The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no … sister of the bridegroom; Miss Lot- *...

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four Page Colored Comic Section VIII, No. 34 The Price of This Paper is3 cents everywhere—Pay no more CARTERET PRESS i AKTKKKT, N. ,1., KHIDAY, MAY !), UVM) 22 Pages Today Three Sections PRICE THREE CENTS >y Man eret Bride Maliszewski and tkiewicz Are At Church Wedding. Lottie Malisewski, daughter »nd Mrs. Walter Malinzewski, Lowell street, this borough, «ph Staskiewski, son of Mrs, 'Staskiewski, of Perth Amboy, j 1 Cl J Si. Notable New Books At Local Library New Volumes Of Fiction and Non-Fiction Are Above Av- erage. Books of more than average merit are listed in a brief list of eight new books at the Carteret library. Five are works of fiction and the others non-flction. Leading the fiction list [married Sunday afternoon in is a work by Thornton N. Wilder. The Holy Family Roman Catholic list with comment on each volume, _ ch. The ceremony wag perform- follows; L -d by Rev. Father Joeeph Dziados*. THE WOMAN OF ANDROS—by the paatotaf the church, in the pre- Thornton N. Wilder. This book is Hence of a i*t«* gathering of friends quite unlik* either the author's "The and relative! of the couple. Cacala" or "The Bridge of SanLuis The matron of honor waa Mis* Rey", It k shorter, more carefully Mary Mallsiewski, a sister of the written, of closer texture. The scene bride. There were eight bridesmaids >» one of the islands of Greece, including Miss Jennie Otaskiewics,, Young Paraphilu*, supposed to marry a sister of the bridegroom; Miss Lot- * girl of hi*own class, fall* in lov« tie Olters, Miw Mary Staskiewici, with Glycerium, the young, carefully Mis« Rose Slivinaky, Katherine lus- guarded sitter of Chrysis, a courte- 7.at», Jennie Kamount, Mary Jacobs wn and a woman of culture froman- und Rose Staskiewici. j other island, The idyll and the trage- There were two little flower girls, dy that results are beautifully pre- Dorothy Stasklewic* andHelen SUv- tented. The author states that the insky. | "«t part of hl& novel ia based upon The best men was Stanley Slemaky. the Andria, a comedy of Terrence. There were seven ushers, John ESUo, It is, nevertheless, esaentially Mr. John Rose, Henry Poyner, John Mit- Wilder'* owncreation, ko, Michael Bialecki, Anthony Siyba THE GREAT MEADOW—by Eliz- and Frank Staskiewici. abeth M. Roberts. Fusing the art of The bride was attired in a beauti- poetry with her prose, and the art of ful creation of white tatin trimmed the weaver of tapestries with her in Spanish lace with, a lace can ar- **»cteTj>oH*fture. Mias Roberta, carried white rosW and TlUes-of'-t'ne-• again with native Kentucky types. valley. The matron of honor wore "The Great Meadow" tells the heroic orchid satin with hat and shees to story of earry pioneer life. Berk Jar- atc-h and carried butterfly roses, vis and his wife Diony are members Pollution Of Water Feared By Council* Protest Made Against Proposed Cemetery On Watershed Sup- plying This Territory Mayor and Attorney Carry Protest To Trenton. The Hearts Bowling Team, Champion* of the Pulaiki Bowling Leagu*. Standing left to right—Gene Czaja, Walter Zysk, William Martenciuk, John Rozanski and Edmond Urban- ski. Seated: Stephen Czyzewski (Captain). —Photo iq Jaffe Studio The bridesmaids were all attractive-' of a pilgrimage from Virginia into ly gowned. ; the wild, new land surrounding the IT nearly Mrs. Staskiewki will reside at Lowell street, this borough. After the wedding ceremony a re-yetocka.de at Hatred's fort in Kentuc- ccption was held In the Falcc* hall ky —the "great meadow". These in Central avenue. More than 200 pioneer home-builders suffer Indian guests attended and the festivities attack, even tortuTe and death at the continued until midnight. hands of the red men; they know all There were guests present from the vicissitudes of hunger and the Cartertt, Per* Amboy. Jersey City, most primitive conditions erf life. Newark, Rahway, New York and, oth- Diony, as a type of the pioneer wom- by towns and cities. Mr. and on, beam her child, marries again 23 when convinced that Berk is dead, and on his return is forced to make, according to primitive law, a choice between him and her new husband and baby. This, the external action of the novel, u less compelling in significance than the mental and spir- itual reactions of the characters to their environment and to each other. THE HIDDEN CITY—by Philip _ „ , , fx . T » n ' Gibbs. London life seen through the Scorer Works Out The Dope ey es of a young doctor who opens an Showing Nine Run A v e r a g e office in Chelsea. A quiet chronicle of everyday events that touches both comedy and tragedy, tiie whole im- pregnated with a gentle cynicism. School Team Makes Good Average Record Per Game. Carteret high school's hard-hitting brigade has averaged nine runs per game, according to the average com- piled yesterday by Ben Zusman, scor- er for the team. Thtse records in- clude C2rt*«t't 1-1 victory over New Brunswick on Wednesday. The Bkw and White team has batted out four victories in nve starts, losing but a heart-breaking eleven-Inning game to Hearts Win Outin Pulaiki League Defeating the Spades in three straight games on Coughlin's alleys last Friday night in the closing tilts of the schedule, the Hearts won the thampionship of the Pulaski Bowl- ing League. The Hearts' superiority over the other three teams in the league is rather forcibly indicated in Secretary Stephen Ctyzewskl's re- lease for publication of the official cords for the recently-completed sea- son. TheHearts elesed their pennant drive nine games ahead of the se- cond-place Diamonds, winning twen- ty-six of thirty-three games rolled in loop competition. The champions When the league opened about eleven weeks ago the Hearts climbed into the lead. The; have maintained thai* pace ever since, widening theii advantage with the passinc of weeks. During the closing weeks of the race the Hearts «ewed up the title; and be- cause of this, interest between the teams began to gradually decrease. One of tiie features of the loop was the gallant fight.made by the Diamond piasmqapi during the olos- ing weeks of the campaign. Perched in the cellar for a Ions tine the Diamonds rose into second place within a period of about three weeks. Final Standing in th« Pnlatki Bowl- ing Laagua Team G. W. L. Are. HS Hearts 88 26 7 .788 909 Diamonds 33 lee 17 16 .516 803 13 20 .393 788 Clubs 33 13 20 .3^3 776 Individual Racordi An. HS S. Czyzewski, Hearts, W. Boianski, Dia J, Roianskl, Hearts ... W. Zyak, H u r t s T. Udtelak, Clubs T. Karpinski, Dia C. Godeski, Dia. ia muii tuiu|«iiuuii. iw tiwuuiuw, wiuun a penoa oi BDOUI wiree weeics. ,• „ ~ r , '• . a " , losing but seven games, established Going to the other extreme, thej J - Mw f lo )!? t *' SP*^ 8 an enviable record on the lanes. The clubs who were giving the Hearts *,• Senk, Clubs Diamonds won second-place honors a mer ry battle during the opening*'' Stawfcki, with a four-game advantage over the weeks of the schedule began to slump * " " Spades and Clubs who completed toward mid-season and as a result their campaign in a tie for the cellar. now fi n< ] themselves in the cellar. The Stephen Csyiewaki, anchorman for I Spades who did not seem to be going the champions, won the title In the; anywhere in particular all year are single race, posting an average -'• - p y con tont with a tie for third and CORONET—by Manuel Komroff. In this long story of the ascent and fall of aristocracy through IML a golden coronet flgursa aa a aymbol of arrogant*, bringing m i s f t its owners. The 3 l 4 with the manufacture, In a Flown tine goldsmith's shop, of s coronet for a French count, and with the rise of two pork butchers to wealth and power, and it ends in Chicago when season. I a wealthy packer marries hia daugh- Joseph Medwick, Carteret's sensa- ter to the French count's degenerate I. __1 !._.. _>LIJ.>A aajs*. tlia VkAMt lint- ' JuA»Jaol ;ing e rwick NVw Brunswick high earlUr in the tiunal boy athlete, has the best bat- ting average. His mark is .652. Med- wick also leads his team-mates in ex- tra-base clouts; four doubles, three triples, and two homen. Six regulars arc batting .300 or better. They sre descendant. MOTHERS ORY—by Helen Grace Carlisle. "Told in the first person, this ia a story of a woman wno took life as it came, marriage, mother- hood, the death of her husband, the Mfdwick. Sielag, Stutike, Hart, Poll, responsibility of a family and the and Chodosh. Carteret has a team av- erage of .371. Cartar»l High Baseball Record* Including Gam** Playad May 7 petty economies of poverty, the suc- cess of her children and their failur- es, and who at the end, left alone, two of the children tragically (lead, Richey .. Medwick Szelag .. Stutike Hart Poll Chodosh. Rubel G AB Jt H 2B 3B HR Av two gone from her, still feels 0 1000 h lif h b d Very ski 2 1110 5 28 9 16 4 4 19 6 10 0 6 25 9 10 1 22 4 22 8 28 1 Daniels 6 IB 3 Micklchs.. 6 21 4 Kubica Baksa Carlyle 9 2 1 8 2 8 6 7 8 4 1 4 1 4 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 g , 0 1.000 herlife has been gcod. Very skillful- 652 l ld hii l f f t 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 g y .652 ly told, achieving an unusual effect .526 of reality. NON-FICTION BROWN'S 1827-1927 (by Grandmother Taaas Records Carteret 10 .Freehold Cartertt 14 Metochen Carteret 5 N. Bruns. 11 inn. Carteret 11 Perth Amboy Carteret 5 New Brunswick 46 Mtekistg RMOTJ* G W L P 8«elag 2 2 0 Medwick ...,. 8 2 1 .416 .363 GRANDMOTHER .368 HUNDRED YEARS, .804 Harriet C. Brown. .222 Brown was born in 1827 in the Ohio .210 town to which her grandfather had .112 migrated after the Revolution. In the .000 60*s she and her husband moved to .000 Iowa where Grandmother Brown liv- .4)00 ed until ahe died, in 1928. Her biog- raphy, told almost entirely in the - form of conservations with her a daufoUf-in-law, is the story of how one good woman spent a hundred 0 buay, useful and, on the whole, happy 5rt O SINGING STRENGTH—by Alfred Knymborg. A complete out- line of American peotry from the i th lfl line of Am py earryl colonial period to the present time. The poeta are classed, where il d hl r or Unusual Values At A. B. C. possible, under specific schools periods, and the work and influence - of each outstanding poet receive an- lalysis. Of special interest are the or to the War; and the appraisal chapters on the poetic renscence just «... affc » a GiiayWiO Via WSSV |*v».w», - •*«* « Silk Store Draw Attention of Bhe work of contemporary poets. . | A BOOK OF DRAMATICCOS- The unusual value of up-to-date TUME—This book undertakes to dress goods, curtains, linens, domes- present in line drawing pictures, a se- tics and underwear has made the A. lection of the costumes of most of B. C. Silk fltore at 164 Smith street, the peoples and period* touched by Perth Amboy, the talk of this vicin- dramatic literature. The selection is ity. The large variety of shades, ma- limited to costumes known to be terlals, colors and styles has drawn worn by characters in plays, pag; th ttti f i hi , lors and styles has daw the attention of women in this sec- ty to the new store, As a special pants, operas Bivd other forms ol ..,— , „ _ „,, drama. There are also drawings of feature this week, pongee slips, well ornaments, utensils, weapons and tailored and made of pure silk pon- motifs, as well as discussions on col- gee will be offered at a remarkably ore, materials and like details. low price. I Mr. Moe Sirop, the manager, in a n. M F p l r A N lrcinN NOTES Interview this morning, said that he AMERICAN LfcWUn m/ita wanted to thank the public for the 170 for twenty-two games. Walter h Mt p i ace> Zysk, another member of the cham- Th t , , pfonahip team, holds the highest in-\ '"f y*' 1 * 1 dividual score with a grade of 267. i ^ •"* £'**!& ** •* ' compUin * Heart, came near breaking their week ol compet | tion revealin ^iv real the Spades in a mark of 909. IDE LETTER BOX Editor Press, Dear Sir: high team score of 909 when they Mattered the maples for &acore of 896. Just 14 pint behind their re- eordt.Dy aUhwtph ths Wrist mads a record hit of 788 they were out- classed by about 100 pins. Twenty- five ptns decided the second game in favor of the leaden. With the ex- We waited a long time, but every ception of J. Rose, who busted the thing comes to those that .wait bottles for an even score of 200 in Your editorial of May 2 was worth this game, the remaining Hearts' waiting for and you are to be con- bowlers turned in low scores. In the grstulsted upon the wonderful way final the Hearts were again extended you handled the matter, your climax to win, 766-722. J. Rose, lead-off is a master stroke. I man forithe Hearts, had a food night, The three or four cases you spoke' upsetting the wood for an average of of or mentioned are but a drop in 186. the ocean of crime and corruption, | With each team competing with the body politic is corrupt from top only four men, the Diamonds tig-ht- to bottom, and the respect and ob- ened their grip: on second place by edience of our people to the laws blasting the Clubs in two out of three and those in authority is a laughing garoeB. The Diamonds took the open- stock to all, and my brother how can ing match 'by a 110-pin margin, 663- it be otherwise? When the highest 553. In the second, the Clubs came judges associate with crooks and dine back strong to win by 97 pins, 630- with them; when magistrates and 533. The third and deciding game justices sell so-celled justice to the was close all the way. It was any- highest bidder. The public press is, body's game throughout the first filled daily with accounts of crimes nine frames. In the tenth the Dift- and damable wickedness in 4iigh of- monds spurted to nose out a 9-pin ficial places as well as amongst the w | n . Udielak was high man in this more degraded 1 of the land and of- match. ten i« it shown that men in ihigh otf-, ficial positions resort to fraud and other criminal acts in oppressing the people. The prohibition law you mention- ed is one of the greatest causes of corruption and oppression that the mind of man ever produced. See the »se of George Voile and his sister. Auto Injures B o ; On Way To School * John Kiah, Aged 6,Hu Brok- Ab Kiah, Aged , Thigh and Outi Above and Below Eye. en case of George Voile and his sister, fined $6,000 and-three years in jail for having one-half .pint of whiskey in his home and up to Jaauary 1, ren had been shot to death in at- 1930, 1860 men, women and child- tempt, to enforce «j law. J^^SllfJSU What is the remedy? More drastic at 12-30 today when he was struck aws? Godforbid! Men have tried by a car aa he was crossing Roosevelt that for untold ages and the histori- avenue at Pershinir avenue, The boy al record of France alone shows. was knocked down and his right that more than 400,000 men, women tn j gn was broken. He also had severe and children in that country have lacerations over and under the right been sent to untimely graves and di b Cmine men still laugh at their laws, I h l bli h g l | c o \r I honestly believe you have found \ n g s over and n g eye ; Th e C 8 r W as driven by Carmine c o \rjno, of Turner street, Port Read- eye c y y •3! d fi BhO w»ii > g Patrolman George Sheridan and and sentiments and not only work for the strict enforcement of laws and at the same time obey the laws them- selves. How about it in our own ommunity? You as one of the lead- ing citizens and the expounder and former of public opinion could do a wonderful work in backing up those of us who are trying to improvecon- Members of the American Legion dltiona here by trying to gat a com- business it has given him. It is Mr. Drum Corps must attend the prac-1 mission form of government or any Stop's plan to treat each and every tices held every Monday and ThuTs- other form that may prove success- customer individually! and to offer day night in the high school auditor- ful in making this the best commun- miggestions which years of experi- ium, President Al Skurat announced ence have made possible. thiB week. MONSTER DANCE given by William P. Campbell Association held at Woodbridge Municipal Building TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 13, 1930 2 Bands 2 Lind Brother*' Fred O'Brien's risking . In the State of New Jersey. You will pardon my long letter p y g but I get the opportunity to see you BO seldom that when J start to visit I don't know enough to ffo home and besides your editorial has given ma enough to think about for weeks to come. Very sincerely yours, JOHN A. COLLINS. WE TAKE PRIDE IN OUR PRESCRIPTION DEPARTMENT M ITTUCH'S Est. 1905 THEY FILL PRESCRIPTIONS 61 Boosevelt Avenn* ley office where .- ... . after which the policeman took him to the Rahway Memorial Hospital. The police made an investigation »nd found several witnesses who said that the child ran in front of the car nnd that the driver could not be blamed. M. Slekeka, Spades L. Zysk, Dia. S. Golosewski, Dia. G. Czaja, Hearts . J. Triangle, Spades F. Kraska, Spades . H. Sabiaski, Chibs . H. Urbanski, Clubs J. Urbanski, Clubs E. Bonkowski, Clubs 22 170 ai4 21 162 174 30 16S 200 W 154 iK>7 27 146 202 28 145 256 30 144 180 15 144 170 24 144 212 21 141 219 10 140 171 26 139 177 .17 139 165 29 137 175 14 136 168 18 132 157 13 131 177 21 131 168 10 129 177 18 129 167 The meeting of the Borough Coun- cil Monday night wound up in a vig- orous protest against a proposed Jewish cemetery In the watershed of the Middlesex Water Company's re- servoir in Clark township. At a re- sult the Mayor and borough attor- ney went to Trenton on Tuesday to present the protest personally to the State Department of Health, and the Council went on record as being op- posed to the cemetery. It is more than likely that the matter wooM not have been given uny attention at all, at Monday's meeting, had it not been for a Mr. K. O'Connor, who was a visitor at the meeting and who explained that he owned property in the vicinity of the proposed cemetery. O'Connor sat through the meeting until the time _ came close to adjournment when the Mayor asked if there was any one present who wished to lay anything before the council. Then O'Connor asked if the borough was taking any action in the matter of the cemetery. He said he had seen t •fkl o. The W. Martenciuk, Hearts 20 129 191 E, Urbanski, HearU ... 25 128 162 J. TnhoUkl, Oluibs 29 128 188 F. Godeski, Spades 21 128 155 A. Hudak, Dia. 16 125 158 P. Eck, Dia, 27 121 167 P. SymanosW, iMa. 1« 120 1<88 M. Bialecki, Spades .... 6 170 141 The scores; HearU (3) J. Rose 187 Czaja 175 E. Urbanski 174 W. Zysk 184 ki 175 W. Zy Ciyzewski 175 200 128 141 138 129 170 141 135 154 166 895 p (0) Godeski 160 Siekerka 164 Samanoski 147 l?0 736 756 Triangle Senk 147 164 134 141 131 141 162 140 130 141 149 788 Diamonds (2) 153 711 722 Eck Golasewaki 148 Karplnski 137 Godeski *•• 12& 663 Club* (1) 96 120 143 125 145 145 114 127 168 633 644 Sobieski Tuholski H3 Bonkowski 117 Udielak Hi7 145 172 134 179 113 144 126 152 663 030 535 Mothers' Day Ob»«rv«d At Proabyterian Church Mothers' Day will be observed in the music andservices at the Pres- byterian church on Sunday. The top- ic at the 11 a. m. service will be- "Mothers' Faith". The topic of the pastor in an address to the children during the morning will be "Jewels" In the evening BerviceB will be held at 7:45 o'clock. The topic will be "Living Faith". Rev. David Emerson officiate at all services. I^orenz will Republicans To Meet On Slate N«tt Week A joint meeting: of the Men's Wo- men's organizations of the Republi- can party will be held on Friday night of next week to select a slate for the June primaries. It is expect- ed that th©party will indorse the candidates whose ternw e: Fitch Street Girl Wins Prize Book Five Others ToG«t Passes To Kahway Theatre. Dorothy Stockman, an 8-year-old girl of Fitch street was the winner of the first prize this week in the Jack Rabbit contest and will receive 1 book. Five other little folks will eceive passes to the Railway theatre. The winners andthose on the hon- orable mention list follow: flBST PRIZE BOOK DOROTHY STOCKMAN, 8 years, 77 Fitch street, Carteret. PASSES TORAHWAY THEATRE MARClNiAK, 7 years, 102 Sharot street, Carteret. HELJiiN GOJXJSRVSKA, 11 years, 3 1'assBic street, Carteret. ILIUAM JsNtfiJKK, 3S2 Grant ave- nuo, Carteret. MAta tilJNUA, 14 years, 18 John street, Carteret. LlUilAN FENSKE, 10 years, 71 Charles street, Carteret. HONORABLE MENTION Eleanor Durjar, 7 years, Itt Chrome avenue, Carteret. Culalie Duck, 10 years, 15 Harris street, Carteret. Josephh Lucas, 12 years, 81 Lowell street, carteret. Rosiyh Gross, 10 years, 22 Burling- ton street, Carteret. Bella. VYeinstein, 9Vi years, 641 Koosevelt avenue, Cartereb. Louis Daze, 8 years, i iiett'erts street, Carteret. Rose Mardi, 12 years, 68 Edwin street, Carteret. Joe Cetp, 10 years, 83 Edgar street, Carteret. Please mention thiB paper to ad- vertisers; it helps you, it helps them, it helps your paper. Piano Instructions GUARANTEED COURSE MISS LOTTIE WEINSTE1N 541 jRooeevelt Avenue lt"Wrr t'WWtWf tlWli 1WW agio. The meeting on Tuesday of this week he said was the important one because ft was probable that the State Board of Health would hand down a decision in the matter. Mr. O'Connor produced a map of the area in which the cemetery is to be established. It was a geological map and by It O'Connor satisfied the members of the council that in the event a cemetery was established it would drain Into the reservoir. This aroused the council with ths re. suit stated abqve. C. Nearing, of Grant avenue, ap- peared before the council with sev- eral protests. Grant avenue, he said, has never received any attention from the street department. It ia full of holes and should be scraped and rolled. Then he complained of the annoyance and damage caused by children from other sections of the borough who make Grant avenue a playground at night because no po- liceman ever patrols it and the child- ren feel free to do as they please. Flower* and hedges, he said, are ruined as fast as they are planted. This matter was referred to the po- lice department. Hearing's third com- plaint concerned a woman, who, h* Baid, was In great distress but does not receive any aid, from, the poor department Ufa. Oarrit Vrake, or* erseer of tstjwor, said that the wo- man in question does receive aid re- gularly from her department. Nearing said that if this is the case then the woman has told falsehoods be- cause she has complained repeatedly that she cannot get aid from the borough. Another resident who had receiv- ed a bill for poll tax wanted to know what it was for. Bills for poll tax are being sent out separately this year for the first time in the bor- ough's history. The same resident said that his taxes on his home had jumped from $40 w $105. The ordinance to build walks and curbs in Passaic street was passed on final reading as was another or- dinance giving permission for the establishment of a cemetery in the outskirts of the boroujjh near the Woodbridge line. This cemetery is to be controlled by the Carteret Cemetery Associa- tion. Councilman D'Zurilla voted against the ordinance as he did on the earlier readings, on the ground that he is not satisfied that it is anything other than a real estate proposition. D'Zurilla also voted no on the bill of 13,800 for a power roller for the street department. And he voted against the reports of assessment commissioners on the ground that the fees allowed are to high. Regard- ing the roller ke objected at former meetings first that the times are too hard and tbs taxes too high to war- rant a purchase involving so much money. Later he objected that the advertisement for the roller embod- ied the exact specifications of the Loden and Sharp roller and that therefore np other roller could have been purchased. This was discrim- ination he declared and did not per- mit of competitive bidding. Monday night the council authorix- ed that a note for $3,000 be discount- ed to pay for the roller. The Carteret Woman's Club in a letter informed the council that it is on record as favoring a recreation center for the borough. The club al- so asked the council to insure s sskfe and sane Fourth of July for this year. Residents of Hermann street in the East Rahwsy section petitioned the council for aid in ge.Uinjr gas. The clerk will write to the gas company asking that a main be extended into Hermann street. Residents of Heald street petitioned for a five-foot side walk from Randolph street to Roose- velt avenue. A Similar petition was received from residents of Edgar street for a five-foot walk there. The engineer and attorney were instruct- ed to prepare ordinances for the two improvements. The report of the chief of police was laid over for anadjourned meet- ing. The finance conuttgtee, through Chairman Hercules^Bllia reported that many of the persons listed on the delinquent tax list were paying up and that the tax sale list waa shrinking in proportion. He said that when the sale comes there will not b» very much property involved. The street and road committee re- ported that unimproved streets are being put into good condition rapid- ly by means of the scraper and the new roller. Chairman Vonah said that two complaints received at the last meeting bad been investigated and had bsen found to be unimportant, r One pertained to a sidewalk in Jean- t' ette street, and the other to a walk " in lower Roosevelt avenue. Councilman Ellis reported that the police wanted to change to summer uniforms and the matter was left to the police committee with power. When the fire and water commit- tee reported. Councilman D'Zurilla !tSst h irin?ai« 1 Stt* C * M i ? ry if for the fire department which, »v- cording to the newspaper, the fire and water committee had tested. As a member of the fire and water com- mittee, D'Zurilla said would Hks to be notified when such tests are made. D'Zurilla is also an active member of the fire department. Councilman Young, of the Build* ings and -Grounds committee, report- ed that a hose" house with a cement floor had be«n completed for fire house No. 1 and that a similar struc- ture would be supplied for compsny No. 2. A petition from William Brown for permission to establish a gas sta- tion on property he owns in Penn- ing avenue near Harris street, was referred to the fire and water com- mittee. The reports of the assessment com- missioners for improvements in Jeanette street and in Roosevelt ave- nue, which hadbeen laid over at tits last meeting were adopted over the protest of "Councilman D'Zurilla who <j held that the fees of the commission- , ers are too high." The Mayor and all the members of the council were present at the meeting. •/ Mother-Duehter Thursday | ,| Gifted Orator To Make Ad- dress At Spread In Presby- terian Sunday School Room., i'.r' J' 1 ;- 1 Preparations are nearly completed:; 5 for the mother-daughter banquetV' that will be held on Thursday night J under the auspices of the Mother- }t Teacher Association of the Presby- terian Church in the Sunday school room. Mothers and daughters of the congregation have been invited to attend. Reservations arebeing made through Miss Mary Colquhoun, of Emerson street. The decorations will be in keeping with the colon of the association, or- chid and yellow. Mrs. Charles Morris heads the committee in charge of the kitchen. Mrs. Thomas Way will be in charge of the stage where a short play, "Mother Blessing's Job", will >e presented under the direction of Miss Alberta Kolbe. Mrs. C. H. Byrne is in charge of table decorations. The big feature of the banquet will be an address by John T, Sproull of Arlington, N. J. Mr. Sproull was former president of the NewJersey Christian Endeavor Society. He ia widely known in business circles as a director and former president of the Coal and Iron Bank of New York. Mr, Sproull is an orator of unusual power. Mrs. W. Bennett will be in charge of the music for the evening. Girl Scouts To Hold Cake and Candy Sale The members of Troop No. 2, Girl ' Scouts will hold a cake and candy .. sale a wettk from tomorrow in Le- •; bowitz meat market in Washington , avenUe, beginning at 2:00 p. m. Excellent Bargains In Central Auto Supply Sale The balance of the stock of a large Philadelphia accessory firm that quit business is now being completely wiped out for whatever it will bring in a sale at the Central Auto Supply Store on New Brunswick avenue, Perth Amboy. Bargnins in tires and automobile accessories, together with home, vacation and sporting equip- ment have already drawn large crowds. Such items as tools, floor mats, tire covers, peat covers, lights, blow-out patches, hub caps ami other incidentals may he obtained at sur- nrisingly lowprices. "V A Warning to the People. It is about time for the people of Carteret to wake up to die fact that "Cheap John's General Store" ia the only store where the highest grade of merchandise is sold at the lowest prices. A full line of curtain goods, bed spreads, Boys' clothing, hosiery, underwear, hats,' caps and the best grade of shoes far the whole family. Cheap John's General Store iMi

Transcript of The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no … sister of the bridegroom; Miss Lot- *...

four Page ColoredComic Section

VIII, No. 34

The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no more

CARTERET PRESSi AKTKKKT, N. ,1., KHIDAY, MAY !), UVM)

22 Pages TodayThree Sections

PRICE THREE CENTS

>y Maneret Bride

Maliszewski and

tkiewicz A r e

At Church Wedding.

Lottie Malisewski, daughter»nd Mrs. Walter Malinzewski,Lowell street, this borough,«ph Staskiewski, son of Mrs,

'Staskiewski, of Perth Amboy,j 1 Cl J Si. •

Notable New BooksAt Local Library

New Volumes Of Fiction and

Non-Fiction Are Above Av-

erage.

Books of more than average meritare listed in a brief list of eight newbooks at the Carteret library. Fiveare works of fiction and the othersnon-flction. Leading the fiction list

[married Sunday afternoon in is a work by Thornton N. Wilder. TheHoly Family Roman Catholic list with comment on each volume,

_ ch. The ceremony wag perform- follows;L-d by Rev. Father Joeeph Dziados*. THE WOMAN OF ANDROS—bythe paatotaf the church, in the pre- Thornton N. Wilder. This book isHence of a i*t«* gathering of friends quite unlik* either the author's "Theand relative! of the couple. Cacala" or "The Bridge of San Luis

The matron of honor waa Mis* Rey", It k shorter, more carefullyMary Mallsiewski, a sister of the written, of closer texture. The scenebride. There were eight bridesmaids >» one of the islands of Greece,including Miss Jennie Otaskiewics,, Young Paraphilu*, supposed to marrya sister of the bridegroom; Miss Lot- * girl of hi* own class, fall* in lov«tie Olters, Miw Mary Staskiewici, with Glycerium, the young, carefullyMis« Rose Slivinaky, Katherine lus- guarded sitter of Chrysis, a courte-7.at», Jennie Kamount, Mary Jacobs wn and a woman of culture from an-und Rose Staskiewici. j other island, The idyll and the trage-

There were two little flower girls, dy that results are beautifully pre-Dorothy Stasklewic* and Helen SUv- tented. The author states that theinsky. | "«t part of hl& novel ia based upon

The best men was Stanley Slemaky. the Andria, a comedy of Terrence.There were seven ushers, John ESUo, It is, nevertheless, esaentially Mr.John Rose, Henry Poyner, John Mit- Wilder'* own creation,ko, Michael Bialecki, Anthony Siyba THE GREAT MEADOW—by Eliz-and Frank Staskiewici. abeth M. Roberts. Fusing the art of

The bride was attired in a beauti- poetry with her prose, and the art offul creation of white tatin trimmed the weaver of tapestries with herin Spanish lace with, a lace can ar- **»cteTj>oH*fture. Mias Roberta,

carried white rosW and TlUes-of'-t'ne-• again with native Kentucky types.valley. The matron of honor wore "The Great Meadow" tells the heroicorchid satin with hat and shees to story of earry pioneer life. Berk Jar-

atc-h and carried butterfly roses, vis and his wife Diony are members

Pollution Of WaterFeared By Council*

Protest Made Against Proposed Cemetery On Watershed Sup-plying This Territory — Mayor and Attorney

Carry Protest To Trenton.

The Hearts Bowling Team, Champion* of the Pulaiki Bowling Leagu*.Standing left to right—Gene Czaja, Walter Zysk, William Martenciuk, John Rozanski and Edmond Urban-ski. Seated: Stephen Czyzewski (Captain). —Photo iq Jaffe Studio

The bridesmaids were all attractive-' of a pilgrimage from Virginia intoly gowned. ; the wild, new land surrounding the

IT nearlyMrs. Staskiewki will reside atLowell street, this borough.

After the wedding ceremony a re-yetocka.de at Hatred's fort in Kentuc-ccption was held In the Falcc* hall ky — the "great meadow". Thesein Central avenue. More than 200 pioneer home-builders suffer Indianguests attended and the festivities attack, even tortuTe and death at thecontinued until midnight. hands of the red men; they know all

There were guests present from the vicissitudes of hunger and theCartertt, Per* Amboy. Jersey City, most primitive conditions erf life.Newark, Rahway, New York and, oth- Diony, as a type of the pioneer wom-

by towns and cities. Mr. and on, beam her child, marries again23 when convinced that Berk is dead,

and on his return is forced to make,according to primitive law, a choicebetween him and her new husbandand baby. This, the external actionof the novel, u less compelling insignificance than the mental and spir-itual reactions of the characters totheir environment and to each other.

THE HIDDEN CITY—by Philip_ „ , , fx . T » n ' Gibbs. London life seen through theScorer W o r k s Out T h e D o p e e yes of a young doctor who opens an

Showing Nine Run A v e r a g e office in Chelsea. A quiet chronicleof everyday events that touches bothcomedy and tragedy, tiie whole im-pregnated with a gentle cynicism.

School Team MakesGood Average Record

Per Game.

Carteret high school's hard-hittingbrigade has averaged nine runs pergame, according to the average com-piled yesterday by Ben Zusman, scor-er for the team. Thtse records in-clude C2rt*«t't 1-1 victory over NewBrunswick on Wednesday. The Bkwand White team has batted out fourvictories in nve starts, losing but aheart-breaking eleven-Inning game to

Hearts Win Out in Pulaiki LeagueDefeating the Spades in three

straight games on Coughlin's alleyslast Friday night in the closing tiltsof the schedule, the Hearts won thethampionship of the Pulaski Bowl-ing League. The Hearts' superiorityover the other three teams in theleague is rather forcibly indicatedin Secretary Stephen Ctyzewskl's re-lease for publication of the officialcords for the recently-completed sea-son. The Hearts elesed their pennantdrive nine games ahead of the se-cond-place Diamonds, winning twen-ty-six of thirty-three games rolledin loop competition. The champions

When the league opened abouteleven weeks ago the Hearts climbedinto the lead. The; have maintainedthai* pace ever since, widening theiiadvantage with the passinc of weeks.During the closing weeks of the racethe Hearts «ewed up the title; and be-cause of this, interest between theteams began to gradually decrease.

One of tiie features of the loopwas the gallant fight.made by theDiamond piasmqapi during the olos-ing weeks of the campaign. Perchedin the cellar for a Ions tine theDiamonds rose into second placewithin a period of about three weeks.

Final Standing in th« Pnlatki Bowl-ing Laagua

Team G. W. L. Are. HSHearts 88 26 7 .788 909Diamonds 33

lee17 16 .516 80313 20 .393 788

Clubs 33 13 20 .3^3 776Individual Racordi

An. HSS. Czyzewski, Hearts,W. Boianski, DiaJ, Roianskl, Hearts ...W. Zyak, HurtsT. Udtelak, ClubsT. Karpinski, DiaC. Godeski, Dia.

ia muii tuiu|«iiuuii. i w tiwuuiuw, wiuun a penoa oi BDOUI wiree weeics. ,• „ ~ r , '• . a " ,losing but seven games, established Going to the other extreme, thej J - M w f l o ) !? t *' SP*^8

an enviable record on the lanes. The clubs who were giving the Hearts *,• Senk, ClubsDiamonds won second-place honors a m e r ry battle during the opening*'' Stawfcki,with a four-game advantage over the weeks of the schedule began to slump * " "Spades and Clubs who completed toward mid-season and as a resulttheir campaign in a tie for the cellar. n o w fin<] themselves in the cellar. The

Stephen Csyiewaki, anchorman for I Spades who did not seem to be goingthe champions, won the title In the; anywhere in particular all year aresingle race, posting an average - ' • -

p ycontont with a tie for third and

CORONET—by Manuel Komroff.In this long story of the ascent andfall of aristocracy through &» I M La golden coronet flgursa aa a aymbolof arrogant*, bringing m i s f tits owners. The 3 l 4with the manufacture, In a Flowntine goldsmith's shop, of s coronetfor a French count, and with the riseof two pork butchers to wealth andpower, and it ends in Chicago when

season. I a wealthy packer marries hia daugh-Joseph Medwick, Carteret's sensa- ter to the French count's degenerate

I. __1 ! . _ . . _>LIJ.>A aajs*. t l ia VkAMt lint- ' J u A » J a o l

;ing erwickNVw Brunswick high earlUr in the

tiunal boy athlete, has the best bat-ting average. His mark is .652. Med-wick also leads his team-mates in ex-tra-base clouts; four doubles, threetriples, and two homen. Six regularsarc batting .300 or better. They sre

descendant.MOTHERS ORY—by Helen Grace

Carlisle. "Told in the first person,this ia a story of a woman wno tooklife as it came, marriage, mother-hood, the death of her husband, the

Mfdwick. Sielag, Stutike, Hart, Poll, responsibility of a family and theand Chodosh. Carteret has a team av-erage of .371.

Cartar»l High Baseball Record*Including Gam** Playad May 7

petty economies of poverty, the suc-cess of her children and their failur-es, and who at the end, left alone,two of the children tragically (lead,

Richey ..MedwickSzelag ..StutikeHartPollChodosh.Rubel

G AB Jt H 2B 3B HR Av two gone from her, still feels0 1000 h lif h b d Very ski2 1 1 1 0

5 28 9 16 44 19 6 10 06 25 9 10 1

22 422 828 1

Daniels 6 IB 3Micklchs.. 6 21 4KubicaBaksaCarlyle

921

8 28 67 84 14 14 08 00 00 0

g ,0 1.000 her life has been gcod. Very skillful-

652 l ld h i i l f f t200000000000

g y.652 ly told, achieving an unusual effect.526 of reality.

NON-FICTIONB R O W N ' S1827-1927 (byGrandmother

Taaas RecordsCarteret 10 .FreeholdCartertt 14 MetochenCarteret 5 N. Bruns. 11 inn.Carteret 11 Perth AmboyCarteret 5 New Brunswick

46Mtekistg RMOTJ*

G W L P8«elag 2 2 0Medwick ...,. 8 2 1

.416

.363 GRANDMOTHER

.368 HUNDRED YEARS,

.804 Harriet C. Brown.

.222 Brown was born in 1827 in the Ohio

.210 town to which her grandfather had

.112 migrated after the Revolution. In the

.000 60*s she and her husband moved to

.000 Iowa where Grandmother Brown liv-

.4)00 ed until ahe died, in 1928. Her biog-raphy, told almost entirely in the

- form of conservations with hera daufoUf-in-law, is the story of how• one good woman spent a hundred0 buay, useful and, on the whole, happy

5rtO SINGING STRENGTH—byAlfred Knymborg. A complete out-line of American peotry from the

i thl f lline of Am pyearryl colonial period to the presenttime. The poeta are classed, where

i l d h l ror

Unusual Values At A. B. C.

possible, under specific schoolsperiods, and the work and influence

- of each outstanding poet receive an-lalysis. Of special interest are the

or to the War; and the appraisalchapters on the poetic renscence just« . . . s» affc » a GiiayWiO Via WSSV |*v».w», - •*«* «

Silk Store Draw Attention of Bhe work of contemporary poets.. | A BOOK OF DRAMATIC COS-

The unusual value of up-to-date TUME—This book undertakes todress goods, curtains, linens, domes- present in line drawing pictures, a se-tics and underwear has made the A. lection of the costumes of most ofB. C. Silk fltore at 164 Smith street, the peoples and period* touched byPerth Amboy, the talk of this vicin- dramatic literature. The selection isity. The large variety of shades, ma- limited to costumes known to beterlals, colors and styles has drawn worn by characters in plays, pag;th t t t i f i hi

, lors and styles has d a wthe attention of women in this sec-ty to the new store, As a special

pants, operas Bivd other forms ol..,— „ „ , „ _ „,, drama. There are also drawings offeature this week, pongee slips, well ornaments, utensils, weapons andtailored and made of pure silk pon- motifs, as well as discussions on col-gee will be offered at a remarkably ore, materials and like details.low price. I — —

Mr. Moe Sirop, the manager, in a n . M F p l r A N l r c i n N NOTESInterview this morning, said that he AMERICAN LfcWUn m / i t awanted to thank the public for the

170 for twenty-two games. Walter h M t piace>Zysk, another member of the cham- T h t, ,pfonahip team, holds the highest i n - \ '"f y*'1*1

dividual score with a grade of 267. i {£

• " * £'**!& ** •* ' c o m p U i n * Heart, came near breaking their

w e e k o l c o m p e t | t i o n

r e v e a l i n ^iv realthe Spades in

a mark of 909.

IDE LETTER BOXEditor Press,Dear Sir:

high team score of 909 when theyMattered the maples for & acore of896. Just 14 pint behind their re-eordt.Dy aUhwtph ths Wrist madsa record hit of 788 they were out-classed by about 100 pins. Twenty-five ptns decided the second gamein favor of the leaden. With the ex-

We waited a long time, but every ception of J. Rose, who busted thething comes to those that .wait bottles for an even score of 200 inYour editorial of May 2 was worth this game, the remaining Hearts'waiting for and you are to be con- bowlers turned in low scores. In thegrstulsted upon the wonderful way final the Hearts were again extendedyou handled the matter, your climax to win, 766-722. J. Rose, lead-offis a master stroke. I man forithe Hearts, had a food night,

The three or four cases you spoke' upsetting the wood for an average ofof or mentioned are but a drop in 186.the ocean of crime and corruption, | With each team competing withthe body politic is corrupt from top only four men, the Diamonds tig-ht-to bottom, and the respect and ob- ened their grip: on second place byedience of our people to the laws blasting the Clubs in two out of threeand those in authority is a laughing garoeB. The Diamonds took the open-stock to all, and my brother how can ing match 'by a 110-pin margin, 663-it be otherwise? When the highest 553. In the second, the Clubs camejudges associate with crooks and dine back strong to win by 97 pins, 630-with them; when magistrates and 533. The third and deciding gamejustices sell so-celled justice to the was close all the way. It was any-highest bidder. The public press is, body's game throughout the firstfilled daily with accounts of crimes nine frames. In the tenth the Dift-and damable wickedness in 4iigh of- monds spurted to nose out a 9-pinficial places as well as amongst the w | n . Udielak was high man in thismore degraded1 of the land and of- match.ten i« it shown that men in ihigh otf-,ficial positions resort to fraud andother criminal acts in oppressing thepeople.

The prohibition law you mention-ed is one of the greatest causes ofcorruption and oppression that themind of man ever produced. See the»se of George Voile and his sister.

Auto Injures Bo; OnWay To School*

John Kiah, Aged 6 , H u Brok-Ab

Kiah, Aged ,Thigh and Outi Above

and Below Eye.en

case of George Voile and his sister,fined $6,000 and-three years in jailfor having one-half .pint of whiskeyin his home and up to Jaauary 1,ren had been shot to death in at-1930, 1860 men, women and child-tempt, to enforce « j law. J^^SllfJSU

What is the remedy? More drastic a t 12-30 today when he was struckaws? God forbid! Men have tried by a car aa he was crossing Roosevelt

that for untold ages and the histori- avenue at Pershinir avenue, The boyal record of France alone shows.

was knocked down and his rightthat more than 400,000 men, women t n j g n was broken. He also had severeand children in that country have lacerations over and under the rightbeen sent to untimely graves and d i b Cminemen still laugh at their laws,

I h l bl i hg l | co\r

I honestly believe you have found \ng

s over and n ge y e ; The C 8 r Was driven by Carmineco\rjno, of Turner street, Port Read-e y e

cy y

•3 ! d f i B h O w»i i >gPatrolman George Sheridan and

andsentiments and not only work forthe strict enforcement of laws andat the same time obey the laws them-selves. How about it in our ownommunity? You as one of the lead-

ing citizens and the expounder andformer of public opinion could do awonderful work in backing up thoseof us who are trying to improve con-

Members of the American Legion dltiona here by trying to gat a com-business it has given him. It is Mr. Drum Corps must attend the prac-1 mission form of government or anyStop's plan to treat each and every tices held every Monday and ThuTs- other form that may prove success-customer individually! and to offer day night in the high school auditor- ful in making this the best commun-miggestions which years of experi- ium, President Al Skurat announcedence have made possible. thiB week.

MONSTER DANCEgiven by

William P. Campbell Associationheld at

Woodbridge Municipal Building

TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 13, 1930

2 Bands 2Lind Brother*'Fred O'Brien's

risking. In the State of New Jersey.You will pardon my long letterp y g

but I get the opportunity to see youBO seldom that when J start to visitI don't know enough to ffo home andbesides your editorial has given maenough to think about for weeks tocome.

Very sincerely yours,JOHN A. COLLINS.

WE TAKE PRIDE IN OUR

P R E S C R I P T I O N

DEPARTMENT

M ITTUCH'S

Est. 1905

THEY FILL PRESCRIPTIONS

61 Boosevelt Avenn*

leyoffice where . - ... .after which the policeman took himto the Rahway Memorial Hospital.

The police made an investigation»nd found several witnesses who saidthat the child ran in front of the carnnd that the driver could not beblamed.

M. Slekeka, SpadesL. Zysk, Dia.S. Golosewski, Dia.G. Czaja, Hearts .J. Triangle, SpadesF. Kraska, Spades .H. Sabiaski, Chibs .H. Urbanski, ClubsJ. Urbanski, ClubsE. Bonkowski, Clubs

22 170 ai421 162 17430 16S 200W 154 iK>727 146 20228 145 25630 144 18015 144 17024 144 21221 141 21910 140 17126 139 177.17 139 16529 137 17514 136 16818 132 15713 131 17721 131 16810 129 17718 129 167

The meeting of the Borough Coun-cil Monday night wound up in a vig-orous protest against a proposedJewish cemetery In the watershed ofthe Middlesex Water Company's re-servoir in Clark township. At a re-sult the Mayor and borough attor-ney went to Trenton on Tuesday topresent the protest personally to theState Department of Health, and theCouncil went on record as being op-posed to the cemetery.

It is more than likely that thematter wooM not have been givenuny attention at all, at Monday'smeeting, had it not been for a Mr.K. O'Connor, who was a visitor atthe meeting and who explained thathe owned property in the vicinity ofthe proposed cemetery. O'Connorsat through the meeting until thetime _ came close to adjournmentwhen the Mayor asked if there wasany one present who wished to layanything before the council. ThenO'Connor asked if the borough wastaking any action in the matter ofthe cemetery. He said he had seen

t •fklo. The

W. Martenciuk, Hearts 20 129 191E, Urbanski, HearU . . . 25 128 162J. TnhoUkl, Oluibs 29 128 188F. Godeski, Spades 21 128 155A. Hudak, Dia. 16 125 158P. Eck, Dia, 27 121 167P. SymanosW, iMa. 1« 120 1<88M. Bialecki, Spades .... 6 170 141

The scores;HearU (3)

J. Rose 187Czaja 175E. Urbanski 174W. Zysk 184

ki 175W. ZyCiyzewski 175

200128141138129

170141135154166

895p (0)

Godeski 160Siekerka 164Samanoski 147

l?0

736 756

TriangleSenk 147

164134141131141

162140130141149

788Diamonds (2)

153

711 722

EckGolasewaki 148Karplnski 137Godeski *•• 12&

663Club* (1)

96

120143125145

145114127168

633 644

SobieskiTuholski H3Bonkowski 117Udielak Hi7

145172134179

113144126152

663 030 535

Mothers' Day Ob»«rv«dAt Proabyterian Church

Mothers' Day will be observed inthe music and services at the Pres-byterian church on Sunday. The top-ic at the 11 a. m. service will be-"Mothers' Faith". The topic of thepastor in an address to the childrenduring the morning will be "Jewels"In the evening BerviceB will be heldat 7:45 o'clock. The topic will be"Living Faith".

Rev. David Emersonofficiate at all services.

I orenz will

Republicans To MeetOn Slate N«tt Week

A joint meeting: of the Men's Wo-men's organizations of the Republi-can party will be held on Fridaynight of next week to select a slatefor the June primaries. It is expect-ed that th© party will indorse the

candidates whose ternw e:

Fitch Street GirlWins Prize Book

Five Others To G«t Passes ToKahway Theatre.

Dorothy Stockman, an 8-year-oldgirl of Fitch street was the winnerof the first prize this week in theJack Rabbit contest and will receive1 book. Five other little folks willeceive passes to the Railway theatre.

The winners and those on the hon-orable mention list follow:

flBST PRIZE — BOOKDOROTHY STOCKMAN, 8 years,

77 Fitch street, Carteret.PASSES TO RAHWAY THEATRE

MARClNiAK, 7 years, 102Sharot street, Carteret.

HELJiiN GOJXJSRVSKA, 11 years, 31'assBic street, Carteret.ILIUAM JsNtfiJKK, 3S2 Grant ave-nuo, Carteret.

MAta tilJNUA, 14 years, 18 Johnstreet, Carteret.

LlUilAN FENSKE, 10 years, 71Charles street, Carteret.

HONORABLE MENTIONEleanor Durjar, 7 years, Itt Chrome

avenue, Carteret.Culalie Duck, 10 years, 15 Harris

street, Carteret.Josephh Lucas, 12 years, 81 Lowell

street, carteret.Rosiyh Gross, 10 years, 22 Burling-

ton street, Carteret.Bella. VYeinstein, 9Vi years, 641

Koosevelt avenue, Cartereb.Louis Daze, 8 years, i iiett'erts street,

Carteret.Rose Mardi, 12 years, 68 Edwin

street, Carteret.Joe Cetp, 10 years, 83 Edgar street,

Carteret.

Please mention thiB paper to ad-vertisers; it helps you, it helps them,it helps your paper. —

Piano InstructionsGUARANTEED COURSE

MISS LOTTIE WEINSTE1N541 jRooeevelt Avenue

lt"Wrr t'WWtWf tlWli 1WWagio. The meeting on Tuesday ofthis week he said was the importantone because ft was probable that theState Board of Health would handdown a decision in the matter.

Mr. O'Connor produced a map ofthe area in which the cemetery isto be established. It was a geologicalmap and by It O'Connor satisfiedthe members of the council that inthe event a cemetery was establishedit would drain Into the reservoir.This aroused the council with ths re.suit stated abqve.

C. Nearing, of Grant avenue, ap-peared before the council with sev-eral protests. Grant avenue, he said,has never received any attentionfrom the street department. It ia fullof holes and should be scraped androlled. Then he complained of theannoyance and damage caused bychildren from other sections of theborough who make Grant avenue aplayground at night because no po-liceman ever patrols it and the child-ren feel free to do as they please.

Flower* and hedges, he said, areruined as fast as they are planted.This matter was referred to the po-lice department. Hearing's third com-plaint concerned a woman, who, h*Baid, was In great distress but doesnot receive any aid, from, the poordepartment U f a . Oarrit Vrake, or*erseer of tstjwor, said that the wo-man in question does receive aid re-gularly from her department. Nearingsaid that if this is the case thenthe woman has told falsehoods be-cause she has complained repeatedlythat she cannot get aid from theborough.

Another resident who had receiv-ed a bill for poll tax wanted to knowwhat it was for. Bills for poll taxare being sent out separately thisyear for the first time in the bor-ough's history. The same residentsaid that his taxes on his home hadjumped from $40 w $105.

The ordinance to build walks andcurbs in Passaic street was passedon final reading as was another or-dinance giving permission for theestablishment of a cemetery in theoutskirts of the boroujjh near theWoodbridge line.

This cemetery is to be controlledby the Carteret Cemetery Associa-tion. Councilman D'Zurilla votedagainst the ordinance as he did onthe earlier readings, on the groundthat he is not satisfied that it isanything other than a real estateproposition.

D'Zurilla also voted no on the billof 13,800 for a power roller for thestreet department. And he votedagainst the reports of assessmentcommissioners on the ground thatthe fees allowed are to high. Regard-ing the roller ke objected at formermeetings first that the times are toohard and tbs taxes too high to war-rant a purchase involving so muchmoney. Later he objected that theadvertisement for the roller embod-ied the exact specifications of theLoden and Sharp roller and thattherefore np other roller could havebeen purchased. This was discrim-ination he declared and did not per-mit of competitive bidding.

Monday night the council authorix-ed that a note for $3,000 be discount-ed to pay for the roller.

The Carteret Woman's Club in aletter informed the council that it ison record as favoring a recreationcenter for the borough. The club al-so asked the council to insure s sskfeand sane Fourth of July for thisyear.

Residents of Hermann street in theEast Rahwsy section petitioned thecouncil for aid in ge.Uinjr gas. Theclerk will write to the gas companyasking that a main be extended intoHermann street. Residents of Healdstreet petitioned for a five-foot sidewalk from Randolph street to Roose-velt avenue. A Similar petition wasreceived from residents of Edgarstreet for a five-foot walk there. Theengineer and attorney were instruct-ed to prepare ordinances for the twoimprovements.

The report of the chief of policewas laid over for an adjourned meet-ing.

The finance conuttgtee, throughChairman Hercules^Bllia reportedthat many of the persons listed onthe delinquent tax list were payingup and that the tax sale list waashrinking in proportion. He said thatwhen the sale comes there will notb» very much property involved.

The street and road committee re-ported that unimproved streets arebeing put into good condition rapid-ly by means of the scraper and thenew roller. Chairman Vonah said thattwo complaints received at the lastmeeting bad been investigated andhad bsen found to be unimportant, rOne pertained to a sidewalk in Jean- t'ette street, and the other to a walk "in lower Roosevelt avenue.

Councilman Ellis reported that thepolice wanted to change to summeruniforms and the matter was left tothe police committee with power.

When the fire and water commit-tee reported. Councilman D'Zurilla

!tSsthirin?ai«1Stt*C* M i ? r y if

for the fire department which, »v-cording to the newspaper, the fireand water committee had tested. Asa member of the fire and water com-mittee, D'Zurilla said h« would Hksto be notified when such tests aremade. D'Zurilla is also an activemember of the fire department.

Councilman Young, of the Build*ings and -Grounds committee, report-ed that a hose" house with a cementfloor had be«n completed for firehouse No. 1 and that a similar struc-ture would be supplied for compsnyNo. 2.

A petition from William Brownfor permission to establish a gas sta-tion on property he owns in Penn-ing avenue near Harris street, wasreferred to the fire and water com-mittee.

The reports of the assessment com-missioners for improvements inJeanette street and in Roosevelt ave-nue, which had been laid over at titslast meeting were adopted over theprotest of "Councilman D'Zurilla who <jheld that the fees of the commission- ,ers are too high."

The Mayor and all the membersof the council were present at themeeting. •/

Mother-DuehterThursday

|

,|

Gifted Orator To Make Ad-dress At Spread In Presby- •terian Sunday School Room.,

i ' . r '

J'1;-1Preparations are nearly completed:; 5

for the mother-daughter banquetV'that will be held on Thursday night Junder the auspices of the Mother- }tTeacher Association of the Presby-terian Church in the Sunday schoolroom. Mothers and daughters of thecongregation have been invited toattend. Reservations are being madethrough Miss Mary Colquhoun, ofEmerson street.

The decorations will be in keepingwith the colon of the association, or-chid and yellow. Mrs. Charles Morrisheads the committee in charge of thekitchen. Mrs. Thomas Way will bein charge of the stage where a shortplay, "Mother Blessing's Job", will>e presented under the direction ofMiss Alberta Kolbe. Mrs. C. H. Byrneis in charge of table decorations.

The big feature of the banquetwill be an address by John T, Sproullof Arlington, N. J. Mr. Sproull wasformer president of the New JerseyChristian Endeavor Society. He iawidely known in business circles as adirector and former president of theCoal and Iron Bank of New York.Mr, Sproull is an orator of unusualpower. Mrs. W. Bennett will be incharge of the music for the evening.

Girl Scouts To HoldCake and Candy Sale

The members of Troop No. 2, Girl 'Scouts will hold a cake and candy ..sale a wettk from tomorrow in Le- •;bowitz meat market in Washington ,avenUe, beginning at 2:00 p. m.

Excel lent Bargains In

Central Auto Supply Sale

The balance of the stock of a largePhiladelphia accessory firm that quitbusiness is now being completelywiped out for whatever it will bringin a sale at the Central Auto SupplyStore on New Brunswick avenue,Perth Amboy. Bargnins in tires andautomobile accessories, together withhome, vacation and sporting equip-ment have already drawn largecrowds. Such items as tools, floormats, tire covers, peat covers, lights,blow-out patches, hub caps ami otherincidentals may he obtained at sur-nrisingly low prices.

"V

A Warning to the People.It is about time for the people of Carteret to wake

up to die fact that "Cheap John's General Store" ia the

only store where the highest grade of merchandise is sold

at the lowest prices.

A full line of curtain goods, bed spreads, Boys'

clothing, hosiery, underwear, hats,' caps and the best

grade of shoes far the whole family.

Cheap John's General StoreiMi

PAGE TWO FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1930 GV-ltTERKT V.

Many Schools Will AidIn Orphan Education

Bill Pawed For Benefit Of WarOrphani Hai Support OfNew Jersey Institution*.

1M !aM week'* iuue WM published• rojjy of the letter tent out to all

f.o»t commanders of the Americanjegion in thii state by Department

Commsnder Richard Hartsborne, ofthe Department of New Jcney in re-gard to the successful termination•f the legion for the passage of the"War Orphan Bill". This bill hadbeen a major objectire of the Legionin New Jersey for some time and ahard fight preceded ita passage. Itprovide* for Kate aid for orphans ofex-eervicenwn who are attendinghigher institutions of learning. Manyschools in New Jersey will co-oper-ate. The provisions of the bill andthe list of college* that will co-op-e n U in giving war orphan* highereducation, follow:

Provide* 1150 00 a year to defrayexpense* of attendance of any WarOrphan at any state educational orother technical or professional school•f s secondary or college grade inNew Jersey. This includes hifhSchools and other educational insti-tetions of similar or higher frade batdoes not include primary or grammarschools.

1150.00 will be paid for four yearsbat no more, to any eligfblt child.

CONDITION'S OF ELIGIBILITY—Child must be •

1. Between lfl and ,21 years.2. A resident of New Jersey since

March 31, 1929 snd at the time ofapplying for ttat« aid.

8. Child of a father who was inactive service during the World W»rand died between April 6, J'.'l? andJuly 2, 1921.

Application for the benefit* ofthe act should be made in writing,

fulfitawot u U

lions by child to Adjutant General(Jilkyjiun, State House, Trenton.

The state haa appropriated |5,000a year for this purpose. Snch appro-priations are to b« continued for 12years thru 1942, when the last WsrOrphan will have reached the age of21, thus totalling a state appropri-ation of f60,0OO.

2. AID BY EDUCATIONAL IN-STITUTION3.

The following leading educationalinstitution* of the state have agreedat the instance of The American Le-gion to co-operat*, as shown below,ia assisting in th« education of WsrOrphans.

PRINCETON U N I V E H S I T Y ,Princeton, N J.; Kale (Dr. John 0.mbben, President) will gi*e freetuition to ttery war orphan who en-

* RUTGERS UNIVERSITY, NewBrunswick, N. J.; Male (Dr. John R.Thomas, President) will give schol-arships of One Hundred Dollars toevery war orphan.

STEVENS INSTITUTE OF TECH-NOLOGY, Hoboken, N.; J.; Male(Dr. Hsrvey N. Davis, President)baa created new scholarships of 11200known a* the American Legion Schol-arship* for four yesrs course. Ac-cept recommendation of Legion forHaveraaeh Scholarship.

NEW BRUNSWWICK THEOLO-GICAL SEMINARY, New Brunswick,N. J.; (Dr. W. T. J. Demarest,President) free tuition and freeroom rent.

SETON HALL COLLEGE, SouthOrange, N. J.; Male (Rt. Rev. Thom-as H. McLaughlin, President) (Ro-man Catholics) free tuition.

NEWARK COLLEGE OF EN-GINEERING, Newark, N. X; Male(I>r. Allan ft. Cullimore, Director)

scholarships of $170 per year each.NEW JERSEY LAW SCHOOL, E.

Park street, Newark, N. J.; Co-«d(Hon. Richard I). Currier, President)fix in each clasn—Ih in all—EtmU-

>n of tuition.ME-RCER B E A S L E Y L A W

SCHOOL, Industrial Office Bldsr.,Newark, N. J . ; f . W d (Hon. ArthurP. Egner, President) nix in each

MILUONDOUAR iHFATPf

QAHWAY,1RVIN6 St I C£r>fTRAl

Big Added Featu reSUNDAY ONLY

First Showing inUnion County

Direct from George M. Cohan's Theatre inNew York City

THE GREAT MIGRATION /Ten million wild animals on the move in,

. „ „ , search of food and water.. .Themost!!£$» stupendous scene ever photographed /

das*—18 in ill—Remission of tui-tion.

RIDER COLLEGE, State street,Trenton, N. J. (Mr John E. Gill,Dean) Unlimited free tuition.

COLLEGE OF SAINT ELIZA-BETH, Morrittown, N. J.; Female(Sister Marie- Jose. Dean) (RomanCatholics)fra* tuition for four.

PANZER COLLEGE OF PHYSI-CAL EDUCATION. CI en wood ave-nue, E. Orange, N. J. (Dr. HenryPanzer, President) two scholanhipeyearly, consisting of entire tuitionfeea, cowing either a three yearor a foor year course.

ST. JOSEPH'S COLLEGE, Prince-ton, N. J.; Malt (Her. Joseph S.Dunn, C. U., President) RomanCatholic Priesthood only. Free tui-tion.

N. J. COLLEGE FOR WOMEN,New Brunswick, N. J. (Dean Doug-Iksa) primary consideration to warorphans for scholarships snd em-ployment.

SLOOMFlELp THEOLOGICALSEMINARY, Bloomfidd, N. J. (Dr.Arnold W. Flsmer, President) freetuition to all.

The following institutions are ex-pected to loin this program, althotheir Boards of Trustees have notyet officially taken action.

LE MASTER INSTITUTE, JuniorCollege 508 First avenue, AsburyPsrk, N. J.; Co-ed (Dr. Walter P.Steinhauser. President).K ° n . to«VEKSITY, Madison,N. J.; Mais, Theological (Dr. ArloiAyres Brown, President).

RICHARD HARTSHORNE.Department Commander.

SLAT'S DIARYBY BOSS FAKQl.'HAR

Psyys la Ike OriglaalBli of the orlflnil volumes of San-

oel Pspy"s diary are the property ofsfsgdtleas college, Cetnbridfs. Bui-land. Tliey sr« dlspl.red to a lln-tttd number of visitor* apon request

Friday—well the tc«4ier rot* anote to pa today ami told him a lot

fluff about myDeportment a n d

. and tonite patuk me out in the

rndtfe and givemi' a licken andthen he Bed he waapuniihinjr me b«-cuz I picked on akid smallern mebut it popped intomy li«i that meb-by he was bhjgernme also.

Saterday—Theywas a meating to-!d a y sum thingabout a X serviceman here in townand Jake and meinarched with the

. , . Shouts and theyhad a band witch played a paterotticpeace and also the french naahunalair witch was named. Mayenaise andwe had a very xalent time and a icecream con* after word*.

Sunday—wile we was out drive ingin the 2d handed ford just aa we wasa croeaing a rale rode track whyhere cums a train and diddent miasu* morn a inch about. I seas the poorold engansar must a b*n skared prit-ty bsd baciw he waa white at a sheatM hi went a past us.

Munday—Pa made > loshial errortonite when MSM Blur.t cum in andshowed us a pitcher of the felloe towitch she is fngaged to fret marryedto. after she let pa see it she sed wellwhat do you think of him and pa re-plyed and esd Wei! he must be verywelthy. she went out without sayingvery mutch more and I herd Ant Em-

my say »umthing obtu a for Pass.Tuesday—we are a getting reddy

to give are play in a cupple wks. Ido not like my part very well becuzI am supposed to be a Englishmenand I am haveing a lot of tnibblegetting the Molecule to stay on myeye.

Wensday—they was a agent heretoday and he was a trying to sell AntEmmy a Incyclopedia but she sed itwassent no use to try to sell her oneof them things becui she was to oldto lern to ride it enny ways.

Tfcinday—Pa gits prttty mad evryIT. since he tuk up playing Golf.Evry yr. about this tints sum 1 witchthinks he is Smart sends pa a littlebook intitled. HtnU for Beginners inGolf, and he has ben trying to playfor seven yrs. now. And says bee hardto beet.

Public Serrice Pays NearlyHalf Million In Bonuses

More than f 4«0,000 lias been paid,in bonuses to Pul/'c 9srrte« bus sndstreet car operators since the No-Ac-cident Bonus Plan of the companywas pot into effect in 1927.

For the most recent bonus period,December to April, over $6-6,600 wasdistributed snd 3,158 operators shar-ed In it

N e w Issue Of Cumulat ive

Stock Offered By P. S. Corp.

Announcement is made by PublicService Corporation of New Jerseyof a new offer of its $6 CumulativePreferred Stock (no par value) in spopular ownership campaign whiohwill start June 2.

In the second offer of this stocklast October, 50,752 shares were soldto 14,674 persons.

Care At CrossingsUrged By Club

Safety Director Of KeystoneGroup Also Condemns ThoseWho Drive On Left Side OfRoad.

With the touring season getting in-to ita stride, the highways of thestate soon will be carrying capacitytraffic, which place* ra added burdenof responsibility upon the motorist,In view of Edward P. Corrsn, SafelyDirector of the Ktyitons AutomobileClub of New Jersey.

"It may be assumed," said Air.Curran, ''that accidents will happen,but by 'accidents' we do not meanthe tremendous number of avoidablecrashes that annually take a toll inlife and property. It should «e thesim of every motorist to svoid dan-gerous driving practices, both for hisown sake and that of other highwayusers. • t

"A prolific source of dsnger notgenerally appreciated by motorists isthe habit of driving on the wrongtide of the road, especially st curves.Even veteran drivers are guilty ofthis practice. Statistics show that ahigh percentage of so called 'acci-dents is due to violation of the car-dinal principle of driving—'keep tothe right',

"Failure to have one's car undercontrol st intersections ii anotherserious driving defect. No motoristcan ever assume, with safety, that hehas a clear track st intersections un-less the view is unobstructed for agood distance in advance of the cross-ing.

"Observance of the rul«« of safetyin these two particulars will result

in appreciable lowering of the accy-dtrit toll and will contributeto the pleasure of driving."

Sale Of New Fords In N. J.This Y«ar Shows

An increase in the number of nfewFord passenger cars registered I inNew Jersey in the first quarter/ ofthis year, compared with the cojj(ponding period in 1929, isby local Ford dealers. Thetfon of new Foods in the flrsjTthreemonths of this year was 8,8Qr8, com-pared with 6,977 in Jenustry, Feb-rusry and March of last fear.

There were 26,621 nerw cars ofsll mskes registered in the firstthree months of this yesr. Of these38.8 per cent, were Fords. \

This record, according to. localFord dealers, reflects the popularappreciation for the new Ford bodytypes sad at the same time indicatess generally »liealthy business condi-tion in New Jersey. :

Asserkaa C«a»t TidesThe largest tide In the United

Stste* occurs on the Atlantic coast InBobscook sod Passamaq noddy baysvMaine, where the mean rsags is a»much as 20 feet On the" west coastthe Isrgest tides occur In Pogtt sound,where the mesn range is Sboit 11feet. At the head ef Oook Inlet, Alas-ka, the mean fanfe of tide is aboutSO feet

Cheap FrlaadsUp TestJud Tonkins says he's slwsys will-

Ing to lend an umbrella sad neversorry If It's not returned. The um-brella teat Is one of the cheapest pos-sible ways of detecting s false Mead.—Washington Star.

MMCVKX0M0H8

1AMOANVIKI

MILS'.VOOWA NILEMNYACOUHT

PRANK R. WILSONprtltttni

In Conjunction with

"SPRING IS HERE"Last Full Show at 8 P.M

UNION COUNTY BUICK PRESENTS A SPRING

SALE OFSEVENTY

SUNDAY- Mother's Day Only

FlJDWEESMAY 11

Always theAccepted Gift

For EraryOccasion

.Spring blooming plants that ex-press the spirit of Mother*1 Day.

We have delightful combina-tions of Mother*' Day Flowsrs.

How can you better ejfpreea your thoughtfulnesa anddevotion than to give Mother1... on Her Day . . . the giftshe would choose h l ^ F l r i f a

SUGGESTIONS:

. Hydrangea Plants, ROM BushesSpecial Gift Baskets

Roses — Always a Thoughtful Remembrance

John R. BatimannFLORIST

St. George's and Hazelwood Avenues

Flowerphone Rahway 711-712 ' /

RAHWAY, NEW JERSEY

Member FlorisU' Telegraph Delivery

Flower* Dal iwml to Any Part of the United

CARSFROM

*50

G. M. A. C.TERMSMost Liberal

Terms Offered

Happy ii the man who can buy a GOOD car cheaply. And when you select a famous brand of car,that it a used car and perfectly checked, you are getting a real buy.The used car market reflect, its best buys in our display rooms, and you will be able to pick up justthe car you wish to drive, for much less than the new cost.

All of our used cars have a guarantee, and they have been completely reconditioned and checked.

Here Are 14 Chosen At56 Others Await Your

1930 Chrysler 70 Sedan;

*995new

1928 Hupmobile Straight8 Sedan; thoroughly

1929 Buick 7-PassengerClub Sedan; 6 naturalwood wheels, trunk,

fer *1395equipped

1929 Reo Sedan; looks likea new car

Random—Inspection

1927 Buick Sport Tour-

" ' 5 9 5

1927 Buick Sport Coupe;b $695

1928 Studebaker Comman-der Sedan; looki like anewcar . . . .

1927 Buick 7-PassengerSedan; a goodfamily $£QCcar . . . . O I / U

Model 314 Cadillac 7-Pass-enger Sedan; verygoodcondition .

1927 Hudson Brougham;A-l con- $tfition . .

1928 PontiacSedan . .

1928 PontiacCoach . .

$450$395

1927 Chrysler Coupe;nimble $OQC•eat . . . . O O O

1928 Chevrolet Coach;

mileage . . . o 4 5

UNION COUNTY BUICKBurnett St. and Rahway Ave.

(2 Blocks from Broad)EMerson 3802

ELIZABETH, N. J.339 NORTH BROAD

STREET

CARTERET PRESS FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1930 PAGE THRE1

[The Deeorator** Letter. . Expert Advlw on Uosm«

-•*-»*v*v\**W**V*t*V*V»***Vt*<

An Especlslly Qay Writing Dtik Group.

Beth, dear child:Do you want yuiir letter writing to

t>« • real pleasure? Would you UVt«-to be known s i a prompt correspond-ent 1 Would jm enjoy never beingconfronted b y l ittck of unansweredletterai Of course you would. Whowouldn't? Of course there are timeswhen you Just have to make yourself•It down, chew your pen a while andfinally dash off some Uota and callthem a letter. One very valuable aidto correspondence, one thing whichsill make tetter writing a real joy Is

Sawmmm&mhtmdesk.

I don't see how anyone can help en-Joying writing a letter at one of thosegraceful and beautiful spinet desks.When you think of the quaint, prim,tlnkly little tunes which used to beplayed on the spinet—the musical In-strument from which the desks werenr»t made—you Just feel like sittingdown before the desk and writing areal, friendly, chatty letter to some-one you've been meaning to write tjjrages. Excepting for the Introductionof a few cubby-holes for storing pa-pers and letters, ss well as pen andInk, the desk and the muslcsl Instru-ment are the same In construction, thecharm of line and proportion of theolder piece of furniture being retainedIn the modern desk. Either In the llv-

Bank Robbers Capturedon Rash From Lineman

Fort Morgan, Colo.—While frankMoore, a telephone lineman In Chey-enne Wells, Colo, was repairing tele-phone lines, be witnessed a pin bankfrom a distance between a band ofbank robbers and a small group ofofficers who were chasing the banditsafter they had robbed a hnnk at Man-ter, Kan, near the Colorado-Kansasstate line. In the battle several ofthe officers were badly wounded, andthe robbers drove sway.

Moore climbed s telephone pole and.after tapping tbe line. Dashed a wantIng to a number of cities and towns,where posses were quickly formedwhich captured the hfiitfilts.

ing room or the lied room the spinetd«Hk Is a constant Invitation to writeletters.

If you prefer a large desk and book-case combined there Is the secretary.While the dainty little spinet desk del-icately Invites you to please writethose letters, the Impressive lookingsecretary tells you ttemly to get busyand do It and not to procrastinate anylonger. Sometimes I fancy I can seemine frowning at me when I know Ishould be sitting before it working.It's ample drawer space offers me such

papers and on the shelves above Ihave the books I use while at the deskand a tew tittle objects, a figurine, avase, a pottery bowl and some otherthings, I particularly enjoy looking at.

Of course you have seen those quaintlittle knee-hold desks. If not you cansee them In any furniture store. Theyare small, yet have commodious draw-er space ami are especially handy tohave In the small living room. Theycan be attractively used In the hall,too, where they serve as a table andoffer a good place to'tuck away billsand memos for tradesmen. These aredesks you might enjoy. I'll tell youabout some for Charlie when I havemore time. I must run along now, asI have much to do.

Hastily, Fern Kture.(A. 1111. WMtvs NMr«i»p«r Ulloo 1

Miner Reports He WatAttacked by Wolves

Boundup. M»nt- Wolves still Inhab-it central Montana It 'he story of MikeKonecni. miner, Is true. Ronecni re-ported he was attacked, knocked downand bitten by a hand or about twelvewolves. Only tii« presence of his dogwhose bark* diverted the animals' at-tack saved him from serious Injuryand pneslbly dciiih. Me was positivetbe beHsts were wolve* snd scoffed aithe suKKesiU>n nf coyotes.

LeafWM ef Vsritw Leaata*The league Is an old measure of

length varying at different times andla different countries from 3,4 to 4.6miles.

HOTSHOTS

ForHOT

WEATHERPure

LINEN KNICKERSFancy or White

i $2.45 - $2.95i

All WoolKNICKERS

$8.98

U d WRIDING

BREECHES$3.98

ALL WOOL PULL OVER SWEATERS

$2.98 to $8.98

ALL WOOL COAT SWEATERS$2.98 to $7.98

GOLF HOSE79c $1.00 $1.80

GenuineMOHAIR SUITS

$18.00

STRAW HATSPANAMAS

They Couldn't Be BetterLooking

$1.45 to 18.00

Pure Wool

BATHING SUITS$2.48 - $2.98

$4.98

Men's

SHORTSand

ATHLETIC SHIRTS39c - 80c - 76c - $1.00

Fancy and White

DOUBLBDOYLE 8CUNNEENH

1SWTJ 1AMB0C0O9

He Falls ThreeStories; Live*

San I1 rumisiu. —A ueur puulvWHS civattHl ai Suiter and Kear-nejp streets when a man cameplunging to the sidewalks (rumthe Uilrdatury window of the.Sutler hotel.

He registered at the hotel un-der the name of George A. Gam-ble, l-oi Angeles- He was sstivck salesman, about thirtyyears of me.

Ciimhle wsl ruxhed to theHurhor Kmergvncy hospital,where it was snl<i lie suffereda linikpii leg, rlipni Injuries' andsevere Internal Injuries.

PAINTED MUSTACHEPROVES A SNARE

Make-Up Results in Downfallof Young Bandit.

New York.—"He was a dark'youngFellow, and he had a blnck mustache—I mean a black mustache pointed onhis face."

Thus William r<ipe, milk wagondriver for the Sheffield Farm Milkvoiupsny, described the man who recently held him up. and. st the pointnf a pin. tn»k nway IDA.

Detectives Martin Cannon sndPrank ttyon eslnjlsted, howaver. thathe would dime hack for more moneyon the milk company's neit collectionday. 8fl the two got Into a police auto•nd scoured the neluhnorhmid.

Along Onion utrvet. they saw a milkWURDO driver running—and Jnsi sbeadof him was a young man also on therun. Tea. tie was a. dork young men

hart a hiafk^^™ ^^^S^^^W^^*rt^W^S^BJ^^P^^^S^S^S^^B^a^SJ^hflgS(pa i Qt i -jf "^jcvifdrifVI p p i . i j

I'rtntion JnfnpM not nf the car asajoined In the chase. At Troy avenueand Kttstprn piirkwny he rsughl npwith the iinrk v-iina mnn an«i h«> WHS

ahle to w-e tli •» niustn .• was aurtMise pitint iniislnche- U P iinc^ifddim

Tlie prisoner suld lie WHS I.e.. Levy,elgini-cn veiirs old. In III* pmkei hehad s hm nt gream I>»lni, a lead pipe,and • cigarette ruts shaped to looklike so auionmilc. He slso had smoney hag of the Federal Reservehank of New Vnrk The pursuingnillkawn ws« Samuel Flulsrhman of1S28 Lincoln plsce. In the W i w a j o!1802 Union street, anld Fleischman.Levy pointed the fHke weapon «t himand helped himself to 184.80. Popelater Identified Uvy as the protagonistof his holdup.

Levy was brought to Flat bosh courtfor arraignment on charges of ssaaultand rohhery. •

Mongrel Bites Mistreat;Saves Family From Fire

Klkhorn, Wls.-Orlidnall» bis namewas Jack. He's )tmt a mongrel popand not much t» look at, but Just thesume be has a new blanket and newname.

He belongs to Mr. and Mrs. RobertBolton of Klkhorn and Is the constantcompanion of the Boltons1 three, chlldren. When he discovered, one mornI nil i hit the house WHS on Ore, be rant» the children's bedroom and pulledfranrlcally at the bedclothes. Al-though he dragged all the covers offthe beds, he couli not awaken hisplaymates.

He evidently balked st the Idea Ofbiting one of the children, so he ran'into the adjoining room and bit Mrs.Bolton oo the hand. And he took nochances. He bit hard. The familynot out of the house Just la time toeacupe suffocation.

When Bremen arrived Jack wascoughing and sputtering about In tbesnow with the rest nf the family, andvr"ieo Mrs. Bolton recovered sufficient-ly to mlk a while later the first thing

"If t h a l J x * w a» t 0 * e l *fbtt JAM I fnew Bawe'a«ii'« BM» WMifteL

— Please mention this paper whenbuying from advertisers. —

Boys hiay »• ith StolenDynamite; Endanger Town

Mi.urn (uimel.-UiiHttle to wall until July t in celftirnie, Hevvrul joultifstole s Urge quamliy uf dynamite fromthe Itellntire iiisl corporation here.

The lives of the boys snd all oesrthem were endangered, as they carriedth« dynamite shonl with them or tookIt tinrae. until they exploded It CIOM totown. Many building* were shaken bythe concussion.

Justice J. J Dropetky sent Bdwardand Csul Sisrkowskl snd BdwirdKapunsksnl to piisou for 80 days andbeld Prank KraJowsU and VictorUoleskl for,Juvenlle coun on chargesof theft.

Student FaiU to NoteTaking Wrong Motor

Columbia. Mo.-Mat Qreenapon Is olthe opinion that students of the Dnlteralty of Missouri pay very little atteolloo to things.

Qrvenspett went to a picture show,parking bis sutnmoblle neirby.' Two hours Ister he discovered tt

was gone.Tweuty-foor hours later a student

at tbe university discovered ha hadgotten mixed' up In automobiles. Bebsd Oreenspon's.

Miser Hangi Himself;Money Found in Hat

Bralntrea, England.—When officerssearched tha home of William Chopping, seventy-eight-year-old miser, whohanged himself, they found severalhundred pounds sterling In cash, ineluding (43 in Chopping'* hut.

Hair O U | HA sudden shock or prolonged nerv-

ous strata caaafss the eelor of ththair because tha plfmeot wbish keeps

drawn. n « staeUftery e? tlie bedr uconcentrated m ueetlag the n*rv«strain and Uw aaauiactare of the pig-ment Is suspended.

Ownei Has to PayDamages for Wrecked Carl.nwreiuevllle. II' A viilf can't go

utxHIl Hie imiiiinshlf j;ell lug bit wit Liautomobiles here without the ownerpaying for the damaged automobiles,according to s decision to Justice oltbe peace court here.

Ii cost P. B (loan el I. owner of awayward calf which wrecked the automoblle of T. H Cunningham whenIt stopped in the path of Cunningham*!car. t1<Q here recently. CunninghamBled suit uklng for WOO but tha conndecided S163 was enough.

Guards Auto So Well \He Get. Himself Fined

Beattl*. Weib.-W. L. Rice guardeda friend's automobile, not wisely battoo well.

U P hart hefp ""kerf hj fi-lenda h*

luii] juu^t J> i Vi,i^iji. in g u a r dthe wr<'<kt>i! Hutuinolille while tbefgut inedltnl ain-iiU.in When t!>irage>men. B*-III lij (lie sherllT. csin« lo haulthe <-ar In lilce atixtd Ilifin o(T with SJSaulomultc plmol for luilf un hour.

Juili;e Wright comiuended liU loyal-ly, tiut mini him S10 for Illegal pos-session nf nreanna.

Hit-ud-Ru Vlctiaa F U «8t. U.ula, Mo—A police drift

against blt-snd-run drivers nearly tot-coeded. follce witnessed an aeddeotThey Immediately swung into aettosisod caught the driver, bat their effortswere wasted. Tbe victim got np soddisappeared.

TVeasferaal CheatsCheats easily believe others aa ba4

u themselves; there is DO deceivingtha n d th l d l Uthan, norBruyere.

do they long decelve.-L*

MOTHERS' DAYA beautiful souvenir for Mothers'

Day given to each person visiting ourstore. Come Today. You do not haveto make a purchase.

1HE-UH-ST0RECHARGE

IT133-A SMITH ST.

PERTH AMB0Y, KI

$THIS 4-PIECE BEDROOM SUITEA modern figured walnut suite for the modern bride. The

dresser is beautifully proportioned with a full Bize mirror and thedrawer work throughout the suite is spacious, f 108 IS THETRUE VALUE OF THIS SUITE. Our Price $7.50 Delivers

100

ROEISLER'S15 STORE

BUYING POWERMakes These Values Possible

THIS 3-PIECE MOHAIR LIVING ROOM SUITEA beautiful gTacely frame. Luxuriously upholstered with

reversible cushions of contrasting moquette. The new modern

tufted backs is an added feature. 17.50 Delivers

DELIVERSANY OF THESE SUITES

IIS 4-PIECE BEDROOM SUITEAnd a beauty. Its elegant design and unusual high-lighted

walnut graining make it a suite to satisfy the most critical. Onlyour tremendous buying power makes it possible to sell this mag-nificent suite, exactly as pictured. 17.50 Dalivsrs

10-PIECE DINING ROOM MJITF.W h i c h m e a n s t h e l i u l M , r h i r i a C I D S C I . ^ t n i . i . H i t a t i l c . s n v

i n g t a b l e , 6 c h a i r s f i n d a n a r m c h u i r a t l l i i n I n w (ir!«• > f ' N r c i i t i D n -

a l l y s t u r d y c o n s t r u c t i o n a n d t x ' i i u t i f i i l w e , m i ( • • • i i i l i i i m l m n s m a k o

i t a v a l u e t h a t i s n u t . H l a i i ( l i i i ^ . K x a c t l y HH p i c l I I H > I | .

m

Hundreds of others toChoose from in the 15 GreatSterling and Roessler Stores

Pick The Store Nearest YourHome. See All Addreaaea Below.

These are five values picked at random from the vast stock in everystore. Our buying staff is second to none. They are creators of fur-niture fashions and/ our tremendous volume of business makes itpossible for us to employ the output of entire factories. When youbuy at Sterling-^you not only secure exceptional value with mini-mum outlay of cash, but we permit payment of the

BALANCE IN SMALLWEEKLY PAYMENTS

And we mean exactly what we say, Our managers are permitted tomake terms in accordance with YOUR income. We give you credit00 a basis that makes you a friend. Besides our unuBual valueswtlich send thousands of customers to our stores every day — wehave built, up GOOD WILL thru our generous policy of CREDIT.

No Codes — PricefPlainly Marked

Free Delivery Within 100 MilesPurchases Held Until Wanted

ROESSLERPERTH AMBOY

168 Smith St.ELIZABETH

85 Broad St.

sVOUUMY?

THIS 3-PIECE K R O E H L E R DAVENPORT SUITELoose cushions. Tho entire nuito cover«<i in a line quality

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$7.60 Delivers

Cor. Madison Ave. Nr. East JerseyNEWARK NEWARK E. ORANGE

47 Market St. 888 Broad St. 503 Main St.

Open Saturday NIGHT Until. 10

PAGE FOUR FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1930 CARTERET PRESS

CARTERET PRESSSubscription, $1.50 Per YearPublished Every Friday By

( II. KYKNK, 130 Jersey St., CARTERET, N. J,Telephone Carteret 1600

(\ H. IiYKNE Editor and OwnerEntered us second class matter June 6, 1924, at Carteret, N. J.,

Post Office, under the Act of March 8, 1879.

Foreign Advertiiinf RepresentativesNew Jersey Neifhborhood Newspapers, Inc.

OUR WATER SUPPLY

Officials of Woodbridge, Carteret and other sections sup-plied by the Middlesex Water Company have been busy in re-cent weeks offering protest before the State Department ofHealth against the establishment of a cemetery on the water-shed in Clark Township that supplies some of the water distrib-uted by the Middlesex Company. It has been submitted to theBtate body that if this cemetery was established the drainagefrom it would pollute our water supply. The State Departmentwaa scheduled to hand down a decision on the matter on Tues-day of this week. But the protest was so vigorous that the mat-ter was .laid over until June. The general impression at thiswriting is that the State body will deny the application of thecemetery association.

It would be a great injustice to the public to permit any-thing that would injure the quality of our water supply. It isgtrange that despite the fact that more or less publicity hasbeen given to the cemetery incident, the general public of thisentire section seemed indifferent. This is to be deplored. Eventhough it may be assumed that our officials will fight for theprotection of the water supply, there ought to be- more inter-eat in so vital a situation.

The people of this region are fortunate beyond the lot ofOf Ullt rnmmunitiai il» Ui

Mother's Day

i l l"with excellent water. It is pure and palatable. And the quality

remains uniform. Our real estate developers seem to have over-t looked the importance of the water supply. Their advertise-i 'inents rarely refer to the water supply although it is probably

the beat in New Jersey,bur neighboring city of Rahway has been carrying on a

losing fight for better water. There the water is supplied by amunicipally owned plant and the supply is taken from the Rah-way rivur Tht're is expensive equipment for filtering nnd forneutralizing germs. But so far nothing has been found to re-move the unpleasant taste.

Some years ago when a chemical manufacturing companywas permitting waste matter to escape into the river, all thesmall fish in the river were killed. The City of Rahway took upthe fight against the chemical company, All kinds of convincingevidence was introduced at a long drawn-out hearing before avice-chancellor with no very gratifying results. Since that timesurveys have shown that waste from farms, pig styes and thelike has found its way into the river and the efforts of Rahwayto secure a remedy have been but indifferently successful.

Other municipalities have problems as"difficult in regardto their water supply. This section has a priceless treasure in itsexcellent water. A treasure that ought to be defended and pro-tected at any cost.

FAITH IN DEMOCRACY PASSINGfir DR. JOSF.rli DARTIIELEMY, Member InitituM of France.

MOTHERS' DAY

Another twelve months have rolled around and the time.has come for editors all over the country to write somethingabout Mothers and Mothers' Day. To be sure some of it may bejustly branaed as drivel. But most of it is worth whUe and allof it is written in a commendable spirit. Mothers' Day is of re-cent origin. It is a belated recognition of the most marvelouslybeautiful quality in the world. There are examples of great de-votion and great sacrifice all down the years of history. Greatheroes and great patriots are recorded for their devotion tothis or that cause. Yet none of them had anything like the de-votion and spirit of sacrifice that Is displayed every day by mil-lions of mothers.

And because this spirit of motherhood is the finest thingin human experience, Mothers' Day is being recognized moreand more as a really great day. The editors may become maud-lin but, at least, they are helping to arouse that recognition ofMothers' Day and the worth and nobility of mothers. Formany years it was only the novelist and the poet who paid trib-ute to the beauty of motherhood. The coming of Mothers' Dayas a yearly observance is slowly arousing a better side of hu-manity.

But the box of I candy or the gift of flowers is hardlyenough recognition; hardly a balm for the heart aches thatthoughtless sons and daughters, and thoughtless husbands, too,cause to patient, suffering mothers throughout the year. Thereis room for much improvement upon that which we have doneBO far. Every day should be Mothers' Day to the extent of re-membering and trying to repay in some measure the debt weowe our mothers.

This is a fast-living generation and by our speed we arelosing some of the power of character that used to be so es-sentially American. Perhaps, as time goes on and the observ-ance of Mothers' Day becomes more and more a part of ourlife we may restore some of that good old-fashioned thing wecall respect for Womanhood. In these jazz-crazed days, our re-spect for womanhood has been neglected sadly. It m a mightyserious condition. For without respect for womanhood civiliza-tion can not make much progress. It is the one worthwhile ideal.

There are endless criticisms of the new fads of women.Men condemn without looking for the cause. They are blind tothe great truth that the women of any age are what the menof that age make them. Let the men of his day observe Moth-

i-ers' Day and there is no better way of observing it than by try-J ' to be the kind of men our mothers wanted us to be.

HE existence totlny of eight so-called dictatorships in Europe, is

proof that th« <>l<i world no longer has faith in democracy, for

although the outward forms oft these dictatorships may vary, they

all huve a common origin winch is in the failure of previous parlia-

mentary systems to CO]K> Ruacssfully with exeeptional difficulties follow-

ing the World wnr.

The crisis which Ims broken out in the institutions of so many coun-

tries exists everywhere in (lit1 minds of men. We have more republics than

in 1914, but nevertheless the democratic idea was stronger then than now.

In 1914 the future seemed to belong to democracy. Tod.tfy we no longer

have the same certitude, hi any case faith in democracy is dead. Who

are those today who would die for parliamentary government?

The modern dictator is essentially a socialist. He is the result of the

struggle of the egregious interest of the masses against the moral, social,

political individualism, which since the outbreak of the French revolution

in 1780, has animated the entire development of democratic civilization.

All the foundations of our old beliefs, in which we trusted for a century

and a half, are endangered.

It is an old dofrinu that democracy signifies peace, nnd there is a

reason to fear that the present crisis of political liberty in Kurope may

jeopardize the peace of the world.

SOVIET CHALLENGE TO FAITH

fly BISHOP H. S. LONGLEY, low. (Episcopal).

^Prisoner Cries HimselfInto Nine Yean in Jail

Chicago.—Abe Oarbelt, 1M0 Sooth)|ln avenue, linii cried himself Intoarly nine year* In prison.

< aV short time «(!" lie appeared beforehtdern) JUIIKO Jnities H. Wllkerson

Charges of swenrlng falsely In af.•vita During the wnr he told aaft bnarri lie wns horn in London

J^ffn a recent civil service exaoilnRtlonI ; tor poaliil del I;* he *[«»« his blrlh-^place as I'hlln.Mphlii. He Anally ad

Ut(ect In court that he was reallyIn Russia, so Judge Wllkersoo

ntenced him to four month*,tien the team started to How. B i t

•nd two children would itarVe,ail sobhed. If he were to be iep»

thni ipnc He made nn I

•loneri i>>i'U i>>. pnihiitlon. und hi*cries were Joined hy those of hiswife nnd children. The judge finallydeferred the sentence and ordered anInvestigation.

The Investigation revealed that Garhett had been paroled from Jolletprison after serving two jear i of aone-to-ten-jear sentence for autotheft, that he alnce hat been chargedwith forgery, embezzlement and non-support and tblt at the present time• radio company for which he workedaccuses him of stealing radio sets.

Judge Wllkerson changed hi* sen-tence to one year and a day at Leaven worth. The Btate parole board (henannounced Qarbett will be taken hackto Jollet to aerve eight more yean

be hns iwnnleted thin sentence- • > ' ' "

A government founded solely on idealism does not supply the indi-vidual citizen with the stamina necessary to meet the moral crises of life.On the surface it might seem that the Soviet is within its rights in settingup an anti-religious government. So long as only those who desire thisform of government are nfTected, it ie all right, but the trouble lies in thefact that not only are there large numbers of fundamentally religiousRussians, hut also ii is impossible to have in existence a government ofthis 6ort without its elTect being felt in Christian nations throughout theworld.

Virtually all the older generation in Russia is religious at heart, butthey dare not speak. The younger generation is not religious because theSoviet forbids that they be told of religion until they are eighteen yearsold. By then their character is formed.

I certainly believe thut a diplomatic protest should be made by thenations of the world even though it lead to bloody conflict.

RELIGION AND DAILY LIFE

By REV. DR. DOVARD, Uithodiil Bo»rd ol EducaU

The rescue of religion from the confines of the church and the Sabbath day and putting its influence into everyday life is the present inter-est of the board of education of the Methodist Episcopal church,

This is not a warfare of education against no education. It ia ratheran interest of purposeful education versus a conglomerafW^P educationalforcei undirected. Newspapers, pictoriali, magazine!, moving picture*,radio, even ordinary conversation, are confronting u| constantly. Howmuch character forming education do (they contain ? i

Our problem, then, is to provide (or simple, unobtrusive Christianliving in all the social groups which the enterprises of present day lifepresent, rather than getting formal recognition for text books on religionand types of public worship.

• We inuBt rescue religion from the confines of the church and Sabbathda; and bring it into unison with the basic Ideals of common daily life

EadsmieA famous doctor declares that love

It a distal*. And some fellows havefound to their disappointment that Iti n t always contagions.

Esparfoac* Not Naoassary

"Bhtparienee," said Uncle Bben, "It agood teacher, but she don't tell youmuch dat common sense dldn' know Inde fust place."—Washington Star.

N«we «f AU WooJbrldf, Towniklp lathe IntUpvmUnt, th . moil wi<Ul»

pejw in Woodbridf.

Here's Instant ReliefFrom Bnnion Pains

and Soft CornsAetnally Redact* the Swelllnc—Soft

C o n u Dry Right Up and C uB« Picked Off

Get a two-ounce bottle of Moone'tEmerald Oil (full strength) today. EverywelUtocked druggist ha» this, and it willreduce the inflammation, lorensM, andpain much quicker than anv remedy yonever mod.

Your bunion* may be to swollen andinflamed that you think you cant goanother step. Your shoes may fed ai ifthey are cutting right into the flesh. Yonfeel tick all over with the pain and tor.tore and pray for quick relief. What's tobe done?

Two or three application! of Moone'iEmerald Oil and in fifteen minutes allthe pain and soreness disappear!. A fewmore application* at regular interval! andthe welling reduces.

And at tor soft corns, a few applica-tions each night at bed time and they justteem to shrivel right up and scale off.

Druggists guarantee Moone's EmeraldOil to end your foot troubles or moneyback.

Karpen WeekMAY 10 to 17 at

B. KAHN'SFurniture Store

55-57 Washington Ave. Carteret

MARKING THE 50th ANNIVERSARY

OF KARPEN FURNITUURE

BEAUTY, Comfort, Value, are outstanding features ofthe 50th Anniversary Karpen Week now in projrretM here—the greatest furniture event, we believe, to which youhave ever been invited.

Celebrating Karpen's Golden Jubilee year, this Kar-pen Week is a doubly important exhibit of all new anddesired furniture designs, fabrics, and colors, at pricesthat will at once attract you. For thfs is no ordinary salefurniture; it included productions as well made as anyyou will ever see. Each piece is a fine example of Kar-pen craftsmanship and quality. Whatever you need tomaake your living room more beautiful . . . a luxurioustwo, three, or four piece group . . . a handsome sofa, orone or two enviably inviting chairs . . . a smart and color-ful handwoven Stick Fiber suite, delightfully inexpens-ive . . . you will find them alt in this notable exhibit. Studythe varied values on this page. Be sure to see them andthe many other 50th Anniversary Karpen Week offeringsavailable here. Tomorrow if possible, before next Sat-

surely. >.

Remember The Place

B. KAHN, Carteret, N. J.

— A Cl8-ifled Adv. Will SeU It -LlssssHslPsVHHijlsssssssssHHis«sHaVsVBlssssssssssssVs^HaMaaV

"Anjwbere-Anytime"DRAKE'SSTORAGEMOVING

PACKING—SHIPPINOHwajs al RaasnabJa Rita*

M l Ellnbvth A m uLlniUa 182S

— Please mention this paper to ad-vertisers; It helps you, it helps them,it helps your paper. —

(HJSHOLM t (HAPMAN./I mberi Xm 1 or* Sltct ExcJttmnUemlnri Nat >'«* Curt £u**mtt

283 MADISON AVE.T.l.phon. P.rtk Amboy MOO

THOMAS MEACHAMManager

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OAKIE and POLLY WALKER iiTmdto'Picturea1 Musical WonderShnw. "Hit the Deck" at the State Theatre next week.

4--

V

'''••* i

Drastic ReductionsIN ALL SUITS

SUITS That Were

$40 and $45

NOW$2950

SUITS That Were

$30 and $35

NOW

$22-5022S. Fm i IN

187 Smith St. Perth Amlmy, N. J."GOOD CT.OTIIKS Hi l l KVKIIY MAN"

piv.s^^^ k . ---7-

,.AltTERBT PRESS FRIDAY, MAYS, 1930 PACK FIVF

Medwick Finally Wins Over New Brunswick High SchoolHopelawn Dodgers

Can t Dodge HeartsVisitor. Get Short End Of 16-7

On Liebig Field InScoreSunday Battle.

,, Carteret Sacred Hearts pound-15-7 victory over the Hope-

..Igera on Sunday afternoonI'rmg's field before several hun-'baseball fans. The Sacred Hearts

, « hitting mood, collectinghits off two Hopelawn pitch-

the third in a

i hitting star for.,„, hammering out a homer,and a single in four tript to

He also drove home sixnext Sunday afternoon the

Tin

I'-'wn" I>«><18«? . ° n .ml(I red...... in a

nThe victory wat

the plateruns. On

have engaged the Elisabeth(,,,t?, one of the fattest teams inliitht senior division in Elixabeth,h,!ir Sunday attraction at Leibig"»

A i t i i - i i i - l.havt'

box score:

[ , Poll, 2b, ....Muyiirek, cf,|)7urillar c, .;.

I M i t k "N l f i l l !

K i

Marl"f.ilUI'frlffMark,Kadcr.

3b,88, ..

ft,I, If.rf ..rf,

HeartsAB

6584465

;.....&.. 4...J... 4

1

41 15 16 1HopvUwn Dodgers

AB Rss, p,

I 'h i l l ' ] '» , SB, p ,

e,

r, ss, 2b,cf,

H201

34 7 12 2Th< nummary: Two bate hita, Dot-

Poll and M. Poll. Three batein'- s tnitsky and Putko. Home rantV. I': 1. Struck out by Masola, 7;liy Kn(ler, 6; by Anton, »t bjr Phil-ii]w. i Bases on balle, off Matola, 1;iff Riuier, 3; off Anton, 1; off Phil-lip, I Hit by pitched ball, Mark andI'hillips. Losing pitcher, Rader.

Speedway Opener OnMay 18, Is Report

Hankinson Syndicate To Oper-

ate Local Track Thia Year—

Thirty-Five. Entries F o r

Opener.

Arrording to reports, a syndicateheaded by Ralph A. Hanktnson, ofW.i.Mlrliffe, has arranged for a aer-ie* of thirteen races to be held at(he Woodbridg* hoard speedway thisyear The opening race is plannedfur May 18 which is a week fromSunday. The Woodbridge trackwhich is considered one of the fast-est in the conutry it expected to bethe scene of some good races.

The Hankinson syndicate conduct!a number of the sanctioned raceswhich are held in the country eachyear. In addition to the Woodbridgeraces, the Hanklnson group will op-erate at Langhorne, Pennsylvania.About thirty-five entries will be ac-cepted for the Woodbridge openerwhich is expected to rf-aw * capacityirowd.

79cYard

T h a i I he l'iiil«-|-i-t^'iiui luiM'Iml! ti'iitn bit Vf-i'v su<Tt*SHiul M u s o n w a n i i u i i e a t -t'd rutht'r impressively Suiwiny afti-r-Noon on the high seliou! field wht*nAl Wdbhind's men whitewashed theCohens and Kelleys of Newark by a3 0 scor« before several hundredrooters. It was the third victory ofthe current campaign for the Amer-ican Legion team. The locals haveyet to meet their first set-back.

In posting his third victory of theseason, Miglecz pitched shut-out ball,blanking the Cohens and Kelleys withsix well-scattered hits over the regu-lar nine inning course. He, fannedeight batters and gave but a singlefree ticket to first base. Wagner, op-posing Carteret, did a pretty jjoodjob, but not good enough. That is tosay, not as good as the exhibitionturned in by Mickey Miglecz. The Le-gion outhit Newark, 8-6.

Judging from the number ofdouble plays enacted by both teams,it was, a game of double plays. Car-teret made three double plays; theCohens and Kelleys also made three.

It took the Legion two innings towarm up. In the third D'Zurillabounced a double into deep center.Galvanek reached first on Jacoby'smitcue, advancing D'Zurilla to third.Smolensk! enacted the hit and runplay perfectly to score D'Zurillafrom third with the flrtt tally of thegame for tha Legion.

Meanwhile Mlglec* waa havinglittle trouble in checking the Cohensand Kellys. He wat aided by tomefine Melding by hit mates.

In the fourth the Legion batted inhard luck. Three successive singlesrailed to bring across a single run.With the bases loaded and none out,Vtnsco hit into a double play, Wag-ner to Spangenberger to Deusch.

The Legion went to work on Wag-ner in the fifth. Hatculin was hit bya pitched hall by Wagner. Smolensk!

"fjjg-toaf lifJbaLLU*foiluiUktWj Mncttltn

beat the throw. Safe all around.Both runners advanced a base on

a passed ball. The mighty Skuratcam« to bat and smacked a single in-to right to score two runs. This wasall as far aa run-acorlng it concern-ed. In the ninth Cohens and Kelleyshad two men on base with one out. Asnappy double play, Smolenakl toKara to Siekerka broke up the Newark party.

For thia Sunday afternoon's at-traction on the high school field, theAmerican Legion has engaged theManviHe Bears. Mlgle« will againdraw the pitching assignment. TheLegion will probably use the samelineup BS on latt Sunday.

The box score:American Legion

Galvanek, If, . lMaaculin, If, 1Smolensk], as, 3Skurat, 3b,

I "THAT LITTLE CAME" l l i trr-nut'K ir loun < «.,*.*. By B. Link j

hlo, \ friMT &OIN1 CnKd UJVTH THE HEATt rtefcriti ^ O O T 6 E V / B N "B\tit>s

IN A. ClL?

Kt<£>HT AHt>

"DRAW "POKER UMTH r\M-

' ( Ar4t>HOU0

(lAUST HAVE

UMTH

HEAT

at, 3b, .Kara, cf, 2b,Uiglecz, p, 3Siekerka, lb, 4Vansco, c, 3Woodhull, rf, 3Conrad, cf, 1D'ZuriUa, 2b, 2

R01100000001

28 8 8 1

AMMcNulty.Tf, 4 0Martin, 2b, 4 0Spangenberger, c 4Poquette, If, .: 4Jacoby, tt, 2Caffrey. 3b,Deuach, lb,Resnick, cf,Kinney, cf,y, ,Wagner, p,

39 inch Silk FlGvaraatMd Wu

Rnn Ttxture He<

$1.1!DAYS OF SUFFERING

NOW QUICKLY ENDEDTk« n t riw }om nut ou et OMH Uf%

th. imamt niu «w f «"> D M iptitem JUmm Wfott y » kuw li Ux piU

w.t

IT

No wn.,.k. uplriaNo kliiu

! !

Uil>, N . UatUilUfd i A lp , , , . * tha u»'lh Ik. ulir. io tkit ,•tr if iclhi q.iiklr. coailauailr.

li Mi | i yiti nikf fna K U M IMMII. lootb-L ' *^JM'U •< M.illli. mnliii . , , , . A . . .

i , hit. DilUtd'i

tTqmililin

kid rftitchihg Jto hlrin blue, green,

bl, n blue, g

gold, washable.rose

39 0 6The score by inning!:

Cohens & Kelleyt 000 000 000—4)American Legion .. 001 020 OOx—3

The summary: Two base hitt,D'Zurilla. Three bate hits, Caffrey.Struck out by Miglecz 8; by Wag-ner 1. Batea on balls off Miglec* 1;Dff Wagner 8. Double plays, Legion,Masculin to Sknraf. D'Zurilla to Smo-lensk! to Sierkerka and Smolentki toKara to Sterkerk*. Keeleys, Martinto Deuach; Wagner to Spangenberg-er to Deuach and Martin to Jacobytq Deusch. Hit by pitched ball, Maa-eulin <2). Sacrifice,1 Miglecz. Um-pire, Donovan. Attendance, 400.

The Carterel high school baseballteam will play ita sixth game of theseason this afternoon, meeting Rah-way hlrh at Riverside Park in Rah-way. This will be the flrtt game of ahome and home seriet between theteamt. Carteret is looking forwardto its fifth victory of the season andjudging from the records made bythe two ichools, Ctrteret should winwith eaae. , , „

As Medwick worked againit NowBrunswick on Wednesday afternoon,it is more than probable that CharlesStelae will draw the pitching assign-ment against Rahway today. If Sse-lag pitches half at good at he didBg-ainst P e r t h Amboy, Carteretdhould come home with another vic-tory

t IHS rest of the lineup will be thesame as usual. Stut*ke will be seenbehind the plate. The infield will becomposed of Hart, Rubel, Michitssnd Medwlek. The men who witl pa-trol the outfield are Chodoth, Dan-iels and Poll.

The Carteret Pebble Brook Hunt-ing and Fishing Club wat host to theMiddlesex County Federation of GunClubs on Wednesday night at theFire House No. 1. Clubt fTom Me-

Ituchen, Jamesburg, New Brunswick,

demands durability as weljservice weight, all sizes.

ee n v u n s i r i i l)(lan »nd S i ! v e r ^ ^ w * r e W e l 1

SILK. HUSItK r(1Rented.rm. . . , '. , . , I rlans were made 'by the CountyThat never diaappointa th Federation of Gun Clubs for a shoot

' to be staged at the New Brunswick• traps on May 24.

Circulars were distributed toyCounty Game Warden Huegg indi-ating the places that were stocked

with fish in this county during thepast year.

At the end of the business session,a fine supper was served by the mem-berg of the Carteret organization.

Pair $1.HARDIMAN S

P H A R M A C YEd. L. Hanlimun, formerly of

Seaman's, I'erth Amboy

PRESCRIPTIONSCalled For and Delivered

Cor. Rahway Avenueand Green Street

Tsl. 3 85 W.«*rUft, f t J.

Dmrniir "Third Rail"The third rails on train and sub-

way tracks are so highly charted thatshould a person step on them deathwould be Instantaneous. However,every precaution ag«ln*t men acci-dents is taken by railway companies.The law state* that at no time shalltlil* rail be exposed*.

J. B L A K EMOTHERS' DAY CARDS

Oil I BUMS el C V

Pluck EaglesAvenel Team Give* Carteret

Boyt Rough Deal In Opener.

Three base hits in the seventh in-ning of a seven Inning game gavethe Avenel Robins a 7-8 victory overthe Carteret Eagles on Sunday af-ternoon at Avenel. It was the open-Ing game of the season for the Eag-les. Karmonowski, pitching for theEagles, allowed twelve hits, whileWutkowsU, the Avenel pitcher, limit-ed the Eagles to eleven hits.

The box score:C«rt.r«t Eagle*

AB R H EM. Minue, If,Possoby, 2b,S l

4 04 1

Soltex, lb, 3 1 2F. Minue, ss, 4Rakoakl, cf, 2Karmonowiki, p, 2Terbeski, 3fc, 3 1 1 0Gombos, rf, 1 1 0 0Bartok, c, 3 0 2 0

110

4 0 0 00 0 02 2 0

Trutiak, jrf, 2 0 0 0

28 6 11 2Avanel Robin*

AB R H EW. Denman, cf 3 2 2 0Jandowtki, 2b, _ 8 2 2 0Wukowski, p, 4 2 2 0J. Raveti, If, 3 0 1 1J. Stern, 8b, 4 1 2 2Centanni, c, 4 0 2 0F. Ravetz, ss, 3 0 0 0Jandini, rf, ...t. Wukowski, lb,

2 0 1 03 0 0 0

29 7 12 3

Decree Of Divorce laGranted To Mra. Neuberg

Chancellor Edwin R. Walker hassigned a decree of divorce grantedto Mn, Natalie Neuberg, of Cliffroad, Sewaren, wife of former MayorLouis Neuberg, of Woodbridge. Thedecree is a result of an actionbrought against her husband by "Mrs.Neuberg.

Mr. Neuberg was for many yearsresident plant manager of the War-ner Chemical Company plant inOarteret. About a year ago he wasmade vice-president of the concern

To Hay At HomeRutgers Lacroete Team To

Meet St. John'* Of Annapo-lis At NieUon Field At 3:30i o m d r r o w ,

' Lacrosse, which in recent years hasgained a high place in. the spotlightof intercollegiate athletics, will holdthe center of the stage at RutgersUniversity tomorrow when tile Scar-let Indians meet St. John's College ofAnnapolis lacrosse team at NeilsonFkrtd at 3:30 o'clock. Rutgers, al-though undefeated in its five inter-collegiate starts this season, will gointo the battle the under dog.

Never has a lacrosse battle at Rut-gers been awaited with so much in-terest. St. John's, undefeated lastseason and undefeated tn seven startsthis season, will come to NeitaonField with a record seldom, if ever,equalled. The visitors have made gey-enty-eight points this season to theiropponents seven, an average of onepoint a game for the opposition. St.John's was one of the two teams todefeat the Oxford-Cambridge teamon its recent tour of the country.

Rutgers has experienced no diffi-culty this year in downing Lafayette,New York University, Stevens, C. C.N. Y., and Lehigh, but will meetmuch' stronger opposition tomorrow."Ham" Decker, Rutherford boy, ArtBaumann of WoodclifT, and CaptainEd Kearney of Maplewood areamong the outstanding New Jerseyboys on the team. Baumann andDecker are juniors, and Kearney is alenior. A record season crowd is ex-pected.

Other contests booked for Rutgerstomorrow are a baseball game withSwarthmore at Swarthmore, a var-sity tennis match with Stevens at Ho-boken, a freshman baseball gamewith Princeton at Princeton, a freeh-man lacrosse game with BrooklynPoly Prep at Neilson Field at 2 o'-clock, and a freshman tennis matchwith Kew Forest High School on theBleecked place courts at 3:30 o'clock.

and was put in charge of the salesdepartment.

Trim Local PacersTwo Pace* Pitchers Unable To

Show Anything To PuzzleInvaders,.

The Woodbridge Orioles invadeiCarteret on Sunday afternoon andpounded two Pacer pitchers for fif-teen hits to sco*e a 9-5 victory overthe Pacers on Leiblg's field. FrancisAndres made hig debut as a pitcherand went along nicely for four in-nings. But in the fifth he waa blastedfrom the mound with a four run bom-bardment. Donovan went in to pitchfor the Pacers. J. Thomas, the Ori-ole pitcher, kept the ten base hitsthat he allowed well scattered overthe nine-inning course.

On Sunday afternoon the Pacerswill make a trip to Elisabeth wherethey will meet the Waysides at theStandard Oil Field.

Carterel Pacar*AB R H

Riubel, ss, 8 1Stutzke, c, 1 0Sierkerka, lb, 2 1Galvanek, cf, 3 0Mudrak, 2b, 4 1Nannen, 3b, 4 0Murray, rf, i 4 1Bazaral, If, —-' 3 0Thatcher, c, 3 1Baksa, lb, ! 3 0Donovan, p, 3 0Andrea, p, 2 0

35 5 10 0Woodbrid»e Oriole*

AB R H EFerraro, 2b, 4 1 3Baka, If, 4Mesar, lb, 4Gerek, cf, 4 0 0N. Thomas, rf, 4 1 1 0Rusnak, 3b, 4 0 1 0Malone, ss, 3 1 1 0Lattan, c, 4J. Thomas, p, 4

2 2 02 2 0

35 9 16 0The summary: Two base hits, Fer-

raro, Mesar, J. Thomas and RudyGalvanek. Home runB, N. ThomasStruck out by Andres, 4; by Dono-van, 4; by Thomas 4. Bases on balls,off Andres, 1; off Donovan, 2; offThomas, 3. Losing pitcher, Andrea.

Rutgers Lacrosse Team

Carteret High Defeats County Sealers In Brilliant Game On

Local Field—More Than lOOO Kan* See Contest.

Rising to its greatest heitfht of the srHson, Coach I'VyncU

McCarthy's Carteret High School bast-ball team scored lt»greatest victory of the season, decisively defeating New Bruni-wick High on Wednesday afternoon on the high school field,5-1, in the presence of approximately 1000 spectators. It w i lthe first time in two years that Carteret beat New Brunswickin a baseball game. The victory marked Carteret's fourth ofthe season in five starts. By winning, Carteret strengtened it.claim for the mythical championship of Middlesex County. Todate the McCarthy lads have trimmed both New Brun&wickand Perth Aml|oy, two Class A schools in Middlesex County.In defeating the Zebras, Carteret High retaliated for an earl/season defeat at the hands of the county seat team.

to Armstrong. Chodosh walked. H*«

Medwick

Beliere it or not! Joe Medwickfinally beat New Brunswick. Afterwaiting for two lonf years Medwickturned the trick on Wednesday. That•pell that New Brunswick exercisedover Medwick was final)and Hodwickbeat Newfor the first time In his ca:wick waa unbeatable that"fanning fourteen Zebrasbut a single past to flnt.waa simply too strong- for NewBrunswick. He allowed six hits, allof them, ilnglea. Betide pitching aneffective game, lie Tieljied win Ml owncause with a homer and a double,driving in three runs. In patting, itmight be said that Medwick pitchedthe greatest game of hit career.

Other bright lights of Carteret'svictory were Jake Chodosh's timelyhitting and King Stutike't fine workbehind the plate. Chodoih made twodoubles, scored a run and drove inanothei. Stutike's throwing to sec-ond base was the finest ever seen onthe high school field. Twice NewBrunswick tried to steal second.Twice Stutzke, with bullet-like accu-

nab the runner each time.Carteret outhit New Brunswick, 7-

6. Save for one inning—the seventh—New Brunswick's hits were scat-tered and far apart. The county seatteam made its first safe hit in thesecond, another in the feurth, onemore in the fifth, three in the seven-th, and that was all the hitting NewBrunswick did. On the other handCarterqt bunched its hita in the sec-ond "Srid fourth inning to score inboth sessions. Aided by Mew Bruns-wick's erirora, Carteret scored againin the sixth and seventh innings,

New Brunswick used two pitchers.Tonchnchik started the game for thecounty seat team. In the seventh inn-:ig Carteret knocked him out of the

hox and Sturgeon completed thegame for the county aeaters.

Carteret played perfect ball in thefield, turning in an errorless exhibi-tion. And the best part of it was thatit came against New Brunswick.

After Medwick had retired threebatters in a row in the first inning,Carteret came to bat and missed aKolden chance to score. Daniels

an error. StutzkeWith no out and

to score, Daniels

reached firsthad the samea possible cattempted to steal third but unfor-tunately was put out, Pennington<MeMurphy. Poll and Medwick werethen thrown out at first.

In the second Carteret bunchedtwo hits to score one run. With twonut and none on, Chodosh doubledand came home on Rubel's line driveover second. ,,

Nothing sensational occurred inthe third inning. Medwick was thefirst batter up in the fourth. The Car-teret fans were shouting for a homerun, and Medwick obliged by clout-ing the ball into deep center for ahome run, the first to be hit on thehigh school field this year. The fifthinning proved eventless.

Carteret started again in the sixth.With one out, Szelag reached first onBergen's miscue. Hart flied out andthe Carteret rooters thought Szelagwould be left stranded on first. Butthanks to Jake Chodosh who againdrove the ball into/deep center for adouble, Szelag scored with Carteret'sthird run of the%am«.

New Brunswick got on the job inthe seventh and for a moment itlooked serious. But fortunately forth« good work of Mfidwick, NewBrunswick was cut off with a singlerun, although three singles and a sac-rifice hit were made. It happened thisway. Cobline singled. He went tothird on Jablontky't tingle. Therewas one out at the time. Armstrong'ssacrifice fly 'to Poll scored Coblinwith New Brunswick's only mn ofthe game. Bergen tingled, filling thebases. It did look dark for a moment.But the sun came out a moment laterwhen Medwick fanned Penningtonwith the bases loaded. Boy, that cer-tainly was a close call'. New Bruns-wick had the tleing run on secondand the winning run on third at thetime.

Taking advantage of McMurthy'surror and Poll's reaching first whenhit by a pitched ball, Carteret pushedtwo more runs acr6ss the plate in theeighth inning. Medwick's double withtwo on did the real damage. Thesetwo runs just about.tewed up thegame for the Blue and White, asMedwick was Invincible in the eighthand ninth innings.

PLAY-BY-PLAYFIRST INNING

New Brunswick: Jeduel struckout. Varga popped to Medwick. Hart

":Miruns.

tossed out McMurthy. No hita, no

SCARLET INDIANS BATTLE TOMORROW

Carteret: Daniels reached first onJaiblonsky's error. Stutzke hoisted ahigh fly to right and Varga missedthe ball completely. Daniels was out,stealing third, Pennington to Mo-Murthy. Poll grounded out to Arm-strong. Medwick was out, Tonoohk-ktn Armstrong. No hits, no runs.

SECOND INNINGNew Brunswick: Coblin was hit by

a pitched ball. He went out stealingsecond, Stutzko to Rubel. Jablonskystruck out. Armstrong Bingled andwas put out stealing second, .Stutzketo Rubel. One hit, no runs.

Carteret: Szelag grounded out. toArmstrong. Armstrong threw Hartout. Chodosh doubled ami came homeon Rubel's single. Michits flied out.Twb hits, one mn.

THIRD INNINGNew Brunswick: Medwick throw

out Bergen. Pennington struck out.So did Tonochick. No hits, no runs.

Carteret: Daniel? struck out. Stut-zke lifted a high fly to Coblin. I'ollgrounded out. No hits, no runs.

FOURTH INNINGNew Brunswick: Both Jeduel and

Varga struck out. McMurthy isinglwl,He stole second bHse. Coblin fanned.One hit, no runs.

Carteret—Medwick clouted a hom-er into deep center. Snelag singled.

hit into a double play, Bergen

bel struck out. Two hits, one run.FIFTH INNING

New Brunswick — Jablonsky pop-ped to Medwick. Armstrong waa out,Szelag to Hart. Bergen singled. Pen-nington grounded out. One hit, noruns.

Carteret — Michits lifted a fly toshort. Daniels struck out. Stutlk*singled. Poll fanned. One hit, noruns.

SIXTH INNINGN e w Brunswick — Tonkoahiek

struck out. Teare, batting for Jeduel,was out, Michits to Hart. Varga fin-ned. No hits, no runs.

Carteret—Medwick filed out. 3 H *lag reached flnt on Bergen't muff<Hart flied out. Chodosh's double todeep center scored Sielag. RuW w uhit by a pitched ball. Michits hit toJablonsky who threw >Rub«l out atsecond. One hit, one run.

SEVENTH INNINGNew Brunswick—McMurthy struck

out. Coblin singled. Jablongsky sin-gled, sending Coblin to third. Coblinscored on Armstrong's sacrifice fly to

fanned. Three hits, no runt.Carteret — Daniels struck out.

Stuttke got on first when McMurthyjuggled the ball. Poll was hit by apitched ball. Both Stutzke and Polladvanced a base on a passed ball,Medwick's two bate drive scored bothStutzke and Poll. Szelag and Hartpopped out. One hit, two rum,

EIGHTH INNINGNew Brunswick—Sturgeon, wh« M*placed Tonkochick in the pitchtVlbox, ((rounded out. Riubel threw OUlTeare. Varga struck out. No hits, «tfruns.

Carteret—Chodosh flied oat. Ru-bel struck out. Michits grounded oaf/No hits, no runs.

NINTH INNINGCarteret — McMurthy itruck oot

Coblin hoisted a high fly to Poll. Jab-lonsky walked. Armstrong struckout. No hits, no runt.

The box score:CarUrat High

AB RDaniels, cl 4Stutzke, c 4Poll, If 3Medwick, p 4Szelag, 3bHart, lbChodosh, rfRubel, 2b ....Michits, ss

54334

34

H0

02I0

10

New Bruntwick HighAB R

Teare, ssJ«duel, IfLindstrom, IfVarga, rfMcMurthy, 3bCoblin, cfJadlonsky, ss ..Armstrong, lbBergen, 2bBurskirk, cPennington, c .Tonkochick, p .Sturgeon, p

222433S31221

30

0000111120000

z000'11

00

6

0—fx—6

The score by innings:New Bruns. 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0Carteret .... 0 1 0 1 0 1 2 0

The summary — Two base hits:Chodosh (2), Medwick. Home rumsMedwick. Rum driven in: Medwick(3), Chodosh, Rubel, and Armstrong,Struck out by Medwick, 14; by Ton-kochick, 4; by Sturgeon, 1. Bates onballs oft1 Medwick, 1; off Tonkochick,1; off Sturgeon, 0. Losing pitcher,Tonkochick. Hit by pitched ball: Pol),Rubel and Coblin. Sacrifice hit*!Armstrong. Umpire, Fish, (Lakawa*na League). Attendance, 1000.

—Please mention this paper when"buying from advertiser*,—

- EVERGREENS-BLUE SPBUCE

8 Evergreens$ 1 so

2 Norway .Spruce, 2 Ar-borvitac, 2 Scotch Pine,2 Austrian Pine.

Theie Ireei are 5 yean old.

2 Colorado Blue Spruce ....$1.102 Ataleai hardy early bloi

lomi4 Azaleai Mollii Orange .. 1.108 Japanese Bart>erry 1.19

12 Hardy Perenniali 1-SO40 Snapdragon, mixed 1.1040 Alter, mixed 1.1040 Dahlia flowerini Zinniai 1.1040 Larkipur novelty 1.1040 Strawflowen novelty .... 1.1025 Petunia California Giantt 1.1030 Gladiolui, larg-e bulbi

mixed t.106 Cunnn mtortrd started

plants 1.10

.10

13c additional for packingpoitage.

awl

Yanosik NurseriesNORTH LEHIGH AVENUE

CRANFORD, N. J.

K 81X FRIDAY, MAY '), 19.10 C'ARTEBET

Thp hvvoraior'n Lvtivr Uox

omorrow-Visit the Shoe Stort

tbil makes •Special Pcaturt

of Fitting ChildrenS> til itittiw • • « > * • l» w l * '

wr thlWt l•MM lriln««t In ptrf»M Rt-Jjiijl Wimmtitil th* i i i i f«lM n( lift . I n ib* rl«h]»M»h iml ItNfth ihil will

ijtrm * HfMlmn nf, nttUHf P#*t.

ihlMrtn'i fMtl

AH (i iM<ti...«ll•rujwlf Ai iLttttUhni. . . and i trw*Ing to trltnrt,

tbtt jJfctlmt i>f U»pHtttthr f t« .

—«nd UM Thrtt

WMf t Anftlt CConMtnt

Buckskins forStylish Youngsters

btitklkln |iDr, Pvfnw'i

uJttMfllAlwtyi look

• > . tttl UMr'n ui u nty an

M Wj4t M D 111Hrmt u A.

#9.90 to $6.2)

Jimii r\ijue

tnert Juvenile Shot Shop)

1 M SMITH STREET

PRRTH AMUOY

(MmAVTSON SHOES run WOMEN

I

n I O lu nil In nl urip I linn or nil•illiot *| I lie linum>B nf muni1 "I myMmnl« |ii<nii|'l« ni<* I" null, "llnvc jrollon »«•; I'lmlf In four limucT" t lionM\\J tin fpol ilkf> inyli'i juiil Hint. IllW|wi MIP I'hulm jrini lm.r fiir jrouf lit-\\\$ niiiin will it'll |iro<1ui'<> R ilinllm*IPHI'IIHII (live tlimu the "onlnfortI ml" hi'fiivi' jriiu Mink" y>>Hi rholiH) of

urn) tlii'ii'liy r»Uln four olil! l « iim l'h# ilm

Hire l i • Chair for I ho«» Wht I n joy "Sinful Comfort."

1it> n Jny to every uiftnilier of the fmniijf * M * m HMk* t i l y»w it t tow wwwin tiiiim nirflln. You know how t r ie rfill nml ri>nifnrl|h|«> It l i , I do niH flMflIn tell you (IIN< Ki plcMlDK lint* tnak*It piiMihlo to u»« It with ilmoit inv

plml wt\y In Jinlan n( I lip i'i»mfilft Of» I'lmlr In In "II In II *)<y ulltlng III ItJIUI I'IIii i'"l If HIP |irii|i<iHliWl »I-P

rljlit, Mini I' I In1 npli»l«li>ltliHil Millhnvn tlml ii'pllli'iii-p, WH ti l Mwith on <>nRjr ilinlr.

wn« A IIIIIP WIIIMI HIP n»pr

Intintlni titMli• KPIP Hindi onlyUn«" H* vrnuiil mnlitt (ham

In in* Tlf'v " IMP wiiinlprfulmmfnrinltl<>. imi W^IIHHI worp, n|m-liMt In lh<>m If v»ii M l luck u

fur • • roll wmitvil in, ymir fM>trtmi|tlpil In mliUIr Now. (heap«M Iwlnt wnilp in "WIMIIPII'Iwith the umc I I I I M , HIP KAIIIP m i l l

liut i^ntportloftptl ID t wnmnn'iIt you |tUh tu-biiy a chulr fur, h« Nilh* IMnlbi i r tl*#.

k Queen Ann* wlnflmi'k ih«lr will

*iyln ruriiltiir* you may hiv« In th»IITIIIK room. Ami you miiy find It li1 wliln vnripif <>f unhoUtqp mitarUlt•lid I'dlnrn.

Tlifl littt-fpl ilmlr In nnfillier llvlnifootn |IIPI'I>, i'lijnylna ifrcat |iopul»rllyJ U i t Illl l l « I1IIIIIP l l l l | l l lH l l , It l Q I ) | ( t l l k lR Imfirl Mini U n (|!i>rl[li)il linrntl, !itntt'l know JUKI why It In, hnt formimp ronmii, I iihvuyn lmvo n nicnlnlplcluro of n linrri'l cjiiilr H|ihol«tprfilIn rhlliln Tlii'y nrp In lih luiij In tot*of nuiiiTlitln, Iml I gut>M t M l In lovewltli HIP drill oiit> I <<vor Hw. ntliotim of mi mini, WIIPII t wn* n littlegirl, imil It IIHII 11ity Iliili* iinwpri InI'lilnlf on II. KIIIIK'IIIIW, It nl

KPPIIIK to lie n wHinmi'ii ohnir, too,IhntiRh tlicrp nrp ninnv nion who IlkiIt, II In vpry iipi'onttlva «nO "dllT*rpill" looking nttil will l»ml a cirlnlnaiitonnt of dlitliu'llon to your llvlntirxwm.

Tlipif *n clinlrn nml chair*.hut bl>w»rp of I lip imnimfomblB on««

AiTPiiliMinlfly, Fern Htur*.(A. 111*. W H I I I I N»wip«B«r UIIIM.)

mention thli pftptr V» ad I >t_h*iM jfrtur_ n«»»p, •-__ _ _ ^ _ _U hclpt fou, It htlpi th*a> | L. Ol»«in«Kl Ado. ilritut Ktiiulu —

THOSE WHO COMPARECHOOSE ALLSTATE-

Th» Amazing Tlr* That Jumped From16th to 1st In Retail Salei In 4 Yean

S rOINlSOl MHUKIOKIIY

1

a$4

T

MM

Ml)

C>MPARB> point for point,ALLSTATE ttptrhritiul

Check, dol lar for dollar,ALLSTATB prictsl Come toour More tod let us tk*w youwhy ALLSTATB V*UM is milesahead of ail other firtt gradedresl Then you too will jointhe millions who are choosingthese Musing ALLSTATES fortheir cars!

SOMI AIUTAT1 IAUOON MICISSin

;sXki.OQ

MMkOO

3lk).2SJlicfeOO

TimI&.60

S9010.2411.45

H75MRANTtIO wmtOUUNMVATtON At TO TtN» Ot MHIAM

ALLSTATE5 MILLION SOLD LAST YEAR

SOMI SUPfR AUSTATI BALLOON PRICISVht Sufx>t Swice Tire

.44)

II .4S1I.9S 17 45

AlltTATt MfOH HtiMURI PfcKTS (FuR

9.65

$2.002.70

H.45

FREE TIRE MOUNTING SERVICE

SEARS'ROEBUCK AND Co.M'Atl-

frfifif"

RETAIL DEPARTMENT StORE2?« HOBART ST.MERrM AMftOY

f,TOW

Direct Saving Furniture Co. RAHWAY, N. J.

ENJOY YOUR PORCH & lAWNCOME people hate Summer . . . some find it the^most enjoyable season of the year.

Don't you think that a few pieces of the delight-ful porch and lawn furniture . . . cool, comfor-table things in summer colors . . would add a great<Jeal to the enjoyment of your Summer.

Smart new Stick Reed for porch, terrace or sunroom . . . really year-round furniture.

Special colors and delightful fabrics to choosefrom.

New Deauville metal furniture and Peacock chairsare now available at much less their former prices.

Come in this week and make your selection early.

PEACOCK CHAIR

A graceful, colorful, decorativepiece . . . very smart, light and com-fortable.

At |39.SO

HICKORY FURNITUREFonwd of carefully selected, sanded hickory

aaptinfs, this handsome rustic furniture fillsevery demand for comfortable outdoor furni-tort which embodies durability and attractive-

S pfaoM f r a i $2S.OO op

DEAUVILLE META

Quite the newest andusually comfortable' . .Ever-fast, weather-proof

Strait* chair... $10.50

Metal tabU

MAPLE ROCKER

In natural maple or Ineoiow. Exceptionally »ub-•tantial and dskh 'with comfcbacia.

Fibre Furniture at Special PricesYou will find our low overhead reflected in values

offered in our fibre furniture.Colors h*ve nover bwn so g-ay nor upholstery M at-

tractive,F%re is quite the thine for ye&r-«»UBd use in llviag

room or «un room.

DIRECT SAVIMCls# FUttNITUftl CO. ^ P

me stonesAv», RAHWAY. N.J. M M

LAWN SWINGS

Cmsropy top swings for the""* and luxurious com-

- gliders f o r the- . , . all in attractive~ colors.

lltcfS

Uy H I K V I N Q K I N Q

(" " f In doing .0 they treatthe sub-l as » «*csl one They lo»e

JlHioing .0 t yas » «*csl one. They lo»e

h i l d i l fftfnurely as » ynf the ethical and social effect

J'fhtn( method by Which taxes are

'' VT!' tux land, buildings and person-, nr ll * t n e a» lne t a x r B t ethe same tax rate

erfect of suppressing build-of enkblins; and encouraging

of vacant sites and sites... building* at prohibitivethose who need sites for

uses. This retards the'irTth"and development of all ourK'Z .Llitle*. It makes building"""re costly and causes higher rents,"rtlured'buying power of H» public,m<l juhless men, because it restricts

'"'buiWinKs and personal Property.., ,,rw|uced by human labor. Site-

! ,„. ,,f land i* automatleallv-creet-I |1V mere increase in population

i11(l sonal services, Yst our tax lawf. mi» both these value*—the humani i,(1I value and the automattcally-

at rd vslue—all in one pot andI, <(« them both at the sam* tax rate.

Ihr fault with our tax law is that,hf Ktste and municipalities fail to.,,,11,,, t more publie revenue frommiblKly-created site-value, and then„ make up the necewaw Mvonue

if „ a tax on bttildlasj* and pereonalproprrty-upon labor wine*.

A billVill be introduced In thenr«t session of the N*w Jersey Isgte-l»tur.> to permit any municipality byvut<> therein to adopt what is kvownB, the I'ituburg* tai plan, wherebytaxi-s will be increased on site-valuevi land and reduced on buildings andpersonal property. This will maintainthe present public revenue and willndu< »• taxes on industry, horn** andfarm"

Here is the opportunely for any(an<lidate to talk intelligently on thesuhjrrt of taxation and advoeats

THE LIGHTS BURN BLUE

A butterfly printed chiffon afternoon frock bj I'auuln. Note the in-teresting detail In the capillkesleeve*. The normal walattjpe t*narked by a bruwn groegral a ribbonharmonising with the beige and egg-ihell tone* of the frock.

- UttU hi ttotteg tHMleS* who serre* tb* public I* a poor

initial; ha worrte* himself to deathtad no one thank* him for it—Goethe,

scientific system. It I* a vote-fetterfor any candidate who vigorously ad-vocate* i t .

PAULJfiNDBft.

t i ' p i i K lights burn blue—It is now* ilvml midnight," lays King Rich

mil, starting awake from hi* dream!>i'ui)led with the ghosts of ni* mur-dered dead. This superstition of thelust I'luntagenet with regard to theconnection between a blue-burningflume and the presence of' Inimicalspirits is a very old and universal onewhich has not yet entirely vanishedfrom our modern folk-lore. There aremany people still who, when the lightsburn blue, fancy that It I* an Indica-tion that "spirit* are about."

On the New England coast when afire burns with a blue flame they sajthat a storm I* coming, It I* an omenof evil—the powers of the prince ofHit air are abroad! In tb* Southwhen the Ore barns blue the coloredfolks and some of the whit* one*, too,say that It Is • sign that "the devilwants to speak to you," and handful*of salt are thrown on tht Or* to keephim away. The ancient Oreek*. whentheir funeral pyre* borned blue, usedto throw oil upon them to indue* aclearer flame. Mr Thomas Browne(1646)1 say* That candle* and light*burn blue and dim at-tn* apparitionof spirit* may be tru* IT tat ambientair I* filled with a ralphnm* spirits,as happen* often In tb* vims."

This blue-light superstition la clearlya lurvlTal of son-worship. The flamerepresented the son and Uke tb* ran(bould burn with a dear light WhenIt doesn't something I* wrong. Theperfect sympathy between the tun-god and bis earthly' symbol, fire, cre-ated by man In bl* honor to Inducehi* beneflclent protection, Is destroyed.Bvll spirits Intervene between the god•n« toll U l

STORE

POLICY

ALWAYS

THE BEST

FOR LESS

THE TALK OF THE TOWN

B-C SILK STORES,164 SMITH STREET

(N«nt to PufaUe Sarvfca)

Perth Amboy, N. t

The unusual value of up-to-date large variety of DressGoods, Curtains, Linens, Domestics and Underwear havemade us the talk of the town

Dress Goods SpecialtyPUEBLO PRINTS

A Great Dcmandof the fam-ous BUTTERFTELD FAB-RIC has made tu purchaie alarge quantity and enablesus to mark this wonderfulfabric at

22cYard

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in the finest printed fabricsto make up your pretty dreuand sport ensemble, alsoplain colors.

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40 inch chiffon finished voileIn the very latest patterns ondark and light color back-

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The kind that keeps you coolin the hot weather, the mostdesirable patterns, washableon the light and dark colorbackgrounds.

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39 inch Silk Flat CrepeGutrantaad WajhaUa

Firm Taxtura Haavy Quality

$1.15

Figured Flat Crepe40 inches wide in the latest creation ofpure silk flat crepe in the floral designon the light and dark color background.

One of our best sellers, available in afull assortment of lingerie colors, eve-ning tints and street shades, >«

$1.45Yard

HIGHER PRICED CURTAINSREDUCED TO

$1.00 PrDotted marquisette in the CrissCross B t y 1 e and 6-pc. fineFrench voile with a figured vnl-ance and stitching jto harmon-ize, in blue, green, rone andgold, washable.

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59cYard

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Pair $1.00

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Stem.

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SPECIAL COMBINATION SALI

. . .• • 23c

o r O r a n u t o 22cI v o r y S o a p . 7c

. . J[<

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t t C ,C>. .IBUl t I (XM«Mt!|

GINGER ALE ,wn>n i <iox. $1 .45 1 boss, l i el . U ICAWmil ft fOCMKANf)

PALE DRY GINGER ALE 6t -u$U5 ^

CLICQUOT CLUB GINGER A H . 2YUKON GINGER ALEIIOHT or DAK

PIEL'S or TREFZ' BEVERAOIS . .ru*t

GRAPE JUICE A 4 - IUMD

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WHITS ROCK .NCW CAaSONATJD 3IAN0IAM

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o o l o v o . . . . 17c

STERLING BROOMS

HACK RAG UQWD *iPt25cpi43cHIT . . tt pt 39c pt 85c1AB-O . . 2«»ttcOCTAMN ar IfJUCMAirt SOAP 5bor*26c

SreOAl TWS WEEK-END

A&rcThraa Famous Brand* of

C O F F E EDaUdous piping hot

Rafruhing sarvwd k a d

EIGHT O'CLOCK ID. 23cWED CIRCLE ib, 27cBOKAR ib. tin 33c

SunnyfitW

FRLSH PASTEUHZED MONT

BUTTERFRIDAY *V SATUROAT ONLY

SAME PRICE

AS TUB

SrKlAUY iHECTTO

EGGS Tdoz" 3 9Sunn/brook E G G S Tdoz" 3 9 cDEL MONTE PEACHES «KB> O. NALVM t * « 22C

CAMP BELL'S TOMATO SOUP . — 7c.

DEL MONTt A P H C O T T . . eakifc

KELLOGG'S CORN FLAKES . P** 7C

POST TOASTIES . . . . P * 7C

QUAKER OATS . . . . 2 pkp. 17c

. 3

FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES

Wttk-md Spmiah

FRESH STRAWBERRIES^23c

FANCY ASPARAGUS

. . .MY-T-FINI DESSllT . .PA1STETT CHUSI . . . .COLUMBIA RIYUl SALMON . .C M M O O t A t S . . fc««4f0$LM1HCXMMCONRCnONH'S SUftAR. . . llh.pl«.«c

23c33C

ONE CENT SALEWHILE THEY l A I T I — A M L l a t PACKAGE OF

WHEATIESCENT

wmenyow tnr> n pnrtapi of WHEATKS at «m nffdm price

VAN CAMP'S UNUDA BAORS

lOSMADOOHM nO

RAJAH SALAD DRESSINGa pt»f|or29C •

SPEOAL AT ALL A«\P MARKETS

PRIME RIBS of BEtjJ,^FANCY CHICKEN LOBSTERS * 4 3 c

THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA CO.

—TRY GETTING WELL-NATURE'S WAY

DR. L J. HEATHTin CWopractar

Hoars 8 to 10 A. M.—6 to 8 P. M.Phone Rahway 1066-J

Central AT*, and Campbell St.RAHWAY

(Near New Bahway Theatre)

Paper B«( CUSM«« Ia**Bl!oBThe honor of Inventing paper big*

goes to China. For centuries foldedpaper has"been used a* bag* In thttcountry. Our modem paper bag hasevolved gradnall;. It has not beenrecorded jnat who has been responsi-ble for the present form.

PROBAKIkia bast thova

you avar had—oryour monay back.

If your dealer cannotsupply you, writ* direct.

3Oc fer 5—$lfor 10Sompl. blade—10c

M O t A K CORPORATION

Wk? U B W Sees* le M««tParallel line* apparently conrirge

In the eje level of the obwrrer. Thists a w.llknown factor of perspectlvaa*d Is earned bj the apparent de-crease in th# sis* of the object u Itrecedes from the ere.

From Youth to AgeThere are thre* trytaf period* in awoman'* life: when the girl maturesto womanhood, when a womangjve* birth to her first child, when «woman reaches middle age. Atthese time* lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound helps to re-store normal health aad vigor.

IMNKHVMSI (UMi'Ol M)

TlBtdtSuits

S. FISHK1N

CLOTHING

187 Smith St.P«rth Assb«y

N. J.

Tel. 2M1

MILE-A-M1NUTE MARTY-By-UNIVERSAL USED CAR EXCHANGE. I «y<tte St. nncl Convery Place,Perth Amboy

Xou MAKt Tttt

FORSpiN.'-THEONLV

(THING IUNIVERSAL USED

EXCHANGE««\ OH THIS CrOOD

USED C«R \QOO&HT THERE

If ever the time was ripe to purchase unused tran*-

portatUm in the form of a used automobile, it is now.

Price, will never be lower, weather conditions are

ideal, and our stock i» well rounded out.

Price. ranK<- from $2,000.00 down to $35.00;Pierce-Arrow* to Fords.

Among our selection we have a number of car* thatare ide«l for transportation to and from work, de-pendable but ancient. We invite you to look ourstock over. There is no obligation.

W e have a wide variety for you to choos* from.

Our motto—"Every Owner Mu»t Be A Satisfied Owner".

Don't forget our 5-day change privilege without loa* to the buyer.

;s*»i

rAGE RIGHT FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1980 CABTEBET PRES8

Watch Motor Car Brake*

During Severe WeatherMost an; hiake adjustment will

wcik reanuuably well In wins drywfultier. when rotiJs ire dry and•vi'rythlug worts freely; but muchgreatar isrs must be exercised IDwinter, when roads are Sllpperr andbrake band* and Joints arc coveredwith mad and Ice. Have the brake*looked after frequently to be sure thatthey tak* bold evenly and the mov-able Joints «b<v•• < be frequently mied

wltli thin iwniHnuliiK oil Hinl if pos-sible covered to prevent mud and 1c*from freeslug on them mil locUafthem.

In driving, one should oa* thebrakaa very cautiously, a* • •uddeoapplication of the brake* It almostsura to cauM a skid, and er*o a alowpressure may produce the same re-sult* If the brakes are badly «ff laadj ailment.

—Please mention thU paperbuyinf from advertiter*—

when

NOTICE""*1

iTo'the Stockholders of the

Carteret Building LoanAssociation

At the next regular meeting on Monday, May 12th,1930, from 9 A. M., to 8 P. M., the stockholders are re-quested to leave their Pan Books for inspection by theAuditors. As this is the last regular meeting of the fiscalyear which doees May 31st, 1930, the stockholders are re-quested to pay up in full to this date as the numbers ofpass books in arrears will be published in the 29th AnnualReport.

Stockholders having Mortgage loans who have notalready brought in their 1929 tax bills for inspection willplease do so at this meeting. The Department of Bank-ing and Insurance insists that the Tax Bills be inspectedeach year.

The semi-annual intersat on Prepaid Shares, nmotrn*!-

^ ^ ^ t w w i i ^ itm, win bcE«Mw#rtrdate. Please ask for your interest checks.

9124,600.00 Loaned on Bond & Mortgage Since Jiana1, 192».

Total Bond and Mortgage* outstanding.

$873,400.00

Under Supervision of New Jer*ey State Departmentof Baulking and Insurance.

Dues received on the Second Monday of each Monthfrom 9 A. M. to 8 P. M. '

OFFICERS

EDWARD J. HEIL PresidentJOSEPH A. HERMANN Vice-PresidentGEORGE A. DALRYMPLE TreasurerTHOMAS DEVEREUX Secretary

FRANCIS A. MONAGHAN Solicitor

DIRECTORS

C. C. Sheridan Max Glass

Andrew Christensen George A. Dalrymple

S. C. Dalrymple Charles A. Conrad

Isidore Brown Charles Ohlott

Thomas Devereux

LOUIS MEYER TOHAVE SWIFT GAR

Machine Will Have Rear-Wrieel Drive and BeDriven by Spur Gear.

There hai been a rood deal of gos-sip concerning the oar Louli Mererwill drlrs In the 1980 IndlanapoU*eOO-nlle race, but tbe actual (actswere not disclosed until a tew daysago when Alden Sampson, head of tbeBampsoa-lCeysr-Bratt racing combina-tion cam* Into Indianapolis to arrangefor quartan where tbe car will b*built.

Tbe car will be named the SampsonSpecial. It* IS-cjrltnder motor will b*made up of two bank* of eight ejUn-dera. The car, a rear-wheel drin,will be driven by a tpur gear oft therear end of a separate crankihaft foreacb of tbe bank*. Tbe cylinder* willbe of 2 0/18 bore by 3-Inch stroke andthe motor will nave displacement of201 'cable Inches.

Conforms to Specifications.Otherwise the far will conform to

•II tb« specifications of the Indian-apolis Motor Speedway corporation fortha I960 race, which will start thisyear at 10 o'clock a. m. on May 80, asoso*L

"Tb* three of ns worked for weekson the design and the motor blockshave already been made and mnchlnework on them !• about finished,"Sampson said. "Rlley Brett Is comingon from the coast and from then onwe will go at top speed to finish thecar,"

Asked who would be the riding me-chanic with Meyer, Sampson said he

• H I - i •Id nee li')w Ifirst <>m <>fAtnrrli-n willhHckKroitlirt It

IH hi c y l i n d e r o a r — l i l tIt Mini fur trui'k In

|n»rforin. With l iei n n HIMIOKI lie w r i t t e n

for u pl«c« w*l[ UJI at tlm nnlsh.

Exhaust Clear* Fog inFront of an Automobile

Hot air sprayed out la front of anautomobile .by an attachment on Uiaexhaust of the car has been found ef-fective ID clearing away London'stime-honored fog, tht American Auto-mobile association reports.

Th* rising current of heated aircreated by the device, a recent Inven-tion, literally lifts the fog about tenftet In front of the front wheels anddoe* tt quickly enough to permit aforward speed of Hbout fifteen milesan hour lir the dewiest fog.

The fof lifter CUII b« attached toany car's exhaust and Is much simplerthan the average windshield wiper. Itb u been tried out In London and Isbeing adopted by motorists there.

sand requests pour Into thewithout doubt, but Sampsonmated that he considered the

Inti-me-

chanic's teat highly important and thathe might ride with Louis In the flrstrace for two-man car* since 1022 onthe greatest automobile rare course IDthe world.

Sampion la the most picturesquefigure In raring In America. He wasan automobile dealer In Ohio two yearsago when he met Louis Meyer, Theyboth were men of few words, of abontthe same height and general build.Lout* was a mechanic for Prank El-liott. Two we*ks before the 1928race Louis wired his friend In Ohiothat lie o*d a good buy In a race carIf Alden had the money. Alden hadIt and came to Indianapolis, where thecar was bought. So well did LouisJustify the Investment that he wonfirst place that year. The same yearSampson bought a car from the FrankLockhnrt eitate and Meyer drpve ItInto second place In the 1929 race.

Work of Trio Divided.The work of this winning trio Is

well divided. Snmpunn watches themoney eod. Louis Meyer does thedriving, and does It so well that hewon the A, A. A. driving champion-ship In 192S and 1920; Brett who hasworked on more winners than an;other racing car specialist, has the re-sponsibility of seeing that the car laalways In tip-top shape meclmnlcally.This rnre combination has mode, atrio to conjure with where secondsmenu tlnmsiindR "f dollars.

Real Bargains!Here's a real opportunity if you

have any desire what-so-ever toown a car—Bring your money!

1928 ESSEX COUPE.Ittta ESSEX COACH.1927 ESSEX COACH (2).19M JMJICK 4 PA5S. COUPE STD. SIX.1804 BUICK COUPE, MASTER SIX.193* CHEVROLET FORDOR.1939 CHEVROLET COUPE.1 9 $ PONTIAC BIG SIX COUPE.1M0 CHEVROLET COUPE,l f t t OAKLAND SEDAN.1B17 DODGE SEDAN & COUPE.

, 1 9 | | WHIPPET COUPE.1919 FORD TUDORS & FORDOR5.1908 FORD TUDORS A COUPES,

MANY OTHERS "

OUR GUARANTEEYou may exchange any car purchased from us without low witUa

one week after date of purchase if for any reason you are disMtUfML(Provided of course you have not damaged the car).

THE TRADt MA«KTHAT GUARANTEES

A SQUARE DEAL

USED7*r-76 FAYETTE STREET - PHONE 27O3 PERTH AK

Between HIGH & MECHANIC STS., PERTH AMBOY, N. J.

(A Division of Dorsey Motors, Inc.)OPEN UNTIL 9:00 P. M.

• • • » • •» • •» . , • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

AUTOMOBILE HINTS• • • • • » • • • » • • • • » • • » • • • • • • » •

If the car hai a backing light, re-verse never should be used ai a brakewhen the car Is left parked. It drain*the battery.

• • •Another jrort the motorist roust re

Member not to lighten too much Is thewater pump shaft-pm-klng gland. Theshaft must run free.

• • *"The Shoe imiiiufiiclurei'S say We

do not wulk enough." This la ImportHiit, we tliink.. Whereuhouts downtown do the shoe nmnufacturer* parktheir earn?

» « •Beginners are apt to ovrrcjioke the

engine whm starting, it- (soften mv

arrived WIIITI they see four Ml fontairplane pi opellrr lilailrs whirlingabout in their pllirva mi u tfirat tliri*.-story high structure mi t h»* n.of ufthe power plant. Themi propellersmuiidiinf idle ((Ivi- tin- lie to RubinK(MI Kreant even though he might ga-ther with a whole flock of his fellowsto chirp around in a little prematurewarmth and sunshine.

The propellers, when in operation,direct cooling blast* of air into

tfiant water conler which cools watercoming luvt from the cuiulensers oftin- liitf .itcain tin bines. This water isal u loiutant temperature the yearttrouml 111 the winter time it in pipedthrough (10 U> 77 buildings of thePackard [>lant for heating purposes.Throujjh this system of radiation, su-fficient heat is taken from tht> waterto permit its use again in the con-densers,

s When the outdoor temperature

rises let* heat can be radiatedthrough the plant and the water isfurther cooled in the big coolers onthe power plant roof Practically au-tomatically the airplanu propellercooling /aiLs go into action, whenSpring arrives with ntiil higher tem-peraturea.

People living in the vicinity of thePackard factories have learned towatdh the big cooling propeller fansas unfailing weather indicators.

peclall; In n-unn went her or shorthufter you have been running the. cur

• * *Motorists lone hnve been wnrned

out to touch the lieud of the upeetlometer and not even to let the average mechuclc work i.i) It. Speedometers Are dellcntn In^rumeiiu, liketine watches.

APPLEGATE'SDEPENDABLE

USED CARSFOR THRIFTY

PEOPLEYOU HAVE 5 DAYS TO DRIVE A USED CAR BOUGHTAT APPLEGATE'S. 5 DAYS TO TEST THE CAR. B DAYSTO DECIDE WHETHER IT IS WORTH ITS PRICE. YOUAND YOUR FAMILY ARE THE WHOLE JURY. HERE ATAPPLEGATE'S'WE ARE CONFIDENT TO LEAVE THEVERDICT WITH YOU — KNOWING AS WE DO THATEVERY CAR IS SOLD HONESTLY — EXACTLY AS REP-RESENTED.

THE CARS LISTED BELOW ARE TAKEN AT RAN-DOM FROM OUR LARGE STOCK. SPIC AND SPAN, INSPLENDID MECHANICAL CONDITION — THEY AREEVEN BETTER BARGAINS THAN THEIR PRICES INDI-CATE

ikf*SKlNE REGAL SEDAN — 4Tiew tires, 2 spares show slightUM. R«flnis*djn H«>i Drib withDeep Orange wire wheels and Old'

nuii mmBwroriim uamn' '

llobln Itsd Breast has lost his jobas a harbinger of Bpring about thefactories of the Packard? Motor CarCompany. Pure mechanical scienc*has taken his place,

Packard people know Spring has

SptciallutienH* who Is wise, wrote Ooethe, pot*

all dtlms which maj dlulpatehi* attention, and confining himself toon* branch axcels 1B that.

BUICK 5-PAS3ENCER SEDAN—In unusumlly dean condition. Wecan highly recommend this car asit has many unused miles of trans-portation left.

STUOEBAKER 1»27 DICTATORSEDAN—RalacqMrarf in B t r n i .dy with Gold striping-. Tires showslight use.

PIERCE-ARROW BROUGHAlt—Reconditioned throughout. Refln-ished in Sable and striped withOM Ifftry »"d V«fmHHon.

HUDSON SEDAN— IfedhanTcalFperfect and reflniabed in a beauti-ful Manchuria Blue with OM Irorystriping.

9TUDEBAKER T-PASSENGERPRESIDENT SEDAN—This worldChampion car ha* been relacquer-ed • very attractive Croton Greenwith Mackinsk Green ribbon strip-Ing. ,

MANY OTHERS FROM $99 TO $1500LIBERAL TERMS OPEN EVENINGS TRADES ACCEPTED

J. AftTHUR APPLEGATE363 Division Street

PERTH AMBOYPhorw. 2516-17

WHAT CROWD*OUR STORE LAST WFEKj

'Now the jValance oPthe stock of alAcce{[orY Firm that Quit ftijinefl to be

FOR WHATEVER. IT WILL OR ING

QUICKf Share in thtf* 6rat^ VALUES

AUTO »UPPUV STORES INC

JPEN 178 NBrunswick kLcmmmm OPEN

. • • *

f;AKTERET FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1930 VAGR

News of the World Told in PicturesOfficial Water Taster Ready for World's Distance Record Doughnut Machine on Board

Tlie Metropolitan Water Board of London has a chemist to test

by tatting all of the water that Is used by Londoners. He Is a tee-

totaler and a non-smoker. Either of these habits would Impair the

fine discrimination of Hi* ta*te. He chews an apple while working.

Flying Trapeze

PMU Bohlndlw, daring aerial acrobat, Introduces a new kind of

flying trapew to entertain the crowd at Templehof Aerodrome, Berlin.

Fitted With Mouth Protector

BERLIN—Dr. Kurt Schlndlrr, Berlin dentist and Inventor of ther hard rubber mouth protector for boxers, fitting up one of his

patented devices for Max Schmellng.

Detroit-to-Budapest Flight

NMW YORK CITY I,i-it in unlit Huj;cn <;zupary, Oeorge•ndreaa and Steven (inisschnikii , t i i no f Himmuiiui m-en, will a t t empta flight from Detroit , M i d i , ii> Itudnp'",!, U n i t a r y , soon. T h e con-templated t r i p la being backed by n Uimlun dally newspaper.

Non-Sinkable Lifeboat

DO,WNEY, CAL—The unusual streamlining and motor cowfllng on the Smseo l>iflBaiB81»"wrfJ*H*fW.'

Pablo SldVr. Mexico's flying ace, will use on his attempt to establish a new world's long-distance Moht

mark during a good will tour for his Government.

Uncle Sam's Sailors Play Ball

OOANTANAMO, CUBA—A scene during the navy's "World Series' at the United States Navy's own

ball Held here. All the big fleet championship games are played here.

Great Spanish Writer and His Famous Characters

MADRID—The new memorial to the great Cervantes, wAose statue ts seen In distance. In fore-ground are two of his Immortal characters, Don Qulxiite and 8ancho Panra. The statues are the work ofCollaut Varel.

She Knows Her Rods and Reels

¥Omt*-ttnfcen that fctmt sink • §Mp~4ht •toatria •••>!>nut machine on board the U, 8, S. Texas, which turns out thousand!for the sailors on board.

Sets Glider Mark

BAN DIEGO, CAL.-Jack Barstow, twenty-four, left, being con-gratulated by Clyde Freeman, Vice President of the Bowlus Sail-plane Company, after exceeding all world official and unofficial en-durance glider flights by remaining aloft over Point Loma for fifteenhours and 13 minutes. Absence of a barograph In Barstcw'i craftdeprives him of alt official recognition for his flight.

Just Before the Spill

This motorcyclist at Worthing England, Is showing how clover he

\a. The picture was made Just before hU cleverness was cooled by an

unlocked for spill Into the chilly waters.

Crossing the Atlantic

MIAMI, FLA.—Capt. Nlclmliui (ImiKopoloits set Ling out from

Miami In the little boat—HiiiulleMt mill ever attempted to cross the

Atlantic. He Is provisioned for four montli.H.

Sausages and Hams

BROOKLYN—Two-soore seamen of thp R. a Hrenuii trying UielTbert lo cap«l£e the new Burmest<'r unslnkalile lltrtjoat. Even In theroughest weather the boat will not capsize or sink, and though waveswaih Into her the motor will nut stop.

LO6 ANGELES- "Couldn't do better myself.' Bays !Ung«r Hubert Calet as he checks the catch ofMUs Frances Callanan of I.os Angeles, who won (•-" "•• resting tournament at Los Angeles County Park,stored by officials of the fsimous mount- -

PAR1&-An official meat Inspector of this city putting his st*m»

of approval on the hams and BfiiflagrH dlsplnyed at the annual

Sausage Fair held here. i,

PAGE TEN FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1930 CABTERBT PREi*,• S:l 'J-L IT"

PersonalsThe members of the Girls' Friend-

ly Society of .St. Mark's EpiscopalChurch will be the guests of lfri.Thomas J. Mulvihill tonight in theMulvihill home at a social.

—The members of the St. JosephAthletic Club will present the IrishDrama, "In the Heart Of .A Sham-rock", on Friday nig-ht of next we«kin St. Joseph's school hall.

—The executive committee of St.Joieph's School P. T. A. has madearrangement* to have the schoolchildren take part in the MemorialDay parade. The school wilt also havea float in the parade,

—On Tuesday night an old-fash-ioned spelling bee will be conductedin St. Jepeph a school hall under theauspices of the P. T. A. of St. Jot-iph i school. Mrs. M. Levan and 'Mrs.Camlet will be the captains. Mrs. T.J. Nevill will be the teacher.

—Members of the student body ofCarteret high school will present aChinese operetta, "The Feast of theLanterns", at an early date in thehlg*h school auditorium.

President Francis A. Monaghanpresided and commented on the har-mony of the party. AH differenceshave been ironed out he said, and theparty is now a solid unit.

14 Featured PlayersIn "Hit the Deck"

What is considered the most pertentiou9 musical comedy ever produc-ed since the advent of talking pic-tures, opens Sunday at the Statetheatre. It is Radio Pictures' lavish,technicolor production of "Hit theDeck".

Fourteen well known stage andscreen players compose the caetwhich is headed by Polly Walker,Follies beauty, and Jack Oakie, thesensational new comedian. Four inthe list were brought directly fromNew York to Hollywood to appear ftithe picture, Polly Walker, RogerGray, Franker.Wooda and Marffuer-ita Paduta. George Ovey, HarrySweet, June Clyde, Wallace MacDon-

Democratt Have Meet ing M, Nate Slott, Deil Henderson,U/ - I I n ' i ci i u » « r • Charles Sullivan and Andy Clark areWill Pick S U t e Next W e e k , t h e o t h m .

More than 100 men were presentlast night at a meeting of, the Men's

FEATURED IN BRENON WAR EPIC "Mysterious Island"All-Color Talking Film

One of the screen's oddest, not tomention one of its most pretentious,romantic adventures, is promised lo-cal film followers when "The Myster-

ioua Island" comes tn the State Thea-trt- tomorrow. It is in color, dialogueand synthroniKiHl sound.

A visualization of one of JulesVI'IIIC'N must extraordinary dreams,"The Mysterious Island", (fives real-ism to an adwnturo that carries itsprincipals «i"l its reviewers from the

secret retreats of a mountainous in.land to tht> bottom of the se« andback again, into a land of fantasyand return. _ _ ^ ^

Newa of All Carterat Borongfe j n

Th. Pr«4,, th« moat widelyraad paper in Cartvrat

Democratic Club in Fire house No.2. There waa speaking by Joseph A.H Willi J L l h d2Hermann, WillS h F

speakinliam J.

Luther Reed, who directed the Ra-dio Pictures musical extravaganza"Rio Rita", directed "Hit the Deck",assisted by Fred Fleck, a director in

y pLawlor, hador

E d d J

hi

Schwartz, Ftpd Colton, Edward J.H«il and other prominent membersof the party.

Plans for the coming campaignwere discussed as were present con-ditions in the borough. It was an-nounced that a mass meeting- will beheld next week when a slate of can-didates for the primaries will be se-Jected.

Nine are included in the

Qi//c/cCLEANINGPRESSINOALTERING

GARMENTS

REASONABLE PRICES

WE REPAIR FUR COATS

PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN

New York CustomTailor

6« Main St. Phone 167

Woodbridge

gmusical repertoire of the story. The"Hallelujah" song, a solo in the stageversion, has become an entire se-quence sung by 100 n«tfro vocalists.

CLASSIFIED AD«Classified advertisement* otUy on«

cent a word; minimum charge 25c.

HELP WANTED — MALE

BABB£JUNG — BOBBINGExpert instructions. The most mod-

ern school. Earn after few weeksLargest chain of schools and shops inUnited States. VAUGHN'S SYSTEM211 Bowery, New York City.W. I. 6-U*.

CHESTER MORRIS as "GriBcha" ami ItKTTV < nMI'SON as BABKA in"The case of Sergeant Grischu" at the Strand Thnilginning tomorrow.

fur one week be-

THE ESCAPE OF 'GRISCHA'

HELP WANTED—FEMALEI YOUNG lady to work in Drug storeI Steady employment.. Applicationsby letter only wilLbi^i^nsideredRaymond Jack.sonr^aBp. streetWoodbridge, N. J.W. I. 5 9.

J -EMPLOYMENT WANTEDFEMALE—Otrl wants position; light

housework or similar employment.Address Miss Fodor, 367 Railwayavenue, Woodbridge.W. I. b-9*

CLEAN RAGS wanted, size of hand-kerchief or larger, 6c a pound

Middlesex Preis. 20 Green street

ROOMS AND BOARD611 fiarron avenue, Woodbridge,

N. J. '/hone 892,W. I. 8-14 tf

FOR RENT

FOR SENT—New six room housefor rent. Steam heat. $45 per month.De Young, Avenel, phone, Wood-bridge 2149J.

TOR RENT—2 or 4 furnished room...apartments; also furnished rooms;

apply Mrs. Little, 144 Main street,

PCEE f-REEA PEARL NECKLACE

WITH

GENUINE FRENCH NARCISSETRUE SWEET PEAbox of FACE POWDER

ALL 3 onlyA HS.00 VALUE

PRESENT THIS COUPONTo Secure FREE NECKLACE

98cAn exciting moment fro nith« RadioPictures, "Thi> Case of Serjeant

Griseha", with CHESTER MORRIS in the title role at the Strand Theatre.

telephone 3-M.W. I. 7-6 tf.

HOUSE FOR RENTReady for immediate occupancy. 5

rooms, bath, most desirable sectioa8 minutes from station, stores,schools, buses, new public park inrear; garage; reasonable. 95 Greenttreet, Woodbridge, N. J. Tel. Wood-bridge 114.W. I. l-17tf.

OARAGE FOR RENTAt 96 Green street, Woodbridge.

$600 a month. Tel. Woodbridge 114.W. I. 1-17 tf.

FOR SALE

FOR SALE—New six room house.Steam heat. $5,750, easy terms. De-Young, Avenel, phoiw, Woodbridge

FOR SALE—Cheap, English setter,1 year old; female; apply 501 Rah-y avenue.

W. I. 4-18tf.

FOR SALE—Five room house withbath and alt improvements in Row-

land place. Telephone Woodbridge688-J or 1710.

BUNGALOW, 4 rooms and bath-electric light, gas, water, sewer,

concrete street; price $3,500; easyterms; 6 Wedgewood avenue, Wood-bridge; inquire J. E. Harned, PostOffice Building, Woodbridge.W. I. 2-16tf. '

BUSINESS NOTICES

PLANTS and SHRUBBERYFRUIT TREES, FLOWERING

SHRUBS, EVERGREENS, HARDYFLOWERS, R O S E CLIMBERS,ORAPE VINES. J. JANSA, SEW-ARBN, N. J. (NEAR PUBLICSCHOOL).W. I. Feb. 21 to May 30*

TRUCKING, local or long distance;two trucks at your convenience.

Phone Woodbridge 198. John Thom-as, Oakland avenue, Sewaren.

WEEK-CHOICE OF

50c tube Lavender Shaving Cream

OR

35c tube Palmolive Shaving Cream

OR

35c tube Colgate Shaving Cream

AND$1 new style

Gillette RazorBOTHFOR

SEAMAN'S PHARMACY84 Smith Street Perth Amboy

/ i n ' i r i s n I n I'i ' i » i i ' i f < i K l v i v , ( I ' I I V i i V Y l v i » i , ' i \ i i \ i t< .' I v 1 / 1 - 1 1 i : i \ , I d I t . , t . I t , I . t t I . • • , t , t » . i k\i

^iMiaiMiMiMmiMi^ if '..if »,If I \f ','1 •'

FREE AUTO PARKING SPACETONIGHT — LAST TIMES —

The Hungarian Movie Star VILMA BANKY in

"A LADY TO LOVE"

ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW

SONDAY — MONDAY — MAY II - 12

Off with the GOBS on aGRAND JOY SPREE!

FREE AUTO PARKING SPACESATURDAY — May 10

"THE MYSTERIOUS ISLAND"

—With—

LIONEL BARRYMORE

2—FEATURES—2

"PAINTED FACES"

—With—

JOE BROWN

Join the navy fora night and grab jyour ihare of the ' rfifreateit fun feaitever tpread on the

Songs .Laughs.Girls .

Color

. . . Everythingto Make the PartyGay!

HITTHEDECK

JACKOAKIFPOLLY WALKER

and hundreds of singt-rs,dancers, players and

beautiful girls

Directed byLUTHER REED

Creator of "RIO RITA"

including ihe sensational"HALLELUJAH" Number

Gorgeous scenes in

TUES. and WED. — May 13 - 14

HENRY B.WARNER

IN i

WeddingRings

with

Lois Wilson

THURS. and FRI. — May 1 5 - 1 6

A HUNGARIAN PICTIOF COURT LIFE

Tb

COLORTONE

Song RevueStan Laurel and

Oliver HardyIN

"Night Owls"

With

illie DoveAdded Feature

GIRLSWith

The NugentsCHANGE OF TINE

Firtt Show Begin* at 7:30 Second Show Begins at 9:30

SATURDAY — MAY 17 2—FEATURES—2

loMni]v«r WA-M^-tf

BlIZZELLAlice Day

Edna Murphy

Wheeler Oakman

Donald Reed

ADDED FEATURE—

ARTERET PRESS I:;I>AY. MAY '», mo SECTION TWO 1'ACE ONI

$1.00 DOWN

DELIVERS ANY

SINGLE PIECE

THE H00S1ERKITCHEN CABINET

At a special Anniversarysale price. Tbi« cabtnetsavBs the lady of the houaamany foot-steps. ' O Q 7 8

In a choice ofrnlors

the hou

'OQ7

efclV

ALASKA STEEL

REFRIGERATORThis 3 door side icer b allwhite, the interior is madeof white baked

i runnel aa wellthe outside

DETROIT GAS

RANGEThis four burner gas range!with overhead oven is • rare]value. Came in $A *]7Sjana IOOK at i t T " * J (

lOOPiec*DINNER SET

A real ipeeial anniver*wrloffering U thla glaied porce-llain dinner i«t of f <i O M Ithe latest pattern. ^ } j

s

COLONIAL

SECRETARY DESK.lust Hie thirls for that space111 your library or livingr»i>m. A leui reproduction"f thi' original in $«wnhognny. •39M

3 COMPLETE

• » * •

ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL

SIMMONSINNER-SPRING

MATTRESSHi-re ia value extraordin-ary, ~ an Inner SpringPined nuttnai of the bet-ter kind, with French roll-A *£*'• , .C o v««d In adurable checkered coverin Green, Blue fQQOOor Rose colon. ^ « J$1.00 Down Deliver* It

YOUR CHOICE

$1Tomorrow you can furnish • complete room at an almoit unbelievable tavitif. Ad-

vanced itjrlei art featured in our Anniveriarr Sale. The •euationallr low prieet

quoted for tbl» Sal*—axtra uvingt that arc record breaking. Caib it not neceiiarr.

A tmall dapoiil dekT«rs anythinf—balance at convenient.

ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL

o can affordeeping comfort We

anniversary

ROOM

OUTFJTS,THAT'SAVE

Y O UMONEY

1 T

$1.00 SPECIALS

A real strong folding cardtable with moire 1 4 00top

Radio bench with metal baseand upholstered seat M 98

in Jacquitrd vulour.

Living-Room Outfit with Coxwell Chair and StoolSuper-feature, a saving of tremendous prpportion to you, a superb outfit selectedwith th« uttnoet care in whioh harmony of design, color and comfort are completelyachieved.' MagnMlc<>nt settee, club chair, covered all over in a taupe and rose Jac-quard velour, and has tapectry reversible cushions. In addition a mawive coxwellchair in taut; and brown Jacquard, with stool. Magaelne stand in red, or green endtable, metal" smoker, Bra« plated bridge lamp junior and table lamps with leathereffect, laced shades.

$10.00' DOWN DELIVERS IT

THIS MAHOGANY

DAVENPORT TABLE

jf mahogany finish bas«,with niahftjrany veneer top.A real » (V»specinl tj

BOOK TROUGHENO TABLE

Mahogany, flniHhed w i t hroomv top and spatiousy ^book trougSpecial

FELT BASE FLOOR

COVERING

In u liirife aflBortment of themoat wanted patterns. Whilethey last, per 1 Qsq. yd.

HANDY CHEST OF

DRAWERS

This cheat of drawers inwalnut finish At. a-spccuiiAnniversary Sale $ 1 A 7Sprice 14'

CEDAR CHEST. SPECIAL

W« offer a natural finish rt>dar chest ut a remark ab 11>value for this $ 1 A 50sale

I V H I « I rv n>>

'14s

STORE HOURS

8:00 A. M. — 6:0<y\ M.

Saturday Nighta 10:00 P. M.

SOS FOR EVENING

APPOINTMENTS

PHONE 2750

END TABLE

This handy end table is al-ways useful. Comes 1 4 00in mahogany finish. 1

Folding table ironing boardof durable make a H 00real value at I

t'ACKTWO SKCTION TWO FRIDAY, MAY '.), CARTERET PRESS

Picture Peers SurpassSelves In Joy Rivalry

Hollywood Stars and Featured jPlayers Display Talents in"Paramount on Parade".

.Mure than thirty-five of Holly-wnuil's best-known stars and featur-ed playcrE will entertain at the Ma-jestic theatre tomorrow in one of thi-gayest entertainment revels everbrought out of Hollywood. "Para-mount onP arade" opens it» sevenday run.

Stars who have enamoured thipublic imagination engage in a joyous rivalry of acting, tinging, duneing, comedy and love-making in thisfestival of the stars. Featured play-erg who have drawn crowds to feeJhem when they appeared alone archere joined together in one big me-lange of sprightly happiness. "Para-mount on Parade" is an intimatemedley of mirth and music, the new-type screen frolic originated by Para-mount.

The beat-known players on thetalking screen appear individuallyand in groups. Maurice Chevalier,for instance, sings two new song hitsand appears in two Chevalier Inter-ludes. One «f them was directed byErnst Lubitsch who made "The LoveParade". Clare Bow is heard singingher new love-lballan, "True to theNavy", and Nancy Carroll sings,danc«s and makes merry to the inucicof Abe Lyman's famous band, in aninterlude called "Dance Mad".

The-n there's Harry Green's hilar-ious comedy to keep the laugh's go-ing. Harry sings "I'm Inadore, theToreador", in gorgeous Spanish cos-tume, in a skit in which he is sup-ported iby svelte Kay Francis, and a .glorious chorus of boys and girls. 'Jack Oakie does his stuff, and Skeeta

THREE MASTERS OF HILARITY

TJAXIETXEON ERRO'L and SKEETS GALLAGHERmount on Parade" at the Majestic Theatre tomorrow.

Pant-

Gallagher crack; wise. Helen Kanecroons "What D.d Cleopatra Say?"

These are or'y a few of the happyscenes prepared for enj(jym*nt in"Paramount on Parade". Many ofthe 'scenes are in Technicolor, andhundreds of chorus beauties cavort.

The cast includes such big namesas Richard Arlen, Jean Arthur, Wil-liam Austin, George Bancroft, ClaraBow, Evelyn Brent, Mary Brian,Clive Brook, Virginia Bruce, NancyCarroll, Ruth Chatterton, MauriceChevalier, Gary Cooper, Leon Errol,Stuart Erwin, Kay Francis, SkeetsGallagher, Harry Green, Mitzi Green,James Hall, Phillips Holmes, HelenKane, Dennis King, Abe Lyman and

his band, Fredric March, Nino Mar-tini, Mitii Mayfair, David Newell,Jack Oakie, Warner Oland, ZelmaO'Neal, Eugene Pallette, Joan Peers,William Powell, Charles (Buddy)Rog«M, Lillian Roth, Stanley Smithand FSy Wray.

Another Chorus GirlWins Fame In Movie

Another little girl who WM adancer on Broadway has flashed witha skip and jump, into Hollywood

'THEN—I'M DONE FOR . . .

—Sc*ne fromCrescent,

angerous Para

stardom. She is Nancy Carroll, titian-haired beauty of the Paramount stu-dios, who will appear at the Creec«nttheatre, starting tomorrow for fourdays, Injier first stellar Ale in "Dan-

s .As with the few others who have

traveled the tame road, it took a dealof dancing for Miss Carroll t o reachher diisy success. More than distanceseparate* the crowded, noisy base-ment dressing room for the generalchorus of a New York stage showfrom a luxuriously furnished "star"apartment at a film studio. And it re-quires something more than courageto make the move.

Nancy Carroll is the neophyteamolg Hollywood's newly arrived ex-

which will open tomorrow at th«

dancing-girl-stars. She has had toclimb even farther than most of herfortunate sisterhood. Her career be-gan under very inauspicious circum-stances. Her first stage experiencecame one night in a little neighbor-hood theatre on New York'* EastSide when she, with her sister, enter-ed at an amateur night performance.

The Carroll sisters sang and danc-ed. Nancy kept on singing and danc-ing. She sang and danced her way tofame. With the development of thetalking motion picture, she was ableto bring all her talents to bear andshe quickly attained preeminence.

—Please mention this paper to ad-vertisers; it helps you, it helps themit helps your paper.—

—CHESTER MORRIS as "Sergeantdio picture at the Strand1 Theatre.

Grischa" SUITOIHIITK to fate in the Ra-

WAR DOCUMENTS IN RUSSIANGIVE PRINTERS GRIEF

Hollywood and Los Angsts'print-ers sprouted a few gray hairs when alarge notion picture studio sent theman order for eighteen different wardocuments to be printed in English,German and Russian!

It happened during the ftlmfcg ofRadio Pictures' s p e c i a l talkingdrama, "The Case of Sergeant Gris-cha", which opens tomorrow at theStrand Theatre.

Inasmuch as Herbert Brenon, thedirector, insisted that every detail ofthe picture be 100 per cent accurate,it was necessary to obtain replicas of

official (icrnian wur bulletins. Copiesof Iht'Hi' were obtained from abroad,but due t.i the fact that several cop-ies of each were required for the film,Southern California printers wereengaged to make fac-similie*.

Everything went smoothly until Itwas discovered that the printer didnot have type faces of the Banianalphabet.

After frantic searching* amongother local printeries, someone dla>covered the plant of a Russian newt-paper in downtown Lot Angeles. TheRussian versions of the documentswere "set" and the type sent to theother plant where the documentsbearing messages in the three lan-guages were printed.

Thia BulMing ta known aa our No. 7 Warehouse, and lalocated in Orange, N. J.

Our Stores In the Oranges—Newark—adjoining and surroundingSections, sre supplied by direct Truck Delivery from this Warehouse.

For More Titan a Third of a Century-we have consistently adhered to the invincible principle, which we adopted at the very beginning of thiaOrganization-QUALITY COUNTS! The secret of 4SC0 Success ties in our determination to give thev e i 7 ^ t thai* produced, to dj$C0 Customers, at fair prices. What a shopping convenience to theAmerican housewife—the American mother—who is blessed with her neighborhood OSCOStoreI

Our Direct Connections with the Sources of Supply, bring every Nationally Known Food to youthrough a Direct Channel—your neighborhood 4SC0 Store, made possible by our Pk'oducer-to-ConsuinerPlan of Merchandising t It Pay* to Trade Where Quality Count* and Your Money Goea Furthest I

Cold Medal FlourKitchen-tested

W

Putt bodied beam, eelected by experts roasted in our own roasteries—you'll enjoy it* rich flavor—and the price t

OSCOCoiiee *27cVictor Blend Coffee » 23c

A ddlcMM coffee. T l * cholo* or UtooMndit.

Acme Brand Coffee ~ » * 33cfor pen-oUlor M

PrudenceCorned

Beef

can17c: 25c

ButterThe Finest Butter

in America ITh» twrt PMHiirwd cra>m

h-om i n outru of rich milkin «nri pound

Geisha Crab Meatcan

H you are entertaining—make lalads.sandwiches—or serve H lor any meal!

Reg. 25c Del Monte California

Sliced Peaches

CalHornls sunshine ghee them flavor.

Reg. We 45XV Finest

C l f ACalif. Apricots 2 2.OC

Toddy23 43

It is resdy to brown—delicious and stay to serve!

can

A deUfhtfulty nourishing drink for the chil-

dren—and grown-ups as welt It ittiefio*.

Good for Breakfast!

rSL Corn Flakes 3 pk"19f

Try Hum Kith rnaj^FrultToasted

Cured Sliced

- *^ Calif. Prune, 2".'2S<

Med. Pnmet,, 2 ""21'

SkatThe New Wonder Hand Soap

2-15cThe Universal Cleaner

There tre hundreds ol uses for Skat In the kitchen and•round the house.

tia TubtrcuUn Tated

E v a p . M i l k . 3UUcMUI28c

Imprcvta th* Flavor at t»n or coftt%

Evaporated WUUt

-tar* Breakfast Hints 1Gold Sent Rolled Oats 3 (»**• 25cOSCO Brankfast Farina 3 P*S» 25cPott Toaitles or Kellogs't Corn Flake* * i 8cShredded Whole Whsat , put 11cWhentenfl IT»«H unit \"nrl«hlnit) . . . . » » • 23cHacker'i Cream Farina .pi"! 13c

Beverages !•Rob Roy Pale Dry

Ginger Ale« 15c

'ftSCO As JO. led

Beverages" ••«• 1 2 ' / 2 c

•Ruppert's. Kruog«r'iOr Puritan

Cereal lirvrrage*4 ' " 25c

•Vlim u-Miil ili'jiimlt'

Mystic Marvel

i It on hand—rl clean* like magte—a realkitchen help.

Calo Dog FoodFOR ALL DOGS

Dogs fnll tor CHIO nt the tintiniH mid beg toi mort.

OakiteClean, a Million Thing,

2 - 25cA teaapoonful doee the dishes. You can-

not afford to be without K!

EggsHie Pick of the

NettalBIc. »««>, faldu-hMitM

*m far Potflilni. Bgllint orikt auk ftaom.

Reg. 15c tfso Carrot* and Pea*Diced Carrots

Mixed Vegetables

2<~25cStock f«ur puii? u a •»»!•«•

&" Stuffed OlivesmatFurr

10c, 20c, 30c

Oxo 1Liquid Cleaning Fluid

-JQcMtke* olothet totter and whiter as a take* out the dirt

For many household cleaning 'purposes.

Desserts 3 pkfi20e

A nti i»pui» d««t«n mat f 9—Hn

S . , Cheese »27<OSCO Calif.

Tasty Food* at Saving* I4K0 Com Starch P»I 7oOSCO 8 t t t Who)« Grain Rie« "> P > S 1 3 «OSCO Quick Mads Tapioca 3pkf«2OoFanning'* Bread and Butter Pickle* Mr2SeaSCO Cider or Whit* Distilled Vinegar . . . • » ' 15cJell-0 or My-T-Flna Deuerts 3 o>>i> 26c

Carefully made, baked in oar ownbakerie, as you like it !

Bread fSupreme 8c

Victor Bread P " " 1nof

Peanut Butter l m b " r 10cOSCO Pure Jellies tumh"r 15cOSCO Pure Pre«ervea )tr 23c

Morton's SaltWhen It Rain, It Pour,

IIIRegular or Iodized

Fin« fre* running salt. Always ready to use.

Candy Specials /Assorted

Chocolates n '"" 39cHerth«y Chocolate

Kisses

Emerald Brand Large Budded

Walnutsib 32c

Full rnetted, rich flavored nut* Irom California'* famousgrows. Idial for *alad*. cake*, candie*. dsssarts and manyother oooking U M »

Our Own Bakery Special !

25cLong Cocoanut—and— each

Long Decorette Cakes

N. B. C. Special,^lb29c

2 i.r*. <m«. 2 1 c

RobenetteRaspberry

Premium Soda Crackers

Cakes

,tW FINEST FRESH PRODUCE 1Fancy New Asparagus bunoh 39cFresh Tender Peas 3 ""29cFancy Winesap Apples 3 R>a29c

Large Golden Bananas . . . , . , ' " " 27cgFresh Spinachlew Charleston Cabbage

5c25c

Kirkman'sBorax

One It* bni ranpUrr

Marshmillows An,?n

MalO-Whipboth for 2 5f

Kirfanan'sSoap Chips'8 rge pk(! 23'

CARTEBET PRESS FRH)AY, MAY 9, 1930 SECTION TWO PAGE THREB

READE'S PERTH AMBOY THEATRESX U X J I U U D I T I MAJmTICXXZS

READE'STELEPHONE

Seven Days Beginning Tomorrow, May 10

30 STARS ENTERTAIN YOUat Hollywood'* jol-

lie»t frolic. Spark-

ling, intimate, tune-

ful. Join in the

fun!

You're InvitedTo Hollywood'. jolliMt frolic The all-starparty. Thirty famous fihn folk entertain,•infinf, dancing, romancing. ~"drama too. Song hito galore,•howgirl beauties. DanlingCOLOR •eene*. A forgeoua,•tar-ttudded festival—friendlymate as a house-party.

M.li... DEtimin,

Continuous

-Saturday,

»ily *t 2i00.1 7 » J •P.rformkBC*

Suodtr iwi

THE HOUSE OF

TALKIES and SOUND1 M I fTRTH AMBOI

$2.00BROADWAYAttractions

forEOc

There'sScores ofTECHNI-9

glittering,and ntti- ,

Join The Fun!

'ANYTIME'S THE TIMETO FALL IN LOVE'fling BudtTy Rogers Urni' 'tXtpMif'Roth i/i one of the romanticgems of

PARAMOUNTON PARADEall your film friends making love, singing,dancing . . . having a wonderful time. Inthe most delightfully intimate entertain-ment you've ever imagined. See and hear

,'SWEEPIN THECLOUDS AWAY' .

as Maurice Chevalier and hiafifty flighty femmes sing and

dance it. Another lyric festival.In TECHNICOLOR.

Maurice. Chevalier sings "All I Want laJuBt One Girl"—and you'll feel that you'rethat girl.

Thirty stars — and they're not acting!

Coming For One Week Beginning Tomorrow, May 10

The SCREEN SCORESan IMMORTALTRIUMPH!

ME*. BERT

.Uyade". Come and meet them personally.

Well "What DID Cleopatra Say?". HelenKane tells you that, too, in "Paramount onParade", Of course the answer is "Boop-boopa-doop".

Here's dancing that's dancing! "Dancingto Save Your Sole"! Nancy Carroll dancesand sings it in "Paramount on Parade".

Hear Broadway's big-time melody makersin "Paramount on Parade". Music that'smusic from Abe Lyman and His Band.

Three mad wags put over the hot ones in"Paramount on Parade". L e o n Errol,Skeets Gallagher, Jack Oakie crackingwise!

Over the house-tops to the moon! Cheva-lier and his singing-dancing beauties takeyou on a cloud-sweeping voyage! A gor-geous riot in TECHNICOLOR. It's anotherof the pulse-quickening interludes in "Par-amount on Parade".

Let's go! Everybody's marching to themusic of "Paramount on Parade"!

WtMSAstounding

Also

MOVIETONE NEWSAnd

MOVIETONE SHORTS

It bat »m»Md th* world. . . . it will •m»w you~~tM« drama of a manwho** advmtur* in loveana battle turned tn« tideof empire and swept aproud and pompous dyn-asty into dissolute ruin

Ihe CASE OF

SERGEANT

Cheater MORRIS

Betty COMPSON

Jean HERSHOLT

A mighty cast bringingthe art of dialog todramatic perfection onthe screen.

Also Movietone Newst

and Movietone Shorts

4-DAYS-4BEGINNING SAT. MAY 10

"Dangerous Paradise"

You Can't Resist—Nancy Carroll'* love-making. In this dar-ing, adventurous South Se« romance. Herfirst •tarring role. She's tweeter than"Sweetie".

NANCY CARROLLin

"DangerousParadise"

with

RICHARD ARLENWARNER OLAND

More bewitching than she was in "TheDance of Life" or "Close Harmpny". Awoman-hating man and a man-loving worn- 'an aloi\e in a South Sea paradise. Hand-'some Richard Arlen ae the tropical lover.Directed by William ("WingB") Wellman.

DEADFSEMODELED CRESCENTPopular Prices, Matinees 10c and 20c, Evenings 15c and 35c

3 - DAYS - 3BEGINNING WED. MAY 1 4

GEORGE SIDNEYAND

CHARLES MURRAY- IN -

"AROUND THE CORNER"A LAUGH RIOT

They find a baby in front of their pawnshop.18 years later Rosie (Joan Peers) is a beautifulgirl. Each picks a suitor for her. There aremany clashes between the rivals.

PAGE FOUR SECTION TWO FRIDAY, MAY !>, 1930 CARTERET PRESS

News of the World Told in PicturesBored With Life international Sailing Race On Hundredth Birthday

LONDON—Yawning for the great outdoors—Abdul expresses hit

displeasure with existence In his barred cage at the Wd htn: " ~™

Recording Tap Dance

CHICAGO—A close-up showing Miss Madallm- Parker recording /

a tap dance at the Brunswick Recording Studios,

Picturesque Jerusalem

JKRUHAI.EM A scene with odd doorways and stairs whichmight have been In a modernistic movie -during the visit of one ofthe Hadassah nurses, supported by the Women's Zionist Organiza-tion of America. _ i

Pedalling His Own Canoe

'Nl?W"YORK.--€h«rl.'H H (lurk, inventor, pcciiillinK his"pocket impeller", a new romliinntinri McyWe and nidi-wheel,which later ig intended to he ninlnnzrd for canoe and rowboattravel.

SAN REMO, ITALY A general view of the yachts as they raced along the course here during th«

International sailing regatta, in which five nations had sixty ahlpg entered. ,

Take Part in First Eastern Glider Meet

BAYSIDE, L. I.-In rear, left to right: Wallace Franklin, flyer; W. Hawley Bowlus, who taughtLindbergh how to glide; Mrs. Keith Miller, flyer; Capt. W. Newton Lancaster, who, with Mrs. Miller, flewfrom England to Australia; Capt. Franecarl Schlleff, famous German ace; Rodman Wanamaker 3d; Prof.Alexander Klemln of the New York University's Ouggenhelm School of Aeronautics; Raymond E. Dowd ofthe Russell Manufacturing Company, and O. T. Stork, President of the C. T. Btork Corporation. In front,left to right: Richard W. Atwater, flyer; Lieut. R. F. Barnaby, United States Navy, who flew a gliderfrom the dirigible LOB Angelea, and Capt. Frank M. Hawks, first to make a cross-country gilder flight, atthe New York glider meet, the firrt to be held in the East. _j

Face Slush Fund Probers

Mrs. Ruth Hunna McConnlck, Member ot Congress from Illinois, who defeated Senator Charles 8.Deiieen, faced the Special Campaign Expenditures Committee of the Senate at the Capitol in Washing!ton. Left to right: Senators Robert P. Wanner, (irrald P. Nye, Chairman, and C. C, Dill, Mrs, Ruth HannaMcCormlck and Senator Charles B. Deneen.

Jamestown Settlers Honored

VIRGINIA BEACH. VA -Oov John O Pollard of Virfrinlu and Mrs Prntiz N;iylor, Deneral Com-mittee Chairman, with (!ov. Mardaman of (Ipoi-glu In the rear, as tliry iivrivivi, attending the 323d anni-versary celebration of the landing.of the Jamestown settler*.

"Mother" Mary Jones, veteran labor leader, heroine of manyhard fought struggles in the rise of American worklngmen, recentlycelebrated her hundredth birthday at her home near the capital city.

National Baby Week

CHICAGO—Mrs, Susan Dumlt, left, is shown with her baby,M&nna, and Nurse Elizabeth Alexander, at the Ashland Welfare Sta-tion, where baby Marina Is being examined. Mrs. Dumlt is especiallycareful with Marina, as ten of her children out of thirteen have died.

A Doubles Match for Life

PHILADELPHIA- WIlmiT Allison, brilliant Davis Cup star, withhis bride, the former Miss Anne Caswell. Allison and other memberswill practice here for several weeks.

An Air Demon

A member of the Army Air C^rps In his grotesque protectivemask and goggles before going up to an approximate height of tlxmiles In a fighting plane. ,

ARTEBET PRESS FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1930 SECTION TWO PAGE FIV1

[lof jjODS£V£LTT, H.c/.

WHO CA»ttLi KETHL NAMt oT

MOTT RADIO SHOP101 Roosevelt Ave,CARTERET, N. J.

Phone: Carteret 1668

W 0 0 D B R 1 D G E

NEW YORKCANDY KITCHEN

Iftnnfaetnmt and Dttltri InSubtly P«f*

CANDIES A*D ICE CREAM«fl Main St Woodbrldf*. T«L 48

CUSTAV BLAUM

Groceries and Provision*82 M»ln 8tr««t Woodbridft

This WeekAHIIHH BHISHANK

Workers Live Longer.Keully Big l'igures.British Worry.Sodom and Gomorrah,

A report published by Mr. Freder-lck II. Ktker, president ot the Metro-pnlltHii Life Insurance Company, con-cerning 19,000,000 Industrial policyholders In the United States and1'aiiHiln. ahowa that workerB ar« llv-Ing longer than they lined to.

Thanks to science and prosperity,the dfutli rate among wage earnershait diminished. Mr. Ecfcer's statlstl-cal bureau shows a new tow deathrate of 9,4 per 1,000 during Maroh.

Mortj udultB that live, (ewer babiesthat die, la a good programme.

still uuiiiiiuKL^ , Uie mnih of lureethousand years. They even furnishedextraordinary biological data of perl-odlral event*, to prove the aex ol thesalt statue.

Nobody has seen the statue re-cently.

Dr. Kuhlmann. Norwegian scientistvisiting Mexico, carrying letters fromhigh government officials, visited InHoly Week the remote Indian villageof Amoioc.

At his request, Indian children di-rected him to a bathing pool.

A young Indian mother, Avellna deIk Rosa, seeing him with the children,spread the report he had oome to cutoff their head* and boll their bodiesto get oil lor flying machines.

The Indians, driven to saperstttlousfreniy, Immediately stqned the na-fortunate man to death.

It lilg figures fascinate you, readabout an extraordinary bridge game,thoroughly authenticated, In whichthe man of Glaitonbury, England,held a hand,

Koch partner had thirteen cards otthe same suit.

The jnau with 18 spades made a.big slam. Mathematicians say t)iechances against such an occurrenceare two thousand two hundred andthirty-live million trillion to one.

The British trillion Is « mllltotf-milUplied by a million mujtlplled by amillion.

With us It Is only a million multi-plied by a thousand multiplied by athousand.

Britain has a new worry In India-fear of treachery among native troops,

Only a few British are In India, lessthan the population of a smalt Amer-ican city, among 300,000,000 Hindus.

To what extent native troops andpolice can b» relied on, in view otIntense national feeling, Is a serious

le British are tmuinf H u f ftroops, official reports referring to"unsatisfactory c o n d u c t," whichmeans that natives would not obeyorders to sboot their own people.

Cost ot travel by air and rail be-tween New York and the SouthwestIs reduced to less than regular rail-road and Pullman car travel.

Flying from New York to Dallas,Texas, or,. Oklahoma City, you lave$5.N In cash, 18 hours In time.

And these cuts are made by thePennsylvania Railroad Itself.

Wise Oeneral Atterbury, head otthe Pennsylvania, decides that If he>nust have air competition, he willown the competition.

Tn the ashes were found skeletonsOf wicked men and women. Imple-ments discovered show that the city,destroyed twenty centuries beforeChrist, was In the Bronte Age. Theyhad not learned how to use Ifon orsteel.

When flrt) r ' brimstone, as yos.remember, de. ,-od tne ».-...ed citiesnear the Red Sea, only Lot and hiswife escaped. And she, poor thing,,was turned Into a pillar of salt be-cause, she disobeyed orders andlooked bac vward. .

In the Middle Ages bishops andothers testified that they had actual-ly seen Mrs. I marie of • illd salt.

Ot all curses, superstition Is theworst. It has? butchered, Burned aliveand tortured millions. And Its holdIs still fixed solidly on more than onethousand million human beings.

In jJuyllght saving regions the clockis advanced one hour. For some thatmeans an extra hour of early work.For others It means another hoar'sPlay. For the majority It loon be-comes routine. The clock Is watched,as usual.

Unconsciously, a majority hare ac-tual hours added to their days andyears to tbelr lives, The automobile,saving time, adds to It.

The telephone, trebling time's pos-sibilities, has created a new, Infinitelymore efficient type of business man,

A man who dies at eighty, havingused the new time savers Intelligent*ly, will have lived, actually, the equiv-alent of 240 years, Instead of 80.

Find "Dry Ice" Well.

Washington.—"Dry Ice" may be pro-duced In commercial quantities fromcarbon monoxide wells on the publicdomain in the desert stretches ot theWe«t.

Such wells have been brought Inby prospector! ID Colorado and Utah,George D. Parkinson of Salt Lake Cityhas Inforni^d^the Department of theInterior,

The prospectors are protected bytheir original exploration permit! andthe government will accept a royaltyof two cents per 1,000 cubic feet forthe first two years of actual operation.

"Dry Ice," made from carbon mon-oxide, has twice the refrigeration effi-ciency of water Ice and keep! longer.

Sacred Beatta Shockedby Bare-Legged Girlt

New York.—Bare-legged girls andmen wearing plus-fours are barred fromth« presence ot sacred elephants inSlam,

Advices from Bangkok are thatAmerican tourists visiting the ele-phants' stables were compelled to re-turn to a liner and put on more digni-fied garb.

QuJrnplatt BornLeoma, Tenn.—Into the family of

Mr. and lirs-'Weaver Bantt—which al-ready boasted twins and triplets—hatranow come quadruplets, four boys.

3 4-aaiaW • » • • • ••aqtoaamt hr «*wy

k « » a « l staal

wltWattumlH

m adjutt-

This SturdyChevrolet SixIV, Ton Track * 5 2 0

No matter what your buil-nets may be, bear In mindwhen you buy a truck thatWt wtM to choot* a Ski.A flx-eyllnder enftlne runsunoothly-aavtag both thechante and body from theharmful effects of vibra-tion. It It more flexible hitraffic. It require* less ftear-•hlf tinft. And it maintain*high vpeeds more easily.

The Chevrolet Utility Truckgives you all the superior'

Ities of lii-cyllnder per-formance—lor it is poweredby a great M-horeepower•faccyUnder valve-in-headengine. And, in addition,Itbring* you all the ad-vantages of modern designlisted at the left.

Gome In today and tee this-sturdy six-cylinder J^TonTruck. You can see foryourself why truck usersare finding* It's wise tochoose a Chevrolet Sixl

"If I could have but oneelectric home labor saver

my Thor speed iron"

HUNDREDS of women will

tell you that! We know!

The easiest way to do home's

hardest job.

Hand ironing by old methodsis

by far the hardest job left in the

home. If 8 the cause of backaches,

tired arms, exhausted bodies.

Now comes relief in a speed method that thou-

sands upon thousands have adopted. A method

that has the approval of leading home economists,

women writers and housewives everywhere. For it

takes the drudgery out of ironing. It does better

work. It irons everything.

Iron with 10 minutes practice

The Thor Speed Iron is simple to operate. With

10 minuted practice you can iron all the fiat work.

That means some 90% of your laundry. It has an

ironing surface equal to 10 flat-

ironi. Heats in 4 minutes.

Cash price $79.50 or $84.25

if purchased on terms of $5

down and eighteen months to pay

balance.

Surely you will wish to see this

new type speed washer and ironer

that costs no more, yet does both washing and

ironing. Come in and let us show you how it works,

or fill in and mail the coupon for further particulars

about this complete laundry jervice.

, r T

Public Service Electric and Gas CompanyPletM send w« Uluitritta ltterstar*deicrlblnf tne Thar Sp««d Iron and Uunew Thor wnblnf ind Ironing michlne.

Oh, of Conn*!lite, Burgles a scientist, Is a beter«-

gweoos collection of Irreconcilablephenomena. Jcit tha tip that theworld hat breathlessly bMo waltinffor 1—Cincinnati Enquirer.

If You Want WorBeing a son-in-law In a great and

fast moving business is one of thehardest jobs of all. In prestige itranks one step below the office boy.—Woman's Home Companion.

*ra (UaAra ««ulp-• m t on tfca Cfcanofe*track i M art Includekufc

It's wise tochoose a SIX

*440(Ptak-op b« <|tm)

•MMtMlvary. . *IMM"

A body typeavailable lor

every business needLeading body manufacturers havedeveloped, for the new Chevrolet *-cylinder trucks, an unusually completeline of bodies available in variouscapacities, special designs and typesto nt the needs of every business.

ECONOMY GARAGE CO.Telephone 675

30 Roosevelt Ave. Carteret, N. J.

WhenWasYour Street

Paved?Traffic requirements changedmany years ago. How aboutyour street pavements? Arcthey relics of the horse andbuggy era?

Motor vehicles need strong,smooth pavements.

Portland cement concrete\m the saf«at and bestsurface for city street*

PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATIONM7 Madiwn AvenueNHW YORK CITY

A National Orgnnisation toImprove and Extetui the Vnea of Concrete

THE

Paulus DairyMam Office: 189-195 New St., New Brunswick, N. J.

Phone 2400 Established 1890

PAULUS'OS1T1VELY „

ERFECTLY M I L KASTEURIZEDWalker-Gordon Certified Milk

Wendmere Farms Raw Golden Guernsey MilkSuydam's and Rutger'B Special Raw Tuberculin

Tested Milk

DISTRIBUTION COVERSNew Brunswick, Highland Park, South River, Sskyreville,

Parlin, South Amboy, Perth Amboy, WoodbridfeCarteret, Fords and Metuchen, N. J.

HOLOHAN BROS.GARAGE

Dunlop Tires nnd TubesTire and Tube Repairing

Full Line of Auto Accessories

Cor. Aroboy Ave. and Second St. WOODBRIDCE

RABINOWTTZ HARDWARE"If It's Hardware, We Have"It!"

Full Lin« of

HARDWARE, PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES

HOUSE FURNISHINGS

56S-665 Roosevelt Avenue CARTERET, N. J.

Tel. Carteret 812 and 1018

PAGE .SIX SECTION TWO

JUST HUMANS

FRIDAY, MAYO, 1930 CARTERET PRESS

By OENS CARR YOU KNOW ME, Al

"Teacher Sayi He's th' Brightest Bird In Schoolr"That's Because ft' S*m Shines Through His B e u r

The Prehistoric Blues

Opened By Mistake

fjaj fj W M ^^*m • wr^mmmmmm wvaw w^ aajaBi ^ i v p f *

« M l at, I wwU (tn kwiqr »hnr <W(k owy

«*• ••* Ua» »«»••• « • « ••haw RaU MartM**1 lUrta** to pitch far d» Udiut-Maaa«aA. W. • « ! a m la Ua Mat Aa «*!»

i .t th. p«4«. 1W• • Marat al • M l Irnm. u j «U 1

»r M L it toA. «M4 •>

4«K1 rw Bui H IM nU «• «H

Mll-ltoWMlUltWUKto itart M H m l •* Hit trwk whkh i§ *bMt th>• b *to» « U x tk'l k*4 «w Wt It I M U KMl i m a VI «aU ««lr « • * » to Nth U M| «M

By RING LARDNERHE CEkID?ME A GILL IF O R Tioo t

VJEU, I1LS<W I AIN'T.IOEBJ To

HOtP»TAL

IHADP,QOogOF t\ DOCTOf?

YOU DOW'TCO ToHOSPITALTHE

MfcTTECo UJKlCHOPChJEDOKI AMD THEM

PiTCKEOUOHLV OF THE

GEAROCD

REGIAR FELLERS Jimmie Puts Ws Point Over By GENE BYRNESI TAKE IT

AU.BACK! HALFOF THE FELLERSM THIC CLASS

AiNfrDOMBELLSt

GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES He Can't Swim Well Enough Foe Ti«l By ANTTA IXX39

fCopQcx), i WEAt.i.y

A GOOD REASON, TOO B A D M ^ A N D

mm* j I«O MUCH— NWHV OOKT VOO/EVBER W O R K _ L ^ OH BUT

RBAL.L.N —SHOULD

Iff YOUR WIFE TAKING DANCING LESSONS, TOO? By RUBE GOLDBERG

"Hun did you come to miss youtrain?"

"Why the derned thing was on timethis morning."

MUST FEEL RELIEVED

"My wltts tongue I* sever still, tibetalked ber head off rhla morning."

"How relieved yoa must feel."

NOT CONGENIAL

"Why (iocs Tom seem to shuo theiiclely of ladles?"

"Well, you Hce. he doesn't ginoke.1

CAUSE OF AFFINITY

• l e r f l r " K \ < n t i- l lnw Mrnuni) butv

-KM-iiiK I " i • r. n -• 1 • 11 • t Miss 111 • h t i l * mill) .

"liy." M111;i.'I•* - "VPS; SN(>'» verf

(ioiirire—"Von heiirrt ot Jim B rottenl ink? Me WNS neiirl.v drnwnwj, hul a([Irl ri'81'IIPd h i m " HUIT.V— "Y I -H ; hill

he hud even v\<ir»f luck1 inier—Hh<"iiinrrlt'il him."

T H l * IS Go«t> PoRTH6 MOSCLES OF

Ot" SOME

A U b SOUP

TOO TlR€b TOWALK -T© -rrte

ClAS5(CA-_

A MAM COMES HfirtSAT WISHT HE IS A?T t o Be

IN THE FAC

fAMt. L,lTT(-e

© M

Am..)c.n N.w« F«lur». Inr.

LIKE MCLASS! CAtDtfAJCI

AMti

M , STIU AGOOP BOYSCOUT,

POP* I DIP MVGOOD

g WwMn W*wt>*Kr Onloti

you SHOULDHAVE A UK3kEL*WHATDIP VOL/ DO 7OMY?

FINNEYOFTHE FORCEAH, THE FCESM SPQlMfl Alft .

MAKE* ME BE WANTIA4' A VACATWN1.-WITH HALF A CHANCr,VOHUT A F&IMELOAFEB Ol'D MAK£ / d ' D 10lr*C AJOB JtST LOAFW SOM6UJH6RC

_ THE BEST fAVIN JOB UMTwJ ^4E"MOST H0U0AV5 01 KIM WIMK AV 15Ti-IAT AV COW6RI5SMUW! - THE O»UVTOIME HE HAS 1& WORK IS JrST 1R/*L»-AVLICTION. HE ECES WAT ONTHE GOVKSNWIAIT'5 tOIME- Aw" I

^

o

-r HE (3IT5 TEW THOUSAM ,rD0OAQS A VEAfc AK)1 A LOT AV/NOTORlETV- As/ COUQSE HE HAS

TD BLV HIS FCOCK COAT OUT AVWAT, AM" HIS f*AQTV 0HCES6,- &OTHE WAJ LET HIS HAlB GOOU! OH,AM C0UQ9E.0NCT IN A WHOIL£ HEHAS TO CKQlSTEN A GcW-BoAT

ATWEti H « STATE

\

Spring Air and Congressmen, 8OT HE KiM REST UP AFWEOTHAT BV HCADIM* A COMMlTrEE-TO lAJ'JKWlSATC OOXIDITIONS '

HUTENtft RAAftT AV W E COU.»MOST ALLUClXj' AM' CESTFUL

THE FEATHERHEADSPAMhJV K6PT HAQPlMQTHE VJAV 1 OBfcSS,

AVJP SO FIAJALLY I DjD- I SUPR0S6 AL6V DOES ADO A

LITTLE DK3MITV-

VJHLL.SAV 6OME-4lXX3xFANJNV • HOVJ

SOU LIKE IT?-v

«~

It Makes a HitU4E KINDEST 1UIAJG

I CAM "WlMK OF TO3AV.FELIX - IS TOASK SOU u j E,MOO GOT >T ?•••• I

%

CAKTERET PRESS FRIDAY, HAY 9, 1W0 aECTION TWO PAGE SEVEN

Jack Rabbit PictureColoring Contest

ii\ it\vii> m m

Color a Picture and Win a PrizeHello, Boys and Girls!

Color this picture as well as you can* And send it at once to the Juck Rabbit Man, in care of

CARTERET PRESSA PRIZE—your Uncle Dave's beautiful Little Jack Rabbit Book-

will be given for the best picture sent in.Winner's name announced weekly.

Yours for a story, 'DAVID CORY,

The Jack Rabbit Man.

Danny Fox was in a dreadful fix.Yes indeed, this old robtxr hanllyknew what to do. Every time h«>started out from his den in the rockyhillside, somebody would call over Uu-wire:

"Danny Fox is going hunting!"After that warning, of course,

everybody locked the door and pull-ed down the window shades.

It happened after a while thatDanny Fox never went out in thedaytime at all—he just waited untilsupper W H over and Mr*. Moon wasWdd»n in the sky before he steppedout of his d*n.

"My dear", he said, one darkgloomy night to MM, FOX, "maybe 1can bring home a chicken, and off hestarted with a bis empty baK over hisshoulder. By and by, as he crept thruthe Shady Forest, he «aw a littletwinkling star.

"Now, who's that, I wonder?" heukod himself in a whteper, but, ofcounts, as he did not know, he got noanswer.

"I must be careful," He thought,"it might be the Polietm«n Dog's lan-tern.,"

•So the oW robtwr fox hid behind atree and waited. By and by, after awhile, who should come along but a

y. My, how h*r little lanternkered In the wind.'Oh, ho!" thought Danny Fox,

'• afraid? I'm glad,it's not the

Name AgeAddre* „City or Town »

fl

little flrofly kept on her way,after h*r little,;Mgtit had disap-

peared In the darkntii, the old rob-ber c a m out from his hiding place.

Then on* he started again for thehenhouse.

By and by he reached the OldBarnyard. But just as he crept

JKSund the Big Red Barn, the faarm-er*» dog saw nun.

"Bow wow!" went Old Sic 'em,tugging at the chain which kept himhome nights in his little bungalow,"wow".

"Keep quiet, can't you?" whinedDanny Fox.

"Get out!" snarled old Be 'em, "I'llcall the farmer."

Just then who should hop by in themoonlight but Little Jack Rabbit.Dear met I hope that wicked foxwon't catch him before next week,dear boys and girls.

And now, dear boys and girls,color the illu«tration to this storyand perhaps you will be one of thelucky little artiita to win a LittleJack Rabbit Book. Send your pictureto me, care of this paper.

The next five beat will receive free

tickets to the RiU Theatre, Carteret^

Your* for a story,DAVID CORY,

The Jack Rabbit Van.

AHWAY, N.I. CENTRAL AVE. Phone Rah*ni12

LAST TIMES TODAY—

ALL NATURAL COLORSINGING «fc TALKING

"SONG OF THE WEST"—With—

JOHN BOLES -^ V1V1ENNE SEGAL — JOE E. BROWN

TOMORROW — ONE DAY ONLYON THE SCREEN

RICHARD

ARLE1

Bernice Claire and Alexander Gray In "Spring Is Here" at theRah way Theatre Sunday.

BURNING UP"M [10NMD

.AM HAl'.DT• * • •

. MARY BRIAN 'H* r i E S S E U 0 N

.....,• ,.f 00 H.tn onHcu, TULIV MARSHALL

ON THE STAGE

RAHWAY'S "ACEVAUDEVILLE

MONDAY — TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

anJ AudttncftlnUn,tptUi>ound !

r

Early "Mall 5«rrie»"The first recorded postal service, al-

though It was not known under thatme, was probably In the form ofe messenger reliy service founded

Cyrus, king of Persia, abont 586B. C. China in the year 1280 i;A. D.bad 800,000 horses and men to carrycommunications.

Followed Ma»t« in DaathThe old donkey which once carried

Georges GlemenceHU died just a fewweeks after Us fntnous master. Thisdonkey, which was more than thirtyyears old, formerly palled the smallcart which carried the Tiger sbontthe small town of Bernouville, wherehe was • councillor.

lflMIMIAttfljr^ m

FLOWERSFOR

MOTHERKNOWING THAT YOU WOULD SEND MOTHKR HOWERS ON "HER DAY", WE HAVE ANTICIPATED YOURWISHES. WE HAVE IN OUR GREENHOUSES ANDSHOW ROOMS THE MOST UP-TO-DATE DISPLAY.JUST THE KIND MOTHER LOVES—FOR YOU TOCHOOSE AND SEND TO HER TO EXPRESS YOUR AP-PREC1ATION OF LIFE'S MOST PRECIOUS GIFT. PER-HAPS SHE UKES CUT FLOWERS, POT PLANTS, OR ALOVELY BASKET OF CUT FLOWERS OR LIVINGPLANTS.

WE HAVE JUST WHAT SfiE WANTS

CALCEOLARIAS, HYDRANGEAS, AZALEAS, BABYRAMBLERS, MARTHA WASHINGTON GERANIUMS,IVY GERANIUMS AND A GORGEOUS DISPLAY OFCOMBINATION PLANTS.

FOR THE GARDEN WE HAVE THE FOLLOWING IN2 ' V POTS READY TO BE PLANTED OUTSIDE:

DUSTY MILLER 76c doz.SCARLET SAGE (salvia) 75c doz.COLEUS (all colors) 75c doz.ZINNIAS (large flower) 76c doz.PETUNIAS (single and double) 75c doz.SWEET ALYSSUM 75c doz.

"™'-~ BBGONIAft-

SNAPDRAGON 76c doz.STOCKS 75c doz.LOBELIAS 75c doz.ALTERNANTHERA .... 75c doz.GERMAN IVY 76c doz.VINCA 76c doz.

76© doz.

IN 3Vi" AND 4" POTS WE H A V E J

GERANIUMS IN BUD AND BLOOMLANTANAS :BEGONIAS : 25cPETUNIAS 20cCANHAS, KING HUMBERT OR FIERY CROSSFUCHSIAS. IJTTLE BEAUTY OR GIANT 35cVINCA, GREEN OR VERIGATEDIVY, GERMAN, PLAIN OR VERIGATEDIVY GERANIUMS / .PELARGONIUMSTOMATO AND PEPPER PLANTS *

26c36c

and 36cand 25c

20cand 60c

35c25c76c50c

lc

CARNATIONS FOR MOTHERS' DAY, $2.50 per doz.The larger kind, Boston grown.

Woodbridge Flower ShoppeRAHWAY AVENUE

Phone 1222 WOODBRIDGE, N. J.NO CONNECTION WITH ANY OTHER FLORIST

Phone 1222

3 ITBI iwi lwfwn ww | f f m wavi «FI wa vat wtf \g§ vis i n wi w i m u m WI l¥l Wt lwlilUamiJWiafl 1WB1W ml rut 1WIP •»• ••" ™tX

How One Woman Lost20 Pounds of Fat

Lost Her Doable Chin—Lost Her Prominent Hipt—Lojt Her Sluggishness

' •T '

Gained Physical Vifor —Vivacioosness — a Sjbapdr Figure

RAMONNOVAPRODevilhayCaw

Tf you're fsl—remore the ctumlKRUSCHEN SALTS contain the

«U mineral tills your body ornns,glands «nd nerves mutt have to func-tion properly.• When your vital orgtni fail to per-

form their work correctly—your bowelsand kidneys can't throw off that waitematerial—before you reilite it—you'regrowing hideously fat!

Try ha l f s t e s a p o o n f u l ofKRUSCMEN SALTS in a dan of hotwmer e\ery morning—in three weeksltd on the ncales anil nuln liow manypounds of (at have vanished.

Notice also that you hire (alliedin tticrgy—your ekin ia clearer—youreyes sparkle with glorious health—youfeel younger in body—kmner'in mind.KRUSCHEN will give any fat ponona joyous surprise.- Get an 85c bottle of KRUSCHENSALTS (lasts four weeks).If eren thisfirst bottle doesn't convince you this"is the easiest, safest and surest way tolose fat—if you don't feel a superbImprovement in health—*o gloriouslyenergetic—vigorously alive—yourmoney gladly returned.

AUTAUUNCA f i«M MM» r tNAl

.. . VlWUHI

MARION

HARRISDOROTHY

ANALL TALKING

|O* Smuatianal Drama

For QualityWALL PAPER

PAINTS aod VARNISHESTRY THE

Newi|York V/all Paper Co.356 STATE STREET PERTH AMBOY, N. J.

•«.*8*flPf^(s»#»Na!Wri

Disappointed I

Th* tnuineu manwho phnntd avacation and Hadlo cut it shore andto back to the office

The travtlenwho couldn't „-.roomi at tht hotel TKe jounj bride,uihcre ihry want- homesick for hered to UOy fntndwnd family

The takman whotraveled a hundtidmilitant found hiiclient out

k

Disappointed!—and all so needlessly. Letyour telephone keep you from similar dis-appointments. It's as easy to call out oftown as to call your next door neighbor—and nd>t at all expensive.

, NEW JERSEY BELL TELEPHONE COMPANYA ^ T B W JERSEY INSTITUTION BACKBD BY NAT1OKAL M|O;U».C1S

'Jgnikf t Cvti and Wouadf

Prcrent infection! Treatevery cut, wound orscratch with this power-ful non-iKiisonous anti-jeptit. /.onitc actuallykills germs. Helps toheal, too.

-famous the world over

Pinaud'sShampoo

leans your hair lustrous,htalthy, and not loo dry!At your dealer's—or send 5 oefor full-size botllt to Pinaud,Depl. M., 110 E i i St.,NtwYork.fSmpUbettkfrtt]

We Sell the flomplete £ine ofJohns -Manville Shingles

C. E. BOIN COMPANY567 Roosevelt Ave. CARTERET, N. J.

Tel. Carteret 1350

17« aiOTH BTRHT

^ -V r

ChifF

or

1.95Wei(ht

UWA P«ir

Blu* Bird "S«rv«t You Right"

J'AIJKKICHT MKCTION TWO FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1980 CARTKRKT PRESS

206 SMITH STREET

I THE PERTH AMBOYj QAS LIGHT COMPANY•

• Heating and Cooking Appliances

I•

I•

If

I

Ruud Automatic and StorageWater Heaters

New Process Gas Ranges

Con-Dcn-Rit Radiant LogsOdorlew—Efficient—Inexpensive

Telephone 3510 Perth Amboy

"THE DENTIST WHO DOES NOT HURT"

PAINLESS EXTRACTIONASLSKP OK AIT JIB

FLATM-CROWNS-BRIDGEJ-FUXINGITHAT LOOI AND FEEL NATURAL

FREE — Elimination, Eitimatt tod Advice — FREEOb* t/Tfim P*tU*tt Cm Hnt Thmr W*rk CmfkuJin Ont D*j

D R . M A L L A S "'MARKET 8T ;

BOOM—• A. M. t» » P. M. IUNDAV-10 A. M. to 1 T. U. !

THE MOTOR QUIZ(How lUnr C»n Tou AnaotrT)

Q. What country lead* in roadImprovement and construction

Ana. United States.Q. What countries lead In

mileage of surfaced highway*?An*. European countries. Their

surfaced highways began withthe old Roman*, and have beenkept In good condition through-out the afe*. Europe has 839,-000 mll«s of surfaced roads ascompared to 150,000 In the Unit-ed States.

Q. I* gasoline consumptionleas on high type roadaT

AM. yes. Where a vehicle willrequire a gallon f o r 1 5 m l l e * 0 D

a high type road It will require1.2 gallon* of gasoline on tbt In-termediate type, and 1.47 on thepoor type of road.

Q. How do different typeroad* affect maintenance, coat,and depreciation of automobiles?

Am A* a type of road be-come* poorer maintenance costand depreciation Is somewhat Inthe same ratio as tbe Increasein gasoline consumption shownabove.

Find Aac.«nt CarriageBelgrade.—A carriage thuught to

be a relic of tlie Bronte age, haa beenunearthed near tlie village of DupljaraIn Vojvodlaa. It la a three-wheeledaffair and bear* an efllgy of a bird-headed diet)', It la made of bakedclay.

Diagram N*«l»dAddad to our collection of baffling

remark*, orerheird In the coun« of

ooks M If ne were older than helook*. "—Detroit News.

Chevrolet Enlistedbr igh t On Pests

Government Buyi Fleet OfChevrolet Sedan* For West-ern Dept. Of Agriculture ToBe Used In Campaign Again•t Corn Borer.

Renewed vigor in the Govern-ment'* co-operative battle with thefarmer against injurious crop insect*wan promised for thia month withthe delivery of a fleet of ChevroletSedan Deliveries to the Western di-vision of the department of Agricul-ture.

Thi* particular fleet ia to be usedin the campaign agsinit the corn bor-er and is to concentrate its work inWent Virginia, Kentucky Indiana,Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin.Similar fleets, enlisted in the waragainst the fruit fly, poll weevil, etc.are in operation in all parts of theUnited States.

Every ear in the fleet recently de-livered is a standard Chevrolet six,with sedan body, in which equipmentessential to a successful pursuit ofthe Getrerronent's war ii transported.As the cars left the Flint plant ofthe Chevrolet Motor Company, theywere paraded through the streets ofthat city with the national bannerfluttering from either side of eachcar, aa though mobilising for the"war" in which they were soon totake part

Selection of Chevrolet* for thiswork was made by the Governmentbecause of their dependability andeconomy of operation in transferringactivities from one "battle lectorto another, it was explained.

OU Ag* mad YouthAge ma; have one tide, but astured-

Ij Youth haa the other. There Is noth-more certain than that both are

wrong.—Robert tool* Stevenson (18M-1804), "Crabbed Age and Youth."

Turkish Woman Drive*Taxi In Constantinople

The old adage, "It's a man'sworld" is fast becoming obsolete evenin Turkey where feminine rights, asanch, have only recently begun toreceive attention. There are few field*that seem leas fitted for women,even in the western world, than thatof taxi-driver yet in Constantinoplea young convent-bred girl recentlyproclaimed her emancipation by talcing a chauffeur's test and embarkingon a career of taxi-driving.

Mouamer Hanoum was just eigh-teen years of age when she startledConstantinople by announcing barintention of taking a chauffeur'scoarse. She subsequently passed thesevere physical examination and, in• business-like) manner asserted thatshe was prepared to enter the driver'stests. She displayed such unusualskill at the wheel that she completedtwr course in record time and cap-tured highest honors.

As a full-fledged taxi-chauffeur,Miss Mouamer's first considerationwas the choice of her vehicle. Sheselected a Chevrolet aix which haabeen specially equipped for taxiwork. She is now happily employeddriving passengers around the Turk-ish capital and enjoying the distinc-tion of being the first woman to en-ter the chauffeur's profession in thatcountry.

the painless way iwihSAPOLINSPEED ENAMEL

CLOSS FINISHssW no smelly odor—leave* no laps ot bankmark*!,.. Drici hard and tmoochai gtaasiaA houo and produce! a g}o**Jt Usdnj. . . la 17 new colon—auo black sod

Sold M*d Rxommndti hji

HUMPHREYS & RYAN74 Main Street

Woodbridf«, N. J.

St Louis Soon to HaveMany New Hospitals

St. Louis. Mo.—with hospital conatructlon totaling 110,000,000 achedtiled for completion during 1030, andfire hospitals erected during the lastfive year* at a cost of $7,500,000. St.Lou!a Is experiencing a phenomlnaldevelopment -of honpltnl facilitiescomparable to any city In the UnitedStates.

AdT«rttdH«Without sufficient and satisfactory

waycannot pomtbly make any head-

In new markets.—Lord Itlddell.

CAROLYN VALENTINE WRIGHTAnnounces

The Opening of

LKITCfiENTHE FIRST METROPOLITAN RESTAURANT

IN PERTH AMBOY

IN THE

HOBART BLDG., HOBART STREETON

MONDAY, MAY 12th,Jl930

—" XtfltCHEON ^ •

REAL VALUESUSED CARS

We are now offering a special group of

Used Cars at tlie lowest price in our history.

JEFFERSON MOTORS, INC.160 NEW BRUNSWICK AYE. PERTH AMBOY PKONE 15

"Where Used Care Are Sold With a Guarantee"

OUR LIBERAL PLANUSED CARS

A down payment and five dollars per

week will enable you to buy that Used Car.

Values In USED CARS That Defy ComparisonDuring the past few weeks we have taken in trade on the New Chevrolet Six the greatest selection of fine Used Cars in our history. And toreduce our stock immediately we have priced them to sell on sight The cars have been carefully checked over by expert mechanics, and, wherevernecessary have been repaired and carefully reconditioned. A guarantee for thirty days or 1000 miles is your absolute assurance of quality and value.

Come In Today Look Over These Sensational Values1929

Chevrolet CoupeThis car is in A-l shape

throughout. Looks like anew car.

$425.00

1927Nash Sedan

Priced below its rvalue. Good in every respect and fully equipped.

1926Jewett Sedan

If you need a large carto knock around in here itis.

1928Chevrolet Coupe

i In excellent condition,with thousands of miles ofgood service.

$30000

1928Essex Sedan

A beautiful new paintjob on this car. Recondi-tioned and fully equipped.

1926-Ford Coupe

Cheap but very good.Always has been kept ingood running condition.

$50.00

1927Chevrolet LandauWill make you a dandy

second car. Use this in-stead of your new car.

$150.00

1928Ford Coupe

Exceptional value inthis car. Looks almostnew. A good buy.

1928Chevrolet Roadster

A-l condition; g o o dtires and new paint andfully equipped.

$275.00

1926Chevrolet SedanA low price but a good

car. Just the thing to goto work in.

$125.00

1926Chrysler Sedan

This car Will surpriseyou. Look it over — thentry it out.

1927Chevrolet Delivery

A good light panel de-livery. Thoroughly over-hauled. '

1928Chevrolet CoachA good looking car and

just as good as it looks.

$300.00

1927 ChevroletLandau Sedan

See this one. A surprisein store for you. An excel-lent buy.

$250.00

1927 v

Dodge SedanMarked down to thia

low price for this saleonly.

$275.00

1929Chevrolet CoachA late model in the fin-

est condition. Look thisone over.

$425.00

1925

In splendid condition.Marked way below itsreal value.

$250.00

1928Diurant Coupe

A very g o o d littlecoupe. Not run a greatdeal. In good condition

$200.00

1929Chevrolet Track'A panel body and a

canopy top express. Eitherone for

$425.00

1925Bock Cud

_ A $200 value we are of-fering you in this car.

$100.00

1926Boick Coach

Another marked downspecial. Worth a lot moremoney.

$150.00

LET US EXPLAIN

OUR USED CAR

GUARANTEE

JEFFERSON MOTORS, INC.160 NEW BRUNSWICK AVL

PERTH AMBOY, N. J.,"Where Used Car* Aw, Sold With A Guarantee"

PHONE 15

EXCELLENT

VALUES AS LOW AS

$5.00 PER WEEK