Committee Named For Defense Day Plans

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1 r r f!f^wfw^ppf^p^fjf^sjswftj The News of A The Townshp sefn News, Page 8 VOL. V, No. 24 WOODBRDGE, N. J., FRDAY, AUGUST 15, 1924 PRCE THREE C Man Huntng For Cop To Arrest Car Theves Fnds Local Offcers Alert Nght Chae Leads All the Way From South Amboy Untl Enhorn and Stmonaen Bag The Quarry Twenty-two mnutes after two auto theves had stolen a car from n front of a store n South Amboy at 1:80 Wednesday mornng, the quck acton of the owner combned wth snappy work on the part of Offcers Enhorn and Smonsen, of the local polce force, resulted n the arrest of Mchael Stackpole, aged 33, of Hampton, Mass., and John Malek, aged- 22, of South Rver. The H g h Schooj Teacher alleged theves were on ther way to _.Stackpole* home, they stated. Adam ; our *-«"«r y n Auto Sut7., of South Amboy, owned the! car, a 1923 Ford tourng, p Charles H. Boehm, member of the.,,,.,., faculty of.the hgh school and coach The arrest of the men was brought o f track and tenns, arrved n Los about n an nterestng manner, and Angeles, Cal., last week, after a trp after Henry Esenberg, an attorney, b 7 "»to across the contnent. He of Elzabeth, who passed Sutes store ]?" ^tur. n. b * boat through Panama, t n. LL L J tan 8l and by way of Havana, a few mnutes after the robbery bad \ huen commtted, had alternately fol-; lowed and sped ahead of the car n Acker s Pavlon Robbed whch the theves rode all the way from-south Amber Wandbrdge n j n van attempt to locate a polceman, r Cot Townshp $300 To Fght Water Rate ncrease Move New Rates Confscaton Recorder*! Court Provng A Payng Proposton waned aganst the (matng of nn! ncrease n rate to Mddlesex Water A»k Hffher Court To Cancel "* * 447Z» -lt n an operatng e* ompany necesstated the floatng of an emergency note of $3,000 at the last meetng of the townshp commttee. The result 6f the fndngs by the Publc Utltes Commsson s consdered a vrtual vctory for th«muncpaltes nasmuch as the Water Company was not allowed anywhere near the ncrease asked for. Fndng, of Utltes Board pense of only $9.00, exclusve of tho judges salary. Besdes ths the court collected a lanre. a*>ounf from vola- Contendng that the now rnte and tors of the motor vehcle lnws that valuaton set by the Board of Publc was turned over to the State. Utltes amounts vrtually to conns- Buldng nspector Arthur Deter caton offt. property, the S^^fAff an appeal n the Unted States Ds- Strcken Here La.t Nght, ] ^ ^ J ^ S g ^ ^ ^ ^ Motorst Sent To Hosptal from enforcng the provsons of ts fndngs. The ltgaton results from Taken 111 suddenly whle rdng the month. The polce made 122 arrests, an average of about four a day.. Empty Cans, Lds Blown Off, Found n Vacant House That Fre Gut Resdence, Property of Kahme, Had Been Condemned By! of Health For Lack of Santary Provsons the fact that the rate schedule rewth her husband through Wood- \ c? nt Y w \ h? "f Ut t<>s Cpmmsbrdge last nght, Mrs. John Wood, 52 years old, of 603 Hussa street, Lnden, wag removed to Rahway hosptal the eon based the allowable earnngs of the company on a valuaton that the company clams s only half what t should be. Whle the defendant Ddnt Do Noton Except Throw Bwes Around y Patrolman Tom Somers n,,,,..,,.,,, / polce ambulance. Mr. Wood; J]? m8 J? 81tne "17!, V * he sec nd,*ooner," explaned Walter Mystery surrounds the orgn of a fre that at 4 oe Sunday mornng completely gutted an unoccuped butdll the corner of Pearl and Green street*, that s «ad to belonged to ether Smon Kahme or hn wfe. An astouu feature of the case s that the fre had spread through entre nteror of the house was dscovered, whle the outsld* < the buldlhg shows lttle effect of ravgw of the flames. Three "Msterj Offcer wouldnt nevah have kotcted me f d seen hm one hs wfe had had a stroke Water Company 7% per cent, on the j Luc^. d 8, ar)d colore( who year, ago and, for that «^> ^ e» w"l 8 - ** ^ Offcer Dunphy Sund.y" r condton s consdered! P c«fflggf*^ f" ^ ^ 1 afternoon whle n the J of "jest Of Cgars and Cgarettes Offcer Enhorn was the frst bluecoat A thef or theves broke open a wndow of Ackers Pavlon n Se- Leaders Pledge G 0. P. Support To seln Man he saw. The stolen car arrved n Wood-.,..._,,~~^.,^ brdge but two mnutes after Esen- through, took the key off a nal and brg bad found Enhorn and explan- effected entrance by unlockng the od the crcumstances to hm. En- door. The booty conssted of about horn rapped on the pavement wth ffty dollars worth of cgars and hs nght stck to call Offcer Smon- cgarettes. The robbery happened pen and prepared to step out n front t some tme after one oclock at nght. of the approachng machne that, n the stllness of early mornng, could bo heard roarng over PralT Hll. "We both had our revolvers handy," sad Enhorn, when speakng of the mattt!rwbw-wwf wtan t cones to dealng wth car theves V«u never At w<rl] aucnded mectng of the know whaj knd of a fght you re get- nelln Republcan Club held Wedneatntr nto..... «. da y n K ht. tne ast remanng doubt The men at the sght of two offcer, of Untes as w the atutnd the blockng the road brought the machne Republcan poltcal leaders of the to a grndng stop and Stackpoe, who,.,. end o{ the ward wol]]d take jn «at behnd the wheel, leaned out the matter o{ gponborng an seln r.nd nqured what was wrong When canddate for townshp commttee asked for hs lcense he admtted that WM dspelled when both Hoy and he had none and sad that the ma- La r» on< n 8pc «. e heg from the floor, dune belonged U» Malek. The latter,, tau. d that th wou, d support the was asked f he owned the machne ct, n Sda,v of Mr. Fagan. The outlooked upon stated that about sx reason, her wuutuu s tuunuccu *,. wws.* crtcal. worth much more than p The couple were out for a rde and «P rt «"d that ts.. had decded to return home when the new rate wll _be only 11-3 per Mrs. Wood omplalned of feelng " y. They stopped at Red nn, on George avenue, and Mrs. Wood attempted to eat a plate of ce cream. Both the husband and Danel Meudl, duzy- SrT G LwL mor K reached propretor of the nn, became alarmed when Jer condton seemed to become worse and telephoned for the ambulance. By the tme the offcer arrved Mrs. Wood had lapsed nto unconscousness. She dd not speuk agan untl the hosptal was reached.._ jest thrown the bones nroun wth some other cullud boys." Lady Luck, Walters namesake, deserted hm n hs for, after hearng p«tw>l ppro * oh, of, rght nto the open arrnx of Dunphy. cent, of the captal nvested. The Board of Publc UtfHtf* wll j have twenty days n whch to fle an answer to the Water Companys appeal. TV A t t The company complans thnt ts n-.^lt. J^lT. ablty to show grentcr earnng nower prevents t attractng new captal to fnance several needed expansons. To gve Woodbrulec Townshp a greater water supper t states that t wll have t* ncrease the capacty of ts wells at North Plnnfed and construct a 24 nch man from Oak Tree to Carteret. The combned cost of these two project* would be about $700,000, the company stntes n ts that he had "done throwed two bts as nnocent of anj crap playnr" la Sundays chcken. «of mn "A nto the pot and wa«wntn a turn at dem bones" when the gnme was dsrupted. Accordng to Water he was ast ddnt get no chance to play," he told Recorder Ashley. "The other boyn was doln all the playn and here Ah am n jal." Nevertheless, the judge assumed that Walters presence nl the game was suffcent ndcaton of hs ntenton of playng and offered hm gallon cans, two of whch had torn open apparently as a contanng some explosve ma were found by fremen when entered the house. People lrla*! the neghborhood say they heard*, plosons before the fremen arrval. The house had been vacant for 1" months. Before thnt a colored : lved there but was evcted by Board of Health when Kahme, e u»"er or agent for the owner, the alternatve of ether payng n fne fust tl to have water conne< of ten dollars or spendng thrty day* ln ""- Complants by resdents of n the county jal. Sentence wn j vcnty Hnt the place constltutr later nunpended. George Blum, Road Supervsor, Wll Agan Seek Thft Offce and, after consderng the querton a comeof the t t d the, g q moment or two. answered n the a praclj ta MmTanCe that seln h h negatve. They sad they had seen a w( m what t hafl b(, en w(,,. k crowd of fellows abandon the machne for_ 8 repremntatve 0M tne commtalong the hghway and had "pcked t tee elected f rom that muncpalty, up" They spent the nght n jal T(w. meetng wan an enthusastc and, after consderng the queston a affajr amj WBS attended by Democrats warrant at noon Wednesday, a, we]1 a> R epu b can9. The atttude S U ltz, the owner of the machne, ^mt. a t0 be one tnat promst. d an told ths reporter that he arrved a)mort Mnd brcknjr* of Fagan n home at mdnght after workng late Ueln other speakers were Doctor at the Barber Aaphalt plant and that j p ga]t Road Supervs(>r George he saw two men apparently tryng U, B)um 8nd Mr Kuntz Precedn(? tfa repar the lghts of an old Overland, peecheg lne c ] u b orkan zed by electcar that was drawn up at the sde r, K Sam Foster as prell d ent; Leo of the street near hs home He left Murpnv vce-presdent; Mr. Bressler, hg machne n front of hs house ana - _._ went to bed, beng aroused a few mnutes later by the sound of someone tryng to start the engne of h» car. He rushed downstar* n tme to see hs car turnng 1 the corner. About that tme Esenberg, returnng to Elzabeth from the shore, was haled by the barefoot and scantly attred Sultz and offered to accompany hm n pursut of the theve*. They passed the theves at the approach to the brdge acro*«tht Kartan but made no move to *t«p them. "We thought they mght be armed," Sultz explaned. n Amboy they secretary; Mr. Hassey, assstant secretary; Mrs. Andrews, treasurer, Mr. FoEter occuped the char. The mportance of communty sprt and soldty, n puttng across the towns canddate was stressed by all speakers, Hoy warnng aganst too great nn anxety for mprovements. " dont beleve the tme s yet rpe for extensve street and sdewalk mprovemenan seln," cad Hoy. "But *f the majorty of the peo_ple want them they can certanly have them." Refreshments were served after the meetng. Whle Mr. Pagan s the only seln man to announce ha canddacy to date t s freely rumored that he may have to fght a prmary battle aganst at leant one other seln Republcan canddate. n speakng of the matter yesterday one aeln man explaned We are out to fnd the strongest canddate from among us. The prmary battle wll settle that and then seln wll get soldly behnd whatever man t puts on the slate for ^November." Womans Club Gven Use Of George Blum, supervsor of roads for the townshp, has announced that he wll Reck r>-p ectnn to thnt offce n the Fall. n a statement to a representatve of the paper recentlj Mr. Blum sad. 1 feel that my qua fxatons as n road bulder for yenrs and my record as rond supervsor for the townshp durng the pnst three Pendng Ordnance To Pnch Roadsde Stands Strcter Santary Requrements Councl Room For Meetngs seasons should make me an acceptabl canddate for the offce. have en By unanmous vote of the townshp commttee t was decded Monday nght lo grant the WomanH Club the use of the councl chamber one Thursday afternoon j^ month wthout charge. n speaftnp: of the matter "Mayor Neuberg referred to the club R t0 1? n K 8hlp Af as an organzaton made up of women » d J?.?«_* n my power by annual nppropra tons, to keep all roads and streets of the muncpalty n good condton. "Of ourse there are roads that need repar. There wll always be roadt n townshp as bg as ths one th as an org from all parts of the p gaged n furtherng cvc actvtes, up townshp en- seln Formed Second Fre Company Monday More Seen As Result Of Squabble Wth Exstng Organzaton The electon of temporary offcers made a" van search for a polceman at a meetng Monday nght marked and, fndng none, Sultz deserted h* the frst defnte steps n the formacompanon and set out for the polce (tjon of a new fre company n aeln staton whle Esenberg sped nft after, f, t*. known as Fre Company No. 2. the bandts. He passed them agan - on the road to Woodbrdge. "ll tell on the road to W g you what," he sad to Offcer Enhorn when the theves were safely lodged n the local lockup, "1 wa* releved The brth of the" new company came about a* a result of dssatsfacton on the part of an apprecable proporton of seln people at the falure of the old company to "get gong and when saw you. After our expert-1 do «>methng," t was stated, ence n Amboy wa«begnnng to j^ e ^t of offcers named were: H Presdent, John A. Hassey; vcepresdent. Wllam Prce; secretary, August A. Bressler; treasurer, Henry Boehm. Sponsors of- the move, all of whom sgned an endorsement of the new company and assumed the dstncton of becomng charter mem Woman Sees Theves Wrng Necks of Ffty Chckens Some tme between the hours of 2 and 4 on Sunday mornng fve men drove up tp the Whto Star Farm on Rahway avenue, entered the chcken coop and wrung the necks of ffty chckens and two ducks. The heads they left behnd but the fowl were taken off wth them n the car. A woman boarder at the farm told polce who nvestgated the case at daybreak that ahe had seen the men around the chcken coop but had been afrad to tell members of the famly, apparently belevng t the better part of valor not to rle the marauders by chasnp them awuy. Commttee Named For Defense Day Plans Townshp Body, At Busy Meetng, Takes..Stand Aganst Trolley Fare ncrease menace to health caused the ac! by flu. lchlth Bonn). t s sad Kahme w«s seen the day before fre movng goods of some knd the house. The gtemnn nt Green street ng of the ralroad wax the frst. see the blaze and he used whstle to summon help. Thomas Somers, on duty at hendqunrtcrs, heard the call for Ft* Ma*. Ranks 11 resulted "Hot Dug Row," the lne of refreshment stands that garnshes the entrance of the townshp on the north end of St. George avenue, was dealt what s consdered a he.vy blow Monday nght n the ntroducton of an ordnance provdng for a yearly j few mnutes elapsed between th«( the gntemnn dscovered the blaze the arrval of the fremen tne h was A roarng furnace and they e<l hard to keep the blaze spreadng to adjonng houses. Neghbors who wore awakened" the sound of the polce whstle afc that they heard a dull thud, AS of exploson, shortlv after the frst b" of the gasmans whstle amuun lcense fee of twenty-fve dollars and that the fre had been seen. Sev a strngent set of regulatons govern- \ of them heard both the whstle _ ng santaton. The purpose of the \ the thud but supposed the frst to 1 ordnance, as expressed by Attorney the roundsman sergeant locatn* 1 "~ j: " L " d the fat the ave of the lttle gradng. Butthe people realze, most of them do anyway, that the amount ox work my department can do a lmted by the appropraton made annually. What have tred to do and what wll contnue to do, f the voters see ft to re-elect me, wll......, be to make whatever appropraton n ha establshment." t U predcted ; tn opnon on the cause of the they gve me go as far as possble." Martn, who was nstructed to draw patrolman on the beat and t, s to "mnke t necessary for the \ the nose of backfre on tl prospectve owner of a stand to spend Ther frst ntmaton of... enough money n puttng t n proner [ rause was the blare of the fre slra% shape to make hm take a lttle prde No one n authorty has ventuhsf There wll be some sort of a demonstraton, n Wondbrdge on Defense Day, September 12, accordng to Guests Play Brdge At Copeland Home Mrs, Elmer Copeland, of Grove avenue, entertaned t three tables of brdge Frday afternoon. Mss Laura Brodhead receved a madera guest towel as frst prze. A vase as second prze was won by Mrs...1, Remers, plans broached by Mayor Neuberg; whle the thrd prze, a compact, was Monday nght and confrmed by the 1 awarded to Mrs. W. H. Warr, Mrs. townshp commttee. The States Assstant Attorney General, n a recent letter to the Mayor, apponted hm charman of Defense Day plans n ths townshp and asked hm to select a commttee to work wth hm. The commttee wll consst of S. Barron Brewster, John C. Wllams, W. Guy Weaver and Dr. B. W. Hoagland. Mr. Neuberg stated Monday nght that whatever demonstraton s de- John Kreger receved the consolaton prze, a telephone pad. Delcous refreshments weje served by the hostess. The gueats ncluded Mrs. Armand J. Lvandas, of East Orange; Mrs. F. F. Wllams, of Greenvlle, S. C; Mrs. Garrett Brndhead, of New Huven, Conn.; Mss Laura Brodhead, Mrs../. Krcger, Mrs. (, J. Remers, Mrs.,1. Copeland, Mrs. that the ordnance, should t pass at although the suspcon s fp ts hearng n two weeks, wll operate ] rumored that evdence seems to ] to reduce the number of stands along t o the fact that t was of ncen the nvenuc. orgn. There are no clues, howe The ordnance, as t s drawn, that throw lght on the dentty covers not only refreshment stands but garages, fllng statons, comfort the person or persons who may touched t off. rooms and all places that "cater to The facts that the house was the needs of motor vehcles passng through the townshp, or ther passengers." The. santary CHUSC wll make t necessary for each stand to have flush tolets connected* wth a sewer or wth an ndvdual septc tank. At places where no water supply s avalable to properly operate tolets a permt wll be refused. nasmuch as the summer s almost spent and, as Mayor Neube.ru put t, "complyng wth ths regulaton s ennt) and that there are no elec connectons n t leave as the other probable causes ncenda a spark fjon a locomotve, or chewng matches." The house st over ft hundred feet from the road and, an the fre seems to h started nsde and worked ts way and through the roof, the ral] spark theory s not gven ma credence. Kahme, who a sad to have gong to take stand owners some n New York Saturday nght and tme," the ordnance, should t pass, could not be located at hs wll rot be operatve untl the rtrst Sunday mornng, was seen enterng^-! of the year. Hoy, who put an end the house the day before the fre tf 1 ; to n debate on the provsons of the company wth a colored man. TM : Mll.11*.. Jo A L-L.fcxr-r 4 >. m A ^. j- thnk that all tope go o«somewhere and take a nap after mdnght." The Overland car wth whch the men had been workng n South Amboy also had been stolen. t s beng held by the polce there to awat the appearance of the owner. The alleged _ bandts knew somethng of the art of (j^rg were. j_ ^, prce, E. J. Fagan, startng cars wthout the swtch key, j o, n ^ HasBey, Charles Hutterman, for they had completed the gnton A ( ( t A Bressler, H, Boehm, Beneft For Parsh n Far Off Dakota Mrs. Leahy Gves Party For Funds To Help Sons Church cded upon wll not be an elaborate *-.» M " lpn j?,\? one nasmuch as t s hs desre to, Mlss Mltte Randolph. keep the expense down to a mnmum, A complant by Hoy that the newly rovsod rate (f fare of the trolley j company places an unreasonable j charge on persons travelng the short dstance between Fords and Perth Amboy developed the fact that Attorney Martn has wrtten to the Pub- A. M. Muckenfuss, Ms. C. Peck, Mrs. bll by callng for u vote, stated that par carred a trunk. The fre A. F. Randolph, Ms. W. H. Warr, he beleved the commttee would be succeeded n takng the trunk froh( backed n ts acton by resdents of; the burnng buldng and found thng th<- townshp. He, as well as others, t was empty. They also rescued f who suok 1, termed the refreshment three battered can that appeared stand nroblem a vexng one thut s have held some sort of explo»,_ growng lke a mushroom out of tll lqud such as gasolne or kerosene.^ Extendng James Street proporton to the needs of motorsta. "Fewer and better hot dog stands" seems to be the essence of the move. crcut by nsertng a pece of brass nto the keyhole of the nwtt-h. Master Dunne Celebrates Ffteenth Brthday James J. Dunne, Jr., son of Mr., and Mrs. James J. Dunne, of Greenstreet, entertaned a number of young frends on Saturday nght n honor of hs ffteenth brthday. Dancnc was enjoyed on the spacous porch,lght ed wth <ack o-lanterns, creatng a pretty scene to behold. Games wth humorous favors made the evenng Samuel Foster, Joseph Fle-ssner, George Sagendorf, Leo Murphy and Carl Brnkman. Each of these men wl endeavor to secure fve members fur the company. The next meetng wll be held Monday evenng at the offce of Sam Foster. Mast Pay *25 To Beat Wfe Chrs Peterson, aged 60, of Hopelawn, found out n Recorders Court, Monday, that t costs $25 when a man feels that he just must ndulge n pass most pleasantly. RVfresbmenU fstcat at hs wfes expense. Peter were Trved and the young folks de- sons bellgerent actons are allw^ he host many happy t<, have been the result of moonshne parted wshng the host many happy returns. vhskey. PRESDENTS PLATFORM CLEARLY SHOWN N SPEECH LAST NGHT The followng excerpts from Presdent Cooldges speech of acceptance last nght leave no doubt of hs atttude on the thef uwue* of the campagn. t wll be noted that he refraned from any utterance that could be construed as a reply to Davu promse to wage a campagn to dscredt hm. A resume of the ppeech appears on Page 2 of ths u»ue. Co««r0w*t OwmsrMr favor the Amercan system of ndvdual enterprue. and am opposed to any general extenson of government ownershp and control. Economy beleve not only n advocatng economy n publc expendture, but n.! pactcal applcaton and actual ac- TaultM bel««e n a reducton and reform of taxaton, and shall contnue my effort* n that drecton. TmnK l am n fnvor of potectk.l. Pew. awl War favor be Permanent Court and further lmtaton at trutwnu. am opposed to aggressve war. EuroM shall avod nvolvng ourutlvm n th«poltcal controverses of Europe, but shall do what can to encourage, Amercan ctzens and resource* lo assst n restorng Europe wth the sympathetc support of our government, A«rcalt«r««w4 Ud»rtrr " agrculture and ndustry on a sound bass of prosperty mad equalty. * C«n l DramHj f»*r l shall contnue to strve for the economc, Moral ad sprtual welfare of my country. lataratufaaal Cmmtmmtm When tac reparatons plan s n 1 «fcall 4**a t a«mrs. Peter Leahy, of upper Green street, asssted by her daughters and le Utltes Commsson protestng t the valdty of the new rate as ng to Woodbrdge> Townshp on the grounds that the company dd not serve notce, accordng to nw. n addton to ressng ths protest the attorney, actng for the townshp, wll, endeavor to secure another rate re- vson. apply 1!; Lackof Frontage Sad To Have Handcapped Center of Town t s understood that Kahme value the buldng at $3,000 and that carred nsurance n the amount $1,200. Popular Young Lady Des After Lngerng llness James street may be extended _rom School street through to 1earl street f an ordnance that the attor^ a number of frends arranged a card Jt a \ 1 K mf " u. lt t" 8 a petton of ney hlls bvvn nstructed to orepare t hh hld t h hom n / / Scrv " to h J? ve «atlcnlse9 meets wth popular approval. t a t hh hld t n hom n J Mss May Ponder dt-d at the home of her mother, Mrs. Robert Pender, Port Readng Fremen Have Over $400 For Playground^ The Port Readng Fre Compan n McVcars Lane, on Wednesday, that recently undertook the task afternoon* ufter a lngerng llness. Mss Pender was 22 year* old and rasng funds to equp the propo playground nt that place have ral,. t,...-. u^- ^...- r had been employed at the local tele-, over $400 to date. Part of the mo. c Servce to have franchses m(; ets w j tn popular approval. t a phone offce snce leavng school. wan realzed from three tag days g s sur- the end of the week and part Kd h d t f h..».... us u...,» u,.,.,.,,..,«, ullc l """- >"- "" «-» «meets wn nojumr apnva. n» pnone once snce leavng acn party whch was held at her home on of flv former Gray Bu 8 Lne cara, un(lcrstoo(1 that some of the property Besde* her mother, she,.,, ; «,. K_ Wednesday evenng for the beneft transferred to ther name was «ot ecessm. y f or the openng can be vved by four brothera, Harry, Kd- canvassne the resdents of the of the parah of. her son, Father. acted upon by the commttee Monday 1)0Ugnt but that other land must be Wllam Leahy, of Qunn, South Dakota. There were about thrty-fve tablea for cards and games, and a number of non-players. The przes were awarded as follows: Mss K. McNamara, slk atockngs; Mrs. A. E. Pearse, dole; MrB. James Murray, boudor lamp; Mrs. Charles Farr, tea aet; Mss Rose Nash, fern; Mrs. Andrew Gerjy, towel; Mrs. Brooks, glasses; Mrs. Bauman, marmalade far; J. Canfeld, slk shrt; Mrs. Oeegan, cracker and cheese dsh; Arthur Ges, handkerchefs; Mrs. Draper, pyrex dsh; Junor Dunne,.towel; George Mullen, towel; Mss E. McNamara, table ; condemned. The cost of buyng the property and openng the Btreet wll who may, t H thought, endeavor to be bnl. ne by a3se ssnent on property compromse n an effort to tsecure a ^(.fted. A date for a hearng wll lower fare for trolley patrons wthn, hl, set U3 aoony a3 tjj e ordnance s the townshp. The fve buses on ^troduccd. whch the trolley dompany wants The (] c. a o f openng- up a street transfer! of franchse are part of the pat. al ] e w,th Man street between School and Pearl streets s not» new one. t has been consdered for gome tme as a means of at once rddng the town of the swamn that les next to the old lvery stable and openng trant p equpment recently purchased by Publc Servce and oderate on the lne between New Brunswck and Perth Amboy, through FordB. ndvdual efforts of sxty old commuters have falod to move the Pennup a larce tract of land there that sylvana Ralroad to make Wood- haa to ( ate been unavalable for brdge a stop for the Long Branch j bmdmr purposes by reason of havng express that passes through here at \ jt sx oclock n the evenng, McElroy r pp slreet j ron tage. Accordng to statements made at towe; M, rt tu,u...,, w» cloth; Mrs. Gray, handkerchef; Mrs. ntroduced a moton nstructng thf Mnduynghts meetnkof the"com ward and Joseph Pender, of Scwaren, and "Robert Pender, of ay. Helen Wll* * Champon Ford, beads; Mru. O. S. Dungan, c er js to formally request the ralroad glasses; Mrs, Kelly^ coffee; Mssto grant local commuters the added " " servce. The latter has been ds-j Grace Sullvan, beads; Mrs. E. W. Pollock, salt and pepper shakers; Mr. Grady, slppers; Mrs. Carroll, alk socks; Ms* Rose Brd, handkerchefs; Mrs. P. Murphy, glasses; Mrs. Canfeld, te; Mrs. J. Leahy, beads; Mrs. R. Grace, mayonnase bowl; Mrs. R. Stack, towel; Mss Gertrude Marsh, mttee owners of most of the property that wll be affected by the openng are n favor of the move patched but no reply has been re-1 nusmue h as t would ncrease the ceved., vn ue o f ther property. A lne on At the rouest of Road Supervsor thl, true sentment wll be found out Blum, who stated that the gas com- > t th(, n.arng. panys delay n completng the nstallaton of a man n Freeman street s holdng up needed repars to the electrc curler; P. L, Ryan, towel; street, the clerk was nstructed t Mss Patten, towel; Mrs. P. H. Gal-! notfy the company to complete thf lagher, garters; M»s Marguerte Me-1 worjt and to remove a number of Qurk, glabnea; Mss Helan Dolan, exceaft lengths of ppe from the gutbook- Ms» Elzabeth Ggan, percola- ters. Blum charged that the presence tor; Mss Helen Kelly, scarf; Mas. of the ppe n the gutters had ob- 1 James Dolan, pendant; M»s Agnes atructed the flow of ran water. Mrs. Chester Peck Hostess At Brdge Last Saturday Dungan Makes Lowest Bd On Keasbey Wa Mrs. Chester Peck, of Tsdale Place, entertaned at brdge on Saturday afternoon ut her home. Beautful prnes were awarded to the Green garters; Mrs. Serey, book; Hoy prom«d the commttee that wnners. The hgher scorer for the Mrs Qunlan, towel; Peter Leahy, gomethng defnte n the matter of afternoon were: Mrs. Henry W. von wrtng paper; Andrew Leahy, apron; j repars for Kng Georges Post Road Bremen, Mas Uura Wodhead, Mm» J. Grausam, frut: Mss V. Sandbeck, frut; Charles McMahon, of Bre, Pa., won the strng of pearls, and Mrs. J. Galvn, the non-players pre,» fern. wll have been accomplshed by the 1 MUe Randolph and Mrs. Armand next meetng of the commttee. At yvandas. Followng the card play- Senator Edge Vsts Here Whle Town Fathers Meet Whle the townshp commttee was sesson Monday ngbt Senator Wad t an hour lkg the same tme he stated that he dd hot blame ctzens of the townshp for crtczng the delay n puttng the road n shape. The State runed the roa.d two years a«p when t used t as a detour for all snore traffc. Second readng on Park avenue sewer (Avenel) ordnance wll be held on August 25. A Glass o* Buttermlk a Day Keep* ng refreshments were served. Those present were: Mrs, Armand Lvandas, of East Orange; Mrs. G. F. Wllams, of Gr««nvll«, South Carolna: Mrs. JoBeph Copeland, MrB. Elmer Copeland, Mss ^aura Brodhead, Mm. Clarence M. Lddle, Mss Helen Pfeffer, Mm. Asher Randolph. Mss Mtte Randolph, Mrs. H " Bremen and M«- Warren of Woodbrldao. Owen S. Dungans bd on ns ng a water lne n Keasbey av was one of the features of MOD nghts meetng of the townshp mttee for ha bd of $ only a lttle more than half amount for whch Hansen & Jen hgh bddura, had offered to do work. Records show that t bas J years snce smlar dscrepancy bds for mprovements has appea The othc^ bds, whch were all abovu the low fgure, were: Han & Jenav, $l,12!t.72; Peter Pet $l,02m.x0; Wllam Rodner, Fq $.MHl.:!0. Dungan was awarded contract. On moton by Conmltteman sun, barles Pfeffer was appon nspector on the job. M».s Wlls, product of sunny alforna and dol of Amercan \pvl hool, ychteday cume through tt the semll num of thu natunml womens lujnjjonshp tenns Uunument, hcng played at Forest rlls, by beatnjf MH. Maron Zndestcn Jessup ut f, 6 1!. Mss Wlls. Mss Brow n, Mss t^leanur GOBS and Mrs. Molla Malory wll fght t out ths afturnoo to select the par that wll meet n the fnals. Thu young (ulfornan, whose pcture s shown above,» favored to agan wn the Funeral For Mrs. ODonnell Held Here Last Thurs BJf. van jjfckan, ttlt. Helens ablty to f suppress any show of emoton at ether defeat or vctory m both pullng and delgtful to tenns fans who have dubbed her Lttle Poker Pace." Trjr.owr bot- The funeral servces for Sopha Beckmun ODonnell, 23. dd, wfe of Joseph ODannell, of toret, were held from the home of < parents, Mr. and Mrs. Olaf Beek of Amboy avenue, Woodbnulge, Thursday afternoon, at 2:80 ocl Mrs. ODonnell ded last Mont from a bref llness, and s survtv by her 1 husband and nfant daughtj and her uarents, Mr. and Mrs. C Btckman, qf Amboy avenue, and oral ssters. Try our Purtan Buttermlk, > ted, qt. 10c, The beat and elm Health nsurance, BUnenwd «l.( stetn. r«>, P«rto Amboy 1 "",Adv, "-; :,,..,

2 PAGE TWO ftuday, AUGUST 18, 1024 NCELY THAT THE HOURS OF DAWN. A HOME. AH0 A WFE, A (-HLD WTH A SfllE, AL MELPTOMAkE LFE ftauy UORTH WHM Th my home. Youve mssed a lot f \"Uvc never sal these words for then 1 arc none sweeter. th. The n! of lfe, matt! mv w found n luppy the (Kvellllf we We labor, we gh\ hlt pear mnft joy, 110 ; we ruam, s uttcnted lfe n buld urn! own. strve, ur we >trur- C nlllely lwllts US there, (tn nlan servce, comprsng many L harmnp au dstnctve dcjf-, wll enable- you to buld wthout recpts. ll m us today. us us WOODBRDGE LUMBER COMPANY VOOOBRDGZ X Mary Succeeds t on Man Street By LAURA MLLER c, ft. by l n n Wlll*r BEAUTY MPORTED Mnlr Street s stupll Man Ntreet n hlltd. Man Street drves out ymtl :>tul Joy and vson. Sn sy< n sub- unnc! the creator of now fnmous h..ok. So say the grls who try to PH- t cape from humdrum lves hy escapng to tfe cty, encl fr«n her p«rtlculnr gray crnpr of her rhpc-lany hatqful Mnln Street sort of tmvn, - l>own n Kentucky them Ore Home folk who reverse th" process. Humdrum grny lve* there? Yes, ndeed Escape both wl*e mll necessary f the Kentucky mountnlu folk are to grow nto Amerlnn wth ther far chance lt lfe, lberty nnd pursut of happn Absolutely. Urge em all to cneve tt Lousvlle, St. Lools or Qhl-,111.-1,? Hy ro npssl Lets brng n- ^cnl, the. bent thst Any lsce has dscovered to these mountans snd mountan people So say the nterested folks down there n Kentucky. Tlls story s of s gracous wuntn JT what Rhe calls her "lfes sunset Speech That Notfed Cooldge Accepts Wth Confdence, Cooldge Of Selecton Speechln Full As Delvered Last Nght Lays Stress On Lack Of Dscord Mas Abdng Fath n Judgment of People On Accomplshment* n Conventon That Selected Hm And Purposes; Sepks Peace and Thrft Mr. Prpndent: n conformty wth lonfr-estflhlshed "d approved custom we are assembled here aa a commt tee representng the States, T-rrto you of your nomnaton nn June] the poltcal campagn hs speech acceptng the nomnaton " " as Presdent offend hm by the Republcan party, and delvered n Washngton last nght, and lstened to by hundreds of local rado fans. ( 12th, last, by the Republcan Natonal Conventon assembled at Cleveland, for the offce of rcftdent of the Republc for the term begnnng March 4, The fact that nne of the members of olr Jommttw l\ere present are women afford? a pleadng remnder of the lvely nterest that the women of the countrv have tuken n your nomnaton nd of the ncreasng partcpaton of the better half of manknd n poltcal affars and actvtes. The members of our Commttee not nnly apprecate the honor of be- \ng selected to thus formally notfy you of your nomnaton as the canddate of the Republcan Party for the hghest offce n the gft of the Amercan neople, but t affords us real perl.».l. wth wonderful real lghts out ] p,, asure to be prvlertd to recall the over the mountans to the e«ht and! j ( j oa an(j nsprng crcumstances and the hlne trass of the north. There condtons under whch you were ure equrlly hgh colors n the VCH of culled und uhomon for natonal lender- JJ5 Mountan hnyn. who range from shp. To be selected by the representares of a great hstorc party as and only choce for the ffteen to thrty rve yearn of age. and j from the A 0 to the eghth grnde ve certfcate. t s poneer work. No > rs To Protect Samoa The pussesslon of Amercan Snraoa fc luaranteed to the nntlveg forever ky tha government of the Unted States. Opum, alcohvl, patent raedl- *nes and conmerclnllzrl drugs lre prohbt ml and m.llrnl MVH- S suppled free. Sster /O woman has ever lved wth thphe boys, and lve «very thrlllln«lfe at old well-known Rprea collpge." Perhaps one must have known.lmn DnkH (JM of Boston and New York, nakazlne wrter and one-tme colle.jp lcan, perknnlly, to sense how much (harm nnd rlchnew of fne erperenee she n contrbutng to the "tlrllllnt," PHK lfe of erea on the clpt of le tnuntaln country. hfth offce of the Presdency a ndeed a dstngushed honor, but such selecton hag a pecuhtrr sgnfcance an dgnty when, as n your case, the acton of the conventon s n the nature of a fatfcaton of the choce of the people freely and emphatcally expressed n the manner approved by law and custom, n every quarter of the Republc, The choce thus made by the peo pe was consummated wth enthus-! asm n a conventon, whch wll lonp esl concluson* of our deals of freedom Moreover, we beleve they contrbute to ttr materal welfare. We oppose the nrtlndl Kuppnrtf. nf prltllose nt»l tunopoly bwrue they are hoth nnjnt and uneconomc, They nre m>t rlnht. They h> not work." The Farm Stuaton. lte\.\unu- the sltntlun nf the farmer, (le Pre>. cnt Mnld rtutt one nf the flf>t thouhts n UK! WHS for the. relle! nl revval nf agrculture as n fudnnenttl ndustry, nnd touched upon the credts of between three and f»nr hunlrel mllon dollars extended through the War Fnance corporaton. _,,, no addtonal $."O,!Mlo,nOO provded f LOOldge n the frst great speech of the relef of the cnttle ndustry, an the formaton nf a $10,000,000 corpora thn n the.sprng whch, t wns estl mnfpn, can furnsh $100,000,000 for dl Wants Opportunty For AM, No Government Monopoles, ndependent But Helpful Foregn Polcy No sngle quest on vtal to the people of the Unted States was dodged by Pr> AVhnt every woman may kqw, Mss be remembered for the splendd char " feela, n that no Mnln Street s nctur of ts membershp, the fne solated for the Jole da vlvre. an s P r t of patrjotjc purpose whch pyrtoo of lvng, to cnn^ln.that many of the good communty organzaton. 1 ) are pager to be of servce, and that all they luck s a hearty nvtaton from Bne one who wuntn more of the beauty of- lfe mported nto her town and who wll get her fellow Ctzens to help dstrbute M. Say " Baw your advertsement n t helps you, t helps them, t help9 your paper. A Classfed Adv. Wll Sell t J&OWf good whch marked ts delberatons, and the Bncere harmony and perfect decorum whch characterzed ts proceedngs. n such a gatherng of patrotc men and women, consecrated to the hghest deals of publc servce, free from the selfsh rvalry of personal ambton, the clash of conflctng opnons, vou were gven your commsson of leadershp, under condtons that left no wounds to heal or dfferences to compromse, that held no tant of self-seekng or of questonable endorsement and support. The platform adopted at Cleveland by practcally unanmous vote, n frank and courageous fashon declares the party fath and outlnes the party purpose, and we antcpate wth pleasure and confdence your nternretaton of that fath and purpose as appled to present problems and condtons. After outlnng the, ul foundaton ot the party system f government. the Presdent sad: "urly ments poltcal co-operaton, nut s an end n tself, but a means, nn nstrument of government, f founded upon n great moral prncple and llrected wth scrupulous regard for ts ntegrty, t cannot fall to sweep onwnrd and upward, advancng alwavs steadly anl surely, a mghty constructve force, a glorous b«arer of prjrew. "That s what the Republcan party nlwnys has been and s tnby. Tn full fauh that such t wll contnue to be, (fltprv "conscous of the K honor t confers and the responsblty t mposes, accept ts nomnaton for Presdent of the Unte. Sutes. "n the hstory of mr country s recorded the publc servces rendered by our party for more thnn the threeyears. That s secure. pass on to the recent past and the present." Progrsss of Four Yean. The Presdent ponted out the condton of the naton n March, 1021, when the Republcan* resumed the rens of government ufter a lapse of eght years. Though more than two years had passed snce the armstce, the naton was stll techncally n s state of war. No dplomatc relatons msled wth Turkey, freecp, Russa, Colomba or Mexco, the Far East T WAS awfully popular last wnter t * Almost every nght one of the boys would drop n to see me. And when the grls wanted to meet BOmewhere, theyd say, Lets make t at Sues. The truth s that our new Thatcher Round Boler keeps our bg lvng room so warm and comfortable that folks just naturally lke to come around. Take t from me, t adds a lot to a grla popularty f her home s cozy." Comtrvatotly rettd Thacbtr Rtvnd Bolers sttam or hot wattt /xru trangular revolvng[rates whch crush and dpte o/clnert and savt on. Wrtt for frtt booklet : Helpful Hnts on Heatng. " THATCHER HEATERS GRANGES sons." Because of the war, "a reck less extravagance had come to charneterlxe the admnstraton of publc affar* Add was all too prevalent n prvate lfe." The natonal debt had rsen to the staggerng total of $24, ,000, more than $7,000,000,000 of t n short-tme oblgatons wthout provson for payment. Government txndb were heluw par. Lcl WHT taxes burdened the people. mmoblsaton and lqudaton were ncomplete. Huge ralroad accounts remaned unsettled. Transportaton was crppled,. Unlqudated foregn debts amounted to $11,000,000,000. Banks were flled wth frozen assets. nterest wus hgh, captal scarce, and fnancal dstress acute. About 5,000,000 were wthout employment. No adequate provson had been made for relevng dsabled veterans and thetr dependents. The great powernment wll fal unless Amerca be kept Amercan." Net the Presdent denlt wth the tarff. "By means of a protectve tarff," he sad, **we have saved Amercan agrculture, labor, and ndustry frotn the menace of havng ther great home market destroyed through the dumpng upon t of a flood of foregn products. Under ths wne polcy we saw an economc revval, and our people BB a whole, n marked dstncton from the sufferers from the fnancal dstress and depresson of other lands, have come nto «n era of prosperty and plenty. As a source of revenue the tarff surpassed all epertntlons n producng an annual return of the unprecedented sum of about SB A fscal polcy whch ] places a large and much needed revenue n the publc treasfry, whle stmulatng bnalness to a condton of aboundng prosperty, defends tself aganst any crtcsm. ts merts are demonstrated by ts results. We have protected our own nhabtants from the economc dsaster of an nvason of too many foregn people or too 1 much foregn merchandse." Th* Washngton Conference. Next the acceptance speech dealt wth the Washngton conference whereby an end wa* put to the run- Compettve naval armaments nf W^tmtrartaorasMft The country awats wth lvely n- ers contnued to burden ther peoples uwrnl THATCHER FURNACE COMPANY M*kmo(OOODHe*»n>nJRmngcatacc 1H5O m THATCHER BULDNG Wclrm DhnlaT Room* ST. FRANCS STREET Ml N. CUrk St. NBWARK, NEW JERSEY Chlcgo.UL SELN LUNCH HOUSE Lncoln Hghway, seln, N. J. LUNCHEON SERVED. REFRESHMENTS. All knds of Soft Drnks. Musc and, Rado Concert* Also Furnuhed. OPERATORS WANTED On Sngle and Double Needle Machnes; steady work; good pay Apply Custom Shrt Co. Avenel, N. J. terest your chartng of the party course, for you apeak by authorty on behalf of a p-eat party wth a matchless record of fathful adherence to sound prncples and of prompt and honest fulfllment of platform pledges. Armed wth ths hgh and honorable commsson you speak from the wde experence of long and honorable partcpaton n mportant publc affars and a personal record of unwaverntr adherence to the hehest deals of party fath and publc servce. These are the elements whch justfy fath and confdence n poltcal announcements and lackng whch, declaratons, pledges and promses have slght clam to acceptance or consderaton. Your nomnaxon and electon as Vce-Presdent four years ago was n recognton of publc servces of the hghest character and value, and the modesty, farr ss and good judgment wth whch you dscharged the mportant dutes of that offce won wde and general commendaton and approval. Called suddenly to the Presdental offce you weresoon confronted wth problems calculated to test to the utmost your courage, fdelty and judgment. You brought to the consderaton ef these, mportant questons the splendd qualtes of mnd and heart and conscence whch have ever wuded and controlled your prvate lfe and publc servce, and n ther settlement strengthened and confrmed the publc fath n your emnent ftness for the vast responsbltes of the Presdency. Mr. Presdent, the call to contnued leadershp and servce whch. we brng has come to you from the offefal representatves pf the party under whose standards ^ou have so long rendered deal publc /Servce. We beleve t has the approval and wll receve the support of vast numbers of rght-thnkng people, wthout reguard to f>arty, who, recognzng your unselfsh devoton to the publc welfare, your steadfast courage and unquestoned honesty of purpose, have gven you ther confdence, n a measure rare f not unprecedented n our recefll hstory.! The Amercan people know that ths confdence ( g well deserved. t has the sound 1 and substantal bass of your futh n Amercan prncples and nsttutons, your confdence n the wll md capacty of the Aroarc*n people to solve all ther problems n harmony wth our consttutonal scjeme and plan of government. (t rests upon your lvely nterest n and your sympathetc atttude toward every ouestton and problem of the day and your desre to be helpful n securng ther permanent and satsfactory settlement, but most of all t s basad upon the knowledge that n all thngs your sngle purpose g that of servng the publc nterest, unmndful of the effect upon your personal or poltcal fortune. We recall wth pflde and grattude 1 our great party leaders of the past, und we glory n the natonal and worldwde recognton of ther vrtues and ther statesmanshp. We re-cognze n you, Mr. Presdent, a worthy successor of these great leaders an her to all ther h(fh qualtes. Under your leadershp we look confdently forward to» contnued opportunty for servce to the honor of the republc and the progress and prosperty, of ts people. by buldng compettve armmnents An avalanche of war-worn people anl cheapened merchandse mpended upon Amerca from foregn lands, the Presdent ponted out. Turnng tu the settlement of these vast problems snce the start nf the Republcan regme, the Presdent ponted out that trentles of world-wde mportance have been ratfed wth Germany, Austra, Hungary, Colomba and Mexco, tlmt 42 other treates have met wth the approval of the senate, whle 6 stll a«alt acton. Frendly ntercourse wth freece and Turkey has been resumed. Peace and Amercan rghts have been assured n the Far East and the Pacfc, Turnng to fnance, the Presdent called attenton to the enactment of the budget system, and the resultant tremendous savngs. "For the fscal year endng June 30, 1021," Presdent Coolldge sad, "our expendtures were $5,538,000,000 and our surplus was For the year Just closed our expendtures were 18, ,000, and our surplus exceeded $500,000,000. Ths was a reducton n the annual cost of government of 12,041,000,000. The publc debt now stands at about 121,250,000,000, whch s a reducton n three years of about $2,750,000,000 and means an annual savng n nterest of more than $120,- 000,000. The $7,000,000,000 of short- J tme oblgatons have all been quetly refunded or pad. The nternal reve-! nue taxes have beep reduced twce, and many of them repealed, ao that durng the present fscal year the tax recepts show a savng to the people of approxmately $6,000,000 a day corapsrea wth One government bond has sold well over 10B." The Presdent ponted out that more whch has never been fully realzed hy the people D general, Mr. Coolldge declared. Turnng to the "honest government" BSU*, Presdent Coolldge ponted out bluntly that n all hs studes of poltcal hstory he could not recall an admlntsratlon whch was desrous ot a dshonest government that, to check extravagance, ntroduced a budget system, cut taxes, purged pay rolls, made enormous reductons n the publc debt and lad frmer foundatons for the peace of the world. \ Presdent Coolldge declared he favored the system of prvate Amercan enterprse and was opposed to the extenson of government ownershp and control; that he beleved n economy n publc expendtures and the practcal applcaton of the tehory; that he beleved n tnx reducton and tax reform; that he favored protecton. Favors Permanent Court. " favor the permanent court nnd further lmtaton of armaments," the Presdent sad. " am opposed to aggressve war. shall avod nvolvng ; uurselves n the poltcal controverses of Europe, but shall do what can to encourage Amercan ctzens and resources to assst n restorng Europe, wth the sympathetc support of our government. want agrculture and ndustry on a sound babts of prosperty and equalty. shall contnue to strve for the economc, moral and sprtual welfare of my country. Amercan cltl zenswlll decde n the comng electon whether these prncples shall have ther approval and support. "The domestc ffulrs of our country appear to me to be by far the chef concern. From ths source comes our ; Htrength, The home market consumes nearly all our producton. Wthn our own boundares wll he determned to u very large degree the economc wel- 1 fare and the moral worth of the Amerl- 1 can people. These are plan facts, but there ure others equally plan." Reaffrmng hs opposton to enversfcaton and relef n the Northwest. He told of the actvtes of the ntermedate credt banks, drectly and ndrectly assstng 500,000 farmers. The Presdent commented on the present upturn of prces for agrcultural producta, "The government rendered a great deal of assstance," he sad, "and prvate enterprse co-operated, but the fundamental remedy was provded, as t always must he provded, not ao much through the enactment of legslatve laws n through the workng out of economc lawn. Became the farmers have thoroughly renlled ths, they have nn the whnle opposed prce fxng by legslaton. Whle mantanng that souml poston, they have seen a partal relef c»me n a natural way, an t wns hound to come. "We now need n agrculture more organzaton, co-operaton, and dversfcaton. The farmer should have the beneft of legslaton provdng for flood control and development of nland waterways, better navgaton east and south from the (rrat Luke*, reclamaton, nnd especally relef for those who cannot meet ther payments on rrgaton projects. But the njaln problem s marketng. Cn-operatlve effort, reorganzaton of the freght-rate structure, good hunlness, and good wages n manufacturng, and the settlement of European affars wll all help to provde better market condtons. """"WfHUthllruB. platform recn rnlr.hf"*psw that agrculture should be nn a bass av, f»r ttuthon and all els* tb«ttnjht of justce. For Economcal Campagn. "Kconomy nbnuld bt practce,! rmlonsly n the condurt>«f n n l campnlgn know t!r 1lff>ult tu n,. tlngulflh between real servce to t, P people and mere wnmefulnea. Ccm, have ncrenwd by doublng of the <>o r torste, renderng clos«calculaton m possble. "Nevertheless, can perceve nn r0,. Hon why the budget system should, be benefcal n a campagn, an t, a, proved to be n government. t a \ a he tented hy our commttee. " would make clearly and defntely one other requrement, that no n,n vldual, or group of ndvduals, tuaj expect any governmental favors n re turn tgr party tssltnnce. Whatever anyone gves must be gven fur t,e common good, or not at all. (.ontrttm. tlons csn be receved on no other hnsn "For the Bret tme after havng up! portunlty fully to orgsnle. the women of the naton are brngng the HAW force whch they represent drectly to b*ar on our poltcal affars. k now that the nfluence of womanhood wn guard the home, whch s the ctadel -,; the nmlon. know t wll be a prot»r. tor of chldhood. know t wll be on the sde of humanty/ welcome t at a great nstrument of mercy and a mghty ngency of pence. want every woman to vote. "The Consttuton s the sole source and guaranty of natonal freedom. Wo beleve that the safest place to dec nr,, and nterpret the Consttuton whch the people have made s n the Su preme court of the Unted States. "Under our nsttutons there s nn lmtaton on the aspratons a nmh er mny have for her chldren. That HfM+m f H"** * oontlnue. Ths con try would not be ft land of opportunty, Amerca would not be Amerca. f thw people were shackled wth government monopoles. "Our country has adopted pmlnm tlon and provded by legslaton for ts enforcement. t s the duty of t!.> ctzen to observe the law, arn! nduty of the Executve to enforce. \ propose to do my duty as nest can.""" For Chld Labor Amendment. "Our dfferent States have hal (][f. of economc equalty wth otfer ndustres. Ths s easy to any, hut the farmers themselves and ther advsers have never been able to gree nn n plan to provde t hy law. Now that nature and economc law have gven some temporary relef, propose, therefore, to appoat a commttee to nvestgate and report monstres to the congress n December that may help secure ths result whch we all desre. 1 want proftable agrculture establshed permanently. want to see the dollar of the farmer always purchase as much as any other dollar. "Under the polcy of protecton and restrctve mmgraton,* 1 he asserted, "no deflaton of wages has occurred. Whle the cost of lvng fns gone down, wages have advanced. The 12- hour (lly nnd the seven-day week hnve pructlcally been abolshed, The unnterrupted operaton of publc utltes wth mutually satsfactory and legally establshed methods of adjustng labor questons Juve been sought. Collectve barganng ntul voluntary arbtraton have been encouraged. Republcan rule has rased the wage earner to a hgher stumlard than he ever occuped before anywhere n the world." - Reducton of Expenses, Presdent Coolldge then ponted out that the people of the country, because of the war have had to recreate nearly one-ffth of our natonal resources. We can make up the loss, he sad, only by savng part of what we produce each day. "t s for that reason." he contnued, "that the present admnstraton has nude every possble effort to cut down the expenses of government. The expenses of the government roach everybody. Taxes take from everyone a part of hs earnngs, and force everyone to work for a certan part of hs tme for the government. "When we come to realze that the yearly expenses of all the governments trance nto the League of Natons as a n ths country have reached the stusurrender of ndependence, the Presldena favored becomng a member uf the permanent Court of nternatonal Justce, "as pence means fundamentally a regn of luw," Entrance nto the so-called World court "woulddo much n ndcate our determnaton to re-, stran the rule of force and soldfy [ and sustan the rule of reason umong natons," Mr. Coolldge sad. Amerca Helps Europe. The Presdent revewed the dlftlcul tes of Kurope and the unavalng ef- forts to fnd a way out untl the Amercan plan, proposed n 1922, was fnally than 40 per cent of the debt due us j ndopted, under whch the reparatons from foregn natons has been llqudat- DO NOT TAKE ANY CHANCES The servces of ths Bankng House has by U effcency devel- nternatonal Buanew. STEAMSHP TCKJSTS TO FtOt A b P4&T8 OF THE WOHU). Money forwarded to " b k r check. Carous Fsh There la a curlou* nsh called the remora, whch «one of ttpe lazest crlauren n the world. On the top of U bead s n powerful sucker, by weans ot whch t attache* tself to the und«r«ld«of oler 0*u, or even of bo*t«,» thu tr H ed, provdng funds for lqudatng about $13,000,000,000 of the natonal debt durng a 62-year term. "The fnances of ths naton have been managed wth a genus and a success unmatched snce the days of Hamlton," Mr. Coolldge declared. "A great revval of ndustry took place, whch s spreadng to agrculture. Complant of unemployment has ceased, wages have ncreased. Captal has become plentful at a low rate of nterest," Mr. Coolldge declared, "and the banks of our country, as a whole, show a hgh percentage of lqud assets." Speakng of the generous law* passed to releve dsabled veterans, Che Presdent sad that more than 71,- 000 have been rehabltated, 38,000 of whom are earnng more than they dd before the war. Compensaton s beng pad at the rate of about $100,- 000,000 a year, soon to be ncreased by $80,000,000 more, $40,000,000 have been provded for hosptal facltes, whch are open to veterans of al Amercan wars. "No government," the Presdent declared, "ever provded so generously fur those dsabled by servce la tme of war." Touchng Ue excluson law and restrcted mmgraton generally, the Presdent sad: "testrtcted mmgraton U not an offeuslve but a purely defensve acton. t s not adopted n crtcsm of others n the slghtest degree, but Kolnly for the purpose of protectng ourselves. We cast no aspersjons oo soy race or,creed, bat we commsson apponted a commttee of experts, whose three.amercan members ncluded Gen, Charles O. Duwes, the Presdents runnng mate on the Hepubllean tcket. The appontment of General Dawes us charman and the report wljlch has net worldwde approbaton were ponted out. When the reparatons plan s n operaton, the Presdent sad, le would consder t tme to approach the great powers wtl the proponul for another conference to lmt armaments stll further und devse plans fur the cudltcttlon uf tntermtlnml lw. " trust that never agan wll the uume of ths naton be called on to urrtflce ther loved ones to the terrble sourge of war," Presdent Cooldge sad. Touchng Latn Amerca, the Presdent sad that we have constantly strven t" ennje to more complete tll derstsnrtjngs wth those natons. He rected the help gven Mexco to aver domestc volence there, and the ndcaton) of a pulley of makng t worth whle for a< government to conduct t self BO UB to mert recognton, He ponted to the wrtten agreement wth Mex «o to negotate a treaty of aalty and commerce such as has not lje*u n exstence snce qual Opportuntes for All, Of dscrmnaton or all knds. Presdent Coolldge sad: "Ths s one country ; we Are oue people unted by common nterests. There should be. no favortes and no outcasts; no race or relgous prejudces n the r^vernment. Amerca opposes specal prt.acfe for anbd anl favors nqut pendous sum of about $7,500,000,000, we get some dea of what ths means. Of ths amount about $H,500,000,XW s needed by the natonal government, and the remander by local governments. Such a sum s dffcult to comprehend. t represents all the pay of 5.0U0.000 wage earners recevng $5 a day, workng 300 days n the year. f the government should ald on $100,- 000,000 of expense, t would represent four days *nore wcrj of these wage earners. These are smne of the reasons why want to cut down publc expense. : "Hecausc nf my belef n these prln 1 clples, fnrnr economy that (he taxes of everybody may be reduced. Much has already been done, The bll whch sgned wll save (he people about $1,000,00(1 each rtny. want further tax reducton and mure tax reform. The rasng of the revenue requred to Qonduct our government n ntmately connected wth our economc welfare. f t s dune by wse and Just laws, the burden wll be most easly borne. But f the method of taxaton s nut sound dsaster wll follow, reachng even to fnancal panc, Our frst thougtl should be to mantan unmpared the actvty- of agrculture and ndustry That tax n theoretcally best whch nterferes least wth busness. Asks Just Taxaton. "Or^ty about 3,500,000 people pay drect ncome taxes, The remander pay, but pay ndrectly, n the cost of all purchases, from a par of shoes to a ralroad tcket, Ths country has at least 107,000,000 of these ndrect taxpayers. am not dsturbed about the effect on a few thousand people wth Urge ncomes because they have to pay tgh surtaxes. They can take care of themselves, whatever happens, as the rlclj always can. What concerns mt s the ndrect effect of hgh surtaxes on all the rest of,the poente, Ut us always renetpber the poor. Whatever cry the demagogue may make about hs abulty to tax the rch, at th«end of the year t wll always be found tha the people as t whole have pad the tae*. We should, therefore, have a system of taxaton under whch the people- as a wjjole sre most lkely to be PHMWevous. Our country chld labor. The congress should have authorty to provde ;1 unform law applcable to the whoh naton whch wll protect chlldh<vv. Our country ennnot afford to let anyone lve off the earnngs of ts youth of tender years. Ther places nre nut n the factory, but n the school, thut the men and women of tomorrow tn:y rench R Tlgher state ot exstence ml the naton a hgher standard of ctzenshp. " " am n favor of natonal defense. not merely as an abstract state of mnd, but as a concrete mode of acton. favor not merely talkng about t, but dong somethng about t. do not want the safety of my country tu he mperled n ts domestc or foregn relatons by any falure to t,. ready to preserve order or re[»>l at tack. Hut propose to work fur voluntary observance of law und mutual covennnts of peace. Common Sens* Gr«atet Asset. "We nre lkely to hear Rrent deal of dscusson about lberal thought and progressve acton. t s well fur the country to have lberalty n thought am-progress n acton, hut ts grpatest asset s common sense. n the commonplace thngs of lfe les He strength of the naton. t s not" n brllllcnt conceptons and strokes.f genus that we shall fnd the" chef re llance of our country, but n the lon,,.. n the school, and n relgon. AHHT lea wll contnue to defend thc=o shrnes. Every fevll force that <n-u to desecrate or destroy them wll (n. that a Hgher Power has OHOH-C! the people wth an nherent sprt nf resstance. The people know the dfference between pretense and rellt.r They want to be told the truth. Th,y want to be trusted. They want t chance to work out ther own matsral and sprtual salvaton. The people want a government of coaum sense. ^ # "These, Mr* Charman, are Rnfle >{ the belefs whch hold, some of the prncples whch propose to support. Hecause am convnced that they.ar* true, because am satsfed thnt th.y are nonr<l, submt them wth a.t> 11:;-, fulth to the Judgment ot the Amerca people." WEEKLY MENU SUGGESTONS There ure no more stmulatng.»;>! petllnf and blood purfyng substances grown than the early sprng greens. Every famly, young and nh should ndulge an freely as possble-. Spnach, water cv. ss, dandelons, mu+ tard, pepper grasp, and many "f ltl8 weeds make mos: wholesome eatng SUNDAY Brc*kf««t: Qrlddle cake* maple srup. Dlhntr: Lamb chepa, w*t*r cress. Supper: Mlk to»t. MONDAY Breakfast: W»«le»- D n ner: Asparagus wth crumbs. Supper: Macaron and cheese. TUE8DAY Breakfast: Buttortd toast, poached eggs. Dnner: Rhubarb and rasn pe. Supper: Bkng powder bscut., WEDNESDAY Breakfast: Orange marmalade. Dnner: Baked cabbage. Supper: Creamed potatoes, dred beef THURSDAY Breakfast: Bacon ard eggs. Dnner: Stuffed pepper* Supper; 8trtwb«rrl«s, cream. FRDAY Breakfast: Omelet Dn ner; Fred fsh. Supper: Gngerbread, apple sauce. SATURDAY Breakfast: Dough nut*,! coffee. Dnner! Sparerlb* and eauer krsut. Supper: Parker hou«rolls. Asparagus Wlth^rumbe. Bolt a bunch of asparagus. P uf * on a platter. n e saucepan put four UhlMpoonful* of butter «nd otu-hull cupful of f»eeh bread crumbs, fry untl brown. Sprnkle over the n*! 1 " gus wth salt, p*pper,mml mne psrsler. Garnsh Wth slk-ej l» r1 cooked eggs. Rhubarb and RalsJn Pe. Cut n small peces enough rhub»rt> to Ol a cup. Add one cupful - rasns and smmer n water tu <" v< untl tha rhubarb s tender am )" rasns plump. Thcken the ]ulc" two tablespoonfuu of flour mu^ * lm two of butter. SwettM to tu".»" all totethur»» J

3 We offer you the servces of our experts free of charge. You ncur no oblgaton whatever. f your roof requres repars, he wll tell you so. f not, he wll notfy you to that effect. t. s false economy, however, to wat untl a storm compels you to have the roof repared. Our roof proof asbestos produces Lqud and Plastc repar, preserve, protect and pant yourroof makngt absolutely watertght all n one operaton. Tha s real roof nsurance. Outlasts several coats of pant. Our damp proof products waterproof your foundatons and keep your cellar dry. CONSUMERS ASBESTOS CORPORATON 1 rtf West 40th Street, New York For quck servce, jawt telephone or wrte our local dstrbutor F. G. BALDWN General Contractor Phone 36-M Woodbrdge, N. J. THE Norwalk Vault of steel renforced cement artght and mostureproof, s tho most practcu! of all underground bural receptacles. For twenty years contnuously throughout thefchole Unted State? t has been treatnd tested n every port of usage. ts unversal success s your guarantee and protecton. Sold by all undertakers. Made by The Norwalk Vault Co. Planfeld, N. J. Grl Scout$ ncreate to membershp from 07,000 to n the lust year WHS reported hy Mrs. ederc Erey, charman of the tlnftnl Aplr rvmmlttaa WOMEN AGENTS WANTED TEN TO TWENTY DOLLARS CAN BE EARNED WEEKLY BY AN WOMAN ANSWERNG THS AD Sell your frends nnd neghbors on of the greatest tolet preparaton: ever offered the publc. Natonal] advertsed nnd known by all. Speta reduced prce. Easy to sell durn spare tme. Wrte today and start lttle busness of your own. Exper ence unnecessary. For full purtcu lars address SCOTTS PREPARATONS, NC. 251 West 19th Street, New York Ct t h e F a m l ly - What pa don1 know about a BROADCASTNG NEWS TODAY OF WEAF STATON noon Jeane Austn, popular snger and panst. Talks under the auspces of Worlds Work and the New York Botancal Gardens. Market and weather reports. 4-5 p. m. Forest Huff, Jr., and hs Hotel Ocear^ Crest Orchestra. J. Gar-feld Dale, tenor, accompaned by Frank Herbert Scherer p. m. Dnner musc from the Astora. "The Story of the Enchanted Cat-taU"by G. R. Knney Shoe Company. Henry Whte, Bartone; Jmme Clark, jazz panst; Maran Metcalf Lndqust, dramatc reader. B. Fscher & Companys "Astor Coffee" Dancfl Orchestra. TOMORROW Saturday, Aafut 16., 4-5 p. m. Courtsde descrpton of tho fnal matches of the Womens Natonal Lawn Tenns Champonshp, drect from the West Sde Tenns tadum, Forest Rlls, New York. f-11 p. m. Dnner musc from the Cose Room of the Hotel Waldorf- Vstora. Ruth Donaldson, soprano; alsey K. Mohr, panst and enterancr. Metropoltan Male" Chornd! Sdward Avs, whstler. Vncent Lopez and hs Orchestra from the Roof Garden of the Hotel Pennsylvana. SUNDAY 3-4 p. m. "Sunday Hymn 8ng" under the auspces of the Greater New York Federaton of Churches Mr. Frank Goodman, secretary of Relgous R Work Department, presd- ng. 4-5 p ;ta uj m. nterdenomnatona r the auspces of the "-Ytttk-fl*«WWlr o? "hurches. Address by Rev. John H. Clfford, D. D., chaplan of th Unted Slates Marnes. Musc b;, arlos Abba, harput; Maron Holt Brown, soprano; Federaton Rad Quartette. 5-5:20 p. m. "The Relgon of th Wder Outlook," the tenth and last of a seres of lectures on "Lterature of the Old Testament" by Professor Herbert B. Howe, of Columba Unversty. tapan," hy Paul Cornell, eg under the of Soeman Brothers, Concert hy the Unted States Marne Rand, drect from Washngton, D. C :20 p. m The Whte House," another n a seres of talks on "The Amercan Government," hy Frederck J. Haakn, well-knwon newspaper correspondent, drect from Washngton, D. C. y, Augut 19th. 7). Emanuelc a. Ster,, bartone; Eleanora Jenao, speakng under the auapfces of tje lecture bureau of the Board of Educaton. Moton pcture forecast by Adele Woodard. Consoldated mnrket and weather reports. 4-6 p. m. Eleanor Rose, soprano: Ralph R. Hudson, tenor. Stores for chldren p. m. Dnner musc from the lose Room of the Hotel Waldorf-.atom; Raymond G. Parker, tenor; Arthur T. Berth, composer-panst, sssted by Ella Mylus, soprano. he Gold Dust Twns. Other program to be announced. WednewUv, Augut 20th. U-12 a. m. Mnne* Wel, panst. Young mothers program. Mnrket and wea(,her.report p. m. Rouheh.pncs, coloraura soprano, accompaned by Mabel Morrs: Jmme Clack, jazz panst; J. Garfeld Dale, tenor p. m. Dnner mu?c from the Astora. Synagogue servces, Cordes and Marks Dance Orchestra. Talk by the Amercan Agrculturst "What s To Become of the Dary ndustry." Matlda Durr Lndsay, soprano; "Evea " wash.-vohmnt Thursday, Augut 21l noon Mare Ncholoson, soprano. "Shoppng For You n Ffth Avenue," b,y Vrgna Wnlburn, edtor and manager of the Ffth Avenue secton of Scrbners Magazne. Consoldated market and weather reports. 4-6 p, m. Bella Graf, soprano; Maron Schott, panst. Chldrens stores, by Mra. John J, Sehoonhoven p. m. Dnner musc from the Monday, Augmt 18th. Astora. Md-week servces under 4-6 p. m, Dwght Conn, panst; the auspces of the Greater New York Lawrence Gardner, cornetst. Federaton of Churches. Elmer Womens program, under the aus- Grosso and hs Versatle Orchestra. pces of the Unted Synagof? 6 of Father Octavan Murson. Roumanan Amerca. basso. "Modern Chldrens Crusade" 6-10 p. m. Dnner musc from_the by Jacke Coogan, young screen star, Rose Room of the Hotel Wa rtdorf- speakng under the auspces of the Astora, New York Cty; Max Brck, Near East Relef. Melvlle and tenor; Modena Scovlle, panst, Robert Hcks, banjost, and Oscar "Whte Rose Talk on Tea Drnkng n Race, panst. r Collar and Cuff S«tt the Call of the Mode Rln«a song of lngere collars anrt cuff, they are the fashon of the hour. Let every school grl Jon tn the chorus, for pretty, lacy, frllj thngs at neck and wrst have such a happy way ol jflvng one a refreshng tmrt to classroom each mornng. t one heed the promptngs of the mode, one wll see to t that the school-tme outft ncludes one of the popular youthful lookng lrhn flannel frocks ether pladed, Btrlped or n sold colorng. To wear wth t, n the tll of OBf,s trunk, or n ones top dresser drawer fttould t»» plenteous supply of lngere collar and cuff sets, a lace restee or two, a net and nserton bb effect and do not forget to nclude one of the detachable lace panels whch drop from ther matohng oollar to the Tery hemlne of the dres. Gar altnred the most ordnary frock assumes a dltlngne «r of chaon and refnement 4=5 p, m. j t Tro; rene Barbara Eckes, soprano, accompaned by Walter C. Rogers p m. Dnner musc from the Astora; Bernard and Robnson, the Dxe stars; Louse Flanagan, panst; Mr. Selkowtz, volnst, and Solomon Pmsler, panst; B. Fscher & Com-1 panys "ABtor Coffee" Orchestra. Saturday, Aujut 23rd. 4-5 p. m. Bruno Brothers Or- chestra p. m, Dnner musc from the Astora; Hotel Graystone Dance Orchestra; Sylva D. Lyons, panst; Charles A. Schenck, Jr., bartone; Myrtle Wagner Whtt coloratura soprano. Vncent Lopez and hs Orchestra, from the Roof Garden of the Hotel Pennsylvana. Classfed Ads. Brng Results A Gentle Remnder Wnter wll be bere a fan almost before you know and wnter meant Coal. Order your supply today, then youll have that off your mnd for another year anyway. We wll delver t accordng to your nstructons. * Specal Prces ftfr August Only Save 50c a Ton JOSEPH KLEN CO. / Phone 21. Man St. and Penn, R. R. WOODBfllDGE - - TRY THBJ1AN SHOE REPAR SHOP For Rght Prces And Frst Class Work On Shoe Reparng. We use only the best of stock ; all our work s GUAR*J ANTEED. Rubber Boots Repared, Shoes Shned, And all knds of Polshes and Laces sold. PROMPT ATTENTON TO EVERY JOB! 77 Man Street, R. CARLETTA :j, Woodbrdge Natures Purest RADO RALF GtT THE WEATHER rorcast, R*.Lf! - WANT TO PLAY TlMC SKNAUS NOW. THEN THE WEATHER REPORT, Pop WELl, WHATS T qonotobe? ARE 5T.L ARWNG. Guess By JACK WLSON Cvynght H}11 by the McClurc Ntwtp*p«[ SyndtCAtc -ALL THEY SMO THER UNSETTLED" Ou the job at daybreak! URTAN DARY MLK The lfe of your baby depend* upon the purty and rchness of the Mlk that you feed hm. So you cannot be too careful where t comes from. You can be sure that Mlk lrnm us s pure, for we use perfect santaton throughout Purtan Dary. BLANCHARD & GOTTSTEN 591 AMBOY AVENUE, Dstrbutors for Perth Amboy, Woodbrdge and Carteret Phone Perth Amboy 1888-J at Our Expense SUCH S LFE FRtMDS, SNCE TH4 ("ft DAT * AKE GONG EACH LTTLE CHLD A TlAMT PLANTS "NlLl. BE <3veN To THB CH\LX>f»M WHLE THE OFFEQHS l<5 BEMO CQLLCrtl* MOMMY, F GVE TH6 MAM TrtUM r-vohex ^LL HE GVt, HE A FLOVMSQ "Tbo 1 Cohens Lead Smtht The ColtH are ahead of the n the cty drectory of New York. ^ book contans 1,981 pages and 11 pounds, 4 ounces. There 0..1O0 Culfs md Cohns n4.*>,wk) Smth and Tltre are U23 Ahrulmn Cohens. 1- AT-O-DENSE AT CHURCH. UPHOLSTERNj Cabnet Makng - Slp Cc WHATS THE USE, DONT. BE, A jacl ^ AMD T«X To»e O THAT bock, / - T SNT -, DEEP EMUF / THE. >WATea«AWFULLY HECEVNG ByUF.VsJZekn HERE. TS 1o CLEAB You CAM <SEE BOTTOM, JUT -folj TWNW US A The Water Was Decevng All Rght Made and Rc-n Antque Furnture Reparng PolUhug. Altu alt knda of work. Y1. Woodbrdge 876-W. C. SERMAYAN No. 1 Ffth Avenue, AT RADO! G. L TAPPEN 1 Lorn) Representatve tut X OZARKA (Portable, $* Complete M1RACO, $ COD

4 Subscrpton, $1.50 Per Year Publshed ev«ry Frday by MDDLESEX PRESS, 23 Green Street, Woodbrldg* Telephone, Woodbrdgc 675 O. HARGS PRALL - MAXWEU. LOGAN - Mamrfn Edts* a H. YRNH - ^Ldrwttafaf E«pr«MnUtN» Entered at second-clan matter March, 1P10, at th«poasofflo* lt Woodbrldyt, N. J-, ondr Uw Art of March t, LGHT ON THE LOCAL POLTCAL OUTLOOK. Of tn; poltcal stuaton n the townshp at the present pretlecton stage the only defnte fads that JUT known s that Dr.; J. P. Saltor wll run on the Republcan tcket to succeed hmself: an representatve of the Frst Ward; Joe (Jll wll be the Democrats hope n the Thrd Ward fn go back for another term; Albert Larsons place on the Republcan tcket for the Second Ward wll le tlled at prmary electon by Edward J. Fagan, an seln man, and a newcomer n local poltcs; George Blum wll go out after the RejUblean nomnaton to agan fll the poston of road supervsor. At the present Wrtng t appears that Rarney (omolly,. the strongest, canddate Ht; Democrats could pck to contest wth Dr. Salter the honor of representng the Frst Ward wll; nt consent to allow hs name to be placed on the tcket. Lack] of tme n devote to the job s the reason gven for Connollys* refusal to n. Other names that have been m?ntjone.d.and! from whch;the Democratc canddate may be pcked are fernanl Vogel and.frank P. Edgar. t s not certan that ether man would accept the nomnaton and, as a matter of fact, Vogel s sad to be ono-of a half dozen young men that the county leaders of the Democratc fold are consderng n an effort to snatch from the Republcans the several, assembly jobs that wll le tlled at electon. t s beng sad, but t must be confessed that t s by no] means certan, that Henry Chrs Anderson, who was beaten by Hoy last.ven, wll agan be. naffd by Democratc p«wera +«- carry ther partys standard aganst Mr. Fagan. From present ndcatons t would seem that Anderson, -j^le runs, wll be beaten almost f not qute as badly as last yffr seln has for tome tme been anxous, to have a man of her own on the commttee and t s not lkely that the vote there would show anythng but an overwhelmng pluralty for Fagan. On the other hand persons who clam to be able to gauge the sentment of the south end of the Second Ward, clam that the fact of the Republcan canddate lvng n seln would not deprve the Republcan party of an apprecable part of the large vote t has always enjoyed n Fords, Keasbey and Hopelawn. George Lufbarry, who was defeated by Fellon last year n the Thrd Ward, s beng spoken of as a possble Republcan canddate ths year. We beleve, however, that the Thrd Ward affords several stronger canddates than Lufbarry has proved hmself to be and that hs partys leaders wll not be unwse enough to send hm out agan to almost certan defeat by Gll. An effort should be made to fnd another standard bearer for the Republcan party ths year. George Blum should fnd no trouble n beng re-elected to the post of road supervsor, even f, as s threatened, the Democrats pck John Coffey as hs opponent. Blum rolled up a comfortable pluralty over Coffey three years ago and there s nothng to ndcate that the result would not be the same, To successfully elect a successor for Robert Hrner, present tax assessor, s gong to be a sortewhat dffcult task for the Bepublcans. Joseph Dungan, defeated by Hrner three years ago after holdng the offce for years, wll be slated for another. try by the Democrats and, t must be sad, s one of the best vote getters n Democratc ranks n the townshp. What wll be done to tll the offce of tax; collector, should Mr. Berrys ll health render hs resgnaton necessary, has not been decded. 1 t s well known that Albert Larson, who wll not attempt to retan hs place on the commttee ths fall, would lke to have the job and that Republcans of the townshp, at least, would lke to see hm get t. But the. problem of nstallng hm n thavbffce s fraught wth practcal dffcultes. As the law stands Larson would have to resgn from the Commttee or would have to wat untl hs term expred before the commttee could appont hm tax collector, and, wth Larson off the commttee the poltcal balance would be exactly equal. The Republcans alone would not have enough votes to appont Larson and t s. not consdered lkely that the Democrats would favor hm wth one of ther" votes. Larsons opportunty wll eome n the event of Republcan vctores n all wards, a possblty that s not at all unlkely n a Presdental year. Woodbrdge Townshp s n the unusual stuaton ths year Of havng two, and possbly three, canddates for county offces. All three, are members of the Republcan party. However, t s not at all certan that there wll not be at least one local Democratc offce seeker to attempt to get on thq county slate as canddate for the Assembly. Davd A. Brown, park commssoner and promnent for years as an actve cvc worker, announced some ago that he would wage a relentless fght to secure the Republcan nomnaton for the offce of county clerk. He went after the nomnaton for sherff last year, and the huge vote gven hm n the townshp came wthn a few hundred votes of wnnng for hm. ( t s almost a certanty that frends n both partes wl gve hm a larger pluralty ths year. Wllam Hoy who, contrary to general belef, wll not have. to gve, up hs post on the local commttee to be elected Free- -holder, has for years had n mnd an attempt! to secure the Republcan nomnaton for that offce. Ths seems to be the. year for hs try at t and he a already engaged n lnng up < support throughout the county. Hoys strength n local poltcs hka» always been apprecable but he has never run for an offce * hat would gve an, ndcaton of just how popular he s wth and fle of Republcan voters throughout the townshp. s known that hs* chef strength s n the Second Ward. Mrs. J. H. Thayer Martn, promnent n womens crcles not n the townshp but throughout the county and State,.s g mentoned as a possble Republcan canddate for the mbly. Wth frends n all towns of the county as a result for actvtes n womens organzatons, there a no reason doubt that she would make an exceedngly papular canddate dffcult one to beat. The only thorn n the sde of her dacy would be that male voters of the county have never ven an opportunty to show just how th^y would regard t standard bearer selected from tpotjg the lades of ther party. W& beleve, however, that the vast majorty of the men would ; bar on electon day shouj($ she succeed n gettng by the n PWDAY, AUGUST f, 1fM Theyre Comtog!!! At the Fllng Staton FEWER AND BETTER HOT DOG STANDS. The ordnance now awatng a hearng by the general publc on applyng strct but not unreasonable santary regulatons fco hot dog ard refreshment stands and requrng off them a lcense fee ought to meet wth popular approval. There are at present enough f not too many stands along the hghways n the townshp and t s tme for some such move as the one started by the commttee. The ordnance wll not do away wth stands entrely; that s not ts ntenton nor does any one $ant to see that come about. The result wll be fewer and bet ter stands n whch the propretors, by reason of havng had to go to some expense to start n busness, wll -take prde enough n ther establshments to keep them n an attractve and santary condton. Not only that, but t wll place them on a more even footng wth other busness enterprses n the matter of helpng to pay the runnng expenses of the townshp. The lcense fee wll take care of that. CHAUTAUQUA. The Chautauqua nsttute, at Chautauqua, New York, s celebratng ts ffteth annversary. Presdent Cooldge fnd? tne occason of suffcent sgnfcance to send hs hearty reconv mendaton for the lyceum work the nsttute sponsors.. The south and west would be deprved of a by? cultura and entertanment factor wthout speakers, muscans, ma gcans, and other artsts who gd from town to town brngng the best of the outsde, world to folks who cannot leave home. Many young folks are nspred to go forth and conquer becaus< of chautauqua. Many tred men and women growng dull ge a new zest for lvng and a new urge on to half forgotten ambtons when chautauqua comes. Many who have left the ctes wth ther ndubtable cultural advantages and come to smalle towns,-far from both beauty and uglness, are refreshed and stmulated by the famlar programs. f a town can effectvely fnance a chautauqua and t ftust be very small and very ndfferent f t cannot there s no better way to get outor stay out of the rut than to have a program. n theory, and usually n practce, chautauqua s a vtal force n makng new men and women from bd, and startng eager youth toward the heght of fame and fortune. NOBLTY AT WORK. Lord Cecl Douglas has Bhocked hs fellow peer by openn a laundry n London under hs own name. That snt a bad dea for hm, and f he washes shrts as ncely as those born to the tub hs country wont suffer. For noblty to work s a novel thng; t seema, however, to be a Bgn of the tmes and to follow the handwrtng on the wall. For better or for worse the world s growng democratc. Caste of brans s the onl knd applauded today. Lord Cecl shows that he has them and f he succeeds n busness he wll develop some more. "Jonesy" Wrtes From Sunny Calforna Former Local Real Estate Salesman Now n Woodbrdge, Calforna Woodbrdte, Cut;, Aug. 1, Edtor ndependent:. Dear Sr: Just to convnce, you that Woodbrdge, N. J., s not the only Wood brdge that a shown on the nj»p. t a a.ot qute as large u the New Jemy WoadbrWW * there a* not enoufh fol^s ja J Arnboy, Woodbrdge and Wedgewoo combned to eat the grapes am peaches here n ten thousand yean or more. t has raned here but twce sne* last Chrstmas, but everythng grow just the game. _ Ths s where the old gold- dgger of 1849 hun K out. They dd not leajve very mufc] "dust" when they got through ca assure you. 1 havent been lookng for any bu thats what the natves, say. Qute a country around here, very prosperous, am the fnest clmate n the world. No plenty of ftatt. mosqutoes, bu POSE B r THOMAS ARKLE CLARK D*BB of Mas, Unversty of llnou. D E man who sold me my tcket at the Grand Central staton was wrnklelws and placd n Us appear arrved, and releved the clerk who had prevlouly been there. He removed hs coat delberately and hung t up wthout haste or agtaton, straghtenng the collar and smoothng p\jt the wrnkles n the sleeves. He adjusted hs te carefully and brushed hack hs har, Bpeakjng to a fohow lerk n the meantme, all the whle blvlous of the gatherng lne beluj me. When he was ready to watt on me, e went at the job wthout haste or gtatlon. He confrmed my reserva- on calmly; he made out my tcket lowly; he consulted all sorts of tables nd gudes wth a delberaton that revealed the fact that he was not nfluenced by tho passage of tme. He WM unmoved hy the rrtaton of the woman behnd me who wanted to catch the sx ffteen tran. When he fnally had everythng looked up and wrtten n and pasted together and calculated and the tcket Hpped nto ts outer clothng, twenty mlnuteb had- passed. The man had pose; he had self-control; be knew that the lne behnd me would keep up all day and all nght and he vu not gong to allow a lttle thng lke that to worry hm. f the woman dd not get the sx ffteen tran there waa another gong later. And thls state of mnd explaned why hs cheeks were so round and hs brow so unfurrowed and bs actons so calmly delberate. He could go on dong hs work for nnety years wthout a nervous quver; he would always seem unnfluenced by the rush- ng crowds constantly gong by hm. am not sure that he was not overdong ths self-control a lttle, but most of us could take a lesson from hm. We worry too much. We ruah nto thngs headlong and do them badly. We lose our heads n a crowd or n stress of one sort or another or n meetng the unexpected becaus* we do not center our attenton upon the man busness n hand, We are thrown off our balance by lttle thngs; we have no potse. (C. 1924, Wuttm Nawapap«r Unon) Th yurl who Bays "Dear me, snt your (ace famlar?" at least bcz a las thets famlar. Church Notes Rev. h. V. Ruschmnn, mnster. 10 n. m. Sundny school. 11 a, m. Mornng sprvce. 7 p T. -Chrstan Knrleavor. Durng the rpfccnratng; of the churrh " ssrvcs wll lp held n the Smlny whnul room. Md-weok snrvcp Wednradny evenng st. H oclock. TV, Sunshne Clnss wll meet at the home, of Mss Dasy Madsen, on upper (Jrron street, Mondny evenng, Annual Mth, nstead of the 17th, as prevously announced. Trnty Eptcopal Rev. J. B. Myers, rector. 11 a. m. Holy Eucharst.nd sermon hy Rev. Wn. S. HRRns, of South Rver. On Thursday the parsh wll combne wth the Congregatonal Church for the annual excurson to Aabuy Park. Congregatonal Corner Barron and Grove Avon. 10 a. m. Sunday school. 11 a, m. Rev. Horace R. Goodchld, of Freehold, wll preach. No evenng servce. Wednesday at 8 "p. m. Prnyer servce. Durng 1 the decoratng of the church, servces wll be held n the Kumlay school room. Methodtt. Sunday mornng the local pastor, Rev. A. S. Dezendorf, wll take for hs subject "Chrst, the Shepherd of Men." n the evenng tho suhjnt wll be "The Mcftt Per.thoth." The Epworth League topc on Sunday evenng at the 7 oclock servce wll be "The Crcut Rder," wth Mrs. Van G. Munjjer as the Hcheduld! leader. Thjs servce wll be held th«4 U 4 H tot Co«l Woolhrldf* 724 THE wse man were talkng about the man whr, takes care of hs money nnrl hs famly buys hs coal j tl the summer-tme. And h> buys t of us because he knows that qualty B econ. omy. WARR COAL AND SUPPLY CO. COAL, CEMENT AND BULDNG SUPPLES St. Georges Ave,, at P. 4 R R WOODBRDGE, N, J. MDDLESEX PRESS 20 Green Street. Woodbrdjjc Tunng n An Ad n The ndependent reaches 2,500 homes n ths vcnty Everybody who gets anywhere s "Tunng n" The merchant who does more than just make a lvng "tunea n. by advertsng regularly. The householder who gets the most for her money "tunes n" by readng the ads n her home town paper. * The taxpayer who s alve "tunes n" by watchng publc affars through the home town paper. "The paper wth the growng crculaton." TRY THE NEW YORK CUSTOM TALOR 68 Man Street Next to Candy Ktchen Wood brdge LOWEST N PRCE. BEST N SERVCE MENS SUTS made to measure, repared, pressed and cleaned. Pressng and cleanng 60c Steam cleanng $1.50 WOMENS GARMENTS are our specalty. Pleatng, dyeng, reparng, steamng and all knd* of delcate work neatly done at the most reasonable prces. We call for and delver; phone 167. August Clearance of Lades Summer Coats At HALF PRCE Ths Sale ottera a most wonderful money-savng opportunty to those who have delayed buyng ther lghter weght Coats untl now. These Coats were orgnally sold at from $15 to t50. They are excellent n style, Eaqh garment represents the utmost n value-gvng even for ths store where extra values are the rule. The lot ncludes Poret Twlls, Slk,.nd Sport Coats, sutable for Motorng or Outng $7«kjRTON 142 Smth St. to $25.00 STORES, nc. M Broad St. EUZABETH *

5 Fords Elmnates Rvals From Champonshp Race By 104 Score Rogers, Atnboy Ptcher, Maced For Ffteen Hts; Burke Contrbutes Three Perth Amboya representatve baseball nne, conquerors of almost everythng they have met ths season, proved no match for Fords last Sunday when Joe Dolna, husky left felder for Manager Anthonys crew, went wld wth the wllow and crashed the frst ball ptched to hm on hs several appearances at the plate for three murderous preand performed to the satsfacton homers and a frzzlng sngle. On of both sdes. hfl other try he smacked the horse- The box score: hde on n lne for the center feld fence and was robbed of a trple by Ford. a great catch by Pfeffer. Dolnarf Fullerton, 2b. feat n crashng out three honest-togoodness four base hts has never Smnlley, cf f> Parsler, as 4 Romcr, rf, 5 been duplcated n sem-pro crcles n ths vcnty. Charles Kocheck, Burke, lb a, Dolna f. tll ML A *^B. l_ ^ m-f H 1 n w tf«-^ _ M* Aa A A. L ^ A_ «. Perth Amboy player, came the near- Sullvan, 3b est to performng; a lke trck n a game aganst the Royal Colored Gants. He got three homers but one of them was of the fluke varety. The gonfalon must be placed on the brow of the huhky nd from Fords, Hes earned t. The frame was a free httng affar as far as the wnners were concerned. Amboy could do lttle wth the offerng of Mlchck after a three run rampage n the frst and fell easy vctms to hajuzlnr afoots Rogers, the star ptcher of Amboy, was tjeated to an unmercful lacng. Besde the three home runb he was touched for a trple, a double and ten sngles. Burke followed Dolna n httng, (jettng three sngles n as many trps n the plate. Jack Egan, of, Fords, was the um- S B Joe Parsler, c 5 Mlchck, p 4 Amboyt. Loeser, f 5 McGure, ss 5 Stnson, 2b B Kocheck, lb 4 Pfoffer, cf 4 Dzurlla, rf 4 Nesley, 3br U~-,».. 4 Stratton, c.... 2" Wallace, c 2 Rogers, p 3 Score by nnngs: Fords 400 Amboys FRDAY, AUGU5T S, 19M Th. "THAT LTTLE CAWE^rwc.rt o *,co.,t.t.~by B. Lnk WHAT -fou "DONG? AHt> "TAUlNG M WHTE CHPS DOT OP THE A "Buje DUE. ALL. THE WHT6 ONES Sherdans Not Able Mohcans Vctms 0( N LNE WTHTHESPORTSMEN Backng up the ptchng of Harry Maer n bg league style, the Possum A. C of Fords, treated the Sherdan A. C, of Perth Amboy, to a 0-2 trmmng, Sunday afternoon, knockng flcason, the vstng boxman, from thn plh by a barrage of seven runs n the second nnng. Prmka, who releved Gleason, was unable to stem the battng bee untl the Fords team had garnered two more runs but thereafter managed to hold hs own wth the hard httng townshp boys. The feature of the game was the work of Maer, Metuchen school jantor, who retred eghteen men va the strke-out route, n hs last three games Maer has struck out ffty-one of the opposng batsmen. Ths s consdered a record for these parts. For the attracton next Sunday Manager F. Gloff has secured the Catholc F, C. of Perth Amboy. The box score: A. C. AB. R. H. A. Gloff, f 5 Jensen, c 4 Szallar, 3b 4 Turner, lb. Frazer, ss,. Rodner, 2b. Novak, rf Maer, p 4 F. Gloff, cf 4 3f 9 Sherdan A. C. AB. H. Sepka, ss., c 4 0 Phllps, 2b 3 0 Gleason, p., lb 4 0 Hess, c, ss 4 0 Urtek, 3b Pumka, lb., p 4 0,T. Connors, f 3 0 Leonard, rf 3 0 P. Connors, cf 4 0 Score by nnngs: Sherdans Possums OOx 9 CLASSFED ADS Classfed advertsements only on«cent a word; mnmum charge 25c. LOST LOST Between Tsdale Place and M. E. Church, on Green, School or Man streets, Woodbrdge, a pearl brooch wth damond centre; sutable reward wll be pad to fnder f returned to 513 Tsdale Place. HELP WANTED WANTED Young prl to help wth housework. Copeland, 555 Apply to Mrs. Maple avenue. J. S. WOMAN to clean offce once a week. Woodbrdfre Lumber Co., 437 Rahway Ave., Woodbrdge. GRL or WOMAN for lght housework. Apply Dey, Lnden avenue, DOGS FOR SALE STRONGHEART Polce Puppes for sale. Champon dojjs at stud. A few very exceptonal females rven to relable people on breedng bass. Dogs traned by n<>ted German traner at reasonable fee; also Chow and Great Dane Puppes. Sttongb^art Kennels, Easton avenue. New Br nswek, N. J. Telephone 1443-W-?, FOR SALE COW and Calf, young. Sepmann, Woodbne avenue, Avenel. t pd. CHEVROLET, 1923 Tourng car, good condton. 42 Clnton street, Kahway. Tel. Rahway 70-J, MOTOR BOAT, Clnker bult, 27 ft., 12 h. p.; Lathrop marne engne; n A-l condton; cheap. Apply 86 Chrome avenue, Carteret, N. J. TWO WORSES, wth drvng and rdne equpment complete; prce reasonable. Telephone 521. M. A. Murphy, Sewaren, N. J. FOR RENT FURNSHED ROOM to let, wth or wthout board. 133 Freeman St., Woodbrdge. SX ROOMS and bath, 80 Albert street. nqure Mra. Vecsy, Amboy avenue, Woodbrdge. FLAT of sx room and bath, centrally located; reasonable. Apply Phlp Krnzman, 60 Rooaevelt avenue, Carteret. WANTED TO RENT $t: to««.pwm, wth Funeral For Mrs. ODonne Held Here Last Thursday The Mohcans, of Port Readng, were caught n a slump last Sunday! and suffered a ono sded defeat at j the hands of the Orole Junors, a Perth Amboy team that had compled one of the best records n the county Hntl t was ht>at«n by the Port Readng boys a few weeks ago, Sundays game, played on the Copper Works Feld, gave the Amboy representatves a chance to get even wth the townshp boys, and they dd that wth a vengeance. Score of the game was Port Readng mssed the ptchng of Depoto, as the work of ts three hurlers was not good enough to check the heavy httng Oroles. Mullen, Barry and Barna yelded ffteen bngles. The hgh, lght n the game so far as the Mohcans were concerned was a long home run wallop by Depoto. Zalar, of the Oroles, duplcated. The box score: +- Orole.. AB. R. H. T. Vrgllo, 3b Mazursky, c Peterson, 2b Zak, lb Zalar, rf 5 J. 3 McQuarre, cf M. Vrgllo, ss Marscano, f Campon, f Courtney, p, Dalton, p Mohcan*. AB. R. H. Mullen, p. and 2b Cooper, c Depoto, 2b. and 3b Barry, ss. end p Barna. 3b. and p Thompson, cf B. Brght, rf McDonald, f. u F. Brght, lb Score by nnngs: Mohcans Orjoles x 13 Prates Cut Throats Of Carteret Junors The Carteret Junors met defeat at the hands of the Woodbrdge Prates, Wednesday evenng, August 13, at Bradys baseball feld. The score was 11-3.,,, Strong battng by Mesck and Choma featured the game. Leonard, the manatay of the Prates, ptchng hs nnth straght vctory, reached a total of 102 strkeouts. ; The Woodbrdge Prates stll clam the county champonshp and would lke to arrange games wth heavy junors home or out of town games. The Prates are* under the manage-- ment of Albert Sssentmklosy, Call Woodbrdge 12-M or wrta to 76 Fulton street, Woodbrdge. The box score: Prate.. AB. R. H. Mullen : Hoagland 1 V MeBck!? Lorch J \ Genty Q o Leonard -* 3 1 J Bed Palko...- * 1 1 Choma 8 l l CarUrat fjunor. AB. H. R. Kelly, Balbuqh 3 0 Skuft 2 0 Trosko, J } Casey 2 1 Samons <» 1 Barna 3 5 Yorke 3 0 Collns CURRCULUM Hlfb Mbool, college and nnlvuralty students, accordng to th* Roma* concepton, are ath- toea encaged n runnng a racu. They follow a "curtculum" ef studes. Ths term denotes th«lr program of nhjecu. t * *s» rved from the Latn "currere," whch, weans to run, Tk«pto- " Op UJHTB OW»S.~ Ut not otj) tqt, W, see )M^w #c»unk$.tt unna actvtes of our former local boy^harold Throckmorton, but * p c notf?etf n Sundays papers that Vncent Rchards, ranked thrd n the country, met Harold n an exhbton match and was forced to yeld a set. Two sets were played, Throckmorton wnnng the frst 6 3 and losng the second 6 4. Just how far Harold would have gone n the tenns world had not thp WRT and an njury to hs shoulder forced hm out of tournament competton s hard to say. He was and stll s a player the crowds lke to watch. Nothng he does smacks of a desre to play safe; hes on the style of Tlden when t comes to smashng everythng over the net as hard as he can. Lke most Players of hs type he s nvncble when he s on hs game but bows to players of lttle or no promnence when hs shots just wont come off rght. Thats where Tlden dffers from other players. No one remembers ever seeng "Bg Bll" n a game where he couldnt control hs shots 1!. Few of the tenns crtcs have had anythng to say of Mss Blake, the school grl who was elmnated from the Seabrght tournament by Mss Balln n a grueljng three-set match that was won by Mss Ballns experence n conservng her strength. But, as a matter of fact, Mss Blake exhbted some of the fnest tenns of the tournament. Her volleyng and general court tactcs left lttle to be desred. Whle she has not the strength of Helen Wlls t appeared to us that she covered court a lot faster than the natonal champon. Look for her name n some of the fnal rounds of womens tournaments next season. A lttle more experence s all she needs. Sgnor 1 Lus Angel Frpo has taken up the study of anatomy to enable hm to place hs blows on vtal spots. He wll brng hs new knowledge nto play n hs bout wth Harry Wlls, and wth that practce bout under hs belt wll step out to knock Master Jack Dempsey for a goal. At least that s hs plan. As far as Jack Dempsey and anatomy are concerned they are strangers except that Jack knows that the jont of the jaw s as good a spot as any to massage wth hs knuckles. Thats the part of Frpos physog that bore the brunt of the hammerng last year. Most rng crtcs predct that whle Frpo s busy measurng Jack for a ple drver blow n a vtal spot, the worlds champon wll step n and land a dozen or so short, snappy cracks on the Argentnans chewng apparatus. Unless the Wld Bull of the Pampas can develop some punch proof prptecton for hs jaw there s lttle need of hm studyng anatomy. Anyway, whats the use of httng a vtal spot when Frpo can wallop a man on the shoulder hard enough to upend hm out of the rng. All Frpo need worry about s httng hs opponent anywhere. And unless we are mstaken thats just what Jack Dempsey s not gong to gve hm a chance to do. n other words, the man from south of the equator wll not fnd the champon comng at hm wde open, lke he dd last tme. Renault may not have beer* a howlng success as a >Canadan Northwest Mounted Polceman (n the unform of whch servce he has had hs pcture taken) but the beatng he gave the tough Bartley Madden Monday, nght stamps hm as a heavyweght fghter of no small ablty. Aganst Madden he put up a far better showng than dd Harry Wlls, the dusky stevedore (who haa never seen the Chelsea docks except to st on a bale of merchandse, dressed n overalls and eatng out of the honest workng mans proverbal dnner pal long enough for the photographer to snap hs pcture.) t looks lke the wnner of the Wlls-Frpo scrap wll have to settle matters wth the Canuck before assumng the mantle of chef challenger for Jack Dempseys crown. As far as Frpo and Wlls are concerned, the former has no more chance aganst the champon than h* had a year ago; Wlls would be dsspated nto a cloud of dark smoke by whchever fst Jack decded ttf use on hs jaw frst; Renault would have some chance of comng out of the rng fclve provdng he secured permsson to enter t on horseback and armed wth hs carbne. Even at that hed have to shoot quckly and accurately to prevent Demppey from knockng ha horse over on top of hm. And yet fght fa"ns would pay a mllon and wager as much more on the short end of the bettng odds should! the cagy Tex Rckard sgn one of the three contenders tp clmb through the ropes wth the kng. The champonahp wll be lfted eventually but the present challengers wll have to mprove and Mr. Dempsey wll have to Blp some before that httpptna. loo UJOUUOMT &Hp THE pcrr,- BtT You ABOOT. U)HAT 0PF1NFF! FOR CUCK- Menlo Park S At The \enlo Purk A. C. dtfeatod the Rartan Arsenal team by a score of 30 to 6 last Sunday. The Parks new left felder and Mutty, of the Arsenal, scored homers. The box score: Menlo Park. H. Htthn, ss., lb J. Hahn, 2b, c, cf 7 Swanson, 3b, ss, c 6 Gerard,, cf.,, p 7 Black, lb, ss, p l> G. Hohn, f 7 Klemowtz, rf 5 Hagenback, c, 3b 5 Buydor, p, 2b f Rartan An«nal. AB. R. Mystrch, f., 3b 6 0 Fakoc, 2b J. B 1 Cooler, lb, f Red, p., lb 3 2 Fscher, c, ss 4 0 Matty, ss., p 4 1 Hurley. 3b., p 4 0 Dougherty, cf 4 0 Thompson, rf Score bv nnngs: Menlo Park x_30 Hartan Arsenal Feds Clout Metuchen Team nto Submsson The game last Sunday aganst the South Ends, of Metuchen, proved lttle more than a practce canter for the Keasbcy Feds, who won wthout exertng themselves by an score. Trples und doubles were plentful among the nneteen safe hts that marked Keasbeys battng efforts. The townshp team, wth vctory safely n ts grasp, played loose ball n the closng nnngs and three errors helped Metuchen brng ts "score up to ten. Metuchen S. E. AB. R. E. Humphreys, lb 4 1 McGuness, cf 4 1 Swaly, c 4 0 Podolsk, c 4 2 Nemeth, 3b 3 2 Pearsley, ss 5 2 Stahl, p. 4 0 Brody, f 6 2 B. Humphreys, rf 5 0 Am PACE Republcan Women Start Natonal Campagn Mrs AMn T, Her), vce lnlrnmn of tn- tcpubllmn Natloml. "nmlrj has Jnt announced the openng of thr Nntluml leltnrters of the bureau of He csmpnlgn on the second floor of the Wrlgley buldng, Kastrrn lu>nlquaru r hnve been opened n New York cty. The Women Voters Speak The voces of tho women of Amerca are makng themselves heard. Mnlne to Calforna, wth a unson whch s nfectous, thayare layng, want Onolldje and Dawpg." n the weeks whch have elapsed sne* the Republcan party no AB. R. H. KB stnndsrd bearers, the women have been weghng these canddates and respect has gone out to these men, who represent the bjgft qualtes n can nnnhool. All sgns show that the women of the country have been weghng thrl pnbhcan platform and that Us pledges have won ther support. Women know that the runnng of the natons busness s smply h AB. R, H. Keajbey Fed.. Stark, p Totlu cf Hatarck, c D. Fee. 3b Katrausky, 2b. 5,0 1 Rotello, ss Blanchard, lb Koserter, f Narlesk, rf Three Great Pctures On Bll At Strand The Strand Theatre, Perth Amboy, offers three sensatonal pctures for the week begnnng tonght. "Reno," whch s the attracton tonght and tomorrow, comes especally under the category for t pctures all that s startlng n the present day dvorce stuaton. Dvorced n the mornng and marred n the afternoon, s the record of Guy Tappan and Dora Carson n ths pcture. Each expects the other to possess a fortune. The desre for money s the motve of each. Two chldren of Guy are made the prce of fnancal ad offered by hs wealthy aunt. n the meantme Guys wfe reads that he has dvorced her at Reno. She: also 1B n need of funds. These crcumstances form the bass of the plot. There are marrages that are vald n one State and nvald n another; the chldren are stolen. There are tghts between the husbands, hatred among the women. Death, a terrble death, fnally solve* the rddle. "Gamblng Wves" wll be presented on Monday and Tuesday. t s somewhat of» satre on modern smart socety but ts man msson s to teach a lebbon.. Wth Charles Murray, Marjore Daw, Edward Earl«, Ward Crane, and severalother start) n the cast, the pcture carres on to a satsfactory fnsh after a most surprsng seres qf ncdents. The screen verson of "The Courtshp of Mles Standsh," comes to the Stcsnd on Wednesday and Thursday. forever, one of the most beautful torml romance* <t nl tnts. T. keepng on a natonal scale. They know that there s nothng about t. They want the government to b«managed as smply and as penslvty as they manage ther own homes. The women have heartllj proved the budget system whch the Republcans have establshed at ngton. They were quck n endorse th» reducton of taxes by $1,25 per annum and the curtalment of publc expendtures wthout n the sll dsturbng busness When the Republcans stated: "W«pledge oursalvts to th» progressve reducton of taxee of ALL PEOPLE as rapdly as may b* done wth due reflsrd for the etsantlal >- ture* of the government admnstered wth rgd economy," the women that the country would be safe f Republcan canddates were elected to < The platforms promse to contnue the partys solctude for all those ferlng any llsabllty as a result of servce to the Unted Stales n tme ot wss partcularly appealng to the women. levs of law enforcement, the quest to tfe slntesto promptly the Chld Labor amendment,-the declaraton for hgh standards of workng and lvng condtons for women workers, and a score of other gresslve planks have won the support of the women. Ther mnds at rest about the program of the Republcan party f to run the government for the next four years, the women have started^ campagn They want CoolWge and Dswes and they are workng to f«ncord-brmklna; number of women W the polls nest November. NOTCE TO CONTRACTORS. BOARD OF EDUCATON, CARTERET, N. J. Sealed proposals wll be receved by the Carturet Board of Educaton at Board of Educaton room, Washngton School, Roosevelt avenue, Carteret, N. J., 1 Monday evenng, August 18th, 1924, eght oclock, Daylght Savng Tme, at whch tme the proposals wll be publcly opened and lead, for Transportaton of 20 to Rahway.Hgh School, J., and Transportaton of 41 from East Rahway secton of ough to Carteret Schools. Tra taton of 40 Pupls from B secton to Carteret Schools. The Board reserves the rfht reject any or all bds, and to mmateral formaltes. Sgned by W. V. COUGHLN, Dstrct Cle Empre Theatre, Rahway PROGRAM FOR WEEK Pctures Now Showng n Lyrc Theatre, Man St., Rahway Whle Empre s Beng Remodeled TONGHT (Frday) Aug. S "BLUE WATER" A whale of a good sea story Topcs Comedy "Gettng Gertjrs Goat" and Hodge Podga SATURDAY, Au f. 16 Comedy- "Junor Partner*" MONDAY, Aug. 18 PoU Negr n "SHADOWS OF PARS" "DOWN BY THE RO Wth, an all-star cast Knograms, TUESDAY, Aug. Specal "Th* Ant." WEDNESDAY, A«. 20. "VALLaJY OF HATE" DOUBLE FEATURE DAY "PAR OF HELLONS" Wth an aluun cast Comedy "Dr»B«hWand Specal "Th«B«U«rft>. w J FabUs. Comedy "R«no or Bmt." Ed4* P*U n "Knock On th«door" THURSDAY, A«g. 11 "FGHTNG PARADSE" Comedy. v

6 TAGESX When Words Fal Then you can express your thoughts wth flowers, tellng your message n a manner that s pleasng and certan to he apprecated and understood by the recpent. "^ You may ether phone your order or come and make your selecton n person. BAUMANNS FLOWERS Greenhouse at St. George & Hazelwood Aves. RAHWAY LUMBER OOOD PEOPLE WE TREAT YOU RGHT NO TRANSACTON S CONSDERED COMPLETE UNTL ENTRE SATSFACTON HAS BEEN GVEN Tome and Get Our llustrated Plan Book of Homes" BOYNTON LUMBER CO. SEWAREN, N. J. Phone 250 Woodbrdge FAMOUS READNG ANTHRACTE COAL SANTARY CE Full Weght THEOTX-EBER Tal. Woadhrldf* 728 WOODBR1DGE AVE. Prompt Servce PORT READNG LUNCH OR DNNER Youll fnd us ready at all tmes to serve you! GALADAS HOTEL Man Street and Amboy Avenue, WOODBRDGE RAHWAY LAUNDRY 72 CAMPBELL ST., RAHWAY, N. J. Tel. 557-J Rahway Wet Wash, Rough Dry and Flat Work Woodbrdge, Sewaren and Port Readng collectons Monday and Tuesday mornngs. Make Your Trp More Enjoyable bj Refreshng Nght on Lake Ere {Your ral tcket u good on h* bo«ts) Thotarla of w«rt bmnl luvrltm «ay ttn-y wuullu t Uve muan] tha cool. CollfoltjU- lkll "»«lne strjlws A WKxl 1*- Hjdta HaUlOOm, u long Bound a!t*rl>;!kl alj JJlKrlllUK UeaJdHt u (be laur-.n. StMnwn "SEEANDBEE" "CTY OF ERE" -" tlty OF BUFFALO" Daly, May lt to November Slh.av, Buffalo - (HX1> M fulrra Lravr CtmUrv. tm P.M. Alltvt Cl.v.l»nd. 7SW A M J SUwlvt lumt \ Arnw Bufelo - ^M A M- lluua lor cdal PoUt, Hut tu B^y. T4ol»s Dcuut.»l,,4» uol. Ask m*l ntll bl N l A Tba C!»»<.! ml and BuSalo TrauU Co. ClmUod. Qbo a»l CoHa, EYE8 TfeXAMNED Headaches Releved by Properly Ftted Glasses Lews Ground on the Premses 1. MANN OPTCAL SPECALST As to my standng, e*k your doctor. 87% SMTH STREKT Opposte Woolworths 5c and 10c Store Nemo Srlf-K-.lunnc No. 3H s a real tau.n. h has a low Kp anl.run :>VM. M^l 1 nlntahle pnk m whle CHM; s:c 24 to V> nu nuts only $).(>). ] Vlf.calr < ant Krl tt. wn<! rbmf. hr\, me am] $*. Well nfrw hr * o»rt. Memo Hylnlr-Fhtn lnttutt U. dlh St.. Nr«Ymt CARTERET TAX Phone 612 Carteret All Calls answered promptly at any Hour Day or Ngh! FUNERALS and WEDDNGS CARTERET BUS & TAX SERVCE Carteret, FRANK P. WOGLOM Statoner OFFCE SUPPLES Addag Machne, and Typ«wrlt»r. 1»7 SMTH ST. S. B. BREWSTER Dealer n FLOUR, MEAL, FEED, BRAN, GRAN, BALED HAY AND STRAW MAN STREET WOODBRDGE, N. J. Adjonng P. R. B. LARSON &FOX SEW AND SAVE WTH Best Sx Cord Spool Cotton DRESSMAKNG HNTS For a valuable bosk am 1 «HE SPOOL COTTON CO.. Dcpt. O S F t A».,, U YaH> Complete nltself Sharpens the blade n the razor wthout removng t Quck. Convenent. Easy to clean. Complete «et*-^ razor, wth strop and extra blades, $1.00 and up. FRDAY, AUGUST B, 1»24 Slzer Approves Defense Test Day Governor n Proclamaton Orders Mlta and Urges Ctzen* To Prepare For Emergency DRUNKEN DRVER A CURSE "There t No Greater Menace To Lfe Than ntoxeaod Prnon At The Wheel of Car," S.yt Dll ncreate n The La««Year Trenton. ndorsement of the acton taken by PresldwH Coolldge and th«war department for a defense tet on September 12, nlxth annlver nary of the battle of St Mlhlel. s fr en by Governor Sllzer n a proclamaton desgnatng that occason as De fense Test Day and urgng ts obaerv anco as a means of nformng cltl tens and communtlcn of the dutlen requred n the event nf a natonal emergency. All cftlz«n«of mltary age are call ad upon to assemble for approprate observance of the day wth a loca nrgnnuntlon ofae-n-rlnr army, Na tl»nal Qnard or organzed reserves, and at the same tme to pay trbute to the men who partcpated n the memorable engagement at St. Mlhlel The proclamaton follows; "Whereas, Th*..]Pr»«ldent of the nltctl States havng desgnated ^fl day. September 12, 1924, the sxth annversary of the battle of St. Mlhlel,-R a day en whch a defense test wll be made; and, Whereas, t s mperatve tha each ctzen and every commnnlty be nformed n the dntles that wll be requred of each n case of a natona emergency; tad, "Whereas, t s of the hghest 1m portance that the patrotc sprt ol the two towns. our people b«fflal^^m AgfJ h us defenseles n an emergency b< offset; and, "Whereas, t s of the utmost m portance that we shall always have mnd the defense of our republc 1 case of an emergency, and that we, n such emergency, be properly prepared to defend our country and our, homes; and, > "Whereas, There would be a needless waste of lves n tme of an emergency t w* dd not have plans for moblzaton and have them thoroughly understood. "Now, therefore,.!, George S. Sllzer, New Jersey governor of the state of New Jersey, do proclam Frday, September- 12. j as refense Test Day. and do order the Natonal Guard of the state of New Jersey to partcpate n the Defense- Test as prescrbed by the war department. " urge all ctzens of mltary age who are called upon by local commttees to ndcate ther ndorsement of the prncple of servce by assemblng (or approprate observance of ths day wth a local organzaton of the regular army, Natonal Guard or organzed reserves, and also at that tme to pay trbute to the memory of 1 our gallant solders who partcpated 1 n tbe battle of Sr. Mlblel. "1 urge upon all ctzens of the state to cooperate wtl the mltary authortes and patr.o v- socetes n! fttngly carryng out the purposes of ths day." Drunken Drver Greatest Menace "An old subject that s always new because of u troublesome, lfe endangerng and never end-- character s that of the vtal problem presented by persons who drnk ntoxcatng leverages and then, whle n a drunken condton, operate motor vehcles." declared Motor Vehcle Commssoner Wllam h. Dll n :l dscusson of recent fatal accdents n Newark and other sectons of New Jersey. "Newarks recent Saturday nght experence, when a father and son were nstantly klled by an automoble wth a drunken drver at the wheel, should arouse all your magstrates and your polce authortes to the need for drastc acton wthout fear or favor, whenever or wherever a drunken drver s encountered. "There s no greater menace to lfe, lmb and property than a drunken person at the wheel of a motor drven vehcle on the streets or hghways of cty, county and state. That tact can not be drven home to the publc at large and to polce and other author! tes wth too much force. Every magstrate, every polce prosecutor or muncpal counsel or attorney, every polceman, whether he be a traffc cop or otherwse, should cast asde hs offcal beng and just as a plan ctzen be ready at all tmes to fully perform the dutes of a- cllxen whenever he comes nto contact wth a case of drunken drver. Offcal red tape ha 1 no place D such a matter. Personal, poltcal or other nfluences hart no place there ether. There s ample law of a mandatory character. Despte the personal vews already held by some offcals, they have no dscreton n such cases. The law provdes Jal sentences. There U no legal al ternatve. Tbe supreme court has upheld the law. t s not for some mnor magstrate or other offcal to net hmself up as superor n judg or knowledge of the law to the hghest judcal trbunal n the state. "When favortsm la shown, for whatever reason, or when persona vews are permtted to preval as aganst the law n drnnkej drver cases, ad and comfort are gven to the worst menace u motorng. More than that, tbe drunken drver as a speces s gven encouragement when falure to adequately enforce the ln\ nsults n somf nfluence beng rought to benr. t «pems that not thstandlnk the pftnrtn of the New ersey legslature to [rnvkle proper Mnshment n PSHPS nf a drunken rlver, there cuntlmps Just an murh fxty as ever n ttfom!"nt nf that phrtonlnr law. n pump nftnncps whero convcted drunken drvers have appealed ther MSPB to county courts there han l»cn refusal by local muncpal attorneys to prosecute the cases n the ntprpft of ltw enforcement and thbjhafprmnllng of lfe on publc thorojrhfaro, My contenton s that muncpal attorneys who tak«such an atttude n those cases are themselves mlthly poor ctzens and unworthy of the postons they hold. "Drunken drvng has ncreased alarmngly durng the last year. We have revoked more lcenses of drunken drvers thn year than ever before, and wll contnue to revoke ther lcenses n every nstance that comes to my personal attenton or to the ate.ntlon of tbe department n any way. 1 cannot understand* why offcals and he publc generally have to be urged to purge the motor vehcle fraternty of drunken drvers. t would seem to me that everyone ought to be anxous to rd the roads and motnrdom of persons who drve whle drunk. What tb n store for the publc, especally that porton of t devoted td motor rdng ether for pleasure or for busness unlosfl favortsm to drunken drver* s elmnated and the drunken drver llnelf drven from the roads, no one can tell, Sorrow n the homph of many pernnns who have met death by the car of a drunk en drver n more wdespread am depressng than moot folk know f t (SOA be publcly known a humantaran sentment mght be aroused that would help amazngly n endng New Jerseys,, most dangerous roml and street hazard the drunken drver." Counclman Cted for Contempt Contempt proceedngs have been n tlttted aganst the boards of councl of WeBt Hoboken and Unon for falure tu meet and select a name (or the cty formed by the consoldaton of Supreme Court Jnsrofl MnUua*4m-.4«au.J<«! tha tun members of the councls show cause at the state house on September 11 why they should not be held as n contempt of court and punshed. The latest step s only one of many n the successon of dffcultes that have beset the consoldaton. A rjreemptory wrt of mandamus was 1B eued by the supreme court orderng the two governng bodes to decde on a name, but nothng came of t. T»«members met, but were unable to agree and adjourned. Early n July a rule to show cause was allowed and late the same month t was ordered that the councls reconvene and agan consder the queston of a name. t j THE j j GAS LGHT COMPANY j s sadln the present complant that no serous efforts have been taken n that drecton, and punshment of the offcals s now sought. The acton s brought by Paul Snger and Paul B. Moos, taxpayers of the Consoldated Communty. Spreadng Faster Than Beetles mported parastes of the Japanese beetle are spreadng more rapdly than the pest tself, coverng as much as 17 mles of tha quarantned zone n one year, and eventually wll overtake the nvader and reduce t to the harmless status t occupes n ts home land. Ths wab told farmers at Moorestown n a dscusson of the beetle stuaton at the annual summer feld meetng of the Ne.^ Jersey State Hortcultural Socety, combned wth an nspecton tour of members of the Amercan Ponologcal Socety. Before the beetles are under control, however, t s lkely they wll have nfested all of New Jersey, moat of Pennsylvana tast of the Sttsquehanna valley and sectons of adjonng states, accordng to Dr. T. J. Headlee, state entomologst. Arse nate of lead sprays have been effecve tn repellng the beetle from farm rops, but no successful nsectlve for wholesale kllng has been dscovered. Dr.Wllam H. Martn of the state experment staton, New Brunswck, dscussed wth growers the plant ds ease stuaton and also tbe cause of spray damage. Compel Autosts to Halt State Motor Vehcle Commssoner Dll favors a law makng t a msdemeanor for an autolst to drve over a ralroad crossng wthout frst brngng hs car to a full stop. Such a measure, le beleves, would tend to reduce the number of crossng accdents. nterest has been renewed n the elmnaton of grade crossngs by tbe crash near New Lsbon of an auto and tran. Four persons were klled and ten chldren orphaned. t wll be years, however, Mr. Dll ponts out, before New Jerseys grade crossngs are abolshed. "t s Do fault ot the rrlroads that tbe work wll take tme." be declares. "f they were to wpe out all of the 1,500 grade crossngs n tbe state at one tme tt would send them nto bankruptcy! "New Jersey has used every means possble to make the roads safe for motorsts. The examnatons for drvers lcenses are drastc, and the traffc rules are desgned to elmnate all hazards." Governor Blzer lkewse sees lttle hope of correctng tbe grade crossng menace all at once. He comments thub: "Naturally anythng whch touches tbe human heart strngs as does»uch a tragedy, gves mpetus to tbe movement to do away wth grade crossngs, but we cannot arbtrarly drve the ralroads nto bankruptcy. We must take nto consderaton tbat the ncreasng number of automobleu usng the New Jersey hghways ajso ncreases the danger." RABDtOWTZ HARDWARE "f ts Hardware, We Have tl Full lne of- HARDWARE, PANTS, OLS, VAR- NSHES, HOUSE FURNSHNGS. CARTEEET, N. J, 206 SMTH STREET Heatng and Cookng Applances Rwud Automatc and Storage Water H tart Con-Den-RH Radant Log* NewProcessGaf Ranges Odorless Effcent nexpensve Telephone 143 Perth Amboy WNCHESTER STORE OF QUALTY Brown Brothers Roosevelt Ave. Tel. Carteret 320 Pants-Hardware-Tools Swmmng Tubes & Wngs Tenns Baseball Outfts COAL Get your coal now and be assured of good clean supply next wnter. We have the best ever produced. The tme s rpe and the prce s rght- Gve us a call; or, at your request, we wll call at your home. You are assured of a square deal wth RYMSHA & CO., nc. Dealers n Coal, Wood and ce 989 State St. Tel P. A. MAURER, N. j. We also carry a large stock of Locust and Cedar Fence Posts. R. A. HRNER Funeral Drector and Export Embalmer The only fully equpped and up-todate Undertakng Establshment n town. Far Treatment to All. Offce Phone 264. Resdence Phone 289. WOODBRDGE NEW YORK CANDY KTCHEN Manufacturers and Dealers n jjrctlj Pure CANDES A$D ^CE ORKAU 79 Man S. Tel. 43 HUMPHREYS & RYAN HARDWARE Man St Woodbrdfe, N. j. Plumbng Fxture* Hoe, Fall Hardware Pants and Ol, «t OH Prces SALTZMANS HARDWARE WRELESS SUPPLES aad SETS Tool. Pant. VtrnU> M Houta Furnshng. Buldar. Hardware 82 Man Slr.et Wooabrldfa HENRY ROMOND, a Qualty Grocer 142 MAN S. Pbona 83 9 Woodbrdgo GUSTAV BLAUM Groceres and Provsons MAN ST. WoodbrMf* OLVER B. AMES, NC, ELECTRCAL CONTRACTNG WUlard Battery Rente* j Homemade Crullers and Doughnuts lke mother used to make. Ask your grocer. HENRY DOMHOFF CARTERET FORDS FORDS HARDWARE CO Tools, Pants, Varnsh & Ols Wndow Oaw and Hoasehold SpecUldes Nut to Postofflc* FORDS, N. J LOUS MORRSON Sho«, Clothng and General, «Metphandse Open Ererj Day Except Saturday fords, N. J. FORDS NATONAL BANK Resources $328,000 FOBDS, N. J. HANSEN A JENSEN GENERAL CONTRACTORS Excavatng, Sewerng, Grftdnf, Cartng of au Kmd. 569 CORNELL ST. T>. 564 M WOODBRDGE THS SPACE FOR SALE G. A. FULLERTON Auto Truckng Uc-J.md Us DbUsM n

7 The New York Plays By WALT K. SWEZEY Thr Grand Street Follt. (Revewed nt the Neghborhood Pny house. 4!!<> Gr»nfl Stnrt. The Neghborhood Players producton.) New York s the greatest place n the world for possessng hdden chntms spots where delghtful gftr- H of hgh respectablty bloom deep the sordd collectons of revoltng unkeptness. Here, one comes upon a restaurant, scrupulously clean, nsprng n atmosphere, the rendezvous o the ultra-aophatcated who ate wllng to pay hghly for such pleasant Recluajon. Yet t s located n one of the worst sectons of New York, drectly under the Brooklyn BrdRC, long known as a playjrround for cut-throats, sneak- theves, kdnapers and other naughty dreamchldren. n a secton where busness s the only password and "rush" ts partner, a book-shop contanng rare old volumes and musty records, of value only tohe ntellectual student, does a thrvng busness, For t seems to add a certan n* descrbable tang and zest to behold puch places of nspraton fat out of ther conventonal dstrct. t seems to mply a breadth of scope whch, however, s mte4 to the select who are fortunate enough to fnd such beauty flamng aganst such a background, Just thus s the demure Neghborhood Playhouse stuated n the depths of a secton teemng wth the wretched lfo of the very poor New York Hebrew. Grand street, thoroughfare lned wth the squald tenement, the "cheap flash" store and the nosy nweat-hop; whore representatves of the law thnk t advsable to patrol n twos for consderably more than socal reasons; where Englsh s sometmes spoken and where lengthy heards are no occason for a panc, n Grand street s one of the most ntellgent Amercan theaters. Whether the settng exaggerates fantly acquanted wth the theater Odd. and End. Pcked Up Along Bro*dw*y edy.,the best of many, many seasons.. Strange Bedfellows Henry Mller, 43d St., east of Broadway. A pleasant Jttle summer comedy. the excellence nence o of me the lttle ue snow-. show- _, ",," Demon Barber use or not, t s known throughout Sweeney lodd,. ts present producton, ""«" ; ^a _ Grand Street Folles" s one that urday. Another revval." Too we 1 wll do much to strengthen ts peerless reputaton. Personally we thnk Whte Cargo Dalys Sxty-thrd St., done for the nterest n t. t the best muscal show n New York, 63rd St. east of Broadway; mat at the present tme, nees Wednesday and Saturday. A Whatever the "Grand Street Folles" la.cks by, way of expensve n Afrca. deeply mpressve story of a vamp scenery t makes up for n sparklne Wonderful VUt Prncess, 39th St. wt. t s just a huge burlesque of east of Broadway; matnees Thurs- happenngs n the uptown theatrcal you ought not to mss t. The fact that t n playng to standng room on nghts that uptown houses are nbout hnlf full prover that not many H n kn\a the new play t the V»n-1 people are. derblty "Dr. Davds Dad" was a r- Ry the way, the best way to get gantc (success n Berlfn, reachng ts there <t take snbwny, or elevated j 2,000 performance about a month (East Sls 1 ) md change at Grand street for n Grand Street Crosstown Western Stale Lands Washbums Canddacy.AKEWOOl). N.. A. K u-t Ktth. The canddacy "f Stanley Wash burn for the Kepulln :<v. nomnaton car or cab. Tske <>\r ndvee, dont, try AlthoWh the sgn readng "Jeanne for (tgresh from lln> :lnl emgres- to walk t unless you are a keen Eagles n^ran " s already up at the snnal Dstrct 8ttr:t.,, nnsderahle student of socalogy a very, very. Gaety ThApter, t s problematcal, at nterest throughout n. pres«of New keen student. > the tme or^vrtng. whether the play Jersey, when former Senor Klhu «of the Rout ~ Seas wltever "return Koot - of N>w York *"" Wsuhhurn* Heres the s laton: Sam H. Harrs, manager, W. H. Savag-, statng: " A Word About the Other rlays play, has M?s Eagles, thlnk > " are doln ll " th -ng for producer of tn\ play has Mss Eagles tntlk > " are dom * " ll " th -»K for under contract; Ths contract states, y f r country n helpng t,, get *» (Curtans rse at 8:30 evenngs, -.-, nto ts that no one but Mss Eagles s to play "Me.wul hgh mnded a man 2:30 matnees unless otherwse men- the part of Sade Thompson the servce as a represents v n Contoned). vamp, n New York. Mr. Harrs had COMEDES DRAMAS, ETC. : sgned a "Closed Shop" agreement, P" ^" mpetus» gven the dea AbU..h Ro,^-Republc, 42nd St. wth the Actors Edtrty Assocaton, hroughout the State and dstrct that west of Proadway; matnees Wed- and everyone n thfc»mt except Ms. "e the tme ha. has come to,-hoos, choose. a Con- neday and Saturday." Started Eagles, an Equty (Somber. And, gressman who s known outsde of the over two years ago. "Thats * n»t " more, Jeanne Refuses to jon enough! the Unon. Mr. Harrs and hs ades Begfar On Howback Broadhurst, are dancng wjth anxety, and mean- 44th St. west of Broadway; mat-1 whle the Broadway crowds look neoa Thursday and Saturday. A U P " }**?>*" ver the Gaety and dream-satyr on Amercan rch, love mentally plan when to buy tckets, and the moon. A clever, artstc, 1 : : : splenddly acted producton. Hot weather s hottng wth ts nf mght and man", but stll no one proposeb a * U! <--- *-- - Don tw6 way that New York. mss t. of D.n.n, Mother Booth, Revewed \ $ c?mphel\cagad the H n *f FP*?\? 1 th * sh, ow now offe. rs ] a t er ten tckets to the show to anyone who Dr. Davd* Dad Vahderblt. p. lean concoct (or, perhaps "konkokt") vewed later. "! an entrely orgnal drnk whch Ea»y Street Thrty-nnth St. Revlewttd later. would be known as a "Keep Kool Knoklal." So fn r the fury <>f the ExpraMng Wll -Equtys Forty- audences throats has been appeasedp p d Eghth g St.,, 4J by conventonal orangeade. Hera s 4,8Jh_St. east of Broad- a chance for somebody wth druf way; matnees Tuesday and Satur store ambtons! day. A polshed comedy. Slght sophstcaton salts t. Ver often an understudy must h Q t 48tk the part of a leadng Broadway; matnees Wednesday a =, ^ «*". to, "o and Saturday. A revval of an old- faahoned play, Hstorcally nter- estttg. Show Off Playhouse, 48th St. east of Broadway; matnees Thursday and Saturday. A screamng com- such jumpng are experenced by the audence more than the player. For once, however, an understudy has taken the place of a leadng lady and has done the part better than the orgnal. Margaret Mower, playng the "Angel" n the "Wonderful Vst* (Prncess) suddenly qut the show, and wth only one rehearsal, wth the company her understudy, Catherne Murphy, took her part over and alnpsoalthkwlw^1 performance. t s bettertrom every angle, and certanly should ncrease the popularty of the H. G. Wells play. day and Saturday. How an angel The Dolly Ssters are comng back dstrct, Crtca, tcket speculators, would act on earth. A world-torn to Amerca to appear n the Greenactors,,..., M,.~ newspapers, ^.v. producers, -... drama prests. dream, Very good. wch Vllage Folfes. Ths s not the clubs players, and themselves, even the are Neghborhood all jumbled (MUSCAL COMEDES and REVUES frst tme we have had occason to together, hashed up, nroderlv season-1 Andre Charots Revuer Selwyn, 42nd place fervent blessng? on the heads ed wth!!_ the. hokum r of a._ the.-t.l: ntellgentsa and served n a manner that Wednesday and Saturday. Un- O» St...root west «f of PrnnHwor. Broadway; TnJlt.nppS matnees nt of fho the "Rnhamano "Bohemans, nn" nc. keeps the audence holdng ther sdes contnuously. ts a whale of a show, take t from us. f you are even usual, but there are a great many a lot better. Geo. Whto "ScandnU" Apollo, STRAND SMTH STREET FRDAY and SATURDAY HELENE CHADWCK and CARMEL MYERS n RENO MONDAY and TUESDAY "GAMBLNG WVES" Wth Charles Murray, Marjore Daw, Edward Earle, Ward Crane, and Other Stars WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY- CHARLES RAY n "THE COURTSHP OF MLES STANDSH" Publc Servce "How Shall Keep Home mmaculately Clean? 9 We are asked by our homemaker customers. And we answer "Use the Hoover Electrc Sucton Sweeper." Why? Because we have tested the Hoover thoroughly, and have dscovered that, frst the Hoover combnes the three necessary fundamental prncples of cleanng beatng, sweepng, ar or sucton cleanng. second that these three are combned so skllfully n the Hoover that one smple operaton performs them all. thrd, that the Hoover gets the three layers of drt that wear out your rugs, the deep-lyng grt, the threads, lnt and har that te down the nap, the dust that lee upon the surface. That the Hoover may be demonstrated to be the fnest electrc sucton sweeper on the market, we have arranged these terms, so that our customers may purchase out of ther earnngs, and know the comfort of a Hoover-cleaned home. *5 Down and a y<?kr h pay State n the recept of letters by Washbums manager from the West, where Washbum has busness nterests, manfestng ther nterest n hs canddacy. The Ward County ndependent, the largest weekly publshed n Northwest North Dakota, publshd last week as ts leadng edtoral under thfc capton, "An Easterner the West Admres," whch reads n part as follows : "North Dakota s dstant from the thrd congressonal dstrct n New Jersey but many ctzens of ths State wll take more than a frejjjly. nter est n the poltcal developments there for Major Stanley Washburn, of Lakewood, N. J., s runnng for Congress. And North Dakotans who nave come n touch wth hs work n ths State, where he s heavly nterested fnancally, wll hope that he s sent to Washngton. He would be a valuable man n the lower house for that body needs progressve clear thnlnur~m«*>-«< hu yo* < > rt»»* s that hs Republcansm can stand the acd test. "Major Washburn has demonstrated hs energy and ablty as a bulder n developng the nfant lgnte ndustry of ths State. He made a survey of the stuaton whch confronted hs mne and other mnes of the State two years ago when the lgnte mnes were expected to make up for a large part of the shortage of fuel n the Northwest resultng* from the strke, and he proceeded to organze the North Dakota Lgnte Coal Operators As- Underrm drecton, the organzaton has stablzed the coal ndustry n ths State and has started the lgnte mnes on the road to expanson and G. P. Huntley, theenglsh "Mayfar Man" or "Slly Ass," wll take prosperty. Hs leadershp was partcularly emphaszed n the manner n part n "Be Yourself," the new whch the operators assocaton successfully opposed the ncreased lgnte Kauffman-Connelly muscal comedy comng to New York ths fall. freght rates whch the carrers sought last fall. "The launchng of a broad development nlan for North Dakota was urged by Major Stanley Washburn last fall when he was brought to the State on a speakng tour under the auspces of cvc organzatons n the larger ctes. He hackud up hs suggeston by constructve acton and he "Pat," a muscal comedy, by that nvncble tro, Bolton, Wodehouse can just be gven credt for dong a and Kern, s on ts way, accordng to man szed job n tellng the rest of the press department of Comstock the naton about North Dakota. f and Gest. f "Pat" g only half as good as "Sttng Pretty," the last ef-! North Dak ta had half a dozen eastfort of those three boys, we ern men who are as fllr to the State shall! calmly go nto bankruptcy seeng, n whch they have nvestments as and takng people to see t. We saw Major Washburn, and who would "Sttng Pretty" sxteen tmes, and, match,. hs.. efforts -.. to encourage ~., greater one, prncpal or chorus man wth one hours rehearsal. m t must be a terrble thng to run lke furv for seven hours a day and not progress a stey, as those three chaps, exponents of Gnger Ale, do, p on that bg sgn on Broadway and 3rd street. 42nd St. west of Broadway; matnees Wednesday and Saturday. Sold wt contnuously snce t opened. Marjore Shubert. Revewed later. Mo Other Grl Morosco. Revewed later. : 11 Say She l Casno, Broadway and 39th St.; matnees Wednesday and Saturday, Full of pep and (rood comedy. Just a nose behnd the best. nnocent Eye.Wnter Garden, Broadway and 50th St.; matnees Tuesday and Thursday. Jurt a "fller" untl the new "Passng Show" s ready. Keep Kool Globe, Broadway and 46th St.; matnees Wednesday and Saturday. Kappng the klmax for kontnuously komcal, kleverly konsjpfent popular prced revues. Kd Boot Carroll, Seventh Ave. and 50th St.; matnees Thursday and Saturday. Edde Cantor kddng them along. Grand Street Folle» Neghborhood, 466 Grand St. Revewed n ths ssue. Plan Jane Sam H. Harrs, 42nd St. west of Broadway; matnees Wednesday and Saturday. Good comedy and dancng, wth only far musc. A muscal comedy. Zegfeld "Folle*" New Amsterdam, 42nd St. west of Broadway; matnees Wednesday and Saturday. "Glorfyng the Amercan Grl" at $5.50 top and plenty of scenery. Mss Elnor D. Gregg Hls Elnor ) t,ru«or Hamploo, V*., who bus Ju«t been apponted»u perrlsor ol Held umlrou aud turs«* by Secretary at Uu luluror Work Wth the appuluuent of Ml*n Greg*, tha bureau of lutllau nfl»lr» completed the ortaaatoo of a new (MTUUB ul fold wcllara work amon* tfco Amart- Sttt ladlu, jump nto the part of any-! explotaton there would be of less the crtcsm States resources heard o fnancal nterests, le s the type o nvestor any yfluhs: State needs. "New Jersey, and that part of New Jersey makng up the thrd dstrct n partcular, s gong to have a mghty fne representatve n Congress f they elect Major Stanley Washburn. The West wll flnd n hm a representatve from the East who knows somethng abou the problems of the West. And thats an unusual stuaton for the great trouble wth Congress s that t s made up of men who know only ther home consttuences. n Major Washburn the Republcan party wll have a man who knows nternatonal problems and who can ntellgently consder domestc problems for he knows both the East and the West." n the same mal a letter was receved from Fargo, North Dakota, from C. C. Danelson, presdent of the N. D. Automoble Assocaton, statng "That hs platform Have Fath n Cooldge whch has been wdely reprnted n the West, remnds hm that Washburn was the frst man to brng ths plea to North Dakota. t was when Washburn made the tour of North Dakota last fall, shortly after Cooldge became Presdent and was addressng cvc organzatons urgng them to launch a development pro gram n North Dakota, that t wa ths plea whch carred North Dakota n the prmares aganst Johnson and La Follette." Mr. Danelson, who one of the most promnent men n North Dakota, goes on to state; "Ths s why am hopng," concludes Mr. Danelson, "that Washburn wll be sent to Congress for know he ca render the State of New Jersey an. the naton a dstnct servce." Former Governor Hanna, of Nort! Dakota, wrtes Washburns campagn Washburn s we" n the Northwest and our peo «j - pe have a hgh regard for hm be-! cause of hs ntegrty, hb character, hs earnestness, hs wllngness to work and ha general desre to do that whch s for the common good. He s u man of untrng energy, s used to metnr people and problems,, ;nd f he s nomnated and elected to Congress from tle 3rd Congressonal Dstrct, thc people of New Jersey and of the country may be assured that Major Washburns record n Congress wll appeal to every rght thnkng person." The recept of these letter* s makng a dstnct mpresson on the people of the Thrd Dstrct who are bel gnnng to realze that t s as mporj taut to have a Congressman who s known outsde of the dstrct as well! ax at home. That ths sentment s ; felt outsde the dstrct s manfest! front an edtoral n the Atlantc Cty Preu! of the 31st of July, whch reads n part as follows: "Stanley Washburn, of Lakewood, who s bg enough to have 500 word* n Whos Who, comes out today wth the announcement that he s a canddate for thc Republcan nomnaton for Cungretss from the thrd congressonal dstrct. Ths dstrct has been Democratc ten out of the last twelve years, wrtes Mr. Washburns campagn managtr. Wushburas rght U gong to be prmarly U> get the largest potuble vote for the Republcan tcket. HU campagn s gong to be confned almost entrely to fath n Cooldge, the consttuton, honest government and sound economcs." That strke* even a non-poltcan good poltcs. Republcans go nto they cau, n th and 11* autet b FACT AUTOMOBLE SECTON N SELLNG OAR STCK TO TRUTH Buyer* of Used Machne* Are Wse Guy* and Watch Many Lttle Ponts. Or KWN OREEH. TrMldm <)r.. T Col lft at Aat«moltra Er(ln»>rlnf. Chl<!a«t< At Ut yon hve found t protpvet Who ll actually "lold" on your used car. The demonstraton has been per feet, the old bolt hts palled the hlls twmttr and chujfed steadly alone nt fve mles an boar. Tlw prospvet (»ts out to examne the tres, "Blah You ctnt tell me that car wth only flvf thousand mles on ts speedometer should have four dfferent makes of tres on ts wheels." be sneers. Aqd your prospect s gone. t t jour fsnft. tor not makng that «le jour falure to renedj the car so that t wll check nbsolutely wth your sales talk. What you hateot taken nto account s that thr nspd-rar buyer t a wse cuj then* days and that youve got to hve a hchlne that satsfes tls epert me chanlcal eye. mportant Questons. Auk yonmelf the folluwlnf quratluns, sell: Do all four of the tlrts allow a flm Mar degree of wear? Are they the ssm«nwket Does the speedometer agree wth them? Remember that the n.ooo-mtle gag on the speedometer 1* one of the oldest that s pulled. W dfferent and set yours at 10,001). Rven better than ths leave tle speedometer "as s." And f you repant the car dnnt forget to replace ll dented huh caps whether or not the place or that the sprngs are depressed, especally n the ((rver,* seat. Tle expense to repar t s small and ths s me of the placet thnt the expert buyer nspects for wear. t the top n good condton? f not have t repared. A sagrlng top runs the lnes of th* fnest maetlne. Whle dong ths have all the broken sdecurtan wndows repared. Are tl* llfht* n (rood condton? Are there any broken len»e«7 Make sure that tte fenders arc free of ther from dents. Take tlen on* yourself. Then the repar* wont be half ns large as f the repar man dd the Job.. How about the doom? Do they open wd dote properly. Do they rattle? * f.«nw nldt m l t» W «.f «rwlrlver wll ld^t th.n.jnn Qood Tool* Kt Adr An*t tlm tl<» tnu 1><m! «trln n nr JUM twrmse ym wnn to m-t rd of t. K tool tml kt wll.ll \ tn-1 ter prce to the rnr nnd (<n to one you get hack the prlrc»f thx tonlx twenty tlmea over. Anl now you urc prttty well s»t. Ruppote you nvte D frend, one who la not ntermtml n the machne rf to setl and nvte hl«crulcsm Uft.-n he wll flnd sorn* hghly mportant Haw that yon have overlooked Now for th* mechancal condton of the engne nd chauu. ll s tasentlal, or ronrnf, thst th* engne b«absoluttlj quet. Ths ental* a %nndrtd thngs nl you know bent how to deal wth them. n other worla, the merhgnlcs.1 condton of nc machne should b«wch hnt t wltl untl demonstraton the condton* And n* «t< wll pmtlblj- tn-ml t» be ron«ld»r these frtu rnrefollf yon wll dscover Hnt jrou h»»t nut ml mnut of the Mes re«tum pled by th* -Menton ths paper to <>* t helps you, t helps them, t your paper. Hundreds read our Clanfted STUDEB AKER WUL CORD TRES H t Grade * Every R«4M«PRCES ARE RGHT! We are Sole Woodbrdge Ds WOODBR1DGE AUTO S AccetorUt and Suppllet, Gas, < ZOMaln St., WOOPBRDGE,] When She Wont Run Dont lose your teraper; just phone Woodbrdge 202 and we wll be on the job n almost no tme to fx whatever s wrong. And the cost wll not be much, for we fnd the trouble quckly Try us on that KNOCK. Weve never seen a knock yet that wouldnt respond to the rght knd of treatment. ts our am to do only frst class and satsfactory work at reasonable prces. CHAS. M. MUELLER 685 St. George Ave., WOODBRDGE, Standard s the dealers choce WD*D a dealer evnlof dapfnd awch on A* «l«o **"* 1 "* you my be mhthlactt ba brad oaly ahs thokmfh Kudy. "Studrd" Cuolot mbfoc w d l CMM d* pop! Made n New Jersey "Standard" Gasolne s as popular wth the dealer as t s wth the motorst. The men who choose ths brand to sell are hard headed busness men. They know that the publc demands qualty and that they can get ther share of the busness only by carry-, ng what the publc wants. Judgng by the number of "Standard" pumps you see ts "Stanc,. ~ hrteen-year-old Mystery the publc U)ant3. Solved At Hgh Workmen tourng- out lavatory ns at the hgh school ths S a urng the work of remodelng l l l t behnd ths p o p u e P yh y t r * jf\\ troublng the school board 0«OA1;«A lta W.Jl«- 1 rte<;11 yea" and that has been OaSOlne has bullt Jbject 0* f complants by the Pa, eucher Assocaton when they 3 reputaton Or Q>vered that the plumbng contra J»U nstalled the tolets wth frst replaced the horse. Qualty does not show on the surface. Most gasolnes look alke. Your best guarantee of qualty s ths popularty, for t s based on past performance and the personal experences of mllons ojf motorsts. STANDARD OL COMPANY [New Jersey] STANDARD GASOLNE The wonderful new fuel "Standard" Ethyl Gasolne now avallh)e at many "Standard" pumpe, completely elmnates "gas knock". Move power oo thc hlk! Lew gear shftng Let* vbraton! Ask the nun at the pump about t. m $tm4*rj" «tkt troth m#k of the Standard OH C* m At UmHd Skm «*d many frtep

8 PAGE EGHT FRDAY/AUGUST S, 1*24 FRDAY, AUGUST 15, 1924 Grcon n tlw Mr. Mrs.,)nhn Camp nnd 1 - Mr. W Wllam; M ley, of lph Mrs. Olsrn : K-.elpy nnl Mr. Wllam km. Perth Amboy; and Mv-n. from erlh Keasbey daughter, Olve, spent Monday at At nntc Herhlnnds. Wednesday from a stay nrk, Wagner. Mn? Ma v Statek. Mrs. 0. H, Decker, M!- : -.nma toyer, Mrs. Fred Fscher nnd daughter. Klwbeth, md Hss Chrstel G-lmg spent Wednesday at the shore. (harle- flbl. of Hrooklyn, # spendng ths week uth Mr. and Mrs. Paul Swanck.! Mss Henretta Morrson s pendng a few dnys nt Newark wth frends. Mr. Rnlph Lddle n the postwaster at present, the offce beng moved to the new Hoy buldng. Mss Paulne and Mss Anna Balnt enjoyed the excurson of the K. of C. Monday. -Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Past entertaned relatves from New York over ] the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Garrck ntertam-d frends from out of town Mondav. Mrs. Chrs layer was an out of town vstor last nght. Mm. Henry hnhaek, of Maxwell avenue, wll have a beneft card party at her home tonght, startng nt H oclock, Mnn Mary Stanck, of New York Cty spent the week-end as the guest of Mrs. Fred Fscher. j Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Olng, j Sr, and sons, Walter. Jacob and /Henry, Mr. and Mrs.. B. Decker, Mr. and Mrs. {. Velng. Jr., and chldren, Joan. Clare and Nan, Mrs. Vbeka Kfc, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Sandorff and sons, and Paul Smth motored to Kngston, N. J., Sunday., j The Eagle Mdgets defeated the < Clover Mdgets by a score of 4-0. The Eagle Mdgets a the new name for the Yankee Mdgets, and the team " s tryng to got the champonshp of, Woodbrdge Townshp. For game? ( wrte or call Wn, (Jc-rty. hone F,J.9ftO-R Fords. N. J. The adult class of Our Ke- <J«pTners UUherarr v%w#tr ww«tn<t Tuesday evenng at the chapel. * Mr. Oswald Skov spent Tuesday evenng n Perth Amboy. The (nualsnduy school and congregatonal pcnc of Our Redeemers Lutheran Church wll be ( 1 held at Lnwnod drove, Sunday. Ser-; vce at 11 oclock. After dnner j there wll be games, etc. for the ch.l-1 dren. Two blsses wll he nt the! chapel at 10 oclock to convey the chldren and also ther parents to :! the grove. All are welcome, Mss Eleanor LudwgHon s very, ll at he rlmme on Kng Georges 1 Road. --The Board of Fre Cmmsson- «r* held a regular meetng at the Fre House, Tuesday nght. The commssoners protested aganst mtomohlsts racng to fres ahead of the fre engnes. The matter wll be referred t<j the polce department. Several mprovements were dscussed, among whch were steam heat, water, new lghtng fxtures nnd plumbng RuppleR. All of the lre commssoners were present al the meetng, Mr, and Mrs..ous Varady and chldren nutored out of town, Sunday.. otto Schuster motored to Delaware Water (lap, Sunday. Mr. nnd Mrs. Mchael Parsler and M.) motored to Keansburg, Sunday. Work on the new water system here wll be started n the very near future, Mr. nnd Mrs. James Qush and dnnghter jjnent Sunday nght wth relatves ln Fords. Mr. and Mrs. John J. Schlcox entertaned at ther home, Saturday nght. Mrs, Charles Schuster s spendng a week wth relatves n plnnfeld. ^Joseph Katrausky spent Sunday fshng at South Jersey. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fesler and ( chldren motored to Hopewell, N. J., Sunday Mr, and Mrs- Hubert Halbcrt and chldren vsted relatves n Fords, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Wllam Ncary and chldren, of Perth Amboy, vsted j frends here Sufflay. A number of local people attended the K. of (. excurson Monday. --Mss Ann Johnnon, of street, s spendng some tme locono Mountans. - Mr?. Arthur (!. lmwn, uf M:n Street, spent the week-end wth frends n reehol<). Mss Helen Ryan, of West Man street, was the guest of Mss Helen Parker, of South Amboy, recently. A son was born recently t< the former Methodst locnl mnster. Rev. «nd Mra. L. B, McMckle, of Pnterson.,.,.., mlr,,,,,, ><;,, MrK. W. G. Weaver, Sr. nnd the.jr., and daughter, Kznbetf, vsted Msses Sarah md Elzabeth W-avcr, j j n lelmar, Sunday, or Orange, were the quests of Mr. Charles Hanflh, and Mrs. W. Guy Weaver, of West Rpent the week-end The Womans Club weekly card party wn held Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Frank Barth. Mrs. W. H. Prall and chldren, There were throe tables of pnochle Pornthy and Robert, nnrl Mss.aun nnd one of brdge. Mrs...1. Raker, (Utter, of Green street, returned.sr., won wth hgh wore n brdge, ---" nt Asbtry a sut of pajamas. n pnochle Mrs. H. S. Abrnm» a cookng pot; Mr. F. Mrs. Roscoe Chase s a patent n Barth, Rat and pepper shakers; Mrs. the Elzabeth General Hosptal. Mr. nnd Mrs. Hurry Baker, Sr.. Mss Anna Baker and Mr. rvng Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Baker, Green street, recently. Mr.and Mrs. Leonard Grmley, of Brooklyn, th hr aunt, Mrs. Prank Carlson, of School street. Rev. Raymond Cameron, who has of Freeman street, spent the week-1 been supplyng the pulpt of the ana * *" k ""- pulpt f th P b r Chh end at Asbury Park. Mrs. Jenne Maubey, of School street, spent a week nt Lambertvlle. Mr,and Mrs. Leonard Grmley, of Freemnn street, returned last Wednesday from n weeks vst at Atlantc Cty and Freehold. Mr. and Mrs, S. H. Stryker, of Myrtle avenue, spent the week-end at Canadenss, Pa. Mrs. J. Wght, of Grove avenue; Mrs. W. Frank Burns, of Grenvlle e; and Mss Helen Pfeffer, of Pl ttdd a bde Tsdale Place, attended a, party at the home of Mrs. k brdge Oscar f Hghland Park, recently. - Mr.and Mrs, Cedrc Ostrom, of Dunham Place, are entertanng Mrs. Ostrflms mother, Mrs. Vrgna Checkerng and her sster, Mrs. 0. E. U-ggtt, of Planfeld. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Baldwn, of Rahwny avenue, have been entertanng Harry Hauser, of Perth Amboy, for a week, who returned to hs home on Frday, A daughter was born last Wednesday to Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bender, of Alden street. Maran Madsen, of ppyg the pp o pulpt of the Presbyteran Church durng the pastors absence, left Monday for hs home n pawa, 111. Mr. Wllam Brown, of Elzabeth, shppng and feght agent of the Phladelpha Readng Ralroad, at the Pert Readng Termnal, gave an excurson up the Hudson to Bear Mountan td the offce employes and ther famles on Sunday. The companys large tuff, Hern, wth 75 aboard, left the Port Rendng dock at 9:30 a. m., returnng nt 6:30 p. m. Mr. and Mrs. James Fler, of Rahway avenue, entertaned relatves from Elzabeth, Sunday. The Msses. Maran and Harret Breckenrdge wll return Monday from a two weeks,stay at Asbury Park. Mss Grace Huber s vstng her aunt, Mrs. Wllam Buttus. at Phladelpha. Frank Lelsen, of Grove street and Joseph Wargas, P. J. Donato, jar preserves. The Rosary Socety of St. Andrews Church held a meetng Tuesday evenng at the school house. Mr. Fred Cgatura reported that $50.00 wag made on the baseball game held Sunday on the Steel Equpment feld, between the Knghts of Columbus team, of Woodbrdge, and the Avenel team. Mrs. Jane reported that $ was the proceeds from the block dance held recently. The socety s plannng to hold a barn dance on Sept. 13. Mrs. Julus Jaeger s general charman. Mrs. James Spears, of New York, and Mss Margaret Holland, of Poughkeepse, were the guests of ther sster, Mrs. Harry Detz, last week. -The Boy Scouts, of Avenel, left seln Rrprerntel by C. Brnkman. Mrs. W. George nnd daughter, Loretta. from New Haven, spent s week wth Mr. and Mrs. Fngan, on Mddlesex nvenue. Mss Chrstna Mueller, of Hola, L,., a frend of Mrs. Henschele, on seln Foulevard, (spent the weekend here. Mss Mueller lkes seln very much nnd would lke to locate For People of seln Annual Carnval Of Church To Be Unusual Affar, Say, Press Agent Spurred on by a most ntense,, play of nterest, planly manfest every move and conversaton of <l people n and about seln anl " envrons these days, now and that here. The seln Socal Club held a barn dance on Saturday evenng, August.), n the club room on Senore avenue. A very large crowd was present and spent a pleasant evenng., t was learned that Mr. Charles Hutterman, on Hardng avenue, wll,..... run for fre commssoner next year n hold ts annual carnval; the van place of Mr. Mke Lews. commttees n charge have redouh Mrs. E. Sdana and frends were ther efforts and are combnng ) spendng the week-end n Mr. and Mrs. Cccanes resdence, on Oak Tree road. Mr. nnd Mrs. C. Brnkman were vstng frends n Hoboken and New York, Tuesday. The meetng of the seln Volunteer Fre Company No. 1 last Thursnendeavor to put across what 8(. destned to culmnate n the most posng, stupendous and brllant -, far of ts dnd held n ths vcntv n many a day. Startng off last years ntal at tempt at entertanng wth a braml of attractons ntended to r /! :n for campg Monday, and the card; they day evenng was poorly attended. A feelng of good wll toward sub«are sendt" home ndcate they are j specal meetng wll be held on Thurs- j quent efforts, to..establsh a favoral havnr a fne tme J... *....- o at c /,,-wt n r«! an(j lastng mpresson that would far towards assurng the success, future events of lke character, seen to have had ts effet f havng a fne tme. The Larkr fnmly motored to Pennsylvana, Sunday. Mr. Adelbert Alexay returned day, August 21, at 8 oclock n Communty Hall for sgnng the charter. Mss Margaret Janke, of Hardng-avenue, celebrated her thrteenth home Tuesday from Cuba, where he brthday recently at a party gven to has been spendng hs vacaton.! a number of her frends. Musc and Mss Alda Van Slykc hts fnshed the summer sesson of the Unj veraty of Mane and s spendng two weeks at Halfax, Nova Scota, before returnlno- to her home. Mr. and Mrs. D. P. De Youne sngng l%rnbned to make the evenng pass pleasantly and, at a late character, s to have had ts effect, for the,),,, topc of conversaton hereabouts, < cernng whch the people seem neve, to tre s the forthcomng carnval planly there s sensed the oppo " hour, delcous refreshments were j nty of agan enjoynp a perod served. Those present ncluded the festvtes and gaety of the rt l Msses Margaret Janke, Anna Hutler man. Rose Tauber, Elzabeth Decker, rove street, 1 and daughters, Jean and Ruth, and _Mare Janke,, Mrs. Tauber, Mrs. Me- _. n.., of Wllam Mr. and Mrs. Joe Felton motored to f Dermott, Mrs. C. Davd, Wesley street, wll return on Sunday nght; Delaware Water Gap, Wednesday. Janke, Mr. and Mrs. A. Janke, and from two WBS* frtrp stay «t\ Th W ^ Chto Fe P n b t h R h, y from trtwo WBSB* cantfrtrpr stay p The Wrrmvn^s Chto Free Camp Pamrapo, war Rear Mountan,yLbrary s open Thursdays from 2:30 New York State. Ths s the regular j^o 4:30 p. m. at the Avenel Staton. Mss Ruth Jance. Mss Mare Janke, of Brooklyn, and Mr. and Mrs. Gus von Hof, of street, has been vstng wth frends at Manasquan. Mrs. Stephen Wyld, of Amboy avenue, returned Thursday from a COOLDGE CHOCE OF WOMEN VOTERS Hopelawn Word has reached ths place that neghbors have been complanng of the nose made by John Paul whle practcng on hs trombone. To keep the sad neghbors quet, not only does Johnny shut doors and wndows of hs room whle practcng but also puts the horn of hs trombone nto a pay of water to drown the nose. Alex. Stntsky, of Cty Lne, has taken a bungalow at Clfford Beach for the summer. A large representaton from ths secton attended the Republcan meetng at Hoys last Thursday nght. Mr. Frank Youhas, G7 years old, of May strut, ded 2 oclock Thursday afternoon after a long llness. He was an old resdent of ths place and wan much honored. A dance s to be held at the Hopelawn School by the Athletc/Club Saturday evenng. A large crowd s expected. Mr. Clarence Mathews, of New Brunswck avenue, was a Woodbrdge vstor MoBday. - Mr. Peter Yohlar, of May street, vsted frends out of town Wednesday. Mrs. Edward Pfeffer, of James treet entertaned relatves at her home recently. Mrs. Thomas Red, of Luther avenue, motored to Wnterton, N. Y.,j recently to vst her relatves. Many people from Hopelawn enjoyed the K. of 0. excurson sal up the Hudson, Youllfndus tose GALAD/ Man Street an WOO! THE Merchants who advertse n ths paper wll gve yon best values lor your money. Chld Labor Polcy. "What the future holds for the earner nml the wage earners famly, n of vtal nterest to the womjh of ths country." Mrs. Alvn T. Hert, vce -halrmn of the Republcan Natonal commttee, stated n a recent ntervew. "Therefore, the promses of the poltcal partes on the subject "f labor are of the greatest mportance. When we reflect that there are ellll and one-half mllon women wast* earners ncludng two mllon marred women wage earners who are drectly uftecttl by labor legslaton, as well as tbe wves of the laborng men who ore nterested n the protecton afforded labor, the npnrlnnce of the queston can be planly seen. "Every woman ln Amerca s nterested n the queston of chld labor and wants to see the chldren of ths country safeguarded durng the most mportant yenrs of ther lves. "A far del to labor was assured by the Republcan party n ts platform accepted by the natonal conventon n Cleveland. Tle platform pledges eontlmd progressve reducton uf taxes, rgd economy n govern ment and promses protecton ugaht undue exact ons, "To the Hepubllcan party goes the credt of beng the leader n the campagn for natonal legslaton to protect the chldren. t was the party that enacted the frst federal chld labor law," Mrs. Hert sad. "The Hepubllcnn platform commended congress for ts prompt adopton of the recommendaton of Presdent Coolldge authorzng congress to pass protectve chld labor legslaton. t also urged the prompt consderaton of the amendment by the legslatures of the varous stutes. "Tlls luw, when ratfed, wll afford natonwde protecton for chld work-, ers. "The average woman of today s worker. She ether works to Support hyrstlf and those dependent uon her or she works to make the fumlly ncome buy as many comforts for her famly as possble. "The lust federal census showed that out of 1 ST1 occupatons, only 35 dd not have women workers. Women have entered the realm of ndustry uml they must be carefully protected. The ctlo of the Republcan platform n favorng hgh standards of wage, workng and lvng condtons among women has receved wdespread commendaton. "The electon of Presdent CoulldKe uml Mr. Dawes, supported by arejub Hcnn congress, wll meun contnued prosperty for the average home." few days sojourn wth relatves n Pennsylvana. Mss Mary Elzabeth Smth, of Grove avenuu, has been vstng her grandmother ut Hamlton, N. Y. Mrs. L. Mevlle and daughters, Barbara and Jane, of Calforna, nt the week-end wth Mr. ond Mrs. l. R,<Hatfo(frrf^Ntttwaveue. Mr. and Mra. Charles A. Harrson, of Phladelpha, and Mr. and Mrs. Armand J. Lvandas, of East Orange, were the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Copeland, of Grove nvenue. Mrs. A. Stevenson and Mss Vera Mellor returned to Boston, after u n kjucu.^. lllj^ «,.v m^p,w.«.,.*<j.vv y, m, o^ t,,t rtlm u.»vt*... «nu JUT. BnO HTS. UUH VU1 11U1, ll Scout camp, and the former Jocalj CharJes>Holden, of Newark, s j Hoboken, spent the week-end at the Boy Scouts are of Troop and encamped on July 28. Mrs. John Beck, of Elzabeth, was the guest of her mother, Mrs. Clarence Turner, of Green street, on Wednesday. Mss Maran Madsen, of Green., street, fl sojournng at the Delaware Ray Hancock, and commttee wll spendng hs vacaton wth hs cousn, home of Mrs. A. Jance. Mrs, Julus Jaeger, of Barnett street. Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Brethwate and chldren. Mrs. H. R. Abrams j and daughters, Mrs. Nel Hume and Reported by EDWARD RENHART. g y of the snrm hgh standard as was ther good f,, tune to experence about ths tme last year. That they are not destned to,,. the least bt dsapponted seems evdent as one s let fn on the varm. actvtes of the many commttt,. that have ths affar n charge. Fr, of all you become mpressed as yn > note the care and thought hps!,m,., n the selecton of the many a (] vared attractons whch wll be,,; fered; for contrary to the usual p,,. cedure that domnates n makng :u rangements for affa f th k n en Water G«p. Mr. K. V. Hoffman, of Wood- the beneft of the Womans Club, brdge avenue, enjoyed a weeks so- Mr. and Mrs. Samuel McKee and josfrm^fcjtmmachufleub. daughter, Vrgna, o/ J*rm,-y Cty, Mm. Carl WMwms, of Hgh have purchased a bungalow on Ffth street, t*entertanng her sster, MrB. avenue. They wlloccupy t on Frson, spent Sunday at Sedlers Beach. Alfred Hyde s endeavorng to rangfmentg for affars of ths The hosptalty charman, Mrs, assgt fre commssoners to secure aevery consderaton s extended.... u._. free lot from the Home Guardan Co. deavonng to satsfy the wants,.,, Ed. Fagan and hs camnagn desres of the people who wll be n manager were Woodbrdge vstors on attendance rather than the mm-da;.- Mondav last, feelngs of the members themselve- ; serve a shore dnner September 5, for George Curta, of Bethlehem, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Barnekov, Jr., and chldren; of Myrtle avenue, left last week by automoble for Peart Lake. Mrs. Barnekov and chldren are to reman for the balance of the day. Mr. gomery, t and Mrs. Mlton Montof Lon^ sland, were the M G M f A New 4<M-fc"nyndcaW. wfll Soon! ahfl Hwnjhnt the, entre tn f h h ^t*frw *Wft ttttt d y start erecton of machne-shop- Rld d ll l n ttttt- advce Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Martn and daughter, Jeanette, of Green street, whle "Mr. Barnekov re- j n Jersey Cty. gy, ^, guests of Mr. G. Montgomery, of Smth street, over the week-end. Oscar Large s vstng hs aunt start erecton of machnp w W dc of alt Ralroad avenue»od wll employ over knds s eagerly sought after, wnh 100 people. " the One set nurppse of beng enabled seln s developng a Jack to offer a brand of entertanment Dempsey. satfyng and acceptable n every w:,v Anthony Acqullas rado s a to the enormous attendance expected, source of entertanment to hs negh-: Foremost amongst some o tht 4 t tl t b 4) O rs. : g h mo.t promnent artcles to be presented j ht b t d t b Mrs. E. Brower, Mr. and Mrs. Wllam Loper Bpent the week-end wth Mrs. L. B, Van Slyke. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sessel and Mr. H. S. Abrams motored to New York Cty, Frday.... Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Stadler, of Mrs. Rose Grausneck and Mrs.! Ffth avenue, are recevng congrauend. Mrs. George Hoffman and Mr. and Mrs. Wllam Coughln, of West n street, left last Thursday for a weeks motor trp through New State and Canada. accompaned by Mr. and Mrs. rvng 1 " rar f s - "». 11 " 1 1 ^" Martn, of Mlltown, motored to Maln street - lelt last Holmesburg, Phladelpha, on Shtur-1 day and vsted relatves over the ^MarUn^.SK^n P- ^^^^^y^l^^^^j^^,, ±J t J^ Sunday and Grove. motored to W^,,, an d George, spent the week-end wth W11OW.ther ssters, Mrs. E. Rosch and Mrs. ro Mss Maran Smth, of New York and Washngton, was the week-end guest of Mss Gertrude Chessre, of Grove avenue. Mss Vctora Browa and Valentne Brown, of Ocean Grave, were the week-end guestj of Mss Agusta Kelly, of Green street. Mss l.avna Stewart, of Prnceton, was the guest of Mss Maran Love, last week. Mss Love spent the week-end wth Mss Stewart upon her return home. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Lee and daughter, Ada, of Flemngton, were the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. Wolncy, of Barron avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Harold K. Whtaker, of Valentne Place, accompaned by Mr. and Mrs. Frankln A. Schaufele, of Valentne Place, and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Huber and Mss Blanche Huber, of Green street, motored to the Delaware Water Gap and Bushkll Falls over the week-end. Mrs. Ralph Kelly and daughter, Jane, of Lnden avenue, spent Tuesday wth Mrs.- Donegan, of Market street. Mr. and Mrs. Gerns, of Barron avenue, have been entertanng Mrs. C. H. WllamB and daughters, Jean- Augusta Treller, of Hastngs-on-the- Hudson, N. Y. Rev. A. S. Dezendorf, of Man street, wll enjoy hs vacaton next week n camp at Neshanc. Mr. daup-hte- born Saturday mornng. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Smth and famly motored to Seasde, N. J., Sunday. Commtteeman Joe Felton, H. S. Abrams, Charles Sessel, Fred and Carl Ledner, enjoyed a fshng trp to Dezendorf "vsted at Neshanc on \ Sea Brght, Sunday. Mr! and Mrs. G, C. Holmes spent the week-end at Manasquan. Mr. and Mrs. Wllam Baker motored to Berkeley Heghts, Sunday. Wednesday, when he made the trp by automoble. He wll be accom- paned by Charles Acker, of Sewaren, and the followng week hs son, Paul, of Roselle, and John Wlson, of Lnden avenue, wll jon hm. Mrs. Leon Campbell and chldren, Patrca and Leonard, the Msses Sade and Jeanette Martn and the Msses Helen and Emly Hnrned, of Green street, motored to Bernards-j Mr. Earl Graham, of Brooklyn, were Edgar Hll Mr. and Mrs. Lews Graham and e, on Thursday. the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. town. Mr. and Mrs. Vnn G. MungerWm. Rowe, of Rdgedale nvenue. and daughter, of Freeman street, are Mrs. Rowe returned to Brooklyn wth spendng two weeks vacaton out of them on Monday for a few days stay. wn, j Mr. C. C. Jones, of New York, Mr. and Mrs. G. Houseman and spent Sunday wth hs parents, Mr. chldren, Vvan, George and Walter, a "d Mr»- C. C. Jones. of Man street, enjoyed a motorboat Mss Helen Lorch s vstng her trp to Morgan, on Sunday. 1 aunt, Mrs. saac Dunham, at Fords. The Msses Ruth and Audrey Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Rettwaller, Bogart, of Cedar Knolls, were the of New York, were the week-end week-end guests of Mr. and MrB. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Danel Des- George Houseman, of Man street. ; mond, of Prospect avenue. Mss Vvan. Houseman, of Man Mrs. D. S. Voorhees has returned street, was the guest of relatves n u. H. wanb a a g, ette and Eleanor, of Batrevlle, Okla. Mss Vesta Peterson, of School has d h k th Mornstown for several weeks and ^ tl k Ms V, Street, s spendng the week wth Mr. and Rahway. Mrs. Abe\ Peterson, of A daughter was born on Saturday Jo Mr. and Mra. John Coffey, of Man street. Mss Dors Berran, of South Amboy, was the guest of Mss Mary Tyler, of Dunham Place, on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Valentne d h C l x - O tlm week - and son, to her home after vstng her daughter, Dr. Florence E. Voorhees,. at Newark. Mss Margaret Lockwood s en t t T h d M r. a n a mrs. t r a n s n- v n e n u u e., r-,- -,- --. and son Ross, and daughters, Carolyn 0 Bren, of Alden.street, Monday and Mldred, of Green street, have evenng. returned to ther home after several _. Mr :. al1^ M rs - J 4 m s Wght; Mss months tour to Calforna and the ThornVon. and Msr^wbberTesTof! joyng a vacaton at Thousand Alden street, and ther guest, Mrs. " " S. R. Todd, of Newark, spent Wednesday at Asbury Park. Mr. and Mrs. T. X. OBren, of.- Alden street, were the guests of JJ. r -. Wln -? re an an d hs famly, at frends n Newark on Thursday nght. Hghland Par.k. Mr. Gasaaway, of Rahway. was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. T. X.» K"»*t»*»»4»*H"H "JUST TWENTY-ONE" Tffl Mrs. Ed. Renhardt s spendng j mght be mentoned a most beautful a few weeks at Culver Lake, N..1. (doll, of a very large sze and what, wth the care and thought that wll, be bestowed by the donor n desgnng ts apparel and the dressng of same, we are sure wll gladden tlv henrt.of the chld fortunate Enough to gan possesson of t, as well a? make her the envy of her playmates for many a day to come. Certanly ths wll be real joy for some one* lttle erl. Then there s a sold gold rng, topaz, gypsy settng, a prze worthy of the effort of anybody: trulv a magnfcent gft, n the event yum fngers happened to be already laden wt]) such thngs. Then agan th-rts the ever present gold pece, wthout whch t undoubtedly would be most dffcult to predct the sycc-. of any carnval. A most coveted artcle ndeed, and somethng as you One of the mportant factors n the electon of the man who s to be the next Presdent of the Unted Stt-s, wll be tlje f young men nnd women who are just old enough to vote. Some of these Hrst voters are wage earners, others are stll n college. They share a common T responsblty, that of exprebs- ] ] ng the vews and wshes of the youth of Amerca. Here and them when a young < man or woman can be persuaded, to talk abow t. they are heard to Ray that they want to keep t Presdent Loolldtse. on the Job at Washngton for the next four years. They can ao t. News of All Woodbrdge Townshp n the ndependent, the most wdely read paper n Woodbrdge slands. - Mrs, Katherne Ebner has returned to her home on Prospect avenue after vstng wth her brother, western States. Mss Mary Hubers, of Green S WOODBRDGE NDEPENDENT 20 Green St., Woodbrdge BESURE AND WCK YOUR TOOLS Ko* Our Well- Ch<Meo Stock of H G H GRADE TOOLS Hardware of All Knds WOMEN OUT TO BEAT 1920 VOTE Women are (,ettlng down to the mslnek of votng. SlulbH show llmt approxmately -. per cent of the women elgble to vole, actually vmel n 1;D. Tl, means only about onu out-f every four. n 1920 on. «ut«had 3,4*2,879 votng cttlj.jj htr total vot* wa 2,090,468. What about th«1,372,411 who dd npt vot»f The womens bureau of the Uepubllcan Natonal conmlftee. wth leu(l< uurters n Chcago, bus Just ssued m nppeul to the women nnmn, them to see that every elgble voter ln ther famles KCM-H to the polls on re^lslruton duy. Women ur» out to round up the "cvc luckrm," and ths neulh men tm well H women. N«Xt to Port Qfc* A Glass of Buttermlk a Day K«eps ndgeston Away. Purtan Buttermlk, n santary bottleg,..qt 10c, Blanchard & Gottsten. Tel, Perth Amboy 18B8J.-^Adv. street, s enjoyng two weeks vacaton from her dutes at the Regna, n Rahway., Mrs. James Rauchman and chldren, of Barron uvenue, are spendng a few weeks at Asbury Park. Mr. and Mrs. Wllam E. Bartow. of Lnden avenue, are entertanng Mrs. Bartows parents, Mr, and Mrs. W. E. Everett, of Phladelpha. Mrs. Harry B. Mawbey, Sr., vsted frends n Hopewell on Tuesday. Mss Elzabeth Galada, of Valentne Place, and Mss Helen Galada, of Man! street, are enjoyng two weeksn Green Pond, N. J. Mr.and Mrs. Carol McNulty, of Elzabeth, were the week-end guests of Mr. and Mra. S. B. Brewster, of Grove avenue. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Breckenrdge have returned from a bref stay at Asbury Park. Mrs. \V. A. Lockwood, of Rahway avenue, spent the week-end wth her daughter, Mrs. John Pfeffer, at! Maurer. Mrs. 1. W. Logan and daughters, the Msses Klane and Nathale, are two weeks at Nantucket. Mra. Paul Kngberry and daughj ters, Jane and Helen, of Amboy avenue Mss Bertha (Jhlott, of Freeman street, and Messrs. Fred Green and Thomas Knnally, of Carteret, motored to Long Branch, Sunday. -Mss Helen Pfeffer, of Tsdale Place, s vstng her sster, Mrs. Garrett, Brodhead, of New Haven, Conn. Msa Haaal Grmley and Robert Grmley, of Freeman street, have returned from a vst n Freehold. Mss Mtte Randolph, of Rabway avenue, s vstng wth Rev. and Mrs..Brookman, rt Sea Grt. Mr, Fruduruk Swsnor, of Lndun uvenue, who underwent an operaton for appendcts last Frday at the Perth Amboy Hosptal, s reported mprovng. Mrs. A. F, Randolph, of Runway avenue and! Mrs. Harry Reyder, of Perth Amboy, motored to Sea Grt, Tuesday. 1 Mlrg, Hsnten tnd daufbur, Mrs. n, and on,ftolwrf,at ft* Elzabeth Dolan, of Grove~ avenue; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burns and Percy Quackenbush, of Perth Amboy, spent the week-end at Dover. Mss Vctora Brown, of Green street, who has been spendng the summer at Ocean Grove, wll be one of the mads of honor at the carnval held n Asbury Park on August 27. Mrs. James E. Rowland and two chldren, of Chcago, are vstng Mrs. Rowlands brother and hs wfe, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Jackson, at 147 Dunham Place. g Mr - a "d Mrs. Harry Coll, of ; C / a n for^ and Mss Emma Ancamp.»f Brooklyn, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Tappen, Wednesday. M. and MrB. Wlls Gaylord, of avenue, are vstn E n UNTED STATES POST OFFCE. Woodbrdge, N. J., Aug. 6, Propoul To Lene Post Offce Quarlen Wanted Po«t Offce Department. Offce of lmpector. The undersgned wll receve sealed Provdence, R.. Maurce Nchols, of East Rutherford, s spendng,a week wth George Tappen. THE FLORSHEM SHOE WOODBRDGE TOWNSHP. LOCAL MPROVEMENT. NOTCE OF NTENTON. PARK AND FFTH AVENUE SEWER. NOTCE S HEREBY GVEN, that an ordnance has been ntroduced for the constructon of an eght nch vtrfed sewer, to be known asthe Park and Ffth Avenue Sewer, or such part thereof as herenafter mentoned. The sewer authorzed n sad ordnance, to be constructed on Park Avenue, s to connect wth the Avenel Sewer at Avenel Street and to run frqm the centre lne of Avenel Street southerly along Park Avenue eleven hundred and sxty feet; and the sewer to be constructed on Ffth pronosals up to"and ncludng Aug. Avenue s to connect wth the sewer 20th, 1924, for furnshng sutable! ut Centre Street, lad by the Maple quarters for post offce purposes at] Woodbrdge, N. J., at a stated prce per annum, ncludng heat, lght, water, tolet facltes, safe or vault, and all necessary furnture and equpment, under a lease for.fve or- ten years from Dec. 1st, Floor space of about 1,600 square feet B desred. Good daylght and reasonably central locaton are mportant consderatons. Specfcatons and blank proposals may be obtaned from Postmaster Grener, and a sample form of lease Jay be examned n hs offce. Dagrams of the rooms offered should be submtted, showng nsde dmensons, offsets, doom, wndows, etc. The Post Offce Department reserves the rght] to reject any or all proposals. C. A. LARABE E, P. O. nspector. Planfleld, New Jeraey. Our shoe busness s bg because men lked ther frst par of Florshems and came agan. Sold J $9.50 Also Patronze the merchants who ad* Realty Company, and to run southerly along Ffth Avenue fve hundred \ feet; all n accordance wth the plans thereof and specfcatons therefor, made by Morgan F. Larson, Townshp Engneer, and now on fle wth the Townshp Clerk. All lands on ether sde of the proposed sewers, and for one hundred feet beyond, may be affected to the extent uf a drect assessment by the.constructon of sad sewer. Tht dranage area may be ascertaned by an examnaton of the plans on tle. Sad ordnance further provdes for fnancng such mprovement at a cost not exceedng Sx Thousand Dollara ($6,000.), and assessng the cost thereof on the property benefted. t» the ntenton of the Townshp Commttee of the Townahp of Woodbrdge to cond«r»ad ordnance and the undertakng of sad mprovement on Auguat 25, 1924, at 8:30 oclock n the evenng (Daylght Savng Tme) (7:80 p. n. Eastern Standard Tme) at the Memoral Muncpal Buldng, Woodbrdge, at whch tme m place all persons nterested wll be gven an opportunty to be heard concernng such mprovement. Famous Edmond Footftters at $7.00 Two Other Lots of Mens Shoe* to close out at $3 *, nd $4- C. CHRSTENSEN & BRO. 86 Man St. Woodbrdge MORTGAGE BONDS OF HGH GRADE PUBLC UTLTY COMPANES To Yeld SKto «H % WARREN H. MMKAN 176 Green St. Woodbrdm (Tel. 722) Representng... R. J. ABRQW8tyJTH, NG. correspondent of SPENCER WAP* CO. know much sought after, these day ndsputably, a wonderful wn fur somebody. Also, and of especal nterest to all of us these days, s the ton of coal ths»* s beng offered fur ten cents. Just thnk of t, a? tne an opportuntty as one would want tn get, part of hs wnter supply. All that s requred s to present. wnnng tcket ayl the black damonds a*-e delvered to your h.e, freght prepad. Wth the advent ths last year! many new famles nto seln, a crea; deal more assstance n the handln; of the dfferent attractons s assured, j Ths allows of addtonal booths l>e:.. j constructed and the enlargement t others, so that altogether, not o:..wll.a greater selecton of artel.,be avalable, but the handlng of m 1 ters pertanng to the dfferent attne tona wll be greatly facltated.. boon certanly to those accustom-, to attendng affars of the calbre St. Cecelas, where, from the open- - nght contnung throughout the > tn- three evenngs of the carnr. there wll be an unusually large en. n attendance. Asde from the usual stand.- at every carnval, there wll establshed at the forthcomng eve: such booths as gents wear, at»!.:. wll be dsplayed gentlemens shr tes sox, etc., a truly practcal offng and, one for whch we predct m unusually heavy attendance. A h: ket stand, wh«;h seems destned have a permanent place n fun;- carnvals judgng from the patron a/ accorded ths offerng lust year, a: the unusual mterest manfested r ths year now that t has beun known that ths stand wll havt < place at the comng event. An alum num utentnl stand wll, we beleve, t unusually attractve, especally, tu m- folks hereabout who by express - themselves as desrous of havng *u an attracton wll undoubtedly aval themselves of the opportunty t" make ths a most promnent booth. Havng n mnd the chldren who wn frequent the carnval, the commtt" n charge s expected to arrange the popular fsh pond and a gr*ab b- attracton. A cake stand at wh> \ wll be offered tha moat palatable " cakes and pastry possble to obla 1 anywhere under any crcumstancewhat wlt be more glorous than t antcpate upon arrval home af ] the carrjlal and gettng nto a l>" 1 pece of home made cake and a fre-". made hot cup of coffee. A novelv 1 stand wll be n evdence as last yea! at whch, because of the number m; varety of the artcles that wll!" offered, gves great nromse uf r* peatng ts tremendous success of la- 1 year. Truly for dversty and gt--ta utlty, the many artcles that wll " put on exhbton at ths stand, call for consderaton on the part of em one attendng ths (carnval, 1 frankfurter stand, ce cream, *"P drnks, candy, and a varety of otlu booths notably amongst them a "> cellaneoub stand at wnch wll be e> fered such thngs as leather go" dolls, slverware, etc., wll all be " evdence and. undoubtedly wll attra-t to (Treat etent. Musc and dam-nt: wll also be engaged n, so that as t» several commttees n unson stuu. there wll be somethng on Up u" ""> tm«to satsfy the tastes of the m- fastldous.. To be held on the lawn surround n* the church, corner Oak Tree Koa. and Mddlesex avenue, wthn >" block of the Lncoln Hghway at tl,. seln ralroad staton.

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