As Metal And Thermit Folk Picnicked Share Car, 6 Streets ... · Metal & Thermit's Plant Here Twice...

8
i,V >.>«>"• :!! Will.—No. 12 j! (iet CARTBRET, N. J. t UllDAY, JUNE 50, itrnses )r iy.iwo Apply Fot Permit!; Aihtifi I A. Asir ihonal Km ADv 1,1 Forty-eight- IJ- . I]' liquor her« were ' c Mayor and Borough : night, each effective i >i the coming year. :i plenary retail con- ii, • us*', No, 3, applied -i iv Ashen, proprietor 11in mi upper Roosevelt •• railed on the follov- i,.,, "This license is is- in,. adjudication by the ., of Alcoholic Bever- ,! ,,f the State Of Mew MI ^peal entered vs. h of Oarteret in con- -i. i no days penalty ni-derH by said Bor- HI.'ITI. June 9, 1944." ih«' license* are for r dealers in packaged chilis pay a fee of r :i.-knge dealers |2B0 . II-.. rost |8fio apiece II ii'H are u follows mi-';. 5-45 Roosevelt i...-.», IT Salem Avenue i A.^ien, 546 Roogevelt Hi is, 247 Washington I y, 209 RoOMvel Hi -inert, 3* Hudson [ lirady, 335 Washing iti.vhkK, 540 Roosevel n Mmwn, 558 Roosevel > Hi us, 27 Pershing tit Buiiik, 10 Hudson IM'-.VICJ, 46 Rootevetl 1 'inTvonak, 48 Warren iiiiini DcRousi, 3 Roose liiiimatka, ?•;•* Artsri; i-.-, 104 Uniw«l»«asV Iruial, 15 ChBrili i Hiuczkowski, 106 f a As Metal And Thermit Folk Picnicked Thu photograph wu l i U «t th« picnic Uit Su j VL *"'" '" R ° 7 " 1 . Girden » b V tht> M«t«l L J"" m " Cor P or * ti °n for thmr rmplnyot Wnojlad won the tafety .ward of the concern for lbs pait year. Some 300 penoni were pmaat, gUMta including member, of employe*' famili** m well *i the workert themteUei. Tht pictara ii by • itsff photographer. 300 At Picnic Rewarded For Safety Record Metal & Thermit's Plant Here Twice Wins Cup From Firm's Head CARTERET Three hundred employes of the Met.nl and Ther- mit Corporation and members of their families celebrated the sec- ond award to the local plant of the President's Snfety Cup at u picnic last Sunday The picnic wan given by the company with em- ployes and their families »B guests Av > Klein, 63 Washington - kondrk, 52 Whjt/ler k-lilus, 41-48 Pershing Mi' li;ii &. Grill, Inf., 35 A 1 ,, II iir. ••••' I >liniuii, 51 Hudson <'» •'.i-iu.<, 216 Roosevelt 657 Roose fil.M.,i,fy,8 John Street. '!> MHirer, 516 Boos* , 549 Roosevelt U Hudson Street. 181 Randolph - ivtruch, 19 Mercer 11 ••Wats. 96 Roosevelt ^•'•'inn, Randolph Street. 552 Rooae- 1 ! '- L:) , 5. Sgt. Charles Karpinski Known Killed In Italy OARTERET New,, of the death in action of Staff Sergeant Charles Karpinski raises to twenty-five the borough's death toll in the present war. He was twenty-two y«wr of age aA4<*W son' of William Karpinski of Washington Avenue and the late Mrs. Violet Karpinski. This yotniK soldier died in the fight- ing in Italy May lfi, the War Department hm notified his fa- ther, who had received word earlier that he was "missing." Sgt. Karpinski was a native of Carteret and attended Car- teret High Srlionl for two yearR and later enrolled in the Mid- dlesex County Vocational School. He was employed at the Liabig plant of the American Agricultural Chemical Company at the time of his enlistment, Hay 18, 1942. He left for over- seas duty in November, 1943, and spent several months in North Africa. Besides his father, ne is sur- vived by a sister, Helen, of Car- teret, and a brother, Thomas, of Port Reading. at Ruyal Gardens, East Rah way section, with a program of games, sports and dancing arranged throughout, thi> day, President Highland of- the campany annually awards -the cup to the ptent in its thain which pro- duces the be«t safety record, By winning the cup for two successive years th« Carters^ plant touTtwice defeated plant* Ioflated' at Jersey if mi City, East Chicago and South San Francisco. Presentation;; of the cup was made by Walton M. Smith, viue president of the company, as Mr, Hirschland's representative. Lenders in achieving the record for these two years were the plant manager in Carteret, W. T. Little, ami A. W. Oppennan, in charge of the safetj program. Loo Bonner and George Hutch- ings headed the committee ar- ranging the food and drinks for the picrtR. Walter Zydt plannefl the amusements, horseshoes, soft- ball, shot-put and tug-of-war; Miss Helen Siimutka seleoted the awards for the competition among the women guests, and Louis Cos scan directed childrini'u gam^and races. Arthur Ploetz was general chairman and the music for danc- ing was by Miag Nina OltichoakTs orchestra. Share Car, Or No Gas, OPA Edict Call By Parish Priest Brings In Over 50 Blood Test Volunteers Board To Refme Sup- plemental Ration UB- leii Rideri Carried CARTEBET — An i m m e d i- ate review will be made of all outstanding "B" supplemental gasoline rations by the local War Price and Rationing Board. The tightening gasoline ration- ing follows a recent order from Washington tn all B and C mo- torists who have not formed car pools to organize a ride-sharing agreement within 30 Myt £ft.ef the expiration of their present ra- tions or face the loss of their sup- plemental gas ration books. "Every day untold nations c*f ittrantt Date* For t ing; SHli More CAKTERET—Typing of volun- teers teady to donata blood when needed at the call of the Cftrteret First Aid 3>Wd will be ttartod here next week.' Wednesday and Thursday, July 5 and 8, nuve b«en set for the jlrst tall, and the work will be continued the following week, Monday through Thursday. July 10-18. Miss Bstelie Myfer and Mrs. Elvira Phillips, tech- nicians of Perth Antboy General Hospital, will do the work, which consists of taking a drop ot blood from a pricked Anger and li Mrs. Ruckriegel Wed To Retired Officer CARTERET Announcement has been made of the marriage of Mrs. Catherine Ruckriegel of Ma- ple .Street, East Railway section, the widow of Conrad Ruckriegel, to Patrick J. Martin of Cranford. The ceremony took place Tuesday and was performed iby Mayor Au- gust F. Greiner of Woodbridge at his home there. The bridegroom is a retired sergeant of the Cran- ford Police Department, After the ceretnony there was a reception for the wedding party at the home of tbi bride, where the couple will live After a stay in Pennsylvania. Mrs. Dorothy Abramson of New York, daughter of the 'bride, and Fred Murray of Carteret, nephew, wexe the at- tendants. The bride wore a gray nnsemhlp with white accessories and a corsage of gardenias. Her attendant was attired in a gray print dress and her corsage was of talisman rosts. gasoline," the Board an id, ;'are needlessly wasted in the United States because private automo- biles are not utilised most effici- ently, Until such unnecessary gas usage is eliminated, very little hope can be entertained for any increase in 'A 1 coupon values or for certain types of 'B coupons needed for necessary travel for a livelihood." Board Gati Onkri Rationing Boards have been in- structed to deny renewals unless applicant has three oj more riders. The boards have also been advised to deny rations to appli- cants who have access to puhlir transportation facility's. "Car share-ri<fng," the Board continued, "applied now can help eliminate unnecessary use of critical materials that are so vital to the success of the wa» effort. It can appreciably aid in meeting the problem of transporting work- ers to the job in the most efficient manner, particularly as a 'stop- gap' until such time as public transportation vehicles can be pro- vided for that necessary work." «xcuse.t tiii "irregular hours, foreman on call, overtime," #tc, will from now on not be ac- cepted as a bona 'fide reason for supplementary gasoline issued where no riders are Involved, un- tent, Nurses of tho borough will be on hind to assist. Volunteers who have registered will bo notified by mall the time they are asked to come to the Squad building, 216 Penthing Avenue, to have'their blood typed. Priait Group p To date about 100 persona arc registered, but many more arc needed. More than half this quan- tity were secured through the ef PRICE THREE 6 Streets Will Be Improved Project Requires $4,431! New Funds, Balance I ( h e r From PWA Pro. Rev. A. J. Sckton forts of Rev. Andrew J, Sakson, pastor of Sacred Heart Church himself one of those registered Father Sakson made a plea for the volunteers from his pulpit last (Continued on Page 5) Sgt. Michael Dikun First Known Carteret Man In D-Day Assault Commissioned Ensign Bonds Sell Better As Total Climbs To $278,556 This Week , 2 John-Street. 186 Washington 55-57 Persh- *FunttdHtli muntan Rites services '•""•' Skocypfe of 22 i took place Wednes- 1 Kuv. John Hundiak 1 l 'equiem high masa ''•""•irius. Ukrainian i Inuial was In Clover- Ml " llll l Park .Cemetery, 1;r fall beaters .were K "''iy, Prank Neman, Bffrko, Michael Truth. 1 vi'>'-, who died Mon- "'•spital, Newark, was :•"••:'ra «f. ag« and tUe I '""yt.ro Skceypee. She II 'y nve cWWren; Mrs, Roosevelt 5. And L Ass'n Declares Dividend 2V 2 % CARTERET Russell Miles, secretBry uf the* United Roosevelt Savings ami Loan Association, an-, nounced this week that directors had declared a dividend of 2^5* per y m on all shares of the asso- ciation due and payable at the close of business today. It also wa.i revealed that during the past year ;the association's gross tasasts have increased 150,000. MULTIPLE CELEBRATION OARTERET — Mrs. Frank Koepfler of Pershing Avenue en- tertained at her home Wednesday night to mark her own birthday and that of her son, Paul. Among her guests were another »on, Staff Sergeant Francis Koepfler, home on furlough, and Sgt. Joseph Ken- nedy, who left yesterday to return to Camp Robinson, Ork. 2 WAVE Recruits Aid Service Kin CARTERET—Mrt, Mary Totin Ference of 15 Lefferts Street was sworn into the WAViES last week and will he ordered noon for train- ing to the U. S. fJival Training School at Hunter College, New York City. Apprentice Seaman Ference is the wife of Pfr. Steph- en Ference of the A r niy Air Corps, now stationed in Italy. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Totin of the Le(ferts Street address, a graduate of Car- teret High School, and has bee,n employed ap an operator by the Westvaeo Chlorine Products Cor- poration. ' She is one of two young women from Carteret to join this branch of service recently, the other be- ing Miis Jane Veronica, Ryan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kyan, of Chrome Avenue, who will repqrt for training at Hunter Col- lege July 17. A (fraduutu of th# Oarteret High 'School, she was era- ployed by the Foater Whe«ler Cor- poration. Her twin brothers, Ed- ward Thomas and George Joseph, are in the navy. Loan Assns Buy $30,000; Scouts District Borough In House-To-House Drive CARTKKCT-- been .selling: a -W;ir little Bonds better thi week. June 24, when the last re- port was compiled by Chairman $278,55.6 worth Enul Stremlau, had been sold. This presents BRITTON IN HOSPITAL CARTERS'!'—Johp. H. Britten of Wheeler Avenue is ft surgical patient in Perth Amboy General Hospital, purchases only up to that time and includes $43,875 in "E" bonds, the individual invoHtment type of MceWity of which the United States hopes to sell six billion dollars worth in this Fifth War Loan. Not recorded in this report are other sales which are expected. Liquor dealers of the borough pledged themselves to buy $16,- 000 worth when they met at the Borough Hall Wednesday night, arid B, W. Harrington,' named chairman of their campaign, hopes to boost this figure considerably. He will name workers later. Rev, Andrew J. Sakson, pastor of Sacred Heart Church, is carry- ing on a one-man sales campaign and to date has brought in over $1,000 in pledges. Reports of sales in' tht local industries are not completed. B. & L- S«le. Two local Building and Loon associations also have announced purchases in large ^mounts, The Carteret Buluing and Loaji Asso- ciation has added $10,000 bought in the current campaign to its holdings, and the United Roose- velt Building «nd Loan'Associa- tion will buy $20,000 to make its tqtal investment in bonds $100,- 000. Tlu'ae NKUU'S ( l 0 not include snics to individual? made through these associations. It is under- stood also the "borough will add to the $25,000 already announced as (•nntflniplntcd purchase. This sum has not been included in the total reported by Mr. Stromlau. Buy Scouts are starling in their camuuign which U to be on a houieto-house basis. The bor- The Mayor Rorough Council Wednesday authoring improvements to Mtrceta in the Wough at a V <-o«t of $15,000, of which M.0HW.15 rcprtaenU new fi This sum is to be raised by : term bonds, due to expire or 111, next. An unexpended sum of 11 -vtII-|JHlVTdo 'IKc remaln Reports 7 Feel Fine? A He Survives 1ST Sinking; In Army Over Two Yeart CARTERET—It bocame known this week that Sergeant Michael Dikun, former employe of the United States Metals Refining Company, had taken part in the fli'Bl invasion of France and sur- vived the sinking of the LST boat he started from Eng- is the first man from uugli i been divided into dis- tricts for Troops 81, 89, 84, 87 and 83 and a scout is expected tn call at each home in the district assigned his troop. Procedure To Be Used In Applying For Commercial. Track Replacements Are Outlined By ODTOfficutl n of commercial motor tivity from the ICC, whieh na« opentora o! commercial motor .. need to purchase new. after July 1 should flle their application* through the Dis- trict Office of the Office of De- fense Transportation instead «I the Bureau of Motor Carriers^of the Jnterstata Commerce "" iy ladled Ae ifrMtwni tet tho ex- the Manager ot the ODT Rrpa/ Street, Newark, 2, Ey.annouacedtoday. C y SSwW in this district are Vw- n. I!»»ex, Hudson, l plained. Under'tbi n«vr p ODT's Regional Division will proc- eed the applications in the Said in accordance with bolide* and, procedure ot the |llM*tlon tion of tha%HW» tiaft p»rtraB "New commercial, not include integral da vehicles." EflorU Pr»ited Guy A- Richardson, Asaktant Director of the ODT in charge ol the Highway Transport Depart- ment highly commended the ICCa hanging ot allocations in a letter to Commissioner John U Rogers, Trho is in charge of the eomrai*- gion's Bureau qf Motor Carrier*, •"I should Hke to amp. ypu ol our grateful recognition, of the burd«i» from whioh Parents learn John Duffy Of Navy Missing In "Action CARTERET--- Word waa re- ceived on Tuesday by Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Duffy of Chrome Avenue their son, S2/c John Duffy, is missing in action. The young man is twenty-one years of age and onlisted in 1941. He has b,een overseas eighteen months and was employed be- fore the war by the I, T. Wil- liams Lumber Company. Hyi parent^ last heard from him in a letter dated May 20. Return From Overseas Marked By Home Party C'ARTBllBT WarranO Officer Andrew Zatesky waa honored on his return from seventeen months service overseas at a party given by Mrs, Walter Sak and Mrs. Mary Zaleaky at 'the Latter'* home, 42 Hermain Avenue. Gueita present were Mr, and Mrs. ff, A. Zaleski and daughter, Anna,'.of Morrisville, Pa.; Mrs. John leaps* of Brooklyw; Mrs. Agne*,W.rei i .J!errak, Private WaU ter Wieczercak, Mr. and Mrs-. Charles Biunkowski and son, Wil- liam, «nd Mr. and Mm. Edward Pogoda and son, Edward, of Lyndhur»t| Mrs. KayNapiawa and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Cierline and Mr. andMrs, Charles Scotton of Jersey City; Mr. and Mrs. Joaeph Dwmb* and sons, Jo- aeph and Donald, of Biyonrte; Mr. and Mrs Walter TOIKMT± «nd daughter, Rutalie, and Walr ter Sak of Carteret. Miss Helen Gavaletz Rank Of Ensign Won By Miss Gavaletz CARTERET —Miss Helen J. (fHVHletz, (lttilgliti'r of Mr. and Mrs. George Guvaletz of Washing- ton Avenue, ha3 been accepted in the Navy Nurse Corps, with the rank of Ensign. She is subject to call for active duty tomorrow. Miss Gavaleti is a graduate of the Jersey City Medical Center's School of Nursing, Altavw&rd she Htlended . Teacher's College, Co- lumbia University, for advanced courses in Public Health and served here SB school nurse for two years. Prior to her appoint- ment in the Navy she was a staff nurse with the Visiting Nurse As- sociation in Plainfleld, ip which capacity she did school nursing, field work and also taught Home Nursing for the Plainfield Red Cross Chapter. She will 'be the second member of, her family to enter the armed forces, her bro- ther, George Gavatets, Jr., having been accepted for service in the Air Corps, scheduled to leave in August, PBA ELECTION (1A RTKKST —' Officers elected rreytly by the Patholmen's Be novolont Association are: Presi- dent, Walter Rusuiak; vice presi- dent, Thomas Hemsel; recording and financial secretary, Charles Mukwinski;" treasurer, Thomas Ponughue. Standing committees for the year are to 'be appointed at a meeting .Wednesday,'after- noon at it:30 o'clock at the Bor- ough Hall. on which land. He CartereL definitely known to have been ih the D-Dav forces June (j. One of sixteen who survived the sinking of this craft, when seen afterward he said, "I fed fine." He is a member of an armored tank unit which haa awn much action, srtrving previously In Sorth African., M f l p ^ M ^ _ Sicily. Ho left Cartoret two and H half years ago with oni; of the earlii-sl draft cnntingrntH, and the news dispatch wjhiclt came to this newspaper wan the first word his family hud from him since the ntuit uf tho invaniiMi. Army Account This despatch is from head- quarters of the European theatre of operations of the Army and (fives thR following account: "Sur- vivors of the American LST which struck a floating mine and sank within sight of the Normandy teaches were In high .spirits when they reached this invasion port (a British Port) and were 'itching to go back «nd get a real crack at Jerry.' "The men, all members of an armored unit, were unanimous in their desire to be re-equipped and Hent back to the*beachhead as soon as possible. A few men were killed when the ship struck the mine. An attempt was made by Navy tugs to tow the ship in to the beach, but the boilers .exploded abnut ten minutes after the ship had 'struck the mine and in another half-hour she sank. Moat of the survivors were taken off by an A*merican destroyer and tratjsferred later to an LST for the returh to Eng- land. Others went over the side and were picked up by mine sweepers and PT boats. All of the wounded were transferred from the stricken ship without mishap.' 1 ' Sergeant Dikun lives here with his brother-in-law and Bister, Mr, and Mrs, John Yavorsky, of 74 Randolph Street. the cost. This money la on' as part of tho fundi pr«vi set aside for improvements \ the sponsorship of the boroo, conjunction with the Works ect Administration, now tinued, Streets to be improved are; i of Hudson Street from to Chrome Avenue, and Chrome Avenue from Street to Middlesex Avenue, permanently resurfaced; ta terscction of Hermann AT and Whittier Street, resurt. seal coatinpto be applied to ! ahlng Avenue between , Avenue and Bergin StreetT coating to Sharot Street betn Perching and Lcick Avenues; costing to Louis Street. t h e measure was introduced Councilniun John A, Turk, eh man of streets and roads, , Apply for Job. The governing body also ceived three applications for r _. tioni at HUB adjourned meeting i which action waa taken on.app cations for renewing liqtio r censes. These were from Mid llilu of 15 Fitch Street and phen SiozUyo, 61 Larch for patrolmen on the police fore«! from Clinton, Miedom of 96 Hca Street for engineer in the fire partmeiit. All w«r« referred tot proper committees. Plann al»o were nuide for Mayor and Council to attend dedication Sunday is will be at 10:30 A. M. r fi lowed by a dinner of the W'miei Society of the church. Draft l i s t s Down 85% Below Normal CARTBRET—-A lessening in t number of men culled for i duty is reported hero for month, It U understood only » wilt answer tho next call, th cheduled' to leave July 24. arc in the age range of from U to 26 years. This is 15% of pre*| viou? demands. Pre-induction examinations Newark, and Camden are b^ halted from tomorrow to July tho Second Service Command nounced ,and in New York processing of selectees for indg tion iK to be anspandbd from week to July 10. During this ; od personnel of recruiting nduction stations must takfc n quired military training th» selves. Recruiting of WACs 17 year old aviation cadeta CO tinuea, however. .._. Lt, Col, Edgar N. Bloomer, #f| rector of Selective Service New Jersey, aaid inductees have passed physical examination! are now being designated ss " ceptuble for the armed and are not b,eing classified PLAN JULY ACTIVITY \ OARTBRBT i'lang for two eventa to be held during July have been made by St. Mary's So dality. Mi?s Anna Haydniak is chairman at the mid-summer dune which takes place July 8 l hi the Ukrainian Pavflion, Tomorrow th£ members will have dinner In New York. Notes From The Services DAUGHTER AJtElVES Ti i aUoeation *|p| ) B p J Louis S. Downs of Roosevelt Ave nue *r,4 the t f M f j ^ ton Miijor John S. Zimmerman, ami of Mi. and M», Joseph Zimmer- man of 116 Longfellow Street, has left Camp Adair, Or«,, and re- ported to Fort) Sill, Okla.,. for the Qjftcers' Advanced Course of the Field Artillery School, » * *. From Pvt, Qoor|e Cbervsnak oomee a nice tnosxage that he re- Cftv«« this newspaper regularly in Hawaii, He writes he is attid n the Island «f; O«hu an bi» time off & i H uwimming find* ><to'' in Honolulu or B«ach and cifically for Sl or Navy. y ^ Selective service registrantswh^ volunteer for induction _ their official ottllu may *t aniwunce a preference for br of eurvice, Bloomnr wild, hutft is no guarante« that the reqq will be granted. O.C.D. Fire Wardens fYi OfHem, Plan Rdward John M«dvnta 3l/i has been alfendilig a 14-duy leav with his parentB, Mr. and Mrs John MedveU of Wheeler Avenue. This U his firet time home after eighteen months in thu Pacific. He in one of four brothers in serv- ice. Emit also is in the. Navy and Stephen and Joseph are in the Army, CARTBRET — T h e Wre W*« dens' Social Unit will celebrate second anniversary at a No. 1 Fire Hall July 26. of officers at this same place day night resulted in Albert J( again being ehoaeti president Other* olecto4j|ere: Vice ( dent, Roy Dunn; recording tary »nd puijliwty chai( l , Corporal Joseph M fl ton of Mr. and Mrs, fltephsq &-delyi of 119 Lowe,ll Stwat wa»'awarded the Good Conduct Medal recently at DeviBrMoBthan IHeld, Tuiiiwn, Arii. He Is nowtraining »»* radio WsratWNpjnuBr ift * 8 4 ^ y p Wallur C. King; Auaucial tary and treasurer, Meyer ma n; sprj«»nt - at - arm*, Nieraan; trustees, Peter Hoffman and Stanley ( SWEET SIXTEEN Brown, of berthing av«nu«, gjven a party Wednesday in honor of Mr sliteenth bit Gua A8dap>n and daughter,' rJiOn, ot'flpfflTd, Co»a.i " ' Mrs. Qtlfford Worth and

Transcript of As Metal And Thermit Folk Picnicked Share Car, 6 Streets ... · Metal & Thermit's Plant Here Twice...

i,V >.>«>"•

:!! Will.—No. 12

j! ( ietCARTBRET, N. J.t UllDAY, JUNE 50,

itrnses)riy.iwo Apply Fot

Permit!; AihtifiI A . A s i r

ihonal Km A D v

1,1 Forty-eight- IJ-. I]' liquor her« were

' c Mayor and Borough: night, each effectivei >i the coming year.

:i plenary retail con-ii, • us*', No, 3, applied-i iv Ashen, proprietor11in mi upper Roosevelt

•• railed on the follov-i,.,, "This license is is-in,. adjudication by the., of Alcoholic Bever-

,! ,,f the State Of MewMI ^peal entered vs.h of Oarteret in con-

-i. i no days penaltyni-derH by said Bor-

HI.'ITI. June 9, 1944."ih«' license* are for

r dealers in packagedchilis pay a fee of

r:i.-knge dealers |2B0. II-.. rost |8fio apiece

II ii'H are u followsmi-';. 5-45 Roosevelt

i...-.», IT Salem Avenuei A. ien, 546 Roogevelt

Hi is, 247 Washington

I y, 209 RoOMvel

Hi -inert, 3* Hudson

[ lirady, 335 Washing

iti.vhkK, 540 Roosevel

n Mmwn, 558 Roosevel

> Hi us, 27 Pershing

tit Buiiik, 10 Hudson

IM'-.VICJ, 46 Rootevetl

1 'inTvonak, 48 Warren

iiiiini DcRousi, 3 Roose

• liiiimatka, ?•;•* Artsri;i-.-, 104 Uniw«l»«asVIruial, 15 ChBrilii Hiuczkowski, 106 fa

As Metal And Thermit Folk Picnicked

Thu photograph wu l i U «t th« picnic UitS u j V L *"'" '" R°7"1. G i r d e n » bV tht> M«t«l

L J " " m " C o rPo r* t i°n for thmr rmplnyotWnojlad won the tafety .ward of the concern

for lbs pait year. Some 300 penoni werepmaat, gUMta including member, of employe*'famili** m well *i the workert themteUei.Tht pictara ii by • itsff photographer.

300 At PicnicRewarded For Safety Record

Metal & Thermit's PlantHere Twice Wins CupFrom Firm's Head

CARTERET Three hundredemployes of the Met.nl and Ther-mit Corporation and members oftheir families celebrated the sec-ond award to the local plant ofthe President's Snfety Cup at upicnic last Sunday The picnic wangiven by the company with em-ployes and their families »B guests

Av> Klein, 63 Washington

- kondrk, 52 Whjt/ler

k-lilus, 41-48 Pershing

Mi' li;ii &. Grill, Inf., 35A1,, I I i i r .

••••' I > l i n i u i i , 5 1 H u d s o n

<'» •'.i-iu.<, 216 Roosevelt

657 Roose

fil.M.,i,fy,8 John Street.'!> M Hirer, 516 Boos*

, 549 Roosevelt

U Hudson Street.181 Randolph

- ivtruch, 19 Mercer

11 ••Wats. 96 Roosevelt

^•'•'inn, Randolph Street.552 Rooae-

1 !'-L:),

5. Sgt. Charles KarpinskiKnown Killed In Italy

OARTERET — New,, of thedeath in action of Staff SergeantCharles Karpinski raises totwenty-five the borough's deathtoll in the present war. He wastwenty-two y«wr of age aA4<*Wson' of William Karpinski ofWashington Avenue and thelate Mrs. Violet Karpinski. ThisyotniK soldier died in the fight-ing in Italy May lfi, the WarDepartment hm notified his fa-ther, who had received wordearlier that he was "missing."

Sgt. Karpinski was a nativeof Carteret and attended Car-teret High Srlionl for two yearRand later enrolled in the Mid-dlesex C o u n t y VocationalSchool. He was employed at theLiabig plant of the AmericanAgricultural Chemical Companyat the time of his enlistment,Hay 18, 1942. He left for over-seas duty in November, 1943,and spent several months inNorth Africa.

Besides his father, ne is sur-vived by a sister, Helen, of Car-teret, and a brother, Thomas,of Port Reading.

at Ruyal Gardens, East Rah waysection, with a program of games,sports and dancing arrangedthroughout, thi> day,

President Highland of- thecampany annually awards -the cupto the ptent in its thain which pro-duces the be«t safety record, Bywinning the cup for two successiveyears th« Carters^ plant touTtwicedefeated plant* Ioflated' at Jerseyif

miCity, East Chicago and South SanFrancisco. Presentation;; of the cupwas made by Walton M. Smith,viue president of the company, asMr, Hirschland's representative.Lenders in achieving the recordfor these two years were the plantmanager in Carteret, W. T. Little,ami A. W. Oppennan, in chargeof the safetj program.

Loo Bonner and George Hutch-ings headed the committee ar-ranging the food and drinks forthe picrtR. Walter Zydt planneflthe amusements, horseshoes, soft-ball, shot-put and tug-of-war; MissHelen Siimutka seleoted theawards for the competition amongthe women guests, and Louis Cosscan directed childrini'u gam^andraces. Arthur Ploetz was generalchairman and the music for danc-ing was by Miag Nina OltichoakTsorchestra.

Share Car,Or No Gas,OPA Edict

Call By Parish Priest Brings InOver 50 Blood Test Volunteers

Board To Refme Sup-plemental Ration UB-leii Rideri CarriedCARTEBET — An i m m e d i-

ate review will be made of alloutstanding "B" supplementalgasoline rations by the local WarPrice and Rationing Board.

The tightening gasoline ration-ing follows a recent order fromWashington tn all B and C mo-torists who have not formed carpools to organize a ride-sharingagreement within 30 Myt £ft.efthe expiration of their present ra-tions or face the loss of their sup-plemental gas ration books.

"Every day untold nations c*f

ittrantt Date* For ting; SHli More

CAKTERET—Typing of volun-teers teady to donata blood whenneeded at the call of the CftrteretFirst Aid 3>Wd will be ttartodhere next week.' Wednesday andThursday, July 5 and 8, nuve b«enset for the jlrst tall, and the workwill be continued the followingweek, Monday through Thursday.July 10-18. Miss Bstelie Myferand Mrs. Elvira Phillips, tech-nicians of Perth Antboy GeneralHospital, will do the work, whichconsists of taking a drop ot bloodfrom a pricked Anger and l i

Mrs. Ruckriegel WedTo Retired Officer

CARTERET — Announcementhas been made of the marriage ofMrs. Catherine Ruckriegel of Ma-ple .Street, East Railway section,the widow of Conrad Ruckriegel,to Patrick J. Martin of Cranford.The ceremony took place Tuesdayand was performed iby Mayor Au-gust F. Greiner of Woodbridgeat his home there. The bridegroomis a retired sergeant of the Cran-ford Police Department,

After the ceretnony there wasa reception for the wedding partyat the home of tbi bride, wherethe couple will live After a stayin Pennsylvania. Mrs. DorothyAbramson of New York, daughterof the 'bride, and Fred Murray ofCarteret, nephew, wexe the at-tendants. The bride wore a graynnsemhlp with white accessoriesand a corsage of gardenias. Herattendant was attired in a grayprint dress and her corsage wasof talisman rosts.

gasoline," the Board an id, ;'areneedlessly wasted in the UnitedStates because private automo-biles are not utilised most effici-ently, Until such unnecessary gasusage is eliminated, very littlehope can be entertained for anyincrease in 'A1 coupon values orfor certain types of 'B couponsneeded for necessary travel for alivelihood."

Board Gati OnkriRationing Boards have been in-

structed to deny renewals unlessapplicant has three oj more

riders. The boards have also beenadvised to deny rations to appli-cants who have access to puhlirtransportation facility's.

"Car share-ri<fng," the Boardcontinued, "applied now can helpeliminate unnecessary u se ofcritical materials that are so vitalto the success of the wa» effort.It can appreciably aid in meetingthe problem of transporting work-ers to the job in the most efficientmanner, particularly as a 'stop-gap' until such time as publictransportation vehicles can be pro-vided for that necessary work."

«xcuse.t tiii "irregularhours, foreman on call, overtime,"#tc, will from now on not be ac-cepted as a bona 'fide reason forsupplementary gasoline i s s u e dwhere no riders are Involved, un-

tent, Nurses of tho borough willbe on hind to assist.

Volunteers who have registeredwill bo notified by mall the timethey are asked to come to theSquad building, 216 PenthingAvenue, to have'their blood typed.

Priait GrouppTo date about 100 persona arc

registered, but many more arcneeded. More than half this quan-tity were secured through the ef

PRICE THREE

6 StreetsWill BeImprovedProject Requires $4,431!New Funds, Balance I(her From PWA Pro.

Rev. A. J. Scktonforts of Rev. Andrew J, Sakson,pastor of Sacred Heart Churchhimself one of those registeredFather Sakson made a plea for thevolunteers from his pulpit last

(Continued on Page 5)

Sgt. Michael Dikun First KnownCarteret Man In D-Day Assault

Commissioned Ensign

Bonds Sell Better As TotalClimbs To $278,556 This Week

, 2 John-Street.186 Washington

55-57 Persh-

*FunttdHtlimuntan Rites

services'•""•' Skocypfe of 22

i took place Wednes-1 Kuv. John Hundiak

1 l 'equiem high masa''•""•irius. U k r a i n i a n

i Inuial was In Clover-Ml"lllll Park .Cemetery,1;r fall beaters .wereK"''iy, Prank Neman,

Bffrko, MichaelTruth.

1 vi'>'-, who died Mon-"'•spital, Newark, was

:•"••:'ra « f . a g « and tUeI '""yt.ro Skceypee. SheI I 'y nve cWWren; Mrs,

Roosevelt 5. And L Ass'nDeclares Dividend 2V2%

CARTERET — Russell Miles,secretBry uf the* United RooseveltSavings ami Loan Association, an-,nounced this week that directorshad declared a dividend of 2^5*per y m on all shares of the asso-ciation due and payable at theclose of business today. It alsowa.i revealed that during the pastyear ;the association's gross tasastshave increased 150,000.

MULTIPLE CELEBRATIONOARTERET — Mrs. F r a n k

Koepfler of Pershing Avenue en-tertained at her home Wednesdaynight to mark her own birthdayand that of her son, Paul. Amongher guests were another »on, StaffSergeant Francis Koepfler, homeon furlough, and Sgt. Joseph Ken-nedy, who left yesterday to returnto Camp Robinson, Ork.

2 WAVE RecruitsAid Service Kin

CARTERET—Mrt, Mary TotinFerence of 15 Lefferts Street wassworn into the WAViES last weekand will he ordered noon for train-ing to the U. S. fJival TrainingSchool at Hunter College, NewYork City. Apprentice SeamanFerence is the wife of Pfr. Steph-en Ference of the Arniy AirCorps, now stationed in Italy.She is the daughter of Mr. andMrs. John Totin of the Le(fertsStreet address, a graduate of Car-teret High School, and has bee,nemployed ap an operator by theWestvaeo Chlorine Products Cor-poration. '

She is one of two young womenfrom Carteret to join this branchof service recently, the other be-ing Miis Jane Veronica, Ryan,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. EdwardKyan, of Chrome Avenue, who willrepqrt for training at Hunter Col-lege July 17. A (fraduutu of th#Oarteret High 'School, she was era-ployed by the Foater Whe«ler Cor-poration. Her twin brothers, Ed-ward Thomas and George Joseph,are in the navy.

Loan Assns Buy $30,000;Scouts District BoroughIn House-To-House Drive

CARTKKCT--been .selling: a

- W ; i rlittle

Bondsbetter thi

week. June 24, when the last re-port was compiled by Chairman

$278,55.6 worthEnul Stremlau,had been sold. This presents

BRITTON IN HOSPITALCARTERS'!'—Johp. H. Britten

of Wheeler Avenue is ft surgicalpatient in Perth Amboy GeneralHospital,

purchases only up to that time andincludes $43,875 in "E" bonds,the individual invoHtment type ofMceWity of which the UnitedStates hopes to sell six billiondollars worth in this Fifth WarLoan.

Not recorded in this report areother sales which are expected.Liquor dealers of the boroughpledged themselves to buy $16,-000 worth when they met at theBorough Hall Wednesday night,arid B, W. Harrington,' namedchairman of their campaign, hopesto boost this figure considerably.He will name workers later.

Rev, Andrew J. Sakson, pastorof Sacred Heart Church, is carry-ing on a one-man sales campaignand to date has brought in over$1,000 in pledges. Reports ofsales in' tht local industries arenot completed.

B. & L- S«le.Two local Building and Loon

associations also have announcedpurchases in large ^mounts, TheCarteret Buluing and Loaji Asso-ciation has added $10,000 boughtin the current campaign to itsholdings, and the United Roose-velt Building «nd Loan'Associa-tion will buy $20,000 to make itstqtal investment in bonds $100,-

000. Tlu'ae NKUU'S (l0 not includesnics to individual? made throughthese associations. It is under-stood also the "borough will add tothe $25,000 already announced as

(•nntflniplntcd purchase. Thissum has not been included in thetotal reported by Mr. Stromlau.

Buy Scouts are starling in theircamuuign which U to be on ahouieto-house basis. The bor-

The MayorRorough Council Wednesdayauthoring improvements toMtrceta in the Wough at a V<-o«t of $15,000, of whichM.0HW.15 rcprtaenU new fiThis sum is to be raised by :term bonds, due to expireor 111, next.

An unexpended sum of 11-vtII-|JHlVTdo 'IKc remaln

Reports 7 Feel Fine? AHe Survives 1ST Sinking;In Army Over Two Yeart

CARTERET—It bocame knownthis week that Sergeant MichaelDikun, former employe of theUnited States Metals RefiningCompany, had taken part in thefli'Bl invasion of France and sur-vived the sinking of the LST boat

he started from Eng-is the first man from

uuglii

been divided into dis-tricts for Troops 81, 89, 84, 87and 83 and a scout is expected tncall at each home in the districtassigned his troop.

Procedure To Be Used In Applying For Commercial.Track Replacements Are Outlined By ODTOfficutl

n of commercial motor tivity from the ICC, whieh na« opentora o! commercial motor

.. need to purchase new.after July 1 should flle

their application* through the Dis-trict Office of the Office of De-fense Transportation instead «Ithe Bureau of Motor Carriers^ofthe Jnterstata Commerce ""

iyladled Ae ifrMtwni tet tho

ex-the

Manager ot the ODT

Rrpa/ Street, Newark, 2,Ey.annouacedtoday. C ySSwW in this district are Vw-

n. I!»»ex, Hudson,l

plained. Under'tbi n«vr pODT's Regional Division will proc-eed the applications in the Saidin accordance with bolide* and,procedure ot the |llM*tlontion of tha%HW» tiaft

p»rtraB"New commercial,

not include integralda

vehicles."EflorU Pr»ited

Guy A- Richardson, AsaktantDirector of the ODT in charge olthe Highway Transport Depart-ment highly commended the ICCahanging ot allocations in a letterto Commissioner John U Rogers,Trho is in charge of the eomrai*-gion's Bureau qf Motor Carrier*,

•"I should Hke to amp. ypu olour grateful recognition, of the

burd«i» from whioh

Parents learn John DuffyOf Navy Missing In "Action

CARTERET--- Word waa re-ceived on Tuesday by Mr. andMrs. Matthew Duffy of ChromeAvenue their son, S2/c JohnDuffy, is missing in action. Theyoung man is twenty-one yearsof age and onlisted in 1941. Hehas b,een overseas eighteenmonths and was employed be-fore the war by the I, T. Wil-liams Lumber Company. Hyiparent^ last heard from him ina letter dated May 20.

Return From OverseasMarked By Home Party

C'ARTBllBT — WarranO OfficerAndrew Zatesky waa honored onhis return from seventeen monthsservice overseas at a party givenby Mrs, Walter Sak and Mrs. MaryZaleaky at 'the Latter'* home, 42Hermain Avenue.

Gueita present were Mr, andMrs. ff, A. Zaleski and daughter,Anna,'.of Morrisville, Pa.; Mrs.John leaps* of Brooklyw; Mrs.Agne*,W.reii.J!errak, Private WaUter Wieczercak, Mr. and Mrs-.Charles Biunkowski and son, Wil-liam, «nd Mr. and Mm. EdwardPogoda and son, Edward, ofLyndhur»t| Mrs. Kay Napiawa anddaughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. J.Cierline and Mr. and Mrs, CharlesScotton of Jersey City; Mr. andMrs. Joaeph Dwmb* and sons, Jo-aeph and Donald, of Biyonrte;Mr. and Mrs Walter TOIKMT±«nd daughter, Rutalie, and Walrter Sak of Carteret.

Miss Helen Gavaletz

Rank Of Ensign WonBy Miss Gavaletz

CARTERET —Miss Helen J.(fHVHletz, (lttilgliti'r of Mr. andMrs. George Guvaletz of Washing-ton Avenue, ha3 been acceptedin the Navy Nurse Corps, with therank of Ensign. She is subject tocall for active duty tomorrow.

Miss Gavaleti is a graduate ofthe Jersey City Medical Center'sSchool of Nursing, Altavw&rd sheHtlended . Teacher's College, Co-lumbia University, for advancedcourses in Public Health andserved here SB school nurse fortwo years. Prior to her appoint-ment in the Navy she was a staffnurse with the Visiting Nurse As-sociation in Plainfleld, ip whichcapacity she did school nursing,field work and also taught HomeNursing for the Plainfield RedCross Chapter. She will 'be • thesecond member of, her family toenter the armed forces, her bro-ther, George Gavatets, Jr., havingbeen accepted for service in theAir Corps, scheduled to leave inAugust,

PBA ELECTION(1A RTKKST —' Officers elected

rreytly by the Patholmen's Benovolont Association are: Presi-dent, Walter Rusuiak; vice presi-dent, Thomas Hemsel; recordingand financial secretary, CharlesMukwinski;" treasurer, ThomasPonughue. Standing committeesfor the year are to 'be appointedat a meeting .Wednesday,'after-noon at it:30 o'clock at the Bor-ough Hall.

on whichland. HeCartereL definitely known to havebeen ih the D-Dav forces June (j.

One of sixteen who survived thesinking of this craft, when seenafterward he said, "I fed fine."He is a member of an armoredtank unit which haa awn muchaction, srtrving previously InSorth African., M f l p ^ M ^ _Sicily. Ho left Cartoret two andH half years ago with oni; of theearlii-sl draft cnntingrntH, and thenews dispatch wjhiclt came to thisnewspaper wan the first word hisfamily hud from him since thentuit uf tho invaniiMi.

Army AccountThis despatch is from head-

quarters of the European theatreof operations of the Army and(fives thR following account: "Sur-vivors of the American LSTwhich struck a floating mine andsank within sight of the Normandyteaches were In high .spirits whenthey reached this invasion port (aBritish Port) and were 'itching togo back «nd get a real crack atJerry.'

"The men, all members of anarmored unit, were unanimous intheir desire to be re-equipped andHent back to the*beachhead as soonas possible. A few men were killedwhen the ship struck the mine. Anattempt was made by Navy tugs totow the ship in to the beach, butthe boilers .exploded abnut tenminutes after the ship had 'struckthe mine and in another half-hourshe sank. Moat of the survivorswere taken off by an A*mericandestroyer and tratjsferred later toan LST for the returh to Eng-land. Others went over the sideand were picked up by minesweepers and PT boats. All of thewounded were transferred fromthe stricken ship without mishap.'1

' Sergeant Dikun lives here withhis brother-in-law and Bister, Mr,and Mrs, John Yavorsky, of 74Randolph Street.

the cost. This money la on'as part of tho fundi pr«viset aside for improvements \the sponsorship of the boroo,conjunction with the Worksect Administration, nowtinued,

Streets to be improved are; iof Hudson Street fromto Chrome Avenue, andChrome Avenue from H»Street to Middlesex Avenue,permanently resurfaced; taterscction of Hermann ATand Whittier Street, resurt.seal coatinpto be applied to !ahlng Avenue between ,Avenue and Bergin StreetTcoating to Sharot Street betnPerching and Lcick Avenues;costing to Louis Street.

the measure was introducedCouncilniun John A, Turk, ehman of streets and roads,

, Apply for Job.The governing body also

ceived three applications for r_.tioni at HUB adjourned meeting iwhich action waa taken on.appcations for renewing liqtio rcenses. These were from Midllilu of 15 Fitch Street andphen SiozUyo, 61 Larchfor patrolmen on the police fore«!from Clinton, Miedom of 96 HcaStreet for engineer in the firepartmeiit. All w«r« referred t o tproper committees.

Plann al»o were nuide forMayor and Council to attenddedication Sunday

is will be at 10:30 A. M.r filowed by a dinner of the W'mieiSociety of the church.

Draft l ists Down85% Below Normal

CARTBRET—-A lessening in tnumber of men culled for iduty is reported hero formonth, It U understood only »wilt answer tho next call, thcheduled' to leave July 24.

arc in the age range of from Uto 26 years. This is 15% of pre*|viou? demands.

Pre-induction examinationsNewark, and Camden are b^halted from tomorrow to Julytho Second Service Commandnounced ,and in New Yorkprocessing of selectees for indgtion iK to be anspandbd fromweek to July 10. During this ;od personnel of recruitingnduction stations must takfc n

quired military training t h »selves. Recruiting of WACs17 year old aviation cadeta COtinuea, however. .._.

Lt, Col, Edgar N. Bloomer, # f |rector of Selective ServiceNew Jersey, aaid inducteeshave passed physical examination!are now being designated ss "ceptuble for the armedand are not b,eing classified

PLAN JULY ACTIVITY\

OARTBRBT — i'lang for twoeventa to be held during Julyhave been made by St. Mary's Sodality. Mi?s Anna Haydniak ischairman at the mid-summer dunewhich takes place July 8 l hi theUkrainian Pavflion, Tomorrow th£members will have dinner In NewYork.

Notes From The Services

DAUGHTER AJtElVESTi

i aUoeation* | p |

) B p JLouis S. Downs of Roosevelt Avenue *r,4 the t f M f j ^ton

Miijor John S. Zimmerman, amiof Mi. and M», Joseph Zimmer-man of 116 Longfellow Street, hasleft Camp Adair, Or«,, and re-ported to Fort) Sill, Okla.,. for theQjftcers' Advanced Course of theField Artillery School,

» * *.

From Pvt, Qoor|e Cbervsnakoomee a nice tnosxage that he re-Cftv«« this newspaper regularly inHawaii, He writes he is a t t i dn the Island «f; O«hu anbi» time off & i Huwimmingfind* ><to''

in Honolulu orB«ach and

cifically forS l

or Navy.y ^Selective service registrantswh^

volunteer for induction_ their official ottllu may *t

aniwunce a preference for brof eurvice, Bloomnr wild, hutftis no guarante« that the reqqwill be granted.

O.C.D. Fire Wardens fYiOf Hem, Plan

Rdward John M«dvnta 3 l / ihas been alfendilig a 14-duy leavwith his parentB, Mr. and MrsJohn MedveU of Wheeler Avenue.This U his firet time home aftereighteen months in thu Pacific.He in one of four brothers in serv-ice. Emit also is in the. Navy andStephen and Joseph are in theArmy,

CARTBRET —The Wre W*«dens' Social Unit will celebratesecond anniversary at aNo. 1 Fire Hall July 26.of officers at this same placeday night resulted in Albert J(again being ehoaeti president

Other* olecto4j|ere: Vice(

dent, Roy Dunn; recordingtary »nd puijliwty chai(

l

, Corporal JosephM fl

ton ofMr. and Mrs, fltephsq &-delyi of119 Lowe,ll Stwat wa»'awardedthe Good Conduct Medal recentlyat DeviBrMoBthan IHeld, Tuiiiwn,Arii. He Is now training »»* radioWsratWNpjnuBr ift * 8 4 ^

y pWallur C. King; Auaucialtary and treasurer, Meyerma n; spr j«»nt - at - arm*,Nieraan; trustees, Peter

Hoffman and Stanley (

SWEET SIXTEEN

Brown, of berthing av«nu«,gjven a party Wednesdayin honor of Mr sliteenth bit

Gua A8dap>n and daughter,'rJiOn, ot'flpfflTd, Co»a.i " 'Mrs. Qtlfford Worth and

r r^j'A/aiTwo3 i S * f'v" W* !'t"y-'™'!ri0f?/i%Pw'f%w-fc;{JF?

yHlfrli

/Edi th Ulnum,Bfown, Mr.G M

the i i« l partyheld Sunday nftci noon l.y Frto>ni1ship Link, Order of ll-o fioliten

••• Chain, was moved iniioms hwauisr! of thr inrlfment wrnther. ln^lo«tl

>' of taking plnrc on '.hp lBftn of th(1 homt' of Mrs, Louis iAtbowitz in

Post Bntilovinl, it *a« held «t the' CotlKififtition iif Lnvi'iK JtiKtire

SytiBK'if'H1, with cijrhl t*blo» inplay,

WMT nmrt* b^ SiifMr.'and Mr». Max

, «nd Mrs. MiltonGross, Mi nn<l Mr«. .lames Brown,Mr*. A, 1>. C!M», Mm. Thomns Me

>• Nilly, Mr*. I, M. W«iM, Mr. nn<lMrs. Hurry Hellu, Mr*. .lo*c|>hWeinman, Mr. and Mm. Klmer

' J, Binwn, Mrn. Irving; Roccn-ijlonm, Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Brown,

'Mr*. Louiit C*T|»titer, Mrs, R. R.Sfhwurtz, Ml*. Alfred Wohl P-mvttri, Mrs. Morri* tUmnii and

1 Mm, Lohowitr..

PALLBEARERS l.tSTF.DCAUTKRKT —ActlnR »« P*U-

^ beaipis lust Friday morning for^jftiitslfiw Rytol of 38 Pemhln*

Jlvrnue were John mid WflltwrTomo7.uk, Alcxumltr Kontrncti,Waltov (Iramntkn, (»i>nn(r<> Ziibi*-doiiki nnd Adam Rflikinnki. Mr..Rytcl di«d I«(t. Wednesday. Th*

1 servifc w«s conducted in HolyFamily Church hy Rev. Matthett

•i Kotiopka, and Rev. Ati^nmy Mtitaat Perth Amboy comlutted th«comkiital iftviqc in Mt. OlvuryCflmi'tery, Linilan.

| NURSES COME AND GO| CARfER*;t--Ca<1et Nurse. Jn-jjniee Wantocli ifc at horrte from3 Jfersey City Medical Center to visitI h«r parents, Dr. and Mm. JosephI Wnnt.rtrh nf Cftrterel: Avenue. T'wu* more y<iuiiir women of the borough

have hepUTi training m membersof this corps at the same hospital.They an> the Misses Ffcnna Ruth

'/j LSfkowiU and Marion Suto, uachI of whom OTIS graduated from C'ar-| tfcret rtijfh School this month,

PatternMany fotfftdriw now Mills* p l M *

pattern pMH for romtoUnj # • * •made of n w materiel*.. These «r«wed hi th« actual cwrtlr* tW

INSURANCEProtection in Caie

of Sicknen or AccidentFor partieulart apply to

THE

Arthur F. Gels AgencyFire and Casualty

Insurance184 Cr««n St., WoodWldg*

T«l. 8-2804

HIT of the 1944 leaion l« thlitwo piace black and white twim•uit which Hmwit-luir/d, Wel -tyed P«nny Slrii, Mi^ Telefit-ion 1944, wrari 10 proudly ittti« •nnual Preview of ButhinfStylei at Atlantic City St**lPier. Highlight! of tin tuit arca bltcjt back and white frontwith * twfl tort» frray boatan tranki.

CELEBRATE IN BIG WAY

CAUTKKKT — Mr. and Mis,Russell L. Miles of Atlantic Streetcelebrated their thirty eighth wed-ilinjr anniversary lanL week byspending the day in New York.They attended thn performance atRadio City and then hud an anni-versary dinner. Th« couple hastwo children, Mrs. Edward S. Ku-nnski (if Carteret, and SergeantThcnuis Miles, former newnpaper-niaii, now overseen.

Gardeners TrickMining garden seeds with a small

imount of talcum powder makes theieed easy to see and space on darksoil.

» ;

Ne* Btoh At libraryiWorfaWe frjftaf 5#«H*r /or Vacatim W*r

Affency for

IMPERIAL

WASHABLEWALL PAPER

. . guaranteed to be WASH-

ABLE and FADEPROOF!

WINDOW SHADESOn new rollers or mack to fit four windows on your own rolren.

RfcaWMiable Pricei

NEW YORKWall Paper & Paint Co.

358 State St., Perth Amboy, N. J.Phot* f. A. 4-1722

UGHT AND

BRIGHT

HIGH ahd LOW

HEELS .

! ; • • •

Dtifttf, airy pitttftw that feftvly Htttn outtltrttt" smailucst,BotittiM white shoes for those«ccMtohs when you want toiodt your drcisy W t

l*W.Y WWtE OU« ITOCK IS |»MfLETE

B* LOHETTO M('AnTlftST "'Whlh- Still Wo

Live," by Helen Maclnnsn, i» arurrriil bm>k in our new circula-tion

Shfiln wan terrified. Naturally.The (icsUfio had juift called her tntheir Wnrsaw ht-adqu*ri*rii. Butrtliv had she been equally «ter-liflrd, H few duy« b«>for* Wm'snwfell, when the 1'oltoh poliee culledhci I'm i|iH:(ti'i>i!i)K? Anil why was•ili!' listed on the Warsiiw polk1'1

binder HS Mmtratetji ftoeh, «known Nnri ajjent, while Henliillmai nf thv fivstapo knew ln>i-n< An MM BrHui>, and tlimifhl lhatnh<> WHS ii Nnzi a(fpni HIAO? She,hnself, IniiBted he win SheilaM.itlnws, English daughter of('h u Ion MM.hewR wWil helped•I'nlKiid in another war. How did"Hznk know who fhc 1 enlly wiistAnd who, by the Way, wn.= Olswak?Why were the fleBtapo looking forbini aHtioUfh thny didn't 1<now kUritthi. nnmc?

You'll ihnrp the tonfli'liess andtf'TTni- that Rhflila f«l t as yon(.riiiyh for thi> Answtrs to thoseijm .'lions. Yoil'll live thrnUjfh thehoiWble sieffp of Wavdftw with theshntt-heartH people of Polandwho wouldn't he beaten, who, evenan the Wehmnchdt crashed intothe city, W<TC mi-rtinif to pet-feettheir- plans for roaitckss resist-ance, ftnjwrll SteVfns, the Amer-ican radio eonvmpntatov, was atthat, meeting and so was CaptainAdam Wianicwski, a bom leadernnd an expert in jnterrilla tactiijs,thcniph .tome said he was » Fascist."Sieve" and the captain both werefond of Sheik, but Sheila hadcome to M a n j btcnbflc of Au-di ew Aleksamler.

After Warsaw f*tl, the Ger-mans, for all tVeir brutality, Taninto difficulties. They'd never pub-lished1 a Basdeker t>f "uncivil-i*vd" fohind with it« (.ix-hundred-ytMi-.old universities and they hada hard time getting around as fastHi the. Undfvirroiind traveled.

BIRTHDAY CELEBRATEDCARtSftfiT—Mra. Slaty tWko

of D«#y 8tfwl was jjwest o¥lior.or «t a Mrthrtay, party givenreetntly at th« home of her son,Jnwfh, In ftdhwuy. flop;were Joseph Harlm andBarbara Ann, Mr?. William Pol-linn, Itm, Bertha Ripp arid Minstotiijte Ripp of Rshway; Mr. andMrs. Andrew Hnbinak of Wood-bridge; Mrs. Jacob Sokoyowsky.Mrs. Mary Rcnj-ak, Mri and Mrs.

Even Bafldekri couldn't have toMth^m about .ladwiRa, the womanwho lived In every key village.And Mperienrp npv«>r h»» Uu^htthem that every Lidice Ift Hydra-headed—that you make more en-emies by killfnff patriot*, not leas.

Miss Miclrinesi' very human;i arc n«l. only nncon-they are ntrforget table.

ftiti RoWoy Horn* SctntOf Hemnl Ftmily Party

(7ARTKRKT—-Mr. and Mrs.John Hemuel held, a family re-union nt their home in the KaRtKahway section on Sunday. Thepmty also wan a farewell partyfor Mrs. Fred Hefljel arid Mrs.Ri-^ic Ornnovnoim who h»v« re-turned to their home in Florida.

Others pT.em>nt were Mrs, AntiaRyman«ki of Miami, F!a.; the #ev.and Mrs. John Murray of -ForestHills, Ii. I.; Mr«. Joseph K«the andMi. and Mrs. William WaUhamand daughter, Gladys, of Linden;Mrs. Henry ttemsel and children,t>orothy and Walter, of Wood-bridge; Mr. and Mrs. ^ red Wetn.seland daujrliter, Juatiita, Mr. andMrs. Thomas rtcmsel and children,Alma and Robert, Robert Hetlisel,Mr. and Mrs. Harold HcmSel anddaughter' Dolores, Mr. and Mri.Charles Hesnsel and vhfldren,l^andy, fMrlea and William, Mr,and Mrs. Andrew rinejre and chil-dren, Neil and .Susun, Mr*. Cath-erine Henwe! and children, Patri-cia and Risjph, of Carteret.

OFFICERS NAMEDCARTMET — Clubrooms will

lie opened in the Rite Theatre.Building by the Carteret Demo-cratic Organization, it was de-cided at the last meeting-, andmeetings will be held on the firstWednesday and third Wednesdayof each month. These meetingswill be in No. 1 Fire Ha)l, whereR recent election of officers tookplace.

Edward l-ausmnhr was chosenpresident; William Trustrum vicepresident; F. H. O'lBrien, secre-tary. Stephen Skiba wan namedto manage the edtminf; campaignin which B. W. Hairinjrton, justresigned as president, is theparty's eandiadte for Mayor.

CELEBRATE MARRIED U F E

CARTERET •• WeddinR tnni

by three well-known t uples. For Mr. and Mrs. John Col-

Ann anil Eugene, and MissAnn Hurfe) »f this plae,-.

A SUOCfeSSA larjre crowd

attended the picnic held Sundayliy 3t. Mart's f,Viurch Guild atthe Ukrainian Pavilion. Mrs.

Swenson, Mrs. Lauraid Mrs. Fred Staubach

were in charge.Plans aw beinjt made to hold aIIilfti- riileitaiiimcnt next Octo-

jer. The guild also met Tuesdaynight. Edward A. Strack wwt

war bond.

A nuisance Is the crack aroundthe «d«» of th« bathtub. This iscaused when the tub settles awayfrom the plaster. After cleaning thacrick, fill with a plastic strip manu-lecturdl for thh jwrpose or packwith rtx* wool and hnish with pre-pared cement, plastic woo* or ptftty.

the fifteenth, celebrated JViday;Mr. and Mrs, Otto Wollenberg.also of Union Street, marked theirtenth, while Mr. and Mrs. Thomaa

xe of Emerson Street cele-brated twenty five years together.MTB. Fctxe i.i the fovWr Misti Ma:ryMaloney.

SENTENCE

CARTERET — Julius Nemeth,forty-eight years of age, of 56Mary Street, was scheduled to besentenced this morning in theCourt of Common Pleas on acharg-e of atrocious assault andbattery, made by his wife, Vilmft;April 1G last. When he appearedin court last week Nefneth plead-ed guilty,

Ltmt a PttaMtMIn 1817 Proflrlo Dial first becafi-.S

president ol McxltDf reflected In18M,.»nd continued in office until

NOW FOR

, Vacntion tkna cflU for chube* with trt* »dd trty comfoi-l. Fortil i*rti of iporH t«i riKrektieri you will pructksllj lire in •cMtial tWMtir tilth ti tSi». It r«qaire( very little knitlint ikill,aaJ It especially carefrt* In a red, white and Wtue ilripr.. *Tonc»n wear it with tkoi-U or tUclci, tucVinf it iiuide or wearing itoutiide, baique ttyle. Direction (licet for knitting thia "BnqutSwe»t»r'V m u be obui^rd by If nding • •Umpvcl, i*(f-*ddr+««rdcitynjotie tc A c Nefflmor* DetiHrtment nf thiling deiign No. 448. v

SAVED BY BUSH

Golden, Colo. --Kirk Cammack,Jr., 17, -owes his life to a smallbush on a mountainside, to whichhe tlung for nearly an hour, after

ing foothold, until rescuersi-otild rweh him. Bphrw him w»«a sheer drop of 175 feet to thecanyon floor below.

MEASLES BREAK

Laguna Beach, Calif .—Charles jIt. .Tester, Jr.'R, record, ai jfoiiigjto school -without an absence forfourteen years was broken re-cently wh>n he «nttprrd an attack'of measles. .Tester is S student nowat Re.dlands University.

Army plans to operate 24 \mpital shiiis by January 1.

DONALD T. MANSON

Office:

P.A. 4-3300 Wo.«-1B92-J

Associated tylth Boynton Brother!A Co, over 24 years.

VKT+RYATCH

« V * r » K«(*tr,Peh Mir *l a t r r i h»tF i n n 1n«t. HP"pnrtu nr rr*o-

h r i n s

Albren, inc.133 Smith St.

Perth Amboy

CltYSTAlS FITTKD

WHILE YOU WAIT

LET'S MAKEThis The KNOCKOUBonds put Punch behind,,your BeWishes . . . So Buy More Than Befor

WOODBKIDGE

AUTO SALES47 r, Rahway Av«.

WooJ. 6-0109

Anna FeierlagGrocery and Meat Market

97 Weodbrtdffe Ave.

Wood. S 1139, S*w»ren, N, J.

VIVIEN'SBaby SIK»|I

111 Main St., Wooill.n

We GWe 3. * H. Grm, si»n

L...

Woodbrid^rFlower Shop546 Rahway Aw.

Wocdbridpc, 0

Woad. 8-122"

GAME SOCIALJACK POT $100.00

Every Thursday EveningAT 8:()0r\M.

AT

St. Andrews Church HailAVENEL ST., AVENEL, N. J.

SWIMMINC POOL-: NOW OPEN :-

AT

SCHWARZ RESTAURANTformerly Pcaa-Central Now opcratad by

€. SCHWARZFarweHr witk Packer Hotel Reftaurant

,FOOD IN TOWN-POPULAR PRICES

try m

Businessmen's• • W t '•'•'•.

StRVKD FROM i t A. M. to 4 *>*,

CLIFFWOOU BEACHClean, Healthful, Filtered Salt Water

Admission Monday through Friday 30cSihirday, Sunday and Holidays 66c

Open Daily, 10 A. M. to T P. M.

STERN'S SunocoService Station

Tire* - Tube* - AcefcHwfet

Main & Fulton Su., Wotrdbridg*

Wood H 2.196

ISELIN 5c iKan<l Hani«!

SlorcS y l v a n Bai"ii>li

Oak Tr«e Rd., laclin

Try our hot weatherluncheon tpecialt

NANCY'SLUNCHEONETTE

66 Main St.Sandwichet

Soda Fountain

SPORTWEAR OF DISTINCTIONSMRT SHIRTS AND SLACKS

GABARWNtS • KNITS • TWILLSAND OTHER FABRICS- SEVERAL STYLES

AND COLORS

StttTMttETSBMAfcTl COMFORTABLE I

1 GOOD LOOKING!

BtlU

LA MODEHAIRDRESSERS

458 Rahway Ave.1 Woodbridf^T«letitionc WtroArMfe R-BIM

Helen Stuttki, Prop.

L R. PETOLI"YOUR DRUGCll

Oak Tree Ron I

Iielin, N. Jlehtphttw MEtuch.., '

SOHNL1Service SlaALL AUTO REPAIR!

Creen Stre«'t -In Ii...

CLAIRE

GARAGE493 Rfchway Ave.

(4104

Gerlty &

21 Main St.,

WO.-8-0283

•..<?

STERN* %mmBervvee Station

. «,

John Orlow^M M t l , Groceri.

Ve |Ctabk-s

'Oak Ttm* W.. I'*11"- f'-

QUALITY

' X, M. Hi«ai, !'• i

Accertwrfet *«- Ga»

HDRR1S

l->'/Vf-:-v,tl

Among TheCartertt ChurchesFREE MAOYAJt HgJOItMEb

B , **». AWaanAtr

A BerVfaa M i r nr121 metttafs of the «>»gf»gittofiiti the armed fdree*, wilt 1M dedi-cated tobls Sundty,' July £, a{ itsprvktt wwnMenointf i t IQiW A.M. Only one *nyk« *ill b« heldthis Sunday morning and tb«

A MM. High praise has been givenhi k f

pto this work from .many

ST. DEMETRIUS UKRAINIAN

By R*v. J»k» HunfokTh» cluw «( Un children who

ratttred the ftmt IJoly Gommun l n t th Ant Avin lit

"Clean your refrigerator when you defrost it," says Reddy Kilo-watt. "Don't let the door stand open while you remove food andompty ice trays. That's a dreadful waste of electricity, just whenilio War Production Board is asking everyone to conserve it."

drrn are requested to take partih this *wvlee. A Hlhn«r will beserved by the Wvmtn's Soalstyin the basement, following churchARrvica, During the dinner, thenearest relative*—mother, father,brother or sister—of the wrvice-

will be presented with ap-Hnd valuable s«nv«niri.

The Summer School will enterits third week with 74 pupil* en-rolled. CIMMS are held daily from9 A. ,M. to noon., except Saturdaynnd Sunday.

The Girls' Choir will meet toniyht at 7:30 o'clopk.

The Board of Elders,will haveits regular monthly meeting Sat-urday at 7:30 P.M.

ST. MARK'S EPISCOPAL

By Rev Dr.Rev, MacDonald, pfieit - In -

charge rf. this church, will serveHoly Communion at 8 A. M. onSunday, and Holy Communion andSermon at 9:30. On Tuesday, In-dependence Day, Holy Commu-nion will be at 10 o'clock.

FIRST PRESBYTERIANBy R«T. D. E. Lorantx

The Seventh Session of theSummer Bible School opened onMonday and has an enrollment ofthirty-tw<x The following tea«h-ers are in charge: Mrs. WalterBorcbard, Ruth Gaydoa, AugustHundemann, Mrs.

ynlon i t the Ant Avine liturgyiMt Sunday consisted of GloriaAnn Bobenehik, Join Ann dut-iui«cht, Judith Aim Kwkiw, M«rltn« Ann Marroni, Jnan AnnSkerchek, Basil Hadyriiafc, StanleyLHua, Theodore. St*ph«n Mortwa,Stephen Orenchak, Vladimir SI-kora.

During the summer months di-vine aervicen for this servicemenand wrvioewomtn of the partedtnd for all the armed, force* ofOur country will fee held everyFrld*y, at 7:30 in the evening,

Tne Alter Boys Society will holda meeting tonight at 7 o'clock.Representatives of several goeluties, appointed to nerve theUkrainian War^Reliof will m«eat' the church hall tonight at Io'tiloek.

During the Rummer month* diVine liturgies are celebrated atand 10:16 Vclock every Sunday

PUBLICMSEHVICEriFTH WAR LOAN DRIVE • Bock the AHack — tuy More Than B»fore

rooUrth u t . l " - '- ••' '" ••

tlit Jalj 5 iw«toiti»ionUtt, th« BmlBi will go to B»l

timor* for ttrtt days and will beaek honte on flurtdty, Jury I, topen « four-day itriw WHh Syra-

cuse. Then there Will ha anotherhort j»unt but on July 20 thetlub will be horn* for 1% eoniwa-IT* d*y»—»nd nlfhti,,

R«r#rit ohahfM htvtt made arest improvement in tim Newarkineup and before thrtQub returnsfrom the north it I* hop«rf thathe Bear? will be thick intke bat-

tle for ft place In the' playoff*—tomaintain their mord of havingnnish«d in tbe.ftrit dr»ltioo Uconsecutive years.

UnfortuMtely, t-h e scheduletook the,B*w» a*ay from hornsjust when the fans started towarm up the club and root1 it oalof'the cellar, nut It is •anticipatodthat intsreifwill be g Mater thttiever when the rejuvenated bruinsrettiftt.

KeMtvations art now being aopUd far (the July 4 <lopbl»h»«d

er. Write or phone the NewarkBasebnll Club, 287 Wilson Av«-nue, Newark. The telephona number is Mitchell 2-7044. The ticketiwill be mailed to jsour home o:office, or left-at the box office foyou to [>ic4 up.

* . . . • . .

He wont dodge this

bontyw/dodge this!II ill War Loan U lh« b i | -i h. un,st vitally important

"ill ' ffmt of this whole, i • • * - • - > > .

V- thr time to,dig outI.I hundred buck* and

iriul H flir l n v a i i o n B o n d i .

Jean Merelo, Evelyn Vaughn andthe pastor, The children are work-ing on a point system, points be-ing awarded for definite accom-plishments in the course of study.For these awards the school is di-vided into two sectoons, the Kin-dergarten, first, second and thirdgrade pupils 'being in the firstdivision and the older grades inthe second division. There will befirst, second and third awards forthe highest number of points inpfich division. In addition, in,eachdivision there will be first, secondand third awards for the memoriz-ing of selected passages of Scrip-ture and to each pupil who makesu total of 75 points during theperiod of the school.

[Sunday Service*The Summer Communion Serv-

ice will be held on Sunday at themorning service. The pastor willgive the second of the serie* ofgermons on "Essential ChristianBeliefs," speaking on "I Believein Jesus Christ."

In connection with the SundayCommunion Service a special of-fering will be received for theWar Time Peace CommissionFund. This fund is providing extraservice for the men and women oftha armed force*, giving religiousservice and leadership in war inlustry areas where large groupsiiive been brought in; establishingew communities with no other

'oligiout facilities, and is aidingvarious phases of religious workthe invaded countries, assisting

hurches in, the countries of our

Jersey Cly OverHoliday Weekend

NEWARK—The Newark Beamwill hreak up their long lour ofthe International League for • atwo day visit to home pastures onJuly 4 and 5, Needless to say,thfiir opponents in the July 4 dou-ble-header will he the Jersey CityGiants for t.hn(. Independence Dayfeature has been a Newark fixturefor more than 60 yoars.

The Independence l>ay double-header will also mark the onlylome holiday games the Bears will

have'this year. The DecorationDay games were played in JerseyCity and the Labor Day contestsare also carded for Roosevelt Sta-dium LhU yuar.

Jersey City will also furnish theopposition -on July 5 and that wilbe a special Ladies' Night becausit will be the only night at homi

between June 10 and July 10 andthe management is anxious tokeep in right with the girls, wh

-BOY MORE THAN BEFORESPONSORED Wt THE BUSINESS FIRMS HERE REPRESENTED

VI11X SUCH•!«>< r.R «nd BUTCHER

INI'S and HARDWARE

'• WI,,L.|er and Maple Sti.

Urtcr«t, N. J.

Cart. 8-5060

<:.\RTEftETIWSTAURANT

>!!> RooieTelt Ave.

Urturot, N.,J.

Crt . «.»7B5 '

WASHINGTONRESTAURANT

Max Cohen, Prop.

66 Washington Ave.

Cnrterel, N. J.

CHEAP JOHN'SCarteret Dept. Store

Hudaon and Union St.

Carteret, N. J.

JULIUS KLOSSt

FM)RIST

Irving St., CarUMt

Cart. 8-5232

— —+-~-——

New Roosevelt

Laundry«526 Roosevelt Ave.

Carteret, N. J.

Phono Cart. 8-84K

TO INFANTRY

The Wat Department reportthat twenty thousand 'enlisted methave transferred voluntarily to.the Infantry and announces thaicutenants under 82 ln'oiher catc-

pories may transfer to the Infan-try or, If physically qualified, theparatroopers,

StnlorsIn High School's Last Honor.

38 01 Tlmt Clatt MadtRtqwirmenU; 28Sophomorei Are Second

CARTERBT — The nlnalroll at <art«r«t High fichnotlude the following students:

S i BliwiMh lUefkuhnen,H l kb JJims 8chwaH*. Helen Sklba, Jen-

nie Spissk, Annette Solomon,in«|nrn Gulln, Ann*

Sophip Troiko. l,udwiir Zabel Bjf^lyn Vaughn, Marion Suto, IreneYuhaax, Marion Wieronry,' JeanViater, WUrua Spewak, M«rwiiSkurat, Jowph 3ibo, BcrnadettoPhillip,, Mildrrd MUMO, Hnrri«tUoM, Catherine (loaitcioli, EileenPeiisulflck, Marit? BIstaK, PhyiiinC h 4 h

fcrna, Ann* Brwiik»%-Molnar, HfWn Mowfae,

erry, Hit* Bmchfcn H«Seibfrt, June S V TSkocypec, Jean Merelo,uU, RiTtina Adamn, All

Vwshmcn* Ktainteih Kthttly, Dorothy

M»r,v 7«fchHk, Marion(Jusior, Uirottn

Angelina l^uffenbeHlosn, Elaine. So)omonf

Bamburak,

Cho4o«h, AnnaE d C

Dunn, JoyceMi

LUCKY PASSERS-BY

Ration, N. Mox.—'When a tanktruck stalled on a hill and crashedinto a curb, the driver, rather thanpermit the fc-iinliue to run intothe sewer, invited every passingmotorist to fill his tank, free andwithout ration coupons,

Etneridgi', Co>»Uncc Makwinnki(Hadys Meltmler, Helen I'opovichJoatph Qeifel, Prancii Hasan, Kdward Kolibas, RoVrt ShutclioAdele Mielnicki, Ella PrltulaP»Dlme Walk"—Jttdlora—-Sarah Sisko,

SH*takyi 4e*» Ward. Gloria DRotNisf, Alice Fedak, Eileen FoneMarion Rocky, James Ryan,liam Kelnttan, Joseph Lesky, Morris Brown, Nancy Collcelto, Kathleeti Hltb, Anna 'Hedrlek, BhirlojMentch*^ Marie Ktekanki, ViolePry«»ta, Anna 3po(rairt't*1 Helen

'urick, Louis Zelman, Sanford

tndnalv John' tiitui,-Sophomore*. -»~ Mary Hayduk,

Doris Colgan, Phyllis Snetl, Helen IShutello, Matilda Reaman, JohnLocale, Aaron Rekkr, Sheldon3chwart», Stewart Chodosrh, lr<ineSidun, Gertrude Rabinowitz, Pe-ter Kutney, Steven Timko, Lillian )Sohayda,.Joseph Mittuch, Stephen

BLAST WRECKS PLANT

Windsor, Ontario. — The forceof an explosion at the ammoniaplant of the Canadian IndustriesLtd., In Sandwich, was so greatthat it blew off the roof, tossedhuge steel girder high in thu air,damaged the- four-story brickstructure and smashed windows,but only three men and a womanamong the workerR -wore slightlyinjured.

JOE'S CIRCULAR BARAND LOUNGE

268 MADISON AVE. PERTH AMBOYPreienti

SAMMY DEANEHi* Trumpet and His Music Makers

Featuring

ROMEO—King of the DrumsPETE MILANO-Dynaanc CuitarlitJOE DE MARCO—Piano Wizard

Dancing Every NightJAM SESSION SUNDAY AFTERNOONS—2 to 6

YOUR HOSTS—SKIPPY A/ID JOE

COLLUSIVK

that snips o f jg•able, utvd in theship* for the Navy, w e f i ,

lii dupon coliutiv*contraots, the

ybidding1

(rovtmlmed suit fl|rjiin*l nine

tions and *tal of possiblerun into mtlitomr,Unittd StaU>« A nMcNally, of NeW York.

aei

STOWSASM

UNCLE SAM SAYSTURN THAT OLD CAR

INTO WAR BONDSFOR VICTORYWE W I L L BUYANY CAR

ANY YEAR OR MODEL ANDPAY YOU A GOOD PRICE

For Quick CaihResults CallUNCLE JOEWO. 8-0149 ,

SPEEDWAYAUtO SALES Co.

823 ST. GEORGE AVE.Woodbridte

Carteret Builders' Supply For Fine

DUCHESS GYPSY CAMP / R A N K ' S

Wt nil good tr*qnMrtt,not mmly u*d tart.

WOODBRILUMBER

437 Rahway Aye,,Woodbridge, N. J.

Tel. Wo. 8-0128

W« will be closed on

July 3 and Tuetdiy, Julfj

DUTOBDTOM Of

MORQAM

WE HAVE SCREENSScreen Doors - Combination Doors

A Good Assortment ei Siietbut Only a Limitcd Supply

GET YOURS NOW!All Building Materials

-CattM*

H*r«'i a ierMti dcror In•Mmaiir a*d a (torn dourin winter. Standard •!»•.or mads to meuar*.

Advance Savings

Ladies'

MMXCtmcawr

T0<19J0

CARTERET PRESSTflcphnnp Curteret 8-5600

PublUhed by Carteret PTMB

OFFICEU WASHINGTON AVE., CARTERET, N. J.

LUCY GREGORY - EditorMEYER KO8ENBLUM Bporti Editor

Subscription, $l,B0 Par Year

Intored M second e l u i rotttv June U,1984, at Carteret, N. J., Poit Office,the Act of March 3, 1879.

% Security Via War Bonds•jj The purchase of a War Bond does notjfgtaibliflh the patriotism of any citizen of

municipality but failure to participatethe Fifth War Rond Drive, when flnan-

ally able to buy a bond, certainly aug-lack of loyalty.

| | It would not be essentially ,wrong for theRation to insist that the owners of capital"make a'direct contribution to the cost ofthe war, especially when we know thatCapital reserves of all kinds would becometfwthl i th t t h t ur emies

time opportunity by thinking that the con-tribution of one individual is unimportant.t is easy to convince oneself that the small

amount of fata and greases that are avail-able is not enough to compensate for thetime, energy and effort required to collectand deliver the product,

Fortunately, there are many women whodo not take this attitude. In fact, the WPBand WFA report that collections last yearrelieved a "critical shortage" of glycerinewhich is essential to the manufacture ofmunitions and other'war materials, Conse-quently, it should be a matter of pride forevery housewife to contribtitc her m»xi-mum amount of fats and greases in orderhat there may exist no possibility of a

shortage in 1944.

in the event that our enemiesilflfiumph. A man worth $1,000,000 standsf! lib* lose ten times as much as a man worthf> M100.000 in the unlikely event of our del

f p The government, however, does not askpeople, whether capitalists or wage-ers, to give any part of their protected

perty. Instead, it seeks a loan, prom-g to pay reasonable interest for a, 11

oney that it borrows. To permit us toarantee the safety of our stake in Ameri-.capitalism, without exacting a toll, rep-

entfi a distinct bargain to those 'whojjaeesa anything.

vj | v Nationa have financed wars fey the pro-;' $688 of confiscation, either of the goods of%'-%n enemy people or of their own nationals..1 .Germany has ruthlessly exploited oon-

Inuercd peoples in order to secure neces-o i a r y materials and the Nazi regime hasf ||>een high-handed in regard to its own

Jj The RussiaiiH have managed to wage a•jremarkable war without stupendous bor-l It would be possible "for the

SlutiiB tu uiuze any property noces-•;, pffy to war-making and to confiscate

3)1 ants and capital in order to .successfully^ this country.

fact that the nation seeks to borrow!r<Jm" its people and' affiumes the treiri«n-

burden of interest that inevitably fol-OWB is substantial insurance fur the con-ittued existence of our capitalistic system,

insurance, however, will be void ifhose who enjoy the fruits of capitalismire unwilling to lend some of their finan-;ial strength to the support of the nation-;•' The purchase of a. War Bond offers every*titizen the opportunity, to effect some sav-ligs, which is advisable during an era ofuflh, profits and high wages. Every dollarnvested in a War Bond represents a capi-al reserve, set aside as financial protection

the advent of adversity. That is a wiserecaution for every individual and everyusiness and should be undertaken r«gard-

of the war-necessity.

Fighting Walker't CensorshipThe American Newspaper Publishers

Association has made an appearance inhe Federal courts in connection with the

case involving Postmaster-General FrankC. Walker's attempt to ban the magazine,Esquire, from the mails.

ft should be obvious to all Americanshat the Postmaster-General wwiiot desig-

nated as a censor for the United States andhat the privilege of second clas^ mailinghould not be used to give any one individ-

ual dictatorial powers over the contrite ofmagazines, newspapers and'other publica-ions.

In fact, the Postmaster-General woulddo well to devote hia attention to improv-ng the postal service ind leave to other

agencies the decision as to whether a spe-cific .publication should be distributedhroughout the country.

Any attempt on the part ef Mr. Walker;or future Postmaster-Generals, to »et up acensorship should result in an appropriateaw to eliminate the matter from his juris-diction.

The newspaper publishers point out thathe office of Postmaster-General has been

peculiarly pulilical aud thai, since the turnof the century, no President has named asPostmaster-General any person who didnot actively participate in the campaignof the successful nominee.

This being the practice, it is so muchmore important that no one man, or group,be allowed to exercise any control whichxerfs pressure upon second class publica-ions.

• More Tanksof the first reactions of our military

iders to the results of the operations inidy has been to order increased

Induction of tanks and military vehicles.He loss of these essential tools of war-has been greater than expected. As

Sorne operations were rather success-Ht must be plain that the reduction of

Dan strongpotnts, and the resistance ofu armor, has been a heavier job

[expected.He matter illustrates the danger, qfing back the production1 of any wea-of war. New developments, in futtfre

upaigns, may make it imperative to haver quantities of items that, at this,setjm unnecessary.

Fats And Grew* Neededbe Office of War Information has' ap-

ileid, to housewives to deliver at least|&,'000,0OO of waste cooling fate and

s to meei?ft "critical nee.d" in 1944goal is double the collection last

|f .hut at least three war agencies em-size the vital need of fats, which areQgredient In more than eight.hundred

fjusoducts.f'.couroe, we have no way of under-jlng the full extent of, the need, but it

be apparent that the Governmentil,d not make suuh a tftrenuoue effort to

waste fots and greases unless thereVa real deraan^-ji^way, the drive

. doex-fho

A vigorous

by enforcement

ve Is to be launched^ tomake the public aware of black marketperations and other abuses arising fromasoline rationing.Shad Polier, Director of the Fuel and

Consumer Goods Enforcement Division ofthe OPA, says that all sorts of criminals,including white slavers and narcotic ped-dlers, are dealing in counterfeit gasolineration coupons. He insists that it "is justas criminal to buy gasoline without cou-pons as it is to sell it."

The rate of arrestsagents is .steadily increasing, declares Mr.Polier, who is determined to bjreak upthe "thoroughly organized, nation-widemob, which have spotters, safe-openersand specialists who deal in stolen coupons."

Along the same line, A. Clark Bedford,chairman of the Pietroleum Industry Com-mittee of Rationing, warns that racketeersmay get control of gasoline industry. Point-ing out that they once gained a footholdin the garage business throughout the:ountry, Mr. Bedford intimates that unlessthe racket is stamped out, they maythreaten legitimate business interests.

Under The State House DomeBy 1. iouph Gribbm

TRBNTON — New Jersey willbe prepared (for tyn»t-wiir flxiiren-cteg Including the mwiiniUtton ofreturning veteran"! into the State'scconomir life; promotion of bothpublic and private umlertttkinjpito improve condition (jenefally;development of decent housingprojects and advertisement of theStato'n industrial and recreationaladv»ntH(fen, l>y the time the war 1»over.

Thi1 new State Department ofEconomic Development, headedby Mayor Charles R. Erdrtlan, Jr.,of Princeton, is already at workperfecting pUnt to keep the Statein its present position in the in>diintrml, civic and recreationallife in the nation «nd to promotean' upswing In business and benc-fitB aftrr hostilities ceatw,

A ten-member, non - salariedStale Economic Council, hVadedby Colonel Franklin D'Olier, ofMorriittown, president of the Pru-dential Insurance Co., will adviseMayor .Kidman on methods of ac-complishing various undertakingspmmnfMI hy the department. Thiscouncil plans to meet on the firstbusiness Monday of each monthto supervise the' work.

The department, Treated hyGovernor Walter E. ISdgc BA oneof his first move* to combine theactivities of the State Govern-ment, takes over the duties for-merly performedPlanning Board,

by the StateState Housing

Authority, State Relief Depart-ment, New Jersey Council, theState's advertising and promotion

h South Jersey TransitCommission, Port Raritan DistrictCommission and the State ServiceOfficer.

Within the new department iscreated aservice, a

divisiondivision

of veterans'of municipal

aid, a division of commerce, adivision of planning and engineeri n ; and such other divisions SBOumminsiomu Erdmun may fromtime to time establish. ColonelWarren S. Hood, of Vineland, isthe Director of the Division ofVeterans' Services and William T.Vanderlip, East Orange, ia thoDirector of the Division of Plan-ning and Engineering. Other di-rectors will be nnmed in the fu-ture ns the full impact of post-warresponsibility is felt.

VOTING: — Conscientious ob-jectors from New Jersey seem tobb quite concerned that no provinioii has been made in the newsordier-vote law to send them ftbsentee military ballots so they mayparticipate in the coming Novem-

work was started, the Elks of theState have spent $2,081,826.94 tohelp their unfortunate brethren towalk, see and to hear.

Atlantic City'Lodge, which hasthe Betty Bacharach Home in itsjurisdiction, spent the largest sumlast year-—a total of $59,086.36.Paterson Lodge reported expensesof 17,319.08; New Brunswick, $0,-S18.27; Millvill«, $5,480.20; Vine-land, 14,143; Hiinfleln1, $3,244;Somerville, 12,54(1.88; ras»sk»$2,362.78; Elizabeth, »2,152.fi3;Weshinffton, $1,333.66; E a s tOrange, $1,84°.&8>; Clifton, $1,-618; Bridg*ton, $1,587.55; Ber-gcnfleld, $1,400 and Burlington,$1,088.75.

There is gratitude in the he«nof every Jerseytnan for the splendid work of the Elka in helpingchildren to walk again; for mak-ing sure that the cumbersomebrace on Little Johnny's teg isproperly adjusted; for getting ap»ir of ey« glasses for an old lady;for arranging with the finest doc-tors to care foj those who needspecial care, and for ordering thatrespirator to save a man's life.

In return, the Elk« reap bigdividends in the feeling that theyhave rehabilitated a life, that theyar.e helping a stricken t o y or girltoward a normal adult life, thatthey are doing something that isworthwhile. Truly, the only thingsyou will ever have are the thingsyou give away.

ber geuerar election.One of these conscientiousctor8,Mw'icftipvlQy€-d a* sn at-

endant at the Norwich Statel

McLEAN i —Congressman Don-ald H. McLean, <vf Elizabeth, whorecently took over the job of Pro-secutor of the Pleas of UnionConnty by appointment of Gov-ernor Edge, is more than glad todesert \Va«hington for everydaylife in his home town.

Although many of New Jersey'srepresentatives i n Washingtonmake •• career of being a Con-gressman, McLean would ratherbe a good lawyer. Too much timei« wasted in the national capitol,he claims, writing speeches thatare never delivered end perform-ing other errand hny tBSk« thatdo not add up. Ho is more thanglad to give up $ 10,000 a year inWashington for a $7,500 a yearjob in his home baliwick whereneighbors are close friends andnot jtiBt another family from Nebraska.

McLean ia expected to makehistory as proMcutor of UnionCounty.

JERSJEY JJCSAWi — GovernorWalter E. Edge plaim to promoteconstruction ot a much-neededS t t Offl B i ld i djconstruction ot avState Offlc.e Buildingthe Stat* H « w c - i vforced to recall the Legislature

al Hospital under iissijnment ofelective Herviee, has sent a let-er to Senator George H. Stanger,

Vineland, Republican, author of.the .soldier-vote law, complainingabout this lack of attention. Healso complains thac lie,has not re-ceived any compensation for hislabor since h,e was drafted over uyear ago.

"I hope that the lack of pro-visions to vote in nn oversight andnot an intentional act," wrote theobjector. "I understand the publicsentiment toward those who willnot fight ^or their country, but Itrust our governing body has suf-ficient undaratianding to regardus yet as citljins."

COPS: * - War prosperity hasbrought Bvany personnel prob-lems to municipal and State offi-cials of NIJW Jtrsey, one of whichi h

into special, session this summerto help him with the project .A special sub-committee of theSenate Finance Committee inWBshmgton will fix tho doto ofpublic healings or. the Hawkesbill permitting th<> Federal fioveminent to reimburse municipali-ties for tax losses resulting fromgovernmental wartime propertyacquisitions, when Congress com-

(H recess . . . Standards

HE HtfrFED AND HE i PUFFED• v ,

,«», s

The New BooksThe war it creating a new kind

of book, books that represent thecombined efforts of men of actionand writing men. In this categoryis "War Below Zero" by ColonelBernt Balchen and Majors CoreyFord and Oliver LaFarge. (

Colonel Balchen, who is credit-ed with more hours over Arcticand Antarctic regions than anyother pilot in the world, has beenin charge of our base in Green-land since 1941. The idoa of writ-ing "War Below Zero" came toRalchen and Ford one day lastsummer when they were breuk-fHsltng in an Iceland hotol. It oc-curred to them that' American?might like to know what nan beenhappening in the northernmostAmerican air base. In like man-ner, Major LaFargit, who writestjvo jsocond part of ','War BelowZero," tell the story related to himby four air pilots, participants inone of. the most snectueulur epi-sodes mentioned fay Balchen andFord. |

Though -11111/ (i little area pfGreenland on the southern tip is

habitable by anyone, hut Kskjinos,t is one of the key regions in the

world' for strategy, For oversouthern Greenland the comingweather for Euroje is made. Ger-

is the of police officers wholwere formerly satisfied to be

guardians'ejl.jjie law only, to takeoff-duty posi^fyns in other phasesof endeavor, ~?

Many of the cops became, taxidrivers when they took their uni

for maternity care and employ-ment of mothers in industry havebeen promulgated by the StateDopatliiitnL uf Hfcultli . . . Timelyrains have improved the conditionof the commerciul early potato

(crop in all sections of New Jer-sey . . . Stat« taxes on alcoholicbeverages, inheritances, corpora-tions and motor fuel are above offi-cial estimatea for the year, WilliamD. Kelly, State Tax Commissioner,announces . . Male job place-ments in New Jersey declinedduring May but the employmentof women increased 3.2 per cent.War Manpower official! report . .Former Governor Charles Edisonhas been elected president Of the

•forms off and'donned civilian t>V- New Jersey Democrats for Cont i t t i R i i hil hi

Prevents MeaslesIt you have not had the measles, y6u

will be interested in f amma globulin, a by-product of blood plasma, which will pro-tect children and grown-upa against thedisease. •

Gamma globulin results from the effortof the Navy's Bureau of Medicine and Sur-gery to secure a concentrated serum albu-fnin for saving lives threatened by shock.The process of separating the protein fac-tions of blood plasma leaves a by-productwhich is now being distributed thrqugh theAmerican Red Cross, to State and loialhealth authorities for use to preventingmeasles or modifying the Attack/

tire. Others became employed inwar plants <.m ahifts that did notinterfere with their police work.Many are helping out at the cor-ner grocery store, or in the neigh-iborhood ice house. Public officials,realizing the great scarcity of la-bor might hinder the war effort,have to le ra te such outside em-

ystitution Revision, while his popu-lar . assistant and former secre-tary, C. Thomas Schettino, hasbeen named assistant secretary ofthe group Steps are being

many realized how nrccMary thisinformation was and by 18411 hadplanted a fully equipped' signalstation above the Arctic Circle.Colonel Balchen was responsiblefor ousting the Gormand,

The second part of "War BelowZero" is the story of a PlyingFortress which crashed on theGreenland* Ice Cap, and so thrustnine men into, the frozen midWirl-ter without preparation «t equip-ment. The last of these menwere rescued five months later,Throughout the'long weeks of thesicp;o, they were kept suppliedwith food, with Auppliea, even withwar news and lettors, by planesthat flew up from coast stations.This is a story of unbelievablecourage and hftroinm, both of themen who did the waiting andthose who finally brought the long*,ait to an end.

• * •

How much do you know Aboutour Allies? "Meet Your, Allies,1

edited by Nicholau Balint, tellspertinent facts about the birtory,Hie people, and the contributions(o the war effort of each of the 36countries now engaged in fightingfui'ism,' Illustrated with a hun-dred' fine photographs, this is avaluable book foe anyone who

wants to 'know more ah<>m nwho are fighting on our siii,

* * t

Bettu Davis, currently st uin "Mr, Skpfflnirbon," Cw«\ i.interested in doing thi> rim

' Mr. SkfffliigUm's frlvolmi « \when the read the nov. I .,Book-of-the-Month Club «•!,,two years ago. It's said l!mi <work first started on the VV.iBros, eots, there was B jrrr.i:of confusion because the isending out 'notices insNi.lcalling tho play, " M M . SL Iton." They figured Mml if IDavis was in it, it must I>•after the part she played.

TRIES TOPICKUNLOLMDOOR

Spokeane, Wash. — i\W»mon had the last laugh OM n;•eon who, in trying to pick ihon the door, of his a^iibroke the door handle. !!•explained that h« lost tinhU car doors four years ihis car hasn't been lockcil

U

WomenLIPST1CK3can expect Lie

sticks because rantoi <>|! •,give i smooth rich qualily'ificiently plentiful, fiuya tin- "which paints out that ;!i.also used in hydraulic 11m iairplanes and military jii'icoatings.

Who Said It TakesBig Money!

Financial Expats .The experts who attempt to forecast

the reaction of markets to various, newsevents have as difficult a job as the mili-tary paipwtfl who attempt to predict whatwill happen in the war.

Th f i ] l

But reel-lit rulings show nign3tlmt thu protectors of the peacemay be forced to stick to theirpolice duties only. Alfred K. Driu-cpil, State Alcoholic BeverageCommUaioner, has bluntly inform-ed a police officer who had amlii-ttiuns to become? » part-time bar-tender that he wtta disqualifiedfrom working on any liquor prem-ises in New Jersey, even outsidethe municipality where he servedas a cop.

In Xrenton, where many police-men served as taxi drivers duringoff hour», *' ruling, went out fromthu offic« oi M«y»f Dueh prohibit-ing sucli goings-on in the future.It -was issued alter a cop wasbrought up on chitrge» of permit-ting his cab to be used for illegalpurposes. •

ELKS: — Thousands of meni-btjra of wuious Etiui'

taken by OPA officials to protectthe hundred* of thousands of va-cationists from New York andPhiladelphia and New Jerseypoint* vacationing at farina andseashore points in Una State frombecoming victims of violators ofOPA ceiling price regubttionn . , ,New Jersey's distiact iiiter-Amer-ican ceremony in honor of the lateEmilio Carmnia, Mexican good-will flier who crashed to death inthe Pines on July 1%, 1928, willbe re-enacted on the pinekndasite on Sunday, July !) under theauspices of the Mt. Hoily-Amer-

Th^ proffisanina] analylste predicted thatthe opening of the FJfth W»r Loan drivewould cause a contraction in tradingsecurities., However, the market UH&& to |confw?i£ Midiprices

j gsthroughout New Jersey who aUndbraced oontintinlly to combat the

i f i l l b diy

ravages oi infantile partlysb andOther c.ripplera ol mankind, de-

lean Legion Post No: 11 Hil-ton B. Conford, of Newark, a taxexpert, hag resigned a» AftfiistaritDeputy Attorney General, effec-tive July 1 . . . A total of 4,760,-(HH) ehictw were liatiJled In com-mercial hatcheries in New Jerseyduring May, compared with 6,-{02,000 chicks during (the oememonth la»t year . r . The next ex-amination for attorneys andcounsellors will be held on 0<t.19 ftno>20 C T i jTr«nton.

*t Cregqent Tenipje,

CAPITOL CAPERSi—The Leg-i»l»turf t»nnot allevkt* the p»ln

iof New Jprtey nilrondjwin-

, withJer-

*4rve taych credit'for their finep

|»4tftW,M.O |nfe T

Anyone who's passing up the convenienceof a Checking Account with the idea thatit's only for people with money is way be-hind the times—or he's never, heard ofWoodbridge National's - ,

Convenience ChecksJ

f

I- • * ! .

JA btpok of 10 Convenience Check! costsjust» dbllar and therels io minimum bal-ance f^qiiirement—ever I No charge fordeposits, No monthly service charge. Adime a check pay* everyfhjiigv, •,'

Save lime, travel mi etj)en*e in Jooking.after mon»y' this

Answen0*

RationingAnd

Prices,i,,.

HT" t.hoflfl nost fre-l this week «* theiri. ofOPA. Atww'A ruling* as of June

l u t imnyg

mail

.1.

V.\ i

Ml

District Office, OPA,

,!,y I start using my.-nline ration coupons!u,,,. will b«eom#.»»H<,,,i 9 »nd will mpin,,-r 8.

M' uny chepaes that ari

All hoeiei c| .,n the Jun*hart are 10 point* p«

1 hi. include* all eh«drici, tuch a* tk»t corn-known M Am«ric»n

nnd uied for ••»(!•

WASHINGTON. — Ever sinceth» beginning of this war theNazis have tot fall many pointedand eltverly placed hi tit* of thetwrlftc secret weapon* they weredeveloping to use against the en-emies of their Feuhtw. These

aponB, they claimed, were tn beso potent that nothing could >bedone to combat them. One of themturned out to be the magneticmine, designed to break the Al-lied blockade of ftnrmany. Tothat the Allies soon found an an-swer in the defaming principlewhich foiled the magnetic attrac-tion of the mines. Tlie Mmkadw ofGermany continued. Another wan

. .hrr.e have b«*Dfrom ritionkif.

to have-,.r car ttres inspected?,>mpuj»ory ln«p«ctiohilonger required, and It

,,»ry to har* an in»s*c-j r only b*fort apply-

i new tir«.. in my Sugar Stamp, i,| of my Spare Stamp

.MI m>i>l>mk for canningWill 1 lose five pounds,i I'm having insule this.

tlm«"ta|>t a

ia.

I!,.. Nition»l Office of the. Im• announced that Suf-M.mp 37 will ntitt be. vnlid.

i i iii-d because I havr. . IVI il iny heating ra-1.• i- the coming *wlriter,iiMi(;li I filed my fuel oilit inn two w<;eks ago, Do

!,l, my application haa

Application! «r« biing. ,>rH Hi rapidly '•• p<hut it may be a mttk orl,.(uic all rationi ar«

.uimhtcr is not living withi ., yrar. Will I be able to

ui home canning for hernmiiii'r and Bend the food. \n Inwn?

, Any member of,,11 v may give »w«y *• much

i 11<i ,<uarti of any horn*up '(1 rationed food ). Then, ioo, at pre«on,, - .immercUlly canned. i.lilei wre temporarily off

ling. At lonf a» the. u i i nt ir.rn point value th

11 csimnding home ca:,i, may be (Wan away (oi

I'll without any of *he re

li'Mi of rationing.

K>'1 extra caniiinit» put up. fruit fo

' M sili'1,' That's the wamill makes some of i

• i We donate the CBtineI ilu'ii we »ell It at the

I he proviilon underl.i. 11 you are allowed • total

:':>n poundt of sugar (r»rituly In order to home canmi tor talc would apply. Bat

| I I or|el it will b» M e t f

the jet propelled plane andbombo/ designed to make th(bombing of Nazi Europe too costly to be continued. But it turnedout that jet propulsion nnd rock-et* were old "tuff to the Allies andthat we, too, had been uninn themand with greater nieces than th<Natis. The bombardments o>lFortress Europe continued.

But now after the occupationby the Allies of the French coastthe N a m have come up with anew super-duper secret weapon—tho pitotless piano' or remote-control }»ntb. This is the weapon,gloat* the Nati prem, that willmake the Allies pay for the bomb-ing of the Fatherland Nn|., mindyou, dentroy the invani^n forces.Th» N»*i* do not cluim that theBOmlsullei) will craeo the Alliedbeachheads. Thair glee derivesrom the hope that these weaponsvill cause such widespread de-duction in Britain that Ihe peo-le in error will demand the pro-ection of military unit8 now or.tfged in invading Prance, thu;

-So this super Mcret weapon ofthe Nar.is turns out to be not agreat attack weapon like the B-29,product of American genius. Inthe hour before their downfall th«N«*i« have restarted to a weaponbased on their old policy—the poi-cy of terror—which aerved them

so well in 1998-41. But this is theyear of D-Dny, and Adolf Hitlerfinds that tho terror he hoped toinspire has settled deep in his ownheart. He is learning that no se-cret weapon can be nwde that willovercome our own secret weapon

-tho immutabfc decision of thefrea peoples of the United Na-tions Jo crush him and his* per-nicious plait for a world east Inhis own evil Imagei HJs newestsecret weapon in sujnad and hope-k'sri as hl« own plight,

• • *

There seems to ibe something9ioy\imihijin„ the fact that theB-26 and the Nazi pllotlm bombmade their appearance simultane-ously, If anyom' will ijteds, to be

brtween Geneftl De Gab Jit andthe Allie* hate become highlystrained. This condition is beingaggravated by charge* made »yeach side in the unfortunate eon-trovmy.

Osntral Do Gaulle taken thestand that his group alone is entitled to be recognised as therepresentative authority of theFrench people, to be entrustedwith the administration of theFrench homeland M it is liberatedfrom the Nazi yoke. His preten-tlons may be summed up in thocbiwes in the name of hit groupThe Free French, The Fighting

N

Washington late in J>ne or earl*In -Inly The outcome of this visitwill be of the utmost importance

shaping the affairs of th,eUnited Nations.

Mry for jrou to turn in thpoint* to your local Board andmake a full report,

Q. What prices have been placedon staple work gloves?

A. Staple work (lore* have impoted on them flat dollar amcent* price*, and thru- pricetnuit b« placed on the glorciby label. Example: "RctaiCellini Price 17c."

Q. What is the ceiling price onsynthetic tire she fiOO x{i ply)?The ceiling price it $16.05 plu$1.11 Federal Excite Tax.What is the cfilinj; price fcnliri'd buked Vii^inii IIMHI'.'

A. Group I and 2—85c per poundCroup 3 and 4—82c per poun

Q.

y y jonvinced that our old concepts

space and time mult \>». rcviwd,.hose new products of scientificevelopment should he convincingnough.Our super-fortress«s have shown

ur Japanese enemies that theraat distances of the Pacific »r<> no

ionger the safety areas they wereniversally considered to be ae re

:ently * two years ago. A thou-land miles are only a three hourrun to our bombers Uiday. Theombinjr of Yawata in Japan wasiot mere 'propaganda or moraleilunt but a clear indication thath« industrial heart, of any coun-t y on any point <>f the globep isnow subject to attack by the mod-ern airplane.

The Nazis, who haw glorified;• robot man, have now devejop-

thc robot airplane as a weuponof war. This is an indication thatin the future it may be possiblefor one country to attack anotherwithout sending over a singlesoldier.

Surely the President couldhave picked no belter day onwhich to make known his tenta-'tivc plan for a world organization'that may work to insure peace onthis shrinking earth whose scien-tific inventions have become toopowerful for its own good.

* t •

Aa the hour for the liberationof Frynce approaches, relations.

French, The Committee of Natlonal Liberation, and now, 1Provisional G o v e r n m e n tFrance.

The British Cabinet, anxious tchave s recognized authority witwhom to deal in France, to (ahto have been mriy to rocognlsthe Dc Gaulle group as the provisional government. But this stewas halted by President Roose-velt's refusal to consent to suchrecognition. The backers of DoGaulle have' charged that thePresident does not wish to reeog'nizc De Gaulle because ho Is afralcthe General will not bo (sufficient);amenable to Allied influence whehe heads the -French govemmenthat the President doe« not wana strong France too «wm afteliberation; that the Presidentswayed ,by his pereonul dislike ofDe Oaullc.

The American stand seema tobe that the United States govern-ment is quite willing to recognizethe Do Gaulle group as the ad-rfiiniittAtive authority in thosesections of France that are willingto have it so. But at the sumo time

Amer-

SWIMMERC A R T E R K T • Sheldon

Schmrti, fifteen years of age, of818 Pending Avenue, was pain-fully injured Tuesday night whenhi struck his h«ad on a tutmerfad\0g at the Perth Amboy BathingBeach, State Street. He was treatid for nflalp lacerations at Perth

Ambol General Hospital after hehad received first aid from lifeguards.

SERVING TOMORROWCARTBRBT—Mombeh of the

Ladies Auxiliary of Cartcret Post,American Legion, will provide thehosteues tomorrow night at theServicemen's CenterRoosevelt Avenue.

on upper

CAT MOTHERS FOXESChanute, Kam~Clayton. Ward,

fox rancher, advertised for amother cat, with newJ>om kittensor a small dog with new-bornpups to nurse three fnn puppieswhose mother was unable to nursethem. Prom the more, than 80 of-fea, Ward chow & wdi&e cat tomother the little foxes.

SJo«k ClihiMhj Chib, UArena*.

Lillian Nagy, 101.9V RooseveltAvenue. t * ,

Uolomoa tfcvit, 78Avvnua. # •

Csrtem' Lhanor Store,.Inc., 65Roosevelt Avtnue.

lorael H. 8chw«rti, 9 Chriitophtr Street.

Hungarian • Amerkan CitinnCinla, «» Hudwn &m«.

Ukrainian - Aiherlean . CUlteniClub, 49 htki Avenue.

Service Notes(Contitmtd from Pw?t 1)

the veteran Tiger Stripe Marauder Group, bawd In Rngland, whichhas juat boen-eUod for exceptionalservice while overseas. SergcsniProkojiuk has b«wn ov«rs«a* onyear and because of th« part Inthe group's performance in Europehe has been given battle credit ithe Europpj»n air offensive anawarded the ibrome star to theEuropean Theatre of Operation*ribbon.

tafft•t • & , to.i and Lt A. J. Brown n o n

'ort Bttining, Ga., to Osap Croft.

i. b.

Share Car

tost <rf tftt

General Eisenhower has 'been em-powered to treat with any friendlygroup that any section of Francewould wish to Ket, up as Hit au-thority. In other words, the UnitedStates will recognize no group'asbeing representative of Franco asa whole until the French peoplethemselves have had the chanceto make that choice. Our experi-ences in Italy an: cited as the basisfor this poliqy.

Meanwhile General De Gaulleafter attempting to prove hispopularity among the French byvisiting the people oi liberatedNormandy, and after much re-crimination against the Allies fonot according him the recognitionhe seeks, has accepted -President

Procedure(Caniinutd frmft Pae* 1)

rganiied and managed by yourdistrict officers and supervisors inheir capacity as local allocation

officers, and we are fully awarehat without their invaluable ex-

perienced assistance, this officewould .have found the task almostmposaible of execution.1'

District Managers opt>r«tin<rthrough the 143 ODT district ft-Aces will.be the,local allocationofficers under the new program.

Liquor Licenses(Continued from Page 1)

Anthony J. Toppp, 49 HudsonStreet. .

Carteret Hotel Corp., 44 EssexStreet.

Joseph McHale, 5&8 Roosevelt

Pvt. John Kokolus has beenmoved from Camp Ctrwin, Col., toNashville, Tenn.

• • •

Staff Sergeant Franeia J. Koep-Her, stationed at Camp IMvin, N.C, is spending a seven-days fur-lough with hut mother, Mrs. FrankKoepfler of Pershing Avenue.

* • • • "

John J. Harrington Jr., U.S. N.,stationed at Boston, Mass., isspending a few dnyg with his wife»nd daughter at their home inAtlantic Street.

* • »Aviation Cadet C. P. Perkins,

Jr., U. S. N., stationed at HowaraCollege, Birmingham,' Ah., spent« J 0-days leave with his parentsMr. and Mrs, 0 , P. Perkins ofLeick Avenue.

• • •

Pfc. Melvin OHnicht, son of Mr.and Mrs, John 3, Olbricht of Lo-cust Street, is home on furloughafter, fourteen months ovorsons,including participation in theNorth African and Sicilian cam-paigns. His brother, William, L->overseas now.

(Continued from Paift 1)ess complete detail* fcr« outlinedby plant comml^wa.

The Board emphashtei that thestand now belns; token is a Armone. It may in many instances cre-ate a hardship for those companieswhieh have not instated upon "earsharing," and which do not care-fully xerullnlic each applicationthat is presented for certification.

In the very near future, OpAexpects tn ask for volunteer audl-tois from plant transportationcommittees tn actually ga to thevarious local board* mid auditthe applications nt transportationcommittees other than their own.

OPA's oar «h<mng campaign hasmet with the approval of the pe-troteam industry which has inau-inraUrl its own program, throughthe Petroleum Industry War Cotm

to eliminate black market op-erators and to conserve Ihe avail-able supply of gatoline for mili-tary and civilian une.

•M M7 to Uasshunc*. It Is ttmpfyform «f **#p*r#<ln«a. Inand all ethers whomay iwliter at theIng next Wednesday aitdday night*, July 5 and 6.

Call By Priest(CotU.Huti Worn too* 1)

Sunday morning, and over fiftypersona registered before loavlnth h h

Th« plan of the Aid.Squsri intp have ready a list of person*whose'blood typ« is known so thathey may be called, upon if neededin arny time of emergency. Callwill not be made indiscriminately

WANTED5

FULL TIMEWAITRESS

Excellent Pay-|

Good Hours

Apply at Oi

LUIGFSRestaurant

State Highway No.

near Green St. Circle

Woodbridffe, N. J,

Phone Wood. 8-2091

Avenue.Joseph, Udasielak, "62 Pershing

Avenue.Slovak-American Citizens Club,

Pvt. BdWaid Mickla has beenmoved from Seymour JohnsonField, N.' C, to, the trainingschool,at West Lynn, Main.; Ste-

'ANNOUNCEMENTUnder new management

CAT 'N FIDDLECliffwood Beach

Official Opening Friday, June 30,1!Choice liquors and food at reasonable prices

v No cover. No minimum. No tax

EYESEXAMINED

GLASSESFITTED

Dr. R L MOSSOPTOMETRIST

Office Hours:—9:30 A. M. to 8:30 P. M.Saturday 9:30 A. M. to 3 P. M.

115 Main Street Phone WO. 82M2 Woodbridge^ N. J.A Csnpl«t« Optomt»rie.S«rTic« Near Yowr Howe

SUPER MARKETS

You'll find a tempting assortment ofreally fresh baked goods at yourA&P Super market. Every Hem isbaked in A&P's own modern bakery. . . made of top quality ingredients—priced to please your budget.

READY-TO-EAT

SMOKED HAM"SKINNED"WHOLE i r |bBUTT HALF 37

COPPOLA'SWill Be

• - . • j

CLOSED MONDAYIn order to give our employees

the benefit of a longer holiday

week-end, we will not be open on

Monday, July 3, or on Indepen-

dence Day, July 4

•RESH FOWLPICNICSDucklings

GftADIA Ib

FRESH OR SMOKED ib

38'29

YELLOW LAYER CAKE l " r t * C 1 " - * 4 *MARVEL RYE BREADMARVEL ROLLS

uiPirk«r Houu, Ohnwr,Sandwich, Friikfiirttr

/git* Patktr ' " " Fariur

French Crumb Cake " 2 0 ' Angel Fool Cake - 2 8Pound Cake A M * Dated Donuts < - 15e

32t Slab Bacon n th* - *31«fc J i t n a i l OllC6» CeatarCat ^ HO»,

Fresh Boston Butts 35= Frankfurters . 37cCold Cats Fresh Seafood

Bologna or Meat Loaf 33= Fresh Haddock""" 17»Braunschweiger »39c fwAWeakfish *MrThuringer . , »33« Fresh Whiting . 10«Luncheon Meat «*-* 49c Fresh Porgies . »>

For Refreshing Iced Tea!

Fine, full flavor is the secret of .really satisfying iced tea . . . andthese famous A&P blends offer fino ;

tea at less than a penny a glass 1 v

Nth Fruits and V^ttabUiEnjoy the choke offerings of farm, orchard, garden and grove . . .yet save money. Buy fresh fruits and vegetables at your A&PMarket where quality and thrift go hand tn hand. '

,m

' " • • * • , - • ; GQPPOLACleaners •••*.•.

NECTAR TEAFull Flavored Pek;oe \L |(,MidOrang«.Pako« ,Jg.'

OUR OWN TEAStrong and Robust y j ,

thrftFtoi k

t, Sun-Rlp«nt«1

WATERMELONS]QuaM»tM«luo

H>lfM«lon

WholeMelon 99

108

FiTBJ,Rla« Atalai (iv«1tu -with aN tbilr IL. 1

i i fl l d M ! D' Iflavr »tl«d M !

A&P Coffe* t»i baa., for j*u*, thento*t poauUr eoffftf in thfl world's

U t coffee-drinking nabonl

TOMATOESICEBERG LETTUCE 2

Bofitu Lettuce v S ,

Cirroti• : ' . ! _

6« String leant 2»»15«Frejh U»es — 17

' • " i—»'';D.V

THE GRfcAT STEAK HUNT

:

; B r JOHN CHAPMAN• ', When nil my 1-F iruml deeds| n being1 »dd<M up in the (fldenlook, It Is likely I shnll be lion-frfjl most for tcivln* up steak.

Of rourdp 1 (on^iilf'ri'd theWhole thing: I'nri-fully. I have hada growing suspicion that AlcaicW * hard tn yet, hefaiiw I hav<>tool hdd n st»nV in I'levon urwl-iineKalf months. Not Waime 1 didn't

•, J'ailhfnlly I would nppear at1© corner liulciu i store; faith

I would lie liiuked fit colilly.mat' with you, Mwt'

Qhapmnn?' by butcher would a»kheatedly, A* the months wore on,tjlift nint'li- imjuiiy win all I need-ed; I would faithfully gpl my nixfrankfurters or pound of choppedtound and wamlcr disconsolatelyInto the night.

But juxt rei'i'iilly there wu» wordffom the War Knod Administrationtkat for tin- .ICKIIKI iiuarln <-f tb<\

there would be I.HHI.HOO,iO pounds i>f lieef nviuliihle for

dviliann thronithout the country.Than came the n |*rt that theifafef supply in New Yrtrk where 1live, was 2!i.!> per cent (fn-aterthan lost yenr. I utmlicd ii pmcla-l^ttlon In rongi-inn by John A.Rotal, exei'tilive wreinry of the'National Association of Hi-tailMeat Dealers, asking ronffrem tn|DJt an end to nie»l rntioninjr:

'"Fh» facts prove we havemeat In this country."

iliitened to OI'A AdministratorCfhMter Howies on the ri'dio, as he'ftandotaly predicted hvut would•It plentiful In n few mimths.

'It was four for thought, to coina .pretty corny pun, I forgot to

Mrs. Fred Stnre and Geoi (reof the Harvard Mcd School,

.fi bo j liHtl Hiinounced man neededbpt one ounce of meat daily toWrvive, I abandoned my plan to«at the new synthetic ntcaks basedOB yeast, Obviously there wa?•teak at hand.# Therefore, I setopt to find it.

Armed with a list of ceillnirprice*, ranjeinjf from 55 cents perpound for porterhouse to 32 centstn chuck, and with a fine thickHftion J>ook, I canvassed--butchersthroughout the niHghborhnud formy pound of flesh,

"I got no stenk. I could us.e flv**

times «« much a< I jot ,""I foiildn't promise my own

mudder R *t*al< for a -vpek fvnmUiday, buddy."

"Whnt'd the difference, you gotpoinU? I ain't (jot any steak. No,I won't haw nunt> tomorrow,either." *

"Ah, Mop rr'abMn'; lt'« like thinill ipvci. How about Home nicelivefwumt?"

"(Jit outta h«r$!"That liirt ww from my old, rty

>ari', the corner butcher.Baffin, I withdraw from the

•dive front ind b#gan i wnr withthe OPA, thfl Department of Api-culture, the pucker* nnd a hand-ful itf other meat people, "Jack,man," a wriowmipded Swift £Co. official told qie, "then- jdnttmi reaiiont for the situation. OneOne—thetr'n a definite shortaceuf f;ood heef becaune the Army(ret* only the heat Kradea and yoni-Bii't (Ind any quarrel with tlmt.Two—the demand for steak* to-day IK from two to 10 time* |r,resit-er than ever before. There'n anawful lot of looie money nround."

"It'i not thnt there lutt't miybeef on ranchf1*," a New YorknepaHmcut of MHiketn' extu^tivt',t nTcl: ''riiw: "Tfi r i^ i "Sv rmrrrmmfamount of steers Wt West. Butthe War Food Adminlrirallont»kn, fotifhly, 3S to 4(1 per centof all heef." However,.! think itwa* a surly, malevolent bnttherwho Hummed It all up beat,

"We have fivi' riiRtrtnieni forevery cut anyway," he «aid icily,"no we dun't have to worry aboutthe »()uawkera."

1nci(fi»ntally, even if therp wereenuuirh beer, you'd still have trqu-lile buying it bvenuae of the Goveniment'n recent muye in doubllng the length <ff time red pointsmust last. Out of fiO red pointsper month formerly available, theaverage pt'ison .spent 40 for beef.Now he (ft1 to '10 red points month-ly, out of which ht can spend, »ay,20 for beef. That (fives him about1 2-8 pound* of beef per month. . . If he can get It, foolish boy.

There ig nothing purely localabout this problem. Steak-Btaivedspies throughout the country ac-cuse me that trapping the T-bonela i headache every where. Even

restaurant*, which aomehow al-wayt nesni ti> bob up with foodymi can't buy at the supermarket.are worrying like mad. They can'tget «>noiitfh uteak to AM the de-mand, ami if they could theywouldn't, have enough points forIt. And believe me, if they couldget it, 1 really/think they'd hide itfrom me out of ipite.

Well, im I nay, I, took all thefaeU into consideration. Thething to do in thin war, I »ulditernly, is to give up steak. Nomatter how plentiful it In, it.'n un-patriotic to put it while our boy awork out on K-ratlonx. So juat liketrmt I gave it «p.»h«rp, clean, nopreparing, no loose edges, t

What's that? A butcher in »Jerney town 13 milei away has «»idc of beef? Boy—my hat, eo^tand bun fare, I'm not going to buyit. I just want to look at it. Justlikn trying to locate an alarmclonk or fl mail order catalogue,Nnai 1 nnd 2 In any collector1*('dialogue.

today's PaiUrn

Hollywood NotebookMajor Clark Gable will prob-

ably resume his $:i,G00-a-w«ekacting career in the near future.

S It-Has been announced that hel-JClll put »n theetaoifwypetaoinp)ji»i after he compU-tes editing the, film, photographed HIIIIJT hia «u-'pervision in KIIKIHIKI and fromj bombers over enemy territory.There is some speculation that hejnay be co-starred with GreerOar-

.pon in tht1 proposed "Scuttle,1';• . ' Harry J-Him'H, thu trumpeter and

j orchestra leader, wlm is making a• name for himself as an actor be

•.'for* the cameniH, and Red Skel-on film iind radio comedian, wereflth bum In circut trull and their

.lives have IHTH cro.-winif eachOth(;r in vuuduville hounen up anil

, ((Otyn the cdiintiv before thoy, W h reuchud Hollywood, Jamei

began his career ai the age of 4•;,»* a circus drummer boy, whilejt'tfcelton started oft as a circua

Craig KeynoliLs, out of the'IBy 'because of a modical dis-<rge, is working i'n.ifour filmsthe same tim1'. Two are beingf',e on hie home lot, a third inpreparation an<| ho is on call

tests and wardrobe and ho isfling retakes on IIIH fourth film

hps been practically iln-d. He's of the opinion that lifn(hi Army U a much uimplei1

ition, but-not so enjoyableir so, well paying',

Ja said that documentary„ i, to depict the American way.'llf» for exclusive dlsj/ibutioii|lf6reign countries, hftve been

4 by the. Office of \Vlation in 22 different lan-

Bill Henreid has one ambition-play un Aiucricun on the

While in Europe, he madefilurea and played a differ-

t nutionality in ench, but neveran American.

That "beer" that you FCC in thebackground of some, of the filmsnow is really glasses of tea orwatered coffee,'

One of the most natural/'Mr.and Mrs." in Hollywood is GreerGarson and Walte: Pidgeon. Theyare back together in "Mra. Park-ington'1 and fellow wurkers Andit a delightful sensation to wutchthem work.

Since Lou Costello's illness, it'sBud Abbott who gets all thebumpn in their films. In a BOonc.during" the filming of "l/ost In aHarem," Abbott was all buLknocked out by the crush of ubreak-away table on ' hia head."Get wejl, will you," urged thealmost unconscious Abbott, as hispartner stood by consolingly. "1can't stand much mor« of thu."

Alan La lid, who was recentlygiven a medical discharge fromthe Arfliy, has ibeen called up forrelnductiom A deferment until hecan finish his present stint in"Two ¥u»r#. Before the Matst," hasbean requested.

Pleased with Kurt Kreuger'sportrayal of u Nazi oflicor in "Sm-h'ara," RKO gave the former New-York stage actor g term contractcalling for two pictures a year,Uii flrst picture, under the con-tract will be a? Simone Shnon'sleading man in "MademoisellePifl."

Bette Davis's new contractwith Warner Bros, is on a picture-to-picture arrangement, permit-ting Uqtte to spend the time be-tween cavh where she pleases.Under the new deal, iihe will netclose to a quarter of a milliondollars' per picture, thus fixingher as tho highest-salaried ladyof the screen,

Fait Flea Awuy

nPattern 9094 comes In sliei 11,

2, 13, 14, 15, 10, 17, 18. Slzs It,liuss, t% ydi. 3ii-liicb, % yd. CUB-rast; hat, H yd.

Thia pattern, together wltit »eedlework pattern of unlul andecorhtive motifs for Unens andarmenti, TWENTY CBNTiSend TWENTY CENT8 In colni

[or these patterns to 170 No«5ipaper Pattern Dept.. 238 Weil 18thSt.. New York U, N. V Wflttplainly SIZE, NAMB, ADDflEM,8TYLB NUMBER.

Bend FIFTEEN CENTS mort forl i e Marian Martin new and.tiitfc«rSummer Pattern Book 32-Ptfei,easy-to-make stylai. Pi«< pttttraprinted In book

Christian ScienceChurch Calendar

MUGGS AND SKEETER

First Church of Christ, Scien-st, Sewaren, Is a branch of the

Jothcr Church, The First Churchof Christ, Scientist, in Boston,Mass, Sunday services 11 A. M.,

und-ay 'School M:30 A, M.;Wednesday Testimonial meeting,8 P. M.; Thursday reading; roorn,: to 4 P. M.

"God" is the Lesson-Sermonubjact for .Sunday, July 2.

Golden Text: "Who is God, save;he Lord? and who is a rock, saveur God? God is my strength and

power; and he inaJceth n>y wayperfect" (II Samuel 22:32,38).

Sermon. Pasaagi* from theKing James version of the Bibleinclude:

"God hath spoken once; twicehave I heard this; that power be-longoth unto God" (Ps. 62:11).Correlative passages from "Sei-

ne e and'Health with Key (o theScriptures" by Mary Maker Eddyinclude:

"There l» no, grower apart fromGod. OmnipoUnce has all-power,and to acknowledge nny otherpower is to dishonor God. Thehumble Nazurgne overthrow thesupposition that sin, sickness, anddeath have power. He proved thempdwortau" (p. 228).

COTTOfJ GOODSThe O.P.A. and W.P.B. an-

nounced that a especial supply oflow<.priced men's shirts and sJvorU,and women's hog Be drones and:otton slips ill i>» put Into' distri-bution in, the rytxt ninety diya,Maximunt retail-price* have beenset and seventeen million yards of:otton have beeft Allocated for tha(fttrments, :

iHrjEJtl SHUfS

The Navygated the wthat hull432 of 8,9ined bu\ Hibeen Hiibitituresults (i^oiiship buildingpouible.

THE FLOP FAMILY

TO S\HG"

I can't et the use of'' bornjustJ to u"

beaten up.

PERCY CROSBY

Un^J,

TUFFY By Hoff

WELL, PO^fbU SUPPOSEAE COULt? COOL THE

•nFmr-rute- HOUSE..

NAPPY —By fflV TJBMANu « » HEARiNQ THE rmtmti SDKY,WEiMMSOtATtiV CAM£. Ti AMERICA , BUT WEHAVE MADE LrTfl| P«X«ES5,f*l& FAR!Mi>J0ffltLE,OUR PEOPLE ARE BCCCMING

IS'UGIY

UMUSS WE twj.\m Km

we MME SCAROCP tvtzmst FOR ABOY WHO ea&i&B THE Km CLOSELYENquGM io oceuw u mm IMDLME

GOWU'D SUCt'LIKE TO-.. BurI DON'-f THINK MY WWl'N POP

wdfLOLETWEV

aElusreNf'fuis!1

'DEAR SON. . . .YOU HAVEOUR PERMISSION AND OUR8Lf4SJN66rVlCT0ft HA9

GUARANflEEOYOuRSWErv.fHE ANXIETY Wt MAY S«(T[RSHALL BE OUR CONiRlBOflONfO DEMOCRACY! WRITE USEVERY C*Y..,L0V8,rMt>J

DETEGTiVE RILEY —By RICHAKB LK^ A N W H U E . I N S I P E KING'S CAB.

HA^•^^!T^ATCA«BELONOS TQ WALTER

yPOOR CHAP ISjm WIST S«X W OK*H, PALW |jU«T DON'T

STIU -<HO5P|TAtl4 < l TRV MOtWN'FUNNV AND! ) ONW A fEW % VDU WONT GfT

f

THI« ISENQUGM/'

SHIPSwhich investi-

of ^ pfltpurred tn

B0B DAUtNIA6ft A FALLS 6,000 TONS C*

EVERY SECO«Dy

fl i t PACIFAfi IN

eft'in'njerchafite beeft im-

\R1

)P1 WANTED

work: Mil wi«k

OreH Co»panjr,

,;(,?,

m IP WANTED:•> in U to carry

*I

in helping the war,i,iy Independent-Leader^si.. Wooabridjfe, M. J.

WANTEtt

\ v 5c a peond foruli-pendent-Leader, 18

" N. J.

fatal Ttfitfett

MOVING

:-S STORAGE — CratlnfliM.ninR. Dependable total,r iiixtBnre moWnfr. 213

, , p , Perth AMboy, N, J,•nn. in a.

PERSONAL• \ i, and clairvoyant m««-\ M. to 6 P,%,:i.|c

licv. E. Rlcker!I2 MAin St.

W I

* • ' { • • • • ' • ' •

i: LAYERS and machine,. r Apply BolUcl Cigar•i ivi-slilng Ave'ruie, Car-

i Statement of AVa. quired. ' CPfl-lGt?

To ihow that l>«.uty aqd fheopera are f«l((t,t , l o n | , T e r y

ftlWfly lUvi day., h«r»'k a Jite-» » • of «». MrtwJ^iftus', y*»Yit

E SW»

»m»H <m (fe Ait" pi*«K Portfr fmfl*p tfw C»-efcnAweW **.<,, lor A*

Mrtnittw, hit retttctti An ArtKtttetatMti: 3<ott*»> aftarffoOftttmCBS.

MALE HELP WAN

k

Oomidf from he-hind the Drafcofts wjuewed »nt i6 to B victory «wr ,thfe tikes Bo)!*'

to Aefct

Field. T%« U f a V«* *ji %*rtylead Iftrt WM* thWW! Vjf « to' »*him ttrfj tfrafo** tttifM the*

sixth

S 3n ....Dert*%t*y, c

A.ft. R. H.

HyinlaV, it,BaHtko, rffclko,

. IT ......... IMyato, «», ft .........;.. 1

;. * , 8b. :J£ $Fiat* W,, 2t> . . , . , . .1 1

0

1

5

Itcored a root, 10 to 1, <it«t

Mpolpa in tla Nation*! 'this fmk at the FftHt IttM.

ttre b*

Trim Cuds, 12 !»4

ft

ss

, it

ift

rod SALE

HdllSK, 6 rooms, tun.! ci! garage, oil heat.

< .in. Telivphone CartenrtC.P. 648 tf.

HELP WANTEDiii white eoftple to live in

U euro of llderan Chib..,1 ground*, Comfortable

i, n HIS. Communicate with•,.-, 259 W, Milton Ave.,

I'linm' RahWay 7-2213.• of availability required.

6-23 to 7-7

BAn Mi*

I.A1IOUKH8 CA« tl«frPB

CAR RfJPAJRKR's IIEI ,PETI8

FOR SALEsKS for tale. Inquire

.I St., Oarteret N. J.C.P. 6-23 to 7-7*

LOST: AT ION BOOK issued to J.

.tin. 60 Plaihfleld Ave.,!,.ii. N. J. Finder please rc-

6-30; 7-7*

LOSTnintaining license and

;iii..n. if [is ration bnokHiint pftperi. Reward.i'l-nsko, 33Q Fulton St.,kv, M. J. «-30»

ALTERATIONS: '•ONTRACTOR. Special

i Inick Work, concrete,t mil asphalt. S. Ltmbo,•HOI;:!, 6-30 to 7-21

I OR SALEi s for sule and repair.hrlcimm, 142 Longfellow

'lit, N. J. Telephone."i'.t!iii C.P. 0-30

ATCBM

ttfiAD NG COMPANYf TwiSlti

i'ort Hendlnr N. J.Tho>« Eng&Hed )n War Control

Work N««xi Nol

i i . H. a.i Rmat*«a, H 3 «H. Aflvrtrek, ll1) ,« « 0£., Cfctreiton, c :.. 8 1 1Cprrente, 3b . . . 3 1 0ft. Mnkwihtki, tf 8 0 0I h g o n , rf ........ 1 i 0BtafWe, rf 3 1 lBah*, «b 3 1 tfl. Wagella, p 3 1 2

, 2b 6 82«0 300 0—6

, c ..3b

cfft

HELP WAHtEP

', N. Y.—AenWd ....„_.gi repotted that as he workedover two acres of land In Cowlea-ville, hid waiiot slipped out of hispocket and disappeared beneatha fnfflh ffuiTow. R/uge*ld was moreconcerned oVer ttw loan of his "A"Ragoline wupons than he wnsabout his money.

OrTICK CtttLSCASHIERS

HOSTESSES

WAITERS

WAITRESSES

SODA DISPENSERS

PANTRY WORKERS

PORTERS

WEEKRND8. TAnT TIMT) ANDHTBADV. PLKASANT WOttKINUCONDITIONS. M1J8T BE OVRHID •VHAR8. APPLY At ONOW.AVAILABILITY STATEMENTNEBDED.

HOWARDJOHNSON'S

Route 26 ,

Woodbridge, N. J.

COST OF PLANES

Here are some of the actnatcflBts «f planes as cited by Repre-sentative Engel, of Michignn:

1B-17, $211,000; B-24, ^219,000;B-20, 5152,000; P-61, ¥143,000;C.-M, ?285,00«! C-46, $219,000;and C-27, ?85,000.

Nylon hosiery "clubs" are out-lawed by the OPA.

Bate, ftPerry, 3b

i 3I , , 0• w 0| , i 1i oI °• $• 0

f °1 ~e

; * • • « . !

t sri I

1 5I-!-\'lV 00 0

A bitin ttie ofipninj inNtl

th» way tor m «aay lt-4 triurmphby the Bruins «wr * e Car*«»w#ok Wi Jh* America* L»»jne.

MX »fnre:-Brttea

A.B. R. H.1 1* t S

« 04 S 8

QPDonfneItolcrtn,ik

, lb

Bk.if.rt

C.rd.

» it e432'

82

Drngons

Ramblers ....

.•'Umpires, KieliWah aW

•. n 10 7,(JOT 110 0 — 2

i&41 * —

BraaHoffcnF«r

Jbttef, c _feolmfciak, p

O- A

8b..Inat/lf*«ns»S, rf .

A.8. R. H,. 4 %- : 4 «

. . - '"•••a I

-<t a- ,i. ; . , * 9... 3 !... 1 •.:. 3 0

27 4310 OUU U—

feruins j . . . 680*116 6—1r ^ A . JIIXL-1 VI

two,CARTKRRT gfrruins1 pitchers for wvenin the first two frames, the IteiDevils scored an S to 4 triniWphin an Am«rfcon League ganw thisweek at tbe Park field.

The box score:Ra4 D«viU

A.B. t. H.tukach, as

3b

HELP WANTED—MALE - FEMALE

It's Your Solemn Duty ,) YOUR'SONS AND TO YOUR COUNTRY

To W*Ht*a«d Produce for tti* Invasion

/ Cttme ToWberal Cable

nnd make th* vkt and cable y6ur loved ones need

m achiovo fiotory . , , Don't Waste any more tinft.

They t,ee4 % •'faf" n w and' you can give it to

them by working here,

YOU OOjN'T NEED EXPERIENCE

WILLINGNESS!

AL SAKSONFLOWERS FOR ALL

OCCASIONSa

IM-HS LMfMbw St.

Carteret, N. J.

Telephone C«rter«t 8-5906

tt«ako,iClaric, c

tratenatti, Ift)unn, lb 8Ondcr, 2b 3Oldakoeki, cf 8Amzler, rf 2

rf ;...... 1

feW « pit «ht more me«t

Jl IMS turn to rt& end rn»de Itv.arutl i i<«b«WK from 14 to M p»Wilt Iii ttrtir production Of five war.Meittlat foW «ld oil crop), lt»WFft has (rtnounced. A survey oproductloH bjr FSA borrnwem I1M3 4omp«Nd with -1642 showethat 'tb*»e limiUes made Increasein fee production of war foodcomparable to the increases madby FSAiaWifces in lMover 1*41.

yootti pttntedon^ feAnilon tiYKfet tnia iiprlnt !ichool forests, »rou™i larm homeiand ntft-'ttrtl tohMik b fe ttate-wlde catnpilgh agulnn tail fcrtwim

:.M.{f&!um ;5;S\;tfliy^,

ar f l M t c n InBBE SUQAA—Alto tltaclit• J»«« 30, bta

•r for ohf a«n«y for th«» • » * • * * Of

owncr't KOM« , riMfb « colon, o*«h «*)*»dtr

In

larW 0«llplM»t, o4*«tiT» ivnt 26, will U

WAttt FAT

na •ffect an |>fl»il

)•*•• rath» ckccki in p»y«cnt (or ae-ID* soanJi of tioaialiaM f f

fractionalI*

new m*tt>od for piricinfaWtlk4« **•*••*, MNh at tKo*e n*«4»4 u«v

aaJ ironm| atacliinct, *attt«mapptlanctt, will t>*c<Mne elfectiTC.

r b i , . . , fiA, *n«[ n«w Tttmil-trt of ar»c««M« f o o * n««i nol r«|Uter if they deal •tttirtl* EntMAtW IWa\4 Vht aai * - aifcUi aVaajAati *j.ti*k l_fcl JllftHli-H aVA Judk. M AfrA.I|V|alaT I H I MaavTV V H I V a VIIlT TITOTi • CWni i» l j TO VwflV flV \JM n

War Pric* and Ralionini Boardilb . -

faeHtttak,, htwHab ana* ftkaoti a m Mm*for Ming a(Mlicati«M (or alWlmoikti of ratioiifd foodi,, it (k»T

tin If <ttr* W t» ** "*"FiuKL O t L - ^ f ^ t e k o M o r i who h n \ th»ir hornet o» l r with

oil hcatinfc HoiVi wllt-os | N a n »xtV« f««t oil lfl<t»*ftc«»1 f hi i f l

fc | lfl<t»*ftc«» «^w«1 Va10 par cant of their ranawoi f*«l «H, WHloti f<* twni wh«n +d r * B ^ m b r jp y o i n of MT* liva in the hoaiohold.

L*H*V tMtoM o t t«* l ofl fer ttnfce wiio M (Ml only forhoWh»| 4 | M » di«Ci«t A » »«ma?«f w»ro o l w outtiorikejl. Tk«now formUM aormita a local War Prico and Rationing Hoard to|r%M >mVra(Vi'«p t « « rtariaiMti vf N •»Wo«a o ihontli W « MpWHft^ ajttd. fi** o«|dMofea4 f t l fon i fbr o»eh odvnr p e t t o * .In thenouialiold, Tha old formula prOvidci a maiimutn of M ^. .

SNAKE IN LtQDOft STORE

Pirtcott, A rto.~-Av rather |»ecu-linr *xhil>it for a liquoV store Wasa boa confltfirtbt, 'which wa»

t*n y»-anR(Cn. The snake, 10 incW then,i;ruw to a length (it fiVj Te'et bo-i'«i-(. Us TWCent ^cath.

LUCKY

Denver, Coto.—When his plowstruck sotnethinB- hard, a' truckgardener, in»U»d of trying to|nish over the object, Investigated.About a foot*«te» theicVel of hia

, We found ntac yovtuls t»fTNT.

Soos, rf ....O'Connor, c

0 p0 0

Siore fcy innings:BruftmR

20 4 B

110_ |Red Devil? 840 10? x—ft

Umpires: Elliott and Mo»k*l.

s r tWASTED

U««d FmmtwreDOOttt

802 St. U»rf«> AT*.8-12t«.J

»at>bUahM M »*•»

th* ftrn>-Jan B., W, iM., T«, rtplaln that wtr-1ernmental reful»lion»bid having nwr« than 50 \clynnmltf on hand at'pUt the firm oat <it borir

llAlL TO NOtmXliTi-tlorj from home n

bint pjckaitPs, am nowjivcn.i| to AmericanNVmakfly batttefield, aftt« »n annminrrmnnt f n i t l

Th*! Navy hoi«f a light cruller to !

Hie *ttip fan traniferritjl't»e t«*m» of Ijend-Itfaid'/th>n, With the tlUeth* United State*.

MALARIA

Malaria f«»er caieji anerli'«n* in New Guinea haiUl rfinety-IlT* percentnionthi and military h»ithf, succe* of the anti>

Dttry itaUoaa synthttlc nttrofen torn-

pound, e«> 6« «*d lo^rrtt^ 4;toB per eontof ,tiw protfln «qulval«ntfor a U to'rt pit ceWprdftlnflUfryttftlbh.

rArctio run off Norwav iiof N«is by the British %

, Mini is proiwlnKwur Ittroes at a Itcont I

DonWin*lo**fth«!

SEEDS FORMortgage

Variable !htert*t Rates.Ih-Mript Service.

Direct deduction I'ton.Savings Accounts

Salicit«d.Currejitly Payihf 2Vi%

Per Annum,

WttiRMseveltSavwgsand loan Association

17 Cooke AvenueCarteret, N. J.

Bruim

Kolodnionki, of"Catri, p : .".....tlk, p-If ,..i........: 2

Moskay, '3b 8JVnkiit, lb , ;(lluchoski, 2b 3Molnar. c ;.

i1

W<? Need Women #

lltney Drivere ' •

MAchiniBt* Oilers

Corporation' v > " r v | f c ;. . A w t e o y , N,

GO TO SfeA WITH tME FLEET—wttfc Wor BM«%I &vcry Bondyou buy makes you a part of the task force, Bonds buy bat-tlenhip*—to carry, the fight tp our unethy!

BUY A BOND. HELP SPEED VICTORY. SPONSOllfeD BY' UNCLE JOE

SPEEDWAY AUTO SALES Co.8S3 St. George Ave., WocxHmdge

Wo. 84149 l

We tell good trantport»ti*l>, not merely atool can. .

81:

ttOOSEVE.LtDINER

• • ; / . ' .

528 Rooievelt AT*.! Carteret

Catt. « 4 T »

2 rtfl€ PLOTS FOR SALEOn NoW Atota H*,**^, icaown at Btocli 845B, I ot 8.On tlatMM A«wnMa> known at BioeV 845B, Lot 14.

. , VrW*nd | c , N. J.Tbaio loti are in a Tory fine location and can be bought al «tvmnaMc tfart H jtm %fll act «j«<cl(l]r,

Broken: Full CommiiiionLOT OWNE*B: To »efl lot* avkkav uie our

LOT OWNERS CLEARING SERVICE

REALTY RESEARCH BUREAU103 Pork ATC, N. Y. 17, N. Y. LE«m«ton 2-6295

BIZUFUNERAL

HOMES54 Wheeler Ave.

Carteret, N- J-

Cart. 1-6353

Christensen's Dept StoreWiH Be

CLOSEDALL DAY

Monday & Tuesday

L '•: •> '

Please Co-operate by

; 'SUfcii;*!1!, •tsMaiiittiii'i

Defeats,4To2,In

American Loop Game;* CAHTKHKT Scoring two in

the first, sml two more in thtjfourth inning, the Cardinal*

•• wat*d thr Kii(rli'« in thi> AmericanIiMgue thin week at the ParkField, 4 I

. , The'• C.rAnnl.I'. «AB

^jOuttw, c?>J5. KIJUIH, p' A Bpyehin, 2b

t. Epychin, lbfJ'Brlen. If

if*, Kljula, if

44444:i

*l

BO

R,11001010fi

A.B. R.

•iDonovan, l bliifHecz, r pB u m , p rfHudrak, if ...

ih, rf. cf

^Jloin, 3bc

i

4... 4

... a

... a2

... 3

... 3

... 1

0010100000

H.il10110310

H.1210120001

QPEAKINGABOUT SPORTS

by Meyer

8 6

ZOO 200 0—4000 002 0—2

I ' O M cord of pulpwood cut from af d r m woodlot will make 18,000 on*e^ktot paper milk bottles.

Sam WantsMore Eggs

ORDER YOURDUCKS AND

CHICKS NOW!Blood tested stock from

, good breeders.

Baby TurkeysFertilizers and all kinds

of seeds

NOTICEMr place will be cloird Mun.

Tne». Pl«»»» <:»ll nextf n k ' i order* thii Fri. or Sat.

(MBOY FEED CO.279 New QjAintwick Are.

Perth Amboy, N. J,Cor. Oak

PLune P. A. 4-1350

-ren Fri. & Sat. EveningClo»ed July 3 and 4

|liy where every

)llar makes a

ct hit.got to watch every

f}lar more than ever if911 are going to buy your

re of bonds.remember too that

hen your soldier son fi-jrily H home he's go-

ilji to need a lot of thingsi|i«t coat money.| . . for your own require-U t you'll be like a goodiperiean parent. . you'll^ t h every dollar . . and

| | h a t case it will pay to9p- your eye on our val-

? bidding for postbusiness by giving

ftfte city's best present-vftlues.

ibrate the 4th inCool Clothes

>PICAL WORSTEDSUITS

, $25 to $37.50# O R T SHIRTS ,

SPORT COATS

GS & SONS

With the Republican convention g*ing in fullblast out in Chicago, and General Ike's armies movingalong according to plan, there's little of importanceremaining to be told about the home front, locally.Of course we could tell you that the RecreationLeagues got off to a swell start last week and thatJoe Udeielak nan just finished renurfacing his alleysin preparation for the comihg winter months, butthat's hardly news of significance:

There was a time when we had a "big" base-ball team in, town run by cither Curley Sullivan, orthe J«dnotas or even the Ukes. But moat of the fel-lows are off in service doing a highly important job,and all's quiet on the hpme front. We ctfti even recallthose pleasant memories that were attached to thn.seposUeason series 'between Carteret and Perth Am-boy in 1928 and 1929 when Henny Staufoack used toimport a half doJten or HO major league stare to playwith the local contingent. And tyiey eve-n charged abuck a throw to nee those games.

But times have changed. There is less and lessinterest in sports and more and more in winning thewan That is the way it should .be. Today, about theonly other yflue outside of being a morale builderthat is being derived from sports is that it is used ma means to stimulate bond sales. Take, for example,that Giant-Yankee-Dodger baseball game the otherday over in New York. It realized $56,000,000 andthat ain't hay, 'brother, The game was devised ahdconceived by a member of the War Finance Commit-tee. However, it required a Columbia UniversityProfessor of Mathematics to produce a method ofscoring it. Bach of the teams batted and fielded nixtimei) with no club batting for six successive outs oroperating in the field for six outs.

Schedule Listed ForNext Week's Games

CARTEKET Dan Semenza,recreation director in the borough,announced next week's schedules

both the National and Amcri-ii Husi'lmll Jii'iigiii'H. It; follow,1!;

National LeagueJuly :i—Uki\s at RamblersJuly r>-—L>i1BKoii3 at I'ii'atesJuly fi—Onipona nt. likes,luly 7- RHIII1)I<>™ at Pirates '

American LeagueJuly 3—-Bruins at Eagles.Inly 5—Ganliitals at Red DevilsJuly fi Cardinals at BruinsJuly 7—Eaglca at Red Devils

New EpochA new epoch In medicine began

in 1985 when the "suUa" druggwere Introduced for treating a num-ber ot,these icrioui diseases. Thisgroup ot drugs has relatively simplechemical structure and to date overtwo thousand compounds ot thisgroup have Iwen ]IH'[IIIIP<I in synthetic organic chemical labornlories inall parts of the world. Out of thislarge number less thnn 10 membershave found 'their way into practicalmedical use in this country. The ful-lowing are employed at thp presenttime by doctors: suUnnllainide,sullapyridlne, sutfadlazinc, sulfathi-azole, tulfaguauadlne, UsuUamerazine, sulfaphra&e.

7 DAYS filTMAfTHEATRE - PERTH AMBOY

PHONE 43388

STARTING

FRIDAYJUNE 30th

FOR BVBRY WOMAN WHOLOVIS A SOLDIER! FOREVERY SOLDIER WHOLOVES A WOMAN!

THEMESI MARK

""ANNE BAXlfcK * WILLIAM EYTHE

MICHAEL O SHEA

4 Days REiCEHTPerth Amboy 4-0255

TODAYTHRU

MONDAYSHOW STARTS 1 P. M. FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY

J, C«rr«l NDSHI t t r l i STUART

MTTLK^

WIUTEHIW.L

^Sittfc

M M I M M '

OBIJ

Frifcy,

Saturday,

Don't tlbi HI

im.

&mm

l»mmi A.

Chapter

One

The Gr«at«»t p

Serial

of all Time

Don't Mit> it I

r»t (3) Pfiyi ~r SUrtini Tu«»day, July 4th

BIG WOUDAY SHOWBtCKBnwiw | RiUHnyworth in

Foster Wheeler NineBeaten By NationalLead By 7-5 Score

CARTERET—Poster Wheeler'*nine dropped a 7 to 5 tussle toNational Lead of 'Perth AmboyMonH»y night at Perth Amboy ina rejritlnr P. A. Industrial Leaguegame. A big four-run rally In tb«fifth frame decided the Iwue.

National U a JA.B. R, H

Connor*, 2b b 0Signorelli, cf 4 8Hcenan, c 8 1Stumph, Ito

221

1 1B. Bodnar, 3b :.... 3 1 2Miller, p 4 (Koblo'ski, sa 4 0 (iSchnnek, If .'. 4 0 0Mervin, rf 4 1 2

37 1 10Poitar-W1<«*lcr

A.B. R. H.T. Bahris, 2b 5 1 2Nascak, If 3 0 1Mftroka, m i 0 0Skroposki, 3b 5 1 3Steteko, p 4 0 0llhrin; 0 ^ =•.-."*• 1 1J. Bodnar, cf 8 1 1

l 1 0 0Hudyniak, l b ...i 3 1 1G. Balaris, rf 3 0 1

, rf 1 0 0

V 37 6 10Score by Innings:

National Lead .. 002 040 100—7Foste-Wheelor .. 032 (MM 000—5

Errors: Skroposki; Three-baseHits: J. BalarJB, Skroposki; Two-buse Hits: Hudyniak, H«enan;Sacrifice: Nawak; Double Play:SkropOBki to J. Balaria to Hyiiy-niak; Struck Out By: Miller, 7, byStcUko 4; Bases on Balls Off: Miller S, off Steteko 2; Hit by Pitch-er; ihy Stetzko (S. Bodnar) 2;Umpires: Smoyak and Giuffre.

Pirates Win 2d InRow, Top Ukes' BoysChib By 5-1 Score

CARTERET—The Pirates con-tinued on thqir winning streak inthe National Baseball Iieapue bydefcatintr the IlkPs Hnye Club, 5to 1, this wook at the Park Field.As a result of their second straightvictory the Pirates hold first placein Ilir league standing.

Tilt box score:Plrilet

A B. R. H.Shanlcy, If 4 1 1Plata, rf ...'. 4 2 1Shomsky, ss 2 © IMoskay, 3b 4- 0 MElliott, lb 3 1 0Myers, cf 3 1 1FiUpatrick, c 3 0 0Hynn, 2b 3 0 «Cinrta, p 3 0 1Seilierl S I 0 0

Sc*n» from "Two Girl, and • Sailor," on* of tha b*it muiiculiof th« J"!»r, now showinf »t the Majaitie Theiitre, Perth Amboy.The picture i> recommended (or everyone «i It i> entertainmentwith a capital "E" from itart to finiih.

30 6< 6Uke.

A'JB. R, H.Kiiskiw, a 0 0Mynio 2 0 0Dcrcwicz 2 0 1Maslwck 3 0 0Hiiriynick 3 0 1IJtUR $ 0 0

If 1 1Tornarusky I 0 0Elko 2 0 ITesky 0 0 0Wolansky 1 0 0

23 1 4Score by innings:

Uken 010 0<M) 0—1Pirates ..._ 001 SOI 2—5

Nmpires: Heilman, Muchin andBicsel, ' "

Early Bobber ^Indians oi the Amazon region*

knew about the substance that cameto be called rubber, and had used itfor centuries before European cm-querors get toot on the land. Fromcute made In certain trees, the na-tives learned, dripped a milky fluidthat would harden when exposed tosunlight or to th« smoke of theirfires, By pouring, the fluid overmolds they contrived to shape crudejars and 4hoes. They discovered thatarticles ot do thing coated with thamilky mass were waterproof, thathalls made of it would bounce.

LEGAL NOTICES

NOTICE OF PIIBM4' »AI,UTO WHOM IT MAY C'ONCRUN:

Al a rOKular mcellMK "I llif (?nnn-I i>f the Borough nf riiripwl linlfl

.liimi :!1. 1941, 1 was illr«cl«il to ml-\'prll«f! the fact that on Wednesday

v f>, 1M<, tliv Mayorunit Council ivlll moot nt 8:D0 I1. M.h the Ooiirfell Chanihrrs, Muiiicipul'jullilliifr, Oooki1 AVMIIIO, Cartoret,N. J., nnii cxpiiso and sell at imbllcnnln and to tint hlRhral lilfliJer iu:conlliiK; Id liTinn nf »H]C .in flip with

Im HIIIIIIIKII Ol«rk iiptn to limpficlinn ttud to hii inihlluiy rend prior:n HUlo, IJOIS »2-»:I iii Hlock 27-,Uornu^h (if ('artornt AHiicHHiTit'nt

Taltp fnrlhpr notion that tha Cnr-crcl Horougli Council hns, liy renn-

liitlun iin.l iriirsiiant to law, llxcrl AMI I n i I>I i I HI pflon at which sulil InlnIn sniil 1)1.irk will !..• suhl totfctluT^Yitll nil oilier uctu!!:: pertinent;

minimum prlcu IIFIIIK |U(M).IIOI'IIMIH uf iiicimrliiK ilci'd nnil

.. thin nftle. Kslil l(it» In.iilii block If oolil on terms will-ciulre IL .luiYii payment of Ji27 ill,hi! balance oi' purrhaso pric:-. !:; '"•

imld in i!qual monthly InstullmcntHif (nil.Oil IIIIIH InteruHt mid otherIcrniH provided for. In Contract of

Tuko furthur iiuticu unit at Fidlrtmile, or miy dnto to wlileli It maybe adjourned the Mayor und Cr.un-cll restrvcJ! the rlglrt In Its discre-tion to ri'jf'.'t any iinn or all bldnnnd IO'HOII nalil lots In siiltl block tusuch bidder as It may Bilcct/dueroffarii being (civen to torma andmnnnp.r nf payment In cuao ooe ormore Dtjnlmuni blila sliull be rc-

Upon acceptance of the minimumbid, or bid above minimum by theMayor nnd (Council Bnrt tho payjiienlthcrpof by the purchaser accordingto Hie manner uf purchase In ac-cordance wilh Urnw of imlc on file,the Borough of Cartc'ret will delivera Bargnlii and Sale Deed for said

' AUGUST J. PEnRY,Borough Clerk.

T.iiie fulv-irtlsed June 2J and'June30, im, In the Carteret Press.'

LEGAL NOTICES

AN OIUHNANCK AtlTIHOltJZlNOTHE IMUM19V10MRNT OH1 CEllTAINHOAtiX IN THE BOltOIHlll OFOA.RTKI1KT ANP HUOVIMNU KOItT U B ^•lNA lc!rfo or rtm OOSTHTHiEHKOK

BE IT OHIVA1NKI), 'by the Mayorand Council of tin- Itorougli of Car-ttret, Hint:—

Hectluii I. That all of HudxonStreet I'roin Koci.sfiVclt Avetiu<> loCilirtuni' Avbnut', ami nil uf CliionniAvenue from 1linlnriii Hti'-'ct to Middlesex Aniiiii', bi< inrnium-ntly Im-proved 11y siiifiuliiB ndinu Hccoi'illna:lo plans and BpeclAcatlnnit Hiibmltteilby tl»> Itorougb of ('artaruf: ttiatfurfjllel -Hie liiIeiH.jctlun itf IICIIIMIIAvenue and Whlttler Htrcet be re-surfmeii according to plans and«p«cMcatlons auutiiltted'by the Bor-

Nallon'i BUnetIn 1941, there were 6,822 minei,

an advance ot 17.1 per cent over1939. Little change has taken placeBubBtquently. .

ISELIN-THEATRE

OAK TREE ROADPhon. Met. « - l H |

today and Saturday ,1 , "SHINE ON,

HARVEST MOON"

"Charlie Cli.n in Th.Secret Service"

Sui<iay tad Monday

"SONG OP RUSSIA"*u

" T

SUN., MON., TUES., WED.

yjfAY RHVTHH

CHMUS' 8L0«l»

f a W I N G E R - D e HAYEKE M I ' R O C H E S T E R W . H IU U H O R N E - H W I S C O T T

mti WALKER • Ktt BLUE

fT«m, DORSEJ«dORCH.' v — l'lu. —

Louis Allbritton - Robert Pagr

"Her Primitive Man"" " " S T A R T S THURS. ~~

Lajrd Crefar - Merle Oberon

>'THE LODGER"Donald O'Connor

"THIS u the LIFE"

oiif h nf ('urlttrot; thai further, tiealconthif? be appllci) to perHhing Ave-nue, upon Hint, portion of nald gtreetthiil lies between Itoone'wlt Avenuenhil Hcrfren Htree.l; ami n»»l coat-IIIK I"'- UIIIIIIIM! In Hharul Htrocl. irpnnllutl portion of »nld Htrpot that Henbetwefii 1'ershlUK Avenue Hnti U'kkAvenue; :md non.1 ciiatlng be apj>1lndlu I.IHIIH KtroiH.

Heetlon 2. Thai Hie i^llmiUcJ comof Hiilil Improvements will be SUi,-(il)ii IMI fin,1 Hit nnlrt "inn iif'JIii.Oll.D.W)he nnd 1B hereby appropriated, to111t-ft Ihc l o a n uf siilil ImprnvemcntK.

Wcctloii 3. That for Hie purpose ofpuyliiR the costs lo be liofnt TorBUM linprnyotnentii, tl\i> funrin indiieKViillublfi heretofore for projectH ofImprovement' under the sponnor-uhlp of tlje BoroUKli of Onrleret,wilh anil In cnnjunctlnn of theWorkB F r o J e ' t Adnilnlntratlon.which Works I'rpldot Artinlnlstia-lion has since B C T tUscontlnilsxl,)<>»vlntr 'in unejUH'iiritMl !•«pitRI fiiniiof |llt,!lfiO85, *hlcli Hum th«refore1,1 nut being used, rhln imuxpfliiii'rtHum bi< und It U hereby now insideav:ill»blo for this purpose.

Section I. TlmC the balance ofSt,i>:!S.l(», needed to and for the pur-pose of paying the, coatu of theailmve Impirtivetnentti, lie KIKI theiiuino HIIUII bo ralRtd by Hond An-tlclpHtlon N<iton, to run nut luuxerIIIHII l^'cenidei' 31, 19H iind to benrnnl more than the JeKiil rate ofInterest. '

Section fi. This ordintince allu) 1lnkn effiict InimcilUtcly upon properadoption und publlfiUlon ot namoHi'iordins to law.

Approved: .1. W. MITTUCH.Mayor.

Al'til ST .1. .PKKRY,HoruiiKli Clork.

lint id June 28, 1SHI.SldTlCK

Tin' ruiriolng ordinance was In-trnihued HI an adjourned meetingof tin- Mayor and -Oniinf 11 of theKorouich of Carteret on June 'ii,1914 when It was adopted and ap-proved on first reading. .

The said ordinance will be con«ld-«rea (or Httcpnd raiding aud finaladoption at a. regular meeting ofthe Mayor and Council to be held atthe Council Chambem, Cooke Ave-nue., OarteiBt, N. .]., on Wedne»day,July &th, \*U at 8:00 F. Mi B.W.T.whon alk, pergonx Interested will be£lven an opiKirlunlly lf> be heard

AUUUST J. PEltltY,•' Clerk.

Empire RAHWAY

FRI. to SUN.

Anna Neagle, Richard Greon in

"THE YELLOW CANARY"

Gloria Jean in

"PARDON MY RHYTHM"

wilh Bob Croiby and Orchmlra

Sxt. - Sun. Mat.—4 Cartoon.

M * It, J. f . *. t-HI*v. TODAY aud SAT.

Betty Grable • Martha Raye

"Pin Up Girl"In Technicolor

— And —

"Showboat Serenade"In Technicolor

and other *hort tubjcctlFRI. - SAT.—ChapUr 12

"THE PHANTOM"SUN. and MON.

Joel McCrea • Maureen O'Hara

"Buffalo l l l l ". in Technicolor

~ Ami —

"Hat Clieck Honey"— v/itk —

Giaca MepanaM L*OQ Errol

TUES-WipiContinuoui Mai. from 2 P. M.

Tallulah WlllianBankbeaJ Bendli

"Chip .Offff ffmi-^%«a —

Coflior . rVO l T l

Block"

Donuld O'Coflior . P e « y IW»d. MM O»ly—Ch«|>t.

'Tk* Tl»«r Wom«n"Dithu to La4ta« ffotik Dayi

STATE THEATREy WOODBRIDCE, k J. 7 ,V

. - TODAY and SAT. f ! 'A«otb«r Bit HU1

wilh Rita HAYWORTH • G « « KELLYpi., *Um!l HAYDEK I .

' f i - r i iu lm;

K,«

Crew^ntFor almost two y«ar« r»dlo

myntrry fnnit liavt beenJchiHednnd thrilled by him. Now Colum-bia is giving picture fan* the Mineopportunity on the screen o/ thtCrescent Theatre. We refer, ofcourse, to "The WhUtier," Mm*mysteriouB man of shadowland intlic picture of the nomo imme cur-rently tellihg the shocking dremaof a iimn who made a terrifyinfcdoBl with dpath. Richard Dix, thepkture'a star, in that man.

In its transition to the screen,"The Whistler" lives up to its airreputation. It clicks in every de-partment which fans demand oftheir myntorics. It has suspense,twists and turns of plot besides anoriginal and though provokingiilca on which it* action is based.

DitmaiWith the rave« of Hollywood's

preview critics reaching an unpre-cedented crescendo of enthusiasm,it become* even more apparentthan ever why 20th Century-Fox'sfilmissation of Maxwell Anderson'sBennatiunul Broadway stage hit,

t e Eve Of St. Mark," openingi<\i at the Ditmas Theatre, wa«

destined to bp one of the mostimportant and eagerly-awaitedscreen events of the year,

Featuring Anne, Baxter, WilliamGythc and Michael O'Sliwi, andwith a brilliant supporting cast,"The Eve Of St. Mark" is being:acclaimed the greatest emotionalexperience to dome out of thinwar, and the most impelling ro-mance ever screened.

Majei t ic"Two Girls and a Suitor," the

new Mflrii-fioldwyM-Mdyer musi-cal which opened yesterday at theMajestic Theatre, is ono of thoserare films about which a reviewertie mi not hesitate to use all thesuperlatives in the dictionary.

It's one of the best muslaals ofthis or any other senaon. Half-a-rtozc.n stars bring it to excitingscreen life under thp superb di-

GARAGE ENTEREDAVENEL— A garage, owned by

Oscar M. Larire, 41 Chase Ave-nue, was ransacked Satjrday andthe following articles stolen: anall-glass oil lamp; a brass lumpand a box of glass marbles. Tl}earticles were valued ut ten dol-lars by the owner.

rection of RieHard Thorp,, :||just a» superb product inn iseph Pasternak.

Strand*Ontiof a fantastic, inn. i

yet ncverihelen attunl nn itual—«ra of crime, 20th r,,',.Pox haft fashioned one of 11/exciting picture* of ih,. ,"Roger Touhy, Oaiiptter!"

This in the story of gin,, 1gun molls *lnfl Wack spdan „.

imcked history -pf Tnuhi,Public Bnemy Nuwhn- n,Nun»b«r 87U, Jollet pi>toughnst of the tough, Tiiuiihis empire with the iron i,,;tenor.

NEWARK MAN FINEDWOODBRIDGEMien,,,, u

ington, 40, ia negro, of :;M 1,Street, Newark, » u rMI,,|placed on probation for m,and ordered t« gtay mil .,f \.bridge Town»hip, when Lfound guilty of Indecent ,..,,,,after he appeared before I;,, „Arthur Brown. The CIHIM,!M

was Joseph Horyath, of ,\i ,,Avenue, Aveneft 0-ffnci••.< \\r

Romond and Fred Loiilm,the Biicst,

G. O. P. CLUB HOSTHBWAREN — Pm-.nl, h,

Mrs, Dnniel V, Ru«h w. 1 ;at « card party, Friday nn,!.,auspices of the Sewarcn I:.,.can Club, Inc., at the I nWater Club, Mrs. A. W. :.\was awarded the door pri/. 1were eight tabled in play .n,,|scores were made by [l:u.soy, Willfltti J." Bnriin, M,linm Willett*, Mrs. Jcmc].!, 1,Mm. Julian Grow, Mr. ,Herbert B. Rankin m,,Bums. The next-card pmbe held July 14 with Mr.F. J. Adams us hohts.

i \ | , |

While more than 40 milhsons are covered by iin<ment insurnnco, bfincht p.i,for the fiscal y(Jar ltd.; I;only $176 million accin.li'figures of the. Municipal Aministration. Thus is due -fact that um'niployn, 1shrunk to insjgiifirati' p.tions, says the New ,Jci < ,pnyern Associatiun.

50% of worsted yum •..dered by WPB for the Aim

T H E R T R E S

IDE'S

Madiion Ate. n«TH AMeor 4 pioa

TODAY THRU WEDNESDAYJUNE ALLYSON

GLORIA DeHAVEN

VAN JOHNSONJIMMY DURANTE-1

GKA( IE AM-ENLENA HORNS

ni

-COMTANION B I T -

AHACKTHE INVASION OF

tiSW BE1TUN

II

ewrnwuiiwrnmimm

7 Day* SUrtin« Thuri.,July 6

STORY OF DR. WASSELL™ 2ND BIG HIT _="STARS ON PARADE"

SiJumdENTIRE WEEK STARTING W A Y

HUSTON

POSTER ^ pnmat .

MetAOLSN'1

LOW

ANDWIW8

BUY WARBONDS Al

THIS MAIM