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No. 28

SHE ITIIS WAY

,11 I, V .

. ih«t Timmj Dano-,,,8hlin a » d S t « « i « n -,, ,he Solomon* wfc»>r«,,, righting . /. v *»d InIBil letter. wWeh «mt«|.n,t Offic* v . . won-,t,i, new »irant«n«nl,,„ in kwp th« fcome

A ,),,. fighter* on fortlgnr touch .'« «

I , . K (IM'THB SERVICE:i,,,„„. for a sliorTISave

,,. i irod from Newport. ,,.„„ to a spot In Mary-. '•;,,rtt(.jiMt Mike Palin-

.,, sergeant Leo Hart,. : ;, while before he

, must Artillery, Bat-i ,„: Miles, Del.; Steve• i... ;imo spot, only he

;l, Buttery A; John„ join hig brothers

, , Vincent, already in\lnkcy Gernak leav-

i iv nftor a five day

amp Gordon, Ga.;ll.iL'-;m now at Pearl

i., i i,.v Hohanek, Const!n,nr from Norfolk

i ,!nl. busy eating hotMil,' Kumunicky; John

-],, i week-ender here,i ,,,t liclvoir, Va.;Stan-\\ HIT Szulimowski andi , tiHlyinp at the Air•,, ,,i School in Atlantic

W Kiihian at Ports:.: i:;. word to his siBter

(.i ; for three daysr ( l lp. Charles Wojt-••..•.. <!ny leave from

,, • ill. and spending it,! ;,,nl Adcle Wojcik,,il was very* happy;

i: I!.I I home briefly from,!,„• 'Butch'/ Ondrejc-,.i: h'ave from Coast

•,i Norfolk, Va., and;.h lidde fluttering of

•, ,i i. iis he appeared inilniiKo Farago wsh-

,,. :,:• ;0iip after just one,,:;:.-; word from Camp

i Imt Joseph . Dzler-\\.,i mi Street and An-,; r r.iR Lowell Street!;, ,i ;it its Medical Re-

('.•liter, f « ~.:. Hill. i •,. South Carolina, en

! •u'itrn duty ihortly;!••,!•! ilreenwald in the

.it c,unp Wheeler, Ga.

Hi

MittitchWins By

-1 Ratio

; • : :

fine dollection' covers" owned by

he has five "Firstl-li^ht" envelopes toiiiiiitu, which werei Andes by the (•-• DiKilittle of Tokyo

the filer gainingon this particularhi- made it with

.'ast; Pat Pattersonl;i>ty," lovely Irishin the Army Dogs

I i>r duties at homei ihf hands of a

i namt-d Daisy; John. <lnily for his call

(iuard; the deeo-•.'•• cuke cooked up by

; with his own two••ok hook; Joe "Puf-MIIIIK it tough to get

i (oast Guard andr the Army; Henry.it Miami Beach

I- i-hunce to be anu.Siur, Hank beinguiii;K shutter bugsv.i since the rage

liiinuy Burke, onei •u'.-st younjrsters

up around here?1 in- Army now arid• • this week fromliw, wbera he"»

" ui aviation mec<• he hustles there•••• at home there'llilk of slack-in the

:. Misj Helen Heil'i• lanaes at % High••!>• to Carttret men':•• She already ba»

i ID m the PreM, butMiiubody who'd lllw

1 aiteret whote n«meII our list ihe'U beliave it. Bead, the

t ioHB to-, tile Rtfh

on your guard to

2Turk And Haury AlsoVictor* By HeavyOdds In Record Vote

CARTBRET^What is believedto be the largest vote ever casthere at a primary election, andone that exceeded the turnout atthe last school election by over800 votes, swspt Mayor Jooej* W.Mittuch and his running matesinto the Republican nominationsthey sought for the coming Gen«eral Election in November. Theelection, held Tuesday, broughtout 1.4IW voters, 1,287 of themdeclared Republicans, 106 Demo-crats. There was no contest inthe ranks of the latter party, in-terest centering on the G.O.P.struggle in which the Mayor andformer Councilman Clifford L.Cutter opposed each other for thesecond time.

Last Pall when the Mayor re-fused Mr. Cutter his support forrenomination, Mr. Cutter ran in-dependently and lost. This yearMr. Cutter, Adam Ginda andFrank Siekierka secured the nom-inations for the posts of Mayorand two Borough Councilmenfrom one faction of the Repuhli-can Club, whereupon others placedon the ticket the names of theMayor, the incumhent, FrankHaury, and Health CommissionerJohn A. Turk. Mr. Turk and Mr.Hnury defeated Messrs. Gindaand Siekierka by about, t.ho ni»metwo-to-one ratio that Mr. Mittuchsecured over Mr. Cutter.

Campaign bitterThe election climaxed one of

the bitterest campaigns seen here,where politics are notably titter,and brought out personal and or-ganization enmities. Leaders for-merly staunch Mittuch supporters,appointees of the Mayor andCouncil, and former close friendsof the Mayor lined up with Mr.Cutter, hut the struggle proveduseless, the result showing thatrtuny ptnona normally uncon-cerned Wttfr declaring tllMli**!*!*

(Continued on I'at/c 3)

35th AnniversaryIs Marked At Party

CA'RTF.RET — The thirty-fifthanniversary of the marriage ofMr. and Mrs. Gus Edwards wascelebrated Sunday night at a sur-prise party in their home in Persh-ing Avenue which was arrangedby Mrs. Haakon Olsen and Un.Harold Edwards. There was musicduring the evening and supper winserved.

The glints attending were: Mi'and Mrs. Thomas Tobiason, Mr.and Mrs. Neils RcinarUen, Mr.and Mrs. Gus Reinartsen, Mr. andMrs. Arthur Johnson, Mrs. Thor-sen and daughter, Dorothy, Mrs.Ole 01' en, Mr. and Mrs. Gus Curl-son Mr. and Mrs. Karl Grohman,Mr. and Mrs. Edwards and HaroldEdwards, Jr.

- . • . ' , - " ' . ' ^ ;

CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1942

EXTRA!PRICE THREE

Results By Districts Of Record Primary Vote

It6oa

For Total 1U. S. Cill Robb Wilton 22* 13Senator Albart W. Htwkct 12» t l

Geer|« O. Pull.n » 2J«M»h A. Bower 44 3G«or». Bhhl 26 2Frank W. Klelb 2* 1 4

Congr«it Cha.. A. Eaton 3»1 31 44St. Senator fnd Burki 308 22 90C « I H » I Ja«k W.IM 3B3 S6 41

Aii .mbly Michael Raiko 419 ST 4 f

John J. Morrlton 382 2T 3 *Surtof.te Henry A. 9tult> 334 24 >5Coroner R«b«rt P, Maton 331 25 93Freeholder. Erne.t W. Nier 292 19 32

Elmer t Ba«kman 294 22 30Mayor Jdiepli W. Mittuch §3K *2~ ' t l

Clifford L. Cutter 419 29 27Council Frank Haurj 7*9 37 »9

J*hn K, Turk 777 3« ««Adam Ginaa Sr. 422 31 31Frank SUki*rka 414 23 34

9 410 2«• »2 42 4« 8

847IB

3•1

2TU

44 89H M

t\ 7114 «IB. 48u

u

5744 SB

It 40 47M 46 4«is ar T3i88 41 7588 261 12483 202 19953 44 4789 48 66

6 738 2816 14

2 312 46 I5 4

89 4881 3360 3671 8989 3682 3588 3248 3181 29w; tt52 8881 8277 . 8 181 6253 87

a20104S10

2816»3630n2B2221W3632344841

92416471»

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To Be Honored

BAZAAR DATE SETOAiRTBRET — Thursday ni«ht,

NoveirrtH-r 12, has been set for theannual btriaur of the Friendly As-sociation of St. Mark's EpiscopalChurch. This will be held in theparish hall and the sale of hand-made articles will be featured.Plans were started at a meetingthis week in the home of Mrs. Ar-thur Graeme in Heuld Street. Thenent meeting us_to he held October13 in Rahway at the home of Mre.Peter Wilbur.

The committee in charge of the6awinr consists of Mrs. Fred StimmStillman, Mrs. John Reid, Mrs.Wilbur, Mrs. Walter Vonah, Hrs.A. C. Hundomann, Mm. LouisDate and Mrs. Graeme.

Rt, Rev. W. J. Gardner

St. Mark's ParishWill Honor Bishop

Yom Kippar, Occurring MondayHoliest Day Of Year For Jewry

Early Morning BlazeRazes Main BuildingAt Warner Chemical

On The Job

the Rpiscopal Diocese of New Jer-sey, will conduct the vespers ser-vice at H o'clock Sunday afternoonin St. Mark's Church. This willbe sung by the church choir underthe direction of Mrs. Fred Still-man and Miss Ruekriegel will beth<' soloist. The lesson is to beread by Herbert Denton of theGeneral Theological Seminary andVcn. Arch Deacon Grtbbon willoffer special prayers. The Bishopwill preach the sermon and pro-nounce benediction.

Immediately after thn serviceBishop (iardner will be honoredat si dinner in the parish hull forwhich Mrs. Clarence P. Perkinsiind women members of the i-hurcliare in charge. Harry Kapji,church warden, will be master ofceremonies, with prominent parts

taken by other members ofthe veatry, Edward T. Falconer,Fred Ruckriegel, Ivan Miller andCharles Crane.

The morning service in thechurch will be at 8 o'clock, con-sisting of Holy Communion byRev. Kenneth MacDonald, Ph. D.,prient in charge. The usual (f:SOservice will be omitted.

Prom Carteret Bishop Gardnerwill go to St. John's Church inSewaren to a celebration of thatchurch's fiftieth anniversary.

CART.BRBT—Sunday night ush-n in the holiest day of the Jewish

year, Yom Kippur, which lastirum sunset until sunoet Monday,

The arrival of Yom Kippur marksthe, eve of the tenth day of themonth of Tishri hi the Jewish cal-endar, and is a day of atonementand complete fasting when the in-dividual Jew seeks atonement forthr wrongs he hnn committedagainst God and man. The day isievoted entirely to prayer andmeditation in the synagogue. Im-pressive features of this serviceare the memorial for the dead inthe afternoon and the blowing ofthe shofar, or ram's horn, at theconclusion of the rites.

Starting the service Sundaynight will he the Kol Nedreiprayer, widely known because ofits traditional melody. It con-cludes with a service called thecloning of the gates, recalling theclosing of the Temple gates at Je-rusalem and symbolizing the clos-ing of the great day oJ prayer.

The keynote of Yom Kuppur isthe divine assurance that prayer,penitence and righteous action canatone tar guilt, this concept fol

g the inherent demoertey i|tJudaism which considers all matt;qual before their Maker, Eachndividual prays for himself and

his redemption. The festival isobserved for one day, traditionsaying that on Rosh Hashana everyndividual passes in judgment be-

fore the Lord, and that on the Dayof Atonement hia fate is sealed,•ignifying that the genuineness of

bis penitence and atonement deter-mine his path through life.

Local SeryicviServices in the Brotherhood of

Israel Synagogue here have beenarranged by Rabbi Morris J. Roth-man, who will preach all his ser-

FAREWELL STAGEDCARTERET—The home of Mr.

and Mrs. John A. Kozuako in Sv-waren was the* tcene Saturdaynight of a surprise farewell partyfor Fiank Dolinich, who hag beenaccepted for the Naval Air Corpsand awaits call to duty. He waspresented a wrist watch and othergifts.

LEGION LADIES MEETOARTERET—Mrs. Clifford L.

Cutter, Mrs. William Cole, Mrs.Harold Fjdwards, Mrs. A. C. Hun-demann, Mrs. J. G. Nevil!, Mrs.Thomas Jakeway, Mrs. TheodorePfennig, Mrs. William D. Casey,Miss Jane Cook and Mrs. HarryGleckner are in charge of arrange-ments for the meeting of the coun-ty unit ot the American LegionAuxiliary, scheduled to be heldhere next week. Plans were un-dertaken Wednesday night at ameeting in the Borough Hall. Of-ficers will be installed for the coun-ty unit and also for the local or-ganization.

SCOUTMASTER ILLCARTERET—William Zachik,

in English. Cantor Jacob;Jolrtstonf will officiate at the serv-ices. These have been scheduledas follows:

Saturday, Sept. 19th—^Sabbathof Ropentancc. The Rabbi willpreach a special sermon on, "Re-pentance in Thought and Prac-icc."

Sunday Evening at 6J80—Min-na Services. 7:00 P. M.—The

Kol Nidrei Service. The Rabbi willpreach on "Atonement Throughself-sacrifice and Self-denial."

Monday Morning, 8 A. M.—•Morning Prayers of the AtonementService; 11 A. M.,—MemorialPrayers. The Rabbi will preachon "Memorial prayers for thedead or living?"; 5:30 P. M.—TheNcilah Service. The Rabbi willpreach on "Repentance before theclosing of the Heavenly Gates."

The Rabbi's new telephone num-ber is Oarteret 8j59&5. He can bereached in the Synagogue studydaily between 4-7 P. M.

Casey Home SceneOf Party For WAAC

CARTERET—The home of Mrs.William D. Casey in WashingtonAvenue was the scene Saturdaynight of a surprise pm-Ly in honorof Mrs. James McCabf, the formerMiss Ann Kutcher, of the highschool faculty. Mrs, McCabe leave*next week as a member Of the W.A. A. C.'s. The party was ar-anged by Mr. and Mrs. William}asey and Mrs. Gertrude Smith

and the guest of honor was presented a purse, after which a buf-fet supper was served.

Those present were: JosephBurke, Miss Stephanie Dud a. MissMary Venezia, Mrs. George Matey,Mrs. Donald Martin, Miss Hazelnalton, Miss Alice Bjork, PrivateJohn Connolly and Mr. and Mrs.Amos Stratton of Perth Amboy,Charles Williams, Mrs. John Glea-son, Miss Molly McCarthy, Mr. tttul(Mrs. Frank DuBush of South Am-boy, Mrs. Edward Casey, Mrs. An-drew Desmond, Jnmes McCabc ofWoodbridge, Mrs. C. Beck, Mr. andMrs. Ira Me(M>i!, of Sewaren, Mr3.James Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. Rich-ard Connolly, Mr. and Mrs. Fridt-joi Aagaurd of Ruhway, Miss Mary1'Hlosa of Linden, Miss Louinu Me•Cue of Shrewsbury.

Miss Marie Hamm, Mrs. StephenMcDonnell of Port Reading, Mrs,Otto Staubach, Miss Marion Kelly,the Misses Agnese and Olive Guiu!-erson, Miss Helen Heil, Mrs. Louis

OARTERET—"The spread of infantile paralysis «ue*trtaghsut thf nUte mukes it imperative that doctor*, publichealth authorities and parents use alt available facilities to pre-vent polio fatalities and deformities," it was asserted today byJoseph V. FlUGerald, state director of the National Foundationfor Infantile Paralynta in New Jersey. Approximately 70 cateshave b « n reported in thin State, with six fatalities.

FlUGerald pointed out that the county chapters of theNational Foundation stand ready "at any time to providetraintd doctors, hoapltalization, convalescent homes, 'SisterKenny' treatments, splints, iron lungs, and any other weaponneeded in the fight against the dreaded polio germ. He saidthat only a small force of field workers are now available togive the "Sinter Kenny" method but that this number Is steadilygrowing.

He stated that each year the Committee for the Celebrationof the President'* Blrthjlay collects funds for the war on thedisease, half of these funds remaining -with the county chapterwhile the remainder goes to the National Foundation, for re-search. Since 1939, New Jersey has attained a perfect record

(Continued on Page 3)

Mark 75th BirthdayAt Party OnSunday

OAKITBRiET—Children of Mrs.August Roesman honored her Sun-day at a surprise party to cele-brate her Revenly-flfUi birthdaj.The narty took place at her home,633 Roosevelt Avenue, and a tur-key dinner was served. Mrs, Ross-man is a member of the LadyDruids and a charter member ofthe Altar and Roaary Society ofSt. Joseph's Church.

The guests were: Mrs. FrankBorn, Mra. John Ruegg, Mr. andMrs. Gottlieb Schuck, Mrs. ReginaAlbnn, Mrs. Elizabeth Kathe, MissCatherine Rossman, Mr. and Mrs.Henry Roftsman and daughter,Dorothy, Mr. and Mrs. WilliamRossman, Mr. and Mrs. AndrewRossman and children, Alice andRobert, Mi. a n * Jim. J«hn Sole-win, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Maroncy,of Carteret; Mr. and Mrs. EdwardScully, of Rahway, and John Quinnof Linden.

Clarence Schwartz AndFormer Resident Engaged

CARTERET — Mr. . and Mrs.Philip Krinzman, of 321 Westfleld

Frank YarnutoskiWeds Rahway Girl

CARTERET—The marriage ofMiss Florence Hilton, daughter ofMrs. William Milton and the lntcMr. Hilton of 649 Grant Avenue,Ruhway, In Frank Yiunutoski,son of Mr, and Mrs, Anthony Yar-nutoski of 2G Porshing Avenue,this borough, took place Saturdaynfternoon. The ceremony wanperformed in St, Mary's Church,Railway, by Rev. Cornelius Kaneand was followed by a receptionIn the Holy Family School Hall,Carteret for 100 guests,

The bride wore a gown of ivoryslipper satin, made princess style,and trimmed in pearls. Her tulleveil was draped from a tiara toform the train, and she carriedwhite roies and baby's breath.Miss Doris Lance of Woodbridge,the on!y attendant, wore romanceblue embroidered taffeta, alsomade princess style. She wore ablue shoulder length veil hungfrom an ornament of roses, andcarried pink rosen. Adam Yar-nutoski, brother of the bridegroomacted as best man.

Mrs. Hilton, mother of the bride

No CatniltinImmediately; WiJob Seen d u eCARTERET— Fire

today laid in ashes the „.building of one of the tint!States government's im|ant war plants—the W»Chemical Company here,casualties were immediareported.

The blaze, it is beliestarted when a tankwas being weldedoverheated. T h e flasrJread quickly because:the nature of the prodwhich is mixed in the buling, and before help cobe summoned, thebrick building was anno bellowing smoke wcould be seen, even indull morning, for a longtance. A crowd qulcgathered but was diapebehind the fire lines bypolice department under tidirection of Chief HenryHarrington.

Onlywan made

brief statem«»fc1

by w. R. mm

Avenue, Elizabeth, formerly of jCarteret, have announced the en-gagement of their daughter, Misa

|*targaret Krinzman, to Staff Sergt.Clarence M. Schwartz, U. S. Army,son of Mr. arid Mrs. SamuelSchwartz, of Carteret Avenniie,Carteret.

Miss Krinzman and her fatheran- both graduate* of Cart.mtHigh School. Miss Krinzman at-tended Drake's Businesa College.Sergeant Schwartz received his de-gree from New York Universityin 1940. The brlde.etect is em-ployed by Eastern Aircraft ofGeneral Motors Corporation, Lin-den. Sergeant Schwartz is at theArmored Force School, Fort Knox,"• Before his Induction he was alocal aports writer and was em-ployed in the office of the MexicanPetroleum Corporation.

wore brown crepe, with wintergreen accessories and a corsage oflilies. IV rs Yarnutoski, mother ofthe bridegroom, was dressed in>]blue crepe, with a corsage ofgardenias, • •

After a short trip the couplewill make their home with themother of the bride. For travel-ing MTB. Yarnutoski wore a greenensemble with brown accessories,and a corsage of lilies.

brook, resident managerthe plant. He said:

"1 his plant is engaged UPdefense work. We have noidea of the extent of tjiedamage hut it will be h*avy.All operations will not bffsuspended. Some will be dbleto continue. The fire startW'between 5:30 and 5:45 in1*^oil-fired rotary dryer."

A hurry call to helpquickly sent to nearby ..,„nicipalities and five responded.

Ironically, W o>o dbriwhith had been (Jdrta*.,by some uhilclish newspajwriter as a "little dot otlvmap between Carteret "iPerth Amboy," was the ito arrive and poured {gallons a minute intof

bjazing building, and •given credit by the cret,,-*a Coast Guard fire boOT Ebrpreventing the flamesfiring a huge tank of <Lcals. This was the maijectiye of all the comp.

IS IT YOURSCARTERET—Mrs. Loretto j£

Nevill, borough librarian, is anxi-ous to locate the owner of a tin-type photograph which was foundand is in her possession. She naysof the picture, "Sh« is very sweet,has a deep dimple, and we thinkit a shame to have the owner loseit."

Downs, Mrs. Arthur Grohman,of Fitch street, assistant scout- """""> •-'••• --.- ,,""muter of Troop 88, Boy ScouU**™" J- J" Do¥;1111*' " r s ' S a « e r

of America, is recovering in the ' B o m i e 1 1 ' M l " A n n O'bney,.M».Perth Amboy. General Hospitalfrom an operation for appendi-citis and his first and secondclasses in first aid work in thetroop will be suspended until hiareturn.

John Connolly, 'Mrs. Edwar<!Smith and (Mrs. Tillie Hermann ofCarteret.

An Editorial

We hope sincerely that the bitternesswhich was on the tongues of so many,previously, ended with the closing of theprimary election polls Tuesday.

Mayor Mittuch and his ticket were thevictors on the Republican side after a cam-paign into which was Injected abuse undrecrimination. This may be democracyat work, but we hate to admit Jt particular-ly at a. time when the very best thinking,the moat astute analysis and the most pro-,

must, if our nation as we knowt th blms

9 wpecta of th« "rf—*--

with

this.war. Is it to be held up at home as aboiling cauldron of hate, Qf irresponsibleaccusations an^ of disunity? If it is, thenour youths, are dying in-vain dn the battle-ftelds <# the world. . ' •*

We think that both the Republican andDemocratic parties should gjve pause.be-fore, they start their general election cam-paign #> as, to assure our defenders thattheira is a government in which free men

issues freely but in which therefor the kind of temper which

V primary o«mpaltfn, Per-do not c6unt at this or any othe,r

the »eharapter of democracy jjft

IS OFFICER CANDIDATECARTERET—John J. Bradley,

son of Patrolman and Mra. Mich-ael Bradley, of 119 Longfellowstreet has completed his coursein navigation at the Army AirForce Pre-Flight School at Mon-roe, La., and will ent^r. OfficerCandidate School. He attendedCarteret High School and Middle-Sex Junior College in Perth Am-boy and was employed in the plantof the U., S. Metals Refining Co,

BIRTHDAY CELEBRATEDCABiTBRET — Mr. and Mrs.

Harold lEdwards entertained atthetr h<>me in Lowell Street, Sun-day to celebrate the sixteenthWrttvday of their son, Harold Ed-,w«rd», Jr., who was presented ammfoer of gift". The «ue»Uattheparty were Miss Esther Menril!,Mlai Mmvtret Uaker, Emil Schaaf,Mr. MM! Mra. Karl Grohmann »ndMJ*> Mtrion Grohmann.

DAUGHTER BORN

Proclamation and Orderof Board of Health

WHEREAS, th«r« h u been reported to the Board of Healthtwo tporadie eaict of Infantile Paralyii* within the Boroughlimit*;

AND WHEREA9, the Board of Health of the Boroufh ofCirteret ii deiiroui of doing alt within it* power to prerentany further »pr«td of the ailment amongit the reiidenU of thecommunity |

AND WHEREAS, the adoption and practice *i certainpersonal habiU by any child or adult will greatly aid in pre-venting the tpread of tfcia dittaio;

NOW, THERBFORE, the Board of Health of the Boroughof Carteret doit order th* following rules, regulation* and per-sonal habits be adopted and observed by each and all of theretiduntt of the l i

1. Keep away from the mouth, thing* which do not belongthere. Theftpg«r« *nd thumbs particularly, and also pencilsshould be kept awajr from the mouth.

2. AroM the u«e of a common drinking cup and com*mon towel. ; '

a.

as they arrived, bedliialthere was no hope of s*Vihgthe structure.

No explosion, except teln-

I

p , pt ftttnor ones which came When "Itrelatively small quantitlfce ofchemical mixtures Weftt h d ff h li tytouched off when licked.\fthe flames, was heard. Tljoaewho were in the buildinijwere able to escape.

In addition tobridge, other communitieswhich sent aid were MetWl - ,en, Rahway, Port Readlftg,Iselin, plus the U. S. ComGuard fire boat which i$ »t*-<tioned at Staten Island.

Action Taken /To Halt'

Wash to* ktndt carefully be fere eating.

A*«lf iwafiptng bits of food or eandy.

D / I h ' t b l8. Don/Ir l s* Mother person'* toy*, belongingutensils or W i l l s

• i . . * • * " .

6. Trr %%M

eating

who it ..nettling or coughing,

eonfeatad areas »r groups.

w M Y«r«M*U. Health Officer, «»y con-or U«ld*«t». which yau belU»» may b*

) ^ l l dl '

mfry nlfht inwas

h

CAKTKKET—As thisnity diHrovered its first twoof infuntilc paralysis in over MV**en yeuiit, the quick steps iniU**"'tuted to prevent any pokiibl*spread uf the disease brought im-int'diate ami high pruiae from ttatohealth authorities. Dr. Albwt v

HuHciibeig, health officer for Mid«'''idli'ssi'x, Union and Somerset <ties, rt'cummended eapecialljr »members of the local Boafd 0Health the ineusures inatitu^wt fei*Sanitary Inspector Michael ti%'cheski, and said the co-op«

given state regulations by ^enforcement was 100 per cent ^'/

The two Carter victims ofliomylitia are John Lander, tWty-one month old son of Mr,Mrs,,Stephen Langar, of 91 yten Street, and. Joseph ModV«eeven, son of Mr. and Mrs.Madvets of 60 Charles Street ilbaby became ill laat Friday Ion Monday, Dr. H. P.Perth Amboy diagnosed ita iticm ft« infantile paralysis.Me4v«t*'wy was strickwi dUthe week-end and hispronounced polio yesterday |jgft|Louis S. Downs. Both weeu jto the Jersey CjtyCenter by the Carter«t;Squad ambulance and wr« '

New B**h At LibraryBy Lor.tto M.

um ~ LIVING w-j by Francis Median, now

i - W »h«W«f( is » rich and d«-ol book on literature fin

..jKript so delightfully comMnliterary charm and practical

la an experiemw iarr In

llr.1*1 and moral peace.•Bit ftrengtheninft, to bo obtainedllrotifth reading, Of course byrtadinft h meant lift g\nnc\nt <wttfct tifhter nm|flw.h»<>ii or amimtn*

W with the comic strips, but

with thp mntureltirtiara«4-<>r* and (he mont originalminds of the human race as era-bodied in honks,

LIVING UKiTAIRS—the title hfitfurntivo—in nn intcllijrent read-«r> Rimln throogh thin higherworld <rf literature. Mr, MeelMntwtt'H le>ttor« with life, am) l i f t•with U>ttm. He Contends tTiat fhosurest, way to enrich one's dailyexperience it to have a thetf of th.*right book* and to spend W Mtrue—if only minute* d«fly—i»

wnhpony. WWh iHnrt aim?Not merely for practical nelf-im-

RI'MMARV OF AUDIT

T h e fniUtwlntt in I he niinimnTy or thfi Audit of th f County ofMX of the rerurrt iiml flnnnrrm Cor the year 1341,

T h e nrrxlnal AintM Imvlng (iron riled with th* n * r k of the Hoardof Chosen Fnwl in l i lrm .if I lie County of Middle"?*.

BALANCE SHEETS—CURRENT ACCOUNTIncreniw or

• A « m n TWor to .Inn. 1, l t d free. 31,1941 D«erea«e«

J640 TUXCH l:<,plviil.lf X-l l H.ffliTtS ~ ;Htveltua Aicmints lt^Hvu-ljlf .Al>12 Att,ll8.5<l ]QT,2Ct,4» 41,678.1*Other Amount* I See elvnble A-13 njYli.VS 3.389.91 114.S3Stoat li*vi>m™..nli< A-14 , 1,746.00 1,746.00Dehrred Balami- New lirurm-

Wick Trout Co A-16 1,048.76 0 1,048.76*BUlnWMicv itcvriuifN A-l* 22,754.92 28,400.00 r>,(4ri.0tC«»h t)«flrlt A- I 7,««C.0S 7,«tR,0J

Totnln ... % (44,419.IK I :i:lO,819,«H I 21.1,«59.2»"

u«Wtlll<%, artl l f

Tat Antlctpntlnn Note" A-36 I 100,000.00 0 | 200,OO0.e»»B»1ur Ttti ROIHIH A-27 1,100.00 1,060.00 40.00*PrlBr Tpuri Approiirhitlon

HaMrvei) A-17 197,611.31 378.91 197,40«.ifl*1941 Approp* Illtlnn JtpHfrves A- 4 1 H6,0PS,9r, lXS.a9X.9ri

Totuli - LlahlllllM f J9K.78121 f 181,333.96 I ^10,449.25*

1940 Vaxn Heritable * - l l f 14,4».»8 ( 0 | ]4,4»9.»R*Rtrenut Accounts RprelvHhle...A-tS <n,M8.t0 107.If7.49 • 41,SJK,»BOther AnnunlH lUnTlviiLln A-21 3.275JB 3,389.01 U4.S3HtMk Invtutirimti, A-M 1,741.00 1,746.00Deferred nulanre* New Brinn-

t(h(* TniHt Cu A-JJ 1.O4H.76 1,048.75'

Totsla - Heservei .....„.: * 86.258.S! I 112,403.40 I 2«,144.88

D u m l n :Suifclun Hevonue Non-Ca»h A- 6 I 22,7S4.9i | S0.082.C3 | 7,327.618ut»lu» Jlevc-nue • (.'anil A 7 36,682.53 0 36,682.63*

- Huriilin I 59,487.411 I 30,082.63 I 29,364.92*

I 644,i79.1« I 330,819.98 I 213,659.29*

RALANCB WEBTO - TRUST ACCOUNTTnrri>n»a or

. « _ . . Refw to Jaa. 1,1(41 TVtc, 31,1941 Pe<:reaso*Cftlh »• I f 176,0(8.79 I 300,18* 3K | 170,»«0.41*Solvpo) B<un«K Due l''rom State

: Of « « r J«r»ey S- « 11,»»J,75 0 11,902.76*D«ferr»a Balance - Now Bruln-

Wlcfc fruit Co B- I !4S.7« 0 248.78*8toefc(i*^a<tM»rit - New Brunn-

WJok 7Jr|Mt Co. .. B- 7 Mtl.00 «,061.W>Boroifth in«J Townnhlp state AM

B«o*lvab)e - Rornlii No Cfranfe 118.19 115.19

TotalB I 39446148 i 211,354.57 %

O«di(Mit«d ApproprlaLInn a r cMotor.Tel^lrle Fined - UoaiU B- 8 fState Dirt no»a fund .«- 8

Pennlon l^indn B- »Due to VunlclpnlUlea:Btate School Fiiniln B-10Becond Cluiit Ibtllroad Ta^ B^ll

Bxeesn DedlcBted Hevenuo:Anticipated - Molor Vehicli

P l ^ : B i t

2,5110.62r.K.1177.44

it.ttf.n

231.79 | 2,.12S.83BT,12».ai*

452.86

T,SS6.»1

rvl

lUserv.s (or Uaali Iludl Acet. So Change •H^HirVe fqr Interest und PJvl-

'ftsli Hal! Aifcounf, JB1-!!is Truirts , B - i l 'Deferred Bulnnoe

TvuM Co, ...iB-llInvi'Dlmont. ' '

tint CD ...No Changefat Borough and Town->t« Aid Receivable •

NQ ChangeJrpliis B-l«

1 7 0 , 8 m s 125,881.83*0 7,3»S.61»

16.0J7.7S 13,842.60...

1,(69.24IS».0O

248.76

6,051.00

l l f i . l*4.241.91

1,194.64 125T4O60.91 4p.»l

0

0,051,00

1U.19490.67

24S.76*

3,751.24"

HAJ..1WCK BHJ0EJT8

.... t 394,366.49 % 211,354,57 I 183,011.92*

CAPITAL ACCOUNTIncrease or

j*n. 1,1»41 Dse.31,1»41 _ _.' 84,301,08 | ^9,379.21 f ^,928-85*

94,748,92

36»,OUO,00

liefer tocash';.:.,;.;. a. sIinjJTdy&motitn Authorliei] and

Unc*dipJ*t«d C- 7Estimated Proceeds of Bomle and

BonS AiiUelimthin ftoles Au- rth4rla»4 But Mot imued C-8

Survlut Hcvcnus, 1SJ7 , No Ohange B9,693.76UnoeVijWetetJ Conttaota C- t 2«,5«1.»1AmeWitlH Blnklug Fund (MO liMjm.it

• DeftrrM •Chars»p to Future- Boiuled C-U 5,«80,»27.7B 5,»43,«47.8»

toTtf-JSm'"- «-W I 227,500.00 5 21»,600.»0 ( 13.000.ftO*Serial jfenfla C-JB 6(*l,(l40.0O 5,870,000.00 268,000.00Bond AnticItmtlon Noteti <J-tl Jtl4,*#0.40 0 3ll,0TO.O0*

Xutborlsuitlam ...G-12AnttclpaUan

But Not leauod O-1S. ntContruc4mriiyfcl>te C-M

Capita) lminovr.ment Fund lie- .

Cktod' i Mkn mii^

P ami twjprttWy #trial Ittflml in rftttfllnr=- aiut

th» rw«t/, pto live in thi« upper Room, but•who dn not know with •what book*to forninh it, Mr. Meehan offers awealth of specific help*. LIVING

R brlclljr mephiiiii theof twitfi. U tell* how to

jflve oitenelf, in HM ihnpifnt pos-way, thfl Imrkgronnd m%tw-

tial for communion witli thecreat thinkers and croofl

Do you, know how to rend inTjkrairraphs? Hew to hrlp yourmemory retain the best? Hereare fqifm sMon* oK imni'-'liatcvalue.

But UVING UiPStAIRS will be»n. more plensinj to people who

have already furnished that UpperRoom. Free of violence or jiuinti-new, It jrtrilws far deeper than sur-face qualities. Few author* have.Vticed no di»rmin(fly the real com-paniotiship which may be found on

prjijtfd page. And in memo-rable paBflappn on imiivlihiiil au-thors, Mr, Meehan diRtilla I ho e.s-lence of basic thinkers and writersfrom Homer, Virgil, Lucretius

one supremely .(front poet ofnnfaittt"), Cat«llu«, Augustine,Dante, Ibsen, Moliere, Bocraccio,to Rabelwis, Shakespeare, Rmoi-MH, Yates and many others. . . .

U V i f l OTBTATBS is 1. bookespecially for tt>o»e who hiive theweds of study and thoughtfnlneift•rtd a hunger for the, be«t things•written and thought in the world.

Fugitive for 25 Yean,MfciT Confewe* Murder

HOANOKE, VA. - Jack Furrow,who 81 Id bit coniclence hurt himto much that he feared he wouldj o insane, has given himself up herefor the slaying of a Franklin countyman some 21 years afo.

County Sheriff Grady Gregorylaid a murder charge would beplaced tfaiatt Furrow, reopening aewe that county authorities thoughtnever Would be solved.

Details tit flM flnirdw were aarlt/U to to HriM « Fwwrw si «M

hi tuft IM «ommWeil theH« saii b* m*i the ran

M ti* n u r t e , Furrow safatbo mtf* tp/ Mrikint temigh tfaamonttftia K vlgtK and sleevingdurVtf * • *»y. Hewent to DetroH,'laKf to UnAsvUta and finally tofire up.

T « k Carrie* Gift, ofTbouMRclr. of Cigarette*

LQNIK)N. — SChoiwands of ciga-MltUi lound in an Aanerican-buUtttfiSf. jH*< Mcvivad la Britain turnedout to be a gift torn the workersto the Vnited 6taU» factory who

for j)M) Britlgh army' ,Mhta were to

^ here. The ciga-rflrtej' «*re.b*ndfd around amongthe trmoren and 'ftlters at the cen-tral ordnance depot The chief ord-nance offleer thanked the U. S. men,

# warned'liueti Peavl Har-bor not to get deferment.

PRESS

wko then pMceed* to go We*, t*the tMuHahi* of Artiom.'tt *orkhn abandoned troM mifle in atown. Patric Knowles andBellamy are Miss Dunne's leadingmen, a'r.d the supportlni? cast in-,. ^ ^ ( ndudes Queenin. Vawar, Eu(feno]n |J^m" t 0 W | t :

Pallette and Samuel S. Hindi. i*.h..ci simrkcr,Oddly enough Miaa Dunne never j | » J ^ i

holieved she posflffised comedic tal-| A l l l l . ,,when she was scorinj? hit after | Mon^r«. ( J ^ J J ^ , , ^

hit on the screen in outstanding',^,, rif tW(,,,ij-(in«>drantatic pcrformancoB su<?h a«; A n ( 1 n rurthrr i , ."Show Boat," "MapiificentObiiM-lnnurt th»i n»iiw «Jsion," "Cimarrofi," etc. Thon catne| ™^ ^"^.. '"waek, for'7?nr:the role in "Theodora Goes Wild"'—-•««<«iv m tll(" l'tH*J'ti

See** from tlw "K»«-i(U «< tJlc Y^nlnw*" itarrlnt G»ry Coop«r,and depleting fbe Hfe of the rnimftrtal Lou G«hri|, it the fektnr*attraction at the Mvjcttic Thvmtrc.

Strandly different from the

former Tarian pictureg, "Tiirean'aNew Y-ork Adventure," at theStrand Theatre, presents the un-civilized kinp of the jungles bat-tling the dangers of civilization inthe midst of the roaring activitiesof New York. Johnnyler, Maurpen O'Sullivan and John-ny Sheffield desert their junsrlu foTcivilization in what proves to betheir moat thrilling adventure.

Dire from BrvoUra Brirff*The story deals with the abduc-

tion of "Little Tar*an" by a cir-cus man, bent on using him as anattraction. Weissnaulkr and Mm

start in pursuit, trailthem to New York, amd amid b»t-tles with circus r*u«Ui>oii.t« amipolite, comical experiences of thejungle n»n with clothes and cus-toms of civi!iiati«n, a riot in anight club, and Weissrouller's sen-sational dive from the BrooklynBridge, they finally regain theboy and, with the a.id of a friendlyaviator, reach their' home in thewilderness afrain.

MajesticTelling with unforgettable ef-

fect the story of a g m t Ameriean;a poor inrtnnyrant'a sori1 frti« be-came one of the greatest! sportsfigures of all time and an inspira-tion to millions of American boys,The Pride of the Yankees" starsGary Cooper as the immortal LouGehrig. Teresa Wright, BabaRuth and Walter Brennan head thefeatured cast of this Samuel Gold-win production.

Although baseball forms thecolorful background of the picture,that b»ck(yround is merely incidental to the human story of Gehrigliimaelf and his remsrT&ikle carwr,told with a wealth of detail and accuracy that makes the pictnregenuine personal doeument.

Beginning wHb Gehrifr.M an

eleveri-year-old kid from NewY«rk'e Amsterdam Avenue, pen-niless but hopefol, arid even thenable to bat a ball farther thananyone flue in hie Rang, the filmcarries on throuph the boy'sschool day's and MB college years,when he waited on tablo and puthimself through his engineeringcourse. Only his mother's insis-tence on his studies kept him frombecoming a professional ball-play-er, and lat(M-

r when he neededmoney to pay her hospital bills,le gladly abandoned his engineer-ng to sign a contract with the NewYork Yankees.

This woe the start 01 Cm.rig'azing 14-jrear-record with die

Y&nkee club, during which timebe shattered scores of marks andget new ones that may never beequalled.

In lh« m»tt*r n( the

nntm

Shnrkey.111!)

MH'I1Mb

> Ptky\.,• t " - J **«i> in,,,i

" » • " • K A I , T I : Int thp t;,,,,,,

,Wlon nf Klnicr i-WT for lv i i t i , , , , / ,

nrA •:'i. <•mfltwrANrA. O I T T P • i , W F e tf>l|I, ,tnv n( Hpplpmher, 1»IJ, appltfjd' ' i lS f l r r t ' to» Miii « I'oiirt by I'ptHtttn »4tt«nf j J 2 £ 2 f " * • * <*

|,

stnr, fTeoamo Hollywood'Bcomedienne.

CreacentEddio Bracken and blonde June

Preisacr head the cast in "SweaterGirl," the Paramount mystery mu-sical coming today to the CrescentTheatre. Advance reports declareii, to he one of the most enter-taininjr films of the season.

Beginning with the slaying ofthe campus columnist during re-honrsnls for a college show, thefilm moves swiftly from thrill to j i£i",i ~*1hrill nnd from laugh to laugh,with a wealth of tuneful hit musicfitted skillfully into the plot. Thopicture is more than a musicalmelodrama. It's a first class mys-tery and ranks high among pic-tures of that classification. In ad-dition, to make it better still, thenare - bevies of beautiful co-ed«,plenty of gags and fun and goat*exciting dances.

Hit tunes in "Sweater Girl" are"I Don't Want to Walk WithoutYou," sung by Betty Jane Rhodesand Johnnie Johnson; "I SaidNo.," also sung by Betty J»»e;What Give* Out Now," by Eddie

and Jane, and the title number,'Sweater Girl," sung by Bra<*enand a chorus of co-eds. The irnuricwas written by Frank Loeeier andJule Styne. William Clenaa M-rected.

fSt. Andrew's Church

WLB reports 1,180,678days bat in war strikes in year,

DitMJtlIrene Dunne, one of Hollywood'!

loveliest screen stars, returns tothe field of gay comedy in Univer-s a l "Lady in a Jam," which icomes to the Ditmas Theatre to-day.

Produced and directed by famedGregory La Cava, the new picturets a wwrthy vehicle for the ceroedictalent* of the glamorous ladywho«« comedienne abilities havedelifhted theatre-goers in the pastin such delightful Sim-fare as"The Awful Truth," "TheodoraGoes Wild" and "My FavoriteWife,"

Gay PortrayalIB "L«dy in a Jam" Miss Dunne

portrays an irresponsible NewYork keltties who goes broke and

i nnnucm ftw,

Bejerve for ImprovninenttFrogreaji Funded by CapitalImprov. Fund C-16

' Bederye fur Improvement! In'.'••• iPrbgrens l-'undect with Serial,:. Boinls ,0-11' t% Reserve on Temporary

Indebtedness No Chung*" Reserve u>v KiiKlneerlng l'«e«. C-16

Hurplua lifvnuir, 1837 No Change (0,519,76J;.; Capitol Sui-Dluu C-20 <,085.76

257 New trvmw(at Elm St.)

Perth Amboyf N. J,Branches: Newark and JwMf CUy

P. A. 4-3259Open 8 A. M. to 9 ?• M.

P.rtfa Amboy, N. J.

4 Dayi Starting Friday

HIT NO.

IABIRUTHEMPIRE

SUN., MON., TUE3.SEPT. W - M - it

to H»y Bastba— Ala«~

Wallsce Be«rr"Jackasi IW HIT NO. 2

D«rinf A tpf a Forbidden UUnd |Empire! |

WED. - THUR9. • SEPT.

"Dr.Lew Ayre*

Lionel Bwrymore16,848,489.33 16,278,811.76 I 664,617.D7

"Lady Garten"Free EH*hea to Ladie*OPERT

FRI. • SAT. - 8BPT. W. - M

ChurltM

La«t Two DayaAsa Satbarn - Red Skeltoa

CITS HER MAN"

^^"•ff w f l ^ * wPWi " fW^^^

MONTHS TO PAYSLIPCOVERS

PRIVATE LESSORS (W ALLYfHJR

VioUn « r |

m The .._.,, fr*. tlftjf, :III of the symptom!

.... nnmendous yatiWy

.„• know tke*i *fra-f noral puhSemny

i acquainted, w^th!,, writing to MA" at

n-rol, GarteNt, fox

<>f t h «, : l i , , , ofA I he rMUMWS p

The polio, t w i n ,1a

,,rul microscope. It,,,..-,'vcr, that tafadkfle

cite pi"PTttiCT[t CltlT-, , . , . , ,-f Ull<l

wmWd swimming places

little to RRheil If these are,w$Be the• eUldran aw allowedmtagla whh people on th« strein «tore» or in meeting places.

tfltnGerald pointed ottt thatstate B specific treatment hat.hem found in tho "Sister Kenny"HMJnod, much can b« done hy thephjwidan. He said that the in-cubation period never last* )onj-er than two weeks and usuallyruns about four or five days.

"Medicm science IMM not yet un-covered a vnmin* or innocttlationthat will work aguinia polio. ThereIs noti i ty thnt can hp dot,,, to ba-

the child or to build upajajnst the disease.

*>£..twined personnel (o 49is ..this cruaadt agalnat nfmtttep V i f t , Bat with tlw pana*

There i» MO Substitutef« YOUR OWN

PERMK1X I H H ;im'i bo tatfcffild wilh anything oxqepl a Checkingi or YQUlQisj i l , . , Today, Ck*kMmtrr makes li

lor e v a t f Maa and woman to have lhiii coav*MeiK« at trifling aoii. * .

»- -• Pny iha «U»aiU»d way — with a check of YOUK

>WHi Ii roakei a battar hjaptenion . . . Your checkbook

i »i your tetvie* M hours a day. It lavej you the lima

nJ uonble ol bQthafing with a money oidei or with • lap

D IM bnnk ioi any tofl oi "spaaai" okeck. And rMMmbwt

(bhkMasttr, ,Y«M oh««k Jot

[ AMOUNT oo#h you only 5^.

;EUBOO(S JUE n a OF CHAJWE.

VKLT AVENUE. NEW JEKSEY

SI NATIONALl i A N K •.,-.

k of Frien<ttyS«ryicc

REMEMBER THE MENIN SERVICE

IVE THEM PRACTICALiND LASTING GIFTS

Gift Saggtttions

i« 4 M » to safagoaft' the eMltf.FHiGeml.1 said that the state

o««« will distribute Informative LnwterW and will maintain its «e id»»•* on • mobile boats so that H | ."may awing Into action wh#w*e»the need may arise. This is o nbattla and we will cooperaW withanyone, anywhere in the state ofNew Jersey hi combatting the rav-ages of polio."

Infa*ti% paralysis oases shouHbe reported immediately U Hr.FiUGwald, at 64 Emersoi Street,Cartewt.

Select that gift

now. Cooperate

with Uncle Sam

by tendini it at

<oon at pouible.

ENGAGEMENT TOLDCARTEREX — Ann«na««ment

has been made by Mr. and MixOeorge Uhrin of John Street ofthe en(5agemeTit of their daughter,Ann, to Private Joseph fcaManis,son of Mr. and, Mrs. Joseph Maid-«ni» of Harrington Street, PerthAtrthoy,

(Cmtinuid frm PW Ifat the primary were lBt«est»d

u^i t* rally to tk* Hi^raVslid*. .

The t*Ul vote cast for all can-didates was a* follows: Republi-can; f a * Mayor, 8.18; Cottar, 4 t « ;Tori, 171; Haur|, 7I9( Citato,482; Sfekierkn. 414, , <;»

DcmocraLi: for Mayo*, C h a i mA. Conrad, preseat Gomdawaa,106; for 'onni-ilmen, SchoolBoard nrcaulcnt Frnnk J. Kearney,ninety-seven; School (<m»mk«totl-•r A4am Mukwitwki, 1OS,

Mor. IMaik

Cama tabulation of the Rtpab*-llcan Tote is shown in a table onthis pafe. The Democratic totalby dMvfcts h M followa: X'»»r»d,

CLASSIFIED

Til* it Jennie Cha, Aa»H«an. JonaU W a r n t k l t.wmm wmttiwaMction ilogan to her fellow workftit at W«l|«rs E(a«tok •K»fSiy (N, J.) Work.. "G«H| hoi" iay* J f a 4 e Mi tkft>M«ac«of nihtia* C U M . "Work to (elh*r!" it m.«m ,*t UnM* u 4 Wfettev CMftlttT*** arc workinf together, tarninf o«* wdla aa4UU|A<HI*. appwratiu fbr America'• M t l l m f«M»« «* W«HI »IW•ra ««J in tk« tky. Helra Jennie tigns «pj f w Wkr l > a j t w»4«tta« «Mnp«n]F*i fayroll allotment pUn.

, > ^ ^, •„ - Wb*ginwith th* tW<tren't wrrhn •» 9A..I4., fatlbwAil-l^ -lit p N k « fora4uN» at iff O'^HIU; Tb- after-noon M-rvicc win P n W ^ .

the weekly Mhe^ie Sa « fo»-l iwt: , ; *

.(Monday' 4:9ft P. ML. Girl 3couttroop m*eUnj( with MTJ Hflen Ne-mi«h, lca<l«r, in ohatx*;' •

TiMday, G;80 P. E> star 6omtW«ll»tri Onmba,bT

gll>; v 11,

at 19:00 and continuingaft«ni««n. I**ie* ar«brine a box lunch.

The Red Cross CommittH 1WWMTI'I m\t Class laWednesday afternoonsM BH»I« Class

traopSeoutSHwUr, in

WadneiMiar, 8:00 P. M., a gamewn-ml will bf belt) In the churchbt'

WAHTE0

BEPRESENTATIV8 to look afterour magaaine subscription in-

tereeia i» Carteret and vicinity.fivory family orders aubscrlptlons.HuJwtrod* of dollars are spent forthem each fall and winter in thisVicinity. Instructions and equip-•M«t free. Guaranteed lowestrates on all periodicals, domesticand foreign. Represent the old-• i t magasine agency in the UnitedStates. Start a growing and per-manent business in whole or sparetime. Address Moore-Cottrell, Inc.,Wayland Road, North Cohocton,New York.

HELP WANTED

STENOCRAPHKRS and (JenemlClerks for local commercial or-

ganization. Write full details toP. 0 . Box K, Woodbridge, NewJersey, II-1H

EXPERIENCED a p e r a t o r a onshirU wanted. Rarrtan Manu-

faetimng Co., 'Hi State St., PerthAmboy, N. J. (top floor). Askfor Mr. Oalli. !)-4to9-5

MALE HELP WANTED

PIN BOYS wanted. Guaranteedsalary. Call at Rahway Recre-

ation Center, 1603 Co#ch St., Ry, N. J., opposite Y. M. C. A.

SK11, 18

WANTED

itte'tir*S-j-ooia unfvirnSsnedapartment wanted in Avenel. TelRahway 7-157OR. 9-18, 25

New—RskoiJt—motors—parts fosale.

We can rebuild your old machine.Lowest terms—all work guano-teed. Gverymake, 290 StateStreet, Perth Amboy 4-22*2.

Steps Taken(Co#H*ind fram Pane 1)

been is contact with them juatprior to tk«ir ttiaefls have beenput into quarantine for fourteendays. ' ; - ,

R«l»lath>ii* Agr*e4On Wednesday night a Sympos-

ium was held hy the Board ofHealth to discuss th* situation anddecide on bmraediate atteps totighten regulations and preventany panic on the part of residents.Present at this meeting were: Dr.Rosenberg, Mr. YarcheskJ, all themembers of the Board of Health,>r. Downs, Dr, Imre T. Kemerty,rank J. Kearney, president of the

Board of Education, School Com-missioner, Adam Makwinski, Su-pervising Principal Dr. Wayne T.Brnnom, Chief of Police Henry

Harrington and Joseph F. Filz-Jerald, head of the New Jerseynfantile Paralysis Foundation.

Mr. FitzGerald had arranged forthe treatment of the two childrenat the Medical Center, since Mid-dlesex County lacks hospital faci-ities for isolation of such cases.This must be maintained for awentyone day period.

br. Hranom yesterday orderedthat all schoul iistiembliea be discontinued for a one-month periodwith each county represented by achapter. Each chapter dispensesits funds according to the needs.

Fitzfieiald aditetl that everyease reported this year w. alreadyunder the cuso of a county chap-ter. "Hovv«vcr, sometimes thesecases are reported fii> Ute that we;^ust start with a terrible handi-cap. Polio cases should be re-ported immediately to the countychapter," he said.

"Knowledge of the symptoms

ens and primary grades of the lo-cal Khflols. The Ba^M «f Haakhalso decided to ahk awners of lo-cal motio'a atctiire tataters to re-fuse admission «f anyon* undersixteen yean of afe for th» nexttwoweelis,

Aft Sckoob Ai>**The pastors of S i Joseph's and

Holy Family parishes, which con-duct the two. p*r»cbial schools iaCarteret,' sUU^ th»y wwuhl fel-low the refcitlatiww g«t up in thepublic schools.

Details of the best known meansto prevent the spread «f the cK«-ense were inforporatett into aproclamation which the board is-sued immediately and which ap-pears in this issue. Strict adher-ence to its suggestions will aidgreatly in the task of the boardto keep Carteret children freefrom this ailment

It u believed th»t warm, humidweather in early Fall, suck as ha»prevailed for several weeks, abetsthe spread of potiewylitis, becausethe disease usually dies down withthe arrival of frost. Research isconducted continually through theFuundution in aa attempt to iso-late the germ canning it, but sofar it hus not b«*ft found. It iaknown however that it enter* thesystem through auch vulnerablespots as the nose, mouth or ptheropenings, hence the instructionto keep hands clean anil to warnchildren against putting into theirmouths objects which Biuy con-tain the (terms.

flrat, f jMconi l , ^6; thjnj, ^ r ] * * " " * 1 *fourth, 8 | fifth, 15; sixth,sev«hthk 8; einMb, 0; ninth, 1

fa*, 7; second, 14;third. 9>;'fourth, »; fifth, 1$; sixthk

21; sevenih, 10; eighth, 6; ninth,1; Kearfley: I^rst, 6; second, 14*;

ihird; 8 | fourth, 8; fifth, U ; skflt,20; « w a t h , 9; eigkth, 6; nlsta,h.

The Mayor lost onlyone dis-trict to Mr. Cutter, th« sevefttk. inwhich Hy» Councilman John lteid,at odds With the administrationfor some time, and Nathaniel A.Jacoby, one of the leaders amongMT. Cutter's f»llow«a. The larifest majority for the Mayor wasrolled up in bis. home district inChrome, the fourth, where hepolled 280 vote* to Mr. Cutter's41. The smalltttt dif-ferenne WMregistered in the ninth, where MrMittuch received fifty-one votes,Mr. Cutter- 4ft.

The borough did not follow thestate trend in thnt in the Q.Q.P.contest for the nomination forU. S. 3*i»tor it gave (iill RobU

T s 8° * "'•S V S V Y . O . L

The iSundaySthoo) wttJ eonvene

19-M. mw.ifc-^ -all n«n; WOH«B'»all women.

Wilson votes t« the l'<!9 casfor Albert W. Jlnwkcs whocured the nomination. Congress-man Charles A, Raton received acomplinjahtary vote, 391 personsreipatarilig themselves for himalthough he was unopposed.

Borough Recorder Michael Resko, unappMted as a candidate foi

may help prevent death or severecrippling. It is sudden in onsetbut is sometimes confusing be-cause of its mildness. It is im-und instituted a daily examinationof all children in the kindcrgnrt

tamhw** *nd knit. Alltha ahtrvtt are urged toand help. Mr*. Charlestha cliftirtaaa of the con

The Swstan of the <hmeet tonight at 8 o'clock.

SCtAPCARtWBT—Bwnagh

tar Joaafh G. Jomo, wkac)iarte of the Borough's'

j t f se»a» metal, reporteiI about 10ft tons wereurday. The day's

aHout two toiM in

farClass for

ticrvlee | t tf:O« with

, « «W/>jin4M>fc.«i-r*cti»a«f llnuK, t B 3er-rt*« by tha pwU< »n "What AteYouf"

Tfie F a l ! , | . yterfal Socif ty, eoiapaMa of all ofthe women's orgtiritatfcma of the

the State Assembly, *••''given419 votes, whereiu tlM two otherRopoMicen. camlidsW*,' for this offlee, Jack Weiss »m| M m t. M«K-rion, received Sfft and 96% »pectively.

tad other tin utainUs,wiU b* »W>r« coUactianJomo s»i(I, and the dateswidely advertised ahead of

SEASON OPENSHA WI"WKHT—Htlss Sailu named chairman of tbjkj

merelundine clnlv of FrLink, Order of flic Goldenwhich hf-lrt !to fint me«Htoi*4season Tuesday night In \tIiall. Mrs. Anton Rablno*awarded the door prise

were servedEdith Fleigel, Mrs. MbftUand Ulmnn.

Navy will advance yoa'fleers; air promotions pli

We hit* a nice selection of late miAutombUtt tsith g»*J tim

. . . priced low hr a quick tale!We tell food transportation, nqjt mftreiy uted cart,

Fa* tbt beat buy of the season tee Joe Janai. ,

SPEEDWAY AUTO SALES CO.S23 S«. Cewte A*«. Phon. Woodbridg. 8-0H9 WooJkr

Fall Opener - 0H£ WEEK ONLY!

CONCERT ON SUNDAYCAHTPBRSr—The ehoir of RK

Greek Catholic Church andit« Port Reading parishioners willg ive .a concert and play, in cos-tume, Sunday night in the HighSchool auditorium, starting at 7 :S0o'clock. Proceeds will be distri-buted among the U8O, and theFirst Aid Squads of Carteret amiWoodtmdge. A Urge caat appearsin the production which has beencoached by ProJ. Paul Yatsko.1

THE L E S S O Nof the recent early-

BUIOVA . HAWLTOKa G I N - P A BWATCHES

UNLIS5 URGENT

STUDY of the surprise atf-nid ahrat etrfy taborniorniug in tl«j mctropoHttn area of New Yorit

No«thern New Jersey shows ttutt "cunoaity" teleptuws e*)Uk g was'so great that tele^wwiilf^ ifep *4b « b m wa*delftyed Ifl some phtc«« aack otker MMIltail caUa could sotget through promptly.

fplau* wttoh later provd M h* fcfepHy, lud hwkd I flf«tof vutmj komhers, ' .

i

The telephone system ia d*pwkoVww» for i^ft conmiu*itio» by those who p*d YCP| % YOUH Iwoiiy M

$ i ^ ^ » ^ tt n to

FolUmym*

1TERET PRESSTetepHona Oarteret 84600

Published by Carteret PressOFFICE

FjUl WASHINGTON AVE., CARTERET, I*. J.

GREGORY EditorH ROSKNHUJM Sporte Editor

Subscription, |1.6(} p«r Year

Entered as second clasa matter June 6,ltJM, at Carteret, N. J., Post Office, under

: tkt A c t of March 8, 1879.

folio Strikes HereMany people in Carteret and elsewhere

ig have admired the excellent job Jo-Bph FitzGerald does for the Infantile Par-i.'-t. Foundation. They have watched it

, . and grow since that first year whenentered the work, but ndw that the dis-

hes struck riffht here in Carteretbuntleua

be captured. They assert ttiaffhV Rus-sian* "will certainly not ifoitukte/'

Berlin tells of a "bitter figw'tor everyindividual house in SUHnffady|«Tironfl"and describes elaborate mine ftehlg and adeep system of thickly studded fortifica-tions. While the Russians may duplicatetheir successful defense of Moscow andLeningrad, it is easily poaslbl* that theGermans will manage to take tne citythe Volga. "

This year the German strength is ron-

on

centrated on a limitedfront in Russia, with

sector of the vastconcentrations of

struck right here inmore will know what tils tire-

l attention to the task really means.The Foundation has a perfect system

^combatting this disease which stilllldes the efforts of the beat medical re-

v ^ r j * h to discover its origin, but equallyI «>mforting perhaps to the families of those

JStricken is the personal touch which Mr.it&Gerald gives each case. Middlesexounty has no proper facilities for isolat-

polio cases, so arrangements were.Je by him to care for such victims att Jersey City Medical Center. As each

is admitted Mr. FitzGerald is on handmake the arrangement and goes per-

sonally to Jersey City almost daily to keeptrack of the progress of the victims. Tele-phone calls to the parents of youngsters

made regularly, all taking their toll.his time, but all being made somehow,

yen though it usually means he works farn o the night at the' other things he must

iget done.

i It is estimated that each case of par-alysis isolated in the hospital and given the

* pecessary follow-up treatment costs a mini-^ p u m of $1,500. Last year Middlesex

Jjottnty raised about $4,000 for the Foun-,;;;|piajion so that it is well in debt now to care

I*fpor the 1942 victims. Let us all rememberiext January when the campaign for funds

made that Carteret children were hittiia year, and Carteret must work harderban ever to pay for the wonderful chance

recovery they are getting.

,planes, tanks and manpower desperatelyseeking to break the Russian strong points.

The occupation of Stalingrad by theGermans would be a seriolts loss to theRussians but it would be no decisive blow.While traffic on the Volga would bo inter-rupted, it is well to remember that in afew months winter weather will close theriver for commerce anyway. ^

It may be reasonably presumed that theRussians have accumulated supplies in theInterior, and that the Red Army will fighton, regardless of what happens if Stalin-grad and in the Caucasus region.

Money Ho Substitute For ArmsMost Americans, who have been read-

ing about mammoth appropriations forwar purposes, \vill be surprised that, aslate as July 31st, 1942, the United Stateshad actually expended only $87,000,-000,000.

This shows how hard it is to get readyfor total warfare. It is one thing to pro-vide money and another to turn out wea-pons and train men.

Since March 26, 1940, when our defenseprogram was expanded, about $220,000,-000,000 have been provided by Congress.It would have been much better if theCongresB had provided a tenth of theamount annually for the past fiye years,with the other half left for the future.

The lesson of this struggle to the peopleof the United States, if they are interestedin learning anything, is that it is hot possi-ble for a nation to fight without tools ofwarfare and that it is too late to wait fora declaration of war to begin to beprepared.

Seventy Per Cent 01 CasualtiesHarold Butler, British Information Min-

er, is in the United States for the pur-pose,a»e suspect, of creating favorable im-pressions for his country.

Ceftainly this is no crime, and in viewtherdetermined attitude of some Amer-

ans to criticize and lambast the British,is'time that the facts be given to the

public.dne of the pet allegations of the British-

haAers is that the Englishmen dfl not fight,leaving it to the Anzacs, Canadians' andSouth ^Africans to preserve the Empire.jf Butler calls attention to a face, al-

iady published, that seventy per cent ofEmpire's casualties in this war have

men from the British Isles.He admits that the British lost many

battles, because they had too much worldarea to'defend, too little to do it with andlittle time in which to prepare. Thistaiount to a general admission that theBjritish Isles were tarred w|ith the same

• jj|rcificism which all but destroyed the de-| |fense of the Democracies and open the

y for the aggressors to prepare for theirlack.

The United States, by its disarmamentJ and other efforts to avoid "offending•pan" finds itself engaged in a war in the

eific. This war would not have occur-except for the fact that the Japanese

came convinced that we were a nation ofies," unwilling to fight and ready to

er rather than face death.| I r . Butler is pleased with ttoe strength

Gibraltar, Malta and the Suez. He notesIftt the islands are still secure and that

e're hoJitynjf• the Middle Ea$ against

Loose Talk From SpainGeneral Franco, dictator of SRain, and

his Foreign Minister and brother-in-law,bristling

is a greatpower on the field of battle and suggestingthat Spaniards might be called upon in thenear future to fight for their country.

From Washington however, though thewritings of Thomas J. Hamilton*, in the

have recently made somespeeches, hinting that Spain

Thin wcflc mark* the publicationof what is probably the best bookwritten about the war sine* PearlHarbor and what It certain to beone of the widely discuwed book*of the Fall Reason. It has th« ra-ther curious title of 'They WereExpendable"—although thfc titleseems very appropriate Indeedonce you Ret into the book—andthe author is W. L. White, the wellknown American newspaper corre-npondent.

"They Were Ejrpendable" tellsthe tragic story of the Philippinesin the words of the survivors ofthe heroic Motor Torpedo 'BoatSquadron 8. This is the daringsquadron that sunk a hundredtimes its own tonnage in enemywarships and that a( the eleventhhour rescued General MacArthursafely from Bataan.

Mr. White spent an evening talk-ing with, or rather listening tofour of the squadron omcert,l2eU:

tenants Bulkcley and Kelly' andEnsigns Akers and Cox, while they"shot the breeie" ss the Navy callcasual turkey talk. Than he wen1

buck to his typewriter and pudown what they had said. The re.suit in the. first (rreat story of thiwar BS seen t>y the men fighting init. It is small wonder that this immensely exciting book was immediately selected by the Book-of-the-Month Club and purchased by thmotion pictures for a screen story

In the language of war, to b<"expendable" is to be left withouhope of possible aid or rescue,hold some impossible positionslong as may lie. The time so (fained, In the cold evaluation of thcampaign, is worth more than yo'and your equipment. This waa thbitter truth about the defense <the Philippines, which Mr. Whicalls "America's little Dunkirk."

When Cavite was homTiprl hibloody flesh and rubbish, the MTboats had already taken up tl>c:rpatrol along the, shores of Luzon.Quite calmly the officers tell usthai the instant trouble bepnn theydiscovered their entire gasolinesupply had been sabotaged. Ithad been doped with wax so thattheir engines were likely to quitat the'most critical moment. Alsoall their replacement parts, so vi-tal for these motors, Imd beenbombed out of existence. In spiteof this, what they did to enemyshipping was something the Japswon't soon forget. They discov-ered that it was safer to leaveBulkeley'g squadron alone.

The high point of the story ishow the MTTB's jfot Ocneral Mac-Arthur end his technical staff safeto a rendezvous in Mindanao, sailing in pitch dar^ne^s in enemy wa-ters and Tvithqut any,means ofnavigation. In fact, When a pas-

(Continued on Pat/e 8)

FIRE • • • * ; less

vNIG Eft

™&! ;,#-. •-

»UAid-

" AND

fight

k V^

1

New York Times, we learn ttiat thesespeeches are "not viewed with '-excessiveconcern." The explanation is 1ft^t thereart no noticeable preparations iri Spain totake any oifensive action against Gibraltar,French Africa or Portugal. a

Well, not so many years ago,"we werenot alarmecj at the mouthings 3f BenitoMussolini, Adolf Hitler and the fj&r Lordsof Japan. We have a better understand-ing now of what these public addressesmeant and it is at least possible that Francoand Suner, in their speeches, are forecast-ing a policy that aifgurs no good for theUnited Nations.

Leadership Key To Labor-Employer UnderstandingSays National Manufacturers'Association Speaker

JUST

ParagraphsT)mtVA-F«ct Dent.

War is hell. Under new gov-ernmental regulations you can nolonger buy anything you can't af-ford.—Brunswick (Ga.) News.

Vice-VenaSeaman Sam says: "Statistics

prove that marriage is a preventiveof suicide. Could be vice-versa."—United States Naval Air StationSkywriter.

Will G»rg»ntu« B« Thar*?BtWood Best, of Hope, is ap-

pointed to organize gorilla re-serves in county; first meeting tobe Sunday. — Northern Idaho,News, Sand point, Idaho.

OptiiflnAil optimist is a man who carries

a box of matches in the hope thatsomeone will offer him a cigarette.—HL&S. Tennessee Tar.

Intelligent leadership by indus-trial managers and intelligent co-operation 'by labor will furnish ncontinuing drive in the battle ofproduction and make it possible foiour armed forces to destroy thepangster overlords of Germany andJapan," said Reuben B. Robertson.Chairman of the National Associa-tion of Manufacturers' IndustrialRelations Committee at the NAMWartime Institute on IndustrialRelations held recently.

Mobilized Production"We Americans, like the citizens

ot other United Nations, have ibeenforced into an unwanted tvar bythe Axis dictators," Mr. Robertsondeclared. "Our enemies preparedfor this struggle coolly, deliberate-ly, skillfully, over a long period oftime. They worked themselveiinto a position in which they couldgrab the military initiative—theybuilt up tremendous inventories ofwar materials before they made amove, and now, despite the hard-ships of their workers and the useof slave labor, they have a valuable stock pile with which they cansupplement their thoroughly mobllized productive capacity.

"Time his run against us. Wemust now surpass by an almos1

uperhuman intensity of effort, ina time interval of terrifying brevity, the results of both accumulation and hysterically sustained ef-fort on the part of our enerfiies.

ewly-organized wartime factories.Underttand Workeri' Attitude"We know that to promote

mong our workers a clearer un-etstanding of management poli-ics we continually need as clearn estimate as possible of workers'ttitude," Mr. Robertson stated.'To get such information in an ac-eptable manner, one of our largeoncerns has invented and .perfect-d a permanent system of 'person-

nel counseling' that has proved in-valuable and has brought the com-pany wide acclaim. . . . The xela*

iimship of the aounsolir toemploye is like that of a doctorto his patient. He has also beencompared to a father confessoTand to a psychoanalyst. He spotsgrouches, obsessions, misunder-

j

fulodds."Moreover, answering those who won-

the British Fleet is engaged, heout that/most of Mussolini's navy is

and that Hitler's warships are hid-Meanwhlle, the .submarine is being

$$ped anct ine convoys are arriving in

Let's Not Waste, Mr. Kaiser!Mr. Henry J. Kaiser captures tn.e imag-

ination; he is a builder of stupendousenergy and magnificent accomplishments.When old-line ship-builders derided hisplan to construct cargo ships, he went towork, cut down the time to 24 days fromkeel to launching and threatens to reduceit to eighteen working days.

There is no belittling Mr. Kaiser's tal-ent along this line, He says he can mass-produce cargo aerial freighters and despitethe talk of "know-how" that; emanatesfrom experienced plane makers, we be-lieve Mr. Kaiser will make good.his boastif he gets the opportunity.

The WPB 18 seriouslying him the chance, having been convinced,

standings, deteriorations of workand morale, and strives to elimi-nate them.

With these somewhat more ac-curate means of spotting problenj*before they arise, of keeping th

tl l'human machinery' constantly lu-bricated with cooperative goodwill, we have additional valuabletools with which to help 'makedemocracy work,' with which torender our struggle against inter-national gangitorinji more effec-tive.

Listen Utre!I suppose I

b'e the one to tell •,),wool-gatherers thai nnenlmenfc—which is in ,—is creating the m.,.', ',geroua group ni -,,,.'priviltge artists thai nH

hai ever known.In thi» itatement, I ,|,, .,„.

ttcept the losffers nn.l !,,who had their names ]>;M, ,|relief rolls for yearn , ,idunnfcd sure they ntud i, ,dating,the principal p,>iii;,,,,'htd the moral physique „,-fi»h, BO they could W;n! ,until a better racko! t, ,Well,-It came with the wdttstml plants, in mm <•f A M W -4HM' il l* ' those It ,,,,|

Washington T)ureiuirr:n-!,Me so gigantic thnt .-v,.,, •;.hat to have a guide to ,..: jhU deifc when he arrivefor a busy hour at th<. ,,|>i

I'll U k e up the «„!,,,.,, ,payroll patriots at some i , ! r

because today V\i- Kn\ ,,to *ay about the induct,:,-era, I realize my ;ii]r-;^,t,,,be unfair in some small ,. ,,.oause I don't believe ih,workers have paiil-up 1 |mob, and are trying t" I..work for » day's wnKr.; rif these few are K<>iiur i,with what, I'm goinff U ;|,, ,I can't help it if they :>!way of the target.

Loolc At ProductionThe P re s iden t of i«..

S ta tes ' i* fiuthority r•>> -men t tha t our prodm-d,.is so far behind that y u ,ly see It, this despite tin •,the workers are ilmui..'.-getting"—plenty of .,i ;

want, wMChis douuli i; .think so, you. just tali >the pay schedule of IV.II i •;

ployee, guys who have ;I|A ,a dime "a dozen because ;

jus t plain lazy and alloyi.on alarm clocks. T i n y ' rhome from the siiimm. v:pockets still bulpny wi!hmoney, even though thn >hdrink for the house as ;i imfor get t ing their p.ucashed. You haven't fi.ri;<course, tha t it's the lik.and me who are trettmi:kind of douffh, and wilhithe naive assumption u

I going to furnish our « i

Even with such tools, however, <l<»ek. Well, we're get;,iw e naturally know thatjilt * not I and good,fhri^flf $djbl d**iW%YOT «toone associated' with us. But thetetools help us to please a'comfort-able majority, and when we can dothat we should consider the job.well done."

Seen From The Capitol Dome

in our history hasbeen so squarely

Scentist finds that the radio iIt Would Be Simpler

Why not let the Governmenttake everything and send us acheck for living expenses?—Wil-liam Feather, in the CopperweldMttgaitne.

Point for the MoonScientist finds that the radio

voice is weaker when the moon iafull —beautyHerald.

hitherto unsuspectedof moonlight.—Arkansas

to cheer up andtA&er all, it's gravity

down, — Boston

lin Compliments Red Armybroadcasts pay tribute to the

of Russian troops, defend-

somewhere and somehow, thai, ijie-massproduction of planes will deliver the freightthat must be ferried across the «ceans ifour armies are to be supplied. ' ' ,

Despite our admiration for Mr. JKaiqer'srecord as a construction expert, we Ho qotsee where this qualifies him as an authorityon the. needs of the nation at war, in re*gards to the type of'iran»!hicles required.

So far m we have been able to'diacover

TSKJIJ

Wont Pan Since 1938It's good sense, good business

and goodmerry,

that keepsIJerald. •••*

United We St«a4From the w ckbouhd toast of

Maine tc- tBe sunny slope* of thePacific, one people, one nBtioiyoneflag and fifty &olution»-of a 'rub-ber shortage.—'Lynphburg (Va.)Newa.

Never beforetimed effortmatched against vital humanvalues.

' Teamed ESVt"We who are engaged in indus-

try know tbat timed effort meansteamed effort and teamed effortrequires an ever-present lubricant,if smoothness and unbroken con-tinuity of operation is to be had.In all human relations that all-essential lubricant is good will . . .In industry, intelligent managersand workmen alike know by exper-ience that only through a spirit ofcooperative good will can the re-quired miracles of wartime, high,pressure, mass production beachieved. We have all seen thevast amount of wasted effort tbatcomes from the coercive illexpressed in strikes, lockouts,senteeism, or slow-down, «r re-sulting from coercion by employer

i, ab-

Tfa«tVA-F*«t"Don'fc spend all jjoutt*Wtion/» J

vises Awerkait mixed up and don't make all theyspend.~^Brunewick (Ga.) Newt.

or by unwise legislative action."Favor Free Eoieiyrite

Mr. Robecteon quoted from theresults of the industry survey re-cently completed by the NAMwhich "bringi out, by summaris-ing interviews with plant employe*,that factory workers of the UnitedStates are fundamentally capitalis-tic in viewpoint They believe intiie proflt motive; b6 per cent ofthem contend that a company mak-ing a profit is more likely to offerthe tori value* than «ne justbreaking1 even; 81* per; fetnt men-tion tb,e workers or the generalpublic when atked who benefits

women's

fromprise.i

H&ver

a iprofltabla'truainess enter-In addition, to! mention a

the many ot»er:>obiir-b.rou«ht together bya t r t a m g

tin NAM. 77 {»? cent say ywould not Mka to'BBB the govern-,ment take over ti» outfit they• • '"' •'j; f , ; | » 4 '4% per ceirt 4r?

Findings of the Tydings Committee emphasizethat nonwar spending waste must be stopped, thatFederal personnel now engaged in nonessential activ-ities must be transferred to necessary war duties.The report points out that: "The elimination or cur-tailment of functions not neceaaary to the prosecutionof the war and those which are duplicating, overlap-ping and paralleling would make available to theprimary war agencies personnel which is well trainedand experienced in Government methods of operation. . . Considering the present status of the Nation, itstretches the imagination to believe, or even compre-hend, that many of the functions still being prose-cuted by numerous departments and agencies couldbe argued as being necessary to the war effort."Senator Tydings has introduced legislation authoriz-ing the shift of employes from nonessential, nonwaragencies to war agencies.

* * * .

Federal publicity often borders on the ridiculous,reports the Citizens Emergency Committee. Ifourdays before Pearl Harbor the Navy Department re-leased to the nation the favorite recipes of Navyofficers' wives. One recipe was for "Niu Moa Ai," aHawaiian concoction of coconut and chicken. An-other was for "Rum-Bumble Pudding." Nearly fivemonths after Pearl Harbor, the Department of Agri-culture released for edification of taxpayers, "Fash-ion predictions in sundaes, ice-creams and sherberU. . . Rqyal Apricot, Stanwick Nectarine, Passion Fruit,and Klondike Strawberry." On other occasions theDepartment has surprised American readers withsuch releases as "War Places New Burden on East-ern Russian Agriculture," and a bibliography on agri-culture of American Indians. The library of Con-gress contributes its share under titles such as .a:."Bibliography of Latin American Folk Music."

• • * . . . ' . . ' . ' • •

) TV,g)ye impetus to the pplicy of "Fiwt Thtag»First" |j&4cessary to win th* war, the Joilii{tie on Reduction of Nonessentjal Federaltures, W d * d by Senator #;yrd of

' eiiing. ,it» Investigations 'in an effort to*wa*j| 1% wj»r agencies and governingnton. $ j $ n l « t that Wasted Detail

w i p e the - r yu

t r iot iam off with a (lamp ,•;.ye t -they shout their ' i n . .over the place- for ^i :it i res , fo r sugar , for i v n ,and ffen«t«lly far m ..:-.•r equ i remen t s . That i•<>,•.;.be tween t h e unions an.l \\\-HouM to responsible f.n- :'"ibeeaiMp",between them •t h i t "the « o b iliuKii't Li-th ing » f a r as WURI". a;:

are concerned, although Ihalf as much th»u>:iii li:given to the wanes ^ ' l ' " 'lem on beha l f of tho-.- M-ithe Solomons.

U. S. Their OysterHaving been tlm> '-

they're getting t« thin!.naUon i i their oyster 1

them drive on ilu ispeeds far in e x c ^ ••and»topon adime.t!ing and icTeechin;1;. .•kind of sneer which sa>

wllh it. 111 get "''»• 'just take note of the kdriving that's in vinv *i.changes at a war imiu M

So their, tires K'<> :II:I1

heir them »hout all ^<-!

:. I'll m lWhil

trends? Who dots w,they are to spend A litt 1.-ing around to find «»i»bos or teminf Tlu-y1-in»ulted. Ride with MThey might have to w:i!iof'Woelutomcettheoiior might have to wan -nteiforhim to wash "i-«f the day and it w""much of an inconveiui-ii' So then they start u-If they can't be \wthey'llquit their j«l^ >«relief," they say, »»'l !

eloa»-up of their iw'"ofp»triotlam.

Practice Makes PThey are obsessed *'•

tdon that they need o"'tt«lrnwda-and they *>l

refardlesiiof l

duli«

,a

iThtyw

thinking in the oldtb#y • « , iby now.S d i our

lives because wa10 fjtt k«hind w ai

t you think this7 t wait un

dUpose

beach an*U. A f^•M the gun,rtdh»lf

;

ion ou the

•£%s&i^BB • ^ • ^ H WL1:mnpSw* "^^1B. 'I'pvont In the fall harei" Ken« j» "Arabian Night,." H H | ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ H H H ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ H k l \ \ \ ^ \ i J w A ^ V % B ^ ^ W^ Bought before we entered th« priority^ Yours f o r % > ! ^ ^ ^ |

.''''''IToiffoH* will pro- Young Wapa Lyrni, wWe mu- ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ U ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ B • ! I \ \ H O . \ l l V ^ ( V ^ J Hard rubber handles, vutconiied onto blodes. i l ^ ^ ^ H

^l^&^^jS^^^S • • • • • • • • • • • I , MS \\^^~*OTnM EXPERES SATUBDAT J H„. „..;, actor Wore the timid «irl friend of Menfy Tn th* •, *" **"!* " J 1 " " " " J;ck * " ? " ? »™ ^ ' f • F t > ^ ^ _ ' • - . . .i^^M

•.,.„..,,,. Spencer Twcy, »d- next fl.nry Aidrlch etfmedy at ^PP*" "»«••*/»« Sh.nd.n . t th. ,.m« Um. in "Wl«,. for th. - , J* f W fttMMMHBlNMHmHMBmHMaM«|||^^H,; . hl. j'.Ht "fl«eM« up" Parumount. E«fle" to b. tfee ft.tar. .ttrtetion .t the lUhw.y Tfce.tr. Son- ^ A l I f f ) ^ ^ *J Can» 1 # C I / * V I I K I ^ ^ ^ I

'"•,"•,' portrtit -woA, " He Interenting member of the csst ^~-'— ^*_!l : — -— . r 1 \ O T 1 F 0 I CIV I jSltllTfll^^^B;:, ,,f.conMtou. «d t * of Son* Henie', l.tejit film, , b*9MANTLE BR10CE |armed fore«'«rf tbi, country\nd E™Ched W"h L°Uel lQ PriW BuM-r 1 J V l f V I Q J l f L C U I I U I ^ ^ H

ra»»it»i showing u. S Marinen Tacoma, Wash,—Wimantling of reciprocal ri*hta to Cuba! The ra«i«k«IIV T/tmatn ^niin ^ « • ?(W ffl I I ^ ^ ^ H, T T L hid 16-mm « 7 w u I dl

tJ'- Mu9' A/e" «>e Tacoma Narrows bridge which pact will last for the duration of U l i p e l l S lOIHalO 5OUP 3 • " ZUf | N o w a t i t s t e n d e r bertl Most economical and tastyl WiS^^M

^ll&SrS S? ~ T ? ^ ? STi L C S S S S^t=i/™ths •* - NBC Graham Crackers £ IK I • - '7^ -* ' ^r I ' H: ? : ^ S S B O ^ liri^r NBCRdyaiLunch . ft» ' Legs of Lamb ^ 3 5 c | Ht;;;,:^d^StfiS NBC Shredded Wheat --1U I r i 1 D i i L 00 I 1 H

;Vn, funded projection CBreer , t t h e 7 ^mm, *450,000. lerence of op.nion, ,„ pubhc at " ^ «• u , . | C h l J C K K O a S t L a i T l b lb« Z O C l i ' ^ ^ H»„,., :ir, not avai lab le . - Now she'. p.!nf to nt»ht »chool to TALL qORN least, a> to the advUability of ex- FrUlt lOCWail Q^ ' . - W I UlUViMVUMI WIIIW X.S/V I | H

1 T X « as hers in le*m ahorthan<i ami typing, ««> that La Salle, III—To prove bis as- tending the 'Selective Service Act I. . , : .! ,- .! C|Aiir Mi ***• 17rf . T*" \^i M I / ^ i m I * . m k ^ U / M ^ C IK 4 . ^ '<• I ' l ^ ^ ^ l"rr v rh*M'"*nd 'M« »h« can answer her own fan mail, sertion that corn pows as tall in to include youth of 18 and lfl 101160 HOIK s«l U, ' 'f ! » J3» 11 LOIO LafTID V^llOPS **' ™* C | J | ^ H•(llv' _ _ l i _ How's thatt Illinois as it does anywhere else, years of age, the general imprea- IJ,,,«nna;*« HowJWIft fta* ICi*. *™» A7* V _ , i . I y-^l j ! % ftS^^Hh — ' ^ ^ 1 TRAnr HT^r^ rMFWAri : Dave Malone, gardener of Oglesby, sion is"that the drafting of men N3yO!inalSe SuP.rh Q*.»ty i« LJI>> J.r "W* 1 P l K I T^TXYTi C nCSnS tb. A *<£ l ^ l ^ HrTtm^imm s r 1 ^ ™ j 2 s r j , a s s r . s : l n - " ^ ^ aisauce s . "ri9< I ™. L.ar!1 v<n?Ps I f I f l

I /«H* ' five years Senrt. Nicholas Wmd^ch to DM Moi neg,Ia., to be entered t ^ LIVESTOCK i j — ^ _ , A I a m K I V O T T i " d w Ib S l f I i ^ HJ ADinwOrtof ^ " W u"!^ . T Mn» in the national tall corn contest. ^ertoek groups and farm lead- ft^-^J Supreme Large Q H L a M I . U L I Y t J l Taity w' O 1^. | 4 ^ H

i t 2 TJMIU hii fither » birthday telegram. 'A , ers have advised the Office of K P A S U T I Enriched Loof A C ffl, 1 ' ^ ^ ^ HILf Eterj PollW »O telegram came, as usual, this year CUBA Price Administration that a recorj 0 1 v Q U W* | I | ' ' i ^ ^ |

pU,S.WirWl Urea^^Yr^tlUot^rtr^T^^ forichibyu.inggy^hlflhinvHomhBl.ntadnond.ron. I F r e S h Killed SteV/ing L | HI .— ;' . i. I killed in action." Ciiba, providing facilities to the ed against further prices rises." RCAC I arna SwPPt far™'al* 7 Mo> * ? 9 i I ^ ^ I I I ^ I M I™ W. I f* I t ^ ^ ^ ^ H

I'WkjA fl-J~L - ^ ?S -CHICKENS •- ^ ^ ^ 1 S E S m ^S! 1 Frying Chickens .QSclHK w^ ,i\\ , Milk 3 24c TONGUES

ssr i b -3kM4 J «^°* ""'I - : r » V ' > ~ p- IQc SCRAPPLE . 3.1 * 1 8 c «

I ;;'• # 1 1 ^ - - . ,. ...••^1: , Cream-White Shortening HKI61( flBOLUbNA M "•• J » c | «I •%& «fkte~<a&^i -""-""••• ^ ^ M V Shorlenino ; ' ^ 8 * . I " FILET OF HADDOCK *. 3 5 c MI lGB«2K3Jr^S^^'Bl^ _— a Kool"Aid Beyera9e Mil^ « I T , ? I F^SH LARGE PORGIES ». 15c ' i > f lI J | H p i K l # | y B ^gf • , Speed-Up Gran. Soap S T * ^ I - ^ « |

I ^B^fiME^^H^i ^^ ' • SSop Jars H««3w« •* O J I 5 L * U Z I f > f lI ^ ^ H K H V J K C >FUU UNI OF CANNING SUPPUB A f t » Prize Butter SSI 5 0 4 - MI r^mm/^^^^^- Toilet Tissue^ W-6e - - - - - - - - - « - j «I 4B^^^^^^S^^^^^^t • ; G,™™ Westin9ta» Mo.do-isA^o won Gold Seal Dated'EGGS S r 5 9 « ? : a |I ^ » ^ t^^k " Z 4 \ Each corton "dated"for your p fotection- < • f f a |

WrZ^»:-SS^.-# f&G Soap 3 - 1 3 . Kraft cheese • 6 0 , 1I • • • • ! *n» t.. „„„,«»«°v"- I • v I V O I Y F l a k e S f ^ Z H " * * Kraft Assorted Cheeses S. 2J£37< XI W—r1A.»o«1»"c"i°^o.«.•*»»""'• I / - c O 1O Mild Store Cheese — -29< . MI T ^ ^ 5 ^ 0 ^ ••«««•'"''! ) • C a m a y S o a p 3 M k « 18= Famous Bleu Cheese *4<X : |

I | - J S ^ - ^ 1 • SELOX «2R£t25« K ' S S - • :"! 1I I H E R e s^'^: V" Scott Towels T - 9 < Sharp Cheese F o ^ 3 5 «• ^ I # ^ 0 F^C T° bred*0*^* 1 ' The Superior Poper Kitchen Towel < T «

I ^ LJ^^^^'-E J I POTATOES Long Island U K « Your CWce 1I ; p ' ^t&^Z^-^h ' : * J M » W I Sunlist J&. DOZEN Your ^I ^ 1 X 5 £ ^ * ^ l » f l » l CBAPES . Seedless « Jibs. / % p _ iI - . I « .M»» wS«t« \- PHUN1S Freestone tt 3 lb..1 i | l C II It,: L - * t a ' * I APPLES Fancy Eating 5 lbs. # | % II S # ; - f I «=«, fc, n^gp^afc, I CHilROTS CaUlornia rT 3 BUnchM MmmW MI " i,"l M i l l l H SPIWaCH Crisp Green 1 n».l ^ ^ HI i l l . : - ; > | D«MW>* I P I - «WEET POTATOES 5 Jbs _^«

•*•**»

"The Bad Man" ' ' " * " • • ' • • ' • ' • • - • • " " • • £ ! ' • * - ' • • • -

flNTY-FJVE 1« youm; too1 to b« i*ttl#d down Hi * rut,to * lifetime nf utarinc ItMflM korimn. Twmty-fivc

*JI tiw« fw wandering, for » e -hi>K n p w eRr^ daybreak,

MTMir eyos with the new city,' hirbor, the new land junt

, thp tdge of Ihe world,i are plenty of yenrn left for

:in| your feet in the cnrlh «ndVyii*, "Hew I'll stay. Twenty

|" Ira's too yount."So Jimmy HanUy told hint-

Self, *nd no he w»s in the IIUB nt»-''•'. fftni again-the same nub station

where he h«d arrived a little over* y«ftf before. What had made himfat off here! Why hadn't he goneon, why had h« ever stopped? H«coufdn't remember now; perhapsh« didn't want to. Fourteenmonth* ftfo the but had come

! along the early-morning BtreeK^ ^ g h j p it had been th« roed^ ireST autumn morning fchifcll of

th« town, the grout trcea goldehand rust over the dew-whitenedgraM, the rows of hnusen nil neatAnd solid and warm. All this Jim-my Hunter had setm, peering outthe bw window. Perhnpi it hadbeen the weariness of four hun-dred miles behind him; that's a lotof wandering, all in one piece.Perhaps, just remotely perhaps, ithad been the sight of a prettygirl'* head turned so that the sunfell aoross her eyes, giving them adancing laughing light, H sheopened the door of a little sta-tionery shop, ready for the day'sbusing*. \

Perhaps most of nil it hod beenthat, fourteen months ago.

"Hi, Mac," said Jimmy to theticket seller, putting his suitcasedown, "One for Boston. Whattlme'i the eight-thirty pulling outthese days?"

"Ha' pant eight,'' old Mac said,with the sourness befitting thesoftest-hearted mini in town. "Sixdollar* and thirty-five cents {orthe round trip."

"One way," said Jimmy. "I—a fritnd's driving me back." Helsoked around. "Who's th« kiiH"he asked.

The Mttle boy gut on the wait-ing bench. He was ubout five, yearsold. He sat with his hands sedate-ly crowed in his lap ;»nl his neatlittle brown booU crowed too.His «yes stared solemnly ut urack of magaiines nearby.

"H»'s Buxter's kid," old MacgrunUd. "Hia ma left him herefor HM to watch while MIH- wunt on

; • an ernnd. He ain't much trouble| watchin', I'll say that, lie's all

tied up stUjdyia' them mag-iaines.He ato't tukon his eyes off 'em*lne» aha brought him in,"

"Boy, they sure nvuke n sucker'otit of you, Mac," Jimmy said."Ought to tie a nursomaid'i apronaround you."

"Take your ticket nnd shut up,"laid old Mac.

Jimmy1 laughed, a littla more, alittle louder: than seemed neces-sary. But that wa» the way h*should sound, that was the sound

jf that rolling good spirits shouldmake.

; Fifteen minutes to wait for the§, sight-thirty bus. Ho should have

cut it cleaftr, Jimmy tohi hlmteli;Wh didn't Uk« this hanging around,I* once the decision was made. He| walked over to the be-nch and| grinned*down at th» little boy.^ "Hi, pal," he said. "And how* 4 the world treating yo»1"

It seemed that the Httle boy| hadn't heard, for hie eyes did not

move.''Well, what do you say?"And, now the little boy's g«z»

: tlowly left the magazines andS slowly rose to Jimmy's face. The

big eyes stared at him, round1,I' wide eyes, d*ep as if freighted

some secret knowledge. Jin-fjgf had nev«r seen such serious

J-iyee in a kid before,g|v "Cat got your tongue!"| j Slowly, solemnly, the little boySflfflke.

New Booksfront Editorial Pagt)

admiral found navigatortaietif hi» bearings with two

ft»gled at forty-fivehe could only murmur, "My

Were Expendable" doesfor complacent reading.

Navy officers pull noin their descriptions ol

; went on «• Manila fell ar>dI Arfoy was forced to retreat to

and then to Corregidor,lidn't hewtaW to point out

! we were earsUss and vhsreMr, Whites book wiB

oi» flgkting mad, and it willjro* sad, put U vill slso

to read vf th* ifi

g p y O4ir nj#».I * story th»t will «*ver b«

i by tn» American people.

. y o u n g Uftutewmt Johnnthor of " V k W t of1 wounded in Africs--4s;rW>t American to shed

Free French—4ie* serious thro»t

able to speakl l k

"Bad mitn," he iwiil. "You'rehad inan.""Yeah?" Jimmy said.He laughed araln."Okay," he said. "Since you

don't like my company." He tookout a cigarette., flicked the matchr»kishly, and moved over to thedoorwny, looking op Main Street,

Yen, there was Main Street;for ths last time, th'ere it was.No more Main Street for him. Hewas going to put a thousand milesor no between him and MainStreet. '

How had he ever got tied downhere, anyway? Fourteen monthsof Main Street!

He threw the cigarette downand ground his heel into it witha good deal more than the necen-gary foree. He walked back tothe waiting bench.

"Hey, listen," he said to thelittle boy, "you've got me wrong.Look." He stooped to M« fcneerand grinned all over his face. "I'm

right, nee? You're all rightand I'm all right. Okay?"

The big, secret eyes studied himsol«»miily.

"Okay?" Jimmy said, grinningwider than ever.

'Bad man," the tittle boy said."You're a bail man."

Jimmy's grin went sour. Hegot to hl» feet, turned away fromthe bench and went to the ticketwindow. "Hey," be said' angrily,"where's this bus, anywiyf"

"What's your hurry?" old Macsaid. "She'll be here, she'll behere. What you been talkin' aboutto the kid?"

"That kid's nuts," Jimmy mut-tered.

"That kid's smart," said oldMac. "He can read, some, al-ready, and write his name. He'san extra smart kid."

Five minutes to wait; five moreminutes. Jimmy went back tothe doorway and looked at MainStieet again. '

There was the stationery shop;that was where he had seen thegirl, fourteen months ago, thegirl with the Runlight fallingaslant her, dancing in her eyes.There'd be other girls, though,and not in any dinky shop on MainStreet. No mure Main Street.I'm a wanderer on life's highway,rolling' along with a smile and axong.

Three more minutes.Jimmy smoked another cigar-

ette; he hardly tasted H. Hostamped it out, and another onetoo, and then the gray bm wasturning the comer and rumbling

Main Street.

Jimmy hopped for his suitcase.The little boy was still staring atthe magazines. Suddenly it be-eame important, terribly import-ant, to make the little boy likehim,

"Look," Jimmy said, almostdesperately, "I'm okay. I'mokay, aren't I? Sure I ami"

"Bad man," the little boy said,his iuil lips moving carefully.

The bus was outside. A coupleof people left it; the driver was]eaniag over, looking for whatevernew passengers might be waiting."Bus for Boston!" Jimmy took aoouple of stops toward it, grippingthe suitcase tight, gripping it sotight the knuckles stood out on hishand. He turned nervously, thenturned'again. Then he slummedthe suitcase to the floor. He run

to tho phnrn* hoolh, and tnr «ltmrbunged hard behind him

He eallfd the rooming hoiif"hello—Wrs. Frost?" hr Mid,

and hi* *oicc was argent. "l« mywife there? Thi» ii Jrmmy Hnn-ley. YM. Thanta. , , . Hello,Cathy? Look. Uok, C»thy, 1—didn't moan it. I didn't mean nnyof it. I wa* just erwty, IEven—even good gnyt get thatway once in a while. Will you—jo»t forget it, OatliyT Yec sure.Sure I'm »t»ylnf, if yap'll let. me.. . . Cathy. Cathy, dirtlni, I'mdowntown..,. And nay, you know.It'g eight-thirty. I'll g» over andopen the store. Come downCone down r*»l soon, huh*Cathy?"

And he walked back acroM MainStreet, and Main ifarMt lookedpretty good.

Old Mac left his window. "Well,Tinirtfy," he said, "you gettin' kindof tired waitin' for your ma? Hay,TlfllbiyT Wltn^ ytft?'you been stndyin* here?"

Then he followed th* little boy'isolemn eyrs to the rack of msga-line.i, and saw the one with theflaming cover picture, the big go'.dWestern eowrboy with the two gun*stuck out from his hip, and the bigwords lettcrod underneath.

"What's it gay, Uncle Mac?" thelittle boy laid. "I can read son*of it, but what's the rest of itsay?"

So old Mac read It aloud."BAD IMAM," her read "Com-

plete In This Iswe—-A Roarini;Novelette of the Owl-Hoot Trail."

500,000Five hundred thousand automo-

biles and trucks are in the hauiisof producers, dealers and distribu-tors and other agencies. They arethe reserve transportation- .and thoonly source of supply until the waris wnn. To prevent the deteriora-tion of the vehicles, elaborate plan*for their maintenance have beensubmitted to holders of the reservepool.

GAS TAX LOWEREDGasoline taxefa collected in July

in twenty-seven states were eight-een and one-half per cent belowsimilar collections in July of 11)41,according to the Public Roads Ad-ministration. In lationcil states,the reduction ranped {rom 24.32per cent to Sfi.Sfi per cent. Innon-rationed states, the largest de-crease was 21.48 per cent in lown.The July taxes reflect June con-sumption of gasoline.

ARMY RAISES AGEThe top enlistment ago for the

Army has 'been raised from 45 to,BO years for men who have charac-ter, skills and aptitudes, whichmake their enlistment desirable.Moreover, if the men are fit forcombat duty, they may be so used.

TAXICAB3The entire tuilcah travel indus-

try has been placed under strictregulation to Save gasoline, tireaand vehicles. Cruising for pas-sengers is prohibited and the en-trance of new vehicles into thebusiness is barred.

WAR CRIMESFourteen persons were convict-

ed of war crimes in the six we«ksending August 31st, according tothe Department of Justice. Sev-enty other persons are under in-dictment and diMiukuraliiaUon pro-ceedings were underway agiunst125 naturalized citizens accused ofacts of disloyalty.

Seen From The Capitol Dome(Continued from Editorial Page)

How one penny, lopped off the auto travel ex-pense of Federal nonwar spending agencies, couldhelp win the war is illustrated by the following:The travel expenses shown in THE BUDGET—1943for only one function of only one government agency,the Agricultural Marketing Agency, of $43,000 isenough to send one man travelling 430,000 n\iles ina y«ar at 10 cents per mile. If only JTcenta per mileweie allowed, the saving would be $4,300, In otherwords, just a penny less auto mileage' allowance rate|or, Federal nonwar travel of one ajrericy might buy20 depth bombs and 20 81-mm trench mortar ahells,or 237,600 rifle bullet*: In broader terms it is seenthat this multiplied auto travel penny could, buy ularge share of the fighting equipment of the nation,if the penny cut were made applicable to all nonwarFerjeral agencies' auto mileage, which aggragatednearly 300,000,000 miles in 1941, exclusive of.paidtravel in private cars. Keraember, on* toi>H<m dollarssaved will buy 20 pursuit planes.

Shedding lighj; on the reasons behind compli-cated and uncontrolled Federal spending fm .»an-essiiitia-ls is the proposal of Senator Hplman of Ore-gon to place Federal Budget control in the hft»4» olthe ^representatives of the people,. £^»atpr IJolmafnattribute* « Ikrge share of noavar spending to tH«method of initiating appropriations at the instance ofthe Executive 'Branch of G^veromejit, rather than theLegislative. The Senator's\nalyais reveals that theExecutive Branch initials the riqp#afr>r'ft»n&i; tb«Bureau of the Budget, part'of the Executive Branch,does the recammejioUng; and Congress has only anuninformed opport«|it^ to

MIIGCSBLUBinTftbl

<3-O"5-K!!

HEYMU66^!L..IMET A NEVWfLITTUE

A"SIRUTDDWr!r ' AT SCHOOL

PERCY CROSIIYSKIPPY

EtZAPOPPEN By O19EN & JOHNSON

Cop mi, Kin ft"ij". tjaialt, toe, W JTrja^nil

KRAZY KAT By HERU1MANAT WiU.rWWM.pw?

W<$-'"-i£?H WOSiT.

NAPPY —By HtV T1RMAN

«0MtS5 PtMKV?MTCHA THBV

t00K5 )REVOLUTION iTH'ROOF AM' [ijj>:

TMCgAlMKAW Mt WOT

OOfSOMf

PNHYf LO WUKS SOMETHING I f MAW

UPff ^^U STORE

DETECTIVE RILEY By BOB ' Am

FACTS YOtr NEVER KNEW RICHARD i n

,.i.:! ANI M

Open With PlainfieM Here Next Saturda/", dm U.S.mJt. Bowling League0 s 1942-43$eason Tees. Night

; The U. * , i . R.jDec. lfi~,Mechanical No 2

Mtaf Hi only Vte 23—MecM No. 1 (late)^ C a r t i N

only

; ycnr, IWH open

iniIT season next

hi

3 M e c M No. 1D e c ' ^-Cart ing No. 2

Raft.:, i i he Academy Al-

:,,,ti-hfis will farm the,,lining nigbt with jOat.

i No. 3 bowlipg the„ 2, the Main p f c ev Mechanical Mo. 4I So. 1 meeting the

clmdulc tot »he,f)i<it

<tin(( N o . 1

Versustin No. 2 .

,.,, Office •'

imnical No. 8hjinieal No, 1 ,l House s

HIT ' • .IIIT Powder:,. Metah •.

H. C.>•>• Refinintf 'l No. 1I NO. 2p Plant (early)hanical No. B

( atting No. 11 , ling No, 1'.. imnical No. 4

• • Imnical No. 3iiiur.cal No. 2

1 tpi'r Powder• • Nip Plant

! .1 Kenning\ L..I No. 8V ; I .1 N O . 1

:inical No. 1" K. H. C , .\\r-n OfficeSi,;. Herwiiitc Metal*I1..nk House'

v

Cnpper'I • lianical No . 1M HiLiiical No. 8M.^-lianical N o . 2M ,m Office''.••ting No. 1, •While Metals

< i R H. C.i i tinpr No. 1V.i MI No. 2S Ivir RefiningMirhiinical No. 4T ink Houses.-mp PlantKu.l No. 1 ( late)Snu-ltor

Main Office

M. hiinioal No. 41 . ;iii({ N o . 1

M ' h a i i i c n l N e . 11 ••I'pi'r P o w d e r

M li.u-.kvil N o . 2

" I-'. ! I . C .'A in if Metals

k House'• .•.! N ; o . 1

•:••• • i i s t n i c a l N o . 3

• l i nuNo . a••r Refining

: .1 N'O. £i]> Plant

M'.l.amcal No. 4

' •! Office•;mr No. 2•: HIT No. 1

•i -'liiinicul NO.., I'•!• • nunical No , 8• •'••! M o . 2

'• >'.l No. 1in Plant

''• • iwnucal No. 2I •• k House

••'•(><•!• Powder.• r Uiifining

•' I'. It. C.

•'>!i!f Metals

o. F . H . C

' ml No. 2l a d No. 1U im« Metals

^-"•i Offiee ':

•!>P<T Powder' • i n k H o u a e • • '

No. 1No, %

l l N

liaiiical

ttW M«tai *

„ ^i- Refining11 •"•'!> Plait '

No. 2

o, I.

l''. H. 0.

I; v"»INo. INo. 4

Oct.Oct.Oct.Nov,Nov.Nov.Nov.Dec.Dec.Dee.Dec.Dec.

Sept. 24—Copper Powder*" 1—Meehanical No. 2- - . 7—Main Office

(Oct. 14—Meehankal No. 4Get, 21—Catting No. 1Oct. 27—Silver RefiningNov. 8—Scrap PlantHOT. 10—Yard No. 1N,ov. H^Mechanical No. 3

'. 24—Casting No. 21—Tard No. 29—flmelter

Dec. 15—White MetalsDec. 28—Tank House (late)Dec. 1&—0. F. H, C,

tfce.

House.29-Silver Kenning

8—Scrap Plant18—0. F. H. 0.2fr—Yara No. l38—Copper Powder

11—Mechanical Mo. 3ISMtatInt Mo. i24—Yard Ko. 2

1—Smelter8—Weehentcel No. 2

16—Mechanical No. lSfc—Oaitrng No. 231—Mechanical No. 4

p . 2«—'Mechanical No, 8Oct. 1—Mechanical No. 1Oct. 6—Copper PowderOct. 13—Casting No. 2Oet. 21—Main OfficeOtt. 2»—Yard No. 1Nov. 3—Yard No. 2Nov, 10—Silver KeflningNov. lg—Mechanical No, 4Nov. 26—SmelterDec. 2—Scr#|> PlantDec. 8—White MetakDec. 15—Tank HouseDec. 22—0. F. H. C.Dec. 30—Casting No. 1

Mtclunical No. 3Sept. 22—'Mechanical No. 2Oct. 1—Copper PowderOct. 8—Casting No. 2Oct lb—Casting No. 1Oct. 20—Mechanical No. 4Oct. 27—SmelterNov. 4—Tank HouseNov. 11—White MatalsNov. 17—Mechanical No. 1Nov, 25—Scrap PlantDec. 8—Main Office

'<• «—0. R H.-C>ec. 16 Yard No. 1

Dec. 23—AfWer Befg. (early)Dec. 29—Yard No. 2

Seray PUntSept. 23—0. F. H. C.$ept. 29—Yard No. 1Oct. 8—White MetalsOct. 14—Tank HouseOct. >22—Silver RefiningOct. 28—Casting No, 2Kov. 3—Mechanical No. 1Nov. 12—Mechanical No. 4Nov. 19—SmelterNov. 25—Mechanical No. 3Dec. 2—Mechanical No. 2Dec. 9—Yard No. 2Dec. 16—Copper PowderDec. 23—Casting No. 1 (early)Dec. 91—Main Offlce

Silrergept. 23—SmeherSept. 29—White MetalsOct. 7—Tank HouseOct. 14—Yard No. 2Oct. 22—Scrap PlantOct. 27-»>Mechanical No. 1Nov. 5—Casting No. 2NOT. 11—Mechanical We. 2Nov. IT—0. F. H. C.Nov. 25—Copper Powderfree. J -Owt lnr No. 1Dte. &~*Uthanleal No. 4Dae, 17—Jlain Offieef t a et—Ueohani No. 3

m—Yard Ne. 1

ftyt. aS—Silvw:§M. H—tank S(>«t. 7^TardNo. 2Oct. 11—Tar4 No. 1(lot. B - O . F . H . C .$ct. Vt~-Meohwical No. 3Hot. 4- Ci»l*inf No. 1Nov. 11—Maln OlfUefa itaem W»t

I

26—Mechanical No. 2* , 1—WWt«:MeUl»

Bee, >~ai«eb#iilc»l No. 1Dee. 17-^Ca«ti«t N«. 2Dec. 2«—Mechanical No. 4Dec. 29-^opper Powder

Yard N«. 1•opt. 28—Yard No. 2Sept 29-««f tP PlantOrt 6--O. F .H.C.

Oct. SO-White Kotal*Oot, J8-Me«l>an]0»l No. 2

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Brain Win BUe h

Beat* fr ateCPEAK1NGU ABOUT SPORTS

r arethe champion* of the RecreationIntermediate Baseball Leafne for19*2. They won the title last Sun.day afternoon by defeating the!Pitates, 6 to 3, at the CarteretPaik.

, • Mario Papi, pitehlng for theBmiha, get into trouble in tht wryflrit Inrrfng when tne Pirates suc-ceeded in filling the bases withnone out. But Bhomgay hit in**a double play and SLuafi gmmMout to end the innli\g without ascore.

The Brs ins j tarW eaWy'mdrolled up a ihree-ruiHeld S theirhalf of the first inning. Theypicked op two mare runs i* thethird to give Papi a comfortablefive-ran lead.

Aftersgettlng ont of a holt inthe first inning Papi hurlsd shut-out ball for eight innings. In theninth the Pirates seored threeruns.

" (8) A».R.H.Staubaeh, s* 4 1 1Perry, lb S 0 0Millk, c _; t a 1D'Zurilla, cf 4 1 1Halasntk, 3b 4 0 1

J . P •• 3 1 1Q'Boirtell, 2b, 4 6 «Benson, If „ 4 ( 0Cairi, rf 4 0 0

Total* „ S6 e 6

Plratw (3) A b . l . « .Lukach, If 5 1 9

I. Staubach, p B I BDon. Staubach, cf .... 4 1 4J. Kend, 2b _ 4 • 0Shemsky, 3b 5 * 1Sloan, ss 4 8 0T. Fits, lb „ 4 0 1M. Pita, c 4 0 1Brown, rf : 4 1 2

Total* 89 8 9Score by innings:

Pirates BM 0»0 003—3Bruins 3ft2 000 lOx—6

Two base hits: Staubach, M,Fits. Three base hits: Brown,D'ZuriUa. Struck out: by Papi 3.Staubaeh 4. Base on balls: offPapi 4, Staubach 2. Umpires:Wadiak, Shymanski, Turk. ,

Bittak He^ts GrantIn Match T«ght

HIGHLAND PARK, Sept. 18—Andy Bistak, Carteret clouter, ha;-had just one ambition for manymonths, to get lliinself in a rhi(.'with one Billy Grant of Orange.He gets that opportunity here to.night ns Promoter Benny Rubininaugurates his 1942-43 season at.Masonic Hall.

Biatftk has been kayoed justonje during his Fuccesstul career,end that belting' came at the handsof Grant. Andy has wanted a re-turn bout ever since, and he's de-termined that tonight's results willbe along directly opposite lines.

The BUtak-Crant skirmish is oneof two tigl(t-round skirmishes thatwill headline the card. The otherwill pair the former Roumanianwelterweight ehanipion, Milo Theo-dorescu, with the hard-hitting Me-tuchen Negro, Jake Holman.

one of the mosturnuual flsticuffers evtr to appearhare, has several other accomplish-ments besides his admitted abili-ties within th|8 ropes. A close per-sonal friend of the movie star,Martene Deitrich, who congratu-lated aim the night he won hie na-tional title, Theodorescu is also BO

d a violinist that hehas given concerts in CarnegieHall

An Interesting cloutcr able andwilling to pack every minute withaction, Milo has turned back someof the biggest names in his divi-sion, and went tbfojigh a rip-snort-ing *r»ca5 wttln Frit;ie Zivic whichwent against Mm by the eplit de-cision method.

Jimmy Snedeker, DuiuUen In-dian, has the feature f«r-r«undpreliminary with Nemiaa ©raytonof New Brunawiflk.

Al m fiMM W«r Carteret g%h tr^ftd'ischedrte for tW mutm »fening «ect IMntiat, ««"htUp iMtt Bite fkt atunber of Claw A Mdh*«li ttut UeDut-thy h«a l»ook*d to* kk 1<942 camptlfii. irr«i firo? Aschools, givtaf the Blues the etif e * tf«ke A«y ve h*4 inquite a number of years.

Th« Blues will open with.Pl»in«eU HI** «t theschool stadium a week from tomorrow, SapUmbtii- Mth.This game has been made poawbit tin-oufto the efoffas atthe Newark Everting News And the fact th«t PrincetwiHigh has abandoned its football teun for the doratten.Plaififield, ofH^SSHy, t&& Prltiwlm tomfai tvr fa *mm-

FkkCtfi Baiting Honorth KUgd LmpeWith .492 A *

CAVTERKT—AMthragi Plata of the Pirate* rfipped th« battiMfamf* te HM BMrMM«ii llld«t* Bweboll League thii mnMet Mtfcm amra«« of 492. H# had SS Mt« in 01 trip* to UM plate, *Uybvin 17JJPMM.

n i l uhampion PiraUi iriaetd the «rrt thn* JKWIUOM, with HarryDk« fMmd wtth <4M and BiH iMd«l third urtth 431.

will be awarded UM I«n«4 K. Lukvh trophy for bctiw tiwft in th« M i 4 ^ >

Wwiy Tcwrriw

Nave a H Toam CLP,

14Wn. HeiM, Piratm i sT« VatAaM, Beaven : . 16Kaeklew, Draconn 17OKU. M4el, Bratae i s

, " , , » r w ^ "Gnaife Kagella, ftragim* 18

Bearen 101? .

ing game but doe to Princeton givftig up f ootbaH the Un-ion County a«frefi»tion was without * game. C*rter«t,also, had an »p«n date for the last Saturday of this month.So the tWo schools got together and arranged a game.Plainfield, for years a Class A team, is regarded as a toughopponent for the opening game and the outlook for thecurrent campaign will be better forecast after watchingthe Slues in cction in this game. One can usually tell fromthe opening game, although there's no standing rule thatthis is the case.

After Plahnfteld the Blues will have a couple ofbreathers in Union and Long Branch. At least, th*ae twoschools hav« never given the McCarthjrmen too muchtrouble anil there's no earthly reason why they shouldstart this year. Union will be played away October S andLong Branch at home the following weekend.

Then cones South River and the gang of brkktown-ars. If the Blues succeed in gaining a victory ever SouthRiver, it will be a pretty aafe bet that they will win matftof their games. South Eiver i« usually the toughest foethe Blues have every year.

After South River, Carleret will oppose Thomae Jef-ferson at Elizabeth. Although the RHzabetfo school tegrouped in Class A, the McCarthymen have never encoun-tered much trouble in scoring a victory.

After that comes the annual traditional game wHhWoodbridge. Rich in background, the annual classic be-tween the two schools, which waa broken three o r fouryears ago but since resumed provides the Blues with theirmost important contest of the season. In thk game pastrecords mean nothing as the two teams clash. I can re-member distinctly two year* ago when the Blues, sport-ing an unbeaten team, met Woodbridge in the final game.The "Barrens w<ere just finishing•* jaetUoere season, win-ning about half ite game. But they (!anae along and heldCarteret to a deadlock. So innxfrtajit has this game be-come in recent years that the Blue and White rooters usu-ally consider the season a success if the Blues win, regard-less of how they fared in the rest of their games. The.Woodbridge game will be played in Carteret this year,October 31.

Following their game with Woodbridge, the Blueswill meet a new opponent this year, clashing with Mor-ristown High in what is probably the ftnt athletic contentever played, between the two schools. ( Id. Note—Thisfact has not been verified or checked). Morristowo, akoa Class A school, will be played in Carteret. Lindsjk alsoat home, will follow.

Oarteret'.s final game in its nkw^game slate will bethe annual Thanksgiving Day classic with Perth AmboyHigh this year at Perth Amboy. For several years the twoschools have clashed in their Turkey Day contest in whathas always been the outstanding game in the county onthat date. A crowd of between 8,000 and 10,000 fansusually attends this game.

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Cherpsniak. But Gene Wadia'kovercame this difficulty toy conver1.-ing Walter Zapp, an inflelder, andrecalling Joe Kielman, who hadbeen retired to the sidelines.Zapp won three pimen and Kiel-imin two without a single lose.Stan ,Mnaluch and Tommy Ginilaturned in thn other four triumphs,ench losing one.

Bional SccordUIMI Name

1* Somerville A -A.13 Metuchen Eagles11 Irvin^ton 9. Club15 N. J. Reformatory

St. Anthonys, S. 1Hanks AssociationSt. Anthonys, S. I.Jefferie Pirates

Ukrainian Athletic Club ClosesSeason With 9 Fins, 2 Losses

Hm. 10~<Mechanical No. 1N « , 18—Castm* No. %Km. 2 4 - « a b i OfficeD« . 2—Tank HouseDae. 10—Casting No. 1D«c, 16—M«caankal No. 3Dec. *»—Co». Ptmimc <(Wt«)p«c, 30~Silver U

CAiRTWRET — The UkrainianAthletic Club recently closed iUtwelfth baseball season with a rec-ord of nine Victories, two lossesand one lie game. The closing ofthe high school «tadinm this sum-mer together with the fact thatfewer team* were organized dut>to war-time conditions resulted inth« Ukes playing only 12 ffamesthis past glimmer. Their normalachedul* raw <ww 20 gamas pereea^on.

For the twelfth consecutiveyear <r«n« Wadiak again hjyidledthe tortiny of tbe hill team "n4d i th« dijBeulties encountered

during the present emergencyturned in a good job. During thepast twelve years the Ukea havewon 1S7 games and lost 99, threegames resulting in tie affairs.

Joe Kiudziursky captured thepatting honors this season with uipark of .464, with "Murphy" Bin-lowitrcz.uk, who played in a littleWore than half the games, was sec-ond with .409 and Johnny Kind-slersky third with ,369.

At the start of the season theUkes fawLa aerious^Mftage oi

xitiers due to the enUgkpient in^ j Navy, of;Pltcher TeWBetski andtlw pro-iball playing of Joe "Nunn"

4532

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89Won, 8; Lost 2; tied, 1

flank* ABitfeiationNWOTV-Red SoxN. J. Reformatory

O»p.56

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49

I t 4 | frW teawm on Satorfeit«rnoan, September 2(1, hyImt PtahOUU «i«h at t)Mtat* Hifh School *ta*itMi.game li sc<i««tri*<l tn if**f. M. In «rdet to give theWai wwkew »f Carteret,whom are working on aschedule in the present warauction program, 1to tee la* game. Krankdirector of athletic* and fiand baeekall coach at the

ion Avenue Institution.Aikt tkia-prooadun waa. inthe preeent day trend which

n the most drn«tio chungemajor league baseball withadoption of twilight (r»me« 1large scale.

Tke gamr with Pis in field,u originally an open date en

Bite and Whjie nchrilula, V Mrapged only latt week throngheffort* of the Nfwirk Even!Hem and the fact that Plainfte«j»ningday game with Prim

1 lost when l*rinci-tnn Higheently announced its policy«Vop footbell for the duration.

lioAeld engagement givesteret a full nine-game slate,-stating of nix home gamestaree on the ro»H. U also It«f the atllfnt schedules the

re faced In recent yearsBO lee* than seven Group AtebepUyed. Commenting onKcCartay said that none ofGroup 4 schools want to playteret s» "we did the nextthing."

The team will wind up itsweek of intensive training to:«#jj! with a practice gameBahwaiy. McCarthy had indiethe team has prngreMcd satis)torlly during the past week.ha* been able tn find capable

icements for the big lossOi e*the line this year. In b«cWW4material "Mac" intimated he l ipretty well fortified. •

NOTES

The U. S. M. R. pin league willopen its fifth consemtivo seasonnext Tuesday night at the Acad-emy Alleys, with 16 teams in ac-tion on Tuesday, Wednesday andThursday nights.

NewaiBeusLwekPtaj-OflSttws

N E W A R K — H a v i n g " wan theirseventh pennant in eleven yearsnnd sot a new International Lea-g u e record b y finishing W the firstdivision 12 consecutive season;;,the Newark Bears arc now sockingtheir fourth . Governors Cup tri-umph. 1N0 other club has wonmore than t w o of the ten serieswhich makes the B e a w three tri-

inmphs to da to a record. TheBears hold t w o other playoffmarks. T h e y arc the only club tnparticipate in all piayoff series amithe 1947 Newark eggragatipn WHSthe only team to swuqp a serie*b y taking e ight straight.

The Bears made a very senti-mential but practical gesture invot ing a full sharo of l»«s'r pennantprize money and nny more moniesthey may win in tho p l a w f f s andlittle world aeries to M n T WalterStewart , widow of the youthfulNewark pitcher who died in May.The Bears cut in so many including tho trainer, bat boy, ground

w a s told to Cincinnati; Ken H o i - . •combc.a pitcher who has been ill (ttt "'amounted to only $192 . They also'remembered Frankie Kelleher, wHflseaaon, and Pitchers Met Qnee«and Jim Davis, who were with theclub part of the season, ><

The players on tho club winningthe pluyoffn will divide $.'1,000 anS'the runners up, $2,000. In addi-tion the plnyora nro paid full sal*ary for every day they survive 'Governor's Cup series. ~'ning club alfio represents thgue In the little world series,per cent of tho gross receipt »tt

that series goes to the players,,'. 1The Bears were unsuc<!CSIJ>,,

ful in their opening series against •Jersey City. ;

Pitcher Walter Dubiel of Hart.fold, Conn,, and Infielder Alft«tt.'Clark of South Amboy, N. J. V i ' 'been added to the Newark nas reserve strength for the play. ^crs. Both started nt Norfolkwhere Dubiel won 13 and lost Sj "[<and Clark batteil .327 for the seflV'ond beat average in the PiedmoatLeague, '.'•'.-

Ptey in the Carteret WjLeague will begin on Septemhe* M-;i|with six teama participating.

keeper, etc., that H full share of Warner Chemical goes intot&eir $.5,000' pennant prize tion with six teams on Sept. 21, • , ; #

RUTGERSUniversity College

For Men and Women

Ukei Uttimt md WuUpg *m »•*«

Name

Yard,No. 2&ft. eg-~Yafi So. 18« t . 29—O. r. H. C.

7—Smelter14—Silver Reflning2^-Tank House

"' " No. 4No. 2$

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E§mJH0 Cautm in Buulnesa, Science and ArU

Credit

My*t»d Accounting Auditing Coat Accouociag

Bing C.P.A. Probka i Labor ProbUw

r Sales Management Producrion Ptaniiiag

Motion and Time Study Social Atpecu of Businw

Truniportatlon Industrial Relations Priocipleso/Finance Corppration Finaoce

Income Tax Law Business Organisation Principle* of Maflietiog

tymnfl t lUJdhiT *- Analytical CfrMwtttry Orfaflic ChenMHry Physical

ChAnlltry General Physics Mechanics and Heat NavigMiM

Plane Trji»J0O0flP»try Analyut^iajwetry Malhematia

Calculus

HUtory Piyckology English Portugue*

Psy*(A>fy«rfPw»ig«id. AmericanU»tt«w,

' DBGtBI PiOGKAMj} ( « .

Opt* for Rittontkm D+yV«H9M p.m.

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i't

Your Health?By The Mwlk*

ANTIBODIESSome people go through life and

i> of old .age without contracting; diseases

'MI It is not because they are not ex-:, flOSfld, for they run the i«»m" risks}:%! getting typhoid fever, Hip'n

tterl», etc., as other* who succumb;^d' these gernis whrn they rnme in"BOntSCt with them.•* "Why iR thin?" you ask. You

, see some folks are immune to cer-tain diseases, say, for instance, ty-phoid. For example, some thirsty

•travellers, travelling through thecountry stop and di ink water froma well. Mnylie Ihi- water is cool

§'• and refreshing. They do not knowthat it is contaminated with ty-phoid germs until one or two ofthem come down with typhoidfever.

i Why do some of them fall vic-tims to the dcndly germs and others

>, escape? Those who drank the ty-!''••j^hoiJ-thfcsted water and yst es-

the hid

Screen NewsThe ten young screen playeri

Whom theatremen in this countryand in Canada consider to be themost promisiifr candidates for fu-ture stardom are: Van Heflin, Ed-die Bracken, Jane Wyman, JohnCarroll, Alan Ladd, I.ynn Bari,Nancy Kelly, Donna Reed, BettyHutton and Teresa Wright.

It i» Bijjnifkant of the currenttrend that the top two are not

"glamour" boyn but comedians,neither of -whom is particularlyhandsome. Van Heflin came toHollywood via a ataffe appearancein "The Philadelphia Story," andhas appeared in "Johnny Eager,"".Grand Central Murder" and "Kid(Hove Killer." Bracken received8 call to Hollywood folhxttinjc liisrole in Broadway's "Too ManyGirls."TheGirl"

He has scored heavily hiFleet's In" and "Sweeter

Jane Wyman can hardly be conaidered a newcomer, but is a youncactress of ability. John CarrollCame to attention hy his singing in"Rio Rita" and Alnn Ladd focused•Mention on himself by his excel-lent performance in "This Gun ForHire."

Lynn Buri, the daughter of aclarfjjyman in Roanoke, Va., was

• last seen in "The MagnificentDope."

Nancy Kelly came to the screenvia a stage appearance with Ger-tttide Lawrence in "Susan andGod."

Donna Keed, a native of Iowa,has appeared in "The^'CourtshipDf Andy Hardy," "Mokey," and"Apache Trail."

: Betty {lutton won her place onthe list by her performance in"The Fleet's In," in which every-one was impressed by her singingand her refreshingly differentstyle.

Last, but to our thinking, notdestined to be least, is Teresa

,,5frig}jt, who has appeared in such.. Outstanding successes as "The' Irfttle Foxes," "Mrs. Miniver" and

"Pride of the Yankees."

'(., Edgar Bergen has signed JerryMaren, the midget stand-in forCharlie McCarthy, in "Here WeGo. Again," to a seven-year con-

i r a e t which gives him exclusiveeights to Maren'a services on radio

' shows and in picture work. Ber-gen was impressed by the 22-year-

m*AA, fifty-five-pound, three foot-1 ] six-inch Maren's ready wit, talentTpaiid good speaking voice,

Joan Crawford, who began herEMBtneroatie career in romantic rolesfund then deserted them for com-Ii ; i% and heavy ilramii, is back in

»e-making role*. In her currentam, "Reunion," played oppositea l U p Dorn, Miss Crawford admits"*4t she actually blushed the dayh« and Dorn exchanged their first' • for the benefit of the cameras

p U ' s been so long since she in-ed in screen love-making.

"'UrTBoioE1 nix pretty touBft ••• •••"-('/arrived in Hollywood, Senor"'"' [So Orta, a Latin from Havana,

decided to do something aboutWeighing only 145, he d£-

ped that aince everybody loves a1 Aan, he would eat Ms way to»en Ruccees. Today, he weighs£ pounds and finds it easy to get

r«)c. In fact, his, salary is now$S0 per week, which isn't hay in

I man's country.

Tired of running errands from\e studio to another in the hopeJfliwlly getting a chance before

' cameras, Hichard Beavew,r-«ld Aklahoma baritone

quit his jWb and hired anTwo days later, he signed

! with another studio forK j W a n t i c leftd i n "Chatter"•"• college musical, opposite

O'Driscbli, another 10-._ Oklahoman. He'd chang-,name to Richard Langley.

Carson had i^keiv ft«..er art *|»d drama ^ach-

•University of I«ndp»,•• 'iiiii- J»en no "StW

p Ike role. The teacher dVdy, young l*dy, I

t wasting yojjr "

their blood that protected themfrom the Infection.

This something is fulled anti-bodies. They help police the body.They art good fighters, for whenthey apprehend a skulking typhoidgerm sneaking sround trying todestroy an individual, they pounceupon him and best him to s pulp.

Some folks take diphtheria, orinfluenta, or what not, on e*jpoi».ure. Other* do not, became theyare protected by the antibodies oftho dinemrs in question.

the great scientist,found out how to create antibodiesin the blood. He inoculated ani-mals with wenk solution of germi.The animals got sick, but they re-covered. He repented the experi-ment and injected stronger dosc»,but the animals remained in health.This wa« because they had develop-ed antibodies in their blood withwhich to fight the disease.

Before Pasteur made his experi-ments on dogs, there were manyterrible esses of hydrophobia con-stantly occurring throughout theworld, but he injected dogs withweakened hydrophobia germs andgradually gave them stronger doncsuntil he' could permit them to bebitten by very rabid dogs withoutdeveloping the din«ase.

The Inoculated animals had de-veloped antibodies with which tofight the germs of hydrophobia.What a marvelous discovery thiswas. Whst a vast amount of hu-man anguish it has Baved and dogsuffering too.

Jennef observed that milk.maidswho had sores on their hands frominoculation with cow pox, did notcontract smallpox, And that gavehim the idea of vaccinating folkswith umallpox virus to preventtheir catching smallpox. Thoughht> did not know it the inoculationsof the small pox virus stlmuluttMlthe body into forming antibodieswith which to fight smallpox germs.

So much has now been foundout abuitt antibodies and their production, that children can be suc-cessfully vaccinated against manydiseases which were formerly verycommon and very fatal.

Typhoid fever, which had been ascourge of armies, was practicallywiped out during; the World War,became the soldiers received thetyphoid vaccine and formed anti-bodies with which to fight the ty-phoid germs.

Much yet remains to be foundout about preventing diseases butour faithful scientific workers arein their laboratbries toiling towrest the secrets from nature thatshe has not yet revealed.

Hedy Lamarr's plea sells $4,-547,000 of bonds In Philadelphia.

Crochet Mtprtad for Decorator'$ Touch

VICTORY

BUYUNITEDSTXTES

WARBONDS

AND

STAMPS

A fine handmatU betliprend ii « priceless (hinp that adds the finalexquisite touch to any HocorMivr arrangement—and will betreasured for generations. Such an heirloom piece it thii yer-tatlte and charming crocheti-d spread called "Radiant Star " Theflasy-to-do l l ir motifi arc crocheted separately, tiling luilrouimerceriied cotton. It it fascinating "pick-up" work for leiiure

moments. Start now and it will be finished in time for yourwinter decorating. Directions for crocheting this spread may b*

obtained by tending a stamped, self-addressed enTelape to theNeedlework Department of thii paper, specifying design No. 675.

DENIED AID; SHE DIESNew York,—Denied old-njrr as-

sistance because she owned n cot-tage and had $212.70 in a sav-ings account, Mrs. Mary EmilicKuzel, 76, withdrew her savingsaccount, made funeral arrange-ments, laid her burial clothes onher bed, wrote two notes, one tothe undertaker and one explain-ing her act and then committedsuicide by asphyxiating herselfwith (fas from a heater. A news-boy notified police that "Grand-ma" Kuzel did not answer herdoorbell. They investigated andfound her body.

OVERSEASPresident Koosevelt'B statement

that three times more soldiers hadbeen sent abroad in the first ninemonths of this war than in thecomparable period in the firstWorld War brings but the infor-mation that, on December 31,1917, eight and one-half monthsafter the start of the first WorldWar, 12fl,000 men had been sentto Europe. On Jsunuary III, 1918,the total had risen to 156,000 men.

HOME MORTGAGES AT PEAKAccording' to officials of the

Federal Home Loan. Bank Ad-ministration, the. volume of out-standing non-farm mortgages in-creased to an eleven-year peak of$20,157,000,000 in 1941. How-ever, further expansion of themortgage debt i» not expected forthe duration -of the war becausenew construction will be confinedto actual war housing and in-creased incomes will tpnd to causeincreased payments which wouldtend to offset new mortgagelending.

TWIN SOLDIERS REUN1TFOElizabeth N. J.—Through the

intervention of President Roose-velt, Privates George and FrankKoch, 22-year-old twins whohave always been together, butwho, when they entered the Armyat Port Dix in July, were assignedto different camps, have been re-united at Camp Gruber, Okla.Now. they're satiafied,

Rationing of fuel oil may takein the Middle West.

Attention Bowlers!Open Alley* Win Be Kept ForYour Party Every Night.

INQUIRE FOR DIFFERENT HOURS

,fl 16 AlleysBar and Grill4 Shaffleboards

FREE INSTRUCTIONSCall R»hway 7-23S9

Railway Recreation Center1603 COACH ST., RAHWAY, N. J.

(Opposite Y. M. C. A.)

MeedCARE

, \

your electric cleaner in first this condition}fI—Avoid running cleaner over *ptn\ tacks, clips and other

foieign objects. These sharp objects can puncture the bag,destroy brushes, break the rubber .belt or damage the Jan.

2—JEmpty dirt bag thoroughly,.after each cleaning for most•tUident operation. . '

3—Keep brushes free of hair, threads and lint.4—tetet core of the electric cord d $ug. ; %«—Follow the manufacture itlstlrUctioxik for filing, 7

• • - • ' ' " • '•• ' ' W ^ ' ' ; ; ' v ' ; " v•: •• v v t T . v y:-«ilv

W*R SAVINGS STAMM ON SALE

More For Your Money At S§f§hderSiOPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT!

,Br«nd New For Fall—All Wool

Sweaters249

Lovely Classic SlipomLong Sieev* Cardigan*

Perfect, with your Pall skirta.newest colors; sizes 34 to 40.$2.98 values.

All

Women's and Misses' New Fall100% Wool Parker Wilder

Flannel

JACKETS

Worth $4.98

Campus favorites. All wool "ParkerWilder" flannel in solid colors; nir.es12 to 18, Also plaids and cnrduroyH.

A VALUE THAT WILL BE HARD TO DUPLICATE

WOMEN'S • MISSES' - JUNIORS'

NEW FALL

DRESSES.94

Made to Sellfor $2.94

A thrilling selection of attrac-tive new Fall and Winterdresses in styles for juniors,rhissea and women. Every newstyle treatment you can thinkof. Newest colors and combi-nations.

B e t t e r D r e s s e s . . . 2 for $ 9

?§ GIRLS' DRESSES

Jusl received H hugo shipment ofgirls' better drenei's that regularlyanld fur Jl 29—now at tills low talelirlcp. Stock up- nnd wive. Sl*6« 1to 6.V HIM] 7 to 1*.

GIRLS' SKIRTS00

ltt'Hutm | l . 49.I'ordnrny aiiflpint wool sus-p e n d r r undw Hint li a n dHtylca; till newF a l l fulurs;alsea 7 to 14.

1GIRLS' BLOUSES

K e (r. 11.09values. Whitesand colors; allwith ' noveltytrim. Sizes 3to 6X and 7to 14.

89cWomen's and Big Girls'

Dress & Sport

SHOES$1.59

$2 and $3 Value*

Every new Fall shade, in-cluding blacto, browns,green*, taps, and bur-gundys.

m, SUp-ins and ootn ' <-u—-i-t A H * * . ' '

I, in btf oe, |

'*; -:

WOMEN'S^MISSES' FALL i W h - O F . T H u i x ^

Blouses| 2 9

\Hmnrtly tiillormi hi,,,,olevcr dtull*. You'll « ,,'.' '

^ & M n s ^ r ; ( ••-"•'•••

,^g?BETTEJt BLOUSES $r7 B |

JUSf ARRIVED!SMART FALL

Skirts1.98

, gored, IIT,,Inew Autumn nlimKltM 24 to'IJ. All

l

BETTER SKIRTS $2.29 TO $4.98

STUNNING NEW FALL AND WINTER

SportCoats

• Classic* • Reefer*

• Wrap Aroundi

• Boy Types

• New Swaggers

• Sizes for Women-MUies'

BIG YANK

SHIRTS

New elbow action sleeves;fine long wearing blue oham-bray; sizes 14 Mi to 17.

BLUE DENIM

DUNGAREES

115

STURDY WORK

PANTS

Heavy aervicewble workpants in dark patterns; site*30 to 42. Will stand manywashings.

H e a v y b l u e d p i u n , , , ' i , ie d a t a l l p o i n t s ••! - M K ;a i t e s 3 0 t o \ 2 , I n ' |this big value,

NEW FALL,

SWEATERS1 8 9

All famous brand:- u.f-n*.dippers, and pull—> !llfleWtion of ntylt"- .<;!•'• []on; all sires. ^ iil- l" '$2.98.

New Fall Curtains!

1CURTAINS

Ruffled Curtain* $1Frilly Priutilla curtain*2tt yd». long, Choiceof cream, ecru and pas-tel shades.

Curtain* • $1Dainty lace curtains in4 patterns, 2 1/$ yds,long. 60-in. o v e r a l l ,Cream and ecru colott.

Cottage S e t s - - $1Crisp cottage seta witl>gay border triro« t(;match your kitchen. AH ,fine quality. V

Tailor, Curtains - $1 IFin* duality marquiMfte. 7Sl4n, . overall,E l / « y d s . long. Daintycraam, fl«u or sott p«»t*l colon.

«*.

Curtains For Eperf'Window!

•'&w