32 pages 32 - digifind-it32 pages 2-secnons ra(,:'xviii, no. 14 32 pages 2-seo10ns woodbridge,...
TRANSCRIPT
32 PAGES2-SECnONS
ra(,:'XVIII, No. 14
32 PAGES2-SEO10NS
WOODBRIDGE, N. .1 . FRIDAY, JUNE 5. 193R
FROM OURFRONT
WINDOWMl hail to the Woman'i Club
I fords which il planning, if''„„ plrxe, to areet a clubhouia
„,! community centre in that,,,!„„ of the Township. Th«•,,wnihip Committee ii loiitf tb
the club all the brick sai-
MONEY LACK BANSALL STREET OILINGE. W. NIERREVEALSUnfair To Use Tew Dollars'
Available For The WorkSays Commissioner
DUST STORMS RISINGLack of funds prohibits the
ili f
Despite Rout At Polls, Old GuardUU FREE SHOWSNames Peterson First H W Czar TO FEATURE WEEKHealth Officer Who Raigned Under Fire h 1934 Joint OPENING STADIUM
IV1. , oiling of any streets in theiePd from the destruction of I Township this year, Road
" r f ^ . k C 2 t . " t a t Oonjm ioner Ernest W.Nief1 - • - • declared last night.Commissioner Nier said he-
,u<d by Fords men; to thati »rc*ly a cent of capital outlay
uill b e required. How is this.f,,r honest-to-goodnest con-I,,unity spirit? ' Woodbrtdge,.,,.V,t vtcll take notice.
! Kail'been in receipt of innumerablerequests for treatment* of dustythoroughfares but that in eachcase he was forced Jto adviec the
, j petitioners that the town, docs'not:inction for ineptitude,.ong- have the money at this time to payI'laimed by the County Re-|for the work.
mi organization, was appar-- "While I am in hearty.synpathy^rahbed-off this week , by; with the taxpayers who are forced
bndgo Democrats. They ac-to endure the inconvenience anddrew the "Old duard out| unpleBsantnesfe of the wideb-pfe-
tircment and named Peter, v a i e n t condition nf which they aremi, Anthony Aquila and complaining, the pimple fact \i that
i, Cill, chairmen respectively,!our ^ w t appropriation will not,. Fust, Second and ln i ra i p e r l n i t (.Xpt<niliti.re for oil this
Nn doubt this news will,ye l i r i
ihi. Republicans, _ \ J "It might be pp.wjble to.juUMM——"•""" ~~ a few '(Jottii't aitit'of our funds wtn
PRICE THREE CENTS
Joseph Gill And Anthony Aquila As The ThreeChieftains Of The Democratic Party Here Jordan Announces Entries
F«r Rocking Chair TestLocal Democrats are buzzing today over the nomina- Are Being Taken
tion of Peter E. Peterson, formerly Tewnship Health Offi-C d i C h i
Graduates Tomorrow
Incidentally, rumor is preral-I that county-wide candidates, Ki.ing to jet a cold receptionrrabosjts when the Fall cam-ming gets hot in Woodbridge.„. local G. O. P. machine,..,,,"t liUe- the treatment ac-,,1,-d by the Morris-Holiworth- ua(.R ( n n m , I m s a c c e n l r U a l e a [ n e,nrh dynasty and may show | d u s t p r 0 ) , ] e n l t o a p o i n t w j , e r e,t how much, when the Bruns -i, kites come arouI,•«. in November.
.which to purchase oil, but theJrnount we would be able to biywould only be n drop in the buckttnnd furthermore, it would be ex-tremely unfair to be restricted itthe areas we would cover.",
Cause; Lark Of Rain
cer, as Commander-in-Chief of their First Wardtion. •
Selection of Mr. Peterson on Tuesday riight, definitelyInstalls the So-Called Old Guard aa the dominant force i'ulocal Democratic politics. AnthonyA. Aquila of Iselin. whe served asingle tern* on the Township Com-mittee and who fras swamped inlast year's election by Mayor Au-gust F. Greiner, is.the leader nf theSetond Ward, whileMoseph L, Gillis in charge of the Third.
Despite the criticism which ac-companied their emergpnee fromobscurity last Fall when they tookover trft; CTampafen direction, theold-line leaders ire apparently de-termined to re-install themselvesto positions of dictatorship Theyhad singularly .poor results lastNovember on tlfeir first start, butthey are willing to try again.
New Blood Objects• Peterson's selection came an con
siitefable of a' surprise, althoughfrom all reports '.here was no openantagonism to him at a meetingTuesday of the First Ward mem-bers of the County Committee. Theparty's new-blood, however, aremaking no secret of their disap-pointment, Ttiayr remember his
hen the Bnins- housewives are unable to cope with,nd looking for < c(mtlnurli on pnqe twelw
ilc- still insisting upon hisus ta* bill, 8t«t* BenotoriIUX, us Chairman of the Ap-intions Committee, has votedlow upon Attorney Generaliz art honorarium of $20,000
work in prosecuting Bruno
An
• i they can continue their.- -]H'ce.
appropriate metlal has|ir>>iented to GoTernorHI l.v twelre undergradu*f Princeton UmYenity, inuti mi of h{> "Rainbow
( l.unpionthip." It wai,, Rockefeller Center,
i ••member, that Mr. Hofl-wri^hing 208 pounds,
id a 120-pound reporter,> citation facetiously ex-
and addi! "while pinning
p yLack of rain has accentuated the ^dismissal on charres of various ir-
l i t i ti ffi fregularities as extcutive officer ofMic Board of Health in 1M4 andtear this little item of record willhurt the party this year. After hisd.smissal, Peterson was reinstatedand resigned immediately.
Jflst Where all this sectlOTIat or-ganization leaves John Coyne,recognized Township leader of theparty, is difficult to 'igure. He is 'looked upon by cojinty bosses asthe Wnodbridge Township chief-tain in the matter of jobs, but it isknown that the Gill-Aquila-Peter-son combination is not entirelyfriendly to him.
690 DAYS IN JAIL,$125, WEEK'S GRIST
Sentenced ToTotal Of.360 Days
On J Counts
Miss Elaine Zischkau
. JSTSTHEATTRACTIONS t ftftn D , t , ,$ £ 1 , 0 0 0 B u d g e t e d F o r
With many dazzling free 1 9 3 f i ^ fc j $2,085attractions listed, prepara- . , * ." Xitiona for the' SUdium Shows Under Strain Ofare .caring completion. ty^ J ^
lr.imoter E. C. Jordan who ~is handling the gigantic job BILL FOR MAY $10 007of arranging the greatest enter, pJIi/rBIMr- nnV o Y « ™Uinn.int program ever to be of- COVERING 3 9 5 CASESfeiod in Woodbridge ha» signed •up a circus, rodeo, Wild West and Funds remain in the town-
betita We3 "at r ^ ^ t "^ T '""Ainonv tin- attractions are Wolan-; w e e K of the minimum human(Us' high wire artists, Lo» Gitan-necessities now being pro(it's and his death-defying bal-vided as emenjencv relief aame act, Merrill Brothers and Sis- • • - • • •* - 'ters, vorld's premier equilibrists; , , .Don Iiernado, "King of fhe Swing- a n ^ s ! j , e e t s sh(nv'1'1 ". '" morning,ing Wire" and the "Parislcnne J%$£* "duetimi l n , h p , , H f fFollies," featuring Sally Blair, 1 ^ tn»n V* \ I11"1""'"1'"1 s™'II.'irrvLandor and Billy Aikens. ft* towns>»P took over on April
i Th« rocking- chair marBthon, ; ! J1?^6 . * lashl ' ( l »<imim.trntiv(,|i»pen id all, Is regarded t y ' H f ! ! ? ! " 1 ! 1 4 ? . - 4 ' 1 ? ' " " ' - ' ' ™ - 1 1 1 " * 1 "Jordnr as one of the most enter-taining features of the show. Reg-!istrntions for this novel contestwhich will determine who can rockthe longest, fastest and farthestto the accompaniment of two
jpinnos, are, heijig accepted now at[Stadium headquarters. Exception-I al prizes will be awarded to all who
G R E E K S BLAST AT LEGISLATURESTIRS COUNTY MAYORS TO ACTION;TOWN HAS ERA FUNDS FOR A WEEK
Relief Accountant
f ° l d total, ""d the case load it-!,111"' ,b.e«n n i t
ub>' » s l x t h
$™***\l9S- fthl' flrst fllU « ' -month nf operntum under
Omenhiser ethc.ent municipnl'lemonstrnted that
ZISCHKAU SISTERSGRADUATUT NJCBrilliant Records
By Elaine, 19, AndDorothy
Parade Arranged"I wish to call attention particu-
larly," aaid Mr. Jordan, "to thetrained animal show, society horseshow, manufacturers' 'and mer-chants' exhibits, various games of
!Ot l ly *2'0*'o of the original $22,000i aPProPf'»tion remains in the treas-••"?* f additional $2,867 is «nf b I l 1
t o
*7.5O MonthlyThat budget item was calculated
to thethree
p l a i n s .fm right arm firmly in your left.ll i< rarr indeed that the ChiefFxrrulive of a treat *tat« ii IOoddly honorecf"
Workhouse pleas for moremanpower were abundantlyanswered by a busy week inPolice Court this week. Sen-tences totalling 690 dayswere meted out to seven de-fendants by Recorder Arthur
• Brown, In seven other casea, finesof $07.80* were imposed. The$57.50 which 12 motor vehicle vio-
ilators were assessed brought themoney penalties up to $125.
Paul Toth, 29, of Flood Street,
Hell property, on Grove W°°o!brid({e, was the most heavilytjT«.' P u n i s h e d culprit A. familiar fisr-
.,W,MUo atuVuTatViofs^J '» police court, n , arr.ign«lK. AlthouRh over »ix
rtRou.;before Recorder Brown last Friday
. " • . " . " . „ . , nn n Hfiink and disorderly chari?eof tax Is due.to Wood-
nr wen half that amountthat, in the end, our
l.'llnrxof tMlKtiw.to w o o o . | - 7 - T , T »"d disorderly chargeT,wn,hiP, no bids have been V*'*1™' *V " " ' A ^ T> r .. ....'.'. t . i , 4L.» • Farkas. He was fined $4.60.
Next day, George Sedlak, an Ise-m ,,B,B
n constable and former profes-Althouffh B 'o n*' w r M t ler, told police Toth
item to absofb. i l l lon i t ' *««»««. d P .1 « a s desocra ing Sfraves m St.
ff K Git public sale on two occa-1 ••— -,—„ " _-„ . ,•i u single buyer came for- J a m e s Cemetery off King George's
Hoad. Officer John Manton in-'vestigated. With the help of Offi-cer Celeste Romond, Manton fin-
ally subdued Toth after a lustyI brawl in which the prisoner was; of necessity roughly treated.
Marred Decoration!i Sedlak testified he had beenvisiting his mother's grave whenhe miticcd Toth in an apparently
(Continued on page twelve)
Although crossed by all im-Unl arteries leading to popu-
i< holiday centers, Woodbridfev.iuliip came through Momor-I'.iy with • single, minor ac-
kiihnt Can it be that we aregrtlini; » reputation (or beingpcuifh on reckless drivers and
art watching their step' within our boundaries?
l ined for a w o . a n - M r
i the thrice-indictedand others of the
il ik'hey Long's Louisiaha po-irroup, for alleged tax
against the government.
nan open letter to Secretarylit Treasury Morgenthau and"rnry General Cammings,i Hammond asks: "Must 4Imtand that men go to the
20- PAGE SUPPLEMENTON BUILDING REVIVALAllgaier Sees Activity As
First Spurt HereSinceJ1929
Impetus in the building trades; visible throughout the townshipand hailed by Building InspectorWilliam Allgaier as the first raprt
since 11)29 is signalized in
olitically at outi with Ihe de-dnt i , but that pig gambles
»'l political leaders are giren•tin of immunity when the Ad-liniitration ogle! a coming elec-
ial for the edition, this newspapereverywhere discovered confidentinside theltrade and outside it thathe whole Raritan Bay territoryand particularly WoodbridgeTownship is due for pronouncedactivity in new construction. Sub-
STYLE SHOW TOPS5 SCH0OLEXH1BITSHigh School Art Students'
Best Work Is PitOn Display
Five noteworthy exhibi-tions of the work being ac-complished by students in thepublic schools were held thisweek. Arranged by facultymembers in charge of spe-:ial projects, they were climaxed»t an elaborate fashion show idvenesterday afternoon by fifty trirls
-f the high school's home economicclasses in an auditorium filled withstudents and parents.
The day before, girls at schoolNo. 11 instructed by Miss MaryGundrum had also displayed gar-ments fashioned during the year.In the same school, Leonard Wil-inger's woodworking students ex-
hibited an exceedingly creditablearray of objects constructed intheir courses.
Still on view at the hi h schoolin the art room ia an exhibition ofthe best work done ki art coursesunder Lwellyn Hold* .and in shopclasses taught by Russell McElroy.A visit is exceedingly worthwhile,if only to remark tfe varieties oftechnic the studen^ artists haveused in interpreting a wide rangeof subjects.
Industrial DhsigniWater colors, lholeum block
prints, pen-and-ilk drawings,charcoal sketches txXA firmly-shad-ed pencil work alljare displayed.Most interesting of the lot is a ser-
Continued on fiftye seven
PAN-HANDLE^ JAILEDMan And Womai Both Sent
Up For 10-Dal Terms
vacuum cleaner."A monster parade will assemble
on Main Street on the opening day.under the direction of Captain Ray-
Twn Wnnrlhriflcrp -mtprR m o r i t t M0o?e and Fife Chief1WO WOOabriOge S « e r B i T h o m a s K a t h , The parade, headedwho have created bri l l iant ,b y t h e e ! e ( . t e d q'ueen o f t h e
' will be| Stadium and with all civic, frater-
on twelve)
Mrs. Clifford DunhamAccountant fur .lohn Onien-
htscr, muillclpiil dlrrftor ufrelief here, Mrs. Dunhamalone does the work entrustedto a department under theERA and her methods and effi-ciency were highly praised thisweek by investigators forState officials wnft are con-ducting independent survey*of the conduct of relief sinceits direction reverted to themunicipalities. iMra. Dun-ham has had long experiencein the work.
academic recordsgraduated from New JerseyCollege for Women in New
nal and patriotic organizations,rodeo and circus performers andfour bands in line will march to
Brunswick tomorrow m o r n - ^ " s t a d i u m g r o u n d s . A t h l e t i cing. Both girls—Miss Dorothy events will start on Monday, Juneand Miss Elaine Zischkau, daugh-ters of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Zis-
chkau, of 601 Barron Avenwwill be given degrees of Bachelorf Arts. •
Few students in the class of 226seniors will have records as out-standing as the achievements ofhetvvo sisters. Miss Elaine Zic-
graduating at the age ofk
ting at the agepecially remark
lid kable
:hkau, _19, has an espi .nackground of solid work. She;was among the twenty-eight sen-|ors honored in th« traditionalChristmas ceremony as the mostdistinguished of the class. Lastyear, as a junior, she studiedabroad on a Deutsche Vereinscholarship to the University ofBerlin, which she won for excel-lence in the German language. Shehad not studied the subject beforeentering college.
Ranked First HereIn 1932, Elaine ranked first in
In the meantime, the contest to! select the "Queen of the Stadium"is continuing at a fast clip. Ac-cording to the tally completed lastnight, the standing is as follows:
Mary Dellanca 6710Irene Tobln 6060Bertha Poldhazy 5513Sylvia Dunham 497«
H&ry uuzaaly 4016Madeline Hackett 2173Rosalind Kaufman 1000Lorraine Mnler 1188Peggy Ann Raup 760Lillian Mfnaky 610Adallne DeAng~elo 494Eileen Quaclt 460Peggy ("nncannon 417K.dna Laurttten 360Kva I'YJIB »30Kvelyn Bonett 330Elsie Thompson 310Annii Dalton 280lOllzabeth Dunlgan '!6D
Fords Woman's Club Considers PlanTo Build Its Own Community CentreSalvaged Material From Razing Of Old Poillon Pottery,
Volunteer Labor By Skilled Craftsmen Of FordsMay Make Long-Cherished Vision A Fact
EGAN,LAV1N HEADLINEthrctaS«i^nrf"ft«pVdi FORDS FIREMEN SHOWating class at* Woodbridge HighSchool. She had intended to ma-jor in physics at the college buttransferred her principal scholastic
(Continued on page twelve)
REV. RUSSELL POTTERTO OFFICIATE SUNDAY
Pan-handler3 thisli
, activity in new construr K'imberling'a appointment, Jiormal operation^ for the .last sixd ,.f the Sfate Police, willlyears have resulted in th Town-
with high approval in these ship becoming badly ^where he ea?ii«d a fine repu- I f f the "
g appwhere he ea?ii«d a fine repu-
h W
ip becomg yIn proof of the
Mr. Allga.er
in
l«n at the Rahway Reformatory progress, Mr. Aiigaiei / ' " " " " J' un fail ing fairness in all his stated that the service^of qualified••linns with employe* and prison-! carpenters have suddenly become
?"d enjoyed the respect a n d ^ " ' ' *.n *et as most of theniiation of his fellow citjizena,'orally. Governor Hoffman has
niHife a better, H indeed a»|selection since he'3 been in
hard to get as mostctaf tsmen in the Township have as
uch work as they can handle.
week werePan-handler3 thislgiven vigorous warnijig not to plytheir trade within he township.Two alms-seekers vfere arrestedafter they had ignored warnings.Both were sent to tint Workhousefor ten days by Recorder ArthurBrown. One, a 33-ytar-old NewYork woman picked uj in a Super-highway diner, admitted a polic*record. The other wis Sam Os-borne, 35, who would »dmit to no•home. He was arrested on MainStreet by Officer Williatn Romond.
2 Motion Pictures Listed AtGala Program On
TuesdayCaptain John Egan and Bob La-
vin,' first prize winners in a re-cent Fred Allen amateur broad-
Fords again will lead the way IAccording to plans now under
consideration, the Fords Woman'sClub may construct a clubhouseand community center in that sec-tion of the Township, probably intin vicinity of th* firehouM. Al-though the suggestion has receive^only informal discussion by lead-ers of the organization, the plan issaid to have b««n well-receivedand deemed as probable of reali-zation.
The Township Committee onMonday night, at a special session,voted to donate to the unit allsalvaged material from the destruc-tion of the old Poillon property.This will probably consist largelyof brick but casual estimates indi-cate that sufficient can be savedto be ample for the type of build-ing contemplated.
Pending definite action by the
Episcopal Missionary Will cast< wiU headline the stage showto be presented by the Fords FireConduct Services At
Trinity ChurchCompany in the Fords Playhouse,New Brunswick Avenue, on Tues-day. Two moving pictures, "It
Rev. Russell Potter, Geneial; Happened One Night" and "Sui-
known in Woodbridge, will have dition to the vaudeville,h of the Sunday morning ser1 The Knudsori Boys
known n g ,charge of the Sunday morning ser-1
vice in Trinity Episcopal Church. ; a
Father Potterimportant clerical
ii
gwork, servingi C l d
The Knudsori Boys will present"Around the Town" and
tp i Miss Elaine Jensen, an accomplish-ed accordionist, will play severalimpor c l ,
ten separate missions in Colorado. selections.While residing in Woodbridge,] p r o c e e d s of the affair, the ftrst
Rev. Potter was a member of the i n a s e r i e S ) WU1 be devoted to theTrinity choir and also sang in company treasury. All civic andchurches in several adjacent mum- | f r a t e r n a l organizations in Fords
> co-operating to make it a
Continued on paqe twelve
FINE CUT IN HALFMrs. Lovacz I* Released
After Serving 10 Day.
The $210 fine imposed on Mrs,!,Mary Lovacz, 64, of Luther A/ve-nue, Hopelawn, after a liquor raidby A AC men had turned up boot-leg whiskey and an unlicensed stillin her home was cut in half by Re-corder Arthur Brown yesterday.Mrs. Lovaez served ten days of a60-day Workhouse sentence in de-fault of the fine but the Recordersigned a release order when toldby authorities the woman has be-come ill. Mrs. Lovacz said shecould pay half ,bi(t not all of re-fine, j
NITE-CRAFTS PLEAW E BE GRANTEDZoAing Board Decision Due
Wednesday On AppealFor An Addition
To assure employment ofnearly three hundred localpersons, indications are thatthe Zoning Board will grantthe application of the Nite-Craft Corporation to extendits Main Street factory to JamesStreet.
Hearing was given the petitionWednesday night and although de-cision was deferred at that timeuntil next Wednesday, all mem-bers of the Board are agreed thatthe request should be granted, ac-cording to reliable information
(Continued on page twelve)
Albert Hansen GraduatesFrom Pratt With Honors
Albert Hanson graduated thisweek from Pratt Institute afterdistinguishing himself in the elec-trical engineering courses and being selected by the General Electrie Company for special training.Young Hansen was one of the pion-eers in New Jersey in developingshort wave radio apparatus.
The youth's parents have recent-ly moved from their home on GreenStreet to a newly-constructedhouse in Edgar Hill.
Woodbridge Head Host ToOther Official,, Prodi
Them To DecideOn Tactics
DEMAND i T A T E HELP| F O R MUNICIPALITIESI Mistering criticism of th«State Legislature for itsstoutly rofusal to provide fin«
jjincial assistance to niuniqi--palitit's to feed and doth*tbt'ir needy was contained In
slntemt'iit made by Mayor Att>imt K. (ireiner last night.Mayor (ireiner was host at th l
ulonia Country Club to the chilfexecutive of all Middlesex Coun&L.municipalities when he un.eaihMa withering blast at the lawmaktnand called upon his assoc jtes towii^e o virile campaign t.> brinyabout some action by the countydelegation to the State House.
As ii result, Mayor Grei..t'r m lmimed with Mayor Patten o'' PerthAmhoy and Mayor Bmmley otHighland Park to consult with th«Middlesex delegation in th ' Legit*lature in an effort to get promptaction. They were instructed tourge passage of a general sale*1
tax, exempting food, medicine andmilk: An rarty confer^ne'e Wplanned.
Pointing out hin belief that rt»turn of relief distribution to tit*local governments was accompan-ied by many beneficial results, Mr.Greiner declared that with properfinancial assistance and an effici-ent administrative wt-u". theycould perform a fine service.
"Instead, howevar, ot c!3Viits efforts toward the guidaneiand support of the local govern-ments in this work the Legislaturehas elected to engage in a politicalbrawl and to disgrace itself in theeyes of the people it purport* torepresent," Mayor Greiner as-serted.
Hlti QuIbblUf"Petty bickering," he continued,
"inspired by selfishness und ad-vancement of the few, has been'substituted for elemental states-manship. With broad alternatives;of making sufficient funds avail-able for relief purposes, ourgates at the State capital f.sway valuable time u they.™,,'-tently Into every prospective plan
> see what may be in it for then.Apparently, a sufficient number ofhem have been unable to seemough of benefits for themselvesn any program thus far presentedto make it acceptable to them."
Mayor Greiner asserted that theeople of Woodbridge Township
were "striving valiantly" to take:are of their needy neighbors bat;hat they could not be expected toarry the entire load.
"Disappointment and bewilder-ment" at the do-nothing policy ofLegislature but unless they unit*to press leadership into the handsof the elected representatives inTrenton, no good can prevail.
"We local officials," he con-cluded, "are the ones on whomour own people depend. We can-not shirk our part of the terrifioresponsibility the years of depres-sion have cast upon us. tf legis-lative leadership collapses we can-not close our eyes, consider thedreary spectacle and utter a sadbenediction unless we are willingto forfeit the confidence of ourdelinquents. If initiative lacks,we must exert ourselves to developit so that adequate provision canbe made for them."
SUNDQUIST FIpDS CARAbandoned on 4th Street in Port
Reading an automobile stolen fromCarteret was recovered Monday byMotorcycle Officer Karl SundquistThe automobile, valued at $150,belonged to Eleanor Dautel of Ro-Selle.
The Stars And Barssuccess.
I The .taia oM Herald-Tribuneone of the bulwark. o?TUpu£-•niim, sines tha party wai a
comet out with the iUr•tion (hat the G. O. P. put a
nocrat on their ticlcet forte-Preiident thia year and thut
the country! But, wouldrank and file of Republican!• t? Or, Ii it necemrj—
l»er the meit that RooieToltFarley and the Brain Truit
> have maile of jhingi?
i the Japanese are marching in-ninn again and Selassie^ erst-
De warriors are sniping ItaliansEthiopia! What next, in the' of .wars, we wonder?
Police Sarraant B^n Parion»
"flStraffic
nctlonedri w\\h
not on*
the School Saf«ppoted of youthfrulatort who've
th the latt twofact record of// t
9*y" rhirraV/for th#se"BitersI AndT* pat on lbsi for tha competent Sergeant.
i ol Ferdt anajb* w> o l ( I | | | | . | wist
«7«, wUca m ntktr iaptlllTs> »f SKI satril ta4 si*.
JohnKreger'sDelphinkmDisphyWins Peak Prize At Hoiocrjbu)Keeping; pace with the
splendor and brilliance ofprevious years, the annualflower show sponsored by theWoman's) Club y/&& held yes-terday in the Craftsmen'sClub. Mrs. C. W. Barnekov waschairman of the arrangements'committee,
(parrying off first honors for hisexhibit of delphinium, John Kregeralso won the blue ribbon for theoutstanding display group. Thesweepstakes priae for haying thegreatest number of exhibits wentto MrB, Olive Van Iderstine andMrs. W. IJ. Harned took honors;for the prettiest hall arrangement.Mrs. Kussell Loi-ch's bouquets wereadjudged first in fragrance, whilethe prizes for shrubbery went toMrs. Harry Reyder, Mrs. SamuelHenr yand* Mrs, Carl Hauser.
Other awards were as follows:BASKET AnitANClEMENT.' Mr
W. I* Harnsd, MrB, William RowiMrs. P. F. Anness; VASE AHfiANGE-MKNT: Mm. .Iame» Ridley, Jr., Mrs.KdwUi Potter, Mre. Fruil 7Juuiili t,st;IRIS: Mm. W. B. Krux, Miaa MuldeN««; KBD PEONIES: Mrs. F. fltun-
Maiili' Xiie, Mrs. A, I. Huliisr, M's.,1. I ivh; I'uI.I.KCTlO.V PIOONIlt):Mrs. Mlli'a Not', Mix Ktvil HiiiuuruB.
llMi'iiWHITK P.nslO: Mia. (). Van ldff-luc Mr.". V .1 AilimiB, Mm, K CTci-ili; PINK UiWIO: Miss Murk'l llixqi,
Mrs. F. 1-*. Anueaw, Mra. M. Koini;KHii KOSIO: Mrs. M. Keiinn, Ml.Stimuli Hrnry, Mvu. L. K. tJrlmlti1;YKIJ.ow liOKIi: Mrs. I'.'O. Dlxu,Mra. TIHHIUIH Ideally, Mra. A. Goo-nli-lii; HUODJ.Oii: Mrs. 11. ituyilti,Mrs. It. C. Tyiri'll; AE.TIS'1'K! ilASKKT OF 11O8RS: Mm1 O. T. Va|lik>r»tllli>, Mia. C. M. CIII»|>IT; A K T l tTl<! V-A.S15 O F 11OH1W: Mrs. K. l i iuhnoil, M"m. V. .Sliincik, Mrs. Ali-x Pollne l ly : A U T I S T I C I.OW 11OWI,: Mr,A. Uotu i t j l i i ; O M M H l N d KOSHitMrs. H. Mars l i , Miss M. Koiinu, .MiaM •
Mr
Wll
yk.: ^ ' i l l lam l!»»i
Mlle«.Ni>e, Altii H i a » i ; iMrs, James Itldloy; iTtVKKTr.IAM: Mrs. Tliuniim Kt-iiliy/ MnLiiuln Hansen, Mi's. Juliu UTdsmCOMMOTION OF HWISIO'I* Wi lIilAM: Mrs. Tlionms Ideally, Mr.Mllea Nuo, Mrs. Fred UemaroaiCOKEOPSI8: Mrs. C. W. Ilunse,Urn. B. nlukaoii, Miss M. I}. K«ll;OAILARDIA: Mrs, Thomas J. Li'Uh,Miss M. Q. Kelly, Mra. John Krt-ge;11HINESB PINKS: Mrs. Jolin Krugi';HWBET SULTAN: Mrs. M. Kan*.,Mrs, Eldwln Potter, Mis. Clies"1
Peck.MUi-cll'ucOiu
BLUE FLOWGHS: Mts»Scliafer, Mrs. O. T. Van1 lUern
Continued on f>uye twtlvt•~M:
^jH«|MagwnwMa^aH&
m
&i .mm
ml
EvenltPromoters Shun A Weight-ConsciousSlugger,Hoffman Gets Gaudy Medallion Celebrating Prowess
For the first time, graves ofthree soldierss who fought forthe Suuth in the Civil Warwere decorated with Confed-erate buttle flags by CaptainRaymond Moore of the Ameri-can Legion Post this year.Captain Maore ia here seenplating the Stars and Barsover the grave in Trinity Epis-copal Cemetery of David Cod-dington, born and bred inWoodbridge, but who took uparms to defend his South Car-olina home when Shermanmarched through the South.Mr. Coddinaton later returnedto Woaabridffa and di«d here,
SPEEDWAYJTANDS OKAllgaier Approves Sections
Of Renovated Tiers
Satisfaction at the care withwhich representatives of the Gar-den: State Placing Association havefollowed his recommendations inrenovating stands at the Wood-bridge Speedway was expressed to-day by Building Inspector WiHtatnA%aier. The ftrst of a weeklyseries of race shows at the nine-year-old plant here was held last
I Sunday after Mr. Allgaier hadcarefully inspected and eventuallyupproved four sections of the re-
i habilitated grandstand. Four! more sections are being prepared{for this Sunday's meet.j Kventually, the Association planato have at least 11 of the orig-inal tS sections repaired to Mr.Allgaier's specifications. The oth-ers will be torn, down, All theuuctions have had the top tierslipped off and lumber used inthoroughly fixing the remainings™U and underpinning.
young Republicans MeetOn Thursday In Aoenel
The.regular Monthly meeting oflife YBujijt Republicans of Middle-sex County will be held in theAmerican-Hungarian Social Club,Remsen Avenue, Aveoel, onThursday.
Charles Sajben, Jr., is in chargeof arrangements, assisted by theexecutive committee. The meet-ing- of % Avep l unit will be hald
A 11 h o ugh matchmakershave proffered him no offers,so far as is known, GovernorHoffman at least has a fancymedallion testifying to hisprowess as a box-fighter.
$o that his victory over the dim-unitive Lou Wedemar, ace crimereporter of Universal Service,would not remain unknown to pos-terity twelve" uhdergraduatea ofPrinceton University had a medalstruck off and sent it by specialmessenger to Mr. Hoffman. Ifpreserved, It will at letut cause thenext generations to pause and in-quire about the Battle of the Kainbow Room.
There are various stories about
There's No Justice Here —So He Pays An Extra $5
"There's no justice in Jer-sey," snorted one Joseph Ver-sani of New York City whenfined $10 in police court herethia week on State Police Cor-poral Austin Kelley's chargehe was driving on the left ofthe road. Mr, Versani en-larged on the sentiment—orstarted to. When RecorderArthur Brown tacked on anadditional $20 for contempt ofcourt, the defendant's conver-sational tactics switched ab-ruptly. He succeeded in per-suading; Mr. Brown to reducethe new penalty to $5.
A totti of $67.40 was col-lected from 12 defendants intraffic cases. Three of thesewere mijfendsd i
what took nkce.known U that
All that is reallyWedemar, who
everybody thought vrat one of theGovernors closest pals, sustaineda very shiny, black eye at thehands of New Jersey's Chief Ex-ecutive, Mr. Hoffman said thertporur ctlltd him * awty a*01*
:mt eye-witnesses seem to be un-animous on the point that Wede-mar was not given a fair chanceto defend himself,
"Matter Oter M M "Viewing the encounter as utter
disproof of the theological thesisembodying the luperionty of mindoviT matter, the obve»se side ofthe medal shows a husky figuregrasping a weaker one in a singlehand withrtnestffipTe ejtytanaaoT!,"Matter Over Mind." The reversesiile states the date and place ofthe encounter.
"It ia of little importance,"said the citation, "that the NewYork newspaperman whvm youknocked cold, as the vernacularhas i t with one blow of your fist,was outweighed by the slight mar-gin Jf some pounds. That wasscarcely within your province toregulate. What is more importants the way in which you conkedhim. Walking by his side in a .friendly manner and pinning hisright arm firmly in your left, youseized the opportunity that sud-denly presented itself and smotehim roundly on the kissar.
Wo take this opportunity there-fore as impartial observers of th«great political scene, to commemor-ate this latest achievement of •yours, the laying low of I MWederaar, in a field outside yfflVchosen profession. In honor o lthis example of unfailing devotionto duty and courage under, txtwe have struck off this small medal-lion in your honor. It will be imonument mare enduring thw 'brass, a plaque to which you at)4
PAGE TWO FRIDAY NE "• 1936WOODBTDGE INDEPENmBBBESSS5SE&SS^B
Young Women To Hold Appear In Elaborate Memorial Day ProgramAnnual Dance Tonight ...Lorraine Warter Heads
Committee; Big CrowdExpected To Attend
petted '.'dsnce «f
Land ar.!ht fuir.i*
M:s? '[/of th* k)itben:»t-Mrf. I'f.iThomr = r.Pear! I'Helen K.r
'Mf-.V'.'n'John V- !:•J Ihif.rrCut'...-:. MPeck M-R a u l . Mr
r.irvor -c>
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>rrai
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M-- < ^ : -,-• H :•jer, Mr t.- .!
BALLA AGAIN SCORESEASY SWEEP IN TRACKCtnnizzera And Mihalko
Win Senior Events AtParish House
Parent-Teachers PlanCard Party Tuesday-St. James' Unit Sponsors •
Affair In Auditorium :Of The School ;
• ; T-< - : a y r.ijrht i n t h f
ay sever•'- jr-ir. :
>:;:>r.;i •»'.aire ?:»
.:-.:! hf".:
ffcan.«»rawb*rry festivalr'-r =tia". Endeavorf : r f pre«bvterianrt;.: in the Sunday•'• -•:•. Th'jr-ilay. Ona; memV'or? are ex--,'•. excursion up the• -, Wf=t Point and•;. >f accepted by.•rTfT up until Sun-
., frankfurter roar:';»rk on Tuesday.
ar.fl William E];; =
?•-..'. Arwtv. Mr?.h R Mr-
5^.;7-xr.r. Mr? M:;Y..-. Mr«- T'r,;rr.&5 >":;\ : - x Peak. Mr?. C'r.-.
r j w . Mr*.
r. y : 7 : r . c ; ; a ! t e i k t f . J : * r ? . V i & r . o a s .! T > p e : h i * p j ..«-.«•<::. Kar.ci. :•>• P.tv. Mr. Meliberg :•:dt a-. aT'.'-r:...* ?.r. hour ciip behind a police
Y •••„-.;• J -/•. !
a n d *">"•: •-• n , : ^ vlad " J e ; : •••. U tnrdav »• •.•> F'r»rMerr,'--::;: L-sy v.the H«rcrea:i'.r, I»
)or? •> tr.t- wer':
r. r.trt. TV
srrar?t-d by,-rr.-r.-: B-.:.jev&r.r.ev wtre-•r-. The MT.-T.:'.ate'l t-v Jcf
COLONIA NEWS\[.
s'-*r.
d M:-. H'.-r.rvr. Hi-r.ry. of".he wcrk-er.d
Hill or?act
at Do-Lak.-.
—-Mr?, '.narles Mitchti'. ovfcr Road atttnded a bridge par'.at the Coionia Country Club Saturday.
half-miie T'i
ar. exhibitionwfjn by the
U'>*r. the Blue Jays. 1"exr;r/';'jr,- wers aiv.' tivt-n
by B'.r. Br;,;thv.T.:te.""F.dwar'r'5r~-'.!e'r. Marie M;;!er ar.d Johanna Mag-yar,
E!«k wort a ?i^cia!from B:!! Firrr.an.
Ar.oTitr ft-fc-.-jr*.bap*'sn. earr.1:'. »aP;rat<-- frr>rr. ihe B'
ar/l Mr=. F-'ittard Mf.zeerf ,f"\V(.^ Hiil Road had a? theiru'ttM* ftfi jj*ni'-.rial Day. Mr. ar. i —Mi»s Mildred Lu<l'cw. teacherM-- Karo.-i B. FiugtraM ar*.! 'of iKe scctirl'd «nt» Thirt •pni'Je.-wiii'fa-irhter. Ruth, of G!'.-n K'.dnc ".ake her pupils to Trenton on-Sa
— Mr. ar.d Mr-. Howardr,f\Ve-t Hi!: Koad er.tertai
Young G. 0. P. Starts).Entertainment SeriesParish House Unit Holds
Party In Main StreetAuditorium
t jYr M-.cHiit'. K;?>. M:«. I. U S '
' " I " ' Kt-'c". Mr ' r . - .^ fT. Mr?, A'I ' ,* 'M;rV>r. Mr?. :.••'": O".rr-.:s. M:-,4;f:-. : P t - . t T K ' . V : ' K-•.•>• Q-^-?-i»y, Mrs. R-,:r.sv. Q-.::r.vy. 'Mrf.
.. 'r>n P.emak,. Mr.f A . t t r : ^ T ^ -'•ser.. Mrs. Chri*:;&r- W ; : : : : ; , M T '' leorfe Blum. Mr;, Qr->n< K: :•;.
!Mr.'. J;.feph McLa-irr-'-ir. Mr-j j o h r Bov'.f. Mr-. Edward J. C; : .y .1 Ir Mr=" J o h - Hyr.r. M:-. Nathar., ?a*ter . Mr<. M-chav'. Deby ar.d
Mr.;. Janie- S'.nur-.
r.'r.ing a series of entertain-the Toi:n? kepublicaii CIulP»n..h House District he.d t
on _ M , ;P.i Mr Howard Fietch- turday to visit the American I"-1 r) anj t i r \ " artv at the Car '
.»... iiU^daj.. L r , j , , p . r m , ._ ,>,,.;,. ,_=„ won the door prize and non-play-1'••• —Mr. and Mrs. wltlianrBFyne *Z?T?' M •"?• *r*'*w*r4i wot* to-Xt*. Fxt&akl Lhome.
—Mis Heien Mezika, teacher c£fourth and fifth grade?, assist-
Z\x StarsHub
North Hili Kta.l had as their(•-•- Mr. an -I Mr?. Jack Bry^onH Mr and Mr J. Wild man of , ,
^. ,, • ••V; led by Mr;. Bancroft- > • ' • ' • ' ' ••••>"• - i c • t jMr. - . Margaret Soule and M
—Mr. and Mr.-. Mar.ley bmijh | p . i n u Blevker, took her puRils.1 Mr. and Mi -. Herman Jercrtf : {l> ^ ^ M u , e u m of Natural., r.t Hursday af At .untie City. ! H ; . ; s r , . i:, N e l v York City on Fri-—Uia[4riF.l*tcher of We?tHill!day.
was inltiatt'I "bn"Tlmi>J«^ I ' t l J I r . arid Mrs. John MaaS iBy STELLA • . w.;:
i-jht in The Veterans of Foreignl P'he I.-elin Po.':f..
—Mir- Kiar.che Jeroff of En-Roiid -Kit the guest of Robert Da>'.
daughter, Joan, of West Cliff Roadwere the guests of Mr. and Mrs.Otto Grube of New York Memorial
JUNESIs XhU vour birthday?1
at the hfinit cf his fit -:i«.in Jer-(-y City.
--Mr. and Mr.-.. <~hark-i Vo.k
—Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cordockof Outlook Avenue had as then-holiday guests Mrs. E. H. Howard,I H d Il l i H d
ikLinn. Rudolph Heitnvjller, Josepr
h F F d i kp
Fito.s, Arthur Frartz,Linn, .Jr., and Miss
k
, pFrederickMargaret
Smanko.Winner? in the pames were:Bridge: Miss Grace Qu*lch, Mr?.
Alfred DOnfee, Edward Augustine,Pinochle: Miss Myrflp Poulstn.
Martin Hansen, Miss Ellen Mc-W.
Alexander Bothwell, Mrs. Ida Col-low, Mi=s Mary Guiics. Mrs. Eli-nore Laritn.
Rummy: John Muchanie,. Mi?sDorothy Blake, Mrs. M. Cassidy.
Bingo: Richard Hilt, KennethRt-chnitzer, Mi.-s Caroline Binde-wald.iir.'l children r,f East Cliff Road I Irenf Howard, Lillian Howard and
Then vou are the tvpe of w<-'!'t' the putsts of Mr. Volk'sjM,^ pa ul McCracken of-Jersey i Fan-tan: William Slpos.mother in Jer-ey City on Saturday, i City. " ~ ^ " — " — — - — —
—Mr. and Mrs. James Currid ofpositive person who alwaysthink.- in tctrms of extensive'enterprises. You have the1
genius and vision for organ-ization on a large scale. Youdream (treat dreams anil the starshave (riven you the ability to makethose dreams come true.
You seem td attract activity andexcitement wherever you go. Youcan never have a dull or common-place life and no matter how quietthings are when you arrive, theybegin to buzz the moment you uppear upon the scene.
You have a very practical streakin your nature, but like all organ-izers you prefer to see somebodyelse do the hard work. But in mak-ing the plans, somehow you' man-ape to find the easiest way.
.. , ., -- , -Mrs. Edward John?on(of WestHill Road recently had as Hill Road entertained Wednesday
their guest, Miss Olira Erickson of at a reception at her home for newNew Brunswick. ^ j members of the Junior Service
—-Mr. and Mr?. Arthur Sayweil . League of which she is president
—Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Nof Chain-O-Hills Road entertainedon .Saturday, Mr. and Mrs. BrmoGrundie and daughter of Averel.
—l.)r. and Mrs. Fred Albee ofsst Hill Road have returnedof Fairview Avenue have as their j _ A meeting was held Wednes- \Ve,.-L . . ,„ „ , „ , , - . c , t l u , ,c>.
Ituest Mrs. Donald McArtnur ot j day evening at the home of Betty from N'nkomi- Florida where theyAmher.n, X. H. . j Sayweil to form an orchestra of ! s p e .n t t h e p a s t V e e k at their Winter
—Mr. Joseph Hamilton of rair-! young people under the sponsor-1 home,view. Avenue returned from hisi ship of the Coionia Citizens Incor- > \ subscription dance will bebusiness in Pittsburgh and spentthe week-end with his family as didhis mother, who lives in Tenafly.'
—Miss Helen Listen and John.Into were the guests Tuesday eve- ter Brezowski, trombone; Robert
i of Mrs. Howard Fletcher of ; Knauer, violin; Betty Sayweil,Hll R d ' i i B f Lii S
porated. Those who attended with | held 'Saturday night at the Com-thelr instruments were: Bancroft; m u n j t v Centfe w i [ h M r s , A n h n rLivingston, banjo; Gils I^wnhardt, I \(.iSOI") zi chairmanclarinet; Harry Ellis, drums; Wai- <' " '
! ninifWest Hill Road.
—Mr. and Mr'
, ; y y ,' pianist. Bancroft Livingston, Sr.
William Fair of I —The Coionia unit of the Wom-d I
You are an excellent judge of , School held their annual DeW-S-human nature and have definite tion Day program Friday morning,talents in the field of psychology and presented the following Hum-and occupational guidance. In your bers; Salute to the Flag and the
Hoffman Boulevard entertained I in's Republican Club held a cardMrs. Lillian Canning of New York I party Friday night at the American
clubroonjs. The*: wereslay,'Winners;, Iftrs. Joseph
over the holiday. .—The pupils of the Coloniai-fwelve
personal life, you are inclined tobe guided hy the occult, but youare loath to adrnit this and shouldanyone ask the reasdt) for yoursuccess or the reason\for youractions, you would be vet* carefulto explain the logical reanpn )foreverything. You have a deepHjiter-£St in science and biology and youare always trying to explain themysterious in scientific terms,
Y t f
..incing of the "Star Spangled Ban-ner" by the entire school; recita^nor.,Belle
"DecorationHanks and
Day." OliveViolet Toms;
Poem, "My Resolve", Albert Bre-zowski; song, "Tramp, Tramp,Tramp," entire school; recitation,"Flag of Our Hearts," MarthaHeldgeni, Diantha Pattiaon, Mil-dred Antler and Dorothy Stults;poem, "Memorial Day,' Ralph
h Mill h "O
j ^ ^ pwere Warner Pipes, « pMcAndrews, Arthur Scott, Mrs.William Miller, Sidney Pinkham,3Irs. Otto Brockman, Miss HelenDeLisle, Harry Ludwig, ^Irs. PaulMourer, and Mrs. Philip Den Bley-ker. The door prizes went to Jos-eph McAndrews and Mrs. Mouer. 1•Refreshments were served. '
MAPLE TREE FARMRahway Avenue, Avenel
(Take Bui 54)SUNDAY, MAY 31, 1936
PICNIC—Admission FREESTUFFED CABBAGE
SERVED FREE SATURDAYNATIONAL ORCHESTRA
Dancing Outside in Fresh AirFrom 1 P. M. to 12 P. M.
Everybody WelcomeA. PICHALSKI. Prop.
PROUD..
59c RING-FREE
SILK HOSIERYA PAIRS J -
r.KIl IT »KIIMU: «KHiHT<n ( . i l o r , - - - l u l l 1 n - b I1..1 f il
••WIIITI"'
SLIPS
$ 1
U . V I V
lull hn.hlnn.dSTOCKINGS
44C
VII Piirp «llk i
Other. 59c . 99e - $1.59 • $1.95
9PORTS WEARSlack - Coulittei 93cShorts . Halters 29c - 59c - 9»c2-pc. PUy Suit. ....$1.00 -$1.95Ginger Rofer Suits $1.93
SUN-CLEER112 smith
Albren, Inc.Jewflers — Oplici«ns
133 Smith St., Perth Amboy
Healthy.Active -Children
AlwaysWear
ARCHPRESERVER SHOES
FITTED HERE
BYX-RAY
ALL SUESA TO E
u; }<mr rklld •
BOSTON SHOE Co.182 SMITH STREET PERTH AMBOY
You were not meant for medio- Doll, Joseph Miller; chorus, "Ourerity and there is the element of , Flag," pupils of Miss Ludlow'sgreatness within you. You have i room; playlet, "The Banner Betsythe moods and temperament of the Made," Robert DeLisle, Lorraineartist and must learn to curb this, Pinkham, Evelyn McCormick, Albagide of your nature.
It is hkety that something signi-ficant will occur during your sev-
Lella. Arthur Knauer and Margar-et Weston; song1, "When Johnny.Comes Marchine Home," entire
enteeth, twenty-fourth and thirty-' school; play, "The Little Army,"first year. Be prepared for a i John McClure. Robert Black, Mar-change during those peripde and [ tin Garofolo, Louis Belardino andtake advantage of every opportun-ity.
7ou are inclined to be somewhatfickle in love, i mistaking infatua-tion, p«rh«ps, for the more last-ing attraction.'Cultivate caution inromance and in selection of a. lifemate. Let your head rule yourheart for the greatest happiness..
Among those who were born op.,this day are: Velasquez, artist;George T. Angel 1.' reformer; IgjorFedorovich Stravinsky, composer;Roger Bachelor, huthor; WilliamTyler, noted churthman; and Co-lumbus Lelano, statesman.
Charles Vigh'; recitation, "Memor-ial Day," Dordthy Mades. StellaSuit, Thomas nynes and FrancisTrevena. The prop-am was closedwith the sing of "America" by the.school and audience.
, —Mr. and Mrs. W. H. McClureof Chain-O-Hills Road are «nter-tainine Mrs. 0. B. Seaman, Ellen-ville, K. Y.
—Miss Dorothy Diets, teacherof the fifth and sixth trrade, tooka number of her pupils to NewVork City Wednesday to visit heMuseum of Xatural History Andthe 'Queen Mary". •<
OUR ANSWER TD
Light as a FeatherIdeal for
Warm Weather"BONDS"
Lightweight
Tropical Worsteds
APPLICATION
FOR ROCKING CHAIR MARATHONSTADIUM SHOWS JUNE 27 to JULY 4
INCLUSIVE ;
Woodbridge Township Stadium Commiation, Inc.76 Main Street, Woodbridge, N. Jl
Gentlemen:7 ^
I herewith submit my name to enter theROCKING CHAIR MARATHON
My Age la
Furnish Own Rocker Ye»... No...^-
Physical Condition Good EairJ. ...
If entered 1 a^ree to release The Woodbridge Sta-dium Commission, lac. from any physical liability.I will submit to physical examination.
Name ,
. For further infonn«HiD|i Phi)n# Wood. 8-0 US
If there is 'a June wedding onyour horizon and the question ofgifts is troubling you, go to the
nearest Public ServWe store and lookover the many electric appliances wecarry. Even if the bride plans on lighthousekeeping she will want an electrictoaster and coffee percolator. Toasterprices are as lowfas $1.95 less cord andpliig. Electric coffee perepkrtora are'priced for $2.95 up. Small carrying chargeadded if you purchase any appliance onthe divided payment plan.
3 Pc. SUITS $15.45
Tbt more eitctricify you utetii cheaper it geli
100X PURE WOOL
\ White Linen Suits 2 pc. $ 8.50
j \)Thit0 Polar Suits Tex 2 pc. $10.50
Washable Slacks $ 1.50 f
Finery MadeTlannels $ 4.50UF
BUY NOW!
PVBLKMSERVICE
CLOTHES __Renuen Avenue at Howard Street New Bruniwick, v
OPEN DAILY 6 A. M.-6 P. M.
EveniAys—Tuesday A Thursday 7 to »—Saturday Until 9 P< M-
woODBRIDGE INDEPENDENT
GUTWEIN PROTESTSVICTORY BY OWLS
FRIDAY, JU1E B, 1986
I
Voelker And Karmazin TopHitters In Recreation
Department Loops •i•',.rinJII protest has been filedi, the Recreation DepartmentII,P result of the Green Raider-
,.,!,, Owl frame in the Wood-I.,. .Iimior League Tuesday.
. l',.y Gutwein, manager of the,i,i'j, claimed that Umpire
..',, allowed the White Owls a,,.,. nin that decided the frame,.,| iho ball Teally was foul.•.,,, decision W»a made by the...irimcnt pending a hearing.11, loaprue continueg to be ledrln' unbeaten Cyclones, while< Hissworda top the Port Read-i limit and the Green Raiders
- | hike's Ranch share the top inWooclbridRc senior division.i.ir and Karmazin are the
i.iijr batsmen.Announce Schedule
,ui<>s for the next three weeks••:,• Fords heavy, junior compe-i! were announced today anrli - filed in other sectors of thei.f leagues organized by Snm, Recreation director.
: :-r statistics:I'lrnlra I Il lur .lay>
It. I all.n iPuhny . If (i
I>|S*J!«T." 111. p 4" O'Him, p. lh li: Crown..HH 5l |Arway,»c 4
2J!:*rkHS;"rf *
Tunic Giving Long Lines
n h .
I f ••
r. h.1 1i 31•I 3 II 2
, vf1
In 20| Tot nls . . 43 | ji n r i l i i K ^ . '
on an not—inHI n :oi tor.—i :t
Htn O m v p , K<>niih|j|,"« iiml IMIII'IFL Threp -IIIIIM, ,1. M. Jucufor.
lirlln
'i< Il-r :i
SCHOOL I K A f i l l ' ,| W u o t t r M a j r I I
. li.! nh. r. linl-'lnn. Hi
-Ji H'lnnii, <i :SMiik, 2li r,^ f i l r i ' iu l i i , :)> ooi.M'i-iiivn, p r,lililnkcn". »n 10,I-Vmtcu, int .1li Kennil, .111 A
Murifn. ir 5i ' .ilc if 1Kralml. rl 4Nmt-dr, rf 2IhirMer, rf 1
4 1
"l.'lls
l.1 sur.
SALMAGUNDILITERARY.MUSICALSOCIETYHOLDS FIFTY-SIXTH ANNUAL RECEPTION
P 1 C N I C
Sun*hin« CUM TO Hold July,August Meetings Outdoor*
Fifty Members, Gueiti ArePresent At Festivities
On TuesdayIts lifty-sixth reception and
final mooting of the year washeld liy the Salmagundi I-.it-prary and Musical Society atthe Colonia Country Club onTuesday nijfht. Approxi-mately fifty members nnd theirtruest* attended and the affair was
voted one of the most successful
of recent years.An excellent program of enter-
tainment was offered. Mrs. LouiseCrowell of Mt'tuohren, accompan-ied by Mr?. Maxwell MaeMichnel,nlno of Metuchen, sanjt two (rroupsof son^s. The first included nntn-
by Waterier and Grieg andthe second, "Vale" by Russell and"Vnltip" by Vnnrierpnll. For anmo/re, Mrs. Crowtll snnjf, "To A
Tendered BanquetWith pinii. •
for July ami \ .,•Clnss nf thi- IChuroh hn* ir! ,! ,
Srliand
lerMis.
A Vei l ; ]
Will:-
Mr-v John <in s s i M n l by Mia n d Mr*. KIIMI.
t t ' l t i l i l l i ' i l t i l l '
Mr*. .Inlin i':inV . l t l l l l l f l l -HTVIO
itiifi plannedthe SiimhinePre»t>yt«rian
• •••' 2:1 for its nextII A. Tappen,
will be hostessltowe, assisting
liter of S«w»ren,Albert Th«rg««enk Schwenier, en-i Monday night.
••mului'ted the de-
m»y begin Uter than seven. Mailyour invitations at lout ten d»y»o*for«h«nd.
QUESTION! "Hwo• woman r*l»r lo awhen atUnti lni a ••rranl?Whan ipaaklaf of him lo ailacquaintance who Aw notknow him wall anoa|h lo etllhim hy hit Aral Bam*, what•Would ilia 1.7?—Mrt. R. M."ANSWER: Unless one is speak-
ing to clos« friends who know thehusband as "John," she refers tohim an "my husband." He is .re-ferred to ni "Mr. Smith" to oneof the servant*.
added to muh«d potatoes, tha* wfflImpart a more Uity flavor afto.
• • •If you w»nt bright window*, da
not use soap. To giva window gUma high polish. sMne with rug dippedin paraffin.
Mrs. William L. Raup was toast-mistreflfl and sailed upon Mi«a(irace C. Huber, who toasted thequests; Mrs. William B. KrUK,SalmaRundi, As We Were; Mrs.Garret Brodhead, SalmaRundi, AsWe Ate; Andrew McCord, Salnta-Kundi, As We Would Like To Bo.
In the receiving line were;Miss Helen Pfeiflfer, Miss Anna
Hart, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert H.Maxfield, the new president, P.Wil%m Lauritsen and P. William r e c t o r -McCtfrd.
The Queitt {Those present were: Dr. nnd
Mrs. C. H. RothfusH, Mrs. D. H.Fords Miss Laura Brodhead, Rev.and Mrs. Howard F. Klein, Mrs.WnilamL.TOrap\ MR5.C. M. CflOf)-er, Mr. and Mrs. Aaher Fitz Ran-dolph, Mr. and Mrs. Leland F. Rey-nolds, Mr. and Mrs. Victor C. Nick-
Wayne T. CoxOf Woodhridge, Director of the
WPA recreational program, whowits honored at a dinner last nightby his co-workers. The affair tookplace at the Wagon Wheel. Jnn,near New Brunswick, and was at-tended by many of Mr, Cox'sfrienda and associates. Beforetaking charge of State activities,Mr. Cox was Middlesex County di-
PAULINSHOSTSUelin Parents Give Party
For Daughter On Birthday
ob-ierviiig tln>ir daughter's «ev-cntli luithilny nnd her first holyriimiiiiinion. Mi. and Mrs. Joseph
iilm, ('nopi'i- Avcnuo, Isehnwrri' lni.it* at ii party at their homeSunday uftpriimin.
The truest list included;Audrey. 1'hyllis and Bobby Mor
(r;ui, AI mil Kim-. Mafllili Bi'gii'iHiiymnnd, Thomas nnd urivceKi'illy, Marry Winger, S or inn andHoris fiuilin of Inelin; Mr. andMrs. Raymond Reilly of Jerseyt'ityi Mr. anil Mrs. John Reilly,Miss Ann Rt'illy, Cartiiet, andMr. aiid Mrs. Joseph Paulin.
Short CutsPiano keys turn yellow when
they are not exposed to light.Leave them uncoveredxtherefore,if you wish them to remain white.
• • «Next time you cook cabbage or
sauerkraut, add caraway seeds. If
BUY AND SAVE AT
ART-PECKFURNITURE CO.
DIRECT FACTORYREPRESENTATIVES
Anytkin| in Fumilars, Bitil
and Floqr Caverinvi
286 HOBART ST.PHONE P. A.4 47SO
Art Youn| Peter Fimiaail
Mrs. W. T. Jones Is HostessTo The Friday Bridge Club
Mrs. W. T. Jones, Tisdale Place,tartainad the Friday AlttinQQH
Bridge Clib at the Stone House,Madison; Mrs. Fred Turner, Mrs.William Weiant and Mra. Fred-
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Lang tunics create the Illusion o/ longer lines, /n this tracko) lark red with white dots and white with red, the white paneldown (he front emphasizes this effect euen more. The large whitehal o/ rough straw is trimmed toifh red and preen grapes.
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New* of All WoodbridgeTowmhip in the Indepen-
dent, the jnott widelyread paper in
Woodbridge
i onusMini., lulu- s, riikiinU'il.t vs. Hoys
•Inli.Tlniri).. June 11. TJiri:t» vs..,".V«-M'.ii., .linn- i:., Wllilmt.- vs. I n
Tliui'^.. Juiii- 15. Tlsera vs. "X."Mmi .linn- •:•:, "X ' va. Hoys' lllulThurs., .lull i' :."i. WIMraU V:
las, Mr. and Mia. O. T. Fraser, Mrs..ouise Crowell, Mrs. Maxwell Mac-
Michael, Mr. and Mrs. LeonardWillinper, Mr.' and Mrs. Herbert'H. Maxfield, Mrs. Garret Brod-head, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Corbin,Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Andrews.
Mrs. Barron McNulty, MispLouise Brewster, Miss Helen Pfeif-fer, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew McCordMisn Martha Morrow, Lamont In-(rrarram, Mr. and Mrs:- WttKamKufr, Miss Grace C. Huber, MraWilliam B. Krujf, Miss Ruth IBrb,Miss Anna L. Johnson, Mr. andMrs. P. William Lauritsen, Mrs.Raymond Killenberger, MrB.Graves, Mrs. William Butters, Mi»s
erick Demarest had hiffh scores.Mra, Weiant will be hostess to
the group at her home in Sewa'rennext-Friday.
Elaine Logan, Misa AnnaMrs. Bertha Brewer andMabel Bloodgood.
SHORTCUTS
Hart,Miss
SHEERS AT WEDDINGFor the outdoor wedding, such
sheers as mousseline de soie, net,marquisette, onranza, and organdie are suggested, nnd for the verysimple wedding in the country,nothing is more charming thandottedSWisg. AH of these sheershave a quality that suggests' ruffled treatments and crisp effects;hat are heightened by soft, summer breezes. There is a growingtendency to pose sheer fabrics othis sort over taffeta foundations.
llmmnrn—:l (inine* Or Murri ' l i iyer 'IV:unC. Viii.lker, Arcs!•'. Luniiiiiliii. AM S l u m .K. lliiriics, All S t a r s.1 Tlrptik, All Mtiir.s(!.• Ziimh". All S lu r s•W. (iiirtpk, A.f«
Miiyrr, All Stars;. Molnur, Aci-K
u l > .11
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11Ill
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II. ttvg.
.555.5004;V,
.384
WOOIlllllllXiK . I IMOIt ITt'lim alt. li. llvif,y
Ivar'innzlD, Cyloiu-s IS 1J.1. Hnka. llnivfs 1- ?S, Poi'liek, nriivca \'i 7II. Snakes, (ireeii I'.aldcraM sTdlmk lirnen Uiililirx 0 ;"S. Ijinimil.-iv. Whi te l ) \ v l » . . n SF. <lii|il>'li. UniVfn 12 i;I!, .liinnl. H r w n KuliliTH.. 17 sA. y.alnildiy, Cyi lones . . . . 1 7 ^
.583
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I'OIIT HH\I)I>( . SK.MOBTKAM W.
Cfn^su'iirils 'iV'ielil f'luli 3A. * H. -Nut ciiil" -
; .sou- .470• .470
tiiii:. PC.
,75<l.80(1.41)0.3;i:i
« (XlDIIIIIDI.I',TKAM
('yrl.ilH-a
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1.01!
Modes andMariners.
QUESTION: "I •hould liketo give a formal dinner soon.At what heur ihould il beginto be correct? Alto, how toonin advance of the dinner dateihould the invitation! beBTIttHlT-^-Mn. M. E."ANSWER: From seven to eight
s the customary formnl dinnerhour. If one riri'frrs. (niwcvcr. it
- Bl SURE Of YOUR
BRfiHESTRUST YOURS TO USl
RELINING - ADJUSTMENTSDRUM REFACING .
TROUBLES CORRECTED
RAH WAYBRAKE SERVICE
S. J. GASSAWAY, Prop.6 Yn. with Blue Gooie, Newark57 Main St. RAHWAY
Phone 7-1511
To make sure that you give sickmembers of the family the propermedicine does, and to prevent ac-cidental spills, buy yourself a medicine spoon. This spoon is extra 1deep and is marked to show the de-sired dose.
'29 REUNIONThe Class of 1929 of Wood-
bridge High School will have a re-union dinner dance at the HotelPines, Metuchen, Saturday eve-ning , J 2 7 ^ l k
Oreen HaidersWhite OwlnlirnveaCometsBlue .layslllack HnwltBl.ll>l>y«
.75H
.7(50
.SOU
.BOO
• OH!)
T K A M :Green RaidersOukea KanchKelly All StaraDuxHungarian C. C.
|)I An-s
SMOII LEAGl'F.W. L. PI '
2 0 l.iwf2 0 1.01")2 1 .6G«1 • 1 .fiilll
. , 1 2 . 3 3 30 4 .111)0
EXTRA CASHOn L/ouh OWN ^
, * . Oft tVIH ««• T»>Wik M htlpi in M l 'IVIN. Aia akwl MONIY
INt b J M• I , . Hwl will iMlly •>•!»r » te n» wSal yv «"•
Slnglt ptiaoiu ot married couplatt i t •llgibla. Louu mad* with otwithout iurnltnr* or automobile*Bapaj In nnall Uutallmnita.
REASONABLE RATESon all leant
Cell wit* ot phon* today—uk b la private lntorri«». No obligation)
FINANCECORPORATIONHOUSEHOLD
Perth Amboy National Bank Building, Sixth Floor313 State St., Cor. New BrumwIcK Ave., Perth Amboy
Telephone: Perth Amboy 4-38SJLlten>« No. 691
Monthly charfr JV4% o" unpaid halancmLOCALLY M A N A G t D OFFICES IN PRINCIPAL CITIES
HouitkoU Ktmu ijoniorj EDGAR A. GUEST in "WtUnrnt"tit!," <-i SHBULOCIC HOLMBS wM Rukard GVrJm.
GENERAL ELECTRICwith the famous money-saving $ealed-in-$teel
THRIFT UNIT
IN BOTH GENERALELECTRIC FLATOP ANDMONITOR TOP MODELSTheonlyrefrigeratormecha-nism with foroed-feed lubri-
cation and oil cooliog.
Here ij your opportunity to ownloday'i fineit refrigeritor 00terms 10 Mir that il will tctuallfpay for Itself.Although others hare imitatedthe General Electric sealed-in-steel mcchanlim, DO cold-makingunit e m laveattd hat 1 record 10compare with thit of (he Generalfileetrfe THRIFT UNIT fc» aVpemUbl* »w*ic» and ecooumy.
General Electric originated
5 Y6ARfParformanc* Protection
282HOBART INCORPORATED Phone P. A. 4-2220STREET PERTH AMBOY OPEN EVENINGS
Reynolds Dept. Store136 SMITH STREET
PERTH AMBOYP. A. 4-2800
Service Hardware81 MAIN STREET,
WOODBRIDGE
I;;$:
11J r, 10
hi ts Ilnka, Hartiii
14 17
3 — 1 • j1 - 0
i . • l i n k . FORD V-8 TRUCKS DO MORE WORK AT LESS C O S T . . .! mark llanlu
i i nli. r . .hJ|A. Valj-. 'aa 4 1 1110. V'ltly, 31) ;tJINslHon. Hi 31 11'Blnk, ^Ij :llllolliwi' l l , I1 1!^l.lost, ii 3l .S ln t t r , i'f I1. Finn, rf II" iKcnna , If 3
IH|1i n n
:i 3
0 - 3
/OODBRIDGESATURDAY, JUNE 6
i ( l u l l I r l u l M < h u r i ' l i
P. M. AND 8 P. M.
DROf* At-
n cilat'
UL/7f/i/THKTEA.
CAPT.
HMTHEWS
[ADMISSIONS REDUCEDFOR THIS DAY ONLY
il 20 - Adults 40oiMii Grove St.
Tomorrow
because they have
RESERVE POWER ANDEXTRA STRENGTH!
ON long or short hauls-up steepgrades—through gravel or gumbo,
Ford V-8 trucks have the reserve power todeliver their loads on schedule and nofavors asked.
The mighty V-8 engines U conservativelyrated by Ford at 80 horsepower-more thanis needed for most work. And thjs is one ofthe main reasons for a Ford truck's econ-omy. Because, with » much /warn power,the Ford V-8 doe* its work easier, with let*effort. The engine operates efficiently andat low cost because it is usually below"pe»k." The whole truck, straight throughto the rear axle, gives you longer life thanwould be possible with a relatively under-powered, over-worked unit.
And V-8 power is coupled with extrattnnith in the Ford truck . . . Frame,
clutch, rear axle—In fact, the whole chassis,including springs, is ruggedly built to insureusers the greatest possible freedom fromservicing cost.
But the best way of all for you to learnfor yourself exactly what a Ford V-8'sreserve power and extra strength means, isto try it—on your own job—with your
'own loads, and check the results. Call yourFord Dealer today. He will lend you a1936 Ford V-8 truck for «n "on-the-job"teit,without charge and without obligation.
AUTHORIZED FORD DEALERS
FORD V-8 TRUCKS
. B.i»h, fei-e^i *. to u Ml. «.»»- dm. d«m »• C. 0. M p.. «»•
ONE OF THE MOST REMARKABLE SALEEVENTS WE HAVE EVER HELD MADE POS-SIBLE BY TREMENDOUS CASH PURCHASES
FROM OVERSTOCKED MANUFACTURERS
FOLLOW THEiOBS-TOMORROW!YOU WILL HAVE YOUR BEST OPPORTUNITY YET.. .TO GET;YOUR SUMMER NEEDS AT SAVINGS THAT ARE PRACTI-CALLY UNHEARD OF . . . CONSISTING OF THE FOLLOWING!
CENTESSMITH AT MADISON-PERTH AMBOY.
Shoes for the Entire Family
— Misses' and Women V
Better Dresses — Women's |
and Misses' Summer Coats j
— Women's Hosiery, Lin- i
Kerie, Blouses, etc.—Chil-
dren'* and Infant*' Wear^—'
Women's House-Dreues &l
Uniforms — Girl*' Slacks!
and Shorts — Men's m
Boys' We.ar — Men'., Wo
en's and Children'* Bath.!
ing Suits.
PAGE FRIDAY, J U L EW00DBIDC8
Tact Among Most Important Virtues For WivesToDevelopPROPER APPROACH S e r v e a F r u i t P i e ;TO MARRIAGE WOES I t , E a n d T tSEEN FIRST NEED " s b a s > * l a s t %
• v.c fiml
COTTAGE CH! !>E PIE WITH NUTS A\D RAISISS
By JUDITH WILSONN o t h i n g t h a i y ; ; i * r . thir .k
IWO Correspondents r ind of i? more apr*'':zii'? than afreshly baked rhubarb <-rcherry pie unles? it i? 8 quiv
dra
Themselves In 'Jam';, Diplomacy Urged y p
er)'- flavorful custard com-
n e , o r raspVtrms.
B, MAR.ANl^S MART.N $ ffg£VJ.d%If ever wive.* required tact, nothing wiser tii»n to ?erve » pie
h i b h Vj "j»edHi* the two w ho rre^nt their ^ j ^ ^ X ^ n nproblems tr.day. The rightapproach, in both instances,'will-save the situation" Lackof tact <->r the wronp' ap-
• pfoath i»i 1 ca'J5* trc-vbl*. Bothhntb»nc?. JO :t hAfr<tr.<. h»ve *oniereuon •? f*el •,hfm?fivei al-ufed.It it most unft.rt.iT.au that mar-ried coup!*? car.ro1. se* morf clear-ly'thst uroa'ly what i« best for oneb bftrt tut bo'V- They often tliink
.one is tryiiif to
nnerj.LUNCHEONSToBito Jaicc
Crtancd Htn In lU«*d PotatoSVetf. witt Pottld
Criip Relit OrMBRaspberry Cream Pic
Cofff«
:ef. drain arvl <•• :».<-.-.»•;;• n :-, \ i cup sugar for sbo:.;
! T, : : ,U>- Strain out the berriesar,.i c> •. the liquid untii thicka r i ?y:..;y. Fiii the pastry shel.fn-.th thf vtiriei, pour the jyTurover the: anJ j e n e •with 1-s'cjj-
, , . . . <-rea"rr. t'.f.: ha« been whipped unThe bride who ..; v < r ; , .n ; f l i p n d f i u t t y a r d ; ; i f n d .jf.au?e t1'_her ed «••:>•. ; . ; parkage creara chee«e.
i'rear., cheese 'J^Jally comes in 3•jr.ee package?.
Cream Ch*«M Pajtrj, T'ti- if extragood for fruit tart?
f sr.y kind. Thoron^h'y cut one•.a:ksee orearr. chets# ar.d '.-4 cup'ihi-rttr.:r,p ;r,t': 1 <up bread f'.rur•that h*« l»«-r <ifted with 1-2 i*»- •1 ip?*n >•!!, •. hill thorcufrhiy ih therefr'gera'.cr. :",*jy,T©ll thir. on *a 'floored boari. cut intc circle' and
Cr«aa> of Muibroom SoupFrwt Friit Salad WithMoney Cream Dr*uinf
Hot BrM BitcuitiBlo*b»rry Cbtcie Tarti
Iced Tea or CoffeeRaipbvrry dtattard
The mskirijt is jirrtpticity itftlf. ir ,,u
oTer1,' on the ether. Some t ime! All you need, ij a baked lower I (,f 2
in tit?- cr t»rta jiot over, uiiti'.
sancwBak« in
•:e::ca'e!y ': Biftini Pici M:^ four'tabltfpoons L~crn?;arvh[with 3-2 CUT s-jpar and addto '2 'c^ff boi'ifiir wateT. Cook. friWing j
I "ccasifr.aliy ift the top . f a double; b-'iler 20 mirnit*?. B«a*. th« yolks !
lightly and add 1-4 cup i•th«t is true but-in''both (.'• these cro*t and thi; simple cflstard•letters one see* that the Tives are b i n*d • w h h , ™*. C'JP thoro:i?hly" " " ' v , , , v Trashed ar.d dra:ned raspberries.don? as they bei;eve best. p o r t j , e C U M a r (j ^ a i j j cjlp m^
"My dear Mr?. Martin: Do you Mil 3 1-2 tablespoons eornstarch,think I am ;uFt:f.ti in keeping 1-4 teaspoor. salt and 3--1 cup supartkings from my h-j?bar.d* I dp Tith enough water to make ahope I am do-.r.jr right in this, for paste, Stir into the scalded milk | pie 5heil and« *»«uv*i xrt lhe.bts.kj.. J . .3*" an<' s t ' r u n t ' ' ' ^ ' ^ an t^ smooth. | fiiline.admit that I dread a >cene wilTTWirTn"? "BESTeTI ycJiTS 5f "5' 5ggs | " * ' " n •him and I a m sun- he would be and 1 tablespoon b u t t e r and stir I p , • y—.fnrions with n-.e. Thew are the briskly for a minute longer. R e - | N f " \ T I P C I •» f\
uear then combine wi:h the corn-jtarch mixture. Add the juie'e of 2lemons, the grated rind of 1 lemon,2 tablespoons butter and a fewgrajns .salt. Cook, stirring con-Mantly until the butter i= melted.C001. Slice 4 bananas into a baked
on the lemon
dnromstances
Minus" In*A New Fad
. Through utter move from the fire and add 1-2 |«ar»]«»r.»«« en my part I did^botit.teaFpoori vanilla. When cool add |$100 damage? to our car. It wasn t the, raspberries. Turn into the ; i ian accident, so 1 cannot collect baked pie shell.from the insurance company. My Top with a little sweetened,husband know? that the car 5s up'whipped cream or with a meringuefor repairs, but has r.o idea what made from the 2 egg whites beatenhappeneii. So far I haTe kept it with 4 tablespoons ?upar. If y<ufrom him. and intend to do so, but use the meringue it should beam I right? He must pay the bill, browned quickly in a hot oven or By IRENE VAILHe is &15' put t° the inconvenience under a low broiler flame so the In order to give the desired sug-•f walking back and forth to Eta- custard does not become hot. The gt.^tk.r, of width at shouider*, smnetjon, etc., I am ^ 'pic should be served cold. 'riu'ijrner? ar-pi? little sheuldar
—Heartbroken." Blueberry Chc»e Tarti ; pieces of the .same fabric as theTwo Pathi Open ' Bake rich pastry in tart pans or iln-s- and hue with taffeta to make
By the time my reply reaches over the backs of muffin pans and •hen. stand nut beyond the sletvt.
ERECTS OF NOISEON NERVES SUBJECTCliRISMAN A R T r a i S ^ S r
n th, mquiet when we are accust.,noiPt, the feeling of being I,is only the normal wiMtu,,nerve centers when ane x t t h b
R search Extended To As-certain Whether Sounds
Are HarmfulTESTS ARE EXPLAINED
'fU CLAUD N. CHRISMAN, M. D.i I J . 'W maiiy of us have' .•n^ ' i l fur .a "quie t z o n e " to
1 \ ,• . f t up a round ou r placei ,• jjv-iiK1 Aftiiin, h o w m a n y',,f ;i- have found ourselves
.udil' 'iily in a quie t , emptyi-,,Ui|1 w h e r e - w e jro a r o u n d
|:V.>!inp as if the b o t t o m h a d• ,,,!,..! ,,ut of ou'r «tomachl5? N'« ' noises of hleh pitch reMi!1
•' .:.' thf effect of nm*e upon the tability and q«fvou«nei«. • !•• :i:i nervnuf system is fon\e-'ilow notes upset the ditc^1
• .p.r id be rci-k''>ned with. Effort• cesses and have a definit.,. •.(•(•n made by word masffln to effect." In the irtndin of ]
••.i.c the nanif'of the sound to ; tor's eifperirrtenU, a sort <, >i word rents as are uwd in used in "which virbratin^ :
are u«ed to anatyie nother word*, noises arc
frame and introduceinto our city codes that wnone producing activjti,.(luce the otherwise nornnf'of urban activity.
A Noiie StudioRectntly, Dr. L. C J r n n t , :
of the University of Buff.,released some very m'!.[fipdinp* that have beer, ,,,what he calls his "noisp -•Dr. Hector explains. •.,„!,ju?t hear a noice. It nff,.,.
rhysiolofrical effect of ., „(vnds on iU Volume and •quency of the air vibir^ets up its pitch."
A matter for discussi...Hector's further
has been the topic of var-of research. especi»lly in do»-n," as chemical comr..
t. ^«. I* _ ^ J ^... * _. • ' • • •
A delicious dessrt can be mode ot cottage cheese in thU iraii: 1 ' , eupi cottage chase: 4tpoont melted butter; ' a cup ruffar; '« tfaspoon/iil salt; 1 fableypcxn 'ictir; g'atei rindo' 1 If mem;2 ego yolks (unbeaten*; Vi cup routTi!,1 ' 3 cup chopped nuts, Mi* thcoughlv and pourir.to an un-baked pie shell. Bake at 4Q0 degrees for ttn minutes, then reduce to 350 degrees and bake until fill-ma is Arm. Freth truitt may be tstd in pioce o/ rawim. This vill *M an eight-inch pit-shell.
;ha t sleeves, in order to get them-selves on" the summer p rogram,
Th
Thi
yon, you wi.i have done either of aihrw_to_cool whitwo thir.gs: made a clear, breastof it to your husband, or managedto keep'him from knowing •what|damage was done. So whatever Itell you is too kt« 10 aSect the,
" Situation.
you prepare Thtri- acit understandniK
anythme from above thv i!bo>v to1. a .r o Bbnrs i hp i rmt . xM in the mutter -•;
imi.'t be worthy. They are not t o . t f tllf':*' f'etves wir.'i ::y t'r.f.ibe just a covering for the arms, i 1 jnp:h just about m:There if a feeling, or a preference «lbow a id wn?-.'01 -short sle'evesi different depTees ' "of shortness being understood.
In other word? a sle*ve can beany lenpth as iong a? it i? short.This observation is all the morepointed when it gets beyond dress-
I e? as it is so whole-heartedly thisseason. The short-?]eeved jacketwas one of last summer'? fashion?,but it is multiplied many times in
; suits that_will be worn earlitr thansummiT'tnTs year, Includir.s; someclotkjajuas, while separate coats aitalso short^Hpeved.
"Short" s-r^eves thir \Y;I'.' mear.s
VtIV '.Ve,; wi wide
nrr f-n* »; rac'.-i-.i.ly
,•*,-,'< where :nany t e « f hav« been b roken down, into their i:i.a !» to fin I in just what degree,-parts ' . In the realm of «<»•-,.;ind-proof walls fo.uld gruaAn- par t s are known as fi ,:,•, a larger work snVet or j u r t how, since that factor deter m ••iucri the noise from ei ther fellow j pi tch. The a r rangement <<(wvii'M?rs oi' from the -treet outs ide; chanism ii such that the-!(.«.d up the outpuv lents of any given n"i-
Since Jill sound j - a ma t t e r nf immediately seen, not : , •v:li:-Htioti. it i« reasonable to ad- ! Af ter a microphone of .,iv,i: that continuously repeated type has picked up the i
i cxatfgprited >ound that we call amplified in the usual "noT^e wrTiM hTtvp Til! rfirl- t>n th* • n i«u*l •pef tkerr then "f. ir.j 'nar, nt-ives. that rmcht finally he analyzer , which separ;,-,ha' infil l . Hn th<- o 'hfr hand, when fcrcnt pitches.
Accidtr.ts will happen, and it ispossible that your husband willtake that view of the situation.But meanwhile, I think you wouldbe happier if you paid this billyourself.
Budget Expcntei'My dear Mrs. Martin: I would
like to ask your opinion on thefollowing: I am a married woman•with one child and we live in the i•nburbs. I t is quite a gay place. Ido not think we should be seen inmany of the taverns, but my hus-:band says I am wrong. All the1
nicest people go, he Bays. He does;not seem to realize that there, isno one with whom to leave thebaby unless I pay a woman to staywith him. That costs at least $1and so makes our evening's enter-tainment pretty expensive. I don'tfeel that we should spend BO muchfor entertainment. My husband jonly makes $45 a week and wehave rent to pay and have not fin-ished paying for our car. He saysI am a kill-joy and that I be-grudge the money because I wantto spend it on myself. This isn'ttrue, Mrs. Martin. Please adviseme what to do. I can't bear theidea that my husband may go outalone. Isn't he likely to?
—Forlorn,"Perhaps he is. I think a good
deal depends on the way you han-dle the situation. Figures don't lie.ftove to hinj that you are right.I t s apparent that you^could notpossibly afford to spend'many eve-nings a week in this way. If youhave never made any attempt tobudget ypur expenditures, do sonow. About 5 per cent, of your in-come is all that you should spendfor entertainment
Beauty. TipsQUESTION: "I b.rt m round
(ice tbat it nicely proportioned,•till 1 would lilm to make it »p-pear ju»t * little more ilender.Can yon tall me the but way toapply my rouge 4°d how 1 ihouldarrange my h»ir? —G. D."
Since your features are nicelyproportioned you can wear yourhair either off the forehead andbehind the ears or off the fore-head and slightly forward on yourcheeks. Make your eyebrows moreinteresting by shaping them justenough to accentuate the naturalarch, and use tye shadow to en-large your eyes.
Apply your rouge in a roughlytriangular area — that is, longerthan it is bjoad. Start on the cheek-bone just under the center of theeye. taking the color out andslightly up to the temple and downto a point just above ttte center 9fyour lower jaw.
Blend the color subtly so thereare no harsh edges.
* * •Those of you who would like tohave glossy, luxurious hair mighttry the eggnog shampoo, The sham-poo starts with a thorough brush-Ing and a liberal sudsing. The soapit then rinsed away and an egg-nog mixture of two Or three beat-en eggs a id rum is put on the hairand worked well into the scalp with* small brush. The scalp is massag-ed thoroughly then the hair rinsedseveral times to removefevery traceof the egg. Try this shampoo whenyou are in a self-coddling mood.You Will not be disappointed.
"F§OU-FROU" IN VOGUENew York women have teamed
their tailored suits with feminineblouses, Up until this time manymore of the tailored type blouseshftve been noted with suits wornunder coats. Far ahead of anyother blouse style is the 'frou-frou" type of sheer with jabot
, treatment, a cascade of pleatedor ruffled frills standing out crisp-ly between the suit lapels. ChoiceM color in these tinted, luue-trim-(ined types find yellow hi/ th« leadnumerically, with violeJr^iexti thenpink and blue. /
STOREHOURS
Dai ly 8 A, V . t o 8 I'F r i d a y a n d S a t u H^8 A . ' M . to 10 P M
M FREE PARKING
Next to Market
Ttiii Food Market ii a Branch,,f Thf TK.FR FOOD
M-\RKF.T of Newark, N. J.
PRICESEFFECTIVE
UP TO AND INC1 1SATURDAY
JUNF. f.
FRUITS ANDVEGETABLES
JUICY SUNK1ST
IT WASN'T very long ago when Loth hUlittle feet could hide in your hand . . .
bis pink fi»U waved above blankets liketiny rosebuds. It •won't be very long be-fore he'll burst out of the clothes'he'swearing. He's going to be a sturdy fellow.
Everything he <•«!» mah^> to some partof his alert body . . . builds a muscle . . .blushes a cheek . . . strengthens a tooth.His first food is still his finest food.Thai's why we're so fussy about milk.It'i hjjs milk . . . it's our responsibility.
Sheffield Farms has felt thie re-. sponsibility for nearly a century. Every
day, methods are* sought to improveSheffield quality and service. Cows areli&pected, utensils checked, milk Isstudied, deliveries hastened. SheffieldSEALECT Milk is a triumph ©{ scientificskill and human diligence, A creamyglassful tells the story of extra cream,perfect freshness and flavor.
You can enjoy SEALECT Milk with thepeace-of-mind that comeg of thoughtfulservice. Order by telephone from yournearest Sheffield Branch. Deliveries arealways courteous 'and punctual.
fShtffitU Farnu pioneered in jxuleuriKlion — iniJw development of certified milk ,— in.tlu! intro-duction of traded milk — and in the u>ft-turdcertified milk.
s H E F F I E L D F A R M SSeahct 6RADE-A MILK
TOE MILK TBMTfTASTES LIKE CREAM •
311 Central Ave., PLAINFlELD2T2A Madison Ave., PERTH AM BOY
FROM TVBERCIUN TESTED HERDSTel. PlalnBeld 6-3600
Tel. Perth Amboy 4-0935
Oranges 10 for «JUICY FLORIDA
Grapefruit 4 (orGOLDEN RIPE
Bananas 10 forJUICY CALIFORNIA
Lemons 7 forCRISP BOSTON
Lettuce 2 HeadsJERSEY
Rhubarb 3 bun.HOME GROWN
Scallions 3 bun.3 bun.
FANCY RED
SPECIALS^Always Dependable 1 lb. can
Packed inSyrup
Just Like Offthe Cob
Largestcan
Reg. SizeCan
Assorted Flavors Reg. Size Pkge.
1 Lb. Can
Reg. J 2 Size Can
5Lb.
MEATSVitamin
RichReg. Size.
Can *
No. 2 Can
AH!! That New Flavor
1936 Spring LambLEGSSHOULDERS
CHUCK ROASTLONG ISLAND
SPRING DUCKS
Short ShankSmoked CALL HAMSSirloin or PorterhouseS T E A KFresh PorkSHOULDERS, Cali. style
25' lb.
Ib.
19clb.
29 C l
19clb.FreshHAMBURGERFresh PLATE orNAVEL BEEF
FISHCod Fish STEAKS
Fresh Cut FILLET
Fresh BUTTERFISH
Jersey PORG1ES
Fresh Sea SCALLOPSLOBSTER andSoft SHell CRABS
lbs.
c lb.
ASTOR COFFEEDEL-MONTE DELUXE PLUMSDEL-MAIZ NIBLETSJ E L L - 0CAMPBELL'S PORK & BEANSIMPORTED CRAB MEATGRANULATED SUGARSUN-RAYED TOMATO JUICECut S t r k i e s s BEANS G ° ^PHILLIP'S TOMATO SOUPAPPLESAUCE Fin^QudK,rilllL U U Jill F-n«»t Quality
KIRKMAN'S BORAX SOAPPURE FRUIT SYRUPSWASHING SODAW A I ft 1 N J tmbowed 80 to • Package
APPLE BUTTER <*« »<>..*„CARUSO Pure Ees NOODLESBROOMS ooodQu.m,CARROTS and PEAS
Reg. Size Can \
No. 2 Can
Urge, 14 Oz. Btle.
Reg. Size Cake
for
for
for
for
All FUvori 16 Oz. Btle.
Arm &
Emboued
Reg. Size Boxf o r
Fine, Med.Broad
Packed*} forin Cello «J
Each
standard No. 2 Can
1712IV
5'5'
14'23'25'22'10'6'9'
11'12'ir
• " c
D
14'25'21'
61
l!0 (
5clb.
23c lb-
BAKERY20c POUND CAKE9c PUMPERNICKELSPONGELAYERPIES
10c5c
15c12c
24c LARGE ROLLS doz. 15c
DAIRYMeadow Farm or TalipCountry Roll CrMBMrT
BUTTER Ib. 3 0 <Selected Candled
EGGSNUCOA
Oleomargarine ;k ' ,b19<FULL CREAM OLD FASHIONED
STORE CHEESE
MONDAY • TUESDAY • WEDNESDAY $GROCERIES
MONDAY
BLISS COFFEE1 Lb. C.n
P»k«d by Tbe M.kcr.of Maxwell Home CoffeeTUESDAY
Fruit CocktailTALL CAN
WEDNESDAY 1 lb.
C R A XAn Educator Product
19'
1 4 C
MEATS
HOT SHOTS:Moudkjr, Tuaidtjr,
J u n . 8 - 9 10
Fresh Beef Liver 19c lb.Frankfurters 17c lb.Cottage Hams 33c lb.
VEGETABLESMONDAY —U. S. NO- 1
New ONIONSa LBS.
TUESDAY —Fancy Green
PEPPERSLB.
WEDNESDAY-SUGAR
PINEAPPLESEA.
DAIRY"GOOD LUCK"Oleomargarine Ib j j
BAKERYCrullers amiDoughnuts
i,(ABRIDGE INDEPENDENTFRIDAY, JUN PAGEFIV1
Keasbey VolunteersHonor Chief Dambach«t June 27 For BanquetFor Retiring Head;
Name Committees•11 ,. Ki'iisbey Fire Protection
.•my lias selected June 27 ftR,,,!(, for the banquet it will
,,, t« its retiring chief, Wil-li.-inihftch. The auditorium ofi.,.y School will be the scene
;,,. festivities,
v ;, reirUlnr meeting on Mon-i.'iirht, the firemen voted to,iute gamea to the KiddieWell Camp in Metuchen and[ci iik'd to participate in the,'iiiil services to be conducted,, United Exempt Firemen'smtinn and the companies of
i, v Hope's*"! and Fords on11. The services will be
,,-(«»i| in Our Lady of Penceh :iiul the member* will me^tlii.-housc at 7 o'clock.
To Visit Shore.Hvi;i' delegation from tho, v unit ftlao is-expected to! the New Jeriey Firemen'sntion in Anbury Park on'ii, leaving by bus from the
garters at 10. A. M., newly elected Good Time, itee wjll have charge of the,t for Chief Dambach. It
of tho,.following, appointed,nil-lit Joseph Dambach:iy Kress as chairman, John, v. Michael J. Parsler, C. D.i, John Cyrus, Andrew Pay-ilies Wajrcnhoffer, Jr., and
• F e e .
,l,nt Damhaeh also appoint-following:
. •iturc committee: C. D,••!• Michael J. Parsler, John
iik and Paul Shaffiey; June'M.•niei'iiil service committee:ITi ilTcr and John Dambach;;
v I nmmittoe for the y«ar;i. i .1. I'arslqr ahd August• , uicwalk committee: Wil-
-, ,',ff. C D. Pfeiffer, Michael
HOW IT BerdantQr
ALTHOUGH BEER \Nr\S SUP-POSEDLY INVENTED BY JANPR.1MUS IN 1250, IT W*3 USEDBY SCANDINAVIAN W/KRR10RSLONG BEFORE. ITS NAME DE-RIVES FROM SCANDINAVIAN"60ORV CHANGED BY THEANGLO- SAXONS TO ftBEOR."WHEN INTRODUCED BY THENOR5EMEN.
ISLE or
Fords Women SponsorA Lawn Party, Dinner
lub To Tender AnnualParty To Husbands
Next WednesdayKl.i!mr;ite iirrangementa arc be
H- irule Ky thP Fords Woman's'lnl> fnr n lawn party on June•"> ni'i the annual men's dinner
tri nrv Wednesday.Thi' men's fete will be held in
•Who! No II and all those plan-•iiiig in attend are asked tor make'e<pr MI ions with the general ohair-iinn. Mis. Willard Dunham, Horns-by Street.
'I'lie lawn party .will be held atthe home of Mrs. Bernice Kleni;IIK! the proceeds will be devotedto the club treasury. The affair Iwill lie held from 2:0 until 5 In theHftfi'Mniiin »nd cards nml croquet.will l(v offered tn members midtheir iruesW.
Liberty A. C. ExtendtThrice-Victorious Comets
Only the l.iti.Amhoy extern!' iiriK Cnmets in nweek-end soiled ior.i liy Tom Yv;erty nine yieldi"!inninir* of bitterally dosed at ;were in (•onti'imelee with thewas decided inthe Port Headisoftie.', by lO-.'i.
• A V. ..f Perth•ho Port Read-HJ-, three-pun*
i'il f»r the Mete;il rick. The I-ih-Init not until 14combat that fln--. The Cometsof n free-hittincMlackhawks tha1-10 figures and
iir Clovers were
GOLDEN
VSaw*
yBnrthn, Ziiivaro and
lockiing J
the winning pitchers. By-nlid Rni'mto wet'e the clout
X MARKS SPOT
Is Proud To OfferTHE NEW 1936
COLDSPOT"SIX"
THE SPORT CLOCKTURNED BACK
Where Wildcat* Fell VictimsOf 8-6 Trouncing
That my»terioH»ly-n«med Kordu jX jKciimulateH another entry onthe right side of it* 1930 ledgerthis week. Tho Wildcats seem t«have Iweti the victims, in n match
by K-'l.
THIS SCOTTISH ISLAND DE-RIVES ITS NAME FROM QAEL-1C"5KA1CH "(CLOUDY Ofc.DARK), BECAUSE OF THE
STOR.MS WHIQHOCCUR THEVE
t 1»M br UnlM TtUm «n*4iU, I KTD.IU! U.).r>tO«.—AHri(hUrai
• Iditinn William Dambachminted nteward and Joseph M r «n< assistant steward, Chief
Kri's-i appointed James;•; tiii' jMiliee chief; Michael]Icr ;i^ captain and WilTiiim
.l.ilm Petercsnk, C. I),ml John KRI7 as fire po-
,i
Fords Lions Ponderlirlhday Celebration
GALA HOLIDAY DANCE AHRACTS CROWDTO THE SEWAREN LAND AND WATER CLUB
E. Cowle, Elaine T7- •» T
Keep NeatFigure to
Look Chic
SurveyiPIanV;;'elcbrale 10th Anniver- u
sat y Of Founding j!1
Zischkau, 0. T. FraserAwarded Prizes
A pj;i holiday dunce was heldin the Sewaren IJIIHI and WaterClub on Saturday night, with morethan a hundred members andKiiests in attendance. Music wasfurnished hy Ken Heller's orches-trn of New Brunswick.
The prize for keeping a balloonintact throughout a dance was
elimination dance was won by
ward to your chest and lower thehead. Then stretch the leg back-ward as high as possible, with thefoot extended and the head raised.Repent with the left leg, alternat-
five to ten times with each
(From THF. INPIKPKNDENT PllMlJust Ten Year* Aga
A SIX-RUN START INthe first round came in htindyfor Woodbridjje in the sec-ond battle with Carteret,which the townshippers bare-ly won, 11-10 . . . Reoord for the season was eight winsand faux l a w s . , . All werecounty league eamos except winsver South Orange and Curtis High
of Staten Island . . . SteveKaminsky pitched the triumph OvpvCarteret but in independent com-petition he couldn't save the Keas-bey Feds, from a 10-G drubbingadministered by the QuestionMarks . . . Katrausky, TothMesick, D. Fee, Warren, HatarickLund and Krauss played with the
y1 The lineups:
WllilmUilk
l-:iis :ih SMI1I.T. ».s iMiikoi. if L1
lVIr l , . Hi 1l ink , ' . ' i :li'l-/.. Jh !iiirni-v. c ~:
Trio, if
• f the tenth anni-! -N existence is lieinK: hy (hi1 Fmds Lions', i.;iiiiiiitee, :-.tudyinc ttr*ui the proposal, will rc-
• i• iv niKht.meetimr this week, the
.illed Allyn I'etcrsun asWesley Christiansen,
Alex-
Thost present were:Mr, and Mrs. II. Ii, Rankin, Mr.
and Mrs. I{. T. Bucan, Mr. andMrs. R. E. Cowle, Mr. anil Mrs.S. J. Adums, Miss Margaret Child,A. ,f. Adams, Mr. and Mrs. RonaldM. Buist, Mrs. Thomas Zettle-moyer, Miss Irene Kelly, Walter d.m o y e r , Mis I re K y ,H y o r , Mr . a n d Mrs . ¥. A . A k e s , M' •-uleiit; Charles J.
: i . innry, an.l It. U. l'red-|an'([ M r ; ( R w R u c k - Mr. *nd Mrs.iir;,~uier. Rayjmnnl Mutidy f.'ranris M. Praky, Mr. and Mrs.-iirnMt.'d us official tail-, Stanley Potter,
. while Anton Lund WHS mi- ,,., „ .• i^ant-at-arms. Other Cueitiinauguration message. Mr. and Mis. John.M. Kreger,
• I the charterT. Wesley Liddle
. and Mr, Mundy.
COTTONMATELASSEn
• -mi ui'Kni iitvtjiii'imm Mj'. and Mrs. Clarence Davis, Mr.i;il club and urged that n'i'l Mrs. Irving J. Reimcis, Miss
it i«f co-opei&'tiim which Dorothy M. Karr, Walter P. Still-uli-ii during the unit's first man, Frances B. Garret, John
ruiuinue. Ac|iiila, Mr, and Mrs. L), V. Rush,uttee studying the pos- Mr, and Mrs. Howard Peterson,
celebration Mr. and Mrs, Philip Prentice, J. A.Harold McLaughlin, Miss Edyth A. Bettei,
1 L. F. Hvrlinger, Miss Rene Ehrlich,Mr. and Mrs. William Chlog, Wal-ter ('relies, Miss Edna Batz, Mr.nnd Mrs. O. T. Fraser, Miss MamelWatts. Robert Rehknff, Mr. andMrs. William Lnuritsen.
Mr. and Mrs. N'oel Kittell, BarIniia Rush, Richard B. WhitneyMr, arj/I.Mrs. I. V. llemarest, Mr,and Mrs. J. II. Zimmerman, Mrand Mrs, J. Holinscn, Mr. and Mrs,Monroe Weiant, Robert Humphreyand Ruth Ramsey, Mr. nnd Mrs, J,Rivers Adams, Richard TownsendMiss Maine O.ichkau, C. AllanPhillips, Mils Mary Ann Clair, Harold I,. HaJI, Jr.. Mr. and MrsThomas Major, Mr. and Mrs. T. JQunkeiibush, Dr. and Mrs. F. C. Deher, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Weiant.
By JACQUELINT HUNTContrary to the idea that moat
of you have, exercises are not tak-on for reducing alone. Frequentlyexercises arc advisable for improv-ing tho apputite and filling out thecontours of a person who is under-weight; sometimes they are need-i'd for relaxation and sometimes tomprovc the posture and generaliiusole tone.
All of you can afford to spendomo, time learning to relaxhrouirh the right exercises. Theurry and strain of modern livingnake you forget how to relax.Muscles become tense, the circu-atiun poor. As a result the skin islomishcd, the scalp taut and dry
and the guliis tender.So learn to relax! Take a tip
i'om your pussy cat.,Stretch fre-luently to straighten your spineml when you have a minute topare, let yourself go complotely.
h t i th fli
This exercises the neck, backand leg muscles.
Ererythipg't Exerciie JNow roll over on your back with
your hands at your sides, the kneesraised. Draw the knees up slowljtoward the chest, raising the hip^off the floor as much as necessary,Raise and lower five times. Replaclthe feet on the floor and relax.
Everything you do while yotjwonk about your house or youiHarden is a form of exercise. Seathat it is beneficial evercise, bydoing 't properly. When you liftsomething, get down as far as pos-sible under the thing to be raised.Than push up with the hip and ab-dominal muscles.
When you stoop to lift thingsfrom the floor, bend the kneeswith one foot ahead of the otherStoop, keeping your back straight.Lean forward for better balancewhen you climb the stairs—or amountain. When you ait, press thesmall of your back and your hipiagainst your chair. This keeps you:posture good. When you walkswing your legs forward from youhips and thighs. Keep, your heaup and pull in your abdomen.
rorit> V' :>!'
it'.l. C a n t o r , i l'<N«»ti. r r 4^ K.' .-slk. It) 3
1 i " I ' r i i i r . ss I: (i. " wir i i in iH. ir :i! 1 H'l»,-n. .'Ii :'~: I l i l ' i n l l k . :ili :i3 i) II l- 'ni/nr, r ' :'3' 0' it: Knvurh. p -
t l
hit .1.li l l—ll^lz.
n l i tI"11
oquois Outing Club was outpointedn the last inning liy Iselin Sena-ore, 7-8 • , , • Ayer t Dra^p-it, Petras, Wheeler Brothers,
e, Clayton, Reedy and Blackilayed for Avenel.
AND FIVE YEARS AGO: CAP-,ain Pete Schmidt of the highichool followed his remarkableitching victory over Perth Am-oy by blasting three home runsgainst Lyndhurst, accounting for
seven runs in 15-9 rout a£.invaj£iaGeprge Sedlak, "Hu-
man Bone Crusher," was trainingfor a wrestling match with BuckyHarris of Elizabeth here on June13th . . . Wagenstein's homerun handed Iselin Senators 4-1 deI'ision over Just Social A. A. ofKeasbey . . . OutstandingComebacks in the major leagueswere those of Jim Bottlomley,Cardinal first baseman, and LouFonseca, White Sox second base-
UAZ torSUMMER STEPPING
Whrther you go In for frillyfrooka or Btrtctly aporte attire,we have the whlto and faahlon-rlght Red Cross Shoos to gowith any costume. In a varietyof styles to make the choos-ing1 easy. Price now only (6.60.
Tho Rosette
T H EONLYELECTRICREFRIGER-
ATORWITH THESE
FEATURES
EVERPRICEDSO LOW
COMPLETELYEQUIPPED
WITH 10 OFTHE FINEST
FEATURESMONF.Y CAN
BUY
FULL 6.3 « < F«' CAPACITY
Buy a bunch of rubber bandscut out rounds of paper and youwill have the essential workingmaterials for putting paper capsover your jelly glasses to keep outthe dust.
spare, et yu g pyExercises that improve the flexi-bility of the entire body, withoutputting undue strain on any onepart, arc best.
Do It GraduallyGo at all exorcises gradually,
Begin by repeating the movementsabout four times at first. The nextday do thorn a little longer and soon, increasing the dose as yourmuscles becunie accustomed tothem. Exorcises taken in this waywill not leave your muscles soreafter tho first treatment.
For this exorcise, kneel on a rugor milt with your hands claspedbehind your back. Hold tho headup and, keeping the back flat, slow-ly lower tho body first to a sittingposition on the heels. Hold a sec-ond, then pull the head down,round your hack and slowly returnto tho lirst position. Repeat tontimes.
For the second exercise got onyoui- hands and knees with your'back flat. Pull the ri«ht knee l'or-
HEADQUARTERS FOR
Philco RadiosFor Authorized Philco Service
Call Elizabeth 2-8900
Jersey State Electric Co., Inc.Fixtures — Appliances — Gifts — Radios & Service
BROAD ST., at Elizabeth Avenue ElizabethOpp. Courthouse Tel. EL. 2-8900
NEW E M P I R E THEATRERAHWAY Telephone Rahway 7-2370
NO ADVANCE IN PRICES FOR THIS GREAT SHOW
STARTS TODAY
BIG DAYS 5FIRST RUN IN
THIS VICINITY
The Vera Borea tailleur U 01cotton matelasse sprinkledsmall bouquets 0/ colored
trs; even the backlei) waist-
t which replaces the bodice iithlt fabric, crrtp and ekan-
King.
BITTING'blue coal'
LOWEST PRICES FOR]CHE FINEST QUALITY^
[SUPERIOR SERVICEPHONE 8-0012
S A M U E LGOIDWY
prei«ntt
THE ROGUE'STAVERN"
* of units we handle.
L. WEINER, Inc.11 SI E. Jersey Street
ELIZABETHOPP. RITZ THEATRE
CHECK THESE FEATURESNew Streamlined Beauty—eye-arresting andmiMtfin inside ami wittnifle.Touch-a-bar—opens the door gently whenyour hands art; full.Famous Foodex—an orderly, "indexed" placefor every food.Rotorite Unit—approved by Good House-keeping Institute.Interior Light—irives automatic, full visionwhen door is opened.9-Point Cold Control—freezing speeds to suitevery season.Gleaming Dulux Exterior—and easy-to-cleanporcelain interior.Dry Zero Insulation—finest money can buy,adds to efficiency,96 Ice Cubes—7 '/•! pounds of ice Fast. Threeseparate ice trays. Finger Touch Release.
PRICED TOSAVE YOUAT LEAST
$40.00
$1U50I # • * CASH
Up To 3 YEARS To Pay$5.00 DOWN DELIVERS IT. Small Carrying Charge
QUALITY BACKED BYSEARS 5 YEAR PROTECTION PLANSears, Roebuck and Co.
275 HOBART ST. PERTH AMBOY,N.J.
SOUR VOLUME BUSINESS!{GIVES YOU GREATER CHOICE!;:;; We cannot afford to hold for price - we;;t must keep them moving due to the number |
**4
F R E E !WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10TH
$150.00 IN JEWELRY PRIZESTHROUGH THE COURTESY OF
A R GOLDBLATT & CO., Inc.(CREDIT JPWELERS)
7 C H E YOU MUST BE PRESENT TO WIN
112 -1934 V-8's, All types . . $345 to $395 J
7 - 1 8 W S . A I t ypes . . $445 to $495>
6 Chevrolets, 1932 -1933 -1934to 1936. Models attractively priced.
iuick, Dodge, Nash, Chrysler, Pontiac,*{[Ford, Chevrolet, Plymouth, Oldsmobile,;
etc., large choice you can't lose!
2 Day Money Back Guarantee
DORSEY USEDCAR MARTThe Safe Place To Bay
Just Above C.R.R. on New Brunswick Ave.E Tel. P. A. 4-2703
PERTH AMBOY, N. J.
MONTHLY PAYMENT PAINTING PLANFeatures of Our
New PlanI N a n d Up*
S No down payment
8 Your itf nctui* U theonly (eouiitr M«dad
5 Two yean to-pay
6 You may kwhlde otherhome linpn>veu»«at»with you* painting
The geuerous term ol out mm Monthly P»ym«ut PiintiogPUu nubia you to (to ill of your needed houM painting Now—at one tima—and pujr fuma income just u you nuy hanpaid (or your automobile, radio, or refrigrriUir. IThe elimination of red tape, delay, and down paymentt, plotlong term notea at lowett Intenat ratw makei our plan doublyattractive. Tho entire tnuMctfan oau be couipletod at on*time in your own home.Let ui make an aatimate—without obligation—on whatdu Pont pa Into an needed. You'U welcome the oonveniano*and economy of our new Monthly Payment Paiatflog PUp.
Saw ui now /or comulete detail*
SERVICE HARDWARE CO.81 Main Street WOODBRIDGE
IV! H-0505
PAINTSVARNISHES
ENAMELSDUCO
PAGE SIX FRIDAY.
ROBINSON RETURNS TO THE SCREENIN THRILLER-BULLETS OR BALLOTC
Dtttniclion Of PowerfulRacket Gang Baiif
01 New Hit
NOW HE'S A RACKET SMASHERI'.'-Edward
the screen in "• FirM Nationais scheduled a«ttn »t the Maj
Robinror,til the
"•:. rcurr.* lo'.- nr Balluts",••ijc'.ior. vhichIV-aVjrt attrac-tr.ea'.rt befin-
•it affords himcharacter
llation that "Lif.'c ra«sar ' . thepicture that rrisdt him famous. !|*ve him, but in this ;<ictura. he ii IHot • pinir;t«r. He ;• fc hard boil-'
• ed detective 'Jt'.trrr.ihed to put theboldest arc^ lie^t ortfSP.Irfa trawl'of criminal''itnoT'. to rivtory out .of tannw!. ':
To do thj« he rtncunctf born1OT» fcnd honor, at >*"»•:. wmt>'jt»r'.,;ily, for he break* with the police 'and ofrUrwbly b fornf a criminalhimself, ir, order to >r«ther the evi-dence Ui break -jp a band bt cracks ;to powerful the: r.o one h»d ever •been »b:e to rut the finder or,them.
The picture i< *.he rtory-of r»ck-eteern who are supposed to be re-spectable focie'.y lesitr?, buslhess jmen of wealth, politicians of hisrh;position and bar,'»:er«. mer, so weilknown that no ore «ujpect» them.They never are •-een with »ny of ithe crookf who '.arry out their or-der*, but contact yir. or;t m»n inthe working orjrar.ii»tion who car-riei oot iheir orders s i * 8e1!«TI'the proceeds of th*ir il'.-pottengains. ..
The story is by Martin M&oneythe New York new-^apefmin *lroexposed racketeering in the news-papers, and w»« ?ent to jail forthirty days for contempt of court>because he refused to divulge the jsource of his information. He |elaitned it was hi? moral right not jto divuize the riamet of personswho jrave him information confi-dentially. Seton I. Miller collabo-rated •ai'h Mooney on the storyand &!«"• WTM* *.fc* ?irmn play;
There i« an ur.u'ually talentedcait in the picturt. '.vjth Joan Blon-deil piayin? the :eminine iead op-posite Robinson.
Barton MacLane has the role ofthe chief of the trar.ifster;, theonly contact with the. "hijrher-jps",but who sti!! has a terrific strag-gle in keeping his gar. r of kiilers infine. In the end <jr,e of themdonble-cro&ses him and shoots himdown in cold blood.
The latter part, the toughest ofall the tough men, is played byHumphrey Bogart, the killer of"Th Prifid F "
Edward G. Robinson who startled the world as thepower-drunk gang leader in "Little Caesar", returnsto the Majestic Theatre tonight in "Bullets or Ballots",shocking inside story about the syndicate of crime.
py"The Petrified Forest.
Frank McHuch furnishes thecomedy element a? the personalagent of Miss Klondell, who runsa Harlem Number- racket. JosephKing i- the commissionerbreaks Robinson.
Race Car Built For Picture 'Speed'May Revolutionize New AutoDesign'Falcon', Streamlined By Veteran Aviator And Powered
With 675-Horsenower Curtis Motor, Attains140 Miles An Hoar In Trial Runs
IH the hope of shattering aworld's speed record for motionpicture scenes, automotive techni-cians in Hollywood built a racingcar that may revolutionize the de-sign of high-speed automobiles.
The racer, christened the "Fal-con," is 2fi feet and 2 inches inlength, is powered with a 675-horse.power Curtis-Conqueror mo-tor and has attained a speed of 140miles per hour in trial runs.
When Lucien Hubbard, associateproducer at Metro-Goldwjn-May-cr, made his preliminary plans to
d S d " d bdpr•oducc "Speed," a drama based| upon the daring of the unsung godsI of speed—the automobile test pil-ots—iiml which opens tonight atthe Strand Theatre, he called forbids from several of the largest-au-tomobile manufacturers for revo-lutionary designs for a high-speedracer.
N'ont of the proffered designswere satisfactory, so Hubbard
| turned to his own industry, to ththighly specialized technicians in
| \ motion pictures.The accepted design for the
"Falcon" was created by ArnoldGillespic;, associate art director andveteran aviatro, who applied the |principles of aero-dynamics to hismodel.
From Gillespie's model, HubertHobson, studio technical drafts-man, completed final drawings and
I ] these were transformed into work-ing drawings by Leo Gossen, for jlifttcn years automotive engineer i
Jamn St«warl HnH Wendy Barrie | f,,r Harry Miller, builder of most |in "Spe-d" at the Strand tonight. I of the record-holding racers.
PREVUE TONITE!Telephone
P, A. 4-3388
Frances Sage Plays WithAnn Harding In
Ditmas FilmT'r< i;r..^h-H '•' a former Wwd-
i,-,iv'* g-.r rr.ake« good in Holly-wood: Mii-- France' Sage, who in•p'-vrt ii:* ~ France* Satz, thedaughter cf O.-e former Mile TWe-
• ta K*stir.tr. an i (rranddaughter of:Mr=. George Keating of MumS*'reet r'lay* the second feminine
!ic'»d in 'supper: of Ann Harding! in -The Witness (.hair" opening ati the I>.;ma? tonight.I M;i« Sage's mother, the fomoriTtieresa Keaung. was born andI reared':n Wood'bridge. After her! marriage the,moved to New YorkCity where she still resides on Cen-
t r a l P»rIt west.. "
•Sharing dramatic ability at an*»r:y agt. FYanee>was encouragedand'later joined the Theatre Guildwhere-»h« played the leading rolesir' .several productions tn largeEa=lern citien.
Ir. the -'Witness Chair", sheriay< the part of an impetuous idebutante. The play is adapted jfrom a short novel by Rita Wei-1.".•.an which appeared in the" Cos-1:r, cCiliun magazine, "The Witness ii.hair" .projects Miss Harding as: r.c- chief witness at a trial in whichr:ti lover i« accused of a crime she
Shakespeare' 'Dream'Screened By WarnersClassic Comedy Comes To
Ditmas TheatreWednesday
A new department had to b,e' created at the Warner Bros. Stu-dio?, for the filming of Shake-speare's "A Midsummer Night'sDream," which comes to the Dit-mas Theatre on Wednesday. Andin this department new ' screentechnique was developed.
For wrfnt of a more descriptivename it was called ftie 'RubberDepartment."
Because it was so nearly alliedto "make-up^' andnead dress, its.presiding gemusvvaT Percy TFeTt- f"more, although it encroaches insome ways on costuming.
The many denizens of the wood-land world in the picture presenta variety of countenances. Theft-are rubber masks of "weird and
__ , wondrous shapes."China Dinner Service from the Tach mask was made to orderRoyal Diamond & Watch Co., Perth I with as much care and artistry asAmboy. The set has an embossed j was ever expended by Benda onborder and is richly decorated. It (his masterpieces,is a gift every couple will be proud The manner of making eachto own. mask to order was tedious and
The store is now displaying an complicated.unusually large selection of gradu-1 The face of the subject was castation presents, wedding rings and ; in plaster and after it had sui'fi-gifts. Prices are always reason-1 ciently dried, Westmorc or anotherable at Royal and generous credit J sculptor built up the -cast will
Mrs. footing's Grand-daughter Cast JACK HALEY 'F MAN"As 2nd Leadln'The Witness Chair' IN G-MAN COMEDY
Country Lad Who Yearn*To Be Federal Agent
Tries, Anjrway
..T.I!,(.'
Frances Sage
.'imu-mg newadventures of
• »»!,• ' -." :>e a "G Man", . : Iv- ,;•; •• make the grade.•','. . lay a': •-•*• Crescent Thea-
•• Pack Haley in the tit le. ;.' ; ,i cast neaded by Grace;; ... ; . v. Wi.'.iam Frawley, Adrien-' . M-.r: .-" and Onflow Steven5
-1:1: r..:e him.'• V .V..,-.' deals with the fate of
. f .-•• v '. <y who goes to the •' '.'y•'.-i T:-.a'f - " i : ••••«> a* a D t p a r t m e n : e !.Ij ' t ice '-vera'.ive. Thrown out of:hat oft'.ir.ization'? <>ffite every•'me he afipfar?, he finally H^1-himself a ir-b a? a soda-fountain
*cierk hat meanwhile continue? :r>mske regi: ir visit?.of the office o.the Pepartment. He makes, such apest of hiJT.se!f that a minor pffi-rial finally secidts to 'do »om,e,thir.srabout it.
woonBinoE INDEPRNI >KN I
NEW LEADINGUDYIN McCOY THRILLER
' •.'n.iii'l T i m M r | n y , f.,.
H- •'!••! i aha l l r . r n , " hi? ] a t . . . - :•
i-a- I M ^ r i V W r s i c r n . t.mv -.
.v • • t ' i i i ' . t r i cn t a t the ( , , . .
I'M :,-!.•. prc»enl« n now !<.•,iiid;. :!i the dainty person '.•.laiii.'iry. who has appca,',many films produced hy i,i-nmiianic-s and will \x> <'-J,I.ifniciiibeicd hy movie fans f, •excellent work in a feature;nf I ' liiveisal 's "By ('an.il,. ,A ' li.ildie Ralph the little , :".hall entertained, Mis?•^ - '• » •- nan entenainea, Mis? ,la
Brown iind J«mn C»g- irives a stellar performance•A Midiummrr Niglit'i has won her approving •
coming lo the Ditmai frcim the newspaper critics
Free Dinner Set OfferedCouples Married In June
Every couple engaged or mar-ried this month with Royal ringswill receive a beautiful 32-picce
y gterms can bu arrangeddifficulty at all.
with no molding clay, until it had the tea-' tures of the finished character.
Conlinuoui
2 to 11 P. M.HMW)lTMAS
Telephone
P A. 4-33M
ON STATE STREET i t the FIVE CORNERS, PERTH AMBOY
THREE (3) DAYS ONLY—WED. - THURS. - FRI.JUNE 10TH - 11TH • 12TH
\
. Tht Majwrrol Shak*tp«ar«l
. Tht M«Iodr
. Th« Mcntmyoi Rtlnhardtl
Wottir Bio*.pi«t«Bl
MIDSUMMERMIGHT'SBREAM"MAX HEINHAHDTS
PwwlucJlon* * 15 STARS * *
JAMES CAGNEYJOE E. BROWNDICE POWELLANITA LOUISE
ALL SEATSRESERVED
TWO PERFORMANCES DAILYMATINEES3 O'CLOCK
PRICES—55c-83c-$1.10Tax Included
NIGHTS8:30 O'CLOCK
PRICES—55c • 83c$1.10- $1.65
Tickets Now On Sale
TWOFEATURES
ALWAYSCREiCEHT
PERTH AMBOY
CONTINUOUSSHOWSDAILY
FRIDAY • SATURDAY SUNDAY
TIM McCOY in "BORDER CABALLERO'-AND-
. . .Meet the pal of ripublic enemies and agum-shoe giggle man ft
J A C K H A L E YGRACE BRADLEY
MONDAY - TUESDAY
GLENDA FARREU *CESAR ROMERO
arid MADELINE CARROLL in 'THE LANS
ON STATE STREET i t the FIVE CORNERS. PERTH AMBOY
PREVUE TIME TABLE7:00 "Son» 0' Gunt8:11 "The Witneit Chair"9:30 "Som 0 ' Gum"
10:40 "The Witne» Chair"
4 DAYS STARTING WITH PREVUES TONIGHT
FRANCES SAGE. THE WOODBRIDGE GIRLWHO'S MAKING GOODIN HOLLYWOOD, SUP-PORTS MISS HARDING
PREVUE TONIGHT!PREVUE TIME TABLE
8.24 "SHORTS"645 "SHOW BOAT"
10:29 "BULLETS or BALLOTS" MAJESTIC PERTHAMBOYCONTINUOUS DAILY
2 TO 11 P.M.
IMPORTANT NOTICE-"--' S S
ENTIRE WEEKSTARTING WITHPREVUE TONITE
" M E N ' S "THRILLS AREHERE AGAIN!
DON'T MISS AMINUTE OP THIS LEAD-RIDDLED REVELATION
onf MRS * *
EDW.G. (Utt/e Caesar)
SAT. - SUN. - MON. • TUES.
PREVUE FRIDAY NUE
DRIVING!DASHING!
ZOOMING!CRASHING!
JUST TO HEAR THtGRANDSTAND ML>K
"THEROAROFTHE CROWD'
with
WENDY BARRIEJAMES STEWARTU N A M E R K E LT E D H E A LYWELDON HEYBURN
I
LAST-T»MrsTODAY
JOE E. BROWN i» "SONS 0'GUNS"
"•fire
FiritNdlionnlPkluit
Directed byW i l l i a mKeighlry
TOANBLONDELLBARTON M.cLANE-HpPHREY BOGART-FRANK McHUGHJoseph King-Richard Purc«|Beorge E. Stone-Joseph Crehan-Henry O'Neill
A Firtl National Picture • Directed by Wiliarn Keiyhley |
Last Times Today "SHOW BOAT" Irene Dunne
AL LATTANZIO
Rjciat eTery Sunday "The WoiafiTdie Tfftf "and C»rdeo SUte Ra"AMU., Champion of 19'•»y«: "Thi« movie 'Sp«''i> one of the finett aut"racini picture. I've cvciteen. I hi|hly recomme >it to i n t j raciof fan wlilike* t j take hi. thrill. ••]the icreen aa well >• ''the track."
Al Lattaniio
FREE CHINA THUR. NIGHTWED. - THURS. - FRI. (PREVUE TUES. NITE)
JESSIE ROBERT
MATTHEWS YOUNGIN
IT'S LOVE AGAIN
L I|)[)RRIDGE INDEPENDENT
rf"COLLECTIONS OFARMY WILL TAKE 50} S9872.86 TRAINER
r irPS Include Big 1935Payment By Citizens'
Building^Loan,v rollectionB for the first
••'i'i,;,lis me $19,877.68 lew".','.,nt3 for the same period
lux Collector SL J.'..imiiunced today. Th« fig-•,.(,,.pivo(l with satisfaction,;,,, Kiiifi total included a.^promise payment in April1,11111 on delinquent taxes, j i /dis Building and LoanII Amboy.M.,v alone, the collection*, .,-' this year were $7,000
Mr, Trainer said
'erth Amboy Recruiting Of-ficer Lists Vacancies
TnI°nU.!lf T^1 f r o m Woodbridge
township Interested in enlistinRfor servtce with the United StatesArmy • « asked to communicatewith Sergeant Edward J. Ryan intv!8T ? f™' r*"uil i"K station inthe Post Office Building in PerthAmboy Fifty applicants will beaccepted for service in variousbranches of the service in the Pan-ama Canal Zone. •
i.,i,r, tiii' sum normally receivedhail been paid earlier this
M ,v ,11, citizens this year,! m $108,443 on tax title.nient liens resulting from
In assessment*, they,i $,11,736. Both amounts, . uhstjintial increases over
S S I F I E D A D S
FRIDAY, JUNK 5, 1936
STATE BOARD EXTENDSBAN ON RATE INCREASEFinal Decision Expected By
July 1 On Gas lightFinn's Request
ding decision of the Boardof I'nhlic Utility Commissionerson th<- petition of the Perth AmboyGas Light Company to revise itsrate schedule, a 'further suspen-sion of the proposed change untilV n «* n «* -1 f i t . % * •
PAGE SEVEJIdirect..,! |,y Miss Anna Fraiier,played throughout the program. Itwas the first public appearance ofthe cluh of mandolin, guitar andbftnjo players who were organizedinto a unit of their own this year.Pauline Unc* plnypil a well re-ceived mandolin solo.
T M IS SerTtd'Mi- Tlnrkcsr and Victoria Peace ,
were i,,hi'r.«. After the show iUelf jndult-
m1 i he
served tea by mem-
whoschool cooking classes, j Wnlsh.
piled garment* Hnrke*
Mnrciii Lifshit,-.I/Pod, Pauline \,:Pewe, Cynthia S'Mitifky. P f tW ^ ! 'Schoenbrum, Mir ,
Vivinn \;Klirnlipth I
i-r, Clam
Eri«k*en, Mnriraret KIlis, Mary'. Mozar,'Ruth f i l ler , Marie NacjfcEllis, Mar(tnr<t Kvirclt. ,J,mn Mae Reid, Anna Srrndn, M a r m lPnerch, Rcirinn (intiidnunn, Syl- Snland, Ruth Terrelis. EllcBvia H»nn«, Irene Iloiry;i, HIKR K«ti-iThomsi'ii, Pnnlinc 11 <-h«-rlf in. Jiaaown1?,. IVnfl Kri-iiilel. Mnric Knval-' Van Iderstinp, Dorothy
Evelyn Me-
i not, Victoril•^htiie, Mollie• Knup, Sadie
. Smith, Ritai U'trate. Mary „ ,
l.iker, Gertrude Knttilrrn l#nhy, .InlinI'arton, Porii1 Hnm-t Mniiusky. Rose Mi
sky. Marie Lance, Rosalyn I.utrias,' Mniryar,1
tiko. Ann '
(Jizplla wh..Inni- .Iprner,'ienevicve Krause.
, y a^Elizabeth Drmrtit.Iran Kreirer M
]''<ir return of . . . . . . . . ..fjimeii S tree t And Rah-mi H<'1HHI1 nml Greon
,f,, Ivnry, Itoutnl In gnM.r i : - l " ' Wiioillirldge In-
;ri.-n S tree t .
N
MKl'AI' mirmniintodnamel <TOSM on pin.him -rllinl ltl-llgl"ll.
HI, .IlimpK* H.ril'tnl,J,. IT foun'l plpn»p
ni .1 nflppli'H Homo, 184Wiiodlirldge.
PIORM ftml tulf-ronilltlnn. 210
Rhone
\ vn i<M<m hniiRp, pun-KiirtiKf. pn<*'il Orlvt',i InMile and o u t Ap-A v t m i r , YV'cmiihrMgp.
W. biff-5
Miss korene Dickerson* o Be Hospital Dietician
Among the students who wereicraduated from Columbia Univer-sity this week was Miss LoreneDickerson, daughter of Mr. andMrs. Loren B. Dickerson, and a for-mer student in the WoodbridireHisfh School,.After visiting her parents inWinona, Hinn,, for a month, Mia*Dickerson will take up her dutiesas dietitian at the Market HnifueHngpital in Jersey City.
Howdy Folks!Danny.from the mifrhty herd of
dancing elephants, will greet hisold and new friends upon his m~rival here in Woodbrldge on Sa-turday, June C. the Kay Bros. Cir-cus will exhibit for the benefit ofthe Men's Class of the trinityChurch. An afternoon and eveningperformance will giu'n, the, hugetented city will h erected onGrove Street grounds. As a spe-cial feature Kay Brc•*. Circus pre-sents Spunky, Shirlej Temple's petpony featured in her recent Dictur
Luriy I op. Spunky will positively be seen at each performance.
Schindel's Reduce Prices
Store Flxt i irn — 10 ft.i i a l
\V 1
10 ft.Original
II r.i& (', . fi-5.
n \ V •••••! 1. . f A t i i 1 n
i 1 K> Aviv l i ln l
M If returnedSchool.
Perth Amboy'sbtm deiiartnwirtstore, Schindel's, offers shoppers
the enil of'the month has beenmade.
The company originally asked tohave the schedule, which wouldincrease the cost of the commodityto the smnller consumers, to he-come effective the first of the year.It is expected the Board's decisionwill be mnde by the first of July.
C. E. SOCIETYThe C. E. Society of the Congre-
gational Church had an -enjjyabletime Friday night at a par.y andft spaghetti supper.
A meeting will be held Sunday at7 ;00 o'clock, with Miss MargaretVoorheBB presiding.
All members interested in an-*cursi6n trip up the Hudson onJune 13 are asked to communicatewith Miss Charlotte Hebetleiti or ,Julia Baka before Sunday.
snrajw(Continued from paqe one)
ics of industrial designs. Orna-mental schemes far silk fabrics,table china and tiles are especiallyattractive. Outstanding posterwork in flat colors and landscapes'are among the must numerous ex-htoits. - - A • ,
Wrought iron work that is ondisplay includes fireplace sets,flower stands with copper con-tainers and a well done tile-toppedtaljle. tyook cases, end tables, cab-
r i:1-CTKH
Tl l n T n pT"'wtis l i l |> ()f
r i - i m r y I l i - tn l lt.• r i 'r ,>nitso8
S l r i ' f l , W u n d -
some exceptional values in Springand Summer merchandise thisweekend. Sharp reductions Jutvebeen effected in all departments tobring out the thrifty shoppers.
Uirge selection is another fea-ure nt Schindel's which assures
satislaciion . in. style aswell as price.
NOTICE , ,,Take notice that G. L. ROBIN-
SON intends to apply to the Town-ship Committee of the township of
i n . y l n i l l M !>n T - : 1 1 1 1 K • • " :
,1 ; | i I ' l e r k .
I'KTKI! VO
WIMMI
MITIC'KI.urt.-i TnTM
• I : l l u i r ! • > • I I ,1,, c i i - i - k . \ V . . . , , l -
i .nns TUTU.
MITMT:, I \ v . \ j / n : i : n . \\.\i-\ I " t 111- T " W !l
.\\- , \\
^! niil.l In- -n,nil'.Una l'i: l; .1
\', v r / l ' K I ! H M t l - ' H
Mini i:
' •n' t . V"y£ tB.Bes, unii lames, eaD-inets are offered for inspection'-bythe wood-workers.
At the fashion show, CynthiaSunshine described for Miss AnneCaster, ht;ad of the department,the garments worn and stated theircost while the makers modelled jthem on the stage. !
50c To $20 |The price range varied from a !
voile dress made by Margaret Soland for 50 cents to a knitted suitwoven by Dorothy Conrad at acoat of $20. Especially effective
-., ^ * » „„.,...,.,.,, „. waa an 80-cent dress exhibited byWoodbridgc for a Plenary Retail \ Mary Borkesc. Students applaudedDistribution license for premises | frequently as the amateur manne-siltiatt'd ut Reading Terminal, Port quins' creations caught their fancy.
Objections, if any, should be ning, afternoon, sports and schoolmade immediately in writing to: B. j wear, knitted sweaters, skirts and. Dunigan, Township Clerk, Wood- suits, pajamas, blouses and host-
bridge, N. J. esses' gowns.G. I.. ROBINSON. The school's Plectrum Orchestra,
IFUEL AND FURNACE ( E lHIGHEST QUALITY FOR EVERY
MAKE OF BURNER
PROMPT AND COURTEOUS SERVICE
I i
!:..- PREMIER OIL & GASOLINE SUPPLYNew Brunswick Ave. COMPANY RAHWAY.N.J
Phone Rah. 7-1263 — Night Phone Rah. 7-0424-R
STUPENDOUS SALE STARTS FRL, JUNE 5
UNNYDALEl i l t K M M4EKIT
I. SMITH & MADISON AVE. PERTH AMBOY, N. J.
ilNSO 17CRISCO19FINEST
CREAMERY
BUTTER29clb-
HOME MADE
POT CHEESEgclb.
FULL CREAM
MUENSTER19
|ONF. - POWD. - BROWN f f c
UGAR 6I LB. BOX ^ F
16 OZ. JAR PUREASSORTED
JELLIESLARGE CAN
MIXEDVEGETABLES
2forl5c
FINEST SANTOS
COFFEE2 lbs. 25«
LARGE CAN—PURE—
• APPLE SAUCE2 for 15c
07 ROTTI F QUART JAR
ItTSfp 1 0 c | HUSIARD2 ROLLS g c | Palco CANS
CLEANSER
THE HANI KILIEP"
J . BUG. CHERRIES
ISNew POTATOES LargeBANANAS
WE UNDERSELL EMALL
THIS MONTH!It Inc. ikf Mr Id* I «r1,
m-hAM- <•< f h r l f I
•il nt *1P,7^ nr tin
InKnKriiirDi Kins .rmi, n r'E| itrr<«t-i»(Hh our b*«t n l i b f
oicennt no \ ur jnn, n
n ' pn«n|-«IH | | | U pn thrlr WaiMi^K HBJ—Our AWhy mil IM| A l t . i h f rnnp|r« In > rRitfhrtiflt* H B 4
Umrn KI«1DR
frtUt d|l
Hope Ckl-'tir n \ r r 41 y m m , llff>nt faun *nld IU flnr U In til anil * i>n Ihr bntl« Af<)t V I . I I l . V A M K ntrd LOW |»1tl( ' M . \\K ITU.I , 1>I,1 \ 01 PI M lt-V\H\ (II II VAI.VKS, TAHII i»r 1 'HKDIT. A W n i i C I I K Non l i e offpr *<m— H r H*d Mtn. "TW-Br*' —'thr>«» tff^nt m l n r v In ihr nrnr^i IMRIHOMIrrrjitltittPt, Mail •-•- >uur rholiw «>f fhrs* bcmitlfiili ltu|ir t hr^l d l f i i , iilua(Kr t*i>n%rnlr»t>« uf l lnjal 'a
Easy Weekly Terms!
32 Pc. China Dinner Service
m
8Diamond
&
ani l l i S
i n n p i i ' t t i f . ' t '
e s i ' t ' i i t i n n a l v a ! r!
tft
•II'd in both White ori w (iold. With your.•.' nr KHKK (ill'T.'
50c WEEKLY
BOTH
RINGS$1 Q 75
5Oc WEEKLY
I L n I ' m l l i i i - l u i r m i m r l i l l K
! . ( ' ' U l n l r < : < i l i j , - r t w i t h n
' i i n • , I'M r y n n l r c ( l i a i u o i i d
• . • . , : I < m a l l r r i l i a n i i i m l n t
$24.50
75c WEEKLY—a trifle over 10c a d a y -buys this stunning Entfage-iiu-'nl King of White Hold setwith a liu-Re, Cfrtitieil flluc-Whitc ct'nli-e Minnionil withKOI'I! fine 4 * J 7 K(\
onds vO I ,O\J- I '
-UU>
li Viiiir Cluiicc ofl'i;KK CIKT
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WINDOWS H)K MORE SPEClAIJi . , ,
Open Monday, Friday and Saturday INightsOUR WINDOWS
PA(;KKK;HTFRIDAY, J I M
fcabJjrtf.grPublished Every Friday by
WOODBRIDGE PUBLISHING CO.
Woodbridge, N. J.Telephone, Woodbridge 8-1710
Subscription $1.50 Per Year
HUGH WILLIAMSON KELLY,
Editor arid Publisher
CHARLES E. GREGORY .... Managing Editor
Entered as s*cond-class jnatter OMarch 13.1919, at the Postoffice at XVoodbridge, N. J..under the Act of March 3, 1S7&.
:i iO'tiiin mean? of eliminating>ra'w'-.j.'iint, wasteful and usel<--=
'..if ;'n--er.t structure. We then I
'tf-'i "" p'^r. and build from tha
[ M i l !
Th,-
have
Annual Intdi'.vo m<*;"r parlies in New Jersey
handed tr.v electorate the annual
instance, declare
I:
Bullying Reliefhi/h time that .-orr.eoiie in
ity advise
WJthor-
r: HMTath in ur.mi«takable
The Democrat?,
;tpa;r.*t r.ew taxes.
Remember x'v.w. Democratic vote? enact-
t-ri the Hoffman <:-.le5' tax. ., ;
They al?'» promise to produce revenues
fr-m source? other than real estate.
Fr"»m tb*ir h»U? Taxation..a.' we un-
d erst and it. :«the .->n5y rr.^.bod gch eminent
ha* to , funds.
terms that hit- canr.ot bully arr-extravagant
subsidy ou*. of public fund-.
customary HorVaih
the Republican* pfomfce, to do ifi.1^36
what ,th"'!?y have failed miserably-to do in
1?35. ev.en though they controlboth the
has mafte a '.vritten'derr.and on Relief Di- legislative ;arid executive" branches of the
rector John Qmer.hiser. fr>r the- princely
of ? 174.60 a m-'nfh to su
his family. ir,:bd:r.g a
f-umtate government. . '
They'declare for a limited tax ;rate, forport himwlf and .. , , . , t , ,1 jury, reform, for revision of the election
two-mor.th> old , . ' . " . .law?, for governmental reorganization gen-
baby. He ,-hould be told promptly that un- ^employment aid is a privilege and not aright, that his requirement.- ar? avay"ouT~."'•"."'
d e d a r a t i o n s l a s t
•Their insincerity ha? been proven a,ll
•no conclusivelv.
of proportion and that all the threats he
can concoct will avail him nothing. He ap-
par«n-Uy ijai-the.grarid illusion that he i? —
especially privileged-, that he is a law unto ^ - • . . . . . . QOM
himself and that hard working taxpayers T f l x C o l l e c t o r M i c h a e , j T r a i n e r i s e l i .
are his slaves. minating from further use the old alibi of i
Ever since unemployment relief he-delinquents, that they were unaware taxi
jran Horvoth hag boen a..thoni.lD.Hlg side.bills of previous years are outstanding. '
WOODBIDGE INDEPENDi.-,
BOOKS AND THINGSThe River Of Word* - birth and death of words.
It gives one a feelinp for historylittle book which con-; t 0 follow such words as "farewell'
a lot of scholarly'and "thoroughfare" dow;n the deep" ' "of the past to their remote aii-
of those faced with the problem of equitable- To each proyerty-owner in arrears, Mr.,. a . „ , , !.„„„.„ Trainer is sending the new bill plainly
distribution. He has used every known . . . . . . .
means of obtaining help beyond that de-
amV nfeasantreadfg n V ords in the
," bvG.H. Vallins. It our word "fee" can Pe
stamped with the warning that prior levies
remain u n p a i d g u c h n o t k e w m g J v e o f l
creed by relief agencies. He has attempted e r s a t t i p l e , U m e t o m a k e a r r a n g ements
to incite discontent, he has tried to organize either to pay their old bill in full or show
sents a" lucid and entertain-[back to "fee." thef h f h E ? 1 ™ " * /<"• " t » t t l e
sents a lucid and entertain[ing storv of the growth of the En?-1™"* /.<"• " t » t t l e '
O'.d EnglishSince in pri:n-
it? r.ew
SWEETNESS AND LIGHTBy CHARLES E. GREGORY
~~~ The Fiasco 01 May 26 ~ ^The Republican Par ty in Middlesex County, a
, nted by its County Committee, put on a pretty ( | ,
•notistration the other night in New Brunswick.
It revived the old claque system, mixed with it
- miners and abominable taste, elected a flag-waver <\
:n-in under very suspicious circumstances and then h;i.
. ,,1,-issal nerve to predict it would enjoy the sweet t a - -,
victory in November. Unless there is a political mil
the Republican party In Middlesex County won't jret .
enough to victory to even get a whiff of it.
This is the traditional foolishness for which th ;
publican party in recent years has become distingii
It deliberately pillages and then whistles to kef p ,
courage. It alienates all decency and then tries t>>
about it. It jumps headlong into a moral break-do?, ;
hj"Stertr»rry;y«H*-about the broken promises of OUK.
Strangely, the only ones who won't recognize i<
estate to which the"Republican organization in the , .
has fallen, is the organization itself. The newspap. >
been practically unanimous in condemning tht i>
which was employed to defeat Mayor August V. i,
of Wood bridge as Chairman of the County Com
Life-long Republicans, who have the old-fashioned ;,- • ,
parently obsolete notion tha ta -man is measured by -
votion to his promise, are openly disassociating th. -
from'the fiasco "f-May 26.
Still, Mr. (lonch goes merrily 6n his flag-w;i\i
and talks about winning in November! And wh> •
hf talks, I'm not fooling. He talks and talks and tul
he practices his art on any and all occasions. Ho ,.•
all the stops, puts on the tremolo, stretches out I
in supplication and testifies that "Rill Gonch k- •
promises; Bill Gor.ch is your friend; Bill Gonch v.
for you; Bill Conch wiH fight-f-or y»u"—~^and Ik; ,
— goes on and on, around and around.
In the meantinr.e, his mentors, Morris and !!•..
smile approvingly. They have won another n<>:,.
in. tory! Gonch is their man! They may have hiir.i-
offk'e" Wednesday'and quartered the Republican Pa r ty hi the bar.-'» I ' ' . , 1 . ^J i, 11 r A _ - - - _ _ —
THIS WEEKYEARSJGO
Ten Years Airo
AVENEL WOMAN'S CLUB
the unemproyed into a poHfTcaTsTedge-ham-ftrrat itirasb*«Tt i»i4-w»d tfet» aveid inel«s-
her. jion in the forthcoming tax sale.
He now finds fault that the taxpayers;.Because of lack of similar notification
. . . iin the past, considerable confusion andnot provide h.m with an a u t ° m ° ^ i b a r r a s s m e n t h a s r e s u l t e d f r o m t i m e
l l
iin the past, considerable confusion and em-i b a r r a s s m e n t h a s r e s u l t e d f r o m t i m e t o
and yet he can finance a political campaign t i m e - M r _ T r a i n e r seems to have taken the
and file incorporation papers for the publi-!proper steps to avoid repetition of such
cation of a newspaper. It is safe to assume
that relief monies were devoted to both of
these Horvath projects.
The voters, wisely, rejected Horvath'sl
bid for nomination for Justice of the Peace.
The undoubtedly remembered the manner
in which he used the office when he once
situations in the future and for his initia-
tive deserves lusty praise.
A Word Oi GratitudeAs the school year draws to a close we
cannot but help calling attention again to
the splendid work performed during the
lish language from the days of the I t l v e u n ] e 'Anglo-Saxon chronicles to the ^ r
o n ^ i n ,present time, and Bfter reading it
% ^ S t h ^ e ™ they have elected the diminutive Mr. Gonch,man's wealth «as j Mrs. H. S. Abrams is the new pre.
one has a sense of wonder at thelonu and checkered career of theEngHsh tongue and far-flungsources of its meSTejfWWoTifi. 5fT.Vallins traces the progress of manyold words, showing how some havepined and dwindled and finallydied out altogether, how othershave changed their meaning and
few have come down the years al-most unaltered. As language triesto keep up with the (hanging con-ditions of life' there is a continual
eu,property and later "money."
» • *CHd Picture Wordi
A* language.changes, .uh.fi ,£Lo«tbeautiful words are sometime?driven out by simpler substitute.Thus the beautiful old noun "nild-heortnes" (mid-heartnessl \va< re-placed by the French derivatives
AND THEY SAID
wit" we now have "remorse of con-science." In speaking of the word"book" Mr. Vallins says:
"In the old poem of 'Beovulfoet describes how, when Beo-spoke, he 'unlocked his wird-
had it. It will be well, too, if they will re- terms by the Junior Police under the di-
member all these things when he tries tolrection and supervision%of Sergeant Ben
blackjack luxury rations out off the Town-,
ship treasury instead of being grateful for
necessities.
Woodbridge Is HonoredA real distinction has come to Wood-
bridge Township through the piano artis-
try of nine-year-old Allen Whiting, son of
Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Whiting, Linden Ave-
nue. In addition to heaping hoors upon him-
self, young Whiting has placed his home
' town in an extremely favorable light.
Playing in State-wide competition, the
local lad performed brilliantly in a Beetho-
ven sonata and the Grieg Nocturne in C-
major. He was awarded second place by
exacting judges from the Department of
Music of the State Teachers' Association.
Parsons.
Alert and polite, Sergeant Parsons'
(helpers assist their schoolmates in nego-
tiating dangerous intersections. To them
must be given much of the credit for the
.complete absence of traffic, casualties
among the young students as they go to
and from classes.
Their consistent interest in their task
is inspired by the kind patience of their
mentor, Sergeant Parsons. While too many
residents of the Township take for granted
the fine co-operation of the Juniors, Mr.
Parsons never loses sight of their helpful
contribution and makes them keenlv aware
THE QUESTION:Iielin moit need?
THE ANSWERS:
What docs
thewulf
; hoard.' Word-hoard is one of those'• picturesque term? that belonr to' the primitive beauty of ancientpoetry, like 'whale's way' for thesea, 'swan's bath' for the lake,
1 'bone-house' and 'life-house' for
, Mrs.'s. N. Greenhalgh, vice- a j i ) a n c i s o w ha t the hell? They may have driven <>
\w*tni'ur*'u'^K*& treat: party the men and women who hold that fair pi it
met'. Mr?. W. B. Krug, Mrs. A. i a f t e r primary election, precisely what it mtvi:
MrTec°Crelr.5Mra. F." Brailhwaiui but they have retained control of the machinery,TTrXT. TOftlr.-MirV.-•^*r*«wrt»I^tateTrarh'-patronage, can compel obeisance from ':Mrs. H. Baker and Mrs. 0. SiesselH. Baker and Mrs. 0. Siessel
named departmental chair- n e a n e a .
WOMEN FORM*AUX.UARY ! Henry W. Jefiers, plastic Chairman of the K«;
OF WOODBRIDGE FIRE CO. I State Committee, who places the virtue of pur .
A large number of wives, moth; above and beyond the sanctity of a gentlemen's an-
was temporary chairman of the County convention '
night. He wiggled and slid in a patently awkwar.i
in an effort to minimize the actual effect of the M > in-
worth pledge to support Mayor Greiner. He did i.
day at Fire House No. 1 toI a Ladies' Auxiliary. FiAlfred Markowsky opened themeeting by explaining the aims of
porary chairman.ffi
p a y gofficers we're unanimously elected:
M M S l i
HeunthwVm-!ever> d e"y t n a t o n e h a d b e e n m a d e 'The following1
president, Mrs. Harry Sherman;
for a book, especially, per-1 MCre ur"\i-t, lt\, 'haps, a dictionary. Still, book it-1 M r s ' H- ^ ^ ; tself is not without interest. For iit meant a beech and gets its name : Five Years Agobecause the earliest writing was LOCAL GIRLS TO GETcut or scratched on the bark; the DEGREES FROM NJC
F o u r Woodbridge girls will beh 234 i t b d
of his personal gratjtilde. This attitude goes
a long way.
Official recognition, we feel, should be
given to Sergeant Parsons for the zeal he
It was disappointing indeed that thelhas displayed in making the Junior Police
second youth from Woodbridge, Robert^ continuing civic institution. He has con-
Wand of Green Street, who also qualified|tributed freely of his time and his efforts
. . , <'YaSt ,»i President, Mrs. E. M. Sattler; vice-HARRY I. BERGER, Oak Tree , the body, 'sword-play for battle _„_:.,__.' „ „ u euJ
Road, Iselin, newsdealer:'A traffic : *nd, i t , . W t f U ' ^ l l , a v e m ^ e , , a . g_ood
light at Correja Avenue and OakTree Road. It is
crossing alwaysused by schoolchildren and mo-torists c o m edown the hill en-tirely too f a s t.T h e r o a d sthroughout t h etown are in deplorable condition.Oak Tree Road itself is onlyswept once a year — literally! —and the other streets are in dis-graceful shitpi', A stop sign shouldbe put up on Marconi Avenuewhere it joins Oak Tree, too. Mo-torists swinir around that curve,too fast.
ALBERT LAVIH, (Jorreja Ave-nue, Iselin, a recorder;Elimina-tion of the railroad crosftig. The
underpass is bad-ly needed. Andwe ought to havemore night policepatrol, too. Wemay see a radiocar uiict- a night
That remained for Mr. Morris. He nervously an ; ,
much hand-wringing pronounced to the i•..;:',,-v;-,-
had taken place when Mr, Greiner was giv./n \» ,><:•
stand that he would be made county chairman. Mr. M
said there was no promise. He said then- was v.-.-r.
"agreement!"
It may be that a Prosecutor of the l'loa.-. I-.-.
the law, is able to distinguish between a im.ir.N.
for the State finals could not compete be-
cause-of illness. We trust that the Fates will
treat him more kindly next year because
and has achieved for himself and for the
youngsters who work with him, a. notable
record.
critics who have heard him predict for| For the parents whose children are
him, as for young Whiting, a fine future. ;guided safely over hazardous crossings, we
— — 1 wish to say publicly;to Mr. Parsons and his
', very word write meant originallyI to tear or scratch. So, when we ; among the 234 seniors to be grad-! sit down t-> read our imagination i u a t e d f r c m N e w J e r s e y C o l l e K e i(may travel far; book will take us ; f o l . Women in New Brunswick to-1 But the rank a n d file of his pa r ty (and 1 -:;'-away to the beech-tree in an Eng- m o r r o w . They are Miss Madelyn1 • p r , K . hpr..u<.p \ r r Morris seems to have tak ." 'lish wood and paper, through the F o r d o f Maple AvenUe, Miss Mar- v l s e c I 1> betaus-e Mr. .MOins .-eems 10 n . n e i.ih. ..Latm word papyrus, to a reed that g a r e t Morganson, Barron Avenue;: think thev are one and the same th ing . They I!..grew along the banks of the Nile. « , , . pp , . i « PotPrsnn nf Vale* *• J. , , . ,, i_ • t . e ,—(From The New.rk ETening tine PiacV and Miss; A. Elizabeth maneuvenng to obtain the chairmanship nt t:I ^ - t ) __ __ Spencer. ' ' ' : Committee for'^IrTYlonch that the Republican :
PROSECUTO'R GIVES * t s birthright for a n\ess of pottage.
PROBLEM TO COMMITTEE . And all of Mr. Gonch's flag-waving, all of M
JJll t X m S o r promises and all the alibis that can be concoctsand the Township Cammittee. Re- now and flection are not going to change their !•ponsibilrty for any accidents that : ._ —may occur (in the track if it is re-opened was placed on them yester-day by Prosecutor Douglas M.Hicks in a long letter to which heaffixed reports on the conditionnf the track made by various ex-ptrt.-. '
andright.
that isn'tThere are
no public telephones open at night.How are we to get a policeman?And children ought to be stoppedfrom skating out in the njiddle ofGreen Street and Oak Tree Road.It's too dangerous.
MORRIS W1TOVSKY, Oak TreeRoad, grocer and butcher: A fac-
For TodaySKIPPER SAILS OCEAN
IN HOMEMADE BOATBy TALBOT LAKE
William T. Murnan is one
of those
may notmoney but who Is having anawful lot of fun., A greatmany mfen, and an occasional I ^ _ ^ _woman, have had a great j Rutgers University V»Vi-w"Brun"
rare people whobe making any
JELICKS AND NEBELTO GRADUATE TODAYM B . J . M. <Mielt#i i>(Avenue, and Krwin Ni-htl. cf
, willfrom
urge to sail around the world I wick. Thoyin a little boat, staying when fancy : Woodbridgedictated, hauling up the anchor
are grailuattr'sHigh .School.
of
INEW YOBy DON O'MALLEY
„ r d . 1 'boys a sincere "Thank you."
Start From match \Universal pursuance) of a refinancing1;
program, similar to that adopted by Wobd-j
bridge Township, would pave municipals:
ties in this state approximately $20,000,000 .zation which is a disgrace to Jmanhood, has
a year, in the opinion of the ijfew Jerseybepn ferreted out as a- re«|}t of a cald-
Laagh It OHThe Black Legion, a Michigaif organi-
Chamber of Commerce. blooded murder laid at its dbor.
A recommendatiton that such steps be One only needs to read the Legion's
taken ..wa^lncludedJjLaJbroad plan of re-oath of allegiance to determine the utter
trenchment urged uppn Jthe legislature ins Ingariity^ of the^rUermcT one^onr
place of additional taxes. Slashing of thejto glimpse the eeerie hoods of membership
debt service item, elimination of present,to summarily decree it a menace in a free
assessments now levied for non-munfcip'al country. It will not, of course, survive, Its
services and absorption of tha gchooB fund;program is the annihilation of Catholics,
contributions were seen as thf most logical Negroes, Jews, Anarchists and Commu-
method of assisting local government.
In addition, thje Chamber called for re-
organization of the State government and
strict budgetary limitations as a means of
cutting down the cost of rule*
Despite this comprehensive bill of par-
ticulars, Governor Hoffman remains com-
mitted to the Loilzeaux plan of so-called
replacement taxes which would mean ad-
ditional levies and not fewer. It may be wise
eventually to impose an income tax
thing Hke it but first, the people of New
Jersey ought to insist upon rigid economy
in every department'of government so
that they can be sure that additional rev-
enues will not be frittered away on non
essentials.
Reshaping of the general schema as ad-
vanced by the Chamber u * :€|^wwr^o
tory to give youngsters ato wurk. Now, ifthey're to get1
anything at alllthey must go outlof town. There'sa nice class ofy o u n g s t e r aaround here andit's simply a pity
chance i when the spirit moved him. T h r e e Years AgoWilliam T. MWnan is doing that BOARD PARLEY TONIGHT
SHORTIES
d m Is of
ERS—Ar
celebrities wand'-:in his little tifty-three-toot boat, ON SALARY SITUATION ' I! \ , ^ . .the "Seven Seas," which sailed , Employes of the municipality marooned New 1 urkers look t h e countryside i"from Seattle in.June, lirii, and will be paid one month's salary their first peck at the Queen ' . summer vAcatiuiidocked in New York City jpst theother day after traversing 20,000exciting miles.
Murnan, who ii, hi one mightimagine, magnificently bronzedby now, wore a white cptton under-
a I f i e 1 • A shirt, old serjre pants ind new tanout of work. Some kind , . • „ . i V , , ^ „ ; . , „ „ „ >,„„t» see them out 01 worK aome M.IU , h s H i h~ fth e x i 8 t e n c e h a s
t beS,de walk .round the ;h " i k P ^on themselves! It's a shame.
B R I S H
4- t h i n -j M
his uip lS Don
thSYLVAN BARISH,
^ 4 - h i - n d f
jrije. | w j , e n Murnan hit Miami, Only fe-re
sidewalks, needs to have its streetsfixed and needs
forh e children.
Near the sthoolis a good location
nists, restriction of immigration and Super-
vision generally over everyone's morals.
With all of these groups eleniinlated, the
Legion would then have everything for it-
self.
The Newark Sunday Call refuses to
take this, or other movements of similar
stripe, seriously. It declares:
Thote who • • • ia th* Black L*fion and ti-miUr lunacici th« teeth of > Fuciit revolutionforget that Americ»m hare a wall daTclopadtent* of humor and un tolling tportimuihip.Tbere'i no rcaton to worry about thau hood-ed hooligans. Drag their l u M r i and their prin-ciples into the light and if the nation's laughterdoesn't destroy them, its good tense will.
We've been all through this nanv timesbefore in the United States. Experience hasproved that American citisenry' doe* not haveto v»ar a mask or hood to govern Uself «r prot * a t i l < r i i . 1 . 1 . A ^ M V U . ( - . - I t - •••• •
himself and says that she has rid-den out hurricanes which batteredlarge steam vessels. When it ttarUto blow,, he simply shortens sail,battens down the natch, stays be-low and waits until the galf brows
over,and if possible a Buroming- around the worldswimming p o o l i s n - t a g m u c t , fun M & UBe(j ^ ^ e , "ouifht to be built., (Continued on page hvelve \
today, bringing them up to Febru- , , , , - , , , ,ary 1. but pending the outcome of Mary as she lay 111 her lllld-a q°nfei-ence by the Finance Com- s o n Kiver pier . . . Dr. Harrvmittee of the Board of Education „. .. , ' .. ., , , , 'tonight, past due salaries will be "oodburn t hast, Nt-w \ ork Lni-withheld | | o m school system em- versity president, livi-s in one of
the (juaint little rt-d brick housesset b.ck from Fifth Avenue just
-abov« WnilungUjn Stuart. Thj;
ployes urjtaj next week.i M . . .
WHITE CHURCH PULPITTO BUFFALO MINISTER
The Rev, Earl H. Devanny of houses were once Serena Rhine-the Covent Presbyterian Church lander'^ stables. Legwnd has it thatin Buffalo, N. V., was tinaimously a slidt, u»ed to extend from thecalled to the First Presbyterian Rhinelander mansion down to the."CmTfch of* Woodbridge aTa meet- stablBs^-^HeTenar-rrrDtema^iytra- aing of the congregation Wednes- very plump woman who didn't likeday night in the Sunday School t o walk . . . It's the Theatre Guildrooms. H. A. Tappen, chHirman^which has signed Katharine Hep-of the pulpit committee, mentioned burn for "JaneiEyre" aext season
Coward ijt usingfield, Connecticut. ;Edna Ferber had '•«•>'•Spalding, the violini--!-left for his estate r-rington, Mass. Spal'ti1.-great wealth, but h.- 'own naibe for himst-jicat wortd.ritr hn* -f*li"'-Erneat Schelling:, th. »ist and conductor.
A large groiip ofminaries hike to the 1
* k ;
Katharine seems to be but thede for a Hollywood invasion.
amusements except the movies for jchildren—nothing for them to do.The only good street is Oak TreeRoad. Temporary repairs are maUesometimes but they wash right out -rfce Independent,
Mr. Charles E. Gregory,Editor, 1
in a heavy rainJOHN HASSEY, Corre.ja Ave-
nue, realt^rfThe thinip that Iselinneed cost money. They are side-
and per-manent Btraet re-pairs. The town ispretty well popu-lated how and indry weather, un-less wind raises
Woodbridge, New Jersey.Dear Mr. Gregory:
that applications for the vacancyhere had been received from J4{l ,clergymen. The Rev. Mr. De- Paul Muni will appear u» Napovanny. did not apply, hU name be- i 'eon In "St. Helena." Walter Con-ing introduce^ by officers of the nolly is siped up for a GilbertPrinceton Thteological Seminary. .Miller production. And Bette Da-- - 1 '•-••• "-• I --—>ia, Claudette Culbert, Anna Sten
May 28, 1936; ilan(j Marlene Dietrich are allstraining at the leash to get here. . . They'd better have more onthe ball, however, than certainmovie stars who recently tried theJumps in Manhattan.
TALENTED — Peter VanMy attention sat just been called to the editor**) entitled "PublicEnemy No. 1," which appeared U the May B, 1936. issue of the [ B - , S t e e d e n t e l 1 ? ^ ? I v. , . , . — about
|the vaudevillian who offereddependent.I want you to know how deeply grateful 1 am lor your common- |^ e d Allen a dpg for. his
dstory statements concernipg the personnel and accomplishments of forthcoming show,this Bureau. It is certainly encouraging to receive such an esprossionl "This dog , " explained t h eof confidence and it •• my sincere hope that our effort. to"atUin . n ! P r o u d owne , r , ' " l o y e * ' t *
in the cHnv. situation wl.i e e ^ n u . to merit your ^ ^ ' ^ 'dust, everythingis okay. But inwet weather, the children especial- ; political interference with law enforcement.
•'— j proval. I am particularly pleased with the s tud that you take against When he want* chocolate, he bark*
ly, have a tough tim*. EverywhereiB mud and standing water andthey're forced to walk uut in the«uddje of the luudii, bting *l'lat-
With host wishes and kind regard*. I n n ' » .Sincerely yours,
J. EDCAR HOOVER.
twice.: "Telli does he do when he want* a cara-mel-almond sundae?"
me," iwid Allen; "what
"Oh," replied the owner, "thenhUtl 'M O M i i ' "
rtn(e7tThis exclusive colony '•'•iust fiffty years wLorillard, the late 'His son, Pierre, is a Kl-in the affairs of the H>which includes Maki>-|n*y B. Wood, Jr., Hfchinclois, H, Rol»nJ !!:•bther Park Avenue 11
r • • •ZONED — Thi!
writes me that y •watch your mam.you move from ">town ty another. 1to-do-wilh-your helevators item is *"''•'has bothered Phil !»<;••adopUd a set of rui«-traveling.
. "Below 14th Stri-.heaven) I don't wuunever take it off if • •'••Baktr. "Prom 14th t ;upper East Side, I wcrumple into pocket,abject Humility at a«>car. North of 59thCoast) I nervously tii»apect lining, and coy::.head. In the Bronx, 1intently, or jam hat »t t t ' h.«
intently, or jam«t»r« at operator's h.
Hat' oughb« wbUtlM 'Moon Ovar MUmi.'" P Hat", enough
,..,,, ABRIDGE INDEPENDENT FRIDAY, JUNB B, 1936 PAGENTNB
ilked Ofjlace In C - J Tourney, Barrens Seek VengeanceL i T H R l v i S T A R S
F,Y OF '35 KINGS:[VENDErrATODAY
ile Champiomhip And•#; , Over Cirterd,
Look Ignored|M ,y 4 CLUBS INVITED
they've been bilked
riifhtful place in the
Jersey Scholastic
1 Tournament they
<\ year, there's not
ft for the youngsters
MAURICE F. X. DONOHUE
Advice From Mr. Kirkletki
Crack Independent Drivers Competing At Speedway Revised Legion Lineup Collects 2,Meets West Amboy Democrats Next
A T H E Y 0 U N G "EN OF THE GARDENw M O C * l a t l O n h a v e M c c e e d ed in launching their
l l i ^ f t a U t° R h 0 W s a t t h e Speedway after a breath-week of abor on the track and stands, it {night be time
u,vu ln •aome few of the hundred ideas one Fr^ttirkleski nurses in his secret heart concerning the businessof staging-and promoting'such carnivals. Mr, Kirkleski,who ig othenv,se k n o w n a s T h e N i c e M a n _ t a k e s U m e o u (
now and then from his professional task of worrying aboutElizabeth High School's football team next Fall to devoteone or more hours to earnest daydreaming about
• i , n for Njek Wi«co herei biles,..automobile drivers and automobile races. He is, in. , , .l .na .l , .u Qniak tftct. nrACticilll V Inonv nn *Vi^ *,iU4jirtt
ri-UiM a
Kive UIlbeBUn Southtoday
ct, practically loopy on thfr subject.The horse, Mr. Kirkleski maintains
||u. sea son ends at Irv-
*iH'i "• n"v ' • ( '"-•"••B f«"-"-kr r - — - - - - - •>>^. 'Ui i i i u i i i v H i i M w i i n iiTiiG o n c r 1 n~
contrived. That match; ality but some heat, is outmoded. Horse-racing is definitelyhere this afternoon, an ornament of a day now past and gone. Horses are hang-
- overs onJy, so many from a recent but dead civilization. Andwhat has taken the place of the horse? why the automo-
id e happens to be de- bile! Everyone knows about automobiles land nobody.hompion in the touma- knows about horses; so, broods the Kirk, auto races shouldwi,ioh Carteret, South!be the major sports interest of the whole land. Unfortu-
, w Brunswick and St. nately, they're not that at all. . Why? A simple lack ofs,nith Amboy .have been j showmanship—or so the pride of Nutley, Lafayette, Wood-'
,,,m Middlesex County.(bridge, Elizabeth and Pawsaic would have you believe.,,„ to that slight detail,; - In the first prace, you'll learn, all automobile faces,,,,, heat New Brunswick must be run at night—on a still-to-be-invented luminousnudity, !>-»• F " c t No- t r a c i n g strip. No floodlights to attract moths, mosquitoesridge whipped Carteret a and pther pest*--not at all. Luminous cars riding on ai,,day. 3 2. Thif wsSlrT?- nimtncu^roaatyen. Afid no numBerH, perish the thought,„. carteret has lost this but rather names of the individual drivers,neatly picked, «• Brunswick hns been o u t On car hoods in the little red jewels that mark poles and
practically everyone at bridges o n the highway.„. ,,r another—and even The speed of the leader must be known at all times,.;,,,v hits a better record, too. How? Easy—remember the automatic governorsrttirin> i»n't invited and,that usttd to Lie at the end of the. Hudson Tunnel? You
,,-wick is! At your leis- picked U p ., traveling light which moved at 35 miles an.„. you can figure it out. ( hour and stayed right beside it all the way. There's the, with the selections al- inspiration! Install a string of 'em on the outer rail. Keep
ii._ ilinnnnnitfl/1 1 ? . _ 1 i _ • _ _*ji ii i i • * « . . • • . .
i• •*>
Seven-Run Bursts Flay The Brooks And Brookviews—Jost Return*, Kinney Replaces Bodnar And Tttbj
Bartos Continues Spectacular Brand 01 PitchingSimplicity being the goal of all sane mep, the very
proficient young athletes who play baseball for Monk Me-
siik, trip American Legion and Woodhridge Township gen-
rally should receive
Garden Stale Itiuinc A^nciiitioii arcs who thrilled the rrowd at the opening of the indf-pemlent (fas-jockos' weekly series (if mtt.n shnws at the Spt't'dwny Sunday arc pictured here. Theyare the six men who turned in the fastest qualifying times. Frn.ii left to riirht a r e : .lack Erick-son, Roselle; Frank Staneck, (liildwdl; Hob Van Nessi, Newark; AI l.nttiinziu. New Brunswick;Joe Verbely, Boujul Brrmk. iwnf Bill (iiardiello, Newark. Ut tan/ .u i won the first hent and the 30-lap feature after heintr fifth in the (|iialifying.
MEFOR STADIUM MEETORDEREDBY PR1SCO64 Trophies Due June 10
For Gala Games SetOn The 27th
BOB BRAlTHWAFtEWINS ALL
•licroutthly discredited,a j jg^ moving with the leading car and hook the circuit
t t b l ff(11-
,ns intend to take t o a monstrous Scoreboard which will inform the palpitating: ' " ' " l . n n ( ! public just how fast the lad out in front is percolating at anye K
Th'Tni a beautifully- a m l > a " moments. It's colossal!' And good, too!
Rebuild The Tracksvictory.
CarlerelR upasliRhtby the tour- QUITE AS IMPORTANT IS THE MAJOR OPRRA-. Q T IS THE MAJOR OPRRA
ituc hiKh school par- ( j o n ,,f r*>l>tiilrlingr all existing tracks. They must be rede-r " ' t eutmUt th'ir si.Jfne4 t n remedy the unfortunate and curious situationm (arteret last Fri- which offends Mr. Kirkleski'n competitive instincts. He ob-
„„. itself WUB played ject.s, in short, to the. guy in front having any advantaget comlitions before a o v e r j n e f]e] t|. ^ shrewd fellow, he has observed that the
'(l''r,Int"ly had to* be l e a ( l e r i n a r a c e "sual'y manages to win. Kirk doesn't like' l ' " " * that. He wants someone else to win. Look, for example, at
;i that was the rock- the bike riders. Look at Bonthron and Lovqlock. Look at.1 ifcniTal intensive t h ( , | l l i r ( j i e r s w h 0 r u n o n a staggered track. The leaders
;;"l"ll game winninK ( 1 ( ) n ' t w i n t h ( ; r ( ' i instead, they lose. That is good; that is
High School Tennis CaptainUnbeaten In His 13
Matches
CLUB ANNEXES 5 OF 7Rob Braithwaite, ace of
the Woodbridge High Schooltennis squad, remains un-beaten as the team coachedby Lincoln Tambocf swingsinto its last four engagementsof t"e season. In seven matchesplayed thus far, the Barrens; havewon five and lost two. Both de-feats—by Metuchen and by Ko-selle—were, recorded in une-poinl,2-3 results.
Vengeance was exacted of Me-tnchen on Monday, when Bniith-waite led the local racqueteers toa conclusive 4-1 triumph. An op-portunity for an equally decisivesponping of the slate against Ro-sdle is scheduled this Monday. Thematch will be played here.
ut.lV
lastor- hnil sailed.paper
,me it
,;,,O
in second place better than the man in first and the man in-ki'tbitM" Ramekin third position better than cither.-!„• brick-heavinu One way might be to build the straightaways perpen-
""IM''1' as dicular to the ground like the wire cages in which motor-inai-j, wa c v t , | j s t s a m u s e carnival crowds by riding around and over
idf was a tribute to and around. Or the bottom of the track might be level andund the funda- the top very much banked. Or the races might be run in
ITM ' a n t ' s w ' ^ l '1 ( ' ' a t ' r i o n ^ ' o u t e r * ' m r'ding shorter dis-solid tances than the drivers on the pole'—HO matter—it is a
f t i r t u n a t ' > ' w a
ability of hiss playedled Karl -.!,,• clutfhc^ despite five technical detail which American ingenuity will solve.,.iriir-, iind Earl him- * * * *I his heart out for ai-ril four-hit triumph.Tcri'ticcki, wholive attempta,
with any
The Radiator Shell Must Be Improved!WE N'OW APPROACH A SIMPLE INNOVATION
„ u m>.. . . , consistency Which may revolutionize the whole theory of motor car•t ki'i't the enemy bin- design. Mr. Kirkleski refers to his inspiration of a protrucl-(-;ittered. jng radiator shell. Ever seen a telephone mounted on a
push-pull extension—a small metal affair which looks likeelip«
r I i . !>• a- lot of X's linked together? There the thing!The smart driver mounts a similar device between his
, „ „ radiator and his front grill. A thrilling race, a thrilling2 " " finish, two daredevils roaring down the home stretch hubi ^ i to hub—and presto! whango! boom! the smart one touches
, . . \ !! }'a button, the nose of his car-flies on powerful springs a- --" - good twelve feet beyond its normal position and the race is
J II 0ii o l - -II " o fl 0
1 7 li 03
t 1 I!3 n 1
II
Anthony Wagenhoffer hasfully justified confidence ex-pri'fi'ncd early fWS SpTtTIR in WBlatent abilities as n sprinter,i^ompeting Saturday at theMiddlesex County track alUlHeld (.•hampionships on NeilsonField in ?;cw Brunswick, thefleet Keasbey youth with theh hair fled over 220
in,,23.6 sronruls, n nrw(bounty record. He RaveWood bridge three more pointsby forcing Kaijborn of PerthAmhoy to the wire in the 100-yard dash in 10.2. Dan ORilennf Woodbridge was the otherlocal point-winner with a thirdplace ribbon in the 440, wonby La Tourette, Perth Amboy,in 56 seconds flat.
South River won the meetfor the third straight year withlil) 5-6 points. New Bruns-wick was second. Perth Ani-boy third, Metuchen fourth,and Woodbridge fifth in thefield of ten schools.
ALL EVENTS PUNNEDSixty-four handsome med-
als wiil he awiirdod winnersHI the gala athletic carnivalwhich Nick Prisco, is arrang-ing as part of Stadium Weekthe high school coach an-nounced today,
Sets ef the lKMtiIul.ifO.Bh.iS8 >"L'old, silver and hrollie have beeniirdered for 'JO event?. The medalthemselves will be delivered h;.hinc 10 and will be displayed aStadium Headquarters on Mail
h k
marks in all departments fortheir recent conduct afwld, 'Al-ways 'providing, of course, that thtl^Kionnairps keep their preientstride thn Sunday at the CityStadium nnd turn buck West A*-hoy's D«rr*cratic flub practically
1 ou Ulcirlbwn Iront l»wn- . - ..AF for the mttUr of simplicitythe SSoldiern wore^in^truftMi l u t
week hy their tutor, old ChwlM •Willinm Menick himself, that t»Mfwere to lose no more ball (ram*»-ivcr. Both the Perth Amb«j ,
Meadowbrooks and the New Brun»~wick Brookviews, wh" were slat*4
holiday week-end opposition.
IIt;
l i
INDEPENDENT ACESSTAGE 2ND SHOWGarden Staters Intend To
Build Race Bowl ToOld Popularity
DITCU UrADV AW CT ANTIC I Street for the two weeks befonRUSH WUKlV UN MANDaUtadium Week and the athleti
program ^et miller \v;iy on tb(>aifiL , rTlw. Mfiiw t •niAV run trftin
] a historical fact, desirable; that is to be applauded. So the tracks must be 1 gouth River, Rahway and Nevdire received wide rebuilt in some currently obscure fashion making the man Brunswick close the season. The
first two foes will be met in Wood-bridge on the 10th and 11th withthe campaign ending at NewBrunswick on the 15th. Of thethree, only Rahway has been en-countered in an earlier joust. TheUnion County lnds loBt that one,in the Barrons' May 11 debut, by3-1.
Won 13 In Row
4 u II4
3 10< nr l r r r l
lib. r. liI) 0n o .ai> 1 ' 1ii 3 •.'il II -I
won by a brilliant strategem!jjo. A. e- • ' * • •\ 3 1
'I II
0 0
0 I) -i1 0 ZII 0 (I
They Want To Smell The AthletesTHE LIST OF IMPROVEMENTS IS PRACTICALLY
1 "inexhaustible. Consider, for three seconds, the unfortunate" I! plight of those thrill-hungry spectators who want, in Kirk s" !! simple phrase, toismell |he athletes. They sit with their
- nose in resin at prize-fights, perch in field boxes at baseball4 *'' * ' a n d football games, have their feet on the ice at hockey
,: games actually catch wrestlers tumbling out of the ring at. ol'l X 5io°=? professional hippodromes and practically breathe on therhil"
ui';.iiiiy""itiM-' player's neck in golf tournaments. >
M Kariiu», Knin-; Where are they at racing shows? Alas, they re l"-""-M/'iiwHki"!.". from the action itself, exiled to high places ih the
'""w"1"- uk"'"'!!.".''1^ stands, forced back from the track so they can get a look" ' at the whole course of the race. This is bad, this is no
showmanship. This is shortsighted.
Braithwaite has gone to the post13 times thus far—in all the dou-bles and in' all but one of thesingles. He has yet to be seriouslythreatened. Next most effectivehas been the captain's team-part-ner, Walter Miller. He has sharedthe seven doubles victories but inindividual combat has divided hissix starts.
Walter Merwin has won twosingles, lost three and split sixtwo-men tests. John Rowe, theclub's other singles nominee, hasyet to win his first singles, but has
elped to take four of six doubles.The alternates, Bob Anderson
nd Bob Haugr, have been usedinly in doubles competition. An-lerson won both his matches andaug's side was defeated in hisnly appearance.
The scores thus fare are: Wood-ridge 3, Rahway 1; Metuchen 3,\'oodbridge 2"; Woodbridge 4,ranf ord 1; RoSelle 8, Woodbridge; Woodbridge 3, Cranford 2;
A'oodbridge 3, Carteret 2; Wood-widge 4, Metuchen 1.
: K111K in Ut 1inning!*:
'. in- hukux iSiniili I; "IT Uikun iuk 1U<;ul a tul KlllHli'V.
\E RALLY RESCUESThe solution has been overlooked because automobil
race promoters are not devotees of the bra(wny young menwho null oars in varsity shells. You've gueaaed it!. The( 0 OF FORDS TEAM who pull oars in varsity
1 answer is a grandstand mounted on a rail or rails, said rail!o ,™i s^atfv encircling the whole track. The race startsngton Senators Crack m \ or rails neatly encircling
Uh And 7th Heats,lose By 8-3
runs distributed betweenth and gevenlMMrings ofrds Field Club's week-end
[with the Irvington Senators1*<! all wrinkka- irfiDl_ibe[of Mike Mesko—and logi-| too. The cluster changed afldlock into an 8-3 win.ds opened fast iii!)d finished1 but had trouble breakingntinued on page twelve)^
More Forir Money
the care move—and so do the stands.The leading driver plunges arqund the turns at 71
miles an hour-the revolving stands do the same thing buwith m ^ h greater safety si|ce they're bigger and heavierH thrills are wanted, one ne^d merely summon the engineeIf thrills areof one
, i K l |
.»!
•a
OUEtall
, too — andIt nwre for
I monay u •
START AT
15REPAIRS
PRESSING• life of everyBent wo (ell.
L1NPARKa CLOTHES™"™
oi one of the better roller coasters and incorporate a fewfancy dips and turns in the grandstand's private track
%m lurch with-•screwmnrKres-e«t-ef^ ^ - c w w e —s t a n d s S and sway with an enormous creaking. Every
,ne is thrilled, particularly the promoter with enough vis-
on so to entrance his public, ^one
NOT TOJl!&
skill would be rewarded and con
HOPELAWN RESULTHEARTENS BRAVESPerth Amboy Adanacs Next
On Slate Of FoesFor Lengyel
Step Two in that ratherdreamy campaign to force amatch with the AmericanLegion, a campaign on whichthe Braves A. C. has embark-ed with great gusto, wasworked out nicely on Sunday.Hopelawn lost the first game ofthat three-name series, to be con-tinued this Summer, by a 7-0count. But the day before, horren-dous to relate, the Young Peo-ple?' Polish A. A. of Harrison hadfallen on the local BTaves withloud cries of glee and enough basetiits to ndd up to a 14-6 victory.
That trouncing occurred at Har-rison and much of its sting waserased when Hopelawn yieldgp^sodemurely to Al Notchy's stylish
at Grove Street' on Sun-
BatitfiMl tfatt
Speedway enn be built backto popularity approachingthe groat days of the boardbowl, the Garden State Rac-ing Association presents thesecond of its weekly series of80-lap thrill orgies this Sun-day at the big plant-just off theRunway ("luver Leaf,
Workmen thi^ week hurried tocomplete four more sections of thestands in the extensive renovationundertaken by the track indepen-dent dirt truck shirs. Knur sectionswere ready fur h.-t Sunday's open-er, wiin by Al l.attatizio of NewBrunswick in :;!) afternoon ofbreathless jamming iim| a total u£12 practically rebuilt sections willhe ready for the peak crowds ex-pected at mid-season.
Times registered in the openerwero regarded as unusually fastand further manicuring of the fastclny strip this week should clipmore seconds from the officialclocks at the seven-event showthis week. Time trials, begin at 1o'clock, with the first heat slateiat 2:30 o'clock, an hour and a halflater.
Saturday to Monday or Tuesday.Kvents fur all ages and of n
types are scheduled, including thusual races und Held tests for juniors and seniors and such affair? a:roller-pin throwing cotftests formarrie-rT WofiiNl, ''Tninrte'hTrfTrfnTjr1
fiestas, football kicking for dis-tance, archery for tiirls, an invi-tation hifjh school relay and ascomplete a card as could be de-vised.
Special TypeThv medals are of special type.
hrratened to present.As a(convenient device, tHe Sal-d im used the lame formula ta(lustinjt off both of 'em. Tht tor*mtiln' Merely to wore seven run*in one hufte, juicy chunk befoi*the end of the third inning.
Pitk 2IMJI 3rdSofrie criticism"rnlitnT Tie levelM™
at the younjt men becnuse of theirirregularity in the inning chos«lBut the fault was small. Saturdaynt Perth Amboy, the Soldiers piefc-ed the third heat fnr the blow-«fwhich destroyed Gil Auirustine'« af-tcrniion. N'ext day at Grove Street•fhry went •« town in th* ««*»IIA
Toby Riirtns, still coasting re-K«lly iilotiK on the momentum h«ac(|iitred in that practically fault-less no-hit, no-runner again*!North Amboy, was the winner •»Saturday. He (rave the Brook* ft
fnnr htts. on<> a drmWt;
Eachlustrative
yp•» pand with an il-
appropriatefiit B
B K p p po the event Tor wTucfi'it is to Be"
:i warded.Aside from the competitive anjfle
iilorie, the unusual trophies are ex-pected to draw a record field ofentries. •
GIRL ARCHERS ENTERMETROPOLITAN SHOOT
Plans Vague For Meet InCity Stadium On
WERLOCK'S TRACKMENCRUSH RAHWAY HIGH
Woodbridge Entries Lose4 First Places But
Sweep MeetDespite defeats of two of its
most consistent winners, Wood-iridge High School's track and fieldteam buried Rahway High under aa 56-39 score Tuesday at Rahway.Uniformily creditable tiroes wereisted by the youngsters who are
.ii their first year of the sport hereunder Steve Werlock.
Joe Boka lost the mile to Hawkof Rahway, who also whipped Bar-ron Levi in the 880-yard run, »ndTony Wagenhoffer of Keasbey *asno.sjed out by.Jenkins in the 1B0-yard dash. Otherwise all was lciye-ly for the Barrons, who had a wideedge in every other event exceptthe pole vault. They forfeitedht
day. If the Braves can rfo as wellthis week and so promote them-selves into a battle with St. Ce-celia's of Iselin why there mayyet be * chance the fondly-cherish-ed mirage of an assault on the au-Kust citadel of the Legion will be-come something of a fact. At thispoint, however, the sad fact isthat the Legionnaires still bellowwith hoars? airuisement at the verysuggestion.
The Perth Amboy Adanacs anto supply the opposition for theBraves this week at Grove Street.
See Eaty WiniBut the Braves stubbornly gc
right on insisting they're at le.astthe second-best club in the wholetownship, point to the openingstage of: their anti-Legion cam-paign—a conclusive win over Par-lin-r—and prediit both Hopelawnand St. Cecelia's brawny youngi»en will be dusted off with equal
V«n Ne.li Thrill* CrowdWoodbridge has had more than
s quota of breathless momentsn the nine years since the $140,-)00 plant was opened, includinghe seven tragic occasions on whichKallant young men pave their liveso a dangerous sports. But thereave been few exhibitions of great-
er courage or greater skill thanBob Van Nessi of Newark gave thefirst week crowd last Sunday.
On the sixth lap of the lS-mile'eature, Van Nessi threw off hisitcht rear wheel just as he nearedhe grandstands on the hometretch. He navigated both the next
two turns on three wheels and tra-velled a quarter of a mile in allbefore he could bring his speedingcar to a halt. The plucky daredevilreceived an ovation when he step-ped from the fast track-job unhurt.
Lattanzio got off to a splendidstart in defense of his 1935 sea-son's championship but cars stillbeing tuned up in the shops ofG d S t t b ill b
Girl archers who have bee-cooping up laurels for Woocbridge High School this Spring wicompete in the junior section of thMetropolitan championships oiSunday, Mrs. Rosemary McCarthyannounced today. Mrs. McCarthysponsor and coach of the sporlhere, will take the girls to the mee'at Hempstead State Park on LonpIsland. Mary Kovacs and HarriettKillenberger will go to the firinjline and Jane Jernee and JanWnrr may also compete.
This quartet earned 13th, 15tli16th and 17th places ten days ag<in the State shoot at the NeJersey College for Women. Eighty-six archers competed, includingmen and women who have beentournament stalwarts for years.
Plans for the invitation meetto be held by the school here nextMonday still are uncertain. It willbe staged at the Perth AmboyCity Stadium.
psbe
ease.At Harrison on Saturday, the
townshippers guided by the DukePochek-Andy Lengyel Brain Trustwere still very much in the ballgame until the seventh inning.
Garden State members will be onthe track for,the first time thisSunday. And delicate motorswhich were not turning at top effi-ciency are scheduled lor thoroughoverhauling before the first heatthis week.
Champ ThreatenedThe New Brunswick Italian is
one of the shrewdest competitorsan the indepenilMit circuit hutlandsome new mounts being read-ied for Virmil DeMario, JohnnyMatera and Joe Verbely, to nameonly three of Lattnnzio's dozendaredevil rivals, should give the193S king some anxious momentsthis week.
In all, 30 car* were in the pits
The lineups:'Ilrarea A. C.
ab. r. h. po. a. p.. 5(inlilrn, 11)
Si'Uttl, rf ...'.Murta tch . 2b ,N o i u l i y , c f : .K o c a l , If, pHni'l'Hllona, 3b . . , ..11Klinnkl , us . . . . . .!».: Kirk-, c . . : . . . . ! .
43 2 0 1
4 1 1 83 1 3 2
- 4 1---S-
1 II1 (I0 II1 II0 ll3 n4U1 It
Totul»
1 0 1 3 1 U
83 0 10 27 10 \1
atDTie;Wagenhoffer redeemed his loss
of the 10.5 Becond '100', by win-ning the 220 in 24 sectnds flat.Joe Melder was third, Dfen Ogdenand Lazar ran one-two in thequarter, clocked in 6S,9r.and Leviearned iecond place in the 880.Hawk's time was 2:28, Boka pick-
h h i t j J1
everyof the lucky
plicity. Garden Staters, please note
*d up another thr«« points in me5:18 rhile and Melder and Ogdenboth whipped Razor in the highjump. Melder'B best jump waa 5feet 2 inches.
Mel Anacker won the broadjump with a leap of 18 feet, 2inches and also beat Boka in thediscus. He flipped the plate 104feet, 4 inches. The team of Meld-er, Anftcker, Ogden and Wagen-hoffer captured the relay in 1 :»7.n
MEYER AT LANGHORNELouis Meyer, taciturn speed
merehsnt from Huntingdon Park,California, who captured the 600mile sweepstakes honors at Indina-napolis Saturday, baa signed an en-try for the 100-mile Eastern StatesAAA championship race to bewaged at Langhorne SpeedwaySunday, June 1.4, Ralph A, Hank
llarrlaunab, r. h. po. a. e
r rwjottsh, 1 f .7 ~;~;~i~;",~ 5 Z 3 J O"~t•.'Mtasek, 2b 4 - 2 1 4 3 0
Hryndza, lb 5 1 1 S 1 I)Wozniak, c, p 4 3 2 3 1 1•itunlewluz, as 5 I) 1 1 1 (1
Mlasek, 3b 5 1 1 1 0 tiDobuali, cf 4 2 1 3 0 0
Koma, rf 3 1 1 1 0LiuilKlnski, c, p , 4 2 1 fi 1 (I
TutalafHi-pre |>y
nniYBB {..Harrlsof . .
1
39 14 12 27 7 1iinnings
, . 010—,ti320—14
loltlcn, ef . . . ..1, Kick, If . . . .Keuttl, If, r f ..Murtaifh, lb 4Noteliy, II 4Kiiejjl, i!Jeininskl , 88 . .Hureelloua, SbI HXIck, If . . . ./mlur, rf 1
ooa, us301 23
vei A. C. •' ab. r. li. po. a.
5 0 1 1 ll3 1 2 2 d
0 0 0 II0 1 10 02 3 '0 11 0 6 1
2 12 3 1 T1 i 2 0 0
24 133
In a , 30 m pat the opener. Ten more than thatshould be ready for the green flagthis Sunday.
Sports Quiz1, How muny inni liave won the
Imliiuiiipolls Memorial Pny automo-bile l ine three times? Nome tlH'm•2 WlHr played .In Hie l>nvl» Cay
Iniilili-B match thin yeiir between theptijCt-B' KM Aunt! Who
3. Where <loes Mike Jacobs plan topromote Indoor uports events in NewY k C i t ?
W C AGAIN SCHEDULESTWO GAMESJN AVENEL
Sam Gioe Joins LattanzioCohorts As The Third
Starting PitcherUntil the miund i« shaken into
the most effective possible arrayof its numerous ball players, thWoodhridge-Avenel Field Club ap
arently won't mind a .5(10 aver-age in the mntter of games wonand lost. Having split a pair of;oughies last Sunday, the tribimanaged by the Brothers Lattanzio will try it again this Sundayagain at Seco Park and again a1 and 3 o'clock.
The Pulton A. A. of Newark, aallegedly powerful clan which wasstunned early this Spring when theBuddies sneaked in and grabbedan early triumph, will supply theopposition in the major, or 3o'clock clash. Negotiations are stillafoot for the first game.
while the reunited MuskeUCTtwere cannonading Antrnstine i n iStutski for fourteen honest has*-Knncks. Frank Jost, back in thtold from Manhattan College aniCaptain Jim Zilai both smote homeuns.
rco Gcrck had a trirlonnd aouMe and Walt Shinn included abuBTe arriving KTs'fn'fe'insSfHWlickey Toth of Keasbey also eara-d a doublodecker.
Lineup Now StableSince it opened the lp,36 canfc_j.
iiign two months ago the Legiomas presented a sadly-shuffled line-,|>. Luds have popped in and outf the roster practically with tht
regularity of a merry-go-round.All that seems over now.
For one thing. Butch Bodnar,long playing against his'will *ntincreasingly concerned about hiteyes, has been replaced as catcherwith Jake Kinney, Flemingto»school teacher unearthed by JoeWalsh.
Jost is back, Zilai is adaptinghimself to Swackie Dunham's oldspot nt third base while Toth covenshortstop and Walt Shinn of SouthRiver and Purlin is almost theequal of Eddie Dalancy out in cen-tre field. Gerek's hitting is increas-ingly a thing of beauty. AndGeorge Rusznak demonstrated heis physically all right again with hiiintelligent twirling on Sunday. Hewon by 9-3 and did not press un-necessarily after that large secondheat.
2 Hit*. In 1 InningIn Saturday's game at the City
tadium, by the way, Bartos sin-gled twice in one inning—thatAird one. He also retired the ene-my in the ninth the fancy way—
ith three strike outs.As for the brawling billed thii
,veek at Perth Amboy—that's •last-minute replacement of SouthAmboy Sacred Henrts, who werepushed back to a date later in tht
qmmer. ..l a s t week's lineups:
ii
pYork City?
Tball?
floeff UacK BPln (to to nolf ball?Ii. What Syracuse quarter-mller IH
regarded uu tin oultitniulinK V. S.Olympic hope?
6. who 1B currently recognized Inw ravyweti;tit-»rrB»tthchampion?
7. Who. wonn the 1935Association
A 0 0 0 U
Totulu 34 7 10 27 IS 1Hofelntrn A. A.
'8b''. '. '.:. 'i, i\), cf .
A. Klinon
pollack,H. Hlmon. _Kramer, Iftura, e . . . . . ..1. Hlmon, lb ,Ruder, rfKuzma, or, pl .Hl 's im, p . . .
all. r. h. po. a. e.i., o o a 3 i3 0 2 8 0 0
GardenState Racing Association sweeiiatukr.ti?
». What natural outfielder playtlilnl Ini8« with Ilia St. Luuitt Carillmils?
9. Who Is Mnx Hrlimellqp'B nmn
1(1..' Where will Ernie Neytrs I'cuiclfodtfcall next Knll? "
11! WJin In In I'litUKH a! Hisinirlu.ni fleutii'.s athletic program?
12, Where Is the HambJMonluigtake Tor burnt-sn horueu run?
How inuuh Kauulliiie are cuntntiillanapollu tiuto
" 11 500 miles?. _ managers of th
Woodbridge Bravex ln baseball?16. What well-knownlocal pltclior
achieved a lio-lill, no-run game with-in tbu lunt (piliilKln ?
16. ilow many m«n on a team InIndoor poln* .
17. Pitcher Jones rtplaoes PitcherSmith with the l'utun lotded withtwo out In the limt half of the ninth
tamo In the Imlianapollallowed 'or the full (00
14. Who are co-mana,
, l , , , . l- , . . HiJn l i i iH i in . i'fAllireclil. If
nker, ill. cm.nlcs. rf
p,,ppy st)Xi
nh. r, h po. A. *-4 1 1 It I 1I 1 3 - I *4 t 1 1 • •Il 0 - ' 1 '31
. HS
0 01 0 0I 0 0'I ft (I•( » 13 II V
. .. sr, j s :i is (Lf«lo«
llh. r. h.
oot for the firt g m e .Last week, .the Irvington Yorks
lost by 6-4 and the Aragons ofArlington triumphed by 7-3,
Cioe Debut.Sam Gioe, late of Notre Dame
now of the Recreation Department,
"ranker, 2h .•>. clia-sun, p
MJtrnka. :JhCi.n-k. rf . . .Ciiiilt-k. rf . .Zlhil, :ib . . . ..hint, lb . . . ..Stiillll. ef . . .O(,'ilen, If . .Tilth. M9 . . . .K l n n t y , i' . .Uus/ i iak , p
Totals' 41 9 15 -Si oru by Innings:
MiiinkvU'W 0(i(l .000
! 2 «l < 40 0 t
(i i i •I; i) 21 13 02 1 111 1
3 »o i>0 il
«It«
t 4 4 *t 5 II »2 0 4 *
030—1mix—i
oka.
iiinkvli'W 0P0 ,ooo daPK'lon 1 170 100 00]Two-ljiise hits -'Itiininah, Mitr<
l'aiikcr. Three-base hit—"Jlonip run--Grrek. Stolen tZilai S. Hhtiin 3. Tolh 2. Jost, Mitrok*.Clrrck. Left on basvs—I.eKi'Mi 6:Itrniikvli-w 5. Houble plfty — Zuppaa10 ('ranker to Moore. Struck out—Ily P.usznak 5; by Chasan 2. Piise onhulls—Off Chasan I, Pasned hall—h'lirli-n. Umpires—SraoyaK and M*~luuuv i -- ..'. - .. '.
V
KtHdrirtB" debuir as TTTiltcherthe WFC in the win over York.With Joe Allgaier and George Mol-nar h* will rate as a startingmoundamen.
The lineups:W. V. <". I ArnnoiiB
lib. r. hi lib. r. h.Fhew, 2b 3 (I llHi-ffiier, 2b 5 1 1V. l.'alo, HB 4 0 MIH'IMW, :!!' 4 1 iM'rwlll, lb ti 1 l|("|ihrll cf 6 1 ••(8'VPSe, f f 1 0 l|Si>liiiii(t; rf I I! i)M'lnKer. If 4 0 «jt'nruno, c I I 2Blxel, c 4 I IIIMiekle, «» 4 I IV ' l k e r , 3b 4 I I l l l a r d e l l , Hi 3 II IMuekey, if 2 0 llKm-Wim. l( 2 0 0M'rwln, rf i II IIIMIUnr, p 3 0Molnar, p 3 0 I
Totula ., 36 3 lOiTotalx . . . S3 7 12
rwtknah. r.'h. po. a. t.
Nl-hllH. SB 4 1 0 1 4 IMurlai'iuio, If 4 0 1 1 0 •Kuiviniirk, 2b „ „ „ , . 4 (t-4 - t 1 »ICaton, i'f 3 1 1 2 II ».urson, lb H 0 0 6 0 i
l l i 't imii, c 3 0 0 fi 2 •tl. August ine, 3 b . ! . 4 0 1 ll 1 «M.Tnltiky. rf 1 0 0 0 » tI te lner t , rf 8 0 II 2 0 <
A u g u s t i n e , p . . . . 0 li D 0 1 <Ktutskt , p .„ :i i) (I .1 l •
Toluls :n 2 4 27 10 t
0(I 31 1
4 «
3 0 1 33 0 0 73 0 0 23 0 0 31 0 0 0
0 00 00 0
1 10 0
Totals 29 0 4 27 10
and his team leading by Tbeana ms team leaning uy OiS. TMI*batter hltu a home run.' who Ischanged wlrli Hie defeat? The bat-ter striken out. Who receives creditlor th« victory?
18, What happens after n tiafetyIn football?
19. What does the checkered flagmean ln auto racing?
JO. Who IB reserve catcher onWoodbrldgd High Bdioul'. liasclteam?
On Buck
b yAragoiiBW. , c.
W. F, C. Iab. r. h.|H'uman, If 'i t 0|Anglo, c
F. L'»|o. m l I 1Mervln, 3b 3 3 2
010 003 220—7100 000 101—3
Yor|t A. C,ab. r. h
Mackey, rf 3 1 1B'lncer, 2b 3 0
lb JForoe, 2b 4Brink, us 4
«iStelder, Kb IBliel, o 3 0 U|Adum, IfM'lnger , cf 3 (I 2|C'ivrse, of ''Hunt, lb 3 0 (tlschork, rf 3Gioe, p 2 0 1'IKUey, [i -
Totals . . 2 6 8 «!ToUI» .. -IBVIIPJ by I
York A, CW. P C
. 020 ID! 0—41)1 010 X—
. 3b . .Mltroka, 2hGerek. rf ..llaiuUrs, ifKllal. 3b . . . .Jost , li, . . . .Shlrin, ef . . .OgiUn. ' lf . . .TBth, ss . . . .Kinney. c . .Uartoa, p ..
ab. r. h.t 1 1\ d i>
in. a. ».'."I *0 0 *
1 2 1 0 1ll I) (I 0 »1 1» 8 -I 1I 1 S 1 »I 3 2 I tI I I (I 41 1 1 5 f
0 3 7 B *1 2 i I «
Totals 38 8 14 n 1* :Bcorn by* innings:
Meadow brooks — 010 006 nit—£Legion 007 1)00 Din—»
TwO'liime h!ta~Sh!nn, lieiek, Ttilh,Marlscttiioi Three-base lilt—(It-raklHiimi' runs—lost, Zllal. .Stolen Imitea• Sliinn, Toth. I-eff on bases—Legion(,; lirooka.ii. Double Jilay— Nehllu tuNewuiurk to Lai-non Htruik out—By Burton 5; by Aitgustliiii i\ feyStutskl !. lli\se on liuTls—OS Harl<i«2; off Stutukl 3. Hit by pileher—Ily Ilimua (LirBun). Wild pltihu*Huitus. Auicusline. Hits- Off AiiHim-tlne, 11 In 3 Innings. Losing iiitttiwr—Auguatln*. U m p l r * W
i -mm
PAGE TEN-FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1936
Crossword PuzzleLARS MORRIS
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Today's Short, Short StorySOME KNOCK 'EM COLD
By Daphne A. McVicker
/
"*5^7 r-
The package fell, with a hideout thud right on the young man'i head
"Her master's voice," said ened. ,He had been carelessly hu-John Carter mockingly, as hefazed after a girl scurryingout of the big oHice.
At the desk next to his, asmall no«e tilted hiwh, awl a*ound very like a sniff came
' 'from Dorothy Emmet.When Lucy Dare had
sprung up to go on a suddenvisft to the water cooler inthe outer office, Dorothy hadlighed. She, too, had heard
morous, but he was hotly indignantat this accusation of caddishness!which his uneasy conscience toldhim might b^ justified. He proceed-ed to cover that uneasiii'.vj by asudden bluster of tenipei.
Tilings wtie said — eliding, fin-ally, with'Dorothy saying1, "I ijeverwan'- to »tir you outside the officei i ( ! c i i n ! "
I Ji'lm nailed rhat down promptly,"Let me U.-MITU you,; yovewunt.
You'd have to knock me u\er thehead before I'd ;isk you to j;o any-where with me again."
,, , . , . , ,, Then and there, certain dreamt,that voice outside — the | rlief, fol. D o r o t hy, and John mental-voice of young Sam Sloane, I ly cancelled a visit be had plan-traVfcliliK salesman, b a C k ned to ni ke to a jeweler's storef rom '•' •"t-i" ^ P haf] fti<*Vipr1 Vn Main Street.
witha trip. She had sigheddistaste thsit L u c y Two blank weeki jmsscd. D010-
» h o u l d S h o w s u c h Obvious j t i y bravely tilled in the long lunch:hours with shopping, and the longeagerness to see Sam —
should jump to greet him —;.,,,, h w a,UU)J,alKep sfle f o u n d that,!instead of Waiting for him to ; without the lunches and dinners
evenings with sewing and reading.;
come in to see her. "I wishLucy wouldn't," she hadthought.
But when Juhn. Carter"ipolce, her "thoughts "whffted
upside dawn. Dorothy wasloyal to her kind. She wouldnot dream of yielding to anyman's cynical view of WOJTI-en.
"If she'd just learn," John•ddod. "Some like 'em hot,»ome like 'em cold—but ri'o-fyody likes 'em that eager."
1 Dorothy rose. She stampeda small foot.
"You're, entirely mistak-en," she said scornfully"Lucy had been complainingof being thirsty. If there's'anything I hate, it's a conceited, egotistical man whithinks girls are always runhing after him!"
* • tInside her, was a cold little feel
Ing of alarm. Had ihe been toeager with John—too willing to gwalking in the evening duak — toready to accept lunch and dinnei<Jates?
1 "Furthermore," she added,hate men that talk about girls.Also, I find I have an engagementfgr diimi'r tonight, after all."
John's cheerful young face
she had come to count on from]John, th«r« was a nojiceauie. dif-fereiice iii hei pocketbook. Hence,one noon, she bought a tinyclothes line, some clothes pins, andj
utont ftatiroTito pse4n her reom^f she were goinjf to buy all of her
meals, and pay for her ownnovies from, now oil, she'd have toeconomize by doing her own laun-,ry.
She carried her armload of pack-ges into a cafeteria lunch room,ind piled them in a row on theh«lf above one of the tables, thenvent to stand in liae with hier- tray, i
When she had .(chosen her fru-j!«1 lunch, and was on her way back 1 •to her table, somebodyyhailed herllgleefully. Dorothy sighed. She had!
to1 lunch with Lucy, butthat young lady, seated at a tableat the front of the restaurant, wasviolently waving to her.1 After a hasty glance at her par-i*k Dorothy abandoned the table
l.-i'iu'ntli them and walked over tojoju'Luey. -
Shi' nibbled dully at her lunch,only half listening to Lucy's reci-tal—
"And 1 said, 'Why, John, 1thought you were always datedup';" And he said no, iind that hewas lpnesome, so I said I'd g'o,
Flight of the Jailbird8
A FCHMB M O M - A U U SSPORTS FER. TH'PRlSOMERS-PDdrHM.1ffAMES — BASEBALL-BOU6HT CARDS 'M'CHECKERS ?&*:'EM oar O'_MIS
OH-HEWAS <S»1EO F T H E M
GAME
f THAT BB TISI -fH' TftUBBLE-
f TM«A HAVIKI'V_FREED1W\--ALMOST7 M > D O I I N HAVE9 >
S'MATTER POP— So No Button Will Be Needed
"3By C. M. PAYNE
THE FEATHERHEADSOverdi
A CLEASI COLLAR.CM. DEAR?
• «*
OF- COURSE- CAW'TSEE
MESCAL IKE B, S. L. HUNTLEYThree Times Over Lightly
"REG'LAR FELLERS" More Than Edge
YOU BETTER GCTDOWN OFF THATWAUL OR XOU'WU ,PALL DOWN A N 'HURT ^OUR.SELF«
HAW HAW!THIS IS EASX t
t CAN WALK ALONG)H£W?. ON ONE FOOT
WITH MY E.YESCLOSED
,//A
» 1WHAT DID I TELL
' - YA? Y'6OT TOOCLOSE TO YHE
I CtOT CLOSER N ^••/h-'.THAT tVEN? Mi,
I SOT WHER-E. , II ;THE CP6C'WA»MT I i
it'*
Xmoclatad
"KEEPJING UP WITH THE JONESES"—Clarice Is Trying to Figure This Out
HOWDY, M'uDVIX SEE VQM AR£tHARD AT VMORJ<
YOUR. PART
<6
A3Z
By POP MOMAND
JUST eveMiUP AM OLD
SCORE TWIT CAl-LS FOR.
A ceJ-£SRATIOM'
TBLL MEALL ABOUT
IT '
IT?'7/ IL
DO YOU
OLD PBLIX PQTTZ ,
HE'S TH' QIR.O
OUT IN '2.9--
/ t AMOULD\ £>AY X\ DO '
EVE.M WlfH HIMAT LAST f X SCUD
l A COUPLS. OFTiCKSTS TO >bOR
, gHe's a grand dancer, isn't he'.'"
.Stony fuiy suddenly welled upin Dorothy. Lucy was talking aboutJohn! H« hud been so easUy con-doled thut he'd invited'Lucy outalready! Dorothy's cheeks burned.
A moment later, Lucy finished
her luhch and rushed out-^atliact-ed, Dorothy saw, with a curl of theUp, by ft familiar flgur» pawing byOutside—Sam Sloane.
. • * *Slowly, at last, Dorothy rose.
She turned toward the table shehad originally chosen.
Goodness! Somebody was sittingthere, ri(fht Mnder her package*—a young man. She'd have to reachright over him to get fte™"
She turnHd back to her coffeedregs. Perhaps h<d leave in a fewminutes. But he didn't. The square
jjhouldtiis under the parcels did not | {manage.-had fullwi, with a hideousstir. And her lunch hour wus ulmoaU t | l uUi ^ight on a head of neatlyover. Well— parted brown hair.
Keeping her eyes carefullyaverted from the yovmg man, whowould surely think she was tryingto attract his notice, Dorothy wenthaughtily to the shelf which heldher packages. ' She reached high,on tip-toe, trying to gather theparkuges up and escape.
Then—there was a crash. Thepackage of clothespins burst —scattered far and wide. Another
Dorothy, with one. wild scream,threw her arms aiqiiiui the youngman's neck, rubbed his head, reach-ed fbr the glass of water on, thetable, all in a tangle of misery.
"John!" she wailed. "Johndarling, are you killed?"
John, Carter opened his eyes. Hisnecktie was spotted with waterdripping down from his necLThere was a large swelling bump
on the top of hi* head. But direct- an evening with Lucy so I couldly before him were two lovejy, l l t i a r nfcr ta,"t about you. There's afrightened brown eyes and two r | n « . in " , f w d t * « « " d o * n . t h e
atreet. Will you go with roe to buy4 • * * i
HUSBAND;
Ther« ia BO muchMid every sprint;
pale peaehlikfc cheeks, and he grin it- Bnd h*Te dinner wHh me to-intt t t» t wm«tined hapuily. . niaht—aiid, every n i j rhW
"S»y it ag»in," he suggested. Dorothy laughed weakly.Before the interusted g»z« of "How can I h*H> it?" she wid.
the other patrons of the restaurant, "Some like 'em hot—but 1 knpekDorothy gathered up her flatiron.' 'em cold!"She stared scornfully at John.1
Then, suddenly, they were both (Copyright, 1916, by UniUd F Wshputing with laughter. j « r e SyodiMtc. Inc.)
"I've been so lonesome," John;(The character* in thb itory a n
til''
of m t n ' t h»t» is oV';'i s a part of /•"•
confessed, "I even tried to spend), fietitiow)
»«* tat^ ,ing. It C»n b« cleanedif the budfet will not 'one. Bttt r n e w one i
t t i b i n t f a s l " 'Grays we J»»riiVg, for the J"-'*traw» become neeewu
1i4i
onBRIDGE INDEPENDENT
•H OK IHIUXIC SAIJ5', I T MAT CONOWRN!i,inr mnotlng of th» Town-,n I no »f tho Tnwrmhlp of
li,-lil MnndRy, Juno l i t ,1 "ijrcili'il to rulvertlne the
,„, Monitny e v e n i n g , JuneIi,n Tiiwnshlp Cornmlttco
10s P. M. (WIT) In th«I'hiiitibnr". Memnrltil Mu-
,^linit, Woodhrlflge, N. J.,i,,,V soil at pifblto sale
'' iiiithodt bUlilcr, subject•'u-inii provlfllnnn. Lot 1 In
Wnodbringa Township
, , F I 1 > < I
.nit.- nf
..I ill'>
!, ,1
• ri«ttoo tjint the TownCo hi", by resolutionin law. fliterl ft mlnl-
j'l 170.111 Ht whlr-h anlil,".'k' will he Bold and to, prli'c must tie wirier?.ivcrtlsInK ttila nrtle.,j> notice tllHt, lit saiililnlp to which It may
Ilic Townnhlp Com.,., tlin rlUht In Its ilia-,.'i.| n i i y n n e or nil hi tini,I lot' in »"l'l Vilnrk ti
H it mdy neleot In caneinlnltnum lilili nlmll ho
.iitiinrr of thfl mlnlnuim•fnwilslilp Commltlpp nnd
',,,1 thereof by the pur,!„. Townsh ip Trefltiiirer,
" , I,,,-ut imiflt he minlo In' ,, iwn wr-ohK from thn ilntr,,,',. 'rnwnnlilp wi l l execute
, I IIIIIKNI" > l t t (! * l l l (- <lnftd
i1'"1""'?, j . mmiUAN.T»wn«Ul |
-, 1 ii TIC ZniJ. 1936.
. ' FRIDAY, JUNE 5,1936 PAGEELBVBf
wn
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I : S S .Clerk.
I - I I O I ' O H A L
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• WILLIAM KATH: , i In-
r.'nn.l.ipk , - : . i 11 ( ' < > r
:il..|.-.l lit.',,----li SlitU., »ltill'IK
: ..ny, abilling t
». Wi.uilu
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WILLIAM KATHW u o d l i r l d g f . >.* J
mJffil ARfcfe
V*.
Jf* HERS OOM« lie \\\oC dOV KlLLKlEJl', 1
*h—^3111Weimi
Tin - THE KELLY KIDS —IL VNITH YOUR TALENTS YOU COU^P BE MARRIED
TO A RICH WIDDER-AND I KNOW TIST THE ONEFOR YA! SHES COMIM' HERE "TO-CAY AND I'U
Fix IT UP m YA. HER
(* YOU MUST MEET MV 6R0THER,DENNIS \KELLY MRS MftJOR. REMARKABLY WEILPKESERVED JIST MKE YOU, AND 0O2ESJ
IS Music ftT'Ev^RY FORE! ^11'—rrr , •
•i lii.il S T K B V B IIIMJUII.I'
t , j .ly in t in . Tuwnsh lp l ' "n i -
. - T..\wi«lilii uf Wuiidliildg«
, li.-t.ill ( . .unpinnl ' l l"" H' r ' l n t '
ri'iuuii..l in .ilium1 l | i g h * i i y .
I! any, nliuuUI lie,i, >viuinij Hi H. J L)unl««i in. Winiilljrl.lK*. N. J
I i U l
NOTICE: ' i i - Unit TIIKi lLnl l lE V.
i- i.-ls i,, upply tn th« Tovtnshlii
1 Ihc Titwimhip ut
i -. I'li-ljliry Ketull **i'IIH
•I I'llilllltIM »ltll»lPll
i i m u f , AvcnFl, Township vl
nilnf. .N. J.
- !n,ib il uny, ulmulil l't!
".ii-l> in Killing in: H- J Uunlgun.l..p i Ink. Wuulbrldgi , N. J-• I) TlllilllJDUK F.;ltl)WLANll-
Wuiidlirldgr. X- J i
NOTICEU.e thut STEIMIKS MIKLDBSV' upi'ly tu tho Township Cum-
i tin- Tuwnshlp of Wu.idbrldgeii.iiy Itt-lMll Cuaisuiuptlon Ikensenwes mluultil »l 3»l Av«n«lV.MI«I, Tuwnslilp Of Wuodbrldg<*i
ions, |( uny. should Iitvly In writing to : U. J. Uunlimi,!• Clcllu WumlurUlgti K^-i-'»
-.1) STEl ' l lBN MIKLlWHY.WoodlirWgf, •"<• J -
NOTICEn.iiU-e Him ANTUN1 I'lCllALSKlIn apply to 111* Township Com-
"( the Townnhlp of WoudLrldgsl^k•llury IteUII Cunsuniptlon llrsnaa
IIIKL'S slluutfil nt llahwuy AvmiuB.Tuwnahlp od Wuuilbrldgu, N. J.
p.lluim, l( an^ r shiiuld . btl "•lulvly In wi l t l tg tu: U. ,
i|i L'Urk, WilodhrldgaJN. J-.•II ANTONI 1'IOUAWKl
Wooi|hrld|». ; N. '
NOTICEthill 1'AUL A., and JOHN
»IN Intend to upply I" I'1" Town[O'Miivnltlsa uf the Tuwnahlu uli n d g e fur n I'laniiry Katu.ll Cum
lkimse fur preml»«» situated «iIllller-Avenue, Avenet, Townahin o:
N. J.if uny. iuhould be maai
Hi.IV In willing to: B. J UunlayinUltik, Wuudbrldga, N. J-
* l ! l
MOTlt'K>ulli'« that f l l B U KA1.1TA
pply tu lha Township Uoiw;jlm Township of Woodbrldga foi| i y Itelull consumptl"" Hc»™»«
Msas sltuatad ul tor4 Carne-w»y, Avan«l, Tuwmhlu i
N J., |( »ny, should be mad'l«ely In writing to: U, J. Dunlgun,
Clvrk. WoudbrWg", N. J.i}) PBBD KAUTA.
NOTICB "i that 1UL1UP 8HABLU8K
La " " """
UNCLE CMNNY1 I F O U N D YOUR
MftA( YA-Aill'M I lSTMKEABOY-lI BUBBLIN' OVER VNITH VlM,
AND ENTHOOZIZIZZM J
MAJOR ANP SHE LOVES
MUSIC ISMEAT, DRINK
AND RAIMENTTO ME'
H UNCLE WNNY! ITSTiME TO TAKE I
ER RHEUMATISM WEDfrlNElj—AS I WAS SAYIN'AFTERl\OH.W«AT A SPtENWD ,
AKE$ MY FIVE WlE
fW6TSlbE THE HOUSE! (BOYS WILL BE Boys
MWrtlSOATHlETlCAND
EELS LIKE LICKIN'
DIN NYHAS
FUSE
TCSTH'
FJ/WW FIRSTNfVEft TKEATEO ME
LIKE.THIS!OHlPASSIONATmADORE
!itOULt> DrE LISTEN \^
YA-AS-ATHALETtolSAURi^T IN ITS WAY BUT MUSIC
TMEYvFOUEEREDJ U I U T M A W
5IIIL HAVE YER STRON4E5T£ARO!ME FER KEEPS! 1MAT SAXOPHONE SHE
YTHING ">fHJGIT EVERYTHING \ U WILL OWERVE THAT I PLftVWITH awsipDABLt me AND
ly Kftull Coni)llliiplliin netnue 101s s i tuated at 4ii2 Ituhway A v e n u *
iHtraat, OVoodbrlilgo,nnieillutuly In writing to: 1). J. Dunigan
Clerk, WooillirlilKe, N. J.KltANK MU8CAUBLLI.
WoudljrldKe. N. J.
,r » |||«nnry »«tull |t ' " " " u « " t ' " n '."•""
1'ownKlilp »i Wouii-iVi'iiue, Ai'uiiL'l,,rldge. N. J
Objections,UlijeciioiiB, If uny, should utihiinieilliucl)' In tut t ing tv. ll j . Dunlgun,Tiiwiialilji Clerk, Wiioilbrldgt, Nl J.
MOTICK. .ikn notice tbut MARV. ANDEH.-il'll
lUuiiilii to apply to the Township Cniu-inltlee'of the Townahlp of 'Wiiuilbrldgefor u.t'ltinury Itetall Consumption ilctsnt**fur preiulHuM situated 4t 361 Wont Avu-uue, aewuren, • Township of Woudbrlilgu,
_ Newwltik Avenue, Kurds, Townahlp of Wmnt-
lOgo, N. J. ,ObJOL'tlorlti, If any. ahould lie niiulo
.iiiinudlately In writing to: H. J. Dunlgau,Tuwnahlp Clork, Woodliridge, N. J.
(Signed) DAVIO MBYKItS.Woodbrldge, N. J.
N. J,Objections, if any. should b« lumle
In wi'ltliiK tg: II. J. iJiinlfe'iui,1V0ud.brjits, fl. j .MAIiY ANDSRSCK
Wuudbrlune, N. .1.(Binned)
NUTICBTake nottae that FHANK P. LBYV1S
intsnda to apply to the Townahlp Cum-mlttsa of the Township of Woodurldgefur a Plenary Keta-ll Contiuroptlon luvnm-fur pramlMI situated at 1S68 Oak Tree,Iaelln, TuwqaUlp of Woudbrldge, N. J.
Objactlortl, If a,ny, shvuld bu umdsImmediately in writing to: D. J. l>unig»nTuwnahlp Clurk, Wouilbrldgj, N. J.
^ NOTICE ' 'Tuke nutli-e lhat BUVVAlIll J 1<'[NN
Intends to Hpply to the Township Cum- jmUUM o( the T.iwmhlu of Wuuillnidi;fur a i'ltdnuty lttjtall Cunsumptlon Ik'tiutlfor prenihies' situated , u# DG NIM:UStreet, Woodhrldgo, Township of Woi/l
jbrldgo, N. J.Objections, if uny, should hi
Immediately In writing to: B. J. Du^lgan,Townahlp Clerk, Wuudbrldge, r i / j -
(Slgned) B D W A » m > r F l N N .Woodbrldge, 14. J.
HNUTIUKTake notke thut EVKI.Yrj UHIS In-
tetlila to- apply to the Tmvnuhl|i Cuiumlt-toe of the .Townelilp of WooilbrUlgti for
'H Plenary jtutall Cuntmmptiuti llcuntte forpremlaea eltuuted at UQ WuoUbrldge Avu-nue, Port Keuding, Townuhl)) of Woodbrlilge, N. J.
Objections, If uny, Hhiiuld be Tilndelllimed)9t«ly 111 WVlt'nlS IV- "• •*• PunlgTownship Clerk, WoodlirldKe, N: J.
(.Signed) BVBLYN (1KIRWuoillirlilge, N. J,
NOTICBTake notice that JOHN J. HEUAK
IK. Intends to upply to the TowmhlpConiinltme of the Township uf Wuudirldge U>r a Planary Reull Consumption
Uttesw for v'e'x'W altu*t»d m 61. New
NOTU'U fiTuke notice lhat MICHAKL ULIVSIt
.inlnnds to apply to tha Township Com-inlttiiii uf the Township of Woodbrldgefor u Plenary Itetuil Conuumiitloh llceaaefur pr«mUe» situated ut Uuk Tree Road,selln, Township of Woodbrldge, N. J.
Objectlotia, If any, should be *ma,deInunedlataly lo writing to: B. i. Uunlgan,i.«».n.hin clerk, Woodbridge, M. J.
MlOHABiL OLIVBn.•WooubrWn, N. J..
ininedlutel)' In wr)tl«g In: II. -I Hunlgati,Township Clerk, WiudlirlilKt;, N. J.
(Signed) i I'AUL SIMON.\VoiKllirklge, N J.
O l ^ J t t n . If any, uhbuUl hv Intuit)Immediately In wl'Ulng to: It. J.- Dunlgua,
wtiHhlii Clerk, Wuotltirldge, N. J.(Signed) UA1TAUO. HUSriO.
Woodbrldgt, N. J.
Tnko m
NUTICKllrii that M11M. MAUY M'>l.
NAIL Intends to apply tu tho TownshipCoiiiiiilllfo of the Township of Wuud'jildge for a lJluuury Hutall Consllniptlunlluensu fur pruiulMins situated ut Newjml WlllUtn .Streets, Woudbrlilge, T.iwn-ahlp of Woudbrlilge, M. J.
Objections, If uny, shuuld he nmdeIniniedlately In writing to: B. J, Dunlga.it,Township Clerk. Wuudhridge, N. J.
(Hlgned) MilS. UAltr UOI.NAH.Woodbrldge, N. J.
NOTICHTake notice that I'AUL PALKO In-
tends to apply to tha Township CommitI M ut lha Tuwnahlp ot Wooibrldge for
• A • ' • •
NUTICKTakn niitlni Unit 1'KTEK SONDEn-
UAAItl) inl.-ii'lH |o apply to the Town-ship Cuiiuiititoe uf the Township ofVViimllirlilge fur a Plenary Detail C'on-HUlliptlun Ih'entiD for premises situatedat in New Urunswlck Avenue, KurdTownship u( Woodbrldge, N. J.
Objection**, If uny, should lie madeImmediately In writing to: I). S. l>unlgun,
UH-BBIIMI Clerk, Woodbrldge, N. J.(Signed) 1'WTKH HdMlEllQAAIUl.
Woodbrldue, N, J.
NOTICBTake notice thut PAUL SIMON Intends
0 apply to the Tuwnshlp Committee ufthe Tuwnahlp uf Wuudlirldge for »Fleimry Retail Consumption llgente furpi-enilM» iltuated at U New SrunawlckAvenue, HUIHUWII, Township of Wuod-brldga. N. I
\t »ny, sliuuld b« m»d»
NOTICETake notice thul SAMUFU, HODhiH in-
tends to apply tu tlu* Tdwnsliip t'onl-Illlttee of tlie Tuwnshlp n[ Wu°dbr!dg9for u IMenary lleUill Cimsimiptlon IUi>nsefor preluUtfu Hituated ut Mi New llruns-wlfk Aveniif, l-'uiilt}, Townwltlir of Wood-bridge, N. J. ,
Objections, If uny, should lie madaInunedtiiti'ly In writing to: ii. J. Dunigan,Townahlp clerk, WaadbrldgB, N. J. '
(Signed) HAMUKI, IKiDEH.Woodbrldgo, N. J,
NOTICBTake ii.ill.i- Iliat CHAHLB8 a. KJIH .:
Iniu^uls to uijply tu the Townahlp C<na-millet: "I Hie Tifwnshlp of WoodbrMfafor a Plenary Ktituil Consumption itoaaJHfor premises situated at 5JS New BruOJ-wli'k Avenue, Korda, Township of Wao4<bridge, N. J.
Objeotiona, If any, should lie mid*immediately In writing to; B. J. DunLg»aVTownship 01«rk, ' - ' - - '|. (S lgn.d) .
PAGE TWELVE FRIDAY, JUNK B. '936WOODBIDGE INDEPRNlu-v\ T
LATERALLY(Continued from Sport Fatfe)
•way from the Senators in the•udillo round*. Rifan, Mike Youngand Miki.» Drnsculii collaborated in• double play for Mesko.
None of the winning club foundRomanohieky for more than onekit, plthnuRhffour-tiasr snii>•Hftun star's
The lineups :rord« r. «.
•ezo . i-rah.
Vounjr did pry ah out of the Irv-
flipper.
mmn ftrnaton. r..h.li.,
LOCAL CITIZENS HELPOXFORD GROUP PLANSStockbridge Meetings Held
To Effect FormalOrganization
SiK Woodhridire citizens! havebeen nttending formnl nrjjaniza-tion ^eetinjr.i nt St.orkbrid(tc,Mass., of the Oxford Group
Jill.DVLA'Miui
Tnl.it• W. o r
Jh I3
v. ir <
P 3
nnel l . Ha 4'infll , 3ti 4robnl, rf 4i'dt. I b 3n » a k , cf 3
i i i i f t l . If 1I : t 4
i|i:'< iii
DJilKliii-I. :ti
H , <
mcnt in America.England in 1U21 ...Buchmnn, the movement has hart
690 DAYS IN JAIL(Cmitimicd from {•aac one)
diunki'ii condition marring decora-tions on other graves. Jud^e BrownsiMiii'tired the defendant to 270days for being drunk and disorder-ly, fiO days for driving without Hlicense and to 30 additional daysfnr violating his parole.
Another long sentence six! months—was given Walter I^isickiof II1 Lewis Street, who \va< con-
of breaking into .Joseph
doi'i.lovi-
• ] • •
irnn
cin.
if .Joe r.nnlin, a young lncnl RaitCn RodftO CotlUIlgir (J"eI McCrefl)' whom boUl; To Amboy On Tue»dayir second Wig hit on the pro-„ i< Wallneo Ford in thn thrill : A thrill a second is whnts prnm-prnduction "The Roue 's Tav i<fd »t the biff Ranch Rodeo which1 w-ill he presented by the Y.M.H.A.
P e r t h A m b o y »•• "••••• ; • • •".« •stadium from June !> to 1.1. _
This Rodeo prono.incod Ro-dny-o", is an conirlomerRtion ofHYneerou* WMtera uport*. Therewill b.buckin l t.hor?« ir.H.n?. both
with and witho
inu a very dangerous fci ,,o thr ridiiiK of wild Brthma,.. and bulls, trick ndinu, calf
iadrill« nn horseback,i h d
(|iiof
a .
whhi* and a very realisticin which the Rodeo
clowns flifhtAnd then there" w'iii"'.',"sharpshootinif from icomedy bucking nrnlt
1 Wd«ow ponies,t d
, jehother
Established injTu|.,,[(\, Sewaren saloon and steal-liy Dr. Frank iii(f $4(1 worth of whiskey and
arettes.Oorjre Keating, 33, of 257 Main
Street, Woodbridge, was sentencedto three months in the Workhouse
T'>t;il» 33
:o i di)3 co
Sports Answers(continued from Sport Page)
i.ni! V . - I . T . i;i30 winner..M.ik'i :in<l DDHHIII KUIIISO.tn Aili i.in y u i s t mill . lark
! f.clV s , . !<>ft\1W -f'Jfi
1 Tl.i .i.l r
IM.111213
" l!iIS17
to!,IK
•CHIPT»r.l
19.M.
• ! • !
i the run,. O ' l t i - i i r iHi! !<».iit l ; i l t / . i ' i , N e w
lii-r M i i r l i n .. I j . ill.-'
f . i v r l l p .-k Pri»r>'!«l|l 'll. -V. V
UK Theatre.
f Alhmtle City.
InTin\!
i . i l , l u l l
LTl'il.l.
IV.ni.I k k11IK-.
tii-1 ;iinl fJczii I'o-
-*. .Ainofltjan Legion.
I in IIIif ili>- i.
ivlmmfiuni
'K, .1 iinos Inwins Smith
safety wnsUa own 20-
<h or theKarnns
, m haII remarkable world wide growth,especially through the Scandina-vian countries. It seeks to re-es-tablish the Christian attitude in|for turning on the water in his celllife with neither creed nor cult but,rtru| flooding the cell-block. Thewith emphasis, instead, on 'snar-joriginal complaint of drunkennessing-' life with one's fellowmen. InWRS held open and he may be ar-the United States, the movement n^ned on that count when hehas gained momentum steadily but completes his present term.the meetings throughout the Berk , Kov»t» Sentencedshires constitute, the first formal Frank Kovacs, 4K, 21) Henryeffort here to propagandize en l^treet. Port Reading, v.-as sentUuwiaam far the life of faith., iawaytur a month on his wife's tes-
Mr». Walter H. Warr, Mrs^tiniony be had bealen her, andHenry Von Bremen and Mrs. J*y Steven I.eslei, 40, of 04 LewisRutan attended a training school Street, f'arteret, was sentenced toin Stockbridge before convocation i m Jays on the drunkenness chargeot the Assembly proper. Mr. andfi]e,] by.Officers Bishop and Peter-Mrs. John E. BrcckeniidRe attend-'son, TWO pan-haiidlers wijre eached several sessions and Mr. RutaU'jrjven 10 days.fs remuining through the closing! FjirCs of $7.fiD for drunkennesssession*.. At fdnie 'meeting's, at-were assessed against Owen Doyle,tendunre has reached S,0fl0 from[28, of 4S Whittier Street, Railway;almost every State in the country. Michael Hucka, 42, of 327 Old
Ro»d, Sewarert; George Dunharo,4H, of 1WC Woodbridge Avenue;John Segery, 48, Ridgewood Ave-nue, and Alfred B. Lord, 3S, ofNITE-KRAFTPLEA
(Continued from pane qne) 'Cranford.
NEW YORKER(Continued on page 9)
says Murnan. ''Even in dinky littleforeign ports you have to pay as'high as $23 to drop anchor. Why«ven in Miami they stuck me
From New York Murnan andZinn are sailing to Chicago by way«f the Hudson River, the ErieCanal and the Great Lakes. Hisship will be overhauled there, andMurnan will look after some prop-erty which provides the financesfor his trip.
"This has been my idea of whatI've wanted to do all my life," he«tid. "I'm & free agent, and I canin as I please. This trip may taketen years or longer. I don't care.HI keep on going: till the ship sinks»r I g-et too old and fogey to go on,I guess.'1
ERAfUNDS(Continued from page one)
tdminister to the impovershed, thelocal bill is $G,6C7.5O, of which13,810 has been paid. The lastfortnight in April cost the town-ship $4,100. The total bill in Ma;was $10,007.84.
With the case load of 395 fam-iies and 1,222 persons, that rep-resents a monthly per capita cost«f $7.50, including food, (and athousand dollars worth of milk,rent, medical costs, hospitaliza-tion and such clothes as are abso-lutely necessary.
To administer that money, thetownship in May spent $439.09.The figure represents not onlyMr. Omenhiser's salary and thewages paid Mrs. Clifford Dunham,in accountant and a clerk andthree investigators-^-but also inci-dental expenses. Mileage has been9*id for at the low ra^e of 4 cents.Wot included is such office equip-ment as has been necessary to ac-quire.
When Mr. Omenhiser took over,ite case load was 465. It has beenrut every week since. During thelast six days, 24 cases were closed,nine old cases reopened and four•ew ones added. The net reductioni 11, representing1 about 50 indi-viduals for whose care the town-ahip no longer will be responsible.
jected to the extension on thegrounds that it would be counter tothe restrictions of the zoning or-
Khaney, 2!»fl Amboy Avenue, and onCharles Takacs, 49, of 70 Pennsyl-vania Avenue", Hopelawn, accuseii
FLOWER SHOW(Continued from page one)
• r s Carl Hansen, Miss,Eleanor Har-Wl; SHADOW SCREENS: Mrs. VanMefitini'. Mrs. Chester Peck, Hr>.<S«n Hansen, Mrs. W. L. Raup; MIN-IATURES: Mrs. M E. Moore, Mrs.Harry Reyder, Nancy Lou Jernee,• r s . Samuel Henry, Mrs Van Ider-
f iflfi.; BUAOK AN'D WHITE: Mrs. L.Orlmtey, Mrs. K.' Dlcksuii; Mr,
1L Brytczuk.AKU3ING TIIAY: Mrs. Van Ider-
»tine; IVY FOR KITCHEN WIN-BOW: Hiss Grace Camp, Mrs- VanMemtlne: DIFFERENT PEREN-NIALS: Mrs Carl Hansen. Miss Maid*Wbe: PRESIDENTS TABLE: Mrs. F.f. Adams. Mrs. Fred Demurest.
JUDGES: Jolin Azud, Mrs. R. H.Kinton.
COMMITTEE: Mr». BarAekov,•lialrniun; Mrs. Keith Taylor, MrsFrank ftanlj, Mrs. Kula Barliel. Mrs4(1 F. Brewater, Mrs. 8. J. Henry,• n . C W. Decker, Mrs. Howard/ernee, Mr . Paul Kingberry, Mrs.JiMlph Klein. Mrs. John Kreger,lira. .1. L M< Crctry. Mrs*. GeorgtHcLaughlin Mrs. George May, Mrs.Aiitlei Fllz UanduUih, Mrs. d. W•ankin, Mr I,<-lainl iCeynulil.n, Mrs.JfcUi.i. .Siill»til und Mrs- Morrisun
hiiatie
especially considerate in planning jfor building a storehouse in the.rear of its present structure and Ithat undue inconvenience would;not result if it were sanctioned. j
May Cauie Removal
STREET OILING(Continued front page one)
may uauie nemovai i t ,U!(| t | h a v e c o l i v e r g o , i u p o nMore important however, is the iM Ni t o id ti f oi,
povsibihty that a denial may cause |f0l. th(1 s t | e e t g on whichK
t h e i rthe company to remove its twojj,,,,,,^ locatedplants from the Township and thus] D ^ n i t ( , a n n 0 U n C c m e n t 1)y t h ethrow three hundred persons out of | c o m m i s s i o n c r t h t t h T ^ { i m iwork. It has become necessary to,C 8 n n o t s u p p l t h e n e c u s s a r y f u n d sincrease facilities and unless thewi ,i u m i o u b ^ d l y n i c a n t h e r e .mumoiDfllltu will nprtnir. rhpflfin!» i* £«iu«MHl«nvy w+ii jjuiiuiu uit IULU. tquwttRfr <« an emergency appro-tion. the firm will bo required to l p r i a t i o n f o r t h e ",locate elsewhere. !k»n . i , in Committee
pTownshipl t h J has
poThe
beenant
•Thore are many vitally import- |loath(, to n l a k e 8Uch e x c e p t i o , l s t 0t phase? to the matter, Thomas t h e r e ( r u l a r ! y a d o p t ed budget, but
„ . . , , B ? a i ( l . President, stated.^ i s b c ! i e v e d t h ^ o n c shou l (1 b e"Although I wish everyone who | l n a d e t 0 m e e t t h i s pa l. t i cu la l. c o n .feels he will be affected by the' • •change the right to be heard, I;think that the objectors should takejntq consideration all of the ele-ments TnvoTveHT"
FORDS WOMEN(Continued from page one)
willing to discuss the proposition.A general topic of conversationthroughout the Township eversince it became known, the planhas met with universal approvaland much commendation from allquarters.
Labor DonatedContribution of much of the
building material leaves tbe clubwith the comparatively simpleproblem of providing carpentersand masons. Imbued with asplendid civic spirit, Fords crafts-men will undoubtedly give theirservices as their donation to theprogress of their community cen-ter.
Visions of giving to Fords thefacilities and conveniences of acommunity house have absorbedthe Woman's Club ever since itsbeginning. Many notable achieve-,ments are listed in its history butthe building program which nowseems practically assured is un-doubtedly the most ambitious taskyet undertaken.
Further canvass of the projectis now under way and it is ex-pected that final action will betaken within the very near future.
ZiSCHKAU SISTERS(Continued from page one)
nterest to German to fulfill theterms of th^ scholarship offeredher. She was vice-president of thecollege's German Club.
Mis? Dorothy Zischkau, also agraduate of the township highschool, majored in political science.She was vice-president of KappaIota, the honorary economics society, and was treasurer of the So-,cial Service Club. She also playeda prominent r(jle on th£ committeewhich organized the Intercollegi-ate Model Senate, which recentlyconvened at the college.
Dr. Ellen Sulver Potter, directorof medicine of the New Jersey De-partment of Institutions and Agen-cies, will be made an honoraryDoctor of Laws at the commence-ment tomorrow: Mrs, Mary Hitter|Beard, historian and feminist, willdeliver the commencement address.'The services will be held in theElizabeth Rodman VoorheeaChapel on the campus.
'These Three' Opens RanOf S Days At The Empire
How one vicious lie almostwrecked the lives of three innocentpeople is the powerful dramatictheme of "These Three," whichbrings Miriam Hopkins, Merle Ob-eron and Joel McCrea to the Em-pire Theatre in Rahway for 5 daysbeginning today.
The story of this Lillian Hellmanscreen play is laid in a small girls'school which Martha Dobie (Miri-am Hopkins) and Karen Wright(Merle Oberon) establish with the
We render a complete
LCANPSERVICE VFOR THE - ^
HOME VJON YOL'tt OWN SBtli HIT YWe coil nrranire Junt tbe typeof loan util nunl - - - »u re-lia>tut*ii Icrnm that you caneanllr afford.
INDUSTRIAL
lo in , Airjniril '« AH N'«rbj
. RODEO •75Cowboys - Indians - Cowgirls 75
100 Horses - Wild Steers - Mules 1
PERTH AMBOY
5 DAYSJUNE 9-10-11-1213Washington Ball Park, New Brunswick Av.
Schindel's Celebrate• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • * * * * • * • Schindel join, the leading .torei throughout the country ;n lrj
to "National Cotton Week." Come to SchJnder., Pe r t h V i
GREATEST STORE, and save on everything made of cottonand
hundreds of other .uper-.pecial. on tale this weekl Don'. ,,., ^
thing keep you from these .aving.! Open Saturday till 10 P M
A Sensation Last Week!Men's Polo Shirts
in the Smartest Styles
59°
SAVINGS THROBGHOUT OUR STORE
EA.
MEN! Your Choice!SLACKSDUCKSKHAKISAll Guaranteed Washable! Great Selection!
Man, on Man! The Real Duke of Kent
SHIRTS . . 79cTin- nun** |i<kpuliir nhlrf Miyli- of I lie jfiir. uniitrii utter (lit ln'»t flrmiirilmnii hi thr >%orlil! liny hnlf n iluxrn n<»u. All MUCH.
Workmen-Here's Your Store!Greatest Buy in Town!
SWEET-ORR andHeadlight OVERALLS
The t w o most famous nittlniiiillirniiilB, a t the lowest, price yuu'veevor s e e n ! You knmv Hit iiuiillly,innl the price talks r-.r i tsel f ! 159WORK PANTS
Cuverta, uml blark. All sizes
Just Look at This Great Saving!
Famous "Big Yank"WORK SHIRTS
Tin' lint m n a ! f n v o r i t o e v e r yu or It iu;tu krii)WH! P a t e n t e df'i^;itft11- [iu' kvt an«i r e l n -1 «j*r*-*-il s.-;inis. S p e c i a l l o wprli-L's f«»r " p i l l i o n Wo«-k."
A Schindel Scoop!Gorgeous New Summery $1.95
DRESSESin the Seasons Outstanding Styles• 2 pc. Linene Suits• Printed Voiles• Pastel Crepes• Acetates• Shantungs• Lace KniUFIzt 'R'for l u i s s e s 1 , w n i r i i n n - J. l i t r w i ' \ \"ini- i i . 11l o ' 2 0 . 2 s tu U i i n d IS l'> S'l, ' m i »"t ••v«-'l'.v ~i| >•'*" ' "n u t s i ' /r '
F L A S H :Boy»' Regular- s|
Wash Suit
'Fruit-of-the-Loom' Fabric
SLIPS
Beautifully tailored slips of thisfamous fabric — just as adver-tised in Good Housekeeping.
Extra Size* 69c
Sale! ShadowproofTaffeta
SLIPS59
Soft, clinging luxurious slips, ata luxuriously low price. Inwliite, flesh and tearose. Gethere early for this superb valueAlio, Broadcloth Slip* O Q ceach *1*7
Y o u ' l l S l e e p Be tier in'
B a t i s t e
GOWNS59
Y o u ' l l slec]) tn •••
t h e y ' r e roomy. i> .
a n d b e c a u s e tin \ •
w e i g h t ! Buy ."i m <'• r
OTHER GREAT
SCHINDEL SAVINGS!
Women1! andMitiet' AnltletiWomen'i
Sport Blouiei
Womtn'iBeach Shorti
Women'iBeach Papamat
Great Hosiery SaltB Full Faslil«ned Silk
IIosu (lrr.), First Quality Pure - I.
Hosea Puru Silk Knee I.em;'
lli>;e
Y»l II C'HOICKAT OSl.V
l i n y In
A.V AMAZING SAI.K
OF GIRLS
SUCKS & >SHORTS $
A triiinemliiua varietyUna would usuallysell for lots moretliiui II. Hurry down .tin ymir L'lioidfc!
NIGHTS AT 8:30 Matinees Wed. & Sat.Col. Jim EAew, noted Tea** Rancher will direct the
arena evenU which will ha »trictfy profewionalcontest*
JOSEPHANDRASCIK562 ST. GEORGE AVE
Tel. Woodbridge 8-1210
SmallROASTING or FRYING
CHICKENSLB. AVERAGE
FRESH KILLED
FOWLFOR FRICASSEE
LONG ISLAND
DUCKS23c Ib.
SMOKED CAL
HAMS
SWIFT'S PREMIUM
Ovenized HAMS
RUMPS of VEAL
And Don't Mis* Up On These
BLUE DENIM DUNGAREES 89cA Special Group of New Full Cut
SHIRTS and SHORTS each 19cGREAT SALE FOR GIRLS!
van ••i)iii.:ss-vi>i> AND KOH IM.AVTIMK
Organdy DRESSESand SUNBACKS
of each.Hfinl IICT out for aliiiiillu' siHitan In the(iunl)ack, then dress)ior up in a stunningorsandy! Coma early!Sizes 7 to 14. 69
SuperShoeDept.
THRIFT BASEMENT Trenviulou!Salt of
Domestics
Women's Arch - Sport - Dress
SHOESj.09
2 Pair $2.00
WhitestGrey* J»BluesBlack*Tana
IN THIf,
GIRLS'SUNSUITS
A variety of pumps,
straps and ties in high
and low heels. Broken
sizes in this lot but a
shoe for every foot.
Women's Leather Sole
StrapsSize* 1 tu s.
SANDALS 7 9 'ami Oxfords in white and colors. • • ^ ^
Hollywood Awnings
69cl l e t l ) d r i 1 1m m i i k t e w i t I:.•nnl an.I ilv-Iur,-H. Kas> h*hantf ti r * v uHII.I ului^. in ' r
nil- .-«. Ail «l/i-.
Cannon TurkisliP « . t e l i h . d . 1 » n d v.1.•••-- •••••'><*
oraj bonl*r. SUe 1B> ' I ( | JRe, l»c ».lue. E.ch l U l '
F«ll Size Sh-^ijStock in i thii print : ' CCcaknp »n<l fMnfilow. '<-••
SALE! SURt-FlTCHAIR
COVERS
Washable, sunfast Inpretty halter topsand other moduls.filzea 7 tu 14.
Viiit Our F»moui
Infants' Wear DepartmentA- wonderful assortment ofeverything mothers and expect-ant mothers could possibly need.Get the layette at Schindel's!Prices are amazingly low!
GIRLS' POLO SHIRTSSIZES 7 TO 16
Mesh, diagonal
materials - maize,
blue and white.
SALE! CHILDREN'S NEW
PLAY SANDALSAT A SMASHING LOW PRICE
49'
S t u r d y ElkSa n d a 1 i inwftite, tan orbrown. Sizes 79
Boys' and Girls'
SNEAKERSBLACK
BROWN
WHITESIZES TO BIG 6
49Headquarters for Boys!
VALUES LIKE THESETELL YOU WHY!
MEN'S NEW
I WHITE OXFORDS
• WASH SHORTS
A iiniiK-luu.1 value! ViU-dyiiil! Well made
! • POLO SHIRTS
39c
All rulyrsi. All Hoys' sizes. Tremendous
• WASH KNICKERSStripes. HIzeK 8 toAll w
• BOYS' SLACKSJuat lii time tor the week-nod!
&i\ All blues , - .
44cissorl-
59c79c
Hundreds of Other Great Volnli for Boyson Sale at Sehiniel'il Rwhl
1.98 SIZES6 TO
11
BASEMENT
a Brawn,Black »ndCombination!
V :.!)PILLOW
Full .im«. B4««<SI>«1. <i"r 1 0
>bl*. R»g. \1* E» c l '
DISH TOW! ISf«rt linen. All «>lorrJ I r
den. ReC. 10c »4ue
JU 111* v i*M - v^*' JLUStroo| quJity 400 yJ> K1
on h»nd »t tW» pri« >"36 in. JWiuhable CrettJJ
AH i w n n w * * " 1 1 ! " illFull pi««» R«t- l S c : v'
36 in. Dre»» Pi'^J,
.nd *DimUu"' With.'1 \ j JAll n«* tprinf pattern
AWNING MA 11Heavy 8 oi. duck. R-'1'proof, fiunfaat. Ht-'K- j t
CURTAIN SALE!M .•
39'
UII sl HIFM1 STORES
97-105 SMITH STREET PERTH
ANNUAL HOME BUILDERS' AND MODERNIZATION EDITION
Y< >!,. XVIII. No. 14 WOODBRIDGE, N. J~ FRIDAY, JUNK B, SKCONI) SECTION
"The RichestThe Man Wh
*,
A CROSS the doorsill of the home owner's castle you'll find theriches and wealth of love and respect a wife and children pro-
vide. Here also you'll find the joyous experiences of the home owner— the thrill of seeing his wife content in the peace and security ofher own home - - - or the joy of healthy, happy children content witha room of their own and a place to play the contentment thatcomes to him in the thought that he has earned their love and respect.
IjERHAPS uncertainty and declining prices have kept you from1 enjoying this great adventure - - -if so, invest now, for real estateprices, forced far below their actual value, are fast returning toA d t liue WOrtlu and building materials though stift reasonablypriced, are due for a rise.
THE GOVERNMENT and lending institutions are offering longterm loans at low interest that you can pay like rent. Decide
today to embark on an adventure in contentment — look throughthe offerings in this edition, and resolve to build or buy now.
,
wooPBMnat
Sttts^n'sModelHoines,ApprovedByFHA,Stirring Successj i&jnjljonas
' " ~77IT AH . m l hi* own
and IIHIM'
wait
Fifty-one weeks ago, build-ing in WoodbridRC Townshipwas quite as stagnant as ithad been for the last fwe
In -Colon!*, Mayinoka ¥ •
C? HHi Road. T•ceived the approval ^
Administration
.luiic 15, was regarded with .tically complete" apathy. No onewas building houses so why ahouldPattison?
June 15 of 1936, the first anni-versary of that beginning in Co-lonia, still is ten days away. AndMaynicke M. Fattison has complet-ed ten thoroughly contemporary,completely-equipped and landscap-ed modern homes, is workingjm aneleventh, ha* orders for six moreto be started as soon as possible—and has been beseiged with offersto plan ftnd direct other real estatedevelopments throughout t h eState.
That is amazing, particularlysince Pattison built only two of thehouses without waiting for a buyerto sign a contract. In one of thosetwo he is living. It is the original•model home'—visited by 20,000home-hungry Americans in ninemonths—and is the basic and onlyleal sates argument the deyejqperhas offered his potential clients.The other hous"e was sold six weeksbefore It was completed!A CONTRACTEVERY 3 WEEKS 1
How was all this accomplished?It is not an easy question. Therehas been no advertising—save fora few modest direction boardserected on near-by highways. Nodisplay advertising in newspapers.No salesmen. No solicitors. Yetmen and women yearning for mod-
-*c---~*-i- J""ii>«aH Hpnntiful-
.streiim to (.'olonia. And, on nn av-erage of butter than once everythree weeks, one of them signs n••ontracl!
That buyer dojis not buy a stockhimHi>, • Within the limits of thewhole development's design, hespeeiHes what he wants and wherehe wants it.'He chooses the plan,the materially the fixtures, the me-chanical equipment. The optionspresented him, along with the beatavailable technical 'and artistic ad-vioL\ are immediately indicated bythe price swing—which is fivethousand dollars. Every, salientfeature of t"he Calonla modelhomes basic pla*h was preserved inii beautifully constructed $ ft,900house completed last week. To du-plicate Mr. Pattison's own homewould cost $8,900. Bungalows havea minimum price of $&,B0O; themost expensive home yet con-structed is valuer) at $10^500.
Under the one-payment FederalMousing Administration '-guaran-teed mortgage which finances the
government's credit and hi* ownmoney means anything.
Well, those are the mechanic* ofthe plan. What i» the situation to-;day? First remember the 20,000vim torn attracted in nine months—attracted strictly because ^ theyWere interested in modern homesa in! because a friend somrw"hiid heard about the Work in ~_Ionia. Theatre people call it "wordof mouth" advertising and it'* thebest there is. Its value inerca*«sbecause it is an unsolicited rewardof pur& merit..
Now remember the «rfe
So much more that ifarc impatient an<l cannot
for the crew to reach theiron schedule, Pattison will be
forced in the future to sublet con-struction of those houses to other
working, of course, underhi« rtgu! Bupervirion.LAND ACQUIREDFOR 760 PLOTS
Enough land has been acquiredalong the slope between the AlbeeEstate and Col on i a Brook to pro-vtttc room lor 760 ' l4tuUcaped
Now remember th ythree we«ks. That avert** is atep-ping up. Stepping up so qoicklythat Pattison has about decided ttiftcan "hot efficiently increase his pres-ent construction crew of 40 men-—all specialist*.
Work aplenty to keep those 4"travelling at top spevd is assured
V i d e i irvm *»*. . « - - _ .
plots. Tvro acres have been boughtand deeded to the couhty to fit in-to the county parkway schemewhich will be developed along theBrook. Part of the two acres willhe used in recreating the ancientmill pond destroyed a hundredyears ago.
The development iUclf lookslike a park. Tije effect of spaciousprivacy the builders have achievedis remarkable. And it is based up-on two simple device!*—-eliminalion of space-wasting out-buildingsthrough the use of built-in garagesand blending" of two driveWaya in-to double approaches serving two
houses. That easy sti-nh^. ,,the tfreen fjrass with ^niv..|only half as often nn wonliiwiVo be necessary.
Which brings us to ih,.mental appeal of ratti-.^m'-; \.they are intelligent. KYMVdetail about them has Lthought . No thing in the h,.there because somethingusually is par t of a house. Ahas been restudied with t|-,,view of creat ing thea m o u n t of-l iving corrsmallest possible totalSPACE SAVINGIS ENORMOUS
The houses dre m o d i m tat lnn, design, construct j(,i!tftil. As jmodern , indecfl.yea r ' s fiutomobite. tin t}.e a r s automobile,small? They1™- n o t K c r ^inch of those houses hasigned as a planned p;ni -ern family'n modern lifeins: in space 15 cmirmmis.ing in money is translatedartistically effective, ccmremarkable mechanical ;incorporated in the hou-
For many visitors \\}\<>{Continued on
le cost as a d p ys the balance as rent, staggeredr a period running to twentyrs. That single monthly pay-nt includes everything—includ-
f i c e mortgage
teeu UIUI^DKI; n,,,^ —
development in Colonia, any pro-,spective-buyer knows exactly nowelaborate his choice can be. He Imust have twenty per c«nt of thewhole cost as a down payment. Hepays the balance as rent, staggeredOVer ~ -:~"1 "imninff in t.WflntV
yearst n e n t n n . i u u i . o ^..—. r f o
es taxes, fire insurance, mortgageinsunmceas well as service charg-es, interest and amortization. Un-der the plan, a loan of 11,000 canbe paid* off tB^ff years irt approxi*mately $9.80 a month. For a 15-year term, the payment is about$11.10 a month.MORTGAGESARE IN DEMAND
The Pattison development is
Installed by COMPETENT
heating ENGINEERSThe
currently rated in Class A, best ofthe four groupings developed bythe FHA. The mortgages them-selves have been resold at 102 andthey are very much in demand. Ifthe mortgage is defaulted, the
IUI-j holder is given 3H% governmentKve-Mjontls se-hV-eannot lose while the
"The Old Reliable"
Carteret BuildingLoan Association
The Institution That Built Hundreds ofHomes in Carteret
One of the Oldest and Soundest InMiddlesex County
The Fifty-third Series Opened June 1
Office Open Every Day in the Year Except
Sundays and Holidays.
At 543 Roosevelt Ave., Carteret, N. J.
Edward J. Heil, PresidentJoseph A. Hermann, vice-president
S. C. Dalrymple, treasurer
"Silent"LORCO"General Electric Equipped"
OIL BURNER
Completely Installed With Tankand Minneapolis Honeywell
Controls
• NO DOWN PAYMENT• 3 YEARS TO PAY• ONLY $1.70 WEEKLY
LORRAINE OIL BURNER CO.METDCHEM, N. J.
Metndiai 6-0093
MiilThi*Coupon Today
WBXXi HEATING SUBVXY COUPONobligation pleaM aend your Heating * n Kk. £ur FftEE B i W H^Ung Survey,b wners huadreda of dollara.
TTSik. £ur FftEE B i W H Unged many born* owners huadreda of dollara.
"S
Cltjr No. Room* In H o u *
ABRIDGE INDEPENDENTFRIDAY, JUNE 5, IGfifi PAGE THRBR
ModelTownshipMayor'sHope__ .. . « M * /twin /iwiurmv I . — — — _ ^ ^ADVANTAGES CITED,
DTURE SKETCHEDw Localities In State CanOffer Equal, Says
Mayor GreinerROUD OF^PROGRESS- irnonlinury advantages
, t o il, by Woodbridgen l , ip to prospective
., i.wnor.s wore cited to-i.. Mayor August F. Greiner
• :11 citu'fit prepared expressly:;,> Hotter Homes' supplement.,. Woodbridge Independent..•iiin^ that few localities in.:.iir offer eqdal attractions,
,l,iyin' reviewed the broad prolin.lcriakpn by the local gov-
, u\ wilhin the past two andjf years to place the com-, in the forefront of projrres-i,inni|)iil centers. He viewedi tifiunlc pride the advance-
thul has been made, declar-• ;.it the whole scheme of ac-
hiis heen inspired by tho,,:' building a model town.
A , realized from the very out-;iiil Mtiyor Greiner. "that to
\\ Ibridife Township apace•>.,• in'st conimunity aevelop--h;it first of alt we must es-i. u stable lax rate. We knew. attract new resident!, more
new improvemens that weM ;il»lo to tell the newcomers
W
OutUnes Efforts Perth Amboy National BankWorksUnder FHAProgramFrank Van Syckle Invites All
Prospective Builders ToDiscuss Problems
Mayor A. F. Greiner
alk
The l'orth Amboy NationnlHank invites property owners to
over plans for repairs,- mod-i, refinancing or' the
K (if a new home with theirlepartment head who has chargeH this loaning service.
Thn bank works under tht-KHA. jiliin which provides 20year loatiH nn nn easy monthly pay-ment plan. Officials of the bankpoint out thst tho plan makes homeownership much enaier thnn in thepast.
Frank Van Syckle, president ofthe bank,* is desirous thnt thebank he of aid to any prospectivehome owner ih the territory andinvites nil to avail themselves ofthe facilities afforded by thePerth Amboy .National.
y must havB"tT> pay' i h r essential, municipal
Survey It Made. then, was the first phase
program. Woodbridgeil, like HO many otfieTmU-;i in New Jersey, had,iirhlly insa'ne during theiii---. Improvements of littlenuiiiHMH-y were purchased
(insideration whatsoeverility of the property-own-
iv. Money was spent withi!>andon without a thought
WAR ON CROSSINGSFOUGHT FOR TOWNSuccess Crowning the Long
Battle By MayorMcElroy Sure
EDISON HELPS EFFORT« - • . _ - - » •-,
Ranking amonj? the mostimportant of local civic proj-ects during the last fewmonths- is the campaign bythe Greiner administration forelimination of ail ^rade-crosiwithin the Township.
Success has crowned the longmonths of efforts, the Court of Er-rors and Appeals only a short Whileago having upheld a decision of& StaU B i l l j b l i U l iy p T y
; . t koning must be made.• -it I-* fluctuated from yeareven with the commonest
..:••- employed to apparent-• within reason.
in 1934, a newly-chosen:;• ('iimmittee Rurveycd the;>'> I'mcnl history. It was-hat extraordinary steps*•. a ken if the future of the:y was to be secured. Ex-i ilitics must be employed• \tiomc condition*.
• •ihridtrt' Township laid; i!uy of retrenchment and' il rehabilitation that has'I rhut will be, adhered toIt is the Ohly way that our
• in know, with any degree'.-•inty, what settlement here
tht'in. A refinancing pro-• A under way. was institut-
-liifc the debt service costs' distribute the municipal
'L"iis over a longer period.viition of the town on a
u! curry basis, liquidation!>'1it, strict economy in every
•fa! department means low-in the years to come. Such
n ms as are made in the nextai - ahi'nd can and should hv!:id. We have started to
1; "in thi» bottom and are con-Miat the main structure is
Oth*r fCr^int'r then went on to-inrf prospective home-
in Woodbridge could beassured that they could:•*• at equal or less cost-iinilarly situated locali-
Woodbridge would nowvtitice outsiders through
c <>f its natural advan-
Commissioners decreeing their im-mediate removal. The only possiblefurther delay that can hold up thework will be nn appeal hy the rail-roads to Ihe Supreme Court of theUnited Slate*.
Seeing in the elimination a aaf-er, more attractive home centerMnyor August V. (ireiner and hisassociates immediately upon theirinduction into office began the campuign which has met with favor before the Utility Commissioner?and every-roiirt-in the State. Hindered by lack of funds with whichto employ technical and legal apecialists, ihc tight, was proseeutet:hugely by Township Counsel LeonK." McKimy. Single-handed, almust, hi- presented the municipalityV case after an original flourish by the county's Board of Chost-il Freeholders fizzled.
Aik Quick AidKven though ultimate success
even before the United States Supre.ine Cnur.t is virtually certain,Mayor (ireiner and Mr. McElroyto stavt- off further delay have ac-tively participated in presenting apetition to the- Federal governmentfor financial assistance for therailroad so that the. legal fightcould be abandoned.
In this phase of the work, theyenlisted also the aid of CharlesEdison, son of the famous inventorand a close • personal friend ofPresident Roosevelt. The-latter *Bhelp l.s believed secured, and withit, the cros-Hings1 doom.
"It's all for the development ofWoodbridge," said the mayor.
INSURE with
Stern and Dragoset
Township "Institution"
Christensen Bldg. Woodbridge 8-0150
• • - - v ••• - - - - •
"Some ink, a piece of paper and a great many
words do not necessarily mean much. The ability to
pay, the fine spirit of settlement of losses and the meet-
ing of your needs are the real essentials back of our
insurance policies."
Invest in
BETTER LIVING
are served by excellent•i tai-ilitifia, bua routes .cross:nii;iries in every conceiv-
I ion.. Our local merchantsvues »f every description.
* < tiicity, water and sanita-• available. Our schools are
: :unon(f the highest in the) 1 our police and fire de-
nts have notable fecords of• iiig the safety and security
i
. I ' ) '
view with pride these coro-u--si'tH," Mr, Greiner con-"We invite families who
•king an ideud location, at• :n cost, to jjiin us and par-
with us in building aTownship. Every member
uliicuil family will be moreid to offer such co-opera-lif can1 to anyone seekinginformation regarding the
NATIONAL BANK EAGERTO LEND FOR BUILDINGNew Brunswick Bank Was
Founded In 1808;Vses FHA Plan
The National Hank of New Jer-sey, at New Brunswick, which wasestablished in IMiK is inviting loanapplications froit home ownerswho wish funds to improve or re-pair their property.
The hank-.also ha^ accommoda-tions for the individual who wished*to finance a new home. This insti-tution is very murh interested inthe_ Federal Housing AdminiBtra-tfcm program and has aid^d manyproperly owners in this, and atherauctions uf the county, with fundstfc improve and modernise theirhomes through tshe Housing Act.
m MODERN PLUMBINGAdd to the comfort of your home by installing
"Standard" Plumbing Fixtures for both kitchen andbathroom. Come in and see our displays. Low pricesand easy terms through F.H.A. financing.
Plan Your RemodelingAround A KELLY BURNER
Right now while you're fixing up your home, orbuilding a new one, is the time to install a new effi-cient KELLY BURNER. We offer complete sizes,types and prices. Don't delay—"Let Kelly Do It ThisSummer."
KELLY PLUMBING & HEATINGSUPPLY CO.
P. A. 4-1960
77 SMITH ST. PERTH AMBOY
YOUARECORDIALLY
INVITEDTOINSPECTTHE
PROGRESSINDEVELOPMENTDESIGNCONSTRUCTIATTAINED
lYEARIN THE
DEVELOP MEN
PAGE FOUR FRIDAY, .TUNER, 19.tr>
Bonus Boom Is Expected By Realtors
NRST MORTGAGELOANS AVAILABLE
VETERANS WARNEDOF THREE DANGERSWar Payments, Exemptions
Place Veterans InPreferred Class
No doubt many World War vet-erans will invest their bonusmortey, due to be paid now withintyo weeks, in a new home, apply-ing this cash as a down payment.
It is expected that some willbuy bacins in the mountains orcottages at the seashore, and evenpart of it will go into the purchaseof farms. Still othern are expectedto invest thin money in the* repair-ing and betterment of the homesthey already own. Another groupwill make UHC of their bonus to re-duce mortgage indebtedness. Real«state interests expect consider-able activity this Summer as a re-sult of the bonus payment.
('adman H. Frederick, of NewYork, andrpresident of J-he Suf-folk County Federal Savings andLoan Assn., feels that the veteranwho selects a sound real estate in-vestment ior his bonus money isfollowing a wine course.
Nevertheless, Mr. Frederickwarns of the many pitfalls whichmay overcome the well-meaning,but unadvised, man who suddenlyfinds himself with hundreds of dol-lars and a glib salesman at his el-bow.
He gives three rules for the realestate investor, whether" he b£ a"veteran or not. These are:—
1. Don't buy property IN TAX-URN SALTS unless there is con-clusive proof of title validity.
2. "Use excessive care" in thechoice of a home or hind; considerits location, surroundings &c, andNEGOTIATE its purchase ONLYTHROUGH A LICENSED real es-tate BROKER.
3. In making a real estate in-vestment CONSULT YOUR FAM-ILY ATTORNEY, just as youwould consult your family doctorin the event of sickness,
Mr. Frederick gives several prac-tical examples of how a veterancan wisely invest his bonus moneyin real estate,
"The exemption of such invest-ments from all taxation imposedby State, city, county or villageplaces the bonus recipient in an en-viable position enjoyed by no otherreal estate investor," explains Mr.Frederick. "The extent of the ex-emption is measured by theamount of bonus money placed inthe investment. For instance, if aveteran put $1,000 of his moneyfrom the government in a proper-ty assessed at $5,000 he would betaxed on only $4,000, and thatwould be true if the property wereimproved or unimpproved or if theveteran purchased a vacant plotand built a home thereon.
"The only levy for which hewould ever be liable would he thecustomary federal income tax onany profit that he mipht derivefrom the subsequent sale of theproperty.
"But the advantages are evenmore striking in the case of a vet-eran who owns his own home anddecides to reduce his mortgage andthus increase his equity," says Mr.Fredericks. "Let us say that h*»owns a home for which he paid$8,000, and on wh^ch there is amortgage of $4,500. He has hisfull allotment of- $1,500 in bonusbonds coming to him, having bor-rowed no money ahead on his ad-justed certificate. He notifies the1
mortgagee that he wil lapply theentire $1,500 to the reduction ofthe mortgage, and he also notifieshis local tax officials that he is in-creasing his equity by the samemethod.
"His property is assessed at $5,-GQQ_£ur iaxiVtlon purposes. His taxrate is 2 per cent, or $2 per $ IWof assessed valuation. At that ttttehe will pay $70 per year taxes, hutto this saving of $30 must be add-ed the reduction of his interest onthe mortgage, which will be $90 ifthe rate ia 6 per cent, bringing histotal saving to $120 per year. Thatis equivalent to a return of 8 percent on his $1,500.
"Where else could the veteranget such a return on his money?Savings banks are paying only 2per cent on deposits. The averageyield on gilt edge bonds is slightlyunder 3 per cent.
"Another factor which the bonusinvestor must consider is the in-creasing importance of real estateequities in a depreciatingg moneymarket. Read estate values go upMB the value of the dollar goesdown," Mr. Frederick concluded.
FINANCING PLANS ARE ASIMPORTANT AS
ARCHITECTURAL PLANSWhen buying a home or refinancing an existing mortgage
CONSULT
MODERN PLAN5 TO 2O YEAR PLAN
The monthly installment, including interest at 6%, necessary to repay a $1,000 loan (orcertain periods, is as follows:
5 years—$19.34 per month6 years— 16.58 per month7 years— 14.61 per month8 years— 13.15 per month9 years— 12:01 per month
10 years— 11.11 per month11 years— 10.37 per month
13 years—$925 per month14 years— 8.82 per month15 years— 8.44 per month16 years— 8.12 per month17 years— 7.84 per month18 years— 7.59 per month19 years— 7.37 per month20 years— 7.17 per month12 years— 9.76 per month
You can easily figure the monthly payment of any size loan and for any particularterm of years; as for example, to secure the monthly payment required for a $5,000 loanfor fifteen years, take the payment of $8.44 for fifteen years and multiply by 5, whichgives you the figure of $42.20.
We are in a position to supply FHA INSURED Mortgage Loans in addition to ourDirect Reduction Mortgage Loans. With every passing month you actually own more ofyour home.
Applications And Inquiries Are Invited.
Modern Building and LoanAssociation
339 STATE ST. PERTH AM BOY, N. J.Telephone 4-2770
. INDEPENDENTFRIDAY, JUNK 5, 1936 PAGEFTVB
MODERN KITCHENH N T R E J F HOME0 , s Up-lVljatei Work-
hop Fascinating Place,Says Rosen
Modern Floor Cohering GivesYouA Kitchen Like This
Linoleum-CarpetOutlet Store)
v ,„,.'kitchen, formerly the( t|.," ,,f the home, is steal-l,o\v Kitchen furnishings,
H.rngeratnrs, electrical ap-utensiK glassware, hnon,
• illM| lighting fixtures, ar«.'...Iliirlit. H'« really logical,!| vnicc the kitchen is the
!'„', ,'»f the home and a hoiise-i|1|1(| of hor
intcr-..„ new ways to <
l,nW to nave work, andmake the kitchen an en-,,);,(*,. td spend meal-ge
urn 1 . , • .,,tt(>,-ts and home economics•Ii:ivc arntAgert our kitchens• v that saves steps and time.,i\c tntight uR.to group on
,),. of the kitchen all of the, n! used in preparing a.i,! on the other side the, Ht nseil in HeattinR: up af-
,,i,.;il. All theae improve-|Mlp lo save our feet and
and shoe leather (and ouri,..positions) as well as timen r . V , , , * ' •
,. n|l of the rooms of the]M, floor i« s» importanti well to start with that
ilic room in planning a• \,. sohetne. The cheerful
.-iviiilahle in present-day:•,-, arc in step with the
, f,,r color in the kitchen.it, UnoJtmm in e»eapti<>nul-•"..i-talile underfoot. Former-. \ a preat deal of time, and
rruhhmir and'Hcourinp, toi iiclirn immaculate. Today,•,, modern materials auch aa.. .mil washable wall cover-; M of house work are »av-
ilie fiict that it ia so easy•hi' kitchen npotleu.i tilings wipe rifcht up. If• i waxed, a daily Huntingiiiiijr with the kitchen dustkicp it in beautiful condi-
,n is really no reason, ex-, -lilt fa«hione4- habit, for
flu floor once or twice a
Kitchens have become so bright and cheerful that they are a favorite »pot forevery member of the family. Linoleum does away with lots of scrubbing andscouring.
BECOMEYOUROWNJNDLO
BUCK FINDS BOOMDUE IN SOUTH RIVERProperty Is Moving Faster
Than For 5 Years,He Asserts
For Rubber*• across the hack of the. t just above the base, convenient place for theMl tialoshcM that usually: the floor. The shelf
;.ij.*> to the wall and he.in inch or an inch and ai (lie wall .HO that dirtran drop through to the• re it ran be rlcarrtht u p
"There is more selling going onnow in the real estate field in SouthRiver," declared .lames Black, old-est realestnte broker in the hor-uugh, "than for any period withinthe last five years."
Mr. Black stated recently thatalthough relatively little buildini;wii.s in progress that houses wereHelling, that he had Hold more thana dozen within the past f<*w monthsand that other real entitle men intown had sold a similar number.
"Young people," said Mr. Black,"are bejfinninjr to pull out of thedepression and they are leadingthe older resident* in forgingahead in land investments."
Shall We Buy or Build?
(Continued on pane tnt~)
g«t all of my lumbeVfrom Miller'* becamethen t know it'* the finestquality at the• unable price.
ALL KINDS OF
LumberMill Work-Screens
Combination Screen Doors
PROMPT DELIVERIES
A. J . MILLER ESTATEPERSH1NG AVENUE CARTERET, N. J.
CONSULT-
JACOBSON& GOLDF ARB
FOR THE
\ RIGHTANSWER
We believe our•} itaff of Real E»-
i i I e ip«£iMi*Uare able to adviseyou properly onthis and similarquestions regard*ing the sale andbuilding of prop-erty.
Tel. Carteret 8-0412.
SPLENDID W00DBR1DGEPROPERTY FOR SALE
BEING AGENTS FOR VARIOUS FINANCIAL INSTI-TUTIONS WE HAVE AVAILABLE CHOICE WOOD-BRIDGE PROPERTY THAT MAY BE PURCHASEDAT REASONABLE PRICES ON EASY TERMS. SEEOUR LISTINGS BEFORE BUYING.
Consult US RegardingF. H. A. Financing
Consult this company for adviceon Federal Housing Authorityfinancing. Take advantage ofthe many opportunities offeredtoday to have a home of your
own.
PAYTHERENTTO
THISIS DONESUCCESSFULLYIN THE
Ja cobson & Goldf arbRealtors — Property Management
265 Madison Avenue . Perth Amboy
i f LIN I
DEVELOPMEN
PA UK SIX
Architect "Brings Basement Out Of Cellar"Through Modern Oil Heating, Says Bienfang
By G. I. BIENFANG(President, Stephen. Sale* Co.)The architect of today is en-
lit.lefi to two-fold credit for liter-ally "bringing Ihc basement out ofthe cellar" and thus makingpeople realize that homes can beheated and air-conditioned mostacceptably by nil heat. In laying:out plans for a home, conscientiousarchitects try to (rive each foot ofspace a definite usefulness. Thecoat of the basement frequentlyamount** to approximately one-third the construction cost of the,entire dwelling and so architect*continued to include, in basementplans, bigger and better recreationor play rooms for young and old.
Thin created n 'Traffic Trend tothe Basement" and necessitateddressing up the surroundings be-low Mftirn, Manufacturers of base-ment, service equipment weTequick to fircopt the responsibilityand opportunity put' upon' themby these progressive architects.
Among the leaders in this move-ment t« cortibine smart modern ap-pearance with mechanical efficien-cy was the Cleveland Steel Prod-ucts Corporation who pioneered inthe development and perfection ofoil burners nnd air conditioning'furnaces for home installation.
Their line of oil burning equip-ment popularized under the name"TOIUDliKKT" is sold in this areaby the Woodbridtfe Lumber Com-pany in association with the Ste-phens Sales Corporation of Cran-ford.
6 Function*The functions of the TORID-
HEBT air conditioning furnace,during the. heating season are: 1.To maintain room temperatureaautomatically, at any desired level.2. To maintain any desired relativehumidity throughout tho home. 3.To prevent still or stagnant air inone room anddraftB ift another. 4.To thoroughly cleanse the air. Dur-ing the Rummer months" its func-tions are: 1. To accomplish effec-tive cooling by adequate circula-tion of relatively cool nifrht airthroughout the home, and air mo-tion within the home during theday. 2. To cleanse the air, in thehomex of dust and (Terms and par-ticularly to remove pollen whichfrequently is the cause of hayfever.
The trend in building today isdefinitely to smaller homes. Andthese new homes are air condition-ed with oil-burmntf heating1 equip-ment so they will retain, their re-Rflle and renting value through thenejet dexade.
FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1936
is included at the rear of manyhouses, thus giving additional pri-VB Owners of homes with largeporches that are used infrequentlymay find it effective to reditfettre-size of the porch and utilize thespace gained thereby aa a diningnook, study, ot downstairs bath.Consultation with an architect orqualified contractor will be advis-able under such circumstances.Funds with which to finance porch-converaion projects are obtainableat private financial institutions op-erating under the Federal HousingAdministration's ModernizationCredit Plan.
WOODBRIDGE INDEPENDENT
Clarktown Houses, In $5,990 Class, Cm Be PurchasedFor $46 Monthly Payment On A Guaranteed Mortgage
'CJarktown Homes' now underconstruction in Clark Township, tobe sold for $5,9!>0, may be paidfor at a monthly FHA payment of$4fi, promoters announce. The de-velopment is heing handled byBauer-Brooks CT., of 137 IrvingStreet, Rahwny. The one-paymentFHA plan of amortizing the debtcontracted by the purchaser in-cludes all charges, including taxesand insurance.
The houses now being built Jn,on landscaped plots fio by ' j v | ,feet. They are constructed with ^-spacious room's, mellntlon install ,tion, tile bath and two-car garat
Use of modern oil-heat radiati.!,!permits creating a game and rc<reation room out of the norn, .cellar. There is also a huhu ,laundry room and adesigned kitchen.
FHA EXPERTS PLAN MINIMUM HOUSE,MERGE KITCHEN, DININC-LIVING ROOMS
In the Federal Housing Admin-istration's Technical Bulletin No.4» onJVinWplss of Planning1,Small,Homes, House A represents aboutthe minimum in accommodationsconsistent with decent living.
In paring the house down to aminimum* £he relative importanceof the various functions of IMiigwere carefully weighed and listedin the order of their importance.
I t was decided that the most es-sential were the privacy and ade-quacy of sleeping accommodations.Therefore, the bedrooms weregiven first consideration. Theywere designed for the needs oftheir occupants for erass-teiiftihs-tion and closet room. The bath-room was so located that access toit from the bedrooms was throughthe small bedroom hall withoutpassing through any other room.
It was decided that the functionsof the living room, dining room,and kitchen could be combinedinto one space without violatingthe essentials of decent living.Tiuirefore^janii_CGmiia;ciitiveiy largeroom was designed for those pur-poses. Tt is not the intention of theFederal Housing Administration toadvocate (his combination as de-
sirable, but in seeking the lowestcost it is considered permissible.
The plan is so laid out that, ifdesired*. fTpartitidrt cfJulfl'be bailtcutting this space in two, with theliving room on the right and thecombined kitchen and dining areaon the left.
Havtnpr decided upon the accom-modations necessary, structuraleconomies were studied. The plainrectangular plan, with intermedi-ate partitions so placed as to allowstandard lengths of lumber to beused with a minimum of . extraframing reduces waste to a mini-mum... A.va,rjet£ pf exterior treatmentsare possible oy the ifse of differ-ent materials and by changing thedirection of the ridge on the "roof,which may run either from side tofide or from front to rear.
Enclose PorchesBy enclosing front or side
porches property owners automa-tically provide another room to theRome. Tn'tKeT mbfTern trend theold-fashioned "front-porch" is giv-ing away to the enclosed type. Innew construction the porch, if any,
CHARLES A. CONRADPLUMBING AND HEATING
CONTRACTORPlumbers' Supplies
Repairs
Replacements forPlumbing or Heating
Systems
All the LatestAppliances
Let Us Give Youa Figure
STORE AND SHOP537 Roosevelt Ave.,
Carteret, N. J.Tel. Carteret 8-0317
FLINTKOTERe-roofing
And Brick SidingHardwood Floors
Sun PorchInsulation
ArtileGarages'""
In Fact Anything YouWant That*Will MakeYour Home a More Com-fortable Place in Whichto Live.
REPAIRSREMODELING
MODERNIZINGavailable through us undernew plan
% If lack of a convenient source for a loan..has prevented you from repairing or re-modeling jour house, now you can goahead. We can arrange a loan for you inamounts of $100 to $2000, under thereasonable credit requirements of the •'N. H. A.
M»w is tbe.tlmc to %c^,Labor and ma-terials are reasonable and the generousprivileges of the Finance Plan provide
1. Very moderate rate*2. Repayment of loan in monthly
installmentsComplete information on the whole
operation—from estimate to paid-fcr job—may be had at our office.
NOW NOTHING NEED HOLD YOU BACK
AS YOU WOULDA CAR
COMPLETE SERVICEOr. Any Kind of ModernFzuig. No Jol) Too Small or
too Large—No Charge (or Estimates, Planning,
Supervision, Etc. SEND THE COUPON NOW.
GENTLEMEN.: Please send me complete infor-mation about the items checked.
A RADIO
FURNITURE
Pay A Little Each Month% You can buy nearly anythingon installments now, even a re-modeling job on your house. Anew room, a garage, a porch,remodeled attic—they all makefor more comfort and conve-nience. Under our simple Fi-nance Plan you can enjoythem now—pay for them
, monthly in easy install-ments^
BUILT-INConveniences
[ ] Breakfast Nook.[ ] Broom closet[ ] Cedar closet['] China closet[] Ironing Board[ ] Medicine cabinet[] Mirror doors
REPAIRS. REMODELING ORADDITIONS
[] Attic [ ] Porte-cuch.-iv[] Basement [ ] R o o f
[1 Garage t ] R o O m a
[ ] Hardwood " Shinglm* ,..l,walls
floors __ „,r , „ 4 [ ] Sleeping[1 Pantry p o r c h
[] Partitions [} g u n p ( m . h
FOR E V E R Y B U I L D I N GS E R V I C E I N C L U D I N G
LOAN S
Name
Address
Telephone
WOODBRIDGELUMBER COMPANY
TEL. WOod. 8-0125
U'OOI)RKII>GE INDEPENDENT
CHOICE PROPERTIESON GOLDFARB'S LISTJacobson Firm Now Rated
Among Largest InBay District
FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1936
Choice homes throughoutI:;ii-1• afi Hfiy district but particu-in ly in Woodbridge Township are:tllll',nK the current listings of Ja-, uhson nnd Goidfarb, Madison\ venue, Perth Amboy, realtors
w|1(, art- among the largest opera-tors in this territory.
l,oiig experience in every de-,,;,,-tmcivt of the work of the mod-,.,-n real estate service agency has, uned the firm an enviable repu-. 't|1(,n not only among conserva-.,,•,. financial institutions but also|tM,,ntr home-seekers desiring to
Miit attractive homes. Jacobsoni cniiifurh. in fact, now handle
for several banks of... and they have disoharg
I the responsibility with dtatin-:.fH'd service to their clients, a, vice reflected in the satisfactionindividuals who have negotiated,. iind sales through the com-
I ! 1 V .
H*ndl« All D«talUConfident that the flutter of ac-u in residential, building afterlille years is destined for steady
.wih here in an economically-, ;nv attempt to provide new,
.I,in dwellings for an under-.:i' stilte. the company now is
Ihmr a .number of Important
Delco Burner Installed In This Home DIAMOND ROOFINGPAGE SEVEN
DOES FINEST WORKThorough Service Keynote
Of Policy GoverningAmboy Company
Building Inspector William AUgaier's home on Free-man Street in which a new Delco oil burner was re-cently installed by the Perth Amboy Hardware Co.
Royal MiUwork And Supply Company ReadyFor Complete Revival In Building Industry
t , - (instructions.!>«• company Is ready not only, :, i t Htlviintagcous sites, carry
••h iH-jfotiationH for their pur-. nut arrange financing of the. itni involved but also to as-
lection of architect, plans
.! I I
introf the firm, in
detail,1* of three homes( i ' i it in F'i'rth Amboy under
Every type of quality millwork',building supplies, screens andscreening and outstanding mer-chandise in other departments ofthe field are handled by the RoyalMillwork and Building SupplyCompany of Metuchen. Establishedfour year* aj o by Samuel Beckeran<i his son Max, the firm has beenpreparing for an early, completerevival of construction in the Rari-tan Hay territory and has erecteda splendid stock of the finest build-ing materials on the market today.
Although it is in business stiict-4fy to mrt-Tis nvmrvvnteht depot for
the best available millwork andsupplies, Mr. Uecker eniphasizew
tractors to do the 'Work.Mr. Becker haa had a long ex-
perience with building materials.
servicing is givenivciy nnjer received by the Dia-mond Roofing and Metal Works ofW'i Maple Street, Perth Amboy,firm officials insisting that equalloriHiderfition be given every in-quiry, whether for a small repairjnli nr a major induatnal'contrait.
Kvery type of roofing and sheetmetal work in handled by the Dia-mond Company, which was found-ed thirty one years ago by SamuelDiamond. He still closely super-vises the work of the house, assist-ed by three sons—IjewiR, Josephand (in stave—who have literallygrown up wit,h the business.
On the company's pay-roil aremany of the original workers em-ployed before Jt'lO, The rpftuU haslieen creation of a long tradition<jf painstaking care with every}oh. The plant, howover, hns beencarefully kept up to date and todayis equipped with the most modernequipment for handling every typeof sheet metal work,, In addition,one-family control of the businessmaWte fdr low overhead expenseand extremely reasonable price
the firm's eagernqss to discuss re-
T»i Jt
ftuperviflinn, deriar- pairs, renovations and new cmi- Ii the present minor strurtion with prospective huild-wiM grow into un- er.s. The company is equipped to
l.nt.d siniill-home construe- negotiate loans throuch the Vv<]"•.imiirhout the Raritan Bay eral Housing Administration and
, 4, , j IH always glad to suggest economi-•hife of the homes now be- ml but thoroughly satisfactory ma-il- incorporated the newest terials and plans to interested citi-
• i attractive nrnaW building zens and recommend qualified ton-,« in* rtt.s which make modern i — • _
M'tn a ^oneration in ad-J ' „>.f (tweltinrgs constructed ns*" " *• -Uellar Floors
- > ;i> seven years ago. < Now that so many houses haver "Whoopee" and other oddly nam-
\->cUcts For Window. T ^ n T r T A ^ ^ r 1 ^ ™ 1 *hP q u e "j tion of finishing the floor is an im-
l.uitd a house with a base- pottant one. One way is to mop the.Hid still have it hug the surface of the concrete with hoti without putting the baBe- pitch, lay an inch of some i,nsula-
\\indows in a re. a ways is quite tion board—preferably one that is1 ;. The heads of the windows treated against absorption and. placed up close to the un- cemenj^nolemn__ojv_top-.oi-that,
i7ntTe~11rirrfloor by fram- Trus"gives a nice surface and con-iiets in the first-floor beams, siderable resiliency. There is toneiidows are thus above grade, flooring on the market that comesfust floor is about one foot with the insulation board and lino-tho ground. leum already cemented together.
fot the finished job.
PROTEXTI
MODERNIZE YOUR KITCHENAND BATHROOM WITH TILE!
PROVIDE a background of colorfulbeauty for modern plumbing fixture*,increase the neatness and sanitation ofyour bathroom and kitchen. Let usshow you that Real Tile costs no more
than imitations,.
GET OUR ESTIMATE TODAY
BOVING TILE & MANTEL CO.335 MAPLE ST. PHONE
P. A. 4-1993 PERTH AMBOY
SWP House PaintFor Uitlng beauty *nd protection
Standard of comparison for houie paint th«..worid ovw^. S*v«. money, f«w«f s^Hontneeded and it lasts longer, siving better pro-tection to the house. SWP Houie Paint matesa raort beautiful finish. Ask us for color card.
Paint .NQW18 months to pay!
Ask us about ihe Sher-win-Williams BudgetPayment Plan for paint-ing now and payingin small monthly pay-ments.
rvUkt th« Porch your Summer Living Room!
S-W Porch and Deck PaintE«iy to Apply and easy to keep clean. This finepatnt takes plenty of wear andweather without showing ItExcellent background colors foryou/ colorful oorch furniture,
$1
No Rubbing—No Policing
S-W Flo-WaxEaster to have waxedfloors. Flo-wax is self-polishing. Just spread/it—in twenty minutesit's dry—ready to walkon. Not slippery. Forlinoleum arid finishedwood floors.
Flat Wall PaintFUt-Ton* walls, a treatfor your eyes. Lastingbeauty. Wash- TO<rable. / T C
Qt.
M«lttt old pieces ntwagain!
S-W EnameloidQuick drying enamel.No brush marks. Onecoat is enough. " f Q c1 « beautiful * T %
colors. p|.
Stop In today fotYOUR copy ol
The HomeDecorator
40 pages of up-to-the-minute ideas. It's free.Supply is limited, soGET YOURS NOW!
VI 1 pint S-W Flo-wax• and lamb's wool ap-
plicator. 99c valu«
(wftho«4•pplltf) reduced to . .
Limit of Vi gal. to • customer at ihk price.
VETERANS
CONSIDER
INVESTING
WHERE
YOU
RECEIVE
MONTHLY
DIVIDENDS* * • % ,
THECOLCNIAI
WOODBRIDGE HARDWARE CO.74 MAIN STREET WOODBRIDGE
Phone 8-0006
PAINT 1 • ! • ! • #
DEVELOPMENT]
HAS
SUCH
AN• ^ K ^ t
INVESTMENT
• • ' • • • ' '??; • :< .
t'AGfc KKiHT
WORK NEARS PEAKFOR JOHN_ SALAKIContractor's Organization
At Capacity; Firrt TimeSinceJ931
For the first time "ince 1931,thf orennizftti'iTi of John Salaki,prominent township contractor, isworking to capacity, Mr. SalakiRaid today His offices are on NewBrunswick Avenue, Fords.
In addition to pul ler jobs, Mr.Salaki has harl IDMI building a newrqodel Lorraine Gas service stationon the old site of the WoodbridgeHotel, Green Street and RahwayAvenue; working on the SimmonsDairy in Perth Amboy and com-pleting extensive repairs to theWondhridjrp Speedway.
Mr. Salaki has bppn a Contractorhfi*n for 18 year! Daring thattimp, he was in Complete charge ofbutldinp School No. 11 in Wood-bridge, School Xo. 7 in Ford* andhad the carpentering contract onthe local high school job. He alsohas erected many theatrea aridchurches throughout the RaritanBay area. '
Himself a skilled artisan, Mr,Salaki has assembled over theyears a highly-competent group ofbuilding mechanics.
DON'T 'SAVE PREMIUMSAYS TRAVELER AGENTInsurance Is "Made" After
It Is Sold, Points OutJ. EJSofield
John E. Sofield, of FraserBrothers, Perth Amboy, represen-tatives of the Travelers InsuranceCompany, the largest writers ofautomobile insurance in the coun-try, states that one of the reasonswhy it may not be safe to savemoney in buying Automobile in-surance is because Automobile in-surance is one of the few thingsyovi buy which is made after it issold.
In a way, buying cheap Automo-bile insurance is like trying to per-suade a builder to build you a$10,000 home for $8,500. He mightagree to do it for you, but becausehe builds it after he has enteredinto a contract with you, He- o*nfind plenty of ways to save that(1,500 in places where they won'tshow. If you bought for $8,500 ahome which had already been builtfor $10,000 you might be gettinga real bargain. It was built to sellfor $10,000 .and no effort wa3 madeto skimp on materials or workman-ship. But if you try to get a $10,-000 home built for $8,500, and thebuilder knows that he must save$1,500 somewhere if he is to breakeven on it, your saving on the pur-chase price may be quickly offsetby extra heavy maintenance andrepair costs.
WOODBRIPGR INDEPENDENT
Attractive Log Cabin
As n sunfft'^tion for a summor fcottmrc at the lake or mountains, [we are shown this charming little:log cabin which has been called tLOGLOCHKN. |
The problviii of most summer ;cottaK*1* '*' t<> offer accommoda-tions for a Irtrire week-end ffroupin a comparatively small space. Acompact and. efficient roofa ar-ranfifement doe* this nicelyl Twobedrooms, a built-in bed in theUvinjr room and certain aleepin^
accommodations on the screenedporch offer hospitality to five orsix couples*
For meals, a table is set up ineither the living room or on theSCffcaned porch. In4ke living roomthere is a large natural fireplace,which can, in the cool months ofthe year, furnish sufficient heatfor the entire house.
The exterior wall* are log sid-ing, a material with the exposedsurface to represent heavy logs.
LANDSCAPING EASY!Federal Housing SeU Ceiling
On Loan* At $2,000With the advent of sprinf, land-
scaping the home, be it large orsmall, is possible in a variety ofways and may be financed underthe Federal Housing Administra-tion's Modernization Credit Plan.In thi9 manner home landscapingmay be paid for over a long periodin easy monthly installments.
Under the $2,000 limitation toinsured modernization loans forurban or farm residential propertyany of the following types of mod-ernization are eligible for financ-ing under terms of the NationalHousing Act: Drainage, outdoorillumination, arbors, trellises, fenc-ing, grading, lawns, laundry and-service yards, permanent sprink-ling systems for lawns and gar-dens, fountains, wading pools.Hardy plants, trees, and shrubsmay also be planted with fundsobtained under terms of the Mod-ernization Credit Plan.
REPAIR And MODERNIZEYour HOME or PROPERTY
With a Perm Personalized
MODERNIZATION LOANLoans up to $300.00, repayable over aperiod up to 15 months, are available tosingle men and women or married cou-ples, who have a steady income, for mod-ernization and repairs, such as:
(1) Repairing a roof or replacing with a new one.(2) Installfng a mortem plumbing w4i&atin#xv*stem.(3) Installing a new bathroom or modernizing the
present one.(4) New flooring and electric wiring.(5) Modernizing and improving interior and exter-
ior generally. yThese are some oi the purposes for which we
will make modernization loans.Call, Write or fkone
PENN PERSONAL LOAN CO.N. J. Banking Dept. License No. 676
Corner Smith & State Street.Over United (Whelan's Drug Store)
Phone Perth Ambey 4-0017MONTHLY RATE 2%%
Colored Door»Delightful and interesting ef-
fects can be developed by paintingpaneled doom in two shades, Thestiles and rails may be one shadeand the panels another, or merelythe moldings around the panelscan carry the contrasting color.Doort whose panels are flat with-out any raised beveled surface inthe center may be made very dec-
Hnwcvcr, stainntl shingles couldhe substituted effectively. The roofis cnvpiofi with natural wood shin-Klo.s which when weathered, takeon a dark gray roloring.
Built-in MirrorsBuilUin mirrors are valuable in j
maintaining i>erson,al appearance,and, properly placed, they .contri-bute t6 the decoration of a home,and tend to-give'the, impressionof adq*ed si^e to a room.
In bedrooms or dreafling room*,if a mirror tlbes not fit in with thegeneral scheme of decoration o'tsurroundings, i t may be attached jto the inside of the closet door.
orative by painUny the panel a contrattmic eolor and then planting anarrow moldlnt around whtr« theedM of Ui* beveled plane wou^dordinarily come; this in paintedlike the frame of fthe door andstands out from it» darker hackground. The Colonial colors mad..P?P«!*M b y , t h e i r «c«nt rehuildintfof WilhamsburBL Va., serve nic<»ly for this type Af painting.
WHEN YOU BUILD or REMODEL YOU NEED
PAINT AND HARDWAREWe Are Headquarters For Both In Carteret
We C*rry A Complete Line of the Famous
Benjamin Moore Paints and VarnishesAll Kindt ol Hardware and Fu
A. RABINOWITZHARDWARE
553 Roosevelt Avenue CARTERETTelephone* C*xter«t 8-0312
8-tOlS
You CAN AFFORD TORIDHEETIt fits, jplo ewry household badget became payment* canbe made lo^ntlt ov*r tit* 3i-fciM<h*>*?td* fBIT HsvtTfit-ment allow* on loan* for the parch*** of oil burner*.
THE SUMMER PLANOF FINANCING
Now you can bay Toridkoot with nothiaf «*•• wntil 5*pt.1st. Tfcan if yo* pay in fall thor* It no carrying <£tarf«. IfYou with' 12 to 36 month* your first pay moat U not dueuntil Oct. l i t . And tho inUroat charf* »• !••• than S percont p«r y«ar. It'* a moat advantageous way to finaive*tir«pur«ho»« »f «uck nec**«aiT equipment.
ITS CLEAN HEATt
No aihoa, clinkers, soot, dust, dirt or smoke. Think of thehours of cleaning dradgory you avoid. Thore U a •nbtta.n-tial saTing in less frequent dry cleaning of ItouM fur-nishings, too,
COSTS LESS TO OPERATE
Toridheet consumes only enough fuel oil to ntainUi*) theamount of warmth you require. No overheated room*. Nounderheated rooms. No fuel wasted by unnecessarily largefires or by lack of attention to drafts and regulators.
ASK FOR INFORMATION
We will tell you just what it wilt cott to install and oper-ate Toridheet in your particular hoattdg system. No obli-gation. Call, phone or write.
V • • • • " • •
TQRIDHEET OIL HEATROTARY WALL-FLAME OIL BURNERS - - • OIL BURNER BOILERS
PRESSURE ATOMIZING OIL BURNERS • - * AIR CONDITIONING FURNACES
PHONE OR WRITE FOR FULL INFORMATION
W00DBR1DGE LUMBER CO.437 Rahway Ave. Woodbridge
WOODBR1DGE 8-0125
IN ASSOCIATION WITH
Stephens Sales Corporation1 C. I. BIENFANC Prxidnl :
HEATING ENGINEERS AIR CONDITIONING10 EASTMAN STREET, CRANFORD
i
BRIDGE INDEPENDENT FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1936 PAGE NINE
,,
OF MONEY- PELLETT
and Loan League^sident ObservesMore Confidence
of Chi-United
.:r;,nd W. Pellnlt. , ( <i,|cnt of the ,..,.],ling nnd Loan leagueiW,.nty-iMghth annual con-,( i h<< New Jersey Building
League nt Atlantic City'(hnt home financing in-,n,,ti would find them-
r1l, Muire money than they
New Air-Conditioning Unit
l l l i r ; ln ( | lonn naancmtiona.'..!• - l id'* '! ° y T^e
, j1 ( . Home Owners Loan',;,,„ '• he said, "contribnt
, n,i'itill by subscribing for,;,.„».ml confidence in re'ihc jm»iic is bptf
, ||,;,t building loan sharon,(•,. investment and the mosti, one nv«H»We, and to
':,,. IN KHvinp:* Bjfnin."r sticfci'l. Jr. of Newar
tll ,,f the llrhan Rehahilita-, n,iilee, in his report, made.'•,.,- vniit. modernization of,, pr'fpertics nnd nrean..,..,,-.:," he said, "the trend, inn h;*3 been away fromnjHUwiities. The replacp-,M>SI invariably have come
.,,,,)* with lower incomesi
,\f\>
A ToHdheet• ir-con<fition-ing unit being•old by theStephen SalesCorp., that it"bringing thebuement onof the cellar.T h i .nottrola the h«*tbut the humid*ity a* well.
BUILDINGS BEATENIN MARRIAGE RACEPopulation Rising Faster
Than Construction,FHA Statescompiled by the Federal
Housing Administration indicatethat during the last 15 years thenumber of families in the United
J States has incrensed materially. c * I over tho number of new
only con- (
New Brunswick Developers Set The PriceOf Their Dwellings At $4,495435 Month
darl H,lr has steadily declin-it - income haS lensen-
i-r ixH-omo increasinglyto maintain and re-
You can livo in your own home,as you've always wanted to live,and ut a cost which is less thanyour present root, according to'officials off tho New BrunswickDevelopment Oorp, which is erect-ing modern homes on plots 75x150at Hamilton and Lake avenues,New Hrunswick.
!t:il modernization can-,, stem the tide. Unitmi prohably can. Why
•c property 6WflGFS 'aTlfl;1 notations t o t a k e
•p biopfcur two urn Corporation or
odernize it aa a unit?will eliminate waste,i•?• returns and better
NO STRUCTURAL SHIFTSIN BASIC MODERNIZINGFloors, Walls, Equipment
Can Be Renewed At••: - SmMl Cost
I \SY GARDEN PATHwny of building an at-
••<!eti path or a string ofimps is^to make a form
i inches wide by 1%k with rtetaTTgutar cfetls!!«.« of 6 inches, thus. n. r, by 12, 6 by 18, !2! r.» hy 1H can be cast,-, AIM\ the top surface• li.ioth. These blocks arei in the lawn either asstepping stones or put
•i ;i pattern with 2-inch•Act-n. The surface of theslid be slightly below the• t!ii*: ground so that
i trtiiy paws over them' ;r «r if variety of color
t little lamp black can•v ihfferent colored sands
individual blocks.
Much can be dnnn to modernizean old house without making struc-tural changes. Floors enn bo re-finished or recovered; walls can bemtched and painted or papered or,in places like bathrooms and kitch-ens, new wall coverings can be in-stalled; heating and plumbingequipment can be replaced; newelectric*outlets can be installed;the exterior can be repainted oreven recovered, an da new roofcqvenng can be laid,
Tn addition, slight changes canhe made in the architectural ap-pearance; wide nverhiin*cing ravescan be cut back and trimmed tightjigsaw porches can bo removed orreplaced by porchos of simple design; chimney tops can he simplified; trading around the house canhr raised to give the house a lower appearance, and proper plant-ing can be done to make the househug the ground. Such work canb<- done with funds obtained fromprivate institution-; under theterms of the Federal Housing Ad
! ministration's Modernization CredI it Plan.
A fivn room house with bath findfinanced 'by a government
gnarnntend mortgage cnst.!| $4,4with payments at $35 per month.This sum represents less thanmany people pay for rent. Th6monthly payment covers interestcharges, taxes and monthly reduc-tions in mortgage and insurance.
The $4,495 house's1 include thefollowing: concrete basementfloor, insulated walls, Standardplumbing fixtures with chrome fit-tings, bath and shower, combina-tion sink and tub in kitchen, solid)rasa piping throughout, tiled bathwith built-in fixtures, AmericanRadiator _Go.,_ heat|n£ equipment,Red Flash oil burning boiler, cop-per leaders and flashings, one andthree-quarter inch doors, kitchencabinets and broom closets, gasrange, electric refrigerator and oilburner.
units erected.In the 10-year period beginning
with 1921 and ending wikth 1030the number of families increased5,600,000 families. The net in-crease in dwelling units Is set downat fi.000,000.
In the five-year period beginningwith 10111 and ending with the cur-rent year the increase in the num-ber of families is believed to be2,225,000. The net increase in the.number of dwelling units is
•" to be 375,000.Fn other words, the 1921-30 pe-
riffd saw the erection of 1,000,000more units than there were newfamilies1, whereas in the last fiveyears it is believed that the in-crease in families exceeded newdwelling construction by about 1,-875,000.
For the full period there seems
lAHOMEIN THECOIONI
f H4DEVELOPMEN
to have been an increase in 'thnumber of families over the in-crease in dwelling units of about875,000.
There were erected during thepcripd, the figures indicate, a totalof 7,500,000 new dwelling units.However, it is believed that 525,-OOOunits were demolished.
The rate of demolition proceed-ed more slowly during the last fiveyears, than in th© 10 years prftvi-ous. This was due to the fact thatmuch of the demoltion was tomake room for new construction.It is believed to have been -100,000units between 1921 and 1930 and125,000 from 1931 to date.
LET US FIGUREYOUR JOB!
many years of experience
buiineti will l i v e
y Whether you «r«
ml tut to bulljd anything from
,rl><,r tretlii to * re-
-linii-nt itand or hou»«
- ,\n do the job »l
,i v i n g, We »*
i I many hornet in
RariUn B a y
,11 tllf .i.rrcii > 1 r •• i- Itt n Ii « n >
Plenty of Money0 for Homes
If you wish to buy, build or re-finance a home you will be inter-ested in this bank's loaning ser-
vice
Under the F. H. A. Plan.
This plan provides for 20-yearloans on a monthly payment plan,much like rent. It makes homeownership easier than for manyyears past.
Talk over your planswith us.
i .7toc£7for FREE estimates on any building you jl.t bo considering. We will gladly work out the
, ! ) ! • ( • job including financing.
KALAS CONSTRUCTION CO.O R D S :} 460 New Brunswick Ave
UNDER[UNITED STATES
GOVERNMENTSUPERVISION
Rhe
IS.OCO -I HAIIMUM [iMvuMironucit
MEANSM
SKILLEDASSEMBLAGEOF ALL
DESIRESINCORPORATI
PERTH AMBOYNATIONAL BANK
TEN YEARSADVANCEDIN DESIGNANDFINANCEDTO FITYOURPURSE
PAGK TEN
Steady Rise In Prices Is Indicated,Says Silberberg, Urging Start Now
Steadily advancing buildingprices nr«> prrfiirtcil l»y E. A. Bil-horberfc, munsiKintf director of thePenn Porsonal Loan Company ofI'prth Amboy, who urjroa familit'Rto embark now on modernizationwork before ><hortapc both ofinrilHiriR supplies ami skilled labormakes such tt-ork expensive in com-pariRon with the present, low rates.
Mr. Silbi'rberjf asserts:"Crtidit of the Hverajjp family iw
of a new national importance, andthe jfrantinfr of this credit is be-coming1 each day a larger publicservice. No one is more able or bet-ter equipped, 6r better fitted to ac-celerate the wheels of trnde andindustry thnn ar the modern, per-
sonal I";<n ortranizationa.""ThfM- ni cnol, more thnn 00%
as many skilled craftsmen in thebuilding trades today as there worein '2H. The price of building ma-terials continues to advance andas soon as tin* public renlifcOR thecondition, the demandB for newhomes and the renovating of oldones wilt probably bo HO (treat that,there will be » shortage of skilledworkmen. There have bec.n few ap-prentices in the building tradesduring the past eight years. Iri ad-dition, many craftsmen took upother kinds of work during the de-pression and will never return totheir former trades. These con-dition* definitely point to higher
F R I D A Y , .ITINK ft, H>-^>
BLACK FINDSlOOM(Continued from pngo five)
her of the Hoard of Kducation for20 vi'iirn, HUM bi-«n in the real es~tate "game" in South River for 2.Ayear* Previous to going into hispresent line of business he ran agrocery store, on the corner ofObert and Main streets where thepresent .South River Pharmacyowned tiy Stephen Duschock nowstands. ,
The Tanner's corner section ofthe honmgh owes its entire (level-
WOODBRIDGE
building prices in the near futurethan ' prevnilt'd during the last,building boom.
"Fixing the home «o that itshould be more substantial andmore comfortable should be u com-mon desire nl this time, particu-larly in view of the continued lowprevailing prices of materials, andthe eaar-with which money for thispurpose can be obtained."
Federal Housing LoansWe invite applications from home owners
who would like to have money to improve
. or repair their property, and from any
individuals who wish to finance new '"KomcsT.
}THE NATIONAL BANK OF NEW JERSEY
NEW BRUNSWICK
Member of Federal Resme System Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
BANKING SERVICE SINCE EIGHTEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHT
MORTGAGE LOANSNO CHARGE FOR PRELIMINARY INSPECTION
PROMPT DECISIONS
NO BROKERAGE OR BONUS FEES
COMMUNICATE WITH
The Refunding Corporation
opment to Mr; Black, who has builtmore than 100 houses in this areaduring th« decade, beginning in1010 and ending in 1926. This spanof years, Mr. Black said, was oneof the most prosperous in his mem-ory. At one time, he declared, hehad a dozen houses going up at onetime.
"Right now you flimply ran no.get a house to rent in South Uiv<.Mr. Black averred. "I have h«<i „„!opportunity to rent about no ftp!n.,ments or homes within the. ,',„..,month but we just have not. Kn\ ,houses. People want to \\Vv „,.,.and we havft not room for th«.m
290-292 GEORGE STREET NEW BRUNSWICKPHONE 3757 -3758
MODERN PROTECTION FOR MODERN HOMESDudley Pick Proof 4 in 1 Locks
ONLY PICK and JIMMY PROOF LOCKS
TESTED and APPROVED BY UNDERWRITER LABORATORIES
INSURED BY LLOYD'S LONDON
SEE IN USE AT COLONIA F.H.A. DEVELOPMENT
HOWE Corporation,PHONE Hu.2-7756 392 BROAD ST., NEWARK
, DUDLEY LOCKS and BUILDERS HARDWARE
AUTOMATICOIL HEAT
FOR YOUR HOME AT
LowestCostAmaxin
iDijCOwy
FUUOILCHANGED
TO GAS
New Principle for Home Heating
OIL GASIFYINO AUTOHATIC HCATER
CHECK THESE4 OUTSTANDING
FEATURES!ECONOMICAL . . . The mostup-to-date and economicalmethod* are employed in themanufacture of the CHALLEN-GER and make, it available at
. . . . . .an attractive low price withinthe means of every home owner.Not only i» the- initial co»t ofthe CHALLENGER low, but Itis the most economical burnerto operate.
GUARANTEE . . . The CHALLENGER is manufactured byThe Sterling Material* Com-pany, Ltd., New York, N. Y., ahighly responsible organisation,and it is distributed onlythrough leading anddealers. All parts ofLENGER are fully guaranteedagainst any defect.
R EXIABL"E"T :~LENGER doe* not depend uponintricate controls or delicateparti. It i* sturdy simplicity it-self—and can be relied upon forsteady performance. The onlymoving part is the motor, whichwill U»t indefinitely.
SILENT . . . the CHALLENGEis absolutely Bilent. There i« n..
elusive patented proce** of c.irbureting the oil and pre-heal-ing the gases before combuiti .utakes place, that does away WIHIflame roars, which in the pusthave been objectionable to oilburning.
JOSEPH FISCHERAUTHORIZED DEALER
259-61 LAKE AVE., METUCHENPHONE 6-0851
K INDEPENDENT FRIDAY,, JUNE 5, 1936 PAGE ELEVEN
" Honeymoon; Cottage"
| i r , i p l t .nfrofitiiiK newly mar-
!ir«- disconcertinglys prriod is filled with
t h t f
lirHt-yt'ftr the story-book writers refer to ns"connubial bliss"; we call it
Attractive CottageIt is an attractive lime English
[ t> ;i
Vliis p.;,. ,)0rplpxitic8 that of-
i(l(> to (irivinjr tho nub-' short distance thisvrry
.!t.y
.rfnK insanityve
! ( • • !; i | (
insanityarc Raved from •
lT by-y arc
h
Protect Your HomeWith Insurance
Insurance is agood investmentno matter how it isapplied.
r (
.../.mir their problems are•nKorof «uch jrrave iw-
novtnly estimated;acceptance of the
which had,such tragic
In short - - - they be-
'i!r"n'ii?p«**t aids in brjng-this much desired
, home of their own., common interest and,M' their minds off the,,,'„„..t.hr-Iess disturbing
Karly married life isnu'h easier and more,w u smooth and tran-Itrrnuae today's homei.h-»I one in which to
' what
cottajfe whose exterior wallft arca happy combination of atvicco,weatherboard inpr and wallopedaiding placed perpendicularly inthe gabled ends. Thera ar« fourrooms, a bath, and an uttacherlgarage. It is as complete n» anysmall family could watjt, and itoffers possibilities for future en-l i
; i ,
The exterior appnintmentR pfit an attractive, distinctive andappealing appearance; that to beduplicated faithfully in construt-tion, must be taken carefully fromthe working drawings. For Exam-ple: the picture portrays a waVer-ing roof ridge extending fromgable to gable. The intention be-hind this is to simulate tho impres-sion of age; or to convey thethought that the home haa stoodmany, many years arid that theuneven ridge line is the result of
CONSULT THIS COMPANY ABOUT ALL FORMSOF INSURANCE
Also consider the advantages of Home Ownership.Consult us on ways and means of financing a home.
WE HAVE ON OUR LISTS SEVERAL DESIRABLEPROPERTIES THAT INVITE AND COMMAND
YOUR INSPECTION
FRASER BROTHERSEVERY INSURANCE NEED
214 SMITH ST. PERTH AMBOY, N. J.Telephone* P. A. 4-3200 - 4-3201
it-'
GeneralRubber Products Co.J
261 Broadway $New York City
AND
HOWARD PLUMBINGSUPPLY COMPANY
HOWARD and COURT Streets
COLONIAare executing all the RUBBER and FLOORS
COVERING work on the J
COLONIA iDEVELOPMENT \
This company has been for many years engag-:
ed m the line of furnishing and installing high class
jbW fbors-and other floor
HAPPYHOME
MUSTINCLUDE
GOOD DESIGNENVIRONMENTCONVENIENTACCESSIBLE
iYou Arei
(Cordially Invitedjto inspect our work when visiting the great modkn*
development *
NEWARK, N. J.
Furnished all
Plumbing and Heating
Fixtures in
COLONIA MODEL HOMESbeing erected by
M. MUNN PATTISON
ELIMINATINGUPKEEP
:j3>»f'. -*f~*r."»-«' ARE IN THEPLUMBING WARE
AMERICAN RADIATORBOILERS RADIATORS DEVELOPMENT
TAC;E TWELVE FRIDAY, JUNK 5, 1936 WOODBRIDGE
Adequate Low-Cost Housing Need Not Await MiraclesOf Pre-Fabrication, Declares, State Director Of FHA
The \vir|c«T>reftd idea that ade-low eojit housing must wait
fniiit l gn the ilovi'lopmcnt of some new
system <>f prefabricated cCmstruc-tinn is not Ixiscl on fact, accord-ing to a statement by Thomas E.Colleton, N«'w Jersey state direc-tor off the Federal Housing Ad-ministration. And to demonstratethat, i n d e n t materials, designsand methods can produce health-ful, livable homes nt costs of from$1,200 to $'i,ri(lll Director ColletonKays the FHA has issued a bulletinwith floor plans nnd elevationsfind (jives tri'neral specifications forfivo such houpes.
Prt'fabricntcd IIOUSOH may offer abettor answer than we now have inthe low tost housinir field,'" con-tinued Mr". Colieton. "There maybe other better answers than..the.one the FHA-in presenting, but atleast there is an adequate answerunder present conditions." *Mr.Colleton continues:
"Obviously in the production ofa minimum ^accommodation at a^minimum co,«t the choice of mate-rials must be.carefully considered.The "house must first of all besoundly and durably constructed.Sound houses' may, however, ,beelected f rom. n variety of mate-
•riais, while durability is 'a matterof relativity, in a measure, result-ant from the care with which nproperty is maintained. Durabilitymust IK? looked upon from ,thepoint of view of a balance of initialcost as airainst the continuing
M'ost.s of maintenance. How thisbalance? will be struck will dependpreatly upon personal preferenceand ffbilrty t«*ifyty- inr^ec.. initialcost?. Apnin, the kinds of materialeh(»K(?n will bo affpctp.d hy theavailability of materials, so thatextravagance in one locality maybe economy in another.
Economic* Stressed in Plant"Only methods of construction
WOODBRIDGE COMPANYCARRIES ALL SUPPLIESLumber Firm Ready To Aid
Negotiating Loans ForBuilders
Building mate.riats of all kindsnecessary to make the home morecomfortable will be found at theWoodbrid^e Lumber Co., on Rah-way Avenue. The firm carries acomplete hfach ffrade line of build-in jr materials at all times and isequipped to arrange F, II. A. loansfor remodelinp, repairs" and ouild-J
The organization also stands inreadiness to assist those in need of"advise on'building problems suchas planning, supervision and esti-
h i
rommon.„ practice and every-where nvjiihtble to skilled buildersare considered. In this • studygrewt effort is made to produceeconnmlps in the structural «y«-tem, but no economies an are nug-gested arc made at the risk of asubstantial structure, or are unat-tainable through a careful order-ing of materials and handling ofthe work. No allowance is made inany of the assumptions for econo-mies which might be obtainedfrom currying on large-scale oper-ations, or from the elimination ofwast* and the increase in shop fa-brication which Buch operationswould permit. The designs are,however, susceptible to a high de-gree of fabrication.
"Choice of materials and the de-termination of structural design .isrtiado with a view to producing ahouse which h structurally sound,durable, and reasonably jegisttwtto use and weather, The selectionis made without respect, to themerits of other materials or combi-nation of materials. No compari-
Deputy CommissionerFinds Year Promising500 More Pieces Sold In
N. J. Than In '34,Says Minier
Building and loan associationsin New Jewwy have sold 50.0 morepieces of property during the pastyear than between May, 1934, andMay, 193S, Ernest A. Minier, depu-ty commissioner of banking andinsurance, told members of thesecretaries' group at the 28th an-nual convention of the New JerseyBuilding and Loan League.
More than 1000 building andloan officers and directors from allparts of the State attended thesessions at Atlantic City which con-cluded last Saturday night.
Making Many Sale*Mirrier -a»id tha t the record'for
the past year was nearly doublethe real estate sales for a compar-able period two yeans ago, whenonly 700 properties were sold. 3nthe past year associations soldmore than 1300 properties, hesaid.
"This is no idle prediction of areturn to rpal estate," Minier said"I speak from the statistical rec-ord of the department of bankingand imroranee-. - ,,..
Making Steady Stride*"I t demonstrates that our build-
ing and loan managers are bendingevery effort to get out of the realestate business and back into the
irjates. There is no charge for this field in which they rightfully be-service. long, the mortgage lending field."'
LUMBER ANDBUILDING MATERIALSWe are headquarter* for the
most cautious builder*! What-
ever your requirements are —
brine them to us, specifications
tinid al]. No order too large. No
order too small. We will supply
you with quality lumber and
part* for better results.
ESTIMATES AND ADVICEON BUILDING PROBLEMSWe have what you need for every building requirement andi
•you can b<s sure that our suggestion*, if carried out- will giveyou the maximum beauty, convenience and length of service.Federal Housing Loans arranged over a period of I to 20 years.
I t BUILDERS SUPPLY CO.781 Sit George Avenue ! Tel. Rah. 7^922
Harry Gordon, President
sons of the qualities of .variousmaterials or of thrir costs IH made,and no pn-ferenco on the part otthe administration is to he drawnfrom the necessity, in a study ofthin sort, of making a specific selec-tion. This same admonition shouldbe home in mind in connectionwith po?sihle alternate* for theequipment and materials forplumbing and heating which areused in any of the illustrative
cases.
SEWAREN FAMILYBEGAN BOYNTONSLarge Insurance Company
Has Many Policies InForce Here
The firm of Roynton Brothers,Perth Amboy Insurance firm, WMformed more than 37 yearn ago byWhitman amf Clancy Boynton, res-idents of Rewaren in Woodbridgetownship. Today it i» among thelargest insurance firms in the state.
The company has a groat ,],.,and liability in«urKce in I
ship and make* a apcrjni iff,render special aervice i » n,partment of the buaine«s
Several Woodbridge ni.m,iconnected with the firm; \ h ,J. McGrath, of High street [charge of the claim detmt
M T M m M J> B r c n " a n . rui(| |.aid I. Manson are solicitors f.company. "
Don't let the putty In y,,,n(lows harden and fall out. "Nnta fall out.
there be danger of thebreaking but air will h
d hg will he
around the panes and thwill rot.
YOU WANT
UNBIASED ADVICE
IAOTORSJ
You may need only an oil burner.You may need one of severaltypes of complete heating plants.But you want equipment of the
,,rjjght az» to do its work with-
out waste. Your Delco-Heatdealer can meet your particularrequirements. That's why youshould consult him. Here arequick facts about Delco-Heat.
DELCO-HEATCONDmONAIR
automatically he*ta with air that lafiltered, butnidifitd *nd circulated toall parts of th* hotM. Tboa it fnr-nisheayou wint»rair conditioning inaddition to automatic heat, y*tcoataao aoore to operatathan automaticheating alona. Oil-fired or gas-bo ming models. Sqmmcr air con-ditioning can b« included or add«d.
DELCO-HEATBOILER-UNIT
conateta of a boiler and bo m«r, btdltaa a harmonised unit which givesyou th* maximum efficiency,whether you want steam, vapor orhot water heat. It also provide*abundant domestic hot water rightthrough the year for a trifling coet.Size* for largv or small homes;stores and other bunding!.
DELCO-HEATOIL BURNER
converts your present furnace intoan entirely automat ic heaii!n>plant. Made In atses eniitahlo for ,ismall cottage, an average hougw, rlarger bulldlnga. All mode 1B amquiet, efficieot, and have only <<i imoving part. Modest pries auAeconomical operaucn make \riiw • »ilburner practical (or every homo I
This i* what "A Product of Ofmoral Motors"-meant when you buy oit-buming equipment
In principle, an oil burner Is like a carburetor. Itsoperation depends on an ignition system, a pump, an
- electric motor and essential controls,Oaneral Motors has built carburetors for years
•waxad pxsMar* pumps ... makes more small electricmotor* than anyone erse. . . leads ID combining preci-sian equipment with controls. This experience in pro-ducing equipment for the combustion of liquid fuelsassures dependable and econoenkal automatic heat.
In addition, you bwy D*ko-He*t froova local organi-ssrtion seUctad foe its kWea^tj and sflihj to serve yoo.
•~-r*» f v
... la
All Delco-Heat ofl-buming equipment us.**
the lowest grade of domestic fuel oil whn.•!•
contains more heat than expensive oils. T'--
Delco-Heat fuel control meterB the oil .ml
mixes it with exactly the right amount >f
air ffir th*» y^mttytfti ..'jjgggs!,.?2£!?: P n 'tend furnace another winter. Delco-H • t
is easy to buy. Aak us about the i»-w
G.M.A-C67o plan. Phone, visit our show-
room or mail coupon. Let us make u fri-e
heating survey of your home,
313 MADISON AVENUE PERTH AMBOY
MHI)<;E INDEPENDENT FRIDAY, JUNE 5, PAQ1
& DRAGOSET New Dunham H o m « Jusf Compfcterf|TnilSWEXreNSIVE|YEARS AGO
Move Their OHic«enel To
Woodbridge,• su-rn & Dragoset,
' I ;,r^ who recentlyI!,-,,.,.; from Avenel to.,.,, building, Wood-.,.in,.d eight years ago
,„.,.„ of the partner-, ( | ,nts nt Pace Inati-,,1. City. ,
horn and edu-, . , • , .
\Vi>odbridge highhas con-
the past eightfast growing
.,, the firm to move•,riltion because of
nll |)(irts of the
lffo8,.t are able to,„ nny company pe-ls licensed by the
,.,-; Both young men.;p,HMftl study of in-
,,/n.i.lered specialistsihrv uro ambitious to|t(, o m . (>f the largesti:|jU>sscs in the state',. .township.
m
Carteret Building And Loan UnitsOffer Funds To Erect New Homes
f STOCK }HfRAHWAYCOMPANY
ilarry
AH
Gordon SupervisesOperationsThe Firm
Of
,,((.,1 in building ma-,,h;.r a home or the
ni one, will find a,.,t at the Rahway
,,V'K CD^.T&l .St..H. Rahway. *
uiulor the personal. Mr Marry Gordon
...lU.d a good manylitv to the building
.... ;,ml is ready at all.,.:,. prospective home
...... interested in re-iiization on prob-,|(
ySupply Co., canH. A. loans for,,ver a period of
Fischer F«rt«r«»p
xe Challenger Oil BvrnyOil Burner, f«a-
f I^ake
Carteret has 'several buiidinghran associations that have beenand still are dependable friends ofthe person'seeking to own a homeor desiring to improve a home al-ready purchased. Among the out-standing associations are: the Car-teret Building Loan Association)^The Sound View Building andLoan Association and the Tax Pay-1
era Building & Loan Association.The Carteret Building Loan is
the dean of them all. It was es-tablished many years ago and hasa tremendous volume of business.The fifty-third series of sharesin this association opened June 1.On the staff of officers and boardof directors are several of themost substantial business men ofthe Borough.
The Tax Payers Building & LoaAssociation is^tohe -wwmt inborough "but one of trie strongest.At present the association has125,000 available for loans onmortgages. Tfie board of directorsincludes former Mayor Thomas J.Mulvihill and Mayor Joseph W.Mittuch. Hr. Mulvihill is presi-dent of the association.
Record Of ProgrettThe Sound View Building and
Loan Association was establishednearly twelve years ago and has arecord of progress since thatjtime.Its total assets at the close of lastyear were $176,0S3.22. The wReeof the association is the law officeof former Assemblyman Elmer E.Brown, who is the association'ssolicitor.
SAY BOYING HEADSEasy T« Clean Aad Loag-
Lifed, Pwnt O«tOfficial*
Many people are of the opinionthat til*> for bathrooms or kitchensi pxpermvp and therefore canonly HP jfiven consideration by themore prosperous home builder.
* is an error, officials of theBoving Tile * Mantel Co., PerthAmboy, point out. Tile is really inexpensive and assures the maximum of cleanliness, durability andattractiveness and combines withit a minrmum of routine labor incleaning and freedom from up-keep expense. T,here is no main-tenance expense connected withtile work.
The Boving firm has been inbusiness for over 25 years and hasdone work on some of the finestresidences in Woodbridge andCarteret,
• KeDy In Perth AmboySeBs'Standard' line
Shelves, built-in cabinets areanswer to many- of the housewife'kitchen problems. Utility and at- jtractiveness are gained by install a-'tion of shelves and cabinets to jhouse kiteaen equipment and m*-1 Heatbf, Phttubhlg Concettiterials. For a small outlay such. •« i t « ma •
Has Had MuchExperience
; i; Fischer ofh'.'n, works on a newchanges fuel oil to
'-n.jiters burn the oilrhuitenjrer tnws thearrangement
Diaappearing Table
improvements more than justifythe expense entailed. Funds withwhich to finance such permanentimprovements to the home areavailable at private financial insti-tutions which lend money underterms of the Federal Housing Ad-ministration's Modernization Cred-it Plan.
rk-W*Iled RoomSoak. UpiJny^ilil '
Dark walls soak up Ilgtit Juit asa sponge soaks up water.
A dark-walled room not excep-tionally well illuminated by day-light will be dark in the daytimeand will require more electricityto supply sufficient light in the eve-ning.
Light is like water in more waysthan one. Like water, light will fitany container. Speaking of con-tainers, clean water in a dirty con-tainer looks dta-ty.
With dull, dark walls, light is.dim and struggling. With dean.light-tinted walls, both electric householder thai the basementbulbs and daylight spread their ra-1 light is out and a trip down thediance in full strength. stairs will be saved.
An important item in buildingor modernizing a home is plumb-ing and heating, with the fixturesused in this work being equallyimportant. The Kelly Heating kPlumbing Supply Co., of PerthAmboy, has many years of experi-ence in this field and is well knownthroughout Woodbridge and Car-teret for the excellence of theirw f i f t V "•""" • * - • " • •••
Resides being competent plumb-ers and heating engineers the firnvalso handles "Standard" plumbingfixtures which are consideredamong the best on the market andthe Kelly oil burner which hasproven both economical and effi-cient wherever in operation.
Cellar Pilot LightIf pUoXJizbJ* are installed near
the door leading to basementstairs, considerable savings in elec-triatJ tists will be effected. Aglance at the basement door beforeTeavins; the house will assure the
t in
Many house owners who lackdining rooms and use the living
;m«m, p.-™- i Dn>» ' o r dining find that a disap-of the burn-'fbearing tittte it advantageous. It
saves space and maintains the har-mony of the living area. A tablemay be bolted to the wall and hid-den by a simple paneled door. Thismethod is also being used by houseowners who have small dinipgrooms but wish to take %\irt' oflarger groups of t?"t;sts.
"i H manufacturedM:iw>rials CompanyCity, a highly re-11/ a Linn and is dis-h reliable dealers.
Challenger are
Any Building Is As SoandAs The Materials Used
171"
ROOF!be amazed
Si x-i
+- :v •#$•-;
atthlowcost
e w . ;>'^ f&S f j
i II n br rr-roofrd forin EI iiiiiutli *»• <»urmi tit p l a u . N o t w i t h. ir. rlibrrt We Mean
Universaltor
o f
r. Another pntrntrdthe.,, -blunlr- i« "
prcvrBtntrottblm-
* » "•Let »""r
••-
RAL ROOFING SHEET METAL WORK;.s MAPLE ST.
' t Phone P. A.
PERTH AMBOY, N. J.4-0446
When a home or remodeling on a home U planned it t» pl*a-ned to rndurc It ii *.n infettment and like *11 investments itmutt be a lound one. Cho**e your bvilding- sappUes, mitlwork,and miion materials from oar large line and yos need have noworry regarding durability and qwality.the right materials.
AMODESTCLEVERLYDESIGNEDWELLBUILTHOMEIS THECOUNTRY'SBESTINVESTMENTTO-DAYCONSIDERAHOMEBUILTTO YOURORDER
L*t n» kelp yon select
See Us TodayEstimates
We witl be rUJ Uany buildinf or remo«Wip« y<today
•-.t
rmm nth acevrmt* Mtinute* on. inch W e«»4-cri-«—«U u.
ROYAL MILLWORK& BLDG. SUPPLY CO.
PHONE MET- S-><**
253-57 LAKE AVENUE METUCHEN, N. J.
CCTUDWlJ
DEVELOPHEN'
PAGE FOURTEEN TODAY, JUNE fl, 1936 WOODBRIDGK
WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIPGROWING COMMUNITY
INVITES YOU TO SHAREITS ADVANTAGES . . .
WOODBRIDGE Township is among the most logical areas in the Raritan Bay Districtfor industrial and home-building expansion.
WITH excellent facilities for water and rail transportation, this community is destinedby its geographical location to develop into a thriving center attractive alike to busi-ness and residence prospects,
THIS objective is the major aim of the Woodbridge Township government. During thepast two and one-half years, a thorough-going house-cleaning has taken place, the cap-ital debt is in process of refinancing and within the next few months the town will be inan enviable position among New Jersey municipalities. The direct result of these stepswill be the further reduction and stabilization of the local tax rate.
THIS is recognized as an urgent necessity by the governing body and its every act hasbeen in support of this policy. It realizes that community development is predicatedon the cost to its prospective residents of maintaining essential services, such asschools, fire and police protection and sanitation. Woodbridge Township is concen-trating its efforts to provide these necessities for the smallest per capita cost.
WOODBRIDGE Township invites everyone seeking a location, either for home or fac-tory, to investigate thoroughly the many advantages it offers. Every local official willstrive earnestly to co-operate in all possible ways to the end that mutual advancementwill result for the Township and its residents.
• • * > - - - - • * — - ^ « - — - . . - . . - . - .- , . ^ . . . f . . . . . . , . . , . . . - . „ . . _ . . _ . . . , „ „ „ . „ . _ . „ . . , , , . „,.....„. . _ „ . . . , , , . . „ . . , ^ , >: . _
r
THE TOWNSHIP OF WOODBRIDGEAUGUST F. GREINER, MayorFREDERICK SPENCERJOHN BERGEN
JAMES F. SCHAFFRICKCHARLES ALEXANDERERNEST W. N1ER CommitteemtMi
INDEPENDENTJUNE 5, .1936
Pfl i tison's Model Homes, Approved By FHA,m Stirring Success Within 11 Months
: inn
, , . i!
(>d from page 2), ue cellar which in not a, j iimo. room ia 8ome-n(,velty. Clean oil beat
, possible. For others, it] |(.,i(. wbirh is startling.,1.,,,,,'iitally simple idea
i room whicb is almost,i waste. It is whollyv ;i ronvenient place to
done, it becomeB an1M of the living Toom.
],.** effort in Bervinjr,,,1,-eds of cubic feet of,,, Miild HJICI less to heat., .,,re? From the special,j die floor to keep oil,,inninhile's crank case
ingenious combination1, and washing machine
. ,,'ily designed and com-;,11.'including the fire-,,- Unit swings up I
, ],,n? There Pattison islh> tins remnTned unim-
ihe fetish of straight-
r •
ct.isnhtjon, Instead, he goeS,nLr <nr for his inspira-
; (>/|in«'* n modern small• (i.> [iropnrntion of meals
either space, time.nort i l d i kn• j ir- range, tiled sink,
•t'riireratnr and all thenii.dern kitchen's tools
i with a minimum ofif a maximum of con-
A house built for George Ander-son was four days away from com-pletion. Painters at (he end oftheir day's work on a Saturdayhung overalls in a closet. Spontan-eous combustion did the rest, atethrough the closet walls, burnedfor hours before it was discovered.Inside that house was a blazing in-ferno—hot enough to melt thebronze handles on the windows in-to lumps of metal. Did the wallsburn? No. The roof? No. The shellof the house escaped practicallyunscathed.
The standard construction iswhat used to he wood-and-br'ick-veneer—plus great technologicaladvance. Time was when wood andbrick meant a frame, house. Aninch away from the wood was nthin skin of brick, totally unrelat-ed to the house itself. For insula-tion against wind and cold and sunthere wnst theoretically, a bareinch at d£su! air. In f!o1onla todaythings nee very'different.4* INCHES SPUN GLASSFURNISH INSTALLATION
In the first place, there are fourinches of insulation, not one. In thesecond place, those four inches arenot 'so much still nir. They arcpacked with spun glass—looking
of anheatoa! It i« nltonry flnsjfroof,'>ut it also need ifever be pj^nted.Hoofs are of slate.
Now the great enemy oi aubinder* is the fact that differentmatenals expand and contract atttl'luK r,n,tioa- Thnt'8 how «"dw^y the old p las te r walls
cracked, how veneers tearaway from the basic house, howfoundations split, become porous.Thorr ifi lirtic of that in the modelhomos in Colon ia. Ia a living roomtn be panelled? Thon the ends ofthe hoards are stained the precisetone of the finished pob .That pan-elling may shrink. When and If itdoes there will be no tell-talestreaks of varying shades in thejoints, n.» weary re-ntaining of thewho.?* job.
Occasionally, there is an error.In the first house, wooden mould-
PAGE FIFTEEN
in (he bedrooms has pulledawny a little from the fabricatedceiling. Very well—the othernouses all have picture moulding*.opiilni iitcly set away from the ceil-nijr. ThA functional value of a con-venient way to hang picture* andmirrors has become a selling point!TluHt' coiling points are now guar-anteed njrainst cracking.
There are other guarantees, na-turally, but the most rea«nuringfact, for buyers about the whole de-velopment is almost exclusive de-pendfnee nn the J. D. Loizeaux
(Continued on Page 16)
INT1
lu-
: i
I . t l
..i WIVES LIKE .I n.j-.NT PLANS
been done inteilfirent-•.,- hidden radiators to
laces, through in-;uid solid-panelled•; to the dogwproof• ptrp-on-it recep-e kitchen door. Not
itliei- the use of awn-nf roots o"fimparatively h ur t iwt sp««« -apd
Nor such small de-n telephone bell-box-
1 , ,-rner-windows with, screens, the base-
'•,id linoleum. Housc-•.i'e stirh intelligence,:' i he construction it-, township has never. ,tic proof of a fire-inn' really being re-
t lined this Spring.
like balls of fUr.ccp. And jrlass Hap-pens to be proof against anythingyou care to name—mice, moths,termites, and above all frro. No-thing lives in it, nor can live. It isfurther bulwarked with nsphnltpaper, positive check against damp-ness. That paper is strung onstrong mesial lath. AsainsL it isbuilt up the brick front.
How is that front anchored? Byan inch of cement, which becomes,.J^hen it ha.rd.C0ii.- a,...solid*concrete^^anTiei Wrapping the house. It is
wooden house, a trlass house, a, iper- Howie, H *»Ttrlr IHWM1^ rr Tftmn^house—and the fire insurance ratesare those for solid-brick const ruc-tion.
There are further tricks. Ahouse was finished last weelV inwhich much of the 'surface is cebn-j)osed of flair-sinnc--: stood on end,blended in with hrick erraticallyset. The effect i< sfnnninjr. 'In Pat-tinon's own house, there is a seini-Tudor wainscntinu: of -olid sl;»hs
NEW JERSEY'S LARGEST FLOOR COVERING RETAILERS
FLO
S&kVMLBeatify
ESTIMATESCHEERFULLY
GIVEN!
WHETHER YOU'RE BUILDING OR REPAIRING THIS STORE CAN SUPPLYYOUR FLOOR COVERING NEEDS AT A SAVING BECAUSE WE WHOLESALEAS WELL AS RETAIL AND ARE THE LARGEST EXCLUSIVE FLOOR COVERJNG DEALERS IN TJHE
E LARGEST EXCLUSIVE. NG DEALERS IN, TJHE STATE. LET US FIGURE -TH& FLOOR «6VERlNe^OB—>VE'LL SAVE YOU MONEY. ESTIMATES FURNISHED TO CONTRACTORSON, LUWVriLESp RUABER-TILE•«. A€O^THit AHfT WNO-W^LE^ TOR ALLROOMS IN THE HOUSE.
WHICH NEVER GROWS OLD
Impenshable Asbestos SidingPlaced Right Over the Old Walls
r :;M of fine wood'shin- which will never ruaiire p.'. ft,, pcrrmncnLC aniL V u u <M t l l u U L d l J S i n j [ n i n y
m.uncen.imc of ( ) [, lLr h o I J U . n n P r ( I V M ! U n l s i m i)L . r
•un.l in the popular ^ j u | i n v M . u u , n , si.ixm,M.mvillc (x-Jargrain t 0 . | , c n t i " pi-tn. .it tlu low racesiiui; Shingles. prc-striU-il hy du- N.muft.il Houv<usc looks "down at | n g Act.residt- it with thistus armor which can
::i noi wtar out and
presAct.
FRlii; KST1MAI1SGLADLY I ;I:RMSIII:D
CHA&SEELI ! M.rket Street PERTbi AMBOY
OFFICE Phone P. A. 4-1339i
ReMd«nc« Phono P. A. 4-2627 W
WOOOBRIDGE REPRESENTATIVE
FRANK SEEL, 155 Dunham Place
DO YOU ADMIRE THIS BEAUTIFUL KITCHEN FLOOR? WE SPECIALIZE INJOBS JUST LIKE THIS. YOUR KITCHEN CAN BE COVERED WITH NEW IN-LAID LINOLEUM IN MODERN PATTERNS BY E X P E R T MECHANICS FORLITTLE COST. ASK US FOR AN ESTIMATE.
HEADQUARTERS for HOME IIV! PRO V E ME NTS |
I M E U C203 Smith St.
ACTORY OUTLETPERTH AMBOY
PAGR SIXTEEN FRIDAY, JUNK H, WOOrtBRIBGE INDEPENiu-v
PATTISON SCORESCOLONIAJTRIUMPH20,000 Visit Model Home
In First 9 Months;11th Under Way
(Continued from Ttage 1!>)Lumber Company of Plainfield forhuildins? supplies. That firm him arijfidly-ninintained reputation forconsistent handling of only thefinest grades of all supplies. I t hasnever had n shipment refused bythe FI! A -inspector* who constantlyare chi'ckinjr material used inhouses on which the governmenthsiH jfuarantoed the mortgage.EMPHASIS LAIDON BUYEHS' WANTS
But always, 'the emphasis is onCivoiitf Lhe man who wants a 1936home not only what he wants butwhat he wants created in the bestfashion known to modern home en-irinner*. In theory, Pattison believ-<•«, for example, in awnings, notroofs for terrace?. There is none-theless a house across the streetwith a roof over a porch. The ad-vantages of the dinette are many-—yet four of the eleven houseshnve conventional dining rooms.The radiator on the garage floor isa pet idea—some buyers veto it.A.s for mechanical installations—every latitude is given the man andIiis wife in'selecting the precise ap-paratus they want. There have, forexample, been gos installation aswell as the marvels of electricalrimpKeifcy which adorn, me at of thedevelopment; and the list of otKerspecial fixtures is almost innumer-able. "
In fact, as part of the drasticchange in working methods forcedby the quite unforseen pressure oforders. Pattison soon will open inthe old, conventional house onWest Hill Road once occupied bySamuel Love, not only a series offabrication departments and spe-eial craft shops but an elaborateshowroom. Space will be leased tomanufacturers of nationally-known special house equipmentand the buyer deciding what hewants in hia new home will choosenot from cataTbjyufes htrt frutn sam-ples on the site of his new home.
As pnrt of the change forced bythe orders, the fabricating machin-ery now taken from job to joba? it is required will be assembledin the new Sample Centre. Andwhere possible^ the special built-inconveniences now so much a fea-ture of the finished houses will befashioned at the Centre in a spe-cial shop by Pattison's Bkilled cab-inet-makers.COLONIA STILLIS UNSPOILED
Return, now, to an earlier prob-lem, What sells the houses? Theeasy answer is ' 'their quality." Buthow have people with the desire fora home and the money to build onediscovered the development? I t isa question that probably can besolved by considering the eager-ness of eligible prospects to ex-plore every lead. They don't waitto be solicited, Pattison has dis-covered—instead, they themselves
Sample Center In Colonia Project
out every clue.In Colonia, they find a "till lovr-
ly residential community, unmar-l>y industry. They find a mw
development with careful restric-tions on the kind of house to bebuilt, how much it must cost, towhom it can be sold and to whom
resold. They find a railroad near-by. They also find a web of hij»h-spfvd highways running m everydirection. There is no initial diffi-culty in driving from Colonia toNew York or Newark or Philadel-phia or the shore. One swings outof one's driveway and i« immedi-
^ ^ f sr>;
t 9 R n n n AYJUIABUE I,K J,UUU F0R y ) ^ |
TAXPAYERS 1BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION
OF CARTERET, N. J.Office 572 Roosevelt Avenue
Meets First Tuesday of Each Month
Ask About Our New
DIRECT REDUCTION MORTGAGE"Member of F.H.A."
Officers—Thomas J. Mulvihtll, President; Bernard %Kahn, vice-president; Dr. Charles Vincze, secretary;Joseph Galvanek, treasurer.
"rf
5
DIRECTORS—Thomas J. MulvihiU, Bernard .Kahn,John Ginda, Maurice Spewak, Samuel Chodosh, JohnKendzersky, Abraham D. GJas*, John P. Goderstad.Dr. Charles Vincze, Joseph W. Mittuch, Joseph Gal-vanek, Ambrose Mudrak, John Debrei.
*Counsel, Abraham D. Glass
'K
SII\iC
tUNDER CONSTRUCTION
Buy Now and ChooseYour Own Decorations,
Lighting Fixtures,Colors, Etc.
60x120 LANDSCAPED PLOT,six SPACIOUSTHJOMS;
METALLATION INSULATION,TILE BATH — 2 CAR GARAGE,
RECREATION ROOM —LAUNDRY, CONCEALEDRADIATION, WITH OIL i
BURNER, OPEN FIREPLACE,MODERN SCIENCE KITCHEN,BEAUTIFUL HIGH LOCATION
CLARKTOWN HOMESTOPS ALL AT5990
$46.00 FHA PAYMENT PAYSEYEniNG
Drive out Route 27 to WestfieldAve., Railway, turn to MadisonHill Road then to property on right.
BAUER-BROOKS CO.137 KVING ST., RAHWAY
RAHWAY 7-0865
vn route with no suburbantraffic to bo threaded.
There, is ample proof of thatimmediately-confirmed statement.Pattinon's own home is exactly 45minuter 'at cruising speed awayfrom the 45th Street theatre JtlNew York where his sister Dianthais pluyinj? with Jane Cowl. In time-distnnre that is nearer than theHronx.
.So they discover, these men andwomen hungering for their ownhomes, H plncc thnt is lovely wherelovp]y homes are being built, atminimum cost for the value given,ami built with every technical help;ind trick that Pattiaon himself hn«heard of in his 17 yearn aa archi-tect, builder and decorator,ONCE A WEEK,MEETS NEW QUERY
, ile has no prejudices about histrade. He wants only the compara-tive cost, the comparative utility,the comparative effect of the thous-ands of alternative choices con-fronting any man dreaming abouta home* of hi? own. Kor mn«t of
these alternatives, he iRwith much data, ].Amuch appreciation of the'iUff,.,tiala to be conmderert. Win,balance, he in constantly ,',menting. • XI '
And even with his 17training in public «n<lprivat,yi
ninK and building even u• , ''record of an individually |houae built every month f,,,
ed, about once a week, with •,tion he haa never met i)(,rnew sufr^Rtinn, a n.-w „„.. '!a new way of doing nn ,\,\ »i
So three you have th<> tn'gredient in the forrmi|It wt l lM weeks has chanicfd a ,1(..( ' r e a i n , ? f R model home ,.flourifthinR devdopmont ,,rhighest bfiuity—the lmil.l,.qHick sympathy with ih«- ,',.,dreams, the pcrsotml nt.,.,ipersonal \isions of th<- >nwple with whom ho h i . ".hoiiKinp and homes, },ut ,homes, <*inco Frcilcrick ^;
firM turned that fatvful • )'„"dirt nn June 1" "
GREATBARGAIN
ReconstructedModel Home
RARITAN TOWNSHIP ^ »**4 ROOMS — SUN PARLOR — TILE KITCHEN AND
BATH — ALL IMPROVEMENTS — LOT 40 x ISO
EASY TERMS
PRICE *4)«5«J5U«OO
METUCHEN, N. J.
5 AND 6 ROOM HOUSESALL IMPROVEMENTS
FROM $4500 .00 UP
SCOTCH PLAINS, N. J.
6 ROOMS-MODEL HOMESALL IMPROVEMENTS — TILE BATH
GARAGE
EASYTERMS $6700.00
WRITE• • * * • ' — + • • • • " - ' -
ENERGETIC BUILDING& LOAN ASS'N.
BOX 14 BLOOMFIELD.N.J.OR YOUR OWN BROKER
\VINDEPENDENT
FRIDAY, JUNE 5, PAGE SEVENTEEN
Officials Of Perth Amboy's Modern Building And Loan Association
r l t o r John ToolanCounsel
Frank DorseyPresident
John J. QuinnTrea*urer
Robert FullertonSecretary
George F. ReynoldsVice-President
rn Building And Loan Emphasizes Its EagernessJo loan Money On First Grade Home First Mortgages
, nrpJiss the creditable.M.shi-fl in 1035, officers,;,., n Building and Loan... nf l'erth Amboy ,this; ;i iti> their willingness,,1,-v on first-grade first
i r i Is are available for.;,.,.-ted loans although,.;,,!) w.ill now acceptlkr,.s oniiijmeB that are,1 iTf^nwn—condition,
,, rowers with adeauateI u^nt only as rertdenc-j purpose properties —
., -at res, factories et cet.IPW be considered.•>,,• association's officers, ..-tablishingitsfinanc-• hly satisfactory planer- ',>( $31,500 for the
hs ending December• ri<d after all taxes on
,wn'd by the association:iiii. the mortgage on its
i.irtvrs building liqui-til other outstanding
,»t. The result was adistribution to Share-lie the dividend de-
showing of the
Rociakion was authorized ny the De-partment of Hanking and .Insur-ance to place first moi*t|f«KC loan*.The move is considered as u steptoward normal operation. In lift-ing its restrictions upon the mort-(Ca«e lending activities of the asso-ciation the Department paved thewuy for an extension of loans on
owpor occupier! buildings,"During this same yertr ti num-
ber of mortgages have been recastthus enabling the mortgagor tocany his payments.
"All maturities have been paidin full to date.
Approved By FrlA"The Association, on February
112, r.ClTi, ti-veivud a Certificate ofApjirovnl on insured mortgages inthe. FIIA.
'To rneet this now type of mort-gage a special meeting of theBoard was called September 23 tocompile a new constitution whichwas forwarded to the Departmentof Banking and Insurance andwhich was referred back to the As-sociation with certain suggestionsfor "crfanges to he made. T|hesechanges were made in conformitywith the Department's thought onthe subject.
"During the past year the mort-
m i Associationwas paid off making u saving of$1500.
'In the payment of taxes on As-sociation owned properties severalhundred dollars were saved by buy-ing bonds at a discount with whichto satisfy taxes at one hundred onthe dollar.
Debt Free"The management of the Asso-
ciation owned real estate is direct-ly under the supervision of the
(Continued on Page 19)
Three Typei, : i - , of mortgages are
ugh the Modern B &There is the regular1 loan mortgage pay-
:.Lhiy installments, the-:y reduction mortgage
. mpiehensive Federal;niiistration plan. The:• - jill financing costs
.mil liquidates itselfMaturity dates running. ir-.-v All costH are car-.ic monthly payment,
•: n -n t .: \'A% a house, ^ffiders• association >« equip-• two notable savingsi ht-re is an immediate
.:; net cost through the.•!" brokerage fees and
and a second savingr . <tc faciliti*** within.[•!i for negotiating
... -• nan itself.;v(M' booklet insucd by;M<'!i lists desirable• air in Woodbridge,'h t r sectionn of theAtll as in surround-
• . ' i » • . i .
:i, choice building..nil in blocks, arc of-
being a particularlyr throughout Fords.
.1 Rcnl Total*•..- the positive, imnic-
Lj.:fs of acquiring in-••• : ;v\ huinca, officers
monthly rent of $25•vith interest at G%,1 " "f $2,~\ IX in seven1 .''^2 in 15 years, atv'iuh time the renkrA rent of $40 under
• n years and $11,172
•' the history of the re-: normal, profitable op-i rt Fullerton, secre
)i.iety, states:<-t Obligfttiona
i* of thej most discour•pinenta, the Moderni I-oan association has
: ><> meet its obligation• •'•'•holders who b r o u g h t
io maturity. With theto again engage in
•'.v, the returnsiii lif inn-eased ami !
MI 'uiititiueil on the"I fully normal opera-
the Aa-
You are invited to inspect, while under construction, two model homes beingerected on Elmwood Avenue, Woodbridge, immediately adjacent to the Wood-bridge Park, and one model now under construction on Colonia Boulevard, in theColonia section.
These houses are modern in every detail, and embody the latest improvementsin houses costing considerably more than the completed price of these models.
Each house has an attached garage, recreation room, is air-conditioned, haswoodburning fireplaces, and the kitchens and bathrooms, in addition to being tiled,have many new and unusual features.
Prices, including mortgages payable under the FHA Plan start at $6,250.00
Several locations are available on which you may have a house constructed ac-cording to your own plans and specifications. .
The houses are constructed on minimum plots of 50 x 100' with sewer, water,gas, electricity, sidewalks and complete landscaping.
The location is restricted to one family residences, is one of the best residen-tial sections in Woodbridge and is convenient to schools, churches, shopping and
transportation facilities.
If you are interested, call t
WOODBRIDGE REALTY & INVESTMENT COMPANYWoodbridge 8-1776 and a representative will give you full particulars.
• • •* . i I - . - . •
PAGREtGHTEfcN
ELMWOOD AYE. HASNEW DEVELOPMENT3 Modern Homes Complete
In Every DetailUnder Way
Throe modern homes com-plete in every detail are be-injr constructed by the Wood-br idge Realty a n d Invest-ment f'ompany on Elmwood Ave-nue near Wwdbridjre Park and onTolonia Boulevard.
Inspection of the houses whilethey are -till under constructionha«t been especially urged by thedeveloper* a.« both in materials andin Workmanship the hi eft eat stand-ards in residential building1 havebeen rigpdly followed. The unusualvafufc represented" by Inese threehome? can be immediately gaugedb>\ insp^btion of tW work under
, f»oren Jkoed, veteran contractor forthe developers." Twenty houses are- to be builtimmediately on the Elmwood Ave-nue tract. Prices begin at $6,250,
-. inciudihgr mortgages guaranteed bythe FHA, and a wide series of
... chofcesj are offered the individualbuyer not only in basic plap butin construction details, quirks thatmake *> house a home and mechan-ical installations.
Every house will have a recrea-tion room, an attached garage, air-conditioning equipment, acientifi-cally-aeitT(fnwl tired" kitehwie,-wood-burning fireplaces and the moatelaborate modern conveniences.
Complete LandscapingOnly one-family residences un-
tUzt the highest restrictions will bepermitted on the Elmwood devel-
opment which is in the heart of oneof the best residential sections int h e township, convenient to.schools, churches, stores and trainsand buses. Minimum plots are 50by 100 feet with sewer, water, gas,electricity, sidewalks and completelandscaping.
Exhaustive research into thelatest innovations in the art ofcreating i^dividuaiized small mod-era homes preceded drafting ofplans for the first houses on thei
FRTT)AY, JUNK *. « t > r ' v -
Homes Now Being Built On Elmwood Avenue I SeenIn Quality PlumhmHone»t Work And Mat. ruU
Both Give Veteran
While the best traditions of ap-ed construction practice have
been religiously maintained, everyproven improvement has been in-corporated into the master planand eareful studies made of. the al-ternative factors determining finalprice, with a view to supplying thebuyer with the beat available in-formation in assisting him choosethe special details of his own home.
FIVE SONS CONDUCTBUSINESSJ)F SEELSPerth Amboy Roofers Have
Been Established For52 Years
The firm of Charles Seel & Sons,prominent Perth Amboy roofersand metal workers, wae establishedover 52 years ago. Charles Seelwtio founded the business h*» re-.tired and the affairs of the com-pany are now directed by his fivesons: Louis, Charles Jr., John, Wil-linm and Frank.
The founder of the business wasthe first roofer in the Raritan Baydistrict to introduce the idea oflaying slate roofing over woodshingles and make the job jiracti-cal. This Proofing process is nowbeing used daily by roofersthroughout the country with ad-mirable results.
Among the large jobs .handledby .the firm is the Central Rail-road station in Perth Amboy. Theorganization haa roofed manyWoodbrklge homes, one of whichis the Demarest home on GreenStreet.
The Seels ore. considered expertsi in their line and "have qualified a«! such in court actions. The c6m-i pany is also an authorized dealeri for Johns-Manvill building prod-; ucts.
i
SOUND VIEWBUILDING & LOAN
ASSOCIATION576 Roosevelt Ave., Carteret, N. J.
(Established 1924)
$ $ MONEY $ $AVAILABLE FOR MORTGAGE LOANS
ON USUAL MODERN PLAN
f NEW SERIES OPENS JULY 1
Officers—President, Charles A. Conrad; vice-presi-
dent, Aaron Rabinowitz; secretary, Fred F. Simons;
treasurer, Frank Brown; solicitor, Elmer E. Brown.
DIRECTORS—Charles A. Conrad, Saul Chodoih, Fred
F. Sfinotis, Frank Brown, Aaron Rabinowitz, George
Quunra Jr., Samuel B. Brown, Joseph Hasek, J antes
J . Lukach and Joseph Weisman. v
MILLER ESTATE FIRMHANDLES BEST LUMBER
Reputation Of the CompanyEstablished Over 20-
Year PeriodOne of the .substantial business
concerns of Carteret is the A. J.Miller Estate Lumber Company.The business was established morethan twenty years aero by the lateA. J. Miller who died in Januaryof last year. From n modest be-ginninj? the business jrrew until
i.pil;»y it i- one itf thv larjfcr lunvlif r t o n c c n i H of this sec t ion .
Tii<> yard fronts on PershingAv«*nue and extends ulong: SharotStreet all the way back to the Cen-tral Hailroad Company's rijfht ofwtty. A spur from the railroad run*through the entire length ijf theyard to facilitate ahippinfc.
The concern hanrllec a full lineof lumber and supplies mill work.l)onr"and window frames, screens,combination screen doors areRtorked. The enmpRny hAR ft fleetof trucks arid insures prompt de-liveries of all orders no matterhow, large or small.
When people in Can,.,.,of heating or plumbingthey think of Chnrl«>« c ( ) l l
Mr. Conrad is the pif.n.Jftinoss in Cartoret. He
here as a young man"toujfh sleddinif" for a tj,,built vjp a repuUti( lh f, ,work and honest m:it»M i;i|
'Bflonable in prices n( a •plumbers were reputed •most of their time 1|, ,new ways to charge i)Mvices.
As the town irrew an.I 'H more m6dern type \u.vthe pl,pce of the old f,lt;Wr. Conrad s business yi..'.th« arrival ivf ctimpotltorihto the contracting aibusinew. Today he ,camard heatina an^'plumiiiV^and will take on a conti^size. He invariaMy pivtion. »
Mr. Conrad's shop arlocated at 537 Roostv.;Carteret.
A wooden strip thj. .inches wide set about •from the flobr and runn-all four walls of ^hcmakes a convenient hn«-'
I to screw towel bars, tuners, etc.
Only Insurance GivesYou Complete Security
A home properly covered by insurance not only protectsyour investment but also provides you with a feeling of* aecuritvthat cannot be measured in dollars and cents.
We are equipped to provide complete, reliable fire andpublic liability coverage. Two forms of insurance every ham"owner should carry. Fire, because without it your investmentmay be wiped out in a few hours. Public liabilityr for prottu |tion against accidents on the premises, which always threat.*nyour financial well-being. * ,
Our representative will gladly call at your home and tlr<<w jup an insurance plan offering the utmost protection for the I'-."1
money. A ita |
BOYNTON BROTHERS & COMPANY200 JEFFERSON ST.
Phone P. A. 4-3300 PERTH AMJ30Y
7
fa
HARDWARE UNESfore i41«o Ho*
// List Of GoodQuality Paint*
ly slogan ad
1 ) r ; ! n
are little,,-:",,,......iff phrasesof A. Rabinowitz of
Colonia Model Homes UieSilent 'Lorco^OU BurnersLorraino Oil Firm Sponwr.
Burner Equipped ByGeneral Electric
The Silent "Lorco" oil burnersponsored by the Lorraine OilCompany of Metnchen, are beinir^ L l " t h° ™A model home«"iS
....j'rvcit Avenue, is appro-i is- "If it is Hardware
(I •' Thnt is true of the,(/ ,i|iicorn not only with, h;,vdwnre but in regard
hl .,« well. The concernh,v.'iything in the hard-, f,.,;m tho heavy articlesI!I(> Itig industries to the
., ,in( division all the lead-',)'.; are handled but the'.,,„>(• inlizes in the excel,,lurts of the Benjamin
vrnpany, of Carteret. .,, IV Anron RabinowiU, pro-
f the hiff store enabled,1 „(• Kilucatioti to provide
, ;i s<hool painting project,,,, of nearly half on notice, hours. Anything in the,,-nnt. rtr hardware lor use,,,1,^ the appearance and, , , . of the home can be
i ",\ Knliinowitz ntore at the,.,,.,..;, consistent with good
MODERN LOAN(Continued frnm Page 17) i -<•
hoard of director*, i* d«bt free and "'"Posed of.
of iho prevailing excellent real eatntc market. In round figures ap-proximately $fi3,000 of Afwocin-
|tion owned properties have been
maintained at nominal expense andi» kept In pood condition to attractdesirable tenants. This year, renlestate owned Rhowed a profit.
"Nine pieces of real estate own-ed by the Association wan sold dur-
* t n e D a B t v e a r amounting ind b $ 0
,, , -.- •••"• "IUUCI no men in : * t n e D a B t v e a r amount ingOolonia. The burner is General i r m m d "S^es to about $30,000.Wectnc equipped and aella for as I "Most of thin property has beenlittle as $ 2 2 f i l t l '
equipped and aella for aslittle as $22fi-completely installedwith tank and heat controls.
Each
aold to shareholders of the Aflao-ciation who are taking advantage
"The big operating expensewhich holds renl estate down frommaking an appreciable profit arenxerl charges such as taxes, flreinsurance, plate glasB insuranceand llabiiitv insurance."
Frank Dorsry is president of theAssociation; George Reynolds,vice-president; John J. Quinn,treasurer and Senator John E. Too-lan, counsel.
i t i L
Split Big Kitchentfi1 kitchens may be readilyK'leil into any of the follow -
units: Dining alcove, houw-offirc with ptnnninft dwk anil
telephone extension, pantry, rtore-ronni. downstairs lavatory, clost'ts it is frequently desirable toimprove a home by making suchchanges and diminishing the sinenf tho kitchen. Such conversionsmay be finnnced with funds obtain-ed from private financial institu-tions operating under the. FederalHousing Aflminintration'a Modern-isation Credit Plan.
entilate Insulation..,\Uu-\. in the summer heati,| hi> ventilation over the
,,' -t-i well as the insulation: , liciit ire n era ted on the
,,i ilif roof must the car-mhiTwisi' the innutrition
i.iKcd and will hold the
all installations are approved bythe National Hoard of Fire Under-writers. The "Urco" can be pur-chased with no down payment andan little as $1.70 weekly The Lorraine firm will gladly R*.nd a heat-ing engineer to any home in Wood-bri(Jge or Carteret for a free heat-ing survey.
WATCH CHIMNEY!Awkward If It Protrude*
More Than 8-10 InchesA chimney that sticks out into
the room 1« awkward and makesthe room hard to furnish. In anarrow room it cuts the room inhalf and makes virtually two roomsof it. A fireplace that ia fjaah withthe wall or hns only 8 or 10 inchesof projection makea a nicer roomand one much uaaler to furnish. Ifthere is this slight projection, bookshelved can be huitt against thewail on i-iich side so thnt the frontof th*> shrives is flush with thechimney- Insist, nn<f neither thechimney nor the hook shelves willseem to project into the room atal l .
The HomeOF
Your DreamsIs Now Within Your
Means• • 5 Rooms
• • Bath• • Garage
$4,495ON PLOT 75x150
COSTS YOU ONLY $35 MONTHLYAfter Small Down PaymentTliU l»N)n Nil tnlrrcat
l a i n Mtitl !>•>• f»r umonthly rrdnrllun lu
your uurttt««#nod Inaaranrr.
IT l\t I.I DK« Yf>tlt < It i l « TIIA*M»OUT%TIO% TO
AMU PKOM HCIIOOLS1 u M l c UKII it \tmil*l l iavc licvii iin(">^
, ; ,11 . v l H ' l l I f l ^ ' I ' t l H l .
\ . tl ppitrtunlly to 11 vt- :• H vmi'u!. I'AYINU I.h^iH T H A N Ci»ST.
4 M M - i i l l i - t l i ! ^
; i y M w.11111• 11 I n
l u i -.; i-ii i n
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. ' i n r . i i i ' s , T h t ' i t * ' I I H M . I * T I I I I H I H V - I f . » . c ; i w i l l ' - . i i \ ' i
. M I , . T l i f - y n n - » • • ' w f l l b i i - k > : ; n t — i i f r . n u t ;..• n i l ,
• i > i i < T i t W t l l t i | P ^ I I " t l l r k u ( M l l h . - i d l l i f t i u l f r i > s l i i t
• i t n a . ' l n k ' l V l u r K ' 1 . T T t x l ' i i l f e e t I I H ; I I I H l l i . i t > " i i l i I . e . - ; i
i i t t > > n l . . U I M I i f y o u w l w h , j u t i N y i t i r : u n < . i i ' i i u i i i • > n i h f
k . ' . - j > t i n - f a m i l y i n v e K ^ t u h l t - a f X r u y u r .i : . i j . i . u ' f f o r U i f f a m i l y i » 11 v « - . . \ i w l l>• • « i l " - • i ' l t n i i
T t n j r c ' n u p r i v a t e J u k i * r l ^ t i t <>i> " ' • I ' l ' l ' ^ i v I . H - ^ m. i n l i l m r . I t m e a n s < l <• 1 1 K I i ' f u k t i i i i h i i i ^ n i i . l I H I . I I . N I ; i m
t i t n . r K i n ) l i . - f u k a t l i i K I n w i n i < T .
' . i - h i t " l l f f i : r e n l d e . t l K H ) ' i r e I m i H • > ! " ' I n ' \ < v y l i f s t
I t i l l . . . T l H - l r flrtttAtt C o i i N l r r i . l i o i i , H - M I . >• \ ! • • " !H i . ' l . . i i . [ . v •. > . i i - i •
, r On- fraturva In w>««iraotlon am! ct| 111iiitinti
T. AllirrliMii Hitillulor 1 «. heat-lai[ fUllllHHf »t .
K Hrtl I'IHMII "II liiirnlnif liuilrr.II. <«pi»cr IrHilffx mill
New BrunswickDevelopment Corp.
New Brunswick, N. J.143 Albany St.
i»Jiti>qKwrMwi)<y«i>nwiKi«OT (i,^i>a^hOt l t<pnaDqjgg^^
IMPORTANTNEWS!
AUTOMATIC HEATING
< •• hitHriitrnt ftuwr.i I > , | VMtMfl .
'rini t> | l | l «MN|. lirolllv flttlBB*.
oiiluu Hlak BMd t«b Is 10. t S-t-iiM-hi.n; built-in kltvhraleaM- M. N*V«TMJ lnrUt- ilo«t-(N.n.ulwK iMwrda, MrwOM 13. Lur*.- cfllnr immtf for rev-
real lull ruuni t.iilliK. Itullt-lB «xt«r*«. 13. KlfCtrlr Hrfrlii. rnlli»u.
H I M piping' tbt-OBSaoqt. 14. OH llurin-r
Come Out Today' " i i to ,\**v l l rnauwl i -k t h * « out i inmii i i tu vtrv.'i in l.nkf
A V r n u c awtl l h »
CHODOSH BROS. & WEXLERANNOUNCE
KELVINATOR
PHONE N. B. 2964
Now you can have Kelvinator dependability in heat-ing your home as thousands have had it in refrigeration.All tl.o careful ensincerinj? that haw miidr the Kelvinatorname famous has been brought to bear in the developmentof the Kelvinator Hoiler-Burner Unit and tho KelvinatorConversion Type Oil Burner for the automatic heating inmodern homes.
Year Around ComfortOf course you will appreciate automatic heat advan-
tages at any time. But particularly in the early'fall daysand late .spring days, when it is too chillyt'o go without afire and not cold enougfh for a heavy coal fire, you will en-joy the economical, automatic control o f temperaturethrough Kelvinator equipment.
Cleanliness and EconomyWhen you do away with the shoveling of coal and
ashes, the stoking of a furnace, you eliminate the greater)part of the annoying dust and dirt encountered in thehome. Draperies, rugs, walls, upholstered furniture re-main clean far longer when you have Kelvinator automa-tic heat. These are features that must be added to theeconomy of operation with oil burner equipment.
Easy Purchase TermsThrough an arrangement with Kelvinator's Refrig-
eration Discount Corporation, we have made it possiblefor you to purchase Kelvinator automatic Jieating equip-ment for your home on very convenient terms. Won'tyou let us make a heating survey of your home, withoutcharge or obligation to you, and tell you how easily youcan have the advantages of'automatic heating?
Sold and Installed By
tiuitit
ii
CHODOSH BROS. & WEXLERKelvinator Representatives
34 RAILROAD AVE., CARTERET, N. J.j j f l^rf^Mir t i i rHi^^
PAGE TWENTY FRIDAY, .TUNE R, 1936 WOODBRIPOE
PART OF A GROUP OF TWENTY HOMES CONSTRUCTED IN COLONIA F.H.A. DEVELOPMENT WITH LOIZEAUX MATERIALS
A HOME IS ONLYAS GOODAS THE MATERIALS OF
WHICH IT IS BUILTLOIZEAUX MATERIALS used exclusively in the con-
struction of the homes in COLONIA FHA DEVELOPMENT
is with a great deal of pride and satisfaction that we mention thefact that Doctor F. H. Albee, owner of COLONIA F.H.A. DEVELOP-MENT, on the recommendation of his Architect and Developer, M. MunnPattison, selected us to furnish all the lumber, millwork, masonry ma-terials, insulating materials, steel sash and hardware used in the con-struction of the very attractive and thoroughly, modern homes beingerected in his development.
When YOU build a new home or remodel or repaid the old one and youcome to the selection of the Building Material Dealer we urge you to se-lect a firm known for its INTEGRITY • * * REPUTATION FOR FAIRDEALING * * * ABILITY TO PERFORM (financially and otherwise)* * • PAST RECORD OF ACHIEVEMENT.
For We past 38 years"* *~* the best part ©fCompany has furnished lumber, millwork, masonry materials and, morerecently, hardware and paints for the construction of thousands ofhomes and other buildings in Plainfield and the surrounding towns.
Our.endeavor has been for the past 38 years, is today, and will be foryears to come, to furnish our customers with the best the various mar-kets afford.
As new materials have been introduced, and have proven their worth,we have been among the first to make them available in this territory.We will continue to do so.
Good materials without a delivery service to match would be a serioushandicap. Our fleet of 16 large and small trucks enables us to offer youthe best in delivery service.
Consult us on the financing of any construction work you have in mind.We can arrange long term financing on the F.H.A. plan for the building,of new homes or the repairing or remodeling of old ones.
COME IN AND LET US SHOW YOU WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER
FHASINGLE
MORTGAGESYSTEM
VETERANS!I II I
Remodel orRepair with the
CNUS
JD LOIZEAUXLUMBER
COMPANYTelephone Plainfield 6-1776
MAIN OFFICE: Display Room, Yard, Mill and ConcreteDepartments—861 South Avenue
STORE: for Hardware, Tools, Paints, Fencing* and dden Tool* and Supplie*—911 South Avpnuc
PLAINFIELD, N. J.