Costs Up If ife-:;., PFolhRises Boys' Camp Grabau Is …...^!y t'^'jji'^:'?!?l •: •;: ?i-^ '...

6
^ ! y t ' ^ ' j j i ' ^ : ' ? ! ? l : ; : i - ^ ? ' - l; - " * ' i ; ' ; . •'•'•••;••-.''.'• '*••''. ri .'**'•'.•'.•' ' " " " " - . . ' . . . ' i ' ' - . ' " "~~ r ^:'' ••-' : ' f ... '''•''. •*' -' ' " ^ 7 " : • •""• ... •• ''.•-'•' V '.'"'•..'. . . 1 . '"'-"'-' •'.••••'' -*• ••',•.'•'.'• ,...'.•••. '•• "'•;•-'.'•• •••.! •• * j - ' !' '•.,.. ,: ' . ' '-^—^".' " ? ~ ~ ~- i s ' r f j ^ ^ p r i p R l i l l l t s i p - i f ^ /, r... '••>.-• •'.;>• GARWOOD r/' KENILWORXH **. ..-••.--' ..» -.11 2,632 Auto U«e JERSEX^JTHURSDAY, JULY 5, 1945 FIVE cmts .•.•-*••" «'*•* ^ Town'Committee To Study Warren Bros. Application Despite a favorable recommenda- tion by the.Board of Adjustment, the •• ••••. v mi: •• m on. an application of Warren Bros. Corp. for permission to use. a'.build- ing at 24 South avenue,' west, for the manufacture of ice cream and candy j • moulds of metaL ' . .'; Ifayor George E. Osterheldt, who presided,' suggested that, a transtriptj Of the minutes of the public h~ J ''conducted last week by the J=ta Adjustment on tne warren :tor.o._ application be obtainedj and If •.•The Cta&Iekd ,&ost Office did i S^a»|»,^t«as«BBsiincedyesterdBy by Mrs. Itose - D'Arcy, acting .post- master. -UptoSoon Tuesday, a total of 2,632 of the $5 stamps bad been »ld. representing a. gain of more-than 2400 stamps during, the past Sale of Use stamps still is reported brisk. y.-.. Jghn E. Manning, Collec!tor_gf_Jn? [sfaSeaifiat bota casfi*aHfflaa p n a t ties are provided for-'«wtorists wrhd :-fail to pay this tax. A checkup of. motorists is expected to be started at any <inc tp see that the new stamps atejaffixed^o the front windshields o l e a i s . . , . • . • ' . • • Costs Up ife-:;., Studied before rendering a d This suggestion was. concurred " fellow* committeemen.' At the request of Mayor Oster eldt, Walter "Warren, ajjartner, in the firm, i/as present at Tuesday ~i ght's meeting, gave a verbal account I the! Relief r«jij recent hearing, relating teat a peti-! "««* *-^v* •tion was presented by nearby resi- ! dents' objecting to heavy industry in. that neighborhood. Mr. $1001 In <** pointed out that there would be bration and little noise audibl the street when installation of .proof construction is 'Completed itt approved j The committee nf HO VI- from ouad-1 Marked Over '44 • Relief expenditures "in Cranford during other 1 ...-•..- .-,• v- Thesejncludcd the application! StanlejL»MacCIaryto-erect a *-cedar picket fence along the sil of his property at 18 Beech and the application of W. S. V 'for permission toconvert hi*J)j IS Columbia avenue froma" two-family dwelling-. The committee also gran' : mission to the Hareo Chemi pany of Newark to use —338-North-aveflue^easti-w cently purchased, for the compounds for the removal 'providing the-concern local ordinances covering operation. The Newark stated' that it had been . the same., .business in years without complaint!,, seated, that the firm contem .' placing the corrugated^Jron $684JM, an increase of S100 over l ] total for tfie same period during 1944, according 4o the monthly^ reports;'' of; Edward Monteriecpurt, director of re~ jlieC Expenditures from- January' "* June, 1344, were rustic feline street. ne. at] to a per- Coin-] at • There %ere three caseS'bn relief in January." 1945, inFebruary and April ! there were' four cases and in March, I May and June there were five cases on the township relief rolls.- There were but three cases on Mr. Montene- courfs rolls during January, Febru- ary, March and April, 1944 and in May and June this number increased four cases. , Unexpected JUness of the working *- re ~jwKmterof sriarge family can put a family on the relief'tolls, despite the war-time job. .boom, Mr. Montene- court explained this week In'releas- ing the reports from hiy office. There of spot, with of letter ucting tot V,' letter re- .<• A. On veconunendation of —Tax-IJett-€o»mitteei-aH-«U' tax arrearage including, inl taxes for 1945 on lot 2, b be cancelled on receipt of a ment of $8,500, and a proximately one acre of th< dering on the Rahway Ri' property" isTocatea on'Lexi nue, backing up to the ri Referred to committeo of Special and .will pay- ap- ot bo'r- The m ave- has also been an increasing number of cases of desertion and. the townships Is responsible for the care, of a family until the deserting father or husband is apprehended and forced-togive part of his uav lo tl >•— . L j f c . Montepecourt stressed the fact that, plentiful jobs do. not mean- the complete disolution of the relief work since -there are and always will be several families who can obtain no support because of illness, age, or dis- ability of a physical nature. There are and will continue to be the re- sponsibility of the township, he said. . - r ~ whoie^ War Loan Drive were offers of $1,000 fro* Francis [ 8 6 P . C . Over Adams of Newark for lot 1 * located i on tincolh avenue and Thoj and an offer of $250 from Snyder for lot 6, block street. Also referred to tee was an offer of $139 : (Continued on page I : street,! The Cranford-Kenilworth area had Arbor j Brtimit-1 juilding; [exceeded its Seventh-War Loan quota j of $625,000 by SG percent at the close of vbusiness Monday, it- was nn- .' nouneed Tuesday 'by B6bert E. Crane, finance total ^ .- v, "-.-.•'•-*-• . . - Sunnyacres Baby Paracii On Sunday Residents of c. ft;--' Baby Parade and picni&fcponsorwt: by the Sunnyacres Improiment As-1 sociatlon . Stewart McFaoen of the, association is general carman of the events. *. ; of 4,689 bonds have been sold in the i two communities with the overall . sales amountingto$1,163,565. ; Sale of "E" bonds totaled $274,337 ' as of Monday night with 4,279 pieces sold. Mr. Crane reported. While the .'• local quota is $325,000, the amount f purchased here to "date sets a new record. When; final tabulations arc \ in from plants operating on the pay- ' roU deduction plan, the met «E" bond .! stated. While the Seventh War Loan drive '- (Continued on page ten) Large Group Leaves ;to Begin Army Training Send Your Blood Gapt. T. R'5 Austin of the Army Medical Corps on Okiriawn, one of"the_first Cranford. physicians J i l i i r a ; wri'tcj thnf ho . . - , ' ' . ' . - • -. , , . : . . J'liolo liy W. A.' Fischer-'. Pictured above are. members of the latest group of sclecteees from Board 5, Cra'nfora! Garwood and Chirk, who left for induction into the -armed forces Saturday morning following send-oft* ceremonies at the municipal building. Speakers were Mayor G<v>rpi> v ~ *' " "" - —•—' <•"•'. v 77 —•- - - «.•- - .._-- v l, i r • i.i •! n rn 11 i i n ii i ii, i.y—•T-« *niu«>TU|^v ^ m • i n r a u u i «^>\Jii»-\J. 5; the JRev, Frank. M. Sherlock, rector of Trinity,Episcopal Church, and Herbert R..Winckler, chairman of the' send-ort conunittce.- ' . ••.••' : . ., in. the group are, left to right: Front row—Sidney Jones, Joseph Cannariuto of Garwood; Art-' thqny Mazzeo and Jack Nelson of Clark; back row-^Wal-trr Hastings, Jr., of "Ganvood, RobOrt Degenhardt, Thomas DiJories, Jr., Petejr Johnson, Robert : Baker of Garwood, William Glazer, Angela Aliwiontl of Oarwaod, lUcluurd Jenklnson, Mario Ben intentCf' James.. H.-. Waterhouse; "BernardVE.-. Tread way"oS- G&r- wodd, Russell jDitzel, Petertfinesl of Clark and Henry M.iin. ' ' PFolhRises Boys' Camp New Float, Dock Completed; Record , Season Anticipated .The first contingent of campers, 36 strong will-TWove^into-the-Grairford- Boys' Camp &t Silver Lake, near Hope, Sunday; afternoon. The event will mark the reopening of the camp alter two years of inactivity, caused by,the war 1 . Coa<3T J.' <5eth Weekley, director, William Moorhead, assistant direc- tor, and their corps of councilors left in^^-Smtm^gBli^S^P^^Po^ the" finishing touches- on the' camp property. preparatory to the openihg. nccone, .' several omcers and directors of the camp association, aided by J. Walter Coffee, local carpp manager, and Ro- tarians and Lions and their wives were at the- camp over the week-end and yesterday. Anew float was com- pleted yesterday, and the building of the dock is almostl finished. The kitchen and dining'room in the main-lodge have been renovated, 12 new beds and mattresses have been purchased for replacements, grass hais been cut on the-camp property and the screening pn.the cabins arid lodge Is being repaired." ' The camp is filled "to capacity and there is every indication that d record will be established- for a' six wcefts' season. Campers who do not "have •transportation to 'the ' camp Sunday have-been requested-to contact 'Clar- ence Fritz, -president of the associa- tion immediately. Mr. Fritz has reminded campers that they«-must •take-one red and one blue ration stomp for each week they are in camp; As food has been ob- tained only, for the campers,- parents framt Schuler served js color bearers. —Aninrnnceinent"'wds made that the post's service officer will be at V. F. W. headquarters, 7 South avenue, west, on the second and fourth Wed- nesday evenings of eaclv inonth to assist vetei*uha and their families, planning to visit nave been requested to.take their lunches. The first meal to be served will be Sunday evening. e t |> ilayor GeArge E. Osttieldt and township officials have to' attend the Celebra Judges at the Baby Patrick J. Grail, Mrs. J and Clarence .Fritz. Th .get- underway .at.11 a. invited' and the| will be: Stanley' rade will ^ ^ -••;;- Children of all ages wi Classes include curria bicycles, wagons. Coats marchers. Prizes will . each class. More th, took part in last year's larger crowd is expecte The Cranford High under direction of Louis lead .the parade and at the affair. Color Gerhardt Muller, Eugi Robert Richards. - • An-old-fashioned famjp: picnic win Notes About Local Residents In Nation $Armed Forces Charles cL Harris, Jr., son of C. C. , west, has rrit.'TTnfrili- ton Field. Calif., where he Is tiosed u-ith the Army -Air Uorp"S." mi-.. m ir .-X 1 - be held at 2:30 p. m. a Walnut avenue and provided for the ch Auto Stamp Stften James B. Dean of 5 £ f ^ Federal Auto Tax Stufc fjron>_.his car. while ' the Village §§fe^ffiWl};ii^ 'X.^>i'^>M^U^**^>ia^.'M,-.;;.;.^4*tW^^^^''*'?, : ;livUj,^^ sUU^j^j . . . . . . . . ( , ... • . . . 'U .'. . , .Voehr and base for the 513 Air- Signal Company's Softball team in tee 13ih Airtwrne Division Troops Softball League is Cpl. George Gabriel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Gabriel of 2252 Demaody street. His team aapi holds second place. Ho is a messber of a wire-laying crew and has served 2fi months. A student at Cranford High School before entering he is "at Auxerre, Franc<f, His brother, t e grovetoff will be > !jn. Every Donald L. Reichelt, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Reichelt of 305 Orange avenue, has reported to the pre-flight at Maxwell Field. Ala., to ! in the Army Air Corps. ' Pic Wellingtoa-C'Van Gorden, the \ last man to enlist In the army before Village,Ute draff Irom Central New York at B e n of 5 •&.„„ reported to police yestpny-that his [Syracuse in 1W0, has arrived home was stolen!tospend a furlough with his parents, ;vas parked night. Mr. and ijrs. Frank Efinger -of 165 Arbor street. Overseas three years, he was taken prisoner in North Africa on December "-25r = '1942 and was- a one-half yearsO Schuler, a member of tho famous Wth Division; arrived home from combat in France and Germany and is spending a 30-day furlough with his mother, |Mr$. Anna Schuler of 20 Lincoln avenue. He went" overseas in February and ex- pects to return to-,octlpn In the Paci- fic -Thontre of War. 1st. -Lt. Michael J. Botint, son of Mr. and. Mrs. Michael J. Bolint of 241 North avenue, west, has arrived at Randolph Field' at Texas. He was formerly at the Air Field at Liberal, Kansas, S'Sgt. William T. Sprole, husband of the former Carol Caldwell of 0 Norman place, has ajrived at Camp Butner, N. C, for reassignment. A veteran of the invasion at Luzon, he holds the Silver Star with an Oak Leaf Cluster, tho Asiatic-Pacific cam- paign ribbon and the Philippine Lib- eration, ribbon. - He, was a squad leader Jn tho paratroopers. Cpl. Albert D'Alessandria, son of (Continued on page ten) V. F. W. Obligate Capt. N. R. Fiske Post, 335; V.F.W., obligated these four new members at its meeting Tuesday nicht: Richafd Schuler, Edward S. Spinner, Edward R. Cosmos arid Herbert 0. Hazen. John-fannacconc, Jr., abux>was'aguest at the meeting. " Commander-Simon E. Klundcr and Richard . F. Dowdell, commander of Union Coiuvty V. F. W. Council, were elected »3 delegates to the National Schotz and John V. Winter were designated, as alternates. •. Donations were voted to tho Sal- vation Army" and" "to the Veterans' Hospital Cigarette Fund. A letter was received from John Kaiser, now in Cairo, Egypt, requesting a mem- bership application blank, The post participated, in last night's Sellers Installed Rotary President Succeeds W. Britton, Honored At Meeting Carroll-K. Sellers-was installed as •president""of the Cninf'orrt Rotary Club, succeeding Winchester Britto.tj, Jr., at Ihstnllatlon ceremnq!es_Jakt Thursday noon at the weekly lunch- eon meeting in Trinity parish house. Mr. Sellers is Police Court, Judge in Cranford, Civilian Defense Com- mander, past commander of Cranford Post, 212, American Leg ion, and ac- tive in other community affairs. Mr. Britton was presented witha past' president's jewel by Henry W. Whipple", chairman of the-past presi- dents' committee;. in appreciation of the service' he has given the club during the pasfyepr. Mr. Whipple congratulated Mr./Britton';on'his.rec- ord, mentioning the winninc of the Rotary" International President's Award hy t.hn local club during his sen ted last week. The retiring-president thanked his fellow officers for 1944-45v committee chairmen and every member of the service club for their cooperation in carrying out Rotary's theme uf serv- ice in such a manner as which en- abled the club to win the awJ: d, based on-community service. Mr; Whipple was in chaw of the induction, ceremonies and the officers and their installing pa.^t presidents are as follows: President Sellers, by Charles M. Ray; vice-pre-Hdrtit, Wade H. Poston,"by Dr. Rowland I'. Blythe; secretary, Harold M. Wilson," reelcct- ed, by Dr. Cordon. L. Peters: treas- urer, John Cron, reelccted, by Wil- liam J, Willicy; member of board of directors. Mr! Britton. hy I'.trtrlt J. Grail; member of board, Ernest Trub- enbach; byCharles E. Doolcy; mem- bers of the board, Norman Glbbs and Joseph Caruso, by Mr. Whipple. Mr. Whipple, ,who offered tno an- nual'historian's report, was renamed th that office. Joseph Minton wag (Continued on page ten) . Grabau Is Missing Coxswain On Duty With Pacific Fleet; No Details Given Mr. and'Mrs. Arthur Grabau of 38-Henley- avenue hovo' tepoived-word from" the War Department that hy son,- Wesley "Arthur Grabau, cox- swain, U.SJN., is missing In, action, in the Pacific Theatre " of War, The telegranr -arrived, laaLweek. and was confirmed in a'message from the gov- ernment this week;. * - The local boy left for duty-With Pacific Fleet in May, 1M4;—No infor- m"' iiittKJK3 ing. 'Ho entered' the U v .S._Nayy.by enllstmontjnjpeccmbop, 1041, a week before the Pearl Harbor attack, nn«l with the Atlantic -Fleet until a year ago. r , • Coxswain'• Gfab'iiU isa nati.Ve of High Wcwark Jind . -(eft a Newark School to enlist in the Navy. ^ dition to his parents, he has two 'sis- ters, Phyllis and Carol. Fire Loss $8,565 In First Six Months Property loss by lire.in pranftjrd during the" first half of this yeiir amounted to $8,565, an increase' of $6,640 over the. saipe period last year according to tlie semi-annual report of Fire Chief Hownrd Sehindler, sub- mitted to. the. Township Committee Tuesday night by Fire Commissioner J. W. Doran. There have been }45 alarms, 38 general nnd 107.still, thus-far this year, as compared with 130 alarms in the first half of 1044, of which 38 d .wicre general and 04 were "still. ~' The prop follows; 23 alarms for fires in dwell- ings or buildinus, $8,425; 3 burners, $10; 12 for autos, $105; and one fire in a bulldozer with n loss of $25. The'loss last year was as foU . (Continued on paoe ten) and his men are working 18 to 22' hours .a day, seven .djiys a 'week, and that never in his life ' u ,has^ he faced, such wounds as the . casualties that be Is treating. "You can't- picture what our wounded look llkojifter 10 to 20 '^teyji ~L life i" a .'fO'i J!?).? nnt ' ""thctTa fecsh J^o.Und, 1^. \v that- physicians like. Dr. Austin are doing. Blqod.' plasma pro- vides a lift of life-giving fluid for a bordcr-l.lno Case. The Cranford .Chapter, American Red Cross, Still -needs donors for the vlsitijjf the mobile.unit to Cranf6rd--on-•'• Monday, July 10. Cull CRariford "6-0671.. And if you've registered, ~idou't t l ices Independence Day Speaker Call* sit I Essential for Peace We must stnrt here. ai. poll.prejudices, discrimination, and ofhetahihRs that divide us £Twe :; war, E. Urncr Goodman" oi NatlortDl. program director Scouts of- America-, night at- the.municipal Independence Day at the II Honor Roll. *. " T h e program;" than 500people; '"wall •Cranford Chapter 3, u.'id.i, and U. iwison. h-ting. president of the chapjter, master of ceremonies.' half hSprband Concert under direction qf-touis P^ the band alsp played, the ment for the National •'Cinii Wei* Amoricn," .Carroll K. Sellers, i Memorial ~ and Independence ,' .Conimtttcc, opened, the prdgwaKl , » . i»«« » ..- »>* i| (oxp.ccssed appreciation, to ... AutO Mishaps Double D> ,d, t6r planhinc last ' In First Half of /45; ^" cc One Pedestrian Killed ^7 ' . . * - . . - ^ . « Automobile accidents are on the Increase in Cranford arid the I$rs"t six manth« "f r<*p"r'M one fatal accident, according to the report of the Cranford Police: One death by automobile was reported in Crnn- ford In 1944. Bath were pedestrian munity. is proud of'every Htnd- girl in h ^ f t try and^'polntcd out'that they ! ln« of their hopes, their dreamSi'«y«ft; '1?%;§i$i t nc ' r to help win the war.. they are tooyoung to have muel in the. making-of-the. peace, not wain to flght another w|iiSr years—they want a •There havtrbech 21automobile ac- cidents during the first six months of i their" normal lives, this year and 22 persons were in-; Mr - Goodman, jured, requiring "-the services of a physician. In the first six months; o f 1044 there were ten accidents and -ten-pcraonj wore injured. fatality did not" coiihe untttthe last; half of the" year. Accidents this year have been as follows:, Jatluary, four accidents and three persons Injuredi Fobruftry^ three accidents ond one person Injured;-! March, twe/ accidents" and three per-1 sons, injured; April,-one accident and one persoA injured; May, three occi- 113 persons injured. -^ "Several of the accidents -were caused 1 by drivers whose residence trained at.Newport, R, I. He serveirfwas not in Cranford. and ope of th* l factors Involved in thp increase in factors Involved in thp increase in , l accidents is the largo'number of war rocket .outlooks which Will dli h N h d » b <> v « °™ »|»™ and ™* t workers drlvinff through Northand of World War works," pointing pieces, mine's and rockets of day hove gone to war. Out get pieces of tomorrow, "he declared, ar* tEe terns of peace which hove 1 'J fashioned at San Foncisco. The and redflaresof arc' casting horizon, looking to when come home. 'he asserted, to a land that vided by prejudices, dlserbttlnatldn "or or the ofher battlesflelda boys are fighting and dying Our rockets of- tomoi l.rbck.et minds, rocket » b <> v « »|»™ ff g .South avenue from defense plants to i ^ mit.onallsrn, into •QioJr foimes. " " ~ ' " ' " :«' Woirdell ^ ^ . ^ ^ DomlnicU DiLollo. 75 years old, of:""™ of the World, ;Wie-n>eakeJ? Uicoln avenue, \ V as killed on Frl- j clnr « 1 - Wc mu st learn tp diy eveniiiK. Miiy 2,-by a bit-i.nd-rq.il - tru * 1 ? ach - -O lhcr ,' .regardless [ driver on Lincoln uvenue. The pt.-li h lice have beet, unablp to approhend ciin anyone in connection with the iiccl- dent thus far ihoutfh the details are i , .e [ nationality, so that ; the whole livc together- in peaee." even those nationsr h;iw bccn our «nomies inn} f dent thus far ihoutfh the details are: } ^ on (lie with police df-partments brought along to Join this great fam- ll Th e i t h itd ll throughout the State and Nation. C. J. Duckworth Reported Improved ' The condition nf-CJnrk John- Buck-; worth, 56, of 311 Manor avenue, who was t'aketutu':Elizabeth 'General Hos- ', pita! on Tuesday' morning in a critical condition suffering from knife, wounds of the. throat, is''reported improved by hospital authorities this morning. The man's wounds, according to i lly. The service star has united all families of this great nation-US < (•Continued on page tan) Community Band Cprrc§ begin Sunday A series of summer Sunday- eve- Injured, man's wife, Duckworth, th»t her (Continue^ on pao*- 1 ten) , on Eastmanrtreei'WM» Mrs. Emma j j un | O r Red Cross in Cranford husband has Building irr First Half of %5 con j Mrs. organization. . 1 i Louis F. Haar, director of i mental music in Cranford; High ! School, is in charge of the concerts/ .'^ i-\:^±?*i:M$zxwi were issued for valuations of $34,800 and tho entire 1044 total of $03,000 in valuations has already been passed with ,every indication of a goodsum- b , mer building season. —Twenty—new—homes— htrve—beerrflssi erected in Cranford thus far this year, Mr. Steele's report shows. . These ore valued at approximately $0,000 each. During the first half of 1044 only, five residences were erected. This year's permits also included six chicken houses, five garages, and oae addition to a factory. The re- With the'relaxing ol (ioVurnment restrictions oii building and the need for supplying small homes for. war- workers, building permits in Criin- ford during the first" half of 1045 reached a total of 85 permits with valuations of $142,155. -' The January to June reports of Building Inspector Eugene E. Steclc far surpass the 1944 mark though they do not touch the records made .during the early part of the wnr when shortages were not acute. Dur^ ing the first half of 1044, 27 permit^] $81,005. i d f l i f $34800 cert Band from personnclpf the drart-'^^^'^lv^i r^_tnr nitrrntlnnf! fn resi- f ||rf j H}^ Srhnni .ftnnrt, "f?rnnfnrd'''•'•'''•-^17?^-"^ dences, JMI indication that .CranJord members of the Union County Sum- people arc beginning tothink of post- ,,, erBant f and Orchestra School In , P"* 1 " "ier Band and Orchestra School In war improvement and are. already Ht}seUc a n d n ny volun-tceV musicians adding porches stairways and other . from cranford who wish to come out improved facilities m their IIOOK-S. .. im , p)ay on Sun< , evcnings . Permits ISSUCKI this y<?ar were ns Ther e will be no rehearsal before th valuations of $1,350; February, five f . O " 0 ^fL Jn "" a /, y i R n WO c -..K t I'ri!f i'?,'! thc ' ' r rs l concert on Sunday but Mr! ""' "' ° " " """•" '""Maar stated this week that he plans permits, $18,850; March, sevenpcr- i i mits and §11,350; April, five permits 15" jlfrniits 31 permits . ynd liuld and $11,425; May,' $I8,O8S, and^J fiituro,« Building activity in Cranford has di fluctuated durinu the wur, accordinK to the type of housing in demund and the materials .availublu. uie rehearsal a week In the nt) .^.^..v,^.Volunteers may-Ksport Sua day evening and then participate lit the 'rehearsals' and concerts the summer. Programs of patriotic ti(mi ' 1 b " nd mus ' e nr « and there were 77 homes built during the of townspeople will be present first six months and there were 10Ui day and throughout " ' permits but the valuations, were; but, display an interest In $356,000 aVno largo apartment plans affaiIrs andtoenjoy music were constructed. y river in the evening.-/ iiiiiiiiSi^S^S^M^^wiiSiM^ *

Transcript of Costs Up If ife-:;., PFolhRises Boys' Camp Grabau Is …...^!y t'^'jji'^:'?!?l •: •;: ?i-^ '...

Page 1: Costs Up If ife-:;., PFolhRises Boys' Camp Grabau Is …...^!y t'^'jji'^:'?!?l •: •;: ?i-^ ' -l;- •"*'i;';. •'•'•••;••-.''.'• '*••''. ri.'**'•'.•'.•'

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GARWOODr/'

KENILWORXH**. ..-••.--' ..»-.11

2,632 Auto U«e

JERSEX^JTHURSDAY, JULY 5, 1945 FIVE cmts

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Town'CommitteeTo Study WarrenBros. Application

Despite a favorable recommenda-tion by the.Board of Adjustment, the

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mi: •• •

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on. an application of Warren Bros.Corp. for permission to use. a'.build-ing at 24 South avenue,' west, for themanufacture of ice cream and candy j

• moulds of metaL ' . .' ;Ifayor George E. Osterheldt, who

presided,' suggested that, a transtriptjOf the minutes of the public h~J''—conducted last week by the J=taAdjustment on tne warren:tor.o._ application be obtainedj and

If

•.•The Cta&Iekd ,&ost Office didi

S^a»|»,^t«as«BBsiincedyesterdByby Mrs. Itose - D'Arcy, acting .post-master. -Up to Soon Tuesday, a totalof 2,632 of the $5 stamps bad been»ld. representing a. gain of more-than2400 stamps during, the pastSale of Use stamps still is reportedbrisk. y.-..

Jghn E. Manning, Collec!tor_gf_Jn?

[sfaSeaifiat bota casfi*aHfflaa p n a tties are provided for-'«wtorists wrhd

:-fail to pay this tax. A checkup of.motorists is expected to be startedat any <inc tp see that the new stampsatejaffixed^o the front windshieldso l e a i s . . , . • . • ' . • • • • • • • • • •

Costs Up

ife-:;.,

Studied before rendering a dThis suggestion was. concurred

" fellow* committeemen.'At the request of Mayor Oster eldt,

Walter "Warren, ajjartner, in the firm,i/as present at Tuesday ~i ght's

meeting, gave a verbal account I the! R e l i e f r « j i jrecent hearing, relating teat a peti-! " « « * *-^v*•tion was presented by nearby resi-!

dents' objecting to heavy industry in.that neighborhood. Mr.

$1001 In

< * *

pointed out that there would bebration and little noise audiblthe street when installation of

.proof construction is 'Completeditt approved jThe committee

nf

HO V I -

fromouad-1

Marked Over '44• Relief expenditures "in Cranford

during

other

1

. . . - • . . - . - , • v -

Thesejncludcd the application!StanlejL»MacCIary to- erect a

*-cedar picket fence along the silof his property at 18 Beechand the application of W. S. V

'for permission to convert hi*J)jIS Columbia avenue from a"two-family dwelling-.

The committee also gran': mission to the Hareo Chemi

pany of Newark to use—338-North-aveflue^easti-w

cently purchased, for thecompounds for the removal

'providing the-concernlocal ordinances coveringoperation. The Newarkstated' that it had been

. the same., .business inyears without complaint!,,seated, that the firm contem

.' placing the corrugated^Jron

$684JM, an increase of S100 overl] total for tfie same period during 1944,

according 4o the monthly^ reports;'' of;Edward Monteriecpurt, director of re~

jlieC Expenditures from- January'"* June, 1344, were

rusticfelinestreet.

ne. at]to a

per-Coin-]

at

• There %ere three caseS'bn relief inJanuary." 1945, in February and April

! there were' four cases and in March,I May and June there were five caseson the township relief rolls.- Therewere but three cases on Mr. Montene-courfs rolls during January, Febru-ary, March and April, 1944 and inMay and June this number increased

four cases., Unexpected JUness of the working

*-re~jwKmterof sriarge family can put afamily on the relief'tolls, despite thewar-time job. .boom, Mr. Montene-court explained this week In'releas-ing the reports from hiy office. There

ofspot,with

ofletter

uctingtot V,'letter

re-

.<• A .

On veconunendation of—Tax-IJett-€o»mitteei-aH-«U'

tax arrearage including, inltaxes for 1945 on lot 2, bbe cancelled on receipt of ament of $8,500, and aproximately one acre of th<dering on the Rahway Ri'property" isTocatea on'Lexinue, backing up to the ri

Referred to committeo of

Special

and.willpay-

ap-ot bo'r-

Them ave-

has also been an increasing number ofcases of desertion and. the townshipsIs responsible for the care, of a familyuntil the deserting father or husbandis apprehended and forced- to give partof his uav lo t l

>•— . L j f c . Montepecourt stressed the factthat, plentiful jobs do. not mean- thecomplete disolution of the relief worksince -there are and always will beseveral families who can obtain nosupport because of illness, age, or dis-ability of a physical nature. Thereare and will continue to be the re-sponsibility of the township, he said.

. - r~ whoie War Loan Drivewere offers of $1,000 fro* Francis [86 P . C . O v e rAdams of Newark for lot 1* located ion tincolh avenue and Thojand an offer of $250 fromSnyder for lot 6, blockstreet. Also referred totee was an offer of $139 :

(Continued on page I

: street,! The Cranford-Kenilworth area had

Arbor jBrtimit-1

juilding;

[exceeded its Seventh-War Loan quotaj of $625,000 by SG percent at the closeof vbusiness Monday, it- was nn-

.' nouneed Tuesday 'by B6bert E. Crane,finance total

^ . - v, " - . - . • ' • - * - • . . -

SunnyacresBaby ParaciiOn Sunday

Residents of

c.

ft;--'

Baby Parade and picni&fcponsorwt:by the Sunnyacres Improiment As-1sociatlon . Stewart McFaoen of the,association is general carman ofthe events. *.

; of 4,689 bonds have been sold in thei two communities with the overall. sales amounting to $1,163,565.; Sale of "E" bonds totaled $274,337' as of Monday night with 4,279 piecessold. Mr. Crane reported. While the

.'• local quota is $325,000, the amountf purchased here to "date sets a newrecord. When; final tabulations arc

\ in from plants operating on the pay-' r o U deduction plan, the

m e t

«E" bond

.! stated. •While the Seventh War Loan drive

'- (Continued on page ten)

Large Group Leaves ;to Begin Army Training Send Your Blood

Gapt. T. R'5 Austin of the ArmyMedical Corps on Okiriawn, oneof"the_first Cranford. physicians

J i l i i r a ; wri'tcj thnf ho

. . - , ' ' • . ' . - • -. , , . : . . J' l iolo l iy W. A. ' F i s c h e r - ' .

Pictured above are. members of the latest group of sclecteees from Board 5, Cra'nfora! Garwoodand Chirk, who left for induction into the -armed forces Saturday morning following send-oft* ceremoniesat the municipal building. Speakers were Mayor G<v>rpi> v ~ *' " "" - —•—'

<•"•'. v

77 —•- - - «.•- - • . . _ - - v — — l, i r • i.i • ! n rn 11 i i n ii i ii, i.y—•T-« *niu«>TU|^v ^ m • i nrau u i « >\Jii»-\J.

5; the JRev, Frank. M. Sherlock, rector of Trinity,Episcopal Church, and Herbert R..Winckler, chairmanof the' send-ort conunittce.- • ' • . • • . • • ' : . .,

in. the group are, left to right: Front row—Sidney Jones, Joseph Cannariuto of Garwood; Art-'thqny Mazzeo and Jack Nelson of Clark; back row- Wal-trr Hastings, Jr., of "Ganvood, RobOrt Degenhardt,Thomas DiJories, Jr., Petejr Johnson, Robert: Baker of Garwood, William Glazer, Angela Aliwiontl ofOarwaod, lUcluurd Jenklnson, Mario Ben intentCf' James.. H.-. Waterhouse; "BernardVE.-. Tread way "oS- G&r-wodd, Russell jDitzel, Petertfinesl of Clark and Henry M.iin. ' '

PFolhRises

Boys' Camp

New Float, DockCompleted; Record

, Season Anticipated.The first contingent of campers, 36

strong will-TWove^into-the-Grairford-Boys' Camp &t Silver Lake, nearHope, Sunday; afternoon. The eventwill mark the reopening of the campalter two years of inactivity, causedby,the war1.

Coa<3T J.' <5eth Weekley, director,William Moorhead, assistant direc-tor, and their corps of councilors leftin^^-Smtm^gBli^S^P^^Po^the" finishing touches- on the' campproperty. preparatory to the openihg.

nccone,

.' several omcers and directors of thecamp association, aided by J. WalterCoffee, local carpp manager, and Ro-tarians and Lions and their wiveswere at the- camp over the week-endand yesterday. A new float was com-pleted yesterday, and the building ofthe dock is almostl finished.

The kitchen and dining'room in themain-lodge have been renovated, 12new beds and mattresses have beenpurchased for replacements, grasshais been cut on the-camp propertyand the screening pn.the cabins aridlodge Is being repaired." '

The camp is filled "to capacity andthere is every indication that d recordwill be established- for a' six wcefts'season. Campers who do not "have•transportation to 'the ' camp Sundayhave-been requested-to contact 'Clar-ence Fritz, -president of the associa-tion immediately. •

Mr. Fritz has reminded campersthat they«-must •take-one red and oneblue ration stomp for each week theyare in camp; As food has been ob-tained only, for the campers,- parents

framtSchuler served j s color bearers.—Aninrnnceinent"'wds made that thepost's service officer will be at V. F.W. headquarters, 7 South avenue,west, on the second and fourth Wed-nesday evenings of eaclv inonth toassist vetei*uha and their families,

planning to visit nave been requestedto.take their lunches. The first mealto be served will be Sunday evening.

e t |>ilayor GeArge E. Osttieldt and

township officials haveto' attend the CelebraJudges at the BabyPatrick J. Grail, Mrs. Jand Clarence .Fritz. Th

.get- underway .at.11 a.

invited'and the|will be:Stanley'

rade will

^ -••;;-

Children of all ages wiClasses include curriabicycles, wagons. Coatsmarchers. Prizes will

. each class. More th,took part in last year'slarger crowd is expecte

The Cranford Highunder direction of Louislead .the parade andat the affair. ColorGerhardt Muller, EugiRobert Richards. -• An-old-fashioned famjp: picnic win

Notes About Local ResidentsIn Nation $ Armed Forces

Charles cL Harris, Jr., son of C. C., west, hasrrit.'TTnfrili-

ton Field. Calif., where he Istiosed u-ith the Army -Air Uorp"S."

mi-..m

ir

.-X1-

be held at 2:30 p. m. aWalnut avenue andprovided for the ch

Auto Stamp StftenJ a m e s B . D e a n o f 5 £ f ^

Federal Auto Tax Stufcfjron>_.his car. while

' the Village

§§fe^ffiWl};ii^ 'X.^>i'^>M^U^**^>ia^.'M,-.;;.;.^4*tW^^^^''*'?,:;livUj,^^sUU^j^j

. . . . . . . . ( , . . . • . . . ' U .'. . ,

.Voehr and

base for the 513 Air-Signal Company's Softball team

in tee 13ih Airtwrne Division TroopsSoftball League is Cpl. GeorgeGabriel, son of Mr. and Mrs. PeterGabriel of 2252 Demaody street. Histeam aapi holds second place. Ho isa messber of a wire-laying crew andhas served 2fi months. A student atCranford High School before entering

he is "at Auxerre, Franc<f,His brother,

te grovetoffwill be >

!jn. Every

Donald L. Reichelt, son of Mr. andMrs. L. O. Reichelt of 305 Orangeavenue, has reported to the pre-flight

at Maxwell Field. Ala., to

! in the Army Air Corps.' Pic Wellingtoa-C'Van Gorden, the\ last man to enlist In the army before

Village,Ute draff Irom Central New York atB e n of 5 •&.„„ „reported to police yestpny-that his [Syracuse in 1W0, has arrived home

was stolen! to spend a furlough with his parents,;vas parked

night.Mr. and ijrs. Frank Efinger -of 165Arbor street. Overseas three years,

he was taken prisoner in North Africaon December "-25r='1942 and was- a

one-half yearsOSchuler, a member

of tho famous Wth Division; arrivedhome from combat in France andGermany and is spending a 30-dayfurlough with his mother, |Mr$. AnnaSchuler of 20 Lincoln avenue. Hewent" overseas in February and ex-pects to return to-,octlpn In the Paci-fic -Thontre of War.

1st. -Lt. Michael J. Botint, son ofMr. and. Mrs. Michael J. Bolint of 241North avenue, west, has arrived atRandolph Field' at Texas. He wasformerly at the Air Field at Liberal,Kansas,

S'Sgt. William T. Sprole, husbandof the former Carol Caldwell of 0Norman place, has ajrived at CampButner, N. C, for reassignment. Aveteran of the invasion at Luzon, heholds the Silver Star with an OakLeaf Cluster, tho Asiatic-Pacific cam-paign ribbon and the Philippine Lib-eration, ribbon. - He, was a squadleader Jn tho paratroopers.

Cpl. Albert D'Alessandria, son of(Continued on page ten)

V. F. W. Obligate

Capt. N. R. Fiske Post, 335; V.F.W.,obligated these four new members atits meeting Tuesday nicht: RichafdSchuler, Edward S. Spinner, EdwardR. Cosmos arid Herbert 0. Hazen.John-fannacconc, Jr., abux>was'aguestat the meeting." Commander-Simon E. Klundcr and

Richard . F. Dowdell, commander ofUnion Coiuvty V. F. W. Council, wereelected »3 delegates to the National

Schotz and John V. Winter weredesignated, as alternates. •.

Donations were voted to tho Sal-vation Army" and" "to the Veterans'Hospital Cigarette Fund. A letterwas received from John Kaiser, nowin Cairo, Egypt, requesting a mem-bership application blank,

The post participated, in last night's

SellersInstalled

Rotary PresidentSucceeds W. Britton,Honored At Meeting

Carroll-K. Sellers-was installed as•president""of the Cninf'orrt RotaryClub, succeeding Winchester Britto.tj,Jr., at Ihstnllatlon ceremnq!es_JaktThursday noon at the weekly lunch-eon meeting in Trinity parish house.Mr. Sellers is Police Court, Judge inCranford, Civilian Defense Com-mander, past commander of CranfordPost, 212, American Leg ion, and ac-tive in other community affairs.

Mr. Britton was presented with apast' president's jewel by Henry W.Whipple", chairman of the-past presi-dents' committee;. in appreciation ofthe service' he has given the clubduring the pasfyepr. Mr. Whipplecongratulated Mr./Britton';on'his.rec-ord, mentioning the winninc of theRotary" International President'sAward hy t.hn local club during his

sen ted last week.The retiring-president thanked his

fellow officers for 1944-45v committeechairmen and every member of theservice club for their cooperation incarrying out Rotary's theme uf serv-ice in such a manner as which en-abled the club to win the aw J: d, basedon-community service.

Mr; Whipple was in chaw of theinduction, ceremonies and the officersand their installing pa. t presidentsare as follows: President Sellers, byCharles M. Ray; vice-pre-Hdrtit, WadeH. Poston,"by Dr. Rowland I'. Blythe;secretary, Harold M. Wilson," reelcct-ed, by Dr. Cordon. L. Peters: treas-urer, John Cron, reelccted, by Wil-liam J, Willicy; member of board ofdirectors. Mr! Britton. hy I'.trtrlt J.Grail; member of board, Ernest Trub-enbach; by Charles E. Doolcy; mem-bers of the board, Norman Glbbs andJoseph Caruso, by Mr. Whipple.

Mr. Whipple, ,who offered tno an-nual'historian's report, was renamedth that office. Joseph Minton wag

(Continued on page ten) .

Grabau IsMissing

Coxswain On DutyWith Pacific Fleet;No Details Given

Mr. and'Mrs. Arthur Grabau of38-Henley- avenue hovo' tepoived-wordfrom" the War Department that h yson,- Wesley "Arthur Grabau, cox-swain, U.SJN., is missing In, action, inthe Pacific Theatre " of War, Thetelegranr -arrived, laaLweek. and wasconfirmed in a'message from the gov-ernment this week;. * -

The local boy left for duty-WithPacific Fleet in May, 1M4;—No infor-

m"' iiittKJK3ing. 'Ho entered' the Uv.S._Nayy.byenllstmontjnjpeccmbop, 1041, a weekbefore the Pearl Harbor attack, nn«l

with the Atlantic -Fleet until a yearago.r , •

Coxswain'• Gfab'iiU is a nati.Ve ofHighWcwark Jind . -(eft a Newark

School to enlist in the Navy. ^dition to his parents, he has two 'sis-ters, Phyllis and Carol.

Fire Loss $8,565In First Six Months

Property loss by lire.in pranftjrdduring the" first half of this yeiiramounted to $8,565, an increase' of$6,640 over the. saipe period last yearaccording to tlie semi-annual reportof Fire Chief Hownrd Sehindler, sub-mitted to. the. Township CommitteeTuesday night by Fire CommissionerJ. W. Doran.

There have been }45 alarms, 38general nnd 107.still, thus-far thisyear, as compared with 130 alarms inthe first half of 1044, of which 38

d.wicre general and 04 were "still.~' The propfollows; 23 alarms for fires in dwell-ings or buildinus, $8,425; 3burners, $10; 12 for autos, $105; andone fire in a bulldozer with n loss of$25. The'loss last year was as foU

. (Continued on paoe ten)

and his men are working 18 to22' hours .a day, seven .djiys a

'week, and that never in his life'u,has he faced, such wounds as the. casualties that be Is treating.

"You can't- picture what ourwounded look llkojifter 10 to 20

'^teyji ~L life i" a .'fO'i J!?).? n n t '""thctTa fecsh J^o.Und, 1^. \v

that- physicians like. Dr. Austinare doing. Blqod.' plasma pro-vides a lift of life-giving fluid fora bordcr-l.lno Case. The Cranford

.Chapter, American Red Cross,Still -needs donors for the vlsitijjfthe mobile.unit to Cranf6rd--on-•'•Monday, July 10. Cull CRariford"6-0671.. And if you've registered,

~idou't t l

icesIndependence DaySpeaker Call* sit IEssential for Peace

We must stnrt here. ai.poll.prejudices, discrimination,and ofhetahihRs that divide us £Twe:;

war, E. Urncr Goodman" oiNatlortDl. program directorScouts of- America-,night at- the.municipalIndependence Day at theII Honor Roll. *."The program;"than 500 people; '"wall•Cranford Chapter 3,u.'id.i, and U. iwison. h-ting.president of the chapjter,master of ceremonies.'half hSprband Concertunder direction qf-touis P^the band alsp played, thement for the National•'Cinii Wei* Amoricn,"

.Carroll K. Sellers, iMemorial ~ and Independence ,'.Conimtttcc, opened, the prdgwaKl

, » . i»«« » ..- »>* i | (oxp.ccssed appreciation, to... AutO M i s h a p s D o u b l e D>,d, t6r planhinc last '

In First Half of /45 ; " c c

One Pedestrian Killed 7• ' . • • . * - . . - ^ . «

Automobile accidents are on theIncrease in Cranford arid the I$rs"t sixmanth« " f r<*p"r'M onefatal accident, according to the reportof the Cranford Police: One deathby automobile was reported in Crnn-ford In 1944. Bath were pedestrian

munity. is proud o f ' e v e r yHtnd- girl in h ^ f ttry and^'polntcd out'that they

! ln« of their hopes, their dreamSi'«y«ft;'1?%;§i$itnc'r to help win the war..they are too young to have muelin the. making-of-the. peace,not wain to flght another w|iiSryears—they want a•There havtrbech 21automobile ac-

cidents during the first six months of i their" normal lives,this year and 22 persons were in-; Mr- Goodman,jured, requiring "-the services of aphysician. In the first six months;o f 1044 there were ten accidents and-ten-pcraonj wore injured.fatality did not" coiihe untttthe last;half of the" year.

Accidents this year have been asfollows:, Jatluary, four accidents andthree persons Injuredi Fobruftry^ threeaccidents ond one person Injured;-!March, twe/ accidents" and three per-1sons, injured; April,-one accident andone persoA injured; May, three occi-

113 persons injured. -^"Several of the accidents -were

caused1 by drivers whose residencetrained at.Newport, R, I. He serveirfwas not in Cranford. and ope of th*

l factors Involved in thp increase infactors Involved in thp increase in , laccidents is the largo'number of w a r rocket .outlooks which Will

d l i h N h d »b<>v« °™ »|»™ and ™* tworkers drlvinff through North and

of World Warworks," pointingpieces, mine's and rockets ofday hove gone to war. Out get piecesof tomorrow, "he declared, ar* tEeterns of peace which hove1 'Jfashioned at San Foncisco. Theand red flares ofarc' castinghorizon, looking towhencome home.'he asserted, to a land thatvided by prejudices, dlserbttlnatldn

"oror the ofher battlesfleldaboys are fighting and dying

Our rockets of- tomoil.rbck.et minds, rocket

»b<>v« »|»™ff g.South avenue from defense plants to i ^ mit.onallsrn, into•QioJr foimes. " " ~ ' " ' " :«' Woirdell ^ ^ . ^ ^

DomlnicU DiLollo. 75 years old, of:""™ of the World, ;Wie-n>eakeJ?Uicoln avenue, \Vas killed on Frl- j c l n r«1- W c m u s t learn tpdiy eveniiiK. Miiy 2,-by a bit-i.nd-rq.il - tru*1 ?ach- -Olhcr,' .regardless [driver on Lincoln uvenue. The p t . - l i hlice have beet, unablp to approhend c i i n

anyone in connection with the iiccl-dent thus far ihoutfh the details are

i

, . e [nationality, so that; the whole

l i v c together- in peaee."even those nationsr

h ; i w b c c n o u r «nomies inn}f

dent thus far ihoutfh the details are: } ^on (lie with police df-partments brought along to Join this great fam-

ll Th e i t h itd llthroughout the State and Nation.

C. J. DuckworthReported Improved' The condition nf-CJnrk John- Buck-;worth, 56, of 311 Manor avenue, whowas t'aketutu':Elizabeth 'General Hos-',pita! on Tuesday' morning in a criticalcondition suffering from knife, woundsof the. throat, is''reported improvedby hospital authorities this morning.

The man's wounds, according to i

lly. The service star has united allfamilies of this great nation-US <

(•Continued on page tan)

CommunityBand Cprrc§begin Sunday

A series of summer Sunday- eve-

Injured, man's wife,Duckworth, th»t her

(Continue^ on pao*-1 ten)

, on Eastman rtreei 'WM»Mrs. Emma j ju n |Or Red Cross in Cranfordhusband has

Building irr First Half of %5con

j Mrs.organization. . 1

i Louis F. Haar, director ofi mental music in Cranford; High! School, is in charge of the concerts/ . '^

i-\:^±?*i:M$zxwi

were issued for valuations of $34,800and tho entire 1044 total of $03,000in valuations has already been passedwith ,every indication of a good sum-

b,mer building season.—Twenty—new—homes— htrve—beerrflssierected in Cranford thus far this year,Mr. • Steele's report shows. . Theseore valued at approximately $0,000each. During the first half of 1044only, five residences were erected.

This year's permits also includedsix chicken houses, five garages, andoae addition to a factory. The re-

With the'relaxing ol (ioVurnmentrestrictions oii building and the needfor supplying small homes for. war-workers, building permits in Criin-ford during the first" half of 1045reached a total of 85 permits • withvaluations of $142,155. - '

The January to June reports ofBuilding Inspector Eugene E. Steclcfar surpass the 1944 mark thoughthey do not touch the records made.during the early part of the wnrwhen shortages were not acute. Dur^ing the first half of 1044, 27 permit^] $81,005.

i d f l i f $34800

• cert Band from personnclpf the d r a r t - ' ^ ^ ^ ' ^ l v ^ ir _tnr nitrrntlnnf! fn resi- f||rfj H}^ Srhnni .ftnnrt, "f?rnnfnrd'''•'•'''•-^17?^-"^

dences, JMI indication that .CranJord members of the Union County Sum-people arc beginning to think of post- ,,,er B a n tf a n d Orchestra School In, P"*1" "ier Band and Orchestra School Inwar improvement and are. already Ht}seUc a n d n n y volun-tceV musiciansadding porches stairways and other . f r o m cranford who wish to come outimproved facilities m their IIOOK-S. ..im, p ) a y o n S u n < , evcnings.

Permits ISSUCKI this y<?ar were ns T h e r e will be no rehearsal beforeth

valuations of $1,350; February, fivef.O"0^fLJn""a/,yiRnWO

c-..KtI'ri!f i'?,'! thc' 'rrsl concert on Sunday but Mr!

""' "' ° " " """•" '"" Maar stated this week that he planspermits, $18,850; March, seven pcr-i imits and §11,350; April, five permits

15" jlfrniits31 permits . ynd

l i u l d

and $11,425; May,'$I8,O8S, and^J

fiituro,«

Building activity in Cranford hasdifluctuated durinu the wur, accordinK

to the type of housing in demund andthe materials .availublu.

uie rehearsal a week In thent) .^.^..v,^.Volunteers may-Ksport Sua

day evening and then participate litthe 'rehearsals' and concertsthe summer.

Programs of patrioticti(mi'1 b " n d m u s ' e n r«

and

there were 77 homes built during the of townspeople will be presentfirst six months and there were 10Ui day and throughout " 'permits but the valuations, were; but, display an interest In$356,000 aVno largo apartment plans affaiIrs and to enjoy musicwere constructed.

yriver in the evening.-/

iiiiiiiiSi^S^S^M^^wiiSiM^

• *

Page 2: Costs Up If ife-:;., PFolhRises Boys' Camp Grabau Is …...^!y t'^'jji'^:'?!?l •: •;: ?i-^ ' -l;- •"*'i;';. •'•'•••;••-.''.'• '*••''. ri.'**'•'.•'.•'

p^j-^i-T^^T^T^^

/v:-;-..;' Nj«» Cnt»*, E*t«b(Combined ,In 1920" _^

KbWARD C. MeMAHON.,:M- HAY,

r latiiei:8 pate a ^ ; <>rdinitic5<M pft*jb*t»*S~jfcott* such a« Have caused a furor in other

^.wnuiiitit* ol thi* size- f T f * m£r<s7Yrioved to sdggeftt that oiltlaiadish sunrbacko W e s and pinafore* oh the older generation

ftW «"<! halters on the teeta-aggrsana nntmB aim -»»w"v»y ——==—-f-—^—«—aren't improving the appearance of our bus?-ness center one bit. And men in shorts lookbetter on a tennis court 1

fa amcnanaftnt,iith«Unempjtoy-;ment Compehsailoto t a w of New Jes-sey increasing th^ weekly benefit scalefrom ^7-l8°t&-$B5j2?.Went into eUtecftoday. The suw rates apply only tobenefits payable oft valid claims inconnection with iSeneflt years be^in-

i n d a v o r h e r e a f t e r . • • • • • •

maximum rate, with a $7rninimum. has been in effect since'April, 1941. These rates.will remalnr

for claimants whose benefit

* . « . .&ITOB!AL_SSCjOATjON 'OverTheTop*

years started prior to July'year, unill ihe compleili

1 of

KOtftl*«i 8t the Port-Orijce^t CroiiIuiJ. N.J^, ,p .: as Second Class Matter,

Published ifcUHday ai Cranford. New Jersey, byTheCtanfordditb*n and Chronicle In^^HcW

.paper tor Craniott!/ Gann-ood and Kenuwonn-

» S<*«eiiptj6B Hatea *2i»6 a Year in AdvanceTeL CRanlord 6-0668

Nation as a whole, has far iin the Seventh'War'drive .,..__-endei last Saturday. Sale of "E". " F " and"G" series bonds through, this Saturday,however, will continue to be counted in the

1 tabulation;- - —' ..- •_,.. . .:: ..........

total subscriptions of $1,1.63*!T65 or 86 per-

^ __. _ rthetr^re^-spective benefit years. ,••-•••

•_ • ~_ > Another change effective today withli lwordi area,-12ke-ther respect-to nswlylSSSlished^beHaM

1 under vJaiitUJaUttn enactedyears, -,„the 1945 Legislature, sets maximumtotal benefits at $572, instead of $32*.The minimum. .totiOJeneut amountfor art eligible individual, during con-tinued unemployment, is $90, instead6 ! $ 4 2 . ; > '. - ' • • . . . • ' '

" >Tests of-eligibility orbeneuts- standunchanged. An Applicant must, reg

worSeT

cent above the quota of $625,«W."

TstefHor woifk, bif&ISKttt-available for suitable work, and re-

port weelcly to his nearest U^S. Em

fifths;;.Starting Sunday and continuing during

d t ^ l d J d concerts willbe offered in MacConnell Parkljy a group oflocal musicians under direction of Louis F.

ord f or sales of thisis^shprt^apptoximaU.^of $325,000. When final reports sire re-

-jceLved^from local plants' and institutions

subjeqt to-the-^w-JexseyJLaw_alsaarereqiilred. (Benefits for partial-is

ceivedfrom local plants and insttparticipating in Jthe payroll de^uclwn plan, BoTmtnFlenrtcf>t »* expected that even this goal may be met_ throughout the State.

Robert &- Crane, ^local-war^jinance A

der the spbnsdrahip of the junior Red Cross3,000 indiivduals and cor-

fci

ill

'.f.'S-'.'"-..''.'"'-!

'7:

lii die past, band concerts have beentried here, during the summer with varying^degrees of success. It seems strange inas-much as summer band concerts have becomean integral part of community lire in manycities, towns and. hamlets throughout theNation. ."7"'"""- -.-

i h e concerts snoiildndb-much-to-pro^mote interest in music among the youngergeneration and also should cause some of the

- older musicians io get their trombones, clari-- nets or cornets out pf the attic and join theband.

The Sunday evening concerts couldwell pave the way toward the formation of

" ' ' ~ *• " " * '• could

Methodist* AnnounceSummer Guest Pastors

me top dese'rve the coi.dents of the area, for their magnificent work!' The Seventh War Loan may well go down in•history as the 'financial drive' that broke the

' '* f 1—— u.Mnininn anAmv

.Guest, pastors who will occupy the '-.pulpit' of the Cranford Methodist.Church during the summer have been.announced by :'the Rev. Albert Al-

the racs •> the Otten mtvi ChronlejenHy. .Roosevelt Playground .operated jointly byEducation ana the Lions Club, is entering

Tennis TourneyToFTiheTfirst time in a

play not only during the summer but,onMemorial Day and on other occasions whenmusic will add color and zest to a program.

Show your appreciation of this Juniori project by attending with your

tennis enthusiasts are planning a communitytournament and a call has been issued for allthe racquet fanis*to come out and join thefuiu C W. Perley,of the Sportsman's Shop,an honorably discharged veteran of the pres-~ent war, is leading the new communityproject , o ••"'".

In the days when Cranford sponsored' the River Carnival and many other summer

activities, tennis tournaments were among.' the rnost important summer events in town

a n d m e Cranford Canoe Club and Ulhigh «».Canoe Club on Springfield avenue sponsored Westfield YWCA- Camptournaments of every variety. Interest in A. n u m b»? of cranford girls arethese affairs waned several years ago and taking part in the day camp activr-

. _ _ . . . l.Vihie-Rev. Gerald F. Crowell of Philadel-phia, fa.'; August 5, the Rev. F. Hes-sic Johnson of Madison; August J2,the Rev. Alden T. Smith of Unlo'n;August 19, the Revv Curtis B. Geyer

-Of.Newton; AiigiiBt. ?.R, t.hft Riwv.' Hwr-bert E. Richards.of Basking Ridge;and September 2, the Rev. Lester ,Bossard of Jersey City. ' . • . '.

Sunday School will continue at9:45 a. m. each Sunday and the hoursof the church library have been ad-justed to meet the early service hojjr.The library will be open from 9 to9:45 a. m. and from the close of the.service until 11:30 a. m. This Sundayat_9:45 the 'Rev. Mr. Allinger willpreach oh the theme, ~4<The MainBusiness..of the Church.1' ;.'.;

Ifhre Tears'. A |« . ,•_ celebrate Independence Day tomor-

rj:ost.JKiftL^ all-day pnogrsan .ttiat taldiudesj-a track'meet iii the morning.' a sottball and baseball programin the afternoon and a -band concert and fireworks' dis-'play in-the evening. Mayor George E. Osterheldt willgive a short address a t | h e evening patriotic programr

- The first contingent ot local youths' will arrive on.Sunday at the Cranford Boys' Camp at Silver Lakef^Jjg ' ~ •• »--• -— T V , , A n t . . | t ) i «

TheBoard of Education and!second week of a • proenrollment of 170 chili

Building activity inted l

wieions Club, entering its:

ram devoted to keeping theren active most of the time.

Cranford. during the Bust halfj l rt th nefourth

Cranford Girls At

program includes^a swim and an evening fellowshipprogram around an"open fire. . ' .. ......

The need for unqualified patriptism at the presenttime was stressed by the RevuOrion C Hopper, pastorof the Memorial PresbyteriaSriChurch in Newark anrfformes pastor of t&e Presbyterian Church, at the finalmeeting of the year of the Cranford Lions Club at theChimney* Corner Friday..' Application ot Frank Wagner foi^permission. to

construct 20 detached duplex apartments arCentennialand South-avenue was refosed by the Township Com-mittee last night on recommendations of,,,the Zoning.

—Board and it vcas recopmnended taat-T*'1"' '<«r«'»n™- =Wh-•mit a revised application in the near; , 'VQlliajw D- HeeJ.'Jr, was installed as president ofthe CrantordLKbtary Club succeeding Dr. Rowland P.Blythe, at the Thursday luncheon^ meeting in theMethodist Church Chapel. • '

* Building has been steadily increasing and activity.here during the first halt of 1940 reached a total of 82permits wjth $257,699 in valuations, it Was announcedby BuUding;Xnspector E. E..Steele who said that this

• was the Targcst half-years-since 1929

. ' BUUCUng activity aaiwtuuvuu ^ ^ . » oof 1930 represented onlyia little m6re than one-fourththe value of ratables atfded during the first half ot1929, according to figures furnished by Building;.In-

.^pectox^lmer L. Moore.! A total of 117 permits wereIssiiea^trpm January to-; June wdth valuations of$222,269 anoHEnffiSr-trig-fleure for sfac-wonihs-w,$815,256. • . Ni., . . _

At a meeting of the Cranford Repupblican Club •last night in the clubhouse a resolution' Of tribute to. the late John W. Heins, who served as ap oftToer andfaithful member of-the club for severar^xears, wasadopted following its .presentation "by James ENWarner.

Except for/the booriilng of bootleg fiewotksj^theFourth of July will be a quiet" occasion in Cranford as ;no municipal celebration! hast, been arranged and. the .majority of residents plat to.ip^fjd the holiday week-end elsewhere .Fireworks sale is prohibited in this.,community but some boyi are importing the forbidden. firecrackers from neighboring towns. . —

A'new Republican organization Was formed Thurs-day night when more thab 50 people attended the firstmeeting in the &. O. P. headquarters of Ihe Syrian- .American, Republican Clu). David Hederi is tempor-ary chairman otjthe orgat nation that will aim; to vto- •mote the welfare of Syrk n-Amerlcans in Cranford aswell as all Republican act /Ities.

At the conclusion^ A

tare FactsCranford isn't Asbury Park, despite

-residehts •'wisK-it-werewhen theiiot and humid summer weathermakes livingahnost unbearable. Since wish-~

i ^ H ^ P § : ' "."•_' ful-thinking'won't transform our suburbanfeill^iSII/ " *«ud«tttifll community into a seashore resort,'

it might be well if all residents rememberedthis and didn't appear on shopping trips inthe business o$nterin summer-cooler outfits

S»ffi<Sa.

With the fine facilities available, at are included in the schedule.Unami Park at the end of South Union ave-nue, opportunity has beett provided- for arevival of the popular summer sport of ten- —,-. —nia Wttil* if in Hw. tk»t m a n v of our sole, Carol Koyen, Gail Lopaus, Carolyounger tennis players are n o w away at s k n a r u p > j a W e t steeie, Grace Wes-war, it is good to keep in mind that the sportis enjoying a revival among the residents athome. Contact Mr. Perley and add yourname to the list if you play, there is room fora lot more entries in the men's singles and' doubles and the mixed doubles.

'..' Need VolunteersAn appeal- for two. volunteers to

serve a few*topurs dally has been" is-sued "by wWPrlce and Ration BoardNo, 3L in Roselle Park. The rationboard office has been swamped for

careTes^ness'^fti otiit-o^MjwM •»«•««.•.»? .—, --w.the'first six months of 1940 by Police CommissionerJ. Edward Wolf. Thirty-one accidents caused injury

lie. first round of. the Softball'A. Timers league was abol-

Clubs dropping out and

July Cedetholm, Mary Coe, EUnCoffee, Carolyn and Marian Eber-

sells and Marian Weber.The Y-TeehjJAage •, campers are

Mary Lib Coffee;' Janet Douglas, JaneJeffries, Susan ' Lackey, BarbaraPutscher, Jean Vettel and Lois Wat-son.

to 20 persons.- .Wendell L. WBkie is the outstanding favorite of

the Cfanford Young Republican Club .according tothe mock convention they conducted at the townshiprooms Thursday. He garnered 658 of the .1,000 votes

- -xtiUM£4!XllAuV£3a '" '•! •'---—--»"--•--• --:—,-..?-.

the snappier league of j ^ „..,Cranford took secon 1 placed coming. In .behind

Bloomfleld but beating ou Paterson,vln the horseshoetournament Saturday tha marked the opening of thecourts on Cranford Oval. • : — • . • * . '

To open the first wee of the season.at" Camp at Silver Lake, 25 boys

WAR LOAN

montbjs because' tne clerical work Tias~increased 40 per cent since the first oftbc year, it was pointed .out. Re-, turning service men with overseasrecords will further increase trie-normal burden ,on the present staff.Local women Interested have been

A reception in honor of the Rev. William Donnelly,newly-appointed pSsfor of St. Michael's Church,-willbe held toni^it in the parochial schooL Named lastweek to succeed the Rev. James F. McDonald, FatherDonnelly is a native ot paterson and received.his edu-cation at S t Peter^s College, Seton Hall and Tmmacu-

' late Conception Academy. He has served in- parishesid Newark. Arlington. $Iorristown and Ridgefield Park.

If owjgjng a dog otters any means of protection-,Cranford. residents, are. well protected for "a policecheck-up reveals that there is a dbg tor every two andone-half families in town and that some families ownas many as fite' dogs. ' ' •

"Skidding." a three-act comedy depicting the an-tics of the Hardy family, was presented by the Chrls-

- • - • ' • - • - —~- -« flift First Presbyterian

*>«».« ^Wal lace and % staff arrived at campWednesday to prepare .fprlthe boys.

YOURVICTORY

THisBy FEED D.

Union Co. Acriealtnral.i

board office and ask for the chief clerkwho 'will work out a schedule agree-able to the applicant.

Boy Vtix Bonds and Stamps.

mmBffi.fc.;WiV,-.^l

'a finish thesfight; lct's hasten the day of finalvictory. The gbal 6F our "That They Shall Live"

purchase ten fieM hospitals.

illOur "Keep Pitchin' Slogan' Contest

ClOStS MIDNIGHT, JULY 7

Church Friday evening in the church auditorium;-Building improvement in Cranford during the_flrst

six months ot 1935 shows a decrease of $2,036 as com-' pared- to the valuations of building in • the firsr"sbc.months of the previous year, according to Building In-spector E. E^Steele. The valuations from January toJune this year wcire $56,093 and in the first half of 1043they were $58.129.

A. quiet Fourth ot >iaGyls~secn here in view^of4he turn—Jt-hp.lpn infact that no community celebration is planned and cracking in hot weather,that sale of fireororks is pirohibited here. Police ChiefCarl Massa has warned residents not to purchase thefireworks in other towns for-setting.off in Cranford.

Plans of two annual stammer events, the annual,-: picnic and an excursion to Point Pleasant, were an-

Gettlnc Beady for Next' [ear: The Compost PileThe basic fertility of a soil is the partly decayed

organic matter that is contained In it.Thi sorganic matter i i Important in wiany ways.

It hedps to .balance the temj trature of the soil, winter r _and summer. It helps the sc il to hold moisture, but in r~"a heavy soil it also assists in letting rid of excess tnois-

" he|vy soil from baking ands a food 'or bacteria andake plant food materials

„ ^ t 1

other small organisms thatother small organisms that r ake plant food materavailable. -It helps to save fe ilizer from leaching. Asis decays, it releases some ] Iant food materials fromitself. Altogether it is the [of the garden soil. * ..

t food materials fromimportant [ constituent

' ' '

WEL<rArrs

~i^crr'u~"'~

'*' — :—:———"' —— ————i '-^—1 ——•' —•- " — ' 'i J—' ' " '—'• — i ' L'—• . V\%—ijlL—id.—*• i — —l'* '1"—' ** ' " ' LSUBBI^K. • f t t ^^**^W*^% • • >**<*PT*WP^g • 'AM^ 1 ." ' ^V9^!t^y^^* •^^*w*tT*UTT^^^^^M T^ . • » • • ^y W . 1 M * , -' • i * . -. • : . '*. i>V • . i i.-_*— ! . n^»»^—^ - [ .Tr'.--1—...^—,„_••.. .. • ..„.. —r—r-r~"~~^*"r****^H>^>*'^^fcfcMi>~~TT*

nsion' A campaign to raise funds for theexpansion of the facilities of the Osce-

D.A.R:Unjertalce»Buddy Bfiig Project

Crane's Ford Chapter, Daughters&J0u>-'- American Revolution, will

uake- and outfit huddy bags for themen and women in the armed forces,especially those in hospitals, it, waslecided at a meeting on Thursday atthe home o£ Mrs: L. B. Harzard, re«?gent, of Springfield avenue.

road was announced this week by theRev. Spencer Baker, pastor. No defi-nite goal has been'announced since

The' project- waS started by Mrs.jWilliam A. Becker, former presidentgeneral of the Daughters of theAmerican Revolution, when she was

isitlng Walter Reed Hosnttal and

-AT~THE

CRANFO1 _ GOSPEL TABERNACLEAVBNVB AN» CBKIttT SIBBBT, OSANFOID'

Sunday, July 8

' THerc is still time to enter our contest. Buy a-WarBond at any Public Service office or through a PublicService employee and try to win one of these prizes.

ft $100 in Wat Bonds*Steomdpfiu 75 in War Bonds'*

ib 50 in War Bonds*

. tourlb, Fifth and . ' _ . w .Sixth prkes -....$25 each in'Wat Bond**

^ Seventh to fifteenthprizes lneluslveJ$l0 each in Wat Stamps

PASTOR KEENEY PREACHING

11 A. M.~"Missionary Vision'"•Vs.

SUNDAY BIBLE':9:45 A.

—YOUNG-PEOPLED- 6:40 P.

> Victory Center

MID-WEEK •

PRAYER SERVICE

Team

7:4$ P. M.-*"A Meeting Jn The Air" WEDNESDAYS f• - • • ' • i

SPECIAL DAILY VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL CLOSING « t 8 P . M , . \ |EXERCISES FRIDAY AT 8 PwM. ALL ARE INVIIH). BBV.CLH.

A t THJ FAMILY CHURCHl

dertaken/j. • . ;It is hoped to more than-double the

' fffi-nitl«.-Af thft prpgpnt.- hnllHIng,

•that, the-'.s'eyvice-men-—andwomen had no place Jo keep personalheldngings. ;.-•

At the meeting Mrs. C. V. Joefndtag^Oby-40-feet, andto com'-

plfete a-church edifice lueasiulng BOby 3fl feeti. The entrance of the pres-ent* structure wlil be enlarged and atower and dock placed on the top ofthe building. . '

The interior improvements plannedinclude a stained glass window behind

tor's, study, one on each side of the•front of "the .church. The basement

facilities will.be expanded so that• supporting beams do not hamper rec-

reation, and a kitchen', rest roomsand other needed facilities will be

aced-to^the^basement.-- •Since the Rev. Mr;-Baker came to

Ihe Osceola Church in iPecember. 200:Titfentbersiiavgiieeiradded-to the. congregation and 60 infants have beenbaptised. The, church serves families*rorn OsceolalJ^rk, JWinfleldJPark,

n§unny Acres, Riverside "Park and..Columbia Manor.

Sunday School Is at 9:45 a> m. each_ -in-the—Osceola-Presbyterian-|

. Church 'and morning worship- is at.11 a. in. The'Junior Christian En-deavor meets each Sunday during the

..'worship, hour, and there is a nurseryand supervisor provided for those who"wish to leave their young children, insupervised play wliile they attend themorning worship.

; The Rev. and Ms. Bakecare the'parents of the Rev. David Baker,

stor of the Presbyterian Church' inFanwood and Moderator of the Eliza-beth Presbytery.

ARTISTS* SUPPLIESWbi, Water Colors and Pastels

Brtuhe* Papers, ete.Books lor Professional A Art Students

JOHNSTON PAINT SHOP109-8 N. Union Ave* . Cranford

ennis lourney <JMore. Uian 15 entries already haveseen .reedveil.for a Cranford Tennis'ournament to be held this month at

the Unami' Park Courts at the end-^fSouth Union avenue, it was announcedhis" week. Deadline for 'entries islext Tuesday and registrations mayye made at the Sportsman's .Shop on

avenue,,C. WV Perley, proprietor o f ' t h e

ports'mah's Shop "and_jjrombter . ofhe tournaments, is being assisted by

H. C- PettingiU^ Mrvtjnd Mrs. War-

pyip * nf John Allen I

ren—Jfairbanics fljwa TJacK'-AricTrewsT'ack .Allen, w^tl-known in EasternIntercollegiate Tennis circles, v willerve as referee of the matches..Tfrery.will.be menj's,, singles, men'snnhtfs . an3 .mixed' doubles •everita-.

Mrs. Hazzard and Miss Anita Skill-man were' appointed to represent thesociety on the Mayor's committee for'.he celebration of the 75th Annivcr-ary of the Township of Cranford.

A .letter from Mrs. Julia YoungalniadEc^v-president—^meral^—was

read. She told of thc^D'. A. R. dona-dn^f^bidsfaateif^niB^avyiaio-isys--

tem to the Mayo^tSeneal Hospital atGalesburc 111. She reported thatsince 'AprU, 1944, a .total of $45,000worth of rrtobilc vehicles were given:o the^Kfational -Red Cro%s for theirblood plasma_-program.

E~(OQffihour during which Mrs. Charles-

served refreshments.

After having successfully com-ileted the first three, .rounds of theEastern Intercollegiate tennis, charn''-ionshlps atr.MontclairrJack Allen ofnglish Village and Harlan Rush of

lahwayv-representing- Union-'Juniory~ | Collogo-and-eeoded-mHTvber-two in the

ihampionships',. - suffered a Quarter-

U. J. C. Registration~ Registration is conCnuingjtoday andtomorrow at the Union Junior Col-lege for the summer session that willopen on Monday^hd wilL_contiriue-until September 7.' • Dean KennethMcKay.;ha"s announced, that regis.trai-tions. thus far indicate that this willbe the largest summef" session, ever"held at the ..school,'.. - A variety ofcourses ire being offered.

Postal Receipts UpReceipts' .at the... Cranford Post

Office'for the-qurter endrng^rune1 30totaled $18,760.69, an Increase of

lecded Schcerer and Taylor. Afteridnnpleting* the Montclair matches,he U.J.C. duct ..are entered in manyState, Eastern-:and~ National" tDurneysIncluding the Eastern United. States"Hay and Grass Court:^championships.illen^ former Duke University Star,

Islfworklng. with. Cy Perley of" theSportsman's Shop in an effort to in-crease tennis" interest in Cranford.

"$381.50 over tne same quarter In1944, it was announcexLAhis_BJeck_JjyMrs. Rose D'Arcy, acting postmaster

Nothing NewThere is nothing new except what

13 forgotten. • .

Early. Quakes- Earthquakes hi Japan were re*corded, as early as 2B5JB._C..

Your monthly payments take care of y o ^ taxes, fifeinsurance and interest and Pay Off Your Mortgage —As easy as paying rent. .

Interest charged on unpaid balance only

CRANFORD SAVINGS &IL0AN ASSOCIATIONOffice 2 N. Uaion Ave.,

INSURED Open dally 8:30 A| M. to 5 P. M.

Saturdays—8:S8 A- M. to 18 31. ,>

TELEPHONE ClU-VFOED 6-0164

INSURED

Inurwl us ta'S5.B00.MMr ••rab*f>

IniUNd up to M.0M.M' par ninlwr

BUY MORE WAR B P S AND STAMPSCM SAIT. HF.RE

YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT YOU'RE MISSING!

Nest belt thtag to, a cool dip—BREIDfS Kei Uelibved

'' finer tasting BEER. Fresh, frosty• tad flavorful. Try it today* BEER

ifei^ t \ ; y : . . ^ ^ * ^ ^ T l l r l t I i y r T / i \ T ' i % i ^ Urn/ M« r j ^ r Taea5issg8SB> • - m T T , . . . .» v : ; • .. ; , : , , . . .:. :. /. •: ? ; ; . . ^ i i ^ J L ^ a .'v:-.;:' fM

nr Dull' ""*'"f

Forth west.

j the $1 entry fee will coyer allivcnts as well as provide prizes forhe winners. • Local residents inter-sted in -tennis have been asked tourn. in their entries Immediately sohat the drawing .may be made 'next

Cotton SocksCotton.soglfs should be bought one

inch longer than the length of thefoot to allow for shrinkage. -

Lactic-AeWThe separation pf lactic acid from

Its crude Hoiutio'fa, w l >•* ptiriflRn-tion, can be efficiently accomplishedby treatment with methanol (woodalcohol).

Fellowdiifr ElecURalph Sjursen was elected presi-

dent of the Senior Youfh Fellowshipof the Cranford Methodist Church atthe annual .election of officers Sunrday-evening. Mathias Torgersen isvice-president and Joan KightUngeris secretary. The five commissionersare-Nancy'Crowell, Ruth Hilte, Phyl-us bunderscrt. 'William McAlpiue and I aiMarie Van Geld*!?.-

Lawrence Roberts, Cynthia GiUingsand Dorothy Eustice will represent

pianist' and a-Nbrma' Nelson,Torgersen and Grac^.Jemlson willcouncilors._FoUQ.wihgjihe elcctiotr the officers

t>'.in&tailed by Mcfvllk- MtdtUa^vh.superintendent "of the.youth'division.The Rev. Albert Allinger, pastor, gaveOn aaamsTatShe-meetirie:•«•-.«; • wnoxM

On' Monday a group of young peo-ple from the fellowship will leave for;Blalrstown where "they, wall attend theSummer~UAsscrnbly~ •=fo^—JUethddist.Youth from the Newgrk Conference-.-

Mrthodirt BibleClosing"

Scrap- books. Unset paintings,splatter prints and plasler-of-parismoulds' vcill be. amonff the projectsthat will be exhibited tomorrow nightat the closing program of the DailyVacation Bible School of the Cran-ford Methodist Church. The' programwill be held at 7:30 o'clock in theruditorium. acftrtfri'inc ta

thy Chenoweth, director..Members of the four departments

of the school will conduct an openingworship service and the beginners

of-Doors." The outstanding lessonslearned by the other three depart-ments during the school will- be ineorporated in a .'dramatization.

this play will be in P;<le$tine and. t3hetime is lzyd during Christ's, early min-

*r3.T*san«.Ml

Membership in the school, wellover 100 the opening day last Mon-day, has increased steadily, it was

JBurditt, Marie Van Gelder, PhyillsGundersen, Joan KiehtUnger, - RuthStrong, Shirley Gove and LaurenceRoberts. The Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Al-tlngeiSWUl accompany the young peo-ple and Wflf serve as-faculty members j

At WestficW *Yf CampTwenty Ci*anford.boys are enrolled

in th«rWestfleld-Y.M.eA. Bay Campwhich opened on Monday and con-tinues four days a week for sixweeks. The campers will receive

•swimming instruction, hanacraft' in-structlon, take hikes and play games.Today they are attending the Giant-Cardinal baseball game in New York.• Those enrolled from Cranford in-

I'cl.ude Donald Caruso, Gardner Col-fins, Richard George, George JeCfRes.Robert Nielsen, fearry O'Neiir.'vBobbyCyNieH, Richard Paul, Richard . Pat-^nrXharl<^.Ray»Jcr^enrieth_Bflfc>=.inson, Peter Trumpore, ^tlal.yoorhees.

_RiRydinsky, George W. Trumpore, Jr.,Edward White and Roger Wolthuis.

THE ORIGINAL HOME, UTIUTY SERVICEWishes To Announce '

A GENERAL" BILL OF SERVICESREPAIRS

Screens.WindowsDoorsLampsRadlpsLeaky Faucets'Electric IronsToilet BowlsWash TubsStorm WindowsLeaders and Gutters

OTHER OFT1ER1NGS-Paint ScreensFalEC^tsrsTTlVtadGwr-• Paint PorchesPaint Ganges. . .Paint Trim1 -..—-WakK WindowsInstall ScreensInstall Storm -WindowsGardening wad !

has carried on an extensive handworkout-

diior worship services. • -Numerous- field- trips have been

taken.s--rOn-3raesday the entire schoolenjoyed a picnic at the High: StreetPjayground and a croup of .juniorstook a''trip Jo O(yTnpic l*arkTin" ITV-•ington'-to-partieipatc~in-«vi,mming—-

Destruction.-iea5HRobeft Fulton domohstrat

ed a mevhod of destroying ships byexploding a- charge- of gunpowder"=•—««• * th* hull'under water;.

Freehold Race* Opensix-weeks'—frijfrniram of par-

tnutuel Harness Races opened yester-day afternoon at the Freehold Race-way, Freehold, and will continue VirJtually every Monday, Wednesday,Friday and Saturday. Post time is3 p. rn. daily and the' daily 'doubleswill close "at 2:45 p. m. Carl Dill,veteran Freehold harness racing1 'driv-er and trainer, has receivedv wordirony his .two. suns.. Johnny and PeteyDill, well-known race-pilots in theirown right and now with the'U. &Army in Europe, that they may behome before the end of the currentmeeting. "Petey. may handH^trie" reinsbefore the conclusion pf Vhc "presentseries .of his furlough'plans- work out,but Johnny may be assigned direcfly

Police jCourt Fines" ''Sdumr'd O.^^iTivarT'oTTSSBff^Uari-tan road was fined $2\'in Police CourtMonday nifiM byJudpe Carroll K.

mfln-Anton Kovacs that he parked

selle, sum-mone'd by Patrolman Thom-as Woods for passing a stop slrect,was lined §3. J. F. Nownian oT Cran-ford- wns lined S2 on an overtimeparking 'charge*..'made by. Patrolman

Acid Indigestionb h , . i l » 5 .ul- lTrirfcJon».imnij tnrtAl'lim rtr«u Miimarlt *cU\ tnutht pilnfuL •utr«ir«t»

Ina • • • ami. .InRiarli In. l llMttrihtim. tlnrtnn U«Ut1lyAllim nr«u Mnmtrlt *cU\ t«utii p.inuL u

Ini i t i , tour ilnmicli imt )u>an)>iirn. tlnrti'n uvu|<r»«crittf thi* it«!r«i-Br.tln« 'm^UrlEt** knnwn. f»fMnunomillt rrllrl—mMlrlnra Ilka Duo .b> It'll •«(Y»hlrft. Mi. liuttva. 1Utll<«ni lirlnsi*rnwfurt In t.Jllty-W r«li)ra JH'IUH to vt tot double monti-tiuk. U c

Kovacs: -' Arttmr Shnon* of Oirw0o4;^r^^b^tARsdl itbless driving, was givensentence and char^ed-$3-*b»t bl coUrt

TO CREDITORS

J!'uii«u«nt to Ui» or«br et CTIAKUEft A, .OTTO,

JII . Kurroem. of ibe IViunty cf UalMV, mitillt'un tix K«wnil dry </ iulir A. IT.. IMS. itp6q th*a|i|<l|'atl<u> i4 Ihe undrMlcucd, tM fcl*ruU* trf.1h? 9«t«U> «f . Ulil' 4lr«VlM4). ' BAttfe U hjbXI&rffirm ti> tlifi rnvlltnn i>f }U! lUtfftlhfil ti» Vt- '

thoir rU|nu twt dMnanda ugtliwl tb» t«t»t* ofMid dH-rawd within «i» noaUis frau Bt* d*t*<if >al<l nnlpr. or U>»x WHI b» tor***rfrtun prnvrullne or rv»Y«rlB< t U U Mth» iul-vrtb*! ' "

TIIE CJUVPonO TJlt'ST

ii tutn.N. J.

**•»?,

CRANFORD'S SUNDAYDRUGSTORE SCHEDULE

CLOSEDSUNDAY

Scher's,BeH's

•m

Phone

Reshlngle RoofsBuilding and Maintenance

WEstfieW 2-3086

i

FROM

JULY 29 to AUGUST 5(Open Monday, August 6)

EMPLOYEES AMUCH NEEDED

VACATION

IF YOU HAVE t ANYORDERS AT 00R PLANT

FINISHED.PLEASECALL,FOR THEM BEFOREOUR CLOSING DATE.

THANKS LOADS!, „ ,».»•.r.

that icon*t break!

The Carrara S»pleee Dinette

59.95$§2 9& u month OH our Budget PI«i '••:W

JVo wonder we've sold more titan 400 of thvwhmH'i»vof,nthb "-

proof, crack-proof, ttain-proof, glass-top dinettesj' Aside

from the miracle glass lop made by a new process of the Pittsb^gh

' Plate Glass Co^ these'dinettes are as smart and sturdy e$U can be! And now we have a new shipment 0/ them in striking new

color combinations that are even more attractive than thm

previous lota. There's wheat finish with a red edge and ivory

glass top,' maplerivilh brown edge and ivory glass top. We also

' • ~ .. have a similar group in solid oak lime finish with up-

holstered red leatherette seats at $73J>0.

McManus

•.••m

m..m

CAST JERSEY ELIZABETH—i vf »-'rffl

Page 3: Costs Up If ife-:;., PFolhRises Boys' Camp Grabau Is …...^!y t'^'jji'^:'?!?l •: •;: ?i-^ ' -l;- •"*'i;';. •'•'•••;••-.''.'• '*••''. ri.'**'•'.•'.•'

-,-.„..,. gffSP

fl?B3J3Tfi}ft^S^jfLTfiflSB3fra^yitfjj!fc35fffj5tf"^5jipi ^ J^f J^W^^J*Jrf^ryptf*^ fin^^^^^i^, I^f^f ff^T T ^ ^ ^ . ^ ^ ?*** [5* vj*?v y. Tr^^r^f J*^y*' *^»•!" •' L * '* T*"^*1* *"* TI i* *** °fc f:" * "*jl L*~ 4 T. " ^ ^ F » '* ' • • •"•. *. * - ° . •» • • S J W C S S S J S J ^ ^ , - .,, , j - , — .J-N**-™1^-. I I " - > g. -- .** - f **» J k* •— %".. ~~- « -^ »,.-. - F "•-.., • •'' ..• i1 -°^» 4 ii-. j ^ -•*•!, •» ow^^h£<flj^2m9^9

Minutes of Board of

iCran

wmtt.

Regular mfeeiinjg oi ..the r'County Board of Chosen Freeholders,was held at the C©in£ IJouset Eliza-beth. N. J , on Thursday, June 28,IMS. at U30 p. m.

Director MeMane presiding. Solicall showed 7 members, present and

• 2 absent.'" "• - . , ;

Smith-ta-4he-p6sltiOB-of;.Asslslfi4tSupfildntendent at I3100.M per' dn-rruffl,Teffectiv€"3fatr7ivroll call unanimously adopted'

(3) Freeholder «Bauer . for theRoad Committee, approving purchasepf a General Motors Truck, less trade-in on a Day Elder? .at a total, cost of$4,805.97, from the tJnion CountyBuick Co., was on. roll call unani-mously-adopted. •*'

(4) ^Freeholder Smith for the

Robinson wIU go to Ashevnie,rt f re

at Columbia

Mr. and Mrs; WiUiam R: Howell ofFt LauderdalB, Ha., visited friends in

Saturday: "Tot" i j

Norma Olsen Bride

tg the . craniom resiae

as this week were j» croup ofvwork

^th.ipletoir«.'lk!V«« girls from Cran-*»nl left "Mondiiy • fetHLong ".Branch

Moneaeuih-

went quet.

star short- stop"yekrg and •••"Daisy Taylor"wielded a .mean tennis rac-

Ho.weil Is presenting to~ ' • • " ' t hMrs T C. Schultz of 204 Elizabeth t h e Cranford Historical Society th

avenue entertained the Jolly. Ten Club bQt w h l c h w a s largely responsible fo:t luncheon last Thursday. Cranfyrd winning' the championshienue entertained the yluncheon last Thursday.

bQt w h l c h w a s largely responCranfyrd winning' the championship

u u r w u will also en-,ISai^ff-^lay^tMhe!

rjeacn jesort. They are Ruth Spohn,Patfcfcia Latkey. Alice Sudd. AnitaBurlingame, Barbara Leon, AdrianncHelm. Lucie Whitscarver and Vir-

•gktiaBrlgg*. ;••-'

«. ,-~.~..- _. —._,.. ofare spending (wo weeks

avenue are vacationing "ait Bates, Waldo RoSw.. ,r, -EarlU^:te(ew:week8.J tm* Mk£;Heimessy.: ilso starred'I

rs.-JEvcrctt .Frank and dafiehter, that memorable game., The vteitotnuui, of Springfield avenue are vis- w e r e the guests of Ray. Cox p O liting Mrs. Prank's mother, Mrs.- S. orchard street, also a member of thLong, of Wilkes-Barre, Pa, • local, high school class of '&7.'

Mrs. H. G. Sutter and son, Jimmie,

•Announcement- has been made ofh marriage of Miss Norma piseir.

Frederick HatuerHauser

nuc, to Hownrq Johnson, b.wu 1/c, following a long illness. A ._,U.S.N.R. of Brooklyn. The double- o f Cranford Ipr 28 years, he was a

ceremony was performed on native, o f Newark. Mr. Hauser was"~ " Church, ay a member of Camp Three, Woodmen

of the World, of Cranford.Surviving .are his wife,. Mrs; Ethel |

the

nZ fiap^stA reception foUowed a

of the brlde.'s parents.

S223iX

Mrs. H. G. Sutler ana suu, « »•.....—, ,of 13 Roger avenue, have been spend- J ^ ^ g A f t e rIna the past week in Rochester, JJ. Y. * ~ w . „ - - - .

Frank DiTullio/ Jr., and Betty Year* at Western.

^Mrs. ——, - - .<Jle.t5qrr-and-'sbns,"

ilVaaclSv JlKTHisd P^nhls, are. spendluriE-:.••i.iwJLJW*ta;.at Beach Haven..;^:::|^'antf-Mrs. iFredericlt;W. Dun-.\ taHrand son, David, of Hocer avenue,

V'.iarem:'vacationing' ai S^a Girt for the~ a o f t t h - < > f - J u l y • '

nine, are phcadShores.'

Mrs.. WiUiam W.-Austin-! of 4SprlhKflcld avenuo was ta,ken". toOverlook Hospital, Summit, in themurKieipil arnbulancc Tuesday.

^ ; P^l^ndMiss^Gcorglene^ariae^The brWe Wore a beige dress'in Cranford; ten grandehildwih, and a

Princess style and brown accessories sL<.ter, Mrs. liddia Siyefs of Totten-and her corsage was of ycUow roses, ville, S. I. ;y<Miss Adelaide Olsen wore her regula-1 Funeral serviceswere-held

i if Mrs Olsen andMiss Adelai wo gtion riavy uniform. Mrs, Olsen andMrs. Johnson wore blue afternoondresses with corsages of red roses.

-Sir. and andfamily of 713 Springfield avenue willspind the summer at Paulinskill

Mr. and Mw..C5eorgc W. Rogers andfamily of 21JI) Orahgie avenue left

Union avenue,, retires frorcrthetern Electric Company today after 48years! service. " "

Mr. Peterson's career-started in1800 in Chicago;-At-thBt time he washired as a wlreman, but it was not

t u uhoneymoon in the Pocono Mountains;Pa. Mr,: Johnson recently returned^to this country after serving overseas

£*. ' : •'••"'..•

Friday for their summerOld Fofge. N. Y.- Miss Joanne Wyman of 35 Col

-umbl^ave»ueJJett^jt__Sjundayspend the summer at Camp LoP

M-. .t ait* r.nmn. Pa. • ....Jfltrs.' Charles Crounse ol orange

Fistneroi. u nawui»i,,i .,w^..^Spending this week at their summer

hottte1 hear Polrrt Pleasant.Mr. and Mrs. J.DlFabio and:daugh-

ter, Ann. and Mr. and Mrs. A. DIFabio-^ttf_Ji,8...North Lchigh- avenue, spent

the past two. weeks at Manasquan. .Costan Berardinelli, Jr., son of

Mrs. Frant&i BerardinclH of 107 Ccn-t i l venue left last week for

municipal a w r c a""•.tor. ana Mrsr^iwrge-F^lichards. ^0nj^bef»I^he^waslmnd<ULiaEervisorand two children .have jetumed to | n the manufacturing department en-take up residence i.ft Cran.ford after gaBe(i in various assembly, wiringrcsidinn for four years in liansing, and cableformiftg operations. WhenMich. ' _, . - the ,K<?arny Works started the manu-

facture of telephone equipment,^ hewas transferred lo the East. At thetime-of..'his rettrcTncnt he was incharge of the cableforming organiza-

Mr! and Mrs. Douglas Bailey andhome at I daughter, Po,tric4a, of 1Q£> Columbia

nvenue, are spending this week atPaint Pleasant. Mr. Bailey returincd

to. I.Monday from St. P.aul, MinnImd Mrs. J... St. TFece ol 2

WPPOVI street recently attended the

tfor three years

W. J./ -

Jr.

afternoon frbnf the J. C/Prall Fun-eral Home Jn (Roselle and burial wasin Rah way. Cemetery,. - '. •

• Minutes of the meeting of. June 14,1945 were' approved as per printed

"cispTes on the members desks.';. Resolution that all bills' approved

Following coamaunicattoBS were-re-fi-and ordered filed:^ y Attendants

: as foUows are_ eligible .fbr annuaL-in-

r Chat T. SniitH. Leon Naiiman,

IMPORTANT MTKHHNG DATES =

GASOLINE—A-18 coupons are good tor .six gallons. •- -•••-SCGAE—Stamp N6. 86 in Book- Four good for 5 pounds,"^HOES—Airplane stamps 1,.2 and J in Book Tliree are good indefinitely.MEATS, PATS—Red lib-point stamps K& through ZS-and A l through Ei

no\*-Valid. . , > . ' " ,PROCESSED^ FOODS—Blue lO^point stamps T2 through 73, in Book Four,

' and Al through Nl now valid. , ' . . ' "*;

Finance Committee, approving tem-rporary appointments of KatherineShafer, Clerk Stenographer in theProbation Office st $100.00 per month,effective July ~15, 1945 and Kasriel

asy puTs'Omce,.flt a.salary of $2§00 perannurh, effective July 1, .1945,. was oh•roll call unanimously adopted.~r~TH<6re"^"beTingT'pp: further—business-

"Harry. CWlan. and Raymond S, Far-retl. effective June 16.

• - Second District Court, advisingtemporary appointment of Margare:

, ^Nokes a^Clerk^SjenoEraphcr, during"."Vacation period from July 1st to Aug""

ust 31st at $100.00-per month.. SupU ot-Public Works, granting 3

;. employees sick leave with pay andone without - •

; , Fifth Ifistrict Court, advising JudgeMasucci will continue to preside asJudge-without pay, «xcept.weekly carexpenses: at S5«00 effective July 1st

State Highway "Dept., approvingagreement for Motor Vehicle Aid for

and also the annual yrork pro-

and upon motion of Freeholder Dud-ley, duly seconded and carried, theDirector declared the Board ad-journed. Next 're'gular meeting,Thursday, July IS, 1945. ' '

CHAS. M. AFFLEGKt.' -•- Cleric;

Cranford Real EstateThe following deeds have been 're-

corded in the bfnee of County Regis-ter Bauer at the Courthouse, TEJiia-

! > e t h : .. T , ' • ' • • , ' • • : >

, Jenriie Fairchild Brackenbusli,ihmatgried', to Mr. and Mrs. GeorgeIV. Hamilton, property in the "south-weirterly side of Willow street. 3O2.ff[eet from West End place.

FUEL OIL—Period 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 coupons and new Period 1 coupons• .now valid. ' '-• •-•--' . •

JLQCAL BOAKD HOCRSr^Monday through Friday—1 to 2 p. m

-Wednesday—7 to 9,p. ni.i

Saturday—9 a. m. to 12 noon

Rrmrl ^By~Spartint

.!•..'..-..•..•. - . . .• .; . _ . . . _ A f - - ^

Marries Brbdklyn GirlThe wbddlnf'of Miss AUce Louella

Krausc, daughter of, Mr. and Mrs.JCf of 201.4 Brown. str#«v|

—•' Ahtelo Lk Braelo .. [\~~-Angelo La Bracio,. 73 years old,

died-bt'his home at 37..Henley avenueSaturday,'"following a short iUnessTA native of Italy^JicjEaffi Biy-:ford two years agoJwJmlllizabeth

Walter , . .__Broojslyh, and WiUiam J,Jr.t^gunaer's mate" 3/ci "of Patrolman and "" '

where he reslded-40" years. He was a•oT St. Michael's Church,

ctuuixtv... to' his wife, Anna, he is[jaWivod by a daughter, Mrs. EstherBcawer .of Garvcy, Calif.; two sons,

William J.ler and Repeater Gassmann offlXJarden place, tooner and Repeater Gassmann of ^-Garden piflce, « w Funeral services were nexa y ^ ^^ __ .__' ^ _ _ ^jace Saturdti^feyeninginjhe Wood- d a y f r om hig home and a high m.oss of.liked by his We- lawn^^I.ReformeTXhurcn-.- - Tl«r requiclnTolIowed-Th StT-Michaep

Mr. Peter was RJT J6KH GUmore Addy pastor, per- chxftcK Interment was n St. Ger-ue o W ai!'? dinner

: ^late^turdajSTHfeyening lnjine wwu- day from hltf.nome ano_a rae"-»i«° «••iked by his We- iawn;^L~ReformeTXhurch7 - TWirpr^ui^TolIcw^-1^ St^MtehaepMr. Peterson was it^vT Joto GUmore Addy, pastor, per- c h u r c h . Interment was •j"'° t-_G c r'-/^i«n.r. ht tist fftrm«»fl the ceremony and a reception- truae's Cemetery in Woodbridge; —

rJbseph-of-€r5nlard-«Hd Peterabeth; a brother, Louis *•**'and six grandchildren.

Funeral services were held yester-jJay_*rom"' " - - -. - u i - i—^^ nf

requiem

Freed: Buys Bonds

Wh.iva loan wHI •nabTryou to moke money. *' ;-ardTSU in^nondw^heallhor home, or help llde.yau

over a wHanelol rough spot - come In end see us.

Oanford Trust Company. . MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM

C t fCorporttfon

J,,^. to^ned'the'eeremony and a receptlon-| t^ae's Cemetery in WoodbridgEssex House and a luhcheSn- Tt the followed'at the home of the bride'sRobert Treat Hotel, Newafk, prior to parents. , | '-Richard

. ^ , . ^ , , _ , i T h c b r i d e w a s g i v e n in-marriage by

Ruth visttea raauves j» iuU.u>u. „—Mr. Pegg visited his mother in Texas.' Mrs. Joseph Dcnglcr of Forest Hm.V^f e°«>llno «««»«• •» « «K; . , , m_'.»-_«». .«wfgT»> t°ur the'country by motor.

$|$2-&:';':-, 'tennial avenue, -left last we**

. Mrs. Joseph Dchgler ofL. i.,;fprmeriy of 15 Elm streethostess to the Cranford'Sewinig'at her summer homc^atwlt. Sinai,

Velteh

L. IT last WednMdaSCThursday andFriday, •Mrs.-'Cnarles Snrioltzcr, Mrs.

IHenryJKehrwld, Mrs. John Deckerajnd-iCirs. Orrok of Cranford wiftrc her

|gu^ls~andrMrS'"Orrolt?5r32nd-weddlng

mer. . .Mr. and Mrs. WiUiam

and daughters.• : : P i - . ' . . ' "•'"'wbnUvef J

ifoee.

JJlakcYJr.,and Joan,daughters, Palsy^Jc a

1*3 jOak,:iang^-afe^ spending the• • • - - - ,t Beach ,Haven Ter-

Correction'The engagement of Miss Esther

Marie Safolln, daughter of Mr. andMrs. Emil Sahlin of Wcstfleld, andRalph D. Terrill, s. 1/c, U.S.N.R., son

uHmwicu.j ..„.. celebrated. BillDcnglcr, home from 27 months' serv-ice, overseas, was also home at. the

and Was attended by MissDorothy Cntalano of Brooklyn as |maid Of honor. Edward Gassmannof Cranford' iXras best man' for hisbrother. • ..

The -couple are spending • theirhoneymoon in Atlantic City and. willleave Mer -this -tnohth for. the WestCoast'.where Mr. Gassmann is'to re-'port on July 23 for further Kiaval as-signment.^,

JUehard W. Veltch, 61 years old,-of. . . , ,.—L— ..l.,,,',, ^ i ^ Mondavucnara ,Washington pUice,

time.James J. Harford, son of Mr. andhas been set for the wedding.

-invenue reit on uonoa; u> v»» «.... and Mtg. John Nostrand and fatallyot-CranforJLwho ore vacationing ntMetcdceonlc . _ . ; , . . ,."/•;" '"" '.

Helen Beach of 1 Sylvester Streetand Leigh Aken of English Village

the week-end with Leigh's

commencement at Yale Universitx,receiving the badicler of engineeringdegree/ While at Yale he was a rrfem-bcr of St. Anthony's Hall, pfiesidentof Branford College Council and a

i ? T th'Vaitbketbal l 'and

k:F KfS1;

m$-

granametheir atin Asbuty Park

Mr*. A.. JT. Orf of 109 Orange ove-ttue Wd soa-ln-lttw and daughter, Mr.and Mrs. Steele, and cranddaughter,have returned from a short vocationat Ocean Grove. .

Mr. and l|rs. Kelson E. Skaarup of1IW Oak lane entertained with threetables of bridge Saturday night inhonor of Mr. and Mrs. W, G. Jcnkingof West Englewood.

Mrs. WiUiam J. Gassmann andson, Edward, of Garden place, are attheir summer home on the Mctede-

'conk,River and Patrolman Gassmann-Btill-ioJn.,them next week.

John F. Cron~lJfrrr~

mcmlJe? or thc'Vatsity-basketball-andbaseball teams. A member of theNavy V-12, he

of-Mr;-and-Mrs; Ralph P/.TJerrlU pf signmem..,;. .. .204 West End places wag incorrectly1 - H c retUBfied home last week orfreported as a marriage fn last week's l c a v e o I t c r scrvhlg for 34 months Inissue of this paper. Mr. Torrill is on t h e Poctftc. ,Hfi campaign ribbonssea duty in the'Pacific • and no date include twelve batfle stars and among

— --• • them are the Asiatic-Pacific ribbon,

pltal< has been in 111 health foralmost a year. Mr. Veltch was a na-tive of New YorkCity and had madeHis home in Crahford Jtorr2X,years,coming here from Jersey* City. Hewas employed u s a sub: station op-erator-for the Public Service.ElectricCompany of Bayohhe. -His wife,Anna Ruck Veltch, died eight years AUellt.

g O • • ' -• - • - •- • . . . : i . W A

AN ORDINANCE Concerning- Ata*olle Ber-

opined by .Township Commitu.

. Union County for 1945, was referredto Road Committee.

Statae Highway Dept, advising•' Dept • approved request to db the• proposed widening of the present

pavement on Mountain avenue. NewProvidence Boro.'Xrbm Summit Cityline -at Division avenuei to Maplestreet, with County f6rces, Jthe ma-terial to be furnished, under Countyco'ntracts.. "were ' referred 'to Road

- Committee.' ..... . . • •" :-\ .Board of Public "KTorks, enolo'siKg

'copy of resolution granting permis-sion to Shell Oil Co_ to cut curb at

" - Elmora avenue Sand* Rahway ay.enue,Elizabeth. •was-referred-torHoad-Gom^mittee. , "• ' ' '

Chairman

k 1

V

• %

OgO.S

them are the Asiatic-Pacific rlbboniand the Philippine Liberation ribbon

also holds the Good .Conduct

orL_a rainy day — the weatheractuaUyhlis no effect on

Vacome sticky.

The uf.v»« „Ison High School In Brooklyn

i«uiu Mr. Gassmann was graduated|from Cranford High School.-

1 radio repairing;" Cran-E t m n Street

Gdar^nteed radio r e p a gford Radio, 2 Eastman Street.

Wash., is spending a tew weeks visit-ing his wife and son,. Joseph, of Eliza-beth^ and his parents, Mr. and Mrjf.Cron of 115 North Union avenue.. Mrs. A-.C. Woods of Woodlawnavenue is spending .two weeks at theMiesenhelder House at MHford, Pa.

DDiERIN ORDER TO GIVE ITS EMPLOYEES

A MUCH NEEDED VACATION-.AND OWING TO THE

DIEEICULT |OOD ffUAT

SeieeUnc OnionsIn buying onions select ones that

are bright, clean and hard, with dryskins. Watch for moisture at thestem end, as it may indicate decayat the heart of the onion. Stone them

; to a cool, dry, well-ventilated room.

. alcohol Iciwtcrocw m nw, »<™..«,..,. .^ v . rd, whichnuy Iw liuied and outstanding at one time, Ulicroby fixed and Mtabllshcd'at nil' (6>.

Roctlon 2. All iirovlnlons of exlsUnc ordlnancn ItioonJlatont herewith.-are thereto ro-poixlcd, but only to Uio eitont of' such Incon-sistency.' • •

Section 3. Thlj_ordfnanc6 shall uIn tlio manner prescribed by atatute.

OKOKGB S. QBTBBBKLDT.

ammonia vo uie mmi.i t „—._ .using' only- a linen cloth for polish-,ing and drying. Wash one glass ata time and nfever_have_;a]»otoerdishes in the dishwater at the saSnrtirhe. ' . " "~

OKOHOBChairman ItM.

Surviving, are "a'slster," Mrs. KatHsfryn Lynn, and a niece, Mrs;- EdwardD..' Shepherd, of Orange. Funeral "services were held from the Meayerand. Lundquist Funeral Home' inMontclalr.

Thunderstorms have long beenaccused of souring milk. Depart-ment of. agriculture experts shaketheir heads* at that one. Bacteriamultiplying In milk causes: th« sour-ing; and heat helps the bacteria tomultiplyr Since thunderstormsusually come in hot weather, andcan be seen and heard, they havelong been accused of spoiling good

WAI/CKB

The

rix. .Tpwnahte. ;ClMk.;

Tucuday, July 3, 19*3,ordUaBn wai

J. WALTER w i . - . ,LTownihlp Oetk of tt»Townihtp ot CrwfaM.

8 W«lnut Ave. teL Cranfwd 6-«««S

~W*SI SOU, tfmnra " r- _Ing there with her over the Fourthot July holiday.,

Mr. and Mrs. G. Uhlig of 55 Burn-slde>avenue have announced the birthbf'o daughter, Arienc Joyce, on JuneIB. .Mr. and Mrs. P. UhUg ot Gar-

' wood, formerly of Crantord, are the• paternal grandparents.

Lt. and Mrs. Dudley W. Robinsonhav* returned from their honeymoon

^randra-ahort- stay_-at_Pj»tchog|uei and• ore spendlKg Koaae' time with1 their

"'• -parenta, MfraKff MM. W. V HJIUITIr;8on-ot 15 Wall street and „

... Mrs. W. J. Ahrens of Cranford tcr>raee. 1st Lt. Robinson is on 0-dayI*»ve, following which he and Mrs.

Will Be Closed

July 15 to 29 inclusiveAND

Cranford' „ •' 4 North ]Union

Ttlu CEAN1Portraits, Wedding, BaW

: , : with or ^Specializing^

CANDID WEEDING:

Cost* but a few cento ware

Paramount Cleaners

Wilbur Coon ShoesFOR WOMEN Wrm

PROBLEM FEETSites 4 to U In AAA to EK

OVK STORE CLOSEDAT NOON WEDNESDAYS

AiMrew erisantiGradtfftto of

M«. CenteanUtrAve* €imnf«WT

advising of bid received - for a newGeneral Motors dump ^-uck, lessallowance • for 'one 1931 Day Elderand recommending purchase of samefrom'the"Union County Buick Co.,was referred to the Road Committee.

Shade Tree Commission, advisingovertime' paid to 5 employees. ' - ' • -

Probation piflce, advising K,athrynBurning, temporary Clerk-Stenog-rapher is enlisting in the Cadet Nurse

—Corps.' — , .Sheriff, advising the appointment

of "Kasriel Levitzky, as Investigator• at S2500 per annum, effective. July 1,

I945v-was referred to Finance'Cam«mittee,

Following monthly reports wereceived and ordered filed: • Auditors(Wright,' Long'' and Co,); Count^

' Physician; Agricultural Agent; Home

PHILIPPINE-John-B^SmlUt

O S SifBiTCo#jwP»B?ftSCOUT—When CaptPhllipplnfi o n t j c e

Mr. and Mrs. Warren W.. Hqlsey'toMr. and Mrs. Leo S, Dingle, propertyin'the- northeasterly .side of Manoravenue, 650 feet from Dunham ave-nue. • .

side oi Burnfid^wenue. S85-SS feetfrom' Elise strecfc..... „ _

Mr. and"Mrs. Kenneth A. McGratlO -MV: and ^Trst-GhatlesT R Soehf,

property in the aoirtherly side of Nor-mandy place 168158 *»et from River?side drive- - , . '•* ' .1 .

Mr. and Mrj; Patrick J. Grail toMabel V. Albert, property in thenortherly sid.-llne of Brookside place,505.70 feet from, fit vision avenue.

Corporation to Thomas. _^ft_.! .. . .

•Mr. and Mrs. William M, Hicks, onetract in Hampton road in the vicinity

" ~ ' "lcl hnV«nufr--and-Wes*- "•"J

'"rjear land' known as"miere I ark; and one tract consistingof 50 feet in- Hampton road at thenorthwest corner'of property of IvaG. Hicks!.. Mr. and Mrs. .Henry J. ShnheonALcc M. Frcyi single, property in lh{1 l i d f F W i ; a \ f e1n^TOes^eTlysid<!rbfFrtinWn!

.«uc, 215 feet from NarntandJ^ place:|~-sWice.-M-."Prey,'fiing4c to>Itose Sha.

hech, married, foregoinirig propertyJftr._and Mtsx.Erwiri Grove to 'Mr

and Mrs. Tf'homas'P 'McForlanc, property at the Intersection of the northwesterly side'of Central avenue anthe TiorQiodsteriy side of Maple place

Anpa Byrne Hoey," widow, an^Catherihc .Byrne, single, Individual!

'* executices. to Mr. and Mrs, f

.. . M»irit"TWml«:.._ ^l.....Samuel Clemens first used Mark,

iidoline of' Hrookside' place, 452.70eet rivwn n 1 vision avenue. . /

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas V- Albert toMr. and Mr>. Howard F. Klein; prop-

siqcline o-f•Brook.srdo place, Q&lDivisuiii aw-nuc. y.

tribution to^fiie If&ginla OtyErilerpristtTon"Fepruary~2,Ttwas originally the pseudonyns dfIsaiah Sellers, an egoUstieal Mis-.

issJlppl river pilot, who wrote »• s*-,ries of articles b>-'Uie N*y,Orleaa*

icayune, beginning "My ophiioa forthe benefit M the citizens of New.Orleans/VVMatdt Tyain" was theleads-man's call on the Mississippiriver^boats that the depth of waternfrlwo faUiufiis—12 feet. WlJleJa

BW Orleans • Clemens wrote a bor-lesquo on Sellers'' work, which wailpublished In a rival newspaper. Hatliked the namp, evidenyy, and 'it at the first_opportunity.

from

JVT.r.and \IrS^>0scar .Ebner to Mr,

(he inUTSivflOH OI l!>« t-'Jiici:of Gr.np <r<«et, and the southeasterlyside ^"Hi-.r.ird avenue.

CorpaMlUon taxesr .;In the ftsc.al year ended in June,

1043: corptsratioa^meome: and. exo^s?profits tuxes yielded almost one-third*notfe-than Individual-income .taxes,but rote changes and economic fac-

•,tora^cj?mhifledjfljttoye Pie _18jH, ih-rdiv.idual income tax revenues- fari

jihead of corporationprofits taxes.

eand excess

WESTFffiLD

TODAY — FRI>.— SAT.

DENNIS MORGAN

is. and Sat.' 1:50—5:15-4RW

Thu. and Frl.. 2:«0—8U5

Also

FRE\> MAC MCRJKAY

CLACDETtE.JPOLBER'r

Richmond avenue..Mj. and Mrs. Fredcrlc/k Laustcn and

others -to Mr. and Mrs. Waiter Coc-"h'Vaae, property hi Uie-northwosterly-

tu (•

Broad St • Elizabeth

Today, frl i Sat>-Jfuly «. 0. tT^ttBtAIt-J^SOCfiiAtt InA

V&&.. Sat. 3:20—6:<5—lft;10

lOftFBO. Frh. 3:30—1:00—10:16

Open Ji«5A,M.

• » « M M » — ^ r - . . . .

celved Us back pay and allowancesafter three years' intcHuuent In aJapanese prison camp, he boucbt WarBonds. The captain was Wounded «nBataan and tost 55 pounds In weight dur-ing his Imprisonment At the presenttime be Is. making a War Bond tour,and buys War Bonds at each meeting."The civilian," lie declared, "Is takinga poke at Hlrohlto each time he buysa War Bond." Smith halls from Hous-ton, Texas. '

FRL and SAT. 2 , BIG HITS!!• J'-. Kandolph Scott '. Gypsy Rose Lee Dinah Shore,

"BELLE of the YUtCOIH"• MJeha«l O'Shea— Woi>dlT«olanI "CircumBtantial Eviiknce*' II SUN. to TIDES.'' 2 Smash Hlts|

Rita, llayworthJanet Blair Lee Bowman

Tonight and Every Night* |Charles Lauchlon Ella

"THE SUSPEC

.-..— FutureIt is estimated that domestic air

lines will W 897#00,00(rtons miles inmail, passenger and cargo by 1850.

I Claudette

Hits Ieorge Ita.ft

SEA"Joel McCrea

Donald O'Connor—Teitcy Ryan

PATRICK W EISM. 7:00, 18:00

S«t 1:35. .5:05, 8p

SAT. MAMNEI« - ^ • L*S;CAttTj3«>N8

Sun., Mail.JACK BE!

T«&«

„. fuly 8. 9. 10—ALEXIS SMITH

JR BLOWSMIDNIGHT

S 0

SUN.. MON..

GAKY COOPER . <

INGRID BEKOMAN

I n . " - . ; • • •

"FOR WHOMTHE BELL TOLLS*

•±M

1 • • : - : • • • • • • : • ! • . ; $

• . : .i--rf,-;a

•J$0

10:00' M»M.; TVIM, sios. B:OS

- Philip ttorn—Helmut Dahtlne

ESCAPE IN THE DESERT3 5 0 8 0 8 0:10 •2iS0, 8:08, 0:10

Ms*., Tuai. 1:45. 7:15. 10:00

STAfefTS WED.. JULY 11" Itiibt Vouni—Dorothy MeGuire .

ENCHANTED COTTAiGE|I:S6, 8:50 I

Phillip Terry—'Audrey Long

PANAMERICANAi;29, 7M? 10:09

WED! THRU SAT.

"BETWEENTWO WOMEN"

mPlus

| 'I'LL REMEMBER APRIL*!

'AINTS-VARNISHES-ENAMELSSTORE HOURS—During July and August—

Open 8 A. M.—Cluing Monday, Tuesday,

Thursday and Friday 6:30 P. M. ~

Wednesday 1 P. M.—Saturday 6 P. M.

Wffl ReopenMonday, July 30th

L. BlLLIAS, I rop.

«®Mf;

We oay one cent each for wirehangers. Paramount Cleaners/ 8 Wal-nut Avenue/Cranford. —Adv. 7T5

GET TOP PfclCE• For Your-Car

CallCRANFOaUk e-lSU-J

And ask Mr. Kilpatrick to-Appraise. Your Automobile

SPRAPROTECT YOUR ELM TREES

FOtfER BPRAVlNO

BOYLE'S TREE SURGERY CO.TREE BimOKKT IN ALL ITS BRANCHES

43 RANK1N ST., ELIZABETH. N. J.j . BOYLE. Pras. Phone EL. t-Mtt

BLClVStONE

I|W! UNCEY MTZELDRIVES

Tr«*« Trirnmed and

-1.

2.

4 % MORTGAGESON OWNER OCCUPIED SINGLE HOMES

-NoJbrokerage-fees 5^ .Convenient monthly

No Renewal charges. P»F«tt««

Na*e«iceA««. ^ - ^ W ^ e e - a a i L "Long term loan. - if you die.

FftED MULLER, Agent

The ModelJ. IL SPECHT. Proprietor

WILL BE CLOSED

From July

And \ViU ReotMsn

The Btkenl WIU AimDuring Jttly

107 - 5 N. Union Ave. CRanf ord 6-2540

Following resolutions were intro-duced and moved, fbr adoption;

(1) Freeholder Bauer- for theRoad Committee, promoting GeorgeVeolde to Assistant Chief Mechanic,at $10.00 per day, effective June 21,1945, was''on roll call unanimouslyadopted.; • • ' '

' (2) Freeholder Bauer for theRoad Committee, promoting. Frank

Maya Calendar'' The Maya calendar, of 18 months,of 20 days each, with five days addi-tional each year; still is used In theinterior of Guatemala.

«otk in dose co-operationwith your phyticisii to nuio*tun the high healdi (ttnd-

ouctn

[ FRUITS AND VEGETABLESARE N Q T RAPNED!

There's ho need to go hungry—'no matter howffn npr^t'te the hard-working mernfers of your

pdepend upon.«« JPrejcriptioa Headqtulteraj

Seagors Drag Storei I N I . UNION AVENUE. ca. %#m — ani

Funeral

"trunming8"--^rtd Around them build an ample menu\\vith fresh fruits and vegetables. They provide vitamins,minerals, and other Nutrition qualities that make themviial parts pf the diet okevery member of the family. .

XAJse them 'coldr- as entrees and salads. Usethem hot in soubs, with «au«!8 and gravies that stretchmeat flavor. You must keep well fed for your ownhealth and t^help win. v ,^ You will be l ETTER FED, thanks to thenation's abimdairos of fresh fruits and Vegetables. Makeyour selection from our colorful -stalls—today andevery day*

Harness Racing

Pari-MutuelsAT

Freehold RacewayFREEHOLD. N. J.

RACING EVERT

MONDAY, WEDNESDAY.

FRIDAY. SATURDAY

FOR 24 RACING DAYS

START;

F ' O S l t l M I

LI A II V IK , ' U H l I ( 11 >N( S

; 4 S ' M

A rinouncement^~+—

Our Skoppe WU1 Be

Closed

yy During July and August

"• Open 9 A. M. to G P. M. Mon.. Toes.. Thur&, Frfc, Sat

Day Wednesdays

Cranford Flower Shoppe. MRS. GRACE E. DEIIMER. Prop.

OWord 6-1032107 N. Union Ave.

MEW AMi) USEDMUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS• B O U G H T

• EXCHANGED7 • S O L D

• Records of All Makes

• Music!

COMPLETE LINE OFHOME RECORDING

. DISCS AND .'NEEDLES

INSTRUMENTS REPAIRED

" MUSIC rURNISHEDFOR ALL OCCASIONS

GREGORY'S310 WEST WONT STRUT

TtU-PUD. -6.8349

Opas Than , and Bat. Bvoa.

ADM. SI.00— Plus Tax

YOU Can Own This GorgeousROOM BUNGALOW

« NOKTB TJNION AVBMUB ORANFOBB

H C r ^ ' T T ' * ' 1 ' ' ; " <;,.... \' i . . . • • . , . - • * * * » • ^MI T r > ' l B A A Jh' J ^ ^ ^ ^ A J W fcAAAA^k^^'fl'wVVVVVVTWrVOVVV^rVVV'WVVV^rVVVVV^^^^^ ^ i a ^ * ^ ^ a ^ * ^ * ^ " " ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ! ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ . •-.•. .•.',.;.,' ' : , , \ ) i . \ 'J<^,\\ • \*'-' V ''•\>'»*1 l \ ' '^V' 1 ' ' t ! ' \ ' ' ' * ' i \ l : ' »•* (, 'y\' i1'. ••%• •."•'•S\.i''*'\?'t * ' " V 1 \ *' • \ V . '• •• . <• •• (• '•*• '-'\ > \ '• • •'•;i •'• • v v \ r i f ( 1 ' ' ^ V ' ' ' . ' , ^ i '<'' M ' \ ' • ' '' • '•

r\%cationUntil August 3 A

Yep, Monuand me are oh our way to theNorth country for a little fishing andrelaxation for four weeks. We hope

a jplejasant time.

Zftif,

*6,990F. H. A. TERMS

MENThese are Permanent, Pb«t-

wilav-chance for advancement

with Designing Experience

Lay-Out Detailwith at least six months experience

\VMC Rules . ..

• " - . " • * ' • ' • ' •

Apply at once, employrhent office

GENERAL INSTRiMENI_QORP^829 Newark Ave., Elizabeth

£fym

••'•'t-im

MM

US R Union Avettue

A rare value in times like these! 4V4 large rooms in on attractive'bungalow of excellent brick construction (as speciffed by F.~H. A.)located in an up-to-date, completely improved community in Cran-ford, N. J.; near schools, churches, shopping, transportation, etc. .

LARGE. BEAimTClAY LANDSCAPED PLOT(No plot smallw than S.000 squaro. feet)

Modern kitchen . . . Rockwool insulation . . . tile bath . '. . shower.". . blower system, heats in wintcr-^cools in sumifaer . . . beauti-ful architecture . , . brick construction . . . and many other out-standing features.

THIS DREAM HOME CAN BE YOURSthe Time Ta'Bay

OIflitris the Time y

'' Phone for Information at Once!

LEXINGTON HOMES, Inc.Suite SOS ,

1000 SPRINGFIELD AV&, ^~

ESiex 3^5901lihta

say 1 JACK. HALEY, star tf tbt~ ~SEALTEST VILLAGE STOKE'PROGRA

Jack Haley is right! You get the very tops inenjoyment when you huy. Sealtest Ice Cream from your

- Castles Dealer. Its smooth, creamy deliciousnessadds sparkle and zest—plus good solid nourishment—

'. to your wartime (Jict. Serve quality Sealtest Ice'. Cream often to your family.

, :!^iATT^

• f - STLES

^M!&MMMMM

Page 4: Costs Up If ife-:;., PFolhRises Boys' Camp Grabau Is …...^!y t'^'jji'^:'?!?l •: •;: ?i-^ ' -l;- •"*'i;';. •'•'•••;••-.''.'• '*••''. ri.'**'•'.•'.•'

LMANNWeitflel& M. J .

_ _ _ _ _ _

ill

OTNE piec* oak dining 1*6601 suite,. excellent eotMMtion, reasonable. T*L

wwart t e l l e r . t'cLCRapford6-1383.| |~"-}$t»m)t M a - O n e etc* aBeaaUiae for.MM

•1-YiA

^ Salong ^ - D o r o t h y •Flemingy-Prop— . - - • - - - - . -

108 Walnut Avenue ______ Granfbrd 6 4 8 4 6

•TRICYCLE for 8-year-old child. T«l.i 6-H82-K.

oak. bpeakfast_suite,top; $25. Te

I BABY washer, like new. T e l CRan-.ford 6J3032-J. .

Veteran __ - . . . .'unium_ea,"- i tour' '"olf \"f^e^i«b»piM«'S- bicycle, ty tech, excellent

rtmpnt or h o n " • W»ft*+:h<*e*_ condition. .Tel. ORanford 6-0820after $30 p. m.

BEACH uftibrella.(MWS8-W.

•Tel. CRanford I Site, VACUUM Cleaner to be Used 1 .

•young couple for .new household; 1baths.

known. make, , A - 1 . condition'.CRonford 6-1878-W.

,tel.

PIANO wawtedM-,any condition.' A..Vrcdenburgh, 240"&orth Avenue,West, Cranfard. Phone CRanford6^0123-M. • tf

double car garage, fruit trees, s u m -mer house, corner lot; $16,600 net.King, 2 Hamilton Avenue, Cranford.

7&*tS*t*te=^?if^iSrSitr^o-_^7-^__*

$2200, taxes and fuel $325;$9,000 home near high school.

FJtVE or six room house, bungalow or "DELTA" jig-saw, 24 inch throat,apartment, by quiet refined adult TeL CRanford 6-0951_J. . '

h i ldandiM>t>e^a A ^

also.

HIGHEST prices paid for Singer,* .Machines in any condition. "Wcst-

flcld Sewing Center. n o "Brood Street, Westfleld, N. J.

_____ _•• _ _ . . 7 - 2 6

$8500.00

IN ONE of Cranford's best .neighbor-h o o d s , . near High School, w e have

CRanford-B-OWtt-R/

FOUR bedrooms, two baths, fireplace,. garage, nice lot; $9,000. -POUR bedrooms, three baths, fire-

place, two^car garage, 75 at 225 riverlot; $9,950' ' .••"••> JOSEPH G"t~3R '

CRan. 6-1890

desire bungalow or small houseJbySeptember 1st. Tel. WEstteld2-3487-W. . ; tf

no children.1 CRanford 6-1617T 14

mm Doit Ameche,

mmm&

Or Was ItMr. Bell?

!»"• '

for sale b large.house with an openporch, large living room, open fire-1 j_.6 North Ave,, W.Place; Abedncxmes^S-batixs on-second"floor; .maid's room on third floor.Large-lot, 2-car garage, mortgage

$2500.ment.

Can be seen- by appoint-

MAIL'S bathing' suit, left in car of• Grntiford gentleman, giving^ West-

field boy a ride from Point Pleasant

Tel . WiEstfleld 2-0262-J.

.j Garage far Rent42 SPRINGFI

THOMAS MaeMEEKlN, Realtor3 North Ave, W. Cranford, N; J.

iarge

BUNGAIiOW—6 ; rooms first floor,large r o b m j n d floor with stairs,lovely sun porchT log bTTrnTHglttre3'

• place, steam heat (oil burner), ga-rage, nice neighborhood near schooland shopping; $8,000.

S I X room home in High School sec-.. tion,, sun porch, fireplace, breakfast

lipnt, lf)W_y

FURNISHED—Bungalow, 'apartmentor room with private bath. .Resi -dential, section, couple, no pets, orchildren; Tel. ELizabeth 3-4000;room 426"; ?•

?HniEE__or:_.f_o_i_r__b_xir_m;t;^^Cranforff. Must vacate JuTjF15tn7•by order of court. Tel. CRanford6,0716. ^ -.-_. ' tf

WHITE. Elephant Sale — Used andnew, dishes, furniture, . clothing,canning, jars; also jams, jellies andcanned goods. One week beginning"^July 5; 9 a. m"| to 9 p. m. '30? NdrtJi 'Avenue," East, 10 . minutes, from ''Cranfprd Center. _• ' ..

10 to-16, 0rto~15. •Pall line ofSportswear, shorts, all colors. EdithHill^lflJ^tyBdSfield. Tel. WEstfleld 2-1410. Open .till 9 p. m. Mondays. .. . " tf.

lot, on heat, excellent location?$8,500.—Modern 6 room house, lava-

CRanford W-J. 6-21

tory 1st .'floor.RJCHARDS-SWACKHAMER

lififtl". • Anyway, to onr Way of thinking,.whoever invented.&e telephone u deserving of many thanks

Jolt f HONE Weitlield 24)248 and tee liow quicklyVOO can complete the lew details involved in arranging

JANIT6R or middle-aged couple toj take care of small building in cen-

ter" 6f town, part-time only. Free1 rent f 3 ^oom^ and bath), heat and

hot water." Inquire..F..DiFabld, £NortH Union Avenue. Tel. CRanrford 6-2151, 9 to 5; evenings CRan-

, ford 6-0205.

CRanford or CRan. 6 04"if6

THREE bedroom home, tile bath,, sunht

LARGE furnished, room wtth"*{v)ih|beds, off bathroom, in private h6me7Jonly twd in. family. 2 _ W a d e |Avenue, Cranford. ~"

bicycle, 26 i n c h , " C o l u m -bian", good" condition, reasonable.Tel. CRanford 6-2806.

PARK:home, tiled bath ' with shower,steam" heaUjoak "floorsrTopeh"porchf!garage, macadam Stive,'. ShermanSchool.district; $7,900. . - • - . ,

- parlor,—fireplace, steam heat,' ga-". rage, fine location near Roosevelt

- SchooL-HHouseTieedsr a~little~patat. and it will make a lovely home;

$ 7 , 6 5 0 . . - • ; - , .• • ., IThiBoffloe will greatly appreciate anyModern* 6 room| listing of properties" FOR SALE

that you may have or 'know of.Ave.i'Eii;

portation. 2 North."tfnlon Avenue, I 3RiPWDW,liny:iength, tor

furfiace, kitchenporta t io .Cranford. Can be seen after 6. .p. m.

im'^'

mmm|p

IfeSv;

And when we jiay ".6. K. — Come in toijay'and getline tnoney you need" you'll join us in laying—THANKSto Don Amedrer- Or was-it Mr. Rell?1-"*-

• • • • . : • . • • • • " • J O H N E. PITCHEtt.

. P. S .—The same Friendly service is available to real-tfonti of a l l nearby communities.

I r a S S t BROAD ST. (oppwlr. Cnlral Av..) WISWiU>

AWNINGS, shades;. Venetian blinds• slip covets, drapes. C. C. Downe,

Teli WEstfleld 2-0161.

or write fi. V. Boyd, 2114 &Oaiver Street, Labway. TeL Rah-

7-1062. - V t fway __tf-

WANTED—Man w h o is interested inTttuklng money and being his ownboss?,-in a business not affected by'priorities. Nationally known com-pany, largest of "its kind in theworld. No house to house canvass-ing. We furriish prospects. Con-tact or write Mutual Benefit-Health

'& Accident Assn., 2003 NationalNewark Bldg., Newark, N.'J. 7»12

few ::-v;c

W&

M

^^•teii!^

THE WARS war WON ycr/

MOLD MAKERSMachinists und toolmakers"on plastic

molds, skillctf—top wages; guaran-teed " postFwar position,, modernplant, highest national reputationquality work. Many employee ad-vantages: PROFIT SHARINGPLAN;- whereby employees investnothing; PENSION PLAN withoutemployee contribution; family s e -curity; large enterprise built onmutual benefit principle. All let-

WESTFIELD: FoUr bedroom home;two tiled baths, 3rd floor bedroomand bath; oil heat,: double garage,white with,green trim, huge living"fflptn ' wWr^tpne-flrcplacJc,: -'dining-'room'-'opens into screened porchwith flagstone floor; tiled kitchen,

•15 x. 150 lot. Only 20 percent re-quired.

WE ARE CONTINUOUSLY LOOK-ING FOR PROPERTIES FOHSALE. IF YOU ARE THINKINGOF SELLING WE WILL BE GLADTO HAVE OUR REPRESENTA-TIVE CALL AND JUWISE YOUON THE ADVANTAGES OFSELLING ON TODAY'S MARKET.

FOR further information" regardingthese properties call our Cranfordrepresentatives:

Redttbed (*; $5,750j 6' rBonVTumte in' choice North. Side Ipcation, modern•, science kitchen that will save, you

many steps,' 60 x 130 well shrubbedlot, double garage,'low taxes. Own-

—cr in Florida •&

SUBSCRIPTIONS — New, renewalgifts and prizes. Lower rates toservice men and Womett,- Write ttrphone CRanford 6-0980. .Miss C. B.Weldlh, 18 Berkeitey Place, Cran-lord. . , . . tf

EtiECTROLUX Gleaners; now^ w-taking orders for N e w Machines.•Still servicing your machines. Deal

\ direct .with authorized represehta-"tiye. Edward %. Wittke. ,JPumeWEstfleld 2-46(W-J. , «

• • • ^ »

t thathbme for $3750.

you can puy this Stow-

ANTIQUE and Gift S h o p 3 r Clicks,original paintings^ bisque, lamps,china," -'silver," bric-a-brac, silkshawls, jewelry, desk, Chippendalecloset, chairs, tables, stroller, deerheads. We buy antiques and "bric-

J Street, Cran-

On the market again and are we gladto have it! Here's an unusual 6room home that we thought had

/ b e e n sold; however, it is available^again and .you. should see it quickly.White colonial, tiled bath, garage,Orange Avenue section; only $7,650.

Newly listed 4 bedroom home, bathand kitchen finished hi imitation

- tile, steam heat, double garage,50 x 1-10 lot, taxes $140; only $5,800.

THE' JUMBLE STORE is open forbusiness as usual. For collectioncall ORanford 6-3047. 7-26

,ford. Tel. CRanford 6-2423 andCRanford 6-1130. • . 8-30

\tttd4titt<f s"MACHINE made buttonholes; ruffling,

tr immings , -etc . , 'general sewing.Tel. CRanford e-OSO^-M. - tt

CHEAP—"My Bo&kjiouse", nine yol-,_umes; library - table; . two gilt"framed pictures; radio,; perfectcondition. Tel. CRanford 6-1842.

Mr.-Harold Wilson—CRan. 6-I954-RMrs; Marjorie Sedgwick—CR. 0-2653Mrs. Miriam P. NeviUe—CRan. 6-2126

HOWLAND — 444 Chestnut Street

PAY DAY every day. The most l ib-l h i t l li ffd feral hospital policy ever offered for

individual.or family group's. Youdo hot have to be a super Salesmanto sell this hospital policy. Afterone ihoUr;S tralnlncKour men start

"out with bona-flde leads and enjoyj

LICENSED ELECTRICIAN — Housewiring, fixtures, repairing in allbranches. Fluorescent fixtures.

DANIEL J. HEYBURN

„ . only 3 years old.kitcnen, modern bath, gas

' heat (cost'$65 last year). Insulated,automatic hot .water heater, a-t-

5-tached garage, 60 x 100 lot, taxes

ServicingE. E. MILLS—Westfleld Upholsterer.

Furniture-repaired and reflnlshed.Antiques restored.: Cushions, Win-dow .Seats, ^Pillows. "Estimatescheerfully and freely given. All

...orde£s~j>romptly attended to. 545North Avenue, East. Tel. WiEstfleld2-2304. •-- 8-30

SPECIALIZING in Splrella Support-ing Garments; also Maternlty^GB.r—*-ments, both individually designed.Fitted in the privacy of. your homeby appointment 'Mrs. Lilly Woew,337 Walnut Avenue1. -TeL CRanford6-1098. 3-29

ARE .CONTINUOUSLY "LOOK-ING FOtt _PROPERTIES FOR

Res. 5" Burnaide A v e , CRan. ,6-0507

Real Estate Wanted|—cjcccptlonal earningsJtoa«thc_flraLJ FOR QUICK R E S t n . T S -

SAVEA B U n O L ! t w i l l

The h i t bullet fired in thli war will go to thefront in a paper ca«e. Until then, every Item•hipped oveneoi muit be made, wrapped ortagced with paper. Vour waite paper helpsthat itream of wppUes along. Snvf all yourwaste paper — turn it all in — shorten the warwith it!U.S. Victory WASTE PAPER Campaign

day. 'Contact or write Mutual I"Benefit HegltrrT&~Accidcnt~Assn.,2003 National Newark Bldg., New-ark, Ji. J. _ . . .7-12

fc CO LJL £ C T IOSUNDAY, AUGUSt 5th

Home Insulation ~-•6ARRETT rock wool insulation,

blown method used; personal su-pervision. Established 1928. Wm.L. Schroedcr, 18 Adams Avenue.

CRanford 6-2700. tf

Trees RemovedTREES tuken down and removed,

stumps pulled. All Work guaran-teed. Completely covered .by inrsurance. Phone or writo A. V.goyd. 2114 North Oliver Street,Rah way. Tel. RAhway 7-1002. U

List Your Property For Sale

We have clients for 1-2-4 family.houses In Cranford, Wcstfield

and Garwood. ,

JOSEPH J. GUKER116 North Ave., W.. CRan. 6-1890

W ASJHING- MACHINE REPAIRS

OF SELLING WE WELL BE GLADTO HAVE OVR REPRESENTA-TIVE CALL AND ADVISE YQUON TtfE 'ADVANTAGES OFSELLING ON TODAY'S MARKET.

FOR further information regarding Ithesij• propertiesrTcaH:r:^ou"r Cranlordlrepresentatives:

Mr. Harold Wilson—CRan. «-1954-RMrs. Marjorie Sedgwick—CR. G-2653Mrs. Miriam P. Neville—CRan. 6-212J)_|

HOWLAND _ 444 Chestnut StreetROSELLE 4-1050. '

ironing machines. Twenty years'experience. Listed in. . Classified

< section, .pf. telephone.Hare: .Tel. ELizabeth 3-5168. 8-30

FRUIT TREES and BERRY PLANTSStark's young-bearing treesmore and finer fruit quicker,in your order now for fall 1945/andspring 1946 planting. Call drwri teme without obligation. Wflllam F,

CRANlfORD Refrigeration and Repair. Service. We. specialize iri' Frigii

* dalre, ' Kelvlnatorj Crfisley, May-flowe"r, .Norge, etc.. Prompt service.Tel. CRanford 6-28303. tt

USED -furniture/'dishes,- cut glass,etc. J. J. Guker, 116 North Avenue,West. TeX CRanford 6-1890. tf

WRINGER Rolls. RoH» in stock forany/type wringer. Bring In your

WASHING MACmNE REPAIRS,,Only expert mechEnlcs worknq

appliances. Irons, vacuum c>

Listings Wanted "WE HAVE, several prospective buy-

ers for Cranford homes. Kindlysend' us 'your listings. HENRY J.SHAHEEN, 336 Centennial Avenue.Cranford. Tel. CRanford 6-2416or CRanford 6-2249. I. tf

SPECIALIZING in Masonry, carpen-try, asphalt roofing, repairing roofs,asphalt driveway. All types ofbuilding reconstruction work. Warapproved, jobs. Satisfaction guar-anteed. Reasonable^ -Estimatesgiven. Tel. WEstfield 2-3l54^Mbetween 5-:30 and 7 p. iru 'JohnMonaco, 232 St. Paul Street, West-field. tf

did

Make a practice of buyincBonds and Stamps each week.

War

* %

m,"BOOK

m N^fbcbiH&DiffsfWtl Hontldeas

10 Pafie Book-24 Section CUppIng File,there are Ideas for every room in your housefa this big new remodel and redtcortUoabook—packed from cover to cover*with.JMmttttiOM. Five complete t»oks la oae.Only SO ctnts-Getypur copy from us now~»Slid irlth it a FREE Topulflr Home of To*

' complete plan book*

fj'.-':te-;! ^ feriiBral Supply Co.AVE. — O t 64J50S > - CRANFORD

i ' i . " i ' i f : i ' ' ' ' ' ' i W ^ ' * ' ' • ' ' ' • ' v ' ! 1 ' . ' ' ' ' ' ' - ' . ' ^ - ' ' ^ ' - ' ' ' - - . ' - - ' « ' • ' * : - * ' , ; ' - { . - . ' i - ' ^ V '••.•••"'•:'•••.''••'::•"''•• : ' : ' j \ ; v '•• ' • ' • ' . • l ' ; • ' •>•! ' , '?

^ h _ j iai^j,1^

YOU'LL* BE*DR1V1NGNEW»CARS»SOON! ItSELL YOUR OLD CAR

N O W !

to

AUSTIN WILSONPhone WEstfieM 2-4656

JOSEPp WARSINSKIPainting and DecoratingPhone CRanford 6-0831 tf

PAINTING and Decorajirlg. l irstclass 'work. J. C. Potter, nhorieWEstfleld -2-4403. tf

DAVIS & CRANE, Painters and Dec-oratorg. Tel. ROsclle 4-5590-M. 19

CRanford 6-0989-M. 320 South Uford fo

mates. tf

SUITE-^-Bedrootrf,'sitting room andbath,--suitable for two people; alsogarage. Tel. CRanford 6-2187.

THREE rooms, well insulated, thirdTelfloor. Business couple only.

CRanford 6-1673-M,

CENTER of town, 13-15 EasjWrianStreet — Modernized

-apartment,—ready-tile bath and kitchen,, h

ers, radios, motors, toasterspaired. Coffey's, 1 AidTel. QRanford 6-22241

re-Street,

tf

UNION County Repaif Service. Wespecialize in rebuilding and repair-ing Thor and Cahor Gentle Hand);also other nrakes. Tel. CRanford6-0663. / ' ' «

we will duplicate It; white' ? , Cran-

/ ford. Td, CRanford 8-2224. * XL

TOP soil, woll roftecl manure, cinders,blue stone; delivered. Al Hacssig,WEsttteld 2-0859. tf

RADIO fCepairlng, Cranford RadioService, 2 Eastman Street. ' Tel.Cffanford6-1776.

FULLER Brushes. For tooth brushes,household brushes, polishes, waxes.Call or write L. A. McKee, 12 Ar-HnBton Road, Cranford, N. J. Tele-phone CRanford 6-1785-W. tf

Refer-heat furnished.ences. Inquire Eclix DiFabio, 6TNorth Union Alvenuo, Cranford.

.Tel. CRanford4-2151, 9 to 5. *'

Sewing Machine Service. AUmakes sewing machines, vacuumcleaners, refrigerators, repaired andbought. 136 Coif ax Avenue, W.,_Rose!!e Parlt Tel. ROselle 4-0512.

FOR complete household electricalappliance repair call Napier's Radioand Refrigerator Service. PhoneCRanford 6-0307. Free pick upand delivery; service.

FLOOR Waxes. Try our brand"Ex-Cel", you'll like it. Paste andno-rub at special prices. JohnstonPaint Shop, 107-5 N. Union Ave-'nue; Cranford. '•„ •

"SKYLIGHT" washing fluid. Theoriginal Skylight formula, >25c pergallon (5 cents refund for Jug).Chapin's Sport Shop, opposite fire-

-Jiouse. Tel. CRanford-fl-15fl9. tf —

NEW roofs of every, description; re-pairs, maintenance, leaders^gutters.Budget pay plan. . Michael J.Harris, 645 New Point Road, Eliza-b h T l J B L k b t h 2 7 1 5 3 t f

fiQQVEH Vacuum-Clcanefa—Auth». orized Factory Branch Sales* and

WILLIAM ROESEL. Interiar^and e x -terior painting." Skilled; mechanic.Personal supervlsioryPhone CRan-ford 6-I572-R between 7 and 8P. M. only. /

Service Station. All makes serviced.L. Rosenblitri, Rep. Hoover Com-pany, 75 West Jersey Street. Tel.ELizabeth 2-7661. tf

Roofoig-RtpairingRE-ROOBItNG. Sidings asbestos and,!

insutafeA brick Bonded roofing.Repairs. JOHN LANGE, PLairi-

jKcld 6-10352 or UNionville 2-0667.

WANT TO IMPROVIYOUR HOME?

T I M E P A Y M E / N T SA R l t A N _

"We do Carpentry, Busonry, Ex-terior PalnUnr. Jnterior Deeor-atinK, Plumbing, Waterproofing,Rooiiuc; Blflut, Sheet MetalWork. • .No Job/Voo Small or Too Large

itea Cheerfully Given '

PARAMOUUNT, «e. Union

APPROVED Johns-Manville roofing;also others; brick siding; flat roofs,bonded; roof* repairs. Wm. L.Schroeder, 18 Adams Avenue. Tel.CRanford 6-2799. tf

A. KANTNER. > New coats andscarfs for sale. Remodeling jradrepairing high grade furs. -118Walnut Avenue. Ph6ne GRanforde-1678. • • ' • • :

FUR9-«— Repairs, storage. Some usedand new fursfor sale, D. Dryson•antt aon, a* KArui Avenue,Cranford.

ELECTRIC light bulbs. Get themnow; we havo in stock all sizes upto 300 watts; also Srway bulbs, largebase. Johnston Paint Shop, 107-5N. Union Avenue, Cranford.'

LORETTA VREDENBURGH, 240North Avenue, West,. Cranford, teli.

openings'liuurr

for beglnnere, 75c half—tf-

PIANO Tuning and Repairing. War-Groff, 'tfor 25 years West-

. field's and Cranford's foremostpiano tuner," 244 Walnut Street,Westfleld. Tel. WEstfield 2-2325.Member of New Jersey Associationof Piano Tuners tf

E. R. BENNETT, Teacher of Piano._Latest methods.- Beginners and ad-vanced courses.' Special course, for"adult, beginners. Lessons at yourhome. 666 Dorian Road.- PhoneWEstfleld 2-5396. tf

CARPENTER, contractor and smallalteration Jobs. . J o h n Klmlcr," 55Third Avenue, Garwood. tf'

A. VREDENBURGH, professionalpiano tuner of Stcinwoy and otherhigh grode pianos. I buy, sell andrecondition pianos. 240 North Ave-

. nue, West, Cranford, Tel, CRan-lord 6-0123-M. tf

LET. us estimate on. any of your mov-Ing or storage' prablftmi. • M«jdera

t sd experienced; cornyteous men. Agents for Allied VanLines, Inc., loag distaaee mover*

GENERAL REPAJBS... ..,.,,.„.AUetationa, Roofing, Screens

Kitchen Cabinets, Etc.Liberal Terms. Arranged

WM. GRASINGCarpenter and Builder

'General Contractor61 Burnsldo Ave., Cranford

Tel. CRartfbrd 6-19288-0

CARPENTRY builder and generalcontracting. Edward Cusano, 530North Union Avenue, Cranford.

b

that • coverwn*nfe_whlch ; attempts [ i "it """ "JRatiofi Board To

in the WaneIn Cranford

ScarietFever, oneofthVmore seri-i dl that take

S c a r i e t ,o u s <iontagiou« drlwwuM that taketheir toll' among children, it on thedecline In Cranford, according to the

f t h B d f H j t h Indecline In Cranford, accordngreport of .th#-Baard of Heajth.1 Inthe first s ix months of 1045 there.were' 17' ca*ejt. of Scarlet Fever

-pmiwi' tu •WUllom jr. WHlgey; H e hjOfflcer, and in the same period in1W4 there were M cases. . . .

Communicable' disease In general

home j canning entitled,Cooking!" will be held at the RoseltePark; War IPrlEe and Ration BoaiSdstarting on Monday, it was announcedthir week., Mrs. Olga^Sendure-wHlbe in^charge. -

On Monday a( 1:30 p. m. Miss RuthKibbe, assistant home demonstrationagent of Union Countyr will test

l-pressure gauges and, speak on. canrriing problems, ,Mr«. Mary W. Arm-

home' demonstration agentM l l P tti

Nurse's AidesCross' serving

jitfong. home demonstration agent,will be at the Moselle Park ottice onTuesday-at 1:30 to conduct a semi-nar for home cahners. She will talkon food preservation and will glv

Cross s e ghas' taken plnce.rach, chairman of he pCorpsr hasrr«juested-all -the Nurse!a|Aides working at Rahway during theday to contact her that thay may ad-just their .'schedules to "conform withthe Wednesday and 'Friday hours as-signed to Cranfard exclusively..

Nurse's Aides who are working Inthe evening are requested to. keep

•iiwir^fttedin^vCranford during thdgn food preservation and wm givefli'sit dx months ©r^5t in iF2fI^aset ( l l^MO l S f t ^^in all were reported ta the Health I in canning: fruits and vegetablesrwith

> first Six months ortea ta. tne weaitn i"» *_*"'"*lt' **

<? -^mph^sis on saving suga. —_munieaoie^-eusease—were- ««»««<£ «iivfct3fiicllb¥s^for-^c¥nnlnl 7from January to June in 1M4. These fruits without sugar,figures include dog bites, which may Miss Doris BrenglCi Home Eco-or may not result in rabies, whichis communicable.r--None have' .re-sulted in rabies in Cranford for sev-eral years.

- Epidemics of chlckenpox in Cran-ford during the winter and spring

nomic Advisor for the. EUzabetPublic Schools, and her staff, wl<help with nutrition problems durinthe morning hours of the projecMiss McCsueken, executive directoof the'Elizabeth Red Cross, will co

f the Ameat Rahway Hospital

Mrs. R. "W. Nled-of the Cranfprd

T d for the ben*fit of U«fl>e3-^H Clay

The «fnee of government is not to.Cbnfer-happineu, but to Cive«*n op-portunity to work out happiness for

I themselves.' .' ' •—William Ellery Channing

It may be laid as aa universal, rule

-thelV pi ^ . ... _has been requested by the hospital andis. expected to aid.in keeping a corpsor aides"*a( the hospital .at the diffl-

S i l i d -Da:

<m:-m

T h e elimination- of selfish fnferesliis essential to .good -government Inother words, the ideal can only beobtained when Godjrules in the affairsof men. _ r-- -

••','. " — S i r ^Wilfred

: 'That government is the strongest ofwhich every man feels himself a part.

• ••.—Thomas Jefferson

•iterWeartaki

what we have. It' ptjW tofficient r a i r ma c U

r»t* M what we have. It ptjW to-have our efficient repair man caUTresularly t6 check on your tjt>*-wrlUra. It costs so little . . . B « «

much. ~ ~ 1Gall Elizabeth 2-1 Ifi5

Davenport ITpewriter ServiceOttCHAKD8TmE~.eLraABETn.NJ,

Aides should ..contact- Mrs. _ Nledrach

shew the Lord's death till he come;(I. Cor.ll:26)SERMON, Passages from the KingJames, version of the Bible- include:• ''Create in me- a clean heart, OGod; and. renew a right spirit withinme." (Ps. 51cl0) Correlative pas-fiages from "Science and Health with

OPEN 10 A. M. TO 9 * . M.-1MONPAY yH»tf SATURDAY

cable diseases cases uus year ana ini Kexi^rxiss-nuiKtroir^d^TneWaWes,---^ - --,-.May German Measles, added its high- to serve at the booth each afternoon 'Baker Eddy include:

— • - . . - « . - ..«» • ,_._ ___v.i—iiThi.-baptism of Spirit, washing

• :«•: :

I ^ j j : : . : . ; . ; _ | | , p , , : , ! u | ; l j . , , , | A , ,V , , , . , } : , , ,^^ : r , : : . , , ,„ : ? : | , ? ? ^ . ^ ^ ; v*,xi:i^:;^f\y:^

..June report, complied on a-tentativebasis on June 29 .indicates that there

.are but 10 cases of communicable,disease reported during the monthjust past, none of Uiem chlcKenpoxor measles. , , . .

Diphtheria, dreaded* disease amonga few years ago, has almost

p f pthe body erf all the impurities offlesh, signifies that thejsure In heartsee God and are approaching spiritual

i d t t i " ( 5 4 1 )

,.' FIB8T CHURCH Or £HitlST''•' • fiCtEXftiBT • •. ,' ' .-

"SACRlAMENT" is the OLesson-Ser-, Life and its demonstration,mon subject f6r Sunday, July 8.GOliDEN TEXT: "As often as ye eat

disappeared from the Board of Health. reports during the past several years-as-nas-typliold fever Other diseasesthat figure in the totals are pneumoniaof a communicable type, tuberculosis,whooping cough and' plain measles. <

The war-time boom in marriages^ n b l t h h t K

GOLDEN TEXT: As often as ye eatthis bread, and drink/ this cup, ,yc do

Hake a practice of bairinc WarBonds and Stamps eaeb week. . ^ •_

r^ . _ . >_ '_*

• / ,. - • • • • •

i uel Oif Usete-H a i j j t t ^ b f t J ^ ^ f j n ^ rly reports indicate. In the first sixmonths of 1945 .there have been •marriage licenses issued, and In-II

six months. ' • '• "• . ^ £ •' Deaths have taken a drop/ Up uti*

til June 29 there were 42 rfeath's'listedfrom- all causes wlthyit few reportsstill to come ln-.foont. out-^)f-town

^ t f e t o 4 W h l

reJ&ar

column showed/160 deaths of localresidents during the ftrst Six months.v The number of births in Cranforddduring the first s ix months of 1045

>e detennined' until late inJuly>**cause of the tardy arrival of

Hcates from out-of-town hospl-_„„. The total from January to May

"was 118, however, only one less thanthe total of 119 for the first six months

- of 19*4, so an increase -|n the numberof births is anticipated..'

Lutheran Service. Sunday service, in Calvary Luth

eran Church will be at 10 a. m. withJhe Hey, MVlUlani *?H. NUlbanck, pas-tor, in charge. The Church Councilwill ;meet on Wednesday evening,There will be no Dally. Vacation

j W W e ^ S c h ^ T ^ ^ c l i u r ^ t o sum

Next Winter!With our sources, we have always been

__abje to supply our customers even during the

. past two winters when shortages have oc-

c u r r e d ; ' >-. . - .-' .".. • '• -• •' .

Authomed NORGE Servicefor Unloti County

S4^ ^ ^

accurate records of deliveries are maintained^

TRADITION WHERE IT MEANS

THE DINING

MOST . . .•:.M

«*•This lovely dining room grouping is steeped in tradition. \ The beauty

of line and subtle restraint of dt jiil comes straight from die, golden aye of' W •'•- - . . — . ' . ~ ' ~ " ••••

furniture design. Notice the charming influence of Hepplewhite in the

shield-back chairs, the satin-smooth finish of the fine mahogany veneers.

Jitdttdel^aj^cel^

coupons are kept in separate envelopes and

STEPHEN BALOG, Jr.4SS Hahway Avenue, EUtabetb. N. J

Cranfwdi-tSSS-jr Elte. S-lt*S

tiffimtm. , Complete l ine. •-: / ; • of

V _ P A I N T S "HFor LYour Home

Schleder'sCnaforJ Pant & Hardware

We.._ JWttVS-iSW

ROBERT C. THOMSON

\X North Ave., E. (Near Alden St.)

TeL CRanford 6-1717

Cranford

one arm chair with rich mulberry upholstery.

9 piecei 329.

• 4

YOU IN ANY

A friend in deed—your in-

surance! For unforeseen

events—a policy of prepar-

edness is always best!

Let us pO» »«•the umiranee *laa best

ntltod to 7«tf IndlvMaal

CHARLES M.YEAKEL-; . Ingtiraiice . '.

FINE, COMFORTABLE CHAIRS

Here is a group of those beautiful chairs for

which we are famous. Their quality is

'. •" eMellent They have full spring congtrucUon^

• \ -

.end precition craftsmanship throughout.

Available in a wide selection, of fabrics. ,

See thes^tykt.and many, tnahy

more in our 18th Century Gallery.

*AM0W HOME THEY TMlNtCTH|WMtS|^

Our men will lie fighting... dying . . . untilthe bi t gun firei. They need your supportuntil then. Vital (uppliet mutt keep flowing'to theia* .'"Kvety Item tUppedovenufUmide, wrappedor (•gted with paper^ Vour waite paper caa

' " if. Turn in all your wut* .-..

fiAVlNfi NOW FOR NEXJ^

- : i l

Budget Terms

ST. GEORGES AVE. :Hifhway 27 • j ^ - , ^ ^ ^ , . , . , , ,™

' RAHWAY. NEW JERSEY y - v ^ ^ § § ^

plpjligfil^s

Page 5: Costs Up If ife-:;., PFolhRises Boys' Camp Grabau Is …...^!y t'^'jji'^:'?!?l •: •;: ?i-^ ' -l;- •"*'i;';. •'•'•••;••-.''.'• '*••''. ri.'**'•'.•'.•'

!!v"'J::;i>'"'T^V'rl-JV

V-'W'•'•* 'V:' ••'• •'•

^ww friends ot the childrenla ttte Daily. V*catlon'Bible«» *hj. .Hr«t Pr**yterian

attend tomorrow eve-

la the church auditorium and_ „ charge o* ICIiut Ertna Ham-'direttcat of "rtllgioui- education

BK»

dutch, Openingh b hld

"theservices

. morning and the

it§SInchide: Beginner*, Mrs.

A. 1L MfiTnnftfii, Urt. A, P. Barrett,MrsT W. « . Wnwall, Mr* F. H. CordiMand Mtk. KJlpatriA; .primary, Mrs.T. Vw Albtrt, MrL G, E. Butler, Mrs.

Aetty. MdCMarmld, Marlon

•Thompson 7tand Mrs. E-trans; and. I

«OtefcddJack 01ieol,:aad'.;jphh'Sloat -have

been in chat^ (if AgiwinS aUdes andmotion pieturfsaTod the children hA*elearned m u d ^ o ! homev«ndWisslonnrj Wozfc through this, pte-turiza'.ion. -Hottnsn Kelting made aneasel and presented "it to the schooland-Ruth Sp i to Tteroth^?Mchardfand Betty • MrTMannMprinted piodges and «mc£

„ -9*4 went towdOctortbaCan-adian Pacific Railroad. Shortly there*after he came to }feyjrprk and wentto work for .the Key/ York Stack Ex-change. Me lived In Brooklyn-andin Jersey City before, purchasing Jih o i r t e h e r e I n 1 9 2 2 , . '••;-:•••'•'. • •/:'•.

Mr. Ross, whs retired.oil pension.Is a member of Clan MacDonald, sa;if Brooklyn; Brookfem Lodge, 825;

iury Club of the Stock Exchange' His future plans are indefinite but

pastime that will take up part of hisleisure hours. He Is well-known inthe- financial district In New York

atana.aad It s*t~riac taM ib» ijpatkta Vtu O» mliJmn Wttoem

fo»_s«»ao

^^ia^LmS^AaS^iSaSS, a^uii' notutad •poafcla «<•««.*<> Jb* twtstktu* or

t t b ; « t WMSS'M,'tst Jim*. »MJ«T WUllaM. Brad*/ Proctor forJ i 1 i « » E P that mua» U afaowB bttoro th« Bur-

la tfa. BwrM»at«\Co«ut rf t h . Count* «*Itit o clow

flttytbar (M) immrV . ^ J jout bumlrod. ftml twtBty-Bto*. f«* and thirty

f & t a t t J « ) to »UI U f_ MsdtMv.tt tb*Dls*«fc». Court

_ Cotut HaUtM, M tb« d V *f ...

* '"wEDXaSLUY, TH< U H T » A » 0 *. . ,;•• J U L Y . X, D., lUi. :.; .

at tub «'d«k (BVT) •to-IM ilUtoboa *l

cottK-nity (Ml '••*•«*. * •Mint of lilac* oT tmlnnWij,. •• I t * aboM. to-scribed bnoilaal a i* attt kmuro ai - lot 31 DO

S^erta WHC Cr*»f4*d, ST. X

thereof b» publish*! Is tlw Crtnford' a ttMfapaptr PUHIahed

chiefStock- Ek-char.de- for nearly 3$ years,retired last week.!-: He wan g iven A **rception by ta» fellow eniployes «f-the exchange's engineerings depart-ment. •• . ••"*;'•..••['...'••' ;..• .-',.-. "•

The local watt" if « -nat ive o f RossShire, Scotland/and learned his tradein that country, to lWS h * tame to

w! ;•''.; •'\'*'+\'-'\ iTHAT! ... I-";.

Guest PastorsAnnouncement has been made of

the guest pastors .who will occupy thepulpit of the ^First PresbyterianChurch during the month of Augustthe Rev. Robert G. Longaker ofSparrows Point, Md., neWly-appolnt-. . . j t f a

Sloan, retiring pastor, will'occupy thepulpit during July. - - - : - . - , . . , _ . . , : '

The guest pastors will be: August5,.the"Bev. J\ Lawson Suetterleln of

August 12, the Rev. John

Plywood StrongerPlywood,Js'stronger than solid

timber and is subject to less dimen-sional change from atmospheric con-ditions. • . ; ; • • . • • • • : : ; • •"• . •

, ^ - i out hUttdi*<Kh»„, aouttwriy WoM the twtot

tb» aald caaUriy lta» rf .'WMtbt WuHwouu* l u w w a - u *

WoiUriy) i . ttwtolt (not UV) WcloalntNorth i»«»'f*t»(M) d«tt*«*, forty (4«l

of th* ;WbMrib*rti tru*U»»v^oWISW1U and ToJUment of JKSBIi-fc CHABT.e t u t d , «UI b> audltad u d i U b i l by tke Bur-to£tt*.4Uld HpoHcd tor MttlMMnl lo th . Of-BhHH* Court of UM CoUttty of Uttlfid. on Thurt-d.y. «. IM. da, tf3H«#J3W?

Montfialr August 12, the Rev. JohnC. Tanls of Moosle; Pa.; August 19,the «ev. 'Clayton T. <Jrlswold, of theYoung People's, committee of theP ^ t l Board of the United

Eye Exainilnations

CRANFOfcD. N. Jf., - *B*«r«! Tnesn, TfanH. and Sat

CHAEIJ» ft. WI180K,

D i l d June lib. MIS.'. 'W1IJUA1I 8T. JOHN fOMK, Pfoeto, . . .

^ _ _ » 6UnJ>*r S«. a l I l i a W l iUld dMni «a tt.MrtU* taap t » # ba fll« In th*

' - of u l d County rf Colon,

K%$&gpftff^^ '/ '• ^ ' r - - ; ; ^ " t ^ ' ^ ^ - . , ? :.-rBag>jqp»^vv:

PULLETS $2.00

WENDELL S. STILLSELDEN (LONO BSLAND) l l t t - J l

OCOUtTRIAL

' • l '

^Excellent opportunily; far

secretary for industrial ..relations exectttive.

Large oil company located in Northern

~iwar. Good salary*'.'

;: Write, stating .qualifications, to. Box

742, c/o Cranford Citizen and Chronicle. ,

irks Four girls of S t Paul's feyangelicaland Reformed Church, leit Monday tospend two weeks at ttie intermediatejejanp of the church_at Camp Mensch

GaywoodL Men Take"win bdi Sunday

.From Elizabeth A. A.Sunday's blUof double-headers for

all teams in thi. Union County Base-ball League resulted in many, upsetsand the Question Marks gained in theplaying. lifting- themselves out of the

l t e i t h d i b l i H h

pastor,, accompanied the gii-ls and willjeturn tjtis evening. 4EheJ3arwood-delegates were Kathleen and Lillian

rd~~-JtnnrNash. Choir prattiee will bo helthis evening and the services on Sun-day Include Sunday School at 9:45a. m. and morning, worship, at l l a . m.

States; and August 26,. the R«v.,Johnand Aides 8L

Phone GR. 6-0116 ' • •The congregation will meet follow-ing the jtlose of the 11 a. m. serviceon Sunday" to act upon the appoint-ment of a full-time church secretaryand to autholze the Board «ttees to purchase a residence for thepastor of the church and. his family.

Plans V e being made for a farewellreception for the.Key. Mr.

J lSloan on Wednesday, July 18, in theintermediate Sunday. .School rooms.The church dhoiir, under the directionof A. It. Watson, will sing and. refresh-ments will-be served. Members ofthe church and 4helr friends andfriends of the Rev. Mr. Sloan are in-vited-to-attend. -^ • *' . "

Cottoa VuaThere are ^nore than 1,000 unpor-

tant uses (or cotton.it what "mutt haVe

stopped thote con-

ttant bills and dun* PREPARESPRING .ntat letttrt! Yet, the Joneses must have smartened up,

like lots of other people, and arranged to clean up past*

due dditjatiofli at one swoop. Why don't even more

IbUts get rid of the worry, annoyance of unpaid bills?

t h e money is here for those wnVean qualify, and ioiott

jteopk can! Ilany^loans are made on tignature «i1y

-ttt endenKtS ot e^terd^riind s e r ^ charges itf«

tt*y be obttined anywfiere for this type of-

Why dont you come in and see us about helping yo l to

After the Wean ofYotJE Car

Needs » nMth aBd Oil

E and WASH JOBWashes Week Hays

North and ftttfawneld Aves.100 SOUTH A VENDS B.

. CRANPOROV141 BtbAD STMBT

••'• B U Z A B f i T t l STAItON BOOKSWKKKDAY8-S A M. ta 7 r. MLBVNDAf»-« A. M. to B P. M.

- : - ' - " ; • • # • • . . . • •

JdMSURANCB CORPORATION

S^i^

.. : , . - . . , - v . . - i . . ' , n . - ..:•..' •'. •:'?•''i'-i,':l'! •''.' ' " : . ' ^ i i ' l ' « ( » 1 i * ( V / . t ! ^ - t l t l - > . » t ' i i ^ l ' ! ' v - ' ) ' i r . - ' ' - ' / ' ' . J ' v " ,v . ' . . ; ' .';!',>'.y.-' I..;,';1-1, ' • • ' . • • • • -^v .« : •'•' : , ' ' ; ' 7 . " " I ; ; . •• ' : ;••••-! , : .-„•. ;•' - • ' • - - , . . . ,

T • • . • • . ' \.'•'•'''' •-':••'. •• •-';'' ' • ' - . ; ' •"• - : '" " • ! ' V V ' " ' ' ' i ' ' " : ^ / l - i ' S - » - ' ' ; K l f f i ' ' ' i ' ' U t ' ' ' ; ^ • •'• '» . ' •"'• . ' • ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' - - C : >'1"'".:'.'

9-3 at Warinanco park. The West-field Hawks, leading the league lastweek, lost two to the Rahway Byrnesana it-is "anybody's league this week.

The Marks had no trouble withElizabeth at the Warinanco field andTed Wrigle'y, obtained from Plainfleldalt the last meeting, and Billy Fulton,pitched_for the winners. .

Wrigley hurled the opened and al-lowed nine hits while the Marks took

Dingle for'1ST.johnny umgie lor OK A \doubled intheJlrst atuTthlrd innings

1—Maloney.—-and—rWrigley---cam«>through with a pair of two^baggersin the seventh when two were out.

Ed Gray drove in two runs with asingle in the third and Murzinski wasresponsible for the two-run rally, ofthe Elizabeth men in the seventhwhen he. hit a triple.

;i The Marks got off to a flying startin the second game'when Pete Prez-wozny hit a homer with one on in thfefirst frame. .A flve-run holiday, inthe ^second jtaning .nailed down the'second triumph for the local boyswhen singles by Plowucha, Fulton,

~Rubino~^and—prerwozny—and—three:bases on balls did the damage. Ten

Church Delegates

the sixth after Murzinski walked,cheating-Fulton

H KBubtao, ( f i l l81ea'*ll«.BUM. SbIISMOII, Sb 0 0 0Vn'ns. Ib 1- !l'loy'ha. Ib 0 1 0Vomtn. XI z . 2 0Petrow,. If AONCC, 3b _ . lGray, rf

01 0I 0 .

Maloney. c 9 S 0Wrlstay, p ..I S «

B B ' *JuslnaU. If 0 1 0US)wn, cf —0 S 0Zanler, as ..0 "0 1Foo'ara, 3b 0 0 0OresolNi c 0 0 0

. reUMon, e 0 * 0 0L'parakl, rt 1 2 0Wrlnald. Sb 1 1 1Brum, Ib ..0 1 0

.Blnsle, p ....0 2 0

ToUla ;b ToUlr .'.:.J 9. '•»—<.... 124 001 100—9„• COO • 000 SCO—3

Tano-basa hits—Blaio 2. Malonoy, 'l«y... TbrM-base bltr-Uunlnald. Itaso on

-.mil—liy Wrlylny, i ; hy -nijvcla, K. ~balls—otr Wrlclcy, 2 ;• oft Blnclc, 1. Struck—LueOlcc.

GAME. ELIZABETH A. A.

It II KZamler. 3b 0 0 0M'zlnskl. 3b 1 ' 0. 0

LWalldr^aii ..0' 1 0-

SECONDGABWOOD

K B Knublno. cf ..ir 2 0Hanell. « ..3 1 ,0P r o W , lf_X_a._O_

- (iray, rf .....'.0 1 0IIISM. If ,...0 0 0J'.IVtia,- H) 0 2 a,Wobsr. 2b ..1 0 0 'Fulton, p ,.,.z ! 0

clouted a (homer in the fourth andSzabo of the A. A . socked one out in

Park Playground Open. Unami Playground of the Unionf>nnty Park Commission, located* atthe end. of Center street In tne co"park, opened on Monday and between70 and SO children were on hand, theopening day. Louis F. Haar and MissMarjorie Smith of Cranford are di-recting the -activities again this. year-Mr. Haar announced yesterday-.thatregular weekly contests in all spoi-tswill begin on Monday and he urgedall chUdrcit -of - the community. tocome to the playground to participatein the activities. ''"' -"

ttealw. p, Sb 1- II*oc'inar», as 0 0 0Grccblfo, Ib 0 0 0Jualnakl, if »' t 0Bruin. If ....0 .1 nBnmrn, cf .-.n 0 0ItabulskVcf 0 0 0

' . I/parskl. rf 0 0 0Dazlnskl, as 0 0 0Poterann. c 0 «• 0Sliumsky, rf 0 0 0

• Totals , 9 II'• <fi • Totals 3 3 Of—flsrwoot! ...» .ia=5!t=.-™-.-250 ltfl-0-HO

Elisabeth ..; „'. 000 003 0—12Three-baae hit—Plowucha. Homo runs

twlla—off Pulton. 2 ; off Btttio. 3 ; offPochmara. 1- Struck out—by Fulton. .1;

' by Bubo , 2 ; by Lamparald, 1; liy IVKJI-mara, I. Loslnir pitcher, Hzabo. Umplro

Killectm • :. •' ".*• • '•

where she. is, pledged to Delta DeltaDelta sororityr—Lt Hund completedthree years at Rutgers University ands a member of Beta Thpta Pi frater-

nity. He is taking advanced trainingas a' fighter, pilot in the Ariiny AirCorps at Sarasota, Fia., and hasserved in the army for two-and one-

T/SGT. EDWARD J.T/Sgt,. Edward J. Biiekley, 20

years old, son of Mrs. Johanna,Buckley of 502 Spruce avenue;was killed in action in Germanyr

j-a-mes-received from the War De-

hv-hk-mother. He was-killed at the Elbe Rivor anttwas.buried at Margraten, - Holland.Formerly of Kingston, Pa., hewas a star on the Kingston HighSchool football team.. He en-tered service in March, 1942, andwent overseas on January 8th ofthis year after training at CampDavis, S. C., and Camp. Wallace,T e x a s . ~-—<—*•"— . •

Mayor and Council tn be Iwld on July 10, 1045at tlio Municipal nulldlnir. Garwnad," New Jeniiiy,at H:30'P. M. tho wild offers t« purThiuw willbo conaldcrod for final »M>roVu) .nmluaU' In af-cnrdaiicc with tho iirovUtona nf tlio N. J. lievlti-d (Itatuteii of 10:!* Tttlo 4»: Chapter <IO-2and aubVctto tlio followlnc terma and coijdlUons: • . ••. (a) Dciwwlt on flnal approval Hliall JH) atleast 23% of sale [irlii-.. (b) l'un.'ltasar e.»,|iay balnnce nf purclutePrice In caali wltlilii ;Tn du>ii qftvr llnal

Miss Marian Co well,' daughter ofMr. and Mrs. Fred Cowell of 313

ndthe' summer with her aunt and uncle',Mr. and ,Mrs. Joseph R. Brlggs ofMinneapolis, Minn.

BORpCGII_pF GARWOOD> PUBLIC NOTICE

Public Xotloo la hereby clvon Unit tlio Jtot-oush of Garwood haa roc«lved Uto followlnnoften to purchaao Borouch ovrnod land notneeded for public uSo and that tbo said offershavo boon approvou by' the' Mayor and Councila.C a mooting hold on tbo 28th day or Juno,lots and that at a renuiar incclliitt of tho

Lfc :R O, Hiind To WedMiss McPike of Florida

Mr. and Mrs. Carai C. MePikc"-of-Pcnsacpla, Fla., have announced theengagement of their daughter, Miss

4 f cO. _Hund ,son of Mr. and Mrs. Ha/ry-Hund, Sr., of 450 Beoch avenue. • *. Miss McPike is a, graduate of Pen-

r School and

7Trustees of. the Presbytery of Eliza-

beth -to '. iVustees • o( the GorwoodPresbyterianT Cliuiiph,- property In the.'southerly s3de'"bf Spruce avenue, 250

month.

OBITUARY' Anthony DIGraiia

Anthony Di Graziai husband of IdaDi Grazia of 46 Second avenue, diedlast Thursday afternoon jit Orangc-burg. N-- Y.. foliowing a' long. illness.

.natiev. of Italy, he had made hishomfe -In Garwood foV 25 years andwas a communicant of St. Anne'sChurch

In addition to his wife, he is/sur-vived by tour sons, Louis',- Albert, Ar-thur and Seaman l/c Nicholas DiGrazia, the latter stationed at PortChicago, Calif.;'two'sisters, Mrs. Car-meila Romano and Mrs; Amelia Es-posito:. and four Rrandchildren, all ol

'tJHrwood. . ' • • • ' . . _. funeral service^ were held Mondaymorning from the liooley FuneralHome at 318 North, avenue,, west,Crapford, and a high.jnass of requiemWas said. at St. Anne's Church.Burial- was in'.St.'-'dSertrude's Ceme-'tery in .Woodbrldge. ••

Transfer* ofReal Estate

The following deeds have oecn re-eorded in the oWce of Cpun'ty -R«cisrt.er Bauer -at th~e Cotythouse, Ellza

BOROUGH OP GA-RWOODPOBLlb NOTICE

lt<IC NOTICE > hMwl>y Blren that th*Dnroucji of Garwaod hai rwelvnl an otter fromJowpb Pcttoulrtlo aiul nracs. Potruixlclln, bl>wife, to imVhaae IkirAUsb owned' land notnenlitl for public u*e' kitown aa Block SO. partof LoU 2.19-»»-a5T-25l). on tlie Ta* Map •,.«*Die BoroUGh of (larwnnd, Iwlhg a plot of landHO"-* 150' at the Sorib .••ait.erijr-rftinw of- Oaltj » « ^ l H VAIIHII^«cumin;fl\T. thw_ »IIH) of

iSiiJ000.00._and.tlmt_iulcl_offer_luW-,bcby the Mayor and. Council at a. rwrular Ongheld on tbVSfiilh-Jay :nf .Juo.«...l9«S. »'»1 that •reenlar raofllnc of tho Mayor WH! Council' willbe held on July 10th. 1HV at O|i> Municipal-nulldlng, Garuopd, New Jeriey. at it :«o P. M.(pr»<allbi£ time).. Tto'-uld offer Will tie enh-aldored for final approval and sale In acvwntonrvwith tiie iifov|»li>Hi of the N. J. lt«j»law! matimw1037; Title 40S10-W. ami lubjert t» tli« follow-Ins tornu and condltlbna: • .-• . •-.• (at liurdiaaer ast*«. to wect • one-familydwelling hous* on" tlw afofrsald plot, of landHO' x ISO', the cVinatrwilon <v>*b< of wllldi to boHlH Una than IWOO^OOi—«*t«t—wnalrurtlon - to-cominenro wltliln thirty days after filial approraiofoffer.

(b) uopoalt aT nnai appr . _ _ .1st iS% nf thp salw prlro. .I'lirchasor In pay

balance of miwn»f pr*'' <" fasli wltlijn Ililrty,dat-s-an^r final upprwal and also iiay pronor-tlonate ahare of laxos for liala«Ko-of_i-jhr_19J3.luuMt on tho present aswssed valuations..

(c) If purdiaser falls, iiccleda nr rcfusMto pay-lialanco <lu» tooKlifr with rliare^s andUltra 'wltliln sllii thirty dava th» deposit -madeshell, be .n>laln<Ml hy tho llor<iiiuli unlHm c>xr-crnlnc body by r«aulu(loh dwldos to tho con-trary.

(d) .Itirrhasor to pay «>st of publication ofJeeal- notice of salo. • •

4H l'ro|icHyW>nirw»iiveycnjby UanealnaoaRale, (lefil jmhjert to r*strlrtl«la of ivnird. IfM'ny, and lonliio onlln(m(v«. and JJio ciindltlnjis herrui cmitalnM.• " Vi-^'-j- •

(f) ' Mayor an'il'Counrll reserve the rlolft toaivept flrrejert nnyor oil offers.

(e) Paid property api|ulr«ul by .IIonniL'h bytax or lnunld|>al Ken. foreclosure* M deedH Inlieu of said prwenllHE*.'

• • W A I T E R MCMAMUH, .7-5 . '• ' .: ., • ItoroUEh Clerk,

and also |uiy |iro|iorii<uiato MHW Af UUI'B furbalanco of year 11)45 Imaud on proaetit dvaluations. .

(c) If purchaser f nils, m'clpcts or - ref IIRORto pay balance duo to£<>t)icf wliji I'IWITM -nndtales within said ..10. dnyv tho ileiwslt nTuilaliall be rot&uicd hy the RiiroUEh unlvsa irovrrnIns body b ; rowilutlon decide^ to the niiitrnry.

(d) . Purcliancr to |iay coat of publication oflecul notice of tuili*.

(el PnHierty to .lie conveye<l by Ilarcaln andBald Deed Biibjwt.. to restrictions of reiNml, If

iiliii: ordtiHUuma, ..• •'(f) Mayor and Utmiu-41 reserves tlio

j ll. To

aocupt or rojoot any or all .olTcnv(C) Maid proptvty acquired by Boroudi by

tax or municipal lltn tiiroclusiiifi-s <ir di>c<U Inllou-oF Iwld procN!dlni:».

• 0««r -- 8ubmltt«d By Block Let ' AmountSeymour and

Jtulh Wostervclt JS 151 ..;. $lM.doRudolph and - , '

Hlcrld Wen»l 50- Wly 15'of 250 .... 108.0»William and

001*61110 Baas HI 2Mn-»?-'i2A •• 150 00T ' .- WAXTBR McMANITH.

7-5 •'-' Boroush Clerk,

REPLATE your SILVER• 'Expert restating anil MM(inlihlng of family iHverwar*will protect i u value for getf>eratlom to come. Just 'call

MARINO'S• 1UU8S WATWBWOOB VMMX •

Oaa Bloak W«ai at JMalaflaU A»*. oM Men* '•*.'

»*w dfMMtyi S u | « i Aata BairalUUlif Want

feot from Oiu^r <••>,•Mr. and Mr< <.'':'*• U: Marko to Mr.

and Mrs. ;Ed ward I)./; »«, property" in.tho southerly .i.U'i .— r ' f our th ave-.nue, 2flo (oet fr.v. w :.,iaut street.

Mutual S.iv:':-. - r .• i Harbonia to

property-k Arie.hor

Mutual, Say.ii- ]•'.;_..;1_HarmfSnla toAnn-a B; &V>«)-.v.:::..- ~operty- aV tlio

the easterlyDruzok.

mid-lands ot Frank

Dr. Howard P. Wiigert

Office Hour* in CnkxfWtt:Dally 9-A. M. t« I t OMB

Toesday and Friday, t to » * . Ml

Wily .• by

U ALDEN.. St.

- . Flsb- Scrapers . '• 'Fishermen's wix'es can make good

-fish scrapers, out of caps froti) softT3rink bo.ttl.rs. Nail -the caps to a

bine 'brush. •• • •

. Victim's of arthritis wilt find' ea-couragingnews :h recent •testsm'adiwith "coW-maTate".1™" pttta^mtee, curcd'-90 per eeftt-of alleases.

WE .HAVEEVERV¥nftNG IN

TOOLS

Ganjord Paint & Hardwaree. Vs rtrst ~ We Have

JustAbout, Everything"C S f W « K

IM 8OVHB AVat; t . CKAMTOMD •

BUILDING MAtfeRIALS

SCREENS

• PAINT

• MASON MATERIAL

ft. in nrwy HARHWARF,

If You Want THE BEST, Get lt At

Standard Lumber & Supply Co.ESVOIAYES GLADLY GIVEN

High and Chestnut Streets CRanford &OSQ8

•••xm

M

W HAPPENINGSNine Liquor titenAre Granted Here

Liquor licenses for seven tavernsand two plenary retail-distrlbiitkm

• stores were renewed or granted at themeeting of the Borough Council lastTuesday -evening in Borough Hall, it.has been announced. •.

Those renewed, included Al's TaV-enn, now trading as the KenilworthInn, the Monroe Tavern, NicholasCaruso, : Chris' Canteen, "George'sGrove and Robert Driver's" Tavern.Package store licenses were, renewedfor Morris Pollack and James Murtha.. A tavern license was granted to

Benjamin Rodoquino for premisesAl's Tnvern. A

request was received from Sandor M.Zh'clesnik, a discharged veteran ofthis war, for permission to operate atavern and restaurant on property heowns at 665.Woodland avenue. The

.property was formerly in business'district but is now in Residence "A"/zone.. T n c request was forwarded to'the Zoning Board of Adjustment

Troth Announced ; ;;• Mr. and- Mrs-. Stephen Ribecky of615 Fairfleld -a'venue have announcedthe engagement of their ' daughter,Irene, lo Ens. Stephen Kutosh, VS.ii. R., sot) of Mrs. Frances Kutosh ofBethlehem, Pa. ' The wedding isplanned for-.the spring of l!>4fi.-• Miss Ribecky spent her childhoodin'Wllllamstbwn, Pa;, andwas grad-uated in 1944 from the StaubenmullerTextile High School in New YorkCtiy. She had been employed in thepersonnel department of the SingeYManufacturing Company-in Elizabeth-port and is attending Drake BusinessSchool in Elizabeth.

-OBITUARYlira. Emily B. Fink

Smfly-Br^Hnkr-83^yoar*-old,widow of Silas Fink, died on Satur-day at the home of her son, Leon, inGreenwald, Pa., where she had madeher borne for the past three years. Anative of Kenilworth, she had madeher home in this community most ofher life.

She is survived by two sons, Leonof Greenwald, Pa., and Clifford L.of Springtown, Pa.; a daughter, Mrs.Mary Belle of Greenwald; a brother,Edward Greenwald of San Francisco;and a nephew; Thomas Greenof Union.

Funeral services were held Tues-day afternoon from the J. C. PrallFuneral Home In Rosclle and burialwas in Graceland Memorial Park,Kenilworth ». . .. .

BRENNAN & TOYEL. J, tHNHAN C.fc.T«YI

Numbing Healing, Tinning

OLCttfiforti

Ens. Kutosh was graduated fromLehigh University with a degree Inchemical engineering In 1944 andwas commissioned In May, 1044, atPrinceton. He was assigned to a. de-stroyer escjort with the jpneifle Fleetand recently returned to attend theRadar School In Hollywood, Fla. HeIs now stationed in Staten Island andwill be assigned to tho Atlantic FleetIn the near future.- '

Surpme Fairty "Miss Ailccn-Allco-AmortViolc-ot-564

Passaic avenue was honored at a. sur-prise birthday party Saturday evernlng at her home,'arranged for-her byher cousins, Mrs. Walter Grophmaland Mrs. .Joijji. Usonis of Elizabeth,Guests were fram--Bllzabeth, KcnlUworth. Union and Winfleld and in-cluded Mr. and Mrs. Lee Amersheic*Mr. and Mrs. John Cummings, Mrs.Sheila Denton, Miss Lillian Gradls?Miss Frances GrocHmal, Chief PettyOfficer and Mrs. Walter Grochmal,

iwald j§Ct. and Mrs. Robert Sherman, Mr.and Mrs. John Usonis and MrsTMor-rls Weiss., _ _

Concert InatrtunentThe xylophone was first used as

rtJtUJWt

BRIEFSSgt. and Mrs. Raymond Gerhart of

Richmond, Va .. have- announced theWrth of a son, Raymond Bill,' onJune 9. Sgt. Gcrhaft is the son ofW. E. Gerhart of 214 North ' 10thstreet. .

Fireman 1/c Eugene G. Schlndler,son of Mrs. Mildred Schlndler of 214North-10th street, bounded in actionoft;New Guinea, was home on leavewith, his mother and has now reportedto Washington where .he is awaitingrepairs on his Ship before returningto combat in the Pacific.

Frank L. Davis will bef-the speakerat the Community Methodist Churchxm~Smitlay. in the • absence .of tho-Rev. Otis Moore, pastor. The serviceswill bo at 10:30 a. m. and will be-Iorthe entire family.

The Married and Single Men's Cluband its Ladies' Ajuxiliary will meet,tomorrow at 8:30| p. -m. at the firehouse.... All members are urged to bepresent as action,will be, taken on theproposed change of meeting head-quarters.

Carol and Peggy Kuch of SSI4

tion with their grandmotheruoutuampion, L. i.

at

{•»)> jo «ooj OOO'OM'69 a t n

tDjwtui OSAOB ptre ftiaaXCd

aptraid

.nti|

COME ON OVER!The geleetton** fine st

MIKE'S WOOLEN SHOP

run

DOES YOURCEILING NEED

REPAIRING?LET US INSTALL NEWCEILING TILE—T«r"BEAOTT.DURABILITY iHdECONOMV.Comes in n V i s ' BEAVfiFVLCOLOBS.

F.OB ESTIMATE

William L Scboeder18 ADAMS AV1L,

TwuttferrofReal Estate

The following deeds have been re-corded in the office of County. Regis-ter Bauer at the Courthouse, Eliza-beth: . • • ' • ' .

Mr. and Mrs. Wilhclm Fischer-toRaymond W.. McElroy, property inthe southerly side .of Newark, avenue,320. feet from the westerly side ofSouth 23rd street, New Orange Park.-

Albert Bertolotti and -An,thonyCam'elli' a'nd others, etc:, to AlbertBertolotti, lots 1 ond 2, block 10(5,section 7, formerly New Orange; andlots 3 and 6, block 106, official taxatlas.

Bertha Emde WedsKenneth W. Terry

NOTICE

Bertha C, (Erode, daughter ofMr. and Mrs. Christian J, Emdc,;.of570 Fairfleld avenue, an<L_Kenno.thW. Terry, son of Samuel H. Terry of1728 Church street, Rahway, weremarried at 4:30 p. m. Sunday at theFirst Presbyterian Church by theRev. .Chester • M. Davis, D.D., in thepresence of n largo -assemblage, ofrelatives and friends.

The bride was given in marriage byher father. The Wedding marcheswore played by Mrs. J. LawrenceHunter, church organist, who gave nshort recital while the guests wereassembling. The Choir, of which the

gpnornilv active- In yjhiirch nffnlrgMr. and Mrs. Terry arc talented mustclans and she isjj soloist in:the choir.

Grand CouleeGrand Coulee dam contains

enough concrete to provide a 35.V4-pijund cement souvenir for everyresident of the.United States..

London Bridge,,-Jhc. original. London bridge wasWilt in 9D4. .

Flavor Pratesa stick Uf clnlmiiKttroi' a

thin slices of orange, or lemon peelin the prunes when you steam them. 'The flavor la delicious.

naif, : AttendIf working in the hot sun leaves

your hair dry ond lusterless, brashit long and faithfully and occasion-ally use hot oil treatment.

•mf,

mIt a- rcxoUf kabtt

War Bonds anal Stains* eaelt

Notleo Is lie . , . . .l<e madi< to tlio hlcho.it blddor for each nf tliohereinafter particularly dnscrlbed prnmlsiv, liytho Iloraueh of Kvnllworth on Uio- Inth day ofJuly 1»4S at elBht o'clork P. M. (K. W. T.I attho nofouiih llall. Ilomuuli of Konllwortli, NewJersey. In accordance with tho provisions ofthellovUed Hututos 40 :80-2fl- (A).

Ut Black ' Mlalnum Sal* Prie*JI-1S 10H . - . .1 ..._..|:t75.0» for bnth2J-S4' •' 413 ••• 1*0.09 for bothBy order of the Bomujtli Council.

I'llILIT J. iKXJBVNA.7.5 ' UornutU Clark.

vot««i»-«tow««.tip

MBIOMieHlAUHOAtO

COMPIETI $JA

tk* -JVaWaM

CMtCUH •Ctwtwil Aw., ttowatk t

-ranamfcn Man • •fcn Mn1», at, lltl.lliW

ions under(. direction of Charles L.Lewis.

The bride's Rown was of eggshellshade of sandswcpl rayon, with hat,o correspond. She wore a corsjaKe

of talisman roses. The maid of hon-or, Miss Audrey L. Emde,- sister ofthe bride, was dressed In lime \yj,o-picce suit with corsage of red rosesrEdward A. Schremp of Rahway wasbesynaan Mrs. C^J. Emdo. motherof'the" b'fideT was a'ttIre9~IrT

a corsag^'of yellow rosebuds. "Thechurch was artistically decorated withspring flowers and ferns.

A reception for immediate rela-tives was held at the home of thebride. Mr. and Mrs. Terry, left fora stay in Vermont, followed by visitsto Hartford and Bridgeport, Conn.They will reside. at 1728 Churchstreet, Rahwoy. Her traveling out-fit was a brown suit with white ac-cessories and a corsage ot roses.

Tho bride Is a' graduate of LindenHigh School and is connected withthe-accounllng division of the 'pur-chasing department of the Tcxaco.Company, New York City. Shv. isamember of the First PresbyterianChurch and Choir, of Ilahway. and.active in young people's, worlcr

The bridegroom' is-n graduate ofIlahway High School and Is managerof glass iqlcs for the Pittsburgh PlatoGlass Company, Newark. ""He is anelder In the Firit PresbyterianChurch, former president oilowihlp. a Sunday tehool teacher and

CLOSED ALL DAY MONDAYS

SEE BILL AND LEO• • • . . . © • •

When It Come* To Fresh Fruits or Vegetables,

the Mmt Reasonable in Town. If You Haven't

Tried Our Fruit and Vegetable Department,

We Invite You to Come In This Week-end.

And Fruit* and Vegetables Aren't Rationed!

1

' HI •

*

oil

•••"••.-7«:-:-;jB

••':-•'•&

m' • ' ' i > , M (I

• • : m

•sim••m

gSORBHOLEft-8 A. M. to i -P . II,, .

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Page 6: Costs Up If ife-:;., PFolhRises Boys' Camp Grabau Is …...^!y t'^'jji'^:'?!?l •: •;: ?i-^ ' -l;- •"*'i;';. •'•'•••;••-.''.'• '*••''. ri.'**'•'.•'.•'

ff^

mtmConvention

1J.Uors For

EventGospel Tent pro-.

by ttie Cranfor <Jo"s-«f• the Christian and

Alliance will belaid from

fa*s been obtained this year for the©ijj-of-doo'rss religious programs, andIt will be erected adjacent to the

at Hetfprd' • avenue and

, v^plans for ihe tent • services werea o u e d this •week, by -the Rev.wjunee t e , y

.aEfeteton H. Keeney, pastor of the Tab-JMT Services" wTtt~be~field' eifeW

Thursday and: R e y . ' : f e :JSe«ij^-will^continue_the"

. a. m-services eaeji Sunday in the•irrevun-

• jfceHsUe service each Sunday evening^iS|i7:«..ih detent. , • . --'.'._.: ,?'iifee list of noted' evangelists' wihovWill'5erye-as tent' speakers' has not

:::jjWSi been completed but those alreadyvjktad for presentation of gospel mes--'&Sjtjtshere are the Rev." Harold S.'Hid ' of Wilmington .Del., the Rev.

«.Bob Jones, Si-.,-of Bob Jones Col-lege in Cleveland, Tenn,, and Dr.

the Moody Bible

BSjn'.'--':.-.

SfeS

, iituto in Chicago.One week will be. devoted to mis-

jBiaflaiy work and missionaries Afreshfrom the field of-Christian and.Mis-sionary . Alliance., -work' in foreign"Sana* w^ll be present at the tent eachevening to tell of their experiences..

»: complete prxigram will-be'an-

^i^ evening the Gospel Tab-: *riiac3e Dally Vacation* Bible Sthotol•« 11 bring its two weeks' program to-a-itlose wltK ati evening assembly of

. pupils, teachers, parents and friends.AM Inspirationnl resume of the sen-

''•man's work is promised by Miss Hcl-«»e'Austin, deaconess and: director of.the school this year. Over lOO.chil-<dr*nwere enrolled. • ^

"Missionary Vision" will be the sor-• a&aa topic? of the Rev. MivKceney at"<be 11 a. m. service on Sunday. Inthe evening the pastor will continue

II!: teaaieg of »g^.S^s..pn..Sgt!oBd_Aj|:i

:;•went Essentials.end" will preach on:?^LMeeting in -the Air." A gospelt i from the Victory Serviceman's

mm

at the Younu People's Societyj^a 6:40 p. m. Prayer «iect-

. lug is'-being field this evening as yes-teidsy .was a holiday.

;(fOo*4tou*d from one)

JIB-

uJS*-.!..1-, .'••;;HJP'.:

mm

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.t»w speaker said that it was ap-prepriate that the War Dads should«poMor the lflfltii observance of In-idtpendenoe Day as they have made». .»*»t peontribiiUon of their own• « * * and Mood in the fight for free-dom. He read the purposes of theA»B«riea».War Dads. ... • • •'^ S ^ Gloria Van Dorpe of Unionibllfertd"TheLord's Priyer" as a vocalsoK and a Men's Chous, directed by^ ft. Watson and organized by J. R.Hath, sang four selections, "This IsMf. Country," "The Flag Without ajStain," J"The Stars and Stripes For,ewer" and "The Home Road," all of»hieh were well received..Invocation was offered by the Rev.

Gordon H. Keeney, pastor ot>-thcCranlord Gospel Tabernacle, ' and^benediction was by the Rev. William

ily. pasior ofTJSUMichaeKs- 4u!CSiurdt. iCapt-N. R. Fiske.Eostt_33.5J

fCranford Post, 212, AinericanXegion,theWar-Oads and the Boy Scoutst&«sented the colors at" the beginningof IJie program.

Additional copies of the programwhich contain the names of men and

In service, as listed on thefiH- mnv ho 'nhtnfand Jit thn

Building.

s tmetiee of bayingweek. ^

Wu

{Continued froat'jtaaeone)Mr., and Mr*-^. IVAlessandrift^f 10Metk r ave&ue, jha»-^ent the CiUzeiia"nd Chrfliiide, the V-B..Day1eaitroh-of The AJ1-American Paragllde.tlienewspaper of^tije. «2nd Airborne 1)1-vision of which faelia embeiJ"Amcr-ican dvkiori to inert tnisians, on \U?% tne 82ndfhc first to go "borne unit, ori April 2fl, X843. Ttook part'in airborne invasionsSicily> Iujy-, Norrnand 3rt

F/O William V. Turner, Srd, iokpt

Hillcrest avenue, has airriveid atdoiph FK-Id.-Tfexas,?^ iesiter a coursens a. pilot member •of. a B-29 Super-

^ a W " ' ' ; ; '•.•Clmka.J. 0 . Wodi

4 Riverside- drive^-a. »a©tnbef~6f theSienal Corps in,Euw)pe, has, receivedthy Briinze Star award, ga'dispatch rccolveii here. Overseass i n c e ^ u ^ s t j M ^ h e ^ was,settinc up~ an opcKitionallcent<sr,dOvspito-n-sovore-Jaek^of-supplieSf-Bndmaintaining ah effifclient operationjofTHe wifp faciliTTos oflh'e entire bat-talion. .-! •—- ; _, i .;. " ••', •

Cpl. Willinm.P. Albertson.'brothepof Georcc W. Albertsotl 6f 27 Sprucestreet nnd Mrs. Sidney W. Smith of26 tehpx avenue, has been honorablydischarged from«;the' U. S. ArVnyatthe separntipn center at Fort Dix a'ndhr h i)t fhp horpo .Of ht«i lAlbertson served e y s ^has been in Hawaii; with-the SeventhAir Force Fighter Control Commandfar two and one-half years. • .

Lt. Waller McGnr«y,-goii--of--M«.:~j«ltvC. Gearrjrk.nf 40? Manoisavenue, ar-rived home Friday ioc-a 4WaaJr .leavefrom OMver Gnneral" Hospital, Au-custn. Gn. Tic was wounded duringthe Battle of Okinawa. • r

Capt. Baynra C. Low, son of Mr. andMrs, John M. Low of Springfield.ave-

H ^ 6 t i d t i t h hEncineejr Corps in the .Pacific- Hewas formerly at Camp-. Clalbourne,'La. ;--•- ,

Theodore A. Chamberlain, e.m. 3/c;U.S.N.R., son of Mr. and Mrs. T. C.ChdmlJerJoln of 5 b Mansion terrace,- hff hppn trflpiforrpd ff> tf Philipines after serving in-New Guineafor 16 months.. He has been in thehavy two years. ' '

Ann M. Holt, dnughter o ' Mr, andMrs. Howard'- Holt of 225 Ranklnavenue, enlisted in. the-WAVES re-cently and is now at the. Women'sReserve, Waval Reserve Training Sta-tion at Broriici 'VC."Y. A graduate ofCranford High School, she was em-ployed by the' Bell Telephone Com-

iltyTwlll"he-the ^>any-before-cnter-lnE servlcer-r .-Pfc. John H. Krochling, son of Mr.

arid Mrs. John Krochling ef 809,Highstreet, has been awarded {hie PurpleHeart for wounds received during thefighting on Okinawa. He was with -*military police unit and hall,and In now back on duty. • He alsowears the Soldier's Medal for Iherolcaction at Leyte. J

Capt. RobertF- Schlock, son ofc Mr.^ ^ 4

a seventh Oak Leaf Clqstef to bis AirModal for achievement in combat. Heis a pilot of a fighter plane inEngland.

Harold R.- Ellison, JT.,, seaman. 2/c,son of Mr. and Mrs. Ellison 61 105pak lane, is hemc on a 12>day leavefrom Sampson, N. Y» ' • ' •

War Loan DrivePc. Over QuotaQ(Continued from piage one)

officially ended last Saturday, saleof "E", "F" and "G" bonds throughthis Saturday will continue to becounted in the tabulation. Mr.-Cranehas 'expressed appreciation to the vol-unteer solicitors nnd others wlio have.helped put the drive "over the top,"So successful has the drive been

talk in . Washington—of postponinguntil next-year the Eighth -Wat-Loandrive, originally scheduled -for Sep-tember. . '. " •

Sounds FishyYears ago Northeast coast fished

men thought halibut was a pest•which—drove—the—cod^away—from-their lines. Gradually, its meritswere discovered and it became sopopular it found its way Into theluxury class. . . .

fit..'-" II'-vJ

ill

mmmm

? ? PROFESSOR WHIZ S QUIZ ??

AMumgh eioplei by Congress on My 4th, 1776-Hum not SIGNED until August 2nd!

; Deeltre^yaar freedom from sunnier discomfort by assuring a cooler' litiae with a complete Insulation Job. We use- A. tine-tested rack' JWMl aradaet to assure luthw protection against summer heat «ud ;%rfatlar eeld.' It 9*y* for itself is whiter fuel savincs. Phone fiW

INSULATION ..W.L

SPECIALISTS

. W CR 6-2799

A t i SHE WORLD 1Mb t* thisAiflerlcan TUr »«the kymbol of freedom fromaKkreuhui and » guiuhuitee that peace ani rlthle«u«B*M thiU'jurevall. This,aKtret«{«n and a twnitttee that peace and rlthleou«a*M thiUjurevall. this,amctal lmltttlit of the Mighty Seventh War Loan, Om*m the ralnlay ofthe Bar obIwoJlmaby V. 8. Marines. It Is the picturef tluit has bc*niM6re widely ui*«d thanany hi this war, proceeds of which the AP donated to selrvlce reliet •

G. X DuckworthReported Improved

suffered a rheumatic heart ailmehtfor the past six years. He was un-able to go to' work and was under adoctor's, cprc. ,

On Monday evening he^uffered an-other heart attack and "Mrs. Duck-worth remained with him until 4a. Jti^when-he-sald he-felt better andurged his wife to get some rest. : Ashort time later, according to Mrs.Duckworth, she heard a noise in thekitchen and found her husbandbleeding from the neck. A carvingknife was near him. She reportedthat he stated he could not stand hav-

g another heart attack. -Dr. Walter K." Fasnacht adminis-

te'red first .aid and the municipal am-bulance-was used to take Mr. Duck-worth to. the. hospital. Dr. Fasnacht.iilsashock resulting fromiher' experiences.

County Baseball . .. The Qarwood Question Marks willbe host next Sunday tbjthe PlainfltldBowmans "at Untfml Pa' k, Qarwood,| 0 a double header. Each team istied for second place .-after sweepingboth ends of a twin bill last week.The games start at l:3(Ko'ciock. " .

PoUtoes Long In World Tra*t' Potatoes, the world's chief- food

crop, have been an item of foreigntrade almost from the day that theconquering Spaniards came upon* to. PertL

H e a d q u a r t e r s f o r L a w n C h a i r s " • ' . . . • • . '

4.95 to 10.95,: ; I; 4.59•: li,.:.: : 4.49..

49c

Folding AdirondackChairs „,„... :..

Reed ClothesHampers.....'..'.

Children's Sand Pails,All Metal

-Yes, We Have Flit and Sprayer*-

Riibbcr Fly Swatters withs~Metol "Handles, Each ~

— G a r b a g e Cans* All Sizes, Reasonably Priced

Chicken Wire, Cut fo Any Length YouWish,3, 4 and 5 Ft. Heights.

A & A HardwareCRANFORD'S OLDEST HARDWARE STORK

12 North Avenue/W. CRanford 64)301

< e ^ ^

WASTE PAPER IThe Urt bullet fired In thUwtr win «o to thefront hi • piper cue. Uiitil then, evety Itemihipped ove fuu mutt be made, wrapped, erUjjed with paper. Your waste paper help*thtt-atMam_oLiUj)pUe«jliM!gJlive_i!{/jw»_watte (taper—turn it all to—ihortea the warwithltl

H.S. WASTE PAPER

N E X T C O L L E C T I O NSUNDAY. AUGUST S*h :k^

/CkmtfnUed from v*a*o*m)lot Submitted by H. J. Shaheen forlots 25 to 30 to block 602 and lots 570andsaoin block 818;/

approval was-given the sateof the tax lien certificate coveringlots 30 to 34, block-459, and lots 25to 30, block 602, to Parkview Manor

the full amount due. Abiy op-weig offers of SflSO-frbm My

Mrs. Albert J. Burdin and $125from "M». Isabelle HTSchlndler &rparts of lots 11,12,13 and 14 in blocki 8 ' Offer of $530 from

in block 364 also waT given finalapproval. j '

Adopted on niKal reading followingI l S H i r i c l i hoUBJeCtions

weft* offered" wafo''an Arnendmenf tothe local "liquor ordinance fixing atsix the nurrtber of tavern -licensesthat may be outstanding at any onetime.

sion of a; sanitary sewer in WalnutqyUJluC* •. Xfl~ ^/t tCICitDn w m • acT

the proposed Johnson.•& Johnsonplant to be erected beyond the LehighValley Railroad.

Dog Warden L. Dozols reported^$15.60 in fines collected in June, andTax. Collector A. B: Caldwell reportedreceipts in his office last month totaled.$39,280.72. June report of Building

valuationsof $81,095 and fees of $287. Thirteenof the permits were for one-familydwellings Valued at $6,000 each.There wasione-geheral and.fourrstillfire alarms last month for propertyloss estimated at $35, according torVport of Fire Chief Howard Schirid-ler.

Because'of shortage of labor in thecounty, road department, Sta.te- aidrrtnrtlocal funds of $1,190 will be usedT>ythe township, road- department for,repair of local cduhty roads, the work-to be carried out under supervisionof the county. .. " :" -

Police Commissioner J. Edwardf

the finance committee in the absenceof Finance Chairman F. G. Sykes andFire Commissioner J. W. Doran wasnamed an associate member of thecommittee.

". , Bisarre Langtiage . •At least nine-tenths of all Haitians

are direct descendants of Africanslaves. French is the official lan-guagft ther*rthouglrthe-popular spe-ken-.la»L___ge_ls a sort of Creolewhich ii.u.^des adaptati6Hi!rof~AM^can. dlalecta and- bizarre-mergingaof" English, French and Spanish.

Sweetie WeA new apricot developed by thai

Russians contains 30 per cent sugar1'when ripe. After ripening U will dryon the tree in 10 or 12 days with60 per cent sugar content It can

(Continued fum vagi one)lows: 15 prpperty. fires, $1,550, And 5a u t o a , $ 3 7 5 . .. ' . • . ' . • '

Griss fires were almost the same inthe two periods, 8T this yearSand 8«last year. False alarms took a de-cided drop,'only two beini'turned faduring the first six months of 1945 -asCompared with eight in the same

"The'department this year also re-

sponded to four alirinrtbr chimney,fires, one for a fire in an electric, mo-

onstone.;fire in an. electric iee box, one gasstove fire, andTone furnace fire. Theresusdtator was used four times.

In the first half "of-liH4, the repart-

oh'e cKinih'ey* fire, lour flres on thepublic dumps, threeoil burner fires,one fire In an electric ice box, onefire caused by a wire brushing a tree,a'nd rescued a child locked, in a room:

John-Bollt p p ^ y

far the English people, was firstgiven currency in John Arbuthnofsfamous "History of John Bull," asatire; published in 1712, on the dukeof Marlborough and the War of theSpanish Succession, John Bull iswell known as a burly country squire,impetuous, honest, narrow-minded;and dogmatic. . • • • - .

-British-ProductionBritish farmers In the 1942-43 sea-

son. produced' farm products -val-ued at $2,120,000,000, according toMinister nf Agriculture Hudson.

made sergeant'-at-arms, and EmanualPeterson tg«g?«rfawt sergeanl-of-annfl.

Committee ehainnen we*e ap-pointed by Judge Setter* as follows:Vocational service, A> '!£.;. Mturer^eommunity service, Hobert E, Crane;ways .and means, H. Stanley Siac-Clary; fdlowship. Jack Apgar; Bo-tary information. Dr. Petttsi youthservice^ _Mr. *»raHservfee, Walter B. Johnston; classifi-cation. Dr. Samuel M. Hinman;membership, Mr. WOlfiey; athletic^

service, .Sir. 'Crane; musician, theRev. Frank MagiH Sherlock.. - ^—Secret

iub's attendance during May -was91.56 per. cent of a perfect'mark.- Guests and visitors. were Lt.. Ed-^'ward Moppert, Jr^ A. A. F^ recent^rreturned from a German- prison campin lytiirh .| f», ii-ag, tvmfiiw'ri -for-fine-.| f i n e .months: TI4ichael Sako, otttoseUeTandK P. Blrfeolz, of Hizabetn.

Eesist IuseefieHesIt is now fcnoWn that insects vcan

develop a resistance to commercialinsecticides/which have been usedon several' generations of theirspecies. ' '"'.',

• . Ergs in Cake ' -. Never use cold eggs tea cake

and expect to get good resnltA. Eventhough a chTHedegg Jost out Of ISeTrefrigerator separates easily, boththe white and yolk whip best whenboth are at room temgtferabtre.

Girls—Women

with Pay Roll Experience

SECRETARIES

STENOGRAPHERS-*-T"

Fine Permanent PositionsGood Salaries-Advancement

..-':. '...._; ;_. • "' " WMC la lw . ' . ~, j, _,, -

GENERAL INSTRUMENT CORP.WH f j W !lgy*«fpMlW*.t i M f f i o W t »

*C O M E . . . . S H O P

ALL DAY TIL 9 P.

Music

V

* by Freddy Sleckman7 to 9 P.M.

•¥•

FOR THE SUMMER

-If

•It

. . . E L I Z A B E T H . . .'• - " - i . . . . . -

D M Phone From W o r dASK OPERATOR FOR WX 52S2 (NO TOLL CHARGE)

— • • • ' , ' ' ' . ' . ' - ; /

" Buy a

War Bond

Tbday

• « . ' • • • »

. » . * • •

• — — — — ^

R A N F D R D KENILWORTH;._TCRANFQRD. NEW JER$EY. THURSDay, JULY 12, 1945 FJVE CENTS

Ito

[py

Area Almost Double*7th War Bond Quota

The Cranford-Kenilworih nw>a nl-

ersOpening Week At

By Athletic Events .A severe cloudburst that . swept

; though • the "Warren County" areaMonday night didn't dampen thep *t the opening group.of camp-

ers at'the Cranford Boys' Camp ott. Silver Xj&ke. A report from the campreceived here yesterday indicates that

-the campers, councilors and^dlfectors rjassembled in the Lodge Hall duringthe storm and enjoyed songs andjokes until taps were sounded^ There

"- •The community camp opened forthe eeason Sunday with a record at-tendance. Parents- and irlends whoaccompanied the boys were shownthiwng^ the camp and enjoyed walks

'through the' woods, - arfdralorJg":'rthe'share * f the lake." .• The first campers, received medicalinspections and were divided intofive groups Sunday as camp activi-ties got underway. The" bojts receivedtalks «n camp procedures and rules

War Loan drive winch closed Satur-day/it was announced yesterday.byRobert E. Crane, local war financechairman. At the dose of the drive,a~ total of $l,243tf)8Z.50TrrB&nds -wereM4^^!^tWo

1«eMninl!uilfles^.^3Chi5.quota was -^625,000. "E" bend salesamounted to $294,124.50 while thequota was .$325,000. Mr. "Crane an-i ^ h h i l l ^ b e met

when final returns are received fromplants in the;, area operating on thepayroll deduction' plan. A total of4,75? bond subscriptions were made,of wibich 4,491 were for "E" bonds.

I- '*•

Is 180 Putts;Committee UrgesNo CancellationsResidents of Cranford;,. Carwood

and'Kenilworth will donate: their^blood Mgndgy ainemoon^aftKeeductlonal building of *he Cranfbr'dMethodist Church at the JuiyfeloodBank of .the_ local Red-CrqsS. . Mrs.James B. Rogers, new' chairman ofthe Blood Donor Cormwlttee, will bei n c h a r g e . ' . ' . ./•••" • ....

• •* Rffle., ajnd rarchery practice Hasstarted and a tourney is planned forthe near future. »•' Swimmingtop sport all the time,- according tothe retfort. The Bull frogs played theSpark Plugs in baseball arid the Bull-frogs won by two points.

Extea credits, coveted honors to["the-campersr'have already been worf

Since the outset'of tne war a totalof 3,701" pints^of blood:.plasma havebeen obtained 'at the. visits of tne mo-bile unit here. In nearly all casesthe quolir has been met or surpassedand Ifc'is expected that the quota of180 pints will be obtained on Monday.

/• It was announced., this week tharegistrations for ""the ^Monday Blood

by Hobert Dommergue, Jimmy Rob-1 Bank are sufficient to meet the quota"' nd-eera1d-Parksv:-The^boys it-all =Hfgisitrants-rflpotLior.-their.apT

have orgattired a Clesfn Plate Club[that wiU-Tneet-orrFridtrys-Tmd-there ^c lr appointments are asjtcdjgjnotlfy.twlU-be -a^dental-clinl^irispection-onjin* corn.trtl.ttee.jit .CRanford 6-0671 as{Saturdays with certificates, awarded ' " '"I to all boys who pass Inspection. In[the Lodge magazines, books, cross-word puzzles arid picture puzzles havebeen placedxfor quiet hour recreation.

Campers registered 'for the~ firstweek, are Frederick Baumann, JohnR. Magan, Robert.A. Farmer, Robe

polntments. Those unable to keep

soon as possible In order that a sub-stitute .may be obtained.

.Jted Cross .workers are 'seriouslyconcerned over the lack of Interest inblood donations .since the end' of th<war In Europe .and they have stressedthe fact that the Metropolitan area

l d i C f d i l i b l dIncluding Cranford, is supplying blood

Harold G: Brooks, Peter Schalestock,Jules Dommergue, Robert Nicholson,

J Warren Tinnesz, Bruce Hoick, Rich-ard G. Stevens, William Magan, An-drew Crisantl, William S. Mlnton,

| Robert B. Mair, Robert Boteler, Ed-ward C. Kurtz, Harry Axtt, JamesPraul, Peier B.Stevens, Robert Lloyd,Hugh F. Malr, Ralph Burnett, Rich-ard Austin, William Mason, Gerald

f IWks, WilltenT" Reis, William Cox,David Yarrow, Bruce MacClary andJames Roberts: . • . „ , . . . ^

•_...Camp Director J.-Seth Weekley isin charge Of the administration of

_.the .-Cxanford.. Boys',..Camp _this. yearand William Moorhead is assistantdirector.*- Councilors include VictorNellsen, Ralph LeUteers, David Bal-

S 1/c Friend BurtonMissing in Pacific

Seaman 1/c Friend Joseph Barton,tJJSJI;RM son pf Mr. and Tftrs. JohnK. Burton of 29 Elzabeth avenue, is

fisted as missing in Naval action uiirr-Merbert—^Wilson—and^—RobfcrT rine i^aoiflc, according to a telegram

Grobengeiser. His family has received from theNavy -Department. , No details ' havebeen received concerning the actionbut it took place..about.a month.ag<and is therefore presumed "to have

Many Attend ParkBand Concert Sunday

L~1"ford were at MacConnell Park onEastman street Sunday evening toenjoy the opening program of theseries of Sunday evening band con-

nned for the park bandstand.The musical program was enthusiasti-cally received and Indications arethat the evening concerts will be-

• come a community affair this summer.The j26^plee« -b^nd~Was directed by

Louis F. Haar, director of Instrumen-tal music in Cranford High School,and consisted of members of the highschool band and alumni of the localhigh school musical organization; The

Residents of the community, re-^of-age.-ar-e-lnvUed-rto-play-to-

the band which is planned to becamea community organization. Severallocal businessmen plan to take theirplaces in the band next week. Mr.Haar has stated that he is in need ofclarinets, flutes, French horns, bas-

__*oons, English horns and oboes but• will welcome the players of any band"Instruments.

In the future rehearsals will beheld once a week In preparation for .Berlinthe Sunday concerts In order that theband b^weldcdt- into- a finished con-cert group. Rehearsals are scheduledthis evening amLeyery Thursday eve-ning at 8:30 p. m. In the high schop]auditorium. Members are asked touse the side door and volunteecrs are

-askfcl to come out at this time*.Mr. Haar, instructor at'the Union

County Band and Orchestra Schoolin RbseUe, .intends to lnivte pupils atdie school to participate in the bandactivities and solo work is plannedlater in the summer. The JuniorBed Gnus is sponsoring the com-trlunlty concerts.

being recorded in the Pacific and anIncrease in severe wounds has beennoted in recent weeks. It Is thesesevere Wounds that necessitate, theUse of many pints of plasma.

Despite the fact that summer vacation time Is here and many residentare.away on short trips, the BloodBank must make the 180 pint quotaand. the cooperation of every registrnnt will- be necessary,-:. "

nawa. He was serving on a destroyerThe local sailor is 20 years old an<

he enlisted In the Navy in February,1S43. He took boot training at Newport, R. I, and advanced training InBoston, following which he was sentto the Pacific. It) action for nearlytwo-years, he was home on a week's

' (Continued on page ten)

fetfsfcoriahstlefct Foster

GremLFHte: Five Youthful jYiaritiw Raise the Flag at Iwo Jima(Other Pictures on Page 10)

Missing NavyMan Was IhOkinawa Action

' Wesley A. Grabau, 21 years old, sonr. and Mrs. Arthur Grabau of 38

Henley avenue, who was reportedmissing in action in naval warfare intjjc Pacific last .w,eek, was a mem-ber of the crew of the destroyer,"Twlggs, sunk off Okinawa on June16, it was learned This week. Thelocal boy is a coxswain .in theU, S.NNavy...

COXSWAIN W. A. GRABAU, C.8.N.information concerning the destroyeralthough, many crew members arc

motion can be obtained concerningpossible survivors. . The Twiggs wassunk in the same engagement inwhich the destroyer, William D. Por-'

244 for the two new, destroyers.According to Information from

(Continued on page ten)

Notes^bout Local ResidentsIn Nation's Armed Forces

Atlantic Fleet. _JHe entered the "NavyIn January, 1944, and received histraining at Sampson, N., Y., GreatLakes, 111., and Gulfport, Miss. Hisbrother, Harry,, is a master sergeantin the Marine Corps.

Cpl. William J. Taylor, Jr., son ofMr. .and Mrs. W. J^ Taylor of 112Pine" street, has been promoted . totechnical sergeant. He is now in

Arthur R. Fischer, son of "Mr. andMrs. S. Fischer Of 22 Broad street, hasWcn"promoted to the fating of radar-man, 2/c, U.S.N. He enlisted In theNavy In September, 1942, and hasseen action In seven major engage-ments aboard* a light cruiser in thePacific.

William G. Sembnrte, h.a. 2/cj U.SJJ.R., son of Mr. and Mrs. GeorgeE.tSemonite of 123 Centennial ave-nue, who. has been stationed at' theNaval Hospital at Fort Eustice, Va.,JM5Jbeen__ocdcretL &Ljrepbrl-tajSan.Bruno, Calif., for transportation to aFleet Hospital overseas. He was

SoutlV Union avenue, has .arrived atthe Army Air Forces RedistributionStation at Atlantic City after serv-ing overseas 15 months as a radarmechanic. He wears the EuropeanTheatre ribbon with six battle stars.He entered service on June 22, '1942.

S/Sgt. Fred Hayeck, son of Mrs.May. Hayeck of 515 Centennial ave-nue, who was stationed In Europewith the 141st General Hospital, re-turned to this country on Friday, June29, on the Queen Elizabeth! He ar-rived at his. home last Tuesday ondwill spend q 30-day furlough with hiswife and 11 months' old daughterwhom he had not seen until his ar-rival home. He was overseas a year.

Capt. Homer Wilson, AAF, of 363South Union avenue is borne on a30-day leave after completing 138missions-as a fighter pilot in NorthAfrica, Corsica and Italy. He holdsthe Distinguished Flying Cross, AirMedal with.five clusters and the

SunnyacresBaby Parade

Patriotic FloatWins Grand Priz^.At Affair Sunday

Five; small boys drcssod to repre-sent U, S.' Marines formed a-tableauof the-famous Flag Raising at IwoJima to .,win the (jrund prize in thesecond annual Baby Parade of the

latr^aii :n>ld' -earchassis, drew cheers from the largegroup of spectators, residents of Sun-nyacrcs "ar d of other sectiorre of thecommunity.

The boys were Bobby and Buddyflellenbreclvt, KeiVneth Weeks, CurtisGilford and Paul Stupak. DavidCowperthwoite' won the tricycle di-vision, Lorraine SosnpwskV took firstprize in the baby carriage class, Rich-ard and Robert Knorr won the cqs"tunic class,-Stuart and Judy McFudrden took first prize in the float classwith their representation of Jack" andyfll7~N^ncy'"Tbd'd," portraying XSayGodiva, won a special award, andMarlv Carol Barcua won the wagonclass award. • "

Judges at the -content were PatrickJ. Grail, Clarence Fritz and Mrs.Jacob Stanley. Their stand waserected at the circle at Algonquindrive where tffl? parade" concluded.I>d--by<LtKth'e direction of Louis F. Haar, theparade got underway .at .11 a. m. atlroquois place.

Mayor George E. Osterheldt, guest

tribute to the residents of Sunnyacrcsand to the civic- group for the work'they are doing In furthering neigh-borllness. He stated that the Town-ship' Committee will donate a cup'* tothe grand prize winner in 1946 as thegoverning body is anxious that suchcivic affairs continue to be a part oflife In Cr.unford. Fire Commissioner!John Doran, Police Commissioner J.Edward Wolf and Road Commissioner

events of the day with an old-fash-ioned family picnic at JBehnert'sGrove. A war bond vyaa won byPete Nylen during the picnic eventsand there were softball games, horse-shoe tournaments and games for thechildren.

Stewart McFadden was generalchairman of the celebration and JohnMullaney led in patriotic singing;."As-

(Continued on page ten)

Presidential Unit citation with four(Continued on page ten) _^

Site Change: The Cranford Memorial and Inde-pendence Day Committee wound upits 1945 activities. Monday night byreferring to a special committee asuggestion that' next year's MemorialDay exercises be held at MemorialPark, Springfield ond Central ove-nues and Riverside drive. Membersof the committee, named by CarrollK. Sellers, chairman, are A. A. Smith,Mayor Osterheldt, S. E. Klunder, Lt

Kllng and Charles M. Ray.

Plan Reception.Wednesday forRetiring Pastor

A rpncrr-intional rcceiption for. theRev. William R. Sloan, pastor of theFirst Prcsbjtlfirian. CHurch, fin'3 Mrs.Sloan will be hold Wednesday'"eve-tvinR at B o'cloplf in the intermed.iat<Slindajt-Sehi)oi rooms of the churchTheH'eeeplTori'iw'rU-biS ii- farewell tc-thctacol- pastor who has resigned hiipulpi.U eflective September 1, to re-tire- from active ministry..

-Did-Twa Sheepu _ _ _Follow You Home?

"We are poor little sheep whohave' lost.our. way!", said the -tm^animals who were found Sundaymorning in the parking lot-next-rto the police statqin. ' PatrohnanFrank Caruso, who "apprehend-ed" them was glad to turn them.over to their owner, Dudley Ne-ville of the Boulevard, Kenil-worth. Mr. Neville and the policehave* a strong suspicion, how-

trie p p ; JCranford . Post Office^was revealed,'

esterday when it also became knowrfthat seven local/residcnTs'liTawe theirhats in the ring for the $4,200'gwei- •Uori. • / •

Mrs.. p*Arcy, who has been actingbVfot since the n^ignatton tot

tration points didn't wan.der fromKenilworth to the police parkinglot. Could some potential black

jeep^hnve-stolen-them-and-"developed cold feet? -.

April, said yesterday she has with*-_drawn for "pcrsdnal reasons." New"on a two w^ekf'._ vacation, she Willcontinue as, acting postmaster until a 'iucccssotis appointed, which-is ctf-vected about September 1. .

T j se in the Deld for the appoint-ment Include William E. CaWoway,•Peter J. Clark, Gerald F. Crowell,Bradley Gillcspie. F*ed E. Kahtncr,

"A **

- Plan New RecordOf Service People;..Ask Relic Donations

N. R; Foster, uf Hcrklcy plave. "wasunanimously elected president of theCranford Historical S»ii-ifly i_<\ theannnal election i>( ullWrs Itt-M re-cently ht his hnme../Mr. Fi-wtrr hadbeen serving us ..presitleiU. the•group since the death •of.-'Androw .R.Warnqck,' president of."the society,in 1944. i.• OtherMffleers:'elected «f t.ho meet-

Ing wore as follow:.: Fir\L vice-president. Edward Everett;, secondVice-prcsidentV WIlH-tmi" F7 tKiffninntreasurer, Artfiur C: Woodward; corresponding secretary, Walter T. Hayand r,ccordiiiR secretjiry, Oliver IRichards. ;

Trustee* for u»« year, tlioiun at th>'meeting, are William M. Hicks amiWiiliom M. Sporry, 2nd. R. \ . Clem-

„ Mr. Hay, Mr—Hbff-

REV. WILLIAM R. SLOANand his wife nnd of the church, havebeen extended "an "invitation' to- theTO^^!yter is chairman of the committee of

for two year tenrw. > .For tlifei yeaterms the menibi-rs'selet-fod WesleyA, Stancer.'Mr. Woodward, WilliamF.- Weinpalil. Austin Dnhrman an-Harry R. Hcins.

Mr,.Dohrmaii was the chairman othe nominating committee' reportinat the rne"eIThTr^^1rrStan«er-was ap-pointed to represent the HlstoricaSociety on Mayor GeorRo E. Oster-heldt's committee p.lantunH the 75tanniversary of the community. JohiJ. WalKli was eicc-ted a member othe Kociety upon recommendation o.Mr. Hoffman, chairman of the menrvbcrsHijT'commiltec. . - — '

_... Ml\. .Eo.!«te.r..;exgrcs socl his opprccia;tion for the support that had bociKiycn him by tho.tni.vtffs and members during "his term replacing thi

r. VV'.Trnn-k.: in'Tiutllhlng^plhn' the future «'.f the society hsta tod that the Honor Yloll Bookplanned- to contain the names arnservice .records of Cranford men, an>wo'i*iFtTi~had" been ftrtAd"-and" that-

church officials planning the affair.! worked out.the commemoration record was to

Refrcshmentji will be served.The Presbyterian Church Choir,

under—the—direction—of-JUulwiu/—H.Watson, organist and choirmaster, willBing—at—the reception. Soloists will

(Continued on jififle tvtl)

It was ri'iwirtcd hy Mr. Hoffmanthat the late Lt. Col. Thomas Truxtonh:iH g<>nr <ririu> interesting relics tohim for placement in the museumThese were the first of their kind U

" CConlinurd on pace ten)'

Unfon County* Park CommissionPlaygrounds List Activities

A welcome is extended to air

sion, if the attendance 1-accor^ine t') Mrs. E. G. Churchmanof Wcstflcld, supervisor. The playarea opened last TWbriilay and 'wttlcontinue to, hold supervised recrea-tion for the children of the northside of Cranford oa week days duringthe summer.e summe playground w p

Nomahegan Playground was closed -15 the near future.

side Museum in Walehupfi. Monday--racoon- to -th""ThlfdreiT weflboiilo,

\ washers cunU t is also on thschedule fur thi> week nnd the children are irnikmu necklaces of macon>ni- and dolls of yarn during thcicrafts hour. A bulletin .board ha;been erected to announce plans foieach duy ajid it is expected thatplayground newspaper will be starte

Winners in_contests thus are- a:follow*: "Jump rope—Gail BaumannElaine Darriels and Barbara'Salwaycheckers—Ann O'Donnell, Tom Sal-

-way and Barbara Salway; tarfjet, TomSalway, Frank Massaand Tom O'Don-nell; sand modeling1—Ann O'Donnel

last, year because of a lack of a su-pervisor. Attendance this year sofar has averaged between 20 and 30children a day. Because the area wasdosed in 194-1 it is thought that someparents may not know of the area andall mothers are urned to s.end their•hildren to the park for supervised i }b OTtourkc and Joan Apjjar; an<games each day. Mis. Churchman,the former Betty .Shor-nan, was asupervisor .it High Street Playgroundlast yeur'Bfid h exporioncodin play-Rrnund directintf.

Mrj.'Rullson, Union County NatureSupervisor, wllljiklt the- playifroundeach Monday at 11:30 a. m. ta lead

"Comm. A. A. Paulson, O. Nelson ThercrrlldTcn on nature~JhTl<Ss~ana~i'x-hlbU nature objects fwjm Ihe Troll-

poste-s- Barbara Salway, Ann O'Donnell and Ton: O'Donnell.

High Street .PlaygroundRecord iittcndanccs of more tha

250 children a day are being taken aithe High Street Playground. Mis;Doris Merilg of Elizabeth Ls aupervisoifor the third year, ossmed py 'Mtt:

(Conttnu&Ton J#oe pHt

kSpiranMetz, Clark AppearTo HSVelriiidc Tra

• * • ' . * ' y

Among 7 CandBdajbei

icting postmaster, as a candidate forW t W i r i n J < r t e r f " t h e

•ml

Weicrsbach.As the appointment probably Will

go to onp of the top-ranking threc^.-.aspirants who can obtain'thc endorse^ .rhent of the local and County Demo-cratic 'organizations', *MrA Clark, Mr> :

M~et7." and Mr: Worersbarrr appcar^to—fhave thc.edRe'on their opponents bc-tausc of their long allegiance to thelocal Democratic party. - - • /

While the final endorsement of thelocal Democratic munifipal commit-tee will not be made until results ofthe Civil Service examination given'"the candidates-arc. announced,*it was-learned' from an authoratatrvc sourceyesterday' that if Mr. Metz finishesamong thc-top-threerhe-wOl- receive—the committee's endorscmettt. - As thematter stands at thc_mpmcnt, Mr.

• • • • • ; • ! • • ' « «

'-W

matter stands at t h c _ p , .Clark will be the c6mnilttco!» second- -••.- -^choice. . . •

Mr. Metz is a property owner andresides at 24 Stratford terrace. 'A.native of the Bay Oldge iWCtiqn ofBrooklyn, he was graduated fromhigh school there and served in tfieNavy for two years during WorldWar I; He was mustered out in 1010. _

Jfm

qu'ently' served'Tor-JTwtraveling: auditor for the.- -United -:

States Shipping Board.' He took up residence .hcre.in 1921.when he joined the Pacific Bank ofNew York as a department head. • In '1023, he became affiliated with the .People's Bank and Trust Company.in Wcstflcld-.is head teller and still iswith that institution, now in a super- .visory capacity and as a tax expert,He attended Tanner-Oilman' Schoolof Accounting and Business* Adminis-tration in Chicago and has taken scv-.e.ral courses nt the American BankingYnstitution School in Elizabeth and •

New York. 1' " '":'''Ac'WvVmvHie'!o7i5rremMJr^^fur mare than 20 years, he served for17 years as treasurer of the (JranfordDemocratic "Club •and'~hji^ been a

(Continued on page ten)

•m

Gospel Tent ProgramOpens Tuesday Nighty5^Th«^lcv*f^arold'^T5taTrff=T^f=Wmingtori.'Del., will open thV thirdannual Gospel Tent program.of theCranford Gospel Tabernacle-.on Tues-day at 7:45 p. m. Noted as' a radio«nd—coivforonco-^pciikcr, the Rev.Mr. Laird is pastor of the First In-dependent Church in Wilmington.This will be his first appearance in

oa&r ...Gospel tent meetings are scheduled^

next week on Tuesday, Wednesday,Thursday and Friday evenings at7:45 o'clock and the. Rev. Wr. Lairdwill .speak at these evangelistic serv-ices. There will be special music byTabernacle musical groups as well DB ••m

tor at the Tabernacle, will be incharge of the l l a . m. service on Sun-day -in the church and on Sundayevening he will conduct an evangel-istic service in the tent at 7:45. Thetent is located adjacent"to the Taber-nacle at Retford avenue and Cherrystreet and has been enlarged and ire-proved'since last year's meetings.

Th,e weekly events in the GospelTent will continue until August 24,'with the,week of August 5 to 12 desig-nated as an intermission duringwhich only Sunday services will beheld. Speakers during the next .threeweeks will be the Rev. Andrew Tel-fi>rd of Philadelphia, Dr. Bob Jones,Sr., of" Cleveland, Term., and Dr.Carl Amending of the Moody BibleInstitute in Chicago. The final weekwill be a missionary week. '_

Closing events for the Daily Va-cation Bible School at the Tabernacletook place Friday evening, when, the101 pupils enrolled displayed for their

m

• m

M

edge they had

gg l i i y^^