CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It · Boy, 7, VictimjWPA HALTS PARK PROJECT, Of Drowning Buried Here John...

8
sH 0P THE ADS BEFORE YOU c,HOP THE STORES — Y O U ' L L FIND IT SAVES MONEY. CARTERET PRESS *K WidMt Circulate hft Infl Cartortt Complttety; S y t t l , ly Rottnblvm mi (talc*. E. RAHWAY RAIL BAN PREDICTED of Dangerous «K tirade Crowing For- .rni in Board Action MIHI.IC HEARING SET N NKWARK JUNE 29TH Avenue Project Will Not Be Included 1* the Belief MM H < F T Elimination of the i |.-:>ii'vnv grade crossing of the , . ,' iiMilrnad of New Jersey, long , i in 1 Ciuteret, appears a llkll- , „,,". in the setting of June 29 , -miiii! hearing of the matter. . .„, ,t »hr hearing is published , k in this newspaper by the :,. ,.,! ,,f public Utility CommlMlon- i:,, MMiIng Is to be at 2 o'clock , ,1 i uinmlsslon's offices, 1060 ,,. ,,i :".tifd.. Newark, when repre- , ,,1'iM". of the borough, the rall- ,, iiililir Service Transportation ,,,.> ,,i|,n utility interests, property ,,..,. .inft nil who might be effected •,,. '.wirlt arc expected to appear. Flans Now Ready l-i,ii'- for the elimination have ;. ,-ii iu.proved by the United States ;, l: r!>i 'if Roads and by the State l u i i W Department. Pund» for the iniv.inii'ilon are supplied by the for- i, M nfipucv to the state department, -,,,;, i: carries out the work. The ,,!:n,ui and the highway depart- ,-, .i ..|i«rr In the cost of buying vv iinoi-sary land. In this instance Mic.fri to ba not over 115,000. 11,1' local administration has lately l«--ii interested In securing a bridge j' tlif- |K)int where the Carteret \-.tw\r extension would oln the pro- i, ••ri\ MPW road which is expected to tv iiuilt in the next few years, ac- ri'linK to the highway department. rli.nies A Mead, engineer in charge i' binlRi- and grade crossing ellmlna- :ni tm the Utility Oommlssion, said tins ftTck however that It was likely til.' borough would have to accept li-.f present plan for the East Rah- ",,iv or West Carteret elimination JIVI srpk the other Improvement ulifn u becomes necessary The present grade ^rotslng is con- Mdcrrrl a particularly haiardou* one u it Is used by many tj-ucM a.-, wall is hv local and Public Service bus ! lm»j • . . Holy Family School Graduation Sunday Tliirtv-nve PupiU Will Alio Attend Maw Together In Morning CARTERET—Eighteen girls and ; J"\rmoen boya will receive their dl- l>i mias from Holy ramily School at Hi' txerclsw" to be held Sunday i-ishi m the school auditorium. All arrangements have been made by '-"• right listen! of the school, and * fine program haa beer) prepared. Iff- Dr. Joseph Dalftdou, pattor > ' the church, will present the cer- "<»tes The program will start at i w o'clock. The graduates will receive communion in a body \ " i he 8 o'clock maas Sunday morn- Tlie following are the graduates: -Iweph Blalecki, Edward Bojar, I Uu-rence Ciajkowskl,, Stephen Dud *, Stanislaus Hadam, Henry KleJ- '• Henry Komleakl, William Kur- v Charlea tysoewski,, H enry MKxlussewskl, Francis Nadolskl, Mamslaus SoWeski, Henry Bosnow Edward Wadlak, UdUlau* Waw- Wiru High Honor Melvin B. C«h«n CARTERET -Melvin B. Cohen, son of Mr. »nd Mrs. Cohen of upper Roosevelt avenue, was graduated last week from New- ark University LAW School, re- ceiving his degree cum laude. He alsn won the award given to the student having the highest average In Constitutional law. Young Cohen attended Cartert High School for two years and graduated from West Side High School In Newark. He Is serving his clerkship with the firm of Jo»eph E. and Leonard Cohn, of Broad street, Newark MARY MYNfO WEDS IN CHURCH RITES Stanlslaus Wojclk, Edward ' Wojikowskt. Florence Blalowarczuk, Helen Bo- fatewska, Eleanor Harktewics, Leo- fnclia Komlewaka, Helen Kondracka •Villa Krystoslsk, Roae Marcinlak, «"i>liie Marctnlak, Helen Marten- r "ik. Helen Nlemlec, Stephanla Pas- "k. Wanda Rogowaka, Roae Rusin- Mary Rytel, Adela Tyslewici, 1 Waselewlc?, Victoria Wyzkow- •Snphle Zabludowska. PICNIC FEATURES : Apple, Amateur Contest •t German Outing < ARTERET — Admission to '•tiukwttlt'a Grove for the annual I'li'iiir. of the Oerman-Amerlcan 'i'i« us' club on Sunday will '<• iree. Tickets for the various ^••utft on the program will be (| i'I inside the grounds by Oscar : ' l <'iu and Henry SUegman. From 1 'i'dock until 11 there will be •itncUig to an eight piece popu- lilr ijixheatra, and entertainment •tin Include amateur hours for '"'Hi fUulU and children, with »wurd 8 lor each group. A »p«- ""I event on the program w»U '«• U Big Apple, danced by J " h 'i Haas, Pred J I UodersUd, Koeble and 4NUTURK WHO — Acknowledge* ^ for help laat week's issue. ui T Tories written by uf Carteret "High Boh made so hurriedly that imporunt bit of t 0 1 t ikd was p u n t bit of t>r«01t was ''vtiiooked~tbat lor. the. typing «' "toriei Mr'Ul'M «re "toriei. MrUlM «re hereby made 1» fttlfr. I, JBaW- '««. Jr., oi the KHioal faculty, t "one, Bride of John KleUn at St. Demetrius Cere- mony CARTERET-Miss Mary Mynlo of 101 Edgar street, daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. Constantlne Mynlo, Mayor To Fix 30th Of July As'DerbyDay [To Issue Proclamation Set- ting Official pate for Races Here KASHA OUT TO AGAIN WIN LOCAL CONTEST Requirement That Parents Approve Entry of Boys Is Stressed OARTERKT Twelve year old Ber- nard Kasha of 10 Charles Street, who won the Map-box derby held here •Mt, yenr, already sees himself In Akron, Ohio, for the final race be- twmi winners from all over the United States. "I'm out to win, and don't care whn knows it," he said thia week. 'I've entered, and I'm not missing a trick to help me toward those fine prizes. And I got a lot of swell ex perlence In last year's race which I intend to use tn getting off to a good start this year. "Do you think the derby Is fun?" he was asked "You bet I do—lots of fun, and then look what you might get If you win—" but here he seemed stumped for words. And who wouldn't be especially a twelve year old boy, vtslonlng the possibilities for the one who comes In first July 30, when the local race takes place. There's the college education, the local trophy, lots of other prizes not yet an- nounced, and the big trip to Akron, Ohio, all expenses paid, for the Car- teret boy who gets over the line ahead of all the contestant*. Other* Dream, Too But of course that's only one boy's opinion- that of Bernard Kasha. Lots of other youngsters hold the same Idea of their own ability, and are started on making the vehicle which they Intend to ride with all they've got. Official applications have already been entered by Joseph McCajin, Jr., eleven, of IB Mercer Street; Robert Kubala, thirteen, of 1180 Roosevelt Avenue; Henry Dumansky, thirteen, of 18 Mercer Street; John Jewers, fourteen and a half, of 15 Marion Street, Hagaman Heglhts, and young Kasha. Other boys have applied to enUr at the Economy Oarage, where became the bride of John Kltban, nffi "of Mrs. Sophia Kleban of 568 Roosevelt avenue, at a ceremony performed Saturday afternoon at 4 oclock In St. Demetrius UVran- Church. The pastor, Rev. John Hundiak. performed the ceremony, which was followed by a reception for several hundred guests In Lu thcran Hall. The Ukranlan choir of the church ,?ang during the cer- emony. The church decorations were of CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, June 17, 1938 Sails for Europe PRICE THREE CENTS. Boy, 7, VictimjWPA HALTS PARK PROJECT, Of Drowning Buried Here John Connolly, Jr. CARTERET—John Connolly, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John Connolly of Atlantic street, will Rail Sunday to spend the summer touring In Holland and Belgium. He was graduated from Rutgers University last week. This Is his second sum- mer on a European tour. cybotlum gladlolas. ferns, lilies and white The bride walked with her father who gave her In mar- riage. She was gowned In white chtfTon, made with a train, and her long tulle veil was hung from a cap of duchess lace trimmed In orange blossoms. Her bouquet wa6 of gardenias and lilies of the val- ley. Miss Sophie Mynlo, sister of the bride, was the maid of honor, and the bridesmaids Were the Misses Sophie KHwensky, Agnes A. Med- veti and Catherine E Zimmerman. They wore gowns of aquamarine chiffon, flower headdresses with short bells, and carried yellow oses Michael Wuy acted as best man. The ushers were Waiter Wsuilak, Joseph t^eschek and Peter Treflnko. BASEBALL PARTY Mayor Heads Delegation Sun- day at Medwick Celebration CARTERET Mayor Joseph W Mlttuch will entertain a group o! thirty-six at the double header game between the Giants and St. Louis Cardinals In New York on Su,nday. Hts party will ocoupy boxes and will include officials from the bor- ough and from several plants. The game marks Medwick Day, when Joe Medwick of Carterel will be presented the Newark Athletic Club's trophy for being the state's outstanding professional athlete. Anqther large group from the bor- ough will go tn chartered butei. ELAINE CARBIA 8INGS CARTKRET — Little Elaine Car- sla, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rob- ert Oartla, of lft Liberty Street, will ting over station WHOM to- morrow afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. She will be oil the Sally and Sam program. applications are being received, but have not yet illed their parents' per- mission. This Is necessary for each entry before It Is officially entered. July 30 will be proclaimed Derby Day, by Mayor Joseph W. Mltturh, Members of Seoul troops in the borough are also planning to enter. Rule* For Entry To enter the contest, boys may go to the Economy Garage. Roosn- velt Avenue, where entry blanks may be obtained. There representatives of D. Wohtgemuth it Son, proprie- tors ol the garage and the Carteiet agents for tlu> Chevrolet Motor Car Company, will help in filling out the entry blanks. Entrants will then receive a copy of the new 1938 Derby Rule Book, telling how to build a car to meet the 1938 Derby requirements. Entrants will also be given a driver's license showing they are officially entered In the race. Boys cannot compete unless their cars meet the specifications set up for every Derby contestant, so study the rules carefully. In the book are many helpful hints on how to build a speedier car. The Derby Is a race for coaster cars only—motorless cars. No push- Ing or any other means of gaining speed Is allowed. It Is run on the incline of a hill where speed up to thirty miles an hour can be attain- ed- plenty fast for thrills, yet with- in safety limits. The Pri»es The grand prize, to be awarded the winner at Akron, is a four- (Contiuuad on page three) SALAD A LA COHEN FEATURE OF PICNIC Teachers' Association Hold* Outing to Surprise Lake On Monday CARTERS — The picnic held Monday at Surprise Lake by the Carteret Teachers' Association proved the men teachers of the borough and others connected with the public school system in vari- us capacities are fine hosts and cooks. The women teachers and several members of the Board of Education were guests of the men on this occasion, and so bountiful was the supply of food prepared that the left-overs provided teach crs' lunches at the High School for several days afterward. Pota- to salad, concocted by Morris Cohen, was a feature of the menu. Those attending he outing were: Dr. and Mrs. H. L. Strandberg, Dorothy Strandberg, Mr. and Mrs. C, F. Dengler, Mr. and Mrs. Prank Haury, Mayor J. W. Mlttuch, A J. Parry, the Misses Olive and Agnese Gunderson, Betty Jeftry Marlon Kelly, Anne Qlbney, A. D, Scott. Loretta Powers. Genevleve Kramer. Margaret Conway, Claire Monahan, Bess Rlchey, Ethel Sny- der. Conran Beatrice Roth, Phoebe Molly McCarthy, Anne Mary Filosa, Julia Qinda, Anne Lukach, Anne Daley. Kathryn Beg- lan, Kathryn Hughes, Kathryn Donovan, Blanche Brown. Ann Rosenblum, Bertha and Florence Rubel. Sara Weinsteln, Ann Sch- wartz, Wanda and Ann Knorr, Mildred Sharkey, and Blanche Ztemba. Mrs. William Thotn, Mrs. Mamie Greenberg, Mrs. Gertrude Smith Mrs. Rose Welssman, Mrs. Eliza- beth Connolly, Mrs. Margaret Lloyd Mrs, Elizabeth Jakeway, Mrs. Louise Ruckrlegel, Mrs. Ruth Graeme Mrs. Loretta AlgosBlne, Mrs. Etta Devenson, Mrs. Mary Makwlnskl, Mrs. Emma Conlon, Mrs! Anne Zimmer, Mrs. Helen Strack. John Popiel, John Czerniewlcz, Edwin Quin, Francis McCarthy, Thomas Chester, Morris Gluck, and Morris Cohen, NEW LICENSE LAW CARTERET—Mrs. Carrie Drake, registrar of vital satlstlcs, has call- ed attention to the new law re- quiring applicants for marriage licenses on or after July 1 to pre- sent certificates they have had the blood test now required before the license is Issued. All information may be obtained from Mrs. Drake at the Borough Hall. BANK HOLIDAY CARTRRET-The Carteret Bank and Trust Company will observe the Saturday banking holiday during July and August, according to an- nouncement made today by the sec- retary- treasurer, Thomas G, Ken- yon, To accommodate its customers the bank will provide special opening on Friday nlghU from 1 o'clock until 8:30. Five St. Joseph School Graduates Are Awarded Scholarship Prizes CAHTERjn'—Flva graduates of St. Joseph'* School received prizes for excellence in their studies at the commencement exerciser held Sunday night in at. Joseph's Church. Rev Joseph A. Mulligan, pastor of the church, delivered the graduation sermon, Honors were won by: Audrey Conran, highest genaial average; John Kennedy, highest In religion, spelling, and also the essay prlie of the County Auxiliary, Anoltnt o r - d*r of Hibernians; James CCDow 0*11, i hiH*it In fior ias; mi hiiH*it In li Bmltb, flnjt fe Mm, *ui fiora ifmrd K Wtr, Council, Knights of Columbus, Court Fidelia/Catholic Daughters of America, and former Mayor Jq-< seph A. Hermann. The graduates were the fol- lowing: Howard Belter, James Burke, Josephine Glees, Audrey Conran, Elizabeth •Dafgek, John Dafgtk, John Duggan, Michael Pltspatrlck, M&d&lyii Orohmann, Antwilo Ilk. Josephine Jackson, John Ken- nedy, Walter Kurek, Gerard. L<>V«, Ontohen lister, Mary qarroU Ke- vlll, J|mw OTJonnell, Marie 8»nkn«r, FETE DAUGHTER Grohmans Entertain at Party Celebrating Graduation CARTERET--Mr. and Mrs. Ew- ald Grohman entertained at tliel home on Roosevelt avenue Sunday night at a card party and supue to celebrate the graduation of their daughter, Madeline, from St, Jo seph's School. In addition to i number of guests from out o: town, the following were present from Carteret: Mr.- and Mrs. John J. Lymai: aiifi daughter Marguerite, Mr, am Mrs. John King, Mr. and Mrs Pred Muller, Mr. and Mrs. Rober Graeme, Arthur Grohman, Victor In and William Muller, Helen Hlte, Audrey Trustrum. Mr. and Mrs Frank Karney, Madeline and Ver onlca Grohman, Charles Qregor, John Dlxon, Clayton King, WUlian: Elko, Douglas King, Thelrnu ai Hus&eH King and Andrew Varga. PARLACOSKI - TOTH CARTERET—'Announcement was made this week of the engage men of Miss Sophie Parlacoaki, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Far lacoskl, of 68 Charles Street, tc Stephen Toth, son of Mr. am Mr», Joseph Toth, of 12 Larch Street, Hagaman Heights., Mr. Toth Is employed at the Unltec States Metals Refining Compan: arid was formerly known as i heavyweight boxer and wrestler No date has been Bet for wedding. TAKE LONG TRIP - Mr, and Mrs, George H. Breitswerdt, of Rahway formerly of Carteret, will leave to- morrow for,an extend*! trip. I Denver. Col, they will visit brother of Mr. Breltdwawit's whom he has not »een for thirty yeatt. Thoy will make tha trip by Qrey- hound bus, 'stopping; ofl st Pitts- burgh to, vl$lt relatival and 10 Ohlsago to stay mtth JtUwta. They fill t t 'ttW ' Four Uncles Bear Body of Child; Rites Held in St. Joseph's Church VICTIM STEPPED INTO HOLE, IS THE THEORY Human Chain Is Formed in Effort to Save Ltd But Is of No Avail CARTERS -- The four uncles 1 the late John Mitchell LaVole, seven-year-old child who was rowned early Sunday afternoon. ted ws pallbearers at his funeral Wednesday morning. They were, 'red Springer, Prank Kearney, ohn Samon and Joseph La Voie. The services were conducted at St. bseph's Church, where the pas- or. Rev. Jrfraph A. Mulligan, sang mass of requiem. Burial was In it. James' Cemetery, Woodbrldge. The child was on a week-end amping trip on the south bank if tho Rarltan River, near Bom- •rvllle. with his father and step- mother, Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell La ole, of 28 Hayward Avenue. The A Vole tent was pitched near hose of other campers, and on iunday, shortly after lunch, two 'lder boys, Robert Neumann, of 3omerville and Joseph Dolan, of Carteret, started toward the Head- gates Dam of the river. They Uild Jtate Police they had warned the smaller boy to go back to his par nts 'camp, but instead of obeying they said he went Into the river They were at the dam when they saw him go under and it Is be- leved he stepped into a hole. Bojn Gave Alarm The two boys, each fourteen gave the alarm and a dozen vol- mteers clasped hands and formed a human chain across the river About a half hour Inter the child's body appeared floating downstream and It was brought ashore by Mr. La Vole. Rescue squads from Som- irvllle and Rarltan arrived at this .line and worked in vain for the ,iext four hours attempting resus- citation. The squads were as- sisted by Miss Ruth Manning, «a nurse, and Dr. W. J. Albrecht. The child was in the first grade class of Un. Ana Zimmer at Nathan Hale School. His mother was the late Anna Saman La Voie, of Port Reading. He is survived by his father, his four uncles, two grandmothers, Mrs. Ann La Vole, of Carteret, and Mrs. Mary Samon, of Port Reading, and a great- grandmother. Mrs. John Kane, also of Port Reading. Flowers at the funeral were so numerous two open, cars were, need- ed to take them to the cemetery. Included among the pieces were designs from toe Armour Fertili- ser works and the child's class- mates. Members of the band of No. 2 Fire Company, to which Mr. L» Vole belongs, held services at the house Tuesday night. The funeral was in charge of Under- taker Thomas J. Cooney. 'Who Stole Crushed Rock?' Mystery Brings Call Fot Sherlock Holmes Weitzen Target for "A** trary Action;' Protest Sent to Hopkins CARTERET - If you get a minute will you please page Sher- lock Holmes? We have. It seems, a mystery which ts known along Roosevelt Avenue, In the 8:20 bus and the back-room of the corner saloon as "Who Stole the Crushed Rock" or "What's a Home Without H Driveway," The Job really ought to be a push-over because the spot where the loot wa.i planted should be marked with a meticulously-let- tered sign reading "This Project Sponsored by the Borough of Carterel." The sign, my friends, disappeared with the crushed rock and both disappeared from the Carterpt Avenue Improve- ment project. The mystery broke In the midst of a community so serene and quiet you couldn't hear the lat- est blasf of Joe Fitzgerald against the way the WPA i« run •or is it only dripping. The MAYOR TCTAGAIN ASK FINANCING BY BORO clues to date Include a report that a figure was seen pushing u a wheel-barrow 1n the direction |c:»_«^ u m . rv> of a pile of crushed rock and r«Igerald BlMtt Dlttd* that, a certain drive-way In town for Attempting to *BuB> certainly needed repairing. An- - - - *~-. other version is the stone was taken by unnamed Individuals who live In glass houses and who should know better than to throw them. The sign has had excursions before, but has always turned up sooner or later. While no great engineering feat will be required to restore this placard to Car- teret Avenue, If and when it Is found, It Is feared that. If work- men try to put back the crush- ed stone they'll have to put that driveway back with It, a Job of no mean proportions. At all events,, the Incident and the mystery have given the folks something U> talk about pro- vided they ran get a word In edge-wise, what with all the t«lk about this and that. Kelley Modestly Recalls Part In Rescue Ot Five In Storm pg B ' Community CARTERET With 83 labor** dismissed Irom the park pmjtft shunted Into out-of-town Joba, pub- lic condemnation fell with uUtCg force this week on WPA nfflcisll and the Democratic minority hv tlM Bh earning BOARD TO DISCUSS REPAIR OF SCHOOL Hearing On Washington Ave. Building Problem to Be Held June 24 GRADUATION PARTY Howard Beiter Celebrates Completion' of Study CARTERET-Howard Beiter, Jr., a ;m of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Beiter of Washington avenue, celebrated his graduation from 8t. Joseph's Parochial School with a party at his home Friday night. His guests were: Charlotte Flessner, of Iselin, Theresa Schein, Josephine Jack- son, Janlee Wantoch, Jane Smith, Mary Oarroll Nevll, Audrey Con- ran, Harry Gleckner, Jr., Jamea O'Donnell, Horace Smith, Charles Brady, Jr., John Kennedy, oJhn Popiel, and David and Charles Belter, CELEBATE8 ANNIVERSARY CARTERJTT — Pride of Puri- tan Council, Daughters of America celebrated its twenty-fourth anni- versary at a meeting Tuesday night In I. O. O, r. Hall. A motion pic- ture show and other entertainment was given, and refreshments were served.. Many visitors from other councils were present. The lodge will meet once next month and once tn August, resuming its regu- lar schedule in the fall. A. i. H. OUTING CARTERffT—The Alliance of Junior Hebrews will hold its last formal business meeting of the year tomorrow! night at the H)U syna- gogue, and on Sunday the annual outing will take place at Echo Lake-. Buses will leave from the two synagogues and the comer of Cook and Washington Avenues. Charlotte Hertz Is In charge of ar- rangements. JOHN MATLAGA DIES CARTERKT — Pufleral services were held yesterday morning from St. Demetrius Ukrainian church for John Matlaga, seventeen, son of Mr. and. Mrs. Stephen Matlaga, ot 10ft B(4»ar, Street. The youth died at his home on Tuesday. He IH turvlvwt by ,,hi» parent, two brothen, Stephen Matlaga, Jr., and Nietwia* HatUga. and « al*t«r, MM. John IJednare, of EHMDBUI. Young MtUkga was a number ot the Harmony Social Club and of t} Oh Th at. otnttrtiM tor, Bw, John The pw- Liebig Lane Man Strives Valiantly to Save All Of Canoeing Party CARTERET- James W. Kelly ot Lleblg Lane, credited In many news- paper accounts as a hero for his res- cue of five persons from Btaten Inland Sound last Sunday, is not only R modest hero but a very much em- barrassed one. It seems he wasn't the only one effecting the rescue, and he thinks It unfortunate he got all the credit because his name was the CARTERET"-All residents, voters, taxpayers and persons Interested in what Is to be done to repair or re- place Washington School, iiftdly dam- aged by fire two months ago, will have a chance to make their opinion known to the Board of Education Prlday night, June 24. At that time the board, will conduct a public hear- ing in the council chamber at the Borough Hall and all concerned with the final decision have been Invited to attend the speak, If they desire. S Possibilities The proposals considered by the board offer three possibilities. Es- for repairing the building set a low figure of *94,366, not to Include ,n auditorium and two craftwork rooms contained in the burned bullri- ng, with $120,000 the cost of repair including these facilities; 1115.000 for an entirely new building of twelve rooms. A third suggestion would eliminate Washington School entire- j tenson dived overboard with life ly, house all grammar grades in j preservers. They had great dlffl Borough Counrll for wholesale ouster, J. H. WeiUen. District Dlttqtd; of the WPA, was the target af condemnation from both R*pubtt- can and Democratic spoke«m*tt. Mr, Weltaen. In a three-mUuHk conversation In the door-way of thi store of Mayor Joseph W. MlttUflfc, decreed a summary flnis to t0t park improvement On which tfm $60,000 of Federal funds ri has been spent. His excuse for the drastic actloft was the withdrawal of local equip- ment from the project, made nK- rssary by the refusal of Council* men Belgert. LUkach and Bcaltjr to make sufficient, funds avaltsHs to pay for the. facilities. It in understood the men wW were working at the park have been given places on other WPA projects outside of Carteret. Thll arrangement, of course, subjects, thi men to the expense of paying Ujdr transportation costs out of town nnd in addition causes great de- lay in the completion of a center of relaxation and recreation for citizens of the community. Call Unnauounced Weitzen's action, which «ven" yet has not been formally announoid, '!j was taken without any consultation whatever with the members o f t w only one obtained by the police. I Borough Council. The The rescue proved fruitless tor a sixth person, Charles Kurticzn, 24 of ] 10 Claire Avenue, Woodbrldgo. whn [ailed to respond after being carried ashore. Mr. Kelly was one of a party ot four who spent the day fishing on the motor boat owned by Alfred Chrls- tensoa, William Holmes and Ray- mond Vaughn being the others. The party. Was on its way back to Car- teret about 7 o'clock when attracted by frantic signals from a man en the Staten Island dock, who called their attention to a canoe overturned In the water near them, about which six persons were floundering while a heavy storm raged. Two Dive Overboard The motor boat headed for the canoe ad Mr. Kelly and Mr. Chrls- Nathan Hale, Columbus and Cleve- |culty with one woman, the most fran- land Schools, and build an addition to the High School casting $225,000. This would care for all high school students under one roof. Instead of lousing the freshman class In Co- .umbus fcichool as is now done. Members of the board will explain the proposals In detail tit the public discussion. After the hearing the board will consider the matter fur- ther and whatever proposal It finally adopts will be put to the electorate for a vote of authorization. LICENSE DEADLINE Council to Set Noon June 25 (or Liquor Applicant* CARTBRET - The Borough Council Is expected to adopt a resolution at its meeting Monday night setting noon of Saturday, June 35, as the final time when applications for ll((uor licenses may be made to the borough clerk. Ap- plications will be considered at the special meeting to be held Mon- day night, June 27. The decrease In the fee for a license from $600 to $3«5, passed on first and second reading, Is ex- pected to become effective July 1. The ordinance effecting the change comes up for final action on Monday. tic of the group, and calmed her only after a considerable struggle. "After she stopped struggling," said Mr. Kelly in describing his experience to a reporter for this newspaper, "the others sort of clung to the canoe until the police boat arrived." This boat had been summoned by the man who attracted the Chrlstenson party's attention. The frantic woman, according to Mr. Kelly, acted Just the way the llfesavlng instructors tell their Btu- dent* a drowning person Is likely to —grabbed her would-be rescuers around the neck and clutched at, them Instead of letting them hold her for the pull ashore. However, Messrs. Kelly and Chrlstenson didn't follow life-saving instructions at this point. They calmed their object with- out the knock-out blow the 1. s. In- structors say Is leglmltate on such occasions. "I didn't want to hit a lady," Mr. Kelly explained, and that's »U there was to It. How he actually got her calmed down he wasn't sure, but he knew she finally stopped struggling and was rescued. The police launclj from New York arrived shortly and took the canoe- ist* to shore. All were treated for submersion and police from Totten- vllle and St. George worked over (Continued on page three) >m his brief call on the unannounced, was ly criticised by Joseph P. aid, President of the ocratlo Organisation. Ing his demands for a ve&tigatlon of the WPA Pltegersld declared: "The Carteret Democrat*;, ganlzatlon Is not concerned' uses. W concerned only with the which seemingly are that he It|) Into our town and after an argu- ment with the Mayor ipracttciuly on the side-walk I closed the part; project. "Mr, Weitzen ts not Invested this power. The government dow • not pay Mr. WeiUen to bulldoie any community. We have a Bor- ough Hall, built, by our citlWU, where Important matters and of- ficial business are transacted, Mr. Weitzen should know this, also that the citizens of this town have elected six men as Councilman who should have had a voice in, this matter." • • •' Mayor Mlttuch declared the park ' project will continue, regardless of the WPA withdrawal. He said t h a t , another effort will be made, prob- ably on Monday, to obtain oon- sent of the Democratic minority to provide necessary funds. If this i ! consent Is not given, he asserted the. work will go on In accordance with the Borough's ability to flu- " mice It, alone. A telegram of protest on Welt- uen's action was sent by the Mayor to Harry Hopkins, WPA adminis- trator in Washington. •7$ Dmytnw Sisters In Double Bridal In St. Demetrius Ukrainian Church CARTKttBI" -St. Demetrius Uk- ratilaii Chinch here w»i the scene Saturday afternoon of an unusual ceremony, a double wedlug, in whelh sisters, the MUsea Ann and Helen Omytiiw, became the brides of Edwunl Daumgarteti and Mich- ael Bodnar. The ceremony unit- ing Miss Aim Dmytrlw and Mr, Baumgaiteu was performed In English, while that lor her slsUr, Helen and Mr. Boduar, wan 'in Ukrunian. with the pastor of the Church, Rev. John Hundiak. ofli- olatlng for ouch. The brlden are Uu; daughters of Mr and Mrs Alexander Dmytrlw of 114 Randolph street. Mr. Bod- nar Is a ton of Mr. and Mrs Bar- ol 1 Bodnar of e PaaMlo atrtet and Mr. Saumgarten of Mr. and MM. Charles Baumgarten of Verona. Oowoe4 Alike The church was d^coratwt hi ay- boUum ferns, lUiw and White «Ud- lolw-The brldsa entarjd Uw church im their father, f*> n ra ^ alike, in whlU: moussellne de wl, made princess style, and their tulle veils were held in place with wreaths of orange blossoms. They carried white gardenias and lilies of the valley. Helen Dtnytrlw was attended by Mrs. Anthony MUler as matron of honor, and Miss Nellie Zalewskl of Newark as maid of honor, Mr. Bodnar had his brother, Walter, as beat man, and Michael Petru&ki of Allen town. Pa., was his uaher Ann Dmytrlw was attended by Mrs. Michael Qregor u matron of honor, and Miss Mae Baurgarten of Verona as maid of honor. Nich- olas Dmytriw, cousin of the two brides, acted at Mr. Baumgarten's best man and Michael Dmytrlw U usher. After the ceremonies than wan a reception at the Dtnytriw home, Mr and Mn. Bodnar will lire at « Paaaalc street, and Mr, and Mn O'DONNELL HONORED •raduation Marked By Pirty at Parents' Home CARTERET -The graduation Of James O'IKmnell from St. Joseph's School was celebrated by his par* tints, Mr. and Mrs John O'Doii- nel. at a party in their home OB Lowell street, Sunday night. There was music and a supper wt(l served. Their guests were: Mrs. PatrMk Devlin and daughter, Marie, MM. Thomas Mello and daughter, Je*O. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry O'Donnell and Mini John, Mr. and Mrs. JaqiM Cunningham and Joseph O'DQB- nell of Newark: Mr. and Francis Irving and children, James and Mary, John, and Alice O'Donnell. GKONSKI FETED CARTEHET Mlis Stella < ski, daughter of Mr. and Frank Grouski, of 25 Mercer fi was honored Saturday at a prise shower given at her u group ot friends, were In pink and buffet supper was served. weif presented In an Twenty-five persons ware r. T. A. ELECTS H*AD* ; i CARTEKfcT The foliowltt* «&.. fleers wen elected thl* week -W the Parent Teacher AssocUMdH 1 «ji •: Washington School: p—!-•—»" Mn. Harry Ulwkner, who elected; vice-presidents, Mrs, ert Shenley, O. F. Dengfe* M4-! Bthel Keller; treasurer, " " " Pilota; secretary, Mn. ~ man. Annual reports were given tit meeting, Held Tuesday, among It aa^jcount of gleam pu

Transcript of CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It · Boy, 7, VictimjWPA HALTS PARK PROJECT, Of Drowning Buried Here John...

Page 1: CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It · Boy, 7, VictimjWPA HALTS PARK PROJECT, Of Drowning Buried Here John Connolly, Jr. CARTERET—John Connolly, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John Connolly

sH0P THE ADS BEFORE YOUc,HOP THE STORES —YOU'LL

FIND IT SAVES MONEY. CARTERET PRESS*K

WidMt Circulate hftInfl Cartortt Complttety; Syttl,ly Rottnblvm mi (talc*.

E. RAHWAY RAILBAN PREDICTED

of Dangerous«K tirade Crowing For-

.rni in Board Action

MIHI.IC HEARING SETN NKWARK JUNE 29TH

Avenue ProjectWill Not Be Included

1* the BeliefMM H<FT Elimination of the

i |.-:>ii'vnv grade crossing of the, . ,' iiMilrnad of New Jersey, long

, i in1 Ciuteret, appears a llkll-, „,,". in the setting of June 29, -miiii! hearing of the matter.

. .„, ,t »hr hearing is published, k in this newspaper by the

:,. ,.,! ,,f public Utility CommlMlon-i:,, MMiIng Is to be at 2 o'clock

, ,1 i uinmlsslon's offices, 1060,,. ,,i :".tifd.. Newark, when repre-, ,,1'iM". of the borough, the rall-,, iiililir Service Transportation

,,,.> ,,i|,n utility interests, property,,..,. .inft nil who might be effected

•,,. '.wirlt arc expected to appear.Flans Now Ready

l-i,ii'- for the elimination have;. ,-ii iu.proved by the United States;,l:r!>i 'if Roads and by the Statelu i iW Department. Pund» for theiniv.inii'ilon are supplied by the for-i, M nfipucv to the state department,-,,,;, i: carries out the work. The,,!:n,ui and the highway depart-,-, .i ..|i«rr In the cost of buyingvv iinoi-sary land. In this instanceMic.fri to ba not over 115,000.

11,1' local administration has latelyl«--ii interested In securing a bridgej ' tlif- |K)int where the Carteret\-.tw\r extension would oln the pro-i,••ri\ MPW road which is expected totv iiuilt in the next few years, ac-ri'linK to the highway department.rli.nies A Mead, engineer in chargei' binlRi- and grade crossing ellmlna-:ni tm the Utility Oommlssion, saidtins ftTck however that It was likelytil.' borough would have to acceptli-.f present plan for the East Rah-",,iv or West Carteret eliminationJIVI srpk the other Improvementulifn u becomes necessary

The present grade rotslng is con-Mdcrrrl a particularly haiardou* oneu it Is used by many tj-ucM a.-, wallis hv local and Public Service bus

! lm»j • . .

Holy Family SchoolGraduation Sunday

Tliirtv-nve PupiU Will AlioAttend Maw Together

In Morning

CARTERET—Eighteen girls and; J"\rmoen boya will receive their dl-

l>i mias from Holy ramily School atHi' txerclsw" to be held Sundayi-ishi m the school auditorium. Allarrangements have been made by'-"• right listen! of the school, and* fine program haa beer) prepared.

Iff- Dr. Joseph Dalftdou, pattor>' the church, will present the cer-"<»tes The program will start ati w o'clock. The graduates will

receive communion in a body\ " i he 8 o'clock maas Sunday morn-

Tlie following are the graduates:-Iweph Blalecki, Edward Bojar,

I Uu-rence Ciajkowskl,, Stephen Dud*, Stanislaus Hadam, Henry KleJ-'• Henry Komleakl, William Kur-vl« Charlea tysoewski,, Henry

MKxlussewskl, Francis Nadolskl,Mamslaus SoWeski, Henry Bosnow

Edward Wadlak, UdUlau* Waw-

Wiru High Honor

Melvin B. C«h«n

CARTERET -Melvin B. Cohen,son of Mr. »nd Mrs. Cohen ofupper Roosevelt avenue, wasgraduated last week from New-ark University LAW School, re-ceiving his degree cum laude.He alsn won the award given tothe student having the highestaverage In Constitutional law.

Young Cohen attended CartertHigh School for two years andgraduated from West Side HighSchool In Newark. He Is servinghis clerkship with the firm ofJo»eph E. and Leonard Cohn,of Broad street, Newark

MARY MYNfO WEDSIN CHURCH RITES

Stanlslaus Wojclk, Edward' Wojikowskt.

Florence Blalowarczuk, Helen Bo-fatewska, Eleanor Harktewics, Leo-fnclia Komlewaka, Helen Kondracka•Villa Krystoslsk, Roae Marcinlak,«"i>liie Marctnlak, Helen Marten-r"ik. Helen Nlemlec, Stephanla Pas-"k. Wanda Rogowaka, Roae Rusin-

Mary Rytel, Adela Tyslewici,1 Waselewlc?, Victoria Wyzkow-•Snphle Zabludowska.

PICNIC FEATURES: Apple, Amateur Contest

•t German Outing

< ARTERET — Admission to'•tiukwttlt'a Grove for the annualI'li'iiir. of the Oerman-Amerlcan'i ' i« us' club on Sunday will''<• iree. Tickets for the various••utft on the program will be(|i'I inside the grounds by Oscar

:'l<'iu and Henry SUegman. From1 'i'dock until 11 there will be•itncUig to an eight piece popu-lilr ijixheatra, and entertainment•tin Include amateur hours for'"'Hi fUulU and children, with»wurd8 lor each group. A »p«-""I event on the program w»U'«• U Big Apple, danced byJ"h 'i Haas, PredJ I UodersUd,

Koeble and

4NUTURK WHO— Acknowledge*

^ for help laat week's issue.ui TTories written by

uf Carteret "High Bohmade so hurriedly thatimporunt bit of t 0 1 t

i k dwasp u n t bit of t>r«01t was

''vtiiooked~tbat lor. the. typing«' "toriei M r ' U l ' M «re"toriei. M r U l M «rehereby made 1» fttlfr. I, JBaW-'««. Jr., oi the KHioal faculty,t"one,

Bride of John KleUn atSt. Demetrius Cere-

monyCARTERET-Miss Mary Mynlo

of 101 Edgar street, daughter otMr. and Mrs. Constantlne Mynlo,

Mayor To Fix30th Of JulyAs'DerbyDay

[To Issue Proclamation Set-ting Official pate for

Races Here

KASHA OUT TO AGAINWIN LOCAL CONTEST

Requirement That ParentsApprove Entry of Boys

Is StressedOARTERKT Twelve year old Ber-

nard Kasha of 10 Charles Street, whowon the Map-box derby held here•Mt, yenr, already sees himself InAkron, Ohio, for the final race be-twmi winners from all over theUnited States.

"I'm out to win, and don't carewhn knows it," he said thia week.'I've entered, and I'm not missing atrick to help me toward those fineprizes. And I got a lot of swell experlence In last year's race whichI intend to use tn getting off to agood start this year.

"Do you think the derby Is fun?"he was asked

"You bet I do—lots of fun, andthen look what you might get If youwin—" but here he seemed stumpedfor words. And who wouldn't beespecially a twelve year old boy,vtslonlng the possibilities for the onewho comes In first July 30, when thelocal race takes place. There's thecollege education, the local trophy,lots of other prizes not yet an-nounced, and the big trip to Akron,Ohio, all expenses paid, for the Car-teret boy who gets over the lineahead of all the contestant*.

Other* Dream, TooBut of course that's only one boy's

opinion- that of Bernard Kasha.Lots of other youngsters hold thesame Idea of their own ability, andare started on making the vehiclewhich they Intend to ride with allthey've got.

Official applications have alreadybeen entered by Joseph McCajin, Jr.,eleven, of IB Mercer Street; RobertKubala, thirteen, of 1180 RooseveltAvenue; Henry Dumansky, thirteen,of 18 Mercer Street; John Jewers,fourteen and a half, of 15 MarionStreet, Hagaman Heglhts, and youngKasha. Other boys have applied toenUr at the Economy Oarage, where

became the bride of John Kltban,nffi "of Mrs. Sophia Kleban of 568Roosevelt avenue, at a ceremonyperformed Saturday afternoon at4 oclock In St. Demetrius UVran-

Church. The pastor, Rev. JohnHundiak. performed the ceremony,which was followed by a receptionfor several hundred guests In Luthcran Hall. The Ukranlan choirof the church ,?ang during the cer-emony.

The church decorations were of

CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, June 17, 1938

Sails for EuropePRICE THREE CENTS.

Boy, 7, VictimjWPA HALTS PARK PROJECT,Of DrowningBuried Here

John Connolly, Jr.

CARTERET—John Connolly, Jr.,son of Mr. and Mrs. John Connollyof Atlantic street, will Rail Sundayto spend the summer touring InHolland and Belgium. He wasgraduated from Rutgers Universitylast week. This Is his second sum-mer on a European tour.

cybotlumgladlolas.

ferns, lilies and whiteThe bride walked with

her father who gave her In mar-riage. She was gowned In whitechtfTon, made with a train, andher long tulle veil was hung froma cap of duchess lace trimmed Inorange blossoms. Her bouquet wa6of gardenias and lilies of the val-ley.

Miss Sophie Mynlo, sister of thebride, was the maid of honor, andthe bridesmaids Were the MissesSophie KHwensky, Agnes A. Med-veti and Catherine E Zimmerman.They wore gowns of aquamarinechiffon, flower headdresses withshort bells, and carried yellowosesMichael Wuy acted as best man.

The ushers were Waiter Wsuilak,Joseph t eschek and Peter Treflnko.

BASEBALL PARTY

Mayor Heads Delegation Sun-day at Medwick Celebration

CARTERET Mayor Joseph WMlttuch will entertain a group o!thirty-six at the double header gamebetween the Giants and St. LouisCardinals In New York on Su,nday.Hts party will ocoupy boxes andwill include officials from the bor-ough and from several plants.

The game marks Medwick Day,when Joe Medwick of Carterel willbe presented the Newark AthleticClub's trophy for being the state'soutstanding professional athlete.

Anqther large group from the bor-ough will go tn chartered butei.

ELAINE CARBIA 8INGSCARTKRET — Little Elaine Car-

sla, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rob-ert Oartla, of lft Liberty Street,will ting over station WHOM to-morrow afternoon at 3:30 o'clock.She will be oil the Sally and Samprogram.

applications are being received, buthave not yet illed their parents' per-mission. This Is necessary for eachentry before It Is officially entered.

July 30 will be proclaimed DerbyDay, by Mayor Joseph W. Mltturh,Members of Seoul troops in theborough are also planning to enter.

Rule* For EntryTo enter the contest, boys may

go to the Economy Garage. Roosn-velt Avenue, where entry blanks maybe obtained. There representativesof D. Wohtgemuth it Son, proprie-tors ol the garage and the Carteietagents for tlu> Chevrolet Motor CarCompany, will help in filling out theentry blanks. Entrants will thenreceive a copy of the new 1938 DerbyRule Book, telling how to build a carto meet the 1938 Derby requirements.Entrants will also be given a driver'slicense showing they are officiallyentered In the race.

Boys cannot compete unless theircars meet the specifications set up forevery Derby contestant, so study therules carefully. In the book aremany helpful hints on how to build aspeedier car.

The Derby Is a race for coastercars only—motorless cars. No push-Ing or any other means of gainingspeed Is allowed. It Is run on theincline of a hill where speed up tothirty miles an hour can be attain-ed- plenty fast for thrills, yet with-in safety limits.

The Pri»esThe grand prize, to be awarded

the winner at Akron, is a four-(Contiuuad on page three)

SALAD A LA COHENFEATURE OF PICNICTeachers' Association Hold*Outing to Surprise Lake

On MondayCARTERS — The picnic held

Monday at Surprise Lake by theCarteret Teachers' Associationproved the men teachers of theborough and others connected withthe public school system in vari-us capacities are fine hosts andcooks. The women teachers andseveral members of the Board ofEducation were guests of the menon this occasion, and so bountifulwas the supply of food preparedthat the left-overs provided teachcrs' lunches at the High Schoolfor several days afterward. Pota-to salad, concocted by MorrisCohen, was a feature of the menu.

Those attending he outing were:Dr. and Mrs. H. L. Strandberg,Dorothy Strandberg, Mr. and Mrs.C, F. Dengler, Mr. and Mrs. PrankHaury, Mayor J. W. Mlttuch, AJ. Parry, the Misses Olive andAgnese Gunderson, Betty JeftryMarlon Kelly, Anne Qlbney, A. D,Scott. Loretta Powers. GenevleveKramer. Margaret Conway, ClaireMonahan, Bess Rlchey, Ethel Sny-der.

ConranBeatrice Roth, PhoebeMolly McCarthy, AnneMary Filosa, Julia Qinda, AnneLukach, Anne Daley. Kathryn Beg-lan, Kathryn Hughes, KathrynDonovan, Blanche Brown. AnnRosenblum, Bertha and FlorenceRubel. Sara Weinsteln, Ann Sch-wartz, Wanda and Ann Knorr,Mildred Sharkey, and BlancheZtemba.

Mrs. William Thotn, Mrs. MamieGreenberg, Mrs. Gertrude SmithMrs. Rose Welssman, Mrs. Eliza-beth Connolly, Mrs. Margaret LloydMrs, Elizabeth Jakeway, Mrs. LouiseRuckrlegel, Mrs. Ruth GraemeMrs. Loretta AlgosBlne, Mrs. EttaDevenson, Mrs. Mary Makwlnskl,Mrs. Emma Conlon, Mrs! AnneZimmer, Mrs. Helen Strack.

John Popiel, John Czerniewlcz,Edwin Quin, Francis McCarthy,Thomas Chester, Morris Gluck, andMorris Cohen,

NEW LICENSE LAWCARTERET—Mrs. Carrie Drake,

registrar of vital satlstlcs, has call-ed attention to the new law re-quiring applicants for marriagelicenses on or after July 1 to pre-sent certificates they have had theblood test now required before thelicense is Issued. All informationmay be obtained from Mrs. Drakeat the Borough Hall.

BANK HOLIDAYCARTRRET-The Carteret Bank

and Trust Company will observethe Saturday banking holiday duringJuly and August, according to an-nouncement made today by the sec-retary- treasurer, Thomas G, Ken-yon, To accommodate its customersthe bank will provide special openingon Friday nlghU from 1 o'clockuntil 8:30.

Five St. Joseph School GraduatesAre Awarded Scholarship Prizes

CAHTERjn'—Flva graduates ofSt. Joseph'* School received prizesfor excellence in their studies atthe commencement exerciser heldSunday night in at. Joseph'sChurch. Rev Joseph A. Mulligan,pastor of the church, delivered thegraduation sermon,

Honors were won by: AudreyConran, highest genaial average;John Kennedy, highest In religion,spelling, and also the essay prlie ofthe County Auxiliary, Anoltnt or-d*r of Hibernians; James CCDow0*11, i hiH*it Infior

ias;mi hiiH*it In li

Bmltb, flnjt fe Mm, *uifioraifmrd K Wtr,

Council, Knights of Columbus,Court Fidelia/Catholic Daughtersof America, and former Mayor Jq-<seph A. Hermann.

The graduates were the fol-lowing:

Howard Belter, James Burke,Josephine Glees, Audrey Conran,Elizabeth •Dafgek, John Dafgtk,John Duggan, Michael Pltspatrlck,M&d&lyii Orohmann, Antwilo Ilk.

Josephine Jackson, John Ken-nedy, Walter Kurek, Gerard. L<>V«,Ontohen lister, Mary qarroU Ke-vlll, J|mw OTJonnell, Mar ie

8»nkn«r,

FETE DAUGHTERGrohmans Entertain at Party

Celebrating Graduation

CARTERET--Mr. and Mrs. Ew-ald Grohman entertained at tlielhome on Roosevelt avenue Sundaynight at a card party and supueto celebrate the graduation of theirdaughter, Madeline, from St, Joseph's School. In addition to inumber of guests from out o:town, the following were presentfrom Carteret:

Mr.- and Mrs. John J. Lymai:aiifi daughter Marguerite, Mr, amMrs. John King, Mr. and MrsPred Muller, Mr. and Mrs. RoberGraeme, Arthur Grohman, VictorIn and William Muller, Helen Hlte,Audrey Trustrum. Mr. and MrsFrank Karney, Madeline and Veronlca Grohman, Charles Qregor,John Dlxon, Clayton King, WUlian:Elko, Douglas King, Thelrnu aiHus&eH King and Andrew Varga.

PARLACOSKI - TOTH

CARTERET—'Announcement wasmade this week of the engage menof Miss Sophie Parlacoaki, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Farlacoskl, of 68 Charles Street, tcStephen Toth, son of Mr. amMr», Joseph Toth, of 12 LarchStreet, Hagaman Heights., Mr.Toth Is employed at the UnltecStates Metals Refining Compan:arid was formerly known as iheavyweight boxer and wrestlerNo date has been Bet forwedding.

TAKE LONG TRIP

- Mr, and Mrs,George H. Breitswerdt, of Rahwayformerly of Carteret, will leave to-morrow for,an extend*! trip. IDenver. Col, they will visit •brother of Mr. Breltdwawit's whomhe has not »een for thirty yeatt.Thoy will make tha trip by Qrey-hound bus, 'stopping; ofl st Pitts-burgh to, vl$lt relatival and 10Ohlsago to stay mtth JtUwta. Theyfill t t 'ttW '

Four Uncles Bear Body ofChild; Rites Held in St.

Joseph's Church

VICTIM STEPPED INTOHOLE, IS THE THEORY

Human Chain Is Formed inEffort to Save Ltd But

Is of No Avail

CARTERS -- The four uncles1 the late John Mitchell LaVole,

seven-year-old child who wasrowned early Sunday afternoon.ted ws pallbearers at his funeral

Wednesday morning. They were,'red Springer, Prank Kearney,ohn Samon and Joseph La Voie.

The services were conducted at St.bseph's Church, where the pas-or. Rev. Jrfraph A. Mulligan, sang

mass of requiem. Burial was Init. James' Cemetery, Woodbrldge.The child was on a week-end

amping trip on the south bankif tho Rarltan River, near Bom-•rvllle. with his father and step-mother, Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell La

ole, of 28 Hayward Avenue. TheA Vole tent was pitched nearhose of other campers, and oniunday, shortly after lunch, two'lder boys, Robert Neumann, of3omerville and Joseph Dolan, ofCarteret, started toward the Head-gates Dam of the river. They UildJtate Police they had warned the

smaller boy to go back to his parnts 'camp, but instead of obeying

they said he went Into the riverThey were at the dam when theysaw him go under and it Is be-leved he stepped into a hole.

Bojn Gave AlarmThe two boys, each fourteen

gave the alarm and a dozen vol-mteers clasped hands and formed

a human chain across the riverAbout a half hour Inter the child'sbody appeared floating downstreamand It was brought ashore by Mr.La Vole. Rescue squads from Som-irvllle and Rarltan arrived at this.line and worked in vain for the,iext four hours attempting resus-citation. The squads were as-sisted by Miss Ruth Manning, «anurse, and Dr. W. J. Albrecht.

The child was in the first gradeclass of Un. Ana Zimmer atNathan Hale School. His motherwas the late Anna Saman La Voie,of Port Reading. He is survivedby his father, his four uncles, twograndmothers, Mrs. Ann La Vole,of Carteret, and Mrs. Mary Samon,of Port Reading, and a great-grandmother. Mrs. John Kane, alsoof Port Reading.

Flowers at the funeral were sonumerous two open, cars were, need-ed to take them to the cemetery.Included among the pieces weredesigns from toe Armour Fertili-ser works and the child's class-mates. Members of the band ofNo. 2 Fire Company, to which Mr.L» Vole belongs, held services atthe house Tuesday night. Thefuneral was in charge of Under-taker Thomas J. Cooney.

'Who Stole Crushed Rock?' MysteryBrings Call Fot Sherlock Holmes

Weitzen Target for "A**trary Action;' Protest

Sent to Hopkins

CARTERET - If you get aminute will you please page Sher-lock Holmes?

We have. It seems, a mysterywhich ts known along RooseveltAvenue, In the 8:20 bus and theback-room of the corner saloonas "Who Stole the Crushed Rock"or "What's a Home Without HDriveway,"

The Job really ought to be apush-over because the spot wherethe loot wa.i planted should bemarked with a meticulously-let-tered sign reading "This ProjectSponsored by the Borough ofCarterel." The sign, my friends,disappeared with the crushedrock and both disappeared fromthe Carterpt Avenue Improve-ment project.

The mystery broke In the midstof a community so serene and

quiet you couldn't hear the lat-est blasf of Joe Fitzgeraldagainst the way the WPA i« run•or is it only dripping. The

MAYOR TCTAGAIN ASKFINANCING BY BOROclues to date Include a report

that a figure was seen pushing u

a wheel-barrow 1n the direction |c :»_«^ u m . rv>of a pile of crushed rock and r«Igerald BlMtt D l t t d *that, a certain drive-way In town for Attempting to *BuB>certainly needed repairing. An- - - - *~-.other version is the stone wastaken by unnamed Individualswho live In glass houses and whoshould know better than to throwthem.

The sign has had excursionsbefore, but has always turned upsooner or later. While no great

engineering feat will be requiredto restore this placard to Car-teret Avenue, If and when it Isfound, It Is feared that. If work-men try to put back the crush-ed stone they'll have to put thatdriveway back with It, a Job ofno mean proportions.

At all events,, the Incident andthe mystery have given the folkssomething U> talk about pro-vided they ran get a word Inedge-wise, what with all the t«lkabout this and that.

Kelley Modestly Recalls PartIn Rescue Ot Five In Storm

pg B' Community

CARTERET With 83 labor**dismissed Irom the park pmjtftshunted Into out-of-town Joba, pub-lic condemnation fell with uUtCgforce this week on WPA nfflcislland the Democratic minority hv tlMBh earning

BOARD TO DISCUSSREPAIR OF SCHOOLHearing On WashingtonAve. Building Problem to

Be Held June 24

GRADUATION PARTYHoward Beiter Celebrates

Completion' of Study

CARTERET-Howard Beiter, Jr.,a;m of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Beiterof Washington avenue, celebratedhis graduation from 8t. Joseph'sParochial School with a party athis home Friday night. His guestswere: Charlotte Flessner, of Iselin,Theresa Schein, Josephine Jack-son, Janlee Wantoch, Jane Smith,Mary Oarroll Nevll, Audrey Con-ran, Harry Gleckner, Jr., JameaO'Donnell, Horace Smith, CharlesBrady, Jr., John Kennedy, oJhnPopiel, and David and CharlesBelter,

CELEBATE8 ANNIVERSARY

CARTERJTT — Pride of Puri-tan Council, Daughters of Americacelebrated its twenty-fourth anni-versary at a meeting Tuesday nightIn I. O. O, r. Hall. A motion pic-ture show and other entertainmentwas given, and refreshments wereserved.. Many visitors from othercouncils were present. The lodgewill meet once next month andonce tn August, resuming its regu-lar schedule in the fall.

A. i. H. OUTING

CARTERffT—The Alliance ofJunior Hebrews will hold its lastformal business meeting of the yeartomorrow! night at the H)U syna-gogue, and on Sunday the annualouting will take place at EchoLake-. Buses will leave from thetwo synagogues and the comer ofCook and Washington Avenues.Charlotte Hertz Is In charge of ar-rangements.

JOHN MATLAGA DIES

CARTERKT — Pufleral serviceswere held yesterday morning fromSt. Demetrius Ukrainian churchfor John Matlaga, seventeen, sonof Mr. and. Mrs. Stephen Matlaga,ot 10ft B(4»ar, Street. The youthdied at his home on Tuesday. HeIH turvlvwt by ,,hi» parent, twobrothen, Stephen Matlaga, Jr., andNietwia* HatUga. and « al*t«r,MM. John IJednare, of EHMDBUI.

Young MtUkga was a number otthe Harmony Social Club and of

t} O h That. otnttrtiMtor, Bw, John

The pw-

Liebig Lane Man StrivesValiantly to Save All

Of Canoeing PartyCARTERET- James W. Kelly ot

Lleblg Lane, credited In many news-paper accounts as a hero for his res-cue of five persons from BtatenInland Sound last Sunday, is not onlyR modest hero but a very much em-barrassed one. It seems he wasn'tthe only one effecting the rescue, andhe thinks It unfortunate he got allthe credit because his name was the

CARTERET"-All residents, voters,taxpayers and persons Interested inwhat Is to be done to repair or re-place Washington School, iiftdly dam-aged by fire two months ago, willhave a chance to make their opinionknown to the Board of EducationPrlday night, June 24. At that timethe board, will conduct a public hear-ing in the council chamber at theBorough Hall and all concerned withthe final decision have been Invitedto attend the speak, If they desire.

S Possibilities

The proposals considered by theboard offer three possibilities. Es-

for repairing the building seta low figure of *94,366, not to Include,n auditorium and two craftwork

rooms contained in the burned bullri-ng, with $120,000 the cost of repairincluding these facilities; 1115.000 foran entirely new building of twelverooms. A third suggestion wouldeliminate Washington School entire- j tenson dived overboard with lifely, house all grammar grades in j preservers. They had great dlffl

Borough Counrll forwholesale ouster,

J. H. WeiUen. District Dlttqtd;of the WPA, was the target afcondemnation from both R*pubtt-can and Democratic spoke«m*tt.Mr, Weltaen. In a three-mUuHkconversation In the door-way of th istore of Mayor Joseph W. MlttUflfc,decreed a summary flnis to t0tpark improvement On which tfm$60,000 of Federal funds rihas been spent.

His excuse for the drastic actloftwas the withdrawal of local equip-ment from the project, made nK-rssary by the refusal of Council*men Belgert. LUkach and Bcaltjrto make sufficient, funds avaltsHsto pay for the. facilities.

It in understood the men wWwere working at the park havebeen given places on other WPAprojects outside of Carteret. Thllarrangement, of course, subjects, thimen to the expense of paying Ujdrtransportation costs out of townnnd in addition causes great de-lay in the completion of a centerof relaxation and recreation forcitizens of the community.

Call UnnauouncedWeitzen's action, which «ven" yet

has not been formally announoid, '!jwas taken without any consultationwhatever with the members o f t w

only one obtained by the police. I Borough Council. TheThe rescue proved fruitless tor a

sixth person, Charles Kurticzn, 24 of ]10 Claire Avenue, Woodbrldgo. whn[ailed to respond after being carriedashore.

Mr. Kelly was one of a party otfour who spent the day fishing on themotor boat owned by Alfred Chrls-tensoa, William Holmes and Ray-mond Vaughn being the others. Theparty. Was on its way back to Car-teret about 7 o'clock when attractedby frantic signals from a man enthe Staten Island dock, who calledtheir attention to a canoe overturnedIn the water near them, about whichsix persons were floundering while aheavy storm raged.

Two Dive Overboard

The motor boat headed for thecanoe ad Mr. Kelly and Mr. Chrls-

Nathan Hale, Columbus and Cleve- |culty with one woman, the most fran-land Schools, and build an additionto the High School casting $225,000.This would care for all high schoolstudents under one roof. Instead oflousing the freshman class In Co-.umbus fcichool as is now done.

Members of the board will explainthe proposals In detail tit the publicdiscussion. After the hearing theboard will consider the matter fur-ther and whatever proposal It finallyadopts will be put to the electoratefor a vote of authorization.

LICENSE DEADLINE

Council to Set Noon June 25(or Liquor Applicant*

CARTBRET - The BoroughCouncil Is expected to adopt aresolution at its meeting Mondaynight setting noon of Saturday,June 35, as the final time whenapplications for ll((uor licenses maybe made to the borough clerk. Ap-plications will be considered at thespecial meeting to be held Mon-day night, June 27.

The decrease In the fee for alicense from $600 to $3«5, passedon first and second reading, Is ex-pected to become effective July1. The ordinance effecting thechange comes up for final actionon Monday.

tic of the group, and calmed her onlyafter a considerable struggle. "Aftershe stopped struggling," said Mr.Kelly in describing his experience toa reporter for this newspaper, "theothers sort of clung to the canoeuntil the police boat arrived." Thisboat had been summoned by theman who attracted the Chrlstensonparty's attention.

The frantic woman, according toMr. Kelly, acted Just the way thellfesavlng instructors tell their Btu-dent* a drowning person Is likely to—grabbed her would-be rescuersaround the neck and clutched at,them Instead of letting them holdher for the pull ashore. However,Messrs. Kelly and Chrlstenson didn'tfollow life-saving instructions at thispoint. They calmed their object with-out the knock-out blow the 1. s. In-structors say Is leglmltate on suchoccasions.

"I didn't want to hit a lady," Mr.Kelly explained, and that's »U therewas to It. How he actually got hercalmed down he wasn't sure, but heknew she finally stopped strugglingand was rescued.

The police launclj from New Yorkarrived shortly and took the canoe-ist* to shore. All were treated forsubmersion and police from Totten-vllle and St. George worked over

(Continued on page three)

>m

his brief call on theunannounced, was

ly criticised by Joseph P.aid, President of theocratlo Organisation.Ing his demands for ave&tigatlon of the WPAPltegersld declared:

"The Carteret Democrat*;,ganlzatlon Is not concerned'

uses. Wconcerned only with thewhich seemingly are that he It |)Into our town and after an argu-ment with the Mayor ipracttciulyon the side-walk I closed the part;project.

"Mr, Weitzen ts not Investedthis power. The government dow •not pay Mr. WeiUen to bulldoieany community. We have a Bor-ough Hall, built, by our citlWU,where Important matters and of-ficial business are transacted, Mr.Weitzen should know this, alsothat the citizens of this town haveelected six men as Councilman whoshould have had a voice in, thismatter." • • •'

Mayor Mlttuch declared the park 'project will continue, regardless ofthe WPA withdrawal. He said t h a t ,another effort will be made, prob-ably on Monday, to obtain oon-sent of the Democratic minority toprovide necessary funds. If this i !

consent Is not given, he assertedthe. work will go on In accordancewith the Borough's ability to flu- "mice It, alone.

A telegram of protest on Welt-uen's action was sent by the Mayorto Harry Hopkins, WPA adminis-trator in Washington.

•7$

Dmytnw Sisters In Double BridalIn St. Demetrius Ukrainian Church

CARTKttBI" -St. Demetrius Uk-ratilaii Chinch here w»i the sceneSaturday afternoon of an unusualceremony, a double wedlug, inwhelh sisters, the MUsea Ann andHelen Omytiiw, became the bridesof Edwunl Daumgarteti and Mich-ael Bodnar. The ceremony unit-ing Miss Aim Dmytrlw and Mr,Baumgaiteu was performed InEnglish, while that lor her slsUr,Helen and Mr. Boduar, wan 'inUkrunian. with the pastor of theChurch, Rev. John Hundiak. ofli-olatlng for ouch.

The brlden are Uu; daughters o f

Mr and Mrs Alexander Dmytrlwof 114 Randolph street. Mr. Bod-nar Is a ton of Mr. and Mrs Bar-ol 1 Bodnar of e PaaMlo atrtet andMr. Saumgarten of Mr. and MM.Charles Baumgarten of Verona.

Oowoe4 AlikeThe church was d coratwt hi ay-

boUum ferns, lUiw and White «Ud-lolw-The brldsa entarjd Uw churchim their father, f*> n ra ^

alike, in whlU: moussellne de wl,made princess style, and their tulleveils were held in place withwreaths of orange blossoms. Theycarried white gardenias and liliesof the valley.

Helen Dtnytrlw was attended byMrs. Anthony MUler as matron ofhonor, and Miss Nellie Zalewsklof Newark as maid of honor, Mr.Bodnar had his brother, Walter,as beat man, and Michael Petru&kiof Allen town. Pa., was his uaher

Ann Dmytrlw was attended byMrs. Michael Qregor u matron ofhonor, and Miss Mae Baurgartenof Verona as maid of honor. Nich-olas Dmytriw, cousin of the twobrides, acted at Mr. Baumgarten'sbest man and Michael DmytrlwU usher.

After the ceremonies than wana reception at the Dtnytriw home,Mr and Mn. Bodnar will lire at« Paaaalc street, and Mr, and Mn

O'DONNELL HONORED

•raduation Marked By Pirtyat Parents' Home

CARTERET -The graduation OfJames O'IKmnell from St. Joseph'sSchool was celebrated by his par*tints, Mr. and Mrs John O'Doii-nel. at a party in their home OBLowell street, Sunday night. Therewas music and a supper wt(lserved.

Their guests were: Mrs. PatrMkDevlin and daughter, Marie, • MM.Thomas Mello and daughter, Je*O.Mr. and Mrs. Jerry O'Donnell andMini John, Mr. and Mrs. JaqiMCunningham and Joseph O'DQB-nell of Newark: Mr. andFrancis Irving and children,James and Mary, John,and Alice O'Donnell.

GKONSKI FETED

CARTEHET Mlis Stella <ski, daughter of Mr. andFrank Grouski, of 25 Mercer fiwas honored Saturday at aprise shower given at heru group ot friends,were In pink andbuffet supper was served.weif presented In anTwenty-five persons ware

r . T. A. ELECTS H*AD* ; i

CARTEKfcT The foliowltt* «&..fleers wen elected thl* week -Wthe Parent Teacher AssocUMdH1 «ji •:Washington School: p—!-•—»"Mn. Harry Ulwkner, whoelected; vice-presidents, Mrs,ert Shenley, O. F. Dengfe* M4-!Bthel Keller; treasurer, "" "Pilota; secretary, Mn. ~man.

Annual reports were given titmeeting, Held Tuesday, among Itaa^jcount of gleam pu

Page 2: CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It · Boy, 7, VictimjWPA HALTS PARK PROJECT, Of Drowning Buried Here John Connolly, Jr. CARTERET—John Connolly, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John Connolly

Friday, Jun« 17,1938

Pasipaiiki LeadingCopperworks Hitters

L)',r\*mor»t tikitrlak

i Pantor

Tap* FieW Wfth Brilliml fin IBtown

tint Aver»ire of MB. TripleTk fn

Hamnl«k

Inhn r>»'.|r*ankl l«Ml* JWkdllH hlttrr nilrln -iy throitfhthf flrrt hull In th* ( ooprtrworki;noftball I*a8ii» For ftvf p n i f i P»i-Ipanfcl Mifin thf rlHrt t\t owr IN)

with n linltldiil hntHnR»' ri'''' '"I'll IW I' tlrci

WU\ 8)f*n Mid Dinsmnr* for mr •Oftfl tlftrr. «>' with an (vHi 8oO

Thf plavarn «'IHI ha»f hit MOor tetter rifclfwuv thrnnth th» dmthalf, fftllw

Plavi>r <! Ml It H K Avr.D ttmlpanki *> IB 4 in 0 55li

Mat*

BakuKYonlt*PrOflos

j KfcrmilikPodlopliuW

Millar

OartlMalawi!

sft434

f,

. Ss4S

' 5

10IHII!IIII0 0

1* 4Id «16 ft7 0

14IIIT»IS10l»IS9!II31llIIItttII

SiT 11 0

1

too4644*44444444S14174Witt411.41140»4N400400

*

sea3#lses

Fatfier'i Day Suggestion!!Slack*, Whit. Sho«», Polo Shim, Ttel,

Socks, Sw**ter».

All At Our Ulutl Low Pricei

CHEAP JOHNComer Union and Mudion St.,

Phone 8-0810

CARTIRtT

OurtnnOUmitn*kyFfdor

1420 T 410 4 1

Yap

ft0ft

t in o i oA Kt S « *ft Jfl * 8 <

Itin

.983INMl3!WJM333313300

.900MO

PLIGHTS TROTH

of A *MI Qirl itAnnounced

AVENEI, The engagement of MMIng* Behrtiu, daughter of Mr. and

IMM. HMH|I Ikhrtnii, of Avenil fltreM.I to m n k Kropfttn. «m of Mr AndMrt )6hn Kropoth, of ftahwiy, wmannounoid thl» w«lt at a p»rty heldIn fiOhor of Mm Itohren'ii blrthftay.

NATIONAL PANTSMI uMitn ithMirr. o»r •>"?

. PRRTN JLNNflV. N. •>•« M a a a c l * * * *

hnAV, Jt!f»R 19th

Girt Dad a Pair of

PANTS

$1 to $6Free

Hrlnjt Hiour

! f i » i m v K l c i i n i o rlot UA ihri11 h t h e miidlr of p«nt«.

Bond Dry Cleaners ToOpen Carteret Store

Hero Id good nrwn for your w»rd-ret» und hr>m» upprnfinee, TheBond Clunfrs it openlhR a utoftIt) CtrUrtt, at M WMhtngton Av»-tiufr. corner nf Pershlnu.

For over lfl year* the proprlfttortnf Bond Store* huve sirved morethan SOO neighborhood tAil or »liop»*lth p|e*nin» »»rvlf» The namehigh quality work th*t Id retailedthrough thr.ie smull ntorts nt price*rnnRlnd from $1 pfrr |»rm»ht upli new ftff*r»rt euitnmirx of BonrtBlorto *t (he lowe«t pMreH In th(Rthtr

Resident* 'if Cartrret run no*enjny qimlltv dry clrtnlng, tallot-1nr fur «lni:iB» nig AlMnlrlg, hut»nrt »hoe rt>nullrllnc At ptlcen thath«ve .•ruirrd fnr Rnnfl fitnrrs the,coTuWiMii iwlrotiMe nf over 75,-onn nf Northern New J^rk*y> flne.nt

Rpest*tor« at t.h*fifth annual Pftncrton InvlUtlnnTr*o* Meet whtrh will tv»ln at s:aonh Saturday aftitrnnnn will have nnoppflftunlty to »i\ oinnn Cunnlnichum perform twice on the fMt trnrkof Palmer Stadium

Th* grsatent, dtntun^e runner inhistory will nut only nm In hi* spec-ialty, the m«e, In which he hM mInJfWir »nd ouMoor world rtcord*,hut will alto eomp*t^ in the thr»e.-quarter mile tvent, n new fHture. in

of the orkanlimtlon re-mind runlomerH thai In thr ISIimifi Stores there IN no romiirn-mine with quality rngftrdlei* of Ultprlc* »nd urge the eltlMnt ot

|PartAf*t to watch the. Pmwi forItielt reftulftr

ITALIAN FOOD STORE244 Smith St. Tel. P. A. 4-1361 Perth Amboy, N. J.

A SPECIALS N)lt| FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

F R E E D E L I V E R YtHE Nl'MBER

OPPOI1TE

CEirrkAL

RAIt-fcOAD

ITATION

CEMlNt LdCATfiLLI

CHIISE

57c IbLA ROSA

MACARONI

3 *» 23eLA PKRLA

QENOVA SALAMIWh»lf

42c Ib.VIOLETTA

OIL

$].15|d.

MAQNESIABtllORCHI

45c"11

MKDAaUA D'ORO

COME!

2 9 c d d n

MADONNA

TOMATO PASTS

6 "M 25cSCIAFANI f U M

OLIVE OIL$].W9#I.

LOCATlUI

PROVOLitTEMntfdk

39clk

UK JKASTINI

MACARONI

$1.20 u i tU Perla br; H«t P*per6nl

1AUSAOI

33clk

ALI B'itALlA

OIL

$1 15 ««l.

The Oldnr and Ortly Italian Sfor* «n Smlrh

After the automoBlle ofBoott t.urntd ov»r t«lce. mar Ypsi-lanti. Mich, hs crawled from un^de.r it uninjured, ntlll .tmoklnd hispipe

WM. MURPHY99 Widgtwood Avt.

Woodbrldot, N. J.K-KOIIKIMI AND ilDil it

lit j»«r» lo

khUHilil

KO

p « > . M n i e t i t l t i n t k h i( n * r * « ( < * d . A l l h lHHt ft 11*

•MA fnninrt work.

Woman's ChH) Notes

Church NewsO A R T t t V f - f t l t MlrVi Blbl*

Olau ot trt» ^trtbywrlin ohurchwill ipflnior a fil&nio far th« mim-tMta of tht oenifttatton at War-lnanto Htt tomorro* thin u to)M an all day affair and all *r«cordially invltrt, «aeh to provide

or Mr own fftM. Go in thembrtvlni or afternooh an ymi nan

Sunday mornmi the. pmlw winp+aeh another rtqu««t «>rti^n onMktt. 3M4. "Many art OkllPrt hutf*w art e.hriMn."

Mimnrlai BirtieeTn« Odd Ptllow's Mtmnnai fl*r-

vlce will M hilrt in the PrMbv-t»rlan ohurth Surrtay ev»ninB »tfl:00 o'tloek. All ar« cordially In-vit«d to tnli ««rvlce There willbe. gjMclai muiln by the choir

Thi Anhual 8ftJ*lnn of the Hum-mer Blt»> BfthflW will fifth Mon-rlfty m6rnln| at 9:00 o'clock Thisschool Is opdn to unv child nf Mmcommunity without chorje. Km ehmnrhlnt will t» devoted to Biblestudy, worship, a study of snm* ofihe hymns Of th* rhurrh Thfre.will slso he A period nf rtrtpatlBndurlni the morninn.

The. Pre.shyterlnn rhurrh wniildlike to t»ke thl.i mrmns nf pxftnfl-ing congratulations nnd h « t wish-es to those who hnvft graduatedthis we,»k from our Hl|h Bchool.

CARTtfRET—In order not to con-

tllft with t,he date (it tti* »tate. fall j

conference., tht Cart«ret Womiin'B

Club np»nln« htnehwm In tfie fill will

to held nn October A Irute&d, of the j

oluH't reftuiar data, n»m»ly, Out. 13 ;

Thin action was taken »t a board

meeting held the early part of the

..... In the cCtifertnce. room at the i

Public Library. Mr« ErMriitel L«-1

kowltt, tirmlrtfni. prpsldfrt

A rwommnirtntlnn was martc thatthe club, in the future, hold onlyon* flower show during the year.that tfi rt* In th« fall. Tht jpTlnt

inhow will be discontinued The showthin tall will be held on Sept. VWith Mrs. Maurlc* RtiewAk M rhalr-mnn. The place will be the Recrea-tion Center wnlrh served nn *uch dnadmlrtibie Mte for th» (iprlng showSpeaking ot flo*tt Shows, the tfrrar-lum donnted hy Jnllun KIOM, WIB»*nrflea to Mrs Ann Reid,

M'r&nitemenM *erc Mrth*rM forthe. Dessert BrldKc wlilrh Mrs. T.J. Nevlll #111 hold Rt n«r home IhAnbury Park on Thursday, June 23,at 315 Sixth Avenue Members andfrlpnrlR nre welcome. Reservation!do not need to he made in advance.Ouent* who alUnrt «ri> ankerl to be atMrs. Nevlll'd at, 13 JD noon as thatl« the timti dessert will he served.Cnrdu #111 he played after An themRtter now eUtncii the trip will betndde In prlvat»rats Anyone tmvlttRroom in her rnr It requested to net

jin touch with Mm. Yetman, chftlr-mati, al«o, tflose wl^hlnR to (to *ndhavlnn no means of transportationnhftuin »ldo communioate with her,Mr*. Nevlll and Mr. ftam Hnrrln are

rooperttlng on this affilr I? lervlnirefrethJAtnti «nd furfilahfttl U»<prltt*. The, club would appfeeiat*i\ good att^ndnncp ail Mrs. Kovlll id"vl»*i ahe can nr-commodate slKt««nor more, tables

The directors pres*nt at the meet-

KINDLING • FIREPLACE

• WOOD#

FAMOtlB

READING COALKOPPfeR'S COKE

MASON MATCRIALSFUEL OIL

Phone Woodbrld|t 1-0714

WARR COAL frSUPPLY CO.

W« Acctpt WrjedbHd|e Townihlp and CertBret R«|ltf

FREE - SOUVENIRS - FREEwith eriry putthttl* ov*r $1.00

JAMES GOUMAS & CO.DILI VERY—Aik for Our Gr«.n

258 S M I T H S T . PROM P. A. i n n ACROSI FROM TKC

}Jww Jjriae tf (graduate Sale10 DIAMOND

BRIDALDUO

1'WA «ntultit<ly n«.i|fn-,MI. atrtteUy iimUiifilllH(M nf i\~K BolMllnlfl. l i t With » t»Ul.•f TjtN uiikUlNE DIA-MoNnB. nt* it at

BOTHRINGS

50c Down 80c Wc.kly

The 'Phantom1

Class Ring

fey. :••,•','•

l> (iffureil In thin eioulnltrn«w iiroallon. U K Solid tloia.UftrRs HOV'AI. quality rrntrrillatnnnd, Wllh nnnlltr (111inn nil nn pncli aide.

Side LJiamondiin addltinn id a flurt*]1!'. ftenuin* Blut-i-Biiter Diamftnd, afftilU tlHlilalte rliifftiolid YUlnw uoltl. Se» It atitOJill.

of H-KS I t

For th* GradUiU!

Solid Yellow Gold

2 Genuine Diamonds

$Q.9525c Down 23c Woeklyi r« n e * ! it's « i«unet iv«! It'sdiRarant: And It's t h j ih i«VUUtt i raduat* wuiitt . InROlId YjlloA' Quid, irL wlttitwn gsni i lno dlnmonrtK, It's annut iunf l l t ig Roysi vnllio atthis law price.

rtller Dlnitn

Best Loose MACARONI100% Pure Semolin

LA I'KRIA

OLIVE OIL DC

MACARONILB. na.

Sahmi (Capr*)

$2-19MADONNA

Tomato PatteSAUSAGECAPICCOLA

PAUTKNK

COFFEECHEESECHEESE

n Italian.AmirlcQh^ec

A il . l i jhttully dainty bi«U«H6 ntylr,wrist wdtch for the youn» girl grud-

DIAMOND ONtXINlTtAL RING

Solid teilOlv Hold.tlen»ilne liUek Onyx IO|>with gmiuint dutnonitand TWo ril«- #*» n (

^ ^ o i a 5 7 . 9 5

He Dawn »c Weekly82 Diamonds

8OLID PLATINUM

ALI, niAMU.NL>Wtdding

Uonn

VAI.UK In an"Channel"C

$29,50

FEN AM> PENCILffT

All atandard niHkat inth» mOflt popular culors

mplett set « | £ A, setas loft a s . . . .

3J« O o » n Ho

Sundftv 1."fATHER'SDAY"

FOA THE BOY atADUATKHfindsoitae, iturfly ohromlum flii-lih«(l cast DtptniltbU rnove-mint. Complete Withlltik bno«Ut

tie * . » k l r

WeSi-hlorpriall

GIVEDAD

Ah Ekctrtc Shtvtrf»»tur» all popular m«K««,

ick I'ac'ktrd »n i fihlttk D d hl

ick. Iacktrd »Auk Dad hla

teicact.. Tney'rt A l j .irlctfl at ,•

it Pc. Wen. A. gntera

Made and ttiikrinua b»

•urn* ufnilh-r*'alittht chai i . . .

$29.75n j»*ti

"BULOVA CLIQUE'

Th» Ideal cllt fur th* yfiuntmtn aradilktt! \1 J«wMBULOVA "rldtu tima" move-In^tit. Ytllvw rsll ia toll!

^ — • ' - • ' •- • " iti-a*.

>** Wo W « k l , as . Daw. iU W««klr Me Bfetra Tit

Sll 001 WINDOWS F0I O tH I I BIG ROYAL VALUES

ST. OEOKOKWOODWUDOK

tht wert Un. GhariM Or«rnje i tph niUU, Un. Emu R h -

. Maurlct 8p«wak, MrOMletky, Un. Auguit Hu:,,.and Mrs. I^efkowlti

n n n t WMki paptr. Mrs H >, -program chairman, will annon,tentative prOfrtm for the ,fail. ~ » . . : :

i-!w,u Selection

G001) USEDCARS*

(OWIWF' Vfv,nl Iorrn

ARTHUR-P MA!^

224 SMITH StRlIT HICfH AMBOY

Kellogg'sCornflakes

R»r 8 1 M Pkf.

5Tomato Juice

Hruff »r»n«. M M. otPort, Wholrtome Idle*

Glint No. 5 Can

TomatoCatsup8llT*r Kltn

BrandYou'll enjoy:U rich ttAfrant fiavnvto*, fliun

M.

7

ALASKA SALMONGRAPE JUICE

FRUIT COCKTAIL 3 8 o 2 ^ sl d u o 1 2 0 c

Da|nty oubtl «t diced frulu

Blue Label fADW Cream 'fc Large 17-Cold#nlonttfmwnn Stylt * oz. Consf l i T l W l X N.Y.StdU Blood <) No.2'/2iCctU115tfcl5FaneyQuol Red 2 Cans 1^

Reg. Size C -Con 3 CNorwegian

CRACKER J A C K S T h ^ , " ' 3 P k 8 S 1 0 cClapp'sBABYFOODSOCTAGON SOAP 3 Giant Size 1 1 -

Cakes • I C

Freestone PEACHES 3 lbs. 1 0 cI

Crisp Iceberg LETTUCE, 2 Heads 9 cSELECTED M t t E D COLORED

EGGS ln ^artonl'HONEY NUT

MARGARINE 23c

PORK

• QUALITY MIATS •You c6n buy Olir m«arswith the utmoit confidenee. Nothing but thefinest quality.

OI JUHJ

Whol. or Mai/ Aib End

BoulettU of QtnulM

ing Lamb 17'Prlm4 CHUCK IOA$T of Choice Graded

Steer Beef Ib. 17c

Fresh Killed Lone, liland DUCKS He

SEA FOOD

Preih DeebStd SCALLOPS ..II- ^

Freeh BUTTIH FISH .' .Ib. 7c

Fteih Caught PkOUMOIRS Ib. 7cLong UlarnJ CLAMi .....4«h U

Page 3: CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It · Boy, 7, VictimjWPA HALTS PARK PROJECT, Of Drowning Buried Here John Connolly, Jr. CARTERET—John Connolly, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John Connolly

• i R F T

V'i

fashion Show, * nnua/ Trip By Senior Cite HighlightClosing Day 0/ The Year At Carteret High School

DenUfla.., I,,I rrlie for the Itat,'.,l«n Him »f 19"

iOHITAGHANVHU

- . I Feature 8afcIKIADI TO TOWN"vmfhp. Ann lothem

, WBD.

OARTIRffr-flo crowded werethe leat daya at Oarteret HighBehool that it >u Impoeelble toget newa of all the actlvltiea Inone wcek'a laaue, and atorteiabout tevjral pre-graduatlm\.eventa, wrttMn by ntudenu, were(tfnltwd from lut week'a 1MU«,which the atUdenU themwlveihelpefl to write and edit. Th«ieitbHee which were H«M over arenifewlth publlahed;

By SttpMnie PryV/aU '40A faahlon ihow «|»nM>red by

Mile Olive Underun * u held atOarteret High School Tueadaymorning. The faahlom were de-llgned by the girls from the Wash-ington, Columbus and HlRh SchoolHwlng datM! under the super-vlalon ol MIM Qunderson

The flrat to exhibit their handi-work wire the nvent.ii and eighthgrade puplla. There were manybeautiful housecoat*, street andifternoon dresws, a.mi clothe* forbeach wear. Later the girls fromth* Carteret High School modeledtheir creatlona, Edna Mantle abeautiful jumper with bolero topfor both afternoon and evening.ftoee HefTner and Dorothy Over-holt wore exquiiite afternoon dreea-ea. tdna Donovan ihowed oulotteawith bolero top. Marlon Beneondliplayed > beautiful ipon dreiamade by Roa« Heffner; Kitty MelIck, Roee Skuret, and Lovey Mel

k wore Jigger coat* made ofweed Qladya fichwtrtt modeled aMte prlnoeia nt.ylc dr«M.

3rierepanla ihowed a twilald apcrrt drew Dorothy Conoly wore a royal blue ellk

ioon drtiM.

By JoMfjh Kennedy '38The aenlor clau of Oartert High

njoyed the annual ««nlor trip toBear Mountain Wedtoaflay Anenthuilaitlo group of one hundredtrenty-flve etnlori »atl*d up theHudton River on the etfumer"Hendrlch Hudeon" for a day's en-joyment The group wa« In charge,of Mlta Kthel Bnyder, Mn William"!nnw»y. Mr Frank McCarthy andMr John Czernl*wlo« The wnlottrip In one of the highlight* OfMhool life »K each pupil R«ea onlyonce In hla senior year. The" e«-p«n»«» of the trip were paid outof the senior da.ii funds.

Every pftrt nf the trip, the beau-ty of the Hudson, the P»ll*<te»,-Bear MountAin. Hie tnttrtalnmentoffered by ths swimming pool. th«eketlng rink, the varlout othereonceailont, the amualng antics ofthe clan comMinns, the dendngand singing added to the pleasureof the day.

A train irom Oarteret transport-ed the pupils to New York to boardthe boat for Bear Mountain. Onthe return trip they arrived m

Port AMdifll atout tm o'clockBy urn %m '40

o n Trwnfliy morning at UJio'olMt, UH ftUmUH torn pre-M&ttd ttwir elleii d*y «untoee mthe evodtteduell. Tht fraitlaUe *«rt

ontJM*i<e," ». WMMMt

nudi a tttoeheUted that tn*

117 G E T DIPLOMASAT H. S EXERCISESFirlt Outdoor Comnwoc*-

rftt It HtM W«dne«d*y(n AthUk

ehaqt at st Marfa tpieaofiVOhvifth, ttVe the mvowWn. M*-lyn Qrow played t vtoOo aeto,"Andante from Concerto Opui M,'

j p JMlehall WftuflU, ]»rteMetit or

th« uiUor (torn,of wetoooi*

band.reeejenttjaiXnWl I .

by Mendeluohn. toUowMaddreat to the gradwatta. \ M r Daniel ft. LoctaU. puWr

Thl» addrew w«t made by Dr.Uf tH« ttMbjUtiUi CTnmh praMh*John A npirio, who d«rWd IMled Qte bettalaumte ttrmon to

l l |

/I-.TOR McLAGLENBRIAN DONLEVYLOUISE H0V1CK

FlUl

mi

STOLEN HEAVEN

[TATETHEATREWOODBRIDGE, N. I.Phone: Wdbg*. l - l l l »

DMi.HT and TOMORfcO*

[ITS ALL YOURS"

Mayor To Fix(Continued Prom Page 1)

year Mholanhlp at any college•elected by the winner. The aec-ond prlM li a Muter D*Lux« Chev-rolet coach. Prlue lor the local con-test will M announced later, the»e tobe in addition U> the Coyle trophyfor the boy who comes In ahead ofall others

To give every boy an equal chanoe.the eoror*utiori wni again be dividedInto two rlisies according to ageftoye from nine to thirteen year* ofMe will be entered In Clau A. Thosefrom thirteen to fifteen years of »g«will compete In Claee B

There It no entry fee of anv kindRvery boy within th* avge limits maycompete absolutely free Prleea willbe awarded to winner and runner-upIn both rlajees Agt doesn't countIn thlt rac<; »peed count*. Nine year*Old or fifteen, the trip to the Natlonai Finals &t Akron depend! onthe epeed of the car!

KELLEY

tMfnlora were donaWrn to the MDOOIa pOftHIt Of AMftlMm Ufttrtnwhith U to b» built Hi the audi-torium.

Following hU tp*e«h the claa*hiitwy wu rM4 by Joetph Ken-nedy. Amid much laughter JohnDonovan propneatod the occupa-tion of each itiimMr of the dtatIn 19(0, The eltle kmooki » » «pre»ent»d by Julia Bubnlek andBtephih UdtMlttk.

At the elite at the exerolrte, 'heHnlort u n | the oiaw font theWftCflt of wTUeh m n comijoeed hyAnna Maiitik. Warreh Kloee pro-vided the atcompewiment.

SCHOOL NEWSBy CharW* Gulp

Mlt* A. f). 8«ott, pflnelpal oftt • high eflhoo), announeei thatteverat mlmMri of the graduat-ing elita hare been award didtcholarihlpi to vtrl6ue oolletu.

The baccalaureate exeroiMi willbe held luntoy afUtnooti at 1 Mo'clock In the hl*h achool auditor-ium. Rev DtnM I . Lormu willadsrtei the gta/imtmg olaie

The flnt euMoor«omMeft«*ment of OirMret HighechMl, held WMneeOAr nltht inthe Municipal Stadium. prtwnUdan effective and Mtuttful ajght,The wMtiwr w u clear and cool,t,M even eeat In the atadlum wettilled before (he line of graduate!a(#ar*0 at <:M o'clock

W "Tannhaueer March."

J p i , ho d«rWd Ipurpote of education M a eotl»lon«. that of learnlni to live witli

and enjoy their d WHpargo. formerly

of Iduoitkm for

pDr.

o Iduoitkm for e.T«reev and now lupcrlnUn^fit Of

d

Hie oiaj* at th« hlth eeboolRunflay.

Or tHe Ut grUvwU&f tWa ye»r.mm altimed int lumora for «n

Marion B m m ,Myrwl Or*nWt. Moa*Vera Ckmalch, Bowm lorenu•nil fefntaor Uatuner. 8ec«Mr

naum w«» wwi by tw«ntf-«»othett.

The gndwBtea w*rt AnmeA Intie eUJajteeJ cap and town.

tplayed by the school band, w u theMocMtlonal to whKh the gradult-ln» olaat entered, ifUr wtlloh RevOrvllle N. Davhtion, prleit in

ifita Bmma um>ntt. hu daughMr, le a number Of the due .

MlU Kmma Wohltchlaier, of th*Oarteret High School graduatingdaat, hai itueeufully paeead h «entrance examination! for theMetropolitan «ot|blUl of New York.

On Juni 1 Mile Monahan of thehigh eehoni faculty, accompaniedby a group of her pupil! from thetevlnth Mfiod English claw, wentto New York to ate "What • Life,"a oom«dy portraying the live* ofhlgn eehool pyplli, now playing atthe tlltihore Theatre. The stu-dent* Utir wjnt backiUge andffllt the principal a«tora. n t aBtane, Ruth Mateeon, and ArthurPlereon.

«t. Kutler. tleartoriomie tr*ndi of refint and p«*ty#ar*

MM* Mnal«Smrnn L/ireptf played a edriMt

nlo. " I M Oamaraoae," bv Mf-narrt, and 8ut*rvlHftg m t e l e i lCalvin t Dangler pf*nttt thegraduiiuui to Or. Herbert L, ttirtnA-b«rg, prealdent M the Bfttrd of 1M-utatltfi, wh6 hanoXI ea«h gnul-uate hU or her diploma.

following thle part of tike pro-gram Kelvin Janofaky pllyed aSaxaphone eolo, "Auid U n | IpM,"and Aev. John HuiKliah. patter ofIt IMmetrluma Ukrainian

n

BE SURE Or YOUR

BRAKESTRUIT YOUM TO UllLIN1M ADJUITMINTS

IRELIN1MG

DRUMTROUILtl

M m/AClQOUILtl COMtCT

RAHWAYIRAKI SIRVICI

9. J. GAJIAWAY, tt*p.fl Yr.. wild Ike QMH, Nmik17 E. Milieu Ate. MMWAY

y l Al>(aa«r» 0

(Gontlaued from pane one)Kurucla for two hour! in attemputo revive him,

Thole reicued were: Kurucsa'iwife, Mary, 31; hU two brothert,John, 32, and Michael, 20, of Aven*l;and Mary and Ann Bullett, 20, and11, of Perth Amboy. Mr. Kelly Isn'tmre which of the women was theone whoie struggle caiued the dlfflculty.

K«lly, a lanky Southerner, lives InUfcblg Une. He ha* lived In Car-teret nine years, and worts aa a pipefitter at Llebig's. He came to Car-teret from hli native South Carolina,is married and the father of onechild.

During the rescue the steering ap-paratus on Mr, Ohristenson's boatbroke so It was towed to the Staienieland shore by thr police launch,where the victims were pflt aahortfor treatment. Then the polloe boatbrought the rescue boat back to O»r-teret.

It Will Alt Go in theKELVINATOR

Out To Repeat!

xpentive

Nil* — Maty Ii«el

ISIN. • HON. . rvit.Jine

he BIG BROADCASTOF 1938

fBorrawing Trouble"

[' WED, JUNE II

I'Shangrul ExpftM"-41*-

JURY'S MCRET*~ BANK am - pu

THURg, JUKI H

ridftHlth

School

Put th« wMk'i «app)y «t p«Hihabl* ftod in th« K»lvin»tor.' There willbe rootn for it bteitiM tM atdiigl iptM «t th* r«fri|t»H« it U

to cleVlHy that lit|a <}uafiiltl*imay be at ore d withiUt inWr fat-ing with the tirtHletion of lite«»ld alt Keltlh»tdr tUetrlerefri|trators fnrqiih the drycold atmoaph«r« that foc-dnt«dl. The adjiiittbl* ahehstin the 1938 raodili make it eiifto Itbre bulky thin|a, luch atmfion*, grapefruit and fowl.

Kelvihator it intetpentlve tooperate. All oabin«ta are mod-erately pti«4d iQl any riiddelmar bt pnrohaMd dn fh» di-vided payM4iit plan at « uriallinortaie oit>t trie cejih prlrr

Bemud KMH»

ISTARTINC MONDAY'No OtHMnh Ace.ittd Uhfr I A. M. Monday

At Thlt Uw M e

LADIES'DRESSES

BiduHfully Dryid tfi l Pr«Md

fur

Title

UlaOiUy!

4 Dresses^HOMEN'S SUITS Dry Cleaned and

StAffN I1LAND CLEANERStit M«4tviLt kvUmt, cAHtiait, N. J

111* MAlrf t f M R T , RAHWAY, K. j .

W ^ "T ^ T ' - r -

GALINSKY'SDIMRTMINT STORE

333 %W itritl- forth AmboyLadi«t'M«n'i

T«llor«dgATHlNO SUITS

SUITS *OR6SS6S

tt

CUan«i

tlut$1.00

MIKB AtLWOOL

Swim Trunks 89

andChildren'*IATHINGSLIP

MINGPPIRS

U P l t l ' At,t WtK>L

Swim Suitt Me

rwn

Men'

VALUISf f | 9 6 CHAIRS* 2 " CPUCH COVERS

* i i mH ^ CURTAINS'* mptrntl JJ«Cum pr. 29c pr. Sfw

29c

!UAI

U4ie*' Uathtr Mr Kpkbcr

Llfti pr. 9e

GRAND OPENINGSaturday, June 18th

BONDCLEANIRS, INC.

N«W JKRtjSlT'B HNR8T SERVICE 0BOANIEATI0N

W WASHINGTOK ST. | \^f^^T69tt#k ^ ^ i i _ i ^ _ i a k i l *ir *U« BteaHBelB^BMlBWaBaBlBaBaBMBBBBHflMBfleHBWrtBlHM Illf H ' ' J , 4 » llli

inal Show White 89c

Meadllf Ht Shirtt

EQVA«

HOME EFFECTSSLIP COVERS 1»«

<M«U Plecw-MHh

I*

4 NICKTI1S

SKIRT .,

IWIATIR ...TROUSlM

NOW!Qet aoiuainted with uurhut Art oleanlnf etrvlce.

i t t i e U)li opportMnlty to1 hire y»ur tUt, or yMrI <weaUr r«lre4hed to Mwr\ ii»aiififi weMidiliiy *tZA a Ipcctal «vlng!

19<, Vetvei fltated. WalU,

T«h tffK)t»'AUWQ0t

| l SChildiWs Dmits

iHiti litiff I

StrOW Hofl

liKg SUit»

Page 4: CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It · Boy, 7, VictimjWPA HALTS PARK PROJECT, Of Drowning Buried Here John Connolly, Jr. CARTERET—John Connolly, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John Connolly

PAGE FOURFriday, June 17, 1938

flJLLAVAN, TAYLOR Beauteous L a C a r r o l lFILM SWEETHEARTS, h S t a r Of Blockade'Franchot Tone, RobertYoung Also in Gait ofMajesties '3 Comrade*'

MudflHr f'mrnll. pwrhapnihon any nthrr Mar In Hollywood,

rourttfrpnrt of

a.nllv

Adventure T«U

The popular "Hopnlong•ml. headed by William

Hayes and

BoyrJ,

yIn In urinal lifeher jewn rolrn

Fnr firs "tinTe In hi, screen! ' ™ * ^ « " n . t e d and a = n

rareei. Robert Taylor shares hon-

or* with an autnmoblle. The car

li Baby" a 1925 Avion-SoUon

wkh which Taylor. Margaret Sull-

avan, Pranchot Tone and Robert.

Ycunit play many nf their scenes

in "Three Comrade*, opening to-

night at the Majestic Theatre.

without "Baby"

Remarque rould not have written

"Three Comrades." for the racing

car h u a very Important role In

the picture.Marjraret Sullavan first meete

Taylor while the three comradesare on a. Sunday outing In "Baby."In "Baby," after ahe has desertedher profiteering afimlrer, LionelAtwiil, Miss Sullavan 3 love forTaylor progresses as they drivethrough the country.

When Young becomea InvolvedIn a, political riot It is "Baby" Whorescued him. "Baby" also speedsMini Bullavan and Taylor on theirhoneymoon, and when Miss Sulla-van suffers her first serious Ill-ness it is "Baby" who races thedoctor to her bedside

After Young has been slain inanother riot. Taylor »nd Tone.with Young's body In the backMat. of the automobile, prowl thecity's streets seeking the assassinand finally trap and kill him.

While Miss Sullavan la at a dis-tant sanitarium, "Baby," againraces to her bedside with Taylorand Tone. When money is neededto pay for an operation Tone sells"Baby" to raise the funds.

"Baby" was only one of manyancient, foreign cars that were re-cruited for important sequences In"Three Comrades."

LAUREL AND HARDYSTILL COMIC KINGSMake First Co-Starring Ap-pearance in Year in Hilar-

'Swiss M ; " '

of the world. MIM Carroll nevertheless regards life and her pro-fession through the eyes nf a brll

Scenes From 'Three Comrades" Opening At The Majestic

English stage and screen, a* wellas In motion pictures made InFranrc and Germany

The actress first attracted at-tention in the United States hv

Southwestern rattle country, "B«r20 .itistlr-e." which opens tod»y «tIh- Crescent Thettre,

The unusual plot, Mulford's

, , n T w r . n M e e ^ In an -.mo* \ her work in "I Wa5 a Spy." and nineteenth «> reach the .cramnhere of culture and unusual eriu t shortly afterward made her debut I - - ' — ->->»• <** effort, nf toldcation In her earlv years she was I In Hollywood as the most beautifulunder the Instruction nf private ! hlonde contributed by English the-tutors later to graduate frnm the atrlctis. Lat*r she was placed under widow whose, husband they have

niversltv of Birmingham. Eng- long-term contract by Walter | Nearly killed In their itniWle.University of Birmingham'land, with a B A rl

evolves about the effort* of goldrustlers to wrest control of theregion's richest mine from a yo'injtwidow whose, husband they have

ready detrcmtnerl to become anactreaa. but found herself underthe necessity of earning enough

and the : wanger. and reaches the high pntnt! The widow, played by the attractlve Owen Oaze, happens t/i beone of Boyri's former sweethearts,and so romance mixes pleasantlywith duty as the B*r 30 foremansets mil. to round up the poachers.

The will of Charles P. Markham

c T h e a t r e . ; > » " « • « " " " •••• - - - • • • . . ,M l "b"1 ly l n embark at nnre on » i in her career as rn star with

brlcn MarUL| i h o r t b ( ] ( pUrp0lw.rui apprenticeship ' Henry Fonda In Wangers "Block -achofll teacher Shehax al- 1 ade." which comes Ui the Dltmasade. which comes lo the

Theatre tonight. This timely screenplay, a romantic drama toldagainst the backgounriof Ihe Span-

d b Willm r I l r t r : > M l v ' P I t n . i m , * . , . . . . . . . . i . . „ „ _ _„money to finance the beginning of | Ish civil war. was directed by Willher career

The path toward fame was notan easy one, but her ambition, rie-

lam Dlelerle! acclaimed as the dl- of Chesterfield, Eng. which dls-rectOT of "The Life of Emlle Zola," posed of a 13,600.000 estate, con-Ihe greatest, picture of 1937. tallied only 73 words.

THEY STAR IN "BLOCKADE"

ous Miss'

The inimitable, Internationallybeloved comedians. Lnurel andHardy, make their first co-starringappearance on the screen In morethan a year In "Swiss Miss," amusical-comedy extravaganza laidIn the Alps, which opens tonightat the Strand Theatre as one ofthe most spectacular productionsever turned out by the Hnl Roachstudios.

A cast of strikiiiK distinction sup-ports the comedy kings in the newfilm, considerable Interest beinggiven the fact that the picturemarks the debut on the American

•Screen of Delia Llnd, hailed ns oneOf Europe's most beautiful singingstars. Also combining a brilliant vo-cal and acting talent is WalterWoolf King who has starred In along list of Broadway musical-comedy hits. Eric Blorc, who hasRddecl gaiety to every picture inwhich he has apneared. is also fea-tured in the cast of "Swiss Miss,"

Five- new songs are offered thepublic in "Swiss Miss." written byPhil Charig who has won fameboth here and abroad, with lyricsby Arthur Kuenser. The songs are"Yo-Ho-De-O-De-Lay-Ee-O," "TheCricket Song." "As Sure As There'ss Sky Above," "Gypsy Song" and"I Can't Get Over the Alps." AlsoIncluded are choral and ensemblenumbers, with "The MountainShepherds Dance" described as theSwiss version of "The Big Apple."

VICTIM OF A RIOT . . .A patriot addresses a throng ot IIUPRIV

men, a parade pusses by, a, rock Is hurled

and In the ensuing melee Robert Younir. Is

fatally Injured aiui collapses In the arms r>f

his twn friends, Pranchot Tone and Robert

Taylor.

A RENDEZVOUS IN ALFONS' CAFEWhen Robert Taylor and Margaret Sullavan i

they select, the cheap, but, colorful Alfons1 Cafe n- M , . ^

for their rendezvous, thinking U) g«t away frnm

nver-devoted comrftdM, Prancrfoi Tone and Hnlv •

But It doesn't work. Tone and YtUng oon fine! >

ftnd in the end the two comi>dM become four.

THK CONFLICT Ot THEIR I.OVK AND THEIR ENMI'l'V is fought against a background of thr iconflict of the Spanish civil war by Henry Fonda and Madeleine Carroll in "Blockade," Walter Wan|rer'»

powerful romantic drama, whieh comes to the Ditmas Theatre tonight.

SPRINGTIME"' Springtime,H w I n K T i m e

and I,oe. Time for Rnbrrt Taylor andMargaret .Sullavan In the above scenefrom "Three Comrades." As a manand woman of a wor-torn generationthey find refuge from their hittprexperiences of the past ln the aft«r-niRil ; :•• •:.-!;• post witr r o m a n c e .

LOVE IN THE FRONT SEAT . . .Even the front seat of a run-down automobile can be-

come an idyllic and romantic place when Its occupants

are In love. The car above has a "Just Married" ilgn

m the rear, or should have, for Robert Taylor and

better or worse" and now are on their way to a

picturesque seacoast honeymoon.

TWO AGAINST ONEPranchot Tone Is perfectly aallsfV'1

way his h*lr is cut, but Robert \,Robert Ttylor feel th»t It needs n ]-,:•Ing. The scene U one of the comic i •"Three Oornrades" Once YOIUIK infinish their Job with the shears pocilittle more th»n a stubble left on I i

j

Strand's Kiddie ShowMakesBow TomorrowEverything Is in readiness for

Ihe kiddle amateur show on the

Strand stage tomorrow afternoon

according to Julius Daniels, the

theatre's manager.

The Strand has been twamp-

ed with application from am-

bitious amateur thesplans i.ince

word went out lasc week that tl:e

management would attempt: a

show of this type, The best of

the applicants have bedn selected

fcr tomorrow's o p e n n j perform-

rnce. Besides $100 In c-Jfih prtos

bclnp awarded a wrist watcn will

to to each week's winner.

Any child under 16 years of,age may enter. Contestants maya^ ly in writing or percon tX theStrand box office. All talmtedrMMren are urged by the F.tr:mJmanagement to make ap^'rationa,! once lor future shows.

With Laurel and Hardy, Kings of Comedy, in their flnl ro-sUrrinc appearance In more than a year, .indwith Delia land, *rn*atioruil new Viennese "find," and Walter King lending their glorious.singing voicesIn supporting roles, ".Swiss Miss" opens tonight on the Strand screen a spectacular melange ot melo4j

and mirth from thr Hal Roach studios.

TEL. P. A. I-33M

ON STATF. 8T, AT THB TITE COBNEBS

On leaving his home for the firsttime since etrly winter when hebroke hla leg ln a fall, Oscar An-

dtrson of Belvedere, inon an Icy walk and hsame leg In the same w

SEVEN (7) DAYS — STARTING WITH

PREVUE TONITE!TWO (21 COMPLETE SHOWS—NOTE EARLY PREVUE

PREVUETIMETABLE

Last Complete Shows Starts at 9:08 P. M.

6:17, "Yellow J»ck"7:43, "Blockade"9:W. "Yellow Jack"l ( : 3 i "Blockade"

SEVEN <7) DAYS STARTING WITH

PREVUE TONITE!TWO (2) COMPLETE SHOWS-NOTE EARLY PKEVl E

READE'S

conunnoui t to 11 P.M. THEATRE TeL f, A I UN

5:43, "Kentucky Mooruhinr"

Prevue Time Table !;S: ZSZgfiL*^10:18, "i Comrades"

Notice—Last Complete Show Starts at 8:51

PREVUE FRI. NITECan You Imagine Anything Funnier Than

EXCITEMENT 1Action - packed drama, aliv*

af today's h««dliue*..(ich and

powerful, by th« director who

gavo you 'Zola' and 'Puteui'

WUTE1 WUGEBnpalong fiusidj In a te.nte scene (ram "Bar 10 Justice" opening atthe Crescent today.

SUNDAY

SHOWS

tji'AKT 1 r. M in "SWISS MISSPEBTH AHBOY

Friday, Saturday and Sunday

CARROLLX^FOIDA

Tlu- 1'lclui'p 1 Iwl Rips Ihr lilamor From Underworld "Bif t)hot«

STARTS WITH

PKEVUE TUES. mmLEO CAKRILLO • JOHN HAUIDAY

Danny, Vladimir Sokoloffand ROIMHI Warwick

Miikey Kouncy thr Fiuiiilrjt Kid In PlcturmGot* lo Town with HU Own Bif

Time Hot Swing Band

With

MICKEY HOONEY

MAUREtN U-SCLI.AVAN

DENNIS 0 KEEKK"The Secret of Treasure Island," No. 9

EVEKY THUB8. tVEKY WED. ( ;M

FREE I»ARTY TSILVERWARE- CASH

»IUTSRTT«RE EVETO THK LApIES

WKUNKKDAY and THURSDAY

KIDDIE AMATEURS

mt In « Teacup" 'Lqvff Honor fr Behave'With Wayne Karri*

To UM UMm-Mwtor ' • *

•mmMim&M

Th«iitf pictureUnttOKftTTAYLOR

From the pages of to-day's greatest book. . . comes the screen'ssupreme love story!All-star, all-powerful!

KIBBEE. ATVWLL UU

Last Times "Kentucky MoonshineToday '

Bathing Beauties On the Stage Wed.

FUEL AND FURNACE OilHIGHEST QUALITY FOR EVERY

MAKE OF BURNER

PROMPT AND CQURTWHis SERVICE

Page 5: CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It · Boy, 7, VictimjWPA HALTS PARK PROJECT, Of Drowning Buried Here John Connolly, Jr. CARTERET—John Connolly, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John Connolly

CARTERET PRESS

jit lames' CarnivalAides Are Announced

, 1MI, Well Under Wty for, |)n y Festival On

July 14, IS, 16

., i imniDOE-Plans have b « n..,ir f | by members of fit.

;,.,vir.h for the annual carnl-hr. iicirt July 1*. 15 and 16 on

,,lr, adjacent to the St.-rhnol, Amboy Avenue. A

. i «.m he served by the Rosary. ,,ii the last night.

foTiovvinnr will be. In charge of••.•imratlniis: Rev. Thomas Car-'.nimrary rlmtrman; Andrew

, .,-,1 urnernl chairman; Burton,.II. treasurer;; Eugene Bird,

-,..i trcmlirer; and HanriRh.MI. V. secretory. Others Rid

n</• plans are; Mm. Walteri.-,,-.mv Hoclcty; Joseph Ar-

u..i\ Name: Mrs. Leon McEl-i'unit-Teachers Association

cniev, Middlesex Council,,••:•. nt Columbus; Ml»x Helen

, , "i. Mortality of Blessed Vir-•i.iv Mrs Chris Martin, Cath-inimhlers; Mrs. Elmer Prew

: i :, nf Columbus r.adets; Hugh••- chairman of the car-

: Edward Casey, pub-

PORT READING-- Thi PortReading Squawi made heap b|jtrouble for the Isellrt Red Devils" • airls' Township Softball

«ue, winning tii> g»me u to 4This mtkis two straight wins forthe Bquawa.

In »noth«r game In the Girls'Le»8Ue, the Red Devils conqueredthe Bhle Jay,, R t o 3

TICERS CLAWED

(•.„•. ,1'd by Alley Catsf wd» Softball League

SCALPED BY SQUAWS

Min Red Derit. Defeated inGirli Ball

in

niwi The Tigers, makingnr.-.t appearance In the Fords

,..: 'ofiball league, went down• ••:\\ RI the hands of thei.i«rc Alley Cats by the score

i m i Znrkovlch and Oloffi in- buttery for the Tigers

Miller and Toth for the Cast.

|}i"in

n mnvlctlon for theft, John;•- <>r Chicago declared his trialbeen a Joke. The Judge said:

two years to think howv It Is."

We Know You'llGive Credit

Where Credit IsDue!

aivlng j»«r Invml nhr HAII-M*IV'S FI.OWKBH for arallaii-lloit. Oor nr|*«ttAn U" ' * ' — •««• r » » r

PIIOMT.EK HICMVKRV * M . OVKR

U N i n N(OUNTIRS

J. R. BaumannFlorist

Rah. 7-0711-0712-0713II George and Haielwood Ares.

Rahway, N, J,

JUNE BRIDE andGRADUATION

t.

25c OPENS AN ACCOUNT

No Extra Charft F«r Credit

t DIAMONDWEDDING BAND

brilliant diamond* are-M in this latest designed weddtnfnnj of 14-K White or $9.75

nOWN-Me WEEKLY

DIAMOND ENGAGEMENTRING FEATURE

nique and iplendld diamond ringunder-priced for outstandinguality. White oreltowgold

fl.M D0WN-I1.W WBEKLY

DAINTILY ENGRAVEDatuttte effect eaae with bracelet< match. Guaranteed timepiece.><• D O W N

>c W E E K L *

GenuineDiamond!

ii thin exqoiiHe wedding ring"' H h white or yellow solid fold.l!l''lilv hand enfTBTcd In allrdlt

$19.50IK)WN~J0c WEEKLY

"M.MONb BRIDAL MET1 "•"' sruuii 3 diamond engagement

'f. -"id ,1 diamond wedding band' ' K l l d

? " " • KINGS

WEEKLY

1938CLASS RING

W white or yallow gold'Jl Color Birthjione

iNO MONEY DOWN

$2.75

BULOVA"RONA"

In the charm «f natural fold withbracelet to match.

Sc WKEKLY

White or Natural ColoredBulovas

For the B»j Graduate

lie WEEKLY . $24.75

Exquisitely deiil(ucd and ttuteful-ly matched In solid white or yel-low gold. Bee this at Herbert's.

RINGS ...,

$l.St DOWN-H.W WEEKLY

HANDSOME BOYS' WATCHWith br»c«l«t to mateh. Guaran-teed tbneplMe.2*o DOWNtfc, WEEKLY

Herbert's Jewelry ShopMAPLE

OPEN RV

PERTH AMBOY

Fridoy, Jun« 17, 1938 FIVE

O

Uin

ui

5oui

UJD

uCLD

EVERY CAR HONESTLY REPRESENTED AND HONESTLY PRICED!!

LOWEST PRICED USED CARS - SAVE 25% SAFELY!

JUNE SACRIFICE SALESALE STARTS FRIDAY, JUNE 17

a:DOUJUJ

O

HZ

X

oz

oz

oz111

ooia.

YOUR OLD CAR ACCEPTED IN TRADE! EASY TERMS FOR ALL-BUY NOW!We have honestly reduced the price of every USED CAR in it&k. You will find an average S A V I N G OF 25% C O M P A R E D W I T HPRICES ELSEWHEREt Check these prices today—COMPARE, See America—plan your vacation trip now ! Go by your own car1—as you pltase—when you please

—where you please, and the most pleasing please of all—at the lowest travel cost not excluding walking. As an example: 4 people traveling inone car will spend less than lc per mile, per person, which is cheaper than walking.

COMPARE THIS LOW PRICE !

ozX

ozo

TRY TO EQUAL THIS VALUE ! THIS YEAR'S BIGGEST BARGAIN !

1934 CHEVROLET SEDAN.lust us pictured above. A hf*:mtiful our.

Mechanically «ound. Has hnd good care. Tirr»nrcllfnt, A real buy. Hurry hrforc it's ROIIP

SACRIFICE VALUE No. 1

1934 CHEVROLET TRUNK COACHHfrr i* it rar just as food as the pic-

lure shnws it. In fine mechanical con-dition vith good pairl -.y] li~"<[f you are looking fii bargain,buy this $265

1933 FORD SEDANAi it look! In the picture. A real bargain if you ever u «

one. Good paint, tires and motor. Youcouldn't buy It for thin price If wt wrre notoverstocked

$245$155

SUPER-SACRIFICE SPECIALS

193B FORD COUPEAn photographed. Thli car h«a a food many thonaand mile*

of Irantporlalion ilill in il. Mechanically found.Good Tire* and Paint. A actuations!value at $245

1931 Ford

Victoria Sedan

$951931

OldsmobileCoupe

'Iytnu m K M I* itI uvaia ss» mttsm i * f

NO "PROMISINGSALESMEN" HERE

$95

Here's Value!

1933 FORD SEDANJust as food as It looks here. A real

bargain for someone who doesn't want tospend too much money. Good paint andtire*.

$1651936 FORD TUDOR TOURING SEDAN

This Is really a sacrifice price. See it today

$395

1BJ7 1(7' WHEfyBASE FORD CAB & CHASSIS ONLY

• -Truly, lit exceptional ihape. With 10-pty tircf and mechanicall.v a.i sound as theday it came from the factory. Sacrificeprice. $495

1930 Buiclc

Sedan

$851933 Ford

Panel Truck

$195

SACRIFICE VALUE No. 2

1M6 FORD COUPE

As pictured above. Has had wonder-ful rare and Is In the best of shape.You'll really apprectatIts value when you set'It. Sale price

THE HOME OF "R. & G." USED CARS

Pictured above la the blf DOR8EY USED CAR MART that extends from Elm to Oak Street on NewBrunswick Avenue, Perth Amboy. Note the tremendous assortment of used cars, spaciously displayed andarranged to make Inspection and selection easy. A bis, modern repair shop is located in the bulldlnf.

EVERY CAR ISMECHANICALLY

SOUND

Grab This One Quick

o

1935 FORD TUDORAs pictured above. There's nothing to

conceal about thii car. Thoroughly re-conditioned with good paint and Urea.Upholstery in fine ihape, too.

$2651937 FORD COUPE

Almost an food u the day It came fromthe factory. Must be teen to be appre-ciated.

SACRIFICE VALUE No 3

19J4 FORD TUDOR

Just as pictured above. This car hashmd but one owner. A good clean jobwith more mileage thanyou can use.Priced low $195

1931

Dodge Sedan

$145

1931

Plymouth Sedan

$50

TRUCKERS ! HERE'S A BARGAIN1933

Plymouth Sedan

$195

$395

1937 % TON FORD PICKUP TRUCKThis truck is like new. Was traded on a

passenger car. An exceptional buy for someone who appreciates real value. Our Sacrificeprice,

$450

1932

Ford Sedan

$125

SACRIFICE VALUE No. 4

1938 FORD TUDOR

At you see It photographed above.Here ii a lot for your money, A foodclean car with an extremely low price.Mechanically p e r f e owith low -mileage $335

oomA

iXoom•n

80 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM In ALL MAKES AND STYLESO

1985 FOKD SEDAN

A. th« photograph ihows it. In beautiful th»p«. H«.had but one owner. Tires, paint and motor excellent.A value, you won't t*e again lor some time. $235

10)5 PLYMOUTH BEDANJust as you see It above. A tine «ar with manyml]** 4t transportation waiting to be used. Youcan't go wrong at this low price $295

IBM PONT1AC 8EDAN

As the picture shows It. Ttres, uphoUtery andpaint excellent, Thoroughly recondltluned andguaranteed. Really sacrificed at this price

DORSEY USED CAR MART

inm

Hm

PERTH AMiOY, N.J.

ELM TO OAK STREET, ON NEW BRUNSWICK AVENUE

P. A. 4-2703 OPEN EVERY EVENING

2-BAY MOMEV B ACK :E ASSURES Ypl JISFACTION

Page 6: CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It · Boy, 7, VictimjWPA HALTS PARK PROJECT, Of Drowning Buried Here John Connolly, Jr. CARTERET—John Connolly, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John Connolly

mS^mrnw^WW'7^^-• '-••i-'TW-y ' '.: " • % T V -*TR&?-?: '« :' T>,T

CARTffttT PRFSS

Friday, JuM 17,1938

League leaders DropFirst Game Of

Carteret WinsUses 7 ThU Year

10-2 Win Over Rovers

C l t f r r l MulthU d*hni nf the ncnnntrth* Rorknf, I" IhHi flr-.lOf thf VPM in tlii- rnrt f r r l TwlII|ht Lfngnn.

| l

makingpltnhMtvictory

i l ; pAcei At Gtrwood Tied i n Tvti League

C«rt«r*t T«»hi Beit** At Gtr-oofl* Alpllrti StARi Six-Runtii i Seventh Inning

the:, In thrcf10 to 2. TUPS

l(. high schoolWIIR the first d»-

bul

Will

the OlOVSMm nr<- tied for

M»tt*rpft llK t(day nlRht ntstadium flow itf « t Ol Ihr [tuvrtsthey sHll hold n cof 1 4 Rtirnt"; iSporting f'lul)mend i*in-

Vdiieiak u-ns never betUr ai h»fanned MV imttof. mid allowed onlyW!) bM»K nil talk H* hdld th»leader* wnri'lefs until the filthVMn they r.rorpd two run*. Butthat didn't matter hecaUM hllt«ammalf hnd htagrrl H nix-runrally In the thini which WAS morethan Mimifih for him to roast, thru-Ut a Tltlnrv

t o maltr thrlr victory more c,om-pleU the Rocknes added, two runtin thr alxth and twn more In the

Blue* Win Nln. Ott of r*tt«tten Clntti - .Wind UpPDfttl* - I j f t t l t I««thRiver Thl*to Ttmti.

dt run t -DMptuthty pllyitt p bb U b l l HJhMiilB

I

the ru t th»ty th« tou|h»itIn tht hUtorr

I t i hbtll HJhMiilB In tht hUtortht HHoti. Itttik ItRQirihy'i

l l h l buUsillCHrUn Hl|h lehoolt6*Mri oomplltd t highlytiwrd, winnlrm u »»m«* Mid 1M-Ing only MV(n. This Inrllidus twotfliirhtminl gtmii, which mulMrtIn Ah even spill.

The turn st«rWd the M&son InbitM of f r y »nrt *Qh nint out

A fat*iCARTfttP.n» rally In which th» hortw tlkm

d n «o»t th» Oartcrtt

Bin .inhn

CEUlt, rrnt«rfleldfr for th* league-

leadlnit Rnvrr, and Pile T«rtbeekl,of ttic Clnvti* are tlafl (or th*bRttlnK leadership In the Oarteret

TWILIGHT HABKlAU. LEAGll*, INCBafbar-, rMlbltdty. <«t«t« J I M M l»p. BWh

Aces a * to 5 Mtbaek lint Sundayby the narftomi Aipln»« at o a r -

until that tlm* th» Atsns hadMOM thrw nlrtu and eVtrythlnR

I roty. Hut after th« homettaft got through With their nixruh homhnrflnipnl, th» garne tookTO a compi'tfly new ujj4ct

The A0«« tried dMptrately Inthi ninth and x-nrtd two nm» tocnmi within on« nt tying the scorethat WMtl't quit* *nmi|h and the

Twilight. accord-ght ua»eD»ii i^ii^r "","i.ki.to the follo*ln« feat qu»rt»r

• by Olim ftehwart*

players have a batting avirag* of,500, barbaroiuk, #llh light hitsin al*t»en chthctB, and Tefttjeeki#lth t\ve i*f«tl*» in tin charioo.

Mike Mltrola, fHnkl* BMnnwukland, Stan EONI follow In ordernamtd

Thi eompl»»i rtoort* folio*:

h«hi»t

wanKm io far this snaaon

idventh:l>«t* Novak, nee of Ihr R o m:l«t* N v k ,

ptfchlng rnrw, started but. h« WMihil l td nrr th i mound In the third

h K lhv

K bitM of f r y hof Its tint ten names Aflertwo In » row to South River andN«w Arumwlck, by twn »nd onerun* reflectively, the Bhtei troh

h l *

plkyed rmil |»mtA but eKp«et t tpHy tomk home engtgerttentisoitjctlrtt^ In .Inly at the Copper-work* Plflrt-

rirlet-et AcidA.B R. H

DonovAtt.Ward, diovWBIlnrbarMUlt, ftoversUutor, Whwler'inixnn, Sporting Club ...Nagy, Sportint OlUbRozmiski, Sporting Olubntiwn*k. Sporting OlubUd?,irink, Rooknei I 2Mltroka. Whieitr'd 4 15Bubnlck HportinR Clubflo«nowlkl, fiovers

Rnvers

flnext thrt« * lm*i

' " fl ( l l s m n l w l n r t l l P . ">*pltrlwd until the sixth, uljr- ! '" fl ( l l s m n l w l n r t l l P . ">* hoys'.. ._ B. , . , i , i . «f,,nnM>ski who ! dropix-rt their Iftit two games bylrtg way to Fmnklt Hosnowfiki. who

IMVM In from short-Tr»» Jarkmn, Uorkne first snek-

tr. h»d a perfprt. day »l hat. g«t-t i m threr for threp

HOW THEV STANDC*rU>rel Twilight BaiebkU LtkgUt,

Inc.

ftnfiknfs,RESULTS

l f t ; JlOVMTI, J.

KevtnOloven>*ortlng club

K«okn«»

w43111

L.112

s50050031*.550

OAMK8

v«, Rover*.ThurJday

Rocknes vs Clovers110)

at)34544

... 4. 2

31

A Oh»mrn, rf.Nerlng, lhJ Sullivkn. cf.O'Horke. 3bMsrcinlak if.ittch, ss.Odildik. pJacknon. H)Mudrik, c.

32novtri ( 0

&b.Botnowakl. is., p. 1l l»itk. lb 3lifbirefUlt rf,, If. 3Kostl, 2b, p. >Wlelgollnskl. r(, 3b. 3•umiitst*. r. SOa»]kov»kl. 3b,. rf 1liglMkl. if- 3b. 3Hovtt, P. i'. 3

25

r.111101110

10

j rt.Warel . II)

mt run marilns. I bi 1, andU, to Linden unfl TnttenvlUp

order tjamtd, Bnih thfse gam^smatiud up AS cnay trUtmprfi

Hl|t the Olrttrtt boy.s were justHit too nvihohfldontIn the tournament, the McCir-

thjrmen woh tht ftrat »tm» (rwnNiw Bhiniwink, I to 7, and thenlost a 1 to 1 hetrt-bnaktr toSouth River, thtln ehmlhaUrtk thtlooilt from further eomp»t.lt)»n.Thli wai South Rlver'i tthftrt ctm-quelt over CartiMt thli MMfirt -two regular ttaion game* and apott-Maaon tourney tuntle

C Byle«klr, M.flnrftl, 3b.Patrlch, If.1 gylecktt.Hayduk, 3blugnak, p., «'•

( " •

to

10 Thomas Jefferwh 7l l Totwnvllle 05 8outh River 8

17 Niw Brunswick 10R Woadbrldgea Ptrth Amboy .

IS Piainfleld8 R«d Bank 18 Linden 5

It Long Brancht Woodbridg*I WHtheld .4 South River 6B New Bniruwlclc flt Red Bank S4 Thoma* Jefferson

11 Lonu Branch1 Linden

13 TottonvllleTaamament OaoiM

1 New Brunswick 71 ,' South Rlv»r 1

Totl l lOarwoo*

A.BB, Cf.u. .,»

S*mkt, lb8kul», M ..f. KvpWlt, ib.Luklch. HH, Tftjac, cO. Kupo*ylt, p.

It

33

0100100110

R.1110A1011

H.0

lfli-

TOtili .Score by inning*

Cartert t Aoe» 010 001Garwoort Alpines. 000 00(1 6

The Summ»ry—2 b t ie hits:mac; b l H oh bal ls : by ftuzuoh 3by Roscmhl, 1, C. Ruptyk 4; strucknut: B,v BUHlak 3, RoMrljKI 1, CRupoiyk 5. Losing pitcher R k k

St. Eliii BeiUn ByFort Hkncotk Nine 10-3

P. Terebeckl, Cloven 4Kohn, Clovers '

•aloszfWfikl, Sporting Club .•odriar, Wheeler's»rolnlak. Bockne* 4 13{, Sloan, R o v e n .... ' n

TirebecKL OloversMluon, RooknetRorke, Rocknes 4 14

fovak, Robere ' "Wheeler's

togers, Wheeler'sWadlak, Clovers

Vlrag, Sporting Clublampbell, Rocknes

E»|l t tkl , RoversBovere, Bportlni! Club

, RocknesMiyortk, Wheeler'sMaaiubh. CloversKoftll, Bportlhg Olub:_.,. , Bportlhg OlubJlfll fteako, CloversFrahkpwikl. Bportlng Olub

Srpak, ftoeknen. irlnl, RockneaSmoltnskl, Sporting ClubRobertson. Wheeler'sDnBrowskl, CloversMarek, RoversRomanowskl, CloversShUrhmy, RocknesHadynik, Wheeler's ..Macloch. Rovers

Clovers

The St. Illas baleball torn lost to the ?or:t Hahcock nlrte, 10 to S, at Fort Hancock last Sunday.

This Sunday th i St. Silas combine travili to NiWatk to pla:the Lenox k. A.

The score by Innings:ftotkn«s 000 0OJ 8—10R o v m • 000 010 0 - 1

Errors—Marclniak, Be«ch, Wl«l-goUnikl, Sumutka, Zagleikl, Oat]-kowikl. 3.

Two bfcse hlU—Bosnowikl, M»T-tk. Jackton

Umpires Casey And DonovAn.

WANT ADS

BUSINESS DIRECTORYiVBflTMAKfcl B T O l t E S SELL

v/ailitrs, Vai.-iiuin Oleuneri at low-*it terms, l.utfcM servtc* 4»pl.,ttam, m()tnrt; ir,:n b int . 2M Stanllr*»t. Purih Amtioy. 4-21611.

W-l-JN

FOR SALE

-,.- . . :. Clovers 3Mudrak, RocknesA. Ohamra, Rooknes ....J. Sullivan, Rocknes0. Sloan, RoversJot ReSSto, ClovenDamm, WhWler's

in, Bpoitlng ClubMate, RoversWielfolthiki, Rovers.Sumutka, RoversO. Reiko, Olovers 36. MedveU, GloversRoman, Rocknes .8tokman, RocknesF. Medvetz, Rtfcklw*

! Munkacsy. Rockhes ..Muszyka, Wheelers ....Pencotty, Wheeler's 4 10Chesltik, Wheeltr's i 2ftira, Whaeler'* S 7

THROUGH THfeSHK BAEt li.n.: a licpurimtnt ««ll-

IMdicis, Htrrl»»«at«rt,Mdrhinr-.-, and BUctriuA II llaillo. U!5 Irvlna

N J Tel. 7-1041. »

£4 ON CREDIT

tikesLose, 4-2, Win 1M2

Carterst T»»m L e m to PtrthAmHoy Runyon Bbvt Club,Then Beats Snyrevitlo EolithGiants

CARTERET The Ukfts had a SO-SO break over the week-»hfl.

Altar losing the opening tkmi ofk double header to the Runyon BoynOlub Of Ptrth Amboy Sunflay at th«Bookn« Field, the tJkp» cam* back toWlh a free scoring nightcap fromthe Uayrevlilc Pnlish oinnts, 13 to \i

four run nlnth-lnnlng rally Vt thealmost, cost the local t.h«

After .itnpplng til*In which the Olanl*

Kad MM tho wore. HIP TJkrt oamfthf.sk to score the winning nin In thel U t half of the. ninth

NeKt Sunday the Tikes will enig« in another double bill, playing

.'tat Side Bcnr.i of Newark arW theClub Ukraine nine, nlso of N»wfcrk.Both tames will be pluyed 6n theRookne field, the (Irtt starting at 1:18

o'clocf.tlunynn Boys' Club

Jb.

Wtnntra G*t 13 Hitt -Yap Leftdt AttatkOut of 4.

CARTBRBT-Poundinghits, the Wr.lt* Matali scored an

triumph over thi Uad Planti V, Tueiday ivtning at the

Copperwbrkl

With

nut

The White Mftti)!, tUrttd earlyand plltd up a big Ave run lew

th pening fr*m» Thty icore^and plltd up a bigIn the opening fr*m». Thty icore^twn mot* in th» fifth *nd three Intwn mot*the seventh.

Prank Y»p *lth ih\U out of four..AS the lsArtlng hltttr for th»White Metkli.

The lineup*:

£+fv •rf.

T«tAll

ftlallr, c.p

potu,et

>9UU Miiit

At..-. (

lb . i4

eurtin, P ?MUlir, U.

rf.

o

0

.10

Yonnipi,tobleskl,

24

MAITA, cfAr>Am». e

CUSTOM BUILT• t i i t c . (i

livingBOOBAMB»

l-altct gun r.<rl'T suite at reaion-abl* prlos. Miit(llr»m llpholitery,l i t Ntw Ilruii.snuk Avenua. T«l.P. A- 14534. M.nmtiictui-frs of cus-tom bulU HviiiK L- ••in ault«a, vt-(>alrl(i» anj recovorlim. tf

Tak« ctlmt.

AT NO EXTRA COJTt t|i« only pair of h

j ths f r \ht)t you

f*gu»"r'ij"thiim (oi - i h « ( t f t U r e — Whave InHA.R 'Itlm». Saf«guarij thsm for \ht (i|tUre—WHA.R .ILASalJ

Let our r«klattrad optoinau i«t t i imlna your «y(« tintiltHnnlno tn«lr tru« condition. If you noed I!«.(»>•, tn*proper Unttn and frames will b» prt ierlbtd lor you.

R* HTOIiAHE - - I)E('EN-;afale laoa) and lung dlBtaftoti tnuv-

int, III Maillsi.i. Ave., 1'nih Amboy.Tel. 4-JSH.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

B Moore's SoftballTeun Defeats NewirkCartant Toweri Scot-fe Fivt

Runs in First Inning to WinEa»ily, 12 to 6.

CARTERET—The CarterM plantsbftb*ll team of the BenJ M«6reCqrripahy scored five runs In the flrttInning to defeat the Ntttark divlilon,IS to 6, at Brady'k Oval l u t frldlynight. H was the first tame of athree game series. The second gameWill b« played in weeQuahlc Park,,Nawsrk.

The ouUUnding feature of thegame was a horne run by "Pop"tjltman in'the seventh irtnlnf. Un-tortunattly there was no one oh Baseit tht time.

Carttret ab. iM itklnue. If 5B>rgor, Sb. 5BkUrtt, at 4

ol, Jbl d , Jb

J. Mlnu», rf8humny, sfP. Nlemart, sfOrrtor, pr. mta.w. ib

2

ib.8haftery, rf

S. m p.Mditt

, »bKerstloe, IfHeath, JbH. iMU». cfj . Podlis, cJ. LOVt, Sf

NewarkCikrteret

ToUl»TheieoN by

IS A MENACE TOYOUR MOTOR!

operU.en tc -h l eh you a w

% | < 4 | MOTOR VITALIZINGJ\ 1 ^ \9 W ) L L RtSTOR! MAX

IMUM MOTOR PERFORMANCEA Gum-Frta Motor

BchulU, rt,Jamyo. P

The Graeo Vltolixer

QETS ALL THE DIRT O u m l n a m o t w c»uttt(tick producing ilugglshperformance And eventua

p Ora«o Vltallierturn, free* the valve*, and

OMre, lbJ. HAfflUlAk. MBohnnok, IfGlnflA, cOurAl. rf

TotAlScore by innings:

0 0 0 1 0 1 3 - *

o 2 o o o o„„.„The summAry—Two bAte Mta: Ad-

it A d wams MAITA; 3 base;

Struok out by Bubnlck. 4,l kJamro, 8; BUB on balls off Bubnlck,

2, Junro, 9.Umplri: UllBberger.June 12, 198fi:

Giants ah.zanicwskl, p 6

Ory«b, lbDomlnlk, cf

COME IN TODAY

S 2b.fepHaritk, It.

, lb .bW rfj . WadlAk, ct.

TotalsBoon by innings:

Polish Olante.. 1 0l lr.00o1i30100

The sumnmry- TwoiBatnulak, M. Babert.

4-1]0} 1-13

ban hitsPobrowski,

t d

391 0 2 1 0 '

S 0 1 0 0 % 1 2 x - 12

H a t a u l a k , M B a e , PBubnlck], Osyf, Dominlk, Oataka Andtameniky; Struck out by Boben, S;StArtytukl, 2; aniewski, 3; fease onballs off Baben, fitaraynski, S; Zati-icwstl. 3.

Umpire: Uarclnlak and Klelman

The Graeo Motor Vltallaer dotsa thorough Job lit half an houror l m . and the coat I* iur-

low.

A Clean Motor Delivers

MORE POWER( i i t c o Motor Vl la l l i er rest,,;-normal, even compresalon In anryllndert, thereby aMurlng C|in<',er itartlng, more vigorous an Itratlon and increased pawn

Motor Vitalising Insures

LONGER LIFEHludff, grit, carbon, and cimcauie friction in four motor; a> idtormallona attack the m\<.<«bearing turfaoei. By renm.i':theie lUbtUnce* Moior Vitalizingellmlnat«t untimely repairs

Vlralii* Your Motor and

SAVE MONEYOrac* Motor Vitalising restingmaximum mechanical eRidtnnto the power plant In your <.uThia meant mora tatrgjr per galIon of fuel . . . more inllfs p~rdollar. . . .

YOURMOTORVITALIZE

,- and enjoy New Car

IDEAL SERVICE STATIONGAS, OIL, QREASING, TIRE REPAIRS

AND BATTERY CHARGINGPHONE (-1319

760 Rooiev«lt Avt. Carteret G«rfct'< Corner

Summary-Two base hits, Berger 2,Dobrowskl, J. Ens; Three base: J.SkuxAt, H. Podlls; Hoipe run, TrankNieman; umpire. Pat Klose.

Musical InstrumentsTnvdea Accepttd

Imtructloni

Rahwov Music Shopl&tt MAIN STRSM,

EAHWAY

Dad/"SUPPORT-U"

113 SMITH 8 T , Jewelen and Optlctani PERTH AMBOt

?H6TOOHA1'HV POHTHAITitommerclal. Expert work Riiaran-

tftd. P r i c o ri'duiiimiili-. TliBinliirij J.

Tel.jUU7J. it.

I f & f X l H AI.I. MAitlfiSIng macniueu; ttiljuit, |l.00.

Smith Btrtel, 1'eith Kmhoy.«tHo

M A C H T N E SK HlfiW-

p. A.tf.

TRUCKSST1IEAMUFEDW» riraudnl uni •tr«amlln> your

alt truok lntn ib* l a t o i niodtU:lnitatl grivlty and powtr u k e -uft miters. R«»ional)ln prlcm.(Jtorje Oherefka, Marlboro d a r i i e ,Marlboro HouU. Old Bridge, N. 1

BEAUTY SHOPS

Musical Instruments

A Gift EveryGraduate Will

Apprtciat*!

CR0OUIONOl.il! wav« \iM up.Bach haauly lt«m 3bc Mnrgle'n,

471 Bahway Avenu.! WuodbrldR«I-1I1I. S-17.3S

OH^HU Btiuty Hhotipe ntrmantntaurU (or children Si,bo, n Wainrtet .Woodbrldga S-OtBO. M t - 1 8

WANTEDQBflUUUi huu»«wo)k»r«i while, 40

to ( I j mothar'h belpora, 85 to 40.Xmpluym«nt Aiitiicy, (9

_.. Av*nu«, Oratii*, N, J. T*l«-Saa Oranw l-l»Hl>r «-lT

UTUATIQN WAFfTSD

SOME SUGGESTIONS:Clarinets, Trumpet!, Violins, Piano Accordions,

Saxophones, Drums. A full and complete lint at

lowest possible prices.

The loading, reliable rnuflc stort in Niw

Jersey. Time payments atronfo<f.

See Us FIRST...See Us NOW...FOR THE BEST

DIZINNO'S—RBFAIBING DONE BY »1\fT

VALUES ANYWHERE!ALL MAKES ALL MODELS

1937 Chevrolet Sport Sedan Built In Trunk $625.001937 Chevrolet Master Coach JSO.OO1935 Chevrolet Coach Radio & Heater 350.00T934 Chevrolet Sport Sedan Built in trunk 350.001911 Chevrolet 6 Wheel Sedan : 2f0.06tH ChlvroletCoach 100.00

: ; ; 1 2 5 0 0\tH ChlvroletCoach1996 Ford V-8 Tudor i :.., ;. ; 125.001912 Ffrd V-8 Tudor ;., 1$0.<fc1934 Plymouth Sport Coupe 325.00

MANY MOWE-DON'T WAIT COMK TODAY AMD U S rOt

G

V. a. tAT. OFflCE

JUST WHAT HE NEEDS TO TAKEYEARS OFF HIS W A I S T U N E . . . .

Dad will thank you foryaon for Introducing himto Support-*Tr. No matterwhether ho ta on a Job the

calk for hard pby»*cal

work or tlii In the pre*dent', oiloa; Support Uwill Wm down hU wautUna, a|Ta him y°u'hlul

pMture, helpvital • n t Wclothe* look bttttr-tet. A completepopular ec4ow tofrom - the mott

you oan alro

$18

bo'

IITHEconomy Gorqfle Co.

I M * at m unu nwroui ooHtAinr.

HARRIS BIPT.M

Page 7: CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It · Boy, 7, VictimjWPA HALTS PARK PROJECT, Of Drowning Buried Here John Connolly, Jr. CARTERET—John Connolly, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John Connolly

Fridoy,Jurwl7,1958

I \RTERET PRESS11.80 Nr Year

pnhlifthftd by CortantOfr-ICI '

., ,,AgiiINOT<)N AVt, cARTthlt, li. j .

(l , v oRHOORY ^.. . . , ,- . —...JMilflf

mrA u ewomj oifcH HMkttM June >, IHi, it.,,,.. H. JH Wit Otllee, under the Act «t

"The mire »Jftpti6n of tHi,

program of Vqunl rifthtt for all, special priv-

ile|«« t6 none" in my. judgment . . . would

io more than any potkiblt

o»u>t-pfc«king or government

to rebuild «ur lost protparity, If wt dear

the track for the Iron Horse we set the tignelfor Ainttica,"

Help for Tfethtr. of S«f*tyEducators throughout the country hilled the

inauguration latt month at New York

Tkt Refcl Victimi

We hope th»t WPA Director Weitzen and

u,Mlineh Ukich, Btylft and Scally are

now. The pwlt project hai been

11 -ink"« no difference to them, we tup-, ,|mt 63 men have bun forced oli local'i ,nH many of them sent to jobt out of

It's of little consequence to them, we..„,,., that these men are faced with ta|c-.,,,importation cottt out of their meagre... ,,iH that the hope of thit Borough to

;.lr ,i place of recreation and relaxation

y sacrificed on the altar of their stub-,»iid selfishness.

• - [,opr they find great satisfaction in,tr>pped the park project, We trust

v Mi/en can throw out hie chest an extra.-I ordtx « hat a tile larger, now that;nfii hit command. We trutt Coun-ukarh. B«ig«rt and Scally, upon whose

r R\\d consciences—must rett the. , i. .n^ibiliiy for this sickening ttate 6f

, ill tnul keen enjoyment in the product|.,r-n hmidiwork.

•,|ii;<«. the ytay, it politics. But it isn't,. i. reconcile the kicking around of men

n«ni iii morale, for the furtherance of po-, 11 ambition.

What will happen to the park it of majorpintance, to be tuH.

Bi:t what will happen to men who areto the whimi of petty partisanship is

tly greater concern.

A WlM Refu**lMayor Gr*irler htit far too much t«nte

f»ll for the importuning of certain Re-

fcblicans in the ftounty—we purposely re-

am from calling them leader*—that he be

[candidate for Sheriff this year.

| There can b* little quarrel with the slate-tnt Mr. Greirter't it the ttrongett figure in

dletex County 'politics, in either party, iniy yeart. Arter being elected Mayor ofcommunity by an unprecedented plural

i he hat been re-elecfed twice by even largerttgm He it. at they tay, "a natural"

hr has those unusual qualities which carryappeal beyond the narrow limitt of party.

[While we feel any roan of hit honetty,jiiiy. sincerity and ability should be avail*" (or public tervice we would be extreme-unfrtir to him to urge him to accept thest hand, We are too well aware of thekneu of the organization from which heId be required to Mck support at the

Us to even tiiggttt it. We can tee no rta-Kf thould rilk hit prestige by becomingied with a leadership which, to our mind,inevitably be replaced.ntil such replacement actually is madeHrl.eve Mayor Grtiner will do not onlyiel( but hit party at well a service by'ing to t«k« part in county politic*. His"I might even be the means throughi statesmanship will be tubttituted for•heelers' tactic* in the party's high

IKll.

CARTERi-T PftSflS

SWEETNESS AND LIGHTBy CHARLES E. GREGORY

s j m u r y

Any*** who't considering running for county affict on

the RepuklleW ticket until Ui«re are radical chartf* in the

party leadership is a screwball and ought to submit to safe-

under look and key in on* of th* State's

ilty of a national certtlr for tafety eeluc&Uon.

ke fhrtt of it* kind in the UnlUd States.fhich hat been made possible under a tp*c-

iftl griftt of funds by- the National Conserve-tioh Bureau of the Association of Casualtyand Surety Eteeudvw. ltt principal" objectis to teach Wachert how to teach tafety, butitt facilities will bi open to all who have et>r»ctical concern in itt intfcrettt.

Thii it not the firtt time'that the stockcasualty insurance companies, who maintainand administer the National ConservationBureau, Uve appeared in the safety educationscene. In ftxt, since the organized itfttymovement begin in 1922, their* hat been amoet important influence in the acceptanceby school* everywhere of safety education «ta major arid practical part of the regularcurriculum.

The legislature! or the department* ofeducation in nearly every itate now requiretome form of safety instruction for tradetchool children. The retultt are vividlyshown in a phenomenal saving of child livetThe accident fatality rate in the age groupof five to fuorteen yaart since 1922 hat de-creased 15 per cent. Meanwhile, the rate forall aft* combined hat increased 24 per cent.

With the inauguration of New York Uni-versity's Center for Safety Education, a newphase in the safety education movement be-gins. For tome time the need hat not beento convince educator! of the importance ofsafety instruction, but rather to aid them inmaking their courses more effective throughthe development of sound teaching practicesand materials. Thii job New York Univer-sity has now undertaken. The experimentwill be watched with interest by a publicwhich is seeking desperately for means with

This jt my way of taying th*t urilet* and until the G. O.

P. in Middle*** County Hndt some new b«yt to run its) af-

fairs it might as well let all future elections go by default.

Thtt, further, It my way of saying that GOnch, HoUwejrth.

Morris, Spritur, Seaman, Eber, Hoffman and Larson—litted

in the order of their importance—tire all washed and laund-

•r*d politically and If they doit't mlbte it they're the only

ones who don't.

i don't doubt but that they're all nice people, when youget to know them, but if there has ever been more awkward,uninspired and inept leadership than they have contributed inreetnt yean, I'd like to tee it. Mr. Conch, the county chair-man, will make a speech at the drop of the hat but it taketmore than a »pt*ch to cope with the technical perfection ofth* Toolan-Wilentz machine, even if i t t a good speech; and

merit in thit connection it certainly open to

which to reduce America's ghastly toll ofaccidental deaths and injuries.

Democratic CleavageThe cleavage in the Democratic Party be-

come* steadily more apparent. On the onetide are the New Dealer! who follow thePresident 100 per cent. On the other sideare the old-line Democrat! who are basicallyopposed to many Adminittration objectivesactivities and methods. During the earlyyears these Democrats said little, and fol-lowed the White House lint for the mott part.But they have kicked over the tracet now.

That is the fact that lies behind the bitter,

Mr. Gonth'tquestion.

Mr. Morrii uted to be the county chairman and is nowProsecutor of the Pleat, I don't know how much active parthe takes in formulating the party policy these days, althoughI do know he it in attendance at conference! of the brain-trust from tim* to time. I'd appreciate him a lot more ifhe'd turn up the number rurtheft and their bottet.

While I'm at it, I'd like also to give a little gratuitousadvice to the fabulout Mr. Johnson of Johnson At Johnson ofNew Brunswiek who, rightly er not. is now looked upon «i theangel of the Republican plfty*—the man who can and willput up the dough. His political representative, in times paitat least, has been Mr. Rutttll E. Wattoft. I've known Mr.Wation for ten years or to and alwaye got along pretty wellwith him but 1 got all caught up with hit idaes on good gov-ernment when, at some kind of a special Attiltant AttorneyGeneral, he put the heat on Woodbridge Township to compelthe taxpayers here tn go into hock for a couple hundredthousand dollars to build a sewer system.

As an advocate of tha better kind of government I thoughtMr. Watson «hould have refused any part in the attempt tomake this municipality go into t project of such lize and cost,knowing as he undoubtedly does of our current indebtedness,our present high tax rate And the effectl htre of the Rooseveltdepression. But no, he either plastered or threatened uswith all kind* of legal hocut-potuk to force ut to build thesewer; and so if this it a taste of hit political notions I'mgoihg on another diet. I don't suppose my own opinion willinfluence Mr. Johnson but 1 can tell him the people of Wood-bridge Township won't relish any plea from hit Mr, Wattonfor Republican tup port, particularly if it comet ear-marked"Good Government."

Mr. Seaman onct ran for something or other and thepeople, rather plainly I thought, indicated by their vote hewal not the man for them. I don't know whether the bi-partisan atpectt of the Seamtn family made any difference intheir choice, but if he is not sufficiently influential to get thefolks to ttick one in the box for him it seemt a little far-fetched to me to argue he can convince them to go for some'body of his choice.

It has been the practice of tht present Republican high-command to designate Mr. Spritzer at prest agent, for rea-son* which thus far have escaped me. All during the lastcampaign I looked for blurbt from the propoganda depart'ment but none ever came, leading me to the belief that

t»U6p»rit«d by tht ctntral

of NtwniiCh fi-oMIti* ti . . .

»ul to ih» public ««tiry or w ltht public Iravtl on ifcrh Bltl..,.-It lmt>«<1«d bv nurh rrrmtofc tndi».i'!*lJlrl1lln' w h M- l f *"y- or**rIntll ha lM\if<! bv said Board fortbt allerlttftn of Itlli erftlflht fyttlfutttntlnr ttmr»|nr k crattW nbtSt th<> rrnijn of siirh nubile hlfh-V»y undlr or ovfr m l ttilroid »rby rn-iinnlriiotlnff mi<]h rillrotj tillfltr nr OYtr tilth cubit "'tr bvflh*n»ln» the iinii, width,or lnrcailnii (it iiirh hl|r(tht oppnlne- i f n n « y fcljrhWIh plncc of the <in<! rtrJtrfll >«t«rt and IO iiftcrmlf "111 nth*!- TllHttPi-j. t i l l

of which mty BtpbWT nf A&H Hoardrflitv hp invnlvtii in M 4 |U l to ih» .fplrntlfin of th«6f 'Ju! )il(thF»y tn<1 of * | | ( r'tll-

Thf Hoard hirfhr (!»•< W«(ln«»-4»v. t h , l l t h Aiv «> JllHi, l l»« ,ttl< lh* hour nf >.rt0- p. y i t th«t|rfi» mm tht rnornt nf «aM ft*i«rSnr t^ B a

InAultrltl OfPc* iliiittlnft,ld Rt Ntwtrk. Ht»

f MIH

n ! he t l t l01c Hi-old Rtrttt

Mrt»v, i t ihi pl«.fit r . Ht»

of MIHftft

fh» RbtMi Mr*bvItor^tary within ttn Jtiy* [jIM d»t<i nr tnlrr hkrtir, it Inolle* to th» Bornuih nfanil ih» pnrfirihltloni, ct.plrtptr-

tht titnrlnn hirnhv oillnfl, byln» (f) tht nnld ft v" "ttr»t, Th* Crtntril

tbtnr

C*«ntv. public- Skrvlc* Itletrlatrd a»« oomoanv, Plibllr »prvlc«Oorfllnmoil TrtmiinrtPsrth Amboy f.)i» ^IHhtN»w Itrtey Btll » 0 t \

Ttlanhnati y A t n h n a t andtl*»rriiph Onr/iAlny. Weiittrn Ut

CLASSOF 1938

fW AM la a tetMMt

imttry UM,

WIRTHw»t»r ctHipuny. n, D,Goftittrurl Ion CompanyCitterd, Tii«t*r°r« 111Li l

ot west- pah>C i , T i t * r r « 11 ComoaftJ

Limited, tn,[ Tlilt Water Plpl C**-piny. Limited. fprHflc<<t enpltt »(tnt*' nnlcr, mid pithliiihli)(t In IhtC l lInJrat 1nf

P r s s r n i 'waptnor nlroulkt-i|i lln< I 'nuntv iif Mlillilt***,

•>ne w«ek in ior to the (late

tl(«<i D i O v l d t r t ff>i In H H. 48:1

T d bTht h t r t b v

Set Grten SigniJ (or Aowric*pongressman Samuel B. Pettengill, a lead-j congressional authority on transportation|i™, offers an 11-point program for solv-

railroad problem. It it a tentible,>l and clear-cut approach to thit vexing

I'ettengill's program includes: Stopi if ut competition with private carriersI the Federal Barge Une; «t°P ^ " K

|fiiliuads to aid their competitors; repeal•UK! short-haul ciause of the Trant-

al! » Act. in order to make it potgible"• uuliuadi, to offer ratei at low at those: i ''V the competitor!: ttop tubtiditingu"»ul «hippihg; restore to railroad man-r»t» the right to really manage the prop-

K've rate-making authority over all1 "I tiansport to one non-political agency111 dignity, independence and import-1" die Supreme Court; Ut railway m»n-111 vvork out fall contolidatiort pro-

•'•'bj«ct to the veto of the Interstate'« Commission; itop frightening In-'•"h nontentical talk of repudiation oi

l s by solvent iWUle, Who c»n <>b,-""'•h common tin** rtW?'•fiefs the roiJa polttti of th«<pro*

11 wki .»«uSi»| b r th. raiUoedi *at it

nternecine war inprimary election!,

many Democratic ttateThe Administration, in

the opinion of practically all of the com-mentators, it out to "get" thoae Democratswho have refused to follow White Houteadvice in important legislation, such as theSupreme Court reorganzation bill. Presiden-tial aides and officials, tuch at Ickes, JamesRoosevelt and Harry Hopkins, endorse can-didatet—and the obvious* inference is thattheir endorsements carry the. Presidentialauthority.

So far, the Adminittration hat won vic-tories in Oregon e*d Florida. It has lost inPennsylvania and Iowa.

It it now generally believed that the Re-publicint will g«in about 80 house seats inNovember. If they gain materially lew that)that, it will be a crushing defeat for the GOP.

either the Republican candidates weren't laying anythingworth whiU or the publicity department wanted to keep thtiractivities a secret, If the former wat true, Mr. SpriUlr showed good judgment all right but I should guess the heavythinkers would have seen to it that they were furnished witha good blast.

At for Messrs. Larson and Hoffman, I'll leave them to youIn fact, I'll leave the whole lot of them to you—and theircandidates, too, because it appears to me that if the Re-publican party in thit county ever hopes to be resurrectedit it going to require an entirely new lint-up. The pretentteam can't field, and God knows, it can't hit.

WHAT OTHEREDITORS SAY

Snow Seven

Exploding the Machine'Myth AgftinAt a time when government it dickering'

with the idea of curbing inventions and agi-tators are orating that technology has ruinedopportunity for the worker in America. Mr.Justin Macklin. First Deputy Patent Com-missioner in Washington, refreshet ut some-what.

Mr. Mackin helpt explodl the machine agemyth by asserting that technological improve-ments, instead of creating unemployment,actually create many new jobs, He point*to the fact that the Federal P&tent Office hasistued approximately 16,000 patents on radioinvfcntifent alone, and that through these newinventions many men had been given en»'ployment.

The radio industry isn't alone in thit fieldof creating new employment Every di

d l iother Industrie* «re

White and theChe«e*

Tht Monitor finds Itself In *very happy portion. We hav« Justhad a Jeter from % rwdtr whichdenUknd* * helpful tnewsr. Here Inhie own words U his itory:

"We've bt«n eating chseae at ourhou« l»tely. quite a bit of cheese.trt fact, tht chee».|ater-in-ehltf

tat our houie Is'tnoufrh.' lt't

developinf comfort-other ucreating fftdgett that mean new job* for morepeople. The inventive gfniut of man l pgiven ut nuny curofottt-<-th* airplane,pfcorte, tutomoblle> #Ue«!fc mft irato

rtady to cryi ohttte, a <n«l-

melantt of crtain and caUai*with tome embroidery of

It's trtat. Andbrtolt It,

ritrry prtMrvtt, lt« tr*,'s irath; tht milkman

Ih (let, he brlflft It nswiy everyUy.

"And that's tht troublt, eacourhulatea. It'i no fun to rtldthe refrigerator and find (lassesand glasses of cheese thai shouldhave been eaten. Why not (topthe oheett? But thai would stopthe tlBUM. They are beautiful,big glatttt, t aw with a pictureof fciow White or one of thedwarfi, tnd on tht other tide aclever rhyme. Tht hoy and girl atour houle think ot dwarfi o ' 'MYth; nani can he left dtrt.Sa t tu for eteh MI (wuntogWhltt) and oAt ettM to matfor the Orumj»r gl|M th>!cracked-U ClfMM Of «he«tef

Now we oan o«»r It leattf tort T h m >

Ncnunb ef

r It leatt tThm > .a*cnunb ef eoMtort T >

truth in Ibt riiori (bit W»ltrt t t u t U to Mney's

(bit W» «U to M "All

t in Serrtte

to

c u l l p d , I h p n o -t i l l

thit mich inalllnir andtht'l poiuillu^n rtandnt^lt nutlc6f the prn(!««rtln(( hprtby Inltltttd

the hfarlm hereby.Tune Sill, Hit.

RRAl.tOf THBLtr UTILITY

COMMISSIONERS.By:i»l>n«di

HAflftT 8ACHA.KA.CH,Pretldant.

I t B f i l :(SlKnttt) KMMETT T. DREW.

Secretary.

T HKKHHY l.'BHTIKT the f0r«-tolim in l>t> a trut aspy of an

Order U»ue<t by the Bosra Of Pub-lltt TItllltv Comrnlattonari t t It*

IIDR hald Wtdneidty, JuAt ttti., and rteerdli In tht mlnuttt

talA mtttliAt.SMMKTT T. DRBV.

C. P «:it-H.

Amateir Night

FLOOR SHOWWKDfJMDAt AND

JACK'SHollywood Inn

Jtoh'i T>twnm STATI BT.

tVfiKY NlQ»t

4 Colonial Modal HornetT*o Hive Bwn

Opt* ti Alt TUhet iiKiieuit iT«nrntt

JlMlftSON AVI. l«twHn tyoamor*and Orovt Itr*tu RAHWAY

Ttke It. a«t*«* AttiiM t« Qrete llmt, sWi»»j-W»kh rer ginAt Uft-Tarn Uri Otte BhMk

•t«atrir«Ki

ou oConet«l«4 RAdUtonWeftUierttrinpedTttt Xltchtn (in color)U t a j t t *Tilt BatK Room, In colorShower Stall

<6995R. A,

LandscapedRecreation RoomEleetrk RanitOtenrenhI Urg*Oartft

SMALL MONTHLY M Y M B N T S SAME At (l»KT

LAKESIDE PARK HOMIS CO.

IK* HtVINO STREKT JlekwiT T-MM-T-Mll

PRACTICAL

GIFTSFor tht) Jtint Brid#

N0T1CMt i k e notlU that THI C

TIC AND DENKrfClALHiUSH CLUB Intend* to

' irbuglt of Ctrttret for a Pitttlon llctmejdt-

_ __ . tl Avenut, (iii•cat. N, J,

Objtotlont, If any, iltoutd btmad* irnmtdlattly In wrltlnc t«i

,. J. r«rry, BorrtUith Clerk of th«orou*b ot Ctrurtt, N. )•(signed) GYMNASTIC ANl)BENEFICIAL SOJCOL POLISH

UKOIUIE BULOWAHCZUK.Prtildtnt. •

EDWAKD KAMIN8KI,»lll»n«ltl B4crtlar)r.

'. I>. 6-10, IT

NOTICETaka notlc* thtt JOSEPH i>AS-

ZKK Intenflt to tpply t? the Bbr-ourh i-punoll of the BoTtsvph ofCurteiel for t Pl»«iry Bet*irC6n-umption Hctmt for pr»ml»tt elt-

untttl at St Hudton Strut, Ctr-trtt, K 3,

Objtctlont, K »oy, should btmade tmmttllattly In writing to:A. J. P«rry, Borouth Oltrk of theBorough of Cartertt, N. J.

(tinned) JOifPH PA»«atC.. P. 6-17, l i .

The LargittOf

Gifts and HouitFurnishing!In the County—

AT BIG SAVINGS !

FABER'SHouiD-FurnSshlngi

and Gift ShopSmith 61, Ferth AM»«J

lira]FOR THE GRADUATE AND JUNE HIDE

Our butineu t»r«r ttf ntarly half a f«niur» lirout wturtnoe thit me flit jb\\ DUr liert li torreelM tt I f T1K, QUALif * an« I'Rlct. S.6 »ur urftteltttltn of lift nterchan'IM «•*«.• . . . * l hnawIt «IU alttse T»B.

F«r t N Jun« Bridi

Ht (SrdduattiCniiftsaent rinft,

rlityt, Cemmanltj tnd

l||rer«»rt, olockf, chUUsrar*.

Wtttl watchM, bydrum, Klf In, Htmlll«n, Parker%tt Wattrdun tu\ and PenoUMil. Beit tuoklt »a< tit•olitr Itts, C«mpacU »H<l

L KREIELSHEIMERUtlMlthSt. JEWELERS firth Amb»y

NOTICEDtvittl tt» Monthi ol Jtlly and Augutt

TWf i»nk WiU Ob«ei>e theSittfrlU* rt|n(f;nt Holuljly tadNo Itubkvtt Will B« Trttttwttd.

It) Order to A«oinm»d«te Qf CwUmmW» WHl 94 Open Mr Butteett On

FRIDAY EVENINGS fom 7rO0 to

mm My m ,..Abote Procedure Will B#k«*t

GRIFFITH NANO CO

other electric tppHt)nc*t,

Wi wonder what thow

Thit Smart Little Pianoi$ typically "Chippendale"

rhU

*0,t.

•tylt.

H il let el H4 «»• "•et)e.»t».rt, t*hf MMjIlJ.

fhei Mtll

$375

Page 8: CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It · Boy, 7, VictimjWPA HALTS PARK PROJECT, Of Drowning Buried Here John Connolly, Jr. CARTERET—John Connolly, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John Connolly

EIGHT Friday, June 17, 1938

SEWAREN REGATTA-:-:HAILED A

, Gutowski Rf-

innv Giitw.kl lor his "NatumThr AWBMIS wrrf* five ffikUon

tins of oil R/v-nsnltlnn tor bfJt.ti-a.mftn.ihlp «'<•"• ' " l ( i r explains of• Vcrnln." Vrftn ' and Brltv Ann 'Tli<* first prlw win a flrc extinguish-cr utifl Ihf oilier two wlnnrn rr-

who •rrsnjfn' thtA J f n - I Phil H«M*incf ive Award* lor Urco- ] r ( l g , t U i w l , prr«ntMi with »n

On Crafl | lr«n «>»»•; ni»Hp«f "By .TnKfi

fur-

BUYING POWER REDUCESFLOOR COVERING COST

Rrrfptlona! VIHIM In floor rov-

prlnn. bf<ls nnri bedding are being

offered by the Linoleum Oarpet

Fwtory Outlet Store at V)j Smith

Street. Perth Amboy.

This store U one unl. In Ihehlg chain operated In principal

SFWAREN ' I 1 ' ' <"'' nnnufll re-gntln •ponsmnl Iv. ihc HrwurtnMM or Hnnl rinli. u hrtiiR hulled».< n trnT-mlrai'- MU-CV.S

forty (rial'., nil of Iliem withmoorings in 1hr Krwarrn Orrrk, p«r-tlcipnfrl In Ihc mnrlno parntir lustSiindav ""'I a Inrfif rrowri of towns-folk (jaiherrd nt thr creek find «tvarUnRr points in Nrwarrn to wlt-npss the colorful .ippdarlP Afterthr rrafl iftunird to thr rtockj, anodal «ns hrld in Mir club-house»nd rrfrrshmi'iih verc sprved anddandnK WBS enjnyrd

Prl7.es tnr Ihc l>rst (lrrnr»tp.d bout*went In Froil Wnhlgrmiilh of Cur-tfrt-t lor his Ann How" and. to

»•»•>• • • • • •»»•»»• • • • • •»»• • • •» • •»»• • • •»»•» •» • • • •» •

VINCENT A. BATTMAN, D.M.D.onnouncti the opening of his office for

PRACTICE OF GEMERAL DENTISTRYAND ORAL MEDICINE

AT

93 MAIN ST. WOODBRIDGE, N. J.

TEL. W O O D B R i n U R H M I l

Quality Giftor »li« OiJwKo ItVw

Onl»

75.00CHAH6t nWe * wax

Uu itou

gotdorunyt

14.95'/ CHARGE H

50t A WEEK

UIRTCHES &

Whatever type of nun Dad may be,you'll find the right Father's Day giftfor him here — in our tremendous,modern auortment of quality jewelryof every description. Make Dadreally happy this year — with a giftthat will last for many years.

dogbUcim.o »ith twequtllry ditmonjl( l

CflSHnDT REQUIRED50c or $1.00 Weekly

^ 17.50

w/ CHARSt ITy Me A WEEK

Th. Schick• l.ctric ihtvt'for tK. Old

wdo > prictictl.

15.00

CHAR&E 1150< A WEEK

SPECIAL .mtc*4tck id Otd'tl»ndiam>

urv»d

l«t la

29.75

SCHINDEL S GIVES THIS MAN'STOWN SOMETHING TO TALK ABOUT

OUR GREATEST

FATHER S DAY SALEDay in and day out—the greatest values in town! Have you ever seen such sensationa

bargains—especially right at the height of the summer season? Come! Buy everything you

needatSchindel's! Whatsavings! What values! The most amazing yet-—in every dept.'

DOMT SPORT AND BEACH WEARFor Misses and Women

Thrilling selection of clever sports top tomakf your pUytlmc the most

YOURCHOICE

HI.A( KS

e) PLAY SUITS

0 POLOS

f CULOTTEa§ SHORTS

% SIZES 14 TO 10

FIRST QUALITY

TAFFETA SLIPSin sell f"r

HUNDREDS OF GIFTS FOR DAD AT

SCHINDEL'S LOW PRICES

tin tap. lire Irluand uilorrd. KnliIractk. Siwi S<ln•44! Aral valnt*.Hariri

FASHIONED

SILK HOSEPrrfreti andjaoair

MEN'S SMART COOL

Polo Shirts

39;HMT polon f<»r rind «n«! ftir y«urH^lf.U r | f aaiorlmrnt uf popular HtflfM.fahrlra and colon, at a trier tautmtana a Iktf; •avfuy on t-nrj onp.All tlrat qaatltj. SlorV np for «n»-mrt. R » . T»c T«lu».

c rXvrvic« and aherr.Nrw a a m|m r r•kiilrk. BUT *XHBtr ••tplr *<(kl( draitlr lowptic« toatorrow!

39

REG. * EXTRA WINDSOR

CREPE GOWNSPaaltl akadtinllarantraatlap; trim.Full rat and nrllmi l l . S im IT tnSOX. Ctxil andr»aiforlablr

WOMEN'S REGULAR |1

SATIN SLIPSFirm llvr «t thinlow prl<*r! .Strtrt-lirnri >ntln In bro- M V H Vrpil«>»f NtrlpfH niwl ^ ^ » ^M

Ul«. 'l>.ro.f m # i

»»«'• !••«" # a \44. ll« Birr *" aW

nnd

Men's Newest Sport Bush CootsUr*. HI.Hn •r ikr. lou'll H T tfctie jackrtiUcinK nivm by Kiuiri mrn Pt all the hitrrhoriN Ih(x nutukrtrr. Idrni tot notoiiBf,for volf, or nvrr TOUT KTVIDH •flit. COTT*tttii rtfRr rhhrr wttfc i>r without R alklrl,

$•(.29

MEN'S WASH SLACKSFirlpra find cliecki. K»rrj,,ulr wHl tailored. WrurSI.Al'KS find ««Tf your 4rcBksuits. AH Miff*, f 1.30 viilur*. 89

HollywoodAWNINGS

Made of heavy drill In

and |rten—orange and green

—complete with hardware-

read; to h»nf. R*f. 79c each

19c to 29c Yard New Summer

CURTAIN GOODS• Plaids •Voiles• Nets • Portugens• Marquisettes• Clipped Figures

MORE FLEECED

TOPPERSMADE TO SELL

FOR $1.99

Cool topptrs to wear

over funimer froclu.

S i m p l y marretoiu

ralaM—and the selec-

tion will thrill, 700! A

complete Mllout last

week. Be here early

tomorrow and y»u

will not be disap-

pointed.

GABARDINE SLACKSWITH BELT

^uu'H apPaid m lot of time InHUrku ihla iVnnirr. Hrre anilnn*f •• thr t lnr and pin re <n-.t.K-k up at this low jHrr.All klita. Wnttk |2.H.

$1-79WHITK BROAUCLOTH

SHIRTSGUARANTEED

FOR 1 YEAR sj.oofamous "Att l * )" brand. Prr-akrunk. CoiTfrllj llatd. Mndtliv «blrl p l lcullnr. A nfiv ahlrt 1rtr If Itfulls to »lic a jtttM aattafac-tttrj nrtr . All alata.

Men'. SleeveleM Barrel!

SWEATERS

All *«ol . r'l'kla acaaun'a bi<c»tkit! Tht i t * i M l at/l«! Saiarlevntraatlaa1 «ol«ra la wl4e aorl-aontal alriBpl*(i, laeladiac Kkiteatrlpt*. Alao aollJ eolora. Allala«a> luweat price In town.

CHILDREN'S LEATHER PLAY

SANDALSS WJtiU Klk

Brawn Elk§ Mtitt, Heavy Strom

Wi M

Men 1 Broadcloth

PAJAMASActual$1.00ValutiA |»nuiMl>

Ka» atyl* tt 1•ltd.wrii« •tick

uitlaajallr taaua* b'aad. A I H C U I«r lk«7'4 b* I I . flatarl fafttnia

an« eolcra. KulUk aatek collar, mlatlo. amU«y mtTUt. liata B. C. aall D.

MEN'S WORK

DRESS HOSE WASH TIESJU8T THE

THING

FOR DAD!

M>llda mid I t i u l n . \m\uri lit IAr.tur lae aummrr at tklalow urk'C. 91ac« id

Kr.

WOMEN'SPaoch Sandals

D«ti*a)f • ! aair aauaiaMr patltrnato I I M M O«a» la atrlfta aa4

^fi l wAakle.White, Blue, Bed

She* I U I. »er. No ValueMEN'S SlUEDY

WORK PANTSVoluei

to $1.98IDSIATI MSN'8 BLUE DENIM

DUNGAREESra la darkl> a I I f ru a, willntau4 alvuty , atliard nrar. MlIv 41. H*». I I .

Ra*. ai valaca.•Mr.<a«ka4 at all•alula • ( atrala.

Union Made- Headlight

OVERALLS ,UIN8 FAMOUS MAKB

SHIRTS - SHORTS

BRANCH OMeAMBTM-iai BTH4 (tnalSTORES MAINFIKLO-IU f»«t lUHtL CHERRY ST.. RAHWAY

faawa* knot* •> tM

WOMEN'S AND GROWING GIRLS'

'WEDGEES'Regular $1.69 Value

989 Alt White.

QpMtel Colon

9 PaUleyt