12
l\ ins** WAR BONDS Mepenbent-ieaber YourWarilond investment I* Your Investment In America • • * '. \\ VI.— No. 14 1'uUilnhcil Kvciiy Krtilny fit in Uicfii SI., WootlhrliiKo, N. 1. WOODBRIDGE, N. J., FRIDAY, MAY I!), 1944 KiHernl us nm'nnd rlmi mttt*r M tlit Piui t)nV«, Woodbrldgt, N, J. PRICE FIVE CENTh Ions Hold ;il Basin Fate As 1175 Men, Women-And Their Mission- Were Blessed Must Ac- lown Land Grant lake Idea Possible I I iif ;]•; Not a dinsent- , heard Friday nijrht ijian 200 attended u i,. Mutiit'ipHl BuildiiiK \cw JiTHcy Board o ,,-,! Navigation on the -tract R boat basin ,/r ;it Sewnren, ! i|> recently offered ,.!,,,.\im:it.p1y '17 acres , ,-,-k In the state !n,- purpose, idueting the hoarinc MacMurniy and Jo- i,, ":\ Several letters Mi. MarMurray fa- -i.nsi'd project. Dur- \;r A telegram was petitioning the || from th? Town- . Ciutcii't, Rahway. . ink, l'nsKHie, New I ' /.ilxlli and South . ni. ('.. A. Giroud, <,! 'in discussion, re- iv nf Sewaren and In be gained by i it In i- speakera were -.in, »f the Sewarcn ,,n. John Thomas, HI,! II. P. Clark. .,in, commander of r'lotillii, of the i'mist Guard Aux- Mn'onipaiued by a ' his men, 1 outlined : ihc boat owners now being used by ', ml iiml which will in ihem after the H ,nkii< U Sponior n LVTI Herbert B. RHII- ; .nsored the project, :. ..-in could be turned f hi-auty Ji» well as mid be self-supporl- niins then stated necessary £or the Hearing Friday For 4 In $100,000 Fire Case In aimple, moving ceremony a roll of honor containing the name* of all the men and women who have entered the tervice from Woodbridge proper w»i unveiled Sunday. Rev. Charlei G. McCorrittin, psitor of St. Jamet' Church, ii ihown above bleu- ing thotc who are enrolled. In the iniert are shown former Governor A. Harry Moore who delivered the principal addreit, and Commander Michael J. Trainer of the local American Le- gion pott which arranged for the plaque. Seated on the plat- form, left to right, are Hampton Cutter, Mayor Augutt F. Grein- *r, Walter H. Warr, Auemblyman Bernard Vogel, Father McCor- riitin, Pvt. Joieph McLaughlrn, brother, and Mri. Joieph Me- Laughlin, mother, of Lawrence McLaughlin, who w n killed at' tea; Harry Stankiewicz; John Kanna, father of Joieph H. Ken- na; Mri. Stankiewici, mother of Robert J, Madden, firit Wood- briJge youth to loie hit life, and Mri. Ciik, another Gold Star mother. Well, That's That WOODBRIDGE - Mayor Augutt F. Greincr, chairman of the Red Croit War Fund drive for Woodbridge Towmhip, announced this morning that a total of $21,540 81 hai bean colUeted to data in the campaign and it on depotit in the hank. The Towmhip quota, the highett in itt hittorv and the unlv one ever overiub- icribcd, wat $21,500. A few commitment! are •till outstanding, Mayor Greiner t«id, and a few tcattered return! are vet to b* made which should bnott the ftnal total by another $100. They Also Serve - - Seventeenth in Serie»-^JOSEPH A. DAMBACH, JR. init sufficient i ui.sluture to puss a ,-i)inii[ the grant of II|M npriate ths ne If (he New Jersey niiiKTce und Naviga I in' project it most me under post-war Honors S. Teachers 11x;[•;—AL its annual ..lay, the Woodbridge '-HI-IHTS' Association pl:n|Ui", in honor of i ••• school system who -i vice. ,The plaque, 1 1 iii'cted tu the high 'i ins Lhf- following ! •• .MI. Thomas Des- ''•'» Karrin.ir.ton, How- - (it'iirjfc Gerek, H»r- !»••, .lohanna Magyar [i Kursinsky, Gene- . itiiiiuld Noe, Joseph "tin Tajnb.oer, .Don- . Cesar JSullo. The WHS made by Harry pn siiK'nt. 1 "Hifei'.t wes held, with "• named: , Mrs. Miriam Balder- 'li^iilcnt, Miss Marion "•ii-tiiry, Miss Mary i-iner, Miss Helen I ."iiii, Woodbridge principal, addressed "(iuidatiCL 1 ." Greiner Paces Primary Ticket WOODBRIDGE Dc-pite th.. fact that there was very little in- terest in the primary election hero Tuesday, Mayor Ausrust V. Greiu- cr, Republican candidate for County Clerk, received 484 votes 139 in the first ward, IKS in th.' second ward and Hi 2 in the third ward, His Democratic opponent, Edward J. Patten, received 31.1 votes. County Committeenii'ii a n il women elected wire as follow;;: Democratic: First Ward, District 1, John D. Milano, May G. Mayo; District 2, Edward Katii, EtlsMbeth Nagy; District !), Joseph. Kuchie, Margaret T. Hyan; District -I, nonu; District 4, L. Charles Man- MarRarel L. Calntuno; Di.i- 5, Bernard E. Duni^ii;, Phoebe E. Levi; District (j, Wil- liam Huber. Second Ward, Dis- trict 1, John Bmlnar; lJi-itrin li, none; District i!, Ernest ,].. Blan- chard and Florence Quadt; Dis- trict 4, Mrs. Mao Clement and Joscpb J. Elko.; District S, none; District (i, Thomas Smith and An- thony Aquila; District 7, Leruy Lewie and Margaret Scott; Dis- trict 8, Matteo Giirune. Third Ward, District 1, none; District 2, William Moran, Gertrmk' R. Welch; District, 3, Harry O'Con- nor and Mary Mullen aiitl Nancy Urban (tied, to be drawing); flistrict Jensen -and May,V. Dunn; District 5, James V, MCHURII and Vioh C. Burelitield. Republican: Kitst Ward, District I* Wesley Hciselberit iiiid Mary Vnn Pelt; District 2, Michael Bug- by and Mrs. Helen Nagy; District 3, Stephen Dobus and Bertha Kel- lenvaiv; District 4, G. Wallace So- field HIHI Agnes C. I.und On The Iselin Front - - Daffy Condacts Offensive Against Recorder Who Promptly Tosses Few Verbal Grenades Of His Own Fathers, Sons Hear Dr. Eaton trict WOODBRIDGE —"I »m be- ginning to wonder if we »re still at war. Certainly, thii commit- tee ihould not have to waite its time listening to anything m petty at this." That wat the comment made by Cotnntitteeman James R. Reed, of the first ward, after a complaint wat registered by Joseph Duffy, of Itelin, against Recorder Arthur Brown. Duffy claimed that Recorder Brown "inittlt«,d the people of liefin' during- a hearing in which, Duffy laid, "the Judge taid the people of Itelin ihould practice temperance and go to church on Sunday," Recorder Brown, who hap- pened to be in the audience, de- nied that he haA used the word temperance or mentioned Iselin. "I said," he declared, "that 'you people ihould be more tol- erant and should go to church on Sunday.' This man (Duffy) made a complaint against two old ladies, one about 80 years old and the other about 55. I took an informal complaint and brought them all in. The women, claimed that the Duffy chil- dren made »q much noite they couldrr't ileep and left all kindi of articles in front of thejr home. Duffy claimed that the women made motions to the children. It wai evident that (Continued on I'atje 5) Big Contingent For Army, Navy Service To Leave Here Monday selected by Andrltw ld n g Konrud Stern and l -v 0/ Land Slated \e Sold By/Town June 5 i:t:iIK;K — At « public Mmnlay by the Towli- :l| 'r, nine parcels of "n-ued property were .11 u s ; 1 I'otter for Stanley C. ; '---iiiib, $4,000; John William Vandcv Deck- \iina Vaqder Decker, 'nil Dafcik, ?500; Aus \ i.ilvi Dooley, $300 '"I"' 1 , MOO; Albert and Wi'ifz, $250; Nicholus ". Mex mid Rose Mesar ' ''• and Mary J. Ker ;i i' ''lei-It B. J. Dunigar -•"'ii'il to advvrti'te IS "' ' ; »'<-• on June 5, Hoard Receives \ Andrews'Resignation iKIlK.;fci -i'h« resign* I'iluiiiiiith B. •"''i "f District -, - M. Stern; District (i, Jnhii J. Iliibji)- rak and Tessa C. Kivy, Alto Named Ward 2, District 1, John .1. arsler and Margaret Kac/.iik; Dis- ict 2, Walter Doinrjka and Han- lah 1'feiiTcr; District ;i, Oscar ilson and Elinor Hulinl; District Stephen J. Sinirijca and I sab ell'.' oth; District 5, Milton Haiisen nd Mary il Larsi'Mi District (i, t»la Injjsti'up and Bertha Wirtz; •Utrict 7, Kenneth Van ml Helen Brown,; District '.I Valker and Theresa Mstriet 10, William Siska and Mae with tfUjtt Eduuatinn Mot that Mi* a poaitio Huntinfton i g^y Fred uch, (Continued on F'a,w 5) Bird, Draft Board Sec- retary, Announces New- est list Of Selectees WOODBRIDGE—Large cuntir.- Ki'iUs will leave Wooduridge Mon- d«y for service with the Army itiul Navy, Eugene Bird, secretary of the Draft Boar/l announced today. Selected for service with the Army are; '• Charles V. Amiess, 741 Ridge- dale Avenue, Woodbridge i. Elmer ('. Anderson, '44 Astor Street, Newark; Frank Bodnaj, Thompson Avenue, Woodbridge; Robert J. Boyle, Cooper Avenue, Iselin; Ber- nard A. Contal*., Division Street, Port, Reading; .Frank B. Cooper, Middlesex Avenue, Iselin; Peter (iutson, 215 Banford Avenue, Woodbridge; Michaul 6. Gohdola, 44 Garsidi 1 Strejt, Newark; Mil- ton W. Jewell, King George lload, Woodbridge; Martin Kara, Jr., !)4, r > Florida Grove Road, Hope- lawn; Frank G. Kovacs, ;t2 Robert Street, Sewaren; Peter T. Lep- sieoiio, 422 So. 11th Street, New- ark; Michael J, Miule, Bioornlield Avonup, latjlin; Ni«la D, Minucri, I Jean Court, Woodjbridge; Joseph Sidate, ;tH Mttwbey Strcut, Wood- bridgu; Charles Slover; 651 W, ,'Jrd Street, Pkiniield; Salvatorc (Continued on Page 5) Drive On! 5th Bond Campaign To Start June 12; Bunt- enbach Chairman WOODBRIDGE "American. iam Through Religion Frpm the Cradle to Manhood" was the sul>- ect of an address given by Dr. jharles A. Eaton, representative fro»i the Fifth Congressional Dis- trict, at the annual Father an 1 Son Banquet held by the Men's Association of the First Presby- terian.Church Tuesday. Dr. Eaton alao told of hia experiences in Con- gress. Victor C, Nicklas, superintend- ent of schools, gave a toast to thv sons which was followed by a toast to the fathers in the form of a poem by Ralph R. Rankin, a mem- ber of the senior class of Woo'd- bridge High .School. Donald T. Manson served as, toastmaster and introduced other speakers as fol- lows: Mayor August F. Greiner, who gave the address of welcome; Julian E. Grow, president of th'.i association; and Rev. Kenneth M. Kepler, church pastor. Moving pictures were shown am: Fred Briegs led thtf community singing with Mrs. Whitney C. Lee- son as accompanist. Members of the Woman's Association assisted in the serving. FORDS—Pprtoaps one of the ! usirst men in the second ward these days is Joseph A. Dambach, But despite the fact that he conducts i\ thriving grocery busi- ness on Now Brunswick Avenue which takes plenty of time and effort, he still finds time to do his share in aiding toward the war effort. Back in 1940, when the Defense Council was first organized, "Joe" Dambach was selected to head the Auxiliary Firemen. He Was chos- en for the post by Mayor August F. Greiner because of his keen in- terest in fire departments, bis knowledge of fire equipment and the methods of fighting fires. Mr. Dambach is a member of Protec lion Fire Company No. 1, of Keas l>ey; secretary of the Exempt Fire men's'Asaociation of Fords, Hope lawn anil Keasbey; a past via president of the county orgnniza tion and financial secretary of th (Continued on i'flf/i' 5) Joseph A. Dambach, Jr. HerSon Won't Be Home So Anzac Mother Entertains Others' Sons W.OQDBR1DGE Vied P. Buntenbach, cashier of the Woodbridge National Bank, has a^ain been appointed Township chairman for the Fifth War Loan Drive which will be held from June 12- through'' 1 July 8. A quota of $ifi,000,000,000' has been set nationally and the ijtate of New Jersey is expected to make its quota of $219,- 000,000. Mr. Buntenbach expects to • meet with Mayor August F. Greiner, honorary chairman, within the next few days to dis- cuss ways and means ol raising the Township quota which is to be over a million dollars. The drive plans this time call for ci concentration on individual sales more than on institutional sales. The chairman will announce; the names of his committee, as well ias the, detailed plans for the drive next week. Local Sodality Members Participate In Inspiring MiddlesexCottnty Crowning Ceremonies On Sunday (Photograph on Page 3) PEH'l'H AM HOY--In A truly aspiring an arish, craw ni! r Fesce, ot Woodbridge, in ceremonies .-..., r id beautiful .setting at Waters' Stadium Sunday evening, " St. Jiunes' served as the annual crowning ^v.v... _ conducted by the Am- boy District Sodality Union. The altar was artistically d«co- ,'|ted with pjnk and white snapr dragons. The statue of the Bleg&ed. Virgin" Mary w«s set on R pedes- tal under an arch of pink, rosvt* entwined with green and blue placed on ,„ Two trellises were o» each ride-of the shrine where th B «-pw t ,«r«ndattendu«UpUced their bouquets. A stand w w Stedxandlesin^luemidwh ,tu - t h e white candles foxing u et- ter M-was placed Jofon. J* A huge basket iilled wl placed before the stand. Palms and ferns were also used in the decorations. Miss Pesce wore a white wlin gown, with u long train and leg y mutton sleeves, lief veil which rtll into a long train and covered face was attached to a coronet hV fac ofVorange 'blossoms. She carried anVld-fashioncd bouquet of white gardenias, swe«t peas and lilies-of- thd valley. Upon her return fropi the shrine, she carried a white trimnisd with l i l i f py the-valley. The attendants .wore pastel d f and carried nosegays of (fow white. carnutionB, white gnupdrug bl They their «u4 blue also wore •hair. -The nieml Rosary wore white in the and pastel i Boaury r p gowns and liKe«-«f»the-valley in hi Tfc»y d iha their hair. »nw»d Beads. Other members of the pro- cession wore street-length dresses and floral headpieces. Sisters Attendants Miss Victoria Pesce was her sister's personal attendant. An- other sister, Miss Betty Pence and Miss Ann Reilly, of St. Mary's, Perth Ainboy, served aB maids ot honor. I\ T eil Malinconico wag crown-bearer. The Most Rev. William A. Qrif tin, Bishop of (he Trenton was celebrant it the. benejliction with Rev. M. A. Konopka, of Holy Funtily, Cur^eret, as deacon and. Rev. Thomas Carney, of St. Law' ehce, Laurence Harbor, as sub deacon, The Rev. iJeiwn Leg niowski, of St. Stephen's and Rev taurettee Hoi'fath, oIO Hungary, both of Perth Amboy, served as chapluins to th« btshop- (Continued on Page 3) Seek Merchant Ship Recruits WOODBRIDGE—As part of an intensive campaign now being conducted to recruit Merchant Marine trainees to "keep 'em sail- ing," enrolling officers of the U. S. Maritime Service will be sta- tioned at the Woodbridge post office today, and tomorrow." Re- cruiting hours will be from 8:45 A. M. to 5:15 P. M. Three to six"months' training, ith pay, maintenance and tini- 'orm* furnished hy the govern- ment, will qualify applicants to ,a.il on vessels of the Merchant Marine and each uJill have an op- lortunity to become n licensed tfficer within a short tinVe, accord- ng to Ensign Thximas B. Kaveny, ii charge of the Newark Keciuit- ng Office in Room B-H5, Federal Building. Men from iili to 50 are eligible. Those under 26 may enroll if -hey have been discharged from Military service or classified us 1-C or 4J 1 . Particularly neeiletl a.re trainees for desk, engine, ra- dio, stewards (ooolt^, bilkers and me.bsmen) and/ assistant Junior, purser, plmrnmoist mate depart- ments. • • Auckland, ti. Z. Woman Writes 0/ Having Ise- lin Youth For Tea ISELIN—'Residents of New /(•aland are evidently hospitable to our boys stationed there judg- ing from a letter received this week by Mia. Joseph Cullinane, of HO Starr Street, from Mrs, Jessie E. W. McCullough of Auckland, Mew Zealand. The latter enter- tained the former's son, Joseph, who was spending a leave in New Zealand. The letter reads as follows: "A few weeks before Xmaa we talked to your son, Joseph, in a picture show and we asked him to accompany UB home for a cup of lea. The following Saturday lie spent the day with us_ and he and my husband were vei'y busy in the garden—we have a large, 1 one, " 'Irish' an he woiilfl be called, showed great interest in our shrubs, plants and fruit trees, a number of which he had not see: before. Strangers to thL« country are amazed at the number of dif- ferent vegetables and fi'uits th.it will grow in one small a.rea, In fact, Hide by side, in our garden we have plums, 'ppaches, oranges, lemons, apples, nectarine^ fig trees and tomatoes all bearing in turn. '* 'Irish' was quite at home as his enclosed letter will show you. He wa» looking remarkably well h h "Just before he left he brought his frien*<!ilong to see us and gave me a box of beautiful carnations. He shyly kissed me goodbye and I could not help feeling that it was really meant for you. (Continued on Pane 5) All Are Minors; Claim Blaze Was Started From 13-Year-Old'* Cigar WOODBRIDGK — Six yoUth«, Jour of them minor*, were appro- by police ihis week U ap- parently end a crime wive of serf- , . ous proprtiiduns sprending «ver the last .several month* which in- cluded H $100,000 tire, seven rob- . beries ami v^rimis jut^ of mali- cious miai'hief. The minors, iiabhcd by Captain John Kgnn and Ltetiloiunl Georae Balint, and beinu held in New Brunswick to a|ipr,,i' bcTori! Judgu Kloinmer KiilteisSi'ii in Juvenllo 'ourt next Friday, are. Luke Jae- ger, 14. of Rf).',i Maple Avenue; \ndrcw Biiiiui, lit, <>f TU Second Street, (ieoiire Nairy. 1.1, of 181 KdRar Stn-el mid Arthur Kovaoh, II!. of 117 High SliTt't. The nlder b«ys, who police s»\y were the least involved, are At' thuv I'l-terton, IT, of Dorothy Street anil Michael Tumku, 16, of Metiicht'ii Avenue. Aided By Patrolman CapLiiu Kuan ,u\t\ Lieutenant Halint. were aitli-il in locating the boy-' liy infornrition turned in by Pntrolninii Kreil I.cidner who had picked thnii up twice under aus- picious niiTum-iliuura iiml brought them IMHIH 1 to their p.r'i'iits, Accordiiii; to ('apt. !'"u iln i J 1 *"- K< l r and N'a^y were arrested fol- l"wim: the robbery at Charles K:iufnian's Suniiysidi 1 Market, Mam Sheet, Sunuay i,inht when $45 in changf was taken. Bars had been removed from H small rear window and it was evi- dent, thai only :i sinnil person could crawl through the spuce. It was also evident that someone who had knowledge of the hiding place where the change- wait kept, was mplicatcd. When taken inio (TOstody, Jae- jfer 'and Nagy arc JHid to have iidmittcd breaking into the mar- ket and then n»intr the home of the former at, midnight to divide Jaeger, in nis state- he knew where the and was fortunaft 'enough to have escaped the malaria of the tropic ROTARY SPEAKER WOODBRIDGK —G, A. Hum- phries, rehabilitation director at Roosevelt Hospital, \va.s guest speaker at a meeting of the Ro- tary Club yesterday. Mr. Hum- phries discussed the subject "Re- hnl>i|it*tion of the Tuberculous." Gold Star Finns Advised Son, Miss- ing Since November, Now Listed As Dead 1 WOODBRIDGE — Mr. and Mrs. William J. Finn, of l!!l Grove Avenue, have been noti- fied by the War Department that their son, Pfc. William J. Finn, missing in action since November, 194U, U officially listed as'deait. Private Finn enlisted in the Army Air Corps December 2, 1942. He was graduated, from the Army Air Force* Technical School, Truax Field, Madison, Wis., on July 15, 1943 and went overseas in October, 1943. Private Finn wa& a. graduate of Woodbririge High School, class of 1942 and was captain of the li)41 football team. Beside* hia parents he is survived by a brother, C. Robert Finn and a sister, Mary Finn. PLAN MEMORIAL C O Ii O N I A — Colonia Post, American "Legion and the Auxili- ary will sponsor memoriul services for the Dead of World War No. >, on Sunday, May 28, at K P. M., at the post headquarter.-;. Families of men who have died in servic: have been invited as speciijl guests The public "is invited •&> attend. ' June 24 Garden Party Proceeds To Buy Comforts For Soldiers DtUsle, Reported Missing Is,Prisoner Of Germany COLONIA ^r Servant HiiioW DqLisle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- Jiam DeLiale, of New Dover 'Road, previously reported missing, is a prisoner of war ^f the German Government, i His parents received word Tues- day, four months aud u day after he was tvret reported missing. The me&ftge watt received from Wash- ington through the effort* of tho Intertwtlonal Red C WOODBRIDGK —Plans for a Kaj'deiv party to 'bo held June 24 at the home of Dr. -and Mrs. C. II. Rotlifuss, on Green Street, were made by the Camp Kilmer Coun- cil of Woodbridge Township Chap- ter, American Red Cross, at a meeting- held last night! at tin 1 liothfuss homfi. Proceeds of thu affair will be .used to buy items, not provided by the Army for Kuldjers at Raritan Arsenal, Camp Kilmer, Belle Meade, Lyons, Carteiet Ordnance the Coast Guard Station at Clark Towi\ship and the battery .on Strawberry Hill. An organ redtal, cards and tt program of entertainment will be tne features of the party. Ru- freshmentfi wUl'be served by mem- bers of the Junior Red Cross. At the preaeut tijne the Couu cil hus bean asked to pruvid« »po- cial p foi 1 . soldiers as follows Strawberry Hill: Athletic equip men\ including baseball irntu ;loves, one a left-handed R'love, .oft balls and baseballs, enrtuins, home-made cookies and cakes. Belle Meade: Six floor lamps, 12 standing ash trays, 27 pairs of lrapes. Station Hospital at C.amp Kil- ner: 20 loads of beach sand. Lyons Hospital: 150 tea eups 150 saucers, 150 email plates, 'A( heavy, deep, unbreakable ash trays. t ; Ilttiitan Arsenal: rubber shoes UK to 1ft; card table ^ov- ers, chain*'for outdoor'*, bed ^ r y for hospital, pi«ces of upholsterj material.. , • ,'' Furnitur« including tables nn desks is always acceptable an large rugs ate needed for all th atationa. Anyone having fwnituri and rug* in good condition whic' they wi*h tu donate »r« ««M.t' get in tou(|-h with Mrs. C. H. Roth fuss, ehaivman; or Misa Hull the money, ment, said money was keptJiecausi' 'he saw Mr. Kaufman put it there when he was delivering milk for •& Town- ship concern. Hire Horiei The. day after breaking into Kaufman's, the boys told the offi- cers they-went- to the Rolling Acres Riding Academy. Rahway, gave fictitious names and hired two horses. They paid for their time in quarters iml half-dollars taken from Kaufman's. They re- turned the horses after theiv time was up, but later re-hired them and took them Metuche-n Ave- nue where thuy had a froe-ftm-all, giving all the neighborhood kids ndes, and mnninn races, W|icn one of the fiddle.-, was damaged, they took the*harAi-s U St. Georg*-— Avenue, slapped them and headed tlu'm toward Rahway, The next day, Captain Kgan and Lieuten- ant Balint visited all riding acad- emies until they Finally located the two boys, After questioning they implicated the others who were taken into custo.dy. , Abient From School I Jaogei', 1 who hus been absent from SCIIODI for Ii7 consecutive days, and Barau are said to be involved in the Klein tiro whicH occurred last St. plumber. The boys', according to tlm ollice,rs, said (Continued on I'utje 5) , i__' , .. $25,240 Grossed In Real Estate Division In April WOODBRIDtiE—Tht Real E*- ate Department grossed $25,240.- 1) during April according to a ['port made by William Allgaicr, lie director, to tliw TownsMfc lommittec, Monday. During the' = nonth 12 real esLate sales were uule amounting: to $5,1)70. The receipts - were divided ns olluws: Deposits on real estate, il,-112.50; cash sales, $2,000; on tract sale payments, $19,518.- .'(; interest-contract sales, $672.- 28; taxes as additional rent, J57.40; miscellaneous, $71.30; Township rent coileccions, fS79; assignment collections, $230. g Attends Session 0/ County Police Heads WOODBRIDGE - Police Chief George E, Keating was among the County police heads, who. attended the FBI Law En- forcement Cmiference at New Brunswick Monday. 8. X McKec, New Jersey Ffil Chief, tiHraduced.. the, gpeakftr «$ the evening, Dr. Frederick I.'Mes*-' win, director of the Rutgers Uni. versity School of Journalism, who addressed the session on "Kn- forcenit'nl and the Press." After the formal .session, Chief Keating .attended a second in i r series of nine conferences, called" *•'• by Mr, McK.ee tu discuss matters of mutual ititerest. 1

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Page 1: Mepenbent-ieaber - digifind-it.com · WAR BONDS Mepenbent-ieaber YourWarilond investment I* ... Must Ac-lown Land Grant lake Idea Possible ... and Commander Michael J. Trainer of

l\

ins**WAR BONDS Mepenbent-ieaber YourWarilond

investment I*Your InvestmentIn America • • *

'. \ \ VI.— No. 14 1'uUilnhcil Kvciiy Krtilnyfit in Uicfii SI., WootlhrliiKo, N. 1.

WOODBRIDGE, N. J., FRIDAY, MAY I!), 1944 KiHernl us nm'nnd rlmi mttt*rM tlit Piui t)nV«, Woodbrldgt, N, J. PRICE FIVE CENTh

Ions Hold;il Basin

Fate

As 1175 Men, Women-And Their Mission- Were Blessed

Must Ac-lown Land Grant

lake Idea PossibleI I iif ;]•; Not a dinsent-

, heard Friday nijrhtijian 200 attended u

i,. Mutiit'ipHl BuildiiiK\ c w JiTHcy Board o

,,-,! Navigation on the- t ract R boat basin

,/r ;it Sewnren,! i|> recently offered

,.!,,,.\im:it.p1y '17 acres, ,-,-k In the state!n,- purpose,

idueting the hoarincMacMurniy and Jo-

i,, ":\ Several lettersMi. MarMurray fa-

-i.nsi'd project. Dur-\;r A telegram was

petitioning the

| |from th? Town-

. Ciutcii't, Rahway.. i nk , l'nsKHie, NewI ' /.ilxlli and South

. ni. ('.. A. Giroud,<,! 'in discussion, re-

iv nf Sewaren andIn be gained by

i it In i- speakera were-.in, »f the Sewarcn

,,n. John Thomas,HI,! II. P. Clark..,in, commander of

r'lotillii, of thei'mist Guard Aux-Mn'onipaiued by a' his men,1 outlined

: ihc boat ownersnow being used by

', ml iiml which willin ihem after the

H ,nkii< U S p o n i o r

n LVTI Herbert B. RHII-

; .nsored the project,• :. ..-in could be turned

f hi-auty Ji» well asmid be self-supporl-

niins then statednecessary £or the

Hearing Friday For 4In $100,000 Fire Case

In aimple, moving ceremony a roll of honor containing thename* of all the men and women who have entered the tervicefrom Woodbridge proper w»i unveiled Sunday. Rev. Charlei G.McCorrittin, psitor of St. Jamet' Church, ii ihown above bleu-ing thotc who are enrolled. In the iniert are shown formerGovernor A. Harry Moore who delivered the principal addreit,and Commander Michael J. Trainer of the local American Le-gion pott which arranged for the plaque. Seated on the plat-

form, left to right, are Hampton Cutter, Mayor Augutt F. Grein-*r, Walter H. Warr, Auemblyman Bernard Vogel, Father McCor-riitin, Pvt. Joieph McLaughlrn, brother, and Mri. Joieph Me-Laughlin, mother, of Lawrence McLaughlin, who w n killed at'tea; Harry Stankiewicz; John Kanna, father of Joieph H. Ken-na; Mri. Stankiewici, mother of Robert J, Madden, firit Wood-briJge youth to loie hit life, and Mri. Ciik, another Gold Starmother.

Well, That's ThatWOODBRIDGE - Mayor Augutt F. Greincr, chairman of the

Red Croit War Fund drive for Woodbridge Towmhip, announcedthis morning that a total of $21,540 81 hai bean colUeted to datain the campaign and it on depotit in the hank. The Towmhipquota, the highett in itt hittorv and the unlv one ever overiub-icribcd, wat $21,500.

A few commitment! are •till outstanding, Mayor Greinert«id, and a few tcattered return! are vet to b* made which shouldbnott the ftnal total by another $100.

They Also Serve - -Seventeenth in Serie»-^JOSEPH A. DAMBACH, JR.

init sufficienti ui.sluture to puss a

,-i)inii[ the grant ofII|M npriate ths neIf (he New Jersey

niiiKTce und NavigaI in' project it most

• me under post-war

HonorsS. Teachers

11x;[•;—AL its annual..lay, the Woodbridge'-HI-IHTS' Association

pl:n|Ui", in honor ofi••• school system who• -i vice. ,The plaque,

11 iii'cted tu the high' i ins Lhf- following

! •• .MI. Thomas Des-''•'» Karrin.ir.ton, How-

- (it'iirjfc Gerek, H»r-!»••, .lohanna Magyar[ i Kursinsky, Gene-. itiiiiuld Noe, Joseph

" t i n Tajnb.oer, .Don-. Cesar JSullo. TheWHS made by Harry

pn siiK'nt.1 "Hifei'.t wes held, with"• named:

, Mrs. Miriam Balder-'li^iilcnt, Miss Marion"•ii-tiiry, Miss Mary

i-iner, Miss Helen

I ."iiii, Woodbridgeprincipal, addressed"(iuidatiCL1."

Greiner PacesPrimary Ticket

WOODBRIDGE — Dc-pite th..fact that there was very little in-terest in the primary election heroTuesday, Mayor Ausrust V. Greiu-cr, Republican candidate forCounty Clerk, received 484 votes— 139 in the first ward, IKS in th.'second ward and Hi 2 in the thirdward, His Democratic opponent,Edward J. Patten, received 31.1votes.

County Committeenii'ii a n ilwomen elected wire as follow;;:

Democratic: First Ward, District1, John D. Milano, May G. Mayo;District 2, Edward Katii, EtlsMbethNagy; District !), Joseph. Kuchie,Margaret T. Hyan; District -I,nonu; District 4, L. Charles Man-

MarRarel L. Calntuno; Di.i-5, Bernard E. Duni^ii;,

Phoebe E. Levi; District (j, Wil-liam Huber. Second Ward, Dis-trict 1, John Bmlnar; lJi-itrin li,none; District i!, Ernest ,].. Blan-chard and Florence Quadt; Dis-trict 4, Mrs. Mao Clement andJoscpb J. Elko.; District S, none;District (i, Thomas Smith and An-thony Aquila; District 7, LeruyLewie and Margaret Scott; Dis-trict 8, Matteo Giirune. ThirdWard, District 1, none; District 2,William Moran, Gertrmk' R.Welch; District, 3, Harry O'Con-nor and Mary Mullen aiitl NancyUrban (tied, to bedrawing); flistrictJensen -and May,V. Dunn; District5, James V, MCHURII and ViohC. Burelitield.

Republican: Kitst Ward, DistrictI* Wesley Hciselberit iiiid MaryVnn Pelt; District 2, Michael Bug-by and Mrs. Helen Nagy; District3, Stephen Dobus and Bertha Kel-lenvaiv; District 4, G. Wallace So-field HIHI Agnes C. I.und

On The Iselin Front - -Daffy Condacts Offensive Against Recorder WhoPromptly Tosses Few Verbal Grenades Of His Own

Fathers, SonsHear Dr. Eaton

trict

WOODBRIDGE —"I »m be-ginning to wonder if we »re stillat war. Certainly, thii commit-tee ihould not have to waite itstime listening to anything mpetty at this."

That wat the comment madeby Cotnntitteeman James R.Reed, of the first ward, aftera complaint wat registered byJoseph Duffy, of Itelin, againstRecorder Arthur Brown.

Duffy claimed that RecorderBrown "inittlt«,d the people ofliefin' during- a hearing inwhich, Duffy laid, "the Judgetaid the people of Itelin ihouldpractice temperance and go tochurch on Sunday,"

Recorder Brown, who hap-

pened to be in the audience, de-nied that he haA used the wordtemperance or mentioned Iselin.

"I said," he declared, "that'you people ihould be more tol-erant and should go to churchon Sunday.' This man (Duffy)made a complaint against twoold ladies, one about 80 yearsold and the other about 55. Itook an informal complaint andbrought them all in. The women,claimed that the Duffy chil-dren made »q much noite theycouldrr't ileep and left all kindiof articles in front of thejrhome. Duffy claimed that thewomen made motions to thechildren. It wai evident that

(Continued on I'atje 5)

Big Contingent For Army, NavyService To Leave Here Monday

selected byAndrltw

ld n gKonrud Stern and

l

-v 0/ Land Slated\e Sold By/Town June 5

i:t:iIK;K — At « publicMmnlay by the Towli-: l | ' r , nine parcels of"n-ued property were

• .11 u s ;

1 I'otter for Stanley C.;'---iiiib, $4,000; JohnWilliam Vandcv Deck-

\iina Vaqder Decker,'nil Dafcik, ?500; Aus\ i.ilvi Dooley, $300

'"I"'1, MOO; Albert andWi'ifz, $250; Nicholus

" . Mex mid Rose Mesar' ' ' • and Mary J. Ker

;ii' ''lei-It B. J. Dunigar-•"'ii'il to advvrti'te IS"' ';»'<-• on June 5,

Hoard Receives\ Andrews'Resignation

iKIlK.;fci — -i'h« r e s i g n *I'iluiiiiiith B.

•"' ' i " f

District-, - M.

Stern; District (i, Jnhii J. Iliibji)-rak and Tessa C. Kivy,

Alto Named

Ward 2, District 1, John .1.arsler and Margaret Kac/.iik; Dis-ict 2, Walter Doinrjka and Han-

lah 1'feiiTcr; District ;i, Oscarilson and Elinor Hulinl; DistrictStephen J. Sinirijca and I sab ell'.'

oth; District 5, Milton Haiisennd Mary il Larsi'Mi District (i,t»la Injjsti'up and Bertha Wirtz;•Utrict 7, Kenneth Vanml Helen Brown,; District '.IValker and TheresaMstriet 10, William Siska and Mae

with tfUjttEduuatinn Mot

that Mi*a poaitio

Huntinftoni g^y

Fred

uch,(Continued on F'a,w 5)

Bird, Draft Board Sec-retary, Announces New-est list Of SelecteesWOODBRIDGE—Large cuntir.-

Ki'iUs will leave Wooduridge Mon-

d«y for service with the Army itiul

Navy, Eugene Bird, secretary of

the Draft Boar/l announced today.

Selected for service with theArmy are;

'• Charles V. Amiess, 741 Ridge-dale Avenue, Woodbridge i. Elmer('. Anderson, '44 Astor Street,Newark; Frank Bodnaj, ThompsonAvenue, Woodbridge; Robert J.Boyle, Cooper Avenue, Iselin; Ber-nard A. Contal*., Division Street,Port, Reading; .Frank B. Cooper,Middlesex Avenue, Iselin; Peter(iutson, 215 Banford Avenue,Woodbridge; Michaul 6. Gohdola,44 Garsidi1 Strejt, Newark; Mil-ton W. Jewell, King George lload,Woodbridge; Martin Kara, Jr.,!)4,r> Florida Grove Road, Hope-lawn; Frank G. Kovacs, ;t2 RobertStreet, Sewaren; Peter T. Lep-sieoiio, 422 So. 11th Street, New-ark; Michael J, Miule, BioornlieldAvonup, latjlin; Ni«la D, Minucri,I Jean Court, Woodjbridge; JosephSidate, ;tH Mttwbey Strcut, Wood-bridgu; Charles Slover; 651 W,,'Jrd Street, Pkiniield; Salvatorc

(Continued on Page 5)

Drive On!

5th Bond Campaign ToStart June 12; Bunt-

enbach Chairman

WOODBRIDGE — "American.

iam Through Religion Frpm the

Cradle to Manhood" was the sul>-

ect of an address given by Dr.

jharles A. Eaton, representative

fro»i the Fifth Congressional Dis-

trict, at the annual Father an 1

Son Banquet held by the Men's

Association of the First Presby-

terian.Church Tuesday. Dr. Eaton

alao told of hia experiences in Con-

gress.

Victor C, Nicklas, superintend-

ent of schools, gave a toast to thv

sons which was followed by a toast

to the fathers in the form of a

poem by Ralph R. Rankin, a mem-

ber of the senior class of Woo'd-

bridge High .School. Donald T.

Manson served as, toastmaster and

introduced other speakers as fol-

lows: Mayor August F. Greiner,

who gave the address of welcome;

Julian E. Grow, president of th'.i

association; and Rev. Kenneth M.

Kepler, church pastor.

Moving pictures were shown am:

Fred Briegs led thtf community

singing with Mrs. Whitney C. Lee-

son as accompanist. Members of

the Woman's Association assisted

in the serving.

FORDS—Pprtoaps one of the !

usirst men in the second wardthese days is Joseph A. Dambach,

But despite the fact that heconducts i\ thriving grocery busi-ness on Now Brunswick Avenuewhich takes plenty of time andeffort, he still finds time to do hisshare in aiding toward the wareffort.

Back in 1940, when the DefenseCouncil was first organized, "Joe"Dambach was selected to head theAuxiliary Firemen. He Was chos-en for the post by Mayor AugustF. Greiner because of his keen in-terest in fire departments, bisknowledge of fire equipment andthe methods of fighting fires. Mr.Dambach is a member of Proteclion Fire Company No. 1, of Keasl>ey; secretary of the Exempt Firemen's'Asaociation of Fords, Hopelawn anil Keasbey; a past via

president of the county orgnnization and financial secretary of th

(Continued on i'flf/i' 5)Joseph A. Dambach, Jr.

HerSon Won't Be Home So AnzacMother Entertains Others' Sons

W.OQDBR1DGE — Vied P.Buntenbach, cashier of theWoodbridge National Bank, hasa^ain been appointed Townshipchairman for the Fifth WarLoan Drive which will be heldfrom June 12- through''1 July 8.

A quota of $ifi,000,000,000'has been set nationally and theijtate of New Jersey is expectedto make its quota of $219,-000,000.

Mr. Buntenbach expects to •meet with Mayor August F.Greiner, honorary chairman,within the next few days to dis-cuss ways and means ol raisingthe Township quota which is tobe over a million dollars. Thedrive plans this time call forci concentration on individualsales more than on institutionalsales.

The chairman will announce;the names of his committee, aswell ias the, detailed plans forthe drive next week.

Local Sodality Members Participate In InspiringMiddlesexCottnty Crowning Ceremonies On Sunday

(Photograph on Page 3)PEH'l'H AM HOY--In A truly

aspiring an

arish,craw ni! r

Fesce, otWoodbridge,

in

ceremonies

.-..., r id beautiful .setting atWaters' Stadium Sunday evening,

" St. Jiunes'served as

the annual crowning

^v.v... _ conducted by the Am-boy District Sodality Union.

The altar was artistically d«co-,'|ted with pjnk and white snaprdragons. The statue of the Bleg&ed.Virgin" Mary w«s set on R pedes-tal under an arch of pink, rosvt*entwined with green and blue

placed

on

, „ Two trellises wereo» each ride-of the shrine wherethB«-pw t ,«r«ndattendu«UpUced

their bouquets. A stand w wS t e d x a n d l e s i n ^ l u e m i d w h ,tu

- t h e white candles fox ing u et-ter M-was placed Jofon. J*

A huge basket iilled w l

placed before the stand.Palms and ferns were also used inthe decorations.

Miss Pesce wore a white wlingown, with u long train and legy mutton sleeves, lief veil whichrtll into a long train and covered

face was attached to a coronethV facofVorange 'blossoms. She carriedanVld-fashioncd bouquet of whitegardenias, swe«t peas and lilies-of-thd valley. Upon her return fropithe shrine, she carried a white

trimnisd with l i l i fpythe-valley.

The attendants .wore pasteld fand carried nosegays of

(fowwhite. carnutionB, white gnupdrug

bl Theytheir

«u4 bluealso wore•hair. -The niemlRosary wore white

inthe

and pasteli

Boaury r pgowns and liKe«-«f»the-valley in

h i Tfc»y d i h atheir hair. »nw»d

Beads. Other members of the pro-cession wore street-length dressesand floral headpieces.

Sisters AttendantsMiss Victoria Pesce was her

sister's personal attendant. An-other sister, Miss Betty Pence andMiss Ann Reilly, of St. Mary's,Perth Ainboy, served aB maids othonor. I\Teil Malinconico wagcrown-bearer.

The Most Rev. William A. Qriftin, Bishop of (he Trentonwas celebrant i t the. benejlictionwith Rev. M. A. Konopka, of HolyFuntily, Cur^eret, as deacon and.Rev. Thomas Carney, of St. Law'ehce, Laurence Harbor, as subdeacon, The Rev. iJeiwn Legniowski, of St. Stephen's and Revtaurettee Hoi'fath, o IOHungary, both of Perth Amboy,served as chapluins to th« btshop-

(Continued on Page 3)

Seek MerchantShip Recruits

WOODBRIDGE—As part of an

intensive campaign now being

conducted to recruit Merchant

Marine trainees to "keep 'em sail-

ing," enrolling officers of the U.

S. Maritime Service will be sta-

tioned at the Woodbridge post

office today, and tomorrow." Re-

cruiting hours will be from 8:45

A. M. to 5:15 P. M.

Three to six"months' training,ith pay, maintenance and tini-

'orm* furnished hy the govern-ment, will qualify applicants to,a.il on vessels of the MerchantMarine and each uJill have an op-lortunity to become n licensedtfficer within a short tinVe, accord-ng to Ensign Thximas B. Kaveny,ii charge of the Newark Keciuit-ng Office in Room B-H5, FederalBuilding.

Men from iili to 50 are eligible.Those under 26 may enroll if-hey have been discharged fromMilitary service or classified us1-C or 4J1. Particularly neeiletla.re trainees for desk, engine, ra-dio, stewards (ooolt^, bilkers andme.bsmen) and/ assistant Junior,purser, plmrnmoist mate depart-ments. • •

Auckland, ti. Z. WomanWrites 0 / Having Ise-lin Youth For TeaISELIN—'Residents of New

/(•aland are evidently hospitableto our boys stationed there judg-ing from a letter received thisweek by Mia. Joseph Cullinane, ofHO Starr Street, from Mrs, JessieE. W. McCullough of Auckland,Mew Zealand. The latter enter-tained the former's son, Joseph,who was spending a leave in NewZealand. The letter reads asfollows:

"A few weeks before Xmaa wetalked to your son, Joseph, in apicture show and we asked him toaccompany UB home for a cup oflea. The following Saturday liespent the day with us_ and he andmy husband were vei'y busy in thegarden—we have a large,1 one,

" 'Irish' an he woiilfl be called,showed great interest in ourshrubs, plants and fruit trees, anumber of which he had not see:before. Strangers to thL« countryare amazed a t the number of dif-ferent vegetables and fi'uits th.itwill grow in one small a.rea, Infact, Hide by side, in our gardenwe have plums, 'ppaches, oranges,lemons, apples, nectarine^ figtrees and tomatoes all bearing inturn.

'* 'Irish' was quite at home ashis enclosed letter will show you.He wa» looking remarkably well

h h

"Just before he left he broughthis frien*<!ilong to see us and gaveme a box of beautiful carnations.He shyly kissed me goodbye and Icould not help feeling that it wasreally meant for you.

(Continued on Pane 5)

All Are Minors; ClaimBlaze Was Started From13-Year-Old'* Cigar

WOODBRIDGK — Six yoUth«,Jour of them minor*, were appro-

by police ihis week U ap-parently end a crime wive of serf- , .ous proprtiiduns sprending «verthe last .several month* which in-cluded H $100,000 tire, seven rob- .beries ami v^rimis jut^ of mali-cious miai'hief.

The minors, iiabhcd by CaptainJohn Kgnn and Ltetiloiunl GeoraeBalint, and beinu held in NewBrunswick to a|ipr,,i' bcTori! JudguKloinmer KiilteisSi'ii in Juvenllo'ourt next Friday, are. Luke Jae-

ger, 14. of Rf).',i Maple Avenue;\ n d r c w Biiiiui, lit, <>f TU SecondStreet, (ieoiire Nairy. 1.1, of 181KdRar Stn-el mid Arthur Kovaoh,II!. of 117 High SliTt't.

The nlder b«ys, who police s»\ywere the least involved, are At 'thuv I'l-terton, IT, of DorothyStreet anil Michael Tumku, 16, ofMetiicht'ii Avenue.

Aided By PatrolmanCapLiiu Kuan ,u\t\ Lieutenant

Halint. were aitli-il in locating theboy-' liy infornrition turned in byPntrolninii Kreil I.cidner who hadpicked thnii up twice under aus-picious niiTum-iliuura iiml broughtthem IMHIH1 to their p.r'i'iits,

Accordiiii; to ( 'apt. !'"uilni J1*"-K<lr and N'a^y were arrested fol-l"wim: the robbery at CharlesK:iufnian's Suniiysidi1 Market,Mam S h e e t , Sunuay i,inht when$45 in changf was taken. Barshad been removed from H smallrear window and it was evi-dent, thai only :i sinnil personcould crawl through the spuce. I twas also evident that someone whohad knowledge of the hiding placewhere the change- wait kept, wasmplicatcd.

When taken inio (TOstody, Jae-jfer 'and Nagy arc JHid to haveiidmittcd breaking into the mar-ket and then n»intr i« the home ofthe former at, midnight to divide

Jaeger, in nis state-he knew where the

and was fortunaft 'enough to haveescaped the malaria of the t ropic

ROTARY SPEAKERWOODBRIDGK —G, A. Hum-

phries, rehabilitation director atRoosevelt Hospital, \va.s guestspeaker at a meeting of the Ro-tary Club yesterday. Mr. Hum-phries discussed the subject "Re-hnl>i|it*tion of the Tuberculous."

Gold StarFinns Advised Son, Miss-

ing Since November,Now Listed As Dead

1 WOODBRIDGE — Mr. andMrs. William J. Finn, of l!!lGrove Avenue, have been noti-fied by the War Department

that their son, Pfc. William J.Finn, missing in action sinceNovember, 194U, U officiallylisted as'deait.

Private Finn enlisted in theArmy Air Corps December 2,1942. He was graduated, fromthe Army Air Force* TechnicalSchool, Truax Field, Madison,Wis., on July 15, 1943 and wentoverseas in October, 1943.

Private Finn wa& a. graduateof Woodbririge High School,class of 1942 and was captain ofthe li)41 football team. Beside*hia parents he is survived by abrother, C. Robert Finn and asister, Mary J° Finn.

PLAN MEMORIALC O Ii O N I A — Colonia Post,

American "Legion and the Auxili-ary will sponsor memoriul servicesfor the Dead of World War No. >,on Sunday, May 28, at K P. M., atthe post headquarter.-;. Familiesof men who have died in servic:have been invited as speciijlguests The public "is invited •&>attend. '

June 24 Garden Party ProceedsTo Buy Comforts For Soldiers

DtUsle, Reported MissingIs,Prisoner Of Germany

COLONIA ^ r Servant HiiioWDqLisle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil-Jiam DeLiale, of New Dover 'Road,previously reported missing, is aprisoner of war ^f the GermanGovernment,i His parents received word Tues-day, four months aud u day afterhe was tvret reported missing. Theme&ftge watt received from Wash-ington through the effort* of thoIntertwtlonal Red C

WOODBRIDGK —Plans for aKaj'deiv party to 'bo held June 24at the home of Dr. -and Mrs. C. II.Rotlifuss, on Green Street, weremade by the Camp Kilmer Coun-cil of Woodbridge Township Chap-ter, American Red Cross, at ameeting- held last night! at tin1

liothfuss homfi.Proceeds of thu affair will be

.used to buy items, not provided bythe Army for Kuldjers at RaritanArsenal, Camp Kilmer, BelleMeade, Lyons, Carteiet Ordnancethe Coast Guard Station at ClarkTowi\ship and the battery .onStrawberry Hill.

An organ redtal, cards and ttprogram of entertainment will betne features of the party. Ru-freshmentfi wUl'be served by mem-bers of the Junior Red Cross.

At the preaeut tijne the Couucil hus bean asked to pruvid« »po-cial

pfoi1. soldiers as follows

Strawberry Hill: Athletic equipmen\ including baseball irntu

;loves, one a left-handed R'love,.oft balls and baseballs, enrtuins,home-made cookies and cakes.

Belle Meade: Six floor lamps, 12standing ash trays, 27 pairs oflrapes.

Station Hospital at C.amp Kil-ner: 20 loads of beach sand.

Lyons Hospital: 150 tea eups150 saucers, 150 email plates, 'A(heavy, deep, unbreakable ashtrays. t ;

Ilttiitan Arsenal: rubber shoesUK to 1ft; card table ^ov-

ers, chain*'for outdoor'*, bed ^ r yfor hospital, pi«ces of upholsterjmaterial.. , • ,''

Furnitur« including tables nndesks is always acceptable anlarge rugs ate needed for all thatationa. Anyone having fwnituriand rug* in good condition whic'they wi*h tu donate »r« « « M . t 'get in tou(|-h with Mrs. C. H. Rothfuss, ehaivman; or Misa Hull

the money,ment, saidmoney was keptJiecausi' 'he sawMr. Kaufman put it there whenhe was delivering milk for •& Town-ship concern.

Hire HorieiThe. day after breaking into

Kaufman's, the boys told the offi-cers they-went- to the RollingAcres Riding Academy. Rahway,gave fictitious names and hiredtwo horses. They paid for theirtime in quarters iml half-dollarstaken from Kaufman's. They re-turned the horses after theiv timewas up, but later re-hired themand took them t» Metuche-n Ave-nue where thuy had a froe-ftm-all, •giving all the neighborhood kidsndes, and mnninn races, W|icnone of the fiddle.-, was damaged,they took the*harAi-s U St. Georg*-—Avenue, slapped them and headedtlu'm toward Rahway, The nextday, Captain Kgan and Lieuten-ant Balint visited all riding acad-emies until they Finally located thetwo boys, After questioning theyimplicated the others who weretaken into custo.dy. ,

Abient From School IJaogei',1 who hus been absent

from SCIIODI for Ii7 consecutivedays, and Barau are said to beinvolved in the Klein tiro whicHoccurred last St. plumber. Theboys', according to tlm ollice,rs, said

(Continued on I'utje 5), i__' , ..

$25,240 Grossed In RealEstate Division In April

WOODBRIDtiE—Tht Real E*-ate Department grossed $25,240.- •1) during April according to a['port made by William Allgaicr,lie director, to tliw TownsMfclommittec, Monday. During the' =nonth 12 real esLate sales wereuule amounting: to $5,1)70.

The receipts - were divided nsolluws: Deposits on real estate,il,-112.50; cash sales, $2,000;on tract sale payments, $19,518.-.'(; interest-contract sales, $672.-

28; taxes as additional rent,J57.40; miscellaneous, $71.30;Township rent coileccions, fS79;

assignment collections, $230.

g Attends Session0 / County Police Heads

WOODBRIDGE - Police ChiefGeorge E, Keating was among the

County police heads,who. attended the FBI Law En-forcement Cmiference at NewBrunswick Monday.

8. X McKec, New Jersey FfilChief, tiHraduced.. the, gpeakftr «$the evening, Dr. Frederick I.'Mes*-'win, director of the Rutgers Uni.versity School of Journalism, whoaddressed the session on "Kn-forcenit'nl and the Press."

After the formal .session, ChiefKeating .attended a second in i rseries of nine conferences, called" *•'•by Mr, McK.ee tu discuss mattersof mutual ititerest.

1

Page 2: Mepenbent-ieaber - digifind-it.com · WAR BONDS Mepenbent-ieaber YourWarilond investment I* ... Must Ac-lown Land Grant lake Idea Possible ... and Commander Michael J. Trainer of

PA OK TWO F R I D A Y . MAY U», I'M INDEPEKDENT—i

Fifth Inning RallyGives Sewaren Win

Fighting Men for Freedomit,,--

V\ I ! K \ 11: :i Iwi l i i rh ' iraini1

t ' ! • I • -1 > i 1- r I -J drfc' l t i 'd the PortF ! . - - n ! i i u ' l i e n v c i ^ . '. 1 .

I ' l i i ' l l i ' i n ' H i . . r n r i i l f o r K e w i i r e n

i l l t i n 1 l i i - t . i iwl [ . ( i z i i k f o r P o r t

R . M ' l i l l i . ' ! o '':<• t i l t - -COI 'C .

A S ( \ ' ; i i r n t a l l y i n t h e h o t t o r n

o f Sh i - f i f t h i i M i i n u d e c i d e d t i l e

v i c t o r y . II ' - 'V V^j ty^ke" . a <lou-

t i l ' 1 l iy r r i p i i i r i l i j i m d :i s i n g l e

t l i r o i i i r l ) t h i ' l » i \ l i y f ' o m m e r t o n

• r o r c d 2 n i n n . H i t * l iy V i c i s k i » ,

Pi is t , . 1 1 z , i k . : m i l ;i - i n i t l " .in I n u ' k n f

s e c o n d 1 I : I M ' l iy . h u > b s o n s c o r e d 'i>

FSoUi p i t c l i e i N w e n ! I h e d i s t a n c e

W i t h l i l i . ' i n ^ k i r u c k i n g u p h i ? s e c -

o n d - t i a i f l ) ! : u i d j i i i r - h i n ( t fine h ; i l i .

H i l l K t i i i c k I ' i ' i k t h e l n « s a f t e r

•• ' r i lv i i i j r " i i ' n i n e - i i ; l i ( ; l l t . M

l . i i - u l . 1.1. <;. l I . I M I ' . I I I . H. T

bnvr, f n r i n i ' ! ' ( i i n v t ' i r . , 1 ' y j

I ' l h i c a i i m i n l W . i . i . H d i r i t i , . H i u ' i

S r l u x i l . h n « I I C I - I I i c ; in . . f' 11 cil f i n m i

t l i r V. S . N a v y P r i ' - K l i j f h ! . - i -h i -» . r |

l i t A t h e n s , f i l l . , f n i . I n l y

t h e c ' i n t i n r n t i i l l i m i i - . U i ' i

T a i n b o n ' . w h o s e t u n i i " ii(l<

WinII..

C

Ilijfh School inii in Mi.•••-!" v!''|.

rponil Andrew I, Ku«oii of Stephen knnit.-z. ofStinwbi rry Mill AVIJJJW, Wbridge. IIHS been <.-eli>t('.'il l

nuv,l'.i:'.

524 F r a n c e Avenue. W«u)dlindi'e. tend the Rnlintniont (Nmumiserved ns « |ilfiloon oftircr nt lion Cnftrso rrf She Field AtIiAthens.

ill

i i i c i -

Hyman Pliivin, luisbund »f tin.former Miss F>ie Bl'ihe, of Wil-liam Street . W(Mu|bri(|</e, has heenIIH'IIIII('(! the il Conduct Miil.il.

TheF.irkn«.rVtkns.

p r o m o t i o n n f , K i i i i ' s l , \ , '

21). .son of M's. F ranc i s I

Sehnti) nt Fort Sill. Olt!:i.

Pi ivntc Jo.M-iih H. Elliott, Miii

of Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Klliott,Sr.. of Wondbridjfe, has unidii-u t e d iis til i i i r j ih tnc mrp iv i i i i e fi-;>tsi

t h e li-l! 1 I . i h e n i t o v |)ombi-t "mi1.

r l lHIlic 's s choo l , ;i! Kwe- ler Fie! . I .

LOSEWEIGHTTHE"AYDS"WAY

2.25FOR A MONTH'S SUPPLY

y\ \ US w,\\! Km personsln-,1 11 In id His. cadi ini i i t : ' > i i i h i n i d i r l l i i ' d i r p i ' -

l in i i <if F>r. S i n m i e l K H i s ,

I ' l i i n i c J

LEVYBROTHERSELIZABETH, N. J.

of 4 4 7 ' P< in: Woo.lhrdiire, ii tail irimiiiF ly ing .For t ress (if the

AAF from the gMd<> of)(i .itnfV sei 'ueanl ' bus been un>iiontimf hy the Eighth AAF Head(liiarti-rs in England. A' former \ Annn Dnfcik,Wondhriilge Hiith rfi-hool ' '

•Staff Sefetr'nnt Fiirkap wsn i; * • • • • • • ,chemical nperntniV as ::=t::nt lie-'j Joseph S. Curati lo, Mils, '•'•'

St i cK. j * '• .»' of HI Amonjf those grnilirtltiiift1 frnmKijrluh jiui intensive enurne of nimii' en^i-

IlieeiiiiK ul recent Service Schoolexercises ,nt Crea( Lakes. 111., wn*K«|(t'ne (i- Pfnir i JK, X l t v o f Mr;

I linhway A\^ tu iUn ' J mie, Avelipl.

e I he war.

I'rivnte Walter

ii I 'a t tery I!,A. Truininir

Thaler.Avenel, is n

.'ith battalion,nt in the

I1,eld Arti l leiy Replacenn nt Tram-

1'SN, of . : i l2 Fulton Street , is oi»-of the 1112 s tudents who-receiveddi|ilomus May ."> from the UnitedStates Nnvy 'School of Music, Ki-ceivinjr Stal ion, Niivy Yard, Wu«h-inffton, 1), (.'. Th*. g r a d u a t t s havebeen ineorpoi'iited into unit h'inde-

inir Center. For; BriiK1-'. N. ('. ; of 2-\ pieces and will he atsignedltd Navy ships nnd shore stat ionr.

of I f uratilo is a RraduiUc of Wood-bridpe High School, clflsr, of 194!and played in the Wnodbridji"llijrh School Band. He played withthe la t ter unit lust Sunday nt thvdedication of tin1 Woodbridgo

IPIaqut' while hnme on leiwe.

Private (ii>»(g(> T. SmithSiiziM Avenue, Iselin, hn° heen a*-•Mtrnod to Buttery A. U t h Bat-t lliim, 1th F, A. Training Reirl-mi'in lit the Field Artillery !{:•-plactmi'iH Training fei.tei-, Fort

Williftm J. Bsrbour , S 'IIQ. WestStreet, Colonia, ha^ cii'iiiileted hisrecruit t ra ining at N:i\al Train-injr Stat ion, Sampson, N V.. ar.ilh«« been p lan ted leave,

Hohcrt J . McEwen. 18. son ( fMr. and Mrs. Joseph MeEwen, of721 St. (ieorire Avenue, Wood-bridge, is nov.' enrolled as an avia-tion cadet in the pre-fiiffht school,

A Win Rym.°h«, .lr., S !/<•, sonof Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Hymsha, ofKidwilale Avenue, has been sentto the Navy School nt Chicago,111., fur technical

* « " * * • c - t o Music Box ExhibitionGuest Night Feature

NKU \ I ! K \ A ta lk o n t h e

"Cuiitan.'i. nf Music Dux.*" fea-!ui '•'! Hie annual KIICM night, ofth. Se.ijivi'n History C'hiln Mon-'I:iV ,i! Mie home of .Mr. nnd MvS.-li'hii \ . K»zu?ko, West Avenue .Tli" irn.'st ;ir!i<U, Mr. and Mr^.(ienrpe Hirhard Hrown, of Chat-hum. .lis|i|ayi'il thii'ty-fivp r a r e oldF t ' n r l i . SWISH, Anstrinii. fUluin:ind Vnierican music hoxps rune-inf in history from their incep-tion m Switzerland in 1540 hi thehey-day of their popularity inAmerica in the tfuy ninety era.

These instruments varied inM/e from the tiny boxes of a few,

•minces to a pi cat console of sev-eral hundred pound?! which canreproduce a two-hour, ronc( rt of

D a n i e l L O i r d e n ! operas and old-time tunes. I'nuiitoWOOl)BRII><;jJ-.-Mr Ojrden o f ' " l l l i s 1 'ol l f*c t i im w p l ' p t h t ' nmsical

-:»:i Docker f lare, WHS appninifd i f f "!''>' l > i r U"1 ' " l ln".\"1S " t l l l l ! t i r a l

II nieniher of the Middlesex Coun-1 c h "" ' ' ," ^ . d '" " Kll(1('(l c u « ! ' " n ( l

tv Vncnlumnl Sehool Roard hv th* 1 *"*™ 1 «'»" «n«l annnnl subjectsU«.anl -if Chosen Freeholders,'yeB-i w l l l c h m o v t ( l " s l h l > y pla>r"( l-ter.lay. Me takes the place of! ^ r - a i u ' ^ r s - Brown have heen

Avenel NewsBy Mr». *• G. Perl«r, I, N. J.

Hampton Cutter, of Green Street,who resigned recently.

The new member is assistantplant manager of the U, S. MctnlRIlefiitinor Company. Carteret, »ndhas !>een employed at the plant I t t l e t > u t u r e-f • : -- .

collecting musical boxes and hist-torital data uboUt them for thepast ten years and are phinninj!to publish the first complete his-tory on his fascinating subject in

for a numbei' of .years, always inan executive technical capacity.He was born in Pennsylvania andis a ffraduate of the MichiganSchool jlf Mines. He is an1 activemembei of the First PresbyterianChurch of Woorihridge.

Also appointed to the Vocation-al School Fioard yesterday was

Mrs. A. W. Scheldt presidedduring a short business sessionduring which Mrs." John WlttckwaH voted into membership. Itwas decided to participate in thesummer Saturday nijfhL dances formen in service to, be held in theLand and Water Clubhouse. A re-port of $Hfi,l(l was made on the

•—Sirt. Lawrence Meyer, I'arn-trnyner. who wns stationed in fieMi'iliterraiiPiiti men nr.i is nowat Fort Banning, (in/, is spendiiii1

wvenil rfd.VP with his l : rother-n-law and sister, Mr. :inrl Mrs. A. JKennedy, Bitrncii Strt 'cl .

-l-"St>?t. Vraiik llnmn, C-imp Phil-lips. KansBS, is spcndiiT a weekwith his mother, .Mrs. Frank llomaof Kolly Street .

—Mr. and Mrv. William Falkci,-stern, WuoilhridRi1 Avi'iiue, spentSunday -.with Mr. Filkensterd ' . imother, MVs. Herman Faikenstern,of Dunu>tlt.

—Mrs. Eai't Palmer. Mnnhnl-tnn Aveiuii', at tended tbe tenthannual Imnmiet ,df ihc Bran<-combe Choral S i n g l y at theBiuadwoy Tabernacle, .S'ew York.Miinduj.

-Mr. and 'Mrs, Hai ry Wilson,of Newark, were d inner isiU'slsSunday of Mw. Wilnon', parents,Mr, i i i ' id^lrs . Frank Burth, M".n,-hiitlaii Avenue.

- Pvt. Charles Nier, who re-couth' entered service in the Mn-line Corps and who i* stationedut I'urris Island,is recoveiiiijt froman nppi'iidectomy. Private Nieris the .son of Mr. and Mis. I 'a ' lNier, of Woodbridue Av» niu".

— Mrs. William Fa lk ins ten ; ,priviident of the Woman'- Club ofAvenel, is. attendiiijt the ">IHh un-tiual convention of tin- S ta te Fed-ration of Woman's Clubs "t the

Hotel N>w Yorker, New York-,Mrs. Kdwin Svihir 'knviti, M.i-

ple Street, is viMtillE her ,husband,Corporal I'M win Schifkovit? nt Re-placement IIr>ndiiiini-t("'n at C.reeii-

ville, S. C.fl, , , liUlependelll HepublwHfl

I'I,,!, will hold a card pnrty'nt. thehome of Miss Jane Misehler. 2<)'»Avrnef Street, tonight. The dniw-insr for the haud-miide afl,'han willlu> made at that time,

—Mr. and Mm. Willinm Reidi-md of Jamaica. 1.. I., Mrs. JosephSchmidt. Mr. and Mrs. JosephStuppi imd Kobeit SchefTef, all ofIrvington; Mrs. William Schmidt,Mr. .m<l Mrs. Kdward Murun, of[.iviiiRstnn Avenue, wele dim)')1

quests of Mrs, . Nancy Momti,OonxUis Avi'iiue. Sunday.

G.O.P. Club U Hold la$tSession Of Season Jane 8

SEWAnEN'-^-Mis- .Klsie Ne-metb, of Central A"t'niic, w«.*hostess to the Scwnren IiKlepen.f

• lit Republican Club with Mrs.J eane t t e Randolph pre'idimr, Acomiminicatioii, coyci'iniiiK the lo-cal S iturtlny nipht dances f<>r menin service, held at the Land •andWater Clubhouse, w.is n'lid. A ie-port 0)1 1he i-liili'.^ visit Lo the ' ' .

Louis Migliorlni, of New Bmns-lhook fund card party,w ' ° ' < ' , . .- There were eighty members andM D ~L" I I II J I P u e a ' R present and Mis. Olive VanMrs. KOOtnSOn IS Installed I Iderstinc, program chairman, was

assisted by members of the hoariAs DAR Chapter Regent

Maxwell Field,MeEwen was

Alabama,graduated

Cadetfrom

JOE'S CIRCULAR BARAND LOUNGE

268 MADISON AVE. PERTH AMBOYPresents

SAMMY DEANEHis Trumpet and Hit Music Makers

FeaturingROMEO—King of the DrumsPETE MILANO—Dyitumic QuitiriitJOE DE MARCO—Piano Wizard

Dancing Every NightJAM SESSION SUNDAY AFTERNOONS—2 to 6

YOUR HOSTS—SKIPPY AND JOE

• New Speed-Easy Paint HidesOld Wallpaper in One Coat

Sergeant Paul, Rossi, formerlyof Avenel and a former dance in-structor, who recently returnedfrom England and is stationed inTennessee, has written n song en-titled "You Told Me A Lie" whicnis to be published shortly. Srr-Ki'iint Rossi anil his wife residein Dardcn, Tetin. They have adaughter, Dolores Del Kay, bo.-jiApril HO.

Avenel Woman's ClubAppoints Chairmen

AVENKL — Various chairmenwere appointed at a meeting <>[the. Avenel Woman's Club Wod-

| iicsday at the home yf Mrs.tCIeorKe Mroz, Hudson Houk-vai'd,

a s f o l l o w s : " ' • • , • • • • •

(-ivies,1 Mrs. "Walter Knutts;(Jurdens, Mrs. Willurd Rankin;hospitality, Mrs. Edmund (Ilen-dinning; international relations,Mrs. R. (I. Perier; legislation,Mrs. John Kttersha~nk; literature,Mrs. Harold Grausam; New Jer-1

sey Clubwoman and piiblii'itybook, Mrs. Mroz; . membership.Mrs. William Kuzmiak; music.Mrs. Frederick Buckley; program,Mrs. Earl Palmer; publicity, Mrs.Frank Wukovets; budget and fi-nance, Mrs. Bertram Van .Cleft,Mi's. WukoveU,. Mrs. Kuzmiak;Juniors. Mrs. Willurd Hankin.

Winners of the dress club thisweek were Mrs. William Koz<i andMiss. Scltrie. A May' 1 breakfastwill be held May 24 a t the homeof Mrs., Pruiik Barth.

j During the*social hour, old-time

, WOODBRIDOE — Mrs. G. G i l - j f " v 0 l ' i t e s w m ' |l!a-VP(l l i y t h ( '"irioiir Robinson was installed ve-

gfiit nf the Janet Gage Chapter,D. A. I!., by the chaplnin, Miv,John E. Breckenl'idge, at the finalsession nf the season held at thehome of Mrs. John M. Kreger,Prospect Street,

Others installed were.; Mrs. Kon-rad Stern, vice president; Mrs,Frederick A. Spencer, recordingsecretary; Mrs. Kreger. boaidmember. Mrs. Thomas Z. Hum-phrey, guest, speaker, gave a talkon Chile.—— »

py yhostess, Mrs. Kor.usko, pianist,

d h d h M K hand her daughters, Miss Kathleen,'cellist nnd Miss Joan, violinist.

SLATE CARD PARTY

,W 0 0 1 ) B R I D G E —TrinityMen's Club will spomor a can!party Monday night at the TrinityParish House. Arthur Molitorchairman and hy will be assistby William Thompson.

Secretary Kimx is hnriei) withmilitary honors at Arlington.

Radionic Hearing withthe new

I m ••• r i c n nItiitcal Aitm-irlum i'uitn-

RadionicHearing AidReady to wear, complelewill) rndionif tubes, eryB-IflLinirriiphon^. magneticearphnrte, balieriea andballery-sdver circuit,

'VM.NV Liberal guarantee. CJ/icniodti one prict' unn

^ quultty Zenith's finest.No exlrss no "decoys."

Come in /or Demomtratlen

I. MANN & SON

89 SMITH STREET

Perth Amboy, N. J.

S. 0 . rooms in p ( . | . ,

dftlph nnd Mr;, i,,with Mrs . Wilriaf,, ,ni idTinj f t h v t i A i t s p i )

T h e s p e c i a l i i n n i i

John II, Buyer,were nerved by t(,,.cd hy Mrs. Rnmliii:meeting of the s,.-,June 8 a t the hmin ,.(iiirdner, Tlifr U*,,,,,

High Academic KanL t jByGeraldineG.ho

W ( ) ( ) I ) B R I 1 M ; K

dine G. Bnrgell,Mary W a s h i n g , i n

ci icks'bu.rif, Va,,(•(.'litly when her u.<on the Demi's li<imined hiyh silmliluiintr tht' wint. [current school yeai

KliKibility I'mquires that, a slu.l.averatte of " B " nher courses with nrecord ruled Ic*.to iy . " MISH Hni|r,of Woodbridiie IImaking Spun is!; [|f

cial s tudy tit M m

I/nilvd Stati <child care servic

» . i

A 10S1POCKfTBOOKCAN MIHIOVIt Vim ]»

SOlNUt W C4A1P;

Visicinj; your wldier in i.iiiip \\.-.

sure thai your trip is a happy one liy cafryinc \,»n ,,,

iht form of «ifc and spendable American l-xprcss 1 I.I-,

(.hcquts. Handbags or ordinary pocketbooks m;n c r ,

lost or siolcn. Then your cash is gone for good. 11

Travelers Cheques are lost or sioljn, however, \nu ,1, ,

loie. \out money is promptly refunded. Issued in Ji n

naiinns of $11), $20, S^l ami $I(H). Tliis protcicion u>-

Tit per'$1(111. Minimum cosi '(Of for $10 to SSi). ^ ,„,

buv item at lhis bank. •

Woodbridge National BankM . - m h c r o i 1 I ' V i h T a l I l i ' s e r v c S v • - 1 . m

M n l i l . i r l - ' i . i | . ' i ' i i l l i e i ' i i s l l l i i > i i r M M . ,. i 1 . ,

Wooilhridgp, N. J.

f S l A B l l S H I D

SPRING CROPS AT

1 >^..*s£%X&-° •«*"•••"too!

Obituaries

Brighter Rooms with Amazing

I Du Pont Paint That Dries

1 in-Only One Hour

Less than $2.75 for image

room (with coupon below)

HLTC'B the pi iul !

/ant to rudeeorlte laiXW'liKively. l/u Tim

lot )i*0[ila whowant to ruderotlte laBtriully but in-ex[«'HKively. l/u 1'init Speed-EasysuVtw you timu and money.

Once over a room usually does thejob. Move the furniture, (luck in one.hour. For the walls and (filing ofaverage rouin, one gallon of Speed-Eusy is enough iwily $2.75 or le§swith barijiiin cuupun below).

A wide variety uf ijp.uutiEul paatelcolon piUl white (lint he intermixedto form countless tintai

Used by reliable painters, preferredby particular home-owtiera. . ,

Thine with Water HYou don't need special thinners.

One (jallon o( Speed-Easy iiaste makesup to I,1-j gallons o[ reudy-to-upplypaint. And only one coat is usuallyneeded . . . for wallpaper, wallboard,plaster, concrete, unpaiuted or oldjmriited surfaces. It ruts time, costand wqrk in half. ^

. Dries in One HourIn an hour you have a smooth, flat

wull finish of enduring beauty. Movethe. furniture back and use. the roomwithout delay. Amazing results forliving rooms, bedroomB, halls, gamerooms, garages, etc.

NOW YOU CAN MINT'MOST ANY ROOM FOR

(WITH BARGAIN COUPON)

Bernadette A. Moffitt\V()()l)BRII)(iE — liernadclle

Ann Motlitt, live months old,ilaui;iuer of Mr. and Mrs. l.coMollitL, ;of :iH Amboy Avenue,

] died Tuesday at the home of herparents. She i.s also sulviytd liya sister, Jane Murie.1 Funeralservices were held Wednesday uf-

i lernoon at 'I :•'!() o'clock fi'um thehome, liuriitl was ill St. .fnmus"Cemi'ttry.

Mrs. Mary A. EbelingAVhWEL—-Mrs. :Mary A. Eli-

elme;, 44, of ti R*mjcn Avenue,| died Tuesday at her Wine. Sheis survived by her hiusband, Karl;two children, Lucille 4pd Kurl, Jr.,her mbtkef, Mrs. Mary"*'Mezeiiaiinrt a brother, lCharles>MezferR, aljof Avenel. Funeral services wort)held this moniihg from tht' honu'and ut St. Andrew's Church. Hu-rial was in St, James' Cemetery,Woodbridgo.

SUPERMARKETS

' i

to. . and,it pays

to A&P »f gettingvalue fof yourdollari i» importantyou!

, bigfood

to,\<

USE THIS COUPON WORTH VICTORYWATCHREPAIR

c i- y Iti'iiulr.!..!• fully K.inr-ii II I <• r .1- 1' «> 'f l m u I"K, » « « III

• Get-Acquainted Offer: This coupon validonly on purchase of one gallon or more ot

DU PONT SPEED-EASY r . ^ HOnly nne coupon to 4 family. Offer •xpinJune M, 1944.

NAME

ADDRESS,

CITY

SPIVACK BROS.334 STATE STREET

RERTH AMBOY, H. J.

WE GUDLY DaiVER—JUST PHONE P. A.-44936

Albren, inc.. 133 Smith St.

Perth Amboy

CRYSTALS PITTED

WHILE VOU WAIT

Every PoundCustom Ground!

You get finer,fresher flavor!

No p r e -(round cof-f e « c a nmatch t h ef l a v o r o II r . i l l l y -r a a l t e d,( r e > Ii I yground cof-f e e ! B u yreally freshA * I' t o fiff!

Crisp RadishesSpring RhubarbFresh ScallionsGarden Spinach

i Nearby Farms

California Hew Crop

YELLOWSpring Crop

» 9c Pineapples *<*»17c Avocado Pears

h, 9^ New Cabbage15c Tomatoes

bchs.

lbs

* • • R p e

In Our Meat Departments!

SMOKED HAMS m i LD U C K L I N G S Fresil Killed Long Isltnd

SLICED BACONPork Loins,: VPork ChopsSmoked Hams

i > i i i t i c u i

ib 3 5 c

_ _ '37^29c Smoked Tongue 39c3 5 C PiCniCS Freah .r Imakeri 2 9 c32* Frankfurters5^"^37c

WILDMERE EGGSLARGE, FRESH. GRADE A

Brown and White

carton

1 doz.43

, . . « * : • -

NECTAR TEAPEANUT BUTTERdexo 'CAKE

Page 3: Mepenbent-ieaber - digifind-it.com · WAR BONDS Mepenbent-ieaber YourWarilond investment I* ... Must Ac-lown Land Grant lake Idea Possible ... and Commander Michael J. Trainer of

| ;1,|i:N |)ENT-LEADER

p|, Is Organizedmlhs In Avenel

\ | , mlii'i-s of the

I >,.wins ClubsI I,, .day ;i.nl,,Hirers: President,

,, !|; vifi' president,secretary, Jean

,1,'d in organize, twp,.,. Anthony Pichnl-„ raplfiin «f the 4H\n,lrew Hacker was

„ ,,f the. -1H White

,,,,1; eiinitied in the,,. Robert. Den Bley-: H^mcure, Anthony,,-,l,ni Toyi, Thomas.,-.; ('eiicgv, Kranois,, Hacker, Andrew, ,,i, (iallo, Joseph,i nrookwcll, Louis, ,.• liirong, Marion,,,, , , Kink, Florence„ „ ! IV tz. Dolores

i;,,sc llorvath, ^ran-i;,iih Brady, Rebr\im /.ii-siiiss, Bar

: ; : , Anna (tallo, Jo|;:ii'l)iira Heckor, An-,,• Jean Zicseniss

FRIDAY, MAY 19, PAGE THREE

Larry M'Laaghlin's MedalReceived Byjii* Mother

WOODBRIDGBlMrB. JosephMcL»ug;hlto, of MB Grove AVG-nuc, yesterday received the Ma-riners' Medal awarded posthu-mously to her son, the late Ca-det Midshipman Lawrence Dan*iel McLaughlin.

.The medal, authorized by theConfess of the United Statesis awarded to officers and men,who while serving on a ehip dur-ing the war period are woundedor suffer physical injury or suf-fer through dangerous exposureas the result of enemy action.It i» similar to the Purple Heartawarded hy the Army.

Auxiliary CompletesPlans For Cake Sale

WOODBRIDGE—Firnal airanK,mrnts .have been completed fnrthe white elephant und cake salto 'be conducted by the LadiesAuxiliary Congregation Adat.liIsrael next Thursday and Frida>at 118 Main Street.

Mrs. A . 'A . Wnlpin, chairmaiis beiiip assisted by .the followingcommittee: collection of merchan-i i i ' i 1 i i i I c i i R K | « • * *• • ' • » - • - •

,lvn Knapp, Jean] l l l s t ' . Ml 's- Ben. Rflhinowitz; trans' . . nortjltinn Men Uanvi, tJ«l^Frtl,.

. . r i i i i g will f c a t u i e

; , m . In July a hot-.,,. held at the park

;i-.iis will be made.,nletis. A sewiilfr, \iiliii will b$ hc!d.,niC ,,f t h e P . T . A .

V I S I T

i i , i ; Mi1, and Mr?.

... ,,f lli(ih Street,. nf a daughtei'j

•ii the 1'erth Am-

BUDWISER

t l l lERand other

popular beer*

call at

VGY'S(lilv Liquor Store

Roiuevclt ATO.

Carteret

;portation, Mrs. Hfnry Bclafskand Mrs. Walter Warliddj.displaand arrangements, Mrs. AbrahanNeks, Mrs. Rftppn, Mrs. MorriiMytelka, Mr*. Murray Dcrn; sale;Mrs. Ben Kantor, Mm. JosepKlein, Mrs. Louis Cooper; putliclty, Mrs. Wolpin and Mr;Charles Friedman; cake sale, MrsH. Shapiro, Mrs. Joseph Cohen.

All knick-knacks to be donateshould be left without delay withany of the followinR: Mrs. BenRabmowiU, 251 South P a r kDrive; Mrs. Otto Mnycr, 131Grove Avenue; Mrs. Dern, 585Ellis Place; Mrs. Charles Lchrer,412 School Street. Thn.se bakingcukes arc asked to leave them at118 Main Street no later than 10A. M., the (lavs of the sale.

Annual Crowning RiteAt Mt. Carmel On Sunday

WOODBRIDGE — The annimp i erowiiiiif,' of the. statue of thoItU | Messed Virgin hy the Junior and

i Senior .Sodalities (if Our Lady o| Ml. Caimel Church will be heli' Sunday afternoon at '1 o'clock.

Miss Miiffdalyn P'azekas, presient of the Senior Sodality, wil

be the crownui1 and her persona'attendant will be Miss Ethe! Si-moii. Oilier attendants will ibeMis.s Ann Bedi, Mis* MargareKD'/.II. Miss Anna Forian, Miss

!.M;uy Me.sics, Miss Mary Nagy anMiss Klizabcth Roman.

from

Shirley Spiegel'sThis Week Only

AND ALL Y O U N E E D IS . . .

$20I T S . . . SHEPHERD CHECK

" i » III TDi I I IAIIv anil W I U T K i SOMK SOLID COIAIKS.

f-M.'Vir-UL TO SEE - - INTRIGUING TO WEARMHI'",, V I I K . I V W O D I ,

Formerly up to $42.50

A T S • i i Shetland fni Koala P«c«

UW% VIIK.IN WOOL j

l"» IIIIMI ihi-nr .•««<» nrv but, i tp lirl j o u Hi-ver hnuuht tNfiii

*'••'• i"i- »ai. l o n i i r r l j Hold lor fWI.511, »«l).M> nu<l $3Ti.

hirley SpiegelMITH ST. PERTH AMBOY

GAME SOCIALJACK POT $100.00

fvery Thursday EveningAT 8:00 P.M.

AT

Andrew's Church HallAVENEL ST., AVENEL, N. J.

i^ t:s|A MINED

GLASSESFITTED

Dr. H. L MOSSOPTOMETRIST

^ Hour»:_&30 A. M. to 3 0 P.S«turd«y 9i30 /^,M. to 3 P. M-

lfcl" Street P U , ' w a MM»"'™V

N«»r Y<»ur

Woodbridge Girl Has Principal Role In Crowning Ceremony Dorothy F. AndersonIs Bride Of Navy Man

jCXUB SESSION! AVKS'KI, A meetmK of the

Avenel Civic Club wil! be h«JdTuesday night nt the 'choolhouiK".Movies will he shown anil u socitlhour ii«'ld, Furtht'i- plsms will b«

WOOPHRIlMiK Mi's Onrnthyl mtilr for the nulinjt rm June 4 «tV \in|er^(in, itauglitiT o( Mr. andl Avenel PiirV.Mrs. Thomas K, Andcison, of

vi' Avinuie , b i i a n i c the luiilnAnd f e w Huthwcll, ( iuniicr's

Mute nf Mr. and Mr*r Itoilnv^ll, of

GIRL FOR CLARKSWOODimiDGK-Mr. and Mrs;

Kolicrt L. Cl»rk, of S»uth ParkUrivr. arc thp nf a daugh-

Avenue, nt a doiiblc-r.np e r e - i >"'• r« r"'>1 1 . born Sunday »t thenmny performed by Rev. RiehmdUtiird in the rectory of St. Mary'sChurch. Perth Amboy.

The bride wore a white fnwwwith a lave bodice and it boutTiii.turt. skirt niul a shouUler-leti^thVfi,l. She carried a !><nn|ui:t ofKardeniiis. Miss Ann Reilly, nf1'i'ilh Amlmy, the m:iid of honor,was ult i ied in an M'e blue (townwith a matching Juliet Cap widcarried pink rosi^. llii.vid Both-well serve.I as his hri'ther'n ln'stmm.

Both the bride's ii'id bride.(rroom's mother, wore n;ivy hlui'^riwiK with eofsi^,,^ n | pmk svveelpea a.

The couple left for Washing-(oi>, P. ('.. when' the bridegroomis enrolled in ,\ Navy Sclmol. Thebride is n .graduate of St. Mary'-Hijfil School firtit the liTi.leereeill

ed from Wooiltiridur 11 iti 1>.

Rahway Memorial Hospital.

TELEPHONE 4-0071

THOS.F. BURKEFuneral Director!

368 STATE STREETPERTH AMBOY, N. J.

Joseph V. Cutello, Mgr.

"Th«r« ] • No Sabtlltut*—For B«rk« S»r*lo"

in the quiet of Spring twilight, Mitt Sunn Petce of ChurchStreet, Woodbridge «nd P.retident of the Perth Amboy DiitrictSodality Union, placed a crown of floweri on. a ttatue of theBletied Virgin Mary in Waters Stadium, Perth Amboy, Sunday.Mi» Po»ce it thown aboTe at ih* entered the itadium. In front

of her are her litter, Min Victoria Pence, perional attendant,and little Neil Mnlinconico, crown-bearer. Following the crowntrare another titter, Elizabeth, maid-of-honor, altar boyi and mem-ber! of the Fourth Degree, Knightt of Columbut. Over 8,000witnexed the ceremony.

Crowning(Continued from Page 1)

Rev. Edward M. Betownki, ofSt. Joiicph'n Seminary, Dunwoodle,N. Y., delivered an inspiring ser-mon on "Mary, Our Mother."

Others who took part were:Living rosary: St. Andrew's,

Avenel, Marion Suchy, Rose Nes-boylo, Frances Muka, JosephineFiorettc; Holy Family, Carteret,Dorothy Trosko, Agnes Kmnenda,Eleanor Czaja; Sacred Heart, Car-tcret, Anne Kopil, Louise Lukach,Mary Bistak; St. Elizabeth's, Car-eret, Barbara Romosocky, Helen

Keltus, Mary Ruacak; St. Joseph's,Carteret, Theresa Bonner, AudreyCatri, Palma De Ruosi; Our Ladyof Peace, Fords, Lillian Lund, Marion Schmidy, Betty Borkes, MaryLabbancz; St. Cecelia's, IselinPatricia O'Neill, Charlotte Fless-ner, Agnes Pietshker, Rose MarieBeecrra; St. Lawrence, LaurenceHarbor, Catherine Houlday, Anna

Slack Suits

'ogleo, Elizabeth .Balint; HolyRosary, Perth Amboy, BeatriceBartone, Marie Nornmndie, Fran-ces Pnoyanza; Holy Trinity, PerthAmboy, Helen Vargo, AnneTkach,.Mary Bator; Our Lady ofHungary, Perth Amboy, Ann Zo-vetz, Jftarge Kozmarps, YolanKarockai; St. Mary's Perth Am-boy, Veronica Totin, Claire Ward,Pat Fitzgerald, Florence Ward,Lillian Hooker; St. Stephen's,Perth Amboy, Helen Szyrwiel,Florence Szyrwiel, Frances Chumer, Mary Ciszek,

Othert In Ceremony

St. Anthony's, Port Reading,Laura Mucciarcllo, -Rose ScottoMarie Fattarosi; Our Lady of Victory, Sayreville, Audrey KohlcrLa Verne Cuilfoyle; CatherineFritz; Sacred Heart, South Am-l>oy, Josephine Hramskowski, JaneBatrukiewicz, Mary Batrukiewicz,Helen Stachowski; St. Mary's,South Amboy, Eileen Nagle, JaneMonaghan, Mary Lovely; OurLady of Mt. Carmel, Woodbridge,Mary Kozen,' Victoria Lucas, An-na Gyurics, Anna Josvay; St.James' Wood'hridge, Mary Maher,Marie Kowakzyk, Susan Murphy,Margaret Ryan, Rae Valentine,Margaret Dunn.

Attendants were as follows:

Avenel, Eleanor Wisnc^ki; Car-teret; Genevieve Sawczak, AnneGavleiU, Olga Juhas, DorothyCoughlin; Fords, Mae Clement;

in, Antoinette Pctoletti; Laur-ence. Harbor, Lois Pellinger; PerthAmboy, Anna Jannucci, ElizabethStuler, Margaret Karockai, Fran-ces Grazanlwwski, Helen Keller,Helen Evan; Port Reading, Jose-phine Byleckie; Sayreville, Cath-erine Schaeffer, Helen Wilus;South Amboy, Theresa Matron-golo; Woodbridge, Mary Gyurics.

Serve At Uiheri

The ushers were as follows: Isa-belle Mola, Jane Rosmarosy, JeanChodkowski, Perth Amboy; MargeProkop, Carteret; Dorothy Hu-dak, Port Reading; Ethel Simon,Woodbridge; Helen Connis, JeiuiSieracka, South Amboy.

The complete program was asfollows: Ecce Sacerdos, Holy Trin-ity Sodality Chuir; Ave Maria,Holy Trinity Sodality Choir; Liv-

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chooie.JOHN POPIEL

30 Grant Avenue, CarteretTelephone Ca. 6-S329

ng Rosary; Litany of B. V. M.,Holy Trinity Sodality Choir (whileflowers were offered by attend-ants) ; crowning, Bring Flowersof the Fairest, all Sodalities; Actof Consecration, Rev. Francis P.Gunner, Union Director; EmittcSpiritum, Holy Trinity SodalityChoir; sermon, Rev. Betowski; re-marks, the Moat Rev. William A.Griffin, D. D.; Regina Cocli, GiroGrassi, choir; Pange Lingua, choirand altar boys; 0 Salutaris, till;Tantum Ergo, all; Adoremus-Liui-date, choir; Star Spangled Ban-ner; Star Spangled Banner andHoly God.

The Most Rev. Bishop receivedthe people after the cermonywhich was dedicated for peace andto all in the armed forces fromthe Amboy area. v

Father Rura arm ihe Sister ofHoly Trinity Parish, Perth Ainboy,were in charge of decorations.Sister Mary Gertrude, of St,Mary's Perth Amboy, was incharge of the Living Rosary.

DONALD 1 . HANSON...Insurance . . .

Office: Residence:

P.A, 4-3300 Wo.8-1592-J

al'"! with (toynton Brothers

& Co. uvur S-l yours,

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33 MAIN ST.

WOODBRIDGE, N. J.

WO. 8-0O12

Before you build or remodel see us aboutbuilding materials. We have everythingyou need, and material purchased isguaranteed to last longer, give betterservice, and add to the appearance ofthe building.

All available tizct andg r a d c t at reatonablepricet.High grade cement,' tor-pedo tand and lime. Youtave when you get themat Carteret Buildert Sup-ply inc.Psora, window-framei andmoldings. You can de-pend on the quality of thework.

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CARTERET BUILDERS' SUPPLY, Inc.We Deliver

Phone Cart. 8-5330

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LADIES'$14)9*

&SuCU mA •»Smart Spring Models up to $32.50

Lower Press Prices f$ 3 9 8 $ 5 9 8 $ 7 9 8

NO CHARGE for CREDITftents $10, wless, Alt you want,

NO MONEY DOWN!BOYS' SUITS $ 1 1 9 8

III Leisure( jackets 6,98

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NOVELTY WASH SUITS 1.98 upOveralls 1.69 Polo Shirts 1.00

Girls' Coats 8.50 - Dresses 1.69 m.

PEOPLES186 Smi th ST., Perth Amboy

OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS

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F R I D A Y , M A Y 10, i - ' l

Colonia Newsit

A c a k e - . a l e , i i ' i d e r ; ' ' i e d i r e . ' -l i n n , i f ' h ' 1 M i « " e - P H ! r ; < - i a U y r . e ?! l i n l K l n a M a d ' e n , w i l l In- h e l d t on i n m r . v . a t 2 : * n I ' . M . , ;.t t h e l . i -h r n r v . P r i o r t o !he swlr, l . i e i e wi l lbe ;i c o m p e t i t i o n , with p r i z e ? , f o r ]the bf'«t c u k e . cookie* , in b i s c u i t s ,b a k e d by s r h ' i ' d c h i l d r e n , T h ec h i l d r e n ' - S I T ' i o n will he in r h f l r ? . 1

of | h e Mi*-e"- . l a n e l l y ' l r " nnd J o n ! !S m i t h .

T h e A n i e i <:u: Leifio'i L a d l e - 'Aux i l i a ry - l ' n ' t L'ln met W e d n e - -i|;iv w i t h M r s . f ' h e s t ev ( V e , DoV'-r IRpnd . P l a n s «•,.,•,, m.'nle f o r a jb i r t h d a y - u p j i ' T J i n i e IT . at t h e |1.»• f?i<i.ti l l : i l ' . - w i t h t h e m e n / «KiiesU, Mrs , J a m e s ( ' tn ' r i i l iscl ia i inis in , a - - : - ' ' - d hy Mr- . T h o m u -n. ']] ;m . | M r . Lloyd r ' f - y . I ' i n n ]p lan* w e r e . i l-n m:ide fin- t h e

•l ' i i | ipy c u r d p a r t y May. i!'i. a t t1i"I .el! i»n H a l l . l ' i i " e m w e r e M r s .Adulpi l Kl-t >-i . Ml'h. . ln -eph f i od -Iry,1 Mr^. Hf'il. Mr=. ( u r n d , Mr?,f ' ley. Mr- . Kd'ii ' liid S p c i T t . Mr-..l u i i a i i Obr- 'p t i. .li1'., Mr- . E d w a r dT m - I . ML--. F r a n k Schmn 'e le . M r - .

F r a n k l i n , Mr- , F r a n k Hiecka . Mi ;.J a n i c - < ic-.vl. y ; lml Mi-, ( icor/1 .1

Kayei.• Mi. ad Mrs . Ben jamin T!n>tnp-

pori, A m h e r - t A v e n u e , w i n (fiiest*ill ;i s u r p r i s e p a r l v on t h e i r 3l l thw e d d i n g at i i i ivi-r- iny. T h e p a r t y jwa* a n mined iiy the i r d a u i r h t e r s ithe Misses J u i v mid Alum T h o m p -son. ( iue«t* iiieniile'l Mr . an<lMr«. J o h n Woro ty lc ' i , Michae l |W n r o t y l r o . Mrs. S t i i n h y H e t r e d i i - . jfind Mi -. l!ud"!p!i I-Jinifl'-y. "f t'.'i'1--t c r e t ; Mr. and Mr-. T h c o d o v eT h o m p s o n , "f Rahwliy. ntui Mi1.and Mrs. F n - d S u t t e i . nf Co ln rva . j

— Ml", a n d M i - . J a c o b S: h n e i d - jer and "in.- . RuiHild iirul J H c d v jJ r . , A m h e i - ' Av r ime , -pet i t i h 1

w e e k e n d in Bai lwi l i , X. Y,

. . .Mr- - , f ' l i a ' l c . S r i . . ! , J r . , ,,r

\fl<-s\ S t r e e t , War, h• >•= 1 cL"-: ' " t h e ,f o l l o w i n g i n o n i l n i . " of the ColTce• ' l uh W e d n e s d a y : M . - , f hu t I , 'O l i p h n n t , M i s . Wi l i i nm V ' e i s , M i . .Jam'1 1 . Ti i j ip i i r t , Mr?. F r e d S n t t " r ,Mrs . W i l l i a m ( l i r d i n , nnd Mr<-. J a -cob Rfhi i f - idi ' i .

- M i - - D i a m l i a I ' a t ' i - i nn , N e »Y o r k , s p e n t t h e w e e k e n d w i t h he rIKircnts , M r . a n d Mrs . F r a n k f V -tisfln, f l l e n d a l e R o a d .

— M r . a n d Miv . C h a r l e s S k i h i l i -,sky, H a w t h o r n e Road , w e r e l i ons '

Mr.

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C.J.NewmeyerLumber Co.1697 Elizabeth Avenue,

Rahway, N. J.Telephone Railway 7-2013

Sunday to Mr. ami Mi«Sehiimlel. of Bayonnr. andand Mr«. (ii'iirce Skibnskysnr:, (Jenrifi'. of N<-w»rV.

—Th«» Junior Aimrimn GirlsClub will inert May 2-"i at the Li-brary al 4 IV M.

—Mr. and Mrs, (ienrirc Renter ,Middlesex Ro«d, entertrnnod onSunday Mr. nnd Mr*. William De'-more, of Perth Ambfly,

--( 'pi . Cieiiiye I1. Resetei hnnnriived Rifely in Enghnd, aeeord-iriK to word received iiy his pHi-entu, Mr. nn<l Mrv (Jemye Reseter.Miildl^ex Koad, ,

—Mr.-*. Ruth ONin wn« ^iven afnrrwe# partV by tr(c CtiTri Club,Friday tit the home of Mrs. VivianOlftlen, Inwood Avenue. ;iri<l pre-sented with a traveling kit. Pre1-ent were Mr«. Bernard Day, Mr--.Stanley I.uboiiiecki, Mrs. Theo-dore Kttjuw.o'ki, Mis. Mary Brady,Mrs, William Friiohlieh, Mrs. 0 : -sen nnd Mrs. Otr^ft»n, Mrs. Olsenis li'itviiiK for service in, tne W A f .

—M"r. and Mr,s, .fume- T«(rE»rt,West Stiei't, t'liter'tiiiied MrsTagifiirt's mother. Mrs. ElizabethAbbott, of Uniod Bench, over theweekend,

-Mr. and Mrs, Charle? Keoit,Sr., Bnfiehl Road, were hosts Sun-day to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Scottand children, of Rahway; Mr. andMr?, Harry Oemorjiiiii nnd chil-dren, of Elizabeth; Mrs. IvnrShurpe nnd children- of Merricl,L. I., and Mrs. OharTes Scott, Jr.*und children, West Street,

—Mrs. Willitim Baldwin, Am-herst Avenue, (-ntertained Mr>.James Allen, of Newark, nthincheon Wednesdny.

-—Ei>sis;n .lames ('lirriil, son ofMr*. Jainei (Jimid, Sr., of ^ort'nHill Roatl, has finishe.l his e n u r eat the Marine Hospital, Detroit,and is now awaitinir further ordersfrom the Maritime Commission inNew York.

—Mr. and Mrs, Kdwiird An-derson nnd son, F.dward, Jr., Fuir-view Avenue, were ain-'t? Sotu:-day of Mrs, Jumi^ Rilcy, of Jer-sey fiity.

"_Mr. nnd Mrs. C, E. Frodrriebson, Runnymeilc Road, had dinnerand attended the theatre in NewYork Wednesday.

—Mr. and Mrs. Robert CHassoi1

and daughter, Kuthy, F.nlieldRoad, spent Sunday nt PointPI ea."a n t.

—Philip and Ronald Hnrttercelebrated their fl,ral birthday withu party at their home on Warwick Road Saturday. They anthe twin sons of Mr, and Mrs. EricIlnrtten. Guests included Mislean Ness and children, alsitwins; Mrs. (',. E. Fredericksoiand daughter, June; Mrs. MontKomery Kimbatl and daughterLynn; Mrs. 'Edward Leniftann andaujrhter, Charlotte; Mrs. ClnrkHtnver and children, Ellen andClark, Jr.; Mrs. Donald Murchi;md son, Donald, Jr., all of CoIonia, and Mrs. John Pearson an'Itwins, Anne and Lynn, of UnionMrs. Francis Ramsey and dflughter, Lucy; Mrs. W. L. Russell, amMrs. Ruftis Weeks and datiphtt'illunnie, of Elizabeth.

—Mrs. Elizabeth Madsen, Rutgers Avenue, entertained her sister, Mrs. Rose, Maybury, of Bristol, Pa., over the weekend.

• —Samuel and Charles Nelsolire confined to their home oWood Avenue with illness.

- - M i s s ' Margaret Rcott, WosStreet, celebrated her Uiirteontbirthday Friday with a funnily dinner p-urty at her home.

—Mrs. Edward "Lehniann anson, Eijwanl, Jr., Warwick Romattended the circus in Vew Yorlast wt4k,

—Mr,, and Mrs. Kenneth MeCain, North Hill Road, entertaiiieMrs. Charles P:mlseii,. of Scwareiat (linrier Saturday.

—Mr. and Mrs. Fred Deck-, Amhoist Avenue, entertained on Suiday Mi1, and Mrs, Theodore l i o nyuk and daughter, Carolyn, an'Mrs. Mime Mihalkovits, of Eli/.abi'th, and on Friday entertaincMr, and Mrs. W, M. Postu, oKriiosha, Wis.

—The Patricia Avenue SewinClub enjoyed dinner and, the the;tic in New York Tuesday. Tbo,-atlendinit were: Mrs, Frank Inportico, Mrs, James Chcre^o, Mr.-John Kalk, Mrs, Michael Capu.and Mrs. John Ovcrbcrttur.

—^MisTi Etta. LottJstf Black «<!(.brated her lllth tirthduy at Inhomi! on Putrifia Avenue Situday, with a party, (iuusts incluicd: Anna, Carol and Frank Importico, . Diane tiarofolo, Lillia!Laife, Niirma Sue Ij'wi.i, Juiii

PHOTOGRAPHS OF WORLD EVENTSfind Bernlce Black.

Mr. nnd MM. Herm'nn Brick-well nnd daughter*, ('ntherinc mid.M M . Walter Laidlaw, of K(i«tStreet, sjfpnt a few day* lust weekat Sea-urle Heights.

- -Mr. and Mrs. Sydney fieiuijon, Fairview Avenue, entertainedon Sunday their dnuehtor and soi;-jn-linv, Mr. nnd Mrs. Samuel Vnndorvrrt. of Franklin Park.,

— Mr. and Mr*. Rttssfll FeMkit.West Hill Road, were hosts Sun-day to Mr. nnd Mrs, A. !'. Fcnke'.of Rflhway.

— Mr. and Mr*. James Black.Patricia Avenue, entertained (jn

'Sunday Miss Jn'sepninp I.opeT, nlidJ<i«cph Ainer, of Kliwbeth.

—Mr». S. fj.'-tjtopkrn«, West FliU'Rnad, is spending a few days with'tier son flnd, tlaiinhter in-Inw, Mr,and Mrs. A. L Hopkins, of ('ran-lord. '

—Mr. nnd Mi's. August Fr,i-zier. Arthur Avi>rfue, were host •Sunday to Miss Beatrice Polhit-mus, of Cnlonia, Mrs. I.rna John-son, of Kearwy; (iuntav Berjcer,of liyndhurst, and Fireman l ' f

eortic Flakier, of the Const

Hitler, RoiiimoU Visit 'Atlanti

RE-OPENEDK NI W MANAGEMENT

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Ani teal Napoli Italian Pies

TOM'S PLACEJelty Nani, Proprietor

Hiyhw«y2S Rarltan Townihip, N. J./

The abnre picture won the national (trand prize in the news picturesponsored liv Ihe t1. P. victory waste paper eanfjtnisn. It was en-

tered hy John Mendlrino of the Chicago Sun. Award was a SSOO war bondplus S2IH1 War bond tnr first plare In the East North-Crntral region. Prliewinners were annntinretl hy Llnwoorl I. Noyes, president nf (lie ANPA.

uard.—Mr. and Mrs. Thornton Ueise,Ttiington Avenue, erttertainedi Monday Mrs. Robert Kent,

Newark, and Mrs. Knel le Tar-r and son, John, of East Orange.—Mrs. Charles Ruti, Mrs.

hilip Betti and Miss Mar^e Kur-•ra had dinner and attended tlnreatre in Newark Monday.—Giistiive l.inilstroni, elet'tri-

iin 1/e, Coast Guard. s|K-nt Sun-ay with his parents, Mr, and Mrs.lex Lind.stroni, Berkeley Avenue.

—Mi1, and Mrs, Paskel Men it t,mherst Avenue, Were guests S«t-rday of Mr. and Mrs. Josi';Vnerker, of Phoenix.

—Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mor-?ey, Kdfewood Avenue, enlei-.Ined over the weekend Mr. and

is. Samuel Morifim, of Eliza-

•eth.—Mr. and Mrs. Fret! Newkirk,

.rnherat Avenue, entertained onundny Mr. and Mrs. Frank New-irk and children, of Linden.

—Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pol-amtls, Florence Avenue, wereosts Suniiay on the latter'? birth-ay. Guests included Mrs. Theo-ore Polhamus, of Rahway; Mrs.

Betty Philips, of \Voodbrid|?e; and

r. and Mrs, Chttrles Lucas, andMr, and Mrs. Edward Hughes asui

hildren, of Colonia. .

—The Colonia Civic Improve-ment Club meet. toni<rht lit K/clock at the Inman Avenue Hall.

Charles Olinhitnt, Jr., who IFK the Casey Jones School

of Aeronautirs at Rome, N. Y., \*a few days this week

with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.Charles Oliphunt, of West Street.

—The Ladies' Auxiliary of tin-;Volunteer Fire Company, District12, met Monday with Mrs. Gene-,vieve Polhamus, Florence Avenue,jFinal plans were made for a cardparty May 2G, at the Inman Ave-nue Hall. Three new memberswere admitted, Mrs. Blanche.

., Mr.s. Loretta Lucas and.Mrs. Anna Guerrero. The nextmeeting will be at the same place,Juno f>. j

-—Girl Scout Troop No, K> metTuesday' with Mrs. Fred Suiter.Ainherst Avenue, with the leader,Mrs, Charles Skibinsky. Tentativeplans were discussed for a tea andbitnaar next month, for which thescouts are. iTHk'injr articles ofhandicraft,present wereWeber, Lorraine Mapps,and Marie Slitter, and Margaretand Patricia,Scott.

Rail Kcv Loss Perils Honan Province

HONANVI

C H IICHANG

Eleventh-hniir inspection tours of the vast Axis cnaslal de'enae* known a s Gefmanv ^^are beinc made by Marshal Rommel , arcordlnu to news dlspatehes, which »»y that Hitler It,, „ ,^*"pre-lnvasion vis i ts ." Kommel Is reporletl making day-by-day lours of arean shown on tlir- ,i,, n*\provides a general picture of the coastal fortress. Broken line Indicates lerrltdry referred |,, , *drfrnse none." Swastikas indlr.tte points which have been mentioned i * "Rommel ' s comm,,,, , , .^^

Reconditioning Program Reclaims Woum

I'wo critical situations face China as Jap drives along the I'cipiiiR-Hankow railroad (1) have resulted in the taking: uf Clicngchow \'i),both key points on the north-south line. As the map show-:, Cheng-flhow is on the northern rim of the Honan province, a great food-rnisingtrea. From Chengchow the rail line cuts across Chinese territory (indi-cated by dark areas). * ,

Pegging a Strike at a Jap Pillbox

Canol refinery is openedsupply oil for Alaska.

• * *«: j * . at ^ B

The fiinelion of the E n g l a n d General hospi ta l at Atlantic City . ti. J., is t h e reeoiiilitinnncent soldiers and (inkers before being sent baek to duty. In picture nt lop, Sergt . Vic I.K •timial I'GA champion (1!)4:J) instructs a c l a s s , using golf c luhs for e x e r c i s e s . Lower ln( lboth wounded in Sicily, e x e r c i s e on the pul leys . E a c h was rec ip i en t of the P u r p l e Heart .mil mlilions. Circle: Sorgl . Sam G o l d m a n of Cleveland, Ohio, leads a c l a s s of soldiers in nbdomin,1 '\M

Kings and Queen of Health 'Fasliiim Null

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A Jap pillhox has hecn located on Bougainville island, and Scrgt.Charles JI. Wolvcrlon of the 37th division sticks out his tougue as hetakes aim before letting a grenade fly to its target. These are two ofthe soldiers who beat baek Jap counterattacks in the Empress AugustaHay area in March, taking a toll of about 7,000 Jap dead. ^

Seabees Open Ice Cream Parlor

Miss Mnwooil i;'-'belle, who liolili II!

As one of the prelinilntrifs uf Hmtllli day, the hc»lthlcit"boy and girl ; Cotton," slioiu ^irmn lite Children's Aid society's city wide renter* (New York) were ' Eleanor Kui^i'ulieliiiM-n and crowned -at the society's west-side renter. And here they j fashion show in ^are (left to light) with nurse Odalovich. Viaaco Cardoza, 5'i , king; j Sttta l i wade "i 'Maiie ItnnuuiM, !>'.•, queen; Hilton Douglas, 6, king of Negro children. ; of w»r lionris ami

Floods Sweep Mississippi Rivei Valley WAC Swum'1

Destined for the scr ip heap becnuse mauy of its p u t s wire worn outand could not be replaced, an Ice c;r«»m manufacturing unit of Guadal-canal WAS tmlvtged and put in order by s> naval conslruutlon battalionMud now is turning out ice cream twice a week for Isi-abeee and themarine unit to which tbt-y are attached. ,

FluOtlil have bi-ru sweeping the Misbiswp,,! l ivn- - at an all-lime high In the Kt. I.uuls

wlih the

r?." * '1

" 0 . I. J^1" '"

member of,tin- u

Md tkirl *>'• '" 'worsted oi»*«>r'|jl 'oMoers of t h c " ' i

111']

SuJ.t, »1

Page 5: Mepenbent-ieaber - digifind-it.com · WAR BONDS Mepenbent-ieaber YourWarilond investment I* ... Must Ac-lown Land Grant lake Idea Possible ... and Commander Michael J. Trainer of

:>;i,nNT—LEADER FRIDAY, MAY 19. Ift-M I'AiiE FIVf

Club Organized;President

l ; l | i i ; K A i t r w

tn pro-Inb

• I I - . " w « s

:i,|,.r| by Mrs. K. L.•til, the. new unit ini!i,. Vational Fi'd-

.nicn's Clubs.i_. nil1 Mrs. Andrew,, r , president; Mrs.i i-cn, ii'oKsurpr aiii|.j•IH-.I. wcrctury.

"•ublic Librarylub's project:

]|;tus !c>- make :i y's fuiulnmcnta

|.,ce

Jnejter also is involved, Cap-•"in Ef'fin saiil, I,, tho rnhlicry ofh* C.l(iv(<r|i'iif l)n:, . r . where, u'c-'ompBnicii by Peterson ;iml Tom-o, Uiey h m k r ope,, ., ,-iK!ir>tt.o

machine and threw pi,.s ;in<l cakesi»t each other

Yesterday, on being •questioned

the case at that time and wereunder the impression that Judj<e. j thRrnwn had insulted the town as awriol«,"

Recorder Brown said that h<-

other petition is just the op-

second t ime, th<- buy;mil led jbrpakitijr into tinFroH Knufmnn on TisdThr«> (runs taken (here

also tid-homp of

ile Place,were re.

_. nes of i,, |... r,,r tli

Kntrl l will he hostess! i i i j r .1:1 M i i y 2.">

Hamilton, of the

i.in'st speaker .

(land Motheri,.,l from Page 1)

,iiy Ihiit time did11, H'e more of him,, ,h:ii' buy nnd you

,, i,| nf him, just usMi-f t>( inn' only sor.,

, r i c as a pilot in,i;,i |nst his life ini, iAbcr, MM 1. Alil i he was 2 1 . He•i: i and was n «oo,lii-init II tfrtiipshot of

\i- you .-nine idea

: l izard-; fliul the.ii ycuir bny will rc-

VOI1."

. r

il fn.m Pttgp 1).. KUin's to Soot thn, j • - for "«m«ke».

, \v,i> pla\i inc fii\ tha i d thitt Haran

i he ears, found', d it. .luejrei thel

.' ih -Marten In pla1 ' • ! ] • , and droppe

in the ci«{ar. T h e y.i!,,] s tarted d o w n

•II-. They reached.vi,i k- when they

. : iiui-r and saw1 mil the bllllilillE

.1:1 home.

, i and Haran lire said:;cd breaking into

!!'•• Viuit KxchanKt',ihei-e ihey cut openin,I then left with

liianue, The School-:• land wn> also en-

• '•! '-i - - l a t u i . by lav-i 'i, Tnere thcy_ took

i • and -pilU'd pa in! .

covered by the police. They alsoadmitted attempting ui enter theAndiascik store on Amlxiy Avenue.

The Klein fire was one of thibiggest in the Township historynnd destroyed irrepkiPiible mate-rials, including -trucks, cars, amhay and ruin committed to e.u.<tome.rs. I'iremen workvil Ion* iivtothe nijsht nRhtiiiK -l.hr stnbbornblaze.

They Also Serve(Continued from Pa^e. 1}

Mew Jurney Volunteer Fire Chiefsssociation.Under Mr. I)iunhiich"s direr

•ion, the various lire cbmnaniw inhe-Township trained auxiliary'

memliers. Special courses wereffiven in fi(fhtin(t fire bombs, so to-day, should an emergency arise,the Township will he able to cufron reserve trained manpower tofiifht fins, Mr. Dambuch has yetto miss u Defense Council meet-nj{ nnd *ias actively co-oporated

with other departments, Includingthe Salvage Committee, He haKheaded a group of firemen from.he second ward who have workeduntirin«ly in the box cars at thefreight yards during wuste piipeicollections.

.In addition to his duties on theDefense Council, Mr. Dumhach isalso ii member of the local WaiPrice nnd Rationing Board. Allmembers nf the Hoard arc volun-

R and serve without pay. TheFords man serves as chairman ofthe tire panel. 'He passes on theissuance oT certificates for thepmchiise of lire, bicycles, automo-biles and rubber boots. He hasanil is giving a great deal of timeto his rationing board duties, ap-pearing there the two evenings aweek the hoard is open and oneafternoon a week to meet person-ally with applicants und other

j h u to catch up on "the bookwork,"

'Joe" is also prpsidont of thrLions ('lull of Fords, an activeservice club which sponsors a HoyScout troop and has helped insponsoring the honor roll in thatsection of the Township and aid-ing in the St. John's First AidSqunci drives.

Recorder Brown said that h<-!has had numerous complaints of"l>a& fence quarrels from theIselin section lately. "He tfhoweda reporter of this newspaper twopetitions from Is&lin, each con-cerned with a principal in an evi-dent "batk fence quarrel."

"As I said at the meeting to-n'Kh<"" •"•' said, "there is olto-

too much liirhtin*some o f the residents of Iselinand it hns to bp stopped."

Big Contingent(Continued from Pn|je 1)• i t UIII .R ftcuue t | u a i i c i . | \ ^ i i i i i r i i i u r u I I U I I I I K|(t; 11

One petition »y» that the com- i Testa, !>12 Miiple Avenue, Plain-ainant is a fine woman and the I field; Rtlwnnl B. Trio, 40(1 (!rnu'<

Mill Road, Wi>o<|hWdfr.r: Royce V. |Willis, H',7 Jni'ksiin .Vniuc, Rn-tan Township: Krnrst (i. Whintui.02 Willry Street, Wonilbridit'1;Alex Wishncv, Jr., -I!.' WoodbindAvenue. Kords; John J. Zelenknvitu, SMI Kiiip (Jeoixv Rnait,Fords.

To SffTe WitK N y y

The f(db)*injt menywill reportfor active duty with the Siivy:

Ivnu I,. A II demon, I'rt'seottj Turnpike. KFI> 7, Riitway; An-! thony Avnston. HI) Col^y Street,

i W'oodhridife; .John Bniby. (onpiji; Avcnui', I."elin; Anthony ,1. Ha:ji'rllotm. M'\> I, Rnhwsy; Pet."i Reiii, 111 Hollistov P]«i'e, Ford-.;

Andrew J. Fuesak, .'r.. 21 Wavi"-ctest. Avenue, Linden; Horirwn'

SChrintensen, -13 Liberty Street.I Kurds; Philip Den BU'yker, 3rd,j New Dover Rond, Colnniu; NIIV-111111 E. Gt'iharcl, MiddleiK'x A v

! mie. Iseliii; Henry Clroiss, 12"iI Ridley Avemlt', I sell n; ,'oseph T.Hnklar, 191 Strawberry Hill Ave-

i mie, Wnorlhridgc; Ht'nry I.ee Hill,

'.Mr. Smith Park Dwr-, Won,Iliridue; (ieuiTc t" Hi'dle. 'J'.MlVI l<li«<tn Avellile, |l vill(f(oll ; JlDK-tHolovncko . I" 1 y. 11!: t A v r i i n - .

Also, SUnlcy Kmnas. S" Hobert IStreet, Sewaren; Frank J, Liptftk,:119 fjrove Street, Perth Amhoy:Ale)tiin<W Luras, Kl MadisonAvenue, Avenfrl; t'onrr.i) C. Mil-.!er, 2 LtvingHton Avoinie, Avenel;!

Alexunder N'ufy. Tifi HiRhlandAvenue, KeBnlicy; John Onuckit,

j Iselin Boulevnrd, Iselin; Oharle<

V Polersii".. 1 10 SrboHri \vtti\Wooilhridtfi"; -I"hn Pfi-ifier. ^fil^ Florida (in.vc H-ad, PfrthAllllHiy: J"l:n A. Poiynvko, 29 \.\\-Hnn Street, Ford."; Kenneth A.Up(Jinitx«"r, "i!!.'. W«t»nn Avenue,Wi*odhrldjrf; Robert .). Short, \Berkley Court, Iselin; Jnneph Sli-vinsky. 3S William Street, Ford*;Frank S. Smnk, tit Nr'v Rrum-wick Avenue. Hopel»w»; John W,Stalaji. :i!i Flood Street, Wood-bridge; G«or«e Ruff, Jr., ftS3 LIB1

<M'n Avenue, Wimdhridxc

in I lie South

|l lands . . . its

KS I wo to one.

"<IUT than grass'so I<J4<slacks of

! vim can have;ilmost any colorHe will kick.

T . . . lighterii'HiT and s ince!1^<I several pairsiHe summer's, out| hoiild buy them'"i'*1 thi1 .stock is

wnniiin to know aiM|K w;/u'i) she .seen

•Ini ' s S lacks

'••ir> to $12 .50

All W o o l

''lire ,hifk«U$12.50

iS &.SONSI 9 ' Smith Street

'Hi Amboy'••'• a«'d Sat. Evening*

Greiner Paces• (Continued from Page 1)

Wajd 3, District 1, Michael P.Susso and Angelina Coppola; Dis-tri(t 'i., Joseph Ihi-.s.sy and kriedaI*, (irnde; Distric1 :t, (ieoige S.Luffbarry ami AniiiyWyckoff; Dis-trict 4, Wade Brown and ElhiI.iuii; District .", Kobcrt BurtonH«d Mary Slivk-u.

In the various conti.'S.ts thoTownship voted as follows;

Democratic: For Sheriff, Nehi-korn, 24it; Jai|Uin. "n. For coro-ner, Bongiovi; '.)'<; Jamison, 1G4;Costello, 1H.>; Kain, f\; Flynn,I(i4. Freeholder: Ftrown, 28">;Campbell, 272; Gadck, 2<J«; Kit?.-Patrick, 10(1.

Republican: Congress, E'dtoln,•ISfl; B;ird.-ley, 117; l.'iiitcd SUiti sSenator, Smith, -tlil; \V'i(trcicli,2"..

Front(Contiiuu'd from Pa(!« U

ml. lunifliaye had been usednth sides. 1 cautioned them

.i-lling them they Would have tonodify their way.of |fviii(?. I or-

ed them not t» talk to eachel or ahout each othur. Justhe was limviriK the court room,

;hw man (pointing to Duffy) saidif old lady, 'I ought to punch

ou in the nose.1 1 think he ou^ht\&' ashamed of himself for talk-

h(,' t« HH 80-year-olJ woman in;hat inannen" '

Reid InterruptsIt was at this point that Com-

nitteeniaii Keid broke in the con-versation and declined that ini.Htimulion he never heard a morejetty complaint, that "we cur-;ainjy have more important things

tnke care of these days."Duffy, however, claimed that

was "lijud shown uiItmlin" White the "people, of fee-Im were just as tfood as those wholived in other sections."

Afte)1 the session, members ofthe Iselrn Civic Association, ofwhich Duffy is a member, staid thelatter had hmufht the matter -upat thair ineelini-, "but they didn'1

Judge ii town's version

E US FORKi Loans,

|(1 Interest Rates,i"»l>l Service.1 Htnluction Plan,

s Accountsl d.

*''*'-v lJttyintf2Vi%1'''" Auuum.

Roosevelt Saviogsloan Association

Cooke

UNCLE SAM SAYSTURN THAT OLD CAR

INTO WAR BONDS

FOR VICTORYWE WILL BUY

ANY CARANY YEAR OR MODEL ANPPAY YOU A GOOD PRICE

For Quick CashResults CallUNCLE JQEWO. 8-0149

SPEEDWAYAUTO SALES Co.

823 ST. GEORGE AVE.Woodbridge

DWdtid Soft $189

$72.50Vtaio.it $69.95

Frnm Onr GIFT SHOP

l.irrui'liortr Giudle Mn

IT'S KOOS BROS. FOR

MODERNModern at its best . . , with color, comfort and

prestige. It features pure and simple linos

(you call he sure it will he good design 20 yearB

from now). Dramatic colors combined with

pale natural woods, or shiny dark finishes.

i£ loungy chairs, sleek and suave for all their

comfort, Tables cannily designed for nniltiple use.

Here's, a representative collection of thjis

refreshing furniture. Come, oh and ah, at the

whole fascinating array in our Modern Shop.

, It's a toss-up which will catch your interest

first . . . the beauty or the low prices!

Divitlfd Sofa$229.50Co<.-klail Tuhle

$42.50

O p m JO A.M. to 9 P.M.

(Closed Sundays)

Budget Terms

KOOS BROS.Si. Georges Ave. Wgluvay 27 Ruhwuy, N. J

Ukck iHedroani Suite uhhTwin Heii. fr iii«c«.

Page 6: Mepenbent-ieaber - digifind-it.com · WAR BONDS Mepenbent-ieaber YourWarilond investment I* ... Must Ac-lown Land Grant lake Idea Possible ... and Commander Michael J. Trainer of

PAGF STX FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1044INDEPENDENT-!,

Here And There:lit theI ftiouulit 'IK1 |ini(fram

dedication of thr Woodhri'lireHonor Roll plnqiip WHS m««t im-pretsive , . . Dy thf way, if youwish to purchase extra souvenirprograms they may lie obtainedfrom Mikr Trainpr at the townhall . . . ( imp Bird is trying to(solve thf niystery of the ili»app^arancc <if his fnvoritr lotteropener . ; . If y«u have any base-hall or Softball equipment you nnlonger USP, your Navigator wouldbe fflad to K''( them for th'.' sol-diers stationed fin StrawberryHill . . .

Buy War Bondl

Decorated For Courage

h Th^Mailbag:Just received ;t copy <if "Fed

erated Spectator." employes' news-paper at the American Smeltingand Refining Co, , , . In it was ajing-lo l>y Kthcl Jaoobson and I ampassing it on to you;

Old MacDonald RatireiOffl MacDoniild had a farm—K-i

E-i, 0 !With a pro rate here and a price

freeze their;Here a quota, there a quota;

everywhere a questionnaire.Old Mnclfonald had a farm—K-i

E-i, 0 !He had a farm, hut he had no

seed,No tractor parts, no hands, no

feed;With a "don't plant this" and a

"fine if you dare,"And a (iovernmont blank to lie

filled with care—And they always want at least one

spare—Here a form, a ration there, and

everywhere a questionnaire.Old MacDonald had a farmAnd the auction is being held at

two p. m,, Sunday, three milesout on Highway 2W,

Bain or shine.Buy War Bondl

S|ft. Ernest A. Farka*WOODBRIDGE — Sergeant

Farkai, 23-year-old FlyingFortreu tail gunner, ion ofMn. Francet Farkai, of 447Pearl Street, ha> received theAir Medal Award with two OakLeaf Ctuitcri in recognition ofhit "courage, coolnen and •Will"displayed during many EighthAAF miaiioni over Germanyand Occupied Europe.

Sergeant Farkai, a chemicaloperator1! aitittant before join-ing the army, attended Wood-bridge High School. He haitaken part in recettt^EighthAAF attacks on many of themoit ttrongly-defended target!imide Germany and againstenemy installation! in Franceand Belgium. He entered the•ervice on' December 26, 1942and hai been oversea! sinceFebruary of this year. He ii abrother of Motorcycle OfficerJoseph Firkas.

Two of triplets are horn inauto ,third in hospital elevator.

Woodbridge Notes

—The Methodist Youth Fellow-ship of Middlesex Counly will holda rally tonight at 8:30 o'clock inthe Sunday School room of theMethodist Church, here. Rev.Robert C. Howe, of Jersey City,will speak on the camp confer-ences to be held in Blavrjtown inAugust. (

—Mr. and Mr*. Elmer Prall andson, Donald, and Mr*. CarolineF'etersen, of St. Georjfe, S. I., werethe Sunday guests of Mr. and Mr3.Clarence T. Petersen, of Ridge-]dale Avenue.

Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Chase,formerly of Tiwlalc Place, arenow residing at 577 RahwayAvenue.

-Mr. and Mrs. Russell L<Hvhhave moved from Rihway Avenueto Ridgodale Avenue. '

—Mrs. Kenneth S. Manning, ofRidgedale Avenue, is entertainingher mother, Mrs. Hattie Austen,of Keyport,

—CapUin and Mr«. L. RobertHeath have returned to their Homein Upper Darby, Pa., after visit-ing her parents, Mr. and Mrs.Ernest C. McfTett, of ProspectStreet. ,

—Mrs. Grace V. Brov-n has re-turned to her home on GreenStreet after a few days' visit withMrs. Roland Williamson, of Phila-delphia.

—Miss Adelia Fox, of Rock-away, is visiting her sister, Mrs.John Short, of Grove Avenue.

St. James' CrowningCeremony On Sunday

WOODBRinCK-Miss RobennSullivan will serve as crou-ner inthe annual May rrnwniiijr rites ofthe Sodality of St. James' Churchto be held Sunday evening at 7:Hilo'clock at the church.

Rev. John EgHti, pastor of St.Andrew's Church, Avenel. willpreach the sermon, Mi's MarionSullivan, sister of the crowner.will be the personal attendant andthe flower girls will hb ChicBill me and MaTy Lou, K rating.

Howard Trumble will servo n>crown bearer land Julia Ehleit a-train bearer. Other attendant.,will bo Miss Florence Arwsy, Mis>Victoria Peace, Miss .ElizabethPesce.

In Grand Musical Hit•T-

MALE - FEMALEHELP WANTED

CLASSIFIEDOPERATORS WANTED

To work on children's drenea.

Steady work; one week

don with pay; food pay. Apply

Carterat Novelty Dress Company,

oyrtairs, 652 Roosevelt Ararat

Carteret. N. J. .Statement

availability required.o1

• HELP WANTED—MALE «

HELP WANTED

Tidbits:Sergeant Wilhelm Brown is hack

on duty at police headquarter.'after a two-weeks' vacation . .The Roy Andersons will he hoststo General Ostnmi when he coniesto Woodbridge on Memorial Day. . . John (Fords) Kish is buyingcigars as the son and heir has at-rived, Mrs, Kish is the formerPat Lei.scn, of drove Street,Woodhridge. . . . Mrs. Owen S.Dunigan, accompanied hy her son,Dick, has (;one to Rhode Island towelcome her new grandson, Terry.• « t

Buy War Bonds

Newsettes: IThe cockatoo at the Black Cat

Inn seems to have an aversion toWomen. His head feathers standup on edge if a woman goes nearhim . . . Sorry to learn that Eliza-beth Andrews has accepted .in-other position. Woodbridge HighSchool will miss her . . . One ofWoodhridge's well-mannered sub-debs is Arline Slotkin . . . Thepond at Ihe fire house is no more.It was eliminated as a mosquitobreeder . . . There is a. lot of talkaround town that wings should beadded to the Woodbridge plaqueto include (lie whole Township. . . Wonder when a plaque will boerected, if ever, for those whoparticipated in the first war . ,

Buy War Bondl

Operator 13 Reports:A letter arrived the, other day

from Louis Varyu. He thinks thRed Crows is do in;; a swell joloverseas . . . A large number oTownship men received the 1Aclassifications this' week , . . Mrs,Jujius "Blake is due home soon .Benee Hawryliw looked very smarin her bright yellow turban Sunday . . . Evelyn (nee. MtLemlWarhurst and family are. back inWoodbridge . . . Andy Desmond ivictory gardening again so politicwill have lu take a buck susit fo

Buy War Bands

Late Mail:Received a note from William

C. Reid, KM 2/c (Jim Ki-id',>on). He said that he enjoys getting the newspaper and passing iaround to other Township boywho may be on the ship with himwhen it arrives . . . Bill wrote inpart: "1 have been following jioimof tlje, articles written in retellissues and I might, saw that sumpeople don't know how well oilthey really are". 1 can't write anyatoriea of heroic ileiids, us I •have•never done any, but 1 would likto say thai 1 feel people tihouliput away their pt-Uy complaintand thank God they are alive aiiiable to live in a wonderful couii

• tey like -ours. Some of my obser-yatioiiji of how, "utters live- wi

' make anyone thinli twice of howmuch they have to be thajikful'forYou may quote, me on this if yotare to, us I mean every word, oit."

Buy War Bonds

CIML ARRIVES

WOODBRIDGE—Mr. mid MrsWilliam Wedemeyer, of U43 Rahway Avenue, are the parent* oi

ja, daughter, Mary Ann^.bor•cently at the Middlesex Get)"4 Hospital, New Brutwwlpk.

BOOKKEEPER

OFFICE GIRLS

CASHIERS

HOSTESSES

WAITERS.

WAITRESSES

SODA DISPENSERS

PANTRY WORKERS

PORTERS

WHKKKNDK, PAItT TIMM ANDSTKADV. PI.KAKANT WORKINGCONDITIONS. MUST RK OVRIlIS YKAUH. APPLY AT ONC'K,AVAII.AHIMTV STATKMKNTNKKI1ED.

HOWARDJOHNSON'S

Route 25

Woodbridge, N. J.

LABORATORY TESTERS,

MEN Arp WOMENInterviews weekdays 9:00 a. m.

to 4:00 p. m.

Ask for Mr. Thurn.

Essential workers must presentavailability certificate.

Bus lines 54 and 62 stop atdoor.

BARBER ASPHALT COR-

PORATION

BARBER, N. J,

MALE HELP WANTED

RAILROAD WORKAn EBBentlal Industry

Positions Open For Men andWomen

BRAKEMEN FIREMENMACHINISTS

MACHINIST HELPERSBOILERMAKERS

BOILKRMAEtEK HELPERSLABOIIKRS CAR INSPECTORS

CAR rtEPAIUERBCAR REPAIRER'S HELPERS

CLEANERSFREIGHT HANDLERS

SIGNAL HELPERSSIGNAL MAINTAINERS

MOItSE OPERATORSLINEMEN WATCHMEN

READING COMPANYApply B. WYLE, Manager

Port Reading TerminalPort Reidinff.'N. J.

Those Engaged in War ContractWork Need Not Apply

High School Boy(over 16}

to fill lample order*Full or part time

Excellent opportunity to learntextile chemical bmineii

Good wagei

HART PRODUCTSRidgedale Ave.

Woodbridge, N. J.

Statement of availability ret;>""

Iselin GroupAirs Complaint

WOODHKIIHiK--It W11S "l*("

li,, Nipht" at the Township Com-

mittee meeting Monday, judRinp

from the mmfher of enmpluints

Betty Grablc, Victor Mature mid .lack Oakir in the colorful mu-litil tomrdy ui Hawaii, "Son; of the Itlandi," coming to th*Cre»cent Theatre for four dayi, itarting today.

Iselin PersonalitiesBv Jean Duff

— Mr. ;IIHI Mi>. F i c i l Hupp a

iKliters, .him1 and It;iili;vra,

Hillside; .Miss Klla Huphrs ofNorth Arlington; Mr. ;\<)<[ Mrs, ,1.

anil daughter. Joan of Irv-

A.

-Spt . Wiint'ii Aquila is vi.'ithis pa rents, Mr, and Mrs. A

Anuiln of Green Sti-rel. SgtA-UiiUi is stationed in Texus.

ly Place; Mrs. Kililh RoltKdward Boltc. Star Sticet wn1'1

the Sumhiy dinner piirsts of Mr,ainl Mrs. Russi'l Furiv, SonnraAvenue.

-Lt. Milton Ashley spent a

—Mr. and Mrs. Jamr* Nolan '

t Newark, were Sunday (tin'sto ">""'ijMr. und Mrs. Joseph Cultinnne.

Star Street.

—Seaman Edwaid L. Rrecti ha.'returned to' his base in NorthCmolina after upending a week's

n l l l (l t . l.y membern of the

Civic Association.First, a representative of the.

jrinnp wanted to know why thepromised traffic li(tht at the cor-

d O kmised traffic l(t

nor of Coi'reja Avenue and OakT,,,,. Road had not matcriali/.i'd.

('onimissioiio;- W e s l e yM'ii replied thwt ths1 chiefv everything possible to

seeine a rnntrol unit hut the WarI'ri)dlietion up to this. d:itr 1ms ro-fuFed to (,'iv|1 H"1 Township a pri-

P

had

know what, they ;|1,what they accompli i,

A fourth <-oiii|,]:i.,an open foundation ,'nue, which the .,,,.,'was a'hazard and ;, i,for mosquitooa, | | ,j<the property, whirl,process of forccln ,|sold to one of the ]h

in filled In . The ,„,ferrcd to the

ority Irt purchase the unit.Then the s p o k o s m i t t v asked

When the roads on Cnrreja Avo-nue and the

ads jHill section would he

repaired, anchHirmiin of r»l

ll s e c t i nWilliimi K.

chHirmiin Works Com-mittee informed him that 11 "res-olution has been passed tonightnskiilK for bids on the work. We'•have 287 miles of mails to he re-paired and only nine old men todo it. Wo just can't do everything

Betrothal I, AnOf Amboy Girl, E.j

WOODBRim'iKiiip Hooker, of p,Petth Amhoy, alii:.Ka(fometit of her I,T ' H o o k e r , tu IvhH. 1/e U. S. Con,,Mr. and Mrs, Juin,Crampton Avenmheen set for the »>,

The hridi'-ld-biof St. Mary's 11* nAmhoy and is cniprotary in llic lawcolder Arthur ItnStreet, Seaman MiiBte ofund prior to t'lH.W''.i« employed atNational Hank.

HIGGIN3-MACK

WOOOBHIIHIKMack, of 'Mr. Simhas announced tin

leave with his parents, Mr. andE A

pMi'?. E. L. Brecn, Middlesex Av\-

-—Mr, and Mrs. Clarence Rowerand family spent Sunday in As-hury Paik.

—Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stccbei.Fiat Avenue, entertained relative-from Newark, Sprinisfii'ld und

: York Sundav.

HELP WANTED MALE

BOY wanted to mow lawn once :iweek. 7H Grove Avu., Wood-

brid(je,.N. J. 5-1 ii"

PUBLIC NOTICE

SOFT CRABS just arrived at Rip-pen's Sea Food Restaurant, !1!21

Maple St., Perth Amboy, N'. J.

brief fifrlough with hisMr. and Mrs. Milton Ashley, C o r - i n u e

reja Avenue,—Mr. and Mrs, Chf.rle? O'Noil

and family, Star Street, \isited inElizabeth Sunday.

—The W o m e n ' s RepublicanClub met with Mrs. Funny John-son, Trieste Street, Monday. Thodark horse prize was wun by Mrs.George Deireiihanlt. H i l l c r f s t ] —Lt. Walter J-iwoHd spent »

The next and final meet- weekend furlough with his par-ing will be held nt the home of lpnts , Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Javvor-Mi's. Georjre Woods, k i Guardiaj ski, Concja Avenui1.Avenue, June 16. I —Mr. and Mrs. Leo ChrUten-

—Pvt. Gloria Free? of the W A C s e n and family, Hillcrcst Avenue,spent a weekend furlough withippjut Sunday- in Wari'tnwn.her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry | —Mrs. Herman Hess Jr., of Si,Fries, Oak Tree Road. Pvt. Frees j Louis, Mo., and Mi's, Mary Cn--i1- stationed at Camp Shanks, N. Y. | sidy, of New York, spent the week-

at once.Criticize* Forrman

Michael Lewis, of Chain o1 HillsRoad, was the next to complainabout rosnls. He declnrcd that "><' i SHinncl"foremen didn't know what his | | , . | m , .un . Themen were doitiR." Mayor AujrutlF Greiner took exception to thatstatement, siiyinir "the road fore-

engineers certainlyman and

i n l m l . , | Saturday.

Production ,.fdo expected to doiih

HELP WANTED MALE

MEN wanted, 16 or over. Parttime work, Morninps or after-

noons. EssentiaJ war work. No ex-perience necessary. M. D. Valen-tine & Bro. Co., Woodbridgc, N. ,1.

5-12, lit

HELP WANTED—MALE-PEMALE

WIRE AND CA^LEthe

ARTERIES OF WAR

Commands and Messages Are1

The Life Blood of the

Army and the Navy . . .

HELP USMake the WireAnd the CableNecessary To

Transmit Them1 No one should be idle now.

There's a job for everyone at . :

GENERAL CABLENo Experience Necessary

Come in and Talk it Over

General Cable Corporation.»» . . _ .26 Washington Street, Perth Amboy

EMPLOYMENT OFFICE HOURS:

Mon., Wed., Fn. 8:00 A. M. to 8:00 P, M.

Tues., Thuw. 8:00 A. M, to 6 'Mf: &

Sat - 7 l : 0 0 A . M.to'SsOOP.Ji."

BB1NQ PB^O*1 OK C1TI8EN8HIP

WANTEDWILL PAY 5c a pound for clean

rags. Independent-Leader, 18Green St., Woodbridge, N. J.

—Mrs. G. Grogan, r"i:it Avenuvisited her nister, Mrs, !). Dowlinof Silver Bench, N. Y., Monday.

end with Mrs. Herman Hess Sr., ofHillcrest Avenue.

—Mrs. Clara Grapel and grand-—Mr. and Mrs. Burton and son, | son Allen are spending a few day.-,

of New-York, are visiting Mr. an'i with Mrs. Thomas r^unc, KennedyMrs. Frank Steelier, Fiat Avenue. Place.

Sewaren Personal^By Mn. Burni, 490 East Avenue •

PUBLIC NOTICERippen'i Week-End Specinll

Shad Koe platter <jf>c; shrimp bllie-plate (55c.

r>-ui

MOVINGLEPPER'S STORAGE — Crating

and shipping. Dependable localand long distance moving. 283Madison ATC, Perth Amboy, N. J.P, A. 4-2318. 3-17 tf.

SEWING MACHINESWILL BUY any make sewing ma-

chine. Highest prices paid. Allmake machines' repaired.Cole Sewing Machine & Vacuum

Cleaner Service13ft Colfax Ave.,

West Rowlle Park, N. J.Ro. 4-0512

3-31t.o 4-21* tf

—Mr. and Mr.s. H, D. Chirk, ofCliff Road, spent several days inSouth Hadley, Mass., where theyattended the graduation exercises«f their daughter, Miss Mary Con-stance Clark, from Mt. Holyuke.College.

—the SewaVen P. T. A. is hold-ing its annual Spring rummagesale this afternoon am! tomorrowmorning in the school basement.Mrs. William A. Vincent, general•chairman, is beinj; assisted by allmembers of the association.

—Mr. anil Mrs." Harry O'Goii-nor and daughter, Alice Mae, ofEast Avunue, and Helen Clark, ofCliff Road, spent Sunday with Mr.s.Mary Terry, (if l'assaie,

-r-Miss Virginia Nik-kenisr. ofClainlield, visited friends in Sewaren, Sunday.

—A card party will hv held \»-light at the Land and Water Cluli-

hoBse by the Scwartn RepubliClub, Inc., to establ.sh a charityfund. Harper A. .Sloan, chairmanof the Ways and Means Commit-tee, will he in charge and agames will be in play.

—Mrs. A. W. Scheldt, of Hol-ton Street, will be hostess to theSewaren Bridge Club Wednesdayafternoon.

—The final meeting of the Se-waren P. T. A. will be held Tues-day afternoon at ", o'clock in tin-school auditorium.

—Corporal Steven Koprhhas been spending a furlough withhis parents on George Streetreturned to Camp Chaffee, Ark.

PUBLIC NOTICESPECIAL $1,011 fish dinner. Ap-

petizer, soup! choice of maincourse, beverage and dessert.Served every day at Kippcn's

5-1!)

PERSONALSPIRITUAL and clairvoyant mes-sages, 9 A. M, to 6 P. M. Appointrn^nU made.

Rev. E. Kicker02 Main St.

Woodbridgo, N^J..,

FORDSiliVYHOUiE

f O l D l H. J- P. A. 4-MM

TODAY and SAT.

Ann Sheridan • Qennii Morgan

"Shine On Harvest Moon"— Anil —

the War Department prcientt"The Memphis Belle"

in technicolorFri. and Sat. • Chapt. # 6

"THE PHANTOM"

ISELIN—THEATRE—

OAK-TREE ROAD

Phone Met. 6-1279

SUN. and MON.Maria Monttt, Jon Hall in

"A4i Baba and the FortyThieves"

in technicolor /-^.ALl) -r

"Women in Bondage"u. Wlfb —

Gail Patrick - Nancy Kelly

TUES. and WED.Wallace Beery - Marjorie Main

i"

"Hi ¥a, Sailor"— WUu —

Donald Woods, Ely» Knot

An«l4«r K « w , » * . TulipD i y w w a r e to the I j j

TODAY and SATURDAY

Olaen and Johnion

"CRAZY HOUSE"

"The Ghost Ship"

SUNDAY and MONDAY

"His Butler's Sister"— AINII —

"Sing a Jingle"

TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY

"Higher and Higher"— Alw —

"Dangerous Blondes"

/RAHWAY? ' •, • . h A h »V. • -

NOW TO SAT.

Grcer Canon, Walter Pidgcon

"Madame Curie"

The Tint great motion picture ever filmed duringactual air combat.

"The Memphis Belle"In Technicolor

You will live a lifetime

in 40 minute* . . . on a

real raid over Germany.

SUN., MON., TUES.,

Ray Ruth Donald

Milland Huney Criip

"Uninvited"Plui Red Skelton » V

"WhistHnjt in Brooklyn"

STARTS NEXT THURS.

Ann Sheridan

'SHINE ON HARVEST MOON

STATE THEATREWOODBRIDCE, N. J.

' TODAY AND SATURDAYNow Together

Hedy LAMARR . Wm. POWELL in

"The Heavenly Body"Plu. Rei SKELTON in

"Whistling In Brooklyn"SUNDAY THROUGH TUESDAY

., i'THe Desert Song"(in color)

With Dcnnii MORGAN - Irene MANNINGAlso "The Ghost Ship"

With Richard D1X

WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAYi

("LADE'S PfcRTH AMBOY '*;

Jl V

UMUWCONTINUOUS FROM 2 P.M.-rHONt P A «0l0»

f)ITMAf

PASSPORT TO DESTINYwith ELSA LANCHESTER

GORDON OLIVER

4 DAYS STARTING FRIDAY, MAYRED SKI I

Betty Grable

Victor Mature

•Jack Qakie

"Song of the' Utand*"

. T , .» , , Jean R"S""in Technicolor! ^ R u t | l t , t .. *

3 DAYS—STARTINQ lUESPAY, MAY ^

Dorothy Laniour • Dick Powell

"RIDING HIGH"

"TUNISIANVICTOHY"

Page 7: Mepenbent-ieaber - digifind-it.com · WAR BONDS Mepenbent-ieaber YourWarilond investment I* ... Must Ac-lown Land Grant lake Idea Possible ... and Commander Michael J. Trainer of

NDENT—LEADERFRIDAY, MAY 19, 1014 PAGE SEVEN

IIndli Wllll*ni»onM.mli N. 1OT«—Antuit 2. IMS

COMBININGIIIHIIRP I.mflw IIWMI)

'''"• II lilui- ln«l'P*«*«"< (l»miH ,„„ .loiirnal HITCH)I" ; ,., r.,|«nrnal WKH)

.. .MMIPII Rverjr Friday hy theI'liiiilHlilnS Company, Wooclbrldgs, N. .!.

1 UKiinrv, t'reiliHnt; Maxwnll iagnn,' ' , , I'IUVI'PIICO F. Campion) Treasurer;

i;|,;(i()ltV Editor nml Publisher

NKWHPAI'KRI».OO per ; n t In ndT

To English-Speaking PeoplesMinister Winston Churchill, wcl-

|,;mpir(> Premiers to London,, as-•„, ni I hat "We need no longer fear

ilHl face "the most deadly climax!lll(li,l of nations."

iiinvliill said he did not expect thatlir;Lt of war we shall reach n>m-

,lniKiii of all problems that confronti, fi Km])ire and vex mankind," butI,,, iiritish Empire in its collectivel..,nli| put itself solidly on the map

,!,,. ;,|| the watching world realize,i in^clher, woven into one family,., , mpable of solving our common

... ,n full loyalty to the .supreme.,, v. liirh we have drawn the sword."

Mil Kujjlinh leader, unlike somei i rilics of his Empire, here and

. .,-, lines not accept the dire proph-•-,,- Iliiiish Empire is in the process

,::'inii. The manner in which therallied to the cause of the Brit-

, .ii.ihe outset of the war, shouldillusions on this subject any-

Ihe early .lays of 1 lu- war to protect vitalxhipi'iiiK, I he American fleet has success-fully assumed control of decisive waters.I'his means that neither supplies nor rein-ffrcemeiitH can he gotten through in suf-ficient volume In succor isolated JapaneseKarrisons.

In this situation, there is little necessityfor any large scale land operations againstthe trapped foe. Left alone, enemy soldierswill be compelled eventually to starve orsurrender. The process of isolating andstarving msts fewer American lives thanan effort to crush the beleaguered garri-sons by overwhelming assaults on the land.

,i mi l»rief for the British Empire- ullicr nations, has matin mis-•. Miiisly, it tioen not present a pie-

• .-riVdion in all aspects, hut, just, :in> people who compose its con-

tioiis are more closely allied to;:.ri;iKt", culture, ideals and civili-ii;i.i ;niy other people on the face

>lil Uc clear, even to BritisR haters.litiiry, that if successful coopera-

..; [Misitihte between the English-• prnpU's, there is no hope what-i wiiiid, developing in culture and••:'• through peaceful years.i- it necessity for the United Statesliiiiish Rmpire to stand together in

that will follow thein- Axis nations. No valid rea-. hy this cooperation should notutual advantage of both nationsultimate uplift of all mankind.

A Job For JournalistsThe American Society',of Newspapei

Editors called iVir world-wide freedom olcommunications and of the press, declaring that a free press is vital to the provention of future global wars.

This is only a partial statement of thecondition <>f future peace. Not only tmisthe press have its freedom, including thetransmission of news, but it must also betree from nationalistic prejudice, excessivepartisanship and eliminate some of itstendency to over-play selected new?events.

The freedom of the press depends moreupon the intellectual integrity of journalists than upon the regulations promulgated by governments. We have complcte legal freedom of the press in theUnited States but no just appraisal of newSand editorial pages, throughout the nation,can entirely acquit American newspapersof soniettmWexhtbiting a one-sided par-tisanship.

We have, particular reference to the at-titude of the press, in its treatment of newsrelating to big business and labor. Thesame observation may be made x of thenews treatment accorded a variety offreakish incidents that occur and are high-ly over-played by sensation-loving jour-nalists.

K'S (JOT WHAT IT TAKES!" Under The State House DomeBy I. Joseph Gribbins

TRENTON —• Democrats andRepublicans Ht, separate StateConventions here next Tuesdayvill officially line up for andagainst President Franklin I).Roosevelt for a fourth term, butjoin in proposing similar planksdedicating themselves to the pros-ecution of the war to reach vic-tory and lasting pence.

Roth annual sessions will getunder way at noon. Republican*will convene at State Headquar-ters on East Hanover Street, whileDemocrats will assemble at theStacy-Trvnt Hotel. Goyernor Wal-ter E. Kdge will preside at theJlepu.hlican srssiuji npd deliver tfikeynote npee«h. 11. AlexanderSmith, of Princeton, party candi-date for United States Senator,will also speal<.

Congfessiiinn Klmer« II, Wene,of Vlneland, who will opposiSmith in the race for 1'nitaiStates Senator, is Hie srheduleikeynoter of the Democratic SlateConvention. Representative dflaryT. Norton, of Jersey City, Democratic State Chairman, will presiile tit the Democratic conclave

Appointment of committees onresolutions, credentials, ' permanenl organisation nnd rules wilfeature next Tuesday's conven-tion sessions, in addition to thespeech milking. The important res-olutions committee at Uith convolitions will draft the 11)41 tentative party platforms for mailingto delegates Inter in the week.The concluding sessions of Ixithconventions will be held Monday,May 211, because the following

this insiilr ?tory on bowou can hrrnme A hero by proxy,

It's a sugar-coated plnn, fpiaran-eed to work.

Fort Dix. it seems, has hundredsf highly trained fighting men, tf

i t

Opinion Of OthersA

Morale Booster?morale booster for raft

'ress Fundamentally Honest• •• "I'lf of the United States, as well

; !<r men, will be interested in'nation of the freedom of- the

''•''• < group of profeaaors, conduct-' iarch under the financial aus-

'•': Henry Luce, weallhy magazine-11.

Hie press of the United States,1 I1", IT fleets considerable independ-

i i unlimited in its freedom, there• "ii why the investigation should• ••'••I. If there are conditions jor

uhich shackle the nation's prdss,•"•'T the facts are established,, the

r all concerned.1 ill editors cannot l}e ignorantI'iiion that,exists in the minds of

^'Miricans that the press plays its"•. that it often presents unbalanced

'hat it omits some news as a mal-i">liry, that editorial direction is

;1"I by the financial interests of( ' i ' and that news and policies re

of the advertising dollar.

. News In 1942Two years ago the newspapers were told

by enthusiastic scientists of a "powerfulhormone" which would increase the pro-duction of certain crops as much as onehundred per cent.

Having some doubts about the matterthen we find them fortified today. So faras we know there "has been no such devel-opment.

This moves us to wonder how much ofthe news that we read from day to day isof the .same type. Certainly, one is con-stantly "surprised" by what one reads,What cumes alter is not always in line withthe news."

. Intelligent readers of newspapers, booksand periodicals, as well as those who listento radio t>Kograms, might remember thatit i,; necessary to think in connection withwhat one sees and hears, After all, thehuman brain cell has a purpose.

board members has been discov-ered by the New York HeraldTribune. It hangs on the wall ofSelective Service, headquarters inNew York for distracted officialsto gaze, upon when they feel thourge to read ii simple regulation.It's the fuohiliziiMon order issuedhy the (iovernnioiil, of Ethiopiaback in l!)-'!5 and this is how itreads: "When this order is re-ceived, all men. and boys able to

•i the suspicions above becauseill at they exist. We realize that,

;'ll,\, each suspicion is justified by(l journalists and nowspapi;• ilit! overwhelming majority ofni'ws men and newspapers areII I i* 11 y honest and any impartial

Ii will present indisputable proof offact.

loc

V I'

hade Dooms Jap OutpostsiHil of the Japane.se forces in thui I'ucific is adequately, (describee

'•';•! statement Issued'by Generan||'. who says, that the enemy is

;i|i'l surrounded in New GuineaV'm. New Ireland and the Solo

•nit is due, in part, to the destrucs of enemy vessels. Someships have, been bombed

our subma• ' i n g y guii-h're,

<'<>ntributed blow•my shipping,

a l i ("i in the Southwest Pacific iW- degree, to the Papdd exjiau

llk(1 United States Navy, WhereaI'H'y had ample Jiftval superiority,in

| i la

"Armored" Bible BaitOne of the .standby .stories, inevitably

with any war, ts the one about

carry a spear go to AddisAbaba. Kvery married man willbrinj; his wife In cook and washfor him. Kvcry unmarried manwill brinif any uniiuirried womanhe can fuul to cook and wash forhim. Women with babies, the blind

Of strong Kreen sod replaein^ bar-ren clay . . .

And thought: If these, poor iieldxcan turn to green,

Love may yet (lower in t'lic heartio£ men.

—Tho Progrcnive Farmer,El Centro, Calif.

The Right SourceOur daily experience seems to

resolve itself into the effort eitherto acquire something we do nothave or to fid ourselves of some-thing we do not want. We wanthealth, und we want to be rid ofpoverty; we want, happiness, andwe want to he rid of hate andfear, and the situation appearshopeless. The world at l a w looks-for supply and release in thewrong direction—to human devis-

Street, was killed; Roberta Suli-mino, U, of U8 Main Street, criti-cally injured, wa» taken to DoibbsFerry Hospital.

The. driver, Edward Hennessy,2H, of 19 William Street, Hustings,scaped injury, He was arrested

on a homicide charge. Dr.Amos 0. Squire, WestchestcrCounty medical examiner, said thesailor admitted having "two ryesand a couple of beers" before theaccident,—New York Daily Mir-

and those ton aged or infirm to | m^, instead of to Almighty God,carry a spear are excused. Any- ] J t ' s u s ' l l )v l11^ sulnuinition, "Seekone found at borne after receiving IV <'Ist- t'u> lcltlK''"m ol Cod, andthis order will-be hanged."—Couo. h i a righteousness,11 with its prom-cil for Democracy1. "Brief, for ise following, "ami Ml these things

, To many Americans, the situa-tion is on.u of increasing hardship.When you take liquor aw»y froma person accustomed to its regu-lar use, you deprive him or her ofa semi-necessity, and thereby youut into 'his or her morale.—New

York Daily Npw».

day, which is usually the date ofthe second convention sessions, isMemorial Day, a legal holiday.

Governor Edge will not attendthe second convention session ofthe Republican,Party. He will beout of the State attending theConference of Governors at Her-ahey. Pa, Senate President How-ard Eastwood, of Burlington, willtake over the reins in his absenceHnd become Acting Governor ofNew Jersey, as well as chairmanof the final Republican Conven-tion session.

Planks to be adopted at thefinal sessions will advocate post-war planning, pledge increasedinterest in war veterans, promo-tion of agriculture, education,civil rights, workmen's compensa-tion benefits and civil service re-forms, as well as the protection ofthe State Government against un-essential spending and the preser-vation of the two-party system.

VOTING: — Proposals beforeCongress to repeal poll tax lawsand thereby prevent citizens frombeing disbarred from vobing be-cause they do not have money,recall an old practice in New Jcr-

to get a crack at theBut they can't get OTOT-

eas because they are needed onhe army post for essential jobl.They are mad as heck about i t ,on. So they ure calling on civil-ans in surrounding areas to help•hem out by taking over their job*.

Men and women answering the•5 0 S • an> in for a pleasant 8OT-uriw. Mont of the Jobs are highlyinteresting, as you can imagine,'>cing on a big Army post in tlw•lidn of tanks, half-tracks and allhe other khaki-colored fijrhtinf

equipment that you normally s«eonly in t,he newsreels, Worker* gat•i big kick out of feeling p«non-»'illy responsible for. helping win •,the war.

There's all kinds of jobs avail-able—ISO types, in fact. You cinwork «s ii fruard, clerk, stenog-rapher, merhqnic—well, you namert. The Army's got it. If you lackdraining, don't worry. Skilled In-•itiuetnrs will give it to you, pa-tiently nnd carefully, for theArmy does nothing by half-waymeasures.

During May, Fort Dix wouldlike lo get 1,1)00 new civilian em-ployees. All will have civil servicestatus, meaning you are eligiblefor an annual leave of 20 days,phis other benefits. The pay i s ,fine too. licsidcs this, you can getlow cost housing in special dormi^tories, <ir if you commute—sharethe ride transportation to nearbytowns; reasonably priced me*ls,and admission to War Depart-ment theatres where the latestmovies are shown for 15 cents.Girl employees are always motethan welcome to the USO dancesand other social affairs, while theRud Cross provides nursery carefor the kiddies of wives workingal Fort Hix.

Employees come fj'om a radiusof (H) miles and there might 'be ftcar pool right to your door. Sonow you know. Here's your chance

ito jump into the war effort with-jotih lists flying. The Civilian Per-sonnel Office at Fort Dix or theIF. S. (employment Service, 520Hast State Street, Trenton, arereceiving application^

lie soldier boy whose life* was sa,ved by a!ibk" which he carried in his pocket andnto which a bullet was found imbedded.

The idea naturally appeals to religious'iMjpli!, especially those who forget tooiint the number of .soldiers who^die- intattle, despite the Bible that they carry•ilong. So a smart company, in Pittsburgh,;>ut out an armored Bible, suggesting fhatit would protect soldiers- jfrofn bullets,shrapnel and bayonets.

A,news report tells us that thousands of•opies have, been sold, but the FederalTrade Commission, cites the company for

its Bibles and asserts

Broadca&tct a."

The MiracleThis man bus seen his acres

stretching bareAnd scarred beneath the wind and

driving rainAnd he has wondered with a sick j

despairIf he would m;ike a decent crop

again . . .Now he has learned to cherish and

to build,Restored- Hie vigor thai hnd

drained away jAnd marveled :is he saw the mir-

acle "

shall be added unto you," Showsthat it is only thro ugh the lens ofan understanding God that man-kind can ace the way out of itsdifficulties. — California GrangeNews.

'Hardship'A wildly careening auto, with a

sailor on furlough at. the wheel,ploughed into a group of mothers,babies and perambulators on War-burton Avenue, near North Streetin Hatilings-on-Hudson, spreadingdeath and injury before topplingover an I'livbankinont.

Sevexino, (i, of 2^ Main

that the book actually increases the haz-irds of a soldier because a bullet, passingthrough it, would be distorted and causeit more serious wound.

Methodist Church Reverses ItselfThe fact that the Methodist Church, in

its general conference, has receded fromit.s anti-war position, taken in 1940, is amatter of gratification to members whohave been humiliated by the pacifism thathas tainted church leadership.

There is truth in the observation of Dr.Lynn Harold llougih, Dean of Drew Uni-versity, that he resents pacifists who bytheir teachings put youth in an impossibleposition "whjle they themselves remainaloof from the.conflict, yet ready like a de-lightfully Irresponsible butterfly to flutterin to dictate the terms of peaci,"

With thousands of Methodists from thisState fighting for the nation on many for-eign battlefields, it is refreshing that thech'iiri'h should see ft* to'Stftrtd beqide themin their hour of sacrifice, even If in doing(Hi it had to repudiate a. declaration thatI DO lie d good in'time pf peace but aeem«silly i« •'lays of warfare.

OUR DEMOCRACY

Anglo-AmericanCo-operation

sey.For 68 years prior to the adop-

tion of the present Constitutionin 1844, residents of this Statewere prohibited from voting un-less they w«rc worth lifty pounds!,proclamation money, and residei'

Allied victory is being aided in the county in which they de-jreatly by the little-known Brit- sjred to vote for twelve monthssh-American patient pool, under! immediately preceding the dec-

which war manufacturers on eachide of the water have free access

to every talent and invention onboth sides. Thus the full capacityof iboth nations' productive capac-ity can work with the full measureof f)otb. nations' inventive genius.It is good to know how completelythe two English-speakirtg nationscan co-operate to beat the Nazisand the Japs,—Stamford (Conn.)Advocate.

CENTURy OF RROGHESS

MAV 24,1944 -(OOTMANNJVERSARV OF THESENDING OF THt WORLD'S FIRST TEIEGRAM-FROM WASHINGTON TO BALTIMORE-BY THE INVENTOR. SAMUEL F.B.MORSE.

Quixote Ride* AgainAn elderly New Jersey philan^

tllropist has started a campaign toexpunge the word kindergartenfrom our vocabulary. He claimsthat our 4ve->year-olds are being"crippled" and "poisoned" by theGermanic influence of the namo.

He has, according to his pressreleases, assembled quite a groupof down -with -kindergarten en^tliiisiiists. They are working nowon substitutes: "Kiddy Garden"and "Tiny-Tot Threshold." •, . ,

Such exumples of misdirectedpatriotic zeal are less frequentthan in the last war. Most of us,fortunately, are too busy to tilt,vith iviiullnilla.-Gazettc.

-St. Joieph (Mo.)

ONE SHELL HITS 3 BROTHERSt Mt>adtl, M<1.—Tiatu bro

, .SUIT Sargt..Edward Butn»,and Peter and William Burn?,serving together on Guadalcanal,

wounded by the same mortal1

, received tho Purple HeartrtliiT for their injuries and alLT «ot the Silver Star Meda

for gallantry In action ut a jointceremony. The brothers are fruitl-'argo, N. D.

THE TELEGRAPH HAS &EEN A VITAL FACTOR-IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF OUR COUNTRY.AMONG MANY OTHER S£RVIC£S, IT ENABLES

US TO GET A WEALTH OF TIMELYINFORMATION, SO IMPORTANT TO ANENLIGHTENED AND VIRILE DEMOCRACY.

CAT ADOPTS CHICKHarvey,, Illinois. — Apparently

moved by the lonesome chirpinglittle homeless baby chick,

Fluffy, I't'isiau cat pet of Buddyuifi, 2, carried it home town family of kittens andgood care of the strang'

liiitju to the family circle.

TKEATED'BY RADIO.at- DuBvoch?t, Man. — MwA. Rodgers was badly injure

when tjatioline with which she W4Scleaning clothing exploded ancaught fife. Mrs. Rodger's burmwere treated'iby means of instru<lions relayed for six hours Irona doctor in the mining; town o1l''lln l''lon, 22B miles away, b;C'aiuiiiiau P-acitio Air Linca radiliook-uii. She was l»tei-.jlown ththe 225 miles by plarni in 1 houi

38 minutes,i

- u

POTATOES: — In contrast tothe scarcity of potatoes at thistime of last year, farmers »re nowshipping the spuds from the Cen-tral Jersey area in railroad hop-per cars, which are usually de-voted to shipments of eoal.

The spuds have been .by the Government and are beingdiapntched to government oper-ated dehydration and alcoholplants in Miehignn and Ohio. Someare transferred into, animal feedand others into alcohol to helpthe war effort. Last, year at thistime, yeople were buying seed po-tatoes to embellish the dinnertable.

tion.To be elected to the legislative

council under the original Con-stitution, a candidate was re-quired to show proof that he wasworth at least 1,000 pounds,vhile candidates for the. Assembly,•hrec to a county, were required,o own at least 500 pounds in real,nd personal estaite in the sameounty, , ,

War clouds hovered ovi-r Clioofonies when the first Onstrtu-ion was adopted* on'.luly -, 1771!,t Burlington by the provincialiongreas. The preamble of thecycument boldly proclaimed that

constitutional authority everlossessid by the KinK« of GreatBritain over the colonies, was d«-ived from the people, and lie-ause (icorge the Third attempted

subject them to the absolutelominion of the British Parlia-netjt and miHle war on the colo-lies, "all civil authority underim is necessarily at an end."

Reflecting the fchounht of thu.imes, however,- tho ConstitutionMovidcd that "if a reconciliationictween Great Britain and these:olonios should take place, andhe latter be ajcain taken under,he protection of the government

JERSEY JIGSAW:—Backwardweather has eliminated a- consid-erable acreage of oats on manyNew Jersey faryis as a 1944 crop,und farmers are planning bo sub-stitute aoy beans. . . ; Next Sun-clay, May 2l , has been designatedby Governor Edge as "I art an'American Day" to give publio rec-ognition to new citizens, . . .New Jersey haj> accepted thechallenge tb contest, with all otikerstates in the country for thehonor of obtaining -"the greatestmonthly increase in the collectionof waste paper. Retail food

f the crown of Great Britain,,hi« charter shall bo- null and vokt,-therwise to remain ttrih. and in-

PYROPHILE:—If there is anykind of person that the State For-est Fire Service likes it is a pyro-phile, especially during these daysof dry woodlands.

A pyrophile is an individualwho loves fires but has no'ambi-tion to set one, claims Dr. LloydM. Yepseii, psychologist for. theNew Jersey State Department ofInstitutions and Agencies.

Yepsc-n, Who said the twin is anew one, first used the word dur-ing an address before the FireMarshals' Section of the NationalFire Protection Association con-vention in Philadelphia recently.

"A pyrophile is innocuous andnot at all dangerous," Yepgep SaUtin 'hie speech, "I Am thinking ofone individual who .is rather shortin stature,, swarthy in complexion,wears a big hat und is sometimesin £Jew York,"

DO YOUR BIT;—How wouldyou liko to help a nuldiat tfiit ovei-se,sB and wind .up yourself with agood job und a change to see allthe latest m-ovios lor 15 cents?

Constitution.

A 'V

prices in New Jersey are 44.93per cent higher these days thanin August, 1939, the month be-fore war started in Europe. . ; .Members of tihe Cooperative Grow-ers Association, Inc., of Beverly,have been awarded a State FoodAward for 1941). . . . CircuitCourt Judjfre. A. Dayton Oliphant,of I'rincetfm, is the first jurist topublicly fa'vor revision of the NewJersoy court system as proposed inthe new State Constitution. . . .The OHA in New Jersey is con-tinuing itsipart in the nationwidedrive against counterfeit gasolinestamps with much success. , . .John H. Bosshart, State Commis-sioner of Education, points outthat some New Jersey school chil-dren enjoy an annual educationranting mor« than $200 whil«others are limited to a $45 pro-gram under the present systemof financing public schools. . . .The New Jersey Communist Partyhas publicly announce^ it favorsthe proposed revision of the State

Any 4.-H girlor boy in Now Jersey, who cara800 quarts of fruits and vege-tables this year will become aFeed - a - Fighter - and - His--Buddy dinner, a new program, tot4-H carmers, , . . The Sixth An-nual Institute of Town and'Coun» •try Ministers will be held at Rut-gers University. J^tne 12, 13 and14 , . . Twenty-five fishermenfrom Newfoundland arrived inNew Jersey last week to help wivethe ^shortage of year-round work-ersTon dairy fiVrngT. . . " T k r H t t rJersey State Board of M«4fattltta .intervened In five strikes Involv-ing 134 employees during April.. . . In South Jersey, peacheshave set well,.which. forecasts agood crop this year, according to(

reports from leading growttW. , .«Movu than 58 pur ««nt pf Ihl em-ployers covered by the' State Un-employment Compensation Law

If you'rti interested, juet keep onof New Jersey have qualified fo(

(tontmued y» Faye 10)

.!«*#! . k.-._

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PAflE RTGRt FRTDAT. MAT 10. ISM-

HELP THE WAR EFFORT!

AND

OMENHELP

WANTEDFOR ESSENTIAL

WAR WORKPAY

PLENTY OFOVERTIME

APPLY AT ONCEBONAFIDE GENASCO

BARBER, N.J.FORMERLY

ROOFING PLANT OF BARBER ASPHALTSTATEMENT OF AVAILABILITY REQUIRED ,

* I* •

WORKRIGHT IN

YOUR OWNNEIGHBORHOOD

* • •

r^9f^^

Page 9: Mepenbent-ieaber - digifind-it.com · WAR BONDS Mepenbent-ieaber YourWarilond investment I* ... Must Ac-lown Land Grant lake Idea Possible ... and Commander Michael J. Trainer of

lKPENDENT—LEADER FRIDAY. MAY 19, 1944 PAGE NINE

AND • . ' T

GET INTO A

WAR INDUSTRYWITH A

POST WAR FUTURE

YOUR FUTURE ISASSURED IN THIS

WORK!ONE 6F

AMERICA'SFASTEST GROWING

INDUSTRIES BOTH FOR

NEEDEDTO HELP US

MANUFACTUREMATERIALS FOR AIR BASES AND

OTHER ROOFING PRODUCTS

TO HELPTHE

WAR EEEORT-I

WORK INYOUR OWN

NEIGHBORHOODWAR AND CIVILIAN

NEEDSAPPLY AT ONCE

BONAFIDE GENASCOAMBOYROAD BARBER, N.J.

FORMERLYROOFING PLANT OF BARBER ASPHALT

STATEMENT OF .AVAILABILITY REQUIRED

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PAGE TEN FRIDAY. '-NT

P o l l y - - A n Unbeatable Womanthe

By MAUDr . D A V I S

In the Sprint el I'.i'i'1 ( I'IIYI met| (A l i t x 1 f a m i l y . T h e I M I I C I I m y

h u s l i i m i l m i l l I I I W M C I I it I hill t im*1

• : i s I n d i t e d I I " ! fill f r i n n t h e A h h ch o m e a t L n i k s | i i n , ( o l u t ; u l n .

W i ' h u r t re f i l l " A r i . m i d i l ie W o r l i li n E l e v e n V e i n s , " I ! I C ; i m i i s i i u r* n i i i n t e n s e l y j u i c i e s t j n j ; s t u r yW r i t t e n b y t h e A l i l i c c l i i ld i ' i - i i

. A b o u t t h e i r l i f e w i t h • i ' i i p i i " H I I ' I" M s i m a " a n i l i h i ' j o u r n e y t h : i tt o o k r h i ' i n ' n i u i i i l t i l " (jlob<> inp l i ' v e n y c i i r . - .

N o w t h i i t t h e A h l i i s I ' l .d h o m i ' i nli ranch ami luul n-rrt'**! n ni«••«*nnimunl house witii the money thehook cuniPil, I was ;.TIX!<IUF ' "moot thi« slriinco fsmiijv

We a n Ivi'd :u their jrnto c»n thet*pny Park Hond early one Su*^'Hay morninir. I 'alicnrp, the eldeMof the thvcf children, met ii«.

Tile h<nii"e \V!rf, and still kheailtiflll. I.UCMtcil (111 ,1 SOuOl Hloll".in t h e foo tb i r fx With f o r e s t s , .ifp i n e s f o r a l i l t ck l f r r t l i i n l Uild f l i "nifch cft^t f r o n t iif t h e K i M ' k i e s '.(•(he west, it reminds you of ahouse mit of :i fnir-y tule. . It i--Hindi' of peeled pine l"ir< stained :iWarm iirown; nf linvuriiin nrcV:-tl'Ctuii1 with a steeji slliivjli'd roofthnt covers tw'elvi ' l a i f roiim*.Ill ii windowed box in the hufeliving room nn the second ffoiris the fii'vt bunk in eni'ic off tie-pr(1ss"Armind the World in K!cv<>nYears , " By I ' l i t ienrc ' I ' ichi ird amiJohnny A h h c

In the Winter of 1 !!.!(> they were"f la t te i " Iliiin they liild i vor beei!and they were 1'ivinu in "TheShuck" on the I.iiminit lanih. Mi.Robert. I.umi'iit lifid met tne Ahhesin Russia the year before nnd hadsnid, "Conic up and ^ce me sonictime—at my ranch in Colorado."They had <.niveil D\\c -iiormy Au-tumn nif^l uud lia'i been t'iyen tiledhtu'k for a home,

"Pupa" hiid said that some dityhe would write a hunk, when li i

Iiad time, mill tell of their travl-'and how the children »t.'ntc<| nnxv-ing up—in five different eoinitne.^,but he never E"t mound to it.PalieiR'e, then (joiili; nil twelve,?aid:

"If the bonk is to h" "ihout u.<children, why don't WE write it';'"

And that they did. The mother,unbeatable Polly, typed the thinu<tho children said. But even th;>>had its difficulties. Slip h:nl nopaper—and no money with whichto buy paper. She did have brownpaper grocery buns.

','Arouml tho World in ElevenYears" came to completion. Oneeditor after another turned itdown. Then one, perhaps a littlebraver than the rest — or rnorefoolhardy, acceph-d the manu-script. It became ii best-se.Hc'11

nf l'.KtT. Money came to the.Ablips, It poured in. The chil-dren said, "Let's build a houselike we want—near the .shuckWhere we did the wrilinsf."

So grow the home in the foot-hills. But even a liinti- sum ofmoney wilt not, last forever. Thepublishers of the first book wantedthe children to write a second''best-seller." They went' to Hol-lywood and came back with "OfAll Places." Then their readerswanted to know what three young-sters would think about tho grow-ing unrest in Europe. Tolly andher famous offspring were on theroad again, wandering where they

1 chose to wnifilci1—at home wher-ever their hats wtie off. Thistime' "There's No PK.ce I.ilwTTome." ' And •iiif'iuwl tlieio,,wjisnot. For during the absence offie family, the milch cows on theJSnch had died of a mysteriouspoisoninj;J tho fine saddles . hadhee.n stolen and uther -jalnmitieshiid come to pass. Tli-.- situationwould have looked too dark forIno.st people to ineel, hut not thounbeatable Polly. She started ailorer again.

I n t h e S u m m e r <>f I ! ' H I l ^ w a sI l i v i l e l i t ( l l l t l l ' l l i l I i } > i ' 1 1 ! i i l l t h e

A bin' nilich. It M s :i bright .lu!yday, cool nnd sweet in ;hi 4i:idnw<inf the jHrif-. 1'iilly, in » redcfilico skilt, n lacey peasant,blouse over ;i slip "anchored"with wifely pins. mid hitrh, lacedbrown bouts, was everywhere ntonce, ii'iikinir every body wfilcoiti".

Over the campfiro, interV«tin|{stoi ies of "everywhere" want back:ind forth iiiid Ihe 1 >itr iron pelboiled niei'iily. The dinner wu-

Today's Pattern

eis had not a' lived on time amiWe hudn't a cent. It \MJI *i\ inthe evening ;ind the children weehungry, MI we wen: into a f union*"we were stranded in a coii.-tnlcity. Money from our publish-I'PJtaurnnt and ordered our din*nor. That W:IR all rijrht, but «:•couldn't leiive —We had no moneyto pAy the bill. We kept on «r-dciinft and eiiting. At eleven ntelegram ciimc to me. Thv monpyliiul arrived."

This Winter Polly went to Cali-fornia. Inn ;i>. finely as ihe "Rwul-lutv? ('(inie Ruck tn Capi'tt'lllin''

ithc Alibis will tf('t in Mie mnnev.•ifrtin mid cmno buck to the houseii book built. Today'•a lettercame to1 nit' from Mr.«. Abbe.

"Did you know," ?he asks, "Ivi«« a welder in Portland? Yen

thought I wns elefti'O'iitrd theirst time I struck an 'ire. ."Itl the »hipy4r(1« I learned wha;

v:i« in the bottom? of ihrMniniyhip> I'd sailed so sublimely iniiver thv .seven s(,'H>>.

"You should have s e n the 'fur-lishcil mom' we lived in nt Port-

land. We ate, slept, combed out?hair iiti'l held polite cmiVfination

i t - all1 four of us. Of all tlv< and shucks within jny ex-

perience, there had never beenanything like it."

Paiiciike (alia,« Patience Abbe)H nurse-aide with n jtonreons

rtificiite from the Red Cross—lias been doing radio-commentp-

in Pni'tlnml, too, Richurd,IS. js in the Niivy Great Lake*Traitiinir Station.

•lidwiny. sixteen, is a senior,"red-hended and quiet."

And heve I remember whatJohnny said that day. lonfr npo atthe picnic—''Tin the otic that wi!1

on with the writing business —these other puys (mewiing I'H-tience and Richard) dim'l THINKthings."

They have a lucky star, theseAbbes, but it shines brightest onthe mother, Polly, the unbeatable,the undaunted by any circum-• tarict*.

Pattern 01S2 comes In Junior•Jiiss ami Misses' sizes 11 12. Kt.M. 15. lii mill 17 Size 13. sle.evtdessipinafore, 3 yards Jin-inch . •». )

This pattern, together with nneedlework pattern ot il3eflll Bliddecorative motifs (or linens amiRaiments. TWKNTY CENTS I

Send TWENTY CENTS in coinsfoi these patterns to 170 Ne.ws-papei Pattern Do.pt.. 232 West 18thSi. New York 11. N Y Writeplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,STYLE NUMBER. |

Send FIFTEEN CENTS more forthe Marian Martin new and blgKerSummer Pattern Hook 32-htRes,easy-to-mnke styles- Free patternprinted in book •.

delicious, and then Polly .hftweius through the house and told usmany more tales of her. journeys.She opened one, door-1-"Mr.Abbe's room," she said, "Butpapa doesn't live hero n-iy more."

Nineteen-forty, and Polly wi>.srunning the ranch ->- Polly ,HIK1Patience,. Richard and Johnny.When Fall came, they inoved toColorado Springs and the childrenwent to school. In Summer theyciime back to the house-a-book-built. Because there was, stvery little money, they rented thebi£ hojise tCL,a.n Englishman fora tourist resort and (he familylived in ii shed on the place, B'.itwherever the Abbes live, theyLIVft, fully andojoyously.

One day during that Summer,Polly came to. my hoiw. She to!me of an incident that occurred(in their last journey.

"When y/c were •coming hoiiKfrom France in lfKl'.i," she said,

... % William Sharp

ROBERT SHERRQD*LANDED WITH THE MARINESIN ONE OF THE FIRSTASSAULT WAVtS OH THETARAWA ISLANDS /

THE JAM'SA/D 1000,000AMERICANS COULD HOT TAKETAMm.HtETOQKtrtN

FOUR. DAYS/ —•>

BIT»,LES$tHMI|ONESOUIIRCMlLiiWASMAMWBVH.000PKKMDJwnomm300ST££lPUaOK£$;r

' ' ' " " """ ' •• 'AX. ' . ....IL,...|fl J . l[(nJU|.l^ I L i ^ P

Christian ScienceChurch Calendar

First Church of Christ, Scien-tist,-Sewuren, is :i bii'..ich of theMother Church, The Ki:-~-t Churchof Christ, Scientist, in Boston,Mass, Sunday services II A. M.,Sunday School, i)::!0 A. M.;Wedntsday Testimonial meeting,X P. M,; Thursday rending room.% to 4 P. M.

"Soul and Body" is the Lesson-Sermon subject fin- Sunday, M:iy21. '

(iolduii Text: "For .niir convei--satioii is in heaven: from whencealso we look for the S.iviour, theLord Christ Jesifs: . who shallchiinge our vile body, Uwt it maybe fashioned like unto his (rlorinusbody, accordinj; to '.he workingwhereby -he is able ev:'!i to subdueall things unto himself (Phil. •!:21), 21).

Sermon. Passages from theKing .lames version nf the Bibl''include: i

"For ye are bought with n price:therefore glnrify God 5n yourTjody, and in your spirit, wiiieiiare'lJod's" (I, Cor. G:2fl). Cor-relative passages from "Scienceand Health with "Key to the Scrip,tines" by Mary Baker Kdjdy in-clude: '- ''Me-ntity i* the. ralloction ut

.Spirit, the reflection in multifari-ous forms nf tho living Principle,Lovo" (p. 477).

State House Dome{Continued Worn Editorial Page)1944 contribution rates lowerthan the ibasic rate qf 2,7 per cent.

CAPITOL CAPERS:—The driveto put the public into hospitalbeds at the public's own expensethrough the new Wagner SocialSecurity bill is picking up mo-mentum in Washington, the NewJersey Taxpayers' Association re-ports. . . . The utter depravity ofman is an element to be reckonedwith in politics as well as theol-ogy, says Dr. William S. Carpen-ter, Princeton, new head of theState Civil Sefvice Commission.. . . Governor kvlgii regards NewYork City as one of New Jersey'smost pleasant .suburbs.

CAT SQUEAKChicago. — Hearing ,\ su,ue,ak

when he startvd bi.s car, Dr. L. IiSchwartz drove for li> minutes be-

t'oie he slopped his car. When helifted the hood,,he discovered th«i-au.se of the squeak. • A grey alleycat was wedged between the radi-ator and the fan bell. He wa.-i un-banned except for a mangledfront paw.

DEER WREAKS DAMAGES.ilt Lake City, Utah,—While

Mis. Keith Soruiisi'n, tin owner,looked on with .imuz«nu-nt anddismay, u doer leaped' throughone end of her greenhouse, racedthrough the flowt-i tftXes to th«opponite eml of the buildiiiR andus if that was nut enough, turnedaround and run back,more glass to gi-i. out.

WROHG pLos Angela.'—- Two men, sus

pMtwl of rOkbery, pursued bymotorcycle poMecmeii, k-apeil froma *tolen taxlcab and Hed afootacniss ii vacant lot and throughau open back <foor, It w»s theWioug pU(T» to |p|c« refuiff, be

it,' ww ihs Pfk am to >

tf

MUGGS AND SKEETER - B y WALLY it|S||jj|GEE'MAYfcE Tt i lS IS "TME START OFA RALLY"- 3 E T UP A N D T A K E t O o R

THE FLOP FAMILY -«> >H

SKIPPY - B y PERCY < : | { I N , |

I Uncle Louie had to seeI the doctor'cause of I

his dlass-blowin'.

*f^pr I'M* Fmy I. ' wibf. WoilJ iijllll itHded • »

• He never shoaldjo'tried to blowout a I

KRAZY KAT -By HERK

fopr \W, King F«iui« SjnJitilc. ln<, Wuil.l mlili c«nrJ

./EATS do, i A-

5-26

NAPPY

.HT15HAS

INTRODUCED

T^£ BOVS W

Hi5 PATMER

STANISLAS

VLADMIP.

OIRECTOR......WE fIND

THEM ON THE

SET.WATCMIWG

THE GREAT

H YOU MUST NOT

IMAKE ANV NOISE

\ WNEN MINE FAHOEft'

I OEERKTSMHE IS J

VMRV TAMPERMWme?

• BAH! ! DOT is NO GOOD! ! MORE ACTION!!MORE PAPV LAT M E SET YOUR OOMPH!LAT ME SEEVOUR PUNCH!!

—By IRV TJIOH

DETECTIVE RILEY - B y RICHAKI), . • t.iAi M TMGMJM/EDLYAfftMPrs

m pita OFBUBBU cm, } ..AKPWHEN

_VOU5£AKCMIPwASAtnAMON£>toBe£ey..wf "CH/WED "WAf GUV A^D COR- 4 WE SWlON

NEttD H I * IN A CANDV SfOPF \ ME DIOM'I'

'THINK A HAVE WEHE WA^ BUVIN'? ? ^ DIAMOND

ONWM!

ftiOCS A MtttY CHASE

/ SAID I'D HAVf

THAT PIECE!

FACTS YOU NEVER KNEW By BOD l^1]FOB SU6KT lAAPURiriES WHCH AMOlNT TO

ONLV A fRACTION Of ONE P6R C£NT,"CAM£

A M D K t T

GOOP MANNERS DICTATE THAT A 6EMTUMANWALK QN TH£ >IO£ Of * IW>V ^

5uRVEy,,fONDyCT6D,By COLUMBIA

UNWeR^ITY^EVEAtEDTHAT

tf«P NEAREST CHOP WINDOWS.

'.J (otK&&g&?

H A R L E S WEStEV,BfiOTHER Of

PlAV A TUNCXCHfiiCTlV ON THlWHEN ONLV IWO

VSAMi AMD NIHt MONTH*.

*;.:».......,.!.,.I*.^jiz'ijt'fj1!.!--. ,.:UJ:.S'. •« a " I iliTiliTlnimT (i mr'i.iiviii frii.Vrif'ttm'limhii'i- ,11.. ;sja

Page 11: Mepenbent-ieaber - digifind-it.com · WAR BONDS Mepenbent-ieaber YourWarilond investment I* ... Must Ac-lown Land Grant lake Idea Possible ... and Commander Michael J. Trainer of

FRIDAY, MAT 19, 1944 PAGE

How's Your Health?A N D TRAINING OF

CHILDREN

part Threeinl.1 I,PP<IS about n quart.

,l.-iy. It is'iiecessary for

l l l |r,^ hwiiwe it pontainH,.' iiiirert'nt, constituents'mi,, ihe makin« of his

]<p|M.4 hesit. and energyn l l (,s from the fats and: l : l | r s , The tissues of the

,.1,11,1 need protein, of,,,,, ulso is 'nn abundance11 n,,t only builds new

i,;,i n'puira ttione that arc.,,,, ,i mil. It has some iron„. niiioiints of limo or eul-

u l , i ,h the bonoK and teeth

. ... rich in Vitamin A,

feezf"HE

Dinufl Dots

which is csscntiHl to K<>™| visionand liciilthy mucous ini'iiihr;in*s.It nisi) contains other vitamins invnryinu amounts. We liiive no!ot:ln>r mitimil food that is more<lif(rsUlil(> than milk. (Irnwti nco- <|)]c lire liencfitterl by it, :IK well n l;!children, j

The vitamins urc linily ri'euln-1tors. Tlli'.v stiimiliil i ' growth :indprotect the body aKiiin.it infee-1tinns. If they lire not in tin1 foodin sufficient, nniounts the lioily l»e-cumes (lisi'iiscd. For i'Xiim|)l(\ thealist'ncc of vitamin (.' rpsiillst inscurvy, which may nut In1 severe, jhut iflay show itself in blcedinuIfiims, loose trcth, low of appe-tite, iind chronic fatigin?, It in vtsrynmii inn amnng the poor of Kn-ni|)f.

Older Bodf Builder*

TIK'I'H is lime in vpjr«tnl>les, suchas eollni'ils, imwtnnl, turnip to!'».|;iecu lel.tiK'i.1, C:IM>HK«\ -spinach;iml mmiy other j t twn leafy VORI1

tables.

| I'hoiiphoioiis also Is. needed forthe Jcctlv and hnncs, t£ in con-tiuncd in foods that nfe rich in v ,

hmc If there is n lack of iron !-.-Photo courtesy New Voik

0

_,f-...-(-

; . 1

An Hilarousicw Comic Strip

by SWANi BEGINS TODAY

THIS PAPER

and copper in the diet, the liloo'ilwill be poor in quality. Liver,led incuts, fruits iilui vegetablescontain these valuable minerals,though ijrcnn.s arc the Holiestswim1.

The oofharils provide1 iron inmany fruits. We also jcet. iron

I from berries and grapes. Nutsurc as K»''d a source of protein UH

j any.! Meat and F.i|(j«

j Milk and whole era in CITPUIS |form an excellent combination forbieal< fast or supper. Not onlychildren, hut ifTown-ups should cutit variety of foods, containing all

f I he elements necessary to soundoily-buildinjc.

1'nrcnLs uuichl not to havemany varieties upon the table ati he -mine meal, but the menusshould lie varied from day to day,Sameness in the diet is not con-ducive to appetite. Childrenshould lie taught to eat the food

| that is set before them.; Smiie mothers tell you, nppnr-: enily with pride, "My work isi made so hard for me.. Sara won'ttouch veifetiilili's and Johnnywon't ilrink his milk, Lucy won't j

i eat bean.s and I have to fix some-JIllinv, different for e^ch child." I

Those children 'arc being jbroujfhi up in a silly manner.They are deprived of good foodsami HIT lieing trained to becomenuisances wherever they go by

Institute.Junior Mim cottoht begin withmch limple beach and backyardtubbalei m this polka dotteddirndl with big poekeli and•Mh-tied wa'itl. Every Juniarwill alao want t*v«r*l drettierdirndl* for town wear, and atown iuit, or maybe two, incheck-ed or plaid cotton. "Youngblack" i i a wiie investment incotton for the imall woman whotalcci Junior t i iei and who likeithe idea of interchangeable cot-ton accessorial. Juniors who areto get their diploma* in Junewill find cottoA drenei in bothihort and full length itylei, and,for vacation, adorable tunbackcottons and playiuits.

RicMarrd RollBUTTER,

The pure swc«t cream from 10 quorH of richmilk goes into ivtry (round of Louella. Winnerof over 500 pr im for flavor and quality. Yourtable deserve! rn« b«»t! Only 12 point* p«r Ib.

STOVE EXPLODES; MOTHERKILLED

DonaUlsonville, Ga.—Mrs. Mar-sette Waddell was fatally burnedwhen her kitchen stove explodedafter Mrs. Waddell had pouredfuel oil into the stove to start alire. She is survived hy her husi*band and two small sons.

their cultivated like- and dislikes' •!:• vand the indulgence of their vajjar-i iv. ' i f appetite.

(To Be Continued)

Aii men of \fiirshul Tito will Hyin itoyal Air Knife ,H(|uiidroas,

Kinployei'V "lYre peec h;umin.-t union i:, upheld by courl.

i \ n i \ \< i :nv I I K xrcw .IKII.MKV' I ' " SLi.|ilii'ii i lni l i ' i - iKi iktAinltci ' t i ik i

.mil Klhi' l Ills \ v i * . ;l!y v i rh i i . m' ivti i i r i ler of I In

CilMM 111 I'lliUH'l'l'V ill' X*-W .IMI'HI'Vlil.id.. mi 111. I'll] il;iy lit' Apr i l , l!ll IIII ;i i i iusi- wherein I' ity nl' I V i l lAmUuy is comiilii i i i i i r i l , anil >'nii ;miiilhers lire i lf l ' i ' i i t l i i l i ts, ynu ;irp ff '- jMii i i t i l in a|i|ipiir iiinl answer siihl

t t i i l l nf romi i lu ln l on or li ' 'fore -"Hi1 11 .linn- IH 'X I . nr tl ial in i l i ' f i in l l

f i l u ' i r i i i ' .sin li ili.ri'i.,. In- 111.i.11• itKHinsii'nn as ili<' rhimriMlur shall think

, i i . i l i l , am! |iisl. Tin. ,K:I!I I Mi l Is1 llli.il In lul-i'.-lus.. ii l i t* l i i l l eel' l l l l-

i ;i I c luv i ' l i l IK lul Nit. •! ill Hlmkill I 'mi Hie r. A. Assrssn i i ' i i t Miip.And ynu n r e iiimlf J e f i ' i n l an t s !"•-caitN" vim nri1 Hit- Itt 'lrs al law mInliii Ulnlti'i suk, Jc i 'eusH, 1*i»t-in(-1-itwni'i1 ill' llii- sulii pretntHeH,

l.i'n (!iililli,[j;i-r, Kul'r nl' Cnni|i].•JSfl 11., l,:i I I SI.,1'i-rlli Aiiiliuy, N. .(.

I I . I ••!*,:. . " , . ! ; , i n

X

you trip tkir calls ^ t o u ^ f cEvening la about the only lime most

service men h&ve to call. Then there is a

huh on Long DMbnce lines from camps,

navel itatioM and air bases.

You caa"htlp by ieaving the llnea

from ttven lo ton «W the service men.

*•. v

No Points Needed for. These Meats!

PORK LOINS FRESH *-29cK LON *-Rib K*. 1 #. tfon, tender tatty pork lolm ore rich In virimllt I ,

Center Cut PORK CHOPS n>- 35c

Smoked HAMWholt or aifher half. Lu

PICNICSi b -ed

Wholt or aifher half. LuKioui i l k t t o f t«nd«r ham or* "topi" for flavor!

or i/noKed ib.Why nor terve a delicious freih or imokid picnic for a chtngt!

Sliced BACON fti % *• 19cHickory Smokid

3 3c29c

Grade "A" BEEF

Chuck Roast * 27A n^LRoast , 27a

iroA' A. Only

Rib Roast

PLATE BEEFfor tour™ n.,,1 _.

points per Ib.

30top";" lor dtiln

wups an,|

No pelnfi «..32c

19c

Beef Liver X t : . : h h ib. 37cFresh Beef Tongues ib. 35cFrankfurters^*, jmcy ib. 37cSKced Dried Beef V4ib.2k

BACON yWhol. or t'n b. 32c

SHADWHITINGS *• \ h

Link Sausage G'tkAA ». 43cPhila. Scrapple ib. 18cBologna ?& ^ 33c

mmP0R6IE5 Sliced COO 25<let of Haddock ib. 35c

EGGS Large

Grade A" WhiteCartonof 12 45

Silver Seal Eggs

cLargi Grade B ^ Q

Carton oil 2 mfM

Ear marc cyvs 'or vitaminj, variety and vitality. Stive famoui Gold Seat «J9i—!J«o! far «v«ry putpot*. Thtrt or* over 200 wayt lo tervs tg j i . No poinli nttded.

\ IHAIK Stamp Ventures ] RED Stamp FeaturesHOM-DE-LltE '•, CAMP1SLL

Grape Jelly \ 2n

p ; ; - 1 9 < Tomato Juice I8;,!: 10* tvopoiaUdOur beil! Only 1 pi, ptr cun

BreadI f \ - I r r ' jj . . . - ^ ^ - ^

firVn»Prown/Pll>jB'10rf PnrTfl, Rpan^16st uin Q»f i? * ese »»"-^(;. Treet or Redi-Meat "T 33cwapereserve,Ph. m KorK&ueans,0poin,. v? 1 ^ ^ j":..s(to; i / n c . : . . j i . . . ^ .WELCH'S

Ib. Jar

Supreme New Large C 3 ft

Enriched 2 ° - " - Loo< T ^Dated tor freshneH. Enrichtd with vitamin 1)1, B2, niocin, iron.

n-oi.

-i , | |^V#l \ / l I W V I IT1VUI 5U»1 W * *

n», 50< i K-P Spiced Luncheon Meat 'Hr 31cOld Smoky rC??J4< Swift's Deviled Ham 3;;; 17c

Pineapple Gems tl 1U Pork & Beans 1 § i r 8* Bavarian B 1 " rz , r 14c: SHRIMP Fancy Wet Puck — 3 1 C

Evereadv Fruit Cocktail NVVfln 33c iMuMStaCheese,,fcJ5(M TUNA FISH Grated •*.... 26co T a w V & t o D ^ r u i e e ^ i c ^volone^rM8< SARDINES Calif.Natural n i cv-zrange oi vjrapeiruiT juice A^H t i c r r L , , . • i Anri>m i- •, *« * *-«.

Clapp Baby Food , T ™ 3Ja«23c 11c * * * £ ! » i £ l2<, LOBSTER Fg«cy ~ 4 1 c t : 69c

Grapelade 21f Baked Beans TnZD3U ASCO "Orads A"

ascoGoldtn Bonlt

Our finest, creorf-style^

Whole Kerne' CornAtm

Hiblets Brand CornDel Monte Early JuneBEETS S/ioestringT O M A T O E S J ^ G'

Tomatoes

tf$»llteat.//ol'Coffeet'Heat-flo' roasting gives you fuller, finer fla vor. Save labels for gifts. 2 1 -Ib. bagt 47«

TEA C. f;r. ** 1U S Acme Coffee ... 28c, 10 Force Whole Wheat Flakes £ \ \ t VINEGAR T / r s h - • * * 1 4 r

1 1 - M - | J C HONEY FLAVORED r . I i n r u t I !•» ,« ,L J A . I

s E « i 5 e Ranger Joe Wheat Puffs X 1 0 K Enriched Flour :s;:L 43< U* 1.04 I,..."" i n c Cream ol Rice Cereal i . 1\( Cream While ^ 23(,™ 64«glall I V S«v« d.llcl.u. c m of. Hie. Cernl lor bruklait. Jfuun-finiii.ii, purfly vt[rt«lj|, .liiirlfiil.ii.

*-1 10c Nabtsca 100% BRAN fi^Mt Plum Preserve «*«• i.lkNabisco Holland Rusk J ^ j f t WaxtexWax Paper 2 ' r 1H

D U R K E E13

Best grade. Famous DressingIQ-OI

2/CA S C 0 w l I 0 l E

jarMikes Randfflelics U

ex«*ptloiittHy food.

AsparagusWax Beans

CRISCOS;24cT68c

iUMBO Jersey

Her^b-Ox BouilbpCubes potl<u>t 7e

Clapp CerealPn-coaliad ctrml "j ,

l ' 'or itralmd autmisl

sach Borne 9 c Bunch 35 iLuscious, big, tender, green spears from Jersey's finest farmt

' • ' *

Today» nest Dic-v.. . — LUSCIOUS, Dig, renqer, green spears from Jersey

Old Dutch Cleanser 2<~Vx I r e b e r O L e t t u c eKirkman Cleanser - 5c ICeDerg LeTTUCe

c«x 12Pint 1 Q C

BlackNqllonotly-»on">u» • " " • - —'

DIF Hand Cleaner

HouseholdM^^S0-" Bl

Silver Sris t « * W K

"WailKM VuBNlfUBB

SlWtf y.W.hWwaw

Speed-Up Soap FlakesSpeed-Up Granules

Large, fancy htads! Sqrve a salad with sliced tomatoes.

Radishes 5c Scallions- 5cRushed fresh from nearby farms. Tender, delicious, low priced!

TOMATOES - & >» 29cPut tomatoes in the lunch box. Perfect slicing for appetizing salads.

CARROTS yz: 2 .-*- 15cO R A N G E S Large Flbrifa .•*»•• 4 5 ^;fti,,. Big juicy Floridas, full of rich juice. Buy a supply now! *

RATION CAtlNOAR

Ui Stamp. A9 to T*Worth 10 lointi Eaeh

Blu« Stomp» A* to Q*Worth 10 Polnrt loth

Page 12: Mepenbent-ieaber - digifind-it.com · WAR BONDS Mepenbent-ieaber YourWarilond investment I* ... Must Ac-lown Land Grant lake Idea Possible ... and Commander Michael J. Trainer of

£AGK TWELVR FRIDAY, MAY 19, INDEPENDENT

AnswersTo Popular Questions

On

RationingAnd

Prices

A.

Q

A.

A.

Whon iliil A !' (,'iisiilinc om-pons expire ;md A-10 couponsbecome viiliil?A-9 gaioline coupon! expiredMonday, May fllh. A-10 con-pom, value of three gnlloni,became valid May 9 and re-main 10 unlit Auguit 8lh. Thiiappliei lo [onuimcn who methe couponi. Gaiolinc dealerimay not accept A-9 coupon*now, but have Until M«y 18 toturn in A-9 coupon! to theirsupplier!.•Must I p.'iv p o i n t s fur 1'iirliril

beef?No, if it i« made from the brii-ket; yet, if it ii made from therump or any part of the round.If I havo R ciiiil codkinu ninycand aLin lineal conk stove, canI get 'A kerosene ration fur tliesummer months?Yei.Arc m i m e d fruits still ra-t ioned?Yei, none of the canned fruitihave been made point-freeIf 1 purrliiise shoes that ;iredefective iis Ui material orworkmanship ami eimaint ir:iaonably lie repaired, whatshould I do?If you return them to the deal-er from whom they were pur-ehated within 60 daya fromdate of purchase, nnd the deal-er decidei they are defective•I to material or worlcmamhip»nd will replace th«m, yourwar price and rationing boardwill inue a ipecial ttamp forthe replacement pair.What is tile ceiling price for abox of strawberries?63 centi for a quart containerwith a minimum net weight of20 ouncei.What is thi' maximum pricefor Grade A chickens, broilers,fryers and roasters drawn un-der 2',ii pounds?61 centi a pound.What is the ceiling price fora used closed console type por-celain gas ranjjfc :i(i" wide?Reconditioned and guaranteed$32.50, deduct $10.75 ii told"•• ii."

Conservation Plays Part In luncheon Set

1 REAL SYMPATHY!• " Nashville, 'J'eni:. — One luin-I dred ninety-six squadron mates

of Private Charle,; Duviill. fnrmer-I ly of Greenville, Kentucky, an| Army flier who was killed in an| Alaskan plane crash, last Janu-I ary, signed their names to a let-|'"*«ter of sympathy and sent it to?',"' Duvall's 2-year-old son, Jimmy.I" Th»t wasn't 'all, The letter con-», tained $55r>0 in cash chipped in

, by the entire siiiiiidroti, and athousand-dollar insurance polityto ibe used for Jimmy's collegeeducation. ••

BEES EVACUATE HOTELPalm Springs, Calif. — The

Oasis, fashionable resort hotel,was evacuated promptly andswiftly recently when a swarm ofbees took oved. A bee expert washurriedly located but it wasn'tuntil the guests were assured thatthere were no bees left in thebuilding that they would consentto re-enter,

Thii attractive luncheon let comervei on everything but ttyle,Thr iquiiro patches of linen arc cut from a ditrarded dren or a,worn-in-»poti tablecloth. Square* of lacy crochet in mercerisedcrochet cotton combine with the linen blocki to make theie love-ly mati. Use them often and watch your laundry problemidiminish Direction! for making thi> luncheon let may be ob-tained by lending a itamped, lelf-addretied envelope to theNeedlework Department of thii paper, ipecifying deiign No.2525.

HEWS FROM THE SCREEH WORLD iISy the time MGM's "The

feld Follies" reaches the screen,it, is estimated that from four Lofive million dollars will have beenspent on its production. This willmake it the most expensive musi-cal of.all time, exceeding by morethan a million dollars its mostextravagant predecessor, Para-mount's "l.ucly in the Dark."

Under a new arrangement aboutto l>e completed, Olson and John-son are to do one picture a yearTor three years for Universal, forwhich the comedians arc to re-ceive $100,000 per film, plus 40per .cent of the profit. They alsoplan to a|fpear on liroadway undare now busy at work on theirnew show, "Laughing RoomOnly," which they plan to put intorehearsal in September.

My, how these "baby" stars arc(Crowing up. Gloria Jean, Univer-.sal's yiunR stin^ini; s'ftl'> hasreached her eighteenth birthdayand may now work at nitfht, whenand where she. pleases. While she"doesn't, under the law, have to goto school any longer, she plans tocontinue her classes in order-toreceive her high school graduationdiploma at the Universal lot schoolthis summer, ,

When production of "Since YouWont Away," began, David O.SeUnick took out cast insurancewith Lloyd's of London. It wasa good investment b( cause theproduction had to be halted lastwinter due to the illness of threeof its seven principal players—Claudette Colbert, Robert Walkerand Jennifer Jones. Selznick col-lected $151,373, said to be one ofthe largest cast insurance claimspaid out by Lloyd's.

Had you ever wondered whathad happened to Slim Summei-

ville, that elongated strip of aman1 with a quivering Adam'sApple and his calf-like eyes?Well, for three years, he says, heand his 12-ycar-old son have been''just fishing" and loafing. How-ever, Slim is back, under contractat RKO, doing a comedy role insupport of Laraine Day and AlanMarshal,

How's this for sentimental non-sense? The hands.of Joan Craw-ford's new watch don't move—they're set at the exact hour whenshe first met her latest husband,Phil Terry.

Veronica Lake's cousin, HeleneNielson, is in Hollywood and herfirst role before the cameras will

-be in "a WAVE, a WAC, and aMarine," at Monogram.

Joan Bloridell's new contract at20th Century-Fox and her assign-ment to the role of Aunt Cissy in"A Tree Grows in Brooklyn," willmean new starring heights for thisaccomplished actress.

Word is that Bing Crosby ismaking a strong bid for a perma-nent place in the'production sun,with the possibility that he maygive up his acting career to givmore executive time to his filmmaking venture. The first Cros-by effort is said to be "The GreatJohn L," script for which is com-plete.

M a x i-e Roseahloom, formerheavyweight fighter, got hischance in the movies because ofa tooth he lost during a fight.Unable to pronounce liis VR's"when introduced to Charles Vidor,the movie director, his namesounded l i k e "Wosenbloom."Vidor saw the comedy possibilitiesof a hulking, flaknoscJ cauliflower-eared pug with such a lispand signed him up immediately.

at MOSKIN'S .. on easiest credit

Cool, crisp pastels

Peppermint strip«s

Flowery prints

,-. V and more

in a host of

youthful,

figure-flatler.

ing styles. >

See, them T

choose them..

WASHINGTON, — DOMINIONPOWWOW Interesting s i (I v -

ihts iirp coming nut of the Loil-III session of British Dominionimp ministerR, Strong EmpireIvnciitcs like Churchill. Smut*

mill Halifax are working to moldIn1 Dominions into a strong unitn balance the continental great ImWITS -Russia and the United

Stales, and to work out a ainffleforeign policy for the whole Em-pile.

The Impression is f>ftininir. thi tthe chief obstacle to such unify'

I he Kirig government in Canada.It i: mi the direct airline route be-

•en the Uniteti States ami Rus-sia, putting it in the position of aIniffer state between the. two. Fur-Iher, Canada is considering join-• iiir future Pan-Americai: confer-•nee.'!, something she l m been un-kvi 11 iTIir to do in the past. All thi«makes <>ur good neighbor in thenojjh feel Hint she must retain herfreedom to formulate a foreignpolicy that, will suit her own pecu-iar problems while lemaininpi loyal membw of the British jCommonwealth. ,

Australia and New Zealand arc>eginning to feel that they are tohave highly important roles in thePacific since they have become themain .bases for the United Nationsin that area. But they are verymuch influenced by the obviousfact that after this war tlie influ-ence of the United States will beparamount in the Pacific, and theivecurity will depend on the protec-

tion of American naval and mili-tary power even more than onBritish. " '

The main supporter of a strong-ly united British Commonwealthseems to be South Africa. Withmuch European competition in-evitable after the war for influ-ence in Africa, South Africa isseeking the backing of a strongEmpire.

One outcome seems to be cer-tain; greater unity than hereto-fore among the dominions—withrescrvatiohs.

• » »

The administration caught 'ibear by the tail in the Montgom-ery Ward seizure, jind met a Tar-tar in the form of Sewe.ll Avery.Reports around Washington indicate that administration emis-saries tried to come to terms withdirectors of Montgomery Wardbut were balked by Mr. Avery whoinsisted that the directors b:ic,k hisuncompromising stand. Congres-sional leaders find then- admira-tion for that gentleman dampenedby his dictatorial methods.

* * *WITHIN THE PINCERS-—Ger-

man propagandists continue toproclaim how impregnable theirwestern defenses are, so impreg-nable, in fact / that their invasionleader, Rommel', can peacefullybreed rabbits while tho Allies areplanning their grand assault. Butit is easy to detect the nervous-ness behind their whistling. TheNazis are said, to have about 250,-000 shock troops in the west readyto die in the attempt to stop ourfirst invasion waves while Rommelrearranges the beat troops underhis command for the most efficientdefense of the German home soil.foe '.betting on the date of the inva-stallations is promised to make it

impossible for the Allies ti> ad-vance without the utmost diffi-culty. Swollen reports Nazi troupsrushed to Denmark to fnve«lall ;ininvasion from the north. Thou-sands of mines have been laid innl! coastal waters and in largearons of the coast itself, a favor-ite defense method of the Ger-mans. In none of their propa-ganda do the Nazis mention theother arm of the pincers— theRussian front. Perhaps they wouldrather not think about it, but thereit is, waiting for the beat momenttfi strike.

Within Germany itself a reck-less mood in reported to havoseized the population, especiallyin the cities. People are MI id tnbe. betting on the date of the in-sion1; on the date and method ofHitler's assHsniniitidn; on the fallof the N«7.i regime; on whether jtheir homes will,be hit in the next jbombing. Inflation is in fv.il iffft-ing, and the black market he-|yond gtivernmept control. But ingeneral they . are resigned tli alast desp«ra\e defense, nnd Alliedopinion in that Cicrman mpralc willn«t crack until their armies Wavesuffered decisive defeats andlosses of men. ,

Mennwhile the lot of the Nazisin France is not a -happy one.They are in terror of a civilinr.uprising led by the underground,and they dnrc not move about ex-cept in large well-armed, groups.!It is reported that they have of-fered General Weyjrand his libertyif he agrees to return lo Francoto keep his countrymen undercontrol. 4t

* * *

WALTER PIERCE RKPORTS:Correspondents in Cairo are furi-ous because the censor has notallowed them to send nut the realstory of the mutiny of the Greeksailors in Alexandria. The storythey are not a'lowed to sendis this: The Greeks revolted be-cause they are determined thatGreek King George, who has thesupport of the British, be pre-vented from returning to Greeceto re.store his unpopular regime.It is to bn, remembered that this

CIVILIANS TO GETPENICILLIN

Washington.—More than 1,00(1hospitals, (lesignaled an depots bythe WPB, will h e , allotted tenbillion unita of penicillin forcivilian use under the newly an-nounced program of distribution.Deliveries will begin "in the nenrfuture," The allotment is madepossible because penicillin produc-tion totals rocketed to 35,000,-000,000 units in March, comparedto 18,700,000,000 in February anda scant 42fi.000.0OO last Junewhen the Government's $15,000.-000 production program waslaunched.

COW'S STRANGE DIET

Wollbach, Neb. —While butch-ering a cow in the cattle slaugh-tering division of the CampbellSoup packing plant a t KansasCity, John F. Moscr, an employe,found an identification braceletbearing the name of Bette LouNoonan in the cow's stomach.Moser sent the bracelet to MissNoonan •'who said sfle had lost itlast Christmas.

regime gpon*orod the dictatorshipof Mclaxas before the wnr. Therebels were arrested by t|jeBritish at the request of theKing's minister when they visitedhim to ask the King's abdication.. . , The triumphs of Hill and Pep-per make the Democrats feel cer-tain that the south will stay solidfor the regular Democrats. . , .The Republicans take comfortfrom the fact that both Mill andPepper won by smaller marginsthan in the last election. This isconsidered to show a growinganti-New 1'eal sentiment in thesouth. . . . There mv piedictionsof a Dcwey nomination on thefirst ballot. . . . Lester Hill, a.s dele-gate from'Alabama, may be slatedto nominate, F.D.It, for a fourthterm, as he did for a Oiird term.. . . The OPA may remove all cutsof beef from the ration list withinthe iu»xt sixty days. . . . The Armyseems to he most in fnvor of theproposed plan to unify Army andNavy into one department

The New BooksVifki Bmim has followed her

immensely popular "Grand Hotel"with another novel about a Ger-man hostelry—"Hotel Berlin M.'!."Hotel Berlin, like its predecessor,has a varied assortment of fasci-nating guests, but things havechanged radically under a war-torn Na?.i regime.

The windowpiuies an1 still shat-tered from the last air raid. Theheavy brocade curtains have tearsin them, and the stuffing is comingOut of the deep luxurious chairs.But the hotel is still the best then-is, and to it come people of highposition, Rumanian officers, NHXIofficials, famous actresses. To italso comes Martin Ricnter., under-ground leader, and there he is hid-den in the deep wine cellars bytwo" sympathetic French waiter.^

On the walls of houses, on tliocars of the crowded undergroundtrains, there often appenrs ascrawl, "You can kill Richter-•-but you can't kill »ii spirit."Service crews gn around and wipeit off; guards are posted to watchthe exposed Hpots. But the.npNlmorning, there is the handwritingagain.

The influence which Mai tin Itich-ter, who is a symbol of courageand" freedom to thr oppressed, hasupon the residents of I lie hotel. \-=the main thread of Miss Bauiu'snovel.

* * *The Greeks of llonin's "linv,

writes II. K. JiK-nbs. in "Six Thou-

sarfll Years ,,f HIT.,,it emptuous of the :',ate oats like the huimans cherished \}^,for the •oat-outing (,,.ninny centuries jJohnson, in his f;i,dict ionary, defnicii ,,for men in Semi,,.,Eng land ." To winthe ind ignant RCMIS ,

land is noted for n ,her horses, <Scntt:tii4|lencc of her men."

The Book- of- i h,announces ' thnt :hJu ly will he ".In ,,,vidor," by Thorn;,.- \j(he lant volume ,,f \logy about bho lit',- ,,.

S torekeepers in \ h

days were.somi'wh;,!.orderly1 inveiitnri '-( ' lurk tells us, in<."|'and P lows." Tin , ,-for hiRtance., of t!,, ,,cou ldn ' t find ttie hai..i

.he had ordered. En .,1let ter , he inform,.,|house that, they i,left him in the in..he could sciil the Inin to say he hud I'M.I.

Instead of dcsinn. ,and forget t ing p ,s torekeeper ;nlil, ,|ogi'lic poKlscvipl,wluil I hnve >;i'il \'.the d a m thiiH1..'" i;

\|

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Under New Management

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O N C E IN A WHILE my swvice is interrupted and your

work held up because a fuse blows out. The tiling nut

to do is call for help, I'm sorry but lack of ivianpower

and the need to conserve gasoline and rubber prevent

our CQrnjnjj to your assistance, You have to be your" own

handy man. Changing a fuse is as easy as changing a

light bulb. 'Keep extra fuses and a flashlight where you

can put your hands 6n them easily."

r • . • ' t

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Men's

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Sizei 34 to 46.

Boys' 5«ni.'iicr

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ladies'J POLO SHIRTS

HALTERS, SHORTS

1.00Good Selection of PoloShirU in Striped Pattern*.Flowered Hslteri, Short!

in Navy Blue.Siiet 32 to 40.

PILLOW

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2 to 6.

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