The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no more four Page Colored 22 Pages Today Comic Section CARTERET PRESS Three Sections VOL. VIII, No. 33 CAUTKRET, N. J , I'KIDAV, MAY 2, ll>30 PRICE THREE CENTS Seton Hall Debater* Police Round Up Polish Social Club Vanquish Carteret Team Held For Grand Jury TELEVISION SET AT ROESSLER'S School Board Voids In a Rutgers Interscholastic League Juvenile Lone Eagles Appoints Committee: Debate, Carteret High was defeated On Robbery Charge by Seton Hall yeaterday afternoon Roessler's, Perth Amboy'i lead- One Boy Robbed Cars Alone Now Organization Ai»o Plan* at the Carteret High School. Seton Fitch Street Man Placed Under ing furniture store, will exhibit a Heating Co. Contract Hall received the unanimous decision But Had 7-Year-CHd Look- First Annual Banquet and A of the judges who were students 5500 Bail For Hearing On General Electric Television radio Decide* To Give Job To Next Lowe*t Bidder Because Burne, out* —- Another Wai Teach- Drive For Member*. from Rutgers College. Charge Of Breaking Into set every afternoon next week Carteret, upholding the affirmative Lane & Richardson Would Not Follow Kn^-iA^.tSpecification*; . ing Youngster • To Shoot side of the topic, "Resolved that Cafe At Night. from three until five o'clock. The A mwt n By a Crap. m } ^ ' R of the Pulaftki Social Homa Work Should Be Abolished in set will be operated from Schenec- resolution adopted by the start work within three days or H* Uub held on Monday night at the AIL High Schools," was represented Edgar IStaubach, 23 years old, of Board of Education at a »p«ci»l contract would be terminated. The Falcon Hall, Frank Godeski, presi tady, N. Y. The public i* cordially Two Juvenile lone eagle operatives by Edith Brown, Isabella IStruthers 02 Fitch Btreet was held for the ac- meeting Monday night, the contract Ann ignored Jacoby's letter and ha* were rounded up by the police over dent of the club, appointed the fol and Bernard Jtosenbleuth. Miss Mar- tion of the Grand Jury on a charge invitwj to see and hear it. The ma- •till refused to go ahead with the lowing committee*: garet PrentiM, Blue and White de- of breaking and entry at a hearing of Burn*, Lanes A Richardson to in- work. the week-end and arraigned in po- chine, which forecast* a new fu- lice court on Monday night. Henry Finance; Jo*eph Urbanski, Loretta bating coach, presided. It is pro- Monday night in police court. Stau- stall the hutting and ventilating ap- The bid of the Burns, Lane * MartencEUk, and Frank Godeski. bable that this debate will mark the bach w«» brought in and quetioned ture for the radio world, may be pliances tn the addition to the Na- Richardson Company was _,, .. Kondas, 16 year* old, of Bergen Banquet: Stephen Cjywkaki, William appro xi- street, IM brought in on two charge*. close of the season for the Carteret Sunday after a report was made to than Hal* School, wa* terminated. matery 91,000 lover than that of Hartenciuk, Loretta Martenwsuk, Ed- debating team. up until next Saturday night. Railroad police charged that he had n the police that Cheret's place in the The board alab adopted another reso- Vandarberg. The attorney advteed "•"• *> ]!«>1™ki. Prank Eck and been breaking into freight car», and Heil building in Roosevelt avenue lution awarding the contract to Fred the board that it may either readver- Frank Godeaki. Entertainment: Matt near the Central Railroad Station Mrs. Ann Pikowka alleged that he Urbaiuki, John Puchak, Edward Bon- A. Vandwbearg, the next lowest bid- tlse or award the contract to the next had Been burglarised on Saturday bidder. Both method* are valid, Ja- h»d a habit of breaking window* for kowski, Joseph Pugd and Stelta der. the fun of it. night. At the close of business* on Wild Night Ride eoby explained. There was consider- Caaja. Membership: Andrew Hudak, Legion Team Wins When the bid* were advertised In hia raids on freight car*, de- William Martenczuk and Betty Saturday night Cheret placed $45 in able dicussion as to the procedure currency in a tumbler with a top and specification* ware given to the Commissioner Mittuch favored re-ad- tectives said, he alwayi worked alone Lukac. Welfare: Andrew Ginda, Stel- bidden, a special type of unit wa* *o f*r as entering the .cars wa* con- la CaaJa, Catharine Niemen, Mitt and concealed it in crushed ice in Cost Driver license vertising, to ts to avoid any legalities Over Elizabeth Nine the ice box. When he opened his detailed in the •peciAcatloro. The tf»t »»y occur. President Theodow cerned but be had several little boys, Urbanski, Frank Ssymanoski ahd Burns, Lane A Mehardson Company seven or eight year* old who acted Prank Ekalewiu. place on Sunday morning he found A. Bishop explained that it would Cardinal* Of Union County that a burglar had entered during the Woman Companion I* Injured was the lowset bidder. Later thia con- take several weeks to re-advert!** a lookout*. He wa* paroled for furth- Preliminary plan* ware discussed cern wanted to Install a different .«r investigation. Town Get 6-3 Drubbing night by breaking a pane of glass in and Car I* Wrecked In Final tod that tail would hold up work. for the first annual banquet to be a side door and turning the key in type of unit and explained that the About twenty per cent of the work Joseph Harri*, 18, of 57 Union Ijven by the dub on June l at the From D'Zurilla's Men, Episode, bid WM based on the second type. street, another lone operator the lock. Is already completed, Bishop said. lish Falcon Hall. The organization Sergeants Dowling and Andrea, When directed to use the unit* ore- Commissioner Conrad said it would brought in by Officer Dan K alao decideded to participate in the Charle* Dako. who formerly re- scribed by the specification*, the firm At the time of the airett he bad Displaying the tame attack which ari d Acting Sergeant John Connolly be advisable to take up the matter Memorial Day exercise*i , sponsored resulted in their first win of the sea- worked on the caw. It was learned sided at 38 Hudson street and who refused to atait it* work. In the with the bonding company before the some small boys behind a shed teach- each year by the Carteret American now live* at 88 Central avenue, ven- meantime, other construction wa* go- ing them how to ahoot crap. The son two week* ago, the American Le- that Stauback had been out of funds board was to take any action on the Legion, Post No. 268. It was also gion baseball team smashed its way early Saturday evening and that lat- tured forth upon a ride Saturday at ing on. matter. Commissioner Conrad and officer brought in the dice. Harri* decided to open a membership drive. A. M .that got him into all kinds David Jaooby, attorney of the was given a reprimand and dismissed to a 6-3 victory over the Elisabeth er some time after midnight he ap- Welblund, a* well a* President Bto- The charter will remain open for Cardinal* ifftinday afternoon on the peared in a lunch cart with a toll of of trouble, according to the police. board, wrote to the concern several hop, were in favor of turning th* with a warning not to appear again leveral months, the president said, so And this statement of the police was weeks ago, declaring that it muet in court. high school field before several hun- bills. Police said that Staubaek de- contract over to the next bidder. that those who wish to join during dred spectators. nied the burglary until Sergeant verefled to tome extent Monday The attorney explained at this this time may become charter memb- Mickey Mirfecs's fine pitching per- Dowling showed him fingerprint*,on night when Oako's license to drive point that the. board, if it were to ers. formance was paramount in the Le- the tumbler and proposed to take>M* which he fought for so hard a year award the contract to Fred A. Vaa- gion victory. His speed ball *lsnts for comparison. Then or so ago, was revoked and he was Health Day Marked derberg, could hold the bonding com- Bergtajfred; Kan proved too mu«h ta*\)ut CawlljiaU. fte {bargebut denjed fined f 16. pany liable for the difference be- "" ~'sflit Insists ha shut nut tha. fflttEfi mra&Ji. A<*swsU|g.-. te the Cartet«t poliee tween tha bid of Burns, Lanss k Summit Church Sunday Cardinals without a single run and the IfA tb»t in car and the car it hit head- Catholic University of Washington • Perth Amboy with a Miglecz 7: by tfewbeck 2: by Hoh- WWeslel y BrowB n andd .IIITIII M H<'lf»rd. ganization of boys connected with on were slightly injured. who will be ordained to the priest- • clearance Rale in which is offerwl ntc weiler 1. Base* on balls off Miglecz There were son^n ami K]>ewh™ hy hood of the 0. S. B. in June. His is St Joseph's Catholic church will PRESBVTERIAH NOTES 0; off Neubeck 2; off Hohweiler 4. IOlar merchandise at bargain price*. Miw Mary Ewing, a missionary Elsie Boiaka, ('lmrloUei Gardner, the fint case in the annals of the IA wide variety of drewes of sheer Losing pitcher, Neubeck. Sacrifice Sylvia Price and Wesley Catri. Pulnski Pin League Catholic Church in America where from Mexico will speak on "Mission- hits, Siekerka, Rankin and Starr. sketch mis of the play Is "In the Heart of The I voile or beautiful prints which arc ary Work In Mexico", at the 11 o'- An Amos and Andy skoti Winds Up Tonight an Englishman born on English soil inow so popular are offered at ilrastic- Attendance, 400. Time 1:42. Umpire, presented by Frnnk Kn.wn, James came to America to study for and Shamrock.' The three events will ilork service Sunday morning in the Donovan. take place in St. Joseph's Hall. fally low price*. They range in pric<> Presbyterian church. "The Visible Relford, Thomas Chirk, Kmnry .lohn- join the priesthood. son and Wesley Hniwn. Others who After two match games are rolled land sire for children of one to four rhritrt" will be the topic of the pas- tonight on Coughlin's alleys, the Pu- • teen or fifteen yeors of age. There in tor at the evening service at 7:45, took part were: Alk.- U>WIT, Fred Great Musical Event Geroniamua, Ymithn Wifly, John lnski Howling League become* his- I also a selection of import*! full fash On Monday evening the Mothor- tory The pace-setting Hearta are Honed socks, silk pongee units, broad Tciipher Association will hold an im- On Sunday, May 11 Yuronkn, Etiinui !M:II, •!("» Fezza, John Perry, NHiolii.-; II"H"I>, Magda- scheduled to meet the Spadee and A Warning to the People. I cloth blouses, boys' wanh »uit» and portant meeting. On Wednesday the tho Diamonds will tako on the Clubs [union suiU for boya or girls. Big re- Junior Hoy ('rus&ders will hold their One of the outstanding musical lene MitturM, Kv.-lvn Collins, Trika Wolf, Dorothy MrKissir, Dorothy in the wind-up games. rdnetionn on girls' cixiU in a host of first rehearsal. ovenU each year in this auction of At the present writing the Hearts I style* and m|npi are also offered. Connelly. .Iiinetio K.meewiM, Alino It ii about time for the people of Carteret to wake The trustee will meet on Tuesday the »tate is the annual musicale giv- 1 Laannr, Albert Kosti'iibader, Mabel are leading in the circuit by nine night, ani on Thursday night there en by the students of Georgian Court ful lgames. The Hearta clinched the up to the fact that "Cheap John * General Store" i* the will be a meeting of the Session. College, Lakewood, N. J. Thia year Washington, Clmrl<'s Solder, Oluxrl<« Hit«, Kntln>rini< (itunl, Ib-rthn Van- title several w«eka ago and if they only store where the highest grade of merchandise it sold WE TAKE PRIDE IN OUR the musicals will be given on Sunday, lose all three games tonight to the May 11, and will begin promptly at vary. Arpod Sinkii. Kluin Ijobia, Ken- at the lowest price*. PRESCRIPTION neth USewart, Miirtf»icL Krdle, Anna Spades, they will atill be six games to New. of All twUrtl Boroufh in 3:30 P. M. daylight Having time. the good. DEPARTMENT Th» Pr»«, the m«l wUaly Georgian Court College has hud I'ohl, Helen I!n/,fh()W.Hki, Gladys A full line of curtain goods, bed *preada, Boy*1 rMd paper in Cariarat many young women students from Schwartz, Jcmeph Herink. Edna Dus- Carteret Republican Units this section in the |>aflt; others are ko, Kntelle Ueecli, Antoinette Schultz, clothing, hosiery, underwear, hat*, cap* and the beet Irene Pedlam. Itulh ll«nry and So- To Have Joint Meeting ITTUCH'S attending there, now. The college grade of *hoe* for the whole family. ranks high amontc institutions of phie Nostorourrz. M Est. l»0S Piano Instructions learning in %11 lirnncheB but hna won A joint meeting of the Roosevelt especial fame for its success in miui- —Miss Margarfit Mesaros, Mia* Republican Club and the Ladies Re- THEY FILL PRSSCKIPT1OMI Afternoons After 4 O'clock cal instruction in all brnncheo. Helen Shulak and Mrs. B. Me«ro* publican Club will be held tonight MISS LOTTIE WEINSTEIN attended the dance at the Elisabeth* in firehouse No. 1. It ia Announced Cheap John's General Store 61 May Devotions will bo be-ld Carteret Hotel Friday nigjit. The very important business" is to Ml AYMMM week-day afternoon in St. Joe- danee insidered and all the members i are i I'AUE TW« FRIDAY, MAY 2, CARTERET PRESS

Ford Bodies Built For Ease and Quiet Riding The Decora lor "a Letter Box "The new Ford, bodies are not only . . Expert Advlre on Home? Decoration . . beautiful, but they.are soundly con- THE structed," Dorey Motors Inc., local Kord dealer* mid "They lit built §3 SMITH IT. I 1 for i>u«y riding and comfort. "The front fender and forward tliiHt shield is one piec«, minimixing JTL0ANI; the possibility of rattle or aquesje. The xume in true of the running hoard and side dust shield or valance. 200 LOVELY NEW SILK FROCKS Double-ply anti-tqueak tase la used between trie, fender* and the bodies. "In aMwinhling the body, panels and frame section* are welded and rivet ill tofrelher wherever there Is -[VEDGtJEENS- possibility of the body weaving- due SILK PRINTS IN FLQRAL AND OTHED NEW PATTERNS. to uni'veti conditions on the road*. FLAT CREPEB, GEORGETTES, NEW SPRING STYLES. BLUE SPCUCf This eliminates the chance of metal- lic squeaks from this source. In the Real $10.00 Values Special at $5.95 linal assembly of the large units of the hixiv. strips of anti-squeak ma- 8 Evergreens terial are uaed between the bolts and $ 80 the body sections. ' 100 Regular $12.95 to $1495 "To prevent noise being imparted 1 Sprue*, 2 Ar- 1 from the cl-.aasis frame to the body, borvitaa, 2 Scotch Pia», hardwood Hllers are uaed In all the I Austrian Pine. sills of the body. There- Is a constant SILK FKOGKS T»M* lr**i ar* 5 j*ar« tendency for thwe blocks to expand so that they maintain a tiffht At in- 2 Colorado Blu. Sprue. ....$1.10 definitely. In addition rubber cush- Special at 2 AMIMI hardy carlr U«a- ion* are us«d to all points where the body is bolted to the chassis. torn* 1.10 4 AsaUat MollU Oranf. .. 1.10 'Before, the interior of the car it > Japan*** B*J-b*rry 1.18 upholstered ami trimmed, sound CREPES, GEORGETTES, CHIFFONS 1.10 deadening material is utilised in al A Olsgrim of tha Roams, Drawn to ftcala. It a tig Help in Arranging th* 40 Saapdravgaaa mined 1.10 placet where noises may be caused Sixes to 50 40 AlUn n(x*d 1.10 by vibration. Heavy galvanised sol- Furniture, • 1.10 dered mwh wire- is ued to support 40 DaUia flowariaa Zinaiai comfy ones—and a lamp. Voor wrltluc 40 Larkspur BOYaltj 1.10 the roof trimming; of the closed can. Beth Dear: 40 Stniwfloww* no»*ltjr ... 1.10 This, with heavy padding, insures I'm going to suggest something I troop will Uke in the desk and chair, IB Petunia Calif ami. Giant* 1.10 quietness and eliminates the poeatbll know you'll like. You alwara were proper lighting radllilei and. If poa 30 GUdiol.t, larr* UIIM ty of vibration that might result in keen shout maps and charts. So take I sibls, four books. One of those Gov- mii*d 1.10 a roof made of wooden nlata. ernor Wlnthrop secretnry desks wlHi Coats! Coats! piece of paper and draw a diagram of • Canna attortad •luted your rooms with every window, door, a book cupboard ol>ov« would be per plant* 1.10 feet In your living room. The reading —Please mention this paper when Hreplaee and what-all la place and in 15c additional for packing and buying from advertisers.— just the right proportion. You might group may also be the gossip group pottage. draw the diagram on a scale of one or It msy consist of • chnlr. a lamp foot to half an Inch, that U a rery and s sJdstable—one with s booh Fllinf Cuiton convenient scale and jour drawing wilt trough beneath—on another side of NEW SPRING COATS — BEAUTIFUL SELECTION It Is customary tn most systems of be a good site. For every foot of the the room. At any rate, both Charlie TWEEDS - BENGALINES - BROADCLOTH Yanosik Nurseries filing to file behind the Indei Utter. length of your rooms make one-half and Jon should be sure to have plenty SPORT AND DRESS MODELS NORTH LBHKJH AVKNUK This la LU* custom used In the Ubrttfj tosh Your clotting group will Include balance as well, without being spotty AffertlnniitPly, Fern Eture. SLITS your sofa a couple of chairs—very BEN. C. BALDWIN <(O, 1110. WMli in Newipaper Union.) FLOWER SHOPPE and GREENHOUSE N**4 for Ednuktioai $14.95 101 JAMES STREET Tel. 727 Kn*w Hli V*(*tabl« The kindergarten children were Some men have the Idea that home NEW SPRING SUITS, 2 AND 3 PIECE MODELS, LACY CREPES, looking at pictures of different ani- Is the place where they can shed Floral Designs A Specialty mals used on the farm and telling the their coats, their company manners WOOL CREPES, KNITTED, AND PORIETT TWILL. COLLEGIATE SPORT STYLES. BEST VALUES. Palms - Fern* • Pot Plants - Cut Flowers use of each animal. When they came sad the smile they've been wear- to the picture of a horse one little ing all dsy.—Cincinnati Enqolrer. Also A Full Line of Vegetable Plants fellow said: "I know what ws get from a horse^—horseradish." mr Rooms $ 50 Complete 397-

1 BUFFET 43 Piece 1 CHINA CLOSET 1 EXTENSION TABLE Dining Room 1 SERVING TABLE 5 SIDE CHAIRS Outfits 1 ARM CHAIR 1 ROOM SIZE RUG 1 FLOORLAMP .00 31-PC. DINNER SET 139

1 BED 1 VANITY 1 DRESSER 11-Piece I CHEST OF DRAWERS I SPRING Bed Room 1 MATTRESS Outfit Drastic Reductions 1 27 INCH RUG 2 PILLOWS 1 BEDROOM CHAlri IN ALL SUITS 1 BEDROOM BENCH

SUITS That Were SUITS That Were 1 SETTEE 1 ARMCHAIR 1 CLUB CHAIR 10-Piece . »40and»45 »30 and »35 1 ROOM SIZE RUG 1 END TABLE living Room 1 DAVENPORT TABLE Outfit NOW 1 FLOORLAMP 1 TABLE LAMP ', 1 BRIDGE LAMP $ .00 $29-50 1 SMOKING STAND 139 WINDO i. fill I IN ONLY SPECIAL 187 Smith St.) Perth Amboy, N. J. James McCollum "GOOD CLOTHES FOR EVERY MAN" Irving Street CAR! FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1930 AGAIN!

IN THE FINAL DAY/ Cf OULQ SALE

OPEN

At Ludwig's.... Feature of 18 MONTHS LUDWIG'S 22nd TO PAY ANNIVERSARY

A small deposit secure* your purehtM; These are Ludwig's Famous Half-Price The balance is divided into eafy weekly Days .... presenting the greatest values in /$ payments, allowing you 18 Montht to Pay. HALF our history. Thousands of dollars worth of PRICE! merchandise being sold for about Half!

PILLOW-A^M SUITE IN JACQUARD

Regularly $298! A three-piece Living Room Suite with pillow arms, covered in an attractive Jaequard. The suite is of sturdy construction with a graceful serpentine frame and elaborately carved legs. The loose reversible cushions are spring filled.

$10 DEPOSIT DELIVERS THIS SUITE

3-Pc. Woven Fibre Suite 3-Pc. Living Room Suite Regularly $179: We sold hundreds of those Itt'gularly $49.50! Three pieces, consisting dS suites at the regular price and now offer a (jf sofa and two chairs, mad* of long- V .95 limited quantity at HALF PRICE. Th*> wearing woven fibre. The suite is finely fin- three piec-ea are covered in durable velour ished and decorated in a choice of colorful '24 with reversible cushions in the same ma- designs. Buy now for your summer needs. $1 DELIVERS terial. $5 DELIVERS Double 5-Pc Day Bed Breakfast Set $14.95 $24.75 HALF PRICE! HALF PR1CE1 Regularly $29.7f>. A fine A colorful breakfast suite day bed with metal ends consisting: of a table and 4 finished a rich brown. well-built chairs. Attract- Cretonne upholster- ively enameled and decorat- ed. Complete with mat- ed. tress. HALF PRICE! 4-Pc. Bed Room Suite

Regularly $274! Hare is a value only Ludwig's could give you. Thin bedroom suite, of unusual strength and.grace, is constructed of walnut veneers with overlays of Birds' Eye Maple. Suite consists of full size 137 Kitchen Chair Telephone Set bed, chest, dresser and rutty. $10 DELIVERS $1.89

$7.75 HALF PRICE Regularly $3.75! A limited HALF PRICE quantity of sturdy chain fleguUrir 115.76! The sUnd for kitchen , use. Hearily enameled in white and easy has a handy shelf for tele- to clean. phone books and is finished a rich mahogany. Complete with chair to match. 3-Pc. Chair and Bed Outfit Ottoman $17.95 $34.50 HALF PRICE in \ \\vllltii,,.wmsm.. Astounding Value! A three HALF PRICE piece outfit consisting of a metal bed, comfortable mat- The comfortable velour cov- tress and sanitary link ered chair has an adjustable spring. Bed may be had in hack which r-wlines in three either brown or ivory finish. positions. Han fringed arms and base. Complete with ottoman to match. HALF PRICE! 10-Pc. Lining Room Suite •i: SUMMER RUGS Regularly 12981 A wonderful value if there ever was one, IJere are REFRIGERATORS 10 beautiful pieces developed in Walnut Veneers with diamond grain- The Famous "Deltox" Brand All Steel Construction ed front* adding a beautiful touch. Suite oensists of extension table, buffet, eenrar, china closet, host chair and R *ide chairs. 149 $10 DELIVERS HALF PRICE HALF PRICE OPEN MONDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS $16.95

j-$ $5 Allowance for your old Refrigerator Size 9 x 12 ft.

LUDWIC Durable fibre rugs, gayly colored, in a selection «f at- y Regularly ?49,50! Despite this drastically low price, Lud- tractive designs. You will find them ideal for use either ' wlg's will allow you |5 for your old refrigerator. The* indoors or on the porch. Smaller sizes also offered at box pictured is built entirely of sUel with'Urge sanitary 175 SMITH STREET, COR. MADISON AVENUE HALF In this phenomenal Sale. food and Ice chamber!. $1 DELIVERS PERTH AMBOY, N. J. PACE FOUR FRIDAY, MAY 2, \>.YM) CARTERET J»HES3

INK IIMTC iifpii., .iiiwim t'«'iy i-nuiife Please mention this paper when I gut, and tin1" IIH "t »i"l'i t'"1' "IB'IJ i from advertisem. Spring Activities we hud our talk. Mr. Mllllkin, I wan CARTERET PRESS n sure! Is l'«lly ll»"le I""1*-'1'1?" a "That there Mr Snuirl huB tnken Here's Instant Relief Subscription, f 1.B0 Per Year them to prayer meWliiK In Mis speedy Published Every Friday By car." regretted Mr. Mllllkin. From Bunion Pains ('. 11. BYRNE, 130 Jersey St., CARTERET, N. J. "Then. I'll Ju« run around there Telephone Carteret 1600 and bring them li«.me—by the long and Soft Corns est way around. Have I jour per C. H. BYRNE Editor and Owner mission, sir?" AetnaDr Reduce, the Swelling—Soft "Oh. go on, do as "you like, Peter, Coma Dry Rig hi Up and Can Entered M second claai matter June 6, 1924, at Carteret, N. J., I can't tell jou anything I" chuckled Be Picked Off Post Offlea, under tha Act of March 8, 1879. , ,. , Mr. Mllllkin contentedly. (Ppyrllht.) tJt a two-ounce bottle of MooneV Emerald Oil (full ttrengih) today. Eterr well-Mocked druggiit hu thia, ud it will Fowlfn Advertiiinf fUprMantatirea Ma *••!. •!•»•• a SnmfiUr reduce tbe inflammation, aoreneea, anil New Jersey Nelfhborhood Nawipapert, Inc. John Poul Jones. Drat roan to brine ptln much quicker than any remedy you glory to the American (las at sea. ereruied. waa a smuKfler in bis youth. He Your bunion* may be to twoDen and BACK THE PRESIDENT heltied bring to the ahorei of H«it Inflamed that you think you can't go land cargoes which tha Brltlib K»V another Hep. Your *hoe» may feel a* if In his recommendations to Congress Monday, President ernment was trytnu to exclude, and they are cutting right into tbe fleth. Yon hit activities in rtmiglng and ltahtln» fed tiok all over with the pain and tor- Hoover has gone straight to the heart of what is perhaps the tore and pray for quick relief. What'* to tbe British warahlpa that were iryinit be done T most serious danger in this country today, the failure of en to break op that trade e»vr him th* Two or three application* of Moone'a forcement of criminal law. There are those who will say that seamanship snd knowledge of wetUi Emerald Oil and in fifteen minute* alt that wars to make bin such a (real the lain and torenew diaappean. A /ew unemployment is a more serious matter. Unemployment is naval ladder later on.—Kokomo more application! at regular interral* and very serious matter but the condition there js Improving slowly Trlbuna. the iWliag reduce*. And a* for toft corn*, a few applica- while the failure to enforce criminal law b steadily becoming tion* each night at bed Uaavand theyjoat worse, more pronounced. seem to shrinl right up and aoale off. N«*a «f Alt Cartwat Bormgfc Drngfiau guarantee Moon*'a Kaaarald The president lays the greatest stress upon the failure of TIM PIWM, tba WMt wMaly Oil to end you foot tnoMaa or BMOST Cartw»t enforcement of laws relating to intoxicating Ifquors, but he back. does not overlook the general breaking down of enforcement of and respect for all law. In part his message^ is as follows: "While a considerable part of this condition arises from Your Ad in This Paper the laws relating to Intoxicating liquors, yet the laws relating to narcotics, automobile thefts, et cetera, which have been en acted by the Congress during recent years, also contribute to Is Read in the Home create the present conditions. This is well indicated by the fact that less than one-third of Federal prisoners are due to prohi- bition, ' "Our obedience to law, our law enforcement and judicial organization, or judicial procedure, our care and methods of WRONG POLICIES IN INDUSTRY The Ljpng Way handling prisoners, in relation to not only Federal Government but also to the State and municipal governments are far from By DR. JOHN TAYlOR ALTON, OmU^l (M.lhodiitl. Round the standards that must be secured. These proposals, while they da not comprehend the whole which remains to be done B, L. A. DAV1ES O ONE is In a position to donbt that Ort Industrial conditions, in file Nation, are a step toward lifting the Federal standards »»•»••>••«»>•»»•»•»••»>»< so far a« the worker is concerned, are much improved over a which must have a general beneficial influence," O-O-O," drnwled old Mr. Mini generation ago, but there is a long way to go before ideal condi- "N kin. glum-Ing shrewd); up at The Literary Digest poll and independent polls conducted tions are reached. For instance, child labor laws are being passed the eager-eyed young man In the bat by newspapers all over the land haVe demonstrated that opin- throughout the country, but there are »till thousands of children between tered tittle <-nr, "1 don't know as I'd ion is pretty widely divided on the prohibition question. But care to have my Polly married, Peter, Dine and fifteen years of age at work and as fast as laws are passed and nnlesa 'twas to some up-an'-eomln' there is no division of opinion among respectable citizens re- enforced in this country those industries when child labor can be used young feller." Why? Because the Home Town Paper garding the need of better enforcement of law in case of recog- "t thought I wu8 up and coming. are going to the Orient and today thousands of oriental children between is an institution—a regular visitor that nized crime. And it fo here, we thing, that the most serious re- Mr. Mllllkin," mild Peter, trying bard the ages of five and fifteen years an working for the pitiful wage of from to smile. "I've been coming around to every member of the family looks for sults are arising from failure to enforcement. It might be added cents to $1.50 a week. This is being done by American capital from see Polly for a yenr Dow.™ md reads from front to back. We that It is the municipalities which have fallen flat in the matter to-called Christian America. "Yep—and you've taken the same of enforcement. Mayors of cities and towns, and governors of route every time, Peter Marr, the have Cuts and Copy to help you build I know there is a change in policy in industry which proceeds on longest way around—all the w«j states should take the same stand that the president has taken the very sound and logical reasoning that it is good business to pay good around by Shelby's quarry and tbe olij yo ur »a d vertiaem ent. and should keep up the agitation until worth while results are hltt, when the shortest way from your wages, for if a man has money he will buy more goods, and the more he house to mine Is to out across the obtained. In many municipalities grave fault* have been un- buys the greater the demand, and the greater the demand the greater the green—and here you are In live mln covered in police departments. In others the police do their profit to the manufacturer. But there are still many industrial concerns uten." duty as far as they are permitted, but they are held in check "I know that—I've thought of thm that have not caught that vision. One man in this country confesses to way—I used It often as a boy, but In by "higher ups". There are instances where the trouble seems an income of over a million dollars annually and pays the girls in his fac- the last year I Just cannot help com to center about the magistrates. Politics in some form is at the tory from $8 to $15 a week. I am far from being a Socialist, but I am Ing around by the quarry I" bottom of a great deal of the trouble. Politics and money, on "Just can't help wasting time and convinced that the unjust accumulation and inequitable distribution of money, eh?" the one hand and lack of public sentimfent for real respect for gigantic surplus profits is deplorable. "Money J" law on the other. "Gasoline, when you're riding your No industry should be allowed to operate in such a manner that it little bus. here." The case of the murderer—bootlegger Remus in Ohio at- can ruthlessly and without warning dump an army of unemployed out on Peter glanced down at the shabby tracted wide attention a few years ago. Remus murdered his the street. If there is a slack in sales let the work that remains be divided flivver. "I suppose It does seem thai way to other people, but I've'got the wife in cold blood in Eden Park. He pleaded his own case and among the workmen. luihlt of coming the long way around, succeeed in being committed to a hospital for the insane.-In a and It's hard to break. Now, whin short time he was released and a free man. you Just said about Polly—you know. Mr. Mllllkin, It means a lot to me com But one does not have to travel so far as Ohio to fin MIND MATTER OF RELATIVITY Ing here to see her, and hoping all th« case's of the amazing ease with which offenders escape with time that some day—" Hfl stopped By DONALD A. LAIRD, Colfati Unlvtnitj. and looked off it the bold shoulder little or no punishment. In Carteret a week ago a 17-year-ol of the quarry bill.that Jutted against youth was arrested for annoying high school girls. Indecen the blue sky. proposals and indecent exposure were his specialties. He ad- Physical differences are as nothing compared with the enormous dif- "Of course, Peter, you know ma and mitted his guilt and there was a gesture of punishment. He was ferences that may be found in mentality. Education does not seem to 1 think a lot of yon. being a nice boy Business Stationery and we've known you all our lives, given sixty day's in the workhouse. The next day his sentenc improve one's regular equipment of brains. Children who are found by nnd I always thought Polly did, too. but she's a prudent girl, and you was cut to a fine of $26 which was paid, by his parents, and i testa to have a little less than the usual modicum of brains in the first Every business man should have letterheads youth as desirable to be at large as a mad dog, was given his grade are still a little behind when they are in the fifth grade, and in case couldn't blame ber If she did get rather Interested In that new automo- »nd envelopes printed especially for him. freedom. they reach the eighth grade, they still test a little below. bile salesman that's staying over to Intelligence is not increased by going to college. Neither is it a Andrew's place. He's always wanting And it is a matter that he should not On the shore road a man and his son sat in a parked car to take as all out In his cars—and entirely off the highway. A truck with two men in the cab and chance affair. Parents with brains much above the average have children ma and I certainly do enjoy It In our economize on by buying the cheapest he several others on the flat deck of the truck came along. The with brains much above the average. Brains seem to be quite definitely old age," chuckled rerotnlscently. can get. Good stationery pays big divi- driver became confused and ran off the road and hit a tele- inherited, just as eye color, stature or temperament. "And Pnllyr questioned Peter's low, , dends. Let us show you samples. If education does not improve intelligence, what makeB college men strained voice. phone pole overturning the truck and injuring some of the men 1 "Well—she's nice to him," admitted in the back part of it. The man and his son who were in their successful? Of hundreds of thousands of men in the army during mobi- Mr. Mllllkin. "Now, that young feller, car across the street went to the assistance of the injured. The lization the average store was fi&.Afte r the war the same test was given he never comes the long way around » to a large number of students entering college for the first time. The when he's coming here, Peter; be Just son remained to give personal aid while the father sent for the •iioots aronnd tbe corner by tbe State Police and an ambulance. These two, the father and son average score by these freshmen was 150. church and he's here tn two minutes had nothing whatever to do with the accident but because their Tjhis does not mean that the college freshman hae twice as much Thnt'S. the way be come tonight, and CARTERET PRESS intelligence as the army man, since the army score does not start with zero whiffet) off Polly and ber mother, while car wa.8 the only one standing near, the driver of the truck yoo was moochln' all around by tbe intelligence. But this difference does mean that the ordinary college mato brought a charge of reckless driving against the father. The quarry In your bos. Wil» Poity'i ii much better equipped with brains than the ordinary man on the street*. gone for the evening—sorry1," said Mr first judge before whom the case was brought threw it out but MlHikln, and, flapping back tatM* bin a suit was started and a Monmouth County jury gave a verdict own gate, be watched tbe disappointed for $16,000 damages probably because the owner of the car suitor drive off. was insured and no compunction was felt in making an insur- STAT WORTHY OF PRAISE "Going back the MUM way—lone way around, Jlmlny," ejaculated Pol- ance company pay. It is recorded that several of the jurors ly's father BB he hobbled around tn slept through a good part of the hearing. «> REPRESENTATIVE BUTH BRYAN OWEN, Florid.. the rear of the house to feed the chick- ens. "I Jut can't see our Polly mar Cases where justices of the peace and game wardens do rylng anyone that's not got more wits a neat little business in arresting hunters and fishermen for It is a matter for regret tba) congress is so often in the humorous than Peter Marr." minor offenses and making them pay stiff fines are not un- columns of the newspapers. If people knew just the quality of the repre- That night when Polly came home, sentative they bad in congress they would not only feel safer about their her father relnted his conversation heard of, and there are many motorists who have encountered wftb Peter. The girl looked downcast combinations of constables and justices of the peace where ar- representation, but they would be prouder to, be citiwns of the republic. and sorry, rests are made for no reason whatever but fines are imposed I am sorry that what gets into the headlines ,}• some casual remark, some "Poor Peter," she sighed, thlnklni; nevertheless. epithet, some piece of irrelevant dialogue. That's all you hear of the of bow her mother had enjoyed the work of 400 congressmen, for the calling of Home one • queer name ii ride with Mr. Smart, the automobile Automobile Opposed to this situation is another that is still worse; salesman. odd and that's what constitutes news. that of drunken, reckless drivers who either escape any pun- Polly went Into the hnuse at last, There it a tremendous amount of breakdowns from overwork in otn- her thoughts lingering on her old Insurance ishment or else go through a form of having their licenses re- friend, Pater Marr. "If Peter come* voked but who succeed in having the licenses restored in a few gross bat that is not news. And I am sorry that the public from the around by the quarry, there's some- days, no matter how serious the offense causing the arrest may gallery sets to little of the work done in congress. I wish the; could see thing that he's Interested In," she de and Your Wife elded. have been. the long hours in the offices. .. The next duy they heard that Petei You want your wile to drive a car. Yoo know • Police magistrates, supposed to know the law and respect Marr had bought the old quarry and all the surrounding acres. how much she enjoys it. and enforce it, often assume the right to dispose of cases.where "Whafd I tall yoUl" demanded Mr they have no jurisdiction at all further than to commit the de- AMERICAN HOME AND SCHOOL MltUkln of his family. "That boy's » Yet you must realize that it is not sate for her to fendant because the offense is one that should be dealt with bv fool to to and boy a woroont quarry." drive unless the car is completely covered with By DR. MORGAN, Editor Journal Nitional Kducitlon Awoctalka. Another week brought a corps of the grand jury. , I,' •' engineers who surveyed the property Automobile Insurance—liability, Property Dam- And so it goes. Prohibition may have started the trouble and It wm another week before the age and Collision. for the bootleggers demonstrated that Federal law could be One of the most amazing things to me is that the American school amazed villagers learned that oil had beer discovered there and Peter Morn Let us give you the full protection of an Auto- successfully defied. Whatever the cause the fact remains that should have gotten so far as it has from the American home. Home con- owning It all, would be a very rich law enforcement is at a low ebb and many, whose business it is ditions often make it practically impossible for the school and the courts man. mobile Policy in the Standard Accident Itmttanc* to enforce the law are contributing to the breakdown. The hon- to give the child s square deal. So in studying the school we must hie "Bow about the longest way around C of Detroit. back into the borne. The real thing we are working for ii the child—the now, father?" asked Polly qtiiMlcallj. est, law abiding citizen is at a disadvantage because he is not "It's the shortest way home some- organized. The criminal element is organized and getting child as a unit, the child as an excellent, happy human being. times," admitted Mr. Mllllkin, "nnd I The elTertivenwR of this great machinery of the White House con- do confess, now that I know nil about stronger. It, that Peter showed n long head for The outcome? Who can predict? The situation is far more ference on child health and protection depends upon its interpretation in such a youngster." terjns which the masses and millions of people can understand. We need "Yen," ndmltted Peter moclently to John H. Concannon serious than most of us realize. The only hope lies with the de- cent element of society backing up the sentiment that Preai- in America an entirely new sense of what social statistics mean. Wouldn't Mr. Mllllkin that evening. "I'm lim! it be a wonderful thing to know how man/ human breakdowns grew out my eye on Mint property slnrn Fust Real Estate and Insurance •At Hoover has proclaimed. Partisan lines should be forgOt- year when I wns hunlliiK nnd found 76 Main Street Eeri. It is not a question that concerns Republican or Democrat of home factors, the lack of fresh air, sunshine, play spaces, etc; how traces of oil In nil old drill hole, no I much of the success and failure in life can be traced back to children? got an option mi It nnd I've been test Tel. 299 as such. It concerns the fate of America. ,t u- Woodbridge "mm KTERET PRESS i;A FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1930 I'ACR KtVR Carteret Swamp Perth Amboy Class A TeamBy11 6 f"THAT LITTLE GAME McCarthy'* Men, Back In Stride, Hold Vi.itors Scoreless Untl Carteret High Loses Thrilling CAUGHT SQUINTING Soveoth «nd Come Through With Third Victory In Four Start. — S«eUg Makes Record. Game To New Brunswick High CLEM Behind the highly effective pitching of Charlea Szelaffc HOLD OH, 'To Queer String Of Bad) Break* Throw* Victory To County Seat GOT Yooft Coach Francie McCarthys Carteret High School hard-hitUn* THERB.CtEMCNT, THE POT - T«am When Aft the Dope Pointed To A Victory FlNGEtti HC w/AS baseball team epened its home season Wednesday afternooa For the McCarthy Clan. LAY ButtNT! before approximately 1200 pereons, by bombarding two Am- SHOULD Carteret High lost a thrilling ele THAT POT. SHOOSHIN' boy pitch** for a well-earned 11-6 victory over Perth Amboy. score 4-3. Neither side scored until vVoflN COMB ven inning game to New Brunswick the sixth when Carteret managed to Voon THE FLIES This waB the first game of the annual two-game series betweea Uigh on Monday afternoon at New push a run. across the plate. The KINGS OFF IT. To A Pot, Krunswick by a fi-5 score. With this score was now 5-8 in Carteret'a fav- ASBESToi Carteret and Perth Amboy. By decisively beating Coach Stauf- defeat, Carteret's two-game winning or. As Medwick was holding hi* own No Goot»s MtTTGNS. fer's nine, Carteret High retaliated for its defeat at the hand, utreak was interrupted. The apparent with New Brunswick, there were jinx that New Brunswick holds over many present who thought that Car- of New Brunswick, earlier In the week. Carteret also posted il> Joseph Medwick still remains unbrok- teret would bring home another vic- third victory in four starts. Strange to relate, Charles Szelag. en, ft now seems that Medwick just tory. A two-run lead In the sixth can't beat New Brunswick on the frame is a good lead in many ball aside from holding « strong Perth Amboy team to eleven hits baseball field. It was the third time in two years that he took up the in nine Innings, iad a perfect day with the bat, collecting Am pitching assignment against New - Nothing exciting occurred for the singles in five trips to the plate. Szelag also recorded his seo- Brunswick and the third time he county seat team until the seventh ond victory of the season in as many starts. lost out on "breaks." "i !¥!& pUytaf ** C*rteret Picture this, If you can; Medwick coupled with a single resulted in. the The acor* fail* to indicate Car- ThU was also the third time tb* •coring of two runs and tying the teret's superiority o*%r Pstth Aaboy, Kave New Brunswick Just seven hits Jago wu put out via the strike in eleven Innings, all of them singles count at 6-5 by New Brunswick. Not only, did Cactmt outhit Ita op- rout*. Puccl hammered a Ion* k* •ml not more than one ooming in one Jnst think of it. Two rant on one ponents, sixteen to atami, but H over Poire head. Poll raced out to ungle. How it happened, no one yet played a betUr btand of ball in the inning' and still lost. Oarttret's de- knows. * get the hall. Meanwhile Pucei ws. feat may be attributed in part to field. Its oVena* wu strong with cueed second on his way to tkM. its ragged fielding and deosnalve Carteret had a golden opportunity men on the basat ai)d Ha all-areund Poll quickly relayed the tall to Med- playing showad a d«eid«d Improve.. pUy. It was indeed a tough game for to win the hall game in the ninth ••ricc k who threw it to Miehlta wa* "to lose, especially after otrt* Inning but (ailed. After two men were merit since Itonfejr'* game at N«w *aa coverini g thithird bbaae. MVehUa the New Brunswick twirl er 0!! r six innings Bae- vanced a base on a passed ball. KesV twit k 7. If Medwick deserved to win winning run on third. Hart, however, lag pitched shut-out ball. During wick's sacrifice fly scored Stutsk* iiny game, it was this one. failed to come through at the op- this time, Carteret had rolled up a Sielay's fourth hit of the game aeaft portune moment, hitting a weak fly t'nrteret should never have lost mountainous lead of 11-2 and ao Sxe- Poll home. Hart and Rubel went out to second. Had Medwick clouted his lag thought he would take matters in Two hits. Two runs. tin- hall game. When one team makes homer now instead of in the third thirteen hits off the opposing pltch- an easy way in the final. In this way SEVENTH INNING Inning, another tale might have been i'vrth Amboy waa able to add four ,.,-. two of them going for extra told here. Perth Amboy: Rexnichak openei IIIIM•". ind still winds up on the short runs. with a terrific three base clout over , nil, something must have been radi- Both pitchers were strong in the In the first inning after Sietag third base. He scored on Kureaft rnll'y wrong somewhere. The real tenth, and neither side scored. Car- had set down three Amboy batters hit. Dickson, Miller and Zetulak we* rv.i-m why Carteret lost still re- teret could do nothing against Logue in a row, Carteret started ita bom- out in the order named. Two htta. mains a mystery, as far as many in the eleventh. The game revealed Imnlment of base hita that resulted Two runs. fwwt iaianad.. Crt hat brilliant pitching in two rung. The second and third Carteret: Chodosh popped to The game developed into a spec- , mmm »fTfeWTferWrr bntml and lourLh inningi JXttYed [TIHlJlsl catcher. Michite reached first on Ja- tacular pitching duel, one of the strength. But Carte ret'» defensive St. Joseph Ball Team Liberty Falcons fail in the fifth Charterer prilllcW 't?*li«««-'TWiW«'-'fMhWW-W irnatext ever witnessed in this coun- play needs further drill and practice Carteret Defends sewed up the game with a three-ran second out. Three hits, a walk ana a ty in scholastic competition. Medwick to bring It up to par. raJly. This bombardment sent Wider batter hit by a pitched ball, all cesst- had a slight edge over Logue, th Gathering four out of five hits to Has Hard^Lock Run To Get The Breaks strumt , thhe southpawth , whho started thhe Ing after two were out, resulted la N<-w Brunswick tee. Both pitchers lead both teams In batting, Medwick County Title game for Amboy, to the showers, four runs for Carteret. Three wire highly effective, Logue striking drove in four of the five Blue and New Brunswick Juniors and and he wu replaced by Uptnsin, an- Four runs. nut 13 m«n. Medwick 18. New Brun- Whit. runs. Mike. Pol] got hi* batting They Outhit Rival Team But Local Gun Club Win. Out In other southpaw. Perth Amboy pitch- EIGHTH INNING swick'n defensive play was better eye working and made three out of Local Firemen Give Dono- Lose Game By 8 to 6 Score. Contest With Four Other ers didn't make any difference tc Perth Amboy' Lipman rolled than that of Carteret. four hits, For New Brunswick, Mc- van Men Trouncing*. Carteret. They all looked alike. Hav- to MlchiU. Oslislo tripled to c« . New Brunswick won the ball game Murphy, Coblln and Bergen made The Liberty Falcon Weball team Clubs. ing scored two run* off WMerstrom, and came home on Pucci's bind* on a lucky-break. It happsaed In this three hit*, each. of Carteret outhit .the Lehighs, of Carteret proceeded' to hammer L4i Two hita. One run. ^*^ way. In the eleventh inning, Coblln Stfange to say, five out of six The St. Joseph's baseball team met For the second successive year the man in mwoh the ,»M» way. Only Caxkret; Michit* fanned. Kubiete with two defeats during the past Perth Amboy, by fourteen to ten. but the first batter for New Brunswick, rum that New Brunswick scored, the Lehigh batters made every blow Carteret Gun Club won the Middlesex une run was made off Lipman in fanned. Stutike got on first whaai were unearned. week. On Sunday the St. Joe's took Kuran mimed the ball in left flsM. walked to first baae. He immediately count and M a result won the game County Trapriiooting. Two hundred this inning. advanced to third on an overthrow Among Medi ick's other note- a trip to New Brunswick and were Sunday afternoon on Maurer*a field Meanwhile Saelag, continued to Poll ended the inning hy striking osjt. over second baae by StQtike, the worthy accomplishments is the turned back by the New Brunswick in Perth Amboy. The score was 8-8. persons saw the Cartere-t shooters pitch shut-out ball. Without a stop, No hita. No runs. larteret catcher. Jablonsky, the next striking out of three county i it play- Juniors, 9-4. The locals took their A three-run rally in the fifth inning walk away with honor* in a county Carteret, in the sixth, continued on NINTH INNING latter, attempted to work a hit and en in a row in the fifth inning. second beating of the week on Wed- sewed up the game for the Lehigh Championship shoot Saturday after- its battinjr tpr** aa4 two more rune Perth Amboy: Four hits in Uus run play but Medwick was too smart The box score: nesday night at Leibig** field when team. noon on the local traps. Carteret did were added. The score waa now 7-0 inning combined with a base on balks fur him. The result was that Jab- Carter*! Hifh they were whipped by a strong team The Falcon fire began in the first good work, breaking 285 clay birds in Carteret'a fever. Nothing now to netted four runa for Perth Amboj. lonsky struck out Coblln now made AB R E representing the Fire House No. 2. inning when Goyena led off with a out of a possible 250. Jamesburg worry about frQM a Carteret root- Four hits. Pour runs, Daniels, ef, 6 1 The box score: g ila?h for home. He stopped midway The score'of this game was 5-2. single. Barna rapped another one- ranked second with a score of 225. er's point of view. So far, all Amboy when Medwick relayed the ball to Chodoih, rf, 6 0 base blow to short right, sending The event was in the form of a was getting from Szelag was just Carteret Hifh Stutzkc Coblin was then caught in Poll. If, ..., 4 1 At New Brunswick th« county seat plain zeroes. team hammered Donovan and Mul- Goyena. to third. There was one out 50-bird shoot. More than fifty shoot- r, • , * AB R H * u tackle. Instead of working Coblin Medwick, p, 6 2 at the time. Paatrick, the Perth Am- ers representing fjve gun clubs were In the seventh Carteret started itn DanielB, cf, ., 4-0 0 toward third base, three Carteret Hart, lb, 0 tan, the two St. Joseph pitchers, for twelve good base blows and nine runs boy pitcher, got himself into trouble entered. The clubs represented were: biggest parade of the game. Ten bat- Kubica, cf .' 1 o 0 players made the mistake of working- Btuttke, c. 5 1 by walking Happy, thuB Ailing the Jamesburg, Metuchen, Deans, New ters faced Lipman in this inning. It Stutike, c, 6 3 2 Bzelag, 3b, 5 0 to win by a comfortable margin. him toward home. The. result was Meanwhile Lovi, the New Brunswick bases. Woodhull's eaay grounder to Brunswick and Carteret. seemed as though they hit ajid hit Poll, If, 4 3 1 fatal to Carteret. On a close play at RubeT, 2b, 5 0 ace, held Carteret down with nine ft rat enabled Goyena to oorae home Everything was just right for the and hit. l^ater after the scorers had Medwick, »b, 8 8 2 the plate, Coblin scored with the win- Michlts, ss, 5 0 hits in as many innings. with the first score of the game. ihooterg. The day was clear and warm talli<> stealing aecond. Outplay Carteret Pa Trackmen At Neilaen Field Of .684 — Sselaf, Stutike T. Donovan, 2b 2 0 1 had already done the real damage in Thomas 39 Zetulik hit an etunr grounder to Sze- and Hart Also Rate High. Bruno, c 3 2 2 that unfortunate fifth inning. It was laig. Dickson doubled but it did not The Port Reading Athletica de- at 3:30 O'clock — Froeh Al- all over ,bWthe shouting for the 225 mean a thing ae Kuran fanned foi feated the Carteret Pacers in thai 81 5 10 2 the third out Two hita. No runs. closing innings ,of their ball game OB •9 To Perform. Joseph Medwick leads his team- Score by innings: Falcon* DEAN 1 Barna and Julius Viater did the Hopler 47 Carteret: Rubel was put out, Os- Sunday afternoon on Lelblg * fielf, mates in batting with a remarkable St. Joseph 0 0 10 10 0—2 lislo to Pucci. Chodosh singled. Mich- 12-9. The visitors outhit Carteret by 10 0 4 0 0—5 best work for the Falcons, each rap- Young .... 46 The Rutgers Univeralty track team average of .684, according to batting Firemen 0 ping three hit*. Strange to say, the W. Bahr 43 its fanned. Daniels walked. Witf twelve to ten. McDonnell led tks) will get its first chance at dual com- The summary—Two base hits: Van two rrien out and two on, Stutzk winners with three tingles in fht> average* compiled yesterday by Ben- Dusky. Struck out by Van Dusky 12; two Perth Amboy twirlers were'also 6. Bahr 43 petition tomorrow afternoon when it strong at bat, each collecting three Bukelew :.;•„ 42 hit a high fly to Oalislo. One hit. Nc trips to the plate. For the Paceaai meets Lehigh trackmen at Neilson jamin Zusman, official scorer of the by Wilhelm 7; by Donovan 6. Base* runs. Rudy Galvanek did the best wwfc team. Charles Scelag holds second on balls off Van Dusky 2; off Wil- hits. field at 8:80 o'clock. The Rutgers- Manager John Hila of the Liberty ^ 221 THIRD INNING with the stick, banging out two soM Lehlgh freshman track meet will be place with a mark of .6*00. Third on helm 6; off Donovan 2. Berth Amboy: Miller was hit b; base hits. A home run by Mickey St. Jo«*pb't A. C. Falcons announced last night that METUCHEN run in conjunction with the varsity he list is "King" 8tutike, McCarthy's the Liberty Falcon* will inaugurate, 0. Mundy 47 a pitched ball. He wag caught trying Miglecz was the outstanding feature meet and will also start at 3:30. AB R H tb steal second base Stutike to at the game. youthful slugger, who bats .560. Pour Thatcher, rf 4 1 2 their home season this coming Sun- P. Mftndy -„ t 42 Rutgers won the "Middle Three" day afternoon at Leibig'a field, with Tan Byck „...... ' 42 Rubel. Wfderstrom also came in con- On Sunday afternoon the Paeev regulars, Medwick, Stutzke, Stela* Coughlin, 3b 4 0 r tact with one of Sselag'g pitches. track, title last season by defeating the Johnstown sluggers, of Perth Am- B. Stark ....: t 40 will travel to Woodbridge Them both Lehigh and Wayette, and and Hart are batting .400 or better. Lyman, lb 3 1 1 Play Widerstrom went out on an infleM they will meet tfce Woodbridge Om- 4 0 0 boy, forming the opposition F. Kiefer .: |._ | 40 Coach Bernie We/ers expects his To date the high achool team has J. Donovan, 2b, p .. will start at 3 o'clock. play, Michits to Medwick. Jago les. Karmon it slated to do the pitch- [ilayed four games, winning three. Mudrak, ss 4 0 2 struck out for the second time. No ing for the Pacers. charges to win the title atrain this The box score: "ill [ Joach McCarthy's sluggers boast of a McDonnell, cf ., 4 0 0 hits. No runs. Carteret Pacers year. His team, however, has been 4 Ub«rtr F»lcon» NEW BRUNSWICK weakened considerably l>y the loss of enm batting average of .386 which Shein, c 2 AB E Carteret: Both Poll and Medwick AB R H H quite an accomplishment. Mullan, p, 2b 4 1 Bmalley „ 45 Captain Chick O'Neill, Middle States YusUk, 2b, 5 Ro*a . 45 grounded out tb Jago. Saelas; hit a Rubel, ss 4 11 In addition to leading the team Richards, If -... 1 1 40 single, but it was wasted a» Rube" Galvanek, Ib, 3 2 2 record holder in the 120 yard high 1 0 Goyena, cf, 6 p hurdles. Rutgers in strong in the field u hutting, Medwick has collected O'Donnell, If Barna, c, 6 Hast . 89 grounded out to Oslislo. One hit. No Karmon, p, 3 1 events where CJe«rg« Croriin ami Bli ... most extra bane hits; three dou- Wales runs. Nannen, 3b, 4 0 les, thret« triples and one homer. 83 Happy, sa, \ Fischer are the Scarlet's best hets Woodhall, 8b, p, 6 FOURTH INNING Mujrleci, 2b, 1 1 The pitching record Bhowa tthah t N*w Bmiwwick Perth Amboy: Puccl hit a alow Yapchinskl, 2b, 3 1 Among the New Jersey boys on the H Hamulftk, lb, 5 206 squad are Harry Klliston, Klmilieth, » Clmrlen Sjelaif hn9 won two games AB grounder to Seelag who threw him Andres, rf, 3 0 1 in HH runny «Urt«, Mniwick won Maracki. lb 1 1 Balarls, rf, 6 sprinter; McCnlir of West drnnK '. Viater, If, out at first Rexnichak struck out, Siekerka, cf, 3 1 ,„„. and loKt one. The following are Szeben, If 1 1 Zetulik walked. Dickeon went out, Baksa, cf, 3 1 ljehlbach of lrvin^l*'" and ' nmpivt'M 1 3 Rose, p, ID his annual report. Dr. David Kin of Vineland, distance men, mid KIHII• the official batting averages of the Fisher, 3b ...... Michits to Hart. No hit*. N<4 runa. Stutzke, c, 3 1 Poppy, s« 1 1 Mortesa, If, 3b, ley, president of the University o! Illi- wick of Newark, a hi^h jumper. iriembern of the Carteret High School nois, volets, the opinion tbat the eight- Cartere'C: ChodQBh Btanrmed a , 1 !>:» C/LRTERET PEESB

SHERIFFS SALE ••••••e»e««a•>*»»»»••a>»e LOVE'S ETERNAL TRIANGLE IN CHANCKRY OK NEW JERSEY —Between Belter Homes Building Dandelion and Loan Association, Complain- ant, and James A. Nagel ana Jen- Blossoms nie Nagel, his wife, d«fendanta. Fi Fa for sale of mortgaged premised dated April 2, 11130. By JANE OSBORN By virtue of the above stated writ to be direi-t«d and delivered, I will exnoao to sale at public vendue on r\It KIN1IORK looked out from his WEDNESDAY, MAY TWENTY- U office window upon the enrpet of EIGHTH, NINETEEN HUNDRED creen lawn that itretetied from his AND THIRTY house to the fine old white MaltlaDd I At one o'clock Standard Time (Two CLKANINC 1 mansion nest door. It was very PRKStINO o'clock Daylight Saving Time) in the smooth and very green—only Ore or C I afternoon of the said day at the i Sheriff'* Office in the City of New Six yellow dandelion blooms marring Brunswick, N. J. the perfect vtrdure. Doctor Klnmore GARMENTS All the following tracta or parcels sighed. He had teen a dotes* or more of land and premises hereinafter par- pntlents In his office and he bad a ticularly described, situate, lying and call to make st the hospital. A few iomorrow you may be being in the Township of Wood- years ago when he was Just beginning bridge in the County of Middlesex hts practice there ID Dun mere be and State of N«w Jersey. would have envied any doctor with so my friend REASONABLE PRICES Known and designated as Lot* brisk a practice. But now be sighed. numbered 1417 and Ml8, in Block numbered 449-A. ai laid down on a That afternoon, Instead of going certain map entitled "First May of straight from, the hospital to his WE REPAIR FUR COATS Hal Skelly, Fay Wray and William Powell, who will be seen and heard at jLOUR-tutmjLOUR- e is in my home and mine in Iaelin, Woodbridge Township, Mid- home to see what messagei awaited yours, and tomorrow if I with to leach PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN dlesex County, N. J." and filed in the him, be turned' bis car toward the tb* Rahway Theatre next Tuesday ft Wednesday in "Behind the Make-Up" Clerk'*. Office of Middlesex County. open country outside Dun mere. Pres- you. I can, by telephone, through the help Excepting out of the foregoing the ently he came to a green Held richly of the Telerihone Directory. following described premises: dotted over with yellow and here and It brings hundreds of thousands ot New York Custom BEGINNING at a point formed by there patches ot white mist between. the intersection of the dividing line He pulled to the side of the road, people together every day. tf they move po between lands of James Naeel, «t ux. 1 stopped his car and slighted. He another part of the Sute, the Directory , in the northeast and lands now or service, or that of "Information" which Tailor formerly of Thomas W, Tapio on the spent tha next quarter of an boar southwest with the former aoutheaat- gathering the dandelion blossoms. He supplement) the Directory, follow* them 68 Main St. Phone 167 erly lin« of the State Highway Route) pushed them Into an envelope he pro- and keeps the record up to date to that Woodbrtdfe No' 1, Section "2A, said point being duced from h.lt pocket and then, get- they will be always available to others distant 25 feet normally from the ting back Into, his car, he drove horn*. by telephone. enter line of the former 20 foot It was after nine that night when nnrrett' pavement of said SUU he had given n word of encouragement Each year over a million directories are Highway at Station 98 plus 90.85, printed for New Jersey telephone user* and running thence (1) along aaid to his last office visitor. A moon ormer southeasterly line, North 49 gleamed faintly through the clouded Thii means rearranging, printing and de- degrees, 45 minutes East, 20 feet to sky, and, making sure that Ills house- livering 1,500,000 names each year. Tuxedo point in the dividing line between keeper was In her room, Doctor Kln- lands of James Nagel, et ux. on the more went stealthily oat to his lawn Providing accurate directions to enable •outhweat and lands now or former- every New Jersey telephone user to reach : and there proceeded to strew the dan- Suits ly of the Home Guardians Company delion blossoms that he had gathered. every other in the growing State is one of of New York on the northeast; Bnrly the next morning, while Doc- thence (2) along said dividing line, the big tasks tiSat becomes bigger every Smith 40 degrees 15 minutes East 11 tor Klnmore was lingering over his year as the State grows. Rented feet to a point in the new southeast- breakfast before going Into his office, erly line of said State Highway; he giunced out the window. And thence (3) along said new southeast- there be saw a girlish figure In pink erly line, south 49 degrees, 4$ min- bending dawn with a tiny, sharp ute* WMt, B0 feet to a point hi Us* IMW«4 In bar hand. Doctor glnmore NEW JERSEY BELL S. F1SHK1N dividing line between lands of James Jumped up from the table and hurried N'agd. et ux. on the northeast and through the long French window out lands now or formerly of Thomas W. Billie Dove at the Rahwa.j TWesitre Saturday. TELEPHONE C CLOTHING Tapio on the southwest; thence (4) to the luwn. "' ^ 187 Smith St. along said dividing line, North 40 de- 'There are only a few more dande- SHERIFF'S SALE bridge, in the County of Middlesex, grees 15 minutes Weat 11 feet to the IN CHANCERY OF NEW JERSKY and State of New Jersey, and more P*rlb Amboy lions left now," Hnlfi the girl, looking A NIW JIKtlT INSTITUTION BACK1D ST NATIONAL RISOUaCM mint and place of BEGINNING. up to him. "Aunt Nellie Is delighted. —Between SERIAL BUILDING & fully described on a certain map en- N. J. titled, "Map of Prop. sur. & Mapped Containing five one-thousandth* But I certnlnly have worked hard jet- LOAN SAVINGS INSTITUTION, (0.005) uf an aero, be the same more Complainants and DAVID BRD- by Larson & Fox, Civil Engineer*, or leas. ting them out." MAN, et al, Defendants, Pi Fa 178-9 Smith street, Perth Amboy, T.I. 29*1 Tom Klnmore was looking suddenly tor sale of mortgaged premises New Jerney," which map haa been Decree amounting to approximate- serious. "Hut of course there might dated April 11, 1930. heretofore filed in the office of the ly $3,100. be more dandelions," he said. "Some- By virtue of the above stated writ Clerk of Middlesex County ami which Together with all and singular, the times [lie seeds blow from quite a dis- to me directed and delivered, I will lots are known and designated on RAB1N0WITZ HARDWARE rights, privileges, hereditaments and tance, and nt this time of year—" expose to sale at public vendae on said Map as Lots 0 and 10, Bfock appurtenance thereunto belonging He pnused and lonked rather eagerly WEDNESDAY, THE TWENTY- 437 B. "If It's Hardware, We Have It I" RUPTURE or in anywise appertaining. EIGHTH DAY OF MAY, NINETEEN at her. "I shall miss seeing yon more Decree amounting to approximate- Full Line of BERNARD M. GANNON, HUNDRED AND THIRTY ly $2,300. PILES Sheriff. than I can tell. When I'm sitting there In my office, I look out and there At one o'clock Standard Time (two Together with all and singular the HARDWARE, PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES VARICOSE VEIMS LEAVITT, UI.BRK II & TALLEY, o'clock Daylight Saving Time) in rights, privileges, hereditaments and $36.28 Solicitors. I we you—now bending, now rising, Blood the afternoon of the said day at the appurtenances thereunto belonging W, I. 6-2, 9, 16, 23. now kneeling. It Is very beautiful— Sheriff's Office in the City of New or in anywiBe appertaining. HOUSE FURNISHINGS Chrook COMUUOM and there Is to little that Is beautiful Brunswick, N. J. BERNARD M. GANNON, of MM and Worn* SHERIFF'S SALE In my profession." Then looking at 653-555 Roosevelt Avenue CARTERET, N. J. i fltaaaaek. Inteatinal, SHERIFF'S BAI.B—In Clwn.'ery ot N«w All the' following tract or parcel of 'Sheriff. Jamr B«t»Mn Cl«r« llurton BulMlm & her, he said: "Do you remember the KUMT. Bladder land and premises herinafter partic- CHARLES JOSEPH SMITH, I_.oan Anonlatlun, • imily ...rporatu. Com- ularly described, situate, lying and $21.00 Solicitor. Tel. Carteret 312 and 1018 TKMMM and plainant, ind Irene K»va!y. Individually time laBt month when you and your All Bactal CompUfata and at admtnlBtriitrtx. rl a In , Defendant*. aunt called to nsk me sbont the dan- being in the Township of Wood-W. 1. 6-2, 9, 16, 23. FI Fa fur aulr nf mnrtjjagml uremlaeB dPllhns? You were wearing a pink Treated by modem .luted Mur.h 2S. 1V30 IJy virtue of tin- nlmv »tol«<1 writ to m<- drabs then—too." Methods wftho«t •orr«T dlr#ct*it Helen laughed. "Wasn't !t funny? XRayFUomcoptc Bxamtnatkmt WEDNEaiUr. THE !1HT DAY OP MAT. Aunt Nellie and I had Just come from A II. 1931) H. J. HEALTI EXTDiSmi ut 1 o'clork • tamlurti lime <2 uYltu-k day- the city. Aunt Nellie hadn't been In light fwvlng llmel In Hie aftnrnoon i>( ailil I ho old house since quite a long time INSTnUTE clay at th« Btirrffr's (Ifflee In the City of New IJruiuvlrk. N, J. before you en me. She'd sent a gar- 21 Fulton St., Newark, N. J. All the following trurl or >iari-«l at land dener on to get the tnwn and garden giireinl*en hrrt-jnnfter purllr-ularly de- * A b* &>m from Bn*d U. Tt*o*t in rrnrer. nnnd hun.lrp s mid iiiirullel with lOviMKi'ci'ii uvenue, flf'y see wluil difference ll mode tn her? AdjaitmeaU 1.^0) fefI , tlienre (3) t nrthcrly anil alons the weRterly line nf l.i'l No. [•< tind parallel And then she askcil me If I'd mind Will £ v the pulnt nr |H«rn of 11I1C1N In between? Well, in least I've had NINO. my own land mimed,." S Belnf the front two-thlnln (2-3) or the pramlm known nml il.«lsniiteD>. liy Mmon ft Smith, I'hll NATURE'S WAY Bnrlmtra. Perth Ambny, New Jtrur. "I sn.v. Miss MIIIIIHIHI." Tom Milled, Every BeihC tlio aam« premlaei convayad lo tht us Rhe f«tart,«?(1 nwnv. "I want to fell Ml* partin of the firm part bgr dead (rnn S^ DR- E. J.* HEATH Joaaph Kovaly and Anna Kovalr, hla wlfa, you RomelliliiK." He simile trver to Pair dated July !<, W0. recorded In Book IBI where she stood on her mutt's green Th» Chiropractor of Ofteda nf nald rounty on pay* 90, IB tha Clark'a Office of the County of Mlddlaau. sward. "I've planted n lo* ivf ihtntle- Guar- Hours 8 to 10 A. M—6 to S P. if. Decree amounting to approxlmatftljr ft,- lion seeds. There will N> « big crop Phone Rahway 1065-J 100. Toxether with alt and alnrular the ^ In a few weeks. You'll have- fo com* anteed Central Ave. and Campbell St. prlvllerea hereditaments anil appurttna buck, Helen. I rmiMn'l endure the RAHWAY thtreunto belonflnx or In anywla* apptr- talnlnt thought of mil seelnu rim mil there— Rirfect (Near New Rahway Theatre) BORNAKD M QANNON. Sharif i hemllrif: nml kneellnt »ml walking ESTHBR BKCKHOFr, Bolldtor. W. I 4-iS; t-2. i. 1(1 uhnilt—Helen. I love »mi.' llelpn. KlinulliiK there before him. nits liliixlilr,1,: deeply "Hut don't you think It Is vt'iv. very unc-onventlonal telHnc me Dial hire - wlllmm calling PERMANENT MARCEL on me?" "1 liiiven't (liir-'d mil." snld the STEAMJWAVEJ doflor. "Neither you nor your aunt have asked me. Helen, dear, I do love you—nml I don't want to come and In white or brown PerfectJPermAnent Wave" see you unless you think you conld SFECIAL Any aiza wave desired and ringlets; like me n little." — reinforced tip; guaranteed 6 to 8 months; shampoo, "Hut I do Hke you—love you—a hair cut and letting included. gmit ilenI right now." said Helen, and double sole; side then turned away her pretty face to With or Without Appointment con fuel on, "So please come in and patches. Sizes tell my aunt you want to be friends." Helen tied lownril her own front dnoi and as Bhe went she called buck: ''But FAN BEAUTY SHOP I'm not going to dig out the new crop of dandelions unless you help me." 253 North Broad St.

ELIZABETH, N. J. —Please mention this paper whan buying from advertisers

Sold HOLOHAN BROS. 'Jonik elsewhere at GARAGE Wot Cats and Woaadt 98c and more. Prevent infection! Treat Dunlop Tire* and Tubes. every cut, wound or Tiro and Tub« Repairing scratch with this power- ful non-poisonous anti- Pull Line of Auto Accessories septic. Zonite actually Only Miles Buying Power makes kills germs. Helps to Cor. Amboy Ave. and Second St. WOODBRIDGE heal, too. possible such outstanding value Vork Store* I $6 Well Hill Slirrl !N>w J«ra«y < JERSEY CITY 6 Eait I4lli Slrcri 137 Newark Awnua PROBAK 140 Eail 14th Slittl We fott the Oomplete Mine of DOUBLE-EDGE ILAOES 7Ot 6«h Avr nt«i 2 >nt Si UNION cm SJl 7ih Avr.. n*ar Wr. Si. 768 BtrttnHiM Av. Johns -Manville Shingles Trio b«st shave 1*62 l« Ave. cor 76ili Si ARK 112 West IZ5(h Si. Hitlrm 95 Market Sirtci •J cAsphalt mnd cAsbestos J» you ever had—or IB86 3rd Avf.. Hroni H your money back. 7942 *rd Avt.. (Iron* GREATEST VALUES IN THE CITY Broad StrtM $41 EaM U8fa Oklahoma unveils a line statue to when the young elephant, apparently Iitated ih»

Money li international. IU power, should be at least just. elephants and set out to captors the and respect for It, are International. escaped beast, which was now racing Now. along Hn«s of government by The "Last Man's Club" of Atwater, rapidly toward the river, while .Cole high nuance, comes an International Minnesota, has burled Its laat but one) galloped ahead on horaebsck, warning bank. member. Charles Lock wood, 17. ac- the crowd. Galon W. McOarrah wai chosen head companied to the grave the body of The huge four-Moted pachyderm It is Direct Saving's Policy 10 Consistently Sell Good of It, Pierre Queintjr. marvelloniljr his friend Peter Hall, who died at plunged pell-mell through an encamp- able French financier, only M, ni niMtjr-one. Now Lock wood Is the last. ment of pilgrims by the river bank Furniture at the Lowest Possible Prices! We Invite Com- general manager. Whea he goes, the club will end. and crashed through a number of low huts constructed of thatch and bam- parison. If You Have an Eye for Values Visit Direct Mr. HcOarrah li considered one of boo, which gave way before the mon- Saving's Showrooms. the ablest financiers in the United HeiM Tastenriutiea" ster like match boxes. Inside almost every hut flres were left burning, and Slates. Raw milk brought to a boll is not, In consequence the wretched dwellings 1'lerra Quesne? repreaenta the acute correctly speaking, pasteurised milk. quickly became s series of blazing financial intelligence of the French. However, that Is about ss well a* can bonfires. mummied in the fact that, ao aooa be done In the home, since the house- after a gigantic war, they have a bil- hold equipment

IMPORTED E-Z UNION SUITS ORGANDIE DRESSES FULL FASHIONED Girl'p Steeveless Dresses For Boys or Girl* DRESSES SOCKS BROADCLOTHS, PRINTS OR VOILES Sizes 2 to 12 Yrs. A Hoat of Colon NEW SUMMER OF SHEER VOILE OR 7 TO 14 YEARS Reg. 49c 43c PATTERNS BEAUTIFUL PRINTS FOR kc PAIR So Crisp a n THE YOUNG M|S3 FROM 29' $1.00 Sleeveless Cool Looking. 8 TO 14 YEARS, OR FOR i FOR BROTHER AND HER YOUNGER SISTER Re?. $1.98 SISTER WE PRESENT BOYS' Sun Suits FROM 7 TO 10 YEARS. Voile Dresses WASH and Suits DOUBLE CAPE H SUITS AND Red, Green and Orchid Dresses OF FINE 2 to 6 Year. 1. Dresses MATERIALS JUST THE GARMENT 2 to 6 Years BROADCLOTH MADE OF FOR THE COMING ETC. Reg. $1.98 WARM WEATHER** BROADCLOTH, ETC. Fast Colors BIG BABIES' Value $1.49 SILK DRESSES REDUCTIONS U.48 59c ON SIZES 1 TO 3 1.00 $1.00 All Hand Made and Smocked SILK BROADCLOTH SILK ALL-WOOL GIRLS' LEADING SHADES SLIPPERS Reg. $2.98 BLOUSES PQ^GEE SUITS IN SOLID SHADES FOR FOR BOYS OR GIRLS COATS BLUE - GREEN - TAN BROTHER OR SISTER A HOST OF STYLES 2.27 68c $1.19 $1.88 AND COLORS

nm.MMsiMVsqpHMsivM^ S : Wil,; i:i^t*;Jis^.iJ'i&ilW!ifij !!jii.:-!H':i*iiii ,=•)..'.iJi •'..;. ""'l. , ., .-. •SSJBVST" i?» PAGE EIGHT FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1930 News of the World Told in Pictures

The World's Money Centre For Wightman Cup Team Target Diving

i NEW YORK CITY-A general view of the famous New YorK financial district. The building at the left Is the International Tele- phone and Telegraph Building, and the tall structure next to it U the new Bank of Manhattan structure. Heroine Governor LOS ANGELBS-Johnny Blley, national ten-foot diving champion, on his way through the air to( LOS ANGELES-Mary Gr«f, University of Southern California score a perfect bull's-eye In the novel sport of "target diving," Introduced here by the stars who are pre- co-ed, who hM been appointed to the American Wightman Cup team, paring lor the annual spring swimming meet. working out here in preparation for the international matches to be held at Wimbledon. Battle on Ice Resumed

™"""WKere the Oceans Meet ..'Wt-.1 .*i sff!

Miss Amanda Thomas, daugh- i hoto shows Sir Harcourt ter of the Warden of the Ohio Butler, the new Governor (Jen- em! of Burma, who made a per- State Prison, who is being hailed sonal tour of this section, as the heroine of the fire which escorted by military police. He One of the most beautiful marine highways In the world has been snufled out the lives of 319 con- penetrated regions where Brit- coMtmcted on the Cap? of Good Hope, extending for 100 miles along victs trapped in their cells. ish officials have not been seen the ocean front. You will note the tip of a lighthouse at one sloping While firemen and guards were for gineratlons and, on tha fighting the flames she kept ledge of the rock, and Is bounded by three oceans, the Indian, A gun of the U. S. C. Q. cutter Mt>Jave aimed at an kcbern during the iin!iu:il hatllp of the Govern- whole, created a most favorable order In the prison yard. atmosphere. Atlantic and the Antarctic. ment against these dangerous floating islands of Ice in the North Atlantic. Pres. Von Hindenburg Mourns Honoring Memory of 's Queen Cantor Rests Up

BERLIN—Frederick M Sackett, United SUtes Ambassador to , with Mrs. Saclutt as they entered the church to attend the memorial services for the late Queen Victoria of Sweden. It's an Old Tribal Custom PALM SPRINGS, CAL.-Eddie Cantor, the famous Broadway BERLIN—President von Hindenburg being greeted by HU KXMI- comedian, who U now at Palm Springs enjoying the desert sunihlM lenej, Mr TOxten, Swedish Ambassador to Oermanj, as the former prior to oommtndnc his work In a film venton of "Whoope*." •rrlTW at the church here to attend the memorial wnrlcei of tbt

late Queen Victoria of Sweden. _J, * . * Whistling Buoy A Fire Tug's Farewell J

BOSTON-A firo tug greeting tlie S. S. Rochambeau with a spray Among the natives In South Africa ttio ancient tribal customs still prevail. When the young men CHELSEA, MABS.-Augusta E. P&ge, blacksmith for the United higher than the ship's masts—on the departure of. 450 pilgrims from Of the tribe reach the coming out stiijjp they garb themselves ILS LS shown here and take part In the cere- States Lighthouse Service, adjusting manhole cover for the tank the Eastern State* for the Eucharistlc Congress at Carthage. monial dance. pocket orr the new fourteen-ton whistling and light buoy. rABTERET PRESS FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1930 •AGE NINE

Would B. iD tuck Gouip Muil Ba ji|«ac*4 My.l.r,'. Cham "111* lady who huu all (hut wealth "B«fore Fame's report can be heard," I'laln truth will Influence half • can bestow," mild III Ho, th« tug« of said 111 Ho, the tuge of Chinatown, Bcoro men at moat In i cation, or SSI (Jhinatown, "1* fortunate indeod If she "the tongue of gossip nmet glow si age, while mystery will l«td million* can go

M|I|J snutml and mtike faces In the way you "W '•'''••' ''""y. ""• do, .and I am having the greatest fun * ' "this Is the greatem fun lu the bccniiHB I'm trying to copy you. Follow The Crowd! wurlil," "Wlmt are you talking about?" "Yes, tluit it why I'm having the asked Larry, the monkey. greatest fun. I have grown tired el Strength "Yes, tell na," aald Jlmmle, tb« copying people who say 'Good morn- monkey. ing, Polly,' and 'Polly want a cracker.' —TO THE MART- "Now I have a whole monkey house "I'm talking about yon and til of v to copy and how glad I*sm the keeper your friends," iald Polly. "Yon Me, has me for a pet and puts me In the If you will but take the time to see what wo are offering, and I lived In a prlvats hous* before I monkey house wbere he la In charge. cam« to the IOO. U«for« that I lived compare thst value, you too will understand why the Mart—U such a in a bird ibop, and before that I can't "I'm having the time of my parrot renumber. . life." busy place. Just then a whistle was heard. A "sliyht 1 cam* from where mj long, funny sort of whistle. grtndpaireaU cine, but I'm sure I The children who were visiting the Wa have a number of very detirable used can on hand at «• don't know. I never took much itock monkey house looked this way and trendy attractive prices including Pontiacs • Buicks • Chryslers • Chev- ID famllj history. But at any rate that, and the keeper laughed to see the bird ibop was toy first home, my them. Oh, how the keeper laughed. ^ borne wbere a muther rolet* - Ewex • StudtUkers . Dodge* . Willys Knights • etc., in 1929 A big policeman bad come Into the monkey house and bad said "bsllo" and 1928 Models, to the keeper, bat the children had not thought there was anything fanny In that. "Still knows yoo, ehr the keeper Bald to the policeman. "The children SPECIAL THIS WEEK don't know what to male of It." "Ye», Jimmle la very loyal and do- voted," Still the children had not been able Chevrolet Six 4 Door Sedan TRIPLWEAR to understand the whistling, and the ATHLETIC UNDEKWEAH keeper turned to the children and said: This car is brand new in appearance ' NAINIOOl •••«»«• »4 "Did you see -the policeman?" A lot for your money—yet! And yoo en Jodft "We did," the children answered. TRIPLWEAR lor youW without rlak. B«WM ft "And Just before be whistled we Price-$300.00 less than new to backad by a $10,000.00 Bondsd QanMMof ob*ti heard another whistle." iHMwtli/actloii.tttach^tom^nMltTttTMit "That wu nmmle, the monkey," Drop Jn. today and tot us ahow you this r«tefero*H said the keeper. "When the police- gaarantsjod onion tutu A awa tor cwvy BHD nd boy. man came Into this noose he gave a long whittle. OUR GUARANTEE "That May B. Bo, but You'r* All So "Bn^ y9ft jjjlttJL.the monkey's whis- We will exchange wkhtn one week after date of purchase wkh- Amualhtf" Hid Polly. tle even berortyou heard the police- QUt Jo you, any car purchased from us, if for any reason you art and daddy and tome children lived. ***»***«Te#(7w~)^§-,v-w;v;#ior n •-• 11 u"riai-nm -ii fihwiiii'ii Mm.mhn fliii ua*MIHIJnEiniii •••!—mi policeman's step as he came In the and my third home Is here In the coo. dissatisfied—Providing of course the car has not been damaged. door, sod he recognised his step and "This, ai I aald before, Is the great- whistled first. eat fun in the world." "That policeman has been on his OPEN DAILY 8:00 A. M. to 9:0O P. M. "Pray tell me why you think to," vacation lately, but Jlmmle knew his aald Larry, ai he awnng by hli tall step, even though he hadn't heard It SHIRTS and SHORTS md weDt back again on hi* bar so be In over two weeks. could look at Polly, In the next cage. "Yon see, Jlmmle never forgets his "Ah, because monkeys art to fun- TUB TQAC* MA«K ny," aald Polly. "One moment they're friends." THAT GUARANTEES 39c 50c 76c $1 gay, the next tad, and the next sleepy, And now the children watched the A SQUA&e OCAL and the next hungry." policeman as he - talked to Jlmmle, '"Well, well, well," chuckled Jlmmle. and the keei«r talked to Larry, who was his special pet, and the parrot "I don't tee that that makes y* any Lisle Silk Broadcloth watched and ssld to herself: different from moat creatures. 'This Is s most friendly and Intelli- "People, and when I say people, 1 gent place, DOUBLE mean grownups and children, are gay, "I'll certainly be more of a parrot or tad, or sleepy, or hungry, or tome for knowing such clever creatures. DOYLE a of those thing* one time or another. "One can't help but pick up a little "That may be to," said Polly, "but Intelligence when one haa intelligence you're til to amuslnj. One never all around one. CUNNEEN knows what you are going to do next." "Why, I'm ashamed I ever said any- "Neither do you know what people thing to silly as 'Polly want* a crack- USED CAR MART. IAMBOC are folng to do next," said I

— A Classified Adv. Will Sell It — —Please mention this paper when i — Classified Ada. Brinj Results — buying from M , t. I ; tt - ( 11'- in i.iiL (iv iii"itY'/l\"i»HIVYin i li'v )W tviiv; >. »\ i I k lit i

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WOOLEN RUGS OUR COMPLETE COLONIAL SPINET YOUR CASH IS WORTH DOUBLE PRICILLA SEWING STOCK OF COLONIAL DESKS 9x12 VELVETS CABINETS WINDSORS Your Cash Will Buy $55.00 Values AT THIS SALE Mahogany or Lacquer ONLY Mahogany and Rush A $30.00 Value WHILE THEY LAST FOR CASH TO BE SOLD FROM For FOR YOUR COMFORT WHILE THEY LAST FOR CASH PURE COTTON REED FERNERIES HOLLAND LINEN FELT MATTRESSES WINDOW SHADES FORMERLY ... » Reg. 85c $16.50 $35.00 $3.95 up | $16.50 MATTRESSES SALE PRICE SALE PRICE $3.95 ANY SIZE 65' FOR THIS SALE -NOW- The Genuine Porcelain Top ONLY YOUR CASH WILL BABY CARRIAGES BUY THEM FOR Breakfast Suites $5.95 D, PARLINAK Reed Carriages . $25 to $30 Slashed . $36.50 $8.95 Coaches . . $22.50 to $35.00 Extra Sturdy PHONE 192 Formerly $49.00 Unfinished Chairs COLONIAL TIP TOPS Porch Rockers INNER SPRING MATTRESS A ltff(« Tlrielf of Style. any color .... 79c Parchment Bridge Lamps $4.95 Formerly $6.50 $1.15 to $2.75 END TABLES ....*. 79c Juniors ..... $6.95 $17.95 to $29.50 Colonial Styles) Tabfe Lamps $4.95 Now ALL UNFINISHED Yoa Will Find Thau Georgette Juniors Velour FURNITURE $40. Value* $19.50 $3.95 A BARGAIN REDUCED 50% Gorgeous 3-Pc. Living Room Suite 1 AMAZIN VERING Beautiful 10-Pc. Dining-Sjute FORMER 65c FELTS — BEAUTIFUL PATTERNS $ .39 Sq. Yd. $59.50 . HEAVY LINOLEUMS — NOW •*• *•• Yd- Formerly $159.00 J ' Sacrificed For Cash HEAVY INLAIDS — FORMERLY $2.98 — NOW 1.70 Sq. Yd. MEDIUM WEIGHT INLAIDS - WERE $1.98 — NOW .98- Sq. Yd. Your C«»h W3I Buy Them For Beautiful Mohair Don't Say There Are No Bargains In 3-Pc. Living Suites $98.00 Woodbridge. You Can See Themjiere. $69.50-p ~* SCOOP CHAIRS FELT RUGS - 9x12 as low as .... $6.75 $20.00 Value for $11.50 YOUR CASH WILL TALK Chain/Rockers, Cogswell You Can't Beat Our Price ARMSTRONG - 9x12 as low as . . $10.95 LINOLEUM RUGS 9x12 - as low as $8.95 MAHOGANY LIVING TABLES COMPLETE BEDROOMS Really Worth $25.00 ALL SIZES AVAILABLE CASH $12.50 You Will Have To See Seeing Is Believing DON'T You Are Welcome Miss This Opportunity To Believe D. PARUNAK, 45«6 Rahway Avenue, WOODBRIDGE K TKN FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1930 CARTERET PRESS tur« are net itlc UMII only unim Wli. Monlny* DAYS OF SUFI KRING 11 YEARS CONSTIPATION portant dill" dd . Tlie Uttle Apes of Nikko, also Criticism's Value GLYCERIN MIX ENDS I Senator Arthur A. Quinn Tells The H[K'ak>'i iiitniiluced by Jay known as the "Three Wise Monkey*," Tile time IN pu.st In Hie history of NOW QUICKLY ENDED VWaver, win* rhaix« of yester- are Mliaru, who sees no evlt; Kika- the world when any living man or 71M ncil ttjni ruu M- Oiton, of Rahway, it id tfai Kn»t ii[Hrin ubuiG*blt ptt «p J* Ag« of Comblau their authors, devoid of good taste, thtwing (am furm Nuw you CA» ttkt MpirU The simple mixture of flycerin, ployer A* Well As Employee — Deplore* Condition and Fred UrirKK", "' Woodbridge. but better all Norln of criticism »r (int. inr pl»** No water. No Mtt*f "This mercer thing has become a tiaic. No cbukinf MU*1K>D BTLJUC VOB dl«w sjuckthom bark, saline, etc., (A%r- than no criticism ut nil. The mov- *.) actts on BOTH upper ««ndd lo«er At Trenton. national problem," remarked a local DtlUrd l A«pt«. •bought were in your system. L* The long struggle of labor to get to form the first labor organization. apple, cheese sod walnut salad.—De- stagnation and death. — David The first unions here were formed Brewer. •iiTiim. ft }<*' draMi*t dot* not b*Tt Dil sWlerika give your stomach and bow recognition and Justice was outlined troit News. Aifxrfa**. *md for a fM« Mmpiv to H «rs i REAL Cleaning and «»e ho* to the Rotary Club yesterday by by ship carpenters in Boston and DRAKE'S Product- Ceo«»'iofL Dtpt. A. I |J Nooh Simt. Nrwtfk. N. J. ^oi you feel! Arthur A. Quinn, State Senator from Philadelphia. BROWN'S RELIABLE PHAJUMACY Middlesex and a resident of Sewaren. Mr. Quinn said the unions are famous the world over He said Halfpenny street in London workfnr for the betterment of both STORAGE JoKo Street »•«* Rw.tT.lt Art, is «o named because oi the long the employee and the employer. He HARDIMAN'S From Youth to Age CARTERET . FKo— 330 strike of bricklayers, on that street spoke of the pension system and the Pinaud's PHARMACY to get a penny a day wages instead home for the aged workers. MOVING There sre three trying periods in a of a halfpenny. Many of the settlers "We have a serious unemployment Ed. L. Hardiman, formerly of woman's life: when the girl matures HER CROSS LlTTLliBOY of this country came here to seek problem today," stated the speaker. PACKING—SHIPNNa Shampoo Seaman's, Perth Amboy stvsj* at RtuoBubla Rassfl to womanhood, when a woman freedom from hud masters. Some "Three to four hundred men await gives birth to her first child, when a WOULDN'T EAT OR SLEEP bound themselves for seven yean •01 El!«.b.t. Anm > Leans your haw lustrous, the help wanted advertisements every woman reaches middle age. At "My liitle son had poor "appetite, labor In payment of their passage, to day in Newark. I see them from my LJIMUB 1M1 healthy, and not tot Ay! aouldn't sleep and wan ?r.ftsi. I «•/• hip captains who sold their services office on Market Street." 1>RESaUPTI0NS these times Lydia £. Pinkham's kim Vinol and it ended thaw trouble* to landowners her*. If their services The senator alio spoke on legisla- At your dealer's—or tend 5 oc Called For and Delirered Vegetable Compound helps to re- Ike magic."—Mrs. L. DuCrest. ere in anyway, unsatisfactory, they tion. He deplored the conditions in for full-size bottle to Pmaud, store normal health and vigor. ouW^-b* automatically rebound for the legislature at Trenton. H« aaid J. BLAKE Vinol supplies the bpdy irnjiortant Cor. Rahway Avenns •uoeral element* of iron, calcium an other'Atren. years. Many of them it is being run by a few men and Spertiag Good. — Kodak Films Deft. AT, no £ 11 St, I'lVhllWiS died as,sls>e*, tn« speaker said. that bills of real merit sre not dis- Developing and Printing and Green Street with cod liver peptone, Thi» ii Just NwYork. [Sample bottle fret] Tel. 183 Woodbrtf*., N. J I UMI'Ol Mi what thin, nervous children or s^ulte Th' employment of women and eased. Bills of a controversial na. 100 MAIN ST. TJ. 26* aeed, and the QUICK result* are •uprising. The very FIRST bottle brings sound sleep and a BIG «pu»- tit* Vinul tastes delicious! J. W. MITTUCH. DngfiU 61 ROOSEVELT AVE. CARHERET Phone 455 Large Pfiila. Accessory Firm Out oP Business CLASSIFIED AD< OUR PURCHASING AGENTS BOUGHT THIS STOCK Classified advertisement* only oat Mnt a word; minimum charge 25c. FOR US FOR AS LITTLE AS CLEAN RAGS wanted, aiie of hand- kerchief or larger, 5c a pound Middlesex PresB, 20 Green street ROOMS AND BOARD 611 Barren avenue, Woodbridge, •. J. ^hone 892. W. I. 3-U tf FOR REM

•ay 19; all improvements; choice r •Bg-hborhood; apply 564 B&rron ave- aae or call 1195-R Woodbridge. W. I. 5-2. •URNISHED ROOM—For rent; 13 aliabciit a Itchy fcuv Melbourne Court; call after five. W. I. 6-2. It's only once in a lifetime that you get a chance like this . . . Crowds will pack our store FOR RENT—New six room house todav and Saturday to share in these never-to-be-forgotten bargains ... Be among the early star rent. Steam heat, f 46 per month ones^ack of space prohibits mentioning all the phenomenal values we have to offer. The doors fie Yofing, Avenel, phone, Wood- fly open promptly at 9 A. M. today. Quantities limited on some item*. frfdge 2 149J. 5 ROOM flat. All improvement*. AfnlU preferred. $3 8.00. O. Ran- dolph, IS Alden street. READ THIS LETTER / IT TELLS THE WHOLE STORY W. I. 4-18, 2&; 6-2* sTOR RENT—Furnished or unfurn- ished apartment; four rooms and Parcir BUT ONE TIRE STORAOt BATTERY lath; garage. Apply 539 Rahway avenue, or phone Woodbrtdge 267. 2fias*. Sfitus 6 W. I. 4-11 tf. OUTFIT Price CWtS Ml fOR RENT—2 or 4 furnished room Get'another. -jtpartmenta; also furnished rooms; apply Mrs. Little, 144 Main street, Mephone 8-If. W. I 7-6 tf. FREE/ HOUSE FOR RENT Ready for immediate occupancy. 5 moms, bath, moat desirable section DRIVC-RS ft minutes from station, stores, 600DYEAR ackeols, buses, new public park in CUSHION Mar; garage; reasonable. 85 Green street, Woodbridge, N. J. Tel. Wood- kridge 114. W. I. l-17tf. VALVE \HS\DZS OARAGE FOR RENT At 95 Green street, Woodbridge. Ifi.00 a month, Tel. Woodbridge 111. W. I. 1-17 tf. V. W8GLGSS FOR SALE CIGAR TROMBONE in excellent tondition. Will sacrifice for $55.00. Apply S44 Barron avenue; Woodbridge LU66A6£ 1259. SPARK; W. I. 5-2. terrier TfOToS FOR SALE—New six room house. PLUOS fide above Prices Steam heat. $5,750, easy terms. De- COLO Yonng, Avenel, phone, Woodbridge 1149J. ^ an for Q.T/R& JU6S FOR SALE—Cheap, English setter, 1 year old; female; apply 501 Rah- STOP LEAK way avenue. W. I. 4-18tf. Hub&pf FOR SALE—Five room house with bath and all improvements in Row- land place. Telephone Woodbridge MS-J or 1710. felt •UNGALOW, 4 rooms and bath, Ouco tlectric light, gas, water, sewe Qmrtmrn concrete street; price $3,500; Type terms; 6 Wedge wood .avenue, Wood. WHIRL RIM bridge; taaAire J. E. Harned, Posi PUMP Office Bildll^dbid bcenre Fr< •T. I. 2-lBtf. ft BUSINESS NOTICES rWER GATRON — Carpenter and Builder; Jobbing Promptly attend- ed to; phone 1531; Brookneld ave- •oe, Woodbridge. W. I. 4-11, 18, 26; 6-2. BATTERY HAMMOCK PLANTS and SHRUBBERY A FRUIT TREES, FLOWERINC IHBUBS, EVERGREENS, HARD"? /9 sTLOWEItS, ROSE CLIMBERS, OtAPE VINES. J. JANSA, SEW- AREN, N. J. (NEAR PUBLI SCHOOL). W. I. Feb. 21 to May SO* TRUCKING, local or long distance two trucks at your convenience Phone Woodbridge 193. John Thorn- sn. Oakland avenue, Sewaren.

6CEP 176 SMITH STREET , HORN SPOT LIOHT NICKEL POLISH

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*"•*** TOOL KIT ! Be Here When The Door; Open TODAY

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AUTO SUPPL Inc. OPEN NIGHTS 17ft New Brunswick Ave. CorfaYeLt St CARTEAET PBESS FRIDAY, MAY 2, 19:!0 S8CTI0N TWO PAGE ONI ALBERT LtCN & SCN ANN ONLY AN IMPORTANT EVENT ONCE A YEAR U llm event held h«ra. It ii planned to give the grealeit number of epe- tiil valaei ever offered. With many itema priced at coit and below whole- tale cut.

Rugs of Quality Occasional Chair Every department manager and 75 $ .75 co-worker it keyed to tka hi(h*at *29 8 pitch of entlmaiaam to ••Ubliah a Tomorrow — unusual sav- haw record. Nothing but the. neweat Urge 9x12 ft. AxminrtcT at a in* at this Anniversary and moat dmlrable in Home furaUh- startling; saving! Seatr.leesl Su- price Fancy Jacquard back and plain Velour, inii U offered. perb patterns and colo:sl Silky button -tul'ted seat. At- pile. tractive. $1.00 DOWN DiLIVER3 $1.00 DOWN DELIVERS OPEN AN ACCOUNT Complete Fine Quality 3-Piece Mohair Suite MMt Trulr ramark- LEON'S FRIENDLY CREDIT • ble valua. In- HELPS. cludai • Slm- Remarkable wiving tomorrow — start tsoni bad In rich of our great Anniversary Sale. brown eolar wllli Thousand* of Happy Home Lover* dtrorilw). aoM Durable Mohair of handsome silky panels Al«o th« are enjqying its benefits — Thous- sheen in assorted lovely colors. Ser- reillltnt Himmoiu ands of Homes reflect the great pentine fronts with drop-carvings. • print with «na Larnr arms. Resilient coit springs. iwiio*i>. n««piy splendid Friendly Spirit of its pro- tuftml mailnM, Massive six-leg; davenport, button- tective features—a Friendljp-Credit back chair, and club chair. trl Ucklaa. Account at Leon's means protection $ ,75 in times of trouble and misfortune. A SMALL DEPOSIT DELIVERS l9 For over 25 yean we have kept THIS SUITE SI 00 DOWN faith with our customers — and that's why Leon's Customers are al- DELIVERS ways safe.

10-Piece Dining Suite Bedroom Suite with of Distinction • Save Burl Panels 4 Pieces Radical reduction—immense Anniversary saving*. Walnut veneers in combina- Priced extremely low tomorrow tion with other cabinet woods. as an Anniversary Sale feature. Massive 66 in. buffet, exten- Graceful b«d, large chest, draw- sion table, five diners, host er and French Vanity, built of chair, china closet and server, walnut veneers and other se- with smart upholstery. lected woods. A SMALL DEPOSIT A SMALL DEPOSIT DELIVERS THIS SUITE DELIVERS THIS SUITE Bedd Makers-

r Simmons Simmons — Englander Bed | This Simmons Continuous This Simmons Bed of Wind- Post Bed in always in de- sor type with graceful fill- mand. It is shown in Walnut ers ig a popular bed for the nnd is typical of Simmon's finish construction. $[?'"' spare or guest room, in wal- Speoial at U nut finish, $1 #>SO I i 1All Sixei Can Be Furni.hed, at 1*<

Simmons "Beauty Rest" Mattress Simmons Ace Spring This Superior Spring Pilled-Mattress needs no Intro- '['!»> lust word in ('u duction. We carry « large stock of all sixes at ftli timos. (Springs, nil sixes. '19"

Ai 1111 LECN & Englander Porch Glider Englander Double Day Bed AH a iciilcr of comfort, and fjuod cheer, H |i<>rrh ilevan (tets ft lot of use |nit I lie care with which Kii|(liinder Porch Di'vims art' made .Solid steel panel with timid-painted flowers enhance the beauty will keep them hejintifiil ami comfortiihln for many yo«rs to come. of thin charming model. Opens to u full size bed with one easy It hikes its pluee lienutifiilly on vvranda, nun-parlor, or living motion. Complete with Engiander jpiaranteed Link Spring, and 93 Smith St., cor. King St. PERTH AMB0Y riMiin. ('ombines tin; deliifhlful swayliijf of a haminork with the mat trees, covered in beautiful cretonne. Walnut finish. comfort of it luxurioim couch. Tailorwl, upholstered seat and back. Attractive and durable covering. Specially priced at : Specially priced al •28' I I'ACIK TWO SUCTION TWO FRIDAY, MAY :!, I'.HO CAKTERET PRESS Sue Carol Never Had Any Trouble Crashing Movies Met Director At Social Func- tion; Given Teat Next Day. A visit to Hollywood, a breakfast party at which a casting director was one of the guest., a morning canter with Nick Stuart, and Sue Carel was a candidate for picture honors. Up to that time Miss Carol had been the daughter of well-to-do Chicago par- ents with the leisure and inclination to travel. During the party the carting di- rector asked Nick to induce Miss Carol to take a camera tent. The following day she auccessfully pass- \UetDAY\JOHNNY WALIMIIIIAM eOWEHW ed the test and • few weeks later A COLUMBIA PRODUCTION had finished her first role. With the advent of Movietone,, she £a|f wj,ich jjB ththe forthcominforthcomng at- pearanc* together of Bebe Daniels wan called upon to display a new tract'ion at t ththe MajesticMjstic , MisMisaa CaroCaroll and Ben Lyoii, Hollywood's most Scene from "Alias Krcin-h Gertie", ft-aturing Bebe DanieU and Ben Lyon phase of her talent. She became a aid to have the beat role of her popular couple. at the Strand fur » wcrk IM-KIIHUM^ tomorrow. ginger and dancer in "Fox Movietone entire career, giving her the utmost The film adapted from Bayar- Follies of 1929," and made a hit. opportunity for her talents as a Veiller'i stag* playi "The Chatte This was later followed by another comedienne. She i» cant as a hosiery Movietone comrdy with music, musical production, "Why Leave box," offers HIM Daniels one of he: Jack Malhall and El Brendel in the Fox model in this film of Greenwich Vil- moat versatile roles. In the inter Calf" which "pens tomorrow at the Majestic Theatre. Home," and a production entirely lage. Jack Mulhall plays opposite pretation of her dramatic and roman The Golden different in character, the outdoor her as an advertising artist, wnile El picture, "Lone Star Ranger," based tic part she converses partly in Frencl on a Zane Gray story. Brendel and Marjorie White have and the balance of the time in th< other comedy rolea. Richard Keene voluble, eloquent argot of the un In her neweat film, "The Golden and Paul Page are also prominently derworld. cast. Palatial New York apartments WOODBRIDG E furnished in futuristic style form the setting for this crook-romance. "Alias French Gertie" was directec NEW YORK Society Racket by George Archainbaud, one of the CANDY KITCHEN screen's foremost generals. It boasts caBt of veteran players of th Manufacturers and Dealers in Exposed In Film utag» and screen including Bett Strictly' Pur« Pierce, Daisy Belmoro, Robert Em Bebe Daniel* on Screen Tomor- mttt O'Connor and John Ince, on< CANDIE5 AMD ICE CREAM Alias French Ger- of the famous Ince brothers, of screen !6 Ham St. Woodbridge. Tel. 43 row in history. tie". The talkies is a departure for Miss Daniels in that she hits tn'cn given Methods and hahils of high class her long-desired opportunity to play GUSTAV BLAUM crooks jirovidi; the animating mo- a role of genuine dramatic power. of "AlfaS French flcrtfo,* ftadfo T* If, It In (fUtmsd, th* 4ttpispv • Groceries and Provisions versatility in keeping with her re- Pictures' talk film which will open markable talking screen debut am 82" Main Street Woodbridge tomorrow at the Strand theatre. triumph in the fjlamorous role o Of chief interest is the initial ap- "Bio H»ta.' [[Ml 1*11« Ml UUIMI SSI 111 Ml Ml nnmt MI nmriir.

Scene from "Alias Kreni'ti (lortii' thrilling s California Privet for Hedging, ! brains, the interference of a » . pfcg. 29c Hollyhock, Barberry for Hedging. [ broadcasting station makes them ; ; ! go haywire. Ot* DUTCH COLUMBIA BVM A police mip«rlntendei>t ar- '. ', • rued that a public honse should ; ; CLEANSER 4 COM 25c SALMON M'. can 23c '. not be granted a license for a i MMSWKT BAtMANN loudspeaker became the music | AMMONIA Ige. bat. 19c 1 PRUNES • Ib.pkf. • would encourage drinking. The 29c 633 ST. GEORGE AVENUE, RAHWAY, N. J. 1 court, however, disagreed. AaN m MOVm rUOTAH SAL SODA 2 pka> 15c MALT SYRUP Hor-uyoa* c« 49c TELEPHONES 711.712 RAHWAY UNODA tAKEM GRAHAM WAFERS It at tin 29c — Classified Ads, Bring Results — MACARONI «- SPAGHETTI 2pkfa. 17c UMEEOA BAKED* OlAHiMOTHWI GRAHAM CRACKERS pfcg. 10c BREAD . S«nd«r«j • tc MILE-A-MINUTE MARTY_By-UNIVERSAL USED CAR EXCHANGE, Fayette St. and Convey P.ace.Perth Ambov IVORY SOAP . 4 cake* 25c SCOT-TISSUE . 3 rob 25c MARTY, BE CAREFUL, WENT .' WOULDN'T NOT f. CHANCE.' You weN-r. RIO-MT BY THE LIGHTS HE LOOK Fl/NNY WftS A rAiNUTG MftN TH6 5IG-NM. RIDIN& Hlfi BIRO WHO'S U P TO CIGARETTES t VAN CAMP'S DIDN'T HE? e o HIDE UG-HTS— HORS Lucky Strlkai, Cam*!*, CW»tt»rfl»ldi, Sw««t PURIED VE9ETA1LES OOWN TME OP Caporalt, OM Gold*, rieaWnti P»«i, Spinach, T—Mtoes. Carrots. Carton $1.15 2 pkgi. 23c To-DAY? UNIVERSAL USED CAR 6 •*. can. 14c EXCHANGE j GOOD USED FRESH VEGETABLES SPECIAL— Thursday, Friday nnd Saturday AT ALL A*P MARKETS FRESH PEAS . . 2 tb.. 2k Thunday, Friday and So*wr««y The following <«ls will !„• out of our paint .hop this week. It would W to your advantage, (if intereated in a good us«d cat w.tl, ,,,,llly i,,il«-B of unu.ed tranaportation remaining) to l«>ok these reconditioned car. over: FRESH SPINACH . 3 ibi. 15c PIERCE-ARKUW COACH.-Refinished Sable, and STUDEBAKKR DICTATOR SEDAN _ Burgundy NEW CABBAGE . ib. 5c LEGS of LAMB striped with Old Ivory and Vermillion. with gold striping. A very distinguished looking car. C STUDEBAKER PRESIDENT SEDAN — This world NEW TEXAS YEUOW ONIONS ib. 5c HUDSON SEDAN — A beautiful Manchuria Blue k. 29 champion car has b««n finulied a very attractive M with Old Ivory striping. Croton Green, wijh Machinal^ Green ribbon striping. Our motto--"Every Owner Must Be A Satisfied Owner". THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC HA CO, EASJBN MVtSION Dop'tforget our 5-day change privilege without los. to the buyer. FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1930 SECTION TWO PAGE THREB READE'S PERTH AMBOY THEATRES

MAJKHTHl

M.liu.e Daily at llOO 11 tuning at 7 «*d 9 .Saturday, HoluUjt READE'STELEPHON (nAfttSTIG^E IAS ^ PERTH AMBffi $2.00 THE HOUSE OF BROADWAY •XUU'HONB 1M1 Attraction* TALKIES and SOUND rnrn for Seven Days Beginning Tomorrow, May 3 EOe 3 Coming For One Week Beginning Tomorrow, May 3

•m

A GREATER STAR •j i IN A GREATER SHOW... •1

t yutul of golden girls1 fcurful of golden tunei BAHIUS Stockingful of golden charm in a delightfully Eil»J«aV* Sw—thasrt ia a daring musical m BEHair-TriggeN r LYORomance of N -7-. tone of gay Greenwich Smooth Upperworld Rack- 4 Village eteers. JACK MULHALL Star of "Rao Rita" fop* Every Dramatic High Spot MARJORII WHITE Wkh Finest Performance of H«r Career , .. C f PAUL PAGE You'ean measure w#> but you can't count the laughi of this peppy production directed by MILLARD WEBB. rom the Liberty Maga- fRfNCH zine story by AARQh DAVIS: GIRTH

Burning Up The Crooked Bywa^i To The StraighUway Ahead ... A Vibrantly Dramatic Story Prom The Genius of Bayard Veiller, au- thor of "Trial of Mary Dugan" and Within the Law."

Alto ALL-TALKING THRILL ROMANCE MOVIETONE NEWS Also Movietone News And MOVIETONE SHORTS and Movietone Shorts

4 - DAYS - 4 3-DAYS-3 BEGINNING SAT. MAY 3 CRESilCENT BEGINNING WED. MAY 7 "Slightly Scarlet" Popular Prices, Matinees 10c and 20c, Evenings 15c and 35c 'THE MaODY MAN" THE CAST Plenums f>™**p* Her Secret Characters Player. known! Al Tyler William Collier, Jr. Startlingly Dramktic! * Eg . Alice Day AN AlfrMWNO HUSiai PKAHA/ A aJlm white 'wrist in the Von Kemper John St. Polit glan of hia flashlight. He joe Yatet Johnny Walker Mlsea it. The woman he IOT^I—• thief I The man Martha Mildred Harri« •he lov««—loves lyT Prince Grederich Albert Conti Evelyn Brent knoin her secret. One of GusUy - Tenen Holtz the terrific thrill scenes Adolph l*e Kohlmar 1n a love-swept romance. Von Badcr Bertram Marburgh and Fram Jo«>f - Anton Vaverka Bachman ~ Major Nichols MOODY THE TECHNICAL STAFF' Produced by Harry Cohn Clive Brook Directed by R. William Neill "ALICE DAY WULIAMCOLUEHJK Assistant Director Sam Nelson Cameraman Ted Tetilaff om| JOHN STPOLIS Asst. Cameraman Henry Freulich BY In a smashing Ihit you Continuity and Dialogue by Howard J- Green R WILLIAM NEILL won't want to miss! Technical Sound Engineer John P. Livadary Sound Mixing Engineer G. R. Cooper Art Director Harrison Wiley Romantic! Alio Film Editor Leonard Wheeler Touching story of a Also matter musician MOVIETONE NEWS whose art is sacrific- ed on the altar of fa- and MOVIETONE NEWS therly devotion. And MOVIETONfe SHORTS SUPERB SCREEN MOVIETONE SHORTS ENTERTAINMENT FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1930 PAGE FOUR SECTION TWO News of the World Told in Pictures

Versatile Track Ace Seeing Chicago by Boat Returns From Hague

CHICAGO—Chicago Is so situated that It offers boating as one of the "pet" diversions T':ls :>l:ture shows the first cruiser of the season to be launched—in the hazy distance can be seen Chicago's s''.yllne.

Long Island Duck Farm

NEW YORK—Mlsa Marjorle Whuemtn returning aboard UM President Roosevelt after representing the United States at tbe Con- ference for the Codification of interniiiiuinl Law. She Is the youngest delegate and only woman expr. t on "rrr;;)ojis:b!Hty of States." PHILADELPHIA-Iliimey r,cilint'

CHICAGO—Now that the "June bride" season Is neaiing, tbt quest for the very special band Is on. The three young ladles pic- 1 J. E. Wilkinson, tlip tlrst of the racing out board motor ptlot-i to MORICHES, L. I. —Henry, three, and George, two, Buckhelt surrounded by hundreds of Lori- '"'.and tured above came across some ancient wedding rings and couldn't reach the finish point »r t'n- V.tii•mile ra New York City. ducklings. This duck farm raises 5,000,000 birds annually. resist the temptation of trying them on. Noted Russian Author Winning Hurdle Team at Penn Relay Carnival The Old and the New

PHILADELPHIA—The Yale University quartet that won Uv wo-yard .shuttle hurdle college relay championship of America. Left to right: A. G. De Vue, H. Ilrerclim, J S. Tritte mid C O. Childs.

Federal Scientists Test Sprinklers

NAI'LEK, Maxim tlotky. tamous mithor, Is returning to NEW YORK-Upper, rotund cops, wiUh heavy moustaches. In his native after H three-year sUy in Naples. Mr. Qorky, their gray helmets of 1910, contrasted with, lower, trip men of the shown with a young admirer, will live at Moscow. rifle regiments, In their polished nickel steel helmets, as they marched Queen of Blossom Festival in New York's police parade. Better Homes Week

Pretty Miss Sue I'ollunl, daughter of Oov. John a. Pollard of A group of obsolete army airplanes are to meet a fate similar to this as scientists of the Bureau of Virginia, la crowned Queen Klienandoah VII., Queen of tlie annual Mrs, Ray Lyman WIJtmr, wife of the Secretary of Ute Interior, apple blossom festival, by Uov. L. CI. Hardman of Oeorgia in the. Standards at Washington burn them In a specially built hangar in a series of teats of the efficiency of plant* a crabappie tree at the Olrl Beout Headquarters In Washing- famous Valley of Virginia. Wlom sprinkler systems to protect aircraft and hangars from tha menace of Are. ton, officially Inaugurating lietter Homes in America Week. CART£RET FHB3B FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1930 SECTION TWO HumbU Md Proud And G«t Bumpad He humble, for the worst thing In the "Stop, Look mid Mitten" la all right, rid 1B the same stuff us you; be con- but many a fellow gets bumped as he J The Dvioitttor'H Letter Hox !',', for the stars are of the same Ht-p» to look.—I)es ftfolnes Tribune- tult as you.—Nlcholal Velimlrovlc. Capital. \«lx!<•«•• on Hunt* Ifrecvraiiou . .

CAROLYN VALENTINE WRIGHT ITS WISE TO CHOOSE A SIX Announces The Opening of LKITCHEN A demonstration tells THE FIRST METROPOLITAN RESTAURANT IN PERTH AMBOY yon why it's wise IN THE HOBART BLDG., HOBART STREET ON to choose a six / iQ s Y 12th 193Q A Guwt Room That It Both Attractive and Raltful. •_ ^ J M- iJjAI * Beth (]e»rr as lols of drawer apnce wlsere you can _ BREAKFAST — LUNCHEON — DINNER — You are the soul of lms|>ltftlily BO l>t> disorderly unil yet not get your of course you are plumiing a guest things all mussed up. A good sited room for (lift new house. I simply dresser, «ultnl>le to either a man or a cannot Imagine you not having a place woman, !• almost a neceRnlty In the to "fjold away" an expected or unex- guest room. Then yon will probably pected ' visitor, and I Icnnw you are want a dressing table. A comfortuble Everywhere, buyers are agreeing springs—the four Lovejoy hydraulic supremely happy now that you are go- chair with a table and lamp beside (t "It's wise to choose a Six." And II •hock abeorben—the weatherproof log to have a nice cuest room In the will be welcomed by the weary trav- THE PERTH AMBOY new home. ' eler. you want to know why, get a dem- 4-wheel brake*—and the sturdy I A thousand times, yes—comfort U • Curtains and draperies for the guest the first consideration 'when planning room really ought to be of some sim- onstration of the Chevrolet Sli. hardwood-and-ateel construction a place for a visitor. Can yon Im- ple, easily cleaned material, for noth- GAS LIGHT COMPANY ©T tne luxurious) Fisher bodies)*. '••) agine a comfortable guest room un- ing makes a room look so fresh as LMIA what an atnaxlnft difference I I less the bed Is comfortable? That Is newly laundered curtains. The trav- where you will want to begin with eler who wishes to aleep late In the two- more cylinders make—In It will take only a few minutes to 206 SMITH STREET I morning will be grateful if the hostess furnishing the spare room. A mattress confirm ail the reasons why it is win of good quality and silent, resilient hat provided draperies sufficiently smoothness, In silence. In flexi- springs will make your guests rise up large to be drawn across the windows, bility and In comfort. to choose a Chevrolet SIM. SO come and call yon a blessed hostess, Ton or shades to be drawn down in order ia today. iS*t • Heateatini g and Cooking Appliances I can have the mattress color gay and to keep out the early morning light i attractive, too, In keeping with what- Little things even more than big And learn what it. AndlnYestl- ever color scheme you decide on for things count In tbe guest room, Beth. ROADSTER ORPHA1TON ftate Chetro- Ruud Automatic and Storage the room. I'm sure you can count the times In • difference all •495 your life yoa'va gone Into a guest rk«Co

r Now...you wash and iron III.CYLINDBB SMOOTHNESS AT LOW €••* — Pleas* mention thia paper to vartUers; It helps you, it Imps ' with one speedy Thor machine it helw your t*oer. — ^Nineteen Thirty (HJSHOLM.t (HAPMAH at a price formerly asked Membeti JVnr f Of * Sleek SuUngt a Goo J Year for ^Making Vtmbtri Nr» Ytri Ch b| for a good washer alone 203 MADISON AVE. NeeJeJ Puolic Improvements T*tepkona Parth Amboy ZM*

THOMAS MEACHAM A NEW home laundry method Manager /\,has swept the country! Women MODERN PAVEMENTS • SEWERAGE SYSTEMS have turned to it by tens of thou- SEWAGE DISPOSAL PLANTS sandi since its introduction but a year ago. Home economists, lead- BRIDGES • SIDEWALKS • SCHOOL BUILDINGS ing women writers and housewives everywhere have given it their un- qualified approval. To you, madam—faced with the home laundry ABOR and materials are plentiful. Ex- problem—it offrr* immediate and lasting rrlicr. I4 perienced contracting organizations are ready with equipment and skilled Costs no more than most good washers mea to compete for business. Seldom We knew thia machine would enjoy great sale. before have conditions been so favorable, lUspocd.efficicncy,beauty and time-saving quali- ties have never been equaled. So it is priced low. for tbe town that needs improvements. 'made available to women everywhere at about Take advantage of these conditions! Use pries of most good washers alone—lew than the price of many. And at no sacrifice of quality. PORTLANP CEMENT ASSOCIATION Every Thor must be first a quality machine. 347 Madison Avenue NEW YORK CITY f $Q#i 6te 10 hours a week ^ The wife? Is the famous Thor Agitator. The iA National OrganixMtitm >- 'twily washer of its typc,by actual test that thor- to Improve and Extend tbt Uut of Cmcrt* oughly cleanses shirt cuffs ami collars in one (washing without soaking. And does it ip gentle ' safety to clothes. PORTLAND CEMENT Tob is glistening ripple-green porcelain enamel, inside and out—the most copied washer feature Thor has ever perfected. CONCRETE FOR PERMANENCE /•/«• Hun wmher aivnv Jjl''.7.'>, with the speed iriiner SI WMH. turner alone I I1'.5(1, /Wei illghtly higher if purrhved on irrmt. & "THE DENTIST WHO DOES NOT HURT" t»PERT ON Surely you will wish to see this new E VfXJ type speed washer that costs no more, yel PAINLESS EXTRACTION GoTo does both washing and ironing, and can ASLEEP OR AWAKE be purchased so conveniently—$5 down PLATES-CROWNS-BRIDGES-FILLINGS and eighteen months to pay balance. THAT LOOK AND FEEL NATURAL FREE — Examination, Estimate and Advice — FREE dome in and let us show you how it works, or fill in and mail Out ^ Tium Patitnti Can Havt Tkur Wtrk ComphttJin Ont Day the coupon for further particular* about this complete laun- dry service. 181 MARKET ST. DR. M^LLAS NEWARK, N, J. And now an ingrnioux Tlioi invrtilion innkeH it possible Public Service Electric .and Gas Company HOURS—* A. M. to • f. U. 8UNDAY—10 A. M. to 1 P. M. to remove the wringer place the Thor Speed Iron in its place—turn the switch sit down ami iron. Ploaie ien4 me Ulwtrsted literature doicribing Ibe new Thor Washing and Ironing Machine. The Thor Speed Iron -called the greatest home labor- saver ever invented—does in 2 hours the work that took 8 hours by hand—and does it well. The method is sp sim- For Quality ple you master it in a few minutes. Yet it irons everything —and presses men's trousers and women's skirts. WALLPAPER PAINTS and VARNISHES TRY THE PVBLICWSEmCE MOTT RADIO SHOP New York Wall Paper Co. 101 Roosevelt Ave. CARTERET, N. J. 356 STAli STREET PERTH AMBOY, N. J. 'horn;: Carteret 1668

.Si*-i*^ji k »*•;

PA(;K SIX SECTION TWO FRIDAY, MAY 2, I!)J!O CARTERET PRESS By OtfNE CARR JUST HUMANS C American Wtiri ViAturai, loa YOU KNOW ME, AL Insomnia Doesn't Bother Jack By RING IARDNER

; THATT ColK/t; To Mf lV THERE AlkrTNO SWEDE WHO Hf 1 III <\x,»LO CIKiJ STAY

irt-l lf: Hfc COOLO

REG'LAR FELLERS And Do Moidceys

"II Must Be Great to Have Nothin' on Y'mind, Hey, Kidl"

JUST HUMANS toy Gin* Carr .. .4 . ««J

GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES She Means Night-Bird Life By ANITA LOOS

TOIWD W1 IKAL IN THOUGHT — MBV6TR, HAV/» MAS JUST COMB "TO

iWMtfcdtffl*-*,^

PEOPLE WHO PUT YOU TO SLEEP—NUMBER NINETY By RUBE GOLDBERG

LtT'5 io:»7'/a p.*,

•, g g AMt> oM< "CRUMBS!" • M SIX HOURS A Mb. TW€WTy-_N|Me ^6 OUGHT To B6 q*7S- MILG3 of»F COAST op pcoTLAAJt* IF NO DATES DAlLi HELPS -riAJerJTY-TiMO teMCTTS A/O HO f ROM THe WAV \Ai6'Re QOiNiG I Sunday—Ye Hre My friends If ye do

Tuesday—Ye have not chosen me but I have chosen you.

Wednesdiiy—There Is a Friend that WHO IS ALWAYS WO stlckcth closer than a brother. ujneee -T^e SUIF» is AWU HOUU FA IT'S GOIMG A Nit OTH€Ti FOOtlsM

Thursday—If ye kept My command- WAS MO "•»• I-T»->.' ^ ments ye shall iihlile In My love.

\MEO,IHOPETO [ l»—I'd like to soe the boss. CWOkSIFJUWlORl **—Gimme your name and address. If •1—No thunks. I'm married. It ISA^TSIWWQ- A n HIT "WAT BOV (Q ' iota I waut to see. AJEAT BASTIW

FINNEY OF THE FORCE .*! Talking With the Stars NOW 01 «0PPOf g AN 1Ui M9UMS P«UA WlU. OtT AM HEVL TBu.'«a HB KW AM* NOT K*to BTT9 IN M« 1MAT SUIT TO SOME YAU.EQ OlOVES AM'«0Mfr VK3UT 4 flOCKIT AT TMff TOlM* ! - AW UtELL • /SUWoftT HfiQ AM 1MB WNlTABLE V 1H6TALI.MINT PLAN TO •OH*, 6USPIW06BS TO CO UIOM TWB «LXT AM* r OFF6PCIMQ IX) A MANMM. A8«» W(SC AV£K) 1k(tMSILVCS UPf WO M3UMO SWELL VMOT« lUlMKlM ITLL A CSALLDM AV <3Afi IN HIS MOQf-, WHOT HEQ OL' LAW WAS IVEQ ACCuS-, MAKB FOOWS OOT AV MEN - BUT TWBV A QOAOSTBQ.OFP WW'LL — LTOMEU TO -AH 1 BtiAAMES *T Hl5SlLFl MAKB M6N OUT >*/ FOOLS.t

He— My college was founded III 'ruts IS Kbe—I never even beard It WOB 'SITE 1 ne.cn TRIALS OF A GIRL

H Htie goca with nil tlie boys sbe't a ftrpper.

V die doesn't go with boy*, the jet them.

It ibe speaks to every one, ahe'i nirt

II she doesn't, she's a "high-batter." THE FEATHERHEADS BrOtbonw M the goes-to echool just to itudy, left out of partlea. ALL WE KNOU) ABOOT T^ MT OS Tb D WE 0K? PARADE!- Dl6TA)sJCE BETWEEN HCCE TWfc TClP UJIU. MAKE If she doesn't study la school ibe'l TO A CHlCK£ LAVJTOM HOA IS WAT ITS WE NfOO 6WTOV VtouC PLACE WEAR A BIS TttJCK LOAP OF PtC-NiCW&Q5 Tv^RolOMG SS-MILES"^ SUMDAVU)fcLLKKl do what must a poor girl do to J5OM0AV-- SKIWS AT OOG HOOD I ••• "WAT IT'5 5O MAMV THtOL)5AND a huppy medlumT OWE FOOT AT A TIME! •• FEET, EKSMIT AKJD A GTEQ JAJCMES ! MERELY REMARKING SWELL!

Tbe modern woman's dress bai latitude than longitude. T

Virtue Is Its own reward, but even •• mgel may blow his own born.

II norms there are no laws atrong awitgh to stop the trouble brewer*.

— ,> • The three words most effectively •M4 b; nmn to preserre peace are •Tfei. my dear."-Midweek Featnra •Mtlon of the Chicago Dtlly N«w«, ,_ .•AUTERET PRESS FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1M0 SECTION TWO I'AGE SKVKN

BtMMvwmw Unemployment Increases Triw a Tuberculosii Menace I'm'iii|ili>ymeiit. bait wurkinjr. an4 \ . . Kx|K\|H'r» l ,%il\ !«•«• on Home ll«-ror«(loii vin^' coiuiithHiH aiul l'*w wziye.s luive s iniu'h inlluenif un the incidence I tubcri'iilnris as infection according o l>r. t'liurli's I. Silk, president of Bargains lio Middlt-Kvx County Tuberculosb "A very lariff iwrcentage 1929 Plymouth Sedan $200 to watch thi.ui. th« Chines* preat re- this case. port*. theee men delay treatment but wham The largest tomb robbery occurred The moat recent robbery occurred placed in sanatoria frequently faQ ta> more thnn a year ago, when the tombs remain a, sufficient length of Urn*. 1928 Nash Convertible Coupe $300 In the tomb of Tn Hit, one of the fa- of the Emperor Chlen Lung and the "These fathers almost always infect: Torlte concubine* of the Mtnchn «6> Empress-Dowager Tin Hsl were en t*eir children," said Dr. Silk, "an* ; eror Chlea Lung. Four soldiers have lered and robbed of their vfttatble con another vicious circle is started. Iav 1927 Chrysler Roadster $240 been arrested charged with complic- proved economic conditions have un- teats. It Is estimated that the tate*e» doubtedly influenced the decline hi ity In the robbery. obtained Jade, gold., silver, and other All of the valuable pieces burled the death rate in the past quarter ef AND MANY OTHERS. EASY TERMS. jit'ins to the value of more thau a century. If we are to succeed in our with the concubine have disappeared, *2,B00,fl00. campaign to reduce tuberculosis to a the Chinese pretc declares, and some The Over Mantel Spice It Incorporated Into the Decoration ftehtme of the minimum a much greater degree of of them have appeared for sale in Mantel Here. economic security must be assured." 1'elplng market*. The loot from the — Cltssifled Adi. Bring Results — Qr, Silk concluded, Beth dear: liliiimci] fur, than ID doing that way I don't believe there la Anything you llbdllt III il Pl-M. are going to neglect In planning your Ymir mantel Is a part of Uje room RIORDAN MOTOR CAR CO.home. Yon geem to think of even OPEN SATURDAY EVENING and you will like It better, I ant sure, more things thai) I tlilnk of, and It's If Its decoration Is In keeping with Chrysler Agency tny bualnew to think about homes, the rest of the furnishings. If you STORE Yes, I can tell you a few things about have brass ornaments some place else B-C SILK STORES, Inc. Telephone niiintt'lH. In the room, have another one on the POLICY As UBUUI It I* easier to sny what mantel. If you have a touch of red 164 SMITH STREET Perth Ambojj 104* im ruiiur do In furnishing a home may depend It out by having some small red object Perth Amboy, N. J. ELIZABETH on a great ninny special circumstances, on the mantel. If the dominant color Best for 1569 but occaelonally there In something of your living room Is blue you might Less New Jeriey Branches you Just must nut do. There I* aome- emphasize It with a blue bowl on the Elizabeth, Trenton, thlog you rnuit not do about maatela mantel. 45 BROAD STREET 115 SO. BROAD ST. and It Is this: Pure Silk, natural color silk latest spring and summer Try half • teiapoonful of ii ihe euiett, ufett and tureat way to KIIHSCMHI SALTS In a «li* of hot ]*v ^k. lant. Double elastic neatly tailor- for the hot weather. Special _*HALSKELLY ed in the newest shades. SOV AUSAUSTAT H tWUMMPCMU. 65 i $1.00 CAST FAY WRAY J5css MOHAWK PILLOW CASES QAIatkkvjl Vests m Fine Rayon, neatly tailored CRINKLED SPREADS 4 <°' $1.00 AtldtM. In match your bloomers. ea. MATTRESS COVERS Attm< ti"ti« Full size, colored stripes, Three-quarter and full size, All lnlUir.K washable, in blue, green, made of heavy unbleached Alto Dresses and Hooverettes rose and gold. Special muslin, taped opening, ser- Vitaphona Act Vlt»plicmr Art viceable. Special All-Talking Scmsii DRESSES — Fine quality, washable pi- Comedy Sound Newt que, broadcloth and batiste in dots, tiny each floral prints, cape sleeves. Tailored and 95- Next "SONG THK WEST" silhouette style. Sizes 16 to 48. THURS. —With- HOOVERETTES — With clever little EACH details, ruffles, silhouette A-B-C SILK STORES, Inc. A JOHN BOLES — VIV1ENNE SEGAL styles, and washable; sizes While They FRI. JOE E. BROWN -•SINGING — TALKING Jo Last PAGE EIGHT SECTION TWO FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1930 CARTERET PRESS Last Man's Club Jack Rabbit Picture THE One morning as Little Jack Rabbit WM hopping through the Shady For- Paulus Dairy Coloring Contest est he met the Tailor Bird. Main Office: 189-195 New St., New Brunswick, N. J. By DAVID CORY "I'll main you a ftylnjt wit for Phone 2400 Established 1890 •even lollypopt," agreed that buni- nelc-like feathered fellow. .AULUS' t Color a Picture and Win a Prize "Here they, are," cried the little POSITIVELY bunny, taking the candies from hii USE ERFECTLY MILK Hello, Boys and Girls! knapsack, nen he followed the Tail- ASTEURIZED Color this picture as weU as you can or Bird to hla shop in the Big Oak And send it at once to the Jack Rabbit Man, in care of * Trie. After cutting and sewing, fit- Walker-Gordon Certified Milk CARTERET PRESS ting and trimming, the Tailor Bird turned out a beautiful flying suit, Wendmere Farms Raw Golden Guernsey Milk A PRIZE—your Uncle Dave's beautiful Little Jack Rabbit Book- Suvdam's and Rutger's Special Raw Tuberculin will be given for the best picture sent in. a pain of wings and a tail to Tested Milk Winner's name announced weekly. •test by. And no sooner did the little DISTRIBUTION COVERS t$jMt hare it on, than away he went - Yours for a story, over the housetops and over the New Brunswick, Highland Park, South River, Sayreville, ' ^ DAVID CORY, steeples, over the cities and over the Fariih, South Amboy, Perth Amboy, Woodbridge The Jack Rabbit Man. people,Goodness, how he did go! Carteret, Fords and Metuchen, N. J. Charles Lockwooil of Clinmberlaln, After a while and many a mile and S. D., ftt)-yenr-oiu Civil wiir veteran a laugh and a smile, he suddenly who, with the denlli of Peter 0. Haiti 01 years old, of Atwuter, Minn., became thought, "I mustn't lose my way. Up the Ions'survivor (if the famous "Last here in the air there's no trail like Man's club." On July 21, 1886. that in the wildwood." ihlrty-tliroe members of i) Coinpunj first Minnesota volunteer Infantry, "Better turn about for home," who bad served side by side In the Henry Frahme suggested the Sun. "When I'm gone Civil war, organized themselves Into It will be dark up here." a "Last Man's club." A bottle of So the little bunny turned about, Burgundy wine was purchased and SURGICAL APPLIANCES but, Oh dear me! After a mile or each year the men assembled to drink each other's health. The orlt- more, not quite three, and surely not Inal bottle of wine WHS not opened AND SUPPORTERS four, he Btill .couldn't make out his nntll three years ngo when only three little house on the earth below. Was- members were left. Peter Hall, who n't that dreadful? bas Just died, tasted It and the bottle Now In Our Own Building was resealed. If Lock wood fulfllls "I'm lost, I'm lost!" he cried, his the original Intent of the club,,he will eyes filling with tears and his noso drink alone to his 32 departed com- 20 West Scott PI. Elizabeth, N. J. growing pink and trembly. Just then rade* oo July 21. .v , a wirvlau jaeeuga earns. tQ him from Opposite City Hall tit Tsilii BSIIH "r ""-'1 ' — MI. heart, Bunnikins! Wipe your eyes and look down behimt that big clump " of trees." -(Sure enough, there stood his little house in the dear Old Bramble Patch. "Oh, thank you, Uncle Dave," cried the grateful little bunny, and doW-he glided as nicoly as you please. '

i. •' And noV, 'dear boys and girls, color the illustration to this story You'll Enjoy "the and perhaps you will be one of the lucky little artists to win a Little Fresh from the Cob" flavor Jack Rabbit Book, Send your picture to me, care of this paper. The next five best will receive free of this Delicious Sugar Corn! tickets to the Railway Theatre Sat- urday matinee. Yours for a story, ASCO Genuine Golden Bantam DAVID CORY, The Jack Rabbit Man. Name Age Sugar Corn 225 Tender, golden kernels, sweet as sugar—a* fine at you ever ate. Truly, wonderful quality, and exceptional value at this low price. Again Our Producer to Consumer Plan works to your advantage. Shop with ASCO and Save the Difference! Louella BUTTER lb 45c Gold Seal EGGS £ 37c The Finwt ButUr in America! Th. Pick of Ik* N«t*l ASCO Reg. 2Oc Reg. 21c STRAWBERRY or CALIFORNIA RASPBERRY Home-de-lite Preserves Mayonnaise Peaches Big jar 15c can 18c Made in our own Kitchens, Delicious and 4 treat CLEANER Just the Fruit and Sugar. from fresh OKJTB and the for any meal. finest of ingredients WARMER HOMES ** ASCO Country Gentleman Asco TEAS or Shoe Peg Corn Plain Black or Mixed c THROUGH THE "STANDARD" HEATING PLAN , 2 "» 29c ub 10c : I* 19c : »> 38c ASCO Staffed Olives .. bot 10c, 20c, 3OcImported Olive Oil Vfe-pt can 25c Kremsjl Dessert* pkg 5c Snider's Fancy Tomatoes.... glass jar 19c Broken Slices Hawaiian Pineapple Snider's Table Peas .... glass jar 25c Constant, steady, dean, healthful heat—without b can » !~~ - 'K 23c Snider's Sliced Beets glass jar 19c smoke or;soot—comes with every delivery of ASCO Toasted Bread Crumbs.... pkg 10c Asco or Pel Monte Sour Krout 2 cans 25c S*nider't Green Lima Beans glass jar 35c ^Standard" FurnaceOil (Light) and "Standard" Heating Oil (Medium). You can protect your- fflMS MACARONI, SPAGHETTI OR NOODLES -2*-19° self now on n< xt winter's requirements, Gold Seal Rut. 13c ASCO OnePkg. Cooked Refined with the same care given all Macaroni or CAMPFIRE "Standard" products, these two oils are free Pumpkin from impurities. Every drop bums completely Spaghetti MARSHMAILOWS k 8 and One 10c Can C ' —with no waste. "Standard" Heating Oil 3 p * 17c 2 * 19 • (Medium) and "Standard" Furnace Oil (Light) Mai - O - Whip Makes Croo «fTi4e FLAKO are always uniform in quality and economical, lef 9c ASCO *\ ^fj I Noodles j"" 1/ Don't let your tank run too low now. Espe- r 25c IE CRUST cially at this season of the year, you can never As Good aa the best home made! Robenj lb N. Rings 25c be quite certain when the thermometer will Bread Supreme »"•£'<) 8c B. lb drop and you'll need heat. Much better to Christ.e 37C C. Victor Bread p*", 5c Brown (Asstd.) have a sure supply of "Standard" Furnace Oil loaf (Light) or "Standard" Heating Oil (Medium) £" Parlor Brooms .-49c . ASCO COFFEE lb T than to have a bad cold or the grippe/ » Carefully .Reeled, full-bodied be • 29c ASCO Extrn Strength ron.lrd .. i|t. bot Victor Blend Acme Brand Call or write the office below for full infor- ii. JO Ammonia COFFEE »>25< COFFEE mation about the "Standard" Heating Plan. Keg. |Sr bi bot Assure yourself of next season's supply at ASCO Cider or White Distilled Vinegar 2 ' ' 25c present prices, based on terminal costs plus Rol> Roy P«le Dry •Rob Poy Pair Dry 'Ruppert's Cereal freight Ginger Ale wli ALE £ 15c i'lllS Imltlr cli Beverages 4 2S STANDARD OIL COMPACT Freah Produce! •FNEW JEBSEY FRESH PINEAPPLES 2 for 25c Cor. Mattano Place and Seaman Ave. FANCY BANANAS Doz, 25c Telephone Perth, Amboy 1700, 1701 CALIFORNIA CARROTS 3 Bunches 25c PERTH AMBOY FRESH GREEN PEAS 2 Lbs. 21c GREEN SPINACH 6 L,b8 25c Sure, Even Heat All Winter . with the "STANDARD" Heating Plan NEW CABBAGE 4 Lbs. 25c There u an ASCO Store near your home. Stop fan at any time and look at the attractive displays of merchandise—4hen comider the fair prices!

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