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-I'*. Afl The News Of CARTERET PRESS · • -I'*. Afl The News Of Carteret Borough i, XII, No 4. 8...
Transcript of -I'*. Afl The News Of CARTERET PRESS · • -I'*. Afl The News Of Carteret Borough i, XII, No 4. 8...
• -I'*.
Afl The News OfCarteret Borough
i, XII, No. 48
Theftice of Thl« Paper is 3 J in to everywh«r«~Pay no mow
CARTERET PRESSDemocratic Picnic
Program Complete,. ,,t, Variety Of Entertainment And Sport Arranged For
i)»y—Three Caah Awards A* Door Prizes—WomenTo Throw Roiling Pin« — Soft Ball Game, Speaking,Munic, Dancing, Singing.
CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1934
of the geneiftl
N11it(>e in charge of plans Cori,,.morratic family pksttte to,i,l Sunday was held last niflrt
.,, norouifh Hall, and tfce pro-f,,r the day was completed.
,, )7isi minute addition!*] in-,',,i,.nt it waa decided to offer, , a«h prizes of $2.60 «ach in
, ,,me*. The tickets to line pk-,uo numbered in duplua&e
,,, <ho<<i> numbers will be used in.'•'inlinK the cash.
11„. committee has obtained a,'i-ful loudspeaker which will
.,!.,. it. possible fco h«*r speaking,'„ .„• nnd announew-entu plainly
,11 parts wf Markwalt's Grove in,' t i(anway wher* the affair will•' i r l d .I i,,.r(> are sev»l*] event* on the
, r i am; some Jor men and Borne•'.. i.mon. A ntfvel one U a rolling
, i in-owing eonteat It will be, „ in married, women only. A
,,.,. lumping contest will be open• union of 48 and over. For the
ihere wJH be pitching horseand other 000148,
11,.. program for youngsters,1 provida plenty of imiiw
The ltot inclndea a flfty-i ilfl. h. a three-legged .race,
sack race, wheelbarrow rate andpie rating contest. All these areopen to boys and girls. i
A program for amateur enter-tainer will be held and there willbe prim for the acts that win
?PP'au»- T h » programde u b b i
Local Lodge W01Mark Anniversary
Daughters Of Rebekah ToCelebrate Founding OfOrder At Meeting Septem-ber 19.
At a mertinir of Dobornh LodgeWednesday night in Odd Fellowshall the following wej"e appointeddelegates to A district meetingto be held in Rahwwy September2fi: Mrs. l,ouis Vonnh, Mrs. Corne-lius Doody and Mm. Ellen. Ander-
thewill include numbers by singers,dancers and musicians. Entriesmust be filed at Rradley's drug•tore not Inter than tomorrownight.
The big sporting event of theday will be a soft, boll content, lietween Ed Dolan's Old Timers andPrank Green's AH Stars.
The lineup — Old Timers, HillI)'ziirilta, Ed. Dolan, William Uw-lor, Francis Oughlin, ThomasCooney, C, H. K.rpir»cr, <'buriesGre<n, James Lukach and VreAColtorv. On the All Stars lineupare: John Trosko Edward DemisK,Ambrose Mudrnk, Joe Shutello,Prank Green, Herman HornChhppie ThatchiT William l!*r-rinirtlon and Philip Roxe Jr,
Governor A, Harry Moore willbe one of Ch« »|>eakern nnd an ef-fort is being made to have JudgeWilliam L. Dill attend. The countyrwndldates will be on baud andmake addresses HS will the localcandidates.
WPIV rrmdo for theof the eifthty-third
son. Planscelebrationanniversary of tho order Se-ptember 19 and the following commit-tee on entertainment whs namedMra. T. W. Moss, Mrs. August)Rostenbader, Mrs. Kllen Ander-son, Mrs. Gus Wulf ami Mrs. JohnReid.
Refreshments wore served afterthe business session. Visitors athe meeting w«rre: Mr. and Mrs.Robert Graeme and Mr. and Mrs,F. G. F. Muasinan. The two womenare members of the lUhway Re-b&kahs and Mtjt. Graeme » NobleGrand of the lodge.
W. ikers Annual PicnicDrmtr* Huge Crowd
M-ry succ*»ful picnic andwas held Sunday afternoon
. M-niiiff in the Falcon hall andunder the auspices of the
ut Workers Association Lateafternoon and throughout the
•ng the place was packed to.M iiy. The committee had pro-
I rrfreshments enough for an,!:n;iry-sU<d crowd but additional
; lies had 10 be obtained several\ During the early evening,,wir Hermann visited the hall1 was given a hearty welcomei .marked afterward that for so
,., ,i crowd it was a remarkably,1,-rly one. Joseph W. Mittoch
led the picnic and made a shorti, The picnic will be an annualMI, the committee announced.
Publisher's Daughter IsBride Of Newark Man
Miss Either Yorke, daughter ofM E P * blih f th»
Miss Either Yorke, d a gM,> M. E. P«w** publisher of th»
artereti of Sylf ton. N.
the brideMiir«4 irfteg>Day at a nuptial
h mass in St. Catfiewws's Ro~ii Catholic Church, Seaside, N.The ceremony «*s performedUcv. Father Hubbard. Afterteremony there was a recep-
:i u> immediate friends and reJ-«-s of the coupte in the Yorke
MXC at Seaside.! he bride is a graduate nurseMI Medical Centye. Mr. Coai-. is engaged In the insurance
• nrwt in Newark. Mr. and Mrs.
Foresters To OpenSeason Tuesday Nite
Court Carteret To Hold BigSocial Meeting As FallOpener — All MembersUrged To Attend.
Foresters of Amorioa, CourtCarteret No. 48 will resume itsWinter Season with its first Socialwhich will be held on TuesdayNight, September 11th, in the OddFellows Hall. The Committeepromi&es an evening of fun andpleasures to all who attend. Cardplaying, and various games willbe played to add to the evening'sentertainment
Thi Committee earnestly re-quests all the members to attendaad help make the affair a success,and to start the season with spiritand mpport Jweph G. ShubejloJr., is chairman of the committeeand is ably assisted by all fiveofficers of the Court.
ledwick Day AtPolo Grounds Sept. 16Local Admirers Of Basebal
Ace Will Present Gift AlOpening Of Giants - Car-dinal Game.
eoted toward th*1 gift whk'h willt>e presented to Joe Medwick, Car-i^ret's big league baseball star attho Polo Grounds, on MtulwickDay, September lfi. On Uhat daytihe Giants and the St. Louis Car-dinals will play on the PoloGrounds. Jutst before the (famestarts a committed of Carteret ad-mirers of Medwirk will presentthe gift on the ball field. The loud-speakers will tell the crowd in thestands and air audience how"highly Carteret prizes the Chromeboy who has made good consist-ently since he entered big leajrue6a.sball just, as bo did in sports in"larteret High.
AJJl/UU
• illy will live in CarUret.
Fellows TakeIt On Chin Again
Me
PRICE THBKB*Uyb« Th*y Didn't BuiU So itmMy >n SantWi Day t —Bf TaBMrl Miss Emma Sabo
Become* Bride Of Louis J.Lukach, Carteret ManWith Drug Store In Mill-town.
Three Women In FightAll Are Sent To Jail
than $HM) has been col
Sadie Moore, Georgia Williamsami I'lhi-I Williams, all rolored, ofKsmrx street, were arrested Mon-day night when Ethel Williamscharged the other two with beatingtier and giving tier black eyes. Ata hearing Tuesday night the threewere sent to the workhouse;for lendays each when it was learnedhey bad engaged in a street fight.
John Mauser and Mrs. Alex Pctro,neighbors living in Jcancttc streetwere each put under $500 bond tokeep the peace when they appearedn court to air a quarrel over chick-
ens. George I .among was orderedto (iay $10 toward the support ofhis wife.
Presbyterian Notes"Christ's Channel for Service"
will be the theme of the sermon onSunday morniruj at the Presbyter-an Church. The two choirs will
render their first selections of theFall. The pastor will speak to theJunitm> on "God's Love For AllMen."
Softball Team T»ket 24 to15 Shellacking From Har-mony Second Stringer* —Next Game Sunday ForKeg Of Beer.
! n Odd Fellows and the Har-i ii. Club second stringers cn-
u MI in what was supposed to be•..iibiill game at the Harmony
ii. ! Tuesday night. It was morei : lurcf. The Odd Fellow's, of
,, took & grand shellacking,• MIIK by a score of 24 to IS orilMrabouts. It was the secondhiuiu the Odd Fellows took from
•ii' Il.irinony Club.Vnd they art stilt going for more.
I i they have decided to play thename of <hts alleged series
Sunday morning.U of beer.
The stakes
iii-tting back to Tuesday's game) A Inch your writer took part (uu-""unately), the Odd Fallows g»veiii'ilu-r miserable exhibition ofIi' '"-.elves. They played every-1'II.K but softball
I". Shutello was throwing 'eml 'ii the opposition and even then1 'Md Fellows couldn't hit the1 'II \nd lie was (browing them in"«. it that.
ii-ore by innings:I ' t l lows
i i i ' i n y
00 2 050 170—IS1012 302 60x-24
Mechanics CrushWhite Metals 1S4
Triumph Give* MechanicaTie With Yard For SecondPlace — One Half GameBehind Leaders.
The Mechanics gained a noteon the leaders in the torrid seconhalf race in the U. S. Metals inter-department baseball league by de-feating the White Metals last Fri-day by a 15 to i score. The victoryenabled the Mechanics to pull upwithin one full game of the pace-setting Main Office team.
Spotting the White Metals tworuns in the first inning, the Me-chanics rallied in the third to scorefour runs and take the lead. Athree run attack in the fourth in-creased the Mechanics' lead to 7to 2. In the next inning the Me-chanics settled all doubt an to theoutcome of the game when theybroke loose with a six-run bom-bardment. Eleven men came to batin this big session. Five hit safe-ly Two walked, And six scored.
Meanwhile Mickey MMecz washaving an easy time holding theWhite Metals in cheek. Mickey al-lowed nine hita of the scatteredvariety.
The box scores:Mechanic* (IB)
AB R HMigle«,p - 8 4 2Dagonya, cf 4 2 ISchultz, lb 4 0 2Baksa, 8b 3 \ 1Balerich, If 4 0[ 1Siekarka, 2b 4 1 1Charney, rf \ \ \Carman, rf 1 J J>Palko, c
f t i o a i Open Fall WorkThe Mother-Teacher Associa-
tion will hold its first meeting ofthe Fall on Monday evening in theSunday school room at 8:00 o'-clock.
The Senior Christian Endeavorwill hold its first meeting of thePall on Sunday evening at 7:0<lo'clock:
The Intermediate and JuniorChristian Endeavors will meet onThurslay afbej-noon at 3:30. Mjx.Estel'le Jamison the superinten-dent of the Intermediates and Mrs.Hilda Doody of the Juniors, willhave charge of the respectivegroups. All boys and girls fromsight tto twelve years of tge areinvited to join the Juniors andthose from twelve to fifteen or
are only in the first year ofhigh school are invited to unitewith the Intermediates. The pro-gram of work for the year willconsist of worship, social and rec-reational features and opportun-ities for service.
The teachers and officers of theSunday school will meet for abusiness meeting on Friday eve-ning1, September 14.
Thomas Way Dies InHospital In Elizabeth
Xhomaa Way, aged 41 years, of127 Lowell street, died at 12.30A. M. Tuesday in the ElizabethGeneral Hospital after a short ill-ness. He is survived by a widow,Daisy, two sons, Earl and Robertand nnc daughter, Jean. Mr .Wayhad been a resident of Carteretabout eight years and was employ-ed as foreman in one of the locafertilizer plants. He was aa mem-ber of the Presbyterian Church andif the church choir.
The funeral service was held thisafternoon in the late home in 1..Q-,well street with Rev. D E. I-or-enl/ nf the Presbyterian Churchofficiating. Interment was in Ever-green Cemetery.
Rangers Widen b a dIn Softball League
Increase Margin To Two FullGames By Virtue Of 14 to13 Victory Over Aces.
» A N C E TOMORROW NIGHT
'•'•••' P o l Clnb willh idance tomorrow nitfht in
' luWiouw in Usdoa itreet atof Burtogton street,
and Fffiih dancw will
•i'llaki is cluunna. of the oom-'i.-u i n oharga of ti* arrange-'Its.
"'•EN HEADQUARTERS1 '< inocnatk hiadquarten! » ti ill MWMved
Palko, cBorchard, it 3 2
31 15Whit* M«UU (4)
ABSchein, If, rf 4Hausman, 2b 3Anacker, 2b 0Zysk, p, If *Lukaskuk, sa 8Caajkowskl, lb SWhite, c — . 4Markowit*. cf ...^ 4Kovacs, 8b ip—.—. *Pajek, rf, p ,.,, »
U
H200211
U.SMetalsAndN.Y.Office In Game Here
Teams To Clash At Copper-works Field ForTime Since 1931
First
Mike Trosko will leadsentative team from tlMetals League g
The Hangers widened their mar-gin in first place to two full gamesover the second place Mulocks this
when they defeated (be Acesinterestingly close game, 14
END INVESTIGATIONIN RELIEF SCANDAL;NO STATEMENT YETGeronimo Says He's Still
Eager To Issue PublicExplanation Of Case
SUMMARYVOLUMINOUSInvestigation i n t o the
Woodbridge-Carteret Emer-gency Relief Bureau, begunin June, is completed. ButP. N. Geronimo, ERA Coun-ty Director, yesterday addedthat he still is not ready to makepublic the inquiry's vital pointsand his own conclusions.
The report presented by htBsleuths more than a week ago ia avoluminous document, Mr. Geron-imo declared, adding: "I'll justhave to take half a day off andstudy it.' All the testimony taken,including the record of questionsput to almost every employe in thelocal office, is in the summary andthe County Director stated he is"trying to analyze it very care-fully."
In addition to a Nummary ofth* investigation, arrest and in-dictment of three persons herehwged with brokering in food or-er slips, the county offices detec-ives also promised carefully toheck and report on other com-plaints against conduct of reliefffaira here.
Will Make A StatementMr. Geronimo yesterday renew-
>d his promise to make "some def-nite public statement" on the,lituation in the bureau which per-litted Mrs, Daisy Touhy and Fred[uber, two Dormer relief workers,
ind Stephen Gurka, Port Reud-ng grocer, to conduct their allegediperations. For publication, Mr.
eronimto stall would not aay what•hat statement is likely to be. Buttome weeks a#o he announced helolieved "careleaanokB' must have
Mm Emma S»b<\ daughter ofMrs. Andrew Monar, of 90 Loiwllstreet, and Louis J. f.ukach, ofJohn »tr«>t, brother of SchoolOommiflaioner Jampa Lukach, weremarried Sunday at 4 p m. in theRree Majrymr Churcn in Perthingavsruie at Washington avenue.Thp rMfmony was performed byRev. Andor Panyik, of Staten In-land, who is filling in as pavtorduring the absence of eRv. Al»xHegyi who is in Cleveland.
Mrs. Atec Fabian wa» the ma-tron of h»nor. The hridenmaidnwere Elizabeth vSabo, a muter ofthe bride, and Helen Bfclog,friend from Buffalo. The beat manwas Andrew Lukaeh and the usherwas Frank Knorr.
Tihe bride wori> a satin gnwnwith a tulle veil held witih orangblossoms, anil carried t<t» rosenThe bridesmaids wore in yellowand peach-colored RHtiii nnd car-ried pink roRos.
After tho ceromonv there wasa reception to a few friends am1
relatives in tho bride's homeEarly in th I'vening Mr. and MrsLukar'h 'left on a wedding trip UWwlij»Kti>M, 11 ('. They will reside in Millkiwn where the bridegroom owns a drug st<nre.
Those present at the receptionwere: Mr. and Mrs. James Lukach,Mr. and Mrs. Ben Garbrr, Mr.ami Mx<<. Andrew Kovscs, Mr. andMrs. Kigmund Lukach, Mr. andMrs. Alexander Pafoian, Mr. andMrs. Andrew Monar and Otic wed-ding party.
Mayor Asks ShowdoiOn Labor Condi!
Hermann To Go Afar Facts A. To EmploynMHt Offtorat M«k-nA»fM<«l By Continual ItofoMl T»Worlnn and Council Mayor Will Take ConmJWorker. To S*»k Facto At Officet Of PUntm.
Pompoui evasion* upon th« part>f industrial head* evidently
ore out official patience W*dm»-d*y night *ti«n another string ofletter* from plant manafern wereread at a council meeting inform-ing that body die waritan could» • no reason for waiting timem conference on the labor tttu-tion. The council had r«pMt«dlyaused to be written request* for
another conference and the fa«-toriwi as repeatedly had refuwliThe letters Wednenday night weremerely mure refumla. excaptimt
from th* Wirocrornpany.When the
Mayor Joseph A. H«"we art retting nowbar* 'wrt of thirc. Th« IIMIDus bhev are tiirinir Carti..,The Worker* AmodaUonthe factories ar« not Mlteret labor. They tcl] U»hires a (treat many Bttia.through letters from kit !
Jednotas CancelGame With Legion
Wood bridge Team Able ToGet Better Guarantee InPerth Am boy — So GameU Called Off.
Friendship LinkOpens Fall Season
Masonic Organization Re-sumes Activity After Sum-mer Rec«aa — Big CardParty Next Month.
The first fall mrctiiiK o[ FriendIi11> Link No. L'S, Order <>S thiinlden Chain WJIS held Tutsda;IRIH HI I lie- Odd 1'YllnwS hall,..i-i ^ business and social meeting'kills wnr made for a public can:>arly in be held some time in Oct<
Mr-- Moe l.rveiUfiri was n\>ti'd chairman of the cuinmitteicharnr nf the arratiHenicnt*
)uriii|j! tlic social (»art of the mcfng bridge was played and n-freslments were sorved.
Those present were: Mrs Thorns I). Chmt , Mr. and Mrs. Abra-ani Durst. Mrs Alex i.ebow. Mrs
.^illian (ircrnwald, Mrs. l.ouis I.e-)owitz, Mrs. Joseph Hrown, Mrs.l.ouis I.chrcr, Mrs. Morris Ulman,Mis. Al Gauluei, Mis. Dura Jato-iy, and Mrs, Morris Spcwak, ofCarteret; Mrs. Mark Harris, Mrs,iVilliam V. Merer and Mrs, Joseph
all of K.ihway,
becauseable 10
tbeir opponents werea belter guarantee in
to 1.!.The third
moiiy Softbiround for the Har-
I.cague follows:7—Rangers vs. Indians
ces vs. Mulocks
Scow by innings:80 4 9
White Metala 200 010 1—4004 362 X16
ic U. SIbe New
York Office tomorrow afternoon atthe Copperworks field in the annualgame between the two teams. Thecontest will start at 2:M
The game which will be the hrstsince 1931 will mark the resump-tion of rivalry between the twoteams. It is expected that Ijegin-nipg with this year the contest willl)e made an annual event.
The Carteret team will in allprobability have Mike Karmon onthe mound with Al Stutzke behindtht plate,
Brotherhood Of Israel UnitPlant For Big Card Party
Plans are progressing rapidlyfor a big oublic card parly to beheld Monifiy night, October 29 inthj German Lutheran Hall "»u«rthe auspices of the auxiliary unit ofthe Brotherhood of Isratl. Thecommittee in charge plans to pro-vide an unusually large and attrac-tive selection of prizes.
Sept,Sept-Sept. 14—Mulocks vs. RangersSept. 17—Aces vs. IndiansSept. 21—Indians vs. MulocksSept. 24—Aces vs. Rangers •
The team standing follows:Harmony Softball League
Team Standing(As of Sept. 6, 1934)
W. L. Pet.Rangers 5 1 .843Mulocks 3 3 .500Aces 2 4 .333Indians 2 4 .333
Rangers 14, Aces 13The Rangers worked overtime to
defeat the Aces last Friday nightin .i scheduled Harmony Club softball league game. But they did itin the tenth inning to win, 14 to13, and thus maintain their loftyposition in first place in the leaguerace.
Tin- Aces gavejthe league leadersa stubborn fight all the way. Theywere far from easy. 1'iling up anarty lead, they were ahead until
the seventh when the Rangerscored three and took the uppehand, 10 to ').
But a three run spurt in thcihalf of the same session gave tinAces the lead once again, 12 to 10the Hangers fought back to tit thscore in the eighth and take thlead in the ninth by the slim marj in uf one run, 13 to 12.
Hut the Aces made their lasihiiiiM- iunlit and succeeded >knotting the count in their half othe ninth. The Rangers then wenun to score what was the winnin,run iu the tenth frame.
The box score:'Rangers (14)
A.B. R. HChipso, 2b 6
allowed th« Touhy dase to developand promitiod his investigationwould produce "no whitewash."
His present procedure with thedetectives' bulky summary, hesaid, ifi to underline statements heeonjsddern important, later gatherthese together in compact farmahd on this base his statement Andany action he may feel impelled totake.
565
3-SkocypeCi cf ,, 5Galvanek. rf . . , , . , . . 5Ka»h», If 5
BalarisTrosko, siJurick, 3bEllis, lb .Kiki, p
R.022
R g1'ertli Amboy than they could pos-sibly ,'et here in Carteret, the Jed-notas have postponed their post-season Kami' with the WoodbridgeAmerican Legion scheduled for thehigh school field next Sunday afternoon.
With the cancellation of thigame the Jednotas have wound uptheir 1934 season.
A brief resume of the season fol-lows: Capturing the flag in the NewYork-New Jersey League for thsecond straight year, the Jcdnotawere eliminated in the second rounof the playoffs by Catasaqua whicwhen on to win the national cham-pionship from Centra! City, defend.ing titalists.
Up until their elimination fron1
the tourney, I lit- Jednotas had beerundefeated, having piled up a win
iK streak of twelve straighgiiines.
many
Woman's Club Notesby ISABEL LEFKOWITZ
Th« Woman's Club will hold itaannual card party October 29,presumably at St. Joseph's HaW.11B opening meeting will be heldon. October 25.
The committee for tho club'*aeventh annual Fall floww show
t Tueaday evening at the homeof the chairman, Mrs. Henry Har^ring-ton, to complete detail* forsame. Thosfl present were Mrs.Clarence Kreidler, Mrs. Frank An-dres, Mrs. ThomBfl But-ke, Mra.Ellen Anderson, MrS. T. J, Nevill
Weiboatvnon rmidMiU
floyment here by irivlttf ftwidri'wK'n in C»rteret wfbey live in aotn* oth«rM-ople cannot get worktowns We mu«t g*t i tnnd we must M« to it thatmen gH employment InWe must make our idemtanri that Wt 1*« outbenefit of Carteret I
The mayor then __„plan which briefly is aaThe mayor and councilwith • committee of fro*seven raprmentativoa ~; _t*ret Workers Associationto the offices of th* tmHM and wiB ask forrecent employment Tlngrupok th verify the record*)dencos of men recentlyThere WM hearty approval <,plan upon the part of th*liers of the councilman anddlman Donolhue offered athat the mayor* plan beout. The motion waaunanimously.
In introducing the motion 1hue said "Industry oweato the workers, and Inthroughout the land willrecognhe the mev«Matyp«ration. Michaal YarcMkfj
:md(>d the motion,John Ciko an account,
president of the Workerstion told of a personal ..in which he received a leposition. Apparently h« __the Qualification* necessary.two days later he received a Utelling him another had b*ea ,
loyed and he might he hired 1t was learned the man
atead of Ciko is a r«ri<fcafi]Fords, N. J. Edward SUlM*'""of a man who obtainedthe WOR construction,his residence on 490avenue. It was found 1live *t that MldrMa orHe WM
and Mrs. Howard Thorn.The flower ahow will be held
Mi«s Lottie Sosnowski IsBride Of John Stoniewski
Miss Lottie Sosnowski, daughterof Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sosnowski,of 83 Lowell street, and John Stoni-ewski, son of Mrs. Ann Stoniewski,of Christopher street, were marriedSunday at 2 P. M., in the Holy"amily Church by Rev. FatheroSeph Oziadosz. The maid of
honor was Miss Stella Leslie, acousin of the bride. The bridesmaidwas Miss Eleanor Zawistowski, ofPerth Amboy. Stanley Stoniewski,a brother of the bridegroom, washe best man. Sain Kushner washe usher.
The bride wore a white satingown with a silk lace veil arrangedwith orange blossoms. She car-;ried a bouquet of Lilies. The maidof honor wore peach-colored satinwith hat and slippers to match andcarried tea roses. The bridesmaidwore peach and green silk with hat-And slippers to match and carriedtea roses.
After ihe ceremony a receptionwas held in the bride's home. Therewere ;IIM>UI 100 guests. Mr andMrs. Stoniewski will Jive in Lowellstreet after their1 .return- from awedding trip to Niagara Falls.
SCHOOLS OTfJENHue local public school* opened
Wadaeaday with a total enroll-of 2.54W a» against 8,437 of
in yea?. The grvatewtappears In the primary
, The Biirollnittiit period willfor the next week, by the
' wfakh time it ia expectedi Of the pupils wno are
will have returned
Two Sent To JailFor Stealing Coal
I'eter Golumb of 13-' Rooseveltavenue, and John Tandarak, of 18Hurlington street, were arrestedWednesday about noon by a Cen-tral Railroad Co, detective^ formealing coal from coal cars. Theywere given ten days each in theworkhouse, Wednesday afternoon,at a hearing in police court.
Rovers, Aces ClashIn Titular Came Sun.
Two Team* To Battle ForSenior Championship OfBorough In Game At HighSchool Field.
The Rovers and the Aces, eaclwith one victory in the playoffswill battle for the W34 senior base-ball championship of this boroughnext Sunday afternoon at the higlschool field. The game will begiipromptly at 2:30 o'clock and a record crowd is expected to watch theiwo teams in action.
The Rovers and the Acis haveeach won one game in the playoffseries which began with a doubleheader last Sunday. The Aces wonthe morning (fame after a bardfight, while the Rovers had easysailing to win the afternoon con
Wednesday, September 12, nt theBoro Hall. The street level en-trance on Cook avenue will beusod. The judges will be Mrs.Thoroaa Leahy, Mr. Fred Baldwin,>oth of Woodbridge, and Mr. R,aunmnn of Bmmaim Bros., Rah-
vay. Entries must ibo in by 11m. and exhibitors must furnish
leir own container. Admission,h i h is free, wiU be open to the
yik'ii flowers. 2. Basketent of garden flowers. S. Ar-injjement of wild flowers in any
lad of container. 4. Bouquet withackground arrangement (tray,
picture, etc.) 5. Large decowtivedbJUias (1 bloom.) 6. Ordinarydahlias (3 blom».) 7. Zinnias (6blooms, any culorti. 8. Roses (3jlooms, any colors.) 9, Asters (6jlooms, any colors.) lfl. Petunias
12 blooms, any colors.) 11. Snap-ragons (12 spikuu, any colors.)
1,2. Marigoldti (t> blooms.) 13.Other annual* (ti blooms.) lb. Pe-rennials, any kind (6 blooms.) 15.?lk>werinjr shrubs or bushes. 1(J,rlome grown vegetables. 17. Mte-t-UaneouB (aJiy exhibit not men-ioned above.
The flower show is open to allresidents of the borough. Exhibitsof home grown vegetables will beappreciated. The public will be in-terested in seeing: what cVin IH;grown in Carteret.
test.On the basis of past perform
auces the writer picks the Rover{o defeat the Aces next Sundayafternoon and thereby win the senior championship of this borough.
Both teams will take the fiekwith tbeir strongest lineups. It iquite probable that the Aces wibase their entire hopes on the pitching arm of Joe Marciniak, Ihiyoung man who beat the Roverslast Sunday. Opposing Marciiu'akin all probability will be StanleyKosel who lost an interesting pitching duel to Mirciniak in the firsgame. - ,
The probable Btarting arrays follow:Rov*r» Ace*KoseJ *,'-.'....' Marciniak
pitcherWhite ,
catcherComba ,
firtt bateZ»gleski
ublic.Classifications of entries follow:Vaae or bowl arrangement ofk fl Bk
W. Casey Jr. To Be MarriedTomorrow At Perth Amboy
William Casey Jr., son of Asses-sor and Mrs. William Ii, Casey, ofWashington avenue, and Miss IrentConnolly, a school teacher, oPerth Amboy, will be married tomorrow at 3 P. M. in St. Mary'sRoman Catholic Church, in PerthAmboy The prospective bridegroom is employed at the U. SMetals Refining Company plant.They will live at 17 Atlantic street
man and was getting away Juntil some one noticedregistration on his auSt&iner said it was such Las these that prompt the 'Association to urge thement of an employment baclearing house in the borougtTM, would effectively stoptricks, he said.
Steiner said the Warnercal Company has coihired Carteret men ond th*Metale Refining Companybeen hiring local men \possible. Mayor Hermannhimself ami the councilthe Workers Associationfigbjt tor Carteret labor.the organization had builtnt&rkable record for __atraightf oward conduct ind Hods. ' ™
A resolution was adopted gri< a club license to the Hua|
Ian American Citiiens CiltJ*a club room in Pershlnf tTiiThe report of the trea»ur*red a balance on hand of )12.72.
Resolutions all wordedwere received from the Vl_.>f Bareigm Wars, the Hebrewration and the Worker*
tion. The resolutions faestablishment of a parkground in the swampy tract _a» the Sisin tract. It lie*Noe'a creek adjacent to th* iSeveral of the councilman dtpHed the matter, sayii " 'in favor of the idea ifinanced. The mayor saldjbe, a good idea to obtainerty as the Canda tract
in lieu of tajxes. Itdeveloped at some fu .when economic condition*ter, or, it might bea project to be financedsuch agency aa the CWA.;be an advantage tx> get rleye sore caused by ttetiondition of the area, he tvresolutiona were referredmayor and council aa ainquiry will be made towho the present ownar*land are. Formerly it «Mby an attwrney n*m«l *died a few years ago.
Charles Lehrer w'bose ,constable is about to e:reappointed for another
Follow The Crowd To MarkwaidGrove, East Rahway |
Sunday, September 9th Afternoon and £v««
MOORE-DILL CLUB |OLD FASHIONED DEMOCRATIC HCXttj
Gaum, Athletic ContwU, Music, D*ncing |SOFT BALL GAME ;
Edr DoUn'a Old Timor, TI F. G J W » AU Star.HOTM Shoe Throwing Cont«t For M«o
SpWal %nmt Married WomenBoiling Pin Throwing Contest
K Tim FORA NEW DEAL
IS HEREELECT HAROLD G. HOFFMAN as GOVERNOR
HAMILTON F. KEAN as U. S. SENATOR:the REPUBLICAN candidates for ASSEMBLY:
COUNTY CLERK and FREEHOLDERS,and watch for developments down the line.
MR. CITIZEN DO YOUR PART ON NOV. 6VOTE THE STRAIGHT REPUBLICAN TICKET
.vnated by1. P. RpF"M''"nn Huh.
Utt W i Evenint ComRemam In Style Thi* Fatt
Your hl(f)i-ln-front last winterevening gnwn will be in style thinfall. Many of the new Parts gowna»re still hiRh front and low inth« batit. O1*i«m «re low both h*cltand front. The top of the firms in(till frequently veiled in IDUIPway. Wide nHouldcr *tr»p in thenewest way of doing thin, newerthan the eap*l«t effect. With widestraps £h* square decollete ia oftenadopted. A few lonitBleevrd evening- gowns are still neen, and thinmode will probahly return withthe fall. Many elbow or shorter•leeves are worn, enpecmlly infragile frock*.
DEPENDABLE SERVICE ISWORTH THE PRICE
Berry Season-NoBut Don't Feel Too BadlyBecause Grapes Are Ripe
Although U. S. Deputncnt Of Agriculture AdvisesEating This Luscious fruit Raw, It Also Suggests
Toothsome-Sounding Recipes For You To Try
GRAPE PUDDING MAYSOUND STRANGE BUT ISN'TRegretful as we are OB seeing the summer berries go,
their departure is more thin compensated for in watchingIho grape* come in. Every day there are new varities inthe stores. Already a few Concords and Delaware reds are
TRUE, io ptylng the electric MIL yon pay(or th« curreol coofomed orer t stated
period.
But, howew intangible, there is anothercom modify that U your* al»o ti a oset offjltc-(ric service!
That commodity i»—Dependability.
And dependability it based on 24 hour aday service. Electricity is a servant which iinever idle, night or day.
Dependability is assured by the most mod-m equipment, up-to-the-minute findings olthe research laboratory and the efficiency ol•vell-trained workers.
In order that you shall have the best service;t all hours ol the day and night your com-tany keeps pace with the latest Improvementsin the ever-developing field ol electricity! Itcosts money to keep modern—and, thus,dependable. But who would have it other-.•isc!
You get a lot for a little when you pay forlectric service that you can depend upon!
No other item in ibt household budgetgives so much for so little as electricity.
here.Eat your fruit raw if youthe Bureau of Horn* Eco-
nomics of the U. S. Departmentof Agriculture in a bulletin issuedtoday. But for all their insistenceon raw consumption the- govarn-ment's food experts suggest thenattractive roripes for cooked fruit.They recommend preserving gen-erous quantities of grapes for thewinter.
Grap* PuiMintCook a quart of steamed Con-
cord grapes in a cup of water totfive minute* Press through a a imto remove akin and seeds. Put to*pulp in • double-boiler with *of sugar, one-quarter copcooking tapioca and oue-qteaspoon salt. Cook twenty-fly*minutes. Add a tablespoon oflemon juice. Serve cold with tCf)milk.
Crap* CoaMrraWaih and stem grapes. Separ-
ate skin fTom pulp. For each poundof grapes use one-half pound su-gar, one-quarter cup seedless rai-sins, one-quarter orange, cut fine;one-quarter cup chopped nuts, one-quarter teaspoon salt. Cook ttiepulp ten minutes or until the seedsshow. Press through a sieve. Tothe pulp add sugar, raisins, orangeand salt. Cook rapidly, stirringfrequently to prevent sticking.When it begins to thicken addgrape skins and cook ten minutes.Stir in chopped nuts. Pour into hotsterilized jelly glasses. Cover withmelted parraiin when cold.
Fried Baa&oai.Skin ripe bananas and scrape off
stringy fltisr. Split lengthwise, dipin batter, roll in bread crumbs andfry until golden brown in shallowfat or butter. Squeeze lemon juiceover them just before serving.Make the batter of one egg:, one- jhalf cup flour, three-quarters cupmilk, one tablespoon sugur andone-half teaspoon salt.
would get its full value ad-
LET HARRIS' SOLVEYOUR BACK TO
SCHOOL PROBLEM
LOCAL STORES GIVESCHOOL LUNCH TIPS
The American Stores tell ofsome interesting ways to varyschool lunches, this week in theirFamily Circle Magazint, the week-ly periodical that these stores giveaway to their customers everyweek. Ida Bailey Allen, hompmak-iff authority, is the author of thisarticle.
With school season stalling,mothers are already beginning towonder what to pack in Kchoollunches. Wise mothers have lcavn-ed that these lunches muHt be astempting and tasty as they arenourishing, and many a plain sand-wich has been thrown away, afterthe sugar or jelly had been licked
•If.
This week marks the second an-niversary inimbdr of the Family"irele, which ia now given away byfood stores to 1,300,000 poopluevery week. Irvin S. Cobb haswritten a special fiction story, il-lustrated by Tony Sarg. Thirty fa-mous actors, authors, and artistshave sent personal messages tothe editor. Hairy Evans, famousmovie critic, and these are repro-duced.
Copies may be obtained without••harge at any of the AmericanStores.
Drink Up!EtpeciaUy II Your
Skin It Dry,Parched
A clear complexion is oneof the girl's requisites ofbeauty, A girl's skin may besmooth and free from minoreruptions, but if It's sallowor muddy it Isn't really love-ly.
If your skin has conspicu-ous yellowish or grayishtones, see a doctor. It may bethat some physical disease isat the root of the trouble. Ifthis is not the case resolveto do a few things to makeyour skin clear and attrac-tive.
Remember to drink tenglasses of water a day, andcat plenty of fresh fruit andvegetables instead of richpastries and too many starchyfunds. Get at least eighthour's sleep every night. Takesome daily exercise in thefresh air.
Don't forget that skintnnirs tend to clarify the skin.(let a (food one and use itoften—ifter cleansing withcither cream or water andnfter any kind of home facial.
Try Raw Peaches In A PieAnd Get A Real Delicacy
PP sure that your peaches areripe because in this pie they re-main ia-.v. Cook a rich crust inadvance, using a half cup ofshortening to a cup of pastryflour, a pinch of salt and enoughice water to make dough. Fill thecooked crust with sliced peachesand cover them with sweetenedwhipped cream.
QUALITY SHOPEXCEPTIONAL VALUES
Among tho leading ckitfiinghouses in Perth Amboy the "Qual-ity flhop located at 2Rfl Smithstreet stands out as one of thebent shops in the field.
Mr. Ssminl Brown, proprietor,ha* been established hero manyyearn, selling nationally knownsuit*, overcast*, shirts, ties andaecewurries. Low prices alwaysprevail here because merchandiseis bought in quantity.
TJM ro#n%the latest styles and mmaiwired of wearing the Irttt at a
re that come* within the rta«hof all. Everybody is assured of afair d«J here and Mr. Browanukes friends of all his patrons,and has enjoyed a large, steady
trnnmte for years. ^JRAll patrons here, no matter what
the purchase, aw mad* completelysatisfied or money is refunded.The store has many patrons fromWoodbridge and Cartorrt.
•at when you don't f,,Rwawnbst. though, u> in,(.
"whether you think*on ''!,j r w t ^ Youl! be mlrpr-,!
mia,.
'i When a fellow has a
jfwato" he naturally wants
• #uit—but for school and
games and
things— it's
KNICKERSSturdy, full
c u t gar-
ments that
will w e a r
and wear. A
c o m p 1 ete
stock in all
sizes from
You'll N«d
SHIRTSAnd
BqttoD-Onsto • t a r t the7«er off right.W b 11«, •olida n d striped.
,H I I IM. Now
SCHOOL FROCKSTailored by Cinderella.
Guaranteed to wash andwear.
B«»f • Ar« DanglingIt seems that we are in for a
winter of being "Little Women"whether we like it or not Bang*dangling over our foreheads andcurls bobbing in the back at thenape of our necks—these completethe picture of old-fashioned lovli-nese we are about to adopt as ourown.
69c
$1.00TO
IPS ABOUT TIMEYOU GOT IN ON
OUR
ChristmasClub
'Thrifties'Save As
You Spend
LOSING OUT!lit 30 all wool suits
Knickers, ve*t
$12.00.
WashableSuil
^for liltU boy,•r» M popular ••
l e w . MJJM yourdhoica from atruly large tal«c.tion of new «mli t t n e l i x
COMPLEXION HELPMilk and lemon juice, taken sep-
arately, of course, are excellentfor the complexion, A glass oflemon juice in hot water onawakening and an hour later aglass of milk are a daily routinewith me. An hour before retiringI drink half a glass of milk and ongoing to bed repeat the lemon andhot water .
Berets Are Getting Bigger,Smaller Ones Still Popular
When you hear that cartwheelsare moving1 over to make roomfor the new beret styles Whichare already making themselvesnoticed and are apparently duefor a biff interaeason and Fallpopularity, don't get the wrongpicture.
Some people are wearing smallberets, but the ones that aresmart, the ones that are newishn Paris and capital letter new
here are large berets.They are made individual by
smart detail, a quill poking thro-ugh the top at a rakish angle, azig-zag edge, stitching, bows andbuckles. The tilt is precisely askewin one of those carefully plannedcareless slants.
At th« Pall showings in Parislarge berets are being featured.One designer features this hat inblack felt. Black and brown velvets are also being made up inFall models =nd it looks as thoughthe style is definitely launched.
"Crinkled Flower*" Stylish
Flowers this season sound ivogue for "crinkled" blossomrather than the smooth petaletblooms. Lilacs, wisteria and fiekflowers are typical of the times,which favor, for afternoon amievening clothes, blossoms whirifall in soft lines and which ar<copied directly from nature rathethan made in artificial patterns.
N«?7 AccoMoriei Smart
Navy blue suede, doeskin orcapeskin gLoves, bag and sandalsare worn by many smart womenwith a navy straw hat to accentcostumes of gray, beige or white
f in styleA-f in valueA in waahability
Size. 7-16
FOR A TASTY
LUNCHEONand DELIGHTFUL
DRINKSVISIT
We've all sorts of ISLIPOVERS
And Button Front
SWEATERSFor Boys and Girla. ,
F O U N T A I NS P E C I A L L U X C h E O N S D A H Y . . . . 2 5 cOur Tatty Sandwiches An The Talk Of The
town lOcandup„% Kjrtra Charge fpr Toasting
COFFEE I W y t Loach Hour
Service(Jlyen to School
ONLY PURE and FRESH
i , • OVRIANITARY
w$ »
Attentioniron
13 USED AT
IMPORTANTNOTICE!
IT WILL PAY YOU TO HOLD OFF BUY-
ING FURNITURE AND HOUSEFUR-
NISHINGS UNTIL YOU SEE THE FULL
PAGE ADVERTISEMENT OF JAMES
McCOLLUM, RAHWAY, N. L, NEXT
WEEK CONCERNING THE GREATEST
SALE EVER HELD IN THESE PARTS.
HEN'S ALL-WOOLFALL SUITS
We made sacrifices—the manufacturermade sacrifices to make this great clothingsale possible. We went the limit — '«eywent the limit to hold prices down and giveyou these sensational values! It's a newdeal for you—DON'T MISS IT!
.95$12 • ALL SIZES• ALL STYLES
REGULAR $20 AND $16 VALUES!
CUSTOM-MADE SUITS10 fjgtt
EXTRA! ONE LOT ONLY I9.9S
If You Bought In Feb-ruary You Could NotBeat Our Price.
Here is a companion value toJ? wMi *h«se suite. Brand new,1934-35 TOPCOATS in all thenew stylet and patterns. Another•Mrifice by the manufacturerand ourselves makes this pricepossible. There are plenty ofatyles to choose from.
While this lot lasts!
l »
1ULARI2Q TOPCOATS!
NOTE, Don't eofuse t W e suits and top., with inferior garment* fc^ sold «t
prie*. m mwcluuHlise U guaranteed— ia this yeay. new
must \ast aT\me —
One p<*rJ protected »
f (
n U1LT oo Nitaw'i hafth lot . . ," with room fat *ve*y toe; DOmill or tscb; fiedhb all-leatfaer,ooa-fotk tola thit gtre with eraytntmoKOt of (Mi**; «**«>* heel1Mb toiieM Aot la jphoe i . . ihoe»thit keep ybang feet young!
Prices Vary With Size
FOR GROWING GIRLS
FROM $ J 2 5 TO $ £ 9 8SHOES AS
LOW AS
WhenAUIsSaidAndDonLet *EmEat CakeM DictumIs No Joke fa These Days
Home-Made Cake Is Whokteac Besides B e b | VeryHandy To Serve For Dessert Or As Snack WHkGlass Of Milk To Those WW Can't Wait For Meal
GINGERBREAD MAKES^HlT WITH HOUSEHOLD"Let them eat cake" would be a welcome pronounce-
ment these days and one that would be greeted by hilariousshouts from younger members of the family. Good andwholesome home-made cake that is rich enough to be nour-ishing and not rich enough \o result in a headache, is thekind of cake to have. Serve it as a snack with a glasa of
FREE - FREEPanel! HOXM w *hEaek Pkir of School
Shoe.
. . . fitted by X-RAYto show exactly how feet liein the shoet. No guess-work.
BOSTON SHOE CO."ALWAYS A LITTLE MORE FOR YOUR MONEY"
182 SMITH ST. PERTH AMBOY
milk or u dessert at the end of anon-starcti moal.
Cnke» enriched with fresh fruit*are especially appetizing in sum-mer. They suggest nice ways ofusing plums, peaches, apples, cher-ries, all plentiful in the stores to-day. A loaf of gingerbread is agood thing to have in the kitchenon Saturday or Sunday, whetimembers of the family dash inand out at all hours and need anoccasional pickup.
Cherry Roly PolyFor the pastry sift together two
cups flour, two teaspoons bakingpowder and a half teaspoon ofsalt. Work in a tablespoon of but-ter and when mealy add barelyenough milk to make dough. Rolland pat this lightly into a long,narrow atrip. Cover thickly withpitted cherries. Sprinkle with su-gar ntul flour. Rhnve the fruit Infrom the edge and press it lightlyinto the dough, then roll it. Pinchthe edges at both end* to preventjuice from escaping. Wrap inflourpd cheesecloth Steam for onhour.
GingerbreadMix two cups molasses, three-
quarters cup of butter or lard andbutter mixed, a tablespoon of gin-ger and a tablespoon of aoda thathas been dissolved in a tablespoonof hot water. Stir in enough flourto make a soft batter, soft enoughto spread to the corners whenpoured into a well-buttered cakepan. Set an asbestos mat underthe cake tin in the nven becausegingerbread bums easily. Bakethirty-five minutes in ft moderateoven. Leave it in the tin until near-ly cold. Cover each portion withwhipped cream. Or spread withchocolate icing. Almost everybody
PORT READING NEWSetto Martin*, Gaern Urban, JainCoop*, Kay UMatfti , BmfMtaMartino, I n MeNUtr, UwrraeeM«Nulty, fane* Varaiflo, WilliamR i h d J f c U d b
WOODBHIDGK AVBNU1.By MILDRED SCHIAVO
POST READING
GRACE ClAJtDILLOCELEBRATES BIRTHDAY
MIM Grace CUrdillo w u th*guest of honor at • part* given bytjgWe
m e»liseveral of her frimda in celebra-tion of her twenty-flnt birthdayThursday night.
Th* rooms were attractivelydecorated in blue and yellow.
g and aingin* featured partof the evening's ama«ew*nt andrefreshment* were served.
The gunta included were; Mr.»nd Mrs. Salvaton CiaHillo, Mr.
Mrs.Mrs.Mrs.
Mrs. Michael Coppalo, Mr. andSamuel Minimi,Alfred Slmeont,
Michael Simeoiw,
Mr. andMr. andMr. and
BUDDIES SOCIAL CLUBELECTS NEW PRESIDENT
At the tut meeting of the Bud-diet Social Club at HagftmaaHeights William Fulkj> resignedas president Larry Waynes was•elected to succeed him.
It w u decided to change th«eeting night from Tuesday at 8'clock to Monday at 7:30 oVlock.
The club will promote a ihowt the Riti Theatre in Carteretuesday, October 16, and ticket*
will be on sal* September 10 andwill be available from any clofcmember.
y, ,Richardson. Jowpfc UdMnbon,Mr. and Mr*. Vincent kfartino,Mr. and Mn. SabailBO Martina,and Mr. and Iff*. Thomas SomefsJr. of Port Reading.
—Mlaa Caroline Hoffman ofBrooklyn, N. Y., apent a wtek withher aant, t in . 6 . KnitUI of Third
likes gingerbread, eithersnack or dessert.
for a
Hrire's HowRouge Users Get
Hint Of 3 BestMethods
Rouge users are divided In-to three schools. The flntmaintains that cream r o u *is best, the second that dryvarieties are preferable be-cause they seem easier toapply, and the third thatliquid brands are most flatter-ing if and when you learn toget them on correctly.
Remember t h a t creamrouge usually looks more.natural and that it's easy toget on smoothly and evenly.Unless you have excessiveoity skin put on a good pow-der foundation before youstart with the rouge. Then,using only a little at a time,blend it carefully on yourcheeks. If you have troubleat first put a bit of cleansingcream on you finger beforeyou dip it in the rouge pot.
Dry rouge, of course, is puton after you've applied foun-dation lotion and face pow-der on over it before you stepaway from the dressing tableand you will eliminate thepossibility of harsh edges.
Liquid rouge takes lots ofpractice to learn to use it suc-cessfully. It ia applied beforepowder, of course.
—Please mention this paper toadvertisers; it helps you, it helpsthem, it helps your paper.
Mrs. Peter Simeons, of Port Rend-ing; and Mrs. C. Napolitono, and
r, and Mr*. Ralph Piteo of W^t-Mrs. Angelina S e w a g e of
'arwood.Also the Missel Grace and Mae
inrdilto, Mary Clardillo, Lillian"ppsio, Mamie, Susie and Violaiminne of Port Reading; Row,
Vssie and Violet NapolTtono ofVestfleld.
Messm. James Rossi, Anthony'homas, Carmen and Benny Sl-nione, and Amiondo Simione, Be-iol!o Ciardillo of Port Reading•'rank and Joseph Hapolitono ofWestfleld.
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Radishf Connecticut visited Mr. and
Mrs. Toth of Larch street, Hagsman Heights.
—Miss LytJia Benntog of Woodridge avenue spent the week
/isitinfc friends in New York.Miss Viola Martino of Perth
Amboy visited her parents Mr. andMrs. A. Martino of Woodbridgeavenue on Saturday.
Miss Dorothy EeklowiU Ofwna the recent visitor of
Mr. and Mrs. R. Martino ofstreet.
"I Drove My Ford V-8 On A 1,400Mile Trip And Used No Oil" Says,
requgula
—Mn, Ft. L«ona and BOM, Joe-eph, A. Charles and Domlnick Con-
anUaa a*4 Daatal jNew |Mk *•*•&• «isad Mr. J. Mftm
—Mw. O. 1Gallaghar, and•pent tha da?hawk Uk«.
—Con Gallatto,laghw and MariaPreeland, Pa.,with Mn. AnnaTavenue.
bato of Portin Union City,Mr. and Mn.
resent at the regular meetingMonday night at 7 30 o'clockimportant business Is to b« trana-acted.
MARTINO SONS CHRISTENED
Mr. and Mr*. S. Martino ofstreet entertained a groupfriends on Sunday in honor of thchristening of their son, VineenlRobert. Vocal selections were glv-n by James Vervillo and Thomas
Somets. The sponsors for the boywere Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hom-ers, Jr. Refreshments were serv-ed.
The guests included: Mr. andMrs. Harry O'ConnoTi of Sewar-en; Miss Josephine Lach of PerthAmboj; Mr. and Mrs. (Tharles Fer-raro of Woodbridge; Andrew Ma-lon of Woodbridge; Harry Rockof Carteret; Mr. and Mrs. GeorgeRaud Jr. of Rahway; Mr. and Mrs.Carmen Zullo, Mr. and Mr«. Mi-chael SUMO, Michael Sasso, Jr.,Raymond SUMO, May Sasso, Jos-eph Zullo, Mr. and Mrs. John Si-vok, Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore Mar-tino, Mra. Anthony Mcnulty 8r.,Miss Hose McNufty, Miss TinaMartino, Miss Catherine Belmont,Miss Kileen Somers, Miss Antoin-
DRESSES EVERY SCH<GlftL WILL W A N T . . . .
GUARANTEED WASH/
ormoDUCMGTHELATEST
IN 2 PIECE
/LIT/
JUST THE THING
FOR SCHOOL WEAR
Special SerriceW« mak* Dr*«t*.
for (•• Estra StmiiWomen wlio cannotb«
New FaUDRESSES
NOTHING $ 4
JETTER J00
DRESS SliCPIOPEN ALL YEAR ROUND
159 SMITH ST. PERTH
HARVEY RUDOLPH, 18 ALDEN ST., WOODBRIDGE
Mr. Rudolph Says This About His Ford V-8:. "lUally, a ride in my new FORD V-8
ia Hke a rid* in a Pullman car. The smooth-
nm* of operation and the tremendous
powc* U certainly there. Recently I nnuh-
ed a 1,400 mile trip and had absolutely no
trouble. Over the entire 1,400 mile course
I added but one pint of water and USED
NO OIL AT ALL Among other thing*, the
•mart appearance of the FORD V-8 is es-
pecially pleasing to me."
at MON E Y-fAYIN6 V/UmTHAT IS THE POLICY OF THE NEW
Woodbridge Food CentCORNER MAIN and SCHOOL ST. WOODBRIDGE
FREE AND PROMPT DELIVERY - Two Phones 0072 • 0073
GRAND OPENING SALE!-FRIDAY - SATURDAY -
Httllf DEPARTMENT Dairy Products
Remember This Regarding The Ford V-8Superior engineering and the proper use of metal, allows the FORD V-8 to per-
f<*» in iU well-known sparkling, spectacular manner without the neces«ty of e*ceM
TO.laterally gives the FORD OWNER the advantage in traffic condition,.
engin* b the FORD works earily-with tt mirnmum of strain and .tress on
all parts.
f
I
1124mA naajlsma, tf»>iuoi frtcm mth, H
y MOTORS.h
"Always The Best for less"At WILLIAM TOBROWSKY'S
Large Bananas
18 C and 2 5 ' D o z e n
SUNKISTOranges and Lemons
17'" 25'
S a ve It me an c/ Mon e ifBORDEN'S
LOOSE CREAM CHEESEBEST
MUENSTERCHEESE 19:. GENUINE
SWISSCHEESE 33
OLD FASHIONED STORE CHEESE 1JERSEY
CORN FLAKESRED CROSSFree Running
SALT 51BORDEN'S
V2 Ib. pkgi. of SWISS, PIMENTO CHEESE
MARYLANDM E L O N S(Must B# Sweet)
3 - 4 or 5 for 25c
HAND PICKED
EATING APPLESSICKLE PEARS
OR
CRAB APPLES5 lbs. for 25c
GRANULATED
SUGAR
$ lb'25cFANCY TABLE
BUTTERiclb.29
ALL G(
EGGS <
23'CAN!
I..-' t > (. U I t* '« , , , i
ViCETABlE^/ - • . . . . i lThey're K"i
FRESH GREEN
SPINACH 3 Ib.. 19cFRES
C 0 R M do*. 23c
I, GREEN or WAX BEANS 21b.. 13c
CAMPBELL'S
PORK & BEANS
LARGEST CAN
PEACHES 2 lor 2 9 "LJBBY'S LARGE DILL
PICKLES jar J g c
)ER 2 bunches
|Y HEARTS 19cWHITE, MEALYFOTATOES 33«
Silver
DUSTSTEEL WOOL3 boxw for 10c
: or YELLOW
UASH 2
SHEFFIELD'S EVAP.
MILK A cam
SILVERDALEUn
TOMATOES 2
TALL PINK
SALMON 2
KirkoW.SOAP 3 for U c
TISSUE8 for 25c
for LARGEST SIZE CLOUDY
PahnoHre
SOAP 4cSELOX
10c
•i JS«
CARTERET PRESSSnbterlptiwi, 11.60 Pw T«tr
Teltphon. Cartwtt 8-1*00
Fublished by Carteret Pr<*»
C H. BYRNE •**•*
MIYBR ROSENBLUM »»•»*• •«*•*
Int«r«l M teeond elan matUr Jon. t, 19M, i t Oartawt,
N. J., Pout Office, under the Act «f March I, 1870.
Foreign AdmtMnfH«w rtrwy Ndfklwrkoed Newspapers, be,
EDITORS SAT-
i IT IS ODD
The Amboy News, which devotes a good deal of time
to telling other communities around the county how to run
their affairs, carries an interesting bit of information in a
front page box one day this week. It seems there ia a Dr.
William C. McGinnis who is superintendent of schools !n
Perth Ambov. He is credited with revealing the cheering
news to Perth Amboy teachers that salaries for May and
June were to be paid Thursday (yesterdey). And here's
the catch in it. The long suffering teachers of Perth Amboy
ijrill receive fifteen per cent of their many months over due
Salaries in rash. The remaining eighty-five per cent will be
fa Perth Amb'\v city bonds.
:i Folks in (-arteret do not know much about the type of
Jfonds referred to. Such bonds are more familiarly known
fg'scrip. But we in Carteret know little about scrip except
ky hearsay. We may know of county bonds and how it is
Hretty hard nome times to convert them into cash. But muni-
dpal bonds—that is municipal scrip—is something else
•gain. Scrip is hard to negotiate. Usually you have to take a
jUpcount when you do find any one willing to recognize it
» money. The Perth Amboy teachers who have been wait-
fakff since May and June for their pay, if they were paid
-Jetferday, still have a job of w«rk to do in converting the
txnids into cash.
*••• It is odd that a city blessed with an all-wise pubiie.a-
iHon to advise it, and with many resources in the way of big
'industry should find it necessary to resort to scrip. Here in
gC&rtetet teachers did not have to wait until after vacation
'sflraa over for their May and June pay. They were paid on
!0nie and in good old American dollars.
The paper referred to recently produced an interview
%ritten by some wild-eyed radical who saw no magic in tin
Way Carteret is run Perhaps it is not magic. But when a
Jown struggles through five years of depression with a
'staggering load of debt left by a former administration
and whittles down some of that debt, at the same time cut-
ting taxes and paying all bills on time in honest money and
jjarrying on all municipal functions there must be some
sound, practical management in control.
"THE COURTEOUS THING"Mr. Douelan ha* hastened In
place himself »t the disponai ofMT. Ball, Mn «nr«*SMr •• »ir»rtorof the BodfcH. HP will rt»y on inWashington to help Mr. B«ll insny way open to him. as long anhe is wanted. To him tfiis xeemfionly "the rourteoUB thing-" to do.Tim will inevitably raise the aues-tion whether the PreHident did th*courteous thing by Mr. Douglan.No word came from him, direct orindirect, except the curt announce-ment that Mr. Douglan had resirn-ed and that his place had been filled. Of course, ft may be that Mr.Roosevelt bat written, or willwrite, a letter of appreciation toMr. Douglas. This would be in linewith his usual handnome behavioron such occasions. Whether he admlU it or not, the public know*that he is under a real obligationto Mr. Douglas. At the President'surgent Teqoeat, Mr. Douglas re-sHpied his teat in Congres* in or-der to assume the heavy duties ofthe Director of the Budget. Atleant for »ever»3 month* la«t year,he was a tower of strength to Mr.Roosevelt, in the early gtrurele foreconomy and for a balanced bud-get. Whatever differences mayLiter have developed, this servicestands secure and acknowledged.The country would have beenpleased to have had a generous ac-[nowledfretnent of it by Mr. Roose-velt.—N. Y. Tim...
JUST GOOD ADVERTISINGOne of New York's big stores
announces that it will sell* at costa year, taking no profit for
the owners and management, thusincreasing purchasing power of itscustomers. Sounds like philan-thropy, but is it? We are more in-clined to believe that it is a gi-gantic advertising Stunt, intendedto attract other merchants' cut-omers and build up tht store1! paronage so that it will reap profits
in the years to come. In a senseit is unfair to every competingmerchant, who may not have suffi-cient reserves on which to live fora year. Little merchants must havesome profit if they ore to survive,to maintain their families, and tohe in a position to expand. Thestore's announcement says It is intended to help national recovery,but if it squeezes out n lot of littlefellows and cramps some of the bigones it will hurt rather than help.—Freehold Tratucript.
COAL and WOODSCRANTON FRESH MINED
COALLESS ASH MORE HEAT
WOOD CUT CONVENIENT SIZESPROMPT DELIVERY
CART. 8-0601A. W. HALL, Prop.
n iDETT THAI Cf\ 191 Periling AU1KCL 1 LUAU LU. CARTERETg
CARTERET
-m
miExceptional WJBM fa bi ta i
n e W Fall dresses may b« Had at th»,Sunshine Dress Shoppe, located onSmith street, n«ar Madtaon aYe-nue, Perth >mboy-
This ston« is a unit in a Jaitjfichain of similar stores and bwausaof tremendous buying power artable to offer dresses for rmien lea*than i» ordinarilv aMted.
All drewes being offered in thdsyear's models, In new pattertaand rolnw. Prices, consideringthe fine quality, ara extrtmely low.
K £ 3 & &
Vmm
mm
illr
GOOD USED CARS• S E X T O N •
ChrytUr and Plrnovtli AfancyIB Smith St. Phone 4-0181
PERTH AMBOY
STORAGEIN FIREPROOF BLOC
EXPERT CRATING AND PACK-ING REASONABLE PRICE8
JAS. MC COLLUM, INC.i29 IRVING err. RAHWAY
tons in Nn.i i•deral nl,.)iMh' '»y the Sim, .,,
ot'ifim in't h'!,"'',.''.
T J*? T**r. Thp nntt,,r.,' . y g * to evsry ,,,,,; ^
L MANN 4 SONOPKJMETRISft
HOURS%™ toia, 2 to r, „„,,
wtdneaday, 10 to i;!,,n,v ^
80 Smith Street T» 420?,
PERTH AMBOY. N. i
DR. WALTER F A C A NSUtMOH CHIROPot),,
H O U R S : D t l l r I I I A M t,,
,'ntmm P«rti Anbey 4
103
-?A\*«
RiWil
ftorn the Tuesday H\jfktduring >* full harvest
the public may be called upon tohelp defray the cost of erosionprevention.
It is not likely that the promi-nent promoter* of the project willallow the matter to rest until amore sufficient reason for refusingthe_appeal of tb» people is given.
Jovrul.
Larcett Ship Etmtorlnn<cut ship elevator In theIs Ht Nlederflnow, (Jermsny,
the Havel, Elbe andodor rivers. Barges arriving ItMcdorflnow must he raised or low-ered 120 feet, depending on the di-rection which they are going.
Citiw CulUa "M.Dch.iUr"Manchester Is a manufacturing
city of England—psrtlcularly ofcotton goods. Lowell, Msss., hasbeen called the Manchester ofAmerica; also Ghent, of Belgium;Osaka, of Japan; Klberfeld, of I'ru»-•la.
PROPOSAL TURNED DOWNThousands of residents of the
State would have been benefitedby conversion of a long strip ofthe Sandy Hook peninsula into ibathing beach and public recreatiun ground.
The Government has not usedand is not using the strip that thepeople I'Dvi'lud. If actually nettled,in time of unerifpncy, the stripcould be taken by the Governmentand used. Idle territory wouldhave been transformed into a veryvaluable public benefit.
It is difficult to find th« view-point of the War Department thatinfluences it to turn down »uth anappeal on the part of the people.It is believed that "ill-founded an-tagonism" of the local command-ant at Fort Hancock influencedthe decision of his superiors.
It was greatly desired that thecoveted area be acquired becauseof the lack of public recreationalgrounds along the Jersey beaches.The public is made to pay forbathing privileges, or shut out en-tirely by private owners, although
Let ElectricityWork for You
CHILDREN'SOUTFITTERS
133 SMITH STREET PERTH AMBOY, N. J.
SCHOOL OPENING SALEAt this tivne when your youngsters are ready to go
back to school, Lobel's offer the largest and most com-plete selection of school clothes for your boy and girl.You will find as always both quality of merchandise andprices most reasonable due to our purchasing power of23 stores.
Back to Schoolt
As children start their daily visii if> the halls of learning, they will „,„,,^ plenty of nourishing, wholesome f(lll<i^ to supply energy and vitality. The (]lh,
foods you buy in our Stores at „, -u
reasonable prices, are kitchen and |,boratory tested for quality. This t,siing ia for your protection and satisf „tion,
Where Quality Counts A Your Money Goes Furthest
One ?t mm Peanut Butter Both U
One Wright Dayton Airplane f 25 /Coffee Sde Contmaet All Week
"> 2 1 cAn excel lent blend of rich f|;iv.,.
Victor ib 19cA fine blend of Santos Cnfi,,
Acme t 25c" . " " 7 i'all - Arabian, Mocha, Java and S.taste the diiterence Ampi-ic". rn«Bo. .km
The World's Finest
Coffees in Our Three
Favorite Blends —
Any gnu of these electricvacuum cleaners will take thedirt out of your rugs, straight-en the nap and brighten thecolors. All you need to do is toguide the machine.
flie Universal is a remark-ably good cleaner for themoney. Its special feature is the noautkwith its smooth bluut projections whichcomb the hairs and threads from the rug.Strong cross currents of air dislodge and
$ . draw the dirt up into the hag*.
UNIVERSAL
Girl's School DressesMothers will buy a few of these
fast color cotton dresses, polka dots,plaids, prints. Full cut and well tail-ored. Plenty of styles and colors toI o o s e from. 3 to 6 size hnve pantiesor bloomers. 3 to 6, 7 to 14.
Boy's 3-Pc. Rugby and4-Pc. Knicker SuitsComplete outfits for the boy from 5 to 14. Fine wool
cheviots and soft tweed suits tailored to Lobe! standard.Every garment ia full cut to give your boy the most of com-fort and wear. The Rugby suits have one pair of shortsand one pair df knickers or two short*. The knicker suitahave two pairs of knickers and vest. A few suits have oneknicker **>d one pair of long pants.
$90.50**° CASH
; The Westinghouue motor driven brush, cletner has an extra wide noule set et-. pecially low. This means fewer trips across
1 the rag and more afficient cleaning of dif •|ficult places. An qxtra belt is given withathis cleaner. $5 allowance is made on the
price of the Wewinghouee if you trade inyour old electric cleaner.
WESTINGHOUSE
$44,95CASH
KJThe Hoover hetU, sweeua and suction"gleans, all in one easy motion dolled 'Poti-
f ^ Suction lifts the rag ja«F the floor and the revolving ban of the
•tor beat out (he dirt and the braahea_ p it up. liberal allowance if yon trade
|j|A0ld electric cjeaner,
u >L800VE8
$"^.9§7 UP
BOYS' SHORTSM*de of sturdy twe«<UIn t»« and g#*y or finecheviot. Every pair i*1<M4 and t«lf bettod.SIM S to 10.
GIRLS' SILKD R E S S E S
A garment nice enoughfor school or church.Made of h«wy crejw ailk.Most appealidg youthfulmodels in wrwy FallBhttde. Win«, brown andjavy. 8 to 14,40 to 16.
GIRLS'MIDDIES
BOYS' BLOUSESand
JUNIOR SUITSFine broadcloth with
preahrunk collar*. Neatlytailored, attractive pat-terns. Th« button-Wiblouses have matchingties. Sizes 6 to 10. Shirtsin sizes 8 to 14. -
,American Coffees skillfulU-
blended.
ASCO
n 0 *lb oqc45c ASCO
Vinegar £ 39f
Peas 19c ASCOSweet 2 •'35
Corn 14c ASCO Crushedor Golden Bantam 2
N o - 2occans 4 B ^
Tomatoes JSSO 2 N -2317c ASCO
Tomato JuiceCocktail2^ 1 5ASCO Beans with Pork6c ASCO Tomato Soup121/gc ASCCTSauer KrautGlen wood Apple SauceHom-de-lite MayonnaiseHindu Belle Salad DressingASCO Evaporated MilkFarmdale Evaporated Milk
4 med cans 19c3 cans 17c2 cans 23c
can 10cpt jar 17cpt jar 15c
tall can 6c4 tall cans 23c
Victor Bread big
loaf •
Bread Supreme u^87c Gold Seal Rolled
Oats2pl" 13*Reg. 13c
Force2 pkgs 23N. B. C. Premium Flake* pkg 9cN. B. C Luxury Cake* AMorted lb 23c•Rob Roy Ginger Ale qt bot 10c*Rob Roy Sparkling Water qt bot 10c
•Plua usual bottla deposit
Swans Down Cake Flour 44-oz
Fleiachmann's Yeaat cake 3cASCO Baking Powder lb can 19cCalumet Baking Powder lb can33c
Pineapple "S^°2 £37Peaches 2 1 3 1
from Am tweal e m mof tuberculin teiUd «ows.
Sw««tCream
Butter » 314
'Hie Kin«8l Butter lo Aifaerlo*.
r> ,'i
I
'Jfpp
I*25-
BOYS'WASH TOP
S U I T S
rtttipti
colon with cheviottw«*4 sborta,, lined and
Xvwy blouae wiihtie. Tan, blue and
>S t ius 5 *• 10.
SPECIALS
GIKL5
Btol«
GlfU' FUnn«l Slurt*. Alli # 0 0
»*i* (
Richiand Butter Ib 29c
Forb . r
Hii»(«ctuiii
F«r pOMUng,
Irf ZLI
twelve T^ Xin*. boilioK, Bivk
aUSLOrange Juice 12 — 23-
'.'I '%:' | S l
C«lif»mUORANGES
IBc
« 5p' 1 1 1 MALAGA «•
TOKAY GRAPESS 1 M . 26C
F«B«I SMWCACUFLO
H««rti ofCELERYI for 17«
«B«I SMW W UCACUFLOWER
s Take Morning Game, 5-4,Rovers Win Afternoon Tilt, 7-0
r , and th« ACM, *n»l- Meanwhile No"ak, Rovers1 piteher. _ J 0 - V t n i ( K I I H M . h * M t k « A . . . . L . I . I ' . . 'Hound Robin totfrney
ljor butali * f cthe borottfk,, furioad i
d
k-n
I,,
Sunday at #»« n i 8*•,,..1,1 and wert no better;,„ they gtartad. IPbr the
= ,I,P morning fame, 5 to,,;,, liovers «wne » « * to, ,heir opponents ta the
",.'tussle, 7 to 0,, which1|(Vintod by rain at the.„,. fifth.
. • ' i n i n K t,, i,,nir duel between J««,i ,,f the A e « «nd Stan-. ,,f the Rover* Kosel,
.,..,ui!-h heimil thi
,,, to Marciniak's five..,l,v WHS fin-ion* with both!,,,!!ling bitterly front theih,. Aces scored an un-,„„ in the second Inning.
',,. ,.,-s came back in the,,,,1 scored two runs on,, ntiwsky's home run to
, ,t with Bill Sloan on base..,.-,, the Rovers the lead for,,',. being, 2 to 1,
.„, ihi' Aces didn't wait long„ ii,,.y tied the score. InI,v onuifht up in their half
! .rssion scoring another un-.,) mil without the aid of nI v,, bases on balls together.,„ infield out turned the
„ m the sixth Sosnowskytin' Rovers off wifch draw-
;,, |,;,.;(. on balls. He stole see-,,l scored on Dinney Comba's
Ll,,c hit. Koset and Zaglew-,,|, filling the bases. Then,k hit MarkowHi, foreinf.;i with the second run and
!„.• ihr Rovers a decisive ad-|fcu". 1 to 2.
\. i's, however, were not toi,|,,m' for right in the same
iiii",' pounded Koeel torMarciniak led off with
Jackson walked. Bar-Mtrk nut. Marcii .walked.lined. With two awayases load, Clark savedi the Aces when he hitleaning the bags.el-noon game saw the
I! up a two-run lead inmil win the game in theith a five-run outburst.
held thfl Aws helnlpiw and shutthem out during the abbreviatedcontest.
Lou Kapuey handled the offici-ating in real big league fashion.
The box scorei;MORNING GAME
Ac«t (S)AB.
oy
H u m , usC l
3g , rf 8
Marciniak, p 3Jackson, lb 2BaranMuk, 3b 1Marrai, 2b * 2Dixon, c 2Clark, cf 2. . .
Colgan, rfM i i k
I AVOR N. J. BIDDERSnine will be accorded
'.r.'y firms by the Statei. Commission in consider-
I ; fur maintenance materi-vi rdinK to a policy adopted-. Commission. Rejection of
i mateiials where firms in•-• -,ic do not submit the lowest. wns voted by the commis
|>LLAR DAYSCHINDEL'S
fli.n.lel's is ready this week-•'i thousands of dollars'f brand uew Fall merchanriuh is being offered shop-i ridiculously low pricesa special Dollar Day event
gibt, hundreds of shoppers
21Rovers (4)
AB.B. Slaon, 8b 4Sosnowsky, as 3Comba, c 3Kosei, p 3Barbarczuk, cf 2Zagleski^b 2Czajkowski, rf 3Markowiu, If 2Roster, c 0G. Slaon, 2b 1White, c ; 2
H.
H.
25 4The score by innings:
Rovers 000 202 0—*4Ace» 010 103 x—4
Umpire—Kapuey.
AFTERNOON GAMER o w . (7)
AB. R.B, Slaon, at 8Sosnowski, 8b 8Comba, lb 8Kosel, cf 3Barbarczuk, rf 3, 3Czajkowski, 2b 2Zagleski, If 2Novak, p 2Custer, c 1
22Acet (0)
AB.Hagan, ss 2Colgan, rf 2Marciniak, If 2Jackson, lb 2Baranczuk, 3b 2Marczi, 2b 1Prankowski, c 1Clark, cf 1Nagy, p 2Vandeventer, cf 1Dixon, cf 1Trusrek, p 0
R.000000000000
Yard Beats Office,In Momd DwL 3-2
Victory Enable* Yurtl ToClimb Within OnfrHaJfGame Of Leaden—ThreeRun Rally In Fifth hmingWin* Game.
By knocking off the Main OfficeWednesday evening, 3 to 2, MikeTrosko's Yard team crept op with-in half a (tnme of the league-leadir;g Of fie • Club.
The game develoiied into abeautiful pitching duel betweenBuck Barkatew of the Yard andJin. Keating, Office «,tnr. i>n thela"-is of .hits, Koatlnz hml theedge as he allowed only five hit?while Barkalew gave six. But theypi>y off on the final score and that'swhore Barkalew steps in for hisshare of the glorj.
The contest was bitterly foughtBoth '.earns art bitter rivals andthis i ame was of vital Importancelo both clubs. A victory for theOffice would have M.wt>d the raceup for the white collared workers.However, the Yard won and therace has tightened "up consider-ably.
The Yard men concentaated alltheir scoring efforts i-n one bigmning—the fifth—In which theyscored all three runs. At this pointofthc game they were trailing theOffice, 1 to 0, as the Office hadBcoreri in the first on successivehits by Carl Morris, Rudy Mullen,and Simonje.
With one, way, Ivnn singled f<the Yard in the fifth. Harmon fiout. and it looked mighty bad foithe Yard team. Rut Rood and reliable Hymie Rosenblootn came thruwith a smashing double, scoringIvan with the run that tied thescore. Yap followed suit and poked
Setwton Not* Out10-9
Tne Sinatofi nosed out the Car-ftftrs, Monday by a 10 to 9
score; *T* win tile Senator* thwirt-rd threatening three-run Tigtr rallyin the b i t frime.
The fa* score:> sfUutton (10)
A.B.King, d 4Frey,.2b .. 2Ihtaridt, 2b 2Bobel, M 4Profcopiik, ri 5Vandevtnter, 3b-p .. 5Notak, p-3b Sl.ukatfnk, If 5Watlfk, t 5DumansH lb 2Virag, lb 2
R.21010321000
tlgtn (9)41 10
tanas, c-3b .Lefty, IfCzapik, Jb-pSurek,M«rek,Gafai,'Rarbarczuk, *lKaldan, ss-cfI. Pisar, rJ
X::
AB.353S51551
35 9 1
Tutillb
s Win SlugfMtfrom TifaH By 1H«
mt»
* artcret Clovers won an Oldi«iftf«.l from tht Tiger*
thf wrrkmd. The score wa»12boi score:
Cloven (IS)A.B.
:ka .lbsky. II
ik, c-lh ...
643444t4235!
3
I000
120
"t the Clovers used their fciti tobetter advantage.
The box store:Ciwwa
Jams, <Patrick,C
-•b
41 15 18Tijm (12)
A.B. R. H6
.11. cCtapStarek.Uarek.Garai, --I Plsar, rfBarbs I' /nk, If .V, Pisar, dJ, Bolvl, rf-ss
555432452
42
R.2111100213
J 8
Lattanzio's 3rd Win In 4 TriesLeaves Him 3 Points From Top
Promoter Of Garden State Meet* Here Declarei He MayUse Red Hoagknd Of Germantown As Driver 01
Hit Car; Sees Matera^Not Pushing It'
LEAD CAN NOW CHANGEHANDS IN SUNDAY MEETStill without a top race victory after four Garden
p p ^tsite Association automobile meets at the Rpoodway here,single into left, scoring itymk' Johnny Matera this morning is considorinjj; ft threat which
with the second mn and pinK the m a y coflf n j m his place in Joe Orsini's car.K KeltSbL0; iflTtoW Oraini is the big.man in the indnpendent troupe ofnoxt three Wters to face him,;'rivers who stage their fifth co-op^nitive meet of thef i i Y l H
defers Defeat
The Clovtr* deitated tht U-Rhi, 7 to 3, Monday attmoen at
' field. Both tt*tn» hit hardC
ins State TilCarteret Team Cops Flag h
State Polish Union leagxC*rt«r«t'« Holy Family bwebult [drove in Run No. S' wWl *
Kohn, ZbPaszlowski, rf 2bJim Reiko, c . .Terebecki, pRoman, rf-cfM.Mylra. 3bPitipanki, IfWadiak, lbJohn Rcsko, lbPoll, ssGregor, IfWard, lb-H . . . .M»slok, rf
"I,.443J3422J101
H.2003011201
are the 1914 champions ofth«> New J e m y Polish Union Base-ball LttgM. They won the titlebefore a btf crowd at the higheetiool field Saturday afternoon,
they defeated the St. llia-Ctob of South Amboy, 14
to I, la the final and deciding
TWO big rallies of five and sixrnm, retpettively, paved the way[tit the Holy Family victory.
The Holy Family scored fiveTOM in the second inning. AfterSam Smolensk) grounded out, Ro-aanaki reached Ant on an infieldttror. He acored when Bill Zyak
Vitrtpled between right and center' I Bin ir ._»i •!>._ J.^.» ?™i. v-».
drive to leftThe locals thtn raUd „
until the sev«ntlt frame, vth«y knocked M. CMtMdd «the box witii a sli-ron ttitt pot on a threaUnlat,
tare in the last inntAf, * • « > , .stopped after atoiiag « • ra»v
Carteret'a pitching dotiatdivided between Bill KamottI,oois Lukmaluk. Betweenthey held the South Arabi l l widely scattered hit*.wai taken out of the box fatthird when he wrenched hie 1Up until that time he held St. 1dnth hltleM and scoreleaa.
The boi atore:
37
<SA.B.Gadek, ss SSkron, c( ,Bobniek, SB . . . .Poskanick, c —Melnick, lb . . . .F. Kosmyna, rf .
7 13
yRlenger, pP. Kosmyna, 2bKintk, If
Hi.11102212
p gBill Kunont then drove Zysk lunnewith * one-bafgtr to right fl«td.Anothtr b«M hit by GokiMwsktsent KMnont to **cond. Both menadvanced on Walt Zjnk's prettysacrifte*. Then up eomes I»uleLukasiuk and what do you tup-poae h« did. He lined a single toleft scoring two more runs. FrankY»p walked. Frank Siekerka then
36 .1 12
forcing in Yap with run No. 'A. -ion here on Sunday. He ia alsoWith a 3 to 1 lead to work on,[the owner of the machine which
Buck Barkalew pitched the last!Matera piloted to five- consecutiveptwo innings aa though his lifpended upon it. He (tot bysixth without much trouble.
p*ln :triumphs in the first rivo meets ofthf the Garden Staters' cumpnign atBut Newmarket. And he in definitely
mile feature
17 0 4The score by innings:
Aces 000 00—0Rovers 200 5x—7
Umpire—Lou Kapuey.
D.g With Niae LivesHave yuu ever lieurd the story of
the dot with "nine live*?" It is tobe found in a book of memories byBlr James Crlchton-Browne, note*a writer In the Montreal Herald.He lays there Is a portrait of afoxhound at Cannon hall, York-shire, apd the following legend Is
g- advantage of these great- Extra help hag been
i-il to take dare of the an-••! c r o w d a .
Cartel ,'ttachedjo t h e ^ w h o was called
Ugkt•l.piiant, by reafon of its
il Ktrength, night be expect-in)oy at letat ten bttnrs' sleep.n. however, for It seldom baatium two or three h»urs' resttun.'. It seldom UM down and
Hover: Rover, In 17S3, was suspect-ed of madness, and condemned tothe gallows, lie WAS hanged for squarter of an hour by Tlmnias Beet,the huntsman, and then thrown In-to a coal pit 35 yards deep. Overthree months Inter, when some menwere down In the old pit. they dis-covered him—still alive mul In per-fect health. He liml found food andwater somehow, Such tenacity won(Or him a pardon, mid he became an
Rosenblum, 3bY bYap, 2b, ss > iBarfcclew, p 3 0T. D'zurilla, lb 2 0Kasha, If 2 0Trosko, c 2 0O'Donnell, rf 1 0Schultz, rf, ss 2 0 0
25 3 6Office (2)
• AB R HMorris, cf 4 1 1Cromwell, ss 3 0 0Mullins, lb 3 0 1Simone, rf 3 0 1Zullo, 3b 3 ' 0 0McDonnell, If 3 0 0Wiegolinski, c 2 0 0Balcwreh, 2b _... 3 0 2Keating, p 2 1 1
26 2 GScore by innings:
Office 100 000 1—2Yard 000 080 x—3
Lattaniio last week won the 10-—his third vic-
in the seventh the Office threaten-(disgruntled at Mators's consistented. With two away, Jim Keating!failures to climb in front of Alcame through with a herculean I Lattanzio in the events here.three base hit. He scored whenSchultz muffed Carl Morris' infield hit. Carl, however, wascaught napping off first, making itthree outa.
The box score:Yard (3)
Ivan, cf 4Karmon, rf, 2b :i
tory in four tries. That closed Ma-tcra's lead over the mustachioedNew Brunswick driver to just threepoints, representing only a secondplace in the GSA point scoiing.That means if ljittanzto placessecond this Sunday, while Mutfi-agoes unplaced, ho ties. If hewins and Matera does no betterthan fourth, lattanzio loads.
Mentions Ho«g|and As SubSo you can Bee things aro be-
Trick Cars FeaturedIn Show At SpeedwaySomaraaull And Roll-Over
Autos Listed By B. WardBeam For Sept. 16
Two of the most unusual crea-tions conceived by automotive en-gineers—a somersault and a roll-over automobile — will be putthrough their maneuvers as a por-tion of the thrill program of B.Ward Benin's International Con-gress of Dare-devils at the Speed-way here on September Itith, iie-cording to the show's industriouspromoter.
The somersault car was original-ly designed, declares Benin, inKnglnnd nnd wan brought to thiscountry for the first time twoyears aRii by the lute Willitim Kspeof l'ortliind, Ore. The car was pro-
Said customers lust Sunday con j hibited by law in England after
Hi' milled that after laying offfor the .Sunday after next, the16th, when B. Ward Heam has «noption on the track for his Con-
uf Oaimlevils, the races willreturn for two weeks in Septem-ber, four dntes in October nndmaybe une in November. He isn'tgoing to hefit the grAiidstnmls,either: figures if the customerslike it, they'll shiver for it.
Mostly Dot•While the best fishing of
the year ia generally had inSeptember, it also is themonth we begin to give ourdogs a workout. The birdshave finwhed breeding nnd
l
Holy Fatally (14)IB.
S. Golasiewski, u 6W. Zysk, If 5I* Lukasmk, cf <!ft Ytpctenski, 2b, p 4F. Slekerka, lb 6S. Smolenski, 3b 4J. Roianaki, c 4B. Zjrak, rfW. Kamont, p, 2bM. Siekerki.'Zb
Scth
41S
18110
aI
48 U
theg
have nearly ma-b
Koiforoski, 3b 8 1W. Urbranik, ss S 2B. Ugoda, 2b S 2L. Lagoda, cf, p 5 1J. Klimek, c „ 4 2llrankowski, lb 4 0
i, rf 8 0K. Kanenski. If 4 0M. Chlebicki, p, cf 6 0
SS 8The score by innings:
0
St. HiacinthHoly Family
Tb
000 080 005— 8060 111 6 1 x ~ U
h i P l k
y t f ytured. Young birds fly but as h o r t distance affordingquite easy work for bothman and dog of course, themore hunted the greater are the
h
coming drastically out of order for | troubl
tributed to a pate of about a thou-sand dollars, although inefficientpolicing permitted a crowd estimated at. above H.0O0O to tricklethrough, over and uinlri the walla.
They saw Johnny Ulesky ofElizabeth u^nin wheel the fastestjob out uf the pits, equal his ownGarden State record of 30 secondsflat in the half-mile qualifyingand then fold up again with motor
Oraini. "Matera isn't pushing thatcar as he used to—before lanna-cone was killed—and I'm thinkingof sticking Red Hongland of ( i * -mantown in under that wheel," thepromoter-in-chief declared yester-day.
Mkitera himself, Joe Verbely,who won the only feature racehere Lattanzio hasn't taken, VirgilDeMario and Tommy McWilliams,all were in the pits enough to re-move 'em from serious considera-tion in the feature.
Second Half Race Tightens^UpAs Three Teams Bunch Near Top
it the. greater part Ot the night j hos^red pensioner ut Cannon hall,[ n-atless shuffling and osellla whert ke llv»d In comfort for irmny
yenra
ByM. IL
IVrhaps I might be wrong but I'm willing to wagertin1 Round Robin junior baseball tournament spon-i by Joe Comba during the past six weeks will take the^ uf the Carteret Twilight League in 1935 and will>nu- the annual summer baseball feature in this bor-ii starting next year.
Hie tourney went over in a big way this year and Joeii'a, its sponsor, ia to be commended for hia excellentI* iii putting it across. I know Joe labored hard to puttourney over. His good work is reflected in the cooper-11 lie got from both the players and fans alike. 1 amI the fans will support a good senior Twilight .League
ftliis borough next year. They turned out in good num-H lor the tourney games this year and were treated to"• ttiir-ji good baseball games. .
Al the present time the tourney is deadlocked with the•' ;wd the Rovers jointly tied for first place. These two"in .split a double header Sunday, the Aces winning the
game and the Eovera the afternoon contest. Theyy the final and deciding game at the high school
11(1 next Sunday afternoon.Ami here is a bit of .Fednota baseball news from my
(l Intend, Tony Zachik. Tony reports the game betweenJ^inutas and th,e Woodbridge League-has been deftn-
*> postponed because the Legion could get a bigger guar-II '" I'erth Amboy playing the Amboy A. A. than Itbl hope to getin Carteret from the Jeduotas. So the Jed-
l l : ' 'iison has finally come to a close. For those who mayim.-u-.sted in knowing how Catasaquu, Oarterets con^"', lias fared, I wish to relate that the team which has'wUid Carteret has marched to the national champion-•I'-feating Central City, 1933 champs, in the finals ati( v.'land Stadium. The score was 8 to 5. rhat bit of'""y be some consolation to Carteret's Jednota teaiq.
i'ifli for that .
i uou't suppose there are many wljo know that Car-1" ; Holy Family baseball fcam has won the chaimpion-[i1'« the SUteiWish League, S e a t i n g South Amboy in•" h id ing game at the high school field last Saturday
'•''ilijuu, ' ' j .
\i the second half in the,U. S. M^ls interdepartpaejtr^-ail leaguxiraws slowl* to a close, with the Main OS-, ' but "in",I learn to my amazement this week th»t\: v ««-d has nd y i won the flwt half and the Tank Housek '"»« a mathemtioaJ S»n9e for the flag In th« open-
Tiger• Nip BoulevardBears By 12-2 Score
Tbe Tigers nipped the Boulevardi';irti over the weekend by a 12
to 2 score. Czapilc, Tigers' pitcher,gave only six hits, struck out iwt'lvcand issued only two bases on balls.
The box score:Carteret Tigers (12)
A.B. R. H.V. l'isar. 3b 6•atrick, If 4zapik, p 4
St;irt-k, c S) . Marek, lb 5J. Bobel, ss &S. Marek, cf 5S. Bartiarczuk, 2b . . . 3J. Pisar/Zb. -:. 2J. P a T .Kaldan, rf >... 5
2111i22000
41 12Boulevard Bear* (2)
A.B. R.4333
J, Sharkey,'3b 3
P. Szoke, 2b ..J. Dydak, c .R. Jepson, lbS. Dydak, p-ss
L. rS. Szoke, cffleech, ss-pLhe^mar, rf
33 2The score by innings:
Tigers . . . . ; . . . . . 312 020 112-1
y » n : ^ o o o i o o '
The race for second half honorsthe U. S. Metals League luis
ightened up considerably thisweek as the Yard team defeatedhe league-leading Office, 3 to '2,o slice the leaders' margin in firstjlace to only half a game. Anil thefard team, which was all but.ounted out of the race about twoweeks ago, again looms as a seri-)ua contender for the second halflennant. Tied, incidentally, with
.he Yard team for second place isMickey Miglecz and his Mechanics'ilugRers.
With three teams bunched near;he top, the laat two weeks in theact promise to be tilled with many
interesting games.U. S. METALS LEAGUE
TMUD Standing(at of Sept. (5)
W L Pet.Office 6 2 .750Yard •.... 5 a .706Mechanics 6 2 .706White Metals 4 8 .588L«ad Plant . . . . . . . 1 6 .147Tank House 1 7 .125
ROLLER SKATING
OOl.LER ukatliig hau devel-* oped into quite a problem In
tbe larger cities auil towns, r»Q.u1rli)g druHtic police protectionto prevent Injury aud lots o! Ul«.Somo munlcl[mlltles have founda way to abate the hazard bysotting off curtaiu areas In whichHbuturx intiut niiiy In and In wblchinotur vehii'li-3 #re prohibited.
A uet of aluiple safety rules,forroller aknteru Is offered here:
Uu not skate In the street « •i-uiit In protected areas.
Do uot skate in the street ufteidark without « Baabllgbt or re-flector button on your back orskaten. '
Do not hfUih onto paulni ID-hlclea or "craoi (be whip."
Do uot ikate w|th truffle; b«sure to face incoming vehicle*.
Do not skate three or (ourabreast. *
.v. J,H
White Metals TakeTank House, 114
In Game That Has LittleBearing On Second HalfPennant Race — TankHouse Drops To Cellar.
In a game thai hail little bearingmi the leagm race, the Whit'Melale took j In- T.mk House byurprisc Momt.iv nighi and beathem, 11 to 4. J'IK' defeat droppedhe Tank Houst- into last place.
The Tank flutist- scored fournns, three of lluni unearned, onme hit in tlit- lirst inning. TinWhite Metals came back in tli
ond with a fighting fury andproceeded lo score six runs on sixsuccessive hits by Kovacs, Scliein
sjakowski, /yik, Iitkasiuk, ant!M.ukowit/. Tliis give the WhitMetals the lead, (i to 4,
After that first inning, PajekA'hite Metals, pitcher, settled dow;uid held the Tank House with onl.
i hits foi the rest of the gameHi- seemed lu gain confidence alit- ^atnc went on.
Iu the filth the White Metal•inns again roared. The result wailiree more runs and the ball game
l.nuis Lukasikuk, with a sing!loublr, and triple, and Joe Czajkowski, also with three bits, leitin- White Metals offensive.
The box score:White MetaU (11)
All. R. HSthein, rf J 3(zajkowski, 2b 4 2Zysle. lb I 0Lukasiuk, ss 4 2MarkoWllz, cf 4 1While, c 3 1Tokarslci, Jb . . . . . ' . , 2 0Pajek, p •'! 3 0Kovacs, M 3tv 2 .
Tank House W
(lurouild, ssDeals, 'p, . iSmukV. [cf
fajbl ia , 3b
Klein, - ; i -/,,'.Sith^fif
/A3331212
2
20
U 1
R.0
1 •
I110000
Tank«O32O
m.m-
gtilightF. 1 lun of the opinion the
d h more be-thereby
gbirds should be huntedfore the m'Hson opens
four operators lost their lives.Kspt' nuidt' Ht'veral improve-pnt-i, but he too wan killed whiletenipting to nave an operatorho let tht' machine K'1' "Ul ofwtrol. Hi'iim pu'rrhasi'd E^pc'satcnts, continued tlu* tusk of im-•ovinjj it, and now it is ready fur•inonstration again.Complete Someriault PromisedThe ear will make one circuit of
ifi track and when squarely inront of the prHntlstHiid, it willmi a complete somersault. Noatfoim or devices other than
hose built into the ear are used.The roll-over ear appears »H auch mor« hazardous itfTair. This
in1 will nisi) be driven ivrtitnul tilt'•ack at 50 miles an hour andhen in front of the Kwindstand,le driver will deliberately put itii a spin which must result in aarret roll. The machine has beennown to roll as many as fivemes.
Professional motorcycle raceslave been added to the programiere.
Clothei That SparkleThere ia a lot of sparkle to
ome of the new Paris clothes.;hiaseled mirror and metal, in
" therec-
he spirit of Venice andRenaissance, large discs,tangles and heart-shaped plaques,lome nearly half an inch in thick-ess, are used as belt buckles andrnaments,houlder.
for the throat or
Starch Keepi Caffs Clenn,White pique collars and cuffs
will stay clean much longer if, starch them. Wash and rinsethoroughly, dip in cold ttarchnd then roll in a towel for a few
:iours before ironing.
icattering the flocksLEGISLATION
A specific ease of the laxity nfour game laws has been broughtto my attention. As the law nowstands one <-Rn run his rabbit dojcnt any time, during daylight, ex-cept when there is tracking snow;provided nlwayx that such dog isunder control. There is th« loophole. When is a dog under control?
Within a few miles of here thereis a group of men who run theirdogs constantly. Hreetling seasonmakes no difference to them. Acommittee from the organizedsportsmen here has interviewedthese men in an endeavor to per-suade them to keep their dogs outof the fields during the breedingseason. The attempt was unsuc-cessful.
This same committee h**followed the dog* and found• young rabbit that had beenkilled by them. The proof ofownership of the dogi that de-stroyed the rabbit was clearlyestablished and reported tothe warden. The wardenclaimed he could do nothing•bout it.This committee then sought the
advice of the local recorder whoalso stated nothing could lie done,Finally the matter was brought tothe attention of the Fish ami (lameCommission who also replied 'theownerB of the dogs can not beprosecuted unless it can be provensaid owner actually assisted in thedestruction of tht' game."
It is just, such cases as this thatproves the sportsmen must organ-ize.
Through proper organizationlaws can be made and "enforced"but without union our Hands aretied. We need a law to prevent^dogs running1 in tin* lields duringthe breeding season. Such a lawis not necessary fur a true sports-man, but 1 am sorry to state there
y y 1 x UTwo-base hits—P. Slekerka %
Yfepctenski, Lukatiuk. Tinwhbase hit — I.ukaaiuk. Struck ouV—By Kamont 2; by Yap 8; by Ch«b-licki :t; by I-. Ugoda 1. Winninfpitcher -Kamont. Losing pitcher ?r3
-Cnetdk-ki. "*
CLOSEONES
By
BARRONMC NULTY
The Senators' "Houiie of David"iiitelu'r, after making a failure ofhis first several starts vows tothavc off ail the whiskers and wearonly a mustache, the theory beinghe couldn't find the plate far thebushes. When the whiskers go, ttmay be back to the bushes for him; ^
The Giants with a batting av-erage of only .151 for the l«&t t«lldays of their trio were atill abW,to land home well in front.
are ownerst t h f
STREAMS OF HONEYFOOLED THE ARABIANS
Flowing streams of wine, milk,and honey wen; not a dlrought-farmer's dream but a reality, ae-eording to this week's issue of TheFamily Circle Magazine, whichtells how Hassan, Sheik-Al-Jabal,in. ancient days built a purudisein which uuch streams lu'tuallyflowed.
According to the Family Circle,the second anniversary number of
of dugs who by nostretch of imagination c«n beclassified sportsmen.
Beaglt! mi-ii can also oxercisetheir dogs during th« in until ofSeptember. While rabbits are veryerratic in their breeding most ofthe young are fur enough ad-vanced to keep away from th<dogs except in rare cases, whenone is sighted.
Some dogs that are fast canpick up these immature rab-bits, which is one reason dogmen should ke«p their dogsout ui the fields until afterLahor Day.Some men train their dogu after
dark. This practice I disapprove
After rumors to the effectthat Grimm w«i to be re-placed as manager of thvCubs, the management step-ped out just prior to the*Giants series and announcedhe hid been signed as man-ager for the coming season.The Cubs immediately flashed
the best pitched and played seriesof the entire sflason for eitherleague, and seemed to be sot foran earnest if somewhat belateddrive for the pennant, only toblow up in the Cardinal series.The strain of beating the (ji&nUseemed to be too much for them, ,£while Terry's men, after not hav-ing lost u series since June 17th,when they then lost to the Cubs,took their beating in stride with-out bein-g upset,
Fraakie Friscb sits in the '£uneasy seat now, it being the :custom of the Cardinal man- |agement to fire all managers '1who can't come up with a pen- : _nant, no matter whose fault. ;The fact that he had a badly
•alanced team, a coupl»> of aging..litchers, seven*! cast-offs, a prim* -IS(onna and a circus clown doesn't • tfount t& a mitigating circuni-tance,
ywhich will be distributed this Fri of. In the first place it is illegaday and, Saturday by die Ameri- and then one can tell but littlcan Stores to their customers what hi« dog is doing so it inwithout charge, the wise old Sheik ihard to correct him. Moat sportsfixed up the streams with small j men now have Saturdays and Sunconduits, then drugged his sub [ days for leisure u) let us shareiecta and transpotrted them to thebeautiful valley of luxurious gardefli and palaces to prove he hadthe power to admit them to p»ta-dise.
Other features in this numberof tie Family Circle will be spe-cial recipes for echool lunches, byIda Bailey Allen, noted 'homemak-injr authoirity; a iihort story by Ir-vin §• Cobb, illustrated by Tony
soine of this time with the dogs,From personal observation I
think game will be more plenti-ful than laat year. The w«»therhas been ideal for breeding andstocking has helped.
FeathersLittle capelets and small wraps,me worn <jnly as wraps, others
Sai*;«nd many other apedul f e ^ l ^ P t on as neck and bodi.-e trimhires. The magarine is given away !"?in« °» ft. f0"";. wer,tf P™l>ably•very week by the American i h e moBMntemtin* feature w^y yStore, to their customer*.
found. There were one or twodiminutive cellophane atrip capes,but more attention was given to
_ .feathers and ruffled taffeta, or-Th« Waiwal Indian, war* friend- !p,nd|e 8 n d mooKimHne.
ly and of very pleasant ulipoaltlon. | Crepe and satin gowns, whenTot Indian*, U)«y wen reinaxkablj {they do appear, are often set offpood loeklof,, and MID* of the glrli with gay ostrich feathers or witheonld ban compared favorably U) ,coau« featfiers.mil regard with their wblteriklnnt^1. As. they turn up oo«assionally
waa almoit whtu. T(je n»tM pf tbetribe, In fact', w u derlftd original-ly from this clrcumftaiM*. Th»word "Walwai" means "tapioca" lathe dlaltct of teveril British QatauIndian tribes.
to, Ttawlire mid to
worn by wores of smart women,with ostrich, eoque and East Indian pheasant feathers known m'lophojihore" all popular.
One is given to wondering how-'much of truth and how much wf-bally-hoo was contained in the Tt*cent announcement of the Redowners that they had offered$100,000 for either of the t«9Deans at the time at their strike. :\
The coming World Seriesbetween the Giants and'Tigerspromises to k* mueh more ofi series than that of last /ear.
The Tigers occupy the niche HiGiants enjoyed lant year, nam«)]i^that of. being- a team of destiny, 3unbalanced but determinedwin, while the Giants arc the iteam as last year, a littlepower, considerable more finand with the same determinateto win, and apparently able tort....to occasions. . ['jS
I T^
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tunc«4 i
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Completely Equipped
603 Lakeview Drive
RIVERSIDE PARKBetween rarktr *—4 alsst NeHil Av«, j
r«U»« the ( n n 4
FORMAL OPENINp
SATURDAY, SEPT. 81
t» u
U4.0
Harold Lloyd Changes Hb Style In film At MajestiAt I Vie right; Sfclr-
I«T T»mple w h o
•cor»«f mcli • hit In
"Stand Up • • 4
Cheer" that ,h« h><
b**n firen tVi*> tillii
role in "Baby Takei
A Bow" coining to
th- STRAND W»d
Abore: Ann Dwmk «n<l a •<:••• from"Collcf* Ct»A" at lh« Creicent onMonday. '
NEW YORK CRITICS APPLAUD CORTEZTomorrow, the Strand Theatre
will screen ''JIat, (lost and Glove,"R combination murder mystery«nd courtroom drama in whknJHosTd'o Cortrz's work has wonwide acclaim, particularly fromthe New York critics. Two eam-ples of the reception the picturereceived there follows:From New York Herald-Tribunes
"Entertaining courtroom melo-drama , . .
"The story is amusingly anddramatically set forth with a num-ber of interesting actors perform-injj attractively under the intel-ligent direction of WorthingtonMiner.
"You should, I think, enjoy tneattractive Mr. Cortex . . .
Abore: S e n * from "Young EagU." a (trial attraction atthr CreieMU today. At the rifh tt Harold Lloyd •• b« M>P«»™in hi. lat«t Ungh bit "Tk* Cat '• P.w ' opening at the Majw-tic tomorrow*
STRANDPERTH AMBOY
DID HE PAY FOR HER LIFE!
NOT GUILTY! - - - and thedefense attorney knew it -but the man on trial for mur-der HAD STOLEN THE WOM-
AN HE LOVED 1
RICARDO CORTEZIN A THRILLING
COURTROOM TALE
WITH
BARBARA ROB BINS — JOHN BEAL
Dorothy Burgess, Margaret Hamilton,
Sara Haden, Samuel Hind*, Arthur Hoyt
STARTS
SATURDAY
25cUntil7:30
Ho encounters enough melodramlaarises to nmke for a lively andrather striking melodrama.
"The acting of the film belongspretty much to Mr. Cortex, butthe lefeser roles aro excellentlyplayed, too. Young Mr. John. B«alis sympathetic and persuasive asthe tvccuBed lov* . . , MissBarbara Robbing is honest andstraightforward, an is Mins Bur-gess. That excellent stage com-edienne, Margaret Hamilton, is de-lightful."—Richard Watts, Jr.F Th N k DilFrom The N«w York D.ily
"Cortez is good in murder mys-tery . . . Perfoirms smooth-ly and satisfactorily . .
"The suspense of the trial seen*and the smooth characterization ofCortez make a visit to the air-cooled Music Hall one of the plea-sfcnter things to do in hot weather.
"John Bcal, who played the roleof the boy in 'Another Language,'gives a satisfactory performance.Barbara Robbina is adequate aethe wife and Dorothy Burgess isexcellent as the other woman.Worthington Miner's diection isdamatic.—Kate Cameron.
The News accorded the picturea three-star rating1.
Tim McCoy PictureOpens At Crescent
"Beyond The Law," StartingToday, Thrilling Story ofRailroad detective's Case
Mounting thrills aiul a whippetsfast, human interest story com-bine to make "Beyond the Law,"Col. Tim McCoy faat-action dramawhich opens today at the CrescentTheatre, one of the most breath-taking screen melodramas hi whichthe adventurous star has yet ap-peared,
It is the story of a special rail-road detective whose testimonyhas condemned a man to die for atrain robbery and murder whichhe latur discovers to his own sat-isfaction to be the work of a groupof conspirators among his fellow-workers. How he tracks the guiltyones to their lair and vindicatesthe innm-ent accused provides thethrilling story and background foran exciting train robbery; auto-mobile chases along titacherouBmountain paths; and a. throbbing
"CATS P A W IS ADAPTED FROM NOVELBY CLARENCE BUMNCTON KELLAND
An entirely new field of production possibilities hasbeen opened up to Harold Lloyd with the assured successpf his flret venture in filming an original story, "The Cat'sPaw," a novel by. Clarence Budington Kelland,
"The Cat's Paw'r comes to the screen of the MajesticTheatre, on Saturday.
Not In his many years of comedy Making, except for a»eries of four stories purchasedfrom Tom Dorgan (Tad), famouscartoonist, neatly eighteen yenmago, has Lloyd ever made a pic-ture from a published story. Therewere several reason* why he neveroperated from stories' otlwlr thanthose created by himself and staff.He felt th»t in producing fromstage plays or popular publishedstories, he would be robbed of thesurprise element which he used tofeel so important to his peculiarstyle of comedy.
Lloyd's ideas in this regard havetaken a turn to the left, occasion-ed by his desire to do somethingentirely different from anythinghe has before attempted in hislong screen career. He flgunnl tomake a radical change in style,and in "The Cat's Paw" he hasdone- juat that. He depends moreon story, situation, eharacterizalion, and dialogue, rather thnri (inthe fast-running gag sequences sofamiliar to Lloyd pictures. Thechange, however, has not resultedin a diminishing of the laughterqualities of "hia picture, but the•results are obtained in a more legi-timate way.
Talbot Diacovert GriddersTougher Them Are Gbrillat
Ganjjsters are tough, butcollege football players aretougher, according to LyleTalbot, who has frequentlybeen a movie gunman aind isnow playing his first role M afootball hwo in the WalrnerBros, picture, 'College Coach,'showing at the Crescent Thea-tre beginning next Mondby.
Lyle made his observationfrom a cot at the WarnerBno*». first aid dressing room,where two doctors workedlive, a badly wrenched back.
In addition to the thrillinggridiron action in "CollegeCoach," there is a lively ro-mance and lota of comedywith the true facts about cer-tain phases of the great Amer-ican college gome, as prac-ticed by certain, professionalcoaches at certain colleges.
Others in the eJast includeArthur Byron, Hugh Herbert,Arthur Hohl and Philip Fav-erahain. The story and iscreenplay are by Niven Busch andManuel Seff.
Five-Year Old Shirley Temple Is StarredIn "Baby Take A Bow" Coining To Strand
"Baby Take a Bow," coming tothe Strand Theatre on Wednes-day, introduces five-year-old Shir-ley Temple in her first title role.After her overnight success in"Stand Up and Cheer!" little Shir-ley has become one of the out-standing personalities on thescreen. She has an important partin the picture and is responsiblefor much of the comedy.
James Dunn nnd Claire Trevor,who have been teamed in threepictures, ate together again in"Baby, Take a Bow," as Shirley'sparents.
It's a sparkling; comedy-drama,that gets under wuy in {he firstfew scetves and maintains a rapid
tempo to the exciting finish. Thestory deals with the struggle forhappiness and success of a youngman just out of ptison, a girl whomarries him because she believesin him, and the result of theirunion, an adorable baby girl whois the pride and joy of their hearts.
Into the pictiire enters an es-caped convict and the theft ofsome valuable pearls from thehome of the boy's employer. Sus-picion and the persecution by aself-styled detective cloud the hap-piness of the little family, Thedrama becomes tense as the crimi-nal, passing the little flat, givesthe baby the pearls to avoid beingcaught with the stolen property inhis posession by pursuing officers.
romance between McCoy, as thedetective, and Shirley Grey, as thedaughter of the condemned train-man.
Addison Richards, a screen new-comer, turns in e remarkable per-formance as the villain. I). RossLederman's direction is all to bedesired.
The "Cutpurte"When the purse was hung sus-
pended from the girdle, a thief cutthe string by which it was attach-ed, and thereby earned the nameof cutpurse. When pockets wereadopted the method of thieveschanged, the thief becoming ftpick-pocket.
WHO^WHO
TWOFEATURE^
ALWAYS CRESCENT CONTINUOUSSHOWSDAILY
FRI.. SAT. • SUN.
He reached be-yond the law*~for romance!
MON. - TUES.CHARLES FARRELLMarguerite CHURCHILLCHARLES RUGGLES
"GIRL WITHOUT AROOM"
Alto
SHIRLEY TEMPLEIt wag a happy coincidence that
launched Shirley Temple on theroad to success as a motion picturestar. This is the way it hap-pened:
Jay Gorney, composer of themusic for "StandUp and Cheerl"saw her performin u preview ofimo of the Baby'Burlesk comediesat a suburbanLos Angeles th»-atre one nightwhile the studiowan frantically'searching for atalented' young-
ster of Shirley's type. Coming dutof the theatre, he saw the littlegirl and her mother in the lobbyand suggested to them that theyvisit Fox Mlm. Shirley went toMovietone City—and wag such asensation that Winfield Sieehftnsigned he* to a contract.
She subsequently appeared withJanet Gaynor in "Change ofHeart," and with Adolphe Menjouin "little MJSB Murker." And nowahe is playing the title role in"Baby, Take a Bow,' coming tothe Straaul Theatre on Wednes-day,
S U M w M M i a v m * A.CH
i
'Young Eagles' Seen A Film-For Children And Parents
Romantic novels, plays tfnd pic-tures are bo a child—who lives inw world of iuiiitrination—merelya continuation of his dailythought*! And that explains whyfather and mother, as w«ll as littieWillie, are keen ai>out screen en-tufaimnent that dairies tbsu,aitwy on the wings of fancy I*¥ £ a g V at Uw Cmte#ti
today, is that kind of »Typical of youth,, 1 M *
h «a fl» two hero**, Safetyand J i« Adams, ar* fpOBC,
peverth«l«ss hat th* element <*i advWture that growWH*
AW«: ican* from th* myitary thriller "H«t, C<MI , r , |
the Slr»nd »ltr»etion tomorrow.
V4AII M lTHEATRE
MADISON AVENUE PERTH AMBOY
SEVEN (7) BIG DAYS STARTING SATURDAY
The Cry For A New TypeOf Comedy Is Answered!
against)id* of!
suit IS!
HIM>Ut
;e
HAROLD LLOYD-THE CATS PAW
UNA MERKELNAT PENDLETONALAN DINEHART
AMATEUR NIGHT EVERY WEDNESDAY
CODING SAT. SEPT. 15CRAWFOR0
• i n
(to M iffaM«EkTPT
- r l ? '< ' '*•
THB
T1. of "Wiiw.,... ,.,;,.,-,..,,.% ,.,,, "white loffllM*
home n i In,,i„< tltc rrpnltllc
Hi-KIFF'S SALEV I M ' i f N B W JIBRBBT-
• i nitiiB KI8H, Cornplaln-.':,n-: rrtsncAS ana LstHA, ,., ...r,., «i itl>.. Defmtd-, ., fnr t h ' •«>• »' mmt-
,i»i^.l Miirnt II, l l l l ,, , ,„ slioTf eu ted Writ, to, ! ,I«IIV<THI, I will eipvaa
n'lR THIRD DAT OF,, \ i i , NINBTBUN
, I, THIItTr-FOim: ^mndard Time In tha•,,. -,.1.1 ilny. at the Sher-
ih,' city of New
... .Inn (met or parcel of.,..; iirrnlnaiter partlcn-
• ..iniald. tylnf and balnfi i rnritret In tha County,,,,i Hinto of New Jaraay.
. i,, Lnt« thirteen ( U l .I .KII ( i n anil tan (10)
i, nf prdparty entitled:.i,ir lurk." altnate at„ llni-ouKh Of RdMMVett
• ,,f C»rt«r«t) Scale V—WT.I m i , owned and
',„ Hubii and CatherIMi r,,l mapped hy Fred | \I,TM N*w Jerwy" whhjh
, „ n - ,k '» Offlc* o( Mld-
, , -. r i! - > 11 a r 1 y d*a«rlhad aa
, „ i • point forni«4 by..,„ nt ih« North-a«atarrf
„-, Avf>nu« with tha Wait',,,iini. s irn-t . thanoa run
• w-ni«rlr alone tha a»Kiin« nt Rahwajr AvamM
,' mvtntean fcnd KlfRtT, i n «0) faat to a point;
. i, tiao tha dlTldlai llna',., anil Nlnt (I) aa laid
M,,,I. tli«nca (>) Northerlyi -,!ih » i i i Waatarlr line of...i anil alonr the dlTlfl
M , Nln« (II «Bi) Tan ( I t )SKv>niythra« and Sevan
• i . - T i ! 7) raat t« a point,i. ••• the moat South-weeti mi Mo. 14 aa ihown oa
•. •• . running (I) **m*tt*.-.[',. with Paulino Itraot
; Hiih«rly llna of lot Me.n -«lii Map, One Huvdred
•<!' laid WMterlf Llna- " i theaco,run>la( <«)t , i»nr aalA Waatorly line
HIT!. D M Hundred•v Hundrodthi (Wl .OI>ii eiaterb) 1IM of Rah
,•1 iht a«fnt or place of
„ lti« North by lot No.1.1 by Paitllx* S tnot , oa
luhwer ATagini and onI I No I a* thoam on tald
HI a i II amount of th* dan.iWd kr aalJ aala la I he
iioueeBd Three H m d i e d(tMH.N), t«fl*ttor withi. aala.Hi all IM aMfiiiar the(?• hendlUmnli and
. inlnlnff.ALAN H. MLt,
Sharirr.• HATER,
Solicitor.C.P.t-T.lMMS
SHERIFFS SALECHANCERY OF NEW JBR-•:v Iktween EVER READY[.II.DING AND LOAN ASSO-[AI1ON, Cornplabant, andTKIUOR LODGE, No. 216i|ii'iM'<l Benevolent and Pro-riivr Order oi Elks of theirM Ki. Fa. for the sale ofv'LMk'cd premises dated July
i virtue of the above stated.. tn mi' directed and deliver-
ivill expose to sale at public
IN KM) AY, THE NINETEEN-HAV OF SEPTEMBER, A. D.,NINKTEEN HUNDRED
THIBTY-FOUR> ''clock Daylight Saving' in :lio afternoon of the said.< ihi Sheriff's Office in thei•!' New Bc^n.r.ick, N. J.
II •!»• fnllowlii^ tract or parcel«nl ami premises hereinaftern iluilv Ii-cribed, situate, ly-.1,1 (.riiiR in the City of Newn k in the County of Mid-i \ .an! State of New Jersey.V.WINNING on the sooth side{.il.]«in .street 100 feet east ofi.i: , ; thence running gouth-a; adit, angles to Baldwin
ct no feet; thence runningtily parallel with Baldwintt ;. feet; thence runningbuy at right angles t» Bald-•ini i 100 feet to the souther-
iili i said Baldwin street; andin' i:]iinui)f westerly alongii»h -areet 75 feet to the placeJKi,INNING.
l"ts Nos. 1594. 1605,i L] No. 2, in the Firsttin' City of New Bruns-niiily of Abraham Suy-i, ami conveyed by himr property to James Lori-'•• :im by deed dated Janu-! viii, surveyed and divld-
und parcels May 31,' ' Ewen, City Sur-
' [ imwn as No. 160 Bald-
''•"'• liit same premises con-"! H.uiy Simmons and Ed-11 ' " "in ijy deed recorded in
!' •• office of Middlesex1111 - " Hnuk of deeds for said
t t e WnM ColorPrta. GHL.IL Lse*. Ha.
Tin ~ THE KELLY KIDS - TOMV
I DVWAMITa> Art' DoMV P R O P /t KtfOW OUARTi VoRHATlCM \ KE-fcl I S G 6 IT,1
BtOCF IS FULL OP i r tj-rDOWN SLOWIV WITM <H6 (?OP€ «C i w e t l -
i inxiiiiate amount of the'• sutiafied by said sale
» of Kuurteen Thousand'mired and Twenty-four•"»1 Kij{hty»one Cents
, t^ether with the--all'.with all and singular
rivileges, heredita-|>|uirtenance* there-. or in anywise ap-
u.AN H. ELY, SBieriff.K I S C H M N
NOTlf*<!*•
may taka notioa., ate,
1 in; ii<ceaa*d, InlamU to1 to tha Orphan'a
of UljidtaaaS. «a4 t g ^ k iQ ^' M.
•"ii "I April, 1»M, tofuUnwajic*' tk|i a U H
aUtatV by tha
^miMvaatarlrthra* fa«t Ua
• < V*1
l»AOB BIGHT v
It's Fun To Reduce,Believe It Or Not - -
[ Make A Sport Of ItTry Swimming Or Tennis;
Golf Or Hiking TooWork Wonders
SKIPPING ROPE GOODGsmcn anil sports appeal more
ronvly to would-be reducersttinn rmitinc pxerclnen that areionc on trio floor to the rount of»nr-tw« throe Knowing this,wet(rht authorities have endowdtertnin ."port* and various amuflf-nwnts that nrc fun to do and atthe name time cf>uni> Ions of weight.
Flrnt, thero'i iwlmmlnK. It n unot make you lose several pound"hut it certainly will equalize yourweight. Many a protruding «to-maen baj become lean ami hardafter the twentieth daily swim,(Ivprwnlirht hipn and ln)fa havebeen known to flatten out intoshapely linen an a result of vigormis swimming. And the good oldKreant alrnk* certainly help* toslenderize and harden fat shoul-ders.
If nwimming in out of the pic-ture for you, remember that ten-nis in an excellent exercise, Of•oune, it's pretty vigorous and
you'd bettor ask your doctor forpermission before yon decide todo it. Golf is less apt to make youton tired, hut if yon p'ay regularlyyou're pretty sure to lose weight.
If golf, Hwimming and tennlfiaren't possitile, there are simpleexerrisoR that any one can do.Walk two miles a day and nee ifyou don't lime a few pounds. Orwalk upstairs instead of taking the
• s v v v •— - — — T" — -
SUCCESS-FAILURE?WHICHSHALLAIT BEp
GLASSES^CHILDRENSend the WHOLE Child to School
V i m n o n l i l n ' l - v t i . l > o u r r h l l i l I n « ' ! " - ' • n l l l l ll h r n k r n « r m i r o i i l i ) TO11T l l ' l
J i n l » » I r n p . i r t i i n l far .Kill n o t In . i - i i . l >">ll- r l i l l d ll> M'hOOl w i t h < M « r -
ll.f vision. M*k« t « -luln jour child tar*l .n.l to nfhaol with 100IMT rent pvrttri vlnlun.I "I our ltofUt«rrd ixwh»r of Optttmrtrj Ktvr.\on all tb« t»ctm.
ALBREN, Inc.Jewelcri and Optician!
133 Smith St., Perth AmboyDR. J. J. BROWN
Optometrist in Charge
We've Just Improved Our Serviceby installing a
WALKER ELECTRIC LIFTThe Latest and Most ModernEquipment for Car Servicing
WE CAN TURN OUT THE WORK IN LESSTIME AND DO A BETTER JOB
COME IN TODAYWe'll Put Your Car on the Uft and You Can Walk
Under and See for Yourself
RHNERTSEN'S GARAGE187 Washington Avenue
CARTERET, N. J.Phone Carteret 8-109G
PACKERS OUTLET OFTHE EAST-Now With
SUNNYDALE170 Smith Street PERTH AMBOY
Boneless 4 ff§RIB I /ROAST 1/
11TenderCHUCKROAST 12-
C » Test Viiion Early
The vision of children as youngan two years can be tested scien-tifically.
elevator. Or skip rtpa,Skipping rope, by the way, Is
(food for the l«w, hips and «to-mseh. Don't dp It for more than
rp minute* a day the 'flnrtmonth. Then gradually increasethe number of minutes per day)to ten.
Gardens Are SentimentalHave you a place in your gar-
den for »cntlment? One well-known woman ha« a Shakenpeareplot, a placn where nothing ex-cept plant* mentioned by Shake-speare are allowed. Another wo-man has a memory garden fullof plant* from all the place!) where»he has had a good time. Stilla third has a Tongue of Nationsgarden witli flowers from everycountry she hao visited.
PresidentOf the President* the United
States has had only one, John Q.A damn, hud a bald nead.
Vacation Jane May Be Ail OverBat Milady Has Skin Worries Left
While blondes and fnit-skinned, brown-haired (iris are worryingnhout various way to fvt rid <>! sun tans, dsrir-complexloned womenwho do not tan or burn bav« t >i<• i r own port-vacation beauty jtrohlmnn,too. For, even though tfcslr jskins may be quits white and clear, thechances are ten to one that they1™1 bothered with excessive dryneas.
* * *
Dry okina need prajHtratim™ which tend to replace natural oilsthat have been drisd oat by tTif sun. If ypnr complexion comes in thiscategory get s, Jar of nmmshinK cream. And leam to use It properly.
At bedtime—after your skin has bcXB thoroughly cleaned andpatted with skin tonic—-dip twn cotton pads in ice water. Wring outall the water and then ptft tlssn* cream on the pads.
* * *.Beginning at the bast of the throat, smooth the ere Am upward and
outward to the hairline. Try to follow the facial muscles. They cer-tainly do not run in a straight line from nose to ear*—yet manywomen go on applying e m m in that all-wrong direction.
Then take a patter (If yon don't own on«, use fingertips) and,again using upward IBM!'JMrtwurd strokes, pat the cream Into yourskin. Keep on patUTir Otttil the cream is melted and the skin feetswarm and tingling. When you've finished, wipe off the excess, leav-ing a little cream around ayes and mouth, and go to bed.
Repeat the treatment fn Mo morning. However, before putting onfoundation lotion and other mnke-up use skin tonic to remove everybit of the cream. ; t
sti.tr n« n 6MThe safety pin orlsinat^J thou-
sands of years ago. AmoRr the re-mains of tne lake dmllsrs of cen-tral Bur op* hat* been round a gnatnumber of plus—some of bone, oth-ers of bronse. Many are quiteelaborate, with ornamental heads,and others are rodely fashioned.Some have double stems, and fewhave been found In form exactlylike the modern safety pin.
LEGAL NOTICE(Corrected Publication)
TAKE NOTICE THAT MichaelSHvka and Mowis Rasher intendto apply to tile Boroug'h Councilof the Boromrh of Oarteret, N. J.for a Plenary Retail OonnumptionLicense for the premises situated• t 2 John street in the Borough ofCarteret, New Jersey.
Objections if arty, should bemade Immediately in writing toHarvey VO. Platt, Boronirh Clericof the Borough of Carteret, NewJewey,
(sitmed) Michael Slivka andMorris Kftsher.
2 John street.C. P. 9-7, 14.
•! i T "
fh* Fl«l Arb«rArbot aw. a legal
many state*, flfet *ss OBHWWN«br»ika on April 10,1872, on whichocesM»n more than 1,000,000 tree*nere plsnted.
Nfere man
tts.saa, pwvided *>y
FUEL AND FDRNACE OIllHIGHEST QUALITY FOR EVERY
MAKE OP BURNER
PROMPT AND COURTEOUS SERVICE
PREMIER ( E & GASOLINE SUPPLYNew Brunswick Ave. COMPANY
Phone Rah. 7-1263
R A H W A Y . N .
Night Phone WdbK. « „.;:>l
.PERTH AMBOY»S LARGEST, BUSIEST AND FOREMOST THRIFT STORE-
SUBURBANITESIT WILL PAY YOU TOTRAVEL MANY MILESTO SHARE IN THESE
GREAT BARGAINSOFFERED AT
SCHINDEL'S TomorrowEVERY PURCHASE
GUARANTEEDSHOP HERE WITH
CONFIDENCE
97405 Smith StreetOPEN SATURDAY EVENING UNTIL 10 P. M,
WOODBRIDGE, COUNTY AND PERTH AMBOY BONDS ACCEPTED
Values Like These Al-ways Draw Crowds to
S C H I N D E L ' SWe'll be "mobbed" tomor-
row. Dozens of bargains
not advertised. Look for
the Dollar Davy sifna.
ANOTHER SATISFiiSCHINDEL SHOPPF.H
WOODBRIDGFIN
SCHOOL AND FALL NEEDS AT BIG SAYINGSMISS ANNA SYRK
62 Milton Av*nna, WnmlbrnlR A V S l " I h » T c b r r n n « l . - » . l . .1,ctfry Haln^ii]' at Hrhliiihi'- 1tine, MWi rtcrjr nrllrli. I l.oukkw»ri plraard mr. Ijul »•'! . 1* Blip, and • pilr »l oltx-blKK-mothvr U ftlM ft freqiviti LHI^*b«rf." • •
A DOLLAR DAY BARGAIN
WOMEN'S 39c GRADEFIRST QUALITY
Undies4 for
RayonBloomers, vests,p a n t i e s andshorties. L a c etrimmed a n dtailored. Pastelshades. AH sizes.Real values.
WOMEN'S TAFFETA
69c v*luci. Bin cut, Straightor V neck. Lace top and bottom.Pa.tel thadei. All iixet.
WOMEN'S FLANNELET
69c value, Anorted itripedpalUru. All lizei. Prepare nowfor cold nighti.
IAYON UNDIES . . . . 3 forWOMEN^S RAYON HOSE . . . . . . . 6 p r . WOMEN'S WASH DRESSES 2 for $W O M E N ! H O O V E R E H E S . 2 forW O M E N ' S P R I N T A P R O N S . . . . . 7 f o r
WOMEN'SNEW FALL
SKIRTSNeweit style* and
Ideal with blouse or sweater.All sicet.
WOMEN'SNEW SILK
BLOUSESJust unpacked. Newest colors
and styles for early Fall wee*.All size*.
LEATHER SCHOOL BAGS . .OVERNIGHT CASES .TRAVELING BAGS . .HATBOXES
. . . . ea.. . . . ea.. . . . ea.. . . • . ea.
TOP ZIPPER BAGS ea.
COftStTS. GIRDLES
Extra Special — While They Last
REG. $2.98 CHILDREN'STRIMMED
CCATSMothers! You must see
these coats to appreciatetheir real »»lue. Everycoat a beautiful new Fallmodel. In newest stylesand shades. Sizes 3 to 6years. Shop early.
BOYS' ALL WOOLSWEATERS
Niewert Falls t y l e s a n dcolors; m a n yw i t h zipper*.Reg. $1.49 value.
BOYS' SCHOOLKNICKERS
Full cut, wellmade and fullylined. New Fallshades. Sizes 8to 16 years.
NEWEST EALL SI ELK
11rsstsRe;. $3.95 Values
Beautiful selection of smartnew Fall styles in Satins,Crepes and Travel prints. Oneand 2-pc. model effects. Colors:black, blue, brown, wite. N«wstyles arriving every day.
Sizes14 to 20,38 to 52.
$4.95 BETTER FALL SILK
DRESSES SIZES14 to 56
$3-94
89c
Values
CHILDREN'S SCHOOL
Complete line of straps andoxford* in patent, black andbrown kid. Site* t% to 11 —11 M to 2. VaUe» to $1.48.
BOYS' AND GIRLS'SCHOOL OXFORDSBoys' sins 1 to 6-ifGirU' si*e, 3 te 8. Pr.
Men! Buy These By The Down!Guaranteed First Quality
HEN'S SHIRTSFull eat and
well mad*. Faatcolor, I s s Tb r o a d c 1 otfcs.1
Newest pattens.Real Talne* atthis low
Talaw a»,w price. I
;.or IMEN'S NEW FALL
PAJAMASBroadcloth amd
flannelette. New.
est styles. All sites-
11.49 value*.
MEN'S COAT
SWEATERSReg. $1.40 Talne*.
Better get hare
early for these.
Heathar mixtures.
AUsi.es.
BOYS' NEW SCHOOL
SHIRTSReg. 69c Values
Jast ia time forschool. Fancy »ndsolid tolors la futc o l o r broadcloths.Full cat, well made.All sl«es. R e a l
MEN'S NAINSOOKUNION SUITS
F i n e qualitynainsook. Sise* to46. Exceptionalvalues at this lowprice.
for
MEN'S ATHLETIC
Shirts - ShortsR*a. 3fc trod*-
Fi»e cotton shirUaad fancy broad-cloth akorto. All
for
$1.49 MEN'S WORK PANTS$1.49 MEN'S KHAKI PANTS. . .$1.49 MEN'S SUEDECLOTti SHIRTS$1.49 Mr^'S DENIM OVERALLS'gQEW'SWORKSHmTO . 2 forBoys'FallWash SutU $1Boys' LeatheretteJackets :i f c y i ^Sport Hoae forBoys' SchoolLoafies
FSuits for
$126e M$r« Fancy 8Hot* pr.
\9e Mm'»Work 10(1;HOM -;• pr. V3»cM«'sNcw 4 > J
P«li Ups fJ1.40 Men's FallFelt Hats
$1
YOUR CHOICE —
4 U8. GREASE SOLV1
CftM ftasl r