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1,800 Weekly
AURYEEIS PAY
DENGLER
'
Carteret Joe Medwick Realizes Lifetime's Ambitioning Traded To Broohlyn Dodgers By Cardinals
j Board President
,|V, He'll Resign Ifp(,nripal Is P*id
[IV RESTORATIONOF E. IS OBJECT
, Members Give No In-
(;iimn Of Intentions, Meeting Challenge
: i An offer by Frank• -1•-Tit of the Board of-.1 resign, effective,- Hilary due Supcrvin,| i atvfn F. DiHlfJel1 Is
• i • i<•, waif made to the.|»v night. A sur-
• ihcr members of theHIT, announced In I• the clerk, Charlesi invoked no definite• in- board. It was re-iritcher's committee,misfiioner Clifford L.
'.•• n u m .
.tatcd: "With a d cit iIn- proper function-
I1 nil of Education of; in return the a<t-
i school affairs to a. I herewith submitII ns a member ofHoard of Education,
i '. o'clock noon, July. nlrd that the salary
; i>in(?lcr, supervisingpaid in full for the
I year, such paymentwithin ten days from
•! Should such pay-iKiik', this resignation
-mi Already Gone
i •> the reading of his1 l;uiiy had attempted to
mi pay Mr. Denver's
CARTERET -Jo* Medvrick rallied hit on*fra«t ambition yeiterdny when he wti IriJodbf the St. Louit C.rdin.li to the BrooklynD6it|«ri in the moil tpectacul.r trade of thecurrent big league learn* The He.l inToWedfour Brooklyn pUyen and » mm of caah re-ported anywhere from $100,000 to $250,000,for Medwick and Curt Da»i..
• * *
For ytara Medwick had expreued the duireto fWr with one of the New York club, and hiteVeiw finally cam, t r n e . Urry McPliait, head&»it of the Dodjeri, (or the past two year*baa put ap iome fancy offer, for Ducky Wuckyand he finally played hia card, at the opportunetime and won. With leu than 72 hour, left
to make a trad* (Ed. Note—Tnat •• the majorleague ralinf) and the St. Loaia Cardinal*,who ware picked a. one of the contender, be-fore the teaioti, bat who hate flopped miser-ably and are flounderini hopeleitly afoamdleventh place with their pennant chance*worth lea* than a German mark, MtPhall againput h]| offer thii week and it v u accepted bySam Breafden, owner of the Card..
Betide. Medwick the Dodger, get CurtDavit and the Card, will gat Ernie Kay, CarlDoyle, Sam Naham and Bert Haa». Joe Mad-wick will make hi. firtt appearance with theDod||ar. today at Ebbet. Field again*! thePltt.burgb Pirate*. He will plat left field.
(Continued on PaQe 2)
IS DECLARED
$500 Reward For Tip To IdentifyTraducers Is Offered* By OhlottRumors Of His Arrest As Band Member Brings Deter-
mination Of Local Man To Learn Who Started StoryCARTERET- Charles Ohlott of Lincoln Avenue, who
conduct* a barber shop nnel real estate and irisnrftfiee busi-ness on upper Pt'mhinjf Avenue, yesterday announced hewould pay n reward of $500 for the arrest and convictionof th? person, or persons, responsible for circulating ru-mors of his arrest.and connection with a Bund. Such ru-
n ma casY to th«nld win his point. Mr.
• .1 the loss of $600 toi iUm deleted from
' Minis because of the"iifirra Mr. Dengler in
i-kcd that if the mem-tn confirm Mr. I1 >»ing charges, heturn the meeting in
for such charges.'••'•!• members failed to
i' > iiKainst Mr. Haurytily Democratic Com-vmbrose Mudrak and
^ Harrington but Re-ninii L. Cutter, who!y criticised the eon-i huol system at a pre
"ii was awardediiinit'ors' supplies oni $550.66. Permission'lie Free Magyar Re-
" Ii to use a room inlioul for summer bl-
1 tion fcom Mr. Mud-was directed to writeI the board to Johnmill Dennis FitrOer-
' work in erecting theat the Washington
School addition.-wed $35, it was stat-
'<•• suggested the high''•ill learn be entertain-1 'nation of its good
ll»n was raised to theI'cuki-r for the gradua-'•- and an attempt toKit. the speaker at a
1 ('ommiuiontr Har-(| the large number of'I'seases reported by•n<l HHked that the aid"•'I be Boufht in havingI1-- cleared. ,
mors spread quickly through theborough early this week and in-volved not^ only Mr. Ohlott butseveral other well-known residents.
Notice of the reward will befound elsewhere In this issue.
Mf. Ohlott said he first heardif the rumors on Monday and atIrst laughed them off as being tooidiculous to consider, But as theumber of telephone calls and vis-
ta to his place of business by per-lons who heard the rumors in-Teased they passed any "laugh-ing matter," he said. Throughout'Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday1
he was besieged with telephonealls and messages inquiring as
:o just what had happened. Theinquirers, Mr. Ohlott stated, toldhim they had been told "CharlesOhlott was arrested and is on $50,-000 hail Bin wife paid thp bailwfth money she (jot from the Bund.His home here in Cilrteiet and hisSummer home at High Bridgewere raided and a large, stock of
> n ' t Forget!Aid Squad Now Seeking
Donations To SupportActivities Here
The rufhors also credited him withbeing president of a Bund operat-ing in Carteret.
Forbid. War Talk
Mr. Ohlott feels particularly in- ]dignant at being the chief victimof sich tillification because he hasmade it a rule in his place of bus-iness not to permit discussions ofthe war, and because throughouthis forty years residence in Amer-ica he has made every effort tobe a loyal American. He becanionaturalized as soon as he reachedthe voting age, he said yostevday,his entrance into the United Stateshaving been when he was still achild. During the first World War,Mr. Ohlott stated, he volunteeredfor service in the army and wasrejected because of his having uwife and three children dependentupon him. After that he worked
the munitions plant at Mov imd served also on the draft board.In his efforts to scotch such ru-
ior« Mr. Ohlott emphasised thate comes from Alsace, which isVench and not German territory;hat he has no close relatives iniurope and no interest whatao-
(Continued ori Pag* 2,
•hool Class Views SolansDuring Session On Monday
CARTERET—The operationof the State legislature wasviewed at close hand Mondayby (numbers of the hi«h schoolclass in Commercial Law. HarryLUbern, class instructor, ar-ranged the trip to Trenton andAssemblyman Ambrose Mudrakhad a portion of the Huusc ofAssembly gallery reserved forthe party.
The trip was made in a buscontributed by theBus Line,
CARTERET — Using as itstheme "Rember—We need yourhelp so that we may help you,"the drive for funds of the Car-turet First Aid Squad has nowreached a total of $74.50 in coivtributions. The squad is relyingon volunteer contributions fromresident.8 of the community andbusinesses and industries loca-ted here.
Of this mm donation* reported this week by John Sidun,•worker for the drive and thesquad, are as follows: Odd Fel-lows, |25 [ Mrs, Morrii Nelsonol tb* -flrftTriphe- »a^a*Wwit
DERBY DATE JULYii,irmBOYS 11-15 ELIGIBL
BOLT OF LIFIRES SIVON HCauses Damage Estimated
At $500; Family AwayOn VjsiLAt Time
CARTERET—Damage Mtimattula.t $500 was caused to the homeof Andrew Sivon, 278 RandolphStreet, when it was struck bylightning during the heavy stormSunday night. The family wasaway at the time and neighbors,after attempting unsuccessfully toput out the blaze with a gardenhose, summoned the fire depart-ment,
The bolt hit the chimney andfollowed it to the living room,there igniting the furniture. Oneof the firemen, Harry Rapp, se-verely lacerated a finger in gain-ing entrance through a windowwith a chemical extinguisher' andrequired the services of a phys-ician.
Slvon, with his family, wasvisiting in Perth Amboy at thetime of the blaze.
All Day Outing On June $0\rranged By Hebrew Group
CARTERET—Sol Sokler is inharge of the annual all-day outngi sponsored by the Hebrew So
cial Alliance. The picnic, to beheld June 30, will be *>t forwfcLd d * ftfcT
1 <"»* Of StuSm In
iRapPlr
1(1 « '-ejiort rf t i< h l Ci he lodge Convention
City t o X m Bright
' K thftpta*
•H oh,
H.,r
Store, ?10; Ladles RepublicanClub, $5; First Slovak CitizensClub, J5; First Catholic SlovakTTnion, Branch 324, $6; CrossService Station,.$5) FriendshipLink No, 25, O.G.C., SE.
Germania Circle No. 3, S3;Bright Eyes Council,'D. of P.No. 39, $3; Theodore Toth, $8;Rakoczi Aid Association, Branch
No. 41, $2.50; M. Sarlk, $2;Mrs. Walter Vonah, Sr., $1.
Further donations may besent to Mr. Sidun at his home,33 Christopher Street or givento any member of the squad.
Report On Tree DedicationIs Given To Fire Company
CARTERET—A report on thededication of trees purchased forthe Borough Park wityi funds obtained by the Fire Company No. 2in a public drive, was read at ameeting of the company Mondayby Joseph Sarzilla.
Short addresses were given byCouncilmen Frank Haury andClifford Cutter. Three honorar;members, Edward Struck, SumnerMoore, and Peter Goderstadt, alsospoke.
and a yrogrem ofswimming events and dancing isbeing arranged..
Tickets may be had from anymember of the following commit-tee: Dr. David Roth, Mr. and Mrs.Samuel Roth, Mrs. Harry Heller,Miss Violet Klein and SeymoreLewis,
Local Women Dies EnrouteTo Carteret From Enroot
CARTERET—Stricken whileon her way home from Europeon the liner Manhattan, Mrs.Rose Cfcifra of 192 RandolphStreet, succumbed to a heajtattack before the ship docked.The Manhattan went, to Irelandespecially to bring back to theUnited States residents whowere stranded when War brokeout. (
Mrs. Czifra had been in Hun-gary since 1937, She is survivedby her husband, Louis.
Party To Benefit RefugeesSponsored By Polish Units
CAftTERET—Statewide rep-resentations attended the dunceheld in the Nathan Hate Schoolauditorium Wednesday night un-der the auspices of the PolishAmerican League. The proceedsof the party will be forwarded toboost the fund being raised in thiscountry to* aid Polish refugeesabroad. '
Music for dancing waj furnishedby Al Kalla and his ojflhestra.
High School Class Of '37To Have Reunion June 29
CARTERET—The Clark QableInn on Route 29, Plainfield wilbe the scene June 29 of the reunion of the Class of 1937 of theCarteret High School. PlanB forthe affair, which will be a dinnerdance, were made at a meetingheld in the Borough Hull.
A novelty program is being arranged and an orchestra wift. bengaged to play for dancing. Diniier will be served in a privatdining room and tickets must bobtained immediately. The partywill leave the Borough Hall at7:30, Wjth transportation to beprovided by those class membershaving automobiles.
Depositors Who Waived 50P . ^ O i O a w . For Stock
To Get $11,000
3000 PERSONS SHARE;LAST PAYMENT IN '39
Checks Will Be Ready AtFirst National Here
Next Thursday
CARTBRET — Trustees of thewaiving depositors of the old FirstNational Bank of Carteret will pay
; $11,000 to some 3,(180 person'slere, starling n«xt Thursday. This
represents a 2% dividend on thewaived funds which are tn thecustody of these trustees, HaroldD. Clifford, George A. Dalrymplend Emil Stremlau.
The dividend was declared at ameeting on Wednesday and will bethe eighth paid since 1934 when thebank failed to reopen after thebank holiday. It will be paid atthe First (National Bank in Carter-et, lower Roosevelt Avenue.
When the bank failed to re-open,depositors were paid 50% of theirdeposits in cash and given certifi-cates for the remaining 50%,which they waived, To date sevenpayments have been made on thiswaived portion, these being, in or-der, for 10%, five successive onesfor 87c each, and one for 4% inJune, 1939. This latest 2% pay-ment makes a total of 56% of thewaived 50 % of the original bal-ance, or a total of 787. of thatoriginal sum which depositors ofthe defunct institution will havereceived.
The trustees of these funds haveoperated their charge at a profit« T « sutte }t tarn* into their haofe.
CHURCH AUXILIARYWILL HONOR POFTSt Demetrius' Unit Plans
Tribute For Franko AtMonthly Meeting
CARTERET — The monthlymeeting of St. Ann's Auxiliary ofSt. Demetrius Ukrainian Churchwas held recently. Mrs. CharlesHarrow, presided. Reports weremade on the Mother's Day dinnerand on the dance, both of whichwere successful,
It was decided to donate $2. tothe A»«r,ican Red Cross War Re-ief Fund and plans were made for
a pianic to be held for membersand their families, the date andplace to be announced later.
The program scheduled for this"month in memory of the greatUkrainian poet, Ivan Franko, willtake place at the next monthlymfting. j,
Mrs. George Elko was acceptedas a merrfoer of the auxiliary. Afterthe meeting, refreshments wereserved with Mrs. Michael Kar-menocky as hostess,
Elizabeth Pastor To Be SpeakerAt School Baccalaureate SundayJ. Paul Heritage Of Vineland Will Deliver Commence-
ment Addreu At Exercises Wednesday In StadiumCARTERET—Announcement that two outstanding
speakers had been secured for the Baccalaureate Serviceand Commencement Exercises at Carteret High Schoolwas made yesterday by Supervising Principal Calvin F.Dengler. The speaker at the Baccalaureate Service, to beheld Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock in the High Schoolauditorium, will be Dr. W. G. Fel-mcth of Elizabeth, who made amost favorable impression In Car-teret several yearn ago when he
tospoke here on a previous,.„Parents and friends are Jn(
attend this service. ^ '*For the Commencement address
J. Paul Heritage of Vineland hasbeen engaged. Mr. Heritage hashad wide experience and is a finespeaker. Dr. Garry Cleveland My-ers says, "I sincerely believe thatJ. Paul Heritage is destined tobecome one of America's foremostlecturers . . . if, indeed, he has notalready attained to this distinc-tion."
The Commencement exerciseswill be held Wednesday night atthe stadium, starting at 6:30o'clock.
OIL PAINTING WONBY LOCAL TEACHERMiss Domina Is Winner In
Contest SponsoredJunior Club
CARTERET—The season's finalmeeting for the Evening Depart-ment of the Woman's Club wash»ld in the Marine Grill, Asbury
To Tdk To Graduates
J. Paul Heritage
Rwkonof honor were Mrs. Russell L.Miles, president of the Woman'sClub and Mrs. Howard W. Thorn.
An oil painting by Miss AgneseGunder;on was awarded to MissSadie Domina, member of the highschool faculty. )
Included among those presentwere: Misses Julia Ginda, Cather-ine Grech, Ann Gibriey, Ann Lew-andowski, Mary Filosa, Ann Pros-kura, Helen Brechka, WandaKnorr, Catherine Fllo, Lydia Ben-ning, Geneviere Le Van, Agneseand Olive Gunderson, BlancheZiemba, Albina Mucciarello, SophiePrywata, Mrs. Nils Reinertaen,Mrs. Eleanor Taylor, Mrs. JosephAlgoizine, Mrs. Lillian McLeod,and Mrs, Wiliara Thorn.
Borough, Local Businessmen Will Make Final flansOft Tuesday For 'Carteret Bay'At Fair O M J l
w ^ . — . - T l i . .pon.<.» of C»rt.r.t D «at th* WofW't Fsjr, S.turJ.jr, July 27,will
— - --r ^ 2 o clock «t tn*Perry io
CAhTERETat th. WorW'n.«t Tua»d«r7lK. . f B a r W h Clerk JUgu.t J. P.rry fatkt Borsufh Hall..TlMiN M>on»o» » « mtmbipof th* b»ro*th •dml«'»t™«'<»» •»? o f »•,?'.*firnu » n « W i t i n i th* adwti.mir °» m»eonungHUy at th* Fair groondi, the Capitolfetatr P a W «Url*r*t B»olt *nd Trwl C«m-E £ , . C b v l M A. Conrad, Mlttuch'._ n™.
addUion«l $1 in «crlp providing for afaitifoato certain cuat»wion« «t r*dac«<l rat**. Ad-niiiioq to th* Fair i> include* in both cMt<dren'i and adult.' tick.U. Th. chlU(*n'» U*k.Ujo bit include scrip-
• • • • « ' , * « • • . . v .
It ii pUnn.d to hard tb* > » 4 of CarUjptti School accos»Mar tW*.l*>al 4*l*»atii»buwform at th* F w , and it i» all* nk«ljr
' profr»m of **t*rt»W.«t wtj U
#B*tb*lr*a>»^al at t L r»l? br 4'
tvu
CLUBWOMEN ARRAHGEhCUKFORJVNE tiWDirectors T Be Guests Of
Mrs. Kucinshi; FlowerShow Is Planned
CARTERET—A picnic for the"Board of Directors of the CarteretWoman's Club will be held June27 at the home of Mrs, NatalieKucinski, near Morristown, M*a,Kucinski is a daughter pf Mrs.Russell L.' Miles, president of theclub.
. The Directors held the finalmeeting of the season Mondayand : outlined activities to belaunched next Fall, These will in-clude a flower ahow to be arranwdby Mrs. John Hundiak and Mra.Joseph Hlub, assisted by a com-mittee.
Among those present at, ^Closing session were MM, MaurkeSw^ack, M,rs. Charles Morris,. Mrs.
8id B
White Metals Takes Easy6-4 Decision Over Silvers
CARTEREXt—-tommy Evonitzhurled the White Metals to an easy16 to 4 victory over the SilverWednesday evening at the Cd^per-works Field and as a result of thisvictory the White Metalg moved astep nearer to they league-leadingYard No: 1 combine. Less thanone-half, game separates the twolubs.
While Tommy WHB holding thelilver in complete submission withline scattered hits, his team matesiounded three Silver pitchers for
total of 17 hits Including homeuns by Frank Yap and Joe Syre.
SYNAGOGUE PICNICCARTERET—TJfert! will be a
and card party Sunday .atWillow Tree Qroye, East Rfihway*section, by the1 Congregation of theBrotherhood of Israel, Alfred Ga-odHiro is chairman of the commit-tee in'charge, and members of thebeafd of governors of the syna-gogue «re isiiBting. These arePreBident, Isadore Mausner; vicepresident, William Brown; secre-tary, Carl Latter, and trustees,Aaron Rabinowitz and SamuelChodosh.
wtt, Vn, Harry•BtnmUu,. Mrs.'
, Mm. ?miwd }th
J
HUNGARIAN PICNICTO BENEFIT NEEDYCall (H'Hungarian Day1
Outing June 23 To GoFor Disjreu Relief
CARTERET—The Grand Com-mittee of the local HungarianChurches and Societies have compteted final preparations for IHungarian Day to be held a1
Braza's Willow Tree Grove, EastRahway, on June 23, commencingat 2 P. M.
The committee in charge of thaffair was formed as follows:Messrs. Stephen Jakab, AndrewLazar, Frank Pirigyi, Sr., CharlesCharkey, Sr,, Stephen Suto, An-draw Zakor, Sr., Stephen ZatikStephen Palinkas, Gabriel SutoStephen Bodnar, George SlomltoJohn Illes, John Palencsak, Step-hen Kala'pos, William Kantor,Frank Csizmadia, Charles Terjek,Sr,, Frank Lippay, Charles 8»es*tay, Stephen Paloczy^ KalmatKerekjarto, Louis Szoke, JohiCstamar.
Also Mrs. Stephen Nemes, Sr,Mrs. Ladisluus Danes, Mrs. Josep'
Carteret Prets,'Garafe Agaii Tt
sor Big Event
WINNER HERE TOFOR TITLE AT
Trophy, Prizes To Been Participants; Fa
Is In Chart«CARTERET — 8aturdafr a
noon, July 30, will bring Iannual Soap Box Dvrtfj,'!to choose the local champion 'will t W b* »«»t to
coinpfte in theInternational Soap
Each year that thii rae«'len run the winner has
with his home made racer, togweek-end of entertainment as 'as the rate at Akron. All expfor the trip are paid, andthe boy is in Akron he is the |of the Chevrolet Motornational sponsors of the raee.
Locally the race Is being«ored by thin newspaper, the EeolRfc {f.my Gnraitc at 30 Roosev«lt Aft*.
(arteret's Chevrolet agend a group of merchants and I
people interested in the w i l ^»rp of our yotinj? boys.
Entries f«r the derby may W ' |undo immediately, at the Ee<%fmy fiat-Hjfe. Boys betweenKcs of eleven and fifteeni'p cligihli> for the 1940 raee, iII contenders should register :nedintely so that they maytnrted at the building of
racinit e«rs. Each boy in themust build his own racer,ing to standards establishedill conU'slunta through the'iy, utul the entire cott may>xcecd (10.
Ult of S|M***tSThe local sponsors edit
to the race; so far are as foMiss Ethel Romaic's Women.
hop; Robert R.' Brown, real &)'t
tate and insurance; Michael ** * 'wchuk's Collegetown Food.
Washington Garage; Sllvg.
Misley, Mrs. George Sianyi, MrsAndrew Barta, Mrs. Charles Comba, Sr., Mrs. Blasius Biri, MrsMichael Varga, Mrs. Frank TotMrs. Gabry;l Kocsi, Mrs, MichaiLaczko, Mrs. Joseph Makkay, MrMichael Romosoczky,' Mrs. Stehen Soltesz, Mrs. Andrew Demeter,Mrs. Michuul Natty and Mrs. An-drew Onder.
The proceeds of the Hungarian"Day will be used for humanitarianpurposes,
Market; John Seid; Frankdato; Sol Sokler and Son;Brown's Variety Storej Sitarand Trucks For Hire; IkeJoseph F, FitzGerald.
Borough Clerk August J. Perry JSchool Commissioner Ch»rles K»y» "X
{Continued on Pagt 2) ' v
AID TO RED CROSSOffer ServkeTWnea S*w-ing Center For War Work'
Is Opened In BoroughCARTERET—The regular I M *
ing of the Carteret Women's B»*publican Club was held at FtM >Hall No. 1 on Friday evening. fH*Club made a motion to offer tb*services of its members to the ButCross when a sewing center ifestablished in Carteret. The- «W».also made a cash donation oi W,(fOto the lycal R»d Cross Drive tnda donation of '16.00 to the fMLAid Sqifad. '
Plans were made to make atrip to the World's Fair onday, June 22. The bus willthe Borough Hall about 10 o'cAny member desiring to makeervutions is asked tolither Mrs. Elsie Bartok or
KLEIN NOW B. S,, OARTERET—Sumuel Klein , of
this borough recuived his degreeof Bachelor of Science in educa-tion at the graduation exercisesheld at Rutgers University Sun-day afternoon.
Bargain Fair Tickets Here
Robert Wilson on or before Tusjfi Pday afternoon, June 18. Noaervations will be acceptedthat time.
At the next meeting of theteret Republican Club to b*"]on Friday evening, June 2 1 , 'men will act as hosts, with Coman Clifford Cutter as
A number at the members'tended a tea at the Hotelyesterday afternoon given byUnitfed Women's Club ofsex County in honor of State Com* 5?mitteewoman Thera "* ' """''
The bargain price tickets for Carteret Day at th« World'sFair, Saturday, July 27, are now on sale here. These tickets,ttrteed at *1, entitle the purchaser to admission to th» Fair andto a nuthbor of tmtertainment attraictions. If bought separately
•the total exwnditurewould be I1.S0. Th«y abe include an ad.41-tional St ditcount coupon for another'lint of attractions identi-fied at the r*ir by.signs posted at their entrances. 'Children's.
' tickets for the special day are priced at fifty cunts, and are forchildren UJJ tp f9Utt«en years of ag|. . , . -
These speciil «tt« tickets are onlj good on this special day,Inly 27^ Mid W» mad? possible through the co-operation of t*e
. . •-•- y ^ ^ h e Carteret Press and thu loppl bMslneaa,' ". d a y . •• ' • •••• "• , '
• • • * " - "" • • - to h a d ; .
and SttiU> CommitteemBn H«nfy •W. Jtffm.
VFW Post Auxiliary NcDelegates To Two &u
CARTEKET—Delegates tostate sessions have b,e«n. n« „by th« Ladies' Auxiliary to ;jjVeterans of Foreign Wars.
Mrs. George Kjmbacfe and ]Adam Harktowics werg
in New Brunswiokmaetlnf of thepwtment t« bs hajd In';
ary
PAGB
WAL ISON WEEK'S CA'Auxiliary f p E*Wnp( Fire-
men To SpQtuor Par-
'. CARTERET The regular roeet-lar of th« L*die»' Auxiliary of theBxMnpt FJremen will he held atFir* Hall No. 1 next Wednesday,Jtant 19. After the bnsineaa smt-liort a strawberry festival will bet e l i Cards will ))(• played nndfWiWs awarded. The festival willbe open to the public.
The committee In tharce con-(iiats of Mrs. James Lukach, ehnir-man and Mrs. Charles Ofeen, Mrs.Harry Moreeralt, Mrs. CharleaBrady, Mrs. William I). Casey, Sr.,Mrs. Harry Tetman, Mrs. A. Lom-bardl, Mm. Jerry Bartok and Mrs.
. T. MrNnlly, Sr.
Orlfta) OMI Orale• The orlfiMl foal fiatt on whichtathradt* was burned (or the flrntfm» t n ffari n o !• « dtfplay atWlfltw-Barre, Pa. To the grata iiattributed tta atart of the hugeanthtaeHt laduitry flouriihtai Inthat region.
JOE MEDWICK(Continued from Page 1)
It was n known .fact that Med-wick was dissatisfied with theCardinals. His annual salary dis-putes nr<* nmplo proof of this.'Even this year h« did not reportuntil the neaton had almost started.
This Is Modwkk'i ninth year inthe majoty. He played with onlyone Hub, the St. Louis Cardinals,starting in 1932 after three yemsin the minors, tnehMlnp one sea-son with Seottdalp and two yearswith Houston in the Texna League,lioth Cardinal farms.
His lifetime batting average Is,338 and in 1037 he was voted thernnnt valuable player award afterwinning the Nationn! League hit-ting championship.
The Dodgem, by securing Med-wlck, will hare grided the neces-sary hitting power and will he ina treat position to win their firstpennant In twenty years.
FUNERAL HELD HERECARTERET—Funeral sendee*
were held Tuesday morning in St.Elisabeth's Chinch here for Mrs.Anna Krupa, twenty-three yearsof nge, who died suddenly Satur-day afternoon at her home, 4.12Ashley Street, (Perth .Amboy, Rev,Mart Hajoa conducted the ritesand burial was in St. James's cem-etery, Woodbridge, The pall bear-ers were: Joseph Liptak, AlbertYrshus, Stephen Toth, Louis Die2-hnii and Joseph and John Ktnpa,Joseph Synowiecki conducted thefuneral,
BnY, lirtipfl n 9\itff9Vu * l)y' Her'rwopnea* Two Cn|lo^6it J
two sisters, one Mrs, Mary Rchaly,of Carteret and a brother, MichaelKarmanocki, also of Carteret.
Navajo OiridesTravelers who loie their sense of
direction on the hugp Navajo Mier-vatlon can easily get straightenedout U the; look tor a Navajo'shogan. The crude log dwellings arealways built with the door io the(Hit
mOf $84.65 Dtfr-
Worktri
(Continued from
~ Donat|on» of*B4.flR ?ee|wd this week broughtthe total cotleeted here to date forto $042.11, as announced by SolSokier and Bflroqgh Clerk AnguatJ, Perry, chairman und treasurerof the drive respectively.
A house to house canvass is be-ing carried on by women workers,the borough being divided intodistricts for the workers, «.s fol-Jlows: No. 1, Mrs. Elizabeth Tuoh-fy, Josephfne flaal, Pearl thinch,Elizabeth Siteeti: No. a, Mrs. He-len Neniiih, Roae Ur, Anne Shniu-ny, Mary Suhar; No. 3, Mrs. V.Dobrovkb and Marie Poll, whoare also working in the fourth dis-trict; No. 5, Mrs. Anna Shutejlo,Irene Gyure, Amelia Locust, Rob-ert Shutello and George Gnvnletz,the last named two of Boy ScoutTroop No. 81; No. 0, Mrs. K.-flym-chik, Irene Daroczy, Mary HniTow,Florence Lauffenbciyer and Mra.J. Kish.
No. 7, Mrs; Ifelen Wolansky,Anna Tract, V. Dobrowski, M.Poll; No. 8, Mrs. Olfca HolowchuckJean Terebetsky; No, 0, Mrs. JuliaTroost, Anne Stromick; ElftBt Rah-•way, Mrs. Mary Aharay, Mis3 RuthTaylor; BoWcs, Mrs. Carrie Drake.
The dwaMOT to bft acknawledg.ed for this WGek, flj'e;
Previously reported, $857.4(1;Benjamin Moore and Co. Employ-ees, $25.10;,Friendship Link No.25, $5.00; Julias Kloss, $5; Car-tcrct Chapter No. 239 O.E.S. $5;Loijia Bollacl, |2.50; UuiB BollnciEmployees, UM- David Ulman,(SK.SO; Deborah Rejbccca LodgeNo. 69, $1$1; S. Schwartz, $1German-American Club, $1; Amer-ican Ijegion Post 2(53, $1; Schools(additional) ?1 ;Burns Restaurant,
lean
lector Alexanderp . Hagan; Ale*|roccr; Joe tiA. Jaroby; C*Club; UkratotaiPavld 3. Jaeokj
Further Information ma/ be OD-tained from th? eMfiatp at '
88 Heald Straef. 'Each year that the derby
been held sevfual thou^njsons have wirneowi t | i nee ,which the winner! njewed r—sward*. The local champion ill ad-
has
to his trip toa medal a*f '
pAkron re-
LEHRER'S76 ROOSEVELT AVL CARTERET
SALE CONTINUEDFOR
1 0 MORE DAYSWhite flannels
For GraduationJ1VERY CHOICE SELECTION
dltionSelvesSoapbox Champlon'fropny,has already krrittf h « 4 ftrf tte1940 race. Wftnen of H#ta artOreceive inedala, anj jejfftier ofthe host upholstered ear receive*a fountain pen and pencil getOther awards are al*o i t u n to en
which will be «4n*un<U iniletnil Uter,
>t "! ' • ' •• : . •
Burid Riks tto KutniqkAre Conduted UM*$
CARTEEBTtr4w." . ' ^ w Ktn-diak, puRlor, offltlated" at i«rr1eeaIn St. Demetffls' .tftrainlanChurch Saturday for ^arry Kui-niak, aKeH 58, Q< 49, Pntpfl StreetMr. KucnlAk died TlW^wfy in theRoosevelt Holpilal. >•'"••'
- d j ^ w t i M Of Holy Family&•*• To Tike Plact In
7:30OARTBRBT — Grsdnatlon v%-\\t*t of floly Family Parochial
rill take place Sundayt rSO o'cloek in Holy Faffl-
ly Auditorium. In addition to apro|rtiB of songs and other en-tertainment, there will be the val-dletflry by Sophie Trasko, In Eh-gllsli, and fn Polish by Jean Wlat-er. VMe pastor Of the church, "Rev.Dr» JoMph Drlkdosz will presentthe diploma*,, Ho le who are to graduate art:
Edward J. Padka, Edmund J. Kar-aaftwtit, IAJI»1«US J. Roniczak,Thiideui A'. Mllewskl, Francis A.
ivaki) lHward V. R«uli-Benwtdlne M. Czajow-
tVMfTlthn R. Epj-ehin, Marie F,Mefcielia, Dorothy P. Malkutt,Adeia T. Mielhicka, Sophia C.PetAfli, StKnfsIa R. Rngowska, Al-
Dorothy J,E. Trosko,
The pill bearers .Michael
and | MBurial was in .lUpifll C»B>«tery,Linden.
The survivor* at* Utt9* children,John of Woodbrldgt;'Frank ofCarteret; Julia, of Mew Y«rjt; fourstep-children, Stephen 944 Michaelof Carteretf Mr*. Mary Painuinand Mrs, Gunk* of Ifindeo^ andtwelve graqdojrjlcSfaii
$1; Hungarian Eefptng^ ChurchCollection, »4.27; Mrs.Walter Vo-nah, $1; House to bpujp «an»as,(additional) «ai,?8; Emil '" "
ment will feature'thft graduationewrrtwa of 9t. Jowph's PtrochialSchool, wMch will be held Taeadaynt(fht at Iffl o'dock. this will In-danV ».play and there will alsobe music. • :
Rev. Ja^es'lfcUtittan, pastor ofthe churflh, w1n"4fldr«i» ffle flfrad-
and, wl|| f ^ ° P r e 9*n t ^ e
RECTOR RBtAINfcpCARTERBT— Rey. Orville K.
DavidBoh, rector of f S i Mftrk'nFipiscopat Church, cel«brated hisfifth anniversary wifli the chijrchon Sunday. The ixectlUye cqmmit-tee of the church announced hl«services on ^ filt tllrie basis hadbeen secured for another year, Atthe time Father Dayjdspn firstcame to Catferet he served fourparishes. Later membots of theparish arranged for him to devotshi* full time to the work here, andit is this arrangement th»t willcontinue. '
Mary T, Tryba, Irene M. Wadiak,Jennie R. Wiater, Mary Ann C.Wierpmftj.
imp r™—
|600R£lARD(C«ntlnn«d
aver In nnythinir save pntaly Artel-itan concerns. ;
When the rumnis spread to suchan extent Mr. Ohlafcf, CQi}f.arroi4with the local police dejjartnlentbut since lie had no definite »ni-pjcions an to wht m y t l ^ t y t
ift«
c. Tl,
of tl,,
J P 4»d seven,
STOP IN TODAYAnd Seltsct A Bulovn «r
T Many other U«*
f A/HION JTUCIy CMOIT JEWKLEka
589 Roosevelt Ave.Kill )Mtiea
)
Cartri-r
SEE FOR YOURSELF!lust What $3 3,50 Mo nth lyW.lt Buy
(After a 10% Down Payment)
Others from $3,990AT
The WOODBRIDGE MANORWEST Of ST. JAMES' CHURCH ON GROVE ST.
• v \t» '
^ ; ^ 3 "V AREum AS
Every icular fpets. She ihoold
'tsu or tne cmiiit ahi ei, f(1)n«flect darfm A« MiwUi| T .» f ,reiull in tUfortnlty .Jtt Ulcr lif,.
JR. ARCH PRESERVE®
Tkeia »ci«n»!fic ibna* are built to property htm th* df»rl, ,Jfoot of your child. Why not boy a pair tomorrow. They .1no more than ordinary ihoet atad are fitted by X-RAY ni ||JBOSTON.
"Always • Little More for Your tioi^pj—Out rrfe** Are Al. -,,Lower Than El«ewk«r»—Ca»p»**"
BOSTON SHOE COl182 SMITH STREET PEHTH
Assured SatisfactionIn Used Car Ownership
Uat Policy ever ,ince we soW our first u«d car has ^ ; ^ i | | | tUlUng aatiafaction b 0WMr»Mp> M d W«V« gping tp
1938 CHEVROLET Masttr Da- 1936 CHEVROLET | I « | WLux* Town Sftan. A-l In AllReipoeU, Coof* T
BBuy It. A Baraain At $
CHEVROLET Mlltsr OfftWJi Matt* 1i« P»hwi
a n Paaola. _ _ .
•E 0 1 flFrtl TM
1 * Wtik'il Uli*#-
I,HIRESHip jrtdUH o* aay new U.». Thlio
V -v1
«vv >' >>
m&23L
\m
HPnnm; * • • • • • > ) !
JMWM
%4 .-> • * * •
Mi-
«
IS
i'
m
" i
4i
iif
i"M,•*-•}
1;•ft
*
1RCHLOCAL
f Warren
,!,l, Gronskjy.:,!,., whowMJii,.r fftthe^,,.,tin> wi th
. , ' • - , ; ™ , ; . : , ( ' . • • ' , • • • • ' • . • , . • . . , • - . , . . • , . . , ,
will too
.,;,! hor to l l . , lr T, .._• h orange HJOWfflW' IjWf
i,,.iii|iirt was !of W i U Nfc^t|ril1 'I.!,. ,,r thp-vftltey;v|l*i'. jut-,
l,,,M(ir was.WMf Wjfifj p n >, ,•-,•,. , o f N f f W
..,iwn nf peachj y,.||<)W T « ( l
lvi!,..,.:,. was the1 b
i he bride's
The feast offthseWad u i t .fan Church «n 'Sunday, th« VM-per* on the eve of the fi'ast willW *»9# * ® o'clock .twnotro*fc*t*infr. On Sunday- the Hist dUjflae liturgy will betfn »t « ». to..BttlMnfi higto liturgy ,at 9*0 a, m.
M«W»Hal s*rvlcefi to<f th* noulnof departed memfhets at ttieU1
4»»VB8 at Eoiehill j Cemetery, Lin-
Ufen. M. /., s»MJ btgta at 11 frelotkt the rB01*ftin^, r ' '
Two banners reilovated b^ Wal
» Boardof Triues, W 'MI D^bTowiky, aNsiittant wcretatyif St. Demetrius Okraini&n ChuM
Virgin Mary are In <*M*e «f :frOThn»nt». SAlhar's Blue Danj" ihwlra of Newark *IU f«
music.
»-UI b t
piano H6UMi'rniind <?f
n-ara exp•-. luring
iii' i'ianofr-r
Rxclueiye
UipresenUtivis
in Union County
For th«— '
Nowo«Jtrji*J.ioacomHwfiblMNship. Today fa k i
ftnd «yOi(i*tK»tk betllty gfildtn ton*, UtMM Wmoil beiulilotof bu*MO«0kH.
Mad* in PA1Y OIANOand MIONONIfTlS
from
intutat 9:15 o'doek on
FintH»». D. £. Urfktc,
Sunday school Will eonvena at9:4B. At -th«. morning
won topic, "MenSpwltl R*d M .A ijtscial offering for tha B4n"
•r»ency Red Crtt« War R l i fFtttid will be Uken at iliaon 3«nday morning.
—„ _ jeftic for tjw m«nUi* aWSn will be Jield in tht |way % k on Shturrfay, IM« tt-
AU raeinbers of th« contregt-m attfntling thje first divine Ht-gi are reqnflstwl to remain In
Sfcurch to t»ke pkn-i in dedicationttrvtces, togethoa with tboie who*lU,aU«nd tbc solemn high litur-
•The: first pVnlic of the swwn[pr tip beoefit «f Bt. DemetrlutiChorch will be hkl4 at Maritwalt'sIV#VB Sunday Jane 1.4 bnglnninftat 2*0 o'clock h Uw afternoon,
of thaaffafc.Jh
Tj Board o J m«hnreh is in chnTve of thethe committee don»»t8 of JohnU OintlB, Mlshadl Pronltura, llar-
Hkydok, Oharfles Harrow, Oon-iMiu Hyuto, tWiartWK D|»fc4,
« WfcJtcr WtwJH*: Tfte *8tn1»fgOf tke giatwhood of the Blotted
MU Iwp CtrteieT, New York, M^-t , Jsney City-and Wood bridge
hi Af htowa, J s n y yTownship. Aftertrto, Mr- «ad Mr,i
M rylid* at 25 Mercer Street,
gtheir weddingP.rry will re-S
Cars for the trarinportation oftitoni attending will mwt tn«folk* it the church at 1 o'titnk.Th"oie nitericiinfr an to pforj[4ethiir own lunches, Hot coffaa willbe «er»e4 a* *j>f P»rk«
^a«m*r Bibi.tdKKilThe annual nejwlqn »f tlw Bum-
tner Bible School will oBafi onMnhday, June ti, and continuefor thre* weeks, Thia school isopen td any child in the commun-ity and has for Ita only pnrpMBthe teaching of the MAf. NothingOf a dp.nominatloflal character £ti<'er« Into the course of study which
gradwi for children from theiin flirrtiitfh Hlah
he hither trade* coverspr»p»ratlon for teachinf. ThereIs no charge for the school. A freewill offering is taken each daywhich in the pAat has covered onlya part of the expense of material.The Mother-Teacher Associationof the church has for a number
Twkiewid, Uft. Elide King afid
SBff
GREEN'SRAHWAY BEDDING CO.Removal Sale
fUko*d. Our New Addrwa Will B«
1553 MAIN ST. RAHWAYNtat To Hftrrit' Dept. Store
1 » . *•, Bofoagh RailTuesday n tn t br s the matter
erHani Aitken, Mm.A&trwr, Mr*.
Nieman* Mfli- Tkmnasthe icat^ SatnMay
Mary Alb* of Edfax 8t««tMrs,' John KindxiersH
Jo*euh Knot and Mnf. Patriot wu, »»U> Ai»D«y
.. nKcNielMt/aMiii*J. Ahort, Dmilr I^iiart, B.
--•TTl tyf**fh» .9»WilkWfa»b«t Shanley,
i
grown of white Fr*dch chiffonover white ^atln, witil/a fulltrimmed bodtoeA coronet • of oraAgecaught the long Uille veil, fh«brWe earritd a whitebook and a bouqtttt of
Anne jB«fre«hmenU w»r« served fol-
lowinj the cards.
HMWHfeontWbn»h« kiwi, fft apteryx, of Kew Zn*
land pMsetiei no visible wutfa, ortall, only »tumjJi vhich can be i««oJVDCQ lti feathers are ptuhed, turtdr,Its nMtrfli art placed at the eq| oj1,'iong beak with which It dlfi J oworms. ' - ' • • '
of y eai-s sponsored the balanet ofthe expense. ' , . ,
Free Magyar "ReformadAlexander Darociy, patter
Sunday•joe •M.J-fWfltW f t*adults at 11 A. M. The afternoonservice .will he omitted.
Weekly schedule—Tuesday *t7 P. Mk: Boy Soout troopWednesday: Girlmeeting; Thu«dayYoung Peoples' Club meeting.
The usual Daily Vacation Blbl«School will commence on MondayJune 2i, at 9 A. M. Children;ofschool age are urged to attend.
Scout troopat 8"R M.
The maid of honprj Mif* .EstherSoltAt, ww« whin eliWtm e#mwhite taffita, with i pifitara hatand biite juxwsaoriw. jg t jtnllff •WSMI JNHW XftifV5W Msl Kai-ipmSf Perth1 Amhoy wrt W d i dand her gown, wu similar Uf Mi»Beltiw's, and the wore piik ««•«e»orie«.
A brother of the brUa, LoaiaBkiba, « u Mr Hokwort's b*rtsian and the u«h«r wai BlbwtHo|«n»ea)f. • , • .
Upon their return from a wed-ding trip to Mr. andg p j)lira. Hoimicak wiH reaide on Eft-gir Stnet
Al.TENBURGPiano Hm*
DSOEMlJffMyK,IJimbotb, N. JM,
« i Rita ThMtad
CRtDlT • "JEWELERSA9D OPTICIANS
Qm Broad Strwt, ipiuUtfa, N. J.
COMBINATION OFDIAMONft AND WEDDING
RINGSLARGE SELECTION OF
USEFUL G1FT9
Jane GraduatesFULL LINE OF HAMILTONGRUEN, BULOVA, BENRUSAND WALTHAM WATCHES
CAMERASGraduation Ring* M-9* and up
at tblit pri»»i. 3CompUu
$269 VALUE COMPLETE«:
N« ttoaoy Down Wh*J. Y«»r T, PFREE GIFT — Witt TfcU Ad
THE GREATESTi m mm
MoreOf
Ri»M fmm OW iMNfair Stock* At Our Ridiculom Low Prj*On Our D(fp|*y lUcka. DIM TO The Public Dwnand For O « t ga
fat dear Qv Sdck Rcgardhss of C«t.
/
Moim J pc. Hunt t— $*£Sturdy eomtructioo. H«fid">me)y upbolit«red ia
Valour. Choice of colors.
C«a*UUM o/B.ncb,
TOT*-*S ANSQ
MEVERBEPOtE!AGAIN!
Come on folia-let's ahow "POP how«u<± we think of him. by ftm Mm
g he'd buy himself (or Father's
the "Bond partial Ibt below/' andov«f to the factory at once. Make
POP1 proud t>f yoti for havingttich good taste-with an "all right" pur-chase of BOND Clothes,
$125 tip
'dress coats (single ft doeHe breasted$10.90Worsted (all wool-coat A 2 pants) I M S
Reversible topcoats (to defy the rain) 17.45White dress coats (single & double breasted) 10.90
Tweed suits (rich, knobb]Topwits (Raglan - set-in sleeves)
FACTORY AT FACTORY PWCES AW) SAVE.
' '/.•»/ fr'kiidiul * •
»HX f j
f s ' » .
"jc*
f '
PAGE FOUR
JARTERET PRESSSnWription, fi.RO Per Yew
Telephone Carteret 8-1600
Published by Carteret Press
OFFICE7» WASHINGTON AVEH CARTERET, M. J.
LUCV GRKGORY WltOt'
MEYER ROSENBLUM 8porti Wltot
E'.itered as second clau nutter Jliltt I.1924. lit Csrfeeret, N. J., Post Otttt, VTt&nth« Act of March 3,1879.
Too Much Tdk,":• t The circulation of wild rumors about
Hund and Fifth Column activittw in Car-
- Iferet this week shows very definitely a
I fery real danger to the United'States to-
§\qay, the danger of people going complete-
I'.jb1 haywire on the word of some irrertpon-
| ufa gossip. Once started, gossip is like
| lM»ob, beyond reason or the ability to see
• the irreparable harm that can come of im-
' j|ll«tfye actions.
,?j'Charles Ohlntt was one victim of such
£,••$•&.-So were Reveral others, here and in
, nearby communities. Thai those who start-,
j^fgffuch talk nhould b« brought to juitice
ajtd-'punished seems fair and needful, but
Imnging in such loose-tongued persons ia
rfljiething else again. Trying to catch the
bRginator of gossip is like trying to pick
<• tip a drop of mercury.
, | That there might be Fifth Column ac-
•' thrities in Carteret is not beyond possibil*-
I ty, But the duty of any residents here who
i,-'i*8 any valid reason to suspect such ac-
'iflvities in our midst is not to start such wild
U' jalk as occurred this week, but to go quiet-
* : f to the authorities with their suspicions1 #nd leave the matter in their hands, Eng-
' ll'nd has learned the lesson of the harm loose
*, "wlkefs can do through spreading informa-
'• nqp valuable to her enemies, and has
fc §4fiied a vigorous campaign against such
rIfuk. Carteret an,d every other American
£.'] oinmunity might, well do so, and do it
;*'"| ow, not'for the value of any information
*, I > spread might be to an enemy of this
V* wntry, but for the protection of her citi-1 jfis who might become innocent victims of
§-'\ responsible persons. Possibly the per-£ J jjrators of the local rumors meant to bey-'f ijjmy, possibly they were seriously bentjf | t.harming Mr. Ohlott. Whatever the pur-| : | we, it is no activity to be allowed in theseM rates, and if the responsible ones can be| 1 wished, fine. If not, every measurek- $ lOuld be taken to stop any such idle ru-i T\ ors in the future. Educational campaigns
be undertaken to impress oh one
1 all the necessity for,weighing theirords.
Caution Is UrgedWord has cdme to us that a number of
lijcal parents feel that they have been mis-lid in agreeing to the enrollment of their
Odren in courses offered by certainhools which are represented as leadingradio careers. It ia understood that somethem made their decision on the basis,
by representatives of the school,4t Band Director George Fleischmann
y&s ,in complete approval of the proposi-
Mr. Fleischmann declares he has nevern such approval. "We, of course, know
Honing of the character of the coursesOf the responsibility of the schools which•r them. Doubtless, most or all of them,bona fide. We would respectfully sug-
however, that in order to fulfill alljjlirements of caution, that Mr. Fleisch-
be consulted before final steps arein. Those schools which are worthy|l(inly will not object to such a mea-
and it may prevent the appearanceof any salesmen who have a goldto offer. •
u 'Secret' Weaponswar brings forth its "secret wea-
f which are widely discussed but nev-, in action.
| | |rst World War produced amazingI-ofirays pf various kinds and super*
of terribW destructive powers.^ld,,of a Beeret, locked in theJjoodon, which was so terrible
fei^h ^aolutely refused to Con-f|upei Thwe. >yere rumors of Ger-
• astounding effectivenesstfie uaa Qt the
| Ifriptdlced Jtaweapons,
lelgian UP-
or*
no word haft been heard of the sup«r-wia-pon and the suspicion ia gradually becom-ing widespread that the German triumphwas due, in part at least to dissatisfactionwithin the ranks of the Belgian fortrcMtroops.
The United States has not been Immuneto the fever of imagination. Lester Bar-low'a liquid oxygen-carbon "iroper-expio-$lve" engaged the lively interlst of con-gressional officials who forced a test onthe Aberdeen proving grounds. The lethel"Vacuum waves" which the Inventor saidwould kill anything within 1,000 feet,failed to develop and a herd of goatsscarcely noticed the explosion.
From Washington, comes a Senate Nav-al Committee report that "a reputablescientist" has an explosive about one hun-dred timeB more powerful than TNT, themost destructive of World War explosives.The committee says that it is not the sameas the Barlowe bomb. From Utah comee thestory of a man who has a weapon "so de-vastating in effect the Allies may refuse touse it," According to the retired Army offi-cer, it will wipe out an entire city at a time,can be fired from England to Germany,from North Africa into Italy and frombattleships.
Then from the East, a German who. lefthis homeland just before the outbreak ofthe war, says that Germany has a greatfleet of huge airplanes, each capable ofcarrying & SHon tank. Tto-nMMwto fly-ing boat* were "built in a factory in theBlack Forests" and 200 of them were readywhen the war began.
Rome, Italy says the Germans have beenexperimenting with a newly bred type ofomniverous grasshoppers which devourcrops of all kind, especially grain. These,it is said, might be transported in airplanesby the millions and released over Britishand French farms in an effort to starveout the Allies.
From the nation's capital, Senator Shep-pard, chairman of the Military AffairsCommittee, saya that suggestions to im-prove the national defense are pouringin from all parts of the country. One manwould drop a hundred parachute bombsin front of approaching aircraft and the-enemy would be expected to fly intothem and be annihilated.
Another recommends a magic greaBewhich will enable bullet and shells to trav-el twenty time faster and twenty timesfarther. A third would use liquid cementin a spray upon attacking troops, whowould be stopped in their tracks. As thecement hardened, th« soldiers would becaptured by chipping off the cement orleft to statuesque death.
Maybe the reader has heard of some"super-weapons" that we have missed. Inany event, everybody is entitled to believeany of these fantastic stories, There isabout one chance out of ten million thatsome of them have potential value in war.
Meanwhile, we might as well rememberthat few weapons have been invented over-night in the long annals of warfare. Usual-ly, old weapons, strikingly improved andintelligently used, have produced the "sur-prises" which have affected the fightingbetween nations. Consequently, it mightbe a good plan to wait until some Armyuses the new "secret" weapons before be-coming unduly alarmed.
Refugees Need AssistanceThe appeal of the Red Cross for funds
with which to, assist i W war refugees inFrance and other European countriesshould not be unheeded, by the people ofCarteret. (
In our ink-rest in the outcome of battles,we are prone to overlook the hardshipswhich face millions of human beings driv-en from their homes by the exigencies ofwarfare. That these people, hrowgh littlefault of their own, have" become homelessrefugees in 'a foreign land, makes theirneeds more imperative and should moveprosperous Americans to do something intheir behalf. • ' ,
While vre are in thorough sympathywith the efforts of the Red Crow to raise$30,000,000 through its 3,700 chapters inthe United States, we are also in, favor ofa direct appropriation from the UnitedStates Government, tp be made availableimmediately for the purchase of food inthis country for the benefit of the civilianvictims of,warfare. ,,, •
June Bugs
N. i
Who h WendellMost Talked-Of Figure In Contempattry American
Life Began Carving Career At An Early AgeEditor'i Note: Tkii ii the let
ond of iix iiutallmenti deicrib-in( the lift of Wendell Willkir.
Chapter IIA big, brilliant kid who wore ;\
bright red rough-neck sweater midchewed tobacco to show how touchho was, Wendell Willkie enteredthe University of Indiana veryyoung, at 15, three years ahead ofthe average student. His bigbrother Ed was already at the Uni-versity. 'Win' got into a scraperight off the reel. Jndiana won nfootball game and the studentswent out to paint the town the colorof young Willkic's sweater. Thelocal police for«e came on the run.
"Cheese it, the cops!" somebodyyelled. 'Cheese it' was the np-to-the minute slang in tlipse days.
The other boys ran. Not Won-1
dell and Ed! Wendell frrinned atEd. Ed grinned back at Wendell.T>y r o W b p tl«Jr sW«38$*'"""
Back home'in Erwood a allega-tion of shocked ladies called onWillkie Sr. to tell him his sons hadpassed the night in the Blooming-ton calaboose.
"If the other students were thereand they weren't," said Wendell'sfather, "or if they had run away,I wouldnH be proud of them. I'lnproud of them! Good day, ladies."
The Willkuia come of courageousstock.
At college hard work got Wen-dell over much pf his youthfulfoolishness. He had to earn hisown way. Back home he had soldnewspapers and driven a bakerywagon. At college he did so muchoutside work that it took him sevenyears to get hie degree. He har-vested wheat in Minnesota, dress-ed toola ill the Texas oil fields, op-erated a cement-block machine illWyoming, ran a boom-town tenjthotel in Colorado and picked vege-tables-in California.
Picking Cucumber* Tough!'^Picking tomatoes is pretty
tough," he recalls. "But the hard-eat work is picking cucumbers un-der a hot sun. Cucumbers are thesame color as the vines and youhave to bend 'way down to getthem." He. knows.
Willkie worked at such jobs allthrough college, travelling fromplace to place as a common hobo.He puddled steel outside'.Chicago,husked corn in Iowa and milkedcows in Wisconsin. For awhile hewas a dishwasher in a restaurant,climbing laboriously up the ladderto the port of short-order cook,
From hobo to corporation president is B further climb up the lad-der. No one can nay Willkie is not aself-made man!
And ho knows the U. S. as wellas V.r known the inside of his hat.Better, because he never knowswhat ctothos he turn on. He is the
orld's worsd-dresaed man, butneither is he the> habeHasher's de-light. IFis friendfc leu iie lookslike a bulTalo.'
Coffeyvillc, Kansas' claims it isthe,first town that started a "Will-kie for President" club. Willkietaught history in the CoffeyvillcHigh School for nine months in1914. He also ran the boys' trackteam, the mixed debating teams,the boys' and girls' basketballteams and the school Y. M. C. A.grnnp He was no popular that thegraduating class put his picturein the annual class hook. His face,
"Just Coming Into Bloom.Wendell Willkie saw enough in
his boyhood travels over the coun-try to decide that democracy wasthe thing for him, and that BigBusiness was not democracy. Hecarried hard,,real-life lessons backto college with hfrn. His fatherhad been a • Williams JenningsBryan man. Bryan stayed at theWillkie home when he visited EI-wood. Wendell became a discipleof Teddy Roosevelt and 'FightingBob' LaFollette. As a college poli-tician he fought the snobbish fra-ternities for rich boys, advocatedJeffersonian democracy, preachedT. R.'s trust-busting and Jack Lon-don's socialism.
He was young and radical.
WORKERSThe Federal Works Agency, with
4,0001 trained employes and di-recting the man-power of 2,000,-000 persons, is ready to performthe construction work necessary inthe new defense program, gaysJohn M. Carnjody, Administrator.He points outiihat the Agency canhandle any t^pe of constructionwork that civilians can do, includ-ing roa.ds, airports, military basefacilitates, piers, docks, armories,housing, railroad sidings, power,water and sewer systems.
CANAHA third set of locks at the Pan-
ama Canal will probably resultfrom favorable action on the proposl by both bourn of Congress,
HEY! KEfcP YOUR MIND ON OUR BUSINESS!
1
/There i& always a camreduction of taxes. , Everyb"government" to spang moneypropositions and, at tfc« ««ja*ttaxes. ' ' ; . '
The way to reduca tac«a.that is what peoplement eliminateaential to the iun
will coW
Other Editors SayBrinjr Out The Hatch ActTtie Judiciary Committee of the
House of Representatives is takingupon Itself a serious responsibilityin assuming to .table the Hatch Actextension which would prohibitpolitical activity by State employees paid with Federal funds.
This extension h a logical andnecessary counterpart of the orig-nal Hatch Act which undertakes
to remove politics from the WPAand other iron-civil-service Federalagencies. There is as much needfor cleaning up the politics ofState machines, in BO.far as thiswill do it or will give impetus toState civil service laws, as thereis for cleaner Federal politics.
The Judiciary Committee shouldat least give the House an oppor-tunity to vote on the measure.Chairman Sumnerg merely says itit "tabled." Not even the commit'tee vote has been made public.Fortunately machinery exists by
ich supporters of the bill m»ypry it out of the committee bypetition. The petition ought quick-ly to gather the needed 218 signa-tures.
Meanwhile, the members of theJudiciary Committee who favorthe clean politics measure wouldbe wise to identify themselves,obstruction have something forFor those who are engaging in itswhich to answer to their conscien-ces and their constituencies. —Chrittiin Science Monitor.
Looking At ton
Pay ing Through T h e Note"According to the Tax Policy
League, it took a little more than20 percent of the national incometo meet the total cost of Federal,State and municipal governmentin 1939.
Think of it! Twenty cents outof every dollar earned being pour-ed into the pockets of the politicalspenders!
The reason yhy the sum doesn'tteem so large to the average citi-zen is that many of the ta*es areof the hidden variety—patnleubecause few realize they are beingpaid.
Fortunately, however, the Ar-ericaji people >re becoming in-creasingly awace of the govern-mental burden, imore and more in-sistent that action be taken atWashington at d in the severalcommonwealths radically to cut'the co*e of puhlic administration,•—Trenton $un4*y Timot- A^rer-liter.
PERFECTIMetbeta, N.eb. — George Crabill
recently grandated from hightchoul with a perfect attendancerecord for the entire twelve-yearperiod. His brother, Clar«mce,graduated two yeau ago with aperfect recor(i for ten years; '
NEW MONIIOE DOCTMNE.TAXES rOR DEFENSE.NAVAL tNCREASE WINS.TRAINING PILOTS.COKMUNIST ON THE AIR.FOR SELECTIVE SERVICE.DEWEY AND TAFT AHEAD.
The uncertain situation in Eu-rope, which means realisation thatthe Allies may face defeat, bring*forth a demand to implement weMonroe Doctrine In order to pre-vent a change In the sovereigntyof island* and territories in theWestern Hemisphere an a result ofthe war. Resolutions Introducedin Oongrens put this Governmenton record an opposing such trans-fers from one non-American pow-er to another. The measures havethe approval of the State Depart-ment.
While passage of the dcclara-rations may make clear the posi-tion of the United States, the onlyinstrumentation of the MonroeDoctrine which will count in theeyes of aggressor nations i» thefighting strength of the United8tntoB. Consideration of the de-claration now indicates that thinGovernment want* to be on rec-ord that it will oppoV.with force,if necessary, any attempt of Ger-many to take over the possessionsof The Netherlands,. Great Britainor France as a result of the pres-ent struggle.
The chances arc that the peopleof the United States will be given'M OpWlOTi*)' ** p«*«*** «"*•form of self-sacrifice in order toassist in financing the defenseprogram. President Roosevelt ad-vocates a reduction of ten percentin all Government spending notdirectly connected with defenseand Congressional leaders express-ed dissatisfaction with the "supertax bills now pending which wouldproduce about $66,000,000."
Senators Byrd of Virginia andTydings of Maryland advocate newtaxation to strengthen the finan-cial condition of the Treasury. Mr.Byrd would add a t«n percent in-crease in taxation to be maderetroactive for incomes earned in1939. Mr. Tydings urges that in-come levies be readjusted so thatsingle men earning $700 will con-tribute at least $5.00 and marriedmen'under $2,000 around $10.00.He says, "The entire burden can-not be carried by the rich." TheMaryland Senator would raise bytaxation around $2,00,000,000 ayear to ftnancee the defense pro-gram.
Indicative of the state of mindin Congress, the Senate last week,without discussion or dissent andin three minutes, passed the Housebi]I authorizing a further outlay of$8B4,902,270 to increase the fight-ing strength of the Navy by elevenpercent. ' Readers should under-stand that this is an authorisationmeasure and not an appropriationbill, which will be necessary be-before the construction of the 22new warships, 22 auxiliary vesselsand 1,007 airplanes authorized inthe bill can begin.
The Civilian Aeronautics Au-thority is wirking in close coop-eration with the Army and Navyin training pilots, devoting itselflargely t6 the first stage of mili-tary and naval training. It plansto give 4,000 student pilots pri-mary training and 5,000 second-ary training.
In addition, refresher coursesare to be given about 6,000 solopilots and will be offered to 26,-000 students who have qualifiedunder the civilian pilot-traiinngprogram, but are not yet ready forsecondary training, which ia llmit-d by the availability of fasterplanes, At least three thousandinstructors will be qualified totrain the pilots and some &.000commercial pilots and 7,000 pri-vate pilots will be given abort re-fresher courses.
It is pointed out that the Armyand Navy, in training combat fli-ers, has a four-course program andthat CAA pilots who complete thesecondary courses will still haveto go through three of the militarystage* to qualify for combat flying.By June 30th, 9,000 students ina ground school course of 72-clasnhours and a primary flight train-ing course ot 3S to 60 hour*.
In addition, 7E0 students in non-college unit* will complete niroi-
l*r com**. .Utidw u n r ,prwent wuwgwidw, the CAA „ ,
Mt tt by 2ep«ptittSnft>«en tf
tt.tl f t y
hich w ,
ri
The $ m itikjor broadrn,Mcompanies which preg«ntoil
into • <our-months periodwill ennblft It to train tt,mary pilot* togtoid of theheretofor« h d W
porceedlnjs tit, theftattonul Convention in.Square fordfiny a little inn,, ,:a *aek »go, felt .cormtr»in,.,|apologU* to tlwir audience fmproceedings. • ,
They exptefned that the p,,,,,.,,law, requires tjjiat equal fnninj,,be gi*«n. to all legally qualinJcandidate*. . In other Wl,r,J"equal, f»ojijttes" require
e the c«ndi>lnt,,Jof the . _.f>: , „100,000 'vdtiffltne same timethey give to candidates of ].:,receiving respectively 27,47f, «'i,fand 16,879, 000 votes.
Qbviously, such a legs! rcquir,mont ahould be altorcd. Wi,;the purpose in the minds ,,f n,authors of the legislation n ,mendaWe, In that they Hr,.i, •prevent feroadcattcrs from ,|,criminating between political p;ities, it might be well to linn ;il
plications of the "equal furilihrprovision to parties which poll luless than ten or twenty pii •,.,of the total votes cast in flu i.,previous election,
In'view of possible future i ]n(
gencles which confront tho n iiimjnow, the people of the I ;.;.,11States should understand tii,t!the defenses of the Unitedcannot depend upon volunteer f,,Jthe Army but to the principk ,,f|selective, service must be invokollimmediately.
Our standing' army, plim Hi<jNational Guards and Reserves,small and it is essential for the|nation to have a backlog ofemits which have had at Ion sibasic training for war service.nation facing a world in iirnwrisk itg security upon the hapjard preparation that is invnlin a volunteer system, fly n n i : |the selective service method ipopulation group will CDIIIIits quota of recruits and the (ernment will be able to calltraining such numbers ns it . ,y|be able to handle a t any time
While we do not hesitate invocate the principle pf seierservice in contrast to a volmiimethod of obtaining recruitwould be easy, under theseryl to, clas.Hif>Imales and, perhap.,.mit volunteers to come fiw
groups whenever il i«neeessaxy to mobilize or ti.inentire group.
With the Republican TW ,il|Convention just around thener, it is interesting to reve.ignncral opinion that unless iha sudden shift, a first-ball"1
ination is not probable. 1view of most observers, II ,n |G. Dewey continues to be tin Iing candidate, with Senutur iert A. Taft, of Ohio, close to iin delegrate-strength.
First ballot votes will alregistered'for Senator Vnmleii.of Michigan, Senator BridgeNew Hampshire,1 former IHerbert Hoover, Frank E. Cannot!and Wendell L. Willkie, GdveiimrBald vin of Connecticut, Sfii;it»fMcNary of Oregon, Hanfonl MiNetder of Iowa, Representative !•seph W. Martin, Jr., of M' >chusetU, and Senator Cappei <•'Kansas.
Present strategy indicates ii" :
opponents to the nominuti" 'Mr. Dewey will work to pn-wn1
a nomination on an early |i'1'which will be followed by a I'• >of strength for Senator T:ii'Should Dewey and Taft both i >si
to make the gfadc mid :Convention beconws deadloel •'"dark hor«e»" will flock t» iifront for trial runs.
"At Your Service Wh t"You Are Serving"
FamHy liquor StorePfc«. Ckr. 8-0977
78 WMhinfton AveCkrtoMt
N.CTICC!DIVIDEND DISTRIBUTION NO. 8
., To Holders of Certiflc«tes of participation Issued to rf^inpositors & Creditors qfrTh_e First National Banjc of Curterti, V fl De-
, th,e(Tru8teee have declared a ^ . ,**&Two (2%) Per Cent dividend distrttiutioh on fth cirtWo
••..«tr
payable Jijne
For the convenience af the Certificate Holder*, »rr»n|erae»^ havebeen^mftde tp make thedMributioB at th« (np^iM^Nnt ion i i ^ n k ,2lj Roowvelt Ave., Cwteret, N. J, at whjcfefeefTwrfiaSM *tth« Trustees w^bjs »re»ent on snid rf»to^«ii|# i ?Br*l day* thqre-
m CHECK-1\ ->• 0 ,v;a-^v :' -jp- ; # i . ;l,#'". •
.;^:'a;.t^/^.
J.\ I
mhffiyjV
Orifln ol
,.F.RTH AM10Y
6ETS NEWpGAfe JAnd T i , Said To Be Scan-
tier Than Sarong! Film
Comic Boohsto every boy
andilriSat. afternoon
MON. A TUES
ALSO —I! ID ROOM DIPLOMAT
withGardner
1 n ENAMELWARETo th« LadUi
g wlih, if not surpassing,the earth quake effects In tho film
San Francisco", Paramount willpresent the greateit storm se-quent cvor put before Teehnl-color cameras in "Typhoon" whichcp«n» tonljtht at the Majestic The-
o l 6 W i t i D o r o t h 5 r •LamoKofcert PreaUn teamed.
Fire, typhoon and tidal« « brouglit togttiur in a .111Rie
furious sequence, ^ulminatitiK in aBale in which whole palm frees areuprooted and go hurtling by in thetropic dusk.
In "Typhoon," Dorothy appearsIn • new South Se» Island costume- « bright, swatch of close-hauled
C E i e d l '
wavesingle
i 1strong;!
BY ROGERS, MTREASoccwifaL turn Gt-Fta-
Af tin For Fint
The itory of a W l y |W, Cingar Sloferi, who it determinedto rlta above her environment for the nan the lo*a>, Joal McCrea,it tht m«vin| plot of "Primrose Path" at tW Ditaiat.
Life Begins At
GRADUATIONWh»rr WJU VOM lit 3 or 3 Vrar« Wrom N»»t
O»B't t,mt Any Time la rrettarlug TourFalnrr. Tim* l> Valuable.
P.rrroll K«w In • rmrcMtun Tl.nl ftrdimA Hrlradlil Kiidirr And «o«il Income
4 <<ID>UI( lid NOW.
Thf Mont Moritrn KitulplurntInifrumrndi At Your DUpoanl.
And
We 41, .__.,.. . . .Mfrlt tmirufion.
Satnr4*r O»n Br App«la(m«at ()ol>.
FREE PLACEMENT BUREAU FREE INSTRUMENTS
NEW JERSEY BEAUTY CULTUREACADEMY, INC.
PRIN. ELEANOR J. BOWERSfnwtttlr Mead Tucker lad laetaiftoi of The
Hobart Bldg. PERTH AM BOY Hobart St.Tel. P. A. 4-1XM
WED. ft THURS.
NOW ON THE SCHfF.N!
TWCrwtMtHtvtl*fOH-
Ttatt
CRAPEi WRiTH— ALSO —
IV Jonai Familyin
V iNt, AS YOU FEEL"
EXTRA LATE SHOWEVERY
SATURDAYAll SEATS2<5C IOAP.'M.
La«t Complete Show Starts 11:00 P. M.UEADE'S
ComUtoUoMl ProhibitionKanus and Oklahoma are the
only state* that haVe complete con-stitutional prohibition.
Weavina; a dramatic ronuutceabout a girl from the wronf sideof the tracks and her 'PrinceCharming who. runs a hamburger«tand, "Primrose Path" bring*Ginger Rogers and Joel MeCrea tothe DUnm tonight In theft firstco-ntarrinc vehicle in »br years,and In one that marks a slgniflcant milestone in their careers.
Adapted from th« sensationalBroadway dramatio success, thjestory deals "with the stormy ro-mance of Elite May Adams andm Wallace. Ellle May. desperate-ly ashamed of her dissolute familyand determined to keep decentherself, meets Ed while diggingdamn at the/ beach. She falls instantly in love with him. Her sincerity affects him and they armarried and for a few weeks arblissfully happy.
Graduation FlowersFor the
Day of Days"'""HM her know
occasion as important as
she does! Make your con-
gratulations — flowery!
Our boxes of fresh cut
flowers, bouquets and
plants will be delivered to
home, school or hall.
Baumann Brothers900 S i George Ave. Rahway
Phonai RAh. 7-0711 - 0 7 1 2 - 0 7 1 3
As timer, **of Mplonace tmenU from wltWn, itBros.' thr imtspies and eorrnptioa, "M«th<« Air," which op«m at tht Icent Theatrt today*
Telephone 441011.
Thos. F. Bui- Fnerd Dktdnt
t366 STATE
PERTH AMBOY, N.,
Joseph V. Coitelto,
kae
You might not beliore it, but tha aatlci thown abova ar* partof a ichoolinf in behaTiar far a d«(|y. Billy L«a It at tha trifterand Cord.ll Hull at the barrel—in "Tha Biteuit Eatar" at thaStrand.
Boy And His Dog Furnish Centralfirbtrufiut
HEADLIGHTFOCU5ID
[& ADJUJ
iby
IASV M l *ikH
a grand boy ariddog as its central
A moving, down-to-earth storyabout life itl the Georgia sportingcountry—rwithan equMlycharactom is told in "Tho Bis-cuit Eater." Paramount's newscreen drama, which is scheduledfor its local, opening tonight atthe Strand TlWtre. \
Translated directly to the screenfrom Jatws Strett'a popular Sat-urday Evening Post story, whichmillions read and loved, "Tho Bis-uit Eater" tells of a boy who lav-ishes his affection pn an outcastpuppy; performs the amafcing feutof turning him into a blue ribbonchampion nnd facaB -a terrible riil-
*nmn when he realises that theiuccpsn of his dog will spell dfoas-er for his own family. Billy L«e,'urftmoniit's talented ten-year-old
iictor, plays Street's lovable boycharacter, Lonnie McNeil, support-ed by Cordcll Hickman, HcloneMillard, Richard Lune and LesterMatthews.
25c Til l5iOO
I l i l l i l r ru l . i r
m 11 IIIWI ';
II I1. M.
TEL P. A. 4-3388
ON STATE ST. AT THE FlV£
EVENING!)
3GcKicopt HuniltyiHnllili}-! nullI>i«vue Mtt
40c at All OlhnTlm«
SEVEN (7) DAYS-STARTING SATURDAY
PREVUE TONITE!Complete Show StarU 8:41 P.M.
Too much InLove to ! • / /
a I IE!
SEVEN (7) DAYS ™ FRIDAY, JUNE 14TH
< ud.y La.t Tima*
DARKCOMMAND"
'
Tidal Wave...Forest Fire... \A Tornado of
tropic love iin the most excitingpicture ever filmed!
Doiothy lomfliir
dug "The tolmi of
l>araiiiit"ls Ifat man
tht Isvisl
SYSTEMBRIM: SERVICE
257 N«w Bmnswkk(at Efan St )
Perth Amboy, N.Sraacam Newark and JartayP. A, 4-3J5» Opan 8.00 to
READE'S
STRANDPerth Amboy 4-1593
STARTING WITH
PREVUE TONE!
GAME SOCIAL•
EVERY
WEDNESDAY
NIGHT,!
ALSO
eOft
Take our word hara'* a
picture you will really •*•
joy. Tha kind of M M *
tainmant avarybody loTaal
i m i iE( C O I H U mciiimNEIEN€ MILUin • IICMIft IMC
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY MATINEE
One full hour of cartoon and comediaaadded to our regular 2-hour show.
* • •
STARTING WITH
PREVUE TUESDAY NITE
L i -
ATI
You'll Swing With ItsSongs and Sway With Its
Laughter I
WITH
Brqderick CrawfordPeggy Moran - Johnny Down*
Gertrude Michael .,••Warren Hjrmer
• • •* ON OUR STAGE—SUNDAY NITE
STRANP FAMILY I* • •
MON. »t8d P. M.
PART? NITECASH'PRIZES
EVERYWED. NITE
BANK MITECASH AWARDS
sec
tCHERS OBSERVEANNIVERSARY
JNtoy Gifts And MemgttOf Felicitation Re-
ceived By CoapleThe Lake Inland
c lu l i rooms nn I,i\fny<'ttr> S t r e e t
. .-WCfr I h r t c i ' i i c Rnl in l i n y n i p t i t o f
n celebration mnrkinp: the t*enty-
ftfth weddinir anniversary of Mr.
ind Mrs, Henry Kirrher, also of
• Lufiiypttr Street, The rnuple weremarrieil June H, 1<U5 in St. Mnrk'n•Eplseopnl '(lurch by Rev. HerbertJ.. Sweeney. ' /
Mr. nnH Mr*. KlrrhcT were therecipient* of mnny ftlftn Mid ofmany mra.inireR of felicitation.
Among the (riiostfl were Mr, AndMrs. Oscar fifoin nml daughter,Helen, Mr find Mrs, Hnrry Mann,Mr. nml Mr-. Itnmld Huher, Mr.and Mr*. S. ('. I'lnlrymjile, Mr. andMrs. Cnnrnd Kirrher nnd ff>n, Al-lan, Mr. nnd Mrs. firnest Wnl»,
"Mm. Nelly Pitsohy, Miss HelenCarsln, Thoinns ISrnmlon, LouisHetman,j
Ilior, Miss Evc-ijrn:Kii'i:hcr,,of faitcrut, Mr. andMrs. John Mnnnagotter Hnd son,John, Jr., nnd Mr. nnd Mrs, LouieAm»ullcr, of West New Mork;
' Mr. and Mrs. Kdwnrd Johnson and' daughter, Carol, of Stnten Wand;
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Glenn, Mr.»nd Mrs, Hurry Eiwngrien, Mrs.Catherine Dnnnvnn nnd snni John,
Inland, Mrs. KdwnrdMichael and Rons, Willintn nnd Kd-vuttd, of Brooklyn;; Ur mi 4 y r #William Angus, of f'rntiford; Mr.*nd Mrs. John Drummond, ofwoodbrid(je,
/RAHWAYTODAY AND SATURDAY
rTOmOYTUMUINM-lOn* kin ioti HI .
•• mmm mm <
SU6HTLYH6H6RABLE
Request Picture Sat. NileVictor MeLaglen-BrUn Aherne
"CAPTAIN FURY"
3 DAYS - SUN., MON., TUES.
[OR ! M FIHST TIMtl
. MAE W.[.
JEST FIELDS
— Ptui —
ARFIt! 0 ^A N N E '
MRI.EY ICLAUDE BAINC
7/5 School idiiy ftfttfjtftttfrm §_
CARTBRBT—tf*ttb«r« of Mi«Safety Patrol of the local sriioolswill be iruonU at the WorldVFair tomorrow of member* ofBorough Cotfndl Mid Board ofEducation. Th« children, 115 innumber and Irieladlnif hay* nndtHrli, Will tnike tilt trip thiwuththe ^mortal »*nwn«lty of themembers of these two boninifhdopnrtmftnt who rfta contribu-ted the neiewory funds.
Lieutenant Robert Shanley,director of the patrol, will be inchirf*. »nd will be ouintrd bytwo other police officers, fiveU»diem and four parents ofchildren in the patrol. The tripwill be made by bus, leavingfrom Carteret High School at9:JO o'clock.
Newark Bears H e mFor One W^k Slay
NEWARK—The Newark 8e»r»,after a short trip t* the Canadiancltt»s, return home Sunday mom-in(r for a ntny of exactly one weekat. Ruppert Stadium. The BuffaloBiaon* will bo the Newark oppo-nonU in Ihr .Sunday doublcheader»ml remain at the Wilson Avenuefltndium throuifh Wedneiidny witha Indies' frame scheduled Mondayafternoon and a nifcht tussle Tues-day oveninj,
The Montreal Royals will followtho Bisons into Newark and playtne Bear* Thursday, .Friday aMSntnrdfty. After this series theBeam -will take to the road forBtinthcr short Jaunt. Thin semiswill be featured by thn ladles' nightcontest Friday evening.
With GcnrKe Wnnhburn, Norm»n lirnnrh, Tom Reis and GeorgeBarley hnvinp found the formulafor pitching shutout ball, the slug-
jirers averaging one homer pergame find the double-play produc-tion picking up with the return ofGeorge Scharien to short, ManagerJohnny Neun thinks his club willbo up there in the thick of thebattle for the league lend no Interthan next week.
Pint Child Labor LawThe first )nW regulating child la-
bor, In the modern seme, wa»passed by the British parliament in1802. It applied to cotton mills onlyand forbade work between 9 p. m.and 6 a. m., limited the working dayto 12 houn, and required elementa-ry school Instruction (or apprentice!.
CBS CUfB ENROLLS71Buiiw IvBtr CJt* Htldi
kmml Cvwmj At7 Ammbly
CABTBBCT—At • upeelal a»-Mmbly, 78 new member* ft thsRuM«n Burner Club worq tappedand prtwmted with the dob colorsand motto. The club, organizedIn 1682, I* open to all pupil* inths htfh nahitol enrollfd in thechemistry course and its purposei iweial And educational.
Thow rsaalred Into membenhip«re: Jowph Bamburak, John Bed-nar, Jamri Burke, John Dellrel,8Unley ljaydok, John Kaehur, AlLukwh, Andrew Lukwh, JohnMnhrcto, Adtln O«yf, Joieph pet'rocy, Anthony Shyjtwnakl, LouUSoblmkl, Stanley flosnowskl, Freddttuback, Rudolph fsrnoiky.
Leslie Van Pelt, Fred Kftnat,Charlotte Brltton; Irene Sefchlk,Melcolm Brown, Michael Capik,Edw»rd D'Zurilla, John Gindn,Harold Ciros, John Gudmegtml,Dougts'. Humphrlei, TheodoiuKlein, Frank Komunicky, AgnesHoffman, Lenoro ffopp, Edith Kim-back, Rita Lee, Mnry Mnrtoscwlcz,Celesta Penkul, Eleanor Possert,Frtuici'trna Silva, Julia Slims.
Alio AdmittedMichael Ktttncy, Frank Larkln,
John Skalaugo, Michael Stima,Wfl»!«y CBttt, BtepTien aiirrepofl,Anthony Gotowieki, Nicholas Sabo,
Michael Stcczcsny, Joseph Burak,John Trodko, Edward Benson,Andrew Koval, Joseph Lacav,Stephen Wuy, Januarius Ohomicki,Adele Brown.
Leona Adams, Beatrice Bodnar,Helen Rreza, Frances Casey, Lil-lian Cduphlin, Gezolla Csubak,Eileen Cutter, Mary D'Alesco,Edna Duako, William Gardner,Steven Szcmciak, Lillian Toth,Sidonn Valik, Janice Wantock,Palmer Weitler, Paith Wllgus, El-eanor Zntick, ReRiriB Zulan.iki andVictoria Takaraki.
The Inititute (or PropflgandiAnalysis, lna., li a non-profit or*ganluUon (oricientiflo reiearch Inmethods uud by propafanditta inInfluaootng public opinion. The In-lUtute was founded by Clyde R, Mil-ler, professor of education at Tench-en college, Columbia university.
$500 REWARDFor the arre»t and conviction of anyone,
group or otherwise, responsible for the spread
of rumors of my arrest or my connection with
a Bund. ,
CHARLES OHLOTT
I' l l l l K NOTH KThe AnnifiU Mmjtlwc of l«t owners
f €l,OVK,l: I.KAF MUHOHlAl,JAltK. AH^OCIATIOM will be held
al t)i« iifflco of the Aafloi'lutlon,C(over I-onf Circle, W<iaai)rtdf((>,No* Jersey, on Monday Juno 24,1016 at ulvvnn o'clock A. M., for t|ioelection or iwaTrusices whoso tortnof office will eipiri.1 at tho AnnualMeutliiK In I IMS, and transaction orany other business wl)'ch may toorequlrad.
HERBERT W. HIIX, •C. P.—«-M, 21. „ Secretary.
GIFTSForth*
CLASSOF 1940
8oa«tklM f "•»* for-ever — *N**«|klM |ir*tlou»Ifllll W»li* ••Mte «
al
SomeSuggestions
Firefly GlowWhat rnakes the firefly glow? The
||ght-flvlng organ conatstt of fattytissue* supplied with numerous airtubes and nerves; the nerves stim-ulate the air tubes and the latterconvey to Die tatty tissue the oxy*gen which combine; heatlegsly withludferin to produce the light.
For Murphy* OnlyIn 1918 William Stanislaus Mur-
phy, A, B., '85, donated to Harvarduniversity annual scholarships forthe collegiate education of mennamed Murphy. The awards goonly t« students ot high scholasticstanding.
SteBito And Edward Ui-li p H
With lion* Mine; giving the invitation who wouidVt drop in.blonde tinging ttar proTei that the !• * Bathing beauty yHe ^oai toInto the water. Here the !• enjoying a tip ia ilka pool 4wrtn( • PaTmSprinii Tacttion. . /.
Rings Fire Box to ReportTheft and It Arrested
NEW tORK.-Alberi UsW AHA->lon tn jeport n $200 robbery at Dis-
oHlce In the early hours got extraor-dinary result), When the 65-year-old suit designer fAund the officeclosed, be turned in a fire alarmand was greeted by:
Four fire engines, two hook andlnrlder trucks, a water tower, twoibnttalion chiefs and a deputy chief,three police patrol cars and a squadcar full oJ detectives,
"Where's the flrc?" PatrolmanWilliam Cnrolin asked,
"There is no flrc, I just wantedto see the district attorney," wasthe reply.
Lass was booked on a charge ofsounding a false alarm,
Civilisation in Afctrtca
I'm a Burglar, Won't YouPlwf e Come and G*t Me'
CLIFTON, N. J.~The de.sk jar-geaht ot police headqunrters.rtibbedhis eyes twice nt 3:15 a. m. when avoice on1 the other end of the tele-phone wire said nervously:
"I'm a burglar nnd I tried to robRoy's Clam Box. Roy caught meand he's making me coll you up.Will you please come and arrestmet"
Pdllce found Roy Dalrymple wttha shotgun and bis prisoner, identi-fied as Mtoony, O. Oohrti *ithbands high In the air. Dalrympleexplained that, robbed of $20 a fort-night ago, he hnd been awaiting theintruder's return. He even hadnickels on the counter for the tele-phone call
Saving on Home Fuel BillsTest* at the University of Illinois,
sponsored by the National Warm AirHeating and Air Conditioning asso-ciation, show that "window condi-tioning," which means any modernform ot double glazing, or "stormsash/1 cut* household fuel eonsump*tion by an average of 21 pfer cent
8n»k« KUtitjC EtiquetteUnder Hittitc law, 1400 B, C, any-
one who orpnounced a man's namewl»tn billing, a snake was deed apound, of silver.
as previously suppot#Mwo geolo-gy profwsbrs, Kirk 8r/a>i dad LpuisL. Ray, report . "
stone topletntnU were ittM inthe fortlhj at prehlstom monHcMIn the LJndenmeter valley m Odlt-rado and flu Harvard protttsorswere called in to act the if* of thtmen who used them.
According to Bryan, the "fuftur*layer In which the relics wer*found'1 was related to a definite gs.ologlc- event which occurred 29,000years ago and thus "dates" the im-plements.
CARTBRBT«W tuun H<*Unnm, O. S. M. performed the
1 ceremony in St. JowpTs ChurchSaturday uniting Mls« G»th«rino
Mtellato and Edwardloseph Lisickl, hot* oi Carteret.The brido is the (laughter of P»)ilSteHato of 1 Louis Street, and
« l»te Mrs. fltellato,The bride's gown was of white
chiffon, fashioned princess stylewith a fitted bodice and longBle«r«s, Her Jong1 ttilte teil washeld with a tiara of orange blns-soms and site carried » showprbouquet of lilie*K)f-the-VBllc.v,haby breath and white roses.
A slatM, Miss Blieabeth Stpllatowas tho maid of honor. 3he woreaquamarine marquisette over taf-feta, with a short veil, and car-ried ten-rose buds. The brides-maids, Miss Mnrtfttl'et Aulto, ftcousin, and Miss Natslio Toln-inonte of Newark, wore yellowmarquisette with aquamarine ac-cessories and their bouquets wereof Ulics-of-the-valley and baby'sbreath.
Henry Travestino was the bride-groom's bent man and the usherswere Ernest Bcrtoloni and. ThomasAuito., '.,-'
Rbth Mr. and Mrs. Lisicki are
o nn
for Mrs Julia KoBtinkeveU, 69,
werp hold Sunday from W
HOii RtiMian OrthodoxiPerth Amhoy, with tht JjMW, v «Georpe Pop«ff, officiating. Mrs.
tlied In South Atnboy
Records of Town KeptFor 61 Year* a$ Hobby
DUfeLIN, OHIO.-Almoit every.one ntiWRdays holds a re«oi<l otsame kind, Including Fey EUfifly ofDublin.
Eberly started keeping « r«0Ord otbirths, deaths and marriage* la thislittle town when he wits 12 yearsold In 1878. He has also branchedout, recording items si neatvby vil-lages, in his old, cover>torn ledger.
His record book li frequtnto con-sulted by children of former Dublinresidents.
It's just a .hobby oi mint," he* r t *dt K f t a t o k l u t k
record* over,"
in
Memorial Hftapital Friday.Besides her husband, Pet«r,
Mrs. Kostinkeveta is survived bythfec dauffhtpm: Mrs. St»phenQywt, Mrs. Gcorpo Little and Mrs.William Surnu: three «tep-«hildrenijnd five irrnndehildMn. The bear-ers were Felix KOWAIJJII, NicholasSjininnski, John Korncluk, OnafryTomwuk, Nichols* Rtytko jiftdMichael Wi*ny.
Prospectivt Btiit FttedAt MiseSmm. Shower
flARTERET—fn honor of herapproaching marriage to. Andrew
of Perth Amboy, Miss Anni l
employeL. Bambargar t Company of New-ark and Mr, Lisicki by the UnitadStntcs Metals' Refining Coriipany.After a wedding trip to NiagaraFalls, the newlyweda will resideon Heald Street. ,
Aalma] SymbolsThe ape symbolises uncleanllness,
malice and cunning; the ass, stupid-ity; bulldog, tenacity; cat, deceit;camel, ittbmiulon; dbi, fidelity;elephant, sagacity and pondsrosity;lamb, innoceoce; rabbit, fecundity;Sheep, timidity; tiger, ferocity;horse, speed and grace; and loop-
Tracing the AppendixThs nppendli was Recognized by
Bttengarlui Carpus* an ItalianUlatomlst, bt ltol tmo hundt*4
lyean later a British surgeon, Claud,his Amyaud, performed Ihe fint ap-pendectomy. In 18H Dr. ReginaldFltz of Boston proved that the dis-ease Is produced by an aftected ap-pendix and coined the word appen-dicitis.
Clothesline Thief ToldTo Come Bad* for Fit
BRIDGEPORT, CONfl,rflhw«times within a lootfa, a thl«l«i!dedthe clothcs]jne ui PbWp W. Oliver'syard, taking two bathrobes, sometowels and ttockings, end two pairot women's flimsies.
Oliver spotted tie culprit duringhis last visit «nd wrote trim!
"Du« to the (aot but the personwho stole the gam>ant| off the Huei^ the rear of 1«4 Stritford ave-nue is known, we, want him to comaback and tee us so (Rat w« maygifle him Jbt upper parti ta match."
'TJp-fltde Down' Girl Wed. Alyce Jane^IcHpnry, who was op.crated on for an "upside-down*'Stomach when she was 10, is now anormal married woman still In her'teeni.
yKnrhiir wits «lven ft surprise mla-cellaneoua shower by n group offriends. Thn bride-to-bo is thedanirhtcr of Mr. and Mrs. MichaelKuchtir of bi Charles Btrcet andthe WHIIIIIIK will take place in S tElias Greek. Catholic Church Jun«22 at 3 P. M. \
The gupnt ft hon^r was therecipient of mnny Kifts.iThe puastlist totaled 1*0. Daneint and en-tertninment were enjft^ed, }
\s
7frami«|
porabH iyt-*ofjjoikoB l»r* aufti
P.-A.-L 4t »ourS<ttnnra«ttir«d bUbifritorlei, Iti
PIANOS
FAfctVI r6R SAI
forittHlyy W
my »n«n.r N*
| 7 6 down,IO h l
for pnly |76 domonthly. WIO helpMTOTiimetit Plnii. Writr I i u j p n d e n t l ^
h ; l | ,
TbLETlSR FtitNgHW)Vithollt kjU'hen I'm.
CblljtnbUi Avcnuo, Wurt.li,, ,
Csrleret,. ,)uly Bn,| Al l,poitiihl* Pftrty Only A,!.i., Ciwlcret, Prau f)(Ti,',.
i
1933 PontUc2-Door Sedan '951934 Dodge Sedan. If you ap-
preciate value impect $ 1 C A
this car
1937 Packard >-C7l. 4-DoorTrunk 3«d.«. Origi- $h«l black fini.h '435
IMS Plymouth Coup* $A-l cMidllion 125
1933 De So to 2-Door % 135
1937 D« Sola Con*. SedunGood rukb«rA l c '465
Small Monthly Payment* — Trade* Accepted50 Others To Choose From
Edward K. CummingAUTHORIZED DE SOTO — PLYMOUTH DEALERS
Used C«r Lot Show Room*407 Rahway Ave. 416 Morris Ave
Tel. £1. 2-9193 EUstUth, N J
SAVE $55 AT— Please mention ftis payer t*»(Jverti»«s, —
TSKRE is a special aura about gifts (or a bride. Romance, beauty,happiness are suggested. Electric appliances fit right iatft the
Just a Few Brand New
6 Cubic FootMODELS • :. .. ,
OWGJNALLYm$55.00•SJSf^SF^^SJ^^S'
pjjptup:. P e j r durability* ithcir dcao and 4 t e gseryi«c majte t&em % logical amwer
quation 'WJjat shall I give her,?' Electric telectric docjts and irons, e k ^ W broilers and coffee
p^e pi t^ew will driigtit a b»de ^nd cemtrf^tci|PBW^Juppintae of imMy* a i^^ithc success of her hoitfc*
moderate and Myrotm temv are ca?y,-Your; assortmcnU.
%
,,p the championship inMetals interdepartment
erljf, 2b .Xjelman, eTurner, rf .
,,inco by diftat lhf th«v Tuesday evening, Iniintr encounter, 18 t 9 . l l .,:, still b ^
,, nut 19he Yard b,v 8 t<r 6 in the fou
five r u n lit Hie fourthmore In the fifth to t ikeiding lead;
t } HIloop; h id * shaky*
:is the game pwgrqjied.! In Ret bottfel".i,arnt, hard-hitting lead-e r the Y"»rdr prowd, W*this title )>y c o i t O Iin nix trip* W th« plate.in five rmw'an)}olf. /
Scpn by .innings—b , eeji
4 d fe
1 04 18 1
4n 11 12
da*—11
faaine)tank Home (8)
$M.::::::; : jQtajkowski, as \ g
an, ofWleromdy; lb
Tfarr, cfrf ...
E31
t14000
8 18
Score by inning*:Pank House '. 400 010 000—$lopax ..... 2?0 m 012—0
AB R I4 0
Molds I « i f Mrttrp ShelW From
Cfrter«rt Nine P*f«*td|Rahway
Sunday.OH«l#a Here
Lht Of Own AnAQthctdGnblkto M htojtel f»cWii| Assismtnt
and Gun Club, l»«t week announced'the fo1|o*fnr lint of "tfonoi* (0 theCtrMreltotalf i iAd. The,c«mjM*r
CARTEHETCardtnaja ran into a Oerman
blitakrietr" at the Rahway Re-formatory last Saturday and; wert'beaten by a, 9 to 4 «*trre By WReformatory nine. ft l a w thfljhlrd straight Ions for the toc»)jontlngent,
Johnny Mittro started on tljeill for ity» Cat da and Itpta4 qntjlle tec on d inning, when tlirmatory team opened a 1
(Hack, sending him to th««"waa reii«v*J by Frank
longlarno, a new addition to- trfewho is tmrattot W 1» a
tee in febatft* of thesetiont Inelacfwl Stta
' anaCrartdock.
Al
0 0
ilBn, who in q x w t o t W 1« at>l* help to this Cardt this aeaion.'
lex
Thppjpwn, Joseph Mudrick, HaMndrlck, Alex Prywata, Joe
f
|n three games this season andalso snapped his nine-Ram* ttreakwhkh i « » afartsd last
This Sunday the local* will playhost to tho Baymay Oriolesthe Copait pi»M. The gihne isscheduled *o statf at 2:39 o'clocti.
Cardlnili (2)
37 C 10
falinowakl, 2bllalowarci!tj|g «
8 w r e Milk Padner V o n ) 4 1 nuaw l»llk
^ Vet tuch In artiol* was ex.ilbit«l M tte MJdwtfrt lB4«ibtla)DeslgntN exhibition recently.
The square milk pall, as manj.otb*r rewJutionlitd larm Impl*-
j hotn* «q«ftpQjeni toots, andiM. hal regions tot exfitlnj.
It t> easier to carry, tt Is easier toHold between the kneei whei) ft lkrIHf.' iti rotlnded corners pour adeal, imall stream, and It li simple
|t c«a be laid on
JluchMkL 8b rE • $ f t | j b . . . . . , ,„ . . . 5
nri, cf ..I.'.....: 8litiro, p, If. 3
Broiowaki, c i.._.. 2longiorno, "if, p 2)eAUeslo, rf 3
mrtttiuciwi by Montana eojote
We f ^ ^by archeologliti fa| ha^t covacrei and fc have Iwrt atleethlgh.
26 2 8
N. J. R. ( 9 )
Petti, 2b, ssHuff, l b 4Fischer, If 8|6adice, c ;.... 3Kivilles, as ,
il," 3b '.•.„''ettnirfti, riluntw, fciav«W, pIwlatM, 8b
AB R4 1
21110iI16
39 9 1Score by intiingj:
Cardinals .1... 000 0Q2 0 - T 2N. J1. R 060 300 x—It
the complete listp i , AU)tu«t Pe
CrtTib., Michael Yarchw t * Weitt, M w J. Ordhlned Gndnar, William Sltar
j k Aaadohiy Alkyi ,Buck Wilson, R
grt, Steve flayg, Walter D | ., John Lukatuik, John Stlmi,Kolesarlck, Walter Ituimftj-Toddy Thompson, Joe Ugi,Rasinnowicj, F n a k Pinnf ,Frank floanowskl, G«orf»
, Joseph Mudrick,Al P
Hagy Liquor Store, Joe Be«tctn r Frank Brown, Leo-.ouig Lcbowttc, Sot Bfckltr, Johnlaalleci, Lchrer's Men lh«p, R.'eldmah, Ronny, Family Liquo^itore, Bill Kochok, palton Motors,
JuUuii Kloss, Alee Lebow, JohnCMJoWelLJack Price, Simon Mentchw,
H a ^ e i T/e%art, Mrs. M a j a m ,leincrsRen'n Garage, Joseph Ba-kp», Bide Froi l t .Store,
Jqe
Compton, ThJwuw MOM,kirehner, Conrtd lUehnaT, Joha IWickota, Wward StmrfU, AndySolt*«, Joneph Witkowski, John
Carteret ftntltof A l l en ,it Anto fctobange, ChaTieii
Sarprii*. 8tort. /ohn Ko*, llr».J«Ml>teleir«l ""
F«nkK*k-
Jo»ph
»«lfe Con-
Gunt
CARTERBT—Joe Eliro, Cirthird bawnuo, smacked a
CABtRSEt —
boy In the teal game of the Ma-son for the Bines. ! i w»* also th«
contest between the two1* thin season.e victory, a hawl-f«ught «a»,
to nay the least, brought Cartmt's«(td lor Uw 1940 eantsttlm to3 tins against only ttw lo«§ai.
ft WSs one of the fcrealaat Ma-tr>ns evdr enjoyed.by a Blue andWhile baseball aggregatlom
Adam Gluchowski, Carttret'abrilliant hurler, pitched a
of a r«Juven»t»fl club, will appearth«h s#<«»nd borne eontMt thin
Wgh aehMl ataiilamn$ the South River* t i l l i x i twtli«ht
at 6 o'dock.T)i« fiokian, in thtir weekly an-
BonncftrttntbyAtMtink.^,f y. pi , state that they have low.
«red the admlsdon to twenty-fiveeenta for aduKt and ten eenls forchildren, effettlte with thin eve-nine's game. The club feels that
b
•am* AS he
eiii Jqe Pultosh.Edward Btruk, KoTBJ>lau» Dept
Store John Rendiieralcy, (j. A.Conrad, Bill Greenwald, CarteretNewspaper DeliTety Co., ArvanRabinowitz, Joseph Silva, Mm, My-ers, Louis Lebo*itz, Joseph Enot,William flrown, Ifarry J. Jhheii,John Chamra, Ideal Service Sta-tion, Steve Kutcy, O. Olsen, Wil-
oaeph Trefinko, JoiPat Strapupedt;lomas Tobiassor
Herman Hel'at R*pp, Ca*|
can, Mich anet*, Ralp
d, Carmen Zulln
At JohiGcorga
l»a«kvicts with only four scattered hits
Hth» aeven-inning game. Hestruck out 'ajx • mon and walkedonly two.
TV« Amboy team open»d thescoring wilh a single run In thtsecond, But their Toad waslived at the Bluen pounded]
0 nini ik,._ an B itrrttftg Wby 2 to l.
a Bingle marker in the . (it remained deadloclted until
Alex Such, MikoSchwartz, Morris
Ham Hikqdem,Karmon, Ma _, ...7,.._Kantor, Jaffe, D. Wohlgemuth ftIon, Charles Brary, JohnBrown Bros., Joe Mavkowiti,
Martin Knoll, Fritz Golle, C,Karwacky, Joe Hasek, RaoseveltLaundry, Harry Weiss, OvertrackDept. Store, Leo Brown, JoiephTreatensky, Miss Mary Sqch,Pawlik, Capital barber E iop, Le{(
Sp j p , (
Rocknian, Abel Burns, Cfrpss S«r-
Cort-an, Ony Tcrnay, Don Ternay,
Bute Craddook, Johnnie Crom-•Well, John Spolowitz, Patrick Po-tocnig, Gycnia Mnchek, Tomczuk(Jrocery, Rwen Grocery, City LineBar, Luborn Tavern, WashingtontJaraRe, George Miako, AdamWalt Bar, James I Lqka,Stutike, Frank C
Greatest SeuonLoaea Only ThrM—CopC*Qtr«l Mm** Cttfaenc« Champlonahip.
CARTBBET—Carteret H i gSchool's basabali toam, 1940 edtion, recently completed Its jreat
Amboy tied tfle. scqr»l k h tyi
c Klkisavdd
pHi.
came to the rescue andIG day for Carteret by
wtil b« mank than to retain
tdsiinion elitfip) wMAor the flight g imt . F « 1
w expktined, nobe1 Incurred In lightingsating will 1M pawad mlower admtation charge.
After their defeat of !^ til* q*ck Wemnblne, In the
the N«w Jorvv, Bas«lon for both«h>bi,'theeam has gpnt oat and 1
erat relnfor«fifflenti 14 \new players. One tahigh school catcher durlwr 1three year*, who will fftke a^nutka, who tarom a bad shoulder which!
talned in football.
An«ther ntw additioneltfb h • fellow by thePawlowskl, • eatchtr,from Holmeta, and isbe quite a hitter. Othteam will remain theto«k the field last weekthe Legion.
Manager Mlgleu stabweek that he will start eltjUdiitlak or Stan Roael
blasting a four-bagger in the lasthalf of thfl Rixth frame.
Emil Nascak and Joe Elko bothgot two hitn for the locals.
The box score:C«rur«t Hifh
Wadlak, If
(*>Al
S u t i k e , Frank Cwya,Choban, Mike tfeiterifjt.,wald Sc Sow, Jaineg 8*pke,Kel^men, Bahe Komewsky,Slinky, Charles Jarsillo, WBatjic, Stanley Kraajnski, B|)ntpyitz, John Lokw, Sberiy, BUI Remolds.
Naacak, Bb 8Bialovarctuk, ss 2Beech, cf ~
Qluch(rwski, pBlko, 8b '...
yafter bis ill-fated North pole flight,tivaa lit Lqckpqrt, I1L, and teachesat WiWt m Nairn School ofAafanautic*.
STORE RENTED
Solders Beaten Bye
Cat t«e t Nine «LOMS By 7 to3 Score In N. J. BaseballAssociation Coqfceit.
CA R T E R E T—The Soklerslaunched nlprht baseball in Carteretlast Friday night at the high schoolstadium before a crowd of several
funs whq were more tjirjll-t h i bbll
iSth.Straight Victory 9-5C«H*ret Tel* Dtfeatt W h
Pfifr
OMT iUHIJITHCHANCE TQ OBTAIN
other's
L»cl by Watching a baseballunder arc-lights than by the pro>epedinpa op the field.
The night was 500I as a c o l tbreeze swept across the field; Itwas the qpeping gfjnie fo.r fcajlip the newly formed New J(Baseball Association.
Carterel opposed the c r » « |Woodbridge Legisn teagj. ^Woodbrjdge outfit woa the ,7 to 3, after a big ioqr-ruR.in the fifth Inning. f | e ga,g?t w t jmarked to raggM play f n f "Bide*,, with th* lopaje b«inft
offendfir.
were outfit^M;tl• •• ' : m
HNE ME1139 SMITH 5TR|
rf
lbShymanski, 0
average of .800 for 18Bill Koi was second with
A. A.—GindaMake* Fine Debut.
CARTERET—The Ukrainian A.made it five straight last Sun-
day by defeating the South Plain-ftejef A. A. ,9 to 5, af thrljighschool Stadium. Tommy Ginda,making hia fitpt appearance of the.
pitched a gToat game, hur|-fpr five imiings
and then coasting along to an easy
U 3Perth Amboy High (*)
Ab RMilcsik, as 3 1Mol». rf : 4Sijoratad. 2b i
If »8«f ..,. 8ct »
•-... 3
tory of fho school, wlnhlng 1gamps and losing only three.
Carteret's greatest accomplishmont, however, was the winningthe Central New Jersey ( W e ience championship, Group 3.
The hitting records show JackBeech tapping the field with abattinggames..356.
Gluchowski and Czorpaniak eachwon five, without being officiallycredited with a single loss. Andby a strange coincident, Koi )»nscharged with all, three defeats.'
The complete record follows:Gam«t Wen
LindenRed BankNew BrunswickPlainfield
H1 00 06 10 0
J.
ft1.,;.: QHog«luk, c qBilgrav, p 3
18IS
H10695
IS10ft
'Hamilton TowmhipSouth RiverLong BranchBed BankSouth River
some of the yonngitersod on the hill last week.
The Infield will probably ithe same with Virag, K
arczuk and Kluchowiklutfield will include Mika'errhecki and Maroiniak.
Carteret's starting lineupws:
Pitcher—Udxlelak or;Catcher—ShymanikiFhrst Paae—A.-Vlrag 'Steond BAie—Klng ,Sfcortntop—BialovarexukThird Base—Gluchowikl,;Left Field—TaiabeckiCenter Fiald-4|t.Vhr«tRight F l t ld- l l«*>iak
Cuvier W t t r e 3 * ,Jay, Ma' - j r r"L
boy of I _ ,An eighth grail*•Is Met five ifyS48 pounda. p f ^olothw that'hM Wim\$ <him arc ov tn lk
Long BranchPerth Amboy
19}e Ukes scored earty and Hud§ S U> i kad in the fourth framed
Sunday the Ukcs will meatoelqwn Owla, of the Wood-Benior League, in a home
the high school stadium,|n tflls sa.m(> the locals are out
«nge a 6 to 8 defeat handedv .by the OWls la$t year.
J l ^ S r Joa • Kielman or Peteiki.' wUl get^he* pitching
is 2:30 o'clock.
25 2 4
000 0—.2001
Score by innings:ifth 4 n * o f .,..:... 0»
Ca»te»et ..........^..i 08The summary—-Home run, Elko.
Struck tnt—f|y Gluchowski 6, byQikrraf 3. puses on balls—offGlikhownkj 2,,pff Bilgrav 4. Um-pires—Kapucy and Coffee,
Armenr's Tops James8. Berry Team, 6-2Opening Game Played Ip
D'ZurillaKeatsSeechKoiElkoNascnkGluchoakiBialovarciukWadiakCzerpaniakViragShymans,kit . GindaKingStaubachJ. GindaKolibasPerkins
Koi
nNew BrunswickLinden
Batting Atarageig ab r h3 1 04 2 0
15 61 1219 58 13 2114 39 10 1316 63 17 1718 m 12 171ft' 61 IT 1618 70 13 17lu 4 B
15 50 ,718" S3 11
3 05 53222
82B
Ave,1 1.000
•800.300
.833
.26'
.80
8
CAETERET — T h e eight-teamCarteret Industrial Softball Lea-gl>e gfli un^pr way Wednesday4 h t t Leib(g's Field as Armour's
l d f d h J 8
.24'
.23
.16
.15
.00
.00C
.00C
.00
.001
.00PiKhtag' w l ip h so bl
3 3 58 2-3 38 40 I1
_ - , _ ^ , •#;to ; l-8 27 32 1Czerpaniajc B 0 . 3 8 82 20
35
-0000
p4g, %t (gsrfthallers defeated the Jamea 8 .Berry contingent, 6 to 2. Tljeoop, recehfly organized, will pl^y
its games on Leibk'e, Field on MOBday, Tuesday, Wednesday ani l u m d a y nighU, leaving Fridaynight open for postponed games
The >
ion In 1901-Oi arhfla Ilearch It the K*» t p r i 'gardens. WflMkt it BUM iplosion ol the »U»ch gnipj
•RENT A[lSc per hour 'til f
!5t pm hour »ft«r 0 !
All Bik . .Chain Guard*
! DoOn BleyoU.. All
GaarutMd.
limfi103
Don't MissLAKE^DE PARKS
OUTSTANDING P E L
107a
h»eld*e»»t
at fte M*.l i * • . . .
runs'over the plate to, l«4 *ft B ', 'threatenpq and e.y»n
ped by the apqliof the sputlipaw f?orr)boy.
|*rattpn atog f
trips to the plate, JOSTyopiiridge
collectedhinwetf.
f h a Carteret brigad* willRiver
Dewing, 3b 4
W 2bialovarcjuk, sa
yi lb :
ft. .-..:.:••ghgtnuuH *
LOOK WHAT YOULUMIJLUM
« ^ 000 110 Ml
F. HA.
- NO LEGALNo Guater Home Value Anywiiert
H*Tax« Until 1941i Bdmi M H
• «
! BfBHf
Issued ForContest
To Be Held By Mea-
Rod And Gun Club
Carteret Park On
22.
RTERKT Hiiloi and regit-f«r the fi«hin(i contest, to
by the Moadflw RodGtan Club nn Saturday. June
'm-tei ct Park, have beena* follows liy Herbert Sul-chatrmnn in charge of the
All rontoMants must ren-r at the park before starting to
(I) C<nrt«t tUrU at A A. M.and clone* 7 P. H.
{&) Filii to he weighed whsac»o(fht while wet,
(4) Contest span to boyi andgirln under the »*« of 14 years,residing only In Carttret.
<fi) No adult to flih or assistin casting, hooklnf or landing •fhh.
(0) On* prlw to o eonteat win.
(7) Priced to b* awarded ttclub meeting it Flrehouse No. 1on July 8.
(0) Committee reserves rightto reject any entry.
(10) Prises will be swardedfor the heaviest fish csurht byboy and girl; heaviest creel; firstcreel caught; first flub caught;and Hghtat fish caught. (All /tabto be judged by weight).
Here s atwo-fisted forecast:
t.
fc'l
••f
That hot waathar will hit yflu
between the ayes and soak
y6ur brow, within the
IThat man who choose*
today, from our wide aasort-
n m t of the new •
,.,;••. AIRTONEPalm Beach Suits
will thank hii foresight all
summer long. For our se-
lection is at top form, includ-
ing the Fashion-hit Shades
of the Season—Jute, Wick-
er, Gulf Green and Cabana
Blue—also that handsome
new Palm Beach While I*
And speaking of hit*—
you'll find the price a bull's-
eye in value.
$ 16.75The Slacks Are Just fB.0&
Open Mon., Fri. & Sat. ET«I.
L BR1EGS& SONS91 Smith Street
Perth Amboy
FarmersMeatMarket258 SMITH ST. PHONE P. A. O U T PERTH AMBOY
End•Specials
JN'S A. CUDAHY'S (Premium) Whole or string -end
HAiMS, Ib. . • , 2 1 cI f S^ANK
Hams, Smoked Ib , 15cU SPUING Small
LAMB, Ib.
• >, t » • * » • • <
Cartmt T««m Poata SMMMI
Straight Victory, Dtfo*t-
inV HhehM A. C.
CARf BRET—The Wings postedtheir second straight ilctory ofthe enfreat'campaign by blankingthe Hitches A. C. last Sunday asJoe Cserpanlak, high school star,made his.debit for the team andhurled a perfect no-hit, no-rungams, 8-0. The contest went onlyseven Innings,
Kot a single Hitches player goton base as Cserpaniak issued nowalks and his twmmstes playederrorless ball behind him. It wasCierpanlak's second perfect gamein three years of pitching.
Hit**** A. CAB R
Rilo, of ..: 8 0Vatral, Ib :...*. * r0Messaros, 2b .., 8 ' 08. Koval, 8b 2 aLucas, ss 2 0f. Nemeth. M 2 0Verres, a7 t.J. B 0Kaiter, rf 8 0Nemeth, p 2 0P. Royal, p 0 0
F«r Wags
21 0 0Wing A. C.
E. Nascakk, ss „ 8 2 1Staubach, 2b 3 1 1EIko, 8b ;....:..,........;. 8 ~ 2 2
«h, ef ,,......,..„ 8 1 I
Viiiag, it .>:..Z'IZ'!M... t ,00Shyroanski, e :..*.,. 4 0 1Broekman, rf ^..^. 4 0 0C*erpanlak. p 4 1 1Nemeth, cf 1 0 1ftelddle, Ib 0 « 0
92 B 11Hitchei ()00 000 0—0Wings m 30t 0—8
100 Mile Anto RaceAt Union On June 36
UNION—The Jlrat such eventin the history of the state, theNational Midget Auto Racingchampionships, fe|turing 100miles of race competition, tfill beheld at the half-mile Union Speed-way here on Sunday afternoon,June 30.
Announcement that official.sanction of the ev.ent for theUnion track had been receivedfrom the American AutomobileAfiAociation was. made today' bypromoters Albert Santo, JackKochman and Red CriBe, who ex-pect the meet to attract spectatorsfrom all over the Eastern sectionof the country to see a field re-plete with leading midget cardrivers bidding for title honors.
UM GiriM Makt ftmFor Hay-Ride Next Friday
CARTERET—Plans for a hayride to Lake Hopatcong a weekfrom today ware made by theLorelei Girls at a meeting held inthe home of Rose Czaya, LocustStreet.
Those pre»ent | Included EmilyMsrcinlak, Rosalie Tomczuk, OlgaBleka, Eleanor Xntik, JohannaMoroney, Theodore Rojrorn, Pat-rick Turner and John Balker.
Indianapolis StarsAt Langhorne Sunday
LANGHORNE, Pa.—When themotor manipulate™ from the out-standing auto race track* of thecountry and the »tar» of Indian-apolis gather In ft convention ofthrills at Langhorne Speedway thisSunday afternoon, June 16, RalphA. Hankinson » confident of hav-ing one of the greatest startingfields In history for the 17B milesof speed which feature the onlylQO-mlle Tace in the East thta year.
Every winner of an EasternAAA auto Tace feature of the cur-rent season will be waiting forStarter Doc Gerner's green flag at
2:30 P..M., eastern daylgihttlme,as the first of three 10-mlle qutll-
| fying beats raises the curtain onthf competitive event* of the com-bined sprint and endurance pro*gram. Precered by time trials, the10-milers will s«rve as provinggrounds for the IS starting postsof the century classic.
The Indianapolis big grind con-tingent will be represented by TedHorn, 1940 fourth place man, JoieChitwood, another Hoosier moneyfinisher and Tony Wlllman, forcednut by a faulty motor. It is alsoexpected that Mauri Rose, thirdplace big grind wfliner, will returnto Langhorne where he scored awin in 1937 with the famed "blan-ket finish."
kForPoiUNION—Five midget auto rac
ing drivers striving to move uphigher from their contending posi-tions In the eastern circuit stand-ings will seek to add importantpoints to their totals In the nexttwo meets at the Union Tri-CityBtadlum, Sunday and Wednesdaynights.
Charley Miller of Linden, N. J.,in third place in. the circuit pointstandings now, and Wes 9aegesser,Charley Breslin, Rex Records and
Johnny Sitter, who aw direetlybehind Mm, »"_i*« ml»5*i S£chauffeurs who will be aHnjnt *Wvictories In these two spew shoWson the itfth-of-a-mile Union trtek.
All of th«m are bidding lorthose precious points but aladscheduled to be present in theUnion Held is Babe Bower, thesmiling Philsdelphlan who is rul-ing the ronut now. Ahead of thepsck in the individual standings,he will endeavor to widen hid lead
OUTSTANDING VALUES
DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT RINGS
WEDDING RINGS
ROBERTS & LIEBERMANQuality Jewelers
88 SMITH ST. PERTH AMBOY
PHONE P. A. 4-1265
OPEN EVENINGS ?Y APPOINTMENT
Gift Suggestions ForJune Brides And
a esDon't l*t the short tirhe ^orry you for
KRElELSHEtMER'S jWtlt-y stock i. large withsomething for every member of the family at prices
that will suit every purse.
GIFTS FROM KKEIELSHEIMER'SARE GIFTS AT THEIR BEST
LET KREIELSHEIMER'S 50 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE HELP SOLVE YOURGIF! PROBLEM
We've served the trade of Middlesex County for half a century and are famil-iar with problems of gift buying. Let us serve you with our suggestions.
GIFTS FOR HERDiamond Ringi — BirthitoneRing! — BUIDTI, Weitfield, Gruan,Elfin, Wsltham and HamiltonWriit Watchet — Dreiter Sett,3 to 20 Piecei — CpmpacU —Ronion & Evani Cigarette Cu; iand Lighten — Bracelets — Cos-tume Jewelry — Roiariet — PearlNecklaces — Bracelet and LocketSets — Waterman and ParkerPent and Pencils.
GIFTS FOR HIMStone Ring) — Signet Rings —Bulova, Wettfield, Elgin, Waltham.Gruen and Hamilton Wrist Watch-es — Military Set* — Ron ton andEvans Ctfaiottt Cates — Sckick,Remington-Rod anal SunbeamShaven — Wallets and Key Cas-es — Swank Collar and Tie Set*— Parker and Waterman Pentand Pencils.
KREIELSHEIMER'S"THE JEWELRY GIFT STORE"
127 SMITH ST. PERTH AMBOY
Impefm4at Unwa now ami,log . d m r i M N A on thi,tbe only en* to the onii..
! % ? M m proKri,,rac«. TU moats'at the T,SUdiam we unreeled P v , ,day and Wadniwday
- A OiiaittW |biv, Will RH
Every Monday Nite
( AMI HCIAI400 444
1344500
St. Jamei' Auditorium WoodbridgrI jiBJSBSJBBsltsMfc*4. Wt^»~^g*^apl"p« i ^ ^ ^ ^ s ^ ^ ^ ^ i ^ * * j*^^^^^m
RememberJune 16tk is
SummerNeckwear
Is always welcome. We katt
a complete telictloh (fom
55c to $150 v» v
E X T R A O R D I N A R Y O F F E R I N G O F T H E S U P E R B
100th Anniuersary Console^CpMMEMORATING
the JOOtfi Anniuertttri/ ofthe renowned
HALLET & DAVISPIANO
$245You Save $50
'on this Full Scale (U Notes)Hallet & Davis Mahogany Spinet
Especially Built to Sell For $295 EQUIPPEDAnniversary Price $245 *
PRACTIANOAn ingenious device
that- enables tone
_ volume to be reduced$5 t)jQWN~$5 PER MONTH «***•****»
. . . » «. •• i L ucing will not annoyEquJtal>hafl«Mnc*<m Plus imall carrying charge Q ^ ^
Actual Saving $ 50
The roikm of tiut century-old favorite, the HalUc & Davis Piano, are celebrating
its 100th Anniv«rjaiy by offering the beautiful piano shown above at thip spectacularly
low pd^c S t a r t s with thii wonderfully attractive value and applying the popular
group Mllirityflan, whereby we obtain, a large number of these pianos to be sold at
one tira* to »1|^ciilj{roup of customers, we an able to make a piic* »o attractive
and.ttrmi w^iwiaonple ui*t any family can easily afford this glorious piano. For
your o i p a i j ^ t i o n . . . tee thiaplanpl , »
• v •• ©soifflsstw mote floor ipKethsn a fwo br five foot rug
11
Otlfchs.t
Notethe«25
QUALITY SPECIFICATIONS. . . then compart I
PRACTIANO
5. NlOUnjP TUNING PINS4. lilNPOiCmHAMMIRS
5. IITEA H«AVY FULL POST
6. ffsufs'rlrishr tna
! Mihdtatldt
11. BfMtkMdwfihKmsfc12. Ca*da<o«ibrw»bi«MU. T^mvk&k14Ttu«sp«Ui1). Httpoailit iyl
proof ctaitt s16. k l i lIT.IS. Wbf ttTiawfcA19. A l i i Uiaiqi^d»ot»«upl« pin
Gir. him a n*# Shirt. W. l,n>,
thttn from 11.39, incKnlinK
Cool Mtsbci, Broadcloth »,„!
Madras.
riW7.V4i.SII/RTSl3SRITZ SHIRTS 1.65
ARROW AROAIR
TIES TO MATCH 1
Ensemble^Smart looking shirts aod Slacks
from
1.95 to 6.95 a let
SLACKS 1.65 up
SPORT SHIRTSCraw Neck Styla
49c to 1.60Button Front Shirt*
LOO to 1.9SLargest S«l«ttion to tat) StaU
Ha a w l h« hot in that
RobeTOU tat* bin. last Cbri.n.--
Pick out a C M I Summer R-1
from our Complete Select.
from
1.95 to 3.95
Swim SuittW. U T . Swim Snha' (I » . ' .
coatanatiTti and Trnalu if h*
wantt |o b* up to ^h* rnibut*.
In Last.,, Wool and Wool ant!
Lastu Cbmbinatioas.
SIMS at 1.9S to 4.95TRUNKS 1.00 to 2.95,
W«"T. a r.put,iwB built # • tai
LTUXEDOS AND I
:NI0Y