10
BACK UP YOUR BOY Buya» Additional Bond Today Mepenbent - Heaber TWY6IVE THEIR IIVIS—YOU LEND YOUR MONEY" Buy Mor* Wor Bondi Toooy XXXV.-No. 12 Km Mi,. Tint 1 (IITlio, Wo lfl'irt tniitlor .lhrldgo, N. WOODBRIDGK, N. J., FRIDAY, ,11'NK I !•! j hi IK «ri>(<n HI., Woodl>rldKi>, N. .1. PRICE FIVE Mi .liinlnt, Ihifl 1'. X. N., is spending I,is parents, Mr, and < Janlot, «f Edgar ,, n ,lli.v Hiirkclcw, ;,„, 11. S. N., in training , ('illicit' 1 , visited Her pa- ;I,HI Mrs, Orvillc Barke- liillhani ing 1 luce, Saturday. V. Yacnvino, 18, of 9.1 dccl, Part Heading, has | his basic Naval Jrntn- S. Naval Training Sta- pnei, R. I., and has been :,, niu-nil « school for iiiiiiianceiiu'ii, IJe al- .MicllirjilKi: Hiffh School. Second Class Phyllis m, i.y. (if Isplin, has com- , induction training with . i s at Hunter College, ml !' now undergoing : „• •unrekeenr-r ut Mill- \\,,man's College, Geor- ihi' daughter of Mr. il:ii',,lil A. Muuncey, of •i and is a graduate ..•!••,• High School. Seel, son of Mr. and Si el, of Woodbridge, ,ii-f(>m'd to the A. S. . A. and M,, College ;i,h Minchello, son of n;ii inn, of '11 Turner i Heading, is now ata- ;iiii|i Ma-xey, Texas. i haney, son of Mr, and [•I- fhaney, of East, i i. Woodbridge, is now HI .seaman stationed >;s N'lival Training Sta- ".ii, K. I. . Rationii Unit Seeks Volunteers Meeting Monday For Women Who Will Serve A« Price Panel Assistants WOODHRIDGK ----- Patriotic Woodbridge Township, Curterel and Met,uchen women, who wish/tV offer their nrrvicea as Price Pnne' Assistants, are asked to 'attend i meeting of the War Price and Ra tioning Hoard Monday night'iT eight o'clock in the Memorial Mu nicipal Building, here. Price Panel Assistants will sem as liaison officer* between consum cr, merchants and board. Thci Job will he to disseminate infor- mation on all of OPA's activities so t'hat the public may be full.\ informed us how it is affected b the vitfious price control and ra tinning programs. 1 ! > t The panel's first Worts will be directed toward the maintaining of the ceiling prices which are listed in this issue. In announc- ing the coiling price, OPA officials said: "The housewife now has a c^'ar Here's Those Ceiling Prices! Mrs. Housewife flow Can Tell How Much Mr. Grocer May Charge Her Far Any Particular Item Swirksy, son of Morris Swirksy, St. iiuc, Avencl, is sta- l.iss UK A, 1115 East levanl, Kansas City, i-r Robert PolhamuJ r Mr. and MrR. Rieh- . <if Florence Avenue, ; been transferred ins, Tennessee to a'lfuniill. and well-defined share in U>«-vvar effort. If she pays the ceiling price a? announced today by the OPA for everything she buys for her family's food, and not one cent more, she is holding the line against inflation, i f she pnys more, she cracks the line. Through the breach flow strikes for higher wages, higher prices and on an< on, up and up. Every loss of i day's work by strikes hampers the war effort, slows down action wastes the lives of boys. "Arguing the prices at markets but yielding fehe cent or two in the end, has been one of the nor mal privileges, almost one of th normal sports of the home pur chasing agent., But now there ii a war, and the housewife is a: important a member of the wai forces as any soldier. He yield no ground in personal combe with the foe. Nor must she. It .nttloagar n-xeator » nickaL It' victory or defeat." Any woman interested in join ing the Price Panel Assistant! WOODBKIDGE—CeiliiiK prices for canned fruits, vegetables,' soups and juices have been entablished iti this area and no seller may chArge more than the ceil- ing prices fixed and posted for his particular class of retailer. ' ^ The classes have been defined as follows: Class 1, Independent, retail stores with annual gross sales of less than $5(),000; Class 2, independent retail atorea with annual Kross sales of $50,000 or more but less than $250,000; Class 3, retail stores with annual gross .sales of less than $250^)00; Class 4,.any retail store with annual gross sales of $250,000. Farmers arc con- sidered Class 1 retailers. All retail stores must post.in a conspicuous place a list of ceiling prices. In order'to aid the merchants, this newspaper is printing complete lists which will be distributed without charge to all stores in the mu- nicipality.. The following is the list of food items and the community ceiling prices established: GROCERIES Ceiling prices (in cents) by (lass nf Retailor Class Class Class Class ABYFOOD Strained Soupy and It'echnut, <i'i-oz. glass 9 Chopped Fruits, Vegetables and Soups <(>erhnut, IVt-ni. gla*s - ..' 12 3READ fWrapped) B. (.;,—White 1943 Baronet, WHS Yearbook, Dedicated To Victory Of U. S. Who's Who Among Graduates Told In Those Who Rate' group is welcome to attend Mon- day night's meeting when the du- ticn of the group will be thor- oughly explained by rationing ex- perts. 18$ To Receive Diplomas At No. 11 nibonv tlelat'dino, feu days with his par- il Mis. Frank Uelar- liiiit Street, C»lonia. , C Goltian, II. S. N., -•!-( ijtit are l-ht parents ilanK'liter born at the f!:jM' llohpital, Lake- . d u l t iii<> is the former i P. Murtino, of Wood- \lbcrt Thompson, Jr., 'i Ceiijer Field, Wash- •^iM'iiflinjf :i seven-day nli his parents, Mr, and Thompson, of Colum- Sergeants William I•'• 'lny, (if Livke Geneva, ius of ithe Thompsons, "'il at Camp Kilmer, ii the Thompson family ' -nielli, »v:ucii, .-ehotil .seaman accuiK is now attend at Little Creek I s I ; > 1 I Pius l.aiini, son of i •1'i.M/ph Lunni, of 64 Ful- '. Woodbiidgc, was re •'•aduated ifrom the Cha i'l School of the Army Ai huieii! Training Com •'•"iiitf Field, III, Whlli ' was trained in variou; I "pei-ations vital to bh •nice of the country 1 fight ' 1| ' I'erick, of Cliff Road "• >•- Ki'ttiiiK his .basic train 1 "' "• S. N. R.,at the. U. I raining Station, Ncwpor Ku/.miuk, s^n of Mr. an '"'.un Kiumiak, of Aven bus been transferred fro Weld, Miss., to Portlan WOODBRIDGK—One hundred d four girls and eigJity-foui' ys will receive diplomas at the ghth grade commencement e*er- ses of School No, II Tuesday tcrnoon at the Woodbridge High chool Audituriuiii. The complete program will be follows: Overture, "Famous /adzes," school orchestra; proces- onal, "Priest March," school or- hestra; Salute, led by Lowell "Mc- jellan, class and audience; "Amei 1 - a," class und audience; address welcome, Helen Friedman I <>ng!' "Spring Heaven," selected horus; recitation, Virginia Force; indentation of class, VicUu' C. icklas, supervising principal; warding of diplomas, James C. iler, vice, president of the Board iff Education; class song, words by Svelyn JUcCullayh; closing, "Star pangled Banner"; recessional, 'KnighLs of Honor," school or- hastra. The graduates are: Dorothy Al- ma.si, Patricia Anderson, Cecelia 11 ..11 Whole Wheat ,™.~- Jl Wonder—White' 11 tyc 11- .Vhole Wheat 11 aystee—White 11 Rye U Whole Wheat , 11 ilver Cup—White : 11 Tip Top—White 11 Rye 11 Whole Whc»t -.«•...: : H Fischers—White * H . Rye 11 Whole Wheat H Bond—White U Rye 11 Whole Wheat , H Marvel—White (24 oz.) White (18 oz.) Supreme—White (18 oz.) Victor—White (small) A*P—Whjte Sandwich CANNED CITRUS FRUITS AND JUICES ; &R.A.PEFIUJIT JUIGJjL^..*, , White Hose, sweetened, # 2 can K' White Hose, sweetened, •lfi-oz. can 3(i White Rose, unsweetened, # 2 can "> White Hose, unsweetened, 46-oz. can Premier, unsweetened, #2 can Premier, sweetened, 40-os, can Flagstaff, # 2 can Flagstaff, 4't-o/,. can - Gltnyood, # 2 can - (ilenwood, 4f>-i>z. can Fame, # 2 can F-ame, 47-w.. can ,,.... .' Diamond, # 2 can .-- Diamond, 47-oz. can Filigree, unsweetened, # 2 can Filigree, unsweetened, 4(»-uz, can ..... CANNED VEGETABLES AND JUICES BEANS College Town, whole string beans, # 2 can Flagstaff;; cut green beans, # 2 can FWgstarf, whole stringless, #2 car* "Flagstaff, nTFwaTTi'eiins, #2 ciiii (ireen Circle, cut green beans, # 2 can .... Hub City, cut green beans, # 2 can ...... Premier, fancy sliced green lienns, f 2 can Premier, cuL wax beans, #2 tan -4 White Rose, cut green beans, lli-oz. glass White Rose, whole green beans, lli-oz. glass White Hose, French style beans, # 2 can While Rose, cut wax beans, l(i-oz. glass Diamond, cut green, # 2 can Diamond, cut wax, # 2 can .... Uco, cut wax, #2 Can Uco, whole. Jtefugee,- # 2 can Filigree, French style, #2u-an Filigree.'fiit green, #2 can Fame, cut green, #2 can Fume, cut wax, # 2 can Fame, French style, # 2 can Krasdale, cut wax, #2 can Krasdaie, cut green, #2 can 12 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 n n ii n n n n ii ii :t<5 lc sa 1G 37 17 I! 7 16 38 lfi I! 6 23 1!) 215 19 1H l(i 17 10 l'J 21 i;t 20 23 17 16 18 18 18 l'J 17 Artyni, Geraldiue Army, Betty Ayers, Evelyn Baldwin, Anna B:i- site, Carol Bartlett, Letitia Beck- Accordion Ensemble Griffith Award l)(;E~rhe Accordion ihe Woodbl-idge High won »n award tr, Dorothy Blanchard, Breil, Charlpbte, Brown, Milicent Brown, 'Laufa E. Burch, Theresa. Camilleri, Margiirka Clnkota, Flor- nce Cohen, Rose M. taprero, June. u Ooogan, Sara D»nley, Bernico Daroci, Jean Davis, Charlotte M. De Bochlcr, VirgiiiwtJetfler, Cath- (Continued on Page 6) Ration Board Revokes Motorist's Basic A Book WOODBIUDGE—One motor- ist had Ma Basic A. gasoline ra- tion book revoked at a meet- ing held this week by the local War price and Ration Hoard. He waa'Philip E. Kollien, of 292 •Central Avenue, Metuchen, Two other'violators summon- ed gave good excuses for being on .the road and were not penal- Del Monte, early garden whole green, #2 can ;-p A4P, whole .stringless, # 2 can J .... BEETS College Town, sliced, Ki-oz. glass College Town whole, lli-oz. glass College Town, whole, #2Ms can Flagstaff, sliced, # 2 can Flagstaff, whole, #2 can Premier, sliced, 10-oz. glass 20 13 17 n; 1'iusioii fr,, m the Griffith M'"undatlnn as a mult of in jta annual au I. -Fmer is the group. 14 13 14 13 13 13 13 14 11 14 12 It. Williamson Hart In AirplaneAcadent WOODBRuDGE—U. B. WIUww*" 1 - J G l 8 Frederick White Hose, sliced # 2 can White Rose, sliced, lli-oz. glass - White Rose, diced, lti-oz. ghiss White Rose, cut, lli-oz. glass ....« - Diamond, sliced, # 2 can ' Diamond, sliced, 16^, glass Krasdale, sliced, # 2 can - Krasdale, whole, #2-can - v Krasdale, cut, #2% can -,--• lona, sliced, #2 iw A&P, whole, # 2 can CARROTS White Rose, diced, 1,6-oz. glass ..... White Rose, shoo string, lfl-oz. glass .... Krandale, diced, #2 can CORN College Town, crushed, white, # 2 can ..:. College Town, crushed golden, #2 can Del Mai*, n'ibleU? 12-02. can 16 Del Monte, crushed white, 17-os. can. 14 '36 lfi 36 1.6 32 16 37 17 37 1G 38 lfi 36 23 19 22 1!) 17 If l'J 1!) 21 15 13 21 1!) 1!) , 22 17! 16 ..,17 ' 17 17 19 17 20 13 16 10 .12 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 11 14 12 12 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 10 8 8 6 11 15 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 10 8 8 6 11 15 Patrolman Daniel Panconi WOODBR1DC.E Patrolman Psnconi wat elected president nf the Patrolmen'i Benevolent Allocation at the annual meet- ing held Monday afternoon. Others sleeted wore: Frank Ssallar, vice president; Nell LanWhWn, treasurer; Cloiindp Znktiro, financial lecretary; Fred Linn, recording lecretar^; Fred Leidner, itate delegate and H«nry Dunham and John Man- ton, delegate) to the convention; William Majoros, truitee for three yeart and John Ondcyko, tergeant-at-armi, ^ Travel To Summer Homes Is Banned 13 30 13 30 WOODBRIDCE •-- The local War Price and Ration Hoard lias received word that several per- sons are mulct the iuipressiun that they may travel to summer .homes on basic rations. Travel to summer homes for vacation pur- poses and not in connection with an occupation is not personal necessity driving, the board has ruled. However when a summer* home was opened prior to the pleasure driving ban one Uip is permissible in the absence of alternative means of -transportation, if neces- sary to close the home to prevent damage to property. The board has also announced that some auto hooks expire in July and they cannot be restored in June. The critical situation Which confronted war industries and war workers a little over a month ago when gasoline inven- tories in the eastern shortage area dropped far below normal, has now become acute, There is now an out-aml-Tiut reduction in "Ii" and "C" rations of III 2/3'i. This leaves absolutely no gasoline for pleasure driving. Basic "D" rations for motorcy- cles may be renewed either at th Board or by mail and should be completed by July 21, l!)4.!i. "A" books in this area do not expire until November 21, , r 0 « . ' Tr A" holders will therefore, not renew their basic rations at this time. The applicant for renowal of basic "D" rations 'will obtain're- newal form at the board after June 22, 1!M3. , W OO1VHR1 !Hi R—"We, the atn of Ml!, proudly dedicate our l!iin>net In Victory for the. United Mali", 'of America hnd her gallant Allici." So rcajs. the dertlcntinn of the ink. "IVarone't" distributfil thi< week to the gradunting CIBSP i»f Woinlbridge High School. The editors of the book have seen In it that there is plenty of humor in it, but nt the same time have reuli-ml the seriousness of I in* times. In nn article entitled "liet's Face It," they predict thiit M'urcs of the class •will noon be in Ihe various services or in defense work. They conclude, "While «t the present some phase of defense work confronts every one of us, Minner, we hope, than expect, thh mess will be over, and we can nil tto more just what we warrt, We'll have a wprld fucc of l'A, numbei' 17, gas coupntis, ration 'cards, meatless days and all the many ills and inconveniences that are f»s- tercd by war. .Then we can iook back' on this Tlyr-ofiildhood ns B nation, and remember and think, and not let it ever happ"n again, that niivn shaft be sJavD of Miirn." "Those Who Rate" was the title selected for this year's "Hall of Fame." In it Marie 'Pellegrino is listed us the "most ambitious" and as the student who "did most for the class." StHnley-Potter won the title nf "most all-around" while June Bnufniak, according to the editors, was the "most studious." The most envied designations, those, of being the "most popular Mid prettie"l |tirl" wi'iil to Y,\'• lyn Si in ill. The t'Xtiriurtt in In itrht lid not i";eape cither I'm Kd Cook wns iiitini'd 'V'hiss shrini]!" :in.| Teddy Itrumnumd the "elm- iriunt" (Confirwrd vn I'tv/r rt) 'Most Likely To Succeed' Students Begin Tin Can Drive Salvage Money Ear- marked For Defense; Council Lists Expenses -A specitl i vc to collect "prepared" tin IIH will Mart Monday in tH« "wnship, Mrs, Chester G. Peck, Imirmiin of the SHIVHRC fommit- . tie «f ihe Defense Council, m- ni'iinced today. All Jioimewives :irc asked givi 1 i heir tin cans, proprrly washed and |ve|mii'il, to any student gttendlnjf Township schools. The cin« will 'ie collected from the whnols on •lune IS, the closing date for pub-' "<• M'hools in the Township. Mrs. Peck urges all housewives i niiikc nn effort in get Ihe cana o thr varimis scheols as there are Edwin F. Potter, Jr. 7 Incidents Make Blackout 'Realistic' Party To Take Place Of Junior Police Trip WOODBRIDGE Public, co- operation was excellent in the tri- state blackout held Tuesday night, Thomas Z, Humphrey, executive, director of the local Defense Coun cil said. In line 'with a request made by Leonard Dvcyftftis, State Diredtor of Civilian Defense, seven inci- dents planned ahead of time wer used and' all departments in th defense set-up showed a thoroug knowledge of the work expected o them. ' As the bomber.-; assigned by thi Army circled over the area ,gian searchlights lighted up the ski which was starless. The yellow alert was received at '.I:1S o'clock with the first audi- ble "blue" signal sounded at !):2'J. The "red" signal was received ut !):r>4 and the second "blue." at 10:27. The all clear came at 10:43. Officials of the defense council today cautioned 1 residents of the Township ito "learn t)he sighala ami their meaning," They pointed out that the Army might decide at any time to flash a "red" signal .with- out warning, eliminating the first, "blue" entirely. Or they may fol- low the secoftd lf bluc" with an- other "red" signal. , The Council also requested resi- dents not to phono during a black- out. The telephone company has informed'jthe council-that during recent blackout* the lines in the Township were overtaxed by un- necessary telephone calls made by householders. fulcan Leads Drive With $200 Donation WOIIDIIUIMCK The Vulciui 'dinning Company, of SFwnrcn, the drive for funds by the Woudbridge Township F.mergoncy Squad with a donation of $200. The squad is conducting iU-> Irive by letter which should con- tact every resident in the Town- ship. However, it is possible that a few liudvertenlly might have been "ov»>'looked so all those, who wish to contribute may do s» by sending their liuiiKtintis "to Squad Headquarters, 418 School Street Woodi>ridge. Other donations re ceived this week were as follows: $50 M. D. Valentine & Bros. Co. $25 Fords Fire Company. No. 1, Ar thur Uuinn, Middlesex Concret Products. $10 Mothers' Chili of Wnudbritlgc. $5 Woman's Club of Fords. Township Women Asked To Join WAAC 17 23 17 23 j -, Kuen though-the gas ban* has made it impossible for the Junior 1'olic.e Patrol to have its annual outing to Palisades Park this year, Captuin Benjamin Parsons has seen to it that the w,ork of the boys will not go unrewarded. For tomorrow afternoon nt two o'clock Captain Parsons will he host at a party to be held for the Junior Police in Nfl. 11 School Auditorium. There will be moving pictures, five acts of vaudeville from New York and refreshments. VOLUNTEERS NEEDEt) WOQDiHRLDGE More, volun- teers are needed in Che Medical Department of the Local Defense Council, Dr. I. T. Spencer, chief of the service, announced today. Those ncedtil are stretcher bear- ers, first aiders, registered nurses, ambulance drovers. If you have a station wagon or light delivery ti uck or other conveyance that coukl bo used as an ambulance in case of emergency register at the Defense Council in the Memorial Municipal Building. WOODIIKIIKIK -• With K,HIM) WAAC's to lie recruited in North- ern New Jersey alone before July 1, when the drive for "10,001) re- cruits in the nation conies to a close, the recruiting station in New Brunswick has issued a call to the colors to women in the Tuwuship,. - - Kspe.cially needed are women for administrative work, radio and communications, cooks and bak- ers, recruiting workers, candidates for officers' training and motor transport \v o r k e r s including chauffeurs, mechanics and I'epair- meii on Army two-ton trucks. WAACS receive their basic training in one of live Army train- ing centers located 'at Kort Des Moines, Iowa; Daytoiia Bench, Florida; Fort ("tjlulluii'pc, 1 (ieor- gia; Camp Huston, Louisiana and Fort Devuns, Mass. Enrollment in the WAAC. is open to American women who are citizens of the United Stales be- tween the ages of 21 and -t-1, in- rcliisive w-ho have at least two yew of high school or its equiva- lent, have no dependents under 14 years of age and esin ilieet the mental and physical requirements. WAACs may be assigned as ac- C t d mi Piii/t' <>] ! the giiB shorlafti-, to have a house- In house eiuivatjg, ,» ,«> ^ Since Ihe first of the year the Salvage Committee has turned "ver tiLihe Township ll.UOl.lfl (or the *i\w uf scr«p material. This ' money is earmarked for Civilian Deleiise |iuiposvs. , H«l(-W,y M*rlc The iippinpiiution for Civilian '• Defense for Ihe entire year 1043 $7,000. To date at the half- 'ar mark the Defense Council has ent $2.iyi!.;iii. Taking into con* lerntion that *$ 1 ,n0O has already eii turned into. .the. ..Township 1 ...- rcasuivr fm- salvage sales, the lefense snt-uji (if the Township as cost the UxpayerH fGUA so far his year. If n sufficient amount f monies is realized through the i ale uf tin cum, and scrap m«Ul« u the remainder of the year, t is possible- that the Council wil\ able to cover it." entire appro- priation without any cost to the ax|Hiyer:i. Of the *2,]aii.,-)C spent to date few of ihe items are mandatory such as $20(1 monthly to the New Jersey Hell Telt^ihorie Company 'for leasing of lines' : fhr" the sirens aenir flfi .to date for power paid to Public Service. The part-time clerk's salary has amounted to $1HO since the first of the netd* tt> ilutc. ^ Breakdown Of Expeniei The breakdown of the $2,100.56 spent is us follows: New Jersey Hell Telephone,' $l,i.:i. r >.!)7 (this figure includes thu miir.ila.tory item of $1,080 r or l eas . ing of lines for sirento ind $205.97 for the. usu of -) inoominj phones iind fivt' outgoing phones which are necessary during blackouts); ai- rens (l'ublie Service and Repairs), ?iil; Auxiliary Police, £137.80; Auxiliary Firemen, $2\; Air Raid Wardens, $102.50; Medical Do- par-tment, $11!).52; Rescue Depart- ment, $1-1.72.; MesKengers and Couriers und Telephone Popart* ment.^ll.riO; olliee supplies, in- eluding pcstaire, $2HH.84; SaLvage Department, $i), r ..21; part-time sal- ary for clerk, $180; miscellaneous, $10.51. 1 Prisoner Stabs Reformatory Inmate 10 2 Township Residents Win State Scholarships 'WOODiBRIilXiE—Kdwin F. Pot- ter, Jr., and Dorothy O. Mtggison, of Fords, were among the 210 who were announced today ai'recipi- ents of State Scholarship;; in thv class pt 1947 ut Rutgers. . The a'yardfe, made on the basis 13 Mayor Suggests Public Works Meeting To Solve Road Problems Wetterberg, Green Street, has recov. f 13 13 12 14. 17 is now back on/duty. Del Monl,e, crushed golden, 17-ta. can.. Del Monte, whole golden Y»^ t»«t, 12-oz. can T ,---- : Flatrsttjff, cru»hed golden, #SJ i can-.. 1 14 14 14 16 15 in 13 12 14 17 16 14 14 14 15 14 13 12- 12 12 13 VI 12 (Continued on Page 4) of scholastic attainment, inttilluc- tual ability, .charagtur, evidence of leadership, health and financial- need, eover tuition, and all fees with minor exceptions. They were established- by State Legislature in 1937. Mit» Meggisoh will enroll at the New Jersey College for Women,in September and Mr. Potter in Kut- gers In July. The latter will bo ftHUfcle 1 for enlistment'in the vwi- oua rawrve branches uf the armed ferim He will be required to take two y$ai'8 of basic -military training as a member of the Re- serve Offi«ere Training Corps. WOOI>RR ! It>GK— A conference of the inembeiti of the Public Works Committee will be held in the near future, following a. sug- gestion made by Mayor August F. Greiner, in an effort to solve the problem of road repairs in the Ttiwuship. T}ie much hashed-ovcr subject was again brought up at ft meet- ing' of the Township Committee Monday when William B. <Jery, Oinmitteeman from. tKe Third Ward complained against the con- dition of the roads in his district. He declared "that the road depart- ment payroll.W just the «ame artd if there -was not enough of an- ap r «J«. »m in jjpi of a special on«i James BcherTrlck,' ehairhwn of the Public Wortai iCoinmittea stated that ' W are doin^ all we can and we eaa't perform miracle; with what we have to du it with. Iveryone wants a little work don rul by the time we get back to the first road, it's in bad condition gain." Mayor Greiner then suggested that the Public Works Committee "sit down, go oviir all the details and decide where and how the work was to V done in each ward. It shguld be worked oii't that way us .there is a reyi-esftntiitive of eucK ward an the comiiiiUee." ' The Mayor's tiugigestion was adopted. John Wirtz, uf Cooper Avenue, Iselin,' appeared at the meeting and complained about the condi- tion of his street'. He «aid |hat last year several children became ill from "playing in the mudhol«&" The Township Engineer wan In- structed ta remedy the situation if possible. Philip Cin- tuia, 21) and Tliumas Ue Maio, 21, bittll of Newark, hulli inmate'; of t-lie New Jersey Keformiitory at Avencl, Were ordered held for 'the grand jury withaut hail on charges of atrocious assault and butjtery tind attempt tVi kill when they ap-. ' iwitred before Kecxirder Arbhur .Brown Tuesday on a complaint of K'ta-bbing u third inmate, Andrew Sudol, 2G, of Passaic. The twn were then returned to the, custody of .Lieut; Culp of the Reforma- tory and brought back to the. in- stitution. Sqdol, -who is in the prison hos- pital, is in "fair" condition. Police Ohieif George E. Keating assigrte'd Captain John Egan and Lieutfcn- an-t George Baliut to the case. The local officers snid they learned that- the stabbed man had urouiMHiJhe animosity of the other) two hfina'tes who hud threatened from time to time to "getV him. Tuesday while the. prisoners w«re getting their exercises in the rec- reation yard, Cintura and DeMaio came up behind Sudol, the au- thoritiea said, thre-w him t<! the ground and'knifed him. Sudol was beaten bofore the, guards cou 1 il come to his rescue. /The knife used was made of •scrap steel and tableware, rubbed duwn on a stone to a dagger-like shape. Conrad Schrimpe To Wed Southern Girl Tomorrow WOO.DBRIDGE Miss Helen Trt'nthani,iUughter of Prof, and Mra, Otis Tl'entham, of Arfhville. N. O., will become the bride of Conrad Cajivpbxll Schrimpe, son-of Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Schrimpe, of 17!! tfinjii Stj-eat, tomorrow at St, Lawrence Church, Ashville. Thtt bride-to-be received her college At- gree Monday.

BACK UP YOUR BOY Mepenbent Heaber - DigiFind-It · Price Panel Assistants will sem as liaison officer* between consum cr, merchants and board. Thci Job will he to disseminate infor-mation

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    0

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: BACK UP YOUR BOY Mepenbent Heaber - DigiFind-It · Price Panel Assistants will sem as liaison officer* between consum cr, merchants and board. Thci Job will he to disseminate infor-mation

BACK UPYOUR BOYBuya» Additional

Bond Today Mepenbent - Heaber TWY6IVE THEIRIIVIS—YOU LEND

YOUR MONEY"Buy Mor*

Wor Bondi Toooy

XXXV.-No. 12 KmMi,.

Tint 1(IITlio, Wo

lfl'irt tniitlor.lhrldgo, N.

WOODBRIDGK, N. J., FRIDAY, ,11'NK I !•! jhi IK «ri>(<n HI., Woodl>rldKi>, N. .1.

PRICE FIVE

Mi

.liinlnt, Ihifl

1'. X. N., is spending

I,is parents, Mr, and

< Janlot, «f Edgar

,,n,lli.v Hiirkclcw,

;,„, 11. S. N., in training

, ('illicit'1, visited Her pa-

;I,HI Mrs, Orvillc Barke-

l i i l l h a n i

ing

1 luce, Saturday.

V. Yacnvino, 18, of 9.1dccl, Part Heading, has| his basic Naval Jrntn-

S. Naval Training Sta-pnei, R. I., and has been:,, niu-nil « school for

i i i i i i i a n c e i i u ' i i , IJe a l -

.MicllirjilKi: Hiffh S c h o o l .

Second Class Phyllism, i.y. (if Isplin, has com-, induction training with. i s at Hunter College,

ml !' now undergoing: „• •unrekeenr-r ut Mill-\\,,man's College, Geor-

ihi' daughter of Mr.il:ii',,lil A. Muuncey, of•i and is a graduate..•!••,• High School.

Seel, son of Mr. andSi el, of Woodbridge,

,ii-f(>m'd to the A. S.. A. and M,, College

;i,h Minchello, son ofn;ii inn, of '11 Turner

i Heading, is now ata-;iiii|i Ma-xey, Texas.

i haney, son of Mr, and[•I- fhaney, of East,i i. Woodbridge, is nowHI .seaman stationed>;s N'lival Training Sta-".ii, K. I. .

RationiiUnit SeeksVolunteersMeeting Monday ForWomen Who Will Serve A«Price Panel Assistants

WOODHRIDGK ----- P a t r i o t i cWoodbridge Township, Curtereland Met,uchen women, who wish/tVoffer their nrrvicea as Price Pnne'Assistants, are asked to 'attend imeeting of the War Price and Rationing Hoard Monday night'iTeight o'clock in the Memorial Municipal Building, here.

Price Panel Assistants will semas liaison officer* between consumcr, merchants and board. ThciJob will he to disseminate infor-mation on all of OPA's activitiesso t'hat the public may be full.\informed us how it is affected bthe vitfious price control and ratinning programs.1! > t

The panel's first Worts will bedirected toward the maintainingof the ceiling prices which arelisted in this issue. In announc-ing the coiling price, OPA officialssaid:

"The housewife now has a c^'ar

Here's Those Ceiling Prices!Mrs. Housewife flow Can Tell How Much Mr. Grocer

May Charge Her Far Any Particular Item

Swirksy, son ofMorris Swirksy, St.

iiuc, Avencl, is sta-l.iss UK A, 1115 Eastlevanl, Kansas City,

i-r Robert PolhamuJr Mr. and MrR. Rieh-

. <if Florence Avenue,; been transferredins, Tennessee toa'lfuniill.

and well-defined share in U>«-vvareffort. If she pays the ceiling pricea? announced today by the OPAfor everything she buys for herfamily's food, and not one centmore, she is holding the lineagainst inflation, i f she pnysmore, she cracks the line. Throughthe breach flow strikes for higherwages, higher prices and on an<on, up and up. Every loss of iday's work by strikes hampers thewar effort, slows down actionwastes the lives of boys.

"Arguing the prices at marketsbut yielding fehe cent or two inthe end, has been one of the normal privileges, almost one of thnormal sports of the home purchasing agent., But now there iia war, and the housewife is a:important a member of the waiforces as any soldier. He yieldno ground in personal combewith the foe. Nor must she. It.nttloagar n-xeator » nickaL It'victory or defeat."

Any woman interested in joining the Price Panel Assistant!

WOODBKIDGE—CeiliiiK prices for canned fruits,vegetables,' soups and juices have been entablished itithis area and no seller may chArge more than the ceil-ing prices fixed and posted for his particular class ofretailer. ' ^

The classes have been defined as follows: Class1, Independent, retail stores with annual gross sales ofless than $5(),000; Class 2, independent retail atoreawith annual Kross sales of $50,000 or more but lessthan $250,000; Class 3, retail stores with annual gross.sales of less than $250^)00; Class 4,.any retail storewith annual gross sales of $250,000. Farmers arc con-sidered Class 1 retailers.

All retail stores must post.in a conspicuous placea list of ceiling prices. In order'to aid the merchants,this newspaper is printing complete lists which willbe distributed without charge to all stores in the mu-nicipality..

The following is the list of food items and thecommunity ceiling prices established:

GROCERIESCeiling prices (in cents) by (lass nf Retailor

Class Class Class Class

ABYFOODStrained Soupy and

It'echnut, <i'i-oz. glass 9Chopped Fruits, Vegetables and Soups

<(>erhnut, IVt-ni. gla*s - ..' 12

3READ fWrapped)B. (.;,—White

1943 Baronet, WHS Yearbook,Dedicated To Victory Of U. S.

Who's Who AmongGraduates Told InThose Who Rate'

group is welcome to attend Mon-day night's meeting when the du-ticn of the group will be thor-oughly explained by rationing ex-perts.

18$ To ReceiveDiplomas At No. 11

nibonv tlelat'dino,feu days with his par-

il Mis. Frank Uelar-liiiit Street, C»lonia.

, C Goltian, II. S. N.,-•!-( ijtit are l-ht p a r e n t s

ilanK'liter born a t thef!:jM' llohpital, Lake-

. d u l t iii<> is t h e f o r m e r

i P. Murtino, of Wood-

\lbcrt Thompson, Jr.,'i Ceiijer Field, Wash-• iM'iiflinjf :i seven-day

nli his parents, Mr, andThompson, of Colum-

Sergeants WilliamI•'• 'lny, (if Livke Geneva,ius of ithe Thompsons,"'il at Camp Kilmer,

ii the Thompson family

' -nie l l i ,

»v:ucii,.-ehotil

.seaman accuiKis now attendat Little Creek

I s I

; >1 I Pius l.aiini, son of i

•1'i.M/ph Lunni, of 64 Ful-'. Woodbiidgc, was re

•'•aduated ifrom the Chai'l School of the Army Ai

huieii! Training Com•'•"iiitf Field, III, Whlli

' was trained in variou;I "pei-ations vital to bh•nice of the country1 fight

' 1 | ' I 'erick, of Cliff Road"• >•- Ki'ttiiiK his .basic t r a in1"' " • S. N. R . , a t the. U.I raining Station, Ncwpor

Ku/.miuk, s^n of Mr. an'"'.un Kiumiak, of Avenbus been transferred froWeld, Miss., to Portlan

WOODBRIDGK—One hundredd four girls and eigJity-foui'ys will receive diplomas at the

ghth grade commencement e*er-ses of School No, II Tuesdaytcrnoon at the Woodbridge High

chool Audituriuiii.The complete program will be

follows: Overture, "Famous/adzes," school orchestra; proces-onal, "Priest March," school or-hestra; Salute, led by Lowell "Mc-jellan, class and audience; "Amei1-a," class und audience; address

welcome, Helen Friedman I<>ng!' "Spring Heaven," selectedhorus; recitation, Virginia Force;indentation of class, VicUu' C.icklas, supervising principal;warding of diplomas, James C.iler, vice, president of the Board

iff Education; class song, words bySvelyn JUcCullayh; closing, "Starpangled Banner"; recessional,'KnighLs of Honor," school or-hastra.

The graduates are: Dorothy Al-ma.si, Patricia Anderson, Cecelia

11

..11Whole Wheat ,™.~- J lWonder—White' 11tyc 11-.Vhole Wheat 11aystee—White 11

Rye UWhole Wheat , 11

ilver Cup—White : 11Tip Top—White 11Rye 11Whole Whc»t -.«•...: : HFischers—White * H .Rye 11Whole Wheat HBond—White URye 11Whole Wheat , HMarvel—White (24 oz.)White (18 oz.)Supreme—White (18 oz.)Victor—White (small)A*P—Whjte Sandwich

CANNED CITRUS FRUITS AND JUICES; &R.A.PEFIUJIT JUIGJjL^..*, ,White Hose, sweetened, # 2 can K'White Hose, sweetened, •lfi-oz. can 3(iWhite Rose, unsweetened, # 2 can ">White Hose, unsweetened, 46-oz. canPremier, unsweetened, #2 canPremier, sweetened, 40-os, canFlagstaff, # 2 canFlagstaff, 4't-o/,. can -Gltnyood, # 2 can -(ilenwood, 4f>-i>z. canFame, # 2 canF-ame, 47-w.. can ,,.... .'Diamond, #2 can .--Diamond, 47-oz. canFiligree, unsweetened, #2 canFiligree, unsweetened, 4(»-uz, can .....

CANNED VEGETABLES AND JUICESBEANS

College Town, whole string beans, #2 canFlagstaff;; cut green beans, # 2 canFWgstarf, whole stringless, # 2 car*"Flagstaff, nTFwaTTi'eiins, # 2 ciiii(ireen Circle, cut green beans, # 2 can ....Hub City, cut green beans, # 2 can ......Premier, fancy sliced green lienns, f 2 canPremier, cuL wax beans, # 2 tan -4White Rose, cut green beans, lli-oz. glassWhite Rose, whole green beans, lli-oz. glassWhite Hose, French style beans, #2 canWhile Rose, cut wax beans, l(i-oz. glassDiamond, cut green, # 2 canDiamond, cut wax, #2 can ....Uco, cut wax, # 2 CanUco, whole. Jtefugee,- #2 can •Filigree, French style, #2u-anFiligree.'fiit green, #2 canFame, cut green, #2 canFume, cut wax, #2 can •Fame, French style, # 2 can •Krasdale, cut wax, #2 canKrasdaie, cut green, #2 can

12

11

11

11

11

11

11

11

11

11

11

nniinnnniiii

:t<5lcsa1G37

17I! 7163 8lfiI! 6

231!)

215

19

1H

l(i

17

10

l'J

21

i;t

20

23

17

16

18

18

18

l'J

17

Artyni, Geraldiue Army, BettyAyers, Evelyn Baldwin, Anna B:i-site, Carol Bartlett, Letitia Beck-

Accordion EnsembleGriffith Award

l)(;E~rhe Accordionihe Woodbl-idge High

won »n award

tr, Dorothy Blanchard,Breil, Charlpbte, Brown, MilicentBrown, 'Laufa E. Burch, Theresa.Camilleri, Margiirka Clnkota, Flor-

nce Cohen, Rose M. taprero, June.u Ooogan, Sara D»nley, Bernico

Daroci, Jean Davis, Charlotte M.De Bochlcr, VirgiiiwtJetfler, Cath-

(Continued on Page 6)

Ration Board RevokesMotorist's Basic A Book

WOODBIUDGE—One motor-ist had Ma Basic A. gasoline ra-tion book revoked at a meet-ing held this week by the localWar price and Ration Hoard.He waa'Philip E. Kollien, of 292•Central Avenue, Metuchen,

Two other'violators summon-ed gave good excuses for beingon .the road and were not penal-

Del Monte, early garden whole green,

#2 can ; - pA4P, whole .stringless, # 2 can J....

BEETSCollege Town, sliced, Ki-oz. glassCollege Town whole, lli-oz. glassCollege Town, whole, #2Ms canFlagstaff, sliced, #2 canFlagstaff, whole, #2 canPremier, sliced, 10-oz. glass

20

1317

n;

1'iusioii fr,,m the GriffithM'"undatlnn as a m u l t of

in jta annual auI. -Fmer is

the group.

1413141313131314111412

It. Williamson HartIn AirplaneAcadent

WOODBRuDGE—U.

B. WIUww*"1- J G l 8

Frederick

White Hose, sliced # 2 canWhite Rose, sliced, lli-oz. glass -White Rose, diced, lti-oz. ghissWhite Rose, cut, lli-oz. glass ....« -Diamond, sliced, # 2 can 'Diamond, sliced, 1 6 ^ , glass •Krasdale, sliced, # 2 can -Krasdale, whole, #2 -can -vKrasdale, cut, # 2 % can -,--•lona, sliced, # 2 iwA&P, whole, # 2 can

• CARROTSWhite Rose, diced, 1,6-oz. glass .....White Rose, shoo string, lfl-oz. glass ....Krandale, diced, # 2 can

CORNCollege Town, crushed, white, # 2 can ..:.College Town, crushed golden, # 2 canDel Mai*, n'ibleU? 12-02. can 16Del Monte, crushed white, 17-os. can. 14

'36lfi361.6321637

17371G38lfi36

2319221!)17

Ifl'J

1!)

21

15

13

21

1!)

1!)

, 22

17!16

..,17' 17

171917

20

131610

.12

13131313131313111412

12

111111111111111111111111111111111111111088611

15

11

111111111111111111111111111111111111111088611

15

Patrolman Daniel Panconi

WOODBR1DC.E PatrolmanPsnconi wat elected presidentnf the Patrolmen'i BenevolentAllocation at the annual meet-ing held Monday afternoon.Others sleeted wore: FrankSsallar, vice president; NellLanWhWn, treasurer; CloiindpZnktiro, financial lecretary;Fred Linn, recording lecretar^;Fred Leidner, itate delegate andH«nry Dunham and John Man-ton, delegate) to the convention;William Majoros, truitee forthree yeart and John Ondcyko,tergeant-at-armi, ^

Travel To SummerHomes Is Banned

1330

13

30

WOODBRIDCE •-- The local

War Price and Ration Hoard lias

received word that several per-

sons are mulct the iuipressiun

that they may travel to summer

.homes on basic rations. Travel to

summer homes for vacation pur-

poses and not in connection with

an occupation is not personal

necessity driving, the board has

ruled.

However when a summer* homewas opened prior to the pleasuredriving ban one Uip is permissiblein the absence of alternativemeans of -transportation, if neces-sary to close the home to preventdamage to property.

The board has also announcedthat some auto hooks expire inJuly and they cannot be restoredin June. The critical situationWhich confronted war industriesand war workers a little over amonth ago when gasoline inven-tories in the eastern shortage areadropped far below normal, hasnow become acute, There is nowan out-aml-Tiut reduction in "Ii"and "C" rations of III 2 /3 ' i .This leaves absolutely no gasolinefor pleasure driving.

Basic "D" rations for motorcy-cles may be renewed either at thBoard or by mail and should becompleted by July 21, l!)4.!i. "A"books in this area do not expireuntil November 21, , r 0 « . 'TrA"holders will therefore, not renewtheir basic rations at this time.

The applicant for renowal ofbasic "D" rations 'will obtain're-newal form at the board afterJune 22, 1!M3. ,

W OO1VHR1 !Hi R—"We, theatn of Ml!, proudly dedicate our

l!iin>net In Victory for the. UnitedMali", 'of America hnd her gallantA l l i c i . "

So rcajs. the dertlcntinn of theink. "IVarone't" distributfil

thi< week to the gradunting CIBSPi»f Woinlbridge High School.

The editors of the book haveseen In it that there is plenty ofhumor in it, but nt the same timehave reuli-ml the seriousness ofI in* times. In nn article entitled"liet's Face It," they predict thiitM'urcs of the class •will noon be inIhe various services or in defensework. They conclude, "While «tthe present some phase of defensework confronts every one of us,Minner, we hope, than expect, thhmess will be over, and we can niltto more just what we warrt, We'llhave a wprld fucc of l'A, numbei'17, gas coupntis, ration 'cards,meatless days and all the many illsand inconveniences that are f»s-tercd by war. .Then we can iookback' on this Tlyr-ofiildhood ns Bnation, and remember and think,and not let it ever happ"n again,that niivn shaft be sJavD of Miirn."

"Those Who Rate" was the titleselected for this year's "Hall ofFame." In it Marie 'Pellegrino islisted us the "most ambitious" andas the student who "did most forthe class."

StHnley-Potter won the title nf"most all-around" while JuneBnufniak, according to the editors,was the "most studious."

The most envied designations,those, of being the "most popular

Mid p r e t t i e " l | t i r l " wi'iil to Y,\'•

lyn Si in ill. T h e t 'Xt i r iur t t in In itrht

lid not i" ;eape c i t h e r I'm Kd C o o k

w n s iiitini 'd 'V'hiss s h r i n i ] ! " : in. |

Teddy Itrumnumd the " e lm-iriunt"

(Confirwrd vn I'tv/r rt)

'Most Likely To Succeed'

StudentsBegin TinCan Drive

Salvage Money Ear-marked For Defense;Council Lists Expenses

- A s p e c i t li vc to collect "prepared" tinIIH will Mart Monday in tH«"wnship, Mrs, Chester G. Peck,Imirmiin of the SHIVHRC fommit- .

tie «f ihe Defense Council, m-ni'iinced today.

All Jioimewives :irc asked t« givi1

i heir tin cans, proprrly washed and|ve|mii'il, to any student gttendlnjfTownship schools. The cin« will'ie collected from the whnols on•lune IS, the closing date for pub- '"<• M'hools in the Township.

Mrs. Peck urges all housewives• i niiikc nn effort in get Ihe canao thr varimis scheols as there are

Edwin F. Potter, Jr.

7 Incidents MakeBlackout 'Realistic'

Party To Take PlaceOf Junior Police Trip

WOODBRIDGE — Public, co-operation was excellent in the tri-state blackout held Tuesday night,Thomas Z, Humphrey, executive,director of the local Defense Council said.

In line 'with a request made byLeonard Dvcyftftis, State Diredtorof Civilian Defense, seven inci-dents planned ahead of time werused and' all departments in thdefense set-up showed a thorougknowledge of the work expected othem. '

As the bomber.-; assigned by thiArmy circled over the area ,giansearchlights lighted up the skiwhich was starless.

The yellow alert was receivedat '.I:1S o'clock with the first audi-ble "blue" signal sounded at !):2'J.The "red" signal was received ut!):r>4 and the second "blue." at10:27. The all clear came at10:43.

Officials of the defense counciltoday cautioned1 residents of theTownship ito "learn t)he sighala amitheir meaning," They pointed outthat the Army might decide at anytime to flash a "red" signal .with-out warning, eliminating the first,"blue" entirely. Or they may fol-low the secoftd lfbluc" with an-other "red" signal., The Council also requested resi-dents not to phono during a black-out. The telephone company hasinformed'jthe council-that duringrecent blackout* the lines in theTownship were overtaxed by un-necessary telephone calls made byhouseholders.

fulcan Leads DriveWith $200 Donation

WOIIDIIUIMCK The Vulciui'dinning Company, of SFwnrcn,

the drive for funds by theWoudbridge Township F.mergoncySquad with a donation of $200.

The squad is conducting iU->Irive by letter which should con-tact every resident in the Town-ship. However, it is possible thata few liudvertenlly might havebeen "ov»>'looked so all those, whowish to contribute may do s» bysending their liuiiKtintis "to SquadHeadquarters, 418 School StreetWoodi>ridge. Other donations received this week were as follows:

$50M. D. Valentine & Bros. Co.

$25Fords Fire Company. No. 1, Ar

thur Uuinn, Middlesex ConcretProducts.

$10Mothers' Chili of Wnudbritlgc.

$5„ Woman's Club of Fords.

Township WomenAsked To Join WAAC

1723

1723

j - , Kuenthough-the gas ban* has made itimpossible for the Junior 1'olic.ePatrol to have its annual outingto Palisades Park this year,Captuin Benjamin Parsons hasseen to it that the w,ork of theboys will not go unrewarded.

For tomorrow afternoon nttwo o'clock Captain Parsons willhe host at a party to be held forthe Junior Police in Nfl. 11School Auditorium. There willbe moving pictures, five actsof vaudeville from New Yorkand refreshments.

VOLUNTEERS NEEDEt)WOQDiHRLDGE — More, volun-

teers are needed in Che MedicalDepartment of the Local DefenseCouncil, Dr. I. T. Spencer, chiefof the service, announced today.Those ncedtil are stretcher bear-ers, first aiders, registered nurses,ambulance drovers. If you have astation wagon or light deliveryti uck or other conveyance thatcoukl bo used as an ambulance incase of emergency register at theDefense Council in the MemorialMunicipal Building.

WOODIIKIIKIK - • With K,HIM)WAAC's to lie recruited in North-ern New Jersey alone before July1, when the drive for "10,001) re-cruits in the nation conies to aclose, the recruiting station inNew Brunswick has issued a callto the colors to women in the

Tuwuship,. - -Kspe.cially needed are women

for administrative work, radio andcommunications, cooks and bak-ers, recruiting workers, candidatesfor officers' training and motortransport \v o r k e r s includingchauffeurs, mechanics and I'epair-meii on Army two-ton trucks.

WAACS receive their basictraining in one of live Army train-ing centers located 'at Kort DesMoines, Iowa; Daytoiia Bench,Florida; Fort ("tjlulluii'pc,1 (ieor-gia; Camp Huston, Louisiana andFort Devuns, Mass.

Enrollment in the WAAC. isopen to American women who arecitizens of the United Stales be-tween the ages of 21 and -t-1, in-rcliisive w-ho have at least twoy e w of high school or its equiva-lent, have no dependents under 14years of age and esin ilieet themental and physical requirements.

WAACs may be assigned as ac-C t d mi Piii/t' <>]

!the giiB shorlafti-, to have a house-In house eiuivatjg, ,» ,«> ^

Since Ihe first of the year theSalvage Committee has turned"ver tiLihe Township ll.UOl.lfl (orthe *i\w uf scr«p material. This 'money is earmarked for CivilianDeleiise |iuiposvs. ,

H«l(-W,y M*rlc —The iippinpiiution for Civilian • '•

Defense for Ihe entire year 1043$7,000. To date at the half-

'ar mark the Defense Council hasent $2.iyi!.;iii. Taking into con*lerntion that *$ 1 ,n0O has alreadyeii turned into. .the. ..Township1...-

rcasuivr fm- salvage sales, thelefense snt-uji (if the Townshipas cost the UxpayerH fGUA so farhis year. If n sufficient amountf monies is realized through the iale uf tin cum, and scrap m«Ul«

u the remainder of the year,t is possible- that the Council wil\

able to cover it." entire appro-priation without any cost to theax|Hiyer:i.

Of the *2,]aii.,-)C spent to datefew of ihe items are mandatory

such as $20(1 monthly to the NewJersey Hell Telt^ihorie Company'for leasing of lines':fhr" the sirensaenir flfi .to date for power paid toPublic Service. The part-timeclerk's salary has amounted to$1HO since the first of the netd* tt>ilutc. ^

Breakdown Of ExpenieiThe breakdown of the $2,100.56

spent is us follows:New Jersey Hell Telephone,'

$l,i.:i.r>.!)7 (this figure includes thumiir.ila.tory item of $1,080 ro r l e a s .ing of lines for sirento ind $205.97for the. usu of -) inoominj phonesiind fivt' outgoing phones which arenecessary during blackouts); ai-rens (l'ublie Service and Repairs),?iil; Auxiliary Police, £137.80;Auxiliary Firemen, $2\; Air RaidWardens, $102.50; Medical Do-par-tment, $11!).52; Rescue Depart-ment, $1-1.72.; MesKengers andCouriers und Telephone Popart*ment.^ll .r iO; olliee supplies, in-eluding pcstaire, $2HH.84; SaLvageDepartment, $i),r..21; part-time sal-ary for clerk, $180; miscellaneous,$10.51. 1

Prisoner StabsReformatory Inmate

10

2 Township ResidentsWin State Scholarships

'WOODiBRIilXiE—Kdwin F. Pot-ter, Jr., and Dorothy O. Mtggison,of Fords, were among the 210 whowere announced today ai'recipi-ents of State Scholarship;; in thvclass pt 1947 ut Rutgers. .

The a'yardfe, made on the basis

13

Mayor Suggests Public WorksMeeting To Solve Road Problems

Wetterberg,Green Street, has recov. f

131312

1 4 .17

is now back on/duty.

Del Monl,e, crushed golden, 17-ta. can..Del Monte, whole golden Y»^ t»«t ,12-oz. can T • ,----:

Flatrsttjff, cru»hed golden, #SJ ican-..1

1414

141615

in •1312

1417161414

141514

1312-

12

1213VI

12

(Continued on Page 4)

of scholastic attainment, inttilluc-tual ability, .charagtur, evidence ofleadership, health and financial-need, eover tuition, and all feeswith minor exceptions. They wereestablished- by State Legislature in1937.

Mit» Meggisoh will enroll at theNew Jersey College for Women,inSeptember and Mr. Potter in Kut-gers In July. The latter will boftHUfcle1 for enlistment'in the vwi-oua rawrve branches uf the armedfer im He will be required totake two y$ai'8 of basic -militarytraining as a member of the Re-serve Offi«ere Training Corps.

WOOI>RR!It>GK— A conferenceof the inembeiti of the PublicWorks Committee will be held inthe near future, following a. sug-gestion made by Mayor August F.Greiner, in an effort to solve theproblem of road repairs in theTtiwuship.

T}ie much hashed-ovcr subjectwas again brought up at ft meet-ing' of the Township CommitteeMonday when William B. <Jery,Oinmitteeman from. tKe ThirdWard complained against the con-dition of the roads in his district.He declared "that the road depart-ment payroll.W just the «ame artdif there -was not enough of an- ap

r «J«. »m inj j p iof a special on«i

James BcherTrlck,' ehairhwn ofthe Public Wortai iCoinmitteastated that ' W are doin^ all wecan and we eaa't perform miracle;

with what we have to du it with.Iveryone wants a little work donrul by the time we get back to the

first road, it's in bad conditiongain."

Mayor Greiner then suggestedthat the Public Works Committee"sit down, go oviir all the detailsand decide where and how thework was to V done in each ward.It shguld be worked oii't that wayus .there is a reyi-esftntiitive of eucKward an the comiiiiUee." ' TheMayor's tiugigestion was adopted.

John Wirtz, uf Cooper Avenue,Iselin,' appeared at the meetingand complained about the condi-tion of his street'. He «aid |hatlast year several children becameill from "playing in the mudhol«&"The Township Engineer wan In-structed ta remedy the situation ifpossible.

— Philip Cin-tuia, 21) and Tliumas Ue Maio, 21,bittll of Newark, hulli inmate'; oft-lie New Jersey Keformiitory atAvencl, Were ordered held for 'thegrand jury withaut hail on chargesof atrocious assault and butjterytind attempt tVi kill when they ap-. 'iwitred before Kecxirder Arbhur.Brown Tuesday on a complaint ofK'ta-bbing u third inmate, AndrewSudol, 2G, of Passaic. The twnwere then returned to the, custodyof .Lieut; Culp of the Reforma-tory and brought back to the. in-stitution.

Sqdol, -who is in the prison hos-pital, is in "fair" condition. PoliceOhieif George E. Keating assigrte'dCaptain John Egan and Lieutfcn-an-t George Baliut to the case.

The local officers snid theylearned that- the stabbed man hadurouiMHiJhe animosity of the other)two hfina'tes who hud threatenedfrom time to time to "getV him.Tuesday while the. prisoners w«regetting their exercises in the rec-reation yard, Cintura and DeMaiocame up behind Sudol, the au-thoritiea said, thre-w him t<! theground and'knifed him. Sudolwas beaten bofore the, guardscou 1 il come to his rescue.

/The knife used was made of•scrap steel and tableware, rubbedduwn on a stone to a dagger-likeshape.

Conrad Schrimpe To WedSouthern Girl Tomorrow

WOO.DBRIDGE — Miss HelenTrt'nthani,iUughter of Prof, andMra, Otis Tl'entham, of Arfhville.N. O., will become the bride ofConrad Cajivpbxll Schrimpe, son-ofMr. and Mrs. P. C. Schrimpe, of17!! tfinjii Stj-eat, tomorrow at St,Lawrence Church, Ashville. Thttbride-to-be received her college At-gree Monday.

Page 2: BACK UP YOUR BOY Mepenbent Heaber - DigiFind-It · Price Panel Assistants will sem as liaison officer* between consum cr, merchants and board. Thci Job will he to disseminate infor-mation

FACIE TWOFRIpAY, JUNE 11, IMS INDEPENDENT I!'-:,,

Miss Genevieve Costello BrideOf William Walker, OfRahway

\ i e v « ('. C i l a U ' l l " . i | : l ! l i ; i - . ! 'T <>!' M1 ' .

uni l Mr ; , J o h n «•*.-t.-ll.). nf I f n n c l l

A v e n u e , i i m i m i ' tin hri i lc uf Wil-

l iam W. ' i lkcr . mii| i-,i" Mr, an i l Ml'F.

IVuaf W n l k e r . of Rahwi iy , S a t n r -

ilny j i f t e r n o o n at St . J ; i m e « '

• • I IUITII . R e v , .ln'-in ' ' a l i a h a n , a?-

MM:m! p n s t o r . J I I I f u n n e d t h r rfl ' f-

n i n n y .

fn f i i i ' k F e n t o n , c h u r c h o r j r an i s t ,

pluy'ed t h e '.vi 'diliiif tjiu-ir m i d M i s .

J o h n O ' -Hr ien , "olui-it, 'an<r " A v c

M a r i n " d u r i n g ihi ' CI ' - Ici i inny.

T h v b i i d e . w h o M'.-I? nWtn in

marriKjre b y h r r h ' !h i - r , w a s pow\rtr

f d in w h i t e .<a*in wi th a l'injf t r a i n .

T h e f imi l . p a n e l of h i r . f iown w a s

IITI - I I w i t h cci'il p e a r l s a m i

i> ve i l fell f rom n t i a r a of

pearls. Sin1

" f w h i t e ii

I'iii 'riril n Ipn'.i-

tii j ind b a b y ' s

ili,.-'- I l ' l rn Co=tello, as her s'u-tp.r 's niniil n f h i i im) , w o r e :i i t own

of v i c t o r y b i n e w i i h m a t c l i i n K p i c -

t u r e hat a n d cnrr i i ' i l a I x n i q u c t o f ]

j r i l fiw<< a i u t iiltio i l i ' lpHit i jum. H r ? i

o1 tier .iliciKl.-iiit1-. Mr>. C h e s t e r Fi-

l o n n v i t z , d f S n v a i c n ; M i - s Luci l l i -

Kis--timr a n d M i - - M i M m l W a l U r .

Communion To fie ServedSuniay At Avenel Church

AVt'.SFAt—Infill imptism was

• hi'lii' Sunday moriiini; at 11 o'clsffk.

at lljr y.vdi I'n .-!iyti-ria:i Church

of AVI-I , . | , willi Ki-v. (V?W-r A.

T ' I I - i la i i^h ' i - i 1 iii' Mr . a n d Mr«,

W i l l i a m (li-i iik WH- I'hri.-'tt 'iu'il S a n -

dia Suzanne Tin- •=n11 of Mr. andMr.-. I'ariii-1 Mai'Ai iliur, Was chrii-Trnrrt Hubert iMttRlttn ami ilw son»f Mi. and Mr"i Walter Munxii,Jann--1 Waller.

('(iinmtiiii'in will bo ?orvpd Sun-day inorninjr at. 11 o'clork and atro-pd sunn sfi-vire will lie held atX I1. M. The Yo'flffK people's ?(.•?-.-•(Hi will I - ln-Id .it. 7 I\ M.

M*IH- of the liriilcjrnnm, of Hall-way, anil Mi" Dorothy Vowiler, allwore (piwne of yellow orpanza andmatching hate. TVy carried bou-quet" of ti'a rose-.

The'hride's moUn-r wore a (freer,print dress with .vhitc accessoriesi.nd a enrsaire "f yifcw rosebuds.The In idejrrnom"' nnuher was at-tirerl in navy blue i;nT with whiteaccessories ami a corsage of yel-low rosebuds.

Frank Walker wnt his brother'sbest man ami ushers were: EdwflrdGodfrey, of Railway: Ru^'fll Yar-ri'll, of Eliznhflli and Oliver andArthur Jones of

••A. reception fur the immediatefamilies and rinse friends was heldat the lintel 1'ai'kiT in Perth Am-boy. Upon their return from thewerfihnjf trip to New York and At-l&ntie Tity, Mr. and Mr?. Walkerwill make their home <m HarrisonStreet, Rjih-way. •

To Open TonightWOfmBRIiHIB—The Scout and

Cub Hubby Sho* KI In- held to-tomorrow night at the

'Presbyterian Parisht«

prom->out-

'blue coaVyou can't beat it

SAVE—buy it NOW

JOHN J. BITTINGCALL WO. 8-0012

standing shows of its kind.For several week? now the-vari-

ous Troops and r\th Packs havebeen preparing for the event andthey will not only exhibit the fin-ished product of their hobbies butwill actually work on them in thebooths.

The *how t? under \kr auspicesof the Nnrthere Oi'trict of Ran-tan Council, Boy Scouts of Amer-ica, of which iP, H. Locker is dis-trict chairman. John T. Tetley,chairman of the Council I 'ub Com-mittee is general chairman of itlwshow. •

Tickets may be purchased fromany Scout or Cub in the district or[it the floor.

$25 War BandTo Be Party Prize

AVENEL—The Avenel Reptrti-

licnn Clnb, Inc., with Mr«. Kd-wanl

Grode as chairmen, will hold a

game social nt Klnb Knlita Tues-

day night after their meeting.

A $25 War Bond willa special award. Other prizes fo1-e awafded are on display in thewindow of "Bill, the Barber." Ad-mission will be paid at the door.

Mrs. Grode is being assisted byMr. ajid Mm. William Gety, Mr.nrnl Mrs. Thomas Bell, Mr. andMrs. John Syme, Mr. find Mrs.Jiob*rt Barton. Mi;, and'Mtn. JohnConner, Mrs. Thomas C»mpln'!l,Mrs. Otis Sears, Mrs. Ruth N'ovick.Mrs. Jay Herman, Mrs. FrankBarth, Charles Siessel, Joseph Pe-tras and Erijest Ninr. <

COLONIA NEWS

ObituariesStephen Hodos

WOODBRTD0E- • Stephendos, 63, lifelong resident of,Woo4-bridffe, died Saturday at his hom#lli.r) Main Street. He is survivedby his willow, Clara; a step-daugh-ter, Mrs. Albert (i. Jacobs, ofBinphRmton, N. Y,, a stcp-^on, Jo-seph J. Novotnik, of JVoodbridjreand a .brother, Joseph Hodos, nfPittsburgh. Funeral services wereheld Wednesday morninp at H::JOO'tfWtc St tilf house anrf' at 9:0(1o'clock at St. James' Church.riftl w«»in'&t Janws' Omn-Ur

I)u-

Stephen C*omanyiWOODBRfDGE — Steven Cso-

manyi, 68, of 2115 Amboy Avenue,died Sunday morning in the PerthAmboy General HonpiU). He had

. -The Cidonin Parent-TeatherAssflciaitimi met Tuesday after-noon at the school. A luncheonwas held by thr members, follow-ed by the business meeting. Do-nation? of three dollars each werevoted to the Emergency Squad,Boy Scout Troop 61, and GirlScout Troops No. 10 and No. 15.Final plans were made for th« pic-nic to be held next Tuesday forthe chiWren. Mrs. Charles Scott,Jr., officiated at the installation ofthe new officers—president^ Mrs.Russell Feakes, vrto received herpresident's pin at thi* tinie; firstvice president, MM. James Suther-lin; second vice president, MiasMinnie Connpton, school principal;secretary, Mrs. James Tfryand treasurer. Mrs. Sydnsy Pink-ham. The following members Werepresented with favors made by thepresident for attending all meet-

Mrs. William Wete, Mrs.James Tagjrart, Mrs. Pin-kham,

/5 . A. J. FOX, Mrs. frank Mohr,Mrs. Frank Dianich, Mrs. RaymondT?ohde, Miss Comptoii, Mrs. Thom-as Chalker, Miss Mildred Ludlow,snd Miw* Rose. Mjizieka. Others•wlio attended this final meetingwere Mrs. Charles Franklin, Mrs.Hurley McClure, Mrs. Sydney

iBeniijon and Mis. Thomas Polamus*.—The Troop Committee of Girl

Scout Troop No. 15 will hold acard party tonight at the home- ofMrs. Fred Slitter, on Amherat Avfi:nue, to raise funds for camping.

Lawrence Suit k inassisted-'by Mffr.'WWtaM OJfiTen,Mrs, Sutler and Mrs. CharlesScott, Jr. There will be table

LICK AFTER WARLAY-OFFS

Start own business, !»>me-ofllce,KiiHw diwrililim eollti'tlon ofo . v i - 1 - ] " H ) 1 1 : 1 1 > s l i ' i - i ' .

Tribune Publishing Co.,Dwtght St,, Springfield, Mas<.

Play Safe!USE OUR

Fur StorageProtect your fun tnd woolemat laweit prevailing pricǤ, '

OUR VAULTS A|BE IN THEP. A. NATIONAL BANK

« THE SAFEST '.

• THE BEST ^• THE CHEAPEST J

• 02 any fur coat . . .iup to $100 valuation. I

for BONDED MESSENGER;

CALL P. A. 4-1346

A. GREENHOUSE195 Smith St., Perth Amboy

Son, Home On Leave,Finds Father Dead

COLONIA — Wlien LieutenantLeKoy Carlson came home on fur-liuijfh1 to visit his family who re-side on Herki-ley Avenue, he foundhis father, Fred -Carlson, 55, haddied suddenly.

The liite Mr. Carlson, a carpen-ter, was employed at, the FederalShipbuilding Corporation at Kear-ny for twenty years. He is sur-vived by his widow Harriet; hiason LieuU'mmt Carlson who is sta-tioned at Hrfndo, Texas, and a sis-ter and brother in Sweden.

Funeral services were holdTuesday afternoon at the GreinerFuneral Home, Green Street,WDodbridgc, Burial was in theClover-leaf Cemetery, Woodbridge.

Allies try to ease war's eco-nomic strain on Middle East.

no survivors, He was a niAmber ofSt. Imre Hungarian Society, Wood-bridge Branch, No.. 17. Funeralservices were held Wednesdaymorning from the Greinev FuneralHome. Burial was Jn St, James'Cemetery,

Raymond A. WolnyFORDS—-Funeral services for

Raymond A. Wolny, infant son ofMr. and Mrs. Howard Wolny, of43 Linden Avenue, were held Mon-day morning at the Greiner Fu-neral Home, Woodbridge. Rev.George H. Boyd, rector of St. Pe-ter's Ofrurch, Perth AnVboy, offici-ated. Burial was in St. Peter'schurch yard. The child died1 Sat-urday at the Railway MemorialHospital.

Henry N. BrownWiOOI>BRl!D!flF,-^Fiin<1Tal serv-

ices for Henry N. Brown, of 98Fulton Street, were held Saturdayafttrnoon at Mie First Presby-terian Church. Rev. Kenneth M.Kepler, pastor, officiated. StanleyPotter sang "Abide With Me" andTrod Be With You Till We MeetAgain" during the service. Mrs.George Rhodes was at the organ.Burial was in the Alpine Ceme-tery.

Bearers were: John Bevgen,George Finn, Frank Be.di, JamesDoyle, Edward Kennedy and JuhnSeally.

Diwkc and Mr. Schneider.—Mr. and Mr?, Fred Sutler, nf

AnVherst Avenue, <• ntertninerl onSaturday night, Mr. nnd Mrs. Ed-ward Arnold, Mrs. Paul Weleiand Thomns Nicholson, nil of

lirabeth.—Mr. and Mr?. Willinm Ogden

and ohildTe'n, Pntricin and Vir-inia, of Inwood 4 v e | 1 U P ' W(1'lfl " l r i

dinner guests of ner mother, Mrs,/illian Kii"k, of Roselle.

—Mr, and Mrs. Raymond, ofFairvrew- Avenue, were 'hosts OP?undey to her sister and brother-n-law, Mr, and .\Irs. Alfred Carl-

son, and son, Dnvid, of Hahwny, atdinner party in celebration of.

Mrs. Carlson's birthday.'—Chaplnin Merritt H. Webb, of

the U. S. Navy, formerly of t!i_«New Dover Methodist Chnrc.h,spent the weekend with friends in(.'olonia. .. •

-Clifford Feakrs. of West HillRoad, was the dinner guest of hisgrand parents, Mr. aivd Mrs. AVfred C. "Feakes, of Kahwiiy, onSunday.

—Misa Dorothy Polhamus, daugh-ter of Mr. and Mrs, Thomas I'hamus, of Florence Avenue, cele-brated her fifth birthday Sundayat n family dinner party

—Mrs. Christian Junpliluth. ofMciFarland Roml, spent, the week-end with her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and M°rs. Olto Jungbluth,of New York City.

—Mr, and Mis: Ijnvrence Suit,of WfrW "Strwt,' WPfC Iwwt* for n

(>rizes and refreshments will be;crve('

—iColonia Volunteer ChemicalHook and l i d d e r ComiHiny" will

d an informal dance next Sat-urday night at the Inman AvenueHall,'June 19, instead of the 26th.The committee in charge Consistsof Richard and Thomas Polhamua,William Diecke and James Tag-gart.

—Members of the Coffee Ciubenjoyed a supper and theatre partyin Newark on Wednesday evening.They attended a performance of".Isinp Eyre" at the, SJcsque,

—Mr. and Mrs. John Almeda, ofAmherst Avenue, are the parentsof a daughter b'orn last Tuesdayat their home.

—Mr. and Mrs. George Reseter,of Middlesex Avenue, were hostsat a farewell party held Sundaynight at the Hotel Hungaria, inPerth Amboy, in honor of theirson, George, Jr., who is leavingfor the service. A farewell speechwas made by William Dehnore, Jr.,and group singing was enjoyed.Entertainment was provided byDavi«l and Joan Jardoth, and theRiley Troop, Decorations featuredpatriotic colors, and refreshmentswere served, the refreshmentsao

—(Mrs. Jacob Schneider wasgiven a surprise birthday partyThursday night at her home onAmherst Avenue by a group offriends, who presented her with apoekctbook. Present were: Mr,and Mrs. Willie Wels, Mr. wrd Mrs.Oitto Fehlauer, Mr. and Mr3. HorstTeteihenoi-, Mr. and Mrs. William

few days tins week to her aunt,Mil!, Fr*wk Robfoiim, of Kehirk-shinny, Pa.

—-Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Ter-tella, of Cavour Street, were ho.^tson Sunday to Mr. nnd Mrs. HarrySica, Mrs. Marl in Sicn, of NewBrunswick, Mr. and Mrs. Frank'ampanero, of Jerscj City! Mv.

and Mrs, Frank Zt'mpclla, of Key-port, and Mrs. Edith Melchione, ofElizabeth.

—'Mrs. S. C. Hopkins, of WestHill Road, is spending a few weekswith her son and daughter-in-law,Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Itopkins, of

nnf^rd.—Miss Veronica WeT>er, daugh-

ter^of Mr. and Mrs. Edwai-d Web-er, of Inwood Avenue;' celebratedher eleventh birthday Jast Satur-day with n party at her home. Thefollowing won prizes in the gamesplayed1: Marie and Georgene Slit-ter, Lois Johnson, Edith Molln.sh.Other guests were: Barbara Pol-hamus, Anna Cuivha, LorraineMapps and Susan and DorothyDay.

—iMrs. John Schuster, of WostStreet, was the luncheon guest onMonday of her daughter-in-law,Mrs. Robert .Sdiusslur, of JerseyCity.

CANNING DEMONSTRATIPNWOODftRifnOE—'Mrs. M. R.

Skidmoro, chairman of nutrition ofWoodbHdge Chapter, AmericanRed Cross, announces that ar-rangements have been made for ademonstration of food cunning tobe given by .Miss Sally Swe l l , ofthe Home Extension Service inthe Domestic Science Departmentof No. 11 School at 2:Iifl o'clockJune 10. Anyone interested maya'ttte-nd.

Cool, Comfortable

PALM BEACH SUITS19.50

SLACKS 5.95

VICTORYWATCHREPAIR

Evury Repair Job Fully

Guaranteed. For cleaning,

new parts or

your watch to

ALBHEN Inc.133 Smith St.P<*rth Amboy

QuiliiteUSMITH SmET'eOR. KIN«

PERTH AMBOYJ

Nut, Stove& Pea CoalPLACE YOUR WINTER'S

ORDER NOW

For Better ServiceCall

Mohr Coal Co,P. A. 4 3088

DadIs

DifferentThisYear

Don't ForgetThe Men In

Service

A sport shirt he'll live in!(And an ideal gift toboot!)

POLO SHIRTS

Mesh and Rib

49c to 1.35

SPORT SHIRTS

1.65 to 2-25

LASTEX SWIM TRUNKS

1.00 to 2-95

SWANK JEWELRY

1.69To

5.00Adams and Stetson Straws

SUMMER NECKWEAR55c to 2.00

SMOOTH E TIES55c-two for 1-00

SUMMER SLACKSRayon and Cotton

2-95 to 6-95

SLACK SUITSCoal and Washable

1.00 tO 6-50 Gabardine Rain Coat* }Q.95 4-95 to 9.95

W. HAT* th*|

Gift Your DOYLE * CUNNEENWant. I

163 iMITH JT.-PH0NIPA4 O3OV PiRTH AMBOYWE GIVE "AW mGR€tN STAMPS

Open

Friday

and

Saturday

Evening.

A SWEETTREAT

A large variety

of Whitman'*,

Schrafft*, Berk-

£> ley and^ag« & <

i Shaw Candies

65c up to 4.00

A BEAUTIFUL SELECTION

^flt your favorite

TOILETRIES and

COSMETICSLentheric, Yurdley, Htlen* Rubiniltin,

Cdly, ETening In 1 P M U , Early American,

Chantilly, April Showen, etc.

55c up to $20

Juit Arrived

Lentheric

Creme Cologne!

Tweed, Miracle

95c

This day wa» named for Pop, |,n|

really belongs to the entire f,m.,lf

it's yqiir chance to show him j l | E t f,

you feel about him i . . «o got )i i t^j

on Father'* Day, with gifts from I1,,;

to make him happy!

SI A-,!,-.

Qualil , , f , , ,

l l

In fcppp •!

trim . .1'

CIC.AK-; A

P ' « ' " - • '••I ' n ofp o p u l . i i - , , , , r i i

c i j a i - i - i i . ,.,,|t0.

El r< n t i r,SA\I l(

E I r e I > ii ilnvi

in uiwirl siic

l i n n !

P o p > :i I » j

w a n t * ii hi!, -

PUBLIX DRUGSTORE

95 Main St. Woodbri(lK.-, N.

commencement

Locket Bracelet

BULOVA - HAMILTON - PARKER - ELGIN

Diamond Pair Man's Wrist W•'|c

WIRTH'SRELIABLE JEWELERS

1<K) SMITH ST. p E R T H AMBOY, V H

Page 3: BACK UP YOUR BOY Mepenbent Heaber - DigiFind-It · Price Panel Assistants will sem as liaison officer* between consum cr, merchants and board. Thci Job will he to disseminate infor-mation

UNDENT—LEADER

bimerL ._.

Card Partyfjcs Attract Many

... •[-(,,. second in the,,„„„..,• card pi'.:-ti::»

! 1(, ,1,,, Woman's Club of!1(.|il Monday at the

•\'l', William Falkensternvulrf Avenue.T ( | ( i n i ; i s Thompson was,]„. .jMT.iiil I>ri7.e a n d Mrs .

,', l | l l l l i n l .i-i received the, • ;lWivi'(l. Other prizes, |lV Mrs. Frank Bsrth,,',,,,,' Bironsr. Mr*- Ctmrlea

],' Mis. Ki-ank Wulcovets••|'; i l'l,jii ( i i ' c c o . A l s o p r e a -

FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 19-13 PAGE THREE

Education Is Backbone Of Present-Day Army Of Specialists, High School SeniorTells Audience At Second War-Time Commencement Exercises Held At Stadium

Mark nniversary

., irkjnBail Palmer,

, K i , Mrs. Arvid\|r<. Brrti'am Van Cleft,

J h Pfv, ,h,.r Smith, -Mrs.Mh

John Pe\. .1. Murphy and Mrs.

\\\" srrios of partiesi i c o l i i y 11 H:1n P . M.

,»f Mi1.-. Frank Wuko-Ci'iiririi Avonue, withV I I H ' ;is co-hostnss.

schman Guild||,,]|s New Slate

School Serves on the Humeront" was the thi'me of the sec-

ond war-time commencement exer-cises held Wednesday evening inthe 'Legion Stadium where 218 di-plomns wera presented.

The graduates marched to theirplaces.while the Woodbridge, HighSchool Band played th* TriumphalMarch. ,The. invocation was pro-nounced by Rev. W, V. I). Stiopastor of thu FirstChurch/

Stanley 0. iPoUcr gave tfie ad-dress of welcome nnd Emily AnnGecsey dolivwed the farewell ad-drcsn.

n g

Serves on the Home Front" wereCdwin F. Potter, who discussed'In the Class Room" and Marie

Pelleprino -who spoke on "InExtra-Ourricular Activities."

Victory CorptMr, Potter said in part: "Educa-

tion is the backbone of our prrn-ent-day army of specialists. Timeis precious during these historicdays, so schools and colleges mustbecome the pre-induction trainingcenters, leaving to the armedforces the job of training men incombat application f)f previouslygained knowledge. TMs total war

The speakerstopic, "W'oodbridjr

<>n the generalSchoc

is not only on the buttle-h

yfronlt, in tho factory and at home,but also in every classroom. Wecan be defeated by losing the

n the elnssroom! Recojrnir.inp t hi -fact, ^President Roosevelt author-zed the formation of the VictoryCorps, an organization of HighSchool Students devoted to thetask of winning the war at home.Our supervising principal, Mr.Nicklas, attended a state confid-ence on the subject, and soon af-ter, a committee of teachers head-ed by Mr. SechriST; formulatedplnns which were put into effect inJanuary of 1943. Since that time,the pre-induction courses, or warcourses, a* we soon began to callthem have been given one perioda day, five days a week, reducingthe course of study in the regularsubject"; to four days n week."

Detcribet Couriet IThe speaker went on to describe

he war courses which includedaviation, mathematics, radio, nre-flight training, mechanical draw-ing, mechanics and languages.

Concluding his talk Mr. Pottersaid;

"It has been said Ithat youngpeople in American schools todayare. far closer to active citizenshipthan young people ever beforehave been in the entire history ofthe world. We, us high school stu-dents, have been called upon to aidthe national war effort both inHhinking artd in action, nmt we utWoodbridge High School arc proudto think we have doim our bit."

The second speaker, Miss I'el-'irnno, discussing the extra-cur-

ricular activities, pointed out thfit"tn date, over S72.D0O hnn beeninvested in stamps and bonds bystudents of Woodbridgo HighSchool during this school year."

"H«lp Bu r Tool."Continuing she said: "In Addi-

tion to helping buy the tool-i towin the war, many of the studentsme aelunlly producing wnr. ma-terial by working in wnr indtis ^tries. Thirty-one member? of the i _senior class alone worked part- ,DAUGHTER TO DAFClKS

1SBI.1N -Mr. and Mrs. J.Hewitt, of thin plnce, are cele-brating their golden weddinganniversary tndny at the homoof t<heir »on in Nivtley.

The Iselin couple were mar-ried in Southport. England. Mr.Hewitt l*is been active inehuri'h work in England and thidcountry for the pn«t ;>5 years!He baa held high offices mchuii-hes wherever he bus resid-ed. At the present'time he isprenidinir' Kldcr in the Presby-terian Church of Iselin.

Eighth GradersGraduate Next Week

llHIIv -Mrs;Frederick;n inslalli'd prcnident

M Imiiui Guild of thevli'riiiii Church at anHmn-t li«l*Uin Uto4in-Mi.,. I.elaiu! F. Jtcy-tlic installing officer.

ell we re :idrnt , Mrs. Francis

, I , I . Miss Olive Camp..lli-iil was toastmaster

, .uiii nivtn by Mrs. Ed-;.|i in;mii. Mrs. Linn, MrsjI..,, l-.ir', Mrs. Kenneth M,\|-... FlnvH Wasser, Mrs.: .;n i••, Jr. , ' Miss Emma

; Miss Parsons,hi w Lnckic was general

.i t;11 Aw w<;is assisted byn, Mrs. Wesley Helsel-K ith, Mrs. Hums, Mrs.

M-. lln-'-sell Deniiirest,Mi A bin and Mis. Linn.

jpl Session Held\Ludies' Aid Society

: 1 The Ladies' Aid So-•!," .Kir.-t Presbyterian

i IN lii',:il meeting of,I ! i r - i i : iy at the c h u r c h

!; ('.. I 'erier p r e s i d i n g .

:.• -:••!• t ; , i l l i u v a y led in the

lii-i i-'il s p e a k i n g mi t h "

in I ' p . n a t ' i r y s e r v i c e for

"i t!ic v e r y s u c c e s s f u l

* Id at the Manse andHI' dish cloths were

iiinTs wishing to hold• : dm nif tlie summeri in LTi-t in touch with,',:;. nr Mrs. I'erier us

• i'llf. A collection of.\ .(•- i u h t ' i i Lu In1 ii*i'*\

• :. in kiddie Keep Well.-....•.• ill' the usua l i lomi-

, i inl j e l l i e s .

".'.'' members were pres-'..'•.tcsses were Mrs.

'•• 'ivard, Mrs. Frederick.'I Mrs. Adrian De

I • HORN

• i ' l : n > < ; K - - M r . a n d M r s .i: ni:i Ii, «l Coli-y St ree t ,

1 ii!- of a son, Ralph'n. it the Runway Me-

' ;" ' . il . Mrs. Rudash isA^m-.N Lund, of Grove

Resumption Of TrainService Is Sought

SKWiAKKN — JPhe TownshipCo-mmittce ia neifotiiitiiip; with thoPublic Utility Commission and theCentral Railroad of New Jerseyin an effort to secure the resump-tion of "stop on request of pas-senger" service of train No. :SM3at Sewaren station.

A petition was filed by residentsof Sewaren with the TownshipCommitted asking the body to useItS' influence fn securing resump-tion . al service, Train No.. i',\'Mleft New York at* 0:H0\ The regu-lar cohumiters on that, train pointout thut now lifter fi;30 in the evening there, is no train service, available from New York or Newarkuntil the next morning at I! o'clock

The petitioners also pointthat a number of Sewiuen residents are employed inessential'industries in both cities and if prossure of work makes it impossiblto make the I!:!!!) train there i"i:re»t delay and inconvenienceand in addition they have to paadditional fiir<w through othemeans of transportation in ordeto gft home.

Sewaren PersonalsBy Mr». Burnt, 490 Ekit Xr.no*

Library Receives

—St. John's Episcopal Churchill hold a special service in the

hurch, Sunday at 4 P. M.'to'cele-rate the ftfty-flrs.t anniversary ofhe hying of the corner stone ofhe church. Rev. George H. Boydwill preach and guests will be pros-nt from all parishes associated•ith St. John's. A reception will'oliow this service.

—Mrs. Elmer Prcw has returned;o her home in Tahawas, N. Y^ af-er spoMliiff wvnral rloyn with

Mrs. ,G«rgc,Mullen'ifl..Eftst Aye-nuo.

—Sergeant Kenneth Morris hasiduated Vom the Army Gunnery

School aj^jos Vegas, Nevada, andnowMationed ;tt Pyote Army

Ease, Texas.

Avenel Exempt FiremenTo Hold Memorial Service

AVKNEl/—A memorial serv-ice will be hold by the ExemptFiremen's Association nf AvenolSunila>'"iiight at'i'ljfht o'clock inSt, Andrew's Church on AvenolStreet.

Members of the Ladies' Auxil-iary, the Fire Company and theExempts wiH attend in uniform.All arc asked to meet at thefuehouse at 7:111) o'clock tomarch to the church.

1 Edward Kennedy, chairmanof tlie affair, hai •invited mem-bers of other lire companies inthe Township and the generalpublic to attend.

and Mrs. Alex Urban andson, Alex, Jr., have returned totheir home in West Avenue after avisit with Mr. and Mrs, WalterCarvalha, of Astoria, L. I.

—.The Sewaren History Clubwill hold a card party toniEht jatthe Land and Water .Clubhouse forthe book fund of the local PublicLibrary. Mrs. W. Frank Burns isbeing assisted by Mrs. HarryO'Connor, Mrs. S. J. Henry, Mrs.Geovge Urban, Mrs. D. V. Rushand Mrs. William C. Ecker.

Fenick S2/c of New-

refresher course will be startednext Wednesday right in the Se-waren School. Alexander Hamil-ton of the Woodbridge TownshipEmergency Squad will conduct theclass and everyone interested \iurged to attend,

—Miss Kay Clark, of Cliff Road,was the guest of Lieutenant andMrs. A. J. Leitnei', of New YorkCity, Friday.

—David Balfour, of West Ave-nue, .hsu returned ifftm a three-week ^business trip through the•Southern'StstM. ••

—Mr. and Mn. T. Nelson andchildren, formerly of WoodbridgeAvenue, arc now living in PerthAmboy.

—Mr, and Mrfl. Sebastian Godfrey and Mrs. Thomas ^onnloy oRahway were the weekend guestof Mr. and 'Mrs. Harry Halsey, oCliff Road.

W0Ol>BRIDC.E-Mrs. ChrolynBromann, librarian at the Bar-

on Free Public Library, announc-this week that the following

ew nduM, books have been giveno the institution:*'

"Diary of a Suburban House-rife," Bluke; "Blueprint Road-ng," Castle; "Wake Up and Gar-en," Cross; "Eden on a Conn-ry Hill," Cross; "Another Clau-

Franken; "Household Hints" I Ior^Homematai'J," Itowej "IToVv"

;» Collect^fernlMi,11 KljnWs, .Also, "Shop Note*," Popular

Mechanics; "Gundalcanal Diary."Trcgaskis; "Aviation Mnthemn-

ics, Wadden; "Door With SevenLocks," Wallace; "Yesterday'sChildren," Warnvick; "LetteriiiLr,Modem tyid FoVeipil"; "AmiitrurNurse," Wheeler; "One WorlWill'kie. I

time iii war plants during the past iyear. . . . Olfr students are alsoaiding, in Civilian Defense activi-ties. Many q,f our boyo act a?Mr<senger* and "nuriers durinii prac-tice air raid drills. Numerous boy<have t»ke,n first aid training amihaivc received certificates as re-sult of satisfactorily completingfirst aid courses,"

Miss 'Pellegrinii also pointed withpride to the Junior Red Croftwork of the school, tho JuniorCommando activities in collectini;scrap and tMe surgical dressingsfliiide by the girls.

Concluding her talk, Miss Pe!-iegrino stated, "We, the studentsof Woodbridge High School, thinkwe have set a record in aiding thewar effort of which we can be dulyproud. We can only hope anilpray that whatever we have donewill help bring us closer to vic-

WO()I)HIUIMi'K--Mr. and Mt«.of Ml

Avenue, iinnounce the \>irt.h of'udaughter Wi^liuVilaj- at thoAmboy Gcnonil Hospital.

Perth

WOODHRITM;?;irograms have hern planifed forhe eighth grade rommencoment

exercises to he held in the Town-hip next Tuesday and Wednesday.

On Tuesday the followingschools will graUuatc their eighthgraders: Scwaren School in schoolauditorium at 10:45 A. M.; PortReading School in school audi-torium *t 1:00 P. M.; School No.11, Woodbridge High School Au-ditorium wt 2::i0 P. M.

Exercise* to be held onday are a« tfoll«w«: School No. 15,1Iselin, in 'Pcrshing Avenue SchoolJauditorium at 10:1)0 A. M.;H»p«-Uwn School in school nuditortut«t 1 P. M.; and School No. 7 , |Fordu in Fords No. 14 School audi-torium at 2:30 P. M.

tor?. '"

NMembers of the

ASSOCIATION

Hair Cut

Shave

Children'sHair Cut

Patronize our i. - . , .. . i* .

OTICARTERET

nave adopted

CE!MASTER BARBERS'

the following prices:

75c

35c

50c

hops. We give you the best service.

port, R, I., spent the weekend withhK parents on George Street.

—Mrs. William T. Ames, for-merly of East Avenue, is now liv-ing at ">;if! West Avenue.

—Mr. and Mrs. H, D. Clark andMr. and Mrs. H, B. Rankin, ofCliff Road, attended a dinner partyiii Elizabeth, Saturday.

—Mrs. Elrwood Wickberg, ofEast Avenue, spent Friday withher mother, Mrs. George Colcman,oi Kearny.

—The St-wareii History Clubwill hold its annual spring lunch-eon WcdncsJki. at the Packer Ho-tel in Perth Amboy. Reservation;we to be made by June 14 withMrs. Samuel J. Henry, program

Mildred RauchmanTo Wed.-New Yorker

W00DBU1DCE — Mrs. JnmeRauchman, of Barren Avenuannounces thy engagement of hedaughter, Mildred Florence,Denny K. Eisner, of New YorCity . • • • .

Miss Rauchman is a graduate ofWoodbridge High School and ofPackard School, New York City.Eisner is associated with the Zip-per Fast Trade Corporation andthe E. Abecassis Import and Ex-port Company, both of New York.No date has been set for the wed-ding.

limeFOR

PHONE

P. A. 4-2525

xim)R

LTD.

STORAGE

Woodbridge Notes—Mrs. Claire MacKay, of Jet-

sey City, was the Sunday guest ofAir. and Mrs, Orville Harkclew, ofDunham Pliiee.

—Mr. nail Mrs. .Fumes Bramble,f Dunham Place, were hosts

Mr. and Mrs. OUley I'ennock anson, Robert, Mrs, Helen Henness/jnnd Miss Winnie Smith, of 1'hiMi-ielphia, Sunday.

—Kdward Hillock, of .Flushing,M. - Yv was Jim week-end guest ofMr. sit\d Mrs. Joel Leeson, ofGreen Street,

—iMiss Grace Turner has re-turned to her homo in Jersey Cityafter spending the past week withMiss Ireneyjrlibbits, uf RailwayAvenue. '.

[.—Mrs, Cedrie Ostroni, of Plain-field, formerly, of town, has re-turned home after a visit with Mrs,Albert R. Bergen, of West MainStreet.

—Tlie^'othcr-Daughti'i' banquetof tho Senior Siidality of St.James' Church has been postponedindefinitely. ' •

—Mrs. Jiflia Johnson, of AlbertStreet, huS returned home afterspending three weeks with.her hus-band, 1"FC John Johnson, at Paris,Toxus.FIRST AID CLASS

ICOI/ON'IA—A First Aid Classwill be held in Colonia LibraryJu'ni: Ill at H P. M. AlexanderHamilton, of tile WoodbridgeEmergency I Squad, will be incharge.

Highland Park, was the guest oftliss Dorothy Hanie, of East Ave-

nue, Saturday.—A new class in First. Aid and

hairman.—Miss Pauline Dodwell, of

61 Building Permitsissued Oaring May

WOODBRIDGE — Sixty • o n ebuilding permits were issyed dur-ing the month of -May for con-struction estimated to cost $44,94!)according to a report made to tlieTownship Committee Monday byBuilding Inspector William; All-gaier. Fees received by his officeamounted to $223.

Of the permits issued six werefor new structures estimated tocost $29,900.

'V Girls SponsorGraduation Dance

SEWAREN—The Sewaren "V"Girls' Club will hold a GraduationDance at the Land and WaterClubhouse tomorrow night. Tick-ets may be procured from anyclub member or al the door. Drosswill be semi-formal.

Miss Margaret Bolota, chair-man is being assisted by MarySnee, publicity; Viola Nagyiske,Theresa Willette, Dorothy Siioo,decorations; Violet«Townsend, Al-ma Counterman, Dorothy Adamsand Ann Kopcho, refreshments.

'Sponsors -will be Mr, and Mrs.Albert Anderson, Mr. and Mrs.Martin Snee, Mr. and Mrs. WilliamB. Willette, Mr. nnd Mrs. HubertCastle, Mr. and Mrs. Midi;Quinn and Mr. and Mrs. W. FrankBurns.

NEXT DRAFT UNITW0ODBRIIXJE — Tho next

draft contingent will go to Now-ark for pre-induction physicalexaminations on Tuesday, Juno 2 1Those •who pass may take a twn-week furlough and report to FortDix on July fi.

"Friendly, Sound, Serviceable"

oodbridgeNationaliBankWoodbridge, New JerseyMembei- Federal Depoiit lniurancc Corp.

CUTS FOR GRADUATES•ItKN'S HOOKS, EDUCATIONAL TOYS ^I HOOKS from 50c STAT1ONKKV .. ... t io

GUADUATIONGUADUATION

RNER LENDING LIBRARY307 STATE ST. BOOKSHOP

'tiKTH *MH»V

WeddingBelle

Now and forever, your

gift of jewelry will be the

bride's pride* Select from

these everlasting sugges-

tions.

WATCHES

[Uduva • Hamilton

Gruch • Elgin

DIAMOND DUO

H00 t0 $200

BULOVA

See Our Line ofCostume and

Religious Jewelry

Blue white perfect dia-

monds • set in platinum •k

white or yellow gold. .

$ 50 t 0 $500REMEMBER DAD

BULOVA FATHER'S DAY, JUNE 20 M W S CAMEO

'LKREIELSHEIMER-1

, The Jewelry Gift Store

127 SMITH ST. PERTH AMBOY, N. j .

MISTEKY \ •

ESIREE, pickin' your new spring suit or topcoatat Bond's Factory is really duck soup. Mister.

A tasty feast ior that hungry yearning ior good3tyle Is REALLY our dish. Check the type suit youwant-rvisit Bond's Factory today, and choose yourheart's desire irom the thousands of suits and top-coats on display.

Imported EnglisE Flannels VDomestic and Imported Tweeds KSemi-Worsteds VHard Finish Worsteds /Cheviots /Herringbones 1/

:• Sjripes 1/ , ,I Solid Colors V /

You'll agree with us Mister, that pickin' your suitor topcoat at Bond's Factory is really DucJt Soup.

SLACKSALL WOOL.

$6-90

SUITSALL WOOL

$24-44 up

• • • i • • i » • • • • " • • * ^ t• • • • • • n • * • • trm I I i \t 9 % t it 9 t tt m m m m u M m » m^

CLOTHESNEW BKUNSWICK FACTOHlf

REMSEN AVE. at HOWARD STNEW BBUNSW1CK, NEW. JERSEY

Open Daily8:30 fi. M. until 6 P. M.

EveningsTuesday, Thur&dar and Saturday

until 9 P. M./ • I • I % • • • * • • • « • • K

/% • • • * « « • • • * • • • • • •f l • • • • • « • • • • • • • • • •

Page 4: BACK UP YOUR BOY Mepenbent Heaber - DigiFind-It · Price Panel Assistants will sem as liaison officer* between consum cr, merchants and board. Thci Job will he to disseminate infor-mation

FOT'R FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 1948 -T.tf

St. John's GuildPlans Card Party

S K W v U i K N T in t . n d i ' - ' C i r ' - I( . f S t . . 1. 111II': K | l i H ' u ) i ; l l / ' ' i l l i r l - .

m e t T \ H ' . i l ; i y ; i , ' ; < - i i n . . > n : > ' t h ' 1

home e.r Mis. Lillian M m i i j inWest Avenue . Mr>. i l i rh : i ' ' l CJnimipres ided lit lh<- l i i ' inc- - ; sc-,sinnd u r i n g wliii'h it > w vnti'il to do-n a t e t r t i dollars tn I iir Cini'-r'iMission of Hi'lp :iml tivn dollnr-to the \V<iiiilbrid(f<' Townshipp r o j e c t «f Nurses" Hviiohir.-hinF u n d . Mr>. H » w P i t e r - u n wasappo in t ed chairman of the recep-tion to be held ^.iininy ttfli-vinml:.

P re l imina ry ])li'N? were iu:id<

; i :i i u r d |nii ' ty to hi1 h e l d . lull

.' I. Mi . linn v ll.'ilocv, rhiiirmiivill '.!• misled by Mrs. Artliu11-niii', Mis-. Simon Larson nn

M ) - Qinni). Mi?. Iiarxon reportil "ii tin- recent church soein

Mis. I. Butler anil Mrs. W. FrnnHums were voted into mcmbeiship. ^

I ' l fpu t were: Mrs. Albert An-ilers«ii. Mrs. F. J. Adams, Mrs. S,.!, Henry. Mrs-. Albert P. Sofield,Mr*. IMniePV. Rush. Miss ClaraScl-nii. Mrs-. A. W, Seheidt, Mrs.liiirire I't ti'ismi, Mrs. John Mflder,Mr*, Pinion Larson, Mrs. I. Tliltleami Rev, Herbert L. Denton,

Davis says lnbor supply will enahlr runners to meet goals. ,

Here's Those Ceiling Prices(in cent'!) by Huss of Retailer

Mass C.ljii's Class Clww

Green Circle crushed jrubU-n. £t ran .

Green Circli1. whole k r rn r l , 4'i r:m

Hub City, while rrushud. s li can

White Huse, whnli- ki-rni-l. ll!-nz, trliH- .

White Ruse, whole coldt-n, vac. ]>:i<k,

tJJ-oz. ran .. • • -

W.hitf Ruse, (inldeii Itanium, t'l rsin ..AAiJ. whole keriirl. t'lildcli, !.' 1!A&P. Ctoshy, *'J canlona, I'ro.sby. - ' - runFame, whole golden. * 2 canFame, CTIHI"<I. Hd.-n, a 2 ran .Krasdale, Gulden li.mlam v;u-. pack.12-07.. can , %

Ki-a.-tilaU', jto.hlcn ' ' ' " • i ' 1 l l ' . !^-^ ' i l n

' Filigree, gul fiAn rmi»h<"U It i"tun. •*—!**»-..lieu, guidon ci iishcil. £11 fallUco, Golden liall^im whole kernel. # U can"Vco. Gulden BanUm v:u-. pack, lS-nx. canLily of the Valley, crushed golden, #'' canLily uf 111'' Valley.golden vac. park, l'J-oz. canLibliy's, (jiilileii, ciiishi'd. #^i.1 can ......Diamond, y.<,W\\ van pack, l:!-oz. cull.. .Diamond, cru-ilu-d golden. # 2 can

I'KASDel M«iz. Owen Gianl, 17-oz canDel Mitnle, early garden, 17-07.. iatiDel Mimic, early garden, l?-oz. phis* :....-.Diamond, * - can s .'.-Middale, #:Jli:i Cilll . , «Middale, #li canA&l1, #1 can •Fnnie. tiny, sifted, 17-oz, can ...Fame. Harden, # 2 canKrasdale, sifted .Little Gems, # 2 can ..Filigree, tender, # 2 canLibby's, sugar, 17w>-/,. canWhite Hose, Tender Jiift, 17-oz. canKrasdale, tender sweet, # 2 ennSultana, # 2 can -•Uco, fancy melting, # 2 canUco, jumbo melting, # 2 cullPremier, Garden Hun, # 2 ennPremier, siflcd suirar, # ~ can

SA1IKKKUAUTChampion, quart glassUuldsmith, i|Uiirt glassSilver Floss, #2'-J can

SPINACHCollege Town, #2',» canPremier, jj-'iVi t.m L.

TOMATOKSCollege Town # 2 canCollege Town, # 2 1 i canDel Monte, #2 i-an .'. ...Del Monte, #V,i canFlagstaff, # 2 ' - canGreen Circle, #2'/i can ^Hub City, #2 canHub City, # 2 ' i can .' •Premier, # 2 canWhite Hose, Ki-oz. glassWhite Hose, #2 Us can ..?•Krasdale, #2 can -Uoo, #2M: canPride uf the Farm, # 2 can .'Pride of the Farm, #2'<. CM '.

TOMATO .IU1CECampbells, 14-oz. canCampbells, 20-oz. canCampbell, 4G-oz. c-anCollege Inn, cocktail, 20-oz. glassCollege Town, 20-oz. enn .....«,College- Town, -KJ-oz, canFlagstaff, 20-oz. can ,..'Flagstaff, 4(>-«•/. canPremier, # 2 can :.Premier, \'l-oi. can ,^un Ray, l.'i-on. can ,..Welch, pint buttle- :

Welch, quart bottle , '. •White Rose, 4(i-i>z. can :White Rose, Ki-uz. glassWhite Rose, 24-uz. can .» «.Ann Page, 18-oz. can -....lona, 24-oz. canLibby's, # 1 can - .Krasdale, 20-oz. can ...'.....

"Krasdale, 4li-oz. can ....Diamond, 12'.-a-oz. can .Diamond, 20-oz. can .'..Diamond, 4(j-oz. can •....-....'Del Monte, # 2 can fdDel Monte, 47-oz. can

FRUIT COCKTAILCollege Town, #2'.it canCollege Town, # 1 can .,Bel Monte, #2',i glass .-7..:......-.T.r.........Del Monte, # 1 can '.Green Circle, # 1 win 4White Rose, # 1 Can j . .:'..

' White R"se, # 2 Ms glass- {•

"White Rose, #V,'i canPremier, #1 can jHe-art's Delight, #2Vi can .-.Filigree, # 1 can ..• ,Filigree;, #2% can T

Sultana, #1 can v ;Fame, #214 can «'.Libby'.s, #1 can ' . , ,Libby's, #2V4 glassUco, #1 can , ..../.Uco, #2% can .... iDiumond, # 2 H 'Can

PUACIIKSCollege Town, yellow cling halves,fy'lV't canCollage Tuwu, y.«Uuw clinjc, sliced,#t% <»n ....: ;.,..„ ......CoJktft Town, Elbcrfca halves,,, iCotleije Town, Klberiii idieed,Dal Monte, httlves, # 2 ^ glass ••--Del Monte, (diced, # 2 % glass ....FUynUitf, hulvi-n, #2'/» can .Flagstaff, slicixl, f f - ' i canO t w i t'itvle, halve*, #'l% c u n

i t'iitlu,

1

11

14

11

1 Ij

faIll

17

lfi

1415

1-11 41>',

13

1710

1.314

13

13

17 If!17 17!!>' 1514 13

1,4141415

ISIll20171517

I!)

13141415

ISIS29171517

1!)lfr17lfilfi13

171710151318

20

21)

Id18

202014

21'•!"

15.2018Uf»

2020

19191617

20

1!)

14

2020

15

20

18

24

20

20

12

16

21

14

1!)'

14

Iff

IS)

15

22

14

19

12

28

23

11

24

12

25

10H181814221418

. 912272310231225

1718

1418

8

10

23

20

...;

. . . J

1089

1425i'\1113

' 1079

1324221113

812277

10251330

81120

fi10241329

3420"

3520*?•-• 4 6 -

2Q. " 2020 2020SgJJ621342135

19353521342035

1125

17

....

19

36

3"5

29

17372038213436

362037213385

1782-

28 27

28 •

.34

388Jt293027

2733

3833282087

....

....

ii28

....

ni:t'

12

13

13

14

Idlfi

17 -

..a

12

in

1313

11

13 13

13 13

1521

1718

1418

102320

812212211121011

7

1125

2.117

193434

29203317

1731

28

Ceiline pricf" (in cents) by Claw ofClaw Qlnss CIIIRS

2

2930313131282826

3*31m3536

Hub Ciiy, yellow rlitirj halves, #2% canHull City, yellow cling sliced, #2 Mi canPremier, yellow clinp sliced. #2 '4 canWhile Ruse, halves, 2H-O7.. glassWhite Riw, yellow cling, #2 '4 can ......lona, sliced, i~li canA&P, halves, #2'ii canHenri's Delight, sliced. # 2 H canlien, sliced, it'i1^ canFame, halves. "# 2 '^ canFume, sliced, i i l i ' j cant.ibhy'e, sliced, ypllow cling, #2ty can ....riinmond, halves, # 2 H canDiamond, sliced, #2^4 canMiddale, # 2 ' i can

PEAKSDel Monto, halves, # 2 ^ glassHub City, halves, #21*! ennWhite Rose, halves, 28-oz, glass ....-.,Diamond, #2'i! can, halvesPremier, JJartlett, # 2 4 canA&P, # 2 ' i can :......'..iKilitrree, #2 ' . . can ,Fifmt, Hartlett, # 2 ' ^ canRuJiy, #2Ms can'.ibby's, Hartlett, # 2 ' ^ canlirtisdalp, Itartlett, #2Vi can

PINKAliilLE•Del Monte, slicpd, #2Vj canHole,' crushed, # 2 can :... .'..:..Dole, Gems, #2'*; canDole, sliced, #2'-! can.)ole, uliceil, #'£ can 'ona, sliced, #lJ/4 can

CKRKALSHeckers Farina, 14-oz. carton /...„Hetkfis Farina, JJ8-O7.. cartoiy.:.'Quaker Farinlf^W-at. cartonQuAker Fariim, 2H-o». carton

puffed Vhent, regulnr site c»rt«nQuaker Puffed •Rice, i+pilar alie chWnw - . WN. B, C. Shredded Wheat,

regular size c-arftn 13Wheaties, regular size cartonShredded Ralston, regular size carton...Ralston Rye Krisp, fi-oz. cartoniRalston Rye Kris|», 12-oz. cartonRalston Whole Wheat Cereal, regular

size cartonMaltex, regular size cartonCream of wheat, small Carton!ream of Wheat, large carton

WheHt*m», Kinall cartonWhanU'iia, large cartonH. 0. Oats, small carton „Kellogg Shredded Wheat, regular size'enrton

All Bran, 10-o?.. enrton

12fi20303229

21!262«3128

2830303030272725

37313B3534

n

3128232525

35373?3435

31£8313125

34-

3%333434

31'23813123

1424918,\\

13141423

24

1526IB2812

1213

All liran, lfl-us. carton 21Corn Flukes, (i-oz. carton

Kellogg Corn Flakes, 11-07.. cartonKellogg "Rice Krispies, 5-oz. cartonXellogg Variety Pak, large cartons'ost Bran Flakes, 8-nx, cartonost Bran Flakes, 14-oz. carton

Rost Touslies, (i-oz. cartonPost Toasties, ll-oz. carton '.-'ost Tens, large carton

61013261116,6

10 ,.26

1111121220

2122132213

'2211

1012•18

68

12229

1358

229

1313102210228

iunnyfield Oats, 48-oz. carton 17Jold Seal Quick Oats, 20-oz. cartonold S«al !5ats, 20-on. carton

Sold Seal tjuick Oats, 48-bz, cartonJunnyfield Corn Flakes, 8-oz, carton;unnyfie,hl Corn Flakes, 11-oz. carton....unnyfiehl Corn Flakes, 18-oz. carton....

COFFEEMaxwell House, 1-lb. bag ,Maxwell House, 1-lb, glassBoscul, 1-lb, bagBoscul, ¥-lh. glassSanka, Wb. glass :Kaffee flag, l7lb. glassWhite Rose, 1-lb. felass"White Rose, 1-lb. bagBeeettnut, 1-lb. glass ,Chase & Sanborn, 1-lbl bagDel Monte, 1-lb. glassNescafe, 4-07.. glassnstant Postum, ,4-07,, caninstant Postum, 8-oz, canBokar, lJlb. bag IEight o'clock, 1-lb, bug ,Red Circla, 1-lb, bag ....:...„ '

1-lb.'bag [ * ! 32

jrape Nuts Flakes, s^iall carton 11irape Nut Flakes, 12-oz. carton 16lirape Nuts, reguhu1 size carton 16Quaker Oats, small, carton 12Quaker Oats, large carton 26Mother's Oats, 20-oz. carton 12Mother's Oats, 3-lb. carton .v 26Sunnvfield Oats, 20-oz. carton .'.'."

1323

9181112

1312131423

2425152fi152'612

121321<59

13

1115

6102511151 5 •

12251225

3538353841403533373338342544

3538353841403533373338342544

88175711

313331343035

353133302238262124

32

"30

33

'+•36

67

33

315629

2749

1831

Jco,vrasdale, 1-1U bag *".'. 30

Diamond, 1-lb. bag *....... 83,

COOKING AND $ALAD OILSMuzolu,' pint can .36rfazola, quart can 67Wesson Oil, pint can , 33Ann Page Salad Oil, 8-oz. bottle 18Ann Tage Salad Oil, pint canAnn Page, 3fi-oz. canDiamond, 8noz 18Diamondl 16-oz ,: 31EVAPORATED AND CONDENSED MILK

EVAPORATED MILKiilvor Cow, 141/4-oz. can ....iilver Cow, 0-oz. canArmours, M'/j-oz. canivmours, (1-oz. can,ion, 14Vi-oz, canion, fi-ozi can

Carnation, 14%-oz. can ....Carnation, 6-oY. tah" ~.V...;~...,Pet, 14Mi-oz. can'et, (i-o/.. can!ealect, 14' i-oz. canleulect, (i-oz. canWhite House, 14Vi-oz. canWhite House', 0-oz. can

115

U8

116

11*

115

U5

Uoo, 14Vsi-oz. can , ...UCB, fl-oa. can 'Every Day, 14'/a-oz. can ;Every Day, fi-oz. can ....,..» ,..,...,:....,.

Condensed'MilkEagle, 15-oz. can '.Star, 14-os!. can r...i....lion, 14-oz. can «..' ...,yhjte House, 14-oz. can

Magnolia, M^z^jiari - ».—. ,FLOUR MIXES :

Auat Jemima Pancake, 20-oj., carton ....Aunt Jemima Buckwheat, 20-o*. carton

116

115

15

A "

U5

UI

21IS17

16 lfr

Duff's Ging«rbruad mix, 14-0*1 C»l'ton ....Slaka Pie Ciiwti B^w. cartojiUco'Cake Flour! *%-[b. c«rtoiv ................Sunnyfiald Pan Cuke Flour, 20-oz, cartonA«cu Pan Cake Flour, 20-oz. cartonAaco iiuckwhoat Flour, 20oa. carton....Sunnytield Buckwheat Flour,

13IS8ft

u15

18

£0

105

105

lft14161214

.111318Bi-l l

"*7"

77

1

3(27uO

2524

26 2fi

32 32

29

27 .2021!262214

12'2081610If

26202H262114

11208159

'n1110121219

202213

•2>l

132210

10It18•58

11220

1358

22' 913

1310221022

817

H8

1757

10

303330333G35

35313330,22382fi2124

53

28IT2546

tt •;:•

5lh5116116'115115V-

• 1 0

,'B105106105105

5

10510510510i105105

10

5

10-

1818151213

111317

t9(-.*«, 6

66

. 7

prices (in r e n t s ) hy <',\m*

(!lrtss Class C

of HH.tiler" I J I H S ( ' l i

2n

• I D

20

1920..

LARD 'Star, 1-lb. cartonPremium, 1-lh. enrtonliEiurp], 1-lb. cartonSunnyficld, 1-lh, carton '

MACARONI, NOODLES AND SPAGHETTIMACARONI

White Rose,/ 8-oz. cm-ton 9 9White Rose, elbow, 8-07. enrton :... fl 9Ann Page, 1-lh. enrtnnGold Seal, 8-oz. carton

NOODLES • - . . • •White Rose, 5-oz. carton 10 10Ann Pajfe. fi-oz. cartonAnn Page. 1-lb. carton ,Gold Seal, 12-oz. carton ..." J.Filigree, 5 oz 10/ 10Uco, 12-oz 1 20 20Uco, 16-oz 23 23Encore, lfi oz ,

SPAGHETTI .White ROPP, 8-oz. enrton 9 0Ann Page, l(i-oz. cartonAnn Page, K-oz. carton : ,.

SHORTENING ' . * .Crisco, 1-lh. jur

Crisco, M b . j a r

Spry, 1-lh. j a r *

Spry, fl-lb. j a r '

Jewel, l i b . carton .

Advance, 1-lb. carton

Dexo, 1-lb.

Dexo, ;(-lb,

SUGAR

Fine Granulated, 2-lb. enrton

Fine Granulated, fi-lh. ca r ton .

Fine Granulated, fi-lb. hat; - •

Fine Granulated, 10-lb. but; ....

•Brown, 1-lb. carton,

10

1H

1!)

18

115

r,1813

115

fi18

2fi

74

.2(5

7422

2fi

742'i;

74

22

15

37

71.

8

*•!!». cart»n ...... ....•

Bulk, granulated, 1-lh

SYRUPS

Lop Cabin (12 oz. glass) .'

Karu Blue Label, ( # ! ' • . • glass)

Karo Red Label ( # 1'u glass)

Vermont Maid (12 07.. (rla.^.s)

Asco (24 oz. guts*)

DAIRY PRODUCTSBUTT.KROne Pound Cartons in Quarter Pound

PrintaGrade AA or 93 score. (Salt)Grade A or 92 score (Salt)

.„.'" K or 91) score (Salt)rade C" or 8*8 score (Salt)

Grade AA or !•.'! score (Sweet)Grade A or !)" score (Sweet)Grade B or 00 score (Sweet)

•ade C or 8!) score (Sweet)One Pound or One Half Pound Prints-

Rolls-Parchment WrappedGrade AA or 1)3 score (Salt)Grade A or K score (Salt)Grade B or !)0 score (Snlt)

rade C or 81) score (Salt)Grade AA or 93 score (Sweet)irade A or 02 score (Sweet)• rade iKor 00 score (Sweet)

Grade- C or 80 score (Sweet) .'TUB I1UTTER

Grade AA or 93 score (Suit) .'.A or 02 score (Salt)

score (Suit)score (Salt)

143534(58

8

18

11

r,

24

fit.•1»

1!)

n;t

13

'.VI31

18

115

24<18

24

r.s17

10

i'l3231

Oiling price* (.in cents) bV

Ch,

Kraft-Pimento ( Vi 1b. carton)Kraft-Swiss (Mi lb. carton)Kraft-Velveeta ("4 lb. carton)

EGGSGrade "A" in cartons (dozon)

.ftimho (min. net weight per box 28 <M.)Extra Large (inin, net weight per doK.

2(5 oz.)Large (min. net wt. per doa. 24 oa.)Medium (min..net wt. per doz, 21 or.) ....Small (min. net wt. per doz. 18 oz.)

Grade "B" in cartons (dozen)Jumbo •Extra Large., •LargeMedium - i :

Small • ••-Grade "Cl" and Assorted in cartons

(dozen)Jumbo ,••• •Extra Largo ••

L a r g e ••••• •

Medium \Small ..f

Grade "A" Loose (do«o»)Tnmbo •• •Extra I«ivpe

MediumSmall ...

Grade.Iiimho

"»" (dozen)

18lit21

21

18l!l21

7

18IBlfi1810

7>r<_7

""'is

IS15in1810

LargeMediumSmall

Grade "(V* and Assorted (dozen)JumboExtra Large , . •Largo .' :

124U24

m

57

55

B0

4(1

•6151

51

47

42

474747

4237

58fir,6348

,43

49'494941

' 40

44"44

4440

r.r,51'I'l

4r,

fid

5(1

4 c,

'II

41',

•I I

I 1I I

Grade B or 00Grade C or '8'J

CHEESEKraft-American

B2-51515053525251

5150506052515150

50504949

5251

, 515053525251

515050505251.51 "50.

50504949

494S48474949 -4948

4847474049484847

47404fi4G

4948484749494948

4847474(5•40

484H47

474(54fi4(5

Ci-lli, carton) 21 20

Prices for Grades "A1' and ""V are inctroct only until June US, 1943 "

Fluid Milk . •Approved I'usteurized (1 qt.) 17

These arc out of store prices for con-tainer or bottle; additional de-posit for bottla.

FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLESBananas

Central American (1 lb.) 14Cuba (1 lb.) 11

POULTRYDressed Chickens (Grade '.'A")*

Broilers (per lb.) 44Fryers (per lb.) ' - 44Roasters (pe/ lb.) 44Fowlinertf.) 40

' Live Chickens (Grade "A") '*Broilers (per lb.) .19Fryers (per lb.) : 39Roasters (per lb.) 39Fowl (per lb.) 35

*,The maximum price of th# above varieties ufgrade inferior to grade "A" shall be l'.^c 'jin-such Chickens grade " B " and 4c per podndChickens grade "C".••*Additional charges allowed for slaughtering :<ntry. A retailer may add to his maximum pricelished hy this order whichever of the following

(1) 10c for a bird killed in accordanci- w\dietary taws, if such killing was d'>in>

or an agent or contractor engaged and p:ii<(2) 10c for plucking a bird which the n-t.-ii

sells live if su«h plucking ia done by hi:ag»nt «r contractor engaged and paid by li

, . , • 1 ,

WW^^

In LB14 »t Fort McHenry, the tight ofout flag still flying inspired Francii ScottK*yo ts write our national anth«m. To-day, the knowledge that "our flag is•till there" brings hope an,d courage tomm who fight for Freedom . . . ev«rywh«r«.

IT'S A GRAND OLD FUG." . . • , l l i e « »

blem of our free Aiq«ri(a. Let'» k««-|> l(

way by tUyipff on Us* job every day! Ke"

b«r, every hour . . . every minute co«"ls-

can't »p«U VICTORY with, an absent 1 'EHPURITAN DAIRY

"The Emblem olQuality"

The Home o( Modern Top MilkFayette St. cor. Wilson S t Perth

TELEPHONE

• '' •• :;•:• , : • } • • ' • • • v ' 1 - ; - 1

r i

Page 5: BACK UP YOUR BOY Mepenbent Heaber - DigiFind-It · Price Panel Assistants will sem as liaison officer* between consum cr, merchants and board. Thci Job will he to disseminate infor-mation

j v: pRpENDENT—LEADER

jlders' Circle.Elects Officers

H,'/,- circle of the Meth-'•':,,m a vv-i-vp re -e lec ted » t n

, I,,.1,1 nt, the home of Mrs.-,.|.,,i(t(.r, on Rowland Place.iM',. President, Mrs. Ira T.,. vice president, Mrs. Les-..I'liiiiiiiiid: s e c r e t a r y , Mrs.

r;. nssistant secre-\\, ..' lidi-lnn P. Trail!; trcas-\1,.-. (iiMii-jtc D. McCullagh;

,,,1 treasurer, Mrs. Byron,,„ ami publicity, Mrs. Traill.

I'lillmviiiK committee was[ f,,!' t'ho aiinuui fnll bazaari:nni ' r: MM. William Moss,Ulierl B<'i'(fen, Miss Mabel

,,, II Mr?, Herman M. Quinn,I.,',,,,., W. Hilbert, Mrs.

i,,- ami Mrs. Carl Augustine.nd'tintf will be held June 17

Spencer's home to Hew for,liM. The next circle rneet-

,.| !„' liclil July 7 lit the KomcIlillirrl. nn Oak Avenue.

Warship CommitteeConduct Benetit Party

i | i l ! l ! l 1 « ! K

, i inl pm-ty

Mrs.,,r

—Plans for »to be h«'l«! at

Alfred .1. Mur-Ke Avenue, Ave-were made nt »

theb- «f Won<lbi'iil(re Tflwn-'••' Scholarship commit-Iliijii School,lula van Slyki", recriiit-.ii, submitU'd the names

Mi

Mr-;.

miiitf inirse*.f tlie scholarship: Mr. H. 1), Clark,. A- W, Scheiclt, vice

(I. (iilmnur Robin-it.-1-; Mrs. RnrI Palmer,>!i», Williirii Dunham.

\h-s van Styki- unit Mr*.,-. ,ni, The next meeting

wilt be held

iroad Employeis Of Injuries

i l;r..U)IN(T—Davi.l Wai-• •I' :::::', Slioridan Street,

'. JHV, a hmkemnn em-•:ii Heading Company

• I ;il the Perth Aitilmy]|n<|,ii;,l Sunday as the

1 injuries sustained on1 .vhrti he fell nt work.

: hi; in 1 he police report;•, ,n releasing a brake oni when hi' fell between

The accidiTitI'.vU Railroad office.

. - . * < minty S u r r o g a t e - ' * ('Hurt\ .1 I II I III < K U I H T l t H H

I ,|,!> '•• aitnii n i s t r n t r i x ol1

I1 i|. |. n , i l c / e a s e i l , liy illI i .iik V i ' n u i m l l y . S11r•

• d i m l y ill Mi.i . l lcsex,I...I1. .' In ri l l ' rl'i'.llli.rs

: '':-,,' i IrM K. I'lippa.-! I I I, II i|. 1.1M, III-IIIIIIIIIN and

i ' I I I ' - e s t a t e I>F, .1, i i i u l i ' i - u n t i l n r n f f l r -•n ; i MX i n n n l i l H I r u m S i l l s

M i l l I.*' 1 ' n l ' e v e r l . i i r t ' t . dl1 against tin:

LEGAL NOTICES

FRIDAY, JUNE 11,

HVTi In II,,,Mi ' i imr i i i i m n i

' t ' l ' lRi ' , \ . - \ v<-ll " t l i i i b l l c«t M i l d e r a.

'l"rki.n

"n i a n . I Mi,; i n

irldRe TownshipTuke Fnrtlier

Tnwnshlp r{,mni1h)lIdri it,minim,in

mjrsiiIn-

Hl>»»r T o i

' which said lnis

1Pills

fin 111

pulfl In

ndjni

terms un

shall In.I'lion ,i

Md, in- I,

. . . I l l . ,

i : ; • ' » ' . '

,ir.'''•'•'''• V ; K :n (ieo.l n i l ( |Wnhl-loiH In

t e r m s , willtil of Sir, I|.O

for In c o n t r a c t

lT :IK it may| ) ( . | i ,K K iv , . , ,of iKiyinpntm " l l ' " " m

mnilmnm

w ) l l

r n i s .

< nr H:LII'del iver llfur suld

IMS.Laoil J u n e l l t l i , KIn Hi" indi-pcnili 'iit-

TO wir l)M""iT'il"v"'hl^SAl iR

J u *»ni)M IT MAY t'ONORKN-

.^...M.rf1.'^"1"1: '"cetliKS ,,f the«lll|i of Wno.lhr i ,H f i l.elit' ' I ' - I:M:I, I w,1H

m|v,.rtls> t he fii.-t.V i

tn

Man.1,

Hint

liubllc sailitcr according tn lerinn of siifill- wllh tlie Township. Clerkto Inspection and to b« publiclyre,nl prli.r In -ill.., I.i,I* r.T-t and ;,7:

Ulni'lc r.C3-1'. W.iiidbrlilKe Township Aises-m.'iii Map.

Take furlher notice that theTownship I'nmtnliim ha*, by resoInllmi and purmiunt to law, titv</t'imiiiiinuni prlcn nt which aiild lots in

.1 Mock will b« nuld togetherwith all other, detail!) pertlnmt,mid minimum ^nri.-e lieluK $.':.',,'

plus costs of preparing deed and ml•tislng thin sale.. Said lota In sail

block If HOU on terms, will renulraV'wn iiavmi-nt nf t*S SH, the bnle oF purchase price, tu b« paid IrI.I! lil'.lillih in; lallmellls oF llll.lli» Interest und ntlier terms pro

vldeil for In conlract of mite.Take rurtn«r iintir,, u m a t sah

sale., nr uny dale to which It may InadjntitiH-d, the Township (Jted ri'KeivMi tin. right In itstlon to reject nay une or all bidand to nell laid lots In said bio. Itn such hldder us It may select, duregard belnf Klveii In termn ammumier of 'payment, In .axe. on« o:more minimum bids shall be r«reive.1

1rp«n acceptance of I lie minimumDid, or bid above mlnltnuin, by 111Township Committee and Ilia payincut thereof by thu |jiinliaser accurding <u the manner of purchasiIn accordanct. with terms of salson tile, the Township will delivera bargain bnd .sale deed for. sulil

hale.I; June >tli, i n n .I! J DU.NJIGAN.

T o w n s h i p 'Cleric.T.i he adve r t i s ed J u n e l l l l i ai

J u n e 1Mb, 19-U, in the Imlei iendent -

LEGAL NOTICES

.ale nn fll«, Ihe TownshlIver a bargain and milemid premises.

1 'a i i ' i l ; . l u n e Hth, Ifl I ;lI i . J . I J t I N I O A N , T o w n s h i p C

T n h e m h - e r l l s e i l J i m p l l t l im e IHth , I J I S , I,, t | , e I m l c p e m

.ender.

Will dfl-d e e d for

ami

W-MTi I>nr\n 13*1/417J « OP PUBLIC SAI.K

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN;At K regular mer t tng ot tmj

o-wrishljf Committee of the Town-ihlp ot Woodbrlds« halri Mon-I«V, June 7th, isia, T w,is ill-

t # advenlss the fact thatMonday evening, June 21st,

1943, the Township Committee -willmeet at 8 P. M, War Time In the.Committee Chambers, MemorialMntilclpal Building, "Woodbrldce,lew Jersey, nnd expose, and sell ntubllc sale nnd to lh« highest bid-

der according to terms of sale, on1« with tho Township Clerk openo Inspection and to be. publicly'end prior lo snle, Lot 7 In Muck'21, WoodbrhlKe Township As-iesstrieTi I Map.

take further notlc* that thePownshlp ComtnlbUe has, by reso-lution and piir»uant to law, fixed aminimum price nt which sal.I lot Insaid block will be sold togetherwith ell other details pertinent,aid minimum price rf'l"K ijw.oo

Plus coats ot preparing deed and a<l-ertlnlnn this sale. Suld let In wildlock If sold on termn, will rouulra

i lnwn p a y m e n t nf $2(1.(id, the bill ,ance of purchase pr|ce to be paid Ineiiual monthly Installitienis of |ll).(iitplus Inherent and other terms *rp-vlded for In contratt qf anle.

Take further notice that at saidsale, or any dute in which It may beadjourned, the Township Commit-ee reserves the right In Itn (tlncreIon to reject any one or all bld»,ail lo sell H'llil l"i in HIH.I li].,rk0 such bidder an It mny select, due

regard bUtlR given to terms undlnunner of payment, In case (nci ormore, tnlnlniiitn blda sliall bo recelved.

Upon acceptance of thn minimumbid, or bid above minimum, by IhcTownship Committee and the payneiit thereuf liy ihe purchaser ac-ordlnic tn the manner oF pnrehun accordiinee wllh ternlH nf .nil>n file, Ihe Township will de*vi>r

ti unil »»W itoad [i>r *

LEGAL NOTICES

nleiosl anil .oilier t"i HIM provided'or in roni riict cf '',ili\

ike further nnlii e lli.it nt anld, nr any dale In which It mny be

idjniirni'.l, tile T..\Mii!ilp Onmmltteese lves Hie riubt in its dhcrelluiireject nny one nr all tild.o and Ift

II snl.I IOIB In snld hl ixk to >nchIdiler as il ,m«y select, due regnnl

iff (fly/n to terms nn.l manner ofinentjvn ca»e one or more mint-

mum lililsliihnll be received.Upon iicRtptRnoe cf tile minimum

bid, o r Mil above hilnlirtlim, tsj thBTownnhlp Committee and the p»y-

ent thereof by the, purchaser nr-•orrilnu to th< manner of purcbusen ncnordance with t e rms DF snl» onle, the Township will deliver a har-'8In nml sBle deed For said premliei.

Muted: June 8th, 1HU.B, ,1. Dtni'i'iAN,

Township Clerk,To lie advertised June n t h nn.l

lune IStH, linn, In (lie lndepeti(ient->nder .

' I . t l . i r i ' l1 I . I t I i \

M.ii nA.liiiiiilsir.ilnr.

S, .1.

". .I . NtirritlUltr'l f'«III I KKItlTOHS

A.huliiiwt nitiM-

l l M U X , l l i - l i ' b Vi . ' . l i t u r s ..I I In'bri i iK In II).ir

s . l id i l r i ' K l H f d , 1111-iii.il i n n , w i t h i n HJK

n- t l i i 'J ' w i l l>l' u n y Jii1111ni

.Hai.l i ldl l l i l i iH-

i l a t i -

Klxko;i i s l i . i l . . r

Ki, llii::.

I, N . .1,

-IINIi l lo i -ke l i:iU/4in.- i n i l l . I l S A l h

M' MAY (MiNCKUN:- nl.it-

i

i i i i t - l i l ) KHe.: of life TuWn-due livid Monday,1 was, ill reel fil I"I l l ia i im Mnlliluy

-I. ISlS, (he Town-will iiiri-l at H K

e Cliam-Hull.lliiB,and ux-

I iiilljlit- HIIIH and, tu

I .Iff j ieur i l lnx l u

. tile with I lie Tovvn-II In i n s p e c t i o n a l l dri-ad piioi1 lu Hale,

. in.-IIIMIVC, In Bl.i.'k

Mum.'W . l i '

llefrr Tin M'-l'^-ti Ilinki-I I i i , II\OTICK W PI IKK H\f.K

,T<) WlfuM IT StAV C<)Nr|.;itN:I At ii reifnlfiT nieeiiiiK nflin- Tu

ship Committee uF the Tnwnsliip oFU'u.i.lliri.life li.'ld M.MI.lav, June 7th,lii:i, I was illrecled lo mlvcrtisetin. Fa. I I but nn Monday evening,June :'lsC, 191:!, lhi|>T.'»'n'slilp Com-inlttf.. will meet ill S !'. M. t.WTIIn the ('niuinillee iNianihers, Memo-rial Miitih-lpiil linildliiK, VVmiilbrMw.New Jersey, and espnai- an.I »elV alpuhli. sale and to the hiKheHt bldilura. i nr.line; |n i,.nns nf sale nn tile,wllh the Township Clerk npen toIliHim'iinn II nil- t" he publicly rprim- to sale, l.nls '.'.'. tn -7 inclu-»ive in Block .'.7:;. Wn

Tiiki: Fm'tln-r notice that theTawnirtilp 1'i.liuiiill.r lias, by rexo-luliiiii .mil piii-Huant to law, tUed amini Ml ll in price nn which said lots InHIII.I block will he suld togetherwith all other details pertinent, mil'lnuiiluiuin prlci. l.einlt MuDiMI plusc.mts of i>|-e|Mirinif deed anil adver-lisihK this sale. Sukl lols In sal.tlilock IF siml on teniiN, will reiiulrea down payment o( "lINUlu. the bal-iince i(r purchase price tn tie paidIn i"|ii,il mnnlhly inst.l llrnein sJl.liMi plus Intei'est IIIII4 other ternmprnviilcd for In com rai l of sale.

Take further notice that at saidsale, or any dale In wlilch ItIn- adjourned, the Tnwnshiu Omii-inillce reserves Ihe rfKhlvmtlou Lu i-ukct any UIIB or all bidsami In -i.-l! suld lots in saidI.I su.-li Milder us It may .selecl duei-i'Kiii-d lieliin" Riven lo te rms ' andmanner (if payment, In cuse mie nrIIKMI' inlnlmuin l)id« shall IIK IU-CL'iVl'll.

I'l'i.n acctiplaiice uf the mlniniumlilil, nr bid al.oVc inlniuinm, by tlmTownship Comnilltoe and the pus-nifiil thereof l.y I Jit- purchaser ac-

lo the iiiaiinei- of pur. liase

l iml

lintli 'tt t h a t III*ini 11-,, liait, hy ri ' in-—iu;iut t u la.w, llxede at w h i c h Hithl lutttft ill lie »i.1.1 liiKiilhn'.er i lclallH pe r t inen t ,

price li«lnK JiriU.Oil| i r . - | ,nr l i i« deed and

Uils mill-. Hiihi lots Inil wild nn tBi'lua, will '

'1'Wii p a y i u e m of 115.(10,11 "I IHIIVluiSU pflci) t o IW' n l niniil l i ly iii .stalliientHI'lii-i Intei-eat a n d b t h a riiii'd tin' In c i j i i l rn i t of

" I

I'lbl'l- unil _"> ihile lo which l t ' m a v'"•'1, lli« TowiiHhlp Coiu-•'•rVe« Ille " l'lglll in Its

' " rejccl any um. ut'' Illl' " »i'll Nalii loU In aa.ld•"' u IJIIIIIBI- US It liny »(.-

' 'K-'iil be ing K'VBII towanner ol' puymtmt, in

'•" iiini'ii n i lu lmum blik' • ' • ( • i V e i l ,

' '-I'IMIICII of ih« ininlinum1 ;H".ve mlulmuni , by tli»1 "aiiaiti,H . U | ,d i)1(J pUy.

" | i by, Um p m v l i m e r in;-

ui . 'e w i t h

1:1,1

of xaleIp vyill deliver «

deed fur uiild

1943,u J. UUNIQA.N,

Township Clerk.Il«ed .lima 11th and

In the tnilep«ndent-

Milld

c Sill,

u f the

K it

i t « p. U.

urdaiice with ti-rnin uf aidele, 11 Tnuushlp will (Ultver

mid sale deed for .said

premises.

liati'il:i In".- Kill, l

n. I. K .IIII) Clerk,lllli and

1IM3, |n thi' linli-pelideiit-To be ;ail\-i'rtlflpd June

.luiif lsla-ader.

Oockri•lllll.lt '

l i:i7/l!UIHalrr Tin W-»U7NQTIC'K OK PlIIII

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCKHV:At a regular meeting of the

Township Committee uf the Town-ihlu ot WofilbrldgM held Uuiiday,June 7th, ml:!, 1 was direst ml to ail-Vcilisc I he fact that nn Mondayevening-. June i l f l , h i l l , i l" ' Town-ulllli Cunilliltlee will "ie«t at «J' M Will- Time in the Coiinnlt-Ixe Chamhei-H, Mcinorlul MunicipiilHuililinif, WoUdbl'Idae, N«w Jer-sey, nnd expose *nd sell at public

le and,,to the highest bidder »«•i f l h tll«

1 " Jiale and,,to Ilia IllKuesi vmwr mt-^TT TSidlnK to terms of m\« oh «1« will*

thtj Townalilp Clerk open to inspec-tion and to be publicly mud .priorIu sale. Lots US and fi •» Block»2Hli, VVnoillii-blKc Townslii|i Assess-ment Map.

T»k» further notice that theTownship Commit Ii>e Ima, by reso-liitlnii and pursuant to luw, llxyd a

nium prlci' nt which .said lota Inaald block will be sold, togetherwith nil other iletalls pertinent,sal . l iiiiiiliiiiini l » l c f 'iniiitf |2GO.u«plus cosL^ of preparlnif ile«i and

•• • - this Bule,. "

it deed andSaid Join IIIttdvalllslllX Lillet Bttt,

said block If sold on terms w I re-uulro ii down payment of t-!5.UU. t««lialuni'H of purchase, pi'lco lo b» paidin ui|uu! monthly inatnllmenta of111)00 plus Interest and other termsprovide* for In contract of •»•«.

Tuke turther notice that at w^Jsale, or any aate to wJilch K m»ybe adjoiirnid. ^ Townsl.lpJJom-miiiee rBaerveB lh« right I* «»dliSf'etlon to reject any £ « ° ' »"bids and to sell said lota In Sftjab o'k to such bidder aa It M,y M-

/ d d belna *\m • •i w t / d w « r belnaterm. »nd nwnn.r otcase OIIO or mor* min

I m t e i l . . l ime Sill, l!M:i.

H. J . 1H1N1UAN,T u w n t i t i l p C l e r k .

T o l i e I ' lv. ' r l l f lu. l . ) . in . ' I l i l i MIHJ 1| | | , . lMI l , H C I , llT t l l f lll ' lf ' l l . i l ' l . ' l l lL e a d e r .

Refer Tin W-IO.1i niiekel 121-UlVOTICR Of PI BMC «AI,B

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCEKN:At a regular meetlnK of the

Township Committee of tlie Town-• htp ef Woodlirl.lHe huM Man.lny.

une 7th, i!H3, 1 wns directed Inidverllse the fnc-l that on Mon-Ifty evening:, June Hist, 11143, Ihe"ownshlp Committee, will meet at

S.P. M. (War Time) In the CommitteeChambers, Momorlal M u n l c l p n lHtillillnK, Wondhrlrlte, New1 Jersey,nnd expose und seH a t public snipiml to I Im hlghnst hldde.r according

terms oF snle on File with I lieTownship Clerk »pen to Inspectionnnd to be publicly read prior tosale, I-nts LMI and 27 In Block lUTfl-II,Wnndhrldge Townalilp AaRi

T a k e further notice that theTownship Cimitnlllno has, by mso-lutlon and pursuant tn law, ftxe.il airilnlmum price a( which sulil lots Inan Id block will he sold togelhelwllh all other detallM pertinent, saidminimum prlcn IH'IIIK $250.00 pliincoals of preTiiirlnK deed and adver-

i i tills jinie. Said lots In HalfIf sold on terniH, will

Hrfer Tin W-:Wi Dn.'Url 117 :lT:tXKI'll !•', UK PI H i l l <(I,K

T o WHOM !T MAY CONf'liHlN:At a ri'irnlur nieetliiir nf the Town

Dlilp CiimniltleH of the Township oW'nniUirlilKi' belli Muinlay, June 7thl!M:i, I w:iH illi't'iir.l tn advertise Hifact thai on Mundny i-vcnliiK. June^lnl, l'.M;i, tlii' Township Ciililinltle.Will Illcel at S I'. M. IJVT) 111 111Cummllteif .Chanibi'M, MemorluMiinlclpiil Itiillillnt,', WoiidUrhtBeNew JerHt-y, tuul t'X|mwe and m-ll ft|ml)II.- nale iiinl In the hltfhi'Ht lildder aiconllnit tn i r i i n s nf sale mtile with Hie Township Clerk opento Inspection and tn lie publicly rcaiprim' tu sale, I.uls ' i f l'i r.'H Mi. Insive in lllm-k r,i;:i-n, WimdliridKTuwiiKhlp Asucusin.'in Map.

Take further notice that thToWimhlp Conimltli-e has, by resnlutluii anil purKiiaiit In law. llxedminimum price a t which .inid lotIn l a id 'block will lie sold luRctlicwllh all other detai ls pertinent, lIIHIlillHIUl prlrc II«IIIK • $'.'r,ll.0(l pill!(•Win nf |n>|iailiiti ili-cl anil advrrHKIIIR thi i silk Said lots hi :hliii'k l( sold mi terms, will reMUlroa itnwn iiayinenl of $;'>.uil, Ihc bal-ance nl" piti'.-liasi. prlci' in he paid Ini'i|iial in.inthly installiiiiMils .>f (111.III!plus Int.-i'-s! an.) utln-i- f r i a i iirn-vided fur in cniilrai'l nT Hale.

Tiiki' Iii it lii'i' notice Hull at nal'lsale, .nr any date In which It limyhe adjourned, tlie Township Coiii-Ililtti'i' reserves I hi' I ' IKIIPIII its dls-i ret Inn in i-i'lci-t any one nr all Milsand lu.si ' l l Hiti<l lnts in Haid blntrklu sii.-h liiililcr as ll may HIMIMI, duereKKfil helnic ^Ivcn to terms andmanner of |iaynicnt, in ease one nrIniilr' l ii 111111111M) hlds sliall lie re-ceived

l';>on n"e»iiitini'e nf Ihe minimumhhl, or bill iilmvc minimum hy theTnivusliip Committee and the pay-ment t'ucreuf by t he purchaser .U--I'urdius to (tie u ianner of purchasein .M'cordaiiiT witli tiM-nis of sale nntile. tli« Tnwiishlp will deliver ilhiii'Kiiln "'nl *»• ' ileeO for said prem-

UATK1): June Kill, ISIS,II. J. Pl 'NIUAN, Townslilp Clerk

To lie advertised June lltli, amiJune ISth, 1S4J, in tlic Iiiili'|t.-iiilcu1-LeUder.

a down imymcnt of $25.no, the hal-incc nf piircliase. jirlce. tn he paid In"|li:il mnntlily InsUlllini.lits nf 1111.00IIIIH Inlcresl aud'"olh(!i- turmn pro-viiled for In cnnlract uf sale.

Take further notlcn thut at nnifl'file, n r any date to which It may

ii'l.lnui-iied, 1h« Township Com-•it I'|»H«I>V«« lh« I'ltfllt lU, US llJ»- ! , „„„ ,„„ ,»i to nitwt jiny ivnn at « l .Wl Htmaal'

nnil to .sell said lots In said block to hrhlB* \sii.-h liiildcr as it may select, d i r '

bi-hiK Riven lo terms nndmanner uF puymeiit, ill case one. o

n e minimum bids shall be recelved,

Upon acceptance oF the minimumhid, or bid abovi! m-luiinum, by theTownship C o m m i t t e e and the payment thereof by tlie purchaser ac

nf In I lie manne r of purchaseIn a. .or.label, wllh leruiftof sale onfile, the Township will deliver a bnr

In and sale deed for salil premlsef),l i a l c l : June Stli. HIC!

B. J. nt'NTOAN,Township Clerk,

Tn lie advertised June Hth nmJune isih, ion, In Ihc Independentl.natrcr.

Itefrr Tot W4W| Dor Ice I 11 K/a-»i"NOTrbK UC K t B U C HAI.i:

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCK11N:At a- regular meeting of tho

Township Commit toe of the Town-aliip of Wood-bridge lieia Monday,Julie Tlh, I!MII, 1 was dlrncled madvcrtlue the, fact thai oil Mon-day evening, lunc a 1st, y,M, theTownship Cnniinltteo will meutat 8 R.M. War Time In the Coni-IHIIIMH Chambers. Memorial Munici-pal Itulldlng, TVoodbrldso, New Jer-sey, and expoHe and sell at publicsHla dnil to the liigbest bidder ac-cording tu terms of aaltj on file withtln» Township Clerk open to inspec-tion anil to bo publicly read priorIn sale, Uil* IIH and 1112 In hlockr.M-C, Wnuilbrldge Township Ax-.scHMment Map.

Talte further notice that theTownship l]ommlttee has, by reso-lution and pursuant to law, llxed amlnlmuiii price at which said lnts Insaid block will fcu sold togetherwith all other details pertinent,said minimum prlcK being $21111.1111plus co»U of preparing deed andadvertising1 this sille.. Said lots lusaid I/look If sold on terms, will re-quire u down payment of JM.lHl,the balance of purchase price to hepaid. In egiiul nioniiily Installmentsnf J1U.IIU lilus interest and oilierterina j>rovlileil for In conlract of

' Tuke further nutlce that at Aaldsale, wi' any date to which It maybe adjourned, t he Township Com-miUue reserves the right In Usdiscretion to reject any one or allbliU Uli.l to anil said lots III) aalitblock to such bidder as It may HB-lect, due regard being given tote rms and milliner of payment, incase one, or more minimum bidssluill be received.

Upon accepumce of the mlnlniMmbid, or bid above minimum, by ' b eTownship C'oniinlttea and the pay-ment tn«r«of by the purchaser ao-rordl l i£ to t h e ^ lliuniier of pur-rlm.se in accordance with turnm ofsale on Illo, tha Township will de-liver a bargain aiul aiile ilced forsaid promises.

Dalml June Ktll. 1913.B J DUNIGAN, Township Clet'K.

To b» adverll.smi June Illh. " ' " 'J u n e 18th, 1943, Jii the lnilcpeiiilci"-I.eiiiJi-r,

l leler 'I'm W-3M| Docket 13»/«7Mil A V-l '

NOl'ICK OF 1'IJBI.H: SAIJBTO WHOM IT MAYCONCKKN:

At A regular meeting ut the Town-ii]i Committee of the Tnwnsliip

oF WoudlM-ldKe- Iwld MulKlay, June7th 1943 I was illriH'tcil lo ailvcr-tls« the fuct Ihat on Monday eve-ning, June. 21st, l lM, thu TownshipCimimllleu will meet ut 8 V. Mv(W T ) In the. Committee Chambers,Memorial Miinlclpul Uullilintf, Woud-brldgB( NeW Jersey, and nxpofln andsell at public uultt und to tlm hlK'i-uat bidder ac^oi-dliiK tu turni* of »al«ilii Die with tb« Towimhlp Clarkopen to Inspection and to be puWltlyreud prior lo aale, 1-uts U to m In-clusive in Bluck 11)12, .WuodnrldgoTuwniililp Ai»i)iiKil«<n,t Map,

Taka(urtfc«rlioflcith»t the Town-thin Commute* kw. by niolntloiiand purnuunt to law, flu ml a mini-mum price ai which "»ld lots In KuloVl!lo«k will be sold together with aUother d«tallt pertinent, Wild minimum price b»l,m •a'JQ.OO pluu etwrjof preuttrliiB dtwd »nd ndvwtljln*thl»'aalB. Btl|,l lots In uittd hluckIt aold on terms will require a *o»n

of |:)7 tiU, tlm balance ut1

r _ yrlce lo be pulti In «<iualRiouthly luALalUUijiiU ufj |,1MD pluti

Hefer Tin W-,%0(li Docket UT/I0B\'«TM'K 01-' I ' l l l l .K: SALE

Tf> WHOM IT MAY ctlNCrcilN:At a regular meeting of th

Township Coinmitti'i! or tlic Tnwn-ship of Wiiodhrldtsi! held MondayJune 7tli, KHil, I wan directed tadvertise the rnct that on Mondaevening;, Julie Jlst, 1DKI, the Town-ship Committee will meet at S P. M,f\VT) In the Committee, Chiunber*,Meniorlal Municipal Huihlliig, Wood-bridge, New Jersey, ami expose ansell al public sale ami tn Ihe hluhest hiiider acenlilllic; In terms osate mi 111,- wllh the TownshlClerk npen in inspection anil to I),publicly rciiil prior to sale, I^itIn Hlock sr; 1, Wunilbrlilise Tnwnnhi'Asscssmeiil Map.

Take Fiirlher nntlre that thTnwnalilp Committee has, by resulul Ion and puiMiant tn law, llxedmilli,mini price tit uii i ih M;I|.1 Int Isaid hlock will lie wild toffcthewllh all oilier details pertlllensaid ii]i iii in um price lining; Jl^S.Iplus costs nf pieiiarinf?- .Iced an:iilvi.i-||siiiK tills mile. Said lot Isaid him k IF sold on terms, \vli'fi|iiii-e a ilnwn paymenl of $ir>.0tlic balance ol' lnii'dinse price t( h,paid In diiiiil inoiillily liiHtullmentinf JIH,(Ml plus Interest and otli«'ii-i'nis i,i.,-,:,1,:,1 for In ::untrict osale.

Take fnrtlier not loo that at sailsale, or any datii »to which it ma;he adjnurned, the Township Cominlttei' resiTves the right In IIUlscrelinn tn reject, any oiip or abids and tu sell salil lot In snlblock to such bidder us It may a*led, due regard lielng given Itern-la and manner of payment, I.•asc one or' more minimum biishall lie received.

I'lion. aewptuiicii of the minimumbid, or I,id above minimum, hy the.Township CammltUo ami tlie payment thereof by the purchaser lieeorilluK to tlie manner of purchasIn a.je.inlance with terms of sa"on file, the Tnwnsliip will deliverbin-Ruin and1 naln deed for ssailiri 'iiilses,

Usuod: Jane Sth, l!li;t.H. J. DUNIGAN,

Township ClerkTn he a.lverl ised' June l l t l l .atK

.luini islli, l!li:i,- lu -the ImlppendenLeader,

Itertr '!'<II W-ll; Uci-ilWOTirn OP PUBLIC SAI,K

TO WHOM IT MAY C0N0URN:At a rcguhir moctlng of til

Township Committee of tho Township of Woodbrldgo helrt Monday, June 7th, Utlli, I wilst illl'ito advcrllso ' tho faut thatMnnda.\' evening, June -1st,tlie Township Coniinlttee wllmeet, at 8 P. M. War Time in thComnilttee Chambers, MeinorUMiiniriiwl Building, WoodbrldgNew Jersey, and exposo and sell a1

public, sale ami to the highest bitdor according to terms (A salo olilo with Hie. Township Clerk opei•tn Inspection and to lie public!ii i'l i.ri"! in sale, I.el;. II and I- IHlnclt ri?l-H, WomlliViilKC TownahJAHsesMinem M;iy.

Tuke. further notice that thiTownship Cusnmlttee has, by resolutlon and pui'uuunt to law, III mlminimum \irWe at which suld lotll said llock will bu .sold tuKelh

with all I iJtier deliilla pertinentMaid minliiiuni pllvw bciiiK JliO.Uplus costs of preparing dead unil aiYi'l'tisiiiK Mils sale. Said lols In sailbluck i( sold on terms, will rei|tilr,a down payment nf |lf,.iill, the hamice uf purchase price to be paid iieiiual monthly Installments of (Ti.U1

plus Interest and other tcriria provided for in contract of sale,

Tuko further notice that atsale, ur any diilo tu which It muy b.udjounu-tl, the Township Cominltee reserved the right In Its dlacretioii to reject, any sn« or all bidand to sell suld lots lu uuldi» such bMUw ua It may select, duregard beiiuj given to terms all'manner o( p»Tnicnt, In cane une oiinoi'ii minliuum bids ahull be re.celvud.

Upon ucceptanou o: the mlnlmubid, or bid above minimum, by UTownalilp Committee ami the payment thereof by the purchaser ancording to the manner uf purdiaaIn accordance with terms ufon tile, tha Township willu btirgaiu and sale Ue*! fur sapremlueii.

Dated: June Sth, VHXa. J. DUNIGAN,

Township Clerk.To be advertised .lun« lltli >»>'

June IHth, 1IH8, In the lndependon

r Til. W-raiUmkl /MOTICK W W»h\Q SALB

To Whom It May C«no»rn:At a regulni- meotlnu of tba Town-

•hip Comraltte« of the Town»h!p oiWoodbrld^e Huld Mohdity, June 7t184S, I WIIB dlrcutei! to advelUo tl*« fact thai un Monday eve-ning, June Dint, 1943, the TownshlCummUtee. will ineot at 8 P. MiW, X ) In thu Conimlttee ChambaraM y Municipal Rulldliiff, Woo*

Ko, New Jersey, und exiiona Jimat public, gula and lo the hlga

cat bidder atcoiilluif tu term! osale on Ille with the Township Olelil

to inapectlnu and la bu

LEGAL NOTICES

•Iv read |ninr I., s.ili*, I^,|« STiid «7'.' in Itln.-k s:,i; .1. WnndhrlilKc

Take further noilre that th*ownship Committee lus , by ' t i e -ltlon anil pursuant tn law. ftiett tinlrniiin prl 'e nt wliuli sal.I lnts inlid block will lie sold togetherIII, all other detail,1! pertinent, nald

nlulmiim prlcr ti.-lrm |K.O (ill |ilnsO J U sf pr«pnrlng deed ami adv«r-slnK this sale. Said lots in nald<*rk If miltl on terms, will reijulr*down paym.-nt nf Jir.llli, tile IIBI-

nre ot purclmse price to be paid»(|ual monthly Inalnllmfnts of

. «'» plus Iniereit and nlhrr lerni!'•ovlded for In contract of aalt.TAke further notle.i. that nt said

ule, nr any date to which It rony b».dinnrnnd, th« Township Committee

•serves the rl*lit In Us discretiono reject any one or till bids >ml to

II sulil lnts In said hlnck lo KUI Ii>ldder an It muy select, due rdgatd

' _ liven to terms and mannerf payment, In can* one or moreiinimum bids shall be received.Upon acceptance of the minimum

id, or bid ftbine minimum, by the"owiiflhlp Committee und the pnyr,neat tliareot by tha purchaser l>°-:ordlngi. to the manner of purchasen acrordance with terms of ia l t oni\e,' the Township will deliver a

and sale deed for no I (I prent-

Vuled : June 8th. 1)1 IS,E. J . DI1NIOAN,

T o w n s h i p Clerk.Tn he adver t i sed .1 nm<" l l t l i iimme mill. i!H3, In the Indepciideiit

LECAL NOTICES

W i

Town^lilii t'Simniitie*. nf Hie Tovrn-••liil1 nf Woodhrlilup Fur a PlenaryIli'lall CntHnmiii Inn lieenJe. F.ii-premises slluated ;it r,:, KuliniiStr-et, WnodlirldKc Township ofM-m.illirldire. N J.

01.it-, tinns, ••; .la- slim,1.1 l.« nindoimni'Mllntelv In WrltiiiH tn II. JIiunlgdn, Tnwnsliiii fl..rk.bridge. New Jerspy

ISTKHI'III .insimt r .W 1. I., it. I, II W.iu.lbrlilffe, S. I.

* \0TlfKTake nnll.'r. thai H A n ^ T VAN

TAMSKI, Inlmids to npplv to theTownship Committee of the Town-slilp of WocMtnHdKP fnr a Plenary

jiromlses sltiialcil at (Cnlleg*. lnn>113 Main Street, Wnmliirldfr, N. ,1.

I'lbJ^cions. If uny, slioultl he mndtImmediately^ln wr i t ing In; R J.I m n i n n , Tnwuolilp Clerk, Wnn.l-brldg. ' . New Jersey.

lSlKTU.il) flAHII? VAN TAS.tl"!..\V l.-l,.—a. |, l l Woiidlirldne, N. J

LEGAL NOTICES

DIIIIIRIII , tcwnsl i l ihri.la,-. New J.'r-.'V

I I

\l M:Yt • I . . - ii .

nl 1 'M'I.II IV. i

r l N K O T Vi,il.i|.t»... N I

TikeI . A i l ' A

NflTlfKTake notice that M1RTAM I. OAR-

IllSON Intendu to apply to HieTownship Cnmmlttei> of ihe Town-»hlp of W.indhrlilHf for a Plenaryttetnlt t'nnsunipilniT Mrense forpremines nil UA ted ut St. (leiirge Avl>-nue, Wnndbrlrtire, ToWitshlp nfWnoill.ridge,. N. J.'

flhji'clinhH, If any. should ho n*wdfimmediiit.'ly In wilt Inn to: II. JDunlguii, Township Clerk, Wnml-lirldiie. New .lermiy. .

(Srmw.il) MIKIAM I. OAURtHOM,W. l.-l, -li-l. II WwidhrMlgp, N. J

Itetii. I W

I" , i , I " l o' . . , un t i l I..,I.I.II.I Id l t eII.|,U1>! !nl

IIA-Hie

lostp.rnapplv l..r l)ie Tow n-

F.'r a IMi-naM'' Ii' 1'iiwe fnv

)remi Win ..II

1 Id w

mu,r.1 iMTl iKbridK.

W 1

PR Ml t l l . ' l t e il i . u . .

. ' | ! . l , l ^

im.-iv.'in, t .

, i . ^ * '

1. il

XIF .in

I V l l ' iI.',

. 11

nl1ny.Wli i p»'V

K'2 Mnln Street

shouldtln« inI'liTk,

ntl ^. ii

•e made. It, J

Wood-

i in t

\Vllrtilhrld(e, N' I

MIIKKT a k e tmtli-e t ha i CI.AlTtK O'^l ' . I I . t ,end^ In ,ipp)v h i the Tnwusihi riiimlitei- nl Hie Tuwn-l i l i i ..Inodliriilgi- fnr a Plrni lfy tlelilllnsiimpUnn lici>ii«e For pi-pinnn'H

1 il HI Cienrfp Aveaii,. AvW n l b l

• i l l I I I ri ii ' l

m m l il n i i i l l l . i i

Towimhlp of Wnnilbrldge. N I.J Hi.ns. IF a n \ . shoulil be m a d e

It. ]\Vnnd-

J . . soI m m e i l i i i t e l v i i i w i l l i n g t « .l l T l k

itW , I t , l j - l , I I

gTownshi|i Clerk,w tersey.

CI.AUlKAvi'llel, N I

'ii the l-'loi Owners n( Windsor

TAKH NOT1CR TIIAJ the ntlnualnei'tlllK uF Ihe pint owners nlVIUIIHOI- ( i ^ rdens wil l Hike iilaec on

I-'rlrtny, June 25, l!M:|, ul S:un I1. M,.K. W. T., at Sill Stimmll Avenue,

\rtm& City, New J e r s e y , l:,n..ii . | i j ,ltoAi;i> (iv- TitrsTKKs.

IJ. (1-11,IK.

T a k e not ice ilia I I1', K H A It l>iKKWIKN i n t e n d s In npplv to Ilic' nwnsh lp Comni l l l cc nf II,e T o w n -

ahl | ) nf WiiodhridKc for a P lenaryte ta i ! Cnllsiimiit inn license lo r

premises s l l u a t e d a t 111 I F u l i n nSt rec l , WiioilbrldKP, Tnwnsliiii ntWoadlirldtfe, N, J.

Objeclions, IF any, should bn mnd'eiWMiilBlwtj' kt wrlUlut t»;

New Jersey,KKHAi;ii H K H W I K N .

A'.l.-Ii.—li-l I,IS* WoodbrldK-', S. J,

i:Take notice that, MUfl, linSK

HACZ Inlenils In npply to Ihe Town-ship Committee nf Hie Township ofWondhridBc for a Plenary Helnll'onsumptlon licence for iireiiiisrn

siliiaied nt :ili:i h'ultnii Stivel, Wiiod-bllrtKe,,N. .1.

(injection*, if any, should be madeImmediately, in wtltiiiK to; H. .1.lUmiKan, Town.ihlp Clert, Woml-hridgre, New Jersey.

(Signed! MltS. r.OSK I!ACZ,W.I-I , .—fi- l l . lS ' WooillirlilKP, N. J.

Tnke milieu Unit Mli'lliA|(t, Al.-MAS I ml.-mli lo n|.|.l\; In the Tnwn-Hhip Cnmmlltee tit tlie Town«lilp'ofW...',|tn iiJuc For- a i'U'UUr/ J!"lallCnnsiiinplion IhehsH Fur preijiliicSsltunteil nt "« Main Strei>l, Wuiiil-

R , Tuwnnhlp nt WmulbrlilKO,N . J , , •

Objecilnns, If uny, should he madeImmediately In wrlliUK to: It. J.IninlK.in, Tuwnshlp Clerk, Wnod-hriilHe. Ni'W Jersey.

(Siitn.'.l) SflCirAF.ti AhMAHI.VV. I I , , - il-1, 11 Wondhrlilpte, N. .1

JlOTICK *Take notice I hut CIIA.t. H. ItOSi-

NKI1 intends lo apply to the Tuwn-ship eiimailllee of thu Tnwnsliip ofWonillirlilttc For a t'leiiarv KetallCnnsuiniitlnri license For premisesNltuittixl at lionle #35, King Georgertnild, WiHiillirldite, N. J.

•4s » Obj.'eliniis, jf uny, sliniiW he madeiT'TWiufiriliulrlli 111 ft m i n t (u: B, ,1.

(MltilKun. Tnwnshlp Herk, Wund-hrldKi*. N"« Jersey.

I.SlKiie.ll CliAS. 3. KOStiNICU,W I.-l.. -ii-1, II Wiiniihi-liUe. N, J.

LEGAL NOTICES

l-i-ti rCliar1

f>!'i> i i'ii

\ i

deriii, Pri>!> *Caravltln. Vlfd

i- Sieln. P e ' - yaiw. almulil !.» mada

lv in wri t .ng In: tk 3.Township r i i r k , Wtv .li-rscy

if

gDIBIiAl.TFH

Hy Pi't<r»»t Anihnnv rI L -r II- I, j | ' -

cnp-POTlAttOM,Hkti-ri', I 're»l(lrt

Slnln, Hw-r

M > T U I ' .T a k e mil Ice t h a t W I M . I A M J

K A T I I i n t e n d s In a p p l y to I lie T o w n -s h i p C o m a , I t l c e nf (Ii , . Tuivi i*l i i |> n (

" l l n i , I K I > fn r a i ' l e i i i i i y l i f l a l ln i m i ' t i n n ll< . u s e I'm- li

(Ireen SI reel, Wnnilbll.lK., Ttof Wiiiidhrulgi-. N.' ,1.

ill,JIM l i o n s il any . nhniiM he m a d eUniuediii'i 'ly in n-rllliiK m II. .1llunitl '1 '1, Tnwn ;!iF|, r ie r lc , Wnud-hrlilire. Ne\Y Je r sev

•(HlMiicd) U l l ' . I J A M .1 -KAf l 'H.W, l.-l,, l l - l , I I Wnndhrl i ine. N. .1

soTirnT a k . i n . i t l . - e Hi: ,I A N T l l o N V .1.

A N D J i W K I ' l l K. A N | i | . : i : . M C l l I n -t e n d In a i M d y t i , MLC T , . w m , l i i | . ( ' , , t n -n i l l l e e nF live T u w n s h i p of W n . n l -b r i d K e r . r t a l ' l i ' i i . u - v I l i - l a l l I ' u n -Hii lnpl l i in l i c i ' i va . i n r p i i ' i n l ' i ' . i ' i i l n -ill.e.1 ill ?,.•. I U ' e s ! A v e n u e , S c iv.lt iMi.T o w n s h i p IIF Wiu i i l b r i i lK i ' , N I.

tini.s. II' any, shn.il.l I.e inailc

Take nottri> Hut the1TY r t . l 'B Ititr'nili tn apply to t»«CnmTfillleemen of thi- Tfwnaht^ OfW.Mi.ttirt.lfB fnr a iluh llrenne Jf«r»reinlH»f sltuit. 'il ;rl HO Mnln BtrMt,WomllirldgH, X J,

ir any, vhnuld h« m*4tlinmi'.liat"lv MI wntlngr tn: B. J,

, To*ns!ilp Clerk. Woofl-N. .1.

(Slgnmlt I'PATKTlN'iTY f L f B .Willlain Ii Ftwlun, Pre».Vutrl.k -1. Kyan, Vice Pr*«..Inhii M. Mullen. Sen. Tre»t.

W 1 -I il I. it Wn.Mllirl.lgi-. N. .1.

XrtTICKTnlt*- nollce Mi4i LEWI* TOM.

I'HIK IntemlK to apply to the T o * * -" l ip t ' . i innil l lK ...f Hie Town.-•hlp or Wondbri.ftti. for » PlentrJ* Re-lull CiMiHuniiilinn llcer»«(i fur prem-Isi's sltiiate.l nt New an.l Wllllll)TIKlreiiln, Wnoiihrlilge, Township f t .Wiu'illHi'tK". N. .1.

If uny, nhoiibl be msqeI wrhinit to; B, J .

Imi Clerk, Wood*Jir:i.-y.

liiiiiii'illat.lyUUIIIKIHI. T.brldKe. Mew

In

<SIKII..II• t.KWIS TtiMCHIK.

w I -I, « i, ii w.i'i.ibridiee.'it, J,

l i n i i i i M l l a l . ' I v I n w i i t i n i :h i i n i ^ a i , . T < t w >c 'U, l | i i ' l . - lI . I I . I K C , N'.-iv . | . - i - s i . \ .

I t .

Wn

Take notice that AliftlANPO VKS-PKI!INF> Int.'lKts lo apply lo Ihc'i'ownslilp Cuinlilhtee nl Hie Town-

p of WondbrldKe Fnr a i ' ienaryitetall ('nllSlllllplliill llcensi. forpremises sltiuiled at West InmanAventu' and Harr ison Sheet, (,'ul-i.nla, ToWiishlp nF W...1.II.1 i.ine, N,1.

Objections, If any, should he made.Immediately In wrltiiiK to: H. .1.

nlgan, Township Cl«rk, Wood-brldKe, New Jersey,

(Signed) Armando Vcsperino,[,.11-1 U S ' Coloniii, N. J.

NOTH'KTake nollcc that lOUZAUKTIl

M.AT0CSIK HZABO Intcinis In a p -ply lo the Township' Committee nlthe Towimhlp of Woodlirlilne fniviif lenary lietall Con-siiiiiptlon licensefor priMnlscs s l tualed al 7:iT llal,w;i>'Avertue, WoiidhridKe, Tuwnship nfWiiodhrldne, N. J.

Ohjcctlons, if any, should he madeImmediately In wrllltiK lo H. .1.DunlKitn, T n v n s h l p Clerk, Win.nl-in-idH'e, New Jersey.(Signed) I'llizabi'lli M.ltncslk S/.alin,

NOTHKTake noliee that VHV.U KAt.ITA

illti-n.l-' in apply tu the TnwnahipConimltli.e of the Township ofWooilbrldge, for a Plenary UctullConsntniitTnn li.-t'tise fd> premisessltitnteiV-nt Lord Htrret and KuperhlKhwiiy, Avenel, Township oFWnodhrldire, N. •'.

(IblectionH, If any, should he madeIinnieillalely "In wr i t ing In; B, J.liunlKan, Township Clerk, Wooil-hrldm1. N'eft- Jersey.

(SignedI l-'nrcn KA1.1TA, ,W. l.-l,,—HI, II* A,vellcl.i»N. J.

Take nut Ice thai A11H HUFF In-tiiuds I" apply In the TownnliipCulnmllti'.. nf III" TOWIIHIIIII ofWondbrlilKe for a Plenary RetailCoiiHiiinpllon licensB for premlsi'ssllnatod at n Main Street , Wuiid-biidge. N. .1.

Objectloiifl. If any, should be tnndniliilai'ill-.li'lv In wi'ltltiK In: It. J.luniliriui, Township Clerk, Wnuil-lirlilge, New Jersey.

(Sinned) AUK DlfKI'',W. l.-l,,—II-1, 11 AVnoilhrlilKc, N. .1.

ANT1I"NY J

W! l . - l ^ -b - J . I I 'ANHK

'ii )••.lSI'lF,

n, N, .1

XOTIIKT a k e not ice I ha l PAI ' l , P .M.KO

Ilitpniis to app ly tn tlm T o w n s h i pC o m m i l t e n tit t h e T o w n s h i p ofWoiullirldKC (or n I'lenitry I te la l lCOIIHIItlllll lull ll.'CUMe tnr pi'l'iniHCSsituated at Wi Itahwnv Aytuue,WoudbrlilKe, Township o( Woodbridge, N. J.

Objections, If any, shnuld be madeImmediately In willing to: II. .1Dunlgan, Township Clerk, Wood-bridge. New Jersey,

(Signed) PAtUi PA1.KO,W. l.-l,.-«• I. II W IbridKc. N. I

NOTICKTuke notice that CMNTON

RAKIOK (Hay'H l i n l , InleluU ti» iply tn the Township Comnilttee oFTowuslilp nf Wnnilhl'IdKe fnr a I'l.'ll-ary Ketull Consumption license fnrpremises s i tuated at .HiiperhlRhwayWoudhrlilKe, N. .1.

ObJiH-tlnns, If any, sbo'Od hi1 madelimnedlntely In wil l ing- lo ll. J

inlgun, Township Clerk, of theTownship of WondViriilgc, N. .1,

(SlRiicd) CLINTON A. ltAKHR,W, l.-li.- -il-l, 11 Woiidbi-iiltir, N. ,1

TakeSOTU'K

notice that KliANClS K1TZ-nKUAMi Intends to apply lo lli«Tnvvnslilp Cniiiinittpe nt the TuWu-slii|i nf WoodlirlilRe for a PlenarylleUiil Ciinaiimpdiiii license furprcmisea situated nt '/.Icgler Avenueand Hupprlilgliway, Avenet, Town-ship of WonilhrldKe, N. J.

Oblerlliinti, If any, slioulil lip madeImmedbitely In wrltltm to: H. J.DiinlKiili, Township Clerk, Woud-bviilKi-, Naw Jersey.

ISlKited) FllANt'l.S FtTWi'KHAI.n,W l.-l.- ii-1, ! ! ' Avenel, N. ,1,

Tali- in.tl .c IJnli'li'lK to apply•ommltti'"' nf I Intt'nnilhrlilife Fnr a

JilllN B A t O Atn the Tl>Wn«!l1t

sltiialf-d1-ldRc,

N .1lll.je, li

111,1,.'dial

Ti.wnshtB «Pli'iiary W<>t»lt

ll'.n I.. ...He f(,r prnKltMlul L'r.,1 M-nn S l i c t . Woo4Til«nslll | ; nf W d l l d

KII.lU... NeW

(Slft lK' . l lW 1 • I . il I

ir iinv. siinuid lu. made111 writ,UK I": 0. ],

nn t'li'rk, Wood-. 1 1 1 '

JMMNW Hi N, J.

Takenleiid-i

nnllI

MIITM'KHut PAI'l, A. KINN

hinpi'ly Inf HiFnr i

ii|.i umc l .it Si

ilic TownshipTnwtixlilp of

nttnilfv HHkU'. f.,r i>r»WI**tUw ,\ ami Zlec-

Tnwnshlp ofA v . - n d ,W n n i l l . r i . k e . N. I

1,1.in- I ' . u i . if i inv , s l m i i l d lie m a d *iuitiiT*.liat»-h in w i l l i n g l o : H. 3.I iittuKi, n. T - i w , u ' l , i | i r t . - r k , W o o d -brl i lKn, Ni'W . I ' v i i 'V .

i S i t i i i e d i P A H , A. K 1 N N ,W. I . - l . -il- 'l , 11 A v e n e l , N. .!.

Take imti. c thaiIIIIHIIIIH tn apply IC i t i i i n l i l e i . . i f t h eW i i i . . l l i r l d u e F n r il i n l i i l m l i . i n I I . C I I H Isliuale.l al SL1 .Matirl.lK,', -r.-wn'-lnj.

obiectlniis, If anv, siiiiuld be "mail*"iinuii'di-.ilcly In writiiit,' lo: B. .1.liunlKan. 'I ..wn.:lii|i Cl, rk, Wood-til-lllR.', N.W Jersev

ISIKHCII PKTI-Ill VOflKUW I -I, I1. I, II U'liiidliridge, N. J.

PUTKli VOOH1.the ToWtithlpTnwimlilli 0(

Plenary Hflall' Fnr premlsoB

Street, Wood-..f W l

NOTICKTake notice that FHANK MOS

CAUKI.M Inlenils tn apply to theTownship I 'omniltUo of the Township uf WuoilbrlilKa for a PlenaryKtstuH OouKUinptlnn license forpremises s i tuated at Marroni A T » -IUIC, Iselln, Township of 'W'ood-brlUge, N. J.

Objections, If tiny, should he mftdeImmediately In writing In: H. ,1.Dunlgan, Township Clerk, Wood-bridge, N. J.

(Sinned) KltANK MOftCATlfiU.l,W l.-l.—Il-l, U* liielin, N. .1.

Take noll101! inli'iulrt Ii ' . i i i i i n i t l . . - ,Wi.n.11.rl.IK.- for a[Hxlrlhiillnn ll. eiinualed at 71 MainbrldKi.., TnwnshliiN. I.

NOT HKe Unit ' ANNA W W » 'apply In t h e T o w n s h i p

< Ih T h i fp

Township ofplenary Itetall

fnr iii'i-misea «l(-Street, Wuod-nl1 Wondhrldge

NOTICETake notice that G. L. H0BINSON

Ititcnila to apply to tho TfiwnshlpOoniniitlee of Um TuWiiship atWoodbrklge for ii Pleimry lietallConauniiitliin llctriso for premisessituated at Reading Terminal, PortHearting, Township of WoiKlbrklgt,N. J.

Objections, If any, should he madoimmediately In wilting to: B. J.Duiilgiin. Township Clerk, Wood-,briilffn, New Jersey.

(Slene.d) G. U TtORlNSON,W. l.-I,.—fi-l, 11* Port Keadiiin, N. .1.

Take notice that PAUL PUN DAIntends to apply to the TownshltfCommittee of tin.1 Township ofWooilbrldBe *for a Plenary Itctaildistribution license For pri-mimmsituateil at 31 Avertel atr«cl, Avi-liol, Tuwnsliip of Wundbrldm'u, N.' J.

objections, if any, shnuld he minlaInimedlattdy in WI'UIIIK tu: H, J.DuulBiiii, Tnwnship Clerk, Wooit-

New .Tei-Dfy.(Higiied) PAUL nilNIM

[,-L.—fl.-l, 11« Aveiiul, N. .1.

NOTICK ,Take notice Hint MRS. MAUY

HQLNAU intends to apply to theTownship Committee ot the Town-ship ut WuoilbrldKt- for a Plenarylii'tall Conmimptron license forpromises situated on New ami Wil-lliim fcitrectn, Woodbrldge, Townahlnut Woodbrldge, N. J.

Objections, If uny, should ba madeImmediately in writing to: )f- •'•Duiilgun, Townaliip Clerk, Wood-bridge, NiJW Jersey.

'(Signed) MliS. MAUY J)IOI,NAl!,\V, ].-[,.—(i-4, II WoiallirUlBc, N. .1.

f o r

NQTKIKTake notice flmt KliANK MON-

THOAIJVO liiteiida lu apply lo tlieTuwnship Oommltlee nF tlie Town-ship o( WoudbrldKe for u I'lenaryItetall 'Ounaumptinn IIIIMISC fpreinlies sitiiiite.il at Hallwaynue und l'rusuuct- Streetbridge, N. .1.

Objections, If any, should bo nimleImmedlntely In writing tij: H. J.

l Township ClKi'k, Wnod-ew Jemny.

FitANK MONTROALVO,W. I.-L.—Il-l, II Woudhi'lilKi', N. .1.

Immedlnteliunlgail,brldge, Ne

(HlgiKJU)

NOTICKTake notice that CiOt.IiRN PALMS

oF WOolUUtlttiilO, a corpin-atiuii,Louis Niinl, presldeiit, Intunds (o up-ply to thu Township Committee " 'Ihn Township ol Wimilbt'hlge Fnr aPlenary Itetall Consumption licensefur iireniinii.s sltuutidl ill Itnutu # - i ,Wiiodbrldge, Towiiahlp of Wond-brhlKti, N. J.

Ohjculloiis, if any, should be mudeImini'dlately In writing to: H. .1.Diinlgau, Township Clerk, WuOtl-brlilKc, New Jerncy.*• (signed) (iolilen Puliiis of Woud-

brldge Inc.Unil* Niinl, Predldenl,Ituute #-!"•> Woodlirldge, N. J.

I. l,.--()--l, 11

iTake noticn tliat HAM MANllKU

Intcruls tn apply to the TuwnsliipCiimniUt«« uf the Township olWoodbrldge fo> n "Pluuury HclallCoiiHumptlon llcenHe for premisessltuiited at Mltlillcsex and I'lssexTurnpike, l.selln, Township of Wood-bridge, N. J.

Olijectlona, \l any, should be madeImmediately In writing tu: B. J.Dunlgliu, Tuwnship Clerk, Wuod-brldge, N. J.

(Signed) SAM MANO^-H,•\V. |,-j,._ti-4, 11 Uelln, N. J.

.NO TICKTllko notice thut JOSHPH TOJIIOK

IntemU to apply to th» TownshipCiimmittte of tlia Tpwiiahlp ofWuudbridge f»r a plepary RetailColiaumptlon license fur premisesallntited at CUB Koad, Sewaren,Iiiwiinhlp of Woodbrfdie, N. J..

ObjoctlotiH, If uny*.' should be mad*Immediately In writing to: B. ./.

l Towimhlp Clerk, Wood-

1 S f g A S&UWU TUHRK,W. I.-li.'--1-4, 11 SawardU, N. J.

Take notice that JQ8BPK *"•CUUtfALUI luteado ta apply tg tha

NdTICKTake nut Ice Hull ERNEtfT L.

IM'IliUKIt intends to npply tn theTownship Coniniltli'i' of Ihe Town-.ship of WuodbrldKi' for n I'ienarylU'tiill ('niiHumptlon license forpl-iMiiises situated al DuualiU Avcline and .Superhighway, Avenel,Township of WoodbrlilKe. N. J.

Objections, If any, should he madeimmediately in writing tn: B. .1.DunlKiin. Tnwnsliip Clerk, Wuinl-brldRc, New Jersey.

(Signed) KKNKST T,. TtKliaKIt,W. l.-L.—8-4, 11 Avenel, N. J.

AMITIUMTake notice that JUI.H1R HllAH-

I.lOSK'l inlenils lo ap|ily tn theTowimhlp Committed ot the Town-ship of Wooilbrldge fur a PlenaryItetall Consumption license forpremises slluated at 69 St. HeorgeAvenue, Avenel, Township of Wood-

lJEc, N. J.Objections, If any; nh(iuld ho made

lmmpdlntely in writfbn to: H. .1.Dunlgan, Townsliip Clork, Wood-bridge, N. .1.

(Signed) JULIUS SHArtLHBKI.W. .I-!1..—l"i-l, II* Avenel, N. J.

NOTICHTakii notice tliat JOKl'IPH MAYHP,

Intenils In npply to the TownshipCumuli 11 ec nf the Township oFWiioilbrldh'c for a Plenary KetullConsumption license For prenilscssltiuUe(I at 'Mi l.'iilloll Street, Wood-lirlilKc, Tnwnslilii ot WundbrhlKe.,N, J.

Objectlon.i, IF any, Hliould be ntadulinnii'illiitely in writing lo: H. .1.[>iiii.lgun, Tnwnsliip Clerk, Wood-liritlt,'!', New Jersey.

(HrKiicd) JOSKl'H MAYlOlt,\V. l.-l,.—ll-1, 11 Woodhrhltfc, N. .1.

NOTtCHTake notice that MICIT.VKL HAI!-

AN1AK Intends to apply lei theTownahip Cotnniittee uf the Town-ship oF Wuodb'rldtfe for a Plenaryllclall Consumption , Ifceiise Furprcinisi'fl Mtiiatc.il at HI West Ave-tiuc, Rewari-n, TownnMp of Wuod-brldge, N. .1..'OhlwIiniiH, IF any, shotijil he mtidcImiiKidialcly In writing to: II. J.DniiiKiili, Tiiwnsililp Clerk, \yi)od-bi-ldgi', New Jersey.. (Slgnmll MICHAEL IVAUANIAK,W. l .- i , ._ii-j , i i Sewai'ca, N, J,

NOTlt W * ITake notice that I-'IIANK BAKA

intends to apply to the TownnhlpCommittee uF the Townalilp ol1

Wooilln-ldgft fifr 11 Plenai-jl1 Ret nilConsumption license For premiumsituated at F>1 New Street, Wiwd-Jjl-ldge, Townalilp ot WooilbrlilBe, N.

Objections, IF any, should he milildImmeilliiti'ly In writing to: B. J.Dunlgun, TiiWimhlp Clerk, Wood-lll L-llu^f $lv W^- J tfcl'4i* Vi ' *

(Signed) ' FHANK HAKA,W. l.-L.—ll-l, II Wuodlirldge.N.J.

NU'I'U E'Ake not Ire that 'C-lETANO"HDS-

M) Inlciuls tn Kpply to the Town-ship Coinnllltce nl' tlm Township otWouilbi-idge For a Pleiiary KetullCnnsuniptluti llceiiso lor iji'emlseaitltuutml nt WiiudbrldBi' AVUIIUB,Port Heading, Township of Wuud-b ridge, N. ,1.

Objectiuiis, IF any, nl.mil.I be mudeIminiidliUcly in wrllliiis to: II J.liuiiigan, Township Clcvk, Wiwd-bridge, New Jersey.

(Hlgaed) ti-AOTANO BUSMO,\V. I.-L.—6-4, II Poll Heading, N..1.

N O I I ;Take notice that MICIIARL OLIV-

|.)l{ IntendH to apply lo tlm Townshipj'uiniiilttan of tlifj TowiiHhtu otWonilbrldK* for tt Plciiu/y j tclal lCuiiHimiplloii license for pr.cmlueaslluuti'il at Oak Tree lloud, Isitlin,Towuslilp of .Woodbrlilifn, N. J.

Ohii'itlonfl, If uny, should be madeIliitliedialely In wi'HliliS to: H J.I.Minlgan, Townmlilp Clerk, Wuod-liridKe, New Jersey.

(Hlgnml) MUH11AKL OL1VKII,W. l.-l..—U-4, II IHI'HU, N. J,

WOTICMTake notice that WALTRR K-

IJAH1CH InteiHlH to npply to theTuwnsliip Commute* vl the Ttiwn-sblp of WoddbrldgH fur n PlenaryKetull Connmuption Hcuiiae torpreniiBi's situated at 93-95 AvenelSt., Township of WoodbrlUgB, N. J.

Olijei tiuiib, if any. should be madelmmeillatuly In writing ' tu: 1|, J.liunltfiin, Township clerk, wood-bridu«, New J«rsi,.y.

(Signed) WArVnOK 10. IfABIOII,W. I.-If,—11-4, 11* . Aveiltd, N. .1.

NOTKUTake notice that MARY und PAUL

CINKOTA Intend to apply to (ImTown.»hlp Committee of Town»hlp.ofWoodbridge for a Plenary HelallConnumptlon Itueima for premiue*sdtuau,! at 7». Albert Street, Woort-brli.l««, 'fuwniiul)i ff Woodbrldce, N.

uijjn;t|unii. U »ay, liquid U« madi

NOTICETake notion tha t COLONIA COITN-

THY CLUII. 1;. .1. HAI'lilH, Treasurer,Intends tu apuly to thn TnwnshlpCnmmlttco nf thu Townalilp ofWooilbrldgo for a Plenary He.tallCo|isumprton licfnai For prc.mlssltuateil In <"'ulonta, Townalilp otWondbridge. N, .1.

Objections, If any, should In. niad.iimmedlntely In writing to: II. J.lhinlgan, Township Clork, Wood-bridge, N. J.(Signed) COLONTA COUNTRY CLUII,

"H, J, Saner. Tread.\V, f,-l,.- l i-IJl Colotila, N.

NOTICKTake notice Unit PHANK SUl'-KlOIlt 'Intends to unply to tlm

Township Cnhimltteu of the Town-ship uf WnodliriilSn for a PlenaryRetail Consumption license, forpmlHe'H Hlttmted at 3d TappenStreet, Port HciuUnK, Townsliip ofWoodbrhlge, N. J.

ObJ«ctionH, IF any, should he madeInnnoilliitoly In writing to: K, J.Dunlgan, Township Clork, Woodbridge, N. J.

(Signed) FKANK SUPRlUOn,W. I.-L, ti-1, 11* Pint, Heading, N. .1.

KOTICKTake notice that FKANK P. LKW-

!S Intends to apply to tlm TuwnshipCommittee of the Township nf Wood-brldge, (or a Plenary Itetall Cnu-Huiniitliiii, Hrense Fur preuilscs situ-ated at KtQS Oak Tn-i>, i te-lln, Township nf Woudhridifu, N. J

Objections, If uny, itlioulil be madeImmediately tn wri t ing (o; H. JDuniKun, Towuslilp Clerk, Wuod-bridge, N. J.

(Signed) ' 1'HANK P. I.HW1S,W. I.-L.—li-l, II Isi-llu, N.

MAKIH!to the

NOTK.'KTake notice that MHR.

PLYNN Intends to upi'lyTuWnxhiii Ciiinnill leu nf lliablp of Woodbrldge fur a PKiiaryRetull ConDiimptlon llcens.* for.priiaii'ii'S situated at Hoiite, ^r, uinlWylle Street, Aypnel, TuwnaUip otWonilbriilgu, N. J,

Objectluna, If uny, should he madeImiuii.lliitoly in writing to: H, JDunlBiin, Township Clerk, Wood-bridge, N. J.

(Signed) MRS. MARIE KLYNN,W. ,1-L, — 11-4, 11 AveiicU N. ,1

N«>TI('I5Take notice thai ANNA A. HiKllK

Dll.S liitumlH to apply to the Township CuiiiiiiltUe o t tike Tuwnnlilp utWoodbridge for a Plenary ItetalConsumption llcenso fior premise!Bltiiuted at il Cutlers Lane, Wood-bridge, Township ot ' " ' •N. J.

Objections, If any, sbould-be mailslinineinmely 111 WfltllljLto; H. J.DiiiilKanT*5'ruwii9hip Clerk, Woodbrhlire,- tf J,

iSlsncil) ANNA A. IlWiKDMtf,W. l.-L. 0-1, 11 WoildbrldBc, N. I

NOTIOHTaka nottoe that 8TRPH10N MIK-

LOSSY Intundi to apply to tlm Town-uhlp Committee of the TowuShlp ofWoodbrldg-e for a Plenary Rotal"CoiiHtiinptloi! Hcenae (or premlneasituated at 301 Avenel Street, Avt-n«l, Township of Wnodbi'lilKe, N. J.

Ohjiiitluns, If uny, ahoiHd'be madeImmediately In writing toi B. JDunlga'n, Tdwnnhlp Clerk, Woid-bridge, N. J.

(Signed) BTHPHEN MIKLO83Y,W, .l-X*.-—li-4, 11* Avunel, N. ,1

'TakeVOTICB

notice that QIBRAhTBHCOHPOHATION hiltniU to apply1 liu 'Pull) 11 nil t ll n n m m l 11 flu nttu TTownship

liluof

Cummltte«Woadbrldge

Offor

Pliuuuy Kulall CoiiKUmptlun license(ur prumluiis »ltu«ted at Route 26and Lorau Avuiiu», Woudbrldtfe, N. J.

Th* UttiiiDS ot I N officers uf tlia

j n * , IF nny. slii.iil.l he madeImnii'dialclv In wrUliiv. tn: M, J.jiunlgiin. Tiiwnslnp Clerk, Wood-

il N * Jersey.fe ANNA Wl-'INhHt,

\\ r, l.-l,.--I-.--I. II Wno.llirltige.. N. ,1.

NOTICKTake iinllcv».tli!it .TOHRPH AN- |

l>HASCiK intend* to npply >" theTnwiishiir I'niiimlili f the Town-shl|i nf \V,.n,ll.il,lK.. fnr a PlenaryHctall Mlslrllniii.iti Ir. .ua. fnr prem-ises sitiiah-il al r.tii . Amlioy 'Ave.',WlindliliilKC. N, J.

< ihjiM-i i.niM, it any, slmulil he madeiniincillalely In u-rillaj,' tn: B. J:IninlKnn, Tnwnsliip c lerk. Wood-

idKr, New .lersl-y.(SIRIICII) .liiSI-lI'M ANHKASOIK,

W. l.-l, .- I'I-I. II ' Wnnilhrlilgf, N. J.

xtmvviTake lintlce Unit l.i-nll Plichta in-

lends I" apply tn iin- Tuwnship •Ciiininllii'i- of the Township Ot

ooiUiriilgi' for a I'lenary iti'tallCnusiimiitliill license fnr pr«inl»0Ssilaatcl at i:'.il Wn.iilhrlilBP Avenue,Port Hi'iiiliug, Township nf Wood-hrld|,'e, N. J.

ohlectlnns, if any, should he madeImmediately lu writing t<>: B. J,iMinlican. Tuwnsliip Clerk, Wood-lirlilite, New Jersey,

(Slitiiedi LK'>N PLICIITA,W. t.-L. li-l, H ' P.nl HuaiHll!!, N,.J,',

NOTICETake n.ill . 'e ' l l ial . II 'UA J. Htl'OH

nleTiiJs In npply to Hie TnwnslilpCiiiniiillli'e oF the Tnwnsliip ofWmidbrldiTi. for a Plenary KotallCniisniiUitimi license for premliieilslhlateil at 4 (iroen Street , Wtiod-hi-W'ge. Tnwimhlu ut Wdudtirlrtfe,N. J.

(ibjecllnim, IF Any, sbnuht he inad.«Imniiidlately in writ ing t o : B. J.I'lunlgun, TIIWIIHIIIP CUrk, Wood-brldge, New Jufsey,

(Slfsm-di Jl 'LlA J. SIIKI8,W. I.-L.—li-l. II WnoilliildKc, N. J.

NOTIt'RTake notice I hul .CHAKLES H.

TYIJ'IK Inti-ndH to apply to theTowimhlp Cuinnilttea'of the T»Wn-itliip nF Wiiudlirltlge for ft PlenfkUtItelail i-inisiiiii|ili.'H IICIMIMR torIii'cmlsps sliuiKcd at Ht, ueor(eAvunui! anil Hutliir Street, ' Avenel,"Township nf WnmlliriilKe, N. J.

lilijeciions, If any, shoiad be madeimuie.llalely 'ii wrltlnp to: 'R J.Kiinlgiiii. Tawnahlp Clerk, Wood-llllilBi'. New .l|er.lie>l.

(Slgniidl rdAKLHS II. TYLER,W. I.-L. - i l l , II* Avenel, N. J.

NOTICKTake nolk'ft Iliat KDWARD J.

KIN.V intends to apply lo Ihe Town-ship Cnniiiiitt.-c uf tlie Towimhlp atWiinillii-lilKH Foi' a Plenary RetailCujisumptlun license fnr pmtnlsM .situatfU lit 98 Hecoml Street, Wood-brldgK, Tuwimhlp u( Wuodbrldg*,N. .1.

Ohj." li.iiiH, ir any, should be madeliniii.-.iljitr!v In writing to: B. Jf.liuniKHii.' Tnwnsbln Ciel'k, Wood-brldKe, New Jerncy.

(SiKiii-dl HOWAIU) J, FINN,W. I,-L.; M!-4, II WiimUirlilge, N. J,

, N0TT10Takif notice that NICIC 1TR SAN-

TIS Inleii'ls In apply lo the Tuwn-Hlilp CniMiiiltt'c ul' tlic Townshipof Woiidlii-ldKii For a I'lenury Beta(lCoiisatiiptluii license For pr«mlne»»ltiwte(l at-Hrtlly-nHiJ Marlon Btteett,--^•Port Heading, Township of Wood*bridge, N. J.

OhjiH-tinii*, IF any, shnuld be mad*Immeillatelv lu writing to: B. J.iMiuiKaii, Township Clerk, Woal-bridge, New Jersey^

(Sigiicil) NICIC OK SANTIS*W. 1-1. ti-4, I I ' Purl Heading. N. i.

g o: B. ,Clerk, Wool-

PICHALSKI,Ayei i i ' l . 'N. J,

NOTICKTake noliee thul ANTONI P10H-

AI.SKt Inlenils to apply tu tho Town-slilp c.jliinilll.-c uf the Township AtWoiidhriilgu ,fur a Plenary HetallCniHiioiiii 1,'H ilci'nat) fur premlsaasituated at S71 Railway Avenue(Hluck STl) AVtfind, Towuslilp ofWiiudhrldge, N. J. *

Object Inns, if any, should be madeImmediately in writing to: B. J,Dutiltfan, Township Cle lbrhlRe, New Jersey.

(SlBiied) ANTONIW. I.-I.. I l l , 11

NOTICBTake nptlc-n that JOSEPH 8. U K

MONIi'i) 'Intends to apply to theTownship CoRiinltteB of Ille Tpwil-ship nf Woodbridge for u PlenaryItetall Consumption • license totpremises situated ut «4 • KeconUStrtr-t Woodbrldge, Township otWuudlirblge, N, J.

Object Ions, u any, should be madeliami'.liutely In WfltlHB to; B, i.IMinigun, Township Clerk, Wootl»bj-idgi', N. J.

(HTgne.l) .lOfll-JHII H. fi lUONICaW. I.-L.--4I-1, 11* Wut>dijrid»e,87l.

-.•A

Page 6: BACK UP YOUR BOY Mepenbent Heaber - DigiFind-It · Price Panel Assistants will sem as liaison officer* between consum cr, merchants and board. Thci Job will he to disseminate infor-mation

- PAGE SIX

l'H.'i Naronrt(('inil-'ni: i l;.i;ii / 'm/r / )

(iloiia I I > " M ' T wii- «cli'<'li''l :t-th<' "m»--i pu l i t r " while Alfii'ilRmichniiin « " » i':|" <liBUncli<>n ofboinK the "IIIIKI liiinclsinnc." I ' " 'the "most popular liny." MatthewJatfo » » I'lei'ti't! :mil Julian Growwon the iindi^piiti'd title of t h ""wittiest."

•For til'1 - tu i l rn! "HHIM likely t»PUCCPnl." I'M win I'otlcr w;if unani-mously cliini'ii. I!'1 liiH lieen onthe lin'nor i"l! ,ill ttirmiwli his llijrliSchool I|;I\ -.

Alvin Kvm-ha \\:i» named the"claps "|itiiiiist" mill Ann Ander-son as the stiidi'ti* with the "mos t

'pleiisinc iK-riniiali-.y." Two t i t leswere jriwii to John I'lin/i't1, "he? idancer" 'ami "jittiTliUK1," HIK! thegfl'mo ilcsiiniation.1- were iiwaided,to Audrey I . anw for thp'irirls.

Jim S i i r f l ak i \(\i> picked as the"most athletic boy" and KleanorJos t ns the "ini.si iithlctii- Ki ' l . "And lant but lint li list Mary Sneewas iinniiunci'l as the "most co-operat ive."

The li'iiys who li'ft school to- jointhe armed form-.-1 wen- not lorg'dt-ten. and their )>ii''urr* and n a m e sa rc listed in the book as follows:

Army: S 'ep l in i IJalinl, l»uvienceDavidoski, .lohn Kvcrctt, AndrewKomuves, ( hail i 's Ku/.nia, RichardMurphy, Thi 'odoiv INiw^ki, An-drew Kiisiiiii'-scn. (liironl Sefchik.John Smirk . Kiis-ell Taylor,. Sti--_phen Viihaly, Fi ml Meloceo,George Ituliriirin.

Navy: Joseph K"luitis, f l i lbe l l-Krclm, Harkei KIIIMII1*, Howard

iMsd i ion , Ki ril Soit | i f»nv Jj>huPanko, ( 'Iwrles I'ltersnll, Allie-rtWohlcrl . John Van Hwkei , Uober t9iry.

FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 1943 INDEPENDENT

CLASSIFIED

OPERATORS WANTEDTo work on children's dresses.

. Steady work; one week vaca-

tion with pay; good pay. Apply

Cartcret Novelty Dress Company,

upstairs, GB2 Roosevelt Avenue,

Carteret, N. J. 3-19tf.

LOST"A" (fiisoliru1 ration book issued to

Josepli 1). Ainto, Uox ,ri7, Iii-man Ave,, Rahway, N. .1. (i-11"

FOR SALECOMBINATION pis and coal

jjray emlmel ratiKc; live burnerkerosene stove, oven attached.Byrnes, Old Road and WmidbridtfcAve., Port Reading N. J, (i-1 1*

FOR SALMOVK RIGHT IN,' four-room

stucco liimst', lot 40x18(1, fullprice $l,rill0. Lincoln Highway,Meiil., IVik, N1. .I. ' Tcicphor.e Me-tuchen (5-OUH2-J. 0-11

HELP WANTEDWOMAN wanted to clean house

and do ironing one day a we.uk,in Coloniu. Telephone Rahway7-0287-R. (i-1

SUN. - MON. - TUES. . WED.

BUD ABBOTT—cosmioMM0N RUNYQN'S

bol l UcDOHUO (nil KUUV1Ttufttnt

i«w mm« HOl.Lt u i Nit OnkntilgJ

STAR-GLITTERING MUSICALwith songs by

COLE PORTERI

\ l l \ \ MHl \ \ l \ ( .

I y rmitr J u a n

l'OWHR FONTAINE'THIS ABOVE ALL" e

"JVUCUERINGS OF BKLYN"

TELEPHONE 4-0075

THOS.F. BURKEFuneral Directon

366 STATE STREET

PERTH AMBOY, N, J.

Joseph V. CoiteUo, Mgr.

"Thcr* !• No 3ubitltHt«—Far Bvrka S«r»ie«"

Iselin Briefs-Mrs. Ro«e .lansen, "f Cramer

Avenue, is spending a week (it tticshore,

--Auxiliary ('• 1 o r i n F r e e s ,daughter of Mr. ami Mrs. H.Frees <>f Oak Tree Road, visitedher parents last week-end.

—Mr. iiml Mr«, Leo (Ihrintnn-sen of llillcrest Avenue, visitedMr. and Mrs. II. Dehn of IrvinK-tnn. Satyj'^fly. •

—J' l ie . Women's RepublicanClub will hold its domnff meetingat H luncheon to he held at thehome of Mrs. George Woods, ofLn Guardia Avenue, Monday.

—.Mr. atid . Mr?. Albert FosterVere entertained at the home ofMrs. Ruwel Furze of Sonora Ave-nue, 'Saturrlay evening.

—Mrs. James Duff and diuigh-ter, Jean," of Copper1 Avenue, at-tended a theatre performance inNew lirunswick Monday.

—>lrs. John WHite and daugh-ter, who reside in California, arevisiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.!. Hnnomolo of HillcreVt Avenue.

—The regular meeting of theselin Chemical Hook and Ladder

was held' Tuesday evening a t theanling Avenue Fire House.—Miss Dorothy Lax of Hillcrcst

Avenue, is attending June weekexercises at Annapolis.

—Mr. and Mrs. Andrew (Jilroy,if Ilillcrest Avenue, visited rclii-•ivex-in Fairlawn, Sunday. «<

-—The MidwiK Juno Cullinanflind Loi'ctta Clrrtgan, of town, at-ended a theater performance in

N'cw York recently.—The Rosary Society of St.celki's Church met Tuesday cve-

ninic.

Receive Diplomas(Continual jrom /'«'/'' U

line f)en Bleyker, Charlotte De-aild, Norma Dorst, Veronica Dun-

'h, Miiry Jfi Finn, Virginia F o r e ,Mary Fortenbocher, Gertrude

Fi:uike, Helen V\ ii'dlnali, MarieFntchko, norothv (iillis. Mililrc!Haihii-h. Julia [linker. Miutli.i

Illi'idgen, f.ila Hogg, Maigare1

Hiun.vflk, IterShn (iorvath, JaneHyni's, Cora Ieki«, Helen Ixso,

| Frances Julian. Helen Kaimondv.| Dorothy Kath, Eleanni' Katko, Ga-j brielln Ki'n"*-''.i Marilyn Kittell, Gloiiu Koesik,Helen Kosty, Madelyn Knvach,Dorotliy Kurhie, Ilorothy Kushner,Ruth Kuzma, Shirley Lauhacli,Barhara Lakntos, Hena I/ane,Stella K. LiQiiaidra, Helen. Leid-nor, Grace Mai, Evelyn McCullauh,Dorothy Melnick, Hetty Meyfahit,Elvii'a •Militi), Alir,> Miller, HelenNenie, Margaret Olah, MarionTalfi, Marion Pappus,. RoslynFfeiffiT, Joan Phillips, OorothvIJe(t»n, Lu'cy Itiekei, Anna Roirinn,Ann Ross, Eleanor R.vTiijalia. Shir-ley S«w.wr, Blanche Sthille",Frances Sehmitter, Ruth Scull;Anitai - 'Sthrimpe, Anna Sedlak,Mary Serdinsky, Joan Koesik.

Mary Stjyjflinski, Rosclyn Hirrn-inolo, I/HIIHI' Simnmns, Jean Snlil-lie, Virginia Sorensoti, Kleannr,Studcnuki, Prisu'illii Taisnaiiy, AliceTengelk'R, Ann TwrMiova, KclnnTrevcna, Grnce Tjonielund, RitiiVan Pelt, Irene AVaigo, TheresaWaskrwidi, RuHi Wylde, BarhantZambor, Mary /iiivorski, MaryZimmuimann.

Boyt LiltedFrank Anvlitoxy, John Aratroti,

Milton Austin, Williiiin ' iBalint,James Barna. Kniest Rarnhas,Richard A. Hattaglin, Iiouis lie-lardino, (lilfoid (;. Bolhwell, Jo-seph Brcfca, An'lhmiy .1. Hrodniak,Theodore ' Hruziinski, Rokert C,furrows, AntTioifv <!nracaus, Roh-e.rt D. anipbeil.'Tthhert W.fnmp-fiell, Dnmiiiick Cnviillero, Louis M.Csaki, Benjamiii Den Bleyker,George DeWortli, James A. Ilorns,Donald l''anell, Thomas Fink,George Fisher, Edward Fofrieh,Charles Frank, .lames Franklin',John GaidnOr, Martin (iarofolo,JohnVCreifus, John Gulics, Riiy-itrantl Iliiboi'ak, Howard Harrison,William Hilt, Herhert Hutt, Stew-art Hutt, Oscar Iverscn.

iMichael Julian, Frank Katko,Frank KcirmoiiiTy, Kc'nndth Man-ning, Anicllo iMartino, Ralph May-

WIRE AND CABLE

MEN -GIRLS--WOMENWE NEED PRODUCTION WORKERS NOW

M) EXPERIENCE NECESSARYPLENTY OF OVERTIME

WE TRAIN YOUFOR HIGHER EARNINGS

GOOD WORKING CONDITIONS—OUR OWN

CAFETERIA ON PREMISES

PERMANENT INDUSTRYAPPLY AT ONCE

EMPLOYMENT OFFICE

Daily—8:30 A. M. to 5 P. M. including Saturday!

General Cable CorporationPerth Amboy, N. J.

Bring Proof of Citizenship

Tlioic now engaged in war work

will not be considered

er, Gerald MeKlroy, I/well Mf-Li'llan, Frapk Nn»y, .loseph Nngy,William O'Renr, J<»hn O'Toole.Jntnes I'alfi, George Pappaa, StevePenik, Robert Perry, George Pe-troff, Dominick Pirhalski, JnmesRobinson, Rrfdiort. Ringwood, Don-iild Royle, Frank Rubriglit, Ray-mond Sawyer, Charles Schwenzer,Alfred Silakioski, James Sipo?.Merrill Sgromolo, John Simon,Robert Suit, John Takncs, EdtnondTieman, Alexander Tarcx, AlfredM. Trosko, John Urrmtia, DonaldWhitaker, William Wiegcrs, RoyWolny, George Wastlburn, Fred-eriek Yuchuk.

Albert Large. Dominick La-PentB, Victor Little, Vincent Man-(fivnaro, John MoClurc, ThomasMullaney, Robert W. Snow.fieltl,Robert Sorenson.

Township Wonien(Continued \rniu I'lV/r 1)

niiinUints, clerks*, cooks, dieti-eiatiH, dental tochnirians, drafts-men, lUtrariana, medical labora-tory technicians, musicians, sten-ographers, telephone operators,typists, truck drivers, weather ob-servers and X-rny technicians.

All officers are selected fi'omthe ranks urn! the opportunity tobecome an officer is open to ev-ery member of the WAAC. Anyauxiliary who has completed herbasic training may make applica-tion, for attendance at an OfficerTraining School. Jn order to beselected as an Officer Candidate,an auxiliary must have certainbasic qualifications which makeher stand out definitely as 'a po-tential" tender.* These inolud*leadership, mental alertness, andeducation.

The service is open to any wom-an, regardless of race, creed orcolor. The purpose of the or-ganization is to relieve active,aide-bodied men for combat duty.

Applicants may apply at theWAAl' Recruiting Office in thePost Office Building, New Bruns-wick or may write to that addressfor any information, they desire.

Cre&centFor entertainment at its zenith,

be sure to visit the Crescent The-atre, this week, where 20th Cen-tury-Fox is presenting Rafael Sa-batini's "The Black Swan." Thi«Tedhnicolor adventure triumph,starring Tywnc Power and Mau-reen OlHara, is far and away themost outstanding film of its typethe screen has seen this or anyother season,

Picture, if you will, the enter-tainment dish that is served, Ty-rone Power, in our hook one of thefinest screen actors by virtue of Iws

KINDLING - FIREPLACE

WOOD -FAMOUS

READING COALKOPPER'S COKE

MASON MATERIALSFUEL OIL

Phone Woodbridge 8-0724

WARR COAL &SUPPLY CO.

„ ST. GEORGE AVENUEWOODBRIDGE

"It Works Well Now, Madam"

IF AN A1TUANCK doesn't operate

smoolhly, have it looked over.

Those snorts and hisses mean

something is out of qr4er; 'elec-

tricity is beiiifj wusteH and (hat's

unpatriotic. Electricity is "needed

to make .the war equipment we'jje

busily turning out in NeW Jersey.

I know for I'ni on iiuty day and

night, furnishing power and i|lu-

injnation for production plants."

OLD PARTS MUST BE"TVHNEU IPi, IF NEWUSES ARE REQUIRED,

PVBLICWJSEKVIGE

ON THE SILVER SCREEN'Desperadoes' Tops Technicolor Films

Claire Trevor HI Whe appears in "The Deipcrndoei" Rt the"Countess" who operates a gambling house. The film is comingto the Strand Theatre tomorrow and is an outdoor epic.

ability to do anything and every- Western HI tlh<> Strand TheatrethtiTK extremely well, w in a role .,#fy- Randolph BeoM, Glenn Jtord,that is haml-tailnred for him. As oanc Trevor, fivclyn Keyes andPirate Captain "Jamey" Waring, Edgar Buihaimn, is the firsl inhe gets every .opportunity to dw-' what'promises to be ii record num-play those qualities that have kept her of Technicolor films this year,himjit the top of the heap for the according to producer Harry Joelast five years. Paired with him ' Brown, who made the new film.qi ttfc romance that is smoothly | According to the producer:superimposed over the basic ad-1 "The constantly growing dif-venture story is creamy complex- f icu]ty j n the matter of materialsioned, gorgeously apportioned j s forcing producers to outdoorMaureen O'Hara, | locations which they haven't used

Strand . I extensively in years. The trend to"The Desperadoes!-1' CoduntbinV color is a natural sequence of this

gun-roaring n e w Technieolo' condition."

DitmasHow the German Gestapo soek<

...(i dea'th of an American navalexpert us part of .the Nazi schemeof 'world conquest, comprise* the

4s of ".Journey Into Fear," Or-son Welles' exciting new melo-ili-iniwitir film.

Headlining Joseph Cotton as theAmerican and'Dolores del Rio usa diinet'i- wtio fnffit in love withhim. the picture has its scttinR inTurkey. CoUen, as Giivham, na-val expert, h:is been surveying theTurkish-fleet preparatory to its rt1-aniiament, and to delay this pro-gram the Nazis decide to kill Tiirnbefore he can take his data backto Amcrrra.

MajeitfcHack in the good old days, when

.here were such things a smooth-running automobile was describedas "clicking on all fours," oven ifit did have eight cy'limlurs, Georgi'Stevens isn't an automobile, but

ic phrase is singuVarly apt. With-,in thi' past two years, Stevens has"clicked on all four," or, to tnak«the phrase even more appropriate,all four have "clicked,".

Reference is to George Stevens'"Woman of Mir Yi-ar," which co-Ma; red Spencer Tracy arid Katii-

me Hepburn, anil to its immedi-ate predecessor, "Penny Seren-ade," in which Cary Grant andIrene Dunn shared stellar honors.

Now nt the Majestic Theatre.Stevens is ropn'Stnti'd by Colum-

* BUY UNITED STATES WAR; SAVINGS BONOS OR STAMPS * A »S64

STATE THEATREWOODBRIDGE, N. J . '

TODAY and SATURDAY

Spencer TRACY - (Catherine HEPBURN in

"KEEPER OF THE FLAME"

plus John LODER in

"THE GORILLA MAN"

SUN. thru TUES.

Robert TAYLOR - Chiu. LAUGHTON in

"STAND BY FOR ACTION"

pliii Neil HAMILTON - June LANG in

"TOO MANY WOMEN"

Wed. thru Sat. "AIR FORCE"

bra's timely new roi,,,,,,,"The More the Mini.Midi Atdntr atom-; ,„ :

ors with Joel Mc(\,.;, ,Coburn.

POEDS. H. J.. P A 4'„,,,

FRI. and SA |

Johnny Wi-iSs n

Frincn liiflmii

"TARZAN

Richitrd Arlen - Ail, „

— In -

"WILDCAT 1

SUN., MON, a i l I | | ,

"HANGMEN AIM,

•tarr ing Brian

nlio T H E EAST Sll

"CLANCY STRF.L-i , ;

, (

WED. and Tll|!|(^

" T W O W E E K S K, n V | ,

with Lum and Aim,,

"UNDYING MON , , r

F R E E D I S H E . S i o U

B O T H N i l I

\lni..

H AMp,, ) y •+

B

i

B 3

£

i 1

i

MXJUEITBC

For Comfort, Quality and ECONOMYin Footwear, Redeem

Your COUPONat RUTHALS!

Buy Expensive Brandsat Only a Fractionof Their Original Value!

4.99 C.99

«.QIO

and

Few at 6.99

Values to 14.75

Choose from a wide variety of styles uiul materials inNATIONALLY FAMOUS BRANDS! Ruthals can oiler

iou such values because our huyera have contacts withirge iiiins TlTal eeitur entire shipment* uuu&Ufii.by orig-

inal purchaiers. All elioe* are perfect! We'll exchangeshoes or refund money within five days if you are uotsatisfied.

We hove m\ ampletelettion of Iwo-lone $pectatunl

Size* 3^ to 10Width AAAA to EE£But not all styles in

all sizes.

Choo»e from these

FamouB Names

.' at Ruthals

• NATURALIZER5

• AIR-STEP•TREAUEASY

• SELBY'S

• RED/CROSS• KAHLER

Ami limn) <«( II.TM win ni

ci:«#iiUr nliru |<

Ojifn Krliluy mill Sumrilii)'

Huihalj287 Madison Ave- Perth Am boy I

llltN 10, JiM»f> M.,(lit A M i l NTOKKHl

l«ulirllk III KHKI H | I U I » > I M., I r. „

{WE MORE THE

MERRIER #SECOND BIG HIT

'The Falcon Strikes Back'

ST. AT FIVE C O R N E R S • P H O N E P x « J ) MOAiU JKOM 1

SEVEN DAYS STARTING TODAY, FRH)A

JOSEPH COTTENDOLORES DEI. RIO

RUTH WARWICKWlOl

OKSON WELLES

STUART EJ^ I " 'EVELYN VKNM-THURSTON DMVIVIAN BLAINI

Tfxdixd7 DAYS STARTING SATURDAY

Cloin Ivdyn Idggr

TREVOR • KEYES • BUCHANAN * If"LADY BODYGUARD" j \

IPEKENT4 DAYS STARTING FRIDAY

Tyruiit Puwer Bilt Buyil

eu O'H»r« Andy.Cly''1'! i

"BUCKSWAN"

'"BORDERPATROL"

3 DAYS—STARTING TUESDAY

"WHISTLING IN DIXIE"

/'War Againlt Mrl. Hadley" M

Page 7: BACK UP YOUR BOY Mepenbent Heaber - DigiFind-It · Price Panel Assistants will sem as liaison officer* between consum cr, merchants and board. Thci Job will he to disseminate infor-mation

lN,)|.;|'F,NDENT—LEADER' F R I D A Y , J U N E I I , PATIE SEVEN

HIIRI I Wllll«n«<m KrllrMnrch R, 1STR—AB«n»t 2, 1941

COM1IWINO

Ind«p«nAent .-. (IDIB)

J l.rmlff-JonrBiil • - UtW-ll

ipiililliliftd Kvery Friday *by tho,„,, I'nlill.ililiiK Company, Woodtirldgt, N. .1.

l lv rrcHlilifht; Maxwell Lottaii, Vlco-Prcsl-..,.„',,. ]•'. (tampion, Trcftmirer; Charles K

Krl i I o r

•mhrnrlptlnn l u l e i *1M ?n 7 ? " In nilvmtr*.

It Probably Will!Astronomers of the world n.rc attempt-

\(i learn the secret of VV Cenhci, a

,1,1,, slur, whose main body in thought to

.,, ;l volume twenty-aeven billion times

F >riv;il, as the sun.

Hi,, twin star includes a red giant and

m m . | i sm aller blue companion whichm

(,|;; around its larger brother. It takesiitv ycni's to traverse the orbit and most

in eclipse behind thetin1 period itI I ' IT star.

Most of the knowledge of this pair ofis was obtained.in we llKUWg eclipse

i,r blue utar by the red one. Observa-

(> continuing but astronomers are

for the next.eclipse, in 1056, to

^4 their previous observations of the

hi ;IIK1 spectral variations.

While further observations may alter

.,.,it conclusions, VV Cephei is thought

!„. larger than auy other known star. It

crocodile tears to shed when the GermanLuftwaffe was dropping death and de-struction upon Great Britain. They hadno lamentations when Poland, the Low-lands and France felt the weight of jrfaziexplosives. '

Certainly, no responsible leader of theUnited Nations will pay attention to thehypocritical suggestion that emanatesfrom Spain, where the government us insympathy with the Axis powers, whichcontributed the armed forces that madeFranco's revolution a success.

The British, it is clear, have no ideas ofeasing the aerial bombardment that is be-ginning to pay big dividends. Sir AnthonyEden, Foreign Secretary, has made it clearthat the British will bomb' Germany andItaly relentlessly.

Air Marshal Sir Arthur Harris, chiefof the KAK bomber command, explicitlywarns Germany that "what she had hadin the past will be chicken feed comparedto what she is going to get" and adds tha"the same applies to Italy."

Britain's memory is long, says Harris"and she knows who started the bombing." He declares that Germany knowher air power will never catch up with thAllies and believes that Germany fears airpower more than anything else.

Under The State House DomeBy J. Joseph Gribbins

STILL FISHING

Cannibalism Excepted

TRENTON,— New Jersey hasofficially adopted the officers andrew of the U.S.S. New Jersey nndn the hectic days ahead citizensre expected to thrill at the deedsif these men as the great ship sailsnemy infested waters. And plans

are underway to sustain the inter-st of New Jersey's romdnnts inhe ship's personnel.

Promoted by Governor Edisonwho describes the ship a» the jrreat-•st instrument of war ever con-

structed, and other State officials,t is planned to have every mftn,

woman and child in New Jerseyjoin the1 "State Society for theBattleship New Jersey" so thatthey may take, an active interestin the welfare of the entire ship'scompany. Individual dues will he adollar"*!* year for grown-ups and26 cents for children, whose intercst is $articulurly (toured. Thesedues may be paid now by mailingthem to Adjutant General JamesI. Bowers, State House, Trenton.

Hew Jersey has already officiallypresented Captain Carl F. Holdcnand the officers and men of thgreat battleship with $10,000 iiwar bonds to be used after th

ar to augment the silver servicthe first U.S.S, New Jerse

hich had a long and honorablereer from 1906 to 1923. Alere arc a great many move me

on tho new vessel than o

thousand light years from thewhich moans the distance that light•;ivel in three thousand years at ai if 18*1,(10(1 miles per second.i- next time you hear a citizen ex-HIK volubly, explaining the issues-i.-;et mankind, "ask him- a questionVV Cephei. It will probably shut

An

liiiwrtj

Conspiracy And FraudAssociated Press dispatch from

York advises that a Federal judgein'il twenty-two corporations and nine

uals a total of 120,500. They en-ileas of nolo'.contendre (no contest)

irn indictment charging them with con-i-i:iK to defraud the Government on as-,ii imving contracts with the WPA.rhc District Attorney said that the

-, iniaiV existed between December,;i ami December, 1942, and resulted iniu.-.ive bidding on contracts around Newik, with the result that the Government..-iiilcd $;S50,000 more than should have!i i xpended.We rail attention to the fact that none:hr defendants received jail sentences,

liih the comment that if the defendantsii i.eeii poor white men or Negroes, ac-.-ni of stealing fifty or sixty dollars'ji'li <if product, they would have gone

In ihe present state of the social con-|i H I , the corporations antltheir officials

•> u-iil through conspiracy and collu-•hidiling are permitted to escape jail

ii.-m-es and their punishment is usually'rii-ted to a line.A we understand it, the Federal law- uui require the presiding judge to in-

1 i;ul sentences upon individuals con-i"d nf conspiring to. defraud the Gov-iiiiint. The law, in our opinion, shouldamended. Moreover, prominent busi-

•-•• men who stoop to such practices"MIII be .socially stigmatized and dia-

l i l i I ' l l , ' "

Just to give some of our sentimentalAmericans a better understanding of thenature of our Japanese enemies, we re-count the story of the Rev. George Yager,who is in this country after missionarywork in China. • « '

The Rev. Yager was in the Kiangsiarea of China. Some of General Doolit-tle's flyers landed close by and were as-sisted by the missionaries and Chinese, resi-dents,

When the Japanese approached, themissionaries withdrew into the hills sometwenty miles away, and, upon the retreaof the Japanese, mov.ed back to the mis-sion, They found nothing but destructionand desolation confronting them.

Farms had been completely laid waste.The whole countryside wreaked »by deathin every home. The few country peoplwho had stayed on, hoping to be alloweito continue to work their--field«, had beesavagely tortured and put to death,

The Rev. Yager says that the few' vilagers who managed to escape death toldstories too brutal and s&vage to relate"Just one charge was not heard," he de-clared, 'cannabalism,' "Outside of that,"he added "take your choice and you can'tmiss the savage nature of the Japanesearmy."

"Greatest Sea Victory"An advertisement for a recently pub-

lished book promises "a complete pictureof the greatest sea victory in American his-tory."

Strange to say, few Americans canname the battle, tell when it was foughtor tell what the results of the engagementwere.• '4'he battle took place in the year 1942,during which the United States scored re-peated sea victories over the Japanese inthe Pacific. They include the Battle of theCoral Sea, the Battle of Midway, tho ac-tion off the Santa Cruz island and the fight

round Savo Island, in "November.

le-oid'ono, tine old silver servicill bu inadequate. This 3ervici

in storage as in times o'Iir all battleships arc stripped <*eacctime luxuries. The $10,001/ar bond gift was approved by thlegislature this spring on behaf the people of New Jersey.Governor Charles Edison ha

ollowed the life of the new battlhip New Jersey from the blu)rint room to its majestic complion. While he waa Assistant Sec-etary of the Navy the great shipv*a authorized in 1939-and namedifter our great State by President'toosevelt at his personal request.When her keel waa laid at the'hiladelphia Navy Yard in Sep-omber, 1H40, the Governor tookart in tho ceremonies. When she

was launched two years ahead ofschedule on December 7 last, theanniversary of Pearl Harbor, Mrs.Edison broke the bottle of cham-pagne over the ship's bow.

Now the battleship is ready tojoin the fleet in defense of theFour Freedoms, armed to the gun-wales and ready for action againstthe enemy in any direction, skysea or under water. With her gothe blessings of the people of agreat State whose ancestors oncehelped free the seas of piracy. The,great ship has a great tradition tolive up to and Governor Edisonpredicts that before they lose thewar, Hitler, Tojo and Mussoliniwill have reason to remember thename New Jersey.

NATIONAL GUARD:—Formernational guardsmen of New Jer-sey are now seasoned troops inthe army of the United States inmany theatres of war and Gover-nor Charles Edison and1 AdjutantGeneral James' I. Bowers areproud of their fine record,

Of the 5fi7 officers inducted intoservice from the New Jer-

hose no longer warranted by thetdurtinn in travel wpr«,-*hut ofT;ime were restricted to operationurinjr the rush hours of the daymly and the remaining were ad-usted and retimed to handle traf-ic as it exists under the pleasigeriving ban,

T H I E V E R Y : — R u s t l e r s arebroad in New Jersey's fnrm ureas,nit instead of being the rough,rouprh, swaggering typo of the oldWest who concentrated uponstealing herds, of steers, the lorilvariety roams the countryside,lifting scarce parts from farmmachinery left in the fields.

The j$tate Department oT Agri-ulture- ha's received several rc-lorts from Mattered sections of,he State of thefts of fnnn mn-•hincry parts. This new type ofheivcry is particularly vicious be-au.w a small part tftkon from u

tractor or obhil- farm- equipmentmay, cause n crop to iipnil due tothe inability to svr.uie new parts.Prior to the present war with itsaccompanying rationing of farmmachinery the practice was un-heard of in New Jersey.

A carburetor taken from a trnc-tor or a wheel from a corn plantermay paralyze work on a farm fordays and may even cause such a

ng delay that entire crops maybe lost, State agricultural officialsstate. Scientific farming which isfeatured In Most sections oTJ"Ji'w

muBt b« done byand thievery of parts createsparticularly fatal situation.

Due to increased prices of poul-try, State agricultural officials analso receiving reports that, chickeistealing is becoming more preva-lent in the outlying districts, Ctfultryrifen whfi take advantage of thetatooing identification progianfor poultry sponsored by the Neversey State Police are smart beause such marked chickens are

not welcomed on the black market.State troopers have been in

structcd by Colonel Charles MSchoeffel, Superintendent of StatiPolice, to be on the lookout wheipatrolling Hie rural areas for alpersons who act in a suspicioumanner. With the scarcity of food,farm crops loft in distant fieldsmay prove particularly inviting toeven the casual motorist this year,il is believed.

Opinion Of Others

HOE-DO WIN:—Civilian def ens-organizations in New Jersey mak-ing plans for the raising of fundsfor various purposes could take atip from folks up in AndoverTownship, Sussex County.

At a recent old-fashioned squaredance held in the township whichfeatured ii real reel caller, thoboys and girls, young and old,came from miles around to danceto the tune of Turkey in tipStraw and other hoiwlown iuncs,

But the real attraction consti-tuted several dinners on the hoofas door prizes which were award-id to lucky patrons. The prize?

comprised a pig, a heifer, a castof beer, a gallon of wine, teichickens ,and five home-imulicakes.

Needless to say a record crowdattended.

2,000 Years Ahead!'in- u|' the comparatively recent devel-''Dis of modern medicine is the discov-tiiat diseased teeth are the cause ofuhieh affect the human body in manyvarious ways, j

Ii i* interesting to'learn that this theoryeleurly apparent in the diagnosis of a

11 physician to an Assyrian king, in theHalf of the seventh century, B. C

il'1 part of the tablet has been destroy-"ne paragraph reads as follows:

inflammation wherewith his headIs, feet are inflamed, is due to hisHis teeth must be drawn; it is or(Hint he i|inflamed,',,

Whether the ancient medical man wasa shot in the dark OP not no one" can

ut certainly his words indicate tha.associated the inflammatory conditior

lung's body with the condition of hi*Thus the unknown Assyrian antici

l'd modern medical, theory by som1 years.

Spain Laments Bombingnewspapers now contend thaents should agree to ceasi

|»1 bombardments, taking the positioiich methods of waging war are nocountenanced.

objections of the Spanish|f* come at jr Jat« date, They had no

XReturnJ"We see where a group of European

hurchmen have appealed for a "return tood" as an answer to the problems thateset the world.

This is a generalization often used tohose who admit that they are on the in-iide with the Almighty and that others aren need of advice, instruction and, perhaps,nmishment.

We certainly are not ready to admithat mankind has turned from God, evenf expounders of religion assert it to be aact,

The people of the world, may not un-derstand God, they may .not .live, perfect.a\s and they may be too ignorant to solve

many issues but, for the most part, theyre anxious to serve the living God.

scy National Guard, SO.9 per centhave received promotions, 21 percent nf them to two or moregrades. Over 500 enlisted menof the New Jersey National Guardare known to have been commis-sioned since their induction intol-'ederal service, New Jersey

Since the beginning of the war tion warnsformer National Guard troopsfrom all sections of the countryparticipated in the defense of thePhilippines and many became cas-ualties with the fall of Bataan andof Corregidor. The American con-tingent of the Allied forces whichconducted themselves so gallantlyin the Papuan campaign was al-most entirely National Guard andNational Guard units fought inforce in North Africa.

In the early days of unpre-paredness, great .assistance wasrendered to the nation by the Na-tional Guard in the expansion ofthe U. S. .Army, not only by mak-iijg available over 20,000 trainedofficers and 300,000 enlisted men,but by bringing in 18 divisions,as well as'coast artillery and otherunits enabling approximately anequal number of selectees to bepoured into these units to furnighthe nation with a large army initself. In addition, cadres werewithdrawn from these trained Na-

ABOUT JERSEY:—Women <>New Jersey are asked to don working clothes and gA into war imlu.stries as soon as possible by StatiEmployment officials . . . Taxpay-ers can look for new attempts tenact laws freeing favorite runestate owners from taxation, thNew Jersey Taxpayers Associa

"Our Forest'Fight," the interesting nxhihit otho New Jersey State Museumwill close .over the weekendPedestrians are asked by the St'atMotor Vehicle. Department to follow common rules ,of safety itheir crossing and walking akinthe public streets and highwaysclaiming 103 pedestrian deathsduring tho first quarter of the cur-rent year are too high a price topay for present-day motor vehicleuse . . . Five bootleggers were iir-vested in New Jersey by State Al-coholic Beverage agents duringMay . . . Jersc-ymcn are requestedto display the flag and purchasemore war bonds u|n Flag Pay nextMonday.in a proclamation issued

Saved By a Bible(The following letter from a

United Statei Army lieutenantto hi* »i«tcr in PeniuylvanU wmposted, in it> entirety, on thebulletin board at PattersonField, Dayton, Ohio.cur Sis:

, . I have escaped death at theand of an enemy in ;i wny somazing I ;im still in a daze. Youimemher I armed myself with uiihle when 1 knew I was goingiver? That Bible is the reason I

still hM-e and able to write.his letter. Here is the story: Myiiiildy ami I were sent out on dutyn the work 1 told you before was-iur job, We had just received in-

formation, the most important inweeks. When we were discovers>y the enemy I gave my buddy thenformation we had collected, told

i to bent it with it, prepare^myself to fuce them. It was thefirst time I'd beeti faced with thenecessity of pointing my guii at anan.

My buddy had not .obeyed myorder. AH I reached for my car-bine, a shot struck me in thebic-iist and blasted me down.Thinking I was (lead, my pal jump-ed for me, grabbed my carbine

well as his own and blastedaway with both guns . . . He wasamazed when 1 rolled over andtried to get, up. The force of thebullet had stunnud me. Dazedly,

(High (ienesi-i, K.xndus,i Hut it sccnicil fiinlii.it.ic that menNumbers, mi through! wmild learn to fly. . . .

11111... I ih

.rvitit'iis,

\w other books, Samuel, Kings,mill kept going. Where do youthink it slopped? hi ihjMiiiddleif I'siilm ill, pointing lik^ ;i linger:it this vorse:

"A thousand shall full at thyside, mill ten thousand at thyright hand; but it shall nut. .conicnigh tliee. Only with- thine eyesshall thou behold and see the re-ward of the wicked."'

Sis, when I rend that verse itraised me three feet olT the grouni. . . In utter humility I said"Thank you, precious God."

Your loving brothel-, 'George.—From the Coruolidatcd Nowi

San Diego, Calif,

For a Free Flow of TruthTruth, it has been said, will sc

the world free. .The world tmlny is lighting fo

freedom. The oppression whic'brought on this war was madpossible by keeping large masseof people ignorant or inisinforine

Millions (if people are lightinagainst the right Unlay becaus'those millions, believe they arright.

If anything etin end warfareforever and weld the world intone brotherhood, it elm be don .by the free dissemination of truth I K U ' , i" l l s ' a m l

and understanding among peu-

Mussolini's BoastOn November 18, when GermanOn N ,

planes were .rocking London with aerialattacks, Henito Mussolini advised his Ital-ian subjects: '

'I have obtained the Fuehrer's pernus-to direct Italians in battle against "Brit-

ain, with Italian planes and submarines."Now, the situation is reversed. Italy

„ feeling the-weight of Allied bombs and _Anthony Eden pointedly nmtrktf that.the JM*rw-pmMt, *ka at»iWd l»«tBritish people have not forgotten Musso-lini's statement.

si on

18

tional Guard troops and becamethe nucleus of many new organi-sations.

New Jersey is proud of its for-mer National Guard troops.

TRAFFIC UGHTSMKotoriststhroughout New Jersey, anxious toSttvo gasoline and tires whereverpossible, art oleased with the jobof revamping traffic, signal controlson streets (ind highways in orderto reduce waiting at intersections.

,Through a statewide programto cut out unnecessary traffic.iR-hts, inaugurated by the StateMotor Vehicfe Department, there

now a daily saving of 7,211hours to motorists in useless stop-ping qpd starting. The job of re-vamping the. gtop-wnd-go lights tofit restricted travel, slower driv-ing and the necessity for gettingas nvmy miles from gasoline and

by Cfcyemor Edison . . . A NewJersey fisherman has entered asunh'sh weighing one pound, fourounces, in the Governor's Fishim:Tournament . . . Both white andsweet potatoes brought recordprices in New Jersey during therecent shortage o,f the "spuds" . . .Vineland, Summit, Hoboken andIrving-ton have been granted a to-tal of $29,615 in federal fundsfor the establishment of child cartcenters . . , State Treasurer Robert C. Hendricksou, Woudbiuywho was defeated by Edison forGovernor, has been appointedMajor in the United States Ann)and is awaiting a iiull for f'oreigi

There are millions of Italians, prob-aluly including Mussolini, who wish theycould forget his boast.

summer.In New Jersey there are 1,212

intersections controlled by trafficsignals under the jurisdiction of152 political subdivisions. De-partment tnsileiitorti studied *!tt,ch

service . . . The State BoanPublic Utility Commissionerspostponing its grade crossing dimination program for two years hecause, of the shortage of labor anmaterials . . . Milk producers iNew Jersey may secure u feitertsubsidy to protect their milk sujplies . . . Tmvel at Governmeiexpense, unless approved befonhand, has been huined by thState Selective- Department Hervico Headquarters , . . Inventigation of the State Civil Service Dpartment and other utceiicies IGovernor Bdi»on will get undomy after July 1 when $2&,0U(| hicuiuea. available for tliat'vpurpi

CAPITOL CAPERS: New Jesey residents pay the Government

wondered why.out of my pocket and

dream, too idealistic for the wellin utter muteness looked at theknown scllishncss

OUR DEMOCRACYSAVE FAT TO LOAD O U R GUNS.

,k GUNPOWDER IN /7MADE CHIEFLV Of SALTPETER.FARMERS HAD TO SAVE WASTEANIMAL AND VEGETABLE MATTER.TO PROVIDE ENOUGH OF IT, <. ,\ I

MODERN EXPLOSIVES REQUIREGLYCERINE WHICH CAN BEMADE OF WASTE KITCHEN FATSIF EVERY HOME SUPPLIES ITSSHARE,.OliR.FIGHTING MEN WILLGET THE AMMUNITION THEY NEED.

-THE.

New Books

But li't UK not tissume that whenhis free interrlmngV of ideasonie.s- -as mine it must somelay—Ann'i-ii'Hiis will be teachinghe rest of the world bow to live.['here must He in some far cor-lcrs »f thip earth ii fpw sparks ofruth iibout hotter living that wehavn overlooked. — San Joia(Calif.) Mercury Hertld.

New Order In HawaiiThe partial lifting of military

rule in Hawaii reflects the im-provement of our position in thewhole Pacific area. Since the dis-sstcr of Pearl Harbor, Hawaii hasbeen living the life of a militarygarrison. It is to tho credit of itspeople that they have accepted se-vere restrictions cheerfully andwithout complaint . . .

This change, warranted by de-velopments in the war, has beenrecommended strongly by Secre-tary of the Interior lckcs. Hebelieves that the Hawaiian peoplehave earned the right to co-oper-ate with the military, Publicopinion on the inaiubind wilt en-dorse his opinion that "the popu-lation of Hawaii hiis distinguisheditself for,' its couruKii and JKBOJU-tion in the face of danger, for it»discipline in the face of severe re-

willingnesB t?

make every sacrifice to aid t inwar.—New York Tintct.

large

s i g n a l installation separately. (i niiluuit'il on I mjc

A TABLESPOON OF FAT SAVSD EACH PAV MAKES NEARLYONE POUNO A MONTH...ONE POUND OF FAT WILL F ide •4 ANTI-AIRCRAFT SHELLS. VvY;,,, .«' Un'"J2 POUND? WILL FIRE 30

Afjrt-TANJC SHELLS. mm M,,

1 ONE 7A&L.ESM0N A PAY "KFROM EVSJtY FAMIIY WIU P8OVI0S

THE ZOO MlLUON POUNDS WE VfEff THIS Y£A/Z.

SAVE ALL YOU CAN-TAKE IT TO Wl/X BUTCHER..

U'f IV Dvlscnll is bead of a •-newspaper ' syndicate and

author of the widely read col-umn, "New York Day by I)aj»."Hi' is mliaiie, witty ami, a twi>n- vdel-fill .storyteller, You'd never ;think on meeting him that he had '—*•once been a Kansas farm boy,spending his days hoeing potatoes

when his father Was watchinghim and climbing trees—wh.enhis lather wasn't watching him.

"Kansas Irish," is Mr. Driscoll'sstm-y of bis childhood on thisfarm. It tells of tornadoes, cy-clones, ilouiis and of minor ca-tastrophes ilmt befell the author,Mich as tumbling into the pigpenami being attacked by an angryt;;iiidi'i-. Life wasn't easy fur the '•:11i-i:-i-i>l 1 voiiritrstci's, buf. it cer-tainly wasn't dull eithtfr. ;

The ilojnjnanl person of thisi-Nn-y is nig Flurry, the father, :;

iinpii'tlk'lahk' outbursts of ;ti'iiipi'i- kept the children and their "yrnlle niutlu'i" in a constant state

uncertainly. 1% Flurry hudmine from seafaring folk of Ire-land, ami he was aU his lift tofeel ii stnuiger among the placidfarmers of Kansas. He took outhis loncljiK'ss in violent and, un-reasonable rages. ' t

His character is illustrated byhis ireiitmeiit of the two povertystricken O/arkians who uttemptadto steal his precious luiainsttil,which he kepi to c.ovur his wheatstacks, lie cursed the (httrkiana,and he kicked them and he cloutedthem. But then he yelled at hiswife,:.."Ellen, havj^ygu got a bite ^to cat for the,Be hungry flops-ile-guys, 1 don't know," And afterthey ha,d ravenously finished Hsteaming pot of coffee, V loaf1 of

a hunk- of ham and a potI ('iwtiiwetl on Payc 8)

Page 8: BACK UP YOUR BOY Mepenbent Heaber - DigiFind-It · Price Panel Assistants will sem as liaison officer* between consum cr, merchants and board. Thci Job will he to disseminate infor-mation

PACE EIGHT

NO TWO ALIKE

fac they

B r I.OUIS MAI.I.EN

Wluit |niy?liil I'IUI) m«

wkflt mii't" nirl* viilncralilc ami

nnxiTi-eyi'H whcni'vcr hi? twin

hroftirr. IVter. was nlmut. Thr rp

was no diTiyinir if. tt'w]* usually

M l for FVlrr's line. Hr was

intooOi. Paul had ?ccn il happen

too many time?. Fear grippedhis heart as he thought it wasabout to happen niifiiin—tonight--this time to "too nice a girl."

PcnsiTcly, Pnul tiigfccct at thech»ir undpr him nnd moved closerto the table in the El Zebra Club.He passed bip hand fondly and an-rewingly over the ljenvrr jacketon thr c-hair l>P«i<l<> hipi. This wasArm—n part of Ann—the deli-cately perfuraoil fnifrranre of thejacket pierced hii troubled mind.Ruffled and driven, he came to adecision. He wilvod, after to-night, to apo and ci>|iy his twinbrother's every inovi1 ami linpia-cinus banter, llf'd do it and seehu* far that, wmiM )?el him—fora chftiifrc

Paul's eyes .lesrcht'il the (binrefloor for IVli-r ami Ann, w(lanced tofjf'thei1 for the foiii'tlicomtecutive time. Thank «CKJI1-nt'ss this wa« to be I he lust danci1.They had agreed to leave'upon it-icompletion. Ann had said: "Youdon't mind, do you, Paul?" Ofcourse he did! Hut he couldn't letAnn know, just then. "Thin is

t m t h t r ,ymi have." Shi-sailed into IVler'tglided :iwny.

Somo brother, h lijcllt! Pnulthough!. I'riibitbly laying it onagain. Ann seemed to enjoy it.Paul didn't! Ann wns his girl!

Ann fitted into I'mil's plans forthat part of life he desired. Ahome. A charming wife, His heartmelted every time he dared tothink of it. lie hadn't yet foundfhe cotirafco to toll her. Gracious,kind, beautiful Ann. Rut he hadtold her all about himself, hisearly boyhood, he, the younger oftwins, had even told her aboutPetur. He wasn't afraid nf Peterthen, with twu thousand miles be-tween them. They'd probably l>emarried before Peter would meether. He had told her of his re-jection by the Army—of his newjob now, as u civilian in the^ArmyProcurement Department,

Paul was afraid of Peter now.Breezy, garrulous Peter. Backhome, Paul had always been re-ferred to us the <Hii(.'t one, whenthe twitls were the- subject ofconversation.

The trouble with himself, Paulthought, was that h« had alwaysgiven up tu» easily to Peter, fromchildhood up. Peter always didget the best toys, the best bike,the best clothes, the best of every-thing.

Ann win something Paul want-ed more than anythjng clue in hislife. She represented the best ofeverything to him. Determinationfilled his lean, square-jawed face.He WAS the quiet one, up untiltonight. Long live the new Paul!

1 would not be easy, Paul re-minded himself. Peter had yearsof experience along these linns.He regarded lifft about him withhardened indifference, and whenPaul sought to reason with him,Peter's face would turn quiteblank, his eyes evasive. He neverargued, never changed, He'd findlove, cultivate it to crop, taste ofit, and leave, it.

Now, 'with the thought of los-ing Ann racing through his ner-vous system, Paul vowed his BCI'U-pl«s were to undergo a change.

Earlier in the evening Peter was

Il l I ' . - i l ' U

l . h . n p ' . • ! ' ( • '

; i | - i ' Y ' H ! i l u

H o w did y

merit . . . ' . '

Mat l o t i d l in

: I V ' I I > ' V '

r r ! " I'm

utr in N'

mi J;I-:1 1 tlmi

Teviis .

. " Q u i e t , yell Mr nil

said, f l - pi

ni()llll)|i:' ri'?

yon SIT I'n"Sorry ."

"Say. whi

pered.

WAAC

,'n'cil hisof the |

1 I P U H V ? '

I1- Ann?

Code

•nil, ill(; (in t h e

il ' i i i d . " W h n t

-«- York . . .?in the iipnrl-itthl you were

Petor hadhand over theihorw.'. "Can't

Peter whis-

Receiver

Receiving code M a part of theworlc for WAACS studyingArmy radio operations an«l re-pnir nt Midland Radio mid Tele-vision School nt rCaniai City,Mo, Technician Fifth Gr id*Miry Moffat of Pill-burgh, P t ,copies code at the receives it.

"ANN'!" Paul had almost shout-ed, "(live me that phone. QuickHeforo you wreck my life!'^

Yes, Ann knew il was his broth-er . . . Peter told her after a fHwminutes of conversation . . . theirvoices sounded to much alike . . .quite a kldrler . . . she Understoodhe was in town on a 48-hour leave. . . she'd like to meet him. Whynot bring him -irons tonight, ontheir date? , , , it would be nice. . . he'd probably be lonesome , . .

she had said.

Lonesome? What ft thought toassociate with Peter., New Yorkwould bo just an interlude forhim.

. .'. the superintendent let mein. You're looking great, Paul,The phone rang so I answered" it.All right? Good, Transferred toMassachusetts. You'll be seein'more of me now. (Ireat town,Boston. Steeped in tradition,(iirla rcopgeniiil, too, Wouldn'texactly compare with the girls inTexas. But all right. Great."

In the aparfitient Paul wasn'tso sure he wan doing tho rightthing taking Peter out on thisdate. He felt uneasy—remem-bering " Peter's technique. Andhis Army uniform now plum! Paulagainst such fearful odds he hadtoyed with tho idea of calling thedate off. He had executed • afeeler: "How about making itslag tonight?"

"Nothing doing." Peter hadsaid. "I have all the stug I canput up with at camp. Besides,you've already made the date."

was made andmeet Peter.

Would she he loss susceptible toPeter's soft impeachment?

Thank goodness this was thelast dance. Paul feared the wprst.He tried to put the fear from hismind. They were coming Backto the table now, both of themlnughing, haml-in-h^ml. Paultried to tell himself he was beingfoolish and torturing the, depthsof bis heart with pain that iHivershould be there.

True, the dateAnn did want to

•BOOKS ARE WEAPONSIN THE WAR. OF IDEAS"—COUNCIL ONBOOK'SIN, WARTIME'

T h e o)i'f">«ion ' - l ay i 'd w i th h im

ns t h e y ITitHiei] tin1 it r ee l a n d

t h e r e l o o k on m o r e a g i t a t i o n .

Peter said: "Well, I'll leave youtwo alone now. The night is stillyoung for me. See you later inthe apartment, Pnul. Gooi! night,Ann."

"Good night. Peler,"'Ani\ naid."Call me before you go nwny."• Is this it? Paul wondered, Isthis the beginning to anotherbroken heart? They wntchedPeter vanish down the dim Titstreet. He turned at the* cornerand waved. In the: "next inatant he«':n (ji.np nnci with him a still,hushed silence came over theempty street, The laughter, theirayety, the radiance left Ann'stare. ,,

They walked alone; silently.Imih, apparently feeling the tense,decisive emotional stress of themoment. Paul saw in Ann's PUTI-di'n change, after Peter had leftthem, the end of all his d/eams.She. too, hp thought, was no.dif-ferent from the others; she, too,had fallen for the blandishmentsof Peter's "line," and his unAV-niable charm. Again, Paul's mindplayed with the thought of thatresolution—"be like Peter"—butsfwiehow that just wasn't his way.He couldn't change.

Tie prepared himself bravelyfor wljat was to come.

Ami w»s talking: "Peter Infun . . . "

F u n ' Was' that how lasting love* a s defined? pad fun taken theplace of love bnilt on solid, deep-rooted admiration? The love-, thedeepest affection that normnllyleads to marriage? Peter was notready for that. Someone wasbound to be hurt, cruelly; he'd notallow it to happen to Ann. Heturned to her, words of protestrushing to his* lips—then sudden-ly heard her say: " . . . but of thetwins, I like you best, Paul."

Paul glowed. Ann somehowunderstood—understood that lifewith Peter, for any girl, would•ml so—a wave of the hand. Hisheart beating wildly, there on thewalk, Pauliook Ann into his arms,held her close and vowed—to behimself for the rest of his life.

State House Dome?(Continued \rom Editorial Page)$33,348,000 annually and get back^13,745,000 ' na grants - in - aid,which ia a very unprofitable pro-cedure, says bho New Jersey Tax-payers Association . . , This is thetime of the year when weeds beginto surround and capture the vege-table plants in the garden, accord-ing to State Agricultural officials. . . Summer heat combined withpolitical expendiency will keep theLegislature from convening thissummer . . . Insurgent EssoxCounty Republicans have gone Ar-thur Vanderbilt one better by fil-ing a ticket known as "The Origi-nal Clean Government Repub-licans." '

... By William Sharp

MAY 10,1933, THE NAZIS BURNED

THE BOOKS

MAY 10,1943-

New Books(Continued jrom Editorial Pai/c)of boiled salt pork, and after hehad fed hay to their lean horses,'he refused to call in the police. Headministered a few more cloutsand kicks, shouted after them,"Get along with yc now, and goodluck to ye!"

* * * >

" The Book-of-the~Monlh Clubannounces for July a dual selec-tion: "Western Star," by the lateStephen Vincent Benel, a longnarrative poem about our pion-eers which was completed just be-fore the author's death, and "II.S. Foreign Pojiey; Shield of theRepublic," by Walter Lippmann.

* * •*

MaqKinlay Kantov, author of"Happy Land," received a raft ofmail about his story from parentsof boys at the fighting fronts. Aprevious book of Kantor's—"LongRemembd1"—*& tale of the CivilWarj'found its way into the handsof a sergeant on Guadalcanal. Inthe thick of battle, when the Japswere throwing everything theyhad in the vain endeavor to oustthe Americans, the sergeant con-tjnued to read the book while hud-died in his fox hole. An pfficer re-marked drily: "That must be quitea story." "Yes," sighed the ser-geant, "they sure had a toughtime of it batk in those Civil Wardays."

NO WONDERSaiem, Ore.—After working all

day in the State Agriculture De-partment office and using herlunch hour to donate a piuf ofblood to the Red Cross; Mrs.(ieorgiu Ramage McCormauk,whose husband is in the SouthPacific, rushed home and did allher housework. Then she report-ed for her second full njifht's workat a cannery which was threatenedwith closure because of lack ofhelp. Then she

RUNS QYBR ,Duncan,' Qkla.—C P. Skiss was

standing on the bonk of a Hoodedcree,k near his homt) wh#n adun wall of water sw#pt th« bouseoff itg foundation, knocked Skiesinto the creek and the house sweptover him. Hla only injury was ascrape on the h«ad.

FRIDAY, .TUNE 11, ]f)-n

MUGGS AND SKEETER

INDEPENDENT- .T , r , \ | , , „

- B y WALLY RISIKTHETE EMUFPRACTCE FERONECttYfM'ARMIS PLUMB h

BLTT THEN AM DTOO TlREP PLlTTLf JD& A^

T

ELZA POPPEN - B y OLSEN & JOTlNsn\

To THAT LOJU-

To- \

»J F0O6HT WMTH —

SKIPPYALWAYS BEAR IN WIND,

, THAT WE WEtfE PUT HERETO DO GOOD

—By PERCY CROSUY

/ ALL RI6HT, PAPA, AK4

\ WHAT WERE THE OTHER:;

PUT HEPE FtoR?

Distnhuted by King fediun-s Syn«ih.air, In,

KRAZY KAT -By'HERRIMAN

fopr. 191?, King ftjniro SfniiuiiiV. Inc., ™,iK •;,;,;, K

NAPPY —By fflV5-A-Y!WHAT'RE YA TKYIN ' I 'PUU!

THAT GUY AIN'T IN NO CONDITIONFIGHT?

. 1 OKAY AUGIE?PULL Y'SELF %.. { LOOK AT'CHA*',">> G'WAN IN -fr,

THEREU FINISH

THIS" 1 ROUND! fc'4

J ' v EVEN LAY

(>, ' \ A GLOVECOMING UP INTHIS BATTLEOFTHE CENTURV..THERE GOESTHE

BELLAS THEBOYS RECIEVE

FINAL INSTRUC-TION^ FROMTHIER CORNERS.

g e SILLY! HE'S IN

POIFICK CONDITION?

JES' PUTTIN'

ON AN ACT

DETECTIVE RILEY —By BOBINDIA AM BAHADURRA»JPO« BAJOOIA,A*EALWY ( L ^ T K ^ W I I I S » O » J ^FuMMU^Ji)** fUWV-EWt VtAKACO, ACIU60T W0MiMtlA1t>» IMM

WARWAKl «{«CHAHr,HA6 UOi SLEPf FO(? MORE TiJAM TJR££ VovEKON Dt t o m ' ^ X Of 'trt WIO Mi UffiE 1 1 / WRMtO BV FOOBfttM YOUNG M M M SALT LAKE CKV...Af A1 ^ ^ ^ ' / V /

WOULD UORK.HAS WE# f KODliaU...MIKE CA« 1$ IrtAI Of MUL WERE ACCOMPANIED W 1MEK WIVIS.

)(1HOUOM1 YOU < I c»»v NOW 1 «r r

wiEt AWOMIN-^ XHATJR!

MACHINE CUNS W I M KNOWH TO fH£ AKCIENT

WAI II BOW UI'.UlAkOllJ 10010 700 AiUtOWS

FACTS YOU NEVER KNEW[HERE .HIRE,'

By RICHAItlt.FLORIDA'

LAND OP SUNSHINE.'

IANDOF BCAUtlFUL

U N I R V A N D - .

YOUNG SCAWp!

WHAT LX) YOU

TtllNKVOU'RE

DOING?

CONNAGtrMVSELFA

TRAILER AND MAKE A

FIRST CLASS TOUR

OF GOOD OLD U.5 A 1

M0R[SCENERY/

Page 9: BACK UP YOUR BOY Mepenbent Heaber - DigiFind-It · Price Panel Assistants will sem as liaison officer* between consum cr, merchants and board. Thci Job will he to disseminate infor-mation

,,-pr'XPKNT—LEADER FRIDAY, JUNE 11, PAGE mm

Ireen Worldiili,,M [ilnmofivs of the

p i : ; .Mintrihutod $2,-in-

M-nili-ofOlmf drive(r,||'l.(-Il of Uin National

f,,,. Infantile Paralysis'„., tlic dread disease.';,,'., n-i!h«1,450,000 do-

H'.ijItO.ODO persons in

"l , ,^ ;,n. still (fivintf gen-.i'""ihfti- time to entertain

;|] ||,,, armed forces of.,y in this nation amI ,'„',,(Ui YOUIIK, believing,,„,„ wdiiUU.likc to meet

> i l t t r r aiMiiiainted with the'.i,,,^,. people, plans \.o

• i l l I'nnni; <»f e n t p r t w n -

!„,,. | | , , \ t . t o u r (if r a m p ?

, ,n , [ j i ^ t " v i s i t " w i t h t.iu

, II !»•!. U icy l i k e i t , t o o

„ ul i i f l i lni, ' r l ' l. • ii-iimtji T r u n k , " is t he

,,v. I t ' s ri"i y c n v s o ld aiii

j iriiin :i p r i v i i t c co l l cc

., rYiu'ili1 t h a t u "s t f t iu l

.•Mi i|i;it I l i r i i vc raa ;

,• i jii-d ii " typica l ruin

,, 1|M|. in,) h i i rh iH 'ow mi

,,i |ii\v(ii'"W, is u l t e s t c

,, i • • i.f Ilic H a r d y F a m -

fur jil:-t. l ine UMinlli n tn l i l wnillil

i n m n y =111 nlI wi 'ek l i i ' ^ , n o w mi

VIMIJI ' n f H n n k n i p l c y t o citn-

t i m i e l ir i 'vinit Ihcii ( I n v c r n m e n l .

Not exactly a crimr when you con-Filler thalt; newspnper publisher*i\rj> the only one-: in this war rillden world who contribute theiriili to the war effort, yet are tvotremunerated—<-or expected to he—•for their time, material or effort

_WAS!IliVrrT;(i\ AV i 1,1's statement to C

I <> n"/hurchill-halt the Uniied States and GreatBritain are commilteiHo the "ex-periment," "|hat air power canwin the wm' is recognition of t.liat'•mall band of "visionary screw-ball" ainnwi who for years fought

I i,,, ||;inly pictures ;iri'•M/\ lik'ni in South

., -f-'Ausliiilia, us they arcif ;,1 ,, (rues to show thatYiliiilulion?, joys and

1 iiiv ; iv rvw family nri'I liv niidioiices when,.,i iiiiyed on Ihn BtSVtuni.

,,,' (fellinn lots and lots.. ,,l these days? None

• i Ceniniiiiider Corydoni. I . S. N,, tlie jjrny-

,,,.,, w ' io-e life is beinf[H, ••; tin- former Arkansas.„ :,.r, who won the Niivy• , -1 •iiinir nine wounded

finm .J;\vn diirinjc the,n. Dr. Wasscll is try-

.,. .ML :ill of Lhe.MU'i's• ,.f which coine froii• ,,,;i: in locate l«ovs win

.....* .niMi^Hi ^nvj mi yr'icrs 11for the right to prove that verypoint.

Major General Ira' C. Enker,..ommamloi1 ot the U. S. Air Forceiind Chief Air Marshal Sir ArtjuirT. Hiin-in, head of the ft, A. F.'sbomber eommnnd, two of the most"iiiiuiiis "visii'iiliiry sri i 'wbnlls" nr<0 be in eli;ii(,'e ill' opcrjUion?.

Hoth know "thcir surface slral-i-K.V, theories r>f In^islies and .liic-tics a1; well IM uny nf tin; hitrh mili-tary ami naviil meil. who belittled•their i'11'oils. Moreover, both weremilitary men liffurt thej becameairmen." • •

Washington observers predictthat the most sigiiififtmt ehjintre in'.he itrrvtf'Ky of the war can be ex-pected. These prediction:; are

i| on scientific calculation tiyr,dii:>tri;;l experts who i-stima,tehall 2ii(i,noo tons of bombs will

have heerr missing since shortlyiflcr the fall of Manilla.

How's this for a contest? Regi'iTowwiy, Edward G. Robinson amiJack Mintz are staging a pipe-sinokiiiK marathon. Each entraiilwill be given a new pipe, a pipefulof tobacco and one match. Theidea is to see which can keep hispipe going the lungest .without re-lighting. Try it sometime!

• educe Germnny'.! industrial capn-city to the point where she ennnot.continue to fight.

And although ihi- is a new formof warfare (the Niuis hit I/omlon(luring a year of blitz with only8,000 tons) the p'onf of it? cf-'fecflvetiess was ilhiitrateit whenDortmund, one of Germany'sgreatest ports, wns nearly reducedto o/bjjfa by Allicil airrflen who hitIt With 2,0(10 tons i.r bombs <lut-

g a one hour isml,The Churchill statement, un-

doubtedly concun-cil in by thePresident, gives iis hope that, re-KardlrsR of Whether bombs nlonecan knock out (ienniiny, the ex-]periment can't but shorten the winanil reduce ouv h'.unaii casiuilticsIt, ii iiiininium. On t!hese pnint?brass huts agree.

Reversing the usual procedure,two films made in Hollywoitl frumscreen plays have been made intobooks. The first wns William S'aro-yan's "Tin1 Human Comedy," aridthe other is the screen piny whichluy (iilpatric originally wrote furhe Warner film, "Action in the:

Atl

We sir* grateful for the appre-ciation of newspaper service ex-pressed by OI'A AdministratorBi.own for the a:•-i-jtance renderedliy newspapers "above and beyond

e call of duty,"The response of both driily and

weekly newspapers, whenever anygovernment1 agencyhas asked foi-iiNtistanco has been instant ainraf-lirmative. The sale of war bond',wns put over the top by news-paper; so was the scrap drive andlhi» wtitili1 rultoniiiK pvograhi. Allthis and more was gladly given byImericali publishers without re-;ud to cost or potential revenu-and without sliut.The other side nf the picture ani:

.ne thftt we can't umlflrStaml i:he opposition hy certain politi:ians and large dailies to the h^yng of display space in smnll newslapors by the Government. Th:ost of such space buying overpcrioit of « year w«uhl he but

11 of the cost of ninninDavis' vast O.W.I, set: up

Incidentally, propaganda mnterinl sent out by the O.W.I, habeen fancied up considerable sinceWorld War I days, when one goodatrocity story put the country onedge for a month. Under EJitnerDavis, the O. W. I. has a lot ofhigh priced talent. And althoughmore of these men earned a groatdeal more in private life, many o(their cS'itics rate their activities nobargain , a t any price. Theirfriends, however, feel that lineRam is getting a million dollarsWorth of service for il song

Stories are fed to more tha2,000 daily newspapers. 1,375 foeitrn language public,itioiis, 'i,d'factory give-aways and ."),('weekly newspaper.

Of e'ourse the important releaare used but there is a great deal

f material released of which only'rhaps ten pei' cent is published.Overseas, O.W.I, has 12 short-

.•«ve Iransmillers sending nullews 24 hours a day in a score of

mnni decided that thi* \r,n tnomuch, Kvery tenth persnn win

ot, The men who were left wereordered to take a (rood look at.their dead rnmrndes. They weretold that the same fate would meeteverybody who did not appear forwork.

# * *WALTER PIERCE PREDICTS:

,The RooseveH - Churchill "confer-ence wan held for the purpose of

' w o r l d politics rather

than war stmtrrry • • • Except (orilci-Utoni r<i attempt to knock outCeniiaiiy by air hitmbings emphnHIS wtvs laid on ivhnt stop* to follown'heii tt'ily crarks and France isfreed . . . There enn be no douMthat both leaders are laying thefoundation fur n Hriti'h-Ampriranuiideistnnding on ('Out-war jiolicifi, . . As ;\ result of his meeting withWinston fhiu/ehill She Duke, ofWindsor may visit F.ngbiud soon.Tlie ex-King has not set foot there

'••inre he gave up tin"- thr*>m' . , .i VlV»hiiict(>ii if rlow'ly studyinif('nrrrmny'-'. indn-Jtrinl mrli t«. Tim'they will be smashed along withthe \:i7.i militiiry machiin- g«e--.

Iwitliiiiit saying . . . Expect a *btrMj reduction in%nur coiil bills early: in ,1'inp. OI'A ruling that dealers|iun*t reduce prices i:i «ce"idi:ncr' with reduction in R. K. f'vich:

intes on coal . . . A dcmati'l for a*lea«t 2tl.n<IO,0(lfl new nutoinohik.

I is cxperfi'd nfter ihe war . . . :i!Jo

n Kmldinr hnnm la*tinit If) y*Srsto meet dertinndjL for new hon>M

. . There K tall? of Ml »ppronth-farm Ulwir sutplua, art about-

face frum tlie situiilion responsiblef"V ''arm di aft defermetit nnd Bio

x|irctive railing.of fnthcrs . . .!f s revi-ii'd, m many as 1.0QO,-

Illin father^ in riliis will be draft-while neaily 2.000.000 riity

rkert n™' <"i fani-" are defet«I although of Jraft age without

Yes, iii only a liitle over (t ymir:he Oliice of War Information hasjrown to top-drawer importance.f.

From the Polish undergroundomes a copy of the new labor

laws; govern ins "nhsenteejsm" ashey dpply to Poles employed in

__ ' plants.. .., ,.'or belnc aiisent from fheir

work for one day, and "for chang-tiheir place of work without

notification there is the penalty ofdeath. It is carried out on thespot.

It is forbidden to be ill no long-er than three days for internalcomplaints and for seven days inthe case of operations. If theworker does not recover withinthis t.imejhx h killed.

One day '!00 sick people re-mained in the plant. The fler-

Supreme Enriched BREADEnrich^by using a yeast high in Vi.amin Bl content, niacin end iron. Rush*. FRESH from our own bakeries!

Most 0/ the Best /or Your BLUESunrise "Grade A" TOMATO••••*••

'.'i \ \ ( ! ;iddressogriipli opcratnrnini' line nf ihe mnny liiskii

<•!- b> the Women's ArmyEi 1 ni|ir. reli'asinu soldiers fo(

1 1111 ii- li.S.Ariny RecruitingUuu Siulrnn today and

I0LL1NTHE WMC

Word cornea that the Ion if-awaited "For Whom The Iiel'lulls," atarritiK (!ury Cooper uniIn^'rid Uerpman, is inl>out tu bireleased, Pinishini; touches havibeen added to the film, on whic!i'aramounl speiiL approximatel.$.';,()O0,0(l() and nearly three yearnf ell'urt.

lledy I.amarr fans will prob-ably av;ree that the title of thelilm she is currently working in

very littinir. It's Heavenly

1 Deanna llurbijr^ husband, younpI ViiUK'lui 1'aul, is now overseas.

[,nu Costello is still under the...aiiu-r ami will vn'bahly ;;!!t return to the screen, or the air, until.sometime about the first of next

^ear . Meantime, an insurance pol-I1 <-y taken out not I011H !iKu, I '.V-'U'ostelbi and Abbott $1,000 a wrckeach in case of illness that pro-hibited work. ,

WANT A LION?SpringfU'k!i Mo.—Want a lion,

...Hi- and all? The Park Hoard hasolTered to sell a full-Kt'uwii lion,cheap, bfeause. of thy meat short-age. They recqived no bids. Nowthey'll pive it away and.will throwin the thirty-foot cage.

uice"Acme Produce Is Tops!"

NO rOINTS NEEKF.Ut < i t l 11?

3

Fancy New

'

^ • A growing number of hog feeders in this sec-\ tion uro finding out thnt the BEDFORD HOG•' FEEDING PROGRAM makes Rood in the hog-\ lot! They find it aids fast, low-cost gains . . •

pushes pigs along to early market with a finefinish that helps bring down top prices, A greatgain, time and labor-saver, too!'

, „ If YOU haven't tried the BEDFORD HOGE,i j ;; FEEDING PROGRAM as yet — give it a reali I test now. Keep records . . . compare costs* ' ' and results with your present feeding pro-

v gram. See for yourself that it really pays to. follow the BEDFORD Plan! Come in today

for full informatio* ;-•- -

AMBOY FEED CO.I 279 New Brunswick Ave, Perth Amboy

> < : > < • « " . * , , . . , .

POTATOESCar ro ts tehTe"der

Limesr \ p p i u S winflsoD L.

Cabbage

513c26c

California

Fancy Large,Juicy

FancyWinesap

Bunch

Box

Pressed from selected luscious ripe tomatoes

Campbell Tomato Juice 2°cr10cGrapefruit Juice G

FW "L1 13cGrapefruit JuiceV-8 CocktailPure Grape JuiceBeets CutBeets SlicedTomatOeS ^ 0 ' No. 2 Can 1 k

String Beans ^ No 2 Can 14cAsparagus AS5S?V No.2Can30cPeaches ^t:*^ IO-OZ. con 18c

A5COFancy

Robford 27-or. ft IAfancy Glass Jar' / , l " f C

K d " .«6-«- I" • I kSelected

Apple Sauce GlenwoodGrudo A 10C

NEW

GREENIb,

Ib.

10c15c1 Fresh Flounders

: Fresh PORGIES >-12« Fillet Mackerel »{Fillet Haddock «• 39< Fresh CROAKERS »I . H A D D O C K S lb- 17c

j Fresh Mackerel * 15c* Gdd Scol "Grade A" Large

i Fresh EGGS •" 53cI Silver Seal "Dated" EGGS <2Ti 49e

COFtfJy

mllvo vuluf!

lb. jar 34<

5 -lb. *.^ bag *

Su9or Stamps 15 and 1^ Good «ot 5 lb>. K«h for C«nnln9

SAVARIN COFFEE WGranulated Sugar UN0.

1np

iirV%|r & ^

: Corn Flakes: WHEATIES: PRUNESs RICE R0BF0W

G7*L

Blue Roio

GbLD SEAl3'i-lb. Bog

DOG FOODMb.Bag

1000Sh«ti

ToiletTiitu«

38 ox. Jai 18c

telephone « £ l s

and more:z^rT every*

wherefront.

. — «-!2to

Washington »no

centers.

over,thet

Hi*

you

ONE OF NEW JERSEY S LONG DISTANCE CENTERS

>..u.».*.:..U,v.i

FlourMaslr-MixScott Tissue

.-.. ^ . .Waldorf•Apple Butter * , £ * & ,•Peanut Butter 5TI&SU5 16-Jar

: FORCE Whole Wheat Cereal K t ic: NBC Wheatsworth CerealwL

htwP? 16cj NBC Unesda Biscuits 3 pkgs. ! \kI 6-o'clock Corn Muffin Mix p i 11c

I Duffs Waffle Mix x2Q

Farrmdalc

Most 0/ the Best /or Your RED

MilkStore Cheese effid lb-32cKraft Velveeta Cheese K 20cOleomargarine D i ; i r ib. carton 19c

Best Pure Tub Lard b 17cFancy Canned Shrimp i 1 31c I 4

MEATS

Smoked Bacon S^, RS ib. 35cBACON ^ D S • % ib.22cAssorted Meat Loaves y2lb- 19cMacaroni and cheese; pickla and pimento; plain meat |oaf

IAI ION'CALTNDAR] Frankfurters^Blue Stamps

•SUPER SUDS , ; ^ 2 3 c X e 6 1 c• Octagon Granulated Soap £Kje23c• Octagon Cleanser 2 cans 9c: Octagon To i le t Soap 2 cakes 9c• Kirkman's Complexion Soap cake 5c

Red StampsTh(l> Slumpi |—- .—.

JNow RtdMmabio M l l j ( |

l

1 Octagon 3 He

Tk*>* Slampilow dtdntmobit

Sugar CouponGood lor S Ibi* Ixplrrs

Auguit 15Sugir Coupon IS and tfi Ooud fori Ib** I*eb («| Uouo i'miiiliig,

Eiliite Octobrr 111.

Coffee CouponNow

J»n« 80.

»im™

pp m lSI.K t i l Olt ri£CB

Frankfurters *35<Scrapple \HSI.K t i l Olt

BolognaSalami cook«i.Vb.Pork Roil **

i b

1IHY

Pork Liver ib

Pork Brains*

* * *HOUR" MONDAY AT 9 P.M. • WEAF • KYW * * *

Page 10: BACK UP YOUR BOY Mepenbent Heaber - DigiFind-It · Price Panel Assistants will sem as liaison officer* between consum cr, merchants and board. Thci Job will he to disseminate infor-mation

V,\(",V, TKN F R I D A Y , . n : \ K I I , H)Y.\ INDEPENDENT-

By The Navigator

Here And There:I ! . . ! , ( l ' n - 1 .Mil S | i i ; u l ) L c i

S I I I - | I ] i ' -ci l I n - f a m i l y b y t n K i n t f a

f l y i i n : v i - i : I M I I I I 1 t h i s i v t ' o k - o n d .

A r c i v - i l . i t 1 I ••'•'•'i S u t i m l i i y n i

: i n i l li I1 f ' i r W a - - h i i i ^ t ( i n , I ) . <"..

at 7 I ' . M. S u n d a y . A r m y life

.•iirn-i-- wi th ri'ili. lie i.- sis lirnwn as

the I'pivri M i l nut . . . Niiti1 Bcrn-

s l c i n \ w i : r - h"inr f r o m AfricH

that " A H M - C " Li-iricr is s t a t i o n e d

w i t h h im. l i e also -a id he made

a tr ip ti> annlhiT air firltl «nd

w a s n i r p n - n l t'i b u m p intii •'1|f

G y r t l r s nf ('••amplotl A v e n u e , who

is a riMik there . . . Ma nil1 Kvi'r-

ott t h i n k - a I'cruiiri I r i s h m a n from

Ciiiiiji K i l m e r \f tin.1 t o p s — a n d

w h o wou ldn ' t . . .

B u y War B o n d i

What To Write:I l i e I• nv-= i l l s e r v i c e : TellT

HimI. Ifnw tin1 family is doing

CVITVIliinsr |»i-<itilc ti^ lu'lp thewar . . . : ! . IIHW anxious thefamily is fur the buy's return . . ..'!. H<i\v well and Imsy the familyis. <livr details . . . 4. How thefamily is ncttinjr along financially.o. Wl.,•:'.; (!IJ::I^ in the commu-nity: Newfmhuut.KirJ.s.fsingU')lie knuws, doinjrs of friend?, who'smarryiiijr whom, exploits of thehome team unit other sportsevents, social doings, effects ofthe w;ir mi the home town . . .Runiiii-ico a little aliout pastevents and pliii'i1* the hoy used tovisit. Ktulose clippin^p from thisnew-paper. . .

Dun'! tell him:1. Vdiir troubles.

liles of TIL- own ! . .plaints He can't do anythingaliout them . . . '•',. Aliout thingsyou are deprived of. He can'tsupply them. . . 4. PoVful predic-tions. He'? flijlitiiijr for tha# fu-t u r e — now. 5. Unnecessarydetails iilidut linanciat troubles.If there ari' things lie should knowabout family finances, and he is ina position to do something aboutthe situation, tell him. But don'tstring it out . . .

Buy War Bondi

He has trou-'1. Your com-

Didja KnowThat Ullieer .To;1 Sipos is an ex-

poi l Victory ftanlener? . . . Thatliis brother oliiovr, Joe Grady, can'timagine what happened to his to-mato plants? They vanished justlike . . . Tyb! Ti-h!*. . . That TomDuniii'an and Axi.'l Kjellman, nowin thi' Mercluuit Marine were homoov.u-r t-iiL- -.vrcku'iKl looking tip-top'.'. . . That 0. P. (Prospect Street)Marsh is ever so chesty becauseone of his favorite mares at the

,N. J. .IiL'forniatorjr, where he isfarm instructor, presented himwith a mule'.' . . .

Buy War Bonds

Operator 13 ReportsThat Mr. and Mrs. James Turn-

er, uf Wedgwood Avdnue willcelebrate their'25th wedding anniversary tuday. Most hearty con-gratulations . . . That Ben Parsonsreally has sonic bang-up vaudevillefor tha,t Junior Police Patrol.partytomorrow at .\To. 11 School .That Shirley (Main Street.) Guv,.sky is on the well list again afterrecovering from an appendectomy. . . That a number of Townshipboys ami girls will graduate Sun-iljiy after a week of festivitiesfrom St. Mary's High School, PerthA'mboy . . .'

Buy War Bon(J«

Operator XYZ Phones:That Mr. ami Mrs. Clayton On-

ley are cnUTtaiiihtg their son-in-law, (.kiptain Warren Clark of theTank Destroyer Corps . , . ThiitJoseph (Sewaren) Xemeth, U. S.N., hat; .returned to Little Creek,Va., after a furlough spent withhis folks . . . That donations arebeginning to pour in for the Wood-liridge Kmergeney Squad fund . . .Thai Mike: (tax collector, in caseyou didn't know) Trainer is giv-ing his house :i new coat of paint. . . That Raymond Olson writesI'roiii the State of Washington thatJif is very lonesome for the boysin the Kmergoiicy Squad . . .,

Buy War Bonds

Last But Not Least:They tell me I hat Mrs. Louis

Cohen is an ardent tirst-aidcr , ,Volunteers are needed for thiMessenger and ('mil ier Corps espe-cially in the nntlwni; sections ojthe Township . . , ('li)siiulu (Cinzilo ynuy /jiu-cari) clarins he got ituniato olV'oiiv of his plants thisWeek . , , The,s(. Victory gardeners are getting as liu.d us iishermei. . . And KM (Kidgedale Avenue)Itunyon won a bet this week butst.ill don't know how . . . And lasljut not least diint' forget tin'Kimrgency Squad and send inyour contribution . . .

Buy War Bonds

Very Literal"You k'ive your , del ta tw<

Weeks' vacation every year, don'you, Mr. Tintuck'!" asked thIrienil.

"A inunlli," ui'iintcd the emiHunt hardwaie dealer.

"A month1! ""Yes. Two weeks when 1 g

on ni) vacation and the two weekthey jfi) on theirs,"

For Play Or "Best" Wlial A Salesman!lie's the little man who wasn't

there—until food rationing camealong.

And what n man with the ladies,too. for Pointless Pete arrivedjust in time to help them withtheir biggest wartime problem —how to use fond dollars and ra-tion stamps to the very best advantage. In newspaper advertising and store display cards you'veprolisilily seen this rotund mitewith the apron around his ci|uat<iirailing attention to the (lay's In11-'buys in unrntioned foods.

The introduction of this hum<»i

9356Pattern 9356 may be ordered

only in children'! sizes 2, 4, 6,8, 10. Size 6 requlrei 2%yardi 35-inch fabric and 3%yardi lace edging.

Send SIXTEEN CENTS incoin• (or thii Marian Martinpattern. Write plainly SIZE,NAME, ADDRESS. STYLENUMBER,

Ready now—our new Sum-mer 1943 Pattern Book! JustTEN CENTS more brings youthis practical tewing guide forthe entire family.

Send ordert to NewipaperPattern Department, 232 Weit18th Street, New York, N. Y,

JUST

ParagraphsArithmetical Note

Japan is a country where twoncl two never nuike four and

lon't always make live.—"Blind!JiiU' with .Mars,"' by Alice Moats.

EvenScience has discovered that theccil ofligM. varies, even nature,

t seems, beinp jixzzy at times,—Chicago Daily News.

The English Character,Whenever an Englishman looks

'rightened, a woman is near by,tnd he fears that she expects himo make love to her,—Henry

Knowal in the New Statesman andNation.

It !•

ous little' character, who so effec-tively performs a vital service tothousands of Xew Jersey homes,

soiiH'thinir of an innovnjionin food store advertising. Whenthe problem of acquainting thepublic with available unrationedfoods presented itself to the AcmeMarket, a new method of adver-tising was sought.

Coirstsint reviewing week iiyweek of the lending rWtoil pr««oryadvertising throughout the coun-try failed to produce any rfni(|iieideas, that effectively expressedthe thought that there are variety,vitamins nd value aplenty in un-ratjpned foods.

.The caricature "Pointless 1'ete"was finally created as a complete-ly original idea as the result ofclose cooperation between Her-bert A. Hen1, district advertisini:manager of the American Store*Company and Natalie JenkinsBond, food editor of the NewarkStar-Ledger.

"Pointless Pete" was the sparkthat arrested the public's atten-tion in newspaper advertising.The natural followup was the useof "Pointless Pete" us a tie-up instore display cards, windowand interior displays of unration-ed items.

People could not forget the'pleasing personality of plump lit-tle "Pointless Pete" and the ad-vertising merchandise when theysaw the name chuructcr on the dis-plays in the Acme Marketsthroughout northern New Jersey.

The "extra thought" given toAcme advertising to help it clickalso proves true" in every angle ofthe Acme Market theme of onlythe best in every department.

Musical Treat For WAAC Feet

1Avenel News

By MM. R. G. Perier, Ayanel, N. J.

Like all (rood loldien, mrmlipri of thr Women'i Army AuxiliaryCorpi mint learn the bade military drill mid formatitni. Be-hind the> rouiinit music of their band, the Waaci parade withmap H4id pr^ciiion. The WAAC it proud of it* Kftndi of tlcillcd'Inujliciani, another testimony to the way I lie Corpi ii taking overmany dutin formerly performed by men.

New Summer Schedule , T 0 , , S * ™ W E . L L I W i

Listed For Bandage ClassWOODimliMlE — The summer

chodule of hours for the Red,'ross -Bandage d a w s heinjr hebim School No. 1 on School Streetwill start Monday, Mrs. GeorgeBiewster, chairman, announced to-ddy.

Starting on Monday session^ivill be held only from <):,'|() to 1

M. There will be afiermionsl during ( r

In the eyes of the housewife'made work" is the kind the hus->and creates Toy scattering ashesin the rugs.—'Philadelphia Bul-etin.

Oftentim«i"In the larger stores," says u

writer, "a_.Yjy»man can purchaseevery possible type of raiment."As he examines the bill, her hus-band often feels convinced thathat is just what Ae has done.—Liondon Opinion.

Turn AboutAt one time during the great de-

pression, things becamq so bailthat, according to one report fromhe United States of America,;ven the people who never intend-ed to pay in any ease had stoppedbuying. 'Then years afterward,he world is confronted with alomplete reversal of the situation.

You now have Lo spend most ofyour money an things you can't

(!0t.—(London) New' Statesmanarid Nation.

Collector's ItemThe promotion manager of radio

station WIiW in New Orleans ad-dressed a beautifully sirnple letterto delinquent clients:

"Dear Mr. : ".Will youplease send us the name of a goodlawyer in your community? Wemay have to sue you. Yours verytruly , . ."—Tide.

* British Women At WarEvery able-bodied man in Brit-

ain who works less than sixty hoursa week, and every able-bodied wo-man Without a child it} her careand working less than fifty-fivehours a week, havu to undertakefire-watching up to forty-eighthours a month. This means pa-troling the streets during air-raidalerts and spotting iml checking(if possible) any tires due to in-cendiaries and high explosives.-—Britain.

WE PAY

Ready CashFOR YOUR CAR

Whether it it paid for or not.We will handle all of your auto-motive problem!. If you wantto buy, iell, finance or haveyour car impaired, tee JoeJanai,

SPEEDWAYAUTO SALES Co.

823 St. George Ave.Woodbridge

Phone Woodbridge 8-0149

Wo' tell good trantportation,not merely u»cd car*.

Uncle Sam WantsMore EggsHero Win The War

Raise More Chickensand Turkeys

thick. Mu.t B.- Ordered InAdvance

ORDER YOUR CHICKSAND TURKEYS NOW!

All Blood Teited BreediFull Line of Feedi

Oniun Set. - All Kind, ofGarden Seedi

AMBOY FEED CO.279 New Bruntwick Aye.

Perth Amboy, N. J.Cor. Oalf

Phone P. A. 4-1350

GAME SOCIALEvery Thursday Evening

AT

8:00 P.M.AT

St. Andrew's Church HallAVENEL ST., AVENEL, N. I

.ionsummer

WOODJHUIKIK—In n commu-nication to the Township Commit-tee, Monday, the Zoning Boardrecommended that Harry A. Rcy-dor be permitted to convert IUBone-family'home at IIS SchoderAvenue into a two-family resi-dence.

The recommendation was refer-led to the committee as a whole.

Bombdrs prepare to be van'guard of push toward Tokyo,

Gains after war are predicted inmaternity care.

Mrs. LawiiMiee Iloapliind, ofCranfoid, eisited her son-in-lawand daughter, Mr. and Mis. Uiw-

nrc Ziegler, of Demarest Avt>-i.ue. ^unilny.

- Misn Mildred Sherwood, ofNew York City. *vas a weekendguest of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Palmer,of Manhattan Avenue.

—Mis. John Den Hleyker, ofDemari'St Avenue, is a patient ntHahway JIcnuiriii.1 Hospital.

—Thi' American Home Depart-ment of the Woman's Club willmeet Monday afternoon at twoo'clock at the home of the chair-man, Mrs. HuroW Monwin, onManhattan Avenue. Mrs, SallieKcrbol, of the Uutgers Exten-sion Service, will'give a demonstra-tion of canning.

—Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sey-Ifcrth, of Fifth Avenue, entertain-ed friends- Sunday afternoon incelebration of the first communionof their daughter, Gernldinc Ann,at St. Andrew's Church.

—Mr. and Mrs. Walter Tauselt,of New York City, were guests ofMr. and Mrs. Walter Munzel, ofMaple Avenue, Sunday.

—Mr. and Mrs. David Camp-bell, of Dartmouth Avenue, areparents of a daughter, Jane, bornMonday tit the Presbyterian Hos-pital, Newark.

—Mrs. Otto Morin, of Commer-cial Avenue, left Tuesday to joinher husbiiml who is located in

Miami, Florida. Mrs. M<vin is theformer Peggy Brookwell.

Mrs. William C;h,ristie, of Newc City, WHS. ft.Sunclay guest of

her son and daughter-in-law, Mr.and Mrs. Arthur Johnson, of OakStrce-t.

•Mrs. Frank Wukovets, of St.George Avenue, will be hostess tofriends ami nignlbera of the Wo-man's Club at the third in a serinsof summer card parties Tuesdayevening. Mrs, R, G. Peric'r willserve as co-hostess.

Family Dinner Party

ChristianChurch

First Ohurch of (

list, Scwaren, is i( |,Mother Church, th,,of Christ, ScientialMaas. Sunday noi-vii-Sunday School, lfl;;(iiesday TcstimoninlM. Thursday, roadin4 P. M.

A \l

"Gotl the Preseiyithe -Lesson-SermonSunday, June U, ;„Science Churches ;tl

througihout the WIII),|„ . , * . , u i . i • H I The Golden Text n

Held At MacArthw Home 0( lh, W d „ a Rtl nrighteous runneth i^safe." (Prov. 1R:1 [))

Among the I sMm

vMr. and Mrs. DanielMncArthur, of Dartmouth Avenue,held a family dinner party Sundayin celebration of the baptism oftheir son, Robert Douglas, Sundayat the First Presbyterian Churchby Rev. Chester A. Galloway.

Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Wil-liam Cullen, Miss Nellie Giltnour,Miss Ann MncArthur, John Mae-Arthur, Archie 'MncArthur, ' ofKearny; Mr. anil Mrs. RobertCampbell iind ^ r . and Mrs. Thom-as Hill and family, of town.

ROBS SICK MAN OF $20,000Chitham, Ont—Snmucl Free-

man, 27, testified in court thatthree men and three women rob-bed him of $20,000 in'bonds whilehe lay ill and helpless in bed.

tions is the wu,Bible: "And we ha\,"believed the love ll,;,i iVlft. God is love; ami I,eth in love dwelled,God in him." (1 ,|i,i,,,

The ithe . following p;e-'Ni;Chrretian Science. t<encc and Health wiijScriptures" by Mary"The sharp expeiiinirt the supposition-; , :as well ns our disapin,cenf*eless woes, tunchildren to the ;,,,.Love. Then «v !„Life in divine ScieM"

The NewFRIDAY and

SATURDAY

BOLUUl VALUES

FOR M E N ! !Just In Time for Father's Day

SPORT and DRESS

SHIRTSSport Shirts — Cut in-and-outer

»tyle and with convertible collar, so

you canwear it for sports or dress!

Fabrics that wash well and retain

their colors. All wanted shade»!

Plenty qt white! Every shirt a top-

rjotch bargain.

MEN'S ATHLETIC

Shirts-Shorts

3 for $11 'llhioiiM *• I t i m " liuiU*1; nl r||M-0liroixlHiitli Nlutrl*; tMilitill t i t l i lv l i rftlilrl*: nil XIXCM. liny n niippl? I v -iln>! Itr'.:. :t1ii- t'lu-U,

llrrtill

o Milil>—\ll MII

itru l'nnr> ituHl'M

Imuitlu u it I t

<Hotiir

L IT> HlilrlI I lo C . l n u ' l lII ) nil HIT lllfi i i .

nri-]iurnl 1

MEN'p BASQUE

PULLOVERS

2 for $1W lilM* "nil M>lhi ruhrrn; crcunn'k ; MIn11'I -(Ici^i'x; HI/CN MIIntI.iiH-iliiiiii nut I IHIEA*'. IhiJ- initi iiiidmi\»•! IilciiI tor ivnrU nr spot*IH.

MEN'S BAILBRIGGAN

UNION SUITS

t Jil lHtllN HUl I t i : n lk t i t l nN klMT,mi kit- trim Hi.

DOLLAR VALUES

DOMESTICS--- BASEMENT4-YEAR 81x99

SHEETS69

Fine quality, fully bleached, scantiest,sheets linitbjjd with wide beim. SORRY

-hut only 2 to a customer. 43b(36-in.Pillow Cases, 39c ea.

BASEMENT1

KRINKLE SPREADSlull mid :}i

i(ci|(iirt- im Iriiithiu . . null

PILLOW CASESt^'iliii. ixi • i i i u l i i j . q

U.K. .'III.; ••iwli v fur

SHEET - BLANKETS

Sufi x.ii^liiiljlr

irs

iBleached &. Unbleached

MUSLIN .fI.UIPCI fur niakliiK Ntirclx. ( •uilliin <-JI»<-», mm- 1 " •

'*H eu>vrnf yU> ^ >i|M. 1 ^

CURTAINING

Berlin*, uinrnuls-rllra, |>lll dull. elK.

Printed Silksand Satins

15 c piece

Plain and FiguredCrepe Remnants

DRESSMATERIALS

• l.luilinm * Vullr• IVrcalra• rrlukle (reprt• >r\v' null N«>«

NOVELTY CURTAINS

l''ulj iCHENILLE BATH SETS

1i>ti|»iitar

TURKISH andHUCK TOWELS

IUIIIIJ alivRf Vnlum clu Mi' <•». ... 0 (ur

TABLECLOTHS( IIUOU Unuiuak lu nmiorUililif»i ilieikii ami Hurul

ii

ORGANDY & 4DOTTED SWISS $1

Mini | i i»li<U w>Ua. JL>

Make Schindel's Your Headquarters tor

RATION FREE!

F O O T W E A R- - V A L U E S TO $ 2 . 4 9 - -

P L A Y S H O E SYet, playshocs with genuine leather soles.Sizes 4 to 9.

I n t e d , Iklui

NOT RATIONED

$•

Nationally Advertised

OXFORDS

1.49Slightly irregular, orelse the price would be '350. Durable rul.be-solei, (lal or cuban heels.4 to 9.

C h i l d r e n ' s TUJI I I I -

SNEAKERSI

99cVut f.utl<*|ir<

Hsrd - to - gets n e a k ert, ntS c h i n d c t ' s

h a r d . l o .beat price. Alli

99CHILDREN'S PLAY SHOES

1.791.79-i-Nol Rationed

Durable c»nv"» "l'il: " "^flexible leathn ^ " ^lonj wear and i'""'"1 '12 to bi s S.

PRIZES • PRIZES -PERTH AMBOY'S FIRST RADIO SHOW

COMHIMIV HOII HI

CHARLIE BALT1ND i r e c t fro,m S c h i n d e l ' * , S a t u r d a y , J u n e I2l l i

3 t o 3 : 3 0 P . M . — W H O M , 1 4 8 0 O N Y O U R 1>I'

EVERYONE INVITEDK A HI

SCHINDEL'S OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TILL 9 P. M. - SATURDAY NIGHT

j

Fun - Froljci . Priw, DON'T MISS

TILL 10 P.