-No. 19 CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1943 PRICE ...€¦ · nue, Buffered injuries to his...

10
-No. 19 f^'i CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1943 PRICE THBSK weetness AND Light ,, : i,,, Ics F.. Cr«|ory—— ihcrc is a very ob- ... ,,i jrnititu'de In all •. r . and telephone |( . received from i,.' service for my nipai^n* here and , to get them a , ,,|irie ration to use : , i iirc home on fur- [• hocn myTonten- .1 ir the Kasoiine aup- .: ,nl('(|iiate to stand hl driiin opened by , ili;uiM the right to .nation sites, there in provide a little \ pleasure for men n who. are really •;,, hard pilrt of this I'.II just about where riir:i'uT Bowles, the ;•, for the OPA in , Hives some hopeful , m: some horse seW i,.niiiK program and I thi' newspapers quote :u,: that furlough ra- j.iohaiily be legalized !••,'• nrf' ban is lifted. ,iu;ii-rt'L with him on !,. i-iins*' in my hook in question about who uliliiTB or civilians, in favors to be hud. . I.I.-KII' to my teacher: HiiiiLir i m p r o v e ? ) run- )l\. which more people possibly imagine in- i n>t, I would lay aside n lake the servicemen ii U to ii.shaded nook luluiT, according to '•iifi', und if there was n I'll parcel it out to in t<> use for such frivol- as they might choose. , nuts this theory in re- iiik'5 to take care of -not first—but the : oil. Then when it ap- is to be enough both Playground Schedule Humming; Tournament Ends, Another Starts Angelina Stragapede Ii Winner In Girls' Chess Competition OA,imjRlr7r—Activities at the Municipal Park playground con- tinue to lie kept in high gear, with one tournament ju.it about com- pleted and another about to get under way. Competition was spirited in the chewi tourney which in due to Wind '"rank Ampler, Robert 'Jludrsk, Stanley Barlko, lEdward Hayduk, Roibert O'Donnell, Joseph Thnat, Michael 9hurn»ky, August Hundc- mann, Jr., Margwet Monaghan, Rose Moriaghan, Angelinc fttraga- pode, (Mary Ann Seibert, Shirley Dudick, Grace Vincsc and Helen Slinsky. up re^irtrntw tlll'l o include I call that shoddy ! ) i.-ii,, •iii vim might like to read i.il ic:ictions uf the sol- .!;•• repressed in the let- •iiil The first from mi August F. Grcincr, from homo: ,i-d I would try to lit ml write • few Wnie» to luiovv how the fellowt I, "I about your article! lin,, rationing. i "I 'ill, the boyi in my iliuir in our area, read .! iliry were agreed (Edi- U; Who'» bluihioil) it certainly on the '• ynu ice, your writing v.un, The fallow* tit iyKt niter nifht plan I tiny would like to do '! well-earned IS dayi' '' mill around. You H'i littinf in a place lor almoit two yean 'i when you get heme stuffed shirt lay, ••'. ii» gai', it juM.doem't "•'• You lure are 100 1 light and the voting '-iiiily will be red hot ' 1 . 1 OH'L mean maybe-*— '•'> can't blame the been going on at a brisk pace for the checker contest to start the first of the •tfcek. With some play still remaining, indications are thai Benjamin MoskeJ, John Kollbas, August Hundemann, Jr. and ^Raymond Seibert will divide the laurels in the 'boyd' noninr division in tho chess tourney, In the junior group, William Donovan and Rich- ard Leahy are the pace-makcrR. Angeline Stragapede emerged H3 winner in the girls' competition. Donate Lunche* Joseph Slinskl is donating frank- furters for the youngsters during afternoon rweas while Wilham Sitar continues to contribute sodh end cookies fo» the group. There were Vi> entries in tho chess tournament. The full rostci follows: Frank O'Brien, Daymond Sic- bert, William Balog, WaRcr Gasior, Alvin Brechka, Howard' Wohlgemuth, Benjamin .lacoby, Benjamin Moskel. Richard Leahy, Elwood Colgan, E<rward Magella, Anthony Sauillo, Andrew Kus- Iriw, John Kolibas, Charles Casa- legrgi, William Donovan, Wendell Phillip. 1 *, William Lawlor, William Zinvnermaii, Louis Michaud, Wal- ter Borreson, Ronald Krissak, George Kollik, Thomas Dunn, Clara Hoffman Bride Of LL J. R. Robertson CA'RTEteET —Captain Edward Wylie, chaplain at Fort Smith, Ark., offlicatcd at the wedding of Mii* Clara Hoffman, daughter of WrTSiiiT Mrs. Henry IiofTniafl'^f Runrlolph Street, and >Ll. John fl. 'Robertson, son of William Robert- son of Harrison. The bride's gown was of Marched chiffon with a fingertip veil mid lace and she carried a white prayer book with gardenias and sweet peas. She was given in marriage by Lt. Benjamin Dit- low. The maid of honor was Miss Martha Nering whose gown was of ik starched chiffon with match- ing headdress. Her bouquet was of white gladioli and gardenias. The bridegroom's best man was his brother, William A. Robertson of Harrison. To Vi»it Oxarki Following a reception in the Goldman Hotel, the newly weds left on a wedding trip through the Ozai-k Mountains. Upon their itturn they will reside at Fort Smith where Lt. Robertson is sta- tioned. Prior to leaving Carteret, Mrs. Robertson was the guest of honor at a surprise shower arranged by her mother and Mrs. Alma Beki'- sen. (Miss Olga Nering of Grant Ave- nue attended 'the ceremony. fo Teach At lJf«MUfMM Local Church Honor Roll To Be Dedicated August 29 — Stephen Lo- ojnroiMiwsf. °X Labor .for 'New Jersey, is sched- uled to be the principal speaker at the exerciser August 2!) dedi- cating the honor roll at the Holy'Family Church. Stephen 'Ozajkowskl is chairman of *>- rangements. The church Holy Name Son ety planned the program which will follow the celebration of high maes at IOISO A. M. by Hev. Dr. Joseph DaiadoBZ, pus- tor. lAt 'J A. "M. n communiiin breakfast will be served with Charles 'Makwinriki as chairman. Holowatch-Kuchytak Rites Are Solemnized CARTKiRETT—Rev. C. S. Ros- knvics, psislor of St. Blias' (irei'k Catholic Church performed the ceremony Sunday uniting Miss Helen tlolowatch, daughter of Mr. and Mis. James Holowatch of Fitch Street, and Private Michael KudrtyaTi. Mr. The bridegroom is \}\c and Mrs. John Kucli- P. 0. EmphyeesSmash Tradition; Refuse To Take Walk On Holiday Some Go 7*0 Shore, Oth- ers Visit Relatives, Do Odd Jobs At Mom tyak of Port Reading. The bride's gown was of white satin with a basque waist and full skirt. Her veil fell to her finger- tips from a crown of orange blov me and she carried a while prayer book marked with a White •orchid" and a spray of baby's (breath. She was given in mar- riage by her father. A sister, Mary, was the bride's maid 1 of honor. She wore light green with a shirred •vnaist and full skirt trimmed with ruffles oi laci>. She wore a matching picture hat and carried gladioli. The flower girl was KliyneJiavBlctjj, rrtgee of lu ll i noli' from Pvt. Stan- 11 I'lnUpiak of the Marine I unlive of Carteret: '•' wilting to thank you ''"> lulumn which you wrote J «ly 23 edition. "id I'm lure thouiandi "'" 'Ike me—'appreciate " Ll «" the way you are '" help the men and wo- ' ll»: armed forCM," •j t » 111 ' sample of opinion is w Frank Casaie«of Port uliu probably won't huvfe ' drive the family car '"K lime because he's just II Ins way: 11 '«t Utter 1 wrote wa» a ''idtikinc you for sanding w " paper for u* to read •i' up with w h*t U (oinf '""•'<=• Thip ii at* a Lt. "'..iik!, but thia tim* it ia 11L "' article* on ,«• aline "'t' Your Wewi on fur- are all rrand. and Am M. Ginda, Army Man Many h Golf port, Miss. CA.KTERET Announcement has been made of the murriage in Gulfport, Miss., of Miss Ann M. Ginda, daughter fff Mr, and Mrs. Petor Ginda of 49 John Streut, and Prival" Walter Karas. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mr B . John Kuril, of Brod- head Place, Perth Amboy. the bride, wh» colored ({own styled after thuL of tho maid of honor, /Shu also car- ried gladioli. The bridegroom's best man was Private Stephen Pawlikonki ol Linden. Reception Held After the ceremony,.* reception for the bridal couple wus held i'i the home of the bride's parents. For traveling, Mrs. Kuchtyak won 1 a black sheer drew with green uc- cessoriea and carried red rusts. The bride, a graduate of Ciir- tcret High School, is employed ;it the RariWn Arsenal. The .bride- groom is a graduate of Woml- •bridge Township High School and prior to his induction in the army was employed by the Genital Ruil- road of New Jersey. He is now stationed at Indiantown Cap, Pa. Morris Cohen Hurt In Freak Train Accident OAiRTIKttfErr—Morris Cuhm, '5.2, of HW Washington Ave- nue, Buffered injuries to his awn and back Sunday when he was thrown to the floor of a train in the Broadi Street Sta- tion, Newark. Mr. <"ohen was a paisengcr oii the Labkawianna Railroad's 'Buffalo express when the pas- senger section became uncou- pled as the locomotive pulled out of the station. One man was thrown from the train and Mr. Cohen and two others who were standing In a vestibule were ilung against bhe door and fell. The Weal man was treated ai the Newark City Hospital und released. Mis* Dorothy A. Connolly CARTERET Daughter of Mr. and Mri. John Connolly, Mia* Cor.nolly who Utt week re- ceived the Hrijrpc of Bachelor of A.rU in Education from fnn N*w Jemey State Teachen' Col- lege in Mwntrlair, will SHunrC hrr dutln «• a member of the faculty nt the Mana»qu»n High School next month. Mill Connolly will teach •ophomore and junior bookkeef)- ing, two claitei in mu«ic and one in finance. She •• trie third member of her iarnily to be- come a teacher. Lions To Install Officers At Dinner OAiRTRBET—Jiimes J. Lukach will be installed president of the Carteret ^ions Club at a dinner dance to "be held Tuesday at the Gypsy Camp on Essex Street. Others of the new slate to be installed are: Frank ScunSatO, llrst vice president; C. iP. Perkjnn, second! vice president; Dr. Wayne T. Branom, third vice president; Joseph * Synowiecki, treasurer; Edward S. Kucinski, secretary; Paul Chergcy, Lion tamer and Louis Bolted, tail twister, LftRoy Height, district gover- nor, will be the installing officer and certitfkaite* will be presented by Harold P. Nutter,'. director. tUyinu bonti' and doing what I want from day to day." That's not the only answer hut it's the predominating one a reporter got by asking mem- bers of tho local post olftco »taff how they vtare spending their vaca- this ynrr. And it'* not * bad way In upend 1 a vncation either, days nf rationed travel and other wur-time difficulties (In ffl't it's ju»t what the writer of this piece did with a week off!) Of course the vacation reports from the post office vary, as some of the personnel did take trips and (some still have thfir rcrtpite from work ahead of them. Postmaster William J. Lawlor hasn't even taken time to think about his own vacation, however, a situation usual with the boas these days. All he cared about especially was getting the vaca- tions nf htH staff taken care of while the vacation school-lboy em still were available to ro lieve'the carriers. But Mr. Law- lor will take his holiday later, wh(>n he gets around to it. Some To Shore The two women clerks are in- cluded in the exceptions to the general anstwer quoted above. Mrs. Edith Klose went to ,Bteton "Woods down on the New' Jersey shore, and Miss Hajel Winchell to Point Pleasant. Also off for a few days at the shore was carrier William Elliott, who divided his time between the salty area and a farm nt Hope where he visited frequently. Joseph Byrnes went to another shore for his vacation, to Rockaway, New York. Frar/k CBrien stayed home and took in a few hall games, which John Ker- nedy probably will do also, al- though he's made no plans. Carrier Philip Foxe used Iii3 vacation to paint his home in Em- erson Street, and another carrier, Kenneth Harris, will go to Bridge- port, Conn., thia weak to visit his ive* the* 1 '- 1 , Robert Bishop hus ipade no plans 'rt and 1. G. (Jerty) Nevill has just rttnrned after a health cur* at Dannvllle, N. Y. However, to f»r «s w« conld learn, nobody at the j»st ofllc* went on • wuHting trip for 1 vacn- tion outing! On 'Deck' Local TwiHer Now h In There Pitthini For US. Pritmur Of War Stamps In New Ration Book 3 To Become Valid September 12 Meat-Fat Coupons To Expire On Saturdays Nearest End Of Month GAiRTDltiBT Brown A in Ration Book No. 3 become valid September 12 for the pur- chane "f iiieals, fats, oils, butter and cheese, and by October 2 the brown coupons will completely re- place the familiar red stamps Ration Book 2, the local War I'rice and Rationing Board an- nounced today. Point values re- main unchanged. Brown stamp B becomes valid September IB. Both A and B ex- pire October 2. Stamp C will be effective September 27, D on Oc- tober ;!, E on October 10 and V ' :l >uuld c o n t a i n in dgid| " '" •' <» u*in( Iht b»v. the ''" y need to help tb<m on- ""='«w bouri they havn »t '" If the OPA objtet. »o '•»««u.ly to ilfin«|ai to men "| lough, Ut th«B talk to Vll -«iiieu and explain "•• '» a w a r Civil Defense 'Emergency' Cars To Be Identified By Pennants on October 17. pire October 30. Those four ex- Meanwhile red stamps X, Y and Z become valid August 22, August 2!) and September 5, respectively and all will expire October 2, In announcing the new'regula- tions, the OPA said that hence forth the meat-fat stamps always will expire on the Saturday near- est the end of, the month, and new sets will become valid on the fol- lowing Sundays. Blue stamps U, V und W from Ration Book 2 will become valid September 1 and expire October 20. In another phase of the ration- ing program, OPAannounced that the old-type B and C gasoline cou- pons will he no good after Septem- ber 1 and told owners to exchange them, coupon for coupon, for the new type sheets between August 23 und September 1. Committee, Quota For 3rd War Loan CampaignSlated Next Week OAIRTBRBT—"Dock" Nagy, who won some local renown si B moundaman in local baseball circles, is now in there pitching 'em for Uncle Sam. The Pt-fSB this week had a let- ter from "Deck" in which he asked that the paper he sent to him each week. We have made arrangements to comply with his request. His letter follows: "I guess there is no harm writing to my home-to/wn paper and asking for a dear favor from them. I would like to have your paper sent to me so that I may keep Up with the lo- cal news, 41 My home address is 80 War- ren Street. I am known to my friends as 'Deck.' While at Jiome I played a lot of baseball as a pitcher for the Carteret (Ramblers and Aces. Your valu- able paper always gave me a break. 1 also pitched ifor dear C»rteret High some years bade. "I have played some ball out here, too. I would like to hear from my friends and if you will just mention my name in your paper I'm sure 1 will. In clos- ing, I wish you and your paper all the best." All right you ball-players, how about dropping a line to "Deck." We cannot publish his address, 'but will be glad to mail your let- ters to him; Perth Amboy Nuptial For Marguerite Clark OARTHRM 1 —The First Pres- byterian Church in Perth Amboy was the scene Sunday of the mar- riage of Miss Marguerite €lark. daughter of Mr. and 'Mrs. Joseph Clark of Washington Avenue, ar.d Francis A. Ludwig of the U. S. Coast Guard. The 'bridegroom U the sonof Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Lud- wig of Riverdttle, N. Y. The ceremony was pcu'formed by the church pastor, Rev. Dr. Frederick 'Niedcrmeyer. Given in marriage by her fa- ther, the bride wore a -white or- gandy gown with a full skirt, fitted waist and fingertip veil. Her bou- quet was of white roses, gladioli and balby'fl breath. Her sister, Genevieive, TTOB maid of honor. She wore a gown of pale green marquisette and caniud yellow rests and lavender gltuiioli. Clarence iMann, U. S. Coait Guard, ww the bridegroom's best man and the ushers were Robert J. Clark, brother of the (brick-, and Edward Falter. A reception WHS held at the Raritan Yacht Cbb. Mrs. Lud- wig's traveling clothes ton&istod of a gray and white suit with green accessories and she. carried tea roses. Mrs. Ludwig is employ* eii at. the Foster-Wheeler, plant here. Pfc. Willi«m Varga CARTERET—the wife and parent! of Prirate Varfa have been informed by the War Dc> parttnMtt that h« hat b«»n a prisoner at war linct July 12 wbtit h* wat in, a tank unit in North Africa. It it not yet <9«- termintd whether he ii a prison- er of tha Italiaati or German*. PrWato Varga anJ hit wife li-red at the Pulaiki Avonue addr«» which ii also the horn* of hit parent), Mr. and Mrt. Charlei Varg., Sr. Andres Jr. To Marry In Elizabeth Rites CARTERKT — The local De- fense Council announced today that after September 15 all Emer- gency Motor Vehicle*, permitted to operate during an air raid alarm will be required 1 to display a P«n- nant bearing the Civilian Defense insignia, nw»r tho right front of the- vehicle. I ' Thu council expects to have the pennants sent hero by the State. at tho end ol the month or ,the first part of 1 September. Ndtioo of time »nd ptacq to receive the pennanto >*Hl be Inserted in this newspaper. .# Only those j»won» who now hold Kmergenoy, YehWe «»*& which are diiptoyed 1 JJ band oprner of the at It). I The Eatiw Identified ipennanta, Mr. Perkins in the future will D* the W said, will permit easier identifica- tion of vehicles by the air raid wardens knd^uxliiury police. The latter haVe 'complained that the emergency cards Iri the wind- shields could net be'Men »t night and resulted In the continual stop ping of automobile, permitted tu move. LMr. Dreyfus* pointed out that all vehicles are flermitted to move duritijr tha *%up" period i<if an air 15 milue a tfrose car «nd e _.. mittwt to move period. He usked alt uncik tft i police that (topped durinjf CAiRTElKiKT---Thomas (i. Ken- ,'DII, cashier of the Carteret Bank and Trust Company, has hi-i-n named local clwirman of the Third War Loan Campaign, scheduled to begin September 9. .Borough resi- ifents will join the r«»t of tin' state jn a common effort to aui- scribe to $585,000,0*0, 'lTie total quota for the e^ntire country will be llio/OiOO.OQO.OflQ, hence New Jersey will be asked to sub«ribe 3 a/10.per cent of the entire na- tional allotment. Mr. Kenyon, said he would an- nounce his committee next wtric when the organisation wot)ld meet to map out the campaign. The quota for the area will be an- nounced next week. The chairman expressed his confidence that many organiza- tions will volunteer U> hejp coil- duct the house-to-house,cunvass us suggested by Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenbhau, Jr. "They will 'Back Tne Attack'," Mr. Kenyon' stated.. • "The suc- and second loan elforts indi- cates clearly that thu people of our community will again go over the op, I am sure we all recotrnfise hat in establishing quotas wo arq guided entirely by the necessity of not only raising the funds re- quired to finance the war, ibut to aise them from sources that will protect the economy of our coun- ry." Activities In Red Cross Room To Resume Tuesday •QAiRTBBBT—The Ked Crosg s«Wlng room in the Cleveland Schoo.1 will be. reopened Tues- day, according tv an aunounce- this week- by Mra. John J h ll |Me said nwl^l>t|-liliJ jth** in write/ifliMii? 1 ' Hi the >d" il Defense ;ue" period. To Former Majy H«rmo» ClAiRTERipr—A.- daughter wai Lorn to Mr. and Mfrft. John Mar k-owit* uf 70 Kdg»r ^tree^ Jlrlon *ay in the Perth -hmog wwri. Hoapltal. Mia. Marfcowitj for ' was lUiss l M*ry R ^ p ' D , ' J " p'<of 'Mfs. Jfi' Guest In Home Of Lloyds Dies After Heart Attack A heart attack Tuesday night waB fatal to Miss Helen iC. Ross of Astoria, L." I., who was a guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lloyd of 149 Pershiag Avenue. Tho body was returned to As- toria 'where funeralservicea will be held. -Alias Helga Ma- rion Hansen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G, M. >Hans«n of Avenel Street, Avenel, will become tho Jbridc of John H. Andres, son of iPoliee Sergeant and Mrs. John An- dres of upper Roosevelt Avenue, this iborough, at a ceremony to be performed Sunday afternoon. The marriage will take place at five o'clock in the Bethlehem Lutheran Church, Elizabeth, and will he fol- lowed tiy a reception at the Elks Club in Elizabnth. The bride, who is to >be given in marrage iky her father, has chosen a pown of white satin trimmed in Ince and made with a long train. Her tulle veil will be draped from a. tiara of orange blossoms and she •will •carry white rose*. AH of trrc bride's attendants will wear gowns of white chiffon am! will have American Beauty colored hair ornaments utwl cany American Beauty roses. These at- tendant)) will 'lie: Mrs. Joseph Lt- mone (if Elizabeth as matron of honor; the 'Misses Jennie Sul, Mil- dred KolVarik nnd (Madeline Bowl- tr of Carteret arwl Mario Klepp if Uahway as 'bridesmaids, and Ruth Hansun, aister of the bride, s flower girl. Attending Mr. An- dres n* beat man will be Louis Putnoky of Carteret, Serving »-H ufchers will be Charles Brady and William Snyder of Carteret, Jo- seph Limone of Elizabeth and Ralph llansen of Philadelphia. The ring bearer will bo Robert Andres. Attar u trip to Virginia the cou- ple, tooth of whom are employed it the Eastern Aircraft Corpora- tion in iLindcn, wilt make their home in iRoselle. Miss Haiisen ia a graduate of Woodibridge High School and Mr. Andres of Carteret High School. Sewing Club Lists Outing To Coney Island Tomorrow OAiHTBRBT—'Plans, by a local sewing cluib for an excursion to Coney Island tomorrow were com- pleted Tuesday night at a meet- ing in the home of one of the members, Mrs. Louis Eatok of Woodlbridjre. The group will leave Carteret at 2 P. 'M. Mis, Fred Gombas will be hosl- (3.1 at the next meeting which will 1)e held Tuesday night. Those present at this week's ses- sion were Miss Cecelia Sol, Mrs. Gombas, Mrs. Paul Kalita, Miss Veronica Grohmati, tMlss Veronica iSidiun, Mrs. Stephen Hamulak and Mrs. John Hamulak. Servicemi Club Hoi Is Planm Group Hetdoi By ter Hopct To Eitalrj liih Quarteri Hort (lAhmBttBT—A meeting i hrld Monday by the »pon the plan to o)'iraniie a Sei"vicenu'n's Center in at •which time discussion"! ter on the obtaining of tn hoiiiut thf project. At » session held Tuetday.' for<| ("utter, long active in i men's grnuns, was namtd 1 dent. »f thr group. Other* i c<l wore Minn iMary DyUg, .% president; Mitm Edith Brot/I u'tary; and C. P. Purkint, urer. The chairman of the house t mittce is George Yuronka. plan is to establish a club will serve any member <A iiniicd forces during futlon l-.otne or visit* to Carteret,:^ function will be to home away from home" one in tho service. Other committee chairmen 'Mrs. Blsie Bartok, Stella Maicisfci, publicity. Mr. Yuronka. named the ing committee to assist him: ' Ballwi, Mrs. Isadorc Brown, Bartnk, Mr. Perkins, Robert doflh, Charles Malcwinilti, Lehrer, Nicholas Yavoriy, Kish, Andrew Ihnat, Frank mierski and Robert Farrte. Mrs. Bartok appointed tb/i lowing to on her committed iMr». John Seamati, Mrs. Mary] tie, Mis. Patrick Touhey, Joseph. Givwrnnski, Mrs. Hlub, 'Mrs. Kathtrine y Mrs. Edith Kofka, Mrs. John R«id,;$ Mrs. John Hunditik, Mis.-, MosoWdM and Miss Brown. Builders Buy 41 Borough-Owned Lots one-half parcels - Fifty-eight nf boioufiHl-0 land were sold by the mayor council at public sale Wedn night. Two lots on Christopher were sold to George and BamJhura'k for W O ; eight lota George Strpet to Catherine reigel for 11,050; four lota Roosevelt Avenue to Philip iMary Foxe. for $8&*>; one jhalf lots on K'lauss Street to ' phett and Sophie Shnsky IliniXnO; two lots on John to Bnii! iMatefy for $500. 'Forty-one lottt in the Bast 1 way section were sold to the I tcret Construction Company $4,100 with the un that if the concert, cannot the neceaaary priorities to 41 one~fumily houses on those I tho KHIO of the property ic voided. The council also received on ll additional parcels ot, ough-owned property which be sold at public sale at the < tcmbcr 1 meeting. Helen R. Chester, welfare lector, reported that relief peniws for th« month of Jtj amounted to-$l,449.fl7. Councilman Georgo Kurtt, * the conrmittec on roads, info •the council that thu Cooke nue resurfacing project is ex vd to be complotid at the end this week. New Books At Library ent thi y *HtHidiaJt, chairman of the local chapter. The room, which is used for aewinf, knitting ami folding of surgical dressings, hai buen d 4 (kiring the past wfeejt painting was in New Promotion Announced For Lotal Man U USMC BAJOBaS MJAUD, S. C.~-8er- ee«nt AJwhael Pelliuk, Jr., 17 h w Avenue; Carteret, has "prppftoteii to 'Pfeitoan Sur- tf\i8rfttoi V;S> iMarino Corps. Ptatoon Servant Pellick enli^ ed in the Marin* Corps StspUm- fr m H i h f frwr 19, p He i« the son of .—iFollowing are diversion." Jesso Rogers adored bHef review* -of two View ibooks his beautiful wife and nil »f hia which have ttflon received! at the children—the fancinatini? timl pet- Carteret library: i ulant Zcnie, the pious Juliu, and CENTENNIAL SUMMER by the boisterous twins Henry ami Albert Odell, Ceorgina. Ho did hia best to keep In 13T0 the uUid old city of thein in hand, and was certain that, Philadelphia •¥«», for one excitius! hiu methods, whil<' perhaps lack bununer,'the Center-nf the whole ing the conventional fainuiiw of would, And against the brilliant Solomon^ achieved ultimate jus- p of tite Centennial cele-Uce. o life far the Rogers family When in the midst uf the sum- became evan iwre brilliant than mar the .KogeiV Aunt Zena at rives before. Tftlr njarri&ge between a from Paris with hur handannm railroad ywrimn *M the daugh'yuun* iinphuw, the Rogers gnls ter of an.ftaUan nobleman 'hadtooth set their cups for Philippe jMd l Th i t i l nobleman had p hpp already wjrtMiaod all sorts *>f ma-The ensuing turmoil which* isn't jor und raiafii erlswi, and boredom helped by the fact that Aunt Zeua had. nav^rjiirtsd any of theni- h»t can't help nirting with any Augwnltt* wttvn* arways «<>Ud a-ttractivu man, no mutter who \K the part ot t\my, amt never fer- la, got her ftilite Wood—which wii« Ihicked with high humor and u not eaW, idfe « huabiuiid <wtiofull ocunpleuicnt of ttuhly-dra*a bometiflieg i0te> the language of eharaicttr*, lluu nU,iy out of the the ffolt^tWW, «9d h»4<r«nnitfi heart of an earlier America make* ana 1*t tOi *ri«inal l^»4»fcbo.utteadinifot rare refreshment cftfi^ m Lad Marks 4th Birthday At Party Here Saturday ley, —Edward X Jr., cvlobraiud his fo duy Saturday at a lawn) lit' received many beautiful T,he guesUn wars;; Carol Luca»,i lent" Vail, Putriciu and Rose Prokop, Baiiiara Wk Marie 'Bbumgarten, Ginger i.ar, Michael und Joan and lloiiuld Helley, <vf Kah In the evening the iparentt, <j umi Mra. Edward J. Helley brutcd their ninth weddinf | vursary at thuir home, 88 dolph iStri'et. Th« following i iprenent: Mr. and Urn. Holley, Mr. and Mrs, A. Mr. and Mrs. P. Prokop, Jf^ and Mrs. John ^erchok, Mr, ! i Mrs. John Helloy, Mr, d ^iwunt Bau.mjrarten, iMrs. N, 1 kimolT, iMisi Maty Grech, ' Carteret and. WlUtam O1W Muasui-lmsutta. Mrs. Mam Awarded At Forest Croup ber. T. . p take place on A wi^on. wiw iield on «f >ia week with «

Transcript of -No. 19 CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1943 PRICE ...€¦ · nue, Buffered injuries to his...

Page 1: -No. 19 CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1943 PRICE ...€¦ · nue, Buffered injuries to his awn and back Sunday when he was thrown to the floor of a train in the Broadi Street

-No. 19

f^'i

CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1943 PRICE THBSK

weetnessAND

Light,, : i,,, Ics F.. Cr«|ory——

ihcrc is a very ob-... ,,i jrnititu'de In all•. r . and telephone

| ( . received from• i,.' service for mynipai^n* here and, to get them a

, ,,|irie ration to use: , i iirc home on fur-[• hocn myTonten-

.1 ir the Kasoiine aup-.: ,nl('(|iiate to stand

hl driiin opened by, ili;uiM the right to

.nation sites, therein provide a little

\ pleasure for menn who. are really

•;,, hard pilrt of this

I'.II just about whereriir:i'uT Bowles, the;•, for the OPA in

, Hives some hopeful, m : some horse s e Wi,.niiiK program and

I thi' newspapers quote:u,: that furlough ra-j.iohaiily be legalized!••,'• nrf' ban is lifted.

• ,iu;ii-rt'L with him on!,. i-iins*' in my hookin question about who

uliliiTB or civilians,in favors to be hud.

. I.I.-KII' to my teacher:

HiiiiLir i m p r o v e ? ) run-

) l \ . which more peoplepossibly imagine in-

i n>t, I would lay asiden lake the servicemen

ii U to ii.shaded nookluluiT, according to

'•iifi', und if there wasn I'll parcel it out to

in t<> use for such frivol-as they might choose.

, nuts this theory in re-iiik'5 to take care of

-not first—but the: oil. Then when it ap-

is to be enough both

Playground Schedule Humming;Tournament Ends, Another Starts

Angelina StragapedeIi Winner In Girls'Chess Competition

OA,imjRlr7r—Activities at theMunicipal Park playground con-tinue to lie kept in high gear, withone tournament ju.it about com-pleted and another about to getunder way.

Competition was spirited in thechewi tourney which in due to Wind

'"rank Ampler, Robert 'Jludrsk,Stanley Barlko, lEdward Hayduk,Roibert O'Donnell, Joseph Thnat,Michael 9hurn»ky, August Hundc-mann, Jr., Margwet Monaghan,Rose Moriaghan, Angelinc fttraga-pode, (Mary Ann Seibert, ShirleyDudick, Grace Vincsc and HelenSlinsky.

up re^irtrntw

tlll'l o includeI call that shoddy

! ) •

i .-i i , ,

•iii vim might like to readi.il ic:ictions uf the sol-.!;•• repressed in the let-•iiil The first i« from

mi August F. Grcincr,from homo:

,i-d I would try to litml write • few Wnie» to

luiovv how the fellowtI, "I about your article!

lin,, rationing.

i "I 'ill, the boyi in myiliuir in our area, read

.! iliry were agreed (Edi-U; Who'» bluihioil)• it certainly on the

'• ynu ice, your writingv.un, The fallow* tit• • iyKt niter nifht planI tiny would like to do'! well-earned IS dayi'

'' mill around. YouH'i littinf in a place• lor almoit two yean'i when you get heme

stuffed shirt lay,••'. ii» gai', it juM.doem't"•'• You lure are 1001 light and the voting• '-iiiily will be red hot' 1.1 OH'L mean maybe-*—'•'> can't blame the

been going on at a brisk pace forthe checker contest to start thefirst of the •tfcek.

With some play still remaining,indications are thai BenjaminMoskeJ, John Kollbas, AugustHundemann, Jr. and ^RaymondSeibert will divide the laurels inthe 'boyd' noninr division in thochess tourney, In the juniorgroup, William Donovan and Rich-ard Leahy are the pace-makcrR.Angeline Stragapede emerged H3winner in the girls' competition.

Donate Lunche*Joseph Slinskl is donating frank-

furters for the youngsters duringafternoon rweas while WilhamSitar continues to contribute sodhend cookies fo» the group.

There were Vi> entries in thochess tournament. The full rostcifollows:

Frank O'Brien, Daymond Sic-bert, William Balog, WaRcrGasior, Alvin Brechka, Howard'Wohlgemuth, Benjamin .lacoby,Benjamin Moskel. Richard Leahy,Elwood Colgan, E<rward Magella,Anthony Sauillo, Andrew Kus-Iriw, John Kolibas, Charles Casa-legrgi, William Donovan, WendellPhillip.1*, William Lawlor, WilliamZinvnermaii, Louis Michaud, Wal-ter Borreson, Ronald Krissak,George Kollik, Thomas Dunn,

Clara Hoffman BrideOf LL J. R. Robertson

CA'RTEteET —Captain EdwardWylie, chaplain at Fort Smith,Ark., offlicatcd at the wedding ofMii* Clara Hoffman, daughter ofWrTSiiiT Mrs. Henry IiofTniafl'^fRunrlolph Street, and >Ll. John fl.'Robertson, son of William Robert-son of Harrison.

The bride's gown was ofMarched chiffon with a fingertipveil mid lace and she carried awhite prayer book with gardeniasand sweet peas. She was givenin marriage by Lt. Benjamin Dit-low.

The maid of honor was MissMartha Nering whose gown was of

ik starched chiffon with match-ing headdress. Her bouquet wasof white gladioli and gardenias.The bridegroom's best man washis brother, William A. Robertsonof Harrison.

• To Vi»it OxarkiFollowing a reception in the

Goldman Hotel, the newly wedsleft on a wedding trip throughthe Ozai-k Mountains. Upon theiritturn they will reside at FortSmith where Lt. Robertson is sta-tioned.

Prior to leaving Carteret, Mrs.Robertson was the guest of honorat a surprise shower arranged byher mother and Mrs. Alma Beki'-sen.

(Miss Olga Nering of Grant Ave-nue attended 'the ceremony.

fo Teach At lJf«MUfMM

Local Church Honor RollTo Be Dedicated August 29

— Stephen Lo-ojnroiMiwsf. °X

Labor .for 'New Jersey, is sched-uled to be the principal speakerat the exerciser August 2!) dedi-cating the honor roll at theHoly'Family Church. Stephen'Ozajkowskl is chairman of *>-rangements.

The church Holy Name Sonety planned the program whichwill follow the celebration ofhigh maes at IOISO A. M. byHev. Dr. Joseph DaiadoBZ, pus-tor. lAt 'J A. "M. n communiiinbreakfast will be served withCharles 'Makwinriki as chairman.

Holowatch-KuchytakRites Are Solemnized

CARTKiRETT—Rev. C. S. Ros-knvics, psislor of St. Blias' (irei'kCatholic Church performed theceremony Sunday uniting MissHelen tlolowatch, daughter of Mr.and Mis. James Holowatch ofFitch Street, and Private MichaelKudrtyaTi.

Mr.The bridegroom is \}\cand Mrs. John Kucli-

P. 0. EmphyeesSmash Tradition;Refuse To Take Walk On Holiday

Some Go 7*0 Shore, Oth-ers Visit Relatives,Do Odd Jobs At Mom

tyak of Port Reading.The bride's gown was of white

satin with a basque waist and fullskirt. Her veil fell to her finger-tips from a crown of orange blov

me and she carried a whileprayer book marked with a White•orchid" and a spray of baby's(breath. She was given in mar-riage by her father.

A sister, Mary, was the bride'smaid1 of honor. She wore lightgreen with a shirred •vnaist and fullskirt trimmed with ruffles oi laci>.She wore a matching picture hatand carried gladioli. The flowergirl was KliyneJiavBlctjj, rrtgee of

lu ll

i noli' from Pvt. Stan-11 I'lnUpiak of the Marine

I unlive of Carteret:'•' wilting to thank you

''"> lulumn which you wroteJ«ly 23 edition."id I'm lure thouiandi

"'" 'Ike me—'appreciate"Ll«" the way you are'" help the men and wo-

' ll»: armed forCM,"•j t • »

111' sample of opinion isw Frank Casaie«of Port

uliu probably won't huvfe' i» drive the family car'"K lime because he's justII Ins way:11 ' « t Utter 1 wrote wa» a''idtikinc you for sandingw" paper for u* to read•i' up with wh*t U (oinf'""•'<=• Thip ii a t * a Lt."'..iik!, but thia tim* it ia

11L"' article* on ,«• aline"'t' Your Wewi on fur-

are all rrand. and

Am M. Ginda, Army ManMany h Golf port, Miss.

CA.KTERET — Announcementhas been made of the murriage inGulfport, Miss., of Miss Ann M.Ginda, daughter fff Mr, and Mrs.Petor Ginda of 49 John Streut,and Prival" Walter Karas.

The bridegroom is the son ofMr. and MrB. John Kuril, of Brod-head Place, Perth Amboy.

the bride, wh»colored ({own styled after thuL oftho maid of honor, /Shu also car-ried gladioli.

The bridegroom's best man wasPrivate Stephen Pawlikonki olLinden.

Reception HeldAfter the ceremony,.* reception

for the bridal couple wus held i'ithe home of the bride's parents.For traveling, Mrs. Kuchtyak won1

a black sheer drew with green uc-cessoriea and carried red rusts.

The bride, a graduate of Ciir-tcret High School, is employed ;itthe RariWn Arsenal. The .bride-groom is a graduate of Woml-•bridge Township High School andprior to his induction in the armywas employed by the Genital Ruil-road of New Jersey. He is nowstationed at Indiantown Cap, Pa.

Morris Cohen Hurt InFreak Train Accident

OAiRTIKttfErr—Morris Cuhm,'5.2, of HW Washington Ave-nue, Buffered injuries to hisawn and back Sunday when hewas thrown to the floor of a

train in the Broadi Street Sta-tion, Newark.

Mr. <"ohen was a paisengcroii the Labkawianna Railroad's'Buffalo express when the pas-senger section became uncou-pled as the locomotive pulledout of the station. One manwas thrown from the train andMr. Cohen and two others whowere standing In a vestibule wereilung against bhe door and fell.The Weal man was treated aithe Newark City Hospital undreleased.

Mis* Dorothy A. ConnollyCARTERET Daughter of

Mr. and Mri. John Connolly,Mia* Cor.nolly who Utt week re-ceived the Hrijrpc of Bachelorof A.rU in Education from fnnN*w Jemey State Teachen' Col-lege in Mwntrlair, will SHunrChrr dutln «• a member of thefaculty nt the Mana»qu»n HighSchool next month.

Mill Connolly will teach•ophomore and junior bookkeef)-ing, two claitei in mu«ic andone in finance. She •• trie thirdmember of her iarnily to be-come a teacher.

Lions To InstallOfficers At Dinner

OAiRTRBET—Jiimes J. Lukachwill be installed president of theCarteret ^ions Club at a dinnerdance to "be held Tuesday at theGypsy Camp on Essex Street.

Others of the new slate to beinstalled are: Frank ScunSatO,llrst vice president; C. iP. Perkjnn,second! vice president; Dr. WayneT. Branom, third vice president;Joseph * Synowiecki, treasurer;Edward S. Kucinski, secretary;Paul Chergcy, Lion tamer andLouis Bolted, tail twister,

LftRoy Height, district gover-nor, will be the installing officerand certitfkaite* will be presentedby Harold P. Nutter,'.director.

tUyinubonti' and doing what I want fromday to day." That's not the onlyanswer hut it's the predominatingone a reporter got by asking mem-bers of tho local post olftco »taffhow they vtare spending their vaca-

this ynrr. And it'* not * badway In upend1 a vncation either,

days nf rationed travel andother wur-time difficulties (Inffl't it's ju»t what the writer ofthis piece did with a week off!)

Of course the vacation reportsfrom the post office vary, as someof the personnel did take trips and(some still have thfir rcrtpite fromwork ahead of them.

Postmaster William J. Lawlorhasn't even taken time to thinkabout his own vacation, however,a situation usual with the boasthese days. All he cared aboutespecially was getting the vaca-tions nf htH staff taken care ofwhile the vacation school-lboy em

still were available to rolieve'the carriers. But Mr. Law-lor will take his holiday later,wh(>n he gets around to it.

Some To ShoreThe two women clerks are in-

cluded in the exceptions to thegeneral anstwer quoted above.Mrs. Edith Klose went to ,Bteton"Woods down on the New' Jerseyshore, and Miss Hajel Winchellto Point Pleasant. Also off for afew days at the shore was carrierWilliam Elliott, who divided histime between the salty area and afarm nt Hope where he visitedfrequently. Joseph Byrnes wentto another shore for his vacation,to Rockaway, New York. Frar/kCBrien stayed home and took ina few hall games, which John Ker-nedy probably will do also, al-though he's made no plans.

Carrier Philip Foxe used Iii3vacation to paint his home in Em-erson Street, and another carrier,Kenneth Harris, will go to Bridge-port, Conn., thia weak to visit his

ive* the*1'-1,Robert Bishop hus ipade no plans

'rt and 1. G. (Jerty) Nevill hasjust rttnrned after a health cur*at Dannvllle, N. Y.

However, to f»r «s w« conldlearn, nobody at the j»st ofllc*went on • wuHting trip for 1 vacn-tion outing!

On 'Deck'Local TwiHer Now h

In There PitthiniFor U S .

Pritmur Of War

Stamps In New Ration Book 3To Become Valid September 12Meat-Fat Coupons ToExpire On SaturdaysNearest End Of MonthGAiRTDltiBT Brown

A in Ration Book No. 3 becomevalid September 12 for the pur-chane "f iiieals, fats, oils, butterand cheese, and by October 2 thebrown coupons will completely re-place the familiar red stamps o£Ration Book 2, the local WarI'rice and Rationing Board an-nounced today. Point values re-main unchanged.

Brown stamp B becomes validSeptember IB. Both A and B ex-pire October 2. Stamp C will beeffective September 27, D on Oc-tober ;!, E on October 10 and V

' :l>uuld contain in dgid|" '" •' <» u*in( Iht b»v. the

''" y need to help tb<m on-""= '«w bouri they havn »t

'" If the OPA objtet. »o'•»««u.ly to i l f i n« | a i to men

"| lough, Ut th«B talk toVll-«iiieu a n d e x p l a i n"•• '» a w a r

Civil Defense 'Emergency' CarsTo Be Identified By Pennants

on October 17.pire October 30.

Those four ex-

Meanwhile red stamps X, Y andZ become valid August 22, August2!) and September 5, respectivelyand all will expire October 2,

In announcing the new'regula-tions, the OPA said that henceforth the meat-fat stamps alwayswill expire on the Saturday near-est the end of, the month, and newsets will become valid on the fol-lowing Sundays.

Blue stamps U, V und W fromRation Book 2 will become validSeptember 1 and expire October20.

In another phase of the ration-ing program, OPA announced thatthe old-type B and C gasoline cou-pons will he no good after Septem-ber 1 and told owners to exchangethem, coupon for coupon, for thenew type sheets between August23 und September 1.

Committee, Quota For 3rd WarLoan Campaign Slated Next Week

OAIRTBRBT—"Dock" Nagy,who won some local renown siB moundaman in local baseballcircles, is now in there pitching'em for Uncle Sam.

The Pt-fSB this week had a let-ter from "Deck" in which heasked that the paper he sent tohim each week. We have madearrangements to comply withhis request. His letter follows:

"I guess there is no harmwriting to my home-to/wn paperand asking for a dear favorfrom them. I would like tohave your paper sent to me sothat I may keep Up with the lo-cal news,

41My home address is 80 War-ren Street. I am known to myfriends as 'Deck.' While atJiome I played a lot of baseballas a pitcher for the Carteret(Ramblers and Aces. Your valu-able paper always gave me abreak. 1 also pitched if or dearC»rteret High some years bade.

"I have played some ball outhere, too. I would like to hearfrom my friends and if you willjust mention my name in yourpaper I'm sure 1 will. In clos-ing, I wish you and your paperall the best."

All right you ball-players, howabout dropping a line to "Deck."We cannot publish his address,'but will be glad to mail your let-ters to him;

Perth Amboy NuptialFor Marguerite Clark

OARTHRM1—The First Pres-byterian Church in Perth Amboywas the scene Sunday of the mar-riage of Miss Marguerite €lark.daughter of Mr. and 'Mrs. JosephClark of Washington Avenue, ar.dFrancis A. Ludwig of the U. S.Coast Guard. The 'bridegroom Uthe sonof Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Lud-wig of Riverdttle, N. Y.

The ceremony was pcu'formedby the church pastor, Rev. Dr.Frederick 'Niedcrmeyer.

Given in marriage by her fa-ther, the bride wore a -white or-gandy gown with a full skirt, fittedwaist and fingertip veil. Her bou-quet was of white roses, gladioliand balby'fl breath. Her sister,Genevieive, TTOB maid of honor.She wore a gown of pale greenmarquisette and caniud yellowrests and lavender gltuiioli.

Clarence iMann, U. S. CoaitGuard, ww the bridegroom's bestman and the ushers were RobertJ. Clark, brother of the (brick-, andEdward Falter.

A reception WHS held at theRaritan Yacht Cbb. Mrs. Lud-wig's traveling clothes ton&istodof a gray and white suit withgreen accessories and she. carriedtea roses. Mrs. Ludwig is employ*eii at. the Foster-Wheeler, planthere.

Pfc. Willi«m VargaCARTERET—the wife and

parent! of Prirate Varfa havebeen informed by the War Dc>parttnMtt that h« hat b«»n aprisoner at war linct July 12wbtit h* wat in, a tank unit inNorth Africa. It it not yet <9«-termintd whether he ii a prison-er of tha Italiaati or German*.PrWato Varga anJ hit wife li-redat the Pulaiki Avonue addr«»which ii also the horn* of hitparent), Mr. and Mrt. CharleiVarg., Sr.

Andres Jr. To MarryIn Elizabeth Rites

CARTERKT — The local De-fense Council announced todaythat after September 15 all Emer-gency Motor Vehicle*, permittedto operate during an air raid alarmwill be required1 to display a P«n-nant bearing the Civilian Defenseinsignia, nw»r tho right front ofthe- vehicle. I '

Thu council expects to have thepennants sent hero by the State.at tho end ol the month or ,thefirst part of1 September. Ndtiooof time »nd ptacq to receive thepennanto >*Hl be Inserted in thisnewspaper. .#

Only those j»won» who nowhold Kmergenoy, YehWe «»*&which are diiptoyed 1 J Jband oprner of the

at It).

I

TheEatiw Identified

ipennanta, Mr. Perkins

in the future will D*the W

said, will permit easier identifica-tion of vehicles by the air raidwardens knd^uxliiury police. Thelatter haVe 'complained that theemergency cards Iri the wind-shields could net be'Men »t nightand resulted In the continual stopping of automobile, permitted tumove.

LMr. Dreyfus* pointed out thatall vehicles are flermitted tomove duritijr tha *%up" periodi<if an air15 milue atfrose car«nd e _..mittwt to moveperiod.

He usked altuncik tft i

police that(topped durinjf

CAiRTElKiKT---Thomas (i. Ken-,'DII, cashier of the Carteret Bank

and Trust Company, has hi-i-nnamed local clwirman of the ThirdWar Loan Campaign, scheduled tobegin September 9. .Borough resi-ifents will join the r«»t of tin'state jn a common effort to aui-scribe to $585,000,0*0, 'lTie totalquota for the e^ntire country willbe llio/OiOO.OQO.OflQ, hence NewJersey will be asked to sub«ribe3 a/10.per cent of the entire na-tional allotment.

Mr. Kenyon, said he would an-nounce his committee next wtricwhen the organisation wot)ld meetto map out the campaign. Thequota for the area will be an-nounced next week.

The chairman expressed hisconfidence that many organiza-tions will volunteer U> hejp coil-duct the house-to-house,cunvass ussuggested by Secretary of theTreasury Henry Morgenbhau, Jr.

"They will 'Back Tne Attack',"Mr. Kenyon' stated.. • "The suc-

and second loan elforts indi-cates clearly that thu people of ourcommunity will again go over theop, I am sure we all recotrnfisehat in establishing quotas wo arq

guided entirely by the necessity ofnot only raising the funds re-quired to finance the war, ibut toaise them from sources that will

protect the economy of our coun-ry."

Activities In Red CrossRoom To Resume Tuesday

•QAiRTBBBT—The Ked Crosgs«Wlng room in the ClevelandSchoo.1 will be. reopened Tues-day, according tv an aunounce-

this week- by Mra. JohnJ h l l

|Me said nwl^l>t|-liliJjth** in write/ifliMii?1

' Hi

the > d "

il Defense

;ue" period.

To Former Majy H«rmo»ClAiRTERipr—A.- daughter wai

Lorn to Mr. and Mfrft. John Mark-owit* uf 70 Kdg»r ^tree^ Jlrlon*ay in the Perth -hmog w w r i .Hoapltal. Mia. Marfcowitj for' was lUiss lM*ry R ^ p ' D , 'J"

p'<of 'Mfs. Jfi'

Guest In Home Of LloydsDies After Heart Attack

A heart attackTuesday night waB fatal to MissHelen iC. Ross of Astoria, L." I.,who was a guest in the home ofMr. and Mrs. Joseph Lloyd of 149Pershiag Avenue.

Tho body was returned to As-toria 'where funeralservicea willbe held.

-Alias Helga Ma-rion Hansen, daughter of Mr. andMrs. G, M. >Hans«n of AvenelStreet, Avenel, will become thoJbridc of John H. Andres, son ofiPoliee Sergeant and Mrs. John An-dres of upper Roosevelt Avenue,this iborough, at a ceremony to beperformed Sunday afternoon. Themarriage will take place at fiveo'clock in the Bethlehem LutheranChurch, Elizabeth, and will he fol-lowed tiy a reception at the ElksClub in Elizabnth.

The bride, who is to >be given inmarrage iky her father, has chosena pown of white satin trimmed inInce and made with a long train.Her tulle veil will be draped froma. tiara of orange blossoms and she•will •carry white rose*.

AH of trrc bride's attendantswill wear gowns of white chiffonam! will have American Beautycolored hair ornaments utwl canyAmerican Beauty roses. These at-tendant)) will 'lie: Mrs. Joseph Lt-mone (if Elizabeth as matron ofhonor; the 'Misses Jennie Sul, Mil-dred KolVarik nnd (Madeline Bowl-tr of Carteret arwl Mario Kleppif Uahway as 'bridesmaids, and

Ruth Hansun, aister of the bride,s flower girl. Attending Mr. An-

dres n* beat man will be LouisPutnoky of Carteret, Serving »-Hufchers will be Charles Brady andWilliam Snyder of Carteret, Jo-seph Limone of Elizabeth andRalph llansen of Philadelphia.The ring bearer will bo RobertAndres.

Attar u trip to Virginia the cou-ple, tooth of whom are employedi t the Eastern Aircraft Corpora-tion in iLindcn, wilt make theirhome in iRoselle. Miss Haiisen iaa graduate of Woodibridge HighSchool and Mr. Andres of CarteretHigh School.

Sewing Club Lists OutingTo Coney Island Tomorrow

OAiHTBRBT—'Plans, by a localsewing cluib for an excursion toConey Island tomorrow were com-pleted Tuesday night at a meet-ing in the home of one of themembers, Mrs. Louis Eatok ofWoodlbridjre. The group will leaveCarteret at 2 P. 'M.

Mis, Fred Gombas will be hosl-(3.1 at the next meeting which will1)e held Tuesday night.

Those present at this week's ses-sion were Miss Cecelia Sol, Mrs.Gombas, Mrs. Paul Kalita, MissVeronica Grohmati, tMlss VeronicaiSidiun, Mrs. Stephen Hamulak andMrs. John Hamulak.

ServicemiClub HoiIs Planm

Group Hetdoi Byter Hopct To Eitalrjliih Quarteri Hort

(lAhmBttBT—A meeting ihrld Monday by the »ponthe plan to o)'iraniie aSei"vicenu'n's Center inat •which time discussion"!ter on the obtaining oftn hoiiiut thf project.

At » session held Tuetday.'for<| ("utter, long active in imen's grnuns, was namtd1

dent. »f thr group. Other* ic<l wore Minn iMary DyUg, .%president; Mitm Edith Brot/Iu'tary; and C. P. Purkint,urer.

The chairman of the house tmittce is George Yuronka.plan is to establish a clubwill serve any member <Aiiniicd forces during futlonl-.otne or visit* to Carteret,:^function will be tohome away from home"one in tho service.

Other committee chairmen'Mrs. Blsie Bartok,

Stella Maicisfci, publicity.Mr. Yuronka. named the

ing committee to assist him:'Ballwi, Mrs. Isadorc Brown,Bartnk, Mr. Perkins, Robertdoflh, Charles Malcwinilti,Lehrer, Nicholas Yavoriy,Kish, Andrew Ihnat, Frankmierski and Robert Farrte.

Mrs. Bartok appointed t b / ilowing to on her committediMr». John Seamati, Mrs. Mary]tie, Mis. Patrick Touhey,Joseph. Givwrnnski, Mrs.Hlub, 'Mrs. Kathtrine yMrs. Edith Kofka, Mrs. John R«id,;$Mrs. John Hunditik, Mis.-, MosoWdMand Miss Brown.

Builders Buy 41Borough-Owned Lotsone-half parcels

- Fifty-eightnf boioufiHl-0

land were sold by the mayorcouncil at public sale Wednnight.

Two lots on Christopherwere sold to George andBamJhura'k for W O ; eight lotaGeorge Strpet to Catherinereigel for 11,050; four lotaRoosevelt Avenue to PhilipiMary Foxe. for $8&*>; one

jhalf lots on K'lauss Street to 'phett and Sophie ShnskyIliniXnO; two lots on Johnto Bnii! iMatefy for $500.

'Forty-one lottt in the Bast 1way section were sold to the Itcret Construction Company$4,100 with the unthat if the concert, cannot •the neceaaary priorities to41 one~fumily houses on those Itho KHIO of the property icvoided.

The council also receivedon l l additional parcels o t ,ough-owned property whichbe sold at public sale at the <tcmbcr 1 meeting.

Helen R. Chester, welfarelector, reported that reliefpeniws for th« month of Jtjamounted to-$l,449.fl7.

Councilman Georgo Kurtt, *the conrmittec on roads, info•the council that thu Cookenue resurfacing project is exvd to be complotid at the endthis week.

New Books At Library

ent thi y*HtHidiaJt, chairman of the local

chapter.The room, which is used for

aewinf, knitting ami folding ofsurgical dressings, hai buend 4 (kiring the past wfeejt

painting was in

New Promotion AnnouncedFor Lotal Man U USMC

BAJOBaS MJAUD, S. C.~-8er-ee«nt AJwhael Pelliuk, Jr., 17

h w Avenue; Carteret, has"prppftoteii to 'Pfeitoan Sur-

tf\i8rfttoi V;S> iMarino Corps.Ptatoon Servant Pellick en l i^

ed in the Marin* Corps StspUm-fr m H i h ffrwr 19 ,

pHe i« the son of

.—iFollowing are diversion." Jesso Rogers adoredbHef review* -of two View ibooks his beautiful wife and nil »f hiawhich have ttflon received! at the children—the fancinatini? timl pet-Carteret library: i ulant Zcnie, the pious Juliu, and

CENTENNIAL SUMMER by the boisterous twins Henry amiAlbert Odell, Ceorgina. Ho did hia best to keep

In 13T0 the uUid old city of thein in hand, and was certain that,Philadelphia •¥«», for one excitius! hiu methods, whil<' perhaps lackbununer,'the Center-nf the whole ing the conventional fainuiiw ofwould, And against the brilliant Solomon^ achieved ultimate jus-

p of tite Centennial cele-Uce.o life far the Rogers family When in the midst uf the sum-

became evan iwre brilliant than mar the .KogeiV Aunt Zena at rivesbefore. Tftlr njarri&ge between a from Paris with hur handannmrailroad ywrimn *M the daugh'yuun* iinphuw, the Rogers gnlster of an.ftaUan nobleman 'hadtooth set their cups for Philippe

j M d l Th i t i lnobleman had p h p p

already wjrtMiaod all sorts *>f ma-The ensuing turmoil which* isn'tjor und raiafii erlswi, and boredom helped by the fact that Aunt Zeuahad. nav^rjiirtsd any of theni- • h»t can't help nirting with any

Augwnltt* wttvn* arways «<>Ud a-ttractivu man, no mutter who \Kthe part ot t\my, amt never fer- la,got her ftilite Wood—which wii« Ihicked with high humor and unot eaW, idfe « huabiuiid <wtiofull ocunpleuicnt of ttuhly-dra*abometiflieg i0te> the language of eharaicttr*, lluu nU,iy out of thethe f fo l t^ tWW, «9d h»4<r«nnitfi heart of an earlier America make*ana 1*t tOi *ri«inal l »4» fcbo.utteadinif ot rare refreshment

cftfi m

Lad Marks 4th BirthdayAt Party Here Saturday

ley,—Edward X

Jr., cvlobraiud his foduy Saturday at a lawn)

lit' received many beautifulT,he guesUn wars;; Carol Luca»,ilent" Vail, Putriciu and RoseProkop, Baiiiara WkMarie 'Bbumgarten, Gingeri.ar, Michael und Joanand lloiiuld Helley, <vf Kah

In the evening the iparentt, <jumi Mra. Edward J. Helleybrutcd their ninth weddinf |vursary at thuir home, 88dolph iStri'et. Th« following iiprenent: Mr. and Urn.Holley, Mr. and Mrs, A.Mr. and Mrs. P. Prokop, J f ^and Mrs. John ^erchok, Mr,! iMrs. John Helloy, Mr, d^iwunt Bau.mjrarten, iMrs. N, 1kimolT, iMisi Maty Grech, 'Carteret and. WlUtam O1WMuasui-lmsutta.

Mrs. Mam AwardedAt Forest Croup

ber. T. .

ptake place on

A wi^on. wiw iield on«f > ia week with «

Page 2: -No. 19 CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1943 PRICE ...€¦ · nue, Buffered injuries to his awn and back Sunday when he was thrown to the floor of a train in the Broadi Street

PAGB TWO 20; IMS pftf

Three WomenHold Sea Jobs

Claim to fee Pint of S«xCairnd on Swunen'i

nywhere.

Fir* Ufcvw Him WithoutCetit, Skunk Suppfiti ft

BAL66A, CANAL tom -Thr«•omen, btllfved to be Ihr flr»t tohold p»perl from the Nation*! Morl-tim« unit* mtir.ving them «» •*«gotn| tmk* and bakers, arrived twr*recently aboard n medlum-jitedfreighter loaderl with enrgn fromthe Went toa*t of the U. S. forthe Canal Tone.

Two of the vnlnen, Mrs. HuthBagard, 21, of Siin Francisco, Calif.,i W Mrt. Mary CMUrn, ffl, also of8aii Franclsos have their linlnn rer-tlfteatw •ireiriy. *hile the eertitV-cate tor prfctty Summalla Lavleia,25, frofti Snn FrandScft. too, I* t» ln |completed. She lrft so suddenly th»»»ht did tint hate time 1o ohtaln !tbefore flslllng.

Called from their quarters, thedoor ot which bore the sign "ttire*Me*» Boy«," Mm. BoRnrd dnd Mrs.Ctfttoh proudly displayed Uieir cer-tiflcatei of service Issued by thedepartment of eommere* and toldhe» they n»fl b**n ac«ept«l forrtrVIc* It rt« wWn eight otherm i « l were luniPd Jowh for nlmi-tet job*.

Tt»y declare they nre the firstAmeritam ot their sat to e carriedon «eamen's papers anywhere.

Quietest of the thtee ii Mrs. Cot-ttn, She 4o»*n't know Whether sheit » wife or « widow, sirro hrr hus-band, tn enlisted man In the navyaboard the USS Junll, which was inCfivtte bay during the Philippine bat-tle Itlt year, was reported last May34 ( I "Hiiscing in fiction."

forked u Hrtrl Clerk,Bow In Ontario, Canadn, Mrs.

Cotton lived in Snult RtP, Marie be-lore |0tag to San Frnncisco, where•he Worked «« a hotel dark.

"I fljttred that he (her husband)isn't J»ln| to sea right now find itleeffled t« me that I might as wellilfn up lo that I could relieve someyouuf man for active service," Mrs.Cotton laid. She is mess attendantfor the ihtp't officers,

AlJo hawing, but not by notifica-tion froftl the navy department, isMrt, BogartT* husband. He Is a gun-ner'i mate In the navy.

"fle'l aTtoat somewhere," sheSaid, "and I thought that maybe ifI went tp » a I could catch up withMfn In ic*ffl port."

Mrt, Boftrd worked In the transitdepartment of the Federal Reservebank in Sin Franciirfn before (he"ran Into Mrs. Cotton, and her IdeaOf signing up on n merchant ship,end here I am." She Is m«si at-tendant for the navy gun crewaboard the ship, ,

Mill Lavleia—known aboard *hipai "Frenchie"—was working as awelder in a Kaiser shipyard at $72* week When she got the idea ofseeing the working side of the shipsibe had been helping lo build.

Weren't Seasick.

She applied for a job three daysbefore the ship tailed for the canal,but was given only two hours to gether kit together and get aboard.The women had an argument over

Uavieia's title, but Anally de-

GA -Firethe fartn ^omr of John StiMr Mil»11 ff(« blithe* he had excef*i H»»uft oh hi* back. He moved Into Matob«MM) packing hoiiM and torn**how a *ktink moved In, too. Afterretiring, Subrr hoard a scratchingat th* door, nnd thinking a cat wattrytaf to gW In he opened'the door,then Mifrimeri It Ihut.

tfked the ttrw*, which rm-Sub*r'« l ist wit unwrtrFtble

Mid bit temporary abort* uninhab-itable.

Wtort Setter W*« ThanThat to Look for Teeth

1*UEBLO, OOLO.-The dentist1..(Mtteht had removed her upperdenture before htvlht * Irfecterltooth treated.

"Where are my upper '..eth?" she•iked after the treatment

She and Wie *wt l« hunrd highand low. Then the office girl waacalled and ahe (oo searched, but theteeth emiMn't be found.

"Well, we've warched every placebut In your mouth." the dwnlfit said,finally.

"Ooodnesfi," said the patient."They are in my month!"

AvoM Ba4 SellttfOne way to escape the necessity

d using rigorous methods for col-ored eottonj nr whitn cotton clothe!for that fnntter Is to wash then*before they are badly soiled. Don'twait until the dress "shows dirt allover." Wash It as soon as tho neck-line, which Is usually soonest soiled,Is dirty. On long sleeved dTesses,Jt Is ofttti the cuff area which soillfirst. In very hot weather, (t itunderarm perspiration which Is themost frequent cause for washing nnotherwise clean garment, but Intothe wash it should go so that theimbedded perspiration may nothave a chance, to weaken the flberior dull the colors.

Children Need More frrolebiGrowing children, because they

are building new fltftue In additionto replacing brofcen down cells, re-quire two to three titties as mttchprotein per pound of body mightas adults.

ttded that sin might be caned tin"salon girl "

All three were proud at not beingseasick as some of the men In thecrew were. They all were coveredwith bruises for the first few day*until they l&nrned how to walk withtoe roll of the ship, but now con-sider they hod gotten their sen legs.

All of them declared tHat they liketheir new life and the skipper andMs crew "Just fine." Although thefreighter carries several guns andsails under all wartime rutes, noneof the three has been afraid.

They take part in all the ship1*drills, and attend classes given tothe gun crew on rescue an4 life-sav-ing work. For recreation they playcards with other crew member*, orread, |

They eavn $105 monthly, includingthe bonui. They all want to go toAustralia, and are supposed to havea ship bound for there waiting forthem when they get back to theUnited States.

Red Cms Seeks Blood Donors;Anyone 18 To 60 Is Acceptable

THOUSANDS OF BLOOD DONORS ARE NEEDEDEACH WEEK FOR THE ARMY AND NAVY.

CALL CARTERET 8-5118 8-5119Thin Bluer (.oHlrllnitfd lij

RABINOWITZ HARDWARECARTERET, N. J.

Hardware (or H«rJw«»r

BLOOD

D0N0R8

Y O UCan help iave the life of a wounded larUr or

M i t t by gitft| a pint of your Moodtkair M M 4 ftftd ri.l tb.lr KtM b * *«,

k or risk our llv.i. AH \\

tit*

Tfltpkt T u b FranLead In ffid$et L»o|)

OAiRTBRIBT — "Dutch" fihymannki's l*illiftnt two-tiil hurlingH)w*t the lf«jp»f U-adinf Ya'nls, ««Ihc OiiintB came t'.irouph wiHi l«te

to win, ft to 1, in theMidartt*«t frrldty n!(*t at the

imi flclA The defeat hadH d1*ftirtr>o«» effect on the Yank*who dropped to necond place Mthe Car (IF nMumed the Wngvttle*rter»hip.Gianii ( 8 ) Alft R HO'Brien, 2b 4 1 2Hofniik, If ,.. a 0 0Tomorrf !f ] 1 «

y , p 4 2 IKnUarifc, c % 0 1Phillit>«, «n k.... 4 1 0Weber, 3ib ^ 1 2 0Kcnts, ct .1 2 1 INiMhe*, Ik k . J 8 0 0KBxkiw, rf »JI/ £ 0 0

20 8 7

Yank, ( 1 ) ,AJB,n TlMenjfai, m .„ 8 0 2DerMwiA, «b 1 0 0EpyVHin, 2fo 3 « 0frokopiak, p % o 0Kqljula, 1b 3 0 0Alufrelii, Tif ....: S 0 0Ihnat, Tf 3 0 0Nniry, cf 0 0 0Boris, c ., 2 0 0

21 1 2Svorp by intiii^B:

Giants 010 '«& 2—SV»nk« 10*1 <W0

Compressed foods are/the newestdevelopment among thorn In chargeot plans to tMtt AmeMct's fight in ittorrtfc, fttfflt, tn wwtipl*, e*n b«»o ewhptesirt ttst up to » petttrt toon wttl |o >htb »n ordinaryi tdt E«pttifn«nis to date ihowfc«t <*riBtl pfBduftt, «he«te and de»by4rtt*J IbodiVvnetablet, fruits,mift MMI «ntf-«ri *« moat adapt'•fcfo t« tomfMsslM. 8«vte«l InDU{#M| tM«» « n ftpn«d as highti E» p«r M

WAR BONDSWlien a soldier or a sailor Is low

In spirit* th*» ii noftintf that willenter htm up u much H a tetterfrom home, So the War and NavyDepartment* have devited a meth-od tor getta* "tt» *ord" to Its fight-ing men <Wtt He''jjfeatest dispatch.This it the microfltm method *trammltlinf letters, known to all ofus as VtnaA,

Any news from home Is bound toplease our toldien and our sailorsbut the nefvs they WAnt to havemost is the hettt from our produc-tion front »nd newt that wt are win-ning our fight against Inflation byour savings »nd Investment kitWar Beadt. p. j . rmmflr Dip*rim*>

*f c»w»JH» <***t R«y R«t*n w i hi tftn • « • ! »t tint t* t tttcr H***\ duthiff tk* H«lldorMk n M t i t l m , i t w*»+ch Re-

King Of The Cowbt>r> aetwi a* Utkul N

AMtPIC/W fiUtmtf PKM7KI)R T £ t JN

A

k « r • E* INPUCTKJW P O « PONATCPf By Tut aoBtic SWRT OFF TO THE

VtWlTRAINING 6EMTERS

BARN COLLAPSES, KILLSMAN

Tuscaloosi, Alu.—^When a por-tion of a new barn on which he•was woiJcMg coHlapsed and fell on

ini, Juhu >B. Taylor, 71, was soseverely injured that he died at Rlocal hospital soon afterward.

-1~' i

BIKES 60 MILES TO FISH•Baker, Ore.—John Fields likes

hk fishing, and gag, rationing ornot, he's going- to get it. He aroseat 3 A, M., road his bicycle overGO miles of rough mountain roadin seven hours, fished for aix anda half hours and returned home«t 11:30 P. M. He caught thelimit of trout, too.

FAIR EXCHANGE?King Hill, tduho. — A hen a

•a pheasant, on Ihe C. E. Woodrandi, laid their eggs in the samenwt, While the hen continuedt» sit on tlie pheasant eggs, thepheasant was strutting: proudlyabout the ranch- 'with her broodf l>al>y chicks.

J#»-ths sharply reduced infirst six months of 1943.

Army will retire hundreds ofnow over age.

Cariilead MidgetLoof By Z^Gime ByToppng Yanks 7-5

•The Cards movedinto n two-«ame lead in thf Miil-

liPhtrtf ky knodtinR off tho., 7 to J>, Monitey evpn!n(c nl

the P»rk field. Gtiral lw> the nt-Hw-ev hit* in three trips

to the 'plate.Car«U (7 ) AlB R IfMerelo, 8h 4 0 0Mijrh»n, U> 2 2 0Cutter, r *..... 3 0 2B«r«a, p i. 4 1 0Donovnn, S8 % 1 0Stroifi, » 3 0 0outai, ab ...<;> _ » l aMudraic, ct 3 0 0Hanwdyk, i* «... 2 2 2

27 1 1

Yank, (g) KB R H« 4 2 1

3 0 0Kpyehin, to S O IProkopiak, 1»» 8 1 £Kijula, 3h 3 0 0Andretla, 2b 8 1 0Thnat, rf fl 0 1

, ef 3 0 I)Bumburak, iff t \ 1

an 5 5(by innirff*:

Yank* lftt Iftl 1 — SCents WlOlOa 5—7

My All Stan DtItAfMr-DefeitCank By 3-2 Score

Cards Beat PirrinIn Senior Leape

OARTERETT fimipipinp out ofthrir slumbers lonif enough'to %eutthe P1rat*B, 1.2 to 1, the CanHntlsfinally itXHiaJteii to -win a jf«me inthe second half, Monday eveningAt the Carteret Park.

Startinir e»tly the O a r * RttheroA four run.i in . the ftait inningand pcorcd four more In _th«,necand,

dUiri. (12) AlB R HMoskal, Jib 4 1 2Lukach. M 0> 2 0Kollbas, i > ...: 9 3 2Pluta, If 4 1 1M, Fittpatrk*, c & 3 >f. fiHpmriA, p 3 t ' 1CopelUnrt, lb , S (* »B. Fitipatrirtc, cf 4 8 !Oolfifln, rf 2 « 0Tex, s« 1 1 0

P)rmt«i (1) AB R ftV«h«4y, 2J> 4 0 1Tereh(4»ki, 3b 4 0 2Sa-raillo, cf 4 0 0Shomnky, M 3 0fhanky, lb S <»Warfleld, rf 2 0 t»GaJbratth, c 2 0 0KUiotrt, W a 0 0O'Korke. p 2 1 0Glnda, If C O O

27 1 5Score ny inning*:

Cardinals 440 032 x—12lirates W>0 <k>l 0— 1

P l * 1 . B v..in1#ut. t*hfl ii 11 i

hfs piim»ml bni-riPiit» flnrl (!,„,

ettv, on, location, i,,,.J^ ot hi* <*ew,.m(be used in some futm,

SOPTCOAIBituminou* minf ,

**pected tobe tymitv nkhon taw'femr, ;s m , i

ahead tt tne

THIN,'. Calif

^Nwi TO ONI:thirteen monii.

Hi Olinn, M,,;ChWMftWg PoAir, | )w*e hM establ, ipt nltie-to-one in it« f,

"BAZOOKA"Tlie "biuouka," the Army's new

»n4i-tank weapon, is so po-werful,iteording to Major-Genersl LevinH. Campbell, Jr., that it enablesany foot soldier to stand Tiidground with the full knowledfcethat he is "bhe master of anytank* which may attack him."

—Ttc Kelly All?tnrs did it aRftir.

Phr the second straight timethey (tefeated the highly toutot!

in a <-kw (?»me, 3 to 2,last TVidfty at the Park field. Andthe Cards, who rnn away with t.hffirM. hnTf, arc just an ordinarytotwn in the seconil half.

y live-hit pitching per-formance stood oui for the Kellys,Ktlly. (3) AB R HA. Kelly, If 3 d 0i. Kelly, c 2 1 0Tony, t> s i 2Milik, s« .1 C tC*t>ik, 2b -...« j S yM«|rellfl, ef 3 0 1Kashei, 1b ., 3 0 0K»O«t, ib » 1 i8«fk», rf 3 0 C

20 3 5

C*r«n.k (2) AB R HLukach, is „ 3 tf JWosVal, p 3 1 2KoIUfca, cf S O 1A. Plata, Sb 3 0 0Rytel, lb 8 1 1T. Fit*, If - 8 0 2E. Fite, c 8 0 lDick, rf 3 0- 0Eoy, 2b 1 0 0Tex, 2,b 2 0 0

27 2 8Score by Innings:

Kcllys w...... 00* aiO 0—3Cardin»U Oil O90 0—2

EtCHT DISMISSEDThe OflA will dismim eijfht per-

sons as a result of a requirementin a saw law that price policy-waking employe* must be personwith practical bu«iness expei-ience.

VEKY CLOSE STRIKESMerlfoH, Ore.—When

struck hfn lookout pout, knockinga spoonful of anricota from hiahand and atartinn a (Ire in nearbytimber, Forest- Service Lookoutman Francis Bush lifted the tele-phone to report ^ e fire. A sec-ond bolt hit the telephone. Un-hurt, Bimh jumped into his fa'and drove for help to put out thefire.

PtMiM CaH 8.1 SiH •

BROWNBROS

Painta and Hanlv. . , . ,

5Y9-B Rooi^vcli ^..

Phone 8-5nr,.r,

flier goes at 780 miteshour, or faster than sound.

Red Gross Seeks Blood Donors;Anyone 18 To 69 Is Acceptable

BLOOD DONORS NEEDED!• i r p iTltoiHtndi of bltwd d«nor* are needed each week to

life-iavlng plaima for tke Army and Navy. Give a pin! <>> '>I•>to t*Te a life. For appointment, call R»d Croij Bluod l>oi<Service, Wood. 8-222S.

Ttiia »p«ce contributed by

CHARLOTTE 01VEII1TERRACE INN

Sl. Gfrort* A n . , Avenel, N. I

Flexible pipe tines carry ourli in Sicily.

EVEN OUR OLD FRIENDS MOSTCIVE WAY FOR THE

y, flTOOp trains and freightemjriftt vital war materials

flukit CftM first. They're theVtctOry Tttinl - ifMbf timet yourl—tntfr Inin raiy han to yieldQM ript of Way to them— youNlfT DC GKNftQ,

We bum pn do«H minjCWtV*nut you'tt tltd w wwt ocniion-Mr to k S V i o m

We iMver tag* that the butottMor our NW Jtstef kitab is wjutkeeps u« ift bUtioui. We arc *mstriving to maintain t a o t t tficicoturvice attd t^MlK *&«t»lufor you. We hM* yMtil rkuvttfi-ber all thit it put train 4houWbe delayW by wartune Irafic,..and #c ku»w gpu «U1 acuan theinc©n¥eniertef yiikk the ttu«American

UR$EY CENTRAL IAILIOIBVttAl LltU.UM f»

»«.)U

»«if u. i . mn /

NOW AND "THEN I HEAR THE OPERATOR SAV

MPlease limit your

Long Distance call

minutes.

Others

arebere'i • good

that telephone circuit!

« t GalOWWBD • At i W « a ^ 1» Irow yo«'ll

to

. . . ' . " • • • " . • • • . •

• • • • , • * • . -^ •'••• &« l^&^: . - : . . . * ; •.'^»-fc-u i--,-;. .A-:

Page 3: -No. 19 CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1943 PRICE ...€¦ · nue, Buffered injuries to his awn and back Sunday when he was thrown to the floor of a train in the Broadi Street

KTHRET'1

In Army,n l | sHeNowkCPA

Lotd Navy Mm EngagedTo Resident Of Chicago

has ren-ived of thr

Camp•,'ifnlly pMited hisqualify HS a Ccv-

r e . ment of Seaman (?.<•) Joseph O.rr-. - . ?,""'?* "Ow *u<ln<"<il? Avh.linr,

in the. |Mwhinut.VMatr. School of the U.Swift, r v . v y n t N«vy 1>ior,

.,.-ul/. is a g• ,,i, School nf iFinanco..,. o( the University,,,IM. nnd before en-

i\n«<<d Forces, was(he (K-COUntinR ftrm

,inl' Snirfrnen in NewI',I(|E>I & Puder in

,111 of Mr. and Mrs,,.u-ity, nf upper Roose-

y ier, HiiedKand Mim "Sylvia Probovieh. .Mi«sPrebovich is the daughter of Mrnnd Mrs. Forward TrAovich ntChicago.

Seaman .C&M-paniak, the son nfMrs. Esthe- f'wrpaniak, 44 PitchStreet, recontly1 graduated fn>mRoot €»mp at thr Great LakesTraining Station.

Eleanor tiarkiewicz GivetParty For Eleanor Jacob

rary Notes•,,;! from Page 1)

most entertaining, novelists.MOUNTAIN, by Mary

l,'t\

MOUNTAIN, Mary,.i prcHOnts s power-

,n)ii!i(f romance whichM ;i story of Chau-

, ,tnl (if the influence. it American institu-ilw lives and careers

i mi Sloane and Irene, • :i|T:iin»t the "back-•iii' (!n>at Tjakea c o u n -

\\ , v I'Vunoca Doner hhs• i, h ln't- own, GLASS

I'. . replete with the, ]s o f tilt* ijRkes

I in such an integralI tuner's witinR, and,

I nn Slone, she has ere-In i t'mc.it characters.

!i iilciitlese, embitU'f-•> iih a driving amlii-

ii,.wcr mid aucceu bo-.,ii.,n he loves and even

principles of honesty, which mean more toutilizes. In a color-

i MIHI1 Renuinely heart;., Miss Doner depicts,

m.iiMtanding, Captaini ulitrslf, and gives us

,:':linjf picture of Irene•, n'lrl whut triumphi over

> •; background and,n'L'riierating influence

ui'i'iii, rises to a, position1.1111 T in business. The: which Captain Tim and

- nut .their destinies:, richly American back-' ihr Great Lakes and ofii makes an inspire! iiinving novel, oirUtand-: courageous, realistic

OA!RTTBRBT -Harkiewicj; wan hostess in herhomo on liongfellmv Street at ..shower complimenting Miss Elea-nor Jacob. Ml<w Jacob is to mnrryCorporal Jd&aph Oozi of Trenton.

•Gucsta inclddert Mrs. UngfordKirfey Tw<ne of Norifolk, Va.;MiMie* (Lillian Knorr, RosalW Tom(tuts, Victoria Wysakowski, Josephine Milik, Mary Rayho, Irenefipisak, Lois Doseher, DorothyH'aury, Ethel Ruokreigel, SophHarkiewici M S t h JHarkiewici, Mrs.and Mrs. AdamCarteret.

gStephen JacobHarkkwicx of

YomngUve Bride-To-Be FetedAt Surprise Shower

('•ARTRRET—In honor ot herohing marriage to Chester

Wii>l|r<ilinnki, M t a Anna I>ewen-dow*ky WB* eivrn a aurpriieshown- in the homo of Mi*» AnneI'rn--kuni. 79 Lincoln Avenue.

Amonir the fcue*ts were Mra.Btoiiisliiu Wlelgoltnaki, Mrn. JacobLewamliiwuky. Mrs, R a y m o n dM

John Craven and Dorothy Morrii, both of "Human Comtdv"fame, are the romantic pair in "Someone To Remember," a hu-man-interest film in which it alio featured Mabel Paige, wht•cored a> "l.nrlcy Jordan'*" mother.

SHOOTS STRAIGHTOAiRTERBT—Piivate first crass

Alexander A. Stutake of M MaryStreet, a member of the IV18 Mili-tary Police Battalion stationed .itGovernor's Island, New York, isone of that outfit who qualified asnn expert rifleman during recenttesta on the rifle range, He scoredISO out of a possible 210.

Stars In Sea Epic

111 BONDSSick l a y

•, , v. .'i1 uur wounded lighting:• • > , greater chance for re-

!••• M I I in any p r e v l o u j con-: f o( th* medical aids. >,:> that have been devel-

i !iy the War and Navy Depart-

• • f these aids is the Hospital-1 ii l'Lue service that has

• :.';;ms our wounded back

WltatifouBufitJitk

WAR BONDSI 4 for I

~~ jU. S. destroyers and other anti-

submarine vessels of the Navy areequipped with quadruple tubes,meaning they are capable of firingfour torpedoes simultaneously, mak-ing it more difficult (or the target toescape. " ,

Land 0' U k e tBoulder Junction, Wi«., is the open

door and trading center ot a lake-lnnd area. There are 194 nearbylakes and countless streams. Deerabound in the forest and black bearare encountered frequently. Occa-sionally in elk is seen. • Brutbwolves, red fox, bobcat, porcupine,beaver and otter and many othersmall fur bearers are native.

Corn Production Decreased 'The Ohio state experimental sta-

tion confirmed the fad—that toreach day's delay In corn planting aft-er the tenth o( May, one bushel letsper acre was harvested.

•ki. Mr*. .I<i»ep(i Nagy, Mrs. Kri-> jilun, iMrs. Chester Godlpsky, Mrs.Joseph AlgoTine, iMrs. ChesterDow<l«ll, Mrs Michael Proslturs;Misses Josephi»n Wielgoliniki,('atherino Beliwl, Julia Gindtt,'-•tlii'iine MnlHnchak.

Aim, Miwes Anna Mahnchak,(Catherine (Jrech, Helen BTechka,Marie Pl•o^kura and Ann Pros-ku in.

Services Held On SundayFor Georgt Woynarowtky

Symplmy 4 B*aAy

— Rev. John Htin-diak, pastor of *St. j)*metrius'Ukrainian Church officiated at th,>funeral services Sunday f o rGcorgi- Woynarowsky, 46. Burialwas in Rosp Hill Cemetery, Lin-den.

The hearers, members of St.Michael's Society, were PeterWakar, Stephen Hronhak, JacobBobkowwita, John NestorouU andJohn Sawchat.

i in teased and continued pur1 I War Bond* it required

i tin1 Treasury Department['•'•• tins hospital transport aerv-

"Back the »tUck Wth War' * • • M.S.

Paillette Goddard and JohnWayne are co-itarred with RayMilla-nd in Cecil B DeMitle'idramatic tea i«g», "Reap theWild Wind." The picture ar-rive! at the Rahway Theatre,Sunday. The cait includes Ray-mond Maney, Robert Preiton,Suian Hayward, Lynne Over-man and Martha O'Driicoll

\

warfare is Hie most ex-icii'-ivi* ilt'.'itrucliun the world liasvcr experu'iiced twin (or the de-troyed and the destroyer. There isIO iiouil where we can stop in this

tin:, side nf peace GO all of usbe required to buy an extra $100

Bond in Hie 3rd War Loan.1/ V hcwiryUifc

Keep Head Out From WaterKeeping the head out of water as

much as possible when swimmingmay help to avoid sinus, nose, throatand ear and eye infections. Middleear infections are more common inpeople with large auditory canalsand perforated or scarred eardrums.

Every Repair J°<> Ful1*

Guaranteed. For cleaning,

new parti or regulating,

bring your watch to

ALBREN Inc.133 Smith St.Perth Amboy

Legally They're Anti NaiisThese marine corps privates are

legally "anti-Nazis" . . . They areMax A. Antinazl and Leonard A.Antlnazl, brothers, of Atlanta, Ga.

Amateur AaUMMiert[At »it' present time there a n

J1"'- than 100,000 active amateur|siii'M.iinei-s in^the United States.

CHARLIEBARROWS

and hi»

ORCHESTRAFri., Sal., Sun. Nighti

Sunday Afternoon 3 to 6

"COCKTAIL HOUR"Special Pricet

Stop in for your favoritecocktail miied a§ you like it.

JOE'S TAVERN(formerly the Show Boat)

Nklpio Hull Ji>r. Sole o«urri*

266 Maditon Ave.Perth Amboy, N. J. .

\\t <••««••• •" ' ' i f " * " • B d

I'. V i-

Red Cross Seeks Blood Donors;Anyone 18 To 60 Is Acceptable

A •» 1.1 uf y o U , bipod can . . v . the lif« "f .

i C»rt, «.lftl«—B-151*.

• TWt Ml contributed bjf

.pW«r or

SEAR'S NEW

FALL and WINTER

C A T A L O G

Motor Sales

S*ranf Uniform1 The sarong la the official uniformot the Flu Fits Guard, native S*-moan unit of the U. S. marine corpireserve.

Mr» O»wirdx of Perthinc Avenueho«tP*-« tn the Women1* BiWe I

the Find Preibyteritn»t th<> mretinjr to be held «ft Ir>mri<>, *. Th* icwion

it 1 4,r» P. M.The H I M met Tuesday •

()l)r» Snirer. Cookchuptn iji thi> itudy bookThin Foundation'' was revteMr*. Alt^n Moorr.

Planes At Perm Field, 1

Tke eryttal roie bowl i* a fraceful vat* for informal table deco-rations. Uie a needle flower holder in tke bottom of th* vai* toMake roiei ttand up in bowl. Modern American water and»h*rbet flaitti in the fluted "Concord" pattern, above, ar« handmade from the i i n i rick | l m ai bowl and heavy eryital platei.Yellow place matt and roiei provide color.

Waih Oarb»«r P»UAlthough thrifty housewives don't

put as much Into the gorbago pallthese days as they used to. still thljUtensil is a household necessity. Tokeep It from being a source of un-pleasant odori, it should be emptiedregularly, and should have a weeklysoaking with warm soapy water.Hlnse with uralriing water, then settn the sun to dry before re-using.

First Woman Air PatrolThe first all-woman Civil Air pa-

trol squadron in Pennsylvania hasbeen formed tn the southwesternpart of U>e state,

MafnealMn DcvelcfetThe English telentlit, Davy, first

discovered magneiium In 1**; butit was not until 1830, In France,that Buisy produced the element Inmetallic form. Commercial exploi-tation of magnesium did not occurin Europe until the early years ofthe 20th century, and it was 19Ubefore the Industry had Its begin-ning in this country.

Don't Clef DialerTo avoid clogging and waste of

materials, have the chamber of thegarden duster no more than halffull when It Is In use.

P F R R I N FTOU), T E X . - H 1Now at Perrin field forbtuii- training. AviationAustin A. Ptuitt, M, ofteret, N. J., is flyinjr 450-honn^power pkne* and taking" f r o B l•chool rounu-j. ami tacticallice that will prepare himjob he has to do on the

He came h*rj from prhjwhonl at Ballinfrer, Texaa.

He iatheaon ai (Mr. »BDeirra O. 'Pniitt of 206

Avenue, Carteret, K.

Pal F»He <m F h V mTo make a convenient

for scrub palls,,or otherequipment that his to befrom room to room, simply 'rollers to a piece of boardIB Inches iquare It taves • :lifting, and makes cleaning

Calerie* MeuweA calorie Is a unit for

energy. It It used to exprai \the energy requirement of the Iand the energy value of food.

Red Cross Seeks Blood Donors;Anyone 18 To 60 Is Acceptable

Nurse's aide checks pulseand temperature. Donormast be healthy.

Nurse watches donorwhile blood is taken from

ein.REGISTRARS WILL BESTATIONED AT-THE BOR-OUGH HALL ALL. DAYAUG. 23RD. EVENINGS

- 9 P. M.

Just arrived in the store for your inspection! %

Everything from A to Z! Do *11 your shop-

ping sitting down from Sears' new big cata-

log. It's the modern, economical way to

shop!

Sorry, none have yet arrived for custbmer

dwtribution! . /

e#u. CATALOGSALES DEPT.

MARS, feOEBUCK & CO. ,

%V Perth Amboy 44900

hrse checks blood pres-are and tests hemo-lobin content.

At blood donors'headquarters, name,dress and phone OfT;taken.

Prospective donors uwttheir turn in line to give, )pint of blood.

Refreshments areby canteen worker. Hivisit, 10 weeks.

PHONE CARTERET 8-fll8-5119. ADD YOUR FU

— — ING BLOOD TO THE HiTHIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY FIRMS HERE LISTED. TION'S BLOOD BANK.

+ RED CROSS pl.tma it laving the livei of hun-dredi of wounded iddicri and iailori. But thou-

landi of additional blood donor* are needed. Give •pint of blood to .ave a life. Call Woodbridge 8-2225.

WASHINGTON RESTAURANTMax Cohen, Prop.

56 Washington Ave. Carteret, N. J.

CARTERET RESTAURANT519 Roosevelt Ave. Carteret

NEW ROOSEYELTLAUNDRYPhone Cart. 8-5616

526 Roosevelt Ave. Carteret

ELEANORE & ROSE SWEET SHOP567 Roosevelt Ave. Carteret

ROOSEVELT DINERJoe Mcriale. M8r

528 Roosevelt Ave. Carteret

G . G A R A Y - TAILOR307 rmMni Ave. Carteret

ALEX SUCHButcher and Grocer PAINT .nd HARDWARE

Cor. Wheeler and Maple §t. Carteret, N. J.Phone o-06»>

JULIUS KLOSS-FLORISTIrving St.. Carteret, N. J,

GEORGE MIKULAGrocer and Butcher

51 Wheeler Ave. Carteret «

THE WOMAN'S SHOP4.4

Lalut ia HaU

Ave. Cwteret

LE BOW "Groceries and Meat*

65 Washington Ave. Carteret

(HIRER'S76 Roosevelt A*«. Cwtfr»t

m

Page 4: -No. 19 CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1943 PRICE ...€¦ · nue, Buffered injuries to his awn and back Sunday when he was thrown to the floor of a train in the Broadi Street

Four-Way Tie Looms HeaHily In Senior Baseballja '?•

CardinalsDrop 12-Inning ThrillerTo A mm In Pitchtn Battle, 3-2

In n s h r i i i i t i f i i l

the Carlnrrt I'KnlitmN wrir bent«!), '8 In 2, m fvchi mnuiir* hythf'AiTf™'* IR«I Sunrfny iiftiTmion.

The wititime run rrnni' in thetwelfth inniii(f. l,c\v;im|(iwek',flnt H*t1rr up, will wnlkeil.TUKKICII follnwi'd liy MHMiiisr n «'n-gle Mniliiir Lewmimlowpki to

W htm-. Brown struck nut.trie<i n squcfic hut [/•-

wast nut at the nlatr.hit to third for what ap-

pealed to be the third out butFltepatriek, uninlTtionally, inter-

the hntt«r nnd the win-n»> camc in-

(*) AH R IIj * 0 ft l

John Kend, 2b 6 0 0Kolibis, If 4 0 1T«**bet*ki, p 4 0 0

4' 0 04 1 11 0 02 0 04 1 1

, cfI t . Whpatridc, c ....ft«*o, rfK*ny, rfRyt.1, ib

39 a (!

A * 4 m ( 3 ) AiR R HBiHkiewiaez, M 4 0 0P«*«mon, cf ' B 0 1

c 4 1 Irf 4 0 0

Liwtndowski, lib 4 1 0«ho<H If 4 0 2

Banattf Herbaceaos PlantsWhll» banana planti are common-

ly retorted to ai tw'ei, they actually•ft | | f antic herbaceous plants.

WAR STAMPSWhen the Marines (jet their serv-

ice pack, tjiore is included thereina bflght shiny new shovel cased ina muslin carrier. The shovel costs61 centi and the carrier 39 cents,or 11,07 lor Mot ensemble.

These Intrenching shoveis areby the Marines around camp,

digging trenches, setting up barbedwin entanglements and in manyOther ways. Your purchase of Warhttmp« through effective SchoolsAt War programs enn readily equipour forces with these necessary im-plementi tor warfare.

V. S, Trtoiury Dtpartmtnt

STUDT THIS PICTURE

Itrown, 8bZnlnowfiki, 2bCannon, p

6 0 04 1 I4 0 (I

48 i 5Score by inniajrn:

CnrtHnals . MO MO 110 000—2Arrows 000 100 WO Wl—,1

BkJijsDctat

Four-Run RallyCUJRTERET—JV m« inn ing* it

looked like the Panther* were go-ing tn win u (fame an they k'd bya 3 to 1 »core.

But the Dluo Jays poundedRiedel in a big fnurrun bombard-ment in the last frame to comefrom nehind and win, 5 to 3, inIhe Junior Recreation League lailFriday night.Bin* Jayi (5) AB S HKolodiiejski, 2ib 2 1 0Catri, M 2 1 1Bamburak, cf 2 1 2Banilici, Sb 4 0 1Zagjry, rf 2 0 0Molcfcan, p 3 0 >2Wawy, rf 2 1 0Penkul, lb 3 0 0O'Coiuiell, c 3 0 0IMittuch, 21b 0 1 0

23 5 6

Panther* (3) AB R HGluehowski, rf 4 0 0Wilfrus, <• 4 1^3I'hilllps, 3b •. 4 1 1I.ukach, of .'.... 8 0 0Ryan, ss i 1 1Iliejel, p 3 0 1Kelly, If 2 0 0Kupil, lb _Itiiyho, 2b 2

0 00 0

28 3 «Score by inning*;

Blue Jays 001 000 4—5•Panther* 012 MM 0—3

lihslMs 3-BtterAs Eagks Huaner6-1 Win Orer KeMys

Litus wmnicked for only three wtoely icat-tercil hit* an the Eajrjeii defeatedthe K«lly All Star* TuenaVy ow-ning: at the Park field, 6 to 1.

A big four-run rmlly In thoopening frame proved too murhof an obstacle for the Kelly* toovercome in face of Lltud' Mffhiyiffoctive pitchinit.E»(l«t (6) AB R HMy-frs, RB 8 \> 0Freeman, rf 4 2 1John Kend, 3b 4 1 1Joe Kofld, c 4 1Redto, lb •. 4 1Lifus, pDon«fhu«, cfVMJ Pelt, if 3Fehuier, 2b 2Crwie, cf

21

S 0 1I 0 0

0 20 0

Mly. (1)

6 8

AB E H0 1A. Kully, If 3

fiabo, 3b „ , , 3 0 , 1Kurdyla, M ..'. 3 0' 0Milik, c 1 3 0 1Tony, p 2 0 0I. Kelly, cf 2 0 0Caprk, 2b ; 3 0 0Kwraer, lb 3 0 0fiofka, rtf 1 0 0T. Ftota, rf 1 .1' 0

24 1 3Score by inmnjra:

Ea#fcs 4M 000 2—0Kelly Stars 000 Ml fl—1

QPEAKINGj ABOUT SPORTS

Jtf Meysr

Giants Peond Out24 Hits To BlastDodgers By 18-5

CARTERET—Pending out 24hits, tho Giants (our own MidgetU'uiriH!) Wasted the Dodgers for11 n 18 to 5 victory Tuesday eve-ning at the Park field.

Shymanski and Kollarik werethe big guns in the Giant attack,each getting five hits.Dodgeri (5)Bartko, c 4 1 1Toth, ss 1 2 1F, Amzler, 2b 4 1 1Dunn, p j. 4 0 1Dunes, lb : 3 0 1Sloan, 3b 3 0 0Oniler, cf 3 0 0KruleRki, If 3 0 2A. Amzler, rf 3 1 1

28 5 8Giants (18)O'Brien, 2b 5 8 ZVnaquei, cf 5 8 3Shymanski, as, p & 4 5Kollurik, c 5 3 5Weber, 3b 5 0 2Keats, p, as d £ 2Hudack, It) 5Capik, rf 3Kuakiw, If 1Kelly, If g

40 18 24Score by inning*:

Dodgers 103 010 0— 5Giants 186 014 x—18

pSmall exposed tears may be lu-

bricated with ligh); motor oil. Alight oil usually does not cajlectenough foreign material to interferewith the operation of the gears.

Bell Gets SeventhStrict Hit AsBgers Triumph

CARTBRET- Billy Bell, hard-hitting first baseman otf the Tfeers,X«t his seventh .»tr«i^it hit lastFriday to lead his te»m to »n eaay11 to 3 triurapji o/er the Wildcatsn the Junior Recreation Baseballeajue,

Wilekau (3) AB R HMcKissle, 3(b 4 0Brown, lib 8 1Cherry, p 3 0Wmikowski, c 2 1

-• GiH, » 3 1. Ch«i'gey, 2b 1 0

Relford', rf 2 • 0 0oe Gill, cf i 0 0

Cupsic, If 3 O 0

"if** ( I DD. iLuktch, as ....J. Mfcgella, 2b

. Kaakiw, p 4 _. Cherepon, 3b 1... 4 1 1

M. Derewski. c 4 2 243I

y, 0H. Sullivan, rf „. . 1 0 0

38 11 14(Score by innings:

igers 401 02C 1 ~ UWildcats 0(10 00 0— 3

2B. Bell, lib 43A. Petrtch, cf '.. 4 2R O'D 3 0

SO

12 3 4

AB R II3 1 13 1 0

2

, cfR. O'Donnell, rfW. Trgtensky,H S l l i

Stev« Comba tells me thtt Joe Med'Wkk'fl older

brother, Johii, w u quite a ball player in his d»y . . . •

Joe, himself, crashed the .300 mark tot week and is

now one of the leading hitters on the lowly Giant

team . . . Frank McCarthy, working up »t the Ord-

nance Park, tells agaociat** that h« will HMTI b* get-

ting hi» boys rwwly for the prid oeMon.. , . TKe U, S.

Metals Bmviinjr League, with «*>out « i or twtlve

teams in the face, may be reorganised this fall . . .

J*oe UdBiekk has confided to UR that wtth 80

many of the women "Working in defense plants in this

area, he 1s already jpefSTng "plans togitBer for'the

formation of a number of women's indtwtrial b/owl-

ing leagues . . . Joe bells tm that that to the coming

thing/ with so many of Hie hoys away in service . . .

Rolled a gartte of duck pins down at Aafeury Park

la.* Saturday n ight . . . Hit T3 . . .Had one strike and

all the rest misses . . .

Young Ruaso, 17 y«irs and sporting a ntistache,

spends hia spare time helping hia father in the barber

shop, when he isn't pitching for the Ramblers base-

ball team , . . Andy Pinty ifi the new-mevnafer «f the

RambferR, ju«t in C&de you arp interested . . . And th*

club won its tenth game last week . . .

With the Cardinals just another team in the sec-

ond half race,, a lot more interest is shown by both the

fans and the teams . . . Because a hot race is in pro-

gress . . . Both the Junior and Midget circuits are

marked toy close competition . . .

Bob Prell, formerly of the Perth Amboy Eve-

ning News, is" now with the Adbury Park Press . , .

We ran into him down in A*ury White spending our

vacation ahd Bdb tells us he likes it very much at the

seashore city . . . We have a date tonight with a

couple of very good friends to <ro t« the Turkish

Baths somewhere in Newark : . . I hope I lose a couple

of pounds . . .

If the Giants fintah in last place, and there is

every indication at the moment that they wiH unless a

miracle., happens, it 'will be the first time since 1915

that a New York club finished in last place . . . I won-

der if Frank Versegi, the newly appointed cop who is

a rabid Giant fan and always has been, will be able

to face the folks while on his beat. . .

Ckertgy Hurls Brilliant 2-Httt<rAt Wilfah Blast BlaeJayt, Hi

on* of thebert pitch in* performance* of tin*'necond half, E*«e Oeregy gavernly two Mt* and Khut out thrBin* Jayn, >a tho WildtaU battedo»t an easy II to 2 triumph, Wed-i'e»d«y evening; in a (postponed tihin the Junior hwp,

t u invincible fromstart to run* and the Blue Jays

Trosko, m 2Ruaao, 21) —• j>Milnav, l'n

WnuJwmJu again led tfce attecicfor the Wifcteat. by b l u f e * a

•-foot Itomw- "over the ro i f"Ttve Wildcat arc only one f tmt

bebim) tbe league leader*.nacau (11) AIR H H

Manhart, cf 4 1<wn,.2b A

Cherefy, p 4Wnukowiki, c

?Ki«ic, if ...'..D, florentino, rf ...

GUI, s» 3C. McKiMic, 3b *Mmln«r, Sb tCtipsie, rf 1Vmira, 21) - . - 0Relford, cf — 0

21

4 24 24 14 t3 0

01000

36 1.1 11

Bl.« Jay. (2) AB R HHank, rf 3 0 0'Catrj, 2b 8 0 0Bsfribura,k, cf 8 fl 1Basiljci, 3,b 2 0 IInggy] it . 1 0 0;MoIcasar,.p 2 0 0

O'Connell, e 4 0 00 00 0ft 0

Q 0 0

24 0 2Beort Ihy i n n i n g :

Wildcats 1*8 M« 0^-11Plue

AiSttrsfaReal

& f0UM»»r :t ie in thp So,,,,,,b»fl1L*Hp»e lOftinH hi-miivn ttle Eftjffel, mnflltt'ir „,,tunity to ellacTi ttiP ,,,f Ol

title with a sitifrlr- triumntfl tike'rtlatea, l l t;n 2, ,„

Bt the PaVk fleffl.

Two games remain 1., (,.In on« itle C»rrfinnis, «,,the ftntkaH, pUy tho K,rule • h«vjr favoj-ito 1,.»p<U Hhelr mlaftrablo h,,

ha'f.

t

Eiabks Wildcats

- . * • *«•. »>w • % .

In Extra-InningGame By 9-8 Score

OAiRTBSETT—It took, the Cardi-

hals an extra inning to beat trieDodgers in the Carteret MidgetBaseball Leapie last Fricfay nightat the Rat* Field. The final seinewas 9 to 8 and the triumph en-abled the Cards to move inVo firstplace in the team standing.Cardinal. (9) AlB ft

Merelo, Jb 3 1Donovan, lb 4 0Uigieci, c 4 2Barna, 2b 4 3Stroin, H 4 1

Gural, s& 2 1 1Wudrak, cf 4 0 2Krissak, rf 1 0 0Hamcrsky, rf ., J 0 0Cutter, i> 2 1 1

Dodger. (8)

3,1 9 12

AS R HBartko, c 5 1 2Toth, ss 4 1 1Dunn, p 4 8 8Amzler, 2b 2 1 0Danes, lb 2 1 0Sloan, -3b a 0 QLeahy, IfHuleski, cf 3 1A, Amaler, rf ... 0 1Nardi, rf 2 1

27 8 5Score by innings:

Cards 2*1 040 08-^9Dodgers 05fl 020 01—8

CA'JtTERET 4n a alajtfwt. U»»tinpaaasi any to far thii soniftrj,

All Stars, 17 to 16, last FrUmy atthe Park fteldv

Joe Kendxierpky, who f« ever-rcntly lea(Mn)f the senior loop inhitting, continued <m bia hot |MM»i y battinf four hits in four trrp»to th« pkte.

Hiriai, firu*. baseman for theKejleys, played' hi« U»t g$im be-fore leaving for the Army. HAcelebrated hi* Anal game by get-ting four hits In four chancea.K*Itn (M) A B E HN. Kelly, If , 5 «Enbo, 3b 4 2Kurdyla,.c 4i

|Tony, H • 4Capik, 3b 4J. K*»y, p 4HHafc, rb 16ofa*, rf 3

_ ". <* 1Milik, w „ „ 1

ymeat th« Pirates' and m,,

CARTERET — Taking advan-tage of Johnny Ryan's wildnesn inthe box, -the Wildcats beat thoPanthers, (> to 4, in a close gamein the Junior League Mondaynight at the Columbus Schoolfield.

Ryan walked nine batten andhit two others.Panth*. (4) AB R HGluchoski, ss 4W. Wtlgus, c 4G. Shymanski, lb 3J. Phillip, 3b 4J. Ryan, p 4

Eigln (IT) dUlBMyent, c I l lFtWnwn, p _ — 4 * 3John Kend, 2b 4 4 2Joe Ke*d, 3b t > 4*Uy«relj, u ~ • S 1Reako, lb «Crane, cf „ 1SherWan, rf 4Stroin, rf 4 1 1

W. Kelemen, If 4Rayho, 3b 4Keats, ef 3Haydok, rf 3

83 4 8

Wildcat. (6) A!B R HV»r*a, 2b , 3 1 r

Brown, 7b 2 1 1CCher^ee, JP 4Wuukowakl, c 1Leoe, rf ..„ 4 1Johh Gill, u 2 fr

0 02 1

30>

1 0 0Ra»ford, If ...McKissic, 3b 0 0 0Joe Gill, cf 1 0 0Cupwc, cf 2 0 0W. UcKismo, If O 1 0

20 6 6Score t>y innings:

Pftnther* 100 100 S— 4Wildcats 003 111 x—6

uYm helping Waltthree ways"

SAYS THE GIRL WHO WORKS AT WfSTON'S

Mrs. Walter Mika, Elizabeth, N. J.

"MVAHMAUKD onTuMdty-on "•« Mtt M» MMMOII CM HH»MQFMv^Walt wai due back at camp. So TO MM* WWItf that Walt andWi*b»d jwt three day* of married life. 11,000,000 «tfw 'Walta'B«H4lidn| than three day* I vowed I'dda MytUpr uvdw IJbe sun to bring

Your job i» Waiting at W«tton-a% tab in tennaof what H «fll aconnidMl i», Mpinf to «te tfabwar—but an wy Job in Mtwd working ttmu.Out "plant ii, light* cnan. and any. r M n n up-M i t e caftwria p mm yon wbrjimmm, now-

i %

b* / tt hkn ba<SAnd I'm doinf it-at W«*«»'«.

, , 4kn w Ui*d to•Mib the Ao»-tc ha** the d»y they'llajarch tbioufb Ho^s, thn>U(h Tokyoand thmwh BarikL TkBti my job a»

dftt

..'.'< V;<

0&*fak. Tran»pflrt«ti(» M corftnbnt-aD No.1rtop it our do* .J»'«ddi-

•kin, M J U W mjfcwmi ofi* XwTJ get a

22

H M

^ f R wiln si,hwrry ibi^tinj paved th,.the W r a W . t i i n n ^ p h T,» « » ntwer better, a* i,,. i

' to two «(':(!',thn>, i,

a Jiome n ln ...fe in tho ihini

In tW» big rally twelv.. ,„to bat and ShomsVy( u | l n

\f fwiee in this one innill;i

t ie rajly, with a sinjjlcEagfc. C2) \Myors, m .,Freeman, H-pthm, ahJoe Kend, cRwko. U>Crane, 2bFchuer, p-]fSheridan, rf 1"

14 ( U )V»*try( 2b ....T * A i , pSanRto, cf ..Shomafcy, n ..a * l , lb ..

el, rf ..BUrott, «* ....

, IfBefcert, c ....

U IT ISScore by ionhifi:

Kelly* m <n\ 0—16Eajles 94ft 1OM x—IT

Sttbbom parUdu of dirt that ttt-tla in mouldinga, cradU, and gatehanko-|et-at^:oni«n. can be cttttlod«Ml by wbisking wtth a paintbruih that has betn dipped )n toapywater.

CtoOiPenoniMl toMMitn kqow from

Iwg wperiaiKw that «m»ilor*ej nfcoare immaculate abott tfceir « nbodiu and clotbaa are aauch martliktly to produoe *cc«mM

I n

Score by iftaL ...

PiTBtes\

.- L' n" i 1

• : i l

tl 11

200 Oil—1

Have You Placed]Your Order lor

Fin-Place Coal?

JOHN J. BIHING'Mae coal'

CALL WO. 8-0012

of Fine

FUR COATS

IMPORTANT

VALUES NOW-

for Fashioned

Beauty,

Quality and

Warmth Jtes!

Shop

Page 5: -No. 19 CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1943 PRICE ...€¦ · nue, Buffered injuries to his awn and back Sunday when he was thrown to the floor of a train in the Broadi Street

ItSHiv Y. — Confusion

I, ;i $M Wll nisaWJBar-

,,,l |il,\rp(t it while or

i l,:it<*r, ft wotriftii,

, „ .it. ihe poarttcr -with

i-phnnnf Urith the

ifiiniriir that sh» found

• 1,1'ii niniith.

cLASSIFIEDAERATORS WANTED

,,n children1*

•,.,.'..;. work; one wwk

The production of war m e n -

ial is trnitiR irp tnd thr rat* of

iToduetiorv h nhont. «x timcq i«

fa*t as before Penrt Harbor my*

DonaM M. Nrhon, Cholrrmin nf

lie WiPB, wno ,«•#*, worter* to

overww* M ttirtr month* \ H j n

H* my* workers

Mitt *fc»t they

the

tefwl

fi. t.

AWftue,

„ , r WANTfeD—MALE

for a few

Aldftr for th«

Also steady toork for

, Apply A. Gum«r,

,n Ave,, Woodbridge

•,ll Wiiodhrldge 8-0797

7-16tf

,ii)M FOR RENT

I \!iI,F, room,

w r # minimum bid*l

Calif. tW*f #r-

of

of CWiww

by

i n *

ik>n,

force

autlMTftitti, In

the a«rpl fronts,

that the Oeman atr

>*n (IwlmflM to the point

wlwr* it I* Wot frtiijr ntnbfe to de-

fowl th* ouWMrtg of R

ng«1nrt »ir attack* but m

U> huh overwhelming

i r t tMff*ta in fa

r,, singie man, in good

References

8-20*

t fathers is ontered for

Oct, I wfcere quotes la*. •

LOST

i,l; hair medium—

,i mark*, brown And

i. Rex, Carteret DOR

:I.!7. Return to J»me?

; KMex St., Oarteret,

Cfl. S-SWS. ft

LOST

wrist *at<* w i *

mi found to iWi Or

pi*

will be Riven you. •

8-20»

11

RCr(«i>t«h( 1 of the minimumhlrt HlioV^ mlninmin by th»*nRd (Tniitirtl uTtd thp pny-

hilliiK to ttir uinrillpr of pnr<"hn*em'rnrrinni •• wllh terms of iiile nn•, HIP ttnrnu|f|i of I'artprpt willliver x Rfcrrnln nn«l HBIP liepil for

in Oart«rt>l""'I

H «) WHOM I t WAY <?(Wt:KnN:At » t*nru1«r nwptlnit or th« r<>tin-l of th» horoiJKh oV C»rt»rft held

Attf, IX, iStS, ) w*n tilroctH <o t*vcrt l tfto fmt thnt nfl

mill m T. M. I * th»| l W l l lp

, , Ort*rM, K(mil HH)n<»> nml «A1I (II pnhlk- HI

in thy. tilRl\i>st tiMiisr «ni>MlIn tfVTnn or BSIP rrti tile »Hli the

<:t<>t-k open tn inif>».utn h*> fni'ilt»lv rrurt pi-1fir tol*>t» IS tn''id lni'lw»lv*>, SH tohiKlvr, 53 nnfl r,t tn nim'k .'IT,.

of i'nrti>r»t A«i*c*ni''ii;

tlnnto »Hit,

• * >

tti« T%>

map.T*

With

trn>

p*kv further imtlrf th*t Iho C'nr-

h t-tl l>nn, hy ,ri'«»-p to , fl

prlw rtt which untilk he /

»)1 othpr flpt»l!n p«rtltii'iit:mlnimntn p l l hi-mtn of p

till" Mh. RklA IIf «oU »« tt»rth»

* *o*n p*iyfl»»nt nfof (mn-twiii* prli'* t» ii

l +r ««.li> tn pur

» | l ,Avm

alot"

.unrt

Inl

Take fiiHlwrtcret Hrfmng.. . . . . . . . . ..„liiilnn Htid iiwrnilHiit In ln«, MeA Itminimum price »l wnlMi aaldIn slid hlnck will Yre, fWllh nil nlher n>tMI-HH 1 ri niltilitnini [nice Iplun 'nuts of prewiring Artt A'nflvertlntnir thip ""I* M*ld ta l i III»mri hlock If sold on t*rtjllrei|iilre H doten payment of '.llip hftlAm-e (if pflpf'nHB> J rlvft M OfMid In f(ionI mnMMy lti*t»llmei><*plim Inlprenl nnd nlher tertn*vldert for in t'ontrAct nf Knl»,

TnUe further nollr* thftl at N i lante, or flny daU* lo whichIn1 adjourned the Mftvor nnfl.11 re#erVe* Ih* rlftht In Its d l k m -tlnn tn rpjei't nny nnf ur All bid*unit If nil! mild l"t» In xMfl hl«rtt titMidi hlflWer nil It m«v wlW't, flttli>jrnr<t h ifijit alvnn tfi t^rttw toftnwnher or imyment In cat* on* ftt!more mlnlinum hldn «hnl1 b» f»*

I'IIIIII ;ir<i>ptnmc nf (tie minimumbid. nr tilt) nho»p minimum by tMMayor nnd fntlnpll nod ihe i»ym*TiiI hereof hy Hi* purchiiRtr *M*0H1IW

thi- mnnncr of pnrchflns In A»—•dunrp (vlUi lnvtnn of «Me oh Ht#>

til* pntniiKh of CArteretHnr<riil«i HIHI ,MnIf l>eeft for

M n retnlAr meetlSlt ttf the (snun-til nt in* Borou*ii «f ulri*N>t held

(hisi IX. i l l s , 1 #»« rtiretted in••Mini' Ihe furl (MM nn WatfM**-

d»\ e* .nt in , W(1I'' '. 1**1, the M»y*>f»ndIn itii>

, p , , )Will mMt at HOT TV M.

MUhlc4|»alc«ri«r»t,

and f tpcV and nrll at puhllc*«* t* ify* > t t k * t MMft t<-

\cm^lrii titUrmii \< K«|* "« t\\? witfh» flornufh I'ldrl niton t Imp*'lfhliontn m

h

i \ |ornufh I'ldrl niton to

a fid to he ylili H. f\ YKtiA priortr; In iuw\ H R

H I ' \ I !•

PERSONAL

ft woney at

Write Box C,

8-20*

Mo.

WANTBO FEMALE

•i.KKK—Younjt woman

1 „-I'll. Stenographic and

in rience desirable. This

iiiriit position, under h>-

• HI king Conditions, nv?r-

Hoiira w««kly. Reply

: 1. cxiporieivca and nulnry

Write Box G, c/o Intle-

I ruder. IJ*8-aO,27;H-3

life' WBtlr sAi.fcTO WHOM IT MAV I.TOCl'MlN;

At a refflilar meeting of tilf ('nunft] nf (hi! llormiirli »f ('urtpri't hcliAuK. IS, 11)13, I WH.H dlrmled tn ndhrrverflne llu. rii.'t thnt nn Wedneldivevening, Hi?|)l. I, l!H:i, tlir Mafni ninCouncil will miel nt H:liO p. M. In thCinimll Clinmlipi-H,-Mimlrllial HnildInK, rnnkc Avenur, ("ariei(•(. N, .1nnd i'X|>nn(> nnd »"ll Kt pulilli- KKInnd lo liu* IIIKIICHI hliMor IK cnrilinito Iprmii nf HHIH on Hie with IIIHoiilltth C'lprk nppK In Inspin tluunttil tn ni> mtfMhiy l**>i'l in i"i* in*nh», Iiftlx » nnfl I* In Him It ;J'I, Hni,

Thkr further nolli-e Hint tin- Ci\r-i*rei liiiiuiiaii rmmi-n imn, hy i-wu,.Irtllnii nnil immnitnt in Inw, flsml nminimum 4>rl u *-lid-h until 1,>|(,In A;llil lil^cfc vvHI 1lt< Brtlit logfMhrVWith nil nllii'V ilftt l lU 1Wtincill ;^Al'l nilnlninm prk'*< hr ln^ l^iiniH)pli i i i-»m« nr pt-cTiiirlnn iieinl nnilJ l i U T t l l l l l l t I I l l s SR|T>, S a i d InlH IIIsAliI h i m k If » n M o n t f v m n #111r i > i | i i h f ii i l n w n t o t y m r n l n f $Sn.f(0

h e I > I I I S I I I - » o f pm- i 'hnm 1 p>h-t> t o In-p a i d In c n u n l m o t i t i i l v H»rt* l l i t t i 'Htn .

T n f c o m r t h i T n ir t l rp t h n t nt m i u is n l v , Hi' , i n y d u t p t o # h l i ' h It m A yii' . n l l n i i r l i r i l ilif. I f x y n r A n d I ' O I I I I -II r c s ' i v i s I In. i l K h l In l t « i l i w r c -

ICTI In i i j r , i n i i v o n e nv ftll h h l ^:<n<l l o K M I Mild lutM In s n l i l I'llo, k

it'll I ' l i M c r u s !i Minv i i f l d i . i l in -

v.l h i ' l n n Kiv i ' i i i n t i ' f m s

m a n n f r n f )<:•>• t m - n i in I - R W o n

TRk* fnrth*r notlr* thut nt Bnnlc, or nny ilnte lo wlilrli It mayhe iidjmtrnipil the MTRyor n>1d <"(,iin-i'll rmilrvM tlm rlptlit In Its dlsitlnli In rpjpcl any nnp nr nil hid*mid In ''•'II niilil 1 • • tH In Hnltl tilm'ktu sin li lil(lilf,r n» il >nny »ph>it, duercRivrrt lifln* Rlvpn to terms nnil

morn minimum IIIOH ahull lie ro

t'liiin li i 'mvtim1 ' of the minimumhid, nr hlil n'hovn minimum hy theMayor and f'outicll nnil the p«y-mi'iit thotvnf hy the iwri'linter ai'-

OK to th* Brnnner of purrhniieciwtlrtTu'p with terms nf HIII« on'

If, (he nnrniiRii of Curtpirt will11 Vet n Hnrniiln nnd Snip l>ci>il for

.),

To Iw :i27 lii th.>

lvcrtl»f.t A«t. 20O«rt<>rpt Promt.

OKTO WHOM IT MAY CONORRN:

At n r«Htilnr meftliin of \\\o ("ounH C e l liel*

FOR SALE

|\l!Y S (RIB, alto mattreas and

rhpst of drawers, hijrh

1 i t (• maple, Mrs; Harry

8-0191.

8-20

l l K K

Ir-'.i

MONEY TO LOAN

r. i/HAN^E loans f t low

rate<<. Existing loan*

•.•.•I I N o Bervicc f e e s ,

nr rail. C O M M O N -

T!l BANK, Metuohcn, N. J.

7-2B to 8-27

WANTED

!'\Y 5c a pound for clean

Indopende*t-L«ader, »

St., WoodbrWfe, N. J.

HELP WANTEb

WOMEN and GIRLSRailroad Car Repairer* nnd

1

Helpers

AGES 18 TO 66

Foreman car shop

READING CO.Port Reading N. J.

HELP WANTED—FEMALE

Ice Cream manufacturing company engaged to

essential war work, located in Woodbridge, requif*

service* of ft ptma ad«pt at fi«orei to handle

roll and rtatUtied * « ^ Thi» i» A permanent

lion. Apply in writing giving »g« »nd experience.

CLOVER GREEN DAIRIES INC.• ! Woodbridge, N. J.

,T.

Tn hiClerk.

ilvertInoil AIIRIIHI 2II nnilIn the Cnrtprvt I'rcso.

mvtn-R UP pimui[>> Wm>M IT MAY «>NCKHN:

Al fi rpgulHr nierttlnff or liie Cmin-1 of thp, HoroiiEh nf PftTtnn-t he.IdHKiiBt IK. 111(3. I *KH illreitcd todvprllse the fact thai nn VVednes-ay PVi'ninfc, Sepl. 1, 19-41, Hip

mil Couoill will ini'Pt ul K:00 P. M.n lh< t'niinrll ChiiimberH,

lldlnff, (,'nnkp Avuni]*, Cnrterft,I., (I ml i>*pn«p (i nil BPII Bt ini

Ic nnd lo I ho hlKhpHt Mrtrttor nc-rduiK I" IITITIH of Kftlo on flip wltlii' llnrouKli Clerk open m ln»iipc-

SEWING MACHINES

Guaranteed ie^airni(( of- all

typen of electrtt or treadle

rewing machines at reasonable

prices. We also buy used elec-

tric or treadle sewing machines.

Best prices paid. Call

Singer Sewing Machine

Co.70 Smith St.

Perth Amhoy 4-0741

t-ll nf th« llnroiiirli nf Ciirterel heU tlwAugust 18, 1H4.1, I * » B *r*<tpd tnnrtfert Kiev thp tinl llmt oil .day ev^nlrtf, Helit. 1, mi! , tti* Mayofan* ('oiinoll will meet nl »:»l) t . M,In the (.'oimcll <Mmn*»prB, Munlrlimlnulldlnir, Ooolip 'Avenue, Odrlojref,N. I., »ml f»pow Hnrt Hell nt jjwMlfsfil* utiil |o the' hlghedl hWder ««'-<nn11ii» to l i rnu nr mil,' nn file withthe HrtroimM Clprk oiifYi to ItinPIv1-th*B nhd tn hp inihllcly rn*d >)rlhrIn nnle, F^t 22T In Block 286, Bor-

i | h uf CnrUrpl A««pHilm*nt m»J>,Tnke 1'iH'thi'i nolli'p tlml the Onr-rot. BnroiiKh I'nuni II Ims, hy resii-

itloil «nd iMii'HiDinl In lnw, fixed *llrilmutti prhi' nl whli'h sulci IntI unld lilni-k will hp Bold tofrM'hi'fMill all ntlipr II.'IHIIH pertinent;uld rnlnrtiinni prlcp 'hplnf? JlfiH.fi*lua niHlH of pnypiirlnR deed nnii'

Is »»18. Hwd R)l InKid hlock If wild on tormit will

iinttn pftynipnt nf 1U..II*hi) haliim'i' of puTchns'S ^rlfti to-»i*iM In cqtinl mnnlhly InxIxllmentH,Tftkp further nollrp Ihut at Wild

ftlc, or any <lrtl o to wh.lch It Irmy»• AdJoiirnM the Mnyor Riirt Cnun-II VpKWIven Hie rlftht In It* dint-fe-lon to rejei't «ny one or nil bidsihd lo ftclt wld lot in said hlock tn

Mich hldilcr «B It mny Mltrt, ilutrt^nnnl liflnn Klv^n tn IPMTI.H Anamnniier of rtnymen't In cnH* onfi or

minimum h1ds shun hn rc-

p, Rnr

of Onrt»r*i A«jrtw«iifl(»nJ.-«Mnf~-THk* fuHh»r nktli;» HitT Tf>n A r -

tviMrt Wo«-o»*)i f o l n c l l likfi, hf M o -tit I Inn and pnrminnt tn Iflw iVtfri Hminimum prl'c nt wlilrh ml lit lotIn HKId block w.lII ho mitt) tofUhfrwith all Attirt ilftFilin portlnMit;raid mlnlminr, prlc« 1)*ln|t $1M).O<)phlf rtiiiln nt prtpiirlnK dtM anilndvprtlKlng tills HNIP. (MM lot In»»M liimk if until nn tprhm will

11 AoWn paytVM'nt of |HO(Ior ptlh'lhmti pHi P to li#

IW in ttil flthiv l M U n » MTtiki- fiirthpr nolle* thnt lit *»ldIP, or nny dHtc tu wMch It (hny

nil)fiWr«W Hit SUynr And OnunMl i-pupfvpii I lip rlrhl In Itn rtlwrplion to rejpi 1 nny on* or all bid*^M to «*\\ *A\n Int In »«M hlock I•licit hMd*v AH 11 may Mpft , i»r»«urd liBtr,« ((Ivfn in ttmiK findh r of pnyrfifni in ca»p onp

* l n | » « m htdjt *1mll hec»|v.»d

I'pnn ft' isptuni-* nf Hi* mlnlmnniFiW, nr Md nhot* miftlMtiVn hy thpNnVnr nn* CoUM>U Mul th* *ihcfi'nf hy thp |»urih<m»r<•, (In. mann.»r of p>ir«hnM> In «c

wllh t*nns of nn% on 111l * t i

m +m* it tfAt ot mK:At * rHNMr m**tlnt »' th» Coun-

It, 1MJ, I •«» d M t

r>«rkitr* of frintm»«feM m vfMI mtrttthU' W

Tike further not Ire th«t *t fewMtr, nr iwy duto to »Mpti It *•>•nf *4]onnHKl lh» Moynr «nd l"*Unr-'l r»»»rt*» the rl«ht In l u 4llrrf-llon tit r»l«i 1 «ny on* nt «ll hid*nnd In «fll •»ld tola In ««ld hkirk t"mix h htiWer ttn It mnv •elect, 4Hi"rfimi-d helftK Klvrn tn term^ aiulmtnner'ot pnymetit In cime on* <>t'rn«r» mlwlwnm Mdn nhnll be n"»

fV n »c, ept«n<» nf (h» Wfnltthtin. nr nM itttnvi (htnlmiim *v theynr «M t V n * II and Ihe t

o( »tt .M| l ton and to ID'tc«,IO h«l to *•(», IMI

hfUlTWitfc Bofnuirh of

/

ounrll hut,

tfc* fthnv *tn| » hrtfl Ml*. l*\ 111o*M nf Hf\

T**»

lottnn

In «»withMillplus

prl-pk

roIfll !RAf>.Hie t'»t

. H*. *>y !•»•«•tn l»» , flifn Awhhh HAM lol

atn he ift<t*tnl»»

tWrtln**it

ftf |I5»i»«d l

lot Ii

nil nt herminimum iirlce hpicomn uf prfpArlnn

th|» utilp, fl«»»rt SVirk If *iM n« trpnillri' 11 down piiymi-nith> Imliinci- «f piirrMiK-' iwli'p 10 hop«l<\ In OHIIBI monthly ln*tftilnfi«nt»of VOfiti | , l i» lmprp*t Urtfl nlhf'< * » • prevldfxl for 'n I'oMrtvt 0

of

nf C«rl»r*l willmid Halp I*r* d for

,1. PKtlRT,HnroinH C|»rk,

T.> he nilvfrtlMd Aug. 2n nnd Ante.J* In ttio Cartfl-pl r

Upon urteptnnfp of tlivlild, nr hid iibnvp miulrtiiim by thfM.iynr nnd l^oiiiu II und llip payment

heri'of dy the purihuwr acconllnHn the mHiiil'.'i- "f piirfhiisc In ac»'nrdnncp with terms pf Hiile on fll«,

Kli nfand

Hiie#l)l

for

To lip (HIVTPIIBIM Ail*.17 In Hie ("dttprpL

n ,c:|y*k.

anil AM«.

: of r t Bi.it KALKTil WTnOft I t MAT .<W40WnK:

Al u rP^iilnr mpptlnit nf Ihp f*oell of the Bornuth of t'urtprnt hAiiftust IB, 1943, I WIIR directed toadvert IMP, thp rncl Mint nn Wednes-day »v»nlfi(t, S»nt. 1. 1MS, tM Mftyor(in'I Council will m««t m H,M P. M.

In the Council cham»ipr», M k p ltnllillnit, fimkf Avenue, OnH*ret,

N. 1., nn«1 pspnKe and » l l (it JMIMIwile nnd tu the hlfthpnt hlilder nrcnMlrtK" lu tcl-IVltl nf *il1, nil file *Uthe Rnroii)tli clerk rtppn to lh»(>««tloh nml tn In- pithljrly re»< Bflttn ,«:ile, Lot ii« In Block 28«. Bor-niith ur rni-tafei A slieiftW^nl ftii«Il.

Take further nntic* thnt the Onrtetvt Hnrnwtrh Court' II hA», tiyIlitlnii nnil inirsiiiini to law, flttilulmiTlh ptlcr al which MA luIh «ald lilock iWll he snld to«*ttV»'with all ftlhei detitlln pertlnetMunid inliilmntii prl' c lidnK ilBO.ti'

rnHtM (,f [iri'imrhiR deed rttulialtiK I Ills »nl<%. Wnld l"t IMuck It mild nil terms wlli'i' n down nflyiVi'piil nf $15.0

1hr hiilami' nf pnn-hRfe prh'e \n h(>iild in flituiil monthly innt

furtWi nollci. ihM nlKnle, flr nny dnli- to which It wayhi' ailjnurnvd tlir Mftynl- and t'niiti-d l reserves the rlRht In Its dlNcrc-tion tn reject nny niip nr (111 11U1 MAird to Hell satd lot in fluid lihwk \n

*il*dp.r an II miiy nelert, I I«Pl helnR Klvi-n In terms :indei nf |iu> nielli in cum1 nlie or•tVittiimnm lilds *hfill he fe-.

like m»«*el of inrtvhliw Ih »c-nrMm-e »l»h term* of «nle nn (I,-,

S or (*«rtTi*t #Hi d^iVft

¥ o p» I* IS 1*

At1IV«T .1. ,ttnrowth vtark.

Auf T*»M AUK.Pr»w.

mT»kc (utth«r

terei ftnrniivh tlutton nnd inirsmnl In M«,mlnlinum prke nt which IIn »Md hlmll Will be Kldltwllh nil otlitr detniln P»r•uld minimum prlr* hetn|plan • •>«« of prep«rln(rurtvertl»ln« till* Mle Mu l d lilmk II mill on l«rrequire a dnwn p*yw*nt «t,<the balance nf p«r*>h»*j prlt* Ipnld In *(iiml rnonthlv InMalll"

Take further notice thtl I•nle, or *nr dul > in whle*tw mUnllttied the Mayor «n* _. II reierrw jh* right In. It*Don to reject nnvnrvl tn mil »nlil lota In nald 1w h hMiltr »« it "<rejnrd h«ln» (Iven m l*rtnmanner of payment tn c»»emore, mlnlnnim hM» »*i«11i«l»<

tmn «ccepl»n«ii of thetTO | t MAV W r t i ;

Al 11 f»ltnj»T mei>ll«» nl tin-Coun-e teftW

il nt t*»eId, IMJ, I wn

the r»ct MiAt

1'Slrteret helddlrectwl in

nn WMIIPH-S, thi'TCnyor

M.nnil Oi lnc l l * l l l mpet nt \M I*.in tht> (Vnincll t?h«n>l>«rn,Riilldlntt, Conkp Avenito, CurUrrt,N, I , »ml e*Ho»f> mid «fII ntmle itnd ii> Ihe nl«hi(il hlildfrcordlnr io teVmii nf Ml- OD.IIIP Hflllltlip Homngh i')prk n|»n In Inmiw •linn *M In l»e puhlh ly rend orlnrtu fAt*. f.oii \fi{, \H. it*, In »ln.k;T», Anrnnkh nf

Tnke further nntl'P Hint nl

snip, nr miy d a t ' In which It inn T*ke further nnlliT tlml Hiehe Krtjourheii tm» Msynr uml Cntin I |pre* Bnrntilrh t'mihi'll hni. hy rf«"-

II rpsprvpi Ihp rlKht In llR fllMTe-I lullon nnd luirmiiinl In In*, flxwl -ilion In rpjw* nny nne or All MA* \ minimum prli •• Ht which »nli! M'Hnnd to 'I'll snid lot In »>ild hlook tn In *ttl« hl.dk will In- i"li< lnKilin rnth hl.lilrr n" 11 miiv iielect, <1«c 1 with all oilier ilt'tulln perilnriii;pitiird hpInK RIVPII In l^rmn nnd Ntiiil minimum i i r l c 1I'LIIIK |linn HI)

tnnntiT of pnyinetit In rAne one nrv Inn IHIIH uf prepm-lnx <ti'i'd mulndVtrtl«lnK thin snle Sin..I |,,!» in•nhl hliKk It mild on Irt-mn f i l lrrndlr* K do*n |«ym>ni of |*» mihT hnlA^ce nf imrchAih' prlcp to l«»-(lid in f(mM mViMhlv InHtAllmem*Tulfe further nnth e inAt AI mid

Ate, At ,AWy dAVx li> Hflllch 11 minrp AAfftMi'MA the Mnyrtr And I'*HM11 r»imrv»» the rlrht tn »n itim-n •Inn lo rAlwt »ny one nr nil hid"•nA In Hell rwlil lots In xfMil ld i» \ i"mh hlihttr KH It mnv »cli*'I diii'

I.Id. ur hid above minimumMiivor and Ccnm*II and tB*-|th*r*flt by the p«rrha«»r

1 to i l i c m i n m r of ( inrrhwl'IconlAiu'e with turmn of gall rthe linrnuirh nf Carterei wilt 1it Hnranln ami Hale l>ee« M

J.

T" be adrertlMtit Au| . » . « !; in Hi-- t'nrteret P^

morn inlntmiDn bids HIVAII be re-el V3(l.

Airef4*nr« nf the MtnlwiumVi*rt nhnv* minimum fty the

iTiHncll AM! the (tnytnentttfftwf ky the (mrchmwr urcioHlhtc

Antijr ftf trtlWhAw Ih Af-* l l h l»rtn« nf ine.1* nW file,

famttfth or CArterM Will rt.<llvetnM HAIF l>r«M for »nM

iM. tir

onriWtml f11 JU

i. rrcnnv,i ! i>rovKh (Merk

1*o h* Aitvertlne<( A»t ** «nil An*7 In Ihe **Arteret m » * .

, - . ... MMtt o wimil IT MAV 1x^^^vRlm:

Al n eipirulnr Wl*»tlh* of Vhe f'nun-• -11 »T th» Rnrntilrn "f <"Art*rp< held

rt4vpr1t?ip ttip fArt ihftl On WeilnppdAy p\TnlhH, f^e l 1, ISI l, thp lnft\oinVid fnMni'lt * l l l impel nt *.*» P. MIn I ft* (Vimuli ohnn*»vi>, Mnnlclp.'illi*\lnln|t, rorikp Avpnu*, CnHerpt

nnd e\|>oW nh'd »ell «tnil in the hlnhesl Milder

lo terms of B*IP on file *l thnMitVi I'lprk nf»en tn insrieiI to lie puMtily reAdl.nt* ir< And i% i

N. .1.,

the11ontn m

• FEMALE HELP WANtfeD

WIRE AND CABLE

MEN-GIRLS-WOMENWHY COMMUTE FAR AFIELD

YOU'RE NEEDED HEREFOR VITAL WAR WORK!

IMMEDIATE P L A C E M E N T

T&H Af© 0 N E HALF PAID

FOR OVER 40 HOURSGOOD WORKING CONDITIONS

CAFETERIA ON PREMISES

I'liRMAtfENT INpUSTRYAPPLY AT ONCE

Female Assemblers

Fetnale Inspectors

APPLY '

Nixon Nitration Works

Nixon, N. J.

Persona in war work or essen-

tial activity will not be consid-

ered withobt availability state-

ment.

Wfr&ALE

nld,

3 •-acceptniice of thp minimumhi.I nbftve mlnlhnini hy the

t,r

Tnkc IIIIHHT notli'e thnt tile Curh'tvl rt<>ruiiKl> <\>iiiuil htiH. liy run1 ntlnn ;Ln• 1 pni'snnnt to Uiw, fllci'il 1inlnliiiniii prici' HI wliti'h sjilil lotIn nnlil bli.'k wltl hi> snM tnretliewllh nil uilirr IIPIIIIIH pertinentmM mlnlronm price helnfi WWl.tljrtiiK runts nf nrt'inirlriK ilecil nniiaviTlLiltiK this mill'. Hulil lota I'MVM hliv-k Ii' «'ild nn term* 4vll

- oflmure I»M* |n>

I'pitn accepUncc' of thehid, or hid nhnvp minimum hy IlirMA.VOV And T*i*imt'll ftiid I hp i>Nvmi'iil

i^nl by the pmihiiflpr n* i nrdlnytn the meniv-r nf p\irch«ii> In m

Ilic nnl-mllth of I'M'trrpI will it-IIVi'i1

UnrifAln and Kuli- Ived lor mil

To he iIH 111

iivertlncil An*. 41» itmlt'nrlefel I'res

flerk

I t MAYAt ,i rcKHhir nict'linK of (lie

•il id' HIP Hnl.'liKh of Cnrtt'ii't IIPII.'VuKitnl IS, I mil, I wiismlyci'llsi* the I'nrt Hint on \\>d»i-Kdiiy i-vpnliiK, Setil. 1, l!H:i, HIM Muynnd Coiint'll will nii»ei nt K:ftfl 1". MIn the Cnrncll Cluimtii-rd. Muill'iliHllulldltiK, <*n<i1n- Av«nne, Cnrturi'lN. .1., ii ml expimc nnd nt'U nl I'ulilliwl» And tn tl«> hl(tnp«t Wilder m-i ot-dlnit In tcrtfin of XAW nn Hie Witlhi> ttoroHBh I'lcrk open to

OK P l » M C

TO WHVM IT MAY t.«NAt « retiilur inwiTi

i II of Ihe IWoit fh of 04rAUKIIM IK. IIII3, I #n« AirndvrrtlKp tlw fin I I Ii Al nndAv evvnlnt. Sei»l. 1. HIS. I"nnd Ciuinill will meet Kt IIn ilie rniincii I'hiimherii,Mnlldliiir, fiioke Avenue,N I , ,in.l fspuee And «fllnnlp ttnd in thp hlFhe*tvi'i'dlnM' l() tt-rniK nf xal' fin i

nroiiKh <'lprk open toIon imd I" he pwlillcly

• air. Lot* I.' Id 11 InrlOMtlnik 211 l.nU '."J ,llld n IHIi. I.IIIK :i nnd I In tthick

•rake rurltii-r tmtl.e 1 lint (

i'i"t Hiirmigli I'miiiill Iniii,urit'll ;ind piirHimitt tn InW,

minimum prlir nt whli-lt «In vnld hlokp will he mildwith All "the' (UtiillaKHIII iiiliiliniiin pilt i- ••••Innilit* I'tmln nf iii>jiurlnKidvertlHlnx l111" «nletnld him kn if Hold »n tern•I'Miilre ii down puynionthe lml«ncr nf purrhmt" prl**<.mid In ii|iiii! monthly Inntalllt

Tiikr flirth.,i until p Hint »t<iilr. or nny tint*- to whlrh I!!»• Rdjimrneit the Mnvor milli II u'«ervf» the rlKhl In It* il*lion to ri'Jwt any one or

nd to H'll unld loin In mild hhnrh lilddi-r us It muypRiird h'lnn iclven tu t e r * #nnniipr nr imynteni In em* Mlnoip inlnliiiiitn hlib iliitllclvod

I'pun m I'optnnve of lh« m i lhid, or hlil iihovp minimumMnyur .mil Tumuli unit the ithereof hy thp pim-hnjierIn the mniiner of purchAAen i r i U m e wllh term" of unit(he llniiiunh of {'Hrti'rpl willa flunotln nnd Mule Heed fbr"

or ID

llortiKT11 he HilVertinert Anit. 10

J7 111 Ihn C*it»tr*t Pri'W.

RAHWAY — Six room

earage, tile bath ftftvl

coal steam heat, close t* tr»ha-

poTtation and schools. l?rite

RMS IK C«nw Agency233 Hamilton St.

Rahway 7-0262

• FEMALE HEU< WANTEg

WOMEN WAITED ON

BOOK PRINTING AND

BINDING

To wt»»k, full or part time in an

essential plMt, nwktng text atrd

scientifie bodka, trhhsh are uWd

in the training of «lh«MS »»<J

men, for the Amed Porrts.

Clean and safe work

- If intagejd in essentialdo not *&

Men and Women: There's a

QUINNandBODENCO.,Inc.,

Elizabeth Ave.,

Rahway, N. J.

at HYATT for you!"Make Victory YOUR Business

HOUSE WANTEDClient want» to buy 5-6 room mAtn house in ex-elusive midenlial section of Ww*n4g« . Giveparticulars at once to

METCHIK&CO.Red Estate and hsatance Agency

288 Hobart St. P«rth Ambay 4-3333

Of MCE

AMBOV, N. J.

FOR RENTMove right in N«« Two-Fwiily Hoiue. on Uhigh

Avenue, Awnel. T*o mile» ftom EMtern Aircraft,

Linden Dlvftioft. » IniAute* walk frOBt Avenel Sta-

tion, PenntylvMfe lto«w»«ti, I minuUi ride hy Btu M

C R

Making vital «Httipinent for planes, tanks, [ships

and guns is our buiinfeis. W» need h«ip. . . menand woman, skilled or unskilled and we needthem urgently.

Yw «an mak* Victory yew buliMti, ™& yourkmfcat work at Hyatt. Ifyou &re a tttWld work**,Iteti'i a iob for you at top p*y» * <**, If youhave no experience, you tian iatti | M l * y whileyou IfJtrttk at once.

ym W«l find Hyatt a Qkx> ptace t» Wwrk. Therettaajhtit rating and rtcreatkml! ftuilities...

active car-sharing clubs. There are many, manyextra benefite at Hyatt. ,,;

We aeed you. Make Victory your buiib*fc

today. '•'•','•$.

There are two Hyfttt BcarioH pluti . On* t t !

the other at Clark Township. Transportation to th» |

is etiy. To reach Harrison plant: take bus 40 which

•«ote with «U Ntwork bus lines. Or, H. & M.

Harrison. Plant is opposite Tube Stria*.

To r««h Qtric Tow**hip plant: takt \m 3S

Hliz.bc(h. Tain bw 54 from Woodbridg*. Pwisi

Rahwty and Westfieli

Shade* and S«ewi*

MADE8,^ 4

-..*?:.'* >'f"'.

S DIVISION Of u E N Ilot* Ftttlh HM fHKVlitMlr' % W WWW WUrWMl IWRNQli

„ - j'. l fc.' | ^^l^^M ^ ^ - _ u ^ ^f j « M ^ ^ h k r t

Page 6: -No. 19 CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1943 PRICE ...€¦ · nue, Buffered injuries to his awn and back Sunday when he was thrown to the floor of a train in the Broadi Street

'^•fW^^^SI^^^''^ 7^" W'^P-r^PiW^'

*AGBRTX

tsecrack Costs,r| High School LadUf Life by Shooting

Ujeit Aboui 'Diihpan Hand*'{r Re;er.ted; Many Like••>•*. Cniei on Record.

• BALTIMORE He sold ihe hnd"dlahpan hand* "

:• Thnt via* the red mn glvrn to tli«^police for 'he (at.nl shooting of AllenWllley, 17. an Annnp«li| high nchool

;'-bey. aiuerlertty hy Mrs H«l«n AlleenHandle. .11. wife of Elmo S. handle.Wealthy rrnlty man, «t fashionable

,' Wlllcy's death wns one of numer-001 homicide* arising from trivialtauten. The number of auch kill-Ing! ntinn.illv in » matter of won-derment even to veteran police andCourt olTlclnli.

And, In a surprising number otcues. It Is B woman who ll givento violence by n remark, often In-

"""tflltfed merely an n "wlietrack."?, A»tements which a man would

pUfh off. it seems, Incite some wom-:1'W to lethal anger':•'••'; Such, according to police informa-' (llori, was the effect of young Willey'*

(•mark nn Mrs. Handle.Frequent Vliltor.

The high school boy, an accom-

Clhed pianist, was a frequent vli-r at the Randlc home, Mri. Ran-

* ilfle alfo played the piano, but not soMil.

A strnnjje jealousy arose betweenthe attractive young wife and the

;• btndiome boy.U culminated one afternoon when

Willey. placing his well-groomedrmillclan s hands beside those of

• Mn. Randle, made. th« remarkAbout her having "dilh-pan hands."

According to her husband, thev young wife never forgave the "wise-

crack," A few days later, when an-other verbal argument arose, sheappeared with n .22 caliber targetitid*. .There were two shots, The

i flfrt killed Wllley, the second wound-*d Handle.

^Criminal annals, here and else-where throughout the country, are

: replete with similar cases, In whichiorne trivial remark has resulted Intragic violence.

Mattie Pearl Manning, blue-eyed14-year-olri Tennessee mountainbride, calmly told a sheriff that «he•hot and killed her husband, Day-fnon, 35, because he told her sheIhould leave her mother and liveWith his folks. Mattie and her fa-ther, Frank Morgan, 50, who triedto shoulder the blame, were foundguilty of second degree murder anditatenced to 20 years.

Laughed at Tintype,Wade L. Smith, B8, a former state

policeman, and his wife, Dorothy,23, quarreled in their Laurel, Md.,

' home, over her laughing remarksfbput'a tintype he had taken at an•musement park, In an ensuingitruggle, Smith was shot and killed.

At Santa Monica* Calif., Mrs. Hel-en Wills Love, 31, resented the man-ner in which her husband, Harry A.Love, 46, a broker, cancelled a daUto take her to a beach club to ceie-brate New Year's eve. He took hi«mother Instead. Helen Love calledhim out of the club <and shot himdead. She went to prison for sevenyears to life.

Several killings have grown outcj bridge disputes. In Kansas City,Mo., John G. Bennett, prosperoustalesman, quarreled with his wife.Myrtle, over the proper playing of

,,» hand. As a bridge player, heMid, the was a good cook. Bennett

.W«8 shot and killed, Mri. Bennett*as acquitted on the ground thathU death was accidental.

1 ,' A few years ago a large lnsur-" ttM» company made a detailed

»Uidy of 500 homicides occurring in(tfte year. One-half of them wereihown to have been inspired by "plf-

1 JUng" motives.

Man Learns at Sixty to| Fiddle for His Living

«VANCOUVER.-In Klondike par-Stocking cap and sweeping gray

you'll see him any day on^Juicouver streets — sitting on a

ip stool, fiddling for his supper.tt Nystrom waited until he was

^betore he bought his first fiddle$2, because he read In a SwedishIpaper that musicians reach

elr peak at that age. He can't read, he has never studied any ofeat masters. He play* the.for a living because he in-

his back while working in the

Cut Dryisg Timet six weeks to paint grand-

jr'« carriage, but the dryingon an automobile paint job

jrt'b«en reduced to one hour andI'latest furniture finishes will dry

•minutes. Now comes th«r with huge war tanks, the paint

i is dried in four minuteiv infra-red rays.

of cotton in thismtry has increased from 6.9 mil'> bales to 11.2 million bales.

Disappearance of Meteordisappearance ot a meteor

be explained by iU passing^.^.J our atmosphere and e m e f$f again into space, or It may be

the atmospheric friction hasit; that is, it has been

i away to fine particles ot dustmay settle without our b*-[ aware of It.

FDR HHft:Payroll savings k

our greatest singlefactor in protecting(itir«elre* i£Bin*t in-

flation. '\ :'-.'•.,;,

Fancy Drm for Ginger Ale

Summertime calls for many • cool, froity toft drink, and there•re always rww trickt to hr Imrned in jcrvinj such popular bev-eraf«s as finger ale. One quart Kndlr of ginger ale will servefour or five with delicious Ginger Julrp. A little powdered sugar,lemon juice and mint add zrtl t<> ihii summer drink' which take!but • few momenta to preparr.Slice the, thin, yellow outer rind from the lemons and cut instrips* Combine rind, mint leaves and lUfar in a pitcher andcrush {together with the hack of a ipoon. Add lemon juice andplace^n refrigerator for about one hour to ripen. When ready toseryfc, strain into a pitchar, add ginger al« and pour into glassesone-third filled with crushed ice. Decorate with a sprig of mint,

2 lemon* Cruithrd icoFew fl])ri({fi mint Vt cup powdered su^ar

1 i|iiarl liollli- (tinker ale

Happy In Defeat

Sicilian peaianti in a ;ay mood after American and Britishtroopi liberated their iiland and replenished their food supplies.All over Sicilv nativei welcomed Allied troops at town aftertown gladly mrrendcred to them.

For Sun Bathing

WAR BONDSNo Mofe Brass *

Sweetness and Lighi(f oHlinnrii jrnm 1'aqe 1)

loufh and I had no trouble inobtaining gas, thanks to the Itt-ml ration board. I had • swelltime and I enjoyed «T*ry min-ute I vras sil home. IncidanUl-ly, that was mr last time honefor a while—and I goes! youknow what that mtana. Well,I ran assure yotf that if I coaldnot hare had the swell lira* Ihad when I was home, I wouldnot be as fit for duty as I amright now, and the gas I get wasa I'm help in the days I spentat home.

"It's a good thing that m*hare MEN back home, wile •"-dentand what a furlough meansto the servicemen.

"The clipping I cat mil Waiplaced on the wall and was Nadby everyone in our barracks analit ii the sentiment of all thaiyou are standing on the »We ofthe men in service and tba peo-ple of the town should standback o£ you. Knowing our townas well as I do, I am ctricinyou can depend on them.

"I don't know anyone in theOPA but maybe some day ikedawn will come and they willawaken to the fact that it takesmorale to win a war, alao. Iwish to thank you again and ei-press the thanks of alt of us upliere for whe.t you are (doing."

• 3 ?• v

Well, what nre w« waiting for?

Perfumes Have Wide UsePerfumes enter into our daily

lives to a far greater extent thanmost of us realize. For every wneeof scent sold as such, thousands ofgallons are supplied to soap andcosmetic manufacturers. Lipstick,cold creams and toilet foods relyon chemically produced pleasantodors. There is no difference be-tween perfumes and synthetic flft-vors for foodstuffs ond those formedicinals except a difference inuse.

Blue Jays Lead By2 Full Games, TopTigers By 9 to 4

CARTKRET — The Hlue Jayscontinued to lead the Junior

ague race by two full frames bydefeating the Tigers, !> to 4, Tues-l»y pvenina; at the Park field.

A Ing four-run rally coming inthe third fram* gave Bnniliri, BlueJny hurler, a sufficient margin towin.

The htttlnK streak of Bell, hardhitting Tigers' flwt baseman, fin-ally came to an end." PreviouslyHell had hit safely in hin Innt sev-en Limes at bat.Tiger. (4)Lukach, ss ri 1J. Manila, Sb i 0 0B. Bell, Mi 4 1 1Chorepon, e 4 0 0M. Dereweky, p 1 1 1A. Petraeh, d 'A 1 1A. Breske, 2b .'I ' 0 1.P. Kolliark, If ...: 2 0 0W. Trstensky, rf 1 0 0Kaskew, 1b 'i. 0 2

1 27 4 7

Blue Jays (0)Mittuch, M ' !! 1 1Catri, 2b 2 2 0Bamlmrak, »b 4 1 0Basiliei, p 4 1 1Mnfflerfki, If ... I 4 2 2Molczan, Sb ' 4 1 0S, Molnar, rf 0 0 2O"Connell, cf 3 1 2Trosko, c It 0 0

30 !) 8Tipers 012 010 0—4Blue Jays 024 111 x—0

ON THE SILVER SCREENDitma,

Durbin it ni,,,,,.'oinp a glamor Kirl.

Havinjr succeanfully p ,milestone on the ifMi,it-v.retrn maturity, Donnn:,stepping Into the exclm,,,of Hollywood's bentiltc; i

For het new Univirm]"Hor» T« Hold," ,hv , , : i , ,Ircsa w « s (rownorl hy A,I ,.'of movieland's foron,,,,,d^ignera. The new picii,,,mantie drawa, cornea ti.,[,.RitmM Th*»tr«. JO*PT)|, ('„,'.','co-starred "With Mi« D| l v l l l n '

Through eleven sm- n . , .,pk-tuiM, Dennn* has (fii,HM , ,,vnunr )?lrl to| a beautiful ,,!H,Nnw thnt she has nlTicuilly |JI('

!

of affC, Producer Felix .ln,|, „'„'cidei.li that she wan rendy f,,,.full (t'*mor Ircatnicni' ,htwelfth picture.

CreicentA thrill-packed, heart H.,.,

Pretcge or V. 8.Uncle Sam has long been Liberia's

best customer and biggest supplier.Traditionally a protege of the Unit-ed States, Liberia was colonized byfreed American slaves in 1822. Inde-pendence was established in 1847.Government and constitution werebased on the forms adopted by theUnited States. The capital, Mon-rovia, was named for James Mon-roe, fifth President of the UnitedStates. English is the official lan-guage. Beyond the coast townsprimitive jungle We Is characteris-tic, with tribal dialects the rifle.

I Heat Limit far CowsResearch work under controlled

conditions has shown that when thethermometer registers 85 degreesFahrenheit the high-producing cowis very near ihe limit of her abilityto keep cool without special effort.Whenever the cow fails to eliminateheat through the body as rapidly asshe should, body temperature goesup and a "fever" results. Smallwonder, then, that under such con-ditions appetite falls off and milkflow declines.

Miokel. Morgan and Alan Cartli have vivid drarnafe roles to-tether m the exulting r6manlie melodrama "Two1 Tickets to Lon-don" cominf tomorrow to the Strand Theatre, Perth Amboy, fora seven-day stay.

Doolcy Wilson. The latli'i-, »companyinj? himself on his famonnaccordion, presents two songs dur-ing the action of the film.

Majeatfc'That 'Lubitneh touch' Ha" be-

come that 'LubrUeh wallop"'!That's tho word that hae pre-

ceded 'Weavcn Can Wait," thenew Ernest .Lttbitssh production,into town and the Majestic The-atre, where it is scheduled to opentoday with Gene Tieniey and DonAmecho .heading an impressivecast.

Hailed a* a saucy, sparklingstory of the naughty nifty nine-ties, "Heaven Can Wait" gives apeek through the keyhole at whatmade the gay'old days so gay.Sparkling with forbidden adven-ture and stolen romance, the filmrevcfls what went on after theball was over—and the gas lightswent out!

Symbel on DimeThe bundle of sticks is the ancient

Roman fasces, rods bound about aprotruding ax, which was the sym-bol of unity and strength. Thesefasces were borne by lietors beforethe Roman magistrates to indicateauthority. The entwining hollybranch on the dime stands forpeace. The design is the work ofAlexander Weinman, sculptor.

On land or at sea our fighting mendo llieir many chores by the soundof a bugle. All sorts of uncompli-mentary epithets are used to desig-nate the bugler, but nobody has yetbeen able to provide a satisfactorysubstitute for a bugle although re-cordings arc U6ed at some perma-nent bases.

SUITED for the Sun , . ..in aplaysuit that's versatile and, fig-ure-flattering. The neat shorts,wrap-around dirndl skirt anddraped bare-midriff blouse inflower-splashed rayon jerseywill combine charmingly withplain colored skirts and shirts inyour wardrobe. Colors in rayonsportswear will retain theirbrightness in Summer sunlightif the label states that the fabrichas passed color fastness tests.

Buimii, "independent," declaros•war on United States, Britain.

FOR SALEBusiness property neurwater front w.ith livingquarter^ suitable for smallbusiness. 4 rooms andbath, all improvements,very reasonable, forcedsale. Union Ave., UnionBeach, N. J.

InquireV. GERALDI

132 Can Ave., Keansburg, N, J.

WE.PAY

Ready CashFOR YOUR CAR

Whether it is paid for or not.We will handle all of your auto-motive problems. If you wantto buy, sell, finance or haveyour car repaired, see Jo«Janas.

SPEEDWAYAUTO SALES Co.

823 St George Ave.Woodbridge

Phone WoodbrisW* »-0149

Aboard ship the men fall in aftheoiclti ul "Pipe muster." On landthe bugler sounds "Assembly!" Butno mutter where the bugle is usedthousands must be bought out olthe money we are investing in WarBonds. Back the attack with, an ex-tra $100 Bond in the 3rd War Loan.

U. S. Trtamry Dtpirlm'int

CURIOSITY ALMOST FATAL;With the AEF in Sicily. — A

email Sicilian boy crawled unob-served into one ol eight capturedItalian tanks, before they hadbeen disarmed by the Americant'-oops, pressed a button and thegun went off with a roar. Theshell cut down a small tree andexploded, sending a fragment intothe back of an Altied sbldier andaimo»l severing tnu leg of a littlefirl playing nearby. A militaryambulance rusht'd the wounded toa hospital, while sympathetic sol-diers lifted the lad, who had caus-ed all the trouble, out of the tank.Ho was rigid with fright, (

RAILROADSDespite signs of opposition in

congressional circles, some rail-roads* arc going &he&d with plansto operate air passenger, mail andfreight service after war, or assoon as they can obtain necessaryequipment.

SERVICE OF SUPPLYDescribing the work of the

Army Service Forces, Major-Gen-eral W. V. Sever says that anuninterrupted flow of supplies haslbe«n kept moving to Americanmen amt our allies and that theorganization maintained equip-ment in the field. In addition,depots and ports have been built

1 in far-away sections of the world.

Macon, Calif.—Pfc. Carl Smith,21, of Port kyron, N. V., has badthe unique experience of/'gnow-ing out of the Army." I^hon .in-ducted, 'Smith was six feet, fiveand three-quarter inches tall. Hegrew UUer and found/ that hissix-foot, eight-inch frame waB toolong to fit a regulation army cotand, unable to get a good night'ssleep, H medical board at RabbinsField Army ^ase decided to givehim an. honorable discharge.

StrandWinning new cinematic laurels,

tho superlative Michelc MorganwilT come tomorrow to the screenof the Strand Theatre in Univer-anl's latest romantic melodrama,"Two Tickets to London." Thestar has one of the season's prisedramatic roles and it is certainlyone of the most .impressive in hercarecV. Appearing with her isAlan Curtis.who has his initialchance in a heroic leading mancharacterization.

Edwin L. Marni, the producer,director, has assembled an excel-lent cast, which features such pop-ul|r piaysn is C. Aubrey Smith,Barry Fitzgerald, Tarquin Olivier,Mary Gordon, Oscar O'Shea and

y ,,rsin's stalwart gucriih, ,,:and their grim (Ictrimin,lt,win out against the N;./1:,unfolded today at tin- i ,Theatre when ColuinlurBoy from Btalingrad" n, , , ,screon. Armed with ih> ,,of a thousand terrors, |;iiiiconqvora+lc youtli l^ . 'ward ultimate victory mwood's flrtt stirring iii; lh l,heroic .city on the VHI.M.

Emp RAHWAY

to SUN.

SANDERS " PATRICK

"Quiet Please, Murder"— 1'lUH —

BARTON McLANE

"A Gentle Gangster"Extral 1 Attraction

"EAGLES of the NAVY"In Technicolor

EYES EXAMINEDGLASSES FITTED

A COMPLETE OPTOMETRIC SERVICE

NEAR YOUR HOME.

Dr. H. L MOSSOPTOMETRIST

Office Hours:—9:30 A. M. to 8:30 P. M.Phone Wo. 8-2142—Cart. 8-2142

US Main Street Woodbridge, N. J.

NOW TO.(SAT.

Betty CesarGRABLE ROMERO

Gco. Montgomery

"CONEY ISLAND"

i> TKI'llNU'OI.Oll

John Clemens

"AT DAWN WE DIE"

1'resenUng a collection of furs

exquisitely styled and in great

variety. Each has the sought-

after look of being Resign ud

for an individual.

IPRICED

SUN. • MON. • TUES. • WEp.

Cecil B. DeMille',

"REAP the WILD WIND"IN TUCHNI00I.OK

— With —Ray Milland - John Wayne

Paulett« GoddardRaymond Maisey

Wm. Bendix - Grace Bradley

"TAXI MISTER" .

fOEDl • . J. T. A. « - « «

, FRI. and SAT.

"Assignment in Brittany"— wiiii —

Pierre Aumont - Susan Peters— Also —

"Dixie Dugan"with James Ellison

Charlotte Greenwood

SUN., MON., and TUES.

"BataaJi"starring

Robert Taylor, Goo. Murphy— Also' —

Eddie Albert, Anne Shirley in"Udy Bodyguard"

WED. • THURS.

"GET GOING"

Robert Paif*. Grace McDonald

"One D«0ierou» Night"with War»« William,

Margaret Chapman

' Glass" Qv«nwar« tp Ladies

STATE THEATREW O O D B R I D G E , N . J . • ' , • . ' .

— — — | »i ! 'I ".* v " 'I' ; • TODAY «nd SAT. ,

"MY FRIEND FUCKA"1 (in color)with Roddy McDOWALL

alto Lionel BARRYMORE U '

"DR. GILLESPIE'S NEW AS$jlSTANTM

^ r-— , , ' ,"••) i - t - '•»'"SUN. THRU T U & . ' r ' . 4 < V- •

"ALIGNMENT IN BRITTANY11

••MY HEART BELONGS t pRICHARD C> "

GencTlERNEYDon AMECBE

CH/Ut£5

— SECOND BIG HIT —

DON'T MISS

tilTMJtfST. AT FIVE CORNERS • PHONi a A 4-J1M

CONIINUOUi DAJii / lOH I tM ,

CHARLES WIKi'II&ERHElll UIE(i (IS SCIIlllliICU1UUH liniCSTOHU

Also Selected Short Subject*

dContinuous from 2 P. M. Phone P. A. 4-1593

7 DAYS STARTING SATURDAYfMtrhrl, Mur.

nilh Aim,|* ilrt|», V. At

y N n. l ( . jB i r r ) - FIU.Hrmld a HUoule; wit•uu. is

WO IKKEISl o LONDON

^ 2ND BIGu

IDIUtOl.

Harr in

IkeGI.W1II GHA*

4 bAY|~- STARTING, FRIDAY

Page 7: -No. 19 CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1943 PRICE ...€¦ · nue, Buffered injuries to his awn and back Sunday when he was thrown to the floor of a train in the Broadi Street

\l< rKRET ~'"fl>.

'afcfpsMltoR

I

• * • I • • •

; '• >".5

\ T

AITH!1V[O, YOU'RE NOT going into the fight alone, soldier. Neither you nor your brother manning

the battle stations on a destroyer or the tail-gun of a Flying Fortress. This is not yourpersonal hell. It's ours at home, too. We'll go through it—as much as we can, anyway—with you.

f \ F COURSE YOU have our prayers . . . and our hopes for your safety . . * and our supremeconfidence in your ultimate success. But you have something more, soldier—something

more tangible. You have our promise that we won't forget you in anything we do. We'llbe at our machines, men and women, in our defense factories—no absenteeism. We'll takeour rationing—no black markets. We'll buy war bonds to pay your way—no eicuMs toshirk.

W E'LL BE IN there punching with everything we have. You can depend on that. •

OTHERWISE, HOW could we face you when you come hotne?

•;•»

to behalf of your families, your friends and yourfellow-fighters on the home-front, this message

of promise is brought by your home town.

HE BOROUGH OF CARTERETJoseph W. Mittuch, Mayor

BeigertConrad

Frank Haury John ReidJohn Turk

Page 8: -No. 19 CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1943 PRICE ...€¦ · nue, Buffered injuries to his awn and back Sunday when he was thrown to the floor of a train in the Broadi Street

Unkr Tin* Stitte n&s$i A M UCARTBM5T PtESSTelephone Ctrteret R-1600

Published by Orteret Prew

OFFICE7« WASHINGTON AVE.. CARTERET, N. J.

LUCY GREGORY — fditOTMEYER ROSrNBI.UM Sporti Editor

Subscription, f 1.60 Per Year

Entered t i *econd claw matter June U.I9K4, at CarUrtt, N. J., Port OfflM, underth« Act of March 8, 1678.

Worry UnnecessaryJohhnneR Stee!, newspaper columnist

and radio commentator, i» worried lert "amilitarily defeated Germany ttfke advan-tage of our political unpreparednesfl."

Brother Steel can quit worrying. Wecan gamble on political uhpreparedneMwhen the German military machjfle is com>pletely defeated.

Every time the United Nations scdre avictQty.Dur, protesflipflftl wo/r;e|(« pjgin ^tremble. They moan about our unprepared-ness for peace, whatever that meana, andthey ghiver with fear about what mighthappen to poor Uncle Sam in the eventthat negotiations are involved.

We are confident that the United Statesyjill perform its full share in the war againstthe aggressors and we cannot imagine thatthe entire struggle will foe lost through fail-ure to talk with .somebody at any particular time.

After all, the war hasn't reached thetalkin stage yet. There is fighting to be

What About hnctmy?The neutral nations of Europe have

been warned against giving sanctuary toAxis leaders who are expected to flee theircountries, if possible, when the inevitablecollapse occurs.

There are six neutral nations in Eu-rope, not counting the Vatican area inItaly. What would happen if the fallenNazis and fascists managed to get intosome of these areas to eacase the wrath ofthe victorious United Nations?

Would the United Nations demandtheir surrender? If this demand is reject-ed, would the United NatieflH doabout the matter?

Unless the answer to both" of these ques-tions is in the affirmative, there is nothingto be gained by warning the neutral na-

grumlin: "A fellow who drink* M* morn*f orange juice, eat* his cereal and his1

two eggs and toast while hf> looks at pic-tures in the newspaper propped beforehim—a picture of a smiling American boywho has had his arm blasted off in a gunturret of a Flying Fortress over the jun-gle* of New Guinea—and, as he (tips hiscoffee, this grumlin feels aorry for himselfand fuMes at his wife because she has usedup all the red stamps and can't serve himany bacon."

Hard To PleaseIt in almost laughable to hear critics

declaim ag»fti«t the Allied policy in NorthAfrtea, wtth their emphasis upon Darlan,the mfotakeA of policy and the mesa thatthe State Department has created in regard to foreign affairs.

The record disclcwes that the NorthAfrican affair was a tremendous success.The concentration of land, sea and airpower which preceded an invasioncuted at low cost, followed by the victoriesin Ttini^ and the invasion of-Skity <KH»tfor something in the present war.

The critic* of our war program are hardto please. Regardless of what is under-taken and accomplished, they know how itcould have been done better. It's luckythey were absent from the creation, or wemight have a different world.

When Will SM* Confer?We have never been able to compre

hend the logic of a few Americans who in-sist that the United States should "get to-gether" with Russia. '

As Edgar Ansel Mowrer says: "Fivetimes in the last few mouths the Presidenthaa offered to inlet Marshal Stalin and dis-cuss fuller cooperation with him. Hfi hasexpressed his willingness to travel most ofthe way. Five times Marshal Stalin hasbeen 'too busy1."

Certainly, if there is a lack of confer-ences it is not the fault of the Americanchief executive. Prime Minister Churchillhas already gone to Moscow to talk withStalin. There is little that can be doneuntil Commander Joseph makes up hismind to have a confwence.

By J. Joseph GribbintTtRHNTON.--Farmers throtifch-

out iNow Jfrwy arc ftsltrH by8t*t# agricultural official* to givrth(> cold Mvouldcr and icy mitt t.nfflrm-to-fnrm egg buyer* and stickto their cooprrotivr market* dur-ing the prenpnt war emergency.

Although they can admittedlymWI« more money by disposing oftheir egg* to nuch buyers, the co-opmtive' rmaricets at. FlcmingUm,HWitaboWm, M't. Holly onrt Pat*r-(ton, built lip over the r»n*t thirteenyears, mny he forced to close upby such action, thus caURiTty thefarmer to losr n lond voice in themarketing of thoir own product*.

W. W. Oloy, chief of bhe Bu-reau of MnrkeK State Depart-ment of Agriculture, who pioneer-

o take hijrh-pflyinjr jobn in de<feiw and other indimtTie*, hn*a.u««Kl many of the municipal

ppnuion fund* in the State to hehearted for almost certain insol-vency.

That in why the New Jerseyxpayers AiMocifltion had

tho City Cbmmiwlon of Trentonto initiate omnized action (imonpNe>w Jprwy municlpsIitiM trNe>w

ed in the movement to the,agricultural auction*, claims: thatfarmers hnv<> sold more than $40.-

worth of PKRH alone at the

Almost A Moped ArmyThe United States has been in was fop

a. little more than twenty months.In that short space we have mobilized

an army of around 7,000,000 men. Mostof them had to be trained from the groundup and all of them had to be equipped

tions. Moreover, there would be little w i t h t h e n e w € a t WMJWM, of, waf<

suction* during I he past thirteenyears. Me worn* lhat ibnm en-operatives have exerted1 a signifi-cant influence for tHe befcfceFrnint«ml the stability of the witty*poultry industry in thf pftgt Ifthey crash fchroURh Ittek of buirf-nean, farmers will again bp placedat the mercy of the buyer, hecraiins.

The chant of the ewe auctioneerWas silenced in mid-Julythe OPA eliminated th«clarabflcatiion of egga andnraximu/m pricing regulationsinto effect, thus ending competi-tive bidding, Apportionment orallotment of the available ppof eggs at OPA-dietated p>ice*became the new method of nele.

Then the farm-to-farm buyersbegan swarming over the country-wide and many farmers weM en-ticed to soil off the market. Someeven received prices higher thanOKA, ceilingt, thud diverting theireggg into the black market. Someclaim it is more convenient to sellto buyers who come to their £&EIUEbecause it saves :» trip fco the auc-tion. At tho present time, manyfarmers are uncloeinYd to take .thequick dollar or stay with the co-operatives and. the long pull.

"To forestall an economic ca-lamity, the producer members injustice to themselves should stickby their own organizations," is theadvice of Chief Oley. "In v W ofthe danger to their own business,they should refuse to deal withfarni-to-farm buyers, thus forcingbuyers to purchase egus at thecompetitive markets. They should,combat the black market, not onlyT»r patriotic or ethical motives,but to ussure the future of themarketing system which hasproved beneficial in the past.They will need the help and serv-ices of the auctions more than,ever, when the war clouds roll

k"

municlpsIitiMt

y pachieve a fair, etoitable and

l d fWvent police and fW*itern throughout the

n«km *y. Wnok-g ^

fl*le pensinninic of TYelK|»n'«nnd flrwnen h«.i CUMM thopensmn fund to totter frhfin

cially.

Tbe New ,Ter<w>y Chamberof C'om'merce conducted a surveyof municipnl pension funds lastyrar nnd announced that (!4 outof 1O0 municipal pension fund*?Were insolvent or npprOaching in-solvency throujjh mounting1 deplet-od assets. AmonE1 the larp1 citiesIn this catogwy, according: to thoresults of the survey are Newark,Jersey City, Trenton, Atlantic?ity, Elizabeth, Oamdfln, Hobo-

ken, New Brunswick nnd, PftttnMany pension funds in small mu>

are wobbling, it wascluimed.

The survey further showed* thnttaxpayers in the municipalities in"Which the liflO pension funds nrelocated, will be called upon to payUKO,000,000 in deficiency np/propnations alone within the next 35years. The condition of these pen-ion funds constitutes a challenge

to municipal and State official*ilike. They should be strai(rhl-eiied out for the sake of the mu-nicipality amf the hard working

ptayeR who are looking forwardto days of leisure in their old

PENNANTS: — Motor vehiclespermitted to operate iniNew.Terscyduring blackouts and air raidalerts may be identified by the u*eof pennants in addition to thepresent emergency vehicle caulsthat are displayed on windshields.

So provides a new ruling thatwill be included in the new edi-tion of revised rules and1 regula-tions for the conduct of civiliandefense personnel and the publicduring1 air raid alerts to be issuedto Local Defense Councils Sept, 1,

When the. new rules are readyfor distribution, local defensecouncils will be advised to discard,the present sets of rules on fileand replace them with the up-te.date set. The revised rul$» willbe printed on yellow papw, in-stead of the blue paper on whichthe present rules are printed.

The new edition wilj. containthe proclamation issued by Lt.General Hugh A. Brum,

prospect of punishment for the leaderswho instigated a war of aggression andwaged it ruthlessly, without regard forthe righto of neutrals or civilians.

Two Wars And DifferentThe United States is engaged in two

wars, one against Germany and Italy inEurope and another against Japan, in thePacific.

While we speak of the war as a single-operation, we must not forget that the onlyconnection between Japanese aggressionand that of the Axis in Europe is that Ger-many and Italy created conditions favor-able for Japanese attacks.

The war in Europe is essentially a landwar, with immense armies of men in closecombat in Russia and with other millionsready to carry the battle to Germany inthe weat. #

The war in the Pacific is primarily anaval operation, with the fate and futur-e ofJapan depending ejitiltety upon her abilityto maintain sea control* without which- theisland empire will be ruined.

Germany, in the summer of 1940, hadthe opportunity to attack Great Britain,With immense armies and air forces readyto carry out the orders of th» high com-mand. The attack did not come becauseit involved sea warfare against an islandempire and Hitler was not ready tor a cam-paign against a naval power.

The development of aircraft has notchanged the essentials of battle, whetheron land or sea. The plane that bombs re-places to some extent, Artillery; the planethat launches torpedoes does the work ofthe submarine. In both instances theraja^e

No nation in the worid- has ever ac-complished the orgaDi»a(tiofl of- an armyin faster time. Neither Ge*nut>& Italy-,Russia, Fr-aace- or Japan ever trained acomparable striking force in twentymonths.

It might be a good idea to rememberthia when you hear a, lot of loose talit aiwutaking possession of Europe at once. Its not likely to be a parade and parentsof the soldiers involved will be glad thatour officials took thrift to train our men;horoughly.

speed of the offensive weapon iskrged, and the weapon becomes njore.4angerous and hence more important,

Do You Know The Answers?We know lots of people who like to

take intellectual tests, invitingly arrangedn various publications in the form of

questions and answers, with the sugges-tion that if you make 90 points you aregetting somewhere mentally.

This is nonsense. We say it for thebenefit of readers who may have developedinferiority complexes trying fe guesa the"blind Bard," aftd* such, quqatfona."

There is a- considerable- space betweenthe possession of information and the artof thinking, to say nothing about the ap-proach to genius. Besides, nobody but aiutuatic would know tba answers to. mostof the quiz questions, without a referencebook.

%«r*

GrumlinsSpeaker Sam Rayburn, of Texas, has

: coined a word, according to the United<' fm$—"grumlins," the home-front count-

erpart of the Air Force's "gremlins.'1

Speaker Rayburn defines grumlins as a; "minority party" of e«tiq|,^*i grumblers,

jalwpteurs of the spirit.'* life nwin features| $£ a is-urnlitt are *• big mouth, and * J0U4

I Awlrioww "who are busy iwinf their

On the d«yitbjD J4uaaoUni d4eappea*e<fcfrom his seat of authority in Italy the OWIin a broadcast ibeamed to foreign countriesreferred to the Italian King as "moronic.1

The President denounced the use of theadjective which, it develops, was suppliedby a- Nev« York coiuwirust who, #

writers, has the adjective-feverWe fail t»seet"where,tJ»ia,U8^ol!the ad

however, Merita,tha attw&w givervit< OwrtuiuJ , no fbnliajL government is gor-ing to 'be influenced between peace andwar 'by adjectives scattered through thether.

on the job of winning the war."j, > Hew is Mr. Bayburn'a picture- of a

A prophet is one who understands thtrend of events of the past and projectsthe trend into the future. That is all thereis to it. .

The income of many people is higheever. This invites cartful persons tosomething for the day when incomes

ON TH£ HIP:—In prohibition•ays hip flasks and pocket bottles

of bootleg liquor were carried byfinale hoppera and gay blades gen-erally without much criticism, butn, these days of legal alcoholic>everageB, they have no place inhe picture.

Scarcity of alcoholic beverage*New Jersey as well as the

growth of the practice of having a Governor Edisonbottle "on the hip" in case ofimergency, has caused Alfred E.friseoll, State Alcoholic BeverageJommissioner to issue a regub>ion preventing the sale of bottled'oods on .Sunday or outside thelours of [) A. M. and 10 P. M~,cokdays.The .step was reluctantly taken

,fter diligent study by Comimts-ioner Drincoll and is expected to'rove satiafactory both with the>ufl>lic and those in the liquorlusineas. Studies conducted byCommissioner Driacoll show thatin a substantial number of cases,war workers andl members of thearmed forces as well as others, af-ter spending the early evening- attaverns, have purchased bottlesand proceeded to consume tho con-tents upon th* highways, citystreats, in paito, autos, etc.

Commissioner Driscoll contend*he practice tetid«d to place injeopardy the whole Bystom ofliquor control in New Jereey andthat the fHiblic reaction to it it•ery definitely b a i Military and,ivil authorities were also getting,

worried over the problem, helaimed.

Opinion Of Others

ing' the Eastern Defense Com- a l i n o l u ' t h l i t tnc> a w l f u l nightmaremand and First Army, establish- , o f a lonl? W A r l l l u l "i'lwus casual-

ties will soon pass. But the wayto make it pass is not to let up in

faith Vs. Fbolwk O£tiausm|hour of the day. It is imperative

During the last few days a nunv * a t w« k e e P ! t i n m i l>d 'her of officials of the Government, het UB **va faith in a happyincluding Secretary Hull and Sec- «"Ww, but let us remember that

retary Knox, have warned tho f a i t n m u f r t ^ «ctive> •«** t h a t 'l[public against "foolish optimism" w are to cut t ie cost m bktod andag to the end of the war. These ^trs w e m u r t P»* m s w c « t ' "statemenia are not just a "lino"

Washington, and whichmight be changed to warningsagainst "undue optimism" if con-ditkw>8 altered. They are sensibleat all times. Hupe is one thing.\Vc have to have that. The moth-er who sends her son, the youngwife who says pond-bye to herhuaband must hope Hint he willcome l>ack safe to her Wo must

the new air raid signal system.Also included will be the Aiwny'arules governing dimout along thoeastern seaboard.

ABOUT JERSEY:—Public em-ployment is no longer attractive•because, of big pay in war indus-tries, the New Jersey Civil Serv-ice Commission has reported toGovernor Edison . . . The Out*of Errors and Appeals will be call-ed upon in October to decide tholegality of Vice Chancellor Jayne'adecision declaring laws unconsti-tutional that allowed the railroadsto forget about $24,000,<XM) ininterest penalties . . . Thousandsof new workers are still neededin South Jersey canneries andother food processing plants .Twenty-ftve officers and enlisted.men of the State Guard have beenpromoted by orders 'approved bvGovernor Edison . . . Civilian de-fense is just as important nowas previously, despite chqwful r?-ports of Allied successes on, thubattle fronts, Leonard Drey/uax,State Civilian Defense Directorcbima . . . During the last fisoilyear tfce State of New Jersey paid*26,806,.*4£.&6 in- eaterieg to 2,-itwl eroptayeg . . . Wage record's ofmoi«e than lv3»0tO0O workers in-New Jersey are being kept up todate by the State Unemployment

any work we do that can possiblyfe of war use, to work harder, toprepare, as Mr. Knox urges us,''mentally and spiritually for along, hard contest."

The men on the fighting frontsdon't need this advice. In the Pa-cific, as in the Mediterranean theyknow that they let down at theperil of their lives. The conse-quences of a moment's Inxnow areimmediate. In a factory or nnoffice these consequences may notappear. They may not appear ifwe are reddow with gasoline orpatronise a 'black market. They

just as sure, however. It is inthe power of civilians at home toshorten or prolong the war, to addor not to its cost in life. Thp.tis something that we should seiourselves to remember in every

Cwiow "L<*»" of Miners'

This should be taJcen up withthe Attorney General at on«e.P. D, R,

Such was the notation whichPresident Rposevelt wrote on thoTreasury Department's report onthe' strange case of the UnitedMine Workers of America's "loan"of between, $000,000 and *»00,<X!0to Carl Elahoff, lessee of mines atSpringfield, IH,

Attorney General Biddle said hodid not think the owe would standup. In- any event, his investiga-tion convinced him that the "toan"was a loan. But oven if it was agift, aaid Mr. Biddle, it would notbe taxable. . . .

Is it good labor policy for »union to pay out hundX-edff at thou-sand* of dollars to Uia lame of amine for the puppme, accordingto Secretary Miu'genthau, of clos-ing the mine d<n«it Is It soundpolicy to starve out a rivtl unionafter it had won the N"LBS elec-tion?

Thia ease gives further causefor public accounting of unionfunds anil regulations of their usein the interests of the union itself,—St. Louii Poit-Dupatch,

U l l

p:i

DEMOCRACY byMit

CROPS:—H i e h temperatureand insufficient rainfall have caus-ed' considerable denwge to Ncwf

Wnjey staple crops and, pr«ticalljrs

all truck crops, according to thev

State Department of Agriculture.Tho derpartimtnt has reported

he indicated yield of white pota-toes in New Jersey is estimatedat ltiS) buahela per acre, or a to-tal of l'l.WJ.UOO Jnishehi during1043. Ouo month ago the cropwas estimated i t IW^/OOu bush-Bin when an

jBfeation ComtnisffionSix h every ten t«a% totalitiesIB; New Jcrs«y tl|ia year wereMdfiftriana . . . Violations weredlteofered by State Alcoholic Bev-erage Agents in 86 licensed tav-

i N July

yield] o£ 177n mesge yield] o£ 177(bushek per a«re w«n indicated byifrowing comjjtioun uj. to thatjtim

erns in Nerw,J<*mey duiin. . . Petitions filed with thet f S

he Secretarjr of Sbjte by Mayor Vincert J.

of ,M tor Governor,

412,800 digmaturcsM t Vh

Former, g m c s . . . FormerMotor Vehicle Commissioner Wil-liam L. Dill has taken up his newduties as Judjje of the Court ofE d A

Venture and SecurityTh« quest for security

fundamental urge of the tun.-:,is a universal ailment. K---vn:uit is an attempt to escape :>reality. It flnds reder-timi m"cradle to the grnvc" .,-,-»plans, in deficit financing i1 -i'the new debt philonophv. mlthe vaat array of Utopiim ,'!i.!M

that are d!esigned to pmvnl- -ni-ter against the storms of lif, Thgame craving found i-\piabroad in Fascism ami \";T h e Italians and (iciinurendered their freedom h>:luaory security and imlr.uv pngeantry. But they W«Ma war of agigrewion Iened the very security • ••IMIIZIItion. Tho downfall of MMand the humiliation. • ] • ' •disaster that has bofan.ii luJhould be warning of thf !

a people that surrender \h> •vidual freedom to »»'•power. t

With the crum/liliug of :itic systems in Europe, ito re-examine the funilam -

the American system i§ wvate initiative is the <l'force. Our private eritt i jt*»n is the survival of "M"n virtually all forms <>i' i

following thousands nf v>• -mankind wae atruiaglinjr v.ture to eke out a harr ••n1

It needs to bo constantlyed and modified as ileftv1.;

'but we should mukr n-r.within its framework ••><adopt policies that wmiMmine and eventually il>--:Human "nature being whatthe release of intfividuii1

under such a stimulus is i>creative force ia the woi UEngUnd L e l l « r of the F"tional Bulk of Boitpn.

JUST.

1 --i;ii i i i - l 1

II.-* t.

in-ar,

N a l

ParagraphsVaoalkw Spoi«

Suggesting: Placid, IVLively, Va.

Errors and . . . The Statu

jtime.Aipplc ia New Jersey

thia year is estimated at 2,379 000bushels,

Racing Commission is expected todeny a permit to operate racing2fth (pri-rtu^ial Ibsttin*. at thewenton P»ir Qjouads .

ecMutal area« wijout \xntfl tii» Anny r«le6

to Ststa De-HfWreyfca,,.. . . PV»d

Jeraey diiring July

THE BAMK« O* OUft C9WMT%V ARC NOW P(0vi6 lN»•IfeATIOlM BkANK ACCOUNTS,* 0d^i«IW Dgf«SIT RATK5MSTAMPS THEV RECetVE FROM CUSTOMeftS- WklTE'RATION CHECKS" TO FltLTHEKt SHELVES AGAIN.HANDLING TME HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF RATIONSTAMPS THAT PASS OV6« STO*E COUNTERS VVOOLPBE NCARLy IMPOSSIBLE IF IT WERE NOT FOR THESERVICE OF OUR BANKS.

1 '¥ n i o n11 per cenrV 1,942

tion. Conditionii iadkal*production of M.Wfo

in New Jeney this yeirjcompared with 71,000produced in 1W&. ••§» iduetion ettimte h V d

butbalcl

the utw M the mi\• and r~* **• *

on finding living'en»e workers . . .

new attorneys and(-at- law will take

r o* -office in Trenton on|4$f. . . A. total' of 24,780

Wrideutai died during1*48, according

nioif HealthNewJeniy

,761,600, an «1JT T- r "

PENSIONS. - Retirement of $ W fhtgt iivsdbm of pollcetnen B a d l ^ " * ^flta in-Kaw Jersey Uwie ^ | v {Cw/lim& on Page 9)

LM>Angeles Times.

CanIt h«B rot no now tha

any girl with a -good J"'1THROIKWPLANS AHP ty«H SALE%AMERICAN UFE

roan'sWORKERS AND MANASIMKNTVOLUNTEERING THEIR SCWICCSHAVE SOLD FIVEDOLLARS WORTH OFWAR BONOS.

n the w«rl

Hirtford Tinwt.

Onn, TOO!

\\MtL, -cutworm*& r » Gen*'

I t DoesThe gift of gab caus

man. to give himself »Ang:ele« Times.. • ,

N*w W«mM'or

The comely tert>inpits stuff nwrelly andVariety.

Page 9: -No. 19 CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1943 PRICE ...€¦ · nue, Buffered injuries to his awn and back Sunday when he was thrown to the floor of a train in the Broadi Street

r's Mind Teasers,H NRY CUTLER,Pfc.D,

Siri Frairk Brandt

Mio !mtatle»t nnm-,,iH,nl to the «um ot,,iu*er rtMror*? U, MVI'fractions out of

bus 100 left***.I.HKP 49?

On

rs g \ o[,i it,., first riddle: Whati iri| to one-sw«n<th of. , id?

\m\ about tW« seirt-IMl,i!ion in a bad thin*

..ni.errce with.I he a breeje for you

to tell the stato that. holds the f>*tival or Ak-fkr-Bcn, for the dunia in the title. Hinlftio. Uio Bmtohas«n Indian name.

flr-A l»th century President ofthe U.8.A. wan Accused of wantingto become a dictator, of packingth« Supreme Court, and, becausehta wife ha* mown so fond of thettaMtion, of seekii.g a third term.He diod ot cancer of the throat.wflilo djctulinjr his memoirs. WhoWM hfi?

1—Jfaw much of R 24-hour dfcvhat pawed, if twice two-third*, ofwhat hai panned remain*?

R—Only one of thn following. 3statements is true Wtilch one?

*

(a) In the Boston Mfcmrrcmore than F> colonists w»re killed.

(b) A statue in erected to thememory of Bonodfct Arnold atSaratoga.

(c) PorahonUt wived JohnSmith's life.

9—iMafco one word> out rf nflWdoor, antt in THIS a cinch I

W—The maximum numker ofcells in some yeast, doubling.ewryminute, 15 reached in aq hour whenyou start with one cell. Whenw a t t the maximum number b«reached if you started with 2cells?

/A \ Siiper-intcll«ct* will immediktely know the only word in^ ili.- Engltih l i n ( U t ( e ending in "iedr." Wh*t h It?

(TVCOMLM r*« won't betemptij to p*ek.)

'u.i.m^nos nqi jo ps.i-|a-ti[ 93jjj6 ujau^jou aq; •)« u\mn\\\M J H i m > 3j« s»3utnp noui)_n•0)3 'tflflOB 'OJIft PUB g[:9 U33*}-;>q 'qvou 830* aq 97:9 pun (JV.9uaaMqaq KUUJW IJU«H jt snir> ';y)o'«»'-9 'W9 'K*» '«Ii)At.i[ qviou ihuoJI 9U|WX-HI pn "»j,i 'Qip9 '0^9 'on:i> '00*0

aA89( qino« BmoJtf

ELZA POPPENTo

'HoT ME-VLL Mr>K6 OFF

pniinnoo i-uapi.iui M{) pitl H,qiHus uu,of PBABS oqifc j.i|iH mi\9]R « jo jity|£nqp n RB'31MDK uo^soa aqi ui pam

o.iaM g ^tiwxa "9nxj si gi—JJ,•s inoq BmuSAas-o*^ pu» (fl- L

•iuBjj) ^uaptsaJd—9

noX \nptp Aq* puB 'SJ3M0J oq

•,).KI B ui spu.i naua^uas a q x — tsqm3iB-3AU puw 9 1 — 8

•5; 'g ' l 3JB SJQSIAIp S I 1

ftK foot wo WHC

OLO-OME " VOHftT CHWTf f "

CO,

MUGGS AM> SKELTER

—By PERCY GRQSJttiSKIPPY

Hank, liTing in ihe center of New Yorlc, hni one office inthe northern lector, another in the iouthern. Not caring

I. office he viiiti on my particular day, he board* the fir»tIran tint cornel aloni. Traiui leave every 10 minutet in bothJin-,lioni. Explain why H»nk, over n Ion* period of time, vi»-it. d Ins northara ofice 4 timot ai often at hit luulhern.

Holtywood Notebook

I'll|h;,,

\ .iiB that biographies of I"iiri(» Americans represent• w host contributions that

made to the selling ofi in the rest of the workl,

who IH now at"Rhapsody in

film miwo»l-biograpy of'•• (leorge G«n*win, recent-

'iiu'ed that he plant to de-•' lemairtdar of hit careerI'KIIIK sucfe pictures.

baiflro-pro*

pmo-but

Singing in th« Wildar-'••" bated an HM Uf« of Johnfi Audubon,' tba »ere«n

1 'or wtiiek U now being pre--J by Elliot PlMil from the!> of Donald Caj^Mt Ptuttio.

l( i the terms of the pur-"!' "Junior Miss," by Mary'"I. thp producer and nuhave six months to dwido'•>• the price for the filmwill he an outright MlO.OOt)

;>sh paynvent of $366,000 and| tent of the picture profits."ver choice is mad«, theM'Us a new high record.

a^iiwin tfce Grwk•. who wilt be ,e«n •• tk«

''Ma,-" of "F 4 . B.U• w '» Plajt G*a»»r RO.PT.1

""•.keeper in "Tender Com-dl1 K D l T ^

iuldier'» wifew,,rk houte-

ate House Domelt!"tucd from Editorial Page)

''\l'HOLCAPERSt—Governor1 l! '!• ports he ip bothered with

""us iti his victory garden in!|yn Park . . . Thev »peed

ll; iuitos in New J e r m 3,7• "K'i when the 8t»te Motor

1 l> i>nil« in three'minutes and

SIM wure required to provide,]w>i Ik'enie plates . . • DIntfh marriaf* rftt* in 1^4

'•U, the tiMlm |WJ! «e i t ifir

keeper part originally called fora German.American, it w«ichanged, at the imittence ofMi>i P|axiiu>u who refuted toportray a Teuton.

Geraldini! Fitzgerald's first filmpart since hur Broaihway stage up-pcarance in "Songs anil Soldiers"three months :igo, will be for thesecond lead in Uniyersal's "WhenLadiea Fly," the story of the Wo-men's Auxiliary Ferrying Squad-ron.

Tha film «dWon of "SUtr.and Strip**," the all-ioldiar mu-tual »»aj»d by tke Fort H«mil-toin SpecUl Sorvice TWtoreSsctiqn «»d utetlamd by 4 eArmy Si|U*l Cprp», wUl b«ill own to service roan tkroufh-out the world. Tbe film vr«*adapted for the tWeen by Pri-T , te Willlui Saroyaa, oovelUtamd pUywright, »nd C«pt.Sheppard Traub«, director ofBroadway pUy», w « >" ehiMgWof production.

Changing their minds*, evident-ly, the Marx Brothers will returnto tlie films after a two-year lay-off, in u typical Marx Brothers

.ewlball comedy but with more...iphasis than usual on the rounl-M I attributes of the comedians.It is aa y»t uatitled.

Bin, Crovby wilt go * m «n-other fowi »» b'» l"*xt P"**1*"-TW» time, il'» '"Hi* R°*«» «<»Utopia." Following that, how i l l , » tawk • f«* y»w» •» W*.

tQ "C»lifo»jn»." ,TWt U»t fi1"i, tebWulad to be « mutSe.1.

Warner Brothers is planning toproduce "Night and Day," • flknstory based on the career of C0I9Porttsr, the composer. It will, 08course, includie m*ny of the oldatvd »#w t»«88; which m popular

How'sYour Health?

By The MedicoA recent copy of the Journal

of the American Pharma-ceutical(Wweiiiti-on is devoted entirely todiscuHsinu the quinine situationnnil how to relieve it. The editorsends out a clarion call to his fel-low pharmacists, to come to thelescuc of the boys, by (riving to

c (fovfrnment all of thjnr uack-cs of opened quinine. Says he:"From the fighting fronts in

•N'orili Afiicn, Guadalcnnal, Newand Burma, comes an

to the pharmacists of theUnited StBlPR fnr quinine to holdnfj miiluria long enough to en-able the army to defeat the Axis.Government agencies asked theAmerican Pharmaceutical Associ-ation to set up a national quinine•pool at Wubhingjton. This has beendone.

"Direct requests from the WarProduction Board, the Army andthe Navy wero sent to every.pharmacist in the country, ask-ing him to contribute his frozenstocks of cinchona derivatives." '

article continues: "Neverbefore in the history of the coun-try has suqh an opportunity been

'offered to civilian pharmacists toplay such u vital role in the ftghlfor our freedom."

While the aimiiet and. navies ofthe United Naticns., fighting inAfrica and the Pacific Soutfhwesh,call for more and more quininewith which to hold malaria incheck lojiK enough to permit themto win the war, thousands oftunces of this precious drut? lie

_. on the shelves of the pre-scription rooms of thousands ofpharmacies located in .stateswhere malaria is comparativelyunknown.

This vaat stock of idle quinineis as urgently needed by ourarmed forces as guns, tanks andplanes, for without it the deadlyfever and chills threaten to strikedowra our fighting men by thethousands.

"Tbe Philadelphia College of'Pharmacy led the way. Shockedby the ruponts of malaria strickentroops at Bataail and Corregidor,President Ivor Griffin of that in-slifution established a test Quin>ice Pool a few months ago, andinviud the pharmacists of Penrc-iylvania to utinil in their stocks ofiiuininu." Tha rtspoiihe hab beeniin.mut)iate and. gratifying.

'A well organized campaign isbeing conducted all over theUnited SUtU^ U> iHjiloct quinine.State pharmaceutical associationsare canvassing their membcis andutilizing their state journal* uudtulletin seiivioes in an effort todevelop as nearly one hundred per

participation a» passible._ _ inapeotors, schools and

collogtts o{ pharnmcy are htivingtheir student* make pemonal call*on pharmacist* in behalf of thedrive to eollect stocks «f quininefrom atate, county, hospitals andevery available source from which.quinine and its derivatives can be

tYEDOCTOR

I I I I*Tqpr ]<Hj. Pnoi 1. fmiW. Worlj li

KRAZY KAT —By HERRMAN

NAPPY mv

If Uiikt j v p tfor yott wfll be Bvlnf Uwltand B«t |Ht Uw m t *tag. TUik 1*»l »?« tn i df.

HEWLEY'S

HAVE DECIDEDTO PAY

NAPPY'S FOLKS•• A VISIT....ONLY THE tHfiU&ON'S '

DON'T KNOW* » IT.

GOES THE DOORBELL. AN6 £BESIDES, IT'S TIME YOU'WERE

L IN BED ANYWAY!! r—H

IT?L WAS JUST GEn»l4

REAQ.Y HO« 9 8 0 *

YOU DOING HERE? NAPPY'S BEEN

Y'MIOHt K RWM<A T D A T . / W ^ '

DE LAD AIN'THIMSELF FER DELONGEST TlWlE?

torr: ; •,•''-•

DETECTIVE RILEV —By BOBJ

iHE LOBBY Cf A SMALL MEW ENGLAND HOTEL, f i f f WJW PAN R l L 6 V ? ? m i . I I I

£hy« the Journal to the ph*nmaci»t* of 6ho nation: "Thl9 i» .»fight for survival. • As you readi£a,. there b a wldiea aon««hemin the Pftciflc longing f* you to|«tt ftwt. We may be your bio.Ithtfc, or y*ur kid. He is out there,ion' a malaria-infested island. He

^ r t h e p m ^ ^supplied with *e' ch-uj, Sncaih*

OB « k the Dutch Ba»t IndJee,tliere ia no more quinine U»n

; | i

TUSGRAM FOR # IF YOU tADIES Will

fAtfroesuw^/M EXCUSED.'.' •

•FACTS YOU NEVER KNEW

GUtSSl'URuNOWRTOTMt

SfATION AND WAIT FOR THE" OLD 8OY!'.

IF HE'S WHERE I WIRED HIM, HE'S ONtVSMUl HWE10MMIHS OVR PING (OK AHIW lietAKV

SCVCKTV-FIVE MIUS FROM HERE!

^ B y RICHARD

W* cpe conquer tiutnj,l QAW t^e war will l>e ov«r.

Page 10: -No. 19 CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1943 PRICE ...€¦ · nue, Buffered injuries to his awn and back Sunday when he was thrown to the floor of a train in the Broadi Street

^

PAGE TEN FRIDAY, AUGUST 20. 1943

W A S I H N V ; T O \ M i l i t a r y e x

P ^ r t f p n ' i l i i - f i l r i ! |1M- L u f t w a f f eW i l l t h e i K f l i i - i i l K < ' ;r< In h e n nc n ^ m y w c u p n n 'AIM-H w e ju <' ivblet o d e s t r o y '.',.'><!(( N i i7 i p l a n e *every month I>urin(r .Inly over1 ,800 (ierninn |>l;iiii"> were shotdown. At tlmt rale the c luckingpoint should c i m e sunn.

Hitler's ;m Mrenirth is present-ly stretched tn the breaking pointon three front* Knsfia, western*Europe jind the Moditen-anesn,That he is iK-timilv on the defen-sive on nl! front.-, is proven by thefact that nn mure offensive nir-crnft lire beintf ptmhired in (Jer-

Thc (jrowiriK aWHrms ofbombern which have razedrg imrl iiir threatening to

Hprcvd the jowne kind of death anddestruction over nil of Germany,have compelled the Nam to con-vert their aircraft factories to theproduction of fighter (defensive)planes nlmnst exclusively.

In Wcily the Allied MilitaryGovernment of Occupied Terri-tories (AMOOT) — a project con-ceived nrul nursed in Washingtonand constating nlmost. entirely ofcivil and military personnel train-ed at nn army school in Char-lottesville, Vn., ami similar schoolsin Great Britain, is. bringing theisland back to its normal life andfunctions, Itavinjr the Allied arm-ies free to attend to military af-fairs.

The first order of the A/MGOTin Sicily dissolved the FascistParty, and with it discriminatorylawa Hjrainet persons for race,color ami creed. It is obviousthat the Allies, while disclaimin?any political policy, do not intendto tolerate the support of the ide-ologies that fostered this war.Next, the AlMG-OT started to petlife moving in its old grooves.Food was brought in to citieswhere (Train was running short.(And, incidentally, our invasionwan cleverly /auffed to get thegrain harvest lit exactly the righttime).

To this and other Allied plans,including the release of .politicalprisoners and administration of lo-cal government through local of-ficials, the people of Sicily ateresponding- with hiippy grins andfull cooperation,

t t •

Former isolationists, bundersand native fascists, convince-d thatGermany must soon fold up, haveturned Nazi apologists. In arti-cles to the press, speeches andlectures to milk-toast congrega-tions, they warn against a collec-tive punishment of the Germans"that would be unjust to the ma-jority of those punished."

The argument we thought hadsome merit until we received acopy of a publication issued inLondon by Polish clergymen inwhich an account is given of themass murder of 2,<HMt,0OO Chris-tians uiwl Jews in a special mas-sacre house maintained by theGermans at Troblinka, Poland.Read it and make your own con-clusions:

"When the victims arrive theyare told to read a large sign pin-ned up on the wall of the execu-tion house,

'." 'You may be easy in yourmind us to your future,' the ndticeread. 'You are going to the eastto work and your wives will havecare of your household. Beforeyou leave you must have a bathand your clothing must be dc-louswl. Your property will be restored to you in proper condllion.'

"Men, women and children com-ply with the order for dist'obingand then cornels the first scene inthe last act of the tragedy,

"Children with women go first.Paster and faster they are drivenand thicker and thicker fall t,hcblows on headb paralysed with terror and pain. The silence is shat-tered by tho screams of womenand the oaths of Germans.

.' 'The victims now realize their' doom is near, At the entrance

©I the d«ath house the No. 1 chiefhinwett drives them to cells, freelyusing a whip. The floor of thecell is slippery. Some fall andare unable to rise because of thopreNiire Of HlOst; behind. Schildren are flung over the heads<rf the women.

* ".When the ceils arm tilled they. are closed ajid1 sealed. Steam is' forced through apertures and auf-

fdcajtion of tho victims begins. Atlmt, cries can be heard1 but thesigradually suibtride and after fifteen

: minutes all is silent. The execu'• tion is over."

• Even thooe moralists who havilanterned serenity, will answer thatno" crime shknild go unpunishedand that we are fighting that jus-Ifce may be done, A total crimtd«jerves n total punishment

iS*oae who- consider this prineipltj:','lr(imoral" are pleading not tinTOUW of hutni.nity, but the CHUM

•of the Germany who outraged* very name of Man. They ar«

the foundation of World

WA predict* 20% out in «xrt-w tite next 12 Monthi.

yroll savings iireatfut single

J in protecting •lyeiagaiiut ifl-

Outdoor Dining—At Home

Attractive, vet practical, »rc the table appointments uted in thiibackyard letting. Straw t«ble mull arc aimplc tn clean. Fruitjuice and water flmiri in thr chnrming "Pali Mall" deiign areespecially adaptable to outdoor dining became of their saferedfe rim and firm b*ir. A Urge tray lirnplifiei in carryingthing! from the home.

The New BooksThe four freedoms may not

i'«ve been called that in Revolu-tionary War days, hut Americanswere fighting for them jusrt astruly then as they are today, Wewere re-impressed1 with that truthafter reading "Origins of theAmerican Revolution" by John C.Miller, an ' August Book-of-the-Morrth Chib choice.

John C. Miller is a professor atBryn Mawr college, who looks so'oung that hi> publishers hesitated

to release his picture because theyfigured that no one would believehe caul'd have -written such ascholarly and important book.Much material hitherto unpub-lished ire book form appears in,"Origins of the American Revo-ution." To gather his data, Mil-r sp«nt several years absorbing

great collections of letters, filescf all influential newspapers dur-ng these eventful years of ouristory, and records from Parlia-

ment.Despite the youth of the author,

this Book-of-the41on,th Club se-ection has been appraised by com-etent scholars ag "the best bookn the American Revolution that

has yet been written."One interesting point, n-ot com-

nonly known, which Miller makess th'at almost up to 1776 compara-

tively few colonists thought interms of complete independence.The preponderaniopinion as to the

est way to settle the differencesbetween the home country and theolonies was by the formation of a

British Common wealth of nations.One of the warmest advocates ofthis radical not ion on this side of

hr Fmta's Side

Ninety-six cents out ofevery dollar joes for War

expenditures.The other fourcents goes forGovernment

asexpensesusual."

the Atlantic Wtas Benjamin Frank-lin. It was contemptuously re-fused by the then governing groupin HnpJand, though favored bymany liberal Englishmen, conspic-uously by the great economistAdam Smith. The British finallyadopted it—150 years too late,when it became the new plan uponwhich the British Empire was re-orgfonized, after World War I.

Probably the most unpopularcolonists in pre - Revolutionarydays were the "Stamp Masters"—men assigned by Parliament tocollect taxes. One Stamp Master,a Colonel Mercer -of Virginia,journeyed from London, to Vir-ginia to find himself tanging ineffigy there. Mercer's resignationwas demanded as soon as he ar-rived. He b.egged for time, tooka look at the mob, and then an-nounced' that he would not carryout his duties as Stamp Master."Instantly," writes Miller, "he be-came a hero. Hflf was raised uponthe shoulders of the people andcarried around- town to the musicof French horns."

Women, too, played their partin originating the Revolution.They Tefiused, for instance, to buyLondon finery and fashions. WbenTea Taxes were imposed, theyalso refused to drink tea. Up tothis time, moat Americans wereconfirmed tea drinkers. One tra-veler reported that there was"hardly a farmer's wife or poorwoman wiho does not drink te* inthe morninc." After the tax wasimposed, when tea Ws found1 inthe possession of one man in Bed-ford, Massachusetts, he was giventhe alternative of either surrend-ering his tea or being turned overto the wome;i of the town foipunishment. He chose to give up*tea.

U, S. provides maternity cafefor the wives of its service men.

AnswersTo Popular QttuHotu

On

RationingAnil

Pricestruest ions nre those most frc-ently nuked this week of the

Trenton District Office of OPA.Answers are official OPA ruling*nn <>f August Ifi Renders maydrtbrnit questions for replies toTrentnn District Office, OPA,Trenton, N. J.Q. 1 accidentally detached my

Number IN shoe stamp. Sincestores will not accept looseshoe nhinrps, does this mean 1will lose it?

A. No, Apply to your local WarPrice and Rationing Board,• hewing your Book Otw>, de-tached stamp and a letter let-plaining what happened, skidthe boalrd 'will iitue you t» vpe-cial >hoe • Camp.

. Mow many pounds off sugarmay I purchase with stampNmmVr 14?

A. Fire poundi.Q. Is it still possible to apply for

Wnr Ration Book Three?A. Yet, tin dalr hai beten extend-

ed beyond th« Augmt 10 dead-line.

Q. Should "B" and "C" gasolinestam(>9 be used after a book'sexpiration date?

A. Yei. Howerer, (rcWewali Braybe [made in advance pi the dateon the book.

Q. What is the earliest renewaldate of a "B" gasoline book?

A. Four dnondi* from tint «Urtinfvalid <lat«.

Q. IMust a tavern have a lirt ofdrink prices which customersmay read?

A. Yet: i»i either a mitten, typed,or printed form of po«tod onthe-wall.

Q. As a consumer do I have aTight to a,sk for and look atfbase period menus in a restau-rant?

A, Yei. Failure to produce bateperiod mejnui by the proprietor•nould b* reported immadiate-ly to ivmir local War Price andRationmf Board.

Q. What is the ceiling price forGrade AiA round steak, bone-less, in a Group 1 & 2 store?

A. Forty.teven cents a pound.Q. What is the ceiling price for

Grade AIA Rump Roast, bone-less, in a Group 1 & 2 store?

A. Forty-t*TWn cents a pound.

1910 AWARDSThe Army-Navy "E" for excel-

lence in war production has beenawarded to 1,190 plants, accord-ing1 to a joint War and Navy an-nouncement. Aiwards went to 1,«-042 plants making products forthe'Army and 550 for the Navy.It is estimated that less than twoand one-half per cent of eligibleplants have received the awards todiate, which indicates the stringenteligibility requirements.

INVASION FLEETIt is now revealed that 3,266

surface craft of all types, fromIttttleehips to motor boats, tookpart in the Allied invasion otSicily. The initial force included\W,m Allied' troops, 14,000 ve-hicles, 600 tanks and 1,300 guns,

\3uitA Two-Piecer

NOWADAYSYOU FIX

ITYOURSELF

1

ONCE UPON A TIME you called us wHen a fuse blew out andwe came right over.

It's another story now. Lack of manpower and the need tosave rubber and gasoline prevent our coming to your assistance.

Replacing a fuse is as easy as cnahging a light bulb. Justfollow these steps, (1) Open,main ^witcH to shut off electricity.*1(2)'-Open fuse box. (3) ileplac^ fuse, [(4); Close fuse box.

Close switch to restore' electricity/ J&

\ • •>PVBHe! v . " • • . : • - ; •

BUY UNITED STATES WAR SAVINGS BONDS AND JTAMP5 •

Pattern B24A may be orderedonly in minei' and women't•iiet 14, 16, 18, 20; 32, 34, 36,38, 40, 42. Sixe 16 requires3 % jrardi 39-inch fabric and THyard contrait.

Send SIXTEEN CENTS in coinsfor (hit Marian Martin pattern.Write plainly SIZE, NAME,ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER.Jmt TEN CENTS more for theMartian Martin Summer Pat-tern Book. Baiic pattern for 3bafi printed right In be1 '1

Send order* to Newspaper Pat-tern Department, 232 We it18th Street, New York, 11, N.

Christian ScienceFh-st Church of Christ, Scien-

tist, Scwrcn, is a branch of theMother Church, The Firat Ohurthif ("hrist, Scientist, in BoKton,

M:IR». Siindny services, 11 A. M.,fiutwtay School, »:."«) A. M. Wed-nesday Testimonial meeting, 8 P,M. Thursday, reading room, Z to•1 P. M.

"Mind" is the Lesaon-Sermonsubject for iSundny, Aujrutt 22,in all Christian Science Churcho*and Socii'tios throughout theworld.

(Joldvn Text is: "Great inour Ijinl anil of (ceat power: HlBunilrrslHiuliiift is Infinite" (P«almsM7:r,).

Amnnp the Ijesson^Scrmon ciU-liixis is the following from theliiiiln: "Kcar ye not, neither beafraid: have not I toM thee fromthat time, :\nt\ have declared it?J-I1 ;irc oven my witntM. In there:i (iml brsidr me' yea, there is :io

oil: I km>w not any" (Isaiah 44;

-The Ijewnn-Sornion H1»O in-

the folUrwirifr p»n*nK«it fromChristian Science textbook,

"Science and Health with Key totho Scriptures" by M«ry BaltnrKiliiy: "God, the divine Principlenl man, and man in God's likenessin i' iiiRC-parable, harmonious andi tcrnal." "God and man arc nottho sinii', but in the oruYr of di-vine fi«-uwe, God and m»n coexistmid are eternal. God in the parentMind, nnd man is God's spiritual

r iv- 336).

Cool Print

WARBooby Trap Def«for

In HIP snow, In th* s,-,n,|hfiirlies, on the roads, in u,,,everywhere the Axis so],] ,"booby traps," to slow n,,,ment of oncoming ngtilin,.the United Nations. Tin- ,,,HUM the snme work on !,,mine sweeper doek at SP i

INVASIONElmer Davis, head of th<> OWI,

letuminx from a thrpe-wp^k tripto Great Britain and North Africa,says that the. European war canend only after the German armieshave been defeated on land.Heavy bombings affect Germanproduction and morale, but, in hisopinion, the Reich cannot be con-quered1 solely from the air.

BRITISH TO PAYThe StaW Department announ-

ces that the British Governmentwill compensate owners of "pri-vate property involved in the es-tablishment of United States basesmi sites required from Great Brit-ain in !he destroyera-for^bases ex-change of September, l!>40. Un-der the original agreement, theI'nited States was, required tocompensate the owners.

S N O W C r y i t a l i . . . f o r c o o l n e non a lummci print in noveltyrayon. Thii dreii ii the perfectwaihable for a buiy lummer, Ina hand wathable rayon fabric, itopeni up flat for eaiy ironing.Before waihinf rayom, checklabel* to make iure they've pan-ed wathabilitjr teiU—and fol-low the washing inttructioniprinted on the labels, A help-ful free leaflet "How to Carefor Rayon Fabrict" majr be ob-tained by icndinr a stamped,••If-addreited enrelope to theWomen't Department of lhi»newspaper,

Like buyin'i; War nm1ier operatinK the Oiicver know ju.it linw

'A

t l ' . - l M , ,

Kivc alHod In the succc. ,/campaign, but he ktmwiccessqry and mustplished. If mure Amniiome front will come tithe success of our Watpuignt will be assured

C/.5. Ttt.,,

I I I . •

lie ;,ilMll-:re.ili.-Itllllll

MAN, 71, WALKS FIVl Mil |Los Angeles. — AlUmu,^

71 yearaold, the recent 1>,Id'rin't keep Monroe MHI!fmm his job. He walknl :,from h » homo to the mru,,,.fice where he had been sumfor jury duty.

GAME SOCIALGame \ 1 , Jack Pot—$25 each week

Every Thursday EveningAT

8:00 P.M.AT

St. Andrew's Church HallAVENEL ST., AVENEL, N. J.

Here's How You Can. Helpif

fc

You »«y you want to help, yet have you ever gone arty further? Have you everdonethethingthat almoat nil of u» can dot have you ever been a blood donor? The proceu U umple, Th«reii no pain, very little effort, yet it take* very little aonietimet to aave a We. . , ' • / •

A PINT OF YOUR BLOOD CAN SAVE THE LIFE OF A WOUNDED SOLDIER OR SAILOR

Phone Wood. 8-2225

THIS ADV. SPONSORED BY • v -

P 1 E W S FRENCH ICE CREAM an4SPRING MEADOW ICE CREAM iii

A PRODUCT OF

•CliOVER. GREEN D A I l i l S