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Fonr Page Colored Comic Section Price VOL. XI, No. 8 of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more CARTERET PRESS 12 Pages Today Two Sections I'AKTKRKT Local Odd Fellows Grab League Honors Carteret Team Captures High Teata Score For Loop and Hitt Second Place In Stand- ing. The Carteret Odd Fellows bowl- in? team made hifltory Wednesday night in the Odd Fellows Bowling L i g League ina representing match with the team Pyramid 1/fldge No. 225, of Lyndhurst, rolled on the Slovak alleys in Carteret. Carteret took the three games by wide mar- gins' and in no doing established a now high mark in three-frame team scores. In addition tothat the local pmners made a new high team score for the league in the Mrst game when they piled up n total of 1013 pins. The Carteret team also tvorked into second place in the league ^tending, and possibly he puahed into first place, depending upon the outcome of other league matches this week. The locals already hold the high individual wore of the leasrue in the 268 pina rolled by Matt Sloan re- cently. , Sloan was again high man in the match Wednesday night. In the first game he hit 2-14 pinB but did hot get into the double class again in the match. Harry Chodosh was on© stick short of a double in the open- er but in the other two he went well above the mark with 213 and 214. Kostenbader hit 225 in the second and 202 in the third. The only double recorded by the visitors was H. Dehn's 227 in the second game. Captain Wachwitz, of the Lyndhurst team started with 138, boosted his figure to 188 in, the sec- ond and finished with 199. The game drew a crowd of men and women, Odd Fellows and their 178 190 21 214 20 996 Hebrew Social Alliance To Sponsor Dance Jan. 14 At a well attended business meet ing of the Hebrew Social Alliance last night in the Chrome synagogue plans were advanced for a dance and entertainment to be held in tho Nathan Hale school under the aus- pices of the alliance on the night of January 14. Lind Brothers orches- tra has been engaged to furnish the music. The committed in charge of the arrangements includes: Miss Madeline Wohlgemuth, Lester Sokler and Walter Messinger. Arrangements were made for a meeting of the discussion group of the alliance to be held in the home if Miss Ruth Brown in lower Roose- velt avenue on December 8, Ben- amin Kaplan will be the speaker , , that filled th« alloys. The scores: Carteret Lodge No. 267 Richardson 198 156 Sloan 244 195 Donnelly 179 186 Chodosh 199 213 Kostenbader 193 226 10113 976 Lrndhunt Lodge Not 228 Johns 186 191 "168 H. Dehn 166 227 16 Demarest 149 158 189 Von Woll 17 Wachwitz 138 188 199 Hubert 164 161 783 920 89 The topic has not or the evening. >een announced. It was announced that the gym lnsa and basketball team of the 1 alli- tnco are holding practice each Wed- icsday night in the high school gym. Field Club Smashes Elizabeth Bulldogs Coach Alexander's Gridders Pile Up 47-0 In Sunday Game On High School Field. The Elizabeth Bulldogs were given another trouncing in Carteret Run- day when they played the Carteret V. C. gridders on the High school field. Early in the season the Bull- dogs came here and were licked 26 to 0 iby the Olympics, practically the Field Club team under another name. In Sunday's game the only differ- ence was that the Carteret score was bigger, the home boys winning by 47 to 0. The day was bitter cold and the crowd was not as large as usual. Carteret started off with a bang, making •two touchdowns knd one extra point in the first period, and repeating the performance in the second. Carteret made another touchdown and point in the third, and two with the extras in the fourth. During the game Coach Alexander made sev- eral substitutions. The Bulldogs played hard football but were outclassed in every angle Church Groups Ready For Two-Day Bazaar Various Organization! Of Presbyterian Church To Sponsor Bazaar On Tuesday and Wednesday. The Annual Bazaar of the church under the auspices of the Indies' Mission Band and the Mother-Teach- er Association will be held in the basement of the church on Wednes- day and Thursday evenings of next week. Supper will be served both ovenjngs with Mrs. Charles Bryer in charge of the kitchen. A part of the menu will consist of Mrs. Bryer's clam chowder which has become so well known to Carteret folks. The booths where folks may secure many of their Christmas gifts will be in charge of the various organizations of the church as follows: Fancy work and apron booth in charge of the Mission Band and the Mother-Teach- er Association; handkerchief booth in charge of the Sunday school; enndy booth, the Senior Christian Ende-avor; the fish pond, the Intermediate and Junior Christian Endeavor; the pan- try shelf, the G. K. M. Girl's Club; home made ice cream in charge of the men. The monthly meeting of the Moth- er-Teacher Association will be held on Monday evening. On account of the bazaar the Ladies' Mission Band will not hold their meeting on Tues- day evening. The Trustees will meet on Monday evening. Two Local Men In Ten Game Bowling Match Harry Chodosh and Patsy Patconig staged a two man bowling contest on the Slovak alleys Thursday night that was a hummer. The two men are expert bowlers and they rolled ten games. Chodosh was a little off form and did not hit as many doubles as he usually does. But he managed to get above the 200 mark in four of the games and hit a total of 1887 sticks. Pateonig never dropped below the double century mark once and chalked upa record total of 2,2^3 pins. The scores: Patconig 203, 215, 265, 234, 224, 208, 219, 238, 256, 222 2283. Chodosh 182, 223, 200, 203, 149, 159, 188, 193, 222, 168 1887. Knights Fights Next ThursJtoP. Amboy Entire Proceeds To Charity In City—Simon Pures FromAll Section* Entered. Advance ticket sales indicate that Van Syckle'B auditorium in Perth Amboy will be filled to capacity on the night of December 8 when San Salvadore Council, Knights of Co- tumbus, stages its amateur benefit fights. The entire proceeds will be turned over to the Catholic chari- ties of Perth Amboy. Wee Wilson, athletic chairman is in charge, issued a request of the game. The lineup: Carteret F. C. Bulldog Wadiak Compton left end Green DeMar left tackle B. Morris Rossman left guard J. Essig Sauerbaum center W. Galvanek Crosley right guard J. Szetag Bagland right tackle ponovan Smith right end Coughlin ,_ Shea quarterback Belgert Harwin left halfback Choloka _ Fangine right halfback A. Gslvanek Troupo Chrome Barbershop Visited By Thieves Drill Away Portion Of Door— Take Money, Hair Tonic and Machine. Sylvester Russo's American barber shop at 93 Roosevelt avenue, waa broken jnto Wednesday night and robbed of }5 in nickels, three bottles of hair tonic and a slot ma- chine. The thieves gained entrance by drilling away a portion of a rear door and opening it. The door was found open in the morning when the proprietor arrived to open up for business for the day. Lucky Strikes Win In Three Match Loop High Team Scores Registered By Both Teams In Interest- ing Series On Slovak Alleys. The Lucky Strikes bowling team carried off the honors in a threo- niatch series with the Carteret Stars on the iSlovak alleys. The final match of the series waa rolled Tues- day night and the Stars were swamp- ed for the three games although they lolled fairly good team scores. The winners took the first game by twenty-six sticks. In the second and third the strikes went over the thous- and mark. The team scores of the Stars did not vary ten pins for the three Bowling Match Here games. Stroller and McLeod each got two doubles. Morgan, of the County School Boards To Dine Here Soon Annual Dinner Will Me Held In Carteret High School On December 8; Members Of Local Board Discus, Night Classes—Bids Received For Roofing Job. Arrangements for the annual din- ner of the county boards of educa- tion to be held in the Carteret High School on December R were made Inst night at a special meeting of tho Board of Education. The clerk was authorized tohire tables and to hp.ve chairs conveyed from the Nathan Hale school to the high school for the dinner. The parents teacher association will prepare the turkey dinner and it will ibe served by High School girls. The only ex- pense to the local board will be the rent of tables and the transporta- tion of chairs. The question of opening evening classes this year was brought up by Commissioner Joseph Mittuch who said that there had ibeen several in- quiries, especially from those inter- ested in attending 1 the classes' for the education of foreign born resi- dents. The evening classes have not been opened this term, it was explained, a^ a measure of economy and also because experience had taught that the attendance drops off after the first few weeks until there are only PRICE THREE CENTS Early Morning Blaze Destroys Big Garage | Carterot Girl It Chr*n Surprise Party By Parents A surprint psrty wan given on Sat- lurriay night for MltoMildred Oil- Five-Cur Structure Belongjintf b<lrt ' of Uw *" ttr **' l n h e r home T Tne dwnrstloM w«r* In pink »nd Ph,|,p Turk Swept By The demotions wer* In pink »nd _. . yellow. Refreshment* were nerved r lames Early Monday—Loss and social g*m M ware played. There $1,000. I was lintting and instrumental music. Stephen Martlak played neTvral vio- rire of undetermined origin was I in solos. dweevmd Monday at 3 : 3o a. m. in Among tho*,. present were: Mr. garagi-. building in the and Mrs. (iilbcrt, Mr. nnd Mrs. SUn- Roosevelt C.rill in ley MalowiU, Mrs. J. Krinintki, Mliw avonue The blaw had Pauline Will,, Mary Kardella, Mary Miserable headway when Jacob, rhyllis Stawirki Julia Jacob ~ T an « the structure Jean Bastek. Mary (lisnUki, Michael when tn« firemen ar-1 Biekerk*, Ignnti Senhmwi iig Attendance Al Slovak Card Party Affair In Sacred Heart Parish Hall Last Ni c ht Was Great Success. five-car rear of Turk's Roosevelt Rained cons it was diai was doomed rived. Both companies responded to the slarm. Tha fire is believed tohave start- ed at the end of the structure nuar- Irs Wnjkowski. Wnlter knit>, Adoir Sosnowtki, Andrew rhnhnnnli, Sir phen Martink. nil '>f I nitcrrt. Slnkni nml William kmlm, nf I to the Roosevelt Laundry Co. Island; Kn-,1 Miller J plant. This section of the garagu and Wnlt-r KoMl.i of waa burned away entirely and a shed connected with the laundry was dam- aged slightly. One of the compartments con- tained a large truck said to have be- longed to a wrecking company that was engaged in pulling" down nn old fertiliser plant here some months Quinn Urges Greater Child Consideration In Educational Task Carteret P. C 13 13 BuHdogs 0 0 Substitutions: Flesko, 7 14—47 0 0—0 O'Brien, Zenk, Schein, Gudmanstadt, 'Conrad, Goderstad, Chomicki. Families To Engage In The Donnelly Five, made up of Bill Donnelly, his wife, two daugh- ters and his brother Frank has chal- lenged the Demarest family of Lynd- hurst to a bowling match tobe roll- ed on the Slovak alleys. The Donta- rest family of five consists of a fa- ther and four sons. All members of the Carteret Odd Fellows bowling league team and the senior Demarest is a member of the Lyndhurst I. O. O. F. five. Holy Family Society Will Hold Benefit Show today for prospective battlers to get their entry blanks in as soon aa possible. The blanks may be ob- tained at the Knight's home in High street, Perth Amboy. All those who enter mu&t be in good standing in the A. A. U. Frizes approved by the A. A. U. will be awarded to the victorious boxers. Following is a lineup of entries received to date: Nicky Sardone, 140, K. of C ; Nick Mazziros, 126, K. of C ; An- drew Seamon, 152, S. A. Sacred Hearts; Alex Nagy, 128, Sterling A. C; Walter Arrony, 135, Wing* A. C; Steve Fedor, 126, Wings A. C. The Essex Pre[» will have four men down. The Essex team is ut present New Jersey champion by virtue of its winning the New Jer- sey boxing championship held last year under the direction of the New- ark A. C. "Red" Volk, Metuchen's pride, ie also signed up. The Salem-Crescent A. C, of New York, will be represented by a team. This outfit just won the point trophy donated by the New York American for the team scoring tht> most points in bouts at Madison Square Garden. One fighter in each class will rep- resent the Warinanco A. C, of Elizabeth. Other entrants include Frankie Litt, of the Newark A- C, New Jersey lltt-pound amateur boxing champion: Joe Vacchiano, 126-pound Bt»te champion who rep- resente the Everlast B. C, of New- ark; Ernest Tickett, of Bloomniild: Daniel Compton, of Orang*>; Carl Russell, at Paterson; Nick Pario, National Turners, of Newark; Jim- my Fleming, of Belleville; Lee Wal- lace, of New York, and Jimmy Walsh, of Trenton. Leo Lloyd, of Seton Hall College, one of the most outstanding ref- erees in the state, a man who haw officiated i n New York at the Golden Gloves tourneys and at the National A. A. C. boxing championships in the past six yean will t>a the thirc man in the ring. Lloyd has worked more than 1,600 bouts. Diclf Muniart, <d ^^J^*^ The Hoiy Family Society, connect- ed with the Holy Family Polish Ro- man Catholic Church will give a benefit show in the Ritz Theatre on Tuesday night next. There will be two shows one at 7 p. m. and the other at 9 o'clock. Twodoor prizes will be awarded at each show. There will ba a double feature picture program. The main picture will be "The White Devil," the sec- ond picture will be a comedy and there will be nerws reels and other short subjects. The arrangements are in charj of the following committee: liam Martinesuk, Charles Makwin- ski, Frank Akalewicz, Adam Yap- ciunsky and Frank Goedeski, Lucky Strikes, was the star perform- er of the match. He started off with 216 in the first game, went up to 238 in the second and finished with 246 in the final. The second match in the series was rolled on Sunday night and the strikes took two of the three games although the Stars had the best of it by seventeen pins for the three games. The Lucky Strikes were at their best in the first game when they piled up a team score of 1050. But the Stars went them six pina better in the middle session. They fell short thirty-five pins in the final. McLeod and Terror each chalked up a double in each game. The former had the high individual score the evening when he hit 256 in .... opener. The"Opening game in the series was rolled; two weeks ago. d iht a few pupils in each class, some times only one. There is also a plan under consideration to consoli- w . as found near date the classes and hold them all discovered but in the High School instead of in the d °o'" s h «d three buildings as in the past. The teachers' committee will Uke up the matter with the supervising prin- cipal. A question as to the science de- partment in the High School was raised and it was stated that a teach- er has been transferred from one of the other schools and has been placed permanently in charge of the science classes, and, through a sys- tem of re-arranging classes it will not be necessary to hire an extra teacher. Estimates for repair work on the roof of the Columbus school were received from four roofers as fol- lows: A. Schwartz, $240; Rapp and Maier, $195; Joseph Blaukopf, $225, and Charles Seel, $257. The con- tract was awarded to Rapp and Maier as the lowest bidders. The repair and supply committee was authorized to obtain bids for changing the electric clock system la the Cleveland school from a stor- age battery system to one not re- quiring batteries. The clocks are at present out of commission be. cause the batteries are run down. A communication was received from County Superintendent of Schools M. -L Lowevp asking the board to see that buses conveying school children are equipped with signaling devices -as required by a new traffic regulation becoming ef- fective January 1. Applications for appointment as a school dentist were received from Dr. P. Richard Wexler and from Dr. Edward C. Kuntar. Two communications from the Department of Education were re- ceived. One advised that a voter cannot change the figures of an ap- propriation invoting for it, and the other pointed out that interest bear- ing warrants may be used where boards are without funds to pay teachers' salaries. Application was made for the use of the Nathan Hale school for a card party to be held under the Auspices of the combined Democratic' units of the^ borough on December 13. The request was granted. ago. The truck was badly damaged. A large number of rabbit cages knocked down and; stored in another compartment waa destroyed. Tho, total loss to the building is esti-|Look At Problem From Stand- mated at $1,000 aside from contents. Councilman-elect Philip Turk, owner of the structure said that he is covered iby insurance. No definite clue as to how the fire started has been found but there is a theory that homeless men were sleeping there and that one of them may have been smoking. No one was found near the fire, when it was A very auc<-<>*«ful c»rd p«rty was held Imt nixht in th» [wrinh h«ll nf the Sacred ll.-nrt Church in Fitch t, undrr thi> fui«nirex uf tha Junior Slovak Social Club. There Vvrr many nttrntdvp priin* fur (he winnors in th.- nird Kimn. The- .lark hnrw prin> went In Mi-i Julia Cham Mr< I'aulini' ]{n -k «<m thp door prm-. A bonk pvi/r nf %;>. f,n , n „„!,) WRH won hy Mr«, I'urlim- liiirkn. Rr- fli'«hmiMltt were <u-rvril. Aiming the )>rii«> winner* in th» uird gnnwtt were Sophia HiTg. Msr- pri't Dolinish, AdaO'Brien. Mn. William Bowler. Kdwnrd J. Cnurh- lin, M. PlutA, J. Anderson. Mm John Ci'/o, Jr.. Mrs. J KII*MV, Mrs. Krniik I>avi«, Mrs. Thums-i Liirkin, Mist .Jpwie Olurn, (•••orite Chamra, Ji.. .l"hn Iliivniik, Mm. John I'nn, J"hn llerega, William Kavoli'hek, J»m« Kukash, (|porg.< YutlMS, Mr. Turk said that 'been broken open several times since the cold weather began and that there were Indica- tions that men had been sleeping there. Until the firemen got the blaze under control it was spectacular and the reflection could be seen for miles. The firemen devoted their efforts to saving the laundry and the grill. Iron Bars Fail To Stop Thieves News Delivery Company's Place Broken Into And Rob- bed Thieves Pry Away Window Bars Take Cash Only. * Windows guarded by iron bars did not stop burglars who visited the Carteret store of the Carteret News Delivery Inc., at 539 Roosevelt ave- nue some time last night. When the store was opened st 5:30 o'clock this morning' for the usual distribution of morning papers, the side door was wide open and a window was also open. The cash register had been rifl- ed of $9.75. Entrance was gained by the side window which was covered iby heavy iron bars. The thieves had used a crowbar to pry away the bars. Then they opened the window. A check-up of the contents of the store which is stocked with magazines, cigars and tobacco indicated that nothing was taken except the cash. The action of the thieves could be reconstructed from the appearance of the store. They pried away the iron bars, entered by the window and took the money from the cash regis- ter. Then they scorned the troiible of leaving by the window, opened the door walked out and left it open. for thl large Wil- ; The scores Sunday night: Cuteret Start' Masc'ulin 168 Stroller 183 Medve-tz 194 Chamra 170 McLeod 266 971 10&6 Lucky Strike. Donnelly 220 170 Burr _... 204 149 Sloan 224 166 Terror 204 207 194 211 247 193 211 231 173 170 176 204 954 214 192 169 247 Former Local Bank Cashier Files Petition In Bankruptcy WOODBRIDCE— Thomas B. Murray, formerly cash- ier of the Woodbridge Bank and Trust Company which waa closed by bank examiners last year, has filed u petition in bankruptcy. Richard W. Stout, referee has published a notice to the creditors that Mr. Mur- uy was adjudged a 'bankrupt on Siovember 18, and that a ftrst meet- ng %! creditors will held before :he referee on December 14 in his dice at Room 806, Electric Build- up, Bungs avenue, Aabury Park. Bank Official S*ys Property In Port Reading Needs Protection Eugene Clark, cashier of the First National Hunk of Carteret, reported to the police of Woodbridge on Mon- day that the Lieber property in Port Reading, now owned 'by the bank, is being tampered with. He asked that the police check up on the situation. Police nay that tho property is be- ing effected by exposure and lack of repair and paint Furian 198 233 167 Junior Woman's Club Plans For Card Party At a business meeting of the Jun- ior Woman's Club Monday night plans were madq for a card par^y to be held on Thursday night of next week in the home of Miss Eleana Bryer in Chrome avenue. The club wus addressed iby Mrs. Foote, repre- senting the Hoffman Beverage Com- pany. She gave the girls many reci- pes for use at Christmas functions nnd at parties. After the business session there was a bridge party! and refreshments were served. Those present were: Helen Jurick, Katherine and Mary Grech, Ann Reilly, Frances Sarzil- lo Ruth Qrohman, Edna quinn, Helen Wachter, Evelyn Springer, Wanda and Anna Knorr, Mary Filo- ga, Mildred Sharkey, Eleana Bryer, Lillian Donnelly, Hilda Therkelson, Mrs. Michael Sofka, Edna Bradford, Katherine Filo, Helen Nannen, Lydia Uenning and Mrs. T. J. Nevill, PLAY IS PLANNED The Hebrew Sunday school con- nected with the Congregation of Loving Justice has under consider- ation plans for a play to be given sometime toward the end of Decem- ber. Scores in final 1050 925 989 match Tuesday point Of Student, He Says In Address At Press Club Din- ner In Pines. "Look at the problem of education from the standpoint of the child" That was the plea voiced by John J Quinn, Perth Amboy banker and pres- ident of the Perth Amboy Board of Education in an address before the members and guests of the Middlesex County Press Club at its first annual banquet at th* Pnt«s in li«tu«h«n, Wednesday evening. Mr. Quinn ask- ed that the educational problembe considered not only from a financial aspect. He pointed out that the child deserves education and that sacrifices should be made to insure the requir- ed teaching. "I have never met a teacher yet," he said, "who haa not been willing to sacrifice that the child might gain. That is the way we all should feel." Mr. Quinn BIBO pleaded for a sym- pathetic attitude on the part of the piess in dealing with the problems of education which are confronting every municipality today. That newspapermen are more gen- uine, frank and generous was assert- ed by Dr. Allen Sinclair Will, head of the department of journalism of Rutgers University, "Newspaper people have been my only close friends since I have teen 20. They qre always-satisfactory friiinds. I have tried other circles but they are no good. The people in them don't speak my language. I am deeply grateful to the press of Middlesex county for the, splendid assistance it has given me in my work at Rutgers. Mr. Will spoke at length of the work Rutgers is doing in coperation with the New Jersey I'resa Associa- tion in providing the newspapers of the state with efficient • newspaper workers. I Motor Vehicle Commissioner Har- old G. Hoffman acted as toastmaster and in his own iniinitable'way, enter- tained during the evening. Once a newspaperman himself, Mr. Hoffman told interesting bits of his early life with the "Fourth Estatera". His timely humor and the pair of inter- esting poems he recited were warmly received. During the dinner, Andrew Pirigyi, Perth Amboy boy whose marvelous voice has won him considerable praise in music circles, entertained with several solos. Miss Angela Hor- vath, of New Brunswick, also gave a number of song^-hits. She sang one number entirely in Hungarian. Both were accompanied by Mrs. A. Trier, of Woodbridge, who played several selections on the piano. Windsor Lakis, of the Iselin Jour- nal, was chairman in charge of the dinner assisted by Miss Ruth Wolk, Men D'xurilln, Matilda Pollack, Margaret Rrv<-h)i«, Joseph llmtt-k, Joseph Martin. Anna Mnrnnck. Mn. lelin Si'nninn, Thomas D'liirilla, Al Knvnnauirh, A. Mayorrk, Mm. A. Kish, Florence Mudrak, Helen M«d- vi-ti. Mrs. Hutnik, Mrs. A, Kimhoch, Mr*. Snlkoy. Mrs. II. lUwitt, Mrs. B. Klein, Mrs. Edward Ilopp, A. Guy- on, A. Moiala, Edna Brown, Edward A. l.loyd, Ksthcr Venook, Lillian Schwsrti, Mary Cik, A. SUnik, Mm. ('. H. Kreidler. Mm. A. J. Bonner. Marie Mudrsk, Mrs. J. Dolinish, Miss Katharine Fi- lo, Sara Weinstein, U. Garnet, John Medveti, Mra. J. BUukopf, M, Lu- kach, J. Fisher, Mrs. Trustum, John Chamra, Ad* Ov#rholt, Mn. J H»id, A. Gajdos .John Barish. Mm. Alice Katusa, Mrs. Frank Andres, Mrs. John Adams, E. J. SkefTington, Mrs. William Jamison, John Gurka, Mi- chael Lucas, Mary Sefcik and many others. St Joseph Boys Lose Tilt ToSt. Stephen's Local Basketball Team Out- pointed By Perth Amboy Five Grant Stars For Car- teret. St. Joseph's Boys club cagers went to Perth Amboy Sunday night where they played the St. Stephen's club and took the short end of a 30-26 score. The game was played in St. Stephen's auditorium, Perth Amboy. Grant, guard on the Carteret team accounted for twelve of the twenty- five points scored byCarteret. The high man on the St. Stephen's team was Geneski who ringed four goals fer a total of eight points. The score and lineup: St. jM»ph'( Bo7> Club G Coughlin, f 1 Mai, t 0 LaMont, f ,..., 0 Beisel, c 2 Grant, g 2 Szelag, g 2 D'turilla, g 0 P 4 0 0 5 12 4 0 7 11 25 Keen Eyes Of Cop Help Solve Mystery Hit-and-Run Driver Surrenders When Information Given By Local Policeman Makes Ar- rest Certain. arp eyes of a Carteret po- liceman led to the surrender this a man wanted in Wood- a hit and run driver. Hin of the Woodbridge Leader, and Peter J. Unban, of the Perth Amboy Eve- ning News. The Missea Helen Solo- mon of the Journal and Bejnice Po- lenaky of the Perth Amboy Evening News were memberx of the reception committee. Following the dinner, dancing was enjoyed. Music was furnished by the Pines orchestra. St. Sl*ph*n'i Club G P Lakowski, f 2 3 Geneski, f 4 0 Kreiger, c 3 1 Edward, g 2 1 Kozlowski, g 0 3 11 8 SO Birthday Surprise Party Held In Honor Of Miss Dolinish night: Lucky Strike. P. Donnelly 179 Furian 205 B. Donnelly 177 Morgan 215 Terror 214 174 267 178 2138 152 233 194 170 24u 243 990 1009 1078 Carterat Start Medvetz 186 Musculin 216 Stroller - 148 Chamra 224 191 205 176 200 177 212 149 192 203 189 228 964 970 961 Jolly Twelve Has . Annual Turkey Supper A turkey supper was held on. M. E. CHURCH NOTES 2-30 P. M. Sunday school session. 3:30 P. M. PreaphiMf und Praise RV. F, S. GftrisB, pas- service, tor. Tuesday evening in the home uf Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ruddy In Grant avenue by the member* of the Jolly Twelve Social Club. After the supper the members played bunco and other games. Those preaent were: Mr. and Mrs. Ruddy, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan.Mil- ter, Mr. and MXB. Walter Dreimrf, Mr and Mrs. William Snyder, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Donoghue, Miss Hettie Jefferys and Miss kmma K.a- This Sunday has been set aparta* Communion, Sunday. The »•«« preach an amwi Sacrament 0? th ^ • ' ' '-->ed •JU><* shel. ..._ Bw»«d »« K» u Jo 1 ** 1 * Old" automobile lire* are burned klU destructive tmwcU Iu market gar |a OttrtUoR, Franc*. bounty School Head Addresses Students Dr. M. Lowery Tells Carteret High School Pupils Of Char- acteristics Needed To Deal With Conditions That Will Follow Depression. Sincere applause greeted Dr. M. i, Lowery, County Superintendent ,f Schools, when he was presented to Ah* students of Carteret High (School by Mitia A. U. Scottfttthe regular assembly un Monday morn- '" After arousing the interest of the audience by hj* clever humorous In- The slim ticem Week of bridge a~ _ - - car hit and killed an Avenel resident in Port Reading.a week ago last night. Seen by a young woman who waa with the victim she was able'to give a description of the man and the Jordan carhe was driving. On Monday of this week John Yuro 18, of Perth Amboy, surrendered him- Mlf at Wocxlbi-idge. He had learned, police say lhat the hunt was narrow- ing down to hihi because of the infor- mation given by the Carteret officer. Yuro was charged with manslaughter und sent to NewBrunswick. The mankilled was Dominiek Maz- zaro, 04 years old of Avenel. He died instantly with a compound fracture of the skull. economic crisis, and optimism and foresight to anticipate less diiiicult ye Dr" Lowery further asserted the cost of education would be repaid with interest if the youth of Amer- ica proved the possessor* not uitae- y of knowledge but of the character needed to follow u.iselfwh and in- telligent leaders to prevent tho ie- currence of a similar era of dei-ieb PRESBYTERIAN NOTES Universal Bible Sunday, will be ob- served at the Presbyterian Church on Sunday. At the morning service the pastor will apeak on "The Wonder of the Book*. The subject for the junior sermon will be "Hidden in the Heart". Sunday evening the Vesper Ser- vice will be given over to an Indian Drama "The White Man's Book". The following members of the Senior Christian EjuleaVor will have the speaking parts: Urace Mott, Daisy Van Pelt, Dorothy Byrne, Evelyn Beech, Margery Bryor, Jean Mott and Ben Smith. They will be assisted by Mrs John Strome of Woodbridge, her son John, of Princeton Senuniary and Albeit Gropi) aUu of Princeton Seminary The other members of the Christian Kndeavur will Uke part in Rutgers-Jaspers In Charity Grid Game Manhattan College Will Furn- ish Opposition At Ebbets Field Tomorrow. NKW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Dec. 2 —Rutgers University's fotball team, will play the Manhattan Clolege elev- en in the East's only charity game at Ebbeta Field, Brooklyn, tomorrow. Rutgers, with the best team since l'J24, is favored to defeat the Jas- pers in their post-season clash, the first meeting between the two teams since a 24 to 6 Rutgers victory in 1927. The Scarlet will be able to pit a pair of .balanced backfields against the individual brilliance of Bill Pen- deigast, Manhattan's ever-threaten- ing backfleld star. To offset Pender- gast, who has played the major part in his team's victories, Rutgers wil have three triple-threat backs in Al Chizmadia, Jack Liddy and Arnie Truex, two consistent ground-gain- ers inArt Bruni and Lou Hemerda, A surprise party was given for Miss Margaret Dolinish on Saturday night in the home of MiBa Katheryn Lakatos in Cook avunue. The affair was held in honor of Miss Dolinish'g birthday anniversary. There were games, dancing and music. Refresh- ments were served. Besides the guest of honor . those present were: the Misses Anna and Katheryn Lakotos, Anna Medvetz, Anna Chamra, Anna Sefcik, Anita and Vera Toth. Anna Fischer, Helen D'zurilla, Anthony Dolinick, Jacob Kovaca, John Mas- culiD, Michael Toth, Stephen Friti, of Cnrteret: Michael Kolnok, of Port Reading; William and Joseph Buck- am, of Perth Amboy, and William V«rrt>, of Newark. Carteret Odd Fellows In* Tie For Second Place A bulletin issued at noon today shows that the bowling team of the Carteret lodge of Odd Fellows is tie with Passaic lodge for second place in Odd Fellows Bowling Leegue. Clinton Lodge of Newark is still holding down first place in the league standing. the drama, but do not have apeak ing parts. Mr. Ci»l»|' *pe«t a number of years ua a miatfonary at the Owight Indian Training School and will tell n..iiit)thiiu{ of if.* life of the Indiana. era m nil Dcuin mm nun ucmoiuu. and the Scarlet's highest scorer und outstanding ball-carrier, Nick ,l»risco who led hut teammates this season withe seven touchdowns. The game tomorrow will be the last interoolletjiutefout ball contest for H members of the Scarlet squad. Liddy and Pristo, both of whom are expected to play loading rolea again-' st Manhattan, and Are ha Dunlop, al- ternate fullback, are veterans of three year«. Lett Tardier, whose drop-kick defeated Lefayette and gave Rutgers the Middle Three cham- pionship, and Warren Uabcuck, al- teinute halfbuck, cumplete the group if setiiurs in the backlield. Ki nn the lino Rutgers will lose FLAT T(J IJ5T--5 rooms, all im- provements, garage. Apply Io0 E Important. Meeting Of Field Club Tonight An important meeting of the Car- cret Field Club will be held tonight the club room over the Town Grill. sines* of great importance is to be ten up, it is announced, and all members ure urged to be present. The meeting will be held immediately after practise. 1 « ok- Emergency Relief Committee To Meet On Monday Night A meeting of the Carteret Cjti^ens Relief and Unemployment Commit- tee will be held .on Monday, night in the borough hall ut 8 p. m. A t f th ti g nouncement of mailed to each member Secretary Russell Miles. p An- the meeting was toda g day by FOR KENT OH SA1JE Stow fitted with fixtures for soda and ice Hud WiK-y, velemn renter who mov- cream parlor and confectionery, id over to tackle this Hunt, and will sell fixture* separately, htore Ik-c Mattia and Irv Hesnick, first cated in ideal spot between I confectionery, or - lo- two ,U-i.ig guards. MaUi'a tas"i£W •' schools at a regular bus stop guard po-ition for three »e«*ons, but | Apply to Phi BK JAVILAK, 684 W i c k , moved over from «d this Roosevelt Aveuue, Carteret, N. J. full to become a fixture In the can-^C. P, 12-AU. ter trio- »W(BBM^BMflspiWMH^WI(WRI

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Page 1: CARTERET PRES - DigiFind-It · ence was that the Carteret score was bigger, th e hom boys winning by 47 to 0. The day was bitter cold and the crowd was not as large as usual. Carteret

Fonr Page Colored

Comic Section

Price

VOL. XI, No. 8

of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more

CARTERET PRESS 12 Pages TodayTwo Sections

I'AKTKRKT

Local Odd FellowsGrab League Honors

Carteret Team Captures HighTeata Score For Loop andHitt Second Place In Stand-ing.

The Carteret Odd Fellows bowl-in? team made hifltory Wednesdaynight in the Odd Fellows BowlingL i

gLeague in arepresenting

match with the teamPyramid 1/fldge No.

225, of Lyndhurst, rolled on theSlovak alleys in Carteret. Carterettook the three games by wide mar-gins' and in no doing established anow high mark in three-frame teamscores. In addition to that the localpmners made a new high team scorefor the league in the Mrst game whenthey piled up n total of 1013 pins.The Carteret team also tvorked intosecond place in the league ^tending,and possibly he puahed into firstplace, depending upon the outcomeof other league matches this week.The locals already hold the highindividual wore of the leasrue in the268 pina rolled by Matt Sloan re-cently.

, Sloan was again high man in thematch Wednesday night. In the firstgame he hit 2-14 pinB but did hot getinto the double class again in thematch. Harry Chodosh was on©stick short of a double in the open-er but in the other two he went wellabove the mark with 213 and 214.Kostenbader hit 225 in the secondand 202 in the third.

The only double recorded by thevisitors was H. Dehn's 227 in thesecond game. Captain Wachwitz, ofthe Lyndhurst team started with 138,boosted his figure to 188 in, the sec-ond and finished with 199.

The game drew a crowd of menand women, Odd Fellows and their

1781902121420

996

Hebrew Social AllianceTo Sponsor Dance Jan. 14

At a well attended business meeting of the Hebrew Social Alliancelast night in the Chrome synagogueplans were advanced for a danceand entertainment to be held in thoNathan Hale school under the aus-pices of the alliance on the night ofJanuary 14. Lind Brothers orches-tra has been engaged to furnish themusic. The committed in charge ofthe arrangements includes: MissMadeline Wohlgemuth, Lester Soklerand Walter Messinger.

Arrangements were made for ameeting of the discussion group ofthe alliance to be held in the homeif Miss Ruth Brown in lower Roose-velt avenue on December 8, Ben-amin Kaplan will be the speaker

,, that filled th« alloys.

The scores:Carteret Lodge No. 267

Richardson 198 156Sloan 244 195Donnelly 179 186Chodosh 199 213Kostenbader 193 226

10113 976Lrndhunt Lodge Not 228

Johns 186 191 "168H. Dehn 166 227 16Demarest 149 158 189Von Woll 17Wachwitz 138 188 199Hubert 164 161

783 920 89

The topic has notor the evening.>een announced.

It was announced that the gymlnsa and basketball team of the1 alli-tnco are holding practice each Wed-icsday night in the high school gym.

Field Club SmashesElizabeth Bulldogs

Coach Alexander's GriddersPile Up 47-0 In SundayGame On High School Field.

The Elizabeth Bulldogs were givenanother trouncing in Carteret Run-day when they played the CarteretV. C. gridders on the High schoolfield. Early in the season the Bull-dogs came here and were licked 26to 0 iby the Olympics, practically theField Club team under another name.In Sunday's game the only differ-ence was that the Carteret score wasbigger, the home boys winning by47 to 0.

The day was bitter cold and thecrowd was not as large as usual.Carteret started off with a bang,making •two touchdowns knd oneextra point in the first period, andrepeating the performance in thesecond.

Carteret made another touchdownand point in the third, and two withthe extras in the fourth. Duringthe game Coach Alexander made sev-eral substitutions.

The Bulldogs played hard footballbut were outclassed in every angle

Church Groups ReadyFor Two-Day Bazaar

V a r i o u s Organization! OfPresbyterian Church ToSponsor Bazaar On Tuesdayand Wednesday.

The Annual Bazaar of the churchunder the auspices of the Indies'Mission Band and the Mother-Teach-er Association will be held in thebasement of the church on Wednes-day and Thursday evenings of nextweek. Supper will be served bothovenjngs with Mrs. Charles Bryerin charge of the kitchen. A part ofthe menu will consist of Mrs. Bryer'sclam chowder which has become sowell known to Carteret folks. Thebooths where folks may secure manyof their Christmas gifts will be incharge of the various organizationsof the church as follows: Fancy workand apron booth in charge of theMission Band and the Mother-Teach-er Association; handkerchief booth incharge of the Sunday school; enndybooth, the Senior Christian Ende-avor;the fish pond, the Intermediate andJunior Christian Endeavor; the pan-try shelf, the G. K. M. Girl's Club;home made ice cream in charge ofthe men.

The monthly meeting of the Moth-er-Teacher Association will be heldon Monday evening. On account ofthe bazaar the Ladies' Mission Bandwill not hold their meeting on Tues-day evening. The Trustees will meeton Monday evening.

Two Local Men InTen Game Bowling Match

Harry Chodosh and Patsy Patconigstaged a two man bowling conteston the Slovak alleys Thursday nightthat was a hummer. The two menare expert bowlers and they rolledten games. Chodosh was a little offform and did not hit as many doublesas he usually does. But he managedto get above the 200 mark in fourof the games and hit a total of 1887sticks.

Pateonig never dropped below thedouble century mark once and h«chalked up a record total of 2,2^3pins.

The scores:Patconig — 203, 215, 265, 234,

224, 208, 219, 238, 256, 222 — 2283.Chodosh — 182, 223, 200, 203,

149, 159, 188, 193, 222, 168 — 1887.

Knights Fights NextThursJtoP. Amboy

Entire Proceeds To Charity InCity—Simon Pures From AllSection* Entered.

Advance ticket sales indicate thatVan Syckle'B auditorium in PerthAmboy will be filled to capacity onthe night of December 8 when SanSalvadore Council, Knights of Co-tumbus, stages its amateur benefitfights. The entire proceeds will beturned over to the Catholic chari-ties of Perth Amboy.

Wee Wilson, athletic chairmanis in charge, issued a request

of the game. The lineup:Carteret F. C. BulldogWadiak Compton

left endGreen DeMar

left tackleB. Morris Rossman

left guardJ. Essig Sauerbaum

centerW. Galvanek Crosley

right guardJ. Szetag Bagland

right tackleponovan Smith

right endCoughlin ,_ Shea

quarterbackBelgert Harwin

left halfbackCholoka _ Fangine

right halfbackA. Gslvanek Troupo

Chrome BarbershopVisited By Thieves

Drill Away Portion Of Door—Take Money, Hair Tonic andMachine.

S y l v e s t e r Russo's Americanbarber shop at 93 Roosevelt avenue,waa broken jnto Wednesday nightand robbed of }5 in nickels, threebottles of hair tonic and a slot ma-chine.

The thieves gained entrance bydrilling away a portion of a reardoor and opening it. The door wasfound open in the morning when theproprietor arrived to open up forbusiness for the day.

Lucky Strikes WinIn Three Match Loop

High Team Scores RegisteredBy Both Teams In Interest-ing Series On Slovak Alleys.

The Lucky Strikes bowling teamcarried off the honors in a threo-niatch series with the Carteret Starson the iSlovak alleys. The finalmatch of the series waa rolled Tues-day night and the Stars were swamp-ed for the three games although theylolled fairly good team scores. Thewinners took the first game bytwenty-six sticks. In the second andthird the strikes went over the thous-and mark.

The team scores of the Stars didnot vary ten pins for the three

Bowling Match Here games. Stroller and McLeod eachgot two doubles. Morgan, of the

County School BoardsTo Dine Here Soon

Annual Dinner Will Me HeldIn Carteret High School OnDecember 8; Members OfLocal Board Discus, NightClasses—Bids Received ForRoofing Job.

Arrangements for the annual din-ner of the county boards of educa-tion to be held in the Carteret HighSchool on December R were madeInst night at a special meeting oftho Board of Education. The clerkwas authorized to hire tables and tohp.ve chairs conveyed from theNathan Hale school to the highschool for the dinner. The parentsteacher association will prepare theturkey dinner and it will ibe servedby High School girls. The only ex-pense to the local board will be therent of tables and the transporta-tion of chairs.

The question of opening eveningclasses this year was brought up byCommissioner Joseph Mittuch whosaid that there had ibeen several in-quiries, especially from those inter-ested in attending1 the classes' forthe education of foreign born resi-dents.

The evening classes have not beenopened this term, it was explained,a a measure of economy and alsobecause experience had taught thatthe attendance drops off after thefirst few weeks until there are only

PRICE THREE CENTS

Early Morning BlazeDestroys Big Garage

| Carterot Girl I t Chr*nSurprise Party By Parents

A surprint psrty wan given on Sat-lurriay night for Ml to Mildred Oil-

Five-Cur Structure Belongjintf b<lrt' of U w * " t t r**' l n h e r h o m e

T T n e dwnrstloM w«r* In pink »ndPh,|,p Turk Swept ByThe demotions wer* In pink »nd_. . yellow. Refreshment* were nervedr lames Early Monday—Loss and social g*mM ware played. There$1,000. I was lintting and instrumental music.

Stephen Martlak played neTvral vio-rire of undetermined origin was I in solos.

dweevmd Monday at 3:3o a. m. in Among tho*,. present were: Mr.garagi-. building in the and Mrs. (iilbcrt, Mr. nnd Mrs. SUn-

Roosevelt C.rill in ley MalowiU, Mrs. J. Krinintki, Mliwavonue The blaw had Pauline Will,, Mary Kardella, MaryMiserable headway when Jacob, rhyllis Stawirki Julia Jacob

~T™ a n« the structure Jean Bastek. Mary (lisnUki, Michaelwhen tn« firemen ar-1 Biekerk*, Ignnti Senhmwi

iig AttendanceAl Slovak Card Party

Affair In Sacred Heart ParishHall Last Nicht Was GreatSuccess.

five-carrear of Turk'sRooseveltRained consit was diaiwas doomedrived. Both companies responded tothe slarm.

Tha fire is believed to have start-ed at the end of the structure nuar-

Irs Wnjkowski. Wnlter knit>, AdoirSosnowtki, Andrew rhnhnnnli, Sirphen Martink. nil '>f I nitcrrt.Slnkni nml William kmlm, nf

I to the Roosevelt Laundry Co. Island; Kn-,1 Miller Jplant. This section of the garagu and Wnlt-r KoMl.i ofwaa burned away entirely and a shedconnected with the laundry was dam-aged slightly.

One of the compartments con-tained a large truck said to have be-longed to a wrecking company thatwas engaged in pulling" down nn oldfertiliser plant here some months

Quinn Urges GreaterChild Consideration

In Educational Task

Carteret P. C 13 13BuHdogs 0 0

Substitutions: Flesko,

7 14—470 0—0

O'Brien,Zenk, Schein, Gudmanstadt, 'Conrad,Goderstad, Chomicki.

Families To Engage In

The Donnelly Five, made up ofBill Donnelly, his wife, two daugh-ters and his brother Frank has chal-lenged the Demarest family of Lynd-hurst to a bowling match to be roll-ed on the Slovak alleys. The Donta-rest family of five consists of a fa-ther and four sons. All membersof the Carteret Odd Fellows bowlingleague team and the senior Demarestis a member of the Lyndhurst I. O.O. F. five.

Holy Family SocietyWill Hold Benefit Show

today for prospective battlers toget their entry blanks in as soon aapossible. The blanks may be ob-tained at the Knight's home in Highstreet, Perth Amboy. All those whoenter mu&t be in good standing inthe A. A. U. Frizes approved bythe A. A. U. will be awarded to thevictorious boxers.

Following is a lineup of entriesreceived to date:

Nicky Sardone, 140, K. of C;Nick Mazziros, 126, K. of C ; An-drew Seamon, 152, S. A. SacredHearts; Alex Nagy, 128, SterlingA. C ; Walter Arrony, 135, Wing*A. C ; Steve Fedor, 126, Wings A. C.

The Essex Pre[» will have fourmen down. The Essex team is utpresent New Jersey champion byvirtue of its winning the New Jer-sey boxing championship held lastyear under the direction of the New-ark A. C. "Red" Volk, Metuchen'spride, ie also signed up.

The Salem-Crescent A. C, ofNew York, will be represented by ateam. This outfit just won the pointtrophy donated by the New YorkAmerican for the team scoring tht>most points in bouts at MadisonSquare Garden.

One fighter in each class will rep-resent the Warinanco A. C, ofElizabeth. Other entrants includeFrankie Litt, of the Newark A- C,New Jersey lltt-pound amateurboxing champion: Joe Vacchiano,126-pound Bt»te champion who rep-resente the Everlast B. C, of New-ark; Ernest Tickett, of Bloomniild:Daniel Compton, of Orang*>; CarlRussell, at Paterson; Nick Pario,National Turners, of Newark; Jim-my Fleming, of Belleville; Lee Wal-lace, of New York, and JimmyWalsh, of Trenton.

Leo Lloyd, of Seton Hall College,one of the most outstanding ref-erees in the state, a man who hawofficiated in New York at the GoldenGloves tourneys and at the NationalA. A. C. boxing championships inthe past six yean will t>a the thircman in the ring. Lloyd has workedmore than 1,600 bouts.

Diclf Muniart, <d ^^J^*^

The Hoiy Family Society, connect-ed with the Holy Family Polish Ro-man Catholic Church will give abenefit show in the Ritz Theatre onTuesday night next. There will betwo shows one at 7 p. m. and theother at 9 o'clock. Two door prizeswill be awarded at each show.

There will ba a double featurepicture program. The main picturewill be "The White Devil," the sec-ond picture will be a comedy andthere will be nerws reels and othershort subjects.

The arrangements are in charjof the following committee:liam Martinesuk, Charles Makwin-ski, Frank Akalewicz, Adam Yap-ciunsky and Frank Goedeski,

Lucky Strikes, was the star perform-er of the match. He started off with216 in the first game, went up to238 in the second and finished with246 in the final.

The second match in the serieswas rolled on Sunday night and thestrikes took two of the three gamesalthough the Stars had the best ofit by seventeen pins for the threegames. The Lucky Strikes were attheir best in the first game whenthey piled up a team score of 1050.But the Stars went them six pinabetter in the middle session. Theyfell short thirty-five pins in the final.

McLeod and Terror each chalkedup a double in each game. Theformer had the high individual score

the evening when he hit 256 in.... opener. The "Opening game inthe series was rolled; two weeks ago.

d i h t

a few pupils in each class, sometimes only one. There is also aplan under consideration to consoli- w.as found neardate the classes and hold them all discovered butin the High School instead of in t h e d°o'"s h«dthree buildings as in the past. Theteachers' committee will Uke up thematter with the supervising prin-cipal.

A question as to the science de-partment in the High School wasraised and it was stated that a teach-er has been transferred from oneof the other schools and has beenplaced permanently in charge of thescience classes, and, through a sys-tem of re-arranging classes it willnot be necessary to hire an extrateacher.

Estimates for repair work on theroof of the Columbus school werereceived from four roofers as fol-lows: A. Schwartz, $240; Rapp andMaier, $195; Joseph Blaukopf, $225,and Charles Seel, $257. The con-tract was awarded to Rapp andMaier as the lowest bidders.

The repair and supply committeewas authorized to obtain bids forchanging the electric clock systemla the Cleveland school from a stor-age battery system to one not re-quiring batteries. The clocks areat present out of commission be.cause the batteries are run down.

A communication was receivedfrom County Superintendent ofSchools M. -L Lowevp asking theboard to see that buses conveyingschool children are equipped withsignaling devices -as required by anew traffic regulation becoming ef-fective January 1.

Applications for appointment asa school dentist were received fromDr. P. Richard Wexler and from Dr.Edward C. Kuntar.

Two communications from theDepartment of Education were re-ceived. One advised that a votercannot change the figures of an ap-propriation in voting for it, and theother pointed out that interest bear-ing warrants may be used whereboards are without funds to payteachers' salaries.

Application was made for the useof the Nathan Hale school for a cardparty to be held under the Auspicesof the combined Democratic' unitsof the borough on December 13.The request was granted.

ago. The truck was badly damaged.A large number of rabbit cagesknocked down and; stored in anothercompartment waa destroyed. Tho,total loss to the building is esti-|Look At Problem From Stand-mated at $1,000 aside from contents.

Councilman-elect Philip Turk,owner of the structure said that heis covered iby insurance.

No definite clue as to how the firestarted has been found but there isa theory that homeless men weresleeping there and that one of themmay have been smoking. No onewas found near the fire, when it was

A very auc<-<>*«ful c»rd p«rty washeld Imt nixht in th» [wrinh h«ll nfthe Sacred ll.-nrt Church in Fitch

t, undrr thi> fui«nirex uf thaJunior Slovak Social Club. ThereVvrr many nttrntdvp priin* fur (hewinnors in th.- nird Kimn. The- .larkhnrw prin> went In Mi-i Julia Cham

Mr< I'aulini' ]{n -k «<m thp doorprm-. A bonk pvi/r nf %;>. f,n , n „„!,)WRH won hy Mr«, I'urlim- liiirkn. Rr-fli'«hmiMltt were <u-rvril.

Aiming the )>rii«> winner* in th»uird gnnwtt were Sophia HiTg. Msr-pr i ' t Dolinish, Ada O'Brien. M n .William Bowler. Kdwnrd J. Cnurh-lin, M. PlutA, J. Anderson. Mm JohnCi'/o, Jr.. Mrs. J K I I * M V , Mrs.Krniik I>avi«, Mrs. Thums-i Liirkin,Mist .Jpwie Olurn, (•••orite Chamra,Ji.. .l"hn Iliivniik, Mm. John I ' n n ,J"hn llerega, William Kavoli'hek,J » m « Kukash, (|porg.< YutlMS,

Mr. Turk said that'been broken open

several times since the cold weatherbegan and that there were Indica-tions that men had been sleepingthere.

Until the firemen got the blazeunder control it was spectacular andthe reflection could be seen formiles. The firemen devoted theirefforts to saving the laundry andthe grill.

Iron Bars FailTo Stop Thieves

N e w s Delivery Company'sPlace Broken Into And Rob-bed — Thieves Pry AwayWindow Bars — Take CashOnly. *

Windows guarded by iron bars didnot stop burglars who visited theCarteret store of the Carteret NewsDelivery Inc., at 539 Roosevelt ave-nue some time last night. When thestore was opened st 5:30 o'clock thismorning' for the usual distribution ofmorning papers, the side door waswide open and a window was alsoopen. The cash register had been rifl-ed of $9.75.

Entrance was gained by the sidewindow which was covered iby heavyiron bars. The thieves had used acrowbar to pry away the bars. Thenthey opened the window. A check-upof the contents of the store which isstocked with magazines, cigars andtobacco indicated that nothing wastaken except the cash.

The action of the thieves could bereconstructed from the appearanceof the store. They pried away theiron bars, entered by the window andtook the money from the cash regis-ter. Then they scorned the troiibleof leaving by the window, opened thedoor walked out and left it open.

forthl

largeWil-

;The scores Sunday night:

Cuteret Start'Masc'ulin 168Stroller 183Medve-tz 194Chamra 170McLeod 266

971 10&6Lucky Strike.

Donnelly 220 170Burr _... 204 149Sloan 224 166Terror 204 207

194211247193211

231173170176204

954

214192169247

Former Local Bank CashierFiles Petition In Bankruptcy

WOODBRIDCE—Thomas B. Murray, formerly cash-

ier of the Woodbridge Bank andTrust Company which waa closed bybank examiners last year, has filedu petition in bankruptcy. RichardW. Stout, referee has published anotice to the creditors that Mr. Mur-uy was adjudged a 'bankrupt onSiovember 18, and that a ftrst meet-ng %! creditors will b« held before:he referee on December 14 in hisdice at Room 806, Electric Build-up, Bungs avenue, Aabury Park.

Bank Official S*ys Property InPort Reading Needs Protection

Eugene Clark, cashier of the FirstNational Hunk of Carteret, reportedto the police of Woodbridge on Mon-day that the Lieber property in PortReading, now owned 'by the bank, isbeing tampered with. He asked thatthe police check up on the situation.Police nay that tho property is be-ing effected by exposure and lackof repair and paint

Furian 198 233 167

Junior Woman's ClubPlans For Card Party

At a business meeting of the Jun-ior Woman's Club Monday nightplans were madq for a card par^y tobe held on Thursday night of nextweek in the home of Miss EleanaBryer in Chrome avenue. The clubwus addressed iby Mrs. Foote, repre-senting the Hoffman Beverage Com-pany. She gave the girls many reci-pes for use at Christmas functionsnnd at parties.

After the business session therewas a bridge party! and refreshmentswere served. Those present were:Helen Jurick, Katherine and MaryGrech, Ann Reilly, Frances Sarzil-lo Ruth Qrohman, Edna quinn,Helen Wachter, Evelyn Springer,Wanda and Anna Knorr, Mary Filo-ga, Mildred Sharkey, Eleana Bryer,Lillian Donnelly, Hilda Therkelson,Mrs. Michael Sofka, Edna Bradford,Katherine Filo, Helen Nannen, LydiaUenning and Mrs. T. J. Nevill,

PLAY IS PLANNEDThe Hebrew Sunday school con-

nected with the Congregation ofLoving Justice has under consider-ation plans for a play to be givensometime toward the end of Decem-ber.

Scores in final1050 925 989match Tuesday

point Of Student, He Says InAddress At Press Club Din-ner In Pines."Look at the problem of education

from the standpoint of the child"That was the plea voiced by John JQuinn, Perth Amboy banker and pres-ident of the Perth Amboy Board ofEducation in an address before themembers and guests of the MiddlesexCounty Press Club at its first annualbanquet at th* Pnt«s in li«tu«h«n,Wednesday evening. Mr. Quinn ask-ed that the educational problem beconsidered not only from a financialaspect. He pointed out that the childdeserves education and that sacrificesshould be made to insure the requir-ed teaching. "I have never met ateacher yet," he said, "who haa notbeen willing to sacrifice that the childmight gain. That is the way we allshould feel."

Mr. Quinn BIBO pleaded for a sym-pathetic attitude on the part of thepiess in dealing with the problems ofeducation which are confrontingevery municipality today.

That newspapermen are more gen-uine, frank and generous was assert-ed by Dr. Allen Sinclair Will, headof the department of journalism ofRutgers University, "Newspaperpeople have been my only closefriends since I have teen 20. Theyqre always-satisfactory friiinds. Ihave tried other circles but they areno good. The people in them don'tspeak my language. I am deeplygrateful to the press of Middlesexcounty for the, splendid assistance ithas given me in my work at Rutgers.

Mr. Will spoke at length of thework Rutgers is doing in coperationwith the New Jersey I'resa Associa-tion in providing the newspapers ofthe state with efficient • newspaperworkers.

I Motor Vehicle Commissioner Har-old G. Hoffman acted as toastmasterand in his own iniinitable'way, enter-tained during the evening. Once anewspaperman himself, Mr. Hoffmantold interesting bits of his early lifewith the "Fourth Estatera". Histimely humor and the pair of inter-esting poems he recited were warmlyreceived.

During the dinner, Andrew Pirigyi,Perth Amboy boy whose marvelousvoice has won him considerablepraise in music circles, entertainedwith several solos. Miss Angela Hor-vath, of New Brunswick, also gavea number of song -hits. She sang onenumber entirely in Hungarian. Bothwere accompanied by Mrs. A. Trier,of Woodbridge, who played severalselections on the piano.

Windsor Lakis, of the Iselin Jour-nal, was chairman in charge of thedinner assisted by Miss Ruth Wolk,

Men D'xurilln, Matilda Pollack,Margaret Rrv<-h)i«, Joseph llmtt-k,Joseph Martin. Anna Mnrnnck. Mn.lelin Si'nninn, Thomas D'liirilla, AlKnvnnauirh, A. Mayorrk, Mm. A.Kish, Florence Mudrak, Helen M«d-vi-ti. Mrs. Hutnik, Mrs. A, Kimhoch,Mr*. Snlkoy. Mrs. II. lUwitt, Mrs.B. Klein, Mrs. Edward Ilopp, A. Guy-on, A. Moiala, Edna Brown, EdwardA. l.loyd, Ksthcr Venook, LillianSchwsrti, Mary Cik, A. SUnik, Mm.('. H. Kreidler.

Mm. A. J. Bonner. Marie Mudrsk,Mrs. J. Dolinish, Miss Katharine Fi-lo, Sara Weinstein, U. Garnet, JohnMedveti, Mra. J. BUukopf, M, Lu-kach, J. Fisher, Mrs. Trustum, JohnChamra, Ad* Ov#rholt, Mn. J H»id,A. Gajdos .John Barish. Mm. AliceKatusa, Mrs. Frank Andres, Mrs.John Adams, E. J. SkefTington, Mrs.William Jamison, John Gurka, Mi-chael Lucas, Mary Sefcik and manyothers.

St Joseph Boys LoseTilt ToSt. Stephen's

Local Basketball Team Out-pointed By Perth AmboyFive — Grant Stars For Car-teret.

St. Joseph's Boys club cagers wentto Perth Amboy Sunday night wherethey played the St. Stephen's cluband took the short end of a 30-26score. The game was played in St.Stephen's auditorium, Perth Amboy.Grant, guard on the Carteret teamaccounted for twelve of the twenty-five points scored by Carteret. Thehigh man on the St. Stephen's teamwas Geneski who ringed four goalsfer a total of eight points.

The score and lineup:St. jM»ph'( Bo7> Club

GCoughlin, f 1Mai, t 0LaMont, f ,..., 0Beisel, c 2Grant, g 2Szelag, g 2D'turilla, g 0

P4005

1240

7 11 25

Keen Eyes Of CopHelp Solve Mystery

Hit-and-Run Driver SurrendersWhen Information Given ByLocal Policeman Makes Ar-rest Certain.

arp eyes of a Carteret po-liceman led to the surrender this

a man wanted in Wood-a hit and run driver. Hin

of the Woodbridge Leader, and PeterJ. Unban, of the Perth Amboy Eve-ning News. The Missea Helen Solo-mon of the Journal and Bejnice Po-lenaky of the Perth Amboy EveningNews were memberx of the receptioncommittee.

Following the dinner, dancing wasenjoyed. Music was furnished by thePines orchestra.

St. Sl*ph*n'i ClubG P

Lakowski, f 2 3Geneski, f 4 0Kreiger, c 3 1Edward, g 2 1Kozlowski, g 0 3

11 8 SO

Birthday Surprise Party HeldIn Honor Of Miss Dolinish

night:Lucky Str ike.

P. Donnelly 179Furian 205B. Donnelly 177Morgan 215Terror 214

1742671782138152

23319417024u243

990 1009 1078Carterat Start

Medvetz 186Musculin 216Stroller - 148Chamra 224

191

205176200177212

149192203189228

964 970 961

Jolly Twelve Has. Annual Turkey Supper

A turkey supper was held on.

M. E. CHURCH NOTES2-30 P. M. Sunday school session.3:30 P. M. PreaphiMf und Praise

RV. F, S. GftrisB, pas-service,tor.

Tuesday evening in the home uf Mr.and Mrs. Walter Ruddy In Grantavenue by the member* of the JollyTwelve Social Club. After the supperthe members played bunco and othergames. Those preaent were: Mr. andMrs. Ruddy, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan.Mil-ter, Mr. and MXB. Walter Dreimrf,Mr and Mrs. William Snyder, Mr.and Mrs. Thomas Donoghue, MissHettie Jefferys and Miss kmma K.a-

This Sunday has been set aparta*Communion, Sunday. The » • « «preach an amwiSacrament 0? th• • ' ' '-->ed •JU><*

shel.

. . . _ Bw»«d »« K»u Jo1**1*Old" automobile lire* are burned

klU destructive tmwcU Iu market gar|a OttrtUoR, Franc*.

bounty School HeadAddresses Students

Dr. M. Lowery Tells CarteretHigh School Pupils Of Char-acteristics Needed To DealWith Conditions That WillFollow Depression.

Sincere applause greeted Dr. M.i, Lowery, County Superintendent,f Schools, when he was presentedto Ah* students of Carteret High(School by Mitia A. U. Scott ftt theregular assembly un Monday morn-

'" After arousing the interest of theaudience by hj* clever humorous In-

The slimticemWeek ofbridge a~ _ - -car hit and killed an Avenel residentin Port Reading.a week ago lastnight. Seen by a young woman whowaa with the victim she was able'togive a description of the man andthe Jordan car he was driving. OnMonday of this week John Yuro 18,of Perth Amboy, surrendered him-Mlf at Wocxlbi-idge. He had learned,police say lhat the hunt was narrow-ing down to hihi because of the infor-mation given by the Carteret officer.Yuro was charged with manslaughterund sent to New Brunswick.

The man killed was Dominiek Maz-zaro, 04 years old of Avenel. He diedinstantly with a compound fractureof the skull.

economic crisis, and optimism andforesight to anticipate less diiiicultyeDr" Lowery further asserted thecost of education would be repaidwith interest if the youth of Amer-ica proved the possessor* not uitae-y of knowledge but of the characterneeded to follow u.iselfwh and in-telligent leaders to prevent tho ie-currence of a similar era of dei-ieb

PRESBYTERIAN NOTESUniversal Bible Sunday, will be ob-

served at the Presbyterian Church onSunday. At the morning service thepastor will apeak on "The Wonderof the Book*. The subject for thejunior sermon will be "Hidden inthe Heart". „

Sunday evening the Vesper Ser-vice will be given over to an IndianDrama "The White Man's Book".The following members of the SeniorChristian EjuleaVor will have thespeaking parts: Urace Mott, DaisyVan Pelt, Dorothy Byrne, EvelynBeech, Margery Bryor, Jean Mottand Ben Smith. They will be assistedby Mrs John Strome of Woodbridge,her son John, of Princeton Senuniaryand Albeit Gropi) aUu of PrincetonSeminary The other members of theChristian Kndeavur will Uke part in

Rutgers-Jaspers InCharity Grid Game

Manhattan College Will Furn-ish Opposition At EbbetsField Tomorrow.

NKW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Dec. 2—Rutgers University's fotball team,will play the Manhattan Clolege elev-en in the East's only charity game atEbbeta Field, Brooklyn, tomorrow.Rutgers, with the best team sincel'J24, is favored to defeat the Jas-pers in their post-season clash, thefirst meeting between the two teamssince a 24 to 6 Rutgers victory in1927.

The Scarlet will be able to pit apair of .balanced backfields againstthe individual brilliance of Bill Pen-deigast, Manhattan's ever-threaten-ing backfleld star. To offset Pender-gast, who has played the major partin his team's victories, Rutgers wilhave three triple-threat backs in AlChizmadia, Jack Liddy and ArnieTruex, two consistent ground-gain-ers in Art Bruni and Lou Hemerda,

A surprise party was given forMiss Margaret Dolinish on Saturdaynight in the home of MiBa KatherynLakatos in Cook avunue. The affairwas held in honor of Miss Dolinish'gbirthday anniversary. There weregames, dancing and music. Refresh-ments were served. Besides the guestof honor . those present were: theMisses Anna and Katheryn Lakotos,Anna Medvetz, Anna Chamra, AnnaSefcik, Anita and Vera Toth. AnnaFischer, Helen D'zurilla, AnthonyDolinick, Jacob Kovaca, John Mas-culiD, Michael Toth, Stephen Friti,of Cnrteret: Michael Kolnok, of PortReading; William and Joseph Buck-am, of Perth Amboy, and WilliamV«rrt>, of Newark.

Carteret Odd FellowsIn* Tie For Second Place

A bulletin issued at noon todayshows that the bowling team of theCarteret lodge of Odd Fellows is tiewith Passaic lodge for second placein Odd Fellows Bowling Leegue.Clinton Lodge of Newark is stillholding down first place in the leaguestanding.

the drama, but do not have apeak ingparts. Mr. Ci»l»|' *pe«t a number ofyears ua a miatfonary at the OwightIndian Training School and will telln..iiit)thiiu{ of if.* life of the Indiana.

era m nil Dcuin mm nun ucmoiuu.and the Scarlet's highest scorer undoutstanding ball-carrier, Nick ,l»riscowho led hut teammates this seasonwithe seven touchdowns.

The game tomorrow will be thelast interoolletjiutefout ball contestfor H members of the Scarlet squad.Liddy and Pristo, both of whom areexpected to play loading rolea again-'st Manhattan, and A re ha Dunlop, al-ternate fullback, are veterans ofthree year«. Lett Tardier, whosedrop-kick defeated Lefayette andgave Rutgers the Middle Three cham-pionship, and Warren Uabcuck, al-teinute halfbuck, cumplete the groupif setiiurs in the backlield.

Ki nn the lino Rutgers will lose

FLAT T(J IJ5T--5 rooms, all im-provements, garage. Apply Io0

E

Important. Meeting OfField Club Tonight

An important meeting of the Car-cret Field Club will be held tonight

the club room over the Town Grill.sines* of great importance is to beten up, it is announced, and all

members ure urged to be present.The meeting will be held immediatelyafter practise.

1

« ok-

Emergency Relief CommitteeTo Meet On Monday Night

A meeting of the Carteret Cjti^ensRelief and Unemployment Commit-tee will be held .on Monday, night inthe borough hall ut 8 p. m. A

t f th tignouncement ofmailed to each memberSecretary Russell Miles.

p An-the meeting was

todagday by

FOR KENT OH SA1JE — Stowfitted with fixtures for soda and ice

Hud WiK-y, velemn renter who mov- cream parlor and confectionery,id over to tackle this Hunt , and will sell fixture* separately, htoreIk-c Mattia and Irv Hesnick, first cated in ideal spot between I

confectionery, or- lo-

„ t w o

,U-i.ig guards. MaUi'a tas"i£W • ' schools at a regular bus stopguard po-ition for three »e«*ons, but | Apply to Phi BK JAVILAK, 684W i c k , moved over from « d this Roosevelt Aveuue, Carteret, N. J.full to become a fixture In the can-^C. P, 12-AU. •ter trio- »W(BBM^BMflspiWMH^WI(WRI

Page 2: CARTERET PRES - DigiFind-It · ence was that the Carteret score was bigger, th e hom boys winning by 47 to 0. The day was bitter cold and the crowd was not as large as usual. Carteret

FAGE TWO FRIDAY, IWTCMRER 2. 1032CA

MILES does the impossible J

$6 Valuein other stores

• Made of the finest imported Lizardskins. They cannot be duplicatedanywhere near MILES low price,A dozen other attract ive styles.

MILES SHOES101 Broad Street132 Smith Street

ElizabethPerth Amboy

Suppose You Had A Million!What Would You Do? Answer

And EnterJNational ContestWinner to Live Life of Millionaire in New York for Day*—i

Competition Suggested By New Paramount Picture.

CUR A BOWRETURNS AS

HUH STARClara Bow returns to the screen

fit the Strand Theatre tomorrowwhere "Call Her Savage", her ini-tial Fox starring picture opens itslong-awaited engagement.

As the heroine of "Tiffany Thay-cr's dramatic story,' a vole which sheherself selected, the fumoufe red-head is said to portray a life- nearly

paralleling: her own hectic career.Tt is the fight? wag-ed by a misunder-stood girl to curb the conflict of de-nirtB that rage .inside of her extra-ordinarily intense heart.

Film Called CourageousIn both screen adaptation by Ed-

win Burke, and the star's interpre-tation of the title role, "Call H^rSavage," has been hailed as the mostcuurHgL-ous portrait of a woman'ssoul yet screened.

As the half-breed sweetheart towhom she turns when society hasfailed her, Gilbert Roland heads thesupporting oast. Others featured in-clude Thelma Todd, as her honey-hniruil rival; Monroe Owsley, herweuk-willcd husband; Willard Rob-

ertson, her stern parent; EstelleTaylor, her indiscreet mother; An-thony Jowitt., as a wealthy suitor;Weldon Heyburn as her mother'slover, and many others.

Earthly "Paradiie"The word paradise rumen from the

Persian luoiiunge, writes J. H. Wls-hart In the Vancouver Province. Zen-oplion was the first Greek writer touse tlie word "paradeWms." In descrlb-IIIK the largo pnrk attached to tlie pal-ace nf Cyrus in I'hrycla. throughwtiii-li tlie river Meander flowed, andwhich was slurknl with nninmta ofIhe rlinsc.

Ifi-rc are interior and exteriflrVICK-S nf the famous ftitr Tower,New York's most exclusive hotel,at which the winner of the na-tional "If I Had a Million" con-tort will be a guest during hi» orher stay in New York. Loc«lcontestants are vieing for a pass,cash award, as well. "If I Hada Million" opens December 10 at "the Strand Theatre.

7:00 At

7:30 A.

8:00 A.

"ITINERARYof National Content Winner l

"IF I HAD A MILLION" CONTESTSTAFF IN ATTENDANCE:

SecretaryEnglish Vftlet or French Maid

ChauffeurDAY'S SCHEDULE: •

M. Breakfast in hod in a luxurious ,'3-room suite ftt The ltttcTower; j

M. Hairdresser, /manicurist and mafwelir, from Dorothy QnyBemHy Sfd»n; or barber for man;

M. l>cnve ftitz Tower with secretary and companion in pri-vate Rolls Rnyce, fur motor trip to Rye Country Olub on

9:00 A. M.

11:00 A.~M.

1I:HO A. M.

' • « •

f«r look at New York .kyltae from

i .chtd«kK .°iC""h Street, ^ick up Roll. Royc, for tripto New York CHy Hall to be welcomed by the M»yor}

«n7purchwe of evening irown, evening wrap, W , »1OTM,

1 00 P.l:4S P.2-ir. P

M.M.M

For imp day. sonic one person—man or woman, buy or girl — willlive like a millionaire in New York!

Will it be someone from Hiddle--sex County?

Will it be YOU?

PARAMOUNTPUBLIX THEATRES

PERTH AMBOY

«><! . Thur... Frl.ltre. 1, *. »

HE I.KAHNKN AIMH TWOMEN"

Stuart KntlnAllison Sltlpuurtb

ALWAY A GOOD SHOW

MUTUAL STORESMUTUAL MEATST k * B « i * Tha t Money Can Buy

For Thunctty, Friday «nd Saturday

HALF OR WHOLE

JERSEY FRESH HAMS . . fc. 12cHALF OR WHOLE

JERSEY PORK LOINS . . ib. 12cFRESH

CALA HAMS . 4t.6ib,.,., . tb. 1 0 cPURE MEAI OR LINK

PORK SAUSAGE . . . . h l 9 cMUTUAL

SLICED B A C O N . . HJI po-nd ,** l O c

S A U E R K R A U T . . . . 3 ib. l O c

ANOTHER REMARKABLE VALUE...THE EVER POPULAR

From ORCHARD and FARMFor Thurtdiy, Fikfey «nd S«uid*y

SunkUt ORANGES . .Florida GRAPEFRUIT .Crisp C«l«ry Hearts . 2

Fancy Whit* MushroomsTsndor PEAS • • •

Florida N«w Cabbage .

do«^29c

bunch*, I 7 C

. n, 29c2 K». 29c2 ib. 13c

The finest cocoi youc«n buy fo< Ainting,

making, cak<Ailing or c.kc Icing. . . and now atloweit ptk«.

fULTON'S PRIDE BRAND

Fancy SUCED BEETS .DELMAIZ

NlbUt CORN i.^niu-,,*EAT-MORE BRAND

CLOVER HONEY . .WESTON-S SELECT

Assorted CRACKERS .LARGE PKC.

LUX • For Fine Clothes

UJX TOILET SOAP . .LAIGCPKG.CH4RSOFl«k«ior<&r«i

. rVittn 5C

. C«*I5C

. h. bo, 32c

. . . 21c3«u..2Oc

mUt . I6c

>**{ f ^^^^W w F^^Wfc W^^^F&^^^^Q W l^W^^^^^^^^^~^^

QUAKER or A A T QMOTHER'S V / A I 3 soor.pL, 5cDiL MONTi

. . . QUICK or REGULAR...

Campbell's Soups • ~ 7C

No. X Cm IMAL 1BAMP

Apple Sauce .TETLEY'S TEA M . .

SPAGHETTI DINNER

. 25c39c

PEA BEANS 2*9* \

The C a I t e r e t P r e s s an-nounce? today details of the coast-to-coast contest sponsored locally bythis newspaper, nnd arranged by theI'uramount-Publix Corporation inconjunction with the release of "IfI Had a Million," whereby someone"ill gu to New Yuik as Paramount'!guest and, for a day, will live thelife of a millionaire.

Just imagine! A Rolls Royceand a yacht at your disposal . . .the royal suite and a trained retinuein the most exclusive of hotels . . .a shopping tour of Fifth avenue,where you may buy the finest ofevening outfits . . . visits to the out-standing "hit" shows on Broadwayand to the far-famed nifrht clubs ofHarlem and Greenwich Village—

A prize worth trying for, isn't it?The contest was suggested both

by the title of the picture—whichopens December 10 at the StrandTheatre with a star-studded castheaded by Gary Cooper, GeorgeBaft, Wynne Gibson, Charles I^aug-ton, Jack Oakie. Frances Dec, Char-lie Ruggles, Alison iSkipworth, W.C. Fields, Mary Boland, RoscoeKarns, May Robson, Gene Raymond,Lucien Littlefield and Richard Ben-nett—and by a sequence in whichBennett, as an eccentric millionaire,gives a check for $1,000,000 toach of nine persons to see whathey will do with the sudden wind-

11.What would YOU do . . . if YOU

lad a million?For the best answer to that sim-

le question, in 300 words or leas,ne of the P R E S S readers will

vin 4 passes pood at any tiim* tohe Strand Theatre. The local win-er will be entered, with winners ofimilar contests in other titles and•uwns in the United States, in themils of this national contest, to beudged by a committee of exetu-ives of the Publix Theatres Cor-

H) ration.All names of local i#inners must

ie. in the mail to New York for con-ideralion in the finals not later thannidnight of February 21 next. An-nouncement of the national prize-winner will be made as soon as pos-sible thereafter.

Write your reply to the fore-go-ng question in your own language,in your own way. Originality ofdeas will count more heavily thanmere literary excellence. All ltt-

5 00 P. M.

5-20 P M

5-30 P M

6:00 P. M.

7:00 P. M.

7:30 P. M.

8-45 P M.

11:00 P. M.

11-45 P. M.lg-30 P M

3:00 A. M.

Lunrh atReception to press and newsreel photographen;Motor lo matinee performance of big New Yorksuch ns "Of Thee I Sing," Earl Carroll's "Vanitiw*" "]ing Colors," e tc ;MuUir .to Empire State Building ^or panoramic gUmp*from Tower of Manhattan Wand at twilight;Back to KiU Tower for long distance phon« call to home,with additional long distance interview by the editor ofyour newspaper;Motor to Paramount Theatre, Times Square, in time toview the mammoth stage «how from the wing*, and to b«greeted by the stars;back to Ritz Tower, where valat or maid will assist in. dreu>ing for dinner;Roll* Hoyee at the door, to Central Park for SO-mlnuteride in a coach-and-four;Dinner in the Sert Room of New York's far-famed Waldorf,Dance to Jack Denny's music.Motor to theatre to see Rachel Crothers' new gma*h hit,"When Tidies Meet," or Paul Muni in "Counsellor at l*w,"or the melodramatic sensations, "Clear All Wires" or ''Suc-cess Story;"Motor tu .station WEAK, "key" link in the National Bro«d<casting chain, for introduction to start of the air lanes;After-theatre sup|;«r at Central Park Casino;Tour of New York Night Clubs, including the El Chicoand Nut Club in Greenwich Village, Tile Cotton Olttb » 4Connie's Inn in Harlem;And so to bed,

not later than December 16,'ters must bo either typewritten orwritten in ink and must be signedwith the name, age and address ofthe contestant. Local folk mustsend their replies to the "If I Hada Million" Editor, tare of this news-

paper,1332.

—. Please mention this p«p*t to ad-vertisers; it helps you, 't helpt UMB,it hell* vour paper. —

MATINEES

25cS«t. A Sun. 35c

EVENINGS

35cCbTrfrea 10c

4 DBJ* StartingJb I> 3

On TheStage

RADIOBROADCAST

NITEEvery

SaturdayAl 9 P. M.

PERTH AMBOY'S

STRAND7K SMITII ST.

P. A. 4-1593

CLARABOW

'CALL HER SAVAGE'with

Monroe Owsley - Thelma Todd

3 Day. Starting Sat., Dec. 7U»

WILL ROGERS"TOO BUSY TO WORK"

withMarian Nixon - Dick Powell

WAGNER MARKET CO

PORKLOINS

WHOLEOR

HALF 12PER POUND

SAUER ,

KRAUT 2 POUNDS

LEGS OR RUMPS OFVEAL POUND

PRIME RIB

ROAST

BEST BONELESS

CHUCK POUND

CHOPPED

BEEF POUND

CHOICE

FranMurttrs i-B.

ONLYFANCY FRESH -•-

TURKEYS i\eWe've forgotten how long ago ^ ^ H ^^rTURKEYS sold at this low ptice! PER POUND

ABOVE PRICES IN EFFECT DEC ufc, 2nd 6- 3T<T I

100 MAIN STREET, W00DBR1DGE572 ROOSEVELT AVE., CARTERET

J* U V s M O « E

. . . . . . . . . , ^ . , j > w . . , . . .

Page 3: CARTERET PRES - DigiFind-It · ence was that the Carteret score was bigger, th e hom boys winning by 47 to 0. The day was bitter cold and the crowd was not as large as usual. Carteret

• * »

A CertainMatch

By QUBENA POLLACK

« l>y MoOiart Nawipap*r Brndlcata.W K T 3 i l

SHIRIJST VAN DOHN shifted ge»rs,and settled back In her driver's

Mat to survey the surrounding coun-try with test

! "Dod't take U too fast, dear," ad-Ttoed Aunt Victoria, who had beenher guardian since her own motherhad died ten years before., "But 1 can't crawl," protestedShirley.i "You'll be tired by the time we

reach Gardner's, dear, and week endparties .usually have strenuous ath-letic programs." began Aunt Victoria.

"Do you suppose I shall like any-one therei" Interrupted Shirley. "Iftiresome Tom Manley attaches him-self to me, I warn JOB, Auntie, I'll flyhome;"

"Yon know," Victoria BrowmlMstarted, Ingratiatingly, "Mrs. Gardnerwhispered at dinner the other nightthat she expected Ted Parson, theShipbuilder's son, If he returned Intime. You've never met him, Shirley,anil you know he's quite the catch ofthe season."

Helplessly, Shirley laughed. Wasn'tIt bad enough to have to listen todull conversation of the usual sort,she thought, without having to bebored by another youth returned fromEurope and his tourist Impressions?

"Dear, I'm thirsty," put In AuntVictoria, "can't we stop at the nextspring?"

"Yes, of course, and let's trust thatIt will cool my Indignation abouthastf and plotted marriages,'' Shirleyanswered firmly.

Shirley drew up by the side of theroad and told her aunt to wait In thecar while she brought a cooling drinkto her. Crossing a road In the spring,She narrowly escaped being run downby a dtiaty blue car that flew withpowerful speed from out a side road.

A mild looking youth In drnh hikingcostume pulled Shirley to the otheralrtn of the road, and enrjrrM herShoulder with a stalwart a,rm tosteady her.

"Oh, thank you," Shirley «ald duti-fully. "You know, America mighthave lost one of her rnshest daugh-ters If you hadn't Jerked me aside Intime."

"And one of ner prettiest, too, Iventure," the youth added, with awide winning smile.

"Tosh." replied Shirley In her con-temptuous manner for flattery, "nutI started across this road to get myaunt a drink. Now I sec no cups."

"If I mny oblige you," said her com-panion, proffering a cup from a camp-Ing outfit. "I'll risk crossing the roadthis time for your aunt."

"No," she countered hastily, notingthe disapproval on her relative's faceat this prolonged conversation.

She bent over to fill the cup withglistening cool wnter. and thought herrudeness to the man who had saved herlife was unworthy of her real feel-ings.

"Here," he said, masterfully. "Letme lit teast flH the ciip for you.Miss. . . . ."

"My name Is Shirley Summer. Andyours?" she snld evading the question.

"Timothy Torrsnce,™ he replied,suppressing a smile. She did notknow whether he was smiling overher mime or his own.

"Well, good-by nnd thank you forBy life, which I do not value verymuch these days," she eald, attempt-Ing to disarm further talk.

"Good-by," he said equally unper-turbed, "I hope to have the good for-tune to rescue you some other time."

Shu-ley ran back to the car with-out a backward glance. Strangely,her aunt was smiling, and not at allImpntifmt. As she Jumped Into thedriver's seat, she thought guiltily thatshe might offer to drive her rescueras far along the main road as shewas to trnvet.

Her aunt voiced the same thought,which surprised Shirley. When shecalled the Invitation, he accepted withalacrity.

"This Is my-aunt, Mrs. Rrownslee,and this Is Mr. Timothy Torrence,"Introduced Shirley. "Climb in andkeep each other company. I'm driv-ing as fast as I can to the Gardnerestate at Langhorn road. If you wantto stop before then please signal me."

Once again she shifted gears, butthis time sat forward In her driver'sseat, tense. Faster and faster, shefound herself (lying toward Langliornroad. She could not Iieur conversa-tion In the reur of the car. but didhear low laughter. What a suddenand strnngo camnniricrUi for ttaldAunt Victoria! Aa there was no call(or her to stop, Shirley thought herpassenger was going past Gardner's.She stopi>ed the car, almost wiltedwith the rush.

"We're late already, Shirley." saidAunl Victoria as she emerged fromthe car on the Torrence boy's arm."Perhaps It will save embarrassmentlater If 1 Introduce jwu to Ted Far-son right here. Shirley Van Dora laher light name."

Bewildered, Shirley stared from oneto another, and tliea surveyed theirsmiles with one of her own.

"Oh. I reeognlrnl her," counteredthe smiting, brown eyed traveler of Intelllgence. And- once again, s stal-wart arm encircled her shoulder and•bo knew she would be saved fromthe danger of misalliance.

Snake-Eating Ho«*Uogs frequently kill and eat snakes,

•ven rattlesnake*, and soake-lnfestedregions are often cleared of thehj Introducing hogs. ,

#u.-

Auto'* "FloaUnfFlouting |>oww la » method •»

moumlntf au en«lne In W** *•* ' r *TJ 'The motiir la impended In perfect **l-»QC« on two mountluei "* rubber andsteel. By allowing U» •<*«* «•» <*dilute oo its natural aita witBto prs-tcrlhed limits, torque rwwdon or •»•bratlon la Insulated from tM tnmpod body.

Wrought lr-» « ^ « » ""*,wo l» «

FRIDAY, DRCEMHER 2, 1932

TUafi. . For

i*AGK

TOMORROW

9 7 - 1 0 5 SMITH ST..PERTH AMBOY

OPENS Its New Home Furnishings DeptWith A Sensational Pre-Christmas

FU RN ITU RE SALE

$ 2 5 Complete 3-Pc.BED OUTFIT

i l l T U T ( O N S I M S OK' ,r si"*-! tw,\ Hwr;iltU' (.Ink Sprlnp. Cotton'v» All T-pn>.-CN ;irr Liu lllilrfMl at ihlK rt'ltifirk-

i>r;• -• <>uiM KV*TJ jiift e fully ^iiaritlttfCil.

Tomorrow—The 2nd floor of The "Leader" will hum with the voices of the eager crowdswho have come to ahare in the most spectacular Furniture Values ever presented to the Peopleof Middlesex County—Only the Finer and Better Grades of Furniture will be handled in thisdepartment—all goods of National reputation and fully guaranteed in every way. In order tomaintain these sensationally low prices all sales must be for Cash Only. Sorry, no mail orphone orders will be filled.

ENTIRE SECOND FLOOR DEVOTED TO COMPLETE FURNITURE DISPLAY

STUDIOCOUCHES

$7.95D n i i t i l i - S a l i i t u r y I l i ' i l CiM

u i t h i - ' . t t i i n n t l f i l m i i l l r

j i n l m i l . m s K » » l l y HIM I I n

t o t l v l n I T i l c m b l p l . i . l .

.;! 1) i-.j- : irA » f n u : u i i .

COMPLETEFULL SIZE

ONLY—

Give These Gifts

BREAKFASTSETS

$12.955-pii'i'rs ooitJtlrMhlK uf l'nrce-lulu Wp »!.<»• Itiuf tulili" anilfour Vln.lsnr rhalni. Alt mot -ive Liu-mier finl«l\.

Regular *29.75

INNER SPRING

MATTRESSES

COTTONMAHRESS

CHAIRS ROCKERSK^gulur * 11.fit) Vnlitrl

I*>-. eomfurtuhk* HiH'kel*.abiitfAny fin inn, Seat In

SECRETARY DESK

A H t . i tiruL H I M I M ' \>'-»k i i :

. h Walnut finish. A

1 2 U

RADIO TABLE DRESSERS. KatHUr *»*.»« Vulue!

* * « ' t a ' • * * • ' A .|Mu:iolU nreaaer wllstunll T«M« i» Walnut ' v«netl»ii Mlrn.illHUb- t u n acllWill arctHnm«l*te

Osnuluo Walnut* 1 * ••"• Itumwuod. f

R Kit's bl( value.

LIVING ROOM SUITESi l : i r S I ' M I . O I I \ i i i l l r !

TILE TOPTABLES

.$1.0011 -1 11-./11 v.-. i'iiiii|i.>>liliiii t i l

1'ip I'l<i\w-r, r i a n t or Si]i

. I I . I . . . v . ' n i i l i r i r i i r i u inh .

Kino TnijiT SpringIn durable iiit

A s e n s a t i o n ^ v» I Hi' itt HAll toizew.

. iH Mi l l . 1 '.[ C'N > " 1 ." III

\ i l i c t - r s E l r ; r 1 I I ' I I I I N i h - i ; ; l i '

. . n - i > l x . . f I . H I T . - I ' l l - : . . 1 , V . i n h

JI I I . I | - " u l l S I / . , - I l i ' i l .

WROUGHT IRON

OPENING SALE PRICE

Uciliiliir *a.UO Value!

MAGAZINERACKS

DINING ROOM SUITE

! . » ( . - , h . i n . l y ! ! . . » I v s H i

- . 1 M . , ] . ! , - H I W u l i i i u f l

I L n n l i . i l I I ' | J t - t > I f . K x l r . t o r

II y >.I1IJ,.

It.nulur t !M

l.iini[. ll"»i' «•'"' 1'uP'r 1'unnii'iil tiliu'!'.. A lulelily Iraport

l i i m i m KM.-n»Um r u l ' l r . " •

all.I | . ' ivi ' " i i i i« t I ' lml ra . l l u t l t uf S"1

FOaOW THE CROWDS TO

MIRRORS COMFORT

Mlnur BH>»4

I Ii tublo

ZND FLOORLEADER DtPAmiENT STORE 9T-105

^ M 4 t y ^ «^SW ;^. «.--O&

SENSATIONALOpening Special

WHILE 100 OUTFITS LAST

SIMMONSNATIONALLY ADVERTISED

BEAUTY RESTINNER SPRING MATTRESS

Krmliir 1'rlrr H i l lM M I I W I V . I - i v u N n l t n l l , , ! v i l h l ' - 1 H l i u n l ; . . >,; 1 : - : ' J ; -

nl.-.-.l |.,-,!t-i

. t r - . r . i

Hi' liun.lr.-.l Mulli

ALL SIZESONLY

t i l K i > r l u ( * u i t i n

$24.95SIMMONS

NATIONALLY FAMOUS

ACE" Coil Springsl\,r ! ' * - * ! J>I •

I t J - . K ' , i \ \ » t u l < - t - - l " f U n i l . i H I N

ALL SIZESONLY $14.95

READ EVERY ADVERTISED ITEMA L L S A L E S F O R C A S H !

$37.50 Fine Club Chain $14-95$45.00 Cushion Seat Sofa »lt .I5$39.50 5 Pc. Brcakfatt Set flZ.93$49.75 Electric Colonial Clock $19.75$47.50 Reclining Chair (witn (tool) 917-50$55.00 5 Pc. Mapla Breakfa.t Sot . $ 2 U 0$39-00 Walnut C«Ur CKe.t »I4.»5$29.75 Walnut 2-in-l Table tlTSO$12.50 Colonial D«k Chair $ 4.45$15.00 Colonial Book Cai« % T.5O$75.00 Solid Maho(any SecreUry $35.00$59.00 Electric Pi«r Clock *17-«0$ 8.00 All Cotton MattrcM$12.50 Fine Uy«r F«lt Mattraaa$19.75 Inntr Spring Mattr«»$ 8.00 Qrwtnpoiiit Coil Spriap .$12.50 Creaopoint Coil Spring* .$ 7.S0 Grecnpoint Steal &•*.$ 9.75 Graenpoint 3t**l B«b ...$22.50 GreeDpoint Studio CoacbI32.SO Doubts St.aio C«ieh »I7JO$49.7B Twin Studio Condi $M.7S$28.75 Colonial Maple V.aity $17.50135.00 Odd Walnut D n u m $12-*S$27.80 Fine Cheit of Drawer*$ 9.S0 Occaiicfcal Lamp Table$27.80 Walnut Cedar Ck«<t$39.75 Colonial Block Front$ 8.00 Four Shelf Book Cmtr$45.00 Gov. Wiuthrop SecreUry ».

S-W

3 . H

$12.95$ 3.95$10.95$17-95$ 4-95$Z4-9S

$22.50 Large Club Chaw. , *

2ND FLOORLEADER DEPARTMENT STOKE

Page 4: CARTERET PRES - DigiFind-It · ence was that the Carteret score was bigger, th e hom boys winning by 47 to 0. The day was bitter cold and the crowd was not as large as usual. Carteret

; ;•.;.• • ^ ' - ' ^ V |! •

PAGE FOUR FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1932taxis.

CARTERET PRESSSubscription, $1.50 Per YearPublished Every Friday By

C. H. BYRNE, 130 Jersey St., CARTERET, N. J.Telephone Cirteret 8-1600

C. H. BYRNE _... Editor and Owner

MEYER ROSENBLU1I .-, Sport« EditorEntered as second class matter June 6, 1924, at Cirteret, N. J.,

Post Office, under the Act of March 1, 1879.

Foreign Advertliinf RepresentativesNew Jersey Neighborhood Newspaper*, Inc.

fj | What, Is He Back on the Air Again? | [)

THE MAJESTY OF THE LAW

Two robberies have been reported within the week in Car-teret. In each instance a store waa broken into by force in thenight season. That is to say that each case was a case of burg-lary, a serious offense when it ia treated as such. But when acase of burglary is called disorderly conduct or is dr«wd upin some other way so as to make it appear of minor import-ance, the offender it likely to get off with a light sentence ifany.

It may be that there has been too much sympathy andleniency along this line. In the two cases that occurred thisweek there is a little doubt but that the police will find theguilty ones and bring them to the lock up. But what will hap-pen after that,

There have been many cases where offenders have beencaptured by the police and proved guilty, but they got offwith little punishment. If a sentence of ninety days was impos-ed for instance, it was soon, reduced to ten or less.

That may be within the general intention of the law orit may not. Someone ought to take the trouble to find out.When the ones who committed the crimes this week are caughtwill they receive light sentences or*none at all or will the com-plaints be withdrawn entirely.

Withdrawing complaints is one of the things that make alaughing stock of the police and the public. Somebody "gets"to the complaining witness and he drops the charge. Justiceis defeated and (he common CTOOk 1aw?hSahd goes about hisbusiness of further lawbreaking.

Operate on Pup: OwnerRecovers "Lott" Ring*

Chicago.—As a remit of an oper-ation performed on a four-months-oldScotch terrier, two ringi, a diamondand a slcnet, were restored to Mr.and Mrs. J. C. Perrie.

The rings wore removed from thedog by Dr. R. W. Dflgley. and bis a»alstnnt, Arthur [Iarford. The dog re-covered.

Although the slpiet ring disap-peared a month ago, It was not until afew days ago the whereabouts of therings was discovered.

ID Other Wordi, "Alleged"One of the boundary murks on an

old-time Connecticut farm, as shownby a land paper, is described as: 'Thetree at which Bill Jones Is said tohave killed thn bear."

MuihroomaTo cnll a poisonous fungua a "toad-

stool" and edible fungi "mushrooms"has no sanction among the botanists.Poisonous and non-poisonous mush-rooms are found In the same family,and mere form or color ia no basisof distinction between them. Thename "toadstool" is not recognized bybotanists.

How SchoolTeams Stand

In FootballWon All Games

High School.—CL»i AAnbury J?ark TenaflyColUnggwood

High School*—Clut BPort Lee Ocean CityHackettstown Woodstown

Pr«p Schooli—Clan BHun Pennington

Prep flefceeU—CU*. B(None)

Undefeated But TiedHigh ScktwJt—CU« A

LindenHigh School.-Cl.il B

Bernardsville LakewoodPrep School.—CU.. A

(None)Prep School.—CUti B

Cathedral KingfJeyHoly Spirit

Not Scored OnHigh Schools—CU.. A

(None)High School.—CU.. B

(None)Prep Schooli—CU»» A

PenningtonPrep School.—CUi. B '

(None)

Poland'* Hangman Say»He'i World*. Worst Paid

Warsaw, Poland.-I'oland'l officialMWiitloner complained bitterly to theKovernmeni (tint he la the "worst paidhnnffmnn In the world."

Asking thnt hl» pny-118 for enchperson eiefi ited-ne Increased, the ex-rrntloner pointed nut thnt he has h*-come so destitute that the governmentsrlrpd hlJ furniture nnd auctioned Itoff lo meet delinquent tnios.

ric explained thnt he hn« hnngedonly SO person* s<> far In 1032 "andthnt doesn't constitute a living wage."

Oldeit Printing E*t»nlThe oldest cxwnple of printing still

In etistence Is believed » be (ho KmrvponHan.nl. ft Hnddhlrt prnyor, printedfrom woodm typo, in 7 » A. D.. In Wclltlon of 1.000.(100 coplES, by order Ofthe Jnpancfio Empress1 K«kes. It Wowned nv the Art In*tl«flj of rl.lran*.

T» Find T BThere are l*o ways of reaching

truth—by reasoning II out and by feel-Ing It out. All the profo«nfl«t truth*arc felt out. Tin deep glance* intotruth are got by love. Lot* a man,thnt Is the best way of ondenttnd-Ing him. Feel a tnith, that Is the onlywny of comprehending It.—F. W. Bob-ertann.

rPioneer R*ilro»d

The Bonton A Lowell railroad,npenwl for business June 27,188B, w*«the first rnllroad out of Boaton to b»nrpnlred. The road wan OTiglBBllybuilt with "flshbelly" rails, laid onatone sleepers, supported on parallelmasonwork.

M».nr« of Suc«« iThe tun it wli<: attain* trj« greatest

nucrMft is usually the man who ba»the pTncereRt love for Mi work.—Fred1

Sweet.

TheBridge

By RAYMOND OTIS

MI

© by HcClurr Nr«.I>a|»r Syndlulf.WSUSarrln

S THKHE a high bridge on thisline—a very high bridge—that

The commissioner of finance InWlldwood, N. J,, Is a woman, Mrs.Doris W. Broadway, who Is thirty-sixyears oid, and the mother of two chil-dren.

Known as the youngest old womanIn Valdosta, Ga., Mrs. P. S. Williams,ninety-three years old, recently visiteda beauty parlor for a shampoo and afinger wnve.

HEALTH NOTES

regularityhealth.

In habit* conduces to

lEYES TESTEDBy Our Expert

OptometristYour eye» never have an oppor-tunity to rest except in sli<. .Bushing traffic, brilliant eU'clricjsigns, fine print—«H exact tliuiitoll. Perhaps your eyes need thehelp that good glasses can tfiv«Consult our Optometrist, Dr. J. JBrown, today.

AiBREEJiic.

One's normal condition depend* onsleep as well as on diet.

One compelled to work In the shadeshould find relaxation In the sunshine.

Effort beyond one's strength In-vites both physical and mental weak-nesses.

Over exertion requires equal relax-ation for both physical and mentalrecovery.

Exhaustion Is a certain Indicationthat one has failed to store up un-used power.

Every person should so lire as tohave a "reserve" both of energy andendurance. ' >

Hitting around after bathing andlying on the ground at any time arevery dangerous practices.

Going It while you're young gener-ally compels one 'to put on brakeslong before they otherwise would.

ltldlng In the cool of the eveningwithout sufficient protection 1* liableto chill the body and bring on a cold.

Ki-nr, . worry, excitement are theInitial cuuses of both mental andphysical diseases, remedies for whichurq difficult to find.

She was a pretty woman, aboutthirty. It was surprising that sheshould speak to me; she didn't looklike the aggressive kind. But she hadspoken and I liked her looks, so Ittqftd up In the aisle of the pullman.

"A bridge?" I said. "There moat bemany of them between bere and thecoast, especially where we cross themountains."

"Well, this must be an unusualbridge—not over a river—a great spanover an abyss. And deep—deeperthan anything."

"I don't know of any.""Are you going through this time,

all the wayT"Yes, I am,—What tobout the bridge!

Why does. It bother you?""I'll tell you," sbe said. "Listen.

Last night I had « dram, t dreamtthat this train came to a great bridge.And the bridge was broken. The trainran into the gap, and. , . •" Shepaused to shudder . . . "plunged athousand feet to the rocks below."

"Well," I said, "that was a dream.Anybody killed?"

"Everybody. My dream wag pro-phetic!" \

I shifted uneasily."What do you mean by prophetic,

exactly?""Well—1 don't know. I saw the

things so clearly—every detail as if agreat searchlight were playing on thescene. If there Is such a bridge Iwouldn't go over it for a fortune."

"If you'll excuse me, Pll go back fora smoke,"• 1 said. She simply noddedand I went to the smoking room. Tosave my life I couldn't get the pic-ture of a train running off a bridgeout of my mind. Then I spotted s>time-table on the* window-sill. Iturned a page and there was a spanexactly as she had described. 1 readthe legend under the picture. "Oneof the highest railroad bridges In theworld." It said, "on the main line toCalifornia. Canyon Flero."

I looked up on the map, which wasalso In the folder, the town nearestthe bridge and then searched the time-table for the hour at which we w.wp.due at that town. Bight the next eve-ning. So we did go over the bridgeat night Of course, all the time 1was telling, myself not to be a foolI slipped the folder Into my pocketand went back Into the car.

"Pardon, jne," 1 said to the dreamer,"but I've looked up your bridge . . ."ajid at that I handed ber the folder,opened to the picture. And I watchedher face minutely.

ner of her hnmlkerrlilcf. All through

the trnln there was n rcranrkahlp at-mosphere of tension The trnln sloweddown, came to on effortless stop -silence. I got out and walked nptoward the engine. I thought I sawthe Russian ahead of me. There wasa cluster of people around the enpine.

When I reached the coal tender Inoticed that everybody had suddenlylined up along the wheels and I hearda voice barking crisp commands. Itwas en tha moonlit side ef HK trnlnand the visibility was good. I felt aJab In the ribs.

"Oet a move on." somebody said In jmy ear. "Line up wtth the rest." Itwas the Russian woman, with a re-volver.

They ransacked the baggage carsand relieved the passengers of theirmoney. Their last act before depart-ing In automobiles waiting with tbeirmotors running was to rob those of uswho had got out and stood with thecrew. Then they herded us hack onthe train. I saw in the moonlight asthe door slammed an oval face framedIn blnck hair. She blew me a kiss asthe train pulled sway.

ONCE WEALTHY MANADMITS HE STOLE

FROM HIS FRIENDS

Voluntarily Confesses He Em-bezzled $500,000 by Un-

secured Notes.

Sees Ghostly HorsemanWith Detachable Hea-1

Paoll, Pa.—A Psnll medical practi-tioner stood agape flip other night andwatched the wild ride of a ghostlyhorseman.

As the shadowy figure came flyingdown Darby ronti. a mile south of theLancaster pike here, the coat tall* ofIts blue military Jacket stood out Inth* wine. * mber swung srreirtty xtIts tide, Horse hoofs pounded without a sound.

Suddenly It came to a stop—and Ina second had vanished from sight,according to Dr. Anthony WayneBaugh of Paoll.

According to legend, the "Paollghost" rides on the eve of tbe historicPaoll massacre anniversary to wherethe British and Heaslnns under Gen.eral Gray fell unexpectedly on madAnthony Wayne and his Chester coun-ty militia. Fifty were slain with bay-onets.

Legend says that the horseman re-sents persons who approach It and re-moves Its head, handlryj It to the spec-tator. Within the next year the person who has received the head dies.

"The rider didn't try to hand me hishead," Doctor Baugh—Incidentally ateetotaler—said.

Chicago.—Once a millionaire, nowcaught in I lie deflated real estate mar-ket, Charles i<\ (Jlaener, ufty-sii.a law-yer, who for years operated a mortgageloan and real estate Investment bouse,confessed voluntarily to State's Attor-ney Swansoo that he lias embezzledapproximately S5U0.UUU.

Hundreds of relatives, friends andbusiness associates, who placed Im-plicit confidence In blm, are the vic-tims.

I'm not a crook," Glaeser told thestate'B attorney. "1 never intended todefraud, but I got Involved deeper anddeeper. 1 tried to hide from myselfhow bad business conditions were.I thought 1 could pay everything back,but bow I'm beyond my depth."

Sells Unsecured Notes.The embezzlement, Glaeser con-

fessed, began several years ago, whenneeding cash, he Issued real estatenotes with no collateral backing them.

He sold them at a discount, paidthe interest himself, and when thenotes came due, paid them off, Issuingnew notes which were taken by otherInvestors.

Glaeser's reputation for honestywas so great that Investors acceptedtht notes without question. Had theytroubled to Investigate, they couldeasily have ascertained that the mort-gage tbe notes were supposed to rep-

Find Cannibal Tracesin Basin ef Danube

Vienna.—Excavations by scientistsIn tbe Danuhlan basin are revealingthis fertile section In a new role—thecradle of a European civilizationwhich once embraced cannibalism.

A perfectly preserved prehistoricdwelling, roughly a thousand centuriesold, has been found In Slovakia, alongwitb quarries In Mlskole, northernHungary, declared to be the oldest yetuncovered by scientist!

While exploring a cave near Domlca,Slovakia, expert B came upon anentrance which led to a maze ofSmaller caves. The i whole systemwas over MOO feet In length.

SAVE MONEYInsure Your Automobile HERE

Public Liability . .Property Damage.

FIVE MONTHPAYMENT PLAN

$,r,,000 and,$10,000 Limit

T o t a l . . .$56.00SEE

J. H. CONCANNON76 MAIN ST. — WOODBRIDGE

ESTAB. 1908 PHONE WDBGE 8-0299

HAVE ITHERE BY

TOMORROW

• " I dorut have that globe in

itock,but I'll have it delivered

to your home tomorrow."

• S« laying, ke telephoned

Newark from his itore in Sum-

mit end insured delivery of

the globe next day. Coit of

call—10 cents.

• Another good customer

had been spered the annoy-

ance of delay by the swift and

inexpensive means of order-

ing stock by telephone.

NEW JERSEY BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY

MOTHERS APPRECIATEBENEFIT OF ELECTRICITY

"My God," she said In a throaty | resent did not existvoice, "U'B the bridge—It's the very | "i slnrtwi In business In the late

THOUGHT WAVES

Nowadays one can fact monthly billseasier than one can foot them.

Well, anyhow, I a toinbitone alwayshas a good word for a fellow ybo Ifdown.

Europe la so sick of war that It Iswilling to do anything to avoid It ex-cept be reasonable.

A preacher says nobody lose* any-thing by being fair minded, But lotsof folk are afraid to take tb* risk.

A recent survey find* that man pre-fer wives who can cook. These sur-veys find out everything, It seem*.

A sixty-year-old wan, slagl*. en-rolled as a itudent in it western col-lege, lie's after his bachelor's d

News of All Csrteret Borough

bridge! When do we cross itT'"Tomorrow night, between eight

and nine.""I'm going to get off this train," she

said, starting to rise.Not now," I objected. "We don't

get there until tomorrow night"She settled back In the seat. Her

hands twitched nervously. She de-clared that unless tbe conductorwould consent to stop the train atthe bridgehead, she would gel off at thefirst station before It.

By morning, a strange thing hadhappened. The whole train was talk-Ing about the Canyon Flero bridge.

Nobody, I thought, had jet consult-ed the conductor about stopping thetrain at the bridgehead, so I accostedhim myself when he came through thecar. Had he heard about the dreainT

"Yes, I've heard about 1(. We don'tmake a custom of stopping thesetrains because of dreamt. But Iwired ahead and got a notification toproceed. There's nothing wrong wttfcthe bridge."

Nothing could be more convincingthan that But the Russian, who hadoverheard tbe talk, suddenly new oatof ber seat and came up to us.

"Don't you see what It U J" the said."Of course they're not going to breakthe bridge until it's too late for, tele-grams. It may be a plot. Sabotage."

"Very well, madam. I'll stop thetrain.'

"Thank you," she said, and turnedaway.

At eight o'clock we came to Ute lasttown before Canyon Plero.

"No reports on the bridge," said tbeconductor and we started on.

Russian T O M B , nibbled tbe ear-

flOs among the German people In LakeView," said Glaeser. "Dp to 1022 Ihad built up a good reputation sellingfirst and second mortgages and deal-ing In real estate. My clients believedIn me and trusted me. Many of themwere my friends for many years, ormy relatives.

'All tills trouble started so manyyears ago I don't remember why Istarted It But I do remember thefirst transactions that 1 got Into wereof this nature: I forged some mort-gage notes.

Gave 10 Per Cent Interett"I made up the mortgage In the us-

ual form, signed It myself, had It se-cured by a trust deed and then soldthe uotes to uiy clients, who acceptedthem without question. As I remem-ber, those Qrst notes Mvere $10,000uotes. Or course, there was never anyactual real estate to secure the trustdeed.

"Once 1 began It, It got away fromme. It rolled up like a snowball. I wasgranting high rates of tnterest, asblgb as 10 per cent a year, and whenthe coupons came iu I would pay themmjneU But In order to do this I hadto forge more mortgages. And thenthese mortgages would come due, de-manding still more money."

N.tmral C«rl«ityThe tuateru, a lUard living In ts-

bnds-northeast of New Zealand, hasthree eyes. One of these, on top of Itsbead, U rendered useless because it I*ccrertd with t told of skla Tbls 1*one of the few creatures now on earth

fo (ono hu remained uscoaocedslue, it f t *

Sine* January 1,1929, re-ductions in mldenct rateKhMhjl** have tav«l ourc u f t o m m more than

(1,000,000 per year.

W H E N the baby wak« In the nlght-ofwhen there'* illness In the home, mothers export*ence some of the bleuingt of electric service.

The instant lighting of a room; the warmradiance of an electric healer; the convenienceo a bottle warmer, the soothing heot of anelectric pad; the benefits of the sun lamp.

And mothers know that they can have suchelectric service together with the electric service

hi l f ° r a FEW

Mothers have no quarrel with the price of•lewtricity—they know its value.

Page 5: CARTERET PRES - DigiFind-It · ence was that the Carteret score was bigger, th e hom boys winning by 47 to 0. The day was bitter cold and the crowd was not as large as usual. Carteret

1WUS88

Mocft filter Mignon for Economy

PROTECTYOUR AUTOMOBILE

with

ftr«*ton*ANTI-

FREEZEYou get doubla protection with

Firestone Antl-Freen in ymir radia-tor. It won't boll off on warm dayi.On oold days there la no danger of• froxen radiator. And, FirestoneAntl-Freeze ii more economical—ant filling IOMU all winter.

The nam« "Fireitone" ii your

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1932

Fit of Coughing SaveiWoman From Sure Death

Ohlrago.—nwaiiap Mrs. Mom-la Stif-fen r(mj;tiP<1 «ho prnhnhly snvpd herHf<\ physicians snv.

A lit of roughing rtl»ln(1|j«1 from hernrrk » pistol hnliol the received Ins hold up nf a bnnlc In the cltj, -Theh l l was loilgod against otn> »t her

In inch a way that hor phjali'lnn salil It was Impossible In npptlite for Us removal.

P A G i n V l

Huf e Rabbit Watchdogfor California Sheriff

Modesto, O l l f . - N n frnr tins I>epHty RherllT Harvej Wrlghl nf thlcvM•a Innjt as Hig Iliick In <>n the Mv

Wright WHS nvr<ikf>np<l one morningt>y tnnil pniimllnit on his porch doorRushing outside tie found HIR Murkiclnnt rnnhlt with a flrm hnlil on an

lilpnllnMt mnn'a rlcht leg.The Wrlp.ht family'! watvh (log nns

aslwp In hit kennel.

r these flays, when lefls expon-nlve m m dlnhen arc. BometlmeB

a necefislty, one neverthelesswishes to preserre the attractive-ness of the main course. For in-stance, hamburg steak, which con-

By Jane Rogersused In Ihli roripn nnd heightensthe niinjj^l savor of beet andbacon,' • ••'

Mack Filet Mignon

Mix V/j pounds of finely groundtains the rich bodybuilding prop-erties of an expensive tenderloin,can be a dignified and delightfulpart of the menu. In the role ofmock filet mlgnon, It is quite adifferent proposition from the plainmeat ball, both in looks and Inflavor.

In preparing meats, especially thecheaper cuts which require morecareful seasoning to make themtasty, good cooks find sugar asuseful as salt and pepper In bring-ing out the full meat flavor. It Is

Backfire S c » n Bar|lirChicago.—An automobile hack lire

BtnrtlpO Charles Young during a confeetlonery burglary. He believedsomeone wns shoettng, broke througha window, and ran awn;, according toChicago police.

Bump Restore* Sightof Eye D*»d 45 Yean

Toronto. Ont —In I SSI Tnomat Ma*win. while plnvlni. was it rack nn theheart with s lacrnaa* mirk He winunconscious fur two tints. When herecovered the tlirhf of in »ye wss(one.

Recently Mr. Mason w n overcomeby heat. He (ell. struck Ms hesit an<twas unconscious fnr two ri»tn

Fie nwnke to find the tight of (hreye restored.

Gyptioa Will Fe.tur.Gerthwin Hill On

Herte Flati Fir.Boston.—When Bra swi«pVthe Met

rnpolltan Driving, club's ItablM, onefrightened horse, which bolted [rumthe building, ran 24 miles before ttwai captured nt Acton.

Watte Paper Lou I*Turned Into a Profit

Boslon.-C«nrersliin«lan annual eipenae nf nt leuii $!t.iMu Into sn Innim?of more Ihnn fcljiui a jrnr wns ncrmnpllshed hprc recentl,v hy a Kmnn of •*tall siores. Im-hnlliiii wMne o( th>largest ilepnrtim'tii ntures, when theySigned commits to v l l In a Chlncfirm waste |ni|>pr nlilrhnrvvluuiilj the)had pnld 1" time mumpil.

chuck or rump steak with onetablespoon ground suet, one tea-spoon At salt, one teaspoon ofSugar, 'A teaspoon, of pepper andpaprika to taste. Mix well: makeInto flat cakes one Inch thick;twist a thin slice ot bacon aroundeach cake and fasten with a tooth-pick. Broil or pan broil 15 to 20minutes. As the meat cooks, thebacon strips shrink and lit snuglyaround the cake, looking verymuch like the membrane whichsurrounds a real filet.

Astronomica l

"Novn" In imtnincimy Is a Mnr that

suddenly flares Into Brent brill iance

which Is malntnlned for a short period,

and then relapses Into Its former inng

nltnde.

Ft iry Story

"I've Ki>t M li'l or w.irk tn lift nl

the i>t!lri' IIIIIIL'III ami wmi'l IM< J ,HM>

for dintiiT." mild the broker '»• his

wife IIVIT the ti-li'phiui<>. "I' yon nepd

me for nnyllilnc, yi.'i can Ret me at

the ('huniii'.v cnbnret ."—Kawui Oily

Stnr.

Schwitrzburg Palace I*Opened Up to Public

Schwarihurn. — The Bchwarnhnrtptilnce, nerclieit NWianllrallj on I hlfhcliff In the valley nf the Hchwarwi Inthe Thnrlnginn fores* has ownopenpd to the public by Princess Annal.tilse nf Siliwnnbiirg S«ndershausenit Is llrst monlloned In hlntnry In 1123i\s the sent nf the Princes nf Srhwnr*tiiiru, hut lt« prckrni form ilnles In themain from the venr* \~'.W I"U.

Antitat S«ttUm««lon the lici^lHs in l.tiilitiiu Ni'uos-

trn. a wtlmrb of I'rrsOvn, a SUme agesettli-uient bellevetl to he more thanflvp thounand M':\r» old has hron dls-covcreil.

medley nf Geor(rci open* the A * P GVTWIWS*

p Monday, !><-<-eniher M B . I Bthis R-rnup, specially orchentrated byMax Terr and Harry Horliek, i* in-rludnl "<"lap Ynur HandK," "LadyBe flnod," "TKe Man 1 I/>ve," and"StriVc \'n the Band "

Frank Parker, the <iyp«ie«' t*nor,ngs "Under the SUrn I Foundmi" and "1'nderneath the t farkmoon", while the two-piano Gyp*ta

play the novelty "Canadian Cap*ni.""R»m»nci>" bv dranadas, " P M d*

Amphoric" by Chiminade, and ae-'vctton* from the "Desert Soi^r"

if ram, broadcast atfl p. m. E.S.T. over WEAF.

Cookfafc Sthaol > La D « i M(iiiiryr Rpcttir, world famoux r»»-

taurantenr whn raterrd to the «pp»titen of epicureti, turns hi' takvtato teachl(1|r children to cook on theOur Daily Komi program, Saturday,December 3rd.

During this program, 10:JO a. m.K. S T. over the NBC-WJZ network,Mr. Rector divulftM ronking arrrvtetn the children and gives them r « i -

to experiment with.

Squirt.•Time," remark* a aclentlat. "tkr»*

U>th »ny»." J«»( like toothpaste, aft.| er n wntnsn hns used the tab* ooca.

- 1-omion HnmiirUt.

Too CloseUp

By EDGAR T. MONTFORT

© liy McClure Krwjjiapor Byndlnt*.WNU Snrvlc*

pvEAHKST NANCY—I hope you

Fb«tton« patented constructionfeature* of Gum-Dipped Cord* andTwo Estra Cum-Dipped Cord PlieaUnder the Tread give you mmt/oryour monty.

Bie

4.40-214JO-J04.S0-M4.75-WWO-W.5.00-JO645-18BJS-J1B.5U-1S—MO-19M0-J1.6.50-197.00-10

E«h

•.10

*.*77.S«7.4t• 3S• • • 8m mm

II,*fia.»IJ.M

iv.es

P«Poli

$10.f0ll.te>

ij.4«14-3X14J4!•.!•17.4*17. M».tt« » •1*40JI.lt

MUNICIPALSERVICE STATION

INC.Opp. Municipal Building

WOODBRIDGE, N. J.HUGH M. TOMPKINS, Mgr.

"NOW I FEELFULL OF PEP"

After taking Lydia £. Pink-ham'a Vegetable CompoundThat's what hundreds of women

•ay. It steadies the nerves . . . makesyou eat better . . . sleep better . . .relieves periodic headache and'*• .ache . . . makes trying daysendurable.

If you are not aa well as youwant to be, give this medicine achance to help you. Get tt bottlefrom your druggist today.

— Please mention this paver to adfertiaen; it helps you, it helpt them,B help* youi paper. —

won't he too disappointed when yoahenr tliat I slian't be able to get backIn time for you to take your trip thissummer. I guess 1 should have toldyou sooner, but the days Just seemto slip by without my knowing wherethey are going. It 18 wonderfulup here and 1 am having the time ofmy life. I'm clinging a man and he'sgoing to be here six weeks more, Ifyou could go on substituting at theoffice for me Just thnt little bit longer.I can't lose my Job In ense I don'tcatch him. Honey, I know you won'tmind giving up your trip this once foryour devoted sister.—Ann,

When Nancy had finished rendingher letter she flung herself across thebed and burst Into uncontrollableweeping. She burled her fluffy blondhend In the pillow and kicked herpatent leather heels In the air. Heraunt, hearing the commotion, ran Into Investigate.

"Why, Nancy darling, what Is thematter?" she asked, stroking the stink-Ing shoulders of her niece.

"Oh Aunt Sally, Aunt Sally I" sobbedthe girl, turning over and throwingher arms nhout the older woman'sneck. "I'll never be happy again,never, never as long as I live. Myown slater has gone back on me. She'stricked me and she waited to tell meuntil I'd made all my pretty clothes,and 1 spent my last penny to get thematerial to make them. And what'll1 do with them In this hole? Whatdifference does It make what you wearhere) How could she do It? Howcould she? And I hud my heart nilset. I've been planning for this tripfor over a year. How cruel she Is!And my sister, my own sister that Iloved DO. How could she do this thing

to me?""Do what, Nancy?" asked Mrs, Wal-

ton at last."Head that letter and you'll see.

Just as cool as a cucumber. 'I hopeyou won't be too disappointed,'"Nancy quoted with a sneer.

Mrs. Walton read the letter andput It down with a sigh, her usuallyplacid face frowned with little worrywrinkles. Ann wns always chasingsome man, her nlisnlute franknessabout It helnjt the only redeemingfeature about It.

"Nnnry, darling," she said after amoment, putting l">r anna around thegirl again. "You're faclns your firstdisillusionment nhmit human heln^s

It hurls Hi' mure. benuiBi' It'snnil

someone you love und trusted who haswronged you. It shouldn't hurt yonany more than If some outsider haddone It Often those who are not re-lated to us prove our most loyal anddevoted friends and you mustn't letthis embitter you. Another thing youhav» to .r«m«imt>«r, Inert; ftnj serlou*flaws In every human character, andperhaps if you knew other girls as yondo Ann you would find thnt they hadequally serious defects. Sometimes! think we get too close up to ourrelatives and that's what makes somany family quarrels and splits. Iknow this Is hard on you, dear, andI'm not trying to condone Ann's ac-tion, hut If I were you I'd make thebefit of the situation and try to formnew ties and Interests."

"Oh, Aunt Sally, 1 wish I could, butI'm Just burning up with resentmentIt's eating my heart out to think thatshe'd do a thing like that to me. Thathurts worse than the disillusionment—and my pretty new clothes."

Nancy's lips quivered and the tearsbegan to fall afresh. "I can't see any-one. Do call up and break my datewltj> Ned for me tonight. _It wouldjust kill me to have to talk to him andbe nice and-guy when my heart's deadInside me. Life simply Isn't worthliving any more. I don't ever wantto see anybody again as long as Ilive."

"Nonsense, dear. You're going toput on your prettiest dress and go outand have a good time. Why, It's sum-mer and Bummer was made for youth."

"Oh, help me to be brave," beggedNancy with pathetic earnestness.

Nancy had decided not to tell Nedabout her brnken heart, but she hadnot been with him ten minutes beforeshe was crying on his shoulder andtelling him the whole dreadful story.She was so pathetic, and lovable whenshe was unhappy. Ned thought witha thrill as he held her close.

"Oh, I'm a little devil to talk aboutmy sister that way nnd I guess I'm asmean as she Id, but it Just slippedout," she said contritely after awhile,her lashes still wet with tears.

"Nancy, you give me an Idea andthe courage to—I tell yon what. Ihnow what we can do with thosepretty clothes. I'm making a trip toPanaroft for the firm In October. . . ,Summer clothes wilt be fine there atthat time. . . . Let's make It ourhoneymoon, Nancy dearest Don'tyflti think you could? I know you loveme, so don't try to deny It."

"What sa.vs sn?" she chlded, hut theman saw finmetlring- In her eyes as Shesut I In're hy him In the moonlight thatmnd'e his heart lenp with Joy as hekissed her Hfinin and again.

"Fur a penny I would," Bhe laughednfier awhile, but the ring In her voicebelled the flippancy of her words, andNed Henton knew that Nancy reallyloved him.

Radio's Most Spectacular Program

A different ull-«t»r program nightly.Monday to Friday, lnclunlve. Tw«great radio chain*. More than 309 ea-tertalnen. The Marx Brother*, Ii na-tionally famous author* In pertun, 75 ,dramatic actors, U world headlluersoloists, 1M mualclan«, a splendidmusical choruu, a doujtt musical com-edy start combln« to glre you thegreatMt Mrl«* of entei talniuenta everpredated on tht air, Tupe In tonight,

N I W

Call Me Sam's Advance Christmas SaleMeeting conditions with the greatest value-demonstration Jo»t when every one's tfcottfhla M«turned to Christmas gift buying , . • Sacrificing Coals and profit* . . • feAtnrlii( bat* known quaBtjm«rchandl«e of hlghent repute • . . BUY NOW while telectiona a n oomplete-iet your thaw oftheee aouuini Pie-Chrlttmai saving*.

Reg. 1.50

SPATS

A Value Thai WU1Bock The Townl

BOTANY MILLS

and aotld colwt—

$» GENUINELEATHZB

At Actual Cost—

$3 ALL WOOLTURTLE NECK

SWEATERS

WIND-BREAKERS

4.87Handker-chiefs

Zipper front—« womrtrV.lu.

Sensational!PIGSKIN'SUEDECAPESKIN

GLOVES1.38

HAND MADE

SILK LINED

Pint quallty-vut up Inprttty gift boxn—<om*with Initials.

2 for 77cHundred! to choose from.

LEATHER

Slippers

1.38

A Super-Sale!

$2.95 and 13.50

FELT HATS$1.50 SilkSCARFS

Our greaUtt v»IU« In10 ytart—All art tllk 4 pr. 89clined. In all ntw•hapet and shadespopular this M«on.

Doubtst « l , fancyterm and eotlde.

Slut »/, to tt.Selection of rich

patterns and In

a 1 1 colors—full

width and length

•|6. MILITARY ANDTRAVEL SETS wi

Union Suits77c

PAJAMAS94c

Bruthi eomb, raior end ethertoilet articles In combinationeeti-««ractlve leather e«M«.

In novelty . . , . . . , •-—•and illo-on modtli, Metcolor broadcloth.

Winter weight-»>'ltenatural 3» «

A Sale you won't forget!MEN'S $3.95 SUEDE

WIND-BREAKERS V Neck All Wool

SWEATERS

1.77Secular *S »0

SHIRTS

94c

176SMITH

STREETPERTHAMBOY

Crescent

Page 6: CARTERET PRES - DigiFind-It · ence was that the Carteret score was bigger, th e hom boys winning by 47 to 0. The day was bitter cold and the crowd was not as large as usual. Carteret

PAGE SIX

: ' * ; ™ " /:i '"':~w'i7

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, fMl

Swift and Co. Purchat*Over 1,000 Chevrolet*

DETROIT. Mich.—An PTnmplr (ifhow fjn'Rt American Inminpsn orirani-tatlnn* »ri> maintaining thr>ir serv-ice at a high standard of <-flic1«>mydespite K^iiTnl luisinpsi romlltinnn

i» shown in the purrhnsp by Swiftand Company of more thnn 1,000new Chivnilet Six rum and trucksfor the twelve months period endingOctober l i t .

These Chevrolet*, delivery ofwhioh wire mnilc throughout theyenr, an1 beinit used in every stHtcin the union at the various Swift

brnnches nnd Hulmirtinry companionto expedjitc delivery of the compimy'i nimnprruis food prodmts.

At present Ihere nrn npproximnU1-ly 2,riOf) ChevrolelK in the fleet,equipment of Swift and Oompnny.Tliih ranks them us one nf the larjf-esl operators nf Chevrnlrt flwtn inHie United Stntc«.

G r r e i a n A r t L o i t

No l i r e i ' un i pMiiiiihU'" <loiie In H I P

time Ihtil <!rpek culture wan nt III

heiclit "re known H> lie In PilHtenre,

hill lliere uri- re.'onlo of nrtlstH nml

Ihclr work*

Let Us SERVICEYOUR CARGUARANTEED WORK

Tire Repairs - StorageGreasing - Overhauling

C O M E IN N O W

BEST QUALITY MATERIALS USED

SNYDER'S GARAGECOR. NEW STREET find AM HOY AVE.

W O O D B R I D G E, N. J.PHONE: WOOOBRIDGK 8 0205

MARTIN SNYUER. I'rop.

Double Feature At Ford* *The«tr« Every Saturday

In appreciation of the wonderfulresponse that the thont.re Roln*; pu!>-lie of Fords and the KurroundinlfI'limmiinity have (riven to the newmunnirement of the Fords Theatre,further efforts me heinR made hyJudue Nelson and his unsocial.™ tobring the entertainments oven to nhigher standard they already havestrewn by bookinjf some of the big-(fest attractions of the current yearlo their theatre.

For Saturday of this week andevery other Saturday there will bea biur double feature show and theparticular projrram of this week endwill brinu Bartmra Stanwyck in "ThePurchase Price" and Harry Carey in"Without Honors" as, the outstandingfeatures.

Barbara Stanwyck is said to havedone her finest acting in "The Pur-chase Price" and as this is the firstHarry Carey picture to be bookedat. the. Ford* Theatre under the newregime, it was seen that "WithoutHonors" ahould be a picture in keep-ing with the policy set down for thenew management.

America1! "Diieoverjr"

A n li . i i i i m i ' i , l i i i n i i c i i f r j u l f s n n ,

visited America In 1WI. Ills descrlp

tlon ot the counUry led to the ex-

pedition of Mef Krlkson In the year

1000, when he landed nt Nnntncket,

calling the region Vlnland. Chris-

topher Columbus wns In Icelnnd In

M77. It I* hilleved he gnt nt Iteyk-

InvIJi Ihc I'lt'oriniiilnn which led him

io rrum Hie Athinllc from Hpnln to

lie West IrwTes In 1 Vi"J.

— Cla««ifl«>d Adi. Brintr Rerolta

CHRISTMAS SALE ISNOW IN PROGRESS

One (if the finest assortments ofChmtmas irift merchandise to befound in Perth Amhoy. is now being;offered holiday shoppers at "Call MeSam's" haherdasliory, located oppo-site. thf> Crescent Theatre, on Smithnt reet,

"ThiH popular establishment hnnlong been ;i moron for thrifty anddispriminalinpr shoppers. Such giftitems as gloves, neckties shiKs, hntfland bathiolies are now being shownat (greatly reduced prices. A pre-Christmns sale is now in progressnnd many thrifty shoppers of Wood-bridffe and Carteret are availing;thenwelvm of this opportunity tohave a suhsUntial sum on theirChristniHS purchases.

666LIQUID . TABLETS - SALVE

Chrcki Colds first day, Headachei orNeuralgia in 30 minutes, Malaria in3 days.

R66 SALVE for HEAD COLDS.j Most Speedy Remedies Known.

PRICES AT SUNNYDALEARE LOW THIS WEEK

The meat department of theSunnydalf Market, managed by Mr.Bert Flytell, is offering a large rangeof meat items this week at surpris-ingly low prices. Many a dollar issaved at the Sunnydale every day,according to the popular manager.Housewives are cutting the meatcosts in half by making their pur-chases there.

The fruit and vegetable depart-ment is also doing an increased busi-ness according to Jake Stamelman,the busy manager of this department.Many shoppers have come to knowMr. Stami'lmnn personally since hehas been at the Sunnydate, and inmany Instances he is askod for ad-vice on shopping problems confront-ing harassed housewives.

Emerald Isla

'In a poi'in "Krlti" published In 1795,

Dr. Wlllliini Drenimn, the author,

writes or "(he men of the Emerald

Isle," and credit for It Is given him.

The couiilry merits the title because

of the bright verdure, of Its j:ra88

and other vegetation, due largely to

the frequent rni'is there.

NIIKHIFVR BALKIN CHANCRKV t)F NKW JBRHrlT " "

i w c m ni.AKIN'S flTAU t i l l l l . i i lNi i * M )I.IIAK ASSOCIATION nf rnTli-rrt, «• <-<>r-l)or«llon, Cnmplslnant. nnil f'ANNIK.HROWN, "t al»., l)-r«ncl.uit«. Fl Vu- <•"Ihti »«li> '•( mortmitci l proiTilnM <I"»IIM1»r tile.Ml,.r J1. 1«>2.Hy vlrtufl (if the flhnvp mnf'-'i Writ. In run

IIIT<TI«4 nml clpllvored, I will »»P"»« tnofll*1 at public vpnilna on\VKIl\KrtllAV. THR aiOVKNTll PAT OP

I.Kl'RMnER, NINETKKN IIUMHKKI)AND THIHTY-TWO

,,l two o'clork Slnndnnl Tim* In tlx1 «««r -nonn of the mlc! <1«y nt 111* Rh*rlfr« Of-flc* In tho City of Niw Hrim.wi.-k. N. J.

AT.L (hone certain Inn. lrn< tn or p»ro»linf Und and j>r»ml«n«, lirrolnnfter pnrtlouIn r l x dur r lbed , slliintu, lylni unit li*ln«In th« Ilorouull nf I'n rliTPt, In the County..f MlildlotH an.l amlo of Now Jorsey.

BGHINNINO at a point In the northerly«ld« of Roosevelt Av«nu« (Korm«rly known• < WmnlhrldiK Avi-nuc) tllntant fifty <E0'>fi'el westerly frum the Intersuetlon nf *h«northerly ulile nf FlonsBvoU Avsnue wltli t i n« m t « r l y sld« cif McKlnlejr Avenue a»4from »«l<l beRliinlnit r i n n l n * (1) In a wn>t-rly direction along the northerly side of'.noaevelt Avonue fifty (SO') f " t to a point;henre <2) In » northerly dlractlon andwrallH to McKlnley Avtnue one hundredino') feet to a point; thence ( I ) In «n

imterly direction and parallel to the rlra*u 'n t lnnei l rmlrse fifty ISO') feet to a Kolnlnd (ti«n<>« K l In a noutherly direction an.Inntll'-l lo Ml** jierond rhentloried course oneundrrd (100') feet tn the point or nl«r«( licRlnnlng.X\f\nt known «« lots numtxrn 19 and !0

n hlork number ** us Inld out on mapII- of the Cancla Healty Cnmpany. Baldml' l>»lnr on file* In trie office of the dera-il Hie County of Middlesex «t New Brunii-nick, N. J.

Koine !he premises commonly known andMinuted n« No. H-t9 noonevelt Av«nu«.

'nrteret, N J.nrrrpps amounting- to flpproilmately |8,-

7fi no.Tngi-ttiiT with all and slnfOlar the rlthts,

irlvllra-pn. hi>redlt»ment» and app'rten-nren thereunto belonging or In anywiseppertalnlng.

BEItNARD M GANNON.lonRRT I.. BROWN, Sheriff.;e 45 Solicitor.: P. 11-11, It. *5; »-».

AUTO KAU10 AND ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES

Money Saving

Storage Battery$£.22in freezing weath-

er eaiy.

THIS POWERFUL

Wllli yuur<>!>! K11A

Pennsylvania

5*tuij lirw Fully tJwi^Ltl,i\iu tail miUJKtltlim. Nutsecond or rebuilt Stlla

MOTOIt OIL2 GALLONSIn scaled c*ns

—Medium— Pirrrt contactwith the reflnrrtimakes I MiInc price LYnur cost lesstlnin ?\ic qt.

Buy With ConfidenceMoney Back IE You Want It

Hundreds of ittmi not thownadvertisement are in-

cluded in thit big 3-day sale ofWinter Ncceiiities. We havecomplete assortments.

ALCOHOL andGLYCERINE ANTI-FREEZF,

GLOVES ROBES

UNIVERSAL HEATERS

It ittt'OKK KUU> KOE LCHH THAN %1.V5.I- lour bu*rd type, poliihed ilumluuiii d«-tlcitur complete with »l| neoeasMiy flUlu(,

H E A T E R Sr u n MODt!. "A•" FOHUgSHUTTERS

RADIORADIO TUBES

C l e a n i n g O l d C o i n t

T o c l fJ i" '"»<1 i»rl(s l iu ih i -o t i i s a p p l y

( K U x l f t f i w h i M n j i wirt i H i la i t i j ten

c l o t h . T n i r l m i i ( h e o r i g i n a l l u s t or (#

c o p p o r EIIHI K " - » 1 c<»inH p.n<ko t h c i n In

R r a w pnt:ii«* (n'i'rii'vrlit,

Fords TheatreFORDS, N. J.

MATINEES DAILY 2 - S P. M.Evening* Continuoui 7 to It P. M

Friday, December 2nd—Lad Day

Wm. Powell and Kay Francil in

"ONE WAY PASSAGE"

Sat. Dec. 3rd Two Bit Feature!

Barbara Stanwyck in

"THE PURCHASE PRICE"

and Harry Carey in

"WITHOUT HONORS"

Sun. & Mon.—Dec. 4 * 5

Big Special Show

Gary Cooper and Tallula Bankhead

in "DEVIL AND THE DEEP"

Laurel and Hardy in

"THE COUNTY HOSPITAL"

Gus Edwards "School Daya" New

Tuci. and Wed., Decamb«r 6-7

Marion Dar in in

"BLONDY OF THE FOLLIES"

Thui-ij, Fri., Dec. 8-9 Two Day* Only"THE BIG BROADCAST"

And Other Big Feature!

Matinee Daily 2 to 5:15 P. M.

Sat., Sun., Holidays Continuoui

2 to 11 P. M.

SAVE THAT "DOUGH"SHOP AT "NAT'S"

LOOK AT THESE

SI'ECIALS IF YOU

D O U B T O U R

WORD — REMEM-

HKR.

FRI. & SAT.

ONLY

Brush WoolSWEATERSn Tan, Pow-

Jt-r Blue, andBlack. Guar-anteed 100%Pure Wool.

Val. $2.95

HANK'S RIBBEDUNDKRWEAR

IN UNIONS ORSHIRTS ANDDRAWERS.

REG $1.50UNIONS

99c

Reg. 85cSHIRT ANDDRAWERS

59c

Pure SilkHOSIERYFormerly

35c Pr,SPECIAL2 Pr. 25c

" N A T S "Exc lus ive Men's Shop

163 SMITH ST., PERTH AMBOYI'cter and Nat Hpiiniidi, Prop.

SALE: rHuNTRUY OF NEW JJRUSKV - Kf1-tw-»«n BLAKINO HTATt n t 'TI .n iNO AM-LOAN ASSOCIATION of raTt*»rpI, ft m r -porntlnT., Complainant, af»'l HKNHY HEN-NERMUND and MARGAnFT HWNNKrt-MUND. D*ft>ndant«. Fl, Kn for lh« nal*of mortgBBtd prpmlnei <lated oc toher 21,ls-32.By virtue ot the above ntatM writ to me

directed and dMIrend, I will *xpon(» to salent inihllr v^nflne Oh\A KDNESDAY. THE TWEXTY-FIIIST DAY

OF I>KCE^IBER. A D., NINETEENHirNDIlED THIRTY-TWO

nt two n'rlnrk Htntrlard time In tlip art^r-noon nf thp said day nt the Hherirfu Otftrtn Hie City o( New Brunswick, N. J.

All t lmt cprtnln t r ac t or parcft nf landam' prdmlwi hprelnafter particulftrly de-Miltetl, slttiaip, lying and belnn In the Ilnr-oiiftti oT Carter*., County of MldiHtsex andfilflte of New J*rsfy.

at a point distant fc**0 hua-ilred Hix fppt westerly from tho Intersection

f tho weHtcrly nlde of Pernhlnf a venue\\h the southerly Hide of Harris street nnd

from snld point running: (1) westerly twen-ty-r ight feot tw a point In tho southerlyside, of Harris s treet ; thence runnlfiK (2)

utlierly on* hundred feet to a. point nndparflllpl with FerBhlng avenue; thpnrn r'.^i-nliiK i 3) efl'iterty and prfralU'l with the first

ntiitned troum* twenty-ctplit , 2&1) feet trtpoint and tlienco running- (4) no r t l u r ly

A parallel with (ho second menlloiifdcourse one hundred (100") feet to the point

placr (if beginning.{^serving thu riEhl to use the westerly

f^.ur feet in width In front and rear andne hundred feet in depth as a perpetualirUeway and allowing the owner of the ud-dii'Jit property on the westerly sliltj hereofft" pnid use with hi« property so t h a t &

mutUBl driveway shall exlflt atljacent to theid house on the said premises uf eight

feel tn front and rear and one hundred tvtlIn depth.

HetnK the premises commonly known, nndilrn1gmited as No. ti Harr is &tre«t, Carterat ,

Decree amountinu to approximately $4,-

Togethfrr with all and singular, thettrhts, privileges, heredi taments und up-urtenancea thereunto belonging or In any-i i^e agpertainlnftr.

BEKN'ARD M. GANNON.ROBERT L. BROWN, Sheriff.

26.K8 Solicitor.V K 11-2B; 12-2. I. H .

SHERIFF'S RALBIN I'HANCEItY OF NEW JERSEY — 1)0-

tween BLAZ1NC, 8TAH IIUILDING ANDLOAN ASBOCJATION {.f Ourteret, it L-nr-poratlon. Complainant, and ROHK 1>' AN-GKLO. et ala., llett-niianLv. Fl. Fa. furBfllfe of mortg-aged prembey tfaUd Octo-

By virtue of the above stated writ tome directed and delivered, I will expo ye tosale a t public vendue onWEDNESDAY, T H E TWENTY-FlKHT DAY

OF1 DECEMBER. A. I>., NINETKliNHUNDRED THIHTY-TWO

at two o'clock Standard time In tho after-noon of the said day at the Sheriff a officeIn the City of New BrunBwiek, N, J.

All t ha t certain t ract or parcel of landami premises hereinafter part icularly da-ftirlbed, nltua.te, lying and hein^ in theBorough of Cart ere I, JildflltHOX County,New Jersey.

AVhich on a map entitled "Map of Ar-thur Kill Tract. Roosevelt, Middlesex Ouuu*ty. N. J., oWnt?d by J. Steinberg," dutedJune 17th. m i . tr.-J. made by Fred aimnna,L'. E., of Roosevelt, N. J., in laid downknown and nhown as lot number 33 fiM-nignnd having & frontage on Houston utreft

hown on *taid map,•ginning a t a pniat being alti 'aU'd on j

the eaeterly llhe of HuiiHtnn ntreet usMHIWII ot) nuid mup anil du tun t ^outliurly \file hundred uml N*>\ei.ty-nine urul nlxty- jfi-ur hurulri'dthH (U».(JH) feet from the cor-iit-r ritriiiftl by the Internee t ion of thetininherly line uif Arthur Kill uvunue withthe tnt+t.Tly Hue of HoUHton nirei-t undfrom HHUt pmlnt running (1) It) an eunti-rlydLrt.M'tl<>u a King & I'nt) parallel or ni'Hily m>\s 11 ti the a-iuthtrly lino of Arthur Kill ave-nue, one humln-d four '«nd nnu one-lr 'n -divdthM ft'L-t (104.01') to a puitii, 'yt-ncerunniiit,' t^i in a anutherly dtrpc-tlun liluiiga line iit right uunifs tu tlie flrttt mt'iitlttiif<l Iiiiursf, twviity fivt. (26") ftst,t to u point, 1Da-tut- runni\\g (3l In a weittcrly dlrtulioci ;u lnn t a lint' jiurHllH or nearly «o with thf j^"Mitht-rly Itnc nf Ari l iur Kill avenue nlu.-tj1 ,ftjiht juid Histci-ji hutulr^ltlid feut ( SIH. Ifr') -to ii puiiit in the cusUTly 11111] of Hmiawu '

r.M-t, und thence running (4) In a north- I\y Ulicctfon ulon^f the easterly liiu- ofOHM tun street, twenty-five mid nix him- I

T71) ftH't to tin1 point nt plain of IIUKIU-

Helnt; 1 liu premises commonly known u n jtiiKiiatL-d ut Nu. 10 Iluiiuuii ntieet, Cai-ret, ^ New JurBey.1 JIM: 100 uinounilng tit H[ii>rnilmiit«ly | 3 , -

Iu.tlO.Together wltli all and Blimular, theKht*, iHivili»i[Vaj, lier*?ditam«ntai and ap<urttnuiH-es thervutitu btlunglng or In any-ite appi-Ttalnlntf.

UEKNAKU M. UANNUN,Sheriff.

BKHT I.aUIS BIIOWTN.30.24 tiulicltor.

1'. 11-25; la-a, U, U.

Inexpensive Prescrip-tion Guaranteed to

End RheumatismThousands joyfully artoniahed at

awif148 hour relief.

Progrwiiive ph«rnu*oi»U will till youthat tho |>ODular big aclHug prescript ionfor rht!umHti»m right now is AUenru—furB5 cents you can get a gcuerotia buttle (rumuuy up to date drugd^.

Yuu CALL get it with tm Absolute giucui'tee that if it dwsnu't itou the paiu—thoBgony-aud r«duo« the » weji|ijjg iu 4tJ hour*-yom ipouey btck.

Uric Acid Pobon Starts ToLeave Body lu 24 Hours

SHlSHIfc\F'8 MA I EM CHANCMDY OF NKW JKitSKY — l»e-

twdcii llliAKINU STAU JUUiLi)lNU ANDt-UAN ASid'J'JlATlUN of Curteret, u. cur-purutiuu, Oonipluinani. und TiiuMAH 1).tlHKItKT, et ala., Dvfttiittaiiltf. Kl. Fa. furthe mile of mortguis«J piumiae* dated LJc-lubt r 10, Vii'LJtiy virtue of the above atatud Writ, tu

iu JirotWd ftoU delivered, 1 will eipufuj uulfl ut public venduo «>u

•ViCUNKBDAY, THtil BBVBNTII 1>AY OffIJIJCUUUEK, NINETKiCN UUNi^KliU

AND TUIKTV-TWOI two o'tloLk StandurJ Tinio In thu af-vi nuun of the wald tiny nt thu Hherlff'nHtWv Lu tlio City vf Now tliuimwick, N. J.

All tliotw uert*lu lull, UucU or paiuvlt'. lund nod |)r«inlB«H hereinaftuz' pHrtLculnr-i dt-MtJilbtd, ultuate, \yivi% ami belu^ in thsluroiiifJi of CuLteret, In the County of Uld\vuvx nU>l ytttte of N#w J o r i . yl lUa iNNlNG Kt the point Of th« int«t,

L^tluu uf the weateriy lino of WooUbridxeLVI-JIIIB (now knuwn UH Uount:vi)lt Avenue)nd thu Nuithcrly lln« uf Ulttiiu^ Htur UuaUiluW KuuWil ttit Waihinutuu Av*jnihe HUB rtllUil.iK (.1) 1& tt wuuL^rty 4lr«ciad ttluim IU« KuUthtifly Hide of bin*

rttur Hua,d onu buudre<l (HJO1) f««t to uiiohit; thence lyuulujf (2) aouthvrly i|)uralUl with Woudbrldge Avenutj forty and

ity njne hundredtha (40.au1) rtmt in t,puint; thence runnitm (I) tjuuttwly mul milnlit UIIKIO" wltb the laitt uitjntluntsj nnirwiiiLnuty-H«veii and iiin«tir-uiit9 Imudnjdthi( j . 'BT) cent tit tha w«BUrly MLUU uf Woud

Avdtmt) and tlmnctj rum.ii.K iiy kiid tiloiiK thq want&rly uiiio of

Av»,iu* (Uty and uivnty-oneludtvdtlui (90 W\ t*«i to tUv JJOIHLnee (if beginning.

Dttcreu« ttinurutlng lu ttptuujiiiua»iH. 116.00.

To«#tUtjr with *ll ftnd «li|gulur thu rlvliti,prlvU«<«<r, U«r«aUmiL«nU mid ap i iu r tunc- .ox thereunto belonging o> la A»ywijtii u,i»

UaN H. OAN NUN1, BROWN. r . Bhurlti

8<mt»** 6» . 8<m?tt#a t. u -u , i», If; JM.

ilKwt'i l^e to muitc, H w*. touche*

Bring theChildrento See

Mickey Mouseat

KresgeToy FairHe's here with his whole Gang tnd t

funny Circus Clown ts in added at-

traction. And there's a Mickey Mouse

Barn containing a surprise package for

every boy and girl.who visits it. It costs

i A quarter to get yiside. The whole merry

outfit is on the fifth and sixth floors.,

KRESGEDEPARTMENT STORENEWARK. NEW JERSEY

*»•<

Shop HereAnd Save TheDifferenceFor Xmas Gifts

SUNNYDALE™ " MARKET170 SMITH ST. PERTH AMBOY

MEAT DEPARTMENT

YOUNG JF.RSF.Y *A 4^^

LOINS PORK 1 ( J clb.

1932 BABY SPRING

LEGS_LAMBNICE PLUMP

CAPONSTENDER, JUICY

Bottom RoundFRESH-KILLED

Roasting ChickensFOR THE OVEN

Top SirloinOR

Eye Round RoastARMOUR'SSUGAR-CURED

OR SWIFT'SFRESH

HAMS H e * HAMSclb.

PURE, FRESH

Chopped*)BEEF 0

LBS.

FOR25'PRIME

RIBROAST

SHOULDER

SPRING l f l CLAMB 10lb.AftMOUR'g STAH

BOILED ' / 2 i « ^HAM lb

CALI SUNK1ST

ORANGES20 For 25c

SWEET CALI

TOKAY GRAPES4 I k for 25c

SWEET. JUjCY

GRAPEFRUITHOT.HOUSE WHITE

MUSHROOMS

Page 7: CARTERET PRES - DigiFind-It · ence was that the Carteret score was bigger, th e hom boys winning by 47 to 0. The day was bitter cold and the crowd was not as large as usual. Carteret

FRIDAY, DROEMBER 2, 1932PAGKWVRN

FORTHE.*!&•

ARE NEEDED THIS YEAH MORE THAH EVER BEFOREAnd wlift more nrnrtirnl frifi < otiltl you give thnn furniture or housp furninhingi? This yp«r

we have h<v*n pnrticiilnrlv fortnnntr in hirymp our immense Chvintmnn «t«cW for much l<*»» than wehave been forced to pay in more prosperous time*. For thin rfmnn furniture is nn appropriate gift forthe cost is much less thnn in previous years. We have listed, below just n few of the hundreds of item*we believe should aid you in your Christina* shopping. Look over the prices carefully. Corrnare themwith what you have onid for the same merchandise in previous years. You will have to agree—FUR-NITURE IS THE LOGICAL C.I FT THIS YEAR —because it is priced low — becau** it it practical —and finally because it in Inoting

Hn- [ 111 ILK n R r f n Ini W I . H I ' H m o r e

ELECTRIC -?CANDLES =(

fcu ' l l neitl thi'in fur tlit> Tree,I r e m o m b t r Ilicy last for yearsI in on the low pnri 'S.

VACUUM CLEANER

t ; •

* : /

Will lli'MT In'

a t t in- in-i. ••

^Kl ("r SInthiT.in;l guaranteed,

ELECTRIC HEATER

SECRETARY DESKS

A t r i m minimi, KiiRiiuitPtMl tn dpllgl i t

lip r iu ' l lJ lent . '>ur tttu^K In t a r g e

let* will lip fiany

Don't hesitate—call today while our »tock is »till complete. Price*such as the*e MEAN FAST AND FURIOUS BUYING — AND "FIRSTCOME IS FIRST SERVED". So by all mean* shop early while this Urgeassortment of beautiful furniture is complete. Don't be late and di**p<pointed. CHRISTMAS IS BUT A FEW WEEKS OFF.

WE'RE NOT GOING TO "TALK TURKEY"WE'LL GIVE YOU A "LIVE ONE"

We wean it—evpry word. With every purchase of $ 100or over we will (five you a fine Northwestern Turkey FREE.And believe us—-we arc going to buy som« Christmas din-ners if the crowds kepp jamming our doors. This offer holdsuntil Christmas eve so get in on this treat It's on thehouse.

f Ct4-Piece BEDROOM SUITE

Mahogany DINING ROOM SUITEA very substantial suite built by one of the

loading makers of quality dining room furniture.Constructed of selected woods combined with rich-ly grained veneer. The handsome buffet, table,china cabinet and' six chairs is includ- A •* Fff\ed at this special price V » * / "

Gee! KidsSee The

TOYS

$49.50to $200

nr bvinitlfully pniPiirtluneil ballroom'H. IVattiren walnut vender of(-net bylo nverliiys. Tlu> drawers are large andly V'Hi rnnn.il K" 1vr1.HK «' I11'"* l'"v

. 8M tlilK tieautk- J A t\ to M A ATill nuke totliiy\

This Beautiful Upholstered ChairWill Make Somebody

Happv

Bring in the "kiddies" and let them see our large assort-

ment of toys. They will be delighted and so will you. Here

we have listed but a few of the many gifts in our assortment,

These values cannot be excelled anywhere.

H i , • 1 :1- I I . . , 1 1 . • [ 1 U l l l f l l l l W l l U t

V l i l i n . i n . i • h , » t i i i R s . r v l i - i - H u m

l i t t l e H l i | . l l . i l i i ' e ? A g i f t $ O 7 5

IV HI I"* i t t ' i ' l t - I .U ' ' ' l . O

! WESTINGHOUSE IRON

liu.-H w\m h u i v n ' t ni ir — t>r nvoA*W o n e Cii. i i i i i i t i i ' i l [u Klvb gvf>A Her-

Muy l>« hud IEI viuiovift $ O ^ &

MIKl HtYll^ £k

ELECTRIC TOASTER

l« H H t h l t i g yU 'IV Uti withuut utie U a iiandicttp.

bt» huil' In v ml nun style*. Our m kill b $

DESK

and

CHAIR

A I i . s k a m i

' I I . I I I ( o r t in -

i I I I , . " 1 ' u l s -

, I'll, i l v s k h i m II

f \ \ ,,11 f . | i . Ill

I U..'* *JQ4S

DOLL CARRIAGE

T i n ' • • A m i l i - I

F A , - r > I . i l t I

i.ilrl.1 K y e " , l u i

HERE':A REAL

BICYCLE

' I ' l l , i t l o i n l m l i i i n l r . - . t l r ; i n

I.,, u l i i a u i i l f r . ' i n 11>|-" i l m i r '

. m m t h o )»"•• •>{ r i i r n U i i r i ' »••••

l l n : i i n d l h - . l . • i i r n i T if H O I I K I

i l i u m . I t i« u i i | i ' > l - - ' t " i ' ' " l I " r " " l '

M- l . i u i - m i l l » i ' H i- ' i i iMtr i i i - l iMl .

A s a I ' l i i ' M l i i i i i M K i f t " > ' h " " "

, , f n m l i l i i K I " ' " ' ' ' n j M - r i i l T l n t i - .

• f i l l s I ' l m i r " i i . i I " ' " ! ' 1 I " 1 " ' "

mr mreh luurv IHiii $ t Q 9 8we aro ask ini; » "

VELOUR LIVING ROOM SUITE

Tli is hPUutif1 1 unite ~n* • . m s i r u c i c i l l>y ;» n . i '

tiuiiiitly k n o w n in i inufu i ' iu r iT . I t )* l>tnli In hint

f.ir yrarH. F in l s t i fd w i th t t i - tu\>-*\ v.-l"iir t h e m a r -

k i t ufrnnl-x. Spe*'[iilly \n\' »?<1 IHT.UIM,- uti ove r -

i i a lHlf iu tur t ' r h u d tu rut^ $69

are be$h

M a n y i i | i r . . | i r u i l i ' l ! i ( l » t i n I I I . l i l t ' l l « n

, M , ) „ . f t , l i n . ) i i r l i i r n f . ^ l i ' i k K t ' r y

, h , . M i l i i V . T V ( . - » T l i . - i v u r . - l i u i i - l

l U . i , . i ( . , l h < ' l » ~ - l l i | ' l | H I t I ' d l U ^ t H H I l l W . |

ENAMEL ROASTER

If III II

. \ r . ' . i l . l i i i - i i l i U ' i i l i ' n h l l « l l l !.!• u , , ] i . . n i - |

89C

FOIJR POSTER "BEDT i n - 1 ' imtiT Ili-il

K i , « i i lu-r . . m a y b e

m s t I ' H . g i f t

IQ98

100 Piece Set of Lishes

HEATING PAD

little -<lttvk« Una many UBBB« i gift.

1bin piicu tttvy wunt Laatuuiu «arly.

This gift is some-iitU I hat will be re-umbi'mi fin- years.

IWe know of nothingm o r e 1'i'Hi.

Jin

tit-'ul, This

u set of Itlishea lia

irtislii'ttlly ilt'OoraU'il

BRIDGELAMPS

t n n humlreilatylea anil »liupm.with LfiiuiKully itil-cnid nhailBB. I'riceJa s 1"W $O98

maJf o

vhiiiii. They ar! unit will Alan

SMOKING STANDS. h, ciiliim Hint »'"»' fll'Ifl'B"Tliuse wnokerii make Q Q c

ti(fli An ex-ial pui'fha.-ie HCru|iUoiial p

Icounts for thislow urii't.

TABLELAMPS

u l l l l of I H . l t y

* 1 » 81

PHONESETS

v a r I v t y ')f

MJIHIH'S U n ii

BridgeSett

>12CoffeeTables

•I'm- » i > i •.,!...» II l i u i ' I'liamt i:iil vi-J \,.v,ihi,il wlllitNmis lii|i

"No*" O

JAMES McCOLLUMIrving Rahway,

BOOK CASEThe lj<j<>kut«e plu-

lui i-il tu-if has t)ir»«Htii-lw-1 and runnytlfiivnT. Iii Walnut.

DRUMTABLE

An a l w a y s we l -CIIIIII Kilt h i t-lmr-Li'ti-rlatlr I>UI1L<TI•nyre ulyi- J^tfS

CABINETSMOKER

llfrp'H |tupular Dunin l'h>fe model, it

SEWINGCABINET

.Sniipl" ami lllt!»ll«a»-,1.-, >ol bUI« 11 "">»

;.., mi riirlrt fJW

DOUBLE BOILER

Thin |»l<-<u of k i tlii'ti i-(|iilpmpTit liitii liuiiilrvil Drtftt Muy.*• liaii In v n r i m i *lixcx.Ani1 lt>a fiQc

BOILER KETTLE

ENAMEL TEA-KETTLE

Another Item every kiu-htMtThe kettle Ijere I* ma tie ur whiteniel ttml la nuaranl««il to give

.liful aervite. 89ALUMINUM POT

T h e ,ll»l' ur u Ihdii.-.imi mu'.i U*y lm|li.nl In muiiy -K.... u i l h . . n i l [in,, c l ut'

illugly .\ rvuL apt v h e n l l

89C

PERCOLATOR

I I U I I I l l u i f l t o

ILL.-II Hl-'lt.. I t ^i

::::., 891

SET OF ABOVE 6PIECES

.99

Page 8: CARTERET PRES - DigiFind-It · ence was that the Carteret score was bigger, th e hom boys winning by 47 to 0. The day was bitter cold and the crowd was not as large as usual. Carteret

iv^^'»,ii^^m

PAGE EIGHT

Fly'« Vital O,.nit n Ilii1 I n n - «• IIHC Hli'H iln not h n v e

UltlKS Tlipy l i m p mi H | ) | K I I I I I I I S w h i c h

fnnt>lp» thpin t" Ijn'Htlic iiml du-.v Imvo

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1932

HIIKHIIF'S MI.K

IN CHAN.'FniV i if M'W!>!.>„ |IHIIKK\ Kl-TI."AN AMHi II "I ATM »'*' » ' 'Nrw Ur'-r, Cninnlolnanl,KI'ZSKA IKTHNAKl, «n,l

si"

lilt

MyFavoriteRicipe

of II..->»<! 1

In th«of Mlil-

<Ur<-'-t«i1natf • ( puMlc vcndi!* onWRUNFSIUV. TIIIO TWKNTT KlUMTH

IUY HI' IiiniKMHF.il. NIN'KTKBNIH.'NliHKli AND THIIITVTWO

MI tivii o'clrak Blmi'lnr.l Tlmi- In thn ullfrin,«n nf (Tie »i>lil ilny nt Hip HI'Tlff r .irtVn

All th« follnwlng Irnel nr |iar,#l (if Isji'lnml rirrmlur* hrrflnaflir particularly«, rtlifil, i>ll"«t«. lyllid ni'l r»ln»llnrmllli "( l"«rt«r»t In lli« Cuuniydlry.'i and Slate of N»w Jrriey.

IIKillNNINll al « HIHIO planlfcllnlir»rlliin of ll"> Wnl nM' "' 'II ml 111* Nnrlli olil* of a i l f "hnmf FIB nuM utrccta worr laid (nil on *i r i , i pnllll'1'! Map nE I'r"li*rty of Marr N.Kli<n«ll. ma<lp h> Wllllani f* "lOnictnoT, l>rth Amhoy, N .11 *9!,"' RTIII rllml In the i>ffl« •ihf the ('rmnty '>' Mt'Mlf'"**Mln<>t wilhoiil nami' Ix'lii* III,-ily ulrfBt kill 'nit "ti ""I '1

Hinnln* NorthiTly Blunir I lieIK Htr*Pt, 11*1 r''"tHIP mom Hmillicrly

al th«

without

IKiwaon, Civil, filed Auguit,• i.r Ih*1 I'li-rkMia I hi* anl'l

,. immt South -mni'i thencnaalil Dlcl« nf

• 11 r» iiiti'lftrrlhlt) ofrif littl Number

KlKhl («) I" Itl'M-k ThlrtM-n (HI on «»lcllimp nni! thu Mill Weat niilr "f E Htrwt:!!ionc» runnlnir Wnaterly parall«l to th«North lino nf tlM nal'l mrept wlthoul m i w ,I'lfly ISO) r««l to the N<irlli»aalprly eorimr.if I.nt Nino (5) In nalil Illork Thirteen<1HK thanre ri>nnlnx HoulliPrly pa.rilll«l tothf anlil Weat^rly lint* nf K rllrpet, OneHunilrnl I HO') f«l"t t» the ««M Northerlyline of lh« aakl Bireet without narni>; thencerunnlni Eanti*rly aliiim llm nalil NortherlyBide of naM »tre»t wlllnmt a nnmo, fifty

H\>.r.IN' III ANI'KIty OK NRW .IKHHKV — Me-

Injen PMlI.A, E KIIAV, I'omplalnanl,a inI IMIIIIII! ZIMMr.HMAN. et l>l. . H»-(endant» VI Ka. for (lie MIO cif imirl-m > i l , ireml»e. .lili.il November (. 1912!ly virtue of the ahove atatert Wrll. to me

illrectfl and dellvereil. I will exp'iae to nnieitt li lillc vendue onU I I I S K H U A V, T1IK TWKNTV.KI'SIITH

IIAY IlK HKI'KMHEll. MINETKKNHI'NDItKII ANll T H I B T Y - T W i l

m Iw.i o'flM'k Hlnndaril Time In lhr> nfl«rnooti of the twlfl day at the gherlff'a off lreIn Ihe Oily nf N o * llrunawlck. N I

All the followln« Irad nr parrel of Inniland nreinlaeit hereinafter particularly il»-

rlhed. nl lnale . lylnn and lielnj In Iheir.nuli of f a r t i r e l In the Cnirnly of Mld-?v\ ari-l Hlate of New .Jprm-yWUC'll <»n » nmp pntttled "Map (if nrop-i of .1, aielnherr, atluateil In Mt'ldlenei

Hitlv, N' J ." ilaled June, 1910. and madeliv Kr«-1 V fllmiini". fltirveyor. Hooaevolt.N. I. and filed In HIP offlre of the Clprk<.f tlie I'lmnty of MldiUenex at New tlnimt-»lc-k. N . 1 . are laid ilnwn. known andalinwn rut I'Ota Numbera 1H3 anil 1M.

riKUINNINd al a point In ihe Hmitherly'line of Mercer Rtresl, illatant Eauterly 200ifeot from t h e rnrner formerl liy the inter-Uei'tlen of the aald Mnutherly line of Mer-[rer fltreel «rlth the Saaterly l int of EdwinIPtreet: running tlienre ( I I Honlherly at.rlnhi AIIJIO. tn Merrer Street. 100 feet;theme (3) Baaterly, parallel with MenderHtrpet. 50 fee l ; thence (3) Northerly paral-lel with the flrat courae, 100 feet to tile aaldHouiherly l ine nf Merrer Htreet; and thenc*It) Weatnrly, aUinK Ihe Southerly line ofMercer Htreet, r,n (pot m the point or plaroof Ili'Rlnnlnt;.

fin KBIFF H AAL1CIN rilAN<'EHT «»F NEW .rKHSRY I

IWDCTI THB CAKTKHRT BIMI.DINC*LOAN AflBOrtATTON or rnrt*rot, Nnw

rorpnrAllfin, Comply In A t\(, tinilA M f l J, HiiNNRR, A(. m,, ct fllH,I>pf«firlnrttB. VI. Ft for thfl BRla nr mr>rt-tn«f><1 [>r*niU#« 'Ulf<1 O<tnhf>r 24, 10 3 7.fly virtue nf MIA nbovp itut**! writ to m*

illrArt*.., and <t*jllv«rn.1, I #111 ^tpnuft toH«1P nt pulillr v^nOii* onWRT>NE8DAT THK FntJUTRTCNTH DAT

OF DECF-MnEH. A I) , NINETEENHIINDRKD THIRTY-TWO

fit twn n'dnrk Siandurd itmn In th» after-noon of th* Hfilf] <Ur • ( tin* flnerifr* QrrteaIn th* Cl*y n( N*1* nruimwipk, N. J.

AI.lt. thoit* f*rtnin loin, truotii or parcel*of I * nil and prn>mlRP4, Nltunte, lying und|ir>1ti| In thd Porough of CHttertt, In thaCcunty of MiddlftifK nn<l Htnt* of New J«r-»«y:

WHICH dti ft. map antltJfti, "Map of prop-wit y of Carternt K*alty Compniy, 10OJ,"mn-rt« by Frank Iln M (trull. Surveyor, Rah-way, N. J., And wlilrh mnp ha* been dulyfiled In the off I, * of th« Clark of th«County of Mlddl*««* nt New Brunswick,N«w J>nuty, are ldltl ilnwn, kbAWn andilinvn an loti numbfru oil* hiindr«4 twelve( l tJ) and on» hundred thlrte«n (Ml) thau m e fronting And farlnf on Lon i f allowitr««t, ai ihown on nald map. and b*lngtw^tity-flvA (2S) feet t>y on« hundrad featIn ilie each.

Delnf the premie* commonly known anddealfnated u No. 116 Lonffailow ttreat.CartMst, N. J.

Decree amounting to tpproxlmataly |4,-120.00.

Tofsthtr wllh all and ulnpnlar, thft rllhta,prlvtlffei, aflrfldltam*nti and appurtenancaithereunto belong!nj or In anywlm apper-taining.

RERNAED M. GANNON,FRANCIS A MONAOKAN, SllBrlff.121.42 Solicitor,

P. 11-18, if.; 12-2, 9,

Serve Quality Foods . . .and at the same time you will save money, if you ahop the ASCO Way,for every day new and unusual values arc arranged. Do stop,in, at anytime, and just look at our fine, fresh merchandise. We want everybodyto know where to buy—

The Most of the Best for the Least9c ASCO CookedA5CU Cooked M

Sauer Kraut 4 big

cans

Easy to prepare — Just Heat — Try some with Pork.

& Choice Prim Rice or8c California Seedless Raisins

pkg

Boiled Rice with Raisins is nutritious and palatable.

ASCO Choice Tomatoes 3 No. 2 cans 25cCalif. Evaporated Apricots lb 15cGlenwood Apple Sauce . 3 cans 25cGlenwood Apple Butter 80-oz jar 18c

Gold Seal Finest

Rolled Oats pkg

ASCO Tomato Juice Cocktail26-oz jar 17c

Mackerel Fillets 3 for 10cASCO Sliced Bacon Va lb pkff 10cASCO Tomato Catsup 2 bota 25c

Quaker or Mother's , p*c

Rolled OatsQuick cook or regular.

Farmdale Sweet Peas 2 cana 25cASCO Crushed Corn can 10cASCO Golden Bantam Corn can 10c

ASCO Pancake or Buckwheat FlourA Pty. 6cASCO Table Syrup • can 10cMaypole Syrup bot 19c

Ritter Cooked SpaghettiASCO Tomato SoupCampbell's BeansASCO Beans with PorkPhillip's Vegetable Soup

5 cans

iula Soap Chips big pkg 10c

Cloanquick Soap Chips 5-lb pkg 25c

ASCO Extra Str. Ammonia big bot 17c

American Toilet Tissue 3 rolls 19c

Lux S o a p F lakes

e pkg 2 1 ° I iimil" llkK 1 0 °Lux Toilet Soap 3 c«k« 20c

NEW CROP FANCY LARGECALIFORNIA SWEET Prunes 3»»25'

Thin skin, small pits, bright amiber meat. A pound of th«se new Prunes

"will serve ten portions at a cost of less than Ont* Cent ii portion.

N.B.C. 15c Holland Rusk 2 pkgs 27c I N.B.C. 30c Playland Sandwiche* lb 25c

Baked of the Finest Ingredients

Bread Supreme wI^£d

Sliced ur Unsliced. Loaf

5'ASCO Coffee lb 23C

Victor BreadTlio minomy loaf.

BigPanUaf

Our Own Bakery CakesBlack Walnut Caramel loed

Loaf Cakes each

Cunianut Marshmallow

Layer Cakes ••such

ACME Coffee^VICTOR Coffee lb 21C

One Package of ASCOChocolate Dessert givenFREE-with the purchaseof one pound of any of theabove brands of Coffee.

Asco or Del Monte Pears2 big cans 2 9 c

A«co or Del Monte Peacnes2 big cans 2 3 c

Gems Cigarettescarton of 20l0c

GOLD F ^ ™ C"TSEAL C - S S ® tw iv.For poaching, boiling and the sick room.

Selected Eggs do* 33cEvery Egg Guaranteed.

Finest Fresh Fruits and Vegetables

Fancy Long IslandPOTATOES

15 lb. bags 27c

Extra Fancy StaymanWINESAP APPLES

4 lbs. 19c

Fancy FloridaORANGESDozen 27c

Fancy CaliforniaCAULIFLOWER

Head 17c

CaliforniaCARROTS

2 Bundle* l i e

ICEBERG LETTUCE

head 10c

Couider the Quality you receive, and the fair Price* you payshopping tha ASCO Way.

u XMtb tmn

THIS y*Ar, of nil ysflrt, 1(, seems jto m , w« need to revive A lot

of our old fftfihioned Christmas CUH-tomfl, to fttlr up joy In little things.

In our family we're going to tierftd bows on everything, even &ltigB carol or two, nnd make candy.Ju«t to have a nice aBflortmentwe'll make onft brittle randy, onechewy cAndy, some patties* and aPenuchi. Why not join ua—hereare the recipes.

i ICoconut Brittle 1

9 enpi i\\K»r, Vt cup dark corn tjrwp\% cup wkt«r; 2 tfcbUnpooni butter; Vt te»-•poon ul t ; i / l tempoon *od*; l^i cup*ihredded coconut, toasted. 1 teaipoonVanilla.

Combine migir, corn syrup, ind water.^Ifte* ov(»r low flume and atir comtkntlyuntil auf&r Is dissolved. Con tin no Chok-lng. without stlrrinK, until a tmaU amoun*Of Wrup formt i hard ball In cold waterI1M1 p.). Add muter and salt, and con-tinue cooking until a small amotuv ofsyrup bccomfR brittle In cold water (900'P.). itlrrlnR frequently to prevent icoreri-Ing, Remove from flre. Add soda, toco-nut, and vanilla nilrring nnly (nnugh tomix. iU stirred too much, brittle maylufar.) pour in thin iihcet on slightlyireared aurfarc Di not scrape mixturefrom sauctimn. 1*1 cool 30 ntconds, thenlift edges of brittle nnd stretch to as thina aheet an posslhi^. Mark Into square*While, warm, or break into Irregular pleceiwben cold. Mulcrs plRhty 2-lncIi equaras.

Molasses Coconut Chew!Vi cup corn nyrup; V* cup molassfa; H

tablespoon vinegfu, 1 tftbl^spoon butter;1 can molfit, Fwcpr npil rnrnmit.

Combine uvnip, innlafiaes, vlnejar, andbutter, and tint! until a jminll amount ofvyrup becomfs hrlttln In cnlrt w«t*r (240*T.). Add cornnm Bhape Into small balla,%-lncli In dlnmrUr, Mftkrs 34 chewi.

Chocolate Coconut Gln«*1ca

4 iquarti unnwrrtcned chocolate, cut Inpieces, 3/3 cup jwreternl rondensed milk,Va cup sugnr, '* rup water. % teaspoonvanilla; I CTII nmiit. aweeltMiftd coconut.

Melt chocol&ic fn double boiler; addmilk and hktiri llcat sugar and water.•Urrln£ until nugar is dissolved; thenboll 1 minute, Add to chocolate mlntur«and blend, Arid vanilla and coconutDrop from teaspoon on w*xed paper. Lai•tana* several iumn, or until Arm. kI doian can*1j s.

Penuchl

} CUP kr»»n tugir, t\iinfcup granulated sugftr; 3/3 cup milk; daibof salt; 2 tablespoons butter; 1 teaspoonvanilla; 1 cm molnt, sweetened coconut.

Combine sugars, milk, and salt. Cook,stirring constantly, until tugar dissolve*und mlKturo boils Continue cooking, with-out stirring, until a small amount of mix-ture forms a very soft ball In cold wat«1332' P.). Remove from flre. Add butterand vanilla. Cool to lukewarm (HO* T.)without disturbing, then beat until mix-ture begins to thicken, and loses Its gloat.Ada coconut and pour at once Into lightlygreased pan, 8 x 4 Inches. When cold*cut In squares. Makes 18 large pieces,

Q U A L I T Y

Eagle, Forced Down atSea, Gets Ride to Land

Boston.—When the schooner Charlec

M. Fauci arrived here, a large Congo

eagle waa on deck with trie vessel's

Newfoundland dog mascot, Sonny.

Capt. Leo Doucette said the eagle,

apparently exhausted after e long

flight, had twice been blown 1n*o the

heavy seas before landing on the deck.

After being fed ths eagle made friends

with a passenger *nd the dog.

Man Laughs Eight Hour*When Tooth Is Pulled

New York.—An eight-hour laugh

wns enji)j(><l by Vltn Itnges after he

had a tonlh extracted here.

At first It was Relieved the laughter

vina caused by fhe anesthetlu taken

fur the cjtractioi, but hnspitnl physl

etnns decided It was due to a toxic

comllllon due to 'nfectton of the gums

Meet «nd Wed in One D«y

Fort Worth, Texas.—Albert H.

('•raves met MIBS Virginia Wright one

morning at a soda fountain At noon

she was wearing his fraternity pin.

rsy rilKhtfiill thej had eloped to Okla

hnrna and were married.

Tomb Br**kt Boy'i Leg

Metawuku, Kan.-t iale Harris, alt,

hits nmrkoil the cenieitrj off his list of

playgrounds. While playing there

with companions a tombstone (el! on

him and broke his leg.

IN THE NEWS

Headline: "Wealthy Barber Dis-

owns Sonik A heir cut.

"Few men wake up and find them-

selves rich," says a writer. Heavy-

weight lioxers sometimes do.

One of our popular novelists says

tiiat ho never runs out of Ideas. A

case of perpetual notion, so to speak.

A Judge says tlmt many young

girls are lurluced to smoke by their

mothers. Led astray, as It were.

He'i In—All !o

The difference between a woman's

evening gown and tier husbuud's eve

niiiK clothes is that when he has

finally struggled Into his, lie's ab-

solutely lu 'em.—Cincinnati IVIKIUIILT.

Smoked Hams13„.„, hn« * . .ow ro«Y «"™~ WHOLE or.

h™. nt ,o low „ pric*. Ami tr-k. » t e *«yEITHERHALF

LEGS OF LAMBRib Veal ChopsShoulder of VealFresh H a m s HAW ... WHOU »». 13C

Fancy Mack*r*l "»« * 13*

b 10*

A*P MEAT FACTSIHmh* ( M i l l 5~""l

Fresh Vegetables

Fresh Peas . •California CarrotsFancy TomatoesIceberg Lettuce

Quaker Maid Beans 2 - 9 c

Campbell's Beant . " - &

Pure Lard . . 2 ^ 1 5 *

Tomatoes "SSZT 3 - ' 2 5 *

HMVW

Campbells Assorted SoupsWhite Bread CANOMOT

Del Monte PeachesDel Monte PearsDel Monte Fruit SaladS e l O X WE smo so*p povrotn

Sliced Bacon WNNYWID

Sunnyfield Flour «*

tTAMMM)

M*ND-nacn>

r«uaM I M R O M U C * . . 2 ^ *

IMMHnSButter or Ch—M Wafers * 29*

ludcy StrikM, Canwb. OM Ooldi

Wlngi

BKOK

Macaroni £HOOCW 4 H^- 19C .

Macaroni rJTJgSS, ^ 9c

Sparkle S « r . 3 i*r- 19c

Whitman's "SS?" V 23*

Doughnuts cuHDuoman *». 15<

Quaker Maid Cocoa 8c

Lowest Price in History!

Quaker MOVER'S Oats

Pillsbury's Pancake Flour . ^ 7«Kaffee Hag or Sanka Coffee ».* 47«Ivory Soap u w u . , 3 **•• 22C

Sale of FINE TEAS Ending Saturday

25*

pf«w h Aw »<L»i*i< bdd awl •miiliMi IWm.I M i a W i « n r n > ' ttp***M a ipKlolMa h tw

z Nectar Tea Vt 13' VtCkoiu c> Ora-»»r J ^ Mto Crrtoti I n Mluil h a w (Moaf

Z~l Moyfoir Tea ^ 17<Out Own TM woucmoi+MVA Hfc.rf» 15c

rh*<* ptktt (Arough Soluidaf, Dvcnabar 3rd

Ofit« in Commerce

We do nut know wheu uuu first cul

tlvated the olive, but Syria Is regarded

ai the flrit home of the fruit. I'liuy,

Roman naturalist of the First century,

A. D., referred to some 15 varieties

grown In hlg time. The olive thrives

In California and Mexico. The fruit,

as packed for American consumption,

comes In three styles—green, ripe, and

stuffed.

Snikeikm in Binh' NeiU

The biological survey gays' that

there are several American birds

which use gnakeskln In tbeir nests.

This Is not exactly used for the pur-

pose of lining them, and In fact, the

exact purpose cannot be accurately

guess, though 11 may bv with an Idea

of adornment. The great crested fly1

catcher always uses Rimkeskiu and

the tufted tltmoiiBe often docs.

Co«J IMdly Applied

The timt coal fruin I'euiisylvniili

mines, sent to Philadelphia in 1789,

would not barn In" fireplaces and wa»

Oted to repair ctreets.

Direnitj Ii UnThere never was In the world two

opinions alike, no more than two

hairs, or two grains; the moit univer-

sal quality Is diversity.—Montalpia

COALThe price will change upward shortly. Make your

arrangements for next winter's supply now.We sell high quality coal at prices no higher than

the unknown inferior grade.Write or phone P. A. 4-2332. Our Mr. J. Rynwha

will call at your home to discuss your requirement*.

STATE COAL & SUPPLY CORP.991 State Street Perth Amboy, (Maurer), N. J.

Telephone Perth Amboy 4-2332

IN CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEYTO: KNIT GOODS EXCHANGE and

MAX L. TANNENBAUMBy virtue of an Order of the Court

of Chiinutry of New Jersey, made onthe day of the date hereof, in a:auBe wherein THE CAltTEltETBUILDING LOAN ASSOCIATIONOF CAIITERET, NEW JEliHEY, iscomplainant, ami MAURICE GOOD-MAN ami otliers are defemlants, youart! ruquiied to itp|ii-ar und answerthe bill uf Bttid cuinpluiuatit, un orhefore the TWENTY THIRD day ofJANUARY, next, or tlie said bill will

taken as confessed against you.The. auid liill i» tiled tu foreclose a

certain mortgage given by MauriceGoodman and Gertrude Goodman, hiewife, to The (larteret Huildiuir I oanAiwoeiation of Carteret, New Jersey,dated April 22nd 1929, on lands inthe BOROUGH, of CARTERET, inthe COUNTY OV MIDDLESEX andSTATE OF NEW JERSEY; and you,the KNIT GOODS EXCHANGE aremade defendant beoauoe you hold ajudgment against the said Morrinuuodman, which is a lien on thelands described in iutid mortgage;and you MAX L. TANNENBiXOMare made defendant becautte youMold a judgment a^ainut the saidllorria Goodman, which i» a lien ontha lands described in uaid mortgage.

Dateii November 21st 1932.B'UANCIS A. MO^AGHAN,Sol'r. of Complainant,545 Roosevelt Av«mi«iCsrtsret, N. J. , ,

& P. ll-2Bj 12-2, 8, IS, '

"TOMBOY TFAS" Drawn for PURITAN DAIRY »» .«««» " 5 " 1

TESSIE

IN S'CHOOU^TO-MORIioW

lt'» a reflection of wUe judgment to order milk from the Puritan

Dairy. Milk and cream produced at our model plant is terted in our

own laboratory to insure UNIFORMLY HIGH STANDARD.

Laboratory ControlledFrom Farm To You

, WE ARE DISTRIBUTORS OF

RAR1TAN VALLEY PRODUCTSGRADE A RAW MILK

CERTIFIED MILKVITAMIN D CERTIFIED.SOFf CURD CERTIFIED

OUR DISTRIBUTION COVERS MIDDLESEX COUNTY