8
or I ill" pn?r--'-;?\^.. *«**» \ :'• |!i 111 ,„. |« ,i, i>ntii, I ; I f N'lr I With Our Boys jf, i .l.isi-ph BasiHci of v .•nuo have received I Ralph A. LOT* . IUIK the (Uftth Enji- ,:,. that, their son, HI of Basiltei, had i the Good Conduct il ItuMlici now is in iin- Utter which an- .••..inl of the medal, i vinte: "This meda in men whose eou- ii,-i in < utttandingly !„ ii»H of tim*. .:, iv reason to be proud Hupp, seventeen i Mr. and Mrs. Ed iiH!> Roosevelt Ave- isled in the Navy !,-fi for duty, He is Ins family in this u-rvice, his-brother UK been a blue- i' time, * Kichor, son of Mr i,nnil of 0X6 Boose- has been graduated i iid Communcatlon Infantry School at i .ii. This is a 12- to develop nidin sets used :mtry in its opera- - Turk, A. S. in th n transferred from V Y., Training Sta i, 'in- Federal Build- I 'I•il'JIIIS. + I, Fabian has bee Siintii Ana, Cal., •itln, Tex., and Pvt ui t (i from Cam i , Fort OrdfCal. « , Miles, son of Mr. . 1 1 Miles of Atlantic .-|i fur alanil) Of Boro Is Held 1» Cuitody Of Military At Camp Forre»t After Wife I* Strangled - ii visiting their aim ii High School, tn: i liiRcph R. Dolah o utinned at Cami iiiir a long perlo war zone; Pv*. Wa i <if the Aberdeen UriMind; Pvt. Josep <>f Samp Siberi -hated in 1932; PFI : . and Ttrhnlcia ••wski, of Memphii 1 1. Schwailik, son o I' .Schwailik of 9! . and fvt. Kami! |-ky, son of Mr. and 11 stenaky, of 096 -'line, have reported !._• in the Anny Air '"ACommand, Kess- CARTERET, N. J., FRIPAY, JUNE 2, 1944 Mes at C author , •amp Forrest, Tenn », c reported holdit^ P rivate ^ yyarold para- rooper who is a native of Car- teret since the t»dy of hia wife {°"[> d in « tourist home at Winchester, Tenn. Sheriff Dyer Matlock of that place said the wflrnans body was found afte- military authorities brought Gal- «nb to his office and said the sol- dier reported to them that his wife was dead. Mrs Galamh was the former flary Allen, daughter of Mr. and Krs. PetM- Allen of Rockingham, N. C , and had been married to the paratrooper in South Carolina. Later she visited in Cartoret with Wm and was understood to have gone to Winchester to he npur him after he was assigned t0 Camp forrest. State authorities in Ten- nessee planned no action against fvt. Galamb HS long as he remains n military cimiudy. Galamb Is the son of Mrs*So- phie Galamb of 132 Roosevelt Avenue, and the late John Galamb, He entered service February 18 1943. He attended Carteret schools and had boon employed locally by the I. T. Williams Lum- ber Company, before he entered the Army. He ix one of five chil- dren and has two brothers who alio have served in the present war. High School Baccalaureate Set For hn$ 11, Graduation June 14 Union Honor Seniors At Prom, And Clan Da, HeU Friday* -m CARTERET Baccalaureate kowski, secretary 1 . Mrs. LUUftfeJfe brin and Mrs. Jean BelaKkyjl* the class advisers, . >< Goyena Rites Held By Rev. Mark Hajos CARTERET Funeral Rerviccs took place lust Saturday for Mrs, Mary fioyena of 41 Thornal Street, who died the previous Tuesday after u long illness. The service was from the Biiub Fu- neral Home in Wheeler Avenue to St. Btt»afeetV« Chnrch when-the pastor, Rev. Mark Hajos, O.F.M., celebrated a high mass of requiem. Burial was in St. James's Ceme- tery, WooMridge, where Father Hajos also read the committal service. Honorary hcnrprn wore: Mrs Stephen Solto.s/., Mrs. Andruw Toth, Mis. Andrew Pull, Mrs. James Caimbok, Mrs. John Pan- kocsi, Mrs. Stephen Babyak. Ac- tive bearerK were Mrs. John Toth, Mrs. Albert Bodnar, Sr., Mrs. John Hone, Mrs Miohnel Nagv, Mrs. Alex Man! and Mrs. Michuul Kelleman. The Mothers' Club, Al- tar Rosary Society of the church and the Rakocsy Society con- ducted services at the funeral home. services for this 1 year's graduates if Cartarot High 8<!hool will be held in the school auditorium Sun- day afternoon, June 11, at 2 o'elonk. Commencement will take place Wednesday, June 14, at 6:30 P, M. Last Friday night the Juniors gave the annnal Junior. Senior Prom in Nathan Hale School audi- torium, with many parents present also. Music was by Nick Orvo's Orchestra and the entertainment consisted of solos by Rose Bialo- warc&uk anl Alice Fedafc, accom- panied by August Hundemann and the Senior Quartette (now a trio since the absence of Harold Perry), which presented a mtdley of snnga. The present members of the group are John KovaJ, Julian Pruitt and Gregory Sofka, with Joe Sabo as announcer. Rose Ra- mirez, WHS in charge of the enter- tainment, and Anthony Russo gen- ei-al chairman of the prom. Rose Orlmn, head of the decorating committee, and her assistants, working under the supervision of Mi*R Agneae Gunderson, had made the auditorium appear to have large clusters of purple grapes, in- termingled with green vines, with a decorat d arch in the center of the floor. Gloria DeRuosi and Wil- liam Poll led the grand match, through this arch. Parant-Tatchar* Aiiut Refreshments were preparod by the school Parent-Teacher Asso- ciation and served by hostesses from the Sophomore Class, with Minn llcRuooi and Miss Kathleen Hluh in charge. The programs were small blue books with silver pencils on blue cords, carried out in the Junior Class colors. Marion Rocky and John Feehan headed the program committee. The Junior Class officers are: William Poll, president; Anthony Russo, vice - president; Arthur Myers, treasurer; Bernadine Czaj- D.f H*M The Senior aiwi held its Day exercises in ^ie High auditortam last A skit was presented* {Continued m Pagt 5) One More Joseph Ferenct, M«r- chant Marine, Anwaf Boro War Dead CARTERE!T~ln publishing t list of meir*#fltc have given their lives in this present war, whitn appeared in the Press last Friday, one name was omitted, inadvert- ently. In compiling the list used papers were checked carefully back to Pearl Harbor in Decem- ber, 1041, and the name of Josaph Ference of the Merchant Marine was not found. It has been learned since that this man, % native of Carteret who lived here many yeurj, died March 30, 1942, after being on two ships which were torpedoed. His name therefore is added to the list of honored dead of Cartpret, with deep apologiea to his family. Koarnun Ference was a son of Stephen Ference of 552 Roosevelt Avenue. He leaves two brothers also, John Ference of the Roose veil Avenue address, Stephen, Jr. in the U. S, Army. At the time of his death Joseph Ference was a resident of Texas, where he had married and established a home. the 1 ijuhay, H. A. 8/C, .fellow Street, eom- • cruit tralnint at V., yesUrday, and ''ttd leave before fur- llfllt. f •' ames T. Burke of the !ias reached Mirth i volunteering several in oversell service. " editor of tiiis news- > k "I wag swimming it'-ii an«an last week «as swell," and com- ' on the backward- ir.Milents near whom " with a belief they'll '»• service men now in '"'w to live in a better >Ucr the war, « * >m» selected John Aviation MeUlsmith 1 i a i»llege program. v at the Naval,Air •"piw Christl, T«x. 1( 1 fluted (o start ool- J| ily 1, after which ••'*"• the commission of 111 Naval Reserve. His 1 li.mdolph Street. * .- Male John H, Mul- 1 •"'-iwt Street has just lnim an inte naive 1 " M 'H at the Serviafl '"'i NuvsJ DUtrict, HI. He wnsetoettd 1 liiUatudj on t^e p^ made durinf testa 'i training. He i» of w e , ',' nek, aon ' '"il'ukskj, -mi from' "penter St Demetrius Chunk To Bmh Mortgage Of $34,000 Very Rev. John Hundiak Paula Bislalt Wed To Coastguardsman CARTKPiET-MisR Paula Marie Bistak, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Frank Bistak of 252 Randolph Street, hrrame the hrido of Wil- liam Buda, Jr., seaman first class In the U. S. Goa.it Guard, son of Mr. nnd Mrs, Buda of New Brims wick, at a cerenVony performed on Sunday. The ceremony was per- formed by Rev, Andrew ,1. Rak- »op, pastor of Sacred Heart Church, in the rectory, and was followed by a reception at Seven Gables Inn, Ijtirlnn. Miss Margaret Dafgek, cousin of the bride, waa the, maid of honor, and Mrs. Francis Bistak of Olympia, Wash,, sister-in-law of the 'bride, the matron of honoi). S 1/C John Dafgek of the U. S. Navy acted as best man, and An (Continued on Page 5} This Sum Pad OH Since 1932; PmUk MmHa, Fundt For RtitcoroHoti Dwnetrkii Ukrainian Church will hold a cere- mony a week from Sunday at which the mortgage on the fhureh will be horned. Spestnl services in the church will be fol- lowed i,y a dinner In the Ukrilnlaiii Pavilion on upper RooaeveH Avcnut. . • The burning of thii mortgage represent* unusually hard work and generous contributions by members of the parish's 2JD families, and the several organi- zations connected with It, In 1932 the church debt was $18,000, Purchase of the land on w<hioh the pavilion stands, r* us the cost at erecting the pavilion ituerf, has rained this debt to $84,000, the to- tal sum paid off and represented in the mortgage whkh 1B to be burned. In addition to this sum the church hail 92,800 invested in War Bonds, to be iwed after the war for decorating the church edi dee according to special plana which have been made, P«ilor Credit* Flock Very Rev. John Hundiak, pas tor of the church, attributes the achievement of thi» record to the enthiuioem and work of the or- ganizations of the church, espe- cially its Board of Trustees, St. Ann'g Auxiliary and the Sister- hood of 'he Blessed Virgin. An- other great factor in the payment of the debt has been the loyalty ef its sons and daughters away in the armed lorceit, who have teftt over tBOO since they entered mitt* tary or naval du'tiea, The board of tnwtees of'the hurch, along with frtbfr Huh lik i g f u liak, is arranging the' dinnet. Thojpe serving in this capacity In- d«A. Harry Wolaiwhy, Michael raskor* and Harry flayduk. Thomas Kennedy Is 7th Scout In Borough With Eagle Rank Rouman Has Top Place Of CHS Biology Stndents CARTERET - Robert Ross man is this year's winner of the award in biology, given each year at Curteret High School at the close of the year's studies. The winner is i'ho»en through a competitive examination given under the direction of Miss Mary E. Roach. The winner re- ceived a bronze medal for hav- ing attained the highest aver- age, and second and third place winners were William Hasek and Peter Kutney. NURSE VISITS HOMK CARTEKET Lieut. Mary Bo- rick of Christopher Strati, has re- turned to duty w.ith the Army lit Pine Camp, N. Y., after n week- end at home. During her visit she attended a reunion vt her clasa of the School of Nursing of Elusazctn Pastor Here, Dies CARTERET Memorial ices ware held here Tuesday in the Fiist Baptist Church for Rev. George Reed, ita founder and fur- mer pastor, who died Monday at his h«me in Ridgcwood. The clergyman had been pastor of the local church from 1921 to 1939, when he WR3 transferred to Ridge- wood There he built Bethel Bap (ml riiinrli four years UK", und was its pastor at the time of liU death. He was a member of the Ministers' Conference «f Newark and other church organizations in the state. He waa born in Scots- ville, Va, Surviving are his wife, Harriet; one sister, Mm. Helen Swingler of Carteret; four brothers, Walter, James and Danridge, all of Tri- delphia, and William of En-glish- town, N. >.; a nephew, John Swin Kler, U. S. Navy, and two nieces, Virginia and Mae Swingles, both of Carteret. TWO EXPECTED CARTERET—Mrs. John Mucha, Jr., of Kankakee, 111., will arrive Sunday for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. John Mucha of Emerson Street, parents of her husband, now in England with the Army Air Corps. Stephen Much* of the Navy also is expected home on leav? from training at Bainbridge Md. HOLIDAY OLIDAY VISWOJS CARTERET—Mrs. Jack Tukner and John Mclnnew of Brooklyn were holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bodoar of Atlantic Four Others Now Setve In Armed Forces; Mother Presents \ivard CARTUREf—Thomas Kennedy, Hon of Mr. and Mrs. J«neph Ken- nody of Perahing Avenue, is Car- teret'a seventh Eagle Scout, -high- est rank in this world-wide organ- ization of stalwart young men and buys. The award of his rank was presented him al the last Court of Honor, held in Carteret re- cently, when Scout Commissioner John A. Turk gave the award to his father, who in turn passed it on to his mother for presentation to their son. OLhuiii hero listed as of Ragle Scout tank are: Walter Bartz of 123 Lowell Street, in the .Seabees for the past two years and now in California; Lieut. Howell E. Mis- dom, serving in Italy with the Ar- my Engineers; Lieut. Gerald Lor- entz, recently commiseipned in the Medical Corps; Louis Resko of 190 Randolph Street, scheduled to en- ter the Navy after his graduation later this month from Carteret High School; George Gavaleti Jr., 66 Washington Avenue, another high school senior; Sergeant l(ich- aei Palinkas of Hermann Avenue, also in Italy. At the Court of Honor awards were made also to forty-two other scouts, These were as follows: Second Class Scouts: Francis O'Brien, Stephen Lukacs, Edwftrd Heffner, Edward Bodnar, Frank Kelemen, William Rush, Edward Mihulko, James Duggan, Wallace Boehner, William Lawlor, William Hoolihan, Alexander Samu, Wil- liuin Soluwin, Louiti Vasquez, David Beiter, G<we Tomari, Wil- liam Kimtoiersk-i, William Kele- men, Charles Fei'tnchik, Einuir General Hospital in Elizabeth. Street^ Crowning Rites Held On Sunday InSt. Joseph'sAndSt. Elizabeth' Reako, Jonnpb Rivpra, Arnold Clevercy, James Irving, John Collina, all of Troop 81; Alex- ander Dunch, John Merello, rgi atim«, of Troop 84,. . ' ret Claw gcouia William Law- lor, Alphonsus Bonner, Francis (Continued on Faqe 5) Memorial Services Held Here Sunday •CARTERET—Mayor Joseph W. Mittuch declared, "On Memorial Day we acknowledge a debt which is beyond repayment," when he S|Hikc al. tin- exeniaes in Wiiltei' OverhoH Memorial Stadium. These exercises were held after the pa- radfi had mnrrhed through the borough, starting at the water- front near the old ferry slip in upper Roosevelt Avenue. Other speakers were: Fire Chief Frank Schuck, S. 0. Burrows, past commander of Star Landing Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars; Clif- ford Cutter, past commander of Carteret Post, American Legion; William Nodolski, V. F. W. com- mander;' August Sebastian, Legion commander; Mrs. William Bishop, president of the V. F, W. Auxil- iary, and Mrs. Theodore Pfennig, president of the Legion Auxiliary. Mrs. Harry Gleckner, past com- mander of the County Legion Auxiliary, presented a prize to Harriet Gross for hen 1 winning cusay nn the Constitution, and also the Carteret and County prizes to Hatinalore Galle and Ann O'Brien, winners pf the poj?py poster contest. Learned Nad Prisoner CARTERET^Cpl. Walter S. Bob«I, 23 years «W, missing in action since April 21, is a prig- oner of war in Germany, ac- cording to a telegram received yesterday by his mother, Mrs. Kathryn Lukaaiewics, of 72 Pu- luki avenue. . Bobel was reported loat fol- lowing a combat mission over Northern !MR«A bombardier, |^ bmbrder, the corporal has been in the service, for two years. He left 'for the Mediteranean' area sev- eral months ago. ' He attended Carteret Hifrl School and before entering the service was employed at he Lie- big plant of the American Agri- cultural Chtmical Company. His brother, Joseph Bobel, store- Keeper second class, is in the navy. in « W f t of tftt of War Bond selling in i ough since the campaigns willeondnettt* Fifth tinue thresh July 8. ,., Cafterttfs qoota for t h P paign has been raised $J making it $900,000. This on the splendid record ing the Fourth Loaa quota at $400,060 was U11AH under Mr. jnaderthlp. In this last ducted In January and ending February 15, residents and businttset Hale Students In Memorial Program CARTER'ET—A Memorial Day program jfiven Monday at Nathan Hale School by its sixth, seventh and eighth grades, offered recita tions, a play, music and other ma of ontortainment. Th-oae who appeared were: Blanche Gutkow- oki, Lillian Berg, Vincent Maicr, Joan F,not, Wiftna Ambolt, Louiie Brechka, Frank Amiler, Robert O'Dnnnell, Mary peters, Helen Nudge, Donald JDDM, -Paul Bod- nsr, ATiioid Cleversey, John On- dee, Elaine Carsia, Anne O'Brien, and Winifred Hundemann, who WUH the pianilt. In a program presented by Mrs. Marion C, Ryttn, tuacher of music for the intermediate grades, those taking part wera; William Magella, lisa Frey,, Audrey Ward, Mary Raskulineo, Gabriel Suto, Mary Ginda, Kenneth Pazar, Helen Di- kun, Eose Kudrock, Marjorie Vivr-ga, Helen Mitroka, Albert Salm, William Bensulock, Rose Kokolus, Donald Lnkach, Doris Sklmmons, Dorolhy (Jambats and iiitiiitbera of Miss Bergon's and Miss Daley's classes. Sarzillo Given Honor ByFomttrtOftU. CA HTEJtET Joseph * E. Sar- zillo of Lpcust Street was elected grand lecturer 6f the grand'court of New Jersey, Foresters of Amer- ica, at tin; convention held Sunday at the Plaza Hotel, Jersey City. A convention banquet the night before in the same hotel saw many distinguished Foresters from all parts of the sUt,u present. ^ohn Huss of Lakewood was chosen grand chief ranger. The delegation attending the conven- tion from Carteret consisted of: Mr. Sarzillo, Alvin Guyon, Edwin S. Quin, Jacob Binstein, Edward Ruth and John 8, Olbricht. MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED —M!rs. Joseph Pas- l CARTERET - • Crowning cere- monies wer.; performed here bun- day night iu two Roman Catholic Churches, St. Joseph,» and St. BlUeth's. At St. Josephs the eeromony took place in the church, while paiifihiu' lu " i uf »t. M I » - Kh ? . Church staged the.r nte outdoors -before a special altar, built for the occasion. At St Joseph 1 * the procession formed in the school for the march to tnY church, led by the ««•• ltn 'n bear.r..nd«colyt««,an of at. Joseph's Boys Club w«h j i d t William «"»<>«!•««• $ man, Margaret Kikh, t>ovothy Ko- val, ClaiiQ Kogtych, RoaeMarie LaRocco, Margaret Mesey, Phyllis Puaillo, May Ann Roessler, Char- lotte SeKtuye, G^orgene Barbleri, Joan Cromwell, Carol Oinda, Ca- milla Lukach," Kathleen Lyneh, Barbara Ann Sandor, Margaret Tavares and Ariene Torote" Miw Johanna Hiregtt, prwident of the Sodality, plh«ed t^e dtvnn on the statue; $»• KM*, attirefl in 9, white chiffon gofn ^ i h » W tulle veil" an4 carrtiH'i of white roses. / W.M« " of white m , M » # ing tn« altar, she maroW tinder h f \MW **»* '*$& C A t f p tar, a recent bride, and formerly of Perth Amboy, has come to make her home for the remainder of the war with her sister, Mrs. Joseph Cztija of Emerson Street. Mrs, Pastor's marriage to Pfc. Pastor, & recent event, was an- nuuueed by Mrs, Csaja during the weekend. The bride was Miae K*- therlne Swal «r\d the bridegroom is the sqn otf Mr. and Mrs. Michael Pastor of Campbell'Street, Wood: bridge. Rev. Mi A. Konop^a per- formed the ceremony at, Holy Family Church, with Miss Helen CHVJB and Louis Pastor, brother of the bridegroom, *s attsntlants. The bxldigroom is stationed in K RE-ELECTED TO CART1ERET Miss Dagmar Koed, daflghter of Mr. and Mrs. Soren Koed. of 12!!, Enierson Stroot, has be«n re-electe4 presi- dent of the Insurance Women of New Jersey, the eleption taking place at a meeting in the Robert Treat Hotel, Newark. Miss Koed operates her own Insurance brok- erage business here. H. S. Students Pay Tribute To Dead CARTERET-^Students at Car- teret High School paid homage to the honored dead in a special Memorial Day program on Mon- day. Barbara Molnar directed this program and Howard Wohljemuth playef the piano accompaniment for the musical numbers. The presentations were: read- ing, by Anthony Russo; song, "There's a Star Spangled Banner Waving Somewhere," Gertrude 'erry; "America, I l/ove You," Shirley Brown; reading, poem, Margaret Kisth; nnng, Barbara Molnar, "Say a Prayer for the Boys Over 'there"; "You're a Grand Old Flag," sung by Ruth Russo and Gertrude. Perry; r e a d i n g , M ln Flandenr Yields," Barbara Molnar; song, "My Buddy," Helen Soltesss; song, "Coming in on a Wing and a Prayer," Eleanor Abaray; song, "Over There," -William Balog, with enscmlBc singing on the sec ond chorus, The final number was "When Johnny Comett Marching Home Again," by all present. During the program there also was a minute of silence in tribute to the fighting men overseas. Spoganetz And Kaky Lead In Anniversary Planning CARTERET" John Spoganetz and Joseph Kutcy, head of the committee arranging the fifteenth Anniversary Dance of the Ukrain- ian Social Club. This wilt be held a week from tomorrow night at the Ukrainian Pavilion, starting at 8:30 o'clock, With music by George Ruddy and his orchestra, Others on the committee of ar- rangements are John Kindxieraky, John Kokolus, Alex Pulohonki, Theodore Hadyniak, Joseph Bam- burak, Eugene Wndiak, Thomas Ginda, Alex Paw luck, Frank Barna and Michael Dobrowolaki. This group will meet Monday to make final arrangements. d busintt $1,077,611,25 in War iufel An intensive campaign ts-I tie this high goal Is being ia<sd now, Louis Brown, .< section proprietor, will he merchants' d i v i s i o n , i Wayne T. Branom, sup principal will conduct the! paign in the schools. Boy i troops also are expected to'; in the campaign, aa they previous ones. Industrial will co-operate to a large to increase, the purchases regularly through the pa; ductions now in effect. • VISITING HERE CARTERET Misa Mary E Smith of Willlamsport, Pa., is the IIOUBU gueel; of Mrs. Frank Koep fler of Perehlng Avenue. She re- turned with- Mrs, Koepfler from Williamsport after the latter had spent the week-end there. Local War Bonds are sold through these agencies, which will intensify Its forts for this Fifth Wax The Oarteret Bank and (Continued on Wed To Bora Girt Irene ; 1 i e mqff of 91 8ha»ot Str*«t tho bride at Pt«. Alfred t of the U. 8. Marine stationsd In Dovir alt*r TEREBETSKY BURIED CARTERET — T h e funeral of Charles TerebetBky, of BB Mercer street, wa3 held this morning from the Joseph Synowieeki Funeral Home, 42 Hudson Street. A high mass of Bequieni was offered at St. Demetrius' Ukrainian Church, with Rev. John Hundiak, pastor, officiating. Burial wan in Rosehill Cemetery, Linden.* Pall bearers were: John and Walter Terebet- eky, Joseph Ciliberto and Nicho- las Shymanski. .,, > i . . . . . , i •-.,. overreu, at a ceremony ] «n Sunday. The place in St. Demetrfm Church and was performed' pastor, Very Rov. John Han Afterward there was a recejj at the Feliske home, The for the daughter of Mnt, Mary molt, and the bridegroom, we* of the Purple Heart for wo received in action, is the son-J( Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fenske 71 Charles Street. Nicholas Yakimoff gave tei 1 in marriage. She wore ii of white chiffon made boul style, and her fingertip-I tulle VPII was arranged to her] with a coronet of orange bloi , She carried a cascade bouquet S white ronea and lilies of the ' For traveling she wore a green suit with black asse and a corsage of white roses, Mias Ethel Yakimoff, sister'' the bride, who was the mai<ft honor, wuie rone colored tulle' a bonnet to match, and Miss ', ence Fenske, the bridegroom's i ter, who was the bridesmaid, Nile green tullu with a match bonnet. Each carried yellow , Andrew Klinowski acted as man. and Robert Lanning, || Crunbury, waa usher. '-: : ^ After a trip to New Yorl/Jf" couple will live at the Street address. SCHWARTZ RITES FIRST COMMUNION CARTERET Nineteen , in M. 'an, 1 Mi.i streamers first In the flrat gifM* CAT—Kilneral services were held Monday at the T* J. Coonef Funeral Home* Perching avenue, for Philip Sohwarta, of 552 Rooaevelt uvenue, Who died on Friday. Riev. D. K. Loranti, pailor of the Flr*t Preebyterian Chikreh, officiated. Burial was, in ItoMhill Cemetery, Unden; pail 'betfers were three BOAB, Herman, W«sl«y and.Amon SclWfart^ and iW S S<**t*' ^ Olbricht Warns Of Fife Hazard From Unattended Refrigerators DOWNED BY GAS G A * ^ pkw. of it Baiiojnh stteet, was overcome CARTERBT-John S. Olbricht, fire marshal of the borough and head of the Fire Prevention Bu- reau, directed attention this week to the care of electric refriger- ators in local homes, and asked householders leavipg for vacations not only to turn oft the current in their absottM, but to remove* the Ice box plug from the socket w\ no contact at all is made daring the absence.' "War-Uma shortage* and in- ability, to have repairs made, U •customary, ..Mr. QUaicllt afilsM out, "hw kwt many ic« 1»o«s in use besoii period when tfc M fily $ * *n4 f«»t «• refily 06 Lincoln Avenue. Mr, Woodhull was ut his work at the time and .Mrs. Wo»dhull was awaktmed by what she thought was a motor running in her buck yard. She h h h g went to the rear the house and found the kitchen full »t smoke, coming from the electric refrigerator. She ruuhed into (he- room and pulled the plug froin the socket, then turned in an alarm, to which both Are compa- nies responded. Firemen had to ate m ^ b W check the" fire an'd Memorial Program At School Monday CARTERITT — Wash* HchiMil children purtloipat Memorial Day programs Mo Tbe first and second songs, and-recitations were by Judith Kaskiw, Alek Zi Mary Ann Elko, Roland Kofc Gllrain. Mra. Herman'o third fioiited H playlet, "The Lib Patriots," in which Victory, Sum, Health, War'Stamps, Nature and others wore < ton. Each pupil in the class j part. Reeitutiona were giv Marilyn Gorden, Donald D'Z Nancy Farios, of Misa Bertf bel'i clays. Marilyn Gordon | a piano selection anil \*\ farkaa playfld "Tapa" on fail net. Group singing closed tfa* ently Has mnered no ill effects sbt i tome of the acrid sjnoko wiilij, to4 went, into STUDENT REVUE POS1 9m- vua t o l i v i i v e n by stu Cartovet Mfh School, for pre»entwion Wedne of tita w M , wa» posfe nt le AM

alanil) Of Boro Is Held -m Pad · 2014-02-23 · Pruitt and Gregory Sofka, with Jo e Sabo as announcer. Ros Ra-mirez, WHS i charg e of th enter-tainment, and Anthony Russ gen-ei-al

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Page 1: alanil) Of Boro Is Held -m Pad · 2014-02-23 · Pruitt and Gregory Sofka, with Jo e Sabo as announcer. Ros Ra-mirez, WHS i charg e of th enter-tainment, and Anthony Russ gen-ei-al

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- Turk, A. S. in th• n transferred fromV Y., Training Stai, 'in- Federal Build-

I ' I • i l ' J I I I S .+ •

I, Fabian has beeSiintii Ana, Cal., t«•itln, Tex., and P v tu i t (i from Cami , Fort OrdfCal.

«

, Miles, son of Mr.. 1 1 Miles of Atlantic.-|i fur

alanil)Of BoroIs Held

1» Cuitody Of MilitaryAt Camp Forre»t AfterWife I* Strangled

- ii visiting their aimi i High School, tn:i liiRcph R. Dolah o

utinned at Camiiiiir a long perlowar zone; Pv*. Wai <if the AberdeenUriMind; Pvt. Josep

<>f Samp Siberi-hated in 1932; PFI

: . and Ttrhnlcia••wski, of Memphii

11. Schwailik, son oI' .Schwailik of 9!. and fvt. Kami!

|-ky, son of Mr. and11 stenaky, of 096

-'line, have reported!._• in the Anny Air

'"A Command, Kess-

CARTERET, N. J., FRIPAY, JUNE 2, 1944

Mes at C a u t h o r ,•amp Forrest, Tenn » , c

reported holdit^ P r i v a t e ^

y y a r o l d para-rooper who is a native of Car-

teret since the t»dy of hia wife{°"[>d i n « tourist home at

Winchester, Tenn. Sheriff DyerMatlock of that place said thewflrnans body was found afte-military authorities brought Gal-«nb to his office and said the sol-dier reported to them that his wifewas dead.

Mrs Galamh was the formerflary Allen, daughter of Mr. andKrs. PetM- Allen of Rockingham,

N. C, and had been married to theparatrooper in South Carolina.Later she visited in Cartoret withWm and was understood to havegone to Winchester to he npur himafter he was assigned t 0 Campforrest. State authorities in Ten-nessee planned no action againstfvt. Galamb HS long as he remainsn military cimiudy.

Galamb Is the son of Mrs*So-phie Galamb of 132 RooseveltAvenue, and the late John Galamb,He entered service February 181943. He a t t e n d e d Carteretschools and had boon employedlocally by the I. T. Williams Lum-ber Company, before he enteredthe Army. He ix one of five chil-dren and has two brothers whoalio have served in the presentwar.

High School Baccalaureate SetFor hn$ 11, Graduation June 14Union Honor SeniorsAt Prom, And ClanDa, HeU Friday* •

-m

CARTERET Baccalaureate

kowski, secretary1. Mrs. LUUftfeJfebrin and Mrs. Jean BelaKkyj l*the class advisers, . ><

Goyena Rites HeldBy Rev. Mark Hajos

CARTERET — Funeral Rerviccstook place lust Saturday for Mrs,Mary fioyena of 41 ThornalStreet, who died the previousTuesday after u long illness. Theservice was from the Biiub Fu-neral Home in Wheeler Avenue toSt. Btt»afeetV« Chnrch when-thepastor, Rev. Mark Hajos, O.F.M.,celebrated a high mass of requiem.Burial was in St. James's Ceme-tery, WooMridge, where FatherHajos also read the committalservice.

Honorary hcnrprn wore: MrsStephen Solto.s/., Mrs. AndruwToth, Mis. Andrew Pull, Mrs.James Caimbok, Mrs. John Pan-kocsi, Mrs. Stephen Babyak. Ac-tive bearerK were Mrs. John Toth,Mrs. Albert Bodnar, Sr., Mrs.John Hone, Mrs Miohnel Nagv,Mrs. Alex Man! and Mrs. MichuulKelleman. The Mothers' Club, Al-tar Rosary Society of the churchand the Rakocsy Society con-ducted services at the funeralhome.

services for this1 year's graduatesif Cartarot High 8<!hool will beheld in the school auditorium Sun-day afternoon, June 11, at 2o'elonk. Commencement will takeplace Wednesday, June 14, at6:30 P, M.

Last Friday night the Juniorsgave the annnal Junior. SeniorProm in Nathan Hale School audi-torium, with many parents presentalso. Music was by Nick Orvo'sOrchestra and the entertainmentconsisted of solos by Rose Bialo-warc&uk anl Alice Fedafc, accom-panied by August Hundemann andthe Senior Quartette (now a triosince the absence of Harold Perry),which presented a mtdley ofsnnga. The present members ofthe group are John KovaJ, JulianPruitt and Gregory Sofka, withJoe Sabo as announcer. Rose Ra-mirez, WHS in charge of the enter-tainment, and Anthony Russo gen-ei-al chairman of the prom. RoseOrlmn, head of the decoratingcommittee, and her assistants,working under the supervision ofMi*R Agneae Gunderson, had madethe auditorium appear to havelarge clusters of purple grapes, in-termingled with green vines, witha decorat d arch in the center ofthe floor. Gloria DeRuosi and Wil-liam Poll led the grand match,through this arch.

Parant-Tatchar* AiiutRefreshments were preparod by

the school Parent-Teacher Asso-ciation and served by hostessesfrom the Sophomore Class, withMinn llcRuooi and Miss KathleenHluh in charge. The programswere small blue books with silverpencils on blue cords, carried outin the Junior Class colors. MarionRocky and John Feehan headedthe program committee.

The Junior Class officers are:William Poll, president; AnthonyRusso, vice - president; ArthurMyers, treasurer; Bernadine Czaj-

D.f H*MThe Senior a iwi held its

Day exercises in ^ie Highauditortam lastA skit was presented*

{Continued m Pagt 5)

One MoreJoseph Ferenct, M«r-

chant Marine, AnwafBoro War Dead

CARTERE!T~ln publishing tlist of meir*#fltc have given theirlives in this present war, whitnappeared in the Press last Friday,one name was omitted, inadvert-ently. In compiling the list usedpapers were checked carefullyback to Pearl Harbor in Decem-ber, 1041, and the name of JosaphFerence of the Merchant Marinewas not found. It has been learnedsince that this man, % native ofCarteret who lived here manyyeurj, died March 30, 1942, afterbeing on two ships which weretorpedoed. His name therefore isadded to the list of honored deadof Cartpret, with deep apologiea tohis family.

Koarnun Ference was a son ofStephen Ference of 552 RooseveltAvenue. He leaves two brothersalso, John Ference of the Rooseveil Avenue address, Stephen, Jr.in the U. S, Army. At the time ofhis death Joseph Ference was aresident of Texas, where he hadmarried and established a home.

the

1 ijuhay, H. A. 8/C,.fellow Street, eom-

• cruit tralnint at• V., yesUrday, and''ttd leave before fur-l l f l l t .

f • •

•' ames T. Burke of the!ias reached Mirth

i volunteering severalin oversell service.

" editor of tiiis news-> k "I wag swimmingit'-ii an«an last week«as swell," and com-' on the backward-ir.Milents near whom" with a belief they'll

'»• service men now in'"'w to live in a better

>Ucr the war,« *

>m» selected JohnAviation MeUlsmith

1 i a i»llege program.v at the Naval,Air

•"piw Christl, T«x.1(1 fluted (o start ool-

J|ily 1, after which••'*"• the commission of111 Naval Reserve. His

1 li.mdolph Street.• * • .-

Male John H, Mul-1 •"'-iwt Street has justl n i m an i n t e n a i v e1 "M'H at the Serviafl'"'i NuvsJ DUtrict,

HI. He wnsetoe t td1 liiUatudj on t^e p^

made durinf testa'i training. He i»

of we , ','

nek, aon ''"il'ukskj,-mi from'"penter

St Demetrius ChunkTo Bmh Mortgage Of $34,000

Very Rev. John Hundiak

Paula Bislalt WedTo Coastguardsman

CARTKPiET-MisR Paula MarieBistak, daughter of Mr. and Mrs,Frank Bistak of 252 RandolphStreet, hrrame the hrido of Wil-liam Buda, Jr., seaman first classIn the U. S. Goa.it Guard, son ofMr. nnd Mrs, Buda of New Brimswick, at a cerenVony performed onSunday. The ceremony was per-formed by Rev, Andrew ,1. Rak-»op, pastor of Sacred HeartChurch, in the rectory, and wasfollowed by a reception at SevenGables Inn, Ijtirlnn.

Miss Margaret Dafgek, cousinof the bride, waa the, maid ofhonor, and Mrs. Francis Bistak ofOlympia, Wash,, sister-in-law ofthe 'bride, the matron of honoi).S 1/C John Dafgek of the U. S.Navy acted as best man, and An

(Continued on Page 5}

This Sum Pad OH Since1932; PmUk Mm Ha,Fundt For RtitcoroHoti

DwnetrkiiUkrainian Church will hold a cere-mony a week from Sunday atwhich the mortgage on the fhureh

will be horned. Spestnlservices in the church will be fol-lowed i,y a dinner In the UkrilnlaiiiPavilion on upper RooaeveHAvcnut. . •

The burning of thii mortgagerepresent* unusually hard workand generous contributions bymembers of the parish's 2JDfamilies, and the several organi-zations connected with It, In1932 the church debt was $18,000,Purchase of the land on w<hioh thepavilion stands, r* us the cost aterecting the pavilion ituerf, hasrained this debt to $84,000, the to-tal sum paid off and representedin the mortgage whkh 1B to beburned. In addition to this sumthe church hail 92,800 invested inWar Bonds, to be iwed after thewar for decorating the church edidee according to special planawhich have been made,

P«ilor Credit* FlockVery Rev. John Hundiak, pas

tor of the church, attributes theachievement of thi» record to theenthiuioem and work of the or-ganizations of the church, espe-cially its Board of Trustees, St.Ann'g Auxiliary and the Sister-hood of 'he Blessed Virgin. An-other great factor in the paymentof the debt has been the loyaltyef its sons and daughters away

in the armed lorceit, who have tefttover tBOO since they entered mitt*tary or naval du'tiea,

The board of tnwtees of'thehurch, along with frtbfr Huhlik i

g f uliak, is arranging the' dinnet.

Thojpe serving in this capacity In-d«A. Harry Wolaiwhy, Michaelraskor* and Harry flayduk.

Thomas Kennedy Is 7th ScoutIn Borough With Eagle Rank

Rouman Has Top PlaceOf CHS Biology Stndents

CARTERET - Robert Rossman is this year's winner of theaward in biology, given eachyear at Curteret High School atthe close of the year's studies.The winner is i'ho»en through acompetitive examination givenunder the direction of MissMary E. Roach. The winner re-ceived a bronze medal for hav-ing attained the highest aver-age, and second and third placewinners were William Hasekand Peter Kutney.

NURSE VISITS HOMKCARTEKET Lieut. Mary Bo-

rick of Christopher Strati, has re-turned to duty w.ith the Army litPine Camp, N. Y., after n week-end at home. During her visit sheattended a reunion vt her clasa ofthe School of Nursing of Elusazctn

Pastor Here, DiesCARTERET — Memorial

ices ware held here Tuesday in theFiist Baptist Church for Rev.George Reed, ita founder and fur-mer pastor, who died Monday athis h«me in R i d g c w o o d . Theclergyman had been pastor of thelocal church from 1921 to 1939,when he WR3 transferred to Ridge-wood There he built Bethel Bap(ml riiinrli four years UK", undwas its pastor at the time of liUdeath. He was a member of theMinisters' Conference «f Newarkand other church organizations inthe state. He waa born in Scots-ville, Va,

Surviving are his wife, Harriet;one sister, Mm. Helen Swingler ofCarteret; four brothers, Walter,James and Danridge, all of Tri-delphia, and William of En-glish-town, N. >.; a nephew, John SwinKler, U. S. Navy, and two nieces,Virginia and Mae Swingles, bothof Carteret.

TWO EXPECTEDCARTERET—Mrs. John Mucha,

Jr., of Kankakee, 111., will arriveSunday for a visit with Mr. andMrs. John Mucha of EmersonStreet, parents of her husband,now in England with the ArmyAir Corps. Stephen Much* of theNavy also is expected home onleav? from training at BainbridgeMd.

HOLIDAYOLIDAY VISWOJSCARTERET—Mrs. Jack Tukner

and John Mclnnew of Brooklynwere holiday guests of Mr. andMrs. Louis Bodoar of Atlantic

Four Others Now SetveIn Armed Forces; MotherPresents \ivard

CARTUREf—Thomas Kennedy,Hon of Mr. and Mrs. J«neph Ken-nody of Perahing Avenue, is Car-teret'a seventh Eagle Scout, -high-est rank in this world-wide organ-ization of stalwart young men andbuys. The award of his rank waspresented him al the last Courtof Honor, held in Carteret re-cently, when Scout CommissionerJohn A. Turk gave the award tohis father, who in turn passed iton to his mother for presentationto their son.

OLhuiii hero listed as of RagleScout tank are: Walter Bartz of123 Lowell Street, in the .Seabeesfor the past two years and now inCalifornia; Lieut. Howell E. Mis-dom, serving in Italy with the Ar-my Engineers; Lieut. Gerald Lor-entz, recently commiseipned in theMedical Corps; Louis Resko of 190Randolph Street, scheduled to en-ter the Navy after his graduationlater this month from CarteretHigh School; George Gavaleti Jr.,66 Washington Avenue, anotherhigh school senior; Sergeant l(ich-aei Palinkas of Hermann Avenue,also in Italy.

At the Court of Honor awardswere made also to forty-two otherscouts, These were as follows:

Second Class Scouts: FrancisO'Brien, Stephen Lukacs, EdwftrdHeffner, Edward Bodnar, FrankKelemen, William Rush, EdwardMihulko, James Duggan, WallaceBoehner, William Lawlor, WilliamHoolihan, Alexander Samu, Wil-liuin Soluwin, Louiti Vasquez,David Beiter, G<we Tomari, Wil-liam Kimtoiersk-i, William Kele-men, Charles Fei'tnchik, Einuir

General Hospital in Elizabeth. Street^

Crowning Rites Held On SundayInSt. Joseph 'sAndSt. Elizabeth'

Reako, Jonnpb Rivpra, ArnoldClevercy, James Irving, JohnCollina, all of Troop 81; Alex-ander Dunch, John Merello,

rgi atim«, of Troop 84,. .' ret Claw gcouia William Law-

lor, Alphonsus Bonner, Francis(Continued on Faqe 5)

Memorial ServicesHeld Here Sunday

•CARTERET—Mayor Joseph W.Mittuch declared, "On MemorialDay we acknowledge a debt whichis beyond repayment," when heS|Hikc al. tin- exeniaes in Wiiltei'OverhoH Memorial Stadium. Theseexercises were held after the pa-radfi had mnrrhed through theborough, starting at the water-front near the old ferry slip inupper Roosevelt Avenue.

Other speakers were: Fire ChiefFrank Schuck, S. 0. Burrows, pastcommander of Star Landing Post,Veterans of Foreign Wars; Clif-ford Cutter, past commander ofCarteret Post, American Legion;William Nodolski, V. F. W. com-mander;' August Sebastian, Legioncommander; Mrs. William Bishop,president of the V. F, W. Auxil-iary, and Mrs. Theodore Pfennig,president of the Legion Auxiliary.

Mrs. Harry Gleckner, past com-mander of the County LegionAuxiliary, presented a prize toHarriet Gross for hen1 winningcusay nn the Constitution, and alsothe Carteret and County prizesto Hatinalore Galle and AnnO'Brien, winners pf the poj?pyposter contest.

Learned Nad PrisonerCARTERET^Cpl. Walter S.

Bob«I, 23 years «W, missing inaction since April 21, is a prig-oner of war in Germany, ac-cording to a telegram receivedyesterday by his mother, Mrs.Kathryn Lukaaiewics, of 72 Pu-luki avenue. .

Bobel was reported loat fol-lowing a combat mission overNorthern !MR«A bombardier,| ^ b m b r d e r ,the corporal has been in theservice, for two years. He left

'for the Mediteranean' area sev-eral months ago.'

He attended Carteret HifrlSchool and before entering theservice was employed at he Lie-big plant of the American Agri-cultural Chtmical Company. Hisbrother, Joseph Bobel, store-Keeper second class, is in thenavy.

in « W f t of tfttof War Bond selling in iough since the campaignswilleondnettt* Fifth

tinue thresh July 8. , . ,Cafterttfs qoota for t h P

paign has been raised $Jmaking it $900,000. Thison the splendid recording the Fourth Loaaquota at $400,060 wasU11AH under Mr.jnaderthlp. In this lastducted In January andending February 15,residents and businttset

Hale Students InMemorial Program

CARTER'ET—A Memorial Dayprogram jfiven Monday at NathanHale School by its sixth, seventhand eighth grades, offered recitations, a play, music and other

ma of ontortainment. Th-oae whoappeared were: Blanche Gutkow-oki, Lillian Berg, Vincent Maicr,Joan F,not, Wiftna Ambolt, LouiieBrechka, Frank Amiler, RobertO'Dnnnell, Mary peters, HelenNudge, Donald JDDM, -Paul Bod-nsr, ATiioid Cleversey, John On-dee, Elaine Carsia, Anne O'Brien,and Winifred Hundemann, whoWUH the pianilt.

In a program presented by Mrs.Marion C, Ryttn, tuacher of musicfor the intermediate grades, thosetaking part wera; William Magella,lisa Frey,, Audrey Ward, MaryRaskulineo, Gabriel Suto, MaryGinda, Kenneth Pazar, Helen Di-kun, Eose Kudrock, MarjorieVivr-ga, Helen Mitroka, AlbertSalm, William Bensulock, RoseKokolus, Donald Lnkach, DorisSklmmons, Dorolhy (Jambats andiiitiiitbera of Miss Bergon's andMiss Daley's classes.

Sarzillo Given HonorByFomttrtOftU.

CA HTEJtET — Joseph * E. Sar-zillo of Lpcust Street was electedgrand lecturer 6f the grand'courtof New Jersey, Foresters of Amer-ica, at tin; convention held Sundayat the Plaza Hotel, Jersey City.A convention banquet the nightbefore in the same hotel saw manydistinguished Foresters from allparts of the sUt,u present.

^ohn Huss of Lakewood waschosen grand chief ranger. Thedelegation attending the conven-tion from Carteret consisted of:Mr. Sarzillo, Alvin Guyon, EdwinS. Quin, Jacob Binstein, EdwardRuth and John 8, Olbricht.

MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED—M!rs. Joseph Pas-

l

CARTERET - • Crowning cere-monies wer.; performed here bun-day night iu two Roman CatholicChurches, St. Joseph,» and St.B l U e t h ' s . At St. Josephs theeeromony took place in the church,

while paiifihiu'lu"i uf »t. M I » -K h ? . Church staged the.r nteoutdoors -before a special altar,built for the occasion.

At St Joseph1* the processionformed in the school for the marchto tnY church, led by the « « • •

l t n 'nbear.r..nd«colyt««,anof at. Joseph's Boys Club w«h

j i d t William «"»<>«!•««•

$

man, Margaret Kikh, t>ovothy Ko-val, ClaiiQ Kogtych, RoaeMarieLaRocco, Margaret Mesey, PhyllisPuaillo, May Ann Roessler, Char-lotte SeKtuye, G^orgene Barbleri,Joan Cromwell, Carol Oinda, Ca-milla Lukach," Kathleen Lyneh,Barbara Ann Sandor, MargaretTavares and Ariene Torote"

Miw Johanna Hiregtt, prwidentof the Sodality, plh«ed t^e dtvnnon the statue; $»• KM*, attirefl in9, white chiffon gofn ^ i h » Wtulle veil" an4 carrtiH'iof white roses. / W.M« "of white m , M » #ing tn« altar, she maroW tinder

h f \MW **»*'*$&

C A t f ptar, a recent bride, and formerlyof Perth Amboy, has come tomake her home for the remainderof the war with her sister, Mrs.Joseph Cztija of Emerson Street.Mrs, Pastor's marriage to Pfc.Pastor, & recent event, was an-nuuueed by Mrs, Csaja during theweekend. The bride was Miae K*-therlne Swal «r\d the bridegroomis the sqn otf Mr. and Mrs. MichaelPastor of Campbell'Street, Wood:bridge. Rev. Mi A. Konop^a per-formed the ceremony at, HolyFamily Church, with Miss HelenCHVJB and Louis Pastor, brotherof the bridegroom, *s attsntlants.The bxldigroom is stationed inK

RE-ELECTED TO

CART1ERET — Miss DagmarKoed, daflghter of Mr. and Mrs.Soren Koed. of 12!!, EniersonStroot, has be«n re-electe4 presi-dent of the Insurance Women ofNew Jersey, the eleption takingplace at a meeting in the RobertTreat Hotel, Newark. Miss Koedoperates her own Insurance brok-erage business here.

H. S. Students PayTribute To Dead

CARTERET-^Students at Car-teret High School paid homageto the honored dead in a specialMemorial Day program on Mon-day. Barbara Molnar directed thisprogram and Howard Wohljemuthplayef the piano accompanimentfor the musical numbers.

The presentations were: read-ing, by Anthony Russo; song,"There's a Star Spangled BannerWaving Somewhere," Gertrude'erry; "America, I l/ove You,"

Shirley Brown; reading, poem,Margaret Kisth; nnng, BarbaraMolnar, "Say a Prayer for theBoys Over 'there";

"You're a Grand Old Flag,"sung by Ruth Russo and Gertrude.Perry; r e a d i n g , Mln FlandenrYields," Barbara Molnar; song,"My Buddy," Helen Soltesss; song,"Coming in on a Wing and aPrayer," Eleanor Abaray; song,"Over There," -William Balog,with enscmlBc singing on the second chorus, The final number was"When Johnny Comett MarchingHome Again," by all present.

During the program there alsowas a minute of silence in tributeto the fighting men overseas.

Spoganetz And Kaky LeadIn Anniversary Planning

CARTERET" John Spoganetzand Joseph Kutcy, head of thecommittee arranging the fifteenthAnniversary Dance of the Ukrain-ian Social Club. This wilt be helda week from tomorrow night atthe Ukrainian Pavilion, starting at8:30 o'clock, With music byGeorge Ruddy and his orchestra,Others on the committee of ar-rangements are John Kindxieraky,John Kokolus, Alex Pulohonki,Theodore Hadyniak, Joseph Bam-burak, Eugene Wndiak, ThomasGinda, Alex P a w l u c k , FrankBarna and Michael Dobrowolaki.This group will meet Monday tomake final arrangements.

d busintt$1,077,611,25 in War iufel

An intensive campaign ts-Itie this high goal Is beingia<sd now, Louis Brown, .<section proprietor, will hemerchants' d i v i s i o n , iWayne T. Branom, supprincipal will conduct t h e !paign in the schools. Boy itroops also are expected to';in the campaign, aa theyprevious ones. Industrialwill co-operate to a largeto increase, the purchasesregularly through the pa;ductions now in effect. •

VISITING HERECARTERET — Misa Mary E

Smith of Willlamsport, Pa., is theIIOUBU gueel; of Mrs. Frank Koepfler of Perehlng Avenue. She re-turned with- Mrs, Koepfler fromWilliamsport after the latter hadspent the week-end there.

LocalWar Bonds are sold

through these agencies,which will intensify Itsforts for this Fifth WaxThe Oarteret Bank and

(Continued on

Wed To Bora GirtIrene;

1i e

mqff of 91 8ha»ot Str*«ttho bride at Pt«. Alfred tof the U. 8. Marinestationsd In Dovir alt*r

TEREBETSKY BURIEDCARTERET —The funeral of

Charles TerebetBky, of BB Mercerstreet, wa3 held this morning fromthe Joseph Synowieeki FuneralHome, 42 Hudson Street. A highmass of Bequieni was offered atSt. Demetrius' Ukrainian Church,with Rev. John Hundiak, pastor,officiating. Burial wan in RosehillCemetery, Linden.* Pall bearerswere: John and Walter Terebet-eky, Joseph Ciliberto and Nicho-las Shymanski.

. , , > i — . . . . . , i • - . , . •

overreu, at a ceremony ]«n Sunday. Theplace in St. DemetrfmChurch and was performed'pastor, Very Rov. John HanAfterward there was a recejjat the Feliske home, The forthe daughter of Mnt, Marymolt, and the bridegroom, we*of the Purple Heart for woreceived in action, is the son-J(Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fenske71 Charles Street.

Nicholas Yakimoff gavetei1 in marriage. She wore i iof white chiffon made boulstyle, and her fingertip-Itulle VPII was arranged to her]with a coronet of orange bloi ,She carried a cascade bouquet Swhite ronea and lilies of the 'For traveling she wore agreen suit with black asseand a corsage of white roses,

Mias Ethel Yakimoff, sister''the bride, who was the mai<fthonor, wuie rone colored tulle'a bonnet to match, and Miss ',ence Fenske, the bridegroom's iter, who was the bridesmaid,Nile green tullu with a matchbonnet. Each carried yellow ,Andrew Klinowski acted asman. and Robert Lanning, | |Crunbury, waa usher. '-::^

After a trip to New Yorl/Jf"couple will live at theStreet address.

SCHWARTZ RITES

FIRST COMMUNIONCARTERET — Nineteen ,

in M.

' a n ,

1 Mi.i

streamersfirst

In the flrat g i f M *

C A T — K i l n e r a l serviceswere held Monday at the T* J.Coonef Funeral Home* Perchingavenue, for Philip Sohwarta, of552 Rooaevelt uvenue, Who diedon Friday. Riev. D. K. Loranti,pailor of the Flr*t PreebyterianChikreh, officiated. Burial was, inItoMhill Cemetery, Unden; pail'betfers were three BOAB, Herman,W«sl«y and.Amon SclWfart^ and

iW S S < * * t * ' ^

Olbricht Warns Of Fife HazardFrom Unattended Refrigerators

DOWNED BY GAS

G A * ^ pkw. ofit Baiiojnh stteet, was overcome

CARTERBT-John S. Olbricht,fire marshal of the borough andhead of the Fire Prevention Bu-reau, directed attention this weekto the care of electric refriger-ators in local homes, and askedhouseholders leavipg for vacationsnot only to turn oft the current intheir absottM, but to remove* theIce box plug from the socket w\no contact at all is made daringthe absence.'

"War-Uma shortage* and in-ability, to have repairs made, U•customary, ..Mr. QUaicllt afilsMout, "hw kwt many ic« 1»o«s inuse beso i i W» period when tfcM fily $ * *n4 f«»t «•refily

06 Lincoln Avenue. Mr, Woodhullwas ut his work at the time and.Mrs. Wo»dhull was awaktmed bywhat she thought was a motorrunning in her buck yard. She

h h hg

went to the rear the houseand found the kitchen full »tsmoke, coming from the electricrefrigerator. She ruuhed into (he-room and pulled the plug frointhe socket, then turned in analarm, to which both Are compa-nies responded. Firemen had toate m ^ b W check the" fire an'd

Memorial ProgramAt School Monday

C A R T E R I T T — Wash*HchiMil children purtloipatMemorial Day programs MoTbe first and secondsongs, and-recitations wereby Judith Kaskiw, Alek ZiMary Ann Elko, Roland Kofc

Gllrain.Mra. Herman'o third

fioiited H playlet, "The LibPatriots," in which Victory,Sum, Health, War'Stamps,Nature and others wore <ton. Each pupil in the class jpart. Reeitutiona were givMarilyn Gorden, Donald D'ZNancy Farios, of Misa Bertfbel'i clays. Marilyn Gordon |a piano selection anil \*\farkaa playfld "Tapa" on failnet. Group singing closed tfa*

ently Has mnered no ill effectssbt i tome of the

acrid sjnoko wiilij, to4 went, into

STUDENT REVUE POS1

9m-

vua tol ivi iven by stuCartovet Mfh School,for pre»entwion Wedneof tita w M , wa» posfe

nt

le A M

Page 2: alanil) Of Boro Is Held -m Pad · 2014-02-23 · Pruitt and Gregory Sofka, with Jo e Sabo as announcer. Ros Ra-mirez, WHS i charg e of th enter-tainment, and Anthony Russ gen-ei-al

r J*rtey St*U Library ha» just i«-W e d « b u f t n i p t i v i T.ist <>f t h e

undIM4y

,;vwhich ndjnoriKMl nine die April 12.'; ThiH lint iriv('« thp Mil nml chapJtw>fiurflhrr of i-m-h mi'iimtrt cn-

•ctPii, tngellii'i1 with the namft itthe Introducer, mul » hriof «ynop-nln of the purpose of each hill,Copies may lie hod icrntto uponapplication ti> the Slate Uhmryat Trenton.

GETTING BETTER<••; CARTKRET -•• .Inmon Karmo-

of ("athorint' Street It 8 pa-t in MiihlcnhcrK HonplUI,Plainflclci,' r«rovnin(( from H rt>-cint operation.

* KeenThe valut of trained <Jogi ••

tiaeh-pnlrul nldeit hai led to the u»«;ot them by both navy and coatt

i and the nrmy also is traln-dog units In various phase* of

cornbat performance. Where h*Wan eyesight fnlls and sounds arttoo light to he hoard hy the soldier,'•ailor or marine, !h« dogi of warcome into their own and prove thilrWCitth, particularly In security anddefense.

%• - - - D o n ' t Pest FBUUMS .flCrub putelncj and (kw't p*«l. Pop

' ,ihem in a pot of boiling salted waterafca »ok covered. Use them inBOilps, talnds, chowders und stews,

' Whip them until light and fluffy and> We thtm as » crust for a meat »nd

ttfetible pie. Serve them withparsley or sprinkle lightly

chopped chives.

; Navy's No. 1 flying ace say?, J#pancw are good M

CARD OF THANKS

W« d«nirt> to oxpret) our sin-cere and heartfelt trunks to ourrelatives and friends for theirkind expression* of sympathy,spiritual bouquets (masses)and litiimtiful Mural off«ringNat the recant dcuth of our <l«ar-ly beloved mother, grand-mother, and sister, Mrs. MaryGoyoiis.

We especially wish to thankRov. Mark HujoB, O.,F. M., forhis word* of consolation; undfor their kinilmwr the Mothers'Club, Altar and Itoaary Society,RakoMi Society, her neighbors,James B. Berry S»nn C,U.,drawing room of KnsUr Wh»el-er Conp, office ot Foster Whsel-er Corp., ('.. I. 0. Local #111)7,those who drove and donatedtheir curs, the honorary and ac-tive bearoni, the Woodhridgi'tind Caileret Police Dept. forescorts and the Funeral DirectOr, L. Uiziib for satisfactoryServices vewleiwl.

SDIIH and daughters amithetir fanitlie«,

' Brothers and sister*, andtheir Families.

Coal Declaration *»rj»i>y June M>,

mint b»1944

JOHN J. BfTTING'hhe cod*

33 MAIN ST.W00DBR1DGE, N. J.

WO. 8-0012

Crowning Heldi ( ouiiniH'ii from Paqf I)

Chitro, rflrryinir the banner of OorI,«rty, IPII Ihn C'hi)dr»>n of MarySodality, nil nf whom wor<- »t-ttrcd in while drwdM nnd blueruppn. Min« Patricia Donovan andMl** Mary Ann llmkriojrcl cnv-ripd atrnamrrs.

The p«»tor, Htv, Jaraw MM-e»-nan, O.8.M., preached the ««rmpnon the subject, "Maty, Queen 'ofPeac#," follnwed hy th* benedic-tlonof th« blewed Mcrmnani Th?Rev. Joseph Grabrian, 0.8.M., as-lintant p««tir. abo participated

The other attend»nls to theernwnar were: Marl«n« Lonak, Do|orei Nnler, M»ry Ann Kennedy.R(*eM»rit< Hlomk'i, M n r j a r e lStinw, MarRutrlte (liimpbrll, Hel-en Kuval, Jnn«t Ginila. DorothyCollinn, MniKarot N»pdi, VioletM«dwiek, Itorothy Dulton, AudreyM"rnion, 1-atriciB Kearney, MaryIrvinn, Veronica Kearney, Thi1-reHH Stiina, Doliirc* Santos, G<'<-tldiiif D'Alcwio, Dorothy LiL-an-tin, Mnry Tedewo, Rose SIIBKHpede, Margarat Viirya, CatherineFnhey, Mar«arpt Monaghan, Dorothy Eckulawicz, Josephine I)cMitto, Rose Monaehun, CatherineSullivan, Helen Harlik.

D«t.il, At St. Elliabeth'iAt St, Rli?-abeth'» Church Minn

Barbara Ramoaocky had the role ofcrowner, clad in ii \*Mtf witlngown and lonj veil, tvitli n bou-quet of calla lilies in her arm,Mi*a Mary Ruici't wai maid ofhonor, and Mis? Burbuiu Pa)l|icrown hearer The rrowner's per-,lonal attendants were Miss RoseMary Herenyi, Miss Barbara Sher-chnek, Mis.' Helen Pritula andMi« Shirley Toth. Cape bearerswere Louis .Kady und JamesBodak.

8«nlor Sodality members whoparticipated weie: Miss HelenKeltKW, MIIB fllita'betl! Demjeri,Mi«.t Helen SoHesi, Miss TheresaLokas, MIM Rose * Nu^y. MisaElizabeth Kelemen, Miss Marga-ret Yanvaty, Mias Olga Ynhflw,,Miss Alvira Yuhas?, Miss Mary1'iihnkiiB, Min Heli.-n Solttms.

The followinK members of theJunior Sodality carried a bier withthe jtabue: the Misses Mary Mak-kai, Elizabeth Zatik, Dorothy Yuhaw and Lillian &)hayd», Theywere followed by members of St.Cecelia's choir and members ofthe clergy. L

Richard Molitar, O.F.M., anslBt-»nt pastor of the church, preachedthe sermon on "Mary, Our Moth-er," and he and the pastor Rev,Mark Hajos, O.F.M., conductedthe benediction service whjch con-cluded the exercises.

CARD OF THANKS

We sincerely thank thune l'B-spoattjbJe for the many acts ofkiiidjttn ajid friendship shownus at the tlttte of the rucent ill-nm« ami dsntb.of oui^b.etuvudhvabnnd akd f«*h»r, David Ul-nmn,, Su«h consideration undtliDi^hhtfulnasn wa» a groutcomfort and we nre very grate-ful.Mrs. David Ulman, and family.

AL SAKSONFLOWERS FOR ALL

OCCASIONS

All KinJi «F V«|«ukl« (nd

Fl«w*v Plant*

133-143 Unif.lk>w St.C*r«*r*t, N. J.

CM>t*r«t 8-6905

SUMMER FROCKSPRINTED JERSEYS

SPARKLING PATTERNSVivid and Neutral

Shades and Color*

Juniors

One and Two-pw«* • 91 • 17,

14 - 20Women 38 • 4«

DIRNDLS • PINAFOMSTwo-Pi«c9

V"

COTTONS • SPUN RAYONS

H i T h e mijifaryvletorlea of the Allies in Italy haveAlready rmulted in nome Jrtnjr de-Iftyvd vlctorle* on the diplomaticfront. Aftar months of urging onour |>«rl, Spain h«» finally neen thelight and hM ordered the Germanand Jap eonnuli) to quit their con-venient »py1nr pout* in Tflncitn.Sweden, too, ho» suddenly decidedthat she hail better tee our pointof view en *.hu mutter of boll LmurI HIT khlptnontx to (ietrmany and IsnfferinK to enme tu. Hn agreanicnlwith our representative!!, Evident-ly victory la ons lantfuutte the n«u-i m 1 H fiin undHmtand, und the Al-lied bandwagon it beginning to ap-peal to them,

Tim tmanhinic of the Gustav!,in<> hiu ughln eK|iloded the mythof an "impregnable fortreas." Noline in thin wiar hw proved rmprofc-nablH. Ths Maginot I<in« and thnlielfriiin fortu fell to the Germans.The Allies wore able to smash theMareth Line. When we. attackncro.ua the Channel, our Ki'eatenthazards will not be the lnnrt forti-ficfttiowh but the water barrieritself Snd iiilMpi'CUi^iWffeft*^ther. T-he uneeanontble atormd ofearly May were enough to Kroundour hontbem and giv« the enemy sichance to repair some of thr dnm-age of our uteady

FORTREKS KURWK: Militaryexperts express tihe belief thai theAllies should be able to RRtabliahITeachheadH on the invaHimi mastawithout too much difficulty. TheNsaiti lire not oxpucUd to mirriftretheir best trooira in futileto stop niich heRehh*iulK.main army will he used for thVdefennc of Germany itself in aneffort to drag the war out as longan possible, while the Americanpublic wuita impatiently for u de-tisive victory. In addition, re-ports parsist that the count ofFrance is dotted with secret un-derground hangnrs in which theNazis have concentrated their airand glider strength in order tolaunch an air invasion of Englandjit a critical moment whun the Al-lies invade. The object would be,\o destroy military equipment andtransportation lines vital to Allied

Na&i poet-war pluns include uSecret underground organization,the personnel for which is alreadybeing trained In present Nazischools. They inUnd to burrowInto bhe German people so deeplythtrt they will bu as difficult to rootout as poison ivy, the Germansthemgflviifi will hnve to takuto clean, out Uvu

l VI' " "

SOUTH AMBRlCiA: In Rpitc offlironoliid cerworahlp, reports comJ>ng out of DiHzil iiidiuuLc tluiLthere is graat di!uiatisfuctioiij|among the citizenry with their']government. In common withaeveral other South Americancountries, Brazil h«» had u dicta-tor at the houd of ittt governmentfor muny years. Recently a groupof Brugilian atudmts took it uponthumsalvcH to purude with (,'ugnin their mouths a9 a protest

8j£i|ilWl gl'VHI IIIIIHJlt IHBll liThey were mat by a contingent ofpolice who fired 'a volley into theroad. The ricocheting bulletskilled and wounded several of thestudents.

u * e

The pussling caae of Father Or-liimuiiski •sewna to resolve itself tothis: Both the Vatican und Mascow wouM like to eolne to an un-dtirstaqding that would gimranteereligious liberty In Polish territorynow occupied, and soon to be occu-pied by the Soviets, Such ari un-derstanding would do. much tobring about a working arrange-ment between the provisional Po-lish government and Russia whoare nut now on speaking terms.

Radtonic Hearing with

the new

Hearing Aid

k HAHN * SON89 SMITH STREET

Ptrth Amboy, N. J.

rVotort c«it l»flV)H not for tr*

Pfe*|d«nt dlwetly but for elector^cnndld»tti. who «r* noralnstfd Itvarlom wtf* srrordlnli to Itatk|a»< and who are pledged tofor th« etmlidate of 'heirEach ttat* h»« ** many flteton t iIt h«> U. 9. tcnninrii ml ttp***inlm.'tlv«» rombtned.

It ii U* tlictoril virte wid not thepopular vote which «1«cl« tt*. W*«l-d«nt. Th« electorl m««t on th« llriitMonday after tht neonil 1 •fantofin n««mh#r at i ilti itt&Uat, tt»their ttat* l«gl»liture« to o»M Qwtrvotes. Tht ballot* tlMn v* w l t l lind »«rh iitotoml ool!«tn ttgoHOHi member to dtllvtr UM wt« a* *Mstate to tht pmkknl of th* MMt*.The itnalt nn4 UM IMHIM ot.Mfi»»lentatlvsi m««t In Joint l MlMi s i1 p. m, on UM followlnl Jiauir/ »to hear the vott counted

U you htvtpick it from th* 1WM« wJn pitty caku, totXtnHcroqutttu. b 4cruM the nun>b*r of iffvlnfpeomblaini it with rtet, jwifc* »0-titoei or tptgMW wd ft 1M~ceanoned cr*«m Miroe. OyMdiMiclami are ideal tor qulofc itewt wt4chowders.

Clean Milkmilk i« milk of «ood itavw.

comet from healthy ctrtvn, la tntar«.i tlict, and contalot Uw bit*teria, nona qf which U

ChristianChurch Calendar

First Church of Christ, Stitn-tist, Sewaren, ia a branch of theMother Church, The First Chuwhof Christ, Scientist, in Joeton,Mass. Sunday services 11 A. M,,Sunday School, 9:30 A,. K.;Wednesday Testimonial meeting,8 P, M,; Thursday reading room,2 to 4 P. M.

'God the Only Cau.se andCreator" ia the Lwison S»rroonsubject fur Sunday, JUIIB 4.

Golden Text: "He ia the fortnerof nil thing*, and Israel is tht. rodof' hin inheritance- Thfi Lord nfhosts is his name" (Jer. I(ht6)-.

Sermon. P a s s e s from theKing; James version of thi Bible

"Every good gift and awry perf«et gift is fromCometh down from the Father oflights, with whom is no variable-ness, neither shadow of tur(James 1:17). Correlative paa-sages from "Science >tnd HealtKwith Key to the'Scriptures" by

aiy Baker Jlddy"He. is divine Principlf!, hum,

the univarsttt can»«, the only cw-ator, and ther« is no other self-.

IJc is iill-inclusive, anilis refleetodbj; ,»U that is real and

i internal ' t l t j ' nothing else"(p. 831).

Hull a mjJUon tetljlxtd "flying"flsh eggs, » Good Neighbor lift fromthe Great Leke» of the-United1 StttHto famous Lake Titicacasnavigable kkt in thft world Inem Peru In the heart of Soufli Amer-lea's Andes mountains, were recent-ly flown In out o( the most unusualshipments iri air history,

Shipment ol tiie »gB» »r »ir w nth« ««ly v«y to IDIUN Mir »*!•arrival during liw brief Umt ptplotj*during which ttauv Usd tu be I(«Wunder Bpcoial condltiunj, Ji.i*.owr»than 4,000 miles from tin Gtsa*Lakes to Arcqwpa, Peru, mint wn»,Yt»ii«nt. Paiiwem a'ctwrt tu Liikii.';Titicaca, vthnri) l e uggi w»i'»: «k»positod, but it took only lour dwltor the uhlpino'it to vov«r that JlVtance. Even by tbe lestest (team-er—o! whlqh none would have been,available due to War cundiUonij—Hie;trip would in all prohabtllty bnvp ve>quired nearly three wqel?s,

o "Tb« UHinTit*rf" r«tulti in p p ^ f^ K ftk tbitm hoM. lighted c.ndU *. R.y Milled c.r-

ri«i C*it RU*MII to aafcly. Donald Crltp it >twr*d with Ml*lR«U«f' *"«' MllUdd in thii itjrrini; film which nt-ri*« to<ky at^ Qr*tc«*t I W t r e . C«f>n*li» Oti* Skinn.r h»i na taiporUntrtfl* in th* pict«r*,

On Silver. Screen

Acrfainiefl by millions of retod-era, 9eme«iet Maugham'* drama-tie n»W, '('frh« Hour Be/ore theDawa. »rrlv«s tomorrow,at tjiep Theatre in on actio'h-packed Paramount film. '

Th i r tM co-;SlflrTlng!Fraii<-i

p gchot Tone and Vefonica Lake, is aJ

departure fffem all known Holly-wood formula for its story d-ealsewith a eonseltmMous <lbjectt>i' inthe e»rljr days of England's warwith Germany. It in this themewhich s*ays audiences as the widerange of emotions in the ,1m playupon their feelings.

CrescentThe only way to describe Para-

mount's "The Uninvited" whichop«n* today at the Crescent Thea-tre in to sftjr "it'fl out ot tWsworld," It In;!',' in, snd in moreways than ont. •

Wh* Bay MiUand, Bath Htuwyand Doniild C M R in Btarring roiSi,the piotuee • dsalii in unearthly

awdjspiriti, a hannW h w w ami[weirdejit set of complications yetviftited upon the tirenn.

MajesticGinger Rogers and Ray Milland

are feamed together in Para-mount's Tecluilculor r o m a n c e"Lady in the DftA" for th» first

Buster., John Hill, Mieclta Auer,Mflry Philips, Barry Sollivan andPhyllis Brooks.:

"Gaslight," tbe new M.Hro-GoJdwyn-Mayflr ftlm at the DitmasTheatre, is one of the most excit-ing and dramatic stories ever toreach the K.T<J«M. Featured byoutstanding performancas by thestar-stiiddsd c a s t headed byCharles Boyer, Ingrid Bsrgmanand Joseph Cotten, "Guslight" will.keep you on the edge of ynur ?e«*f-,it relates the story of the IIWHIItiful young singer, portrayed byMiitf Betgnian, who marries heraocompeni»t (Charles Boyer) andwith him .sets up home in the London house where Paula's Runt, ifamous singer, was murdered.

Shirley Temple has reached th«grand old niro of sixteen—oHApiil 2!lrd, to be exact. It'« hardt;» I'HiiIize that Ihr little tot of fl

back is now an alnwito p miss.Don Amechc, who is the fatJle.t'i

of four boy*, nay* he Rmt MM,Ameehe are looking fof a habygirl, or better still, girl twins, toUdopt. Tho only entrh h that tjiejbabies must be only about six

"'k* old.Ireno, wlio dosigna the clothed

you set; Uedy Liam^rr, liftna;

Turner, Mnrlwie Dritrich nnd'Gri'cr (rarson, not to mentionutbi'i'.s, wear before tli" camera*,in answerins; the question, "What»houlil a woman be Hk« to wiear«lcithe« well?" described her atfnllnu-<i: "She shouH1 be «f a «er-LHIH height, extr«nu!ly slenderuuA havt- nnnchftltnce. Anybbnywho jumps around like a jack-in-

oan't wear clothcF to ad-vantage. Clothe* have to be car-ried with a certain ptreonality."

A Christmas card, sent out inbooklet form And picked up byProducer David Hempstead, willbe made into a screen play, en-titled "The Greatest Gift," andC*ry Grant will play the lead.

.The story is about u man wh«pbfltome* distrusted with life undfishes he had never been born,The colnplicntioni come when heis granted a now lease on life,

When "The Ey« of St. Mark'n,"baiied on the »tage play of th»

name, was previewed, th«

dMh't Ule the , inbnil th« boys are Wi

Raraan. Writeri ar« h,,.,whippingi up « Mm oni|iwhich WHlta'm Eythe is »\Ing buck to Ann Baxtn ,.,of tming killed,

.Lee Bowman'i «xp«H«lln

tl(e movies i» that of „„ „other totifA 4 S 1 -«*tM«M>«. •

to Halljrwood from 1y to play » major role ,

«reen, ( Uowmari failed to 1.part and for '« lony tin,.years, to lie ewct, all hn «,,:bit part*. He changed in.made nne pftttrre and hi-Win siwh'a slim!**" Ihni 1.,star billing on his next, "Ti..patient Team," a se<iui 1 •„rollicking pomedy, "Tho M .Hwrfw." :• • .

Th« film' bio(tr«phy of v.Wai I l*re*l<lent Woodnn..son i* '"ultnost" the truth. 1tie* iart l|tlnif taken, binaro concerned «nly widi ,episodes in th« life of theman. T o attempt is bcin,.

,to maltfi the charactersphotofitipMd copies, theare relying <U1 their int |tion» to m r n t t the pi-^ies, living and dead, who ,,;roles in inU^great world ,hThe fllm b»x 147 speakin-9f>. of them nf hiitoi ical

canee.—1__ l

Army)* ClrttAaloTht army boufht Itt fln.t

mobl1« In WA.

Btemki With VpncyAllspice comei from Jamaica end

Mwlco, although Mexican spice isdifferent botanic«Hv. Mexico alsogentts anise, which often to usedin apple pie in plooa of cinnamonand blended with homy or comsyrup for uie on waffled »r griddleoaket.

highly successfulMajor and thi'

time since theirromance, "ThoMinor."

In the tilm version of MossHurl's hit iiluy which vptined y«s-tei'4fty at the Majestic Thcutre,Giuiser h«s the role Gertrotde Law-rence created on tho static -that«f a swankjj fashion magazine,Bay Mi Hand is seen as her adver-tising manager and thorn-in-her-nirie,

Others in the cast are Warner

The entablishment ofrelations between thass two coun-trieg would do much to guavanteajthat the United Nations can r«-muin united upon the coming o^p£ttca und through the difttcultperiod of rocontitructioi). Su, al-though Futher Orlumaimki htta]boon punished by his HiiiwriurH wi.vailed A null'appointed and uo~J(jualitied del«gut« of hut church,]hie effort mny yat h«ve fing ttivl favorable raml

Sprout** BoybetMSprouted soybeans are often In-

corporated Into dlBhts such as ourAmerican chop suey, but they can&ko be used alone as a butteredvegetable. The cooked, sproutedbeans can be served ap sauted beansprouts or chilled and atrved In vtossed salad •

VICfOtYWATCH

TJod tiMJr Ki>« n i « i d . If at

Inline,walrh to

Albren,

• 97 SMITH STREET PERTH AMBOY, N. J. •

HOT WEA THERSPECIALS!

mrs SHUT turnWhite, tan and blue. Sixes small, medium and lar

BffiWS SUMlH^t T I E S . . . . . 2 for $1Good selection of atripei and desifaa

133 Smith St.

Perth Amboy

CRYSTALS FITTED

WHILE YOU WAIT

LADIES' m mm..... vMFlgral or itripad p*tt««n»

rswn SUITS.

YOUGOOD BREAD?

JOE'S CIRCULAR BARAND iwmk

MADISON AVL tmmtmm

SAMMY

Yes. Alt the wanted colors in one and 2-piece mod.

giws 30 to SI

LABffiS' COOL P U Y SORS. . $2 94Floral deaifna or wlid colori

UUHC'COTODRESSES 2f«rSSWSire. 9 to 17, 14 to 29, 38 to 44f

VaJim to $3.94 ncE\

— . / * " • :

ME

Q**mg Emy

BEER

Fmtily Utm* Stow101 RMMTtlt A T *

C«ri*r«t

DOKALDllANSQH

BUYS YOU THE BESTA*soKlatcd with Boyni«h BKrtlmrs

& Co. oy«M,y.*»W,

Bited by «>tp«rterie«dl bread W b m In

MEN'S SWIM TRUNKS. $194!Navy or wine. Sizes smidl, medium and Urge

..L.Si i« 2 to «. Qoodi wlnctipA «f

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,

Page 3: alanil) Of Boro Is Held -m Pad · 2014-02-23 · Pruitt and Gregory Sofka, with Jo e Sabo as announcer. Ros Ra-mirez, WHS i charg e of th enter-tainment, and Anthony Russ gen-ei-al

mo • Hollywood tank nmlf ** <ih»n(ct» a $10 bill

into Ws rtWBTth.. i quick ttlf

weri l ON W l

, ; ( o SUNDAYJ linoi.

|'i men', * h

, , • • i n - t o

i,by. mill uill. Prince is

n Tn fiuft,. he's

'"JL 'ki Z w i w i K f a *IU oili«O f l BHk _ As the teller coujri-

out the bills up to wven, the'*"*"? aftnotimrM that it W»R a

. <n<r ordered the tttlw inov*T Mr* iTiflnpy, The ffi].

1«t ducketf •under the counter inAme rotber, apparently 1-osinp his—>"\ fieri, -Wrfnir onty fa> •<?.

bitnV; trajnmd | 3 on that deal.

HOT i 6 "UNSAFE"

r%.—T>cidinp that n

•old; retaining wall &1onjj astreet was "unsafe," the i-lty parkdepartment ordered it iblatteddown bef«re it fell down. A 160-jttek dynaiftife change-wan appliedhot tne #,»J1 did not bodf?c,

Of A mi tt*ll of "known trim':Jftafa" m tftwline t k e k

By"A Bell

Her«»y, mlftnrary.

thin ii a nwel by £htwar eomapondeivt wl»

tp

'Unto the Vktley." It it « i»t«Jtort it tnrtw t*s tnfttr. tt ft nturartAnteritaw in tt*ty...•U-MU •-<*tht? IlniIMn-AlHWlCIHI "-ttHiJbftried to rtbttiWan

the

weethefctt, a boy from the»1*B <rf the trseks, koth>lotimi of

pa*h«tlc "suicide pact".In ttw watm and Appwlinit

drama of a cirtnmutilty, in the ro-of a bfeauttful young doc-

. ... townlirte# of hto Own gnbd

instinct* and d«mocftitk> tipfrring-.rap. He understood th«fnl, simple poople <rf (hethe fishermen,, the offtdats, flhecartmen, the children wirol*!* irtthe streets shouting: Msoldiers to throw them «arameT»—and he knew how much they want

\ to carry on the mtoirdi of tJwIr

four CRFKEHT STARTINGFRIDAYJUNE 2ND

CONTINUOUS F*OM 2 P. M.

i, \Y S STARTING TUESDAY, JUNE 6TH

"••"•""*""' •"•* Csiar Romero • Carole Landii

"A GENTLEMANAT HEART1

ygtor wfio couW never fi»d time te

Giwldi* has wrilteji hor mortromance, ' '

COWVICTED OF EVASIONCARTRWEt-—Monday has bee*

wt for sentence «f Leinjer V, Pitt«l thin Horftoth *or faihiro to re-port far indrtctkin into the Army,fte will apcer in Federal. Court

l where h« #as itidicted on

(EVEN MTJftUMTHEATRE . PERTH AM8OY

PHONE 4-»fl«

STARTING

FRIDAY

JUNE 2ND

CONTINUOUS FROM 2 P. M.

STJLWIOE

Chiturl^s

BOYERhiqtid

ERGMANloscph

COTTEN

I"hut alBo'howinu$and needed a new frrte-

ttom. He found that an ancient'bell which the town had loved hadbeen taken-away by thflFawigte tomnk« Run barrels, and he did,something: about it. He discoveredthat there were pretty girls inItalian towns just an there are inAmerican towns. And he and hisnew friends ran into some ..trip-pi iiiK difficulties*—red tape andprejudice which revealed themwives in astonishing uuarters.

Mi. Horsey spent three monthsof the summer of 1943 in theMediterraneon theater, coveredthf> .Sicilian campargTi, and livedfor some time in a village like CheAdano of his story, vHi» travel hasthe kind of truth that could comeonly from first-hand knowledgecoupled with profound under-standing and' feeling. jBiit tWestory BUO has rich meaning for thefuture, for it deals with men w}roHie already facing problems that navalbRttalion.will follow in the wake of the war.It makes s t a r t l i n g clear the factthat charters and agreements areonly as effective a» the men whoare sent to implement them.

Readers of Mr. Hersey'g "Intothe Valley" and "Men On Bataan"will remember how deftly and! sen?ditivcly the brilliant young corre-spondent of Time and Life sketch-ed our fiffhtinj? men—theirings and thoughts as they marchedand waited and fought. And theywill remember the exciting swrft-noiw of hi* narrative technique.This is his fli^st novel, find it dis-plays to full advantage his re-markable ability to create lovableand unforgettable characters andto make a story move quickly andwith purpose.

Of rt lighter vein but good entertuinment is "Meredith Blake,M.D., by Peinry (JniWis, nnr of themost popular modern writers.

Young Dr. Merry Blake, bril-liant, ambitious and a "bornmedico", temporarily gave up herplans to become a great surgeonwhen she took over her jrrand-fiithtu'H practice in the smaltSouthern mountain town of River(•up,

8he hail no inkling: that in herduties as a country doctor she wasto face the greatest challeufre ofher life. Nor had Meredith, notlong- out of medical school andconcerned mainly with her career,left room for love. When charm-ing Hugh Prather, wealthy youngSouthern bachelor, swept her offher feet, Meredith was caught be-iwtcM!' tile iliHllrtljft wf :i 24-hom-a-diiy job and her own longing forHuifh.

Each dny seemed to Mild higherwalla between Dr. MWry andHugh. When she needed HughPrather most—and most fearedlosing' him —young Dr. Blakefound herself fttrhting with all theskill anil intuition she possessed tosave two young lives, childishlylovely Louellii Carling, daughter ofa wealthy widow, and Loiielk's

tW$, qharBe, R is btficted by thelocal Draft B<)ard clerk, NathanielA. Jacohy, tljfl man may hav> regintei'ed elsewhere • in the state,since he is not recorded here.

mi

Invalid fioy, 6, Wm»Rank in NaYy Outfit

PITlSltJROfi.-Chlef Petty OfcRcer Jlnnny Carrlek of Mount Wash.Ington Is just Bix years old and has«p«H fbur ol those years bedriddenwith a uptnal Infection, but he's stillal> lrtil>orta,nt member of UncleSam's navy.

jftnhiy, official mascot for a iiavnibattalTbn Which has seen service inthe Afcutfon Iiilands, holds his rankII Ho- mere (sop to HTI Invalid child.Ydun|t Jimmy is a builder of mo-ralfe—an Integral part of the navy—•ml he really enrned his stripes.

With the aid of his mother, Mrs.Loulg Carrick, Jimmy dispatchesnta«erous letters daily to hjs pen-pals, the members of the Aleutian

In response, he gets dozens ofV-mail mlssivpj from the sailors, alltestifying how cheering Jimmy's let-ters are to the fellows up in thefrozen north.

The other day, on Jimmy'i sixthbirthday, a plaque came parcel postfrbm the boy's battalion. It read:

"Our mascot—Chief Petty OfficerJimmy Carrlc'fc, United StafesNavy, Aleutian Islands, 1942-43."

Since Jimmy Is unable to writehis letters himself because ot theposition In which he must constant-ly lte in his bed, the boy's motheracts the actual writing while Jim-my dictates.

The 2B-ye»r-otd radio ictreit Me*eed«» McCHmbrhl|e ii »oon tory&kAvt in Honorary Degrm of Dnrtor of L^ttcri from Mundp-lein Co11e|e, Chicago, her Alnm,M»^r. Ml» McCwnbrlJit* !>••gu«tt^ttrr«j i» iet«r»l out'iUtt^inB playt on Ranald Cdmnn'a"fiveryHiiitf for the Boyi" dramatic teriet, heard Tueidayi OTirNIC, «i«i iftotofod by linJfhtfrfc.AifaJjlht Cimp»tty of To-l«do, Ohio. He're the it pictured vritfi Colmmi r«h«»nin» an ArchObl«r jcrfpt.

WH19KEY KILLS CHILD, 2 'Plttsbur]irh, Pa. — LHtle .larnea

White, 2, died fwm awute alco-holie poisoning atfter he had taken

bottle -of whiskey from a re-frigerator In his aunt's home anddrank part of it.

GETS 71 LETTERSA»bttm, Idaho. — Returning to

a portal station from a South IVcifle war front, Marlrie CorporalL M. Lansberry found 51 lettersfrom his wife and 29 letters fromothers in ,llie family.

PLENTY ^'POSSUMSPhiladelphia, Pa,—Blgfit wrig-

fling baby ipossums, iaten by po(Ice from the pouch of theirmothe', v ho had been killed byan automobile on a Philadelphiastreet, were turned over to thePhiladelphia Zoo,

Great Britain refuses, to liftfood bbckiades o* Btrrtpe.

Your Halth?

CARE O f CH*J>RENIt stem* almost IIKI edible

in a time like this, thfr« fe M ttrachmlMn«n*|;(>m«nt of little dUWrntn,Poor, helptow creatures, many ofhem arc doomed to go

with weak vyn\hodles. dffwllvj t*one». In-

dent ion and crooked hrnitijt, allon account of pnrentu wbar weretoo ignorant and indifferent tojjiv<> their offspring n chance to(row into strong, normnl hym»nhemp, mptitally and

Countless children nrofrom ailmentg that arc«ble. It in the bnanden duty ofevery mother, to fttudy child earcand t» Kuiilp and mmrd her chil-dren from the ills—mental, moraland physical—that threaten them.Rv»n the animals of the foiettoften bestow upon their little wildoffspring more intelligent and fcf-fectionat« care thnn anme hnmanmothers. '

Many*heIp)eBa babips have ciga-rette smokp puffed in their fatesby their mothers, even when nuii-liijf at the breast. Thu* th«mothen compel the babies tobreathe into their Iflngn air whiehis co poisonous that if it wereblown upon the dteltc«t« insect*

onljr n««4tMd proUtn*, btt( h*fltitnt amount of mlnoruJtivtanrtMi, ir i« i« toInto hi* bones, itrengthmh«rt, and notmh his nw*rl«#i

build

Army on Italian FrontAtUcked by Trench FootALLIED HEADQUARTERS, AL-

GIERS.-'Trench foot," a diseaseprevalent among soldiers in WorldWar I, Is appearing on the Italianfront for the first time In this war,the American medlcol service an-nounced.

The disosBo is c«uiod by soldier*'standing In mud and water, unableto change shoes and socks.

"Our problem Is very difficult be-cause of the slit trench variety ofwarfare now being fought," Ma).Henry Snydet ol Wtnfleld, Kan.,said. "In tbe last war the construc-tion ol long trenches allowed fordugout* where the men could drytheir feet and change shoes at la-tervals."

that feed uponkill them.

pl»nt«, it woiild

Dr. J. H. Kellogg, of the B«tU«Creek Sanitarium, (forbade smok-injr in the buildivvgfi OT upon theextensive grounds. Ha.Mid tha(

he did not want his patients poisoned by tobacco smoke. How-aver, smoking Wa» allowed 'in the^re«nhou«p», for the purpose ofkilling bugs and Insect* upon vege-tation.

Mothers should inform them-

C»rtwhydTBt<« tr« f«uKliu(t»r», nfirchM* braid,vejettble*. fruits end milk.

Butter, cream, egg yolk*th* fat part of ntMt **vi*r<ineeeMnry fats. Protein \ttit] to proper growth and •ment. It it chiefly oM»iti§dmilk, einrs, meat, and flshr>

Lime, or calcium, andphoru* mttit be obtalnwt »Vbody in order tobones and teeth,th* rie* that #c eatthe valuable minerals an.4mins 'removed by milling.I* done HO that it wilt remiin •in indeflnlte time on the ,ler's shelves, undisturbeduga. Bufrs would xttirvc to in it, no they let it alone •it'j feed this denatured a i ditaliied food to your

along with white flour and

that have bien left 4fUr Imilling process — aastricken, so far as food

Don't let all the ballyhooenriched flours, broa<b and Ifool you, The natural minerand vitamin* that God put

w have not, huenafter their removal. Chemle<!^which some scientists naytttvely harmful are putfood and the millingwould have us believe thatfood in as good as beforeproteins, minerals, and vitanwere removed and chemical*:,stituUd.

Insist on feeding your f«mupon foods that containoriginal substances that ntti

selves about thedren should eat.

food that chil-It is more es-

builtsoil.

into them from the

• 23 Protestant faiths protest

dmftrag of ^f«-fli«lo(ri«il rtn-

dentli.

46th Anniversary

TO GET THE BEST BUYS

m 1 YM

I1iiSai

Tell Her YouLove Her With'the

DIAMONDfrom WIRTH'S

For perfect romance . . . for love and af-fection that will endure forever, be lure togive hec i> diamond from Wirtli I.

quiiitaly wrougbt mounting! with a[ beautiful diamond of flaming beauty I

4

\

TwnJw*

LADIES'Smttrt tfew Sprhf

• andLUMBER ,;

PLYWOOD

HOOFING

MOORING

INSULATION

SAND

CARRY

CARTF1

lirf C»rteret Build-JHT Supply friendly•ervic* give* you therhost value for yourmoney in lumber andnippliei. Nowhere elsem thi» section will youfihj «uch fine qualitymaterials at »uch low

and nowherefll you find theca«rt«ou5 service

AMI pr«rnpt delivery.Conie in to our Yard to-

day. i

G jN LUMBER AND

i

MOULDING

MILLWORK

ROCK WOOL

BRICK

CMNDER BLOCK

GRAVEL

I1 '• / •

•COSTUME t-

AND

RELIGIOUS

JEWELRY

to\ot«

|0*-

\m*s

4ii you Want'

NOTHIMGDOWH

COATSNO CHARGE for CREDIT

FINE SELECTION OF

.GRADUATIONGIFTS

C!

• COMPACTS

• EAR RINGS

• MOOCHES

t tIC SETS

• BIRTH.

• ;£

i w mm /ALSO SUIT3 FROM *25 to 42.50 .

m.<•-.*? • • . • • • • • • . • V - .

Page 4: alanil) Of Boro Is Held -m Pad · 2014-02-23 · Pruitt and Gregory Sofka, with Jo e Sabo as announcer. Ros Ra-mirez, WHS i charg e of th enter-tainment, and Anthony Russ gen-ei-al

y.'..« ••*•! ""» • ' • : ss

CARTERET PRESSTelephone CsrUret 8 K600

Pul>llah«d by CarUret P r o i

OFFICE7* WASHINGTON AVE., CARTEKET, N. J.

LUCY GREGORY EditorMEYER ROSENBLUM Sport* Editor

Subscription, 11.60 Per T O T

Entered «• second clasi matter Jon* \i,1984, at C«rt*ret, N. J., Port OflJce, undwU>« Act of March 8, 1879. _

Or. Branom leavttCartorrt IOHPS, most of nil, a man, when

Dr. Wayne T. Brnnom leaves the boroughfor new duties as .supervisor of schools in

Dr. Branom came here three years agounder anything but auspicious circum-stances. His predecessor, Calvin F. Deng-ler, had been vlliAed arid made generallymiserable. The school board and thecommunity were tor,n by bitter disputesover policy and conduct of school matters,with consequent harm to the schools andstudents. It was no easy task to come asa stranger into such a situation, but Dr,Branom took it up calmly, dispassionatelyand with patience, and his three years assupervisor have proven him able, respectedand liked, He was brought here by aDemocratic school board. This year hiscontract was renewed »o that he woilld

-have come under tenure of office, by a"boftrd since become Republican in its con-trol—surely a test for him.

Under his guidance the schools began toto be

New studies were instituted, newset up to fit the child in the

operate smoothly, and progress

made.

had some hotly contested elections, basedupon issues that have deeply stirred thecitizens tif Uils country. The rule of themajority is based upon acceptance, by theminority, of the result of an election.

We have had minorities in the nationwhich have refused to cooperate with therepresentatives of the majority. Theyhave attempted, by subterfuge and politi-cal sabotage, to thwart the will of the peo-ple, expressed Ifgnlly at the polls. Inbrief, they are for democratic ways onlywhen they win.

DIRTY AT THE CROSSROADS

programsschools to go out into a changing society.Faculties and school board members alikeworked with him for the aims on which allbecame agreed.

With the departure of Dr. Branom forlarger duties and better compensation thanthis community affords, there comes a va-cancy which cannot be filled easily, maybenot quickly. It gives the Board of Educa-tion a hard task, and it is to be hoped Dr.Branom'a successor will fit the measure heHas set,

Dr. Branom leaves a vacancy also in thecommunity life, into which he enteredwholeheartedly, Ho joined in the dub,

icivic, Boy Scout and churclvlife of Carter-jet to give to them whatever iho could.<;Godspeed him on his way, and God sendjCarterd. a worthy replacement.

> • >

Rabies Still PrevalentPreliminary, information indicates that

in 1943 thirty-three human beings died'of rabies, which is the worst record in•five years. There are no figures on the.persons saved from this horrible death

'.'through the I'asteur treatment.

Right On The ButtonThe public, the industries and the re-

tailers of the nation, have tried to co-operate with the OPA to control the risingcost of living. But OPA's latest announce-ment on the "highest price line limitation"involving further delay in settling this is-sue of major importance in low-cost dis-tribution, and its claims advanced in de-fense of the limitation, leave retailers"dumbfounded," says Robert A. Seidel,controller of the W. T. Grant Company.

Mr, Seidel declares that "it's high timethat the American public found out thatthe. Office of Price Administration, by lim-iting and eliminating the competition oflow-cost distributors, has forced the Amer-ican housewife to pay an extra dollar, or38 per cent more, for a $2.98 dress, andfrom $3 to $5 more for a $20 coat.

"The highest price line limitation has notcontrolled prices, as evidenced by the lat-est figures of the National Industrial Con-ference Board. During th<i )ant 12 monthsprices of goods covered by this ridiculousprovision have increased almost four timesas much as the. prices of other lines; thedisappearance of women's and children'slow-cost outer wear has been more pro-nounced than is the case in other lines.

"We repeat the suggestion made hun-dreds of times'during the last 19 months:PeVmit free competition on availablegoods. Permit low-cost distributors tosell goods at prices lower than those nowlegally permitted to be charged by specu-lators and profiteers.

"Perhaps we should repeat the proposalmade to Congress; 'Allocate 1,000,000yards of 68 by 72 prints to us and we willhave $1.59 dresses on sale in all of our493 stores within 60 days.1"

The New Books

^.t.,.. The experts who .study rantfis reportthat there seems to be no evidence that

t the dread malady is anywhere near liqui-':.'; dation. For various reasons, some prob-i ,|ibly arising from wartime conditions, dogsi, Continue to go mad and to avoid all efforts'•\, of public official to apprehend them.|jf't i Dr. Harry W. Schoening, Chief of theI? Pathojngical Division of the Bureau ofI*'Animal Husbandry, says that the control|; ;• pf rabies depends upon licensing all 'dogs

in a community, picking up and destroyingp unclaimed strays and keeping all dogs off| | the streets when rabies appears. He pointsIf oUt that health officials often fail to re-1| | ceive the wholehearted support of the pub-| | ; Jic in these operations, '^VWhi l it is distasteful to the average

ti

Accidents Kill PeopleIt may be useful to tell'you again that

accidents have killed twice as many peo»pie in the United States as the war sincePearl Harbor.

The National Safety Council says thataccidents have reduced 350,000 war-timjworkers to industrial 4-Fs with permanentdisabilities. In addition, 102,000 workershave been killed and 9,500,000 injured.

This 1B a terrible indictment of modernman and his carelessness. While some ofthe accidents worn inevitable, the greatmajority of them could have been avoidedby more intelligent action on the part ofthose killed and injured.

The figures show that 61,000 personshave been killed in trafHc accidents sincePearl Harbor and that some 2,100,000have been injured. Certainly, there is nonecessity for the death of approximately2,000 persons a month in highway acci-dents. These casualties provide, unanswer-able argument for the stringent enforce-ment of traffic regulations and the inexor-able punishment of those guilty of endan-

Thc war brings suffering tomany millions in many differentways. Just one phnse of this vanttragedy Is related in James N<JI-man Hull's novel, "Lost Island,"the story of what happened to utiny atoll in the South Pacificwhen the American armed forcesestablished a base t h e r e pv

James Norman Hall everyoneknows best perhaps ns collubofijitor with'-Charles Nordhoff of "Mu-tiny on the Bounty," the sapa bfCaptain Hligh and his crew. Hewas an ace in the last World Wtowas shot down and taken pristjin Germany. Since then hespent most of his time in Taso he knuws ftarti firsthand exjjence what destruction the Wistof war luis wrought to thi> p p jful isles ofjtht! South Sen. "Lostlalund," his first novel under Sis

the natives, Father Vim lit-tle church made of coral slabs, aswell us hiB exquisite garden he hasspenL thirty years in cultivating.The two Austrian refugees, Pro-fessor Lchmann und hU daughter,who have had eight months of se-curity and happiness there, alsohave to leave.

This is the story that is told,simply and movingly, in JamesNorman Hall's "Lost Island."

* t •

One of the most remarkableheroi»es of the Civil War, accord-ing to Marjorie Barston Greenbiein "Lincoln's Daughters of Mer-cy," was Mofihef Bickerdyke, whoone bitter night in 186S, on herown authority ordered an oldRroastworks factory to be torn

'dowrt for firewood, so that the1,500 wounded men in her care

Other OpinionsTh. One Thing NeedfulIn a world HO ingeniously organ

ized that every last man, womanand child would be properlyhoused, clothed and fed, the problem still would be, What to do witlife? . . .

For example, social workershave come to ace that what thpoor need more desperately tha:even material aid is a new grip olife, a new attitude toward thworld. Something spiritual.

Physicians have long recognisethat many of the deep-seated maadies of mankind are actually diseasus of the ego rather thanthe body . . .

Ministers of religion constantl;remind their people that to btransformed in estate means fir;a transformation of mind an

own name, jiyiuil of tliu June d i j a r could be kept from freezing,selection of tlie Honk of-thi' Mnnf h ' " ' ' '-1 -<• '•••- " • • - -

^VfWhile itf jijtlividual to contemplate the destructiontiff djogs, there is no choice when this seems

j e neocasary to protect human beingsofpm hydrophobia. Ther consequences

tectlon are inevitably intense suffering„_ death. Consequently, no chances ran

^ e taken by responsible health officials orI'jfefi right-thinking individuals despite their

of dogs.

Club, aloJljTiSvith "Fair Stood theWind for.:Ffjj(DCi'," by H. E. Rat^s.

The nari'«ior of this .story | i sColonel Dodd, formerly a Dctrjitengineer,, coinniissioned into theArmy after ,fi£arl Harbor to do: arush job of Vfinstruetion on a titiyPulyiieHiulii.ifclsnd. He has twoweeks to survey the idyllic scenebefore the freighter arrives wjthmachines ari«tusupplies and troops.The job is important und must bedone, but Colonel Dodd, a sensi-tive man, buffers at the thoughtof breaking the news to the is-land's iiih»t>i^nls. He knows thatinevitably i trueauty and peace,isdoomed. Coral s reefs must bbluBted to mi(!?o way for freight-ers. The whole village must betorn down—the thaLohed huts

Morning brought out the Major,very much embarrassed, for herunauthorized demolition of thebuilding had to be considered abreach of"Madame,"

militaryhe said,

discipline,"consider

yourself under arrest." "All right,Major, I'm arrested," she retorted,flying past him with a hot drinkfor one of Her boys, "only don'tmeddle with mo till the wuktlmrmoderates." He didn't, either.

heart and motive . . .The difference between a sic

and a sound civilization. is moriften measured by the absence ohese spiritual factors than it is b;h.e absence of material factors .

It is for lack of vision that arjeople • perishes, not for lack ofmaterial resources. — ETanitille(Ind.) Courier.

ANOTHER KIND OF "BOOK"

Chicago. — When Donald Happel, testifying for the State «ta gambling conspiracy, trial, saidhe worked in a "book," DefenseAttorney Emmett Byrne was mys-tified, until Huppel explained thata "book" is an establishmentwhich accepts race bete.

geringhighways.

the lives of their fellowmen on the

pro-Only When They Vim

v.. There are some Americans who|«Uim the virtues of a free country and en-

1 Joy the right which it gives to all qitizeus[lo-freely criticize those who hold high <rf-

!>.• Nobody would curtail this right whickthe heritage of free men but it seems tonecessary, occasionally, to remind these

that they, too, jiuve an obligation tocratic processes. \ •lie every n i p has a right to his own

on, in our the-

A Son Dies In ItalyWe have Hot admired the public career

of George Sylvester Viereck, nj»w servinga prison sentence for failing ,jU> registerproperly with the State Department as anagent for the German government and al»ounder trial, with 28 other defendants, for Iseditious conspiracy.

The hews comes from Italy, however,that his son, George Sylvester Viereck,Jr., a corporal in the army of the UnitedStates, was killed in action 911 March 24th.The death of a son cannot excttee the mis-takes of his father, but a tragedy Jies be-hind the public record of these men.

WHEN WE PLANT AND TENDOUR, GARDENS WELL,YIELD US BOTH FOOD AND SEEO-ij&pFOOD FOR. TODAYAND TOMORROW,SS£P FOR FUTURE PlANT/NtS.

Si

Under The State HomTJomeBy J.

per c level, ratherterminate the cm ploy,many workers and at I

continue overtime I

TRKNTON. Major party ptat-trms adopted Hi, it'S|)ectivr Re-ihlican nnd Democratic Stat*

lonvcntionfl thin week, outlineear-cut but different approaches I who remain,

the solving of State a<l Na-tonal problems and leave to the

jience of the individual voterhe Hociflion of where to r**t hl«allot. As the midway spelterays at the county fair, "You paysour money and takes yourhoicc."

Democrat* believe "that no oneut iKrafcklln Delano Roo*ev«lt c»nirlflu about * common" under-tanding between our country,Jreat Britain, the Soviet Union,•hiris, ahd ail our other Aliiea,

which is needed to make a binding•»c«" in endowing the New Dealnd President Roosevelt for aourth term. Republicans favor'reservation and protection of /ia-ional Interest* with full recogni-,ton of International responaibrli-ifls. The platform also hastens todd the Republican conception of

government is definitely opposedo the New Deal plitnnpd economy,

Republicans endorse Mie "able,rtgnrous and courageous" leadei-ihip of ({overnor Walter E, Edgend intelligent cooperation of the

Republican Legislature in accom-lishlnjf the ambitious ad-miniatra-ion program during the tirst three

months of the Governor's term.On the other hand, Democratsharacteriied the program as de-igned to secure control of publicRices for seMsh parlUan pur-IOSPS, and the cooperation of the.egisiature in putting it across asshameful."

A revised State Constitutionwhich provides for a reformedudicial structure is advocated by

Republicans in their 1944 platrorm, while Democrats opposeadoption of a new fundameuUlaw on the ground its proponentsseek to control the New Jersey:ourts,and that the document failso guarantee the right of home

rule and gives preferential treat-ment to the railroads tit the expense of the ordinary taxpayer.

Democrats advocate repeal o:railroad tax compromise laws andRepublicans ignore the issue intheir respective platforms. Bothparlies agree upon the necessityof post-war planning, election re-forms, extending to workmen'scompensation laws, protection ofcivil service and the State Teach-ers Pension and Annuity Fund,promotion of education and agri-culture and veterans welfare.

Major parties arc agreed upona vigorous pnmecution of the war.Planks providing for no new taxesin New Jersey are also includedin th& pUtformvVi th ^ p u b l i -cans reserving the right Itf revisepersonal property tax la^ra if alegislative commission now atwork on the problem, aijrees thismust bo done,

But Frank T>Executive Director of th,Employment Compensa)inn , 'mission which sends <,ui n,,.,,to the inemploymerit Wl l,,.looking he situation ovi, 'close-up, claims the temp.,,.awing in benefit payment, i,,the first quarter of the y, i ,inot mean there arc nni ,job* to gt> 'round. | | .,,means a greater amoiml n| ,.justment among workern hi inecfiwary even whilp THHUDI ,.,irag employment levels him i,riBing. The paymonta st;i,i,,|go down again in April, |>, p ,out.

Judge declared there will |lc.:et-np in the acfivitirs HI ^Jeraey war industries nr ;,crease In the labor force: ,,,-Stale until the invasion i|>erhapj, the war haa been .. „.

STEAKSi-Thc gM v ,,n New Jersey flelda thj.s u,„,

»!la Ulu •••:vn •vtftirrr-.if f

have taken cqgnb.'-wii, .., ,

"""W^f thr ri,!.'|,.Steers are being »hippi..f .,

New Jcrwy for fending ;,,,,»o fast from western point.6,0(K) head at least arc i \ ,to take advantage of the tIng grass during the cur iyear ending July 1, accoi.iiDr. R. A, Jlendershott, eh,the Bureau of Animal In,of the State Department ,,iculture. *

These are in addition increasing number of fi'inlmbreeding stock producedthe State* a condition whu 1.ly indicates that meat pr<x|haa gained a foothold in N>Bey agriculture.

i ,FREUNGHUYSEN.United State* Senator S<n^\Frelinghnysen, of Far Hill ,a fine idea 23 years ago whmestablished the New Jersey IBreeders Kund to aid ynuni:-t|to stay on the farm whengivw up because of a pi'r.scn il jterest.

The plan hai "worked <>uiand in recognition of the rumembers of the New .J<iiClub Agents' Association i T n jhonored Senator, Frelinghuy^i

dinner.Since 1921 when the fun,!

established 1,519 New J-farm boys und girls have l><n i>

total of $152,792,59 for ,bpoultry, awiiU, beef ami •agricultural products. The <rnal fund is in tac t , "LOSM- 1been less than two per nncommentary upon the inkand industry of New .Inyoung farmers.

"That Need Is Now"The statistics of organized

ginn show in the churches the beattimes are the worst times. It i«,further proved by the great in-crease of serious reading when thegoing gets difficult.

Cynics will say that this is theold story of the hurt child seekingits mother for comfort and the di-version of a fairy tale. Religion

»n eacape, they nay.Some of the current interest in

religion is that, of course, Butthere is a deeper reason. The re-ligious impulse is so interwoven inhuman nature that it can waitthrough decades of doubt and sub-mit to reams of ridicule, to appear!suddenly when the need for itarises.

That need is now.—Bridfcport(Conn.) Telegrtm.

EMPLOYMENT: — Two stateofficials recently looked at the in-crease in unemployment compen-sation payments during January,February and March in New Jer-sey and got different ideas as towhether the employment honey-moon is over.

Charles R. Erdman, Jr., .StateRelief Director, took a long rangelook at th<» 25 per cent IIUMPMSP inpayments and asked whether industrial employment has nolreached or possibly paBsod itapeak. Further, he suggested thathe time may be approaching wheriiiHiiugcnicnl should hi' inged tigive serious thought to the advisability of curtailing overtime wSrkand .keeping as many workers aipossible employed on Ihe 40 houl

President of the S'Board of Agricul ture in i:Prelinghuysen became coni • rwith the migration of farm >•>•to the cities. P a r t of the ti'Uhe believed, was their lack •definite interest in their p^ 1

farms, I'Vw owned any •••i'-nthe livestock and crops witli «they toiled and derived n<> <

ings or .sense of rcspunMl'from their efforts.

So F re l inghu jwn ptucril '000 in trust with the State II'of Agriculture and in-*p:r.-illius Fors tmann pf Passaic, (<>another $20,000, makini;; ;.of $30,000 in . the New I"Breeders Fund, to be l""ii.deserving farm youths. Simfitart the fund has helju'ii n

(Continued on I'tujc '

doubtedly resolve it#elf

Stream-Lining Taxe$Legislation simplifying tax law» for fifty

million individual taxpayer^ is expected togo through Congress with a*ang, and al-ready there is the suggestion that addi-tional legialation will "streamline" cor

porttjon taxation

to

0^provided equal co.nsider»tion is given to

' ht

VICTORY CROPSLIKEWISE.IF WE HUSBAND " " "

OUK TJARNINGS, HUI TINS ALLWE POSSIBLE CAN INTOwA*BONDS, SAVINGS ACCOUNTSAND UFE INSURANCE,K*r fwu stew THE VICTO&Y

OWffJO CARW OUT

S pirns.

The Fruit of EvauonReal international collaboration

following the present war willmean that postwar problems willbv (Hiked instead of being evaded.Evaaiuii of an intenvatioHal prub-lem means that seed is being sownwhich will come U) fruition in an-other war.- Unless the nations oftin: world are sincere in their de-termination to keep the peace, anykind of peacd will not be keptlong.-—Wichiti (Kan.) Beacon.

In the Front RankThe majority of the American

people do imbibe the fundamentalsof morality and right living strew-ed by the churches. The churchdoes cast a moral atmospherewhich the majority absorbs, con-sciously or not, as they absorb the.|rays «f the aun, There are, be Itremembered, more than 60 millionactual church members in thecountry, almost 20 million enroll-ed students of Sunday Schools.

But it is tttill very much a ques-tion whether thin is enough. Therelation between diminishing Sun-,day School attendance' and risingjuvtmjle delinquency must be morettwn **4oin<ife*4«, :. "If a boygoes to Sunday School he won'tgo to jail," J. Edgar Hoover h u

of the Federal Bureau Qf InvwtMg»Uon, At jnor»J Iniurance for!

A BETTER "BUY"THAN EVER

Now that Congress luu boosted the cost of

Money Orders, our

Convenience CheckingAccounts '•

offer savings JTMI wta' i wwit to miff. Cost

less to use than Money Orders for paying any

bill over $2.50 More convenient, too- and

a check is a legal receipt for a paid bill.

Stop in forMl information

Page 5: alanil) Of Boro Is Held -m Pad · 2014-02-23 · Pruitt and Gregory Sofka, with Jo e Sabo as announcer. Ros Ra-mirez, WHS i charg e of th enter-tainment, and Anthony Russ gen-ei-al

ASSIFIED0 P , ; R A T O R S WANTED

,nKk on ehlldren'l torn*."nrk; on* w«A Taee-

, i t hMnvnlty Dress Company,tin2 Roosevelt Avnrac,

M. J, Statement of

. n • A j

- WANTED, Maintenance Man.position. Writ* ifHo x B, c/o of this

statement avail-8-2,9

H1-1.P WANTEDi i t,, 14 to t»rty new*-

This in tietpln^ the war\,,ply Independent-Leader,

,„ s i , Woodbrldife, N. J,

WANTEDi'\Y tie a pound for clean

I ii,Impendent-Leader, 18si WoodhfldgS, N. J.

..4 l-rm-i

WANTEDsiKl) in purchasing ali.-riisc or a liquor busiWnodhridge. Give price

Box I* c/o lihla new*15-26 to 6-9

House Domed from Editorial Pag*)

amWtioua farm youngsters along:he road toward owning; their ownherds and flocks and eventuallytheir farms.

HEADLINED „ Top-flightnewsmen throughout the tonntrywill heart 'for Atlantic CHy nextweak to take part in the eleventhannual HeadUn«rs' Frolic along•with photographers, .radio convmefrtatorg and newsreel camera-men, as guests of the AtlanticCity PreM Club.

Twenty-two awards for out-standing achievement In journal-ism will be preaented at a hugedinner at the Hotel Claridtfe onSaturday, June 10 "to tile mostcapable in their respective Aeldsduring the pant year. Broniemedalions will accompany eachaward. In addition to the head-l ine «w»rds, the Atlnnttc CityPress Olub will also present anumber of War OrrnspondentValor MedniR.

A buffe^ dinner and stag partywill start the famong frolic on thonight of June 9 and a golf tourna-ment and outing at the new Atlan-tic City Country Club will con-

Ux and enjoy fhramlve*, whichto more than vreleonie in thenedayi of' mimniolih new* breaks in«'l arew orf the world. '"

•.Th« Aitifttq $ t y PiWs C-Uib i«to be comlnen*^ tor the Head-liners' Frolic, Meanly Went of itskind in the woA&.

StateJEHflEYmembership of tht

gion now stands at mote than 35,-

000, of which- f,00ftv»r* World

War II veteran*,.... Judge Artlmr

C. Kint, Toms Rlrer, hai been re-C. Kint, Toms Rlrer, haielerted President of the nlogical Society flf New Jersey for

two year term Motor ve-hiele trnvol for thrStfttf Govern-

t U l l d l«86rtS2 rilment Uilalfd nrilea In

Answers

RationingAmi

PricesQuestion* are those most fre-

quently iwkod this ireek of (h«Trenton Diitrlct Offlc* W OPA,AnsWers are officill OtPA ll

9

t>ook wh«nof »hoe<T

ft kit )purchase* a pilt

A- Yt..Q. Is it nece«ary for trie to have

of Read«ni mayli

J y rabmlt qu<'rtioM lor replies to DU-trict Oflkfe Oi A Trenton N J ^

dudelith.

the frolic on Sunday theIn between times the mem-

F OR SALE ,nlTcring for sale the fol-,,ilied property: 767 St.,'.. Woodbridge, N. J. va-

8 1 2 2 i

In; '

,. ;„•(. purposely not settingl h <m this property as Che,,, authorised us to accept, ntmlile offer and by rea-

V,T mean we are practl-,.;,ily to give it to you atin figure.Murgatetten A Oo.

"7fi Hobart St.ivdh Amboy, N. J. 6-2

MALE HELP WANTED

FOR SALElAVi:iiN RESTAURANT

l,,,,,,, license forin|l)ni|K,. K-2378

Isle.a n dCall6-2

LOST• (.msnlinn ration book iisued to•I,,,, l,.s Kuhora, 7 Wtch St.,i,.rH Kinder please return to

I, | follow St., Carteret, N.C. P. 5-26; 6-2*

LOST|A" irasoline ration book; taaued toV KIH.I1, 569 Roosevelt Ave.,

t. N. J. « «2uu-r.-

LOST[lli!|iS[i\Y in Woodbrldge, La

,11,.; KlRin wrist watch. Reward.In W Onnaby, 14* Main St.,

l,ri,l(ti\ N. J. • 6-2

MOVING(PI'KR'R STORAGE — CratingI and shipping. .Uepanda'uie loca!

iii; distance moving: U8!n ATB., Perth Amboy, N. J

I,A 4 MIS. 8-17tf

PERSONAL|PII!HIIAI, and clairvoyant mes

!FS. 'J A. M. to 6 P. M. AppointHt:i I l l l l l l c 1 .

Uev. E. Ricker'J2 Main St.

Woodbridge, N. J.

RAILROAD WORKAn E»8fntlnl Industry

Fotitlona Open For MAi ami' Wuiniii

BRAKB1MEN FlUEMBNMAClrtNlHTS

MACHJNIHT Hfll.PBRBBOrLBSIlMARHRa

BOII.BnMiAKRU HELPERSLABORERS OAH INSPKCTOUS

C'Alt UBPA1REIISCAR RBPAIItKH'H WRt.PKIW

CLBANKRHFltKIGHT HANDLEU8

glONAL HBLBKR8SIGNAL MAINTAINED

MOR«E orBRATonaUN10MKN WA-n'HMKN

READING COMPANYApply II. WYl.ti, Mananor

Port Rendlnfr TewnlnalPorL RtadlnfTN. J.Kngagol In War Contract

Work Need Not Apply

April, a reduction Of 103,006miles under the March travel . . ,'Claims will be filed by the StateHighway Department with theFederal Government for paymentof damage* to highways cnused by^normally heavy hauling to Armyand Navy depots . . . A total of$350,422 was paid out in, unem-ployment compensation payment*in New Jersey during April . , .With their fingura crossed, NewJersey asparagus growers openedthe 1944 sertson with one eye onWashington awaiting a threatenedOPA order fixing a price ccilijig. . . Twenty-five food processingplants in South.Jersey have inau-gurated a labor recruiting andtraming program to insure fullulilizHtititi of available labor -tpark New Jersey crops this ypar .The State Selective Service Officehas coniinendeil lawyers for vol-unteering to aid In the Veterans'Assistant program throughoutNew Jersey . . . Once a person ofJapanese descent is granted aleave fro.m a relocation centre bythe War Relocation Authority thatagency has no legal right to pro-hibit hist settlement in any commu-nity, the House of • Assembly has

a new tire Inspection

when applying for a

wiewalt

made

A. No, How«nr, •»•« th»«fk

p t ar« nolooter rtqalraJ, tir* ia«p««-tlbn rtc«rjf nail k* k*pt withth. k U l wh*k tk

•nd Mill !)• pr*MnWd to tha war prlca andrational boards with applies-

far r#n»wal or sMppI rations.

q ptrict Oflkfe, Oi A, Trenton, N.Q. When a «p«(;lal Aoe stamp (a

insued to a consumer, m ^ it

to supply emu to New'hatcheries . . ' . Gaaoline taxe* col-lected in New Joraoy during Man*reached $1,498,885.06 comparedwith $1,424,826.27^ the previou*month . . . N«w Jersey shipped byrail 0,201 carlota of potatoes dur-ing 1948 . . . A slight advance inthe total cost of living in New Jer-ney wa* noted by the,State Depart-ment of Agriculture during April. , . State Treasurer James B.Sautter is.^crtting out a programto -invest' certain State funds InUnited State* Government securi-tiee which is allowed under a newlaw . . . Latest community tob«a»t of a new frozen food locker)lant is Mount Holljj where theBurlington County Farmers' Co-perative imit opened business on

May 23 with 750 lockers, for pn-t

Bond^Quota(Continued from Page 1)

Company, the First National Bankin Cartwet, the Part Oiee, UnitedRoosevelt Savings and E>o»n AMO-elation, and the Carteret Buildingaftd U s n Association.

Philip T. Ruegger of ketuehenis chairman for Middlesex County,and Mr. Stremlau will work Inilose co-operation with him. Pub-

licity will be handled by the editorof this newspaper, Mrs. Charles E.Gregory. '

brawkait hvitotart Mittt»Up, andthi CltM Will ««d iky GeorgeGavalett.

Th« «xereis«t w«r« cloaed by th#singing of the Clan Song, thewords of which were written nyPhylli* Chodosh.

Mr*. Dorothy V. Hauiner, ad-vlibr of the class, directed thoprogram.

HELP WANTED

BOOKKEEPER

OFFICE GIRLS

CASHIERS

HOSTESSES

WAITER8

WAITRESSES

SODA DISPENSERS

PANTRY WORKERS

PORTERS

WRHKKND8. TAUT TIME ANDSTKAI.iV. PMCANANT WORKINGCONDITIONS, MUST BH OVBRIfl YKARS. APPLY AT ONOB.AVAII.ABIL1TV . STATEMENT

been told Winter of

HOWARDJOHNSON'S

Ropte 25

Woodbridge, N. J.

1,136 acres of North Jersey wood-li>U tins again failed to reveal any(iypsy Moth ejg clusters indicat-ing that New Jersey has suppress-ed this invader . . . The State DepaHment of Agriculture reportsthat 400,000 hens have been pul-lorum tested sfnee last .September

SEE US FORMortgage Loans.

Variable Interest Rates.Prompt Service.

Direct Reduction Plan.Savings Accounts

Solicited.Currently Paying 2 ^ %

Per Annum.

United Roosevelt Savingsand Loan Association

17 Cooke AvenueCarteret, N. J.

CAPITOL CAPERS;—If self-iinpoaed restrictions oW noti-ossen-tlal spending are adopted us afixed policy by New Jersey and itsmunicipalities through the presentand post-war periods, a new dayof sunshine will have arrived forMr, Taxpayer, claims the New Jer-sey Taxpayers' Association1... Aampaign is underway by the OPA

to compel hard-hearted landlordsof New Jersey to fileVent registrartion statement* showing maximumrents being paid . . . Forty Glou-cester County piggery operatorsrecently found themselves holdingthe bag in a depressed hog marketwith at least 16,000 pigs ready forsale and no interested buyers, ac-cording to official reports.

Q. Since Spare Stamp No. 87 isrequired with all applications,

'lor sugar for home canning,"how will the local hoardknowwhen I nwk« application fo'any additional canning sugarthat I need, that I have «lrvad<Hubmitted Sparo Stamp 37with my first application?

A. The War price and rationingboards will keep records of allSpaa* Slampt luhoilttcd withcanning sugar applications, analwill have that Information

* available when supplementalapplications are made.

Q. Is there a ceiling on shoe re-pair uprviros, «nd how may 1know what I should pay?

A. Tile ceiling ii determined bytho individual operator's high-est March 1942 pricot. Eachseller Ii required to have arecord of his base period pricesavailable to consumers. Far-ther^ dollars and eVnts ceilingshave.been established for rubIKT heeli attached, and theofficial OPA list of these pricesshould be posted.

High School(ContiMA }fom Page 1)

Gladys Mcltreder, u a repTeient*tivo of the.clan, .asked for 'admit-tance !to tje "Outaide World" oiJohn 'Koval, who pdrtrayed the

Paula Bislak(Continued from Page \)

drew Slyon, Jr . of the CoasGuard, the uthe •.

Mr. BigUk ga\e his daughter inmirrlagt, She wore a gown owhit* mouuellne de aole, fishioned ndth a full skirt extendedto form the train, mid a tulle veilarranged fingertip longh from atiara of orange blossom*. She car-

trawdltni in « |'hite Mficssories', and a <

white roses. The bride, a |of Carteret High School, \employed by th* EaitemCorporation. Thestationed In Norfolk,the couple will live.

part of the keaper of this "Out- >ried a white prayer book markedalAm. U/».U *' TV~ . 1 - . . UI^AABU »«.^ ulHk M I M anil Illin* nf 4UA unltav

HELP WANTEDI

Experienced driver wanted

for baker; truck. Must be OT*r

30 and married. Exceptionally

good salary will be paid to

right man. Apply D. Ulman

k Sons, 83 Washington Ave.,

Cttrteret, New Jersey. State-

ment of availability required.

HELf WANTED-MALE-FEMALE

WAN1ED AT ONCE* * ^ ^ssV

JI11NEY DRIVERSKxperieuce.Helpful Hut Not NecesBary .

INSPECTORS«l« School Educatipn Reeded Simple Arithmetic Used

• • • > • • '

OPENINGS ON ALL SHIFTS

;f

' ' . .•.-• t• • • ' » •

TYPISTS ' 1

OfBJRATORS «

SUPERVISOR

:, * 'gilCBETARIES X

No Experietc- Necessary - Paid W vile Learning

Delay - Come In Today I

PIANOSExcellent Makes

InExcellent Condition

» • • > • ' , • '

• • I •

*'mera| (#ble Corporation26 Washington $troet,*erth Amboy

OFFICE HOURS:

Mon., Wed,, ^ 8 : 0 0 A. M. to 8:00 P. M.

Tuea.i; W % , «i00 i, M. to 5:00 P. %

Not since America's pianofactories went to war havewe had such, a fine collec-tion of beautiful pianosin our warerooms as wehave now.

You will think most of them are new. Some htfvebeen completely rebuilt in our shops, others havebeen reconditioned, making them just as serviceableas when new.

r This is as fine a collection of pianos as cau b«found anywhere in the East.

STBINWAY • CHICKER1NG • SOHRIERKNABE • KRANICH&BACH • MEHLINWEBER • BRAMBACH • KRAKAUERSTECK • CABLE • HALLET & DAVISand a dozen other well-known makes

Good Serviceable Grands$295uP

Good Uprights t ; ^ 8 t

. Many sizes a«d styles in brown and red* mahogany, walnut and ebony.

GRIFFITH PIANO CO.*

i'JP"

World." The cl»M hittory wairead hy Marlon SkufMt, withWilma Speirak and MoMroi.JaeflKhowiU an Freahman; Anna Dackoand Joseph S a b o w Sophomore*;Audrey Burke and Harold Perrya* .(unidra, and Helen Burak and

Zahel as Seniors. The class"Hall of Fame" was presented asa trip to the museum, where stat-ues were viewed by Marie Gulp asMother and Monroe JarobawUt Wher son. ,

Gifts and "Knocks" were pre-sented to each member of theclass by Phyllis Chodosh andCharles (!n.waleggi, and RobertShutcllo, president of tho claw,presented it gift of f 150 in bondsas the beginning of a curtain fundto the school. Dr. Wayne T. Bra-nom, supervising principal, ac-cepted the gift for the school,

The Class Prophecy was pre-

rosfw and lilits of the valley.The maid of honor wore orchidtaffeta and net with « tiara of thesame material, and Mrs. BinUkwas gowned in jeach taffeta andnet with matching tiara. Both car-ried, yellow roses.

The couple we*it to Atlantic

Thomas K«(Continued from

O'Brien, John Feehan,Heffner, Robert Rosfima«,.;

Kelemen, TVoop 81;ma, Troop R4

Star Scouts: WilliamEdward Heffner, Alpner, Robert Ronman, «f81; Jack Losak and Joof Troop 84. ijj-j

Ufe Scouts: JosephTroop 84.

In addition to the above, iStiiba, Troop 84, remerit badges; CharlesTroop 81, four merit •'Willinm Kplemsn, Troopmerit badges; Jack84, seven merit badgeTrosko, Troop 84,

GAME SOCIALJACK POT $100.00

Every Thursday EveningAT 8:00 P. M.

AT

St. Andrew's Church HAVENEL ST., AVENEL, N. J.

WHEN YOUR BUDGET BEGINS TO PINCH

SUPER MARKETSBeat your budget! And ititt i

•• joy the best of meals! Shop at yourSuper Marke t . . . where your food dollars buy

Garde* ProtfweFresh fruits and vegetable* ut plentiful... IO be rare to cat lob of

them daily. For specially freih, flavorful "garden goodness," visit your

A&P Super Market! New Spring cropt are priced invitingly low!

-New Crop

BEANS 2 29TOMATOES ~ 2 25

Lettuce J"BE;;t , 13= S p i n a c h « - 2 17-Asparagus : , 39= Avocado Pearj^'M 7'

Limes :««•» 3-14«Oranges^,112 43'Green Peas b15« Onions ,;:""„

Every item is baked in A&P's own modem

bakeries . . . made of top-quality ingredient*

. . . and rushed to you extra-fresh! Priced

low to please your budget and ration-free 1

Pineapple Butter Creme Itirf

GOLDEN LAYER C A K E - - - 127MARVEL WHITE BREAD

whole

cake 49=loaf

JaiuParktf H«f»«l

Sponge Square 20c RollsJqn.Por|<« Jl«s» R«k

Devil Food Bar » 33c DonutsJ«n. Park.r—floln et Mirttf J«M Parkti^SwHitrii '

Pound Cake 2 8 X 4 6 c Coffee Cake . » 21

FINE QUALITY ME ATS . AND ALL POINT FREE!AAP Supar MarkeU are famous for meab of quality. . . afa4 wartiuM u no exception t That's wby you'reguaranteed satisfaction when you buy A&P meatst

w*ay-ToiAT-c«n»fCirt

>35< HAM SLICES.»32< SLICED BACON-35c CORNED BEEF f L ^r t 19c^ 24c FRANKFURTERS—37c»29< B0L06NA

$|AK)OD '

WHITE HOUK-EVAPORATEIIPoinl 1% till

camWhits Houis is fine, pur* mu>, t«

•uarantttd top quality always!

Cora Flakes W ™ M P;RJceGem8»N**»fELD - « ^ i

W h e a t P u f f S "NNYFIELD 4 o r p k . | |W h e a t Flakes ""NVHELB j |

A National Favorite INECTAR TEA

19c pkg.

Cake FleurBaking powder £%!,»&%Macaroni ™Egg Noodles ^pmsor^jSpaghetti **"* 2 ^ ,

ANN PAGE

PLUM JAM,: 2;Real old fashioned goodness .

and basidts, it's POINT FREE!

Plain OlivesM

Stuffed OlivesPeanut ButterCider VinegarSalad Oil mmi

to.

mum

OKED HAMSl«ffU»tHaH ' __

-49.

eSPARE RIBSi t PICN

Tomorrowenjoy a cup ofliciousA&PlIts finer, fresher Ivor will startday off right!it — s e e why itAmerica's fa?

MMMB

HtUM

Page 6: alanil) Of Boro Is Held -m Pad · 2014-02-23 · Pruitt and Gregory Sofka, with Jo e Sabo as announcer. Ros Ra-mirez, WHS i charg e of th enter-tainment, and Anthony Russ gen-ei-al

IJO*ERK TV*.~-Riil|ih Athlev

OB i»ll sides. A mil 11* f a ( f i i t i i ^ c I I M | I ' l i i - h i ' i l i m o

p a r k e d : i u t i i i ) i " l i i | i ' . I n

•itjutrietil wliii-h eii'Minl. I lie«trtH'k him with his flsl,

him In the ground. Then

off willi Anlili'.v'« ''nil-hfld jumped i n t o th('

cJir i l i ini i ' : ih.L liirM.

TlmbtrHM U. S. forest service estimate!

V!(fc,0ftl.0O(V(WK) hfmrrl feet n| ntiimliHIHItnbrr »f »,nv In/! slip lii A.m«r-

4.J5. • •

>r,w» ULLS ftt cttmtcHflATM

St. t ou'»,--Two d«y» after the(Vnternry Mpthodint (Jhurch ritpoited the finding of a $1,flo() hillin U'I collection piste nflprinj;, StJotin'a MclVwIlKl (tiurch offleinlnannounced that they, tot., hml re-««eiv«d aha, In an envelop*, Ip-

rlbi>d "for St. .lohn'nment Fund."

"ADVANCEThe Nsvy will npi>nd more than

a billion dollars on "advancebnws" ifi ihp Puciflo und abflntJiMO,000,001) forIn the United 8t*t<*.

HtENOTtfHfeNew totit.—ffur'uij *

with heir huabnnd, A Fr»rx woturned in » flr*> nlnrm to gvi help.Hh* jot nil s)ii' tlppd

, two hook-mift-jhrfdpr ctwo battalion chief*, n

y rhief and three police cat*.•%c nlso lf"t " summon!' to court»W1 ft ftne fnr J2n for t«rni«r in•a fnlw fllurm.

FIFTH WAR LOANThe Fifth Wur Uam drite will

hogin on -Ir.np 12th, with a goalof |lfi,0<MI,()(MI,IK)0, of" whlt^i sixfcillion will ho Roujjht from indi-•idiials. The. niinimiitf) will lastnntil July (Tth.

SCHOOL WDWIAPOW»

with hi* (father ^tiwplve yenrfl »ffo, Villlam P,v

Jones, of Peteratwm, W. Vo.,Weed a brijflit olirjftct. He plekedit up, and exclaimed, ".See, ! havefound (i di«mond." li was not un-til recently, however, that .the

U f Mll. J. Holder, professor «i sreol-<)Ky at Va. Polytechnic Institute,identified 'he stone as a <fla-rbonfl, of -:U,4« n#tr'e elfrntvwhite with R slightly KU-entahtin^r and with no visible imjrori-tii'i: exert one black spot. I t isfie<; (i»ecpt one bkck stpot.l It intOic tersest diamond ewer found inI'.hn United State's nnd the «econdlin-jrest nf any kind ever found i iNorth Amei'lcu. I

Hick ReftTf thp riHtirtit nfeds a Back

fry slipping a wnshbonrd Into a pil-lowcase behind the pillow, "tenn" »fulded card taMe or bread board tina slant agalntt the bdelt of the bwt;nr use n straiiiiiMmek choir, bottom-»!fie up. sotbat.itsJ«l&.}s|p.agal,n»tth> head of th* bed and lit baekffiriri:i «n Inclliwrt pln«e; and COYerthe support with pillows.

There's nlmnst no end to thef

bajje, alr>ne or In romblhation. Ceolcrisp cole slaw; hot, savfljjr slaw,cabbage boiled in meat broth,rlioppfri cabbn|(e quick cooked. Inmilk, and cabbage boiled in quar-ters.

Life j«fkd nearly torn from hi" body 1), - - ^ - - --••• -«•.„•.Civile Nell AoJrcws, Srfnnn Male, MnratWI M«nBe, fniifLi

MTK irera thf i * U e ^ hi« I>MB «il* • -3? Cl l l ib l | !r nt«hine IMI witl,liuiprotrtllve sHItfMhig. Llfler the. Alp WM torpwloea «™r«CT- *H6 ' w pHunil iktll .ltd eotir»(tn he moved in)""1"1 | M » »'• '"• ' ' • • t a < he*1"111-fliri [>hllnnri»l#(l Service Mednl. for men iifce Wu w y m t r * War ll,mu

.OLIVER.ftF.WPOP . i n ^ ^Nashville,f enti, — Six -months

ajjo, J«ck Puffh, 12, ran into afence, while playing with « groupof b»y*, «n<l jabbed a loose pieceof wood just under hi», shoulder,

his lung. Although ho

Miitmc p w r n , ,]were able to Kelsp'Ja'ct »livicently it waa (Hseovereil,X-ray, that » slhreV ofentered his loft tung. Itmoved iiftd Jaek In i'rapidly.

MUGGS AND SKEETER —By WALLY BISHOP

/IT'S ATHE ROCK

THE ftXKV15 CKrVZ-T A

ABOUT < /

HOf4EV!'. A

TvI^|*yTl A , \ ^tfi^ :*]L

;\AJKAT'S^i i r nruM/4rvfc. U'CfllN(a

IN THE <HIVE^ )

\m «Di/'

k 1,A \7"*'i l jiff)

KRAZY KAT -By HERRIMAN

Vfe

Si.'oory

NAPPY• ( p . " l V U K.ii.i- r i . i t u i i i ?;iiilirite, Tnf ,fop,

—By IRV TWBIAN921 ELM STREET, THER-

-XU SAY, THEY LOOK V 7 THE MATTCS HAS BEENjARC Y A W GOTTA FW0 LIKE ANY OTljf R BOOK- HOW ^ THOMUflHLY iNVEWICATf r.

6 T 0 W W IT'S APPEARANCE, BUT. CAN YOU BE SUR£ WE ) > IT HAS BEEN SCUNO THATIDE POSTALS * 1WS 8UHWNG THE 60Y WV9 BOfiM HCRt

DK M1£ « A NATION. * ftfclNS DtCIKCl

DETECTIVE RILEY —By RICHARD LEi:

mr's wTHIS W£ft!£VERVflME tcmsf mw watt OF uttSE

m A 1WIS...HM 10w»«e Ait WSE WIKPOWS so liwr «x i

OtJ NEVER KNEWV WIO AT Olff*fMT PffilOOSWgaf

As Americanas Baseball!America's great national pasttnoe-^ba«t-ball—is a game of quick initfafttofc tythe individual player wrfking in toivcert yttti each of his teanwates/ •-

i r ahas aatde this countfy o£ putsnent,_ Individual inhijtivt-and Ac !rtt-

W U c it must b* f t t&Mifwe ve to keep Arjaerica souoA

•s tf f:M'

Page 7: alanil) Of Boro Is Held -m Pad · 2014-02-23 · Pruitt and Gregory Sofka, with Jo e Sabo as announcer. Ros Ra-mirez, WHS i charg e of th enter-tainment, and Anthony Russ gen-ei-al

¥B«*AmS-v«

r SprinfttltVI. n holtilt'JUilgla

.,i,:meie pstwlf,top

rtvw to 4*rk-,,,,v

nut sav«4

American J., r 11 • • of ICorwnokhn

,11'irl l lBfd.

m Hint Ij»tt1« defut-

nr at bnr|»l*MKSfin fold up tl» i|»nk

,,„ i>«achhead « Mm-. hnv. After B

the

Peri filer* of the Bar-

R1JRAK,

P A l " '

for » H ™ . ™ u ? ,Tor a Plenary HetallIJren«e fur premium Consumption

u t d ij«

' .8o^."U"'1 C'""" »' the Hw-of earterat. New ,ienwy

(' I'

Vak. notk> that MK'HiARt. BUV-KA Inlondt lo apply t,, th e Boroiie-hOBWIIOH of ihf Hnrpnprfl or Cirterelfor ,. Fl.nary detail C

in killed.N:i was in av i.ipm. Tnotrau H,ion, N. C. After tot....;(> nil aftenwfltj,.^.!:platoon toiftMJ ittiB

I).-. .1np*n**t teh*,...;if in an area Hit

,, to be ittttttd by

,rk Prlvatt HrtB*try tn.ietwfltA.iMt.

bfl post-i

should

frmn the marine post*h,i the b«ioh unmo-

nto tiio vpfif lor f tp,i Jtiffontto llrtH.is sighted hijn and

i.>11n twam

„. .. — Itujited at 2St., <:»rur«l, N. J.

OWj'tlnna, If nny, xhould he mud*im»m<lla «•« in writing to; A. j"'firry, Billliigl, Clerk of til* Horough of ('Brierel, N«w Jersey

i™ 1 ""' ' M " ' H A K I ' HIJVKA,

(Jof

» KOTIC1KTalu

* AHAMIntend t<> apply

fpu«li CouniilJ of the BorouiClir1«ret for H H i l a r y mial l Congumption Ilienne for premises Mill-ftt»d Bt 104 Union Street t'Mlerel' "*,» ' ' • « w ' / ' • ' - ' ' "A t . . . . . . .* .

O|1Jei'llon«, ff nny, should bemail# Immedlalelv in wrllltig to: A..1. ferry, Borough oierk of thiHOIOIIKII of <'nrten>t, New Jemey

(Nlgned, WALTKIt (IttOMATKA* AIMJ* HAHKIBWIfeca,

point uppotHa the ma-unit. FearifUt h« KtttUim-rleuM, ht1 W**»* •:•!•,!(•( above bla head•>«i in flnm* ^atiorciw

k'i befort lh« artll-in' "penedtlre.

•/..is pot|p««l*i and>'.it.mn later was evicti-

v MAS APPENDI-

CITIS

ii I'a.—A am»es8-

. :MHI,V was recently

.-,- surpeons at thollnspital on a t'l.

I'IIIMI infant. The1. Mrs. L«o Figels,

• -.1. for appendicith• inn- the baby wat

SOTIt'Knntic* l|iat ANKH.A BBK1

Inlendii lo apply to the HorConiiill w( thf Hiirough o

C,art««t (nr'a Plenary Retail ConKUfhptton ll<T-nno Tor premise* nil••at«l nl 36 Iludnon Htreet, CnrterN. .1. w . •

Qbjfotloni, If any,. ghQulil birnade.lmmedlftlply In writing to' AI. I'erry, Borougli Clqrk or ilia Herough of Carlaret, Naw .lerney

i<W1»n*») ANKlIA HKKJKHT,>:.. v, e - l . !»•

MOTIIHTalw notlfd that MATTHKfl

KONDttK Inlnidn In «|i|)|y to tinHorouth Coi||ii1l uf thf HoroughCHrtrrtt fair a 1'Unnrv tt«tnll Cnn

llrpn»(* for pr*rnli«Kill r,J .Wheeler Avertiif, CarIt. J, >

If wiv HIIOIIIII lie madll.ii«)y In willing to: A.

Farry, Murptigh I'lPilt of Ihr Hnrh of (frier*), NrW .Irrxev.

M^TTIIKW*

llf.M. NOTICES

MI'CK'K

Mllfl SUIZA-diicl Uuiii'lU

Boroughin ill*''11Kii of

(' i m u p lximatad lit fi!lf>

N 1l

rurt«r«t, N.iiny, nhoiild;i wrllint to

l i n k uf I lit-, NMW Ji.tr»•'>•,

\«ITI«'B• I H>HKKEI ItAKOS

••'••• l o I hi> H o m u g l lH'H-IMIKII ill' 1 , , ' a r t e r n

l l

nptlrt* thit JojW CH0MO-

QminnU ot th« B«>»uth »t niffor a Plenary n«Ult Conaump

llo«n»e tbt pteirllnt ulluatwi at0«*5[«« Ava|»», C«tt«»«l, N. 3.

ObJWtlJkM, if ally, ahoql* U madentncd!at«ly In writing to: A. J.

, Borough Olwtt of th« Bor-Of Oiritrai M*W Jan»

4 JOtf cHOfoW

nattce that A>tNA C B l IK InUnd* to npdly to tho Wor-Coijntill of ih« Borougli olt for it ri«i*ary rttlRll Coti-

niMi|ii!(rn lluoiiit tat t>rdmlae» iiltu-(led at 48 Warren at., rartaret, N.

Object ton*, If niiy, ahouM ha mndeWDerttally I i l

y, M a derttalely In writlnir to: A. .1., Florough Qterk of the Dor-or earieCei; New J«r«#ylRneil) ANNA rHBflVMNAK.

the 4% Push' in Italy

JfOTICBTnkr nophf that SAMUKL I.KH-

|AN Intenrln lo upplv to the RrirftiigMt*iiuncll of (lie HoroUKl) uf (,'llrtmfctto a ]'l*nary Ketall Oonauintmufclr*tinp for ihe pr<>mlt«n nflimiiMl atI Hii(l«on Htrttpt. Carlcrot N .1JJbJecdwi.i, If any, ahould hn madi,WniedlBtely In writing to: A. .1>n.v, Hornn(th (MPIR of the Jtor-liMi nf (inrierst. New Jersey.

(fllfcnpill KAMmcL M'IFIMAli,'- I ' . *••>, » •

nntl.n mat ITRFUjKlAN-CITISSBN'B CLUB In-

to apply In tli<> Bnrouffti Coun-I'll of the lloroiigh of Citrtoriit for.

Clluh Ik'ensp for premium «IUialPdat 49 i*ick AveiiiiB, caricret, N.. ,i,

The nAVer* of the cluh nn IJarryl k prwlilent; PhlMb Hllln

R y , .(Jbjartlonii, |f any, Miniilil be mnilfl

Wmmllawiy in writing u > ; , A . J .Furry, Borough OlerH of tHe Buf-oui|h of curteret, New Jersey.

( 8 I ^ t K N l N M l 'INIMTIKMN'B CI-UI3

HAItRY lUYUl'K, Set'.C. F*. «-2, !)•

T»k* nolko thiit ANtmriW I'r5TftAOH Intend* tn apply to t1>e Bor-OltgJi Council of the Borough i)f <;ar-terat fora Plenury Hetull Conamnp-tlon llionse for preminofi sltuati-rt ntII Mercer Street, Oarlnret. -N, ,1

(tbjertlong, If uny, ahnulil li« mudeImmediately In writing ">: A, J.Furry,- Borough t W k J f |hi« Bor-ough of (,-arteret, New .l«rh..y.

r n l ) ANOItBW I 'HTA

. ' • . • • • • • : " 4

You Pays Ycair Money and You Takes Your Choi

r.4

is* * • '

f

^ ^AV "' '

Ti

v : . . . . j

'V*''' 'T* ' $

,,M" : . •

t r )C. K 6-2, »•

(Mtt»»NAN(!KAN ormiNAKCE TO CftKATE AND

[*,TAW.rHH ftUI.KS AND 11KQ11-I.ATWlNB, CONOHIWINO HAN!1!AI(V f'AOlUTIHM IN [>WRIi|j-1NOH OCd'HElJ KV PKItKONSAN IIW8l1>l;N('|il.H

•IT IH IIICMKHV OltDAlNlOll BYT1IK lIDAIil) OK ILKA1.TH oh" THKHOtlOINtH OF CAItTBHKT, IN THK(WNTV Oil' MIl'I'I.KBBX ANh•rtTATK1 ()!•• NIHV IKiLSliiY:

I, ttecllon t. That no uwiinr ofany hiillillng or pr •mlHcn In 1I<MI.-

| l l f l | . i :i I I . . U , ,1 i n i i n t , l , - i | . . , . n r l i t. i H a i t i l i r e m l a i i R o r b n l l i l i n u ' t o , a n y

l l m l I ' A l i T P ! ! : ! ^ ! 1 F H > - ' l i i i J I v l i l u t i l i . r r n m l l y , nl e l l . l . H t o l l p p l v t o t l l t u l t m , l i l l i l . l l l i n , . i v l i i i M l l l l r

"• ~ ' ' i t ' l v i ' i | i i l | i p e i | w i t h n c r i ' p ti i i i i i i l i i t v f i i r l l i i l p s . n a l d f «I n g i i i n p i ' i l y l i i H I . i l l . i d i nMeK o i ' in t I I H h u l l y n Kf o r M i " i H i r p i i ^ i 1 o f * h i f» l i a l t t i i i ' i i n 111" p r o p i - r t yT i t l e d p r o p i ' i ' t y I h n - .

H ^ r t l n n ~. T h a t n o u w i M ' i ' <II H O I i l l i i | [ o r t i i i i n i i H i ' X , o r l l H t i i n

| a f t e r flllown) t u l i v . ' l i y l i y n i ' i r o r

Taltn notTKI. corn

I'diiiirll of the B'iroiiKli offor a t'li'iiury Ili-tHll Con-ll< "iiHi- for ini-nilni n HIIII

Hied ill H KHHI'I Htncl, I'urtt ret,N. I.

Objertloii!i, If uny, KIIOIIIII he madelunu.'Olidf)y In wrltinK <'>: A. .1,i'ttny. Borough ClxrK of tli« Hur-ough of Cartrrcl, Now .lerHey.

(Hlgned)

xalilpro|i-IS

till)

o n l i n u l i r ew i t h i n I lit

anyk

jtyJohn

P. «-!, »*

i,Tdth, Krcrftnry.glllcii, Tr»MHiii.:r

W i t h l i l l i f a m i l y u i l r i l i ILIIVI l i i l , in ' D i i i h l h i K l i r l o n g l i i Ku n l c K H m i l d l i n t , h i i l l i l l n p r . . o r | ilm.( i 1H p r i i j i M r l y * - I J U ! P I > I M I w i l l. ' e | H i i | I I I I I I | I . | ' I I H i i n l t i t t ' V I ' u . li i l u l Iri | i r < i | i " i ' l y I n s l i i l l n d In t i n 'l i r e n i l x i ' H , o r h u t ! i | l t i K I ' I - I M I I I M I ' !I l i e I ' I U I ^ H M u f t h i n o i ' i l l n i i n i i ' ,n i e i i i i tli** p r o p e r l y w i l l i l n t h u T l l l e i l

I " ' « . . . — . ." " " " ' i o w n e r i i f

o n u

him

Mil l

ii" x =IHii»t»<J m Ml, Ctirtercl, N. .1.

. MII.ml.I lie inik.liAIIIIHK ID: A, I.i Nik uf HIP ftur-I NVw IclHty.ii'.sKl'll HAKOH.

v i i r i lK

t7f i i i i i i l y t u t h eBorough or' ,H Cnn-

ItltU-

i'i 1 in.

• - It VVauue,

"iv. xhmild ba ma illwilling tu; A, 1.' l .rk of the Hot-i N.-w ,iers«y,

MICHAKI-in .i|ip]y to ti

JI tin' Borottfh of.i.jiiy ;i>,uHr<.'(ip

' 1 IJI«IIIIH*-|( altuikl Avtiiua, Cur

-1., xlmulil be miuli*uiitliig to- A, .1.•i.ik of tut- Bur-

Nuw Jartey.C K

nOTHBTake uuiiie tiiut v i n n w n

* alULK INI'. Intepdn h 4SPIV t"(he Borough C6uncll of IH« BtrroOfhHI i'untT»t tor S Fh>nnry Itfitnlli ll(it, InlllillnR, or premlKe.i. n

i llreiifie fur promlaesl inmi hy lilm nr IIIH I.HIIIIVHI IIS Mwlem Avi-tiiie, fur - l«4xeil,' nr let lo uny

N ,|. itri ioiiH. iinl nt ]>J-I-HI-nL<ttijfi-tlotm. If nny, Hlittnlil he mude

Imnifillalfly In writing lo: A. J.I'erry, llorough Clerk, of thu Hor

f Curlerel. New Jtrsey.Slgni-dl Vlll<;iNIAN MAIt &

Milt LI,, IN*'.W. Koviii'a, l're«.lloic Knvu'",

HHI1., Trem,I', li-!, V

HUTU'MTak» noli™ that JOSEPH MA.

JOKOH Inlenil* to apply lo the Uor-ough Council of Hie Borough offurterel fur 11 iilfiiaiy HeUII AIOII-auniptlnn lii-rnne Tor premlaea iltu-tted at 115 itoortvelt Avi:wi«, Oar-teret, N; J. ,

Objoclluiin, If nny, ihould be mad*IniiiWHalely lit writing to: A. J.Perry, Borough Clurk of th« Bor-ough of I'uitcret, New Jeney.

(S)Jgn«d) JOHKPH MAJOHOB,. P. I-S, »',

; Take notlia tl^tt H<>IA)MON NOVIT intcmln to apply lo the Borought.'ouncil of IIIH llorouKh of Ciirterelfor n Plenary Jtelall IHatrlbutloiiilinnw for pr«mliim nltuateil at 71W»»ftlligton Avenue, Curteral, N. J,

oSta'tiui'ii. If uny, should be madalinn)«tllalelv In wrlthiK to: A .1.Petty, Horonglt Clm-k uf the Bor-ough of Carteri-l, Miw .Irraey.

Fm((n«.l) HOI.OMUN NOVIT,<\ P. t-t, !»

ot nowniuili'i'iwith lui'fiptfil

«inIfrtry rui'lllllen, ami not t»rufifrl.iilHInlli'il, rniy ronLjnilv In IM>' HH'Ihimxelf or with IITH family, urn liiiiilliiiiii l<i rent, Isiim", or let ™ni

dill, hulldliiK, of |ni'inlMc» to :tn\licrmin or pt-rnoiiK, linie.HH lit' l|.iHtiillo or flliywa lio'nu lldr. Inteutlohto Innliill lu-i'i-pli'il mode) M MUIIIlury fili'HIIIen within « :enHonnliltime from tin- diile of thin urdliiatii-e

Section I. All iu 1'llllc I: IIK ol'dlmiiKei*, ruli'fl, uiul retfulutlulls urli»rehy ilerlnred retrokoil.

Mei-tluii u. Thin ni'dltmtU'e shutt.idf •Itt-rI |inmi'illuU)ly uponuinl iirnpHr mi H|)t?lln+ IULI up••I name.Pimp-Hi nn Aral readingMm i, 19H,

HEHMAN OBRKK.President of IUa Ho*™ iw ntulth

ClAlIBNCH SLlftiO,cit-rk HI tl|« llimnl "f lli-alth

\« In-rcitd-

Frenoh forcei, eager for another Bmaak at tie ttadltlasal fee, havet«ken the spotlight In the big; Allied dike In Italy. They atrnok west-ward frotai Castelfortc (1) in a MniatloQal assault on Mt, Malo, an^ cap-twed the Im^rtant town or AAanla. oWting MM »iriyfroad through ttievalley and ripping a bale in tbe qaatnv Une. To Urn wrath (2) IF. S.forces drove the enemy from Santa Maria Infante, and northward (smallarrow*) the British Eighth army extended It* Rapid0 river bridgehead.

Hitting I}each Behind Curtain of Fire

• Erer hear ef tk* Aailo Twf OIBBT t*ta club hat been i«tabU*hrt atiy a mite »eMM the IrttgA«iio, Italy, («r UM u n m n m l ol Brh)ah and V, «. iMm. WM^UI I f w i M wet, wlrith a n•oeordtoe.to ntnaber« ahtvn by tteowt1 of dke. BetUm In Irriak. in »l<*af« at left the"spring handicap" are chalkefl on « e MaoW»»(fl, At rtfWt the fcarrttr U sprtmj aal they ar» « t .

Lumber Jacks Do Ttteiir Bit in Biggest Log

Landing barges carrying troops ashore in the assault on HtnnboldtBay, Dutch New Guinea, move In behind a curtain ot fire laid d«wn bynavy ships and planes. So accurate « u Uie bftmbardment that bargea»wept up to the shore right on the beels ,0/ the forward moving explosive!.Operations In the three Dutch New Guinea sector! are beUeteft to hivecut off some 00,000 Japs. t

Summer Comes to 'Big Town'

Mi'l'K'Kn.il .ll'lMfi

tu thl - l1

:

Mithe Horuugn

Kh of Ciirtci'fll *'cinuiimptii>n

ixi'K «ltu«t«(l at Hi'.irl.Tet, N. J.11 v, Mlioultl li* mail*ivililng 10: A. -I.' I n k of tile Bini, New lern»y.

11 MiHN UUIIAI-.

ICit IOHN KOI.IHAH

to tli« Huvimsii"i<itiuh of Carter*!

l l

"i'ii*-, C a « e » t ,'iiy. "liould b#wntinv t»;iMerk of the

• I . NewHIHN

at

144-

Hiiii the H T S•^ CHJH Intdhnln t"inii«ll t'onin'il of tbuiuiut for a Otnb 11"line* nlVt)at«d at 6*6'"ii, ("arftret , N . . J ."i Hit) flub are: Johnm. JoHoph gabulchllk,

'i'h Treatenahy, treua-

KOTIOK •Take notlfi- HIM I VIN»"KNZ*]_W-

^llfHiW Iiijwniln I" n|iply to tin. bor-ough ColiiH'll or I he Horouth ofCarteret for u Plenary Itetall Con-numiillon lli'«im« for uremlM< •I1";ulod ttt 17 Sulsrn AVe., C'ftTtoret,N 1 '

bieftlonD, If any, nhould be mulalmin«llu.t«ly In w i l i n g to: A. J.FeSy? Borough L'la»k. uf U» Dor,ough of Carleret, New Jer«ny.

"sifrneil' " iw'WKA UXlltd

PKY-N04IUK

Take iiotlre that ALBXWATA Iliteuda to apl>ly to the Bor"«»h (,'ouwll of lha BorMih JlCarteret for a Plenary ltelair Contmnptlun, Huanas for preinlMa a tuiajid at »• Booaevelt Aveim*. t,ft»

'objections, if any, should lie ma.d«lmmadlat«ly In- wrlHnif to: A, 4.Earry. BSIUU* i JC irk of the «orS^'offrtSr*}. New .ler,«y

(3tgn«d>) A USX PltVWAiA,C.,r. «-2, *'

Yu''apply to tl>« pori)U*hpf tha Borough «r

for a VUnury listen </»"

T UThe fni'egojriff orrt|nu.i«'i' v

troilm I'd and mloptpd nu llrntliitf ill n raKiilHl' intetiiiK "f U">of Hiiiilth of Hi* HormiKli uiterm l!Cl>! Mwy n, Hti / i jTIuinllnlllH'n will »•' rnttlier j-oiiaor Heroin! mutllng hnil llmil

K I

»ai(

ml"Pilcin mi Krlrtny.I' W H v

Mine 2, I9H nt 1 M

Henlti llooliw, Uoro/Hfh H»U, U'DkeAv,. irarlertl, N. .1. whtm all l)«r-Vnii« Interested will be Blv«n a"

ruin > ".| |.|j)jn»n' HMKJO,CWrk.

(!.]J. r.-s»fl; ii-2

MASTKH'H 8AI.KIN CHANUKHY Olo

hetweeii I'M ,O It UNula CompliilnuutH, ii*U *'UTTB'lJM'BV, Ct 111", defeiidantu.

NKW .:K I-II.I.KV,

..uiplalniints, umlley ft ill*, urt- defeniUntH, thufli'liber, one of the Special Milof na!d four! of Chanuery, WM

iu iiith day ol June,at two u'rlock In thv) afternoonnt pulilh' vaiidue I" tjiti »«le!*,.. • , .

the Shel'lff'fl omi'B In the I Hy ofw RruHnwli-li. N. J., «ll t' l ft l

uf lund uinl pi'tiiniuea siKlBtt".elnif In tlie f'>rf»B|i "' .County of MIMlosex anil

ot New Jemey aiid liriler u«|U filltt>WH:

In tlm westerly 11"* "f

i l traft^ndred't i i ia' fifty a»'' « r ( i

• Jtaa HulUna, 15, Urta In en* of the many lonthff o&mpi near MhtytBh, m ^oted a (aial of 10,000,000 feet of lumber to the largest drive in the Eaut dlnoe 190J. The drrvB.waatie in with the European Invasion, alnoe every foot of thin wood will g« to the war effort.' Jein I§/at left roning a lor with her pe»vey from the ptle Into the 8t. J«hn i*ret. Right: Jlere "Jacga" Mpike poles and peaVeyt olambw over the floating logs, wpa»»ttat »nd KBldtng tjjein Ihreifljh th

Sisters of Mercy

uf

t U e ,State

lb

TOVen lulndreiMlia (JBK.6/Wnortherly from the noftharly Hie ollaliwuy Avenue formerly UnioiU U n n d > tli

fe»

Among the hot weather scents in Brow; (bo, New Tort, ttya oee (Wt)w i about the cutest. Six-yeat-oW {Jordan Q&ynor l« shown enjarinr •»Iqe cream cone as Us companion, a "honey bear," enjoys a, ewe ofhis own. Blfht: When the meroriry Jumped to 88 degrees in Chicago,Jimmy Fialft, t*o, and his pop, jumped '<>* the water at the beaoh.

mmmmm

Portable KitcheUKUng no«d>; tliencij runnlnKw»"terly on a HUB lia(>alW with »a1.||pe of Itanway Avenue,, one bun

l nutty «»ld asventy liun-(•*{ U> the most

Hun "' a I™1'1 , " r . . la>1<

y Uy Llwla H. Colwull, u b m l to Herman Khaplrp,

ury 2«lh, 1900, by di-udSook[876 o* D«e«a for Mldillei»*"ounty UH P*««» 634 etc., »a>4. » «U n i t al«o the line of lam formerly

b U. H. Oroweii; t h n

line «eventy tlv» (7&) U»l toUOU«t: tlnnce ea»terly o n ' a llnS with the cortrw flrMt »u

, nhould be niadowilting to; A. i,

of uit«rt» Htrwt *fj>WH ,„twelve hundredths 175,12) fe

or plai'ii vtas #89 Leffertti at., uar

N J

ug a part of th* tune praml»e»

Oel.^ ^ M f ^ f f f -h ™^B^ap*«a^ajPPj' •' f^PWP''

Aboard a coast gnard*manned assart>anap«i* heading back fromBurope's batUeftonts, tw« U. 8. army nurses minUter to tw« waonatdqpirrlort convalMcIng on deck. The aorte* m Skonfl U«nt». l lha .befii (Jeft) and Mmrgajtct' Cqllopy, sisters, of Lawrence, Ha*f, Tbtlrp»tle»ta arc ffrlv»te H»R«ff>« deft), and l'vl, WUIU>W Sokxejbtck.

Llent. IriT'lke11) Keplord,!navy flying ace, looks up to'•ton* HfcMbylVwdf.JI.t ibare, leMer of the "Skull an4iboon" Corsair squadron.

Page 8: alanil) Of Boro Is Held -m Pad · 2014-02-23 · Pruitt and Gregory Sofka, with Jo e Sabo as announcer. Ros Ra-mirez, WHS i charg e of th enter-tainment, and Anthony Russ gen-ei-al

rbugging FlourBag Stall. Traffic

BAI.TlMWhfc.- A j!t|prhiin((ln(jflour bug (in an embankment bor-(taring nnf nf Oir main routddowntown j.ivp !»-i) pnlrntinrnUW Jltlnn. Tin' im/»l«*1 pntrnlHM11 finally «rinrr>d ihc rliiiivebag and found thrrrln: one llVoljrbin , ono nol *n IIVPV. and two

Wtth no life nt nil, having hiduStir necks wrimn.

Sea Battle-It's aWhale of a Story!

jAjnericanSubchaierBriikly

i Goet Into Action.

SAN FRANCISCO-The tele at •Wh»le, mistaken (or an enemy (Ub-mtrlne, and whlrh "attacked" on

• AjD«rlcnn ««bch»»er, wan told by a" U. 8. talk force commander here.• • • "W« wero entering the Sicilian. channel for the Initial attack on Sic-

ily when one of my group of patrolcrtft and aubcltnsers sighted whitlooked lfkc n submarine," Lieut.Com. Robert P. Luwtlier, SO, whodirected thp first firing on Sicily,Wlsted. lie hm just returned from

Ii

BJaBta* n M I H I I J f j "ft*tt L iMJOt '^Vt'ljii 'J LL ~ m J B t f ^ T T ^ ¥ WHt'A'ia!&& fk fit^jDUl t,l ilT JBa^fctfcifaAni JIMJ'J iVi ^.IIBBB^I !' V^k^rfi " • • £** '* ^i^fc-H A

Team Finishes InLast Place In Meet

Iftiyi "Th« subchaser flred machineguns at the whale, which seemed to§0 berserk, lushed nbout and thenRlrfaead under the subchaser, stop-ping the prnptll?r.i and both engine*.; "The subchaser got away."j In Issuing Onul instructions for thefcvftlion of Iliily, Rear A dm J. I.Haul Jr., commander of tlio Eighthamphibious tame, included a warn-ht§ to his crews1. "And be (urn tob* careful of whales," CommanderLowther recalled.. "the whaling stihchnser's skipperliter received the Navy Cross andthe entire crew won the presidentialUnit citation for action/ at liela,Sicily, Commander Lowther, who Ita former member uf the San Frsn-CtlCO Stock exchange and son of aMethodist mlnlstei, rcvenlcd.

The commander was in chnrgc of• group of four patrol croft, aboutlike corvettc*, nnrl six suhchnsersWhich directed and protected land-lags on Sicily 6nd Holy. Two of theships were lust at Palermu after di-rect bomb hits, he said.

Hitfh's track lr«nm fin-ished in laat plum in n rfunrirnnictt-lur trnok moot held in Water'sStadium, Perth Amboy, last Sat-uriia>. The locnl boys didn't cvon«Und n rhnnrc, as Perth Amhoywalked off with first honors with79 point*. I/oh(f Branch finishedNpcond with M1^ and Anbury Parkthird with 2K V*. Carteret's tola!was lit.

Cartprct'a fiummnrv follows (5participants to each « e n t ) :

One-Mile Run—<S<ft\>ifth.44Q.Ynrd Run—FcijA fifth,Pole Vault-«ftr?,lll«>, ! WHigh Jump—Knm-I, fifth:Shot Put—Kutma, fourth.Dificun "Kuzma, fourth,Javnlin—Sabo, third,

British Farm Hand HeroIt Deaf to All Praise

LONDON. — Kenneth Andrews,hired man on a farm at Bucons-thyrpe, Norfolk, wei walking hqrn,ewith his baby nnn In hit firms whenhe saw a British single scnter planeobviously In difficulties and aboutto criRh. "

Handing the baby tu his wife, heran toward the plane as It hit theground and burst Into (lump. Hescrambled onto the nose of the ma-chine.

IWow him was the pilot, impris-oned In tho blazing cockpit and mak-ing frantic signals The pilot wasalso shouting instructions, but An-drews did not llBten. He knew noth-ing about safety panels and. suohtilings,

Kicking the cockpit cover in withhis heavy farm boots, he tore at theopening with his bare hands,, and,reaching down, dragged the pilotbodily from his seat.

Andrew* did not listen, oithor,when the pilot thanked him, and al-though the villagers think he la ahero they don't say so to him.

For Andrews is deaf and dumb,

Qnce Populous SilverCity Dawn to One Man

i .SILVER CITY, IDAHO.-Thls oncuheavily populated mining, townwhere 45s roared in by-gone years isnow a ghost town—except for oneman.

He's William Hawes, 67yearoldnative, who claims to be mayorand police force for the city of emp-ty buildings. In bis spare time, lieworks on an automobile he startedbuilding seven years ago, patternedafter racing automobiles nf lDHtyln-ttge, \

His long-time friend, Carl John'71 years old, left recently, ex-

nesWith Baltimore

NEWAUK The Newark Hearsjhome «t Rtinficrt

for a (itny of 18 days. From June1 to 18 they will play Baltimoreand the fmir northern dubs, Mon-treal, Toronto, Rochester and Buf-falo, before taking to the roadagain following the Sunday dou-bleheader with the Bisons on the!l«th.

The long stand on familiarground offers the Bruins B fine-opportunity to climb out of theInternational League cellar,' andManng-fir Bill Meyer in determinedthat they shall take advantage ofsaid opportunity, ,,

Meyer has probably used 100combinations In an effort to findthe rig-ht one and will not quitmaking chan^eg until the Bear?fegain their accustomed winningstride, A few ple&mnt days andthe opportunity for long practicedrills at home should go a long;ways towards solving Meyer'sproblem,j Moving,into {.he JVilion Aynnurtfndium Thursday nlghl, the Bal-timore Orioles will -also play Fri-day night (Ladies' Night) andSaturday afternoon. On Sundayday afternoon this Muntrunl Ituy-als will b« on hand for a double-header.

Sieve, Kuk, funner. all-Americaquarterback al Colgate and pnwcnlly the ba»e)>all coach at BlairAcndemy, was scheduled t.n jointhn Ben™ Thursday, He is an out-fielder and hae had several years'pro experience since graduatingfrom college.

Sunday, June 18, will be "Dun-pllfin Day" at Ruppert Stadium,On that afternoon some 600 fansfrom Dunellen will honor BobbyMaior, Buffalo third baseman whohails from Dunellen. Perry Gill ischairman of the committee.

;! J; "The cold winters 'and loneliness\ afe a little too much for me."

'A '{'ale of Boys, PoliceI And Too Many Rabbits'. SPOKANE, WASH. - DetectivesHike Vecdiiu utid Harry Davenport

; founded up two teen age boys who', admitted looting 1 ubbil hutches.• Tor two hours Vecchlo and Daven-

port drove around town, returningI to owners the bunnies the boys had

given them,But the boys must have had the

• rabbits In their possession quite aV little while.

: Tbe detectiveB found they had:- more rabbit a than owners. .

Cupid in Need of StreetList; Asks Chief's Help

ATLANTA.-Corp. Homer F, Gold,en, of Camp ninlhorni", La., was inthe unhappy fix of remembering thegirl but forgetting where islie lived.

To Atlanta's chief of police, M,A. Hornsby, the soldier sent an ap-peal for a list of all the city's streets.

"I lost contact with my girl friendIn Atlanta," he explained. "I'm sureI could find her if I could get * listof the streets, because I'd remem-ber the name of the street It I couldhear It." *•

At the bottom of the note was thepostscript: "I sure will appreciatethis favor, sir; she means a lot tome."

Slugging Over WashtubPrompts Priority Plan

KANSAS CITY.-Mrs. Lucille Zw-trow, manager of a stx-family apart-ment, told police that two womenwith washings to do were slugging Itout lor the right to use the tub inthe basement. . *

By the time police arrived, onewoman had knocked the other down,both were In tears—and neitherwished to prosecute.

Mrs. Znstrow'g new directive: Aset schedule for use of the washingmachine, not a catch-as-catch-canarrangoment. ,

De Gaulle seeks permanentRusso-French alliance after thwar,

0y||-fe

Prelate Finds RebirtK *'"'I Of Religion in Russia:. WNPON. - Back from Moscow,the archbishop of York told a pressconference there had been a resur-gence of religion in Russia,

"The terrible losses and sufferingsOj the war liuve brought again intothe open what was always latent—the deep religious strain in the Rus-flan national character," he said.

•1): " I t would be ubsurd to pretendthis Is universal. There arenumbers who conscientiouslyall belief In God."

JEWELRYVURTIIE

From Corpiet

t, Transferred to Living'•'- CHICAGO.-For the first time in

history, the American Med-Abkutialiuu Juuitiul ie[»)ilii,

|;ft sections from the bodies ofj. dead, persims have been grufted to/$» jevered nerves of the living.

!

*^' A. newly duveloijed surglc'al tech-Blflue employing u special vltamin-lortiflcd glue has made It possiblei restore the functions of the perl-

rgl nerves which, when uiidim-di aupply sensation und motion to

\ limbs, the journal said. , "

DIAMOND

ISOLITAIRE

A

it State Prisons Arem 4 Engaged in War Workffl^ICAGO.-A survey reported by

council of state government*that inmatus of virtually ev-

' »(4le priauu uie tiijjagt;cl iii wari.'Agricultural work and that at

qne penitentiary hai addedfc shifts to'meet its heavy pro-

schedule.of the hujje anU-submaruie

i oeti protecting harbor lnstal-and waterways i ts being

by hind by inmatei of S*Othe CalJorni^ «t«tf prison.

Ladies'and

Gentlemen'^Birth 5to

Rings

/

RichCameoBrooch

OF GARNfcTS

Ohio,—A non-skid

fur battlAhlpe,

BRACE-LETand

LOCKET

JUNE VALUEFOR Y O U -A choice of newest

watches for, men andwomen,

BRACELETS,PEARL NECKLACES,PENDANTSwith chains,

NCWCST BROOCHES,NEWEST £ A R mQSf

kAPEL COMPACTS,WATCH WALLETS

TIE SETS,DRESSER SETS.

and many useful gifts foi1

graduates. '

OPEAK1NG| J ABOUT SPORTS

• by Meyer

FOOTBALL CHANGES ,

At its recent session, the American Football

Coaches' Association wont unAnlmmiHly on r«c<vr<I RH

looking with disfavor upon the Intentional kickoff out

of Itounda and recommended two changes to the Foot-

ball Rules Committee of Association.

One wAfl to chang« the kickoff rules HO m to give

the ball to the feceivjng side oh its 45 rather than the

35-yard line when the ball is kicked out of bounds,

and the other recommendation was to legalize the

forward paBS from aywhere behind the line of »critn-

mage, removihg the 5-ynrd restraining distance. In

connection with,the kickoff they proposed to use an

artificial tee not to exceed an inch in height.Lou Little, of Columbia University, who initiated

the discussion on the changls a* chairman of the pow-erful Ruled Committee, warned hit colleagues thatcollegiate football was in danger of taking a back seatto the" urofesBional game unless rules committeebrought the rules up to date'.

Some of. the members present felt strongly that"freezing" of the rules far the duratio.n«would bethe best thing to do.

The rule change the Committee seeks is the s^ihethat professional football gave'up recently in favorof a new provision not only penalizing the kickingteam but compelling it to kick-off until the ball iskicked in bounds and the receiving side is given theopportunity for a runb&ck.

The voting on the change in the forward passrule was not unanimous an on the Mckout becauseBorne of the coaches were concerned about the gamebeing turned into a glorified outdoor basketball gamein permitting the pass fr6m any point behind the line.

MlSCELLANI

'TWHH a swell party Recreation Director DanSem'enza threw for the boys in the Recreation DepaiUment at the Rec Center last Thursday evening, . . .With soda and cake and everything. , . . FrankMcCarthy quite good naturedly remarked that hehopes he never again has a baseball season like theone just closing. . . . "Worst that lean ever remem-ber," says "Mac." . . . About the only big team intown this year is Foster Wheeler aggregation inCounty Industrial loop. . . . Good luck to them. . . .Despite t he fact that he is one of the leading sluggerson the team, our own Joe Medwick has been benchedin several games recently, filling in as a pinch hitter.. . , Sam Friedman, a.guy from Brooklyri who hasbeen a Dodger fan since, he was ten, toid us down atthe shore over the weekend that when Brooklyn lethim go they knew that he was through. . . . Wehope that is not so. . . . Matt ydzietak,.owner of thelocal bowling alleys, predicts'that after tire war bowl-ing will go over bigger than ever before, . . . M'ikeGregw is managing a baseball team over at Benj.Moore's, and he's pronysed to keep us informed ofthe team's doings. . . . Davey Jacobowitz, managerof a light senior baseball team from down Chrome, iscomplaining we did irot use his box score last week.

• , . , Sorry, Davey, but "uomo big defense plant adsseeking help" took up all the apace allotted to u s . . . .

Yank Meets His Cousin;He's an Italian Soldier

WAKHINGTON.-Sefgt. Frank Bioof 719 South Pauling street, Chicago,on duty with a B-25 Mitchell mediumliomher squadron ol the northwestAfrican air forces, recently struckup a conversation with sonic Ital-ian soldiers who were manning ananti-aircraft battery, the army an-nounced. One ol (he Italians recog-nized Sergeant Rio as an American.

, "My name is Rio," the Italiansaid, "and I have an uncle living in

-Chicago at 719 South Paulinastreet."

Tho American sergeant and theItalian soldier are cousins, SergeantRio's father is Vinceiuo Bio.

Store

Six Philadelphia!There are six cities named Phlla

^-IphiH-in Illinois, Mississippi, Mil-suuii, New York, Teimessee andPennsylvania.

GRAY HAIR?

H. J . r. A. 4-Mtt .

TODAY AND SAT.

D*mty Kaye, Dinah Shore in

"UP IN ARMS"in Technicolor

plua Selected Short Subject!

FRIDAY and SAT.Chapter 8--"The Phantom"

Arrows In Week-end For RecreationGame By 22-0 Score

CARTERET — The CurterctACM ware buried under R 22-to-0acore hy the Arrows A, C. of PerthAnvbny over the weekend. Eightcostly error* by the Ace» helpedthe Arrows in two big rallies.

ARROWS A. 0.AB R

Buck'icn, M 8Peterson, If (Srtufus, «b 8Novak, c 6FwtoT, 3b :........, 3Straube, p 4rtrich, lb 2

d :.., A, rf 4

8214

2422

1136 22CARTEnET ACES

AB R HCle«, 2b •;...., - . . S O 0Gor'ivtes, 3b 8 0 0NemMh, rf • 3 0 ,0O'Day, II, p .' 2 0 0Bri«ksr cf 3 • 1Walker, c 3 0 0Koi'kt, p, If 2 ° ' °Molnsr, u , p : 2 0 0Wnu'ski, lb 2 0 0

CARTERBT—Two more tjUMmhanded ip t'ieir linenps for thecoming neR'on in the RncreritlOTiNational anA American BweballLeagues, Dan Semens*,'league di-rector, announced thl» week. TheRamblen, who are entered in the'•Senior" NatiotMl League, and tt eEaglea, of the' "Junior" AmpriranLeague, listed their roaten.

iRantblersi Tronkn, Bamburak,Rukao, Potrnek, "Kirni" .Iftcobo-witz, Basilicci, Brown, Dezto,Debrl, Pussillci, Fitzpatrick. andManliArt.

.Eagles: S. Chodosh, R. Merelo,R. Mlglecz, R. Modlsk, A. Barna,J. Darua, A. Hudak, J. Stroin, S.TVyth, (i, Kollarik, J. Gurnl, Z.Vinwe, J. Makbi and M. Sloan.

Four teams are entered in eachleague. The National loop will ton-Hint of the- Pirates, Ukes, Ramhlnrsand Dragons, while the AmericanLeague will have the Bruftn, RedDevils, Cardinals and the Eagles.

Other salient factors aro: Bothleagues will -open their season onJuneJ9 at tho Park field. Bachteam will play nine games in eachhalf, with the first half Windingup July 26 and the second on Au

23 0 1Scow by innings:

,rro*<i 3 1 3 T fl 0 S-*2Carteret 0 0 0 O'O 0 0 - 0

Errors—ArrowB 1, Aces 8. Two-base riiU—^Ulrich, Peterson, No-vak Sthck out—by> Straube 13,KoMnstt 'CO'Day 1. I t o j •»balls—off Straube V, Koianskl ;,O'Day 7, Molnar 1. Losing pitcher,Kotanakl.

FINM R»W LOST V» YEARSOnagia, Kan.—Mrs. John Ber-

gei w*s killed twenty-nine yearsago when * tornado struck herIn, me. The ofchcr day, her grand-eon Donald BergcH, ma pl«ytngIn a fleld and foujid Hie weddingrlnjr W» grandmother had beenwearing the day she was killed.

gutl 25. P1IJ*1TB Will be h.week »tt» kv^vti 2B. <;;1,,be pluyed JHI (oiir niehi .«eek—<Honvys» Tuesdays, i >day* and Pridayi, lcnvin,nlgrht, Wedjtel«ay, for p,, ,ments. All gamcB in the A ,Leagrue will start at ?.in ••and In the National Lca 'iu r

time will h« '«:<MJ p. M.Mr.; B*rrttt)t& also am,

formation rft a «o^*ball | l : i | ,those 00^111^,do not pi,. (hall. •

Wedding "Cake Travel,Halfway Around Wnr,

LOU.DON.~L««dlng Air, , , . ,fred Edglnton, BAT, itis-,....,packing hli trffubkn In his ,<<,bag, packed a Impound, thr,. ,wedding cake, compleU win, ,,|Icing, and lufgad It half*,,,the world. ' «

Edgtnton, training In Can»<well nwars of th« ratlonins in i Jland. So whtn hli girl s , ;i|hit mailed marriage prop.-:he wSi due to wturn horn, i,„elded to be tuny prepared :.wedding feitlvltlei.

UNCLE SAM SAYSTURN THAT OLD CAR

INTO WAR BONDS

FOR VICTORYWE WILL BUY

ANY CARANY YEAR OR MODEL ANDPAY YOU A GOOD PRICE

For Quick CashResults CallUNCLE JOEWO. JW)149

SPEEDWAYAUTO SALES Co.

823 ST. GEORGE AVE.Woodbridge

W« t«ll good tramportatloa,Dot manly u»«J cart.

Empire RAHWAYFRI, la SUN.

SUN. and MON.

Anne Baxter, Thomai Mitchell

"THE SULL1VANS"— Aud —

"ROSIE THE RIVETER"with Jan* Praia*, V»m Va(u»

Impojtisl ipve<Ug«tcn have found viu-'BiJn Calcium F«nto(hen»te of tome valutIn ghanjiiig tay but, when a dcliclencyo( Uiii vitamin nay tare owed gray or

i h kFor euuuple, one tat awductad by

Good HouKkapinf uugsiiae cm t uuni.

( p f n w W | p<knM o( a ntiVD of «xne hair ookx.

yg pt

(tbt lube •mouoU wed la abov« tetta);PJ.US 4S0 U.S.P. uniuol Hi, tb«,vii*inianetummy to hwllhy j w m . Tty CRAV-VfTA SM what «4l l k

lathi w r o *

TUES. and WED.

Lynn Bari, AUtn Tamiroff in

"Bridge of S»n Luis Rey"' - Aud -

'Sweethearts of tn. U.S. A.— wita —

Una Merkel, Donald Norrl.

Ditboi to the Ladici ^oln Dayt

HMTH* MMOOtfH

plui "TROCADERO"

Rotimarjr Laos, Johnny DowniSat., Sun, Mat. - 4 Cartooni

NOW to SAT.

Humphrey Bofart

"Passage to Marseille"

Claude Raini - Michelle Morgan

— Ainu —

Anne Gwynne • David Bruce

"Moon Over La* Vegas"

Sun., Man., T«e*., W«d,

John Wajrnt, Suikil

"Fightinf Seabeei"

, Jant Withwt

"My Be*t Gal"

Next Thar*.

"STANDING ROOM ONLY"

"BRIDOE OF SAN LUIS REY'

STATE THEATREWOODBRIDCE, N, J.

TODAY •*«? SAT.p « # 4 In

"IN OUR TIME"B. Brow» In

IN BURtESfJUE"

OBRIEM

('•' '

Clearance Sale!We invite you to attend our

1st Clearance Sale Starting

Thursday, June 1st and

lasting 10 days

Coats - Dresses etc.Tots to Teen Age

• ' L , II, I T I

Vivien's Baby Sho|i111 MAIN ST. WOODBRIDGE, N. J.

Woodbridg« 8-1476

T H E R T R EJMCIf i l l Pf.R:,,"M: ciBicnoh r.i w j i i f i l

PERTH AMBOY "New Opening Day

THURSDAY

NOW PLAYING

A Lady «f

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etNTiNtannULVFUM101 ML

Coming THURSDAY, JUNE S

BETTY GRABLE in

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RIADI'I

• I T w»ntONDSAT

TR1S THtAlHl

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ONE WEEK STARTING SAT. JUNE 3

She w • • (initUr •;. 'ihocldng, cru«l, aw«m«n too

N1L8A8THER