sssas^sa GARWOOD CRANFORD KENILWORTH · M • 'A" i-^>^ * -, "~\, ^*^ ^ •- ** * * ...

12
•m: y , <•• , , I, '• ."://>•'•:.'•'/ &''^^^£^li^SMiSSMU : -^A^ jr%'ISHf*«fv£rJ^£|£4]^Jl^-*if m*mmm ' V 'I.' ••¥• -•"••• ';, .' . sssas^sa VoI:XLlX^vNo.-35; Ri^jparfizi A\edjcal Unit [ '• Move Casualty Stations j Jn Compliance With "^ : State Recommendations ••"•'. Reorganization of the Emergency]' . Medical Unit of the. Local -Defense I '.Council in compliance yjith instruc-j tioris from the Medical Officer of the State' Defense ^Council is under-j way this week under direction of .Dr. i Carl G. Hanson, newmedical officer' TH.chief. ' •'; •-. ~r J . .. S . Moving of the two casualty sta-j Hions t6 new locations where the! equipment may be set up -perma'-j. nently and available for instant use in thevevent of an' emergency was: among ^the first recommendations. : The station formerly Ioca.ted in the j basement of St. Michael's parochial | school has'been moved to the base-T| ment of the JJhion Junior College at ; the corner of Springflcid avebue and: Holly street, and the station now lo- '.-'cated In the Methodist Church edu-i callbn'al building will be moved; shortly to the Lincoln school base- , ment" on Centennial'avenue.. I The personnel 1 at'each'station will; , include three .physicians, 12 regis-I tercd nurses, sovcr/ai_nurse's aides.i eight stretcher , teams composed of! trained first aiders, nnd tipproxi-i niately 12 first aid workers who willi. - remain at the stations. The. town-i.1 . ship'ambulance will bp^attached to; — the station at thoJunTor Collogq and -..'the Red'Cross arnb'ulanre to .the sta- tion at Lincoln" 1 'schol.'.A physician and regisetred .nurse," whenever pos-: sibie, will accompany the ainbu.-, Jancei' on all "falls. ' '• ..; In aifditiori^i. the twoambulnnces, I approximately 25 light trucks' have; been secured frqrn -Jotjal merchnntsi by H; Stanley MacCl&ry, chairman GARWOOD CRANFORD KENILWORTH -5re >** BUY CRANFQRD, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, OCTOBER I, 1942 FIVE CtNlb Leaders Praise Citizen and Chronicle . For Many Services to the Community Promoted DR. WILMAH LANGE, D. D. S. son of Mr.' and 'Mrs. Fred -W. Lange of 10 Madlran avenue, who has been commissioned a lieuten- ant. Junior grade,, In' the IT. S. j Today7marKs.thc^..opening of the j National Newspaper Week observ- ance throughout the Nation, one of jih'e, few nations left on the face of j tlje earth where Freedom of the fPress still exists. J *Inconnection'with the observaricc, ;jThe Citizen and Chronicle presents i herewith; statements • by several r township leaders as to'the value and j service of the local press to the' com- i" munity, particularly, in war tlmej M HERBERT-; R. WINCKLER, Com- jmabdfr, Civilian Defense Forces j "Without.' the publicity given the Local Civilian Defense Council', it would have .beeri most difficult to j bring our various units to their full strength in th?~shorl time we had , to bring mobilization to completion. \ • "Since' mobilization of pur Local J Defense forces, the Crnnofrd Citizen land Chronicle has provni (most \A\* uable to keep both i|iir Jinits/and ; citizens well Informed in se^ard tSS I various activities nnd the progress of ! defensfc work. j defensfc'work. v v . r. :[•.. Reserves, and will report "j "At this time, National; Nfcwsp. for duly on Monday at the naval 'base at Sampson, N. V.' Dr. Lance Is a graduate of Cranford High School' and the University of Pennsylvania, lie served'his in- ternes'ilp in Mountainside Ilospl- tal. He Is closing his denial of- fice at 27 .Vorth Union avenue for. the duration. " paper j VVeek, I take the opportunity to ex- I press my thanks andappreciation for the loyal American .way you have ,j served your community,"-": Ml.y-OWARn It. I1EST, Suprrvls- Club Begi 52nd Year i Ing Prinlclpal, - Cranford - Public. ; Schools—"Arnerican-educators, schol- j ars, and publisher^., haveenlisted in j the war against Fascism; Wo have —j'witnessed- country , rfftei*-country ; where scholars and .-educational lead-' '•< ers were searched out and seques- tered in- concentration camps where ,i they were left to rot. We have wit- nessed ns a corollary to this prugrnm ;; of suppression thc .burcUrig of books; magazines and newspapers,'with the contcol or stojipage^of whiijt. hod : once been free' publications;"; •'•'Forcibly-we have cpme to realise that there is no f>lacein n fascist . . v , ',; State [nj- free scjhools and iis, close b'e assigned to'.tho two calualiy stn- Get-together" Tea _. , assoeiatbTa free press. Freedom of tions 1 . ,• ' '. ^ / ! ""' • the press and freedom of speech are Both stations"'are being equipped; ^Th.e Wednesday Morning.Chi-b will essential for protecting the dignity and staffed in compliance with State|UJ)en its fifty-secotid/year with a ten! :——-—'• '• -^— Civilian Defense regulations, • Dr.i.for-members next..-Wednesday, : from. ; Hanson said yesterday. All local i 3 to 5 p, m. at the 'home''of Mrs.'.W.j ..physicians. ajid registered nurses, F. Whitescarver of 16 Fiske terrace,j have or will shortly be "sworn in a s ] . Mrs. Victor Salsman is M nj^jhcj&^)f~Ui&.^n»r8eri*y."»»etli>e#r'8^tKff^arrVnigrnfSnf^roTlItis' get-to- i unit by-H. R. WincKler, commmder: gother occasion. Hostesses are: Mrs.! of the Local iviliari nefciiHe forces.! D. W. Balnicr, Mrs, Lloyd A. Brlgg's.' Maneuvers^ of the medical unit will; Mrs. Carroll E. Bunny",. Mrs. Joseph* be held fro'm- time to time, so .that ;ill, L. Conrad, Mrs. John Fast, Mrs. Har-; personnel will be familiar with^their,.ry R. Ilcins, Mrs.. Harrison C..'Pray,.j and; personality'ot' the' indivli They are basie ftnr'-a frre'etrucafji CLARENCE L. FRITZ, Chairman. War Price ' andRationing Board the way the .news is presented <o us.'• I have had the urge to write to youj and tell you these "things. .'.Cranford |' about.thc finest town iri.Jlht' No. 3_"War Price .-and. Rationing j f™ 011 "*' ; W e a r e very- happy, hpw,, Board No.' 3 i's indebted to the Cran- ford Citizen and thronlcle for its continued cooperation In giving pub- licity to . matters pertaining to the Office of Price Administration. The Board has : been limited in its staff, and in its supplies, but through tlie efforts of the local newspaper prac- tically-all Important Information has been made available to tho, public. We are very fortunate to ha*c such a paper, in our community,"." ; MilS. GEORGE II. UAtKS, Chajr- man of Volunteer Services, CranTord t hapler, American Red Cross—"Our tiiwn. newspaper serves us in many ways, news of• our- friends, news of various activities In the townj Our town paper-helps all.our charities -and '•ntcrprijics by giving "publicity for which we pay nothing and gain »• imicli—ulid we say'from-.'our hrar/ •Tliiink- ./ y ^ y ppy li\ ing m a community which vo muih A great deal of the i _ gcw. to nur tiewspaptr which has h.ul' -| the le.ulershlp 111 promoting and sup' porting genuine progress.. With rv'-j ery good wish : for cbhtinUett .success."' MRS./JACOB STANI-EY, Cocnair , XjofaX Salvaic Committee^"!; - ld lik \\. STANIXV MAC CLARY; CO- halrmaii. fjocal .SalyaeeCommittee—. "U has "been very interesting to should like.very much tp express iny sincpre appreciation for the suppat't your newspaper so generously gave!' to the; Metal Scrap drive. Quite .ob? | viously I believe that nil of us should j spend every possible minute of ouiy liinc to the war effort. My work as; cO'ciiairnian of! the Salvage Cpmmit- tce .worild .not have been us success* ful. without the splendid, cooperntioti of Jraiir "paper." . REV. M. V. POVNTEK, Cranford Methodist Church—"A.K'rie'.' Cluiii'li iiml'ii Fitc Hress bo'l clinv to tho sjiir.e tiling.'. Destroy .onti.. iin.> tho other is gdm 1 . thinks truly until h Will Admit Pupils Monday 1 79 Elementary'Children From Winfirfd Town$hip > To Attend Local Schools The Board of..Education Tuesday- night decided- to admit '7a/vVinfleld Township elementary ^jfchool chil- dren to Lincoln nnd Shermnn schools j nnd- the Junior hitih school , next Monday morning/it was announced , yesterday by ^Supervising PrlnciiiSlt j Dr. itowarcl^f He--I The action was 'tnkcuat a'spccial board meelniK at- y several residents of Witi- , " ""•''' "'"•' T/*"" 7 ', 1 "?, "','" [ ! other minds and thus pr to watch, the growth; and the im-1 „,„,„ ,, ,.. 1... ....,.,_,.,_^ irovcinent in our . local newspaper. We have -"rend and enjoyed : your lublic.'itioii each week slnco taki y f self; for' i>y'expression1 he up| cism. .It Is by criticism that w<> iit- taln to ilk 1 greatest measure of triith A fctterei* ^'liurcli and P/ess ninnuiitsi __..>........ -••••• ;5v" -n»Mn- -iu»i(ii;-j j spiiitinilslavery, which is thr ex- ip residence m Crlinford in- I9i5. l\>\ i__..L „/ ..... J, ....... / . .. . < •• of thc motor corps, for us&as cmcr- nehcy ambulances. The'scj' also.'.w Wednesday Morning Group to Have! , Get-together-Tea ,it lias become ^a very iiii|>o,l't;in't .part in iiiir I'timinunity. •• _ ..- "All of us know the power of the press and the fact that w<- are but ii small P»rt nf the wjiole United Statei it still if true that tin- lucnl news- paper has its own ieii[ionsll)ilit.Y wjtliiit its own -bou'iulnries'. Your paper is doing its part in rc|i</rtiiiK the news with accuracy aiid-f'iilrnt-.ss; as \W'H" us moulding public'opinion^. Never for ipe monncnl .I'l'Jiil 1 i-iglft-to ralit your- news.with iiKA'pt'iicicnl-thought. .,. ."My whole family enjoy: nus fpntiii-'t's tho.paper trenie of destitution, afid tho dciidl.iul blight 1 In soi/.e Ilie/vbuls of nicn. A ; free C.hurch"-aiid I r e s * arc'- tilt? chief-',- pst eiifiiiies oX^Totfllitariuitlsm (ip.-rj hence arc tiiCyflrst objects of Hie Oic-, tnlor's axe., "Men Dispirit always units! iricans tt/express themselves, us diil, the cany Christians by. signs and aw'cjjfyptlc writings. Hut awb iHov'sliy." methods ^are dfinuurou.f'. for in-secrecy arididnrknifiJs luiiVdi.-i, /suspicions nfid tho-serins of hiitvcd ^nd fenr crqalc devils at every tun. and everybody becomes suddenly .• : 'spotted snake with double, lonklit'. 1 ' ^•'('Continued on vaga five) ' ... OEOItO N. LARSEN son of/Mr, andMrs. Julius I-arsen of nil Nbrtli avenue, >yest, who ban licm promoted frotn IIn Uvutenant to captain In the. NIK 1 /riarServlce» branch of tlje-^.S. Army. . Stationed in WaoK 1>, (j'.. Capb Lareen has lierit ih Icnateii as llabon ufllccr betw'reiLN tlm Special NrrvloM IHvMon and Hie Army Air ^oriml lie has srrvril »» assistant chief In the, ar'rhlli'oture Krniiii of ' the i-neir* iierrliiR corps for the pant several moiithsyCiint. Lumen entered thn scivlci''<m Aiarcli C, 1911, as a scconil lieutenant, anil wiw nulisc-. •iucntly iironioled U> » llrst lleu- tciunt.- lle.ls.un leave from the. metropolitan Life Insurant* Company, New York, Where he llncl was lii Die. standardization ilc- liurlnu'tit. He U a^ graduate of ('ranfiird IIIKII School and C'ln- clnnutl Univcrslly, lo Investigate rtireany in For USO DriVe ^ f V r t t l n Donations of hassocks for use us; ley, Mrs. Ira J. Stone, Mri*. Frank W. i seats in the' emergencyiawibulances'.Tonipldiis-nnd M«. U'obdrt Wclunan.] . and two tea- wagons for- 0S5'tis. inV" "A^prim I n A n ynunished"W'orlk) i {.. Ktrument tables in the two casualty, wi ]i'- bc . tnc theme of" the :Wcdiiesd&y," t .stations-, have-been requeued by .the 'Morning Club's .-proBram-this "scifein:'- medical unit Local residents desir-, Many , n t cre n.i|,a evcrtts. havi^bep'n | ing to donate' these items' arere. v pfaiinerf in : coi(ntiction• with tiiis-topit;, QUCFtod'to lonv#*-t>inm nt tin* Mitnt- --' *- . . ~- ..>.-. • - qu,e:?t(?d to leave-them at the Muni- cipal Building or:, telephone Cftan- ; oh frcedorrj of .'the press, economic u.jLNi. uuuuing or-, iciepnone i.Kan- relations vfith America's neighbors, ^ n r 6-1414 and'.'they will. be..«aicd,'p o ,.t v - a r-plaKning and philanthropic •*F\ ;• ' . • . •[ enterprise. [.:' ' • -. \ •' '' Fivte Women Take Engmeering Course ' indicative of the additional .This yoai- there will be-no ince'ting the '..fourth .Wednesday 'of the montlil-^rid'coniniittces will meeli at this time: •Organized in 1891.. the'club was;- . ount o f •mbney- raised 'here admitted to the Genera^FederaUrHi^. for the.USO:last year.' ' .Sorvice .Organizationscampnign dne.s not get underway, here until October 19 Dr. Gordon L. Peters, locnL chairman, announced yesterday •that $11 in contrlbirliohs already -have-been—turneiHn—t(T-Trc!is~ urer llariy L, Dijiimick at thc /Union County Trust "Company, The jMumni Association of: [Cranford High'School, turned ih a check, for S10 as proceeds from a recent dancet- and.. the third.' grade of Clcvcla'nd.'.Sclibpl con' tributcd $i. ' " ';..' -./ '. Residents who will be out-of- town between October 19/ind 31 may—turn in' their, contributions now to the:"lreasurciv/6r.' Peters , said. .lie- urged fUlrcooperotion • of toivnspeople in tlie drive, -- pointing out- that this 'year's quotd-Of $7,000 is three times the or—College '.h vomen "" " ^ : ' cDiit^se, it was announced yesterday i:by. Di^. Charles O. Cole,' presidpjit. This is ujeili^t time in the institu- tion's 10-yCar history th^t so many women .hayeMaken this course. , ; Dr. Cole states^that the.exigencies of tho times .wilr^uidpubtedlyl dc- it = _D]?i!lJtot»tt._^j < e,L>ymea turn toward^the sciences^ahd rnathe- maUcs,:f" ' ' • ' . . ;. j| t> "-"There is eyery reason to^islieve '.-that-women .Will-be eminently^sucr '.cessfuhjdong these lines,'.' Dr.--Colel • saidi "as they have been along many others. 1 ' , ••'•••: '' : ." ' .State Fcder'a-; .u' \ I \ A' __.:..': ' . jfnd r 3D. associate mernbers.] ft? Mrs. 'Georse -Laing is^ptesitlent oj:\ theciub. Mrs. I. H. 'Lewif and Mrs! I. J. Stone are'yicc-presidents-;' Mrs.! II. D. tollman is recordinn secret;\ry;. Mrs. H.T.. Rearwin ls''cor|respond'ing| arid federation secretaryj and Mrs.| p. A. ^Durifge is treasurciC Chairmen Of' the stand ing commit- i. tees are: Building fu'ndi Mis^ W. S.j ' Gee; cntertairiment, -Mrs; J. L. tch-f-> man; finance,. Mrs. I. X S'tone*. m e m - | &WJ&- ^ ^ t ^ ^ l The rationing -of RubbefBbots p Also Among 6 Types; Most Items Not Affected Notes About Local men In Nation s Arnted Force Cadet Gedrge Robert Bolte, son of Mj. -and- Mrs.' G. R, Bolte,,pf 322 Manor avenue is stationed aj Max- weU Field, Ala;, where he is attend- —ing-tlie Army Air Force School for pilots. He was graduated from Cran- ford High "School and was employed as a schedule and material dispatch- - er before entering j'the service. ,in, .August -.-' Cadet Walter Crawford JTorlqff, son of Mr. and' Mrs.-.-Carl Norloff.of 03 South Union avenue,- is stationed with the Army AirJPprce. School for , Pilots.at\Maxwrff Field, Ala: He , attended-Westfleld-High School and -.• had'se*Yed'M8 months irt the 7 'regular Z_ arm .y ptevious to beingapnelntedjio . , I •.-.. • , I me rauoning or men's rubber s. C. E..Bundy; and publicity, Mrs^ wor1c shoes and rubbcr , bools$pt0 . r. r~,r. gram for which was announced yes- terday: by 1 Washington, is in com- plete readiness to start in New Jcr- 'j-sey. This was .announced last night by James-Kerney, Jr, .Stat« Direc- tor of, the Office of Price Adminjsf- tration".'..' ' ' ' ' All War ,iu corps. Edward Keller, son> MM. A. -H Keller of nue, west, has technical sergeant at damp \G6\don, Ala, where her 'is stationed. Ernest G. Gebler, Jr, son of Mr and Mrs. EV G. Gebler of 335SovtJJi. CnJon^avenue,- reported last Thurs- day for duty'xMth,the-Umted Siater I. of Cranford Higfi Sch been employed by the Singel Machine Company in Elteabel viousto his enlistment. "Price • and , Rationiiig j j throughout the Stated Mr. Kerney said, have the necpssary forms and. instructions to put the I programs into instant operation He cT~M3rtin~Hobert Cree, son of 1 emphasized that only six types of Mr. a"nd Mrs. Marttn'C. Cree of 16| men's rubber boots and rubber work Oneida placer was home last week-j shoes will be rationed. Men's, wom- end from Baltimore, Md., where he] en's ojjd children's galoshes, rubbers is stationed-. --,'•' ! an( ? 'sretics, and WomCn's and chll- Licut; William A.. Jackson, son of | dre'n's boote are unrestricted and Mr. and Mrs. ArtHiir T. Ja.ckson of | may be purchased at will. 211 Rotford avenue, has pntered the 1 Following a freeze of five days. Officer's Specialist Course in the 1 effective midnight Tuesday, in which Communications''Department of theno sales of the rationed footwear ^ Shl F Sll b d Commuprt Field Artiller^ School at Fort l ar be made, actual rationing will Md l ^ .i , cul rationing will Okla 'Before entering the armeii begin on Monday when eligible per- iervic^ he was a laboratory assistant, sons may apply to rationing boards for the Standard Oil Companyftffnr ruirrhase-pwttBfatw; rfew Jersey " Only su^typ fb Jersey. - .," -^Only su^typos of-boots and rub- Cadet Solon L. N. Lawrence ha< bcr. work shoes are included under graduated from the U S Navy Prc- the rJtioning plan. They are de- Fhght' School in*Oj?po^rHill, N. C , "scribed as follows 1 and will, spend a iSw days with nisi Tyfle I 1 Hip-height boots includ- part;nts, Mr and Mrs, Louis, Law-, ing all hip, thigK or sporting* boots f N t h U b T 2 Ab k 1Ayr Raid Wtf-fdens ; v To "Meet Wednesday .-,.,... „—, Aicen«ral meeting of all. air f^re entering^ Flight School in Peru, I "Storm Kirig" bocits^-bjir,below hip p-rald ,wardens.-will be held ait 8" p; , , p g pg bots rence of North Union, avenue, be? Type 2; Abpve - knee - height Registrai . llie infnntile paralysis quarantine }n Winfleld.'.a government housing project, was lifted more than a vyecJt ngo, and the elementary .pupils' are:i being' admitted on rerommcridation of Dr. K. E. Terrell, :.chool physjiiun,. aiid ^ie Winflcld Township phyai- cian. ^(Jldi'r^iyinlli'l.!• pupils* wi^re admittrfi to ilii+iwuy I.!lj'.h School thia^ nnd other, children Were also : ; d J thi:(.wci-l: ti St. Michai-l'a I. here anr! t<>a pnrochial schwl . in A I'rt'Vjoua obstacle in tlu* i'tary' chikiteti utk'iulifr; sclntul liertr ; \v»'s the. nnrWpaywH'nt of lii.^t^yi'.'ir's I tuition, iiiiiountinK- to-npproxiinately . ?5,!}(!(). A cheejt.fur this ..amount' was.. rcrt-ived lust wijrl< by; Dr r A. L. .Inhii.'-on, ciiiinty supx^riiitciidc-nt of school*- 1 , ittid turned c^cr to'.the lucnl siliool authori'tiitf. ; Dr. Hest !inld that ^tho W,infii!ld .imifils wiI|.||K" fjivcii an wpJKfrtunlty/ Ui maki) up: the vimM -wKteh they "hnife-mi.sst'di' i Winlielii'lu i but pinns art; underway for thtNor- (jnnizntlori of a kindergarten." \ Ends TKiesday ^ Have Sighed Permanent register Sincq Pripnary rrgiiitration biiokii i 'i'nv"sh))>' rooms will bu closed lit" p. m. Tuesday, it waif ahnfiwiced-las night .by.-Township Cleflf-J. Waltci Goffcc, IjOcal residents, not prcvi oqsly'registered, have until that.timi •I'o gel tl)6ir num'es'on the ncriuancn lists. '•' ' .'•• .... ' '•'.;•'' During the past week, ''injure tha 45 local residents Jiayc -registcriiir, bringing to more than 00 tIic~Tiujn bcr -who have signed, since' the Pri mary. / . •••'•' ... • .. . The'Yownship cleijk's ofllco will 1st from. 9 a. m. to noon -on Saturday^ and from 9 a. in, to D p. m. on Mon- day and Tuesday .to accept last-miii- utc'registrations, "-•....'• ""•• ' ' Meets-NextrFhUrsdayH Trinity ;Mpn's Club wili- hold-ils first meetjng of the current season next Thursday evening at Trinity parish house. ' It will be,. "Navy Night" and Commander .Edward Stark who was through the recent at- tack'on Pearl Harbor. wilKbe. the ipettker. :•''•'./• # - • - .'"•' '"Eyes of Iflie Navy," a moVie re^ cently released by ther'Navy Depart- ment, will be shown.' The meeting is >pen to the public and. the club urges ill men to come and bring their sons, hat they may see this-newest infor- mation on Naval Aviation and hear .Commander Stark. . r Cranford Engineer. ^ Listed as Missing Ira W. Billinger, 33 years old, of 09 Holly street, is- arpong those listed as missing'in the Navy's list -f merchant marine paraonnel dead. r missing for the.period September 941 to August 1942. A first engineer, he was a native f Tyler", Texas, and had lived in' Cranford for two years. He was last lorne 'on rieave In. Aprill I^l^ii, .lives here, anci-. ye; In t.he So-jthwest.' immte; Ind. }height. Salvage Group Makes 600 Outfits Cranford tied .Cross chapter ypDtcrdny oppeiiied for donntions of sinnll'. upholstered .fumittiiT, . lamp.4 and straight backed chnlrH hit use in tho .-recreational room at Camp Killnar which the loc.tl chapter is furnibhln;!... ' : -•'• Loenl rc::ideiits--desiring to do- n'a'to any of these Honw iirn-rt— t|iiO!it'cd to cqnluct .Hcd" CI'O.HK. headquarters in Cleveland School and they will bu called for 1 . ' Oil Rationing Now irr Effect -.• All Sales From Today . " Ori Will Be Under —:-—• New OPA Procedure Fuel oil r.'itipnlnii! went intrf'eflec- in. ,Ncui--Jprsey aod :2I) other states today and residents using, uil burners are required to asccrtajij-Jho umourif of oil in the.lr tanks today, which; wll! be among tKe * information required ^ n s ^ t t ' i W w m ^ ^ l ^jcc' and K'atiiming Board No. 3, covering .Itfiscllc, Roscllb Park, Cranford and" Kerrilworih, had nn dennile infprmation..pn the rationihg- DroKram this'tnorning, l)U.t said that the machinpry js all sot to go ahead' as soon as details of the plan are re- ceived frpm the Office: of Price Ad- ministration. Charles Rentori of Ro- selle Park is in charge of the fuel oil rationing panel forjJhe local board. While the Hole oT fuel oil is not 'rozen, residents making purchases 'roiri now on.must agree to surrender he required number. of coupbni, when issued, To their dealer^ in all probability, the 1 amount of oil al- lowed each householder will be based on the cubic feet of space in th.c home as well as on- the exterior tern: pcrature. New Minister At St. Mark's 1—-The. Rev;- John W. P . I Colllbr, Jh, formerly pastor of (he St. Thomas A M. E Church of Wostfleld, wan appointed 4o the pastorate of the St Mark's A M. E .Church on H I * 4feet-by—Bfahop D. II. Olnis at the id-year. Conference in Philadel- phia last week. TheRev, Mr. Collier occupied the pulpit last Sunday and will move to Cranford In the_very near future. He succeed 1 )''the Rev. Julian Jenkins. ' / ' Yinfmg Nurse Meeting ' The exectiHve board of the Vis. • r \ ' ' ~ r< J «» .——completed for Nftvy relief at . the Uumplng Urounds May Salvage for Waf Keliof workroom in Help-Spread Polio •'. Cleveland; School ^ince the pioject . ... % r -•• ..'..' ; was startetl last May, it was an-" The condition, of the" township,-nouncecPthls"weck< -Durlnji Septcm- HunipsaB a breeding cniuml for fili-.i.'bcr ajune,' 280 ciiniplcte mitflis were and iT-paqultots wliiclv inlKlit hi? nfllnlshctl aiid forn;irdfcl"to.'-"'the. possiblo factor'.-in. the- sjjreiHl '«,' Brooklyn Navy Jard. poliomyelitis wnu disiusscd ut.'thej- An appcirl Jiar; been Issued, for old • luiuun)-inciting: of the tYanford I'hy-: wi61c'iri)ISnk"oKj'> hi; uJed as inneifr Kicfiin.s' Club Monday al-tho home off'llhings for rJ'otcll work quilts'. The Dr. Grnliam C. Ncwbury lii Mllnblimkels may he worn but,should be street. - D r . . C M . •CuhrlKlit was ap-', clean. Mrs. -Roderick -W. Smith has pointed to Invciilignte the conditionsfcmnl'leted n patili work quilt each at* the dumps aiul eilfcuss thesubject I week since the Salv.ii'e for War Re* further with .the Uiwrd of Health.- ; lief croup started operations. t .,.-. Tlie following announcement from! ..'Also needed aresewihg machines the. Union County Medical Society; In good condition for use in the . was rend: -VTho Union-JJounty Mcdl- eu) Society .rucohimciida tlmt, when- ever pi'uiiticnblc, patients requiring h'ii; y^its call their physician bo- UI If i b i '^ UI a. py o If [ioKslbio. This.ishould l., If [ioKslbio. This.ishould liO->f*mie bet'iiUKC'-of tt^e shortage of docorsXuo; .to the .vtitran'cc of many of our fncrnile'r^.in the iirnied forces, imd -in- -nn" cifort-tb^ccbnoniizc" nrr gasoline' by ellrninatlri({-~u^nccessary (Jj-ifjJioatiuii of trips!" -•".' , •"•^^- Officers fleeted for- tfle enauiitg year follow: PrcBident,'' Dr. New- b|jry;. hohorafy presie'erit,.-Dr. .Nell Cantnldo; secretary, 1 Dr. Carl • G., 11 jnson;. and treasurer, Dr. Canright. Fletcher .._ .... :ub^:j3r4. Dr. S. H. Carsley nnd Dr.. Cnstaldo, are now serving with the armed forces. : Appointment 'ot Of:"" Hanson as a member of the. Cranford * Defense (•Continued on Uut wprk.rooiiis. They b killd ' be operated ey > be operated by skilled 'workers and will be re- turned in the samcjcomlitinji as when loaned. With the approach of coWL Weather, the "committee has again urged local women knitting socks for soldiers at JTqrt._ Ethan AHCIL J.O—return these - items' tp salvage headquarters as soon as possible so that they may be-shipped. Resigns From Faculty..;..; Resignation or Nelson E. Ligh.tcap^ as a high school conftnercial instiruc- >WU U J l l . - ^ . ;• ; was accepted __. _. ^.. . luTatfon"1aT"a^pecIal~m5DHngT^ues^~ day night. Mr. XJghtcap, who will remain, on. the faculty~until a" sue-' cessof is obtained, has accepted a position in industry. He is president- of the Cranford Teachers' Associa- tion. , -" •"'"•>. •••'"•' •.•'•'•' CranfordWpnianFind^ Comfort From War Turmoil in Defense Job ;"In a greiisy, difficult .sort pit way; I to the' Federal ..Unemployment Bu- lat gives ^OUr Dabrlotlifn «niril"tHii»ln>=" '- »!!—«--••- that gives your, patrlotisfij something to light into,-you Und,fir,defense in- dustry some peace for the turmoil that bides in all our hearts thesQi days." That Is Mrs. Alison Hitch- cock's explanation' of her-sentiments o» regards her position as inspector at the IiWrente Engineering Com- pany in Linden. MM(, Hitchcock of 304 Springfield Avenue is one of the, first-Cfanfprd women to take ir-factory position in answer to the Nation's call fpr women to'rhan thc defense industries. She hcllvcs thaf many 1 women would be well qualified to vndqrtake. such vital * "* hnr ' * *K""'""°''i <v i"y- rriay lacl(:',tlie,jfiltiar. push and the knowledge-oj| ^he" A rJi i st steps 'to be taken .to' transform : a housekeeper into a factory assembly linear ma- cljinfe »Kopernjloy*efe»i .,.•'; •"V : V ^Contacting the etnployjfflent pnices of the rndustriesand-filling out the bianks^^Btrpplylng education,.,, itssi- derrte and qualificatioiis -Was; riot ouglii 1^;'Hitchcw* »ojtfc',f! proctire a'ipb. "" v . trained reaii v in Elizabethi ,., .... "Vou ;will-have-to wait yOuir tujm,'*' i. she says of women ."who. will go here '/ ~ to investigate the training facilities " for specialized work in lotfal, areas. a "TJoii will"taj"interviewed! by,a verjr''."" pleasant, efficient' person who. will. .; r go over-your qualifications with,you, ) and it necessary; wUl ; Bdvise y^» r .as?. •'.' to what 'typa, of "work for which to- •'•',-7 prepare yourself."'.' * ».•.'.;,..*.' .f " She.was sent tq,ThomaS' Jefferson .> High School in Elizabeth., Hours and "' class «ehed;uteS. differ according to/.'-, . 'ihejtype of'instruction taken. Mrs. 7 V, HitchcOck "comfleted" y'"«naWi'nl*ttf;;'r:: course In. eight wecksj. attefldlng^the- ' school fftom' 10:36 al rn^jo J-30 p^m.-J.>t ; Of the i:iMS."tip^7i3piMachine; sh(^»<5;- practice, period she s a y s ' '(Here,; unr' : J. dor the supervision of-capable structorsi is taught the ute of laL.^-, . ; . ,,•, milling machines, grinders, sharpea^f!^ &i cement and the hours are ; . . a n d .yo^tf feet : hurt^ tor^ffifeifirtlrS^* •few '.;d^^: ; ''^^5«si^J^i||eajiiiiS p. m. Wednesday In ,Sh School, it was monijnr by ChJrf-Jflr H»ld den L Cadet Sayinohd-Alan \Vgtersr"3r_ Below-knee-height heavy - is^stanoBed at] son of ,Mr.-'anolM Beachr--H<ris;a. graduatcj ^^7Con«Tiu«rSn tait tomorrow *aniel.Burr.-. of^Mrs Holly •street passes and the work becomes (Continued on lott page)

Transcript of sssas^sa GARWOOD CRANFORD KENILWORTH · M • 'A" i-^>^ * -, "~\, ^*^ ^ •- ** * * ...

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sssas^sa

VoI:XLlX^vNo.-35;

Ri^jparfiziA\edjcal Unit ['• Move Casualty Stations j

Jn Compliance With " ^: State Recommendations

••"•'. Reorganization of the Emergency]'. Medical Unit of the. Local -Defense I'.Council in compliance yjith instruc-j

tioris from the Medical Officer ofthe State' Defense Council is under-jway this week under direction of .Dr. iCarl G. Hanson, new medical officer'TH.chief. ' •'; •-. ~r J . .. S

. Moving of the two casualty sta-jHions t6 new locations where the!equipment may be set up -perma'-j.nently and available for instant usein thevevent of an' emergency was:among ^the first recommendations. :The station formerly Ioca.ted in the jbasement of St. Michael's parochial |

• school has'been moved to the base-T|ment of the JJhion Junior College at

; the corner of Springflcid avebue and:Holly street, and the station now lo-

'.-'cated In the Methodist Church edu-icallbn'al building will be moved;shortly to the Lincoln school base-,ment" on Centennial'avenue.. I

The personnel1 at'each'station will;, include three .physicians, 12 regis-I

tercd nurses, sovcr/ai_nurse's aides.ieight stretcher , teams composed of!trained first aiders, nnd tipproxi-iniately 12 first aid workers who willi.

- remain at the stations. The. town-i.1 .ship'ambulance will bp^attached to; —the station at tho JunTor Collogq and

-..'the Red'Cross arnb'ulanre to .the sta-tion at Lincoln"1'schol.'.A physicianand regisetred .nurse," whenever pos-:sibie, will accompany the ainbu.-,Jancei' on all "falls. ' '• ..;

In aifditiori^i. the twoambulnnces, Iapproximately 25 light trucks' have;been secured frqrn -Jotjal merchnntsiby H; Stanley MacCl&ry, chairman

GARWOOD CRANFORD KENILWORTH

-5re >**

BUY

CRANFQRD, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, OCTOBER I, 1942 FIVE CtNlb

Leaders Praise Citizen and Chronicle .For Many Services to the Community

Promoted

DR. WILMAH LANGE, D. D. S.son of Mr.' and 'Mrs. Fred -W.Lange of 10 Madlran avenue, whohas been commissioned a lieuten-ant. Junior grade,, In' the IT. S.

j Today7marKs.thc^..opening of thej National Newspaper Week observ-ance throughout the Nation, one of

jih'e, few nations left on the face ofj tlje earth where Freedom of thefPress still exists.

J *In connection'with the observaricc,;jThe Citizen and Chronicle presentsi herewith; statements • by severalr township leaders as to'the value andj service of the local press to the' com-

i " munity, particularly, in war tlmej

M HERBERT-; R. WINCKLER, Com-jmabdfr, Civilian Defense Forces —j "Without.' the publicity given theLocal Civilian Defense Council', itwould have .beeri most difficult to

j bring our various units to their fullstrength in th?~shorl time we had

, to bring mobilization to completion.\ • "Since' mobilization of pur LocalJ Defense forces, the Crnnofrd Citizenland Chronicle has provni (most \A\*uable to keep both i|iir Jinits/and

; citizens well Informed in se^ard tSSI various activities nnd the progress of! defensfc work.j defensfc'work. v v . r. :[•..

Reserves, and will report "j "At this time, National; Nfcwsp.for duly on Monday at the naval

'base at Sampson, N. V.' Dr. LanceIs a graduate of Cranford HighSchool' and the University ofPennsylvania, lie served'his in-

• ternes'ilp in Mountainside Ilospl-tal. He Is closing his denial of-fice at 27 .Vorth Union avenuefor. the duration. "

paperj VVeek, I take the opportunity to ex-I press my thanks and appreciation for•• the loyal American .way you have,j served your community,"-":

Ml.y-OWARn It. I1EST, Suprrvls-

Club Begi52nd Year

i Ing Prinlclpal, - Cranford - Public.; Schools—"Arnerican-educators, schol-j ars, and publisher^., haveenlisted inj the war against Fascism; Wo have

—j'witnessed- country , rfftei*-country; where scholars and .-educational lead-'

'•< ers were searched out and seques-tered in- concentration camps where,i they were left to rot. We have wit-

nessed ns a corollary to this prugrnm;; of suppression thc .burcUrig of books;

magazines and newspapers,'with the• contcol or stojipage^of whiijt. hod

: once been free' publications;";•'•'Forcibly-we have cpme to realise

that there is no f>lacein n fascist. . v , ',; State • [nj- free scjhools and iis, close

b'e assigned to'.tho two calualiy stn- Get- together" T e a _. , assoeiatbTa free press. Freedom oftions1. • ,• ' '. / ! • ""' • • the press and freedom of speech are

Both stations"'are being equipped; ^Th.e Wednesday Morning.Chi-b will • essential for protecting the dignityand staffed in compliance with State|UJ)en its fifty-secotid/year with a ten! :——-—'•—'• -^— —Civilian Defense regulations, • Dr.i.for-members next..-Wednesday,:from.;Hanson said yesterday. All local i 3 to 5 p, m. at the 'home''of Mrs.'.W.j

..physicians. ajid registered nurses, F. Whitescarver of 16 Fiske terrace,jhave or will shortly be "sworn in as ] . Mrs. Victor Salsman is

Mnj^jhcj&^)f~Ui&.^n»r8eri*y."»»etli>e#r'8^tKff^arrVnigrnfSnf^roTlItis' get-to- iunit by -H. R. WincKler, commmder: gother occasion. Hostesses are: Mrs.!of the Local iviliari nefciiHe forces.! D. W. Balnicr, Mrs, Lloyd A. Brlgg's.'Maneuvers^ of the medical unit will; Mrs. Carroll E. Bunny",. Mrs. Joseph*be held fro'm- time to time, so .that ;ill, L. Conrad, Mrs. John Fast, Mrs. Har-;personnel will be familiar with^their,.ry R. Ilcins, Mrs.. Harrison C..'Pray,.j

and; personality'ot' the' indivliThey are basie ftnr'-a frre'etrucafji

CLARENCE L. FRITZ, Chairman.War Price ' and • Rationing Board

the way the .news is presented <o us.'•I have had the urge to write to youjand tell you these "things. .'.Cranford |'

about.thc finest town iri.Jlht'No. 3_"War Price .-and. Rationing j f™011"*'; W e a r e very- happy, hpw,,Board No.' 3 i's indebted to the Cran-ford Citizen and thronlcle for itscontinued cooperation In giving pub-licity to . matters pertaining to theOffice of Price Administration. TheBoard has: been limited in its staff,and in its supplies, but through tlieefforts of the local newspaper prac-tically-all Important Information hasbeen made available to tho, public.We are very fortunate to ha*c sucha paper, in our community,"." ;

MilS. GEORGE II. UAtKS, Chajr-man of Volunteer Services, CranTordt hapler, American Red Cross—"Ourtiiwn. newspaper serves us in manyways, news of• our- friends, news ofvarious activities In the townj Ourtown paper-helps all.our charities -and'•ntcrprijics by giving "publicity forwhich we pay nothing and gain »•imicli—ulid we say'from-.'our hrar/•Tliiink- ./

y ^ y ppyli\ ing m a community whichvo muih A great deal of the i _gcw. to nur tiewspaptr which has h.ul' -|the le.ulershlp 111 promoting and sup'porting genuine progress.. With rv'-jery good wish: for cbhtinUett .success."'

MRS./JACOB STANI-EY, Cocnair, XjofaX Salvaic Committee^"!; -ld lik

\\. STANIXV MAC CLARY; CO-halrmaii. fjocal .SalyaeeCommittee—.

"U has "been very interesting to

should like.very much tp express inysincpre appreciation for the suppat'tyour newspaper so generously gave!'to the; Metal Scrap drive. Quite .ob? |viously I believe that nil of us should jspend every possible minute of ouiyliinc to the war effort. My work as;cO'ciiairnian of! the Salvage Cpmmit-tce .worild .not have been us success*ful. without the splendid, cooperntiotiof Jraiir "paper." .

REV. M. V. POVNTEK,Cranford Methodist Church—"A.K'rie'.'Cluiii'li iiml'ii Fitc Hress bo'l clinvto tho sjiir.e tiling.'. Destroy .onti.. iin.>tho other is gdm1.thinks truly until h

Will AdmitPupils Monday1 79 Elementary'Children

From Winfirfd Town$hip>

To Attend Local SchoolsThe Board of..Education Tuesday-

night decided- to admit '7a/vVinfleld• Township elementary ^jfchool chil-dren to Lincoln nnd Shermnn schools

j nnd- the Junior hitih school , nextMonday morning/it was announced

, yesterday by Supervising PrlnciiiSltj Dr. itowarcl^f He--I The action was'tnkcuat a'spccial board meelniK at-

y several residents of Witi-

, " ""•''' "'"•' T/*""7',1"?, "','" [ ! other minds and thus prto watch, the growth; and the im-1 „,„,„ ,, ,.. 1... ....,.,_,.,_^irovcinent in our . local newspaper.We have -"rend and enjoyed : yourlublic.'itioii each week slnco taki

y fself; for' i>y'expression1 he up|

cism. .It Is by criticism that w<> iit-taln to ilk1 greatest measure of triithA fctterei* ^'liurcli and P/ess ninnuiitsi

__..>........ -••••• ; 5 v " -n»Mn- -iu»i(ii;-j j spiiitinilslavery, which is thr ex-ip residence m Crlinford in- I9i5. l\>\ i__..L „ / . . . . . J , . . . . . . . / . .. . < ••

of thc motor corps, for us&as cmcr-nehcy ambulances. The'scj' also.'.w

Wednesday MorningGroup to Have! ,Get-together-Tea

,it lias become a very iiii|>o,l't;in't.part in iiiir I'timinunity. •• _ ..-

"All of us know the power of thepress and the fact that w<- are but iismall P»rt nf the wjiole United Stateiit still if true that tin- lucnl news-paper has its own ieii[ionsll)ilit.Ywjtliiit its own -bou'iulnries'. Yourpaper is doing its part in rc|i</rtiiiKthe news with accuracy aiid-f'iilrnt-.ss;as \W'H" us moulding public'opinion^.Never for ipe monncnl .I'l'Jiil1i-iglft-to ralit your- news.withiiKA'pt'iicicnl-thought. .,.

."My whole family enjoy:nus fpntiii-'t's tho.paper

trenie of destitution, afid tho dciidl.iulblight1 In soi/.e Ilie/vbuls of nicn. A;free C.hurch"-aiid Ires* arc'- tilt? chief-',-pst eiifiiiies oX^Totfllitariuitlsm (ip.-rjhence arc tiiCyflrst objects of Hie Oic-,tnlor's axe.,

"Men Dispirit always units!iricans tt/express themselves, us diil,the cany Christians by. signs andaw'cjjfyptlc writings. Hut awb

iHov'sliy." methods are dfinuurou.f'.for in-secrecy arididnrknifiJs luiiVdi.-i,

/suspicions nfid tho-serins of hiitvcd^nd fenr crqalc devils at every tun.and everybody becomes suddenly .• :'spotted snake with double, lonklit'.1'

^•'('Continued on vaga five)

' ... OEOItO N. LARSENson of/Mr, and Mrs. Julius I-arsenof ni l Nbrtli avenue, >yest, whoban licm promoted frotn IInUvutenant to captain In the. NIK1 •

/riarServlce» branch of t l je -^ .S .Army. . Stationed in WaoK1>, (j'.. Capb Lareen has lierit ihIcnateii as llabon ufllccr betw'reiLNtlm Special NrrvloM IHvMon andHie Army Air oriml l ie hassrrvril »» assistant chief In the,ar'rhlli'oture Krniiii of ' the i-neir*iierrliiR corps for the pant severalmoiithsyCiint. Lumen entered thnscivlci''<m Aiarcli C, 1911, as ascconil lieutenant, anil wiw nulisc-.•iucntly iironioled U> » llrst lleu-tciunt.- lle.ls.un leave from the.metropolitan Life Insurant*Company, New York, Where he

llncl was lii Die. standardization ilc-liurlnu'tit. He U a graduate of('ranfiird IIIKII School and C'ln-clnnutl Univcrslly,

lo Investigate

rtireany inFor USO DriVe

^ f V r t t l nDonations of hassocks for use us; ley, Mrs. Ira J. Stone, Mri*. Frank W. i

seats in the' emergencyiawibulances'.Tonipldiis-nnd M«. U'obdrt Wclunan.]. and two tea- wagons for- 0S5'tis. inV" "A^prim I n A n ynunished"W'orlk)i{..Ktrument tables in the two casualty, w i ] i ' - b c . t n c theme of" the :Wcdiiesd&y,"t

.stations-, have-been requeued by .the 'Morning Club's .-proBram-this "scifein:'-medical unit Local residents desir-, M a n y ,ntc r en.i| ,a evcrtts. havi^bep'n |ing to donate' these items' are • re.v pfaiinerf in:coi(ntiction• with tiiis-topit;,QUCFtod'to lonv#*-t>inm nt tin* Mitnt- --' *- . . ~- ..>.-. • -qu,e:?t(?d • to leave-them at the Muni-cipal Building or:, telephone Cftan- ; oh frcedorrj of .'the press, economicu.jLNi. uuuuing or-, iciepnone i.Kan- relations vfith America's neighbors,

^ n r 6-1414 and'.'they will. be..«aicd,'po,.t v-ar-plaKning and philanthropic•*F\ ;• ' . • . •[ e n t e r p r i s e . [.:' • • ' • -.

\ • ' ' '

Fivte Women TakeEngmeering Course

' indicative of the additional

.This yoai- there will be-noince'ting the '..fourth .Wednesday 'ofthe montlil-^rid'coniniittces will meeliat this time:•Organized in 1891.. the'club was;- . ount of •mbney- raised 'here

admitted to the Genera^FederaUrHi^. f o r the.USO:last year.' '

.Sorvice.Organizationscampnign dne.s notget underway, here until October19 Dr. Gordon L. Peters, locnLchairman, announced yesterday

•that $11 in contrlbirliohs already-have-been—turneiHn—t(T-Trc!is~

urer llariy L, Dijiimick at thc/Union County Trust "Company, •

The jMumni Association of:[Cranford High'School, turned ih

a check, for S10 as proceeds froma recent dancet- and.. the third.'grade of Clcvcla'nd.'.Sclibpl con'tributcd $i. ' " ';..' -./ '.

Residents who will be out-of-town between October 19/ind 31may—turn in' their, contributionsnow to the:"lreasurciv/6r.' Peters ,said. .lie- urged fUlrcooperotion •of toivnspeople in tlie drive,

-- pointing out- that this 'year'squotd-Of $7,000 is three times the

or—College '.hvomen "" "

^

: ' cDiit se, it • was announced yesterdayi:by. Di . Charles O. Cole,' presidpjit.

This is uje ili^t time in the institu-tion's 10-yCar history th^t so manywomen .hayeMaken this course. ,; Dr. Cole states^that the.exigenciesof tho times .wilr^uidpubtedlyl dc-

it

= _ D ] ? i ! l J t o t » t t . _ ^ j < e , L > y m e aturn toward^ the sciences^ahd rnathe-maUcs,:f" ' ' • ' . . ;.j|t> •"-"There is eyery reason to^islieve

'.-that-women .Will-be eminently^sucr'.cessfuhjdong these lines,'.' Dr.--Colel

• saidi "as they have been along manyothers.1' , • • ' • • • : ' ' :."

' .State Fcder'a-; —. u ' \ I \ A' _ _ . : . . ' : ' .

jfndr 3D. associate mernbers.] ft?Mrs. 'Georse -Laing is^ptesitlent oj:\

theciub. Mrs. I. H. 'Lewif and Mrs!I. J. Stone are'yicc-presidents-;' Mrs.!II. D. tollman is recordinn secret;\ry;.Mrs. H.T.. Rearwin ls''cor|respond'ing|arid federation secretaryj and Mrs.|p. • A. Durifge is treasurciC

Chairmen Of' the stand ing commit- i.tees are: Building fu'ndi Mis^ W. S.j 'Gee; cntertairiment, -Mrs; J. L. tch-f->man; finance,. Mrs. I. X S'tone*. mem-|

&WJ&- ^ ^ t ^ ^ l The rationing -of

RubbefBbotsp

Also Among 6 Types;Most Items Not Affected

Notes About Local menIn Nation s Arnted Force

Cadet Gedrge Robert Bolte, son ofMj. -and- Mrs.' G. R, Bolte,,pf 322Manor avenue is stationed aj Max-weU Field, Ala;, where he is attend-

—ing-tlie Army Air Force School forpilots. He was graduated from Cran-ford High "School and was employedas a schedule and material dispatch-

- er before entering j'the service. ,in,.August -.-'

Cadet Walter Crawford JTorlqff,son of Mr. and' Mrs.-.-Carl Norloff.of03 South Union avenue,- is stationedwith the Army AirJPprce. School for

, Pilots.at\Maxwrff Field, Ala: He, attended-Westfleld-High School and

-.• had'se*Yed'M8 months irt the7'regularZ_ arm.y ptevious to beingapnelntedjio

• . , I •.-.. • , I m e rauoning or men's rubbers. C. E..Bundy; and publicity, Mrs^ w o r 1 c s h o e s a n d r u b b c r , b o o l s $ pt0.r. r ~ , r . gram for which was announced yes-

terday: by1 Washington, is in com-plete readiness to start in New Jcr-

'j-sey. This was .announced last nightby James-Kerney, Jr , .Stat« Direc-tor of, the Office of Price Adminjsf-tration".'..' ' ' ' '

All War

,iu corps.Edward Keller, s o n >

MM. A. -H Keller ofnue, west, hastechnical sergeant at damp \G6\don,Ala, where her 'is stationed.

Ernest G. Gebler, Jr, son of Mrand Mrs. EV G. Gebler of 335 SovtJJi.CnJon^avenue,- reported last Thurs-day for duty'xMth,the-Umted Siater

I. of Cranford Higfi Schbeen employed by the SingelMachine Company in Elteabelviousto his enlistment.

"Price • and , Rationiiigj j throughout the Stated • Mr.

Kerney said, have the necpssaryforms and. instructions to put the

I programs into instant operation HecT~M3rtin~Hobert Cree, son of 1 emphasized that only six types of

Mr. a"nd Mrs. Marttn'C. Cree of 16| men's rubber boots and rubber workOneida placer was home last week-j shoes will be rationed. Men's, wom-end from Baltimore, Md., where he] en's ojjd children's galoshes, rubbersis stationed-. - - , ' • ' !an(? 'sretics, and WomCn's and chll-

Licut; William A.. Jackson, son of | dre'n's boote are unrestricted andMr. and Mrs. ArtHiir T. Ja.ckson of | may be purchased at will.211 Rotford avenue, has pntered the1 Following a freeze of five days.Officer's Specialist Course in the1 effective midnight Tuesday, in whichCommunications''Department of theno sales of the rationed footwear

^ S h l F S l l b dC o m m u p r tField Artiller^ School at Fort

l

arbe made, actual rationing will

M d l^ .i , c u l rationing will

Okla 'Before entering the armeii begin on Monday when eligible per-iervic^ he was a laboratory assistant, sons may apply to rationing boardsfor the Standard Oil Company ftf fnr ruirrhase-pwttBfatw;rfew Jersey " Only su^ typ f bJersey. - .," -^Only su^ typos of-boots and rub-

Cadet Solon L. N. Lawrence ha< bcr. work shoes are included undergraduated from the U S Navy Prc- the rJtioning plan. They are de-Fhght' School in*Oj?po^rHill, N. C , "scribed as follows1

and will, spend a iSw days with nisi Tyfle I1 Hip-height boots includ-part;nts, Mr and Mrs, Louis, Law-, ing all hip, thigK or sporting* boots

f N t h U b T 2 Ab k

1 Ayr Raid Wtf-fdens ;v To "Meet Wednesday

. - , . , . . . „—, Aicen«ral meeting of al l . airf^re entering^ Flight School in Peru, I "Storm Kirig" bocits^-bjir,below hip p-rald ,wardens.-will be held ait 8"

p ; , , p g p g botsrence of North Union, avenue, be? Type 2; Abpve - knee - height

Registrai

. l l i e infnntile paralysis quarantine}n Winfleld.'.a government housingproject, was lifted more than a vyecJtngo, and the elementary .pupils' are:ibeing' admitted on rerommcridationof Dr. K. E. Terrell, :.chool physjiiun,.aiid ^ i e Winflcld Township phyai-cian. ^(Jldi'r^iyinlli'l.!• pupils* wi^readmittrfi to ilii+iwuy I.!lj'.h School thia^

nnd other, children Were also:;dJ thi:(.wci-l: t i St. Michai-l'a

I. here anr! t<> a pnrochial schwl. in

A I'rt'Vjoua obstacle in tlu*i'tary' chikiteti utk'iulifr; sclntul liertr; \v»'s the. nnrWpaywH'nt of lii.^t^yi'.'ir'sI tuition, iiiiiountinK- to-npproxiinately. ?5,!}(!(). A cheejt.fur this ..amount' was..

rcrt-ived lust wijrl< by; Drr A. L..Inhii.'-on, ciiiinty supx^riiitciidc-nt ofschool*-1, ittid turned c^cr to'.the lucnlsiliool authori'tiitf.

; Dr. Hest !inld that tho W,infii!ld.imifils wiI|.||K" fjivcii an wpJKfrtunlty/Ui maki) up: the vimM -wKteh they

"hnife-mi.sst'di'i Winlielii'lui but pinns art; underway for thtNor-(jnnizntlori of a kindergarten." \

Ends TKiesday^ Have

Sighed Permanentregister Sincq Pripnary

rrgiiitration biiokii i'i'nv"sh))>' rooms will bu closed lit"p. m. Tuesday, it waif ahnfiwiced-lasnight .by.-Township Cleflf-J. WaltciGoffcc, IjOcal residents, not prcvioqsly'registered, have until that.timi•I'o gel tl)6ir num'es'on the ncriuancnl i s t s . '•' ' .'•• • . . . . ' ' • ' . ; • ' '

During the past week, ''injure tha45 local residents Jiayc -registcriiir,bringing to more than 00 tIic~Tiujnbcr -who have signed, since' the Primary. / . • • • ' • ' ... • .. .

The'Yownship cleijk's ofllco will 1st

from. 9 a. m. to noon -on Saturday^and from 9 a. in, to D p. m. on Mon-day and Tuesday .to accept last-miii-utc'registrations, "-•....'• ""•• ' '

Meets-NextrFhUrsdayHTrinity ;Mpn's Club wili- hold-ils

first meetjng of the current seasonnext Thursday evening at Trinityparish house. ' It will be , . "NavyNight" and Commander .EdwardStark who was through the recent at-tack'on Pearl Harbor. wilKbe. thei p e t t k e r . :•''•'./• • • # - • - .'"•'

'"Eyes of Iflie Navy," a moVie re^cently released by ther'Navy Depart-ment, will be shown.' The meeting is>pen to the public and. the club urgesill men to come and bring their sons,hat they may see this-newest infor-

mation on Naval Aviation and hear.Commander Stark. • • . r

Cranford Engineer. Listed as Missing

Ira W. Billinger, 33 years old, of09 Holly street, is- arpong those

listed as missing'in the Navy's list-f merchant marine paraonnel dead.r missing for the .period September941 to August 1942.

A first engineer, he was a nativef Tyler", Texas, and had lived in'

Cranford for two years. He was lastlorne 'on rieave In. AprillI^l^ii, .lives here, anci-.ye; In t.he So-jthwest.'

immte;

Ind. }height.

Salvage GroupMakes 600 Outfits

Cranford tied .Cross chapterypDtcrdny oppeiiied for donntionsof sinnll'. upholstered .fumittiiT,

. lamp.4 and straight backed chnlrHhit use in tho .-recreational roomat Camp Killnar which the loc.tlchapter is furnibhln;!... '

:-•'• Loenl rc::ideiits--desiring to do-n'a'to any of these Honw iirn-rt—t|iiO!it'cd to cqnluct .Hcd" CI'O.HK.headquarters in Cleveland Schooland they will bu called for1. '

Oil RationingNow irr Effect-.• All Sales From Today . "

Ori Will Be Under —:-—•New OPA Procedure

Fuel oil r.'itipnlnii! went intrf'eflec-in. ,Ncui--Jprsey aod :2I) other statestoday and residents using, uil burnersare required to asccrtajij-Jho umourifof oil in the.lr tanks today, which; wll!be among tKe * information required

^ n s ^ t t ' i W w m ^ ^ l^ j c c ' and K'atiiming Board

No. 3, covering .Itfiscllc, Roscllb Park,Cranford and" Kerrilworih, had nndennile infprmation..pn the rationihg-DroKram this'tnorning, l)U.t said thatthe machinpry js all sot to go ahead'as soon as details of the plan are re-ceived frpm the Office: of Price Ad-ministration. Charles Rentori of Ro-selle Park is in charge of the fuel oilrationing panel forjJhe local board.

While the Hole oT fuel oil is not'rozen, residents making purchases'roiri now on.must agree to surrenderhe required number. of coupbni,

when issued, To their dealer^ i n allprobability, the1 amount of oil al-lowed each householder will be basedon the cubic feet of space in th.chome as well as on- the exterior tern:pcrature.

New MinisterAt St. Mark's

1—-The. Rev;- John W. P . I Colllbr, Jh,formerly pastor of (he St. ThomasA M. E Church of Wostfleld, wanappointed 4o the pastorate of the StMark's A M. E .Church on H I *4feet-by—Bfahop D. II. Olnis at the

id-year. Conference in Philadel-phia last week. • The Rev, Mr. Collieroccupied the pulpit last Sunday andwill move to Cranford In the_verynear future. He succeed1)''the Rev.

Julian Jenkins. ' / '

Yinfmg Nurse Meeting 'The exectiHve board of the Vis.

• • r \ ' • ' ~ r< J «» .——completed for Nftvy relief at . theUumplng Urounds May Salvage for Waf Keliof workroom inHelp-Spread Polio — •'. Cleveland; School ^ince the pioject

. ... % r -•• . . ' . . ' ; was startetl last May, it was an-"The condition, of the" township,-nouncecPthls"weck< -Durlnji Septcm-

HunipsaB a breeding cniuml for fili-.i.'bcr ajune,' 280 ciiniplcte mitflis wereand iT-paqultots wliiclv inlKlit hi? nfllnlshctl aiid forn;irdfcl"to.'-"'the.possiblo factor'.-in. the- sjjreiHl '«,' Brooklyn Navy Jard.poliomyelitis wnu disiusscd ut.'thej- An appcirl Jiar; been Issued, for old •luiuun)-inciting: of the tYanford I'hy-: wi61c'iri)ISnk"oKj'> hi; uJed as inneifrKicfiin.s' Club Monday al-tho home off'llhings for rJ'otcll work quilts'. TheDr. Grnliam C. Ncwbury lii Mllnblimkels may he worn but,should bestreet. - D r . . C M . •CuhrlKlit was ap-', clean. Mrs. -Roderick -W. Smith haspointed to Invciilignte the conditionsfcmnl'leted n patili work quilt eachat* the dumps aiul eilfcuss the subject I week since the Salv.ii'e for War Re*further with .the Uiwrd of Health.- ; lief croup started operations. t . , .- .

Tlie following announcement from! ..'Also needed aresewihg machinesthe. Union County Medical Society; In good condition for use in the .was rend: -VTho Union-JJounty Mcdl-eu) Society .rucohimciida tlmt, when-ever pi'uiiticnblc, patients requiringh ' i i ; y^its call their physician bo-

UI If i b i' UI a. py oIf [ioKslbio. This.ishould

l., If [ioKslbio. This.ishouldliO->f*mie bet'iiUKC'-of tt e shortage ofdocorsXuo; .to the .vtitran'cc of manyof our fncrnile'r^.in the iirnied forces,imd -in- -nn" cifort-tb^ccbnoniizc" nrrgasoline' by ellrninatlri({-~u^nccessary(Jj-ifjJioatiuii of trips!" -•".' , •"• - •

Officers fleeted for- tfle enauiitgyear follow: PrcBident,'' Dr. New-b|jry;. hohorafy presie'erit,.-Dr. .NellCantnldo; secretary,1 Dr. Carl • G.,11 jnson;. and treasurer, Dr. Canright.

Fletcher.._ .... :ub^:j3r4.

Dr. S. H. Carsleynnd Dr.. Cnstaldo, are now servingwith the armed forces. :

Appointment 'ot Of:"" Hanson as amember of the. Cranford * Defense

(•Continued on Uut

wprk.rooiiis. Theyb k i l l d '

be operatedey > be operatedby skilled 'workers and will be re-turned in the samcjcomlitinji as whenloaned.

With the approach of coWL Weather,the "committee has again urged localwomen knitting socks for soldiers atJTqrt._ Ethan AHCIL J.O—return these - —items' tp salvage headquarters assoon as possible so that they m a ybe-shipped. •

Resigns From Faculty..;..;Resignation o r Nelson E. Ligh.tcap^

as a high school conftnercial instiruc- •>WU U J l l . - ^ . ;•; was accepted __. _. ^.. .

luTatfon"1aT"a^pecIal~m5DHngT^ues^~day night. Mr. XJghtcap, who wil l •remain, on. the faculty~until a" sue-'cessof is obtained, has accepted aposition in industry. He is president-of the Cranford Teachers' Associa-tion. , -" •"'"•>. ••• '" •' • . • ' • ' • '

CranfordWpnianFind^ ComfortFrom War Turmoil in Defense Job;"In a greiisy, difficult .sort pit way; I to the' Federal ..Unemployment Bu-lat gives ^OUr Dabrlotlifn «niril"tHii»ln>=" '- »!!—«--••-that gives your, patrlotisfij something

to light into,-you Und,fir,defense in-dustry some peace for the turmoilthat bides in all our hearts thesQidays." That Is Mrs. Alison Hitch-cock's explanation' of her-sentimentso» regards her position as inspectorat the IiWrente Engineering Com-pany in Linden.

MM(, Hitchcock of 304 SpringfieldAvenue is one of the, first-Cfanfprdwomen to take ir-factory position inanswer to the Nation's call fpr womento'rhan thc defense industries. Shehcllvcs thaf many1 women would bewell qualified to vndqrtake. such vital

* "* hnr' * *K""'""°''i <vi"y-rriay lacl(:',tlie,jfiltiar. push and theknowledge-oj| ^he"ArJiist steps 'to betaken .to' • transform: a housekeeperinto a factory assembly l i n e a r ma-cljinfe »Kopernjloy*efe»i . , . • '; •"V:V

^Contacting the etnployjfflent pnicesof the rndustriesand-filling out thebianks^^Btrpplylng • education,.,, itssi-derrte and qualificatioiis -Was; riot

ouglii 1 ^ ; ' H i t c h c w * »ojtfc',f!proctire a'ipb."" v . trained

reaiivin Elizabethi , . , . . . .• "Vou ;will-have-to wait yOuir tujm,'*' i.she says of women ."who. will go here '/ ~to investigate the training facilities "for specialized work in lotfal, areas. a"TJoii will"taj"interviewed! by ,a verjr''.""pleasant, efficient' person who . wil l . .;r

go over-your qualifications with,you, )and i t necessary; wUl; Bdvise y^»r.as?. •'.'• to what 'typa, of "work for which to- •'•', -7prepare yourself."'.' * » . • . ' . ; , . . * . ' .f" She.was sent tq,ThomaS' Jefferson .>High School in Elizabeth., Hours and "'class «ehed;uteS. differ according to/.'-, .'ihejtype of'instruction taken. Mrs.7 V,HitchcOck "comfleted" y'"«naWi'nl*ttf;;'r::course In. eight wecksj. attefldlng^the- 'school fftom' 10:36 al rn^jo J-30 p^m.-J.>t;Of the i:iMS."tip^7i3piMachine; sh(^»<5;-practice, period she s a y s ' '(Here,; unr': J.dor the supervision of-capablestructorsi is taught the ute of laL.^-, . ; . ,,•,milling machines, grinders, sharpea^f!^ &i

cement and the hours are ;. . a n d .yo^tf feet :hurt^ tor^ffifeifirtlrS^*

•few '.;d^^:;''^^5«si^J^i||eajiiiiSp. m. Wednesday In ,ShSchool, it wasmonijnr by ChJrf-Jflr H»ldden L

Cadet Sayinohd-Alan \Vgtersr"3r_ Below-knee-height heavy- is^stanoBed at] son of ,Mr.-'anolM

Beachr--H<ris;a. graduatcj ^^7Con«Tiu«rSn tait tomorrow*aniel.Burr.-.

of^MrsHolly •street

passes and the work becomes(Continued on lott page)

"r—i . • .

THE CRANFORD

THE CRAMORD CITI7FN, Established 1898(Combined in 1321)

/farty meeting o> to a parade before the local -President's Message'or' national ruler, 'with terrific penalties im- Qn Newspaper'Weekposed if you failed to obey that surhmona. nr,tal»

Lzt B _ _ _ « , v.fionai'

swap ideas with your neighbor without let- 'The observarce of National Xews-ting yo^elf in for trouble with the secret, ^ ? j £ £ £ ? * & £police. You would KriBw that yBU could no ourselves to the freedom that is as

Weir; Harvest£Lr*

C Ml V ^ HON. PuDUSHERCM \RLLS" M RAY. EBIIOB

NATIONAL CDJTOftlAL."- ~ \ssocm\OK"—

children to your Sunday School. You wouldknow that you would soon have no indi-vidual rights at all — you would be but the

. . < r j . . *. - l i t

slave of a dictatorial state. * •We may perhaps realize these things

only survived—it is an eircr.ks! partol the'steadyirj ball^l* sh.ch en-ables our ship to nde the- storm.

-way imposes gn»e re» rttp^-.i-bilities.on all ol us. bat^ipon no pub-

-.f ito <-v*»r ornn tn thirtlc that uojervAnt does the ropecsariLiy far

• the newspaper we take so much for granted than upon the pre-s

nt Cranforrl. N. J;,Matter

I' u «. l.tv .it Ci infuid Sew J i r w y , by

i'i i n iDfl ChronicPe, Inc- OflK'ial

( i .i ' <\ C . i i w . i d l .Hid Ken i lwor th

'HI i Y u i m A c h . i m e f t |

••-? / Hun '.I T i l ("n infnid B 0008

•'The USODriveTru .second annual campaign for funds

ifor the United Service Organizations inCrcinford will be- held from October 19through October 31. This year's quota is$7,000, or more than three times'the totalamount raised hero lnst year for the USO.

As the war progresses', • the USO iscalled on me n and p-iorp I \ ll'f men in sdr-\K<* .Stores hf parents rijjlil here in Cran-fortj I'ndo'i1 tedly ( in Ic-tily .is to,the .splcn-did-vvmk 1 fing vlfcoinplishcd by (lic-USO inthe Itund-rrls of army camps scatteredthrouphout"thc Nation, avwell as on foreignsoil flip USO gives the men in uniform a"Ironic away from home." And nothing*helps morale at home bo rnuih as a feeling-of confidentc that somebody is taking an ind» idiuil interest in the men in tlx; enmps andon the fighting fronts.

It^s difficult to obtain workers to can- " hre dangers,vass for any cause. 1 he workers for theUSO drive, are all volunteers and many ofthem, in order to do their part, have to giveup s>c\ eral evenings away from their businessor their families The least local residentscan do is to plan now how much they canafford to give and.! have the contributionready when the canvasser calls. And remem-be.r, Cranford's quota has been tripled, so doyour part by increasing your contributionover last year. This is one small way youcan show your appreciation to tj e boys whoare fighting to preserve our way of life.

is the keystone cf the liberties of all indi-\ iduals. Once this, free press of ours is muz-zled it will be the signal for the suppressionand persecution of religion, of the right tol-rlong to a labor union, cf the right to speakour minds.

Where the press is free it can functionas-a protector of the rights of our*peop!e andof our free democratic institutions Wherethe press is enslaved, these rights of the indi-"vidual and the free democratic institutionswhich American-s hold so dear, soon dis-appear.

Their* s- theduty of keeping tr» pecple fu"y ..ndtruly informed "Pier crrespard-eilti are braving c m y fire to sendback the story of' >--cfI !>-•. e- Theireditors and pub' _-i-s a-c deeplyaware- of their * t ,> t^b-Ii'y for thefaithful prescnt.it '. ci the rc*._

"The American people are" \ .gilcnlof thtur precious heritage of a freeP'efb They will pc-mi: rcjthcr itscorruption nor Jt> ptners ca tor sel-liih. end* They will corL,-i,e :o re-(,Mld it as their •t'vns; right hz~d .11%ur as in peace

Governor LaudsAmerican Press

"The observance of -Natio^al News-paper Week aguir erve !o rcm-ndUti that freed mi <' thiugnt ^-d tx-priȣim i thefiee people!

"The great $cluis been )b> frie [been, moric thinf.nt1- |It hi sipublic upinunaIj'c med urn for••prtad" uf fruthtt li.ii helped in u

\r-\ I fr-oi

cl

T'.c [»"" ' -rt;. i-Jer of

v •-<>•" ofti . n <s j-^n -

11 d i^ccv f j ui-d

t K(>> «-rrrivti • *• J L

• Fire Is Sabotage f"Todny fire is sabotage," says a release

from trvc National Board of Fire Underwrit-ers 'T.very fire that destroys a single itemof vvdr machinery makes it that much easierfor the enemies cf freedom to kill and mffirtithe fighting men of our^country and,of ajlthe United Nations Every fire that keeps a.skilled worker away frorri his job is a victoryfor the enemy in his race against time. Thiswar will be won by production and not byashes "

1 he war has created many grave new" To carry out their'evil purples.I *' r» i i i " r " • ler and his imitators mu<t slangejs. Due to lack of new equipment, '

it is of,U>nne(jessary to use old and faultyequipnieiHoT various kinds in both homeand industry. Millions of people are work-ing harder and longer than they ever workedin their lives, and that makes for fatigue andcarelessness. It js necessary to put little-trained people to work on factory jobs, aridmany of these people do not understand thefire hazards which are inherent in their'pecu-pations. The tremendous speed-up of indus-trial output in all fields is in itself a definitebut unavoidable fire hazard.

<.f a

thru our window. f\y t d and Charier

RETROSPEC1the Cliiacn and C'liruiiide

roponsu e to thi w .1 «f t i t j»t p <."Our" nation " 'i'c uji ..rm-

.igainst forces that would destroy e\'-t iy basic institution chcri^httJ by>afree people. /The great lita'pon <>rHitleiism is fear — fear which isKioundi.l in "hatred ai-.d igr.urance.

C. E. Trubenbach, well-known local feed, seed andgrain mirehint and trULkci, I lapidly expanding histrucking businc.-.s.' He recently acquired another Jdrgc.

,truck, the fourth in his rapidly grpvving licet, and last\VEC1C one of his trucks made ,a delivery of valuable.rncrcharidl&e to Fort Knox, Ky. . This is a .record' for.distance for the local firm. ,. * "• . .. _^;._...

of ihe PressThe press, for the7 most part, is taken

granted Few persons when they pick

Under these conditions, it is necessarythat every, conceivable safeguard against fire'biS^se3'lt'o''cai»cifyr"~'Every town and* cityshould at once pass an up-to-date .fire pition* ordinance, and enforce it to the

Teven-letter.

in every fcrnj,.A free press-. is intolerable tn tlyfecivho In e by the Ue, - '-. . /

'A courageous, forthright an*i' freepre-s is c-ssential to our war^effort.The newspapers of America,feave ac-cepted the challenge of Jlfie worldensis by declaring that they will go •"All Out For-Victory."/'

"1 know that .(he.-presd of (his nationwill carry OKitsj high" tradition ofkeeping liberty, truth and tolerancealive in the minds arid hearts of everyAmerican" ',.".' •'.-,'.-

(Signed) Charles Edison;Governor of New Jersey!

/ . ' • • •

Set Maximum PricesFor Rubber Footwear

Maximum prices for the new Vic-tory line of waterproof rubber foot-

. \ . t. The Mons Club coif team Is really riding high this

week after.deicatinr,the Rotary golfers for the llrsltime in several years of competition. The "rparln"Lions" were taking no chances In last Friday after-noon's match. They "borrowed". Bob CVane, formerErhoXlke Club champ, as their, number one player,and from there on It was rather smooth sailing. TheLions are ready to end the scries now that they havewon, going on the British theory that he who wins thelast battle wins everything!. •

: ' * • • ; : - . . , • ' • , ' • • :

•We've often heard of babies and childvein lockingtheir parents out of their cars but it remained for ourbookkeeper. Miss .Marian. A. Schmitz, to furnish usvpilha new,;angle to this, story. • Coming back to the.oilBce'.Satur<lay afternoon, Miss Schmitz ..brought herdog, which she left in the car. Heturning to her car,she found that the dog had put his paw on the insidelock, locking the car securely and with her keys insidersShe had to telephone her. brother tot .a spare-set ofkeys in order to enter the car. ^ ••••.

. Oai linotype operator, Etank Dunbar, was cavort-

be at the opening of the Gay Blades rinkFrank gays the World Series l*?a minor

for granted. Few persons when they pick Every home-owner should get into the habitup their daily or loial newspaper ever^stop, ~c - — > - • — ' • — -• >••—- •--•- • * « - -to think how much liberty and happiness isbound up in the fact that you.can read thiskind of a newspaper. Few stop to realizethat only in the United States and the Britishempire can men and women read the news oftheir neighbors and of the world without

1 the blighting touch of government control.Should you be denied that right you

would soon realize that more and worsewould be coming. -You would know thatsoon your spare time would not be your own,that at any time you could be called but to a

of periodically inspecting his home for dan-ger*.^ AncLjn every factory, workers andmanagers alike must be trained in fire pre-vention and control. It is especially impor-tant that approved types of fife extinguishersbe placed at handy spots in plants — and thatall workers be instructed in their operation.

It should be remembered that cleanli-ness and orderliness are in themselves gooddefenses against fire. The littered home orshop is all set for a destructive blaze. There'sa job for everyone in this fight against fire —and the time to do that job- is right now! -~~ -

; A local resident visiting our sanc'tumon Tuesdayspoke of the unsightly condition of many" vacant lots-.in our community and remarked as follows: "It seems

'unfortunate that the owners of these lots, many ofwhom are supposed to be civic-minded individuals,should be so lacklrg in community pride as to let theirlot^ gradually drift into jUch a deplorable condition.?He suggested that a few pictures of these lots, with thenames of the owners, might shame them into' cleaning

of their grounds.

3OOC

MORTGAGE MONEYAVAILABLE

\ . , _ " ' _ o_,_ • — - - . "*<<:

On Easy ~M6ntR1y ^RepaymentYour "monthly payments cover your taxes, nreinsurance and interest and Pay Off Your Mortgage.

As easy as paying rent.

Interest charged onunpaid balanceonty/ * - • — •

Attractive Interest Rates Low Procurement Costs'

CRANFORD SAVINGS AND LOANAll Savings Accounts Insured A S S O C I < t t l O f l AU 8*v>n*s Accounts Insured

Office 2 N. Union Ave., Cranford, N. J.

Open daily 8J0 A. M. to 5P.M.

-Saturdays—8:30 A. M. to « M. •

-*$mBy the Federal Onrliifi and; Loan

Inrannce CorporftUoW 'By (he Federal. Savins and L e u

Insurance Corporation '

U. S. WAR SAVINGS BONDS and STAMPSFOR SALE HERE •-_-'.'."-'-. .

I P B I B B

use of crude rubber in such items,are set both at whoeisale and'retaillevels in a regulation issued today' bythe Office of Price Administration.The regulation'covers heavy occupa-tional rubber footwear air-well as or-dinary civilian articles. •..'.-.

With manufacturers' prices ahxadycontrolled by an earlier regulation,today's order brings sales ;of Victoryline footwear at all trade levels underspecific control. .. ;. . : - '

Retail price maximum* are estab-lished in dollars.and cents at five difV •''ferent levels for.eajch-item. The level- 'applicable to a retailer depends upon

_the amount he pa^d .bis supplier,whether he is a manufacturer or"^-^^wholesaler The. price paid .to thesupplier, in turn, depends upon*'thediscount-that-the supplier allowed the-- -retailer from the maximum wholesale.'prices as established in the same reg-ulation " . . .

The wider the'supplier^ discount,not counting discountsfor'cash; pay-ment, the lower the applicable retail *ceiling level

Since retailers are required to dis-play their maximum-prieeseis will be ablejo determine readily' -can be done and that Js'thelwrvegting of early planted

-jvhether the price asked fora parSc-1 gladiolus.>••'- . v T " -.:-• v. ... .',.-...'lar-rtcjn is a proper one. - _ ' • ' " " . -• • , . . . ;, .

' ' Digging and curing early planted gladiolus can be

INFrom the

rive Years AgoSafe dining awjid*, gi\en o di i \n \

inijts to then LILtlit- \Mthoul ii itjioil I)wcie ixceutcd lo elg it re lduil* of Ciweek by the local safe dining tonimillLf .

. The first meeting pt the new Junlor-.Sir.i. • ..fhjh -School P.-T. A-- is planned tor OctoUer lifi-'in I . .a'4 .School. ThPii,group has been^iormed IKJiiiui ',,[Vtt*mergingofthe two schools in the'new-building ' i.r.g \

Completion. / ] .' ' •, . ' '• '*": The.Township Committee turned--dnwii v'. '!;.i.'- '.

nance to vacate part of Berkeley, place .from li ••,]•' ••.:•street Jo the Rahway~ river, after several U/HL-S (•:

.protest had been received against the.mcann.... Adult Education Classes open next week in t'live-land School.and Lincoln School, H, n..best, .s.v;» .'•>,.<-.

• ing principal of the Cranford School .ann/nindii.Classes .are-under the joint, auspices, of the lio.n-.j i.ii- *dtication and the W..P. A. • Languages, goyoninu-i;'.. .business technique and icraf Is will be taught.

The Rotary Club soft ball' team defeated ilu- Li-myClub 20*15 in the third annual "comedy ami cinifcontest,. ' The victoipr gave.the Rotpry.Club iwo ..J.I:RS |oni the .silver;• loving cup to one &rc&e:'tloh».''. | , ' ..

.-:.!• Plans fqrjbxgajuzBtion 6f.a ."junidt'munk-iifal'toiit'-mittee" were formed by the .YouiigHepublKan club. ;'•

'at their last meeting. "Committeemen" aiici'"citn-;-mitteewomen" will keep ;a Jist of the voters in" Uiiir

, districts and thus be able to help at election time. IW. E. Cooper was elected president of thu Cran-

ford Welfare Association last week.Cranford High School's new athletic field on Wal-

nut avenue will be used for the first time Saturday• When^Uie Blue and Gold clash with HoseUeJ&gh^

for the local team in two years, since the old field Waitlocated oh the site on which the new high school isbeing built, V —-----•--~~---^-... . .-._

The Men's League of the First iPresbyterian '•Church began its twenty-ninth year-of activita lastweek with a meeting in the church school auditorium.

• • . ; . .'" Ten Yean Aco '" •, ' • ' -". Notices have been posted by Postmaster Houghtoh

calling (or bids for the proposed new postofflce sitedesired by the United.States government;' Planii for the season of,the Cranford Riding Clubwere outlined at the meeting September 26-at the club

the lpts up ana thereby give adjoining: property owners—""?!!? .1,?, Kensington Riding Stable Jn Uenilworth. A 'an ihcenUve to keep up the improvement and beauty -» c?I5Pe«««>* wiU be, held Sunday, October 16, on the .«f . k ^ ' ^ n * * - . » - . . •¥ > ... . •« yt^uior,^ dub grounds. Events are scheduled imjumping, sad--.

die and horsemanship classes.''• . Jqhn R. Reay, prominent local druggist and.ac-

tive member of the Businessmen's Association, died-..suddenly at his home oh September"24. .'fie had beena Cranford resident for 28 years. ' ; :. ^

Over 500'pictures h'ayefeeen mounted and• placed"in the Public Library for circulation by Jhe p'iclurt's .,committee of the P.-T. A', units. Many valuable pic-tures have been donated by interested people to; swellthe total obtained from magazincsi.''('-••

The "Fall fashion: Shp\vr of the Junior-• Service. ".League will take place in the near future. Plans have

Your GardenTKls Week

By FKED D. OSMANUnion Co. Arricultural Aee'utt

gardeners arej\ovt plant-

; which are stored over winter, one thing

Junior Red <ToPackXmas

j Christmas boxes to be packed asdsent bV the Cranford-schoot- dbUdrenhave been received and-placed in theschools by the 1 Junior Red Crosi*So-.ciety, it was arinouncedjthis week by -Mrs. Thomas Gilley, chairman of tbei^group. Fewer boxes have been re-ceiveB this year because of the lack "of space in ships for sending theseboxes to needy children'all over the -world as has been done in past years-Toys and games packed must be smalland light in weight this year-. . '."

A meeting of the school principals, 'was held in Cleveland School Tues-day to plan a large Red Cross organ-ization injhe grade and high schools.,R. A. Clement is in charge of the "drive in the High SchooL Charles A-Wallace in the 'Junior High Schooland Frank Martz and Miss Gertrude- .

the latest in.fall fashions.• •'• .The Cranfard Taxpayers'.'Association met .las-! >.

•'night to discuss objectives and' methods ofcaccampiiJi- -'••--.:. ing o program pt"eebriomyln' spending (oivii iuhd?. '' Ihe meeting wasinfornial. and open to the'-puulic. ' °• :'State-, and county candidates for the ••No\;uirbi>r -.-

_ . . . . - . : . „ , t. .. , flection will be speakers' at the luncheon of ihe Gnin-i>,Thisjob, of course, calls for harvesting summer's ford Wpraen's Republlcan_Clubjn..Echo.Lake(ft;t.-rt7t—'"

crops first .And although il, jsj_blt_£aily_to- take-up-^raub-Octpiber-ir/. OnTted-States Senator W. \V,,r;<i:•" Barbour, candidate for reelection, Donald H.'JkLe'.K,

candidate for Congressman, and Charles E.-Loik';<u.v. - „.,..candidate for State Senator, will -be the? speakers. "

. Malcolm and Fred Warnbck, comprising the U'ar-nock brothers doublesieam of Crariford,'won hte Ur', nbounty doubjse chnmtoionship in Warinanco Park i.isiw e e k . - 1 ' . - . • • , • • " - . . "

Teachfrd and principals of- Cranford schools, Jr(- . 'not moving tb.take a cut in salary since not yi-t n- -quested by tile Bpafa of Education to do this. Tiivi. -are, however, considering an.investigation otjin.ifii-i' . -status o'-fthe town and the administration of rci.i v

funds;, should an- appeal by the Board deem it tii.h-stsaiy for them to have this 'information. -•- : J

done-now'with a minimum amount of'time and ex-pense. Those planted later should: be allowed to' growas long as they will, on until severe frost checks theirgrowth. •- ; •• . *••' •'-

In handling all gladiolus, be sure to remove the?as soon as they, are dug. Some gardeners leave the"

tops~tm^believing that plant fqod1 in the, (ops go badeinto lhe-DnHis-,3'his is questibnable, and the tops drawmuch water fiijjft^the bulbs when they dry. For thisreason it_is better Hr-temovethe. tops as soon as pos-sible. Furthermore, the>topsharbor thrips,so promptremoval-and burning of the topsjs an aid in the-con-trol of this pest Place the conns ifi-trays to dry, pref-erably in the shade. As soon as theyareCsufficientlydry, they can be placed in the cellar. In «iout twoor three weeks, the bulbs may be cleaned and the

' conns removed. . • ".: If you .want to transplant lilies, early October is

one of the best times, for the jnbst of them have made , , ^ - T -Ihejr'full growth even if the tops are green. Ifithe banquet is beinbnjbs are dug and. moved immediately, they • beconie " * " 'well rooted-before fall., and start out stronger- in thespring. Leave all roots on Ihe bulb and treat then!more as a perennial than as a bulb, but be careful toplant sufficiently deep. It won't hurt if you break thetop loose from the bulb, for this has finished its growthfor the season. ' -

- r- Fifteen Tears Ago- *The Central Railroad of New Jersey condenw.iuor-

poceedings in the.lownship rooms i r e creating muchlocal interest, this week. Hearings have commencedon. the grade crossings at Lincoln and Union avwiui.*and there is widely divergent opinibn'on the value..0!the property to; be confiscated. "• _7 < T h Rev. Kenneth 0 . Martin, local Scou.tmaite.r.

Cranford shortly after the Annual Fatheranquet fo th S t O t b 257 Ti

With the elementary schools.u can also transplant all ynurb I f t th d j t

lsofa

RedThe annual

Garwood-Kenillean Red

, 2 p. m. inSchooL tt m annnwnced

yesterday. The annual meeting winbe followed by the regularthe executrro boar*. '

-, Amer-be held on Wed-

at

and Son Banquet for the Scouts on October 257 T6fe3uet is beinjrpl^nhed as a iarewell party far.'hin i

.. • A Cpunty-Falr «i lLbe given by Trinity.ChurchSchool on Saturday; October-a. Booths-will be set upin the parish house for the saie>ef refreshments ant!toys, and' grab bag.^nd> shootlngBawes are being

• Johtt K. Cloud, a member of the Cranfora^Sdlaoard, spoke to the football team before its game'l^f.!? " . g j n g y e . boys to boost the games and get fiemost jooa out of athleUcs. The board's-aim is to en-courage full participation in athletics by all the pupilsin the public schools.

, Designation of stop streets was urged for all in>int street intersections, of Cranford at the Torni-Committee meeting here this week. Mr. Ward•"•-1 ""~ giving the-support of many local

_ j & and spoke ofthe state rccom-the early winter - perhaps '^&t^^S^1SmaW2S!r-eni<ircX ^^-^^ ' -r -«~ its locality ana provide markings for them

,--— % ' ^ ^>-—^**e Men's League of the Presbyterian._ your tubersoes as near. October 1 as poBlblerrTai<J Plans Xor a W s o h ofgreater^itertaithey freeze too hard the bloom buds-ttSare <'ever before. A possuJle-progranTisCetagJworked out

already formed lor next summer1* flbwexmg wiU be * ^ " - - • i r ^ * B * ^ ? - ' ? -oesTxvFeo.

in October. In fact, they do just as well as if moved in' the spring-and you have the added advantage of gettingthis out of the way and of wiving the plants time-to be-come well rooted over winter. The principle of mov-ing perennials, in the fall is to get them moved earlyenough so as to permit the roots to become well estaonlisbed before winter so^they won't heave. An addedprecaution against heaving Js to give slight protectionalter the ground " ^December*

lor presenting The Harmony^ Trio--5fit gave •»><* »,saflafactor>H^fonBance lart yeSfc . j '

* * ,\

uVu-

!tic field on W,il-it time' Saturdlyth Itpselle .Highffrs'fr'n'ome"gairic>l!t.the old field Wa'fw high school is

iPresbyterian '•of activities lasthool auditorium.

naster Houghtohpostofnee site

lentord Riding Cluber 26-at the club. :KenilwortH. A'

;ober 16, on the.a?jumping, sad- •

ited and' pluixd'-by Jhe picnin'sy valuable pic-people to; swell

Junior Service.re. Plans-have

ition met .las!aC-accumpiiJi- -g (oivii fird=-the pubi ithe N(j\y In"n of the 11 ' - .Lnike- C-i L - * T -

or W V.Id H U l •s E l-o ix. i \PC. kCl

ismg the U'..r-vvon hie Iinco i\i i*

Rotary Hearsrt5fFm*»« yrsssssr^sas?

naryRev. Smith Cyrtu

In South Africafctperiences of a Baptist mission-

ary j n d hjj wife in Liberia, SouthAfrica, were told'to the Rotary Clubat their meeting last Thursday bythe Rev. Smith Cyrus, former Jlocal

dd firmer pastor of E^nan-p o r of E nannel Baptist Church. He returned

. from Liberia May 26 after., serving asa missionary there for eight years.Liberia 'pwes much to.- the UnitedStates ;for its advancement, in. edu-cation and religion,, the Rev, Mr.C idCyrus said.

Opening a series of war. awards, the club presented $25 bonds'

to WJJJlam D. Reel, Jr,, John F.•Cron, Dr..Carl G. Hanson, TheodoreLange, Jr.; and Carroll K. Sellers.

T h e wedding • anniversaries of-Mr.and Mrs. John Theiz and Rev. and

-,--Mrs., Frank H Sherlock -were ob-,.-_ s o r e d . ' . • • ' . • • • • • ' . . , ' :

The club received an invitation toplay in the • Cranford'.BowlingLeague, and A. B. Caldwell was .ap-pointed bowling representative.

.," fldward J. Kane, theatre manager,wag inducted as a member by-PastPresident J. Walter Coffee. Dr.

G. Cole, president of. UnionCollege who was previousmember" of the club pre-

newcomer with the .initia-were Herbert WelchLesley Lord, of West-• H7 Stanley Mac-

Will Mark WorM ^Communion Sunday,*^«£n«uIiS^DTacK

Istered at the 8-^nd 11 a. m. servicesin Trinity Church Sunday, which isWorld Communion • Day. Sundayshould mark the^ates t advance yetto connection with the Parish-~ "

the Rev. Frank M. Sherlock., rector!declared yesterday.

World Wide Communion Sunday,to quote the announcement from theDepartment of Evangelism of theFederal Council of,Churches, whichsponsors the observance, "does notcontemplate Union communion ser-vices, >ut rather that-each-local-con-gregation shall seek to have all of itsmembers present at its own AlCommunion Table, and, at t "time, conscious of their spirituwtme-ness with all fellow Christians aroundthe world."

In this connection the first monthlyChurch School Eucharists will be

^ held for all confirmed members ofbond the school at 9:30 a. m. .Thnapem-

bers of the Kindegarten amrTuniorgrades will have their usUal period,of instruction in the parish house fol-1lowing a brief service in the church. I

J h e first issue of the Parish Herald ifor the current year will be dis-'

rsgr-

LJotis Hear Junior

—Dr. Charles C , Coleppresldent ofthe Ifnion Junior Co]lege,~a33ressedthe-meeting of the Lions Club Fridaynight in. the Cihmney Corner on thesubject of present day conditions in

for the currenttributed-SundSy.

Clary. Also a gueGrail, U. S."M. £., bJ, Grail, assistant to

h i f l

/ nley Mact was dpi. Eugeneb t h f P t i k

p Eugnether of Patrick

ip engineer,ith lwho Is op, furlough, here with rela-

tives' after nine monthsN^f service; overseas.

Dr. Gordon L. Peters,; •preside*.

Ident,

Eight Tire* Stolen w '-.Six automobile tires and tubes 'val-

ued at $150 and two mptor.cycle_.tireswere stolen Sunday from a barn' at 1Hillside. avenue, Kenneth Butler .of409 Lexington avenue reported US thepolice yesterday. Boards had beentaken off the front-window of thebarni and an .inner -door had beenjimmied to steal, the tires which werestored there with motor vehicles.

Two Can DamagedAutos driven by Michael Nigro of

332 Amity . street, Elizabeth, andRoger T. Grady of 1029 Grandviewavenue, Westfleld, were damaged ina side-swipe collision-Sunday nighton Orchard street Nlgro was "sum-moned orf-a charge of reckless driv-ing by Lieut William-Fischer.

CONSOLATION. . . . When arrangements are made

members of the,'family, are consoled In tfioknowledge that' their, tubule wil.Kbe' one. ofenduring satisfaction. ' '

LEYFUNEKAL .SERVICE

218 NORTH AVENUE: W. CRANFONO O-O208

To Pay for Your Medical CareAlways a blessing, good health is a first lin*

obligation in wax tifne! Attention to mecbcul and

denial needs should not be neglected. To further

the maintenance of good health end better health

standards, °thlg bank offers Personal Loans 16 pay

Y, dental and hospital services.

WISELY ~ - BQUQW rot A FUKPOSI:

I money for any practical and worthy .L not hesitate, to apply to us. Jnst

Bficer in charge of Personal Loantv:iva courteoui, confidential coniid-

UP TO $1000

If youpurpose,ask for thYou wille ration.

jCb UNTYGoMPANY

BROAD STREFT-SUZABETH100 SOUTH AVE, B • CKANPORO

er learning throughout ,the Nation.He was introduced by Dr. H. R. Best,supervising principal of schools, anda member 'of the club. August Ther-mann, Jr., chairman of the sportscommittee, announced that the Lion*Rolf .team defeated the Rotary goffers

100 Atterid Fir«t

The first, meeting Of the "LincolnSchool P.-T. A. on Monday brougbJalmost 100 parents out to,1-meet thenew teachers and the-new'principal,Frank J. Mart?.

group heard Mrs. John VanderVeer,chairman of rnternatlonal Relationsof the State P.-T. A., who spoke, onthe value of the P.-T; A. in the com-munity. She stressed the. PQint thatthe group was not social or political

Dr. C. M. Canrlght, Introduced byDr. E. A. Ourtfee, suggested the utili-zation of the Rosele incinerator sys-tem instead of the Use of the towndump for garbage disposal;-Vice-president E. .N. Downe pre-

sided in the absence of PresidentAugust Therrriahn.

• V "

• ' • ' • ' ' / v - • • • • • I • • - •

Rebekkh Anniyertary Sherman P.-T. A .Rose, Rebekahitod e, J99, I, O, O. T o Hear Dr. Terrell • -.,

F,spr-,Westfleld,vwill! ckebrbte to- W flrst meetini, of the 'Sherrnarlhlght the 01st anniversary of the Re- School P.-T.-A.: will-be held Mondaybekah iDeKree whlch\vfas founded'^' 3 P-1 n».;fn the school auditoriuniSeptemfctr 20. 1851. ." 1*,he mectinfij Dr:, f" ^ Terrell, schwl pliyiiician1,,„,,, . ._ ,, . , k , ••'-„••,,'W1'l • * l n c speaker and will discusswill be In the American f ^ i o n Hall, t h e ^ 1 ^ o f •,ub,Jrculo.siS! i n schoolin Westfield. At this tirneuthe UKIRPI children.' • • • 'Will be presented with theXGrandf Mrs. J. S.-Auston, chairman of thMaster's Trophy by the riresiderit, of mothers' committee, and Mrs. W. rthe Rebekah State. Assembly. I. O I Apple, chairman of the- ways an

Recover Guns, BondsStolen Here Aug. 31

Valuables stolen from the home ofCharles J. Christian of 106 Columbiaav^nue-on August 31 were recoveredFriday by Patrolmen Lcstcrl Powell

-and Thomas-Woodsr- The~Ioot hadbeen stolen,by two boys, 14 and ISyears of age, whv allegedly confessedthat they had broken .into the Chris-tian home on that night. .

War bonds valued at $225, tworings/personal papers, a .45 caliberautomatic and a .32 caliber revolverwere taken. The bonds and personalpapers were concealed in a woodlandnear, the Walnut avenue crossing ofthe tehigh Valley. Railroad and werodamaged by dampness.-1 The gunswere recovered from the home ofone of .the boys whose .parents -saidthey, were unaware that; the firearmswere in their son's possession.

The boys .were, parolled in the cus-tody of their parents.

-mothers—nK>v»m»nt---tO"-protect-- the-children in each' block' in the eventof an air raid as an example of this,and stated that now, more than ever,the parents must show Interest in thecare of their children in an emer-gency.

JRutgers ExtensionCourse Opens Here

Announcement-has been made of•m extension of Rutgers Universityfor learners in the program oftcience for elementary grades being(.'iveii in Cleveland School. • Thecnur^p is held on Mondays'from <•• 10until 0:10 p. m. and started ttiiiw e e k . • • " • . • • •

Teachers taking the course, whichdeals with simple experiments, fieldtrip tcchniaues and a: survey of SOTlected rending material, will receivethree credit hours, per.semester

George Levitt to!

. meeting of theBible Clais of the FirsTPreibytertChurch at 9:45 a. m. Sunday. •Sunday, G. Russel Smith, assistant',.!class leader, cited the many benefit*-

the Weekly meetings of the class. A ~night of sports and an evening1*'en-tertainment furnished by the soonand daughter! of members it being'arranged. , i -

Study Group to Meet .The Lincoln ••"School ' prc-school

study group will hold Its first meet-ing at 8: IS p. m, on Tuesday- nt thehome of Mrs;. J. B. Stearns of 38 Mnn-slori terrace. One. of' the topics tobe discussed Is "The'Young MotherFaces War." Any mother In the com-munity interested In the meetings iswelcome. ' "*>

Dehydrated Fait.-ByDEVOE

It's New.A Wonderful Discovery. 'The Best of Water Paints.Easy to Mix.Easy to Apply.12 Beautiful Colors.One Coat Covers.Dries in One Hour,It's Positively Washable.

On Sale Oct. 1,1942

Johnston Paint ShopCR.e-2540

107 • S N; Union Avenue

McMANVS BROS, • 1152-11S4 EAST JERSEY •ELIZABETH

Store Open Thursday and SaturdaySSlights

Save 20% By UsingOur "Drive-In " Service

;ondeniii i ireotinK 1 .ic1-I: commencednion avi. L.I-the ^£lue '

Iriita is to <;n-U. the pupils

.YES, YOU ACTUALLY SAVE 20%BY BRINGING YOUR LAUNDRY

i TO OUR PLANT STORE.

| acquainted lea to be held In tl[school next'Thursday afternoon| 3 p. m. .,' • . . - . . • • •

! Princeton Eleven :

iMeeta WilUaim NextPRINCmtJN-rWilliamsi1: perennii

early season opponent of the Princc-Iton football team, will cornV to Pa' mer Stadium on Saturday to frlay thsecond game on the home'eleven's1W2 schedule. The Williams team isunder.the tutelage of Charles W.Caldwell, Jr , former Princeton full-back. basebaU pitcher and basket-

| ball player. The same Will start a3 p.m. " . ' - . ; . . • '• -.- -. • •

aevdandP.-T. A. o ' • '..The Cleveland School Pyr. A. wi

meet at 3 p. m. Monday in the schoollibrary. Uiss Margaret Wishard, theschool nurse, will speak pn the,sub-ject. T h e School Health Program,"and BSiss .Gertrude Almy,. school

" ' 1,-witt-ereet-the-moiliers^—

Swan "BpDGET" Service '\}

8 ibs. 98c MIN.

Each Additional Ib. 10c

LESS 20% ON CASH AND CARRY"DRIVE-IN" SERVICE >

EL 35420 R0 4I007 tk » ISI4

This' senrlce inclnoes:

* All flat work 'flalshed

', Wearing apparel BuBdry, Keadr to Iroa

_^n»nttercliiefs lc eaek

• v8Jilrts—nasd fialahed7e each. "

Due to the fact- tha't my "associate.Dr. S. Lustigj and I have been calledto miliUry service, it has becomenecessary for me to close my office6t-2O5-NorUi-avenue, urestr for "theduration. r ^

DB. If. D. PEARL,„ ' Veterinarian.

SNAKE

um orcmunsirs

S CHO O L - S H4XE-S-.la A U S b t s u d WUiks

Bay SOW WMe O n StocksAre Complete

ANDREW CR1SANTIjmam HOBTITAL

SM M w a U n . • Cnmltr*

Church hasnmentibsnworked outave Midi >

KMMKMBIR rEAKL HA«BO»V—BUT

piece., dettfned for' a yeunf, d;nimleAmerlMrl Piseei in •iraple, flowing llnei, and

inodo of lUlng. Selection la to varied and fle«lbi« "tail yon mar cre.te ju t iheiype of bedroom yon

- jledre. A dainty, feminine bondoir . . . a htnd-; « M .maKnllne bedroom . ; . • conTenlent, tu

room for two. Then lovely bleached ma-'hoianr pleeoi are priced indlridoallr below, wthit whetlicr yon hare • budgr! purie or a hound-

<hii_qailftj.l)«dr*oni „ _ !

V.nilr . . . . . . $60.00Benrh . . . . . $ 1 1 . 5 0Nifbl Sund $15.00Double Bed. .$26.S0Oi.lr $11.SODreMer . . . . $ 6 0 . 0 0

.$31.00V»nll7 $35.00Twin Oient, « . $39.00Mirror . . . , . . . $ 2 1 . 5 0Twin Bed*, each'$26.50

3-Piece Suite*For i s Little as

»FuU Six. Bed. Drum er Vmtty Kith Uinert. S-Dnwir Chut

fine furniture

AT^'

. - • • - . - ' ' • • ' . • ' ' • • . - . . '• - - - ; * • . - ' • • : • • : - ' ' • J . ' - ' * - • • - • • . . • • : • ' • . . . '

\ - 7 - ~ , . . . . . . * - - . - " - - : . - ' l - •=• . • * - - • - i * . « ' - . . - i' '...V -•:"

^SNAPSHOT GUILDYOUR SNAPSHOTS'

illlifrilUPSFlft

nfi1111ar

wiv

Dark flaOwa* Utntened •, To, lighten s>~4ilrk.t hallway, one

liousewife had the two small squarepanels removed from' the upperparts, of two bedroom doors, fyeseopenings w.-re fitted with ground

amusing silhouettes with black paint.This ingenious device allows lightto enter the hallway and aside fromits safety .angle, gives a decorativenote to the doors. Oecaleomoniasmay be used instead at painted de-'

Color Chance of E « Yolks. &gg. yolks with' richer-shades, ofyellow are; due to increasing, theamount of yellow corn and greenfeed eaten by the chickens. Toomuch green feed tends to give theyolk a brown or green "off tint."

VeneiueU's Unavto Elver "Venezuela' is divided almost in two

by the great Orinoco riverf-form-ing a large valley right through thamiddle of the country from west toeast. This river brings, down somad* ~- - - - 'ages it has built up a delta cover*ing 40,000 square miles, acrosswhich the water finds its way inmany separate streams.'

». : Slowdown for SafetyMany a vehicle, because, at worn

tires or faulty mechanical condition,-cannot be operated safely even at

-40 miles an hour, according to theNorthwestern University Traffic in-

data.obtainabler-82 per cent of. thefatal accidents and 97 per cent ofthe injury accidents in urban areas,and $4 per cent and 69 per cent,respectively, occurred when carsv.xrc opcrr' n- ,-t F-CC<1S of " "

A three-quarter-century-old' clockIn Essex county courthouse, at Law-rence, Mass., has one face to tellthe time of Jtay and another to tell

^. ">e d a y of the month- Automatiy* "r-- 0 ""*' ^ e day face Marts the new

month on tlire, whether the pre-ceding month ho<J_3L_30. 29 or. 28.

-days. - • - - - - ""--_-."_ —

flower .Produces IJgfatSome flowers, as well as insects,

produce a light at night. This tactwas discovered by the daughter atLinnaeus, the great botanist, who

'noticed the nasturtiums glowing in-the dark in her mothn-VesrtteJt.""_

ForebesTtata"This.year'when the birth" rate is

rapidly- increasing and a housingshortage, exists in key areas, manyfamilies are converting porches* intonurseries. Attractive pastel-colored

- ' - msively built with insulating panels.THese panels are especially: adapt-able to a baby's room, because theypossess acoustical qualities which'will deaden noise from the street

VAN'S' EXPERT

IfFOIDCTB IC

- *- AMen St.

car. whichlih

jijifeti

ARDIZZONE'S~ HomeJrUde

ICECREAM- nun MOXVIBY

N. Daloa Ave. sad Aldea St,

Have you ever tntught of •framing1' members of your family In an opsn '.window? Try It, If you want results Ilk* this.

M£fORE people bars probably been"framed" pbotoxraphlcally am

Ured to toll the tale tbao you could•count In i forty-hour week. Farther.more, they're- probably looked allthe better for It. Photography IsIlk. that. - -

For Instance; Joit tsk* a look atour Illustration. Isn't It a ilmple,ebarmlnt shot? YOB bet'Jt U-Lottof tht chirm, of courie. Is due tothe pltasant aspresiloD of tht UlU»|trL But. I think you can chars* alot more off to th* tattlDC—to thttact U>t tha subject In this cast U"fr«m«d" >y tht open window.

If you keep your tyes open, yonildad Out there are lou of potentUl"trames" like that throuzb wblcbjfou can picture jrour. subjects. Door-ways viewed from Inslda or out araalways excellent; th« window of inautomobile Is another possibility

arches of any sort are cood; a cou-ple of trees, or an orerhanslncbranch with a lot of leav'ea-willmake, excellent framing material.Look for places through which 70acan rlew your subject, and you'llhave tha Idea down pat. ^ N •

Howerer, here's a tip. In making'such pictures, because of th* w!d»discrepancy In dlstanc* which fr*-*qaently aitsts between u * tram*and y o u subject, you'll need ailth* photoiraphlo depth of fltld thatyon can possibly- secure. Therefore,us* a small less aperture. Smalleas aperture* fir* greater depth,

of field, and In cases like this willb»lp keep all objects In th* ploture'sharp and clear.

Try -framing- your subjects th*ext tint* you make pictures—and

see It it doesn't sir* you more at-tractlr* and Interesting results.

John ran Guilder

Entirely Remove WaxBefore rcvarnishing or reshallack-

ing a floor, wash it thoroughly withstrong soap suds, rinse well and dry.If there is any doubt Dial the wax aentirely removed by the soap andwater sciubbini;, the floor may bewiped over with turpentine or a

- turpentine substitute railed petrole-um spirits. To moke sure Hint thewax is entirely removed, varnishone floor liourtt and lcn\c it OV«T-night. If the varnish semi-; stickytne next morning, that is proof thatfender TC-ftdr-t7raflinOTr*mm?er TCftdrt7raflinOTrmm,and the floor m|ist bv rrrlrnnci.

Dry Skim BlllkA praqtical way to improve the

diet, at low cost, is the use of dryskim milk which has the same foodvalue as fresh milk except that thebutter fat has been removed. Dryskim milk contains the protein, cal-cium and other minerals, the vita-mins B and O, and the milk sugarof fresh milk. ~

STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIPHTATKMENT uf U>« owi)i>ralil|i. manasi mtntt-

(»f Thr Crmfurd I'ltltrn and Ctiriiiililg, pullIlilml «rrkly at rranfuril .% J rwiulml tiyIlir Art <>r Alinim 21 l t l t I'll) Illlirr. K C

, Mr».l»,n IVIIl/ir Cliarln M II.;, nimlnmtlanatrr K V MrMahon (»nrra Tlie ('ranr.Til (llli'ii aitil I hnmli |p Klin klinlili ra K (*

'MrM.1,,.1, (harli-i M llajr ami Krlir«( T. Mllliltoti I

hllH Mill < Mi \lin<>\Hualniaa Manaei r

""•in anl •.nl.rtm.l iKf.rr- mi Ihla Jhllclj1 . ( -«.|lr<nl«r I'll* SUllall A KilimluNotary rutllr, N J CuitiiiilMliin fiiilrea Fobruary S 191'.

—HIHPS—DELICATESSEN

A FULL LINEOF

DELICACIESIPIMM cat.«-«« -

I t N. jDNION AVKNTK '

Every Employee of This NewspaperIs a Home Front Soldier in the

FIGHT TO WIN-^VJ

(PKOOF NEXT Tttim8DAr)

Discover that it'a a rule here to give.you

perfect assurance of satisfaction. .'You can

trust us implicitly.

r "PROOF OF LAST WEEK'S AD'

V STEAM IS NOT VISIBLE!What we see fa •team that has been ennjeased in the'air intotiny globules of water acain. Steam in itsdT-is invisible.1..—"PopnlarlaHacles" —A. 8.E. Aekfermaiin. ThirdEdltton.1 . — < ' • • • - • • -

'A"

BUILDERS GEN ERR L SUPPLY &

i-^>^

* - J t - r

HILE America's planes, ships and armed forcessmash at the enemy with fighting machines and

manpower—AmerkaVmen and women employed atturning out your local newspaper — smash at the enemyon the home front with the machines that bring forththe written word, and with the power of a Free PressfThere are men and women right around the corner ofyour own address . . . rubbing shoulders with youwhen you shop . . . sending their children to schoolwith your own . . . who, day and night, work to keep

,ry6u abreast of the news of your community. Some ofthese home front soldiers are reporters who go out andget the news - ^ ofteri at persbnaliriAr'Tiie list islong

, — there are compositors who set the type as you readit; photographers-who dare anything to get a vividpicture to give you an intimate look at what you rest?about; there are those who distribute' the paper, thosewho place it within your very hands . . . and more —

• all your neighbors — all dedicating their wartime pro-ductivity to Victory!" ' ' J"~\r ,

*C^k

^

Also enlisted in the fight tor Victory, through the medium of 'your news-paper, are the retadlers who speak to you in its advertising columns.They tell you where qnd when you can get what you need. They helpyou fight inflation fa complying with government price regulation*, andby providing people In every Income bracket with a fair share <A avail-able merchandise. And your, retailers — like your newspaper—havebecome Uncle Sam's Bond salesmen— and Bond purchasers. For it iswith the money that buys War Bonds that our fighting forces a n equipped

•fa their FIGHT TO WIN—VICTORY! , -

• - * * * *

. 5 - 7 ALDEN sraEET.AND CHRONICLE

CRANTORD, N. J.

.V-,-7*HsaJHl l > ifSjnlifty^V>'i1-\i"-!-M''ll.^ft-n 4iA

, - /. i _ '

* > " • • . ,

• / •

itreuor •«>» has built a'•special ran.'. ™l Wt lo'r «»ft where

Presbyteric^l

Panel Discussion , (To Feature SessionNext Tuesday Evening

Sociologifl AHvises

Courtshfp by YoufluYoung people will orobublv make

wiser. '

mw-cra .on .2 Giant Sassafras Tress

Preserved Jn Ent<r-l-»Two mammoth sassafras trees.

fine themselves to or-e toil ear'} inthe dating penoi

TI.is i« the ip'-iio-! of Dr -JM, K-John, associate .professor of ruralsociology at the Pen' svl\ama State'.college, who spoke before ,a tonn

ing of the Haabeth Prrsbjterial n j ' Wide acqu t in lances lups wt'it*e First PreOjv-.tT.an Church here >cmng people of tie opposite se*The Rev. William D Felmeth, D D , | U'lp t" tducite the rmoUm andchairrran of National ruv-'on- m e.,ib'e OJ i l i ^ m s to discover t'> -Tthe New Jersey area, »il k\.d the' pri fen nets," Dr Jnh-i anidpanel discussion and Hie follon n j He (ltod studii-. shewing that f.\i_-irinisters will lake yjrt TJ,C jtev t o r s of a succ-c-sful inatritigp .in

»„ Edward A. Odcll, D D . head of the c l u d e '"OS acqu.-urtjnu, .1-modvr-nus^onary work in ihe We t In-1 a t e l v r t ) n 8 enfijgciinnt, appioval bvdies, the Rev Reid B Dickson. D D ,1 t h e Parents of hoih.-t'io happiness ofsecretary of the Board of Pt,n«iun&'l b o t n c-l-t> o f pjifi-ts in, llu-ir o-vnthe Rev PhiPp Eliott, DD j>a*toi | r"Jrr'age, uliulcsnirr niinh s«nt n-of the Pre-bjlcnan Church of 'Ot'onship> with pjrorts ,ipd mod

route 20 since Ui<? settling <>f thi>Western Reserve", have been proserved fn their inlirvtv by the Ohiodepartment of highways

In a recent reconstruction, widening and paving of this highwaj spe-cial _orders_jv ere given i } .jfiaL'CUiSoms *f<ne""dn"wtor of <high\rav«A ithat. e v « y prrranripn-De" TSHCiriu"]priserve these Uvu ueos, winch

Fourteen Weddings inWhite. House Since* 1811

There have been U White Howe

-they- oeeurrcd,- tfiey-'VrtW 'thusr trf:" 1811—Cucy Pajne Washington,

Mrs Madison's sister, ami JusticeTodd of the United States Supremecouit.

1812—Anna Todd and Representa-tive* John G Jnckson

IBS&Jttrlu Monroe, daughter of•the Pr«:slfnt.-""iincJ-Sa<rt(ft.tS.a:-Tim« Gouvcrncur.

Ion Jackson aril John \d-priserve these twu «e<-sv winch i lEIId—Holon Jarkson aril JEland just west of North MncHnn > nms. sin of (he PrcsuhlitCorners o-r the north-side of the lfUTr-Delui Lewis and .'

Brooklyn, the nev. John HI Adam*,head of the department'of Univer-sity worit: atid the Rev. Clayton D.

youth Work. . ^r—• The forum will follow a "supper

hpp

served at G:30 p.-m. by the Wom-an's Association. » The - businessmeeting will be held in the nfter-

' 'The Margaret Greene Guild of the

church will resume scheduled mcct-. ings"beginning Monday at 6:45.p.m.

Mrs. \V. R. Sloan, wife of the pastor,will be the speaker and her topic is"A JMotto. With a,Motive." Specialmusical, selections will be-given un-d th d i t i f M Al

roadSassafras trees of t'le sue of these

tvvo monarchs are rajv, says theColumbus Di^paUh Seldom arethey found with Hunks'ibat measure 4'infect in diameter, as do these.

Being so close \i the highway,this regal pair nitesiitajed specialgrading tieatincnt «s vvi ll as amodification of the grade of thepavement itself, -w they would notbe disturbed,.. The highway deportment even

constructed a. stone retaining wall. . . . . .--- —y ...-..* , tq-protpct the~cxp67fed roots oftho

relatively the same amount of otlu-'1 trees to.thtf easj. which is above thecation, and there should not be- Un? new grade of the road. : . *"^wide a' gap'in thi'ir ages. ..':",•. j . ' . ' , . ; - .

I ri?S)t*nt-ony hini^i iil'iciwlo~it \vhole-'Seme courtship ini'judi>' tlio strungon uttachnient to parents'and 'choos-ing a partner' for wealth or-socialposition rather than-.coiripatibilijy,Dr ' John addi'd

erau.' f(vi()m>si for sotrl activuvIn addition, both families should

come from the same -economic levv-nl,: •

Kurriv.-rmiire, "todays murWhipsmust often be 'canted.un ,n the en-virrtnriifiit of.c'oinincreiiilized "thrill-,sellinjj'' ree'r,eati(iii. ' As a .'result,courtslnp'has becomp too much of.a

i l .activity,, and manyi l:der the direction of Mrs. .Mva'tt-ink-'li1""'11'0"0"1'1

cr. Supper vfill be served by' Mrs ^lU"6fPe"P^>')cpi'CWilliam Higbie. Mrs. R.'.C. Kmrry i f c e t l o n ' ° f nuirring

-Mrs. H. J- Schack and Mrs. William s"m<-ltlIlic!s -".V^j1"1

Liss^nden. ' . ' . . ' , • .'. , < ; h o o s c the "partner

The executive board of the Wom-an's Society niet yesterday under ;thi

. leadership of—Mrs. A. TV Baker. ."Sunday, will be World Wide Com-

"dren.

munion Day and communion at thistime has a special significance, nc-

. cording-to...the Rev. Mr. Sloan, Inview of the fact that our men in the

-armed forces are joining in', this com-'ser\'ice in many' foreignmunion

lands.Pre-communion / service" wiis heM

uesdaynight -Tiiis meeting marl':s

Parents . aie'• by trying tofur . tl*(.'ir chil-

Everclcan CtlrtlinsGlass curtains, made-by a secretocess i h ih ilkprocess in which silk or cotton can

be enclosed' between two sheets ofglass, may soon be on the marketThe curtains" will neither get dirtynor wear out.

Before l'laritins Seeds'Commercial • fertilizer" applied

te^1. on . v^iM° gardensTuesday .night. "This meeting mariiithe first of the mid-week Bible scr-

' U ^ e a r 1 1 * " 1 ^ he!d- " lr"u« l io»t b ^ w t s " ^

should be worked" thoroughly" "intothe top two.or three inches.ixf soil

"planted or plants

Farm Lumber NeedsFarmers'can now order" construc-

tion lumber, for their farm' storageand packing' needs, as provided inan amendment tb the WPB lumber-,freezing order. Sales' may be made

'to any person for use*'in the con-struction or eclair of buildings forstorage of agricultural prodirijts andfor packing, boxing and/shippingsuch products,, providra that "'signed compliance. •srotoTnent ac-

• :onipa;ni<!s the ordi-i/This not onlypermits_fiirrt\er's 16•nbtiiin lumljc-hut niso" mukesyff.posKtblu forci* 4<mse farjKirr-sluncdIn'obtain Umibcr from miUj^-. In

IhiS ^kinds (tj—cvii 1 lun.il

f/j |

• Ypur Dime's In The Army M!ow!

Alpl'O iseY\cr Pni;i-o(

1K.J5—.'lar.v Enston an I Lucion B ,I'olk ' •

1U7—f'mily Martin and LevvHJUindolph

im2-Eli/abcih Tylor, il.uifhter ofthe Pusidcnt. mid Willi.iin Waller.

1874—Nellie Grant, daughter ofthe Prtiidmt, and Ali;i-iiu>n Snr-tons _ ' L

lUTO- Kmily Piatt, niece of I'usi-dMU Hnjes, and Gen Russell lias-tings. ' • • - - " ' . • • "

TJent Grover. Cleveland.lilOfl—Alice Kposevell, daughter of

the 1'iesident, and- CongressniwiNicholas Lofigworlh. . ..'•

1913—Jessie Wbodrmv" •Wilson, j .daughter of the'-. President',Francis Bowes Sayrc. '.,•••'.•

• 1914—Elcanpr Wilson, daughter of.President, and' William Gibhs \

McAdoo, secnitary of the treasury. Ox Koasl

Five"'Sle'cp Inducefa f"or.

TUMENT's'.lIff. 1. Hur l ) Uy(,,. TIIHI tu»_ «,'.-i.iiut .,1

I!.,, suloi'ttu-r. i:«,-,.y.,f cf-'ihi.' l««t Will midr,M:nii,iii -,-t vutjnxiA ii'Aii-iusi; .HIVKS^ . . : I « . . I . ulll W/Am>\M M,IWIHII.«,I>.'. IUHI /f-|,it,-|f,l f.ir »(m.ini'ii| d<IJJ.II.IIU>' c. i i i t ' i i r iiio c'i(iiiii> i.r I'niI'rl.lai, ll.i.-,<Mli iliy.iir . ......' YM> A. M. /-•*• :..>. • . .

lAvniiin TIII:I=T COMIMY'Y, .

III:UI>/I.KV r At'STix,. ..nr..|.i. x. j ;

>!, i / tr. «.| . •

row-urn

PA^I N T STHE FASTEST

LINJE IN

FALLGROWING PAINTAMERICA!

SPECIALS!QLO .

QUALITY,H0USEPAINT

95cGAL

QT.

OLOEXTERIOR

PAINT

3.2595c

GAL.

OLO — A ^RELIABLE FAINT FROM A RELIABLE STORE -^ OLO

' - <OLOPORCH

AND DECK. PAINT

OLOTONEPLAT

PAINT(

3.6995c

GAL. 2,4075c

GAL.

OLO - —- THE HE A R,T OF C O L O R - _ OLO

THE MODERN MIRA CLE WALL FINISH!

KEM-TONE

TJ»e Woe Public to-Try:ghl .rontijo) .(to.. itulu4c sleep)

vuries- all the way from .'countingslu-ep to the more esoteric forms <lfnutophyiiosia,' rcscntch shows. All 'schemes/arc- methods of limiting jconsciousness. Each of the follov** Iing plans has its adherents:^, j—Listening- to Imaginary dropsof ruin fulling on an Imaginnry tin |roof (snid to be better than counting

•sheep'because It requires-less men1-jt i l l e d o r l ) . '••'.. ••'. ' • . '

2—Assigning tiomcs to eiich letterOf the iilphnbet. A |s for Albeit, Bis for Benjamin; etc, (Oi\take ani-riinls, fish, names.of-countries, imy.thing you like.) • v •

3—Painting large imaginary' fe ex-t.tremely slovyly on h Inrge.-biack vviillwith' un injaginary brush' un.il uniinit'ginarv 'tin of imaginary whitepaint." (This one Is cited oh-theauthority' ol all eminent psyeluilo-(gis^.wAo'is of the <jpiriion|thiit im.v-.,body,-.who paints threo o[ the. 3s.'inthis;.very, slow mariner will find Itvirtually impossibre to keep nwukei!)

4—Hepeatod reliuiouH (onnulus (irnia'ntr'as. (Ifdr those vvl'iu-ure illk nt"-'ease or unaccustomed to moyclin.this. sphere, the age-old BmldlnM ;formula, "Oin manl' padmc liuinV 'has been found efliciifioin in lifti«if

I At the first «!, iiusting m Tlver-1 ton, Englnnd, In mure in in 50 jears,

7,000 sniidwirlirs vvdTsold \

IMiiiutcd ^It is «.stun.iti.u inai llcwnil pays

more tuxeH nun the United Statestuaa i i ) Ihnn l'l of the states

Choose Company WiselyFrom tht good you .will k'.irn

good: If you mix with the bad youW i l l l o » l > ' « + « • <•• 1- I I I , | V l .

From Tomorrow Through Monday, O£t. 12

5—lltciling liunticnse VLIST __ly, over and over,- (LfwisCurrofra"Jubherwocky" or Edward Lear'shmcikks will come in handy h u t )

Vk, COyERS WALLPAPER — - WASHES EASILY! *' ^5 IN ONE HOUR — COVERS IN

2-98 Gai. - . 98cDRIES IN ONE HOUR — COVERS IN ONE COAT!

_OXK C.M.1OS MIXED W m t WAlgft-MAKKS t'l> INTO V? GALLONS O F

. K E M - T O f l E _ A P P L I E R S , E A C H 8 9 C

Tra\clrr's Tree for Thirsty I'ciTiilcMadagascar, < rroneou-ily tillirl

lhe-|and^( the man eating tree, InIn truth the land of the tree-drinkingman. r

British soldiers landing "on (he bigKrOnch island olf <south«ast Afrunwill find no carnivorous vrgelntionlarger than the pitcher plants This•shrub, four feel high, bears jug- 1shjped, water-filled pitchers In j\vh 1 ch it traps and dig<stn unwnryI n s e c t s . :'•'• .. • : . '. 1 '-. 1

What the exploring Britons will en-joy is the Traveler's Tree, a lifesdycr for the thirsty. It is a palm,oftciXlOO feet high, whose big frondscondense rnoisturo and collect it Ina natural reservoir close to "thetrunk A s>^.ir tup, and out gusheia quart of_ pyre, sweet woter, _sn_ys_the NaTIohal 6reogr.iphic~"soclety

' rt'cThe franking piivikfLP> that V -

the right to ft ml mall witlirhit |«iiInn postage,, is cxUndcd under>hrteheads CbngiLSsmnal frank m nJ, mj-inembcrE of tbj' Icfyalntive branclNof tIie~felTrrar"i,ovc rnmont, unTun]penalty mail (uncle r penalty for pnvate use) for members of the exitulive tind judicial .branches tif thegovernment and ptrs nal free mallunder signature for authorized persons—now conferred upon mrmbcrsof the armed forc.es of thn Upitr-dStates and generally conferred tin ,widows of Presidents of the Untied |States

from this List of BEST BUYSLovell & CoVel

CANDYCUPBOARD

CHOCOLATES

70c. LB". BOXF n E S II

W E E K L Y

qj ^Shavo Cream;,..*•?*' Bladcn 10 for ,.,

JOHNSON & JOHNSON

VJck's 97-Vapo-Rub . t. £•*»

Efficient Tractor OperationTo operate n tractdr at full lood

(<:osts only one-eighth more "than athalf load, but twice< as much workIs accomplished The only notice-able difference in full-load operatingcosts is increased fuel consumptionOther costs, intluding-lnbor, deprccintion and-mainl*nance, remain al-most the same. . Farmers who arcpressed1 for labor thi- year can wellkeep this in mind Pulling morethan one implement at a time 'andoperating, at higher speeds are twoways to keep the tractor well loaded

IfvYou «;et a VacationTo prevent week-end traffic.con-

gestmn. .Tngcph R Facfmnn, dircctor of defense transportation, urgedvacationists to do their travelingduring the middlf of the week when'ever possible At the same time,Mr. Eastman said that vacationsShould be staggered .throughdul theyear instead of being concentratedduring the summer month!).

Maillard's- VICTORY-CHOCOLATESIN VELOUR CHEST

1.10LB. BOX

Lovell &CovelTHIN M^NTS

49cLB. -

OIJ) DR. STORK'S BABY OIL.pint'siic. .•.•,.•.•.......'.." ;/......

T W I N - E T S , - . ' • " ' • ' " . • • ' " " •'•'"

Z7iXip» ..„,„, „„..,. mncir

I l A B V T O Y S i "•'• •

u^ fwm ...;»..^....vv;,..l,...; ;;VIMMS' VITAMINS .AN.I) MflNERALS

SOcSfac KREE when you b u y - !

larse s l ie .a $2.25 Value, -fllioth for" '.;.. .•...'...'„:.... * ' f

JOHNSON AND JOHNSON <FlRST.AID KIT No. 4 ;;:7....,'* •

SUPERrSdrifctETISSUES, 6l)0s

VENIDA TOILET "•'.<* -TISSUES . . .fc for

CODANOL MALT, a Cold Resistant,Especially Palatablo for QQ.Children, pint .......; ;..5JOC

ARMY AND NAVY BRUSIILESSSHAVING CREAM, large Jar

FIRST AID ABSORBENT COTTONon Reel-Roll, U. S . P., t / * " * U i o

' pk«. 1 ., 1 9 CPAR RAZOR BLADES,

Schlck Injector *%g\ ^ A _Type ,..'......- ZO for 6 9 C

*epto ATJBtainbl •-•...,..,« * * C

£ & 24c-49c

Modess50 (or

SAVE'WITH SAFETY AT SEAGER'S

' / " J •

: ' - •>* * <

Page 6 J THE C1TIZKN AHD CHKONId* MT, OCXOBBt 1, 1MB

SOGIAEMr 11 d M-5 I H Lew * of 433 ~^y. _

North Union a\enue ha\e taken up 204 \\ a!residince in Westfleld quanic

of 433'~^Mr and Mr- Henry Herk'triter jtf*jln.ut avenue are I

_ j

Miss tllzaheth. Bood_of 2t .Burch,- .^itlis, SiHiL JltfJcj of-35K Lt-tjlfi"

Miss Bctte Sticik of a rd Uhl at Sussex•week endMi ; t

- M itliI L i loid n "f 2->l/IvwisV h i i n t u i m d ./H im ifter

"penc i l the umrtgr it MiKin VII-JiS< V "

[ _ -y1 lie GiJe n S tict\ held i picn-c

iti-f "i t f t hi me of Mr ird Mrs1 *\ \ bcrt of DIM I IJ a\u ue

II

Mr

iNlflf

J

Mr \\ ' i l lntn McMdhon of 6 Ed-- ' - t. ^ u rd pl/ct returned fiom Overlook

ind Mrs Richard Guest uf Ok- Ho^pi^il Summit on T u y d iy Jformerly of Cranfmtl.-.liave • • . .-•••- • ; I

been M ,ting Mr. and'Mrs. H. -Jacobus- MY. and-Mrs, John N. Schmilz of v

of Cmig place. " . ; ' --> 3!1.Hollywood .avenue entertained on .•--<•'••' • , . •' • Su«day,''following the christening of

Mr .md'.Mrs. C. A. Hunnetl- of 110..their son, WJilliam John. •• • [•South Union avenue entertained Miss . : . , . . . - . •' • |E M I . M ' Withers of Washington, D.C. , . Peter IJ. Sperry,'. s6rf. of M r . and j

_~ljit » a k-end. — '^~ --'• — .Mt' .-Williarri Mr-SpcrryrHndfof "325'• •••' ..rz...-.^.. '-.'—-North Union avenues/has been tlectrd '

Mi« Charlotte Fenter of 104 Hill- student Council rtpr'rsentatiyc of the 'c r e t .iwnue had as:.her jguest last P J f ! n rorrn '(jur,j,,r..class) at Pingry'

Sellout, Klizabeth.wci-k-ind Miss' Gloria -Nelson ofW r l Oinngc.

, , . .„•' ; n i .... .. r <i p'i aifn- George E. Ilcusrh left Mon-M. ,,,clMr.s.L. B . L . u i i o n o r B E - to'join-her husband, Dr. George

nn .m- .^ i iueore vacationjng at Mi- f. , f e U K e l w h ( , h , | S b ' ^ d k

urn,, H.i. visrt.ng their son, Hoy, who. t , , c 1 : ) ( ,n t n I C r i r p s .,, C l | n i p t • p e t .is Kt.M,,md._tliere.- j .rsbureh; Va. " . , ' - ' . '.-• 'Jll.irold Kichfer, son of Mi', and Mrs. j

Jean SteigerwaltWeds Edward Hess

Miss Jean Elizabeth Steigerwalt be-rotheirid&/Ed'Wiarditl Mesy

Betrothed

.J_-MISS JEAN ECCLE8TON'

Mr. arid "Mrs. 11. T. Rcn'rwin of doi

Anderson-Ecclestoh'Engagement Told

Announcement hasbeen mad&bf theengagement of IVJiss Jean F / Eecle-

yeston ofRpselle-,

Jo^ph Hiohter of VValnut avenue has """ '""". '" '' •**-"•""" «* ""• (.-iiHiiKeniuiiL oi 1*31 5 JU.cnti ml his freshman year in Michi- ° '" c! l a r d street-qro moving the latter ston,. daughter of .G.E.Ban Stiitr University.':' "'•'••••• - : | l ' i l r t o f l l c x t week to Hlnghomton, 550 West Seventh

, • • • ' • . ' |N. Y. Mr. flcarwin has been traAs-. formerly'of" EljxA1r , nd"Mrs, Robert J'. Patton of felled to the Propellerf Division'of Anderson,.son of

J17 O.fl> Lane tntertaihed Saturday .--Itrniington Hand, Inc., for the dura- ' "" "; .it their home. ' Guests were lion of the war. t —•••-.•

HI. of 30 Uroad Mrc

.(•lit fiom Union and GranfjordX.

otlii i -.' Club osill mu't;jft.8 p. in. r.it the hf>me" of Mi

i. "il Spruce, street.

Mi£ .AlidToW Miles, of ISenJamin

MiCintfi

Idiul

Mrs. Louis Snyer.of 119•uvrnue are .'spending n

Vweik w.lli their'soiV and ilaughicr-in-l.iu Mi and Mrs. Stcph'an Saycr,in I! il i Cymvyd, -1'a.

Mr .1 il Mi's. Carroll-M. Yard of 16Il.imiit MI ".trcet ivill-spcnrt thjit week-end in Cleveland- viy.lting Mr. .'indMi- J hnmns; MacMeekin, Jr., for-.,

j in il\ i.f Cianford. ' -. i

Mi', I.I.fold I n l'jn CiiciliV\ is it l l lg ti

ic.C. MHz. (if 24Stral-l«Ht the, past wcekfcndVi'llaRe, Now' York City,• friehus-

ay . n i g h t for Mr.yesterday

with tlie~ariny: There , werb guestspresent from Nc^v York, tong Island,Harrison, Cranford.and Garwood.-

Jack Phelaiit Jr. formerly of Craii-foid and now "of -New York City, haitftilercd his- junior-year .at Kordh/niUnlvercilyc lie Is a iiiembei-

Offlccrs Training Corps at ' . ' Miss' isabollc S. Falrweatherthe university and'lias ,;jttajfied tlie- tlaughtfrof Mr. and Mrs. -James Fair

we'iitlicr of 10 Holly street;.was marAllan Carn,.-,,, 'At. Piiiiii,.iH ried_ Saturday to John. Podeszwa,-sor

"iiMurned

V" •-"' u ° 7 : . t - , -- :- A dinner for the bridal party-and, also Carmen's birthday airtdilhe^rty1 he engaeemen/was revealed at,a the immediale families was given by was'a -farewell eveit befcrehJle«rewo nurtv'Salurdav.niffht fnr Mr. '•- u , . . . j «»„ c.iv.;.....,. i. *, «._ „ ..' ^ a r e w e u e\eci pejore hp left

v e i t y andlank.of Hrgimc-nim

: Smith ,10 Sy

on Saturday in St John's LutheranChu/ch, Allentown, Pa Miss'SteJg-irwalt is the daughter of Mr and Mrs

t George-Steigerwalt of 114 Centenniali avenue and Mr Hess Is the son of Mr

ind Mrs. Edwin (Itss of Hellertown,Pa

I The ceremony was performed at 3iP m by the Re\» W C i Schaeffer,lpastor.tof-the church DecorationsI were white chrysanthemums andmusic was provided by Professor Ens-rud, organist

.The bride, given in m,ai ruge by herfather, wore a gown, ot white btlk-jcrsey, fitted style, wiih, •*> flnger-Up

. veiLfastened to a coronet ot pearls.I She carried a bouquet of "whltef'chrys-I anthemums.I The maid of honor. Miss Daisy

. Prlbblc"of. Charleston; W. V?., woregold taffeta and net and" Carriedbronze chrysanthemums.. Brides-..jalds, ;Mjss Elizabeth Berry, of )Vest-ileld anH Mrs. Herman Steigerwalt ofWashington, D. C, wore aqua taffetaand net and carried yellow chrysan-

The attendants had head-flowers.of

Herman G. Steigerwalt, brother of

artha Ander- u!L, u; otmienem,

of

MISS HELEN CAPOXE

Miss Capone to WedCarmen A. t«ca "'

The engagement of Miss Helen Ca7

pone,-daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Doni-inick Gapone of, .Westfield, to CaroieoA. Luca, soricf ,Mr. arid Mrs. LouisCuca of 10 JVoodlawn avenue, wasannounced last'Wednesday at a triplecelebration, at the'Luc* hqjne. It.wasj C '

and Mrs. Steigerwalt before the for the army yesterday.n ^ F\ WfeF * A ' **#^ *%*< w^4 I »i t*m i d>- 4 La ** . A • • • «. H I _ ' ' " '

/and has-been employed in theOther, guests were: Mr. and Mrs.

The United Slates Treasury oilers Treasury Tax SavingsNote3. .Series A-1945, at par and accrued intorest hotnSeptember 1st 1942.

i '

TEOM notes are receivable at par and accrued interest

in payment of Federal income,«stcrte and gift taxes. Theyare issued in denominations of S?5., $50.. (100., $500or $1000.

M not presented in payment oi taxes, the notes will be

redeemed af purchase. Rrtce only, either at or be/ore

maturity (September lBt 1945) without advance notice..

By putting these notes in your budget and buying themout of income at regular-intervals, you "will proride inadvance 'far the payment of your income tax. and relieveyourself of a considerable burden when the time coniesforjxiyment. . . ' "-•..-' ' f

Cranford Trust CompanyMEMBER FEDERAL.DESERVE SYSTEM

' AUmktr Ftd.ril O«poiit Iniurjnc* Cotportlran •

Appro'vxIMortgtgn,FtJinl Houiinj A4mimtlnlion

y o hn Pdeszwa, solf Vnli'ntinu Podeszwa of 1713 South

vesli-r

'street "iiMurned TuoJaajT from a .•. , , . , . ' ""••' ~"""«:«Wv»a'w!t¥'hfcr>fo^• ' • ' • • • Mrs. Podclsijwa. 'live Wed-dmg.tpol

|i!ace a,t. thc'hqme of the bride's par-cuts at [3 p. m. The Rev1. Matchett Y

h.i". TIIIIK' lo_ U'orceslcr, Mass.,-wlieiehe li.is inlcrcd his freslimaii year atWorcc-ter Polytechnic Institute.

Mi .ind Mrs. E. Fi-ed/Marsiglio of2 l

IJoyd^luX of Kaiitax, Va.Ir. and Mrs. 'il tiff visited in Cranf,ordii their . vny.-t'lu-miBh to Virginia from

A (no w"ceKs'---vacation a! Mountain ;.oMVit» House in Whit'eneld, N.

-oiugt. .,t M.uthas oUU C h - U r c h ( performed ^ c e r e .

-local boys- enrolledclass nt Lchiiih

oM,)8 Springbf <m \ ,r v

l e t"™Cl1 A V« | .» c^:t ; .-mie,i street; and Kobcrt Schf.om.\, K,,k V.i ,where.shespc,n;a, i (m o , M , . ; ..,nd W f s ; Vo])

u u k ,nd ^attended lier daughter's .fScIimidl of" 93 Cranford avenue;

Mi. Ch.ulcs S. Dorn for.nely - o f - 1 ^ ' ^ ^ T ' 7 ^W?"g'vMiss

" " ' ? ! ' •-• •1--uw!" J-. S"Hlli of 12 Ciaremoht

-monyin I The bride was given in marriage by

father and wat; attended by her

,. ... . of.:.Mr. niid Mrs. '"aid of librior. Harold Sherwob'd ofJolinson of D Ileruing ave- 'Klizabcth was best man.

die;. William' Knclic, son of Mr. and ' A ''eccptloh followed for 45 guests.bride was. graduated from

tun

,n Sebring

there

"son'

de was graduated fromCranford High School and the.Indus-.Irial Arts Sc:hooUn Newark. -She is

j employed1 by the Union Trust Com-liwny.,. Mr. Podeszwa'ls-n gradjiale_o.f'LimteuJIigh School and has been en^Played by the Mather Spring-Com,pany in Linden. He leaves for the

iandchjid

Dons Dixon, daughter of Mr.f !i>np Grube

^ ^ ions for•• George Dixon of 43(L^Or- :''''.—-•-—• -

stir-cl, left" this week to'enter! '» " 'e iumy in 1her second year-at. Bales College in I,1"'evious t o b e i n

Lcmsloli, Me. •.-.' . b c r '

Mr. and Mrs

Mtfleld, is -stationed at - e U I V H » ™ n « r O r -;r, okia: He had served Gree - Stamm Nuptialsin Hawaii for three y e a r s ' . , . , < . ' • • • ")eine sent to C a m n L u ' - J'.'^tat.ipns have been issued for.the

Buy Your WineBy The jGase J

• And:Save! >; DEL RHONE

' California -SWEET W^KE'- 24Pt«. or 12 Qts,^

^ for only : ......

4.50^PORT, SHERRY. MUSCATEL

Stock up NOW! Priceswill be much higher soon.

S C H S R ' S ILiquor Store

CR. 6-0141

104 Walnut Avenue _

ing sent to Ca,,,p Gru ' • ' ^ T T ^ f ^ . r " ^ * ,.• . • . wedding- of Miss Lucille-,Stamm ofwcddlng; of Miss Lucille ,Stamm of

Wcstfleld to Pfc. Martin R. Cree, U. S,

Beverly Halsey.Weds Frank Burr

; Carol dlofson WedsNewspaper Man

a v e n u e , w a s

of fler - RollbuschTroth Announced

and Mrs. Rudolph'R.RpllbOsch16 Roosevelt "avenue haveC an-

! nounced the engagement of their(daughter-. Miss Rath Anne Rollbusch,I to Pi-t^Olto H. Koffler, U. S. A., sonjef Mr. and Mrs. O^o Kofller of ,700'"-1*- • • Union. No'dale has

'-if?I

Burr ot 505 Riverside drive and the*late Clarence Burr.;; The• ceremonyl^^hVVh ""i'r^XI*rL'J''" i v c w - l o r K : " :took- place in St. Luke's Episcopal] 9 ^ ^ ^ f» i f i ^ ' «^rBcv-i ' i:Church in Norfolk, Va., and was per- l l l W m F" B e n n e « - D - D - A

.._ . •ey.-ifffrtrpstfnT• Miss :Katherine Horvath of 240

Blopmingdale avenue was the bride's-only, attendant and Sgt. .-RaymondSherbinskj, U. S. -M. C, ot Johh.«towii.

l iar- j -f'-s .noiiuuscn is a. graduate ofSaturday in Hvw£rd ;

t R o 6 C : l l e .P a r k '^ '8" School and'Is cm-rtf \ v - v.+t. Th&1 P'oy^J by the Prudential Insurance

j j , e ' Company ih Newark. Pvt. Koffleris:n, Xe»- York ' s ' a l i o n «i at Pine Camp, N. Y., and

employed by his father as anrior decorator before entering the

iiw s-iiir, W •" / ' . u ' Miss .Barbara Ann Weber, daugh

matron nth. ? , tcT o f Mr" a n d M r s ' W i l I i^m F ' W e b e -^ be . r . , ' ' o f " D a S a I l e avenue.'left yesterday

„ . . - , - ' " O C i l"m a™ .-:.. . J for. New Jersey College for Women at: ° . . . ! •« • ?." graduaic ;of Cran-,Xew Brunswick. . - ., .-

Westfleld Ladies' Auxiliary of

.Vcorsage of pale pink j-oses. T l i e m a i d j a m Tnylor, is "a Tpraduste c,f }few--a wchedn" and brjagc at the Elksof; liorior wore a yellow dress with ICaanari School, Darijrr, G.:>r.n., ind bf.'HoIIle o n H m street, WestOelH, nextbrown . accessories -and if .corsage-VI-Ncfw Y o r k Vniversity. .K.c is aif-cci- w<^dTie?day at 1 p. m. .. ;.y e l l o w r o s e s . ". .. &*••••• j a t c d w i t h • i h c n ] e B » 5 r r i ' ! i rf*»«-r4. , , . . . , , . _ • • • • [ . ' >

Air- and Mrs. Louis T. Weierspachand daughter, Mildreds of 10 Edge-brook .place visited Capt. and Mrs:Farris Swackhamer at Garden City,L. I., over the week-end.

•ellow roses. ... .". .. 3W~--T:|atcd with the me<*»srei':ie depari--Mrs. Burr- is a gradiJate of Cran- j m e n t o t the.Nevv York Dajly Xcws; :

Cord Hjgb,.SchBol and has been em- ] ' ™ couple will make tlseir hon* atployed by. the Cranford Trus.t Com-J'1'. W e s t Twelfth • street. Xcsr Yorkpany. Cpl. Bun-is also a graduate of ! 9 i t y - - ' • ' :"" ' ••Ofinford High School." The. couple \~77T- ;—^-—r-=-_ . L,.will remain-in Norfolk,. Ya;, where". HIGH GRADE CLEANINGCpl. Burr 19 stationed at the ,Naval - . - . . - • . - ' • •Air Station.. ' ,v '••,-

, a n d M r s . G e o r g e H . [ u h , l b c t h , y , OBates. of .-'Hampton street. at the her* 18, at 4 p. m..-- A. reception wil

ng bftiie/destroyer Brownson fallow In St,'Michael'at the-Oethlp^cmShlp-lrulldihgrCon

launching bft i ie/destroyer Brownson f a l l o w In St," Michael's Ha_U . :-._•BUlldingTConF ^ M ^ ' S ! t a m ' m w i n ^ e " ^ l v e r i l n ~ n T a r -

p a n y . yard on Stnten Island lastT h u r s d a y . . . ' '• . . '••-•• •-,

Mrs.' George-N: Larson arid chil-dren; Ib-nnd Barbara Jo, will reltirntoday, to -Bethesda, Md., after" spend-ing a month hero visiting her mother,. - - - w • "~ •"•""iy ••>••»• mouicr, inorgnn, jr., or;#ewark, aMrs. Margaret Castor of 14 Washing- I rie Hujbcr of NewarkT a a r " ^ Mt»V'Jull C l t C b

Cast

riage by WillianvMorghn, Jr., a clos^friend, a'nd will .'have Miss DoloresCree. .sister of the bridegroom, as hermaid of honor. Bridesmaids will beMiss Shirley Bunco arid'Miss BarbaraParker o( Westn.eld,. Mrs. WilliamMorgan, Sr'., pf;Ne\yark, and Miss Ma

ng IMt»V'Jullui

W ° S t - Mr:

e ujbcr of Newark .Clayton Cree, brother of the bride-.

ill be best man. ^Ushers willL-ir^n 'Wi V ' I . " ' ^? ? W 0 S . M r > ' JfopnifwlU bT> best man. ^Ushers willS f t ? ! wth^hls daugh- be Warren F. Rode ofRahway; Ray'teKin-Liw and family for-a short. mond B'iazzo of Clifton, Theodore

SCHOOL

FRENCHand.

SPANISH

mond B t a o of Clifton, Theodoretorgerson of' Wc'stflcldTTaha".Byron

imoro, Md.Miss Stamnvls a graduate of"Wesl-

llcld High School and the AmericanSchool of Design. Mr.. Cree attendedHoly. Trinity. High School' and was

Cooper. - Stout. ' "•Nuptials Announced

. Announcement_was."made this.weekqn.Kc wcddrrigT'o'F. Miss. .June Stout,daughter of Mr. and'MrsVM.• O: Stout!pt Richmond, Va., and Staff Sergt.Alan E. Cooper, U. S.-A.;-son-ofSchool. Triisfee and Mrs. Walter E.Cooper of 511 Central .-avenue,. The'ceremony took place on September 12in-Trinity Episcopal Church, Colilm'-bus, Phio. The Rev. Richard Zeisler;assistant, rector, 'performed', the cere-mony. . - ' • ' • •

Mr. andy Mrs. Cooper attended theceremony which was followed "by areception at the Riveria.iri 'Columbia.'

-Both the bride and bridegroom at-tended Roanoke College in Salein; Va.Staff Sergt. Cooper.'aiso a graduate

graduatedSchool.-

. from • Westflqid

Costs but 3 few cents

Parampunt Cleaners'—•-•-— Est3b«sh«dTTK58 Walnut A w . " Tel. CnnTord C-SS88

HEEL, TOE0 N E '

. AND

JLET YOUll childrenlearn grace and poiseby sending them to ourdancing school Danc-ing is an * importantasset in good soclctr.

(nalfeMT

RENESDANCING SCHOOL

CALL CR. C-1910' For Particulars

o'ely. _ ^ _ - ^ - - - j

! " • • •i

BUDELL AkT

IJse Moore Paint'. : • • • • • • : ' " F K O M — 1 . .. .' '-.

Skillmap's HmfeareH AVE&. W, CKAXFOBBTEL. CK. « - « • ! y<

OPENS "OCTOBER 3rd -.

PAINTING-ANBDRAWINGCLA'SSES

i ^

/

V

STILL LIFE — DAY.A1JD EVENIN.G

. craLMEN's MTURDAY' MORNING CLASS ••;, ' . y . ; C a t a l o g u e o n R e q u e s t - • • • ' ' '•" • • . '_

Telephone • . _ 627'FOUBTII AVENUE

3-3266 • . ' WESTFIELD, -NE1V JEItSEV;iiiiiiiniiiHiiiiiiiiitmmntiitiiiiniMtiiimKK

^" NOW OPENAdulf Courses (Morn. & Eve.)

JChlldren (5 to 14 Vrs.—AfternoonsT U .T O K I N O, <..: -

French.— Spanish — Latin

Ecole Francaise'de Westfield645 Nd. Chestnut Street'

-.Telephone WEstfJeld 2-1909-J

FOR A -LADY WHOLEADS TWO LIVES!

~Here Is the halntyle that will«arrjr yon thronfh busy.'wmr-worktae days ind feUlevenhnrs -with clunn! Arranretfwith a flick of the comb fornniform or more formal wear. . . Call CR* 6-1846 for anappolntmentl

LimaBeans

New Green Cabbage,perlb. . * -

FancySweet Potatoes

GreenPeppers. i

g p r . a l s o a graduatet Cranford High School, is.in the

glider division of the'army air corpsand is now stationed at the air fieldt Smyrna, Tcnn

YOUR

RESPONSIBILITY*

OME <I«r you m»y t« cilled upon luJdtnlj 10 mitaninvrtl irransemn^s. Do you know how 10 chooaa• dirKtor wL«t ul itSSTjou ao«L "TPUft;M8I*0NSIBILITT,"

booklrt minj rllh nrfilwi firm *~U %m UJIUU'IWI* / .VA'TIO.VAL SIJLEOT^D UOBtJCU.NS, of. wi ld)w «r« membcFi, u d whow rlsld qmiiOotlons formcmtwnblp demand n m p l i t i f i u l u t l a , uniform c o mJo III and serupulooj l t l ^

-M Sprfnjfleia An.Cnnford

US K. Bnuid St.Wcstfleld ~ -

air^Beautv Salon

TO $yz YOUR 'FOOD BlfeGET

ana

Fresh Local. Eggplant, eachAcorn

"SquashItalian^'

• Prunes . .Seedless White

Grapes ' _

3u». 14c2"» 19c

25c

OFFICIAL COLLECTION DEPOTFOR FATS AMP TIM

-~-' AMPi£-SUPPLY-OF FRESHMEATS ~ ~ v

TO TAKE CARE OF OUR CUSTOMERS' REQUIREMENTS

FULL LINE OF GROCERIES ' ~"

J J' • ! • • • • : • - • • y ; •

1 » J

f **

Leaden Praise^ Citizen and Chronicle

(Continued from page onej

3SSW*

ftanlife. Liberty is one such thing.For without it we are not men but•lares, chattels; and life becomes amere pawn. Once we lose the rightof free speech and deliver our soulsInto thetandsof any G t

Notes

Savings r

from

wandering.In misty ways., who-haveembangwr-the-Itverof buTcKirdrenfor fancied ease d fi

Eyes

•nd to the expression of editorialopinion, It ha* a valuable and indis-ttensable part In the welfare, main-

BIRTHS—"^TT" • • ' '• • I ' ' i — — , ,.ui » H # » — i - i i h i i iw^

OBITUARY 1 Roland Stout Hurt

OeMSe P. 81CMI At Camp Davit, N.C.

. Roland Stout, nn of Mr.

today Mrs. Joseph Q. Kortley of 2J Hanll*"Closely' reTatod'toT freT^ss, In! t°1 avenu«i,°? September 3.

fast, dependent upon rtTisTfreel A *on' O i I b e r t D a i U e l - Jr-« to Mr.church. In a sense; , they are eT<an<rMre- P»«rt D- Helper of 503 Or-gaeed in similar endeavors—to dm- c h ° r d ' t r e e t l t>rt Au»»*» W l 'cover and make the. truth, -from1 A s o n ' J o h n - J r > to M r - a n d M r l -

. . . . 4^—r" Mv«"i-» «**» Bums o-o*— *u ouujuir enaeavors—to dts- —T~ ~ "* "" -—•.—.. •*. . y™ expects to l)e released from the hos-tato thetandsof any Government we cover and make the. truth, -from1 A s o n ' J o h n - J r - *> M r - a n d Mr»- SLT #*hi^!f manager and a pitJi Jn n n o t n e r w e c k py4 s t o u ,

„ . "*!*ESSS11*-.0 -tosUpeople^'helots whatever-iouner-it -may-.«nhe Mg^obn.JLSlatt.at 23 Hampton road,on n>ember of the board of directors o f , ^ ^ been JQ. the-army, -tor-six

gratulate The Cranford citizen ? £ l M r t H o r « * C r o n ot M i J-°«ut.drive, U>e German Uithersn Church. El«a- • — — 5_-

Mrs. Ell J. Loranger, Jr., on Cranfordavenue. _ _^

A new president will.bceUcted'to111 the rfflce left vacant when-Mrs.Daniel P Loomls moved to Chicago.::Mrr. ~

D-«»HM *nc \«iaiuuru viuzen- anaChronicle and say. 'Thank you', for on Au*ust 10

.T .••••*• •>"/, « i tail A jUli (

your service to the community."

led interest

s. They

100.. $500.

tea will be

or before

tco notice.,.

lying them

prorlde in '.'

md relieve

me conies

THE REV. FRANK M. SHERLOCK,: Side avenue, on August 32.Rector. Trinity Episcopal Church^' T w i n sons> James Michael and John"The country is about to observe1*"*" ' "National Newspaper Week,week, important as,it is

n sons> James Michael and Johnserve uane. to Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lane,This'Jr- of 970 Lincoln drive, on Septem-

, important as it is to-the hcwsir45™6- -• -papers throughout the land.' ls: also! Mr. .and Mrs. John V. Nostrand ofor tremendous interest to the peoplelis; Hamilton, avenue announce the«'hn make-up the-reading publiclblrthofa son Bruo^Dlll on Septwnwho make up the~ reading public.Iblrth "1-6^^'son, ttruc^uui, on sepumThis year. National Newspaper Weeklber 15 in the Elizabeth General Ho»follows In the. wake of ChristianIpital. • • . - .. .Education Week and World Wide! Major arid-Mrs. Thomas Truxtun

i-ommunioin^Sundayjluringahe nrstiannounce^thel-blrth-of a. daughter^or which the people" are urged to Mary Calvert, on September 15. Mrs,remember^.their Freedom through!Truxtun is the former Peggy Cruik-tnnst, and World, Communion Sim- shank, daughter., of Mr. and Mrs. E. A.day is_set aside in order that Chris-1Criiikshank- 2nd,, of . Holly streettians throughout the world mqy -find Major Truxton is stationed at Forttheir wav In fi™!- Altars or Cpm-'Lewis, Wash.' Mrs. Truxtun Is:stay-

P V

for fancied ease and pacifism."Of some,people it may be gald:

_yes hive'-ahefy, but s?c not; andbralni, but think1 not If the ques-

• tion of Free Speech came boldly andopenly before us we'd all he quickfcf decide for it and take pur stand

, at great cost. But it; comes not so.Wise and wily,are.they who scheme

.. to enslave and rule a people. "HowInnocent and necessitous their plans

• appear!, Or freedom may be lost notbecause of clever rulers but of aShortsighted' populace/ blinded, by

'.greed or fear or hate, or ignorancor^_^or lullediby: easeor_fair, false-pros-' pecta o( .peace and plenty. Only a

Free Church and a. Free Press, alert,• .trith keen sight, high convictions' and dear speech can save us from

such bewildering plights and - pit-IB-US. . • — _, _ - - . , . . . » > u u« w\mi~ *>cvvis, ntiaii, JVire« i.*l

"A good local newspaper, intelll- , u T l r ^S' ^ T , ' ° Pnrtak» ° ' > g with her parents,gently edited, independent and" with ^ S?5r?mcn?. o f HoIy Communion! : 'genuine desire to .promote thehiBh-

. est interests of the whole communityand of nil people-everywhere With-out bias or prejudice is invaluable

-«The 'big dailies' do not know it all,or always sejve the interests of the'forgotten man' or community. Thereare such things as local tone, color.

. interests and speech; and a local• press best con give expression to

such good things. And wherr jt does—os our local, newspaper most cer-tainly does with coveted distinction

.,— it should receive the unstinted!support of all the people, always.1'

DR. HOWARD R. BEST, Chairman,Cranford Chapter, American RedCross—"A major factor in the successof any civic institution or civic: or-ganization may,be attributed to theeffectiveflbss: of itgJ public relations-program.

"TheCranford Citizen nnd Chron-

i A sqn, Robert BJUer, to Mr. and ot t h a t church, he was also In the.Mrs Lawrence Butler of 12fl Bum- Liederkranr Singing Society of H«-

beth, and of the Young Men's Club

Llederkrant Smgmg Society of Biz--abeth and the Eliabcth Royal Ar-

Woman't Qub to MettThe Cranford Woman's Club, of

. Jameb; Angus Knowles is• I'lroiuem, will resume meetings on

_. , . ' *, /Tuesday, October IS, at 2 p. m. at Use^^4^.Lrn;.S^.?Jh™^»^M^S..Klein.21 5

PNor thcanum.

*-J fathivCaslno asformerly-planned

e- I

«..« uv^^cii meir, consciousness of Mr and Mrs Charles C fVlinn'c nf)orlrth'Sr"?P

en^nhKrrS,tran^ ? ™l200-Norjh LehiWavenue ente fainedfor their fellow Christians all over thnlr nio™ M^. t»m«. T ti.._i...he

from taking ,/my part in sucha service;

"As National Newspaper Weekcomes upon us, let us remember howclosely the newspaper, is related toour religious life. p a y Wter'day.'inthe free, pfess, the religious, doingsof men and wonien, churches andsynagogues may be related to n freepeople. What n contrast

their niece, Mrs. James, L. Hughes,[Jr.;,and.infant son, James Leo, III,and Mr.' and Mrs." Hughes, Sr., ofBoston, Mass., over the week-end.Mrs. Hughes, Jr., visited her husband,Lfeut. Hughes, at Camp Kilmer. Thevisit marked the" first" time Lieut.Hughes.had seen his son.

Patrolman William Gassmah . . -turned last week' from Asbury Park

're-

d Citizen andicle has always maintained acivic attitude directed towar

hi»hthe

to our. where he represented Cranford Local! world,'52 at the State csnvention of the Pa-

came to my desk an trolmon's Benevolent . AssoclaUbn.ri^' " P a t r o 1 ^ " Harry Craig, and Frink

", T'"0"' d c l i v- i Caruso,, and former Patrolman Ed-T ^ n «n-ttint, ward'Coleman attended part of theAs I read it, I real-,'sessions as giiesU.t '

nrtlclewas in theercd in awretched place: . „ „ .tzed the extreme tension under whichthe pre/ich.er was laboring. Ofcourse he could not mention names*or plnces, or qven policies, but as Iwent throush il, I was conscious thatin this round about manner, thepreacher was , e

his tenchinR

. .AND

childrend poisen to our

Danc-

socleiy.

fE'S:HOOL-1910ars

_-^. : i

i

ii

. jj1

Church |$.free. the Press "is' frriv I,"t.kisi thank iGod that this is so. Let-usfee to. it that they remain.so.-. Thiscan be done by supporting the localC h h d th l

e ne by supporting thChurch and the local Newspaper.

L. 11. HAZZAnn. Chairman, Seleclive Service Board No. 5—"We want!to thank the press for the wholeheart-.j!

orid wfiich has aided greatly in rank-jf G n E E I S S F E E S •=»ing our work much easier."

advancement of all civic organlzn- to boar on conleniijornry matter* Ittlons. They, have been liberal and, was a masterpiece of "skillful "nnd'cooperative at nil times. . (( ' | relevant rxcResi ,.- We today.i in thial

;Y "The Amorican Red Cross has'do'-' 'nn<;1'' n a v i p "" s n eh restrictions' The'pended upon the Citizen and Ipinron-'"' ""'- '- ' " ' - ' ";

-Icle as thej major medium' for ad-vancing their public relations pro-

, gram, . The interest and supportwhich the Cranford-Garwoo'd-kenil-worth Chapter of the American RedCross has -received is prima faeifevidence as to the effectiveness" 6four public relations program.. The

~^Tn5pwrtp^ft^htf~Wa1'~TijmrT5rTvewhich went 'over the top' 'is 'only

;..pne.uf many instances when the.Citizen nnd Chronteiiljias'served its, community and the netKCross."

• THE REV. WILLIAM II. NIE-BANCK, Pastor, Calvary Lutheran

^Church—"It is qujte fitting that Na-tional Newspaper Week .should beobserved.. By focusing the attentionof the community .upon the local

- newspaper, whick.is'taken for grant-ed-so much of the, .time, the inestir1

mable contribution which a frerpress makes to a. free country is re-vealed. ' „ . ' • ' .

"It is the watchdog of freedom,unhampered, uhcohsored and unre-strjeted in the reporting of the news

Mrs. Edward T. Towler of 22 Cran-ford avenue gave a family dinnerparly at the Echo Lake Country ClubSunday in honor of her cousin, MajorNathaniel Finch, U. S. A. , . :

liam, and a sist*. Mrs. Annie - , - . . . . . .of Eliraboth. ,v^ I, The.Fire-Department gave a fare*

Funeral services were'held from his!.w e 1 1 Party last week ln>onor of Ber-homc on Monday^Ight, th«sRev. J. H.Jn a r t J neming.-a member of the vol-•Mever. D. D.': of Eliaobeth Lutheran iunteer Unit, who reported yesterday

TJ= tipg. Interment Was in\ f«'f wrvlce \ylth^5e army.''rCemete'ryr-Westfleld.-^ -=• b i - rr i i2 g -tTT S ~

- ". • •• • . - Mr.\ and Mrs. E. Weber Foreman of21 Elmora'avenue will leave todayfor ForKRileyT Kans., to visit theirson.^rnncis W. Foreman, a first licu-" int in the V. S. Army Ale corps.

Religious ClassesStart Tomorrow <'

Seventh graders "of the CranfordJunior High School will start'religion^education classes tomorrow duringthe seventh period. Pupili will bedismissed, at 2:10 p. m, Jo' attendclasses at -the church of their selec-tion;- -.- . - - ' • • ' / .' . •

Instru'ctions In Bible History nndideals and aims of.the church will begiven by the ministers of the respec-tive churches each Friday afternoonduring the school year nnd full schoolattendance'credit will be given, thosechildren who attend the sessions.

This is the second year that thepjan has been in effect in .Cranford.Last year 111 seventh graders wereinstructed Jn the churches accordingto plans formulated by the local min-isters. _ ( \ • '

Churches 'participating - are;- Cal-vary Evnngelical Lutheran Church.First Presbyterian Church, St. Mich-lufl's Church, Cranford MethodistChurch, Trinity Episcopal Church.Gospel Tabernacle of the Christiannnd Missionary Alliance,''St; .Rtark'sh. M. E. Church and the First Baptist-hUrcii.

Service League^~To Fill Vacancy

The Craufdrd Junior 'Service

tentW7irT>res{(lEat fliereceive with the hostess

Tea will-^bc served following thebusiness meeting, -Assisting hostessei

ll bt Mrs Edgar. II Miller, Mrs.Johrl B. Chamberltn, Mrs. Smead D.Jiriry, Mrs William'^F. llanzl, Mr>."Richard McFaddcn and Mrs. EdwardW.- Sansom. Mrs. Howard M. Park<mi Airs. T.-Kennady Heston, sustain-i4g members, will pour."

rFirs At Wholesale.• • » tat HI •MlnaU iricn Intel Ina m I

»ll w l i u i , ti* t>M~««iStnfi^i 0««».l, f '

utipft' fui iMiynanlv 0M» ilj'tf'l. (, P V - * •

Old Bridge to BeTaken for Scrap

The old county bridge on the Sperr%

been obtained from the Board —Freeholders. ..The Bethlehem Steel...Co. will be asked to dismantle the- "bridge.' Jt has been abandoned for"several year*. It Is estimated. that - 'there are several tons of steel In l£

FURNACE SUPPLIES" -'-• -AND

WEATHER STRIPPING

Schlecter'sjanford Paiot & Hardware

WE HAVE J U S T , A B O U TEVERTTHINO — TRY U 8 FIRST!

/ CR. 6-187*,101 South Ave. , E, Cranford

DURING NATIONALADVERTISED BRANDSWEEK OCT. 2 to 12

CRANFORD JOMAHEGAN GOLF GLUBNOW OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

Springfield Avenue, Cranford

SAT., • SIJN.. HOLIDAYS $1.00

100 N. Union Avenue, Cranford "- - ^ *•- D E LIV E R Y

Tel. CR. 6-2070—207f—2072SERVICE

SPECIALS THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY; OCT. 1, 2, 3

WUE . I.ERSEV" f-

BREENS

News ForScotch Drinkers!JUST

S C O T C HBlend of 100%Scotch Whiskies

3.69 4/SQt,

Last Price $4.39Never. Has This, ScotchBeen Sold So Cheaply

" / • - - ' • • . - • • " . . ' " ' • ' • - . ' • ' " • •

- - FLEISCHMANN'S

CONGRESS HALLao vtoot . • • • " . ' • •

BLENDED WHISKEY

r-

Formerly Sold at $2.69

B

,29 K. UNION AVENUES

Fancy Nearby FryingRoasting Chickens

!-•'. .'(2»4 to 4 lbs. size), IB.Roulettes of. Spring Lamb,

.•. p e r I b . . • '..;..:.,...';:.,.'..,._ .

39c

•'"'• " 'per. 1 b , " _

' Loin Lamb Chops,; l b l ^ !, i p ^ , ^ ; : . ,Rib^r5hpulder Lamb Chops,

28c47c39c&$ :

• "Fresh Jersey- - R i b End, p r ;

Choice«6ir|6in Steaks,l

Loins;

,;Choice Porterhouse Steaks,

-" per Ib.'.:.-"::..., .'.,....'....:..,.Exfra Fancy Young Fowl

(AH Sizes), per|lb.Maple Crest Extra Fancy Turkeys

(New 1942 Crop)/ -(10tol2 Ibs.size); per Ib.

43c49c57c

Fresh Chopped Beef,-perlb.1

Fresh Long Island Ducks,•' per Ib, .,-. .:,.: ,:..;;:L1:

Fresh Sausage Meat,—1® ibrr":"~i!:ii~

Swift's Premium Frankfurters,.- - . ' p e r I b : . „ : „ . ; ; ; ;

Fresh Cl ian, Spinach .•.,.:;.,;r..V..

Selected Fttune TokayGrapes, per Ib. j.

(Selected Ousters )Lirge Cottkihg

Apples. , (U. S. No. 1 Grade)

PRACTS

t^~<.;?N£-'-:

SEUUTAN30 01.

FIRST AIDER KIT

BARBASOLSIIAVE CltEAM

TICK'S'VA-TRO-NOL

~f B B ' - . E - ' E . "•••

25c JEKGEN'S

With Purchase ofJERGEN'S LOT^N

- -BOTH for -

- M-SIzeMODE88

8UPEHMALTConlalnlnr VitaminsA-if-D-G piu» i r o n

Fresh Crabmeat,Mb

Jumbo Celery Hearts,bunch SQUIBB'S

.CPDUYERODV

Fresh Green Peppers,each

BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPSWITH WHAT YOU SAVE

BY BUYING HERE!Sno-White Cauliflower,

per head100 5-GraIn

ASPIRIN TABLET8

DRU

bJEl^vnrlcr-orHaddock Fillet, per Ib.

Fancy Large Shrimp,. perlb.Salmon or Halibut Steaks,

per Ib.Fancy Large Oysters,

'per dozen J x

QUALITY FRUITS A^ID VEGETABLESSPECIALS FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

2 ib.. 1 7 c10c

4 its. 19c

GROCERY SPECIALS

/ ' ,I'),

, • •>•" • " I

I0- '

-S v ' ». '

-' V

*• - I

Page 8 -THE CftANFOBD CITIZEN AND - CHRONICLE. THUKSDA^ OCTOBER "1> 1942

Saturday\

Pr. A. L. Johnson, county superin-tendent of .schools, addressed the'/irst

ctinc of the High School P-T A

f P i n "

Stand After LosingOpener to East Oranjje

-p— Cranford High Sthrml foo'bal1

team, after losing to Ei . t Oian'U33-0, Saturday in A*-hl<nul Si idi mi

— East-Orange, ul

tt>e i-"v, Hifh fat1 c ol ' tr c. Wjr Prc/gram 'III. IILS. id .1 e 11 • air,i of t e lugl.-i- - J |iciff rt l ie 1 e I'Ji \> rtien-

i • ly t«> * tit. bu>' in. the "•(.! mi clj >•) Ii. i t t f i j n i be f urcl phjMc. llv

fit sIicn th iVi i t c .11 .irmcd ••tr-

1 / Walnut awnuc- Held he ie M l u n l i jRegional ,l«> I-.-l .1 , <>•>- In r l .

Bound Diook »> , M , , H , f >7-0, , , f

, | l l u . , , | b v l h t B r o U p

-c, for

George

they meet lhl> » « k uiutliiir nun '" ' l ' 't l iu>ttc.iGrpup *> eta1^ ''• l' folUiWing omrmtlrr chairmen

Coach Wfekleyv ck-un -h .mel ^ « > > cunccd Mr. C If WilsonIts laLT-of exiHii.nr. Salm . fW. . . - 1 ' ' H t l l t > ' M l : A "' O u n l » d t " . .East Ounce stuud tin-1- touch- '»" "• f'H Mr- I>a\.<i Halmirdowns from i n l i i u p l i d foiw.ird ' '"' "'»<• |1'»" M l i'Her Ai«.i.nd.passes and blcitl,cil punt in C'r.uw > ir bund-, andford tcintory Two moie uiris Utlhi , program,from lone runs completed the Kaj.t.-C«ilihi'i, publiclj .OranRO total. • _ , ' ' ',.,' ; ;. ' An ripi-n hr-iusf i

In the;seeoud .Tinlf ,of the Kam« oil'November IB.Cranford came from be'h'incf to offer ''i.-it the.^.lassroclEast Oriuiiie l"lGnty_-of ehallen(;e 'nnd children's*", teachers,.threatened- Iwico at Ihe.JO yard line, bufiiiess -sefsion. -" ' ' '^»f- ' the homo team:. Passes f rom.; A delegation will attend the. UnionCuiribcrk'dKO tp'Poeltler anU runs b^r County Council meeting in <3ctobc-r,Poflllcr were the outstanding p l a y s ' t n e dale itnd place for which are toiif the, Cranford offensive. • , ! be nnnouiiceci later. - - • .' The-summary; , . . ' - .

sl.ui ji-,- Mi1- rredand Mr, Philip

iifi'ting will be heldThe" })arents miiy

rns---and' meet their

u:'-h-r •

.. BAST: H«AN«B ' sidccf.Mrs. Carl Warsinski, president, pre;

...Mi.sV).I,I|I'||C|..I«

ii

ia : . - i j«iii-n

MI.-Al i i lv rSKit l»'nl.ViiI'll ••{'{< III. r^an.nrm.iri-.1'MiirlnlomiK

1-KiuLi alH-rKiil'.il!li.>t."i':I'I.III|.|I.II.-... <

SliMu. fin 11.Illlru-V. -KI.IIT;

wfc-l'r'll '^•'•d'mim.- A™-il lIM.i-nl: uniiilr.', • Kdnnril >I.UIII. .A'llllmn .Iliiieln.

r.'Wti. llnrlni.llnull... Kui

Mil Ktrnln

l.liultuil

laii,' Cnstlf,. Iliiiim.'

:». IliiiM, I'iliiB'lI-.' K»rr. . Dunirlil.III. llril'lv, Hi-Ii;ll«,>i O M w - r u m i r ,rlni, Ilimtli. fox.

; Ili-rvrri', Aulli.fliy,.nt> in : I,' ...I I In.-.

'FirstFirst Aiders.to Meet ••

There will be a meetjni,' ofAiders who- lire stationed5 at1 'theMethodist• Church casualty station.tn^morrow at B ]).• m. at the .station. /

New Nurses' Aid Class /- The NurseS^ Aid Course to^be given.by the Cranford-KcnijworUi-Car-wood Chapter of -the Ameritan- Red,,Cr'o.s£ will 'start, on Ocaobur 12. Forinformation or rcgUtratiot) call theChapter Rooms, Cwnford G-0G71, orMrs. A. V. V. HiliSoli, Cranford (i-'(IO7O.

SLOW, SHARP AND STEADY

Give Window Screens

• • • • - ; ' / C h e a p Clit .s

_Strange|y- cnmig'hi s.i,me_ol themost nutritious meats lire .tpuntl-'-'a't.tlicboftom of the butcher's ' pr.eelist. yKidney, brains,'heart.and iivcrhave a dis'tinotive flavor itnd an at-tractive .appearance wficn they" lire

I kj couked. 'Yet, till tiiesemeat .organs, except..(.ivi'r, .are note x p e n s i v e . '-'••-'. • • • ' .

I J

Wee S!tSjQ'O T C H J) R I N K E R S !•

Cold/weather is .coming "and- here'is a-bang-up starter. , '

allantine's Scotch

(Formerly Sold for $4.39Never before has this Scotch been sold at this price.In use for more than 100 years. Take advantageNOW of this extraordinary offer. ;. ' X

W

ROUSTROAD

A fine r>e and a fine buy!

RED LABELBLENDED WHISKEY

Gal.4.49Half gallons arc becoming, diffi-cult to get. lluy in quantitynow and save.

BARNETTSWINES A^D LlQUt>KS \

,9 WALNUT 'AVENUE; ' ' We Dcllyctf • CRANFOIVD 6-IO4t

Everybody hot heard of the three "Rr»," but the photographer who tookthis picture kn:w the three."S's" of successful photo(j.raphy — Slow,

0 i Sliarp, and Steady—and applied them to hit work.

ful nliolosraphy — Sli.L*|>nrss — do-pi-iiie"upon correct fotiis So <lou;t'giie.is.'If you'jor'on't'cLfiiiln, cltli'prineasiiro Ufa disl.iiico dtmr yourcamera.to jour subject, iwco It off,Vr us.e a riingo fliijer.'unless-your

•nitin". •nilhmetlc—the.* ^ Unco "It's"—arc J.imiliar to al|

1 of. us. llut "Imvo you .hearclVpf Iho"tlirio "S's"'"6r pliotnsrniiliyf-^Slow,'hit irp. und S.teacly? Tbcy'ro thottaslg of1 many a IVnn picture, even

—riliotiiih inust of us 'never tliliik. of• tlicni ofiun enough. \ I

Consider."Slonness" fnr Instnifct/Knhody,likes in lio IIMMI^IU of ns/aslow wniker. Kvuiybnily Ilkns t o / i oright tip on Ill's t.V. s uhen takingpic'itires . . . p.'lthii; tlib.Jnh/iliinr

• fast ai:<! eflirji-utly - . . n(iul/.thut.'s-Ouu"'iiiirlcr- i)'in?t rirritnistitMyf?, but1

•R-lM-n ->;tii!'ro just, gi tiiri'g/sliirled. pliutpi)^ia|)li.ienyy. tt ufl-n. leads to

' "fc'o beforo iiraliliif; any Fiiapsh.ot,. . tnlio th.0' linn* to t/iink things. Ihronpb pnd cliri'U tiii ort yoin-self.~"MaJiu stno-your tciciiy-expniiure. iinj. ccn!pc»s|ti<uj are ri^fit. And renu^ii-

"S-1 ill •.««<•«•!<•»'••bfiP Hot tlio sec

In order to' get the jump onTlie*nnd mosquitoes, 'window screensand screen doors should be putup before • the first flying insectmakes .its appearance Windows

^ 4

because it is usually impossible toHush them comfortably againHie screens are up „-The ,Screens, loo, should be

cleansed before being fastened intoplaLe Uvcn though they were

~\a" m.iRe a scrubbing necessarySprjyinf^ with a garden hoso willremove only a little of tho winterdust, jnd more thorough methodstl ould be employed

Fill a largo pail with1 warm sudiywater, arid use a scrub brush on thewire mesh. Rlnge with 0 spongedipped^in clear warm Water, ortilth a ho^e_ Then repeat the proc-cs"s cin tTie other side of each'screen.Let dry in the sun and wind t

If the cleaning must be done in-doors, use the bn<?cment laundrytubs oi> the bathtub, but .in that cosespread an old sheet or'other large«loth-on tKe-bottoinj^of the-tub—tan"prevent 'Scratching'• the porcelain \\surface. ••'• - - .- . - i . . . . '' - j .

Screens shoujcj be scrubbed Befpre | |either the. mesh or the frame is re-painted, " . . . ' • : . . ' • ' •

BE ON HAND

FOR THE FIRST

KICK - OFF AT HOME!

Cranford vs. RegionalSATURDAY,. OCTOBER 3

AT 2:30 P. M.HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETIC FIELD

^WALNUT AVENUE, CHANEORD

C Of dr" C r a i i i o r d'«. T e a m !A D E Q.U A T E S E A T.I N O V A C I L I T I E S- * Entertainment Between Halves. :"~ by Cranford High School Band

'camera la ilxccl focus: TJi'aL'fl thoway most espeiienced photographers'work. '. ' . • • ' '

f'inally,.femembor thai tho,"Stead-liie'sa" which help* you avoid blurred

dilctures lucaiii liolillnf; yourcainoraaljsoliilely still. If you can't do tli'a't,placo it on Boino firm auppyrt. sucU .as a tripod, a table, or u fenco, anildon't jar-41'when yon a.rq makingexposures. AVI'lh tho camera "empty,of course, practice) releasing the shut-ter nit h a smooth, evt'ii..."ac|iiceio" *until yo.u can mako your exposureswTllmut Jarring til3 raiucra n't all.That's llio sloy, Sharp.' nnd Steady.will- to pUolographlc'eui-'cess.

. ' .'nhn v.an .finitdoc"

Distribution PlanFor Newjpas Books

State OPA_headquarters has "giventii.min!! boards..»i plan Xor the dis-

IVibutidn «if new supplemental 13 and

thuso uhichiixpire on'October 22.Aecoriling to the distribution plan

holders'of. 11 aiid C books which aredue • lo jj|,<cpire on that daje'will re-ceive-by mail a simple, one-page formentitled "Supplementary Informationfor Kenc-wal of Gasolino Rations.*.' Onthis, form 'the'applicant "will be re-quired lo'enter his speedometer read-infi. the number of, occupational

he has driven during the lastysv his estimated occupationale for the three months begin-

Homemakers Are .Urged toSave Their Cooking Fats

'Housewives are urged (Q save allisod cooking fat in order'..to ^urahis' fat into explosives for use b)j/jlie-United Nutions. • , . .Fats make glycerin, and jjly'ceri

makes explosives. Millions of pouijasof glyc"erih are needed, and hoijrse-wives can help supply It.

.Homemakers are advised to getnil cooking good from the fats/ first.

I Then strain thenv'dnd pour tb/e fatsinto a e|ean wide-mouthednot: a .glass container. S(6fe thefats in a refrigerator or aflool darkplace until you have collected atlt'ast one p&iind.

yyhen housewives hayfe a pound•take it "to the meat cMiler who isco-operating in this drive. He will-weigh the can of fat,^pay the estab-

"ifshcd price for it, -pnd start it onits way to- the war industries. <

Don't "let the' fa/s stand' so longthat they become rancid. Once theybecome rancid the glycerin conTent.'

I is reduced. Do not take the fals toI the. meat dealer on week-ends.if it

;| ,cii|n bp iiv'oMeil. Help him .by..bring-1ing them- in-early in llie week..'.: • ' .

HOME GAMES:

OCT. 3^-KeglonaIOCT. JO- -N. Plalnllcid

.- OCT. 17-^R^hway

CHEERFOR

• THETEAM

ADMISSIONAT- TUE GATES:

Adults - ... 55 centsChildren - 30. cents

. ' (Including Tax)

Insects Create Fife Hazards

gtober 22, and whether he has

milesni'ngchanged tiis address, occupation, or,

' MIILC his original ap-pliratloit

Enclosed ntth Yhjf form *w111 be npostal card on which the applicantmust w rite his name antUiddrcbs, and•in cmclnpc addressed tcKthe boardm which he may return theNmplicj-tion ai.d the card The card will beu«cd bj- the board to notify ttie api>li-

\ I It

be icmmdcd that the i.itionmgy l j i i sn s require him to return Tin

ufd book (i\ e days after IUtopthcr with-any unused it

.Firkt'Cocker .• According to the u-t-wds of the-i .In.wct Outbreaks in forests' areAim-ri.can Kenhcl club t!ie first span- I sometimes .of. more importance-be-lei come-to this.country on the Muy- | cause of.the fire menace they,ere-llowcr in-162(1. Wlirtlier/it was a ., ate than because of the value' o i lcocker spaniel, most pupijiar. breed' i the. tmibc-r killedy'saja the U S 'of doc in the country, isn't knnwn, | department bf agriculture'. When

•it freeman Lloyd 'says ;i,pniiitini: ) destruetive outbreaks of insects de-

a liycr-colorcil. -spami-l .icfimtely of "ly ,,/ one-species of tree, a high per-the cocker type. ^ • .. "-.-•• I centnge.,o(;-..the .stand, m a y b e 1 tie,

"-————— .-••".- -j.'.struycd;.- These standing dead treesTowel L«ft in ratlent j go down in the course of a few yeaus-

A surgeon.received a; sentence.dr> making an almost itr.penetrpble tana year's hard" labor from a courtin Leningraci, Russia. It was. testi-fied that fie had Jeft a towel,- twofeet long, in the body of a man. onwhom' he •'operated;. The patient

-died in agony within n month.

. Dates Are Businessi Matter.Reminding clients of family birth-

days nnd other anniversaries, expi-ration,of licenses and .similar mat-ters, is. the business of a "new con-cern Ih'London. • ; • • ' . '

glc.of logs and '.tops. Under properconditions, says llie_ forest; service,a flash of lightning "may set,of! thehiass,' resulting in a widespread con.(lagration olmosi impossible to. .flglitPast experience" has showii that epi-demics of the mountain pine beetlein lodjiepole. often have been fol-luwod by destructive firbs. •

. . . - ' • • . •"'•' i

X ; FoolYou!YOU STILL HAVE TlMp TO; GET

EXCELLENT RESULTS FROM",

QUALITY

SOW RYE jJN^OUR GARDENS FORNEXT YEAR'S GREEN MANURE: 5 c — 101b., 50c—25Ib.,$l

CRanford 6-1661

lteui.jic, KusiTo cle.ni Kist-oir thi) Ka, -ran-,

use steel wool fust, and then"":with stove polish

ready to rtiail out the foims as••oon h<; they JI rue, "Mrs MargeryLeibnehei. Chief Cletk, announcedyesterday. \ . -

NoLimit to Orowth

seems to bo no limit to growthThere is no such thing n,s a fullgrown rattlesnake, or a ful!-i;rii\\trout, or a full-grown oyster. Kiscontinue to grow as long as Un-live, or at least as lppg as thc> continue to obtain food ln^a quantitjgreater than the si .ounfnecderi timaintain the body in nrnormnj s'atiof upkeep and_ repair

Beavers Benefit Birds"Beaver preserves in the James

bay - area. ,of Canada are proving'beneficial to waterfowl, reports thedepartment of mines and resources.Beaver ponds and mcndoWs -createdin sanctuaries by. the industriousbeaver provide additional food nndShelter for large numbers of geese,ducks, and shore-birds migrating toand from their nesting grounds andincrease thp available breeding area.

. Unites states Supplied Tobacco.One shortage, which -the United-

States may have to make «up, isin tobacco.' Australia's homegrown

> output'is not enough for its needs.Before the war, the United'Statessupplied most Australian smokers,

• Shipping Some 20 million mnnJ<y T n addition to more than 20

. million cigarettes.

104 Stars Are Discoveredat-it-diseovered-lM heretofnlre

IJtfelrs last-.year, has beenannounced~~by the '"-:::5^- • - 'nomieal instilirte

' j —

Oat Haehine WorkUJmbreUi

Into abeen

i ANOTHER RECORD!V

I•t

THE AVERAGE WEEKLY~NEWSSTAND~SALE

OF

THE CRANFORD CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE

FOR SEPTEMBER, 1942 /WAS

316 Copies More ~THAN DURING THE SAME MONTH LAST YEAR

BE BRIEF-War Call mayje

You May Obtain The Citizen arid Chronicle Regularlyor Obtain Extra Copies from Any of the FollowingDealers:

Telephone Linesarid taitchboordi-are Li-uitdthlwith war -message*. We cannot

enlarge fafilitics — but >ou canhelp make room for essential calkby~avQiding unnecessary calls

itianslrrtrfl^

w

Goldenberg's

C. C. Harris

Seager's Drug Store

Unipn News Co.

Bogen's'

Wolfe's

Richter's

Redfield'a

The Cranford Citizen and ChronicleCoverage of Local News -

CRANJ'£•'*•'

6-0008

z* »

• . , . „ • ;

' ' • ! ,1 - I , —

list- In Public Service Commercial Stores Country Club ,w^»'*more surprised

than the Uona qiib golfers last Fri-day afternoon *hen the scores were

after their match with the

roup

OtfwOSurehNote,Ifiss Norma Nelson was weltited

president of the Methodist ToothFellowship last week at a mectinr atwhich Robert Higbie was elected

I . vice-president, Howard 'HnCurar- and B»rhar. Hrfrff

time In se^ral years of play. Thescore was: Lions, »tt points; Rotary,*Vk point*. fc

Beh)nd the superb playing of Rob-ert, Crane, former Icho Lake clubenampion, who turned In a dinting

JL h

Mary Lou Thomas, Marion' Finch,Grace Jcmison and Margaret Dineea.Counsellor for this group a ;Pearl Torgerson.

The Fellowship will install officerson Sunday evening. Miss QraeejJemlson will give* her report of the Isummer conference of MethodistYouth which she attended recentlyat Miami University.

The church will be open daily formeditation and prayer, according tothe decision of the. Official Board attheir meeting last week. The pastor.the' Rev. M, Y. Pbynter, will be in

p , o n g76, BwJLions won three points In thenrst-meteh in-which "Mr~Crap»

xw&Fmm&7r3am~r'

thrchurarcTaily-. to offer prayers forthe family,' the men jn service, theNation and the Church and to offerspecial prayers on request: Detailsof this Will be announced shortly."•

.Dedication Day, the,anniversary ofthe opening of the educational build-ing last year, will be' celebrated Oc-

' tober. -12, it was decided by theBoard., ,G. K. Warner and C. C. Rob-erts have been appointed as a com-mittee to arrange the details of thiscelebration.. • "': . '

Tonight the service of Family-At-Church night wj}] be held. Manyprominent town citizens, includingMayor George E. Osterheldt and Mrs.Osterheldt, have been incited to at-tend.. • ' .'••• . y'

. ••; Sunday will be Family. Commun-ion Pay'in connection .with WorldWide Communion. Day and5 a largenumber of families are expected totake part in the service. •:-•••:.-

, and Conservation Cen-J- Mrs•.hare.beetf set ay by. PublicSerTlc* Electric and Gas Company' Inall,Its cominercUl -storea to cooperatewith tne Goreriunent'f National Nutri-tloa »nd Conservation Program. Attfc«e, Centers" bomemaken tnay ob-tain Information concerning household'maaacem^ot dating war time.

., Thai^Ceoter" b an'attractive boothi^eoorated in red. white, and blue. Eachla In charga of « home aerrlca consul-tant or an aaststaot who will answer<iaestlona^anl offer raggestlons relat-

ing to nutrition and meal piiinnlhRnnd,the ute'and enro of Run and plrelrli;appllanc.es.. Literature on tlirso nubiectt, of an Interestlns and nut lootechnical nature, li dlstrlbntcd froe.There are ten instructlvo bobkjuliIrom which the bomeninker inn#-choose. • ' ' . • " . '

Recipe'iheets, that keep abreant ofthe food altuatlon and Include BUXK««-tlons'for tho ui« of leftovers, prepa-ration of sugarleas detaerts and meatsubatittiUS) are slao given away. Reci-pes' for canning-Fall fruits and Tege.tables are the most popular.

Coffee and Carl H. Warsinsld.' Itunderstood that tho victorious teammade Mr. .Crane an honorary lifemember at last Friday night's meet-ing.

Result* of other matches follow:Dr. Will' Lange and Henry J. Sha-heen, Uons, defeated Roy 'Murdocfcand William p. Reel, Jr., Rotary, 2 itto- It; William J. Willsey and CarrollK. Sellers, Rotary, defeated ClarenceFritz and Dr. H. R. Best, Lions, 3 to1; and Edward J. Kane and CharlesM. Ray, Rotary, defeated. George S.Sauer. and—Harry—R^ ""

.• Low Yesr, 1931According to the bureau gf the'

census the mortality rate in Ameri-ca in 1931 was the lowest since thefederal government began - collect-ing: rndrtalitystotliitlrs in. i 000.

.1TWHKA

all Christian Sctenca Churche*Sode^ei throughout the world.

The Oolden Ta^tisj *1He that'ww-eth to lus flesh shaU o« the OeshTMPcorupMow but lie that soweth to the

Among the Lesaon-Sennon clta-Uon»U the faUowing from tee Bible:"Love not the w«rk% nefther ttwthing* that are in the worl« It anyman kjve the world, the -love o* theFather U not In him." (I John 1:18)

tl^cllmate refuUted by the8t«t*m. Waterneveitrteusthalttomh it to la Utitd t

the quitWaterneveitrteusthere,

alttomh it to la- a Utitude « thott-1,•and milts north pf.Labraddr anil

'Two Centuries ago Catherine theOwatot.Rusala had a 853-plect setof Wedfewood pottery.

looursaa

made in theTodf of the Opera Hous*•t GlenbounleJ, England, to male*loom to* them. / , $ -,' -' >

vpmmwHm ^Lv^s*a^**<ww*"ww*>

w*wMi^^

f Uan Science textbook. "Science andi» Health mittx Key to the. Scrlttures"

by Mary Baker Eddy: "Hold thoughtsteadfastly ot the enduring, the good,and the true, and you'wdU bring theseInto your experience proporUonabrylo their oceupancy ot your thoughts,'"(p. * » )

Millions to VictoryThe U. S. A. spent more thaa

131 million a day for war duringlast. April) enough to pay for a bat-tleship, air-aircraft carrier, • heavycruiser, and a submarine.andjwiee.what we spent for weapons in themonth before we entered the war. • .'

A Long Bridie in EuropePlans are under way for building

the longest bridge in Europe—a" two-inile span to connoct the' Danish is-land Zealand with the islands ofLolli;nd and Falster , •:...

GOOD PAYINGSEMI • SKILLED JOBS

, inAIRCRAFT FABRICATION

Riveting and Inspection Work

MEN and WOMEN WANTEDWhite or Colored

To take training In NationalDefense Training School _

j FREE

EASTERN AIRCRAFT' ... Unden DlTfadon

GENER A L MOTORSLinden, N. J.

. APPLY AT YOUIC LOCAL U. S.

CMFI,OYMENT OFFICE .FOR FULL INFORMATION

THE NEW STYLES ARE ON PARADE AT STEIN & MARKOWITZ

{ - i

When CrandiiiotlirF made icecream, she turd rich, Tresh dairycreuin and other equally fineingredients. So do we in mak-ing Castles Seallcst Ice Cream.But greater skill and modernfreezing methods give Castlesthe smoothness and delicacy offlavor that grandmother never,achieved in those good old days.

WAR BONDSEssential in the" equipment of ev-

ery Soldier, Sailor, Marine or Flyeris a first aid kit, consisting of band-ages and antisqptlcs for, instantane-ous use. These materials' are packedinto D compact box and cost about$1.50 each..

ASTLES

We need millions of these' first aidkits for emergency treatment. Theyare also used by Red Cross work-ers,-in flcld hospitals and whereverneeded until hospital treatment maybe obtained. Even a child could buyone or more of these kits throughpurchase of War Stamps. Buy WarBonds and Stamps every pay dayand invest at least ten percent ofyour income in these governmentsecurities. v s T,m

Siberia Has Cowboy TroupeCowboys of Olritia, Western Sibe-

ria, have a dramatic company of 21members, which tours the.provincegiving plays before farmers andinhabitants of remote- Tillages,some productions being In the openair.

StmllM. tme. _ f tAfa c

Doti't BIIM the Sealtmt rVo((iiMi>. P. M., WEAF

Queea,a Typist<Juee_n El^Ppeth Is-the first Eng-

lish queen to work regularly at atypewriter. She uses a small'porta-ble one for replying to most of her'personal letters. It stands on a se-verely tidy little desk'in her ownstudy at the palace.

" Wcltting Contests for GirlsJapan's Society for the Promotion

of Health is holding long-distance-walking contests for girls from of-fices, homos and domestic Service

Which will it be-$45 or 40 Cents?

c •

To mail a letter to evens, rabexriber of The

. Gtizen arid, Chronicle would «oat mppioaa-

raatel? $45.00 in pottage.

To reach these same people through a small

classified ad in The Gtizen and Chronicle will

y°" as little as 40 cents. ^ ,

^ T)iua advertising in The Gtizen and Chronicle* is.a bargain—one of the greatest bargains which ,

hat ever been offered to you. ,,.

Today s SpecialColonial, center.hall, Urge

living room and fireplace,

son porch, 2-eu> garage,'

large lot landscaped, orig-

inally $14,000, sale price,

$7,000

^ « M t T i » r i H « M " ' . ^ . f L * U O j < *

I'TTiheahs it's """time to changeinto warmer, moreconventional clothes-Tr-and'-we're. ready—for you ! !

The frost will soon^be on the pumpkin and*boy, are' we ready o fix you up'with just theclothes you need! Hundred, of the country's

^fifiest suits, topcoata and overcoats . . . aUbought month* ago . . ;; are awaiting your se-lection; right here!. Everything that', new forthe i^son we have—and most important ofall, the prices are still the same "money 'savers as- before . . . when' you buy 'your

clothes in a MAN'S store you are assured a 'perfect fit at' NO extra co«t—NO CHARGEFOR ALTERAttONS! Come in, investNOW in qualify "clothes that really-save youtoonty. ' • , > ,' ' , ' ' •

t .' *

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'-_ ' V

Report Card

Several StatesA new type of report card will

used in the Garwood. Public Schoolsthis year, Supervising PrincipalLouis Nicolello announced this week.A committee consisting of FranklinE. Wicks, Mrs. Margaret Bohr, MissBertha Mader and Mr. Nicolello ex-amined various report cards beingused in this and neighboring statesand believe that th£V_hnj!£_sattled on•ne which will be most satisfactoryto Ihe parents and pupils.

— The-Junior Garden' Club Tieldnts•ret garden show in • the Lincoln

• School'lost Thursday' afternoon. JohnDushanek, former president of theGarden Club, served as judge and

r Mrs. Herman Johnson and Mrs. Her-man WerrhVassisted in arranging theflowers. PfVRfe were given by theSenior Garden Club and were wonby Janice Smolley, Thelma Oldford,Beverly Henry, Anna Oleyar, Martin'Oleyar. and* Frank Llqubre.

The first meeting of the CameraClub was .held last week. DonaldBoyden was elected president, Jan-ice Smolley,'vice-president; BeverlyHenry, secretary; and Robert Fluhr,treasurer.' The president will ap-

"point -a . committee to plan futuremeetings. One of the first projects ofthe club will be the.developing ofpictures taken of the exhibits of theJunior Garden Club Show.

St. Paul's GuildTo Meet Tonight' The Woman's Guild of St. Paul'sEvangelical and Reformed Churchunder the leadership of Mrs. LesterStcffen, will-meet-tonight at 8 p. m.in the church. The-feature of • themctcing will be a practical 'talk onthe uses of modern wall paper andpaints.. .

Holy Communion services willtake-place Sunday tit 11 a. m. in coh-•ectjon with World Wide ComniunTion Day. Sunday, Schoolis scheduled for 0: 5 a. m. There will be a•iceting of the Church Council Ti

. dny. evening. - •'

District Captain*District captains and -assistant* to

further the campaign of local Repub-lican nominees—Fred L. Cowell formayor, and E» Thomas Daub andWilliam W. Gilbert for Council —were appointed Monday night at an

Republican Club headquarters onNorth avenue.

The appointees, follow, the Srstnamed being captain; First district,Archie Darroch and Marie DeCicco;second, Bert Bertolamy and ClaraDeFreltas; third. Albert Gill and AnnHenry; and fourth, Roger Todd andRegina Knight.

The three candidates spoke brieflyand announcement was made thatthe next meeting will be Tuesdayevening, October 13, at Republicanheadquarters._JBertramJ.Bertolamy, president ofthe Garwpod-Republican. Club, open-ed the meeting, and the appointmentswere made by Burton E. Dickerman,campaign manager..

url Scouts PlanFor New Season

Thirty-five .girls attended the firstmeeting of Troop 10, Garwood Girl.Scouts, last week'in .-Miss Roger'sclassroom in Lincoln School. Themembers were divided into" patrolsand officers were elected. Flans tothe year -were discussed,- among themhe spending of some time' in theScout Cabin in Watchung Reservationmd the possibility of caring for smafll

rues-

Mr, and Mrs. Fred Folzone of 522Willow avenue announce the blrtb ofa son,. Michael Joseph, Tuesday eve-ning at tbelr home. : ••-. ••• .."

We Wil| Pay Cash forYour Car!

Should you be force* to'dispose «f your car seevtt far the best pricel

Noms € k ^Mt Central Area**

<\ WESCTTBLD• "w» HATB Birrn :mum u u IN WBsrro

children while their mothers are at-tending P.-T, A. meetings in the aft-ernoon. - ' . . - • -

(Mrs. Leo Anson and "TOtstf Aliceogcrs attended a tea for leaders, and>uncfl members at the home of Mrs.oble In Westfleld. The tea was for

he purpose of introducing the newxecutive secretary, Mrs. Hartman,tio is irl charge of organizing new

troops'. In "Westflcld. and Garwood.

Presbyterians PlanRally Day Sunday

Rally Day observances will biheld Sunday in the Garwood Presbyterinn Church. The' Rev. J. WSloan; pastor, will-address the Sun

m

II

I

IA

'I,

MtlADY

50 THAT.

iii tirtin

TII cm•CAI

Ti l CM

urni*

•Tht sound of th« AirRaid S im is a strictwarning to y o t r . . .BLACKOUT YOURjiOUElErtn-tb* /a lnf tafglow on th* outside«an strva as- • beaconaad bull'j-ey« forenemy planesl

"Oh," you say, "then'snothings a blackout J . .all yon do is put out thalights!'' . .. •'..>.. 'That ain't» bid for a fewminute*, but think how itwould be to sit in completedarkness forhoural Would.:you like to Uve In the dark•rery night that blackouts

. areordned . . . not just in•ummtr but on long winter

You don't have to Hv« In Ithe dirk! Simply main th* Jpreparations suggested In IIllustrations (Mt). so that I -the family eanba complete- |ly comfortable. > Arrange .for quick, etoipbte bb«k- |out . . . and check it from' Itbtou(«W«. . |f o n t bt caught tiapn- Ipared, find out now ««•»• I«<slof«*«««a»» during Ia blackout I.

PREPARE YOUR HOME FOR BLACKOUTS NOWASK YOUR LOCAL CEr-ENSE COUNCIL

Transfer* ofReal Estate

The following- deed* nave bees re-corded in the office at County BegSs-ter Bauer in the Courthouse, .Eliza-beth:

Borough orGarWOodHumcnik, lots 281 to 253, block 7»,section No. 1, map of property ofNew York Suburban ILandj Company,situate at GarwoocVWeatfleTd.

SL S. Corporation to Mr. and Mrs.Henry Frahme, property at the inter-section of ,the' easterly sideline-ofEast street and the southerly sidelineof Beech avenue.

S. S. Corporation to Mr. and Mrs.Jacob Bauer, property in the norther-ly sideline of Spruce avenue, 200 feetfrom West street

Mr. and Airs. Henry J. Shaheen toMr. and Mrs. Carl W. Soltis, lots'258to 260, btock-7% majrof sectionrNo. 1,property of New York Suburban LandCompany* situated at • Garwood-Westf le ld. " '•••

f l av aa. aa. at iay Tktaa at Ika aka

' • >aa>«neaalt-aw.inh. K. J . «•

BAT. OS*

saai a^Ba^-afaaaa

SnTlsidM

The finest emeralds in thecome from theMuzTmSesnoBogota Colombia. T h S T

"borers cut out chunk afterJjpure quartx t i i ^

O M ) t OklM tM «T « • •

r. *. Mmm. M. & ( M MTtau <r l u * aT C B. m.

BaWtaW On.l th

•Albert R. -SfAzulf ••—.-.i-mtbology at the Anof Natural History /fa New

day School-on theFast To the Faith."

topic, ',VHoldin

'"Donald M. Snyder and .William RMiller ore delegates from the churcto the meeting f the PresbyterlaJ ICrartford Presbyterian Church oTuesday*.

A

Lincoln. School. William O. E.rH,McEnroe, state defense inspector o.this area, spoke to the group on re-sults of the state inspections. Movles were shown of civilian procedurein a gas attack, the. Control Centeand Casualty Station were set up todemonstrate their use irOah .emer-gency, and Dr. H. R. Best, chairmanof the Cranford - Garwood - Kenil

tlkRd Cross, madean appeal foihe organization's -'activi-

ties during Jhe National Emergency.

DO YOU NEED A NEW GASJANGE M WATER HEATER?

HERE ARE THE FACTS .-REGARDING GOVERNMENT -ORDERS REGUtAfINGTHEIR SALE: T ; r ,The sale* of gas appliances in the show-

-r-rGomspfdea]ei:3;i8.subject to close controlby the governthehl:. However, provisionshave been ma^le\ to' supply certain gasappliances whert they are definitelyneeded. - V- '

1. If your gas appliance is vorp out beyond repairor- if repair parts are. vnot obtainable, you mayapply to us and we%ill assist you in filling outthe necessary.forms to obtain a new appliance.

2. Anyone with no means of cooking or heating' water may purchase a\ new gas range or gas

water heater! - * ' -* ' • ' ,

For further information stop in at any ofour showrooms and we shall be glad toadvise you on securing the gas applianceyou may need.

ELIZABETHTOWN l:CONSOLIDATED GAS CO.

BRIEFS

Appearing on. the front- cover ofthe "Better, .IJgtttcs'and Gardens"magazine,'"October,, is'sue. Is a photo-

h 0' The Sunday service in Sti Mark'sKpiscopftl Church will be for th<| 18 thSunday after Trinity. Holy i con-ilmunion 'will be administered at the8 a. m. service." No- evening gathering is planned this wee.k. . . . • , - '

A-food sale, will be held at 10:15a. m. Saturday in borough hali. bytr e Ladies'- AUicillary to the Gar-wroc^JMre_DepirJtnjahtr--TlTe--sare Is

lSiSLS)LSeeemi''avettwe; -UKSeTWe direction of Mrs. Herman.--rfn» f « _^i...^ _._•• Johnson and;;. Mri:.. Arthur Smith.

Proced* will .be given to a fund for

graph of Dorothy Anne 0'rifHn, 8months' old daughter [of Mr. andMrs. Theodore C..Griffln of 404 Beechavenue. / The baby Is the grand-daughter of Mr. and Mrs. WilliamGrlflln of 104 South avenue,! east,Cranford.. Her father is employedby the Magnus Chemlqal- Companyon South avenue. > •..'-.'•

who left yesterday for active ser-vice with the army, was given a fare-

ll t Sdy, g a

well .party Sunday night in a Unionrestaurant. Those-^ttehding were:Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Fluhr, Mr. andMrs. Carl Soltis, John iSbltls, Mr. andMrs. E. W. Severs, Miss Clarissa Sev-ers, Mr. and Mrs. William Pelusioand Charles Zemany of Garwood, andMr., and. TMrs. Joseph Leonard ofCranford. ' ' • •

The first- regular meeting of theGarwood Women's Club will be heldMonday night at.the home of Mrs.Herbert Flamrher of'i'Franklln ave-nue, Cranford, formerly of Garwood.The meeting is,scheduled as guestnight and prospective members arebeing invited to attend:

Garwood's scrap pile contains ap-proximately 10 tons of salvage metaland rubber, according to the esti-mate of Conrad Kelm, chairman ofthe salvage drive. The goal for thedrive that ends Ostober 11 is muchlarger than this, however,-and ap-peals through' handbills distributedby the boy scouts will remind resi-dents this week1 that the search J)f•attics and cellars, should continue.Jiot only discarded junk but alsoitems that are In good condition butnot essential to the householder come/under the heading of scrap wh<mthey will provide fighting" manorialfor the Nation. J

• John Gibson, son of acting MayorIra Gibsori of 303 Myrtle avenue, hasarrived safely 1n Wale's, according tomessages recevied by his father. Heis with' the. engineering departmentof the;nj^rchartt.marine. . "

Th- v SJd i i Sti

An Efficient Mole Trap- To catch moles,' find" a run tha>is used regularly. With a post holedigger dig a hole the size of a gallonbucket through-the run, so that whenthe bucket is placed in the hole thetop of the bucket will be just belowthe tunnel. Plug each end of thetunnel with loose dirt. When themole presses dirt out he will fall intoihe-, bucket—-and—cannot—climbout. Then place a board over thehole, flat with the surface. '

Brothers Wed SistersAt a triple -wedding in Franc*

three brothers of the Stinteff familymarrf.d three sisters of the Adamfamiiy. A fourth brother is to mar*ry a fourth sister. A fifth brotherhas'entered a monastery at Romel-fing near Mete. There is no fifthsister. . ;

•Ut at CnrtrtL ckha Ommtr.pnpntj tt B. CUdU. B>q.- akkbHi*la th*ftfc»f »*satfcurc DU

mr,U m

htm hut lmnrtnlavHUUturf ateLot So. I'M MK. Btoct aid Ma* 1M fait;U>BK« XorthwMtetr at ritkt aaslai to thlaat m m « fan ta Canal >Ha«arib«mNortluKSUtlr abx M a i m g IN M ;UKW» WwiihaniHQ 1 tm& to UM *ub* of

•»UB or TUIa nua or BnUdac nan tor aalaat Onalbrt. Calaa Cmmtj. Viw lanar. BMB-wtj ota. CaklO. •*«.- Mica •>» b a* 01* lath* ask* of th* aadatxf «r Caka/oMatjr:Uuor* Rsukmtalr Haas aaM lot Sa (Mt;UMOC* Kofttantortr at rixht aafha ta tha laatcouna 2 tot ta VaMa M.nmm: Hi ran* Korth-caataiUr aloa( DUaa i n w . H Isel: thtaeaBowllnaitirty 1 tat I* tk* atao* *f baHaalac.

Kamra aa Hm. US. Ms aad SM Manh CatooAw*., Ctaaranl. !t. J.

sound Him* ever made of «,.* » g s of wild Amerjean birds. ^

Caspian'Below'Ocean Lev.)^ e C a s p a n sea fills , l d S l d eP»e»sJon. Its surface lies a b t hfeet_below the level of t l j ^

Woman's Team 'BeUast, Ireland, wUl have a. worn

an's football league. ' . •

purchasing utility kits for the Gar-wood boys in the armed forces.., A special meeting of the BorougffCouncil ras held.- Tuesday night toopen bids, for the sewer constructionon Locust avenue from Center streetto West street. Bids. were read fnShithe Trifagllo Construction Companyfor $2,880, and.from Guerfiero.andDen Conte for $2,425. These bidswere referred to the committee forinvestigation. ' ••

Sweet Silence.Begasse, the residue from snoai

cane, is used In ceihngs as n <oundjbsoiber.

TRU S XABDOMINAL BELTS

WEA PJUUECT WTT —. -

ELASTIC STOCKINGSLADY IN ATTENDANCE

SEAGER'SDRUG STORE

10J N. UNION AVENOtTEL.CB.6.070S

STORM SASHWILL REDUCE YOUR

HEATING COSTS!PREPARE NOW FOR NEXT WINTER

BY OBTAINING STORM SASHFOR THE WINDOWS

IN YOUR HOMELet Us Furnish You With An Estimate:

—Full Line of—Screen., Screen Doors, Screen Wire, Molding, Moth

Proof Cedar-CloKt lining, Roofing, Insulation,___ Chestnut Posts, Arbors and Trellises,

STANDARD LUMBER & SUPPLY CO.PADTK HA^ - HABDWAEK — M S O N SIATKRMXS

G1TKN ' V*

CRANFORDPHONf CR.6-0800

TODAY — FRi; — 8AT;"EAGLE SQUADRON""YOU'RE TELLING ME"S»t.Mat—'Klnr of the MonnUes'

SIW. — JttOM — THE.:«)AN MELVYN

•THEY ALL KISSEDTHE BRIDE" 7

• . : ' - •. — Also— •--• ' .• /•

"SUNDAY PUNCH?'Jean Bofwrs — Wm. Lnndicsn

- 8TABTINO WKD^ OCT.r:.T^-Greer Ganon — Walter Fldceon

"MRS. MlNTr^R"Color Cartoon—PETE SMITH

Shown at til5r~t:H—$af.

— HIT No. t - r

•obert Taylor — Norms Skeara"Her Cardboard Lover"BfscDONALD

I MARRIED AN/Dead EM KMs-Uttle l a *TOUGH AS THEY)SON.-MON.-TDE/ t

Bmplircy BOCAE* aa

THE Y O ^ H O TJoan Bennett—ftaadwt Tone .

"Tht Wife T*ke» « Fryer" |Ptns—Donald Baefc Cartoon,

WEDi-I Greta GAEBO as . ' '

"l^TAHAHl"Gco. Hnrphr — Locilte Ball I

"GIRL, GUY and a GOB"/ O c t -' •:•;• T H E - ' •••.. .

9 and is BAKER'S WIFEl

— Plus —WALLACE BEERT ia

"JACKASS MAIL'

For EVERYTHING PERTAINING TO-MUSIC Vi.k

sn w. rmtrr sr. ruumntut. u. i »taara. mm* Sat Em.—T«l PIK 5-«5«

;HT'YES

"• • 'i

FOR ATTACKWere is the Great Horned Owl, nocturnal bird ofprey, lord high executioner among birdtl Hisvision i» keen in Ihe dimness of night and hematic*the most of it. He tights his quarry front his perchin a tree and acoops dtnen upon it with uncannysilence and swiftness of flight. He needs little lightto guide him,

"DAY EYES" AT WARHuman eyes need GOOD£ft>HT for clear vision. Nn»,proEabfy more than evejr before, eyes arc used in pro-longed close vision at night. Many of you arc doingwork at night which contribnteg to the war effort. Itis important that yoa maintain good lighting in yourhome to safeguard eyesight. Good ^yesiglit u a pre-cious anet in war time. Do nothing that loners thelighting; standards Ton bja/e established in your home !„

PVB1 SERVICEA 914?

fiJwy United S&ies War Savingr Bonds and Stamps > -

\ -

V „

IT

/

ir V '"'

fe; ' ^ I S ? "Sftj^?, I* *^ c*tfe j» i

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Kif'

' . , . - . - -f .^-," ^ V r ) ^ \ j v - * ' • > ' ' ' *

-T«l. P i l l . 5-«51»

Intensive ! New First Aid'Classes Start Soon

-.J. Salvage. CommitteeDutribjite* Circulars;

^••-..^Toiiii'in^Date'"'v With;more than 30.tons ot ™»,.,metal already contributed by, local!residents,: the Salvage- Committee of~

-start early in ,October. Mrs. Lester

, Cooper, chairman of the First AidUnit, announced this neck. Enroll-

! meat for these courses is now '-'in' progress and can 6e made by apply-I ing to Mrsr~~Cooner at CranfnrdI 6-1473-M. It us hoped that the en-j roUment will make. it possible to

, »»«'have a large group for afternoon asscrap w e l , n s e v c n i n g c l a s s e s .tocat A m e e t i o f t h e Ffret A l d i U n U o f

g Committee of ^ K e n l l w o r t n r ^ n s e C o u n c l , w a s^ • ^ T ^ T * °U"h

C * Ot Whifh h e l d i n HIHIIIW School last night, Michael F. Tortora >s chairman, this. Equipment was distributed and or-

ueek is aunchuitf .in even more in- | d c ' r a g lven>according to the sugge-s-tensive dnve for scrap metal, rub- t l Q n s n J a d e b v t , w s l a , m s p c c l o r s ot

.her and rags among borough re,.- t h c t c s t d r l , , - l n s t ^dents. • Borough officials and the De-tense Council have pledged full co-operation to Mr. Tortora and-his!committee in their efforts. |

' A circular letter and.pledge cardare being circulated, this week among]

'" Ipcal residents, The pledge card"reads j '"1 pledge to recanvass ..ourpremises thoroughly for all suchwaste materials as scrap metals, rub-|her, rags and burlap bags and to aj-Joperate in getting this, waste mater-j

• ial intof\?ar production by. getting .itI.to, the Salvage Depot, giving it,'to a-i'liaritv iliii ' " ' H 4 ^ l

Pastor, WifeAre Honored• Rev. and Mrs. Moore

Receive 1941 ChalmersAward of Methodists -

Six Rationed Types

„ (Type 6)Pacs, Bootees^and work shoes,l e u than 10inches hijh.

,(Type 1)U i P • II e I g h tUooU.. All hip,body, -'thigh',- orsportinf boots.

9%

Tlrrthe1' Kq

lev, Otis- H.aioore,-pastor"oflilworth Community .-Metliu-

• • * " •

- polling'

i" The letter follows: "jV crisisists in our war production prograi;i'jdist Church, and Mrs. Moore hawdue to the serious shortage of scrap I received the 1941 Chalmers Fundsteel, rubber and other vital'ma-j award'in*recognition of. their workterials. "This shortage-can and must'.in rural communities. during 30 'yearsbe filled to adequately equip our boys! of service, to the chinch- . "-on ait" fronts and it is our obligation! The gift, a $100 war bund,-.ca'ir.o as

• to soe.that.it is JHled, - '-• ..-' '. J.-a .surprise lo.the'Rcv. T.Ir. Moorv.'nnd'•"It is important to remember That] h i s w i f c w n ( > attended a meeting inSO per cent of every tank, every .ship,I 'he Methodist Building in.New Yorkevery submarine and '.every gun is I a s t w°ck and "were honored: by a

, (Type 21 ,A b o v e - K"r>-l l e l ( f l i t "Sto-.ii iKing" llools. ile-*!(JW hip height.- i

made of scrap iron an.U steel. Theli.sam

rub

and ere honored.by npresentation rpecch-by n repivseiita-tive oif the Department of HomeMissions and Extension* of the

many yl-hrs.i

ne jtpplies to equipment made o(luoLfdr. "For our boys' sake, .recaii-j *""JO'""'7 UIIW »-***vass your premises for ally of the Methodist Church..articles listed "below ".Hid get'them! T n c Moores spent m«i ? jrais . ininto war production immediately--byi'Uupcr Iowajn-a rural area t,h.-it cx-brlnglng them to the local Salvage 'tended 35 miles by 15, and also sawDepot located on the Boulevard next service in New England,to Borough' Hall . • '• ' M r s ' Moore is executive secretary>:Give special .\tentihn to the ina-}^^ W °^'* 1 ^ l S^.?J:^V. | J n

(Type 4)n t I a w - KneVH e i K h t LightBoots.

racs . fe Iloiitors,10 Inches or high-rr. All iacod rub-ber footwear ofthis hirlRlit, anUliootrg types withtir withiiut laces.

Boots.

nv \ . .i. OKKICI-; OP Vmi'i; ADMINLSTKATIOM

-CLASSIFIED ADVKRTISINC RATKS''Fi^t Insprlinn-^Tu-o cent* k word, minimum charge forty cents.RiptMt viiK-r-OBc"ornt a word minimum charge twenty-live cents.IHielline lor eupy—Wednesday noon • Ca«h, chi'Ck or stamps must

neenmpany adverti"lng t

REAL ESTATE FOR SAIJK^ ropm house, tte.im heat, r

porch, fireplace., hnrdwoud Hour*,in very Rood condition iJiit V ! \

- ,200, nt 314 North Avenue, l int .Owner will saculUe for ?4UO0 In- -quire Felix Dif'aulo, 34 Hanliltoii COMFORTAULY furnished, room

•Avenue. Phone CR'anford 6-0205. • with t\j-o singlebeds. 9Il lakeAvu-....;. ;_: '_ -..: , ' ! ",-nuc Cranford, (just off" AVnlnut.FIVE room'bungalow, $3500. aood Avenue). . 10-1

neighborhood; bargain for a man' -. — — • — ; — — *who is handy; $1000,cash rcquirctl. CO.MFOHTABLY

MODEHN fl room house. 2 car-gar-'a g e ; $ 7 8 0 0 . . " • . . •'• '•''•••: >

EXCKPTIONAL- bargain;'-' 14 mom'house; 4 baths. Rarage, automatic

Ft'KMSIICI) KOO.MS FOR KENTI-ARCStC. vvcll ftnnishiMI single loom

for gentlemen. North side. ."Con-venient to bus and htntimij Tele-phone-CRumford d-1397.., ' If

filrnlsh«l rooin^private bath, ecu-1

trally' located. ; Meuk If -dc'sir-od.Phono Cliftnf.ml (l-2172-ll. tf

" FOJt" SALE "HEALTH Scale; also canning pears

find grapes. Telephone CRanford0-2040-R.

COl'L sprinff, cr.oss-tied, for 48 inchbed; almo&t nctf; reasonable, Tel.CRnnford..0-227O:

ONE floor lamp, $0; one oak diningtable, $12 , 1 Wade Avenue, Cran-ford.

GIRL'S tun polo.coat, size 10, almostnew, $10. Telephone CRanfordtl-0128-W. .

storeroom which lyoir might'be ableto-use someday' but which our boys'need nowV] , |.. 'Tor further | information contact

the Local Salvage Committee, tele-phone CRanford 6-0196-R or CRan-ford 8-1473-J."

Listed at the bottom of the letter,are items made of metal, rubber andr a g s . - ,. . - • - . . • . .

'' • Christian EndeavorChooses Officers' Esther Smith was elected presi-dent of. the Kenilworth ChristianEndeavor Society at' a meeting of

\ ^ ' the society1 in theTCommunity Metho\_-dist Church Sunday-evening. »„.„.

. Swords was elected vice-president;John

. which has head<(unrters inNew |Yprk.-..The.Rq-v1 Mr. Moufe has'scryefl as alumni'secretary qf Cor-nell College and has' held pastoratesin North Canton, .N.j H., arid WoodsHole-and - Hubbardstown; "Mass."

BRIEFSThe first meeting of the Kcnil-

worth P.-T. A; wUl be held in Hard-ing^fchoolJtonight^at 8jg. m^^After

"B~sfe6rt"tSiiHiiessi ineeTtng~Biere "willbe a tour of inspection of the schoolled by Harold Shaterian, principal.The school was redecorated and re-paired this summer and-each roomwill be open- t h b t h k thwill be open" to show the work thatwas done..... _. • :^ Herman tohman,.,U.- :S. !M.:C, is

stationed at Guada canal, SolomonIslands, according to. word receivedby his .parents, Mr. and' Mrs. Chris

Pictiiri-d altpvr arc the six types of men's rulilioW tvorh SIMK-Sand rubber boots which now will lit1 rationed to persons whose workrequires such footwear, and. which is essential to the war effort orto public health or .safety. Applications for purchase •ccrlillcatr*may be made lo rutioiiiuK boards on and after October 5. It wasemphasized by ratlonini; ollicl.ils that these slxjtypcs arc thc onlyrationed lubber footwear. Men's, women's, ami children's galoshes,arctics, and rubbers, arid women's and children's boots are unre-stricted and may. he purchased at will. ••' •.•••*••••-.

lSfM^Wftf^IMWOA's' MaeMEKKIN

A I.OVI:T.V

3'-Nprih.Ave.fK.;''Cranrord.' N. '.I.''' rtfStreet;

Uitiuiet,' a real hoinephrr-c > .Kino lo'cuticm; *m

. . . . . . —— vote family. 301- Elm153 UUXCItEsST Ayi-mii'. 5900.. os l i j Cranford., . 1 , - - . . . . •

imd-$52-.5O monthly makes you .flic i —*~T^-:-~~L-~-—•—r-- ~proud owner tit this compact sixi L.AKGE; second flour front mom witii

-. room Ctiionfal .-home With imc car- aU-ove; for man or \vu~) -----.'attached giirnge—-cicccllciit living '•lent nrijjhborhnod; Jlfci.- room with fireplace, tiled kitvht-ii | _*t;'tion. CltanfintVOia:

IIKI.P IVA.VfKIl—". Gllt'L wanted to help in slurc, Model.j llakcry, 7-Eiistnian Street,-Cran-

I f o r t ) . , • ' . . - • " .

. _ . . „ . _ , , r a ...vv.™ ».v=-^«mc«n,i by m s .parents, Mr. and Mrs./Raymond Schen-er, secretary, and Lohman"of North 21st street. .Erii a Shallcross, treasurer. The' Cadet "Egan Koeriig, U./S. Armytopiexfor this Sunday evening's meet-; A i r C o r p S i is now attending pre-ing will be "The Christian Endeavor, flight training school at Santa AnaPledge."\^ " ' ; [ Air Base,. C a l . " " . . " /

"• World Communion will be ob- Pvt.'AdoIph Patterson, Army Air-served' at tlie^ church Sunday: All. Corps, is home on/furlough with hisProtestant Churches have been asked' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pat

..."•' to observe thisXday, stressing the' terson of Michigan avenue, Hefellowship of Christians even across j stationed at Langley Field, Va.

r the barriers of war. Nrhe offering of I -David Joseph'Gluck, Jr., son othe day will go to Overseas, Relief,rMr. arid Mrs. David Gluck, Sr., of fl

'.'."• and to aid the work df/chaplains in.1-Passaic avenue, has enlisted in th,•: the U. S.' Service.- . \,•-'.-'. j Army Air Corps and is stationed a

v . Homecoming Suhdgy will^be Oc-| Fort Dix, awaiting assignment to. ar• . tpber 1177 Former1 pastors and\resi- [aviation, school in! Texas;'

-—^ients-wlll be "presenT at "the" service "TfajF•" Collectdr : arid'' Mrs."-.on'that day.

Transfers ofR6al Estate _

. The following deeds have been re-corded hi the ofljee of C9unty Regis-

»._.. ._. . _.._ . "vLerbGlendinning liave • returned from,'.»two wesks' vacation, to' Atlantic Ci.tj

Idnriccticut,F."Kernan, son of Mr. and

G.F.- Kernan of North 21siStreet, Nhas left for Newport, R. Iwher be, will begin training at th

,^?».^JL*IS^S-S S I S Aid ursegiven-by• , ; . • - . - " . . . • . - • I the Cranford-Garwood-Kenifworth

Mr.-and Mrs; Roscoe P.. Conkling, chapter'of the American Red Cross•and 'others'-to Lcroy Glendinnihg, i uijj] s t ^ t o n October 12. .All-Kenil-lots 22, 24,. 55, Z?^?,-nfid ..30, b]Qck;worlh women interested'in taking55, lot , block 416,5ana+<tets « o 21,.1 the-cfiursc should get in touch With•block-421, section 3, may of New, M r s E..purreilin Harding School.Orange. ' '' Travel: Movies will,-be shown j n

•J Ahthoriy S. Amoscato, single, to Harding School on Wednesday) Oc-(!>Anna Mickein, lot 8Q, map ef Blue tobcf]14 under auspices of the ways

Ridge Manor, section Jfo. 2. . and means committee of the Region-al High School P.-T. A. The movies

FiuT Larger in Australia ^. . Australia tfs a. base for. offensive

'. war against Japanese- invaders tothe north is one to which shipmenta"of-mpst United States fopd,suppllesare unnecessary. Pacific ships can

• thus carry more tanks, planes, and'••T-JOTrnunition,. .--. , .

"The magnitude of supplies avail-able for United States forces' in Aus-

tralia is indicated by:the surpluses••-, normaUy exported. More than a

third of the foodstuff. produced inwe continent has-been finding, itsway fa recent years.to foreign mar-

will be interesting, and • instructive,i-an ' the proceeds of the entertain-;'ment'will benefit the Regional HighSchool P.-T. A. .. . '•• .•",.' :\. J

Pvt. Joseph A. Markano, Army. AirCorps, son of Mr. and. Mrs. AnthonyMarkano of~480~Washingtoo^ avenue,and Pvt. George C. Engclmah, ArmyAir Corp?, son of Mr. and Mrs.George L. Engelman of Twentiethstreet, are attending the Army AirForce Training School at Madison,w i ' • ' " ; " :

Transportation of ExplosivesThe railroads of the. United States

,.?"? QM&feinthe;past"11 years haveWnsporied bUUpns of pounds of dy :

nainrte, black powder, and other dan-gerous explosives, without the loss,of a single life, says a'railroad as-sociation. • •

L. J. BRENNAN

^ B R E N N A NPlumbing, ]

• CKTOn

"Tanning

The Mothers' Club: of Boy ScoutTroop 82 met Monday night at thePublic Library under the directionof Mrs.. O. B..Reid, president. .'

, - Quintaplets Very BareMedical statistics ,show that. -Medical statistic* ,«how that

quintuplets are born once in 41,600,—000 times'; quadruplets once in 747,-000 instances; tripIeU once in. 7,103,7and twics once in evety 87 cases;

WDd Life BeforeMore (than 1,000,000 acres of

Louis&ha^-AlSansasTand Texas landtoo steep or tto-etoded fof~cultiv»-tipn have been plamed-in^trees »

a fixture timber crop' wild life.

Shade and Ornamental -" Thees AsjSifhi New. Rolp

1 Tlic. couiltry's- lirge shaqje; and'Ornamental trees, .which longjhaveplayed . an. aesthetic part in theArr.eriran way. of life, may soon as-sume'nn even more important role.

Arid that- is from thc standpointof camouflage . . ;' protecting in-dustrial centers, army camps, roadsand residentiaj/urea.s: from enemy

' The tree/expert, Dr, E. PorterFelt, director of the Bartlett Treeresearch; expressed satisfaction atthe foresight of several industrialplants which already have "begun toutilize' trees in the design. of theirgrounds—particularly several warproduction plants in- Connecticut.These^jmportaht - factories, pouringout implements of warfare from as-sembly lines. Have systematizedtree plantings of maple, elm andhard oak • during the past severalyears for camouflage purposes. .

"Examples of this kind should becopied more wfdely," he maintains."Trees are important not only fortheir, direct protectiiia...ef.camps.aridairfields from aerial attack, but fortheir shelter value when troops maybe forced to scatter from open roadsduring bombing raids.". . . t ..- Thir stately elin is without pei»r;»a ria'lurpl enmourage. Pin" oak,'

.Etorlet oak. andr.ed oak are desir-able'guardians of-'fKe iind propertyin the Kast,. he asserts. ,Kor thei-entral"stat'e's; liie"so"ft hfaple*Ts par-'ticularly- good,.'while; in the West hea'dvises box eider arid ..Chinese ei'rriare advisable. . , '- .

:

mid tiled bath, steam heat coal IJlred,- all. in-good, condition. See it!thnuigh.yolir own broker-<>r

J."C. MULFORD- COMPANYRealtors .

214 Park Ave. . I'LalnllcId ii-5l«)0f . - , . - • . - ; __ ^ _ . _ ' . _ _ _ ! _ _ _ _ „ j COMPANION-NUKSE, white, •KU50WESTFIEI.D— .b'IQ"Mayc St. — A' .years old; for elderly 'Invalid Indy,

small cash payiiient 'and-f $02.50;" Phone CRanford' 0-01.14. '' tfnxmtiily to'pay-tuxes,.interest, ftreinsurance and reduce, the mort-gage', buys this six room Coloniallioine with tiled kitchen, tiled ball

OLD furniture, for sale. Call Thurs-day nhd Friday afternoons, 7Washington Place, Cr.inford.

KNGL1SII 'coach and I b;(thinctte,both for $8; alsiy oib. All| in good-condition! . 221 Vfalnut 'Avenue,

_^. tTWP QOli * 1.6_tiii.'V, f.oi conditmn.

Call ill 23 Oak L.uic, oi phoneCliunford fi-10II0-W and-ask forFrpd Dalsain, ji

THRKR Inirnc'r RUS Kingc, baby crib,2ilnio»t new. Htiosur kitchen cabi-net. . Larson,' 119 North Avenue,Vt'cs.!,, Crnnforcl.

.-.. "'Dried'Vocabulary '",.•\liiAn article discussing, -soine ofthe opportunities in ;f0od drying',now opening for farm! co-operatives. JHarrj* C. Hensley of tjieiFarm Crcdj

"it ""adminislratiori"" mciitiohs . themeanings" of several of the wordsoften.used in, describing these prod-

'. U C t S . . . . . ' . . •• ;" -

• The terms most commonly used todescribe dried produces are Indlca-

word .dirarTndiDates drying byany. means; "»un-dried" Indicatesdrying without artificial heat. - "De-hydrated" and "evaporated'! signifythe use of artificial heat. "Pehy-drated" implies mechanical circula-tion of arllflclal heat, while "evffpo-

j.VOUNO girl for general- houseworklive days a week, Monday to Fri-day froin 4 P. M. io 8-P.-M. CnllCRanford 0-2285. -'•..

shower, 2 cor Karage. Ready for];__. . . - .immediate occupancy. See it thruj SALESLADIES wnnted, ijo- cxperi-ybilr own broker or •' .,''(• • - i ' 'enco noeeKsttry." .Full or part time:

. t r . • « m T . r n i m ; M i . D . « v Afa 17 to 50 Tclopii W E t. J.' G. MULFORD \ COMPANY'' RealtorsI Ave.. ••: PLainflcId 0-S800

y17 to 50.2-3570.

p r me:Tclopiione WEst-

J 10-lj

^rated"; refertjriore^particularly^to,the use: of artificial heat In drlert.|which-depend for their air circulation on natural draft,.

* . " • ' • ' ' ; J ' - '•' . • . } ' • • , , , ' ; , ' ' ; ' ' •

; ' . - ' • " ' - • ' . - W b a s i a i t . • • • • ; - ' , ' . - , v . . "••There's, a new mascot at the

medical department of the Orlandoair base in Florida—a cal,' nameof Leukocyte Lymph Ha'emophyliiiIII, or "Here, Pussy'^-for short. Theother day members, of the hospitalstaff noticed something strarigejnthe feline's behavior. And good rea-son. He Was dead drunk and havinga terrible time zig-zagging acrosstrie floor. Too curious, ns is histraditional wont, Mr. Cat had, tippedover.a bottle of'rubbing alcohol andC9mE,lout,..of.,..tM:experierice»;earry»log a splendid jag I - • • — • -

LOVELY home, all newly redecor-ated -both- inside and out; beauti-

, ful new tile bath (shower), largekitchen, all reconditioned withnew cabinets, linoleum and etc..

of Cratiford's '-most con»entcntand best locations. $6300.

HEINS, .17 North Ave.. E., CR. 6-0777

It Deadline for'^' Pr-oStable Orc.ht.rd T e-—'Abdut- P-i years -js-the-age-"dead-line "for "the trees.: in a prolltablea^ple-jvprcljard—50, perhaps,' in' thenorthern parts of New Englatiil,New ^ork, and Michigan, wheretrees develop sloWly. Hqrtjcultur-ists of the .department- of agricul-ture consider that most' commej-ciat orchards' should be replacedat least by the time they are 40years old,.

Fruit of the best size and .qualitygrows on relatively young tree's. ItIs difficult: to > spray large- treesthoroughly because of their height,expensive to prune in'e'm and tothin arid pick the fruit. Systematicrenewal' .of tlje orchard permitsplanting the best new Varieties, dis-carding old vareties.. that havj}.given away to better,ones,

Since it takes about six to'eightyears before, apple trees even be-gin to bear, nnd about 10- beforethey bear- heavily, one-fourth of thelife of the' trees is over- before theyare good .producers. Therefore agrower practicing 'Systematic re-newal ha'a about pne-fouirth of hisacreage under-10 years of age allthe time., As that one-fourth comesinto bearing an equal .number ofwbrri-piit: trees' ajre removed andnew stock planted1 near—though notin exactly-the same planting spots.Sometimes "Ihe young trees areplanted between older trees whenthe orchard is about 35 years old.F l th ldthe orchard is about 35 years old.Five years la'ter the old trees come

Glass Boots Aid Circulation- •. In the. Cincinnati General hospitalyou may see a 'patient here, andthere lying inbed and wearing enor^mous glass boots.. Tjieir function ismuch thc same as that of the "iron

[• lung'"- and heips-iff: rcstore"e)rcula-'" t i o n . , . - . . . - : • ' - ' . • - . • • • - • ' •

out, when1-the youngneed the space.

grow' to

-'.. HOC von :• 3 room apartment ......$55.

8 rooni house ^...'...$70.|__7_room-house^,.;. ..$100.—

8 room houMf ..,.$100.Larger houses up to $140. per'month. - . ,-;

THOMAS MacMEEKIN3 North Ave., E., Cranford, N. J. U, REAL ESTATE USTINGSHAVE BUYERS FOR

ilOUSEWORKEn, assist with twochildren. Sleep in. $40. PhoneCRanford fl-0541-J.

WANTED-i-Part time maid,'9:30 to2, no Sundays. Small adult family;apaitoUGllenWd0

GENERAL houseworker in goodhome in Kenilworth, Separateroom, Sleep in. Call' CRanford8-2771. . >

sAT"sACItlPICE, Bipokfiiit set, Queen|/\Annc liuflei arid tea wagon; Gen-

' cKH Electric rcCriKorntor; four pos-ter Bed; odd-chalis, Lathe and Jig

." Hiivv. fllJ. Linden Place.. Tel. CRan-ford 0-ll)?3rR.'-

T A S y c w fall hats-gayoff the face stylv? — Pompadours,high crowns. Many, of those stun-ning huts come In Navy; also othernDw.Bhncles—. Australian urt'on,

rSalute blue, . bl.iek anp\brown."Prlpes i$1.05 to $7 05. iHfihV,58 Elm Street, Westfl'eld (nexKloJarvls' Drug ^tore). " 10-8

TltESli pggs riha "all kinds of cllick-"'MM. Delivery service. • Sloat'sFarm; WEstflield 2- 4333?" tf

RELIEF cashier. Apply CranfordTheatre, Cranford, N. J.

STEADY or part time, .refined posi-tion for woman who needs' a goodincome. References and car hejp-ful. No soliciting. Box-528, Cran-ford Citizen and Chronicle.

TEEN and Young Debs' wear. Thenew fall line is here. Edith Hill.51O.,.EaaL,Braa* Street,.. WBrtfleld-2-1410. Open-Monday and Fridayevenings. _ tf

FULLER Brushes. For totth bnishes,-houschold brushes, poHthcs, waxes.

. Call ar write L. A. McKee, II Ar.llnKton Road, Cranford. N. J. Tele-phone CRanford 0-17SB-W. tt

GENERAL housewortcen, with refer-ences, Mrs. Moffett'i Employmentn n v i , u u i t n a run H t a i u t n - enccs, jars, moaett's Employment

TIAL PROPERTY — It will pay I Agency, 231 Elmer Street, Westneid.<;y'ou to list your houses with u»; Phone WEstfleld 2-0708.; you , . _

for sale or- rent. We have a Ionwaiting list. 'ARTHUR N. PIERSON CORP.

37 Elm Street, Westneid "Tel. WEstflcid.2-4B48, or eve-

•, nlngs Coll CRanford 6-1184.

APARTMENTS FOR RENTPHREE_JargejrpomS, ;bath^hcat, ,;hoL'" wStcr, •olcctjrlir'refrigerator and

garage. Adults only.. J55.0O. 11North Ave., W. •: Phone CRanfordffilOBO.- ' . • " . • • ' .-••

DRESSMAKING" - 'DRESSMAKING, tailoring, and al-

terations. Ladles' Mown materialfnado up. Prices reasonable. Mrs.A. 6 , Anderson, 222 North Ave., E.,Cranford. ."'' 10-1

: FUBBIER .. •A. KANTNER, established1900. New

coats and scarfs for sale. Rcmodel-Jng and .repairing high grade fucs.118 Walnut Avenue. Phone" CRan-

•fprd 0-1878. -..--"- .'.," " #'.'' "tf

THREE room apartment, refrigeration,"fine location. Adults. Lfghhousekeeping. $35. i Phone CItanfdTrS5B50W '

CARE OF CHILDRENATTENTION — working, mothersi Children "taken care;of by the day

Trained workej-^Iarge playground.'. —supervised play.-"Prices.reason-

able. Phoric" WEstfleld 2.-4585.

TAILORINGEXPERT tailoring, cleaning-.

pressing at reasonable.prices. Suitsmade to .order. C. A. Peltier, 5Eastman Street, Cranford. ,tf

-• ' W.V MAGAZINES'SUBSCRiPTIONS to aU Periodicals

f . both new and renewals. Pub-lisher1 special offers filled. AlsrAVON PRODUCTS sold. TelephoneCR. 6-0980. Miss C, B? Weldin, 18.Berkeley Place. Cranford t)

. ELECTRICIAN iLICENSED ELECTRICIAN — House

wiring, fixtures,' repairing in allbranches.- Fluorescent -fixtures.

DANIEL J. HEVBURWRes. 9 Burnslde Ave., CRan. 0-0907.

FURNACE BEPADUNO^WARM air 'furnaces repaired regard-

less of condition. Work guaran-teed. L'. Bertolctt. Phone WEsUfleld 2-3084-R. '.'. .tf

MOVWO—STORAGE—TRUCKINGLONG distance moving. Fireproof

storage,' packing, crating. Agent*Allied. Vans. SIsser Bros., Inc.,Somervllle, Plalnfleld, New Bruns-wick. ~T

LET us estimation any of your mov-ing or stomge problems Mde

u m vModern

UPHOLSTERY—DECOBATINGUPHOLSTERER, decorator, curtains,

slip covers, shades, cabinet workand also aU furniture repair.. FredKantner & Son, formerly wlth.W.iiaumgarten, 45 South Union Ave-nue. Phone CRanford 6-0893. .. tt

WANT TO IMPROVEYOUR. HOME?

NO'DOWN FATHKNTUP TO 5 TEARS TO PAT

We do Carpentry. Bfasoiiry, Ex-terior PaJniimr, Interior Deeor-atuuTf PlumbuMr, Waterpnofiaf ,BooSng. Siding, Sheet MetalWork. .No Job Too Small or Too Large;

Estimates Cheerfully Given

PARAMOUNT^E

taELP#ATTMalePORTER wanted. - Apply Cranford

Theatre, Cranford. x

MEN for factory y/Qtk, as laborersand : mechanic • helpers. Bus' todt?or; The Antcricnri Laundry Ma-chinery, Co., 7th Street and Mon-roe-Avemje--Kcnilwortli. .• i

D'lE AND TOpLMAKERSJigs, fixtures,: gauges, plastic moulds

ALL AROUND MACHINISTS ;

• . BENCH HANDS • ; . : ; .

- ~ ' SET-UP MEN -"- M i l l i n g Mafchines. -

TURRET LATHE OPERS. •Wnrner & Swascy,- Potter &-Johnstbn

. INSPECTORS.

FINAL SALE:—Remaining merchan-dise of Westneid Electric and OlftShop at 84 Elm St., over Mur-phy's. Good selection gift paper,table mirrors, Christmas treelights, Lionel, greeting cards. Chafebrass and copper gifts, wood andleather goods, miniatures, Fosforiaand-Duncan and MUIei* glassware,'milk, glass. Coors dinner ware,baby dishes. Also small lampshades, odd lighting fixtures,globes, switch plates, refrigeratorevaporator trays,,, lamp fittings.Pottery lamps, less shade, formerly$1.05, now '50c." Also open Fridayand Saturday evenings. TelephoneWEstfleld 2-4224. Verna A. Jacob.

- T - • --loir"

.Tool, floor, flr»t piece'< B - ' ,

: • • . • • • • : • • . - • . ; - •

:

MILLING MACHINE OPERS.. ' - • ' . / • " ' • . • • • • " . . . ' . • •

. jn^ECTBICIANS .

Those novyemployiEdTn 'waF'. work will not be considered. .

NATIONAL TOOL t MFGi CO.12th St., Kenilworth, N. J.

SCREENED top soil; well rotted' cowmanure; lawn sod; delivered any-

'where.. Call and see quality andquantity,. Alfred E. Haessig. Tele-phone WEstfleJd 2-0859, WEstfleld2-3222-J.^ »-• ' U

JUMBLE' STOREWo ' hoed children's woolly clothes,Any little these and those,Coats and shoes aSd underwear,Bring whatever you can spare. /Phone CRonfprd 8-2047."

REAL ESTATE WANTEDWANT to buy 5 or 0 room modern—house—OF—bungalow, Cranford or

Westfleld, Have 1940 Buick sedanfor down payment. P. O. Box 268,Cranfdrd. .

WOBK WANTED—MateHANDY man, 65, strong, wants work.

Phone CRanford 6-2092-R, ' tf

GARAGE FOR BENTGARAGE for rent, corner of Clare-

mont Place arid Cranford Avenue..Phone CJIanford 6-0607.

MAN 'wants work—-"lawns, garden,concrete or any work except plas-tering. Lorenzo' DiFabio, 45 Meek-er Avenuer" Telephone CRanfordC-08O6-W. . " 8-tq

SHADES, VENETIAN BUNDS'AWNINGS, suades, Venetian blinds,

slip covers, drape*. "C. C. Down*.TeL WEit 2-0161, Home phoneCR.6-018L

PAINTINO AND DECORATING .X-.h,. CRANEj: painter and decorator;

25 Grove Street Phone CRanford8-2612rJ for etUmates. ; - -,!["M

JOSEPH VARS1NSK1 —. FtteUag-Decorattnf; -IJoyd's, TUbsot andImptruu-mllpapers. Pboa CRford e-MM^t;^^

LOSTlast week, .black Gordon Set-

ter, white chert. Answers toPenny." Anyone knowing where-

BANK Book No. 19805 of the Cran- ;' ford trust Company, "Cranford; *s

N. J.'i The finder' is requested ?ti»Vf• return it to the bank.' IJraotreJvS

storedibefore the l7thJ aayvbf Od-;-£ . , .•C tbbeTf^l^luappUeatloii^^-sWfi:^!

made ,to. Uife bank^ foB ^Sx&fci•v book.-•:' -',;'::;•'• \:'':-\:_:^?£$&WU&

BSTIMATISoBVituning % o r t *

:vlBsJ1ent!»oA:i«i

q p ^ p: teousjnen. Agent*

fne^ g t nRobbin* •: AUSon, Int

Sheepfamily ha* his

but he's riot tike*

:-•'-i-.--'": SPKNCftE COKSSTS;iSffi«:|s:;iGIRDLES, Brissieres, Belts, Surgical - ' .,

;CorseVMHS.: GHACK:K.iMOt^x!a|ig*«Registered, 6pen«r Conetier«.;,lW. ;, w.CBanford *-1008.7'*exk*!*^Ms£«>t§Kti

i E f ^ * ^ ^ * ^ 1 ' '" "'~"~'"'

• ' % — - 4-

is ~

Notes About Men,In the Arriied Forces

THE* CBANTOBD CITIZEN AND

WaTera of 210 Maple place, has been

Nashville, Tenn.~ Also stationed atNashville is Charles Evers.

George toeltlec of 40 \VaJl street

fcJMWieserver and wllfrepprtselected as one of a group to undergo'to- South Bend, Ind., where-he willintensive training as a pilot at Max-well Field, Ala. He is with the Ar-my Air Corps and has been at Nash-ville, Term, taking classification

attend a schol for ensigns at Notre'Dame. He is a graduate of CranfordHigh School and attended Scton Hallbefore enlisting

-- Hidgel-rCr Polk, son of Mr, andMrs. Harry C. Folk of Linden place,now an upperclassman at the ArmyAir Force officer candidate school at

'Miami Beach, Fla, has been madewing adjutant. He is the-sixth rank-Ing man in the schoof, which has alarge enrolment. Clark Gabte is a

~ -1. squadron*serges[ni in'the' afne-'-fiaS'r,"and the' local man pays him a glow-

loshes, and arctics, and wome-A andchildren's boots, he pointed out,not to be rationed.

ment the program will begin with aflVe-day freeze of all sale? of therationed footwear in order to allowthe trade to take and file the re-quired inventory and to secure nacessary forms from local boards.. The dealer has until Saturday, Ocfo6er*J0L(o fife' his Myratffiry~Saroinue?wcst,""was graduated lasi'Ktday

from the Oflleer's Candidate School with the rationing board.at Camp Lee, Va He received his jsecond lieutenant's commission in thrquarlcrmaster corps,

ei Surgical Dressingirtcrmaster corps, and has been IZ^ " ~ £ " I T .igncd to duty at Camp Butner,, KoOHl O p e n E v e n i n g sih N C L t D l i 1Raleigh, N. C Lieut. Dooley was In-1

ducted March 7,, 1041, and has spentids. eatau&enstcEatJCianpJjBes. A

..... _ „._.. giaduate of Cranford High School,Ing tribute, stating that he is .one of .was associated with flls brother,the hardest workinK Tenschool and asks-no fnvois

ne o f , ,-,'„ t |1 0 Charles E. Dooley, in the Dooley Fun-ANo in enil Service prior to his induction.

IH I Lthe same class are two other Cran-'Hc is a rrtember of the-Llons Club,ford men, Joseph Luvcland, \vlirt"fr, a*'AI«o graduated in the same class wassquadron "commander, and Baird Paul M NJckenson, son of Mr andSimpson ,who is a sergeant. |Mr3 Paul M. Nickerson of 114>Clare-

Pvt.'jamos Hoflowcll, son of M r \ m o " ' P l a c e Bo'h men wereUn theand Mrs James Hollowell of 121 ,"samc pUtoon but did not know theySpring Cardcn street, is now with,were-fellow Cranford residents untilthe Aviation Cadet Detachment o l , B r a d u a t l o n d a v Lieut NickersonMiami Beach, Fla. " | was platoon leader for the graduation |

Second Lieut William R Krodnck.i ce"*cmofiy and Lieut Dooley led theson of Mr and Mrs William J' Fred- P I j l o o n o n maneuvers. Mrs Charlesrick of 34 West Holly.stiect, sla- E Dooley of Cranford and Mrs. A. Etioned with the Maintenance Battal-i V l l l a r d ^ Port. Washington attended

The Red'Cross Surgical Dressingrooms will be open for evening vol-

ning October 5. The-rooms are lo-cated on'the,third floor of Clevelandschool and will be open from. 7:45

are requested to useto 10 p. m.

Volunteersthe North Union avenue entranceand to wear a wash, dress or smock,remove nail polish- and. bring a cov-ering for their heads. .

Staff AssistanceClass Opens Friday

A new Red Cross Staff Assistanceass will start at ID' t

Findi Comfort\n DefenseJobs

teresting that the day passes beforeyou realup it."_ - , »

Classes in simple decimals, frac-tions and calculations are' general forall mechanical courses but these are

another related subject that is taughtfor almost any type of course

Mrs Hitchcock- now worksdays a -week, nine hours a day in herinspector's position* She expects towork harder and for longer hours

her life. She plans to have to getto work in fair weather or.fouL Shefeels, however, that this is. her way

f bearing arms, ofT working side byside with- the men of. America in••reserving the "democracy she en-loys.

"There are thousands of women,"she declares, "who have- the time,strength and ability and who can, by•xertlng a bit of initiative, contrib-ute definitely to National Defense inhis manHier 11 She urges them to

follow her experience In preparing

Send-off HeldFor Inductees

m

Ion, 10th Armored 'Division,. FoBenning, Ga., is taking a' course" I;Ordnaricr Scryico nf.Aberdeen Proyinfi Ground! Aberdeen.MdJ •

V\t. Arthur Johnson, son of Mand Mrs, Charles M. Johnson* of 3

"John street Is now-stationed nt'.CnifiJlaan, Riverside. Cal.

P-.1.' Joseph DiTuUio, formerly oKeesler Field. Miss., is now stntioiiewith Hie Air Corps at' New Orleans; La. i

Cpl. William,: DiTullii) of 15 Woodside-Place is now In Kntflanriwaf •- formerly; stationed at ForBriV-rc'S. C. "

Cpl..-.;rjjudley- W. Robinson of For' Dupont, Del., is visitin",' his parent?

J!r. and Mrs. "W. W. Iliibinson'of 1'Wall street. Cpl. Robinson, is orspeci;il leave prior, to.going.to FiBenning, Ga,. as a candidate of theOITlcers Training Sehnl. He leavefor K"ort Bennlng on Sittui day.

Pvt,.-I'eter J.-Mar];ey, son of Mi-ami MnfRfRtiiiel-Markey of 2 A.rnetPlace, is now' stationed at DunrmField,-.San Antonio-Texas,- He is inthe ground,crew of the ail* enrps. •

Dr, M; D; Pearl, formerly of 205North avenue, wrst. lias- returned tNewport News, Va., after n brieffurlough here during -which hoclosed 'hfs"-vcterinnrian- onlre. Dr,Pearl, h'drst lieufeiiant, is now portveterinarian at'Newport News. Heformerly was slntionefl at iDrooklyn

Seaman Robert.Ej Klunder, son oMr. ;and Mrs. Simon .Kllinder lif aDenmnn plncf, has ciknpleled hisbasici Nnvhl training a I the If. 'S.No*l:arTraiiiiri-j'-StallpnJln"Ncwp6r.t1'R. I., and vv"ill attend n .school forradiomen lifter tin IB days' leavewhich he is Kpcndtnu here. He is ngraduate.of Cranford High SCIKMII

• * ! ^ r . £ j ! £ ^ a ^ o u M ^ ^Icties, I'riorvtu- liis enlistment hewas employed os n circuit draftsninnby the Western Electric-'Company!

John ,J. Kundra.t of 82 BUrnsiilravenue j h a s pra'dua ted from the.School of the Recruit of the .O^>fi.Naval Troimng Station in Newport,R. I-.'3-nnd. Is on. a short leave beforeencofliiHj'; in • ii-^MaclinlslsV. Mates'ncliool/upon • his. rcturriv' He is aKrhdiiatc of Thpmas Jefferson High" nool, Elizaljeth, and was employed,eforo his enlistment, as a mechanic

with the Sincer Mnnufnetuflng Com-pany. His wife is the former MariorfWhite. ;-' ; . •• . . yT

Erling; Arnesen,, Jr., son of Mr..ind Mrs. Erjing Arneseri 6f;23 South"Unjoh avenue,- and Andrew Marko-wich.of 4 Hale: street, who hnvebeen serving as Army Air Cgrpstechnical instrm-Krs at ChariutoFields 111., are'' now stationed at

the graduation exercises at Camp Lee.Waltef E:"Cooper, Jr., son of, School j j

Trustee and Mrs.- Walter^. Cooper ofall Central'avenue, is enrolled In theair corps reserve and is taking apilot's training ioyrso at. AlbrightCollege, Reading, Pa", -He formerlyattended Lafayette University wherehe studied aviation for two years

Will RationRubber Boots

(CniUlltmv*' frmn pnpj

U-otn Local Board S, Cranford, Gar-wood, Clark, and Wi'nfleld, receiveda municipal send-off yesterday morn-ing m the Cranfprd Theatre at 10o. m. They left* an hour later forFort- Dix, «oing first to Elizabethr,by.'btt 't'TBS-rif-TlTr* *"™ra'

Brief talhs were given by H. R.Winckler, chairman of Mayor Oster-heldt's send-off committee, Llnford B.Hazzard, chairman of Local Board 5,and. the Rav. Walter C Pugh, pastorof. St. Paul's Evangelical and Re-•forroed Church, Garwood.

j n K ^ , ykit donated by the women of the fourcommunUies.'cigarettes and an Amer-ican Legion handbook! ' *

The. men were inducted1 two weeksago. following physical examinationsin Newark. «

Two Fined onDisorderly Charge

Vincent Tono of \\2 North avenue,west,1 and Richard Merwin of 560Ninth avenue, west, Roselle, weretaken into custody by Sgt. GeorgeRosendale and Patrolmen George'Ward Monday for throwing stones at

fined andGeorge

costs.

W. J. Kersens of Garwood for overrtirae parking, Murray Daniels ofCranford for permitting a dog to runat large, and Ruth Worth of Plain-field for impropar parking.

C«^WB*.ppxovedT;" the J

fense system wasWinckler, commander of" thedefense forces.

de-t"

local

PROMPT DELIVERYMADE - • ' ,

Lehigh Coal & Supply Co.11 NORTH AVE., E.

x fcRANFORD

AGENTS FOK

JEDDO-HIGHLAND COAL'. • -:.. C O K E ( .'._ ,

STOVE —and — NUT

Type 4: Be)!ow-kncei|ieU;ht liKlitbootsi - . ; . . . ' . - / ' •

(Types 3 and 4 are siihil.ir foiweight. Kind of work performed bythe applicant will determine winchtype he iselifiible for.) .-.;

Type 5: Pacs and bootees, ininches-or, higher. All Inced IUIJfootv/ear of this hclgh.t, and booteetypes with or. without laces,

Tj*l>.e 0: Pacs, bootees, and rub-ber "w'O'fk shoes icss than 10 inchesh i g h . " . . . : • • • '•••

•-.Kligibi'lity for the six types is llm-ti'd to persons whose vrnrk is c<m-

iicctMl with the war effort, nc- withpublic health or Safety, tmd who re-quire rubber work shoes or lubbt-rboots for the .performance- of suchwork. Applicants who nre found

lidible will "be "required to tuin inTor salvago a pair of worn rubberwork shoes or rubber: boots whenVurchasliiK a new pnli;,wlth,n rjtion•ertlllrate.- . ' •• ••.".-..-': !•'.--In 'oullinjni! the-sinir-ic steus ofhe rijtionlxiK procedure, Mr. Kilmey%'iplifeizecl that "only, i-iicn's rubberivorfe shoes and rubber boots1 fiom4io six up would be rlitloned. Men's,women's and children's. rubbers,

, p irun. Nn ri-scrHiiliift .or'.nhnlt- lloor. Sllun'ix

t nlvv inmd In onoi-nunites nml 1IIH(4 "pvnna-. <»r-FREE circular*.

MINWA^

Johnston Paint Shop107-5 N. Union Aye. ;„.. Cr. G-25lO

75c ADOIRATIONSHAMPOO

$1 8lze PACQUCS'SHAND CREAM .

SI WOODBURY MATCHEDMAKE•UP

class will start atin Cleveland School, it,was an-

d dfor a trade through-ithc proper au-

the 'street lights, on Riverside drive.Crosby, chairman of the Staff Assis- to.-become a registered, \yorkerset out to replae v i t l factd

They were' fined $5" each by Judgearid to set out to replace vital factdryh l i

yhelp with training to keep ihc homef t hi

Monday night on a disorder1^-con-dt hand begin training tomorrow morn- duct Charge.

Walter Nietzel of 8 Cherokee road,with wnr.fronts before

even $89!

Frankly, now, yow didn't expect it this year, did you? A sale with the

magnitude of an annual event. . . at a time like this? But, here it is, in

spite pf what's happened to the wool and fur markets, the skyrocketing

cost of labor! Every coat is made of the same fine1 woolens-you're

accustomed to. Every fashion is authoritatively NEW! Border coats,

. .t"Xed? C-°°ts: shawls to the waist, neck-to-hem panels!, lt.i> thejargest'_

and one of. the finest collections of luxury-coats we have ever

assisVnbled. Qome . . .. feel the fabrics,, examine the meticulous

tai ojing, caress the costly furs. KNOW that here is an annual sale

thai trings ypu values extraordinary . . . coats you'll live in and,love

for tt e duration f • -

TOMS (6 Vitamins and S Minerals), 50c Blie FREEwilh Urte SUe; BOTH for „ . .

AIJCA-SELTZER,I*r*-e 60c SUe

1.6949c

§Jiie(s Drug Store102 Walnut Avenue, Cranford

^Qpp: irnlon

These Luxury Wools* Forshnjfln• JuUiard* Botanny• Oscar Kahn• Stroocka* wool interlininfi

The New 1942 Colors. All the beautiful new- blues,green, brown,'beiges, reds;plenty of blacks, too!

Broad and "

West Jersey Sts.,

Elizabethy

THE-SE lUJXURY.FURS• leopard '•

• ' ocelet

"> • silver fox

• tipped skunk

• white fox

* • polo fox

• blue fox

• real mink'

• sheared beaver

• -raccoon

• cross fox . •

• bleAdeisable *

Sizes for All• misses. 10 to 20• women's 38 to 44

• halfrslies 14% to 24H

3 Waysto.Buy1—Pay small deposit now . .

balance November l i t . -^Pay a smaU deposit with

kly or m t h lPay a smaU deposit withweekly or monthly par--ments. •

3—Use oiir regular Charge'or Junior Charge Account

To Phone from- j Cranfordask-operator

. for WX 5252-L(No Toll Charge)