HEEBIE SontSS sMtsBA€¦ · , I a in resume hts duties l,e How, of the Air iiy. ml ii> mr:l;...
Transcript of HEEBIE SontSS sMtsBA€¦ · , I a in resume hts duties l,e How, of the Air iiy. ml ii> mr:l;...
33
SontS
HEEBIEsMtsASB
,-.•,«• ^'^*i$&ir$!&m^^ ^•rj^-vrrj.-: Y fW'^j^^i^fg
V i ' Is VII.—No. 6
WithOurBoys
i S.
'kman, ton of Mr.1 Hrockmtn 6 1 . 8 8,,IS left for the H«-where he will • • " *Nuvy.
Hmmed By Claim
,..,. .icy fltroin, S, K. l/c,,, „ 'days' furlough * l l *
,,.., Mr. and Mr», Charles, ;|n Lincoln Avenue, af-
",,,,,,,thR duty at sea He, I a in resume hts duties
l,e How, of the Air
iiy.
m l i i>
mr:l;
Rationed In Atlantic..yperted home for the
with his parents, Mr.\lex LeBow of Atlantic
During that time he willni-crs University to re-
William Morrta has r«-i,, Fort Devens, Mass.
; n p home to aee hisMrs. Chariet Morrii of
i ,n Avenue, who It a pa-llet h Israel Hospital,
i.i|>czynsky of Hudsonill i.r comrainioiMd a see-
,.,limit in the air corpsIds sinter, Mis* Sophie
kv. wont to Texas to at-
. Mipa
10 Local Businesses Co-operateTo GipeH.S. Students Experience
PMCK THRKE GKNtt
An,HI IV.
Charles Thatcher,Matagorda Peninsula,
nied by his wife,us mother, Mrs. Cor'ne-nf Grant Avenue.
him Dudich of Camp., is home for a visitthe former Marionif Jersey Street.
son of Alma,i ii; I ifayettc Street, mem-' iln \ "-iir's gra^nnting classMiry. High, Schopl Jn Perth,\ i! 'iv is stationed at Great- N.iv:il Truining Station,
Kii«.i'il Mooro was at home re-' i i the Naval Station in•: i '•' visit his parents, Mr.111 I',ml Moore of Washing-
h \. . His brother, Albert'•' ihe Army, now is in
pwili Aim-ii, us is theh- cousin,).unison, formerly of
, n Avenue.
v. Alexander Daroczy
CARTERET - Rev. AlexanderDaroczy, pastor of the Free Mag-yar Reformed Church, was chosena member of the. judiciary of theEastern Classis of the church atthe meeting held here Sundaynight. Also selected with Rev. Mr.Daroczy was Rev. Dr. CharlesCinczc of Perth Amboy. FrankPirigyi was named lay representa-tive of the district, After themeeting there was a dinner server1
by women of the church, withMr. Pirigyi as toastmaster.
Wallets As FavorsFor H, S Seniors
CARTERET—Members of thesenior classes at Carteret HighSchool received wallets as favorsat the annual prom, held Fridaynight at Nathan Hale School. MissAgnese Gunderson, art teachn-,and her classes carried out thePan-American theme in decora-tion, and music was by Jack Mar-tin. Refreshment* were servedby Mrs. Charles Stroin and a committee of members of the Parent-Teacher Association.
The class officers, Joseph Gur-ney, president; Stephen Krupa,vice president; Dorothy Yapcien-ski, secretary and Marion Sankner,treasurer, were assisted by thefollowing: Orchestra, Rita Berry,Bruce Galbraith, Winifred O'Don-
CARTRRET—Co-ordination be-tween the Work Experience Pro(tram now in operation at CarteretHigh 'School and local industrialplant* has bnen established to a
ree of great success. A num-ber of students have secured part-time jobs which benefit them us
l as the plants in their presentgreat ncori for'.office workers, andothers have secured full-time worknfter graduation a« fl direct resultof the plan's arrangements'. Stillmure will be employed, it is e«-pflcted, at lfle conclusion of thepresent school year.
Industries co-operating with theplan have included: U. S. MetalsRefining Company. Benjamin-Moore Company, Armour Fertiliz-er Company, Metal and ThermitCorporation, American Agricultu-ral Chemical Corporatlon,Vlrgrfni«-Carolina Chemical Corporation,Foster-Wheeler Corporation, I. T.Williams Lumber Company and-Westvaco Chlorine Products Cor-poration. Three students of thiscourse now are employed also atthe Cartcret Bank and Trust Com-pany.
What ShukM*This proffttm providS*.
seniors in the office prsttteetVi-sion go out lor g period of 4*nweeks to schools, banks, tndtosttyand other local offices for acWal«xper)encc and observation. Ehir-ing these weeks
their majorthese studentsstudies in the
ii'itll',1.
frill;:!.,
IftPI ,
I
|M'.
lour I
Wrii ' , I
ton .1,
I ) •! .•
\ In.
Wiiwnynski,-, U. ^. /N.,
seamanhas re-
1 " >tmly
station,
n~it to
•Uenue,
at the NavalSampson, N. Y.,hla home in
li- Francis J . H e r r e s ,ami Mrs. K- G. Herres
l 'Mil, East Rahway, has! is a skilled! aircraft11 "in the school at Sey-
NM.n Field, N, Car- HeIn Army November 19I'lrvuiuHly had attendedHi's School in Newark.
MeWin Cohen, ion ofMrs. Morris Cohen of"'| Avenue, has returned
'HIT a short leave spent
nell, Michael LaRusso; decora-A n , Ifena SUtminskl, HelenWalko, Cyril Sidun, John Aitken,Henry Wnukowski, Joseph Gurney;refreshments, Willa Walsh, Men-rtetta Frankowski, Alice Proskura,Thomas Loiak, Robert Loink,Frank Panczit; invitations, Eve-lyn Johnwm, Mancy Gulino, JohnLazar, Joseph Kendzicrski; fuvor.s,essie Moczarski, Eleanor Melick,Arnold leaner, Marshall Hopp,
Darocty; class advisers,Miss Marian Kelly and Edwin S.Quin, Jr.
Richards And Sokltr AreNew 2nd Lieuts. In Army
CARTERET — Two moreyoung men from this communityWere at home this week wear-ing the brand-new bara of a sec-ond Lieutenant in the Army.Lieut. Stanley Gilbert Richards,son of Mr. and Mis. GilbertRichards of J47 Pi-rshing Ave-nue, commissioned last week atFort Benning, Cai., has reportedfor new duties at Camp McL«l-lan, Ala. Lieut. Lester Sokler,son of Mr. and Mrs, 'Sol Soklvr,of Lowell Street, was commis-sioned at Grinnell College, Iowa,und will report next week forfurther study at Washingtonand Lee University, Lexington,Va. He is assigned to the ad-ministration ueivice.
morning and work daily from 1 t,M. to 3 P. M. in the office to whfchthey have been assigned, there do-ing the same type of work theregular office worker is expectedto do. It is understood natutaUythat all such students do not re-place regular employes. Type's ofwork performed by such studejAtsincliidc pilling, filing, taking dicta-tion, operating calculators, mimeographs, switchhoards, sorting mail;cutting stencils and doing othertypes of clearical work.
This program ..has beenthe direction of Frank I. Bare-ford, Jr., of the commercialclasses faculty at the school. AtpreBcnt a total of sixteen pupil*have received temporary jobs andby June at least twelve of theseare expected to become perma-nent.
IS Pounds Per Person MaximumExtra Sugar Ration For Canning
I II.
at Carteret•"I ncrw in service who
IIIIKII recently includ-' Koliert Dolan, '42, now•:•; Paul Kostuikavetz,
'•>• Maliszewski, '42, of. l-iiwrence Csajkowaki,'•kiss putty officer now" Key West, Fla.; 8tan
lk ^ ~/c, now stationedI •1|. N. Y. with the Navy;
••''•'Kiiian, S 2 / c , s t a t i o n e d••• ^ p i k .
111 Arrivals IncludeWtk Father in Amy
l : i l ! t i ' ; T ~ - M r . and Mrs."' •' Atlantic Street areII • °f u daughter, born in
1 n«w arrivals alsolll"ed tliis week, Mr,"•I'b Kisty of'124 Car-"• huvu a daughter,h w«y Memorial, Hos-
i(s been named JaniceKisty is tho former
Mrs; Harry Ru4-nagted
bornDavid
The youu|''f»>
herw«« Mrst Jtophie
Stamp, However, To BeDesignated For AddedAllowance Of 10 Lbs.
WOODBRIDGE ^-Clarificationof sugar ajlotments for home can-ning wan issued here t^day by thelocal War Price and RationingBoard.
According to th« OPA instruc-tions, every person desiring to ca,nfruit or berries is permitted amaximum of 25 pounds of sugarat the rate of one pound for everyfour quarts of finished cannedproduct. This includes a maximumof five pounds bi sugar per persona year for making jama, Jellies andfruit butters.
Up to fifteen pounds will be issued by the rationing board imme-diately upon application and pres-entation of all copies of War RationBook One belonging to the family.The board will issue a "Sugar Al-ilowaiice Coupon" for the desired Iquantity of sugar up to 15 pounds.The balance, up to ten pounds, willbe obtained later by using twoWar Ration Book One stamps,which will be designated shortlyby OPA and buying the sugar di-rectly from a retailer.
Pending announcement of details.if the new plan, consumers whorequire home canning Bugar imme-diately can get all but ten poundsof their allotment from the localration board; but those who canwait to use the ration book stampsare advised to do ao.
Home canners who are going tosell their product must take blueprocessed food point stamps fromtheir customers at tfau rate ofeight points per (luart,
More For Vendor.This class of home canners is
entitled to a maximum of 250pounds of .sugur ut the rate of onepound for every four quarts of
finished product and this amountincludes the sugar for home can-ned products for home consumption as well as for that which wil)e sold.
Home canners of this class werewarned that foods processed underthis arrangement may not be givenaway as point-free gifts. They arcalso required to keep a writtenrecord of names and addresses otheir customers together with inotation of the quantity sold Ieach.
SOLDIER TO MARRYCAKTERET — Announcement
has been made of the engagementof Miss Ann Shara of Perth Am-boy to Private (fc) Joseph Szitar,son of Mr. and-Mrs. John Ssitarof 48 Warren Street, Carteret.The young soldier is s ta ined inAlaska and no date has been setfor their marriagf. His brother,pfc John Siitar, recently had a
f l h h ih hepfc John S i t , yfourteen day furlough which
if t Bi Spifourteen day g hespent with his wife at Big Spring,Texas.
Pekola Reported MissingAt Seal WmToll Now 8
CARTERET—-The news thisweek that Stephen Pckola, five-man, U. S. Navy, had been re-ported missing at sea brings toeight the toll of young men ftomCarteret v/Vo are victims of* thpresent war. This young man,whose home is at 93 MapleStreet, had boon in the merchantmarine for several years. Hewas an oiler for the Sinclair OilCompany in 1940. He is a na-tive of Carteret and was bornhere December 13, 1913. He isdescribed by those who knewhim as "an extremely quiet sort,of man who stayed at home mostof the time when he was ofduty."
He is the third man from th«Merchant Marine to fall victimto the -war. Joseph Cherepon ofLouis Street was )ost overboardin Chesapeake Bay last Decem-ber, and Joannes Pelich ofWheeler Avenue was lost froma freighter in the Gulf of Mexicoa short time before.
BROWN IS DELEGATECARTERET—Robert R. Brown
will represent the local lodge ofOdd Fellows at the Grand l/odgesession in Trenton June 19, havingbeen chosen at the meeting heldlast Friday night. At this samemeeting Sergeant Carlton Gurig,recently returned after twenty-months' service in Greenland,spoke to the losmbui'.s,! JosephMushcr of Perth''Ambrtjr has beennamed district deputy of the tenthdistrict, which includes Cartcret.He succeeds John Donnelly of thisborough, who hua served twotorms. Members «l»o plannedmemorial services for Juno 8 withWalter Sipos in charge.
36 Graduates HereIn Red Cross Study
CARTERET—Thirty-six wornen of the borough who have complcted required courses of studjto aid in Red Cross work graduated last night at exercises hein Nathan Hale School. Course:of study were for the MotoCorps, Canteen Corps, Cantee;Aides and Nutrition Classes.
WilliSm C. Horley, of PerAmiboy, chairman of Perth Amboy-Carterst Chapter, preside*and Very Rev. John Hundiak ga'the invocation. Miag DorothLynch, coloratura soprano, san|with Mrs. Elmer E, Brown (Sylvia Brown) pianist, accompaning. Mrs. John E. Toolan ofPerth Amboy, captain of the Mo-tor Corps and Mrs, Morris Gold-farb, chairman of nutrition, spoke
(Continued on Page 8)
Officer Chas. MakwinakiCARTERET -Officer Makwin-
,kl is chairman of the annual bene-it of the Patrolmen's BenevolentsBoeiation which IB to be held<ek from tonight in the High
School Auditorium. At that timevariety program will be given
he artiRts appearing including In-:al talent as well as others fromNew York.
five Second AwardTo Foster-Wheeler
CARTERET,—Awarding work:rs at the Foster-Whocler Corpora-ion the second "E" for excellent
production, last Friday Rear Ad-miral Clark H. Woodward told hishearers of his confidence in theiroptinued efforts toward successfullojiduct and conclusion of tho war.
" Admiral, who is chief of theincentive division, spoke in theJbpjlor shop after completing a tour
f inspection on which he met shoploiemen and many workers.
Richard Townsend, president of
DrivingBanIs AgainIn Effect
New Order As Drat*tic Ai H«nder»fl Ru-ling Lait January
CARTERET ,— Although thepolice department late yesterdayhad received no official notice ofthe order banning all pleasureilriving in this area, where anacute gasoline shortage existsPolice Chief Henry W. Harrington
he had ordered his men "toreport all obvious violations."
The Hctton an the netinrf pure driving ban was taken to meeta gasoline crisis resulting from"tremendously increased militarydemands and to assure adequatigasoline for farm production ofood," tho OPA said. The dwin-dling supply, marked by emptyfilling stations in some cities, waaggravated by the breaking of thi"big inch" war emergency pipe byflood waters in- Arkansas and bythe continued heavy demand fornil.
Prentice M. Brown, price ad-ministrator, stated that he re-gretted the necessity for invokingthe regulation but the gasolinesituation left no choice. Mr.Brown appealed for the co-opera-tion of State and local police intelegrams to the Governors oftwelve states.
The order is' as drastic as wasthe ban put into force on January7 by Leon Henderson,"Mr. Brown'spredecessor. It resembles theprevious regulation in many re-spects and adopts the same defini-tions of pleasure driving. Adopt-
Prtmtti h Ah Corps Tiififi A
To AwardPlant «E"Exercises At Copper W<To Feature KihnerAnd Special Color
he union at the plant, received theaward, and Lieut, Commander W.S. Downs, na-val inspector at theplant, presented "E" pins to tworepresentatives chosen a m o n ghe newest employes, Mias Marga-
ret Gal and Joseph Polish. Lieut.Commander J. Douglas Gcssfordwas master of ceremonies, a post
Sjjft. Jtttpti StwkCARTERET—Sergeant Stark,
son of Mrs. Alex Csepke of 11Catherine Street, has just grad-uated from the aviation me-chanics/ school At Harligen,Texas. After his graduationhe went to his new assignmentat Plant Park, Tampa, Fl».
Ration lilted MonthFor 75-Mile Driver
ed also are police enforcementprovisions, including one that gas-oline rations of those found driv-ing in defiance of the rule mightbe revoked.
What li ProprAs in the original rule, touring,
vacation travel, driving to placesof amusement or for social calls
kurtd a year ago, wjhen % . , » M ruled <wt while trips hy motorfor shopping, to take children tooriginal award was made m Car-
te ret. He was introduced by Wil-iatn Lonsalitle, vice president in
charge of manufacturing.This second "E" will be repre-
sented by a star on the "E" ban-ner flWn at tho piant ever sincets first presentation. Tho Misses
Helen Sieber and Sophie Mat-weiihyn raised the flag. Music forthe oelebartion was by the bandof CarUret High School, directedby Philip Waron.
Student ProspectsJoin School Club
CARTERET—The Bun.sen limn-ers, one of the laigest und mostactive organizations of ntudciilsat Carteret High School, held itsHiinual initiation this week of stu-dents who will taki' chemistry nextyear. Edwin S. Quin, Jr., of thefaculty spokV on Chemical War-fure and u dance followed the busi-ness meeting.
The Misses E. Clare Monahan,
to
Katherine Donovan and Lorutlo F.Powers of the school facultyformed a visitation committee thisweek at a Newark high school.They were selected by the MiddleStates Association of Colleges amiSeconduiry Schools which carrieson an exchange program of obser-vations in schools by faculty mein-
Mqilmen Delivering Ration Book 3 Applications;Consumers To CompleteFormsAmlSaulTbNemrk
bers from similar institutions inother communities.
Recent salea of War Bunds andStamps in the school have amount-td to J5,95fi.25 and $470.40 forthe pant two weeks, This week theFreshman class led, with leadingplaces going to the home rooms ofMrs. Dorothy Hausner, Mrs.Phoebe McDannol and Miss AnnGibney. 160% participation wasreported from the classes of MiasBess Richey, Mrs. Haiftiicr andMrs. McDonnell.
Rehearsals are in progress forthe Junior Cla,s» play, "StageDoor" to be given June 1 and 2under the direction qf Mrs. Mar-riette • L. tyjhrer, Twenty-ninestudents &re in th>'
CAKTERET — With mailmenalready beginning the task of de-livering to each futnily in the bor-ough an application card for WarRation Book Three, War Price andRationing officials outlined i"»tr.uc-tiona to guide applicants in fillingout and mailing them.
Emphasising that War RationBook Three is merely a replace-ment book to be used when RationRooks One and Two are used UP,Officials said that the OPA would"notlfy the public when the newbook can be used. Everyone !»urged to «H oat the application
Dro-iBpfcly and drop it W*® *hoy, retaining only thft
m itub at the too fl
»•..„!, i,. «pn»i
uled to begin on June 2 whi;n theOPA will begin, mailing thu rationbooks bused on the applicationcards returned by that date,
Initruction* LWtedInstructions for •filling in and
d f lmailing th«gcards fol-
low:1. Detach the iiafr*w f
oRtion stub at the top of the cardand keop it.
2. A family should use a- singlecard to apply for its Woks.
(a) The name' and address ofthe head of the fwily,»hould beentered in the apac* # # B < J for,"person to whom b#qfc», | i e to bemailed." Prlflt c ^ r % ' 1 v
the family should be entered againoti the first of the numbered linesprovided at the bottom of the cardfor names of member* of the fam-ily eligible to receive Ration BookThree. List all eliglbla members ofthe family here, -with their dates ofbirth. If there i» not enough roomhere for .sjl, lhe W»mes, use theadditional space provided on theother aid« of fte card.
3. Every m«n( woman, and childibl f R i B k Th
y ( ,Is eligible for Ration Book Three
'tMdwientered a<
exceptForces
persona(Army,
in, the ArmedIjtavjr, Marines,
ast Guard, and Women's Aux-frlesj and iniptt*! <»f (nstitu-m» o ! involuntary «oiHln«Bwni4, "Parsoni lWiftg « & »
but m* r « M b»it|» or s4optl«l»i
school, to attend funerals or(Continued an Pmjc H)
Bride-To-BeHonored At Shower
SKWAREN — Miss MargueriteSkelTinglon, of C&rteret, daughterof Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Skeffington,was the guest of honor at a sur-prise personal shower given Wed-nesday night at the home of her:--ister, Mrs, Lawrence C. Ryan, ofBrewster Place. Miss Skeffingtonwill lie married to Corporal J. P.Hutfan, of Oranford, tomorrow af-ternoon at 5 '"o'clock in St. Jo-sephGs Church, In Carteret.
Gifts were presented to thegnest in a large white paper heartA buffet supper was served. Theguests were: Mrs. James RyanMrs. Betty Manganaro, Miss MaryLou Ryan, Mrs. Blanche KellnerMrs. Claire Ryan, Mrs. Ann DyerMrs. Mary Ryan, Mrs. RosemaryRyan, Mrs. D. McNical, Mrs. HHcrbold, Miss Y. Picaro, Mrs. WHaviland, Mrs.^ J. Lynn, MrsHelen Torr, Misa Laura Hoganof Cranford. •
Also Mrs, Eljen Laushmor, MissE. Laushmor, Mrs. Lillian Tobia,s,Mia. J. Barney and daughters,Vilma, Rhoda and Aranka, MrsDavid Lynch, Mrs. E. J. Skeffing-ton, Mrs. J. Pollack, Miss JohannaPollack, Mrs. M. Conlan, Mrs. S.Medvetz and (family, Mrs. R. Heff-ner, of Carteret; Mrs. J. Buckleyof Perth Amboy; the Misses Ger-trude Hensberger, MargueriteBailey, Margin and CatherineCurghety, Margaret Welsh, MaryMarguerite and Elizabeth Delaneyof South Amboy, and Mrs. FredBurki!, of town.
WOODBRIDGE— Harry C. Ashen," of 598 Roosevelt Avenue, Oar-teret, owner of the car driven lastweek by David Ashen of the sameaddress at the rate nf 75 miles anhour through Sewaren and PortReading, was notified thin weekby the local War Price and RationBoard that the use of his rationbook has been revoked .for theperiod of one month.
In a letter to Harry Ashen, theBoard wrote:
"This is to advise that the trans-port ration issued for an automo-bile operated by you as a taxicahhaj3 been suspended by order of theloard for one month.
"The reason for this suspensions that this automobile, license0H87A, was driven by David Ash-m at the rate of 75 miles per hourn Woodbridge Township on May1, 1943. David Ashen was con-
victed of this charge and appearedbefore this board on May 18th.At that time., full opportunity wasgiven Mr. Ashen to state' any fuelsin mitigation of the offense, burafter hearing this evidence, theBoard was unanimously of theopinion that the month's suspen-sion should be invoked.
OrdeM Book Returned"U is unpleasant for any Board
to be required to take a drasticstep of this kind, but under thecircumstances, no other alterna-ive appeared suitable to the pa-
triotic requirements of the ration-ing program, It is ordered, there-fore, that you forward immedi-ately to this Board, your presentration book, as the period of BUS-pension will begin on the date thebook is received in this office.
"Failure to comply with this no-tice will result in reference ofthe case to the Law EnforcementDivision of the OPA." '
David Ashen appeared in policecourt last week and was lined $35for speeding. , He was arrested byMotorcycle Officer Rudolph Simon-aen after a chase which ended nearthe Carteret line.
CARTERET—Two wtekstoday, Friday, June 4, hasset for the presentation toUnited States MetalsCompany of the Army^Na»jr-award for excellence In Ksduetion of war materials. T%s"lercisen will take place InScrap Plant of the relnarfare in charge of Copt. D**U *roe of the War DeparLiient
Capt. Monroe has informs^'plant the pro|tram will lasttwenty one minutes and atlimit of two minutes will bton each part except one offor each of the speeches byrescntativei of the Amy •Navy. One of these r«ptives will present thecarrying the "E" emblemwill fly above the plant from,4 on. Music is to be by the Iseven piece band from Camp- imer and It is understood the *of the employes are to beto the ceremony. A speed eo |guard will function "for thesion, this to be formed of men •the plant who have b«en in. _service but now have returned to ;
production because they are thirty.i3eight years of age or over.
Mule SpacffiedArrangement* for the extrcitjM ,'
have been'worked out in detailby the Industrial Service Divtownof the Army, which has tpefirftrt••")')the following musical numbers. fc'^'included: "The Caissons Going Along"; "Anchors Awalfch";"Marines Hymn"; "The 8onf ofthe. Army Air Corps," and "O»WThere."
The tentative program is Ufollows:
Singing of America, led by flip,Harry Wilson, professor ofmusic, Teachers' College,bia University.
Significance nf the Army-Navy•'•>'$E, Lawrence E. Cole, works rAaiu
*sr oi,the.local plant. ..,* 'Presentation of the burgee*
representative of the War D e f tment, and its.receipt by Stephen''•},Trosko, president of the unKMi '*& '*'*'the plant, and Heath Steele,dent of the company.
Response by Mr, Steele.Address by Navy speaker.Response by Edward
secretary of the union.National anthem, led by
Wilson.
OFFICE NOW OPENCARTERET — Israel Somaeh
has been assigned as manager ofthe Carteret branch of the UnitedStates Employment 'Service byThomas H. Hogan of the Wai-Manpower Commission. The officeis now open at 165 Roosevelt Ave-ue, corner of Carteret Avenue, op-posite Columbus School.
GIRLS DANCE AGAIN
CARTERET — The weekly"Make-believe Ballroom" dancesof the Young Ladies' Sodality ofSt. Joseph's Church will be re-sumed tonight in the school hall.The Sodality also ' has organizedtwo Softball teams with DorothyDolan and Mary Bonner as cap-tains.
Memorial PlaqueDedication July 4
CARTERET — Work on ; Ierection of the borough'srial to men Herving in World.'1
II will he completed by July1'it was reported to the BorCouncil Wednesday night,cilman Frank Haury, chairmanthe committee making therangement, set this time for'completion and reportednecessary preparation ofground already is well under 'The plaque will be at the front Itho Borough Hall.
Mayor Joseph W. Mittuch,nounced that he will issue atarnation this week
New Books At Library
WJp — Mix* ViviciitiL'Wintera,.. daughter of Robert Win-ters <H -the U. 8. Metals RefiningCompany, and Mrs. Winters,whose home is at 27 PrincetonRuad, JEliiabeth, graduated thisweek trom Beaver College, Jen-kiutown, fa . , with the degree ofBachelor <tf Science She was aleader in various college activitiesduring fcej yeajrs there and major-
d in k i d e r a t e tdies 'g j y t
ed in. kindergarten studies.
By LORETTO M. NEVILLECARTERET — THE FOREST
AND THE FORT, by Hervey Al-len, is thu first in a series of novelsthat will be remarkable in AmerUcan 'writing, both in narrativepower and grandour of concept.The author of ANTHONY AD-
HpK has hwn at work on thisimmense task for /many y«»rs andhe will continue at work for sev-eral more. ' To be comprised, o t»ix long navels which will be pub-lished individually as they areready, the trfttfendous whole «illhe mU«d TH8 DlStHHERlTED;
With the publication of THEFOREST AND THE FORT ••ginsa n<jw era in reading, the pltMur*an* excitement of w*ioh will con-tinue and inertpHW in lnt«nsjty asthe novsln of f t t DI8INH(«I«T:
bED grow inFORlST
theAND
bine who was captured by the In-diana as a child and brought upby them and who managed to getback to Fort Pitt, It is the dtoryof the sjege of Fort Pitt and ofthe march to Bedford Village af-ter the siege was raised.
Here are the men who are re-sponsible for the safety of thefrontier, Colonel Bouquet and.Captain Etuyer , who did whatthey could' with the little, theyhad and were always handicappedby the obstruction of the ilettlereand traders they wore trying toprotect. You will come to knowthe men of the garrison and youw))l understand the Indian wyou never have before. You willAJbo meet' that extraordinary
• I, Bwtts Mc^uistop. whose no-of ittQBftHty were highly
teret citizens to support the po]sale to be heldAmerican Legion and VeteransForeign Wars. The council''>J)b:'accepted an invitation from'vetentru1 group? to attendMemorial Day services andrade. Sunday, May 30,
The Schedule Rating Bureau.New Jersey, in a letter, comned the borough officials for ading u fire code and establishin;lire prevention bureau.
Work on the construction of IRandolph Street Sewer isunder way, CouncilmanKurtz, chairman of streetsroads reported.
CELEBRATES BIRTHDAYCARTEUET,—Joseph Bob
Longifellow Streetsixty-flfth birthdaywaukend with a dinner
marked1;during- •,]
bis home.Dr. E. J.
Covers wereNovak, Mr, and
John Novak and Mi&s An,ne |Sewaren; R«y,Mr. and tin.
vak, ofSchlycta,Uochal, of perthMiry StrelU, Miss M' \•Stix-lltt, Stephen Gregor,way, and Mrs, Joseph Boh
ATTEND COHVBNTipN
Jomo, Mrs, l ean Bchaffer iM. E- €onway representcal chapter of the
ww> a huge
{Contiwtd <m Pagt t)k M '
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:
PAGE TWO FRIDAY, MAY 21, 194*.f / . • • • * ;
liss Matgaret Prokop Crowner]At Sacred Heart Rites Sunday
Sodality Member* JoinCelebration Oi AnnualTribute; Children In LineCAflTRRRT F"!!mvinir nut HIP
hi'mc, "Mary'n f'ruwn," mi'mberiof ihc Spiiinr Smlfility »f SncredHenri Church conducted tho *n-Dunl cniwriinir I'Ki'irijcj Hinulnyevening. Miss M«T|fgrot Pnikop,president of the Sodality, hftd lh«
KEEP COOL'About Shortages'You can make your otherclothes lust longer !>y wearingGenuine Palm Hemli, Ameri-ca's KOOI.KRIZKI) S i f t - 5 0
Suit i ^
L U T It U I N I C L I , T H
You'll Md there's miof cool .eomfiiil in mil' genuinePalm BeiK'h Suits! tri teststhey avonw 1!1V, ciiulcr thanjiny others! ('oiirfdrt'.s not aJl—remember a lunu wearing,good-looking 1'iilni Hcach aaveawear on your wonloi) iiuits andthey're1 HO .sturdy, un averagePalm Bench is y,um\ far It or 4years. Switch to Palm Beachfor summer we.ur nn your war-time job—set1 us for harj-to-Kjl dark tone* fur work, andtighter shades to relax in - 22%cooler.
E r»l'\ that «f frowner. Thei- was plnred nn n mound ofwith flusters of whitr nnapnx. fern* nnil lighted candta,
and Bronnd it was n tr«lll« ten-tanned with grefiiH find bearingtwelve xt'nrn to represent thftwelve virtues of the Virgin, Mury.An n member of the 'Sodality spokeon eot-h virtue during the cere-mony a dingle fttar ws« lighted,until finnlly all twelve were
li-sin.
The prwpjwion began with theof the litany by the choir
and wan led by Rev: Andrew J.Sukson, pastor of the church, fol-lowed by altar boy* and Rev.•Kiiiher Raphael, 0, F. M. of Clif-ton. The Children of Mary, dres»-cl alike in white gown*,, with roaebuds in their haif, carried oldfashioned bouquets which they laidat the foot of the'throne. Thegroup consisted of Mifweft MaryShaner, Dorothy Lauter, MarthaGambats, Mary Gaydos, MaryPluta, Marie and Veronica Lu-kach, Helen Mazur, Anna HAsek,A Sapik, Anna Medveh, Ane-SIH Kolibas, Mary Margaret ('anik,Arlcno Sohnydft, Rose Trokop,('onfltance Arabrny, Alice* Thorn-<h«k and Etiwbcth Matrmka. '
Members of the Junior Sodalitywore white ifnwin trimmed in blufanil skull capH, and carried flower-decked hymn honks, which theyalsr> laid at the foot of the ntatue.The jfroup consisted of the Miss-es Catherine (Ihiimra, Mary Bis-titk, Louise Lukach, MargaretMnscnk, Florence Brcchka, MaryThompson, Elizabeth Eimko, anilMartha Hednnr.
Members of the Seninr Sodalitywho wore the apoake.rg, wore white.gowns with blue trimming andeach carried a white hymn bookmarked with a shower of ribbonsand fern. Misa Prokop in her roleof Oowner wore a gown of whit*marquisette with a fingertip lengthveil caught to her hair with awreath of daisies, and carried aHuruy of lilies.
More Participants
The group of Senior Sodalitymembers comprised: the MissesHelen Medvetz, Ann Chamra,Margaret Medveb, Johnna Pol-lack, Ann Kopil, Lorraine MaryProkop and Ann Gavalet*. Theygang "Mother at Thy Feet Kneel-ing" a» the cnowner knelt at thefoot of the statue.
Following these members in theprocetainn were three little tots,Joan D'Zurllla, Carol Dolinich andJudy Kuhala, who were dressedalike in white and wore crowns ofapple blossoms. They laid theirflowers also *t the feet of theStatue, The: two small flower girls.serving the Crowner, Rose Marioand Patricia Prokop, were dressedalike in white and carried smallColonial bouquets, and CameliaLukach, the crown bearer, wore Hpicture flock iff while material", abonnet matching that of the So-dality members, and carried thecrown on u white satin and lucepillow. Mias Ludiiiilla Goceljcak,vice prusidcnl and assistant to MittsProkop, wore white and carried aflower trimmed hymn book.
As the cpwn was placed, theclimax of the ceremony, the MissesAnn Novobilsky and Helen Shulick
Rosewig'g "Ave Marie,"
AnswersQmttioiu
. On
RationingAnd
PricesQuentions are tho«« maft fre-
quently Hiked thli woek of theTrenton District offloe of OPA,Answers are official OPA ruling*as of May 17. Readers may «ub-mit questions for replies to Tren-ton restrict office, OPA,.Trenton,
N. J.Q. We have a church group that
gives a picnic every year. Maywe have pointi for rationedfood?
A. Apply *° »•"*"loe>l l w w * "you eharte for tit* food, T «may have M allotment thltyear.
Q. Must I make any special reportto my board when I collectpoints for food I sell?
A. N«, hut f au k*«p a rtcori ofth* >*le« and turn the colltctedatampi in to the board,
Q. Dehydrated soups are still onthe May ch&rt but no pointswere taken by my grocer, Isthat right?
A. Yei, He wai correct. Dehy-drated toupt were removed, butat • very Ute date, and thechart! had already been printed.
Q. Where do I apply for supple-mental gas to drive to my vic-tory garden?
A. Apply at yeur local War Priceand Rationing Board.
Q. How often must I have mytirei checked if I have a "Bbook?
A. "B" book kolden mult havetirei checked by June 30th—and "C" book holder, by May3 lit.
Q. Are shoes with plastic solesand fabric uppers rationed?
A, No.Q., I am suspicious of the price
charged me for a dress which Ibought recently from a localmerchant. What can 1 do aboutit?
A. Yoa may report the incidentia writiag fiviof full partieslart to tV* Trenton District,OCoe »i Price Adminiitration,and the cate will be investi-gated.
Q. If I sell my own washing ma-chine, do I have to observe ceil-ing prices?
A. Yei. A regulation effectiveMay 3, 1943, placet all i»U. ofuied waihhif. machlftet underprice control whether told byan individual, auctioneer, orretail itore.
THE RIGHT SPOTHlackfoot, Idiiho.—On a shop-
ping trip, Miss Catherine Bakerparked her automobile across theStreet from the fire department.On returning to the car, nhe foundthat while she was gone, the carhad caught fire The lilHxe wasextinguished by the firemen.
Father Raphael gave the sermonand Benediction followed, with thechurch choir singing the hymns.
The village blacksmith, prudent and cautious,like many other small business men, saves tohathe can from his limited earnings and reinvest!most of it in his little shop so that his produc-tion in quantity and quality may be improved.Ha risks his capital that his operations may•Xpand—creating more work for others.
This is the essence of the American systemof Free Enterprise. Through its applicationover the years hundreds of small shops haveexpanded into giant factories producing thestuff needed to win this war.
This policy pursued by Americans has madathis country great! How else could we be sowell prepared to handle the tremendous jobsfor war work? Mow else could we be atpeak production seventeen months "after PearlHarbor?
This system of Free Enterprise—or Capi-talism—call it what you will—is not ready for
. the discard. It k the only system thatcan rebuild this world, come Victory,
frVBLICJSjSEKVICEAS544
O N THE SILVEJR SCREENStrand
Vivid, adventurous entertain-ment is heralded in t ie presents-ion of "Whit* Savafe," out of
Univorsal's major productionswhich tomes tomorrow to theStrand th*atr«. TiUnM In Tech-nicolor, the new picture reunite*Maria Montet, Jon Hall, and Sanu,:h« senMtlonal starring trio of'Arabian Night*."
A South Boa* Inland pandjieIs Die local* of the rtwy, a f tmajitic tlctlon tale da&Itajr withplight of an amorous shark hunt-er who lores th« fascinating na-ive prine*«s. Miss Monte* ap-
pears as, the princess while Hallportrays the fisherman. Sabu isse«n In the role of th« latter'*assistant. Others in the eaat in-clude Turhan B«y, Sidney T»l«r,Thomas Gomes, Don Tent *ni'Paul Guilfoyle.
CrMoentMore than forty top ranking
stars in one picture is somethingof! a record, even for fabulous
but that U. th« scoreParamount runs up with itsjihow of shows, "Star SpangleilKhythm," which is due to enter-tain theatre goers beginning todayat the Crescent Theatre.
Definitely the field day of fielddays for movie fans, "Star Span-gled Khythm" boasts among itsplayers Bing Crosby, Bol Hope,Fred MacMurray, Franchot Tone,Kay Milland, Victor Moore, Derothy Lamuur, Paillette Goddard,Vera Zorina, Mary Martin, DickPowell, Betty Hutton, EddieBracken, Veronica Lake, AlanLiuid, and Rochester, with Wil-liam Bemlix, Jerry Colonnu, Mac-donuld Carey, Walter Abel, SusanHayward, Marjorie Reynolds, Bet-ty Rhodes, Dona Drake, LynneOverman, Gwy Crosby, JohnnieJohnston, Gil Lamb, Cass Daley,Ernest Truex, Katherine Dun-ham, Arthur Treacher, WatterCatlett, Sterling Holloway, theGolden Gate Quartette, WalUrDare Wahl and Company.
In Simdoia Of Danger
"White Savaf*," »pectacul»r technicolor production, ha> (L.to ft.) Jon Hall, MaHa Montei, Sidney Toler, »nd Sabv. ArthurI.ubin directed tbt Hci|inf romantic dram* of the South Sea»which itarta tomorrow at the Strand Theatre, Perth Amnoy.
"There'lDitmas
always he anland" ia not only the title of apopular British war song; it*R al«othe theme of the unu»ual Anglo-American film production, "For-ever nnd a Day," which boasts thebiggest cast of stars ever dsiiem-bled on the screen. The picturostarts today at'the Ditmas The-atre.
The story centers about the his-tory of a London house and of thevarious generations of men andwomen who have lived in it duringnala. This unique occring is saidfo be one of the most entertainingpictures of the year, with scoresof brilliant performances end halfcrucial moments in English an-a dozen romantic episodes woveninto its main plot.
adapted to the screen from theWilliam Woods novel of the samename, which is scheduled to opeiat the'Majestic Theaatre today, mthe story of a little Norwegiantown's unyielding defiance of Nazdomination.
The production was directed byLewis Milestone, .the; man whobrought to the screen the greateststory of World War I, "All QuieOn The Western Front." Milestone sincerely believes that in"Edge of Darkness," he has thfirst truly great film story of thnew World War.
"Edge of Darkness," starringErrol Flynn and Ann Sheridan,
SEWS FROM THE SCREEN WORLDWhile there has been much
criticism of war films becamethey, for the most part, still'seemtoo fanciful, there is one thingwe can nay. These films are bring-ing to the eyes and ears of thepeople "living history," enablingthose who see them to visualisethe places and conditions under
which th« vac is being fpuht.>•££. »1 • J £ _ _ s'••! v
While there were a iruAnberwar stories after the first WorldWar, practically all of them canycout some time after the end <Xfthe war, Today, we have suchAlms as "Desert Victory," "InWhich We Serve," "So proudlyWe Hail," "Mrs, Miniver," "FiveGraves to Cairo," und theonly a short time after thedents depicted in them have oc»«urred.
While people may think being acomedian is an easy life, to BobHope, it isn't. After undergoingall sorts of stunts for the sake ofa laugh (for the audience), hisnext film, "Let's Face It," callsfor him to drive a jeep throughthq side of a building, jumpthrough a plate-glass window(real), and propel a rowboatwhich is hoisted out of the waterby a German U-boat. Funny,isn't it?
Director Lloyd Bacon is plan-ning to make a film based on thelives of the five Sullivan broth-.era, who lost their lives when thecruiser Juneau was sunk off Gua-dalcanal last November.
Cecil B, DeMille is finding itdifficult, if not almost impossible,to find enough men to fill the part?for the filming of "The Story of
Dr. Wassell." Gary Cooper willportray Commander Corydon M.Wasael, former Arkansas countrydoctor, who wnn tho Navy Crossund a radio salute from PresidentRoosevelt for evacuating ninewounded American sailors fromJava. Elliott Reid, a newcomer,will play u wounded Americansailor who Jails in love with aDutch nurse.
Vice-versa, Mary Beth Hugheswas recently given a contract byPine' and Thomns on conditionthat she keep her weight below125 pounds.
aurWM laVMttf SOMI
w ttutn
WE PAY
Ready CashFOR YOUR CAR
Whether it U paid for or not,We will handle alt of your auto-motive problem*. If you waatto buy, Mill, finance er bat*your car repaired, I M id*JanM,
SPEEDWAYAUTO SALES Co.
823 St. G*orfa Ave.Woodbridse
"'"' *4>MePhone
We .ell goodMt manly
L MIW. N, J. P. *. «-•»! .FRI. and SAT.
Don Ameche - Jaitet Blair in
"Something To ShoutAbout"
— AN« —
Geo. Saundert, Tom Conway in
"The Falcons Brother
SUN., MON., and TUES.
Bud Abbott - Lou Coitello in
"It Ain't Hfry"— AUu —
Geo, Brent - Priicilla Lane in
"The Silver Queen*'
New Exciting Music!
JIMMYGAURINO
And% Hie Boys
Come Tonight!
Always Funl
SHOWBOATCircular Bar & Grill
266-268 Madison Ave.Perth Auboy, N, J,
Try Oar Fine burntMeet Showboat's New Skippers:
"Skippy" und "Joe"
Joseph Cuccinello,Sole Owner
Other Editeit Si?Division of In faM
Some Inbor spokesmen and
iflemlic'rs »f Congress h»w beentrying to convince the i ptopW*that business is getting rich from.he wartime rise in. natidnal in*nmo at the expensa of the work-rs nnd the farmers. These claimsire not supported by the fact*.
In 1940 national income was177,800,000,000, Of that total,J2.B per'cent wtht to wages andnnlarie*, 5.7 to farm proprietorsmid 17.0 to business profit* aft«rorporute taxe». In 1942 ths na-ional income w u Up to the un-
precedent**! total of flifl,800,-00(1,000. But the breakdown ofhe portion going to these three
groups had changed. Wages andHnries climbed to 67.8 p«r tentand farm proprietors to 8.1 p,er'ent, while business profits, aftertaxes were down to 16.8 per «nt .
From these figures, it it clearthat business has not teen get-Jng an incteased share of the ris-ng national income. On the con-
trary, its proportion*** share hasbeen going down, while those ofthe wag* and salary.eamfn am)the farm proprietors have been onthe upgrade.—Wa«hin|ton Star.
A Moral ForteNo better time could be found
when men of faith ought to beoften upon their knees. In the-
'. SURREY, TT.V—VJc« Admiral ArthurSn«M«, on the retired i,,;,royal nsvy, said In an n,M,tan rfvtsl that the prooU-menac« of th* U-boat I* on i]otltttitf Klv*4, if It hat nota«tU»Ul tatt solved.
"I c«nnot isy more thanpreient," he added, "j | e a v
you to draw your, own conoluThe vice admiral, who ha
(0 th« rdlrtd Hat since ISM,at a meeting at which he hWer'apUqW marking the »doj HMS Dardonyx by the peoM»Furley and Coulidnn.
Two Marriage Propoail,IReceived .by MontgomeryL0ta)0N.~G«n. Sir lJernnrd
Montgomery, British Eighth mcommindtr, recently receivoHpropoiali el marriage. "Cnrlmenough," t>« lays, "both camethe »»me post. That must i,(record."
T*# general, K yoari old ,-,,,widowtr alrra* 1037, told of tin ;
potatk in a letter to his nLady Montgomery.
r TfntThe tame chemicals thut R,,
the productlon'bf (llmi ahn ,.„KM rasBU/actore of munition
united prayers of dt'vutr.i |and women lien a morulwhich no thoughtful |).-i'..,iunderestimate.—New York
WED. and THURS,
Lloyd Nolan • Heather Angel in
"Time To Kill"— Alwi —
"Ufa Have Fun"— Wllh —
Bert Gordon (the Mad Ruitian)
FBKK UIHUKN I*O LA1M1SSW t l ) , uu.l TI1(IHN.
WALTER_ l'lua —
«ur«liu Hunt - l(U-li«rd I arlauu
THE AFFAIRS OF MARTHA'
NOW SHOWING
Jnliii I'njue - nuturrta O'Hara
To the SHORES of TRIPOLIIN Ti:( ll.NKOl.OH
— Hlua —
Hert Uvrilun • MarKurrl Ltudiay"Lett Have Fun1.1.
Empire RAHWAYF l l . to SUN.
STATE THEATREWOOOBRIDGE, N. J.
TODAY a»d SAT.ANOTHER CKJEAT 2-FEATURE ^ROGRAM
"THE WOON IS DOWN"with Cad) HA.EDW.CKABBOTT and COSTELLO in
"fr'AINT HAY"M
SUN. THRW TUBS. < T"P
R*4 SKJCLTON in
IN oixie11~ 7 • - • • •
OP THE
"PRAJBJI CHICKEN?"
ST. At FIVE CORNMS • ftHONt ' A «•))»
TOPAY THRU THURSDAYA Calvacada of Mo-tion picture enter-tainment.78 top rank players
FOREVER.AMD A DAY
Walt Ditney'i
"SaludosAinigog"
with DoaaM Duck
it'i T.rri6cl
l« Teehnicolor
COMING F R I D A Y T M A Y 28th"BURLESQUE"
fttfffutContiouuut from t P. M. Phone f. A. 4-1593
7 DAYS STARTINC SATURDAY
HUUMHIEZNKWUttlO
~-2NO BIG HIT —
LUM AND ABNCt•2 WEEKS TO..UVr
PAUUETTE GOWUJIP . DOROTHY
HOW. TOKHLL OUT APPUCATION CARD FOR RATION JKXH^ 3
WOK NO. S KfcNTIFICATIOII STU»!
»•¥« WAI RATION MX>K NO. I
000000
tONTS POSTAGE IT MAH.ED IN , ,
NEWAftK, N. J. | ,ICtNTSKHTACtllSWHttl f
lirh .r«.» t»jnm »N> Iff atHM bt *<hl, IMBll*, «
POT WAMPHUM:
uvp m
Iht linufe
lit Wir Kiitw ttrt N.,} Firm,
nullMl M4IW «< «» dttn M • ! « • bMh 1M |6 bt MiM.), ns 1441111 i i « i M « awki *.u MAT h. l«—,J*j, ll ^i |IM« ttftt* awti *ill KOI bi IM*I
mi I.I, Ji, ifilTJ* « •***"! uelb
fil«» In l<k M ff*4
you m BK i nnfctr if t f ttttf !«•!>.
, S B w t I « k * f t * < « W . xfni KM MM. . . « . life
IP YOU CANNOTOMTALL THENANMON
itJ«i A N ....q.....SJtt
8IDECARD, «« tTHIS SPACt
iTt-Hillk AM MORE THAN IJ PIR5ONJ. CQMPUm ANOTHIR APPUCATIONK»»PllttON««OTI»ICH»IDINTHI*O»ll
H
tSTHlS MIS1 TIMES
fa Ukrainian ClfflrdiD t t a m n , 0
kb bit U> win tl»tBrown, 104,)rw*Mtld H«r who marched with MtttiMn to
rkrninhn (!huT("h was tho
m«r-
of Miw M«rydaofhtw «f Mr. awl Mrs. UirryWolaniky of 188 Rtndolph Street,o Frank Wrublevskl, son of Mr.nd Mrs. John Wrub!*v*kl of
Sooth PldlnfleM. The ceremonywna performed at 4 o'clock by theimstor, Vnry Rev. John HundinV,»nri mo«ic wait by the fhurehchoir. The church «nd »ltar (Jec-orations were of white stiuonalflower* mansfd RRalnst ferns nntlptlms, Immfdiately after theceremony there w»» a reception inthe Ukrainian Pavillan.
The bride, ftiVtn In mirr1»(ff hyher father, wore a gown of whitenet and satin, made with a fullskirt «nd long train. Her veil wa*of tulle, arranged from a coronetof orange blossoms and falling toher fingertips. Her flowers wereWhite ro««s end orchid*, formedinto a cascade. All her attendants were dressed alike, in Ice himsatin, and wore hair ornaments oontrieh plumes. Their boui|U!'t«W«PW of v*ri«ffat«<i
These attendants wore her sin-ter, Miss Sonin Wolansky, whowas the m iil of honor, und thoMisnea Alice Ginda und HelenHam&dyk, bridenmaid".
rne KeraKi." <>f Detroit,Mich,, acted as boat man and theusher*, both qf South Plainftulri,were John Naiamck and JoscnhSnwczak.
Mr*. Wolansky, mother of tin-bride, was gowned in a blue i>n-semble with a gaidenia corsn((c,and the mother Of the bridegroomwore navy and white with a sim-ilar corsage. For traveling thi1
bride wore a belno suit with navyblue aceewnrieB and an orchid cor-sage.
After a trip to New York thecouple will make their home inSouth Plninfield. The bridegroomserved in the Army before Penrl
h« Set. laestey |8,0(M in War Bondt.
He dwetawd, i "If* mrfrdity to fc*h» O|Rt In tnk war
est he ran." \
STKRlLllllMt PLUHk
Waahlnfton—jA,1 (hctoiMl, aim-1liar to an tntl-fi7«M aoJoUoa, r*-1
nUy devflopadf, Is so powerful'that a th)mbl«fu|l af.tkt chemical jcan oohi|t)«te1y »l«rtlli« tht air of,ihospitals, numeiiw, bAnicks tn<"dwelMng*, ntcoidlng t<r th* W»|
45.,-bftlcal Board,
Harbor and w»* honortkly dW1charged. Th« jbride has bt»n «n>-,lployed by the iYohipt» CorpOrt-tion in Linden- SA
Ertry Repair job fatly
Gu*rant««4. For cl*«niaf,
new parli or r«(uUtln(.
brim y°u r watch to
ALBREN Inc.133 Smith St.Perth Amboy
^ - - _ . A SIGN HERE
Vmi mailman will deliver to you an Application for War Ration Book| Thin. pictured above, some time between May 20 and June 6. This hew
(in Look will be used later to replace your present food rationing books• they are used up.A family unit will use one application card, the head of the family en-
the required information as indicated above; Anyone living with thei who is not related by blood, marriage or adoption, and individuals;iway from the family unit for more than sixty days will use a sep-
arate application card., " • ~<- — . •
State OPA hftadquftrtetu UPgee everyone to fill in and mail the card im-mediately, first tearing off and retaining the narrow identification stub atthe top of the card.
If you do not receive an application card in the mail by June 7, or ifyou spoil your card and need another, you can get one at your local post office.
Hundreds of Newark CDVO volunteers, 13,000 high school students, 800high school teachers, and OPA personnel will cooperate to mail approxima-tely 4,600,000 of the « w rtipUeemmt ration books directly to homes, inorder to spare idie public'the time and inconvenience of waiting in line atschools or rationing boarde. , o
, DISTRIBUTED BY NEW JERSEY OPA
MUSI BE "3UPER-MAN".>lu.—Performing
('ommando
| | . - , , ! . | . N ,
' : l j i i ; ,
i'
, downtown garage,iiir roof of u busin»sa
n-nrliy, took a long fun,,[ into space. Fallingri, the hoy miaaed thelnt the gurage roof andH iimither fifteen feet topavement below. He
niy u slight head injury.
FWatfcg B««pttattAccording to the rtports town Co-
lombia, thrilMton ana inttery «n-Itntms »t Work «Mit | ta i to in-oAaB OM or more mall bdtiMaband bOspital-dltpensarits on tht rtv-
1 a n In (lie rut*«r-proiucln| rtflans.Thi Urf«r floating lniUUationi Willcoralst U a kuotli to tow a hos-pltal with eight or Un beds. Amongthe supplies they will carry are anti-malarial drugs, which are being dis-tributed widely in the Amazon areato protect workers against malaria.
GAME SOCIALEvery Thursday Evening
AT8:00 P.M.
AT
St. Andrew's Church HallAVEMELST.,AVENEL,N.J.
ltab«c»»rMahogany is used extensively In
making plywood and veneers. A thinouter coating or surfacing of mahog-any placed over a base of soft toughwood makes line material for build-ing fast PT mosquito boats. ThinSheeti of mahogany and other woodsfrom one-hundredth to one-tenth ofan inch thick are cemented togetherunder heat und heavy pressure, thusproviding a •eeml-plBstlc materialthat is boll-proof, waterproof andlighter than steel.
Built Ship* KarlrBefore the Mayflower arrived in
die New World, the first ocean-goingShip to be built on these shores hadbeen launched on the Maine coast.The time was 1607 and the ship, the"Virginia" made many trips acrossthe Atlantic. Today, American ship-building Is une of the major in*M-tries anfl the only one to meet andexceed presidential directives In1942 Deadweight tonnage in W2was in excess <* 8,000.000 daad-weight torn.
EGG TRUaiC, TRAIN, OMELET
Chicago—When his truck con-taining 210 cases of eggs wt sitruck by a freight train at a rail-
road crossing, James Manno es-:aped with a few bruises, but theback of the truck was filled withscrambled eggs.
many Spiders HelpfulAlthough most people kill spiders
on sight, there are in reality, only afew species Wat are to be feared.They even have an actual utilitarianvalue, th#lr webs being employedfor cross hairs on telescopic gunand bomb sights, range finders andoptical instruments. In defence ofspiders, It also may. i>e said thatfor food they prey on intects, manyof which are Injurious to plants andman.
Tk« IsrMf Central, too,
k » WWtsill to do with
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i» f»tri «ff oiM
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i» -mn or mseyk4«hc»n
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MUIOAD
OFFICE MEMO4/30/43
TO DEPARTMENT HEADS:
RE. TSI1PHQMII ADV'T; Doteplan-our necessary calls inadvance to keep them brief *adto the point?
Are we ready to talk whon our"
connections are get up?We should^ do everything po»^
siblt to avoM tying up longdistance lines needlessly.
WOMEN'S
BIG SAVINf:
• • : • ' / - . » • :.v•I- &\-
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TILL P**v
EASY PAYMFARRANGF
HliHIJI
WRS&TOtJR FRIDAY, 21, 1*49
ICARTERET PRESST*l«phon« CtrtfTit 8-1 MO
Published by Carteret Preai
OFFICEf t WASHINGTON AVE., CARTERET, N. i.
LUCY GREGORY EditorMEYER R0SEN8LUM Sporti Editor
Subscription, $1.60 Per Y«M
Entered u second CUM matter June S,UW4, i t Csrtewt, N. J., Pott Oftc*, undn
ict of Mtrch 8, 1879.
Indian Maues UnconcernedThe situation in India, which concerns
many Americans, in not understood by
people, who think, if one judges by
ir words, that the criais: in India can be
ittled if the British would just make up
eir minds.
It is difficult, very often, to get theth as to a situation at home. Obviously,
is harder to understand the problem* ofign nations It Id Impossible whenever
ividuals try to determine policies byhefi that take no account of facts.The spirit between Hindus and Mos-
in India is real, with the Moslems"warning that an attempt to force theminto a federated state with the Hindus willbe met with violence. With Hindus de-inanding "free India," which means givingtheir leaders control, the Moslems reject-Ing it, obviously the problem becomes large-ly a matter for Indian agreement.
The crisis is further complicated by thefact that, outside of a few leaders, nobodyin India knows much about what is goingon and few care. This is borne out by thedispatches of Herbert L. Matthews, who hasbeen in India for months, as the corres-pondent of the New York Times.
Writing from Peshawar, Mr, Matthewssays the situation dependa upon two funda-mentals "of the Indian situation that pre-vail everywhere." They are (1) that themasses have no political consciousness and
;(2) the Moslems are steadily drifting into-Jthe league camp.
r: ' The league, it should be pointed out, \A
' t h e organization that threatens violence ifthe demands of the Mindus are granted bythe British government.
i !
|;:', British Doing Their Fightingfi i The future peace of the world and the,. safety of the United States and Great Brit-
* bin require that the two English-speaking'"'jhations continue their close cooperation af-
jter the conclusion of t he present war.| Because of this fact* almost self-evi-jdent to students of world politics, we thinkjit is important for Americans to appreciate
e contribution that the British are mak-ng to the overthrow of Hitlerism. Such
j-ecognition will not detract from the gloryof our own fighting men.
It is a mistake for Americans to believe• that they art; doing all the fighting. Itjp would be tragic if our war news over-em-^jphaaizes any phase of the great war, espe-
.(-|wrially if it persuades us that the British,French, Norwegians, Greeks and other
ppeoples have made relatively small contri-butions to the" common cause.
Roane Waring, National Commander\ the American Legion, just back fromorth Africa, takes cognizance of this
•vet, we bulieve, when he says that theh are not "letting somebody else do
%\r fighting for them." He saya they areping it "magnificently," and adds thati« British soldiers in Africa "have been
Ugh hell and its fires have not daunted
!<:;;"Vy* yield to no on« in udmiration1 oferican fighting men but, like the LegionJer, we admit that the British deserveiit for a great record in thia war, What-
tr may have been the suspicion aboutJB flg-hting qualities of the men of Eng-S8; Scotland, Wales and Ulster before
iJWar began, there is but one opinion to-r'and Hitler knows it.
cannot sponnor it" and that the Chamberof Commerce or the Manufacturer*1 Asso-ciation cannot sponsor the campaign. Heaiwerts that Industry ban lost prestige andthat business men are no longer leadingaffairs.
Major Barrel T. Lane, of Utah, one ofthe members of the Americanism Commis-sion of the Legion, questions whether thepublic would respond to A campaign financ-ed by a fund given by "business men." Hoput his finger on the matter when he point-ed out that while the Legion collected achild welfare endowment fund and spentmoney on Americanism, "we raise it fromour own pockets."
This ia an intelligent observation. TheLegion-would suffer in prestige if it becamea stalking-horse for any group of businessmen, interested in a propaganda job, re-gardless of the high-sounding motives con-tained in it* general principles.
If the Legion wants to undertake sucha campaign and the campaign met withpopular response, the Legion could raisethe necessary funds without the interces-sion of collection-plate passers to approacha class of business generally regarded as"big business," /
Asks Legion To fting A SongThe American Legion will probably be
to sidestep the proposal of certainness executives that it sponsor a cam-
"to keep America sold on American-
TIME TO INVESTIGATE
Aircraft, Guns, Tanhs And MenNews dispatches from North Africa
speak of the merciless pounding given theAxis forces by Allied aircraft and the mur-derous fire of thousands of guns massedalong the line, just ' before the break-through that resulted in the surpise cap-ture of Tunis and Bizerte.
With Axis aircraft practically non-existent, hundreds And hundreds of Alliedbombers and fighters harassed the retreat-ing Axis soldiers. More than 2,000 sortieswere made over Tunisia and the Sicilianstrait in one day as our airmen ranged toSicily to destroy Axis shipping,
The big guns put up a concentratedartillery barrage of the World War 1 type,shelling enemy positions and paving theway for the infantry's assault. Tankswere extensively used in the battle whichdemonstrates conclusively that an army isnot all aircraft, or artillery, or tanks, ormen.-
It is the everlasting cooperation ofevery unit that makes possible the exertionof such pressure along the enemy line that,eventually,* and suddenly, the front ,<j,racksand the day is won-, ' ; «3St-> <ji
OTHER EDITORS SAYWhat We War AgainstToday, we are engaged in the
greatest trial known to mankind,embracing every habitable portionof the earth. All of our wealth,our resources, our manpower ami,lastly, our womanpower are enpaged in the destruction of a fom;with declared intentiona to de-stroy religion. This crime cannotcome to pass, and it is for this wehave lifted the sword;of battJf",We lov* freedom, liberty andworship ofjttm, the author
Behind The TimeAdmiral George Robert, the Vichy-
dominated High Commissioner of Martin-ique, protests the action of the State De-partment in severing political relationswith him and his regime.
The French officer warns that the Am-erican people may "one day have to paythe price of their obliviousness of 'a livingreality' " whatever that means.
He is nearly a year and a half behindthe time. The American people, now de-fending themselves from attack, are pay-ing the price of their obliviousness. If theyhad enjoyed a better comprehension of theforces moving in the world, they wouldhave been better prepared for war and, asa result, might have been SR&red theirpresent ordeals.
ur engaging in this ghastlyWe have no hatu for cnemu*» asnun; we extend the doctrine oficighborly love to include evenur enemies. We do make war,
lowever, against our enemies'resent evil designs. The destruc-
.ion of the church and of its serv-,nts and .every symbol of rig))t*lousness these things wo hate,ind will not allow to happen . . .
We who profess religion, tlisti,must carry the niorai responsiblety like the founders of our na-;ion who also suffered throughears of bloodshed, to the end thatur way of life, our choice of
worship and our right to freedomand liberty will prevail—RearAdmiral, George L. Weyler, ondedicating the new Navy Chapelat th* Navml Operating Bate,Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
no ot}e objects, to the gen-prineipie expressed but interpreta-
, will differ greatly afid there is dangerthe campaign might be misunder-
; seem» thajf'a few 'industrialists con-be idea of collecting from business
p r c e s about twenty bjllion dollars a year'Educate thi! public" as i p the future
American initiative.
th« proposal p r i v ^ y withHe admits that "induutry
People Ahead Of Congress' According to a poll, conducted by theAmerican Institute of Public Opinion, sev-enty-four per cent of the people of theUnited States believe that "an interna-tional police force" should be set up afterthe war "to try to keep peace throughoutthe world."
No such overwhelming sentiment isvisible in Congress,, which is unduly Im-pressed by a vociferous minority.
One problem of democracy i» to secureaction in the national interest, without un-due deference to the prejudice and opposi-tion of small groups. Sooner or later therewill be an appreciation of the rights of themajority to rule the country.
There is only one remedy for the re-peated failure of Congress to'express theopinion of the majority of the nation. Thatis to leave some Congressmen at home. Thejsooner it is done* the better it will be forthe general welfare. I
"Perfectly Coordinated"Joseph C. Grew, former Ambassador to
Japan, approves the United Nations' planfor the destruction of Germany: and Japan,saying it is "perfectly co-ordinated andtimed" and designed to do thj worst thatcan be done to each while f a t i n g both.
This is interesting, partlcliiifly in *fowof the Ambassador's strong presentation othe strength of Japan. He has warned hicountrymen that the Japanese wi!l h>ve,totie atylnJn ttytUe becau&e, unlike the Ger-mans, they do not give up when theappears inevitable. '
ductjon, food distribution. (We| And we could 'not hurry her.have a Secretary of Agricultureand a food administrator each nowauthorized to exercise the other'spowers!) Tha home-front warorganization ia a jerry-built struc-ture of dj.vided authorities, scat-tered responsibilities and clashingjurisdictions, and President Roose-velt is Its architect.
The people whose dollars arepaying for the war and whose sonsfttlff:brothers and husbands arefilming it are entitled to know
They are, entitled to knowthat Congress has fciwn thc Presi-dent ample authority to create aWar Cabinet which would corrupt,those, basic weaknesses—a WarCabinet, with a few able members,each made definitely responsiblefor a definite part of the wholeprogram, each given clear author-ity over the agencies and officialsconcerned in the doing of his partand all enabled to meet frequent-ly and regularly with the Presi-dent*- argue out their differences'befoce him and- get his prompt de-
isions.The Truman- Committee knows
M r The State Honse Dom<By J. Joseph Gribhins
Asking God w*n not a matter ofspending five m.jn'utes to ask Himto bless her child afld grant therequest. It meant waiting uponGod until she felt His leading.And I must wy that wheneverMother prayed and trusted Godfor her decision, the undertakinginvnrinbly turned out well
God speaks to me in prayer.Prayer is not self-hypnotism, ItIs more than meditation. TheBuddhist priests spend days inmeditating. In, mediutipn thesource of strength is one's self,But when one prays he goes to asource of strength greater thanhis own. . . .
Prayer is our source of guid-ance and balance. God is ableto enlighten the understanding. Iam often bewildered, because mymind is only finite. Then 1 seekguidance, and when I am sure, Igu ahead, leaving the results withHim . . .
What I do want to make clearis that whether we get guidance ornot, it's there. It's like tuning inon the radio. There's music in
TliENTON--New Jersey resi-dent* face milk rationing in an-other two or three month* becausenormal production in decreasingand OPA iltubbornly refuses tosanction • penny a quart IncreMein milk priced to prevent farmersfrom losing money and to encour-age an adequate supply for the fu-ture.
Such il the prediction of ArthurP. Foran, State Milk Director,
hi insists the OPA has beenp enny wise but milk-foolish. Ef-forts to increase the supply "tNrw Jersey milk by meeting theincreased cost of production weremade more than n year ago by Di-rector Foran but organizationspurportedly representing consum-ers blocked bis plans through get^ting OPA to "freeze" all milkprices.
Ordinarily st this season of thcyear, there is a surplus of milkin N^w Jersey. But this yearthere is no milk surplus for thefirst time in the memory of manyold timers in the industry, Ac-cording to Director Foran, thi.-*means that, beginning with thedry summer months, serious short-ages of milk will occur.
In pre-war days, New Jerseycould look to other States forpart of its milk supply. This year,however, even other states areshort of milk, much of which isbeing converted into butter andcheese for military needs, and in-to dry milk and evaporated milkfor lease-lend purchase. There-fore, Director Foran insists NewJersey must depend almost com-pletely upon its own farmers.
Statistics compiled by DirectorForan reveal that New Jerseymilk production had fallen offinore than 29 per cent behind theconsumer demand in January andEobruary la«t. At that rate, hegays, milk production will be Aovtnso low by July when the normalflush of milk begins to taper off,that New Jersey will face thcprospect of milkless days.
"For want of a penny a quartmore for its Milk, Now Jersey ialosing a vital battle of war-timeproduction," said Director Foran.
MARSH:- People of PassaicCounty foci there is no other per-son like their County Clerk, LloydR. Marsh, and thoy predict otherresidents of New Jersey will soonlearn that this astute, dynamicofficial is the man who gets thingsdone in proper fashion.
Marsh is considered the man be-hind the recent swift maneuverswhich brought former Ambassa-dor Walter E. Edge out of poli'tical oblivion to be the Republi-
Re»li«in(f th'e rabbit w,,,l!r|
up his plants, he wrote t<> ifuns asking for inforomtj,,,,how he could lagally RHthe rabbit. By the time |:,ccived a reply the "buck" ,wai being followed around I,.little rtbblU,
informed him h,.,secure /L permit from the sFish and Game Common,trap or shoot rabbits that »r.ing diwnage on hi» own pro,,providing such n permit docconflict with local ordinarieshibiting shooting in Mom,Lake*. The gardener H«HIH «to the State House for such :imit and was mailed an appli,',,,.','
By the time he got nrn,Jn.(filling out the form, he-there, were IBS rabbitsabout his property, A few , | jago he wrote to Director I),,,,again tenuesting informationhow to get a permit for n m:l,gun which he believes w,\necessary to keep the r;iM,t>.of hi* garden when t |u.,plants reach rabbit-"at |,
HABITUALS: - Conti,,,,,,weeding out of wise guy m.ists by the State Motor V,|Department after they haveconvictions or three accidentpaying safety .dividends in yjJersey.
Arthur W. Magee, now <,missioner, initiated the campaagainst hwhitual violators nftraffic laws in 1933 on a s1M|scale when he was Deputy Si*Motor Vehicle Commission!Today it ig one of thement's major activities, Si if1933. 21,044 warning letters >„been sent out, 8,011 hear,have been h»ld and 4,930 lii-cnnrevoked.
Motor Vehicle Departmentcialn have made a significant | |covery growing out of thepalgn against the repeatersa general rule, drivers whoa record of truffle convictions ;i|have a record of nccidents.
ABOUT JERSEY:—The sflag Hying from the State Hnproclaims a record of 1,112(1 Suemployee* in the armed service <the nation . . . Many comties nf New Jersey have developtraining courses for childaides, preparatory to institmiij
c i v i l
programs for the cafe of childn
I Mil UlC lauiu. i n t i c o inyoik HI
all that. It should tell the peo- t h e a i r i whether we tune in or not.
Say W h a t You Mean,
SenatorsThe Truman Committee ought
to come right out and say what itmeans: President Roosevelt is theman who can and should end con-flicts! in the war program,
The committee's report.on theatest flare of synthetic rubber-aviation gasoline trouble is toodiplomatic to do much good. Itwill not insure correction of the'basic weaknesses in the control
of the war effort" which SenatorTruman and his associates havecomplained of so muny times.
It glosses over the fact, knownby every member of the commit-tee, that those weaknesses havetheir origin in the White House.
Somebody must suppress "de-structive, w a s t e f u l feuding"among energetic men whose dutiesbring them into conflict. "Wherenecessary, heads must be knockedtogether" by somebody. Some-body must make the War Prodtic-tipn Board's authority *'a living
l i " t h ^ decisions can be
pie.—N. Y. World-Teletr.m.
Mme. Chung On PrayerMy mother was', . . a Spartan.
But one of my strongest childhoodmpressions is of Mother going to
room she kept for the purposen the third floor to pray. She
spent hours in prayer, oftfn be-ginning before dawn. When weasked her advice about anything,she would say, "I must ask God•first."
prottlity" ha^ imade and pnfoiced "over the objectionn of' R«gj-»i»iv» d«]>arun«nthe»«iBv *;: - ";••; v ;
So says the Truman ^''The chairman of Ihe War Pro-duction Board was given sweepiagpowers, which at least on paperappeared broad enough to unablehim to direct war production."But somebody also gave sweepingpowers to the rubber director, sothat "practically speaking, thechairman of the WPB had onlytenuous authority over the rubberdirector," And somebody gitv.flsweeping npfrers to the petroleum
By learning to tune in, one canunderstand.—Mme. Chiang Kai-fhek.
LABOR TURNOVERThe high rate of labor turnover
imperils the Maritime Commis-sion's goal of 18,000,000 tons ofships this year, according to RearAdmiral Howard L. Vickery, whossys that the construction of tank-ers, aircraft carriers, transports
'and escort vessels will be retarded
The New Books
I of war workers . . . New Jei -cnext Governor would haveeral additional weeks in whir1
draw up his first budget mi'sunder a resolution sponsoredSenator Wesley L. Lance
an party's almost unanimous|H u n t e r ( i o n C o u n t v a n d suI)l")rtl
Associationchoice for Governor next fall. 7 t h c N e w
Because of hin reputation, he hasbeen selected us campaign man-ger for Edge.
He resides in Hawthorne .and;has pne son serving in the Army.His brother John ia Chief of Po-ice of Clifton. He has worked jn
the Passaic County Clerk'a officeall his life, starting out as officeboy for the late John B. Sfater
Jersey TaxpayeMore than fn
Hilary St. George Saunders is"probably the most widely read au-thor in the modern world, and yethis name has seldom, if ever, ap-peared in printr—either on thetitle page of his own books orelsewhere. He is the author of threofficial British Government report*on the various branches of theBritish lighting services, with suchbooks as "Bomber Command,""The Battle of Britain" and"Coastal Command" having Boldwell over 12,000,000 copies. Sinceall hia works are official Britishpublications, all of them havebeen published anonymously, un-der the British Government seal.The latest .iii tlw aejies, "Cuhj.;bined Operations,'* the completeitory,oj the Commandos to date,is the ifck-of-Hie-Muiith Club
June, along with l»ak
forces, both Allied and Axis, areengaged, and what the strength ison each side,
"Combined, Operation*" takeBtHe story of the Commandos fromthe time they were first organized,after the evacuation atl ^ p vDunkirkfW to<%hat' the authorcalls the greatest Combined Oper-ation yet to nave been staged inthe war, the landing in FrenchNorth Africa. H« details the train-ing and experience each man hasto go through in becoming a Com-mando and, with maps and pic-tures, shows precisely what tookplace before, during and aftereach raid.
One of rious notes Saun-poi«t» out in "Combined
Operations," along", with his thrill-ing descjriptivns of the actualraids, is* that the fpfMi&l song of
hicb»iviut|a« ••—•», - . « . . e ...V.L .u—, raids, is that the fpfMi&l song ofDinesoMprVinter's Tales." I the British Parachute Troops is
paper.pSo are they, on paper and itt; l»nd
practice; tn every branch (if t % ^ i
tationV/'efom $ 'preyer^tion, tnanag«in<mt of
Sattnaerr'i» aaid to know moreabout thfjragi'ess of the war thaneven Winston' Churchill. As offi-cial recorder for 'the CombinedOperations Command, headed byLoid Louis ^tduntebatten, he is tin:recipient pf all reports from land,sea and air forces engaged in raid'
jf |nemy territory throughoutthe world, It i« his job-to curie-latfcthe»e reports into the pictureol the wjJMf as a whole, and to keep
administrator, and there "the lines' his recoj-ds straight he has to knowof authority aw confusing even on' what1* foing on not only along ttie
" { F B l i H i
.Come Sit By My Side If YouLove Me." Ano,th»r odd thingthe Commandos discovered wasthat one of th* first objectives unMadagascar vt/f a point of landbearing the name of Windsor. Cas-tle—the sim«f n»me aa that of theresidence of (hi British KoyalF l >>:>Family.
And iir tduring the
fcoast^ o,{ France, Belgium, Hoi-l d ^ f J b t l n u hb,ut »l»o on such
^ Si
India, It ii wild that Saundtrt<$n put h« Anger °n »"X *pot on
•"• "' """!M
g h pS. Ompbeltflfn was deliberatelyblown up to Hoek a harbor gate,
»t St Naiaire,of which H, M.
and climbing up through various iclerkships, chief clerk, deputycoonty clerk, until he was electedcounty clerk.
Following the;1 collapse of thcHcCutcheon regime in PassuicCounty a decade ago, Marshstepped into the picttlre and bybrilliant work perfected a greatmachine. A short time ago his or-ganitatioh broke into the rock-ribbed Democratic stronghold ofPaterson and elected William P.Furrey as the first Republicanmayor in a great number of years.
Marsh has the ability of select-ing the right man for the rightposition. Last year he supportedCharles K. Barton, Paterson bank-er and lawyer, us the Republicanstate senatorial candidate fromPasiaic County. He was electedand because of his ability andgeneral wholesome ness, hai become the most popular Senator atTrenton although he has servedonly during this year's session.Through- Senator Barton, MarshBccurt'd every appointment .jie-sired by Paasaic county ""many other counties receivednone whatever. He even arrangeda joint session of the Legislatureto elect a new PasBaic CountyCriminal District Court JudgeMuch of the success of Marnh lie*in thc fact'that he is not lookingfor any State job, even though hewas prominently mentioned forGovernor a few months ago. Hitihtereal lies aoltly in the smoothrunning operation of the Repub-lican party in Kausait County andin the State.
RABBITS:—Leonard DreyfuM,State Defense Director, ia oneState official. who maintain! hiisense of humor despite hit big jobin lining up thousands of warden*and others in preparation for thebombing of N«w Jemey. Me in-•Jute 'the little bits of humor % tcreep into the daily mail bay halpto mlirimiie hit troublei.
gas officers of local defense n>
cils have just completed a live-i
course in the Gas Spccialni
School at Ainherst College
Charles R. Erdman Jr., state reiij
director, reports that 74,6 l!l
sons are receiving relief in
Jersey, including 2O,H!I6 on nlil
rolls, '27,945 old age pension*
and 2&,5C>4 children under !
are of the State Board of ( hl|
dren'a Guardians . . . Appn
nmt«ly 7,000 crop reporter-
New Jersey supply information
their crops to the Federal Si il|
Crop Reporting Service . . .
members of the New Jersey Slat
Police, including both enlisted .i
civilian personnel, recently .'
swered the callchapter of the
Of thc Trent'American K
Crosti in the new drive for I
donors , , , New Jersey ranks
among the commercial aspai
states in yield per acre, with
total production last year of
871,000 crates . . . In New I
sey, farm labor is being r
$b'4.Z5 per month with l"><'!'
compared with $60.2fi ' " A|>nl
1»42. Condition* . ed
govern diversion of r• *:-'*l|( *'•''
from the Delaware River by '
stateN of New York, I'ennsylv;"
and New Jeriey have IIWN
eluded in a bill being studio!
the Legislature . . . Brown i"
seems to be the best catch i>! N
Jersey" anglers so far this s|>ri"lj
according to entries in the l l
ernor'* Fishing Tournament
The State Department of A^IK
ture warna farmers with vuliw1
horseu to take precaution* HI?""
e n t e p h alomyelitiit, or "!'•''
f»ver" . . . The State D e p a r t s J
of Health protests against t»l
practice of meat packing
pi-sparing hamhurg and pork >"
with «x<-9»»ive (juuntitii
fata mixed with meat . • - V"
HouKs Speak** Jo*"1 K- l l"'
Ocean City,'has taken up his i"1
dutlea, as a member of the St
Board of Public Utility Co»'"
alonen.
CAPITOL CAPERS;-• S t >
Def«n*e Dkeetor Dreyfu»» !'•'
report th»t during the lam '
light air raid teat a
l irml
gTownship resident ranhpm» »n$ slapped an airden oil the., back stating:
During the past winter, a Itptin- wUiti»t'»r« Wowing b«c«u»
fromraid «
flf .thf town, uin Lakes man h>i b«en corr**-w . » Mtjull).] ponding with DreyfuM. It aa«m.
the winby rqonthj h«
«lrt«nd«rtd Allies'
OF WORLD EVENIS 'Bolivian President Warmly )Grfeetcd
favorite Robert Taylor, •••lined to a United State*.,,-••! »• •" e*eeul'T« oB>«r, It being impreued by SkipperDonlrvv »• Chief Yoenvan Walter Brennan that war it not
, |.Uy i" "St"""1 B * F # f A«llo«," ••«» of lh» N«Ty in MtUii,| ihf Japanese, to be teen at the Rahwiy Theatre Sunday
Other Editors SayA b o l l tI, . , , „ ,„. r,,,)„„ ,,,
thru i'
h v , p | ,, f
t , , ! „ •
Postwar Germany.. to me that if wo arc to,i reawakening of demo-iinots in Germany, we
nirnize HB fundamental»f (iermans themselves
nif what the structure ofjrovernment is to be.
IIHMT will be Borne who.'.li-ral state, Wit go far
nil the evidence sup-u-licf that the over-
, l u l l l . y
olhrr- •
„• re establishment of thelaniora which formerlyI ,.nc German rtglon from
i i ,t wholly obvious thatcrew strong in South
(jfrm;lii Havana, which protectedn MIlionary groups againstmpin liy the Central Oov-
er,,Mi, nt.' is It nut equally obvi-ous ili.it more opposition to Naii-
manifest in Prussia than? Is not the weakness
|of \\v\<-\\ in the critical years an|,if,||( nt proof of the instability|u' i. .'. .I legislatures?
Tin i ! of hostility to Ger-
|n;my ui!i be atrong and perhaps
nil•! I and jjssifuctiv-e thani imagine, :.Thja fact isih\ :iml the'only thing we
loin !. i; tn set up military gov-wnnicnt fur a period of time. Thisgurrrnnietlt must bo item andjim. li'it I sun sure that when its|ta<k li.i- ln'i'ii completed, the cause|of I»MI-I- will be seen only if thepriivi-i-.il- <if the Atlantic Charterarp ;i|i|)ln i| to every people and toeviry part of the w^rld.—Dr.C<or,f N. Shutter, Pr*iid«it ofHunirr (nllc(e, at quoted in Auf-
l i r e IP
Ihtvit
bau, New York, aitti-Naci Germannewspaper.
Launching the IntrtpidThe Intrepid, sister ship of the
aircraft carriers Essex and the
new Yorktown, apparently wan
christened last Monday, after she
had already slid down the ways.
In naval lore that is Usually con-
sidered a good sign, that a ship
should be so eager for her launch-
ing as to beat the formal cere-
monial. And that should be the
character of a ship named In-
trepid.The ship for which she was
named was originally a Tripolitanketch named Mastico, wMith wascaptured by Stephen Decatur andwas used Feb. IB, 1804, in burn-ing the frigate Philadelphia, whichhad fallen into enemy hands afterit had run aground. Later theIntrepid was fitted out with pow-der and combustibles in l>i> blownup in the midst of the TripoliMeet, but exploded on the way,carrying to death its commander,Lieut. Richard Somers, two. otherofficers and 10 sailors^-ChicagoDaily Newt.
HELPLESS FIREMEN
Topeka, Kan.—firemen in Sta-tion No. 1 looked helplessly on asimoke poured from a house justhulf a block from the fire station.Thu man who reported the fire in-advertently turned the knob of anautomatically locking door, pen-ning the firemen and equipmentinside. Fire-lighters from a erois-town station quenched the flames.
(Ben. Enrique Penaranda, Bolivia's president (left), li shown upon JUtarrival en the lawn nf the White House. Be signed a declaration «i•tfttnution with the United Nations. Left to right, President Pen»rand»,Eteajftent Roosevelt, Vim President Wallace Mid acting naval aide toPresident Roosevelt, Adm. Wlllson Brown.
Miners at 'Round Stove' Discussion
'Supermen' at Rest Famous American Leaders Honored in
Straws and PanamasStetson and Adam
$1.69 to $5.00
Genuine Stetion Panamas
,. m^ SLACK SUITSSHANTUNGS, TWILLS AND POPLINS
$3.95 and upFIELU a U B SLACKSLaundry or Dry Clean A
. ' $5.45 •Other Cotton Waih Slack. 2,95 and up
SPORT SHIRTS ALL COLORS$1.65 & up
EX. SIZES ALSO
BA5QUE OR TEE SHIRTS4 9 c to $ L 3 5
BATHING TRUNKS WOOL AND LASTEX$1.00 to $2.95.
KE1S SUMMER SHORTS AND SHIRTS45c and 75c
Open Frtd»y and S«lurday Evening
Relaxing under the comfortable heat of a stove, these four minersdiscuss their No. I tnpit, the aix-day wrek for miners under governmentsupervision of the mints. The six-day week was ordered by Fuel Admin-istrator lokes throughout the ciml mining Industry as work generally wasresumed, after a nation wide walkout.
Additions to Great Britain's Fleet
When U. 8. troops entered ihit Tu-nisian valley they found the gravesof 12A "supermen" who bad losttheir live* In battle with the AHIes.Tbf nrcne of their final retting placeis eslm and peaceful now as Ameri-can hoys walk through the rotrs ofcrosses marking Nail grave*.
Nazi 'Flak' Trains
Shown at left Is a scene at the banquet given In Chungking, Ofclna, by the CfctMt*miwion, to honor Brig. Gen. Claire Chennault, who won lasting fame as leaftr of Ufc firing t t f t«6ca*lon of (loncral Cfacnnaull's appointment at commander «(the Uth V. S. air f»rre. Oin/ral IIs terend frnm left, in picture at right, Lieut. Oen. Joseaa 8fllwHl, commanding grteral tf djfc (ma-lndla area, is shown (with sweater) chatting with tome of hl« ofBrers at a has* somewhereBoth generals recently have had talks with Oen. George Marshall, chief or ttaff, In WalhlAgieH.'
Skilled Blind Folk Aid in Defeating
infill
The sea-power bf'tlie United Nations gets two powerful new additionsIn these new British war vessels pictured at sea for the first time as full-fladged members of tlie Britisli navy. At top l» the super-battleship H.M.8.Uowe. At bottom is the II.M.S. Indomitable, modern air-power carry-ing giant.
U-Boat's -Officer Addresses Mates }'
Trying to h lt the extensive knock-ing out of locomotives and rollingstock, the Nazis have fitted out cer-tain trains as "flak trains." Entiretrain is turned Into a rolling arsenal.At top Nasis man light anti-air guns.M»w: Onnnert run to their heavrafttl-alr cannon.
Morocco Etiquette
Oen. Mark Clark, head of U. S.forces In Morocco, is eating withbis flogcrs at the great "dlffa," orfeast, given by the rich t'ald ElAyadl on the octasion of a wolfhunt. Oeneral Clark and his staffenjoyed the dWa immensely.
Inspiring pages In the story of America's war effort are being written dally In the Oakland, Calif.,L
trial Home for the Blind. Here skilled craftsmen produce clothing and bedclothes for the armed Iaddition to making brooms for state hospitals. At left a blind worker cuts and trims a broom after it It/'ou the handle. Center: Two blind'women are busily engaged in sewing pillow cases. Right: Aa Seeing Eye dog. The dogs guide the blind when they wish to leave the koine.
See No More Profit in Chicken Raising Grooming t T
Summer Garb
He W wrvlvui olo port they^wpre «)|rtBi'ub rene*U in U«man«r«w ate: Th« i«k w
guar1!
in
by
V'1'••J : 'MM^M^-^l
submarine' jm»a». . 'Btn the «Xf«BWw
ves,Up br % S. n^y «»ocrt
• / ' ' • - - )
Diver S. C. Zagary, cWe/ DMmale, puts on a weighted dlvtaf
In Gomales county, Texas, third largest poultry producing comtlf In met. He is going down In thethe Ifnlttd States, the chicken farmers claim that they cannot' make a dock to inspect the three aoprofit, and many of them Intend to go out of business far the duration, a FT boat, IT boats haveHere several farmers are discussing their problem* against a background big job in keeping laps at thejfrof empty chicken cages. ' taace in the South Pacific. . '
• e T, XT. n " » T\ J Firemen's VictoVeteran of Desert Victory Greets Dad v-
Celebratlnjthe British « i« ft Uw Hw»d w*r
/ • •
ff! Sit , TM8
Carteret Blues Trim New Brunswick In 2 Games,Slides Four MilesOn His Stomach to
Aid Freezing Pal
But Too Late to Save Manj Caught in Crevasse of
Valdez Tilacirr.
VALDEZ, ALASKA 'Tied In line4t duly "
Thst'is Iht ivnr department requl-«D for I young soldier wltn sleeps4t*p In B crevasse of Vnlitcz gl«-4|af, tamtd trnil tn the gnlri CRmpt«t 'M. Snow »ra]j his tnmb, thetcrwerlng mountain peaks ore hitmonument.
Twanty compnnions barely ei-etptd the «nmo Into when hurricane« M l and avalanches cruii'ht themon « training trip.
It was five days nfter the stormfcWfce, and while gales still howled.Vlftt the first survivors staggeredfOi crawled back into cnnip. Ittod taken the spredirst of them five'tmy* to cover 1(1 miles.
Tbree Were Mlniilf.But this story concerns the three
«rto'Still wore niisfiinR when It wasDioughl all of the mirOivovs hud beenbfOUght into Ciimp. They wore Kiv-48 up lor dend; n new pnrty sot outto flnd the bodies
At mldnifiht o( the sixth day, oneOf the three erjiwlcd into rump. Itdeveloped that the three hurt holedUp close against the ninimtnin In theUJadlnf, bitter stnnn. Then n snowtflda buried them.1
The strongest, caught in the shal-low edge of the avnlnndw, strug-gltd out and crawled and staggeredbaek to town.
On the morning of the seventhtoy, « Sunday, resellers heard fainttrim tor help Before them on theWOW, too wenk to stnnd, was thefnatn, almost unrecognizable figureof the 20th survivor. This la his•Wry:
When the avalanche roared down,h« had managed to bore a way toth« surface with his bayonet, forhimself and his weaker compnnion.Because their (opt and legs nlreadyWare frozen, the two started crawl-tog tortuously townrd town.
Fell Into Crevasse.
Then fate stepped in. The weak-er deviated ever so slightly fromHm' trail and tumbled Into a crey-• f te . He landed on a ledec 20 feettrtlow.
Unable tn get him out, the sur-vivor cut strips finni his sleepingbag to wrap around his own feet,bund* and his nbriomen to protectthem from the- ice.
'Then he dn>i»f>ed the remnants Ofthe bag to his comrade; set up hisrifle to murk the spot, mid startedinching his wny duwn Die glacier onhU belly.
When found, he had crawled tourmiles through the gale-borne snow-storm. The strips of sleeping bagand his uniform.' were shredded rags.His feet and prirt of his legs werefrozen almost solid. So were hissums—Jo the elbows.
But he still was creeping along,seeking assistance for his (alienbuddy, v
Two days latsr, when a partyfound the now sDow-fllled crevasse,handprints still were visible, inplaces, on the glacier and the snow-covered flub."
Beirs Home Oi StartStay Witt
NBWARK-The Newark Bear*will break up their long rWad tripthin week, Jumping home for athn>e-(Uy Aland against the Balti-more Oriole*, The series, whichwill get. underway Thursday andrun through Saturday, will markj» drastic change In the. Bean'Hchedulf,
Beginning with the Thursdaycontent all Newark games etwpt,Saturday and Sunday contests wilrhi' played during the twilighthours. The Thursday and Fridayfrays will start at 6:46 but bepinning June 1 the weekday fameswill be ncheduled at 7KM) P. MThe Friday "nig-ht" contest wfllalso be the first "ladie* nlsfht"game of the year, following »Saturday afternoon game at 3:00o'clock, the Beam will go awayaicain until May 21) when th«y re-turn ifor the holiday WeekendugHiiiftt Jersey City.
Both the Mny :!() rtoublcheaderurn! the Memorial Day twin hill onthe following afternoon will beplayed at Newark. This yaar'*schedule call* for the Labor Daydoubleheiider nlso to be played atNewark with .lerney City having(inly the July 4 doubleheflder.
Manager Bill Moypr in morethtin nnxious tn get the Dearsijackhome thin week even if only forthree days. That will mean threelong morning butting drills whichthe Bears bud ly need because ofthe bad spring weather and Whichthey cannot got on the road.
Of grout satisfaction to Meyerhus been the improvement in thehitting of the veteran Gene Cor-bctt since the club took to theroad and the few good dayg en-joyed by the newcomers who haveshowed flashes of greaf battingpower.
Corbett, International Leaguebutting -champion in 1941, willhave to carry the brunt of theBear's attack this year but can'tdo it nl! alone and if necessaryMeyer will make some chanfM U>add the neceasary power. But hedoesn't want to change thingsmound until all hands have had Pfuir chance to .gain tehir battingeyc.1,
Ke-UK PackagesAi many factories now make
paekaf«e for war supplies instead oftor fopd, and since steel for nails
Ntnd wire ts scarce, re-use of crates,lp»M, parrels, baskets, burlap andcotton sack* is urged, to prevent awidespread shortage of food pack-
OPEAKING• J ABOUT SPORTS
Chinese TramlationOf Britannic*
CHUNaWC-Work bjf |>f*flstarted on translating the Ency-clopedia BritannlcB Into Chinese,It was announced officially.
This "colossal undertaking''will require several years. Thenational Institute for compilationand translation of the ministry ofeducation of the Chinese govern-ment is In charge.
Most Envied ManButter
Cipwt Grftdar Can hi$$
IMPORTANTINFORMATION
FORWAR STAMP
HOLDERS
;.1*Vfc|ji]Niismyi VH War Sump, or o*eitH, MK, »1, o r | 5 —do m palrlutic wmoe.
r SBoney gum to woifc for
tun't |t JaV YOUf •Ma ts '
1st f)if4 #
yom tmy
It may ba newsfolks that the condition* w*R ffjgofcth«y milk their BOWS utd tiwthey give the resultln* fntugt *«•be told ImmedlaUly by «n MMtt
when he lamplem Jmrttoq <*fter churned from tto*duced.
Where the mlHtitorefl and what theeating are but a Jewol Information that I . « .rated as on* of the countqfabutter graders, CM b fby puttini a pat ot butter Mb Mkmouth.
Mr. Kldred Is chief buttar **>*•tor for the Atlantic «qd ««4aV "Smcompany's Chicago wtrtkoHt*. $*•tually, he doesn't wmplt mktmM-nor does he swallow an? '4f ' « •butter he 1B inspecting. 4 MlHiVounce sample, taken t> « mtUitrier from a fiber box or wood|nitutwith weighty ranglog frojn M t«4apound*, It suftkUst
An iiwpectar can, fc Mplt # -ujicss, tejl by tMtlaf «ad]io«llM|
a sompie'gf butter under what con-ditions the cream was produced thfthundled. Quality of the finished prod-uct is laraely 4etarmia«d ty mperfection of the raw KjaHerhri -sAdcare givej] the prooesiU),! sum-lions. ,, T»
So scut* is « fMaW* MM*'tftaste uud aroma ttMt H m. * *(airly cuutotmA Ar|Pt» 4t «ffMavcy, (fetermlw tv * • M l 9mmthe territory or orMe «l 4k*ter. SkuokwMi in &*f«i in aw $min NebrMtc*, Mian or writelaurl, awl th* kt*vy U fMi io c«ttk on ttw 9m «wa i<a«b imparu Ha <m ******charaet«rlttio«, Although 4|ejr « pusually too taint to mtm **• mexpert.
With Joe Medwick benched due to ft hittingslump, there's little that you can write about hhn butthe other day the World Telegnrm carried a'ftotureon his missus that was quite interesting. And for thebenefit of our female readers we are going to repentit here:
It's more painful to watch some, of these bigleague games in which your husband is a ttar than tolisten to yeur child play her first piano recital!
That's what Mrs. Joseph Michael Medwick ofSt. Louis says. She should know. Her husband,Ducky Medwick, is left fielder for the'DQdgera.1
To look at those chic young women sitting in thebox marked Players' Wives you might think what acarefree, exciting life they have, traveling antondthe country, living at hotels, sharing the adulationheaped on hcro-huflbHtids. But if you think being abaseball player's wife is next door to being a moviestar you'd better park your illusions under the firstfire hydrant and dampen them down.
For Mrs. Medwick is a glamour saboteur.Tiever Take Rooto
She wonders whether most people realize that ifyou are a baReball player's wife you— '
Never take root anywhere.Must continually prevent the baseball fans from
spoiling your chiWren. . 'Must lead a quiet life during the 8&aa©T), as your
husband is required to keep strict training rules.Must try to find living quarters convenient to
your.husband's ball field and yet near a park wherethe children can enjoy exercise and fresh air.
Remember that today your husband may belongto Brooklyn and tomorrow to Cleveland—and thatsuddenly you may have to make a new home, newfriends, send down those temporary new roots,
Mutt Be PUxiWeMust have the flexibility mid guod humor to meet
new people and go new placeti—and continually.These were just & few of the points made by
Mrs. Medwick concerning the life of a major leaguebaseball player'n wife the other day when she pausedat her suite in the Hotel New Yorker.
Joseph Michael Jr., 5, played with a toy armytank and explained that "if the army didn't get himthis fail, ihen/hel -poto kindergarten." MellndaGue,S, a quaint, demurs child, looking like a painting outof the past, proudly exhibited a dainty doll.
"It's a constant problem to find a place that isconvenient for Ducky and still find a neai^y perkwhere the children can play and have fresh air," Mrw,Medwick'explained. "Yes, I go to all the games andI play, 1 guess, al moat as hard as Ducky. I thinkthat is the experience of every ball player's wife.Finally, however, we wives learn that you can't winevery game. Then we relax, enjoy the game, catpeanuts und have fun like everyone else."
Sfe l£»°w* «•**!»**Mrs. Medwick is young, brunette and dramatic
looking.flhe knows the hardships of ba«ebal) life, but she
knows, too, the thrill and glory of that old hows) run,the surge of triumph at catching an "impossible" oneAgainst the fence and the kingly pieftswe of winning« pennant. ' ' ,
She says she'd not change her life for any other—even if she gets calloused fingers from keeping upthe scrap books, bites her finger nails at the ballgames when it looks a# if Ducky might afiss one, gets,'blisters on her heels looking for living Quarters.
High School NinePlays linden AwayNext Wednesday
CARTKRET — Goinfr into the'ir of their 1943
the Omter^t High School baneballtonscrs will lake on Linden nextWednesday afternoon in a single(tame at Linden.
Thin will be a slight change forth* Blues from their stiff programprogram of playing a double head-er every Saturday but it will givethe local boy* only three days' rentbefore their a)l important clashwith Perth Amboy next Saturdayin a twin bill at Perth Amboy.
According to present Dibits Mc-Carthy will plWh Andy Perryagainst Linden next Wednesday.The Union County aggregation hasbeaten New Brunswick this yearand rales OR one of the leadingschoolboy nina* in thi> (action ofthe state. Carteret holds a dou-ble victory over New Brunswickand that should put both clubs onan -equal basis.
Following the double - headerwith Perth Amboy next Saturday,the Carteret High School Blueswill have one final two-game en-gagement with Trvington High be-fore lowering the curtain on thecurrent season. And that prom-ises to be a real test for the Blue?becalm* Irvington this year boastsof one of the best clubs in mirthJersey. Frank McCarthy said that"if we get away with a split withIrvington we'll be lucky."
Yanks Send BackMany Souvenirs
FUND War Zones
fcftWWN.—A new «l«etrop mUro-WM, 0ow«rful enough to br«alc
4<MfB«n»ofct Into pttrtlcles heretoforeMsMiniuifhable, b«e betn designed
ffett 1 . C. Martin ol the 1m-#ttt«l «•))•«« of Seitpe* in eotlato-jtltlon with MetrppoUtao Vickerstlttflrfc*,) compvuy, tt wvidincywd.
XJM d«vja# mm -a DMOI of «tec-ttt>M jn*ta»4 ol«J>M4n at light.
for "tauae" 4bc *l«ctcAn siiwo-scope use* electrostatic and magnet-ic Atldi which refract the electronJxami Qweb^B glass operate* tu or-
icsitotowrti. «v im-can be reproduced on » fluo-
ffeCaUNaflt Cd&Kft. W t^^^s^aW - S^pa^a^F^ais^B^pp* S" m^^H^IPsn^^hPs^H »S~»SH^p
VORfeA, XA»MMNWly. flol.a « . t , m*m, « ff^gte, «snH
mmm- •- - -
everyMO man «bosr4 tarptdoed m w l *lurvlve, hast Uathers, minj»t*r oi
jf to « to««t at * lunehHI the VoraMpfol CcoiDWV of JinPlate Vpxten, lord Uithgrs M i dthat moat caiu«1y«i r«wih«4 asdirect result <X enemy attack ofwhite men sought to escape from • 'stricken * | p .
Lost cH We tn Hf«toits ami rHfcIs less than 2 per cent of the occf-Piiuti, be continued, In five ot every•h ***** *>» mrvlvurf m pickenup within "Zt hours.
Carteret Track TeamAs Matthews Win$
CARTERET—Oarteret High won seven out of ntneevents lo defeat Perth Amboy in »n itjter^chool trackmeet held at the high school Mtadium Tuesday afternoonThe summary Rave Carteret 49 1/8 points 31 2/8
for Perth AmbQy.Warren Matthews, Carteret's brilliant fiflfolred atar,
captured five events himself, winning the 100-yaf4 dash,220-yard dash, the 440, high jump and broad Jump. Htatime for the 100 was 10.2.
Cy Perkins finished first in the ««0 a t - H I * ,George Heil winning the shot put with B mark of M.U J/4-
The complete summary follows:100-yard da«h—Matthews, C, first; Brown, P, A., «a*oml; T e « -
betaky, C , third. Time: lp.2. Total: Gartewt C.'Pertti *«h«y 8.
220-yard danh—Matthews, C , first; Brtwn, P . A., secOTd; Ma-koviski, P. A., third. Time: 27.6, Total: Carter** 6, Perth Arthoy 4.
Mile—Steuber, P, A,, firat; Moore, P, A., second; 3. Sabo, C ,third. Time: 6.24. Total: Carteret 1, Perth Amboy fi.
BSO-ynrd run -Po*kin», C , first; Kidg*. P. A,, wennd; Wolf,P. A., third. Time 2:17,2. Total: Carteret 5, Perth Amboy 4.
440-ysrd run—Matthews, C , first; LaRuw>, C , second; IIOCIKO,P, A., third. Time: 58.3. Total: Carteret 8, Perth Amlroy 1.
Shot put—Ileil, C, first; Knvul, C, second; Bigos, P. A., third,Distance: :16.11V4. Total: Cnrteret ft, Perth Amboy 1.
Jiwalin—Bigos, P. A., first; Papi, C, second; garatowcz, P. A.,third. Distance: 1413W, Total: Carteret 3, Perth Amboy fl.
High jump—Matthews, C, first; Steuber, P. A., second; Morey,P. A., Utak , C , Saratowiw, P. A. Height: 5.4. Total: Carteret5 1/a, Perth Amboy 2 2/11.
Itroad jump—Matthews, C, first; Tiirehetsky, C Second; Brown,P. A., third. DistonceijMU^. Total: Carteret 8, Perth Amboy 1.
fimnd Total: Cnrteret 40 1/3; Perth Amboy 31 2/3.
title in a bag and ktate ».honor* looming over the h-,Prank McCarthy^ Carti-n •School Blua* rolled up m,highly ImproMrve double ir—-thisj Hme over New Bruneicraek ntne~ lMt Saturday :,noon at N«w ftrumtwiek, 4 ;•t-6. Cal-twet's briUiunt ,',.
jretT (its been marred i,,, >a single dafaat and a tin |r,llh
Changing his prowl,,, ,his starting piteherB by umit \hint In the first game and Iin the nbrhtotp didn't muk,much dWlerence for Can,fast-Stepping ball club. NV,,,,McCarthy starts Perry in th,.game to. fret the jump ov<>i n,,posing club for the hrilliimt ..paw, unbeaten this season. h:,our straight (fames.
Perry, groomed as one i,!schoolboy
Silk Gowns from India,Jap Flags and Armor
Among Prized Gifts.
WASHINGTON. Souvenirs arc beginning to pour home from the war'smany fronts. Veteran postal author-ities, recalling the flood of mementoithat rolled back from England andFrance during World Wnr I arebracing theniBelvfs for an evengreater deluge this time.
What with a mucli larger armyand navy by far than we had in1911-18, the' torrent is expected tobe fcnorpious when it Teaches, itspeak. 'This time the boys fiave vir-tually the entire globe to pick from,or will have when victory Isachieved.
First souvenirs and trophies camefrom the Philippine campaign, thenfrom the strange lands ot the south-west Pacific.
When the AEF descended onNorth Africa, however, the troopsdiscovered that the Germans andItalians virtually had stripped theFrench colonies of valuables. Butenough trinkets, jewelry, band-wov-en garments remained to give thenative merchants a land office busi-ness.
Gifts Often Punte.
In India the pickings are muchmore varied and attractive than InNorth Africa. U. S. soldiers thereAre buying all torts of souvenirs,some al which are specially pro-iiuced for the tourist trade.
A popular gift to send the girlMend is a native silk gown. Oftenthe garment is boldly decorated withldfnouB lights of the country, like* e Taj Mahal or the vice-regal pal-w e at N«w Delhi with appropriate
Battledlts OwnShadow 10 Minute*Story From South Pacific
Fleet Is Odd Tale.
WITH U, S. FLEET fa THESOUTH PACIFIC:. This was theBattle of the Shndnw. Now that I'vecaught my breath and quieted myshaking knees, it can be told.
On a moonless night recently inthis South Pacific war I accompa-nied one of our ships nn a bombard-ment mission into Japanese watersnorth of Guadalcanal. The commu-niques recorded only half of whathappened that night, because duringthe second phase ;:• the mission—the withdrawal—one of the war'sstrangest things happened.
For 10 frightful minutes we bat-tled our own shadow as we ran athigh speed through a Japanese-con-trolled group of islands.
It wasn't a real battle, of course.But to every last man in our crew,ready to fight ot the drop of a hatand expecting anything from theJapanese, It was as actual as thewarm sea swirling and slappingabout the ship. •
I don't Intend to ridicule, I sawthe phantom warship myself. Fun-ny as it may seem, it wasn't socomical at that moment when thewarships—the real and Its shadow—loekad in deathly combat.
We had made our firing run closeto ftvore against Japanese ground in-stallations and swung away In asharp 80-degree turn. Great blackclouds spread brokenly across thesky, and heat lightning flashed injagged streaks every few seconds.Our ship was frequently silhouettedas It knifed along, We watchedcautiously for opposition. .
Milk Income Bl*<*Farm income from milk, which
has been increasing since iSBS. wasnearly 25 percent larger in 1942 thanIt was in 1841, according to the de-partment of agriculUire.
Hunter Kills Wolf onWrong Side of Road
ALBANY, MO.-LawVence Derkskilled his wolf on the wrong sideof the rond and thereby lost $5.After being chased a great distance,the animal finally darted from theroad and Into a fence where It be-came entangled and Derks killed it.Derks then discovered the road di-vides Gentry and Ndiluwuy countiesand the kill was marie on the Noda-way side. Had it been on the otherside he could have collected abounty from Gentry county.
'Twai Enough io MakeHim Gnash His Teeth
CAMP EDWARDS, MASS.-Sol-diers of the Thirty-ninth Generalhospital were lined up and ready tomarch to the mess hull for breakfast
As the "top kick" wns about tobark, "forward inarch," Pvt. Thom-as F. Hessian of New Haven, Conn.,broke out of ranks and dached forthe barracks.
Upon'his retdrn, the furrtlng ser-geant asked the reason for his act.
Replied Private Hesslon meekly:"I forgot my teeth."
the county this seninti, tm i . .|brilliant one-Ait shutout n;..,
New Brunswick. He has ,1 ,,,«»f two-h i t ters to hia crnliiseason.
Perkins was invincible nfirst K&me as he held the ,team to four scattered hit- 1teret won the game in tininning with a big four-run ,..after N e w Brunswick hud In2-0 lead s ince the flint itmii,r
In the second frame it w:iAndy Perry as he faced <>nhbatters. In three I n n i n gfirst, third and sixth—he n •theand
KI<1P in
duringone-two-throcthe remaining
only /our New Brunswickwere up in any one innini:.short, he had the home teamiiiK light out of his hanii." iteret picked up a single nm ithird inning and ^wo more iifourth to cop the necomi (,raiu>
Firit GaracCartrretIjukusiuk, ssMickics, 2b .Perry, rfLaxur, l b ...Perkins, p ...Ht'il, cf
AB313333
StuUke, If 3103
23
AB
Kimlziei'Bki, cShomsky, 3bUulbraith, 3b
Father Hears of Son'sDeath, but 'Carrie* On'
SOUTH BEND, I N D . - F M I * Wolt-mmi of South Bend was notl&od ofthe death of his ion, Frank Wolt-man Jr., 26 yean old, Flying For-tress pilot, in action on the NorthAfrican front January 31.
After receiving the news, Woltmanreturned to his Job making «lrpl«neengines "to save some other man'sson."
"Boys over tbe*e dont quit whensomeone gets hurt," the father said."I can't either."
New Bn»iwiokPace, If pLatham, 3b 4Punyko, ss 3Miller, rf 8Johnson, lb 2Lukas, cf 2Kahler, c 3Smith, 2b 3Cianfort, pHentz, p
201
26
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R011(II)000I)00
War «a f o n tNorthern Ireland has started a war
on foxes, which are killing sheep.
mt> jw m *ii-
Jewelry—necklaces, bangles, ant-lat« and rings—are toe stock in badeat eountlets Indian bazaars andtftMe find their way to our toldlentor shipment home Native knives,eafw, amulet* al p are collected.
Sometimes the recipient* backkoine are puizled by the objects«Mlr mwitollt tend. The Smlthsnnl-m Institute here, the Field MuseumIn Cbjcajo, the American Museumat Natunl History in New Yorkjb«quently are called on these daysto identify unfamiliar objects fromUW other side of the world.
«e»l War Traplitef.Vrom the South Pacific war areas,
the flnt aouv«ntn were r*ally wartrophies, Things like Samuraiswords captured from Japanese of-ficers, Jap battle flags and otherartiolftf* the totm'* »UiUryequipment,
ilsat'ihuwii ofttwe m tt» swordmm turn % iv» oft«t on t unM|4 mf br Q*mii UtutAnhur ts
Tested Bleed PressureBlood pressuK wai first measured
in 1733 by the Rev. Dr. StephenHales.
E x LibnS . . . By William Sharp
* Batted for Gainfort in tithScore by innings;
Carteret 090 00-1 nNew Brunswick . . . 200 000
Errors: Pace, Gainfort, LatinShomaky. Sacrifices: Mikics I1
ble plays. Punyko to Sim1
(Johnson; Punyko to JoinfttruA out—by Garnfort ; by !'king 5. Bates on balls—oil 'forf 2; off Perkins 4, ilpitcher—by Perkins iMillci 1 ;—off Gainfort 4 in 6 intmuKenU 0 in 1 inning, I.ti-ini' 1er: Gainfort. Umpires: Aui,and Lcpine,
K11I)l)0I)
0
0
(I
uII
Second'N«w aVamwlcfc AHPace, If ' 3Latham, 3b 3Punyko, B» 3Miller, rf 8Johnson, lb 3Lucas, rf .., 2 'Gebhardt, cf 1Paulut, 2b 2Kahler, t 2Lins, p
Oarur«tLukasiok, «gMlckica, SbPerry, p
Perkins, 8bFihpatriek, cfIty WTerebeUky, rfKintaieraki, c
2
24
AB323812322
21
jgvmim ALASKA MPfiNSfiCOMMANDLCONSI8TEO OF ONLY
•MAROTHEBN
returning W«Bt RHItolMI
D M tMilfc at «*•
WHuN*«t withe0d shall
m wWa brass tnfi tttvar
Inftatin by ts* buwlnaVi, JMP0AUNC&OP
AUSKA INUuwtstiiiJriT Mrvid.^W^w^"W wW^&*KWM ipajHiJ
00 and >aki»n. »w«y
Score by Innings:Mew Brunswick .... 000 000 i:
Carteret 001 200Errors: Lukasiuk 2, PUUIUH
nyko, JC«hlir, Miller. SanPit»p»trict fltruck out—by1; by Perry 5. Baaen on I"*eff Uni 4. Umpire*; AUB»and Lepino.
TsMeat TreesA»a»rican Forestry ^
Uon has rseords of five tren MIn whkh pw or nwre mdinii o w . f a t i « i t « O I « t y«iiesf.op rtwtf lor the flvt wdr-*«dWOaV«0; Sequoia, 372; "-
» 4 0 '
Rflt
NOH A Y H1LUC0M..,,,.hod on the porch
^.pred through the, n,>r lip«, It 80, Still
, |H-tr»ye»s of. her "rt-,„,«, formed a round 0
l h d
,,l let
„•! you,
ii she mher husband In.vf schedule, this
Robert?" shethit belied
present at those
v,,ndon't mind," he
war. I've been expecting It.But she only ihr«m»ci ln«fhr-
ently.
It was all a little saddening,teo-«to mtiaa that she'i turntdagainst him now s* ardently ushe once had turned to him,
"You tee, Helen," h« t u *a y .ing, "If you let- mo support youand Bobble-^s I really want to,anyway—then my draft board.. "
Suddenly it was on them, tear,ing at her ears, holding her heartin icy suspension for one breath-
began picking out the silfcou-ettes nt pknes, donn* «f tk*Missreai alt ower the tk*. OMat i*-VMtieaa earriars «f dtttMittlo* andItiaery and dt«Ui.
,>l('y stood* there held-in his lonir, atniitivritwisting1 it, yet With «
If this werer, as If he had
hiving out from town to.nttnge the laat Fridaymonth of their year>
It was nothing new tolack of sureness on his
, :,s a familiar symptom. H.-icttr—the character„ :itr in h«r longing to
ltllr him, she had tried'.v.,i\f<; finally to cope
,,. years before she had, :,]| it quiU,
,,.,| Into the IMllff **•*»1|M1. "if you'll sit down,,,t,lno. He's playing iuviih his train,"Itohert blinked twie«.
please do, Helen."moment she knew why
„„• two week* early. Al-,,. it bad been Bobbie
r., "i-c, Bobbie he aaked, This time, the real-
-,. WHS aqothwr reason;him fer It,
Bobbie from thepnscnttjr he came run-i! night and sturdy in his
, .„ suit. The thin foa-,, ,,iy folding into the pat-
i Hubert's, seemed keener
crusitive than ever inIMIion; the warm, impul-•'• WHS smiling with joy,
, tut bank on the north:hr curve, son?" Robert
!,:,!,• iiilili'd. " T h a t o l d e n -, • jumped th» track oneuHut I got a sew twitch,
,,.,,1 I don't know . , ." "Iv,ii father h u something. ,-.rr with me flrat, Bob-II In broke in. "He'll be
Theia vm> | lifani ttemeai be-fore he answered ewHy, *;<Mcourte."
"Oh, I hopecould He tell!about planes?
But howWhat did h« knowHer lips moved in
"AT:
ILL
;-iii, Mother." Bobbie de-
IIIi iicd to find Robert'ssi i\ iyes regarding' her
Ii!tiiUy. At it, toe thought,, v mining how much sjit
"ml,. l;..|..rrt?"r i l . ..••
• ihi'dcd scotch. Any-:.!'•>• him th» ooturage h«
,i ••! i'o through with the de-k.r proposition he was about
ilcn felt bar lips twisttk ii as she went into the
lix the drink. She would'.- with him, mentally;aowuing climax to hi.sf cowardly little shrink-
i life, its problems and, the test that deter-
• thir you were a foun ori Wesley.
- ilie drink from her withmi)1 on his delicate lips.H ncross Irom him, ex-
-•. watching him aa heI. then took a deep swal-!n- glass. Now* he can• it, she thought.
" Kobert cleared his< i dry raap, "When
i Helen, you absolute-" lot me support you1 knew it wasn't for
! kiuw you simply pre-< i aUmif on your own."•I tu light a cigarette.
i>>- inntiiiued, "I under1 Hut things are differ-
i seems to me. The• •I'iiK price* up, you're not''""i; well at all, while I••"•' making more moneyi without particularly
'•'•" Me laughed shortly.1 ju»t wondereil if
1 ii thinking it over a bit
"»1 say it! her thoughtsTell me the draft
1 you listed as having no! Tell me you want
•"'I "ie back on your bud-111 i-iui keep out of the
Pattern 9342 may b« ordered•Illy in cfcildren'i iiie* 2, 4, V,I, 10. Shw 6, jumper, requlni1 5/8 yardt 35-inch; bloute, 7«yard contrail.Send SIXTEEN CENTS in coin*far (hit Marian Mtrtia patUra.Write plainly SIZE, NAME,ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER.
Ready now—our BCW Sura-mtr 1943 Pattern Baokl Ju«tTEN CENTS m m brutf* y*athii practicnl guidt for the en-lira family.
Send order* to NewspaperPattern Department, 232 Wait18th Street, New York, N. Y.Delivery of pattern may takelonger than utual because of tieheavy volume of mail.
U'M moment then shoving it oninto a rapid, uneven heat . , The*scruaming aroomph of the air raidsirm*.
"Mother!" Bobbie was in thedoorway, u toy freight car in hismm).
"It's nothing, darling." Helenwent to put her arms about hitstiff little shoulders. "Robert-will you put out the lights?"
"Of course, Helea." Quicklyhe went about turning off all thelamps, and presently the three ofthem were at the window, staringup at the sky, slashed with search-tight beams.
Shortly the sirens stopped,Robert's) voice came quiet and
uiu'iuotionul out of the darkness."Just a practice alarm."
"I don't know." Helen clutchedBobbie's tense body closer. "Ibear planes."
"Just making it realistic.""What U it Daddy!" Bobbie
whispered.Helen saw Robert's hand drop
to the golden top of Bobbie's headand caress it gently. "Just a gamewe play over here, sort—so we cankeep them over there."
"Then I'm not afraid."The distant throbbing Helen had
heard grew louder. The search-
prayer *i she looked anxiouslydown at Bobbie lad tightened herarms about him.
"I'm not afraid," BobMe said."But you're afraid, Helen," Rob-
ert said.
"I'm not!" She glanced scorn-fully at him, wondering that hedared accuse another- of fear.
"Yes, you are Helen—afraid forBobbie, hit life and his future andall his hopes. T know. I can sw>your fac« in the moonlight."
tfil voice wasn't mocking. No,it was strained with acme emotionshe could not quite place,only seeji yoor face tn the moon'light twice hafore, Helen. Thenight I fell in love with yon an*the first night you came home (fromthe hospital with. Babbie and laysleeping by my side. Your f&ce inthe moonlight always tells meeverything I want to know, Helen—when you looked up at theplanes just now, for instance,when you looked down at Bobble,and when you looked at me."
She was puttied, terribly pus*sled. By the time she Anally had
[shrugged hi« words aside as mean-ingless, the pianos had gone. Andin a little while the blackout wasover.
Bobbie went running back to theattic, and Helen turned to look atRobert. He was ntiH at the win-dow, gazing out. His face strained.
She h*d never seun him like thisbefore, and she didn't know whatto say or do. She. could only waituntil he at lust turned about andcam* to her. ghe saw that all the
Suiet sensitivity had left his face..i| wpr«Mlon WHS cold, hard."I didn't know it, Helen," ho
said evenly, "but I caiuc nut hereto say gotHlbye. Tell Bobbiebe back some day to fix his switch<or him."
And she knew then why heangry and where he was K<Whet) he said iro^dhyc. "It's worth» flirfet, this time, Robert?" sb«asked softly.
His mouth relaxed. "Why, ofcourse," IM said.
For » moment after h^iad gone,ahq sUipd, very still, lia^eoing to herheart. Then, with a quick pushagainst the screen door, she wastiorpss'the porch and running.
"pobertl" She caught his arm."ttobtrU—you'H let me know howyou're getting along?"
"If you W^nt, Helen.""And Kobert—" her
gripped hard, "you'll let me know,too, when you get back?"
He did not answer, but the handthat coveted hers was tight midwarai. And when he had gone on,she lifted her eyes to the skywhere the searchlights were
ng to go off one by one; and hermile, .wap »s«ug.
How's Your Health?»<>* TOR CRILE
1 l'nle of Cleveland, Ohio,' ""my yeaw one of the
. surgeons,'"•'• writers, and reueajch-
" '' VVIIS an interne h« a»w
''• "<;m die. g u t . youth's
"! ''wn cruahad by a tr»Ui.I "'l 'He from bUedJBf but
•'•II. r»ar ttu4 ahowi TW<II u> thinking.
!" I'idod thai fear w w th*I ">'>ny deaths foHowtaf" injuriaa,, H« _ -
"i">u animals and fount!1 ''iiiftivti changet Wtfi
llll"i4t. in the brain fromII h wua augmented by
Jlll!i Ifd him to the practicelLll"« surgery. ,
•lll'nt Lo be operated on, an•' "lorphint und aeonla-
111 h<>ur befort weraAiMa.'""'wate* foarHafow thl
•""•>, b u tII,- l g
th« patient. Dr. Crile blocked nftthe nervua by injecting them withnovueun anesthesia. After theoperation was over, thtt patienwau made more comfortable by inJectiona of quinine and ure|drochloridy,
Ur. Crile «JJter manynyints concluded th# body *»tkson the principle of an electriaj»at-tery. According to his philunonkjtha b/ain is the positive pole, th««d Mood cells negative, whiletheir fnawbranes are condensersTh« n*r»fll »«•« the wires that carry the impulse,*.
Dr. Grile, while a great studentof energy, was himself a.living
qf the moat r«energy. He'was vigorous and appatentlymaehhte.
".Struggle," he said, "ia a bio?ugicaj Hftcoawty, »»d («•• ^i« preferable to puBilanimou* )(|«e«
l4i" about %::yi
Christian ScienceChurch Calendar
First Church of Christ, Scien-nt, Sewaren, is a branch of theother Church, the First Church
f Chriat, Scientist, in Boston,s. Sunday services, 11 A. M.,
lunday School, VM A. M. Wed-nesday Testimonial meeting, 8 P.If. Thursday, reading room,to 4 P. M.
"SQUI anj Body" it the Lesson-Sermon subject for Sunday, Muy
m alj Christian Sciencehurches and societies throughouthe world.
The Golden Text is: "We all,with open face beholding as in aglass the glory at the Lord, are
hanged into the same image from;lory to glory, avea as by thoSpirit rf the Lord. (H Cor. it: 18).
tiupiig the Leaaon-Sermon citn-tk>na is the following from thoBible: "As for me, { will beholdUy faca in slghteousnesa: I shall
a mtwfied, when I i^wake, withthy likeness." (Pa. 1 M 5 ) .
The irtdigpn-SBrqion also in-^^d«a tile fflowing uaaHHge fromthe Christian Science textbook,"fipieiice and U*ail;h *Hh K.ey toth« tortures" by Hvsy BakerEdAyf "Identity ii the Reflection>f Spirit, the Reftection in Mul-yaxiem forniK of the LivingPrinciptfc Lovo (p, *?D->
H4gft LMCK YEA*
j r < ( S years old, has. btwo in ahotpital (four times In l e a th»«
on*ur time nft b««ait wh«n
ilacerated i outhfA th«n, aramnied ^ ^ 7 down niB ..nearly severing hi» tonailsj then
• •-/- " r 1 - : j i t jwnhed In
prtniH 4Utrator, km U|n»
MUGCS388?
TO (srrcxrrofTHE OBA0E9 AM*<3O I t ) HU3K
SCHCWL.7
- f e OPEN fk
f-., \-i\\ Vina F(Jin'*-< M"^f«f, W ,
T H CVWITH UENT»U
' MORTIMER.HE LIKED THE
SERIES, AM'HE r*5/MO HE LIKEO ] o5P/M?ff RIBS AM'\ /gRAVy. A 6UV
THAT'S >,BLEWi
,m I'll I'll, i [ I i.nky. Worllii
- ^ HERRIMANKRAZY KAT
^ i M s S 2 ^ > ^ • -TIRMANNAPPY
H E CATTLE OF• T H E CENTURY
6 ABOUT TO> U & N . T H ECONTENOERS FORPUGILISTIC RECOG-NITION BEING
'&CRAPPY SA*A*
OKAY SONNV? W J NEVER (WNO THEY€R TICKET? 1 WI6ECHACKft,VULCHeRf
ONE WWJYPl6ASe?>- | HERE'S Y£B.PINNY.'
'ARRO6AKTI DM159KDN ISAND TME Pi$S£NT
INDI-: CATtS A VERY! PLENTIFUL. GAtE RIO6PT.
BOB 3ARTDETECTIVE RILEYI CAW! TO THIS OFFICE fO REPQltfSK£PTlC,WIUVDU,BART:friE OPERATIONS
OF U i SPHINX
AND HIS CULT
AR4 APPARENTLY
friEfiEFORE.HE MUST HAVE ASSUMEDSUCCESS HAS GOME TO
HIS HEAD! WAi MAPE ON MV LIFE.. . .
SOMfOHE
I KETCH!SO WHAT ?
HOWEVER.DOE*
NOTFEflTriAT
m CASE 6QUITE
CLOSED.
FACTS YOU NEVER KNEW RICHARD LEE $LOCAL NEWSPAPER M A $ M A U 1-ME FOllOWING f
\RfriUR BAUfrt (» ONCC StAllEP IN TKl MMNHfUXKNAWUNP,
OUM EHO«ltWAT£RBOK>ft10W.t KNOWN A*
•'.'1
*AOE EIGHT FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1943
trial Day RitesSunday, May 30
CARTEKET The annual Memn-tat D*y Exerriwi. which IHIIPk thin yi'Hi mi S u n d a y , ' M a y
ill "•»t't »f ' •l(l oVlo'-lt in-of tlir iisiiul curly morning
of prrvioii i yrm«I M t a h n v r hcpti miidc hy
AniPiirnn I.cKinh, nnd Starg Post, V i ' tnnns <*f For-
Igtt Wms, ami the program willt«rt at tJi<- olil fnry slip. At thit
' J*t each ycni HirvirM no hclrlj!. Or thonr who died at am and
ir iWMath of flnwprn in enst into the••: -water.*! •• After the waterfront nervirM'|'^Hreiji(iB will tnkc place in the.'• Qrerholt McmoriAl Stadium of thrX fflfh School, with Ilr. Wayne T,I^HNlhom, Jtupei vising prinripBl, H*'A^fclh ipoAkrr. 0thorn taking part.| ? i it* to Include: Rev. Krnntth Mac-1 Ifogild, prifrst in charge nf St.!C*Hwk'fl Epiwopul Church; Rev.!&• Daniel E. I/irontz, pantor of tho'• fteibyterian Church; Mayor Jot1 'iftph W. Mittuch mid Ambrone' lludrak, preniili'nt of the Board of
• jjdtieation.ii The Hiifh Srhoni Band will play1 alul John Kennedy, County Comi Minder of thr American I/*pion,
will be mauler of memories. An-, gUting him will be Clifford U Cut-
*'t«r, commHndcr of the local Le-gion, Joseph '(Jawronski, eommnnd-tr of the V. iK. W., and the preni-dtntR of ftieir respective LadiesAuxiliaries^ Mr;;. Theodore Pfen-
' nig and mm. Giiwronaki. Ar-rangements for tile Legion par-thMpaMon me in chai'Hf*1 of JackPrice, and for the V, F. W. ofCharles Walling.
D. OF A. PLANSCARTERET—Mrs. John Merelo
Id in charije r>f the card party tobe 4ie]d next Thursday niffht byPride of Puritan Council, Daugh-
, ters of America, in I. 0. 0. F.H*ll. Members also have planned•to go to New Brunswick May !!1to take part in u patriotic rally,and to entertain .'title officers hereThursday, June !0.
AUXILIARY HAS PARTYCARTERET -Mis. Frank Brown
and Mrs. .lames Hrown were host-. owes Monday nielli ut it bridge
party held in the. ('onirrviration ofLaving Juslirc by its Ladies Aux-iliary. Thirty pi'isonn wore pien-ent, Hosti'sses at the next partywill be Mrs. Sandor Lehrer andMrs. Louis Lehrer.
WEDDING TOMORROWCARTEItKT MIM Marafrret
krITInuton, rtmiffhter nf Mr. andIrs Edward Skeffinirton of Edgar
Street, will he married tomorrowfternnon to Corporal Joseph Ho-nn of Cranford. The ceremony
will take pl»ee at ft o'clock in St.Joseph'* Church and afterwardhorr will be 0 reception at Oak{ill* Manor, Metiiehen. The bridr-dfpt i* n Kradunte of CarteretHifth School and Rhodes School inNew York. The prospective bride-groom, stationed nt Camp Hood,Tex., wast employed by the CitiesService ()il Company before hitInduction.
ADOLfHSON SERVICESCARTEItFTT—Funcrsl services
or Curl Amid Adnlphnon who diedsuddenly last week at his1 home,211 Roosevelt Avenue, took placeSaturday afternoon in the GrelnerFuneral Home in Woodbridire.Rev. Homer Henderson of theMethndint, Church there conduct-ed the rites and cremation fol-lowed in Rosehil! Cemetary, Lin-dtn. Pull bearers were: AujfUJitMurks, Henry Schwedcr, Seaman01»en, John Clark and RandolphNorthvade. Mr. Adolphson in sur-vived liy his daughter, Gunda, of"Jirteret, and other relatives liv-ng Eudope.
CLUB MEETS MONDAYCARTERET —Mis» Genevieve
,eVan will ho hostess MondayIjfhL to members of the Evening
Department of the Carte.ret Wo-man's Club. 'Pimm lire being madefor the final meeting, to be heldnext month,
NEW SCOUTMASTERCARTER6T— William Gardner
has been named Scoutmaster ofTroop 183, sponsored by the Bro-therhood of Loving Justice Syna-gogue. He succeeds Harold Gross,now in the Army.
WEDDING PLANNEDCARTERET—Mrs. Stella Mod-
zelewsld of Lowell Street andher daughter, Irene, are in Dear-born, Mich., where Mrs. Modio-lewski in to be married next Sun-day to Paul Lucky of that city.
ARD PARTY SOONCARTERET-Thc Hebrew La-
dl«n Aid Society will hold a cardparty June lfi in the Synagogueif Loving Justice, The organiza-ion also has made a recent dona-ion to te USO.
CLASSIFIED
lOES TO COASTCARTERET — M i s s Bernice
one to Fresno, Cal., for a month.Sr.ymborski of Union Street has
OPERATORS WANTEDTo work on children's dresses.
Steady work; one week vaca-
tion with pay; good pay. Apply
C«rtei;et Novolty Dress Company,
upstain, 652 Roosevelt Avenue,
Cirteret, N. i. 8-Wtf.
| ' HELP WANTEDI" GIRL OR BOY in High SchoolK ,' graduating class as assistant inj ^ chemical laboratory. Pre-
one who ha.s had course inPermanent position.
opportunity for advance-;,»ient. Hart Products Corp.,' ifidgedalo Ave., Woodbridge, N.
M. 6-21
I j ; ; HELP WANTED—FEMALE||,j&|RL or woman for light house-jfc"v.work. Afternoons only. Apply
529 Alice Place, Woodbridgc,B-21*
| =" HELP WANTED—FEMALEFli SCHOOL (illtL to mind a
from 2 to 5 P. M, three ora/t^rmiiinn it wiiek. fill
Ave., Woodbridge. 5-21
HELP WANTEDi'j|K)Y wanted to drive light deliv'* *W lrwk and general work,
dbl'idjfe Independent-Leader,Green St., Woodbridge.
WANTED MALEHtid F I R E M A N
d, 8-hour day. Permanentftployment at water plant. Ap-
Water Co., Parkj»«nue Pumpintr Station, South
. J. B-21
FOR SALE.•'.HOME, practically new, locatedU In Colonia, corner lot 60x143,ft'rooms, large unliniuhinl room on
cond floor, at tucked gtiniens, awninira, convoruion oil
feWne)' or coal fired, atcuni Jicat.Wm cash, balunue 25-yr. KUAVffeortgage. Owner going in army
Interested buyer must act quickTelephone Rthway 7-0109-J.
B-21*
MEN WANTEDto handle steel
:>iin an flssentiul war industry'A:1-'f>- Jf you are now employed In
»n UHmiiHliil wur industryJ)J«a*e do. nut upply.
Apply in person «t1 *, our warehouse
Qr«en Une & LehighVrttejrRailmd
Won, N. J.
• ' V -' Ofone Elisabeth 2-8182
i\ * Tubes'«d 1,845
Kin of Anthem AuthorIs Convicted of Murder
LONDON.-Derek Lees-Smith, 20-year-old student, waB convicted ofmurder of his mother, but was ad-judged insane and ordered detained"during the King's pleasure," an in-definite term.
Lees-Smith was accused of stab-bing and choking his mother, Mrs.Marlon Scott Key LeeSSmlth, whoclaimed kinship with Francis ScottKey, author of "The Star SpangledBanner." She was found dead De-cember 31.
The prosecution claimed the youthhad signed a statement admittingthat he killed hit mother after shecomplained of beer on hit breath.
Golden link HonorsMrs. Kaphan, Founder
CARTERET — Honoring th*irKin mi matron emeritus, Mra. Lil-linti Kaphnn as "Mother of theLink," members of FriendshipLink Ho. ZB, Order of the GoldenChain, celebrated their thirteenthbirthday in I. 0. O. F. Hall Tues-dny nijrht. Also present as a spp-rinl K11(>M. was M»» Esther We-doon of Perth Amboy.
A fund of $50 was created tohe used fur Iho Grand Link projectof urndinp cigarettes to men inservice overseas, and $5 was votedRK n contribution to the Red CrossWar Fund. Mrs. Elmrr E. Brownreported that proceeds of a ballheld by Iho grand lodge in NewYork May 9 wore sufficient to buytwo fully equipped ambulances tobe sent abroad, and Mrfc LeoBrown reported on progress ofplans for a Liberty Ship to behoupht with War Bonds andStamps sold through the [/ink.Mrs, Morris Ulman reported onthe convention held in New Yorkearlier in the month.
Plans were announced for thefood sale to be held next Thurs-day at 60 Washington Aveuo withMrs. Samuel SrulowiU in charge.
After the business meeting therewas entertainment with tfio fol;.lowing taking part in a programof recitations and music: Lois Le-vine, Iris Seader, Sheila Green-wald, Arthur Ulman, GertrudnRabinowitz, Barbara Ulman, How-ard Wohlgemuth and J u n eSchwartz. Refreshments wereserved by Mrs. E. E. Brown, MissEdith Ulman, Mn. Meyer Rosenblum, Mrn. Ulman ^nd Mrs. Rob-ert 'Scader,
THREE IN HOSPITALC A R T E R E . T —Mrs. JNiilip
Drourr of Locust Street ia inPerth Amboy Genejal Hospital,under treatment for a broken legsuffered in a fall at her home.
Mr», Charles Morris of Wash-ington Avenue is a patient in BethIsrael Hospital, Newark, whereshe underwent an operation re-cently;
Mrs. B. J. Kathe of CypressStreet has been under treatmentat Muhlenberg Hospital, Plain-fi<jld, where she underwent anoperation,
CLUR MEMBERS BUSYCARTERET—Miss Irene Stal-
menski was a recent hostess to theQuestion Marks. After the. busi-ness meeting refreshments wereserved. The members also held :iskating party this week in PerthAmboy and now have plans for aweekend in New York,
Dew«tiveI>r*aK#€mi* A&tvtd With Crochet
Thiti crocheted bedtpretd hit »m«rt OTfriiied puffi in a diifanalpattern. ' Make it in white, over • loft pmtel or flower printedchintz flounce for an unaiual cnVet. I his decorative Tenturc willcame well within ymir wartime budget becauie it ii made of in-expemire meicertkrd crochet rotton. And tince now ii the timeto make the nail of whatever material! "nil hare on hand andto ute ynur own inventivenen and talent to turn out neededarticles for the homo, "on mi-ht ialra?e worn or torn curtaint,drAperlei ot lllp covet-i to Hie f»r the flounce, pHlowi and othertrimi Pirrcliom for crocheting the hedipread majr be obtainedby lendinr a itumped, >elf-addre>ied envelope to the Needle-work Department of this paper, ipecifvin? deii^n #6043.
Mrs. Zierer HeadsCD. of A. Officers
CARTKRET — Mis, WilliamZirrcr has been chosen grand re-gent of Court Fidelia, CathfilieDaughters of America. Servingwith her will be the following of-ficers: Mrs, Arthur lluckriegeljvice grand regent; Mrs. WilliamCole, prophetess; Mrs. HarryGleckner, ' lecturer; Mrs. J. ,1.Dowling, historian; Mrs, ThomasJakeway, financial secretary; Mrs.Howard Burns, treasurer; Mrs.Frank Born, sentinel; Mrs. Thom-as iBurke, organist, and Mrs. Albert M. Neill and Mrs. JosephLloyd, trustees for two years.
Rev. James McLennan, O.S.M.,was chosen chaplain at the last.meeting, when it also was voted togive a prize to the member of thegraduating class of St. Joseph'sSchool making tha highest averagein religion. Mrs. Clifford L. Cut-ter will be hostess at her home inLowell Street at the next meet-ing, June 10.
FINED $15(lARTKRF/IWoscph Pszalka of
of 727 State Street, Perth Amboy,was lined $10 and $5 court coststhis week when he appeared be-fore Recorder John H. Nevill on ncharge of careless driving. Thecomplainant was Simon Deli of 28Wheeler Avenue whose car, parkedat the curb before hia house, wasdamaged several weeks ago. Atthe time Pszalka was found nearbyand on a request from Del', Ser-rgant Daniel Kasha made thearresJ, , ,
LIONS TO ENTERTAINCARTERET—Members of the
Lions Club will have I a LadiesNight Tuesday, June 8. There willbe a program of music, entertain-ment and motion pictures.
TO BE JUNE BRIDECARTERET—Miss Marie Eliza-
beth Sebesfa, daughter of Mr^andMrs. August Sebeata af this bflr-
lough, has set Saturday, June 19,for her rnawringe to Wultet Stopin-skl, son of Mf. and Mrs. CharlesStopinski of the Hagawan Height-isection, Port Reading. r The maif-riage will take place in St. Jb-seph'a Church.
TO NAME DELEGATESCARTERET — Members of thn
Ladies' Auxiliary of Star LandingPost, V. F. W., will choose dele-gate" to the ^tate encampment inNewark when they meet nextThursJay night. This gatheringwill take place next month. Theorganization also will take art inMemorial Day exercises and in Na-tional Poppy Day here a weekfrom tomorrow.
Officers recently installed wereMrs. Charles Bleka, senior vie?president; Mrs. Elsie King, chap-lain, and Mrs. Adam Haririewicz;conductress.
Wyeth. The psfnttnrJw#i«W«»|on a portrait b'jr '/MtaWMifltFrancis done in 1703 and dc-•ti-rihcd in the novel. You can
so soe from the portrait thatSdliilhie.l was no ordinary man,The steadfastness and strength ofcharacter shown in that face wereinvidrncoil in everything he did,both good and bad. He was noordinary man and hta is no ordi-nary •Uory.
A second new volume 1»GRRHN CIRCLE, by Chris Massie.
(ireen Circle i« the most unus-ual and disturbing utory of mur-der and madness that I have readsince "Before the Fact." I-,rec-ommend it heartily to anybodywho appreciate.* a murder novelthai, is completely ou(, of the ordi-nary pattern, and, whose solutionwill come as a complete surprise.
The hero M The Green Circleis F,giin Bothwlck, A brilliant stu-dent in an. Knglish divinity school,whose unhappy love affair leads toattempted murder and insanity.A green Christmas''T>all has beensuspended in tha window of hisbeloved's house, and this "greencircle" hprnmes a symbol to hisdisordered mind. It appears firstus ii pin-poirtV o? light, swells toenormous proportions, then slowlydwindles and Vanishes. How muchof Mr. Massic's narrative is factand how much the wild imaginingsai Egan Bothwick's diseased brainis something I leave to the readerto discover.
The Green Circle is so good*that I expect it will be remem-bered for years, and eventually in-cluded in anthologies and omnibusvolumes,
EVERGREEN HOUSE, byLouise Platt Hauck centers aroundattractive youhg Cynthia Barstowwho is very hospitable by nature.She welcomes, therefore, the as-sorted relatives who have beendrawn to the nearby city to engagein defense work, into the ramblingold house which she shares withher grandmother. Then, she adds
several young men who h»vc beenunab|e to find living quarters else-where. The resulting1 Hltuation In-evlUbly produces daily problemsand complications but Cynthiarevels in their solution. And evenEvergreen House itself ditches theexcitement and fosters several loveaffairs, not the least of which isCynthia's own unexpected- ro-m»nc«.
Driving Ban(Continued from Page 1)
chnrch, are considered "essentialdriving."
The ban against pleasure driv-ing was revoked in March by Mr.Brown, who substituted an "hon-or system," The motorist waspresumed to hsve a legitimatereason for operating his car. Con-formance under the "honor" sjrs-tem was de.clar.cd by officials to beunsatisfactory.
Determination to effect econo-mics of the use of gasoline byholders of all types of ration al-lowances wa« expressed by OPAofficials. Pressure is to bebrought to boar upon even T orcommercial vehicle operators toeffect further savings in gasoline.A re-examination of the claims ofII and C e»rd holders to allot-ments for occupational driving isin progress.
36 Graduates(Continued from Page 1)
on their work, Guest speakers in-cluded Councilman Frank Henry,representing Mayor Joseph W.Mittuch; Councilman John A.Turk, chairman of the Red CrossWar Fund; and Clarence P. Per-kins, chairman of the DefenseCouncil. Refreshments wereserved 'after the program.
Graduates were as follows:Motor Corps; Miss Sophia Pry-
wata, Mrs, Rose Kemeny, MisaDoris Spewak, Miss Gloria Hun-
•dl/ik, Miwjfilrkt WantochSadie Wmffl Ml,* Mary it,,Mils Erlka Wuif.
Canteen Corp*: Mrs iBrown, Mn. Irono Hundiui \,JRose Weinmann.
Canteen Aides: Mm \Brown, Mrs. Fanny Brown iRebecca Brown, Miss Snrli. isort, Mrs. Terry Kloss, Mrs n,Liven, Mrs. Olfa Holowchui .Anna Schwartz, Mrs. Hole, •wak, Mrs. Diana Stein.
Nutrition Class: Mm, oiiv, |nell, Mrs. Rose ChodoshOlga Cwijk^wskl,. Miss Mn',-.-lag, Mrs. Helen Bdmon.kL. Gordon, Mrt. Marie n,,Mrs. Edith Klose, Miss !Kennedy, Mrg, Natalie Ku,!,Miss Msry tifoy^ Mts. M, MJveto, Mrs. Mary Print t, \JSarah Rabihowiu, MrsReid.
Ration Book ;;(Continutd Irdpi Poor I)
than sixty days must fill flil,separate application card.
Ott«r Requirementi5. Place a stamp in th.
indicated on th« face of ihi>a two-cent stamp if you |,Newark, otherwise a tlu-«-istamp, ani) "drop the entin(except the identificationwhich you detach and keep)mail box. The card is aliv»<!dressed properly to OPA M\lING CENTER, NEWARK, \
6. If you do not receive m ,plication e n d in the mail by i,J6 or 7, or if you spoil yomand need another, go to yompost office for one.
7. If you have mailed inapplication aard promptly ••. •receive your War RationThree by June 20.
8. War rUtlen Book Tinnot to be used until the p,ment announces the date mi |it can be used. < It is intireplace War Ration BookTwo when they'arc used up.
Library Notes(Continued from Page 1)
man, six feet four, at a modestestimate, and extremely powerfulas you can see from the portraitof him on the front of this book,which was painted by Andrew
Has His Wallet Stolen,It's Found and Returned
BATON ROUGE, LA.-Severalmonths ago Willlhm D. Bridges wasrobbed by a man who accosted himon the street, pinned his arms downand seized his wallet.
The man fled and Bridges chasedhim several blocks. Recently adredge boat worker restored the wal-let to Bridges' family. The Negrowho robbed him evidently had be-come frightened when he was chasedand threw It into the Mississippi riv-er, which washed it back to theihore. Bridget' money, $103, wasintact.
Kanfaroo Has Kin HereThe kangaroo ol Australia is a
near relative of our native opossum.
Play Safe!USE OUR
Fur StoragePfqUtt your tun and wooWnt•I low»t prevailing pried.
ODE VAULTS ARK IN THEP. ,A. NATIONAL BANK
• THE SAFESTff TUB BEST• THB CHEAPEST
§ $2 «ny fur coat . . .i p to $100 valuation.
f« BONDED MESSENGER
BOND CLOTHES
The "Buy" word
of men's fine clothing
I
Make Schindel's Your Headquarters For!RATION FREEFOOTWEAR
NO RATION COUPON REQUIREDCASUAL OXFORDSPerfect for workor play in blueand white, redand ;white, allwhite, tan andbeige.
WOMEN'SSIZES 3U to 9
^v., .^-'
•V1'
NOT RATIONED NOTRATIONED
CASUALS and PLAY SHOESNOT RATIONED
1.29I Rubber and
LeatherSoles
Smart-lookinf, and practical. In blue-and-white, maizeand red, and other colorful combinations.
SIZES4 to 9
NO STAMP NEEDED • MEN'S
"GANGWAY" OXFORDSLifhtweight, comfortableoxfordc for play and cai-ual wear. Sturdy, goodlooking hoptacking or cor-duroy uppers in a choiceof popular colors. Long-wearing composition soles.Wedf« type heels.
YOU DO NOTNEED A STAMP SIZES6 to H
MEN'S and BOY'S SNEAKERSHardfto-get weaker*, at Schin-
del'i hart-to-beat prte*.
' • • • * • - ,
«-k"'U*vi