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FACTS<br />
WITHOUT PEAR<br />
OR FAVOR<br />
J 0,000<br />
REAWCRS<br />
EVERY WEKK<br />
Vol. 56. No. 48 SOUTH AMBOV, N. J., FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1New Year's day reorganization | Since there is nothing in the 193?<br />
topsy is being performed by Colon- meeting.<br />
ihw to indicate that it takes preceer<br />
Eugene Mullen, of- Perth Amboy. It is said that according to thedenco over the previously enacted!<br />
Following his collapse in front of jaws of 1937, Chapter 1442, page aw, or that it repeals it, there is<br />
the Bayview Inn on Pine avenue, 46, under a law providing for the0 question which of the laws aplies<br />
at the present time.<br />
Opiola was taken to the local ffis- ppointcnent of City Collectors, the<br />
p tal in an unconscious condition, erm of- the City Collector is set for Recf.-nlly, in ordor to clear up<br />
where he died several hours later. , our years after the date of theuch cases as this, the State Legis-<br />
With four companions, Opiola • assnge of the legislation. Accord-'lUure authorized a codification<br />
spent from about ten o'clock until tig to this measure, the local Col- j he laws, and since there are few<br />
three this morning making several lector would not be affected, inas- copies of this code in existence,<br />
visits about town with friends, and much as the tow is construed to here Is a question whether this codancing<br />
was the principal pastticno. provide the four year tenn for those dification makes the matter of City<br />
Collector appointments clear or<br />
Around three o'clock the party went ppointed after the passage of this<br />
to the Bayview Inn. When the other kgislation. On presumption that whether it places a different intermembers<br />
of the party left the car to ( his law does not effect the local i pretation upon the matter from the<br />
go inside the tavern, his compan- ituation, it is said some of the cl- Itwo apparently conflicting laws<br />
Victor Ciknc?:, 22. of 31 John St..<br />
Helmetta, was killed and Miss Mary mer, first assistant foreman; William<br />
These films will be of special inte*-<br />
Sosnowski, 20, of 24 Yatcs street, Brennan, second assistant foreman;<br />
hospital. ><br />
ert to students in the business course<br />
and Commercial Geography and<br />
South River, received a fractured collar<br />
bone as the result of a three car Stockton, chief driver.<br />
week for petit jury duty from Janu-<br />
from tho squad assisted at the Hin-<br />
James McCarthy, janitor, and Chas.<br />
among the ninety six drawn this<br />
During the year a drtail of men<br />
accident on Washington Road, near<br />
ary 17 to February 5.<br />
Manual Training classes.<br />
denberg disaster at the U. S. Naval<br />
the DuPont baseball field at Parlin,<br />
South Amboyans chesen were Palrick<br />
J Coan, Mrs. Helen Harkins.<br />
The entertainment, will be the station at. Lakchurst, and five memb'.rs<br />
of the squad also worked in the<br />
New Year's eve.<br />
Lecture On State<br />
first o*! a series to be sponsored by<br />
hh Commercial OUlb of. wmch Mr.<br />
A passing motorist took the two<br />
Charlotte Hawcs, Gertrude HiBBms. |<br />
flood area at Charleston. Huntington,<br />
wm) Kurtz l4 the advlso<br />
; under the instructions of the State<br />
to the South Amboy Memorial Hospital,<br />
where Miss Sosnowski was<br />
at<br />
Term As Loader<br />
Thomas J. Nebus and Chris Nicholas.<br />
rescuo work.<br />
and other points, doing hospital and<br />
(Continued on Page Eight)<br />
TIT J ril I III , i Instnlnltinn of the recently elect-<br />
Y, M. C. A. AUXILIARY Due to the amount of emergency<br />
treated for her injuries. Cikn.cz was<br />
pronounced dead upon arrival.<br />
WOnisin S UUD Me8l lp< ? officers of the Italo American<br />
WILL MEET TUESDAY fnd transport rails, it was necessary<br />
for the sqimd to purchase an emeri<br />
Citizens Society took place at the<br />
The Woman's Auxiliary of the<br />
At their first session of the year,<br />
car Jo carry the equipment<br />
ROTARY WILL REQUEST<br />
meeting of the organization staged<br />
held Tuesday afternoon in the Parish<br />
House, members of the South<br />
Monday night in Wilhelm's hall,<br />
ipennsylvania Railroad Y. M. C. A.<br />
COUNCIL TO ERECT<br />
Albert Jerome was installed as the<br />
John Zdaeewicz Is Named<br />
ind answer all emergency calis when<br />
jwill hold its first meeting of thoth-D regular ambulance is being used<br />
Cor cthsr work.<br />
STREET SIGNS HERE Amboy Woman's Club heard an interesting<br />
lecture on the history of<br />
president for the fourth term and<br />
iypav Tuesday afternoon, with the<br />
the other officers are: Bernardino<br />
new president, Mrs. E. C. Thomas, A five man team of the squad<br />
At the regular weekly meeting of New Jersey delivered by W. C. B:ttenson<br />
of the New Jersey Bell Tel-<br />
ChuilH,, vice president; Alderni Capltini,<br />
corresponding secretary; L. President Of Council At I Luncheon will be served at onuvll AppicRatc. JX, Edward Dey, Leo<br />
piesidlng.<br />
ronsiKtinpc of Michael Szraga, Man-<br />
tho South Amboy Rotary Club held<br />
in Wilhelm's Hall, Tuesday noon, a ephone Company.<br />
Credico, financial secretary; Anthony<br />
Nlcorvo, treasurer; Rocco Col-<br />
, o'clock, and will be followed by a Procman and John McCloud was<br />
resolution.was adopted appealing to<br />
the City Council to erect street signs colored .EL'^r slides IT,l l^Ttl and among d<br />
the ° lnat<br />
the verious intersections. The ,tercstlng points about the state<br />
y i hort business session, after which entered in the State First Aid Contest<br />
under direction of the New Jer-<br />
ucci. Orosio Spina. and Salvage<br />
the ladies will engage in bowline:.<br />
Fazio trustees; A. De Lucia, James Monday's Reorganization i The other recently elected officers<br />
of the organization are: vice- successful in winning first prize In "<br />
sry Stntn Police at Trenton, and was<br />
resolution will be submitted at a fu- brouRht out was the fact that while<br />
Jasper and Peter Greco, members of<br />
ture meeting of the Council. It was the fourth smallest state in the unpointed<br />
out that these signs were ion, New Jersey ranks ninth in im-<br />
the council; Frank Materangelo,<br />
Ipresldents, Mrs. L. L. Sheppard, '.'re First Aid Squad competition,<br />
sergeant at arms, Chris Nicorvo, as Edward .7. O'Connor Named Police Justice; Mattlu-w Cronin, City jMrs. J. Frank Pulton and Mrs. Arj'lKur<br />
Skmv: recording secretary, among winners in the subdivision.<br />
second price in the final contest<br />
available and are stored in one of portance.<br />
inner guard and Cesare Guistppe,<br />
Electrician—Walczak Votes in Opposition To<br />
tho city's buildings. Comment was j The meeting hostess was Miss<br />
and Erminio Vona on the consultive<br />
committee.<br />
Icretary, Mrs. Anna Perkins; trea- CAR CRASHES INTO<br />
Committee Appointments<br />
Mrs. Howard Dillon; financial semade<br />
that possibly they could' be: Bertha Diebert.<br />
NO APPOINTMENTS WEKE MADE TO BOARD OF WORKS j urer. Mrs. H. D. Littell; historian.<br />
erected by WPA workers, and if so. The literature department will<br />
POLE AND PORCH<br />
would be a great help to the strang- meet at the home of- Mrs. Gene NEW GAME SOCIAL<br />
. I Srs. A. E. Hadlcy.<br />
Charles Straub, of 58 Lincoln ave.<br />
erg who try to find the various Fenzel on" Monday, January 31, SERIES STARTS AT The dove of peace was fur away nnd the unanimous election of Councilman<br />
at Large Zdanewicz as per-<br />
CHURCH AUXILIARY Carteret, was summoned to appear<br />
streets in the city.<br />
when the discussion topic will be ST. MARY'S WEDNESDAY from City Hall New Year's Day,<br />
n local police court to answer a,<br />
'•The High Cost of Living."<br />
Vhen the 1038 Council met for or-manenganization.<br />
Because they could not followed his nomination by Council-)<br />
president of the Council<br />
MEETS TUESDAY reckless charge charge next Wedpsday<br />
evening, after he caused con<br />
If it's a GREETING CARD It's «t<br />
Next Wednesday night at 8:30, a<br />
KUIIN'S or nowhere.<br />
adc STAR LOAN WILL<br />
series of social games will be- agree In a pie-meeting conference man Stanton.<br />
The January meeting of the Wo-<br />
TT»1JU CIV SUiJfS Ul ftUUiiW gUlUCa Will Ul*~ -.r>-~~ — - •- -<br />
idemblp daninge on Bordentowa<br />
ELECT MONDAY! In at St. Mary's Hall. The pros- held in the basement of the hall, the The only sign of open rebellion | mn »' a A« xillrir y of chrlst Church avenue last Wednesday evening.<br />
Oil Burners at MonaBhnn's; installed<br />
by mechanics who know how.<br />
did not get under way until 1 o'-G'oimeil President Zdanewicz an-<br />
Tuesday afternoon, January 11,<br />
, , , ,, perity purse is $100,00. The main meeting, scheduled hdld to t begin at noon<br />
evident nt the meeting came after will be held in the Parish House on The car driven by Straub left the<br />
Monday evening at the annual , lnchlde a port^e typewrlmcetlng<br />
of the directors of the Star<br />
CnrncT Stevens avenue and David St.<br />
^ „ oedw chest, „ ceiiarette, a<br />
clock, then a few minutes later a nounced the makeup of Council committees,<br />
fuid when the vote for ,;cn H. Harvey, Manila, P. r.<br />
2:30. Tho speaker willb Mrs. Bcnroadway<br />
and crashed into a light<br />
Tclcnhnnc 253.<br />
adv<br />
recess was called and another attempt<br />
at, reconciliation was made,<br />
Building and Loan Association, the| mnn 01 . woman's gold Swiss wrist<br />
pole on the parkway causing conidprnble<br />
damage, then crossed the.<br />
election of officers will take place.<br />
and a 9x12 congoleum rug.<br />
confirmation was coiled for. Coiin-<br />
If you are not plenty of At a meeting of the shareholders j ^ wc, pk the grimd prlze of tne<br />
which apparently was unsuccessful.<br />
Mirs. Helen DeFort of 37 Laurel trcpt and dnmatilnR the front porh<br />
of the Clalfy residence.<br />
Wateak voted an emphatic<br />
steaming hot water for your household<br />
nmls. try Mimaffluti!. Corner mns F. Gleason. Oliver W. Welsh: ri to'j n mes Mershon and Mrs. Cla- Police Justice. Three nominations According to the new committee<br />
Mondn bndny night throe directors, Tho- „,.,„„ Mnn 0D < n ^..v., was award- Edward J. O'Connor was elected<br />
st^'is confined t"o the Portl^HCm-<br />
"No."<br />
1<br />
boy General Hospital.<br />
Tnken before a local physician by<br />
ho polico, the mnn was pronounced<br />
Stevens avenue and David street. ? mW ?,L cpl \ A :_ S 1 m i th WEro clcotcd for the office were made. O'Connor<br />
|a Mnkwinski. Margaret Kelly was<br />
.setup, three of the Important com-<br />
Telephone 25.1<br />
adv for a three year term.<br />
was nominated by Councilman Kress.<br />
Mclal CeilliiffS at Moniichaus. Quick fit to drive.<br />
i warrifd n maple breakfast set, and<br />
mittee chairmanships go to Council) )()1) an(1 Rno(i urn. Corner Stevens<br />
Councilman Nierkorn sponsored the<br />
! Jlvs. F. Coughlin received a maple<br />
veterans: voterans: Kress will again head the<br />
' " ~ —<br />
name of Joseph McKeon, and Councilman<br />
Waiczak nominated Reuben "nit^ee. and Zdanewicz the Fi-I<br />
Avr. ami David St. Tel 253. adv<br />
chair, nnd ottoman.<br />
Fire Committee; Stanton the Street<br />
j Forgotson. O'Connor received three<br />
C NOTITCK<br />
nance Committee.<br />
'<br />
Tho TMX I!
THE FEATHERHEADS<br />
So iVE GOT IT ALL<br />
FIGURED OUT I TAKE" "<br />
EARLIER BUS—AVOID me p<br />
J<br />
JAM AMD NOT T—<br />
\NORRy ABOUT J->-<br />
To f i:<br />
OM TIME —) ^<br />
FINNEY OF THE FORCE<br />
IP I'M ffOiMff To (JET UP<br />
A HALF HodR EAfeLiER./ I<br />
To SET REAPY TO<br />
TfJRM IM NOW<br />
OKAY- I'LL<br />
BE UP<br />
LATER.<br />
* °£*r<br />
3V SHAVIMS- TOMIG-HT<br />
I'LL' B£ SURe- TO BE<br />
ABLS To SET THE<br />
EARL-/<br />
MBOY CITIZEN<br />
WAKE liP.'i! YOU<br />
fOR To SET<br />
THE ALASM' YOL<br />
JUST HA^E. TO<br />
CATCH THE USUAL<br />
BUS- IF VOU<br />
Early to Bed<br />
WiS-OI KNOW<br />
ALL THAT.' 01<br />
•TEST COME IN<br />
T'TELL VET.<br />
WER CAR 15 ,<br />
PARRIED OM Tri<br />
SOiDE O'<br />
You HAVE<br />
IMSOMMIA<br />
YOU<br />
SLEET<br />
FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1938<br />
Make Votive Offerings<br />
Snail lias One Foot<br />
Soldiers of ancient Greece used to<br />
The snail has one foot. The foot<br />
is really a muscular development of<br />
make votive ofierinps in the torm or<br />
masevuuic»i"»*- ......Hitpd the stomacn, stomach, ai and is never lifted<br />
soldier statuettes to the god "
FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, X038 TffB SOUTH AMB0Y CITIZEN PAGE THBOT<br />
FABLES IN SLANG<br />
By GEORGE ADE<br />
JUST HUMANS<br />
-^T<br />
By GENE CARR<br />
FABLE<br />
OP THE<br />
HOME<br />
VS<br />
TME19TB<br />
HOLE<br />
JOE WAS A REGULAR GUY<br />
WELL LIKED BV EVE.WBODV<br />
BUT HIS WIFE'S<br />
RELATIONS .<br />
HE WAS A GOLF FIEND<br />
AND HIS BETTER. OR<br />
WORSE BECAME VE.RW<br />
WORSE ABOUT IT '<br />
SHOT HE ABSORBED<br />
AT THE I9"2! HOLE MEANT<br />
JUST ANOTMER. HOUR OF<br />
LOST SLEEP _J<br />
AT THE END OF A FEW<br />
MONTHS JOE LOOKED LIKE<br />
A REPAINT THAT WENT 18<br />
HOLES WITH A DUB i<br />
A<br />
WIFE<br />
IS<br />
HARDER<br />
TO<br />
CORRECT<br />
A<br />
SLICE<br />
REG'LAI? FELLERS And Do Monkeys Oow on Trees? By GEiiSE BYRNES<br />
HSS'. LOCK<br />
IKVJ" BEAUTIFUL<br />
THEY ASEAN 1<br />
St. Mary's School News<br />
X<br />
II<br />
SPIRITUAL LIGHTS<br />
God's care In preserving and. governing<br />
the world is His providence.<br />
He preserves all His creatures in existence<br />
as long as He wills. "When<br />
Thou shalt take away their breath,<br />
they shall die, and return again to<br />
dust." (Psalms 103-28). In order<br />
therefore, that His creatures may<br />
continue to exist, He provides all that<br />
Is needed for their sustenance; meat,<br />
wheat, vegetables and the various<br />
fruits of the earth. .God also governs<br />
the world, i.e., He conducts all<br />
things in the world so that they<br />
contribute to His glory and to man's<br />
advantage. There is no one on earth<br />
for whom God does not care, and<br />
for whose welfare He does not prepare.<br />
A mother would sooner furgei<br />
her child than God would forget us.<br />
He even cares for irrational creatures,<br />
for the beasts and birds and<br />
plants. "Behold the birds of the air,<br />
for they neither sow nor do they<br />
reap, nor gather into barns; and<br />
your Heavenly Father feedeth them.<br />
Are not you of much more value than<br />
they?" (Math. VI-25-30.)<br />
Moreover, nothing happens by<br />
chance. While there are indeed<br />
many things, the causes of which we<br />
are ignorant, all have some cause,<br />
and God guides all.,The only moral<br />
evil Jn the world is sin. Sin is due<br />
to man's abuse of his free will. God<br />
created man free, and therefore,<br />
does not hinder even those free actions<br />
which are evil. St. Augustine<br />
says: "God would never have permitted<br />
evil if He had not intended<br />
to bring some greater good out of<br />
It." In His love for us, God will<br />
draw good out of evil and make everything<br />
turn unto His love for us.<br />
God will draw good out of evil and<br />
make everything turn unto His own<br />
honor and glory and the snnctlftcatlon<br />
of the elect. (Rom. VIII:28).<br />
In this way the soul resigned to<br />
the will of God is like the ne-dln<br />
pointing to the North. The soul that<br />
submits itself to all God's arrangements<br />
has already begun to live the<br />
life of heaven upon earth. His<br />
Cross is carried for him': his ship<br />
is in the hands of a sure pilot and he<br />
is sure to arrive safely into port.-<br />
Regina Coakley, '39.<br />
* * *<br />
Library Magazine Shelf<br />
There has been a very noticeable<br />
demand at the school library for<br />
current magazines and periodicals.<br />
The upper classmen are manifesting<br />
a great interest in modern problems<br />
particularly those dealing with the<br />
present world crisis. These students<br />
exhibit a curprislngly mature<br />
judgment in the selection of articles.<br />
The Pro and Con page of the Literary<br />
Digest answers many questions,<br />
while the Catholic Digest summarizes<br />
the leading items of importance.<br />
Owing to tlie deep Interest in<br />
correct speech and oral presentation<br />
which is so prevalent throughout the<br />
school, the Correct English Magazine<br />
and the Literature Review are<br />
in constant use.<br />
The under classmen are interested<br />
in Popular Mechanics Magazine and<br />
the ingenuity Qf many of them plus<br />
the knowledge acquired from this<br />
periodical has Inspired them to attempt<br />
the creation of many mechanical<br />
devices of which wo may truly<br />
boast.<br />
The Young Catholic Messenger, a<br />
weekly-periodical. Is also of Interest<br />
to the younger students. Prom this<br />
little paper the children are gathering<br />
a wenlth of information, current<br />
events and moral lessons.<br />
This interest manifested In the<br />
various types of literature silently<br />
portrays that the student body of<br />
St, Mai-y'a is educating Itself for the<br />
demands of the day and possesses a<br />
ccrtnln amount of foresight which<br />
will make them good citizens and<br />
Stood Christians. ^<br />
PATRONIZE CITIZEN<br />
{ ADVERTISERS<br />
HAZEL NOTS AN 1 .^EN<br />
Marian Anderson,<br />
Negro Contralto To<br />
Sing At Rutgers<br />
In Third Conceit of Current<br />
Series<br />
Marian Anderson, famous Negro<br />
contralto, will be the artist at the<br />
third concert of the current series<br />
at Rutgers University on Friday<br />
evening. 1 The performance will begin<br />
at 8:0 in the Rutgers Gymnasium<br />
in New Brunswick.<br />
Acknowledged by critics as "one<br />
of the greatest singers of our time,"<br />
Miss Angerson has met with remarkable<br />
success in almost every<br />
music center of the world. Three<br />
sold-out Carnegie Hall recitals in<br />
one season attest to her popularity<br />
iri this country.<br />
Explaining this success. Olin Downcs,<br />
a leading American Critic, describes<br />
Miss Andersons' voice as "a<br />
ACORttS, PEACHES,<br />
BEST UNEO, PEARSt<br />
CHESTOOTS, APRICOTS..<br />
•••••LET ME<br />
THIMK WHAT<br />
modities and service; (c) depression<br />
contralto of stunning range and vol-iume, managed with suppleness and industries.<br />
building construction and related<br />
grace." Praise of her voice and personality<br />
comes from Russia, Spain,<br />
"Many eminent authorities assert<br />
Scandanavia, Vienna, Egypt and<br />
Palestine.<br />
Miss Anderson's career started in<br />
a church choir in her native Philadelphia<br />
where she sang as a child.<br />
Her vocal training began with a Negro<br />
teacher and later she became a<br />
pupil of the well-known Guisseppe<br />
BORhetti.<br />
Her musical education was financed<br />
from the proceeds of benefit concerts<br />
and from contributions by<br />
music-lovers of her own race. After<br />
further education, Miss Anderson<br />
appeared in Paris where she was<br />
well received and urged to make a<br />
continental tour.<br />
The New Brunswick, concert will<br />
be one of the first appearances of<br />
her third transcontinental tour of<br />
the United States, whicli began this<br />
week in Boston.<br />
Sentinels<br />
of Health<br />
Don't Neglect Them I<br />
Naturo designed the kidneys to da a<br />
mnrvclous job, Their task is to keeji tha<br />
flowing blood stream free of an excess of<br />
toxic impurities. Tho net of living—Ufa<br />
it.'-flf—is constantly producing waste<br />
matter the kidneys must remove from<br />
the blood if good henhh is to endure.<br />
When the kidneys fail to function aa<br />
Nature intended, there Is retention of<br />
waste that may cause body-wide HistrosB.<br />
One may suffer nnSKint* bnekachc,<br />
peraislcnt headache, ntlaekH of dizziness,<br />
petting up nigVits, swelling, puffineaa<br />
under tha eyes—feel tired, nervous, all<br />
worn out.<br />
Frtnuent, ncanty or burning passages<br />
mny be further evidence of kidney or<br />
bladder disturbance.<br />
The TccrtRiiiipri and proper treatment<br />
IB n iliuretic medicine to help the kidneys<br />
eft rid of excess poisonous body waste.<br />
Uae Donit'e Pills. They havo had more<br />
thnn forty years of public approval. Aro<br />
endorsed the country over. Insist on<br />
Voan'a. Sold, nt alt drug Btoiea,<br />
DOAN SPILLS<br />
Tax On Materials<br />
Raises the Ire Of<br />
N. J. Manufacturer<br />
Newark. January 5.—The Progressive<br />
League of New Jersey,<br />
through its president, John H. Allen,<br />
prominent manufacturer, and<br />
president of the Chamber of Commerce<br />
of Jersey City, has sent the<br />
following communication to Senator<br />
Charles E. Loizeux, and copies to all<br />
members of the legislature:<br />
"The problem which must bo solved<br />
promptly and iRlfo'ierly, if we<br />
are to avoid serious disaster, is the<br />
depression in business, the vast and<br />
rapidly increasing unemployment,<br />
poverty and crime, and the extremely<br />
oppressive cost in taxation, charities<br />
and social unrest.<br />
"In our opinion these conditions<br />
are the result of (a) lack of buying<br />
power; (b) excessive cost of com-<br />
that the underlying causes are (1)<br />
the imposition of excessive taxation<br />
on materials, equipment and buildings,<br />
and on'business transactions;<br />
'2) the harmful practice of holding<br />
land unused or under-improved, on<br />
speculation, for the natural increase<br />
in population to make more valunble.<br />
"The logical and only effective<br />
remedy is State legislation which<br />
will (a) gradually reduce taxes on<br />
materials, equipment and improvements;<br />
(b^ gradually increase the<br />
tax on all taxable land value in each<br />
community enough to provide the<br />
needed public revenue, and to bring<br />
land—the source of all employment<br />
—Into greater use.<br />
"This legislation would immediately<br />
encourage building and other<br />
development; it would also reduce<br />
the cost of obtaining and maintaining<br />
homes—and these two factors<br />
would do more to improve business<br />
and social conditions, and thus reduce<br />
the cost of unemployment relief,<br />
thaii anything yet suggested.<br />
"A bill to permit this plan to be<br />
put in operation in cities, towns and<br />
boroughs had good support in the<br />
1935 and 1936 sessions of the State<br />
Assembly. It will be reintroduced in<br />
lhe coming session and should be enacted<br />
without delay.<br />
"This would accord with the constitution,<br />
which says: 'Properly shall<br />
be assessed for taxes under general<br />
laws, and by uniform rules, according<br />
to its true value.' It does not<br />
specify that all property, nor that<br />
any specific kind of property, shall<br />
be taxed.<br />
"This would in no way affect the<br />
proportionate amount of revenue<br />
payablo by each taxing district to<br />
the county and state, as that proportion<br />
is based entirely on assessed<br />
values nnd not on tax rates."<br />
KEEP AMERICA OUT OF WAR 1<br />
15 Y I!ALLOTS NOT BULLETS<br />
This ballot is offered to the readers of The Citizen in support of<br />
ft nationwide "l'eacc-for-America," camiiaijrn lwivig eonthteteil by<br />
the Veterans of Foreign Wars of (lie United States. Tlic purpose<br />
of thin canipaimi is to provide Congress U'HJi tangible proof, In<br />
lhe form of 25 million signatures of citizen voters, that the<br />
people of this nation want America to heep out of war.<br />
You Can Do Your Hit For Peace By<br />
Mailing This Usillot Properly Signed<br />
VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS,<br />
National Headquarters,<br />
Kansas City, Missouri.<br />
I hereby call upon Congress, and tho President of the United<br />
States to adopt nnd apply policies designed to Keep America Out<br />
of War and supported by a.national defense program adequate to<br />
preserve and protect our country and its people.<br />
. • Signed .<br />
Name in Pull<br />
Street and Number<br />
City and State<br />
EL.se 'CAUSE<br />
YoUVE SAID<br />
"Information"<br />
No matter how meager the details you supply her, "Information" will<br />
furnish the telephone number—if there Is one nnd if it's not in your<br />
directoryl Here she is at one of the up-to-the-minute Information centers<br />
, serving New Jersey telephone users, surrounded by equipment and by<br />
records some of which are changed daily. She h?s clipped 20 seconds off<br />
the time needed to fllve you a number, In the last ten years. Usually you<br />
have the answer in slightly more than half a minute, now.<br />
CARD OF THANKS<br />
We wish to take this means of<br />
thanking our many kind neighbors,<br />
friends and relatives who assisted<br />
in any way during our recent bereavement.<br />
Also wish to thank those<br />
who sent cars and the beautiful<br />
floral bouquets to the funeral.<br />
Mrs. George Kuntz and Family<br />
DON'T BE SKINHY<br />
Amazing gains of 5 to 12 pounds in<br />
j. tew weeks ace often, matte by adding<br />
Yeast Vitamins and iron (as contained<br />
In Vinol) to your diet. Vlnol helps<br />
stimulate appetite, improves blood and<br />
nervous system. Vlnol has helped<br />
thousands Rain needed weight ana<br />
tnorgy. vinol Is delicious to take.<br />
PETERSON'S PHARMACY<br />
"Everybody's Talkimg"<br />
'•Hm! T thought so. Try rating BLUE R1H-<br />
BON BREAD everyday!"<br />
Good Old Fashioned<br />
JELLY ROLLS<br />
filled with a pure apple<br />
raspberry jam<br />
SOUTH<br />
29c each<br />
"So He's Your Brother. What no You Call Him?"<br />
"When He Acts Like This I Can't Tell You"<br />
lift<br />
PROTECT<br />
your BABY<br />
Mother most hospitals now SAFER against germ*. So. «<br />
protect their babies against mother, do at hospitals do, M<br />
germs and skin-infection by doctors recommend Give<br />
rubbing Mennen Antiseptic your baby a- safety-rub with<br />
Oil alt over the baby's body- Monnen Antiseptic Oil daily,<br />
every day This keeps the Buy a bottle of the oil at your<br />
baby's skin healthier and druggist's today,<br />
OIL<br />
FRANK'S<br />
tc<br />
FOOD MARKET<br />
The Store of Quality Foods<br />
611 Bordentown Ave.<br />
FREE DELIVERY<br />
South Amboy<br />
Tel. S. A. 277<br />
MEAT — POULTRY — FISH<br />
Thursday, Friday, Saturday, January 6, 7 and 8<br />
Genuine Spring<br />
f)')<br />
Legs of Lamb 1b Lot<br />
Jersey Uib End<br />
•« /\C<br />
Pork Loin, lb. 1" Rib Roast, 9b. LO<br />
Boneless<br />
AAe<br />
Milk Fed Veal lo<br />
Home Made Loose OOC<br />
Sausage, lb. Zo<br />
FRESH<br />
Prime Beet<br />
Fresh<br />
f\QC<br />
^ fj"<br />
Calves Liver, JO<br />
Armour's Star OO C<br />
Smoked Hams Zo<br />
Whole or String- End<br />
Chopped Beef<br />
Fresh or Smoked<br />
OO C<br />
Kabosi, lb. Zo<br />
Prime Beef<br />
OftC<br />
ChuckRoastlb ZZ<br />
Sugar Cured<br />
Pork Goodies<br />
Brookfield or<br />
Cloverbloom<br />
White llofie Chicken<br />
4 lbs. New Of C<br />
Sauer Kraut Z!)<br />
Boneless f\ f|t<br />
Corned Beef, oL<br />
Jersey<br />
O*7 C<br />
Fresh Hams, Li<br />
Good Luck<br />
Noodle Dinner 29c Margarine 2 lbs 39c<br />
Potatoes bskt. 45 C<br />
IOO Ib. bag $ l.3
PAGE FOUR<br />
Scene From "The Las! Gangster/' Coming To Attendance Roll<br />
Empire Theatre Next Week Sunday - Monday ( For December At<br />
Public School No. 1<br />
Edward G. Robinson and Lionel Stander in "The Last Gangster"<br />
Ronald Colman Stars in "The "Lost Horizon"<br />
At Empire Theatre Next Sunday and Monday<br />
Early Golf<br />
There is considerable evidence to<br />
•upport the theory that the game of<br />
Xolf originated in Holland as far<br />
*ack as 1300 A. D. Certain it is<br />
that "kolf" was played in Holland<br />
mt the beginning of the Fifteenth<br />
"Century in the streets, church<br />
squares and church yards in the<br />
summer, and on the ice in the winter.<br />
This is definitely proved by old<br />
"Delft" tiles which date back to<br />
that period and show "kolfers" during<br />
the upswing and at the address<br />
of the ball. Further evidence of<br />
the Dutch origin of the game is quite<br />
apparent in its nomenclature. Such<br />
•words as "stymie," "dormie," and<br />
"putt" can all be traced directly to<br />
the Dutch.<br />
SHERIFFS SALE<br />
In Chancery of New Jersey<br />
Between Maiy A. Plugge, Complainant,<br />
and Casper Shuler and<br />
Harriet E. Shuler, his wife, Defendants,<br />
Fi. Pa., for the sale of mortgaged<br />
premises dated January 4th,<br />
.1038.<br />
By virtue of the above stated writ,<br />
to «ie directed and delivered, I<br />
will expose to sale at public vendue<br />
on<br />
"WEDNESDAY, THE 2ND DAY OF<br />
FEBRUARY, A. D., NINETEEN<br />
HUNDRED THIRTY-EIGHT<br />
at two o'clock, Standard Time, in<br />
the afternoon of the said day, at<br />
the Sheriffs Office in the City of<br />
-New Brunswick, N. J.<br />
All the following tract or parcel<br />
saf land and premises hereinafter<br />
particularly described, situate, lying<br />
and being in the Borough of<br />
Sayreville, in the County of Middlesex<br />
and State of New Jersey.<br />
BEGINNING at a stake on the<br />
•westerly Sif; of the Road leading<br />
Irom Washington to Sayreville,<br />
distant fifty (50) feet, south eleven<br />
degrees west from the southeasterly<br />
corner of a lot of land conveyed<br />
by James R. Sayre, Jr., and<br />
Peter Fisher, Sr., to Charles Cost<br />
and Stella Anna Cost, by deed<br />
dated June 12, 18B0, ^and running<br />
thence (1) south eleven degrees<br />
west fifty feet; thence (2) north<br />
seventy-nine degrees west one<br />
hundred (100') feet; thence (3)<br />
north eleven degrees east fifty<br />
FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1938 THE SOUTH AMBOY CITIZEN PAGE<br />
THE SOUTH AMBOY CITIZEN<br />
FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1938<br />
Published Every Pridny Morning By<br />
THE SOUTH AMBOY CITIZEN, Inc.<br />
At 211 First Street, South Amboy, N. J.<br />
Telephone South Amboy 4<br />
VOL. 56. NO. 49<br />
Entered as Second Class Matter at the South Amboy Post Office<br />
Under the Act of March 3, 1879<br />
Subscription Bates: $1.50 per Year by Mail; $2.00 by Carrier<br />
$2.00 Outside of Zone 1. Four Cents per Copy<br />
J. MELFORD ROLL,' EDITOR<br />
• BUY AMERICAN<br />
It is somewhat disheartening to read every day in the papers<br />
jpf the United Automobile Workers denouncing the automobile<br />
•companies because of the recent lay-off of so many men and the<br />
equally strong blame of the company officials placed upon labor<br />
for their sit-down strikes and their throttling, of business. It is<br />
disheartening because we don't think either of their ideas are<br />
right.<br />
We read in Sunday's papers that fully forty per cent of the<br />
money spent in the United States for Christmas shopping was<br />
7>aid for foreign n\ade articles, produced much cheaper than<br />
American manufacturers can produce them: They are - manufactured<br />
at far lower wages and way below the standards of<br />
American labor requirements. They are available because trade<br />
treaties permit 25 per cent of all imported goods to come in without<br />
tariff restrictions to protect American labor:<br />
There were thousands of Swiss watches, toys from Japan,<br />
Germany and Czechoslovakia, cotton gloves from Czchoslovakia,<br />
sold in America .at prices with which American manufacturers<br />
could not begin to compete, totaling 80 per cent of the total gloves<br />
sold. Japanese silk goods and toys far undersold American<br />
brands. Japanese rubber goods undersold standard American<br />
brands fro mtwenty to fifty per cent. Foreign shoes, carpets and<br />
rugs, glassware and pottery, laces and almost everything else<br />
were bought at prices far under the American standard, in spite<br />
of freight rates and ( tariffs where tariffs existed.<br />
American pottery manufacturers saw bitter cheap labor<br />
competition from Japan and Czechoslovakia cut an average of 18<br />
million dollar market down 45 per cent, with 5,000 of the normal<br />
25,000 American workers in that field out of work, and only 12,-<br />
000 of the remaining 20,000 working as much as half time.<br />
In Great Britain they have a national toy-word. It is: "Buy<br />
British," and they live up to it. An Englishman won't buy any<br />
article made in any other country if he can buy it British made.<br />
In this country the American laboring man is probably the<br />
worst offender. He will take his five dollars or more a day and<br />
go out and buy a lot of Japanese light bulbs, rubber goods, toys<br />
for his kids and other foreign made goods produced by laborers<br />
held down to wages of fifty cents a day, just because he can get<br />
them a few cents cheaper. He doesn't stop to realize that in doing<br />
just what he is, he, together with thousands of his fellow workers,<br />
are cutting their own jobs down to four or less days a week.<br />
We do not claim to to be any too bi'illiant at solving national<br />
troubles but an ordinary person with any horse sense at all ought<br />
to be able to realize that capital and labor ought to. quit calling,<br />
names and get together to keep the American wheels turning by<br />
remembering and living up to the first requisite of good business:<br />
"Buy American."<br />
An Acre of Oirty Dishes<br />
In 12 months the average woman<br />
washes an acre of dirty dishes, 3<br />
miles of dollies, 1 mile of glass<br />
and 5 miles of floors, declared a<br />
home ^service director of a gas association<br />
in London.<br />
Trees That Shed Their Needles<br />
Coniferous trees shed their oldest<br />
needles annually. These turn<br />
brown or yellow in the autumn and<br />
fall ofT. Usually they are two or<br />
three years old, and are farthest<br />
from the tips of the branches.<br />
| •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••<br />
VISIT THE<br />
DE LUXE BEAUTY SHOPPE<br />
10;> Slevons Avenue South Amboy, N. ,T.<br />
PETEK GRECO, Proprietor<br />
Expert Attention Will He (liven Your Every Wish<br />
Permanent Wave, Finger Wave, Marcel Wave, Manicure,<br />
Shampoo, Facial, and Courteous Service<br />
For Appointments Call South Amboy 526<br />
MISS LOUISE KELLY, Beautician<br />
"SOUTH AMBOY'S OUTSTANDING MARKET"<br />
Fresh Call Hams, lb. 15c<br />
Fresh Killed Fowl, lb. 2
A," '<br />
PAGE SIX THE SOUTH AMBOY CITIZEN FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1938<br />
PIPE DREAMS<br />
South Amboy and a chorus girl<br />
Are much alike 'tis true<br />
Our town's built with outskirts<br />
iind a chorus girl is too.<br />
* * *<br />
The New Year meeting may be<br />
over and the now councilmcn may<br />
Jiave taken their seats but the conferences<br />
are not over. At one of j<br />
them this week, one of the new<br />
councilmen put up a Stiff fight for<br />
an appointment he wanted.<br />
• * *<br />
We hope during the year 1938 we<br />
won't have to spend so much time<br />
investigating things that disappear<br />
from City Hall and the adjoining<br />
grounds. Now about those Christmas<br />
tree lig<strong>hts</strong> that disappeared<br />
from the tree at City Hall grounds.<br />
We've found that they wers strung<br />
across a building on Pine Avenue,<br />
cd to a new home in the Second<br />
Ward.<br />
j<br />
She was not familiar with the j<br />
doors in the new home and ran into |<br />
one of them New Years Day. and |<br />
the discolored optic is the result.<br />
Honor Roil For<br />
Examinations At<br />
Public School No. 2<br />
The "Mechanicsville Terror" will;<br />
soon be sticking out his chest, pass- •<br />
Having attained 90 or over in each<br />
ing out cigars, and receiving the<br />
! congratulations of his friends, with<br />
subject the following pupils have<br />
.. - , i been placed on the December exa<br />
the ,<br />
b; new ! sm ;! title e ,. 0 Lhe h .: has s ./ a^:,!!! attained.<br />
c , aUSe ° f animation Honor Roll of Public<br />
* w *<br />
School No. 2:<br />
By Mck-o-Tine<br />
If the foreman of' the WPA forces<br />
counted his shovels recently<br />
SIXTH GRADE<br />
* * *<br />
George Hasslacher, Anna Krutel,<br />
After long and painstaking effort | and found onp mssingi he can flnd Ethel Mundy, Kenneth Miller, Charlotto<br />
Nau, Melvin Sprague, David<br />
the Lunch Wagon Poet submits tr.e !jt Jf he searches on6 of the homes<br />
following effusion:<br />
in the Fourth Ward close to where<br />
Rue.<br />
his men were working. For the life<br />
FIPTH GRADE<br />
of us, however, we can't figure how<br />
Mildred Hughes, Dorothy Milburn,<br />
Agnes Parsons, Irma Reese.<br />
a guitar player figures he can get<br />
after they disappeared from the<br />
City Hall grounds.<br />
» * *<br />
The boys in the council who bear<br />
considerable weight when it comes<br />
to city uSali? caused a long wail 'it<br />
the council meeting New Years Day<br />
and took more time agreeing on the<br />
,signals than Alabama and Califor-<br />
'nia did in the Rose Bowl game the<br />
came day.<br />
Judging by the frequency and<br />
length of the huddles the new council<br />
started the year with, they will<br />
•11 be round shouldered from leaning<br />
over in the huddles.<br />
* * »<br />
And talking about that new council,<br />
it's a good thing for some people<br />
and their,destinies that the roll<br />
call of rotes at the New Years Day<br />
was called alphabetically instead of<br />
In the order of Wands; there may<br />
have been some surprising developments<br />
in that event.<br />
* * *<br />
any music out of a shovel.<br />
Taxpayers Group<br />
Urges Elimination Of<br />
Dedicated State Funds<br />
Wants Reorganization of Motor<br />
Vericlc Department<br />
Tn Its plutfoim for 1938, the New<br />
Jersey Taxpayers Association urged<br />
the- elimination of all dedicated<br />
.state funds, proposed) that motor<br />
vehicle moneys be considered general<br />
revenues and advocated "diversion<br />
of these revenues for relief ne<br />
cessities, rather than any imposition<br />
of new taxes."<br />
The Associations' statement was<br />
the first definite public position<br />
taken this year by any organized<br />
group urging that, if relief necessities<br />
still exist, diversion of highway<br />
revenues for relief purposes be<br />
continued in 1938, instead of the<br />
passage of new state taxes.<br />
"We urge action on the recommendations<br />
of the Princeton survey<br />
with . respect to reorganization of<br />
the State Motor Vehicle Department<br />
and re-issuance of drivers' licenses,<br />
vehicle registrations and plates by<br />
mail," read the association's 1938<br />
declaration.<br />
"Pro - dedicated funds (except<br />
debt service upon existing bond issues)<br />
should be eliminated and public<br />
revenues from all sources should<br />
be paid into the treasury of the<br />
state and distributed under regular<br />
But then it's surprising things appropriations." continued the As-<br />
platform.<br />
went off as well as they did Newsociations'<br />
Years Day since there were six "Motor vehicle revenues should be<br />
councilmen, two ex-councilmen, a general revenues. Meanwhile, if<br />
New Brunswick Commissioner and relief necessities exist, as they do at<br />
an Elizabeth detect ive sitting in the the present time, we favor diversion<br />
council chamber during the votins of these revenues rather than imposition<br />
of new and a deputy sheriff's derby was<br />
taxes."<br />
used to hold the votes.<br />
j Approving administration of rel:et<br />
One of the unusual sig<strong>hts</strong> about<br />
b " municipalities, the associatown<br />
Christmas morning was a I tlon s P'a"orm urged consideration<br />
Christmas tree in the garbage'near ° r some means<br />
" of tapering off this<br />
an upper George Street residence.<br />
The story behind the discarded<br />
tree on Christmas morning is that<br />
visitors came in while the lady of<br />
the house was away and thought<br />
the Christmas tree, standing, there<br />
waiting to be decorated should be<br />
white instead of the traditional<br />
green and proceeded to change it's<br />
color but the color came off anc<br />
she had to throw it away.<br />
Before her marriage the woman<br />
would probably have raised Cain<br />
about a thing like that.<br />
* * *<br />
There seems to be ample grounds<br />
for a suspicion that a blonde owner<br />
of a tavern in a community south<br />
of this city of ours is seriously<br />
considering entering the service station<br />
business. She's seen around<br />
local station frequently with a look<br />
of keen interest on her face.<br />
* * *<br />
There is evidently parential objection<br />
to a budding romance almost<br />
ready to burst into blocm on Portla<br />
street. One recent afternoon.<br />
the lad in the case, a resident of- the<br />
Hshtown section walked past the<br />
house with a "come on out kid" look<br />
on his face, then passed tho house<br />
again and out came the girl running<br />
after him, buttoning up her<br />
• coat as she rushe:! to overtake him.<br />
* * *<br />
The other night a local lad had<br />
the unsolicited honor of being the<br />
highest High School student in<br />
town. Some of the other High<br />
School students got irked over his<br />
high minded conversation and<br />
thought it was high time they did<br />
something about it, so they hung<br />
him up on a tavern sign and let lilm ><br />
stay there a little while.<br />
* * *<br />
It must be thrilling to bo a politician<br />
in this town and sot into confen-iics,<br />
you never know what will<br />
be the 'opic of li'scussio.i<br />
Por Instance, there was one held<br />
recently when they investigated the<br />
disappearance of several pounds of<br />
tea. You can bet all the tea in China<br />
however, that the wrong person was<br />
accused of the purchase and disappearance<br />
of the tea, in South Amboy.<br />
* * *<br />
There will be a meeting of the<br />
First Aid and Safety Squad next<br />
week, when the final vote on hy-lawF<br />
will come up and what action a<br />
member who appeals to have a<br />
Democratic-Republican complex will<br />
take, is a matter of conjecture.<br />
Tho matter came up for action tit<br />
two previous meetings, and one time<br />
ho voted "Yes." and the other time<br />
he voted "No," so no one can figure<br />
out what he will vote the next time<br />
.. the matter clbnes up, or whether he<br />
will emulate m card player and yd!<br />
out, "I pnss!**^<br />
* * *<br />
Just to keep the- records straight,<br />
those scratches on the face of the<br />
SV)ur,th Ward Rambler with the Intemperate<br />
nickname, were caused<br />
by a South River girl. She said no.<br />
but he didn't hoar her, so she star-<br />
' ted to talk with her hands, using<br />
her fingernails for the punctuation.<br />
* * *<br />
The black eye that Is beinfr carried<br />
around by nn officer of a re-<br />
, oently organized auxiliary of a service<br />
club, is 'probably one of the<br />
first received in town this year and<br />
1pas acquired because the lady mov-<br />
public burden" and overcoming of<br />
"the impression which may exist<br />
that time has ripened relief into ai<br />
fixed, over-enlarging and permanent 1<br />
pension system." The platform!<br />
urged, however, "every effort to re- [<br />
lieve distress resulting from unem- i<br />
ployment." !<br />
The association's 1D38 platform, as<br />
outlined in the platform, includes<br />
advocacy of biennial legislative ses-!<br />
sions, and state reorganization. The J<br />
platform has this to say on the sub- j<br />
ject of mandatory pay laws: j<br />
"We favor the permanent repeal,<br />
of all mandatory laws affecting the:<br />
employment and compensation of I<br />
municipal, county or school employees,<br />
subject nevertheless to the provisions<br />
of the civil service or tenure<br />
of office laws."<br />
The association advocates rigid :<br />
budget control and supervision of ]<br />
municipal finances. On the subject<br />
of pensions, the platform states:<br />
"We support the recommendation<br />
program of the New Jersey Pension<br />
Survey Commission recommending;<br />
that the contribution of the public<br />
to pension funds shall be limited to<br />
15 per cent of the active payroll.<br />
"Wo favor limitation of municipal<br />
police and firemen's lining ass<br />
to thirty-five years to prevent unv.inldly<br />
pension requirements." j<br />
Tho taxpayers' group is developing!<br />
n'nns for a very virosous campaign i<br />
vainst new state taxation during!<br />
1038 and will support a j<br />
for state reorganization.<br />
Honor Students At<br />
Public School Ik 2<br />
The following pupils have been<br />
placed on the General Average Honor<br />
Roll of Public School No. 2 for<br />
tho month of December:<br />
SIXTH GRADE<br />
Emma Harris, Elinor King, Jane<br />
Miigee, Dorothy Pcarse, Wm. Straub.<br />
George Hasslacher, Kenneth Miller,<br />
David Rue, Melvin Sprague, Anna<br />
Krutel, Ethel Mundy, Charlotte<br />
Nau.<br />
FIFTH GRADE<br />
Mildred Himhes, Elizabeth Krutel,<br />
Dorothy Milburn, Marie Nicbanck'<br />
Agnes Parsons, Irma Reese. Irene;<br />
Springle, Catherine Van Horn, Shirley<br />
Wood, Gladys Ware, Doris Ku- j<br />
lowsky, Esther Kurtz. Dorothy Mac-j<br />
donald. Raymond Leonard. Joseph'<br />
Marizio. Fred Vanderhoff, Robert<br />
Emmons. Elmer Johnson.<br />
FOURTH GRADE<br />
Marine Fllskov, Emma Lour. Doloies<br />
Murphy, Be ~7>,,Janc Stratton,<br />
Richard Kiirowsk- ""••"us Levandusky,<br />
George M • . . '<br />
Rhinoceros On ml<br />
Fossil bones of<br />
/ceros<br />
show that this anitrii. / once<br />
found on nil Iho i-onlinem-. /vow it<br />
lives only in Africn and Eastern<br />
Asia.<br />
John Miii'shul's Training<br />
John MnrslKill, who became Chief<br />
Justice of the United States, hud no<br />
college training except a few lectures<br />
on law and natural philosophy<br />
at William and Mary in 1779 or 1780.<br />
Irene Springle, Catherine Van Horn.<br />
Gladys Ware, Shirley Wood, Doris<br />
Kurowsky, Robert Emmons, Elmer<br />
Johnson, Joseph Kudelko, Martin<br />
Ziolo, Fred Vandcrliooff.<br />
Federal Government<br />
Gives Big Allotment<br />
to Tri-County Electric<br />
Have ISuilt 12(> Miles of Line to<br />
Serve Three Counties<br />
The Rural Electrification Administration<br />
of the United States Government,<br />
has just announced allotment<br />
of an additional $25,000 to the<br />
Tri-County Rural Electric Company,<br />
Inc., to finance house wiring and<br />
plumbing installations for about 200<br />
customers. The project has already<br />
received S113.000 previously, to<br />
build 126 miles of line to serve about<br />
446 customers in Monmnuth, Middlesex<br />
and Ocean Counties.<br />
Harry J. Postel is superintendent<br />
of the Tri-County Rural Electric<br />
Company, with offices at 46 Bayard<br />
street, New Brunswick.<br />
FOR •<br />
COLDS<br />
AND RELATED<br />
COUGHS<br />
FATHER<br />
JOHHS<br />
MEDICINE<br />
USED OVER<br />
80 YEARS<br />
I'M A<br />
FACE-SAVIR!<br />
Keener, longer-lasting,<br />
kind to the akin, Trcel<br />
Single-edge Blades are<br />
uniformly good! 4<br />
superb blades for 10*.<br />
B L A D E S<br />
FIT GEM AND EVER-READY RAZORS<br />
Saturday Night in Japan<br />
"/"
FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1938 THE SOUTH AMBOY CITfZEN PAGE SEVEN<br />
Lewis A. A. Meets<br />
Carteret Legion Team<br />
Tomorrow Evening<br />
Quintet Will Play Saturdiiy Nite<br />
Games At Hi«h School<br />
Auditorium<br />
Tomorrow evening the Lewis A. A.<br />
•will inaugurate<br />
its new Saturday<br />
night same policy, when It meets<br />
the Caiteret American Legion team<br />
in the High School Auditorium here.<br />
In the preliminary game, the Lewis<br />
Girls' team will meet the KeaTisburg<br />
Oirls' Club team and there will<br />
be dancing before and after the<br />
same.<br />
Arrangements have been made lor<br />
tames here every Saturday night<br />
during the remainder of the season<br />
with tome of the fastest teams in<br />
this iection meeting the local quintet.<br />
Sun Meets Rotary;<br />
McGraws vs. Buskeys<br />
In Y League Tonight<br />
Tonight in the Club<br />
League it<br />
the YMCA, thet# will be two games<br />
In the 'first the Sun Oil will meet<br />
the Kotary and In the second<br />
the<br />
McGraws will roll the Buskeys.<br />
Next Thursday, there will be four<br />
games, the K of C rolling the Catholic<br />
Club; Frank's Market rolling the<br />
Busikey team, and the Scribes meet-<br />
Ing the Terra Cobta and the<br />
Perfect<br />
Vest rolling the Jersey<br />
Central.<br />
Friday night the Sun Oil w:ll<br />
roll McGraws and the Pennsylvania<br />
Railroad will oppose the Rotary.<br />
Scores of' Tecent games:<br />
Buskeys (1) Kennedy 193, 223,<br />
201; McCarthy 210, 177, 148; Lambertson<br />
174, 172, 143; S. Sczalolskl<br />
167, 159, 192; Adams, 180, 200, 192.<br />
Totals 924, 931, 882.<br />
P. B. B. (2) Trowell, 163, 202,194;<br />
•Carrigg 160, 128, 147; Purcell 167,<br />
226, 188; Stivers 217, 206, 192; Thomas<br />
164, 222, 190. Totals 891, 988,<br />
SH.<br />
* * *<br />
McGraws (1) Glendinnlng 184,<br />
174 171; Goodlng xxx, xxx, 149;<br />
Hammer 142, 124, xxx; Groves 129.<br />
144, 183; Plcarle 148, 174, 170; R.<br />
Karle 182, 188, 145. Totals 785, 824,<br />
4)18.<br />
Scribes (2)<br />
Coogan 205. 133, xxx,<br />
Howard xxx, xxx, 133; B. Steiner<br />
199 247, 151; Gent 159, xxx, xxx;<br />
McHose xxx, 195. 170; S. Steiner 161,<br />
St. Mary's Wins<br />
From South River by<br />
Two Point Margin<br />
By a two point maraln, St. Mary's |<br />
boat out South River High on the<br />
Augusta street court here Saturday<br />
night in a thrilling exhibition. The<br />
final score was 28 to 26.<br />
Weinman was responsible for the<br />
winning goal that put'Victory in the<br />
Saints' bag, and gave them their<br />
sixth consecutive victory.<br />
St. Mary's was trailing by<br />
ten<br />
points at the start of the third period<br />
and jumped up to even the<br />
score as the fourth period closed.<br />
Two points were secured by each<br />
team in the overtime period.<br />
With a minute and a half to play<br />
in the final regular period, Ryan of<br />
St. Mary's missed a foul try and<br />
with a half minute remaining Bonus<br />
of South River missed a similar<br />
chance.<br />
Harkins and Crowe put St. Mary's<br />
out in front by a two point margin<br />
in the first overtime period,<br />
and<br />
Fritsch tied up the game for the<br />
third time with only twenty seconds<br />
of the period remaining.<br />
South River<br />
Mursky. f<br />
Sitze, f<br />
Pawlowskl, f-c<br />
Senko, f<br />
Fritsch. c<br />
Sigle. g<br />
Bonus, g<br />
Hatter, g<br />
Totals<br />
ST. MARY'S<br />
McGowan. f<br />
Weinman, f<br />
Ryan,c<br />
Dolan, c<br />
nnrkins, g<br />
Crowe, g<br />
Totals<br />
SNOW THRILLS!<br />
For Home Movie Enthusiasts<br />
ARE YOU Q<br />
ONLY A 74<br />
74WIFE?<br />
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Three Rutgers Teams<br />
To Resume Activities<br />
Tomorrow Night<br />
Swimming, Basketball, Wrestling<br />
Teams End Holiday<br />
Layoffs.<br />
Rutgers University athletic teams,<br />
idle during the Christmas vacation,<br />
will resume activities this week<br />
\yith the basketball, swimming and<br />
wrestling teams meeting intercollegiate<br />
opponents o n Saturday.<br />
The undefeated basketball team<br />
197 xxx - Gent xxx, xxx, 181; M. Soo; will have Dickinson for its fifth" op-<br />
W 161.' 177. Totals 912, 955, 812. * ' "-• •<br />
* * *<br />
Botary (1) D. Reed 167, 177, 175;<br />
Blind 135, 135, 135; R. Mason, 105,<br />
160 169; Blind 135, 135, 135; Stephenson<br />
244, 192, 196. Totals 829, 801,<br />
810.<br />
Catholic Club (2) McGuire 163,<br />
191, 177; Sh&V> 157, 161, 192; Blind<br />
135 135, 135; Carroll, 201, 169, 177;<br />
Banfleld 159, 199, 165. Totals 812,<br />
850, 846.<br />
* * *<br />
Perfect Vest (1) M. Weiss 154,<br />
160 149; D. Weiss 145, xxx, xxx;<br />
Switzer xxx, 154, 131; J. Yanas 199,<br />
172, 132; M. Yanas 161, 182, 130;<br />
A. Szagolscky 211, 205, 169. Totals<br />
870, 873, 711.<br />
Rotary (2) D. Reed, 135. 15B, 156;<br />
Safrnn 187, 169, 215; Peterson 182,<br />
150, 170; Ried, 181, 155, 151; Stephenson<br />
203, 173, 188. Totals 888. 803,<br />
£80.<br />
* * *<br />
Sun OH (0)<br />
(Forfeit.)<br />
ponent of the season in the Rutgers<br />
Gymn at 8:30 Saturday night.<br />
The<br />
other two outfits, opening their<br />
current seasons, will travel as the<br />
swimmers face Columbia at New<br />
York and the wrestlers tackle Princeton's<br />
matmen at Princeton.<br />
In view of the return to form that<br />
gave them a one-point victory over<br />
Princeton's cagers, the Scarlet<br />
basketball players will be favored<br />
over the Dickinson team which lost<br />
its opening game to the Tigers.<br />
Coach Frank Hill is far from confident,<br />
however, for the visitors will<br />
be seeking revenge for two successive<br />
defeats at the hands of the<br />
Rutgers quintet.<br />
The'swirnming team that will open<br />
the most difficult Rutgers schedule<br />
hi years shows promise of being<br />
even stronger than last" year's oncecicfeated<br />
array. The only important<br />
losses through graduation were<br />
This spectacular ski turn is one<br />
of the highlig<strong>hts</strong> pictured in<br />
"Snow Thrills," Just released by<br />
Castle Films for the small projectors<br />
of home and .school movie<br />
enthusiasts. Personally edited by<br />
Eugene Castle, the small gauge<br />
picture Is a professional newsreel<br />
covering every Imaginable winter<br />
sport.<br />
Locust Will Meet<br />
Nebus Club in Heart<br />
League Monday Nite<br />
Monday night in the Sacred Heart<br />
Bowling League, the Jjocusts will<br />
meet the Nebus Club, Tuesday night<br />
Ernston meets the Kurzawa outfit,<br />
Wednesday it will be Franks against<br />
Clemys and the action for the week<br />
will end Friday night with Adams<br />
rolling the Benedicts.<br />
Scores of recent matches:<br />
Emston (0): C. Gomolka (1) 166.<br />
S. Petner (2-3) 138; 167. A. Lagoda<br />
162; 135. T. Phillips (1): 101. A.<br />
Gomolka (1-3) 129; 152. Zretoiec,<br />
2-3) 258; 147. Kolodjieski 164; 130<br />
200. K. Petner (1-2); 204; 145. Totals,<br />
764; 833; 801.<br />
Nebus Assn. (3): Jensen 190: 200<br />
193. Hess. 203; 177; 219. C. Moran,<br />
179; 255; 192. Kennedy, 209; 202;<br />
171. Cowan, 173; 157; 232. Totals:<br />
954; 991; 1007.<br />
* * *<br />
Benedicts (1): Swlderski, 185;<br />
36; 145. Wojciechowski: 153; 147;<br />
163. F. Walczak. 149; Rev. Urtoanik,<br />
2-3) 92; 118. J. Sharo, 167; 146;<br />
31. W. Walczak, 202; 150; 162. To-<br />
,als: 856; 671; 719.<br />
Kureaiwa's (2): Hrankowski. 145;<br />
66; 152. Si Sharo, 176; 190; 169.<br />
'loskonka, 125; 166; 166. C. Sharo,<br />
79; 159; 144. Klosek, 157; 182; 181.<br />
Totals 782; 863; 812.<br />
* * *<br />
Clems Club (0): Dcforzynski, 126;<br />
189; 173. Adamecs 137; 164; 155. A.<br />
Jankowski, 145; 131; 140. Koziorowski,<br />
131; 152; 185. Ciszewski, 234;<br />
210; 177. Totals 773; 846; 830.<br />
Adams (3); Keraperski, 155; 152;<br />
155. Szatkoski, 125; 196; 105. Dzlekan,<br />
222; 183; 144. L. Lagoda, 150;<br />
Green's Men's Shop<br />
Wins Roll Off With<br />
Peterson Pharmacy<br />
Green's Men shop<br />
annexed the<br />
first half title in the<br />
YMCA City<br />
League Tuesday evening when they<br />
took three games from Peterson's<br />
Pharmacy in a roll off to decide the<br />
tie for first<br />
place. They knocked<br />
down a total of 3014 pins against<br />
2677 for the Pill Rollers.<br />
Pemberton was top<br />
man in the<br />
match with a total of 629 pins.<br />
The scores:<br />
Green's Mens Shop: Pemberton,<br />
202; 206; 222. Moran. 226: 207; 203.<br />
Becker, (1) 161. Kennedy (2-3):<br />
181; 232. V. Poulson, 182; 211; 221.<br />
J. Poulson, 184; 178; 199. Totals:<br />
955; 982; 1077.<br />
PeteTson Pharmacy: Carlisle 166;<br />
176; 177. Lowndes,<br />
B. Lamibertson, (1)<br />
149; 173; 168.<br />
145. AWbatlello<br />
(2-3): 183; 200. Fox, 197; 209; 156.<br />
Cowan, 167; 226; 185.<br />
967; 886.<br />
Totals 824;<br />
J C P & L. (3) Neweth 121, 152,: Simpson, back stroke swimmer, who<br />
163; Bu:ke, 131, 153, 170; Riley, 151,<br />
140, 131; Newton xxx 7890$—7890 ..<br />
140, 131; Blind 135, xxx, xxx; Newton<br />
xxx. 125, 136; Gominger 166, 194,<br />
221. Totals 704, 764, 821.<br />
* * *<br />
Frank's Market (0)<br />
(Forfeit.)<br />
K. of C. (3) Grimley 135, 161,<br />
178; Wiater 144, 212, 146; Gelsinon<br />
111, 153, 126; Nolan 145, 161, 169;<br />
Gundrum 181, 117, 183. Totals 716,<br />
804, 802.<br />
* * *<br />
Perfect Vest (2) J. Yanas 171, 146,<br />
212: F. Zagrzecki 181, 166, 138; D.<br />
Weiss 171, 166, 119;<br />
C. Symanski<br />
152, 165, 148; A. Shabolsky 204, 187,<br />
209. Totals 879, 830, 826.<br />
Terra Cotta (1) Bodziak 177, 199,<br />
171; Lizura 142, xxx, 152: Carroll<br />
xxx, 148, xxx; Boshada 164, xxx,<br />
157; McCaCrthy xxx, 130. xxx; Dowtlell<br />
185, 183. 200: Shang 197, 168,<br />
150. Totals 865, 828, 830.<br />
will be more than replaced by several<br />
up-a'n-coming sophomores.<br />
Columbia's natators, growing move<br />
powerful each year, will start with<br />
a good chance of toppling the Scarlet<br />
team for their second victory<br />
s:nce 1928 in the series which has<br />
seen Rutgers win eight times.<br />
Raphael Birthplace a Museum<br />
The house where Raphael, the<br />
famed Italian painter, was born in<br />
1483, at Urbina, is a museum.<br />
Blind, Catches Fish<br />
Though blind, the Chinese dolphin<br />
is able to catch and devour fish<br />
that have normal sight.<br />
Many Cumiiounds of Carbon<br />
There are more than 250,000<br />
known compounds of carbon which,<br />
with hydrogen, is the chief ingredient<br />
of natural gas.<br />
Fritz Faulkner, diver; Doane Me- 173.' 212' A Marczak 135. 188". 22B.<br />
Carthy, distance man. and Eddie rotaj s 78 rj, 89a. 842<br />
* * *<br />
Locust (1) Rev. Urbanik 159, 178,<br />
203; A. Urbanik 166, 161, xxx; Cierpial<br />
xxx, xxx, 142; G. Lagoda 162,<br />
213, 162; F. Zebro xxx. 168, 177; S.<br />
Urbanik 158, xxx, 182; J. Urbanik,<br />
190. 183. Totals 835, 858, 866.<br />
Fl-anks Market (2)<br />
F. Rackoskl<br />
xxx, 150, 134; Opiola 164, xxx, xxx;<br />
Wilus xxx, 168, 138; Brylinski 169,<br />
xxx, 166; Kuc 221, 180, 178; Revolinski<br />
171, 158, xxx; Rasmussen 198,<br />
218, 192. Totals 923, 883, 808.<br />
Rider College Alumni<br />
Sets Aside 3 Days for<br />
Homecoming Event<br />
Banquet, Central Feature. Will<br />
He Held Satimlav Evening<br />
• January 29th<br />
Three days have been set asid? for<br />
,the homecoming of Rider College<br />
Alumni—January 28, 29 and 30.<br />
The first general reunion was held<br />
In January last year and thousands<br />
of old students returned for a day<br />
or two.<br />
The central feature of the reunion<br />
is of course, the banquet which will<br />
be held on Saturday evening, January<br />
29th, at the Stacy-Trent Hotel.<br />
Trenton hotels have made special<br />
rates for the returning alumni for<br />
t.ho three dny period. The first event<br />
of the reunion will be a basketball<br />
Ktune between the Alumni and the<br />
Varsity teams on Friday, January<br />
28th, at 8 P. M.<br />
The moinins of Saturday will be<br />
devoted to a visitation of college<br />
buildings. Sorority and Alumni Sorority<br />
and Fraternity luncheons will<br />
bo hold nt 12:30 P. M. Saturday.<br />
Alumni Association meeting for<br />
election of officers will be held at<br />
the college at 2:30 P. M. The banquet<br />
raid reunion of classes will bn<br />
held Saturday night followed by an<br />
Alumni Ball.<br />
Sunday will be devoted to Sorority<br />
nml Fraternity activities.<br />
Light I'tdiii Corona in Hcllpse<br />
Tola) )ij,'ht from Ihe corona in ft<br />
solur pcllpKo is equal lo half thai<br />
from n full mnnn<br />
THROUGH THE HOOP<br />
By Joe Chaitnello<br />
Joe Baiiey, tournament manager<br />
of county bawling tournaments,<br />
announced that the 1938 county<br />
bowling tourney will be held at the<br />
Sportswood Hotel starting<br />
Februr.:y<br />
15th..This year bnwlers will<br />
be divided into two classes, A and<br />
B. .Bowlers with an average of 170<br />
or better will bowl in class A..Others<br />
with averages until 170 will<br />
bowl in class B. .In order that a<br />
five man team may bowl in class<br />
A, they must have an average of<br />
850 or better. .Those in class B<br />
will be those teams that have<br />
an<br />
average of less than 850..In<br />
two<br />
man teams, class A will consist of<br />
duets having an average of 340 or<br />
better. .Class B will consist of duets<br />
having an average of' less<br />
340.<br />
than<br />
M EN because they are men can<br />
never understand a three-quarter<br />
wife—a wife who is all love and<br />
kindness for three weeks of the month<br />
—but a hell-cat the fourth.<br />
And make up your mind men never<br />
will understand. There are certain<br />
things a woman has to put up with<br />
and be a good sport.<br />
No matter how your back achesno<br />
matter how loudly your nerves<br />
scream—don't take it out on your<br />
husband.<br />
For three generations one woman<br />
has told another how to go "smiling<br />
through" with Lydia E. Pinkham's<br />
Vegetable Compound. It helps Nature<br />
| Anls llvr Long<br />
Ants, among the insects, ore wellknown<br />
for their longevity, the workers<br />
surviving four or five years and<br />
queens living as long as 15 years.<br />
SHERIFF'S SALE<br />
111 Chancery of New Jersey.<br />
Between Millard B. Emn. Complainant,<br />
and Olekadia Olesiak. Ft<br />
Als., Defendants. Fi. Fa. for the<br />
sale of mortgaged<br />
premises dated<br />
December 8, 1937.<br />
By virtue of the above stated writ,<br />
to me directed and delivered, I will<br />
expose to sale at pub'.ic vcrrlue on<br />
WEDNESDAY, THE 19TH DAY OF<br />
JANUARY, A. D.. 1938<br />
at two o'clock, Standard Time, in<br />
tone u,the = ^ - i ~ B t h e aft6rnoon of the s, id day . at thB<br />
discomforts .___ „.<br />
orders which women must endure in<br />
the three ordeals of life: 1. Turning<br />
from girlhood into womanhood. 2. Preparing<br />
for motherhood. 3. Approach-<br />
"ig "middle age."<br />
Don't be a three-quarter wife. Take<br />
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound<br />
and go "smiling through." Over<br />
a million women have written in reporting<br />
benefit. Why not give this<br />
world-famous medicine a chance to<br />
help YOU?<br />
SHERIFF'S SALE<br />
In Chancery of New Jersey<br />
Between Home Extension Building<br />
& Loan Association, of Sayreville,<br />
N. J., a corporation of the State of<br />
New Jersey, Complainant, and<br />
Thomas F. Dolan and Rose V. Dolan,<br />
his wife, et als.. Defendants. Fi. Fa.<br />
lor the sale of mortRaged premises<br />
dated December 14. 1937.<br />
By virtue of the above stated writ<br />
to me directed and delivered, I will<br />
expose to sale at public vendue on<br />
WEDNESDAY, THE TWENTY-<br />
SIXTH DAY OF JANUARY, A, D,<br />
NINETEEN HUNDRED AND<br />
THIRTY-EIGHT<br />
at two o'clock, Standard Time, in<br />
the afternoon of the said day, at<br />
the Sheriff's Office in the City'of<br />
New Brunswick, N. J.<br />
All those lots, tracts or parcels of<br />
land and premises hereinafter particularly<br />
described, situate, lying and<br />
being in the City of South Amboy,<br />
in the County of Middlesex and<br />
State of New Jersey.<br />
Known and designated on the recorded<br />
map of the Village, of South<br />
Amboy (now city), which map is<br />
entitled "Map of Property situate in<br />
the Town of South Amboy, Middlesex<br />
County. N. J. Surveyed and pro-<br />
S<br />
I<br />
tracted by a scale of 100' to<br />
June, 1935. by John Perrlne,<br />
In<br />
Jr.,<br />
Sheriff's Office in the City of New<br />
Brunswick, N. J.<br />
All the following tract or parcel<br />
of land and premises hereinafter<br />
particularly desoribed, situate, lying<br />
and being in the City of Perth Amboy,<br />
in the County of Middlesex<br />
and State of New Jersey.<br />
Being on the northerly side ot<br />
Broad Street as intended to be laid<br />
out and opened. Beginning on said<br />
Broad Street at the Southwesterly<br />
corner of a lot of land conveyed i>y<br />
J. Parker and wife to James Mullen<br />
by Deed dated October 10, 1857;<br />
thence limning westerly along<br />
Broad Street, Twenty-five (25) feet<br />
in width and extending Northerly<br />
nt right angles in dnpth One Hundred<br />
(100) feet. Bounded Southerly<br />
by said Broad<br />
Street; Easterly by<br />
Lot of land now or formerly of James<br />
Mullen, deceased; Westerly by<br />
land now or<br />
formerly of William<br />
Flowers, and Northerly by land now<br />
or formerly of Arnold Lynd and<br />
Parker.<br />
Premises are known as No, 182<br />
Broad Street.<br />
The approximate amount of the<br />
decree to be satisfied by said sule is<br />
the sum of Five Thousand Twentytwo<br />
Dollars ($5,022.00), together<br />
with the costs of this sale.<br />
Together with all and singular<br />
the rig<strong>hts</strong>, privileges, hereditaments<br />
and appurtenances thereunto belonging<br />
or in anywise appertaining.<br />
F. Herdman Harditv, Sheriff.<br />
Harry C. Brown, Solicitor.<br />
in Woodfrriidge Township, Middlesex<br />
County, N. J,, Aujust, 1913, surveyed<br />
and mapped by Larson and<br />
Fo>:."<br />
Beg:nn:ng at a pcint in the<br />
northerly line of Woodbridge avenue<br />
distant oastc-rly one hundred<br />
(100) feet fiom its intersection<br />
1 with the easterly line of Sewaren<br />
avenue; from thence running d)<br />
northerly parallel with Sewaren<br />
avenue one hundred twenty-five<br />
(125) feet; thence (2) easUrly parallel<br />
with Woodbridge avenue fifty<br />
(50) feet; thence (3) southe-ly parallel<br />
with the first described course<br />
?ne hundred twenty-five (125) feet<br />
(0 the northerly line of Wocdbrid?e<br />
avenue;<br />
thence (i> westerly along<br />
ihe said northerly J : ne of Woodbridge<br />
avenue fifty (50) feet to the<br />
point or place of beginning.<br />
Bcin;-,' bounded<br />
cm the north by<br />
parts of Lot 483 and 500; on the<br />
east by Lot No. 306; on the south<br />
by Woodbridge avenue and on the<br />
weKt by Lot No. 303.<br />
Being the premises commonljr<br />
known and designated as No. 87<br />
Woodbridge avenue, Sewaren, N. J.<br />
The approximate amount of the<br />
decree to be satisfied by said sale is<br />
the sum of Five Thousand<br />
Three<br />
Hundred Twenty-eight Dollars ($5,-<br />
328.00), together with the costs Of<br />
this sale.<br />
Together with all and singular the<br />
rig<strong>hts</strong>, privileges, hereditaments and<br />
appurtenances thereunto<br />
belonging<br />
or in anywise appertaining.<br />
F. HERDMAN HARDIN,<br />
Sheriff.<br />
Peter Clausen, Solicitor.<br />
$31.92 12-24-tt<br />
$22.26 12-24-4t<br />
SHERIFF'S SALE—In Chancery of<br />
New Jersey Between The Home<br />
Owners' Loan Corporation, a corporation<br />
having its principal office<br />
in the City of •Washington, restrict<br />
of Columbia, Com/plainant and Joe<br />
(also known &s Joseph) Roman, et<br />
als., Defendants. Fi Pa for the sale<br />
of mortgaged premises dated November<br />
24, 1937..<br />
By virtue of the above stated writ<br />
to me directed and delivered. I 1*111<br />
expose to sale at public vendue on<br />
WEDNESDAY, THE 12TM DAY OF<br />
JANUARY, A. D., 1938<br />
at two o'clock Standard Time in the<br />
afternoon of the said day at the<br />
Sheriff's Office in the City of New<br />
Brunswick. N. J.<br />
ALL the following tract or parcel<br />
Surveyor," as and by the lots numbers<br />
one (No. 1) and two (No. 2)<br />
in Block No. 25. being situated on<br />
the southwest corner of Broadway<br />
and Henry Street, as laid out on said<br />
map, each of said lots being twentyfive<br />
feet in front and rear and one<br />
hundred feet deep on each side, and<br />
bounded as follows:<br />
Southerly by lot No. 3. westerly<br />
by Lot No. 72; northerly by Henry<br />
Street, and easterly by Broadway,<br />
all n?cordin
PAGE EIGHT THE SOUTH AMBOY CITIZEN FRIDAY, JANUARY 7,<br />
Hoffman High<br />
Lost Tuesday Tussle<br />
WithRoselle Park<br />
ECONOMY IS KEYMOTE *<br />
OF MAYOR (iLEASOX'S !<br />
NEW VHAR'S MESSAGE,<br />
. j<br />
(Continued fioni Page One)<br />
Auditor of the State of New Jersey,:<br />
and entirely beyond the contiol of i<br />
myself and members of the Council j<br />
.t b.iL'umc mandatory as a matter of'<br />
public duty to bring our finances!<br />
Hoffman High School basketball<br />
team Jost its first game of the new<br />
year Tuesday afternoon when it<br />
dropped a contest with Roselle Park<br />
within a new state policy.<br />
High on the local court 27-23. Tlie<br />
setback to the John Streeters came so , 3 sp( , ak _ fgi. lh(J sjns<br />
sifter they had secured four victor.<br />
les in a row.<br />
The locals led the way :n the first<br />
quarter but after that the visitors<br />
One of<br />
;lie results of this was that this<br />
present administration had to atone.<br />
committCd<br />
by others who preceded us in office.<br />
In spite of this, however, I am<br />
•mppy to be able to say, for the<br />
forged out ahead and jroins into the , ist Ume wHh;n my memoryi the<br />
fourth quarter were leading 23-la., f, jty cJos( , s a ycar oj business wlth .<br />
A heroic spurt in the final quarter > out a genen,, budect defl C lt. Closby<br />
the locals brought them close to I . U]e , a jn o ,, ]or words> wUh<br />
the visitors but failed to tie up the j a], hjl, s for the year 1937 pald , n<br />
^SE^<br />
. ,.. . ! full and close to a thousand dollars<br />
The John streeters meet Wood-• cash lc, ( ns a genera , balance<br />
bridge High on the latter s court | Tn)s jrj a hJgh]y praiseworthy accom.<br />
this evening.<br />
j ,,ii s i lmeri t. It conduces to a continn<br />
HO f m^" ? K ot Smlth<br />
, \ n' , ^"rfh ""»«' Amboy's sound fi-<br />
0 1, 1 Marks t 1,0. 2. A. Dobrzyn-| niUloial oonditl its reputation for<br />
ski, f 3, 2. 8. Wheeler, c 0 1 1. Ne-<br />
p0Vemn,t and the strengthbus,<br />
g: 0, 0, 0. Henry, e, 2, 0, 4. Maxfield<br />
g, 0, 1, 1. Selover, g, 3, 06. Totals<br />
9, 5, 23.<br />
I<br />
noselle Park, Adase, f 0, 0, 0. Beo-;<br />
Uche, * 0, 0. 0. Klein, f 2. 0, 4. Hun- ;<br />
te, c 6, 0, 12. Buros, g, 5, 1, 11. Gal- !<br />
lagher, g 0, 0, 0. Totals 13, 1, 27. j<br />
Immaculate Quintet j<br />
Trounces St. Mary's<br />
In Tuesday's Game<br />
At the hands of Immaculate Con<br />
ception of Trenton, Tuesday, St.<br />
Marys' High School suffered a set<br />
back when they were defeated by n<br />
five point margin, the score being<br />
' 36-31.<br />
Although-they held the lead during<br />
the early part of the game, the<br />
local basketeers were on the wrong<br />
end of the score most of the even-<br />
Ing.<br />
At the first quarter whistle the<br />
score was knotted eight all. In the<br />
second period, the visitors took the<br />
lead and kept it until the closing<br />
whistle. The score:<br />
ST. MARY'S G. F. T.<br />
McGowan, f. 2 3 7<br />
Weinman, f. 4 0 8<br />
Ryan, c.-f. 2 2 6<br />
Dolan, c. 0 0 0<br />
Harklns, o. 4 1 9<br />
Eovlno, g. 0 0 0<br />
Crowe, g. 1 1 3<br />
Kelly, g. 0 0 0<br />
Totals 12 7 31<br />
IMMACULATE G. F. T.<br />
Gray, f. 2 0 4<br />
Kelly, f. 0 0 0<br />
Barrett, f. 0 3 3<br />
Basco, c. 5 4 14<br />
Warwick, g. 0 0 0<br />
Rossi, g, 4 0 8<br />
White, B. 3 1 7<br />
Totals 14 8 3G<br />
Lewis A. A. To Stage<br />
Basketball Games for<br />
Warm Springs Fund<br />
Proce«di of Double Header On<br />
January 27 Will Go To<br />
Foundation<br />
relief rolls those who aru not inbttdcet for the cominu year appropriations<br />
should be cut to the bone.<br />
need and those who merely desire<br />
to defraud the taxpayers. At theNot one penny should be wasted.<br />
same time we will bend backwards Not one unneeded employee should<br />
to be sure, in the spirit of Christian<br />
charity, that those who are less the health and welfare of our peo-<br />
be engaged. Services essential to<br />
fortunate than others will be compJe<br />
xinder the govemir/nt should<br />
fortably clothed and housed and not be neglected; but economy must<br />
decently fed.<br />
be the rule.<br />
While paying the strictest attention,<br />
to tiie needs of the people them-<br />
gratification for the excellent co-op-<br />
In closing I want to express my<br />
selves and continuing to exercise eration you have given me in the<br />
the greatest economy in the spending<br />
of their money we shall also con-<br />
and Mr. Zdanewira have been loyal<br />
year 1937. Mr. Kress, Mr. Stanton<br />
tinue to preserve the physical assets not only to the people but me also.<br />
of the city itself and to improve And I cannot let this occasion pass<br />
without complimenting Mr. Filskov,<br />
and Mr. Watson, who are retiring<br />
iron! the DU'ncil, for supporting my<br />
administration in actions which they<br />
deemed for tlie public good. At the<br />
paved. There is a resulting increase same time I welcome into the official<br />
in the value of our properties. There! Md Mr. NcJjrkorn and Mr. Walcthey<br />
will en-<br />
ness nndd<br />
convc Jeiiee, especially in| J".v the opportunity to be of<br />
;s also a great increase in cleanli- zak. I am sure that<br />
service<br />
jfa connection with the effort here<br />
to raise funds for the <strong>President's</strong><br />
Warm Springs Foundation by holding<br />
a <strong>President's</strong> Ball on Saturday,<br />
January 29th, the Lewis A. A. will<br />
MAYOR THOMAS F. GLEASON<br />
ening of its credit in financial circles.<br />
It is needless to say that we<br />
must give the same careful and diligent<br />
attention to the people's money<br />
in the, year to come as this result<br />
indicates we have given in the<br />
year just past.<br />
It is worthy of note that in spite<br />
of tho fact that we had to raise<br />
money for reasons entirely beyond<br />
our own control, in spite of some of<br />
tho effects of the general depression<br />
and in spite of heavy expenditures<br />
for relief for the ycar 1937,<br />
that the city's financial condition<br />
was so good that the City of South<br />
Amboy did not have to borrow one<br />
penny for relief purposes for the<br />
Raritan River and Raritan Bay, of<br />
pollution. Many of our sister muyear<br />
1937. By economical adminis-1 nicipalities New Brunswick, Perth<br />
tration of relief and by close co- Ambov. Amboy, Woodbridge, WoodbridKe. Keyport, Keyporl Raritan<br />
Township, Sayreville, for in-<br />
operation with the State of New<br />
Jersey in the inattcr of securinr relief<br />
allotments, , to supplement" the the law and by order of the court,<br />
stance, have had to build, fancier<br />
cit' city's contribution, tib administration of these expensive sewage disposal<br />
relief in South Amboy has been handled<br />
fairly and efficiently. There is creat benefit to everybody concern-<br />
plants. In the long run it will be of<br />
inot one unworthy person receiving ed. In the meantime, however, it is<br />
1 relief from the City of South Aml)oy.<br />
wo will not tolerate upon the the taxpayers. As we make up<br />
just one more extra burden upon<br />
ou"<br />
hold a double header basketball<br />
game on Thursday, January 27th. them. In this light your record in<br />
The games will be staged at theimp:-.ovint' tho streets and sidewalks<br />
High School Auditorium with the and gutters in tlie city deserve great<br />
Lewis A. A. team meeting St. James credit. At the present time practcally<br />
every street in South Amboy is<br />
of Elizabeth, while the girls' team<br />
will play the St. James girls' team. paved. There i lti y<br />
The entire proceeds of the games<br />
will go to the Foundation.<br />
New Miracles Of Ti<br />
PhoJoelectnc Ccl' 1 !<br />
By James D. Pnxjy<br />
Director. Gihoots or Eh'.tricil<br />
Engineer ins, Mtff/i.itio.'M)<br />
Correspondence Schools<br />
TTTVO combat tho lilindinK I'h.nne ii,<br />
JL liglit often I'lirouiiteri'i] by ;:,otorists<br />
when t!i.\v drive into a Io,i;,<br />
highway tmiii'i, nilonsp sodium<br />
vapor lanijiw have bcou instnlU"l in<br />
the flOU-1'oot Tooth Hock bm-e on<br />
the Columbia Ilivnr Highway lira; 1<br />
Boimeville Dnm. The lij;lil* bum<br />
continuously, b.a a* ilayliglii .taiU\ : ,<br />
with the approach of night a photo.<br />
electric cell device aulom;!lic;iny<br />
reduces their Intensity to the h rnlled at the YiMCA between the<br />
consideration for the taxpayers been Brirrs-q Chevrolet and Daylight Bamnnlfesled<br />
in all of our other de- kevy teams, every man on both the<br />
partmcnt.s. It would be superfluous trams rolled over 200 in the final<br />
to go into detail in each department '-'amp or the match, showing thp<br />
but the Fire Department, the Po- high typo or bowllm; beins nxhibitlice<br />
Department, the Department or cd by local trains :n the county<br />
Public Uiiildinps and Grounds and lrasjue.<br />
in every coniiniltee of the Council Tim 'icores: Daylight Bakery :<br />
coming under my jurisdiction I have Heinclio 170; 224; 225. Gorchess,<br />
found officials fully awake lo their: lili: 204: 213. Smith. 201: 227: 237.<br />
public trusts.<br />
HymiplPKki, 272; 204: 23B. B'.dlcy:<br />
I call your alte.ntlon to the need 210: 103: 233. Totals 1028; 1052;<br />
'or continued vlrsllimce and devotion 1HG.<br />
to public duly in the year aheiul of Brings Chpvrolcil (0): Pemberto-.i,<br />
us. Just ns In the pa.st mandatory 3!)3; 2IIU: 201. Kubarur. 205; 201;<br />
legislation beyond our control unco 210. Silvers, 105: 193; 202. Thomas,<br />
Us problems to solve not of our own IBB; 2i!, r >; 20!), Hansen, 100; 172; 7.0?,.<br />
naklng so In the future, probnbly Tolals !I45: !)!)!); 1025.<br />
within a short time, the Slate of!<br />
•«<br />
New Jersey will compel us to bn!!d a' Siipnrinl.pntieiit of Power for the<br />
sowago disposal plant. We will •' pl ' !i(i y Central Power nnd Light Co.<br />
know that the Stut^ hap passed '" " lis «