THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER - DigiFind-It

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GRADE CROSSINGSMUST GO 1 I . . THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER

INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP

Woodbridge, N. J,,, Friday Afternoon, April 19, 1929 PRICE TWO CFNTS

MAYOR' REPLIESTO CRItlClSM BYSEWAREN1TESSays He Voted as Member at

Large, and to UpholdRights of Industry.i ],, lolliiwiliK statement was Is4

, ( l |,j Muyor William A. Ryan,Kot^ Ii,, 1,1 1' TownBhlp y«sterd»yi >."

. imi. the passage' o* t h e o r a i "pcrrnlsslon to the

Petroleum .Product*,n, lay a 9erles of pipe-lines lin-

si;iH' street, Sewaren, I have re-, ,.,l several lett«p& from Sewaren,!,l,. criticizing me for voting in, ,',: I ho orMlnance which makes.ii,i,; the coming pf this new in-i, in WoodbndgS Township.Hi, , writers of those letters ac, !,)•• of playing polities', and of

,,um Comiuitteemen Gill, and,,,|,IM n who voted against the or-

,,,,, Another letter claims that,!,,•! not necessary for me to votei in. nutter at all.i iniiiiitiiout .my administration

i,n,- been guided by one out-, puiiaiiit;: 'to fulfill the du-

; ut a CoiBniitteenJ»n-at-large•i, ,. view toward the interests ol

I., .s i,:<n 1 p at large.,,UHMii;h 1 do not owe the objec-

,ii ,s< wuren1 an explanation,w .ivi- it gladly boottUBe-X t>i i ,.,in make them see the other

. ni imil much aerated Bituatiou.i wiii'd tor the ordinance whichIH ,1 Hit! door to a new Townimip

l i n y , because I waB anxious tomi Word for a measure WJiicU

\,. tu that industry the right iti.uiii not be denied. Wnen1 too*,.•!• Kmr years .ago, 1 delivered u

,r_f to the Committee and to. j.niiiitj of the Township, in whichi.ujmiai'd tu lhe_.Township as a,,,|e, Uial 1 would do everytfiThg

.,;. power to further Industrial...iiisiuii, to.Jnyite tne coming of., nmusnW, to tne end that taxesmill lie lowered, more opportune, nn niiiployiiient be created, and

A\ i>iuii)Tty owners and business-,ii in- iewarded for their heavylilti'iuUuiis itt^ia^t tax funds; by• • inrroased vulue of their hold-...-, ;uui investments.

TiioiiiJi Woodbridge Townshipiiists ol a large area, and of, ,u,l auctions as yet somewhati'ar,iir<l Uj vavant tracts, it in,, lUnuss one municipality, des-mt to u yrea't future, a s'reat popu-UOII, and increasing prosperity,

• i :••!'. i(l''tl it preserved its union andi imt weakened "by tile secession ofiis coinponent parts. • •

ui thli muikiiHillly, 1 am

to Greet First-bornZaphyr Louktdts:"1 proprietor

of the'Main Restaurant and,Delicatessen, Woodbridge, Inanxloitsly awattliift the arrivalof the . gieamBhlp. Vtilcania,which sailed from A PatranGreece, 6n Wednesday.

Yesterday "Louis" re'etevpd acable, telling him that his. wifeand son were safely on boardthe gteamer.

The popular restaurant pro-prietor returned'to his native

- land about two ,aml .a halfyea." ago, and jWrjed a ".hometown" girl.

On Sunday, the . 28th., tin;Vulcanitt,, is scheduled to duck.and Louis will be' at the gaimplank to grept his wife and « rnls son tor thc-iirjit'

SENIORS WILLTAKE CAPITOL

TRIP MAY 5.

Action! Camera!

"Thi <>u

Class of 1929 Will Visit ' »»»<»•Washington Accompaniedby Three Chaperones.

tMUtUW I). IHsSMOM)N-iini'Ht Man in the World11,Coban'K famous DroiidwayM y

ut Hie St. JannB''-tiit, played by

MYSTERY PLAYPrincipal Role in "Seven

Keys to Baldpate/' to be!Played by Arthur C. Ferry

iA novelist In Hi'ttl'rh Of material I

an unusual story, .brings abent Iniri» <>r uhiiKival nidifttlonp inv Seven Keys to Haldpate' ,rh will lie presented by' tlip fac-

i.l the Bar run. Avftnue HighSeiiiiol .in April 2lith., anU 27th,The complete cast of fourteen mem-bers has already been chosen nrrdHi" Intel cut shown In rehearwilB in-dicates a successful presentation.

"The Seven Keys to Baldpate'' Isa, inwodrajnatic farce by AugustlnMac Hugh. I t is one of the flntBt ex-amples of the modern Americanmystery plays' and 1s xatd \ o be anifdipy or mystery,-rarce and In-trigue.

The play hlngq

n

u i i i

ii Ii >

Sfhool auditorium on Jlay 2, by Kerry,'who givesMiddlesex Council, Knights of Co- pie a key to an I:hiinlnis. It IH a distinctly "nujdern" ; pale. All are j«play and Is packed full ut a™on. ! they have the on

The Senior ClassAveouu High ifchoolannual Washington15th., permission having beengranted by the Hoard of.Education

o l t h e Harrni. • ^'filltrip

| yThe story centers »round a rtn>«-' out the place toi

•round a novel-d pat ArWH*F £.

iCli of seveil peo--known as Bald-

o hgllev^" thatthey have the dnl*Jie)! and all seek

t h l t n j f tnjfte U thelr hojne.OHeVafe of oirter-attorney, played • by The ffivttn.,chosfen

make its I Andrew' Desmond, who Its sent to ' ent types aiwfMU .sorts of. happeningson May.] collect a bill from a millionaire in; occur When they meet.

a small Pennsylvania town, wherey U

at thelt meeting Monday night. The2J boys and 41 girls, will

Wednesday for ale.avestay. The Board appropriated $150to Bend three chaperones, in com-»]ylD,g with a request df SupervisingPrincipal John H Love.

%e-In the

4 m *resignation. a teacher

Grade at the Barron 'AvenueSchool, was accepted with regrets.Miss Walling plans to»«pend, nextyear In BTMy. " "7

The school nurses made 615home visits during- March, accord-Ing to the summary of their reporturead at the meeting. Nearly seventhousand children are tinder their'care, according to the summary. Onecase'of illness resulted hi deattr.1

Preliminary plans for ' the Se-waren school addition were Hiibiutt-ted by Architect J. K. Jensen.

y , The characters and the part aa-

The attorney finds .that the villas«T Mary Norton,1 a newapaper repoiT-niltllonalre, who Ms the worla .•' er, Mfss Voroft Mcfilroyt Elliahtichtest tightwad, antl his own em- J Qulmby, a caretaker, A. R. Nelson;ployer, are scheming to fleece the Mrs. Qulmby, Miss Martha Morrow;girl working In'the millionaire's of-1 William Hollowell Magee, novellBt,lice and get control of rich oil landswhich she owns. The young attor-ney— thw«rt» the two men and winsthe heart of the girl. v

The show' was staged by Qeot-gcM, Cohan In collaboration with theauthor, Auguitln. McHugli, in 1920.

Sl'Ki'i

.NK In ( imiiuiiiilly Kilin "Iiovtf.at Mrs! Siullt", *im I kin i, and l)«n, .lr., (jrllidliitt nw»>. »

hero of the nitn, ii'uisfcrH U'lKtei1 affrftlnn, nftcr lin.vlnirit'Srui.,1 the heroine, MISH Murjorle'MAler, (r«nn tlHiiiInt hullilliitc. .Members at the HI>|H1H«II Fire Dnpartmnnt, shown In the SICIK-Hie, Irt't tn ikht, M(we|>li l,a».liza, Michwl Kochltk, Ale\ Kiimln-sky. mid thief t^harli-s Tun'k.

' VandClinch" FaJe-OutRewards Fords Film Hero

Ztetty JWorjortt Maier Rescued fcy Dick Prdmwre . *« u,w«a dD«nV.«t'.~ r.'— 6 . A . < " 2nd. It IsFire Scene

A. G. Ferry; John Bland, D. A.Wescott; Mrs. Rhodes, a charmingwidow, Miss " — •• '" -

Being a movie hero, even if it means cany ing the heroine' b,een ltl

EARLYCOURT VERDICTINIAND FEUDBrown • Carpenter Battle

Over Race Track Site Maybe Decided til May.

.I'MIIIK Job* *Ktrkpatrlck, of lh« ,'>Hil.lle«ti County Circuit Court; r»-v m d il*«iKlou.:in tb.?. .BrnwnrCar- ,pt-iitir ejwtuient snH InVolvInx the oWuodlirldpe Hoard ^invBwuy affter

•' (i• ln';.r|i)K on Monday qf armi- ,i'i«ns iij gtlornfys for both pifrtles,Ki-ciirner Hernatd Xn*t\, attorneyfor tin: Drown iwtcresiH and Middle-sex County Solicitor tVed Richard, •son. coinfj,el*Br for Win. V. Carpen--"t<i, were ordered to hie brh'fs be-fore AjriV 25th. , •.

I The ense w»» irlvd before thncourt and a Jury which tm«l bi><aiImpanelled - .waa Hluliarged by...agreement of *«ttl*»el »«d the COttrl.

. .tTlie.ju>lon was taken on the'recom-;inend»tion of the court when It wa*i "tnbllfhed that there WBH no con-

; ucivdsy and that Hie case was to• be tdecided' on technical points.

j Numerous legal problems are In-i volved nni the,.court made It plain

Jthat_the flllltK of briefs af nn'early""llnte would enable him to render his

decision about Muy 1st.

A bill to (>uiH title on the tractis now. before Vice-Chancellor U.

^ in_ Chancery Court, nt LongrancTTT TOTt Vcli'piVuIed" fo naaff '

slon on Hie hill on Mayhoped Hint hie. decision

| will definitely fix the ownership ofthe property, the title, of which him

hill,. a

; Peter, down a shaky fire ladder, is not suchjijough job,, according toi Thorn- j j i c k prerjpore, leading nun in the Jords Community Film'

'1»-_;»w'y

Miss FlorenceCowlns ; L o a , M « x , the Mayor's Man"Friday", B . T D h t JiT. Dougherty; Jim

It ran for months OH fireadfray and' Gwg&ft, ih»-<toaked mayor, S. .K/It wus also a road succesa. The lo-' Werlock; Thomas Hayden, presidentcal

buccels us the play Iviited for aniateur/ presentation.

Reckless TruckDriver F i n e d$100 by Recorder

The following birth reports have!been recorded within the nast week <at the office of the Board of Health:]

WoodWtdgeApril 10: Elsie " Jenkins, of 2«S

MoVn «|ipel, dautlitrr nl Mr. and\ Mis. Walter Jenkins.j James. Hhorrte, of Kins George'road, 'sort of Mr. und Airs. Lester1 Shoi lie.j Jennie Teffenhart, of 189 Grovei • - - " • • - • Mr. a n d M r s .

"Love af First Sight", now being produced by Dan Dorn, vet-1eratrfox News"cameraban, of Red Bank.

Marjom MaieV,, pretty arid "viVRBiDas leading lady, re - ! '

. « . „»«««,. ™.« Ul ,.™,, a. w a r d e d Predmore with a hug and kjsa (all'for the camera of

j , Robbins; owner or Baldpate, L. course) after she had been rescued last Sunday in one of the 'policeman, M. it. j m o s t reajistic fire scenes ever staged in an amateur production. Passengers and Crew Mirac-

IDIGGER WRECKSF L Y E R

Thethe library.

I avenue, daughter ofJOlin Teffenhart.

Walker l!mt4ti*(ib.^-»3, a truck! --Anf4t- « T r'arrte«r--elBrio»f °*vwdiTllie"uuty'of uphuidiiiH: driver, .of 711 Kaat Jersey ulretjt, ji\lden street, daughter of Mr. and

in,' inieivsi of the whole. To be! Kliiabeib, paid a $1UO TTntf -anil | Mrs. Theodore X. O'Brion. IMM. 1 enuld have exercised t h e ; t ' l i u n C 0 3 t s w l i e n arruiuncd in policei April 6: Regina Romis, of Oak'I'livi'ii-i' of'the chair, and refraimd' court here Monday mornlim on a avenue, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.iKim uiiina since my vote wus not reckless driving charge. Buddulph i Stephen Romis.

ar» to On duvotud to I M«nibers of the popelawn FireDepartment assisted in the Bceffts Ihd

.._ I gave a natural performance whichI reaped much praiBe from Dan Dorn.

Mr. Dorn has been away duringthe past week, working on severalMovietone sound newsreels, and

I tiltuim; "silent news" storm scenes| aloni; the Ji'rBcy eoust;j Now that he is back In Fords,work la scheduled for every hour ofthe next week or two, when many

I local scenes will be shot. Tree plant-ischools in

M I L K FUNDDRIVE BREAKS

ALL RECORDS

Tree PlantingPostponed Due to

Bad WeatherDue to bad on Arbor

ulously Escape Death inGrade Crossing Crash.

Passengers and train crew mirac-ulously eseuped| serious injury, whenthe crack Pwuuy. Train No. 118, aWashington-New York express, was(Uralled as it it ruck a ditch diggeron the Iselln crossing Monday after-noon about- 8:80 o'clock. TheI'ennay flyer came around the »

Collations, Contributions, to•Aid U»oV4«>rish.d Chil-

T i I *o *oo AT, Total $2,632.97.

A l > r" " ' " - " * »"•"""Jugt below the Iselln

ot seventy niiu-s »""*Sr

lor a. decision on .the or-Thal might have been a

ruke of politics, because it he was driving wag dhitvu anmswiUed nu one. »nB an accident:

LH.I«.J-. i, 1 voted- for tltB ordinance, Buddulph was driven

in avoid-

a, largeo . i 1 voted-for tltB ordinance, Buddulph was driving a, large |>ro«pwt utiwt, su»e i was anxious to g u - o n W - l r u c k l o a a e d with furnituifc uod wuii J o h n i(l)1C|,;lo, industrial rlBhM,'tor p W Vhogglng the road police alleged , ^inui lur greater comm\inW'"e * " dl"lvl»« ^ a '"^' r a t t o f l Vl>ri, 1 0 stentV - - . ' , , •, ° . • B u u r f w h a n a v r m i it n nHHtii>n^pr I A p i U I U . o l f ( M

, The Milk and Ice Fund drivewhich ended hist Monday uveninu;

!'i(ccuaBful ever held,of Mr. und'ilnal reports showing that the sum

Mrs, Oeoruie Haddeo. ! of |2,632.!J7 «as raised in theApril • 1: James Lorch, of 1 GO Township. Tin' final meeting of the

was arrested by Motorcycle OfDcerj April 3: llobert'Hadden, of 411 was the moatGeorge Ballnt when tin- truck which I Eluiwood avenue, son

I'rospect strwt, son of'M'rl and Mrs.bollcltoi's wild- held ut the home of

Arbor Day Exercises .Held. This Afternoon

by Colonia P u p i l s

truck

Thewere, to be held at the Qolonia

day and the program which was to' j ; , , ^ 12'iQ "junk byhave been given last Friday will be when it stalHnl at thegiven at that time. The ceremonies! i'lie huge locomtlve caught , thewere postponed several times du« trailer which carried' the machineto the inclement weather, the heavy' u n , i shattered it* to bits by fn« forces .a-aln» making it inadvisable to • o i tht- impact. A section of tho •'bring the children to the park, ni1-'gasoline engine which drove the dij;- '

exercises which cording to Supervising Principal • , , e r w ng c»u);lit on the eow-ca^her

LtMll[ii'.s, itiui lur greatef .c

I" T btiiVve that Mr. Campbell and|.M: tiill were justified In voting

:imiiiiai Hit) ordinance, if they be-lievvd that i majority of their con-rtiiiiuiis inltbe Third I^ard sym-1,I'.ulilzed wit^ the minority of ob-ij>i;tors In riewaren. rio (ar as my jmiH vote was concerned,. 1 wasL-uiiUd not.only by my own personal;•"!!•.iri'ion thai I was voting for ,thebe t Interests of the Township as awlinle, b,ut also/ by the overwhelm-li'.- expression in fstvor ot the ordi-ii.nuc, which we "had received from

Fottla, Iselio, Colonia,ll'M" lawii, Keasbey, and'other sec-

speed whencars camelnt< to avoicompelled to

I st'tk the courtesy of theinn mutter because i wish toe home the fact that 'polities'

I did nut filter into the Question at(nil. if i had'been convinced thatmy,vote wquld have reacted unfa-

.ii'i;. iigainst m« politically, IIvmild still Jiave voted for the ordi-iiuinii.'. because <I {eel absolutely cer-

tain Uiai.l was acting in the Inter-

Bwiiurn, • businessmen and lndua-tlie.-.1' . .

S G I ROMOND ISRECOVERING FROM |

SUDDEN ILLNESSDesk Sirsjeant Harny Homond,

a member of the local police depart-ment, is convalescent at bis liomeon. Albert street, where he Wa«taken last Sunday moininj; follow-ing a vertigo attack. Sergeant Ro-mond, who bag been a police officerfor more than fourtefii .warn, had!attended early, mass at St. James"]

• • Iselin.Miril 10: Helen Toth, ol Middle-

sex iivenire, daughter of Mr. andMrs. JoM-ph Toth.

Avwiel *April %: Helen Kosty,, daughter

of sir. und Mrs. CharleB Kosty.

E. H. Boynton. on Rahway avenue. School last Friday afternoon andI who w*s inchsirgeof the campaign, which were postponed several tiraefl

were heldplanted

Drewstersuperiiitendent

Principal. . (Mr.

followtag: E. H. Boynton, Mrs. A.; Willis, recalled incidents from 'theF. Randolph, H. BaVron ' BrewBter, I nfe 8f Mr. Willis.

Mrs. A. F. Hulier, ot Green street, because pff E i C i

Ladies' Auxiliary ofFire Company Holds

Enjoyable Card Party.The ladles' Auxiliary of Wood-attended early, mass at S | .The ladl ary

•Church, on Amboy avenue, and was bridge Flrel Company, No. 1, held astricken during the service, [ successful card party In the vflre

(Rotary SpeakerDeplores M e r e

"Sports Appeal""Tun many boys eo to college for

»M-th ami not fin study," tjal* ^ro-|e^sui Earl Held Silvers, of But-f*> i's rnlverslty, Bpeaker at thej V i i h hmclK-on of the Hotary Club

|K. Craftsmen's Club yesterday.topic WUH "College and What It

rftiuuns Today".I" The m^t regular meetlug «jt theIcliib will be held next Friday noon.IA luui!lu*m* will i,e hejd next Thurs-l l

wll i,e hejd n xl.«ii.\ ev«iiinBat which the Rotarlans|v.ili hiive as their KUeats the Wood-

fcrid Lions Club, i A bowlingeh on the CraftBmen'8 Club &1-

will follow.h

[[ley l follow.

The date, tor ttie annual Udies'

The illness was totally unexpect-f house on Siihool street Monday ave-ed, the officer and friends.believing ning. There were twelve tables-\luhe had entirely \recovered from a re- j p[ay. The non-players' prize wyiscent illness whi^i was not of a setl- UwarYled to Mrs. Prank La Fai\i.OUB nature. Hi had been treated [ Migg Stella iKelly received the door-fop high blood preiure and hadbefin urider the care of physiciansuntil a short time ago. He appar-ently |ia4 entirely .recovered. Hemay not lie able to return to his du-ties for several %eekn, an officerwho visited the home saidday.

Irving'Relmers, T.,B, Murray, W. H.Wurr, Morris Seijal, D. W. Bartholo-me, and S. C. Potter.

The proceeds from the campaigns,which are conducted every, two orthree years, are used to furnish milkand ice to families where there areunder-nourished children. _ Every jcent which is contributed is 'used topay for ice or mjjk, no money be-ing spent for Iciettcal or other trt*

The'program follows;Arbor < Day greetings, Robert

Wagner."Hymn, "Lord of Life", school.

John H, Love. 1 ot the locomotive and was found toParents and friends of the pupils be tightly wedged into place wheii

are invited to attend any or alk of the steel mogul turned over on it*the exercises. } rlgtit side, blocking all ti>ur main

"The Barrion Avenue High BehWil • Un« tracks 150 yards, north at theprogram which w.111 be given at M crossing.o'clock, was arranged by Principal! Three coaches o r t l t c t r a in wlTtcri1"Arthur C. Ferry. It follows; (were derailed were torn from the

. Flag salute. i wheel truckB as the engine workedSinging of "The Star Spangled'in reverse with all brakes set. Ths

Banner." f road-bed, rails and' ties were piled-Recitation, "Our Forests," Rich- in several places by portions of the

ard Predmore, of the senior -blasts,' wreckage. The flrBt Pullman cguchplanting a white oak tree. • ' leaned at a forty-five degree anglo

Recitation, '.'Arbor DH>," Miss'with its front vestibule against theAddress,'"H. B. WIlliB," John H, Arline Corbett,'ot the junior class,' underside of the locomotive. The

cldental expense. I The lattergiven by volunteer wp.rkers.

Love,Songi "Arbor Day," school.Declamation, Hamilton Billings. ."The Lord's Prayer," J. H. Love.

• Planting' of. Mr. WiUls' tree.' ' SOUK, "BraWnf Butrbtes"'

Address,Anderson.

"John, H. Love,'* ' Roy

a red oaJi tree. j coal trailer wa» piled against theRecitation, "Tree apd New Jer- rear of the locomotive after ltn

sey," Harry Lund, of the sophomore I w,t)ee.la. and trucks were .torn loosoclass, donating a white oak tree. . i n the short uiad ride,

HecHutiQj|, "What Do We Plant?" Engineer Charles W. BartelmesB,Miss JuHsr-BirBe*, ot. the freshmen Lot- 121 Baltimore bpuleywd,class, planting1 ai red oak tree.

| Recitation, rtTrees," Miss Harriet

Woman's Club ;a

Election to beHeld Thursday

Song, "Trees," by Joyce1 Kilmer, phort, of the Eighth Otade, plantinsselected pupils.

Declamation, Emma'Burner.Soug, "America, the Beautiful."

• Planting of ivy by Parent-Teach-ers' Association, Mrs. W. «Qodson,president.

Song., "America."

The following received the prizes;

'" SUSr. ".Kenneth' Rechnltzer; j ^ ^ S Z ™ * ZThe directors of the

J,Mrs. Frederick

Edward TrostJ! Craftsmen's Club and were given :iLinn, Stella Kelly'

POSTAll 1NSFECT0RrAil\risi1

MM. Freder ,June Klchardaon. Sheriff William S.Hannah J K Horper' Andrew' Hannah, j . E. Horper,

J. Rhoder,Andrew

Q (

chairmen o£ the various committeesof the club. The nominating com

submitted the names of Mrs.

VISITS LOCAL OFFICEThomas Carglll, a postal

tor otilhe> Elhabeth'diatrlct, recent-ly completed a »ttryby of the localpost-ofnee and made several recom-mendations which were adopted Im-mediately. It ww the first officialinveitigatlon mad* here since Po«t-inaster Stanley C. Potter was aik-polnted nearly a yew aga.

The change* made were all M •minor nature and will put the aflftir*on it more biwliie«»-lilie basis.

New "relay" nmll boxes ,are beingput up on Amboy avenue, to pro-vide protection for mail left for car-riers. It ha* boon the custom tosend out mull to points where e*r-

the truck. The

Parr.Fan-Tau; Emma Zehrer, Fred

inspec-} Zehrer, Josephine Melder(/ Mrs. TZehrer, J p ,Zehrer and Mrs. Fred Zehrer.

Mr*. FrancU Gorlas was generalihairman of arrangements.

Moe Koch Announce*Freeholder Candidacy

lKlit was set for M»y lftth. riers might meet, ,An invitation to attend the dls- mail c*n now * • dropped m.Itrti-t conference ot Rotary-Club». to loeV,ed up until the carries w

lieid In Anbury Park on M*yand 21st., was received.

of the member* expressedii«ir intention to «tt«nd,

'Pin- visitors, were: Clarence?''<»WII, of PostorU. Ohio; Jerry

id, of Qlens Falls, N. Y.;iward w. Purceal, ot Boonton;•nil Cowan, Jim Houjel and

Crane, of South Amhoy.

Frederic* H. Turntr Co."KNJSIIAL DAND

Sewaren, H. J.TWephone

to pick It up.

BThe funeral ot John

J f tl UtThe unea J

was heJd.fnm t l» Ute hom«,.ion Btreit, Port Heading, laaiurday morning followed by ierIn the Greek CatMHe church,

I t t «» 8J JGreek CatM

tetet. Interment WM «» 8J-cemetery, Woodbridge. Mrdack died at » • Vvth. Amb«yHospital W«t Wedne«lay, aftermstttn**. » • *• »ur»iT«dbr*••wife. Mary* " d «•»«» chlldrw

WAJTCVP

bridge,

B, caw^

<«4 locality, P fur-to Boi

Anpouncement wa» ' made todayAnnouncement yby Moe Koch, of Perth Amboy, that\% has eatered the race for the .nomination 'of Freeholder on the Tonlerence atonregular: Democratic ^Ueket at thespring primaries to be held onTuesday, June 18.

Mr. Koch ha been^kwmlretled In the affairs, ot the Demo-cratic organlwtlon In Perth Anj-boy, but k i t not sought any publlqoffice before. In a statement, thecandidate say*

I shall make an energetic cam-^jo in all aectloni of the CountyUnd hope ^that the voteri In theDemocratic rants win, fire me mnomination. If nominated andelected. I thall serve tbij*ople ofMlddlMex County to the beat of myability." • . '

U red oak tree.Presentation of trees, Supervising

Principal. John H. Love.Acceptance'In behalf o' the Town-

ship by Mayor William A.- Ryan.America.

wood, Maryland, and > FiremanGeorge W. Phillips, of 2408 Thir-tieth street, N. E., Washington, D.C., saw the trailer -on the tra,cka a3ITie train swept do*n a ftraight- -away after round)ng the curve. Bothbraced themselves aa the firemankicked the fljo door shut and bothtook hold ot a grab-lvon which runs

The following program, arranged across the frout boiler plate. Thoby Principal Mrs. F. 'P.

N l b iofy

School No. 1, will be given at onel

MI-B. William Hained for j l c ^ witreasurer. The annual election of morningthe club will

Woodbridge • Jews Will; Observe Passover Ritesi ' ' •

The Keast of the> Passover, orJewish Easter, as It is often called, I ni(__. _Will Btart at sundown next Wednes-' gong, "Welcome Sweet Spring-day e-venlhg and will' be celebratedwith special services In the Con-gregation Adath Israel synagogueon School street, Woodbridge. Serv-

o'clock by the pupils ot thatFlag salute.Singing, "The Star Spangled Ban-

nert"Recitation, "Trees," John Oin«i-

chairman of the com-

also be held Thursdayat 8 o'clock, at sundown

8

ion will last eightdays. The ttrst day will'be a day ot

mZe Sr-piwTsKu: ^or tSlf - t tobj . Wlo*.* by seven daysm , pthat the Milk and Ice Fund drivewa» a success.

Mrs. Martin Newcomer counselorfor the junior organisation epon-uored by the club, said that manymembers of the JunUir Woman'sClub planned to attend the Junior's

Part.

of feasting.

Fined for InebrietyTwo

court

vs

aient emulating °*an* bath wlU be let frae to

y lady or couplt who wUl Ukaof dentist» o«e> »nd mint

i BlrtUtty and gaa

row, The recently organised "LittleWoDUtb*» Club" bad contributed twodollars to the Milk and Ice Fund,she Mid.

The name of Mrs, FrederickDemarest was proposed for meinber-Bblp. '

Communication*, were receivedfrom the Aveutl *fld Leoola Clubsendorsing th& candidacy of Mrs. E.H, Boynton, of Rahway avenue, whola a candidate for vice-president, ofthe state club. ,

Mra. J. J. Dunue, who Is In ebarguof < the arranBfmenU for the cardparty which was to hav« been heldn«xt week, said tfeat the event badbeen Indefinitely fOBtponed. Otherclub actVrltlfts mm the changed»te naowMity, Mieording to Mm,DuBpe.. ' /

drunks tiatd | 5 fines andBtB when arraigned In police

londay morning. Theywere: Theodore Debrow, 36, ama&on, of UnoleumvlUe, S. I., andJohn McHugh, 46,'a laborer, ot SeaView Hospital, 8, I,

time," school.Planting df tree with a pupil from

oach.Qlaat} placing a shoveful of dirto.n the "foots of tree. v

• introductory remarks, Mrs. Kdgar:Presentation of. tree, J. H, Love.Acceptance, Mayor Ryan.America. »Principal Lelfffid Reynolds, of

School No. 11, arranged the follow-ing program, wbloU will be given at1:30 o'clock by pupils ,of SchoolNo. 11:

Flag salute.Singing of America. . . , - , . . ,.Recitation, "Trees," Jean Kreger,

G d >of the Fourth Grade.Recitation",

awl oftelephone eainI taTmUI

and gaa.dbid

hone eain. B l e r t U y a gtaTormUon pbOM Wovdbridge

Speeder Pays FineMax Teltelbaiim, 43, a bath house

tto«9 "Bt N Yteowrjet

Gra.de.

Day,"

throttle had beeu Jeft wide openand the Wheels (,'iound out a showerof Bparks as they turned In reversewhile momentum carried the trainforward. , "

It IB'thought that the b)-Kes onthe train were not "applied until tli?moment of imimct ' when air lineswere severed and" the •ijrakca ' wer*;net automatically. Engine andcoadies held to the rails uuiil theyhit a "frote" into which a bolt or apart ot the ditch digger may haveTajlen. The heavy eteel rail wasbroken off as though It were a bitof kindling wood. Huge sections otthe rail were thrown into the airand across the main line tracks.

Passengers on the train Bald theysaw a shower ot sparka higher thanthe windows ot the car after thecrash. One woman said she hadseen car wheels, and gears go hur-tling through the air past the trainas It ground' to a itop. PassengersWere thrown from their seats In thefirst three cars of the train all ofwhich rocked dizzily before comingto a stop,

Tree pkpting, with » boy and girl • The train was In chaVgei of Con-elected from «*ch class, participat-ing. Th« cnfldren who will takepart are: Mary-BWa, Samuel Kiw.hl.Sl G l l Horace Ogden,

Walter Merwin,

p yWSleanor Grlmley,Evelyn Nuasbium,

ductor Q. H, Knight,Main line trains were routed over

1U» rCu.uideii divjflon tor W«ralhoursTThe autild«lra«K"at'lMllBwas undamaged, though much deb.-

Arline Janderup, Alex Bnik, Rose rli had been piled on It, a* the en-r, Colby Dill, Jr,, Doris Burns, glne careened dlullydown the riUlar! CurieetoB. itarlorl*) Abbott, and tore up the roadbed on the Nc-

**i J *T J i l l ^ • 1 — ~ ~ ^ " *

... ., ._ J8 Bant New Yorte «,v»-nue. Brooklyn, nald coats of court *—-- —. ™—.—. • ™- — — . . . .when arraigned In pplioe court here George Roode, Wlllan Linn, Paul ond outride traek. The engine.wasMonday mUU n- a. speeding O ^ . l l l . ^ f l l J ^ ' W t f f f l . ^ i g i e ;charge. Teltelbaum plead guilty tothe charge sieferred by Tr&fftc Ser-geant B»n,parsons.

' |T,FOB RBW- ' •

T l w Room House, all iniproVe-menta. A inug little horw in finelocation on Qreen street. Three to

metima ne tlon,. school*, churches and tforsb» aulgned VI*W in rear Is of new Woodbridge

t d I th | p k R t bl O a e

Tha Bridge Pariy", a play, will | five minute*" walk trim Vim.be given by tne oluj aometime next tlon.. schools, churchea and "'montn. RO1«B atad reb.ears»l»»wAeajr future.

> , 1 ' * * - • ' • • '

Patricia Ann Burnt, Friable New- ment -by wrecking erawa who theucomer, Porothy Hunt, Qerald "K,re- repaired the inner rallB, giving ager, V l i l Q * l E d t f d M i l ; d b l t k over which Vsrackl

Virgiola CMlher, Edw»*d Mil-;double, track over whichBetty Ttghe, Oliver Young, trains were sent to avoid delayt-

Chester Frank*!.' AWred Lapenta,] Engineer Bartelmeaa and Fireman.Frank Vargo, Vivian Balion, Ed-1 Phillips were cut and bruised. BotHward Martin, Ruth -Young. Harold; W e taken to jhe- Babway **—"'"Orlmley, Jen»», Sormonfc, Mary 'Oy,Nlthardt and

4y, yP, Copeland,

started In the | p»rk. Rent reasonable.Phone, 114.

Qarsge,

Remarks' on tht new o»rk. Town-Ibifl Engineer Oaorge Merrill.

PreMntattaa ot (r«», Mr. Love,Acceptance by Mayor Ryan,

but were discharged after t gtreatawut. The two m«i b«4worked together for about five year*.

Passengers who,'were jdlgfctlir in-jured Were: M.r»v W. B.CroweU andMiss Dolores Morgan,, of Reaiaut

(continued on pag* f• • * . . ^ . . ,

• * • ' • - - » •

TwoTHE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1929

KIDDIE KEEPWELL CAMP TO

BEGONTlNiM

Ex-D. A. R. Appeals

• ?«!'•_•• • ! « - — •

John E. Toolan Is President,Hampton Cutter Vice-President.

MldiJli^es County »ill Voullnue tolook to the •elfar.' t»r It* Childrentljjs< sunjme^.ln, thn maintenance oft^f Kiddie Keep W'll Cittiil' for uh,dcrprivilpRod chi'Mn-'n, which for,;1+10 past five years t)»* <*<"" M rourtijtnwBTd th« physical mibutldlug of'rlilldren -whose stnlivili hat* be¥n js;ipp''d.by the fcardiilui's <)( the win-1

1 t < * r m o n t h * : ","•"'" • " • • • • ' • • - " • ~ j . - ; * • • . . . - : . . . . . . . - . . , . I

Klve 'years. . B*O last »l>r,lus. the]Middlesex County B^rrealloif Conn-1

, <•!! nprewntfnK f.in.-rnil.5 rcHplouK. 'philanthropic, civic -and educationalnriinnUatloiia of-the county, alarmed |hy statistics which- showed that ana- jthird of afl-i>et>aoi ehiidren inv'M.ld-j

. rili'spx County were undernourished,and underweight, met to dlMUM the!forming , of a county health' campwhere mifh children • might be;nurwd back to health and .vljsoriduring the suihmer months. Vpon

'the expert advice of T. 1) Kldner. ]of the "Federal Hosptwf Planning jCommission; Albert Johnson,head;of the engineering department of]Kilters 1'niverBity; W. C, Weasel,IIn charge of the camping depart- Imenl of the Hoy Scouts of America jand Dr. C. K, StimwMi, of the Play- ]ground and Recreation Association jof America, a 200 acre tract «f land !In Iliiritan Township, known

SCOUT CHIEFSTO PLAN FIELD

DAY H E U E

Andrew C, Johnson —

A Good Alibi

"Expelled from the D A. R,year as a psillt of ,' blacklist"charge! which she' made, Mr*.Helen Tuft* Bailee, of Cambridge,Maw., plans to appeal for rein-itatcmunt at the Washington, P.C., convention the w»ek of April

15th.

Will OrganizeSenior C. E. Club

at White ChruchTwpnlv-livi1 'members of the sen-

as i lor Sunday Srlisol of the First Fres

1923trict Troops to be HeW at

1 Woodbridge, May 25.The next * regular meeting <of th<>'

ScoutW>aderirdr\ the Rarltan Connivnl, Hoy Senntu "I America, will be.Ticld ofl Thursday, April 25. in'South 'Amboy. i

TIM» speaker of tfc«-evenlng will jbe William Hlllcourt, a member of,tVe National Council ^Editorial 'De-jpartnfent of the Boy Scouts of;America. Mr, HllWouri is the uuthor of th* t(ew "Patrol Leaders*Manual", fchich.sviU *»op be avail-.able,. .He. has befen a- ScoutmasUrJtor a number of years tn Copen-hagen, tfcnjnark.'aifd Is an authority1,on th% Tutrol Method ". , |

The meeting Is to be held at the,

S C H f l O l T H R I F T ^ ^ f Andrew c JohCOLLECTIONS SHOW •».«<• « • MA from the home oE

GOODson, 64, wahts son, Arthur, of ATCirel, Wedne»-

KHSTSchurch officiated. Ml.tenmeht w « 1"

in Crowded Bu?Eugene Penlk, 24, of «S

Educational Thrift collnctlons tak- ^ ' f ^ ' i Y y ' ^ l o T l n t b * Prestfyte'rian' Blreet, and Steve-Kara, 50, of <•;,,.en uj) from-the .several Mboojfjj1, r j > meterv Woodbridge. • . . . ! bell • treet^both^of Woodhn,]

'We1

' as follows oh J

• • H I 1^ • T •" M ' • " * TT -m - W-T I —' T ^V~

»y evening onPort Reading ..._:...-.IJJO.H J * l t a , ,rt Elizabeth. Sunday eve-|charges Penik and Kara w n , :i.No-1 ~ —-• {*;•" "rnfifK- He Is survived by three sons, i rested following a flat fight „„ ,Mo 11Avcnel _ i ^ ,Iselin No. 157-....St. James' __i.SewarenIselln No. 6

SchoolIselln No. 16Port Reading

118.838S0«76.31J0.1B

first Baptistk

*"trat acdStockton streets, South Amboy. air8:15 P,4 Mi, through arrangements jmade by J. Tracy DM, Scoutmaster jof' Troop No. 91. . l .

Invitations have beein sent.to allCommissioners, Scoutmaster* andAssistant '8c.QUjniast.ers, and it 1B>\-pectah_._Uiat a . large, jjsjegalipn of

His first big picture has madrChesterMorrii a Mar His workin "Alibi"' has won hin>; a highplace, among newer cinema celeb-

rities'.

these men will be In StUndnhce.j The chairman of the. committeei on arrangements Is Morris Margn'retten, a member of the ExecutiveBoard of the Radian Council andchairman of the Leadership Train-

Committee.

Woods and owned by the nyieHoard of Freeholders wag- procured t'lvi

In the fait of 1!*24. a campaign WIn-ailed hy Harry Medlnelss,

•l*i*rth Amlwy, w uthe county, netting 112,000

rWireli met and completeduinary plans for organizing a.Vni'or Christian. Endeavor

of Cflil> last Sunday evening. Theyoung people met at the request of

.--•-*•- A . F . nandtrtlrtt-, whoSeriior

"'."""""I'' "?.!SS.loSL'I"Slwtiy .b.ort.J » in. ownuM.gentlyof W?N.Xoung People's Church, tfcefirst service of which was held lastSunday evening. " •*,

Mrs. John Strome explained a new, ,-pign-forV-PresbfterlttB seater-club

lowing year sixty boys were taken a n i l a l s o l0\& of u i e W 0 I K 0[ t ] i e

from its camp at Sea Girt, the1"!grounds -were,o^ean^d, several tern-,porary hulldlnga were erected, wa-ter was piped from a spring on the

„ premises l

care of, some gaining as much a) i ChriBtian Endeavor. She then sumten pounds" through their participa- [ marked the work of the precedingUonJp h.eaHhful_actlville«.

Every yeafirnce'TReh'"'y yconsiderable advances under tke ad-

Star Gazing

I Arthur, of Avenri; William,; Woodbridge, and Carl of Keasb1

Ownei1 Abandons Car

jSewartn ~! Avenel!No. 11

No. 1| St. James'

I Totals

' No (hinting AllowedPresident Coolidge today tele-

graphed the editor of the St. LouisPost-Dispatch:

"A bill appropriating $48,ufl6 toimproveJfount Weather tor a Presl-dentlBi retug* is jaat being signedby me. I congratulate you on tb*

_, , . success of the campaign firsti ^ '• I ^ i T , ! * , b r o a c h e d tn your newspaper, andio The Woodbi-idue I/MU1W) ! a l m 0 8 t unanimously approved by the

EW YOI!K, April IS—Proof that; p r eg,'of the nation. The Congressthat chattering h-at"of the cellu- has shown an inclination to ttea* a

loid industry, the talkie, has grown President with the same kind of

of Public Service bus In Perth Ami,/tn which Penik was severely (-,'••ubout'the upper lip,

Patrolman Joseph Dwyer nrr.M ,[both men and the complaint* w , , '

•: . • ••••• . „ '.pressed by Ed*ard CaUahan "sA touring tar, owhed by N. D.' Public j«*vie* repfessnutlve. v,.

Gallup.-of Main street/was found bus inVhlch thebuwl took p|;i. ..•abandon^ on Rahway avenue l»st,w«* flllsd with passengers,, accor.tSaturday. U was towed to" police | In? to The potlca, who said u ,

i headquarters mhert it was held un- women aud children passent.tirth.TowW? arrival.., Oallup saM were bidly lrl«hUned.«. _ «_- J i - # » 'iVkB M t * •4vtiafi t lvfl 'b*BS l' j.iiiMiiiii n -n^^«fcfc<

- ' ' And Bowl .Q. "It oats are given a- hor«o i,

mediately after hard work or . ,else, what hmpptnsT'" s

A.; ''Hs,e4U."—Pointer. •

lewhlng #n OW_»pff a-Xew Tn,,

Hhe had left/the

ran drf a Wqto return and ,r«fl11 the tank-

H t/the • ' * * • » *!gg UMk ran drf and had not---,

' l d fl11 th

NIn add lion to hi- speaker o< he, m a n - 5 M | t e c a u bt, f o u n d ,„ , c o n g l d e n U l o n l t e x i e n d s to our birds

M * . 1 " ' ! " L f " J ' ^ r : ! ; cracking good. rook drama, yclept and other wild life." - A. P. dl-tof the ' arrangements for the big1931 Rally am) Field Day which is

"Allbi."

at this' meeting.

Pry Open Sedan Doorsone.e.

There is no star, nof evw a fea-tured player (Hollywood is not yetover the shock), though young Mr.p

tO Meal Battery, lOOlS Chester Morris grabs the picture in' the first scene and gallope right oil

gthe first scene and gallope right oil

it. This picture has made him.Tin) doors on..a.-ie.daA.-PgMd. by wlth it. ThCharles Treen, of ' Grove s t r e e t , T e T m i f r ~Woodbrldge, were pried open early "Alibi." based on the BtageSd if d h b d "Nightstick" is the story of a

atch f ra'm St. - Louis.

Detroit MareTORD SEDAN. 1925 first-class

:tonj tlr«* good aa neK.iv.il?Qilady.—Washington Star.

Sunday morniifg and the battery and "Nightstick," is the story of a youngorganltation and,lead the d^cusslon toolB were stolen. The" theft was crook who stays a crook and doesn't iwhii'ii fnifiJuw: *4iiiw-fTteWe-fTOf-twpnrtnii ^r_.JMiuinm Tr'^'nj .—ho.J116^ under the love of a girl.!fer, president ot (fie Middlesex | found the : ear had b««a entered fBTboieT Tnere loTS— tradltiou;

ministration of John K. Toolan, County Christian Endeavor. Unjon when he returned home about 1:30 No. 2!)president; Hampton Cutter, vice-land Irene Walling, missionary chair-presldent; William Welant, treas- iwrh of Uie County Ohion extends*urei and Jane Packard, secretary, greetings to the members planningthrough, the co-oueratjon of various the n«w society. John' Donnelly, andorgan Stations -such as women's j Milton Agreen, fflemBeTS'OTIhe out-rgclubs, labor organiiatlons,* civicclubs, municipal bodies and privatecontributions throughout every duiunity in the county. fecon ing Show.

gojni; society, also- Bpoke.A nominatias committee wjs ap-

pointed, which Included the follow-Sing: Albert Tt-rhune, Claire kelson,

?in,ce the beginning of the Second Harriet Short urid Rub.tU. Demarest>»•«!•, KirU also have boni admitted, Tuf t(illi<wins,tommltti<:• was chosenthe total number of boys and girls to tiicide on a naiuu fur the nuwbeneliring from the camp m'ountlng society; Berend Von Br'emtn, Mar-nearly from the 60 boys of 1924 to (caret Black, Evelyn Howard andthe 20« boys and giils of last year, juvl Leeson.some of whom gained ua many as| Those present were: Audrey Pete-jMassachusetts the tin" plate from see in a" long, long while,nine pounds, their browu and stu.rdjlUiin, Florence Cprfield, Dorothy which he had eaten his toasted

o'clock. "The Racket" was about the first;'pWMTB to give the cops a break. |

Wm. F. Murphy3HEET METAL WOWLTin ~ Copper - Sheet Iron

, Roofing A Hot Air He«t*ig

99 WEDGEWOOD AYE.757-W

• . pjck«r» HesJthy SpotImprove After Fall —

; , At Metro»olltan Chifrchi_To»onto Etenirig Teregram.

(til the* PoliceFAST OIRLS' TOURNAMENT. "•

f «NeRBWAltD

For the arrett and convictionparty who stole the shirt off ofJ t Ih W Sh

AST GIRLS' T O U R N A M E N T . > | p a r t y wno s i o i p m e amri on of j , .OPENS HERB WEDNESDAY Jame« at Ihe Wax Show. 323 s-

. —Dallas (Tex.) Journal.'Rampart Street.—Loulilanna paj,.

wrU tf cmftrt. . .si MT/ Unit imt

Iht irnr tmttflhi tfttn-irninci . . \ ItUpbnUtubtniff jm ttJ '*»••

Watching His Step ' "Alibi'.'., does more—you can't help"I don't know what's the matter but love the cops in the picture;

with that ttttle man over th«re. He they are &uch__Ana.tellows! v . i

was so attentive a few moments ago1 Rapid 0re action, sensible direc-and npw He wont even look at me." <l0°- some «W«U photography and

"Perhaps he saw -me come in. an intelligent male east makeHe's my husband!"—Condon Pass- "Alibi" one you'll remember. The

Mr.Hearty Appvllte

Ford waved his hand

women are negligible.; If Chester Morris deserves star-duiu'v laut«U for hi? wnrk,'u dpe*

ant! Roland West, diminutive director ofgrinned in farewell. Be had 'col- "Alibi," who -has -turned out as neat

ilected for his old" Wayside Inn in a piece ot goo* ««tertainaent you'll

testimony of the Nelson. Jean Jtfeobsen. Claire Nel-and play, prop- sun, Dorothy McElhenny. Berend

ll f l f l lb

cheese and a 'dosen church wardenpipes.—New York Tribune.

bodies a vitalwnolesome ?x._, . .erly balanced ahd well regulatefl" Vi.n Ureraen. Jams* Lee. Albert) , ^diet, in charge gf a trained dieti-, Tuiiuue, R«f?ell .Dcnnvnsl'. David,, "Have You Seen My Annt?lian. ipng <^n4c^foj|t|kr (hours gf. BuUour.-Joul Ln'^^«eruice Coup- j visitor (to smallsleep in the opeA air, careful obser-'land, Milton Agr*eB,' Jtohn Agreen,,| p ej e l .

Reynold*. Claire Pfeiffer, e a k ' F r e n c l ivation and examination by th^ real-' Lelanddent doctor and visiting doctors. Martin ^ewconn-r, Joseph Patko,iioin I'trtn Amboy anu New Bruhs- Kenneth Morris. Margaret Black,wick and the! happy association with • jane Copeland. Olga Barnekov,other happy children. Two hun-'Evelyn Howard, Betty Copeland;dred • uiluren returned to horae' Sarah" Holland, Mildred Bowers.where many of them have""very few, Lydia/ Leber, ' Harriet Suott, Johnot tl)< advantages which make for Camp, Georgia lleam, Mrs. Williamhealth and happiness, ready tcr face' UuW and Mrs. John Strome.the' coming winter with ereate*ivigor and1 resistance than ever be-;fore. Many of them were thorough-!ly alive to tlw. benefits of fresh air,Funshiue, propte.r food and rest'as,they • had never been before. They ihad learned many things at cainp1

which would help them to keep

Volstead l*m in AfricaA Transparent Dining-Room. —

We had to eat gar-dinners in North-ern Uganda under.a mosquito net-

boy)—"So, ting tent. Inside u»e tent are Mr.I hear you're leamiag to George Eastman, Osa, Dr. Kaiser

, Peter—"Well—not all of if." —Punch.

Waiting UMSuburban Neighbor ~ "Is Mr.

Jones at home?"Domestic—"No, sir; but III tell

themselves -in better conditionthrough the coming winter. In fact.

Solving * Traffic ProblemOh, bury him deep

In some sftady bower—He drives in the middle

At ten, miles an hour.—•Buffalo Evening-News.

In Lullaby LridThe following preciously preserved

follow-up visits were made through- extract from a love-letter writtenout the winter months to keep watch i home to his wife by a, soldier on ac-of the little summer health ,cru-| live service will evoke tender memo-sadirB. • Iries in thousands of former service

So much for those 200, but there men:found' "Don't send me no more - nagging

4 J dwere 200- more who werethrough, iuediijd. exajnttfition ^V ttrtiWJere, Lettingcounty tuberculosis clinic to be in'^oodT T f i ' 0\ree~ae*d of the camp-life. But because away from home, and I want to en-of limited- and' insufficient;Joy this war in peace." •— Christianequipment, the best thai could be Science Monitor,done for them was to place them up-1on the waiting list, which • meantthat very few of them-were giventhe chawre they needed.

So far this season, 150 children

at It AgainThree persons were dead, and a

fourth was reported in a criticalcondition today as a result ol .a bus-n, 150 ch .

aniong others have already been ei-" band"a attempt to patch up martialamined and placed upon the list to! differences with his wife.—San An-

rtak f th b f i t thi mipartake of the camp benefits thissummer and it is the hope of everywell wisher' at the rtrHdr^n thatnone wjll have to be turned asidefor lack of spac«' or Inadequateequipment.

•onio paper.

High Visibility"I want a, pair ot garters, please."'"Yes, madame. Something like

those you're wearing?" — LondonOpinion. k

Compsiny• , iJOOMMATE WANTED Or Gloria Swaiison GrowU/ MAKE your selection from the i Wouldn't it be awful If the talk-

,./ best grade of trees, plants, and Ing movies should reveal that Bullshrubs. Franklin ''Av«. NUrsery Montana lisps? — Buffalo EveningYards.—Des Moines paper.

i.

K jtnjr Imiui", your> our barn

ile,n>. Don't letIliti trukl net into yourproperty f<ir lack of aK«o«J cxMUlng or protectivepaint.

We'll t«ll ,ou (he beat.We'll *!*> supply tfce ^etkto put U on, U yon ao de-sire.

All the best brands atreasonable prices.

Kefl, * MeAliadea Co.74 SmHk 8t Pettk JUaboy

Auto PartsrIB kirnl )ttu want to

nutke driving whetherfor pleasure ur buabieaa, asuccess. Evcr>ihlag that'sgood at |*-U*-a that U*right.

Cuuie iu ai.j let us fityou out.

McLEODArto Supply Co.

1* Main fU. FkttM aW0ODBR1DOE, V. 1.

know?"

y e g org a , Oa,flow much do you and Philip Percival, Mr. Eastman's

white hunter, The bottles on thetable contain vinegar and olive oil.—Caption in Mart|n Johnson's"Lion."—(Putnam's).

ChampionsNotre Dame is compiling a great j

P R I T A T K

VIOLININSTRUCTION

at•THE MANOR HOUSE*Port Reading Trollry Crossing

SEWAREN

Saturday Afternoons1 - S P. M.

PHONE WOODBRIDGE5 2 1

HENRY HEKSCHGraduate Institute of

ttUSICAL ART, N. T.. C,

"Convenience—4oes-pay-l r •

THE American-home has proved it.5ji? newest conception of convenience —

j ^ n ^ w h e r c y e r needed in the home-is spreadingthroughout the country. :

Architects are incorporating this new idea m Adrplans and specifications. ' ,

However, you don't need to wait to build or re-model to have th* comfort and convenience. **toavailable iday. Let us show you- bow economically thii new'conception of complete telephone comfo/t may beapplied to yout home.

Whatachangemough.telepKonesmakeinahomelYour experiehce with other conveniences shows thatthey will pay for themselves many times over—tohealth, enjoyment and prosperity. •- -

New Jersey Bell Telephone CompanyA ym

basketball ' record, ;him you called. What shall I say iKeogan, coach. TTieyou wanted to botrowt" — London-has won 5* out ofPunch. " h

unfler Georgeiala cage squad

games in the

Knows Ills Gravy"Oli. Mr. Lamebr&ne, you hare

egg spilled all over the front of yourcoat."

"That's all right, I l<Jok well intianything

Pointer.oint

"George, dear, why- do you shutyour eyes so tight when you kiss

gpast three seasons. —- Chattanoogapaper . . • - • ,

me?":ytng da

Flamingo,you're Greta Garbo."—Denlson

\ Small Oame"Life's a comic buBiness. Before

the war I waa a professional ele-phant hunter."

"Really! And what are you do-ing now!1'

"Trying io< sell inieet powder."—•Punch. '

SUpplng Back 1Large hats are to be.worn by

Wr'tmnHte-nBte'to'-wUwomen are losing

Weekl;jBaahoSff,-^;"

for

Printing

P H O N I 1 4 0 0

. " • & • - ; ' - ,

MACK PRESS, InC .

\ • / • • • . "

\ ; '

The Cleanerthat gets ALL the dirt

VHpHERE are two Hoover models Both have the special,* Hoover cleaning feature — Positive Agitation — whichpicks up surface dust and tint, loosens and extract* the em-

, lidded grit The large model sells for $75 cash and the- small size for $59.50. ?erm« prices are a tittle higher.

t We demonstrate the Hoover without charge. There'sno obligation to purchase. Wt'lJ call and show you bowquickly and how thoroughly your most soiled rug can beetetaed. We'll/i«wrov«r your oM electric cleiaer^wi ifyou'U trade it in to us, we'll sell you a Hoover at a worth-while reduction. , • *-

You may pay for it in installments$5 down, and you harp the Hoover

: tg wort for you, f/ien $5* « month.

PVBOC®SEKVIGE

: ' 7 ; i r . • • • * [ • •

THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, APRIL t», Three 'ffl

Woman's ClubWell Representedat District Confab

,,.„ IIIIMIIIICTB of the Wood-.Woman1* Club attended the |[Hstilrt Convention of the I

'f.,i^ht ffTfft^** FyflHiut'itiu" 'ur*

Blazer Stripes Are Worn Over WMte Frocks

| | | ( h jit Freehold today. Mra.ini, i,. Swan, president of the', llntd Woman's Club, pre*tded'a,t

IIIHIDIIIK cession which opened1(! ,,'rior.k. The morning pro-

,,,., mi lulled ft welcoming addressU,., swan , reports ot dub. prenl-

.1|t;i mill art address by Mrs.' L. C.,1,1, ^miihern v lw-pres ldent of

,,' iL^nciiitcd clubs.!II,,. afternoon session began at,,.!,,,i; with a reading;' on "Hls-

rjl ,1. Miiiiniimtli" by Mrs, SamuelH rowiut. Mi's. Theodofe/liewia' i .. iifriiold club saris a group,,„.;,! s.'irrtiuns. Mrs, L. y . Huh-

nii !.|ini;o. The session eiide'd with, n i ; fiiiiulnji by the Spring Lake

:,,i,,,III'W Club. The secretary fori iinvihl Inn wan Mr*. J. p . . T u l -„, ih. Ued Hank club. -.

•pi,, i ich^ation from tne tocal.clull,.1,,,!,.,! iht> following:

M, \ . i'. iitimloiuli, Mi;*1.' Whlt-soii, Mrs. M. H a h i e n , Mrs.

Mrs. E d w i y d Mar-'Hrewateis^Al

,'.",',!,•'," nlsbrow, Mrs. O. W. Ran-, ,,T Mis. Jnmea MucCrory, Mrs. fc,II i',n>ntiui. Mrs. A. A. Buird, Mra.

• ) '

M R M ' H I N Tst.-nk Vvin\

Should Boy Break DateWith His Girl Friend

to Oblige Relatives?mid \V*torVn'ft*

l'liUMi|>|ile Sinwberry

S«l«u)

I u«

tt) YlittJjMAfriend laka a ba«•of.o'B* young lady, if

Rather n nlebl»n beginning to p r o b , b l > a t « "In wronp;- which every way ! »rfthis dinner mt nu, t int It? And. »n r , '

DiBAR KlRQINl.Jt

relatlvott? thatwith h<-r. ahould

•«r, I'll talc a fttane*.

arUtocratlc . ending. Never mind.The dTsnert can be made th« day be-fore, It you like, and Rtlll be good,or pnimgli may be made for twomeals.

THIS WFEITS RKXIPKS .•otntoro en CMmfole—These are

the same as srallopM notatoM, Te«l i » r t ln.»n enteriHlnmBnt atand sliee pofato«« thin and put Into church. He wa» solng with

LEHU 1 »m t to me and dot* what I a«k htm toa girl 10 jrwr* old and hav« been ] unlen* ha think* It lint right. Dogoing with a IOIIIIK man for overtwo j n r t we UP re going awayto iinnd Uw?Vta(*r hollihyt, butthe pwfto * • Were fcdlriir to visitcams to my home Inatead. • Since

weren't gottlK I decided to take

I,

\v Von' i i l H f .

I'. J

Hreintn, Mrs,Mrs.'Cliarjeit

, DOIltttO.

E.

CAMPFIRE GIRLSHOLD CARD PARTY;

Ih, li-iniuois Troop of CHinp KlreIi, ni ;t successful curd party

ii,, huinr o[ Mra. K. I'\ Hunt, ot, inaii street, last Krlday evening.

i;iiilr.-t were In play. TJie door',.,. WUK uwtiuUd to J * I B Cscllta

IIILIIH. Miss 'Ethel Hunt antlSin it Ii received the non-playerH1

-,:-ils. Prt7.es In the gamed were,inl, il to the fo l lowing:I•tiiDchli;: Mm. R.' A, Wlngler , J.Hunt. Vincent Biros, ^fre. N. 01-

i Mrs. diaries Nelgort, Ceciliaii, John Kalamen, , Ellen

jHunt Mra. A. Hollia, Mrs. S.. Han"1 II silbermann, Mrs. H. J. Otllls,

H. t'etersen, Mrs, S. Jensen,iri Hunt, Albert Hunt, Charles

ii-Tan: Joseph Zegs, ~Mi!dredOtto Hunt, Florence Corfleld,

us Fltipaklck, Maynard Hunt,IIn Lewis.

13} hVVY (.'IiAIHH

(Oittrnl •I'TPHS riuhl«i Kxpert)

W K are Hfiuin fining

a buttered-taking tilth. Scald milkenough to cover fbtatpes, iheltlrig a

I tablespoon of butter in It- Salt fchd.pepper, the potato'**, pour the milkjoTM, Kijrlnklf bread or crackercrumbs on top and cook In Oven fora n h o u r . ••• .

Pineapple Strawberry Bavarian —.iSoak five teaspoon*, of gelatin in1

; one-fourth' cup CiJId water for flveiminutes. Urine:,to. boiling, one and!

,one-fjourth cups crushed pineapple, I.one' and one-fourth cup* strawberr-;rles, one-third cup sugar and pour

,c^-_«ai--8^==B=—-—^»—. .. mm ... • r - ^ i [over gelatin, stirring*until dissolved.. •. • • • , ^ ^ i ^ ^ ^ ^ ' ^ ^ ^ ? ' ^ ^ ^ ^ '-'Letcbol, and when Ju»t lienlnnlns

, ' ' • • ' • ito thicken', add one cup heavy beatenle«s frock, under, the bright1 red-are a powder blue In the wider cream-. Serve very cold. Serve*,Jacket; with,; the red Incorporated Btrlpe, onragff,. yeltow ana black In eight. Used ennnfed ptireaitple. The

meuntiyfcl* mother ask-ed hint to tikeher to Ttatt »'relatlvt>. He "w«ntAnd nelt «ft» at bdme. • Do youthink ttitl la rlnht? Once, beforeI rtayed at *eroe wheriiil* cousinand her huiband uanted, to g* tnan entertainment. Kl« cousin4o9»- not live near here and onlygel* toriajt them about twjee a-yw»r. Would you pleau tell m>If you ,wouH «T»THI; to him abouttt or 1««V8 it go? Ha. Is very nood

Movie Fashion*

•: areson.

dence axbut lately

In'" the frock in pipings or Incrus-whlte sea- tntlons', is D rival to the w.hlte frock

tn evl-.wltlia

While Is always(iach Huiimicr approaches,

it se'einVto be settinR cnltwtion

the narrower,very

The cout Is straight fresh pineapple, unless cooked, does

nuH'c and moi-c, »o. It Influences HUIHII exclusive shops had tteverything pnm.s, tweeds, eVery of white with If Jubut, and outlineconceivable fabric in one tone, hats of thfi akirt yoke p.ped in butterand>shot>H. Kvtrything except the- jellow, the- color or the cyped en-troslery, wliich Mill remains piin- semble coat." Worn.with a matchingcipally Riinbui'ii. ' Hut white unre- yellow felt hat and yellow >)fi|Kplleved IE an •rylns-nn-Btt-Rtttrto-the shoes,"tt mafle a' mm"sTrTkiiig "coa-iimjorlty of women, BO we find lt tume. ^_

Itfcrt o r ColorBut It is In the gay, blazer stripe

coata and jackets posed over thewhite frock that the greatest riot ofcolor Is seVnv Many variations ofstripes In a large rang?-of interest-inR colbrs are offered In these eol-

. line, very simple In treatment, Its.not allow the gelatin to harden. |Us yellow coat this seaKon. A only trim being bands of self fabric

charming ensemble shown In the ! reversely u*ed. A White hat and What Tin"* Tertiw Meanof one of New York's

iliihint

i

vivid colors. : IJutifr and lemon yel-low with .white JIH> much In evidence. An nil white cont In en-livened with a yellow Bcarf, or thewhlt# frock IH touched up with yel-low pipings or hows and btlt withyellow lnciUBlatioiis. Bright red Is

white shoe* accolnpuuied. this cos-tume.

The second model shows a jacket green color" UHuafly" spinach,of the blazer striped in dark blue, I fricasaee - - Meat brownedyellow, red and white, suggesting'Eeared and tften Btewed.rfgtmental colors. White turned i onlartlne Veal, chicken,&*•* ^JL! e^i r_J. t : v e r B - 1

Rn r t .wh ' t«.other white meat_bonejL.-Ue.d..cuffs are.useDTTdrTTTim. A bit of t l i e B e l v e ( j P O u

Jthe frock at the fieekllne and tie.White hat and shoes complementthe ensemble. '

Florentine • - In Florentine style,

or iand

lined In >he way to «wrtYcn-the l«cHons:white coHtutiie, also blue and gr^en. especially adapted to wear with the

An unuBUal coat for country wear,at the rlgh ., ahowa wide, blazerstripes In red, while navy and . , „ „ , „, „ — „ „,...peach, the stripes running -In width m a t o e S i a 8 (n tt casserole •"IRIT.

-—JVit tv* variety otfinely cut vegetable*.

Mignons — Small piece's mich asenderloln of beet.

Pate de tola gris—Small pie of' oose livers.

l'llaf or Pilau—With rice-and. to-

from aniuclr

rn Inc.. jind a quarter to. an! QUpneiie8—Meat, liver.- fish or po-M a halt. The novelty Heart, t^toes cTfoppefl" anffinpTy spasoned

r, . , . . , . , t , . . - - - .employing a horizontal treatment,' n d roiie<j i n t 0 balls or boulettesBut tt Is in the ensemble that white frock. Take, for Instance, the'accents the coat. Rose be.lge h a t " r p " e o

white exploits Itself with the great- very youthful sports- coat shown at land shioes are worn with this cos-est riot ot color, Tlie white mleeve-the left, of the sketch. The colors, tume. , | «i

PETER'S ADVENTURES|.tft-l.anded Oompllroeiit A THOl<;HT IN TIME Invitediiiinspireii that Mr. George » T Gander's ti'ueetlon, Gobbler irlenos

i. t-hwin, take lt from the adver- iVgrew very ansry, . hig watttes w i t h

,nivnt, Is never bored from a growing as red as tire. "1 am speak- Bot I i l t o a n argument with my com-i,k. If some night club wants to jig of that very Turkey, Gander,"

i iiB a price to Indorse It In that r.piied Vie. "That—that—that"—-limn v/( are willing to sayjhat Oobblec stammered and stuttered,

looking back- i walked and _walked,and'here I am." • • •I "On the way home I thought ofwhat a tool I had been—looking fortrouble and then falling into It as

For wheti Ime and some of my wild

to -go1 for a, walk 1 fell Inthe plan all right, but Boon I £ » , £ « „ , w i t 8 t o g e t h e r r k n e w

well enough where it was that lead-er had been bound to market, of fl*vorf»

ulncedi ,uwr-.are bored by t

W h e > • - - •vr httvu been borednt-the North Pole.-

| | ] . New York World.

This and•w*«.

rying to think of '(fomethinK

AwfulMistress—"Did

oinethinn In the kitchen just now?>.Servant (with some emotion)

a .week-, <irned traitor. Peter spt|3i«-«ooth-i--P- A. In i,g|j-: , , t |

| "There, there! .Yolt afiesafe ROW— - and you have learned a lesson, and,Oman after all, that Is worth something.

hear you break t , o b b i e r . You have, found out itnt,on tu.t nnw? foesn>t p a } . t 0 . | ) e t o 0 trUating—VOU

h&va said so .vournelt. We know all;Y.siu ^ my (sniff) engagement R b o u t y o u r b e l n ( , l e d w l t n the/lock!jrllh (lie milkman;"—London Pass- t o t h e alaunhter. dander saw youi

and told us. and we were just get-(Show.

Him to Torture Your Wife y o u"I'm Imylnfc a washing-machine J w

(M my wife as a birthday present.","That will be a aurprlw, eh"Yes.

few car.Dr.

us, and we were justto mourn your loss

turn up safe and sound. Howyou ever -manage to escaiie?"

Gobbler chuckled.quite! She's expecting a1 "I'll tell you what isaved my neck.—ChrlttlaV Science Mon- It waa a thought in time!" cried ho.

Well, when that wicked leader\

Regular Church Services

1U'V,

. St. JamtsIt. J. O'FMTell, paHtor

Sunday Service*[Masses at 7:30, 9:00 and 10:30

.7:30.

Trinity EpiscopalRev. J. B. Myers, Pastor

course:

Style Whimsies?The "caterpillar sandal" is the

very newest wrinkle in Paris foot-wear. *\>r morning or beach wearthe sole is made of wood, fn threeparts, very light, ajid practically lm-

nd boiled. Served as garnish.Tlagout — Stewed meat In highly

eaaetted jjuise or gravy,Pfichauffe — Warmed over meat

31a.li. v.Hemnulade —, With Remoulade

auce, a mayonnalsfe with pickles,aperB, parsley, tarragon and «»-,hovy essence.

Iloulftd* — Eollad, atulted andoasted meat, as flank of beef.

SaHpcon—A mixture of fruits In asyrup or highly seasoned;me«t mixed with a thick!

ewce.S a | m ( — A ragout of roasted and

tewed game or meat, well seaBoned.Soubise — With" #hlte- onion, or

nion flavor. 'Supreme — White sauCe made

ronv cream and chicken stock.Tartare—With Tartare sauce.

g oyou think If I k«*P on letting himtake otk*r» like that It wouldc'tua* a good many dinputwi withhis pnople a f t * we are married?We haw p*lanatd on Kfttlnx mar-ried In August., I1I.ONDY. "

Wellk tllondy, dear, the la*t ques-tion depends largely oiy you. If youare unselfish and thoughtful for 4il«people, cememb«r!ng that after- all .he belpnga to them, t^o, you won'thave any trouble, But if you insist6ii having liim all to yourself, re-Kardleas, you probably will. I pre-snhie his mother thoiiRht 4hat as .your contoinplalefl trip w»)t canceled,It wn*n't st) Important that h,e '1)«with you. a'ndm a»ked him to earort'her. And the other time, henatur*ally wfcnted i o be with the cousins

.that he.orily we« ocr.Halrfn«lly. . It 'j would hav*'been'*!«• If their prans

could have lnclfc<frd you, but per-haps that couldn't be done, t don'tbelieve I would, speak to him aboutIt if I were you. -

* « • ' "' •"DEAfl VIRGINIA, LEE: I ani

golnff with a fellow whose mdtherdocs not IIko me because peopleliav:e told her tfilnns about mewhich were not true. How can Imake her like me'.' 1 Imvft- beengoln* with hlni for over a year,but she dni-it not know. WouM, It-he all limit for her to break usup n o w ••*•*•' r. A. C." , . ,

If sin thinks you. arc a bad Influ-imce n\\p could try to "bruak you-.up".any time, hut mothers usuallyfall In their effort* In this direction.Do vim knawUtmutliDi' iwsonitllyTIf so, why-mH'go (oact1 hor occasion-ally nnd show her what kind of ajiirl you are? ' -

IlafflliiK a W'ltard1'rofessor Einstein may be a woii-

dor when It comes to handlingtheories, but we often wonder how.he makes out when he gets upagainst a reality of such substanceas an Income-tax blank. — AlbanyKnickerbocker Press.

i

Vol-au-vent — Light puff pastrypervious to dampness. Leather ur- baked in a mold and {Hied with,rounded with aluminium, gilded of chlcken^^weetbreads or othei dell-lacquered, Is used for afternoon o r ? a t e " ° "evening,

. • • •Wear Jade jewelry and jade green '

pumps with the smart summer cos-lJ.

By

IS tlllB Asent in K xi'aiiiliiiiillii'i'

l l i f HKxIel s u t c l \ ImikMjust Htepped out or itframe. Sweet, Isn't It?

Long, dainty line nifties

ilay?if she

|the evenlnx Inxk ni' thrKee. Plcturwl is iy ueKrnfltetl shadow hirr anilvelvet. Marj- Hiiun Is tlu'miss uvcnl lug* thr i unri-i'litiii.

<re ofotrhiil

Keep the Home Fires'Sacred to the meniiry of James. . ., who died August 6,• 1S0O.

tume, sayB Paris. This comblna-: His widow, who mourns as one whotton is particularly effective with a'can be comforted, aged 24, anawhite dress. - I possessing • every qualification for a

" jgood wife, llres at V40 street,3 CHILDRENIUUN DOWN- t this village;" — Tombstone Inscrlp-

BY TRICK .AT PLAY ition quoted In air unidentified clip-—Omaha Bee-News.' pinsj forwarded by a reader. ' ,>

School after 9:00 t'dock

Baptlam* at 3:00 P. M.Kvmlng De.VOtlou«"-7:30

••••k-day Bervleea—Mnweaiily Day Service*—MaSscs7:00 o'clOCX.

[First Frldav*—MasB 7:S0 o'olocit.>ntension* heard on Saturdayernnon* and eyenlng* 3 to 8 »ndo 'J o'clock. Eve* of First Frldayi

\6 al! Holy Day; of Obligations aiSaturday*.

Parish Swletletlosary Society: Communion First

||ri'lay of month.' Name: Communion Sccoid

|nday of month.Smlillty of BlesJied Virgin Mary:

mlon Thlri Sund«y of month.ICirls of the Pariah: Communion

urth Sunday ot month.

/ WALKEO AMD ...^L/VO HE&E /AM.

rade on the rifiht as .to whether wewere traveling eiiKt or weBt.

fc , "The two of us iuBt couldn't8.A. J*.—Celebration of Holy En* a g r e e an<1 flnany i thought of a way

charltt. " to prove I knew best. \ would walk10 A. M.—Church School. ( n e w a y i. declared to be west, and1

11 A. M,—F(r*t »nd third Sunday lt> w h e n n l g l u c a m e_ t u e g u I l w e p t to ," - - •• ~ "' be

11 A. M , F ( r * t a d lt> w hof each month, celebration of Holy B l ee jJEucharist and sermon; second anafourth Sundays, morning ^ayer andand r i g h t

l n fI;ont o ( m eb u t i f h p s a n k t 0 r e s t

fifth Sunday,m v b a c k ( w u l l l t l b e w r o n g

tp, M.—Evenion*.

Avenel Presbyterian3 p M.. — Sunday School at the

Avermi School, every Sunday. 'alighted to the"4:15 P. W-—Junto* Christian En- "

t yboy—Once you nuike up your'mindyou are soing t» »l« a thing, do It,'and off 'I tlew. without saying- an-other word and before the leaderfeaw me.[ ""A short way from the flock I

ground and without

leavor.7:16 P.

Service*.8 P. I

Service*.

M.—Christian Etld&avor

— Regular

PresbyterianItev. Ernest Abbott, Pastor

|-Tlie topic ot the Sunday mornlnsprmon will bp: "The Story of

liih". ,' ' ">••The Young I'feople's Church serv-ut 7 o'clock Sunday evening will

flude a discussion lead by the|tor. The theme will be "Chrls-[>ity and Service".The Young Men's Fellowship will« at the Presbyterian ¥ t t n s e

(nduy evening ut 8 o'clock. Therebe a discussion on "Advertis-

< hrlstlan Science SocietySewaTen

A brunch Of The Mother Church,The M m Church of Christ,tilt, In BoRton, Massachuaetts,

Sunday School —Sunday

Sclen-

School — 9 : 3 0 i Ai ' u - oService — 11:00 A. M.

P MTihuraday. —r ILeultitS Room,

, B:60 P. M-

St. Andrew's

J id week serviceat 8 o'clock.

Wednesday eve-

3:00

Rev. B. i- O'PairteU, pastor.Services at Public School. Mass

at. 9 A. M. Sunday morning.

Si. Cecilia's(ISBLIN)

Methodut EpiscopalA. Boylan Plti derald, "

10 A. m,-Sunday SchooU ..'—...A. M. — Morning Worship.

ni top.|c, "Sin Supplanted".6 I', M. — Evening Service.m topic, "Tim Shortne»B of

Comlev. Wm. V. D. Strongi PMUW

1:46 A. M.—Sunday School.| l A. M.—Morning Worship.

P. M.—chrlitiao Endeavor.P. M,—Evenlng Wowhlp.

rednesday, 8 P. U. — ' ~~ "(y ol the bible.

St. JVicholai, (FORDS)

A. M:| P M.

10Tr«a roa*.

moralm-

St. Anthonys(PORT RJIA01NG)

f QAlaSi4, pastorChurch on" Woodbrldge avenue.

Masses at 6:30 A. M.'and 9:30 A. M.Sunday morning. •

Evening Service, 7,;4S P. M.

Oar lady of Peace(FORM) „

E*V- O. II. lleagfln, pastor.Masws on -Sunday morning at 8

and 10 o'clock. Sunday School lol-tnwlne first mass.towing n i ^ w ^ g o > c l o c k

Phone Perth Amboy1 2 9 9 - *

PERTH AMBOYUPHOLSTERED

FURNITURECOMPANY

pPpai>-ina Re-CoveringLiving Room Set*

A > -Slip Covers Made to Order

254 MADISON AVE.NKAIt M.VHKBT ST.

•OPBN'KVIOXINCS TIL N1NK

NO HAY FEVERin 1929

It ic'iH be your men fault ifyou have Hay Fever l/tu y«or

ASTHMACAN BK STOPPED IF YOU ABE.WILLING TO ULLP YOUKMELV

I ' H O N K 4IS

NEW Y O R KCANDY KITCHEN

PROMPT DELIVERIES

Our Candies &. Ice CreamREACH THE HEART

PURE WHOLESOMEDELICIOUS

63 Main St., Woodbridge

DINE AND DANCE

THE LIBERTY HOTELAND

RESTAURANTUoonti By Day Or Week

Wm. Haug, Proprietor2B2 Ainboy Avenue

Phone 1158 Woodbrldge

616la a Prescription for

Colds, Grippe, Flu, D«ngne,Bilious Fever and MalariaIt la the most speedy remedy known

FRESH EGGSFOR SALE

86 Prospect Ave, WoodbrldgeK, HUHSTER

Absolute proof of thew statetnehts is mailedto you upon request

Hayward's PreparationDepwdable-yReliabh—Effective

Can be taken by Men, Vomen, Children—it containsno Jhab it-forming drugs

DO NOT DELAY v WRITE TODAV

Send no money—full particulars will be mealed to youReliable-references in your community are given

ADDRESS i

HAYWARD DRUG CO., INC.110-116 Nassau Street New York, N. Y.

r(FORM)

E . A . F I N NFUN'tiltAli DIHECTOR

AND

"The BetterPHONE 78*

STB^ET

J*

158

THE PERTH AMBOYGAS LIGHT COMPANY

206 SMITH STREET, PERTH AMBOY

Heating and Cooking Appliances

Rind Automatic and Storage Healer Heaters

7 W w P w i i i Gas

C«n»D«n-Rit R»di»m Log*

Telephone 143 Perth Amboy

Phone 142K 'Where Quality RuksI5fi -160 Smith Si ftrth Ambqy. NJ.

NOTIONS

FANCY

GOODS

OR

H

B

s

FOB

MEN

WOMEN

AND

CHILDREN

5K Whenj&ttlsty Rules196-160 Smith St Berth Amboy.lU

WE SERVEWE DELIVER

CASTIE'S ICE CREAM, PUREST BECAUSE HEATHIZED

W O N E YOIJIR ORDER

* Hoaglarid's Qwifectionery, Largett A**ortmenjl ofrlavort in Town

SCHOOL AND JAMES $TS, t• • i < • • • ( , » • ' ' . • ' • " , , , : . / . . - • '

TELEPHONi;—WOODBRIDGE 244

;v.,.;#"'... -•.?.*}!<••

* ' . . ••',: • . . ! ' , i , i ; ' j & t",1 ' •>. '•• )• •,•':-,:''(«••' ' j : * ; .

THE WOODB* LEADER, FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1959

THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER SPRING PUNTING IN MEXICO

unfit* 1«pernVtt«<i pro-'«»<1

froth r*»<ier»v «c|»r««tilv(toftm at kntertft *n> lpTlt«d. but no. Monymqur U'Urt will! b*

~" Woodkridfe. N. J.,

Grade Crossings Must Go!The vrevk ot th^. VVush'ington-New York, express «t

lselin croSstiiK oVtiiePtfnrfsyiv&rtia Railroad drives home Veryforcibly the mc,-*..ty of the grader crossing, <riimrna<iorijfrarn vrfnch the Uad%r Has been advocating for *•

"Grade '(.Vising? Must Go*', the slogao 'ap^peariftg everyweek at .the top of the first page, will stayikejre until the fastgrade crossing in Woodbridge Township has b«en eltrpin^ted!

Most of us are accustomed to think of grade crossingsdangerous to motorists and pedestrians only.. We feel that ad\hug* ancL. heavy .an object at- ai Railroad train will never com*,

•out sec*ond best in an encounter with any machine which maybe stalled on a Crossing. . , . , : , :

Monday's near-tragedy proved vthat "passenger trafficthe Pennsylvatu.- and the Central • Railroad is decidedly dan-gi-rous and unsafe, so long as grade crossings are allowed toexist. >

Only the1 hand of» God-prevented a terrible catastropheV.t lselin on Monday. Had the speeding train left the tracksi.nd. plunged down the thirty foot Embankment at th / r ight of

- tb.e.lxackx.in5tea| of falling to the' track level on the left, manyjiassengers would h«ve been killed or badly.iiijured. • ••

" Wiiflf mtgiTl tqryi! boeit tr»i:.worHt railroad wrecki

publie/'to | ) 0 ^ H T A I ; K 1 N f ; T o x iS ,1Uoted as sayinc that he fads it quite Uiter-'j Safetto the school Children, to the passengers and D estini; to h. Mind. He had sij-ht (or many years, and gradually tost —Ovid.

] _ . . m ' • • _____. La... - ._ -_ -_ . - * - . ' . D A tp f ipba • •estini; to h. l.hnd. He had sialu for many y a r , gHe finds it e«.<ier to concentrate when' he is unable to see. He works

would have happened, if a w«t-bound express, going" at highjipood, had struck the capsized locomotive of the east-boundinun just HS the latter hH the west-bound tracks. j

Death would have been rampant then, and the Pennsyl-V;IIILI RaUrpaoLvvquld have lost possibly a million Dollars inadjustment of claims, wreckedToTliiig stockriiaiTiajted roadbed. and costly delay due* to its entire main line being blockedand demoralized. . ' - • , 4

Must so terrible a tragedy occur beforeHi^Pwnisylvania'Railroad and our ice-water throwing legislators wake up tothelt*aJizastion that grade crossings MUST BE ELIMINATED?„ . Do,we have to wait until the long list of orphans and

horizon and beyond ? •Grade crossings are unfair to the motoring

pedestrians,stockholders of the railroad. They are inhumane, obsolete,\[\inconsiderate, a remnant of the horae-and buggy age.<*>-.• They are a constaafc>menace. Death lurks there, biding ihis time, watching and waiting, knowirig that sooner or later j "the fmilities and carelessness in the best of _U5> wjll bring avictim to his eager talons. * ••••

The" waiting-rooms,-flf the, Pennsylvania Railroad havebeen plastered recently with high-priced advertising, tellingthe public at large what "loyal, dutiful, courageous and de-pendable gate and crossing watchmen" are employed by thePennsylvania. Railroad. , >

Look at the police records of our own and-«4her towns.Gate watchmen have been drunk, asleep, slow, careless, oftennegligent. There isn't a grade crossing in the Town«hip thathas hot its history of accidents.

The crossing a t lselin is the worst of the lot, because a ::illrtjbusy highway, teeming with motor traffic over the week-end,intersects the busiest railroad right-of-way in the United

Comprehensive History of StateWill be Compiled by Princeton

Kniitnt'n Fund oi MOO,000 Maktt pIntensive Ten-Year Campaign for the Study

WltUla » t n qrniT«w4ty will begin an . Int^nilTP journal* and u t t , court r.V,'«tudi ot th« history qf New Jersey AeHt, ln»entorie» ind «0 (orll, .u t t e K«Ut of a. l ift from Mr the va«tn«M of this matertM '

ji W. 8mHh,,©r Madlnoti. New geiher Wltfr-the fa« that it ||< , .J e m r . UT. Smith, a graduate of scattered, hlideh, and uncatrioTale and of Hamrfl Law Behool, maket It UnpoMlble to^one ma,

' t o w prtstdekt of lUrrU, Forinsa and tludj' it i l l . The writing of hiJ• Conipany, «f Nur York. Cttx. ha» re- murt.be « matter 6t teB m .»n rv

eeHUr created a tand of $100,000 to lore the general historian r i n> • defray re«earcl\ and publlcatton ex- j lo an authentic Ti|*tory of• ' peniM. country., or'atate, k group of it

l I I * « H * U J B * the M*- tljatora muat have urpparH •

work, which wtll.take i , 0 , 1 ^ ' ^ t b « W*»fe»t Ob>-

urouBBi to a cr,neWi#Ht, IB^ this v_ . .hauttlre survey not oril) the noHtlc.1 graph writer and the generaland economic hlrtory of New Jeraey rtan. The (act that there ftvwill be studied M 4 recorded but baphatard work Ih digests.ali« i l l phases ot the llf«* df its interpreting the primary

' ' has made lit'accurate andglaring owmlslooa.

t history

of his State, he \K deeply con-

make It > « i b i e forfaculty of I'nncetM to

thear

is * New Jerwy »woi- on prtmarr wortet and witatory ia Wentifled ^ " ^ t « -choUrl)

r-

yhtatory ia Wentifled

t the. col6ny andl-.i«onwith the tiietorvIT,. f%mouldn>nrt the'Mi»leM oft r y farultj for

C B. D.Chirks B, Words of WisdomInjustice in th^ r-ml jiroduce* in-

• dependence—Voluiir.

The lure of th« D»rk; Drunkenness is nothingI voluntary madness, -^eneca.

but

AlthOUfth t h e . SPHtrii « ; ; !

herhls- New"Xers%yTltr ctnwp^iT''tttU important and prepare the ground for (1

iind^rtaktaf; history ot the Bute In tiir.-.t v<>nlimU«d tfllort* ' volume*^ In thta final •*,:

'Thf-*<>rk will be donp in a thor- conelusOTs reached by n .•CHthly f<-imtific way. AH hlstor; of the monographs will 1..should b- based upon primary (continued oo pas*- h.. .

Add SlanguageBritish Prof Works on American Dictionary '

4 By HOY i. (iimiONs .convey so concisely this <?wSafety lies in the. middle course.] . ^ - ^ . ^ ^ f f W r T O f y j ° k | n f ^ V J o ' u ^ ^ K V :

/CHICAGO April 18. — Modem!* dictionary 0! American t : . . vhurt fven of j

*7 • i '•neglected lias b H e n

Sufua^

ClUlIdart

lowance for a courageous wWllnV in The dark."a^itotn U»nadult goes tttfnd without much tegretting. But it is • • •**inspiring and encouraging to see a man of brains andacconii'llshnwnts who e»», wbilaJn the dark:..-auty ot life and-reali«e that that beauty ci-naHy dimmed, even by blindness. (

. . . . • • • -«K * — - - •".

r.T u? craw that Mr. TarkWgton U not in as bad ftga hiind man vho is without tunds or special

lal-ntr. He has made a great deal ot moflfy, all t>t <wliR-i- \w has earned honestly >y writing good stories.1

H<- i; able to employ the best eye SpeclatlBi; in the.world to operate, ifl the hope ot partly restoring his,' A Ple«s«iit Snrprlse k

•{'• if iit.i.' to licia!- l.ls stories and to employ help. j , the"will at iheh >•,. K cant i,6 anogfetlier pleasant tabe Mind. Even though the! J o n " I*1** t B e t e " "u , ...rtiai roM, l B u e n of. .ight are m y ' .ood. &&#<** !?_• . ^ " d thl

v youth is rewriting the diction-ary and all the king's philologiBtgand lexicologists can't prevent It.

It may take a century or so toencompass it, Dut the shop girls.andtheir, wise-crackllig boy friend's who

"baloney," "luttarrles"

Lr

"whoopee" today, will havej , , \ h e m0011taln, of truth, T O J » ' « * i n t h P dictionaries of:nerer elimb-ia-valiL— Nietische. ^ i ' 0 T ' •»

TUPTG to no'doubt that U is theyounf: people with their reckless useof all kinds of slang terms who give

their 1 " M . It nmltteA

Dinner Stories

The doctor'snewwife

„ . . . . .. . . ^ _ > "> » -^IZJ:.-:^-.,—

tiiMi.,hur been uatheritu: about him tor years, as bis eyes . .».. . ,- •-. .uluallv , . I You wish to see the doctor? t

1 liavv known manv i.ersons who have committed auldde foi much she said.. "Couldn't you come to-cause-, t ',' • • - , - . - _ _ \ jjnprrow morning?1

Why." said Jones,mtersects the Dusiest raiiroaa ngnt-ot -way in tne L i m e a i j e r s b n g r e s o r i ( o ^ ^ u p o n t h e m o g l u i v i 4 p w 0 M t t o l L one;doctor invStates, II not In t h e World. There IS hardly a time that there O, of the connuonegt causes of suicide \» loss of money. I knew g man I "Oh, yes.

'Hsn't the;

he's in," said thet

__ _ 9 I ? _ . --._ . • . - • - -'»erses-that he had scarcely a nundrtd ffitltlon dollar_ ttr-his

. . _ into "the EnglUk Channel out of one of his private airplanes..Booth Tarkington not only continues ,to live; he continues to enjoy

and you have a

tearing around the Menlo Park curye at seventy miles, an hour,with the crossing hidden until th^y are almost on top of it, , - . , . fc) ft li¥U1B

.. .. . . . • .• j 01 if; ' l i le- AHls life is full of b*auty and intereat, even while his, sight H lack, , i n v - ^ f ! , t w « .Situation which IS an unmitigated 24-hours-a- i n , . l l B a beauUfur world, and a Tarkington now and then reminds at up*- ** t o l ' ° * s -lumauitv' '•• J- ' that K is more beautiful than we had ever believed. ' • i 'When a youim-BM-ti 'fMiHii __i__i_L_- .^ ,1 1 - *__»_*«*_ Ift a ha_. |

i« TAtuiuitiip; as a commuiwy,demand from the Pemisylvama- Raiiroatl, aiv early sbatemeati

So many inen, etc., in Om nei:as to just what steps will be taken to eliminate the crossing ers. for Christmas that a great deal of borrowing-of fi>ftt<h«**"ujdanger at lselin.' - l Is going on-T-Ohio State Journal. • ' ' ' fka;

Middlesex County authorities, who were negligent in al-'lowing A "hump" to remain at the lselin crossing whan the, A college president says the youpg.man's most difficultfJ6nes

Ijtd> t'Uum.Yera de.VenE. K. favors us. with a few so«tal

f l l ' '**•

young" %omcan. is Ifttro- iduced to a bachelor wboQays, "I'm'

! very happy to meet you," she shouldt a g i : n i i H i U k i H' word,, old thing!".

•a Towns—lad? while ouiskalloi; approach a gentleman wHohas coc.r a cropper .on the ic«, sKie

,should- «iy, "How do you do, MrOh, dbi?'t g«t up.'.'

1'eniisylvania ejevated its iracks there, should demand proof problem is choosing^the ^ h t girl to marrj'.. Which proves that;.positive that steps toward^ the crossing, elimination will be the prexy has,funny ideas as to who does the chbosing.—taken without ^lelaj-.. ., T " . ' 1 . ' ••' '• '•

\ THe state Of Sew, Jersey, the goY<ernor; and the' legisla-j Ye*, son, tlje stork is the bird with th.c big bill.r— .ture should1 take action. • T • ' v '•• > •'• '• . s — .—i

rematks, ...riye he*rd a lot about'you," tte weU-kudwn pernofc should1

reply lightly, "We)l, you cant prove1

anything."—Boston Tnweript. ' |

The civic organizations of Ihe Township, Rotary C!ub,:

Lions Clubsj \YorttenV<?lubs, aH^Bhould rise in righteous indig-nation and demand action/, ' < ' , j

The Township Committee has on various occasion^, under jthe leadership of Mayor Ryan, demanded action, and has been'

* promised' temporary pTotertion-ef-p^de»t«a'fl-ti^fflc--atrimpof-1;l a i n p o i n t s . ' • • . '-

The lselin wreck is one that strikes home. It shouldteach the Pennsylvania Railroad that its splendid record oi •safety is in jj^ave danger at crossings where large vehiclesmay lie stalled at any time. , 4 , ' :'

, The elimination of the lselin and other crossings,J£ notonly humane and just, but it is good business. Good business •for the insurance'companies, and for the railroad u well. i

While the lselin wreck, with tragedy miraculously avoid-!ed, is still fresh in our rahida, let's get busy and fight |pr elim-jination. Poisibly the damage sustained-by the P«BOsylv&nia*Railroad, and the black biotch'on its safety record, will pro-jvide a seltish appeal more effective than the weifaTP Of themere motorist and pedegtrian. . . , ' • • ~-\ •

FORLORN FIGURESBy CLIFF McBRIDE

Wky the Miuiiflink?• • . • v . i ., . • • , « > , . . •- .

There are no grade crossings in Newark.There are no grade crossings ia Elizabeth;

There are HO grade crossings in Linden. r

% There are no grade crossings to Rah way.There are no grWe crioasings in Metuchen.

There are no grade crossings in New Pruoswick.TJiere are no grade crossings in Plainfield. H : ',"*''

There grenpgra4ecrQ«iings ini

As yet Europe has not Warned 1U cold apey w»k*k* UnitedBtatea, but probably will as soon JM it tkawe outNashville Banner.

r-' Headed for the Tropkn'. Notice to J4y Chicken Thieti The ear blanltel that you stule!'along yrith the last consign men. o'f,iiwultry from my chicken coop wa»jjan all-wool blanket. If your fort-Uieht. had Dot been blinded with! poison botf-leg liquor you wouldI nave taken my ice machine inan-ad|for where you're goinfc a refrigtra-j Jbr ptanriTBiitfl* In; rtoic *pttroi,f .-t n e than a wool blanket.

I . E. 4. ROBB, ^ —Albion tl'enn.) [>ai«er.

bow Mow*The young married couple were

having a disagreement while awaitlag lunch at a nodem 8oho eating-house. The woman was grumblingbecause they were unable to affordthe luxurious re»uu»ranU which bad'been a feature of their honeymoon.

Webster's dictionary has 1,.obsolete in many*«speci_. ..tng to-Prof. Craigle., Beside

in ll-1-.picturt oflanguage at in* •:

wa* finished In 1828, It wa« ;•<A:. .-t - : iT1"1

platform, pow-wow, punk 111.1:except to » suppltmenwry i-,.:. Not only did makers 0: Acan dictionaries from Wti.»<-ignort? many perfectly goou \can words but they astrit-1:Americanism* ;m ISnglish '(•: -

Professor •Craigie Is Jiert- t<fy all these matters.' A!r*.ihas been at work at ttie Y\.:-oi Chicaso two.years un ; ,-toncal Dictionary of Am^ru.1.li.-!;-. He still hoA-jibout- eu; •oi labor ahead of him, w - :frQui the 17th Centiwy on tt...ot prominent author*, a. •IIIOSA- of minor vriteii, J'1

of travel and u\>newspapere and periodical

sheet* and 'te;.* t<>I'rofesfor Crafgle knows

tt'id 0/*. A3 Of 1 1' proft-rffc: :ford, he wa* knlghKsd ' :

i-t for tvU work in hri:Oxf.nd dtetfonju°y. to cui_.Tlie Oxford 4leUptaarv c. .rword of' 414,835 words, «."ODO.000 letters anil ftgur.••

Sir

' ingantic usk andlhe'sin hit American dictlonar>rait of w.oris "SB* exprfT-never aaw Uiemselves ia •.'.print before, Amoni the'e.'i4hich .were once alang butwill be coustdered sucli i-are "in HmKe orie's i»ik." .'oft," "to trade~on."'f*n> U»-.-tut,1 "boM,1' "io catch i>;.cave- In,*" 710 ttft the nu^-ltav.'' a i:»od time,'' "to: ri;l.II >-. " "Ib Mump." "l"ntl-• 1 ..u.-rc rueal*" . "'almi?!lt.' • •find "(i^iU place."

And tiiat'a owly thr'^ii i1-may UKe aome few )***?•*• 1 "8*t tlr«," "hunk;"boio." ( "bimbo,'' "hot d>'-the long ItoU ol other i-^'

ot the atmo *-ud '

ihe «helkbound to get there.

You can t h**eeverjnrhereero»aly.

ya brass band

tslr WillUuuA., U. D., UU. B.

life #e«l «ptrit to ti»e languaje. and Pun«h.uukei it an vtircttve medium fortcpnvtyln* thought, according toProfesaor Sir William A. Crai*W.'

CelebHty {«/Wr length)/lot the coanrmMoii)—"uV1-

aboot me; let ua talkaelL T«l! »e—what dotfot mi part JUi the o

| o , " «aid the mat, „

. ^ K 1 ' .. . w a .. • ^»*Wn*tT. Who is now nor iw•Ob, yea, I cw," an»pt h i . wife, an AwerieM dictlon*rv at the

Tvp got it "with msnOjSF-OB my veralty oi CWcagofi_Ultf."Wf>___r____<a WdAklv 1 1 . ' . •_. tZL . '.. .

Hurtinj M U M ' I VtMtlwiMother (to n u l l daughter Just

home (rom a vtolt)—"I am aorry tostr your ««w gives a r«ry poor a t

t of you: 'Naujhty' untidy, un-

__ truth!Protestor Craigie U refiarded M

the sretMit dleiionary-maker In theworld, «B«'b« ought 10 know.

your!„,»-, wUlHe (tired of waiting 1

ahe haa. I o«V wUh'sii% chance to prob»«' H'Transcript.

imp—'."Dautbter — "Does auntie

write all that?"Mother—"Yet."* •

. Daughter (a«dly)-^"Wl-tt a thingto say u> 1 chUd'i own mbtber!"—Credltiwl to "E»b»iige" by thiChrl8tl*p * - - • • - * ¥

0 ,

apt .and jrtn e admtb« moat'atrlct jurUt

'Toe real t M ( of

HeUutwru* .Hoovi

for' 1"CH> <

many current » d waaafterwrnrda Mayorjfe extremely —New York Etwjlog Post

admiration ot even'•-'-* • '— ' b t h(k(t'Bt»>l'-

• la aaid n>

i-u lulu

l h e

to lbs a l«u

«( com

now DPhave

VTHfc WOODBR1DGE LEAbER, FRIDAY, APRIL 19,Pajre JHve

JONS CLUBURGE JUNIOR

TRAFFICCOPS.limi'ir l'«llc« Patrol, to be„,, of i'ubllc school thlldren,

Sn&xxxxxzxzxixzxxxxz

ii,,. wo o a D r ia^fHstts„ .,i,i <>f Police Chief P, W.

|,i,-|,lt>, according to preliminaryniinoiinced at the meeting of

C','-'i.iniis Club Monday evening. A( l l ,iiin' of three members of'ttie, will nli includes Presidentrj I'ord, Steve WyH and Peter

(,n;,,n will confer with Chief•|,iiv and ask his aid in .carrying

: l^ iiiatructlon program.inll president VoTA, wTio broughtnut tor linfore the club, said he

, ii'il that Township officials,,,I,I indorse tlie plan, #hich In-,,l, s ;i regular instruction periodIn- in lit Weekly. - Pupils-will-not•i»i(i'(l tn do any traffic duty as,.i loinciB, but jylll keep their: in.iii's from creasing -Btrcetsninnlnp Into them nn their wa\-

'ml from Behoof. Thfe Lions Ciubilimiiif a prize or prizes for yte

6rl; - 'i hih voted to Accept the, in-

tiiiinn of the Rotary Club to bequests >at .a dinner in the

iili* III'H'B Club n€>it Th'ursday eve-i A - bowling match en the.•.••'••men's Club alleys will follow.An invitation front the T, own shipiiimiiiri'. asking that 'the club beh :•UI'HIS at n dinner Ip the

is Club Monday evening, wasnil and accepted.

I .inns will discontinue theirr bowling matches after theiri ni'Ni Thursday evening.

JTh' club - voted . not to .send ai l i . i ' i - to lln> annual convention

i.rlil in I.ouiHvllJje. K}\, tht»'I'ln1 Ways and Means Cojn-

waa Instructed to preparein sending" delegates to ilT]

^ ^ , ^ 3 k :

... , .,+,: » ;

To Us This WeekWe have on hand over Fifty

Trade-ins as the Result of the,V,J

.'.V

ini for tli<? remainder of the

Cggs" Love Escapesjijury When Cross Country

B u s lunw T » r U ev A. Love, son of 9upervlR-

I'rinclpal John H. Love, of theiip schools, narrowly escaped

injury last Saturday When ain which he was riding over-

mil near Butler, Indiana. Mr.WHS returning home after a

with relatlvesMn Evanston, HI. {ire. woo forty passengers In the

r, wtw» H Bkidde4 off tbaroad-loverturned in a, ditch. All! [il serious Injury.• Inis driver was later arrested '

Joniiivllle, {4. J., by a State .po-iicr for npeedtng downhill

lie hlstfar was "out ot gear?'

IN HISTORYOur Used Car Prices have been so RADICALLYREDUCED that even Used Car Dealers will flock

REAL SPRING

•-' .-f-LX-J^i.-jjlit

. : - . * - . . - ^ i . - _ V -,-..- •

A FEW OF OUR LISTINGS

t)e Wotiiao's Club ~ ' !Meet at Home of !Miss Muriel Dixon

Little Woman's Club willlilt- iirtfPiioon fit thelnjtnr of

Dickmin, on Cedar avenue,hftlnf, last week wan held atuue of liurbara Grow, daugh-Mr. and Mrs. J.. E. Grow, of

tie avenue.jjoso present were: Mrs. Martin

fconier, Barbara Stern, Jane iMuriel pickson, Barbara Var-

Mnrjorlf Newcomer, Olivehcei. Mary Smith, Ann' BaWf-[and l'en and- Ann Concannon.

1929 Kksh Advanced " 4 i " Six SedanRun400 Miles

1921! Little Marmon Collapsible Coupe; In Perfect Condition

1927 Jordan Sedan1927 Chrysler "70" Roadster **

Newly Painted

1928 Chrysler "52" Sedan1926 Nash Sedan1926 Hupmobile Sedan1926 Master Six Buick Coupe ,1926 Willys-Knight Roadster ^1926 Locomobile Junior Eight Roadster

'T• •" ' • • " 1 .

SMALL DOWN PAYMENTS.These fine automobiles may be bought at terms speci-

fically adapted to fit your particular income—so that you

can pay without any strain on the family budget, while youare enjoying the luxury and comfort of your car.

). P. Women to HoldLuncheon May 7th.

be Spring Luncheon of theDun's Uepubllcun Club of theRxhip will be held at.tlifl .Madi IVa Itoom on Tuesday, May 7th.

nat ions should be made with;{jArtluir J lunl , of Grove avenue,

has churu<* of the arrange-

rial nii'iiihL'i's of tlu* ellin arfl'iiiK' the meeting ofjJJig .Mid-1

t\ Cuuiiiy Wimvun'sf

iychology Class

Century Motors, Inc.i 310-312 High St.OPEN EVENINGS . Perth Amboy, N. 1 TELEPHONE 340

— . _ — _ _ — — , . — : — ' - - - . ~ • . - ~ • - ^ — —

»sy study Cluh, constut-I isludtintK enrolled In the

'•museiln I'stycliology, off*1

-•is state I'nlvevslty, WUB ••il al tluv Wlnfteld Soott-^in i:i!/.iibctli, on April 12.J. I'. Heuer wan electedit, ami Miss Levy, secretary,;

plans to hdvcat one of

meeting rdomsui ilie year, for the pur-the further' Btudy ef p*y-unil it« application. It is S1I |UM

il'in invite various authoritiesrfcntlrtc phase's of the

^Comprehensive Histpry of State01.

: l i » ' i i l

01

Will be Compiled by Princeton(lontlmied-from page 4)

d.'iJliililtrdinutoi

0 lie

riu us.Tin

in eoiiiliflct form. Thia co- I'rlnceton rJepartment Of Hlatory.liluii for (jurve.viiiM a dea- In .some caws dlssertatlojls, present-

Held of history js believad ed by candidates for the" Doctor otiiniiltie and is *'\pectl'd toMillosouhy aegree, will be expanded-

interest aiiuing his- into volumes for the series. Severalof the authors have already beenselected and work wjll begin lmme-

"The Commercial Historywill be written by

Albion, Associate Pro

work Is to"bt* comprehensive „„, . . . .Ot. ii« well as to have dUcus- i i >l« scope. Not only will political, Q{ ^

M the members on how, tnnomlc and m litary history be In- R o b e r t Q ^ ^ „„„„, t l u .can be used to solve eluded, but various phases or ijne t^&of Q( H u t o r y . , ,T l i e p 0 U U d j n g 0 ,

'd;i> pruhlfins: H«*-frf^lw-people^Uielil mjtuo<ja « t W e t t t . j M w y i < ^ JohnJE. Pomtr&t.! 10. School of Education 375; ColHeuer inis been appointed. ri'Hs ut various periods W|e}'iAssociate Professor of History;,"Ed- lege of Pharmacy 397; Summei

oaii of the committed to draw chupls, the books they read, n>«ir . . . . . . . . .. . _

Rutgers EnrollmentReaches 13,035 Mark

The eprqllment at Rutgern Unl-veraity 1B now'lll.ii36, a record forthe University, it WBB announced by(Itutgere bracialB today., The enroll-ment figures are •for the collegeyear 1938-1929 and will appear inthb'annual catalogue to be publishednext/ month.

' j he re are 1,371 Undergraduatestudents, in the college for men, and1,042 undergraduate students in theNew. Jersey College- for Woman.)Other figures ar« ,us follows: gradu-ate students, 8u; special students

A.Bitter PillBy CLIFFORD McBRlDE

,, , w ; . , Comprehensive Galley No. 2mill a constitution. He a nuseinents, their methods or trav- u c u t t o n l n N e w j e r s e y » by Nelson

by Messrs. &. Ro-•«•', their homes and their furniture. B M A P r i l i C e t o n 1 9 3 8 ; a n dSubjettJ* of MonogiHphs

Anuinn the aubJecU to which

yH J. Ulola, ftnd the Misses

Bm-j;h and Claire McMllough. „evy, t'liatrmau of the program, dlvldtful volumes of the monograph

litter. Is to have aa h e r a a s i s ' d t I

Summerijession 1,532; Short Courses inAgriculture 164; Extension Coursesfor Teachers 3.0H; University Ex-

Shortj "Transportation and Travel In New I tension Division 0,002 andJtrsey" by Wheaton J. La^ie, A, B.ix)our8es ln Engineering 42.Princeton, 1926, M. A.-Yale, 1926. ^ _ _ — _ _ '

Native ol .New JerseyMr. Smith Is a native of Ne'w Jer-i, graduated from Yale with the

of Bachelor of Philosophy tn

New Jersey Philllas Andoverhaving prepared for college »t

MANTO INSURANCE MKN

will be devoted" are: The [ti-lt. Wlight and Balf. | iun« of New Jersey; The Founding

L invitation in extended to those Of Bast Jersey; The Founding ofIjnuy be interested In Joining y e s t Jersey; New Jersey in fhe\a\> to attend the psychology French and Indian Wars; The

which meets at 8:00 P. M. Sruggle fur S«lf-Qovernment

*KlRLrliilr Af thft "f!tfnfltltutlt)n' NOW * u " l u c j 1 1 " ! ' -, -. , BVfiJUU6i- --.— - - , n i i | i Inti* W l t n IN. 13. Xlnl I IK ftUu' UVUlUvliy 1JI

i a l l LKvn New Jersey iu the

ucation , in Newfuneral of Mrs. Bv» Ba,umlin.!'A'' a n l 1 Architecture In

' or VuiMntine Daumliu, of »>y; Religion In New Jernejv;

188ft twid-WUB imide a member of theflrm In 1909. He lb now presidentand chairman of the board of di-rectors of Harrla, r'orbeB'and Com.

..>,. ier-P*11^' t n e BV»ccessor o f N. B. Harris,»,.,».., .u iuo , nan "«"« . . „ . . . , , , w | _ and Company,pun Monday morning, followed| ey; hvety-Oay Life In New Jer . ^ member of the'New. Jer-

mass in Our U d y of ,ny; Science, Invention ^ d M^J- | H l s t o I ,1 ( f t t l ^mly, of the Na-1

'Church, i'ordti. Ilev. C. B. '' ne in wew jersWi ins

A. Apgar, assistant superinten-dent of the IJlizabi'th district' of the

He re: i Prudential Insurance Company was

vening.Those present were: P. J. MCCUB,T T St H H d i k J

VulMiitine Daumlin, of »yj R g J .Fords, was held from Punishment and Morals In

f l l d | ey; hvetyOay Life In

8Jersey,iBtevnient was In

cemetery; Perth Amboy,[Haumlin died ln home last> moinlng after a brief Illness., ,

bearers' were: Wllbert and 'Ato'lcuU-ure - - _ - - . - - , •Blunchard, John and Joseph! Tl» »erle«. |B » ^ e % ^ - " '

John Youneberg &ud Pran- tie Princeton•Univewity P?«»,rell. ;volume appearlog

Medi-inner-' jeyie ]„. tiomit CauD«U• TIIM Education and, 4 UPnduntilal History of New

4bor In New Jersey; and Land'Aij1leulture in*«eW Jejsey. 4.

neiiglod lu_.. _ iirecior o f t

CoiiBervatlon Bureau of N*w York,

Huuiuiln u surlved by her c:implet«4- The bookuand several .bhlldMB,, ner pound handsomely\, mMia, M u y WMtlalie, ft I ome will b8 ll)iu»tl»tfld.William WefltWke w»d a Tbe mt>0Q.BWIW M» tq

lty T « « , <Boon as It J«

t beto beclotli and

writ'Westi»k«, | 1 M p«Jt by members ot the

• • • • • - VT . : \ , '

IdftdipProfesaor J.

on Str»wberrVeiHarold. Clark,

pN, Temple. T. Stuty, H. Hedrick, J.Sohmtdt.C, Anderson, fl. Hotrnee,P. Turner, W. Hegel,-W. Paain.

Of

Tl\e ' annual dinner dance andmeeting of the Kewaren Land, andWater Club will be held In Pfaft'uRestaurant at Metuehen this eve-ning. The election of offlcera forthe present year will be held at thebusiness meeting following thedinner. *

Toe committee in charge of the ]event, headed by H, "JX Clark, ,ae->

nutsere, Unlveraliy, Aseoctate Po-'aisted lay, M,' Irvina ' Demnreat andmoiostst of the State .fcgrlcultilMU i William H. TombB,Tw$ mapped outExperiment Station, will give a & program which pwmUei.to makeradio address over Statioh WOB onl tb« affair one ot the best ever held.Saturday ftfternoou, April »0. Htt T n r t ' r f b t m d ^ e j t h AmBubJeet will ba "StrawberriesPiewure and i *

• i

<s/t<qqp£( and &re'6S o/'/t

STALLED DITCHDIGGER WRECKSPENNSY FLYER

continued from page one)

i villf, N. J. Until were treated byI doctors win> 'wviit. rushed to the, scene through the co-operation of| liolice who sent ambulances (rom• sunjiundinp hft.spUa'Js and physiciansi from Woodbridgt'. Cartert and Rah-1 way, immediately after being in-1 formed of the wreck.

i Members of the Isella Firs Com-uftny responded in record timewhen called to the scene; theydumped the fire in the boiler andreleased the steam pressure in theengine.

i The truck was driven by Bert{Lance, of 47 Pioneer street, Newark.I A helper, Daniel Hauck, of Hillside.I was riding with him. .

torhboy will f,urnlBh the uduslc for the! daiMila*

J-i-* Quick, the

Milady's racial beauty mustsupported in 1*29 by a beautifulsDlne, rottib«d and powdered' in har-mony wltb her faco. ^-Seattle Dtity

Wlwt IV v Klekwa MlmstiANp .RQ8E3

OPEN TWIN CITY. 89CKPXCHANGE

B u>!-Journal

P.-Tv A. MembersAttend Conference

' Six members of Woodbrldgaj Township Pareut-TeachtJre Associa-

tions attended th« Central Oofifer-fiicH of the New Jersey Congress ofParents and Teachers betd at theN$w Jersey College for Women OKWednesday. * Mrs. William F Uttlft,of Rah way, conducted the meetings.The speakers were Dr. Paul Den-SleEa Austrian Minister of Educa-tion; Mrs. Mabel 8. Douglas, dean .ot the New Jersey College tor Worn*ea and .Mrs. Uttle, »tate preside*),of the.State Parent-TeaoherB' Awo-ciatlon. ,

The local womttt vbo attendedwere: Mn. V, Scfcoenetoerger, Jffn.William Tobrowiky, MM, Merrt*Choper. Hn . H. Bbwnurt, ¥ n ,WUUMU Wand « A 4 Mr*. A- B.

' . f - I '•: ' '•

•:•&.

f SixTHE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRlBAY, APRIL 19. 1929

MANY LOCALDEEDS FILED

f'- and H'>i}" t•••• ft r.fl inch' : i i - rh then-o(. ••* may !

will, r i r e r em- - . r . w w h l r h in- i- hereby 3K T'i'Uatf-rtl . i i o feet of '.•• t " 4 2 " <"«< c o ? t o t ™ r I > l t ) L " " l *

|.i|f». wi th muntiole*, a n p u r mem.>- ftnii o t h e r »"fK Ir

to t he Iso to i

of - XXIXXXXIXXXXIXIXIXXXIIIXXIIIX5IXIIIXIIpro'. n J.

notes or bond?hereby au'lhoftlMl » \f isati-d fr

' d. April !>Adv. rti"»<1 Ap> nth.,

Clf-rh.

J, ami

AT RR1INSW1CK ."'.'..".SJS'KC-.i.i: SJT.J?V.5-^SW* " ^ f ^ s s r* \ l D f i - V J l j U r r T T l V i V ^ j , itiMed VfttMed t»rra cotla1 or pursuant to th.- ronirMMng K«W-. —1.M..II, MM MtTWIOl.fcvr— <(

••"«'• • • - • . c»*< t r ^ n * feliHr'j^iM Loch lpii>* niJH" t n ? 'Biyww *of C n f c p t t r *«>* of t R f e ^ L A S B ^ . """"" "~ <• # i T t -fi**wt*~^ '• ' iV4 -jg - • - t * l f 1 f riTN(*fl 11lie ftT f*OWf Tfct^ OF " C&&J* *" * ^ *JPt» ^$ 4 l i * ^ * i ^ ^ •••• ^ ' * l ' g^g^gfl ^ ' " *

wnship Realty Tfwm**M-' in, l l j m i urccr >iiu orr rtf p^-**** »nt<in n<iie> o r '""'** ' ! ; a f i i T l i ? NOTICK HUH^IKBV GIVEN \hatB • • • j f t C f r e i n f » r e e d eo iMJi i t e 1'ilirf* w i t h p r o - ' t i w g t ~ a T ~ " f f TTP" n o V - ^ e s c i i n w i t i th<> T**»»>• h i p Coi--.i«ltAEC -Wil l J v g j d *K e n s t e r e d a t C O U I l t y dttl . J ^ - j . i n a i A e - M n t t n E - u r r e i n f o r c e d per c e n t p e r a n n i m . Ai l o;h«r n: V- n j . . , . t i ; ,v a t thi» v.--m<m:il M u n f c l p a T

TownshipRegistered at County SeatShow Brisk Trading. monofltnlc pipe with

' platw..

per cent per annim. Ail o;h«r,t)'£-vitrified ' tl'e ten In re«p<"t of *a.<\ rot"*

bond! «hal> br detenniJi"! li)L . , 4 ma must b* accompanied by Chairman of the Township Commit- , n , h e au'-rnoon. J

* fc dertlfted cheek for HS.Ofle.O* tee, the Towmhip Clerk and Town- pail!aE(» 0( the- 1.1 * - " ~ payable to'-the Rahwaj Valley J<rt»t thlp "Treasurer «hO »rp hereby au- „ which l inear.

Dunns the UM tnr*e we**. * larje Me«tlii« a» a - guartntw that the tWrlwd to execute *nd ls«u«,.sald l h » r e t 0 „ . . - k. - . .

.« «- "iMT,tioir ^K^:Srwh;f^llK « r j t h r - r « ,mr . I-KI,Woodbridge Towpvhlp h.v t>e*n i*- ^ - ^ fe(> ^ J ^ - a n d w h l t , j , ^d-'oftW Is to b* one In i>cror\lane« ) e c t i o n

-iordeit at ' t*e Court}* Clerk « oJBfce .heck shall be r»turn"sd to the bid- With the p|.an.« ana profllp c( """-prtpr to

NEW HRfNSWl^KDurinc the UM thrfe

Indicat ing t>rl»lf*prlfc» tradinn In h,ulldlo»( lof» • tK«d«, for thefollowing item? ha»v? be»n retofdfd;

Wwt.EBd B. I- • A**"n to Henr>-Kiinu.'' Lot*•"lir-1f fKt ••42C-.Net'Jcolin. also l.ots t to b Till-»i|ii. TV I'' Woodbridge „ .

Wtst End B. U A»» n toKiinti Lots *3-ll t S / 1 , Lot111 '.::',y Map,Twji -Woodbrtdio.

m t h \mhoy Bjy ft Loan t o toJohn Latllermore * wf. Lou 25-:« 111 3>(5A Map- Clifford Height!s-i- I. Twp Woodbridge.

fov Corp to Hele'n P. Ford..419-520 Map Home Gardens,

Twp Woodbridge. i

cOpi«t

1JO

/ d i t

of tofr eootract^Lftertj- SH^l l'artin*nt Improvei>tanS ffropoMi .form»,.ment,' »«: heret"'rtrp flr»<"t1h«l, mad*

forffl* ot bond .by (XJi^e R. M?rrUI, Township Kn-be if~fi at'tlle of- gineer. -and th> »f»el flea lions there-

" ot, Whl<"h ar? bow on file with the„.,, .-_, Street. ff«w TotK TWrnhlp Clertf " ~ ?

CBy or at the oBce of the R«hway 6: T*« . ImprovementVallej- Joint -Ilirtlnr." ; 3.T • BlUt InHude such f-xieurion

• ' •*• ••-••-•- " j , or may flj »ect|ng *lree(f notirotpectiv*' bldde'rg uiw^rApfT.ty side lines "of.hg tve'ntv ddllar« a» mar be detfimined .

itiOOOi which" euro* w'm be !»• •hlpConiniltte* to W .necrtsary^totinded to. Contractor.* who

r,.-iti;i^ at thf '.•.••rniTijI Munkipalnldinf. Wood I'i'-f. S. J-. Oil

April 2?n<l.. 19*' at 3:10 o'clock"vtltyffliar

oreiBaae«,object ion*; |

may be presented by any tax-.f <he township. " ' 4|

Objector* may IHe'a wjrltten ob-wlth th* Townshtp' Clerkthat dau

U J.Towtkehlp

HMHMHM

THE TOADt MARK-THAT GUARANTEES

A SQUARE DEAL

bftjpnd

be refunded |h«

Lots 13 u 17 Bl l ttW ***'*$&*-,Map-'CoIonU Hills. \ W P Wood- H J ^ % M ^ _ . ^

J/'Vi- SSTJ'sf.'^ffiir " ^ ^ Val^^t MgUMtTWP \\oodl.rld«e. . •* . . * WertfleW. N8* Jersey.'

the? I. The «o»t*oT

entitled,Municipalities .

. . . . . ff!(initer. Or*d* and Tinder Pare- |fim-Bt In lottriHrtlal Avewi*,AvrnH. and a.Mnrm Sewer In tiCooimcrctal Art-no* and (te«nte> i |Stn-rt, AieneL Together wtihthe Necessary Ap^anenanen,

.and to ProrUe lor tbe Iwu-of TrMpnrary N<Me» or

ltonds . and to, I'rovkle tor the Arte**»nemThereof. , • •.

t.v the Townshjpf the Township of-lnJ—Lhe ^ * a 5 i y -•'!thef i Th> a

pro- shall be aa«e«sed upon the lands'intbe Vicinity thereof benefited or In-creased in value thereby to the ex-

n t?' £ wfLllflc L. SV Mayer. Lois 185 to 188to IS* Bl N 4*3 to 4 0 * Bl O ' M a p

Kly * 'inv Co. Twp Woed-

eDated—April 10 ,

Uryanf. Win t" Plfttffl! 100 ft

Ir

Middlesex:1. That Commercial AvettUe.l

Avenel, beginning at a point in thej__ southerly line of Avenel Street andi

V. ThirordlnVn'ce'ihairuke' eOect extending eoutatrly approximately jimedlately upon Ita adoption and 350 feet to the northerly line^ofIvertUIng as required by law. ; Burnet Street, tn- improved by theVteted April *th...l»«l. • ; contraction ol concrete curb, gui-lAdvertised April i l th . . 1929, and t « . srade, abd cinder pavement,'

April 19th:, 1919.

. . ;.«l , for fur-.;and doins a!l vorkj

B. i. DUK1GAS.Township Cl«r

KOT1CE TO COXTRACTOItS

and by the RRHtruction of a worm;s+-W(?r~in jCommefclal Ateaue and

/George Street, andtr and by virtue' o f lh« provtetons of an act en,Ut4j|Ml.

t ** A—fc,, .11,1 f*nmmmm-—ii n t? \ l l i n - I M m

Approved March 2T. 1917, theainendtuenU thereof and supple-

' menu (hereto and other laws applicable thereto.

W cor Charles St. Twp Wood- reqirrfetf lor* "the constructionliridat-. . Section 3 ol the Rahway Valley i

Uallnt. Alexander * wf to- John Trunk Sewei will be received by theTurn & wf. Lots 416-417 M»P luiiwgv Valle> Joint Meeting at

Heights. Tlftp *4Vood- ,helr office. S? Eim Street. Wrtt-, « „ . , „ „/ . field N. J . at 8 P. M (Daylight Sealed proposals,tar the construe- 2 ^ , d inipt&ifment shall be

Sht;.herd,~R. Bowden et al. Trus- gaviB? Time). May 2. 1929. jtlon of I5elin-Colonia Spur, R»b*9J' known a* tjte ttir.m-rcial Avenue,tt*s io TTnr Drflttr: i a n 3* a*— 3eeHon~a o t the. Trunk .gewer e«-l V»"e3'• Trunk >ewer, Woodbiidge ^-^nej;- Concreie Curb, Gutter.'.Map F"alrfleld Terrace, Twp Wood- tends from a point in Clark Town-; I'ownsMp. Middlesex—GouaV, New ^jgde-.-C4Bder--l^-vraeat. and Corn-bridge ' ship north of the Rahway River and i Jersey, will be received by the m e r c i a l Aveijue and George Strwt

Gn'dbeteer. L*o et al Exrs to approximately 500 feet northwest-iTownship Committee, WoooDrldge. 3 U i r l u Sewer Improvmitnt.Mel DiifTy. Lol 514 Map Avenel et\}

f trpm the Rahwa7 line, to a New Jersey, until 3:30 P. M., April; j ^ g g^^ 0 , Twrniy-two ThouPark Sec* 1,Twp Woodbridge. "'point in Cranford on HK »outhWMUi 22nd., 192S,'at which time they wlll!^,,^ (|21,000.0( ' Dollars or so

Francis. Je«se T & hu* to Bergen ,,r|y siae of thfe* Rahway River ap-i be publicly opened and read in the m u c h hereof aaniay be necessary igMeadow? Corp. Lots 53-54 Bi 5" proximately 800 feet southerly from!Memorial Municipal Building. Wood-j nereby appropriated to meet the.Map Demorest on Hilltop*, Twp the L«lilgh Valley \ Rail road. The; bridge. New-Jersey. i c o s l '0( carrylBS^ out said improve-:Woodbrt<Ue. »> * lower WestftelA.Jfn|nkv from Cen-j The work consists I of aPP™«- ment. -- -" 1

Maple Realty Co to John Onech- tr^l Avenue and Walnut Streets |ni niately _9,22» lin. ft. jsf 30 jje^n-. 4 Temporal not*3 or bonds are]

H

...4L.jtt__Lotj 2>*-2*9 Map pfark Townahip to the Westfleld'forced Concrete Pine Sanitary Sewer h t r e b y auu,Oriied to be issued from;Avenei Park Sec l> Twpt "W0ooT-*iiDe adjacent to the L*high Valley and 20 Manholes. time j o time, tn an amount not toilbride* , at Raliway Boad. i« Included. . Plan* and specifications for t*e, e x < ; ^ - the sum above appropriated, 11

Bleyker. Philip D k wf to The Section 3 of the Trunk Sewer in- •,proposed work, prepared by George j p u r g u l i n t t 0 ^ controlling provi-., SUteof N. J.- Par* SSA B C. k 41 dudes approiimately 3.100 Jeet of R. Merrill. Township Engineer have s i o n s o f C n a p t e r . 5 i ot l h f e I^WJ of. A. R.'SafT'N. J. State Highway D«pt, go inch, 6.800 feet of.54 Inch and'been filed in the offce Of said En6ln-;j . j l 6 aa'amewlM and suppkment-,|

Twp Woodbridge. , . ' &.150 feel of 3«~ Inch sewer, with eer, •. in the Municipal Building, d vMch.m)lM o r b o a ( l s s h a u bear:-• The Tide Water Pipe .Co. Ltd to aiaQbolu, appurtenances and otheriSToodbridKe Township, New Jersey\i: , e r e 8 l %t a r a U r o t t 0 e x C e e d s B

«ute of S. «T ali Ids lying W£- »orVJnclilienlW thereto. - [and nTfty be !t*pect*d by pro»p«ct iv#^ c a j n ftT a B h u m X\\ other mat-tween right of way1 line* 50 ft eafh "vp to and~Including Veww 0^<i6ibildders*(lurinK TjuslitftM w n . ;iefs in respect of said notes ortide of cent«t line ;>taie Highway inches In diameter the pip* Is t o ' * " ' TJUs'sandard proposal I o r m*> r*fbonds shall be c-termined by the!Map N. J. State Highway Dept, ^\i giaied Tttrlfled terra colta or attached to the specifications, copies C h a | r n , a n 0 ( u,e Township Commit-!Twps Rarlwn, Woodbridse. * Rah- F a s t i r o n pipe. 88 inch pipe may be ot which may be obtained upon a p - } ^ t h f t xownshii- Clerk and Town-'kiv. , Inion County. .'of vitrified tfle or concrete or caat • plication to (he Engineer. i g h j Treasurer, who are hereby au - ~

Hu«f. Fred W.. to Julius Nemeth.' i r o n , a ud largernUes are of pre-cast! Plans and specifications will be t h o 7 l i e d t 0 ^^^ a n d i s s u e ^ d ULot 44,Map Owen F. Conlon. S. sd re-inforced con«r>U pipe with pro^'tttrplahed to PrOTPwUv« ,b.td,d,e,rs "f . temporary notes or bonds. iC liury Si. Twp Woodbridge. terilve Inside coeting tsi re-iaforced;on payment _ofTen_ (*10.80) Dol-,

National Flreproofine Co to Coui»-vraDBOiuhtc pipe with vitrifiedr-.-- . — - - - ; ' - - • — ; r ,v, i 5. Said storm it-wtif-Shall consist

tile lars, wh.ch^amount. wnt_ be refunded^, a „ty of Middlesex. S. sd Keasb^y j i n e r plates. iuP°n return of plans and speelmea-Ave, opposite Station 8i JT.S5 2nd Each bid rinwi be accompanied by tions before the time specified for

T, 5. sd Kjeasbey Ave. 93.S3 ft S. a certified check for $45,000.00. the opening of bid*.80 deg 44 mln E. fr turn In S. ad payaBle to the *ahway VMley Joint i Blda.mUrt be made- on the stand-Keasbey Ave, Twp, Woodbridge. Meeting as a guarantee that the«rd proposal torau In the »*nner

Nacy, Andrew £ wf to John Bod^ Contractor will execute the contract, designated there.n» and required oyu s « i wf. Part Lot 17 Map Gre*n i f Bwarded failing which. s,dd check-tae spettfications; must be enclosedHills, Twp Woodbridge. . 18hau be forfeited, and which said to $e»led rjgSSlPP^v.^fJ"? t»e

Kao»ndw, Helen it als to Wm H; c h M t shall br return^) tt>.^6',hid- name and addfeas of the^ftldfler anilZois Lou 156 to. 160 1st Map Ise- der on tBg-ciotutluM of'tUc cont>Mu:.n*me of proposed work on the out-lin. also Lots 2501 to 2504 1737 c£ple3 of plans, proposal forms, side, addressed to the Township•Jfld M»p Isjelln. Twp- WeodbriOoe. sp«Jfi«rtU»tt* aad torm^Ajfcj^qni.S?™^'"*^, Woodbridge Townshjp

Grossman', David, et_als to l->ed J - J cuntract can be. seen at the "of-'~'*e^E'"**l**'V w>*~<*uei be accom-PObat. Part LoU T" i F l T B f 42 o f c l v d e i>0MS C o n 8 o U i n ' g , , . panfed by a certified check for a sum^emorMt on Hilltops,-Twp Wood- i n m 30" church' Street, S e w \ o r k ' ° r 1 ° ^ °,1 t h * a m » u n t , b i d 1 r l t ^bridge. • I o i t r or at the office of the Rahwav conditional endorsemeat, provided

MSerr*ll. Wm P. ft wt to Kather- ^ ° r ^ ^ t i n g , J7 S m « i d f h « k 8 h * U n o t M l f tM -"«•ine Miller. Lots S-4 Map E«t Sam- s , r w i WestBeld. N. J., or may Jbe

Maple Realty Co to Carl L. Stock. ^ ' ^ L ? ™ ^ . ? - . . ZZt Company certificate stating thatLots it: to 832 245-248-7.69 Map on oepoaitlag twenty d o l l a r s ' s " ^ " ^ ™ ^n p r o v i d e . theiWerfel Park Sec Q Twp Wood- t * ^ * * 1 w h i e h s u m w l U °« . r f Wddef with the required bond, and1

bridge f u n d * d t 0 Contractors who submit m u s tv . ^ d e U T e r e d , t t h e place and

Limolt S*ba»tiaA i . to patsy b l d s o t t return uf the plans w»h ln ;^ (Q^ the.hour Abore mentioned.Llmol l i 'wf Lou X |o' 3 Bl 442N l e n **?* after, the ^contract fias The Township Committee reiervMMap Seqastian Ltmoli.1 TWP Wood- ^ n awarded; if tlje ralme are in ( h e ^ t 0 r e J ect any or all bids Ur .aP w-Mi-vuiu 1.IIUUH. i ^ c o n d l t i o n W | ) e n .returned. deemed to the best interest ot the

•Weneer L wf Lota 12 I O " I 4 B T l 0 P»»il« w h o tate out plans *n i : — - '••^•-,B.44^HI^lap ^ n ^ ^ w J o d h r i d s e . * 0 n o t wbmir proposal.. . • . **'** .Township Clerk.

Kothman, Sarah £ T » U to • ; * * * « . ?leettor-*«w»j» "»e: Dated Airil 9th., 1929.Hrnry'Kunti. Lot 1 Bl 446A Map *}?}},_ t 0 r*Je*s an>' *" d a H Pro"i Advertisef April i:th.', 1929. andAu&onta Manor. Twp Woodbridge.

Maple Rty Co to Lake Coal Co.Lot 471 Map Avenel Park Sec 1.'i * i> \\Vodbridge. . j

Hudaaish, John t wf. to Joseph-'iae Gat>on. Lot 15-H Bl 563W MapCentral Park, Twp Woodbridge.

llaai. Jacob !p- R<»aUy P'>r1*llt" lrij;Co. . a. E. sd Rahw«- Ave. 9.01 ftalong same, being curve 360 radiusI.earm,' E.-directiffli tr Intersection

llaaway Valley Joint Meetiftg.• E. S. F. RANDOLPH, Chairman

G, LARSEN. Secretary,

jAprH 19th^ p l

1929.

•rd concretebeginning at the culvert at

Rahway - Avenue opposite lot111 in bloefc 855Q and extend-ing- westerly through said lot141 approximately 62 feet to a-propottd manhole; t h e n c enorthwesterlj- through lots 1 + 1and 110 in block 855Q auproii-mttlelM »0 feet to a proposedmanhole In George StrejM aboutopposhe the easterly lot line oflot 144 block 8£5<J ,thence «i-tfndlng west»rtr along Georga-Street, approximately 464 (•'elto a proposed manhole in Com-nierela'r Avenue; thence north-erly along Commercial Avenueapproximately 260 feet to aproposed manhole in Meinzer \\street and from said proposedmanhole a 4 2" re-lniorced con-crete aewer ^tending northerly

• along Commercial. Avenue ap-proxipi^ttly in5 feet to a catchbasin on AVPE«1'Street. All ofthe lot and liock numb^rb areas shown oi^f&.Town?hip A.-

th£ T.Qwnshftp- •'of Woodbrtc i^

S.' The location of any part ofid storm »-w.-r may be changed or

tbe said' plaus t>r specifications de-parted from bv resolution of the ;

LMiAL ADVKKTISKMENT— j Township CouuiJltet" within thej Ilimit of tht- appropriation herein i

NOTICE TO OOSTBACTORS

\O\

X O T I-C ENOTICE 13 HEliEBT that

proposals for the construe-! P ^lion of Madison Avenue CurB. Out-;****"86

l ! 0 * cons

j provided for so :ar a» may be found k j' necessary in the actual carrying* out j-r^

mprorement, either jnun til jlttuiBuu /vitriiur \,uiu, Mm*i^" " : **y» O P

lerland Cinders from Avenel Street,!0* construction. , • • jSouth to Leiox Aveilue .Woodbridgel T. All th« work of said improve-;

Middlesex County. New'men^ is to IK o.oae in accordance-^:. .*• b d G r « e n ^ Produces, rwp , h e T o i n 8 b i p Committee will hold a; Jersey, will be received by thejwtto the plaos and profile Q( the:

Raritan Trust Co1 to LesliePhillip-,. Lots 3-4" Bl 859N Map T*"" , !

Avenel GarJens, Twp Woodbridge. , r

r-Riy Co to Joe " - " -

_» inWtiag at the Mnuorlal Municipal .Township Committee. Woodbridge, i Commercial Avtaqe Concrete Curbk|jv Building. Woodbridge...fi. 1-. on New Jersey, until 3:30 P. M.,. April Gutter, Grade. Cinder Pavement and'I

2i.s-2ii(1. Twp Wopdbridse.

llobbink.k Co.

Mao- Avenel Park s»ec a t w h l c l ) ^ a n d p U c j e o o j M , l m M bridge, New Jersey.

tol.RRovL^Vr.L^ " ~ " "•Part Lot 4B £"all~L6r

U- jectioD 'with tlir Townahippart lot 7C Bl 750 Mapsaehar Bobbins. Twp Woodbridsr. , , n t d ,

Otnan*iiy, Chas A f t wf to Ra4to ' wr l o *- • l*Ai>sociat«s. Lou 34-Ji Bl 445BMap . Auionia Manor. Twp Wood-)bridge. •

S r » Bruus Holding Co to ThosW..,Kej;4.y.v Lot 11 Bl 3T5U MapItosaltik Heights, Twp Woodbridge. •

Bf^dy, Thos W ft wf to WmDues^'iuiin ; * wf. Same land as'••above. • • (

Bcker. Johan *> wf to The State*ol N..J. .Par 91 MapK. J. StateHighway Dept. Twp Wofrdbrldee. i

Briugs. Geo E ft wf to The Stateof N. J Para 47-47A Map N. J.State Highway Dept, J w p Wood-bridge.

(coatlnuAd on pace eight) - |

Clerk Gutter and 620 cPlans asd

yds. ot Cinder*, j seeling streets rot beyond the prop- j 1ications for the'eny side lin*= tf Commercial Ave-

B. j..Wf«IGAN, ipropoeed work, prepared by George n~ne as nia>; 6* determined by theTownship Clerk. R. Merrill, Townahtp Engineer, have' Townships ComitiUtee to be • necea-

i, jbeen Bled in the office of said Sn-'Bary to proiect the improTement.iRWeer, tn the Mttaiejoal Balldln,,.! , > im,,tvftaitfkt ^ i , ^

nd di't«Uon of the Town-CommtutY -and according to

provisions u{.an act entitled,

To rravkfe for CoKxete Pave-lueni, l>mcrt-i« Vwrtt apt th*Seonmiy Uratlmg awl Drain-age or Utterly tUMrt. Hope-lawn, WoodbridB* Towiuhip,and to Protiile (or Uw l«u-ance of Tnuporari Note* ortmprwement Honda and toProvide for theTheneof.

1 bidders during bua^ess hours,j' The standard proposal forma areattached to the •pacifications, copies

jot which may be obtained upon ap-plication to toe Engineer.

Plans and •petlfleiUons wilt bei 1 8 -ifurnlihed to prospective bidders qp.) shalljbn payment of T*a 1*1000) Dollars: which amount wlH be refunded upon

•aid improvementbe assessed upon the-lands In!

vicinity thereof benefited or in-jIn value thereby to the ex-'

It Ordained by the\ Township, return4Qf plana and specifleatlons be-CommlU«e of (be Township of tore the Umo ayedfled for UM open-W d b i d i t C f to l Wd

pin tho County, of tog ol Wda.

' I Bid

tent ot the benefit or Increase.11. There shall 1w takes by pur-

cnaae, condemnattoB or otherwise.

TO uiwuts

' M|ddle«M: 7 . * " ' " ' ".* "* I "BWa'must fcf insAe on the stanoV tor Uie. p^rpow iif aflordtng. the}I 1'. That UbVriy street. Hopetawn,[ard proposal forms In the manner, neeeesary nishis-«t:way for said:beginning- at the northerly line of''designated therein and required by :»«wer where the smse departs., (romNew Brunswick wenue and extend-Uhe specincatloos; must be encloMdfthe street, line*, the followinging northerly approximately 2,533 i to seated'fny%lope»,'bearing thrn»niei sertbed lands and real estate in i h c l

'and'adifea* of the bidder and nams!Township of ttood»rt(>ge: ,1SEALED PBQPQgALS fpr fur- feet lo the southerly ed«e of theaUhing materials, and doing all lavement on King Georges Post i of proposed work oo tbewutk repaired for.,ib« eonMrueUon Road, be. Improved by the construe- [addreeaed to the Toirnsbip Commitof Secxion 1 of the Hahwas Valley lion of oonweu-curb and 8" re-ln- tee. Woodbridge Township. New Jer-Truiik Sewer, wlU be reeelred by foroed concrete pavement, and the aey, and must be accompanied by •tbe Rahway Valley Joint Meeting at necessary grading sad drainagejeeiUfted cheek ter a sum of 10% oftheir o»ee. Zl Kim Street. Weat therefor, under and bjr Yirtue of the the amount bftf without conditionalneld. New.Jersey, at 8 P. M., tPay provisions of an act wUUed. "An!endorsement provided said checklis t Savipg Time), May 1. U2» . .Act Concerning MunMnnaUttea". a» | sha» not be lest Mian »500 M, p t r

1 at Ue Trunk Sever ex- proved March 27 U | i , the amend- able to the order of the Townabipl f 2, m ^ i ^ 1 ^ * 1 1 1 * 1 " 5*"w T*** l h M e o t *** " W ^ B W I I U Treuurer, and a Surety Company

SUe m Woodbridge on the aoa^t thereto and other Uwa •pplinblside ft the Rahway River, to Grand thereto.and Uaden Streets in Kahway, sad J t- Said improvemetl' shall

a lateral trunk in Rahwaj. Known as the Uberiy^reetto the Woodbridse line. , ;lB>pro»e»Bftt

SecUoa 1 ot the- TxuBk Sewer l » [ J. Tlw turn of Potty-five Thoueludes approximately ».16» feet of sand (MS.OOO.OO)

eertlficaie atatgu that Surety Com-

•i • v

panl'-wlU provide th«-bidder wtththe rwiutred bond, and must be de-Urered at the ptooe and before feehour abort wentiftn«a

The Township Cotamltui rtminejthe right to reJB«( M y or aU hid* If

A right-ofrwaji through andever Iota Une Hundred forty(140) and Oce JJnndrtd fortypne (141) in Biota 8&5rQ, asshown on the Township A**e«&-ment Uap, s i i j )«u being moreparticularly d. signaled on theplan • and croftl* hereinbeforemeniioaed. . iII This ordtoun shall take!

•Sect immediately upon t u adoption'and advertising a* reaulred by law.

1»*», and

Clerk.

AprilAPrtJ

USED C4R MART74-76 FAYETT& STREET " PHONE 27D3 PERTH AMBOY

MMHHMHKMHHMHMMHMH>\HMMMHMHHMM

Don't stay at home and read the \\road maps—ownacar of your own. KLow priced and easy terms. Small Mamount down.

Some of the

Exceptional Bargainsour volume turnover en-

ables us to offer: ••;-..

1928 FORD Bus. Coupe

$425

2nd., -l»2&. at 3:30 o'clock 22nd., 192S, at which time they will Storm Sewer Improvement as here-1(afternoon, to consider the final be publicly pjtened and read in thejtofore descriOf^, made by George R.:j

"• of | the following ordinance. Memorial Munleioal Buildins, Wood-:Merrill, Town*!^ Engineer, and ihel |idgt, New Jersey. jspeclfleatlont ih^reof, which are now

by any tax- The wurk conaisi« of approximate;,on file with the Township Clerk. jly 1,200 cu. yds. of Excavation.) 8. The lmrvru»ement shall a l so 'M

Wectors may &le a wrttTeh 6b 'I,"iW"ila:-ftr-Cgwiifie Curb

19Z7 CHEVROLET G O U P E . . . . $295.001126 DODGE SEDAN . ;.. -;.. $350.001925 DODGE COUPE . . * . . $225.00

1927 FORD T U D O R . ....'. , . . $ 1 9 5 .1926 FORD C O U P E . . ....... $165.00

Urge

art

Itwdtleh,& t r t

Swltoi andAtt

One Week Ei

Easy Payment* * Trade* Accepted

7 OPQtEVENlNGS

t '>

THE WOODBRlDGf. LEADER, FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1929 Seven

"V-V '.

URRONS TOPLAY BORO

NINETODAYh School Horsehide. Tess-

; r s Will Wield the WillowAgainst Carteret.pi,,. iiniTon AvtMino High School

will pliiy thH Carteret. High,,i un Hic-ld Bandlot this after-

v,.Hi her |)trmitting. Tliejhrld^i- !»>>» have been workingn ih( r.ym during the'week, i t

impnsKllilP to Ret In any out-inaciicp with Jupe JMuvlus andi ;IHH holding sway. .«,,i;,\ s rloiih was tb.be the see-i,i1 ilic wf'K and' th* third of

:,.Mi,]i. Tin- locals were to meetI luido nine at Leonardo

il.i\ [iiiprnoon, but no boats.ivailiihle fop making the trip

aino was £alJLed..off.It ice's boyB haven't had an

,iunity to keep ln trim alhce

OUTDOORS Keasbey Rremeni S O R D S P O I N T S

Said I to BillAtrfouf

f l i i - t

tllHlriles

tussle of the seaaon played;mo ql Hahway. The Bar-

•<• a neat working machineconflict, downing the Rah-l>y a 5-2 score., Rtce'B

ilMnon came thrtnrRjtF" tir '1rtwi,.,;ii Wuk'ovets and Schmidt

11- the first sack clear by theo u t method.

,c iiarruiiH will meet the Portmini nliif on the Parish Homein the first home game of thei next Wednesday" afternoon.clifttulf Includes only a. few

hrrc and a large attendance(•ted at the opener on the lo-

ItCanBtDoneV'My K. V. H.

"On Tuesday mc*nooSf you'll hear my horii •'

And rain w shine, or Thunder'showerWe'll start at that appointed hour." .

Said Bill to me, "No matter what ?May happen, be there wi the dot; .....We'll get some trout and on the fly ••Unless, before, wo both should die;"

Well, Tuesday came, and so did rainIt rained and blew and rained agiainSensible people stayed in bed, ' -JL."But this is what Bill said : '

"When comes the day that you or ICannot get trout caught on the flyWe'll pack away our reds and reelg,And with a handline fish for eels."

to Cross Bats withH. & L Langan 9

a p p hourIn spite of icy gale and showerWe left "behind our daily dutiesA j u L & t a r t e d - f o x t l i ' k l L J

isbey Tigersimble Amboy»ars by 9-1 Score

Tiucr A. C. nine of Keasbeyc«d ilie l'<Tth Amboy liears by

In the firsWash of" DOt«\ion the Ketbbey. dla-'

hint Sunday afternoon. Soo| Temple, who were on the

for the home tribe, allowed»o hits and chalked up ueven-Btrike-outB,ely, hurling for the visitors,

'ii men, . but the Tigersod ut every opportunity^

uk and Dt-ak made two tal-(tch for the winners.

tigers

36 9 7Bears

«."

En route we lectured, sage and wise,Earh other on the use of fliesThe coachman, cahill and the hackleAnd on the merits of our tackle.

. When "finally wei reached 'our strealn" -The Northeast gale with frantic, scream 'Was lashing whitecaps into spray: » „„Said I: "We'll get no trout todayV' /

But Bill, he merely rigged hia r,od, , *•> .'-.At peace with all the world and God.Said he, "A Coachman will be "right."'"I said, "We'd better dynamite."

• . , • ,

The icy gale bent low the treesUntil I thought the creek would freeze.But then t got a bright 'idear1 •

'. 1 said to Bill, "Fe'U wait fgltf here, .v • » • " . • " '. . „ • ' ' • * + • •

"Ju$t let us wait, and by and byThe Vind will Jolow the river dry, 'And all we have to do then, d}mmlt, ...Is walk right in and pick the limit"

Who knows but what we might have done it .And told the tale in this fool sonnetHad it not happened that the rain'Filled up the.,^jg;qne crejjk again. ^

At neon we hurried to the red-Hot stove at Flomerfelt's Stone ShedTo thaw our frozen hands and feetAnd muneh a lunch "a treat to ea t."

* * -In spite of gale and rain, and snow,We still can.say: "I told you-eo."For when the wintry day was doneBill had six trout, and I had one.'

Dean of All living Baseball Men

The Keasbey flremrn'gam ill h t h i fifirst kryoiil

W.I team will have their| Sunday "when they meet the HT &. I..truckers' nine on the Kpaabey din-

Lmohd Sunday raornlnn. IXQ LanFgan's truokera have been working1'htrd. hnd promise the Him>kte-ea,tr'rn

surprise. The Keuxbey sandlothas befen put in ftne.Khnpe by' theLa«gan combine and every effort istt> be made' to stage home games.

The Hop'eiawn-Keasbfiy Fire Com-pany clash which wan' to be stimotllast Sunday was postponed because 1•of the cola weather, but the Keust-y

s~ Jrt*. troop played.;tne Yann'lguns lit Ia, long practice seBston.

William '"Benny" Cilofif, who hasbeen active ln the uffahs of thefire company, haB returned to theirline-up. He has had ninny yrnrs'experience on the sanfliot and willhelp coaoh the redshlits.

SPORTSMEN PREDICTtSOOD TROUT SEASON

t OR JERSEY STREAMSNew .Jersey's'invltadun to Us first

fishing .pftrty of the your will be ac-cepted by the largest Knthorlng ofthe Jsaac Wilton clan- that has evergonV'out- to. greet members of tlietr,aui,,famlly on the season's open-ing day^ Municipal clerks and

Mother flflhlng-JicenBe selling agen-cies have been kept busy issuingten8 of thousarids of the cards thatwill admit to the outdoor celebra-tion on Monday April 15th.

On that date a record host of an>glers will wade the laughing watersof neATly 300 trout streamB, readyfor any speckled beauty that risesto*, ttietr- lures, —Sportsmen predictthe season will produce the finesttrout fishing New Jersey ever has Iknown.. An inspection of any troutstream, they say, will show an abun-dance of fish.

Due .to continuous rains and highwater, las^year, which spoiled muchof . the fishing, many streams wentthroush last yett's sea,wu with 'but

•little depletion of their -ftah life.Also, the State Pish and Game Com-mission ma'de the largest Fall plant-ing of adult trout ever taken fromthe Hackettstown Hatchery. Thishas been followed by the Springplatting, which began March 4, anduurjuf the month 100 truck-loads ofbig fish, seven to thirteen Inches inlength, have been added. to thestream populations. The fish trucks,operating daily, will 'continue tosupply trout from the hatcherypools, as fast as they are fished outof the public streams. ..

These conditions have given an-glers'-emraerfor anticipation of greatsport during the 1929 season. Notonly1 has this caused a rush for fish-ing licenses,- but sporting goodsdealers say the business in wds andflsHihg" "tackle is unusually brisk.Fishermen's hotels, too, are bqokedup, in many sections, for weeks jahead.

Way to VictoryOver Bearcats

'I'll- HHUITBIK1 nine of Wood-IniiUc wax HwntnpM by R 13-4 scorn»li"n ilu'v nit>t ttae Hawks' trlbe'of.!Vi1h V^nlmy on the H<"arcnt»' dta-iniinil Sunday'afternoon.' It wax- tlni'u)>riilni: dash for both learns. Raf-,iu<i, liuillim for the winnera;-struckout fn\ntwn men and all'nwod onlyniiip hits? Joe Bartisch. nrtuttuuwIWIIIIT for the home clan, grantedHit- visitors twenty-one hits andstruck out ten men,

Mursinano. tallied 'three 'runs fortin- victor* .

The

H. I'uontv 2b.Anderson, l b .Maidlcano. M ,

" fcAit. n. H.

i 1 1s

l.udwlgsen, 3L. Paone, If.Olsen, cfDlckson, rfKafton, p

HE WAS "TrtE* IRST OF TMtINITIALT& Pl,AVAWAY

DBA4 OF ALLBASEBALL

By JACK SORDSCentral Press Sports Cartoonlat-Whter) «.

BACK in (Hi; early eighties,^ yowng niajor leaf ier r«vo}iUi<mUeUthe playing of first hue. "l ie beipuTbf pteylnk the''tax folly »»

feet behind It and covering ground 25 feet on either fids. At tbetime It was claimed that no' mnn could coWV'tUf liag proiterly.plny-lng ttyit distance, from it. The orthodox style W M to stick clow.

That player wax Charles (onilskey, now president of th« OIIICBKOWliiteSo.v, aiul the oldtwt magnate In organized ball. Ho WAH borntn ChicaKO In 1809 Mtd has devo id move than SO.years to the-nar--tloual pune,

H« tMi<nn Ills professioiml career at the age of 17, playing thirdba-te at Milwaukee. At 20 he was with the Dubiique NorthWP8U>ntleague club, first a s a pitcher and later as a first baseman. ' The St,liOalK Hrowns, of the original American Association, signed htm In18814 and he won four pennants tvltb. them. One yew with, the-Huotherliood team In Chicago and be returned'Ui HI. Louis, going ayear later, 1802, to manage Cincinnati. Six years after be began tolay the foumjution for the Western League, and later, with ItanJohnson, the American League. i

Johnson persuaded Charles Somcrs to Bnance tTomtakey at Cm-uiKo and the White Sox began to make money from the o\itset. fn1010, after 10 years of success with the 8ox, he built the preftttit<3omUk«y Park. It first tueated 15,000. Today 60,000 cm be ac-commodated. • .

4E 13 21

SB.Dunham,Blick, If,Bok«, 3b. ..Polko, c ,Bartlsh, p.Sleblcs, cf.Leba,ny, rfPocheji, l b : . . . . . , . ^Oranile, lb.

5 000

<001111

36 4 9T.be score'by Innings.

Hawks 1 0 0 16 4 10 0—13BearcatB. ;.. 0 0 0 0 4 0 ,0 0 0— 4

The summary: Three base hit,Kafton. Two base hits, Kafton,Rerolchak and Bartlah. Btrurk outby Kafton, 14; Bartlsh, 10. Hit by'ltcher, Dlckson. fc

fcs

M e d a l Playat Colonia to

Start May 5.'

12bon, lb.

S3.ton,

an.

cf

{SUPPLY OF{» REPLENISHED

n

PHEASANTSBY STATE

SO

Boat to Enforc»astal

Wild covles of rlngneck pheas-ants, now the chief game birds of |

n'New Jersey, have been augumented io'by the liberation of 1,300 beautiful |n cocks, supplied from the state game01 farms at Forked River and Rock-

" J [ __lport. The birds were dlstrltuted2 equally ajuoog the 21 counties by

the game wardens. This extraspring restocking Included pheas-ants from recently imported Bu-

stock. ;The game laws permit the killing

of male pheasants, only, and with a jorders for an Intensive pat- i 8 U n ) i U 8 «f hens left In the fields,Delaware- Day and Atlantic l a g t year, the restocking has been,Biers to watch for violators deemed necessary to assure theIshiiiK laws, the New Jersey .breeding Of these birds on.the hunt-1

iBout "N. J. Burlington" haB j n g grounds. This natural increaseV in commission for the sea- w m be .supplemented by tiie Ubera- ,

the State Fish and Game t l o n from the game, farms a! many ii i s a 1 o n . The cruiser was thousands of young birds during the,

fur the winter at Tonia g u m m e r , these birds reaching ma-;! Shad llHhing operations will i turity before the open hunting sea-1

tirsteratin

g pattention of the war-

; from the "Burling-

ya o n n e x t Fall.

T h e g u t e Game Com-ithe T h e g u t e p^tf ftndthere will be also an im- m l e j j t o n a ) a 0 w m supply thousandB

ck-tip on the commercially p h e a B a nt eggs to fand fisheries along tliel l hBndH ami

coast.

on the lfisheries along tliel

farmers andsportsmen, who wish to hatch thegame birds for" liberation on theleown grounds. Eggs for hatchingcan be procured upon application to ithe warden of any county.

W. H. S. Baseball Schedule

Date OpponentsWhere Score

Played W.H.S. Opp.

April 9 Rahway _ AwayI April 16 Leonardo .*.....l.'....;..:. AwayI April 19 Carteret1....: Away

April 24 Port Kiehmonrl .: Here

5Rain

AprilAprilMayMayMayMayMayMayJune

Rahway. ,... '. ,_ Here29 Carteret ™._._: Here

3 Linden : '. Avfayg Metuchen Here-

15 Freeholdi - Away18 Metuchen ! „... Away28 Leonardo _...". :.... Here30 St. Mary's :.*_ Away8 Port Richmond :... Away

Totals '5

Jersey Shad HatcheryDoes Double Duty.

New Jersey's ahad hatchery atHancock's Bridge, in Salem county isdoing double duty, this spring. In ad-dition to the Bhad that it will turnout in the due course of the season,the establishment will first bring anatch of yellow, perch. The percheggs, millions in nunjber, are nowunder incubation, '

Superintendent Charles 0, Hay-,ford, of Hackettstown, superinten-dent of the state fish hatchery atthat point, la directing ' th» shad*producing operation In South Jet-

.sey. He decided it would be poasl-I ble to set up tte equipment and runj through a b f g hatching of perchwhile waiting fpr the shad egga.The perch fry will be distributed in

i South Jersey streams,

polluted South Jersey streams. The, . .shad, it has been demonstrated, will ! *WI-«>M>B.return after their migrations, tothose native streamB.'

Hen's Yon* OfaWoe, Mars ,A Denver paper offers a prixe o f , e a r i y l n

J2B.000 for the first person who «om-|munlcates with a planet. Not to be Mildoutdone, I offer $2B,000 to the first jplanet that commutaicates with us.—-Elmer C. Adams ln. the DetroitNews. -

Medal |»lay at the Colunla Coun-try Club will start on May 4ih., and5th., and will continue throughoutttremmith, acrordtng to tin prelim-inary prosrnm nnnounced yeetcrdByby W. C. -HoMltzell. of Rahway,chairniau of the tournament com-mittee. An attractive programwhich haw been arranged for theseaeom will be announced at anearly date.

.The tournament comnjlttw In-cludes: W. C. Hoblitiell, chairman;D. \V. Iluitholomew, at Woodbrldge,secretary; V. Turner Hawetl, of Se-waren, treasurer; L. Parka, of Rah-way, schedule chairman; LouisNeuberg, of Sewaron. entertainmentchairman.

The prolimlnury echadub) in*eludes medal plRy for the hrst four

The tournament com-mlttee will award prizes during themonth of May. The.,handlcaptr W»scheduled Cor May 30th.,,and ft isexpected that match play will start

Winter HelpedN. J. Game to Survive

Game,birds -and small game auf-• m w ii^i .fered little during the past winter,

Ittaok Measle* I according to reports made by stateEditor The Chroniclfe — Sir: L game wardens to Protector .James

hope: the repoft that Atlantic City M. Stratton. As a result there wasis canceling Its annual alleged practically no loss due to starvationbeauty contest is true.' The Chron- or «octreme cold and wardens.saylcle's great interest in these contests there will be an abundance- of suchhas been one great blotch on itsscuttle.—San. Francisco" Chronicle.

The shad hatchery was opened at«| fashioned ' girl in our pldthe request of net fishermen ln the'

I lower Delaware -River and bay.These fishermen will co-operate withthe state by turning over to thehatchery all'spawning shad taken, lntheir seines. The young Bhad willhe planted In-the headwaters of uh-

HEELS, LINKS,I E H . Sl'lNNERS.

UGH, HOOKS, BAITjfKH, l.KADEKS, FLY-&KS, HOOTS, WAD-1, AND EVERY CON-IlENOE .NEEDED BY" ANGLER.

Your l icense Hare

[KIN BROS.VI Smith Str««tferth Amboy

for the famousOutboard - Motor

Fishermenare invited to drop in atNo. 8 Fifth Avenue,'" Av-enel, any evening" to in-spect my lines of

Wet and Dry FliesSpinners, Hooks,Tapered Lines, Leaders

OHDKKS TAKEN1 FOR

Thomas RodsDevine Rods

Hardy TackleWaders Wading Shoe?Fly-Books Creels

Dry-Fly Boxes, etc.

L E. Raymond8 5th. Ave., Avenol

10,000,0005,000,000 BILLIARD

players keep physicallya n d m e n t a l l y fitthroughout the UnitedStates thereby keepingIn perfect physical con-dition to ward off flu,grip, etc. Your doctorwill point out the bene*fits of these two healthbuilders.

Special Afternoon Sessions for Ladiesand Instructions (or Beginners

PERTH AMBOY RECREATION•WHKHE « U E [iADIBS B6WL"

Market Str«et, Corner Madiwra Avenue

We Supply Everything

for the Fisherman

EXCEPT THE

andif you want to SEETHEM) you'll get an eye-ful of speckled beautieson display in oar windowtank

GET YOUR

FISHING & HUNTINGLICENSE HERE!

HoldliiK the Fort"You remember Fanny-^-the old-

home-town?"

'Yea, dear, sweet Fanny,is she* riow?"

"Still there."— J

Where

game this year. -During the few snows that made

leedlng of birds necessary, the'war-dens had the assistance of farmer's,sportsmen, rural mail carriers andBoy Scouts. Reports of .the feed-ing operations Indicate that therlngneck pheasant is now far .moreplentiful than quail, while the Hun-garian partridge is In third numer-ical position.

CJunsKnlveN

Fishing Tackle

Tvniiianml

Lieber'sSporting Goods Store

205 Smith StreetPETRTH AMBOY

...what thewelVdressed Kitchen

!Th« old, dr«b GhatlaS h»v» been out-Uwoill , , . Modern kitchen furnhur*has gone in strong lur the "Dr«ss-Up"movement . . . New chetr and clmrmire bting bruuiftit i«' h»in and tables by

m.rre/ou.

SPEED ENAMELthat dries h*id *[K! emonth u • Ujttof gUlt in four thcrthours/ , , . So easy to ap-ply that even a novice canbundle It expertly I17 modern colo/to chooai) from I

f/v MSPIAY IK <>( K WINDOW jHumphreys & R.JMI

7ti Mala St.WOODBHIDQH

Fishi

Old TimersIf you Wlltlt good ad-

vice un where to buy yourtiickli! for tin.' opening ofI tin trout seaaon Aprilir.ili aak the old timers.U11 their list of "pre-ferred" tuckle stores,you'll And LEVIN'S.. Wodon't claim to be the onlyruckle store In the state,but "Old Timer" will tellyou that we're one of'theIt. el. Wu have almosteverything the angler'shrtut desires. But 1!tliure'3 anything we havenot got, we'll get It foryou pronto, without ex-tra charge.

fc-'l.

THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRlbAY, APRIL 1», 1W»

FEMININE

Styl

Pitci EdgtFmcbHitt

VtrySbttr

390 b completely fcmin-me—t composite of tbe dainty

jettons erery woman cherishes.This New Golfi Stripe Stocking

would be desirable at' toy jJrice.Bat tt | i .95 it offen • vahiewhichhitherto has been impossible toobcaio.

SlUt atockliHP, all

•llfrkshfre" Silk S t o c k i n g * * l l "torn** »l.Ot>

Something New and Dainty in lingerieCrppe <H- Chini* Slip*

satin

"Kk"hrlleu" Vesw T9t.

Frenrh Panties #1.00

Bloomer* »l.00

C. GHR1STENSEN & BRO.96 Main Street ; Woodbridge, N. j .

"A SWf e Place to Buy"

7 J7 to SI 8 *2T I" %** MapOper-njtcin. AU\asder fl 4-

DaviA Mandd 4>0tS 819 tn

Cha« * * '

to Bowling •

KahT^ayOoldsmlth.' .

Mary Horvath. U H q s - S i .Ideal ParK. Twp Woodbridge..

Sheriff to Wm. Arthur *Dunham. t o t "2 Bl 55JO'r.rove M*ttof, T h p Woodbridge

Cas^v Stephen Ijp'wf 16 t~SlotR. "liota 22 7 t o 334 MapI'ark Twp WoodbrBge. • • ,

••' " • U Stock1.Park

S TAKE 2 OUT Of "iAmerican Smeljfhg

, ,„ Cfaflsmeri's Club.alleys"Wednesdaye>*inngrThr PerthMap "Smelters" rolled their last game in the Perth Amboy Indus1

Gw) trial League recently, ch&Udng up ft pretty good record.Map Lee'»%wnt£t rolled a "grand" in their aecond game,

of the, feiw wftrked up on the local alleys since they wereopened about four months ago. ' . ' -

Einhotn rolled.high total for a single.string with a,230.was right beKind hini with a 229. Vanzyjt was third

.C«t«.-.- _.- - . _.d"ns, Twp Woodbrioge.

Krfilelsheln<f-r. daeol ' l / w l toWiiiard E Ooodmil * *f. LowH 2 0 m 3&"O Map Clifford Heights

l-393G"Wood-

MRS. TRAINER HURT WHILE BOWLINGMrs. M. Trainer, wife of the assistant Township T

urer, was painfully hurt on the Craftsmen's Club ;,|fftieBday evening when a ball fell off the i-ack and la,,

on her toes. The accident Occurred in th4*ifec6nd tram.which the ladies of Couft Mercedes rolled. ^

^ DBtnaresttook honors for higli «OE«I. »h<,,•K»T.::

Nick Langan, *rho acceptedgame" knocked the maple* for a 206.

The scores:Mrs, 3. Hughe* ,_... 120Mrs. J. Elnhortt ~... 117Mm. JHtLalM'y.;-— • » «Mr* M. Trainer _ HBill Gerltv

to

: t i ,Mm. J. B.s * l M n i . J. 73

S C 2,I'wth Amboy

Willard K*HO Map\ViKxltirl<l?e.. tii. Andf-rs .8oren

T. ii»«>. Twp

Bill G«rltrMr», J. P. G ' r B T - M r

TO N k k2 in.

NICK NICKS DUCKS TOU 107

* i * * j a i * i i # A ^ .tstring in th« mixed duck pitv.gihi6£ oivtjiiCraiFEamena ialteys Wednesday evening. Mojjt of the 3ftdi«s who tried •'small pins had rJreviouiply rolled in the C D. A, games o;••,

• BUI

bridge.

ATTENDANCE ATSTATE MEETING

r i u u t games. - -Annual Event to be Held at T h e MOWS:

Woodrow Wfljon Hotel,Brunswick in May.

WOODBRIDGE FEDERALS WIN OVER K. S. * R .The Woodbridge Federal bowlers, 6n.e of. three teams hold-J Mr* ^

ing third ptac^ in the Perth Ahjboy Industrial League, took!MJt ,jtwo games from the American Smelting and Refining quintet j MirM.inathe lasE"ro\ind of the teifcue roitisA oft .'the.-Recreation*i!?;jfaj.Tuesday evening. Bucko, rolling for the winners, chalked up;h.gh for a jarifrle string with a 246. He also hit the maple*iov a 213 in his first string. - j

tatiied thtee "twp,. century" scows in his three I

The duclc-pwj.scores:(Wity 1 . "6 74 Kick

57JIO

IHinne'L., 3557

Mr*. J.. Mr». A.

86 Mrs. KtUpatriefc

— ~ - HolupThe Wtiorfliriiltt- Lions Club pinna HaUahan

to send a l<(0 \>?r cenrdelegation to Bucko __.the Eighth Annual State Convention tof Lion* to be held In the wood-i.row Wilson Hot?!, in New Btuns-WMrj••• .May lr.th., and 16th. Thei

176

l#»j887 : 902

elaborate *.Trtert»4aw*at

' l l U :TThe two-day

. . . A ^ , P ; 'BEAT KEASBEYS .in&\ th e£oBl Office firsts^of Perth Amboy, Industrial League°nS chamP s> defeated the KeasBey Xeraffitc ijowler» in two of

includes a three games which closed the tournament sessions on the Re-

? £ ^ ^^ i ThK

MANY LOCALDEEDS F I L E D

AT BRUNSWICKtr'um Page 6 )

Dall, Peter & wf toFischer. S. 4 ft Lot 9D & -N.-37Lot 69 Map G*o LiddK W. sd 1

N. J. StateWoodbridge.' Huber. Nell ie to 1'erth Ambctffc Loan Co. 'S. sd Kit :r ise l iu to.Woodbridge* s t N. W.. tor \4 Jacob

Huber, Mary', to P^rth AmboyRty & Loan Co. Sum* land as

9 Brwk country club and a sight-we- fey c\&n trimmed Uncle Sam's tri^e in the first strjng, butl n ? _-^ iL° l ^ ^ » A i " ° "* ; rolled far below them in the second and third, games.

KabffiPW, high man for the evening, rolled three "two cen^vuitinu tury" scores, the only man on his team to chalk up a two hffirF

to attend a d red score. Venne'trWSgenhoffer, Payne and Tilp all rolled

The scores:Office 1 . Keasoey Ceramic

Caroline Sludticr-..Map - Sewaren I'ark.bridge.

Uurns Holdiuu Corp

1-otsTwp

.Miss LilUan \Ves«ropp"fHE Women's Savings and

KahareiGilesQolden'_HoflnianPemberton

222U_ l<i0_ 180-

1«1192

. . . . . ner, Corn*lHii= n t * f to.: 1 rjompahy, of .Gleveland, an or-Wood-. TVssie Solowinski. I.nl.- 1"5-1<» M »P'gahlzatwn run-solely by women, lias'

Wesi*rjiaard 4 W ^ i t r s a a n l . W. i u j t * o m v > i r t e d ^ v t n years of itsto Mike Rd Hornsby St, Twp Woodbridge. e x i s t e n t e and also a $100,000 cam

206 S12 Vennet148 1(1 Wagenhofler190 178 O. Ti lp _ -190 181 Payne181 161 Al Tilp _.

<J15 506:

201161

....... 159

*.„.. 2i:i

132

m112162181

2021591321&3

749 . 843

wl to Eliza-p a j | , n , o r n e w busiW banker

pss. Miss Lillianand lawyer, is

Burylo. Lot 3Vr. Map 10 Really k Chnatensen H^lse^ ^Coiuiui-rdal Co, Twp Woodbridge. betn Koster. Lot n, * part Lot ov Westropp,

Pollick. riusime &. hus- to Albert Map C.oodrlch l'.trk, Twii >\ood- presidentH. Dolinick & wf. Lots 252-253 bridge. ' . . „ , i Miss Westropp declares that eeveuMap Verth Amboy Heishts, Twp Halamud.Lculs A. *J™^ t o State y e a r g , l a v e a n j p , y d e m o n s t r a t e d thaiWoodkrldte- ° f N ' ,,.'l'*Te \? - • p

n ," t' women can successfully run a tiaHd-l'oliai-K. riusane & hus to Loui« State Highway Deyt, T*'I) Wood-,jn s flnd l o s n or.ganiiation. iTt^-Kline-Kty & Imp Co to John- E- bridge. ' , , , . „ „ 'sources hay« grown trom ^45,9Sth'55

(.•,allath<:r *: wf. Plota 377-411 Map Booi. Lomsl' . (Louis T. Booiei t 0 Q V e r ^QO.OWntfie says. Of theUshnwy E*u, T»u»Waodbtidse. Jrj t wt to The State ot N. J. Pars. s o o r < 0 companies that Vere

Kline Rty & Imp Co to John. E **"6^'*<'r,'s"f3:tC^;,.'>1;Jt!^J

!' latevroriBed AL...UK » m e time as theSavings and Loanpaay,women'sthem.

Asked ab.out any prejudice exist-ing -against women taking responsi-blt poalitono 4n-sinu.lar-iDstltutions.Miss Westropp said there was somesuch prejudice and Quoted an in-stance or a large ban,k. which re-fused to give an earned promotionto a woman until a number of de-

i posltors. who were her clients, had

might know she was a i7 • I

capable of holding, well paid business positions. "1• have had * capable maid for someyears," she remarked. "But I CAN

' j t necessary," she

Booi. Louis I'. (LouisJn & wf to The Slate of N. J. Pars

E ft$-63.'-6« 7S-73 i**p.5 S. J.. Sis& Kaiherlae M. Gallagher. Plot 4U U.thway. Dtpt. Twp WoodbVidge. i women's SaHngs and Loan Com-

"iUp Uahway Et&, T*P Wood- HiSKins Mary I, et.als to The'p a f l y a b o u t 1 0 h i n e surTiVed, thbridge. 'State of V J. l«ar 6.9 Map N. J. w o m e n - 8 company bet us °n« of

Baldwin Rty Co to Geo Evan & State Highway Depf, Twp Wood-wf .Lot,-. 1UIU101 Map1 gewaren bridge. . tPark, Twji Woodtiridge. ' 1 Steuerwald, Chat L. Tnc.to Alon-

Maple Hty Co to Mary Gardetla zo P. Weed. Lott f3-74 lS7-16iiet ale. Loti pl6 to 518tMap AjBBSyiji.^*1 1 G^«'ld»te "terrace, TwpPark Sec 1, Twp Woodbridge. ^tvoodbrldge.

Hoaglanii, Bonnette W & wf to NieUen, Anders Soren & wf toJulia Siegedy Ulkle. Lota 42-43- Olga DaxltnM- Lots 7-8 Bl 37331-bl Map A. WedEewood, Twp Wood- Map Berkley Terrace, 1>p Wood-btid^e " < bridge.

ll^asliLnd. Bonnette W ft"wl to Sheriff to DuseU In*. Corp. Lots' threatened" "to withdraw if she was;Louis Sietedy 4 wf." i.oU> i0-41 416-420 Vla^Jlome 6»rdens, T^PjnoX^ven the office. Even then she ;

'Map A. Wedgewood; Twp WxSod- Woodbridge. , - A ~ \ was'requeeKff" W Tftgn"^"" iW»B»* Ilr ' . \ J. W. Hollowajr Co to Chas Onlr'-'to bank' statements that no;

Ua Jos E * wf to John E»y Sehl««i»becker. LoJ* 36 to 38 B l l o n ewT. Part lot 28 k all Lot 29\& 847E Map SL_ Oeotf* Manor,

part lot 30 Map Fulton Terrace, Woodbridge. . . j J I ^ Westropp added, however,Woodbridge. " t! \ ' City Hall Ld & ImV Co to Stephen; s h e t^]^^ that "when women

fay,"1 Joan &• wt to Woodbridge Elko k wf. | Plot 380 Map Boynton n f t w demonstrated their ability toBldra Supply So. Same-land »s Beach HelgWts, Twp Woodbrldge. j t a k e responsible positions they willabove. ! ' Cary, Arthur I. & wr to Theodore^ g e t t n e m » t

Woodbridge Bldrs Supply Co to M. BelchefT. l.ott S2-€3 Bl WC-, concerning the older women infted Roncu t vf. Same land as.Map lse|in, Twp Woodbridge, ! industry M*» WestroDp declaredabove, t ' Allgatr. W.u A. A wf to Jos H«r- t h a t f e w y ^ g womea—like men

Niealdn, An^rs Soren & wf to vath. Lots I'-IO Bi 445B*Map Au-V l n - g i m U a r cgee—had the necessaryChrU Hahu. Lots 6-7 BP373B Map sonia Manor, Twj» Woodbridge. ^experience to take positions of trust

• Berkley Terraw, Twp W.oodbridte. . Horvath,'Jos & wt to Sam Juston A l l t h e feminine directors" of thtdherifl to JatDes S. Wight. 163.76 & wf. Lota 9-1Q Bl 445B Map Au- W o m e n ' B gaTings and Loan Com

/ H S. E. at right angles fr E. sd sonia Manor, Twp Woodbridge. ; m ^ ^ t i f t e women she sa\BEwt Ave, a l s o j . part Lot 11 Bl 10 Fox, Michael. J * wf to Th« State l f t n d a , percentage are married.Man Sewiiren imp Co. also Lot* S3 of Ts. J. 1'ar 3C M*P >>• J. State; W o m e n Qt BuStne3s ablltty areto S6 Map John Twtor Johnson, Highway Dtpt, Twp Wowdbridge. ; n o t content Merely to do houseworkTwp Woodbridje. * Ott. Samuel fc wt o The State ol; • '

Mer^ HomeTBldrs lac to Enrico N, J, Par 24 M«p U, ) , State HighMini. Lots! 1118-1J19 Map Avenel way T>pt, Tup Woodbridge.Park T>i> WoftAbridge, - i Zaktaosky. Johi A wf to The

lia'sl Jersey tISfiBw ft Timber ee 6t»t^ ot X. J. .ftur J.1.^MJU!LN^ J.to Homer N, Tinner. Lots 11-12 State Highway fl|pt, .Twp\Wood-Bl 3 i lK Rev Map Lafayette Heights, 'bridge: {kTwp Woodbrufge. • New Bruus Hollting Co to Thos

Praser, Kdw n G in vt et als to W, Reedy. Lot J l Qk 375P MapHomer N. Tihji«r. Lots 8 to 10 Bl Rosalia Height:, *Nrp woodbridge.3alK Kev Map LalayeUe Heights, Orsechowskt, iQ)|p J^ wf to MapleTwp Woodbrifte. Realty Co. Lots

Cook, James Bl'r et als to Eetetle Aenel Park, SecE. M. Coleutui. IM 21 Bl 45 Lot Hagaman, Join47 Bl 1 >lUp Bamorest on Hilltops, vath i. wf.Twp WoodbtUg*.1 H*gaman '

City Hall l i * Jpp Cf to Tony Twp Woodbridge.liuriu. Lot t03D™Ma> Boynion Fulkerson. Ei>Bt ucii Heights. Twp Woodbridge. of Education*titrtek-oj) t ,wf. Lot 247 * W- 14 LoU 16S 16« BlLot 248 Map Perth Amboy Heights, Twp Woodbridet,-Twp Woodbridge. ; | Raimussen, Chi

Palmer, Kirnl'. & wf to Anna cent Subo & wf,Wilson.. Loi 4 Bl &61 Assessment 181B Map DunMap. S. sd CXureh St, Twp Wood-^Twp Woodhr

'bridge. , • -Wilk Rty &Doyle, Julia j>, & wt to Harvey muBsen ft wt

a. Clark. LM» ^-18 B\ 4fi MimaSlB- Map DUB1

Oemorest on ttiUtops, Twp Wood- Woodbridge.bridge. I Sheriff to Hoi

Raymond. latUe et als to Louise Lol 6 Bl 2S0b'A. Woekfle. j M f 134-135 Bl C Twp Woodbridg.Map Colonta, f*P Woodbridge, I Sheriff to Hoi

.RanUn Trutt Co to Sophie Mis- Lot I Map Kakolc*. Lots 45 46. Bl 860 Map WoftdbrtdgeAvenal Gardeaa, Twp Wood bridge. > Tf«f*""f. Jo]

Egan. John Sr 4 wt to Albert Balla. LotsHeliefaard Lot 691 Map Palra«ld Hagaman HelTerraee, Twp 1foodbrtds«. . :brld|«,

RodAer, Cora«llu» P< k -ml to Al-t 8tr»UM, Jessebut Hellegaardt' LoU 5J to t t Map Uughlln. Loti-^rutld Terraee, Twp Woo4brldge. Map Salamander?

Bumteiu, Harry i f ( I t EUrry bridge.Hagin. Part ioU 31 to 34 BL 406J i Orwnsteih. FliU«4* jVooQbruyw tets , Twp Wood- Maple Realtybridgft. ' •^•••-' • «,'•-,;• ••• f i n t to 1118 I

SherUf to H|kr Burateln. Same 1S1T to 1367 to 1land M above. ^ * . Map A»*mel p:

Witenu. David Ttefc fit to The Woodbridge.rfHate of N. J. Par f « . Map N. J.| Q««n»l«ia, Al«uuder 8 • wt toSUte Utgh way Dwl, A * * , W«M* David Maadei. f-MUd T&t*to 7»1

Park Sec 2, TWB Jfoodbridge. J

?$mwim M^• TTwp Woodbridge.

wf to Joe Hor-Bl 1074V Map

, »d Spruce Si,

& Wf to Bd

Wettropp is an assistant:»r Cuyahoga county,isident of the

and loan company.

Gwen, Stowaway '

Pooton, 16, at Oakland,iray on a 20-passengerde a trip to Salt La!

City, Utah. She hid under the lug-tn, tbe «abin.

e*1-

? ^ Hot Air| Dispatches from Tainan said Jap-

I to Vin- anese rMUenU were preparing tod T

Heights0 to 43 Bl

1.

to Chris Ras-46 to 43 Bl

Heights, Twp

B. L. Ass'n.Karkus Heights,

B. L. Ass'n.Heights, Twp

ft wf to TheresaBl 1079M Map

Twp Wood-to Qeo A. Mc-

IQ ft Lot 32Twp Wood-

R A bus toLoU 1345 to

1448 to 14*72-3

evaporate tod go to Tslngtao.—At-lanta " w J s r

Upright Brunton—in good condi-U<»; 4 "wonderful bargain at 1100.Write Boi B. Woodbriage, ti. 3.

vJKHi BENTFurniab.a| Booms — S08 Barroo

Pbone Woodbridg 783.

GEORGE R. MERRilX

ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW

Friday, April 19

"RED WINE"WITH

JUNE COLLYER - CONRAD NAGELSaturday, April 20 2 — Features — 2

PREP & PEPWITH

A Snappy, Youthful Cast

TIM McCOYIN

THE ADVENTURERSunday, Monday, April 2 1 — 2 2

ALIAS JIMMY VALENTINEfeaturing William Haines

TUESDAY, APRIL 23 FREE CH1NAWARE

Don't Miss This Picture

"SPIES"iwith an all star cast

WtJ., Tlfo., April 24 — 25 2 — Frataret — 2

NORMA SHEARER in

"Lfcdy of Chance"also Tim McCoy in The Bush Ranger

THURSDAY NITE SILVER NIGHTFriday, April 26

"Fugitives" WITH MADGE

BELLAMY

COMING

SOO NV-

100 MtTALKINGHCTURJES

T

Prevent Systemic InfectionThru ORAL PROPHYLAXIS

Sciential* are •rtniitTgimajority of all lnfecttom enter th« body Ihroagh th« ii,uK- 4s Just a* Important, bothfor yotJr health and for ywirsonal satisfaction, l6r the mouth to be kept dean, ta It Uyou'r -body to be bathed with soap and Water.. -

Decayed teeth are m«on«httent with orat d«anHnf»?.rmed broken, and loose teeth give riM to general s>>i,tn faction -with its aUpn3ant'permanent bodily Injury IDform or another. •-•••-.

D*n,tafvjt-Ra>-, eUttinatfon. correction/ and treatmentmouth conditions may b* had at the office pi ,

, l Dr. L §HAPIROBURGEON DENTIST

. 104 Main Street WoodbridgePHONE.-WO0DBRIDGE J2S FOR APPOINTUBNT

Open Efenlags Cotll 8 on Tneaday, Thursday and

t:

THE PERTH AMBOY SAVINGS INSTITUTION

DR. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN is our great. 'example of thrift. He wrote more ou '

and wrote better than any other man we knowHe began practicing thrift when he « . -twelve years, of age, and he practiced it artlwrote on if all his life. •

Franklin had a savings account

THE PERTH AMBOY SAVINGS INSTITUTION210 Smith Street, Corner Maple Street

The oldest bank in Perth Antbor

Dorsey MotorsI N C O R P O R A T E D

.U'lHOIUZKD

Maple & Faytlte Ste. f i T o / ' « * AmboJ

THE FUNERAL HOMESTREET ANp BARRON