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8
r, H Jf THE ADS BEFORE YOU Lp THE STORES-YOU'LL SH ;, N0 IT SAVES MONEY. CARTERET PRESS Widwt Circulated Papr CtHrv jtf Cuteret Cmpltteiy; I t t t Mtyer , "Slri AW NO. 29 CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1939 PRICE THR^E CENT8 tepublicans Cut Tax Rate To )emocrats Fight To Keep It At $7.35 ILT BY KRYSZEWSKI IS HI $1,600 JOB With Democrat! ^ Haary Offers Reporter Cut us t Haury As Clerk ! ^ 0j School Board ; HE N VOTES SELF IN posa | To Name Stadium or [) r . Strandberg It Voted Down Haary Successor vin:n' School Commis- ,,. ,. , Kiyszewski became ',..,,. f the Carteret Board j, r Wednesday nifht in r ' . ; nm.uivrc through the ,. . . his own vote With , , • in Democratic mem- ( ;;.;. -inners Lukach, D'- , \[ .::;,!> ami Harrinfton. I'lmiigh a short time , I-..,•; llaiiry. district clerk • tir years, and a hold- |f..,., 1-1 year, had with eon- . i 1 ;. ilty persuaded the . I itself opposed to i r r.io, now pending in 1: i., by which he would i..:••!• ii'inire of office. • ,' brought the matter (•if. . i viii ir he thought such i ' apply tenure to hol- :,: 'iinc jobs to be vicious ;r,.v mitsiilc the intent of !;>. of tenure. Commis- ':•'.•• A and Harrington •\ vu.tnj to have time to ;i • Mn iict before com- \ •• •:--ivrs as opposed to II. i ;rv usolutlon WU'pdt 1 : ' ur and passed with ' IN p n'lkan commissioners nil! lukach aqd D'sur- w fp.:i C A IIT KRET Kx-distrirt Clerk Knink llaury todny or- dered publication of the follow- ing advertisement: WANTED: A collector fur the money due me from the Board of Education for the difference in the salary of $2,600 which I have been paid for the past four years, according to a newspaper report, and the sums I actually have been paid, $l?S0O per year before cuts were restored, $1,- 600 since that time. I will gladly and willingly split the difference on a 50-50 basis with anyone who can collect this sum of money for me." Charles Kryszewski LAST RITES HELD USMR SOCIAL CLUBFORMRS.BENSON ) 80 ^ One Of Borough's Earliest Office Group To Sponsor Affair In Elizabeth- Carteret Hotel Settlers Succumbs At Her Home Monday IIL' the result Mr. 1 never thought I'd like thst to prevent •siting tenure." Next Move—Oat 1 r ihun an hour he was " i without warning, and •>' >ali during which the : : ' >> in the audience ' rn;;itii- silence. 1 '•'• i.une when Comrais- ' i;llu, newly seated on iftir his election in -••• "! offer a motion i a clerk. I nominate •/.i-wski." A second •rrinjtton followed im- 1 >'k and President 'i"iu'd the procedure lik and Mr. Haury ; * derk could be time during the Itly :,, Jer Mr CARTERET—Among the out- standinic events on the social cal- endar i.s u dance to be sponsored by the Office Social Club of the United State* Metals Refining mpany of Carteret, Friday even- ing, April 28, at the Elizabeth- Carteret Hotel in Elizabeth. The committee, -headed by Har- old Van Ness, comprises: John A. Turk, Lawrence Rack, Nat Marcus, Harold Miller and Charles Terjek. Dance music will be furnished by the "Frolickers" from DP. M, until 2 A. M. A program of entertainment hajs been artmifreil with Joseph Fitzgerald acting us master of ceremonies. CARTERET—Funeral sc-rvices were held yesterday morning for Mrs. Margaret E.eahy Benson, one of Carteret's earliest settlers, who died Monday morning at her home, 89 Atlantic Street, after a short illness. Mrs. Benson was eighty years old. The funeral was con- ducted In St. Joseph's Churth by the pastor, the Rev. Joseph A. Mul- ligan, and burial was in St. James SCHOOL COMMITTEE ASSIGNMENTS MADE BY HAGAN MONDAY Dengler Announces Gradu- ation Exercises To Be Held On June 14 STADIUM TO BE SCENE I'AltTKRKT Committee assign- ments fur the year on the Board nf Ivluoation were announced by IVsiilcnl William B. Hagan Wed- nesdiiy nijrht as follows: Finance, Galvanek, Lukach, Hsmry,; teachers, Haury, Kryszew- ski, Mudrak; text books, Lukach, Krjw.e-wski, Galvanek; repairs and supplies, Galvanek, Haury, Har- rington; janitors and grounds, (ialvnnck, Lukach, Kryszewski; transportation, Mudrak, Galvanek, Kryszewski. Course of study, Haury, Krys- zewski, D'Zurilla; athletics, Haury, Kryszewski, D'Zurilla; commence- ment, D'Zurilla, Harrington, Gal- vanek; printing, Kryszewski, Mud- rak, Uaury; law, Harrington, Haury, Galvanek; member aotivi tics committee, Hagan. Conference May 4 At the same meeting Supervis- ing Principal Calvin F. Dengler announced plans for the second annual vocational guidance confer- ence, to be held at the High School Thursday, May 4. The program ia in charge of Miss Harriette Le- Bow, and Dr. Millard L. Lowery, county superintendent of schools, will address the school assembly. After his talk group meeting* will be held in which workers in the various fields in which students are Now 'Captain Hagan' Lukach And Scally Vote On Reduction Of Expenses; Beigert Can't Make Up Mind William B. Hagan CARTERET- William B. Ha- gan waa notified this week of his promotion from the rank of First Lieutenant, U. S. Army Infan- try Reserves, to the rank of Cap- tain, effective April fi. The no- tice wag received in a letter from Adj, Gen. B. B. Lovett or the War Department. Mr. Hagan is President of the Carteret Board of Education, holds an executive position in one of the local industrial con- cerns, and is in charge of en- listment in the C.M.T.C. from Middlesex County for the com- ing Summer. WIFE WINS DECREE ON DESERTION PLEA Cemetery, Woodbridge. Surviving are four sons, Thomas H., of Trenton; Edward, of West New York; George and Arthur and two daughters, Mn, John Con- nolly and Mrs. John Scally, all of this borough. There are also 20* grandchildren, 10 great-gritnd- childien and a brother, John Leahy, of Nicetown, Pa. Mrs. Benson came here from Woodbridge more than fifty years u#o. She was a communicant of St. Joseph's Church arid a member of it» Rosary Society. J. J. Lymun had charge of the funeral. Matthews Favors Mrs. Za- COMMITTEE MEETS TONIGHT kor On Counter Peti- tion ; She Gets Child Mrs Mary Zatick Street won a Harrington followed "it the proposal was •il. iI.airy announced the •<v»ring Mr. Krysiew- ^' Kry&zewskithank- "'•ratic members for ""i of confidence and -•"Hy disappointed his didn't •• - 11 " 1 way. He said the ''• WHS a surprise to him. K 'j 1 - / .,;wHki had concluded ! " rl1 Mr. Hiury then 1 "wn thanks to the 1 i!h confidence shown f »ur years in office '*• quite appropriate • should thank his I'i'-i • li Me,,, •'••'I action of the 1 ' na-eting marked '''•••' in which Mr. ;il "l prominently. 1 ii- name the High '• '" memory of the 1 the board, Or. •' ! "IU-I-K, resulted in U >U\ four Uemo- ll11 " Kepublicans '' ' I'uatigated the lll( 'i're and hypo- •'"' i'» l J ag« 2) w i K SCHEDULED 1 'tie Class of "'uli School, will '""'• ll in the Nsth- 1 ''utiitorHim 'on 1! Mxil 22. Music 111 h* furnished by | ""--heatra, in which 11 ^l ptuyers are '•'•' '»«y b* obtained "' "' the class, or 1 "' -'I the door,-. .V is B 'RTHOAY Hana Mi- CARTKRKT- Zakor of 1M divorce from William Zakor of 165 Randolph Street in Chancery Court at Newark un Tuesday, The case was heard by Advisory Master John A. Mutthews, who ordered Zakor to pay |8 weekly for the support of his wife and their four- and-a-half year old daughter, Bar- bara, who was given into her mo- ther's custody. Counsel fees were granted Mrs. Zakor's attorney, Re- corder Michael Resko. H. N. Gast of the office of David T. WilenU represented Mr. Zakor. Zakor had sued for divorce on the grounds of desertion but the decree was granted the wife on a counter petition for a similar charge. Mrs. Walter Vonah, bor- ough Oversapr of the Poor, appear- ed as a witness for the wife. Mrs. Zakor waa given permission to resume her maiden name. CARTERET—Mrs. Julia Tarnik, I financial secretary of White Carna- ! tion Grove No.-24, Woodmen Cir- cle, will entertain the auditing committee at her home in Edgar Street tonight. The organization's next meeting will take place Sunday afternoon. MEN PLAN SOCIAL CARTERET—The Men's Club of St. Mark's Episcopal Church will hold a game social May 17 in Slovak Hall which will be in charge of William Grame, Charles Crane, Thomas Donoghue and August C. Hundemann. interested will talk with the stu- dents. An invitation was also read {Continued on Page 2) HIGH SCHOOL PTA PLANNING BENEFIT Teachers Assisting In Plans For Party At Yetman Home Here CARTERET — Arrangements are being made by the High School Parent-Teacher Association to hold a handkerchief bridge Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock in the home of Mrs. Harry Yetmait in Locust Street. On the refreshment committee are: Mrs. George Kurtz, Mrs. Wil- liam V. Coughlin, Mrs. Joseph Hlub, Mrs. Matilda Hite, Mrs. Clif- ford Cutter, Mrs. J. W. Mittuch, Mrs. Joseph Hasek, Mrs. James A. Johnson, Mrs. Maurice Spewak, Mrs. William Conran and Mrs. Yet- man. Teachers assisting in the plans are: Miss E. Claire Monahan, Miss Phoebe Conran, Mrs. William J. Conway, Miss Marion Kelly, John Sidun, John Popiel and Philip Goi, SHOWER IS GIVEN FOR BRIDE-TO-BE Mn. Zimmer Entertains Wednesday For Eliza- beth FitzPatrick CARTERET-Mrs Raymond Zim- mer entertained at her home, 3'J Wheeler Ave., Wednesday night at a surprise iniscellaneuus shower in honor of Miss Klizabeth FitzPat- rick, who will be married Sunday afternoon, April .'10, to William C. Shaw. The bride-elect i.s the daugh- ter of Mrs. Elizabeth FitzPatrick of 59 Union Street and her finance the son of Mrs. George Kurtz of 85 Lowell Street. The Zimmer home was decorat- ed with many cut flowers and there was music and dancing, after which supper was served. The hon- or guest received a large number of gifts, including a complete kit- chen set, Others present were the following: Mrs. Joseph Conlon and daughter, Agnes, Mrs. John Con- lon, Mrs. Philip Foxe, Mrs. Otto Staubach, Mrs. J. J. Dunne, Mrs. August Sebesta, MM. Frank Crai- gen, Mrs. Kurtz, Mrs. John Alben, plrs. John Capik, Jr., Mrs. Edward (Conlon and daughter, Mary. ' The Misses Winifred Shaw, Gloria Stein, Helen Ssyoranowski, Sophie Andrysczyck, Mrs. Patrick Conlon, Miss Gertrude FitzPatrick, Mrs. FitzPatrick, Mrs. Daniel O'- (Continued on Page 2) TALL CEDARS PLAN PARADE APRIL 25 March To Precede Meeting In Slovak Hall; Rabino- witz InCharge f'ARTEKKT -At a meeting of , the Ciirteret committee, held at the office of Benjamin Rabinowiti on Wednesday night, for the forth- ominjt Tall Cedars meeting which will be held on Tuesday, April 2B, at the Slovak Hall on Wheeler Avenue, it was decided that a street parade be held prior to the meeting aa a welcome to all the out of town guests that are ex- pected. John P. Goderstad is chairman of the committee ar- ranging the parade and iB being assisted by Sergeant Robert Shan- ley, Jacob Price and Angelo Mich- ael. Millard Munn, Drum Major dt the Perth Amboy Forest, will head band of musicians in the par- ade. The Rangers of New Bruns- wick Forest will be in line, to- gether with the band representing the MonmouthCounty'Forestg. All Tall Cedars, with the Saplings that will be planted at this meeting, will al.so be in line. The parade will assemble and leave promptly at 7 P. M. from the Slovak Hall on Wheeler Avenue and march to Roosevelt Avenue, to Pershing Avenue, then along Pershing Ave- nue to the lower end of Roosevelt Avenue, then back on Roosevelt Avenue to Washington Avenue, to Cooke Avenue, turn left on Ran- dolph Street to the Slovak Hull. The meeting will open promptly at S P. M. The School System Be Damned Morton To Speak MRS.LEFK0W1TZNAMED TO NEW TERM^BY CLUB Re-Elected ' By Carteret Women At Annual Meet- ing Here Yesterday CARTERET — Mrs. Kmunuel LeflcpwiU was re-elected president of the Carteret Woman'* Club at the annual meeting held yester- day afternoon, and the officer* chosen for the year are the same who have held office in the past yew. They are: First vice presi- dent, Mrs, RumeH Miles; second, Mrt. Ch*rie» Green; corresponding WcreUiy, Mrs, Clifford L. Cutler; rteqpiing ««Mtary, Mrs. Abra- ham J>. Gliwj federation secre- tary, Un. Harry Ystrnan. fo»r B«w dirwtow elected were Mil Wiriiam Snell, Mrs. William k i H. N«vUl and M». An Editorial We dare say that never before in Car- subsequent project already in the minds teret's history has there been a more nau- of his benefactors. It might conceivably be seating and reprehensible political trick f{tf t h g n i n t h m e m b e r q f ^ B o a r d t o fl] , than was performed by a coalition of tour Democrats and one Republican at the meet- ing of the Board of Education on Wednes- day night, • • Bartering his self-respect, his pa'rty loyalty—and to our mind his future useful- ness as a member of the school system ad- ministration—for a $1,600 job, Republican Charles KrVszewaki lined up with the Hei! puppets to oust Frank Haury as District Clerk, BecauM of his long, honorable and conscientious services for the Board and the school children, Mr. Haury became the victim of a dastardly partisan mu- noeuver. ^ « This, of courie, to regrettable because it demonstrate* wnat can happen^ to decency in public offlc«, Equally important, it seems to us; U the indication it brings as to what we may expect of the Board of Education from now (KB, Democratic sup- Francis P. Morton of Bast Or- ange, Past Master of Masons for the State of New Jersey will be the principal speaker and the guest of honor, Plainfield Forest will perform the Sidonian Degree upon a large class of candidates. It is expected that delegates representing forests throughout the entire area wilt attend this meeting. It is expected that a large number of former members will be in attendance at this meeting since delinquent mem- bers may* be reinstated by paying the current year's dues. Refreshments will be served at the close of the meeting to all those attending. The reception committee will be composed of: Mayor Joseph W. Mittuch, Alfred I. Wohlgemuth, Aaron Rabinowitz, Emil Stremlau, William Schmidt, Isadore Mausner and Joseph Gaydos. Benjamin Rabinowitz, Junior Deputy Grand Tall Cedar of the Perth Amboy Forest, is general chairman of the meeting. CARTERET -Despite bitter and vehement opposition || liy the Democrats, Mayor Joseph W. Mittuch and his Re- I publican majority in the Borough Council adopted on first jf roaditiR last night a new budget which cute the previously | estimated 1939 tax rate by 74 points. Successful in his long negotiations with State official*^ to obtain relief for local taxpayers against overwhelming* mandatory appropriations, Mayor Mittuch hurriedly called a special session of the council to consider the new budget 1 before the legal deadline, which was last night. He had | already discussed a ten per cen salary cut with severalT| groups of municipal employes and he will present a similar request to employes of the Board of Education on Monday.*! Democrats Prefer $7.35 Rate The 74-point reduction was voted by a strict party 1 vote. Councilman Beigert reserved his decision, but Couinf oilmen Lukach and Scally dissented. The vote came after several heated exchanges which. Mr. Beigert dominated, largely because he had the strong- | est vocal chords. He questioned the increase in anticipated revenue. If from $63,000 to $100,000 when a resolution was offere4-| to approve this step. Mayor Mittuch pointed out to himfl that the State Department of Local Government had ap*|f proved the change when it was advised that Carteret waj preparing a tax sale to be held in the near future and felt 1 that the additional $37,000 would be realized from it. Beigert 'Reverses' Decision "I reverse my decision until I have had further tim*;| to study it," said Mr. Beigert. >J "You do what?" inquired the Mayor. "I mean I reserve my decision," answered Mr. Beigert. Mayor Mittuch pointed out that since no time was afforded to study the proposal, which he felt was perfectly easy to understand, that Mr. Beigert should at least vote one way or the other. "I'm not here to give grammar lessons," said Mr. Mittuch. Doesn't Need A Lesson t "I don't have to find out from nobody," responded Mr. > Beigert and this particular colloquy ended. The next matter to be considered was the one suggest** ing the ten per cent salary reduction for all public em- < ployes. the vacancy caused by the death of Dr. Strandberg. The people of Carteret can now only expect a Board of Education motivated solely by and for political advantage. The Democrats and Mr. Kryszewski have obvi- ously decided to shoot the works for their own purpose, let the school system and the children be damned. To our mind the only fortunate circum- stance in the whole miserable performance is the enlightenment it brings of the char- acter and cajibre of those men involved. " The Republicans should indeed be grateful to know just what value Mr. Kryezewski places of, honor. Furthermore, they can be spared the necessity of dealing with his action, themselves for he has signed his own political death warrant. To climax the sickening deal which rwrt was not accorded MJ*. Krysaewaki, we m*de Mr/KrysaewpJii platrict Ckrk we Applicant! For HS Stadium Called To Meeting Tuesday CARTERET—All applicants for the use of the High School Stadium have been asked to meet with fhe President of the Board of Education, William B. Hagtn, and members of the athletic committee of the board, at the Borough Hall fuegday night-at 7 P. M. An attempt will be made at this time to work out a schedule (or the use of the playing field. Tuesday night, April 85, haa been set for a conference at the High School among members of the board, the Supervising Prin- cipal, Calvin P. Dengler, the principals of the borough, schools and nurses of the school system. At this time Mr. Dangler, the principals and nurse,* may he asked questions about teaching and other school routines and snyone interested has been in- vited to attend. The meeting was arranged by Mr. Hagau ut Weioesda^jifektti Board of Ed- ucation meeting because, "I don't thjj* I fcnow en^ufh sbovt "I'll contribute all of my salary for the rest of the,| year," offered Mr. Lukach. "That indeed is a magnificent offer," commented t h i l Mayor. "For my part, I will be perfectly honest. I am more % than willing to accept a ten per cent cut but I feel that |« cannot afford to devote all the time I give to my office>| without some compensation. Then you, Mr. Lukach, will J give up your entire salary for the rest of the year?" An Offer With A String "I will," said Mr. Lukach, "if the other members of :|| the Borough Council do." "So then there's a condition tied to your offer?" asked Mayor Mittuch. Mr. Lukach smiled and Mr. Beigert was having difficulty in keeping abreast of the proceedings at this point, so the discussion ended. The resolution provid- ing the ten per cent cut was adopted unanimously. - , : ; High praise was sounded by Mayor Mittuch for th&i "splendid spirit" in which his plea to the workers to take if the reduction was received. He already has talked with the policemen, firemen, janitors, school faculty and school principals and stated that although he had not been given any definite assurance of accession he felt confident a • majority would consent. "I wish to publicly thank all those employes who hav«| indicated their willingness to co-operate with us so whole*,! heartedly," he said, "in an effort to reduce the burden onf the taxpayers of Carteret. "They have signified their - tention of acceding to my plan and they deserve—they*! richly deserve—the thanks of the taxpayers. Despite thetf fact they are protected by law against any decrease, theyfj are conscious of the needs of the Borough and are willing! to do their share." Denfler Agrees To Cut The Mayor added that he was going to suggest the Board of Education that they'adopt a similar resolution J of request to employes in the school system. He also said; that he had discussed the situation with Calvin F. Dengler,; Supervising principal, who "immediately agreed" to cept the cut. Under the-firesent program, it is planned to carry i reduction from May 1 to December SI. Mayor Mittucl said that all appointive officials in his administration also agreed to the reduction. A total of 184,816.95 is removed from the budg which was introduced last night. The library account wi ahaved'by $600, % he*lth appropriation by fSOO and

Transcript of CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It · r,HJf THE ADS BEFORE YOU Lp THE STORES-YOU'LL SH;, N0 IT SAVES...

r,HJf THE ADS BEFORE YOUL p THE STORES-YOU'LLSH ;,N0 IT SAVES MONEY. CARTERET PRESS Widwt Circulated Papr CtHrv

jtf Cuteret Cmpltteiy; ItttMtyer , " S l r i A W

NO. 29CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1939 PRICE THR^E CENT8

tepublicans Cut Tax Rate To)emocrats Fight To Keep It At $7.35ILT BY KRYSZEWSKII S H I $1,600 JOB

With Democrat! ^ Haary Offers Reporter Cutust Haury As Clerk ! 0j School Board ;

HEN VOTES SELF IN

posa| To Name Stadiumor [)r. Strandberg It

Voted Down

Haary Successor

vin:n' School Commis-, , . ,. , Kiyszewski became',..,,. f the Carteret Boardj, r Wednesday nifht inr' . ; nm.uivrc through the,. . . his own vote With, , • in Democratic mem-( ;;.;. -inners Lukach, D'-, \[ .::;,!> ami Harrinfton.

I'lmiigh a short time, I-..,•; llaiiry. district clerk

• tir years, and a hold-|f..,., 1-1 year, had with eon-

. i1;. ilty persuaded the. I itself opposed to

i r r.io, now pending in1: i., by which he would

i..:••!• i i ' i n i r e o f o f f i c e .

• ,' brought the matter(•if. .iviiiir he thought suchi ' apply tenure to hol-

:,: 'iinc jobs to be vicious;r,.v mitsiilc the intent of!;>. of tenure. Commis-

':•'.•• A and Harrington•\ vu.tnj to have time to;i • Mn iict before com-\ •• •:--ivrs as opposed toII.i ;rv usolutlon WU'pdt

1 : ' ur and passed with' IN p n'lkan commissionersn i l ! lukach aqd D'sur-

w fp.:i

C A IIT K R E T Kx-distrirtClerk Knink llaury todny or-dered publication of the follow-ing advertisement:

WANTED: A collector fur themoney due me from the Boardof Education for the differencein the salary of $2,600 which Ihave been paid for the past fouryears, according to a newspaperreport, and the sums I actuallyhave been paid, $l?S0O per yearbefore cuts were restored, $1,-600 since that time. I willgladly and willingly split thedifference on a 50-50 basis withanyone who can collect this sumof money for me."

Charles Kryszewski

LAST RITES HELDUSMR SOCIAL CLUBFORMRS.BENSON)80

^ O n e Of Borough's EarliestOffice Group To Sponsor

Affair In Elizabeth-Carteret Hotel

Settlers Succumbs AtHer Home Monday

IIL' the result Mr.1 never thought I'dlike thst to prevent

•siting tenure."Next Move—Oat

1 r • ihun an hour he was" i without warning, and

•>' • >ali during which the•: : ' >> in the audience' rn;;itii- silence.1 '•'• i.une when Comrais-' i;llu, newly seated on

iftir his election in-••• "! offer a motioni a clerk. I nominate•/.i-wski." A second•rrinjtton followed im-

1 >'k and President'i"iu'd the procedure

l ik and Mr. Haury; * derk could be

time during the

Itly :,,Jer Mr

CARTERET—Among the out-standinic events on the social cal-endar i.s u dance to be sponsoredby the Office Social Club of theUnited State* Metals Refining

mpany of Carteret, Friday even-ing, April 28, at the Elizabeth-Carteret Hotel in Elizabeth.

The committee, -headed by Har-old Van Ness, comprises: John A.Turk, Lawrence Rack, Nat Marcus,Harold Miller and Charles Terjek.

Dance music will be furnishedby the "Frolickers" from DP. M,until 2 A. M.

A program of entertainmenthajs been artmifreil with JosephFitzgerald acting us master ofceremonies.

CARTERET—Funeral sc-rviceswere held yesterday morning forMrs. Margaret E.eahy Benson, oneof Carteret's earliest settlers, whodied Monday morning at her home,89 Atlantic Street, after a shortillness. Mrs. Benson was eightyyears old. The funeral was con-ducted In St. Joseph's Churth bythe pastor, the Rev. Joseph A. Mul-ligan, and burial was in St. James

SCHOOL COMMITTEEASSIGNMENTS MADEBY HAGAN MONDAYDengler Announces Gradu-

ation Exercises To BeHeld On June 14

STADIUM TO BE SCENEI'AltTKRKT Committee assign-

ments fur the year on the Boardnf Ivluoation were announced byIVsiilcnl William B. Hagan Wed-nesdiiy nijrht as follows:

Finance, Galvanek, Lukach,Hsmry,; teachers, Haury, Kryszew-ski, Mudrak; text books, Lukach,Krjw.e-wski, Galvanek; repairs andsupplies, Galvanek, Haury, Har-rington; janitors and grounds,(ialvnnck, Lukach, Kryszewski;transportation, Mudrak, Galvanek,Kryszewski.

Course of study, Haury, Krys-zewski, D'Zurilla; athletics, Haury,Kryszewski, D'Zurilla; commence-ment, D'Zurilla, Harrington, Gal-vanek; printing, Kryszewski, Mud-rak, Uaury; law, Harrington,Haury, Galvanek; member aotivitics committee, Hagan.

Conference May 4At the same meeting Supervis-

ing Principal Calvin F. Denglerannounced plans for the secondannual vocational guidance confer-ence, to be held at the High SchoolThursday, May 4. The programia in charge of Miss Harriette Le-Bow, and Dr. Millard L. Lowery,county superintendent of schools,will address the school assembly.After his talk group meeting* willbe held in which workers in thevarious fields in which students are

Now 'Captain Hagan'

Lukach And Scally VoteOn Reduction Of Expenses;Beigert Can't Make Up Mind

William B. HaganCARTERET- William B. Ha-

gan waa notified this week of hispromotion from the rank of FirstLieutenant, U. S. Army Infan-try Reserves, to the rank of Cap-tain, effective April fi. The no-tice wag received in a letterfrom Adj, Gen. B. B. Lovett orthe War Department.

Mr. Hagan is President of theCarteret Board of Education,holds an executive position inone of the local industrial con-cerns, and is in charge of en-listment in the C.M.T.C. fromMiddlesex County for the com-ing Summer.

WIFE WINS DECREEON DESERTION PLEA

Cemetery, Woodbridge.Surviving are four sons, Thomas

H., of Trenton; Edward, of WestNew York; George and Arthurand two daughters, Mn, John Con-nolly and Mrs. John Scally, all ofthis borough. There are also 20*grandchildren, 10 great-gritnd-childien and a brother, John Leahy,of Nicetown, Pa.

Mrs. Benson came here fromWoodbridge more than fifty yearsu#o. She was a communicant ofSt. Joseph's Church arid a memberof it» Rosary Society.

J. J. Lymun had charge of thefuneral.

Matthews Favors Mrs. Za- COMMITTEE MEETS TONIGHTkor On Counter Peti-tion ; She Gets Child

Mrs Mary ZatickStreet won a

Harrington followed"it the proposal was

• i l .

iI.airy announced the•<v»ring Mr. Krysiew-' Kry&zewskithank-

"'•ratic members for""i of confidence and-•"Hy disappointed his

didn't•• -11"1 way. He said the''• WHS a surprise to him.K'j1-/.,;wHki had concluded

! " r l 1 Mr. Hiury then1 "wn thanks to the

1 i!h confidence shownf»ur years in office'*• quite appropriate• should thank his

I'i'-i • li

Me,,,

•'••'I a c t i o n o f t h e1 ' na-eting marked'''•••' in w h i c h M r .

; i l " l prominently.1 ii- name the High

'• '" memory of the1 the board, Or.

•'!"IU-I-K, resulted inU>U\ four Uemo-ll11" Kepublicans

'' ' I'uatigated thelll('i're and hypo-

•'"' i'» lJag« 2)

wi K SCHEDULED1 'tie Class of

"'uli School, will'""'•ll in the Nsth-1 ''utiitorHim 'on

1! • Mxil 22. Music111 h* furnished by

| ""--heatra, in which11 l ptuyers are

'•'•' '»«y b* obtained"' "' the class, or

1 "' -'I the door,-.

. V i s B'RTHOAYHanaMi-

CARTKRKT-Zakor of 1Mdivorce from William Zakor of 165Randolph Street in Chancery Courtat Newark un Tuesday, The casewas heard by Advisory MasterJohn A. Mutthews, who orderedZakor to pay |8 weekly for thesupport of his wife and their four-and-a-half year old daughter, Bar-bara, who was given into her mo-ther's custody. Counsel fees weregranted Mrs. Zakor's attorney, Re-corder Michael Resko. H. N. Gastof the office of David T. WilenUrepresented Mr. Zakor.

Zakor had sued for divorce onthe grounds of desertion but thedecree was granted the wife on acounter petition for a similarcharge. Mrs. Walter Vonah, bor-ough Oversapr of the Poor, appear-ed as a witness for the wife.

Mrs. Zakor waa given permissionto resume her maiden name.

CARTERET—Mrs. Julia Tarnik,I financial secretary of White Carna-! tion Grove No.-24, Woodmen Cir-cle, will entertain the auditingcommittee at her home in EdgarStreet tonight.

The organization's next meetingwill take place Sunday afternoon.

MEN PLAN SOCIALCARTERET—The Men's Club

of St. Mark's Episcopal Churchwill hold a game social May 17 inSlovak Hall which will be in chargeof William Grame, Charles Crane,Thomas Donoghue and August C.Hundemann.

interested will talk with the stu-dents.

An invitation was also read{Continued on Page 2)

HIGH SCHOOL PTAPLANNING BENEFITTeachers Assisting In Plans

For Party At YetmanHome Here

CARTERET — Arrangementsare being made by the High SchoolParent-Teacher Association to holda handkerchief bridge Wednesdayafternoon at 2 o'clock in the homeof Mrs. Harry Yetmait in LocustStreet.

On the refreshment committeeare: Mrs. George Kurtz, Mrs. Wil-liam V. Coughlin, Mrs. JosephHlub, Mrs. Matilda Hite, Mrs. Clif-ford Cutter, Mrs. J. W. Mittuch,Mrs. Joseph Hasek, Mrs. James A.Johnson, Mrs. Maurice Spewak,Mrs. William Conran and Mrs. Yet-man.

Teachers assisting in the plansare: Miss E. Claire Monahan, MissPhoebe Conran, Mrs. William J.Conway, Miss Marion Kelly, JohnSidun, John Popiel and Philip Goi,

SHOWER IS GIVENFOR BRIDE-TO-BEMn. Zimmer Entertains

Wednesday For Eliza-beth FitzPatrick

CARTERET-Mrs Raymond Zim-mer entertained at her home, 3'JWheeler Ave., Wednesday night ata surprise iniscellaneuus shower inhonor of Miss Klizabeth FitzPat-rick, who will be married Sundayafternoon, April .'10, to William C.Shaw. The bride-elect i.s the daugh-ter of Mrs. Elizabeth FitzPatrickof 59 Union Street and her financethe son of Mrs. George Kurtz of 85Lowell Street.

The Zimmer home was decorat-ed with many cut flowers andthere was music and dancing, afterwhich supper was served. The hon-or guest received a large numberof gifts, including a complete kit-chen set, Others present were thefollowing: Mrs. Joseph Conlon anddaughter, Agnes, Mrs. John Con-lon, Mrs. Philip Foxe, Mrs. OttoStaubach, Mrs. J. J. Dunne, Mrs.August Sebesta, MM. Frank Crai-gen, Mrs. Kurtz, Mrs. John Alben,plrs. John Capik, Jr., Mrs. Edward(Conlon and daughter, Mary.' The Misses Winifred Shaw,Gloria Stein, Helen Ssyoranowski,Sophie Andrysczyck, Mrs. PatrickConlon, Miss Gertrude FitzPatrick,Mrs. FitzPatrick, Mrs. Daniel O'-

(Continued on Page 2)

TALL CEDARS PLANPARADE APRIL 25March To Precede Meeting

In Slovak Hall; Rabino-witz In Charge

f'ARTEKKT -At a meeting of, the Ciirteret committee, held atthe office of Benjamin Rabinowition Wednesday night, for the forth-

ominjt Tall Cedars meeting whichwill be held on Tuesday, April 2B,at the Slovak Hall on WheelerAvenue, it was decided that astreet parade be held prior to themeeting aa a welcome to all theout of town guests that are ex-pected. John P. Goderstad ischairman of the committee ar-ranging the parade and iB beingassisted by Sergeant Robert Shan-ley, Jacob Price and Angelo Mich-ael.

Millard Munn, Drum Major dtthe Perth Amboy Forest, will head

band of musicians in the par-ade. The Rangers of New Bruns-wick Forest will be in line, to-gether with the band representingthe MonmouthCounty'Forestg. AllTall Cedars, with the Saplings thatwill be planted at this meeting, willal.so be in line. The parade willassemble and leave promptly at 7P. M. from the Slovak Hall onWheeler Avenue and march toRoosevelt Avenue, to PershingAvenue, then along Pershing Ave-nue to the lower end of RooseveltAvenue, then back on RooseveltAvenue to Washington Avenue, toCooke Avenue, turn left on Ran-dolph Street to the Slovak Hull.The meeting will open promptly atS P. M.

The School System Be Damned

Morton To Speak

MRS.LEFK0W1TZNAMEDTO NEW TERM^BY CLUBRe-Elected ' By Carteret

Women At Annual Meet-ing Here Yesterday

CARTERET — Mrs. KmunuelLeflcpwiU was re-elected presidentof the Carteret Woman'* Club atthe annual meeting held yester-day afternoon, and the officer*chosen for the year are the samewho have held office in the pastyew. They are: First vice presi-dent, Mrs, RumeH Miles; second,Mrt. Ch*rie» Green; correspondingWcreUiy, Mrs, Clifford L. Cutler;rteqpiing ««Mtary, Mrs. Abra-ham J>. Gliwj federation secre-tary, Un. Harry Ystrnan.

fo»r B«w dirwtow elected wereMil Wiriiam Snell, Mrs. William

k i H. N«vUl and M».

An EditorialWe dare say that never before in Car- subsequent project already in the minds

teret's history has there been a more nau- o f h i s benefactors. It might conceivably beseating and reprehensible political trick f{tf t h g n i n t h m e m b e r q f ^ B o a r d t o fl],than was performed by a coalition of tourDemocrats and one Republican at the meet-ing of the Board of Education on Wednes-day night, • •

Bartering his self-respect, his pa'rtyloyalty—and to our mind his future useful-ness as a member of the school system ad-ministration—for a $1,600 job, RepublicanCharles KrVszewaki lined up with the Hei!puppets to oust Frank Haury as DistrictClerk, BecauM of his long, honorable andconscientious services for the Board andthe school children, Mr. Haury becamethe victim of a dastardly partisan mu-noeuver. ^

« This, of courie, to regrettable becauseit demonstrate* wnat can happen^ todecency in public offlc«, Equally important,it seems to us; U the indication it brings asto what we may expect of the Board ofEducation from now (KB, Democratic sup-

Francis P. Morton of Bast Or-ange, Past Master of Masons forthe State of New Jersey will bethe principal speaker and the guestof honor,

Plainfield Forest will performthe Sidonian Degree upon a largeclass of candidates. It is expectedthat delegates representing foreststhroughout the entire area wiltattend this meeting. It is expectedthat a large number of formermembers will be in attendance atthis meeting since delinquent mem-bers may* be reinstated by payingthe current year's dues.

Refreshments will be served atthe close of the meeting to allthose attending.

The reception committee will becomposed of: Mayor Joseph W.Mittuch, Alfred I. Wohlgemuth,Aaron Rabinowitz, Emil Stremlau,William Schmidt, Isadore Mausnerand Joseph Gaydos.

Benjamin Rabinowitz, JuniorDeputy Grand Tall Cedar of thePerth Amboy Forest, is generalchairman of the meeting.

CARTERET -Despite bitter and vehement opposition | |liy the Democrats, Mayor Joseph W. Mittuch and his Re- Ipublican majority in the Borough Council adopted on first jfroaditiR last night a new budget which cute the previously |estimated 1939 tax rate by 74 points.

Successful in his long negotiations with State official*^to obtain relief for local taxpayers against overwhelming*mandatory appropriations, Mayor Mittuch hurriedly calleda special session of the council to consider the new budget 1before the legal deadline, which was last night. He had |already discussed a ten per cen salary cut with severalT|groups of municipal employes and he will present a similarrequest to employes of the Board of Education on Monday.*!

Democrats Prefer $7.35 RateThe 74-point reduction was voted by a strict party 1

vote. Councilman Beigert reserved his decision, but Couinfoilmen Lukach and Scally dissented.

The vote came after several heated exchanges which.Mr. Beigert dominated, largely because he had the strong- |est vocal chords.

He questioned the increase in anticipated revenue. Iffrom $63,000 to $100,000 when a resolution was offere4- |to approve this step. Mayor Mittuch pointed out to h i m f lthat the State Department of Local Government had ap*| fproved the change when it was advised that Carteret wajpreparing a tax sale to be held in the near future and felt 1that the additional $37,000 would be realized from it.

Beigert 'Reverses' Decision"I reverse my decision until I have had further tim*;|

to study it," said Mr. Beigert. >J

"You do what?" inquired the Mayor."I mean I reserve my decision," answered Mr. Beigert.Mayor Mittuch pointed out that since no time was

afforded to study the proposal, which he felt was perfectlyeasy to understand, that Mr. Beigert should at least voteone way or the other.

"I'm not here to give grammar lessons," said Mr.Mittuch.

Doesn't Need A Lesson t"I don't have to find out from nobody," responded Mr. >

Beigert and this particular colloquy ended.The next matter to be considered was the one suggest**

ing the ten per cent salary reduction for all public em- <ployes.

the vacancy caused by the death of Dr.Strandberg.

The people of Carteret can now onlyexpect a Board of Education motivatedsolely by and for political advantage. TheDemocrats and Mr. Kryszewski have obvi-ously decided to shoot the works for theirown purpose, let the school system and thechildren be damned.

To our mind the only fortunate circum-stance in the whole miserable performanceis the enlightenment it brings of the char-acter and cajibre of those men involved.

" The Republicans should indeed be gratefulto know just what value Mr. Kryezewskiplaces of, honor. Furthermore, they canbe spared the necessity of dealing with hisaction, themselves for he has signed his ownpolitical death warrant.

To climax the sickening deal whichrwrt was not accorded MJ*. Krysaewaki, we m*de Mr/KrysaewpJii platrict Ckrk we

Applicant! For HS StadiumCalled To Meeting Tuesday

CARTERET—All applicantsfor the use of the High SchoolStadium have been asked tomeet with fhe President of theBoard of Education, William B.Hagtn, and members of theathletic committee of the board,at the Borough Hall fuegdaynight-at 7 P. M. An attempt willbe made at this time to workout a schedule (or the use ofthe playing field.

Tuesday night, April 85, haabeen set for a conference at theHigh School among members ofthe board, the Supervising Prin-cipal, Calvin P. Dengler, theprincipals of the borough, schoolsand nurses of the school system.At this time Mr. Dangler, theprincipals and nurse,* may heasked questions about teachingand other school routines andsnyone interested has been in-vited to attend. The meetingwas arranged by Mr. Hagau utWeioesda^jifektti Board of Ed-ucation meeting because, "Idon't thjj* I fcnow en^ufh sbovt

"I'll contribute all of my salary for the rest of the, |year," offered Mr. Lukach.

"That indeed is a magnificent offer," commented t h i lMayor. "For my part, I will be perfectly honest. I am more %than willing to accept a ten per cent cut but I feel that |«cannot afford to devote all the time I give to my office>|without some compensation. Then you, Mr. Lukach, will Jgive up your entire salary for the rest of the year?"

An Offer With A String"I will," said Mr. Lukach, "if the other members of : | |

the Borough Council do.""So then there's a condition tied to your offer?" asked

Mayor Mittuch. Mr. Lukach smiled and Mr. Beigert washaving difficulty in keeping abreast of the proceedings atthis point, so the discussion ended. The resolution provid-ing the ten per cent cut was adopted unanimously. - ,:;

High praise was sounded by Mayor Mittuch for th&i"splendid spirit" in which his plea to the workers to take ifthe reduction was received. He already has talked withthe policemen, firemen, janitors, school faculty and schoolprincipals and stated that although he had not been givenany definite assurance of accession he felt confident a •majority would consent.

"I wish to publicly thank all those employes who hav«|indicated their willingness to co-operate with us so whole*,!heartedly," he said, "in an effort to reduce the burden onfthe taxpayers of Carteret. "They have signified their -tention of acceding to my plan and they deserve—they*!richly deserve—the thanks of the taxpayers. Despite thetffact they are protected by law against any decrease, theyfjare conscious of the needs of the Borough and are willing!to do their share."

Denfler Agrees To CutThe Mayor added that he was going to suggest

the Board of Education that they'adopt a similar resolution Jof request to employes in the school system. He also said;that he had discussed the situation with Calvin F. Dengler,;Supervising principal, who "immediately agreed" tocept the cut.

Under the-firesent program, it is planned to carry ireduction from May 1 to December SI. Mayor Mittuclsaid that all appointive officials in his administrationalso agreed to the reduction.

A total of 184,816.95 is removed from the budgwhich was introduced last night. The library account wiahaved'by $600, % he*lth appropriation by fSOO and

TWOF1YDAY,

iSPIFICANT NAME'FOR JEWISH CROUPiBoys And Girls Organize

, Club Called "Nair Tu-' mid"; Mfel Weekly

To Get Testimonial

A i

i

,|rirl-

intr

Hi 1 from

nrirnnirnihV - H I T I

f Hi'- lionitiirh w ill i i i 'Tl I"-t iln ''i>ni-1<>trfition nf 1 iiv-•t|i .- 0iT;iiiii7.:il|nii nf Ihf

u I M I ,.||tly clf 'Tfi ' l l , mill• •! •. Siiii Tumii l" i-lio«en.

Jin-..- .iirnilii'-- the I 'erpftunl

nf .liiilni'in iiiul each m c m -

ir.liniijes the rlmvinjr spirit

i-i' e. J e w i s h hoy? and g i r l s

ifti>en to e i g h t e e n y e a r s of

i)N> .'in I'litfihle, and the m o t t o

v i l l In "Kver ( i lowinir ."

Tin' juirpoHe nf the (rroup, as

decidi'd upon, is to p r o m o t e cul -

ttiriil :itid s-'ocinl nr t iv i t i c s a m o n g

it« ( inn nn'ttiher nnd J e w i s h y o u t h

from i i l h i r cummtin i t i e s , and e v e n -

tua l ly i' i« Imped to form 11 S t a t e

Jewish Vniith F e d e r a t i o n .

Officer! N«mwlTfinpornry onVer« were elected

as fullnws :('onsul, Charlotte Gard-ner; pmctor, Rosaline EhrenfoW;gcrihe, f'liKilotte F. Ifcrti!; mnre-tarinn. ('hnrle« H. Sokler; chap-lain, (iludyi M. Schwiiitz; atten-dant, Mildred Brown.

Committee!; will be appointedat u liitIT meeting anil businessmeet iHE" will lie held every otherWeek and on intermediate weeksthere will he social meetings, Out-of-town members will he acceptedand mother'! nf the memherR willform iin honorary hoard of rliTec-tor.i.

RETREAT MEMBERSTO MEET TONIGHTSan Alfonso Group To

Hear From Captains,Outline Plans

CAKTKKKT Members of theSan Alfonso Retreat U'UKlie willhold » di'iliiit meeting at the Col-umbia •'lab in Wnodhiidee tonight•when reports will be made andplans outlined for the future. Re-portH will be niven by the retreat

f captains in the third district, includinir Carteret, Woodbridgre,Perth Amboy, South Amboy andSayrevillc, all in the Trenton Dio-cese,

One of the Retreat Masters ofthe Redcmptorist Retreat Htouse

Stunner Moore

BREMEN TO HONORMOORE ON MAY 8THNo. 2 Company Sets Date

For Testimonial; SocialPlans Announced

CARTERRT- I'lnns have beenmade dy No. 2 Fire Company tohonor Stunner Moore, an honor-ary fire warden, and also honorarymember of the company, at themeeting Monday, May 8. He willbe presented a bailee.

Tomorrow nijtht the memberswill Httend the dinner in No. 1Fire Hall, given by the ExemptFiremen's Association, with the La-dies Auxiliary as truest!). JosephSarzillo, Charles (ireen, John Seal-ly, Joseph Wnllinfr, John Albennnd John Duncan arc in charge ofnrcanifoments,

Plans have ulso been made toattend the Exempt Firemen's BallSaturday night, April £9, in Lu-theran Hall. The committee mak-ing the arrangements is ThomasDevereux, John Ruckriegel, GeorgeSwenson and Louis Peterson.

William Carney, James Irvingand Harry Rock will represent thecompany at the next district meet-ing, to be held in Avenel.

St. Joseph's Church BenefitU April 21

CARTERET—Mrs. Alma Kellyand James J, Dunn are chairmenof the card party which iB to beheld Friday night, April 21, in St,Joseph's Church Hall for the bene-fit of the church. Assisting in thearrangements is the f»U»wing

APRIL 14, 1989

Bandit Gold

IT VB TABCWAll

• AHOCUIK) Nf wip.iperi.WNll Sfrvlrp.

TneOfLikrty/NowAtLibraryIs Tense Story Of Young America

• "The Tree of Liberty" in a novelin which the author has tindrr-

. . . t a k e n tn show early America asnpHE bank at the Crossronds had, „„„„,,„. , , B W j , J n the scope1 been robbed, nnd the robber had j ( h ( l pomtry frorn

,,rapod with *lO.n0Otn gold. He was • £ P a c i f l f r o m

mrnt wn, mnrle by radio, and oldjthe Howards, through four gen-Wiirren Saimirls. who occupied the'erations.

only cnliin on Pcnr Creek, north of , Matthew Howard is a young sur-Bi|i Pine, henrit and seemed onlyjveyor from the mountain countrymildly Interested. - jof Virginia. When he, went down

Along ahont 8 o'clock * rap sound-j t0 Williamsburg to seek a job.ed nn the cnbin door. Warren went j^on,, , , Jefferson, a boyhood friendm the door nnd threw it open. t | c n t h i m a s | l i t o f c ] o i n M ftnd told

him whom to nw. Howard fell inlove with the daughter of one ofthe richest and most aristocratic

"Howdy." he said to the manstanding there. "Come In out of thfcrain. It's a bad night.'1

The visitor looked Into Warren's

Frsih white cotton floodi the cvi-ninR icfttr . . . thit itRouff'i creation of while dntlrd twin with • buttle effect in back,l l ihoiAh in April'* Hurper'i B»raar. A hunch of violeti ind Itlieiof the Tftllejr tied with pink >ml purjilr ribbont idornt the wmJit.

Republicans Cut

glance »bout.••Got a radio, I see?1

"Supposry

gentle eyes, stepped inside and cast ! o f t h c V i r * i n ' B landowners. Be-Li, , i n n r « .hmit cause there was opposition to her

• nU.u, * «.„. he said. tn«rri»Ke Jane Peyton became allou listen In to all the news [ the more determined to marry th«

broadcast*••" strange but disturbing man who"Nope," Warren replied. "News was a gentleman although he work-

dimt interest me much. Rldln'far?" ed with his hands.

-Rtnyin' here for the night If yuh [ W h e n t h e r u m b l i r f , o f , h e t o m .

don't mind? Put my hoss In your i n ( ? r e v o | u t i o n vibrated over Vir-

stable already. ^ n i o f £ 0 Matthew and Jane"(! art tn have some company, .. , . , - , , . , ,,

, ... „ . _ e J .had different conceptions of thehowled. Sud-

ilrnly thp stranger jerked erect."Some nne'i coming!"Warren stared mildly at the gun

that had leaped Into the stranger'shand. No sign of fear appeared onhis face.

"Keep your mouth shut," the

hroiigh

(Continued from /'<;./? 1)

total of $7,000 will be saved under the plan to reducemunicipal salaries and an additional $15,000 from thesalaries of the school employes. The reserve for uncot-lected taxes on the basis of those savings was reduced by$20,333.63.

Due To Mayor's Effort*Because of the efforts of Mayor Mittuch, who has " ^ ' i ^ i , , , , wa , reiieve<L

taken. Down through the course ofthis book covering the period fromthe French and Indian Wars,the Revoluton, the trouble withFrance, the time when Americawas going through its pangs ofbirth as a nation—to the election

stranger was saying. "I been here j of Jefferson as President—Mat-since morning, get me? My hoss thew and Jane were frequently inwent lame. I laid up here till he got i disagreement. Like other Ameri-bctter. That's the story and you J cans of the time, it was to Jeffor->Uck to it, or else . . . " jstm they looked for guidance and

Warren flung open the door andadmitted a man.

The newcomer stared suspiciouslyat the stranger.

"Howdy, Sheriff," ssiu Warren."Tough night to be out." He nod-ded toward the stranger. "Friendof mine, Bill Wiggln. Stopped bythis morning to lay up while hishoss' foot healed. Bill, meet ShertfTHadley."

The"Bank

said.Going to

leadership.

"The Tree of Liberty" is like"The Forsyte Saga" in that itfollows the story of one familythrough generations of chang-ing times and fortunes. Mat-thew's anil Jane's sons—Peyton,who married the daughter of atrench nobleman, and Jemes. whomarried the daughter of a NewYork Banker, carry on the storythrough the days when Jeffersonwas contendi]the survival of democracy for all

utood nl the gateway of the pnsswhich the Old Snnta Fr

wound off to the GreatCol. Ripple had married the

glamorous Spanish daughter of theproprietor. As tho years went by,their beautiful daughter, HollyRipple, grew up, sheltered faraway in s hoarding school in theEast. At her father's death, Hollywas plunged onto the throne ofhis cattle empire, a bewildered girlwho knew nothing about the WestShe arrived at the moment whenCaptain Rritt, foreman of theRancho, was at his wits' end todefend the 50,000 heads of cattleroaming over the domain of theyoung heirew. Rustler outfits madeinroads continually. Outlaws be-

organized into maraudingcattle thieves.

There was no alternative forHjolly and Britt except to fight.Their strategy was to organize astill tougher outfit and fight therustlers on their own terms. Theyreceived the ironical name of the"Knights of the Range."

The story moves swiftly fromone climax to another as Frayne,a mysterious young cowboy andfighter, and Braios Keene, amongothers, encounter the smaller un-organized desperadoes. The warworks up to a live and deathitruiorle with two big cattle-men,with backed by fighters loyal tohem. There are nights of skirmish-n% and ambush, Holly herself'ften participating, and once near-y abducted, The end is a battle atdawn in which the lion Carlosorces wipe out the Inst and largest

band of outlaws. It is one of ZatieSrey's greatest battles,

CARTERET PRi

SCOUTS t O ktNTF.RU^]

CARTERET—The X,

Pack sponsored by the l v

ian Church will hold Pa in,

at 7:30 o'clock, April ;"•

rmrrh. All parents and -

been invited, and Den \

present, two i»kit*. Craft •

also be on display and |i.,

be present Scout Execut,

liam H. Watflon, Camp i

aioner McFarlane and a ,], >

from Parlin. This Cub I'

recently re-or(t«nized imi

leadership of I. Robert Fun

now has thirty-nine r>

members.

ON SOUTHERNTR11CARTERET—Mr. and '

Robert Fariss of 88 Hoal-land their three children, iNancy and Jean, and Mr. Ir

Hercules Ellis and their .bert, of Lincoln Avenue, |.this morning for a week'Washington, D. C, and VIn Washington they will s],,week-end as guests nf Mrbrother-in-law and Bister, iMrs. E. N. Shocklcy, whonearby Ashburne, and furgo on to Roanolie to uFnriss' mother, Mrs. M. l\

Many Elephants Killed in \iAround 70,000 elephants ;n

annually in Africa for tin-trade.

of the group, as will Vic« Preai-dont Joseph Howard of Little Sil-ver, head of the retreat move-ment in the diocese. Motion pic-ture* of on actual retreat will beshown.

All members of the league, bothCatholic and non-Catholic, havebeen invited to attend, along withrepresentatives of all local Catho-lic organizations. Edward A. Lloydof Carterut has been named dis-trict promoter. Middlesex Council,Knights of Columbus, will be hosts,under the leadership of GrandKnight Ryan and Retreat CaptainHenry R. Miller.

oxe, Harry Hein, Elwood VanDeventcr, James Irving, RobertO'Donnelt, Jamus Pusillo, John Al-mn, Frank Morgan, Mrs. John Bar-ney, Mrs. Tillie Jnrkson, Mrs. JohnMedwick, Mrs. Mary McGann, Mrs.Georire Kimbuch, Mi-s, Neil Jepson,Mrs. Dom-y Feebun, Mrs. MuryEppensteiner and Miss Catherinetellato.

CasUe Called "The Mouse'The castle of. Thurnberg or "The

Mouse," on the right bank of theRhine near St. Gourshausen, waibuilt in 1363 by the Archbishop ranFalkensteln. It was named "Th»Mouse" by the counts of Katzenein-boyen, whose castle "The Cat" Btoodopposite.

given unsparingly of his time and energy in an effort to sheriff flung off his slicker. *

protect the taxpayers from an overwhelming burden, the "W*^ SaVd'SsTa' ' Go1939 tax rate will be in the neighborhood of $6.61 this 'e

8fmyposs^here."tonanything Z """':,",; " ' T h r " " 1 ^ i\\""year instead of $7.35 which would have been required1 ~ - t h e pe°pIe- T h e S""**''*™

had the Mayor not carried his battle to Trenton,In this reduction, the Democrats had no part. Last

night they voted, in effect, to keep the rate at the $7.35figure.

Shower Is Given(Continued trnm Paae 1)

Rourke, Mrs. Joseph Poll anil Mrs.Sophie Kutcl, all of Carteret; theMisses Anna M. (onion und HelenWacker, of I'erth Amboy; MissesCatherine and Mary Klose andMary Connell, of Ktaten Island;Miss Clara Kutnjak of Fords; theMisses Murguu-t and Mary Saiuon,and Eliiaheth Fital'atrick and Mrs.Thomas FitzPatrick and Mrs. JohnKane, of Port Heading.

The mnrriuse of Miss FitzPat-riek and Mr. Shaw will be per-formed in St. Joseph's Church bythe pastor, Kev. Joseph A. Mulli-Kim.

Penn Established Land

Office for Cash SalesTitle to land in this country was

secured from » sovereign power orimminent, varying in differentsections. William Penn secured his(rant from Charles II of England.Hs established a hind olllce and in-stituted active measures for cashtales of land. He issued ordinarydeeds bearing his own signature,tome of which still exist. Later, hiscommissioners issued warrants, 1. e.,certificates authorizing personsto settle vacant ground, with rightto purchase in seven years, titleremaining in commissioners. Be-fore the end ol the period, settlerscould secure certificates of surveyand finally "patents" or deeds exe-cuted by commissioners,

The requirements for our deedshave come from the English law,adopted in this country with minorchanges, states a writer in the Phil-adelphia Inquirer. Recording ofdeeds is universal here and has ex-ltted from time ol settlement. Inmost state* conveyancing is done bymembers of the bar, but elsewhereby conveyancers not practicing incourt In some large cities compa-nies are formed to undertake con-veyancing and to guarantee titles toreal estate.

EHAKDOAH/ft. CHICAGO

So popular, sincr first intro-duued in tin; Kunt mi thoS1IENANDOA11, Sitwuidew-JNoiMW U(« now ulso in mrvun<m the NATIONAL 1,1 Mi 111).Snmrtlj-ujiifiHiin .1, iliine S lew-•rdctitct also are Iti-pxtcrf JNur»e», eiii>(><'iull» helpful toWomen anil children uL iliaiervke of GMHII and Pullman|MUMag<ro, utxtwut charge.

Both traini we Air-( jwditiunni•nd h»ve Iudividiml lin-iininuChair Coaclmt with. Tray MulService to Ct»ch 8e«t»-u4y§ecrioe of iU kiiul to thc W<*L

NATIONAl UMtno

Kryszewski(Continued from Page 1)

critical, saying they had "gone onrmml publicly in KlowmB tributeto Dr. Stniiidbt'ig ut the time ofhis ileuth and now denied him thehonor due him aa the one to whomthe M.ailium will always be a mon-ument, whether you accord thehonor lo him officially or not."

Resolutions have been receivedby the bourd from five organiza-tions to date, urging the stadiumhe named for Dr. Strandberg.('onimiiaii'Moi'n Harrington andMudrak said they resented Mr.Usury's sarcasm and believed Dr.

himself had beeniiumini; thc stadium for

ai)y one person.The board voted t-o buy two

ota from Paul Stellato for $910to uvoid encroachment by the newhigh uchool gymnasium, and au-thorized Mr. Galvanek to completethe tennis court* now in construc-tion.

of him. Warren?" | (.,,rry o u t Matthew's long-neglect-

"B i»'^ nl^rj™* !e(l (lrpam of *°[n« to the

west Territory, while others settleIn a week," replied.

anhoofs.

Tradition and ModernUmCombined in New HousesNEW YOSK.—American home-

builders are striking * happy me-dium between staid traditional andthe "nudist" type of ultra-modiruarchitecture by swinging morestrongly than ever to traditionalforms, but with modern treatments,says Architect Arthur E. Allen.

"Colonial, American - lookinghomes which are true to our heri-tages and traditions can be. und arebeing constructed without sacrific-ing the spaciousness and light whichconstitute a chief virtue of modern-istic architecture," says Allen, whohas been the architect for morethan 18,000 homes throughout thenation in the last 11 years. "Thenewer homes of Georgian designhave picked up the outstanding goodpoints of the modem trend, notablythe large window areas. They aremade bright and cheery inside, incontrast to the colonial houses ofour forefathers, through use of plen-tiful windows, modern Interior plan-ning, generous use of wall mirror*and smart selection of furnishings."

Architects and home-buyers areshunning extreme modem styles tosuch an extent, Allen said, thatmodernistic styles are actuallybarred in some plaiined suburbancommunities.

the clatter of approachingWlggin grew tense.

"Posse, I guess," said Radley.Four men, masked, guns In their

hands were suddenly inside.

men or important statesmen anddiplomats.

This is a novel that cannot becompared to any other. Its char-acters, its major events are au

The leader of the four stared authentic and the plot is so closelyth« trio In surprise. "Company," woven into the story of Americiht «aid. "Didn't expect to find the that it gives the reader a sense oold man entertaining guests. Still, living af,-ain in the. days of earlyIt don't make no odds." He turned American times when aristocratshis head, "Truss 'cm all up, Jake." i nnd frontiersmen, statesmen am

The leader o! the masked four ap- philosophers and courageous mepreached Warren, jabbed a gun into a n (j w o m e n w e r p forraing t h e d ( , m ( ,his ribs. "Guess you know what ' n . R t i c , l a t i o n t a h ( . . n Q w o u

we're after, old man. Better pro- n e r j t a ( , c

duee your cache ol gold and save • 'time and trouble."

Warren looked genuinely sur-prised. "Gold? I ain't got any gold.Don't pan enough out of the crick to

Week-end

SUN-CLEERSPECIALS

C. EJOCIALPretbfterian Intermediates

Have Party Monday Night

CARTERET—The Intermediatehristian Endeavor Society of the

Presbyterian Church held mi Eas-ter social Monday night at thechurch, when there was a programof games after which refreshmentswere ecrved. Those present were:Thelma King, Mrs. William Attken,Robert Ward, John Urban, JulianPruitt, Wilton E. Stewart, WilliamReidel, Ronald Shanley, RalphWoods, DeWitt Dorsher, RobertWilson, William and Jack Aitken,William Elliott, Harold Perry, Ro-bert Moore and Rev. D. E. LorenU.

Just Received!,MORE!

Pure SilkFull Fashioned

HOSIERY39'

Value! to 65c

8!4 to 10'i

New

Colon

I'M

keep me going, hardly."The masked gunman laughed

harshly. "Likely story. Expectedit. We know better, though,chunce. "Where's it hid?"

A STRANGER HERE MY-SELF

By O(d»» NaihThe trouble with Ogden flash's

poems is that you stop friends andstrangers to quote your favorites

Last | t o ' h e m — a n d they insist on quot-ing theirs first. His light verse

"You're crazy! There ain't any."The gunman turned. "Take ofl

his boots. Jake. He'll talk."

makes joyous reading. His realistic, witty pen punctures the pom-pous, the mechanical, the inhuman.

They removed old Warren's boots, i One of the last of the individual-stuck an iron in the fire till it glowed : ists, he laughs where he loves. His

genius raises the mainstream of

The Holy Ghost OrchidNatural History says: The Span.

ish friars who came to Mexico founda strange, exquisite, magnolia-likeblossom with which they were ableto illustrate a point in their teaching.In a terrestrial orchid of alabasterWhiteness, from which there drifteda heavy, compelling fragrance, laythe snow-white image of a dove."Esplritu Santo!" exclaimed theilrst priest who taw It. He called itthe Dove of God, the visual formof the Holy Ghost, la their teach-ings, the Spanish priests used thedove orchid to illustrate the mira-cle of the Holy Ghost. The Indians«ver since have regarded the flowerwith unwavering davotlon.

The sound; American humor to a new high-] water ark.

red hot.Old Warren screamed,

reached Wiggin's souLWarren screamed again, and sud- j His philosophy cracks down on

denly Wiggin broke forth in a tor- i t h e m i d d l c o f t h e m o n t h gn<1 Mon_

days, on ants and centipedes, Hair-cuts, Mother's Day, allergy, inter-

l,r. [BnU Bt, Su.) 1iLr.lbdMh. idHV.

. ( l i t

P. M.V.it.

IHWANPOAH

(lko.J M. Su-) UM A. M,

;;: il^iit

• COTTON PREVIEW *

Science to Gauge EffectOf Sunshine on Nordics

PRETORIA, SOUTH AFIUCA.-Has sunshine a degenerating influ-ence on Nordic stocks?

That is the question that scientistsexpect to be in a position to answerwhen they have completed an in-vestigation in the Union of SouthAfrica.

Insufficient radiation Is known toretard development of skeletalstructure, teeth and other tissues,but some scientists believe an ex-cess it almost equally detrimentalRecently experiment! Indicate pro-gressive deterioration.

Observation EUtioni will b* estab-lished at Stellenbcsch, Johannes-burg, Uurba, Mont-aux-Sourcei,Nolspoort and Bloemfontein.

rent ol speech. "Let up, you fools!Let up! He ain't got the gold. Itook it from him an hour ago. It'sin .bag onmy saddle In the stable. c

Go look and see! ,The masked man sneered. "We'll Byrnes and

look, mister. It better be there, i a " not y.ett o o >. jot America. Ladies and gentlemen,

One of the four went out, return-1 w« Sive you Ogden Nash, poet,Ing five minutes later bearing a, story-teller in verse and comraen-

erabarra«inS metersin the schools

School Committee{Continued trom Paye 1^

from Mayor Frederick F. Rich-rdson of New Brunswick to attendmeeting in that city next Wednes-

day night when SuperintendentEverett C. Plummer of the StateBureau of Crime Prevention willspeak. The meeting will takeplace in thc City Hall at NewBrunswick.

Commencement Jane 14Mr. Dengler also announced bac-

calaureate services at the HighSchool auditorium Sunday, June11, anil commencement exercisesin thc stadium Wednesday, June14. He presented to. the board aisoplans for courses of study includ-ing activity in health and physi-cal education, tripe to places of in-terest and extra curricuUr activi-ties for promoting pupil interestof various sort*. An applicationfor the position of teacher wasreceived from John M. Eudie, andfiled.

It took six days to pull the two-units of the streamlined Dieselrluctric railroad locomotive, weighfing r>H&,000 pounds, 4500 feet orapproximately five city blocks tothe (iuueral Motors exhibit fromthu New Yoft World's Pair r»U-

iinc. Moving under its ownut its top opted of 117

miftw \\n hour, the locomotiveCOUld hjive traveled nearly 17,000mi)u in th« name time. Visitor* tothe J W will bu able to observe theinner workings of the Diesel elec-tric locomotive through fcluse aec-

tytaito This exhibit 1»

sactc His eyes were glistening."The Jigger's right, boss. It's here!"

They dumped the gold on the tableand gloated. Hadley was watchingthe man Wiggin. He knew that War-ren didn't have that much gold.

"We're going," the leader, wassaying. "You'd better not—" Hebroke off. The door was open, again.Sheriff Hadley's posse was there, atthe windows, too. The gunmen's lit-tle play had ended abruptly.

Hadley rubbed his chafed wrists,looking evenly at Wiggin, but spoketo bis deputy. "We'll be going backto town now. Gotta get these bankthieves locked up. Glad we got thegokj back. Make things O. K.-forevery one. So long."

tator on the human heart.

KNIGHTS ON THE RANGEBy Zane Grey

The historic Don Carlos Ranch

MORE EASTER MUSICCARTERET — Services at St.

Mark's Episcopal Church on Sun-day will be for Low Sunday, morn-ing prayer and sermon, at 9:30o'clock. The Easter music presented by the choirs last Sundaywill be repeated.

Real Opportunity]ALL WOOL $2.98

J A C K E T S

$1-69$3.98 Jacket* now$5.98 " "

Come Early!All Our $1-1.79

Sweaters

SUN-CLEE112 Smith St. Poll> Ami!

OPEN FRI. EVENIM<

In the Previews of Progress•stage »how at the General Motorsinhibit building at the New YorkWorld's Fair, demonstrations ofphysical sciences provide glimpsesof future possibilities in both in-dustry uud manner of living;. Typi-cal uf this show is the Frif-O-Thrrm, an amazing- coil combina-tion of heat and cold on whjoafood can be cqoked and ice creamtvuimi at the same time.

The largest single exhibit at theNew York World's Pair will be thatof General Motors, To be knownu» Highways and Horizons, it willcaver nearly seven acres in theTranaporttttitm Zone at the headof the Fair's Central Mill.

Temperatures In StratosphereUsing the fleeting rttye ul the set-

ting sun, scientists have measuredth§ temperature high in the strata-inhere,/fur beyond the reach of anypossible balloon ascensions, it it re-:ported in the Journal ot the OpticalSociety Of America by Dr. K. D.Hulburt of the United States NavalHflltarch laboratory. The tempera-lure from eight to thirty-five milesabove the surfuce of the eartheomef out to b; minus 50 to 00 defrees Fahrenheit. The measurementof the brightness of the light in thetenlth sky an hour after sunset andso hour before sunrise made thefadi*g» pustible.

EGAN POST GAME SOCIALFriday, April 14th

RARITAN BALL ROOM267 NEW BRUNSWICK AVE. PERTH AMBOH

FREE! JACK POT GAME $ 8 5LUCKY NO. 13 GAME $50 RETAIL VALUE

* HmU Hint parti of « » South there

to a frtlitf feat ««& mockingbird* tfe* guardian at t good periow

F CERTIFICATl GAME

$150.00

35-CASH 35'

75TH BIRTHDAYw,m From President

(l Governor Honorpemocrat Here

.., |,|T Hiirhlijrhted by.-,,,„, ivnldent Roose-

. , , •, rrmi Moore, Corne-i.,,,i,liiii celebrated his

,,•,1, i,irthday Saturday at,i hi-' «on, C. A. Sheri-,„!,, Avenue, whera he, mi..:iRK«w were-among

Vlli,iiory telegrams andi, ;n-rivpd durinjf the

and friends

Job lnmm* In New Jersey(Till.

:

.,, i.fTor their felielta-,-, rniflri is an ardenti ims kmg been afflli-

;, ,ir:iin of that party

,, yum was carried outi ,111,'iitiTS and one son.. .irrv Mrs, Theodorei iirtorct, Mrs. Frankif Ww Brunswick,

, Murecraft of Boundsuwnrt Clark, Bay-

Wihon Bullick, Man-,,,,1 Mm. Luay Wil-

uiiiiii, Ohio.

uvrli Incorporatorhm was one of the six

, <>f Carteret in 1909,i inn of vital statisticsvtii'i) years issued the,, license after Car-

,i,. jncorporattd. He hasi worker in many or-

II.- in a member ofi Firemen's Association,manlier of the New Jer-

Firrnitn's Aseoclation,•n~, nnd State FireKiatinn. He belonged

> !ii«l fire company.i-in his grandchildren

• tinnilchildren was ai which were imbedded

it ii th» iiitcenth of aMirltt of ri>l(>i<ei on "Job laiar-•nce in New Jertry.")

reded ing county-widenl of job innurance

benefit* WITP made public thisweek by Executive Director HaroldQ. Hoffman of the UnemploymentCompensation Commifwion of NewJersey. The figured were an-nounced an the total of benefit•mymentu since January 26 mount-ed over the four million dolLarmark. The breakdown reflect*county totals for the period ofJanuary 2fi to February 48.

The percentage of payments toOUt-of-SUtc renident.i, who areeligible because of wage credit!established in New Jerney, is com-narably email and in offset in thenaymentu by other Htates liable for

the claims of New Jersey rcsidonU.In the period from January 20 toFebruary 28, New Jersey paid toresident rlnimnnt* of New York$88,93N.fi3 or 2.85-4 of the totalbenefit pnymenta for that period; toPennsylvania residents eligible forNew Jersey benefits, $33,527.24were paid, or 2.59% of the totalbenefit payments. Prior to the pay-ment of benefits in thiat State, NewJerney, through the State Employ,ment Service Division of thin Com-mission, aided unemployed re»i>dent* of New Jersey to collectbenefits for job insurance in stateswhere they had acquired rightsthrough employment covered bythe laws of other state*.

Samnury of PtymcnttThe Ubluation of job Insurance

payWnta by counties from Janu-

CountyAtlanticBergenBurlingtonCamdenCape MayCumberlandEwex ..GloucesterHudsonHunUrdonMercer ...MiddlesexMonmouthMorrisOcean

STATE«ry 26 to February 28 follows:

SalemSomersetPutaexUnionWarrenNew YorkPennsylvaniaDelawareOut of State, Misc.

Total DollarsI 51,623.14

61,021.6416,540.8466,348.16

4,863.4081,227.46

3O9,21O;7122,792.74

212,483.696,706.83

68,606.7061,927.2088,029.2518,029 613,827.81

85,679.538,791.62

18,783.928,442.64

108,695.9612,391.6406,938.0333,627.24

752.804,271.50

3.984.721.207.37.34

2.4123.89

1.7816.42

.524.914.792.551.39.26

6.61,52

1.30.27

8.00.96

2.862.59

.06

.33

OUR LADY OF PEACEWEEKLY GAME SOCIALAnaboy Ararat Ford a, N. J.

EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT at 8: IS P. M.Profit-thariof P W M $46 Doer Priie $SOur Lady of PMC# Special S Pri*«t— $225 in Caah and

Admitt ion 2 8 c All Hifh Gr«d« PrifN

WILL MARK1 ANNIVERSARYI Fellows To Mark Dtte

| Tonight At Father-Son Banquet

IAIiTKIlKT-Cartwet Lodje,h,: ..• will celebrate its 86th

«niirht in I. 0.' 0 . F.tion, the Odd Fellows

|:-. : • "n-ir annual Father andi-h' Mh!ch is always a suc-• ! !•!•.mini's to be even moreVi'.il

i"-n>M tonight wil! also bo1 ;'V the presentation to one

members of a 25 yearan.l ;in added feature will.• • :-liiiw .to be presented;. ( iinilia, incoming noble' ;.•' next six monthI1" ii- will be a roast beef

: ;it the close of the.• . :. hrgt attendance isMl.

• I'! i.lay night t h e lodge will••'!<• nwallation o f officersi' ili^trict t^am in charge

STATE TOTAL .. 131,293 I 1,294,099.45 100.00

Grover Whalen (left) grin* with delight aR he presents fiamberpeT's miniature preview of hisWorld's Fair to Percy S. Straus, president of Mapy'n. (iovernor A. Harry Moore of New Jersey, and Wil-liam J. Wells, president of the Newark Department Store In which the 800-snunre-foot model is beingshown. i

Miss Morgensdn In ChargeOf Senior Party April 21

class of the^- The Senior

Woodbridge HighSchool will hold a "Kiddie Party'lat the school April 21 with MIMMargaret Morgenson in charge.

Music for dancing will be playedby the electric victrola.

100.00

As a reflection of the volume of | One hundred thousand Preliminary1

business the Unemployment Com-pensation Commission of New Jer-sey cites sections of the AnnualReport dealing with the Mail Re-ceiving and General Files SectionsExcerpts from the Second Annual

3DGE PLAYS CARDSI'hontaa Members Follow

eting With Social Hour

— Bright Eyes:f'l. I'Ji'.irhterfl of Pocahontas,;l "'I party Monday night

'"'"•"•.i-ini'ss meeting in No. 1"^ Blanket awards wereli!:i•!• to Mrs. J. Zatik and• I " ! : : : AHicn.

!l;l1"- "i' high scores were:"•''.!'!l|l« Hite. Mm. Harry

Charles Moni», Mrs.r" -'"''k, Mrs. Charles!••«'-• William Rapp, Mm."''"!• Mrs. Walter Vonab,

11-«l" Freeman, Mra. Fred;"t!l' Mr.,. Harry Mann, Mra.

'« , Mrs. Elijabeth'•"ura Crane and Mr»,

Report follow:

"A yardstick for the measure-ment of the Commission's opera-tions during the year appears inreports reflecting the work of theMall Receiving Section and theMessenger Section in charge ofoutgoinK mail. The report of theMail Receiving Section where allcontribution reports are received,time-stamped, remittances checked,and report* transferred for audit,shows 642,500 items handled in1988. Eighty thousand contribu-tion reports. 130,000 informationreport*, 110,(1(11) miwellaneous re-port forms, and F>2,000 miscellane-ous remittance forma were handledby this Section. The Section re-ceived l-iii.OOo checks and moneyorders and 500 remittances in theform of currency. One hundredtwenty-five thousand incomingpieces of correspondence were re-ceived and routed to the respec-tive addresses, Bureaus and Sec-tions.

1,135,000 Mailinft"The Messenger Section is in

charge of the dispatch of all out-going mail including monthly andquarterly employer report forms.Approximately 1,135,000 mailingswere handled during 1938. Thisfigure includes ti95,000 first classletters and approximately 440,000pieces of third and fourth classmatter. Two thousand live hun-dred deliveries and 1,375 register-ed letters were also handled by thisunit in the hitter part of Decem-ber, when the Commission forward-ed to employers necessary forms tobe used in connection with the pay-ment of beiii'titH and dispatchednearly 500,000 pieces of informa-tional literature including the pam-phlet, 'Information for Workers^

Information forms, with a supplyof placards, were also sent to postoffices throughout the State."

"Increased operations havethrust new responsibilities andadded burden* on the General FileSection, responsible for employerflies. During 1938, 4,815,646pieces were handled by the. Sec-tion, the daily average being 18,-241. This Section, during the year,has handled nn average of 1,158daily requests, compared with G63daily average in the precedingyear. Field assignments totaling14,058 were cleared through theFile Section during the year, and9,407 employer's index additionsand changes were handled.

'In addition tn thin activity, thework under the direction of theHead Fik- Clerk also included thesetting tip of the Flext'line Indexof employees' names comprisingapproximately 1,400,000 listings.This was done by an average ofeight clerks over a period of threemonths."

local Red Cross ChapterWins NationalHonor Award

WOODBRIDGE — The Wood-bridge Chapter of the AmericanRed Cross was awarded an honorcertificnte from the National RedCross Chapter at Washington fordistinguished achievement in theannual roll call of 1939.

CANT DO THAT HEREWOODBRIDGE — Raymond

Bornstein, 18, of Orange, wasgiven a suspended sentence onWednesday by Recorder ArthurBrown for driving without a reg-istration in his possession.

SPEEDER SLOWED UPWOODBRIDGE-Jaro^s Purll-

lo, 29, of Lorch Street, Carteretwas given a suspended sentencefor speeding Wednesday and fined$4 for court costs.

Blood ExtractHalts Bleeding

Will Assist Surgeons inOperation!; Acts as

Freezing Agent

Capital Museum Houses$130,000,000 Exhibits

WASHINGTON. - Collections ofthe National museum are now val-ued at more tbiin J130.000.000, Alex-ander Wetmore, assistant secretaryof the Smithsonian Institution, re-cently told a house committee. Themuseum, administered by thaSmithsonian Institution, houses na-tional collections of natural history,anthropology, biology, geology, artsand industries and American his-tory. The catalogue entries nowtotal more than 16,000.000 individualitems and last year brought morethan 300,000 additions.

The Smithsonian Institution Is oneof Hie capital's most popular tourist1

objectives. The attendance lastyear w.ts 2.412,195, tile largest inthe institution^ history.

p PROTECT GAMECun Club Forma

0 Fight Fie ld Fires

11 r The Meadow111111 ('l«h haa formed a

!;"hl L» fight field Ores''•'•'' ifaiiKi covers. Jesse

"•ii'H-d chief and Wil-ln former Borough•' i-tiint. Leo Kuhn,

• " ; " '"ill Neil Jepsen!i »nli the new unit

1 imu ulao been"" the weight* Of

! """"it the Summer In""'"" lll'ld by the dub.

11 "i Mews. Kuhn,' •''•I'sen, and Brick-

COTTON PREVIEW *

NEW YORK.-Bleedlng duringsurgical operations end after ic-cidepts can now be stopped almojtinstantaneously with an extractfrom beef blood sprayed on a woundwith a perfume atomizer.

Four University of Iowa scien-tists announced in "Science," pub-lished by the American Associationfor the Advancement of Science,'that they had purified thrombin, theelement in blood which makes Itclot, and had uied It successfully inhalting profuse bleeding within twoto ten seconds.

Operations frequently are hampered by interference of blood inan incision, Dr. W. H. Se«gers, Dr.E. D. Warner, Dr. K. M. Brlnkhou*and Dr. H. P. Smith declared, par-ticularly in operations on the brainand liver.

Acts •« Fretting Agent.In the future, however, an atomiz-

er filled with thrombin probably willbe one of the principal parts of

surgeon's equipment, since thechemical atops bleeding from thesmall blood vessels which cannotbe closed in any other way,

Thrombin acts as a freezing agentto form a thin film of clotted blood

Elks'Kiddie FundTennis Matches

At ElizabethBUZArTETH - - A m i d all the

furore created by the forthcomingappearance of Donald Budge, 1938World's Amateur Champion, andFrederick J. Perry of Great Brit-ain at the Elizabeth Armory onSaturday evening, May 6, there isone follow who remains singularlycalm. The raven-haired Perry refuses to get excited about hismeeting' with the former dictatorof the amateur tennis world. TheBritish ace is quite certain that thegreater variety of his game willprove to be the winning factor Inhis meeting with the sluggingBudge.

During their amateur days, theblack-haired Briton and the flame,thatched Californian met six timesand the English ace emerged vietorious on four occasions. In thisconnection it is interesting to notethat Budge's two victories wereregistered in lesser tournaments,once at the Pacific Southwesttournament in California, and onceat Eaatport, England. Perry's fourvictories, on the other hand, weregained In Davis Cup matches, atWimbledon, and in the final ofhe United Stales Champiuiuihip atForest Hills. Of course Perry real-zes that Budffe has improved his

game by constant play againstVines on the tour just completed,but feels confident of his abilityto turn back the thrust of the red-headed Californian.

The matches are being spon-sored by the Elizabeth Elks' Crip-pled Kiddies Committee and tick-eta can be secured at the Elks'Club House on Westfield Avenue,or by calling Elizabeth 3-2100,

LLOYD RETREAT CAPTAINCARTERET—Edward A. Lloyd

<f Lincoln Avenue has been namedCarteret captain to arrange for lo-al men attending the week-end

retreats at Ran Alphonse RetreatHouse, Went End. Captains havebeen named in several localities ofthe newly formed Raritan DistrictUnit of the retreat hoase, of which

arteret is a part. Reservationsmay also be made directly with thefather superior at West End,

DANCE TOMORROW NIGHTCARTERET — The Ukrainian

Social Club will hold its tenth an-nual Spring dance tomorrow nightat Greenwich Garden, with musicby Eddie Benish and his orches-tra. There will also be a specieentertainment during the evening,arranged by the chairmen, Theodore Sofka and John Bubnick.

FEDAITIJTHOSPITAI:CARTERET—Joseph Fedak ol

Lewis Street is a patient in St.Eliubeth's Hospital, Elizabeth. His under the care of Dr. L. SDowns,

TOmMIOUJI IICURITY

A HOME is more than an invest'ment in day-by~day happiness,pleasure and comfort. The horn*ym bmld or buy today is a soundntMjfantnf in future security foryon family.

We will be glad to explain thenew FHA Plan of home ownershipthrough convenient monthly pay-ments, planned to suit your income.

First National BankIN CARTERET

CARTERET NEW JERSEYMember Federal Deposit and Insurance Corporation

""' ''lub offers an!'llK<-st fresh watar

11 water fUh

1 h« annual paat-" S t . D

areaarea

: llMftl

over any area which begins to bleedprofusely. It always is present Inthe blood us a slightly differentsubstance called prothrombin whichis converted to thrombin when ex-posed to air.

However, in some Individuals It Isnot present in sufficient amount*,or is not converted quickly enough.As a result they bleed profuselymid during a surgical operationtheir condition may become criticalunless a blood transfusion is givenimmediately. Use of thrombin, ob-tained from the bluod of cattle atslaughter houses, may make manytransfusion* unnecessary.

Pneumonia Cure.Recently Dr.1 Clyde Brooks ol

Louisiana State university declaredhe had gone to the same source,had obtained from ox blood a sub-stance known as "deturo-protoose,"and had found It successful In th*treatment ol som« types of. pneu-monia.

Thrombin als/> has be«o found ef-fective in checking ttw W««ding ofhemophilia, tha dlseisa whicheaua*s a fmtton! to bleed almostcontinuously from iven • wnill outor bruise.

It ii also expected to be a vitalaid to buna surgeon* who hwetoforehave not been abl« to stop bleedingfrom the small blood YWMIS withinthe bone marrow mctpt i t t bwax, a substanM {orelfn to thabody which somstimis tatsrfewiwith bwe heating, Dt, feqftri sal L

Church NotesThe Easter Communion of the

Presbyterian Church will be heldSunday morning at the regularhour of worship. Thera will bospecial music by the choirs. Thepastor's Communion meditationwill be "The Christian Victory."There wil! be a meeting of thesession before the service for thereception o f members, followedby the public reception at the ser-vice.

Bible Clui ServiceThe monthly social of the

church, sponsored by the Men'sBible Class, will be held tomorrownight at 8:00 o'clock, All are cor-dially invited. Troop 82, BoyScouts, will observe Parents' Nighttonight. Mr. Macdonald, chiefcamp executive of the nationalcouncil, will be the guest speaker.It is hoped that all parents of theboys will be present.

C. E. RallyThe annual rally of the County

Intermediate Christian EndeavorSocitiea will be. held in the Pres-byterian Church of Cranbury onFriday evening, April 21, at 7:45.Members of the Senior and JuniorIntermediate societies of the localchurch are planning to attend. TheJunior Intermediate Group willpresent a song and scripture fea-tuiB of the worship uervice, EulalicBeech, of the Senior Intermediatexwill offer the prayer.

The news items for the nextissue off "Our Church Booster"shoud be in the hands of the Ed-itors not later than Thursday,April 20.

"Thrifty-Six

An Elephant CemeteryWhat is belitved to be an "ele-

phant cemetarr," established byHannibal, tho Carthagenian gen-eral, when he lUilfhtortd some ofhie war baaiti before crossing theAlps, it situfttai netr Avacon, in thevalley of the Durance, Trance. Be-neathihe "cemetery" was the buri-al plwe of | entetiatn ol the Ironege and 100 ol U i wtyriare whodied MM years before Hannibal ledhis army from Spain over the Al-ptne pusses. la WB». C. Bannibalstarted from Curtttaje with 17 ele-

t 4 yHPW Moon $o& SMB>* lev nta and batata

n&feSi'&tf.rt

$ 149.95

Famtnu,SiUnt, StaUJ-in-St—l

G-E THRIFT UNITwith Oil CooUng amf

S Y*at§Ptrformanc* /W«c(faiThe urigloul fatal cold-mf if ifif r»w hmltni thif h>tbeen perfected throughI) yeaui of nuu>ui»ctu»in#.

• Not all die faawy ftntuw of theG-B delow cabinets bw a wild,sound, sensible refrigerator thatwlUttkecare of all your needs. IdsGeneral Electric quality throughand through. Yon can be sun of•bondaat Ice cabet, houn d«t-tttts sod etie, dependable foodpceearvattoo fw yean and yean-

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PHONE P. A. 4-2452IASY PAYMENTS

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CABTERETFRIDAY, AHUL 14. 1939

dden'"^Lov^AfSir", "Huckleberry Finn", "Sergeant Madden"Lone Wolf Spy Hunt", This Week At Amboy Theatre

\ " ON STRAND SCREEN, - \UA,r:<mr<irRFFN • ON CRESCENT SCREEN U N 5

i r . r . t r N CW MAJESTIC SCREEN _ _ _ m t m i ^ ^ ^ ^ i j«MM«»SBLaaHIIIIBfitfSUflflHHHMBON DITMAS SCREEN ^-^^u^^^^m ^ | ^ ^ a ^ M H M M H I H | ay9flH| l HHlHM^ H E ^ ^ H

"The I.oni> Spy Hunt," firit of a «erie< of Columbia filmn featuringWarren William at the light-finrered ropiue, open* Friday at theCrricent Theatre, with Ida Lupino co-featured. Fruit'" MI.nwrence pointing a tub-machine gun at Mr. William, whHay worth and Ben Weldon stand by. 11-year-old Virjiniler, a new child tarnation, ii cast in "The Lone Spy Hun

• howinf together with "Tke Sinning Cowgirl1' at O - '

YotinR Mnk**y Rnnnry, wlm in ill*1 imit has "ttolpn thp picturr"from manv a famnui itar, romci into hit own at lait ai 11 full -flvdgtd i i n himirlf ftnnnrv miht i hii Tint iota itarring appear,anr*- iii tlir title role of MarL Twain't clatiir tale of boyhoodjoy. an.l norrowi, "Thr Adventure! of HUCKLEBERRY FINN."The pirtiirr iipciu Fridny »l the Ditmai Theatre where it will be

»Jii>Hn for the next 7 dayi.

1 Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn'Presents Mickey Rooney As Star

Romance ii given a leriei of erilrrtaining dramatic complicationswhen it »mjte.f a lpy»-prnnf international heart-breaker and afur-and-diamond-loving lady'of It-inure in "Love Affair/' eo-itar-ring Irene Dunne and Charlr* Bnyrr, Maria Outpemkaya, LccBowman, Aitrid Atlwyn and Mnurii p Motrovich Are featured in

thii RKO Radio Picture.

HYearOldVirginiaWeidlerMadeHer Stage Debut From A Soap Box

Wallace Berry. I nrninr .lohn.on and Tom Brown in a .cenr"Srrn"-«nt Madden"

"The Adventures uf llui-kleherry

Finn," Mark Twain's sequel to

•• "Tom Hiiwyur." with Mickey Unn-

ney in the litle nile, pltiyiiiK his

first solo s inning |)urt in :i lira-

:. matU1 stm-y uf life on the Missis-

'i iiippi, is the uttractiiin »tai'ti»K tu-

\;: day at the Ditnnis Theatre.

'i Familiar to millions of leiiik'is,

\ the Mark Twain story presents

i Mickfy us the river lad who seeks

J, to aid a runaway slave to escape

?•• up the river to n free state. Their

i raft is invaded by two comical

"The King" and "The

Duke," who (five bojjus Shake-

speaienn plays, plot to sell the

slave buck into slavery, und are

about to dtTruud two girls of their

1 rvice as

where (Hie

the Mississippi, and

of the last old river

stoameis still in service in thiscountry staged the drumutic raceto roaeue the «lave from a lynchmob.

Richard Thorpe, who filmed'The Crowd Roars" and other hits,

directed the new picture. The caatincludes Walter Connolly as the

" who. with Mickey a&Juliet,»tage* an absurd "Romeo and Ju-liet" performance in a river vil-lage. "The Duke," William Fraw-ley, veteran of stafte and screen,and .the, kindly Widow Douglass,belief actrew of the hoy, is .enactedby Elizabeth Risdon. Jim, the run-away, is played by Hex Ingram,the negro actor who scored as "DeLawd" in "Green Pastures."

The. two heiresses whom Mickey

Irene Dunne, Charles Boyer StarsIn Intriguing European Romance

father's estate when H\lck exposesthem ami precipitates a dramaticclimax.

Much of the action was filmed j w'atson, Victor Kiliun and Claraon the .Sacramento River, which did Blandick.

rescue.* from the swindlers areplayed by Lynne Carver and JoAnn Sayeis, and the remaining

! supporting roles are filled by Minor

Making their n>st appearancetogether as a romantic team, IreneDunne find Charles Boyer have theftellar rules in "Love, Affair," com-ing- to the Majestic Theatre Satur-day. Produced und directed byLeo McCarey, who was responsiblefor the Academy prize-winning hit,"The Awful Truth," the currentoffering affords Miss Dunne herfirst straight dramatic role in sev-eral years.

Miss Dunne is east as the luxury-loving fiancee of a wealthy busi-ness man who sends her on fre-quent, trips tp' gurope' to .collectart objects for* win IleturninBfrom one of these missions, smeets Charles Boyer, the notoriousContinental playboy.

Although Boyer is also engaged,the shipboard acquaintance of themundane couple quickly develops

i n t i i

2 BIGHITS

ALWAYSCRESCEH

FREE DISHESTo the Ladiei

Every Mon. and

rl'JITH Olltni IMW.. •,•»»,

FRIDAY - SATURDAY and SUNDAYThe gayest of all bandittiis battling a spy ring now!

toW A R R E N W I L L I A M • I D A L U P I N O

And That Grand Liltle Heart-Breaker Virginia Weidler

' ^ C ° r l T "FLYING G-MEN"

LOIIH hefore nhe became the'precocious brat" of many a Holly-wood film, 11-year-old VirginiaWeiiller was a stage star, Herstardom was confined, however, tothe "Soap Bon Theatre" in tneWeidlar Hollywood home, wherethe child's mother was accustomedto give Virginia, her brothers andsisters, the benefit of her theatri-

. . , , cal training.K«nuinc romance that virtu- M r s W e i d l e r w f l g o n c e o n e Q£

them both off then , K u r o p e ' s greatest opera stars, andlittle Virginia —youngest in thefamily — soon acquired a fluentknowledge of French, Italian andGerman. A natural mime, she pro-gressed rapidly under her mother'scoaching, so that she quickly ruledthe Soap Box Theatre.

Taken to a studio interview dur-ing "Moby Dick," which starredJohn Barrymore, Virginia walked

sweepsallyfeet. At a brief stopover on theI-'ort uRiiese island of Madeira, theromantic influence of '.he pictures-iue background fuses thoir love

into an almost invulnerable so-lidarity.

Boyer, who has known only acaviar-and-champagne life, decidesto prove himself worthy of thisgreat love by a six-month romanticmoratorium, during which he willwork in Mew York BB an artist.Similarly, Miss Dunne goes to workus ii night club: singer.

At the end of the period, theyrush to the established meetingground, the Empire State Build-ing. Boyer arrives first, but hissweetheart meets with an aiitomobile accident and is taken to thehospitai.

off with a coveted child's part. Shemade her debut in that film, and ayear later made her first stage ap-pearanc?, This wag, with Rrancist e M e f rn:"AuNmn Crocus,1' with'Virginia's role being entirely inGerman.

Subsequently, her career has

been an uninterrupted PUCPCBR-Freckles," "Laddie," "Peter Ib-

betson," "Timothy's Quest," Maidof Salem," "Souls at. Sea," "MenWith Wings," "The Outcasts ofPoker Flat" and "Out West Withthe Hardys" ore only a few of herrecent pictures.

Currently featured in support ofWarren William and Ida Lupino in

olumbia s "The Lone Wolf SpyHunt," at tne Crescent Theatre,Virginia possesses what is perhapsher most colorful role to date. Sheis seen as a child who likes radioprograms, and who re-lives themto the extent of constantly "ulay-ing" her father's butler, or slap-ping toy handcuffs on him.

Virginia still takes part in SoapBox productions, though now thescenes are a rehearsal for thoseshe is to do the next day at thestudio.

Twenty-seven hundred tons o:itcel went into the construction o:the General Motors Building at theKtW Yoffc World's i'alr. Coveringsome seven acres at Ihe head of thCentral Mall, it is the largest structure of »ny single exhibitor.

Wallace Beery In Puhe-RingiiStory'Ser geant Madden'AtStraiSon of a Kansas (lily police-

man, Wallace Beery plays his firstpolice characterisation in the title-role of "Sergeant Madden," storyf the New York police which opens;oday at the Strand Thaetre.

With Beery typifying one of'New York's Finest," Alan Curtis

appears as his son, a rookie copwho attempts to win promotion by

smart" short cuts and thus runsafoul of the law he is sworn torepresent. Then it becomes thefather's duty to put a halt to thecriminal career of his own son.

Tom fcrown is seen as Beery'sadopted son who idolizes his fos-ter-brother but is true to the ideateof his foster-father. And Lor-raine Johnson i« the Irish waifwhom Beery makes his adopteddaughter. After she marries Cur

tis she finds herself unnshurinit the life of a criin,

In the supporting cast nr.:if outstanding featured •among them Fay Holrien as |:.iwife, Marc Lawrence as ink

Hy" Ceders, David Cur.the "Dead End Kids" as a .petty thief, Marion Martin n-cey's sister, Donald HaimWelden und Etta McDamH

Adapted from an originalA Gun in His Hand," by \\i|

A. Ulman, Jr., "Sergeant M;•was given authentic bsck^of New York's lower west Mpictures in detail the work .New York police departnui',ing audiences behind the sn ishow the tniining givenO'Toole, for sixteen years ,iber of the department, si:.tuchnical adviser.

READE'S

STRAND 4 DAYSSTARTING

WITH

PREVUE TONITE!

"Big House" Beery

Matching Witt and

Hot Lead With

Vicious Gangsters!

CHANEft AffiR CHAPTER could only be madeby these two bril-liant stan...togetherfoi the l in t time!

pAGEWATER RUSTLERS"

Just as YOU readthem sitting upall night. . .But now REALplaces . . . REALpeople . . . REAL

adventures!

— AUo —GRACIE FIELDS

In"SMILING ALONG"

Truly A Laugh Sen«ation

AUo —"BLOCK-HEADS"

W:thLAUREL & HARDY

They're Funnier Than Ever

"SERGEANT MADDEN"with

TOM ALANBROWN • CURTIS

la iaine JOHNSON

MARK TWAIN'SImmortal

3 DAYS STARTING WITH

PREVUE TUESDAY NITEMARTHA RATE

BOB 1OPE

with LEEBOWMAN

WithANDY DEVINE

ALAN MOW BRAYLast Times Today

"BLACKWELL'S

ISLAND"LASTTIMESTODAY

WEDNESDAY 8:45 P. M. PARTY NIGHTTHURSDAY, FREE £HINA TO THE LADIES DEANNA DURBIN

TEL. P. A. 4-3388

ON STATE ST. AT THE FIVE CORNERSPERTH AMBOY

SEVEN (7 ) DAYS STARTING WITH

PREVUE TONITE!TWO (2) COMPLETE SHOWS NOTE EARLY PREVUE

(i:23 "Blackwell't ltland"

7:38 Huckleberry Finn"

9:10 "Blackwell't [•land"

10:25 "Huckleberry Finn'

Last Complete Show Starts at 9:10 P. M.

PREVUETIME TABLE

SEVEN ( 7 ) DAYS STARTING WITH

REVUE 1 ONITlTWO (2) COMPLETE SHOWS -NOTE EARLY PREVU:

READE'S

Continuous 2 to U P. M THEATRE Tel. P, A. 4 Oil

PREVUETIME TABLE

5:59 "i Smart Girl* Grow U|i|7:26 "Love Affair"9:09 "3 Smart Girl. Gruw

10:27 "Lovc Affair"

Last Complete Show Starts at 9:00 P. M.

PEES8FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1989

fARTERET PRESS•,,i,,rrlption, $1.50 Per Year

>|pphone C«rt«ret R-1B0O

r,,i,lished by Carteret PresuOFFICE

WASHINGTON AVE, CARTERET, N. J,

, ,;i;K(i(»RV EditorSpoft* Editor

,il ns second el»M mttter June 6,,, riirtcret, N. J.. Post Office, under.' ,,f Mnrch3. 1879.

.Sprm«( , , , , ! . ; | l O \ V f T B

Time Is Clem-Up Timeand May flowers aren't

, \ > h l

pil!'"1

fli I11

Thnt means spring cleaning

cleaning shouldn't meanI out the rugs, washing the cur-

lusting that little-used spare, it should mean a definite, plan-, r a m of putting property in apple-

-. i i i K

not only to improve its value..jii-jtnre, but to help prevent that

iioyer that strikes when we least

Current budget estimates will carry thedebt to within an eyelash of the $45 billionfigure by next year.

Even if a new limit is not sought at thenext session of Congress there is not muchto cheer about in the present situation. Thedebt has to be paid, and it can be paid onlythrough taxation.

But there is no assurance that a higherdebt limit will not be asked for next year.In fact, all indications point toward a biggerdebt This indication comes from the ap-

Jpajeiit'Washington policy of "let's spend[[and spend and spend some more."

It is about time for economy to be madea word of actuality and action instead ofjust a seven-letter word that sounds good inconversation. It is past time for a recog-nition of the fact that you can't spend acountry out of debt and depression.

And it is about time for the taxpayer-worker to start figuring out how he is goingto ma*e his earnings meet living expensesand government expenseg at the same time.

A Banking Job To Brag AboutWhen a bank fails, it is headline news.

PACK

Present Day Influence

it tire.

r-

n

|nr! nr r

l i . i n i i i ' V

i M l l H J !

IMil I',

ut ani

outbuildings are perfect in-fire from a carelessly dropped

ijrarctte. Check over fireplaces-from now on, such inciden-

units will be used more and;vsti'm less, As warm, sunny days

especially careful to keep grassii,.|<is clear of debris. Never burn

u hen there is a wind and have water„!, in case matters, get beyond control.Aiovc all, go through the house fromI,, |,, attic on an inclusive "junk-dispog-

|,r.,krram. Those old newspapers andp/inrs you've put carefully away andI m \ ii look at again—that broken f urni-v ih;it belongs to the worst period ofiiKn those odds and ends of "gay nine-s'1 clnthing—that jumble of worthless,hminiilile knicknacks in the hall closets:t riii <>f them all. Give them to a chari-er urbanization or the junkman. Andu'll niittcrially reduce the chance of a

Ire lullinj: your home.A number of progressive communities

it (an> mi general spring clean-ups eachlear us a civic function. Parkings are tend-I ami ii'Mutified, fences repaired, and oldIrctraps are torn down. Fire department*pid nt In•]• municipal bureaus cooperate nnd

t ilu drives. The result is a more at-vi and safer town—and a town whosecuts may feel proud of it. Every com-

lumtv which doesn't do that now shouldover—and start the idea goingIt pays dividends in dollars as

i>s tangible values.

What doesn't make the headlines is theimmensely important fact that only a micro-scopically small proportion of failures re-sult in any IORS to bank depositors.

In the overwhelming majority of in-stances, the assets of cloeed banks, plusassessments made against the stockholders,are more than sufficient to pay off all de-posits. And today, with practically allbanks carrying Federal deposit insuranceon all accounts up to $5,000, tha chance ofloss to depositors is so remote as to behardly worth considering—some 98 percent of depositors are covered by this in-surance.

American banking has discharged itspublic obligations in the finest conceivablemanner. It has been*far more responsiblefor this nation's epochal industrial and so-cial progress than most of us realize.

Wasteful Governments Best FriendMany oil companies advertise the price

of gasoline in this fashion: "Gas, 15 cents agallon; state and federal tax, 6 cents; total,21 cents."

If similar methods of illustrating theprice of all products were employed, theAmerican consumer would get the shock ofhis life.

OH, DON'T9fc •U.V.MRT,

A

THE FBMINIUEPO&TS MO

WE <MJ EXPECT THISAWV 04 V wow — '

V, X. (j.» . *

CHURCH DIRECTORYSt. Mark's Wf^~R«v. Orville N. Davidaon, rtettt.

ScrrlcM at 9 A. M., Sunday School immediately afterward.Pint PtMkytaHta—R»v. D. E. Lorrntt, panter. Strrteti at,

11 A. M. and 7:45 P. M. Bible aehool, 9:46 A. M. "'Fra* M«ir»r RaiVnaad—Ret. Alexander Daweiy, paitor.

Services for children, 9:80 A. M.; for adults, 10:30; vatptw,3 P. M. •;•

St. J«*««4'« 1. C — R « T Jotwph Mulligan, pastor. Maaaaa at7:30, 9 and 11 A. M.

Sacred H*(rt SWvak R. C—R«v. Andrew J. Sakaon, paator.Low manse* nt 8 »nd 9 A. M.; hlfh mam at 10:30 A. M.

Holy Family R. C.—Rev. Dr. JoMph Dtladou, putor.at R A. M. md 10:30 A. M.

Zion Latk«r»n - Rev. Frederick Noeldtoke, paitor. S«rtiewat!):4RA. M.

St. Eliuh,Ui'i H» ( «H>* R. C—Rev. Mark Hojoi, patter. 'Service, 9 A.M. low mau; 10 JO A. M. hlfh maaa. ^

St. D*m*triBi' Uknlmlaa—Rev. John Hundiak, paitor. 8«T» (

vices at 9 A. M, 10:15 A. M. and 7 P. M.HnnfaHaa BtptUt—Rev. Julius Hontiko, paator. Service*

II A. M. and R P. M. Prayer ntMting 9:30 A. M.; Sunday tehool10 A, M.; Young People's service, 7 P. M. Wednesday, 7 P. M.,Bible Study.

St. Ellat Creak C*ta«lie~Rev. Alexis Medvecsky, paator.Uiw m>u »t B A. M ; high mau, 10:30 A. M.; veaport at 8 P. M.

LoTiB» Julie* Con(r«|tilon—Rabbi Solomon Helmlicn.Sabbath services, Friday 7' P. M. and Saturday 9 A. M.

Brotherhood of liraal Congregation—Rabbi Ephraim Solo-mon Sabbath services, Friday 7 P. M. and Saturday 9 A. M.

Hi

Railroads Still The Goats

l i n k i

'O l l l l i l .

hot $ The Matter With Small Business?«Jersey essentially 18 a state of small

men. More than 90 per cent of our

I manufacturer* employ less than 500oik r. Of our 59,000 or more retailers,

H whdming majority are small mer-I1

l»-»

t)Vt

" "

lain

naturally, there is bound to be con-• interest in the New Jersey Statei "f Commerce announcement that

an extensive survey ofin New Jersey,

has been hit harder by the< »f the paftt few years than the.small enterprises. Many arefor survival against an adverse

tide. Can they *e helped? Canwm be developed which will make it

fur these small enterprises to im-!»'ir competitive conditions, obtain

credit and widen their markets?state Chamber is confident such a

1111 can be formulated. It is now"w the obstacles preventing adequateH|K "f small business in New Jersey,lns ''elating to advertising and de-m"t <>f wider markets, the effects ofal *tate and local taxation and ofll|"» adversely affecting the growth•"''•''s* of small enterprises.i l l! business needs such a program.1 l l t |i )- As Robert T. Bowman, state

points out, any programbusiness in New Jersey

aid to the economicstate as a whole. When weand industry, we help our-

When you buy a five-dollar pair ofshoes, a dollar or more is for taxes. Whenyou pay a three-dollar electric bill, 50 or60 cents represent* taxes. When you buy aforty-dollar suit, close to ten dollars goesfor taxes.

You can't dodge taxation—unless you'rea hermit living in the hills. On a normalday, you pay taxes a dozen times, thoughyou may not know it—when you drive yourear, ride a trolley, eat lunch, or make a pur-chase. When the American people get thistruth through their heads, there will be adrive for economy in government that willget somewhere. For ignorance of the factsis a wasteful government's best friend.

One Resolution You Should KeepBy this time, most of your New Year's

resolutions have probably been broken.That's only human. But there's one reso-lution everyone of us should make and keepor the twelve months ahead. Here it is:I resolve to do my part, as a motorist andedestrian, to help reduce America's ghast-,r death and accident toll."

During a large part of 1938, the acci-ent rate declined. But we haven't yetarned the right to compliment ourselvesnd sit back on our laurels. Tens of thou-ands of people died unnecessarily last year-the victims of recklessness and ignorance,ens of thousands more will die unneces-arily this year—unjess all of us do some-hing about it.

There are three basic approaches to theaccident problem. First, comes education.And that doesn't mean just teaching therudiments of safety to school children. Italso means reaching the adult—continu-msly and pointedly—with those simple in-tructiona and suggestions that, if followed,

will reduce the hazards of motoring 90 percent.

II'

Iaic

s">all business men but citizensgenerally will wish the State

its latest undertaking.•il

Aft The Horn U Stolen."much comfort to be found

«r iu the official Washingtonthat no increase in the Na

will be sought '»*

of the Treasury Morganit—it is just about a* com

on the stable door afte

'.urn) i e v e l i ;M

The real value of New Jemy'ajrailroads today in not more than30 to 50% of the valuations placedon them by the state for tax pur-poses, according to studies recent-ly completed by The AssociatedRailroads of New Jer»ey.

Since 1926, the New Jersey rail-roads have suffered losses in traf-fic and revenue of 50 to 60%. Thisvery great shrinkage in the demandtor railroad service has adverselyeffected the value of the roads byreducing: their earning power. Ithas alto lessened their ability topay taxes.

The railroads used to be almostthe only transportation agency inNew Jeriiey. Now they must sharethe available business with trucks,buses, airplanes, pipe lines, and in-land and coastal waterways.

The railroads have had to buytheir rights of way, build and main-tain their roadways, and pay inter-est on the bonds representing thecost of these things. On the otherhand, trucks and buses use thehighways, constructed at great publie expense, for the transport*tion of passengers and merchandise in direct competition with thirailroads.

Yet no account of these changeshas been taken in arriving at theassessed Valuations of railroads.Last year railroad property in theState was assessed at $441,556,-656, and on the basis of this as-sessment taxes of $20,364,054 werelevied against the railroads.

Actually, however, the real valueof the railroads was not more than$250,000,000, and any person orgroup who would invest this sum ofmoney in the New Jersey railroadswould not earn 2% on the invest-ment. The taxes on the New Jer-sey railroads, at an average rate of'$4.60 per $100 on excessive valua-tions, represent a burden which

•very New Jersey railroad ishreatened by this tax situation,'wo of the larger railroad systems

and several of the smaller eorri-panies are now in bankruptcy.Other important railroads will beoroed into receivership if they

do not fret immediate tax relief.The justice and equity of the

railroads' position in this matter isbotne out by the Report of the NewJersey Commission on Tax Law Re-vision, which recommends that the>ate of taxation of the railroadsbe reduced.

The facts of the over-valuationand ruinous taxation of the rail-roads point to the need for re-ad-justment of railroad taxes, in thelight of present conditions, topoint where the railroads can paythem.

Only if they are given relieffrom the impossible tax situationnow confronting them can New Jersey railroads give adequate trans-portation service to the people othe State.

Department and oth«r agencieshich have participated in safetyrograms. New Jersey is faced withparticularly difficult problem be-

:ause of the heavy volume of inter-tate trafflc-^much of it of a com-

mercial nature^-which is hardw tocontrol than local traffic.

New Jersey is to be host to theannual meeting of the NationalSafety Council in Atlantic Citythis October. It is fitting that weshould show our guests an exampleof safety effort.

looks as it it might ba Garner vs.D«wey.

If that proves to be the 194Cline-up, we think De-wey will outlast the old man in A tough rampaign.—Washington, D. C, Times-Herald.

DRUID PARTY TONIGHTCARTERET — Carteret Grove,

Ancient Order of Druids, will holda card party tonight in GermanLutheran Hall. The followingcommittee will have charge of ar-rangements: Arlo Schur, MartinSchmitzer, Martin Rock, JohnRuckriegel, John Haas, ArthurMarkwalt, Robert and HermanHron, Adolph Nering, StephenFistes, Kenneth Van Bramer andOtto Eiffert.

HEBREW ALLIANCESETS DANCE DATEEsiex House In Newark

Will Be Scene; Mothers'Party Also Planned

CARTERET TV annual Spring;Dance of the Hebrew Social Alli-ance will be held Saturday night,May (!, at Essex Houne in Newark,with memborn and their fritnds attending. It is also expected rep-resentatives of similar organiia-rions in the vicinity will be pres-ent. Mian Anne Daniels and Ben-jamin Rabinowiti, chairmen, arebeing assisted by M1«tea ElsieRockman and Beatrice Roth, Mrs.Alfred I. Wohlgemuth, Dr. RalphWexler, Max Zelman and JosephWeiss.

SYNAGOGUE GROUPHOLD CARD PARTY:Brotherhood Of Uriel

Scene Of Gathering Here.On Tneiday

CARTKRET—The Ladies Auxil-iary nt thp Brotherhood of Israel •Synagojriw held n curd party Tuet- 'Iny night after its busineas meet*ing-, at the synagogue. Mrs. Hafr/ 'Gordon m'tlved a banquet clofeliand napkins to match and other'*award* went to the: followingMrs. Meyer Koblenti, Morris Wain*.1stein, Mrt. J. Bienstein and daugb*ter, Mary, Mrs. Robert Chodoih,,Mr». S. B. Brown, Mrs. Lillian fc»Vbrin. ;

Mrs. Harold Stern, Mri. Ladom '„Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Bt f l |

SocialThe social between the Hebrew

Social Alliance and the YoungFolks' Hebrew League of Rahwayorlginallv scheduled for Wednes-day, April 19th, has been postponedto Wednesday. April 26, at theEagles Hall in Rahway. There willbe many interesting features at-tending this social, highlights ofwhich will be * number of selec-

binowitz, Mrs. Harry Beraon,Edward Shapiro, Mrs. Chrlstln*Pollack, Mian Pearl Chodoih, Mr*. MDavid Jacoby. f |

Mrs. Max Schwartz, Mr. andMrs. H. Perlmuttcr, Bella W«in- .-.>«stein, Mrs. Robert Chodosh, Mra.Ephraim Solomon, Mrs. EdwardHopp, Dorothy and Esther Venook,Ann Rosenblum, Mr. and Mrt.''Samuel Wexler, Mrs. Sidney

the railroad companies cannot payand survive.

Today, the existence of almost

Other Editors Say

Second, comes law enforcement. In-:ompetent police—wholesale ticket-fixing—slothful prdsecutors—inefficient traffic

courfa—these $re among the best friendsthe Grim Reaper has. A number of Amer-ican cities ha\f« materially reduced theiraccident rates by revising their traffic codes,training their traffic police, and doing awaywith fixing. •

third, comes better street and high-way design, to' eliminate "accjdent prone"locations1. Many an intersection which wasa virtual death trap has been made safethrough competent engineering. Everycommunity should start on « iotog-time pro-gram that will gradually do avyay with thiscause of deaths'and injuries, v <•'

We can have safetyv-r-if w^wunt it, andare willing to earn i t This J* a universalproblem, and its solution depends om-the co-operation of us all. We nJftilftrBrogrerctoward that ej)d last year—itt'a. do'* Jfre»t

Elliott Says Garner Lead*Elliott Roosevelt, son of the

President, surprised the customersin his Texas broadcast night beforelast by delivering a resoundingpat to the back of Vice President•John Nance Garner. The meat ofElliott's speech was contained inthis paragraph:

"This much, however, is certainJohn Garner is in the driver's sealright now, well in the lead as alikely Democratic candidate for thPresidency in the 1940 elections,"

The logical inference ia that thatcame from the feedbox; but wheth-er the Whits House or the Garnerfeedbox, we don't know.

Anyway, there seems to 'be agood deal in It. Mr. Garner, a con-servative old devil at heart, isnevertheless popular with personsof all shades of political opinionin Washington. The Vice Presi-dent usually retires into obscurity!ik« a cuttlefish hiding behind iteown ink.

Mr. Garner has done anythingbut that. Such a wisecracking,good-natured, magaetic qld boy ithe that practically all the men en-joy hia company, and moat of theladies consider biro a card.

Hia chances for the 1940 Demo-cratic nomination, aa Biliott Roose-velt gays, look food. Garner wouldprobably have the southe»n delega-tion pretty solidly behind him If h*should go after the nomination inearneat. He's the kind of man theSouth generally likes. And the

Safety AwardAB the result of effective work

n reducing highway accidents,New Jersey has been awarded firstplace in the Eastern division ofstates and grand prize among allstates by the National SafetyCouncil. According to the termsof the award, New Jersey came'nearest to doing the maximum

that could be done practically fortraffic safety" in 1938.

Traffic deaths in New Jersey forthe year were cut from 1,278 to885, in 1938, and from an averageof 1,191 for the three years pre-ceding 1938. Great credit is givenNew Jersey for this reduction inthe face of substantial obstacles.The New Jersey death rate for1938, per 1,000,000,000 miles tra-veled, was 8.6 compared to thenational average of 12.7.

Results are not the only con-sideration in making the sward.Up to 50 points were granted forthe reduction itself, and 50 pointsmay be had for accident reportingsystems, traffic engineering and en-forcement, child safety programsand public education.

Many state and local agenciesdeserve credit for this gratifyingnward—state and local police, Mo-tor Vehicle Qepartment, Highway

'Samaritan' VictimizedBy Mep He Helped

WHITEHALL, N. Y.-ClarenceKilburn, farmer and Adamsvlllelumberman, played the role of GoodSamaritan with unsatisfactory re-sults when he came upon a strandedautomobile on the Whitehall-FairHaven rnad Kilhurn stopped andfound that a car, occupied by two19-year-old Whitehall youths andtwo young women, was without gas-oline. He carried the quartet toWhitehall to obtain a new supply.

After the young people had leftthe Kilburn car, Mrs. Kilburn dis-covered that her purse, containing$45, was missing. She complainedto police and the young men werearrested.

Pleading guilty to the charge be-fore Justice of the Peace WarnerB. Nelson, the youths were givensuspended sentences of 60 days eachand instructed to attend church oncea week. They also must reportweekly to Whitehall's chief of po-lice, Edgar C. Whalen.

The money was returned to Mrs.Kilburn by the father of ane of theboys.

tions by the Swing Band of the | f °,wn' M rf 'IW " r» • H «"» C h ^

Rahwav organization and a o n - ! *?*• R o ^ . C h o i l n s h ' Mfe- T h o « ^Rahway organization and a oneact comedy entitled "A Bachelor'sBaby" to be given by the Alliance,There will be refreshments anddancing following the program.

In charge are: Sylvia Schwartzrepresenting the Hebrew Avariceand Ike Prybel representing theYoung Folks' League of Rahway.

At the meeting of the HebrewSocial Alliance held on Thursdayof last week, a committee was ap-pointed to arrange the annual Mo-ther's Day celebration which willbe hold Sunday, May 14, 1939.Heading this committee are: Dr,Herman Mechlowitz, chairman; as-sisted by: Dr. David Roth,Daniels, Joseph Weiss, MissesPearl Chodosh and Sylvia Tobrow-sky, of Woodbridge,

Tuesday members of the Discus-don Group attended a debate atthe Perth Amboy High School be-

oMMcNally, Flnryce Brown, J. Reid'er,Mrs. Abraham Zucker, Sylvia To-brosky, Mrs. Dora. Jacoby, tin,Joseph Blaukopf, Mrs. SamuelKatz, Mrs. William Brown.

Sylvia Brown, Mrs. SidneyFox, Mrs. David Seattle!. Haft?and Sylvia Steinberg and Mrs. LeoRockman.

tween A.Greeman.

J. Musty andThe topic was,

RussellFuturep

of Peace." It was a discussion ofthe Wagner Labor Relation Act,

TO MEET TONIGHTCARTERET—The meeting Of

Our Lady of Hungary Roman Ca-tholic sick and benefit society,postponed from last Sunday, willbe held tonight at 7 o'clock. Themeeting was put oft because of theEaster holidays.

and its effect upon Labor, Any-one wishing to attend discussionsat various places throughout theyear, may ask the chairman of thecommittee and suitable arrange*ments will be made. The chair-man iff thia committee is Mr'.Abraham Glass.

Crippled Man WatchesTide Slowly Engulf HimLONDON.—Unable to move due

to a broken leg, James Noble,60, lay on the beach at Ipswich forthree hours watching an approach-ing tide.

Rescue came just as the waterwas creeping around his neck.

While throwing stones to his dog,Noble fell six feet from the dockonto the shingle when the tide waslow. He had almost given up hopewhen his cries were heard by FrankSmith, proprietor of a riversidehotel.

S I C ' E M I

Browing conservatism in vartouother parts of th« country wouldflnd *t Icaff one rallyjng point inGarner. ' '• • ;

;

At,thi* Ume,. 18 month*

RBPOKT OV THK CONIMTHIN OF THE

CARTERET B A M # TRUST COMPANYOF CAHTKUET, MOW .IIOItMKV, A MKMBHR OF THK FEDERAL

KBSKHVB BYHTKM. AT THK i.'LUHE OF BUSINEHU ON MARCH29, 1»M, PUnLIHltKH IN Ad'OUDANCK WITH A CIAI.I, UADR RV.THE FKllEHAL RKKERYK HANK OF THIfl DIKTIUCT 1'UP.yUANT

TO THK PUOVi.SIONK OF THK FEDEHAL IlKHKliVK ACTASSETS

Loniia unrt IMHC'OIIMIH (incliHllng 113.13 overdrafts) fUnited KtiiU'H Oovoriimtlit ul>lli|iitUuiB, direct and KU.irmiteedObligations or Mlutex mid political nubdlvl»long . .Other liolids, union, itml <leln!liturnaCorporate Blocks (lni;!u<llng HS62-IH slock of Federal He-

nerve Imnk) - ,Cash, bntaiK'ex with olher hanks, including reserve balance,

and cash Itoma In proceea of collectionBank premlfieB owned (53,540.00. furniture and flx-

turen I 8,010.00Bank premise* owned are subject to $ None Hem not aa-

eumcil by bunk)Real estate owned other than bank premlteiInve»tmentn and other ftiiets Indirectly representing b u k

pfemlHex nr other real entate .NoneCustomer*' llul'IIUy to thin bank on acceptance; out-

standing NoneOther assets None "

387,327 «139.071 t l f£O3,O7t 4S

4.J52M1

381,413 ( F j>|

36,611,1

TOTAL AHBHT8 i , ILIABIL1TIKS

Deniaml deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corpora-tions - , . |

Time deiioxiln of Individual!, partnerships, and corporation!Deponltd of United Statea Government (Including- posUI

savings) _...i*»n«Depoilts of atatea and political subdlvlilona ,LiepQsUa of banks ', .NoneOther delHinltti (cf rilntd nnd sIKoera' chcoka, «to) .,.,..,

TOTAL DEPOSITS ......$ .1,111,111.(1Bills payable, rediscount!, and oth«r liabilities for bor-

rowed money i.. .„. Nen«Mortffugea or'other liens, I None on baqk prethlpie* and

I None on other real enlato ..™......NoneAcceptance! executed by or for account m this Afink And

outHtandlng ,.^...Hon»other littbilltleu : I

TOTAL LIADILITIKH (not Inoiu4in« obH»ft«ona"shown In Item 33) I

CAPITAL ACCOUNT?aplt»l • - | 'iurplu* ,_».._,...< ....4'Tn<Hvlded profits ...,.,.... „.,.... -,...,Hoservcn I mill retirement account for preferrafl capital)....

TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNT ...Z r '...„•.•. I

36UJ5.&l,367,77l,ff|

II11 t i l l

100,000.445,0'OO.j

J7

111,397 J t

TOTAL LIABILITIES A N D C A P I T A L XCCOUNT .....: I U41.U7.I1-S' T h i s bank's cuultiil UOUBIKU of. mrmnun utoolt irltli tuta( pur value < "

tlOU.I'IMI.UU. , 'ttHMHMUMDA

P l e d g e d a t o e t s ( a n d s e c u r i t i e s I o s , n e 4 ) <b<M>k * l M )(cj Asutiis pledged to (jmiliry far «x«r«lk« uf. flducj

powers, and [or iiun)i>«.«« utller thaj| to secure lt»bfirtlati.TOTAL ..„ >\ , • ..._11:

lary or corpH6 UOM

Secured und preferred liabilities; •(a) Deposits secured by pledged «M«U pursuant \n re-<iulrem«nt« of law

TOTALTOMli . , . , „ ..,..,,.1*., •i, <Ttiomaa O, K»ny'on, Treasurer ot the above-nsfy tliut the- above it»t»rn»nt la true t6 the ^eitcertify

und belief.

najBfjd bank, h«f

Til "'.*

CAftTORff

l ^ f A G F SIX __—~——™~—— —~ """ """""" ~ I I I 1 fill

ICarteret High School Field Day To Be Held May 1a, Twilight League Head, Sees

S, gCloser Competition This Season

C A I . ' I I ! " V I

{ b e k e - n . • ••• Hi

• B a u ' l m l ' I '-.''I'll

l i t w n v |:1 I. in •

i f l i l n , | i i . ' " l . : '

• c * n t i i i t i . i . i '•

m c n i l i e i r - ••' i h

ir r ^ n '

III. I -.'

l l l . l t

I.I 111.

, in ThisI. . . i . t h i - r

h.nr . l of

the ,'iddi-

SI . HI ill!

• ba lanced

t>» theplayer

' Should lie

tion nftJub will 'tin!..' f"i

OUtfH

" W h e e l . T ba-i b e e n improved

di|i..M of :i n i iml ier of now

Mr Ilila -niil, "nnd they

inbl in tlieri' e v e r y inch

o f the way linhlinif for t h e (lag.

T h e l i k e ; . ;i l o m h i i u i t i o n of the old

UkfN and the ( ' l i n e r s , hiive n good

f l u b . W e don't know m u c h nbout

t h e St Kliii'- tenin. bnl t h e y p layed

a n d won a Kiindly "lilli'.'l of K,lines

in lH.'tH, and ihmihl enii ie iiliini;."

T h e Hovei•;. lii't yenrV ehnm

Ukes Start NinthSuccessive Season

. :i|i|ii'«i to have the strong

. i .lull on paper. The Rocknen,while limy have split up during theAint'i, Imve reorganized and puttogether n club which promises tolie in there nil senson, Holdoversinclude A! Terpak, who pitched ano-hitter last August and BillO'Rorke, hard-hitting catcher.

Manager Dan Donovan of theSporting Club predicts big thingsout of his CIHII. which somehow fail-ed to hit its stride in 19.18. Dono-van hns I-ejrs Korsi beck in thefold, with Joe Frnnkowski behindthe bftt.

Arrangement* are still pendingfor the opening dny double header,tentatively scheduled for April 30.The first hiilf schedule will soonhe released by the secretary's of-li'-e. and will lie published in theloenl preps.

Club To Open WeekFrom Sunday, April 23, AtHome—Expect Big Year

CAUTKKKT The ( 'nrleret Uk-rainian A i biiMdiall lenm willinaugurale i:,- nintli ';lrninht sca-sOn n week fioin Sunday, April 21),a t home, aeeordini; I" an announce-ment made this week. Appropri-a te opening day ceremonies willbe hold for the yame.

The irtiiiu' will mark the start ofone of the longest records com-piled by any temii in town—onein which the I'kes litive played 193games, winning IICl and losing

loin: record given

Udzielak, ZyskLead In Doubles

CAItTERET—With a toUl of.'I'.I.'IT pins, Mutt Udzielak and Leo

' Zysk nre the new leaders in theI Kcd Crown doubles s1

tournament being run off at theAcademy alleys during the presenttime.

Danny McDonnell and John Mc-Donnell, brothers, are second witha total of 3694.

The leaders:Matt Udiielak-George Zysk.. 8957D. McDonntll-J. McDonnell 8694F. Donnelly-W, Zysk 3670H, Chomicki-S. Grego 3647Me«ey-F. Baka S622Anderson-Paterson 869EFedor-Kazmer 3581

3570only (if). Thithe Ukes the distinction of bo-1 Drewski-Ughiing the oldest active club ill Car-

te re t today.

The likes will fiice a hie; season.Besides pl:iyinir Twilight I.CIIRUI1

basehiill, they iiiv entered in thonewly organized Middlesex Countyinter-city hiiHcbnll Iranui ' which ismade up of eiiflit teams from vari-ous point.; of the county. Alsothey will plity independent Raniesdur ing the week.

This year's club will liemarked by the presence of manyfamiliitf dices, from previous sea-sons. Topping'the list of for-1"'"' t h e Mechanical No. 2 bowlmer stars who will he back in ' ing teams both came through with

Hamulttk-Donnelly 3B49Mielecz-Siekierka .1625

Office, MechanicsNo. 2, Score SweepsMain Office Takes 3 From

Scrap Plant No. 2; Me-chanics No. 2 Trim Cop ax

CAkTKKET -The Main Office

uniform this reason will lieTerebecki brothers, Joe ami I

the

who hui Ir I'ke.s to many avictory in recent years. Also onhand will he Whiley Paslowski,who in lllll;! eoninilcd a brilliantbatting average of .tiliK for aneighteeiH'uine schedule. StanMasluch will be another old timer

' to return to the fold.

Candidates who are fighting itout for the iiilield portions in-clude Walter Hobenchik, WhitcyPaslowski, Walter Zap, MichaelOsyf, Nick Hamadyk and Al Lucas,

The outfield will be pickedfrom the following list, includingJoe Terebecki, Dinny Dobrowski,Joe Wadiak, Charley Bolianek undStan GuraI.

The brunt of the ditching willbe shared by (leu;1 Clinda andDim Dobrowski.

Among the pitchers who will• 'carry the burden Ibis season are

Joe Kidman, Peter Terebecki,Michael Bobenchik and StanleyMasluch.

Eugene Wadiak will be back inhis ojd post as itmnugrr of theteam. The club will be newly

i, Uniformed. Practice sessions arer'lield regularly, with two beingf- scheduled for tomorrow und Sun-

sweep victories while the CoppePowder keglers scored a two-plywin this week in the U. S. Metal:intci'dcpartment bowling matches.

The scores:Main Office (3)

Einhorn 135 133 H<Possoby 148 149 13Cheslak. ' 143 202 15Kitzler 171 158 15Jaeger 163 141 14

Totals 760 783 78Scrap Plant No. 2 (0)

Goetz 116 175 10McDonnell 144 154 17;Schein 156 141 13Kruna 123 ' 87 11Blind 125 125 12

Totals 664 692 667

Bears To Be FetedAt 2d Annual DinnerBanquet Arranged By New-

ark Fans At Essex HouseOn April 19—Rickey , Di-M a g f i o To Be Present

NEWARK The outstandingport* banquet in northern Jersey,he annual dinner in honor nf theewark Beam, will he bold next

Wednesday evening (April 19) inhe Esiiex House. Sponsored byhe Grtaslies, the Bears' officialtoting organization, the banquetill pay tribute to the champion-

hip 1938 team and give baseballam a chance to meet members ofhe 1939 squad.

The first such affair, arrangedlast year by a committee of .15

ewark baseball fans, is now gen-irally regarded an the finest basc-all dinner ever staged in a minorague city. Tickets were Hold out

layt before the date of the ban-,u«t and scores of fans purchasedeats outade the hall, where theyould at leant glimpse the team nndhe speakers.

The Yankees will be representediy Manager Joe McCarthy, Joe Di

Maggio, Lou Gehrlg and LeftyQomer.. The occasion will murkDiMaggio's first appearance inNewark, Members of the World'?Champion? who Ian year toiledor the. Bears will also be on hand.

These include Buddy Rosar, lend-ng batter of the league laat «en-on; Chnrley Keller, the loop's ace[lugger; Jack Haley, who toppedhe circuit's pitchers in won-lost

percentages and Atley Dnnnld,lopubir strikeout artist.

Dr. Kddie Farrell, former majorijtue inflelder and member of the

1932 World's Champion Yankeesand of the 1934 and 1935 Newarkclubs, will act as toaatmaster, andipeakers will include FrankShaughnessy, president of the In-ternational League; BranchRickey, director of the St. LouisCardinals' farm system, who isknown its baseball's most brilliantafter-dinner speaker, and manyothers.

Hijfh spot of the evening will bethe presentation of a memorialresolution to Colonel Jacob Rup-pcrt by The Grizzlies. This willmark the first time any group hasthus honored thn man who gaveNewark its most powerful teams.The resolution will be received byGeorge Ruppert and will later bepermanently displayed in RuppertStadium.

me 2tASHAW?

n3"<; it) '••r\w*; b 10

my 120/! *TWOB

moup vowsAWdt I?, ARt

*'•«* 10,000PRllfe? s? Ihf. P N P * V*. !9?9

POWUNG

HEBMHIMB86ARD

t -,sm ht powttwa

Academy Team Beats Carteret CardinalsGarwocd, Wins $100 ; To Open Here SundayCarteret Bowler* Score

Again In Return Match—Win Another $100

CARTKRET—The Academy Al-ley bowlers are richer by (mother$100.00 today.

After winning a hundred bucksfrom the Garwood Recreation pin-ners nt the local alleys two weeks

O, the Carteret brigade rolled11 return match at Garwood lastSaturday night.

And the Carteret pinners camethrough with flying colors (and$100.00) by taking the match by91 pins 2826 to 2735,

The scores:Academy All«j«

Lccal Combine to OpposePowerful South RiverClub—Prokopiak SlatedTo Hurl

Hudsons Leave ForCleveland MondayCnrterit Pinners To Com-

pet* In A.B.C. TournamentFor Third ConsecutiveYrar

CARTERKT The Hudson A.('. howler*, lending pin team intown for the past five years, willentrain for Cleveland this Mondaynight to compete in the A. B. C.bowling tourney. The local pin-ners-, who enme in the money lastyear when they walked off withmore than $300 in prise moneyat. Chicago, are slated to bowl inthe Hinp-les competition nn Wcdnes-dny niijht and roll in the doublesmi Thursday afternoon.

The Hudsnns, bowling in theStaten Island Major League underthe banners of the Log Cabin club,and film as the Academy Alleycombine in Carteret, will maketheir third iippcnrnncc in the A.H. ('. competition.

The howlers and their average!this season compiled by Mat Ud-/.ielak follow:

Mike Siekerka—U. S. M. R 102Staten Island 18

Fred Kitiler—U. S. M. R - - 199Staten Islnnd - 19C

Hunk Chomicki—Industrial - 20Staten Island ... IRC

Leon Zysk—U. 8. M, R - IOCStnten Ialnnd IS

Walter Zy«k—Staten Island 18

Matt Udzielak—Staten Island

Sketch Over 1,000 Years OldA crude sketch of a woman twang-

ing the strings of a harp, found inthe pavement at Amageddon inPalestine, in a layer of ruins, datesfrom bdtort 8000 B. C,

Old Bnuhet DacfnlKeep old tooth briiahei to uie

lor cleaning crevices in delicataChina, vases, etc. A wash withlathtr or a brush with water withvinegar in it will brighten many adull ornament.

Fiekierka ....P. Donnelly ..H. ChomickiF. Kitzler ...M. Udzielak.

Totals

198180181154161

171204178194188

20120915)9218190

874 935 1017Garwood fi*«r«ationi

Pester 182 206Kelly 17G 13SRicardo 144 15.1Koehler 189 170Lngesl 233 170

180208187212203

Totals 904 840 985

CAUTKRET—The Carteret Car-dinpls will get off to an early startnml open their 1939 baseball sea-son this Sunday aiii....«;;;; at theCopax Field, opposing tho power-ful South Rivor Blackcata, a newlyorganized team composed mainlyof former Soilth River ex-highschool stars.

Frank Prokopiak, leading hurl-t>r for the Cards last season, hasbeen picked {or the mound as-signment. On the receiving endwill be "Speedy" Brozowski.

The Cards have their slate filledup fully for the next two months.

The probable lineups and bat-ting order for this Sunday's gameis as follows:

1. J, Bialqwarcipk 3b.2. J, Orban-. r.f.5. W, Finn 2b.A. F. Prokopiak p.B, G. Kopln c.f.6. J. Finns l.f.7. J. Brozowski c.8. J. Mittro lb.9. A, Gluchoski g.sGame scheduled for 2:30 P. M.

19(Lineups for A. B. C. Events

The Hudsons have announce'the following pairings for the A8, C. events.

(Team)Mike Siekerka.Walter Zysk.Henry Chomicki.Fred Kitzler.Matt Udziekk.

(Doubles)Mike Siekerka—Matt OdzielnFred Kitzler—Henny ChomickWalter Zysk—Leon Zysk.

Namci Leonora and LenoreThe names Leonora, short tor

Eleanora, and Lcnore are forms ofthe Greek Helen and therefore mean"light."

Thousauds o( Different CoinsA London expert eitimates thai

there are more thar 32,000 dltleremcoins Ir the world.

Kochecks Reorganize

Official Program Of Field EtenlAnnounced By Frank McCarthl

CAHTKHKT -The second wi-

tal nnterel High School Field

'Hy, sponsored by the High School

udent Orpanization under Frank

McCarthy, director of physical

ducntion at the high school, will

e held Wednesday, May 17, at the

arteret High School stadiumeld.The program -will begin at 9 A.

I. with an appropriate band selec-on and continue all day, windingp -with a baseball game between

Jarteret High School and NewBrunswick High late in the after-

oon. •The affair promises to be a great-success than the first field day

which wag held lajt year. Severallundred students will participate injhe events which will include 00Irani dashes, 70-yard dashes, 80-ard dashes, 100-yard dashes, 220-

For

South America's PopulationAbout 90,000,000 persons live tn

South America, more than one-halfof whom reside in Brazil.

Carteret Will Be RepresentedBy One Of Greatest TeamsIn History This Year

CARTKFIET- -Carteret in goim;to have one of the greatest soft-ball trams in history this year.

tor the Kochtcks, pride of theorough Ijtst year, have reorgan--,ed againJthis year, under Joerosko und Bill Beisel, and willave one "swell" ball club. Theam is being sponsored by Billocheck, of the Kocheck Pharm-

Oldest Known Printed BookThe oldest known printed book,

discovered in China, bears the dateMay 11. 898.

S, Kopin .O. Schur ....N. SeibertA. Perka ...L. Zysk ...O. Senk ...

Copnx (0)146138158173154

150

179203149163

130138207175178

Totals 789 844 628Mechanical No. 2 (3)

pntgers Nine ToPlay Fordham TeamG a m e Scheduled For Neil-

son Field Tomorrow—Other Rutgers Sports News

NEW BRUNSWICK-The RuUgerft buseball team, tijtlit defen-sively but miiible lo find its battingeye to date, will play host to Ford-ham'.s powerful nine on Neil sonField in New Brunswick Saturdayafternoon at 2:30. It will be thefifteenth meeting between the two

I'Jfivab in a series dating buck tor 1918. The Rams have won 13 of,the games played, und Itutgt

nly one.Last year, the Scarlet fell vie-

to the pitching wizardry ofrdham's Hank Borowy who Imrl-a 7-to-0 no hit guine. Borowy

take the mound again Sutur-an effort to run up his

of victories in intcrcul-ste competition which run now

pto two figures.'Dick Coe, veteran left-hander,

probably be Couch Chucki'» choice fur mound duty foren. Coe. has failed to hit binin his two appearances thja

dropping decisions to bothand Brown.

undefeated Rutgers la-team travels to New Haven

et Yale Saturday afternoon,tBe Harlem River tn New

time, three Rut-

AmundeaenOlsen .....ThergeenHeuton ...Nagy

180126166156188

159209176143192

183180168147171

Totals 878 849

Scrap Plant (1)Uanunski 190 184 187I'asipanki 174 165 162Grego 169 167 13-0Mai 154 163 175Comba 280 199 121

Totals 917 878 781Copper Powdir (2)

T. Tell 168 147 158K. Grant 138G. Medwiek 177 203 182B. Zysk 108 212 214T. Ysrr 216 198 154Crowftrd 171 16

Totals 887 826 86'

IK.tM Bans In One ClusterThs lUr duster In the uonstella

tion HarculM is mad* up of mortthan 100,000 suns, maoj of tharoimndiedi of times Urgtr than ourown tun.

will open the

" Squirts BIM4 ti«m BrasThe homed toid found In the

Southweit dtitrt country, will,when annoyed, squirt s stream ofblood from its flyer

meeting eights of Columbin und Manhattan. The varsityjunior varaity, and freshman. «r«ware slated for action,

The track team also will open itsseason, me«ting New York Unlyw

rerfulin New York Saturdu;

Time To Take An Inventory Of Our Pantry $ By Ding Darling

3THJR HMMRt JPENT A MIUJON EfcftS PUTTlMfr UP PftESIflVCg fOB US-NO** LOOK

MM •» H"iteam competition2888.

4-Mike SiekerkapJace in the all events

i

The locals have signed up onef the greatest softball pitchers

the state in Hike Sabolowikyf Elizabeth. He has pitched h e .helps Dodge team to the state! ^"o'. Khampionship for three consecu-ve years and won two games for

he Elizabeth team in the nationaliris held in Chcago last year.The team is entered in the

>in-County Softball leagueonsisting of eleven teams from

dle»ex County and only onelub from Union County, Alames will be played at night a'

Wonderland Park in Perth Amoy. There will be two gameiach night and each team wiliicrform twice each week. Thocal aggregation, which compileca greut season last year, will alsi

lay independent games.Besides two other pitchers from

Union County, and Bunchy Grantcintillating basketball star, thearn will have some of the outlanding local performers includng Dougy King, Matt Udzielak

Bill Buisel, Sam Smolenski, Fich.Donovan, Joe Trosko, Joe MatJo« Czajkowski and Bill Hagan.

The Kochecks will play a practice game with the Amboy Kmen Leafs this Sunday morning at

9:30 A. M. at Leibig's fluid. '

Carteret Team WinsLaurels In TourneyHud&ons Take First Place In

Doubles With Score of1239—Siekerka 10th IrAll Events

CARTKHET - T h e Hudson.,red pretty well in the Middle-

sex County bowling sweepitukealudd at New Brunswick duringthe past two weekB,

Their complete records follow:1—Copped first place in the dou-

bluB competition with acute123!) rolled by Mike Siekerka iWalter Zyak.

2—Took fourth priie also inthe doubles tourney with score ol111*3 rolled by M»tt Udrielak and

Tigers Beaten ByMacKinney OilersCarteret Club Loses, 40-28

In Gold Medal InvitationTourney

CARTERET—It just wasn't inhe cards for the Tigers to win.

Competing in the opening roundof th« Perth Amboy Y. M. C. A.nvitation Gold Medal tournamentit the "Y" court Wednesday night,'.he Carteret team was eliminatedfrom the tourney by losing, 40 to28, to a close-playing MacKinneycombine of New Brunswick, de-fending champions from last yearind favorites to repeat this sea-son.

The Carteret team fell behindat the start and trailed through-nit the entire game by marginsvarying from three to ten opints.

The running score:First Quarter—King 1-0, Knot

2-0, TreUky 2-1, Williams 3-1, Yo-chum 3-3, Tretsky 6-3, Duryear8-3, Grant 8-4, King 8-6, King 8-6,Benhardt 9-6, Tretsky 11-6,Benhardt 13-G, King 13-8,

Second quarter—Virag 13-9uryes 15-9, Williams 16-11, Ben-ardt 18-11, Tretsky 18-11, King8-12, Duryea 20-12, Grant 20-13ochum 21-13, Bernhard Z2-13.Third quarter — King; 22-)5

Spewak 22-17, Williams 22-19retsky 24-19 Spewak 24-20, Vaniew 20-20, Schench 27-20, Spe

rak 27-22, Frant 27-33, Spewak7-24, Tretsky 20-24, Bernhard1-24, Bartz 31-26, Duryea 83-26Fourth period—Tretsky 34-26,

Benhardt 35-26, Grant 37-28Hummel 38-28, Scbenek 40-28,

Ti»e« (a«)

G. F. T.King, fa ., 2 4BarU, f .... i oM. Virag, f 0 1Williams, c 2 1

pewak, c 2 2irant, g i 3

Walsh, g 0 0

yiud dnslicH, one-quar te r mil, :

rlnys, a running broad j 11,,.,,

funding broftd jump , a high ,,,

1 snek race, a th ree IcgRcti •

and a girl*' a rchery exhiliitim

Part ic ipant* will he limit.!

,nly three even t s—two ruin,

events and one field event <M

field events and one nn,

event.

Awards will be presented mJay, May 19, at the regular:,;bly session at the high schmi

The official program of CMannounced this week by FrankCarthy, follows:9-9:15

Band.9:15-9:30

(10 yd, dash—7th grad<> h,70 yd. daeh—fith grade h.80 yd. dash—Freshmen IMStanding Broad Jump h

men girlsStanding Broad Jump-- s,,

more girls9:30-9:45

220 yard Hash—Junior h ,220 yd. dash—Senior buy

9:45-10220 yd. dash—Freshmen h220 yd. dash—Sophomore

Oil.rt (40)8 12 28

Vochum, fTretsky, f 5Ouryea, c 4Benhardt, g 2Van Liew, g jSchenek, g , jHummel, g n

0. F. T,1 1 3

3 130 84 101 30 21 1

of

16 10 40Score by periods:

Oilers 13 9 11 7—40Tigers 8 5 13 2—28

Officials—Dubin and Augustine.

49 Men Torn OutFor Boxing GroupBoxing Classes To Be Coo-

ducted By Cart MorrisAnd Al Suto

( AKTEKET—-Forty enthusiastic.'imng men turned out for thelyam.'.iition meeting of the inde-leiuleiitly-operated boxing groupit the Greenwich Gardens Tues-lay night. Motion pictures by the•Uundurd Oil Company and talks>y Kred Ruckriegel, Jumes John-ion and Carl Morris featured the>rogram.

Mombers of the group handednto what will hereafter be knownis the Carteret Boys' Club. Thenew club will have two divisions—me for boxers, the other forveight-liftcra The latter sport?arae into the picture when somehalf doten young men interestedin the pastime asked that they too*>e admitted and given • place totrain.

' Boring classes under the direc-J - of Carl ;Morris and Al

100 yd. dash—Junior girU100 yd. dish—Senior girURunning Broad Jump .11

boysRunning Broad Jump s,

boys0-10:15

100 yd. dash—7th grade100 yd. dash—8th grade

80 yd. dash—7th grade 170 yd. dash—8th grade :

Running Broad Jump- Imen boys

Running Broad Jump — S.more boys

0:15-10:30100 yd. dash—Sophomore100 yd. dash—Junior boy-100 yd. dash—Senior boy<Running Broad Jump—.In

girlsRunning Broad Jump—S,

girls10:30-10:45

H Vhiile run—Junior boysV4 mile run—Senior boys

(Finals)Standing Ilroad Jump—In

girlsStanding Broad Jump—s.^

girls10:45-11

100 yd. dash—Freihmen •100 yd. dash—Sophomore220 yd. dash—Junior girl-220 yd. dash—Senior girl.Running Broad Jump—7th t

boysRunning Broad Jump—Sth :r,t

boys11-11:15

H mile run—Freshmen h% mile run—SophomoreVL mile run—Junior boy-U mile run—Senior boy

(Finals)Standing Broad Jump

grade girls11:16-11:30

60 yd, dash—'Freshmen i?irl|60 yd. dash—Sophomore j70 yd, dash—Junior girls80 yd. da«h—Senior girlStanding Broad Jumgi |

grade girlsH;30-ll:45

60 yd. dash—7th grade I70 yd. dash—8th grade 180 yd. dash—9th grade I

100 yd. dash—10th grade100 yd. dash—11th grade100 yd. dash—12th gradeBaseball throw—Freshmen 1Baseball throw—SophomeBasketball throw—JuniorBasketball throw—Senior .-:|

1-1:157 th grade relay—boys7th grade relay—GirU

(Finals)Senior boys high jump

(Finals)1:16-1:30

8th grade relay—Boys8th grade relay—Girl-s

(Finals):30.1:46Freshmen Jralajr— BoysFreshmen relay—GirlsJunior boy* high jump

(Finals):46-2:00Sack Race—5th grade l»Three-legged Race— Cth

boys

*H1 start at the Gardens at 7 P MMonday.

Cy Deals and JWw»rd (B«b«)CoufUJn haV, b e , n ^ " " J '

origin*! comnilttt* tn charge.

2-2:15Sophomore Relay— B'>>s

Sophomore Relay—Cir^(Finals)

2:15-8:80 .Junior Relay—BoysJunior Relay—Qii 1«

(Finale)2:19-2:30

Sophomore boys high j>( Finals)

2:80,2:45Senior Relay—Boys8«nlor R l ^

mHigh School t)irls A..

hibJtlon.

PRESSFRIDAY, AWUL 14, 1939

<Wy One Note IJ«a In RongA W i t t s and famw» song. Ml-

flom heard to recent ye»r«, li TheMonotone," composed by Peter Cor-nel** U8M-1B74> Throughout theentire i on | of « bars, «ayi Col-lier's Weekly, only one n n t e - G -i« used.

IS'

kin smell all the

.: ir-akin'l Oh, yet, y«rnnswer that, don}"f?nn.iC."

HIS TOOTH

:i is SkinpanU?" ,:i>!l on the ninny sub

II NfiliE T0FIC8

*t» »>*» Kent Dewyt Wt«4Research reveals that wood never

•tCtyt solely on account ol age.Deterioration It mainly brought onby an attack at fungi.

tych Water, Lets MittA con nay consume 4 to 6H

pounds ol water (or every pound atmil* the produce*.

*uet QsmMn lent*It * « * * • oft* piece M knowledir-

s( less uie to n fellow than knowingwhen he'i bent, It's knowing whenhi'i done Just enough wnrk tn kepphim from being flrH

Ja»«net» u* , Kajii r t w , r d |

ArrsehB the many English word.that have entered the Japane«e vo-cabUlary and reroilned almoat in-J«t |g "jtremma- Japan-se be-"eve It ii i native word, having for-gotten the orlglnsl-"dl!emma."

Hay Have Vloleat OpinionSometime* a man has a very vio-

lent opinion; and ai often as not,he la Hint,

PAGERaw Three Soqa Crowned King

Catherine de Mvdlet, quean olHenry II of France, born 1518, died1MB, had tour sons, nf wtiWWI tWMwere crowned klni of Franc* dor*Ing her lifetime. They wef» Frith-tit II (1SW-W), Charles IX (KM*ir>74) and Henry III (1874-lMt).

MalUajto BlrthaFrom die literature on

it appeara that multiple birth* krtmost likely to occur in woman be-tween the agen of S5 and 44.

Many Inaecfa Known U taleaetAbout T50.900 ipecles of Insect*

are known to science. In thlt coun-try they e»t 10 per rent of mir food.

Patting Shine <m Prcteehi0* the varloua 'finish-*" put on

food products, the shine on pretzel)tl ntrtatn-d by trip «MMt p r w « s .Petal* being baked, aayi Oollicr'iWeeWy, they »re dipped in a wwrtc,harmless solution of todlum hydro*,ide, commonly known aa causticaoda or lye

TMta Rfml Teara aa Baa*Mark Twain ap«nt 14 yeara tn

writing "Pernonal Recollections ofJoan of Arr "

Hai Non-Native PopnlatJonPortugueie'i African colony, Mo-

tamblque, has a non-native popula-tion nf ahmil 4S.7MI persona.

MeMe n r ttvengeThe forth tt fte Ohlneae In AM

existence and power of the &**&.and the flrm belief of the nvennlngpower of hla own spirit when dis-embodied, has, in the past, ledmany Chines* to commit luleldeand thus have his ghost enme barkand avenge itself on some enemy.

Excaanfe RIM WineIn the orthodox Japanese mar-

riage ceremony, the bride andgroom exchange nine tiny CUDS ofrice win*.

Thrttgs Wklck Make Mea HaptrTo read, to think, to love, to pray,

- these are the things which makemm happy.—TUnkln.

i tee* VIM HHowry DM Wwiyi been prlted as

a nMSJt data«t«blt twtet and de-rives it* iweetoaaa and favor fromnectar. • liquid secreted by flowers.The flavor of httntjr depends on theparticular flower* from which thebees gather nectar. Moat honey Ismade from a mixture of nertars.However, honey may have a pre-dominant flavor as bass wood honey,buckwheat honey, clover honey, andothers.

XeaOwt, Camphor BCMSM m « J dWhen en equal quantity of fee

two solids, menthol and camphor, Ispulverlied ahd mixed, says a writerin Colller'i Weekly, It becomes aliquid.

ttwl Keef OeOews t lSlnre 1678 a clause In

of Eastwlch farm, In Hancounty, Knglnnd. has requlr»ucrpj5ivp nccupant to kwt> !pair a gnllnw* thnt ttan4aland and h»» never been US* .the execution for which flerected more thnn two andcenturies agu. Furthermore.Collier s Weekly, It must be iwhen nccesnnry, and theone If the third on the alt*.

M M i i w Feet UfefIt waa not rare for Ashersni

the pioneer days tn pull pfeet In length out n( Ohio i taccording to hintorlcal "f

J I H 4NDTHI: f ©ECE

i

1

' •: USLIM BYI n'i,i\**'»r ttos\"> / [ ILLINOISrri i- \ ) SCAT hiw i

^ y g s s a B

A3

nor <s

Aft.T *

£ TOil

KTO^r

11row:1

AM>'tJsgr;i^n.Y^«^tr7wrr^£^>

" ' ' ^--——~^-i-i • • ' v* * * -

w v p » O T T A ossaasj"<rot»r< A MO ejRfVB HIM,

\ I ,,.1 ^ L j l i , .i • ,,,f

•fe:I1

/ ^slasssssl

« B U , WE BBAT TH' TRAW. 'TO * B T INTO T0W»\, SUM H*5«OT TO <«OMS THIS <***>••

rt* 3HOW5 *«CKJNt

r^iei we'Lu J U HIM fcM^J T1R MIM O

« woMDtR,OL' «OY» H*N« *O IIHTO 3»H1Nt FIELDXBX t'Lt- T1MC* A<SyT OvsMt H» »•«

i-fit-

|v ; ir.'i -Look hare, Mr.I i. • 'i you'd quit hanging j

• :: •;. ai night. It makes the.. : >: v ' U s . !

THAT'S A HOT ONE

.'y—At my age all womenh»- <, ime.

u:a:.:i' — And doubtleu you; the same to all women. •

MI, THE VITAMINS

^VVELL I'LL1"? - » " 7 \

I ' .

oe oC

3L1M cJIM.' t A ) »JBt-»-

»WTIN TO SH

C3

-0.-. H/ s>/,sveeo uf1 ] r f'•• • r ^ e t ' l V O

V l T - l ( G f c iOVJtt APPLES^ t^ [SPAIN6F/Et-fi LOOKS

.IKE 4 H/FTYBO&O

pick-l understand you h a w allif n.i-.i!s cuuked nowadays.fM-Thars r ight-boiW shlrU

''•"!•[•;, t h i n g .

li:n:i) A NOSK DITB

I!b"- siwome of Jim Bobinrril"i tu do tome ol the stunts••'"••t'lrs have bean doing anda!lJ !"-'.k« his fool neck."

(iIVIN'G HIS AIX

' Y « . he offer* to"' '«• lives at my feet

""• L1HGUOHT

f

ri/'

M ,, '"'

""•'runt

•' "'•>•• i n v i s t b WJM'.i,<- , n d -

1 FffltStXI LAP WEEK AND YOU HADPA <ii>, A / ® C J U * THE HULI N O C K S : r~—•

NO SWEE.'TM OFFA AU (HE WOMEN FEE UFr.1

I'M A WOMAM HAttR! 160T NO USE FEETWe SEXMt FEU THE FREE ANP EASf BACHELOR &TUFF'

AiN.DONTBESOHAEO-

6 0 T W SENTIMENT TAU1

(RS6T!lTHINKIKHO1fyI HOW WE CAN WKE

(_S0ME MONEY

5TA6E ENTRANCE

A N D W E U « >1 FIFTY-FIFTY

VviTHY^U

VAUDEVlLir

Tft IMY

(•tMEDMKl

pflht!K

WOMEN AtETrrEBUNK!6lMMEA (0»p \ANplWULOWTSWAPlTrntTHE J

<LAS6IESraHEBA;

I NEVtR Pit? THI35O0Y STUFFBEWRE,BUT 1 JtfT COULDNYREFUSE A NJCE^AL LIKE

SUCH

PlDJA HEAR HERCA lHlMDCAItlANBDIWASEE

FERlTME I

i w$iri1

ou> FOSSIL!

. — r'OM.ioorr \ * N

UNCUWNMV.'L N

4

rv11asaTjat

f 4 l

1R1l1iIlam

nasasf ^sssssi "11spIgWINK:

5 0 THE (XS> < W 3 IN YlCTRAPAT•" -r,EH,D)NNY?gOM£ PEACH J D O 1

; C0N6RATS! BtTTCHA>9HeHAC A NICE SWEET]

AW, SHOT!UP!

7:OHUNK!

FIVEI8UCKI

PACE K1CHTFRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1939

CARTERET PR|

frrftnnht. of .n

A* a nilp. an rnri-jj'Jllie b#|bit

the irnnvTv "f which th*r»

CHRISTIAN SCIENCEWtiinr of At'Tipmfnt" i* the

' i "f Ihi> I.Minn Sprmon In

Fir<t ( hinrh of Chrilt, S«t-

, m Si"wnrpn on Sund»y

' Ci.l.lcn Te»t in: "W* »iio

r,,,,\ through our Lord Jttui

i. liy whom wt have now re-

the atonement." (Roitunn

i l l

\inoinr th<* ciutlonn which com-

ihi- I#«(ion-S«nnon In the fol-

,\vinif from th« Bib1«: "And, b*-

they brouirht to him * man

k of the pilny, 'yin* o n • bed:

;iml .lo*ii« *rt\ng their faith Mid

unto tho nick nf the paliy: Son, be

of K»od che«r; thy tinn tre forgiven

the*, But that ye may know that

the Son of mtti hath power or earth

to forgta Him, (then »aith he to

the nick of the pal«y,) Ariw, Uke

up thy bed, and fo unto thine

house. And he aroii*, »nd departed

to hi! houM." (Matthew 9:2, B, 7)

The Lemioti-Sermon nl«o include*

the following pamiigo from th*

Christian Science textbook, "Sci

encn «nd Health with Key to the

Scripture" by Mary Baker Eddy:

"The umr power which henl* sin

hraU aliio nicknewi. Thi» in 'Ihe

bemity of holifieon.' that when

Truth heal* the nick, it rastn out.

evil*. »nd when Truth cants out the

evil called diiea»e, it heal* the

•ick" (p. 135). m

MMMl, m-IMlfT HKWII.I TION OF TIIK BOIIOI « " Or ( AUTRBKT.

UH-NTT. NKW jriwnr

i'i *- in Hi., ismii'

, ! , :„' U „< i n '

I'!!

MKIIR1IV HKHOLVBP. thai th . <«M«w!ni . IKI . -.rnKl.M""- . ! . . » ™ n « . u l a th . l o « l h.*l,.i <nr

.i.vKi.. >h,t . . !•nf HIP Mlh d»S' of

h.t l tai r«.Ir v h.t lh» l.u-lf'1 "i>«1 tai r«.I.M«ll « a . ap»mv«l ;yl«.rr"..!w". of r ' l r l . re . , C . u n l y nt MMrtle-m on April

N .1

M «t 111. BoTOUfll IU1I» l l HI » i>' I m k I1 M

I I I M»ol«tl9» <" * •

. n.r.«h ci.rv.TotUy «nd S«tiird»y

DOUBt.F. SENSATION SHOWBnri« Karloff

"SON OF IRANKF.NSTEIN"

riu>

Mel-vyn Dnufli" Virginia Bruce

"THERE'S THAT WOMAN

Rvqueil Fralurr Saturday Nile

Alic Fa-i- • Lew Arrei

"She Lrarned Aboul Sailori"

STATE THEATREWOODBRIDGE, N. J.

Phono Wdbfe. 8-1212

Tonight and Tomorrow

"Jesse James"

"Up The River"SUN . MON. - TUES.

APRIL 16, 17, 18

"Paris Honeymoon"— Plui —

"Little Orphan Annie"

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19

"The Lives oi a BengalLancer"— Alio —

AmbushCASH NITE

THURS. - FRI. - SAT.

APRIL, 20, 21, 22

•Gunga Din"— Plui —

"Bar 20 Justice"

Lightweight felti require »pe-

ci*l care in cleaning.

We do them perfectly and we

charge low prices

Angelo'a Shoe Shine & Hat

Cleaning Parlor.

SB5 State St. Perth Amboy

BE SURE OF YOUR

BRAKESTRUST YOURS 10 US I

RELINlNG ADJUSTMENTSDRUM KE1-'AC1NG

TROUBLES CORRECTED

RAHWAYBRAKE SERVICE

5. J. CASSAWAY Prop.

fe ¥r». with Blua Cooac, Newark17 E. Millon Ave. RAHWAY

Formerly Albuurt Garag*

pFor Weddings—Birthday*

, A AnniverjorteiGIVE

KreielsheimerD«p«ndobl« Jewelry

i»»» urf fift itMulv pric«4—wltk A*

LSHE1MEB 'QUALITV

IfliHEIMUL

Itm rri>r>lt)tlr>n will he hn tilt Jnil day of May.

fnr th« y « r l»ls mar be pretented;;;;;,•• ».•.,..„«„ . , < • . , . « . . . A i i m i r r 3

IJH.M, minuirrKXI'I.ANVTORY HTATKMRNT

Tin- I.II.IKI- renrr.PiiU I lie rnnilt nr «»rlou« o n a t d i r n l l n n on 1ho purl,,i it,,- fM.vcritliiK Hw«y «n<l tli» i v i m r t n i f n t »f IJX-HI Uovfrnmrnt midO|M1,I,I i, imhlrri-il liiircther with thr or ig ina l buditel which w»« Intrn,h, n Murch 27th, 1939. Th» (Irtt IMIIIKPI which wa« I n f o J " " ' 1 ^l , ,nh mi nin.niiit t« l>* minwl by Inxntlcin In lli<> «um »f $ « « . » » . « 1

II iiuriiiiHrM. Ini'ltMlnir Klute, Oounly nnil Hi-lmol T B X P -i l . i irlnlna"- ' - " "—

iMii'lxiHfH. InrltMlnir Ktnte, Oni inly nnil Hi-lmnl TBXPII .TIII- lnif lnf l fl» o r l » l n t t l l y Hpprovwl lian b ' r n rettiicci) In t h e MUIII .if

fir l d hy Hie f l l o w l n g c l u n g ' " :ni f ln f l fl» or l»lnt t l ly Hpprovwl lian b r ni n rrnre.enled hy Hie f. i l lowlng c l u n g '

» MI'pllnquent Tax Col lwt l t im IDur from Hint* Tor Kmcrnpiuy llcltor

I,|hr»ryHenltliHullrtlng mid OroiindnHIiKdtt Tre#nHfllnrlfi nr Munlclpnl KinplnyrfBKm«rfency Itellel (which will he m«Ar up l>y

wmtrihulloni! fnim 8<hiiol KmnlnyrM' H»l-

KoBorvr fnr ItticnllKlcd TBIK-H

TOTA1,

17, Will. 003,1*3.32

• HD.DO• 44.00SOt.OOlton.no

7,000.00

is.ooo.oi)J

I J4.SH.S6

llrnrral KrvrnnmI. R(!Uri.l'H UKVRNUB CAKII

Ap|irn|fl»'»H1 (Hi (H'liriiim HSVENtlR NON-rnah

A|}tirnprl>ii>il With I'rlitr Written Cnn-renl n( rftmfn(«!«in*r nf I rn-al

In I'In 1

U.1U3.39MIACKM.AN'RDl'H ItRVBNtTBi*LiefpnpnAli'ilifillr llfvrT«»r LlrfimmFOPH itml l^rinlln . <

F i n nIntprrnl iimIntl>rr.l nil

nn TaxfaIrtUfKP— Tax H*v«-

Kranrhlw T»s .Hun HrrflplB TFIS - *Uroaa llfcflliln TilKmiiihlac Htxl (iniM Hecvlpla T u n

•nt Tin Cnllfctlom_. llrnm oT <lnnrr»l R c r » M

Aatlrlp»t*d With I'riot Writtm fim-•rnt of rnmmlaalaiirr ot Loral GOT*rrnmrnt.{H) Tru*t CKBII(Ii) CnllPtilon of AuBeniun^nu Hscflv-

660.00iri.7oo.oo

],H«O00250.007 40.00

?,300.00

70O.D016,9S«.9D

1,700.0010,846.86

10,7311.04100,1100.00

ahla(i•) I.Uiul<lail<in "f Trunt Heaaive tor

Amount Dm- from Current . . . .!iU Itrllrt Due from t u nlc | Triin«|..,rt«tlon W.F.A. Kmplojftn(f) Trim Huriilus-Non Cmh

TOTAL MlSCItLLANBOUHKKVKNtUCH

3 AMOUNT TO 1IU UAI.HKD HTTAXATllINtiMntkl rnr4>u#e T«KLocal Hfhool TaxCiiunty TaiStale Tas

1,200.001W.0O

1,400.00»,iBO.eo

914.00l>,4W.t02.000.008,100.00

77.100.00

H.415.04 I

3,040.00

1.S2H.792S3.OO743.Ml

7.S12.W

1,1 r. i. r. o1 1 , 3 2 9 . 2 6

l ,7J4.r ,45 , 7 2 4 . 1 6

COTTON PREVIEW

— I

8,000.00

1.7.11.11 —25,794.00 —

2.073,00 —— 17,»»D,44

3,000.00

. I S12 .I66 .I0 $ -'ze.O70.H9 I l » 7 , : m i u

•io»,!»i.n .148.000.00 137.101' HH3t,O«0.0e 3»,»75.2«

4 TOTAL OK OBNKltAL DUIK5KTHKVBNl'KN -

1 UMRitOKNClKX AUTUUltlZKbIN HJ8

J73.273-.J6 »I6,332.OS|

26,301.19

e. TOTALS % »73,!7S.M I 911,635.44 I

Ari' ltOHRIATi;i>Appropriated

(or t i l lAn Modified

Kur 1939 Hy All

7(6,064.3.1

17,000.00

812,064.:'!;

7. OKNKnAL AI'IMIOI'IUATIONS(a) urKUATKiNK:I <lrnrral (Joveramrnt

AdmlnlHlriitlvo nnd Kni'cutlvo . .

nther Hun I'erifunal H*rvlr*AKHvHinint «mt Collection at T»«e>

oilier tlmn l'praor.ul Hervlte . . . .T«« Sale CJoitB

l<«*»l—VarHonnl Servlrpw

Auilltothff thurl IVraoniil fttrvli-j . . . .

•i rrntfrtlnn tn rrnoi i i and ProptrtrKtr« •lVr»ti>liiil Servlcei 'Otlin- ihun Tononal HervkeHydrant Avntul

4,870.0(16J0.0U

5,71)0.001,190,1101,000.00

2,340.00

2,500.00

I run»fera

8,482.71 |

7,873.80

2,600.00

2,500.00

— 19.VS7.I7

f+ervk-p, , , . .Peniilon Fund

l>rtuimil rtervlre* .othpr thun ppmtmu1'UIR'A itnd KlriMii n'Hlrrrli und KnudaK>|mtn ami Malntrnanif iI'eraoniil ServlreHOilier than reittonul Sirvk-eSiren I.IRIIMDK ;Munltuilon.Street OleanlnK

rOllii-i IIIHII l'erannnl Hrrvli'tItiirlittife uml AHII I t n u u v u ireiMcrml rtPTVi( PHo t h e r t lmn Perminu] HerxlteH n t l t h and C'hurUimHnanl nf H e u l l hlYrtuititl Hervli-pnOther thun persona l Hetvk,-1'owr-- Ai lmlnlstrj i t lon . . . . , . . . ,IVrmiiiHl ServUeao i l i e r t lmn Persunul Karviivl'uur l le l letl'ernniin! sprvK-ew ,o l h i T t lmn rprkunul Herrli-ca . . . .I I CIHJhlUll

KUtdiP K«en Well .'.'.''Olhi'r than rvrannul Harrle.Anll-Tulreri ulQildOtlipr ihan Pei-pnnul Hprvk-PHKlMt Alii Siiuadother tlmn rorpnnul HtTvh't'HKrrrratloa wul KdacatiOBl'«rk» anil niiy«rciurid»

OUHT thun PfTRomii rtervleel,llirnrl«HI'eCmmftl Hervli-caOther thun Prrannal Morvlrn ..Usrreatlon Arilvlty . ,Other t tun I'erauriul HervlceaI ' b M d

16,(1011.002,100.00

18,000.00

b3.2S0.001,5410.00•J,880.00

16,1170.011. 2,000.0014,500,00

8,000.002,000.00

6,000.1102,000.6(1

t,7«0.002,260.00

840.004,100.00

4,840,0010,000.00

1,000.00

300,00

100,00

1,000.00

1,800.001,1100.00

4,020.002,460.00

1,500.041

18,000.00

6i.rn.2o

2,84 6.if II9 H O S

13,710.78

6,289.77

Hulldlnira and (>rflumlaI'criiunal t torvk'nO l h e r t h a n I'crwutal H » v l c e . . . , 'Cuint)pnt.atlun I t i surunieLhibjltly Inauram-e ,.,.*.T c l « | i h u n e ...I'.'.'.'.Klsotlonii ""'_HhtUn Tr»(>«WP.X. Hiiwlnii Prcijpol .'.(llhar thun Ivitiunul Korvlfb

(I)) CONTINQgNT . .( i ) DKI1T NKKV1CK1. M M M I M I l»pbt Hrrvlce

I'nyinont of HondaIfttereat on Uond«Down Hayifieht on Jmi>rovt'iiifntnHitcreat on Htme T»«p« _In l t iu t un (hunty T u n aintcrnt on Delay In Funding Xol-il'e'n llnnun and H(ut« Itnnd ]<nni|a ifi \i'.

id) l'AYMKNT O f F U M T i N G UBBT(.1 DEFICITS and HTATUTOUT

1,690.002,810.002,500.001,800.002.5O0.00

1,000,00500.00

1.GO0.O0

4G.7OO.O039,8311.006,7.29.20

Bm»r».ncy HK»v«nuea ; 26 .J013 .Kil'»n | l'luft» wlthoill ABuroyrlaMnlia —KkprndUufQ without Avpiruurlatlun

Ti u*tl>uc fnmi Caultkl ' _HI JUDOKMIONTB _

(HI i"tLKli l>eHclt of H3J 27,1*4.71l.c».| H.hool T»K t61tMt.ilcuunty Tai •ii<Mjaa.eoHlale Huldlera aiul boau« T«i 1,500.00mute Hcliool Tax JI,WO,00ltearrve for Uncollultd T«l«i , ' . . . . . 106.Sfo.lW

641.00

80,000.00

1,000.00100.00

lM.oo.

1,000.00

1,000.00

1,187,6(1

U90.00

4,I0«.!7

t,50«.0«1.47M9J.001,14

•itts1,900.00

37,700.0040.ttl .7l

8,4(7.11(114»2

31,101.0.

3,W0.oT)IS,S4t.44

Kipendnl»ncl

Rta«rv«dfor 1938

J,482.71

7,873.90

t

2,600.00

2,500.00

19,867.17

1K.00U.IMI

2,846.0039.14G.S8

13.710.78

6,285.77

8,095,22

fill.00

20,000.00

1,000.00300.00

loo.oo

1,000.00

810.01

6,387.(0

M . 600.00

J,30k,27

2.(00.001,47»,893,002.141,174.57

50«.0i

1,000.00

37 700.01140,938.75

3.4*9.18.214.6

ai.soi,

8,»6O.0i13,049

< A|iuro|irlat!iia

38J.675 6!IS7,3(I2H

1,486.136,489.187,614.3

t 4)71.17! t i t t lMSD.U f 115,112.0' J«.W8,a9 . UW;

7,l«i.>«H.481.14

I6.48J.11? I H I »

Sentimentiil, perhapi, but elegant i> th* word for thit Balenciaga

white linen evening diem Irimmrcl with Englitk embroidery and

tied uo with b»by-pink ribbon., »i .liown in April'« Harper'i Ba-

zaar. The cutout work ii belter known ai eyelet embroidery.

AT THE RAHWAY

C.D.A.CARDPARHDRAWS BIG CROWDMrs. Cutter Chairman Of

Benefit Given At St.Joseph's Hall Monday

c A K T K i i K T A Iniye Rttend-

iinc, markcil tlic currt party he ld

iil.-iy nipfit by Cnurt Fidel in,

tmlii' Dmifrhtcrs of A m e r i c a , in

SI. .In.icph's clniiTh hall. Spec ia l

a w n r d s went, tci Mrs. ! .«o Coujrh-

lin, Mrs. Kdith Sofka, and Harry

(;icij<nei-. _. RpfrcsJinicnts were

Mcrvcd ftftoi the' xsmes ended.

Mrs. 'Clifford L. Cutter was chair-

mnn.

Winners of hifjh score? for the

various KiinifR played were the fol-

lowing:

Kiichrr— William Tlonnolly, C.

I., CiiUcr, Mrs. Thomas Larkin,

Mis. (irni'i' Bullnch, Mrs. J. B.

(I'Unmiell. Mrs. OIlie Pfenning,

Mis. Frank Born, Mrs. Frank

(>'Hrien, Mrs. Frank Craisf

Mrs. A. McDonnell, Miss Helen

IVvrreux, Mrs. Joseph Kennedy

Mrs. Mniy CIulp, Miss Klsie Daie,

Mis. T. V. Burke, Mrs. James Irv-

iiiK and Mr. and Mrs. J. R. O'Don-

IH'll.

Fnri-tan-—Mm. A. .1. Bonner

Mrs. Joseph Enot, Mrs. Cutter

Mi.« Mary Therese Bonner, Mrs

Andrew Dobrovich, Mrs. John Har-

riuHii, Mrs. Thomaa Kinnelly, Mrs

Kincst WRIZ and Mrs, George

Kurd.

Uunimy—Mrs. David Lynch

Mrs, Helen Williams and Mrs

Thomas Williams.

Other Winner.

HridRe — Mrs. Morton LeVan

Mrs. Edith Sofka, Mr. and Mrs. J

J. Dowling, H. Gleckner, Mrs. John

McDonnell, Miss Thelma Hoffacre,

Mi's Agnes Quinn, John McDon-

nell. Mrs. H. L. Beiter, Mrs. Loretto

Nevill, Mrs. Harry Gleckner, Mr,

and Mrs. Thomas Jakeway, Mrs.

l<i!ii M ''p.rthy, Mrs. Leo Coughlin,

Mrs. John Kennedy, Mrs. Howard

Burns, Mrs. Katherine Sexton,

Mrs. D. Donovan and Mrs. C. A.

Sheridan.

Pinochle—Miss Lucy Williams,

Mrs. Mary Little, Edwin S. Quinn,

James J. Dunn, Ann Amzler, Mrs.

John Hrivnak, J. H. Nevill, Edward

Lloyd, Mrs. John Harrington, Mrs.

K. Pollack, C. C. Sheridan and

Miss Tillie Pollack.

W. C. Fields in "You Can't Cheat An Honeet Man" with EdgarBergen and Charlie McCarthy

Sitter* Answer 20

Million Phone Calls

WILTON, CONN.-Two sisters,

Grace and Gertrude Worthington,

estimated they have answered

more than 20,000,000 telephone

calls during the 92 combined

years they have been operators

at the Wilton telephone ex-

chtDge.

Grace has workejl 47 years for

the company and Gertrude 45,

which is believed a record in the

country.

Cause of Amnesia

Amnesia is caused by overwork

«r worry. When a person Is a vic-

tim of It he often recovers, but then

be thinks something is the matter

with him mentally.

HI Ho Defines 'Influence'

"Influence." said Hi Ho, the sage

si Chinatown, "is personal friend-

ship skillfully managed so that it

will pay dividends."

Winnie Thickness Measured

It is possible to measure oil films

so thin that 35,000 of them piled

atop one another would be no thick-

er than a sheet of newspaper.

Corned, Beef Popular in Japan

It's a long way from Dublin to

Tokyo, but one of the most popular

foreign dishes in Japan is corned-

beef and cabbage.

Requirements for Patent

In order to be patentable, a de-

vice must Incorporate a principle or

idea different from any already

patented.

Student House Maid Is

Razzed but Likes JobALBANY, N. Y.—Being a house-

maid is a swell job for a boy work

ing his way through school, says

Thorpe DeVoid, 18 years old, and a

freshman at State College for

Teachers He washes, irons, cooks,

dusU .iiid mops at the home of Rev.

Percival Kinkema and his wife.

"I needed board and lodging and

this is the first job I heard of. 1

got it and I'm mighty glad of it,"

he says. "It certainly beats tend-

ing furnaces and lawns or jerking

sodas. And when I get the supper

dishes done, I have the evening to

myself with time for my studies."

Thorpe can take all the kidding

that comes his way.

"A lot of college girls, including

sume I don't know," he says, "call

me up and kid about my job. Some

of them have aiked me to get in

touch with them when I finish

school."

Wife Tramps Snow SOS

To Save Stricken TrapperEDMONTON, ALTA.-A trapper's

wife tramped out a huge "HELP"

in the snow beside her cabin home

in the Far North and attracted a

transport pilot who flew her strick-

en husband to Whitehorse, Yukon,

for medical aid, according to reports

reaching here.

Rach'o messages said that Pilot

Sheldon Loucke had sighted unusual

markings in the snow near an iso-

lated cabin far from Whitehorse

He circled lower and saw the dis-

tress signal.

Loucke landed to find the husband

was suffering from blood poisoning

and took him to a hospital at White-

horse. The reports indicated that

the man, whose name was given as

Norquist, would recover.

WATCH FOR GRAND OPENINGLINCOLN AUTO STORE

592 ROOSEVELT AVE., CARTERET, N. J.With a full line of Automobile

Accessories, Tires, Oils, Greases,Radios, and Electrical Accessories

OPENING ON OR ABOUT A P E 2 1

GAME SCCI4LL- EVERY MONDAY NIGHT -

St. Jame«' AuditoriumAmboy Ave. Woodbri

10-20 GAME $20 - "LUCKY" - JACK POT $1 o"ESCORT NITE"

DOOR PRIZE $10 " ADMISSION 4ftc

There Will Be Plenty ofWashing This SummerFace the fact. Fashion II;IK &one feminine ami

you are going to wear blouses again, frilled and

tucked and exquisitely fine. The trim shirtwaist

is once more a favorite. The petticoat has returned

with fine embroidered edges and wide flounces.

*

&

All thie means laun-dry work. You willnot mind it if you useelectric equipment.

Washer prices be-gin at 144.95, ironenat $20 (irolicr illus-trated it $69.95).Small carrying chargeif you buy on terms.

PVBLICMSERVICE

ORE AT NEWS FOR BUYER*OF LOW-PRICED CARS I

^ J ^ ? y 0 U g e t : D u a ! Cwiter-Control Steer-Ing, Handi-Shin and self-energizing Hydraullo Brake*.for handling «,aBe . . . wide-vi«ion, U«l«teel Bodyby Ftahot for safety . . , Old8' «olu. ive Rhythi.noRide for comfort. . . a,,d a fast-itepping Bcuu"-Master engine that suves you money ovory i'

ET.I