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Transcript of BRIDGE LEAD€¦ · BRIDGE LEAD AN INDEPENDENT ... cial or omer reasons be denied the ... of...
BRIDGE LEADAN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP
THE WORLD'S NEEDY
SEVENTEENTH YEAE Woodbridge, N. j . , Friday Afternoon, November 18, 1927 PRICE THREE CENTS—$1.50 PER YEAR
TUNNEL WILLCAUSE REALTY
BOOM HERESAYS HESS
Predicts Big Real Estate De-mand by Outside InterestsDuring 1928. P r a i s e sPublicity.
TELL THEJVQRLDAdvises President of Local
Brokerage Firm Celebrat-ing Its 5th. AnniversaryToday.
A. J. Hess, president, of the firm jof White & Hess^ Inc.,- realtors of}"Woodbridge and New York, was in-jterviewed by the Leader yesterday \on the significance of the opening ofthe Holland Vehicular T&nnel, andits effect on the Jersey real estatemarket. The firm of White & Hess,started operations in Woodbridgefive years ago today, and has donemore to advertise the Town of Wood-bridge than any other one factor.They have spent thousands of dollarsin the Metropolitan dailies, and innewspapers of North and CentralJersey, advertising their MiddlesexCounty holdings. Commenting onthe new vehicular tunnel, which isthe first direct traffic underwater"bridge" between Manhattan andNew Jersey, Mr. Hess said: j
^'What made Florida? The an-(swer f§ 'publicity'. Most of the ex-!aggerated values placed upon Florida Ireal estate were fictitious. Many!people bought blindly, from a blueprint, in the hectic rush to 'make akilling'. Publicity did it. Millionsof words printed in every newspa-per of the country, plus elaborateadvertising that cost many millions, j
"Proper publicity is needed to;bring to the attention of the real i
James P. GerityRevives Old Slogan
"Do your Christmas ShoppingEarly" cautions James P. Ger-ity, thereby being just a stepahead of the times, as usual.
. "And," he continues, "Thatalso goes for getting your 1928auto license plates!"
For J. P., besides being apopular real estate and insur-ance man, is also local agentof the State Motor Vehicle De-partment, with the big job ofhandling distribution licensetags for a large district.
Anyone who is under the im-pression that it is not a big job,is invited to Mr. Gerity's officeduring the week between Christ-mas and New Year's.
This invitation is more or lessof a joke, anyway, because dur-ing that week the line forms onthe right, and you have to waityour turn.
A corps of .typists and clerks,under Mr. Gerity's supervision,attend to the job of making outlicense cards and renewingdriver's licenses for severalthousand applicants, from allparts of Middlesex and neigh-boring counties. Therefor—
"Avoid the rush!" cautionsMr. Gerity. "Do it now." "Nowis the time " etc., etc.
Distribution of the 7,000 li-cense plates delivered to the lo-cal Motor Vehicle Agency threeweeks ago, started on Tuesday.Mr. Geri'ty's office has proved sopopular, because of the dispatchand courtesy with which li-censes are issued, that manyout-of-town people prefer tocome to Woodbridge for theirplates.
To repeat, "Get yours now!""However," says ' J. P.
"Whether early or late, thisoffice welcomes you, and as-sures you of courteous, prompttreatment at all times."
Benefit Show for Masonic HIGHEST SCOUTBuilding Fund on Tuesday HONOR MEDAL
A BENEFIT performance, proceeds of which will go. to the j ID A ¥? A l i i / E j l / 1 1 1TVTasnrnV Rm'lrHno- "Fund., will hp ViPlH at. TtlocVs State- The*-! I Of* A I YOIITM
DEMOCRATIC DANCEON DEC. 3. TO AID
NEEDY FAMILIES
Masonic Building Fund, will be held at Block's State Thea-tre under the auspices of Americus Chapter 0. E. S., of Wood-bridge next Tuesday. •" . ,
A splendid program of film entertainment-has been pre-'Kankpared by Manager Marcus for the afternoon and evening per-formances. „. __ » The big feature picture is "The
Winning of Barbara Worth," SamuelIGoldwyn's presentation of the HenryJKing production of Harold BellWright's best selling, novel, withRonald Colman and "Vilma Bank.
'Eagle Scout" Con-Upon Joseph Warg-
There will-be no "victory dance",by the Woodbrjdge Democratic Clubthis year, in spite of the overwhelm-ing success of all four local candi-dates at the polls on November 8th.
So gx'eat has been the demand fora social affair of some kind, how- _ «- ~ "CTer- tf»at' t n e <=mb members have Mary Burke, Jack Campion,adopted Committeeman Graoisain's
SODALITYM U S I C A L
COMEDY ISGREAT HIT
LEGION ASKSTOWNSHIP FORIMPROVEMENTS
Committeeman Graoisain'ssuggestion 'co hold a dance, proceeds
, \TT j» - j D A -tfrom which are to go toward the, a t WOOaDnage KOtary fteedy families of the Township at
Christmas time.The date for the. event has been
set for Saturday, December 3rd. Theplace is the School Street ParishHouse. The crowd, it- is hoped, willfill the hall to capacity.
Meeting.
BY CONGRESSMAN
Eleanor Mack, Ethel Cam-pion and Alfred ColeyStars of Amateur Success.
KEATINGSC0RESI Manager Marcus said that he had se- William Street Bov Has Won i Tickets are now being printed, and Entertainment One 01 Best•cured the big reclamation film after ' „ 3 . _ * ! will be distributed in the near fu- ^ p . , T T r»." • • " • • ' E v e r Staged Here; Direc-! weeks of negotiations by 'telegraph|and telephone and that he felt the•Slate Theatre honored in offering a
_ _ I production of such proportions to itsM a d e ,!patrons. . .
The dramatic romance whieh fea.-, tures Ronald Colman and the lovely
Favnr« Mnvp i Vilma Banky, is a glowing, tale ofA avuia w u t c . |those'pioneers who ba'ttled.'Mth the
menace of water, first in its total ab-The following letter from the local
post of the American Legion was re- _ceived at the meeting- of the Town- yast "lands and the reclamation of a
Want Alterationsfn H A I K P War R*4ir« 'IO riOUSe War IvetlCS.
Twenty-One Merit Badges ture. The affair will not only be anrv~ • Ti v • , ! opportunity to meet the successful
During three lears withTroop 32.
Local Democratic candidates buti will give guests a" chance • to con-; tribute to a worthy cause at -thesame time.
tress Allan Workedders in Two Weeks.
fon-
JOSEPH C- WARGYAS, of.Scout Troop 32, of the M.'I^l; . , P n e a r v
E. Church, was awarded the^&Clill I \USd.IJand then in its over-flowing Eagle Scout medal at y ester-j
.presence, it is at once the story oi day's luncheon meeting- of the
ship Committee on Monday, and re-man's soul.Club.
forrpri to thp hnilriino- fnirmiiftpp > " - i T l ie medal, which is the highest
wfth the ?ecommendafiSn of cSn\m£ : " T h * Winning of Barbara: Worth;' m e i , t a w a r d o f the Boy Scouts of
teeman SatUer that it be acted upon £fjf» * * « ™f™T° *ZZ^ ^ S ' I . f F^2£*7 C°nSreSS-favorably: G. Hoffman.
to Hold AnnualDance Nov, 23.
The annual dance- of St. Cecilia's
FW, if any, amateur at-tempts at musical comedy
have been crowned with theapplause a c c o r d e d "HerSong", a romantic play withmusic, presented under theauspices of the Sodality of St.James' Church at the parochial
October'31st., 1927."Township Committee,Woodbridge, N. J."Gentlemen:
"At a regular meetin
, angle ot any of the-more important i n a n
;films, with Willard Holmes, eastern J o e Wargyas became a scout in o , ™ annual aance-or »t. Ajeciuas an fli+nriiim nn!engineer, coming to love Barbara J u n e 1924 joining Troop 32 at the Rosary Society of Iselm, will be held School aUdltOUUm Onijust as Abe Lee, desert-bred westen- -\Voodbridge Methodist Church. Since "™ the auditorium of Iselin School a n ^ T u e s d a y evenings.jer, does; and poor Barbara does not that time he has made steadv prog- N o 1 5 o n Thanksgiving eve Thek h id l i bh
the auditorium of Iselin Schoolj p g N o \ 15> o n Thanksgiving eve. Theknow her own mind, loving both. r e s s through the various grades of ~ ™ « » committees are working
'Gary Cooper, one of the year's scouting, becoming First Grade n a r d to make this a gala event that S Uccess , b u t a d rama t i c one asof Wood- "finds," plays Abe Lee to Ronald scout in December, 1925, and since m 1 1 eclipse former affairs.
Not Only WM it A
bridge Post No. 87, The American Colman's Holmes. And Miss Banky that time has qualified for 21 meritLegion held on Friday evening, Oc- i s Barbara Worth, daughter of the badges which has resulted in histober
Semi - AnnualIL of C Banquet
Monday Night
28th., 19?7,to communicate with your honorablebody on the following matters of in-
iterest to 'che Post:j " 1 . Because of increasing mem-ibership and the almost constant use'of the rooms set off in the Memorial[Municipal Building--for members, i'ciis requested that the use of the Le-giou rooms be limited solely to the
!use of V ie Post membership and thatclubs using the auditorium for so-cial or omer reasons be denied theuse of the rooms for checking hats
land coats anu .iie serving of refresh-ments therefrom.
. Jefferson Worth .. u»I was instructed s h o u l d b e reclaimed.
CONDITION OFISELIN STREETS
IS DISCUSSED
rand march win start at well, every member of the castthe special features of andrchorus doing their bit, and
achieving- the Eagle Medal. He has,""; i>™s'^ will be a prize waltz. , , - , , _„- . ; „„ !„ d i t ,attended"the official Boy Scout camp1 _Aa usual there will be a large Seveial of the principals dlSfor the past three years and has Thanksgiving basket for some lucky playing talent which Shouldsained some practical «anip experi- »u.6st. 1 ^ e r e _ W l 1 1 °® several sur- alln-ro-orl rn lip irllp rhir-ence. At present he is serving as D r i s f i s i n t h e f o r m o f d^erent enter- not be allowed to lie Idle dur-
Condition of Iselin streets came'Camping, Civics, Bird Study, Path-up for discussion at the meeting of finding, Swimming, First Aid to)the Township Committee last Mon- Animals, Carpentry, Scholarship, iday afternoon, alter the reading of Handicraft, Firemanship, Craftwork:a letter from Alfred D. Hyde, of in Wood, Safety First, Masonry andIselin, complaining of the deplorable Poultry Keeping. In each case rep-
"2. Because of the donation to the;condition of thoroughfares there,'resenting rigid requirements in meet-Mr. Hvde was.in§ the various tests. - .
1 ~ Woodbridge Rotary Club
At present he is serving as .Senior Patrol Leader of Troop 32, tainment numbers during the eve- fag the rest of the Social sea-having been promoted to this ranfe m n =because of exceptional leadership •
- Wargygas-liold-the following meritbadges: First Aid, Life Saving, Per-sonal Health, Public Health,, PhysicalDevelopment, Pioneering, Cooking,.
GRAUSAMURGES ACTION
ON ZONINGsection of New Jeraev I an? -ladIto sav that the bi° New York dailies Tf le semi-annual banque'c of Mid-;saw "fit to »ive ample publicity to dlesex Council, No. 857, Knights of: condition of t h othe opening of the Holland Vehicular Columbus, of Woodbridge, will be Post of numerous articles and relics d l l e t 0 h e a v y r a l n s . M r . Hyde wasTunnel The Sundav papers devoted l l e l d on Monday evening, November pertaining to warfare, with no avail- o £ >lhe opinion that $200 spent on the he W g yseparate sections to* it The maps 21st-> a t t n e Rendezvous, St. George able space to place the same for or- r o a d s f O r cindering, would alleviate; proved their interest m scouting byshowin°" the sections of' Jersey direct- avenue and Freeman street. namental or exhibitive purposes, it the condition. I giving this special recognition.
the tunnel show that! s t a t e officers will be present and is respectfully requested that the Mayor Ryan, in commenting on the'Rotary president, John M.Bildi C i t t f b d b h i
Mayor Appoints Committee toTake Initial Steps TowardDrafting Ordinance.
son.The truly remarkable thing about
this amateur musical comedy^ how-ever, was the co-operation of all par-ticipants, and the organization ef-fected by Miss Agnes MacDonaldAllan, directress of the John B.Rogers Producing Company, of Fos-toria, Ohio, who presented the play.
It is difficult to name the out-standing star- of the production, asthere were several who did exceed-ingly well.• Perhaps Miss Mary Burke, prettyHigh School junior, "daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Patrick Burke, of 25SGreen street, is entitled to the larg-
at Mon- est bouquet of compiiments. This.meeting introduced young lady has personality, 'the aiak-
sack,mously.
ious to havens lar°e a »--i tlfprin"
h« P ° r t a n t feature is on the. program. ; meetings and socialM b l i d
g gplanning, to attend are for the coming year
and next spring, it »vui uo M ,because people are blind and do not -Memoers . , . ,.
aood investment when they u r § e d t o § e t l n touch with Edward fully requested oi your body to con- trenching machine dig uiem up. M. Einhorn, of Woodbridge, chair- sider the extension of a gas line to | week or two later for laying sewer
spwer w o * ET Jthe ' numerous j " "It would be a waste oi .,...«,,, . — -- --- --- -events planned said the mayor, "to place cinders onitrict Commissioner John Dixon and, it is respect- certain roads, only to have the;Scout Executive Herbert W. " "
aiwere present as guests.
ly benefitted bv the tunnel show that: State officers will be present and is respeexiuny requested mai me Mayor Kyan, in commenting on the Ru l a l> prBsiueui, JUUU ^ . Kreger,! Committeeman GrausamWoodbrid»e is no farther from the will speak on matters pertaining to Building Committee of your body be iett.er, stated that Iselin people were who is vice-president of che Raritan day's Township „ . . .mouth of the tunnel than Hacken- the good and welfare of the order, authorized to have placed in the f u l l v a w a r e o f t h e t a c t t h a t i t i s i m . Council of the Boy Scouts of Amen- the question of a zoning ordinance ings of a good voice charmmg
which claims to benefit enor- Michael.Coll will act as toastmaster. rooms of the Legion suitable glass p 0 6 8 l D l e and impractical to remedy|ca. presided at the luncheon. Be- for the community, and urged im- tures, an easy and deliberate stageG r a n d K n l a h t 4 r t h u r G e i s i s a n x . closets for the proper placing of said con<jitions at the present time be- sides Scout Wargyas and Congress- mediate start of preliminary steps manner and a smile tha^wtnt r
IUUS to have'as large a gathering as articles. ,. ^,. . • fiu^tjif ijie apwer wolfc. i-t progress.jinan-JHoffma , Scoutinaster Alfxan- toward^ the,-drat"ti«f~lKt the local to the heart* .;:: her auOienr?.•r. - t u i s s ih io fnCT t i i o •nni.oi !ir,,r .m o^ i-ftTi'i i i o " o ^ n i o n'v -•. f h'**** riiJUiarA^a!'^*"rt"^jrirTi'irrf h o a n:siat-<a nf s v i i n " I d e r G. tC O . u e l c h ' o f i r o o p 4 2 . jDis- " s t a t u t e . J a c k C a m p i o n , a s i i i e "wiSfc--
"In order to play fair with all sec- UiS and purely ornamental salesman,tions, and with all.classes, residen- w u a "knockout^^ His j?art was
i.n „ onn(q invptitment -n-iion that- u l » c u i" set w Luucu WILII jiiuvvraru lujiv requesieu oi vour Douy i-u cuu-• ireiicmug uiauiuiie uig Liitjiii uy a : " " - v--~ —' a«««^^. . tial, busines and industrial," said .} ' . ,, ._,_ _i- _ ,.„see it " " n e s > u u e n t ^ u e n l n e j ' .M. Einhorn, of Woodbridge, chair- sider the extension of a gas line to | week or two later for laying sewer I . — . ;Mr. Grausam, "we should approach tt, portraying Ore
.,_ r" , . , „ . ,, . . , man of the committee on arrange- a proper place in said rooms for the pipes." .My advice to Woodbridge people m e n t s . :purpose of use in cooking. This re-1 "It would be ?200 well spent." ob-
holding real estate is Leil llle Participation in social and athletic | quest is also made on behalf of the'served Committeeman Kish, smash-World, fahow them that V\ ood- activities is being planned by the Woman's Auxiliary Unit attached to ing a precedent; for this was theis on the map. There is not c o u n c n . D u r i n g the last two "yearsbridtanother community m the state that bowling has been one of the "mostis so richly endowed with possibil-ities and with all. that goes towardthe making of a big city. We haverailroads, a complete bus system,water front and rail-front industrialBites .business sections permittingplenty of expansion, fifteen wonder-ful, modern schools, churches of alldenominations.
"We are within easy commutingdisTance of New York, Newark. Weare on the mainline and the shorebranch of the Pennsylvania Railroad,the greatest railway organization in '•life world. The Lincoln Highway, imost famous of America's national j
the local Post. first time on record that .Mr. Kisti4. Because of increasing member- has ever displayed or-even pretended
sports, and the Woodbridge s l l l p a n d limited space available for; any interest m Iselin. Mr. Kish,played an important pa r t - in | t h e conduct of meetings which now' l i ( A v e v e r ' l l a d a c W p o n h i s shoulder
Middlesex-Union council eon-'j^g to be limited to one small room throughout the meeting, and could,lit is respectfully requested that the |not resist an opportunity to disagree.Building Committee of your body be cluaed. __
Anti - ExplosiveResolution- to
be Presented
I authorized to investigate the feasi-ibilitv of tearins down 'che wall be- ;
"Something has beenretor'ced Mayor
done,Ryan.
Long BranchPlays Locals';
•TpmorroAn interesting sport event- is in
role of a cocky,this zoning problem carefully and de- swaggering young men well nkfedliberately. It will take at least four by tne ladies and with a gift formonths to draft this ordinance, and making ancient puns seem bright andI recommend that we start at once." ttew- , . , , * • IT T> *
„ , As the talkative Mrs. RufusMayor Ryan suggested that a se- 0 , H a r a ; w i f e o f t n e s o d a p 0 - p m a n u .
facturer, Miss • Eleanor Mack, ateacher at the Fords School, scored
Her role was that of a gush-matron interested in art, the
ries of meetings be called, with in-!vitations to all interested taxpayersand residents, who should be given
'ample opportunity to voice their *
tween the" a'd7o!nin~g" "rooms "allotted ' h a v e personally inspected the bad now under the direction of Coaches i ^ ^ 'i fVip 4nipripflii T po-inn Tcith i 1 i^nrilR anrl tbp WftT'st. hnlps havp VIPPTI t 7£»T.l* nlr anH RrilniTicnyi. w i l l stack:
view in. mind of jnaking one large
Mr. store for local grid fans when the e n g i n e e r a n d attorney were appoint- Her song numbereleven, e d a g a c o m m i t tee bfr the whole onWoodbridge High School
the ' s P o i s a n d t n e worst holes have beenlwerlock and Robinson, will sta'ckU P - would be highly im-_ l a r e
room "instead of "two smallTooms as \ Practical to give any permanent re-now exist.
"5. Because inspection of therooms of the_ Legion is also invited
. iby your Committee with the request™>^eJ£^J^!^^traffic lanes, and the shore highway, in sympathy with the action of the I w J ^ 1.or^tt
that yourin their i t l l e r e o f w a r r a n t P^ t ing , that your*nJ^"\Building Committee be authorized to
lief at this time, when sewer workis going on."
Committeemen Grausam and Satt-ler stated that the improvementcommittee would take care of thejbers of the faculty, .were given
forces against the football represen-!g
tatives of Long Branch, tomorrowafternoon at the Parish House Field.Piay will start at 2:30 o'clock and alarge attendance is looked for.'
Werlock and Robinson, two mem-
improvement committee to do every-thing possible at this time.
Marie
Yours respectfully,Woodbridge Post No. 8.7-,
The American Legion,.SBLMAR R. CHRISTBNSEN,
Adjutant."
—PERSONALS—
busiest of them all, traverse our County BoardTownship. We are situated between stand * against the storage of explo-^"""*t"lfPerth Amboy, Carteret, Railway, all gives in the countv, Mayor Ryan said iof them industrial towns. at the regular meeting of the Town-1 " l trust that the above requests -» .
'"'To industrial enterprises of any ship Committee on Monday. I will received favorable consideration MISSkind whatsoever, Woodbridge Town-, "Ours was the first municipal , a n d t h a t t h e P o s t may be duly ad-'ship offers the greatest possibilities, j body to protest against the further ] vj?®J
d o f t n e Pleasure of your Com-To residents it offers real home at- storage of explosives," said Comrnit-mosphere. To businessmen it offers; teeman Grausam, "When the govern-the profit to be gained from present ^lent applied for more land to beand future growth. ; added to the Raritan Arsenal
"But we need plenty of publicity, premises"We are -almost in the shadow, I might! -^ resolution will be drafted by thesay, of the Woolworth Building, and attorney, condemning the storage ofyet we have not 'told the world', explosives m this densely settled sec-Let's make it welcome. Let us in- ^ a n d petitioning the removal.vite tbp world tn benefit hv our ad- l T n l s W1^ D e forwarded '-with thevantaXus position and our -reat resolution of other Middlesex muni- Presbyterian church will hold gift tee to take her place.fnf^r!" P°slt1011 an<i om =reat c l p a l i t l e s t 0 W a s h I n E t o n j shops Friday night, December 2, in
' 'the church basement. Articles suit-) Mrs. Stephen Wyld,
matter. Mayor Ryan instructed the I chance to coachtee-
team, to seecan be
a n l Uea one The° Redoff with
views in the matter. theatre, handsome leading men, inThe Township Committee with the ietei a i m o s t anything but soda pop._.- __.. _ ^ ,_^ . "Radio Widow"
well received..Alfred Coley had the most difficult
role of the entire cast, that of EmilJKronlein, aged music master, whoidolizes his daughter, and feeds hissoul on memories of his wife, wholeft home twenty years previously tobecome a Broadway star. Mr. Coley'spart called for a great deal of mem-
To Hold Civil .Service . jExamination for Local :
Post Office PositionOpen U. S. Civil Service examina-! orizing lines made more difficult Dy
hroken" tions will soon be held for the posi- a German accent.The teaTWTost four "-ames in a "on of "Clerk" -in the post office at; Ethel Campion, as Christine,The team has lost fou-i sames inj i {Wopdbridge» N_ j _ E e c e i p t o f a p _ daughter of Kronlein, carried the
'• plications will close November 30, major part of the vocal solo worn1927. -with Miss Burke. Miss Campion has
T a v ri«-lritU>n! but"went"to pieces after the) Applications for this examination a pleasing voice, which brought outI aX LlerK O n m ' a r , 7 i n i l a^ma * I must, be made on the prescribed the catchy harmonies of the play to
The resignation of Miss AnnaDuff, who had been employed in theTownship Tax Collector's office, wasaccepted, when presented at a meet-ing of the Township CommitteeMonday afternoon.
Somerville game.The trouble may have been in the -form, whieh, with necessary instruc- good advantage.
booking and arranging of the sched-1 tions, may he obtained from thej As the hard-boiled director ofule. Instead of signing up with small Commission's local representative, Broadway show, B. Keating didteams for practice~games, two of the Miss Margaret A. Kelly, at the Wood- bit of character work that gave lifetoughest teams were' placed at the!bridge, N. J. post office. 'a~A ™ w + " = r v 1 I l t m s t l M s r > p " p
head of the schedule.'The first game j All persons wishing to take .this!•and color to a very interesting
loud-voiced. square jawed'bawl
- ~ with Freehold was a scoreless tie! examination should Secure Blanks ••*|P°&en;Miss Marie Gerity, daughter of a n d the second with Belleville was aland file their applications with the;theatrical tryants who bawl out
! Mr. and Mrs. William Gerity, was ap- 7-0 affair, in Belleville's favor. It undersigned prior to the hour o f , everybody m geneial and conceitedThe Sunshine Class of the First [pointed unanimously by the commit-!was the Red and Black team's per-1 dosing- business on the date above m D r " f " " ' " ° 1T1 n a ' - 1 H"" 1 5"-
White & Hess, Inc., are running aseries of anniversary celebration,sales over a period of one month,starting -today.
Serious ChargeMade Against
John Jacquot
Synagogue AuxiliaryElect New Officers
able for Christmas gifts, as kitchen avenue, visited her niece, Miss Kath-
sistent fight that was responsiblefor the scoreless tie and the low score
of Amboy of 7 to 0 and not the cheers of the
specified.com
utensils, and home-made•coffee will be on sale.
cake and' erine Miller,day.
in Philadelphia Mon-
The Ladies' Auxiliary of the Con-jgregation Adath Israel held an elec-tion of officers at the home of Mrs. I! Samuel Vogel, n Main street onjj Wednesday night. The followingj were elected: Mrs. Harry Sherman,! president; Mrs. Samuel Schoenberg-er, secretary; Mrs. Morris Klein,treasurer, and Mrs. William Tobrow-i i4. , ^ , , , , . ,
| s k V j publicity. v«»«w | w a y s attach to a battle between
51 odd-job man of. ^ c a r d p a r t y w i u D e h e l d in" the!tradition-cloaked rivals are enhancedbei'n°- held for the l e c t u r e room of the synagogue on1 in the Woodbridge-St. Mary's grid-
grand jurv without• -Bbail, following I Monday, December 5. The follow- ! i r o n c i a s s i c this season. The sched-mg committee was appointed: Mrs. u l e calls for this game Thursday
Interest Grows with Approachof Woodbridge-St Marys'Game,
The color and glamour which
arraignment before Judge Vogel inrolice court this morning, on a stat-jutory charge preferred by the father jof a young twenty-four old youn
Bernstein, Mrs. JamesMrs. Harry Sherman,
the auxiliary will meet theMonday of each month. The
afternoon, Thanksgiving Day, at Cut-ter's Field.
One of the largest crowds that has
al- St. Mary's24 . .Belmar 032 Red Bank . 00 Seton Hall i 196 St. Benedicts ^26"0 . Linden 12
13 St. Cecelias ".. 633 : St. Marys' 0
woman, of Woodbridge, who is said ^™n\Monda-y ^ e ^ , \ m ? u " 1 ' 4T h e lever witnessd-alocafscholastic tus-
tn he mpntallv Kiihnnrmni Tapniiot December meeting will be held at the s i e w in Ke o n hand to see the twoS\% f " * tt« M ^"^ a empntallvnofguilty
Tapniiot
PERSONALS
ofMrs.
Green "street.Schoenberger,
Ke o n
battlehand to see the twoMayors and officials
student body.'JSo School Spirit"
And the trouble may be due to thefact that the fine school spirit thatwas found at the Barron^avenue in-stitution up until 1925 has dwindledaway so far that "dear old Wood-bridge High no more knows the realmeaning of "school spirit".
Where are all the "pep" meetings?What has happened to the social ac-tivities of the various classes? Where
of the Red and
only ones interested in the team's ishowing are outside fans.
The date for assembling ofpetitors will be stated in thesion cards mailed applicants afterthe close of receipt of applications.
Prof. Love to AttendEducational Conference
at Atlantic CityProf., John H. Love, supervising
Township schools, willconferenceEducation
Atlantic City'De-
Yet underneath this hard exterior,. I Blossom has a soft heart for the"fallen star, Adele Despare, runaway
wife of Kronlein.Edward McLeod, as Rufus O'Hara,
the big fizz and pop man; was veryconvincing. He didn't have much tosay; Mrs. O'Hara took care of thatpart• of .the program..... All the girlsagreed that the little French mus-tache was very becoming . to Rufus.
Mention .should be made of MissEleanor (Mack's splendid diction in
statutorycalled tiy St|tteChas. H. Elliottcember 8 and 9.
the rendition; of her song number"Radio Widow", which drew big ap-plause and an encore. "
Barney Whanel, :Gene Finn, B.Gerityhands.
and Tom Levi wereTheir make-up and
stagecus-
wonder why the team T l i e P r 0 S r a m arranged by Commis- t u m e s w e r e realistic, and their clever
108 63
of both cities will be present to take
AVENEL WOMEN TOpart in the ceremonies. Bleachers to a b l e llne-up, as given, by the coaches:
Both schools will no doubt havein for the
Thanksgiving tussle. The prob-
Mrs. William K. Franklin, Mrs.John Serena and Mrs. William Prallwere the luncheon guests of Mrs.
!seat 5,000 are being erected on the]Woodbridgeo / \ l n V M kc T, t** t. i n ! field. The Hopewell Band as well as SiesellliULSJ AMA5 DALAAK a band from each shool will furnish
[the music. Police from Perth Amboy„ ._ The annual Christmas Bazaar of i a n d Woodbridge, assisted by a num-
of Irvington, on the Avenel Woman's Club will bejoer of state troopers, will keep theCatherine Mor,Wednesday.
Margaret Parsons, daughter __ tMr. and Mrs. Benjamin Parsons, of j under the supervision ' of capable! To date, the St. Marys' outfit hasj , centerRidgedale avenue, celebrated her 'committees will hold many "attractive;turned'in_ a more successfur record; janderevits „_.._,
[held December 9th. at the Avenel 'crowd in order. The game is slatedof: A. A. Club-house. The various uoor.hs t o start promptly at 2:30.
St. Marys'__ Kubinak
Kish
Coukos
left end
left tackle
left guardNo© ~_ :
fifth birthday on Wednesday after-1 holiday gifts.noon by entertaining a number of her A hand-made patch quiltplaymates. The guests were Wallace j which books have been distributed,and Dorothy Mis'dom, Margaret Mur- i will be awarded.ray, Grace Moffett and Anna Parsons, j Mrs. Alice Pomeroy is general
Thirty-two members of the Ladies'j chairman, assisted at the variousAid Society of the First Presbyterian'• booths by: Toys, Mrs. L. B. Vanchurch attended the annual Nesbitt j Slyke; aprons, Mrs. H. Bernard;tea held Wednesday afternoon at the j fancy articles, Mrs. F. E. Barth;
.than the Red and Black. The Wood-jfor'bridge-St. Marys' records this year: m a y e r
Woodbridge0
home of Mrs. H. A. Tappen, 'ofSchoder avenue. Mrs. Tappen andMrs. William Rowe were the host-esses
owels, Mrs. H. Baker, Sr.
Blue Ribbon Butter Every DayKeeps the Doctor Par Away
0 Belleville ...14 Somerville ..12 -,_ :. South River7 Roselle Park0 -._.- Metuchen ..0 .._ Rahway0 Carteret
Freehold 0 Stillman
right guard
right tackle
..._. Gallassi
. McDonald
Cladek
Dalton
, s I o n e r B I l i o t t c o v e r s Problems * ta wel a^evei. j - Seating aswon^r wVtLrw^tal l to8*0 0 1 a d m» i s t e^°f and supervi-!^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ mSine^ id^loakedRafter tlfiSfthree lamee? fe' ^ ^ ^ y ^ ™ l^ the part, ,and seemed quite at ease
Do youdoesn't play the way it should? Doyoupieces, after the• flret three•&*>**» (e ra l; p h a s e s of adult education and-""'This year's team is the best that ha,s i t h r . , g e h o o l curriculum The:
ever represented the Woodbridge.1mB h l ° h s e a ° 0 1 c u m c u i u m - i a - e
High Sehool and would have won the!majority of their games had the stu-dent body showed some interest andcheered them on to victory.
Regardless of how good a team theBarron avenue institution will turnout they will never turn in a suc-cessful season unless the old schoolspirit is revived.
library Benefit PartyCookery with & Kick
Young Wife—"I'm afraid,
WiU^at tte =SdSn - H S L A ^ S ^ 3 . ^ ^ , as AleleI Despare, did very good work.1 The play ran off so well on bothS nights, that few :<3f the audience real-jized that the cast an* choruses had
Yet,Mac--
jDonald Allen, the directress,.whippedThanksgiving afternoon will find j the material int a well disciplined,
the Jolly Rogers and South River, well coached, amateur theatrical com-A. A. in another football encounter pany.on the South River Field. Because! « e r energy and enthusiasm,.. herof the 6-6 tie on last Sunday, the,knowledge of music, and her busi-managers decid-ed to play another'• ne/sslike manner, together with: a
Rogers to Meet SouthD* * D *' ••-•/* 'Been coached only two weeks,River in K.eturn uameidU r ing that time,
I my pie is not all it should be.O'Brien'think I have left something out."
Husband (with a grimace, after
game to decide which is the betterdear,] team. -
The game is slated for 3:00 o'clock
pleasant • personality, were in large.,measure responsible tor the suceess
and the local team and rooters. will•! numbersleave from the corner of Main and
of the affair. Scenes and choruswere; rehearsed .and re~
hearsed until -the:.^directress i'was
7 ! Tight endsatis -fled and every /member of the
. 0 Mullen ...__14 i quarterback34|FuIlerton Bloom.0 left half
21 jHaliderhan J. Dooley20 | right half
- Doo&y, sampling it)—"There's" nothing you j William streets at 2;00 P. M.jcould leave/out that would make it special bus has been chartered for "troupe" . co - operated splendidly,
Brennen taste like that. It must be some-] the trip and those -wishing io see I They were interested _at all times,thing you put in it/'—-rBoston Tran- the game may purchase. tickets from land anxious to make the show a sue-scrlpt.
i Wukovitz Waltersfull back
ROOM FO RENTBARRON AVE., 508 — Furnished
any member of the club. . cess.: —— -—— ;: • [ The McGann twins, in charming-
A meeting ol the W^podbridgej.rbse colored frock's,- ;did a specialty:Men's Brotherhood-was held" last \ dance number: which brought > 4owi{
..room and bath. Mrs. C. R. Wey-' jdght in the Sunday, school rooms of the house..gand,' Telephone 1195-J. M l - 1 8 . the Presbyterian church. i (eqntinvied on /page weight)
PAGE TWO THE WOGDBZIIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, NOV. 18, 1S27
encFound in Searcli
brN.J. CripplesTRENTON, N. J., Nov. 16.--Re-
ports are being received at the State jHouse to the effect that many cases \of pathetic and distressing afflictions jare being uncovered by the canvass jand survey being conducted this i•week under the auspices of the NewJersey Crippled Children's Commis-sion. Much that is being recordedand tabulated will be condensed andpresented in a report to 'the incom-ing Legislature, to the end th.at stepsmay be taken to provide medicaleducational and vocational relief forthe.little sufferers.
Information is also being gatheredrelative to 'the condition and needsof older cripples, together with theblind, deaf and epileptic persons ofthe "State. In these cases vocationalguidance is especially, desirable andthe Commission will refer such in-dividuals to the State Departments jinterested in bringing this about.
With Governor Moore's hearty en-dorsement of the work and the earn-est co-operation of school authoritiesand teachers throughout the State,the week's survey is progressing nice-ly. Much helpful work is also be-ing done by civic and social organiza-tions, including the various lunch-eon clubs, such as Rotary, Kiwanis,Civitans, etc. -A number of the fra-ternal organizations are also at•work, notably the Elks and theShriners. The State Medical Societyand hundreds of individual doctorsare likewise helping, as are alsoState and City police, municipal of-ficials and others.
PITTSBURGH CLEANS UP DEBRIS OF TANK DISASTER PORT READINGAGAIN LEADS IN
Library Dance SuccessThe Iselin Free Public Library As-
_ _ , ' soeialion held its dance on Saturday.1 H K l F I A good crowd, attended. Prizes were
awarded to Mr. jytillrnan and Miss. . . . . . Serv"iGe< collec- Alexandria Nahass for the best cos-
tions on November 1, tasen up from t u m e s . "Al Smith"-and his Collegi-
j Avenel Sunshine ClassGives Surprise Shower
! the several schools in which theWoodbridge National Bank is oper-ating the system, were as follows:
Port Reading ;__ 5208.45No. 1 __, 102.90No. 11 __ _ _ 101.60Avenel ; . : , - 99.75High School -"89.1-0Sewaren ._.... ....... 62,19St. James' .' .._ 52.14
•'• • . . . ', . r . 1689.52Summary
School • Attendance Deposits P . C.Port Reading.__ 385 371Sewaren' 109 80Avenel . 391 221No. 11 ._.. 622 323No. 1 : 504 "202St. James' 350 111 32High Scfiool 581 120
96
ans furnished the music.
New Girls' ClubFormed at
A regular" meeting of the Sunshine-;;i Class of the Ayenel Presbyteriait-}:;.church., was held Saturday night; a.6. ;•• •the borne of Mrs. L. B. Van Siyke*-••>•A miscellaneous shower was ten— >dered to Mrs. J. Perry, formerly;"*-Mips Agues Winquist, of Avenel. ••-.-.•%.:•
Miss Jean JLockie presided tCi the •business session after which a l a r g e ; ^umbrella ; t r immed, with, the class;;
ir-l's club has been formed .(.colors, blue and - yellow, -wasA new gir-ls club has been formed . ( . l , fc , fin Iselin. It-will be known as -"The | sented to. Mrs. Perry, filled..,,vataGirls 'Happy Hour Club." The mem- m a n y beautifuls gifts, :. Favors,:: o£bers are: Ruth McGowan, Eileen D l u e baskets^ with yellow ftowers-Fisher,- Nettie Katt, Lena Katt, Irene filled, with candy were given .eachMerrill, Lillian Rush, and Genevieve guest. Sandwiches, home made ca.ke.Boehme., The officers are : RutH r Mc-! a n d -lemonade were; 'seryed-by the
7 3 Cowan, president; Lena Katt, Y i c e i n o s t e s s - . " : .. : . :: ;•57 I president; NeWie Katt, treasurer; I Those present; wePe:,,;Jeaii and Ag~5 2 i Genevieve Boehme, secretary The fles Locbie, Martha Weimer, Jolaa4 0 meetings are to be held Monday Kerekes, Prances and Loraine Dick-
V l K iafternoons at 4:15
Totals 2942 1429 S3
RED MEN OF COUNTYTO BOOST MEMBERSHIPWilliam J. Stetser, Past
Sachem of New Jersey, was the prin-cipal speaker at a'combined" meeting-jof the nine tribes of the Order in |Middlesex County to be held at the 'Wigwam of Poambo Tribe No. 65 at19 8 Smith street, Perth Amboy last.
; h t . •• ' ' '
Model for HusbandsThe-iiarassed-looking man was be-
ing sliown over sbuae: works:"That -machine ," said, his guide
"does the work of thirty men."The man smiled gltrmly."At last," tie said, "I have seer
w h a t m y W i f e should have married.' '—London Tit-Bits.
Get a CradleFirst Assistant Vice-President —
of a position would your
prson, Esther Van Slyke, KatfeeV ln<*-Bernard, Henrietta D-ietz,Montgomery, Agnes Per.ry, Mrs.B. Van Slyke, Abraham Winquist,F . > Perry,Winquist.
B. B. Clark and Arvid;
S e c ond Assistant Vice-President — j€5 ,, , . , , , , , .. As nearly horizontal as he caaiThe rally, which was held to stim-., t . , Cornell widow
ulate interest i n ' t h e present State-,° O o e U widow.'LEANINGthe
in theIt is theTurpose of the Commis- e n t i r e *** a n d s P r e a d devastation in a mile-square area.
sion to secure the most complete!data relative to every cripple or par- $1Q ftfift IQ COUNTY Picked the Wrong Sport$19,000
QUOTA FOR SALEOF XMAS
tially crippled person in the State,regardless of age or condition. It isnot alone the dependent ones aboutwhich information is desired, butalso the children and others of well!to do families. In the case of those.not dependent upon charity it is 'often found that they are as much Middlesex County will be 119,000.00 jin need as are others in the matter for- 1927. This is an increase ofof vocational training and guidance. ? g 5 0 0 0 0 o v e r t h e Christmas SealIt is the ambition of the Commission- ' „ , „„„ „ , ,na* m. • *ers, headed by Joseph G.-Bach, of Sale of 1926. The 1926 Clmstmas•Trenton, the chairman, to put New b e a l
Convict (reading newspaper) —•"Dere's justice for yer! A footballplayer breaks two men's jaws andj
wide membership campaign of
bodies werej3 O j O Oo was the -largest meeting ofthat shook the t^e R e d M e n n a v e e v e r j j a d in the
county. The Adoption Degree was[conferred by the degree team ofPoambo Tribe. :
| Other tribes who attended the!rally were: Conomoo, Ahander, and
The Needle, WatsonNo trace of the flyers was found,
but the condition of the plane in- Ahwaga, of New Brunswick; Seneca,CCA I 6 another man's leg and is de lion of s e a t e d that they had jumped from of South Amboy; Osage, of Spots-dE.n.L.0 d e n o u r j T.yhile I gets ten years for 1 the plane before it landed, or left it ville; Wickatunk, of Milltown; Quin-
!only stunnin' an old guy wid a I after it descended. — Unidentified nipiac, of Carteret; and Seminole, ofThe Christmas Seal Sale quota for,blackjack."—Boston Transcript.
Sale showed an increase ofJersey in the front rank in the mat- a b o u t ?3,500.00 over that of the pre-ter of caring for the cripples. Gov- ^1OUS J e a r - Local Christmas Sealernor Moore appointed the Commis- S a l e chairmen have been appointedsion for this work and he happily } n flmost every town and townshipselected a number of men who are m t h e county, and active prepara- \
IF SUN BIEAKSOUT AND ITCIESAPPLY SULPHU1
Clipping. Sayreville.
mightily interested in the subject.Said Mr. Bach today: "We are QhiTstmas
tions are now being made in the!main office for mailing out $35,000'
Seal Sale letters ongetting fine results from the State T n a n k S g i v i n g B v e .survey and we hope by the end of, T ^ R l i n i n f $ 1 M 0 0 0 0 w i l l m e a nthe week to have the work in suchshape that complete and adequaterecords will soon be available. Thenwe can get at the even greater . task \
The sum of'only an expenditure of ten cents foreach person in. the county. Manybounties in New Jersey contribute
. . . , , . ., . „ .. ,!more than this amount per person,of tabulating the information and g o m e ( . t h r e a c M a p e / c a p l t aworking out a series of recommenda-; t o f t w e n t y . e l g - h t s
sc e n t s . I n
Pa d _
irons m an effort to acauamt the d i U o n t ^ Christmas Seal mailGovernor and Legislature with the; ^ t h t h methods to be-used inexact situation throughout the State.; t h e C h r l 8 t m a 8 s e a l c a m p a i g n w i l l b eWe are very grateful for the fine as-ii *.,__ _-,,=_• . ' a
Bistance which is being given by theschools, churches, clubs, doctors,public officials, lodgemen, insuranceagents and numerous others. Theyare rendering real service for human-ity, for a type of humanity that is
booths,. Christ-1
seal card parties and- Christmas'
While. The general public canby turning in reports of cripples to
)r other agency;
Florida ClimateHello, Maggie! How are
i- m getting in tiieti the class."
'Splendid! Top, I suppose?'
you
best
hot-water pipes."—Tit-BitS;
Taming tbe Wild"Hello, old man, where have
been?""Just got hack from a camping j risburg News
trip.""Roughing it, eh?""You bet. Why, one day our por-
The new airplane that functions^ a bird will solve the problem,provided the bird is a duck.—Har-
. Just the moment you apply Mentho-SuSphur to an itching, burning orbroken out skin, the itching stops andhealing begins, says a noted skin spe-cialist @This sulphur preparation, madeinto a pleasant cold cream, gives such-a quick relief, even to fiery eczema,that nothing has ever been found totake its place.
Because of its germ-destroying prop-erties, it quickly subdues the itching,cools flie irritation and heals th"e eczemaright up, leaving a clear; smooth skinin place of ugly eruptions, rash, pim-ples or roughness.
You do not have to wait for imprcve«ment. It quickly shows. You can geta little jar of Rowles Mentho-Sulpbu*at any drug store.
Opens * rf
Checks the Bowelsthe Fever
Stops 'She Cold
Practical Politics"Atlas carried the world on his
table dynamo went on the bum and j shoulders."•we had no hot water, heat, electric j "What we want is a man who can jlights, ice or radio for almost two]carry a few close States." — Louis-'hours."—Life. . - 'ville Courier-Journal.
Four thingsyou must do
to end a" cold quickly. HILL'S Cas-cara-Bromide-Quinine does all fourat one time. Stops a cold in one day.Red box, 30 cents. All druggists.
A Charming Little Architectural Jumbfe
BigNovember
SaleBig Bargains,
. in Floor Coverings,Bedding and Furniture
furniture Shop'BEKRY BROS., Broprietors
70 Main Street Woodbridge
;Win. F.-MurphySHEET METAL WORKTin — Copper -- Sheet IronRoofing & Hot Air Heating
99 WEDGEWOOD AVE.Tel. W»odbridg» 757-W -
LouisCIVIL ENGINEER ANB
SURVEYORBlue Prints Tracing*
Estimates Furnished
283 Madison AvenuePERTH AMBOY .
Phonel%3
€CTRREG. U.S. PAT. OFF-
YOtTR PROPHECYYou have often said,_"Some day radios will be operated
right from the light socket. Some day radios will be har-nessed to the house current. Then they'will be trouble andservice proof." . . '
1 That day ihas come.' Your prophecy has been fulfllled-PLUS! ' ,- ' • . . . ';-',.". v
Plug in the. wall—;that all! Amplex- 'Lectro-Sonie willdo the rest. .Yes sir, it is all electrically operated. ' Runs asa complete unit just by attaching to the alternative currentlight socket. ~-. . > -'...; ',
Say "Good-bye" to messy "A" batteries and run down,"B"s. You no longer need fret and fume-over .storage bat-teries tha t do not "store," trickle chargers that ... neither"charge" nor "trickle," nor " B " eliminators that do not"eliminate." . .
Tfie Amplex 'Lectro-Soriic does away with all that messand trouble. It takes its current right from the power line.
LIST PRICE $160.00
Radio Service284 STATE ST. DitnSsxtT£atre- PERTH: A1BOY
1YBRIDS are not confined altogether togrowing things as may be evidenced bya most casual study of this pl.—i wMch
partakes somewhat of the English ••••.trie, theDutch Colonial type'and the bunga'ow. A^dyet for all that it is a most charming littlecottage for a small family and an ideal lovenest for a pair ofnewly weds. It hasexterior appeal andinterior charm to anexceptional d e gy e efor so tiny a home. •L. Almost square, 22by 20 feet on theto u n 3 a t i 0 a. s, itwould be difficult tocrowd more livingroom into.this areathan has been accom-plished with this de-sign. And likewise, short of the most ex-treme type of the English cottage, it would -be an equal task to provide more broken linesthan is offered here. With its" wooded back-ground it becomes a strikingly attractivelittle home which impresses at one's first
g l a n c e . ' - , . . , • . . ' •
The treatment of the living porch, with itsThe Common Brick Msnulacturera' Association, Cleveland,
or. brick construction sent upon request. . - •
brick pillars and floor in harmony with thecommon brick walls, is both attractive andsubstantial. It relieves the one feature ofupkeep expense usually found with the.average brick home of the smaller type.jPainting expense on this cottage will always;be "hardly- worth consideration and with its]
-- -—--• asbestos roof the de-gree of its fire-safety!is very high indeed.•i iis a durable struc-
s interior arrange-iment lives up to its,outward appearance,1!the arrangement of:living and diningrooms being such;that they are at alltimes virtually one.:This gives a decep-
tive atmosphere of roominess. And what agem of a kitchen, with its unusual equipmentand its enclosed service porch! -
On the upper floor, reached by a stairwayfrom the living room, are two large, airy and:well lighted sleeping rooms with big closets,:and just across the hall a snug yet ample1
bath. In every sense it is ideal,, - jOhio, can furnish complete drawings, for this design. Leaflet:
" Local" Telephone ServiceThat Reaches Two Worlds
TODAY you may telepBone only to people at home or innearby places; tomorrow you may have St. Louis or Los
Angeles on the wire and the next day London, Edinburgh or.Mexico City. - . •".':'"
At your instruction, your telephone extends its service totouch two hemispheres. The instrument and the system be-hind it^are engineered, built, maintained and developed to givethe universal service which Americans have learned to expect.They know it is a powerful aid to effedtive action.
To give such service requires skilful coordination of methodsand apparatus in and between the systems operated by com-panies associated in the Bell Telephone System.
New Jersey Bell Telephone workers realize their responsi-
bility in.furnishing universal service for your use and may be
depended upon to do their .part to; make it all that you wish
i t t o b e . ' - : ; . ' \ • ; • • - : , ' . / : . • ' • [ . " ' , ' \ : u ' ~ •'• ' \
- V'NEW. JERSEY- BELL TELEPHON&JCC>MPANY
- - • ' • : • • ' • . - ; •• " ' ••.-^;:i. P r e s i d e n t
A NEW JERSEY INSTITUTION BA-CKEI)T BY RATIONAL
THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, NOV. 18, 1927 PAGE THREE
ashions. News and Features of Interest to Women -:-Junior Woman's Club
of Avenel at Meeting LucienLelon^ FAMOUSPARISIANCOUTURIER
The Junior Woman's Club ofAvenel, met Monday evening at thehome of their president Miss Alicia ( E x c l , l s i v e C a W e t o
.Slyke. Mrs. Myron Robinson was I ^ T h e Woodbritli.e -Leader)- " PARIS.
DO not wish to boast, but, in jus-tice to the Parisian courturiers, I
THE LUXURY OF FURCentral Press
the guest of honor and the speakerfor tlie evening. Mrs. Robinson spokeabout her experiences in organizingJunior clubs in the state.
Announcement was made of two:conferences, one in Woodbridge andone in New Brunswick. Mrs. Robin-:son invited the girls from the Avenel I
attend. <members were present. t o r v Q f c l o t h e s a n d i f j a m n o t m i s .
Ice cream, coffee and cake ' w e ^ J t w a s ' first' B a i d a b o u t f u r s
must mention the immense improve-,ment in the art of fur working, |since the courturiers began to in-
as 1
served by the hostess. The nextmeeting will be held at the home of ,.the Misses Dorothy and MarionO'Brien, of Avenel s'treet.
M h h d b d b P a r i s .
entirTtendency in the modemd t
Hostess at Breakfast
treatment of fur, is toward greatei; thinness, suppleness and flexibility,j If you remember your mother's "seal^J(skin sack," its weight, its board-like'
_ m , ' "V • „ T -r. 'Solidity, you will be able to appreci-,On Tuesday-morning Mrs.-L. B. fe a t something like its real value,
Ihckerson, of Burnett street, servea t h e w o r k o f t h ea m 0 ( i e r n f u r r i e r .
breakfast . in honor of Mrs. Myron. - T h e d e s i r e o f s m a r t w o m e n , a l l.Robinson, of Hackensack. Miss o v e r t h e l d t Q r a g g l i m
-Alida Van Slyke, president of the p o s s i b l e i s l a r g e l y responsible foiJunio r Club and Mrs Forest Braitn-, £Ms tremendous effort on the part of-waite, president ot the Senior Worn- f u r v o r k e r s t 0 g i v e h e r the warmest*n's C l u b were guests. j possible material without the effect
j of bulk, which was formerly the pen-o n e h a d tf> pay. for cozy com-
| p a f t o f t h e s l e n d e r e f f e c t o fmprfr« MAW Of l i rp r<s t h e m o d e r i 1 f u r c o a t i s certainly due .eCCS « e w UlllCerS t 0 n e w methods of preparing the! skins. - But an almost equal credit
The Rosary Society of St. An-'should go to cleverness of cut, anddrews' Parish, of Avenel held a meet- this is where the dressmaker comesing Monday night in the tea room. into the question. He studied fur
The following officers were elect- and its possibilities, as he had beened: Miss K. Hughes, president; (used to study cloth, silk and velvet,Mrs. J. Kennedy, vice president; Mrs. land the delightful result may be seenJ. Jaeger, secretary, and Mrs. Chas. j today in 'the wonderfully slim exam-Flynn, treasurer. I pies of suSi "solid" furs as Persian
Miss Agnes Manaker was appoint-, lamb, caracul, seal and even the.ed chairman of a card party to be fluffier mink, which comes from the |held December 1st. Assisting her f world's leading furriers, whetherare Lottie Manaker, Mrs. J. Suchy, i they be specialists or dressmakers.Mrs. J. Jaeger, Mrs. E. Moran, Mrs. Black Predominates
'Inside Information' A Serpent Scores
Use cold water first on egg- stains,then hot water arid soap. If the yolkleaves a grease spot use carbon te-trachloride or some other grease -sol-vent after sponging with cold waterand allowing the stained place to dry.
* * * . " IThe legs of children's rompers
should not bind. They should bestraight or have loose bands. Thesize of the band should ,ba deter-mined by measuring, the child's leg5 inches above the knee...- A knittedband or cuff may be used- if theblcused effect at the knee is desired.
J. Kennedy, Mrs. M. Buehannan, Mrs. Daytime furs, this winter, will be ]Chas.Flynn, Mrs. M. Cigietura and m o r e o f t e n b l a ' c k t h a n bro 'Wn,Mrs., J. Swetets.
Avenel Personalsthe leader for smart street wear willbe breitschwantz, and its entire fam-ily of less affluent relations, Persian
jlamb, caracul, astrakhan, etc ,.j...I Mink, the absolute leader immedi-lately after the war, and the desire
Modern methods of preparingthe skins and cleverness of cutare responsible for the slim linesof this Lelong ermine eveningcape. Chiffon velvet or satin arehis choice of linings for such awrap, the color to harmonize withthe majority of the wearer's eve-ning clothes.
The dasheen is a vegetable usedin place of potato in southern cli-mates where white potatoes cannot!be kept for long stretches of time,
jits flavor, slightly resembles- that ofchestnuts. It can be boiled and pre-pared in any of the ways potatoesare good. As the texture is some-what dry, it should be liberally sea-soned with butter. •
* * *Scrapple is a good example of a
food combination in which the in-complete' protein of a cereal is sup-plemented by a little of the morenearly complete protein of meat. Itis a-n old-fashioned Pennsylvania-German dish made by cooking cornmeal with pork trimmings or leanpork. The U. S. Department of Agri-culture will tell you how to make it.
* * *Several times a year, or whenever
waste begins to run away slowlyfrom your sink drain or from otherfixtures, the' pipe should be wellflushed with boiling hot water to dis- ,»»,rr> T , !>»-,solve the grease. This should be fol- BJ MME. LlisBETHlowed with a strong solution of CNAKESKIN still continues to holdcaustic potash (lye), and half- an -^ its popularity as winter nears. ihour later the pipe should, be flushed Coats, shoes, belts, use it to good1
(thoroughly with clean hot boiling advantage. This chic sports model,'j water. . . worn by Martha Sleeper, is of pearl
* *. * gray sriakeskin. A-gaily coloredPeople are'learning to understand scarf, peeping out of the pocket, addsi
the value of liver in—the diet as a to the youthfulness of the coat.source of vitamins and minerals, as. : •well as of protein. In addition to: STl'liE WHIMSIESplain fried liver, or liver and onions, I Monkey fur is frequently used onthere are numerous appetizing ways smart little hats—particularly velvetof cooking liver. Equal parts of models. —rground ham and cooked liver sea-: _soned with cream and parsley: Hats and bags of velvet -worn with
Baked Meals AreEconomical, Delicious
and Very Nourishing
oven
some other baked fruit dessert couldbe prepared and bated -at'the sametime.
Other Baked MealsOther baked meals may be? (1)
Boned fish, potatoes, scalloped toma-t o e s ' a » n l e 2ie>' (2> Scalloped
orIS""a ' " ° r B
Meat and Vegetablesi which -is usually about one hottr.Cut in half, remove the seeds and
One dioh meals'—combinations" of membrane, then seoop out the fleshymeat and vegetables—have a savory part with a spoon. Mash and" season
; odor which tempts the appetite of -with salt and but'ter. Any that isthe most fastidious. Rolled flank left over, may be used for puddingsteak with vegetables is prepared as or, pie. Because these two foods take •
• follows: Use one pound of flank BO much space in the oven, there i s 'steak, or round, if the -former can- little opportunity to ,bake any otternot be obtained. Dredge well with food at the same time..two tablespoons of flour to which .cue teaspoon of salt has been added. K/rnc D AD T O CMTPDT t IMCMixx one cup tread crumbs, one "1K5. OAlVir i JLRI l i l l l AmSsmall onion (minced), one table- ATspoon butter, two tablespoons h o t " " 1
. water, and one-half teaspoon salt. [iSpread over the steak, roll, and tie.' M r s - F - B - Barth, of Manhattan' Sear in some drippings until well avenue, Avenel, entertained at a' de-|browned. Place in a large baking Ughtful' luncheon^ on Wednesdaydish, adding one cup of tomatoes, demonstrating the Super Maid. Cook-Cover and bake 45 minutes in a Ware. Those present were: MES. R- .
! moderate oven. Peel and cut in one- A. Lance, Mrs. P. J. Donato, Mrs.half inch dice, two large potatoes, Forest Braithwaite, Mrs. E. Rowe, -three carrots, one 'turnip and two Mrs. L. B. Van Slyke and Mrs. F. E.
1 sliced onions. When the meat is Barth. - - - -j partially cooked, place the vegetables! • ' ' .around the meat, sprinkle with one A daughter, Annette Harriet, waa:teaspoon of salt, cover and cook one born on Friday to Mr. and Mrs. I. •
! hour or until the vegetables and Inselberg, of Lewis street, at the' _ _I meat are tender. Brown Betty or Perth Amboy City Hospital.
chopped and served on toast make a the velvet costume make the "ensem-le for there is always a little danger of good dish. Liver may also be cooked ble complete" for the winter ward-
in a easserole with mushrooms or roBe.Mr. and Mrs. J. Everett and son,' of all smart women, now takes sec- , i n a c a s s e r o l e ¥ u n musnrooms orJack, of Ridgewood, spent the week- ond place in favor because it is im- a coat's looking like a peignoir, un-! o t h e r veo-etables Chopped cookedend with Mr. and Mrs. J. Jaeger, of possible to look as slim in it as one less it is fantastically cut, and the ' i iv e r is excellent for stuffing onions' 'Tis said that yellow and the grapeBurnett street. _ : can in breitschwantz, and even m its whole trend of the fur mode is away;or other baked vegetables. shades will be fashionable at the
Jack Bolan, of Burnett street, related furs. For evening there is from fantastic cutting. The cape! * * * southern resorts this seasonspent the week-end with Mr. and nothing lovelier than ermine. But must be wide enough to wrap well! Jerusalem artichokes are similiar. . _ 'JMIE. Addison Holder, of Newark. ijust "ermine," is no longer enough around the slender figure, and p ro - i n fo0d value to potatoes. Since they! An interesting ensemble
Mr&. J. Jaeger spent Tuesday in for the exigent woman. Her ermine tect it from a chill. There is noth- s r o w somewhat irregular in shape, \he metropolis consisted ofElizabeth shopping. [must be matched as carefully as her ing more annoying, nor more dan- the easiest way to prepare them for woolen dr^TmatcTiPriwith n fino-er
Mrs. Harry Dietz spent Wednesday Oriental pearls. Sometimes it takes gerous to health, than a scanty eve- the table is to boil or bake them in un len-th^ cane A MintedTtnb fromand Thursday in New York visiting months to assemble enough skins of ning wrap, which exposes, the-lightly- their skins and then pare them. +?' froCk embellishedI with a redlelatives. exactly the same tone of- white, and clad body to sudden cold. As to lin- Boiled Jerusalem artichokes can be monogram hull- below^the
Mrs. P. J. Donato spent Tuesday exactly the same length of hair, to ing, it is -a matter of the cliente's served in cream or other well-sea- u i o l l u ° I d m n L m & "Glow I n e -in Newark. make the ample wrap demanded by own taste. The best materials are soned sauces, fried, or baked in a
Mrs. R. A. Lance and daughter the mode of the moment. chiffon velvet, or satin, and the color:sauce with grated cheese and but-k T t h '
in'-blue
M , , sauce with grated cheese and butvisited friends in New York on Tues-^ When ermine is used for evening should be chosen to harmonize with'tered crumbs spread on top. Bakedday. . wraps, I prefer the cape to the coat, the majority of one's evening clothes. Jerusalem artichokes may be served
The Sunshine Class will hold a,food sale Saturday, November 19th. jat the Maple Realty Office.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Soper spentMonday in Rahway. i
Mr. and Mrs. F. Brecka and fam-1ily, spent Sunday with Mrs. T. Ziin- jxtier, of Irvington. ' -:
Mrs. J. Du Boyce spent Monday inNew York. • .
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Weiler spentthe week-end with Mr. and Mrs. F.Loree, of Summit.
Mrs. A. Brown, of Fifth avenue,has returned from To'ttenville after,spending a month with her grand-'parents. j
Mrs. Edna Weiler spent Tuesday•with Mrs. H. Olsen of East Orange.
•Mr. and Mrs. Steven Butter andfamily, of New York, spent Sundaywith Mr.of Avenel street.
Mr. and Mrs.tained Mr. andover the week-end.
The Avenel Parent-Teachers' Asso-ciation is holding a-food sale thisafternoon in the school auditorium
Edwin and Jack Hixson, spent theweek-end with their grandmother,Mrs. J. E. Voorhees, of Hopewoll.
Mrs. Bertram Wheeler and son,Kenneth, spent the week-end W"ithrelatives in Connecticut.
in their skins, or. scraped out andseasoned with butter, salt and p'ep-
j p e r . _ •
HotseJioid Bails• • BY MRS. MARY MOKTOH »•'
Choosing a Husbandi \N anyone but the sirl herself settle the following question?/ "Dear Mrs Lee: I am a girl of 30 years old. I have a friend thathas been away all summer and he knows I have been going with an-other boy but he says he still wants, to marry me. I love him verydearly and he says the same about me. He is 36, has been an awfulman to roam around, but says he is ready to settle if I am Do you'chink he would make a good husband? He is a good worker. I gowith a bov of 2 3. He has lots of money and a nice car. Everybodysavs I would be foolish to give him up for the other, but I can t sayI "really love him. How would I explain to either one, or showld 1m,it hnth aM trv to forget' "WEARY AND WONDERING."Q f ySu realty "dearly love" the first one I cannot see why you hesi- piping- hot biscuits
you is what these friends of yours say. You'll have to be cour-iJ . * -G,,^ #,.;nn A 'n-nA fa l l fhO Vimr VfMl
are going-to be married.
MENU HINTWhen the day is cold and the ap
Veal cutlets should be served well petites hearty 'there is nothing thatdone, not rare like mature beef. tastes quite as good as soup. Try
* * * "• 'this Italian soup some day when vouBiscuits Cooked at Table are tired of all other kinds. An en-
Biscuits can be cooked at the table tire meal is contained in this oneon a small electric stove. Use two dish. The -sweet potato and apple
!pans, to keep the family supplied, recipe included in this week's recipesI Put the biscuits in a pan, cover it, WOuld be a welcome addition to theiand place it on top of the stove. The m e al 'that has as its first dish pork• biscuits will rise, and brown on the chops or roast.;bottom. Then slip the pan under Italian Soup and Cheese Crackers :inealh the rod hot wires of .th<? .stove, j Celery Olives jThe biscuits will be a delicate brown. Raisin Gingerbread '" Milk'By kceiiing two pans goui-i you can, . - jcook a sufficient number and serve j THIS WEEK'S RECIPBS !
i Italian Sdup—One-eighth cup rice,two cups soup stock, one cup cannedtomato, or two fresh tomatoes, one-1
made fQyj-th c up shredded cabbage, one!Green Tomato Pie
Green tomato pie can be
Iselin ProtestantChurch Women at
Wednesday Luncheon
The Ladies' Aid Society ofMiss Marion Emmerich, of New jjmo-a. Protestant Church, of Iselin,!
, . . , ,. fine, one-half cup cooked lima beans,medium sized green tomatoes, slice, t H tablespoons Parmesan cheese,
M Naha^s Mrs J \ iai?d heat with one-half lemon m thm d ^ t feste_ B r i ^ k
J j' Fuchs Mrs L w'^S l l c \S ' , three-quartern cup of sugar, ^ Pt o m a t o t o boiling point, then add
Mrs O NeisonMrs. ^er'^LZTZttn'eToVat^re «**•*** l e t COOt a t mOdera te t e m '_ _. _ , n _ r ~nT | Lcl UXlilld,llJ.UJJ. till t i l Lilc LUXLlcttUtrO cli c 1 ,Q r Q t 1 , T .o i in f i l t o n H O T 'A Ar\ a l l i-itH^T*
Mrs. S. Baker, Mrs. W. t , A d d o n p a n ( 1 „ , , f tera ture until tenaer. Aaa an otherMrs A. Stocker, V A a a , + Vi d ^ i n g r e d i e n t s with the exception
Honeg-er, Mrs J. B^S^f K ^ ^ . ^ ^ i ^ ^ S S : : ^ - ^ S e ^ ^ ^spoon of butter and pour into a pre- ! b o i u t P o u r i n t D d i s h e s M ibaked pie crust. Cover with an up- B p r & W e - w i t h c l i e e s e .per crust, and bake about twelve ^
vonVonBurgesser,
A. Janke,! L
the G. Woods.
5of
York, spent Sunday at the home of l l e l d a iUI1cheon on Wednesday after-1 Call a Chii-opodisther sister, Mrs. Ella Large, of George noon> a t the church on Oak Tree; A s F a l l proceeded, Mrs. Fall sat minutes in a hot oven until the up-street. road. A delicious menu had been i n t l i e f ront rOw of the spectators'!per crust is done. If there is not sweet Potatoes and Apples—Peel
On November 29th. in the Avenel prepared by the committee in charge. sectiOn visibly disturbed. She wrung enough liquid in the tomatoes to three medium sized sweet potatoesTea Room, a card party will be T h e l a b l t . w a s attractively decorated j j e r h a n ( j s during the three minutes cook'them, add a little water when a n d t w o °r three "apples. Boil orgiven by the Junior Woman's Club f o r t n e OCCasion. iher husband was on her feet. — St. stewing them. Be careful to pre- steam potatoes until tender and placeof Avenel. Miss Alice Kaiser ischairman of the affair. Tickets arenow on sale.
On Monday evening, lNoveiuuei M r B L21st. a card party will be given^for, q t n 1 m ; T , _ Mjthe benefit of the Avenel Free Pub-lic Library at the home of Mrs. H.Barnard, of Burnett street. Mrs. P.J. Donato and Mrs. Jane Bernardwit! be the hostesses.
The quests included: Mrs. -'•- D.jPaul Dispatch.Hyde, Mrs. J|. S.~ Johnston, Mrs. S. |
XT ^ 'siiiofi* Mrs K. Katen, Mrs. B. -Mat-) At least-the Democratic party has;November t e n g o ' n M r B L L a b e r Mrs W P t i k th
!: Stillman, Mrs.
)L a b e r i Mrs. W. P. key-notes in more keys than any. Benning, Mrs. K. other party.—San Diego Union.
bake the lower crust only until it is i.n
delicately browned.« * *
Starching HintsStarch
baking dish with flat side up.Sprinkle with brown sugar and a few
CARD OF THANKS
George Aimer, of Remsenavenue, wishes to express hisgratitude and appreciation to themany friends and neighbors,the Woman's Cpib of Avenel,the Rosary Society, the Hun-garian-American Society and theGerman -American Society forthe many floral tributes sent inbereavement of his beloved wife,Eva Aimer, -who passed en
. Thursday and was buried Sun-day from St. James' R. C.Church also for conveyancesloaned by friends, and to Mr.A. Greiner, of Woodbridge, forefficient services rendered, and toFather R. J. O'Farrell, pastor ofSt. James' Church of Wood-bridge.
SULPiUE SOOTHES
Th» First Application MakesSkin Cool and Comfortable
If you are suffering ftorn eczema orsome other torturing, embarassine skintrouble you may quickly be rid of it byusing Mentho-Sulphur, declares a notedskin specialist.
This sulphur preparation, because ofits germ destroying properties, seldomfails to quickly subdue itching, even of•fiery eczema. The first applicationmakes the skin cool and comfortable.Rash and blotches are healed right up.Rowles Mentho-Sulphur is perfectlyharmless. ^You can obtain a small| s r from any good druggist
CIALlZES IN TURKEY RAISING
j small pieces of butter. Place applesiwhach have been cut in thick slices
, Ion top of potatoes and again sprinkle
B - ESS.clothes use starch as hot I f y m f c ^ ! ' 1 1 moderate oven. Cook until applesciotnes use siarcn as not as you can ' o^ft on/i ounp i<= svrmw Tf «stand, it. Hot starch goes through. S L - 8 0 ? ^ * dish is used ther caSthe fabric better and mnrp pvpnlv ' Slass Bating dish is usea tney canand doe/lot llt;e
ashin"spots wh/n b e »f™ **%&*Z lervironed. Keep most of the s t a r c l l <=onie from the oven and make a veryhot. Use only part of it at a t ime. i a t t r a c .U v e d i s h " .Replace it wlien it gets cold and thin. I . - •The ideal way is to h-*re two pans Raisin Gingerbread—Use a regular \of starch, beside the reserve supply, gingerbread recipe but add one cupjDilute, one with enough water to o f well washed raisins and a few.make a good paste for the thinner slices of orange peel cut thin.materials, and keep the other thick: ———"—' •enough for the heavier clothes. Be-1 I» some respects the election ma-gin by starching the clothes you ehinery in Mexico is quite similar towant stiffest. Clothes wrung dry be- ours, except that a candidate who Isfore "starching will be stiffen than eliminated.—Detroit News.wetter ones. White starch shows)plainly when used on dark colored ] Toasted Totclothes. It may be tinted* with tea! Combination Gas Store and babyor coffee for browns, and with blu- buggy, good condition. -—Ad in an.ing for blues, or especially tinted Illinois paper." -.-:.-••products may be purchased. ' : - — ^ —
— The yellow race may dominate theMrs. Fannie Demarest, of Green world some day, but not unless thej
street, is seriously ill with bronchial white race gets too yellow to domin-pneumonia. ate it.:—New Bedford Times.
Mrs Jacob A. Dobmeier, of Park River, N. D., is one of the besti \\n turkey farmers in the northwest. And she explodes a
Thanksgiving myth. She says more turkeys—many-more—are pur-chased in December, for Christmas dinner, than in November. She;.furnishes thousands of turkeys each year to hotels, wealthy homes*,and transatlantic liners. Photos show Mrs. Dobmeier and one ofclher prize birds. «
YOUNG'S' TEA GARDENAMERICAN AND CHINESE
IRestautantSPECIAL
11 A. M.—2:30 P. M.40c. to 50c.
SPECIAL
to 8:3.0 P. M.65c—75c.
•- PIIOfER.. STTIfDATand Holiaays
'91..QO'-
131 Smith St. Perth Amboy, N. J.Over P. A. City Market Telephone 8266
OVER FORTY YEARS' EXPERIENCE
.'HAR-VEY KELLY 'PAINTER AND PAPERHANGER
24 NIELSON STREET, WOODBRIDGE, N. J.Telephone 222-M
-
i . Youwell
See
The
Hi FANCY CREAMEgT^^p
*g$$£3S®W~^^ Bulter Thatf^g?*^ Carft Be Better
•si, '
have reason to be thankful forbeing—your health.
that you safeguard it by using
BLUE RIBBON BUTTER
purest and bes your money can
your
buy.
"Where Quality Rules'| 158160 Smith St ftrth Amboy. N.J.
DRY GOODS
NOTIONS
FANCY
GOODS
F
R
THE
B
S
FURNISHINGS
FOK.-
MEN
WOMEN
A N B
CHILDREN
| I5fi 160 Smith S* PbrthAmbcy.NJ. b
PAGE FOUR THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, NOV. 18, 1927
THE WOODBRIDGE LEADERPublished Every Friday by
THE WOODBRIDGE PRINTBRY, INC.At 104 Main Street, Woodbridge, N. 1. •
Entered at the Poat Office at Woodbridge, N. j . , as Second Class Mail Mattel
Another Trapper Trapped.
Republication of news and editorial matter In these col-umns is permitted prodded credit is given to The Wood-
sy bridge Leader.„„ Correspondence from readers, expressing opinions OB
topics of interest are invited, but no anonymous-letters will be published.
Woodbridge, N. J., Friday Afternoon, November 18, 1927
Only One Spark NecessaryT H E Pittsburgh tragedy is a vivid example'of the suddenness
, with which fate can strike.
One second prior to the explosion, the scene at Manchester
was one of peaceful labor and industry. .Children were &t play
at the nearby school yard, housewives were busily at work.
everywhere life moved along in its.accustomed rut.
Then came the cataclysm. Like a great giant imprisoned
by puny man, the millions of cubic feet of natural gas rose high
into the air, a monstrous spirit of flame, breathing death and
destruction, leveling great factories, crushing brick tenements
as though they were built of cardboard, flattening out stores
and office buildings, as the sucked up air, rebounded to earth
with a terriffic impact.
Technical men are of the opinion that sparks from a blow-
torch used in repairing the inside wall of a neighboring tank,
found their way to a gas leajt connecting with th enlarge tank.
Whatever the cause, it was carelessness somewhere, or
else deterioration, the enemy of metal, at work somewhere, un-
seen, and A SPARK.
What assurance have the people of Woodbridge Town-
ship, and the rest of Middlesex County, that a tiny spark may
not result in the explosion of high explosives stored at the Rari-
tan Arsenal? •
Think of the danger to life and valuable property, to pub-
lic buildings, factories, shipping, that would result.
Middlesex County is sitting next to a powder barrel, #it is not a safe position. The Pittsburgh tragedy should prove
an argument for the removal _of explosives from the Arsenal.
Government military engineers may tell us that there isj
no danger from explosion.
But, neither are gas tanks dangerous ias a rule. An
officer of the American Gas Federation stated that there are
only two other cases of a gas tank explosion, on record.
The fact remains however, ithat the Pittsburgh tank DID
blow up. Nitro-glycerin and high explosives '.are far more dan-
gerous than gas stored in a tank. 4
In case of war (not a probability, but a.possibility), enemy
air planes, or planes manned by traitors or spies, could bomb
the arsenal very easily. - -
Instead of merely destroying valuable explosives, however,
they would kill a hundred birds with one stone, by destroying
factories, shipping, and possibly blocking roads necessary for
the transportation of troops and supplies.
FIFTEEi MARRIAGELICENSES I S S U E D
DURING OCTOBEROctober 7, G-eorge Francis McCabe
.nd Marion Elizabeth Hritz, of Hope-lawn.
October S, Harold Anderson, ofSewaren and Josephine Minucci, ofPort Reading.
October 11, Joseph F. Perry, ofvletuchen and Agnes Winquist, ofAvenel.
Odcober 12, Stephen Urban, Jr., ofAvenel and Elizabeth Hissen, ofPort Pleading.
By Lulu Hunt Peters MIXof 'Dielrand HeaiHVand'Diet for ChildrerC
Answers to CorrespondentsThin, and Thinner in Spots cents in stamps with a self-addressed
I FELT you were indeed an angel', |y g , |when I read you were. about to j I>o Keep Your Pace Clean?j
forsake your beloved F. F. F. and: Naturally the diet and other fac-turn to us, your lesser loves, the tors have to do with the condition
JT. T. T. My trouble is thin in spots of the skin, but there is one factor—arms, legs, throat. Are you clever which has not been quite sufficientlyenough to help me? I" have taken emphasized, and that is cleanliness.
jto heart your KYMS — Keep Your.}. r>r. William McDonald, a skin speOctober i s ' Tames E Bowlin- of!Mouth S l m t — a n d y o U r w i s e a d v i c e eialist, writing in the Hopsital Socialihwavlnd Helen Nefaon^ol Fords i t 0 l e a r D t 0 a C C e p t t h e t r W a l a n n o y " S e r y I c e> sa>'s t h a t t h ' e normal skinn \ i a n ^ H e
TI e n * e l ° ° ° ' V D T ' i a n c e s o f I i f e a s a matter of course. S n o u i d n o t only be properly washed
October 13, Joseph Duh, of Perth u have increased by food intake and but even scrubbed twice dailv I!T h e la t ter , it seems t o US, ough t to be a good a r g u m e n t to! lXmb°>" a n d Elizabeth Hansen, of j have started some light calisthenics there is a tendency to blackheadsuse against the military gentlemen who insist on the strategic October' 13 Edward
location of arsenals.
ity should not be impaired or handicapped" by the Federal j of on fe . ^ ^ ^ ^ o f W o o d .F . , undoubtedly your thin spots, win
government. . bridge and Sophie Pillik,' of Wood-!PlumP o u t . _, x 'to
C. B. D. Charles B. Drisooll
Knowledge hr Everybodydon't have to know Greek and Hebrew and Syrian in order to be
educated, these days. OX 'course, if you do know those lnguages, somuch the better.
But the difference between being educated today and being educatedfifty years ago, lies very largely in the fact that knowledge has been putn the lower shelf, where we can all reach it. Formerly, you had Co stand
up very tall and straight, or maybe climb up on a step-ladder of ancestryor wealth, in order" to get yourself enough knowledgeand culture to be classed among the knowing ones.
During the last twenty years the process of democ-ratizing, knowledge has been going on at a tremendous -pace. In fact, this process is the outstanding mark ofour civilization.
Nearly all children go to high school now. Every-body learns enough English to be able to read thenewspapers. Even if one reads nothing but good news-papers nowadays, One would soon become quite familiarwith a goodly portion of the world's great body ofknowledge. Most of the newspapers now print a greatdeal of cultural and educative material.
WITHIN the last few years, authors and editors have been at work onbooks that are designed to place the most important cultural in-
formation within the reach of all who have learned to read well.Hendrik Willem Van Loon contributed vastly toward this desirabla
objective when he wrote his "Story of Mankind." He produced a historyof the world on a new plane. Whoever can read a Fourth Reader canread the "Story of Mankind." And whoever absorbs the knowledge andconsiders well the implications in this book has ceased to be ignorant aboutsome of the very important phases of life in this interesting world.
NOW there has been announced a prize of seven thousand five hundreddollars for the best book of "humanized knowledge," the Forum maga-
ine and the publishing firm of Simon & Schuster co-operating In furnish-ing the money, striking a medal, &nd publishing the boot.
Such a prize doubtless will bring out something monumental in a popu-larization of knowledge. It won't bo a royal road to learning. No; what'swanted is a democratic road to learning, so that everybody will knowsomething and whoever wants to learn will know enough to make lifeinteresting.
By the way, are you reading any of the good books already publishedfor the purpose of humanizing and popularizing knowledge?
| and am rest more. I notice when oiliness and acne, he recommends.. of II go through the exercises that my D o n a m i s o a p a n d hot w a t e r , fol-
iSayreville and Elizabeth Weber, of; throat seems to show hollows. I am lowed by cold water; then if th
Next to Bergen, Middlesex County is the fastest growing!Ho^etla'TO-,„ „, ,' o ,. j r ^ f l ^ V ! J S ? , ^ e v*oretmtZl Bkin seems dry< a litt<le col<i c r e a m
a. • j . ! 04. t % -NT T TT l I October 17, Charles C. Schwalje, of exercises and will they prevent me, T h doctor .calls attention to thCOUllty m the State of New Jersey. Her progress and prosper-iMetuchen and Josephine Mascarelli,.from gaming? .. F.-' ! f a c t t h a t t h e complexion of the aver
• - - • - • • • • • - . - - - - : When you gam to normal weight, a g e m a n . g s u p e r i o r t o t h a t o f t h e
average woman. He attributes this•M the o . . . . . J . ,..4. „ „ „ to the fact that most men shave
A couple of millions spent to remove explosives from Mid- b r i * ste - . o n t l a . „ t J hollows lust the reverse special d a i l y ' u s i r t g s o a p a n d h o t w a t e r -
October 20, Alex Samslo, of Perth hollows—-just the reverse Specia 1( W e 1 l a T e M a r t i c l 6 o n A c n e a n d
.mboy and Elizabeth Sekretar, of,exercise^ fo r jhe ^ t ^ s h o u l c L de-; 0 B a l a n d D i e t -whldh you mayOctober 2 4, James E. Zehrer, of'contour firmer and rounder. Don't: *™ ^ e i f v e K - & Selt'a&AreSSed'
Sewaren and Emma Marie Remak, ofid o t h e m 5° * h e extent that you bej » » •qpwa].pll jcome tired., ot course. To round out ,bewaren. („ , - , ,, _ . , Mucus in the Blood?
.—No, the blood stream does notmucus. That idea is a relic
dlesex County, would be a profitable insurance premium.
Accustomed to Greatness
F'AMILIARITY may not breed contempt, but it certainly i October 25, John Choma of Fordslthe n e c k muscles the exercise of. . . . , . j . , innri Fii7fihpfh TTnqtn nf Trpiqhev irocking the head backwards and for-
imimizes appreciation ot greatness. , O c t o b e r 2 8 J o h n N e m e t h . o f Cart.:wards and twisting to the sides a s £ ? n ^ i ^ r t i J^ 'We, of the New York Metropolitan district, our water- eret and Elizabeth Papp, of Wood-|far a s Possible, and the floor exer- ot prehistoric times.
' I . . , AX-J njp.it, -win T/>TI T tintra o vic-d/i PI-»T t h e 1 iviucus is Liic n u nfront facing on New York Bay, our river frontage part of the bridge.
great Port of New York, are accustomed to a large scale of Keasbey'and Rose Grezner
construction m bridges, roads, tunnels, subways.
This part of New Jersey has been called "New York's front
yard". It is an apt description. The Hudson River, the Kill
Van Kull and the Arthur Kill, which separated us from the
greatest city in the World, are being conquered by man's en-
gineering ingenuity.
The Howland Hook Bridge, the Tottenville Bridge and
now the Holland Tunnel are arteries through which the throb-
bing life blood of the City will circulate, to enrich and vitalize
this part of its natural realm.
Geographical and State boundaries are being obliterated
by the forces of progress. "Greater New York" and "Greater
New Jersey", interdependent as they are in maritime and rail-
road connections, are becoming one >and the same identity.
Costing 48,000,000 Dollars, completed after eight years,
one of the greatest engineering achievements of the decade,
the Holland Vehicular Tunnel and its influence on this section
of New Jersey are not being thoroughly appreciated, except
by those who are farsighted enough to foresee its results.
There is no doubt that other tunnels of the kind must
fallow in time. These tunnels not only eliminate barriers, but
they eliminate DISTANCE as well.
Distance can no longer be measured by miles. A week's
journey of fifty years ago can easily be completed by auto
in a day. Lindbergh completed the trip from Detroit to New
York in a litle over two and a half hours. We are no longer
dependent on the raih-oad time tables for transportation. Car
ownership is growing to enormous proportions, and we may
truthfully say that Woodbridge Township is "a couple of miles"
from New York, measured by the old standard.
The Holland Tunnel marks the beginning of a new epoch in
the development of Metropolitan New Jersey.
The completion of the Fort Lee Bridge, the Tottenville
and Howland Hook Bridges, and plans for additional bridges,
wider roads, "one way traffic roads" and cross-state highways
for the use of trucks, will transform this section of the state
into an industrial and residential area that will exceed the
fondest dreams of our professional optimists.
October 31, Alex
cises which I have advised for the' Mucus is the normal substance se-abdominal walls are excellent (lying creted_ by the mucous membranejus
ion the floor and raising the body to a lubricant and mild arx~~ -*— rrrn--Isitting position without the aid of mucus membranes are
of Avenel ' t h e bands, etc.) We have 10 exer-|°f the passages which lead to theOctober 31 Alex Muka of AvenelucLODer a±, Aiex xuuKa, or AVenei . ,,, T p _ .•„ „_ a r_
and Frances Witkowskv, of Avenel . ! c l s e s— i n e -lummy 1 en—in an arBirths
tide called the Atonic Abdominalouterworld of the ear, nose, intes-
_ _ tinal tract, etc.) When .these mem-Wall which you may have by send- branes are irritated, there is an ex-ing a self-addressed, stamped en- j c e s s secretion of mucus, but it never
jvelope with your request. I gets into the blood.Fords For thin hands, exercises of the j Nor are there such foods as mil-
November 1, Ethel Tatarka, Ever-1 fingers so that the muscles between j cus-forming foods. Although, as 1green avenue, daughter of Mr. and;the bones and ligaments will de-jhave told you many times, diets thatMrs. Joseph Tatarka. velop, are the only things that might > are deficient in any way irritate the
November 4r William G-loff Horns- affect them. Keeping the hands soft mucus membranes so that they areby street, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil-'with glycerine solution will help to more liable to disease and irritate theHam Gloff. [keep them looking better. I naucus membranes so that they are
November 11, Virginia Elsie Bon-| The gaining (or losing) instruc-1 more liable to disease, and so thealsky, Hamilton avenue, daughter ofjtions may be obtained by sending 10'production of excess mucus.Mr. and Mrs. M. Bonalsky.
IselinNovember 4, William Gloff, Horns-
gel, Henry street, daughter pi Mr.and Mrs. August Nothnagel.
Keasbey HeightsNovember 3, Helena Mary Jo,
Are You Hysterical?
A woman of 40 lies on a specially 1 rible experience of some sort.made springless bed, maintaining as
Clinton avenue,'daughter of Mr. andi£early as possible a motionless posi-
Prompt ActionCommitteeman Grausam's introduction of the zoning ques-
tion and the appointment by Mayor Ryan of a committee of
the whole including the engineer and attorney, to take initial
steps towiard a local zoning ordinance, shows a spirit of "do iJ
now", that befits the approach of so important a problem.
Mayor Kyan's plan to entertain suggestions of an advisory
nature presented by residents, manufacturers, and business-
men of the Township, is an admirable one, which will assure
representation of every class in the framing of the ordinance.
Mrs. Frank Jo.November 9, John Joseph Gulies,
5 8 Albert stueet, son of Mr. and
it ion. She is carefully fed and nursed
The theories of cause in hysteriamay be summarized by saying that incertain individuals certain symptoms
by her solicitous farmer husband, j are provoked. (Perhaps they arewho comes in from his work many predisposed by heredity to mental in-
d j t tMrs. John Gulies | times a day to attend to her needs.; stability and having been trained toNovember 10, Grace Helen DeakJ s t l e t a l l { s glibly and volubly of her [wrong mental habits by well-inten-
317 Oak avenuedaughter of Mr and'[ y
terrible condition," and recites in i tioned but unskilled parents.) ThesqMrs Stephen Deak j detail how five years previously she j symptoms are provoked by the ac-
November 11 Annette Harriet In- Permitted herself to make a slight i cumulation of the internal and ex-selberg 647 Lewis street daughter:move i n t h e b e d t h a t resulted in a ternal stresses in their efforts toof Mr. 'and Mrs I Inselber" " sudden and terrible pain in the head,; adapt themselves. The symptoms
blackness and feeling of imminent not only permit the patient a certaindestruction. Since then she has not.escape from the painful realitiesventured to repeat this rash act! j about him, but gratify directly or in-
This patient was hypnotized, and ! directly certain unconscious crav-in the hypnotic state she arose from i ings.the bed in which she had not moved j Treatment: What can be done forfor five years, went to the supper j the patient with hysteria?table and ate with her family. I*or] The first thing to be done is to-
November 12, Robert Henry Keat-ing, 80 Freeman street, son of Mr.and Mrs. James Keating.
November 12, George Rudolph Du-|das, Greenbrook avenue, son of Mr.and Mrs. Andrew Dudas.
Port BeadingNovember 13, Helen Marie Beck,, , = ~ -_ — —
Garden street, daughter of Mr. and ' a tew w e e k s s n e repeated this, even m a k e sure that the case is actuallyMrs. Peter Beck. (when not in the hypnotic state. Then hysteria and not an organic disease.
November 10, Theresa Pelligrino ! s h e relapsed into the old conviction | Then the patient has to be studiedTappen street, daughter of Mr. and!of helpless immobility. Five years to get the real significance by find-Mrs. Matthew Pelligrino.
We Know 'Em AllCHINESE THOUGHTS ABOUT
WOMENThe patient woman roasts an ox
with a burning glass.The extravagant woman burns a
can*3te in looking for a match.The foolish, obstinate woman goes
to sea in a bandbox.The cautious woman, writes her
promises on a slate.The vulgar, affected woman is a
spider attempting to spin silk.The curious woman would turn a . - - .
rainbow to see what was on the other governing machinery of the organ-side.
to get the real significance by findmore have passed; she is still lsjngjing out the various causative factors,motionless, fed and tended by her one case is best treated by hypnosis,
th b t tfaithful husband.
y y p ,another by suggestion, others by so-
Blushing BillCommissioner of Public
f Unless I give you this warning, T c an ed re-e"duc^tlon, some by "studiedknow that many of you are immedi-; neglect," others with a stay in a'bps-ately going to jump to the conclusion ipital and the establishment ot a rou-that perhaps some cases of paralysis • tine. But in all of them we have tothat you know of are due to hysteria. I get at and remove the psychologicalSo I want to tell you that there are j causes. Some cases respond beat toparalysis and certain diseases that mental analysis which may uncovergive the same symptoms of hysteria;the painful suppresesd memories andthat are actually due to organic or then by a frank discussion dissolvestructural changes in the brain or them. Some cases of hysteria arespinal cord. These are true orgamcciiied by the appearance of serious
diseases. Hysteria is also a disease,(physical disease of financial or socialbut it is, a disease of the mind. The calamity. ,.
For the general public it is Im-portant to understand that hysteriais an evidence of failure in mentaladaptation, the result of many com-plex factors, most of which are un-known both to the patient and the
I ism does a flop.-Boston Transcript, i Until the science of the mind was
I studied carefully, it was believed that(these hysteria cases were either be-
Works witched or fakers, or that there wasUchard W. Wolfe, in a written pro- a disordered brain. Freud, the pio-josal to the Mayor, which the latter neer in the studies of the unconscious:aused to be read to the-jneeting,! mind, and his •workers, discoveredirged that every piece of campaign' that some of these patients developedliterature "link up the names of their symptoms as a protective or
outside world- _.. Under no cir-cumstances is one justified in regard'ing hysteria as faking or foolishness.Most of such cases are curable, butneglected, the disease may cripple
Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and defensive system, as the result ol one,its victim until death ends the strug-Tribune. j or several emotional shocks or a ter-' gle.
RED-LETTER DAYS!They're on their way! And what a party it will be
for the movie fans Can you imagine the ..tremendous*,line-up? . On the 21st. Clara Bow will be here in "Hula,"then a week later comes "Seventh Heaven," and to "besure.'that great classic "Les Miserables"..—..--There aremany, many more big ones corning .You'll watch thenewspaper announcements we hope— Thank you!
Matinee 2:30 Evenings 7 and 9-—TODAY and TOMORROW—
—Continuous All Day Tomorrow—-There once was a cute little girl, with a pretty twin-
. kie in her eye Boy, how sne could "£)o" things,.-...as it were This cutie is none than the vivacious—......
BEBE DANIELSand to continue, she went to a college not to have somuch fun, as you'd think, but to study all about but-terflys..i- But later the "Fun" bug got into her ear,
. and what a time! She made the swimming team,thanks to that Channel swimmer—•
GERTRUDE EDERLEand when they yelled out to her-—
"SWIM, GIRL, SWIM"She did. And how
—companion feature —
BENLYON"For the Love of MiKe"
— SUNDAY ONLY —— Continuous Performance — -
AL WILSON• I N . • • " • " • • • . ' • . • •
"SKY HIGH SAUNDERS"- — a l s o -T— ' • . .
"CANCELLED DEBT"— MONDAY and TUESDAY —
Can you imagine that hundred .candle power "ITgirl— :
CLARA BOWas a naughty little Hawaiian flapper who just can'tmake her hips behave.—_.—And beneath the bambootree she dances daily the— • . ' . . .
i i H U L A "—— companion feature-
He was a well-liked chap because he was sincere andhonorable But there came one of these cute lit-tle city slickers, a female who knew her small townyokels.....—The way she "took" him over, and ultim-ately learned to love that simple fellow—
MONTE BLUE _who enacts the heroic lead in that base-ball classic—
"THE BUSH LEAGUER"will make you too like this film offering.
— WEDNESDAY - * - THURSDAY —Great scott! What a dramatic situation . . . .How in-tense it is..:. .What power it has-.......:..-How replete itis 'with thrills.... And yefcshe was an inspiring sightagainst the moonlit sky as she sailed the majesticsea ,But her decks were red, red with the veryblood of her freti'zied crew. . When you see-*
HOBART B0SW0RTH• • • • • • " ' I N / • • • - • " v - : • „ : • ' • . : - • • • • • • • • ' • •
"THE BLOOD SHIP'you will have witnessed a vividly true story of a two-fisted man protecting a young, innocent and prettygirl who was the only female on that clipper ship.
— - companion feature—She- has won the heart of American fandom!Beautiful-—• " ;
BILLIE DOVETruly the—
"AMERICAN BEAUTY'
THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, NOV. IS, 1927 PAGE FIVE
UNAVOIDABLESAYS DRIVER
OF CAR THATKILLED GIRL
Little Tot Meets Tragic EndWhen Struck by Myer'sCar on Amboy Avenue,Tuesday Morning.
FUNERATTODAYAlice Christensen Was on
Way Home from Store Er-rand. Died at AmboyHospital.
Funeral services for six year oldAlice Christensen, daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Roland Christensen of Am-boy avenue, Woodbridge, will beield from the borne of tier parentsthis afternoon, followed by inter-jnent at Alpine Cemetery, Perth Am-boy.
The little girl died as the resultof a broken neck, sustained when hitby a car driven by Robert Myers,ceramic ware dealer, of 109 Churchstreet, Woodbridge, and owned byhis wife, Estelle.
The accident occurred on Amboyavenue, near Cutter's Lane at 8•o'clock on Tuesday morning, whilethe little to'c was returning from anerrand.
In a written statement submittedto police headquarters, Mr. Myersaid: "that the child ran from be-hind an approaching car directly infront of his auto, which was pro-ceeding at 'the rate of twenty milesper hour. Mr. Myers claims to haveapplied both brakes, but due to theshort distance between him and htechild, and the wet pavement, the car-skidded sideways, its rear end strik-ing the girl.
John Vereb, Jr., who happened-along in his car, took the girl to thePerth Amboy Hospital where the girldied shortly after arrival there.
UPHOLDERS OF WOMEN'S RIGHTS ON THE GRIDIRONServices for Mrs. Demurest;
to be Held Tomorrow at 3 I>. M. iPERSONALS
_ , . .„ . , ,» + ! Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Coughlin, ofFuneral services will be held t o - , U p p e r M a i n s c r e o t a t t e m j e j d t h e
morrow afternoon at 3 o clock from A r m ; y . N o t r e D a m e r o o t b a l l g a n i 6 a t•the Presbyterian church for Mrs. • N e w Y o r k gkturdav.Frances Demarest, a life-Jong resi-dent of Woodbridge, who died'Wednesday afternoon after a short
A son was born on Saturday after-noon to Mr. and Mrs. James E.Keating, of Freeman street. Mrs.
To Confer WithRaritan on Fords
Sewer Problem•• , - . , , , «. - ncd,uug, ux r reeuian street. ivirs.
illness ot pneumonia at the liorne of K e a t i w a s lovmerU- M i s s J o s e p l l -Mrs. W. A. O-bommG™™ street,- g e ^ d . u g h t e , . of Mr. and Mrs.
On Monday, November 2 9th., at8 : 3 0 P" U' a j o i n t meeflLillS of thewith whom she had resided for a j HenS" L^ut?1 1^6 1 '
long time. j MIgS Adele Heftle of Atlantic City, Township Committees of "WoodbridgeMrs. Demarest, born in Wood- was the week-end gue&'t of Mr. and and Raritan will be held to consider
bridge, was in the eighty-ninth year Mr-s. George Hoffman, of Upper plans for storm and sanitary sewers
( t t e h F i r I V e ! D y t £ i ^ Alpha Phi Sorority of i n t h e W i l d w o o d Evergreen avenuesi Ladies' Aid Society connected with'the Congregational church will hold see1™11, where reUet from overflowIthe church, and Janet Gage Chapter,'its Thanksgiving- tea and food sal& a n d stagnant water- is urgentlyDaughters of the American Revolu- in the Sunday school rooms from 3 n e e ded.tion. ' rto 5 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. |
Msr. Demarest is survived by a Advance orders may be placed byj Student Committee Postponeddaughter, Mrs. Harriet Gage, - of • calling the parsonage, telephone;Westfield, and four sons, Charles J.,|H3-W.and M. Irving Demarest, of Sewaren;W- Harry and Ernest W. Demarest,of Tacoma, Washington.
The Ladies' Aid Society ofDue. to the absence of chairman
the Fullerlon of the High School studentPresbyterian church was entertained council, a meeting of the "Town-
| at the annual tea by Mrs. H. A. Tap- ship Committee" of students at thet>en, and Mrs. William Eowe at the Town all, was postponed last Mon-
ot M r a " % / • • Tappen. today.
Here is one of the two grid teams of Colorado Teachers' College of Greeley, Colo., which will meetin the first girls' football game ever to be played in the west. The fair co-eds are completely outfitted,for the fray and ready to take the sprains and sprawls and all other hard knocks of _the he-man 8
The young lady who has just goiten rid of a punt is Captain Le Fevre of one of the teams.
Vanished Sympathy „ , ,• _T , ,;' x , . . ' ' . , Schoder avenue, Wednesday. ,
"Don't you miss the old-time bar-( T h e -^^dhi-idge Men's Brother- i Mrs. Logan Boekius, of Ampler,«P?" . , . . ," . . • (hood met last night in the Sunday Pa., is visiting- her mother, Mrs. O."Teh; these night-club hostesses j s c n o o l . , r o o m s a t 8 o - c i o c k . Harisen. of Green street,
don't want to listen to your; T h e A u c t i o n B r i d g e Ciub meets Rev. William Leahy of Quinn, S.this afternoon at. the home of Miss D., is visiting his parents, Mr.Louise Brewster, in Grove avenue. Mrs. Peter Leahy, of Green street.
troubles."Journal.
— Louisville Courier-
game.
CHURCHNEWSMethodist Episcopal
Township League Favored.by Woodbridge Commltteemen
"A meeting will be held at the
er speed of the new transmission,"he said, "are approximately the sameas in the standard three-speed trans-mission, the extra fourth speed pro-Lviding a reduction of 107 per centgreater than in 'the standard trans-mission. The new type operates andshifts the same as the standard, ex-
An invitation to attend a confer- - A meetms win oe aeiu at me: t f o r a Q a u x l l t a r y attachment toence of Townships with a view Township Hall of Umon Township on; t h 6 - u f t r w ? throws the
hi of November 18th at 8 P M at which je of Townsps w ; t h 6 u f t r ward a League of Townships of November 18th., at 8 P. M., at which j f o u r t h d i n t
w Jersey, was considered favor- it is intended to formulate a plan * ^ _ _ 'f C f t t t d f i t i I
toward(New
. iably, at last Monday's Comirftttee; and scope of organization.„ . ^ , TT* r, u T. i- 'meeting. It was pointed out by Com-! "It would be appreciated if those]0R«v. A. Boylan Fitz Gerald, Pastor , m l t t e e m a n ~GraUgam> that co-opera- subjects were taken under advise-
Itive action on laws pertaining- to ment by your Township Committee:Townships might have its advan- and attorney, and arrangements!tages. It was edecided to have.made for attendance. )Woodbridge Township represented . • Very truly yours,
Wm. W. FIRBERGER,Secretary/
That coldroom in thehouse. •• doesit worry you?
Let us advise you—Free/""OLD rooms and high fuel bills\_j go hand in hand -with improp-er or antiquated heating equipmentin the home.
Whether in old home or new,your heating problems deservemore than guesswork—deserve, infact, the attention of men who havemadehome-heanngproblems theirlife work.
The world's largest makers ofheating equipment place at yourservice their 40 years' experience
- —and all that it has taught them—free. It will pay you to take advan-tage of it.
E . W . P E 1 XHill Street, Highland Park
New Brunswick, N. .L-Phone New Brunswick 3564
Mrs. A. H. Bowers, Mrs. William
New York City.10 A. M.—Sunday School.11 A. M. — Morning Sermon;7 P. M.—Epworth League.7:45 P. M. — Evening Service; h e m e e t i n b y e i t l i e r t h e m a y o rWednesday, 7:30 P. M. — Choir o r a t t o r n e y . T h e letter inviting
practice followed by prayer mee t - i W o o d b r i d g e t o j o i n i s a s f o I l o w S :
tog.St. James
i
October 25th., 1927.I "The Township Committee of theTownship of Woodbridge,Sunday Services
Masses at 7:30, 9:00 and 10:30 Middlesex County, N. J.•o'clock. "Dea r S i rs :
Sunday School af ter 9 :00 ©'clock| "Represen ta t ives of H i l l s i d e ,-Mass.
Bap t i sms a t 3:00 P . M.
NOW FOUR SPEEDTRANSMISSION FORCHEVROLET TRUCKSIn order to enlarge the field »of iUnion and Cranford Townships met
_ at a meeting in Hillside, October.service of the trucks manufacturedEvening'Devotions—7:30 o'ctock. !l3th., to consider the advisability of by the Chevrolet Motor Company,Week-day Services—Masses 7:30.'forming an organization of Town- Sidney. Corbett, manager of theHoly Day Services—Masses 5:30 \ ships for 'their mutual benefit. Be- Commercial Car Division,- today an-
and 7:00 o'clock.First Fridays—Mass 7:30 o'clock.
sides those present other Townships nounced that a four speed transmis-evinced an interest and a readiness sion is now available for all Chevro-
Confessions heard on Saturday to co-operate. let one-ton types,afternoons and evenings 3 to 6 and "It is desired to form an organiza-1 This new transmission, Mr. • Cor-*7 to 9 o'clock. Eves" of First Fridays tion, to consist of the Township Com- bett said, will provide 107 per centand all Holy Days of Obligations as mittees of the various Townships, to greater application of engine power
-on Saturdays. (constitute a League of Townships of than the regularly equipped 'three•Paricii <5r»-iotiP« ' t n e State. The primary purpose speed transmission, and is particular-jrausn »ucieue» ^ would be to meet, from time to time, ly .adapted to such work as pulling
^ Rosary Society: Communion Firs t , a s a n organization, and as such to out of ploughed fields, sand pits, andSunday of month. 'consider matters of common interest similar heavy duty service. Provi-
Holy Name: Communion Second;to the Townships. There is an iden- sion also is made in it, Mr. CorbettSunday of month. \'city of interest which undoubtedly said, for a power take-off so that
Sodality of Blessed Virgin Mary: |would best be served by mutuality of the power from the engine may beCommunion Third Sunday of month.[action, and the opportunities for applied to various devices such as
G-irls of the Parish: Communion service and mutual help would ap- hydraulic hoist, pressure units for
SpecialsWEAR-EVER ROASTERS
3.95 4.95 5.95Stainless Steel Knives and Forks
1.75 Per Set
Fourth Sunday of month.
CongregationalRev. Wm. V. D. Strong, Pastor
pear and develop with thethe organization.
9:45 A. M.—Sunday School.11 A. M.—Morning Worship.7 P. M.—Christian Endeavor.7:45 P. M.—Evening Worship..Wednesday, 8 P. M. — Weekly
-study of the bible.
Trinity Episcopal
8 A. M.—Celebration of Holy Eu-charist.
10 A. M.—Church School.11 A. M.—Morning Prayer, Litany
and Sermon.4 P. M.—Evensong, and eonfirma-
•tion instruction.Thursday, 8 P. M.—Choir prac-
"tice.Friday, 3:30 P. M. — The Little
Sisters of the Fleur de Lis will meet-at the rectory.
Presbyterian
jrowth of sprayers, pumps, e'tc."G-ear reduction in the three high-
APPROPRIATION BALANCESTO DATE OCTOBER 31, 1927
Woodbridge Township Budget for Year 1927
6,000.00
10 A. M.—Sunday School.11 A. M.—Morning Service.3 P. M. — Junior Christian En-
deavor.6:45 P. M.—Christian Endeavor.7:30 P. M.—Evening Service.
Avenel PresbyterianMr. J. Gregory, Pastor
3 P. M. — Sunday School at the-Avenel School every Sunday.
4:15 P. M.—Junior Christian En-deavor.
7:15 P. M.—Christian Endeavor•-ServiceB.
g p, JJ. — Regular Evening;Serviees.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
Appropriatedfor 1927
GENERAL TOWNSHIP PURPOSES:Salaries,. ' exclusive , of other
departments '. ? 10,400.00Printing, Advertising & Sup-
plies .._ 4,000.00General , 5,000.00
TOTAL 19,400.09MEMORIAL BUILDING MAIN-
TENANCEASSESSMENT & COLLECTION
OF TAXES:SalariesGeneral
TOTALPOLICE—Subdivided as follows:
Salaries _Equipment, Maintenance &
Operation .General .Pension Fund
TOTAL _._.RECORDER'S COURT-
Spewfc Balance
? 6,000,00 % 4,400.00
SewarenA branch of The Mother Church.The first Church of Christ, Scien-
t i s t , in Boston, Mass.Sunday School—9:30 A. M.Sunday Service—11:00 A. M.Wednesday — Testimony Meeting,
'8:00 P. M.Thursday — Reading Room, 3:00
•to 5:00 P. M.
Salary
Iselm Service
The regular Sunday Service will.be held at the Hope Chapel, Iselina t 7-45 P. M. The Rey. Wm. Mahon\Street Signs _•will preach on "Give Thanks-Why?", Contingent —
Sunday School at 11:00 A. M.Prayer meeting, Wednesday eve-
ning at 8:00 P. M., at Mrs. Howard~Hit's home, Correja avenue. All areTwelcome.—D. H. Belden.
Expense & Care of PrisonersTOTAL
HYDRANT CONTRACTBUILDING DEPT.—
Salary ; ^_Equipment, Maintenance &
Operation .General
TOTALHEALTH—Subdivided as follows:
SalariesEquipment, Maintenance &Operation ....
: GeneralTOTAL
POOR—Subdivided as follows:Salary .ReliefChildren's HomeAlmshouseGeneral ._._ : ..
TOTAL _..ROADS—Subdivided as follows:
Ssffary ^__Repairs ;Equipment, Maintenance &
OperationTOTAL ___:
Sewer Maintenance
12,000.004,500.00
16,500.00
76,000.00
2,500.006,000.003,040.00
87,540.00
1,800.00"600.00
2,400.0020,000.00
1,500.00
300,^l"',.<)0
I,9u0.00
8,700.00
3,000.001,000.00
12,700.00
900.006,500.00
500.003,000.00
500.0011,400.00
4,000\0050,000.00
10,000.0064,000.00
3,000.802,000.00
12,000,09
2,684.764,601.89
13,286.65
5,416.33
10,951.744,545.20
15,496.94
1,315.24398.11
6,113.35
583^67
1.048.26*45.20
1,048.26
62,053.58 13,946.42
1,867.504,668.37
88,589.45
1,050.00428.75
1,478.75 -18,187.41
1,250.00
299.2992.53
1,641.82
G32.501,331.633,040.00
18,950.55
750.00)71.25 |
821.25 |1,S12.59
250.00
.71'. 7.47 |258.18
CARVING SETS3.88 to 15.75
PYREX OVEN WARECASSEROLES
PIE PLATESCUSTARD CUPS
BEAN POTSPLATTERS
TEA POTS
25c to 3.50
22k,, Gold Band Glasses'GOBLETS —-• SHERBETS — WINES
9.00 doz. to 11.00 doz.LARGE STOCK OF CHRISTMAS GIFTS
Kelly 6cMcAlindenCOMPANY "*•*""•"
74 Smith St. P5>T Perth Amboy
DRESS UP
For ThanksgivingYou'll be Thankful
if you sit down to theThanksgiving Dinner inone of our Hart Scliaffi-ner & Mara suits. Thesesuits are of a style, fab-ric and quality that leavenothing to be desired.They are BIGHT iu ap-pearance and in price.liodk around youyou will And that the best,dressed among yourfriends wear Hart Schan'-ner & Marx suits andovercoats. J o i n t h eranks of well dresscflmen today.
Nathan JacobsonLEO JACOBSON, SUCCESSOR
318 State S t EVSTW Perth AmboyThe Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes
DELIVERIES TO WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP
.00 3,132.00
Over*Oyerdrawn.Dated November 17tli., 1927.Advertised November. 18th., 1S27.Office Township Treasurer, Woodbridge, N. J.
2,277.931,374.819,220.74
600.005,686-06
92.202,242.88
896.079,517.01
3,255.0048,540.18
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2,627.195:18.03
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722.07*374.81
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300.00813.944Q7.80757.32
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REMODELLING & REPAIRING DONE RIGHT
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The " 0 . K." TagIS YOUR GUARANTEE
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PAGE SIX THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, NOV. 18, 1927
Fish and Game •-League Banquet' to be Held Dec; LThursday, December 1st.,- is the
fiate of the ninth annual meeting and'dinner of the New Jersey Fish andGame Conservation League at theNewark Athletic Club, Newark. Thebusiness meeting will be called 'toorder at 3 o'clock. Dinner will beserved at 7 o'clock.
"" The main dining room of the clufthas been secured for the dinner androoms adjoining it for the annuaimeeting. Apropos of the latter,please make note that it will be opentwo hours earlier than in previousyears.
The dining room will comfortably- seat about 600 persons. Reserva'tions
will be discontinued if and when theyreach that number. In any event,none can Be accepted after Saturday,
Predict Fail ure - of - PlanFor New Merchant Fleet
as Congress Fight Looms
It died because, with the opening we really got in the way of service 'We Demurof the west, inland development and what we have left on hand out The cake was of three lawyersyielded far larger returns than ship- • of our three and a half billion-dollar with plain white icing. — StocktonPing- | fleet, we arrive at the reasonable con- (Calif,-) paper.
For years before the World War1 elusion that the penalty we paid for . ——we hired foreign vessels to carry our being found flee'dess in 1914 was aexports and imports. It worked fair- round three billions, o'r thereabouts.ly well. Foreign shipowners dis-1
t r"|TJ| |"|
The price of the dinner tickets is14.00 and the nienu will include atleast one game course. The ticketsmay be &ecured from "-ei'ther John S.Schwinn, 56 Clinton street, Newark,or Arthur J. Neu, 983 Broad street,Newark. Payment should accom-pany the order for them.
Tables seating eight and ten willbe provided. In case a party exceedsten, tables will be grouped if suffi-cient notice is given the committee.
Members making reservations forothers are asked to send the. name ofeach guest. This will greatly facili-tate seating the night of the dinner.Members may bring guests who arcnot members.
Pall details of the program will besent as soon as possible. Meanwhile,the committee assures you it is doingits best to provide entertainmentthat will measure up to, or surpass,if possible, the standard of previousyears, and it hopes that you will co-operate by ordering your ticket, ortickets, at the earliest possible mo-ment. We have never ceased to re-gret that it was necessary to turnaway more than 100 who wanted toattend the dinner last year.
Kenneth F. Lockwood, John S.Schwinn, and Arthur J. Neu, are thedinner committee.
tlflTH THE OPENING OF THEWEST, INLAND DEVELOPMENTYIELDED FAR. LAR&EtL.RETURNS "THAN SHJPPMS —
OUR FLEET DWINDLED
OUR
MERCHANT. CARRY ING 9 %
FOREI6N COMMERCE/WAS
gcriminated against us somewhat.They helped-their various countries'1Slf couid.tos^ S r S ^ S ' cT!petition among themselves. Thanks'to this rivalrV, we "broke even,
nr
NATIONAL MISSIONS |
BUT when the World War begin-—flooey!—went our overseas trade,
HAD-to-have a merchant fleet. What]we built cost us something morethree billions and a half.
I N THE EARLY DAYS OF HER HISTORY THE UNITED STATESC HAD A MERCHANT FLEET EQUAL TO ANY ON THE SEAS
L , A t
meet lfng
+1 o f„ t h t Breckenridge'
Chapter o{ the Presbyterian West-j minster Guild was held Monday
at the home of Miss Louise
b tt& u , c £ S « E ? S n ! prayer7
bottled up. I fered by Miss Anna Hart. The study I'The allies were swamped withjof National Missions was continued !
their own business. |The topic being "The Spanish Speak-The few neutrals had nothing like:ing People." Mrs. G-eorge From,
enough shipping to go 'round, and j Miss Louise Huber and Mrs. Charlescould charge what they pleased —|Kuhlman conducted the study period,which they did, to the point of pro-] The first reading of the play, "The1
hibitive rates—and next to no bot- i strike of the Ladies* Aid", was 'giventoms to be had at any price. I This is to be presented by the guild i
We had nothing of our own—that i in the Sunday school rooms someis, S thimbleful, where we needed]time in December. The cast will beoceans. I coached by Miss Grace Huber. i
When we ourselves entered the ' |war, there was nothing to it — we _ Licensed Gold-digger !
flt Wht - Iu were .
Rub Rheumatic Pain,. *Soreness, Stiffness
husband; lor money."Miss Bridey—"No, was calm—•
Rub Pain right out with smalltrial bottle of old"St. Jacobs Oil."
What's Rheumatism? Pain only.Stop drugging! Not one case in
fifty requires internal treatment. Rubsoothing, penetrating "St. Jacobs Oil"directly upon the "tender spot" andrelief comes instantly. 'St. Jacobs Oil"is a harmless rheumatism and sciaticaliniment, which never disappoints andcannot burn the skin.
Limber up! Quit complaining i Get:a small trial bottle from your drug-gist, and in just a moment you'll befree from rheumatic and sciatic pain,soreness, stiffness and swelling. Don'tsuffer! Relief awaits you. Old, honest"St. Jacobs Oil" has relieved millions ofrheumatism sufferers in the last halfcentury, and is just as good for sci-atica, neuralgia, lumbago, backachesprains and swellings.
exaggeration, perhaps. We salvageda little.- True, most of our ships, even ifsafe to trust at sea., were so badly-built, that they are enormously ex-1pensive to run; -or* they will steam Ionly six or seven knots, as comparedwith our competitors' 12 or ] 5, upto 2 0-odd, in 'the case of their fast-est boats.
It is merely cash out of pocket totry to operate them against ourrivals. Yet it may be the worst ofthem gave us some small wartimereturn. •- We, also have the Leviathan, oril-nally seized from Germany—a genu-ine asset. We ourselves cannot makeher pay—unless we consider that she |.represents no investment — but any.j! other. .country could.
Brain-work StuffFarmer—'"Thought you said you
had plowed the ten-acre field?"Plowman—"No; I oaly said I was
thinking about plowing it.""Oh, I see you've merely turned it
over in your mind." — ChristianEvangelist.
ADVERTISEMENT—
K O T I C E
•TO: The unknown heirs, devisees,personal representatives and as-
signs of Robert A, Glover, dee'd.,and their unknown heirs, devisees,personal representatives and assigns:
By virtue of an order of theCourt of Chancery of New Jersey,made on the 31st day of October,1927, in a cause wherein FredCiegotura is complainant and EmmaCobley and others are defendants,you are reauired to appear and an-swer the biH of said complainant, onor before the 3rd day of January,next, o r the said bill will be takenas confessed against you.
The said bill is filed: to foreclosea certain tax certificate given by the
"Township of Woodbridge to FredCiegotura, dated the 10th day of No-vember, 1920, on lands in the Town-ship of Woodbridge, in the Countyof Middlesex and State of New Jer-sey; and you, the unknown heirs,devisees, personal representativesand assigns of Robert A. Glover,dee'd and their unknown heirs, de-visees, personal representatives andassigns, are made defendants be-cause you have or claim an interestin the premises described in the saidtax certificate and bill of complaint,
STANLEY F. KACZMAREK,Solicitor 46r Complainant,
217 Smith St.,Perth Amboy, N. J.
11-25-27. '
The above sketch shows stages of development of th,* American Merchant Marinehard fight will be which, in'a way, is as i't should be;
[they are not worth repairs. a o i y serviceable.America had, not. a' So, although we are doing 30 per Qne expert calculates that
By CHARLES P. STEWART Nevertheless,(Washington Correspondtent for Cen- made for it.tral Press and The Woodforidge / To be sure,
a FINALLY, a smallcraft of our own
handful of themake is toler-
I/eader.) ! merchant fleet,; in anv proper sense cent of our foreign trading in our a n l o u n t we wasted in buildingt h e
I r Would have pservice all-'slumping rapidly—in a fair way to l n the world, at anything but war-
a ^ W e had som^ha fengaged L : overseasb e l o w o u r
cent.
some oi mem F the early days of her history' the
prices. Another gives it as hisopinion that an adequate mercantilemarine could be created now for one-
g t a t e g
our foreign ,; equal 'to any& m e r c l l a n t fleet . T a k i n g t h e s e estimates as a basis,seas, and giving ourselves credit for what
A S*H I N " G - of the word but an apology for one, 1°™ vessels, as compared with only t h r e e and one-half billion-dollar fleetT O N Nov in 1914. ' I9, »er. cent before the war, -we are would have paid for all the shipping
18. — For be-i n g caughtw i t h o u t am s r c ii a n tfleet, Amer-xCct JJcLiU. * on
three billion-d o l l a r fineduring1 t h eWorld War .
To save herf r o m b e i n gmulcted again, ad e s p e r a t e
XEbetesa ©teas SbopPHONE PERTH AMBOY 3551
atbelow Majestic' Theatre
PERTH AMBOY
INVITES YOUR• INSPECTION
OF FALL AND WINTERMODELS, OF COATS, EVENING GOWNS
AND DRESSES-
FASHIONED IN LATEST STYLES
Reasonably PricedNO CHARGE TOR ALTERATIONS
fleet
apology for a mer-jr
N pa-per it is somewhat betterthan our 1914 apology. It is whatj
remains of our war-built fleet—if i't ]can be described as ever having beena fleet.
It carries about 30 per cent of ourattemp'c will be made in Congress foreign commerce at present, whichthis winter to provide her with a sounds like a considerable improve-fleet now—or as soon as it can be ment on 9 per cent,built. -• I However, our 1914 apology was a j
Although- it is quite generally pretty good apology, as far as it]recognized that America needs the went. The ships we did have werefleet, this program will have tre- up-to-date, for their time—as goodmendous difficulties to overcome^ as any country's, ^vessel Jor vessel,partly because violent objection is and kept in prime condition.. jsure to be raised to the appropria- Pew of our present craft ever were)Won of the necessary money, no mat- of any value for commercial pur-ter how much it may save, later, and poses. They were thrown togetherpartly because of wide differences^ for war- use. Nobody, expected, themopinion as to the manner in which an to survive more than a voyage orAmerican mercantile marine ought to two.be created and maintained. . " . j Today the newest are more than
Fo r these reasons, the fleet con- 10 years old. Nearly all are in astruetion plan probably will fail, hopeless state of dilapidation —
GEORGE R. MERRILL
CIVIL ENGINEERSURVEYOR
Wooflbridge, N. J.
E. A. FINNFUNERAL DIRECTOR
ANDEMBALMER
"The Better Service"PHONE 788-J
361' RAHWAY AVENUE
THE PERTH AMB0TGAS LIGHT COMPANY
• 206 SMITH:STREET, PERTH AMBOY
Heating and Cooking Appliances
Ruud Automatic and Sterage Water Heaters
New Process Gas Ranges
Con-Den-RIi Radiant Logs
Odorless—Efficient—
Telephone 143 Perth Amboy
R.A.HIRNEREXPERT EMBALMER
ANDFUNERAL DIRECTOR
The only fully eQtriPPed" and up-to-date Undertaking Establish-
ment in town.- OUR MOTTO
"Pair Treatment to All"
Telephone Woodbridge 821.W. Z.BARRETT, D. D. S.B. B. SMITH, D. D. S.
Gerity BuildingOFBTCE HOURS
MONDAY, 10 A. M.—7 P. M.; WEDNESDAY, 10 A. M.—8 P. M.;FRIDAY, 10 A. M.'.—8 P. M. •"
93 Main Street, Woodbridge, N." J.Main office:. 115 Albany St., New Brunswick, N. J.
ASHESSAND AND GRAVKL
EXCAVATION
NICHOLASLANGAN
WOODBRIDGB, N. 3.
~ TELEPHONE 238
WE SERVEWE DELIVER
CASTLE'S I ICE CREAMPUREST BECAUSE HEATHIZED
PHONE YOUR ORDER
Woodbridge CoiifeetioiseryLargest Assortment of Flavors in Town
SCHOOL AND JAMES STS.TELEPHONE—WOODBRIDGE 537-R
,#!.
Electricity Is One of the Greatestto
p HE policy of Public Service is good service for-1- tomers. Thousands of Public Service people are
at work, day and night, in power houses, gas plants andother properties, all over the State to assure continuousand dependable service.
Public Service is careful in its selection of the electric appli-ances it sells. Every make of electric labor'saver must undergorigid tests in our laboratory before it is listed for sale.
Public Service maintains a home economics department and alighting department to help customers with their problemsin home management and to advise them of the best way tolight their homes. No-charge is made for these services.Telephone the Public Sendee Store nearest you.
You may arrange to purchase any appliance we sellon the divided payment plan. This accommodation.is planned to permit you the use of the labor'saverwhile you pay for it.
The Thor Electric Wash-er is unsurpassed in pro-viding a quick, thorough,safe means of washing allclothes and linens. Letus send you the Thor be-fore next washday. _,
~$S Down
IS Monthsto Pay
Lamp styles follow many originalmodes this season and Public Ser-vice offers a wide selection. Ourstock includes many beautifulfloor lamps, attractively shaded,as well as quaint table lampswhich give a novel note to a room.
Make your toast at the table.Serve it hot and golden brown.Toaster prices are from $3.50 up
Electric percolators, pot type, sellfor $6.50 and up. Handsomefour-piece urn sets are priced from$17.75 upward.
Be seated while you iron.The folding Thor Ironerirons'the entire wash inless than half the time re-quired to do the work byhand. See it at work atPublic Service.
$5 Down
IS Months to Fay
PUBLKMSEEVICE
It's fun to use an electric corn popper.Th& Excel electric popper works on anylamp socket. Sells for $2.91*
The Emeralite is made witli a specialscreen which gives a soft light, restfuktothe eyes. Public Service sells this lampin many styles.
Avoid inconvenience. Be prepared to re-place lamps, as they burn out. * KeepMazda lamps on hand.- Prices are from23 cents upwards according to the wattage.
The Porta light may be fastened anywhere. Attractively finished with silkshade. Your choice of colors. Pricedat -$7.sy;
THE WOODBREDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, NOV. IS, 1927 PAGE SEVEN
^
; r :
SORDS POINTS * by Jack Sords La*ret ^Roughshod- */ lhsorganized Woodbndge tleven;
j ^ - matched in every-deptartmeiit of the game, the JollyS^Eogers and the undefeated South Biver A. A, eleven battled
.//$o?a/6-§ tie on the South River Field on Sunday afternoon.' . ; nLpckie, of the Eogers^ and LarEin, of the A".-A. team, were^outstanding individuals throughout, the heavier Sou/fch River
enabling: Larkin to get the edge on individual plays. Enda»8 forward passes predominated.
The Pirates scored toward the end' of the first quarter,^? Lockie intercepted a pass from Sokoloski and boltedthrough the entire "brick town" team for 80 yards and thefirst touchdown of tlie game. aerial, Larkm to Baronski, was
•-•- The Sputh River outfit evened the knocked down byBarna.; ShemiekCduht in/the second period,when tdove through tackle for 2 yards. OnBaronoski completed Lar kin's pass an end run, Larkin gained a scant
; and Tan 9 yards'for the score; (yard. A pass, Larkin to Baronski,•':-• ••••;-In-.--'--• the second quarter, South [was completed for the touchdown..B.iTCr. placed the ball on the Pirates' Sokolski's; drop kick just missed the•6 inch line. With four downs to'uprights and the extra point. , Southmake and 6 inches to go, the Rogers'!River kicked to the Pirates' 20 yardline was impenetrable. jmark. Lockie received and ran tov piaTirf P W his 29 yard line. Roper punted .to
-•"'or--:*i.-W- Zu V A South River's 15 yard line, whereSouth River won the toss and re->Uvm ^ f u m l ) l e d and the Pirates re-
ceived. .Roper kicked off *o. Mulh- ^ ^ ^ ball on South Rivers' 14. gan; who; came back to his 45 yard d , .— RPfore the first DlavH On._the first pla^,South;IHver& £ f ^ t ^ ^ t h e ^ S endef
l ff d Al
Keeping the Name Feared on the College Gridirons
p ^ ; e r & £f ^ t ^ t^ p 5 yards for off side, A l g c o — g e G O n d p e r i o d i
pass, Sokolski.to Smith fell -a.little j-^v-south River 6short, ^oodbridge was penalized 5 ' . ; Third Periodyards- tor off side Sokolski, punted
P 32 d l i
jolly J&ogers,
yto.the Pirates; 32 yard line wiere b y
S o u t h R i v e r started the second half
Williams fumbled and Smith recov- line.,„ to - the: Pirates* 30 yard
3SI#ary returned.the ball to his^ South River's baU on the iQ t d l i l i e . O n 'a "Statue of Liber-
v, Rogers':32. yard lme. A lateral pass j t „ p i a y , which is a fake pass,.Mulligan, to .Sokolski, placed the ball, L o c k i ( r lost a y a r d . B o p e r ; o n a n off
. on :the Pirates' 19 yard line. .She- t a c f c I e p l & J ? l o s t another yard. On!/ mick on an eM run play failed+to t h e M * t , ^ Mulligan intercepted
-gam. A forward, Larkm to Smith, R r s , p a s s ' S o u t h River's ball on^was^ompleted for 11 yards, placing t h e R o gers ' 4 8 yard line. Sokolski: thfr ball on Woodbndge's 8 yaf d lme.' n e t i e < i ,%_ y a r d o n a a end run. An
.Shemiek .failed to gam on a •• line a e r i a l > L a r k i n to Baronoski, placed.smash. -Sokolski metwith the same ffie b a l l on Woodbridge's 32 yardI fate,; when- he tried to skid around Un& , A n o t h 8 r pass, Larkm to Mulli-. .end. An aerial,. Larkm to Smith, g a n w a s incomplete. Larkin romped
.was good for 4. yards, hnngmg the a T 0 U J l d e n d f o r a g a m Of 8 yards,oval to.th-e Rogers 4 yard line. She- S o k o l s k i n i t the line hard, but gained
/miek, on •.-..a line plunge failed-;' to n o t n i n s . sokolski, on a wide end/gain the required distance, l o smgthe r u l l n e t t e d ^ yards and first down.
ball on.downs. Rogers':hall on1own-1 gouth River's ball on the Pirates' 19;:. 4. yard line. Roper dropped b a c k l o g m a r k / Larkin drove off tackle I.. and puflted to his own 27 yard.line. f o r a i n • o f 5 y a r a s . On the next'..South; River again started-the aerial i a y g o k o l s M w a S thrown by Roper *
Borough Team Wins 20 to 0
tackled the receiver. Oh the' of Princeton,aextpiay, Lockie intercepted Sokoi-jyt,LI KUbJfcKo 111 rLAI y a w the Barrons of Georgiaski's passi and salloped80 .yards for irTntrk!•«»••¥* & T T O n tV/Mkimr rp,,_i,' J -LI -nr -, -,1 »a --touchdown. Williams .missed theUNDEFEATED BAlO'NNh * , a n d t h e .Wendells of«xtra point when his. drop kick was "pi ctrE'W WCYT 5 ATIIRriAY Harvard. Now we liaveblocked. The Pirates kicked to -tae;«*4-V *-<« « I : ' A l ^ ^ l WlVl/A.tcenter of the field. On the first play, i
Joneses of man. He can tackle and block and ability to defend against forward team's 40 yard line. A pass, Mullenis great as snagging passes. He passes. to ' Wukovits, placed the oval . ondemonstrated his defensive as well Grange's fight to make the varsity Carterefs 35 yard line. On a per-as his offensive abilities, in the game was almost discouraging one and feet reverse play, Mullen breezed
j a n ( j -;against Michigan. I't
"THE annual clash between Woodbridge High and Carteret* is now a thing of the past. Some will call=it a nightmare
while others will refer to it as a track meet. However, the fact(that the Bed and Black was defeated 20 to 0 should not'be heldagainst Coach: Saunders, nor his team, for they did the bestthey could. And, it could have been worse!
That remarkable spirit that was so evident at the start ofthe season when the Barron avenue boys held the heavy Free-hold machine to a scoreless tie was not in evidence. Yet thiswas the same team that held.Belleville squad to a 7-0 countand beat the cracker-jack iomerviUe outfit to the time of 14to 0. Yet the local boys played a better game against Carteretthan against Rahway and Roselle Park. If the Red and Blackhad put up the same fight against Carteret as they did againstFreehold or Belleville, Carteret would now have a defeat onits record. Armour hit the line for the second
If any member of the Red and score. The extra point was againBlack eleven had any idea that missed by Medwicks.Woodbridge had a chance to win, 1 On the kick-off, Medwicks bootedthat fond illusion probably vanished the ball to the Red and Black's 20after the first quarter had ended. yard line, where Bihon received and
Medwicks, Carteret fullback, at returned the oval to his own 41 yardI the kick-off,- received the ball on his line. Here an aerial attack proved1201 yard line and dashed through the j fatal. A pass, Mullen to Rankin,j entire Woodbridge team for 7 5 yards: was incomplete and another pass,and the first touchdown. From then (
[ Mullen to Rankin was intercepted byon, Carteret smashed and trampled 1 Medwicks, who ran to Woodbridge'sthe Red and Black at will. Med-|20 yard line before he was downedwicks, Currie and: Armour were the by Mullen. An aerial, Medwicks to"big guns" for Carteret. While j Comba, was completed. for the thirdBihon was the outstanding star for j touchdown. Medwick's drop kickWoodbridge. . .missed the point after touchdown.
Play by Play Carteret once more kicked to Wood-Carteret won the toss and chose to ] £™*se's 2 0 y a r d , m a l ^ k - Tit% U™e'
receive. Mullen kicked to Carterefs .'Stilltnan received and raced to the25 yard-line, where Medwicks r e-j^o r o uS"h t.eat?1 s , 4 2 y a r ^ l l I?e ' w£ereceived and dashed through the entire'-^ was tackled by Currie. HereWoodbridge team for the first touch-1 Woodbridge opened another aerialdown. . A drop kick by Medwicks a t t a c k " A . »af- M " " e n t o Fullerton
.missed''the extra point. Medwicks 7*f ^complete. Two more passeskicked to Woodbridge's 20 yard line. *? U ° w e d ' +
MH l l e n t o ^J161"*031 t l ?
n d
Handerhan caught the ball" and ran M u l l e n to Rankin; both of themto his own 35 yard line before he were mulled After taking a 5 yardwas dropped by Harrington. On a Penalty for the incomplete passes, aline play, Handerhan lost a yard. »ass< Mullen to Fullerton was final-Koyen, around end, gained nothing. ^ .completed but netted only 5Mullen taking no chances, punted to y,aras;. AS^% Mullen threw a pass.
I Carterefs 30 vard line. Currie re- T l l l s t i m e t o Rankin, who also missed'ceived the punt and returned the a n opportunity to score. Carteret
now became alert to the passinggame and the next pass by Mullen,was grabbed by Gudnested, whobroke around end and started downthe field like a frightened deer.Lund was on his trail like a bullet.Another touchdown seemed certain,but Lund out-ran Gudnested and
n the 3 yard line. Cur-end for 10 yards, bringing
ripped through the Pirate' Jolly Rogers bootball eleven- will'line for, 9 yards. Larkin squirmed play the undefeated^Belleville Capi-Mie ri
for onescore
_ ~~. . v ^ ,^^ i u,**^*, .uivin&uM, j.t. was Grange, .would have discouraged a less stout- around ^j^^. J. * J-V .7.^^^, ~- i~ o -" O . , ,. , ^striving to, m a k e who, among other things, .fell 011 a hearted boy. Several operations kept the ball to Carterefs 25 yard line. r l e L 1 Y Jvy•Others r a n k w i t h f u m b l e d p u n t a n d bxxt I l l i n o i s i n a h i m from Playing for two years hav- Koyen was a 'b i t slow in getting ^ " r a s
a . la\?„ t ' n -t />,„ horou-ha -Lcuitt. wiwi p o s i t i o n t 0 m&ke t h e flrgt s c o r e o f i n g c l o s e . t o 6 5 stitches in his should- started on an off tackle play and lost standing IS to 0, m the borough
^ ^ *~*.~ .,„*.»„. .— - ^ - - - , - , - , T-U •. i» o -A t n e § a m e and incidentally the first er. But now that he has landed he 3 yards. A forward, Mullen to t e a m s lavor.through center- for the required yard tols at the Nutley Elks Fiela at d yiarsi ty c a r e e r . . i touchdown -scored against Michigan is out to keep the name of Grange Koyen was incomplete. Another Third Periodand .f irst . down. . On an end run, P. _M.. next Sunday. __ _ _ ^ _ j Garland; never will be the runner! this year. a feared one .on the college gridirons, beautiful reverse play by Mullen,
.. y .Sokolski could eain nothing. Score,' . The Capitols have defeated three jJollv Rogers, 6; South River, 0. iof • the leading teams of northern i
' «Aonn<i voriml ' Jersey:- Wessingtoiis, '.Prudentials and i":• An-end ™ hy S i c k netted 2 the Bayonne Originals. The local.yards.: A beautiful triple pass, Lar- P^ate crew has lost two, won two
•: kin to Shemiek to^Smith, failed with anoV tigd ^ o- t h e last man. Sokolski booted toL " ^ e Rogers, play the waj they-Pirates' 14 yard line. Sullivan .off-. id- against South,-.River lastSunday,.
for B vai-ds Lockie around they should score another victory.L a vards On a line plunge ' A Pl lman autocoach has be¥ gained a/foot,. Roper punted
SPOPTSDONEBPOWN Grid Captains
ByJVOKMAJf E. BROWN
^oine publicity „ -Which last includes ^Dave Barry, j Walker and was another bushwacker
the man who refereed the Dempsey- dig at Dempsey on Mr. Kearns' part
Pullman auto-coach has been gOME men are born to fame. Some full bloom of what is commonlyfor the occasion- and those iJ a c a u i r e l t others have it thrift known as blah.
Shemick, wismng to go, should get in touch | * C J " » « . " ' ^ f * * ^ * * h IU.Stl The' announcement came during aSokol-:With Manager Lakis... on or before,upon them. And otheis get there- by , - n t he proceedings. It obtained
_ : - "" P. M. Sunday. The bus will pulling a long count. i g o m e p u b l l C i t y for Kearns andT arkin wheeled around end" for 4. leave from the corner of Mam and |VUM-UW r J.1 • j " T a ' TJx© Jo l ly xios'Grs linc-iii? ""T
K n i t t e d •?7»rdTkrl1undU«d. Allude: Hoagland, Matthewsperfect - pass, Larkin to S l i e m i e f c ^ r a w a n . wnaien, . m u iuuiph.mb, into the limelight suddenly by being ; difficulties and resume business replaced the ball on the Pirates' - 1 1 > e r " y , -- J™-*t" K m i i X ™ o m n T O i ' | n a m e d officials in important bouts. Ilations died a sudden death. Kearnsyard .mark . Sokolski -almost broke •*<« » e ' . _ ™ i u ^ ™ , ^ ' , * 'but most of them have done their: latest wneeze would indicate thatthrough for a touchdown, but was ;1Neary, ...romeioy " l w • J J " 0 . • work in a routine and satisfactory! there never was much to it.downed oh the 6 inch line. . On the •__ (manner and found themselves for-]first -play, Mathews broke through n - J * r | a ! „ . R A o fand; threw Larkin, -for a yard loss.' ^cUTIlillffliS J i C u l
With a start of the second half,placed the ball on Carterefs 19 yard the Red and Black representativesline. On the next play, Mullen collected themselves and showed a
'dropped back to the 27 yard for a little fight. Carteret kicked to|drop kick, which sailed below the Woodbridge's 15 yard line. RankinI bars. This gave Carteret the ball on caught the oval and returned it to
C. ™ . TXTT,™ „ . m , . .,_ , , ' their own 20 yard liae. Medwicks his own 36 yard line. For a mo-APT Alls ING Georgia Tecb-s Gold- p l o w e d through the Red and Black ment, Woodbridge played straight
r . - 1 - en Tornado" eleven this year is ] i n e - a n ( j brought the ball to his own football. A line plunge by Rankindown now as a beautiful example^in.Ed Crowley, end, and a great help 4 7 y a r d l i n e . Armour followed with gained a yard. Bihon followed on
a terriffic smash that placed the ball an off tackle for another yard andon Woodbridge's 45 yard line. Cart- on the nest play, Mullen droppederet's little quarterback, Currie, dove back and booted the ball to Carter-off tackle for 6 yards. On the next e f s 17 yard line. On an off tackleplay, Woodbridge was penalized o.piay, Medwicks fumbled, and Siesell
Tunney battle at Chicago.Other referees have been thrust
and threw a , |- Huingah brought -• the . ball back to (
the 4 inch line, on an off" tackle dive, j5. .Sokolskl pounded, the line like a madj
bull; but was'thrown back for a lossfof a yard. The-, "brick town" WIT-!
Tiger Eleven 64jotten the next day.
Barry, too, as booked to draw just
The recent rumor that Kearns andDempsey were'to patch up their legal
YALE authorities are to be com-mended for their action in trying-Ymended for their action in trying-a fleeting minute in the ; spotlight——' to restore athletic relations between
, until he ^counted four and then ' H a r v a r d a n ( i Princeton. The firstI started all over again. , ! s tep was taken recently when the
•—- The other night Barry was called j Harvard officials were asked to enteri w i that « I P Kail nn downs and t o ' The Cardinal eleven of Wood-!upon to referee the battle betweenl a crew in the 150-pound rowing raceS S ifo halLout ot the danger zone, bridge, beat the Woodbridge Tigers j Mickey Walker and Mike McTigue' in the regatta .next May. The Crim-
PT- xiunted on the first play/jplac- a t the Cardinal field-by the tune of in. Chicago. Having been properly !Son will not row in the freshman,
the suhere on his own 32 yard 6-° last Sunday. ~4announeed from the ring Barry pro- junior or varsity events but the pres-Onee more South River began" Although the Cardinal line wasjeeeded- to walk down the. aisle tojence of a Harvard crew in one of the
aerial at tack A lateral pass, greatly outweighed; it broke up andientei- the scene. And lie hadn't gone' j-aces will, "break the ice."completed, messed plays, tackled for losses and,more than four or five paces before liaq'fplr i l l "alone that there
•but the^.receiver was _thrpwn. tor - a j w . ^ t . T i o . , o worr inT.-fm' i^ . - v,nr<i "Ti,iri»«n ^mr toon •fi?t:^-n__" was no basic reason forloss of 5 yards,t o r IS yards,
.Rogers ' . 22the ball to the
Anotherthe Tigers threatened to score.
On the kick-off Cacciola received
AMMUNITION
SPORT SHOPMain Street Woodbridge
;:X' : Kahway
INFORMATION
"Thirteen, fourteen,Which is how fame can give a man
the ball'and ran it back to his 45yard line, but the Cards lost the ballon downs. A few minutes before jthe half ended "Rookie" Hunt in- walker,
a lef'chanded jolt.
and feels more deeply, possiblj', than1 either Princeton or Harvard, theI breaking-of ties that bound all three
•ACK KEARNS' announcement that institutions together for years,he is going to point Mickey
tercepted a pass and. ran. 45 yardsbefore downed by Slebics on the 20yard line.
Two minutes before the end of thegame Cacciola blocked a, punt andrecovered the ball on the Tigers' -i
goingformer welterweight and
Jater middleweight champion, for a
It is more than a possibility thatPrinceton and Harvard will shakehands again before the football sea-
bout with Jack Dempsey may be set'BOH of 1929 rolls around.
yards for off side, placing the ovalyard
recovered, giving Woodbridge theball on Carterefs 17 yard mark.on" the Red and Black's J 4
line. Rock, on an off tackle play, Bihon squirmed through center forwas thrown for a 6 yard loss by one yard. Mullen, on a reverse playSiesell. Currie barely gained a yard that "failed to reverse, lost 4 yards,on an off tackle dive. A pass, Med- Bihon made a beautfiul catch ofwicks to Comba, was incomplete and Mullen's pass, bringing the ball towith 9 yards to go, and last down, the borough team's 4 yard line. OnMedwicks punted to Woodbridge's 20 the first play, Bihon shot off tackle,
iyard line. Wukovits, Woodbridge's placing the ball on the one footI new full back, skirted end for a gain mark. Here Woodbridge lost another,of 5 yards. On a line plunge, Han- [ chance to score, when the field gen-Iderhan smashed against a stone- eral failed to use his head. Instead.I wall defense for no gain. Mullen j of calling for a variety of strategicj played safe and booted the sphere-plays, three line bucks were ordered;to the center of the field. On the Each was met by a stone wall de-
I first play, Medwicks shot around endifense that might have baffled Bruceland netted 9 yards. Gudnested tried Caldwell. Medwicks punted to hisan off tackle plunge, but gained
1 nothing. Being the third down andonly a yard to go for first down,Medwicks decided to carry the ball.He did and made first down ,as the
own 30 yard line, when Woodbridgelost the ball on downs.
Bihon received the punt and re-turned the ball to Carterefs 21 yardtine. - Here Woodbridge received the
quarter ended. TheCarterefs favor.
score, 6-0, injfirs't break of the game, when theborough lads were penalized 5 yards
Second PeriodWith the start of the second quar-
for off side,Carterefs
placing the banyard line.
Sweetening the BlowAn author who recently submitted
Highway Robbery"There goes the old rascal who
yard line/ :On the nest play Slebies a manuscript to a firm of Chinese>swindled me out of $40,000."plunged the line for the touchdown.|tmhiishpr^ received the following " H o w d i d h e d o i > t ? 't J l d publishers received the allowing
,in enabling Tech's vaunted backfieldito get off on the "fast and well able __
The southerners are enjoy-
^ 16 yard line. Bihonter Carteret began to hammer I smacked the line for 2 yards. AWoodbridge's line relentlessly. Cur- pass, Mullen to Sfiltaan, landed mrie slipped off tackle for 6 yards and, the end zone. Giving the ball toon the next play Medwicks took theiCarteret on their own 20 yard line,same path for 9 yards, placing- the j Medwicks ripped through the Wood-
'ball on Woodbridge's 25 yard mark.; bridge line for a gain of 18 yards.
fell' Medwicks before he could get start-Mullen to Stillm'an
The pass fo r point failed.On Sunday, the Cards will play
the Port Reading A. C. at 2 P. M.John Joe Keating Is coach for thered birds. .:••
The line.-up: •Cardinals---' TigersNebels .....l._........._i___..: ..... Perraro
received the followingreceived the. allowing!
left end
letter covering its return:"We read your manuscript with|
boundless delight. By the sacred]ashes of our ancestors we swear that Iwe have never dipt into a book of!such overwhelming mastery. If wej,-were to publish" this book it would'jbe impossible in the future to issue p a p e r >
« H e r e f u g e d t o l e t m e y , h l 8 , powerful southern team,daughter."—Der Brummer (Berlin).'
ing a fine season and are looking^ ' An'otheT pass,"'Mullen " to | ed. A perfectly aimed pass, Med-
Iforward to their game wxth George, f j a n d e r l l a l l w a s g o o d / p l a c l n g - - - -
Turn the Rascals OutREPUBLICANS TRIUMPH
Toss Girl Off Train "
^ _ the wicks to Currie, placed the ball on!baiT~o~n the Red 'and Black's 30 yard | Carterefs 45 yard line. Armour(line The umpire blew his whistle;tore through the Red and Black line
Damaged Partner land called the play back" because the:for 10 yards. Medwicks heaved a"Have you heard that Mr. Leh-: Woodbridge backfield was in motion. I pass to Currie, but was too low.
mann has had both his legs: cut off ottfyor this the local lads were penal-]This ended the third Quarter.Fourth Period
As the final period opened, Cart-lized 5 yards. Mullen, played safe
s<; again and punted to own 33 yard
Barcellona _._.......—left tackle
;Dign.
Liptack ..—
Cacciola —
Tobaete -_-
DuniganI . ' - • • • • • . • • • ' • ' • ' • "
Nagy ._:_.
left guard
center
rightguard.
Jerdome
Van Tassel
._ Gilrain
Ellis" any book,of a lower standard."As it is unthinkable that within J
right ta-ekle
right end .
quarterback
- right half
~Tleft~hajF'"
Simone
. Clemens
!the railway?"-^-Scare head in a Portland .(Ore.) J •"fth&.t a shaiue! He deuced _..„,,
beautifully!"—Nagels Lustige Welt j in e . Medwicks netted 3 yards on a'eret was in possession of the oval,_(BerJin). _____.». ,:.r ,., ^ - , , ~ -- line plunge and on the next play [on Woodbridge's 43 yard line. Rock
Armour fumbled.Headline
Puzzle for Morticiansexchange—"Too many
find its equal, we are, to our great Well, how many would beregret, compiled to return this too' " ^ ™ " Boston Transcript'divine work and beg you a thousand , a b o u t «oht.—Boston i-ransenpt.times to forgive our action."-—-SiamObserver (Bangkok). I Popular Cause
If Pullman porters really want tojjr .. [abolish, tipping, all they have to doi
, „ . , * - . ' 'is to take a decided stand, on the. Julia—-"What is the cure for love m a t t e r ; we can assure them of plen-
Dunham;at first sight?" • t y o f b a e k i n g , _ st. Josepl "Amelia—r"Second sight."—London Press. -
gA Mullen recovered ! started the fourth quarter with a 9
A Walkover . 'the ball as it rolled toward the yard gain through the line. Med-Dayton, October 12.—Lieut I. A. | woodbridge goal, giving the Red and '.wicks, on a wide end run netted 2
just,Woodring, averaging 158,968 miles Black the ball on their own 19 yard'yards. A forward, Medwicks toan hour, won the Mitehel trophy air nne. A lateral pass, Mullen to Han- Comba, netted 23 yards, but as herace held in connection with the derban, placed' the oval oh their own was tackled, he fumbled the ball anddedication of Wright Field today.— J27 vard line for first down. After-Mullen recovered. Red and Black'sKansas City Times.
Jordan Opinion.
Slebics
The score by periods:
.._._. Loekie
Hunt
CardsTigers
;0— 0
ft—6
Ragging the ClassicsIt was .an amateur play and the
Hardly Ever , iBoston Transcript.Smith—"My wife never gossips." jSmart—"Neither does mine. Byj iNToblesse Oblige
manager'said that everybody in the the way, what does your wife call LADY NORFOLK IScast was jealous of everybody else.!"?"—Boston Transcript- — m ™ ~ .
being off the team for three weeks, ball on own 10 yard line. Herewith a broken collar bone, Captain Woodbridge pulled that old saying,
An Opportunist Fullerton was sent into the fray, but j "what monkey sees, monkey does".She — "And what did papa say w a s unable to halt the massacre. OnjA pass, Mullen to Bihon was good
" when you told him you couldn't sleep the first play, a perfect pass from for 2 5 yards, but when Harrington'" for thinking of me?" Mullen was muffed by Fullerton. Had |tackled him, he fumbled the ball and
Jack — "He offered me a job as he completed the throw, an open'Currie recovered it. It was Carter-watchman in his factory." —- geld awaited him for a touchdown.)efs ball on Woodbridge's 35 37ard
Fullerton crashed off tackle for 5! mark. Currie, around end, nettedyards. On the next play, Mullen ' 3 yards. Comba speared a pass fromfumbled and Comba recovered. It Medwicks that placed the ball on thawas Carterefs ball on the Red and 24 yard line. Medwicks ripped
He declared that never again would0-^-0! he manage an amateur play. When
The "summary"—- Substitutions,[Questioned about his main difBculty, - "Why did you drop Shakespeare
Notoridhs Plagiarist
Coughllja for Nagy.;/Nagy for Nebel; he made reply: "I'm having a deuce In modern garb?"Flan for -Clemen!. ^Referee, F. Boka' of a time keeping the peace hetween "Too many people ^threatened toUmpire,- Dunchak,- Time of periods,Damon and Pythias. '
' minutes. ; , . . , / ' . I :: . ; , /Courier-Journal.Louisville sue me for stealing- their plots." —•
Louisville Courier-Journal. .
RESTING AFTER JBlack's 30 yard. line. Currie smacked-through the Woodbridge line for 9LAYING 173 EGGSithe line for 7 yards and Armour fol-;yards. R!oek shot off tackle for 3
-Grand Junction (Col.) paper.!lowed for 10 yards. As he was^yards and first down: On an end— jtaekled, he dropped'the ball, but was!run, Rock added 2 yards more. Cur-
Idea Sup on his feet again and recovered rie followed for one yard. ArmourLIONS TO PROVIDE
MILK IN SCHOOLSthe pigskin on Woodbridge's .7line. Medwicks, on an end
fard smashed the line for 3 yards. Mer'-run, wicks slid off tackle for 2 yards.
-Long Island paper.'placed the ball on the 4 yard Sine i (continued on page eight)
PAGE EIGHT THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, NOV. 18, 1S27
M U S I C A LCOMEDY IS
GREAT HIT(continued from page 1)
The cast and chorus groups wereas follows:
The CastEmil Kronlein, a music master,
Alfred Coley; Fritz, a pupil, J.Hughes; Ann Keleey, friend of theKronleins, Mary Burke; RufusO'Hara, a pop manufacturer, EdwardMcLeod; Mrs. O'Hara, EleanorMack; Harry, their son, Jack Cam-pion; Craig Randal, Lawrence Cam-pion; Christine Kronlein, Ethel Cam-pion; the carpenter, B. Whalen;props, J. Finn; elec'trician, B. Gerity;the doorman tragedy, T. Levi; RaeFontaine, a girl from vodvil, Joseph-ine Kolb; Mr. Blossom, the director,B. Keating; Adolph Blumberg, theproducer, F. Witheridge; Paul Gor-|tin, the matinee idol, J. Keating;Gladys Vantyne, ex-Follies girl, Mar- jgaret Dalton; Adele Despare, an ac-tress, Marie B. Dunigan; specialtydancers, McCann Twins.1%: i> The Chorus Group
Midnight Glide: Mary Connelly,Mary Doras, Anna Krewlnkle, Mar-garet Krewinkle, Florence Kenna,Margaret Lahey, Margaret Murray,Florence Piar, Elizabeth Schein, RoseToth, Jennie Turner and Anna Zilai,
Soda Pops: Ellen Campion, Eliza-beth Dunigan, Jeanne Dunne, Mary-Finn, Rose Marie Geis, Veronica]Koblas, Edna Oberlies, FrancesRyan, Elizabeth Simon and MabelWhalen.
Artists: Ann Dalton, Jane Gerity,Josephine Kolb, Helen Miller, HelenMcCann, Ruth MeCann, MargaretMcDonald, Loretta Simonsen, Angel-ine Stancik, Anne Stancik, CatherineThompson and Helen Van Tassel.
Summer Girls: Bernardette Delan-ey, Marie Gerity, Kathryn Grace,Mary Kath, Ellen Mullen, VeronicaMcLeod, Anna Neder and May Shaw,
Spotlight: Adele Kenna, MarySnyder, Helen Campion, Irene Som-ers, Mary Bobzin, Margaret Jordan,Marie King, Miriam Moll, WilliamKeating, Jack Keating, David Gerity,Thomas Levi, Albert Jacobson, Ed-ward Nash, Leon Jordan, and FredWi'theridge.
"Old Fashioned Valentine": EllenCampion, Helen Dalton, Helen Kolb,Grace Ring wood, Anna Bergen andjklarie McCann.
Bobs: Kathleen Cosgrove, MarieMiller, Marie Grausam, Loretta Sullivan, Mary Kerkowitz, Margaret De-lahey, Nancy Desmond, Stella Mag-yar, Helen Ryan and Johanna Mag-yar.
Musical NumbersACT I
Spring Song (violin), J. Hughes.Give Me the Spotlight, Mary Burke
and guesvcs.Soda Pop, Ed McLeod and Pops.MY
CRASHES THEMAN-MADE LAWS MEAN NOTHING TO
UNINVITED HOUNDBy DAVID H. (JHCKMAN
(Exclusive Central Press Dispatch to The Leader)
OAKLAND, Cal., Nov. 17. — Socrates, East Oak-land hound of mastiff extraction and Pekingese
tendencies, refuses to recognize the law forbiddingthe Oakland pound to accept any but invited guests.
In the face of several "standing room only" signsand the disapproving frowns of two pound men, Sot-rates fought tooth and nail to crash the gate of thepound wagon the other day.
Socrates has been annoying the pound men forsome time, according to J. Patrick McTiernan, Oak-land poundmtaster. Al-though he wears a legit-imate dog license on hiscollar, Socrates is ob-sessed with the desireto steal a ride on thedog limousine operatedby the city.
Every time he seesthe speeding poundwagon, he gives chase.When the driver seesSocrates, he steps onthe gas. But so doesthe dog. It's a merrychase. .;• •
S o c r a t e s ' owners,Thomas and Rena Mor-gan, 8 and 11 respec-tively, can't do a thingwith him, they declare.He just won't stay home SOCRATBSwhen they are away at school. After school hours,he's fine. And during the vacation period, 'hedoesn't chase the pound wagon.
"It's getting so there isn't any more sport incatching hounds in (these parts," McTiernan com-plains. "If Socrates persists in trying to crash thepound on -a trumped-up vagrancy charge, I'm. goingto prefer charges against him of endeavoring to se-cure rest and comfort under false pretenses. Werun a canine home, not a traveler's rest. What's hegot a home for anyway?"
Jolly PirateCrew Battles -
to Tie" Score(continued from page 7)
i
pass, Sokolski to Barons,ki, was also |incomplete, and Sou'th River lost the)upper hand on downs; giving the jPirates the ball on'own 21 yard line.Williams, off tackle, gained 4 yards.On the next play, the Pirates fum-bled, but .recovered, losing 2 yards.Roper's pass was intercepted by-Baronski South River's ball on the
I Rogers' 20 yard line. Shemick: gained a yard around end. Larkin! took ' the same path for 2 yards.Sokolski twisted through cen'cer foranother yard. Sokolski, off tackle,lost a yard. „ Pirates' ball on own 16yarr line. Sullivan on a line plungegained nothing as the third quarterended. Score, Jolly Rogers, 6; SouthRiver, 6.
Fourth PeriodSullivan lost a yard on an' oif
tackle play. Roper dropped backand booted the ball to his 38 yard
'line. A forward, Sokolski to Smith,was incomplete. Larkin skipped
j around end for 12 yards, placing theball on the Pirates' 26 yard line.Larkin again whipped around end.This time for 9 yards and put theball on the Rogers' 17 yard mark.Sokolski met a- stone wall when he
CATHOLIC DAUGHTERS
Court Mercedes, Catholic Daugh- Miss Margaret Sullivan,'Mrs,ters of America, held a theatre party Caulneld, Mrs. J. Jg, Verity,Mrs. "Ed-.-at Block's State Theatre last night.'ward Einnorn,••Mrs.. 'George Finn,.Members met at the Columbian Club M. De Joy, Mrs Fred tVithefidge,at 8 o'clock and went in a body to Mrs. J. B. Levi, Mrs. F. Zuehy, Mrs.the theatre. After the performance, Miss Dorothy G-albfaithe, Miss Marie/they returned to the club-house Dunigan and Mrs. M. P. Schubert..
Emil ^The Paramount Picttxre
»The Way oPAU Flesh/
Iselie Notes
Emil Janmngs ChampionsSimple^ Human Pictures
where refreshments were served.Mrs. John Cosgrove, chairman of
HOLD THEATRE PARTY the committee, was assisted by Mrs.'Frank -vlsio, Mrs. Andrew* Leahy,
character opportunity of my career.
Mr. and Mrs. Christina of Oakj tried to plunge through center. Lar- T r e e road, entertained a number ofI kin, trying an end run, was thrown relatives from the Bronx, on Sunday,for a 12 yard loss by Pomeroy. Here,Those present were: Mr. and Mrs.again, a volley of forward passed Salari, Ethel Marion and Johnfailed. South River lost the ball on Thomas, Joseph Gudeurez, Phil Kudowns. Woodbridge's ball on own Hckkaski, Mr. and Mrs. P. Aparp, of31 yard line. Sullivan, off tackle, oak Tree road and Miss Julie Chris-gained 3 yards. Roper followed for tina, of Oak Tree road. After din-4 yards. Lockie, around end, for 4 ner the party motored 'to Boundyards and first down, placing "the Brook. - " - *oval on the Rogers' 42 yard line.. Miss Julie Christina of Oak TreeLockie squirmed through center for roaa. j s p e nt a few days in New York,one yard, and around end for 31 Miss Mary Pinto, of Correja ave-yards. Roper, on a line plunge,' n u e f s p e n t Tuesday in Burnvrlle.gained nothing. Roper then punted! M i s s J e a ] 1 Heyborne, of Hillcrest.to South. River's 27 yard line, and avenue, Miss Anna Ciceone of OakSokolski punted right back to the Tree road, Miss Mamie Lahasio,Pirates' 35 yard line. Lockie's off w e re out-of-town visitors on Wednes-tackle plunge netted 2 yards. Pom- aay ajgnt.eroy carried Roper's pass to South Miss" Dora Msyzka, of Oak TreeRiver's 37 yard line, but was called roa<i, antLJKenneth Van Pelt of Rah-back for off side. Rogers were pen- -way, spent Wednesday out-of-town-alized .5 yards. Another forward, Mrs. F. Burgesser, • of Star Eagle,Roper to Mathews went wide. Roper i s entertaining her father and sister,punted to South Rivers' '38 yard Of Newark, for a few days.line; Larkin caught it and returned Mr. and Mrs. William Kniffen, ofit to his 47 yard line. A pass, Sokol- Hillcrest avenue entertained Francisski to Smith, was knocked down as Kniffen, of Katonah N Jthe game ended. Final score, Jolly ( The Rosary and Altar Society ofRogers, 6; South River, 6. g t. Cecelia's Church, held a meeting
The line-up: On Thursday evening.Jolly Rogers South River airs. Caroline Fink and daughter,Mathews Baronski May, of Iselin Boulevard, sailed for
left end Belgium, on Friday night on the——-'Moore Tuesday steamer "Penland". They will join
left tackle
ing in "The Way oiAI! Flesh"
A-f^cfr fftm c p p y y ! Mr. FinArt lSt b o m - x felt that destiny entered ii= in-:Neary ., Fitzpatnck mOnths ago and
) l f t " d
'Motion picture makers of
- that will take themJackj a c c o r d l l lS
lidol of the world, now hailed
Larry Campion.The Boy in the Pullman,
Campion and Summer Girls. . . ^,Uiiii5 me mmms Ui tu l a y l u -Memories, Alfred Coley. |American audiences as the greatest! » Jannings, "I was inspiredReprisal—Give Me the Spotlight, thespian before the camera both here;
Mr. Fink, who. left here about twoexpect to remain
tiuence when I first read the story;) left "guard there for'cwo years.it seemed to me that the part ofjTompkins Marks Mrs. Stella Godleska, of Fiat ave-
; August Schiller, the kindly, home-j center " n u e j s p e nt Tuesday in Elizabeth.'Moving but humanly weak bank!Thompson _ _ Fee a I rs. SUk, of Correja avenupe en-
t h 'cashier had been created especially! - right guard tertained relatives from New Bruns-for me. I consider 'The Way of All Kennedy - - - Adams wick over the week-end.
from the path e s t e f f o r t ' t h e fluest w o r k o t m y l l f e > P o m e r ° y - Smith'tOred to New Brunswick recently-o-i >• even exceeding 'The Last Laugh' and right end i James Whalen, of Astoria, L. I.
' -Variety' in dramatic simplicity, real-[Williams - - Larkini s p e n t the week-end with friends inism and humanness. ! -. quarterback ' Iselin. :
"During the filming of this pic- Lockie' _ _ Mulliganleft half
their
by! KaymonH" Eliott, of Auth avenue,
Oak Tree road,
Mary Burke and Ensemble.ACT r
and abroad.e • - - • . „ . . . . . j William Reedy, of „„„. . ^ ^ ,.„„.„,
,by those arotfnd me. Belle Bennei'c, Sullivan ... _ - Shemick i George Degenhart, of Hillcres'cave-who plays Mrs. Schiller. I consider) right half .Inue, and AI Parkes, of Marconi ave-But the way is now clear, Jan-. t 0 b e o n e o £ t h e t h r e e greatest ac- Roper — Sokolski• n u e attended
nings continues and then goes on ':o tresses the screen has ever known.Quartet, B. Whalen, J. Finn, B.Gerity and T. Levi. \ _
Midnight Glide, Josephine Kolb!tures, great, sweeping, costly pag-ijnore' syWathelic" performance"and Gliders. ••—*- i *~- " - - - i — •
full backThe score by periods:
Jolly Rogers ._!explain his conclusion. "Epic pic-!Never have I seen a woman give a,tures, great, sweeping, costly pag- i m o r e sympathetic performance. . „. .jeants, have for some time been con-| "Miss Bennett's marvelous work1 South River
The Rainbow in Your Smile, Ethel: sidered the last word, the ultimate '• a n ( i inspirational help was paired by I The summaryCampion and Lawrence Campion. j goal for tne producer whose ambi-: t n a t of Phyllis Haver, one of Holly- Lockie, Baronski.
the National GuardI meeting in Elizabeth, on Mondaynights
c n n~11 f h e I s e l i n G i r l Scouts of theT i A — Golden Eaglet Troop, No. 1, heldi.ouclKLowns, their regular meeting at the nre-
bubstitutions, i j O u s e o n Harding avenue with Miss
on
Artists and Ensemble. jtain extent, is an illusion. j o f All Flesh'"could not have been i Pomeroy for Barna;. Barna for Saturday"ACT III ' "Picture makers now realize that 'otherwise than the crowning achieve- iTompkins; Tompkins for Barna. i Mrs Johnson of Pei'h imhn
Keep On Humming a Song, Bthel;what the thea'cre patrons want are^ment of my life." South River, four. Referee, Marks, spending a few' WPPU-« at n hand Larry Campion. . | simple, human stories; stories that| This dramatic treatment of the'Rutgers. Umpire, Shack, Harvard. o f h e r mo ther" Mrs f
Her Song, Ethel Campion. give a cross section of life. Big sacrifices of one man for his family, jHead linesman, Dubrowsky, Rutgers. rpreQ r o a d ' • •Music was furnished by the Cliff- moments in little lives, if you choose-of his reaction to the attraction of aiTime of periods, 10 minutes. I Mr ami- • " " — » « - » — - to put it that way. - j worldly woman, after many habit- j 'ing aVe^ue ^ t e i S i e d
"Such a picture is 'The Way of All forming years as a, proud father and j Bishop Hughes says that jazz is friends f romN™vmv™v,> ,„!,;„*, %,„„ -jven m;e w h a t I husband, will be shown at the State dead. We thnnslit WP flotp^ Onmo-. e w I O I K on bunaay.
wood Beach Orchestra.Those in charge were: Miss Marie
Dunigan, chairman talent and publi- Flesh' which hascity; MISS iVtay Thompson, chairman, consider to be the mos'c convincing Theatre on Sunday and Monday.of tickets; Misses Frances Jordan I———and Helen Bergen, programs.
Carteret RidesRoughshod O?erWoodbridge High
_(continued from page 7)
Carteret lost the ball on downs.Woodbridge's ball on their own 4,
!
Lundright tackle
Siesell .._ _ _right end
Mullen _quarterback
Handerhanleft half
Turne? !
..... Combas
Currie
.... Rock
New Jersey Crops Good,Harvest Labor Plentiful;
Prices Should Decline
We thought we deteced some-;thing.—American Lumberman.
HOSPITAL AUXILIARYWILL PROVIDE CHEER
FOR THANKSGIVING
Christmas Greeting Cai'ds21 for $1.00
Box assortment contains 21 of themost magnificent high grade Chris'c-mas Cards and Folders, Steel En- „graved Colored, each one different f "?e Woodbridge-Sewaren chapter
! and each with an envelope , t h e Raliway Hopsital met a'c theICLL ua.lL- N e w Jerse>" Produce prices should) ARTCRA.FT COMPANY jhome of Mrs.. F. I. Perry, in Grove
Koyen __ _ Armour b e l o w e r t n i s f a l 1 - d u e t o S° o d crops[1057 Anderson Ave., New York City ^ e n i J ? ' M o n d a v afternoon. Mrs. Bright half
Wukovitsfull back"
The score by periods:IWoodbridge 0 0
Medwicks
Carteret 6 120
.and a plentiful supply of farm laborto harvest them before the frost.
The unusual supply of farm laborin New Jersey, indicates that manu-
0 facturing and other non-agricultural2 20
SE ?V e fThe summary: Touchdowns, Med-
business activities are not as activeas usual. The present supply offarm labor is estimated at 95 per
kick the ball out ofterritory, but - his punt wasand he fell on the ball, joarteret two points on a saftey.ball was put in play on the
for Handerhan;yy per cent of a normal.
The State Department of Agricul-j
ColdsBe quick—be sure
Deal promptly with a cold. Use "the
WuEovits; BihonRichards for Fullerton"; Lee forBarna; Wukovits for Richards; in New Jersey harvested this yearMontague for Stillman; Jandervits I with only root crops still to be
Black's 20 yard "line. Rankin missed i 01" .Day2v- ,C!il'tei]et' Gudnested for gathered Preliminary estimates ofa DPi-fect- i>ass from Mullen A n - i R o c k ; C z e r t a ' n l k i o r Turner; Rock ;the white potato crop point 'co anothe pass Wukovit to Siesell wasi f o r Oudnested. Referee, Rlelly,; average yield, of 161 bushels perother pass, Wukovits to biesell was.N_ Y u_ U m p i r e j C o m p t o i l ) Rutgers. | acre, as compared with an average
and
plete passes. Woodbridge's ball onjown 15 yard line. Still another in-complete pass, Mullen to Rankin.Woodbridge again penalized 5 yards,putting the ball on the 10 yard line.Mullen got off a good punt to the
ture reports practically every crop
McNammara, Sal-j of 122 bushels the last ten years.of periods, 10 minutes, | The apple crop this year fell be-! '
| low last year's average. The pre-;RFHTND T H F S(nipM|pQ'1iminary estimate of the total pro-;
W. Hoagland, who has returnedfrom a tour of Europe, presided.Mrs. C. Cunningham reported that
j proceeds of the recent bazaar were>PO5O.0D.
The chapter gave a rising vote ofthanks to Mrs. F. G. Tisdall and toMrs. Clarence Cunningham for
. .„-, ,. ^ ^ „„, services rendered at the bazaar. Mrs.Siost efficient, most complete help.. (Edward Martin was unanimouslyThat is HfLL'S. It is so ideal that elec'ced to'membership.we paid $1,000,000 for it. HILL'S I Plans were completed for sendingstops the cold in 24 hours, checks the food to the Rahway Hospital forKver, opens, the bowels, tones the en- ~~tire system. Millions now employ it*Start it today.
ffltt'SCaseara-BremuSe-QuinineiS? S 2 5 ? *H IS"-1*, «» »«» «d ••««you s «t HI
portrait. At BU
Thanksgiving dinner.Skeins of wool were distributed
to the members for th« making ofbed scarfs which will be part of thegift boxes 'to be sent to the hospitalat Christmas time.
Alfred Coley's make-up was
duction is placed at 2,697,000 bush-iels, or 58 per cent of a normal crop. I
& This figure compares with 4,310,000'center of the field where Currie got masterpiece. It takes Lon Chaney:bushels last year and 2,845,000under it and returned it to Wood- n a l £ a d ay t o P u t o n s o m e ot U 1 S bushels in 1925. The quality of thebridge's 35 yard line. Another 5 make-ups and 'co those who were ' c r o p this year also fell below nor-yard penaltv" was handed to Wood- waiting ui lme for lvliss Allan's deft ma,l, the department reports.bridse for* off side. On the next finishing touches, Alfred took. longer i •.play7 Mon'cague broke through Med- tliRJ} Chaney. _ ! . _wicks' interference and spilled Med- u
E d McLeod was quite worried fighter Becomes Labaretwicks for a 3 yard loss. Medwicks, bet«>re the. curtain rose on Tuesday (\wnfir • M^o-Kan Filmon an off tackle play, was called night's performance; someone had UWIier in Meigfiai! Tllmback and penalized 5 yards for being t o l d . J " m h l s m u s ta- c h e was not on — : jin motion before the ball was.straigttt. Thomas Meighan comes to Block's!snapped. Medwicks' pass was inter-i ™e audience missed one _of the s t a t e n e x t Ti!UrS(iay and Friday in!cepted by Mullen. Woodbridge's j b e s } scenes: Gerity, Levi, Whalen h i s l a t e s t Paramount drama "We're*ball on own 21 yard line. A pass,' f*d,. F l n f Perform an improvised fan- A U G a n l t , l e r s / . Adapted from theMullen to Wukovits was incomplete. , . , ; ! ; c „ a n c e / c o ^ e hilarious de- g ^ e y Howard stage success -LuckyAnotner forward, Mullen to Siesell, • "^ht ot the "troupe ! Sam McCarver" by Hope Loring aiid:placed the ball on their own 35 yardl J ° c k MeGuirk, who. handled_ t h e i o i r e c t e d b y J a m e s Cruze, the picture'line. Wukovits' bad throw to Bihon lighting switch board tor the snow, | s l i a p e s u p a s admirable screen mate-)was-also incomplete. Mullen decided \and M l s s M a e ^alsh, who did the r i a l _ . . .that he'd throw'the next pass. Ran-;prompting, were out of sight, but j . annparq aq an Fsqt «?idP waifkin completed it and took the ball their work was very important. | *°™^™ as 1 woSssionai m4e •'competed^another^oass but it ^ 1 ^ zie§feld was not behind the' scenes'• fighter An automobile accident pre-compieted another pass, but it didn t » , Q0no- -,<.- woodbridge:Tents h l s continuing in the ring andcount as he was out of bounds when:ac ± l er bona , eise woociDiiagei *1]ri1<, f n i-,fs. nT,iv rpma-inino- tnipnfhe cau-ht the ball Comba inter- might have lost some of its prettiest "e t u r ? s to Ills only lemainmg talentnecau^ni tne Dan. ^omDa miei : ..= t ., -pi-iii-. —music. Playing a piano m a nightcepted Mullen's pass, on his own 3 V £ one ardent Vouth remarr-d c l u b ' W s f a m e Sr0WE **yard line as the game ended. •"•" o u e < u . a e n l youin leuuiheu , _„_,_ , _._i_ ___._j... .
The line-up: |after watching the McCannWoodbridLStiU
d leaps and,w h g the McCan a:'1,bounds. A i^ch society woman tails
A fellow would have an awful time1"1 l o v e . W l t h h l m ; H l s adopted
Kish .__
'Harrington trying to decide which one is the 1 b r o t h^ r . is attracted to her Ano ther-JSPend ° ! p r e t t i e r of the two." \™**- the idle bounder, is killed and
' We bet that the little misses ofia11 t h r e e a r e a c c u s e a o£ t h e crime.Ignatz , j Then—•left tackle ithe "Soda Pop Chorus" would get a'Paver ' Sika! ni§ h a D ( i even on .the professional' But see "We're All Gamblers!"
left guard i vaudeville stage. I The star of 'The New Klondike,"Barna _ &_ . Harris Miss Eleanor Mack's work as Mrs. j "The Miracle Man," "Homeward
center " O'Hara was so convincing that many Bound," "Tin Gods" and "The Cana-Coukos - - Elli? a married man in 'the audience feltdian" has never had a finer vehicle.]
ri"hV °'uard ' ' i quite at home. 1"—:~++" l i ' " ' — <•-"+"""^ ~HMarietta Millner is featured.
WOODBRIDGE HARDWARE CO.W. J. GOHEN, Prop.' . ..
(Successors to E. F. Moore's Son)45 MAIN Sf. PHONE 96 WOODBRIDGE
SPECIALS FOR THIS WEEKnow 1.00
.90now
Aluminium Ware-...-. ...............reg. 1.50
AH Shells .._: __„ ...reg. 1.20
Hot Point Irons.. reg. 6.00 now 4.29
Carving Sets reg. 2.75 now L98
HEADQUARTERS FOR*
SHERWIN - WILLIAMS PAINTSOPEN EVENINGS — PROMPT DELIVERY
BLOCK'S
STATETheatre WoodbridgeMatinee Tuesday and -'Thursday 3 P. M. Bvei-y Evening 7 P. M.
Saturday, Sunday and Holidays 2 P. M.
Last Time Today-Friday;;:::
Bobb» Vernon f'CRAZV TO FLY" LATEST NEWS"KO-KO CARTOON"
Tomorrow—Saturday Only
fiertrude EdericJ a m e s HailJosephine DunnClarence Bodtfer
Comedy "FRENCH FRIED" LATEST NEWSBruce Scenic "POOR FISH"
SUNDAY and MONDAY, NOV. 20 and 21 ONLY—
Jl VICTOR. FLEMING Product
Camo Comedy "He Tried to Please1Latest News
TUESDAY, NOV. 22nd. ONLY—
— Benefit Performance Masonic Building F u n d -Under the auspices of Americus Chapter O.E.S.
Matinee 3 P, M. Evening 7 and 9 P. M,
RONALD COLMAN. AND -. '•
VILMA BANKY. • • • • I N
"The Winning of Barbara Worth"From the world famous novel by Harold Bell Wright.
A Dorothy Devore Comedy "KILTIES" Latest News"Bruce Outdoor Scenic"
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 23rd., ONE DAY ONLY—
Mack Sennett Comedy "GOLF NUT" Latest News"Field Officials" by CKick Meghan, Coach of N. Y. U.
THURSDAY and FRIDAY, NOV. 24th. nd 25th.
— Matinee Thanksgiving Day at 2 P. M.
Allamblers
WITH
MARIETTA MILLNER,
-JAMES* CRUZEfprodu&lan.:
APQLPH 2UKQR -.a JESSE l : LA5KY
d QaxaSnaimt Qicture
Lloyd Hamilton Comedy "NEW WRINKLES"A Curioisty Novelty = Latest News
— COMING ATTRACTIONS t—"Barbed Wire" "Spring Fever" "Underworld""Beau Geste" "Anne Laurie" "Hula""Fireman Save My Child" "Alias the Lone Wolf"