+ All Categories
Home > Documents > MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta...

MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta...

Date post: 25-Aug-2020
Category:
Upload: others
View: 0 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
22
COMIC SECTION Woodbridge, New Jert«y t Friday, August 1,4930 COMIC SECTION MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn't Bad, at That By BUD FISHER Do AS x TCLV. VOVJ: SHA^C: S AN PASS AS FiNC: YOU'LL PA^>S F O R .^ ^£ASY AS P<C: * oN<T 1 I 1'vG COKAC DOVJJW FOR 5MT 7A-AS 1 . W S6fJ iS TVtc NooT YOJ \ ; , ' -e of J >*^
Transcript
Page 1: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

COMICSECTION

Woodbridge, New Jert«yt Friday, August 1,4930

COMICSECTION

MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn't Bad, at That By BUD FISHERDo AS x TCLV. VOVJ: SHA^C:

S ANPASS AS

FiNC: YOU'LL PA >S F O R . ^

^ £ A S Y AS P<C: *o N < T 1

I 1'vG COKAC DOVJJW FOR

5MT

7A-AS1. W S6fJ iS TVtc

NooT YOJ \ ; , '-e of J >*^

Page 2: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

FELLER, I O'O

THENEBBS Junior Airs The Family SquabbleM if IIPIH, la , TV** Mat W v ». r« ot.)

LOO< AT THAT MEAT &ILL.\T LOOK5 LI»CE: VOU W E R E

FOR SOME.I U BET YOU

C^ECK IT

SAME OLDMOTUE.R 6AVE

AMD MV DAD DiDMT15 <=>O'Kj£ TO

MIM OOVJNJ TO

THE:

TO LET UtM

VO'J AKJD VOOPROMISE. To BE

GOODe>ov

. ' .w£tLJOlMMl£ / VOU DiDWELL A M O POR ALL THELlSTE^sJ^KlG lKJy UKJCL-E. SOBTUAMX5 .

K4AMC MV LITTLEMAN* ?2« »

..'c)UNJ OR KJEBB EU?VWAMT TO STEP UP TO

TWE MlCROPHOKJE. ANJO5AV "HELLO* TO

PAPA ?_VtL ^ET THeVRE.

I &0T3

AW5 PA \,OF THE &EST

LI^E A WORSE

<

AMDAKID

Twe COST.

WMmyK

WITH ME,.

By SOL HESS

<!DOlE5,TWt5 IS

TO LET TME

TWE STUD\O

TAL< OVET5 TUE: RADIO

NOT LlSrEMlKlG IKiAMSRV AT EACM

AM AR&UMG:NJT©ILL..TMAT

5 ABOUTTHE 2o TH. CALL-AMD TME LAST 1 ^ILL LEAVE THE.

Page 3: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

S'MATTER POP? Does Experience Count? By C M PAYNE

IT IT VJUZ-A

CEMT I L05T

Page 4: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

* * YOU OUGHTA HEAR THE SKIPPER,TELL /ABOUT HIS SET-TO *WLTHTHAT SCOTCHMAN THAT'S JUST

MOVED OUT HERE f. TOONERVILLEFOLKS '

FONTAINE FOX

TOONERVILLE FOLKS

USSEIS, EZRA; SOMEBOPY PUT

A BULB IN THAT LIGHT; PO

YOU KNOW

ABOUT I T ? "

The Scotchman Rubs It In

* WELL, IF THAT AlNTA BULB IN THAT

LIGHT THEN

5EEIN"' THINGS!^

*4 WHY SURE !IT'S A BULB

IN THE LIGHTWOT

IT

YES, SHIPPER, THE SCOTCHMANTHAT'S JUST MOVEP IN OVER THERE

THAT BULB I N ; HE COMES POWNEVERY EVENING ANP REAPS HIS

PAPER BY IT*1'

Fontaine

THAT SURE IS

QUE£R ! THEY AIN'T

BEEN A BOUB IN

THAT LIGHT SINCE X

STARTEP TO CUT POWN

EXPENSES TEN YEARS

" So's HE WON'T BE

OWN ELECTRIC CURRENT

AT HOME ! Q

BRING A LADPER ON MY NEXT ! THERE5SCOTCHMAN NOW

BY THE

HE LOOKS LIKE HE WANTSTO RIPE SO X WONTSTART HO ARSYMENT

WITH HIM JUSTNOW.

TRIP AND TAKE OUT THAT BULB ;

THE IPEZA OF HIS REAP IN' EVERY

NIGHT AT THE EXPENSE OF

THE TROLLEY COMPANY!

PO YOU C H A R R R . ^ FOR NO, WE PONT MAKECHARGE FO« HAND*

MEET YE DOWNTHE R;AI*-W/\Y

STATION J11BVtH AS THIS ?**

Page 5: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

F

The News of AllThe Township

• All F

VOL. XII, No.^21

CountyOld

Old Emergency Notes

By Present Incu

Advantages Ar

ing as

WOODP.KHXiK, N. .1., FRIDAY, AUGUST, 1, IOTQ

22 Pages TodayThree Sections

PRICE THREE CENTS

lit Shows>ebts Paid Off

Isen Free-Th<» present Board ofholders han already atiiltcntion and caused fiiicnt by the road imthis section, the voluI,ring large and thewith n thoroughness i,11 y. Now the boarddtier Ht-pp that will

has had made anludi t of the(unity books and is talng the public

,, its confidence bylubiishtng themlmiclit so that everyoli,,rmod accurately HS fi midition of the couj

mny

The mnthod nf aiftinst used byhN board will (-liminff much o f t h e

former auditswill make it

vpoiiHc attached toml ,'it. the same ti

easier for the f| uhlicI I I J, | | \ l « , < t \ B » i* » k i l l j | - - - - -

j u t |i,>w much monej U being spent:in<l for what purpo c;. This first.(Mitrtcrly report shi.vn that aboutjlilC.OOO in debts left »ver by the,',ld board have been paid off andthat the present board is clearing upthe over expenditure of the past three.,r four years. Director Compton, ofthe hoard has issued a fltatJMMiil'*ftconnection with the audit.'^hat is en-lightorilki»;.*'IiT. Oorupton's statement'/oil owl:

Concurrent with the publication ofthe first formal quarterly audit ofthe financial condition of the Coun-

Former Board, Are Cleared Up

ts. Director Compton Explains

momy of Present System of Audit -

ipared With Old Method.

months intervals the exact conditionof the budgets, showing the amountsappropriated, the amounts expendedand the remaining balances. In thisconnection, the attention of the pub-lic is respectfully invited to Exhibit"G," which Bhows the condition ofthe budget in detail.

A careful analysis of this and sub-sequent audits, as published, will reveal several outstanding accomplish-ments of thin Department for thefirst six months of 1930. It will re-veal that there have been paid offthis year $135,942.41 worth of emer-gency notes ileft over from the form-er Board of Freeholders. There is,at the present time, only about $24,-000.00 worth of these notes unpaidand it is not the intention of thi3Department to borrow any moremoney this year on emergency notesunless some unforscen and uncon-trollable catastrophe should occur.In addition to this, the $195,000.00

|ted muchable com-

lements inI work done'being done, was a nov-

|st taken an-tt friends.

the financialLEWIS COMPTON

DirectorBoard of Freeholder*

knowAvenel Girl Becomes

Engaged in AirplaneMiss Marion Bizderi Promises

o f L i n d e n

Oil Shortage MayGnweNertWar

Speaker at Rotary Luncheon

Says Oil Production Mu»t Be

Curtailed.

"The production,of oil must be cur-tailed or there will be a shortage inR few years," James Patterson ofthe Mexican Petroleum Co., said In atalk to the Rotary Club at the Mid-dlesex Hotel yesterday. "The fewyonrs may be twenty-five or fiftyyears but they would be few whenit comes to tapping natural re-sources. Our children will have toworry as to what to burn in theiratitos. There is a great deal of over-production of crude oil and muchgasoline is wasted." (

"At present there is a flood oigasoline partly because such a largepercentage is refined from the crude)V present methods. If the presentlaws regulating the oil business canbe changed, a great deal of overpro

lere has also recently been a re-funding of $664,000.00 worth oftemporary notes into a permanentbond issue on which w* will pay in-terest at the exceedingly low rate of4 W '.', instead of the average rate of5'< which is usual for temporary

ty, it occurred to me that it might financing. About half of these tem-bc in the public interest to issue a porary notes carried interest as highstatement at this time, elaborating a» 6%. The large number of bid-somewhat on the remarks and fig-ures contained in the published audit.

Just prior to taking office on Jan-uary 1, it became apparent to theDepartment of Finance and Admin-istration that very definite changesshould be made in the establishedsystem of auditing the County booksand in keeping the public informedof the true financial condition of theCounty. This was brought forciblyto our attention by two facts; first,during the year 1929. there was paid,or obligated to be paid, $50,797.94for the regular and usual audits andal.so special investigation audits; and,wcondly, due to the fact that therewere over-expended budgets for theyears, 1927, 1928 and 1929, amount-ing to $105,000.00.

The heavy cost of auditing, wefeel, has been overcome by the im-tisttion of the quarterly audit in thatevery three months a complete andbusinesslike statement of the finan-ces of Middlesex County wilt begiven wide publicity in the publicpreso for the information of the gen-eral public. We feel, also, that thissystem will preclude the possibilityof a recurrence of over-expendedbudgets in that the quarterly auditwill show to the public at three

TO ACT AT ONCE ONPROPOSE

Township Committee to Proceed in Accordance With Govern-

ment Requirement.. Highway Traffic Mu.t Stay

i Off Side Street*.

5bunk

j the

i Cor immediate operations inm-.tvm-tiim of a dock on the"f Woodliridge Creek were fa-M"t»luy afternoon »t a meet-

; the Township I'omihitteo wheninttii-miiu C,rnu«am informed•••mmiUcc Ihnt if the dock is

the governmentK the creek some

i essential toi n n y I" inn dvi-'lt i m e in Aut ' i i - t .

duction can be curtailed. Recently M«DYthe refineries have voluntarily cutdown production fifteen per cent,which helped some. This has savedover 75 000,000 gallons in the pastthree weeks, but the crude oil pro-ducers have BO far refused to follow:

GOVERNOR MORGAN F. LARSON

, the dock MIHUT way lit once, Mr.I (irnusnm s«'n\, m urilcr to get the1 dredge into (V creek beforei leaves the sound w\\cte it is now cn-j gngpd. An ordinance luitlwrizmg the! (-(instruction of a dock is viw evidence

f good faith that the

t o OVWK . . . , _ .

Man While Sail ings _ ,

den on Sunday Afternoon.

To Marion Bizderi, of Avenel, be-longs the distinction of being prob-ably the first girl in the township tobecome engaged to wed while flyingin an airplane.. On Saturday MissBizderi and John E. Klubenspies, ofLinden, were flying with LieutenantCarr of the Cranford Airport. Thelieutenant, of cdurse, was busy withthe gadgets that control the plane,but Mr. Klubenspies was equally busywith a diamond ring which he slippedonto Miss Bizderi's finger. The en-gagement took place while the planewas above the home of Judge HenryA. Klubenspies, of Linden, a brotherof the prospective bridegroom.

After landing the couple visited thejudge and told him and his wife ofthe events of the flight. No date hasbeen set for the wedding.

The next war will be caused bysome nation lacking oil reaching outfor supplies," asserted Mr. Patterson,

important question today

hetwwn—

ders on this bond issue and the keen-'ness of the competition for the pur-chase of these bonds is a very clearindication of the stability of thefinancial structure of this County atthe present time.

The former system of audits andthe former system . of publishingmonthly the list of checks paid outby the County Treasurer did not, inany way, prevent or indicate anover-expended budget amounting to$105,000.00 in three years, nor didthe former system of audit ever showthe true financial status of all of theDepartments of the County business.This fact is borne out by the neces-sity fjr the investigation held lastyear.

The accomplishments of the De-partment of Finance and Adminis-tration for the first six months ofl'.KSO have only been made possible, AVENEL—The first Carnival ofby the whole-hearted co-operation of | the William H. Campbell Associationv °h \7 m e m . b e r a n f t h e B o a r d o f opened on Wednesday night on the

Townihip Rrpuhlicani Vii-Him Yeiterday lit S™ flirt

HitTAnd-Run Charge Against

Hopelawn Man-

George V. R. Tinnoy, Jr., of 82

Jhe moi

isZ.fr sumDr. Prank Moore, formers

tendent of the N. J. Reformatory,was guest of honor yesterday. He isnow with a firm of architects design-ing penal institutions.

Emmanuel Voge)os, of Cranford,was a visitor yesterday.

Montgomery avenue, Newark, re-ported to the police that bis car wasstruck by a hit-and-run driver Fri-day night at 8 o'clock. Tinney saidhe was driving north on Amboy aye-^ :n the Strawberry Hill section

car bearing registration K-iiud .. ' - •' ' ?« car and the dri-when a1 ' * olice traced14036 sideswiped. n.. A ... " to Johnver did not stop. The - *

tions favoring the dock were adopteduhd copies forwarded to th© Wat D«Hpartment * **•

The attorney was directed to pre-pare an ordinance at once and thecommittee adjourned to meet yes-terday afternoon to introduce the or-dinance.

Committcoman Robert Sattler re«ported that he had broken up an at-tempt to route busses and other 'shore traffic thrdugh township streets.It was learned that circulars hadbeen handed1 out to shore-bound traf-fic Spnday morning instructing thoseliving in Newark, Hliisabeth and oth.

r points this side of New York toreturn by way of Cutters lane intoWoodbridgo and through to Rah-w»y avenue. Cutters Lane, Fultonrttw\. and some of the other streetsthat victn included in the proposedroute an> narrow. The general ef-fect, Mr. Kiiu\eT said, would be to ex-pose the pi-"v\« of Woodbridge todanger and incuiw»ni(,Mei it in un-derstood that the Sia\.i- Vijflway com-mission may be respoiWiW for the

wants before the order is K>proceed with the dredging. Ri'S"1

Traffic AccidentsInjure Several

Mrs Mary Gormley, of 1041 inin cjTclliarB. The committw WV»4 upAvenue Newark, was painfully in- Mr. Sattler's action and decide* \W.tZ .; 7.10 o'clock last night when - - — %AZl'a car in which she was riding with rouuneher husband, Edward Gorrnerly, was

highway„ „,„, jp streets be permitted.

ner imaum™, u » - — — . •• , Two ordinance* respecting park*in collision with a « ' < £ ™ j £ ' w a r e introduced and passed on firstJames

with a |i n t r o < l u c e d a n d pa

readings. One has to do with the

Foir Kittens A Day Old, AliveBeneath Eight Tons Of Coal

Rescue Effected by Cutting Holes in Side of Wooden Bin in

Cellar of D. T. Manson Home in Linden Avenue. Kittens

Seemingly Unhurt by Tremendous Weight Under

Which They Were Pinned.

The nine lives of a cat are acknow-lmore tons were shunted into the same

the Perth Amboy City,d treated for l.c.r»Uon. of

? b d ° mr,dI V

h

face- armsi d t

a b d ° m

*« i n e d at the h08plUl f °-"8tlon/

bout the faceus riding

anton,by

Campbell Association. Has 4-Day Carnival

Freeholders, the County Treasurerand all of the elective and appointiveCounty officials. A continuance of

grounds on the Campbell Club house.A great number of people were inattendance.

this co-operation and keeping within j Tents and materials were furnish-the budget appropriation will, in allied by the James Bell Company, ofprobability, mean a very substantial ~ • - . . • " .reduction in the County tax rate fortb(> year 1931.

Body Of Carteret Girl FoundWashed Ashore Near Sewaren

Ten-Year Old Sophie Kuzniak Drawn Into Deep Water By

Undertow Caused by Excursion Boat. Companion Rescued

by Twelve-Year-Old Boy. Body on Land Two Days

Before Discovery by Fisherman

S<>phi« Kuzniak, aged 10 years, of j When the police were notified a1 Salem avenue, Carteret, was search with boats and grappling hooksdruwned Saturday afternoon, at 3 o'-1 was started in an effort to locateclock in the Sound and another little j the body. A marine boat came fromgirl, Elizabeth Rpzanski, the same | New York and aided the local policeage, who was going down, was res- \ in the search. The children w«recu*d by Jame« Rusnak, a twelve-year-old boy. The children had beenbathing in shallow water and thetide was out. An excursion boatpassed and caused an under-tow thatswept the two little girls into deepwater. Sophie's body was foundWednesday at Sewaren.

Rusnak, seeing the girls in trouble,swam to their uid. He brought Eli-zabeth to shore and turned to helpSophie hut she had disappeared.While other children gave the alarm,

bathing at a location near the Ar-mour plant in Carteret.

Wednesday evening, about G o'-clock, William Buckalew, of 137Broadway, South Amboy, was fishingin Sewtlren when he noticed an ob-ject on a point of land extending in-to the sound near Smith's creek. Heinvestigated and saw that it wag ahuman hotly. He gavtf the alarm.The police notified Coroner LawrenceKinney who viewed thq body and saidIt had been washed ashore on the

Runnak swam about, searching for, narrow point of land at least twothe child but could find no trace of ] days previous to the discovery. Tinher. ' coroner took charge of the body.

Newark. Many different articles in-cluding, blankets, candy, groceries,traveling equipments are offered at:he booths. Refreshments includinghot dogs, sodas and ice cream canbe had at the stand which is in chargeof George Tompkins.

Dancing te.held on the dance floorof the Campbell Club House. JohnBolan's and Gardner's orchestra fur-nishes the music. Dancing is heldfrom 8:30 until 12:30 every evening.

John Larson is in charge of the en-tertainment assisted by all of themembers of the William P. CampbellAssociation. There is plenty of park-ing space around the grounds. Allmembers of the Avenel Communityand of the township are welcome toattend.

The carnival will close tomorrownight.

ledged to be vigorous and capable ofresistance under ordinary circum-stances, but it waa demonstrated inWoodbridge yesterday that the ninelives may be only a day old and thatthere may be thirty-six of such livesunder several tons of coal for thegreater part of a day without anynoticeable damage.

It happened in the home of, orrather, in the celler under the homeof D. T. Manson at 592 Linden ave-nue where a driver of the South Sec-ond Street Coal Company placed fivetons of chestnut coal yesterday morn-ing at 8.30 o'clock, and where three

kenpitalthe heao.She was dtnfurther exami

Anthony —_wag cut and bruisedwhen a car in which hewith Valentine Gryzk, of SPa., collided witty one drivelGeorge Sedlok of upper Green aat the super-highway crossing.

Robert Hans, aged 5 years, of 494Cornell street, Perth Amboy, wascut on the head, face, arms and legsyesterday afternoon when he wasstruck by a car driven by Joseph Dan-iels, of Linden, in Amboy avenue.

appear in full in another column.Application was received from an

Italian society in Port Reading forpermission to hold a celebration in-voiding the use of fireworks. The. T M P V c i t v voiding the use of fireworks. The

' ?bf0Jut the face matter" was .referred to the adminM-

£ tt

POLICE SEEK MANWHO ATTACKED BOY

Hunt in Port Reading and

Hagaman Heights for Fiend

Who Assaulted Boy.An unidentified degenerate escaped i In the meantime the coal man had

Monday afternoon although several returned with three more tons of

bin at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon.On the day before the coal arrived

there were no baby cats about theManson home but it was known thata feline family might bo expected atMo«t any time. Yesterday morning,after the first lot of coal waa dumpedinto the bin, faint meows were heardand Mrs. Manson asked the driver ifhe had dumped the coal on a batch ofkittens. The driver said he had not.

At 1 o'clock in the afternoon thefaint cries were again heard andMrs. Manson told a neighbor, AlbertMartin, Sr., of 596 Linden avenue,that she feared the kittens had beencaught beneath the coal. Mr. Martinsaid he had business that would de-tain him for a time and that as soonas he was free he would investigate.

Mr. Martin kept his word and ap-peared at the Manson residence soonafter 3 P. M., with saws, chisels,augers and a hammer. The meowscould still be heard faintly and Mr. ., „ ---• jMartin located them as closely as new parjes. They were a gloomy lot |possible and began cutting holes in f boys when it was explained thatthe side of the bin.

Thirteen Boys Seek Job

Chasing Tennis Balls

The Township Committee, especial-ly the Mayor, had a close-up of theunemployment situation Monday af-ternoon. When Mayor Ryan andsome of the committee members en-tered the meeting room they foundthirteen boys, some black and somewhite, ranged along the front seats.Asked what they wanted, one littlefellow, acting as spokesman, saidthey wanted a job. Further question-ing brought out that the lads hadbeen the victim of some practicaljoker who told them they could ob-tain jobs chasing tennis balls in the i

tration committee.Leo Brady and G. Acker were ap-

pointed inspectors on aewer jobs thatare about to be started. Chief of Po-lice Patrick Murphy was given per-

ission to attend the convention oichiefs at Duluth.otest was received from the

a garage own.street for

ItFordser who is _. . . ^parking cars offered forwas referred to the police comrml

Committeman Grausain reportt-that a request had been received tovacate the short street extendingalong side the Presbyterian Churchfrom between Hahway avenue andCarteret road. The object is to usethe space occupied by the street forparking cars. Committeeman Gillsaid that if anything was done inthat section the sharp point of thelittle triangular park should berounded off so as not to cause 90much trouble to motorists,

Trolley Hits Truck—Driver IsInjured.

August Kalepa, of 614 Hansenavenue, Perth Amboy, a driver forthe Perth Amboy branch of the Eli-zabeth Hardware Company, was cutabout the side of the face and bruisedon tho body Friday evening at 6 o'-clock .when a truck he was drivingwas struck by a trolley car on thefiistlino system in Sewaren at theHolten street crossing of East ave-nue and the tracks.

The trolley was operated by JohnAngursback, of Berle street, SouthKiver. The har,d£*re truck Wfts dam-aged.

Decker Place Woman

Entertains at Bridge

Mrs. Daniel Ogden, if DeckerPlace, entertained at two [tables ofbridge, Monday night. High scoreswere made by Mrs. W. K. Griswoldand Mrs. William Gilham. Refresh-ments were served by the hosteM,Those present were: Mrs. John Gor-ton, Mrs. William Gilham, Mrs. Har-ry Reyder, Mrs. Fred Baldwin, Mrs.W. H. Griswold, Mrs. L. C, Grimley,Mrs. Stephen H. Wyld and Mrs. Od-den. The group will meet next Mon-day at the home of Mrs. W. H. Gris-wold on High street.

police officers scoured the vicinity ofPort Reading and Hagaman Heightsfor him after his brutal attack upona 3-year-old child had been reportedby the mother.

The woman, Mrs. Lillian Scharup,of 6 Roosevelt avenue, Carteret, re-lated to the police that the man hadtaken her son, Godek, aged 3 yearsinto a vacant house in HagamanHeights where the assault took place.

The mother, searching for her son,happened to look into the vacanthouse and saw the child. She tore itaway from the man, but at the timeshe did not know what had happened.She described the man as being be-tween 40 and 50 years old, about 6'eet in height and very dark.

Accompanied by the mother OfficerMien, McDonnell drove all over theerritory while other officers search-id the boats and labor shacks but norace of the man was found.

De Molay Mid-Summer

Dance on August 9th

Amaricus Chapter Order of De-Mulay, of Woodbridge, will presentits Midsummer dance at the Sewar-en Land and Water Club on Sat-urday evening, August 9. There willbo dauting from 9 until 1 with musicby Tangaard's Bluebirds. Several•iDvelties have been arranged, and itis expected that the dance will beono of the most successful social af-fuirs of tho season. Ticket* may beprocured from any member of theUe Moliiy, or at the door.

California Pastor to

Address Sunday School

Rev. Kenneth Beam, of La Can-ada, Cal., will address the teachersand puuils of the Presbyterian Sun-day school Sund»y morning at theregular ) school hour 9:45 o'clock.Rev. Be»m is spending a few weeksin NewjYork City, where he is spe-cializing in studies on communitychurch programs.

Rev. Beam was formerly a mis-sion worker in Japan, where he be-came interested in International af-fairs and an exponent of commu-

t A L h i

Womans Club Provides Prizes

For Camp Field Day.

The annual field day of the KiddieKeep Well Camp was held on Mon-day. The Civic department of theWoodbridge Woman's Club, Mrs. J.J. Dunne, chairman, presented fif-teen prizes for the event. Mrs.Dunne and Mrs. A. F. Randolph at-tended the event.

fairs and n pnity, church wort Afr.mreuenL he iathe pastor of the popular cKurcn in

d lU k "Thp

La Canada lUtf,pknown as "The

La Canada vaUtf,Church of the TJghted Window.Rev. Beam has just returned fromToronto, where he attended a WorldSunday school convention. •

COSTA'S FAMOUSICE CREAMA«L FLAVORS

60o Quart309 Pintgtc Half Pint

HlRDIMAN'SARMACYAve, & Green at.

S. and D. of L. To MarkBirthday Anniversary

The Good and Welfare committeeof Pride of N. J- council 24B, Sonsand Daughters of Liberty, met Tues-day night at the home of Mrs. J. M.Jensen in Freeman street. Planswere completed for the birthday an-niversary celebration and class ini-tiation to be held Wednesday, Aug-ust 6, in the Masonic Tempi*.

Refreshments were served. Thosepresent were Mrs. H. Bernard, Mrs.L Ramberg, Mrs. Charles Nelson andMre. A. Nelson. i *.

Golfette Course in Fords DrawsLarge Number of Fans.

Hundreds of miniature golf fanshave found playing on the new Qtit-ette course at 440 New Brunswick j»v«nue, Ford* a real pleasure withthe result, that they make it a reg-1ular pastime each day. The course, •which to ideally located, contains Jmany novelty features. Eighteenholes comprise the round of play. -

Christensen's Mid-Season

Sale Will Be ContinuedDue t% popular demand, the oppor-

tunity efent of the season, Christen-sen's Mid-Season Clearance sale wilbe held over for a few more daysHundreds of super-special bargaianshave drawn large crowds to the Mainstreet store this week. Practicallyeverything in the clothing line is be-ing offered at greatly reduced prices.Men's suits, shirts, hats, trousers,Bportwear, accessories together withwomen's hose, slippers, and numer-ous household articles may be pur-chased at surprisingly low prices."

Coolidge Economy

When all 1B said and done,the Coolidge Economy was theoutstanding feature of theCoolidge administration.

Practice economy in a l lthings, including' your »utomo-biU Insurance.

The Commonwealth CatsuultyCompany, more than 85 yearsold, with more than *6,QO0,QOQin assets, writing more automo-bile insurance In New Jerseythan any other company, buloww r»U«, giving you the max-imum of security at a minimumof cost.Telephone Woodbridge 8-2149JD. P. DE YOUNG, Avenel, N. J

Real Estate & Insurance

chestnut which he shot into the bin.Mr, Martin cut some circular holesin the side of th© bin large enoughto insert his hand and arm through.Some coal poured through the holesand presently the head of a kittenappeared. The kitten was rescued.Next the tale of another kitten cameto view and a second rescue was ef-fected. Finally four kittens weretaken from beneath the great massof coal. All of them appeared to beas healthy as any day old kitten.

The mother of the kittens whohad been absent appeared and tookcharge of them, and they scrambledabout her as lively as though theyhad never known a care of a coalpile. It ia believed that the pliablebones of the kittens adjusted them-selves to the pressure, if the coal andthus the thirty-six lives—nine apiece—were preserved under the sixteenthousand pounds of coal.

MARIAN BIZDERIAvoncl Girl Who Boc^tn* Eug*««<l While Flying In Airplane

lere were no jobs open.

resbyterian Mens Brother-

hood Holds Shore Dinner.

The Men's Brotherhood of the'resbyterian church held a delight-ul shore dinner at Cottrell's restau-ant in Keyport, Tuesday night.Those who attended the affair were:iev, and Mrs. Ernest Abbott, Mr.and Mrs, A. F. Randolph, Mr. andMrs. H. A. Tappen, Mr. and Mrs.W. H. Griswold, Mr. and Mrs. JulianGrow, Mr. anad Mrs. I. J. Reimers,Mr. and Mrs. William Gardner, Burnlam Gardner, Miss Miriam Lister,Mr. Emil Koyen, William Koyen, Mr.and Mrs. Floyd Johnson, Mr. andMrs. Whitney Leeson, Mr. and Mrs.Joseph Copeland.

Mr. and Mrs. John Kreger, Mr. andfcfrs. Fred Baldwin, L. Brookfield,rfr. and Mrs. Leland Reynolds, Mr.itul Mrs, A. H. Bowers, Mr. and Mrs.Stephen Wyld, Mr. and Mrs. Emerion White, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Grim-y, Harry Tappen, Mr. and Mrsilarry Baker, Jr., Mr, and Mrs. Theo-loro Leber, Mr. and Mrs, Shain, Mrind Mrs. John Camp, Mr. John Rich-n-ds, Mr. and Mrs. James Filer, Mrs.'arstensen, Mr. antr Mrs. James.to id, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gillis, Mrml Mrs. J. Heisclberg, P e t e rk-hinidt, Sr.# Peter Schmidt, Jr., Barley Kiysko and Logan Bockius.

Prizes For Low Scores at

The Woodbridge Golf Links

The Woodbridge Miniature Golf•inks at Pearl and James streets, is'list becoming a popular spot forniniature golf fans. The eighteeniolo course which is o|»rttwhigh Toinpkins, Harmon Partridgeui<i Neal Harmon has many' novel'futures which attract fans from all• ver the township. Beginning thisweek, two zeiprs of five dollars each,till be given to the man and. womanuniing in the lowest score. Thewre.lvo golfers in each division whourn in the lowest scores during theveek will meet each Monday nightii an elimination contest. Anyones eligible to compete. Scores willit- kept by a appointed scorekeeper.

r for the course is 44.

NOTICE is hereby given that theannual meeting of shareholders ofthe. Norwood Building & Loan Asso-

iitti«M will be held at the associa-tion's registered office, 4 Greenstreet, Woudbridge, N. J., on August!>, 11)30, at' 8 o'clock in the evening,for the purpose of electing officersand directors for the insuing year,und to transact other business toronie before the meeting. Polls willremain open for 1 hour.

JOHN T. TETLEY,Secretary.

W.I. 7-25: 8-1.

Sunday School PicnicAt Echo Lake Park

Presbyterian Children Have

Delightful Time Saturday

Athletic Events

The annual picnic of the Presby-terian Sunday School was held Sat-urday afternoon at Echo Lake Park.The children were taken to the parkin a bus and private cars, The win-ners in the athletic contests were:Intermediate boys 100-yard dash,Roland Palko, Edward Simonsen;Intermediate girls 75-yard dash,

Outwater, CharlotteJunior boys 100-yard

MarjorieBrooktield;dash, Robert Jost, Clifford La ing;Junior girls 75-yard dash, Irene Pal-ko, Mae Reid; Junior boys sack race,Duuglas Zenobia; Intermediate boysthree legged race, Kenneth Morris,James Reid Intermediate girls sackrace, Charlotte Brookfield; Juniorgirls three legged race, Lucille Krebs,Irene Palko; Intermediate girls threelegged race, Mae Reid, Bernice Baum-lin; Primary boys sack race, JackChristensen; Junior girls sack race,Lucille Krebs; Junior boys threelegged race, liert Jost, Robert Sat-tler. The Rev. Ernest Abbott andJohn. McCreery won the horse shoetournament. In the afternoon, theadults enjoyed a game of baseball.

John E. Breckenridge was generalchairman in charge of the affair. Hewas assisted by A. F. Randolph whosupervised transportation, and JohnStrome, John Donnelly and John Mc-Creery, who planned the program.

Uenil Tennis Club Defeatedat Perth Amboy

AVENEL—The A v e n e l TennisClub was downed by Perth Ambey --

Amboy on Saturday.ing Baker plays No. 1, 6-1, 6-1. Twovery close matches which couldhave won the match were lost byE. Pomeroy, No. 2 man, 6-4, 4-6and 6-4 and by G. Forest Braith-waite, No. 3 man, 6-2, 8-10, 6-1.Avenel's No. 4 man and RalphWheeler who played No. 5 man wonthe last matches with only the lossof two and three Barnes each. Bothdouble matches were lust. Avenelplayed without the, services of theirNo. 1 man, Earl Pomeroy, and PerthAmboy played without their star,Ted Ems.

Avenel will play Newtomorrow ut New BrunawieK.

J. BLAKEKODAK FILMS 24 Hour Sarvic*

D«v*loplnf •»«! PrUting100 MAIN ST. T»l, 8-0298

HARDIMAN'SP H A R M A C Y

Ed. L. Hardimaii, formerly ofSeaman's, Perth Amboy

PRESCRIPTIONSCalled For and Delivered

£or. Rahway Avenueand Green Street

Tel. 18ft WooJWidg., N. J.

j;\

Page 6: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

PAOB TWO

THE QUEER ONESFIRST AMERICAN APPEARANCE 0 Br THOMAS ARKLE CLARK

^ Dean of Mi l , Uni»*nitT0 Illiaoil. C

VOODBRTBGE 'NDEFENDBM1

Mile. Helle - NiceOF FRANCE

CHAMPION LADY DRIVER OF THE WORLD

Auto RacesA.A.A. Sanctioned - America's Most

Sensational Board Speedway

0009000000000000000W

If !''' , .-iIlVWl-

"'. ' and fol*- \ c m t o m .

would befluliPr than H 1*.It I* the nnniranlthnt (rtvrt testnn<l color nnd intpr<-st In life. ItKlvf's one sonie-

tti inpM-nm.

to t a l kIt chonpp»

nll m"nrit

I1*eIWP<] the styles

"..',. > :u the puR*1* of the.'•noes. Khp setR her own.

^ " i , < never fallpn fr>r iihnrt skirts,,r t.';e uneven herriline or hobbed hnlr jor even silk tt'WfclngB. Lisle thread |ones ire good enough for her, and ah?still wean these bis wide brimmed"oppj n a t s covered with wa-vlnxfeather* and flower*. Bnt ihe attract"attention when she wnlks down tripstreet.

They have courage these queerones. They help tn xtnhlllze cuMomand to keep the rn<]lcHl» from Rolnpwild over "-acini nn<) Rfirt«rlftl novelties. More power to them.

(Sl t i l l H'HKtn N»w»ri»»r fnlnn 1

New York's Dry Czar

OperaPurl mil's np

fly," wan iirculurH «t l.n S< n!(i Fchni (• ry 17. 1004, nnrt *ei'>r<"! en utter fail-ure. Three months Int'-r H «»« gir-en «t HrM<-ln. nn-1 Milnnn illBnpprov-al wns nft ujihei'l. It sturted on *rnrer r of wmlil-iviOe |-r".l-irtlon. nndU onp if the run t p " l ' " l n r <1l"'rB"If noun.

"Tlinl'H the HXHRC" l« n f^nifiTH ex-reniilim wlilrh oriRlnnted In the An-Inlmllnn exprpsulnn, "that 's thel,|7. •• Chli In Tlln'ltistunl mnan»lilnE-" Therefore, "thnt's the thing."Illth-fnliitlii'" l» « funtnftlc Amerl-•i vnrlntlon of hlrh flown or high-.lllng.

repjlnr

K>..

If «<•

8 - Big Speed Events - 8WORLD'S GREATEST DRIVERS COMPETING

Mi,T oftiiinlne to

hi tlif community who re-K'< t!it rptfular rr^d which

] f ' .! | . iw».•uM hnve iijin5pd a good deal

•!•! [jnt hn'I llorton In our vll)!'• rnn ihe grocery store In

t"«-]i. I.OIIB after every merchantwas rlt-'ii veritiR hlB merthnndlM byautomobile Horton continued to drlTehis old [iii-bald nag to a rickety deliv-ery wnpon. He did not enre for auto-mobiltf. He did the delivering him-gelf. sitting on the high seat of thecart ns iinrclaied a< a wooden Indian,bin fr<.(k coat tails hanging over theli.ick o[ she seat ar.fl l.is old "EtoveI'll1'/1 hat cocked nt a perceptibleni:»'o 'TI li13 gray lif-.Tl. He wag ifigure that no one ever ftirgot. i!^kfpt t" hl» oitl n-ays and his old dressuntli (he undprtakfr coriveyf,] him totl:o rji-nii.'tery, but ns long as he livedLe cave class to the' town.

TIK-V liave automoMles j id electt

^ f

W 0 0 D B R 1 D G EINFIELD $1.00 GRANDSTAND; n n

, r $2.00BOX SEATS $3.00

ct*.furnaces and

\,-r i. . mdios and safety razors nndtelephones In most of the farm housesIn the community In which 1 once

—that Is they all do but McGin-nis. He lets bis whiskers grow, herl'les l ' town Still In B flittering sur-rey K-hind a span of Sfiritea horses.He wouldn't trade a good horse forthe best automobile he ever Ret eye*on. 'lit- is the richest man in the com-niuLity who could have everything be.wants, but the facts are he waitsnothing modern. The old wayB arepoud enough for him. He has no usefur a telephone and the radio driveshim crazy. He carries all the waterhe uses from a spring a hundred yardsor so from the house. Why dig awell or put in a force pump? He still

I j clings to the o!d base bnrner andI1 thinks a kerosene lamp quite good

enough for any of his purposes. HeIs Just a frenk, the neighbors say, hutIt Is immensely Interesting to ere, ink community where every one else iscnizy to get some place else in ahv.-'v, one mn" —'io i« sat'c"'"-l ' " "i"*

w t : o 1,!:? !•••

a mail i:irr.

M«r»en DHnster. Tradvr. Tr;:;;.-.r e-::;>s ti.st

for tee past five or f-i yi-ars cirttT.ihare been dlniinishitc a; an a'.arrJigrate, due panly to auHai.ting civiliza-tion, partly to the fact that U.ey ar?closely trapped. The n'.-rr!«i is one ofthe cholcv t fcrtn-arers.

Cetaceans are tr.c^u-ilsitnjcrare !? «o cic-ilf.ei as tthem Ct for ar; aquatic life:stance, whale?. (Wphir-s and ;•••r;"':s*s.

^

AS USUALthere will be

We have ioinetl withto no< only meet but BEAT Mail Order

and oilier Special Brand tires on

Price-Quality-Service

OLDF1ELD

O»rTlr»(Cuh Prirt)

Man

Ttrt

$5.55 $5.55

4.so-21 6 .55

7.55

DIRECT SAVING FURNITUREDirect Saving Furniture continues to be.priced at exactly what it is worth andworth exactly what it is priced. Patronswho bought hereearlier may have thesatisfaction of know-ing that the pricesthey tecUred were

DIRECT SAVINGS inaugurated this policy last Feb-ruary in the belief that current "sales" practicestended to deceive rather than benefit the public. Itis our convection that in most cases a cut in priceshould serve as a warning rather than an induce-ment and that the buyer's real protection is the honorand integrity of the house from which she buys.

too low to permit reductions duringAugust and patrons who plan to purchasenow or in the future will find our regular

prices as low or low-er, quality for quali-ty, than most of theprices offered in so-

5.0D-20. 8 .15 0 .15

s.oo-21- a.45 8 4 5

5J3-I8 8.9S 8.98

5 s-2o. 9^0 9*40

5JJ5-2U 9.75 9.75

6.00-20 12.55 12.90

lome in and nee the tact*for yourself

Y Ol no longer need to §encl forlire? by mail, nor do you have to

buy tires made by some unknownmanufacturer. Firestone prices arenow the lowest in tire history, butmore important than that, Firestonequality has never been higher.

We've taken the •syatcrroat of tire baying

Visit our store and we will show yonthe '-inside facts" about tires. Wehave actually tut up new tires andhave the cross sections for yon to ex-amine— you will easily Bee whyFirestone quality it so outstanding.

Don't worry about pna«twe«and blowouts N.

Punctures and blowouts are botfifcr-Bome and most people fear them—but NOW, because of the patentedDouble Cord Breaker, Firestone haspractically eliminated them. Comein and let us shovr you this featurethat puts two extra plies of cordright under the tread where mostroad wear comes and where punc-tures and blowout* start.

Compare Prices andSpecifications

Because Firestone Tires hold allworld records on road and track forspeed, safety and endurance, manypeople think thev are high priced—;but just check iheue low prices—then compare quality—you will bedollars and miles ahead.

called "Sales."

DIRECT SAVINGFURNITURE CO, ^ *

*WE ELIMINATE THE RETAIL STORES OVERHEAD"

Sixc 4.50-21'Widih of Ti«

fTtuekneMOi

TireVolume oIRabbo

In Tread and

OurTire

4,75 Uu_ lkSOlb*.

.598 in.

Tin4.72 In.

15.68 UM.

,558 In.

Side*Nambcr of Pile*

•t Tread 6

ErtablUh JJW FaeU byCrow Stclien, 9f Both

165 en. in. 150co.in.

stoS-

T F I I UYI A A mt4

AMTHOlSuper Heavy

MMftDuty

Hd

(CukPitok Tin

4.50-21 $9 .20

4.75-1910.20

5.00-19 10 .95

5.25-20 12.^5

5.50-20*3.90

6.00-20.14*70

6.50-19 17.40

7.00-2019*05

9.75

10.25

11.75

1 ^ 5

15.15

17.&0

18.95

21^15

f.Wf< Batterie*

j ^ p l i r | ^ J ^H * Bta»

St. GEORGE Ave., RAH WAY, N.J..: • Ppea Evening* Until 10 P.M.

NEXT TOFRANKLIN SCHOOL

Advantages of Our TireWider Tread, of Long-Wear Non-Oxidizing

Rubber.

Thicker Tread, of Long-Wear Non-OxidizingRubber.'

Heavier and Bigger All Around.

10% More Rubber in Tread and SidewalL

7.2% Thicker Tire Seedon.

Double Gum-Dipped Cord Breaker, 6 Plie* atTread.

Ju.manufacturer

Jn«t p g ysavings of the one tire

f conUrob own •ourcea ofraw materials and who uses the mo*t modernmanufacturing method* in the Industry—LeJdership, gained in actual performance onrace track and other endurance runs. The In-

nen,!°r » f t h e BaUo<>«» Tire. "Mont MUe» PerDollar."

DOUBLE GUARANTEEAll Tires Guaranteed Without liuiiinHons by

WT u . - » _ . ^ 8 •"*« Firestone.

We Mount Voar Tires FREE - DHve In TODAY!

L

DALTON BROS37 C O W AVENUE CARTEREI Ml

Telephone Carteret 8-0411 '

.! L iui.^.

Page 7: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

ntUWHMH

\The IThe Ihvorut^* T o m o r r o w at LUDWIG SAUGUST SAVINGS

Ch.irmlng Bedroom |inlsh«H In Colonial Pieces In Red Mahogany.

•:. III 'II 'IM], purly Ai

!>: pup l l l l i r Imlll J

t I lk" n p e r e n n i a l ,

• nrnini i l t ' v c r y year .

•:iltv mi l l l u s t ru l l o t i

' p o i n t s , ( leurm1

fund-nmil".us tin-now It

ton I- of myI'S

i,t l " ; i s i l i i i l f n 1l117.cn s u l i j i t s « n w h i c h

I ,-:,n lie counted to dell >r n curtainl,.,iuii' Just any limp, nri' "irly Ainer-i,-:ni furiilturo designs Is I I 1 R " ' them.

I !,•• pnpulnrlty..of f u r t i v e nwlfiifti'r those designs I* moi ' ier Hlustrnilot) of my ^intention tliiu the suitulili- Is the benutlful nnd Hint the r t t lIv licinitlful Is In style forever.

Think of the r i l p l m fathers uslntliiil furnllirVe years nno nnd ot howln»iiiiilfiil the same stylos are In ourhomes rlnlit now. There1 Is nothingfurlillsh Blmtit It, you know, j It Isf,vily simple, sturdy n " 1 ..wfivMini It certiilnly (,i.fs character and(ii•;;•'.'.., nnd comfort nnd homo likenesstii imy room.

Hut don't lot your enthusiasm for ItK<> too fur. There were ft Ki'UAt ninnypltvi's of furniture made !>y our worthyancestor* for pai'tlciilur uses which weno IOIIKCI- have. Ofteh ' they werefurceil' tu make rrude and homely

they illd not have thame nor tlio tools to ninke nny other

.(nil. Thnt'a my pot cry ngnlnsiiiiitlques, yon linve to tnke themthey urn nnd so ninny of thorn nre no

iiKi'i1 useful toThe licmity of rppnnluctlons Is Hint

they inn he ndnpted to our present cle-ninnda nud yet Imvft ittl the remity ofthe orlglnivls Incorpornteil In them.The pieces helnff reproduced today urngraceful nnd delightful.

Another MR ndvantnge the reproductlons have over orlglnnls la that theynre more sturdily built. A piece otfurniture which hns heen In use forn few hundred years Just can't helpshowing It and being In rnther frnlcondition.

You may have earlyIn any room In y^nreiTcrfnTprtces

-'m m * 4)r"r house. ThereaJr"Sven ' 4nrnhle dinette suites nowcoriHl»tlng of drop-lent tables, chairs,Welsh dresser, or n buffet. Hookedrugs are especially attractive in theroom which Is going early American.

I had no Intention of roving on at „such lenjjth when I started this, but iyou really are to hlume asking rueabout one of my fuvorlte subjects.

Koiully, Kern Kture.f(7). 1530. Wt!Bt'.![n Nvwipnpcr Unlon^

ONLY <»» . y r > J »'T

T R A D E I N

Do nol h«.il.l. lo .hop-lh™ o lh*

FREE I 1 FREEFREE nooir

Spring. I Boudoir L a m P 'Chests

FREE | M a « " i n e l FREETables I Book Racks 1 Table

Troughs^ 1 Lamps

Rugs

Rugs

FREEIce

FREEireakfatt

Sets

FREEFine

Mattresses

», you would your old car.

PHONE: Perth Amboy 42

SilKFUFF'S SALE—New Jersey Su-preme Court—First National Bank

of Perth Amboy, N. .!,, a corpora-tion, Plaintiff, vs. George M. Vaten-tint' nnd Horry B. Afflerbach, I)e-fi'iidants. FS Fa for sale of premisesdated .lime IS, 1930.

Hy virtue of the above ntated writto mi' directed and delivered, 1 Willi »cpoM' to sale at public venduu onWKDNESDAY, THE 27TH DAY OF

AUGUST A. I). 1'J3Oiit 1 o'clock standard time (2 o'clockdaylijfht saving time) in the after-noon of the said day at the Sheriff'sofiice in the City of New Brunswick,N. .1.

All the- ripht, title and. interest ofdefendants, George M. Valentine andHurry B. Afflerbach, of, in and toall the following described premises,to wit:

All that certain tract or parcel ofland in the Township of Woodbridftcin the County of Middlesex and Stateof New Jersey, known as Lot No. 1(in map of property belonging to

William Edgar, of the Township ofWoodbridge filed in the office of theCounty Clerk at New Brunswick, N.•I., March 20, lilfl", lying on thesouth side o'l Green street. Degintiing at the northeasterly corner oflands of Amanda E. Krickenridgc,thence along said lands 150 feet,thence easterly f>5 feet, thence north-erly 1M) feet to the south side ofGreen street, thence westerly alongsaid street 55 feet to the place of be-ginning.

Judgment amounting to approxi-mately $ 1,45(1. -j

Together with all and singular therights, privileges, hereditaments andappurtenances thereunto belongingor in anywise appertaining.

BEKNARD M. GANNON, Sheriff.LEWIS S. JACOBSON, Attorney.$20.1li al-it-mon\V. 1. H-l. 8, 15, 22

—Please mention this paper whenbuying from advertisers.—

Read Every ItemThey Mean

Tremendous Savings!Men's Polo Shirt» 79cRayon Silk Polo Shirts $1.15 3 for $3.25All Wool Speed Model Bathing Suit $2.45 $2.95 $3.45All Wool Sport Sweater* $2.45 $2.79 $3-45Pure Linen Knickers $2.79Men1. !Kra»h Knickers $2.45Men's White Sailor Pant* , $1.50Boy'* Sailor Pant* $1-00White or Striped Flannel Pants $5.95White Duck Pant. $1.69Khaki Pant. — Union Made $1.65Men's Dress and Work Trousers $1.65 $2.79 $3.65Men's Rayon Silk Shirts and Shorts 59c. 2 for $1 00Men's Broadcloth Pajamas $1.00 $1.59Light Weight Bath Robes $2.95White Athletic, White and Fancy Shorts 39c

STRAW HATS95c, $1.45 $1.85

FREE! EXTRA PANTS FREE!Tailor Made All Wopl Suits

To Measure

$25, $30, $35, $40Extra Pants Free

DOYLE 8 DOUBLE

CUNNEEN(WEEN STAMPS

QUEENSTAMPS

SATURDAY

J»h±y.ln*- <HfVftTF • * •'Illppnt person | f . | |

IOUR to

LIBERAL CREDIT TERMS

OF ANY SUITE $109

3-Piece Living Room SuiteSPECIALLY PRICED LUDWIG'S AUGUST SALE

4-Piece Bedroom SuiteSPECIALLY PRICED LUDWIG'S AUGUST SALE

This 3 pc velour suite in an outstanding value dur-ing this sale. Upholstered in checked veiour combinedwith figured jacquard. Regularly priced at $ 198.

$10 DELIVERS IT!

$109A typical value in this sale. Fine 4 piece Bedroom

Suite—including1 full-size bed, chest, dresser and vanity.Constructed of fine cabinet woods throughout.

$10 DELIVERS IT!

$109

YOUR CHOICE ANY SUITE $129

3-Piece Living Room SuiteSPECIALLY PRICED LUDWIG'S AUGUST SALE

4-Piece Bedroom SuiteSPECIALLY PRICED LUDWIG'S AUGUST SALE

fhis suite was mtde to sell for $229. Three piecesinclude long, comfortable settee, arm chair and thronechair. Upholstered in quality mohair with reverse ofcushions in moquette. Back of throne chair also in mo-quette. . .

- $10 DELIVERS IT!

$129 We urge you to see. this suite. Four pieces—includesfull-size bed, chest of drawers, large dresser and FrenchVanity. Constructed of genuine Walnut Veneers. Regu-larly sold for $189.

$10 DELIVERS IT!

$129OPEN

SATURDAY

AND

MONDAY

NIGHTS

LUDWIG175 Smith St., PERTH AMBOY Cor. Madison Ave.

CLOSED NOON

ON

WEDNESDAYS

DURING JULY

AND AUGUST

i »W»VY kVClW^

Page 8: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1930•OODBRIDGB INDEPENDENT

Sukaenptiaa $1.50 Per YearPublished Every FrkUy by

MIDDLESEX PRESS, 18-20 Green Street. Woodbridf©Telephone, Woodbridgc 1710

CHARLES H. BYRNE - - - EditorMAXWELL LOGAN Publi*h«J. J. RAFFERTY _ Advertising and Bminesn Manager

EntcKdiu wM-ond-elMi uatfer March IS, 1919, at tb« Port-offic€ it Woodbridc*, N. J.. undtr th* Act of Mare* 8, 1879.

tuTiotui lavtinstM iFHE5WT»nv»FIFW JIISEY NEVSfikPEIS. IK.

VMd.

f/?fHIS PUBLICATION is committed to no political, racial, r*h-l l tious or social (rr°uP o r orfsniMtion. IU aim is *.o allow inVI> ita new* columni nothinj that it knows to b< untruthful,

biased, or of a nature to offend a proper sense of delicacyThe p«per'i opinion, insofar ax a sincere endeavor can serve to pre-vent it, do«i not appear in the news, but is confined to the space setaside for it—the editorial column. In this column it is pledged touphold such things as it conaiders worthy, and to condemn and flffhtagainst conditions in which it see* evidence of insincerity, injustice,or prejudice of the public welfare. Its columns i t all times arcopen to publication of communications on any subject, althoughno communication will be considered that is palpably bitter or ma-licious or which is not aiirned by ita author. In cases where it isrequested, the name of th« lutiior of a communication will b«withheld in publishing.

0 Canning 0

NO ROOM TO SPARE

The request to vacate the short street between Rahway ave-nue and Carteret road at the White Church should not be acted'upon careful consideration, The growing volume of traffic atthis intersection has created a need for more room and betterfacilities. To close the little street would add to the difficulties.

Some time ago signs were placed making the street a one-way passage, but the direction was contrary' to ordinary rulesof safety, the one-way stream requiring drivers to cross twolines of traffic. At the time the police disclaimed all responsi-bility for the one-way signs and admitted that the direction in-dicated by the signs was wrong.

The triangular park at the intersection of .Rahway avenueand the Carteret road is a beauty spot and probably dear tomany WcfDdbrjdge residents. But the point or apex of this!triangle, extending as it does io the line of the two streets,!makes a sharp, inconvenient turn for drivers leaving the Car-1

teret road to go toward Rahway. Use of the short street to.avoid this turn became common as it was safer. And the* -_c._..placing of the one-way signs did not check this use of tV j ; u s r ; i *.,,street as soon as it became known thi|t the one-way signsnot authorized by the police departmthe little street altogether is probablyof the one-way plan.

It was suggested Monday thatbe rounded off. That was the odiscussion. If the little street ^ ^ e

off of the park should be s u « * *° EiaKfe UP f o r :-*elbow room. *'

FARMERS AFFECTED BY WAR

Br GEORGE E. ROBERTS, Pruidrai i f 1 h l " ™ - < * 7 EaI lk-

DOES JT

Instead of attempting to P

duce wheat and cotton M..*--T « CEE

use of machinery esn^5 •3tJ-t*d :o that

costs Bhoald be 'ar*; u E ^ ^ ^

the general"-* b'^ : L * o i ;

, the chetr^i F.r»^rtioa

*J»e whole » : ? : : : : • « to

By THOMAS ARKLE CLARKD«aB of Mr>. Uli'Trrmit; of

IUICOII

I J

t. The reque°*e result ^

• * : • > -

i & . . U i f

;he

ir-y.'.-'-z, u t i isr i ir uAt} had its origin ic \\.t *

•i iiTLZ-zizzez: of prc'i-j.ijos end trade v L ; i L:

7* r. ?:.;;.'j cf i{>:>is:~'7.-, s.i:i the cutting off cf t

~-:i''.T v.::. ::A dtv&r.LUoi. cf tsucfc of Europe LT tb

-et: ft:rr_-.^f M 'LTTL :r:':j?::or c-'JUide of Europe.. N:

;r. fu:: z*'<i-:-''-'---- tzi i:. :Terprorjnc-r:o2 of ftrni rrrc-

c.rld. u.i t ZT'A-hZz. cf ii.™ rtlitf eiiEts in everr K^T_;;

ct. idea :r. ".-.td ofT h

Jos? :L

I I E : vr.«-t: I L :

cf E

oi cu be grors 1L the reg1:*. rr.t &s the Gretl Aa^r-i

cf E.t:-:..Ltrj tdtrtei to

a r:.c

t i ir-e;:1. ir

^t i :.i.i K T J M S r:;i.stc*_;L?e£

'ROUTING TRAFFIC

.A preceden; tha: wil] be valutbie ii: the future wa? estab-lished M'.ndfcy afternoon when ir.e To*Qjhip Comrriinee :ooka ?xand agtir.s: permirtiEg the routing of high*-ay imfEcthrough street? of Woodbridge- Presumably il was the H.gh-•way Corr.nus?::r. tht; was responsible for The aTTempt :<. fir.ur:a grta: pvr.ior. of :he shore traffic through Cutters Ltr.e. F_l-ton ?irtr*, and &•:• c-r.. to Rah way aver.ict. Such a progran:, :1 ;*.had tee-t permirted. would have created a cC'r.c::.j:. *>a:would have damaged the commucity in mar-y way?, feces-triar.s. e=prcially children, would have beer. exp:>fec '.: rr.athdanger: iocal trafRc would have been inconvenienced. tr:e vve ron streets would be increased, and the sen-Ices cf ertra policeofficers would be required ai crossings.

Woodbridge }s subject to more than it* fair j.'.are of re-'Bponsibility and expense in policing crossings of highways, with-in the township limits as it is, without asrjn:::.g any new bur-dens.

O.aeT EtilfcL.

MODERN PARENT TOO MECHANICAL

I ; KKL ?"_:?: £t.J.rrOE3i Pirsnt-Tiaz&cr

i ::. ::•-. ii:^t and l i e tralLinc — t l?; i iLjicntr t v.- s

-r :>••:_ 1J T;T':L tbe rr'.r 'tr : e :L i . : - e cf z>tTzz.~y->i.

Pf *.",:. :: iL'.'b :•«:•:•-?.•. - I ' J t i : aj much ITT :••:•>

rjf iitijvT —u^; rc£.iK *-i= izi '.tzi ui f:~:;<rt::oQ

ic

I'.-rn.'jf:. : * C J J less cria.e

iiess.jurf.tl'i'r f'.-rrfTfi! of tbe £n€r buir.Li ".ce'ref. banian E

hiiEEi i^>rfFts, TrLf-f the &bjec"..Tf v.rid cf actiot

rret uf :T..

ucn wi_; Let

VENGEANCE NOT FOR SOCIETY ciildrei,E^ L; i'rk.z heigh:

t i i ouoi.; irti.e, a:. as tbev

art iv:

Etery single one cf l i e &rru2.rL3 useJ todEv is fsror of CET::£L1

l.'tely :o reru" SJ vieorouslr. The

tLL it tvtr lji\e wimoat K . d hTunt

usedLi was used, t i - f:T a iccf: witbte-;

the etrlj j;j.rt c-f tii h-.i c&ys.tl jji:Eishinc;t

common T'tiutv :/cr c:vy on*-

la ?ach eafee you itiy the sacrecrjesf cf i:n. YCJ hir? takt-L to yc"r-

stlTes, either ts individual* or as the Elite, \L~ >:•""£! ic- Uiki'ivi* i : e :

vLicb vptj c-tc never givje. . . .

1 em cot satisfied as to capita! r-LisLmem k*:r<c a dcierrctt.| 1 -

tSiJXik tha: sJwate autimef that a pan crett^s a balaut* f-heet when he is

going to cornEii murder, and putt capitSil punishment CB the debit side

agaiwt aaytitiijg ta e ight g*t OB tht o*d-4 sid*. T k i t ar*« f#¥^ calca-,.

lated coid-Llooded murders, bet the bulk of mtrdtrs are nothing i f the

kjed, bnt are crimes committed when a man loses t-oiitrol of himself.

I don't thirjc that society has anv right to tfrfcak TipgeMice upon anj-

on*. I i ia my. MietjtMi tbji real deterrecti a^aiiiBf crime ii social opinion.

It U not tbe p&Jice northe lairs. It is the heeJthj puMic'ftpSrifcfif'WMftr "

affects and surrounds a man from his routb—1 am satisfied mjself that ,

it is to that mare thai: anything else we owe the

PUBLISHERS PROTECT PUBLIC

Bj W. E EVMPEF.EVS. Fcfcni Tnic

in our crun-

mai

OUR ECONOMIC SYSTEM FAULTY

Bj DR. WALLACE VCLViE. FedtrJ &t»u

Pt'-'lisbtrs thrf-ugiiO'-t the c-ouirry tre'to be cre:.:ed with refjiorisi-

Lilitj (cr the stitoest cf tbe ctsipaign of the fbdtrt: trade commissioL

agairiftj frcjdulett tdvtnifing. Is the last six mrjLths, Eecordinr to fig-

ures I ^ave gathered, publishers hare rejected not leas ••.an $100,0&0.000

'worth, cf questionable advertising. As a nesnlt, the p : o c h a s been pro-

tected, from being nobbtd of not less than flM.OOO.'ji'jO.

The press in this 'matter ha* rendered a great public servic*. I

-Uiligm.ijut wiiLio|j|i. vear tbj^^ivtrnsjsg columns tC'' publieauons will

be practii-ally free of that claw of advertisements that are plaijflt*ffl*e..

But whetLtr it takes a year or tea years, or however long it may

take, the f.pht is-fiuiig^iQ «jEtmue- wjtii }he*e faiers »T\A rjnr^i1^jjr,A

"e ^ho live by robbing the ucArr ancT%'-if6r!anale are pet oui

si. ID this nr.itrULking »e have the sut<;.trt of every hof

}.»ubiishtr

ageixjy it

and

America. We heve the support of evtrv honest advenising

. We believe thai we Lav* tbe s-jp:.or. pf every honest

^jmerieaii dtiien.

Over-jTCKiurtion and unemployment form a vicious circle in eco-

nomic affairs. Each U a result of die other, and efforts lc corrt-rt either,

at loiig as the o:htT perji«t*, are likely to be unavailing.

It .» d i i i u i i to iniHgiLie a stain upon pre6ent-daj civilizitioii more

ite\j-ii\fd that this. The entire huniau race, tape for the Uule haodful

ft per. otis who <x>mprise the wealthy classes, is crying out (or more and

•tore goodg. The full time of every worker etery day U needed to produce

tbe goods desirvd. Yet untold millions of human lives are being deprived

of all approach to happiness today because we have been unable w to

organise our industrial &. =itm as to conserve and mike fruitful our

human retourvts.

If in evec the greatest of national markets, our ourp, nfiuaployiLcLit

aeem^ to be chronic; if the same thing is apparently true is Anstralu, a

pew country of tast resources and only 6,000,000 people; the conduit!)

tan hardly be aroided that only the videst attainable international

ket« are suflkieut in order that existing difficulties of demand and

Mat; be set over against wui other and canceled.

LAWYERS MUST "CU VN HOUSE"

Bj CiOif C H A S I J S KVAXk HUGHES

LLC

EJ stu r t r ie

-Ts,r "i S ' t '

11

FIRST PRESBYTERIANW o o d b n d j r A - » n u r . AR e v i la:r A M - r r - * . :

'i ''.I \ M S ;rri»v j !A. M. M-rn.ritr ',vni>li;pP M. C h n - - ! in Km! '" -

rvniN" SFF:VHI: ,n t• ( • n a n I ' h u r i h . K t - V f ' r n

will preach. Sermon t"|!;\-nur nph't'CK^ne** ha11

EPISCOPALMi'm A. M- — ' clc!>ru!ic

11:00 A. M.-FernK-n.

7:1, ' ?, M

1''

H e i y K -it h; i r : - t

— F r i d a y B>.y

l.r.1

ST, JAMES. — ! . • • « • M n « -

wiil r i -c tne H

t i t r yand btiV.fr in tin-bridcc. ir, the- (and State of Ni1-

Beinjr knownLot N\.. ;.3 tf) '«

T .»-:l-v;n*-'

atand d<-.«i(!r»tedMap of liret-r,

vember. ll'Ol1."BEGINNIN'C

southerly linedistant Two H-r.cfeet wof.i-rly frr.mwith tht- westfrly '.nue ' r in: thence Tur.ri^tr ' I 1 r- i i tn-

;.. Kverprfcr.,* Fifty il .M'l•«:t-rly. parallel•JI-. Fifty '."'0ithtr iy. paralleli-d ctiur>e. Olio

No-

; a print in theEvirf r tcr , avenue,(trod Seventy-Five

' K..r,l av t -

f-rly.aven

E-.

i I "

tr.t J

cf BEGINXINu.

fte: t" a jointe .f Evenrreen.Kar=tiriy. alonpEverereen avr-; 0 th- point or

::• L: - t

::.g-.itr. the

& ; •

NOTICEgiT?r tha:

IK. M. Mornini S«rmon..; p M—Sunday ichool.7: "Younr Peop|«'i B»ptin

Unto'HOlP. M.—Evening sermon.

Wee«J«y, 8 P. M P«y»r Meet.hi.

Firat lurch of Chriat, ScientialSewaren

A brch of The Mother Church.The Fii Church of Chrint, Scien-tist in 'Fton, Mass.

Sunds Service—11:00 A. M.Sunda school—9:30 A. M.Wedmlay—Teftimony meetinif,

\Y:(n) P. .I Thu'rsav—Readsnu room, 3:00 to

:.-.H) P. J

Publi«h »t prtor to Auf. 3, 1930CHRISTKN SCIENCE CHURCH

1.OV1 will be the subjtel o\::r l.fisc.-SfniKin in all Churchrs

• t'hri«! Scientist, on Sunda>,

; ,t G, ikn Text is. "No manr seen rod at »")' time. It »r

.ine mtVfr, Hud dweilcth in- , d h: Idve is ()erfe<te<1 in u«"I n A l.'l. .

\ , .ng if citJtmns whtch enm-,.....'.• -ic 1 .^..n-S-rinirm .s thf t.l

u . . fr< < tin- Bible. "Hi-livvi'\: ;> V.'ve ne another, for love n

• i, ,.. ani! every one that luveth is,. ("rod. ami ktio|»etli liml.

jij. . .-,. ] Vi-iji not kirowcth ni-;: , ij i* love" (I John

4 " .'; ;. ..,••' - r ' m o n also inchidr^

..., _ . , / ;.a^njfte from thextbook, ' Scien- r

--"rt'r"j1

. Davii^ht Saving Tim*)tfter-

to COD-

".:*-c :y tr.yf.i:;

C.rii: : : / : -.- that itB. J. DUNIG.VN.

Tc-xr.?r:r C e

AN ORDINANCE TO AMEND ANORDINANCE ENTITLED. "A.N iORDINANCE TO PROVIDE FOR IA PUBLIC PARK IN THE TOWN-!SHIP OF WOODBRIDGE," adopt-|e-d Apn; ". i. 1927. n nintndedNUT 14. 192S. M*rch 11, !929axil M»> 26 1530.

\V » C ^ . r c ^ . tr

-'A. Lr.-i

Don't forgetyour Insurance

No tourist's equipmentis complete withoutfull Automobile In-surance — Liability —Property Damage—Collision.

It is the best safeguardagainst the dangers ofhighway travel.

This agency can fur-nish you with goodAutomobile Insurancethrough ihe StandardAccident InsuranceCompany of Detroit I

CONCANNON'SWoodbridge

76 MAIN ST. Tel. 299

:**:'. rt-r.-

1 t i tw :»,*• CTEW-

rh oci freis ctrrr

LtTt- wetr»

Stt!.B VhS IK* nitg tbt burieL <ttLi Lift StllUUi-laLTor* out

"St.* U CIUI itu t l turn* sart c>! m>ctnl EffEir nrc or ttr»« uaiei~» *«rt_Tbert- fre iRiicee &td tbet'er fiEnietaii<3 aou-iTi'iiiiie rid^a. ?H ne-i«r fentc l*d onui urter inidLigtL'

'Er t * L T do j e t let btr?" I iLktefl1 Imvt nevei hti i fitepb-

aiiil «npp«Bt!) ThH [*r«i^ s:;:!contrfil ' J ihv'.T rttJdreu. ;.

ilsrt. and o^f (tiDnfit peni4t,.y t«*;, Cj

t^

neim•'I- --^•4 i f '_.-.•*+1 j - . r t t :

•-vj--:-r..:.f r t i k i a g . : i >.-.„• H ./.•'

' > V " : ! 5 H : t : *^-r . t : tr.e

'.- i :•:.!.-. .1 ; h t e i « ; ; ' *,<. .,•> [

The i s l e ' s here . . . thewear's here .*.. q man's-

here I Buyyour new Florshaimso» low Sale prices . . .

Attempt! bj Uvvere to thwart the tdministrauon of jmtioe IT

delaji, ghtrp practice »nd chicanery ihoold be uniparin^y oond«nned.

They hare no pkoe in a profession vhere skill and honor should gp hand

in hand.

£ren vheo purged, u it should be, of iu delinquents, tiw bar is

onlj at the threshold of iu opportunity to devote its technical htovkdge

to the effort to adjust the mechanism pf joftiee to the dsmandi of a com-

JJIU wcietj to which old methodi in many reaped* art nainit*d.

ITarJ* jfljoroTemect in this direction ii neoaaaarUj alo*. bar aatoeia-

fcWtion of canhk prowscutonL uafu tn te i aad

chililreE«fl '.aci.* I

t t iW tt*T!l tO

rtt •*it)«i 1 it, tt^j La titrf.

LV CHANCERY—Bftw«*n FAIEF1ELDIN'G AND LOA-V ASSOCIATIONCoi6pkin*tii, ked GEOBGE ACAMPBELL, et alt,., Dt/ti,d*r4u-

Fa fctAMilt cf mongugtaiae* dated July 14,By vir(ut ui t i t «i>t/\> f=i*ttd »rn

to me dirtfl*d deliverbd,' Ito SLW at public

WtDKESDAY, THE T W E N T YSEVENTH DAY OP AUGUSTNINETEEN HUNDRED AM,

TH1BTYAt out o'clock £

Diyligttil'ernooc of the kaid di> »'.

in t i e City ol Ne»

All tfc«"' '

Walkover UM! Flortbatn

Shoes for rVUn

76 RooMv«lt

Page 9: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

, ,|)HRTDGE INDl ?ENDENTft FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1930 PAGE PIV«

NOTICE \( | [ I ( ,,; i s UKRKBYfilVENthal

' r ,-,. niliip Committee will hold,'!!,,, it the Memorial Municipal

"•"' • • on August 11,

;,i :tnil,.) in

::i0 o'clock (Daylight Sav-the Rfternoon, to con-

,,„ final passage of the follow-,, liniiiire at which t ime and

.",,!,],,,.lion thereto may b« pre-(l |,v any taxpayer of the town-

,,,„.,•!v owners wishing to objectHI,. ,i written objection with the...i,;,, clerk prior to that date.'•"" ' b . .1. DUNIGAN,

Township Clerk.ORDINANCE TO AMEND A,N

IKPINANCE ENTITLED, "AN?R „NANCE TO PROVIDE FOR' P U B L I C PARK TO SERVEn i FORDS, KEASBEY AND

, P F L A W N SECTIONS OF

rcdirift thrp» valuations thereofthp manner provided in Sectionof Chapter 252 of thp IJIWS ofan amended and supplemented,$17,104,482.00; The net debtsaid Township, computed in the man-ner provided in said Section 12 in-l d i h d b

in I phip of Woodnrid(t<>, County of Mid-12 dlesex and State of New Jersey.

Dated: July 2ft, 1930." JACOB L. NEWMAN,

RIO Broad St.,Newark, N. J.

n 1it the debt hereby authorized,

is $1,192,609.U, being 6.97 r/r. Asupplemental debt statement showingthe same, has been filed with theTownship Clerk as required by said"net.

3. Tim ordinance shall take effectimmediately upon it* adoption andd i an required by law.

IN CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY^-656

TO:ULLIAN SACHS and HARRYSACHS, her husband:

By virtue of an order of the Court

*•#*•»»*•*#•*##•»»#•*#*#••#

THE ART OFEATING

W, I. 8-1, 8, IB, 22, 29

TOWNSHIP AND of Chancery, made on the twenty-««« r v o t\ ^ ^ j J July, Nineteen HundredAPPROPRIATE MONEYS TO

>AY IOR THE SAME AND TOC R O V I D E FOR THE ISSUANCEr 1KMPORARY NOTES OR

)NDS," Adopted: July 22, 1929.,..,.:, in the prosecution of theniciit of the public park to, I'onla, Kcasbey ana Hope-,-tions of Woodbridjfe Town-!,(.(Mimes necessary to appro-

*,, mi udditional sum of money,It (inliiined by the Township

of the Township ofin the County of Mid-

n 4 of the ordinance as•\\ is hereby amended to read

j i l n w * ;

Tin1 sum of One Hundred Thou-j l(')0,000.0(U Dollars or sonicof as may be necessary is

ropriated to meet the costid improvement,of the ordinance

opt id is hereby amended to readBlows:

The iiverftRc assessed valuationtaxable real propertyjexceed

and Thirty, in a cause therein pend-

STATE OF NEW JERSEYDepartment of State

CERTIFICATION OF DISSOLU-TION

To all whom these presents m*y come,Greeting:

WHEREAS, It appears to i..y sat-isfaction, by duly authenticated rec-ord of the proceeding* for the volun-tary dissolution thereof by the unan-imous consent of all the stockholders, deposited in my office, thatCOLONIA BUILDING & DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, a corporation ofiliw State, whose principal office isituated at Dover road, corner ofWesthill road, in the Township ofWoodhridffe, County of Middlesex,

in*, wherein the BROAD AND MAR. State of New Jersey (CharleB C.KET BUILDING AND LOAN ASSO-CIATION, a corporation, is com-plainant, and you, et al are defend-

Mitchell, being the agent therein andin charge thereof, upon whom pro-cess may be served), has complied

limit'|(H'|H:

nnts, LILLIAN SACHS because you with the* requirements of "An actore the record owner of the prem- concerning corporations (Revision ofisea in question; and HARRY SACHS I 1896)," preliminary to the issuing ofbecause you are the husband of the this Certificate of Dissolution,record owner of the premises under NOW, THEREFORE, I, Joseph F.foreclosure; you are required to ap- S. Fitzpatrick, Secretary of State ofpear, plead, answer, demur or other-1 the State of New Jersey, DO HERE

by " i n|rryiii(r out n*

Srrtion 7

nprnvep p y

ments), of the Townshipf Md

n p r ) pio<llni(l(fe, in the County of Mid-

d upon the next pre-

wise move with respect to the com-plainant's bill of complaint, on orbefore the twenty-sixth day of Sep-tember, Nineteen Hundred and Thir-ty in default thereof, such decreewill be taken against you as theChancellor shall think equitable andjust.

The object of said unit is to fore-close a certain mortgage given byHENRY KUNTZ, Single, to THEBROAD & MARKET BUILDINGAND LOAN ASSOCIATION, onApril 12, 1929 and recorded in theOffice of the Clerk of MiddlesexCounty in Book f>98 of Mortgagesfor said County, on page 100, whichsaid property is located in the Town-

BY CERTIFY that the said corpora-tion did, on the Twenty-sixth day ofJuly, 1930, file in my office a dulyexecuted and attested consent inwriting to the dissolution of said cor-poration, executed by all the stock-holders thereof, which said consentend the record of the proceedingsaforesaid are now on file in my saidoffice as provided by law.IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have

hereto set my hand and affixed myofficial seal, at Trenton, thiB Twen-ty-sixth day of July, A. D.( on©thousand nine hundred and thirty.

(Signed)JOSEPH F. S. FITZPATRICK,

Secretary of State.

FOR PORCH AND LAWN

Porch Gliders$15.90 Delivered

You can Bave at least $10 on this Porch Glider. A noiseless, ball bear-Ing action for the restful comfort >ou desire. Sparrow spring. Uphol-stered In beautifully figured drill. Cotton padded back and seat.

Beach Chairs$2-39

Equipped with foot rest. Hardwoodframe covered with heavy ,wovengreen and whit* duck. •

Folding Chairs- $3-98

Choice of Green or Red. Comfort-able and sturdy. Heavy canvas seatand back.

CompleteHose Outfit

The "Real"Hose Reel

$685Famous "Not-A-Klnk" quality-anteed for 2 >ear*. % toch, S P *Complete with nossle, coupling sadwasher*.

AU steel, tasy working. Holds 76feet ol hoee and unreels as you usett. Cootrueted to last a lifetime.

Acme Mowers$5-95

Kul! 16 In. cut, i self nharpen-Inil liliilu, High ronl typ»ieuy tu bandits, y«t sturdy.

Steel Camp Stools, 69c

CheUi.$1.19

11 In. wide, MIn. h i l t ,itralttht lwood.

Screening2c Sq. Ft

18 Mesh — Galvanised

Guaranteed for 5 years againstrurt and wear.

Uwn Settees .... $3.25

SEARS, ROEBUCK AND Co.OPEN SATURDAY EVEHNGS

PARKING Elizabeth Ave. at Bigelow StWACK tfioiK Uigeluw 24044

t iv 6:10 Dallr• U, t SaUirdaTa

QVaBAMTKI

By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK n

D*«n of M#», UniTirtilr ofllliaotk

If I had my vnj I ibould eliminateeating entirely. It seems to_ me a pure

wnMe'of time tospend it hnlf fmnror more fillingonrwlf wltli food,only to roppnt theprocess twicenKnln bpfnre theilny Ifl onded. Nntthnt 1 do not enJoy Mtlnn; quitethp contrnry, binthere nre BO manyother th ings 1should hetter en-Joy If It were

mprely n mutter of choice with mef'prlmps before long some IngeniousrhemlM will dcvlfle a serum or n ni|vmile gmnll enough to carry In the vestpocket to give one the necesBnrv concontrnted nourishment, and nil weRIIMII need to do Is to swnllnw i,ne ofthese and be died for the day.

Rut as things are now. cut I up Is. ofniiirw, a necessary evil. We must «ntin order to live and to he ahle todo the other things we enjoy doing.BO that we might al well make thel>fHt of It. The thing that has alwnysftirprlsed me ts the fuel thnt eatingn» often and al regularly ns we do.and over so long a period, we havennt developed any more skill nnd flnpsae thun we Imvedime. When an In-Mil cent person prnctlces any procexgthree times a day—not to speak ofthe extra rnenls thrown In hetween—over « period of fifteen or forty or ahundred years or io. one mlglit ren-sonnhly expect that the thing wouldhe done with some nicety and artis-tic finish. Considering the practicewe hove had, most of as ent prettycrudely; we have not gotten for re-moved from the animals which eatmerely to Bfltlsfy hunger.

There should be an enjoyment Ineating, a refinement, a show of goodtustc, a deliberation and a poise thaisuggests something higher thnn themere desire to shovel In enough cal-orics to keep the machinery of thenndy going for sli hours or so.

Cray Ig an eintnple of what I mean.EiiUng at the table seems more enIni'tdentnl matter with him thnn atmslnefis. Fie approaches a menl slow-ly; tie handles the cutlery quietly andwith n skill thnr shows an acquaint-mice with the .nephnnlgrn of eating.He Is never In a hnrry, never en-crossed with his food. Re seems moreInterested In the people about himand In giving them a good time thanIn the satisfying of a physical appe-tite. It Is a real delight to watchhim, fur there Is nothing gross, noth-ing vulgar, nothing hurried or bunplpd nhout his eating.

Harris Is a man of prominence andimportance In the community In whichlie lives. There Is no certainty as touhat will happen when he ftuda him-self, either to his clothing or to thetnlile linen. He sprawls when he sitsdown to ent He goes at It ns If bewere shoveling Coal or pitching hay.nnd thnt he had little time to accom-plish a most Important Job. He han-dles his tools crudely and all througha nienl he gives Ihe impression of be-ing a gormand and a boor. Ue knowsnothing of the art of eating.

(@ l»10, Weftcrn N«wij>aptr Union.)

Fin t Vf of CoinThe bureau of mines snys tlrat the

first bituminous coal was coked In theUnited States in 1816 and was prob-ibly-nsed for smelting Iron.

BIG FIRE SALETHE FLORENCE SHOP

83 Smith Street PERTH AMBOY, N. J.

HUNDREDS OF DRESSES

AND COATS TO CLEAN OUT

EVERTHING MUST GO!

Wonderful (election* to choose

from. Get your share of the

savings. Now it the time to get

HIGH CLASS MERCHAN-

DISE AT LOWER THAN

HALF PRICES!

COME EARLY

One Lot of Dresses to go at 39c(LIMIT 2 DRESSES TO A CUSTOMER)

ONE LOT DRESSES, real shantungs, linens, wash silks, crepes, prints,Q Dres»esL forup to $6.95 values, to go EXTRA SPECIAL

ONE LOT HIGHER PRICE DRESSES, new summer styles, georgettes,

chiffons, organdy prints, sizes to 50, up to $22.00 values to go at

(A REAL BUY)

ONE LOT SPRING COATS, drastic reductions, every coat must go re-

gardless of former prices or costs. Values to $35.00, extra special.

DON'T MISS THESE SPECIALS!

"AS YOU LIKE IT," full fashionhose, chiffon and service weight,$1.50 hose to go at 87C

SILK RAYON and NON-RUNUNDIES, big selection, wondervalues to go at 39C

Firil Thermal FlaikSir James Dewar. nn eminent P.rlt-

Ish chemist and physicist, who de-signed vacuum-Jnokeleo' vessels for thestorage of gases after he had lique-fied them, discovered the principle ofthe thermos flask about 1802, snysPathfinder Magazine. These dusks,known at first as Dewar hull*, provedvery effective in preserving liquidgases by preventing the Influx of ex-ternal heat.

SHERIFF SALEIN CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

—Between WILLIAM DUNHAM,et als., Complainants, and ELLASCHENDORF, et al., Defendants.Fi Fa for sale of mortgaged prem-ises dated July 25, 1930.By virtue of the above stated writ

i * i •• 1 1 1 " 1 T - . . M 1

WEDNESDAY, THE T W E N T Y - 'SEVENTH DAY OF AUGUSTNINETEEN HUNDRED AND

THIRTYAt one o'clock Standard Time (twoo'clock Daylight Saving Time) in theafternoon of the: said day at theSheriff's Office in the City of NewBrunswick, N. J.

To all that certain tract or parcelof land and premises, hereinafterparticularly described, situate, lyingand being in the Township of Wood-bridge, in the County of Middlesexand State of New Jersey.

Beginning at the point of intersec-tion of the Easterly line of Myrtleavenue and the Northerly line ofGrove avenue, running thence (1)Easterly, along the said Northerlyline of Grove avenue, sixty (GO) feet,more or less, to the lands of Herbert

I to me directed and delivered, I will.. Spencer; running thence (2) north-expose to sale at public vendue on erly at right angles, or nearly so, to

the said Northerly line of Grove av«-nue, ninety-five (95) feet, more orless, to lands of Conrad Stern; run-ning thence (3) Westerly ulong thelino of lands of said Conrad Stern,sixty (60) feet, more or less to apoint in the said Easterly line ofMyrtle avenue; running thence (4)Southerly along the Easterly line ofMyrtle avenue, ninety-five (95) leetto the point or place of beginning.

Premises known as 88 Grove ave-nue.

Decree amounting to approximate-ly $11,275:00.

Together with all and singular, therights, privileges hereditaments andappurtenances thereunto belonging-or in anywise appertaining.

BERNARD M. GANNON,Sheriff-

A. J. & ,1. S. WIGHT,$22.26 Solicitor?. • 'W. I. 8-1, 8, 15, 22

MILE-A-MINUTE MARTY — By — J. ARTHUR APPLEGATE, 363 Division Street. Perth Amboy

ATTHIS RATEvve'uu 8E

HOME, i5 0 O N . '-THIS 5ORE

;€H AMAftV/ELLOUS

VACATION,1.TOOR

YOO SAID iT ' -THANkS TOTHIS WONDERFUL OSED CAR} BOUGHT SO CHEAP A T

J.ARTHURAPPLEGATE'S

-ALMOST 3000 MtLE5 O^ER.ALUKINPJ OF POADS~

D HOT EVEN AFLAT/ r <

MARTV.'J GOSH.'WHATWASTHAT

?

/IMU5TASPOKE TOO

SOON/

WR0N6

GUMP JN THE ROAD/ — THE"WA&ON'S ftUNN(NG-

AS EVER.'

ktish

CHRYSLER 4-DOOR, 5 PASSENGER SEDAN, aerie* 80. A most lux-urious and comfortable standard make automobile, that co»t up-wards of $3,000. A car that has been completely refinished andis equipped with all new tire*. The price on thi» car will astoundyou.

PIERCErARROW, 5 PASSENGER, 2-DOOR BROUGHAM. New paint,pew slip cover*, excellent motor, good tire*, and be*t of all—reallydependable transportation ati a very attractive price.

WILLYS KNIGHT, 6 CYLINDER, 5 PASSENGER, 4-DOOR SEDAXextremely low mileage. Original paint and upholstery in splendidcondition. Original tire* and they show very little wear. You cansee from this that the car ha* had a splendid home and Ha^ma,nythousands of miles of unused transportation left. Get our price

[ on this car.

BUICK 2-DOOR SEDAN, 5, PASSENGER. Ha* six tires in splendidcondition. Motor exceptionally quiet. Original paint. Car hasbeeo very carefully handled and only in one owner's hands. Theunused mileage in this car represents in u*e a good many times theDumber of dollars we are asking for it. You may rert aMurad w»will not hesitate to make any reasonable demonstration to convinceyou of this fact.

\-

J. ARTHUR APPLEGATE363 Division Street PERTH AMBOY, N. J.

We have the new Austin BANTAM on display and invite you toinspect and drive it.

Page 10: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

FAGI SDt FSIDAT. AUGUST 1. 1

Daring Frenchwoman To Race At Woodbridge Speedway, August 10HOW . v DRESS IT

".:••: •-• *.r~ A.v.Tr,-'-•:'.* r;ul. 5 « r - f s ; ^ ' - s ;.<>•.• • ;

'/.r. _\*Tt rc:r*ar..y :

•••»!*..td "Vie •sr-,r'.d by ' e x — a r . d s ^ d

POTPOURRI

Th? BertiHon Syitern

J O B PrintingSerrkt

•Ivtf*. V« ahnf* pUct •«,

'-, 1 ,t | \A, — -

T-o TU-ri Wortfc WUUA ••:". -;;;*r ::p tr>4 a >"ft f

MODEL GIRL

AMBOV

BLUE BIRD HOSIERY,76 SMITHS! ^_ P«

On Sale SaturdayOUR REGULAR $1.15

SERVICE HOSE

MASTER MINDS'FAMOUS BOXERS

• r . . . » - :

•,*r • a-. i - . *:>»+r:« •"••* •*•?.**. :•' r.K n-^.-.i..? c'.r;--:r.:r.trdrr.:.t= a- hour for . fc-sra": r& :r.e tar. V-orK T . e

ar 'i rKc.les:-' Tht *-zj/l'. •*.• vf Kft-N>'.«r ar t ;r.« • ..»h;njt r.<

-=' •'•'•>•.'. McGraw Dropped Hack Wil-

'"'""' "'•' son for Poor Hitting.

r'..-*<r<: a:~. -f *' t*t- y,,a t a r t of-.«. >«-trl it Eiii t i i t

Maiiciu'i Won

to 1!T» on cr^i.; for f"ir D"ntl» U t^rtr-t '.n e M:>r. t'.uzz.

Pure Silk to Top.EVERY P A I R PERFECT,

GUARANTEED AND F L UFASHIONED.

FREE REPAIR 5ERVICEShould you ever get any run-rwr. in the»e, we will REPAIRTHEM FREE.

a pair

» Wf 'A» Vt «IM» Wt /*

»bar.<i'jr.. h'-**v<;r, •.: ha- remained •.-•.c-.'n* -f a dr"-*rr. trL-.i t t ; s {•••m-' iyr*s of track* through'.1 , ta t cvjri- !,/*,,„,. o l l t l l e , a ' \ i ** H*.ri= ar* ^'tce( o r Mi le H*' : ;e-N;c*, a b e a u t i f ' j l f - a r a t i v t i y f r a i . Z"r. u « c c e r . t h & c fo r • t r y . H e r exh: ' r :* . : 'n» :r. A s e r . c a ^,'*\% h o o * ^ ' ~ ^ t y ' • " • & ' r a m e ' ty o u r . g Frer .c ' t r*orr .ar , t--i ec l ipse &11 rr .any y e a r s v r . : . : . • i ' * f j*E" a s *•**!! . !* . ; • • a i : e j . a c e : r . 2-rr , :> cii". ^ r i c ' t * . ." . w < ""h e r « i? ' . t r s in t h e f*«V. r v a tan^OT!- t n ^ w r , f*.*r ~f *v»^ F ^ n - c ' s !r,aR>ci". i r a . : f -mi le <i:n t r a c k - &rrd half-TELle • E r ' i -*" r T n i n i ' *tny th? ?--age f . r a career ',n the : corr.«:T fvajre T.-% ; . i ^ : t ' ',f- -.he ; ••'•arc ?pt«i«ayf. a!! T^ ' - ' ^ r ly c:f- Urtra-r'O-fii«l Eoa«b erf Gr<* tom-^nrr, f.'-:t. r s r ' t f f *»-&if- r , ' F: i r . ,nf- ft - - f-T^ V; frrt &nd^-r . v r : r r • i f * * r r::p"r.* /<-*"*-r- * r - r r *v*- • *-. i"=. • J '-•' - \' \ f-, *.'& PwWl* mi J t t t r S ' ' J ^ L t tLt 'IS back

tor.i:.".t- *-•'* Keo» ac l Jittr V"?i.t tLea ' iS^' t

America. w-trt by a s-.:.rr. ;'.a:.'. v r.tr rrr.ajr.r.a- : }'r*r>.ct. st a stiff trice. R-.'-^t [-reTloosiy.Both motor b'atir.jf at high sptirds '.;ve rr,:i5O wriic'r. ;.";••..rt>d .r-«r*—to | Ktr ;r..'.a'. a: r »i.T£T.;;; • -.:.;' '"^'13) wai <l^ciiT;'^2 bj tLe WJ^te

and flyir.s? an a:rp':ane paie into coir.- h^r-<:'.f—a= a : . r.r*r arr.-r.;: i-.tr ftx ; f.-jr.try v--..'. '•* r:.fc-;« a: -.:.-: "»V ;• s.-,i t.etau»e >,e ctc'.ir:'t ttrvw.parat:'.*- :r.-j?r.;ficar.c': a', the f«-atc ir. th? accorr.p.i?r.n'.tr,t ' .i.'r. Fpt*df ! !'.r:<:pe B'-ar^ .-:.it'j"*'ay £ "f-'-L :r ~. Ci 'nie Mack <" CL t *• Lk tJ-Oizh ofwhich H'-::*-Nice ha^ performed ,n :r. a rrr.-.'.r tar. H> - N . c t :.a- tri".;- • ^r.-.ay. J«" j»ck»B :-, l:-.i >.:=, H. l ^ - "the rscir.z tou.ve^ of Europe, w w r - t.een a p:or>e*r. .-afe I K :-^c-re ;'. — — T V ,•„,„=, .-_. . r.^.* t0 v^Tlh*h&- lor .ed her ra;;L? car a: : - - -a -.ar^r whitr. c •.:...,tec -f a ^ ^ . — p - e a s e rr.er.f.-.r. i t ; - p s t t r wies ,_ ^-* y*"^-1 ' • - - • - - ; ' ' ; " -

' • - • " • • - tuyir.g irtrr. acvert:Mr«. — ^-rt.a.« from &2 o!-/.r^- Q*L.-.r , i - :ca

ci tci t r .

Eiies ar. r.rjr

iiI ; 'f Mf J*fMt/*f MfMf M ^^KJSSS

We have Joined withto not only ineet but BEAT Mail Order

and oilier Special Krand tir«ks on

Price-Qiiality-Sepvice

froc l ie Cltv*-.--.: :••:.::. ,~ y.'-i.Tii* yank*, r-y-.j M. ; fj.si-.s uji^r-

frstinsittMl O'£> -1 ' ; ;.•:.:.. ~-•'-'.'.:*. Het'-;i*d the >'i:->Li. . - r . ;^ wi;i .Sj»

Is lies t tr I1..-^^ sV;;.ed J eCr-.Llc to tl.i- tr::,:rs. Hi-1; E^rriiigt ; Bbort f"r '.Vif.;..r.r. ^.

Vance «i? b. Vc:-i:~ is UJiG

iJw (aft*f»r gomrmelf

\

rOl no longer need to wnd fortire# bv mail, nor do vou have to

buy tireft made by wmf unknownmanufacturer. Firestone price* arenow the lowest in tire history, bntmore important than that, Firestonequality has nerer been higher.

We've t a k e * tfc* mymttry• a t *f ttre k ^

• - * • A - ^ • " A

OLDFIEUIW.R

4.40.21

4.30-21.

4.75-19

3-00-21

5J5-18

3J5-21

h6.00-20

• . B.30x5

32»6-

(CukPTla) Tin

$5.55 $5.55

6.15 6^5

7-55 7^5

S.9S S.98

. 9^0 9^40

9.75 9.75

12.551Z.9O

TBKK TIBES

1945 1945

Visit our rtor* and we will show vonthe "iniide facts" about tiw*. WeLave actually cut up new tires andhare the erose section* for TOO to ex-amine— yon will ea§ily * « whyFirestone quality is to outstanding.

W « « T T abMt p«M<ave«

S-:- "x'j'i'rl Hitck ^V..i.i_.L .f M ^ r & wi.h'Ic'; S^IJ'-. ; ill; tv T',t-j> iL IL-C-J L r

cause he tool do't .Lit.

E^rie Neaie Of Parktrs l . i i r j . '.V. Ta.,fi-m-rr fry.-tL>ali coacii ht Wfc5hi^gtf«L

£ . tt-e

PunrturM and blowout* are bother-some and most people fear them—but NOW, because of the patentedDouble Cord Breaker, Fire»to»e haspractically eliminated them. Comein and let ua show yon this featurethat puts two extra plies of cordright under the tread where mostroad wear comes and where punc-tures and blowouts start.

Compare Prices andSpecifications

Becau&e Firestone Tires hold allworld records on road and track forspeed, safety and endurance, manypeople think they are high priced—but just check these low prices-then compare quality—you will bedollars and mile* ahead.

Sue 4.50-21TTidlb oi Tire

OarTut

4.73 in.

Tire4.72 m.

Vei(hl of Tire. 16^0 lbt. 15^8 IU.

TutVuluue o{ Rubber

in Tread andSidet »165 CVL. 'in.

Number of Plie*150 eu. in.

EuabfUh tke ForU br 4<Ja«tf U> Sf > „Crou Sttiotu • / Botk Turn

A>CHOB

O»Tb»

4.30-21 $9 .20

4.73^1910^0

3.00-19 10.95

5 3-20 12.15

5.50-20 .* l » 9 0

6.00-20 1 4 - 7 0

6^0-191740

7.00-20 19 .05

F DntT

Ortlrr

9.75

10.25

11.75

11.65

15.15

17.10

18.95

2S45

|We#<*M Batteries

U-PUU *

ElTersity of V:a^d coach w

KJ, Dan

Tie Kt-faciy dcrty ir;:i tenoe-foni ttv* a battle to rtttis its pres-

* [ige OD a ;ar with BtTiril wiitr t-vtrLttof pcwiLg e«is*<3ueiite. Tit JUneri-can E'wt'.f, the Arli&gtbB Classic aiJiL« Btl-ont Stakes tr* :Ltrlvtli of tte Churctiii! DOBU

Of t i t s all tb« reiil prHtig* ooti;tfcvcttua:!.T to be at«>rt«3 to. tie Bti-ILOL: itrt'T. or "stakes," t*-:-ausc It Uat the derby distance oi one t id oat-Laif n::lts and conies at a ti:Lt wbtsi;> ;;.r»Hr-jear-oMsto rv^-i lit

Lai t^ie I

-.:.; 5.1 f**t tai-, is t':.r o'.t^.atji-

!:.:*• -. L ..- & T y ; . ; « : > : > : 5 r , ; L : : . « •t . ^ . ' • • ; : . , ? : - ? i ; r j : - ' t . : . . - f . r 6 : r . i , l

iL f:.s: -.; aiy. I . r . - :> . '» .> ir::-

!' !'.;-r ::, ::.- Teifis :rtsTUr. In ;.irt. iti - ' - • • • w - ,!

1 - l a . " ,'• feet ^K H.-:i.'^\l:^h L:A

Advantages of Our TtreWider Tread, of Looa>Wear Non-Oxidinng

Robber.Thkker Traad, of Long-Vear Non-

Ritbhcr.AD Around,Hearie d Bigge

Mow lUbhcr ia Tread »nd SidemlL7.2% Thicker Tire Section.

*0 Jttst paaung on to yon the_ i% eavinga of the one tiremanufacturer who controls own aooree* ofraw material* and who use* the mod modernmanufacturing method* in the lndortry—Leadership, gained in actual performance onrace track and other endurance runs. The In-ventor of the Balloon Tire. "Afo*t Miies PerDoUmr."

Double Corn-Dipped Cord Breaker, 6 Plie« atTread.

We M

DOI BLE GUARANTEEAll Tirea Guaranteed Without limitation* by

Ut and Firestone,

t Your Tire** FREE - Drive la TODAY!

TOMPKINS TIRE & BATTERY SHOP445 Pearl St. Woodbridge, N. J.

Phone Woodbndge g-1280

Tubeis - Batteries - Accessories

• • I , j t

a fa5',j "A .L.'.-'r O?"I ST.-.<-k OOt li> F*'.Li*rrt iD t'Efc

irc-iM- li-t >«ir. Iitri;<-\c ibc. I purebt-1 t;.y's-.alf thi t -lay tt.'i n-i« j.it-^tjg=*-l *•**. if I <1'J say it Ljjwii

! • • ily i n n s ' a r e t*Vfr frjrk 1 ;4owipoM (•! the Urn* aid a a(jl'rL:y, k : i

"I « ; L : to Inlorni you tLat Ii a rriii fcrriou* antcane a id a

§ee wLat jo-n can do (or

Kid Gleaton, one of (\<r.n!« VUck'iU • boi>stt>r for Jimmf

He UF« of Mm:ray « u h H FT<II 1c e«iag t«

t.e the gr*»t«t t>a:! I'laver that everlivpd aLd 1 dciL t !*r kEtli. C*>bb c>r»DJ of tbt otbtrs. It c a j t>t bj Jail,

PLAY SAFEBUY THAT USED CAR

AT THE MARTOur one week exchange policy

eliminates any chance of an unsatis-factory deal here. Because it is yourprivilege to exchange without losswithin one week after date of pur-chase from us.

We Have On Hand Today -1930 Ford Sport Roadsters - practically new1929 Ford Sport Coupes, Standard Coupes, Sport

Roadsters, Tudors1928 Ford Sport and Standard Coupes1929 Ford Town Sedan, New1928 Pontiac Sedans and Coaches1928 Chrysler Sedans and Coaches1928-1927 Essex Coupes and Coaches1928 -1927 Chevrolet Coaches and Sedans1928 Nash Sedan1929 Ford Pick-Up1929 Chevrolet Coupe1928 LaSalle Sedan

j MANY OTHERS , ,

In fact anything from a Ford to a Cadillac;

LIBEkAL TIME PAYMENTSTRADES ACCEPTED

1££££

THE TKAOfc MARKTHAT GUARANTEES

A SQUAW DEAL

USEDGWttat

iri.tion this p«per\tnatn. :i belpo yuu, it beip

• it help* your

NEAR HIGH ST., PERTH AMBOY

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00 £

laatt*^.

Page 11: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

iEEN FROM THE SIDELINES "THAT LITTLE GAME" BEFORE THE BATTLE n

( ' 11 • V-

w '• ; i

• Hy TOM HRENNAN, Sports Editor

ROBINSON—CHECKERED FLAGi:,,b KnMiiHon, rapidly noarin^ the peak of raring fame,.,vcii the checkered finish flag Sunday at the Woodl)rid(?e

, ,1 Speedway by the Grim Reaper, and the racing world lost,l,,.r (.treat ntar—a man of cool daring, iron nerve and ubil-i;,h|)inson, who was named "The Dirt Track King" some

;1(r,,, rode to his death as he probably jfroulrt have been.: in do—with the breeze fanning his tanned cheek*, his

,.Vi's blazing with the thrill of combat, his hands greasy,,.lollies spattered with oil, his racing car "wide open".

,\nd be died not in vain.lt was apparent, at the time of the

( | r n t . I bat if he had headed toward the dirt apron, he prob-

v, ,,iild have either" killed or seriously injured Decker, andl,t !I;IV«' caused a five or six car smash which undoubtedly,1,1 ii;ivc resulted in more deaths, inasmuch as the several,.,-.; who were only a short distance behind the two cars1,1 ,,,,t have been able to clear the wreckage. Thus, Robin-iMI| a true sportsman. Undeniably, his nume deserves ajiinong those gallant men who sacrificed their lives to the

muse—Lockhart, Keech, Bible, Segreave and others,minute, reader, and pay tribute to the memory of a

Iriver—"Smiling" Bob Robinson,

THE LITTLE WORLD'S SERIESwn baseball moguls, Charles Barcellona and Stephen An-hiive arranged a cute little five game series between

luhs, and from the looks of everything in general, there• fin-works aplenty before the senior baseball champion-

is bestowed on the winner. The Woodbridge" A. A. andinils Kield Club represent the principal figures in the five

hMma which will open Sunday afternoon at For*ds with,,,u ling fans yelling for this, that and the other thing. Thet.-mis are pitched to a high key for plenty of action, both

Living had their hopes bolstered by victories over the

L niil. To try and predict the winner would be foolhardy,11 as down-right dangerous. Suppose the writer venturedn t hut Woodbridge would win, thumbs down. Alas, and, ' All that could be expected would be a high powered

bin-ii -nme place along King George's Road. Suppose Fords

a< uivd to win. Ach, der looie! Chnlly would come runninghi iv pounding on my desk, knocking papers all over the

,.-, mid niebbe me too. No sir. It isn't safe to predict on thisAllans have been cooking for a long time, and the boil-

mint has been reached. Who wants to play with dynamite'.'Anyway this much can We said. Both teams are good.

|r,ls li;is been winning pretty consistently. The Brownies haveLipi'd out of a losing streak which hampered them for thesi in.mih or so. Barcellona wants to win the series. So does

Anthony. So does Woodbridge. So does Fords- The name|1hi, snug is "SODUZ". Copii's of i tmay be obtained after

en- '

-cries game. Enough said.

|rou;nies End Slump By Winning[Two Games In Row Over Week-end

A. A, Takes Plainfield Red Sox Into Camp, 17 to 4,Then Bottles Newark Websters, 13 to 5, To End Long

Streak and To Upset Prediction Of Poor Season >

Slinging from defeat after defeat, boiling from adverseItin-m and burning with a desire to win, the Woodbridge A.

tossers snapped into the victory column over the weekinning two ball games in a row, thereby building a

for the coming series with Steve Anthony's

CAR PLUNGES THROUGH GUARDRAIL AT TERRIFIC SPEED;

DRIVER DIES INSTANTLY100 LAP FEATURE RACE HALTED BY TRAGEDY

"Smiling" 1'nb I{nbinsnn rode to his doom Sunday after-noon in the feature race at the Womlliridgo Hoard Speedway,when the Miller Special which he was driving crashed throughthe guard rail, hurtled forty feet through space, and lauded ittwisted wreck of torn, buttered metal. Kohinsoi^ died instant-ly of a fractured skull and several other injuries. The dead pi-lot, who was known as the "Dirt Track King", was thirty-twowars old. He was a resident of Henson Springs. Kin., but livedat l.angborne, Pa., during the summer racing season.

Tho ari'idi'iit occurred in tile six- pit—ami he never will, now." When:ip of tin1 hundred lap final nsked what he porsonnlly thought of1'iith

[ • l i t . Moore drew the jpnle, butList his position U> Frani/'who edged

Uohinson, the mechanic replied, "Bobj Robinson was ono of thi> finest, clean-

into thf lead. Robinsolfand Decker cst, sportiest drivers I ever know. Hliattleil for third pln/e during the was u gentleman in every sense o•inly laps of the grind, and whenMoore was forced to" his pit in th«fifth lap, it became a battle fur sec-ond position. In the sixth lap, Dock-er slipped by Robinson, and trailedFrame for the lend. The leader heldn quarter-lap advantage, (Alt n scantlive or ten feet was all that separatedDecker and Robinson.

STILLMAN'S SLANTSBLANK JOLLY BOYS

Oriole Piteher Twirls No-RunGame As Mates Win Fifteen-th Of Season, 3 to O.

Irr'a great pitcher's duel, WaltStillman blanked the Perth AmboyJolly Boys, 3 to 0, thereby enablingthe Woodbridge Orioles to win theirfifteenth game of the season. Stutz,pitching for the losers, allowed onlyfive hits, but the Orioles made gooduse of them. Stillman also allowedfiv* hits. Gerek did most of the hit-ting, the snappy centerfielder col-lecting three out of the five regis-tered by his team. The winnersscored in the first and third innings.

I iv whopertiv .

hnls 1'ieiil Club. On Saturday, the Brownies hit the trail to

laihli.'hl where they battered the Red Sox of that place into

bv tinU U i i l l i l

ih.1 M

score of 17 to 4. Sunday, on the Grove .streetie Newark Websters fell before a batting onslaughte of 1.1 to 5, and now, Charley Barcellona feels bet-

The box scores:ORIOLES (3)

AB RFerraro, c 3 1Ruka, If 3 1V. Lattanzio, ss. 3 1(Jerek, cf 3 0Stillman, p 2 0J. Russnak, 2b 3 0Kath, 1b : 2 0.1. Lattanzio. rf 2 0G. Kusznuk, lib 2 0

23 3JOLLY BOYS (0)

AB R. 4 0

00000000

Cy.p.tn, cFisher, lb 3Horvath,. :ibIirowa, cfGlazer, 2bJ. Toth, ssDial Kowsky, If ...Stutz, pStumpy, rf

BRAVES WIN FROMSHAMROCKS 10 TO 3

Fords Team Piles Up Big LeadWhile Balog Blanks Amboy-ans For Seven Frames.

The Ford Braves had an easy timedefeating the Shamrocks of Perth

the score ofcollected thir-

Amboy, Sunday, by10 to 3, when theyteen hits from the offerings of twjAmboy pitchers, while Balog, whopitched for Fords ^ave the losersonly seven. He held the Shamrocksscoreless until the eighth inning.Panconi led with the stick Vith threehits.

BRAVES (10)

Guidifth, lb, IfBalog, pAnderson, 3b .._Matusz, If, lbPanconi, saVirgillo, 2bLitka, cB. Matusz, cfStankovice, rf

AB554545542

BY EAGLES 7 TO 5Perna's Team, Minus Several

Regulars, Stages Stiff Bat-tle, But Early Lead Wins ForNewark.

ScoreOrioles

by innings:

Jully Boys

24 0 5 3

201 000 0—3000 000 0—0

lean,I

I i d .

l.iu-lu'il tlif Saturdaylint! tin' Red Sux to sixhit* while tho BrowniesIn- combined offerings of

mil Stryker f»r a total of,n. In thi' lust- six inningsKHim', the locals seorod four

totally wreck any hor.esIn I'liiiiil'icld victory. Dave Gerity,(in,! -,!h, Francis Gerity and Dun-

.i with tin- willow with, three>itci\ Davt Gerity was high

br, r with live runs, which inci-tally would have been enough to Campion,jj lli.- Red Sox.icw-, ,,f tin- unexpected victoryunlit ;i large crowd to the Sunduyiic, ami the aforementioned

I saw Kddio Gerity bottle thenk Websters, giving nine hits,i,',Hint,' tine- support. No New-xiUyr titu-hed Gerity for moretwo hits, and he kept themMattered. The visitors were

(1 to use two moundsmenftm-x the Brownies, but they

•d to hold the Woodbridge crew.tintriu hit*, rattled to all corners

he lot, soon swung the tide of• pry, and before the, game was

Hr.y innings old, it \va» apparentilir locals were due for another

In.lSandbeck, who has been ' hitting|it<- consistently, cracked the pul-

four times in five trips to theii-'i' to. lead with the ^yoodenware.'ing hit three, times, t h e team"I line ball throughout the en-ganie, and judging from theseKami's, the Woodbridge A. A.

ip is about over.Jin1 box scores:

WOODBRIDGE A. A. (17)AB R

<;I'tity, ss 6lullen, lb B

•H-tsch, U> 8

Score by innings:Woodbridge U>2 i»»l <>2—1'I'laintield •• 000 400 000— 4

The Sundays game:WOODBRIDGE A. A. (13)

AB R1). deity, as 5Mullen, tb 5Daim'tsrch, '.ibSand,beck, If .Keating, ff. Gerity, cfHughes, 2h

h

2

41WEBSTERS

AB.... 4

. r>

g ,Dunham, lib

c ..E. Gerity, p

NEWARK

Littiriu, cf ....Patettu, libWilde, ss ....Woods, 2b, pCicarelli, lbI'a'liaiw, IfMasker, It'Scarlercio, rfKiss, c

Score by innings:Web.sters 01Woodbridge 20

13(5)

1100I);iloio0

14

H100o2012

I U

ORIOLES WIN 16TH;RIDE RANGERS 9-6

Kalmar and Rusznak SplitPitching —L Team Plays Ex-cellent Ball.

The Orioles took the strong Hang-er nine into camp Sunday afternoon,winning their sixteenth game of theseason by the score of 9 to 6. Kal-mar and Rusznak split the pitching,and allowed only nine hits. TheOrioles rattled «ut--fourteen hitsfrom the .benders offered by Mun-yak. G. Uusznak sneaked away withbatting honors with three hits.

ORIOLES (9)AB R

Ferraro, c 5 0

39 10 13SHAMROCKS (3)

AB R HRosko, rf 5 0 1Nolan, 3b 4 0 0Lack, 3s, lb _ 4 1 2Stieb, p, ss 4 0 0Jennetty, c 3 1 0Teuber, cf, If 4 1 2Kaltenback, lb, p 4 0 0Quirk, If, cf 3 0 0Peterson, 2b 2 0 2

33 3 7The score by innings:

Braves 030 110 320—10Shamrocks 000 000 030— 3

Summary — Home runs: Balog,Panconi, 2; Lack and Teuber. Threebase hits: Balog, Litka and Lack.Two base hits: Anderson, Matusz,2, and Panconi. Struck out by Balog,8; by Stieb, 1; Kaltenback, 1. Baseson balls, Stieb, 4; Kalog, 2; Kal-tenback, 1. Umpire: McCardle.

With several of his regulars stillvacationing, Bill Permi's CampbellAssociation nine was again defeatedSunday when the Newark Eagles col-lected eleven bits from Barna amiWukovets to win, 7 to 5. McGovcrnpitched the entire game for the win-ners, giving the Avenel club ninehits. Perna's men made their bidfor victory in the eighth, when theystarted a rally which netted themfour runs, but McGoven tightened,and maintained his grip on tho game.Barna relieved Wukovets in thethird inning, and did well, givingthe winners six hits during the re-maining innings of the game.

The box score;CAMPBELLS (5)

AB RStophin, 2b 4 0McArdle, lb 6 0Nier, rf 5 1Perry, c 4 1Barna, 3b, p 4 0Petras, If 3 1Katz, cf, 3b _ 2 2Stern, ss 4 0Wukovets, p, cf 4 0

was a gentleman in every sense ofdie word, and nhvnys played the rac-ing gamo fairly and squarely. ButI had a hunch something was goingto go haywire tudny. Before therace, I said to Bob, "Bo careful, willyou Bob!" lie turned, and laugh-ingly asked me- if I were getting ncr-vuiis, and thnt's all 1 remember."

The fifty mile feature was haltedimmediately after Robinson's fatnlcrash, with Kr«l Frame in the lead.The ITIIWII swarmed around the twowrecked .ill's nnd over the track forni'iirly an hour and u half after theIniK.'dy. Duo tn the condition ofI lie hack at the point where therra-li iH'ciirri'd, it was apparent that

wiiiild be impossible to continuer:u'c.

Lou Moore BurnedI-"ii Moore narrowly missed wreck-

ing his car and killing or injuringseveral drivers, when coming downI be home stretch in his time trial, he•;t nirk the rail, mnde three completeturns and screamed over the finishline harkwards. Only hy dextrous

nK did he avoid running wildiKh Hie pits which wert> filled

Robinson was waiting for u chanceto shoot by Decker, when in the six-teenth lap, Decker's right front tireblew out, the car careening into therail. Robinson swung to the right,|)»s.sibly to avoid piling up in frontof the oncoming drivers who wereonly a short distance behind. He washopelessly pocketed between Decker'scar and the edge of the track, andwas forced through the rail. As hiscar hurtled over the side of the track,Decker's car skidded down into thedirt apron where it was btruck by ucar driven, by Bernie Katz, of Hrook-lyn. Katz, however, had seen thoaccident, and hail his car under con-trol, with the result that Decker es-caped injury. Robinson was pro-nounced dead by Dr. .1. ,J. Collins, ofWoodbridge. Thy body was thenremoved to Gundrum's morgue inPerth Amboy. It was learned later,that Decker was completely unnervedby the- accident, and was sufferingfrom shock.

SENATORS SMEARATHLETICS 15-3

Pete Schmidt Hammers OutTwo Singles, Double andTwo Homers To Star At Bat.

4 1005 02C

030— 5000—13

Baka, If 5V. Lattanzio, ss 4G*rek, cf 5(J. Rusanuk, p, 1st 5Kalmar, p, 1st 4J. Rusznak, 2b 4T. ljUtanzio, rf 5Parsons, 3b 4

H222232001

9 14 1

, #fcmdbeck, Ifeating, rf', Oerity, cf

lihain, 2b 6,nipion, c 6•llivun, p 6

Fords Lions Win;Steels Take Two

Detailed Accounts Of FordsLions-Woodbridge L i o n sGame, and Seco Triumphs,Omitted.

ci 17 nPLAINFIELD RED SOX (4)

AB R ""AB

cDonough, If 8 0Uaitfelder, lb 5 0

rol c f ""•• 4 0, u ', 1 0

j i , 2b 3 1"«»ti'ey, us 4 1

bnover, rf ' 4 0|tiligtt, 3b 4 1

Httrtfelder, « S 1k p, ab 4 00

RANGERS

Pttctio, rf ....,.- r 4Hwintak, ss 3S. Yuhas, c : i,.. 4Kutzens, 3b ... 3Kerley, 2b 5Granat, lb 4Torok, If 5J. Yuhas, ef 4Munyak, p 4

41(6)

AB R H0 0

In a game in which Pete Schmidthit five times in five trips to theplate, getting two singles, a doubleand two homo runs, the Iselin Sen-ators routed the Port Reading Ath-letics, 15 to 3. Whalen pitched greatball, giving only seven hitis and get-ting airtight support. The Senatorsbattered Hutnick and J. Vernillofor a total of eighteen hits. Hutnicktook a bad hammering and wasforced to the beneh in the third.

The box score:1SEL1N SENATORS (15)

AB RMoulton, 2b 3 3Schmidt, cf -.. 5 2Boltzar, ss 4 2Lambert, lb 5 IW h a W p - B 1Hutteman, 3b 5 0Dube, If 'I 2O'Neill, rf 3 \ 1Ohlmnn, c 1 2Balas, 3b A 1White, rf ., 2 1

35 5NEWARK EAGLES (7)

AB RFrazer, ef 3 1Mille, ss 4 1Uizzolo, cf .._ 5 1Hearan, rf B 0Gregorie, c 5 1Pastuva, 3b 4 1D. Scurese, lb 4 1l\ Scurese, 2b 3 1McGovern, p _ 4 0

37 7 11Score by innings:

Campbells 000 010 010—5Eagles 023 001 010—7

FORDTES BOTTLECOLONIALS 8 TO 3

Milchick Gives Three Scatter-ed Hits As Anthonymen Col-lect Eleven To Trim FastNew York Club.

Beating the Colonials of NewYork, by the score of 8 to 3, Sunday,gave the Fords Field Club nine afighting edge for the opening game

LOU MOORE

RICK DECKER whose skiddingcar precipitated the craih which re-sulted in the death of Bob Robinion,

Score by innings:Rangers 000

li 9 4

120 021—6Orioles - 300 020 301—9

Due to lack of time, the box scoresand results of several ball games hadto be omitted from the sporting sec-tion of thin issue. An especially inter-esting account of the Kords Lions-Woodbridge Lions ball game, writtenby a neutral spectator, was amongthe stories. Incident ally, Fords wonthe game, 10 to 9, with Ben Jensenon the slab. Billy Ryan pitched forWoodbridge. It la expected, accord-ing to reports, that a series will bearranged between the clubs.

The Steel Equipment team w<mtwo games over the week end, beat-ing Mercks, 8 to 4, and the strongAvenel Robins, 11 to 3. Lokey pitch-ed against the Mercke, and snaredthe mound duty of the Robins gamewith Johnny Kara. The Seco nine ex-hibited great hitting ability in both

l collecting twelve bingleu in

Indian He«ddr«»«e»The Indians of the eastern United

States dl4 not make use. of elaborateheaadressei as did the Indians of thewestern plain* region, although asingle feather, or perhaps a smallnumber of feathers, may have beenworn by some of the tribes.

of itd series with the WoodbridgeA. A. The Anthonymen, led byMickey Milchick, who gave three,hits, started off early to whip theNew Yorkers, and were never head-ed. Tajatino, the losing pitcher, hadhia offerings touched for a total ofeleven hits by the galloping Ford-ites who refused to be stopped.Romer led at bat with three hits inlour trips to the plate. The. losersdid all of their scoring in the sev-enth and eighth innings. Milchickblanking them for six consectitivcsframes.

The box score:FORDS F. C. m

AH&43

38 j IBPOR11 READING ATHLETICS (3)

AB, R HT. Simione, c _ 4 " 0 1C. Veinillo, lb 4 0 0A. Smjione, cf 4 1 1C. Simione, S3 4 1 1V. McDonald, If 4 0 2Barbato, rf 3 0 . 0Yastak, 2b 4 0 2Hutnick, p 0 0 01. Vernillo, p 3 1 0

30 3 7- Score by innings-.Athletics 001 200 000— 8Senators 244 020 30x~16

Hrehowxki, ssRodner, libSoo, IfGloff, 3b 4Romer, cf - 4Burke, lb - 4Milchick, p -• 3Smgyak, e 3Krauss, rf 4

34COLONIALS (3)

ABBarro, ss . 4I^rent, 2b - 4Brown, lb 4De Bella, ef 4Ruvola, If 3Bratraline, c 3Potenga, rf 3Madia, 3b 3Talatino, p 3

IT3

85 4 0 tho first, and Un in the second.

Dangtr in Luminoui PaintMedical authorities way that lumi-

nous paints may be poisonous unlessthe worker takes the proper precau-tions. A person whose occupationbrings "him Into close contact wltbluminous paints should always wearglores while dolnf this work and re-member uever toni>ut the hunda Intotittttovth.

Senators Vs. Cardinal*

The Iselic Senators will meet theSummit Cardinals on the Iselin. Oval,Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Atthe time this page went to press, nopitcher had been assigned to facethe Cards.

8 1

••/ H

Robinson crashed through theguard rail about twenty five yardsfrom the spot where .luhn Rohrer,of McAdoo, Pa., plunged to his deatha year ago. The tragedy occurredon the western curve of the bowl,•pposite tfce grandstand in whichlome members of Robinson's family*at. His wife and throc-year-*>l»lon, Robert, Jr., were in the- crowdjf approximately i),0O0 who saw theicrvy pilot ride to his death.

Robinson, a veteran of the racinggame, was named the "Dirt TruckKing" some time ago due to his dar-ing and skill. He was a very prom-inent figure in the racing world, andbeiause of his congenial (personality,was beloved by drivel's as well asracing fans. The Daytona lieachspeed king had figured in a numberif major auto racing accidents, buthad always emerged unharmed, ex-cept with |i few minor injuries. Itwas Robinson's skidding car, thutprecipitated the fatal crash of, RayKeech, once holder of the world'sspeed record, at Altoona, Pa., a lit-tle over a year ago, on June 15, 11)20.In this race, Robinson, who had beenlapped, struck a hole in the track,spun ubout and.roared toward theapron. Woodbury, close behind,awerved to avoid hitting him, andstruck the guard rail at the top ofthe track, ripping off uliout '2520 yardsof the steel and wood bund whichfyll across the track. Keech, ridingniarty 120 miles an hour, smackedthe rail, und skidded? into the apron,where hi! was killed •when Woodbury'bcur struck his squarily.

Acting chief mechanic William

with mechanics and drivers. Moore'siirni was burned on the hot exhaustpipe of his car. lie was treated atthe truck by Dr. J. J. Collins. Thecrash necessitated the rclining of thowheels on the Miller, and the replace-ment of two tires. Later, Moore sejthe time trial pace with a mark <ilUventy-onc seconds Hat. Frame cir-eled the bowl in 0:21 1-5. Robinsonund (ileason did the lap in 22 sec-onds flat. The. drivers and theirtime trials follow:

Driver Time Sec.Sail, Kidgewood, N. J. 24 3-5Moore, Indianapolis, Ind. 21 flatFrame, Los Angeles, Cal. 21 1-5Marion, Hrooklyn, N. Y. 27 flatDecker, Stuten Island, N. Y. 22 1-')Turgeon, Hrooklyn, N. Y. 24 flatWilliams, Philadelphia, Pa. 33 3-5Keller, Newark, N. J. 25 flatVenth, Baldwin, N. Y. 25 1-5Denver, Norristown, Pa. 25 flatllaug, Newark, N. J. 26 1-5Spolin, Reading, Pa. no trialUohinson, Daytona Beach 22 flatPatterson, Atlanta, Ga. 23 1-5Lynch, Jersey City, N. J. 26 1-5Harris, Port Richmond, N. Y., 25 flatShingle, Phoeni.vvilte, Pa. 23 2-5Neapolitan, Philadelphia, Pa. 25 flatLawshe, Flemington, N. J. 24 1-5Nipper, Jacksonville, Kla, 25 3-5KatK, Hrooklyn, N. Y. 28 4-5Aspen, Philadelphia, Pa. 25 1-6Hunter, Ardmore, Pa. 27 1-5(Jleason, Ardmore, Pa. 22 flatTabor, Hloomlield, N. J. 25 flat.Wingerter, Hrooklyn, N. Y. 24 1-5Dolan, Newark, N. J. 30 flatBlackmail, Hrooklyn, N. Y. 30 1-5Sehurch, Hollywood, Cal. 2 | 1-5Buechler, Perth Amboy, N. J., 28 flatLarzelere, Overbrook, Pa. 25 fltHeals, Pnobsuott, Mass.

h

The score by innings:31 3

Colonials .... 000 000 210—3Fords 320 120 OOx—,8

Summary—Three, base hits: Hom-er and De Bella. Two base hits:Kumer and Trent. Bases on balls:Tulatino, 2. Struck out by Mikhick,3; Talatino, 1. Stolen base: Hrelhowski, Umpire: Paruler,

West, of Norfolk, Va., a close friendof Robinson's for years, was griefstricken over the driver's untimelyend. West, who became friendlywith Robinson years ago, said, "Well,I'm glad Bob went the way ho did—riding to glory with his eyes danc-ing with the thrill he always got outof racing, but I'm sure sorry he hadto *go. I expected him into the pitany minute for gas and nil, and Istood there, along with two otherhelpers, with the cans ready to re-plenish the Miller. 1 suw the crowdget up and yell, which was nothingnew, su I kept looking down. th» trackfor Bob, but he didn't pull into the

25 flat, 24 4-5

Smith 26 flatMoore Wins Opener

Drawing the- pole in the first quali-fying heat, Lou Moore won it in 3:3!)tint. He was nosed nut of first placeat the beginning uf the race by thefast Frame, but by •skillful driving,passed the lighting Frame about thehalfway mfirk. Framrj finished sec-ond, R o b i n s o n tHird. Gleason,Decker and Sehurch comprised theremainder of the. (ield.

Rick Decker won the second heatover 4 field cimsis^.ng of Gleason,S e h u r c h , Patterson, Kutz anuTui'geon, in 3:41). Gleason took arcurly lead from the pole, but motortrouble fvrced him to his pit for th«0it£r.n.au!ii Sehurch promptly slidinto first place, ami held that posi-tion until the last lap when he waspassed by Decker who won by a car.length. Bernie Katz finished third.Sehurch and Decker were cheeredwildly by the fans for their daring.

Nine starters opened the thirdqualifying heat which was won byJimmy Patterson who drew the pole,(lashed into an early lead, and wusnever headed. Patterson's time was3:.rn! 4-5. Lawsho capped secondplace after giving Patterson a runfor his money in the early part ofthe grind. Wingerter wits third.Tabor, Sail, Beals, Laraelure, Den-ver and Hums comprised the rest ofthe field. '

Due to the fact that a large num-ber of curs were elegible for the con-solation race, two heats were neces-sary to determin*'"tKe starters. Thefirst three drivers in eas;h fiyo lapheat were privileged to race in. theconsolation finalnelere, Sail andthe first heat.

of ten laps. Lar-Venth iiualified iuHeals, Aspen and

Smith tinUhed in that order in thesecond heat. After leading for ninulaps in the final, Larzelere thoughthe got tho checkered flag, sloweddown.on the tenth lap, and lost therace to Bub Sail. Venth nnlahe<4uwund.

Page 12: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

"For The Defense" To Have Week's Run At Majestic;Jack Oakie's Latest Film Featured At The Strandl

Was a Big Idea Once Oakie a New Feast of Fun In Latest RousingComedy From Broadway Stage Hit

Alice White SingsThree Mot Melodies

In Her New Picture

f o r l i * . r W J '-•:>• » ! ' . . ' •

* v , * r o ? • ••" ' • - ? ' - •> ' ' ' - - - l " -Savir G:.v :r_ H •'Jy* •.•>:* -I

ffis Fan Mafl Gains;Powell Hods New Hit

Prince of Poise" PortraysCrtfty Criminal Jun»t lrDrama at

3. - - t

•.-. x-". r r - * fr-.-T. '-

- . t • » • - • ,r.

r • • «•» fa-'H

• : i t e '•'-

• »• i " '

.aii^r, rr.' rr.ent*.• 7-<- H*f> From Synr

&.<i*;".e<! 'rom the sta*^ c •tr.e -Arr-e nime that kfp'. N>•.ht-itr*-*"^^ in Bpafme of jr. •ir f :r,»- run of the play ",»--

^r*tn "i>iT:'in of'the fur-'^itrr.t^r^ of tr.t- onrill", N-^'.i?'- '»•". "And A. Ed*ar.Lar*-:.1 nr.'y piloted Oaki? :nI J . Lori." directed thi« '.*,<

i -TT.e'"- c'.ftre". N-- Oakit »tarr:n|{ pif.t^v/r .?f - P.'.-ytn. the ;->te wl'h'.-'j'. a «on^ put • . •' ' V '-r.^ Mar, ' f f wAf in hi* own inimatA"i t < - f r a ;r T-- A:rr,a Marr.my" ;r. "Sw r - -

, i v j . ' . ^ ,r.r ,.^r*v . iv'A f',r»*rd to hearme •- ' - fj.r.eer '.1 h.' "1 W:vh i Co-'d >in? a L?<•••-" ir-': reira^ed ;rt "The Sap From .-yr&i i.*»

.-.*- :v far. ' •• : " . ra'ivi: ' .r.

;rr.-,.fr. t. w r t :

Screen CelebritiesIn Title Roles Of

New Comic Movie- • • • : . - ; • ' . % • r : i > • ' ••'*•'•

. • — - • -. -r'-'Ti. ' :ZA r.*•»•'• •'• o f

N* TrcrmUt tt All

I E- ;T -r, ; t ; 1 %j.i- . ^ \ t : • • • r s T r . " ' • • • •

*o7-,.

Behind tht mtn tttb9 cavnttf tt*nd§to mrtnj trtmtitr.d rttdj tt, dojour

MEAT PRICESARE DOWN!C 1' '. '."-'-" • " A L P ' S pcHcy, the recent

c -. i - ••": f'tjh r-ect rrorkct has been'r--cZ -c j zzi'.'i'i c *o t^e public in lowerff-; -• :&: -.' z'\ cho ce quality meati.

T' s *e<r''-e"3 ct o!l A81P markets our outstand-irg iwr..z' " il be Prirr.e Ribs of Beef frcmspe-:^: / 5% ected cotlie at the lowest price inmon/ ye^'S.

' D : ^cf fY.i tc taVe advantage of this low priceof 2£c per pojnd on Prime Ribs of Beef. Andin odd ••o-.-yiu will find all cuts of fresh meatof the f.nesi quality at exceptionally low prices.

AT ALL A&P MARKETSY fr;\jt-i c u SATWr.DAf

PRIMERIBS OF BEEF

SPECIALLY SELECTED QUALITY BEEF

'iie j»-:..&r.:T a.:.-:i i - : .: :-if-r-: -.* M;.--:i I.-;.-. L J : .-.: Lsr.c &:.c -.-..-.er a t ._h<. Strarid.

: =--"•• three day rur,.-. ' i.."*r . : .

":."••*.£• t : ir ' - - -". :"-&y t: *.*T :•»••-. ::'.cr efTect= groi-nd.- - . " : - • - : -.:? r..-it ?Ci : . : - i . c . it-rnerr. - t u The siory (ieal= with th-

A C l t O C D C - " * - ' ^ M C * » T ' " V """•' '" " • • " " ' ; - - - - i.:: : i - - : H ^ - trt.m. Italv of an Italian count who i,, i O U r L K o 1 1 1 l O I H j ? J-.:.i : : . - •»• . . ;.--.-.i-i F.- t:.i -- •>':•'. c.r.-v -.r.-r rrtrea; cf the desert his wife on their

. * 8 r ' - - — "- -:'•_ " - . V j i - v " i'l - i: i.— v ir.: \'*;i ;r.vi! T. by the night whiles h<- enttrtain.-i I B , THOMAS' ARKLE CLARK | ^ ^ Z ^ ' ' A . - : r . , - , ^ - : ^ c e ; :r.e back- tria. tolo«el^hi5jg_

] ' De*.a of Men, L'nireriitj of J I , ~

>?T tr.-.-_. i t : '.:-. :•

Lowes/ price in years

25 FIRSTSIX RIBS

'= 27clb 19c

LEG OF SPRING LAMB -FRESH BLUE FISH - -

FREESTONE

PEACHES 49

is t.~- : , - >?*. Li: sill su;^r;:.".;."^ -:.r t. ir-.

giccili't

8 E G U U 8 PRICES

GOLD DUST 10,9.^ 25cGoWDwtSCOURING CLEANSER 10c

{BOTH FOR 21 c}YOU SAVE 14c

CHBFBOIARDI

SPAGHETTI DINNER Pkg. 29cGULDBfS — '

MUSTARD lor. 11c

_ ^ _ ^ MUELLER'S

MACARONI or SPAGHETTI

2 pkg.. 19C «•'

UNEEDA BAKERS

UNEEDA BISCUITS

3 pkOi 11c

CHEESE WAFERS orBUnER WAFERS tm 29c

WHEATIES

KIRKMAKS o*

SOAP

J

5 «A* 05c

PALMOLIVI^ SOAP

6 cdkm

II-GREAT ATLANTIC ft PACIFIC **co

EASTERN DIVISION

He d-.-em't bfc^Te :Ut if i: rtiis osKif.tr SundiT Tt cat eipeet rtioCL Mven caCC<££lT» r-:~ CiT= of t iewwt. • He tro'aM ;-? . ts -rf ir^t u>dtr a ladder is L'A. tz. 1 t'ttk esa jnuking ttross L:s ;.iti. rive t:m no ico:<3 chilli. He lfe-jj'ti 'KirS t s jose 'wt'.£3 troiiiKl Ui chiir to fcri-g Llsi-st-.I good licit Ln » crir'i :c~r. btt hekr..-,K, [*rft<tiy we'.i. i-a*. .'. i t fio*sa'tf '.&:.'. hU pout':*? In •.:.« ii.-e of tke jr:'.-:i—or ma)L^ it 'a lUr ..£:.'. of t i tc•:••-•:.; anyway ;t U '-it or l ie oti*r—lit crop will n.-fciT "te a 1-ZZITG.You can beiiere it or no- t i t Le t a i !s w : it bepp€n too rLW.j-|li:z.is to giTeIt •-<> credence.

Gordon with his ftai l j rlies oct lnL:a a Jtomobiie every jj',«ts»i' STJL4*J.He i :4y« golf on occasion if.er he bisbe*ij to the moTting ctarch Etrrlce.b-.t «hen Us celgt^Kir, who wa.s be-V.Li with t l j ipritg wort, Enisledsoa.ig Ms 04ti on SaLd&T Gordonktrw tbat the crop would be a failure,as it was. Ell own crop wt» to tet-ter, but there were otter a <J raffl-citLt reasons for hig failure. Wbeajou do a ttiing like that joa are tareto \*j diarty for it Mftr^

Drake gives lal»oriouB and carefulaufettlon to tbese iabwle cLain let-ters that everj ooe, I Boj/pose, getswLicb purport to have been suitedby Colonel Lindbergh or PresideDtCoolldge or the Mayor of Pesoium, be-Cfcuse be fears the calamities Vtdcbare promised to tLose .who break tbechain and throw that &ort of timewaiter Into Ute discard. He doesn'ttee bow It can bring disaster, bat beU Jait a little afraid to risk it, tboagbhe auertf with real feeling that he|j jn no sea&e •npentltiooa.

1 At for myself, I get no seiiaarionexcepting one of awkwardness whenI spill t ie s&lt on the tablecloth—1always break tbe .chain when askedto "write this message to nine of yourfriend*' eren though tbe kin* ot Em-Land bat Initiated the menace, and 1never expect anything to happen. IfI were cootempladog a second mar-riage, Friday or the thirteenth of themonth or both together would notdaunt me. When I start to do a thingand have to tarn back, however, 1always alt down; not because I a nsuperstitions bat Just beeaate it dot*

a little safer.

M. 1»M. Wwtwn t r n u M

While Building a Greater

Reynolds Store for a

Greater Perth Amboy

— PUaac mention tkfc

DISCOUNT1 on all Purdni-e- inailti ilurinj; our

I Alteration and Expansion Program

If, when you come into the y.v.rt i!.t--v

daye, you s*e mtr. i.n. overalls running

around lTki «o many busy bees, GO not nib-

take there for '...ing models it an infurni-

rtlhi fc f ktfcow of "Ck-rte* 1-or the M(«l-

em BuiMiEg'Methinic11. The=e are the

men who are iuiiding the Greater Rey-

nolds Store, the men who are preparing a

new department ...lore for Penh Amb.-.y.

A new front, r,*w display windows, a m-w

inienor lay cat, elevators, new fixtures, :n

fact 4 t'jtnpltu :.ew store tu "be ready by

October 1st.

. . . . all these changes necessitate-;

andt ^h^ting around .Department.-

wilt have t a lurTnovCTl- and moved again.

In order to tor<'par<« for a n t j | j s mi>ving it

i> necicjsary for uai to reduce our stocks

1-i.nsMtraMy. To do this and do it quickly

we are using this means . . . A 157c Dis-

count on All Purchases in the Entire Stem-

• • - . whether marked at regular prices,

special prices or extra special prices. Thi~

actually means in many cases savings Ui>

to 5U'i or more, because hundreds of

items uf merchandise have already been

radically reduced.

Thu DiKount.take, effect tomorrow. Saturday, August 2nd:

Shop tomorrow, .hop early while stock, are complete.

REYNOLDS BROTHERS

Page 13: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

WOODBRIDGE INDEPENDENT FRinAY, AUGUST 1, 1930 FAGKWN1

PARAMOUNT PUBLIX PERTH AMBOY THEATRESDOORS OPEN

1:00 P.M. MAJESTIC - STRAND - CRESCENTYOUR VISIT TO PERTH AMBOY WILL NOT BE COMPLETE WITH-

OUT ATTENDING ONE OF THE PARAMOUNT PUBLIXTHEATRES. COME — GET ACQUAINTEDWITH PUBLIX COURTESIES AND SERVICE!

Sat., Sun., Mon., Tues.

A Publix Theatre

Smith St. Phone 1593

"Don't cry, little girl.

I'll buy you a whole

diamond mine."

Wed., Thurs., Fri.

Bring The Whole FamilyTo See This One.

A Picture that willtouch the hearts ofeveryone who seesit!

JTTLETON LOONEY talking! The wise-cracking bumpkinwith the Napoleon complex. Takes countesses for the count!Gets in Dutch with duchesses! Thinks HE'S the Grown Princeof Grinomania and Hilarityland—and so he is!

For he's none other than your old pep-Pal and joy-Friend

JACKOAKIE

—Also—

CAREFULLYSELECTED

SHORTFEATURES

In Paramount's Laugh Fest

Sap fromcuse*

with GINGER ROGERS

His Real Everyday Life!

"GRUMPwith

Cyril Maude, Phillips HolmesFrances Dade

Also

Other Features

IN THE HEARTOF THE CITY

THE BIGGESTSHOWS IN TOWN!

A Publix Theatre

Madison Ave., Phone IPS

ONE WHOLE WEEK - C o m m e n c i n g Sat.

Because It's Real, It Has aMighty, Mighty Thrill!

Like '/Street of Chance," it's got red-blooded punch behind it! Inside se-crets of the headline drama, revealedfirst-hand by a newspaperman whoknows!

WILLIAHPOWELL

Gay, debonair spender, lover of bright lights and women, bril-liant criminal lawyer, the best friend a crook ever had—that'sBill Foster—so clever the cops won't believe he is straightThey get him! New York gasps! See why! See how! There'sa woman behind it all.

Powell's third dynamic smash-hit in a row — "Street ofChance," "Shadow of the Law"—and the biggest one yet!Made by the man who made "Street of Chance", John Crom-well. And that svelte charmer, Kay Francis, is the woman. Athrill a minute and a great climatic kick!

"Fon the Defense"with

Other Entertainment

"SING YOU DANCERS"A Musical Novelty

"NEIGHBORLY NEIGHBORS"A Talking Comedy

THE BIGGESTSHOWS IN TOWN!

A Publix Theatre

Smith St., Phone 255

SUN., MON., TUES.

MAN TROUBLEA Picture Everyone Will Like

Also COMEDY - SOUND NEWS • CARTOONWEDNESDAY and THURSDAY

SWORDS

CLASH FOR

A WOMAN'S

KISS!

to makeyour sides ache.

Love to m a k eyour heart ache.

M a g n i f i c e n ts p l e n d o r tomake you want'to see it over andover again.

BRIDE OF THEREGIMENT"

_With—IVivienne Segal Walter Pidgeon

Allan Prior Louise FazendaFord Sterling Myrna Loy

Lupino Lane

HEAR ALICE SING"I've Got MyEye on You,""Hollywood"

and"Hang On

To ARainbow"

Bated onStory by

J. P . McEVOY

Alice White as DixieDugan again. N o wshe'shea a red hot CIJK-mama. Living amore thrilling- than an>ever screened. Playing

leading role in life'sdrama and failing meverything but the fi-nal love scene.

See it for its snappysongs, studio secrets andAlice—better than ever

«ow GIRLLLYWOOD

ALlCt WHITEJACK. MUL+tALL

Page 14: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

rXL TE* FRIDAY. ACCfST 1, 199t

CLASSIFIED ADS OBITUARIES Kiddies Maliwt at- • - i r . : - . > . : . : » - rs»L»<.i"'^-. Majestic EYerjFriday

D J. *T*» U Ha*fi At« * n for DiraWtli Gzrt-

WOODBRTOGi^

Japanese Studewt WriterTo Preach At A

>. ','T.*iT.'-

V - ¥To

: - . - - 1 -jr • r Tr* X 'tS

- A-r- ' ' I'1 »R<1 1" Mrj oist mort rf*r in tha'** * l r"' Tta<Jy p vA?:*r h:« itndyiBj tail y»«.

MICHAEL J CtEKNAlC

r-.*- W *. F* - L ~

—.*< •• :••* : •»*-•-» > -

c-t- W " W . , „ ,

I ; - n r:

r^ r•«

Ki". T

.- u-

' . • I l ' l

' ' * • f f ' M.WLM.

"irr- "~'*:.s.-\l''.'• '-a* Bible.'•'• '•"* Mr Ttt^l* lr^i fill 1** pn'pr.

•**r.!.'r. " Mr H'>rr'jv will b«

-.i-. • •.»^»-.:-,r. • . ' r VJ

'» w.:; -j*' :!•.* jroett of' • H. J'.r.t> Mr. »rvd Mr*. Mornnr

this; I T i-. ;:*• A %• » n » :

H*y

is»d the .-V 3 t r u :•:•••: . - . * K ; •

.S T Pi'"1 ' *

rr-.-.-. »-. ".i* r.-.-.M i.--: v-.r

* • - • - •

-»««*i»f Army"

f -„ ; i i , 7 _ . -

4 ^ • - . : » .v _ t . - . . * r • • i ' - 7 ^

L.-.«- ;f Wic - i

aW I. " t; -i

ROOMS A.H-D BOARD

FOR SALE

. -p:- .-^«*.- .- .• .1 RAW- . .BLSIMLSS NOT1CE5

HA1ROR£5SER —Mr irr. Mr-- L ^

Mr

to reraott tntiialtj, «Dd iii cocprtM tfj« tjUtory of

Ici^rj tn<i UTITIJJD'* Of ;TT.« r.arr^r oj I'm pie iud r

Prt -oa of : t i

ALWAYS A GOOD 5HOW

LA5T TIM£S TONIGHT— LAST TIMES

A TERROR TO MEN ! A TORRENT TO WOMEN !

Gary Cooper

"THE TEXAN"—Witt—

F A Y W R A Y

SATURDAY — Augu»t 2

Janet Gaynpr—1»—

"CHRISTINA"SUN., MON.— AUGUST

in "THE SOCIAL LION"Comedy Metrotone Newt

TUES, WED—AUG. 5-6

THE SENSATIONAL PICTURE

"Ladies of Leisure"—with—

Barbara Stanwyck—Lowell Sherman—Ralph Gr»v*»

THURS., FRi.—Aug. 7-8ELINOR GLYN'S

"Such Men AreDangerous"

with WARNER BAXTER

SATURDAY, AUG. 9

CALL T°HFF W E S r—wit |«—

MATT MOORE and DOROTHY REVIER

-i Fr^^i

Gordon

Tiy.

—Mr. at-i Mrs Her-^r. Silbtr-

M. . S i n yV.. ;-oday :; ••-.-.•>%rrr.a.-. and Mir^ir.a.-4 itay.r-g a: Carr.- T

—Mr. atd Mr, iar

Arc~r.. X.

P.iir = i.-

?—Mr=. K". r.rid i'.i'r. sr.^ :r.:>iren,

Earbara s y EicLard lef-. W«dn*»-d a y : , •,-;=.• rc.itivr- .r. 0. Lv-eriVi.le,N. V

—FTar.'ii Jer-ier.. - ; Frttrawi-3tre*:. ar.-i L -'/r. 5:.ii. ;f Portpj i'iir.g'. ; ; c t : s^r.-:ay a: NV.t- I>j-

"—Mr. ar.d Mri. J-.hr. McCrwry,M:M O.r;:.'.y L*-;r.ard. M.u GiacysBrer.r.ir.. Mia D^r- -.ty Brcrisans p t c :h.* week«r.d at Higr. Br .ige

—Mr=. F. iaa4b«rf and Mus Ellen.•:ar.dt.«irg, '.f Tr.-.-ir.-.-.llr, .S. I.. •.-.*-;:«i Mr». J. M. J=n-en, of Frcvmr.reet. W d

C H R I S T E N S E N ' SBIG MID-SEASON SALE

NOW IN FULL SWINGSome of the Outstanding Values

B. V . D . U n i o n S o i l . . R e f . V * l . 1 1 . 3 9 , S*le p r i c e $ 1 . 1 9 3 for * 3 5

Goodinit TripJetrttr Union S»iU 11.00

Plug ia4 F»KCT SWm-ti »ad V « t 39c.

Men • K»B<Uierdurfi V>"hjle Tlxy Lut>

Men'» F(^cy Skiirti ' Ail Colon).

M»'i BrouUlotit Skirti fZ.OO V i l , ,

Meet Work Stirti (Extra Qmality)

M » i I p n SaiU ($ZS.0O VaJae) «1

Men'i Famcf Femr-im-HtaAt

Meat LUlc Seciu (Ail Colon)

3 for $2.75

Reiuiir 50c VtJue

$1.00—3 for J2.55

$1.69—3 for *5 00

_ $16.50

39c.—3 for $1 00

tic.—5 p«ir for $ 1 00

FLOHSHEIMSHOES

now am. fit a

Dii contusedStyU.

it $6 95

Biff' VALUES:

in ftar

DRY GOODS

DEPARTMENT

y4 OFF

C. CHRISTENSEN £ BRO.96 Main Street Woodbridge

"A SAFE PL\CE TO BUY"

THEWLYBIGSHOWTOV'SiT YOUR CITY THIS SEASON

W00DBR1DGETHURS. AUG.

Ji MJUI ijg im in i j/r JEI i z n s ET ESTPJ

'5s

y£2^&JZJZUJJlJ;y^£&j^j2J^^ ?;.

MIGHTi NEW JERSEY - - 6 ; WITH SAFETYAn investment in our 6% prepaid stock certificate^ i? a© inveslpenUiihNew!

Although tbe &th state in the Union in point of size. New Jersev ranks ienth amon^ allstates in total number of dwellings and population. This high concentration of Buildin"Developement is additional security behind your investment

DIVIDEND CHECKS 0>' PREPAID STOCK AT $200 PER SHARE MAILED JANUARY 31 AND JULY 31

OUR ASSETS ARE OVER $250,000.00. We have a steady growtji with conservative investments

New Series Open Monday, Augu_-t 4. $1 Open* An Account. Payable Fir-t Monday Of Everv Mouth.

*Oficeri: lMUEbre M. Wei**, Pre*ident; Thoma* D. CberetVice-uacnt; Wmiain J. Lawlor, SecreUry; S*muel ScKwwiz, Trewurer

, Maawell So«m..Attorney; Peter Frey, Alexander Lebowitz, LouU B*N«»jr, Fred F. SonoM, Herman Sloan, Sunuel Wexler and ludor

Blazing Star Building and Loan Association of Carteret72 ROOSEVELT AVENUE

s

:.\****±*£J&

Page 15: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

, AtQtSt 1, 193d SBCTTONTWO PAGE ONI

This Weekhy ARTHUR BHISBANB

Foolish Former Question.[Vlr. <>>olid e Smiles.Marconi's New Baby.Our A«e of Folly.

tural

licit(1 of the Amerlrrnn Agricul-Chrniicnl Company roporlH tn

Pf^^lV llnovnr that uno of fprtl-IHfi-H would tiflp ttm farmer, rntelll-,rPIit fi'i-tlll«lnK wrrnlrt rut tho cost nftt-lK'iit production to 17 rents n bunhnl.

Tin' fiiiiniTB IIIIKM ask:

"Thru why don't y°» ' P t lllfv r ' - ° v -

prnnu'iil opnratn Muscle Slin;iln tlmtH10 jiniplf pnid for anil Rive us rmin-o r s chrap nltroRnn no that wn canfflt-tilize our wlirat lnmln at n rnnftnn-illlf CllHt?"

Tn Hint the very complete I!eii\ilill-,-an JII'I l 'emncratlc nnswer Is:

" \ \ v li;ivi> a fertiliser trunt. You

n r P talltlnc HolshovlHtn."

SLAT'S DIARYRV ROSS FARQUHAR

Friday Cuzzonknnaaw was here

Carry fmm Ar-Itxlny and she aslmr did ! |inss inschool this yr. ;iml

soil yi's I I'ost.;iinl yiiu ^apprised

scdtint

Why no Isurprised

X

Dr. Wood, of the Orncker r ance rin l i ' Ins t i tu te , nnnnuiicfis tlio RIIC-il KrnwliiK of ciincor COIIH In a(11 lie.

•ly lien Xpect-ii for several

yr-;.Siitcnlay — A

nntlier di\y andmy nr/.zon wns Btnwking ii li i) u tlYiiirrynjfi' and shened her nia had allwnyn eclvised erly

r r y a i f c s a oyn she begun tu

marryed shed

Th:ii they are Remiliii1 cancnr cellsTkiuiwii beeaimo, trnnsplnnted In the

!,,,,!|..! nf rats, they proilucn cancer.Km- three thousand yeara, Dr. Wood

s;,v tii'ii liavd "worked with dead,.;,!,,.. r cells. Now for the first t ime«-P Imvc them nllve nnd capable ofpi-nil'i'-ltis hiinjan cancer."

Tip* riiinoiincenient Is Important. Tohold, rind study your enemy Is a great

It nill plf'iwe Pnlvln roolldRc'H ml!-Ilnin i• f iiilinlrers to know that renard-1,HS "f weather he nlwayn waken upuniilliiu' He Inherited nml i c rve lihrniiph the parltKl of Rlnantlc pron-perliv. cruised hy the pouring out ofwnr lillllmiH. Then he handed the JobIO Mr. Hoover.

Ainl now fur writing 150 word» ailiv, telllim Mr. Hoover to keep cheer-ful ;iiiil the people to Bupport him,Mr. Cn.illdKe Is paid ^150,000 a year,,t ti'iist, twice what t he people payMr. iinover, to worry. W h i t wlM

M . . l - ' l ' -"I i|.> not choose."

A ' wnmlttee of rongressmen wentto l:i.;|'<'ct dangerous ileds." In the'nit '.iiiishlne. at their summer camp.

Tin- Cimgressnieu looked wise, th»I'liniiiniHists, dreBSiMl In "Hhorts." ac-(ordmi; to reporters, yelled "Murder-, is ' Capitalists!" at tlie committee,vhii h contained no murderer and noiwpiulist nf any ImiKirtance.

If "iti-ds" could get rid of the "Capi-talist,- " that worried Karl Marx, liowwniil.l they feel? There would be nomore bath tubs, automobiles, "movies,"rea»ty nude "shor t s" or Rood payrolls.

All tlmae tliliiRB are the productsof "Capitalints."

all ways made it alioint to have thu

seramoney in tho a. m.

Sunday — The .Sunday sknol toe-r.hcr ImlM me out this a. m. On m;/way I splint a nickle. for candy andwhen I went in I wns usoinK a toothpick and tiuichor BC<1 Why are youpicking yuro teeth and I sed becur.no 1 else nose where to pick and ahe

(jot. about. H sorp and culled me Asmnrty.

Mundiiv Ma had .lani' nnd F.layboth up at. nre house for supper thi-?I'vninp; nnd I tuk Elsy into suppernnd she told me her and ,li»n<» had

nst a lot to see witch 1 went withmp. So I oonKTachelnted El^y hpcn/,she had won out. end she ped. Welll.o tell tho truth I Hiddent win I lose.I K<»SS I never will understand theopposing seeks.

Tensdny—Ant Kmmy pot a 100 $frum a old Unkle witch dyed a yr.ngo. I ast her whut was she going todo with all that munny anil she sedshe diddent no. she wood of like toby ft leppard skin coat if she cud findone witch diddent have no Spots allover it.

W«n»day—I gess I ensulted nreteecher today, she told me she waswirking on a job at the mill. 1 sedhow cum and shi: g«J. Well I have tolive, and I sed Why so and she acatedabout '/4 sore.

Thirsday — .Joe Hix was here thisevning and ma sed Joe is it trewthat you are secritly marryed to Lizzie Blunt and he Red No Lizzie hasnew it all the time ever sence thKoramoney.

POTPOURRI

Yak Live. HighThe yuk makes lie home at Ihe high-

est altitude of nny of the Hnlmnls. liv-ing lit a lielpht of 1S.000 feet In Tibet

Translation* of the BibleWhile It IB possible Hint the

Bible him not renched nil theworld, It certainly hns found Itswny Intel numl purls There nreone hundred imcl ol^tit coin|ilotetrnnFlnlliiii* iii>'i »ome live himrtreO pnriinl translations nf thlfgreat wnrk. One stntlstlclnngays that fmirleeti million copiesof Hie Hltile or nf the NewTeslanieni are distributed annunlly.lift 1»JU vVenlfril NBW«l>ftl»>r Union i

Happy D«y«Little Mary wo* on a visit to her

grttiulpnrents and the uld fnshionedgrandfather clock In the ball wns asource of wonderment to her. \Vhlleshe was gtnniU*K before it her grand-mother snkl to her from the nextroom: "Is the clock ii:nii'.iig, dear?""No, mn'nm," promptly replied Jliiry,"It's just stundlnn si 111 nndUs tall."--Montreal Stur.

—Please mention thin pap«,- when

buying from advertisers,—

Cal i i J i . ' i

every

eu

ra

ini! a

Knu'l

Th

with

War,

ilbl's followers have n new Idea.il of >|)cn(]in« one full hourmoriiiuK In prayer, an Is (lie

•ii in India, Hindus of dlffprulit•s start at 5 o'clock tn tho morn-mi sing "Hymns of Hate AKalnst;ui<l."•y are mild hymns coniiniredsome produced in the WorldThey only advine. Hindus to

'.o:nes;nin, boycott Ilrltlxh Komls.

What the Rods of the Hindus, l'ar-si>ej and mhers will think about mill-Hiinitini; liyinns for mornliiK prayersr>>iiiiiiiis to he neen,

M.tnoiii, Italian electrical cmiiis,.mil his wife have a llttlu Rlrl. justhor:i. Thi' mother certainly Is dip-;ipi«diit> il, the father probuhly: Moth-ern want hoys tvi please fathers, fa-thers want boys to gratify tbp.lr ownvanity.

FniiuMiitily, Nature Interferes.Aci'Ki'iliiiK to laws of heredity,

dauchti-rii inherit and hand on to theirchildren ti l ( ; Konlus o( tlie fatlivr.

A sun inliLTits the father's genius,rarely. You cun count tho really•-•real suns of great fathers on thetinners of two hands. Marconi hasthriM< children hy tils flrat wife, twodani'Iiiers ;md one HDII.

Tin- Hi-it ish ( l o v e r n m e n t haa in-

ciea-i .d hy a to ta l of s ix ty mil l ion i j

;ii):inls I}^!II,I;IJII,(IO(I) t l ie fund to re - '

lieve I lie lyn'lllployiMl. Such a pro-

r;r.i!ii:iii. would till us wi th r i gh t eous ,

:iiitl-l!.,;*hevil[ InOlKunllon he re .

Th'-y \< ;ve only l.!IUH,l)(M) uiU'lil-

jiln>-••! in I'.ritaln. We. h a v e twt™ t h a t

()u: ;IKC is line of complicated fully,with iiKiny i'oola to applaud. Younitliojs are umouraKed to enna>!e Iniiicvck' ri'linn contustM that ruinh i ' i i l i h .

Adulis tnguKu l» iHin-Btop dani-lnt!conte-.ts. ICiiuully 'harmful. Many Biton lliiL-poles for iilayn and weeks,proiul of themselves, A twulvu-year-*U1 boy Warts A 'kfek "stftiiiK CIWUT-';ince ciuitest." Ilia father supportinghla plan to remain In the tree for amonth, although the weather mailtells him tho treo may he. struok byllKhtiilng and advises a linhtniiiK rod.

Simeon Stylites be^an It, moru tlmn1.5UU years a«o, BpelliUnK years on topof a biKh column, prearliinK from Ilia;i«rch, nevor coming down.

That was different becauso hethought tlie I » r d would Uko to seesomebody live on a high column foryearn.

Different aluo Is the case of the"Holy Man of Benares."

He went, further than Simeon andsat all day long on sharp iron spikes.Ha thought that pleased hla Ood. Inboth cases the faithful contributedliberally. Today the fools contribute.

(Ifi 1930. Kim Keamitl Symlicilc, Inc.)

ForDAY and NIGHT SERVICE]

"SPEC'S''TAXIPHONE

WOODBRIDGE8-0538

Two Car Service

JlTT73lT|

Big. Get-Acquainted Coffee Sale!In order that lovers of good coffee may have an oppwtumityto test the merits of our Brands, we are making special reduc-tions in Coffee Prices for this week. ,If you use our Coffees, you will welcome this reduction inprice. If you have never tried our Brands, we would suggestthat you do so now—at a great saving. You will appreciatejust how good, good Coffee can be-

Where Quality Counts Your Money Goes Furthest!Roasted in Our Own Roasteries.

ASCO Coffee lb 24'Rich, Full-D«-li(fhtfiiI Aroma!

VICTORBLEND

The Choice of Thousand?.COFFEE - 2 1 ACME

BRANDAdapted to Percolator Use.

COFFEELouellaButter l b

Gold SealEGGS

The Finett Butter in America,

Cartonof

TwelveThe Pick of the Nettt!

Strictly Pure

LARD '"Home Needs at

19Vo/»14/2C

I' ISavings!

Large Fancy Calif. Prunes 2 lbsFat White MackerelASCQCorn StarchASCO Cracker Meal ...Skat Hand SoapLux Soap Flakes

2 forpkg

.... 2 pkgs2 cans

... big pkg

25c15c7c

15c15c19c

Reg- 35c Del Ray

Italian DinnersC29

A very appetizing, economical dish—easily prepared.

Imported Pure

Olive Oil can 2 5 c4 cakes Sweetheart Soap1 pkg. Blue Streak Steel Wool23' AMERICAN, PABST-ETT

SWISS OR PIMENTO

BREADSUPREME

LargeWrapped

Loaf 8'Cheese

Ritter's Cooked

Spaghetti

Special Sale Sweet Peas!Reg. 19c ASCO Fancy Reg. 23c ASCO Tiny

Sweet Peas 3 rs 49C June Peas 3 59Sweet Tender Early June Peas . 29c

ASCO Pure Fruit

Preservesj.ir 21

Your choice of Strawberry, Pineapple,Peach or any other variety in ttock

ASCO orBARTLETT

PEARSbig

can 25c

Iced Tea is Very Refreshing!

ASCO Teas5 1 0 c : t£ 19c

Preserving Helps!Mason Pint Jars doz 75cMason Quart Jars doz 85cJar Top* (Porcelain Lined) .... doz 29cGlass E. Z. Seal Pint Jars .... doz 95cTop E. Z. Seal Quart Jars doz $1.15Jelly Glasses doz 39cGenuine Parowax pkg 9cBest Rubber Jar Rings doz 7cCerto (Sure Jell) bot 29c

Plain Black or Mixed

Orange Pekoe — lndi» Cijylon

Reg. 15c ASCOor SnideVs

Tomato

Catsup2' 25c

ShreddedWheat

Biscuit2 * 19c

ASCO FinestWHITE MEAT

TUNA FISHam 2 5 c

ASCQ Fancy

Wet

Shrimp17c

Beverages Cakes and Candies!*ASCO Sparkling Gin. Ale 2 qt bots 25c*ASCO Cream Soda 2 qt bots 25c•Rob Roy Pale Dry Ging^Ale qt bot 15c

N. B. C. Choc. Malted Milk

Biscuit ib 25CMason's Cocoanut Peaks 3 for 10cRainbow Wafer* 3 pkgs 10c

*Rob Roy Pale Dry Ging. Ale 3 bots 25cASCO Grape Juice pt bot 17c, qt bot 32c

•Plus usual bottle deposit _|_

N. B. C. Assorted

Sugar Wafers pkg

Milky Way Bars 3 for 10cASCO Creamy Mint. Va lb bag 10c

Finest Fresh Produce!WASHINGTON PEAS 2 lbs. 2 UCALIFORNIA BARTLETT PEARS - doz. 29cICEBERG LETTUCE '.. head 10cJERSEY MARGLOBE TOMATOES 3 lbs. 25cMARYLAND LIMA BEANS 2 lbs 2BoHONEY DEW MELONS Each 35c

"When you "compare ASCO Price, you realize that It Pay. to TradeWhere Quality Counts, and you get the Mart of the Bett for the Least.

Try^the New HOOVER!

and Learn the way toEasy Summer Cleaning

T T'S HARD WORK to keep the house clean in the summer

when ilujtv; ami windows are witlc open letting the dust blow

in. The il.iilv cleaning needn't be a burden, however. It can be

done easily, tfioroiiRhly and mote quickly than ever before with.

citlu'i of the new Hoover models.

Tiy the new Hoover, cither model, without

i>!>liff,vi<iii, on vour own rups.

Trove for yourself the truth of our statement

that the limner is the most efficient electric

cleaner on the market and the one that pro-

longs the life of your ruR».

Hi over 725 sells for £

Hoover 575 for JH)3.5O

, Small increase in price of either

if purchased on terms of

^5 down

5 fl month

•15

Our Exhibit at the American Fair, Municipal Auditorium, Atlantic City, ihowi

the Industrial Advantages of New Jersey. When in Atlantic City pay ui a viiit. , .

1609

' tni

Iml

Vlii,

;/

vm

•;••/; ' i

ALASKACork Insulated

REFRIGERATORSCarefully built refrigerators . . .

properly designed to cave money . • .time , . . and ice. Our entire stock willbo tacrinced,

l/3 Off Regular PricesAll Steel Alaska*•**" i"h ree [ ) o o r Side leers

"REFRIGERATORNo. 930 formerly $27.50;

in white- $18 .75nowNo. 9800 in white andgreen, $37.50- $25.25

•AV.

WEEKLY

No. 491 formerly$24.00; now

No. 494 formerly$27.00; now

nowNo. 9820 in white andgreen, $46.50- $ 3 0 . 7 5nowNo. 9840 in white * O C OC$51.50~now VOD.6D

No. 9860 White and ft/IA KC\green $61.50-now ***"•*>"

No. 9830 White and *yl C CHgreen $70.00—now * < * ^ ' O U

IN SOLID OAK

$15.00 No. 52 formerly $ 2 3 . 7 5$36.00) now v ~

^ i r " 1 ' . $29.75

ALBERT LEOM93-95 Smith St. Cor. King St. Perth Amboy, N. J.

Page 16: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

. W&.*-...!..—•-•.

PAGE TWO SECTION TWO

Thp Devonslor'H Lvttrr Box i Oil and WaterWon't Mix

BT ARDEN X PANGBORM

•••. • ' . . i t . . ' » r . - " - r w . i r : Tt

• ' , - t ' ! • I : > F - ' . ' t i t r i p - ! f ' r r : •

<* iS: fe" mjih CHI >Be wiif mi-iiie-

• ;• i- f,..-If of t wi-1 ' «•* W! .'-I, f'f«-f I; ti-.iB'i !• T

"!i*- f.t: er.; ( ' ar. l>s'»-

T M

w U : • . • ; • _ • • : ?

.' ft 'ti i". • : '.:.?:

t ic • -.<•:.::iJ>' t l i f

c,: M J t . t 3 - ~n • C-.»-•-»• Rjji Miy Now:?-«*-: C" f.j ' i

•t r t«•„ .

et t • "M bT> q u i t e»" !•!•'• f&r'.'TieK ;n

\.:.i

••\M\ hM-f ai n:atlii ; ; < r i.'U I: f rif b raw of

: v t > r ; " f ?u»* B ''uw "f « L ' T•:>• . '« ! lyimucts fri-eLfive «••»

* ui*. it * toe timnied r»fcri(^1 ' 'r- IT, t w!' t oM<<"r water. If y>u

d(*fi/t knew Jur' b"w in. . "

i ' It. tl.Dti tio'. tbe Idea ' prot b t ctiier. "She ' i Dot y»ur clbR&

yen »«.:.l

tnp nj[»rt KIT.! mu^ i'Oj'n.tr ti "* rvii-'..

trj U,ty «:n.;:.tt« the imf-vr". iuXj.

j«ort-i OLCITht oLt i:

ont ior. It cbooti&i a

It to some oti* who kic«-f how :ocleas Orit-ntEl rngt. If jo t i'.-ii't hhiif 1: It 5! vet the procew »c?«r3ei mordinary donieFUc, the fiheeD—•wl.ici.1» reaily iht most EUrsTj^e tl.itijabout an Oriental rug, asiie from thebe»ct!ful rnkiri—«H! be lost

Oriental rug« from Persia, for In-Ftao?e. are fascinating and Use? nr«being rEbOfc to rowt tbe Au^rlcat de-mand. The <5esisns and colors arethe earne as In the rugi ma^e lri theE*lt You don't netd to think thtleu of your 'iMr.'-rtSe Oriental rvg be-CBD#e It Is factory niadt. Morie 1D-gplrtd conceptions of nom&dj nUir:?

wcnvir:R on out n.aster-

t'.f j i n , U £;(••; ir tbe EketE•> '*::.$ *•(*«. lt.v th* rjCT. TMi

a Ujore art.^tic p&ueni H2\Ji'.>re t;v;( colcrt '.'i&r. tou'.d t* otli-r^iiie I'OSH^ \*f. Syij'.hwlc dyes are

of itaiiuIa'.'TurHi c-(Jorlng which it ueffirieut ai juaLt dye*—aid ie*» ei-

thing yen should t»t carefuldeuj with a rej>'jta.Me firm In-

f'.<?*i of jilckiiig np a "bargain" fromtu liliiernjt i-ei'Jler of tloubtfttl ortfia.T!;e»e traDderlLc trttlers cannot t>etra'*-1; wlien you die«rreT that your•'vt'.Ubt''e OrleLtP.;" li a cheap, fllmFyrat with little or no wearing quality

ALd you'd l>**t I'tit tome »ort olraBl:ir'ri!tig v.A?z y CT raja. They'llt>e softer xnirjer fc't and they willbold up cuc-h lotiger.

fiur youtgt-Et tlierut' r«rcently ex-prcsfd hi-ikelf iy ?;-illlrig a bottleof lck bil <»?r <.r> o{ our nigi tuta '.'.tiiijT f t it o-jt. fortunately.

KoL'lly, Fern Eturt

Proud Graduate With Her Diploma

T l ; l s G f r i u a n h ' • • ; '*• •- •!

c o u r s e u s is i f u i i l c ! " r '.:.•• !•'

b t , a u i i i . - - , i ' . i ; t - •:• f

:. :., l . : :s !•••:: ; • . - • ' . • - : a f" : : : : . - ' - i . t h s" t r a i n i n g

. - : . ' . . . : .„• •- •- : ; O ' : . .-. *•;.*• r i - i - i u - J a t t i e

:. :.; .L N-.-v. Y:!t tity.

Washington on Mount Rushmore

Sl* l . . .-"ift*'» «h8:? ClhW1! Wild! I tJjBi>

If jnc i i'u: OB • pa' ' rf overall* . . .'""HuSjli! Ai I wat Knyiut there

art tf 'wt, iL-eiieraUciif trf Merriweo'*.en ttet.itid jot, i»"ii. fcf'**E pentnitUttifof ci't'jr*. Behind tli'.t pirl If orieFMKrav <ti of in.rnip^tita. Cu:ture <slijtierert. cctfonni It; If you t aTt Ityou hhve. If j(«u havenX you CEI.'I t>uyit ei.d you can't felpn It. Cut ereBtEtds OUL t"u, BpaiDft any tia'trr<it)ijd, I i.etiK't tell tlie 5t!"t::g>-r 1bir a MerriwfEittier U> have (,!m rw.cnite that I'm not of the—er— ordi-nary. . . ." His fMiteDce Jaded Itto a»!:£ht shudder. "Aud the lK»;.tt'lEftdoe^L't have to explain his OCCUT»8UOLfor i^ ' f ; e to know that he's Dot of—«eii, of our position. You have It;she tiBWL Ton won't mix-"

"Ton ta!k as If culture WB» a Eitrn-ti'ip.rrt packed around for people tolook at . ' the youoper one retorted, h'.ivoice rising. "BotDetljlEg physical, likemeasles. Why. It e nothing more thana state of mind—like conceit. louknow t'.Etned well rd marry her anj-way, If It weren't for putting herQuder a lifelong handicap that's utter-ly needless." The younger Mentweather turned suddenly, grabbed thehat OD the corner of the big desk and.Jamming It down upon his head with-out noticing ttat It fitted him like anumbrella, strode from the office.

"Here, here." MerTlweatber &fci,i"rcalled after him. "You've pot tty |-.jt.drat 1L" But ths young miiL wiitgone.

For some time the chubby faced <•:.?cogitated. He could find DO flu-* mwhat he h:id said. That about overalls, now. If he were to d"n e v e r t s .

! everyone mould rec"gi.lze that t!>y• were., foreign to him. If he . . . The

telephone Interrupted. It was Mrs.; Merrlweather. "liut Lltst it, I've got

a conference at three o'clock," lit pro-tested. "I can't go shopp;.Lg Where'sthe chauffeur; well, confound 1*., 1

: didn't give him the day ofl, did 1?Besides, Joe ran off with my hut. . ." The phone clioke'l. Mr. Merr!-weather sic'ied- He wo-ji.; go shop-ping. Of course the cor.ftrer.ee couldwait.'

At RoSenhlfiom'E he fo'jT.d himselffloundering In the wake ••'. I.is 'U Ina sea of humans. After stru^^lir.g tf-nminutes, he cave ut>. I!:s wife leftMm waltln? nt the foot of t!.e expresselevators. Five, ten, fiftee:: rniDutes.He became aware suddenly that s-omt-oue was plucking at his sleeve, lieturned" tn face a huge woman In asloppy, red hat, trailing' two dirtyfact'3 cl'SUlrcn from her ham-likehand?.

"Where's the corsets:" she enquired."The—vr—humph'.""The com-ts . . ." the lady repeated

rifititntly.••Confound It. woman, whiit do you

take me for?" he gasped at last, nurrl-lie i at her brnzen familiarity

She icKiki-il nt him then with scornon l-'T (Jiibby face. "Tlie fluorwalkergin this store is terrible,'' she Slid.•They d»n'l know anything and theyain't got nny courtesy. I've a gnud no-tion to report vou to the nianager at;ince."

She lumhertd away.For a long time Mr. Merriweniher

couldn't force himself quite to rtuMieit. But there It nas tn awful cer-tainty. This frowsy woman with tliemo untidy children had mistaken himfor a Boorwnliier, had considered himher Inferior, hart threatened to reporthim to the martut-'er for Im-ompenttnceund discourtesy. The hut: that v sit. U« didn't tiave a, hat. ID U Lalfdaze, he started to gel awaj beforesomeone repeated the ghustiy error.He went out on the street, forgettingnil abuut Mrs. Merrlweather and the;.ael;agi'S. arid walked unseelnglj to-wn rd Ms offk-e. As he did so, the situ-ail")' begun to sUupe itself ID IIU mind\u iti true perspective. Horrible as it\wis, it hail ct.bt him nothing. Theytia'l ml t'iken*1 him for a floorwalker,true, but what of it? Did their think-ing $" n.ake it so'; Humph!

'ILi-n. wlih a Sjtart. he realized thut'l.ai was the \vp thing hl» son had!. :.] iiliu t-arlliT fn the day. Oil and,V:I:IT Culture. A signboard packtjt.ir i < •.[ite to see. Stute of mind Con-vii. Humph' He Bin

-:•,;>• und tilephoijtd to the

FRIDAY. AUGUST 1. 1930WOODBR1DOR INDEPENDENT

mind lon-at a dr<|g

the yaclt

"fniifouiit) it all. Bon,'1 he >-'aid wheni,e ni.ally ti"\ llit yi.ung nmn ou the• JIIHT i-nd of the wlru. "That waterwe were talking about; we ought tostiirt distilling It right away If we'r«tolng to. Why nut brluj; htr out tothe house tonight?'

Head uf lii-orge WUBIIIIJ^IUU, ilur\i..l !iy (Julinn llor^luni on the facMount Itutiliuiore In Soutli l*Hkutu, umeik-d recently us the lirstwork uf (he imOecti-d i l

— A Classified Adv. Will Sell It —

jifa in ft DayWhen tuuklug a ioog voyage, at cue

particular spot on tbe other sld* oftb« world, the change It representedbj a whole day, which uiuut b« addedor lubitracted according to the wajtb« iblp U going. On a leap rear, go-ing from Yokohama to San FraucUcoshould the Khlp come to the place ofChange ou February 21), theu. If a dayU added, (but added day |u kuonn of

at Kehruary 3D.

The Han Kraud*cu peak Is the hl(fa-est peak In Ariiona. It ts 9,000 feetabove the Colorado plateau, and lamore than 12,000 feet above Ma lereLIt was thought by tbt Indians to betbe third mountain created, and wascalled by them the "High Place ofSnow." IB 153a it wa* namad by Mar-co* de New, a Franciscan friar, uthe "Kingdom of Sao Francisco." Tbepeak is also known on some, mkjps *f'Humphrey! 1'eak."

f t Cats ••« We«a«iPrerent infecrioo! TreatcTcry cut, wound or•cnucfa with this powei-ful ooo-poifooou* aari-wnk . Zooiw actuallylulls germs. Help* tohe*l,ioo.

AUGUST CLEARING SALEOf desirable stoves at prices thatare much below the usual prices

Do Not Delay As QuantitiesAre Limited

Our monthly payment plan makes it easy foryou to buy now and pay in easy payments

E-Z-EST WAY RANGESModem KttottM fUc*es-Mo<Je«ry Priced

.95$36AboSoU

00

CASH DELIVERED

Tbe new model E-Z-est V«yis truly t mtrveL It ont*dasses otber makes ta styk,beauty of design, *nd price.Skilled start designerj bufltthe E-£-est \T«y with a scien-tific regard for efficiency tad

sizz bsram and 6 fallsize cooking hole*. Hoose-vrtres ippriCMtte its ease ofOpcrarioa, hs qaick beadncaxtd wonderfnl baking qual-ities. Bams common kero-sene. Priced verv lav.

TODAY'S GAS RANGETHE NEW PROSPERITY

$CO.8552C»ih Delivered

Picture the convenience and beauty of this outstandingPROSPERITY GAS RANGE in your kitchen! Features:

$ K Porcelain ename' finish—as easy to clean

^ as a china dish! Roomy baking and broil-** ing ovens; full-size burners; large cook-

D O W N ing top. Sturdily constructed, standsBalance In Eaiy rigid. Handy service drawer. See and

COMPARE the Prosperity todayl

RELIABLE OIL STOVES ANDRANGES AT REDUCED PRICES

SEE THESE SPECIAL BARGAINSIN GAS RANGES

4 BURNERE-Z-WAY WICKLLSS RANGE

WITH HIGH SHF.LF AM' r-HE!,UNDEK BURNERS

High Spt-.-d Hrat D:r:>:.'.£ E^rr.r

36CASH DELIVERED

4 BURNERWICK KEROSENE RANGE

PORCELAIN ALPINE GREENCHIMNEYS

$ 21.90

CASH DELIVERED

.50

5 BURNERE-Z-WAY WICKLESS OIL RANGE

LARGE HEAT RETAINING ASBES-TOS INSULATED OVEN,

Guaranteed To Bake Perfectly. Ther-mometer Gives Exact Temperature.Drip Pan Under Burner?. Chromium „ ,„ , . ,.,Plated Handles. The De Luxe Model. C A S H DELIVERED

$71

3 BURNER

WICKLESS OIL STOVES$e.25

.. ALITaGAS GASQUNE UPORCELAIN ENAMELED IN GREiEN '

AND IVORYBaking and Broiling Ovens. 4 Burn-er?. Over, Thermometer. Was $69.95.Now CASH DELIVERED

HOT WATER HEATERS

HEAVY DUTY FIRE BRICK LINEDWATER HEATER -

Htu:s 40 Gallons Per Hour

.75

BETSY ROSS GAS RANGEHEAVY CAST IRON COOKING TOI'WITH IMPROVED CI.OVKR l.HAF

REMOVABLE L1IKSW...nh S59.25. Special at CASH DELIVERED

DISPATCH GAS RANGE

WITH OVEN CONTROLPOrft.'ELAIN ENAMELEDh SG5.50. Special at

$>1Q.85

.... CASH DELIVERED

OLIVETTE GAS RANGEFOUR BURNERS

WITH BAKING AND I1UOILINGf'VF.NS. PiiJtCELAIN ENAMELKD

$36 .50

at CASH DELIVERED

PROSPERITY GAS RANGE

•• "KEK* AM. • $ / j - i . 8 5:- ^-A:N ENAMELED. 61CASH DELIVERED

ELITE EXTRA LARGE GAS RANGE

i A N : '$67'.85

CASH DELIVERED

3 HOU GAS PLATE

V.'ITH NICKEL TRIMMING$C.4O

2 HOLE GAS PLATESON HIGH STAND

;!.:,: A:r M.x-r-

$5 .25

When in need of plumbing supplies of any kind - callus up and have our special plumbing expert call andgive you an estimate. No charge for our services.

SEARS. ROEBUCK AND CO.STORE HOURS

D«ilj 8:30 to 5:50

( WML b 30 to 1

Sat. 9 lo 9

R E T A I L S T O R E27S-277 HOBART STREET

PERTH AMBOYTnlcpkou*

ProaiptlyFill.d

TELEPHONEFtRTH AMBOY3680 3681

Page 17: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

W OODBRIDOE INDEPENDENT FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1930 SECTION TWO PA6BTHWB

Older at the prices/you >v been waiting for

The coming of the August Sale is goodnews to the hundreds of thrifty buyerswho know the values this annual eventbrings. Greater than ever! More varieties!

Ced«r Cheiti

$27.00Walnut finishedand jfemiino ro<lc e d a r lined,llonmy and sub-stantial.

Chett ofDrawers

$15.75F o u r or fivedrawer chest*,walnut vnnpered.Rimmy in s i z eand nicy in ap-pearance.

COIL SPRINGS

$10.50w mils insure comfort.A very substantial bed•pririK, nt an attractivei i r i i ' i 1 .

50 LB. MATTRESS

$7.49")0 pniind all cotton mat-tress cuvered with fancyart ticking Well tufted.A Kuaranteed value!

fLENITLCESHOULD Cf BOUGHT

Lots of it, from the finest makers, is being sold under cost ofproduction—and everybody knows that prices lower than costcannot long endure!So, if you need furniture, make up your mind that the time tobuy it it now and the place to get it is JAMES McCOLLUM'S.

Furniture for every room at sensationalreductions! Buy one piece or an entirehome-full of furniture and save 25% to401! Liberal terms gladly arranged.

M«Ul Bedi

$7.49 up

Continuous postmetal beds; fivefillers; wood fin-i s h e s . V e r ysturdy.

SewingCabinet!

$4.49Priscilla Sewing('ahincts, walnutor mahogany fin-ished. A m p l ylargo.

NC

SAVE

ODD TABLES

$11.50up

Walnut tables in tho pop-

ular octagonal shape, and

in a variety of styles.

3-Pc. Living Room SuitesWith a positive Saving of 25 % to 50 % Now

3 pc. Jacquard, all over, reg. $149 $ 99.00

3 pc. Tapestry, all over, reg. $179 $129-50

3 pc. Mohair, Walnut Frame, reg. $275 $137.50

3 pc. Mohair, Walnut Frame, Taupe,reg. $250, webb bottom $176.50

3 pc. Mohair, Walnut Frame Suite,reg. $265 web bottom, $189.50

3 pc. Tapestry, all over, reg. $300web bottom : $210.00

3 pc Mohair, All over Mulberry, reg.$350 $225.00

BEDWill never beto 50 %.3 Pc. Walnut4 Pc Walnut4 Pc. Walnut4 Pc. Walnut4 Pc. Walnut

ROOM SUITES IN 3 • 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 PIECE SETSbought at these pi-ices. A positive saving here of 25%

Bed Room Suite, formerly $149.00, NowBed Room Suite, formerly $159.00, NowBed Room Suite, formerly $179.00, Now ...Bed Room Suite, formerly $210.00, NowBed Room Suite, formerly $250.00, Now ...

With Maple Overlay7 Pc. Walnut Bed Room Suite, formerly $350.00, Now

Over 50 Bed Room Suites to Select From

$ 99.00$109.00$129.50$169.00$175.00

$250.00

METAL AND WOOD

REFRIGERATORS

AT 25% OFF

DAY BEDS

$14.50U1

Graceful style. Opens to fullsize bed. Complete withspring and mattress.

ODD CHAIRS

$18.50up

Jacquard u p h o 1 steredchairs, with soft com-fortable cushion. Spe-cial values!

WALNUTSPINET DESK

With and without drawers.

$18.00 up

OUR AUGUST SPECIALA complete Bed Room, 10 Pieces, Consisting of:1 Walnut Dresser .|..;j1 BedI Vanity1 ChesTof Drawer* * - " - > v - ;1 Spring1 Mattress1 Bench2 Pillows1 6x9 Rug

S Pc BREAKFAST SET

In Green or Gray, A Bar-

gain at

Special $109.95

$22.98

Watch Our WindowsFor 98 C Specials

HERE IS A DEMONSTRATION OF EXCEPTIONAL VALUES IN10 PIECE DINING ROOM SUITES

lO.Pc. Tudor Walnut Dining Room Suite, formerly $250, Now $189.0010 Pc. Queen Ann Wai- Din. Room Suite, formerly $250, Now $144.5010..Pc. 2 tone Sueen Ann Walnut Dining Room Suite, formerly

$275, Now $150.0010 Pc. Walnut Dining Room Suite, formerly $245, Now $179.0010 Pc. William and Mary Walnut Dining Room Suite, formerly

$275, Now _ : . $210.0010 Pc. Tudor Walnut Dining Room Suite, formerly $360, Now $249.0010 Pc. Spanish Renaissance Walnut Dining Room Suite, for-

merly $450, Now ._*! _....„ $275.00

:ny, un v^nis located in] , _ .

•ridge, Cotrn- 90 W'tate of Now * * v "

MEWMAN,•ond St.,Newark, N. J.. 8.

ALEEW JERSEYANKLflf SO-'l . uiiujniMO

HOOS1ERKITCHEN CA$1NETS

Inj Ivory, Gray ind Green

$34.50up

ODD VANITIES »ndFRENCH VANITIES

$14.50 up

ODD DRESSERS

In Walnut Finish.

$18.50up

3 »nd 4 PC. FIBRE SUITES

IN A VARIETY OP '

COLORS AT

$18.49 up

LEasy

TermsJAMES McCOLLUM

129 Irving Street Rahway, N. J.

EasyTerms

Page 18: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

fA<QB POUR SECTION TWO , AtT.C?T t.WOODBRIDGE

News of the World Told in PicturesThe MacDonald Girls A Study in Expressions at English Baby Show Far From Heat Waves

Is a i".ir» t:~r-c.*"j; *r:~ N«i Y;:t.

Aii B'.jS-

Dime Arcade on High Building

CHICAC-O-C:1.: .Y:j i.-o^ a ;^r.e •-. ar.i y;u are at'.-J :o s « out

c»t: C^i

Fiaring Felt Hats for Fall

After the Earthquake in Italy

"•: :.t ct it* :r.:;^;:ar.^ having a

Elephants Take "Cure" at Hot Springs

Wiih a si^ir:!y ,a".:err.e<i tlacic and aju:e woolen

f^iie l r.en cellar ar.d crTs, Lucille Powers.

wears oc* of :he ne .e : side-brjumed hals in wh::e lei

Will Handle All Details

it. Hut there ittiilnty. Tills froff: .-two untidy childrelfur a floorwalker, a c d ^-P- r

her Inferior, lind tviphur and111 in to the ninmigei

jonderous members o! a irivel:r.g cr^-ij :.-;•..; •. tr,

. spr:r.g5 a; •.-•>.• H.~.es:-ead, Ho; S]:r.:x-. \i.

..::s l4M.e.-j o: ihe

daze, he stiirlMl tisomeone repentedHe went out on

Mrs. Me

Veteran British Explorer to Be Honored

ANOELKS G»'yim Wiiioii, the Ameru-itii Olympic Coaimlt-

t « general manitjer of '.iie in'i'i u'.>u:;ii.c Unii.fj here, u^pectini tiio

^UfiJjtrlog machine wlilttj ••binudi' i.uuieiai3 UIUJ the seals of U»

L M Aageles Ckilbcum.

t-ONUON—Sir yiimitn PeLrle, tighty, veterin explorer and noted authority on lh« necblhlc age,wbo wiU t* hoiwred by Britain tor his fifty years of explorsuoai and scientific lnv«tnjationi. He was liiafksi to Hod Ibe iuyatenous vrlUugi In the BimA Deceit In IMS. U« U shown vlth tome of hi* rare fliui-

• r•;...-.; G.;.^<- H B .

• - pan of Pinntelt

New 10,000-Ton Cruiser

PKILADELPHIA-The new :«,000-:on cruder L". 9. S. Ch:.::r

la:*s: sciv.on to tr.c f.w. at the Navy Yard here, JU;1. belcre it lei1

on a :rj!ie to -.Tc-r.'-y-;^: E^rop^ir. pcrts.

Moose Calf Became Friend

STOCKHOLM -Z:_i ;;. . ...-

vej ijy tha f i r - ; : ; r - , . :...-

u^eJ i?.: b e ; . - ; :^:..r.

fe was

Ht.:-::-.s:i:-.ci. IJe' h t i re-

And Now the Messengerette

Page 19: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

\voODBRTDGE INDEPENDENT

a oQUOQQ•UUiJULJ

WILDWOOD-by-tlu-SeaNEW JERSEY

The largest . . . finest „ „ . moit moderne hotelon *hl» popular «ea-bathed Uland . , , juri• t\*p *rom the boardwalk.and all amuie-

Twn hundred spacious , , . airyroom* „ . . most of which overlook theece«n , , , finest of private facilities

Har, service . . . splendidf-"*4 , , . daintily prepared.

SUPPER DANCING DAILYIn a Magnificent Grill

GOLF PRIVILEGES

MODERATE RATESWRITE FOR BOOKLET

Own»nMp-Min«g»ni«ntB*nn*( E. TouiUy

Seaton May until October

SECTION TWO PAC

The Children'sYOUR DRAWING LESSON

(No «)rnw funny qu rn t lnn murk:Thi^n ndd n r l i r lv lint*;

\ fuimv liump and twn »hnrp

(Now aren't th«T |ii*t too fln«T)

Nnit m«k« ni iUkfn «n(l an «y».Two hind und two fore pawn;

Tmi'vp drawn a squirrel with n nutClasped Unlit In hla (harp clown.

-T.ncills Ctite*.

HOW SPRING RETURNEDTO EARTH

Ttie Greeks of olden titles tell ofi beautiful vnlloy cnlled Ennn Thetroves there were peaceful and theakoa were quiet. No trace of winter•vor entered the vnlley, for It wna aipot denr to the henrt of Rcrceter, thamrth mother.

l'orscphone wna the only dnughtet)f Demcler nnd ns fnlr ng the fftlrcitlower In the mpndowB.

One tiny Persephone looked np fromlcr plnylng to net a shining chariottppronclilnR. Font hlnck horses drew•he chariot nnd holrflnn the reins wnsi tnll. hnnilsonifi lluure. lie onrrledI sppnr nnd wnro Inni! (lmvlne mhoi"

| THE PERTH AMBOYj GAS LIGHT COMPANY

I206 SMITH STREET

Heating and Cooking Appliances

Ruud Automatic and StorageWater Heaters

New Process Gas Ranges

looked for her lovely daughter tocone dancing to meet her. She be-came frightened and aearched In allilreotlonB. She tlghted a torch nndhunted by night through the valleyThe next dny nnd the next, she wnn-dered tar and near. At Inst she satdown on the bnnkB of the stream andwept, tor she knew her daoghter hartbeen stolen.

"No gross, no flowers, no fruit, nogreen thing of any kind shnll appearon the earth until my daughter Is re-turned to mel" She rleclnred sorrowfully.

Just then Derneter heard n mnr-muring, nnd looking np, saw thenymph, Arethusa, rising from a fonntain nenrby.

"Pcnr Enrth Mother, be not Badbut he comforted," snld Arethusn."As I hurried under the eiirth on mywny here. 1 passed the pnlnce of thegod DIs. On his throne, bCBlde him,slta Persephone, wenring a goldencrown and hailed as queen."

Con-Den-Rit Radiant LogsOdorless—Efficient—Inexpensive

Telephone 3510 Perth Amboy

Inn KIIKII-IK-II In ttie gurillKhlie fell to her kneos and eav

ered her fnee for she knew that thisivns no mortal, hut n god. The char-lot stopped beside tier. The driver ofthe vhnrlnt gazed at the beautifulmnlden a long time and finally mo-tioned for her to rise and come tohim. He helped her Into the shiningchariot, lifted the reins, and was soonHying over the meadow.

The hnrseB sped along until the;came to a river. From the depths ofthis wnter a water nymph arose.

"You shall not pass," she cried."You have no right to take the maidenwithout askinj; the earth mother."

Tills caused the handsome younggod to become angry.

He threw his siienr Into the riverand the nymph melted Into the wavesand was gone. The waters parted nndthe ftirtti opened. The horses and thechariot, hearing I'ersephone and the

*uiii; K"<I, dashed through the open-n^ and were seen no more..When Pemeter, the earth mother,

returned to the valley of Enna. she

Tuxedo

Rented

S. FISHK1N

CLOTHING

187 Smith St.Perth Amboy

N. J.

Td. 2991

Catering B<*CLAMBAKES

OTHER OUTDOORFUNCTIONSANYWHERE

ANYTIME

FIRST CLASS SERVICE

GEORGE GE1SPORT READING, N. J.Tel. Woodbridge 8-0094

Englith InventionStulnless steel was Invented In 1010

by a cutlery worker In KhWIleld, Eng-land.

HOTELST.JAMES

Noticing WithoutCscat!SIN6LL ROOMS • 2 » - *

Now KoitictPr Rnpw Hint only oneco\ild help her, that wna the mlghtjZetiR. So Rhe hnstenpfl to the top nfhigh Olympus nnd Rsked 7«ns to mmrnnnd DIs to return Persephone.

"Rut my brother Dla loves yonidaughter," Zeus replied. "Tie hs*

fle her queen of nil the underworld. She mny retnrn to yon onlyt she has eaten nothing since the

hat been In the underworld. It li alaw of the gods that no one maycome back to earth again If he hattaken any food In the kingdom ofDIs."

Now It happened that Persephonehad picked a pomegranate aa shewalked In the palace garden and hadeaten part of It

When nermea, the messenger ofZeus hud told him what had hap-pened, the great god was thoughtful."The earth needs corn and ftnlt," he"aid. "It must not always be b a m oof flowers nnd grass.

"Speed again to my brother! Tellhim that the enrth needs PersephoneTell him that half of every year aheIs to Btny with him In the dark haltsof his palnco. The other hnff of thevenr «he la to return to the earthuml brliitt hack the flowers and thegrnss."

And as Hermes led Persephone opto the enrth and through the yalleyeto Ennn, tho barren land becamegreen. Tfie corn sent up Its youngshoots. The trees hnrst Into leat

Dpmeter looked across the vallejto see the benntlful goddess dancingtoward her with (lowers bonnd In herhnlr. Spring nnd ynnth had oncemore returned to the earth.

-Allc« M. Qreer,

COOL AND COMFORTABLE,

LAST TIMES TODAY—

THCf E WHODANCE**

—With—

Monte Blue - Lila LeeBetty Compson

TOMORROW ONLY2 - BIG FEATURES - 2

t

"Far-Flung Empire11

Tho Itrltish empire Is tha correctd!*:i£iiatl<in for tlie whole RRKregateterritory linked together by allegianceto the British crown. Tho associatedself-governing communities of theBritish empire are spoken of as theRrltlRh Commonwealth of Nations.

If It Kilii HimUsually you enn tell by looking at a

man that his Idea of worthwhileachievement Is passing other ears.—New Castle News,

— Classified Ads. Bring; Results —

JIM GIRAFFEJim Giralic can cat

liis lunch

Up where the air is

breezy,

But when becomes to

take a drink

It isn t quite so easy.

(40) feet to the pointNNING.

High

RICHARDDIX

In

"LOVIN' THELADIES"

With

LOIS WILSON

'FRAMED'—With—

EvelynBrent

Regis Toomey

SUNDAY — MONDAY —

Double Vocal Chords

W O O D B R I D G E

NEW YORKCANDY KITCHEN

Manufacturers and Dealers inStrittly Pur*

CANDIES AND ICE CREAM

ti« Main oL. Woodbrid(?e. T«l. 43

GUSTAV BLAUM

Groceries and I*rovUion»82 Main Street Woodbridje

For QualityWALL PAPER

PAINTS and VARNISHESTRY THE

New ^ork Wall Paper Co.356 STATE STREET, PERTH AMBOY, N. J.

HOLOHAN BROS.GARAGE

Dunlop Tires and TubeiTire and Tube Repairing

Full Line of Auto Accessories

Cor. Amboy Av*. »nd Second St WOODBRIDGE

TWOcylinders arebetter thanoneYES, there is a Santa Claus forhousewives beyond the gasmains. Pyi'ofajt—the old reli-able compressed-gas-for-cook-ing system with two cylinders—brings you the same freedomfrum worry as city gas. It iaproduced by a un i t of theworld's oldest, and largestmanufacturer of compressedgases.

Two cylinders bring youdouble dependabili ty. Youneed never run out of gas.Each cylinder lasts from twoto three months. Weight ofevery cylinder is triple-checkedbefore delivery. A steadystream of gas is a/ways readythe instant you want a bright,hot flame. Let us be your gascompany. We're ready to serveyou today: Call or telephone.

nunINSTALLED WITHPYROFAX OUTFIT

street fortyor olaee of BfeGINNING.

One nf the riiivsl of niiliirc's human[ilieiKiniiMin has I'miml expression illsix-ji'iir-ohl Ora l i l Kiiy of Newniun,III. (icrnUl stii-priscil liis [liirents, Mr.mid Mrs. Holmrt Kny, wlion lie wus11 lialiy hy whistling before lie couldtalk. It niiin'art'd that he was equippedwith 11 ilouhlo sot of vocal eonls, theoxtra set belnn known as the "robin"or "bird" type. N(i\v, nt the aye ufsix. Ccrahl Is nlil« to whistle or war-hie In his throat, while eating anykind of (nod.

POTPOURRI

ram».rinits now nivini su<i»r-litivi s«rnc» to PyroiiMuitrs. Lot am Kesulitor<l slrfii idditieatl cost.

Beef CutsDo you kimw Imw uiiiii)1 "cuts"

iliure lire In it beef after It lius'M't'n alnu;;liti'ro(l mid drt'Ssed1:Klflcpn. They lire: ncili. chuck'ills, glmulder, fi>re slimik. lulsuel, cross I'IIIS. iiliiic. nuvcl. loin• Uuik, rump, rouinl. second cut•iimiil, liiml sli^n!; From lln.'ilhle we Ifiini hciit WHS fulfil.licfore I lie Uu.vs nf Aliratiiiiu.

(fEi. lfl30 Weptt-rli Ni w.^iiauer Union I

Premise* known as 103strewt. Woo<lbridg«,

Decrees amounting to approxi-* ^ y $r>,000.'Together with all and singular the

rights, privileges, hereditaments andappurtenartces thereunto belon^mfor in anywise appertaining.

BERNARD M. GANNON, Sheriff.CHARLES K. SEAMAN, JR.,$23.10 Solicitor.\V. I. 7-11, 18, 25; 8-1.

IN CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY78-050.

TO:MILDRED SOLOMON:

liv virtue of an order of tho Courtof Chancery, made-on the second daynf July, 19S0, tn a cause thereinpending, wherein the BROAD ANDMARKET BUILDING AND LOANASSOCIATION, a corporation, iscomplainant, and you, et al., are de-fendants, because you are the own-er of record of the premises in ques-ion, you are required to appear,}lead, answer, demur or otherwisenove with respect tu the complain-mt's bill of compUint. on or beforehe third day ef September, 11)30,r in default thereof, such decree

will be taken against you as theChancellor shall think equitable andust.

The object of said suit is to fore-lose a certain mortgage given by

HENRY KUNTZ (unmarried), toTHE B R O A D AND MARKETBUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIA-TION, on April 12th, 1929, and re-corded in the oflice of the Clerk ofMiddlesex County, in Book 5!)8 ofMortgages for said County, on page480, which said property is located inthe Township of Woodbridge, Coun-ty of Middlesex, Mil State of NewJersey.

Dated: July 8, 1930.,JACOB L. NEWMAN,

810 Broad St.,Newark, N. J.

W. I. 7-11, 18, 25; 8-1, 8.

Frrolu Xwo-cylindtt lyidm i mU ABC. biltt'i" lAotri dtnet

lai /ram cylinftri to rt'ff.

PYROFAX GAS SALES & SERVICEN, E. corner Church & t . Seconil Sta.

Pl.in6.ld, N. J.Phcne: PUinfleld 6-ift»°

SHERIFF'S SALE — In Chanceryof New Jersey. Between The Perth

Amboy Savings Institution, a corpor-ation, Complainant, and Edward H.Kinsey and Emily M- Kinsey, hiswife, Charles B. Pearce and Sara MPearce, his wife, Defendants. Fi Fafor sale of mortgaged premises datedJune 6, 1930.

By virtue of tho above &tated writto me directed and delivered, I wilexpose to sale at public vendue onWEDNESDAY, THE 6TH DAY OF

AUGUST, A. D., 1930^ut 1 o'clock standard time (2 o'clockdaylight saving time) in the after-noon of said day at the Sheriff's Of-fice in the City of New Brunswick

IN. JAll the following tract or parce

*nf land and premises hereinafter par-ticularly described, situate, lying andbeing in the Township of Woodbridge, in the County of Middlesexand State of New Jtrsey.

BEGINNING at a point on th<southerly side of High street, distaneasterly three hundrtfd and ten (.310)feet from the southeast corner oiHigh street and Linden avenue; running thence (1) southerly at rightanglea to High street one hundredmid twenty and eighty-seven one-hundmlUiu (120.87) feet; thence (2)easterly nearly parallel to Lindenuvenue forty and ten one~hundredths(40.10) feet; thence (S) northerlyparallel .with the first describedc<uine one hundred and twenty-three»M4 fifty-five one-hundredths (123-M) feet to the southerly side ofBl«k street; thence (4) westerly

the southerly aide of High

SHERIFF'S SALEIN CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

—Between The FRANKLIN SO-CIETY FOR HOME BUILDINGAND SAVINGS, Complainant, andFRANKLIN -C. FREDERICK, etal?., pefendants. p Fa for sale ofmor£{raK«l premises dated June 19,1930. IBy virtue of the bbovo stuted writ

to me directed and delivered, I wilexpose to nale tit public, vendue onWEDNESDAY, THE SIXTH DAY

OF AUGUST, NINETEEN HUN-DRED AND THIRTY

At one o'clock Standard Time (twoo'clock Daylight Saving Time) in the,afternoon of the said day at theSheriff's Office in tho City of NewBrunswick, N. J.

All the following tract or parcei|>f land and premises hereinafterparticularly described, situate, lyingend being in the Township of Wood-bridge, in the County of Middlesex,and State of New Jersey, known anddesignated as lots thirteen (13)fourteen (14), twenty-three (23)and twenty-four (24), in Block BC3B on Map entitled "Map of CentraPark. The Hub of Woodbridpe, situute in Woodbridga Townnhip, Mid-dlesex Co., N. J.," which Map wastiled in the Middlesex County Clerk'sOffice, December 5, 1923, us Map No.1032, in File No. 598.

Property known as 618 Ranwayavenue, Woodbridge, New Jersey.

Decree amounting to approximately *9,400. .

Together with all and Bingular, tnrights, privileges, hereditaments »n<appurtenances thereunto b«longinror in anywise appertaining.

BERNARD M. GANNON,ShwuT

H. HJTNNESSY,flB.WO Solicitor.W. I. 7-U, 18, 26; 8-1.

WILLIAM POWELL—In—

" S H A D O W T°HFE L A W "

TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY —

"COURAGE"-With—

Belle BennettMarion Nixon

NEXT THURSDAY and F R I D A Y -

WILL ROGERS—In—

"SO THIS IS LONDON"

RAB1N0W1TZ HARDWARE"If It's Hardware, We Have It!"

Full Line of

HARDWARE, PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES

HOUSE FURNISHINGS

553-555 Roosevelt Avenue CARTEKKT, N. J.

Tel. Carteret 8-0312 and 8-1018

Henry FrahmeSURGICAL APPLIANCES

AND SUPPORTERSNow In Our Own Building

20 West Scott PI. Elizabeth, N.Opposite City Hall

THE

Paulus DairyMain Office: 189-195 New St., New Brunswick, N. J.

Established 1890Phone 2400

U S E PAULUS1

OSITIVELYERFECTLYASTEURIZED

MILK

Walker-Gordon Certified MilkWendmere Farms Raw Golden Guernsey Milk

Suydam's and Rutger'a Special Raw TuberculinTested Milk

DISTRIBUTION COVERSNBW Bruiwwick, Highland Park, South River, S«yre»i

Parlin, South Amboy, Perth Amboy, WoodbndgeCarteret, Fordi and Mtftuchen, N. J.

T00 6ett the domphU MneJohns-Manvilie Shingles

\c4sphult mnd dsbestos K

C. E. BOIN COMPANY567 Ro«ev«U Ave. CARTERET, N. J.

Tel. Carteret 8-1359

Page 20: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

PA OF SIX SECTION TWO

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

i ^ A i . ; A F .Ni . - r.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

5: * : ?

??.f.-.'>: 7E:•.:-.-1.:; '

FRIDAY. AUGUST J. 19S0WOODBRIDGE 1KDEPENDEN!

County of Middlesex Audit Report January 1, 1930 toJVlarchj51Li?3Ou>r »>n

L ' I

ih« )»,*•-..*«

i f : '.in ; •-: -

• * t - : -•- -

-.Hi!)

' T L" l i t !

1 E l l ( *. fct ••<!.! '<, , _ . . , . , , . , . , ! . „ . • . , .1 I * - i :.: L .1 ~k ' *•> *

1 • • L r r • . • • . ' 1 : '

>r. t t v r

NT•-J.k^T..1 t

f I 4.k r

' " j

' , t

: h;

*

; 1 •

k 'i t ? _

1

t

V «

•. t

• ' •

V •

" ' "

t :ti" i •'' .L "

* "f

. (

•t.f"

l i.

' - i

" • I>» ""'

• • *

* • ' * !

J,

t t

• : t

>T k

* ' 4 ,

»•: — ' . *. , ."!• u t

f HIHLT.

u tit h:o : : - f ! t *

traa 4-:-M

KHEFT

REFKBTQ <n E

a

O 1 D T

TTBl: ;>

; f; t

I f f

-.r.s;nti^t•f •IM-

; iM

i't;l

s * : :

1AH1BIT

i --

r.\HIBlT B . . . . . . .; , L i ' , T . 'HE1'- »• ' '•."-. * '.

If I

^ - ; • " ' - i'

) ' . > • • •

v t: p.

: i . '

-.-'.J'»K

y ' ; '.•r" !'.!•

4"l i t

:»'

, -14«

CIRIH

i-rK1

K N T'•1 ' J

112 41H2 (J, ! t .S44:2 2'J

•iie 41

B N T121 '<!it! 11

>E2'itH It(2! J«

TRT',«T

ll« • !(-47 1(IT1 4«

14*.1411(4 I t

1 Id "1

TRUST

' •A i r - .If. «.., ,

in :•2 ; 1 .

"». i i

2X r-It.l.s < U -

1 . 1 s : . .

CA.F • •1 : .

M» 141 14t."«

IMS.l'T !

: » . - i > » ; '

• • ! : < . • • : . - • > '

i r

r v : : in-tii.

. • " • . ! . ••. • •.

4 • BC fl KT ^ ^ f (

- . . . .

TT: E

L.>i;'i-*-*^-11 '..'.

It H *-f

: : i-T -

1:: - . ! • . • 1"

r - . - * • 15 k* -r ' • '

KE~E:PT5 — CTP.RENTXH:B:T A

EXHIBIT C THKr.r vinNTH l-KRIIMt KNIIM)M (HI II 1! IK I "

. . « r , - . r : - : . - : • ' . : [ : • . T - — I T H H F . S T

A - •

A _r

• f t. r »-". : ; : .'N

1 .

. • • ; . r w— • > • ! B7

- ' 't

utrr fc.r^r;,

* | i '

t ; '

. . . f -• t - , .4

'.» > «: .

'^i r'.i1.

• . . :•.!•. '.i

y

Kt;.

*- L: :

f l '

a ' J i " , * r ;••

• - v . i :-.h: H i l i • ! . !

• , •?• of * !•.»• jv-ar

-r. i > if tr» t+ : ; • JT . 1 '.La: : t«

t

tttntl—M."v|vf< . l i i J»:»r&r—rtO.tr*.

l (II "tt t t t i i

itMtl

4 4 1 •

1 » ! • • !•

!"'r • :1" i I

tii!.

!< *"'.-"

> - • r

i,' *1 ;,„Sr : : *-

> » ; • • '

y • • ; -\: 1 i *-

T - i+r'"V, : - «

'.'•••:r_*.>

' • *

•7+ ' '

P* *

F I T ** . * • • *

f AF'*

• +:w-

y

I i

!' r

v^

1 '

*-m>rn

, - • » * - *

;

r ' . \

*ZZtK'' t&

I " • *•£"*'

-.:> E i

••4.! > r t

C, r.'l

3"jr;i'.i

TOTAL

-•- ; ; CASH RECEIPTS — TRCST'••! •.-•-» BH'.IBM I U I U ) 1. Its* — Exhibit A" . :. i - . « Mi:* School Fund* — Dl(

.i/aoij- DrtoctiTt Ptaiioa Fund

pr . . .k-.r >.t:f j : : i r r .t £ . - ' . - - : : *-. .r-C-r-eU r..: f

J.'KhNAklJJ - V i H STt lNER.« : ' '4V. : • - . ' i-:. •, n

• •• r

. k. to c. -.'*-

r i - t * s :. _ ; « * • : * : : -r • ; *•

IT i:. c > r . » r i f fM 'A I : * : i K-: I t

Mr.

•TVlir-r

!E...:.r! 1: if• yi1 ; . »i T.'^r

" '"A-K

. A....it.•f »>:{•,^? &r. 1 'i- : J:*. :1. i"'.' \- L * A

Firm .'.

E A I . A S ' 1

'.. ar,l'" <";>'k- - - . \

• F . r. !

ifcH : iM»«mA •••.'<!

ii'jntfl

A- • ..1F ^ a t

jrfrsjnis I'a. 'ahLe-I'nyalilr — ]

it/* Pay*!.Ir-•.!<•—Huflietl»i« — Huil«f.t

E — MARCH 31. K'3'i —

>j3'«—1J'J'!#»1

—IluilKdRiniBft— Bu' lg - t . . .

K X H I I H T n

EXHIBIT

tH.::i.rIII- i> \ P*rth Ani!'\- '';lv

THRKK MONTH PERIOD ENPKUAT 11AK(H 31. lll.K)

CASH UI.SBI'IISEMENTS — TRUSTnoi FundsI Fun Is.1 Funils

f . ^ . c t t a H - p . Si!:r..,i FJ r ,. s h l a r i h r » B u n S i h u

1 M*t j . h*r.; M-.-iJ.rs.ei ii S h o o l F u n I.-

j r v T ••*'!.».'..;> S-.r-.-'i F jB

I 41-

1 : •> . •

3 j :• •

13 1'1! >

3.."19 1'

t • *

Fjr. Is—1".- • . s l . ' i . i l

Balance

Dalancp

: : i . -.1 -.-r V-' -•

•' dattd July 11. 11-30.. j By virtue 'A the above stated writ1- to me directed and delivered. I w:V.

f .-. •. • 7'.-»i»i..n exp-jse to sale at public vendue on-L.J f M.^.rw WEDNESDAY, THE TWENTIETHLr. w i:.; i-.:«- DAY OF AUGUST, NINETEEN

I r... • : . .i i - -

m I ' - .

Cr":. i-e I ^ ' . '-

l . r> itJ-r**- -'t : : - TI.--.'-..1.';i i •.; *

-,t t i .1^ r ^ :-' 1

V i ' c ; ^ l r.'• J A-.il

-j .r^ra. P»:.-.i:.fM:4

'.•.•.•.-:S'i »•.

^ -. : - t 1 feT. ;

! .•::-• - U,. . :? . !

. ! • - : > i.rit

B . -

it

; . .

! s -. J

i - • *r . 1 HUNDRED AND THIRTYone o'clock Standard Time'

i ij.»»-i o'clock Daylight Saving Time; in4 rJ* tin- afterLocn of the said day at the

N v i a .'JhtritT'i Office in the City of Ne\>»'i 'K!j Brunswick, N. J.• ' . '»"» ' •*'' t ' ' i e ffilccwring- tract or parcel; .' \t't oi land and premises hereinafter I V*•'.:. !«•«• i>articular'iy described, situate, lying| •'

by!i

Balance

%^A^S^\ mh ?i»-^sHENRY KUNTZ. U n m a r ,THE B R O A D AND MARKETSBUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCI.WTION, or. April 12. I'rl'i and record. \-i in the Office of the Clerk of Mid-Jdlesex County in iiook 393 of Mort-1gage for said County on p&go 484,'w,hieh ?aid proper.y U located in theTownship of Wood'aridfe, County of jMiddlesex and Staw of New Jersey.:

Dated: July 2, 1*30.JACOB L. NEWMAN,810 Broad Street,Newark, N. J.

W. f. T-3. 11. I s , i 5 ; s.i.

CA.SH E I : . A V E l-y.-l— E i h l

THBXE MOITfH raUOD XSBKOMAJKX n. IMI

CASH RECEIPTS—CAPITALI. Hit—Exhibit A :

K bTerr.pi^r)-1 In-.tr-jYtn^nt A.idj BpoeiTtd ..<

and bting/in the Township of W"oo<f-| SPECIAL MASTER'S NOTICE OF|. ,_ . , , ,_ , , bridpt, in :he County of Middlesex. SALE. j• f -. :. k >..n jnd State of New Jersey In Chancery of New Jertey. •- • ' L r ; : •"•"•** BEGINNING I ' . I point 111 the j Between THE ALLIANCE BUILD-j

u"T:> northerly hne of Buclcnel! aver.jfc,*. T«tst*r'.y one hundred fifteen« * e - h a r i d - r e d t h s 1115-

•*-! - tet from its intersection wniier;;.- ::ne of Rahwsy avenue;11 northefiy »i right angle-

Bjjckr.fci; svecue one hundred1 OOi feet; thence <2i westerly and

with Bucknell avenue, oneJOOl f e « ; thence (3)

y *r.d parsUel with the firstiied course, oce hundred 1100)

h h l

ING AND L C A N ASSOCIATIONi OF NEWARK, a corporation,Complainant, and LOUIS TOKE.iet a! Defendants. On Bill to Fore-!

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN" that j

EXHIBIT E " "

j I r . f - r :*^.*r,:, ::. i ' r - j r *

X:.f.T-f-r rf Ei

7 " 1. »A: ?;•« s;.i.f-i.'.:: . - : > • . , : , - .

^ • . : -1 : i i i :

roi.u.

. - J . i . \

CASH :— El. ' ,1

1 • ~ • - -

i

r..1..: B. . . .

:.-B"F..-E«l• i N* -. 1 T :

T.L- - : ' B ,

. • .

- u'. - '• • 3

R.1 6 '

3

. . !

l "«

-C.VPIT.A.L

•a •!»

K'I ' c :!;•?,*«

•!* ;s10 i :

;o> so

rtt*inril .

BriA(«a|3» »3( :S

: i n <•i,ei«.»s

" »S.Hi.ui.:«

>Ti.4«i n ><: it

1

1

'

l i : :

! • •

J:

by virtue of an order fori

of iproperty pendent* "lite, dated July i15, 1930, made in the above slated;.cuuse. I shall eipo=^ for sale at pub- ] Bioklie vendue and sell to the highest I B»:»CCHbidder, on Thursday, August 21,1- "|V!:Vii'ii

AddOBUUidlBt

C b kIII II.

-t-'i'iiii";!*:* '(•-«!• fw-t t j a pi-iiit irt. the northerly line | 1.S30, at two o'clock in the afternoon j<>i ButkBe" avenue; thence 11)

, aiang the &a:d line af Bucknei!^fc . t i e hundred ilOO) feet toplate or point "of"UEUINNIXGT1

' 3 known a lots number(24), rwe-nty-five (25),

(2^) and twenty-sevenm the block number six hun-

4r*d L (600-L), on a "Map of Wood-tirtogt Gardens, situated in Wood-

of that day, Eastern Standard Time jibeinp 3 P. M. New York DaylightSavins; Time! at the dwelling houseon thy~p»n:. erf the premboc -h«wiiu. -lifter described, known as No. 53Meinier street in the Township ofWoodbridge, Middle^i County, NewJersey, the fee simple of all tkai c*r-t£in tract and pareff of land andpremises situate, l^iij^ a"?d b*in« in

EXHIHIT I, BBTOKCILUTION <U BANk BVI. l \ - L-—

, THKKK MONTH PERIOD L M i t l i MAiUH ii. USD

KXM1BIT aTUREE MONTH riJlIlK) I Mi LI),

HAIKU sil. 1 * *

Bank I'.-

Mar 3:tit: si

^ . i / : — H I ^ 1 - - a.".1"™ :C-h^~>^u b n d *e Townihip. Middlesex County,'the Township of ^'oSJlbridge, Coun-H ' "" ~" * ' v — T—•'-•-" • ty of Middlesex and Suite of New

Jersey, being known as lots no. 59S< - .vcEiEf; , t j —t •"•' and 594 and dwelling thereon, froni-i . o J* L.i'*i.4uiL» Together with all and singular, the j ing on the Southerly line of Meinier

-. j-.-tai.*- rvghu, privileges, hereditaments and j street, as shown on a map entitledF l

LI.::

f .1 Bl~*rUM II.« A l!~

, u "ii.'a New Jtrs-ty.ti:_i-U:;E B i.v Decrees awfounting to approri-

azipurtetiances thereunto belonging 1 "Map of Avenel Park, Section 1,• h l n l " " •- : : - - - — — •-•-" Worfdbndge Township. Middlesei

Ccunty, N. J., owned and developediENT.'ETH UAYi . . »• ' . 1 • IJJJJ •

or in anywise appertaining.BERNARD M. GANNON,

I t ) J U S J I .l i t s t t i . i f . -,•!:: ttfcaic*. N J

STAMLER & KOESTLER,$23.10 SolieiWrsW. I. 7-25; 8-1, 8, 15.

Sheriff.

B . ift.'..; 1 >• kL'i«; Of CMXleFtt JlVdCUfc Ui lh t i l tSlile of L^HiF I I : C < 1 4r. 1 fr ~

:^J IN CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY10 79/290.

^ U ' T w V i y £ 5 i « " a .V"'"*,:°./c.T'TO LILLIAN SACHS AND HARRY.|:..r-i ,i« titbit t \<« J,:K.I SACHS, her husband, and JOS-

EPH K1RSCHENBAUM........ . , . - . ^. _ , . . . .., By virtue of an order of the Courth»«. , miiiiiDi iii »intr.) ai.r.s ihr of Chancery/ made on the 2kth day..m.,-ir udt «i c . i t« i t i . . « ; . 1...II- 0 | J u n e Mneteen Hundred and

i l l j.i .-,t . iDti-Jive ti^f.ur^jioi 1 , t . ,1 f*«t; «.! . , . ,-iheL.« . . nenberiy on »Vcour»e p«tiit-i Thirty, in a cause iherem pending,

1 .»herein the BROAD AND MAHKETLDING AND LOAN ASSOCIA-

. N, a corporation, is complainant,br.d you, et al are defendants, L1L-

• LI AN SACHS because you aii; theowner rA the premises in <|ue;t on;HARRY SACHS because you are

nd of the oxtper of thein question; and JOSEPH

. t t i . r . .= . t rc*i

•«« (It.: : M T » l lh Mil »uJ t\at.

(i: r. .le^ea. Jitldilitam«-nu L:

BERNARD W liANN

JO8EHH V PB^GAN,11} i2 Solicit ifW 1 7-Ii. I I . I, 16.

" ^SHERIFF'S SALEIN CHANCERY OF NEW JEESKV

—Between EVELYN KOESTLEB.a n d WlLUAM

question;K1RS/CHENBAUM because you hold

: k subsequent mortgage on tke piem-; ises in question; you are required to

r it. miywisr: appear, plead, answer, demur or,N Giherwibc move with respect to theii.»riti I complainaDt's bill of complaint on

ir befoie the twenty-niotb day of• August, Nineteen Hundred and thir-' iy, or in default thereof, iurh decreewii! be taken against you •* theChancellor shall Think aquitabte andJust.

The object of cart wit » to IMW-

by the Maple Realty Company, 215Smith street, Perth Araboy, N. J.

! surveyed and mapped by Larson k\ Fcx, Engineers and Surveyors, Perth' Amboy, \ . J. and filed in the Office

uf the Clerk of Middlesex County,I t 16, and further described as fol-lows: 7

BEGINNING at a point on thesoutherly line of Meinier street,distant 149.13 feet Westerly fromthe comer formed by Jhe intersec-tion of the Westerly line of Man-hattan a«*nue and the Southerlyline of Meinzer street as shown onsaid map; thence (1) runningsoutherly at rignt angle* to Mein-ier street 100 ieet thence (2)running. Westerly 50 feet; thence(3) running Northerly parallelwith the first described course ]U>0feet to the point in the Southerlyline of Meinzer fetreet; thence (4)running easterly SO feet to thepoint or place of BEGINNING.Together with all and singular the

hereditament* -and appurtenance* tothe said premwei belonging or incnywi&e appertaining.

Dated July 25, 1930.

J. H. THAYER MARTIN,Special Master in Chancery,

927 Prudential Bldf.,Newark. N. J.

WOLBER * GILHOOLY. Solkiton.^ 8 1$ W»t

WOLBER * G LW. L 7-85; 1 . 8,

its.-:,.litJ

W.il\

:»—St«t# iBMllUtlMttStmte Aid — Tubw«ulo*l»

T * J I . . .

Page 21: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

w<)OnBRlDGE INDEPENDENT

FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1930

Continued from frrcedimi pagr,

SECTION TWO PACE SEVEN

County of MiddlesexAudit Report January 1, 1930 to March 31, 1931

E X H I B I T HSTATEMENT OF ACCOUNTS 11E< RIVARI.K

AT MAIM II <||, m MHalnnrp llerplved

at J»n I. 1SSO ic, Mnr. 31. 19S0Exhibit A6.SJ9.U

VPIII, 1P Fund . . .

' !,»„,! --Tiih»rruln«lii

\t,t TulirrculoulK

TdTAl

1.141.tnIO.KHH 1 S

J6B.481 «,402.00

4.S0O.2I260.111

It), 200.00

. . i s iuoi .an

Exhibit ('t,««9.743,41111,233,141. US

2(1, SSI. 18

K.402.00

2F.O.76

144.833.64

lit MRI\ II, l!lRuhlMt t!

110,(117 75

KXIUBIT IKTATKMENT OF ACCOUNTS PAYABLE MERER V Eft

AT MARUI SI, 1980aeni>rv><l Dmlnimml

lit Jnn. 1, 1930Exhibit A

of Ijlinntii-fl . .Mcinhprit niul

, , . mul Burial*t - l " ! " "

',„,.. I'nM * Printing.

"l'...|.l fulling due,,„ i.,,n.l-l •lolil

i-i.Tk't" K i p » n i i M

1.271.1B212.11

111.641,1(0.13

HB .47703.IB4SR.i l

' 207.40191 7826H 3S

2,000 00

941. «031.27

mo.3ano si

l i l in. i,1 ..< ch

.. i -, 11.i I

, i • t w

V llunrilltnnllnhivRy . .

f A MranuresH 19-JHVlncllinil . .

914 82113.00

1,242.KB1,111.11

S07.02T0S.75

MS420.9013.74

1.811.541.7*2.014.940,72

454.70109 17

10.150.0711,«!).»»1,19105

M9.J9J.HS

1-1-30 to 8-SIExhibit C

1,tl«,729S0.62111.81

I t9 . l t26.26

SUM*123.45

14 .B&H.eo

7.«0.2,000.00

620.00843.85

23. SO90S.04

It3 . i l

40.HM1.1S210.00

7.»S10,10

244.471.1S7.U72,111.!S

pnt Mar 31, 1930

Erhlhlt II1*4.72

183.i4490.14K0.2Z

144.9<)342.1H192.75106 I h260.78

S 8 7 . 7 6H.771.20

110. Rl1S9.24914 .62

92.47"81.«1

1,111.ISFiltT* 02703.16

.6"HO 10

• 1S.741.306. ss

E94.342,101.49

454.10109.31

10.750.0;11,r,23 la1.194.05

193(1 lluilaci AnticipationHlUnnot— Mtrch 3|, !9S0— Eihlhlt

SVRPM'SAT

Elhlhlt

:ihlhlt II

EXHIBITRKVKNVE

MARCH II

A

KACOOVNT

, 1*80Pr.

. 1101 000 0010,(1*14

Cr,113!.S39 14

lt8t.Bit.S4 im.SSK.84

EMiinrr i.ACCOVNT8 rAVABI.E CAPITAL A4DCOCNT

AT MARCH II, ltMCniinty Ttprfird TitllKllnic 47».1»l l d I Kllnnd IHHUP Kxpenne—I93HTerm Bonds

7H.J550000

•>'/,. rMAlnril (in rontrnrtn J,«01 15Mnnd l'rpnilum Acrount 157.00Honil lump KxppnHPH—1!I2H 1.65A.24

TOTAL—F.xhIMt II . . . .E X H I B I T M

D E F E R R E D ( I I A R f t K H TO T A X A T I O NA T MARCH 81, I»W

llHlnncr—.Irniunry I. 1930—Eihl l i l t A IB,094.IO0.00I'nympnm thrrtUKh Hu.lncI-- | - :xhl | , | l (• U'i.OOO.OOI ' a m t b H l k F

60.000.00

IC.197,94

y UKh H u . l n c I | : x h l | | l (I 'aymnita by Hlnklnj; Fund <'nmmlni!l<tn

Eh--Exhlljlt Ji 32,000 00

Dnlanc*—Mnrrli 31, 1930--F!xhllilt I) tC.034.300 00

EXHIBIT NHI'MMARV OF PERMANENT IMPROVKMENT CONTRACTS PAVABI.E

AT MARCH ill, 1B»Ol d

ITnpnld nt 11-1-30 Exhibit ANew t'onlrart* nuthorlzotl l

113,210.02 I3S.I23.O1

EXHIBIT JIMMtHY OF BONDKO AMU TEMPORARY INDEBTEDNESS

AT MARCH si, i»aoNew

s,,ic< I'nynWp . . .tinpr"V0NH*nt NutfB

BftlnnfflJin. 1. 19S0

Kill I hit A. . . 154.322.41

Elhlblti!' »n0 E

PnymrntHEihlbltn

C anil E

i. i- . i n

• T \ I ,

Payable

4VI.0I1.I0t).3ir..(oo.oo

178,800 0040r..n(!0.00

211,000,00aj.ooo.oo

M»r. 31, 1*30Eihlblt 11t 11.4.322.41

fi.iS7,soo.oo

4tiri.ooo.oo

»6,7>»,«r,3 M 1^00.000.00 110.0110.01 «7,lT!l,r,r>3.Sl

Tutal. .I26B.206.79.. 79,419.119

347.A2t.llK. 106.7Jfi.82

$174,071.006<l, 1BH.B*

Ptlm>gat?'K|I(.|'.'IHK

• r,4 r i . in i i . i :10,261.110

Payment* to (v .ntrnrtnm—Kxhihl t E

ntractn I'uynble nl 3-31 -Exh ib i t B I241.R89.78 1111.489.22

J9,9S« 'ii

»r,r..S44.i9

5.106 2'

$5,106.26

E X H I B I T OSUMMARY OF IMPROVEMENTS IN PRO«KESH

AT MARCH 81. 1090

Halnncp—1-1-30 ExhibiTotRl

A SBC6.KI1-0SI'aymrntii for Pfrloil—Exlilblt K:

Oinirac t i in . • 10S.7J6.92Engineering 5,141.JO*h«pecli>r» 3,769.1(0AilvertlBlng .H 126.70Extrut ",476.86Miscellaneous 566,40

T O T A I IfiKS.SOK.OSI.PBB Ajdj Rprrlveil fur Period—

Kxhllilt R 50,714.02

Ttilal rout paid to date on Improve-ments In Proven—Exhtult I) 3H.894.04

Summary of Other Hems:

FlnaduM47.S75.S0

6M00.673.36(1.902,769.75

30 256.30H.90

193.00

»156,425.64

50.714.02

(05.711.(2

BrlilKMiU5.692 .M

39,916.252,381.601,010.06

95.1H1.167.7S

373.40

lgO.6C0.O5

K0.660.O5

iSep NoteIiflnwl(ithf rn

ary of Other Hems:Vocational School Bnutii Hlv'er 'Mflck Truck» . .FurdiMin Tractor • • -Worhliiiukp WellIlco TrueiiIndexing Sutrogate'R KecttrdnAutocar Truck i

522.37

17.0H1.222,318.102,265.601.250.00

12,393.71

SEES HEAVY CLAIMSON FUTURE BANKERS

American Bankers AssociationOfficial Declares That BankingChanges Creating Large BankSystems Will Call for BroaderSocial Viewpoints.

Larier wale group or branch bunk-Ing will Inevitably bring a new tra ofbanking organisation and operationsto the United States and bankera willbar* to deTclop "new conceptions, newadmtniatrntiTe methods and new economlc ylews," RudoK 9. Hecht, Chair-man of ths Economic Policy Cotnmiivlion of the American Bankers Associa-tion, recently told1 the members ol theAmerican Institute ot Banking.

The Institute Is the educational sec-tion Of the association and he empha-sised the point that th» new era 1Lbanking demanded "that we must stepup our education so that banking shallbe fortified for new responsibilities."

What th* Future Calls For"We must broaden our social concep-

tion of banking," Mr. Hecht «ald. "Not.inly for the technical opuratlons of thenew banking must we lit ourselves, butboth as Individuals and an organitedprofession we must charge ourselvenwith serious consideration of the so-cial problems that are Involved. Al-ready we hear mnrmurlngs and fenrsand doubtB aa to whether the changesthat are coming about In banking Inthe extension of group and branch sys-tems do not constitute the looming ofa new financial menace, a monopolisticthreat not only to the Individual unitbanker, but to the financial liberty ofsociety In general. I am stating thesethings merely as facts that must betaken Into consideration In our studies.

"Public opinion cannot be Ignoredby any business, least of all by bank-Ing, which la admittedly semi-publicIn character and la, therefore, subjectto special supeTvUion by the consti-tuted pthorltles. If banking develop*tendencies that give rise to publicfears, we moat so conduct ourselvesas to reassure all doubts.

"For this Is true,—that business snc-oeeds only by serving society—that no

World*! Rword for Kojac

V. «,

nporRp Knjnr of ttic New York

Ai.nletic cliiti won tin? '."•Kt-ynrd liiU'k

stroke In ttip Nntlmml A. A. 11 swim

mew st Lung Itpiich, Culif. Kojn«

Rwnin die 'J'-'O vurdN In 7 minutes I

WHEN BABIESTHERE arc limn whena baby is too fretful orfeverish to l>e sung to

«lcrp. There, are some piiins n motherrnn't pot away. Rut there's quirk comfortin n little Can tonal

For diarrhea, and other infantile ilia,give this pure vegetable, prt-pnrntion.Whenever coated tongues tell of consti-pation; whenever there's any sign olsluggishness. Caatoria hn* n Rood l:iMp;children Inve to tnke it. Hoy the gen-uine—with Chas. 11. Fletcher'son wrapper.

seconds HpilriM his farmer record ol

2 minute* 1(7 4-!S BPCOIHIS mnilp In

llminltilu InRt yenr. Tills Is 11 new

worlds record for 11 220.

T O • TAI $52,622.37

ContractsLet

E M I i n t T FKIMMARY OF PERMANENT KOAI> AMI HRIlHiE IMPROVEMENTS

r- AT MARCH 31. 111311

Permanently Aids Hec'd'Intmn-il plun 1 1-30 to Amount

A nil K T M * 1-31. JO PaidExhibit E To Dat«

CASTORIA

nt 1-1-30 l,039,f.7» 73

Io 1-1-10

457,:oo ;o

f«td OB Paid for •' Pal.l forContract ...Engineering Inspect

Pnlii forAdvertlnlng

Paid for Paid (or Pild (orExtras br> Melaln^d Wlscd'oua

1. . I I'.13

1-1 -3U t .

I : . , M i l l , n l i t

'• 1 . , I 1 1 1 "

: ^ i-;io io :i.

«9.1f ,» .*3

.1 I-I-.in tu

Miliil.lt B

3 - 3 1 - 3 0

.,! l l - J I - 3 0 E x h i b i t Q . . J 1 . I 0 H . M 7 . 6 2

30 ^3'J.llfill 303 i - 3 o . . . . i o , : M no

, .1.31-30—Elhltilt K3-HI-3O—E»hlhlt S iM.\3II 35

li ' , : . ;no 79

n : . iM.'i i

U:\4T.4 (II

»;.>'.'.s:.4 so

5'),714.O2

J!.",714 02

lMI-KOVKJIKSTS IN•. I , , 1 ' ; ! (< •

i n i l i c - i ' i l I ' l u i . M ' l » I n 1 - 1 - 3 01 - I - 3 H I n 3 - S 1 - 3 O

KtK.HKss — HuuU tml Bridge*

In I'roRreHN iltoadK and IlrUlfii-

n-—Kxhlblt U

sii.nii o

7 \ 4 4 9 . 7 4

H, i iu . i ; u i ; 43

n ; s 14';. » i

4 I. fM". 7 .2 4

: i : t . 114 u<

(1,2:11,710.49

»l.;:r. .T4,O.4i

fi4n,,n;s.«u

0Kli.J71.li7

14,706.60 H.,»22.69 J4.S72.T4 1.076.US

141.IM.31

3H.1SI; 'la

11,105. US . ( l l

3,«f.<l.9O

IS, OS 2.^(1

i'.,(i(l4.7;l

2.3M.OO

S.3HU.33

s.-r,!i.7r,

l » ,5< : .44

7,051.liO

1.(110,(15

X.061.HI

30.52

1.544.2S

1,3114.37

95.1S

1,479.li6

»3.023.81

31 ,181 .64 l,079,i.i6

4,062.99

1.187.76

6.220.16

»3C,(02.39

5.849.64

U2.929.49

CONTRACTS PAYAIII.K

C o n t r a i l s l .Pt t u l-li-SO I An A b o v e )I ' i . ymi .n t . - In 1-1-3II C u n t r m ' t H 8 5 S , » ; 7 . 7 8f,« ' I t i - t i i lm-i l 7,0711116

U, 039,678.13

806,607.73

193.00

12,747,17

^.G^'j.ua.

373.40

2.98 5.42

JI5.742.riI

B r i d g e s

117,030. Ul.'ontr.KtH I'uynlilo at I-1-3D — Exhibit E 174,071.00

KXIIIIUT (|ANAt.VSIH OK PKKMANENT ROAD IMPROVEMENTS

I NCO.Mri.KTKI) AMI NOT I I l.l.V KIN.VNCKI)AT MARCH 31, IU3O

Flnaii i-nl plUn Vldi U d ' c lAM« Id-c'il l-l,}30 t ot<, 1 1 3 0 :i 11 :i'i

Anioini t['nld

To I lnt i '

.,.:. !•!• l - r i i i l l m l ' M r i K - l ' r iI u M ' , \ \ ii T u r n i i l k *1 '1' i , i i \ M i T u r n p i k e

I n •• I M.uii| f , M., [ i - A

I , M l , MIT..-I-,., [

l l n f f M I

I:., I.,-, ,11

M —Milltnvrii

\ \ 1 ! IISI.U

-lmri-- Hulr Acreii stHllon

\\ ' i i i j i - 11'JirtiTi-t I-'-NI-U- Hruniiwlrk

n Uiiiul, Snyrnll let-i, ln.'lin I tltk Tree ..,, \ . -u UrunHWlckK' iHi'lln-imk Treeilli Amtinyjletui hen

l.nl'nr and truckingi*iiifc. Traffic HIKHH- and Itrualra ot. i - . furnlnlli'il W1..IIPH

V . [ i l l , -

u Market

I'lvi- ('nmnlnit Hunlcn-

H ' f , , r i i n n i i r y H t u r m , .N i \ \ l l r u i i rw l i j k . m e w e i. l . i ini l lnK

4i . IS'.i.O')

I IP .411 .S2so, SK

4 V . 4 O v . i l l )at.37C s.',

1.712 0 U

3.UV1.2542,131.20

0,1,317.201.131.1)0

3.194.il

9.02((.SU

3'.,1>1 T3

'•',. 4 33 ".4

m.:3i.;o

; i , J T ; I :

:.."7i.ni

4;.i;j9.ai

3,000.00

Note Ueliiw

Kxlnblt I ' I,ll)i>,li47.«2

1 l'J30 (two) G'J.lljS.iS

43.J7I.47

r,0,r,48.0l)

Sec note below

4ai.2OO.79 60,714.02

S.3C7.Hli2.tl0.4731i.7l6.50

1.S4I.1III >. fi. .10

5,SC5..riS

4,mi7.h,',44,105,7 2

1,701.45

2,?.20.OOJ41.14

1.013,(1211,43 i,

;w.^^i; fin4:1."77 HI

i : » , » : i / i if.l.L'iiT.IMI4J,T,:i (12

3.10* ; i

4 s.i': 1 54M.5SY31

(i.57i'..3S

3:.Ml!, HIi ,n tii 1:1

3,,l,^0411,3111.40

I.SIIO.OO

P11I1I for Paid for Pali! tor 6%Inspection AclvertUIng KxtraB Ttetalnetl

1I24.32S.46

3. ift.l.TB5113.707IISI.5OSIK.OTi

1,450,003.O7I.OO

1,127.50111! 3.16

1S5.10>;r,2.40am so:r7i,ooU.1.50

SlS.20

M'V7S

24O.:5

23.00

59li.H0

IS, (111150

1.014.001.45S.003.020.05l.OSB.OO

71". 1.9 7s ;..•<.00

3.240.00

S46.7S•fiCJO

J30.P0: , U i , i 7

so 1.00

492.00

(IS.00

312.00

192.00

04.7'J5B.S492.44115,«4B2.0I92.10

77.82112.9(1

f . i . i :1.11.60

7 2.60B7.22

7».0«102,1'.'

67.70

li ."i.OO

t;..c4

94.78

921.60 1.730.HS

4.BR4.334,395.61 EO4.10

6.001,155 001,424.57

1,204.48340.74

«77.8411,926.69

412.54

2,715.02

34li.l2

1,727.05

l'alil forMIscel'UB

223.00K13.HS81S.15

228.00113.00

200. US193.92670.00

45.00

872 4083S.26

2.759.53

ce.ts

619,76

6.(02,526.00

1S.6S-J.44 1 ,544 .2 ! 3 1 , 1 8 1 . 6 4 7 ,079.96 '2,747.17

' E X H I B I T K% \ \ I . I S 1 S Ol" r A V M B S T S OF PKHMANKNT ROAD IMPROVEMENTS

H ) K THIS Tl iKKK MONTH PKKIOD KMIK1)MAKCII 31, 10:10

I l i i M l r l l l . l l l I ,

M , i | . | , . A vt-'n

I ' l - r i l . A m i , , ,

Turiiplke1 N t w IlrunuwlrU

.Mutui'heji Detnur

.111.11 DH.S5. 4:'.fi7:i,7s. 1.3TI :II». 5,ii 17 31

4SIHI. 10,H76.2!>

Hl.nl l-liiliiit - llulf Ai le-Hiilfiiian Stutlun !.(ii«.»H»» iy Annuu4-Ciirteret 13 2Ui,,ii,ri,iB,..._ ^ I jj, jj lKrlmn Tuwnablp) r'B-:>

iilliii'l|lf-lili'llii.(iuk Tree H. Sewer'HniilKf Hi'Tiirniatiiry Hturm Ht*w*r"ll.r(,li!i--laflln-O«k True

244.6!)2H.6O1S5.6O

TI.UIIH (U Eihllilt I' I7M4S.71

»10,'.i>0 Oil

l . l i i i i . i i l

3, IDS, 24

H. t iS1 .4 4

2 . 4 2 1 . 0 S

405,KOI).47

39(1.00I,li4i).75

37100

H4 00

17.J2

13.20

I

1,984-33

1,424.57

145.00

business can permanently prosperwhich does not both Tender service tothe public and at the same time con-vince the public that It 1B renderingthat service. Banking, therefore, musttake cognizance o( what the public Issaying of this new era In Its develop-ment.

"It must bo part ot the techniqueof modern banking administration,whatever form our enlarged institu-tions take, to avoid the creation ofmonopolies, or even the appearance ofsuch a centralization of financialpower as to be able to exercise an un-due Influence over public or privatefinance or other lines of business. Thepublic's right to the safeguards of faircompetition must be observed.

Mutt Preserve Individual Initiative"It must also be an Hem of man-

agement that Individual Initiative andopportunity shall be maintained. IfAmerica has outstripped other nationsIn the distribution of the benefits ofIts progress, it la due to the fact thatthere are no barriers of social casteor business tradition agalnat advance-ment for character, ability, and Initia-tive. American business has learnedthat It serves Itself best by encourag-ing by every practical means Individ-ual ambition and Initiative, and hurtsItself most by repressing or neglectingthem. Competition for efficiency, bothwithin an organization and betweenorganizations, will prevent any Insti-tution from long enduring In whichmaintenance of opportunity and recog-nition of initiative are not controllingprinciples ot management. As headsof the greatest of our financial and In-dustrial institutions stand men whostarted from the humblest of begin-nings. Through all the grades of ei-ecutive authortyy and reward standmen In positions In keeping, generallyspeaking, with their individual merits.I, personally, see no reason for fearingthat the enlarged banking organiza-tions which the future may hold wouldnecessarily supply future bank em-ployees with any less opportunity forachievement than unit banking.

"Again, a major consideration of ad-ministration in any multiple form ofbanking organization must be its pub-lic relations lu every community Ittouches. Its foTemost considerationmust be actually-and visibly to servethe economic upbuilding of that com-munity. No system will be long tol-erated whose local members work, orare suspected as working, to draweconomic strength from one placo toenlarge the flnanlcal power of another.The local unit bank has always beenpart and parcel of the communitieswhere it lives—and no! system can laist

It a major prin-

KHF.RlFviIN CHANCERY OF NRW JKUSEY 1'*

IWPPM 1'KHTH A.MDOY Il lMMUNi; ANII.UAN AH&OCJ ATIOW Cmnplulnnntf. nmltlAYIU II. KUHMAN. et Illn PrfrmlalitKFl K» for Knlc "f m e r t m c - ' l pri'iini-i •IIHIIMI July 9. 1910lty vlrliic of thp ttliovf piutnl writ tu 1111

•llrt-i'tril imcl ili-llvrrfil, I will r*|>unt' tu milrs: Jititillt- vi-n»lur 1111WBUNKSllAV THE TWKSTIETH DAY OK

Al'lU'HT, N1NETKKN K C M U l K I iAND TH1HTY

Al one o'tlink yumlrtr . l Titiii1. two OYIIM kI'nyllfcM Suvlng Ttnu1! In thf Hftfrnmm nfHIP aulil day nt thp S V r l f f f l i f fke In lh«City of Nvw [Irunuwliii. N. J.

All Ihr fnllnwlnir lr.n:t or p a n e l nf lumlmul pr<Mnlprn hvrplnaftf r part icularly ih'-*< rilieil. pitttHIr-, l)lnK nn4l liflHK In thrTnunHlilp of Wtiodbn^iip. In the Ciuinty nlMlilillpitpx. rtn<l Sta te of New .lrr«py

HtMnic knn^ll and ilp^lRnatrd nf l.titfa N(w.!, nnd 1',, Hlk, 373 M. on 11 Mnp of nerli-|py Tprrare. nituiitdl In Im-lLn, Woo<llirlil|cnTnvvimhiv. Mldi t lnrx County. N. J.. Ailgunt.1925."

HKirlNNISl! al a point on tli? n'Uthprlylltit- of l i i tpn Btrppt. tllMunt eimterly Klifh-iy-flvp fpcl from the cuntprly llnp of Elnt-hurHt Hvcnup, from t t ieme running" t l )HmithiTly, nt rlKht angle* tu tlrpmi iitrprt,IIIIP Humltpil Twenty-five 1 1^5) fp*t tu 11uttlKi-; llipnip <») "Utterly. purnlU'l wllliUrppn street. For ty (40> f«*H to u s tuhp;tlifii, c (.1) northprly, imrallel with thp flrnillpsi-rilipd r-oiirpp, One Hundred Twpnty-flvp(U[}> Nvt to a point in thp nouthprly linfvf (iriM-n utippt; t h p n . e (41 wpctprly,»nid Cn-eii mrpi't. forty «4(lt fpt-t to HippiMiit in [Jin* or HELJINNINd,

HpInK tlif sumi' priMUlnen i Olivpypil to IIIHHitl Iiitvid II. I'lrdtUiin, pi ux, liy ilvt-li fiouAmli-rH s^irpn NIPIBP^I. pt u\, lipurlnK ilulAliKiist 3rd. 1328. and r n o n l p d In Hook

gDtM-r«o uniriuntIng to aPt>roxlmiil<'ly

630.00.ToKt'thr-r with nil nml slnpuSur, thn rl

privj left's, li(T(^litauif'L(h aiul iippuripiI'M tluTfuiitii belonginK »"* In any wine

L.KOHKKNAIU) M. CAN

H,Solicitor

Here's Instant ReliefFrom Bunion Pains

and Soft CornsActually RedtxH* th* Swrlllnc—Sofl

C o n u Dry Right Up and CanBe Picked Off

Get a two-ounce bottle of Moone'aEmerild Oil (full strength) lod«y. Ewrywell-atocked druggist h u this, and it willreduce the inflammation, toreneta, andpain much quicker than any remedy ronever used.

Your bunion* mar be to swollen andInflamed that you think you can't goanother ttep. Your shoes may feel ai ifthey are cutting right into the flesh. Yonfeel lick all over with the pain and tor-ture and pray for quick relief. Wbat't tobe done?

Two or three applications of Moone'tEmerald Oil and in fifteen mintites allthe pain and soreness disappears. A fewmore applications at regular intervals andthe swelling reducea.

And as for soft corns, a few applica-tions each night atbed time and they justseem to shrivel ripfl up and scale off.

Druggists guarantee Monne's EmeraldOil to end your foot trouble* or moneyback.

H H E H I F K ' S M A L E - 1 " < ' l i i r , i i T } i . I N . ' W. I c r j M ' y . l u t w e e n ' / M p l i e y T > ' f 1. r d i n i ' l i i n i -

( t n t , n r i d l . i i n r l l / . . S n i l l l l . *>t u v , r l , ! ( l ^ . I W -f i - h i l ; i n t s . F l K; i f u r ^ u l f u f t n n r l K - i K ' 1 1

I ' H ' i i i l ^ t H , d a t e d . h i d e - 7 , U' l l*! .

l ! y v i r t u e n f I h f i t l i n ' t ' s u i t e d W M ' I n 111*-i l ! i e r 1 < ' i l ; i i n l i ) « - l1 \ - f r , - « l I n i l l fX lH . t - t - l o h a l iI t l l i n l i l l i vi n i l t l i 1 o n

W K D N E S U A Y . T H K 2 I 1 T I I I I A V H I 'M ' l i l ' S T . A . I I . 1I'[IO

» t 1 ( i ' c l . i i - 1 , M l i i r n l i i i i l | M I I > < (2 u ' . i . H l i i l n v -l l ^ l l i t » . u i t : ^ t l l i l t ' i i l l t l u > [1 M c r i l i M i i i n f s u i ' li l u y a t I h f H h c r i r r H O l f k f I n H i t ; C i l y c fN e w I l i ' U K F n ' l e k . S . I .

A l l t h r I n l l i i W l n K U ' J ' - I " r | i n r i - i . | o f ] a l i t l >n i l l i i f i n l ^ t ' H h c r t - i n . i f l i T p a t ' t it 11 l u r l y t l i •r r i l H i l . s i t i m U 1 . l y t l l ^ i m t l b i - i n t ; i l l t l i f

I ' t t u - n s h l l ' i i ' f W i i i . t l L r l i l K i ' . i n t i n - ( , ' m i n t v . ' IM l i l ' H > » i N . a n d S l n t p " f N e w . I c l s f y

l l f i i i B l i i u . n u An l i , l » ('., 1 a n i l » 1111 a i H u nu f : : ! l e t s i l l F i n d s , X J . , t i w n i M l l , y . I n i K) ' . W t ' S l i - r r u n r i l ( I n i l I ' h l l n t l n n W i ' » l t T | i i i i i n l .J a n u a r y I S . l H O i ' .

H K C I N N l N r , n ( a p o i n t I n l l i f f i K t l i ' i l yl i n i ' u f l l i i r n s l i y i - i r c i ' t . a n I n l d d n w n « n K H H Im a i l d i s t a n t tnw l i u i l t l r r d j u n l t u i ' l l t y - f i u .'[ LTi 1 r - ' t ' t r u n t l i t r l y ( m m l l w i n n 1 In a s li i t l l u r t i f H n r n u l t y j t l r t f t i m t l \ I M \ l i M i i r\ \ i * k a, ' ( . ' u u t1 ; t l u ' i i c e r i i i n i i i i K L a ^ t v i v .•r i K l l t ; | [ I ^ U H w i t h l l n r n j - l i y H t n - t - t m i l ' l l l l l ii l r t ' d . m i l t i v t . | y < . i i n . 1 t i n e i t i i f - l i u n i l i t - d t l i ^1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 f«•«.t t n a i m h i t ; t h i ' l U ' i ' i n ' i l l i i ' r l > ,s . - V f i i t y - f i \ i - a n i l l l i i r t f - t l i r f i - t n u - l i n i i d i t dtliM iT.V.'iHI f^t-t tu a iiiilnt; t l i fnrr ur.^trr.ly iiarall.'l wilh tin1 firnt L-IIUIHC, urn* Ima-Irrd aill l:iiu-tt-cn and fifteen om'-lmmln-il*ths 1IIH.U11 feet to H point In tlie eaMrrlyline nf HOIIIKIIV utrottt • thellfo finutherlj11I1111B III" easterly line >f Hnl-llKliy streetH vtt.lv. five (7."i) feet to the jiLacu <if HU-TU N NINO.

lift rees anluunUnfc' lo lipjirciKiniiltely JS.-'jn(l.

'ro^etlHT wi\h all .klul HltlRuUr the rlKllt*luivil.-K*'1!. lieledttiinit'iUH jind apjiurtt-naheIH llit-r.-uinu LeliuiiiliiJ: or In linywlfe ii|i-lii'rmiiiinK.

UKRNAHl) M UANNON,WILLIAM A. SI'ENL'KU, Klietiff1^3. IU Hulli'ltor.W. I. ;-'J;.; s-l, S. IS.

I2.7C9.75 110. S3 18,308.90 119S.00

KMI1IUT SAVV1VKIS OF I'KB.MANKVr p l H l " - * IMTKOVKllKMTS

" L'NCOMrj.lSTKII AM" NOT t'l'l.l. l'INAM'KOAT MAKtil 31, 1UJU

ContractLet

Aiiiimy Avenue Culvert f -.Hinlr Homl llrldje 1,040,00ciipi'MMjuiiiu. llrowntuwn ltd. Brg. 1,826.00ciifi'HcyuiLiiii Urowntown nd. Brt 1,1141,00

• I I li'illlh-l-'lPHl, Pi.n.lu 11M,lva . 11,211.00| i Iii'ium-Preiiri I'lindu Bridge , 11,311.00•7 h'lirut. Htre«t Culvert I &,400,00• • KiirKP .Slrot-t Culverl \ i.llOI.OO• • i l i ' luiHtd Culvert J 1,7110.00I l"(<r Cuunly HrldK« tr:... 1,614.OS

007110.00OH.Of,

III Avenue Hrldge . . . . . . . . U7B.00•Mitln N(r*M<t- WoudlirldKe . . . . . . . fl.4f»0.«0Mllltuwn Urlilge 4«,2'J3.l)0^l««ill llrHlne 6,836.60•New Murk«t Uaail Culvert

ilJoiK't'llt HriMikl , 2 ,40(00'Oil HiHimi Muluwun Hinl.l 9,»tl,tOOld Hrliln*.Mataw»n 7.2811.»Sdid llrlilKa-MuFuwan 13,t32 00lilva Ave. or Beavar liani Hoad

Mllltnwn itrlilKe ,•••• 24,000,00Itlvar ltoad Culvert 1.WO.80

Kliltfeilitlti Avenue, fulvurt 4,(94.00Old llrldga-UaUwan ltund «,4(»,00H" Ainbuy-8ayr»vllle Bd. Culvort l,4»7.00Houtli uiver Bridie «,l«9.00Huiilh Hiver bridge 1,2110.00Sllenuld Avenue Brldgo JJ,O4d.OOHuotuwuod lirlilgi S»,t0t.i9Wlthlngton Brlitgti «,lll.0«'<

rorniunentlyFinanced plusAkla Herelveil

to 1-l-so

I 2,4OO.UU

12,000 00j j , 2U0.Q0

D.KOO.OOS.f.UO.UI)

1.483.00

7 , O 4 6 . ' J 8

o,eeo.C7

2,900.00' 12,210.87

AuthorlzeJ 1931)

AmountPulil to

D a t e

2.(117. Hi5O.S8

Paid forPaid on Tald for Paid for Paid for Paid for 6% Paid for

Contract Engineers Inap. Advertising Extras Detained MlsceU'oua

Sll.iOft,223.70k.MiT.Si;

26».20l.su.ori1,0115.017.US2..7I

2li.9V7.430,087.49

7.807.KJ16,liSU.T(

1,733.751, s 4 y. IP r,

1 2 : J . O »6,1:10.007,&O5.llli

1,4«3.00'> ] i : 5

6.127.I1O24,976.00

5.354.(172,370.150.4G9.63

13,140.10

1S0.2S43.809(1.65

109.&5

2011.0017S.00901.10116 110

«5.00143.00130.10

1,022.00

221.0a

7*.00128,00

21.80158.753(4.00

372.00510.99240.00165.00

lo.OOu.OO90,171.84 23.SD0.00 640.00

V.000,00S, 900.007,000.001,706.1)54,B»3,l)0S.S90.09

10.100.00

2,090.684.068.67

7,321-28

3,47101- 80,185 0)

18,163.11010,4(0. tit

3,51)9.108,126.801,412.«53,979.153,126,60

2t.587.OO17,100.007,726.35

86.5077,9S.

14900108.80162.00

74.251.9U.601,010.00

298.115

31 MS38100

84(1.00

288.00240.00581.00138.00168,00

tie.72

482.00

47.887.0S

45.26m.m

S4.87

•LSb.7173 S464.4)9

•10.33ST. 9137.Hi89.87

75.84

35.HS47.0242.2872.15.

141.(8115.7786,Si718460.13

196 00

30.00

244.0S

258 2031.05

126.006S8.20 -iau.20300.01

99.25

97.05

270.003'JO.05

322.50

281.83

322.336»l.tiO

• 91.25

273,40

3(0.00 1.J00 09

64,01184,70332.40

7 4 . 8 6 '361.00 Ui.ti

164.(01,187.70

1.419.19

504.37to.00

110.00

tu bixhlblt V J42,J11.J» 1111,464.01 1218,114.OH I18MU.5I t»,B»9.S3 |8,0tll

fiber \

EXHIBIT IANAW£IS OF PAVHBMT8 OF PKKMANBNT 1MUUGE IMPEOVEMKNTS

FOB THE rKWOU ISNDKD MAECU HI, U«J

clple of operating tecTinique toand not exploit, the communities intowhose bu lne^s lives it enters."

Growth of Banking Education ,

DENVER, Colo.—At the American

Institute of Banking convention held

hire last month the growth in the

effort among bank employees to i»o-

Tide themselves with banking educa-

tion waa shown by .the fact, aa re-

ported by one speaker, that 12 years

ago the institute had 80 study chap-

ters, today 208, and that its enroll-

ment In the atudy courses bad grown

from 11,000 (to 46,000, or an increase

of over 300 (per cent. The graduates

number nearly 14,000. The institute

la the educational section of the Ameri-

can . Bankers Association through

which bank workers are given 1nBtntt>

tion in theoretical and practical .sub-

jects relating to their business.

— A CkMiflsd Adv Will Sell It —

AmountNuine uf Bridge Fatd

«mir ltuau Bildgd »»•«»l>«an,_Freah Hunda Bridge , 618.20

Lincoln Avenue Bridge 1,0*5.01*n Bridge' , 14.0SI.HJd Avtmu* Bridge ' U.498.M

8puUwu«d Brtdg, , , , . , . , , . ' U.71I.M

Contrartor

881.215IS.JH.OO9,315.00

Bnglneerlng

to 8*hlblt P

I1.47S.56 $6,ii0.76 H,»4».64 |a,»S6.42

—famous the world over

Pinaud'sShampoo

Leaves your hair lustrous,healthy, and not too dry!At your dealer's—or tend 5 ocfor full im bottle to Pinaud,Dept. M , 2 JO £ 21 St.,

DAYS OF SUFFERING

NOW QUICKLY ENDEDThe n<xt time you itart ant of thtit diyi.

jee Ih* initant rtlitf vu" */rt with DiltarJ'tAtpftgtim, Almoit before you know it thf paindisappejri, yuur neivu suJil«nly rrlji.

With Aiprrgum you chew th( pain jwjy. Forit ii tht (belt aspirin obljimble put up inchewing gum fnrm. Now you cjn it\t isptnnany time, any place. No water N« bittetlain. No choking scntjiion- IWL^UIC y>>ii (twwDilljrd'i Asprrguni the aipirjn mix«i ihvu^unhlT*i[h the S-IIVJ u> tti.it ill in southing qmtidviar* effective quickly, foniinuouilv.

It brings quick r«3icf from athing huJi . uvih-athf, tht pain* of neliriti*, nc«r*Igia. «vcn ,h.-u-mjiism. If your druggist do« not hivt DIIIJIII »Ajpenjum. send lor a free umplr to H*jithProducts Corpoiation, Dept, A, 113 Nuft^ HtbStreet. Newark, N. J.

"Anywhere-Anytime", DRAKE'S

STORAGE ,MOVING

PACKING—SHIPPINGBtaffcf •• R«»ioB»bl# RatM

•01 EllnWk AT.no. *PUnai LUJ.B XS21

LEARN TO DRIVEExpert and Courteous Instructor*

CARS FURNISHEDMiddlesex Auto School'ii'2 N'i'W I'li'unswick Avc.

Perth Amboy, N. J.

Telephone P. A. 232

make your/j\

DOUBLE-EDGERAZOR

(old or new model)

y/////,,,ywBETTER RAZOR

•or your money back

I FOR TEN 5C/K)« FIYIGuaranteed by •

PROBAK CORPORATIONHull' Co.'ki, M. V.C

(MJSHOLM & (MAPMAN

Mtmbtti Sew Yurtt i^< feKScmbtu Hm 1'or* Curb

283 MADISON AVE.

Telephone Perth Amboy 2500

THOMAS MEACHAM

Manager

From Youth to AgeThere are three trying periods in awoman's life: when the girl maturesto womanhood, when a womangives birth to her first child, when awoman reaches midillu age. Atthese tirnia Lydia E. Pinkham'aVegetable Compound helps to re-rtore normal health and vigor.

IYUIA E. PINKHAM'SVEGETABLE COMPOUND

. P1M!HA\I MtO. CO,

ordonDennettWILDWOODS*

(Nf W J£US£Y)

UBGEST«*FINEST HOTEL

How One Woman Lost.20 Pounds of Fat

Lost Her Double Chin—Lost Her Prominent Hips—"LOB! Her SluggiohneHa

Cained Vigor — VlvaoioiwnrsB — a Shapely Fifaru

If you're fat—remove the eanselKRUSCHEN SALTS contain the

six mineral nails your body OIRUM,glands and nerves mint have to func-tion properly.

When your vital organs fail to per-tain their work correctly—-your bowetaanil kidneys can't throw off that wattematerial—befure you realize, it—you'regrowing hideously fat)

Try h a l f a t e a s p o o n f u l ofKRUSCHEN SALTS in a flas* of hotwater every morning—in three weeksget on the settles and not* haw uuuiy

1 ' ' • h « e v u d i b e i

Notice also that you have gainedin energy—your ekin ia clearer—youreye» sparkle wilh glorious health—youfeel younger in body—keener in mind.KRUSCHEN will give any fat persona joyoua surprise,

Cet an 85o LotUe of KRUSCHENSALTS (lasts four weeka). If even thi*first bottle docan't convince you thisis the easiest, safest and ayxeal way tolose fat—if you don't fael a nuuerkimprovement in health—so gloriuubly

j i l alive—jf«ur

Page 22: MUTT AND JEFF -:- Mutt's Idea Wasn'Byt BU BadD, a FISHEt ThaR t · 2014. 3. 2. · ** you oughta hear the skipper, tell /about his set-to *wlth that scotchman that's just moved out

WOODBRIDliKFRIDAY. AVGVPT 1, 1PA GE EIGHT SBTTT ON

By RING LARDNERJUST HUMANS >. « Mi:. Sees It Al!B\ GENE G*RR

\ * A \ By GENE BYRNESIt's Always the Brighter Side For JimmieREG1AR FELLERS

Skyir. oo Tbtro New S

The Political Back Seat Driver

Bv AIN'HA LOOSA Qaaint OkJ American CustomBLONDESONUY THEY PUT A

T KMOW JtSStTlCSt MAO*MtS*S\

VM1 HAVE IN -O4E5E —/SHOES' 1 MtlkMj

l OM£& ' f*

PEA UNDER. THEM A N DHM> kW ENGLISH RELATIONS!VRtCVD M THE VERYCALL IT A GAME !'.

TME ©OYS IN AMERICA USESHELLS T O O - J

7IOO P0OHO5?

By RUBE GOLDBERG"\EVEH OUT OF ORDER'

MARGARET,'-s -me

RAbto ?

WHEN IN THE VEINLOTS OF FUN

]\::.—Vi':.\ .Ju ;...•; u . . ti.;i:

Bug—'j**, ttU It i lv !*s: ri-Je I've

NOT NEEDED NOW

i?i i ,

' (

( s

rrr- ;i •

• i

_ — — — — •—

4 ^ -

Jim—Do you BiiU O'j )'.i''jf i ;wj

NaMuin—I hnveu'l rt-.-fcijt;>. I'aroou.iag oeit to t tannery

FINNEYOFTHE FORCE .?-' F-?.•!£?£.

IT SEEMS LARGER

"You think a ftquiire >anl Is uiueiquare fett, eb*/"

"Of course It lu.""I>ld you ever try rakliig all the

rubblsb out of oneT"

FOR THE SAME REASON

She—WIIJP do »o tuauy meu like w- t t iut» ti fluln?

lit- Why do no many wuiueu tiketu (et lulu

i"\;

• x OF CooRSfc 1 iQLO IMA FEW UTTtf VJHiTE UtS

fcV» VHNK OF T»4ATf!

No "Out" for the Duke

THEFEATHIERHEADS..

/ mcxi rtt COULD' r • t

rtAD TOLD 'in WE MAM£ Of ^WE SJSTCE OF tot P£AC6 ' P -WAT VJOULD MARftV 1)5

A C C i P T I M J J

The Boss (Joke*B6 AM

AJd htmetlVM IN XtMH « X TV « K AKD V * QoOLO O6T A

T

MRKUflfl H0W5UFORArtOIDtAO?—-

. • • i f V « K AKD V * QoOLO O6T A .

M^'V t e v*na OF VB PUWC — f^ C A S £ f e

WAT NOOB HAKI F t U .DOWN ON I * »B

5THt e v*na OF VB PUWC


Recommended