BOARD OR EDUCATION E H.'cOMiN ~

Member Monmouth County Press Club

68th YEAR — 46th WEEK Founded In 1869 M ATAW AN, N. J., THURSDAY, M AY 27, 1937 12 Pages — 2 Sections Five Cents Single Copy

Strikers To Meet SENATE APPROVES $100,000 ITEM Deadlock Unbroken 'm o d e r n a n d e a r l y v ie w s o f o l d ten nen t church n e a r battlefield ! Closing Order Is With Management FOR THE NEW CHEESEQUAKE PARK Over Appointment Invoked Against In N.Y. City Today 9 Democrats, Aided By 2 Republicans, Muster Aid Of New Boro Clerk For Measure Monday Nite; Assembly Is Expected 5 Harbor Taverns Express Hope Conference To Repass Appropriation Bill Without Change; Council Again Refuses To Chancery Order Leaves 2 May Produce Settlement Jersey Journal Attacks Local Playspot Idea Second Troller’s Motion Of 7 Independent Inns Of Walkout; Object To Approve Shaw; To To Tailby Present Cheesequake Park’s $100,000 appro­ bludgeon the Republican senators j Free To Operate In priation remained after the state into voting for a bill that would, if j Be Given To Body Madison Twp. Area senate finished amending the as­ passed, enable friends of the Demo­ HIT MATAWAN ‘SPYING’ sembly’s financial bill Tuesday all cratic organization of Middlesex! nine Democratic members being kept County to unload on the state at a j URGE LICENSE ACTION ACTION BY DEVELOPERS in line and two Republican votes fat profit a much-criticized tract of | Labor Man Avers Plants secured. Due to the heavy Demo­ Cheesequake Creek near the Raritan j Liquor Dealers Are Asked Intimidating Workers cratic majority in the lower house Laurence Harbor Heights of the legislature final passage of »r=/»iroo * -P“rk P"rP°” “ Applications For Union Activity; Co. Fought Case Under the item for the new park on Cheese­ The New Brunswick Home News * rior To June Session; Clauses In Contract Morale Stays High quake Creek is assured when the bill yesterday in an editorial replied: | Rinear Is Approved Of Property Deeds again goes before it for approval of “That was not only unfair intima- I ------Strikers at the Keypor- plant of senate revisions. tion; it was an untrue one. Most of i The deadlock over the appointment the Architectural Tiling CO. looked In passing the appropriations bill, Five of the seven taverns in Laur­ the area, needed for the park, is I of a boro clerk in Matawan, to re­ ence Harbor will be closed by June forward today with hope a schedul­ the senate deleted $35,000 for a probe waste land and not valuable. On the ; place the late William A. Rodgers, ed conference with company officials of conditions in Wildwood, and it is 30 it was revealed last Thursday tax maps of the townships in which still continued after the regular afternoon when Constable Otto Ken- in the New York offices of William believed the assembly will abandon It is located, the ownership is listed ! meeting of the mayor and council Schatskin, president, would bring an its jehampionship of this item to fur­ getter, of Madison Township, served as ’unknown’ and the value as nom- j Tuesday nite in Boro Hall, the proprietors with a $hancery court end to the walkout which has brot a. ther adjournment. For the first inal. In championing his proposal,j At the meeting two weeks ago complete shut-down to Keyport’s time this year the legislature held a order sustaining the Laurence Har- Mr. DeVoe repeatedly had said that I Mayor Edward W. Currie offered the j bor Heights Co. in its suit to en- largest single industry. 2-day session, Monday and Tuesday, if any sizeable part of the $100,000 j name of James H. i“Jay”) 8haw, of Strike leaders reported yesterday and after recessing Wednesday, re- . _ __ t______w_j> ______! force the permanent closing ban. As I all liquor licenses in the state are that arrangements for this morn- convened today with prospects of j alone, he would discard the project. | Georgianna L. Leary, present acting tog’s conference were made thru i insured for a year, effective July 1, winding up business before it to- | “We do not believe that the state clerk and water rent collector. i the move does not shorten the period plant foremen. The meeting is sched­ morrow. will regret this appropriation for full-time assistant. During the Rod­ uled for 10 am. at Schatskin’s, 101 j for which the present licenses were The Jersey Journal, Jersey City, in | park development. In time, it will ger’s regime Mrs. Leary had func­ : granted, however. Park Av„ offices. recently taking Fred W. Devoe, of j come to appreciate it. For not a tioned as an aide to the veteran Strikers said this morning they | The liquor places not affected are Middlesex, to task for his opposition few years Mr. DeVoe has looked upon clerk. In offering Shaw’s name the j the Blinker Bar, operated by Fred would refuse to participate in the to the free state university bill, said: j that Cheesequake region, which is mayor suggested he be paid a salary ! Ohnsman, and Burlew’s Restaurant confab if Roland V. Tailby. superin­ “It will be noted that Democratic ! wholly within Middlesex County, as of $300 a year and that Mrs. Leary j on Route 35. A boardwalk bar, op- tendent, sits-in. They maintained Side View From Old Section of Cemetery. (Photo by James F. Lewis, Keyport.) Assembly Leader DeVoe is the same j ideal for a public park. He has come continue on her present wage basis. I j erated during the summer months his attitude was responsible for much gentleman who is^ giving another j thru with it for the future welfare When Shaw's name was offered |,_._ — ~ | by the Laurence Harbor Heights Co., of the dissension at the plant and only Councilman Harry Troller mov- j is also unaffected. objected to his being present if these ed for confirmation. Councilmen R .! I The closing order is enforceable matters were discussed. L. Cartan, Robert G. Thixton, Demo- i , under a chancery court decree filed According to reports last nite J REALTY BOOM NOTED REALIZE J 110 FROM crats, and Charles E. Hunt, Repub- j ; Mar. 18, 1936, following hearings Prank Zundt, president of the Key- lican, indicated a preference for Mrs. ! before Vice Chancellor Maja Leon port local, Harlan Gray, Peter Bo- IN MATAWAN DEALS POPPY DAY RECEIPTS Leary. Cartan and Thixton suggest- ; t . - ; Berry at Long Branch. In its suit gard-us and Lucy Kruschka were slat- ! _____ ed Mr. Shaw for assistant and Hunt . , • j the Laurence Harbor Heights Co., ed to represent the workers. They j r ». vi . T r j_ f T a t e n expressed the opinion Mrs. Leary was j i - 'developers of Laurence Harbor, will be accompanied by Charles Jen- j K 1 r “ c l 1 a K en $60 Collected By Junior capable of filling the position un­ charged the taverns were operating nings and Thomas Kelly, American | By Tunis Lambertson; Auxiliary; First Prize aided. Councilman George W. Park­ in defiance of a clause contained in Federation of Labor executives, who ; List Many Rentals To Annette Johnson er, the other Republican, not in at­ the original deed to the sale of the have aided in the direction of the tendance, in a communication read properties and that development Keyport strike and the formation of [ van’s Agency, Matawan, reports a Mrs. Grace H. Curran, chairman! by Hunt declared he favored Mrs. zoning regulations were being vio­ the union here. j partial listing of several real estate of the Poppy Day committee oi Mat­ Leary. Councilman A. B. Smith, lated. Mosa:c-i«ia(awan Threats l transactions which were consummat- awan Unit, No. 176, American Le­ altho taking little part in the dis- Five Places Affected Jennings, in a press statement last i ed within the past 10 days and four gion Auxiliary, reports that the entire (Continued on page four) _ In his decision Vice Chancellor nite, bitterly denounced alleged in- | others which the brokers hope to 10C0 poppies ordered were sold on sustained the action against known^ timidation methods being used by close over the week-end. the streets Saturday and $110.52 was j BUFF FIRM MOVES TO executives of the Matawan Tile Co. ‘ realized. The improved appearance! n r A n o , U m r i t and the Mosiac Tile Co. to prevent of the paper creations was favorably R F O R fiA fll/.F , C O . A . A . employes of those plants from be­ at Colts Neck formerly owned by commented upon. I l L U m m m t L V/V. n . n . coming affiliated with the Keyport Stetz & Narazonik. It consits of The 1000 poppies was a smaller1 „ ------’ , - - local. Jennings stated that several five acres with double frontage o n ‘ number than in previous years but j Activity Scope Enlarged specific cases would be brot to the highway route 34 and the Farm- the chairman considered it ____ To Include Welfare As attention of the National Labor Re- ingdale road, including a road stand to sell every one and this was ac­ lations Board for alleged illegal and an 11-room modern dwelling. complished. Well As Social Work methods in violation of the “unfair Mr. Lambertson plans to have his Members were agreed that many Fifty-four members, representing mnker Bar was out­ practice clause” of the Wagner Act. new quarters open for business about more could have been sold but last all departments including employ­ Century Ago, Fi side the area affected. The case of ' The labor leader stated he had June 1. year when 1500 were sent a consid­ ers and executives of the Hanson- the Laurence Harbor Heights Co. reports that foremen of the Mosiac Mr. and Mrs. John Sutton, of St. erable quantity was still on hand Schanck, Duncan Submit plant were interviewing workers and George, Staten Island, purchased i VanWtnkle-Munnlng Co,, met in the D • J r\ vr d rc 1 aSainst Burlew’s Restaurant was dis- threatening them with the loss of the Clyde Waltham property in Mad­ ceipte*were ^ ' L k i n 1 7 ' Amerlcan Legion Hall at which;time, OPPOSITION LOOMS TO INCLUSION B ld s U n N e w r o s t o f t i c e missed and the defendant ordered their jobs if they persisted in organ­ ison Township, off Route 28 (New F. H. Duncan” and Spafford WJ reimbursed to toe extent of W50 for ization activity. He also cited an in Brunswick highway), consisting of Schanck are the Matawan contrac- eounsel fees The court held that stance where a fireman at the Mat­ 214 .c m , together .tth . 5-roon, W™”" ' L T w . ^ “™ ”"“ *■ Byr^'r'^rim.ndr,, OF OLD TENNENT CHURCH IN PARK tors who have submitted bids on the I awan Tile Co. had been laid off on ------I approximate $55,000 building project I the others did not apply in this ii bungalow, modern in every detail.j Currie. Mrs. William Donnenworth, ° f ^ ’ j stance. the pretext the boiler he fired was Mr. Sutton whose native land Is j Mrs Monroe Watson Mrs piumie ! meetin8 and shortly afteiward tum- Opposition to toe site at Tennent, t Chesney, sexton of the church as his j to house toe Matawan Postoffice it The suit of the development o being shut down. Scotland and an expert authority on j MacDonald. Mrs. James ’ Martin. 641 U over 10 WUltam H Slavln' Indicated in a proposed congrcs-. father. Hi: -h McChemey. was before [ was learned today. The bids Will be ! , . ... h „ . accountant, who was elected tern- ] “If our investigation proves that dogs, contemplates establishing Mrs. Louis Luebck and Mrs. sional bill for the establishment of him. He told me Old Tennent Church ‘ opened at the procurement division, : P y g , . . J .. . a’ these charges are true,” Jennings up-to-date kennel for the breeding Devlin. porary chaiman. Mortimer F O - a natlonal c^etery. has been voiced , was not used as a hospital, the house ' U. S. Treasury Dept.. Washington, i l said, “you can rest assured we will and boarding of pedigree animals. The Junior Auxiliary collected $60 Connor was named temporary by Davld vanderveer Perrine in a , used as a hospital was the Walter tomorrow. A number of outside con-| ™ y ° f ated an ta b s retary. Joseph Wachter. retiring ,etter t0 WUUam H. Sutphin, Mata- Kerr house. tractors have also bid on the job, i t 1 Shoretend Circle known as take steps to prosecute Immediately. Other real estatp transactions re­ of the total. The Junior girls work­ We’ll lay all the facts before the ported by Mr. VanBuskirk Include: ing were: Maro Watson. Gloria chairman, cast the ballot which was wan member of the housc of rep. : My grandfather was David I. Van- I has been learned. Postmaster R. C. ' 7 ” J 1®?®?*; d‘d National Labor Relations Board in The Radi hospital property on Curran. Susan Sutphin, Ethel Bendy. voted unanimously. reser.tativcs. Mr. Perrino who for | Derveer, son of John VanDerveer,1 Devlin will be in Washington for the . . Philadelphia and demand action.” Matawan Township, recently leased Mr. Slavln stated that the •*!v.years has been interested in local j a RevolutionaryI... soldier, a boy ~ ofc 17, I nnonimr opening ofof thothe hirlcbids tmnnrrmr tomorrow. i: klTtli. Tavern operators appeared Stun- Fear Company “Spies” to Miss Violet Silk, Newark, consist­ pose of reorganization was u [history and genealogy gave the land |a fifer of the druto and fife corps ned at the suddenness with which ing of 14 acres and a ^-room modern large the scope from a purely Jennings blamed the intimidation rato, Marion and Marilyn DeForest. one“ to I n c lu d e d ; ,n Frecho‘d °n wh,,chAthe Mo“ th ! » h0 beatf tbp « « « thf ^ m g T° ™ OVK VIOLATIONS I the closing order has been invoked. home with outbuildings. for the lack of a large turnout at a Frizes were awarded to the Juniors : C° Unty H!s,oncal ^ bUlldlng first dlvls!°n to f°rm | ■ Altho the decision had been known The Radle hospital property on meeting, of Mosiac and Matawan , . . . who collected the largest amounts. 1 " ^ I J £ X ~ u“sed ’ was crcctcd a fPW years ag0 and cbeck the enemv advw$°- dur- ! Matawan Township police have in- I since the filing date in March, 1936. workers scheduled for the Beach T * Matawan- overlooking j lst pri2e ^ t0 Johnson , this purpose would He does not object to the creation , mg the time General George Wash- ; itiated a drive upon owners who no move had been made to have it Park Community Hall, Keyport, last Lake Matawan rented to Mr. and | and 2nd to the twinstwl MorinnMarion andanrt ...... VhTflJof ...... — °t tne thc new nPW national natIonal cemetery cemctr,'y duc but ington ington was was preparing preparing the second violate the dog ordinance thru fa.l- , enforced and the fact the steps ---1_ ----- i h*n®fir qtfan’s n»in inn nrvi <*iir»ri . • if chnuU Ho rxr, fHo Hiincinn fr»r tFro ,• - ...... nite. He said that a large percentage Mrs. Patrick Guigliano. Marilyn DeForest,DeForest and 3rd to Maro boneflt affairs held, the first effort tnsir.ts that it should be on the bat- division for the battle. ) to procure license tags. James t of the workers in both plants had A Newark building and loan asso- Wateon will be a dance to take place tomor- | tlegrourd, east of the church, and j I often with my parents visited rr^y ! Sampson, dog catcher, has had 3 1 able summer season i signed applications to join the local ciation property, Main St., Matawan, row evening in Legion Hall ■ the front to battle for grandfather, and attended service at I warrants issued for alleged violators, especially disastrous. but that fear ’ of company “spies” consisting of 8-room modern house, , The . chairman . ... read toe iH certificate H thn, i ...... historical- ...... accuracy,t citing evidence the Cld Tennent Church. Never at | They will be given a hearing tonite j The innkeepers are remaining had caused them to remain away. rented to Mr. and Mrs. Dimick, for­ Wife Of Former Matawan of incorporation and said he toot t0 disprove the folklore which has j that time was the church spoken of in the Keyport offices of Recorder close-mouthed about toe action, if According to the A.F. of L. execu­ merly of Brooklyn. Man Buried This Morning 11 would suffice as a been gaining momentum with the ; as used as a hospital during the I Thomas L. Smith. The warrants were any, they intend to take in fighting tive the organization drive will be Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Schotte, Union, by-laws committee was appointed j years. He is against conversion of battle. A straggler of the American j served yesterday by Constable the ban. Some have suggested that (Continued on page three) (Continued on page four) Mrs. Mary Florence Llnzmayer, 60, to prepare suggested rules and reg- the church into a patriotic shrine, forces sitting on a monument (tomb- j Charles Ariano. | (Continued on page four) I wife of Adam Linzmayer, Monmouth ulations which will be presented a t ! 'gabbing it up." because of its al- stone) in front of the church, was ______, 1 Av„ Navesink, died Monday of a the June 8 meeting. Mr. Slavin is j teged use a-S a hospital during the heart attack. Mr. Llnzmayer is a chairman and members of toe com- Battle of Monmouth, contending SALT MARSHES PRESENT DIFFICULT brother of George Linzmayer and mittee are: Anne Thompson, Ida that it w;us the neighboring Walter MATAWAN’S NEW MODEL HOME READY lived here as a boy. Thompson, Elmer Larsen, Arthur J K e r r farmhouse into which the ______held_ this _morning______atWard, Walter Seeber and Mortimer wounded and sun-struck were car- PROBLEM IN CONTROL OF MOSQUITO 9 o’clock in St. Agnes Roman Cath- |F. O'Connor. Election of officers may | rjedi a building long since gone, = FOR PUBLIC INSPECTION TOMORROW olic Church- with the Rev. M. H .' take Place at this time. Appreciating that the merits of British, in command of General! Dr. Thomas H. Headlee Describes Fite And Methods Callahan celebrating a requiem mass, j The opinion was expressed that the controversy on the place of the' Clinton. This battle was the bar- Congressman And Mrs. William H. Sutphin, Mayor Of Warfare To Exterminate Pest; Commissioners Interment took place In Fair View the officers should be selected from church in toe story of the battle ley field of Henry Perrine. owning Cemetery, Middletown Township. [ the workers and not^ from executives i were ai( with the side which M r., 1000 acres. Seven cannon balls from Edward W . Currie, And Other Officials Extended Have Been Able To Treat 140,000 Acres; Claims Mrs. Linzmayer is survived by her > or foremen. The officers shall be a Perrine has espoused, this .paper;the British Artillery hit his house, j Invitations To Attend Opening; Expect Crowd Tide Gate Process Is Found Most Effective husband, a daughter and a sister, j president, vice-president, treasurer, edited the questionable' paragraph j destroying apple trees in his orchard j To View New Dwelling During Coming Week Mrs. Bertha Walnwright. j secretary and board of represent ) - in the news release from Washing-; located between his house and the j The salt marshes present a dif­ state and curb breeding in such ------I tives. Each department shall elect a ton to read, “the church which some i barley field, William M. Strother, Matawan recreation room adjoining. It is ficult problem for the state Mosquito areas.”* Expert Upholstering I representative to be a member of the believe was used as a hospital." It j I endowed $1000 in the Endow- ! contractor and builder, announced a 100% triple-insulated job by Extermination Assn., according to its And of the second: “If it were At Freehold Upholstering Shop, 47 j general board. might be noted that historians have [ ment Fund. Five graves endowed by | today that the new M. L. TenEyck Johns-Manville with material furn­ secretary. Dr. Thomas H. Headlee, economically possible to bring the Throckmorton St. Tel. 915. Esti- “ George B. Hogaboom offered a had to contend with such build-up [me were the graves of Revolutionary ' model home was completed yester- ished thru the manufacturer’s local chief entomologist at the State Ag­ salt water with its killiflsh to the, mates cheerfully furnished. We call j motion that meetings be held once legends as the one about being able j soldiers John Perrine, Capt. David ; day and all plans arranged for the authorized dealer, Cartan & Devlin, ricultural College, Rutgers Univer­ back of the diked salt marsh and i for and deliver free' wlthin 25 miles month. This was defeated. Mrs. the bloodshed on the pews, Baird, John Van.Derveer. John Cov- i official opening for public inspection who also supplied toe building ma­ sity. allow it to flow out thru the ditches, I °* Freehold, wj27fp | ciara O’Connor then moved that | a type of canard which thrives in ! enhoven and Col. David Rhea. An- ! tomorrow afternoon. Congressman terials. Millwork was furnished by they be held quarterly and this The county commissioners have all the ditch breeding would be cbn- Notice . historic places and this is one that j other ancestor, Corporal Joseph j and Mrs. William, H. Sutphin, Mayor 1Keyport Lumber & Plumbing Supply, carried. been able to treat 140,000 acres, but sumed and oiling or New Jersey Matawan Post, No. 176, American j needs no such exagerated build-up j Bowne, who was buried in the Old ! Edward W. CUrrie. and the boro 1 the plumbing material by Mortimer F. O’Connor is general 156.000 remain untouched as yet. Larvicide applications made un­ Legion dance, scheduled for May 29, to be famous. [Tennent Cemetery, was not included j officials of Matawan have been ex- Hutchinson, Inc.,plumbing work by chairman of toe dance to be held There are two methods of mos­ necessary.” postponed to June 12. Free admis­ Mr.’ Perrine’e letter to Rep. Sut- | in my endowment. : tended invitations to be present for | John Lauterwald, masonryby Brew- j f ; tomorrow evening. Public officials quito control in these areas. Open The larvicide was invented at the sion. $100 to be awarded. 3 ohin follows: ; (Continued on page three) i the opening day ceremonies. ' er & Kilcomins, electrical installation marsh control consists of trenching experiment station under toe sup­ J p j company executives and their wives My Dear Sir:—I am writing to j , —------‘------■ . ! The various women’s and girls' Iby Stanley Jones, tiling by Thomas so that tides ebb and flow thru the ervision of Dr. Headlee. It is no I have been asked to serve as patrons correct an error authorizing Con- [ Notice To All Holders of Monmouth , clubs, civic and patriotic groups Miller, toe excavating and hauling swamp. The other method necessi­ more deadly than fuel oil but has gress to appropriate a fund for a [ County Scrip have also been invited to join the by Martin & Brown, painting by tates the construction of tide gates. many advantages which make it an Saturday, May 29. Dancing Satur­ be mastsr-of-ceremonies. An enter­ national burning ground at Old Ten- | The Board of Chosen Freeholders | public of the bayshore area in mak- Tunis Sickles, gravel by William Tidal water are walled out, and Important weapon. day and Monday evenings. A1 Kalla tainment staff composed of Clara nent Church. j of Monmouth County have authoriz- j ing this event one that will be Garrison, landscaping by Edward drainage escapes thru tide gates at An oily extract of pyrelhrum flow­ and his orchestra. 27wjfp O’Connor, Irene Bruce and Flor­ The church itself was not used as: ed all banks In Monmouth County j worthwhile to those who are vitally Ziegler and the carpenter work by low water. This method is prescribed ers is emulsified with soap or sulph- ence B. Carney, will be ii? charge of a hospital during the Battle of Mon- ; to receive and cash Monmouth 1 interested in modern home building, William M. Strother. The model for densely populated districts where ated alcohol, then diluted with from Call “Matawan 1952” program. mouth, June 28, 1778. The housc j County scrip on June 15th, 1937 and j The new model home which is said home was completely furnished by a very high degree of mosquito con­ 10 to 15 parts of water. It is produced Best coal now at lowest prices. other committees named are: used as a hospital was the Walter■; thereafter, paying interest thereon , to be the first model dwelling ever The Sterling Furhiture Co., Red trol is necessary. more cheaply than oil can be pur­ Muehlhausett Coal of Matawah. j ticket, James Clark, William Lock- Kerr house, now not standing, lo- up to that date. | erected in the Boro of Matawan, Bank, in Colonial and modem cre- Concerning the first method, Dr. chased and, according to Dr. Head­ 27jfptf! wood; music, Vincent Smith, who ated on the ground, the last pur­ No interest will be allowed after | situated on a high elevated plot of j ations. will bring his Locust Club Orchestra: chase by the committee of founders June 15th. j ground, 50x140 ft. at the corner of Matawan’s first model home has Headlee says: “The open marsh lee, is not harmful to plant life, Season Opening May 29 decorations, Daniel Gorman, chair­ and the committee from the Board Edward C. Broege, j Ravine Dr. and Overlook Rd. I been widely discussed during the past method is effective because with waterfowl. At Anchor, Ihn, Union Beach. flood tidal waters come the salt wat­ In areas where 25 to 50 gals, of oil Chicken supper 35c. Music for danc- man, Joseph Wachter, Frank Mar­ of Trustees of the Old Tennent Cem­ wj27fp • Clerk of the Board. I It consists of five cheerful rooms, three weeks in the bayshore area er killiflsh which consume all the u, needed per acre, only 3 gals, of | jng. wj27* tin; refreshments, James Clark: etery Endowment Fund. -—;------| including two bedrooms, studio liv- and publicized in The Keyport mosquito wrigglers they can find, larvicide is required to do the same . ______. sergeants-a.t-arms, Donald Weir, I am nearing 84 years of age. j If you need printing of any kind, j ing room with fireplace, colored tile j Weekly and The Matawan Journal. leaving few to reach the winged work. Texaco Kerosene Francis Roberts; planning commit- Cne( day during my young life, I j we are here to serve you. Our quick [ bath, dinette, kitchen-with electric : Mr. Strother predicts a large crowd was at the cemetery caring for the ' service and reasonable prices will: refrigeration and electric cooking during the 10 days it will be open stage. Small fish have an amazing Over huge swamp areas, oil may! For delivery call Colot’s Service, j tee, Thomas S. Byrne. Joseph Waqh- r appetite for larvae in the wriggler (Continued on page three) j Matawan 882. j4fptf (Continued on page three) famfly plot and saw William Me- 1 clease you. range, 2-car garage in cellar with a ! for public inspection. THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1937 PAGE TWO— FIRST SECTION THE MATA WAN JOURNAL, MATAWAN, N. J. Miss Iris L. Jackson Runyon-litnberson Glauber-French DIVORCES Miss Iris Lay Jackson, 18, daugh­ The piarriage of. Miss Dorothea Miss Edna M. French, daughter Lamber$on, of Mgtawan, to William of Mr. and Mrs. Pinckney j. French ter of Mrs. Blanche Jackson, Maple DuBois-Edwards PI., Keyport died Thursday, May Runyon, Jr., of Belmar, took place of Beachview Av, Union Beach, was Chancery Court has granted a 20, 1937, in Fitkin Memorial Hos­ Friday evening, May 21, 1937, at the married at 11:30 Saturday morning, May 22, 1937, to John J. Glauber, preliminary. decree of divorce to pital, Neptune, followbig an attack Burfeind-Ruppell S iegel - Gold worm parsonage of CMvary Baptist Church, Belmar., The ceremony.was (son of Mrs. Richard Glauber, (51 Fred DuBois, pf Tennent, who charg­ Frank Sawtelle ] Mrs. Maria Hines of rheumatic fever. Saturday evening. May 15, 1937 Miss Ethel Goldworm, daughter of performed by , .the . Rey. Allen N. , North 12th St., Newark, at the ed Mrs. Mae' (Edwards) DuBois, of Despondent over ill health, Frank j Mrs- Maria (Kelley) Hines, 77, Miss Jackson was a graduate of at the New Monmouth Baptist Mrs. Rose Goldworm, 103 Remsen Nettleman. , Church of the Transfiguration in Jamesburg with desertion in No­ Sawtelle, 59, a Spanish-American I widow of John Joseph Hines Sr., Keyport High School in the class') Church, in the presence of a gather­ Av„ New Brunswick, was married The only attendants were Mr. and [New York City. The Rev. Randolph vember, 1929. Their marriage took War Veteran and former Monmouth | who lived many years on Atlantic of 1935 and had been attending' ing of 250 relatives and friends and to Julius Siegel, Son of Mr. and Mrs. Shaw College in North Carolina. Mrs. Stanley Runyon, brother and iRay officiated. The bride was given place in January, 1928. Counfy employe, ended his life late St., Keyport, died at the home of amid decorations of palms and bou­ Joseph Siegel, 25 E. Front St., Key- She was at college when stricken. sister-in-law of the bridegi'oom. •riage by her father, — rid at afternoon,'May 21, 1937, at i her daughter Mrs. Loretta Larch- quets of lilies and bridal wreath, port, at the home of the bride on Besides her mother, she is sur­ Members of the bride’s family and a i Miss Mary Balinsky of Yonkers. ; home on Wood Av„ English town, ar- of West 0l’ange' Sam day. May the wedding took place of Miss Al­ Saturday nite, May. 22, 1937, at 9 MARLBORO vived by 2 sisters, Mrs. Vera Col­ few friends witnessed the ceremony. IN. Y„ sang Gounod’s “Ave Maria.” fiijirjj £i charge of shot into his 22- 1937• Deat!l was due to a heart mira Vetter Ruppell, daughter of o’clock by Rabbi Lebovitz. The bride lett and Eloise, both living at home, A reception followed at the home The bride was attired in a flow­ | attack. Mi's. Hines in recent years Mr. and Mrs. George Ruppell of was given in marriage by Abraham The Charles Hagermans have chesty and 3 brothers, Alfred, Walker- ■of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Runyon, ered lace gown over taffeta wi*h a County Detective .Leonard Shields ■ Ideal Beach, and John Peter Bur- Grazersteih. moved to Colts Neck. Mr. and Mrs. Perth Amboy. town, Va„ Frank, Philadelphia, with the room decorated in pink and j tulle veil, finger tip length. She car­ and Police Chief Raymond Vander- ^ames F- feind. The bridegroom is a son of The wedding was performed before Michael O’Hara have starred house­ and Strother, Haddonfield. blue and a wedding cake for the ried a ‘bouquet of gardenias, and hoef, who investigated, said Saw- | ______visiting her daughter Mrs. Matilda Burfeind, of Verona, a setting of pink and white. Jack keeping in Mrs. Baird’s bungalow on . Services were held Monday after­ center of the table. The bride and lilies of the valley. Her maid of telle tdok a single-barrel shotgun I when taken ill. and the late Charles Burfeind. Lebovitz sang “O Promise Me ” Railroad Av., vacated by the Hager- noon at 2 o’clock in the Second groom will make their home in Bel­ honor, Miss Catherine Sullivan of horn his' home shortly before 6 pm., Mrs. Hines was twice married, The ceremony was performed by The bride was attired in a white faians. J Baptist Church, Keyport. The Rev. mar. i New York City wore perriwinkle went fo the rear of a chicken house Some years after her firs h - the Rev Samuel Johnston, pastor of appliqued lace dress, redingote style, | blue lace with a large leghorn hat The Marlboro firemen fm in Raritan Town- Monmouth Memorial Hospital, Long A reception was held at Button- new home at 183 Gregory Av, West Announcement has been made of I Orange. Councilman and Mrs. Fred- LEGIONNAIRES, the Spanish war. He was honorably ™ f September, 1876. daughter Branch, Sunday, May 23. 1937. He wood Manor Matawan, where an the marriage of Miss Albertina Carl discharged as a corporal. He was a j Qf charles Calvin and Armenia Spurdie-VanNess | eriek V. Croes, of Keyport, and Mrs. had been a patient there since Apr. elaborate supper wa .‘served. Danc­ and August Pudleiner, both of the Auxiliary and Fam­ member of the Junior Order o f ; Announcements have oeen receiv­ (Joseph E. Wenzel, of Freehold, at- Walling. She had always made her 27. He is survived by his wife, Es- ing, singing and various other pas­ Keansburg. The ceremony United American Mechanics and j ed of the marriage of Mrs. Ethel - tended from here.. ilies, 20% reduction on home in the vicinity of Hazlet. tella. times were enjoyed. formed by Mayor William Turner, of was a it exempt fireman. 'Witt* Van Ness, daughter of Mrs. round trip European Mrs. Walling was a member of St. Services will be held this after­ The bride and groom are spending Keansburg, on May 6,1937. The wit­ Catherine Mrs. Ralph P. Villars Spurdie. The ceremony was perform­ of South Keyport and was active and interment will take place in will reside at Worchester, Mass. Mrs. J. Frederic Silcox SEE Mrs; Jane R. Villars, 32, wife of in the auxiliary of the Hazlet Fire Midway Green Cemetery, Matawan. Burfeind is a graduate of the Essex ed Tuesday. May 14, 1937. in Brook­ Funeral Director RalphJ Villars, of Wilmort Park, Co. during its existence. County Hospital School of Nursing. lyn. Mr. and Mrs. Spurdie left on a Goidberger’s Travel Bureau Middletown Township, died short­ Services were held at the resi­ Infant Jean Goode The groom is a graduate of Johns honeymoon cruise to the British KEYFOJBT, X. J. West Indies and are expected home ly after midnight Monday morn­ dence Monday afternoon at 2:30 Jean Goode, 7-months-old daugh­ Hopkins University of Baltimore and the latter part of the week. ing, May 24, 1937, at the Mon­ o’clock. The Rev. George W. Han- ter of Arthur and Sarah /2 c Each 500 Pairs! Reg. $2.50 KathleeA andMary Rose Phillips, > wood Wilson, Miss Mildred Walling Miss Julia Taka, daughter of Mr. Following the ceremony a recep­ 7*4e by the lOfl and two sons. Lawrence and Ralph I and Mrs. Francis W. Stanhope and Mrs. Michael Taka, of Columbia tion was held at the Hans-Anderson Villars, Jr., all living at home; her ! All Healthy Blood-Tested Stock M en’s Slacks Av., Union Beach, whose marriage tea room at Teaneck after which of New York, will the couple left on a week's wedding and Trousers .8, was trip to Washington and Virginia. Up- Also Baby Ducks ■ir return they will reside in $ J .95 Farrant Terrace. Amboy Feed Co.

iany attractive gifts. Pafncfea Gordon C< ____ Guest were: Mr. and Mrs. Michael Men’s Sanforized his honied 51 South St., Freehold, home of his ancestors for several Taka, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. C. Evans, SMARTEST OF SUMMER SHOES Monday; May 24, 1937. He was the generations. He was a member and Mrs. Harkucha, Mr. and Mrs. Michael SLACKS son of fie late Michael P. Collins elder of the Jamesburg Presbyterian Taka. Jr., Miss Ann Wargo, Mr. and Made to sell for $179. Fast color and wad bom on the Collins farm Church, of the .Jamesburg Council . . . Cool . . . Washable . . .Oood- Mrs. Michael Wargo. Miss Grace Ic-oking-l Wear them for Sports, near Marlboro. of the Jr. O. U. A. M., and of the Clairehew, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Scoras, -USED CARS- Mr. Cqllins is survived by his wife, Board nf Education of Monroe | Miss Anna Callahan, Miss Ling Mel- Sarah (McCue) Collins, and a son, Township. lody, Misses Ann and Mary Taka, All Makes - All Models FEATURE the Ducks. Very full E$ j.: Dr. George Allen Collins, of Shrews- Mr. Vanden'bergh is survived by Mrs. William Whitaker, Raymond oury, a dental surgeon with offices his wife, Mrs. Josie (Dey) Vanden- Barese, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Burk­ in Newark and Freehold. bergh, 2 daughters, Mrs. John L. hart, Joseph Harkucha, Mrs. Mae TWo sisters, Mrs. .Sarah Sherwood, Lewis, of the State Home'for Boys, LaGiglia, John Mount, Mrs. J. Re­ of Freehold, and Mrs. T. MsCue, of Jamesburg, and Miss Hilda Vanden- ’34 Buick 6-W gan, Mrs. Krause, Clifford Evans Neat Stripe Marlboro, arid 6 brothers, Thomas bergh, of Rhode Hall. Mrs. Lewis is a and Miss Julia Taka. Sedan $165 and Michael Collins, both of New former Englishtown resident. Women who are careful of Brunswick; Dr. James Collins, of The funeral was held Wednesday Derechailo-Danuck Flannel T r o u s e r s Bristol, -Pa.; Martin and Bartley ’31 Cadillac Conv’t afternoon at 2:30 o’clock at the resi­ A miscellaneous shower was given their appearance will seek $ 4 . 9 5 Collins, fyoth of Marlboro, and John dence, conducted by the Rev. An: by Miss Victoria Derechailo, of Coupe 140 Collins, of Red Bank, also survive. drew S. ^Layman of the Jamesburg Cliff wood Beach, Miss Mary Dan- two essentials for their sum­ Services were held this morning Presbyterian Church. Interment uck and Mrs. William Danuck, at (Thursday) at 9 o’clock at St. Rose The Most Desirable * | was in Westminster Cemetery, the later’s home, Main and Atlantic ’34 Pontiac Sedan 142 mer shoe wardrobe — the of Lima; Roman Catholic Church, Cranbury. St., Matawan, Tuesday nite in honor Freehold; with the Rev. John A. of Miss Anna Danuck, whose ap­ M en’s Shorts Kucker, pastor, celebrating the re­ ’33 Cadillac V-12 new fabrics and the Flare-Fit Mrs. Mary E. Herbert proaching marriage to Andrew Dere- j 2 for $J.OO quiem mass. Burial, in charge of W. Services for Mrs. Mary E. Herbert, chailo will take place June 12. The Conv’t Sedan 230 innersole which holds the H. Freeman, took place in the family 88, widow of Joseph G. Herbert, of house was beautifully decorated with ! plot in the'Freehold Catholic Ceme­ Tennent, who died Sunday, May 23, an Umbrella suspended from the ceil­ Every pair fine BROAD­ tery. 1937, at the home of her daughter, ’35 Buick Club feet in balance, correcting CLOTH! Very full cut, balloon ing with blue and white crepe paper seat. 32 to 4C. Combed yarn Mrs. George H. VanNest, of 21 Em­ streamers which concealed the gifts. William Cherry Sedan 249 wobbly ankles. Both fea­ Athletic Shirts. 3G to 4G. ma St., Plainfield, after a month’s Miss Danuck, received many beau­ William Cherry, 55, died at his illness, were held Wednesday after­ tiful and useful gifts. Refreshments ! residence, 95 Elizabeth St., Keyport, noon at 2 o’clock at the Hulse Fun­ were served to about 50 relatives and \ ’36 Olds 6 Touring tures in Tuesday evening, May 25, 1937, after eral Home, Englishtown, and were U n d e r w e a r friends. Among them were: Mrs. j Sedan 235 a long'iillness. Mr. Cherry was bom conducted by the Rev. Charles Neff, Agnes Derechailo, Miss Victoria in Keyport, Aug. 31, 1881, son of pastor of Old Tennent Presbyterian Derechailo, Mrs. Anne Hendricks, SHORTS, STOUT the late Moses and Hannah (Comp­ Church. Mrs. Herbert, at the time Mrs. Edward Kelley, Miss Alida Ver- ’35 Olds 8 Touring ton) Cherry. He was a carpenter of her death, was the oldest mem­ Voort, Cliff-wood Beach, Mrs Joseph all his life. ber of Old Tennent Church. Inter­ Savitsky, Misses Helen and Sophia Sedan 198 " u / union”1 SuiteT!'il>le 7 9 c Surviving are his wife, the former ment took place in Old Tennent Savitsky, Miss Loni Martens, of Cliff- HIRTS, and SHORTS.. Edna Poling; a brother, Joseph, of Cemetery. wood. 2 5 c Hazlet,, two sisters, Mrs. Winfield Mrs. Herbert is survived by 2 ’36 Plymouth DeLuxe , - t / u £ - E E Z Maurer, Miss Elizabeth Cherry, both daughters, Mrs. VanNest and Miss Blum-McGuire Sport Coupe 198 J a SEI&YSHOE of Beerp St., Keyport; three nephews, Georgianna Herbert, also 5 sons, Jo­ Miss Mildred McGuire, daughter of Winfie|d and Ralph Maurer, Keyport seph H„ John L„ Wesley C„ Arthur Police Chief and Mrs. Charles Me and J .‘ Carlton Cherry, Hazlet; and G. and Leon Herbert. Guire, of Keansburg, has set Satur­ ’36 Buick Victoria a nie^s, Miss Dorothy Cherry, of day, June 5, 1937, as the day for her Touring Coupe 249 M en’s Sw eaters Hazle^j Frank Piazza marriage to Bernard Blum. $ | .9 5 Services will be held tomorrow af- Frank Piazza, 60, husband of Mrs. temoqii (Friday) at 2 o’clock at the Virginia (Triafie) Piazza, Girard Av., ’37 Cadillac Touring residence. The Rev. Frank Harwood, Matawan Township, died Monday BIRTHS Sedan (Demo.) 535 forme?: pastor of the First Baptist evening, May 24, 1937, in the Perth Church, Keyport, will officiate. In­ Amboy General Hospital, following Gunn Solid colors, terment will take place in Green short illness. A son, James, and 5 Mr. and Mrs. John Gunn, Jr., of G.M.A.C. terms to suit your purse. Grove pemetery, Keyport, in charge daughters, Mrs. Joseph Saccone, Union Beach, are the parents of a Open evenings. Phone 910 of J. (Frederic Silcox, funeral di- Jennie, Nina, Virgiitta and Lillian, daughter born Friday, May 31, 1937, New Straw Hats at rectofi'jof Keyport. all of Matawan, also survive. in the Perth Amboy General Hos­ S. W. CLIPPINGER, Sale Prices Services were held this morning pital. The baby weighed 8 pounds. Joseph A. Grant (Thursday) at 8 am. at the residence Mgr. Used Car Dept. Joseph A,- Grant, 39, an engineer and at 9 o’clock a high mass of Flack Men! Special Saturday Men’s of thel.^Iarlboro State Hospital, died requiem was celebrated by the Rev. Mr. *and Mrs. Elwood Flack, Au- All-Wocl Ready-to-Wear at thq hospital Monday evening, Pasquale Romano in St. Joseph’s mack Av., Union Beach, announce May 24, 1937, of a heart attack. Roman Catholic Church, Keyport. the birth of a daughter, Wednesday, Services will be held tomorrow Interment under direction of the May 19, 1937, at the Monmouth Me­ SUITS - $18.00 morning at 9 o’clock in St. Gabriel’s Day Funeral Home was in St. Jo­ morial Hospital, Long Branch. Romaic Catholic Church, Bradevelt, seph’s Cemetery. with the Rev. Louis Cogan officiat­ Sprague Howland B. Jones ing- atjfja high requiem mass. Inter­ Wesley Falhoun Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sprague, DOYLE & Kearney St„ Keyport, are the parents ment iwill be made in Holy Sepul- Funeral services for Wesley Fal­ of a son born Monday evening, May sher Cemetery, Areola. Mr. Grant’s houn were held Wednesday at the Motor Co. 24, 1937, at the Hazard Hospital, CUNNEEN wife and , 3 children survive. Funeral Home of Richard VapSant Long Branch. Cadillac - LaSalle - Olds of South Street, Freehold, conducted A S. MILLER SHOE CO. 155 SMITH STREET Infant Kuhn by the Rev. A. L. Linder, .pastor of Ochat Sales — Service ?ERTH AMBOY A daughter was bom to Mr. and the Freehold Baptist Church. Inter­ A daughter was born to Mr. and Shoes fitted by X-ray B A N K Mrs. Lpuis Kuhn, of Lincoln Court, ment was in the Malboro State Hos­ Mrs. Henry Ochat, of Raritan Town­ 36 Maple Ave., near Monmouth St. We Give Double 8. & H. Green Keansburg, at 7 p. m. Thursday, May pital Cemetery. ship, Friday morning, May 21, 1937, Broad Street Trading Stamps Saturday 20, 1937. The infant died shortly Mr. Falhoun was 62 years old and at the Monmouth Memorial Hospital, RED BANK TUXEDO SUITS TO HIRE after birth. died at the State hospital. Long Branch. THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1937 THE MATAWAN JOURNAL. MATAWAN. N. J. PAGE THREE— FIRST SECTION

strikers is cracking are false,” Jen- l MAYOR INAUGURATES To Tell How To Look THROMOWICZ DIES OF ! !gifts ARE BANNED nings told reporters last nite. ’’Such j EDDIE KOONS Up A Family History tales are being put out for propa- j Formerly with Jan Garber, Ross SUNDAY BALL HERE WOUNDS FROM RAZOR I f FOR K. H. S. GRADS ganda purposes. Financially they j Gorman, Meyer Davis, etc., offers expert instruction on Saxophone The public is invited to attend are all right so far and not one has ! applied for relief. The spirit dis­ and Clarinet. Bedecked In New Outfits a free lecture at 2:15 Friday after­ Succumbs At So. Amboy Board Asks They Be Sent Orchestra Coaching & Arranging noon of next week at the Mon­ played here is the finest I’ve seen on j Tiger A. C. To Open Yesterday As Result Of I To Homes; Work And STUDIO Tel. Matawan 2176-J-2 mouth County Historical Assn, any strike in yealrs.” Season At H. S. building, 70 Court St., Freehold, Self-Inflicted Slash Changes Outlined the first of a series planned by Coach Willard Rlsley, president of the genealogical committee of the Michael Thromowicz, 40, of Suy- | Graduates of the Class of 1937, REORGANIZE A. A. the Matawan Tiger Athletic Club, organization, headed by Mrs. Har­ dam Av., Matawan Township, suc- j Keyport High School, will not be KAPPY’S announced today that plans have j riet L. Wilkeson, West Long jcumbed at 11:45 a. m. yesterday at | permitted to receive flowers or other First quality line of delicatessens, been completed for an auspicious1 Branch. the South Amboy Memorial Hospital | gifts in the high school on the nite groceries, candies. inauguration of Sunday baseball at to self-inflicted wounds. Thromowicz j of the exercises the board of edu­ Breyer’s Ice Cream Miss Gertrude A. Barber, of Proceeds of the dance will be used the Matawan High School field when was found with his throat slashed cation announced this week. The Open Sundays New York, will speak on “Genea­ for welfare work of the Hanson-Van- his team bedecked in new colorful lying about 150 feet in the rear of I decree is necessary because of the Main St. Corner Middlesex logical Research,” and after she Winkle-Munning Co. Athletic Assn, j uniforms will trot on the diamond has outlined the procedure used his home Friday afternoon. j numerical size of the class, the to oppose the Holy Name club of in tracing cne’s ancestors, there Funeral services will be held Sat­ j largest in the history of the school, Union Beach. will be an opportunity for novices, urday morning at 8 a. m. at the res­ j In order to provide seats on the as well as ethers, to ask definite idence, and at 9 a. m. in St. Joseph’s (stage for the graduates and com- questions. Miss Barber is assist­ Roman Catholic Church, Keyport, [mencement speakers it will be nec- ant librarian at the New York where a high mass of requiem will jessary to utilize all available space Genealogical and Biographical be celebrated by the pastor, the Rev. j and for this reason the board, thru Society, secretary to the editor of John P. Burke. Interment, under District Clerk R. O. Walling, has the direction of. the Day Funeral urged flowers and gifts be sent di­ the society's monthly publication, Interior Vie Showing Colonial Style High Pulpit, Pew Doors. the New York Genealogical and Home, will be in the church ceme­ rectly to the homes. In order to pro­ Biographical Record, one of the tery. vide more seats on the main floor leaders in the field, and has com­ ' Police who investigated the case | The ground for a Memorial Park f0r parents and relatives the Class piled many genealogical and said Thromowicz had been despond- TENNENT PARK should be at the location I have of ’37 voted to dispense with the local history manuscripts. ent since having been thrown out of j ------named, east of Old Tennent Church, customary daisy chain which re- work at the Keyport Architectural (Continued from page three) Yours respectfully, (quired wide aisles. The junior class Tile CO. plant several months ago.! Hon. William H. Reid, a ruling DAVID V. PERRINE. -will not participate in the exercises,' ,p.m. The topic will be “Across the |He sustained’ an arm injury when! elder of Old Tennent Church, Freehold, N. J., May 17, 1937. it has been announced. World It Crys.” caught in a conveyor belt at the j nearly 86 years old, and his sister, In answer to an inquiry by Samuel All of the seats on the main floor The senior choir and octet will jplant. Mrs. John Oakerson, will verify my C. Cowart, Esqr., to Congressman and in the stadium will be held for rehearse Thursday evening at 8:45 Friday afternoon Thromowicz told j statement Old Tennent Church was William H. Sutphin, as to the pro- seserved ticket holders until 8 p.m., p. m. The junior choir will rehearse his wife, Julia, he was going to shave ! not used as a hospital on June 28, visions of the bill to authorize the Those not occupied at that hour will Thursday at 5 pm. The Builders of and walked out of the rear door of 1778. Secretary of War to acquire land be made available for the holders, the Trail will meet at 4 pm. the house with a razor. Some time The story came from a person in­ surrounding and'including Cld Ten-i of general admission tickets, Mr. On M emorial D ay the blue and the The Ladies Missionary Society wjll later he was found by his wife who forming the Red Bank (7) Chapter nent Church, for the purpose of I Walling said. present in the lecture room of the went looking for him when he failed (D.A.R.) They placed a tablet on the making it a federally maintained In an additional statement Mr. gray and the khaki-clad columns | church next Friday evening a play to return. Neighbors called Patrol­ Church stating Old Tennent Church national cemetery, Mr. Sutphin re- Walling announced the board had will march again. And with them, “If I Be His Disciple” by Elliot Field. men Adolph Menzel aVid William was used as a hospital. Their inform­ plied as follows: “It is neither the]decided to install fuel oil equipment The following people will take a part Furey of the Matawan Township er cared more for the glory than for thot nor intention of the bill to have in steam boiler at the high school, in unseen array, will be the ghostly in the cast: police. the truth. That disposition of the the federal government assume the ! The idea is that the efficiency of the battalions of the dead— the boys Mayor Edward W. Currie, himself Mrs. Henry DePeyster Morris. Miss Beside his wife the deceased is informer influenced him to make managementv of the historic Old ! present plant will be increased, per- a . great catcher performing with Hannah McLean: Mips Dorothy Dal­ survived by one son, Walter, and other statements in regard to the Tepnent Church. Before introducing i mitting the heating of the main who did not return— whose graves battle that were erroneous. Keyport High School, Perkiomen ton, Mrs. Arthur Hall; Miss Blanch three daughters. Anna, Julia and the bill, I conferred with all of the ] building and the new WPA built we cover with wreaths. (Prep.) School of Pennsburg. Pa., Carew, Mrs. Edgar McNabb; Mrs. Mary. The fight after the retreat of the trustees of Old Tennent Church, j manual training addition, without and at Princeton, has consented to Jones, Mrs. W. H. Diggin; Mrs. Calk- ! first division raged between the west- who are thoroly familiar with the i need of installing an additional Our N ation has no more glorious j em limits of Monmouth Court House intent and purpose and expressed ! boiler. be on hand to toss out the first ball memories than those bequeathed at 3 o’clock. jand east of Old Tennent Church. their approval of the project, so you i The present coal bin in the high The Tigers have been playing an may assure your friend that the [ school will be made into 2 rooms for to it by its fighting sons. impressive brand of ball on “foreign”, George Washington and Marquis management and operation of the the storage of educational and jani- fields this spring, preferring not to De LaFayette slept under an apple Church would continue in the hands I tor’s supplies. A room in the base- start their home season until Joe p . I N it A tt A rl lree in tlle Henry Perrine orchard, j of the trustees. :ment of the addition, originally in­ Bennett shipped their new uniforms. music will also be .presented by Al- * i cr'L 'l J A U e n a e a Having made a study of the Bal - "It is only my intention to per- tended for storage purposes, will be THE MATAWAN BANK Sunday afternoon the club trim­ fred Ball, Miss Emma Franke! and! By 150 Children; Play tlefield of Monmouth, locating whei • petuate this historic old building used for board meetings. It will also MATAWAN, N. J. med the South Amboy Dodgers on Miss Barbara Oschwald. Miss Susan By Mrs. Blood Given Ramsey defended the guns, where i and burying ground, and to establish . be the office of the district clerk. Sutphin and Miss Shirley Noddings i _____ j was the artillery fight in the Henry j a national shrine in Monmouth | Mrs. Caroline Silcox will be secre- the laiter’s field 9 to 1. George MEMBEK FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION Claythn drew the hurling assign­ will present a dialogue “If I Were! a party in celebration of the 3 djPerrinc barlc>’ fieki- where Gen. j County. Since other historical sec- j tary in the office of the district ment from Risley and kept the nine You." Refreshments in the form of j birthdav of the WPA playground lComwallis aLtacked the ri« ht wing tlons have been recognized by the! clerk and the high school. Miss INTEREST PAID ON SAVINGS Dodger hits well distributed thruout cake and coffee will be served. land Recreation Center was held for|of tbe American Army, slmultan-. federal government, I believe that (Prances Decker will be secretary in the 6-inning conflict. Floyd Bi;own, the children at the Center last nite eouslv wilh the attack qn the center j the people of Monmouth County and 'the grammar school office. PAY YOUR TELEPHONE BILLS HERE former first string M.H.S. catcher, Matawan First M. E. Church 150 children being present. jof 1116 American army by Monckton’s j the State of New Jersey are entitl- The teachers committee has been was op the receiving end of Clay­ (John A. Naylor. Minister) The entertainment consisted of a grenadiers, I would like to go over|ed to equal recognition and I am i working on plans for increasing the ton’s mound offerings. The annual union memorial service play entitled “A Wedding In Mother I ^ 6round with you at some future 1 hopeful that I may be able to bring j educational opportunities of gram- Quitllan of the Dodgers was the will be conducted by the First Meth­ Goose Garden,” which was written i111116 Ithis 'about." mar school pupils.The committee expects to make a report i outstahding batsman of the after­ odist Episcopal Church in the First by Mrs. Lewis H Blood The cast i ow Tennent Church is located on | The bill recommends the appro- board in the near future concerning • noon,’ slapping out three for three Presbyterian Church Sunday morn­ consisted of the following char- |holy *round. should n°t be gobbled Ipriation of $250,00° for the purpose, the enlargement and enrichment of j with F. Burke of the Tigers in the ing at 11 o’clock. The Rev. John A. acters: Kathryn VanPelt, Mother up by the United States government, *to remain available until expended. the curriculum. runnef-up spot tied with Adamecz, Naylor will deliver the address and Goose; Marilyn Cogan, Little Bo- j ...... The district clerk has been notified ! Amboy’s flipper, for two hits each. the pastors of the co-operating it is. more than likely that Clayton 'JUDGMENT AGAINST “ MAN FROM NOWHERE” that the WPA repairs and replace- I churches will have a part in the ment project in the grammar school and Brown will be the battery for program. A male quartet from the Mary; Nicholas Longette. Jack will be started as soon as possible j the Tigers when the umpire yells Methodist Church will furnish the Sprat; Audrey Layton, Jack’s Wife; MARLBORO MAN GIVEN PLAYS TO 300 HERE -play ball” here Sunday afternoon. vocal numbers.___ Arlene Wilson, Little Miss Muffet; Mat a wan s probable batting order The American Legion and affiliate John Johnson, the Spider; Robert} State Hospital Attendant Production Sponsorej will be: L. Manuel rf, F. Brown c, ed organizations will attend in their Hurlew, a Brownie: George Slee. j «tin n A * - - - — ------—J Maneini lb, F. Veary 3b. F. Burke ss, respective groups, and at the close I Little Bey Blue; Jean Thixton. i d e c u r e s $1UU A m o u n t E. Lei’ If. G. Wiggins cf, Scully or bf the worship service the? American j Queen of Hearts: James Lauro, From Staff Member Rapolfe 2b, Clayton p. Legion will conduct the memorial! Humptv Dumpty: June Lambertson. ------part of the service in memory of de- [Old Mother Hubbard: 8hirley Bur- William Clownev. an attendant ceased members of the Legion. j lew, Mary had a little lamb: Lila ' the Marlboro State Hospital w CHURCH NEWS Each church will hold the regular ; Jane VanBrackle. the bride: Pred , . . . b I the Mata STRIKE evening service in the respective | Ewington. tbe bridegroom; Billy Au- First Baptist Church churches, at 8 o’clock. The public ■ mack, the preacher: Rita DAlola Fra!lk Henry, a member of theu stsian i by the Men.g clufa of the First Pr( j (Continued from page The'First Baptist Church, with is cordially invited to attend the I Betty Corcionne, Marcia Spray, of the same institution, i Wed- j byterian Church under the directi I continued and that as sooi It is an occasion for bringing home Garrett Detwiler, pastor, announce public services of the churches and Jeannette Meola. the bridesmaids; nesdav before Judge J. Ei it Neu- of A. Adam Banke who rehears :of the workers in each plant are to us all the lessons that our present the following program for the week: hearty welcome will be freely ■ Beatrice Aumack. flower girl; Fran- ,n . . Asbury tbe 3-fcct mystery.4 months prior ; admitted to union membership bar­ gaining privileges would be sought, £ The’; junior meeting will be held tended by the congregations to Ices Artilli. Little Red Riding Hood; Pflrk Mf c!ownev s oae out iits production. security and pride of place was made |n the-lecture room at 3:45 p.m. on itors. j Doris Holmes, a jumping-jack , Jane ( immobile accident which oc- i Mrs. Florence Carney as M rsl He also added that activity at the Thursday. The junior choir rehear- (Spray, Eva LiPera. and Josephine curred ( on the hospital grounds about Craddock, a boarding house keeper; T ™ 1 Tl 6 Co^TrenUm. had resulted possible by the great sacrifices of tal will be conducted by Mrs. Victor | ,, , .. { - j | Charles, doilies from the Follies; o’clock Dec. 19 IF. Howard Lloyd as Mr. Graydon, lb “ nucleus being formed there Ar- those resting under the sod. To their Fredda at the conclusion of this Englishtown- Men . Injured . . I| Carmilla------TomaseUa. a daffodil; Su- Al that lime he stated he was president of the bank; Milton F. I chitectural Co. strikers also helped meeting. In Manalapan Accidents (Zanne Donnell and Jean Campbell.' John McCann a feli0,v at- Stevens.m, representing Prof. Holm- Picket the latter concern during the memory, we place our humble offer­ The prayer meeting will be held ------violets; Angelina LiPera. Purina tendant ^ lhe Marlboro-Freehold jes, a boarder and Miss Elaine Skin- ing of flowers. Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m. and Curt Schur, Manalapan Township , Durante, and Mary Corcionne, sweet road l0' enable him to get the bus. ner in the role of Anna Royce. a Strike Enters 2nd Week Will be followed by a special busi­ recorder, imposed $10 fines and sus- ; peas; Lulu Rlnear. Little Miss Daisy; clowney drove hLS car out of the boarder, had the principal parts. The Today marks the start of the sec­ Interest Paid On Savings Accounts ness meeting, called by the board pended the driver’s licenses of three Willie Frances Kiah. Black-eyed groul)di he clalmed he was ne- rest of the cast was as follows: Hilda ond week of strike activity here. of deacons for the purpose qf elect­ reckless drivers for three months (Susan; Jean Devlin and Phllomena gotiat)ng a curve on thP extreme 13wensen. a maid, Mrs. Georgianna There has been no major disorder Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ing aditioral members to the board. each Sunday. iTomasella, tulips; Dorothy Hedge- righ[ gide ol the road at a slow rate j l. Leary; Dory Fry, a boarder. Miss and the picketing has been peaceful. A meeting of the Sunday school Royal Ing, New Brunswick, was : path and Helen Coward, butterflies. speed when Dr Hpnry approached ! Emma Fra'nke; Miss Prim, a board- The lone untoward Incident was re- officers and teachers will be held arrested by Farmingdale state police, j Others taking part in the program opposite direction at a fast i Miss* ^My'the ^D^brow" Henry ported Sunday when a relative vis- _I-;-__ 1__ • -*__l. ~ i„o n e rv a manri solo ' ' iting a family living- near the plant Friday; evening at 8 pan. in the lec­ after his car had struck a wrecking ! were Alice41 Berry, a piano solo, 1 i into the j Holt, who worked in the bank, Louis Farmers & Merchants ture rbom with William Bader, Sun­ truck engaged in extricating an up-| “Orange Blossoms '; tap and clog rear oi hK car. Clowney's car was ; N. Pazienza; Mr. Cox, who asked attempted to drive thru the picket day school supt.. presiding. set machine which had hit a tree on dances by the pupils of Charles afterward taken to the Raritan questions. Donald Riley; and Rod- lines. At It! a.m. the church will jom with the Tennent highway. According to Mast. accompanied by Mrs „ eo!? le Oarage. Inc.. Keyport. and repaired, ney Baxter, the stranger. Fred P. According to leaders the morale Na t i o n a l Ba n k Police Chief Raymond B. Vander- Mason; Angelina Bucco and Pauline ■ Dr BHenry.s vers^ of lhe accldent | Buntenbach. of the strikers has been excellent. the other churches of Matawan in M a t a w a n , N e w J e r s e y the union memorial service to be held hoef, of Englishtown, the wrecker Kneel, vocal sections, Jam£s Lauro. clowney for driving on his! The Men's Club octet sang sev- They report the men and women In the Presbyterian Church under owned and operated by Augustus mandeflin selection; aJ4egro^cho^ ; side of tht, road. but did not explain j oral selections. are as determined aj ever to win Old e st Bank in Mo n m o u th Co u n t y their demands and are prepared to the direction of Rev. John A. Nay- Greveson, of Englishtown, and the sang ‘Swing Low Sweet" “ Chariot, “ j how‘ it was that Clowney’s car was [ The following also assisted in the battle the issue thru to the end. lor. wrecked machine Jby Robert Davis, George Battles from the WPA project off the road on its right, together (production: director of scenery, /^ESTABLISHED 183 0 “Stories that the morale of the Miss Bernice Duncan will be the Rue’s Corner Rd., Englishtown. Ing entertained with character songs. with his own machine, immediately ! gar McNabb; stale carpenter, Fred leader, at the B.Y.P.U. meeting'. male companion received The committee in charge of the after the happening of the accident, j Stevens; business manager, W. Oliver At the evening service the choir minor lacerations and were treated party were: Mrs. William H. Sutphin, Judge Neuman dismissed the coun- j Diggin; program chairman, Frank under "the direction of H. M. Munson by Dr. Ralph Woodruff. chairman. Mrs. William Donnen- terclaim brot by Dr. Henry and j Martin and electrician, Roland V.. will 4ng “All Glory, Laud, and After a minor accident on the same worth, Mrs. James Martin. Mrs. awarded Clowney a judgment of j Tailby. A financial report will be OPENING NITE Honor” by Teschner-Bach. The pas­ highway, William Brodie, 53, of 111 Oscar Oschwald. Mrs. H. G. Travis, $109.55 representing the damages j raade at a later date when all returns tor wifi speak on the theme “The Throckmorton St., Freehold, was also Mrs. Marguerite Laird. Mr. and Mrs. done to his car. have been completed. Transformed Demon.” fined. Pete Vetri, Wood Av., Eng­ Henry L. Zucker. Mayor Edward W. The witnesses who testified for Mr. j Following the production, mem- On Tuesday evening at 8 p.m. the lishtown, was the complainant. Currie, Mrs.„ Edgar „ N. Pike, „ Mrs. . . | Clowney besides himself were M r.!bers of the cast, personnel and octet AT BELVEDERE BEACH B.Y.P.U. Council will meet in the Benjamin Sklar, Tracey Station Wesley F. Hall, Mrs. John . c McCann and Anthony Granato. one J Were guests of the Rev. and Mrs. First Baptist Church of Asbury Park. d., was also adjudged reckless after Curdy, Miss Katherine Huff. Of the owners of the Raritan Garage, j Robert B. Berger at the Presbyter- The Rev. William R. Rossell, of Key- his car struck the rear of a machine The program for the entertainment Inc. Dr. Henry and Mrs. Henry and I tan manse. FRIDAY, 28 was under the direction of Mrs. MAY th port, Will speak on the theme “Per­ driven by Cornelius E. Wetherm, Mr. Nemeth testified for the defense. I ------Mildred Warne, and her assistants, sonal Evangelism.” Bound Brook. Mr. Clowney was represented by j Mrs. Genevieve Donnell and Brook­ Edward W. Currie, attorney and) MOSQUITO WARFARE Meet me at BELVEDERE BEACH, Keansburg First Presbyteriah Church lyn McMillon. counsellor-at-law of Matawan, while | Raritan Star, No. 80, On John Tassinl contributed three The following items pertain to act­ Dr. Henry was defended by Ernest | (Continued from page one) boxes of lovely candy for the mem­ ivities;' at the First Presbyterian 30th Birthday Honors 5 Ker, Esq., of the firm of Boyd & j be sprayed from an airplane but the THE FAMILY AMUSEMENT PARK bers of the cast. Dodd, Montclair. I larvicide is too lite. Laboratory work- Churcjj of which the Rev. Robert Five charter members of the Rar­ The program will be repeated for B: Berger is pastor: |ers are experimenting still further itan Star, No. 80, Order of Shepherds adults at 8 o’clock tomorrow evening. Laurel Ave. and Beach way On Sunday morning a union of Bethlehem were honored at the GETS SUSPENDED SENTENCE j with the fluid, seeking to add orial Service under the auspices of 30th anniversary of the founding of ------j heavier substance so that it would NEW BUSINESS BUILDING the American Legion Post, No. 176, of the local lodge. The celebration Fred W. Slmkin, Jackson St., was! be possible to drop a film of “bug VARIOUS NEW FEATURES Matawan, will be held in the Presby­ given a suspended 30-day county j juice” from the air. held at the Scheyichbi Hall, Main Alphonse Vaccarella, High and terian ^Church. The Rev. John A. St., Keyport, Friday evening with 75 jail sentence after arraignment be- i The effect of oil and larvicide on Bank Sts., is the owner of a new Naylor and the choir of the First members and out of town guests fore Recordei' Harry Bolte, Sr., broods of mosquitos is simply ex- SANITARY SWIMMING POOL building of cinder block and brick- Methojflfci; Episcopal Church will present. Mrs. Florence Frailey, of Thursday nite on a reckless driving ! plained. Wrigglers, resembling small trimmed construction now being e- plan ahd present the order of ser­ Bradley Beach, deputy of the Star, charge. Simkin was arraigned after j worms, feed beneath the water sur- with Filtered Salt Water rected opposite his present home. vice. . £ was presented with a pocketbook and a car he was driving collided with j face but must come to the top to The building is 40x32 and will be,a Sterling Thompson, Jr., of Edge- a large begonia plant by the Keyport one operated by Fred M. Burlew ! breathe. 2-story structure. It is located about Among the many new attractions are The mere Drive, will lead the C. E. ser­ members. at the intersection of Main and ------200 feet from Main St. and is being vice at 7 p.m. The meeting was presided over by Spring Streets. j Have you read the classified ads? Twister, Kitty-Car, Merry-Go-Rounds, Dodgem, At flie special evening Memorial Mrs. Estelle Wethered, vice-com- built by Crosby & George, Matawan Day service the Men’s Club octet w ill: mander. Guests were present from contractors. Jungle Ride, Hoopla, Kill-the-Kats, Bottle Game, sing “Jesus Lover of My Soul” by Freehold, Asbury Park, Red Bank, Holbrook. Mrs. Alfred Thatcher, the Bradley Beach and Keansburg. The RESERVES AID DRIVE T o the Children Skee Ball, Skill Games, Restaurant, Refreshments organist, will play “Andante Moder- charter members were Mrs. Louisa ato” by Mendelssohn and “Postlude” C. Jacobs, Mrs. Carolina Hauser, Mrs. Members of the Matawan police THOMAS H. RYAN, SR, and the Ku Ku House for thrills and laffs. Plus by Hifl. The pastor will preach a Effie Bailey, Mrs. Henrietta Bailey reserve have been bn duty during o f M a t a w a n the nites of the past week in a numerous other interesting amusements. COME sermon, “Good Enuf.” and Elgar Walling. Ask your Dad after supper if he owns a New The i,Glenwood Mission Band will A covered dish supper was served drive against traffic violations. Po­ FOLKS and inspect our new renovated beach and hold ife annual spring roll call sup­ with decorations of blue and white. lice Chief Edwin C. Sloat stated to­ England Mutual policy. If he smiles before Kiddies’ Special| per Tuesday evening at 6:30 p. m. Cut flowers in keeping with the day the move was part of the cam­ he answers, he has one. Weekly Admission swimming pool. in the? lecture room of the ehurch. color scheme were artistically ar­ paign to eliminate speeding and Pool ...... 5 0 c Dr. Lloyd S. Bowman, of Sierra Leon, ranged and each guest received a bring about the safer operation of Yours for a good time, Africa J will deliver an address, “The favor. The room was also decorated cars within the boro. FRANCIS F. SIMPSON Cultur£ and Morals of the Africana.” in the lodge colors of blue and white. NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. Free Parking For 200 Cars THOS. H. RYAN, JR. The mid-week prayer service will 155 Main St„ Matawan 744 Broad St., Newark be hel&, on- Thursday evening at 8 Have you read the classified ads? THURSDAY, M AY 27, 1937 PAGE FOUR— FIRST SECTIOK THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1937 THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, MATA WAN, N. J. PAGE FIVE-FIRST SECTION

Get odr price when your organiza­ MAY DAY BREAKFAST WEDDED HALF CENTURY JR. WOMAN CLUB HAS tion is ready to have new by-laws IS HELD BY WOMEN AFFAIR FOR MOTHERS printed. We specialize in this work;

Affair Marks Annual End Group Inspects New Club Of Club’s Season; Mrs. Rooms; Banquet Plans ENTIFIC SWEDISH MASSAGES Lehritter New Head Are Completed Special Reducing Courses 6 Treatments $7.50 I The annual May breakfast of the Tuesday evening members of the I Matawan Woman’s Club, which Matawan Junior Woman’s Club en­ | marked the completion of the club tertained their mothers at the an­ year and featured the installation nual mother and daughter nite. Al- I of the newly elected officers, was tho the club rooms have been in use | held Monday at the Methodist Epis­ thruout the year, Tuesday was the copal Church. The Ladies Aid Soc, first time that guests had been in­ | prepared and served the breakfast vited to see the rooms which are now I to the 80 club members present, completed. Lefferts, One of the Boro’s Beauty Spots j Mrs. Charles E. Hunt, retiring Miss Madeline Egan, president, 11president, presided and welcomed presented the following mothers with 1 $2.75 £ | Mrs. Robert B. Berger, Mrs. August a rose: Mrs. Frank Seidler, Mrs. Soehl and Mrs. William Donnenworth Herman Thorsen, Mrs. John Knauff, ' as members. Each of the newly elect­ Mrs. H. W. Lambertson, Mrs. George ed officers was presented with a W. Finger, Mrs. George P. Lehritter, corsage and installed by Mrs. Hunt. (PI Waves Mrs. George Tunnington, Mrs. Phillip y 1 Complete MATAWAN PEOPLE AND THEIR ACTIVITIES Those installed were: Mrs. George Egan, Mrs. James H. Cadoo, Mrs. SPECIAL Bernice W. Brown, Society Editor : : Telephone 137 P. Lehritter, president; Mrs. Charles John VanderWaal, Mrs. Frederick ||;E. Hunt, first vice-president; Mrs. Bronkhurst, Mrs. Oscar Oschwald, INECTO HAIR DYE ------— -I j Elmore Kattner,* second vice-presi- Mrs. James E. Voorhees, Mrs. Thora deni: Miss Laura Gesswein. record- Thomsen, Mrs. Frank Higbie, Mrs. C. $3.50 Comtl“ ' Miss Jeanette Cosgrove was the Mr. and Mrs. John Brown, who Mr. and Mrs. Edward Herbert, of jirg secretary; Mrs. George Davison, Leon Garrison and Mrs. Oscar H. dinner and evening guest of Miss have been ill, have completely re- WILLIAM E. MOUNT Morganville, have purchased a house corresponding secretary and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Mount, Hyer. Esther Patton Wednesday nite. I covered. on Schenck Av. Harold Disbrow, treasurer. Depart- Miss Frances Gillis, program chair­ Harry DeWitt spent several days Sea Girt, celebrated the fiftieth an­ „ , — — — „ ' , I ment chairmen installed were: Mrs. man, was unable to attend and Miss Mr. and Mrs. Harold Smith and Mrs. Minnie Pappa was one of four last week with his sister, Mrs. Amzi niversary of their marriage Tuesday Madaline Cadoo took charge and family have moved from the Corbett: winners in the Daughters of America Thorne, in Leonardo. r ! : Alfred C’ WaIlin- home department; of last week at the home of their nr, oh»rioe tivo _nr,a Qt ' Mrg Harry Kahn, fine arts dapart- presented the guest speaker for the house on Jaqkson St. to Ravine Dr. jmerchandise club. son-in-law and daughter, Mayor and CEIL S BEAUTY SALON Mr. and Mrs. Edwin H. Conover ment; Miss Hannah McLean, gar­ Mrs. Charles R. English, Red Bank. evening, Miss Laura E. Gesswein. den department; Mrs. Oscar Osch- Miss Gesswein gave an interesting Mrs. Joseph Baier and Mrs. Rens- |I Mrs. Charles E. Allen was the visited their aunts, the Misses Hay­ Mr. and Mrs. Glen Hunter enter­ Mr. Mount is a member of the firm wald, temporary chairman of the talk on “Our Attitude Toward I^ife splaer L. Cartan saw “Victoria Re­ i guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Pepin ward, in Marlboro Saturday evening. tained Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Delaney of Mount-Barrett in Matawan, civic department until the new presi­ in Work and Play.” gina” in New York Thursday eve­ in Red Bank over the week-end. and son, Thomas, of New York, over Mount-English in Red Bank, and W. ning. Mr. and Mrs. George Walker were dent names her successor. E. Mount & Son, Inc., in New Bruns­ Miss Ruth Tunnington entertain­ Mrs. Marguerite Laird entertained Saturday guests of Mr. and Mrs. the week-end. The activities of the different de­ wick, Ford automobile agencies. For ed with a monolog and Mrs. George Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Zucker the Tuesday Afternoon Bridge Club Henry E. Cooper, Tennent Rd„ Free­ Lehritter, president of. the Senior Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Watson and partments for the past year were years he conducted a large general attended the matinee performance this week. Mrs. Walter P. Swanson hold. son spent the week-end at their reported by the respective chair- store in Englishtown, and served in Woman’s Club, brot greetings to the of “Victoria Regina” in New York won the prize for high score. Juniors and wished them success in ! Mr. and Mrs. Edward Meinzer were I summer home in Spring Gardens on the state assembly. last Thursday. In behalf of the Junior Woman's the coming year. Mrs. Robert H. Miller. Mrs. E. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kane, | the Delaware River. Club, Mrs. Oscar H. Hyer, counsel­ Mrs. Oscar Oschwald, who saw the Mrs. Raphael C. Devlin was the Goodchild, Mrs. C. E. Allen and Mr. West Concourse, Cliffwood Beach. ler, presented Mrs. Hunt with a pair FRENEAU club rooms before renovations, ex­ Thursday dinner and ovar-nite guest and Mrs. A. L. Pepin visited Asbury last Thursday. Mr- and Mrs- Howard L. Lewis, of of ship book ends. Mrs. Hunt pre- plained to the mothers the amount of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Toole in Jack- Park Sunday. ______| Pocono Manor, Pa., were week-end , Mr. and Mrs. Howard Erdmann | guests of the former’s parents. Mr. ited to the senior club a mono- The dates for the Freneau Fire 10f work the members had to do in son Heights, N. Y. Co.’s fair will be Aug. 18, 19,.20, -21-! order to restore them to their pres- Mr. and Mrs. Seldon Ward, Mrs. attended the matinee performance of and Mrs. Jacob A. Lewis. gramed glass water pitcher for the j There were many lovers of music | ent state. Mrs. Oschwald’s daugh- Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Eike and sons, Sarah Quackenbush and Miss Retta "The Show Is On” in New York last j ------speaker’s table. and the drama from this section Who j ter. Miss Helena, gave a report on Lester and Ernest, Jr., of Stamford, Deats spent Sunday in Camden and Thursday afternoon. ! Law Clerk Franklin Cottrell, form­ Mrs. Hunt has recently been named attended the play at Matawan High | the activity and work of the home Conn., were week-end guests of Mr. Haddon Heights. erly__ with______Counsellor______Edward _ W._ ___Cur- third district welfare chairman. School Friday nite and the ears of department. The which was $nd Mrs. 3. E. Fatton. Mrs. Emma Fallon entertained Mr. I rjc,•ie, is now in the Keyport law of- Lieut. Col. J. J. Allan spoke to the Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Kahn en­ and Mrs. Frank J. Scanlan, of Jersey I flCes 0f Counsellor J. Frank Weigand. club on the various phases of Sal- the cast and those in charge must made by the department was award- Vernon Chevalier has returned to tertained the latter’s parents. Mr. City. over the week-end. Mrs. Scan- j . — j vation Army wark in the United have burned had they heard the ed t0 Miss Ann Donovan, of South his home in Sayreville after spend­ and Mrs. M. Morris, of New York, lan is Mrs. Fallon’s daughter. Councilman and Mrs. Albert B. j States and foreign fields. enthusiastic comments anent the | Amboy. ing several weeks with his grand­ over the week-end. ------Smith were week-end guests of their j Monologues and musical selections Play- Mrs. Caroline Silcox read an orig- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Dietrich. The Misses Myra and Peggy O'- son-in-law and daughter. Mr. and ! were given by a proup who accom- Mrs. William Duncan, of Keyport, S jnai p0em dedicated to the club by ATTENTION, Mrs. Gerard A. Devlin and Mrs. Donnell were week-end guests at the Mrs. Arthur Sagebicl, in Drexel | panied Mrs. Allan from the Salva- and mother-in-law, Mrs. Eleanor | a frjend entitled “Mother.” George Loscoe, Jr., and his fiancee, Louis N. Pazienza attended the Sat- j Joseph Kress bungalow on the Hill, Pa. ] tion Army headquarters at Newark. Duncan, spent Saturday in Asbury! pinal plans were made for the Miss Mary Banks, spent the week­ urday evening performance of “Vic- jShrewsbury River at Sea Bright. 1 ______Park. | annual banquet to be held at But- GRADUATES! end as guests of the former’s parents, j toria Regina” in New York. I , While motoring thru the Shenan-i p ™, i n n r n i u o s in /v m j Mr. and Mrs. Haynes, of here, and; tonwood Manor June 24. At the Mr. and Mrs. George Loscoe, in I Dr. and Mrs. William H. Pengel, doah Valley over the week-ertd Mr JU ufcl u Mrs- Haynes’ parents. Mr. and Mrs. : conciusion 0f the evening the hos- Do you realize the terrible : Counsellor Martin P. By: H LHU1K Jersey City. accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Ed- . and Mrs. Bert Boyce and daughter! r iirv iir n r n n r n i m ir M' ^ McGoff. Long Island, spent pjtality committee served refresh- struggle necessary to make a | Hartshome & Byrne. Freehold and ward L. Wyckoff. of New York, will! visited the historic Virginia Caverns ! SHOW SCORES A HIT 1 Monday in Red Bank- 1 ments and a social hour was enjoyed living? Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Weaver Matawan. was in Trenton Monday sail Saturday for a vacation in Ber- in Harrisonburg, Va. _____ Mrs. Charles Hans. Elizabeth, spent I by mothers and daughters. Why not insure your future cently moved from Matawan to the and last Thursday in Long Branch muda. _ _ ~ Thursday with her mother. Mrs. C. ______j success and happiness by Seligman Apartment, W. Front St., William H. Slavln and Earle J. i C a p a c it y A u d i e n c e V i e w s 'c . Hulsart, and sister. Mrs. James training in beauty culture—a Keyport, which was formerly occu­ Keyport Trees Purchased profession that is not over­ Frank S. Mason, Jr., who has been Harrington have been named as 2 -N it e E n t e r t a in m e n t ’ i VanBrakle. pied by J. Geraldi. For 1939 World’s Fair crowded? on a trip to Panama, is spending ;division captains by F. Howard Lloyd, j p .• r j Charles Pembern, Newark, spent Come in and let us discuss several days with his family this ! general chairman, to raise funds for te n u r e C a s t L a u d e d j Sunday with his father, of this place, Albert Eifert, of Long Island, was Men engaged in procuring speci­ the matter with you—no obli­ row Postmaster Devlin will attend week before leaving for another trip i organizing Boy Scout troops in the I ~ ~ Mr. and Mrs. George Stilwell had the week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs. men trees and foliage to be used for gations. the opening of the bids for the new to South America. | boro The campaign starts June 7 ! The St' Joseph s annual m>nstrel j as their guests Sunday their sons and William H. Tichenor. Sunday Mr. Matawan Postoffice. - - - ! ----- ' j and musical comedy held at St. Jos-1 families Mr. and Mrs... Rayj decorative purposes Tichenor and Mr. Eifert visited the Mr. and Mrs. William Wuhrman > The Rev R , phs' Parish hall. Keyport. Monday I stUw, — " silver fox farm in the Pocono Moun­ Members of the commercial law and daughter, Lillian Marie, at j tin ri Tuesday A tains, Pa. class of Matawan High School ac­ Grantwood, were Sunday guests of, Tuesday in Philadelphia a-(miring audiences, apd_ companied by Principal John E. Ben­ Mrs. Wuhrman\s parents. Mr. ami mf-.rmau,,,, foi , j,', in. niv Mrs. James Fury, of Asbury Park, nett observed the procedure of and Mrs. Henry Scharg, of Ruther­ Mrs. Jacob Dietrich. calion union Bibl. -chool to b m ,u ■ sherifs sales at the Monmouth ford, were luncheon guests of Mrs. ; in the boro this summer, starting in ! sh on ^ p ia lp ye County Court House in Freehold. Dr. J. Wallace McCue and Dr. j j ujy 1| ir>in the ’cast turned R. C. Devlin yesterday. In the morn- Monday. ing they attended the funeral ser­ Edward Sullivan attended the 3rd performance and among tho.-i ~ - — _ vices for Mrs. John Joseph Hines, Sr. annual dinner dance of the George-: The 4th quarterly conference was ' scored decided hits with the aud- i phWd"eVph7a'May ^20 by the attend- . .------, Miss Marion Gabriel, of Roselle, a town University Alumni of M on-; held in the First Methodist Episcopal1 lences were Mrs. Rosa H. Bergen, m , ance 0f Mrs.. Aaron Warne and byCharles Klelmant >EMY The Trinity Junior Guild held its former domestic science teacher in mouth County held Saturday eve- , church last nite. The Rev. Leon j a Hawaiian act, “The Alibi,” Benny Mrs M E Hawkins. The local rep- °Perateda busmess ~ the site. The , Hobart Bldg. Hobart St. regular meeting Monday evening in the Matawan Public Schools, was ning in the Berkeley-Carteret Hotel, ; chamberlain, of Red Bank district I Kelly' clara O’Connor as Mae West. resentatives joined a group „from the, i species which are not abundant in PERTH AMBOY the parish house of Trinity Episcopal the week-end guest of friends in the Asbury Park. superintendent, presided. Annual.re- j and a vocal duo featuring Mrs. David , Pirst Baptist Church,Matawan, and Telephone P. A. 4-1220 specimens. Church. After a business session, re­ boro. Miss Gabriel’s engagement to j ports of the various church organi- I Sr-’ and George Martin. ! thirty journeyed by bus toPhila- | freshments were served and gemas Wilbur Kuhns was recently an­ Daniel Rinear, Jr., is playing with 1 zations were made j The entire show, written and di- delphia returning the same nite played. A “hot-dog” roast to be held nounced. Tiny Wagned and his Nights of j ___ . _ rected by Joseph Lanzaro, proved I ______at Camp Brady is planned for the Melody Orchestra of Metuchen. The; Mrs. Gerard A. Devlin entertained ! his ability as a coach of amateur I Sewers For Allentown near future. Mrs. Thomas G. VanKirk. of orchestra will play at several fra- • the Teachers Bridge Club last eve- I artists and he Is to be commended j _____ ROSS W . MAGHAN i Princeton, formerly of Metuchen, temity dances at New York Uni- ning. Mrs. Howard Erdmaan won for ^ untiring efforts thruout four : A petition to the mayor and coun- has gone to Bradley Beach to spend REAL ESTATE — INSURANCE The Mothers’ Club of Woodbridge versity and Rutgers University dur- | the prize for high score and Miss I weeks of nitely rehearsals and for | cil fo,. a ^werage system for the 58 MIDDLESEX STREET MATAWAN, N. J. ] held its,annual luncheon Monday at the summer with her sister-in-law, ing commencement weeks. I Esther Blau, consolation. The host- finding his arduous work a pleasure I Boro of A[1entown is being circul Telephone 1880-J Buttonwood Manor. Mrs. E. H. Boyn­ Mrs. John Vankirk. Both Mrs. Van- _ „ , A — : — . . ess had to play as Mrs. Edmund Allen , & the co-operative response of an j ated ton, president of the Red Bank Wo­ Kirks are sisters-in-law of Mrs. Will­ . Dr. Carl A. Gesswein and Dr. ! was unable to attend j exceptionally talented cast.|______man's Club, was the guest speaker. iam L. VanBrunt. Oscar H. Hyer were members of a ; ______1 j After the highly interesting 2-hour | Mrs. Boynton has been counselor of committee which sponsored the 5th Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Conover I show, a large number remained for j the group since its organization six Jimmy Kennedy was one of the annual benefit ball for the Riverview j and daughters, Claire and Carol, I the dancing. The committees which i What do you want most in your years ago. Membership has increas­ guest artists at an accordian concert Hospital, at the Red Bank Elks Club ! were Saturday dinner guests of Mr. | worked so faithfully to help toward j ed during that time from 20 to 60. given by the famed accordionist. Saturday eveAng. The proceeds will j Conover’s mother. Mrs. Carrie E .; the success of the show, turned in a Charles Nunzib, at the Continental go towards the purchase of a new | Conover. This week-end the Con- | most impressive preliminary report. | Mrs. William Wasmuth, of New Auditorium, Newark, Sunday. The | operating table for the hospital. j over family will be guests of Mr. and ! The Rev. John P. Burke, pastor of I BATHING SUITS? York, a former resident, entertained world’s renowned accordionist, Pietro Mrs. Ralph W. Herrick at their bung- j St. Joseph’s Church informed friends j the Wednesday Dessert Bridge Club Frosini, was the featured 'guest art- Miss Jeanette Bromber r enter­ alow in Pine Grove, Conn. after the show that he enjoyed the I • FIGURE FLATTERY last Thursday at luncheon and 1st. tained several friends at dinner at ------entire performance immensely. j bridge. Three tables were in play | Buttonwood Manor Friday eveniii;.;. Frederick E. Hessey Is one of 10 The dance music was furnished by • SWIMMING EASE and prizes were won as follows: Mrs. Mrs. John Collinson, of Washing- After dinner the group went to As­ seniors at Drexel Institute of Tech- Ray Royce and his Canton Club or- Rensselaer L. Cartan, 1st; Mrs. John j ton, left today for a visit with Mrs. bury Park where they enjoyed golf nology who has been elected to mem- chestra. The refreshment commit- • QUICK DRYING N. Knauff, of New York, 2d; Mrs. Emma Green in Old Bridge. Mrs. and dancing. The following couples bership in Phi Kappa Phi, national | tee was composed of Chairman Mrs. • LONG WEAR Harry J. Kahn, 3d, and Mrs. Raphael | Collinson has been a guest for a made up the party; Miss Marie honorary society, in which member- j Joseph Charles, Mrs. William Don- C. Devlin, consolation. Others pres­ week of Mr. and Mrs. Forman R. Deitz, Frank Dell; Miss Jean Apple- ship is limited to seniors of high j nenworth and Mrs. May Gillis. The These Have Everything ! ent were: Mesdames Joseph Baier, Thompson. Each spring she spends gate, William Wilkins; Miss Edith scholastic standing. Hessey, a grad-1 show was sponsored by St. Joseph’s William H. Tichenor, William R. a month visiting relatives in this Fischer, Charles Mandeville; Ger­ uate of the Haverford Township Choir and the majority of its mem- Craig, Paul Egan, Evart V. Silcox vicinity. Prior to being a guest at aldine Longo, Lawrence Congro, Miss High School, Upper Darby, Pa., is a j bers were in the cast, and Mrs. Harry Stonaker, of New .the Thompson residence she visited Bromberg, Frederick Jaffe, of Key- senior in electrical engineering at Monday Elite’s performance which York. I with Mrs. Charles Ziegler. port. Drexel. ( was staged especially for juveniles, Ladies’ Swim Suits — :—------——------— : drew a large number, some of whom n ii rs . . were accompanied by a parent or an Specially Priced Miss Gresilla Cummings Matawan Civic Club Police Search For Rings G e o r g e K e ll e r P r o t e s t s older brother or sister. Feted At Bridal Shower Hears Scout Speaker Left In Laurence Harbor $53,000 Order On Bonds j ______$0.98 $0.98 Miss Gresilla Cummings, who will Ernest M. Blanchard, an executive State police of the Keyport bar- j The court of errors and appeals, School Children Take to be married to John Raymond Maher, pf the Monmouth-Ocean Council, racks have been unsuccessful in their j at Trenton Saturday, had under Hike Under Miss Cohen of Marlboro, Wednesday morning, Boy Scouts of America, advised how efforts to locate two valuable rings j consideration the appeal of George June 9, was guest of honor at a bridal troops might again be organized in reported left in a washroom of Bur- Keller, of Cliffwood Av., Cliffwood, Forty children, 15 girls and 25 boys BEACHWEAR ! shower given by her sister, Miss lew’s Restaurant, Laurence Harbor, Matawan Township collector, for ranging from 8 to 12 years, under Matawan. at a regular semi-monthly Patricia Cummings, and Miss Bea­ between 6 and 7 p. m. Friday. Police | title to $53,000 in bonds which he the leadership of Miss B. Dorothy M en’s Swim Suits j trice Birkbeck at the latter’s home, dinner meeting of the Matawan Civic decline to reveal the name of the ; contended his mother gave him prior Cohen, teacher in the Keyport Osborn St., Keyport, Wednesday eve- j Club in Buttonwood Manor Monday Newark woman to whom they be- to her death. Grammar School, hiked last Satur­ 5 Waikiki Suits ping of last week. The bride-to-be nite. longed. j Keller protested a chancery court day morning to McFarland’s farm Consisting of All < received many attractive gifts. At a recent meeting A. D. Shultz, The rings were missed shortly after j ruling that the bonds belonged t his j at Deep Cut Hill on the Hazlet- j During the evening various games $| .89 $2-50 of Keyport, manager of the bayshore the owner left the restaurant. When ! mother's estate. He argued thru Crawford road. • SLACKS For ' were played and prizes were awarded district for the Jersey Central Power she returned they had disappeared. | counsel that the securities were out- Several weeks ago the children in j to Mrs. Margaret Fransman, of Key- & Light Co., and head of Scout ac­ One of the rings was a platinum dia- ! right gifts from’ his mother, Mrs. her class asked Miss Cohen for per- i ® HALTER port, and Miss Grace Maher, of tivity in this district, appealed to mond dinner ring, of % -carat, with J Caroline Keller, who died in-1934, mission to go on a walking tour. She • JACKET Marlboro. The hostesses served re­ the Civic Club to sponsor a local two diamond chips on each side. The | The First National Bank of Perth was assisted by several of the older I freshments at the conclusion of the troop, and following this Mayor Ed­ piece was valued at $150 and was ; Amboy, co-executor with Keller of boys who were successful in main- j evening. ward W. Currie called a public initialed “Emma.” The other ring , the estate valued by counsel at ap- taining discipline. Guests present were: Mrs. Anna meeting to hear several representa­ was described as beiiig of yellow gold,; proximately $200,000, asked the court Miss Cohen stated that the chil- j Men’s and Boys’ Slacks 98c up Cummings, of Keyport; Mrs. Thomas tives of Monmouth County Scout containing a square, black onyx i to sustain the order directing Keller dren were careful in not destroying | Maher, Miss Grace Maher, the organizations further advocate one stone, with a 25-point diamond in i to return the bonds to the estate, wild flowers or shrubs, and believes ■ Misses Margaret and Katherine Me or more Matawan units to replace I one corner. It was valued at $75. ! with interest of $12,677 and counsel that all the pupils gained a prac- j Garan, Mrs. Thomas McGaran, and those discontinued about two years 1 The descriptions of the jewelry ; fees of $8000. tical knowledge of nature. Men’s and Boys’ Tennis Oxfords $1.60 up Mrs. Catherine McCue, all of Marl­ ago. were broadcast over the county police ; ------As an instance of the interest; boro; Mrs. Raymond Kennedy, of June 14 the Club will hold its last radio. j Industrial Union Opens Office shown by the pupils in this excursion I Freneau; Miss Mildred Nolan, of meeting until autumn, Attorney many of them arrived in front of the Men’s White Sport Oxfords $3.50 Eatontov. n; Mrs. J. T. LaBracque, of Earle J. Harrington, cor. secy., has JUDGE TERHUNE GIVEN BEER A regional headquarters for the school at 8 a. m„ an hour and a half Red Bank; Miss Gertrude Fay, of announced. FROM AIRSHIP’S LAST TRIP | Committee for Industrial Organiza- before the scheduled starting time. Long Branch, and Mrs. Margaret j ——— ! tion, popularly known as the C.I.O., The party returned at 4 p. m. with Also Children’s Beach Wear Fransman, Mrs. John O’Neill, Mrs. ] BAND HAS 2 ENGAGEMENTS Thru the courtesy Of Sid Everson | is being set up in Freehold, with nothing worse than aching, tired Ada Birkbeck, Miss Beatrice Birk- j Judge H. S. Terhune, Matawan, is j Warren C. Montross temporarily in bodies and a few bush scratches. True Economy Can Only Be Found in Quality beck. Miss Patricia Cummings and Keyport Fire Dept. Band played ! in possession of a bottle of German {charge. Mr. Montross is a district If the pupils desire to again, take the guest of honor. Sunday morning at Old Tennent: beer blown from the dirigible Hin- > organizer for the Textile Workers similar trip, and have their parents' | Church, Tennent, for the annual denburg at the time of the explosion ! Union organization committee and permission, it is planned to make it | You have the merchandise, we are memorial' service of the Daughters j at Lakehurst, May 6. This beer, in 1 has been active in organizing the | an annual spring affair, Miss Cohen 1 prepared to “tell the world” about Of America lodges of Monmouth as good condition as when it left A. & M. Karagheusian Rug Mill j said. it if you will say the word. Your County. Monday morning the band Munich, was picked up by Mr. workers. The headquarters will serve i ------— advertisement in these columns will will participate in the annual Mem­ Everson a few minutes after the I Monmouth, Ocean and Middlesex | Be a regular reader of this news- i S c h o c k ’ s reach the people with money to buy. orial Day parade at Keanaburg. explosion. j Counties, j paper. Subscribe now. . PAGE SIX— FIRST SECTION THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, MAT AW AN, N. J. THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1937

Qld Bridge Loses One, Letterheads, billheads, sJatemenjtB, PROGRESS REPORTED | MATAWAN GIRL SCOUTS i POWER BALL LEAGUES cards, circulars, posters, in fact any Ties Against Helmetta j kind of printing may be obtained at ON JULY 4TH FETE. WIN COMPASS CONTEST! STARTED THIS WEEK this office promptly and at reason­ The Helmetta club appears to be ■ able prices. May we have your order I going*like a house on fire in that for that next job? Hoboken Man Will Supply Various Troops Compete j ! 12 Teams Entered In Two ' Middlesex County amateur baseball j Fireworks; Parade Of In Rally At Harmony J. C. P. & L. Softball j league, altho Old Bridge Keys man- Squads Scheduled Country Club Sat. Loops In Shore Area i aged to hold ’em to a scoreless tie LAWN MOWERS j Monday nite but were forced to bow The various committees of the Troop 22, Matawan, won first prize i The Jersey Central Power & Light j to the league leaders the following Matawan First Aid Squad met in in the compass contest at a rally j Co. employes launched their first I nite 6-1. . the social room of Midway Hose Co. attended by nearly 200 members of softball campaign this week as Kossman apd Lefty Zajac ’ staged'; FRED L. ISAACS Monday evening and reports were the Monmouth County Girl Scouts | leagues swung into action on the scoreless mound duel with the \ made on the July 4th carnival. John Saturday at the Harmony Country ! central New Jersey fronts with six former holding Helmetta to five hits j Tourine, chairman of the fireworks Club, Highway 35. near Mldletown. j teams in each. j while the Old Bridge clubbers nick- i committee, announced that nego­ Awards for the victory went to The six teams in the “Seiple” cir­ ed the forkhander for seven safeties. tiations have been completed with Anna Ludwig, Elizabeth Duckworth. cuit are the General Office < Asburv Joe Antone, former Marlboro State David Calvino. Hoboken, to furnish Mareta Parish, Kathryn Harris, and j Park), South Amboy, Keyport, Reel Hospital infielder, got one hit in the I two twilite games. and 175 aerial bombs j Peggy Hostetter. Miss -Joan LaFavre, j Bank, Long Branch and Gas Distri- tor July 5. This mammouth array of ; and her sister, Miss Claire, captain | bution Dept. Old Bridge . . 000 000 000—0 7 1 fireworks will be the finest ever shown j of the troop, accompanied the Mat­ ! The “Polhemus” . loop comprises; Helmetta ___ 000 000 000—0 5 1 in Matawan. he premised. awan team. Hightstown, Lakewood, Point Pleas- j Batteries: Kossman and Morrow; Police Chief Edwin C. Sloat, chair- j The afternoon program included ant, Belmar, Asbury Park, New Bus- j Zajac and Sciogel. man of the parade committee, stated games and the contests. The troops iness Dept, and Substation staff. j R H E that it is his intention to have the | then made outdoor fires and cooked | Keyport will tackle Red Bank' Helmetta ...... 302 000 1—6 4 1 parade late Saturday afternoon cover j camp supper. Massin of colors, sa- ! June 2 and the following Wednesday j 3 Old Bridge . . 000 100 0—1 3 3 as many streets as possible thus as- ! lute to the flag, scout promise, first the Keys meet Long Branch. Adie i suring everyone of a grandstand j aid demonstration by Troop 21, Long | Shultz’ team will play all of its Batteries: Cikacz and Bystrek; H. seat. He also stated that invitations ! Branch, singing of the “laws," "Hymn | home games on the Keyport High Morrow, Biernacki and P. Morrow. are being sent out to every first aid i of Scouting,’’ and "The Golden Day School field; three league games will ; be staged on Wednesday of every squad in the state and 3 squads in "is ~Dying,” followed by playing of Englishtown Flipper Pennsylvania to participate. “Taps” was the evening program. I week. Andrew Hulsart, chairman of the, Second in the compass contest Seiple League Hurls A No-Hit Game May 26 concession committee, reported that' were members, of Troop 16, New AT YOUR SERVICE. Attractive members of the Jersey Central Power & Light Co. all-girls first aid Cartan & Devlin will lend lumber Monmouth, Bessie Penterman, Janet team which make their fust public appearance at the AlJenhurst Auditorium Friday to demonstrate correct South Amboy Plant vs. Keyport. The Hanson-VanWinkle-Munning for 8 stands to be built on the school Morford, Frances Hurst, Zelma methods of first aid as approved by the American Red Cross standard first aid course. This, the only woman’s, Red Bank vs. Long Branch. Co. employes’ team went down to grounds. Contracts have already tfeen Thorne, Grace Noack, Frances Kelly, team in the company, is cue of many first aid teams thrucut the Jersey Central territory prepared to answer | Gas Distribution vs. A. P. Gen. Office. defeat in a hard fought 1 to 0 battle June 2 signed with the Morris Sales Co. of Helen Denxfxs and Anita Palmltier. any emergency call. Reading from left to right: Evelyn Trowell, captain, Flora Chadwick, Elizabeth Me in a 5-inning twilite contest on the South Amboy to supply all prizes Knot tying was won by the same Devitt, Edna Birdsall, Helen Lockwood, and Kathleen Cummings, the "victim," all of the Point Pleasant ; Keyport vs. Red Bank, Matawan High School field Monday for entertainment for young .and old. troop, the team comprising Helen district office. j Long Branch vs. Gas Distribution. nite at the hands of the Englishtown 1 A. G. Gen. Office vs. South Amboy. The prizes will consist of , Dennis Anita Palmitier, Janet Mor­ Sporting Club. June 9 radios, electrical appliances, cook­ ford, Margie Williamson and Grace iCashion Blanks Firemen, Tice Hurls A Two-hitter Harry Narozanick, toiling on the I’m ready to deliver Noack. The second award was won BELVEDERE BEACH TO Gas Distribution vs. South Amboy. mound for the visitors, hurled a no­ ing utensils and all kinds of useful Holy Name Victors 5-0 For Keys Win Over Fliers 1 Red Bank vs. A. P. Gen. Office. All kinds of Plants gifts. by members of Troop 25. Red Bank, run. no-hit game, fanned eight and Long Branch vs. Keyport. issued but one pass to out-pitch his William Smith was appointed by including Evelyn Levins, Mary Cun­ OPEN FRIDAY NITE With Geqrge Tice turning in a for Spring ningham, Pat Elliot, Audrey Estelle 2-hitter Tuesday afternoon at Nep­ June 16 the Squad to appear before the j A. P. Gen. Office vs. Keyport. We do not have any branches board of education for permission and Betty Carton. Manager Thos. H. Ryan tune. Keyport High School easily First award in first aid went to frounced the Neptune High Fliers Gas Distribution vs. Red Bank. to use the school grounds for the Will Launch Season erans representing the Freehold fire­ South Amboy vs. Long Branch. concessfon stands and fireworks. Mary Cunningham and Patricia El­ men to four scattered hits as his 9 to 0 in a seven inning conflict. liot of Troop 25, Red Bank, and sec­ Tomorrow Nite While Tice was silencing the enemy June 23 KeyportGreenhouses It was suggested that the squad Holy Name club mates went on to j Gas Distribution vs. Keyport. J. Kalma obtain the services of the Hill Billys ond to Audrey Taylor and Selma win 5 to 0. Charlie Lugannani and bats, the Keys bunched their eight The beach resorts along the shore Red Bank vs. South Amboy. of Hazlet for music on both evenings. Coopersmlth of Troop 31, Lon,’ Alvin Vandcrveer divided the mound hits with two walks and three errors area will open the summer season to tally nine runs. There had been , Long Branch vs. A. P. Gen. Office. 210 Main St., Keyport This band is well known around the j Branch, duties for the flrefiters and were June 30 shore area and has appeared on the Troop 31, Long Branch, won the this week-end and from a recent a considerable lapse between games Telephone Keyport 497 survey, this newspaper learned that touched for 10 blows. Keyport vs. South Amboy. radio several times. It has not been signaling-alphabet contest, with Artie Manuel. Keyport. and Zip which favored the Keys until their rentals on bungalows and concessions Long Branch vs. Red Bank. definitely decided as yet to have Troop 14, Freehold, second; signal­ McGlory. of the churchmen, put on slugging catcher and one of the main were unusually brisk at tire beaches A.P.Gen. Office vs. Gas Distribution. dancing. ing-message, first. Red Bank; sec­ a spectacular exhibition of fielding, cogs could get back in action after this year. July 7 ond, Troop 117, Keansburg; nature, the former accepted five chances a head injury three weeks ago which Thomas H. Ryan. Jr„ Cliffwood, Red Bank vs. Keyport. first, Troop 24, Red Bank; second, without a slipup while his opposing kept him out of harness until Tues­ Seek Expert Advice Upon new manager of Belvedere Beach, Gas Distribution vs. Long Branch. Troop 25. Red Bank. shortstop took care of six for a per­ day’s game. HENRY S. DEVLIN Keansburg, announced today that South Amboy vs. A. P. Gen. Office. Co. Hospital Donation fect fielding average. McGlory also Corcione. Septen, Allocco and Mer­ the official opening of the entire rill led in the Keys' attack with each July 14 Mrs. VanB. Walker Will batted 1.000 per cent by hitting three A. P General Office vs. Red Bank. The Board of Chosen Freeholders, beach will take'place tomorrow nite for three. Rhea Preston, Wickatunk, breaking into the hit columns with (May 281 when all lites will be Keyport vs. Long Branch. has empowered County Adjuster! Head Auxiliary Benefit played centerfleld for Holy Name two bingles. One of Septen’s drives turned on and all the boardwalk con­ was a screaming triple to right South Amboy vs. Gas Distribution. John L. Montgomery to obtain a , ------but failed to register a hit in his cessions will be open. , center. Allocco got the other only July 21 hospital expert to supervise distribu- j Mrs. Van B. Walker, Cloverdale only official time at bat. Changes have been made in the Keyport vs. A. P. Gen. Office. tion of a $75,000 fund among five .'Farm, Crawfords Corner, entertain- R H E ; extra base wallop of the game, a boardwalk which will afford a larger Red Bank vs. Gas Distribution. comity hospitals, including the M at-! ed the executive committee of the Bremen 000 000 0—0 4 3 double to center. parking space for cars. A large R H E Long Branch vs. South Amboy. awan institution, doing charity work, j Keyport Auxiliary to the Monmouth Holy Name 202 001 0—5 10 1 swimming pool has been installed July 28 According to present indications Memorial Hospital at a special meet- I Batteries; Lugannani, Vanderveer ! Keyport 001 015 2—9 8 2 and it is purified with a chlorination i Neptune 000 000 0—0 2 3 Keyport vs. Gas Distribution. Dr. William D. O'Hanlon, Jersey ing at her home Monday. and Dane; Cashion and Thompson. South Amboy vs. Red Bank. City Medical Center superintendent, The meeting was called by the process. ! Batteries: Tice and Septen; Mans- A high board fence is being re­ | field. Miller and Metz. A. P. Gen. Office vs. Long Branch. Swill be the expert whose aid is sought president, Mrs. Murray WoronofT.Woronoff, Home fields are as follows: South |Dr. O’Hanlon has had 40 years’ ex- for the purpose of discussing ways iplaced with a modern chain-link At the 24th annual exhibition of Amboy. South Amboy electric plant berience in medical finance. and means of raising money for the fence which adds to the neatness of the long beach which has be ! the Allied Artists of America which field; Keyport. Keyport High School During the tion of Clyde Pangborn, world- ! opened with a private view at the field; Red Bank. Red Bank High famous aviator, against Roland W Fina Arts Building. 215 W. 57th St., School field; Long Branch. Long I’ i i The New- York, May 20, Georg J. Lober. Branch Firemen's field. Ocean Av.. of Keyport. with studios at 6 E. 15th West End; AlJenhurst Gas Distribu­ ' \( V ' York, was awarded the tion, Deal field. Phillips Av. and_N. of Honor for his garden figure Y. & L. B. R. R.. Deal; A. P. General itled “The Golden Apple.” This Office, Whitesville School. West Bangs Av. and Springfield Av.. Nep- ne of the outstanding awards of Tel^Keyport 1109 year in sculpture. tune W. D. Swartzel hospitals affected are m ^Fukiiv "prizes. Mrs. William Along with the iJemorial, Neptune; Monmouth Me- Hitchcock; tallies, Mrs. E. Francis ities this year a s aorial .and Dr. E. C. Hazard, Long Ehrlich; ffood sale, Mrs. Walter D. be coached at tf AAfSP/CA'S 5ranch; RiVerview, Red Bank, and Swartael, Mrs. Frank A. Smith and in the state swirr Matawan. According to Montgom­ Mrs. Harold E. Green. ery representatives of each hospital Tea was served at the close of the Keansburg Trojans Beat t o tv PR/CSV C A P / agreed to the bringing in of an out­ meeting. Those present were Mrs. j side expert William Hitchcock, Mrs. Evart V. Sil- j Mohawks For 4th Win PONTIAC ^ Director Raymond L. Wyckoff, cox. Mrs. Walter Sw;artzel. Mrs. j *Keyport, pointed out that any recom­ Henry Ackersoil, Mrs. Murray Wor- ! The Keansburg Trojans came thru j mendations by O’Hanlon, or whoever onoff, Mrs. Harold Green, Miss Vir- j with their fourth consecutive trl-1 is selected by Montgomery, will not ginia Anderson and the hoste« umph by downing John “Big League" j be binding on the board, but will Rawlings' Mohawk Negro Giants of serve merely as a guide for board Red Bank 10-3 as the latter nine! 'action. Revolutionary Soldiers made their first start of .the season At Holmdel Ascertained at Keansburg Sunday afternoon, j Charlie Rosier. Trojan hurler. pitch- | A Colts Neck Country I Efforts have been directed this ed superbly in the pinches keeping j instate Changes Hands (weekto clearing the weeds and un- the five Mohaw’k hits widely scat- ' ------I dergrowth from the old burying tered. H. A. Gogarty, of Brooklyn, presi- : ground of the Holmdel Baptist The Trojans’ big rally came in the dent of H. A. Gogarty, Inc., export church. The work was done to get “lucky seventh” in which the whole shipping and custom brokers of New the cemetery in presentable condi­ team batted around and scored six I York, has purchased a gentleman’s tion for Memorial Day services which of the 10 bingles. It was reported \ country estate from Mrs. Wubber. will be held Sunday. that the Trojans may be booked for I The property, said to have sold for Three men have been engaged in Sunday and twilite games at Eng­ $20,000, is one of the most attractive doing the work. They were paid out lishtown, Old Bridge, Freehold and in Atlantic Township. It comprises of a fund collected by Mrs. Carl Wil­ o.ther towns in the county after 14 acres, with a frontage of approxi­ son with the assistance of Mrs. Wil­ proving their mettle against the; mately 1000 feet on the Colts Neck- liam Pitcher. The graves of two stronger amateur teams. Tinton Falls road. With a large Revolutionary ’ War veterans will be graceful house, grounds replete with decorated after Sunday’s services. William F. Eekhart, leader of the : tall trees, shrubbery and flowers, According to Arthur McFarland, Keyport Fire Dept. Band, played | gardens with picturesque landscapes Keyport, county registrar of veterans’ with the Tall Cedars of Lebanon ; and other natural beauties it is one graves, only two American veterans, Band of New Brunswick at the Tall of the show places of this section. both of whom served in the Revolu­ Cedar convention in Atlantic City \ The land is enclosed with a white tion, are buried in the cemetery. Saturday. picket fence which blends harmon­ They are Col. Isham Holmes, of the iously with the surroundings. The First Monmouth Militia and John house has 10 rooms, including six W. Whitlock, whose company and bedrooips, and it is provided with a regiment are not known. Col. bathroom, a steam heating system Holmes led in the capture of the AND IN ADDITION and other modern improvements. British brig “Britannia” in Shoal The usual outbuildings are on the Harbor, off Belford. TO SMART Sm i, I GIT place, including a large barn with As far as is known no Civil, Span- four box stalls, a 2-car garage, ken­ ish-Amerlcan or World War veterans AMAZING COMFORT nels, a tool house and chicken are buried in the cemetery. There Rouses. Spruce, evergreens and box­ have been no burials there for a AND HANDLING iA S i" wood are abundant and the acreage number of years.' includes pastures, a brook and wood­ land. Mrs. Wubber had owned the prop­ Fewer Income Returns In erty a number of years and had used Keyport; Matawan Gains STREAK that makes Pontiac the most beautiful thing it as a summer residence. She will move to1 Brooklyn, where her hus­ Reports of the U. S. Internal Rev­ band, the late Theodore Wubber, was enue Dept, made public recently ADD 15C A DAY MORE TO THE PURCHASE PRICE OF THE NEXT and handling ease come from a very special combination of a 117' wheel­ engaged in the wholesale grocery disclosed that Keyport residents filed base, six-passenger, Unisteel Body by Fisher; Knee-Action;center-point business. The house was built in 87 less income tax returns in 1936 LOWER-PRICED CARS AND GET A PONTIAC WITH .. . steering; and safe, sure, velvet-action, triple-sealed hydraulic brakes. 1898 by the late John E. Beckman, than the prior year. In 1936 298 W hat’s more, as Mrs. Berg drives her car over the years she will dis­ an uncle of Mrs. Wubber, and was returns were filed while last year cover that Pontiac is a money-saving marvel and a record-breaker sold to Mr. and Mrs. Wubber in 1926. the number dropped to 211. CEDARIZED for dependability. Unlike Keyport, Increases were That is all you could expect from a n y car—yet Pontiac gives you Archaeologist Back Home registered in Matawan and Keans­ all these priceless advantages at a cost so near the lowest that you’ll burg while Union Beach remained Moth-Proof Bag | Y the same. In Matawan the increase never feel the difference. Read the proof— * based on 18 months terms Godfrey J. Olsen, archeologist, With Every Garment in 168 representative cities, the average difference in monthly who resides at a Red Bank hotel, is was from 117 to 126 while Keansburg ^ 5 payments between a Pontiac De Luxe six 2-door sedan and the busy cataloging Indian relics after reported 46 in 1936 compared to 42 • in 1935. Three returns were filed for EXTRA Knee - Action EXTRA inches of leg same model of the next lower-priced cat s only 15 cents a day! a winter’s expedition in Arizona. Pot­ smoothness, to let you lon^^gfve'you^ak tery shards he excavated convince both years in Union Beach. Keyport Cleaners ’ rest as you ride. PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION, PONTIAC, MICH. • him that this continent has been Thruout Monmouth County the populated at least 10,000 years, he number of income tax returns filed said last week. He is a member of In 1936 was 7296, as compared with & Dyers 6842 in 1935. the staff of the Museum of the 25 E. Front St., Keyport American Indian, New York, and has Phone 133 STRICKLAND’S PONTIAC worked fn . recent years in Central “Matawan—1586-1936” a complete America. history of Matawan now on sale at this office, or at your favorite MATAWAN, N. J. Have you read the classified ad*? newsdealer*. 114 MAIN STREET THURSDAY,THU MAY 27, 1937 THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, MATAWAN, N. J. PAGE SEVEN-FIRST SECTION

Robert Farrow, of Montclair, spent KEANSBURG I COMMUNITY NEWS! last week at his bungalow on West J ___ . [Comments On A cop Concourse, and gave it a new coat of 1 Joseph E Bahr presenting the ! paint- „ j Veterans of Foreign Wars, is chair-1 CLIFFWOOD Mrs. A. C. Backer, Plainfield, spent; man 0l a committee on plans for the ! ‘ Basic’’ Summer Sunday at her place on Wayside Dr. annual Mem01-ial Day parade. He i Charles Winters has returned Frederick Kortenhaus qhffwood wm be assisted by Comdr. j ames i home from Havre De Grace, Md„ and Av„ Karl and Richard Heuser and ; pa,]on of Ule local t of the Amer. j will spend some time with his sisters, Fred M. Burlew, Matawaij, spent; ican Leglon The Strother-Built Dress the Misses Frances and Margaret | Sunday at Shipbottom. A price-cutting "wi f j Winters. Mr. and Mrs. J. Alden CrisweH j section with g“aso- Mr. and Mrs. Frank Adams, entertained Saturday evening James , Jine selJing as ,ow as 139e per gal. Brooklyn, have for the fourth season | Cannon and Edward Bensinger, | Nathan guckerman, a junior at rented Mrs. John McBreen’s house, South River. Sunday visitors weie ; the university of Alabama, Tusca- New Model Home Elmwood Dr. Mr. and Mrs. J. Nelson Ash, Parlin, l0Qsa Ala has alTive(1 home to Mrs. Carrie B. Henderson, Pacific j and daughters, Ann, Inez, Betty Lou tSpend the summer vacation with his Blvd., is entertaining her mother and sister, Mrs. William Springster and Elalnc-______i parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. Zuc&erman. and Mrs. E. Wagner, Garfield. : Summer openings have been an- Mrs. Peter Cooney, State Highway, MORGANV1LLE nounced at a number of places here visited her daughter, Miss Agnes ------including the Bzach Palaoe, of Cooney, East Orange, two days last The Children’s Day service will be , Messrs. Sheehar and Andreach, who week. held at the church the last Sunday : held a successful affair Saturday Mr. and Mrs. J. Alden Criswell in June. evening. The Shamrock Hotel on the entertained the latter's father, Ed- j The Sunday school will go to As- ! Beachway has undergone extensive ward Met ting, Jersey City, Friday bury Park Saturday evening, June | alterations and held its opening also and Saturday. 19. No small children and only those j on Saturday evening with a large at- By Stephanie Whyte Mrs. Maude Stillwago^ and Mrs. accompanied by an adult will be tendance present. Friday the Willow Of Steinbach Kresge’t Hazel Schildknecht spent Wednes- j taken. Wood Inn will have a special pro- day at Asbury Park. Mrs. William C. Lane, Matawan, gram of entertainment that will con- Asbury Park Mrs. Frederick Kortenhaus and j spent Tuesday with Mrs. Belle tinue Memorial Day. * Steinbach Kresge’s “ Sport Shop” daughter, Miss Jane, and Miss Eliz­ Warne. ------is harboring the new “Nan West- Mrs. Sarah Schilkie spent Tuesday abeth Meinzer, of Ravine Dr., visited ; NUT SWAMP iy” blue-blood shirtfrock that with Mrs. George Frazer. friends in Outcalt Sunday. Two views of the Model Home smart women have declared to be Mrs. Wilbur Nixon, Laurence Har- j Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lambertson1 Robert Archibald, 32, of Nut just completed in Matawan for the perfect “basic” summer dress. bor, was hostess to the Friendship j and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lambertson j Swamp Rd.. who had pleaded guilty M. L. TeuEyck. It contains five It comes in a galaxy of fabrics^ Club Thursday nite. High scores j were Saturday evening visitors at j of adultery with Mrs. Margaret Mid- rooms and bath, and a two-car were held by Mrs. Charles Metting j Asbury Park. gett in Neptune Township, was given garage and recreation room in the and colors and ardent devotees and Mrs. Nixon; consolation prize | Clinton Heyer and family, are 1 a suspended sentence Of one to three basement. have almost their entire ward-’ went to Mrs. Edward Kelley; dark j moving to their home in Old Bridge I years in state prison and placed on robes of this one dress. horse prize to Mrs. J. Alden Criswell, j this Thursday. j probation for three years in quarter Refreshments were served. Miss Ethel Woolley, Jersey City, ! sessions court. Freehold. During this Mrs. Bertha Bishof and Mr. and was a recent visitor with her parents, | period Archibald was directed to pay Mrs. Edward Kelley were dinnfer Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Woolley. | thru the probation office. $10 per guests of the latter’s sister, Mrs. Miss Virginia Lambertson. Plain- j week toward the support of his three Harold Milton, Fulton St., Freehold,! field, was a recent visitor here. | children, now in charge of the State Wednesday nite which was a sur­ Mrs. Emma Green, Old Bridge, Mr. ! Board of Children’s Guardians and prise in honor of the 10th wedding! and Mrs. William Ludwick and; his wife, a patient in the state In Matawan anniversary of their brother-in-law i daughter, Harry Ludwick and friend j hospital, and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest i of Elmhurst, L. I., were recent vis- i ------Hampton, also of Freehold. Rela­ itors with Mr. and Itos. W. E. j UNION HILL tives and friends gathered to con- I Preston. ” 1 — gratulate them with best wishes. ! .------i Miss Marie Dorman was given a surprise party F*riday in honor of Mrs. Hampton received many beau- j SPRING VALLEY tiful gifts in remembrance of the her birthday. Those present were; Open Friday, May 28 „ . , . I the Misses Emma and Doris Neuman. occasion. Henry Brautigam has secured a s hin Av Matawan; the Misses Mr. and Mrs. Edward Studhalter, position in Newark where he is r e -, Vera Emmons AnnabeUe Emmons, Woodmere Dr., attended the conceit siding but spends week-ends with his Jean Cmmeri Conover. Ida ■and 1*11 given by the Concordia family. . Mae Wilson, Lorraine Eisman, Rose Ladies Singing Society and Perth Mrs. H. Stuart Morrison of the , piano d T6ny Piano.Robertsville; Amboy Maennerchor and Steinback Terment road is recovering from a m sses Myrtle Barbour. Gen- For Public Inspection Artist ^Orchestra Saturday nite. slight automobile accident Wednes- ; evieye Nunziatlo ^ d Anna Dorman.! Mr. and Mrs. Edward Meinzer, day evening of last week near ^ char,es Barbour John ^ Matawan, spent Thursday evening Cheesequake The Morrison car, Ooraum. Union Hill. with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kane, which Mrs. Morrison was driving, ______West Concourse. was rammed from the rear by a Mrs. Henry Colford and Mrs. Har­ truck, throwing her against the BRADEVELT and will be open to the public daily “X Marks The Dress old Holinger, Laurence Harbor, vis­ steering wheel. ited Mrs. Anne Hendricks Thursday. I The Rev. Daniel V. Smith was I Vm Spending M y Mrs. . Bertha Bishof entertained | guest preacher Sunday at tfie Old J until June 7th, inclusive. Friday nite Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur CHAPEL HILL (Brick Dutch Reformed Church. j Bishof and baby of Ideal Beach, I Minor Brown, of Marlboro, chair- Summer In” Mr. and Mrs. John Zielinsky and j man of the Marlboro Township Corn- Keansburg. I I adore the West Point precision family have moved from the Griffin mlttee. has purchased from the board Mrs. Maud McKenna, of Stony ! of the tailoring . . . the fastidious*, Point, is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. house on the Headdens Corner road j of education the unused school here ; fit of this “ Nan Westly” number, J. Alden Criswell. and are now living on Pine St. ! and will remodel it into a bungalow. | a smart summer resorter says., It’s unbeatable for workmanlike clean lines that nobody The following business firms sharecHi^hj >k for day- of constructing WE CONGRATULATE!

Material* on This Project Gravel, Hauling am MR. STROTHER on his beautiful MODEL HOME which he furnished by by Pure Silk Shirting Southwear Crepe recently built on RAVINE DRIVE, overlooking picturesque Navy, brown. White, aqua, blue, green. maize, pink. LAKE LEFFERTS, Matawan . . . and we are greatly pleased i Polka-dot Chiffon Diagonese Crepe to have co-operated in furnishing this beautiful CAPE COD CARTAN & DEVLIN MARTIN & BROWN Toast, navy, ! copen, green. MODEL DWELLING in Colonial solid Maple Furniture. Matawan Matawan Spun Rayon Print White and aqua grounds. (Sizes 12 to 20) Representing the Nationally Famous Furniture Manufacturers, Price 16.95 including . . . ‘You must close-up “CUSHMAN” MAPLE FURNITURE for every room in the vieiv the sterling de­ house. Mason Work Landscaping by tails” . . . F. W . W HITNEY MAPLE FURNITURE of Character and by See the man­ Simplicity. nish collar, the plunk - plunk - HEYWOOD-WAKEFIELD Colonial and Modern Maple BREWER & KILCOMINS EDWARD ZIEGLER plunk s h ir t - Furniture. s t u d s down- Matawan front, the let­ Nurseryman ter-box pock­ ets, the perky IN Our RUG and CARPET DEPARTMENT you will find a short sleeves1 large selection of BIGELOW-SANDFORD, KARAGHEU- : also thirty j \ studded, th e SIAN, MOHAWK, FIRTH and other famous makes! ^ nippy leather Tile Work OUR LINOLEUM SERVICE includes ARMSTRONG and trast c o l o r . by FOUNTAIN MORTGAGE SERVICE, Inc. “SEALEX” FLOOR COVERING in any type of installation, It’s t h i n g s Broad Street Bank Building like these that RUBBER TILE FLOORS and WALL LINOLEUM. We make you look very flawless and will gladly give you suggestions and estimates without Trenton very finished . . . I know any THOMAS MILLER woman will agree. obligations. Ross Fountain, President Phone 2-2162 Matawan Branches: Long Branch, Toms River Headquarters for the FAMOUS SIMMON’S BEDDING, in­ cluding the “ Beautyrest ,” “ Ace” Coil Springs, Studio Couches and Outdoor Gliders. As Bedding experts we can be of service to you. Painting and Decorating Millwork by “The boxy pleats We extend our cordial invitation to visit us after you have visited by expand like an ac­ the RAVINE DRIVE MODEL HOME and SEE OUR DIS­ Keyport Lumber & Plumbing Supply cordion almost” PLAY OF 14 Model Rooms, including Maple and Modern TUNIS R. SICKLES Old Keyport Cut-off and Route 35 Not quite of course, but whether Furniture, 18th Century Mahogany and others. you stride or strut you’ll find the Phone Matawan 1699 Cliffwood skirt always expands to just your 319 Main St. Matawe step . . . it’s because of those generous boxy pleats that expand and contract so precisely. I’m keen abo,ut the way the waist Sterling Furniture Shop snugs-in too and that trim little Electrical Installation leather belt. The whole thing is Model Home Furnished by just something you can’t afford W h i t e s t . STERLING FURNITURE COMPANY STANLEY R. JONES to miss so don’t bother to think R ed B ank PaC„ fitLeot twice . . , come and get it. White St. Red Bank Main St. Matawan Open Evenings Till 9 P. M. PAGE EIGHT— FIRST SECTION THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, MATAWAN, THURSDAY, M AY 27, 1937

The first scene represented Indian narrator. The scene explained the Wailing-Elston the New Jersey Bell Telephone Co., ★ READE'S * GENEALOGICAL — LOCAL home life just before the coming of hardships of that period. ENGAGEMENTS Luther Walling, Sr., of Belford, has Keyport office. Mr. Churchman is the white people, and their mode of The chorus sang “Little Annie announced the engagement of his a painting contractor. HISTORICAL NOTES living, with their costumes and be­ Rooney,” “Two Little Girls in Blue,” Berkamp-Van Winkle son, Luther, Jr., to Miss Gwendolyn No date has been set for the wed­ liefs, were brot out thru the con­ “Comrades,” “After the Ball Is Mrs. George Sappah and son Elston, niece of Gilbert Elston, of ding. Long Branch Girls, Boys versation of the character. Lorraine Over,” “General Grant’s Grand George, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Newark. No date "has been set for de la Motte and Ethel Ann Carhart March.” Marion Gaglione and Betty Kolodziej, Miss Katherine Kolod- the wedding. Dramatize City History were narrators. Rogers offered a piano duet. ziej, of Union Beach, motored to Chauncey Skilling presented “Sail­ Following a grand march in the Jersey City Friday nite to attend Churchman-Jastrab Pupils of Gregory School presented ing Song” as a vocal selection and scene that represented a ballroom in shower given in honor of Miss Miss Lillian Jastrab, Aberdeen Rd., a pageant of Long Branch last the children’s chorus sang “The the gay 90’s, the guests at the ball Marian Van Winkle who is engaged Matawan Township, has announced Thursday nite in the school auditor­ Same Tides Flow.” danced and the minuet. Richard Ed­ to John Berkamp, also of Jersey the engagement of her sister, Helen ium showing the progress of the city wards sang “Sweetest Story Ever City. The wedding will take place to Raymond Churchman, of Mata­ from the time the white people se­ j The famous wrestling match be- Told” and the chorus presented “Red on June 26. Miss Marian Van Winkle wan. Miss Jastrab is employed by cured their land from the Indians I tween an Indian and a Vhite settler for a tract of land as prize, was en­ Sails in the Sunset.” is the niece of Mrs. Sappah. to the present day. The final scene of the pageant brot acted in the next scene in which The writing of the script, the the history of the town up to the Chauncey Skilling was narrator. The Treat-VanDucrsen painting of the murals and the roles present day, with the characters rep­ children’s chorus sang “Long, Long Mrs. Frank Allinder, of 80 Ford as played by the pupils was a part resenting the various community or­ Ago” and “The Old Spinning Wheel.” Av., Milltown, has announced the of their regular school work, thru ganizations and businesses. Each engagement of her daughter, Jean. To the melody of “Home Sweet which they have increased their child explained the workings of his VanDuersen, to Donald Treat, son Home” played on the music box, a understanding and appreciation of respective organization and the of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond “treat, of home in Long Branch 100 years ago their city, with its facilities and op­ chorus presented "Little Old Lady.” Old Bridge. was shown, with William D’Amato as portunities. Mrs. Harry Heldt, Mrs. Kathleen Mr. Treat is a graduate of South White and Mrs. Harold Morford as­ River High School and is employed sisted in the production of the in the duPont laboratory, Parlin. The pageant. wedding will be held in the autumn. Badami-Hcnnessey Mr. and Mrs. Fred Badami, of Union Beach, have announced the Mrs. Jeanette Ellis, of 5 Seventh engagement of their son, Joseph, to DANCING St., Keyport. won the $100 Bank Miss Frances Hennessey, of New FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Nite award Tuesday at the Keyport York. The announcement was made NIGHT AT Strand Theater. Next Tuesday nite’s Saturday. award will be the regular $50 Riverside Bar and Grill JACK'S TAVERN amount. Harry Hollum, manager of OLD BRIDGE INC. the theater, has announced that 367 STATE ST., PERTH AMBOY starting next week there will be 2 Special Saturday Nite weekly Bank Nites on Tuesday and Cube Steaks with Thursday evenings. The same rules Turkey and Dressing French Fried Potatoes 10c j which cover the present drawings with potato salad 15c (Will be in effect. To be eligible to 1 receive a prize theater patrons must Orchestra — Dancing | purchase their admission ticket* at “Never A Dull Moment” ■least 15 minutes before the draw- ■ ing takes place. One registration I will suffice for all drawings. The Gayest Spot to | UNION BEACH The 10th annual reception and j Spend the Evening dance will be held Friday evening, i ' May 28, at McCabe’s Tavern GEO. STEWART’S ORCHESTRA } beachfront. A small admission will j now playing every j be charged, and there will be a door ■ FRIDAY — SATURDAY — SUNDAY I prize. MARINE BAR WOOLLEYTOWN Mr. and Mrs. Clinton S. Woolley THE RARITAN INN I and family, Rahway, spent Sunday Broad St. Keyport j with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ratcliffe j and Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Woolley. Gall Patrick - Ricardo Cortez PORT MONMOUTH and The Women’s Auxiliary of the fire GUNS OF THE PECOS Jimmy Merrill and His S. S. Sandy Hook Orchestra g company is arranging to hold a starring DICK FORAN (Formerly of Mollie’s, So. Amboy) | hostess card party at the firehouse Every Saturday Nite next month. Episode 9 of Dick Tracy Koppers Coke, Screened Lump Special This Saturday Soft Coal chemically dust treated. Tuesday-Wednesday June 1-2 1 and all sizes of quality Anthracite. Turkey Platter .... 25c ! Stultz. wJ18tf CAREER WOMAN with Valdura Enamelized Claire Trevor - Michael Whalen C A R T W R IG H T ’S INN, Freehold Paint & Enamels Also Guaranteed for 5 Yrs. PARADISE EXPRESS ffith Grant Withers tPpWj,

SpOTSI hvery Saturday Kite Frankfurters & Sauerkraut Served To All Asbury Park Theatres EVERY WEDNESDAY Performances Daily Hill-Billy Orchestra — Dancing — Entertainment at 2:30 — 7 & 9 p. m. TABLES FOR LADIES FRANK ECKEL, Prop.

Xtra! — Xtra! Larry LaRose Says: Reade’s MAYFAIR Every Wednesday Nite— The Hottest Band in Monmouth County— Make a date now. Entire Week Starting Saturday, May 29 Bill McQuire and His Swingsters Asbury Park’s Famous All Colored Band FRED ASTAIRE, GINGER ROGERS HANK SMITH & HIS MELODEANS SAT. NITE EDWARD E. HORTON HILLTOP TAVERN Matawan-Freehold Road Larry LaRose, Prop. “Shall W e Dance” Now Open SEIDLER’S BEACH RESTAURANT Shore Route 35 Laurence Harbor Reade’s P A R A M O U N T Fish, Shore and Chicken Dinners Served From Noon to 10 P. M. Entire Week Starting Saturday, May 29 33rd Season of Serving Good Food Frank Seidler (Phone Mat. 208) Richard Seidler FREDERIC MARCH, JANET GAYNOR ADOLPHE MENJOU

For A Grand Week-End of Pleasure , Come to McCabe s Orchestra - Fri. - Sat. - Sun. “A Star is Born” Floor Show — Entertainment Music by “Buddie and his Boys” No Cover — No Minimum M cCABE’S BEER GARDEN Reade s New St. James On the Beach Front “Where the Cool Breezes Blow” Union Beach Entire Week Starting Friday, May 28 Julian’s Boathouse ROBERT TAYLOR, BARBARA STANWYCK J On the Beachfront, UNION BEACH VICTOR McLAGLEN Music by Rocky’s Rhythm Boys Dancing — Singing Waiters — Entertainment Saturday Nite, Sunday and Monday afternoon and nite Good Eats “This is M y A ffair” Every Saturday — Spaghetti and Meat Balls 25c All Kinds of Sandwiches and Hot Potato Chips THOUSANDS TO THRONG FREEHOLD MATAWAN HIGH’S ’37 STATISTICAL DRIVING PARK TO VIEW THE RACES JMatratt I dumI BASEBALL RECORD BETTERS ’36 MARK Gould Completes Extensive Plans For Gala Opening Writer Names Mancini The School’s Outstanding On Memorial Day; 26 Outstanding SPORTS PAGE Athlete During Current Sports Term; Bats .391, Trotters To Complete Fields .968, Starred On Grid And Track

Twenty-six outstanding horses will M ATAW AN, N. J., THURSDAY, M AY 27, 1937 Coach Andresen’s Matawan High click on the way down the home­ compete for $1600 in purses, in four HARTMAN, MORRIS School baseball squad wound up its stretch of the season’s campaign... Memorial Day trotting and pacing 1937 season last week, losing the final their most impressive performances races here in Freehold Monday, ac­ SHARE HIGH GUN AT were in games against Leonardo, cording to the entry list released BRAVES WILL OPEN OAK SHADES WINS 8-7 game to Leonardo and the writer Freehold and Hoffman High. today by William M. Halsted, sec­ PINE KNOT SHOOT discovered after compiling tlie sea­ Mancini not only played consistent retary for the Freehold Racing Assn. SEASON FRIDAY NITE Sport Topics Discussed Weekly OVER CARTERET NINE son’s statistical record that the team baseball thruout the season but has The races, for which extensive pre­ ended the campaign with a batting been a stellar performer in track and parations have been made, will make Keyporters Tied With 24 Manuel, Egbert, Kravitz, Turk And Desin Pitch, Hit mark of .341, a fielding average of field events and played a fine brand the revival of lite harness races on Sunday At North Cen­ Dane, Leitch To Play In The Bay shore Area Locals To Victory At .901 and winning game percentage of football with the M.H.S. varsity 11 during the 1936 gridiron cam­ the old county fair grounds track terville Traps =By ‘ BALL HAWK ”: of .400. where the sidewheelers have been an Against Royals Middies’ Field Dan Mancini, whom the writer paign. It was reported this week institution intermittenly since 1857. that Dannie may continue his educa­ The heat wave which particularly Bowling Leaguers Elect Officers l rates the outstanding athlete of Charlie Berger, business manager Despite a sloppy fielding exhibi- M.,tnwnn Wifrh finhnnl for the 1936- tion at Pennington Prep. On the card are a 3-year trot, for hit the shore area Sunday apparent­ a $500 purse, with six entries; a 2.19 of the Belmar Braves, has completed KEYPORT—Approximately 50 sportsmen were present at the annual Uon the Cak Shades senior 9 turn- ! sfaLn led his mates at Coach Edgar McNabb is banking ly had little effect on the contes­ plans for the opening of the floodlite banquet tendered the members of the Keyport Bowling League last {ed in a 8. 7 victory over the Buddy 1 thp A with 39, and finished second heavily on Mancini to pile up points trot, also lor $500, with 10 entries; tants competing in the weekly clay- baseball season at Memorial Park Thursday nite at Ye Cottage Inn, Keyport. After partaking of a turkey Social club at Carteret field Sunday j m fieMing with 957 The individual for Matawan in the central New and two special events, a special bird shoot at the North Centerville ^dinner, Al. Schwarok, Granville Culver, Ray Kruser, Frank Angello, Paul pace, for a $300 purse, with five en­ tomorrow nite with Captain Abby afternoon during an intense heat> bjgb fielding honors went to Devino Jersey championship track and field traps which is being sponsored by Stenzel, Charlie Perrine, Charlie Kinhafer and Evart Silcox offered tries, and a special pace and trot, for Leitch and his team stepping out( wave and a threatening thunder ‘ with a mark of 968 meet to be held at Asbury Park to­ the Pine Knot Rod and Gun Club, in their new togs to face the Brook­ valuable suggestions for maximum interest of the league during next storm.. The team as a whole started to morrow afternoon. $300, with five entries. for the scores would indicate that season’s campaign. Al. Schwarck, proprietor of the Recreation alleys, The two special events were carded lyn JRoyal Giants with the game Lefty Eovino was unable to journey | there has been an improvement over offered his full co-operation in assisting the schedule committee whenever after a -scheduled 2.23 pace had scheduled to get underway at 9 o’­ with his team to Carteret due to j MATAWAN HIGH SCHOOL’S previous week-end events here. possible for the general welfare of the circuit. The league officers for failed to fill. clock. illness and the mound burden fell Doc. Hartman and Pete Morris of 1937-’38 elected include: president, Granville Culver; vice-president, Paul 1937 STATISTICAL RECORD The entries are; While the majority of the Braves upon the shoulders 'of Desiri and Keyport shared high gun honors in have been getting into shape, playing Stenzel; secretary, Raymond Kruser, and treasurer, Evart Silcox. The Turk. Between them, they turned in bat fld First Race the singles, cracking 24 out of 25. with lite semi-pro teams in the shore by-laws set by this league will be followed to the letter by every quintet 3-hit pitching performance and had j ab r h po a e avg avg 3-Year-Old Trot Purse $500 Pete also shared runner-up posi­ in the pin loop. The newly-elected officers will work tnis summer on for the past month, they are it not been for 6 damaging errors. I pv • i l 33 8 13 62 4 3 .391 .957 Three Heat Plan tion with P. Waivers, both register­ to get their first real test, swinging plans for the bowling league season opening in autumn. Oak shades’ flippers might have pos- *’ la . . ’ Elizabeth, N. J., blk. m. ing a 23. Doc. Walling scored a : against smart ball pitching tomorrow r sibly registered a shut out victory L. Mancini, if 26 6 10 14 0 2 .385 .875 ■ Spencer 1:59%, Starbertha 2:09; while O. Luyster of Matawan hit nite. The class of chucking they Shore Conference Gets Dizzy Spell instead of barely nosing out t h e l j < Devino, 2b, ss 27 5 10 13 17 1 .370 .968 Harry S. Gould, Park Ridge; Hal­ 21. Walter Walling cracked 18 to take have been facing in daylite ball for Middlesex aggregation. p I k CENTRAL N. J.—It’s a good thing the Shore Scholastic Conference 30 7 11 25 20 9 .367 .833 sted. high gun in the doubles, Massey the past four or five weeks has not Desin and Turk contributed gener- ‘ ° Valet, br. h.—2:15% second with 15 and Pete Morris third even been fair country pitching—just baseball season is winding up for the sport scribes’ dope sheet is being ously to Oak Shades attack with each Hessey, rf, cf 23 5 8 15 0 1 .347 .938 Volomite, Mary Watts 2:08% ; Ed­ with 15. batting practice for such veterans as kicked around with wrecxless abandon of late. After living up to all cracking out 2 hits. Nagy went the Hickey, 88, 2b 36 8 12 16 20 6 .333 .857 ward S. Conord, Montclair.- President John McDonnell and Dane, Manuel, Egbert and Kravitz, expectations, several of the teams we had expected to click on all full route on the mound for the ' - - cylinders thruout the race, are beginning to show signs of distress. For Mumford, p 24 4 8 2 8 2 .333 .882 Santa Rosa, br. m. William Saggan, club promoter, have the dime a dozen variety. Carteret club. Rapolla, Kalieta, Volomite, Mazy Watts 2:08%; Ed- arranged shoots for Sunday and True, the Brooklyn Royals have instance, Keyport, the favorite, barely nosed out Hoffman High 5-4 in Lease and Joneski got the remaining Bresney, rf 31 3 9 7 0 2 .290 .778 an early season contest, while the Governors nosed out Matawan by a agent, East Orange. Memorial Day afternoons which not been rated during the past five 5 hits for Oak Shades. 2 3 .227 .957 similar score. The Mats divided with Leonardo two games, then recently Gumbs, c 22 4 5 56 Superior, b. m. should draw a record number of years as among the top-notch Negro It was reported after the game the Leons turned around and nosed out a better ball team, Atlantic Gaylworthy, Duchess 2:06%; S. S. contestants and spectators. Shells attractions, but from reports we were that the Oak Shades management I , _ Highlands 3-2. The Mats split even with Freehold and last week the Mather, Princeton; Tyson. and refreshments may be procured able to gather, the Royals have been was not pleased with the general j 1 ea rn 8 1 Otal 252 50 86 210 71 29 .341 .901 Watts High, b. c. on the grounds. greatly strengthened this spring in county seaters shut out Hoffman 3-0. performance of the team, and would The Keys and Lakewood appeared to be the only teams in the Shore Ace High, Sister Stokes; Mrs. M. I. Sunday’s Results at N. Centerville hopes of regaining their last laurels seek a well known semi-pro ball­ hit freely and scored upon in the Conference that have been able to set and maintain the pace thruout. 1 Aronson, New York City. Dr. H. W. Hartman. Kejjport 24-21-20 which they enjoyed when “Cannon­ player to coach the club two even­ first two frames. Carhart’s nine Coa,ch Carhart has very cleverly manipulated the schedule to mark time KEYPORT TROUNCES George, b. g. P. Morris, Keyport . . . ’---- 24-23-1 ball” Dick Redding and the slugging ings each week until the team starts tallied one in the opener and four until his catching ace, Sammy Septen, is ready to get back into harness Protector, Grateful Spirit; M. J. Dr. (Toot) Walling, K’p’t. 22-20-18 Santop was the outstanding Negro playing heads-up baseball. RED BANK NINE 15-8 in the second while Red Bank came Duer & Co., Exmore, Va. O. Luyster, M atawan...... 21-19-19 battery in the east. after a two weeks’ lapse due to a head injury. “We should have won Sunday’s back with three and one in the W. Walling, Keyport ... . 49-19-20-1" It was unofficially announced this game easily, but the box score proves same two stanzas. Second Race Carhart’s Team Makes It P. Waivers, K eyport...... 18-23-23 week that Leitch would import’ a Sports To Dominate Over Holidays that we had difficulty in nosing 'em Lett was shelled off the mound in 2:19 Trot Purse $500 seasoned hurler from Newark while Eighth Straight In A J. Layton ...... 17-14-19-14-17-20 BAYSHORE—Land and water sports will dominate the field of general out,” the manager stated. the fifth and his successor Yorg Three Heat Plan Hen Dane, of Keyport, will do the OAK SHADES (8) R. Massey ...... 18-16-16-17-22 activities over the week-end holidays. With thousands of motorists head­ Free-Hitting Tilt faded to halt the Keys completely Mazy McElwyn, b. m.—2:10% catching. Kravitz will most likely A B R H P O A B C. Bahrenburg, Keyport .. 13-19-14 ing toward the shore area for a three day period, the beaches and the Rapolla, as 4 1 1 2 2 2 altho he proved more effective. Mr. McElwyn, 1:59%, Mazy Watts start at third with Art Manuel, an­ Robt. Stultz, K eyport...... 18-17-16 ball parks should get a great play. I believe that swimming, fishing and Coach Stanley Carhart’s Keyport 2:08%; Joseph A. Burke, Plain- other Keyporter, at second while T. Sith, lb Advertise regularly and honestlj, Walt Walling Jr., Keyport 17-15-16 boating will overshadow all other branches of sports, including baseball, 1 0 | Keys scored its second easy victory field; Burke. Leitch will patrol the shortstop ter­ Robt. Hartman, Keyport .. 16-14- tennis, golf, track and field activities, especially in the shore area. The Desin, p-K 4 o j over Red Bank High last Thursday price your merchandise fairly, and Hollyrood Perry, b. g.—2:14 ritory. Dave Egbert, one of the old­ MaMrgello, I you will always have customers. H. Jacobson ...... 17-17-15 beaches will get the play during the day while in the evening, some will | Q ] afternoon, this time by a 15-8 tally. Great Britton 2:02%, Periscope est members of the Braves hi years H. Peterson ...... 14-15-15 stroll the boardwalks, others will attend niteball games and still others 0 1 | Lett and Yorg toiled on the mound 2:03%; Eugene Carpenter, Newark; of service, will be back at his favorite A. Peterson ...... 8-15-14 will seek other forms of amusements. Nevertheless if ideal weather ® J | for the visitors and were hammered Carpenter. J. McDonnell, Keansburg 17-15-16 I post in left field. Other well known 1 o | for 19 hits while George Tice, the Daylee, b. g.—2:14 prevails, record crowds will be on hand for the first real glimpse of Williamson ...... 9-16-9 shore players will be in uniform summer amusements at the shore. Belmar Braves will open their niteball 0 0 | Keys’ ace, was touched for 13 bingles, PLAY SAFE Guy Day 2:04%, Peggy Lee 2:02%; ready and anxious to get into action S. M orvick...... 16-13-15 season at Memorial Field tomorrow nite against the Brooklyn Royal [2 i including a homer by Baine and two BRAKES RELINED Harry S. Gould, Park Ridge; Clark. against the Royals tomorrow nite. E. Vanderbilt, N. Centerville 14-14-12 Giants. Local enthusiasts of the rod and reel report that striped bass, doubles by Henry. Judge, br. h.-r2:ll% Berger has had a gang of men ABRHPOA —SPECIAL— H. C overt...... 10-9-40 eels and weak fish have been caught off the Keyport steamboat dock Hegedus, 3 1 0 2 .2 Tice fanned 12 and issued three Truax 2:04%, Janie Lee 2:05%; S. manicuring the playing field, car­ H. Felleney ...... 11-9-11 recently. Eels are running plentiful in the bay. The Keyport Yacht 3 0 0 6 0 walks but the opposing pitchers were Ford-Chev. $ 6 -7 5 S. Mather, Princeton; Tyson. E. M ow er...... 7-9-9 penters repairing the grand stand Demeth. Calumet Filomar, b. m.—2:10 Club is starting sailboat activities; several “comets” were seen sailing * 7 . 5 0 W. Saggan, N. Centerville 13-15-14 and experts from the Jersey Central gracefully along the waters of the bay over the past week-end. Activities Truax 2:03%, Julep; Frank D. Power & Light Co. checking the Doubles at the Keyport yacht basin have been brisk for the past three weeks, Phillips, Goshen, N. Y.; Phillips. floodlite system for the past week in W. Walling, Keyport owners having their motorboats put into shape for the season. More than Laurel Hill, b. m.—2:12 effort to have everything in tip Warwick, Matawan ...... 4-8 50 motorboats and sail skiffs have slid into the water in this vicinity over Laurel Hall, The Main Emma; R. Massey...... 12-16 top shape for the opening. The Geo. W. VanWicklen, Glen Head, the past month. Henry Winterton, owner of the Elite Raritan P. Morris, K eyport...... 14 mayor will be on hand to toss out the Works. Keyport, reports he has built and sold ovt* .40 b 4 Truax—; Joseph Carr, Freehold. Holy Name team this season. If you check the box scores from week to Vacation Days at the Big Boy, br. g. Major Gill, b. h. Baby ducks are beginning to put in their appearance on the mill pond week, you’ll find him playing in almost every position on the ball team. Napoleon Direct, Lady Sunrise; W. Guy Abbey, Fanella Thompson; He has pitched, caught, played the infield and outfield. The only positions A r e H e r e A. Moore, Freehold. Joseph Carr, Freehold. at Allentown, mostly paddling close to the side of Mother Duck, but o n c e ------he has------missed------to date is umpire, ticket-taker, scorekeeper , - ,and batboy. Fourth Race Sister Alice, blk. m. in a while a more adventuresome I Last Sunday he opposed “Tuck” Hansen, former Temple University grid Pick A Car To Suit Your Abbedale, Lassie Direct; Harry S. Special Trot and Pace Purse $300 youngster strikes out on his own. I and diamond star who hails from Navesink. Freehold won the game 6-5. (Continued bottom next column) Gould, Park Ridge. ------I Hansen went the full distance and cracked out two doubles, but Preston Needs From The Largest Freehold Track was derricked after he failed to hold an early 5-3 lead. Hansen got half And Best Stock In Mid­ of his team’s total hits. It was reported this week that Billy Haberman, formerly of Ed. Vanderveer’s big Freehold club, may be signed by the dlesex County. Rumson club. Haberman has been playing left field for the Austin club on AN ARMY OF PANTS of New Brunswick this season. The Rumson team has been getting by Complete Satisfaction with nine players since the season opened and should any one of them Guaranteed. receive an injury, Bob Ilsley will have to call in the ground keeper or batboy to fill in. , INVADES P e r t h A m b o y Payment j Comet Season Opening Postponed Here i 1934 Chevrolet Master Sedan $135 ' MEMORIAL DAY KEYPORT—Dannie Holmes, the sparkplug admiral of Keyport's land fleet, informed us early in the week that the scheduled season opening, of | 1933 Chevrolet Master Coupe 90 comet activities at the Keyport Yacht Club was postponed a Week due to I 1932 Chevrolet Coach 70 the fact that some of the sailboats are not ready to slide into the water. ; 1931 Chevrolet Sedan 49 M onday, M ay 31 It had previously been planned to set sail over this week-end with an 1931 Chevrolet Roadster 49 i intra-club tune up race but when the rocking chair fleet says no it j 1936 Plymouth Fordor means no. However, regardless of what John Hartzler, the schoolmaster, Touring Sedan 185 Joe Bedle, “The Big Paint man,” Palmer, the banker, brother Lloyd, the \ 1935 Plymouth D/L Coupe 163 j Knot man from Lumberville, says to the contrary, young Dannie Holmes j 1935 Plymouth Coach 163 still insists he’s champ of indoor sports at the yacht club. That crack ! 1934 Plymouth Tudor 135 4 Events for $1,600 Purses ought to get a rise out ..of the “Ace of • Pine Knot,” don’t you think, Dannie. Will somebody’s face be red or is he apt to raise a temperature? ! 1934 Plymouth Sedan 139 1 1931 Dodge Sedan 73 j A STORE FULL OF PANTS 1934 Dodge Sedan 139 | Anchor Inn Proprietor Englishtown Sporting 2 : 1 9 T r o t and Summer Slacks Priced from $1.50 to $6.50 Announces Opening Club Books Oak Shades Charles Cerrato, proprietor of the Mgr. John Palladino, of the Eng­ DORSEY The Largest and Most Complete Stock of Pants in Perth Amboy lishtown Sporting Club, announced Anchor Inn, Florence Av., Union USED CAR MART — Thousands of Pairs to Choose From Beach, has announced the season’s today that he had booked the Oak Three Year Old Trot opening date as Saturday, May 29. Shades nine for a ball game on Sun­ THE SAFE PLACE TO BUY Mr. Cerrato will serve a half broiled day afternoon, June 20, at English­ Alterations FREE spring chicken supper to his patrons town and is desirous of hearing from ! 2-Day Money-Back Guarantee MATCHING Every pair carries our absolute guarantee of for a small charge. Entertainment the Oak Shades management for a Elm to Oak Sts. on Satisfaction, or your money back without and an orchestra for dancing will be written confirmation on this date. New Brunswick Av. Two Special Events — A Trot and A Pace question. features of the evening. The Matawan Township team Phone 4-2703 Our Specialty Mr. Cerrato, who was recently in­ playing winning ball this season with Perth Amboy, N. J. Lefty Eovino hurling a superb brand 26 Horses Entered Don’t throw away that perfectly good Coat BLUE and GREY SERGES jured in an automobile accident, has and Vest. Let us match them up with a new fully recovered and is looking for­ pair of pants. at EVERY PRICE ward to Saturday’s opening at which i N°AXDlSRKDkcoratk yolk time he hopes to welcome the return HOMES Races Start at 1:30 of many of his former patrons. Al­ ! GOLD SEAL DA.INTS AND tho the Anchor Inn is open all the At your service 24 hours per day NATIONAL PANTS STORES year round Mr. Cerrato is making and 365 days per year, with the high­ ELKCAT STORE est -quality of fuel oil, delivered to special plans for this week as the 1 Highway 35 - South Keyport • Admission $1 Including Tax and Parking summer season will start at a ma- you through predetermined record­ For Quality anil Fair Dealing 199 SMITH ST. "S.K S.’ffiK“ PERTH AMBOY 1 jority of the seashore resorts. ing meters. Stultz. wjl8tf ✓ , ) ■■ THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1937 THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, MATAWAN, N. J. PAG% TWO— SECOND SECTION LINCROFT Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Chapman, of CENTERVILLE COLTS NECK HOLMDEL CLIFFWOOD Orange, spent the week-end at their John Mahoney has given up his COMMUNITY NEWS bungalow on Shore Concourse. Charles C. Conover, of Red Bank, The annual spring supper for the Mrs. Mary Dooley and daughter, Jdhn Wilson has built a new gar- position with a book company at Ted Lewis, Newark, spent Sunday re on his property and is repairing has rented the Danser estate prop­ benefit of the Reformed Church Miss Helen, attended the first solemn with George Wolf, Cliffwood Dr. erty and will move here about June Wednesday nite of last week was Newark. high mass of their cousin, the Rev. his house. William Domidion, who is employ­ HAZLET HILLCREST Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Willard, and 1. It was recently purchased by J. attended by 180 persons and was Francis X. O’Sullivan, of Brooklyn, Mrs. Doris DeFlaviaho and daugh­ relatives, Plainfield, spent Sunday at B. Conover, Toms River, who is successful beyond the expectations ed by the New Jersey Bell Telephone at St. Patrick’s Roman Catholic ter. of Altoona, Pa., are visiting Mrs. Mrs. Elwood Wilson and son, Eu­ A program and exhibit was given their bungalow on Shore Concourse. having the house improved and is of those who promoted it. The profits Co., has been temporarily trans­ Church, 95th St., Brooklyn. They Frank Ambrosino. ferred to Virginia. Mr. Dominion’s gene, Red Bank, spent the week-end by the pupils of Hillcrest School at Mrs. Charles Tice and mother, Mrs. razing the outbuildings. are expected to amount to about $75. also attended the reception Sunday Case Vanderwall and Herbert place as scoutmaster of the- local with Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Walling and 1:15 Friday afternoon. The pupils Sophia Harden, Matawan, visited’ the Fred Perrotti opened his new Vil­ The supper was under the direction evening. The Rev. Mr. O’Sullivan Hoglander, of Long Branch, spent family. will go to Valley Forge this week. latter’s sister, Mrs. Helena Emmons, lage tap room and grill Saturday of a committee of which Miss Louise troop will be filled by Stanley Stil- one of the many priests who Sunday at Robert DenOuden’s Nurs­ Henry Tintle and son, Bobby, of About 30 parents and visitors at­ Freehold, Friday. nite on the state highway near the Schenck was chairman. Assisting well, Sr. ordained Saturday morning at ery. Pompton Plains, spent the week-end tended the exhibit which was com­ Mrs. Theodore Szymdnski and chil­ traffic lite. There was a free chicken her were Mrs. Harold Bennett, Mrs. Harry Anable who has been •oper­ St. James Pro Cathedral. Muichella and Angelina Luearelli with Mr. and Mrs. George Emmons bined with the 4-H Club meeting dren, Teddy and Jean, Morganville, dinner, music by an orchestra and John Jeffrey, Mrs. Jonathan H. ating a goat farm on the Phalanx- Mrs. Bertha Bishof and Mr. and were confirmed in Brooklyn Sunday. and family. Mrs. Tintle who has and Class of 1937 exercises. The visited with her sister, Mrs. Michael entertainment. For several years Mr. Holmes and Mrs. Douglas Fromm. Lincroft rOad, near the latter place, Mrs. Edward Kelley were dinner Mr. and Mrs. Charles Allocco, of will soon take over a 12-acre qrlace been spending the last three weeks meeting was called to order by Presi­ Wagner, Sunday. Perrotti has conducted the Mon­ The public schools of Holmdel guests of the former’s sister, Mrs. Hazlet, spent Sunday with their here returned to her home with her dent Thomas Cowles, with J;he 4-H William Brown and daughter, Dor­ mouth Star tavern at Colts "Neck. Township will hold combined com­ the south side of the Red .Bank John Huber, of South Orange. daughter, Mrs. Peter Genovese. husband. pledge; followed by song, “Old Faith­ othy, Bloomfield, spent Sunday , at This new place of business is a. 2- mencement exercises Thursday eve­ road, just east of Lincroft. His moth­ Mr. and Mrs. Bernard O’Reilly, of The DeLuca family are spending Mrs. Harry Houghson, Holmdel ful,” grammar grades; a demon­ their bungalow on Ravine Dr. story building. The bar is on the ning, June 10, at the Keyport High er, Mrs. Isabelle Anable, of Phila­ Newark, spent Sunday at their bung­ several weeks in Vermont. Rd„ returned home from the Mon­ stration in history, fifth, sixth and Mr. and Mrs. Armour Ashforth first floor and living quarters for Mr. School. delphia, recently purchased the alow on Brookside Av. Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Acquiviva, mouth Memorial Hospital, Long seventh grades; “Health Heroes” were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Perrotti and his family is on 'the Miss Ruth Williams, formerly of property, including an 8-room bouse, Mr. and Mrs. George Kantra, of of Red Bank, are spending a week at Branch, where she has been a sur­ Thomas Cowles; awards for 4-H Club Holger Bengsten, Cranford, Sunday. second floor. A bar of mahogany by Rector PI., Red Bank, has taken for him from George Harry Rich- Perth Amboy, Miss Marie Holmes, the Betsy Ross Farm. gical patient for the past two weeks. projects, Howard J. Stelle, county Mr. and Mrs. George Hossu and the owner is in the tavern. possession of her recently purchased dale who will move to Utica, N. Y. and the Misses Gertrude and Louise Thomas Maria, of Brooklyn, is Roy Winterton is a patient at the club agent; son^, “Home on the Mr. and Mrs. George Vassile, Gar­ Wednesday, Aug. 11, has been fixed house at Everett, formerly owned by Mr. Anabel has contracts to supply Olzewski, of Jersey City, spent the visiting Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore hospital. Range,” grammar grades; cartoons wood, spent last Thursday at their the date for the annual harvest Mrs. Mary Carton. Miss Williams goat milk to dealers who supply week-end at Mr. and Mrs. Sigmond Straniero. Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Hyer, of in history, Doris Peseux; song, “Dick- bungalow on Cliffwood Dr. is public health nurse for Holmdel babies and invalids. Olzewski’s bungalow, Shore Con­ Edward Cerlione and family spent | home of the Reformed Church. Valley Dr., Matawan, entertained the ory, Dickory Dock,” primary grades; Charles Tice is remodeling the and Atlantic Townships, with office course. Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Esposito,; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hagerman members of the Sunday school board recitation, “Our Stars and. Stripes,” house and store of George Smith, of Middletown. * ! have moved into their new house1 on in Town Hall, here. Dorothy Ege; song, “Early Spring,” . Mr. and Mrs. John Granato and RIVER PLAZA of St. John’s M. E. Church at their comer of Freneau Av. and Wilson Ignatz Potosky is • painting his ♦ the CrusiilS tract, home Tuesday nite. Mrs. Leonard Joseph Iaderosa; unit in geography, daughter, Josephine, of Centerville, Av., Matawan, where Lawrence Le- house. ! Miss Elizabeth Matthews has befen Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Robinson Lufburrow will replace Mrs. Frank Esther Johnson, Border-World War, spent Sunday with the latter’s moth­ MORGAN maire has a general store. The children are preparing for j selected as the new organist d? the and children, who have been living McCleaster as teacjier in the primary Carmen Iaderosa; song, “Baby er, Mrs. Elizabeth Ferrante, and sis­ their graduation exercises on June Reformed Church. with Mrs. Robinson's father, William department. Mrs. Monroe Hyer will Leaves,” primary grades; unit in ter, Miss Concetta Ferrante,of Mat­ George Mershon, of Bayview Man­ 10, in Keypiyt High School. All Henry Molis has moved from Mrs. B. Conover, have moved here from substitute for Mrs. William Bell’s j geography, Frank Montague; song, awan Rd. GORDONS CORNER or, highest ranking member of the schools in Holmdel Township have George Decher’s house to Farming- class. A committee of three was i “Londondenary Air ” grammar Henry C. Erbacher and Raymond | Morgan Boy Scout troop, has been Headden’s Corner. joined in the Eighth grade exercises. dale. appointed to make arrangements for j grades; South American Border, Hendricks attended the christening Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. ! chosen to represent the local unit at Large use is being made of Shadow W. Hall, of Philadelphia, was a the annual Sunday school picnic. | Frank Hyer; song, “Spring Flow- of John Sayben, baby son of John Leland S. Clayton were: Mr. and j the National Scout Jamboree to be Lake for fishing since it was opened They were Roelif LeRoy, Harry , ers,” Carol Carhart; Class Will, Doris Sayben, of Nixon, formerly of Cliff- Mrs. Francis Broxmier, Mrs. Bertha school visitor Sunday. NEW MONMOUTH { held in Washington, D. C., beginning for public use. Trout and various Cowles and Monroe Hyer. A Chil­ Peseux; class poem, class; memen- wood Beach. Nunn arid children, Joan, Elizabeth, The school children accompanied I June 30. other kinds of fish are being caught dren’s' Day program will be presented ■ toes for seventh grade, Esther John­ Joseph B. Sealer, of Kennilworth, Robert, William and Charles, Jr., all by parents and teachers, enjoyed a . Herman S. Labrecque has discov­ I The Bay View Rod and Gun Club in big quantities. under the leadership of Mrs. George son; piano solo, Marie Bailey; Class is stopping at his niece’s bungalow of Long Valley. bus trip to New York Tuesday of ered back of his house a spring which will hold a game social at the club- Hoodlums threw stones thru the W. Hanners and Mrs. Walter Smale. Prophesy, Carmine Iaderosa and on Woodcrest Dr. Mr. and Mrs. Warren Jamison, of last week. They visited Central Park he believes has medicinal properties. rooms this evening. Russell O. windows of the houses of John Boy- A pageant entitled “The Game of Doris Peseux; Class Mementoes, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Kelly, Wood- Robertsville, visited Mr. and Mrs. L. Museum. Planetarium and Radio He is using the water for drinking Mathis and Russell VanHise are land and Mrs. George Palmer one Life” will be the feature of the eve­ Thomas Cowles and Frank Montag- mere Dr., entertained Sunday, Mr. S. Clayton and family last Thursday City. While in the studio the chil­ purposes and he says it has had chairmen of fhe committeee nite last week. They got away, but ning. Refreshments were served fol­ no; song, “The Old Refrain,” gram­ and Mrs. Wulford Ufer and children, evening. dren sang, “My Little Buckaroo,” highly beneficial results to his health. charge of the arrangements. they left some clews'. Mrs. Palmer lowing the business meeting. Those mar grades. Deloris, Donald and Allen John, of which was reproduced on a vtctrola was also the victim of another depre­ attending were: the Rev. and Mrs. Those receiving 4-H achievement Guttenburg, and Mr. and Mrs. James record. Get our price when your organiza­ Treat your shrubbery and garden dation. One nite recently some mis­ George W. Hanners, Mr. and Mrs. pins and the number of years' work A. Kelly, of West New York. Miss Vivian Canfield, county li­ tion is 'ready to have new by-laws soil with an application, of Hqrticul- creant cut all the tulips in her Harry Cowles, Roelif LeRoy, Mrs. completed were as follows: Thomas William Gouldine, of Jersey City brarian, visited the school Monday. printed. We specialize in this work. tural Peat Moss. Stultz^j wj!8tf garden. ; ■ William Bell, Mrs. Albert Heath, Cowles, sixth year pin; Marie Bailey Medical Center, spent Saturday with Mrs. Walter Smale, Mrs. Kenneth and Doris Peseux, fifth year; Carm­ his mother, Mrs. Jane Clark. VanMeerbeke, Mrs. Theodore Bailey, ine Iaderosa and Esther Johnson, Cirio Muscio, his son Peter, the Mrs. Elmer Bahrenburg, Mrs. Hattie fourth year; Harvey Smith, Elaine former’s brother-in-law, Ernest Aumack, Miss Annie Cowles and Mr. Guderpahn, Frank Hertle and Rose­ Bruno, and nephews. Peter Muscio and Mrs. Monroe Hyer. The next marie Iaderosa, third year; Tony and James Chaffie, all of Newark, meeting will be held June 8 at the Enfante, Gladys Johnson and Troy- were assisting Mr. Muscio over the home of Mrs. Hattie Aumack, Key- elus Schanck second year; Jack week-end painting his store for the port. Weigand, Daniel Enfante, Shirley season opening. The members of the G. G.’s Sewing Booth, Helen Zurck and Frank Dye. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Szymigielski Club visited Mrs. Harry Houghson at first year. and friends from Jersey City spent the Monmouth Memorial Hospital After the program the parents Tuesday at their property on Shore Wednesday afternoon of last week. were invited to inspect work done Concourse. Those in the party were: Mrs. Roland by the pupils in class. Mr. and Mrs. John Staib, of Ravine Emmons, Mrs. James Glenn, Mrs. Dr., entertained Sunday Mr. and James Neidinger, Mrs. Frank Me Mrs. Frank Golden and George Oleaster, Mrs. William Barnes.- Mrs. LEONARDO Smith, of Newark. Hendrick Bennett, and Mrs. William Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Braden, of Urstadt. Three Leonardo children received Jersey City, spent Friday nite with Mrs. Joseph Jackson has returned first communion Sunday at St. Mr. and Mrs. Armour Ashforth: The to her positionin New York after be­ Agnes’ Church, Atlantic Highlands. former’s mother, Mrs. J. M. Braden, ing confined to her home with illness They are Nicholas William Kaiser, visited with her sister, Mrs. Wilbur Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas W. for some time. Morris, of Matawan. Mr. and Mrs. Emil VanPelt, Ho­ Kaiser, Joseph Finkle, Jr., son of Mr. Mrs. Mary Dooley, of Elmwood Dr. boken, visited Mr. and Mrs. George and Mrs. Joseph Finkle and Barbara was a Saturday nite guest of her Emmons and daughters Sunday. Barnes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. cousin, Mrs. Catherine Angleman, Mortimer Barnes. Queens Village, S. I. Memorial Day the fire companies Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Bogart, UNION BEACH of the Middletown Township Dept. Wayside Dr., entertained at a dinner r, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Mrs.

? report irgaret Brockel, of Irving­ % V a J u j o i * Parent-Teacher on June ton, entertained friends at her bung­ during the present school term the 1. Miss Rouse is a teacher in the alow on Woodland Dr. Sunday. association has served to pupils 13,- Middletown Township School, here. Mrs. .Mabel Schmidt was hostess 000 bowls of soup, 7000 cups of cocoa Principal Paul I. Redcay of the to the St. Patrick’s Club luncheon REFRIGERATION COSTS and 632 bottles of milk. In addition local high school has received a com­ at her home Wednesday. Pinochle to this 40 children had dental work mendatory letter from R. L. Hutch­ was played during the afternoon with w i l l S t a y d o w n done. inson, asst. mgr. of the Hotel Roose­ Mrs. Luther Foster and Mrs. Anne Mrs. Edward Stokes, formerly of velt, Washington, D. C., where the Hendricks holding high score. East Keansburg, is a hospital patient. pupils and chaperones were quarter­ Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Lake and IF Y O U BUY A Patrolman Gus Dirner received ed again this year on the annual daughter, of Cranford, spent the a telephone call at 2 a,m. last Thurs­ trip to the capital. It reads in part: week-end at their bungalow On day from Burtis Aumack, Florence “As we have a number of schools Woodmere Dr. Av., that a strange animal was look­ staying with us during the spring we Mr. and Mrs. John Genteleste, of ing in his bedroom window from have an opportunity to observe their New York, spent Sunday with Mr. the front porch roof. Dimer hurried supervision and conduct while in the and Mrs. Tony Delousia, of Cliffwood to the scene and cautiously climbed j hotel, and the way that .your party Av. to the porch roof with only a small j was handled and the way the stu­ Mr. and Mrs. William Bedford, of pocket club as a weapon. When he dents conducted themselves while in Brooklyn, spent the week-end with saw the gleaming eyes of the animal the hotel leaves no question in my Mrs. Timothy Kearns, Matawan Rd. FRIGIDAIRE in the dark he requested Mr. mind but that it was the best school Mrs. Catherine Wilkinson and Aumack to get him a more substan­ we have had.” family, of Newark, have returned to tial weapon, which, in the form of their home in Cliffwood Beach after a heavy piece of wood, was handed spending the winter in Newark. to him thru the window. He then ROBERTSVILLE Mrs. Agnes Derechailo and daugh­ approached the corner of the build­ The Community Club meeting was ter, Miss Victoria, attended the grad­ ing which the animal was hiding held Wednesday evening of last week uation exercises, Thursday of the behind and waited for him to appear at the church hall. Those present Perth Amboy General Hospital and when he did, the policeman were: Mr. and Mrs. Fred Leonard, School of Nursing. Miss Sophie E. gave him a whack with the stick Mr. and Mrs. George Emmons, Mr. Savitsky, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. and knocked him clean offl the roof and Mrs. Leland S. Clayton, Vernon Joseph Savitsky, of Matawan Rd, and killed him. Upon investigation Morrell, Richard Boyce, Mr and Mrs. as a graduate. it was found to be a large racoon William E. Lambertson, Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Erbacher, is visiting with that had been brot up as a pet by Warren Lambertson and family, friends in Scotch Plains this week. the Barber boys tho recently had Charlotte and Janet, Leona, Irma Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Goodfellow been roaming around the boro in and Harold Clayton, Mrs. Fannie and the latter’s mother, Mrs. Good- Purchase Plan! search of food. Gus admitted that Emmons, Richard Boyce, Emily fellow, Orange, are spending the if he had known it was a racoon of Menzel, Carl Lamberson, Earl Em­ week at their bungalow on Hillcrest such proportions he doubts whether mons, Mr. and Mrs. William Storea he would have climbed the roof to Way. • No reason now to delay! and family, Marian, Everett, Alfred Mr. and Mrs. John Durski and attack him, as they are exceedingly You can start right away and Francis, and Mrs. Alfred Storea. daughter, Beatrice, South Amboy, T w c T months’ out of every year we vicious when cornered. • enjoy the benefits and sav The speaker Sunday morning at visited Mrs. Agnes Derechailo and ings of the “ Super-Duty’ take the "can't" out of "can't afford the church was William Vogel, of family, of Sheridan Dr, Sunday. Frigidaire. Come in and place your order____ SCOBEYVILLE Cranbury. It was roll call Sunday. Mrs. E. I. Hopla has returned to Pay no money down. Then deposit as little as a Frigidaire," by selling them for An altar offering was taken up. her home with her daughter, Mrs. 15 cents daily in a handy Meter-Ice bank until Title has been transferred on the Harold, Irma and Leona Clayton, John P. Lauterwald, after a visit your Frigidaire is paid for. Payments are actu­ as little as 15 cents a day until front portion of the Warren M. Drew of Gordons Corner, visited Mr. and With friends in Prospect Plains. ally less than Frigidaire savings! Nothing could farm to Stanley A. Brown, an execu­ Mrs. Warren Jamison Wednesday Mrs. Anne Hendricks attended a ■ be easier. Act now! paid for, following installation tive of the advertising firm of Brown evening. birthday party in honor of Mrs. & Thatcher, of New York. The farm The Young Peoples’ Bible meeting Nellie Jones, Laurence Harbor, Sat- Come In!...S e f Proof of ALL 5 BASIC without a down ym en t. . . A is held every Tuesday nite. Last \$as sold under contract six months urdaynite. SERVICES for complete home refrigeration 1HHTHTI0\\ ago. Mr. Brown bot elose to 60 week the following were present: Mr. and Mrs. Frank Murphy, of Frigidaire saves its owner more acres, which comprise the entire Richard and Raymond Boyce, Har­ Perth Amboy, formerly of Cliffwood, 1. GREATER ICE-ABILITY frontage of the farm, approximately old, Irma and Leona Clayton, Lois visited the former’s uncle and aunt, than it costs. Bought at present 1000 ft. and a depth of 2300 ft. The Woolley, Emily Menzel, Alfred Clay­ Mr. and Mrs. John Murphy, recently. 2. GREATER STORAGE-ABILITY property is bounded on the east by ton, Marian and Ida Mae Wilson, Mrs. Leonard Loesch, of Bloom­ prices, which are low, your Woodland Dr. and on thl west by the Alfred and Everett Storea, Millard field, is spending this week with her 3. GREATER PROTECT-ABILITY Henry Wilkins farm. Mr. Brown Lambertson and Mr. and Mrs. Fred daughter, Mrs. William VanRiper, refrigeration costs can not GO contemplates the erection of a dwell­ Leonard. 4. GREATER DEPEND-ABILITY Cedar PI. UP, once you own one. ing for his own occupancy. Mr. Drew Mrs. Jane Clark, Prospect Av, 5. GREATER SAVE-ABILITY retains ownership of approximately VANDERBURG spent Monday and Tuesday with her Larger models available at slightly more per day on Meter-let Plan. 35 acres and is moving a 10-room daughter-in-law, Mrs. Thomas Clark, house, small cabin and chicken coops Only Frigidaire has the New Instant Cube-Release Jacob Lipert, who recently sold his Irvington. to this part of the property. Harty Mrs. John P. Lauterwald enter­ Only Frigidaire has it! Poland, of Neptune, has the contract farm at Marlboro, has purchased an Instantly releases ice-cubes front 8-acre farm on Route 34 in Atlantic tained Thursday Mrs, Elsie Lanning, tray, two or a dozen at a time. Yields to do this work. The Drew farm was 20>more ice^by ending faucet melt- Township from Elmer Hall of The of Cranbury, and Mrs. Rudolph Heid- Cuts Current Cost formerly owned by Michael Collins inger, of Farmingdale. to the bone! and is generally known as the Collins First National Bank of Freehold, a place held at $5000. One of the two Mr. and Mrs. Andy Chirickiello, of See an electric farm. Three years ago the place was Newark, entertained friends at their meter prove it be­ gold by a broker to Harry B. houses on the land will be improved fore you buy! and occupied by the new owner who newly purchased home, on Cliffwood brook, of Asbury Park, who was then will operate the farm, formerly part Dr, over the week-end. chief county detective. He leased it of the Lafayette Schenck holdings. Mr. and Mrs. Claude W. Davis, of to Mr. Drew, who later purchased The property is north of the William Somerville, spent the week-end at the farm. H. LaBoyteaux farm, occupied theif bungalow on Cliffwood Dr. William Moreau. Mr. and Mrs. John A. Henderson, HEADDENS CORNER former residents of Cliffwood Beach, No ice order is too large or too and the latter’s ijiece, Miss Edith George Morford has constructed small, but what will receive our im­ Hibbett, Hillside, called on Mrs. W. JESSES CEniSflL rOWES UI HT Ci an attractive rock garden on the mediate attention 365 days Of the H. 8. Thurgaland, Netherwood Dr. 6 terrace on his front lawn. year. Stultz. wjl8tf Friday. THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1937______THE MAT AW AN JOURNAL, MAT A W AN, N. X ^ PAGE THREE— SECOND SECTION "

Englishtown : Michael Pawlik and wife, Emma, FINE MATTHEW SCHEUPP man, Monday in Raritan Township j deptartment, in a drive being- con- / PROPERTY CHANGES Henry L, and Emma Ervin to Wil­ Madison Township, to Julia Mauss- i (Middlesex County) police court ducted against truckmen using the ' liam L. and Mildred Stroby, English­ ner, Madison Township, property in Scheupp was arrested by Inspector Superhighway who overload their Monmouth County town, Wilson Av. Madison Township. Gould, of tlite state motor vehicle ( vehicles. Three Neals A The following real estate trans­ Keansburg Copyright by SIDNEY SNOW 1935 fers have been recorded in the office Amelia Briggi to Beachway Amuse­ When broiling ham, it should be of Joseph McDermott, Monmouth ments, Inc., Keansburg, 15 year lease. cut into slices, about one-half inch County Clerk, at Freehold: thick. Broil slowly until meat is well Matawan Middlesex County done. Time depends on thickness of ham. - Helen and Charles C. Schock to Last week the following deeds Bertha A. Schanck, Matawan, Main /ere filed in the office of George and Jackson. Cathers, Middlesex County clerk, at NOT MERELY Lochslea Heights, Inc., to Plunkett- New Brunswick: Webster Lumber Co.; Lochslea George Gaub and wife, Madeline, “FUR STORAGE” J. Y A N K O Heights, lots 26 and 27 B. H. Herman and Maurice Wanderman Madison Township, to Edwin F. Elli- BUT 30 BROAD STREET, RED BANK to William W. and Ruth Ackerman, and wife, Grace, Brooklyn, prop­ lot 6 B. K., Ravine Gardens. erty in Madison Township. CERTIFIED Lillian M. Miller to Heuser and Clayton Lumber Co., South River, Heuser, Inc., Edgemere Heights, lots i E. I. duPont deNemours & Cp., 14 and 15 B. I. Wilmington, Del., property in Madi­ son Township. Keyport Eleanor T. McCarthy, Elizabeth, Elizabeth W. Morris to Chester & QUILT CLUB to E. I. duPont deNemours & Co., and Evelyn Poling, Keyport, Fulton Wilmington, Del., property in Mad­ St. ison Township. Minnie and Edward J. Riley to Earl Lawler and wife, Leola, and Boro Building & Loan Assn., Key- Claude Lawler and wife, Julia, Nep­ COLD STORAGE ON THE LAY-AWAY-PLAN port, Kearney and Elizabeth Sts. tune Township, to Eleanor T. Me Matawan Township Carthy, Elizabeth, property in Mad­ George LaBelle to Lorraine Realty ison Township. Go., Cliffwood Beach Park, lots 7, 8 Harry W. Lawler and wife, Bessie, A. GREENHOUSE, INC. and 9 B. D. Camden, to Eleanor T. McCarthy, 195 Smith St. Perth Amboy An easy and simple plan by which you can Atlantic Township Elizabeth, property in Madison PHONE P. A. 4-1346 Josephine McGrory, et al to Lena Township. Capra, Atlantic Township, 2 tracts. Vincent Rinaldi and wife, Alice, enjoy the best at no extra cost. All you do Warren M. and Rosemary Drew to- Jersey City, to Alice Schueler, West Boys Like G ooey Icings Stanley A. Brown, Atlantic Town­ New York, property in Madison is select your blankets or qujjts now and ship, Hoekhocksen Rd. Township. Alex and Frances Cichoski to Alex Percy Hillyer, Madison Township, make weekly payments of 50.c. As easy as They ’ll Eat a Little Cake With It Cichoski, Jr., Atlantic Township, 7 to William E. Culver and wife, Mar­ acres. garet, Old Bridge, property in Mad­ SID N E Y SNOW3=S5=55=!W«jaj=3ra Charles A. Conover, et al to Jacob ison ^Township. that, and you are assured of lower prices, B. Conover, 3 tracts, Atlantic Town- ’ Charles H. Zeppelin and wife, Jos- We Examine Eyes ship. ephine, Glen Ridge, to William L. distinctive colors in unusual weaves and F TH E boy scouts are dropping in on their way home, Raritan Township Barron and wife, Elizabeth, Laurefice I you’ll merit mental orchids if you just pick up a plain Jacob Fries to Ruth F. Andrews. I Harbor, property in Madison Town- For Glasses Raritan Township. Keyport-Reans- designs, many exclusive and confined to us. cake at the store— eut it into convenient cubes about an Ship. Reasonable inch and a half in size and ice top and sides with quickly burg Stone Rd. made, gooey icings. Here are a couple of good ones made Marlboro Township John D. McDonough to Devlin and Electrolysis Specialist Cash or Payments out of condensed milk and sugar with a bit of flavoring: Make your selections from such nationally McDonough, Marlboro Township, Unsightly hair i season lease of 30 acres. Coffee Icing Maple Filling face removed per- jjf* known brands as manently by mul- ; ATWOOD g,e,il ZXA cups conf. sugar 1 can sweet cond. milk y4 cup sweetened cond. milk Vi cup maple syrup tiple electrolysis 282 State St. Perth Amboy speck of salt safely and scicn- 1 teaspoon vanilla NOW! Near Ditmas Theatre Mix all together in heavy j tifirally. Vi>"' j 2 teaspoons cocoa stew pan and bring to boil, hold- | Vapor Youth Turkish Hours 10 to 8 P. M. Daily l'iion.- or write for appoint ST. MARY’S 2 tablspoons strong black ing there for eight minutes, j Health Bath Table Cnmnittatlon Free coffee stirring steadily. Cook. Spread ' 15 Years Experience KENWOOD Blend milk, coffee and vanilla. on cakes. Dust with powdered | sugar. Ernest Marks Add sugar and cocoa, sifted Chopped , nuts may be added Remodel Your Fur together. Blend well and spread to this icing, or walnut halves CHATHAM on cakes. used for topping. Coat Now! ! ! This is all so quick and easy— and yet conveys such an Here Is What You Get standing for the best in quality, beauty and expression o f friendliness that you’ ll be the grandest lady ENHANCE A on. the street to all the youngsters. Remodeling, repairing, refitting, new lining, new interlining, new warmth. We are also featuring a new design BEAUTIFUL FIGURE loops and buttons, glazing and Menu Of The' Week Monday, Wednesday and refining. Additional p i in a pure-down silk elaborately Friday Evenings from IMPROVE any figure—wear fur supplied at cost y B j—, garments personally ijtted to when desired. Also f 6 P. M.—For Men includes— ami stitched, with handsome trapunto work. you cunningly designed to Graduate Masseur 5 STORAGE & INSURANCE 1 1 Breakfast—Chilled melon, ready to eat cereal, mould and hold your figure, in fried ham and egg buttered toast, coffee or cocoa. Lunch—Clam the glamourous silhouette of broth, combination sandwiches,' potato chips, strawberry sundae, tea or milk. Dinner—Roast leg of lamb, pan browned potatoes, summer CEIL’S and LILLIAN’S youth. squash, romaine salad, roquefort cheese dressing, ice box cake, coffee. HEALTH STUDIO Why not try I TUESDAY I Connected With Ceit’s Beauty Salon I J Breakfast—Baked apples with Cream,' cold (Over Kresge’s 5 and 10c Store) Cereal, griddle cakes, broiled bacon, syrup, jelly or jam. coffee or cocoa. THE OLGA Lunch— Baked onion soup, parmesan croutons, cold cuts, butterscotch CORSET SHOP pie, tea or milk. Dinner—Broiled ha-m steak, french fried potatoes, new creamed peas, lettuce and totna’to salad, stuffed peaches, coffee or 273 Madison Avenue Everything beer.______Everything Perth Amboy, N. J. WEDNESDAY! Majestic Theatre Bldg. Cut-Priced I I Breakfast—Grapefruit juice, hot cereal, buck­ Guaranteed Mother Hubbard Stores wheat cakes, grilled sausages, syrup, coffee or cocoa. Lunch—Pine­ apple juice with avacado balls, eggs a la king, sliced tomatoes, soft WEST FRONT AND BROAD STREET; KEYPORT. N. J. | rolls, coffee ice cream, tea or milk. Dinner—Cream of tomato soup, lamb pot pie, hot biscuits, string bean salad, peach whip, coffee. EY€GLASS€S W e Deliver Free Phone 1 2 2 9 I THURSDAY I ,. ■ . . _ .! ON CR€DIT I 1 Breakfast—Sliced oranges, fried mush, broiled COMPARE COMPARE bacon, poached eggs on toast, coffee or milk. Lunch-—Salisbury steak, TYPEWRITERS Bigger and Better Specials hashed browned potatoes, lima beans, lemon water ice, tea. Dinner Ragout of veal, buttered noodles, asparagus, watercress salad, cheese ADDING MACHINES Cake, coffee or beer. Swift’s Pure J Bought Sold Wilson’s Best A !c Land-O’-Lakes /• r 1 r J F R I D A Y Rented Repaired I I Breakfast— Strawberries and cream, ready to EYES EXAMINED EVAPORATED MILK 0 L A R D 142 CORNED BEEF 142 1 tb pkgs. Reg. 19c lb eat cereal, scrainbled eggs with mushrooms, hard rolls, jelly or jam, Portable and Rebuilt Typewriter* EXPERT OPTICAL SERVICE No. 1 can. Lean and good. Reg. 19c can Lg. Cans. Reg. 3 for 22c can coffee or cocoa. Lunch—Crab cake sandwiches, cole slaw, hot apple j at Cut Prices FINEST MATERIAL USED pie, tea or milk*-. Dinner-—Sauted fillet of sole with wine sauce, j LOW CASH PRICES Convenient Terms Educator „ La Panza . julienne potatoes, buttered spinach, shredded lettuce with Russian j «• H f * Kraft’s or Borden’s * 1 1 C* T C* Soft and Tender dressing, frozen egg nog, assorted cake3, coffee. mirror Pimento, American, 1 t-kr1 A K-s*- L Crax Butter1 lb pkgs. Wafers Reg. 19c 1 5 pkg PEAS— - “”°2 tuhhjfc % lbBrick-veiveeta pkgs. Reg. 19c u | S A T U R D A Y ^ p,reakfast_^CantaIoupe, ready to eat cereal, Superior Domino frizzled ham, onion omelet, whole wheat toast, strawberry jam, coffee Heinz ^ Oc /• r or cocoa. Lunch— Stuffed peppers, buttered beets, sliced tomatoes, Typewriter Service The New ^ flc chocolate pudding, tea or milk. Dinner—Pork tenderloin, hashed Cariton Theater Building BAKED BEANS IZ S U G A R 0 XXXX. Confectionery. 1 lb pkg. Reg. 8c browned potatoes, pea and carrots, spring salad, apricot up-side-down 107 Monmouth Street N U C O A lif Pork and Tomato Sauce. 18 oz. can Reg. 15c The Better Oleo. Reg. "3c lb eake, coffee or milk. Phone Red Bank 485 Joseph R. Serplco, Prop. ORBO Concentrated —a Double-Tip Qlr 1 S U N D A Y j £ Breakfagt— g;iced oranges and grapefruits, Local f'h e cereal, eggs Benedict, hot rolls, jelly or jam, coffee or cocoa. Dinner— r r r e Every Egg BLUEING ERe"oniocal 5 tube MATCHES strikeAnywheret^ 2 pk& Crabmeat cocktail, fricassee of chicken, dumplings, buttered string Lillilu Guaranteed fcr fV d o z beans, artichoke salad with mayonnaise, assorted pickles, stuffed STOP THIEF! Toilet € \ 1 q Baker’s ^ i \ c celery, biscuit glace, coffee. Supper-—Welsh rabbit, stuffed olives and Believe or not, there has been an unusual number of stolen cars Pure pickles, buttered toast, fruit compote, coffee, tea or milk. *1 OJLc reported during the past two months despite the fact that the T I S S U E Z 2 M U S T A R D 1U Reg. 5c roll Tastee and Good. Reg. 15c qt. Sidney Snow will be pleased to supply any of these recipes. majority of the owners had their car doors locked, then why not park your car under cover with guaranteed safety for only $3.00 GRAPE JELLY 1Z2 Just write care of this paper. 1 lb jar. Reg. 19c per month. Popular Brands fY pkgs. a tmt „ Fleckenstein’s OAp CRINE & HALLERAN Flcckenstein’s f) Ap CIGARETTES 2 : i „ 2 5 c BOLOGNA M 2 U „ ESSO GAS & OILS SERVICE FRANKFURTERS r 2 0 ^ Opposite R. R. Station Matawan Offer SALADA TEA Pride of the Farm |\ic K E T C H U P if2 TAT M ixed ...... i/2 lh 29c y4 tb 15c NOTICE 12 oz. bot. Reg. 13c hot Free Sample Package With Each Purchase of Mixed Tea Golden Ripe Green Hollander’s f - q SAVE $ $ $ $ $ SAVE California “t 1. c BANANAS PEPPERS Lehigh Direct From Mines B E V E R A G E S 5 L E M O N S l 2 10 Flavors. 28 oz. bot. Plus dep. bot Juicy Thin Skin. Reg. 25e doz. ea. Stove ...... $10.00 $9.50 I K 2 ^ Nut 10.00 9.50 Pea 9 0 0 8.50 1 Nestle’s O c Jersey O c New O C All Coal Guaranteed 100%. 22 Bags Per Ton I CHOCOLATE BARS 3 Automatic Heat Regulators R A D I S H E S Z CABBAGE ■ Ree. 5c / each Fresh Pulled bunch Hard Heads 16 SNYDER COAL CO. Keyport Phone 968 I MOTHER HUBBARD FILLS YOUR CUPBOARD AT LOWEST PRICES PAGE FOUR— SECOND SECTION THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, MATA WAN, N. J. THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1937 COMMUNITY NEWS MIDDLETOWN BROWNTOWN PHALANX OAK SHADES CEDAR GROVE PARLIN Mrs. Thomas Leider, of Keyport, Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Olsen are Tony Mazza will apply for a plen­ spent Monday with Mrs. Arthur Fire threatened the home of Isaac Mrs. George Hauser spent the now living in Keansburg. ary retail alcoholic beverage license Joseph Blaikitis, of South River, Kaelsch. Johnson in Cliffwood Beach Friday week-end at the home of her son- OLD BRIDGE CHEESEQUAKE Miss Edna Higgins was a visitor in for the Monmouth Star at Colts who is employed at the duPont plant The Men’s Club held a meeting in morning. Quick response of the in-law and daughter,.Mr. and Mrs. Union Beach Sunday. Neck, the former occupant of which Matawan Township Fire Dept, con­ here, and his bride of May 16, are by A1 Miller the social rooms of the Reformed Charles Burlew, Cheesequake. The firemen will hold their meet­ Frank Burlew has been employed has moved to new location in Colts fined damage to the chimney. Chief It has been reported that the old Church Thursday nite of last week. Miss Carrie Hauser spent the living in South River. He married ing for the month of May in the in the packing department of the Neck. Objections to the granting Charles Areno, of this place, super­ Salpa Plant situated on the boundary William Bohn repainted the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. John Miss Antoinette Dato, of Atlantic firehouse tonite at which time the Titanium Pigment Co. plant in the must be filed in writing with Jon­ vised the wqyk. of Old Bridge is to be re-opened in porches on John Massey’s house. Hauser, Cheesequake. Highlands. old fire truck will be sold to the Roseville section of Sayreville. athan H. Jones, of this place, At­ The graduation exercises of St. the near future. Old newspapers The Bridge Club met at the home highest bidder. The eighth grade of the local lantic Township clerk, prior to the Joseph’s parochial school will be held and magazines are to be reclaimed of Mrs. George Smith Friday. Mr. and Mrs. William Gross en­ grammar school took the annual ex­ next meeting of the township com­ Sunday evening, June 6, in the school and reconstructed paper pulp will be Miss Evelyn Starke, who is super­ tertained Mr. and Mrs. George Gaub, aminations Tuesday afternoon at the mittee. auditorium. manufactured. As soon as machin­ of Browntown, Saturday evening. visor of music at Hawthorne, re-, school. ery necessary for this process can be Mrs. Charles Oertel, of Dayton, ceived many compliments after a Several people from this vicinity procured, the new company, known recent concert. ENGLISHTOWN CRAWFORD Men, Save $5 to $10 in Our visited her mother, Mrs. Rose Schul- attended the minstrel show given by temporarily at this time as the meister, and Mr. and Mrs. William A May Day community Sunday St. Joseph’s Choir in St. Joseph’s Pupils of the sixth, seventh and Spotswood Realty Corp., will start Schulmeister. school outing was held Saturday af­ Hall, Keyport, Tuesday evening. All members of the present faculty removing all the old machinery, and Frank Burlew, of Browntown, the ternoon on Peter McClees’ property. of the schools in the Manalapan eighth grades of the Crawford The local baseball team motored School took an educational trip Great 10 Day installing new, and the work will go Misses Helen Gross and Ellen Win- Mrs., Clarence Johnson and Miss to Hoboken Sunday to play the team Township district, which includes Tuesday of last week to New York. rapidly forward. Deep wells on the ant, South River, and Melvin Apple- Helen Root were in charge. they beat two weeks ago at Cheese- this boro, have been reinstated for property will pump 3,500,000 gals, of gate visited Mr. and Mrs. John Mrs. Thomas Johnson gave birth the coming year. Funds for the trip were realized from quake. This timd the tables were disposing of $5 on the co-operative water per day for this work. Enor­ Hauser Sunday evening. to a daughter at Syracuse last week. turned, and the locals were handed A new floor has been laid in the mous amounts of steam and elec­ Mr. and Mrs. William Schnuck and Mrs. Johnson is the daughter of Mr. First National Bank of Englishtown. plan. The winner was Ahce Schanck a defeat of 15-5. of Telegraph Hill. Proceeds amount­ tric current will also be used in this Mrs. Edward Gerome, Laurence Har­ and Mrs. Henry Starke of this place. Miss Elizabeth Burlew visited Miss It is also being improved with a coat ed to about $40. manufacture from their own power­ bor, spent Friday evening with the Kenneth Smith celebrated his 39th Jean Applegate, of Cheesequake, of paint. birthday with a party of friends SALE house. Approximately 125 employes latter’s mother, Mrs. Mary Gaston. Tuesday evening of last week. will be given work, whioh will help Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Seger visited Friday. Smashing low prices Miss Dorothy McVey, of Westfield, this locality considerably. The in­ Mr. and Mrs. Charles Seger, Keasby, BELFORD made possible through ability of the Spotswood Realty Sunday. spent the week-end with Mr. and our being out of the high Corp. to procure their necessary A fire, which started in Matie’s Mrs. W. W. Brook. VOGEL’S machinery has held this work up, Mr. and Mrs. J. Wright Brown re­ Mrs. John Bennett and Mrs. Ed­ rent district. Woods Monday afternoon was quick­ ward Barnes attended the meeting but it is hoped that this condition turned home Saturday from a two ly extinguished after our firemen of Organ Guild at Princeton Tuesday will be remedied very answered the alarm with the new months’ visit in Europe. N e w Once more we see Poppy Day at John Corcoran, of New York, spent of last week. Men’s New fire truck. No great damage was Trinity Sunday was observed this its best. Many of these paper flowers done. the week-end with his brothers, Beachway Department emblematic in their synthetic beauty Charles and Edward. week at St. Clement’s Episcopal A-* number of friends gathered on Church. Yesterday St. Agnes Guild are being sold, and much good will Miss Carlyne Riskhamm in con­ Spring & Summer Sunday to help Mrs. William Gross of the church held a chow mein be done with the proceeds, hi helping fined to her house with illness. N o w O p e n celebrate her birthday. Those pres­ luncheon and a bunco party. men who are, and have been con­ John Zielinsky and family have ent were: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Elmer Compton has had a new fined in hospitals with wounds and Fessler, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Cress- moved into another house. front porch built on his house on diseases of which the people at large man and daughter, Joan, Mrs. Rose Timothy Daley has redecorated the Church St. know little or nothing. These poor Schulmeister and Mrs. William interior of his house. SUITS Charles Hesse, of this place, who men gave all they had to serve their William Lyons, of Lake Hopatcong, Schulmeister, Mrs. August Kaisaw recently secured a contract for im­ country and have been left isolated spent Friday with George Mott. ;; and daughter, Louise. proving roads in the township has to live the rest .of their lives in a Miss Elsie Bartell, of New York, . 5 0 Mr. and Mrs. James Morrell, of Hubbard Av. resurfacing in the River bedridden state. So what better dis­ spent the week-end with Mrs. R. J. Ravine Dr., Matawan, visited at the Plaza section well toward comple­ position of such small and inade­ Gibbons. home of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore tion. quate funds that can be raised in Schnuck Sunday. Mrs. Catharine Sullivan, Mr. and selling these poppys, can there be. Mr. and Mrs. John Hauser and Mrs. Edward O'Flaherty, Elliott, It becomes the duty of every citizen sons, Millard and Howard, visited Mary and Gerry Sullivan spent Sun­ EAST KEANSBURG of this glorious United States of Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Menzel, Rob- day in South River. to spend the small sum of money ertsville, Thursday evening. The most prosperous summer sea­ they generally do to further this Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schnuck and STATE HOSPITAL son irf years seems probable, judging purpose and work. by the large number of rentals of 4 daughter, Jean, visited Mrs. Lucy From our childhood we have been Williams, of Kunath’s Corner Sun­ Mr. and Mrs. Jack Eisenberg, of summer bungalows already made. told of the Memorial Day services day. Marlboro, have joined the Marlboro Last summer a number of the bung­ State Hospital Orchestra. alows were unoccupied but so many and parades of the veterans of the Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brown, Jr., 1 I various wars who have marched each and daughter, Sharon Lee, Spots­ have already been rented that it FREET FREE! FREE! seerrts probable that few if any will year. We later have seen these wood, visited Mr. and Mrs. Arthur OAK GROVE J5c Belt or Suspenders with i f - | | be without tenants this year. 1 1 things come to pass as the years go Brown, Sr., Suhday. I each suit purchase. Bring this 1 by. Veterans of the Revolutionary cftarles Jurman, of New York, has Mrs. Emil Wahl has been suffering BATHING I coupon with you. War, the Civil War, the Spanish been spending some time at the home from poison ivy. American War, and now the World of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William War have done their bit with un­ Jurman. Mrs. Caroline Copeland SUITS selfish spirit. They leave their work was also a week-end guest there. From and once more don the uniform that Newark Farmers Market, Inc, SLACKS WHITE SUITS 15 STYLES has become to them a heritage, in TENNENT From Linen, Gabardine and Men’s Genuine White order to carry on a work dedicated B u c k s k in C A QC to the memory of those who gave NEW SCHEDULE OF HOURS EFFECTIVE $ 2 .9 5 There will be a memorial service $ Thepcs°Iad: S Q . 5 0 Sport Shoes. their life that we might live. We held at Old Scots Burial Ground at 1.00 y y are fortunate in having such fine 3:30 p. m., on Sunday under auspices MAY 23, 1937 BLOUSES . . . from $1.00 son’s Latest. up Reg. $4 value “ upstanding men in the Township of of Old Tennent Church, which suc­ 2 and 3 Piece PLAY SUITS . from $1.95 Madison who feel that while they ceeded Old Scots (Presbyterian) are not always active in this work Church. The public is invited. M arket Hours each year, are willing to give their Another coin of ancient vintage The Largest Wholesale Market in the State Located in the assistance, as they^ vK£,.&>ne»if true Center of the Metropolitan Area of N. Y. and N. J. VOGEL’S QUALITY SHOP 286 Smith Street open Evenings Perth Amboy NFD AM ) CONTROLLED Corner Broad and Mechanic Sts. Between Oak and Prospect Aye. u. d Euclid Avenues, RED BANK Look for the Quality Shop neon sign

the people of Ole member the fact that They also ison Perrine, of Princeton Junction. their way endeavored to do their bit A possible explanation of the pres­ Beginning oh this day in memory of these men ence of these coins may be found in Are you ready to properly enjoy we do not forget. We are very sorry the superstition which led people on the other hand to have been in­ to toss something of value in a the coming week-end? AT ONCE formed by the Township Committee spring, and “make a wish,” we believe of East Brunswick that they will not was the correlary. ALTERATION make any donation to the village of MAJOR Old Bridge this year. It has been quite an established fact that this LAFAYETTE MILLS Decoration Day township has from days beyond re­ REUSSILLES’, Monmouth’s leading jewelers, find call always made this donation with­ A large brooder house and 1500 Just a few reminders of what you’ll probably need out question for this cause. The young chickens were destroyed Mon­ it necessary to again increase our floor space, citizens and taxpayers who turn out day afternoon by a fire on the farm in expectation for these services are of Gerritt E. Fielstra, Marlboro- Gabardine Suits filled with a feeling that something Tennent road. No authentic esti­ that we may present a greater assortment of has gone wrong. Can any reasona­ mate of damage was immediately New models and shades. ble excuse for such an act in this available as the owner was in New sort of an endeavor be recognized? York where he is connected with 27.50 to 40.00 new merchandise to our fast growing number Many expenditures have been made the New York Public Library. Ger­ in municipalities and in time a re­ ald Finlay, a workman, who discov­ of customers. turn can usually be seen for the ered the blaze, said the chicks were expenditures made, but who makes worth about $160. Replacement of Sport Coats such a quick return as men who take the brooder probably would exceed $1000. Finlay was attracted to the Snappy checks, plaids care of the annual Memorial Day STARTLING VALUES work? H owler, the people of Old blaze when a thermostatic alarm sys­ and plain colors. We are about to begin construction of a new, Bridge may rest assured that the tem sounded on becoming overheat­ services will go on just the same and ed. He summoned firemen of the 12.50 to 20.00 / in the deficiency is being taken care of Marlboro and Freehold fire depart­ large addition to our present building, followed by popular subscription by the bus­ ments who were powerless to save WRIST WATCHES iness organizations, the citizens, and the brooder but kept the flames from by complete interior alterations to our present the American Legion of this village, spreading to a larger hennery nearby. Sport Slacks DIAMONDS to such effect that nothing will ob­ STERLING SILVER struct the continuance of these ser­ TINTON FALLS Plaids, checks and plain store. vices and the usual parade. Services flannels. CLOCKS will start with the parade to the Ernest Wadley has bot an Interna­ cemetery, services will be rendered tional automobile truck for use in 3.50 to 8.50 GOLD JEWELRY by the American Legion, with the delivering ice cream from his Twin To do this it is essential that we dispose of, as able and willing assistance of the Brook Farm. Wash Slacks NOVELTIES Rev. Albert Latscher, who gives his Eugene Tipling has repainted the TROPHIES every effort to this work. The pa­ fences and made other improvements 1.95 to 3.50 quickly as possible, the major portion of our rade will then go down to the Old to the farm which he occupies. STEM-WARE Bridge Circle, around same, and back Wednesday, June 16, has been fixed to the triangle, where Joseph Edgar, as the commencement date of the LAMPS large, complete stock. past commander of the state dept, public school. The final tests have Jantzen of New Jersey, American Legion, will not taken place but it seems probable SILVER CHESTS deliver to us the message of the that all the members of the eighth Swim Suits for Ladies day, at which point the services will grade will be graduated. RINGS break up. At 3 o’clock in the after­ and Men. The pupils of the public school en- j CULTURED PEARLS noon the Old Bridge contingent will joyed dancing a few days ago after 4.50 to 7.95 proceed to Spotswood where they study hours. Music was provided by I DIAMOND JEWELRY will give their assistance to the boro a Works Progress Administration I SALE there in their services. orchestra. PICKARD CHINA The Sgt. Jos. B. Crandall Post, No. Men's Tranks 177, of the American Legion, of Old IRISHTOWN CHROMIUM-WARE We offer our merchandise at tremendous price Bridge, held its regular meeting in 1.95 to 5.00 the post rooms last Thursday. His­ SILVER PLATE Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hauser, of torian Dqnton Brohme, of the Mid­ Broad St., Keyport, have purchased reductions. Be thrifty! Buy now! Our cus­ dlesex County organization, present­ LEATHER WALLETS the O’Reilly bungalow here on land ed the post historian, Harry Steph­ once owned by the late E. D. Petteys, Manhattan Polo Shirt, ^ a m -P a n a m a s SPORTS JEWELRY enson, a prize of a post historian’s tomary service will prevail. postmaster of Keyport and publisher \ r . . _ . Stetson, Penn-Craft and overseas cap, made of a blue serge, of The Keyport Weekly. The house in Mesh and Celenese. Hopkins. with the certified insignia of rank which he lived burned and the small­ worked in gold. This prize was 1.00 to 2.00 1.95 to 7.00 er one was erected. After alterations Watch Come In awarded to Comrade Stephenson for the Hausers will occupy the premises. his efforts in compiling the finest Our Edwin R. Peseux and Edwin H. Wall­ See Our American Legion History in the ing, Hazlet, are doing the masonry. Store closed all day Monday— Decoration Day Windows County of Middlesex. The winner REUSSILLES’ of this prize has become so proficient For Monmouth’s Leading Jewelers Wonderful in this work that his assistance has WEST KEANSBURG been solicited in Middlesex County Mr. and Mrs. J. Hamilton Maxley, j VALUES! VALUES! work along this line. of Maplewood, have reopened their j 36 BROAD ST. RED BANK home at this place for the season. MATCHAPONIX J. KRIDEL DIAMOND JEWELRY SPECIAL ORDERS AT WICKATUNK ------RED B A N K ------Telephone 1831 Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Smith and REMODELING—REDUCED SPECIAL DISCOUNTS son, Donald, and Mrs. James Healey, Mrs. Frank Creavey is now em­ of Spotswood road, are on a motor ployed in the Schulte-United store Free Parking rear Broad St. Stores trip to Canada. at Red Bank. ‘