our airtrtura. pttraalu th«at carteret, n. j., ffuday
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With ft*Vm!\Pint
, ,n A.trid. All TlWOf Th« Town With Y*ur
Home-Town P«p*r
X\Vf--No. 15
Af Value-Shop The AitYfc* UrgMt AB4 BMI p A3tmhm En Th* Art* An Our
AirtrtUra. Pttraalu Th«at
CARTERET, N. J., FfUDAY, JULY 18, 1947 PRICE THREE CENTS
SweetnessAND
Light, , , M ! M . S E. GREGOttY
details of Derby DayComplete list of Entries and Numbers, Other
Pertinent Data on Big Race is Furnished
_*.
;,,,i,.i,iod to Mr. Joseph, i,,, owns an earnest ddn-
if .loRun in his adverttse-•..,! nr sells "good trtns-„ M(1i merely used cart'*| r t , , ,nil achievement In', „,„,!, for many phllo-
,.,,,s with which I am,i11 |n my casual conrer-
,1, „;. who cherishes almost, 11S his reputation the
I'IK'IP Joe" which h«j. invites new friends VJd,, |:i when addressing him,,miiy or profeaioniUy,
... nun i-nuntry a mere slip, .,,,, I'niRnd. He has made,' .;iv since, and mad* it
,,,,1 iTspeotfUlly Mid—I; ,,ti, some slight tlng« of.,: ,,rop.s,t. Joe, who h*t«i,„,,,„ with a fervor which„, „«•„ . is definitely a o w -,,,,mhrr Of a O*plt»Mlt*C
, musically Inclined, Joe;in,i m clays pwrt when we,,iiir more time, we playedincts up In Joe's |»rsfe
i, empirical otaaervaUoru,,(,,,usais of Kant and Kdne
ihn superficial explorers„. i ,.uim of human reawmlMh.nnnsiiiiis. i haven't played
,,, nuch, exofpt with a„; ;\ui, in over twenty years
,,. nirnd Joe U learning to:i:i ninnpet and also the; ihniiKht once I-recognlwd
.,!!•• waltz as we romped;:!, ,,ui casually arranged re-,., 1,1 it joe said later be had,i. t.iwio at that particular„; and WAS only ad llbblng., niiiii wondered since just•in hell I was playing, be-i lid know that any ap-
n relationship between my,,iv my manual dexterity and,ii!iinr's intentions was atrlct-
CARTKRET—Followinc art the pwtlnent detaib in eonaecttonwith the Wtinlnt tomorrow of The CARTERET PRESS Soap BWDerby, wtth the Economy Garac« Company u co-tpont«r and theIJoiu Club co-operating:
PLACE: PershbK Avenue hill, with startlnr ramp located at tK»thfe junction of Roosevelt and Pershlnj Avenues. , ,
TIME: The Ant trials will ret under way promptly at »:M P. N.L U t OF ENTRIES
CLAS8 ACar number Driven by Am
A-S William Makwliuhl MA-4 Monty Bfbdon 14A » KaUgHvka 11A-l WUMMB Murray ISA t ioaeftk Klraly IfA-8 WHUatn MMelbv rtA-S Andrew KMca 14A-lt v Richard Btahrlti , 1 4A1S Richard Leahy A P
Robert Farias " 'fffi vJacob Ferenca l * ' iAlfred Tampa . > l i
CLA88B
22 Garteret Boys to Vie TomorroIn Annual Soap Box Derby; WinnerjTo Race Against U.S. Best at Akron, |At Dinner Installing Matefy Lions Club Head
A-15A-tiAM
6-1B-*B-10B-llB-14B-18B1JB-J»•-19Bi t
WINNER:
Raymond WhnaWilliam OlndaJoseph MelickWilliam SchmidtLarry ParkasRobert BishopLawrence SteflelJehn-Joe SarikLewis Kasha
The winner wilt be decided by a neeTh w n e r irlrUtt In eaeh of the two elaiwes.
PMZK8: Pint Prize—trip to Akron, O. for four day* to participatein the Sjat»on»l flnala; plaque, awarded by the Chevroltt Motor Co.;Wrist wal«h, awarded by the Chevrolet Motor Co.
Winners of Clam A and Class B—Pen and Pencil set awardedby Shell Oil Co.
Second prtw In final*—Special award by The CARTERET PRS88.Additional prizes—Gold, silver and bronze tie clasp for ftrit, Moond
and third place* In Clui A and Class B; fl-volt PoweHite will be(Iven to owner of best up-holstered car.
Winner of national finals In Akron, O. on August 17 will reotive afour-year scholarship to any college In the country; second-placewinner In Akron will receive a Chevrolet Fleetmaster sedan.
Mrs.JakewayAssuhiesPresidencyOf Middlesex Legion Awdtiary
Capacity Crowd is Expected to SfceThrilling Event on Pershing Ave.Lions, Co-operating, to Have Tag
CAKTERKT -Thp big day is here!Tomorrow afternoon at 2:30, on the I'fjrshing
hill, 22 ('Rrteret youngsters will compete in theSoap Hox Derby sponsored by The CARTERET Fwith the Kcnnomy (l«r«tfp Co. as co-sponsor. After'of preparation, i\\cne hoys will ra-cr each other fofhonor of jrninij to Akron, 0. to compote in the nftttfinals JIIKI un opportunitii to win a four-year 6oUt|
™ crllnla retain Prrtm all *•«
Council DemandsDebris Removal
Approximately 75 people attended the Installa-tion dinner held by the Carteret Lions Club In thePhoenix Grill, Clara Barton Monday night, AlbertMatefy was Installed as president by A. ClaytonHollendef, District Governor. Shown above arcthose seated at the head table and from left to
right ire Mrs. Mater>> Mrs. Alfred WohlcemuOi,Mrs. Robert P. Mulvaney, Mr. MuJvanty, Mr. llol-Innder, Mr. Wohlgemuth who Is the retlrlni presi-dent, Mr, Matefy, Aufust J. Perry, Georfe Kovakand Gerald Parella. After the dinner, dancingwas enjoyed. (Carteret Press photo by Lafcis.)
Day' SlatedBy Ukrainian Club
j
and
liir .suui ui aii artist alld is an addict of theh rnntury poeti aa welli 11 innpet lmpreaurlo atr\ vi could Quito ncdtiolte•Hie tendenctej with any-vm>i! as a used oaf lot,
, joe finds all the buy-s.'llcrs contributing not
thewelfare but
scope of hit un-
, but I suspect thatto the compelling
survival that made Joe1 to «ive the Public Serv-
e d oas Company aIIHS now, and always
| >mw ,i string of electric bulbs'"••I .u-ross his used cajr lot
| I - I W Avenue aa well u• iihiniinatlon 1Q hla laTSfe.II 'iiiniv that he could lener-•• <>wn juice cheaper than'"i'i '"iv a from Publte flerv-1 IIKKIHI up a dynaitto,
™isted. ot a 1912iiiinitiir, a p ^
engine (or k reaeon-a quantity of halr-
second-h*n« chew-t'.in and baling jrlrt. The
int yak for the engine' the dynamo, tty fKUa-i OIT the vim» and;<ud the rep-at tm'ap>« make It ><% lUU a
i j b T h ' '
' < - t . i J
' • ' " • • •
Bora DelegationSees Ceremony; Mrs.Gleckner Installed
CARTERET—A large delegationof Legionnaires and Auxiliarymembers attended the sixteenthannual conrention el the AmericanLegion and Its Auxiliary at WMtiAmboy on Saturday to *jltne« theinstallation of one of Its membersfes the President of the MiddlesexCounty American Legion Auxiliaryand attend the Legion session.
Mrs. Thomas Jakeway of Mat-thew Avenue, who has been veryactive In Legion and Auxiliarywork for a number of years was in-stalled at the Auxiliary session inthe Masonic Temple. Mrs. Jakewayhas held all County Offices in theAuxiliary and did especially goodwork as Child Welfare and Re-habilitation Chairman.
Also Installed at this sessionwas Mrt. Harry Qleckner of Lin-coln Avenue, as County Secretary.Mrs. Qleckner, too, has a veryoutstanding record In Legion work.
The Auxiliary session was con-ducted by Mrs. Evelyn Schulte of8ewaren, outgoing president andthe Installing Officer was Mrs.William H. Baker of Deans, NewJersey Department President.
William Bums of Sayrevllle waselected County Commander of theMiddlesex Legion whose sessionwas conducted In the Perth Am-boy Post rooms.
The County History Award waspresented to Carteret Unit^oi theAuxiliary.
Those who attended the sessionof the Legion and AuKmary andenjoyed the dinner and dancewhich followed were: Mi\' and Mrs.Thomasi Jakeway, Mr, and Mrs.Harry Oleckner, Mr. and Mrs. J.0 . Nevill, Mr. and Mrs. MichaelBofka, Mrs. Id* Cuttet. W n OlivePfennig. Mrs. Ursula fteman, Mr*.
S Separate Knights of ColumbusCouncils are Established Here
job. Thewinked,
madeJ<* soon ha4 a 1
but
• - .«j e (M
whole problem>Wl re-to puwto 8«rVtM, and
^ deeply.roptwLKjflld-m erstwhile cortotUtora
de-
Jane Cook, Mrs. CtartneeMrs. Mary Thorjl, Mr* C. oof Railway arid Mr. ahd Ml*. JdfrtnWiUon of Wilkes-Barre; MUt RuthQrun, Washington, p . C. titi Ar-thur Ruckriegel, Al BaUoh, MortisCohen, John Sidun, and FnncisCoughlln.
Girl Scouts are Invited
To Attend Rahway
CARTERET—TueMay, Wednes-day and Thursday of next Weekwill be the last opportunities forCarteret Girl Scouts tfl attendcamp In Rahway park. .(Wr 50girls already have w e w i M andthe bus will leave Carteret HighSchool at 8:30 in the (netting onthe camping days.
Mothers of the girl* 4f« urgedto assist at the Park. TrW» whohuve aided up to now »M Mrs.Edward O"Brion. Mr», MnlfcrnlnCzagkowskir Mrs. Peter WM*. Mrs.Joseph Babitsky, Mr». AndrewKoystlc, Mrs. Mai-y HlWnan andMrs. Edward Corrin. THI GirlScout leaders-are Mn. Qlg» Kl»i.v.Mrs. Helen Nemlsh and Mla» AnnNevill.
Local Group to be HostSunday; Baseball andField Events Slated
, C A R T E R E T- -The UkrainianSocial Club of Carteret will be hostto the Young Ukrainians of NewJersey and neighboring States atthe second annual Youth Day,Sunday.
A program of athletics *ill bepresented In the afternoon at theWalter B, O w h o l t Stadium altarwnreff a1 plcUtt will 6e held In therjRfatnwn Mvtnion ftiw park.
At 1:30 P. M., at the stadium,the Chester, Pa., Ukrainian SocialClub will meet the Carteret WeesIn a baseball game. Two houislater there will be a softball ellrrti-naton contest with Passaic, JfctseiyCity, Elizabeth and Allentown par-ticipating. Running and fieldevents will be conducted 111 theperiod between ball games.
At the picnic, music will Be p*rtt-vlded by the Oley Brothers, New-ark. Walter Wadlak and JohnKendzierskl are co-chairrrteh ofthe affair and they are being asslsted by Joseph Pakus, JohnRerlek, Joseph Terebetskl, Theo-dore Kaskiw, Eugene Wadiak, JohnSpoganU, Joseph Kawensky, Mich-ael Dobrowalskl, John Dobrowal-skl, Myron Bobcnchlk, Walter Bo-benchlk Joseph Klndzlerski, Mich-ael Bobenchik. Nicholas Wasylyk.John Masluck, Stanley. Masluck,Thomas Ginda, Steve Wuy, JohnLitus, Andrew Kaskiw Joseph Wa-diak, Joseph Palehonki, Alex Pale-honki, Walter Mynio.
Sul is (iiven 2 Days toClear Lots of Trash;Borough Then to Act
CARTERET A conference ofMayor Skiba and members nf theBorough Council last night de-
that unless Edward Sul re-
and'i
> feu to, talliitig theabout tbe
IthatOf
CALENDAR OFJCOMING EVENTS
writing.
JULY
and M.trttgrSt. Joseph's Ohuich.
Legion and Auxiliary.24-Meetlng, Carteret Civic League, 8 P. II., Boro Hall.27-Weddlng of Josephine DappUo and a m Kost, M. An-
S £ B » r ^ S c i 2 L M Vincent B. -Bt Anthony's Church, Port Reading,
i game for Carteret First Aid S<iuad at High BChooli Holy Family Nine va. Carteret Orloh*.f St Mary's Sodality, St. DemetriUi. Church-30_M?etlng of St Mary's
AUGUSTtlmefr""v 'lie too many
the'"utract to
be allsaid; but
because
little;1 "•'•'in uftordno
better tqwithin hj»
"'"' »'« more of'"i) him wjth
l v Jiw says you
2 Wills ProbatedOf Boro ResidentsMrs. Burns is Named as
Beneficiary B y H e rHuHband; Sous Shan
CARTERET—By tlie provisionsof the will oi James Burns, whodied on June 3, probated by Sur-rogate Frank A. Connolly, thewidow, Esther, will have use ofthe estate until her death, atwhich time it will be dividedequally between sons George andAlbert.
The will, dated May 8, 1945, waswitnessed by, Elmer.E. Brown andNellie Connolly.
According to the will of HelenKonchiewicz, her estate will goto her children. A son, Walter, wasbequeathed un additional $800which had been banked withouthis knowledge after he presentedIt to his mother.
The remainder of the estatewill be shared by Prank, who wasnamed executor, Helen, Antoin-ette, and Julia, The Will was datedFebruary 4, 1946, and witnessedby Ilmer B. Brown and HenriettaWel».
Each of Local Catholic
Churches Has a Unit;
Committees Selected
CARTERET — Carey Council,1280, Knights of Columbus, has in-stituted a decentralizing programto facilitate its operation in theborough by establishing separatecounoils in eacli of five local Cath-olic churches here.
Each of the five churches h whsti tu Courrcll orgarrKM. Mem-bers of these Individual courierswill automatically belong to theCarey Council. It Is felt that thisnew system will make the opera-toon of K. of C. affairs in theborough much easier.
The parent council In recentyears had become administrativelyunwieldly because of its increasingsize and the new move is expectedto provide a more direct Jystemof Knights of Columbus benefitstlvough the smaller parish coun-cils.
Ouiding the live smaller coun-cils wHl be H committee of CareyCouncil consisting of Andrew Hila,chairman of Catholic activities;John Neder, program chairman;,JB. O'Donnell. insurance; JosephMakkai, membership, and Michael
alinkas, publicity.Committees Named
The individual parish councilswill be In charge of the followingcommittees: Sacred Heart Church,the Rev. A. J. Sakson and FranqlsD'Zurilla, parish chairmen; Ed-ward MedveU, chairman of thelouncll, assisted by Andrew Baum-
garter, Apdrew Oalvanek andJohn Lashlk; Peter Slvon, insur-ance; Joseph Dolinick, member-ship, and Frank Dolinick, publicity.
St. Ellas' Church: The Rev. C.Roskovics and George Hila,
parish chairmen; Michael Abaray.chairman of council, assisted byMichael Seibert, George Gavaletzami Edward Lozak; Stephen Ha-mulak. insurance; George Skalau-ga, membership, and John Hila,publicity.
The Holy Family Church: TheRev. M. A, Konopka and WalterNiemiec, parish chairmen; CharlesUrbanskl, chairman of council, as-sisted by Edward Szymborski; Ed-
Board Maps PlansFor School Repair$7,500 Damage (Caused
By Fire; Recall Warning
By Olbricht on Ducts
moves the unsightly debris sur-rounding his home In the EastRailway area, that the Boro willorder the work done. Two dayswill be"afforded Sul to comply withthr mandate.
Although a meeting of the Coun-had been called to act upon a
resolution authorizing the Issuanceof bonds'to finance street repairs,only Mayor SkibR and three coun-cilman attended—Synowleckl, Po-tocnig and Leshlck—and hence Hquorum was lacking. This is thesecond time In two weeks thatCouncil business has had to bepostpon?cl because there were no'sufficient members present to conduct It. The absentees last nighwere Turk and Sleklerka, RepubMeans, and CougMin, Democrat.
Those who did attend, however,f a n ted A hearing to a group of
Preparations arehow bekig made by the Board ofEducation t©''repair the damagecmned by Suntfsy's flre In Colum-bus School and to nuke tho struc-ture safe according tb present-dayfire prevention measures.
The flre, which esused damage mm' Edward Schultz of the Rapid
. Ar- J!
scholarship Prom all reports,'"rars" which the boys hare :tills year arc the beat Inhistory of the big local event icompetition will be at a whlte-hdlpitch.
Mayor Stephen Sklba hasclaimed Saturday as "9M|tDerby Day" and, In conjuhe Lions Club will conduct a Ilay-the proceeds of which
used in the club's various iharttable and youth project*, Jan(tement.i of a tremeadouamount of the detail in oonnec*Ion with the Derby hat beHi;
handled by an able committee.under the chairmanship of C. P.yPerkins Mr. Perkins, who annual-'"ly takes an enthusiastic interest Inthe race, personally has inspectedmany of the entries' cars andwill be on lmnd tomorrow to directhe running of Carteret's most
Important sporting contest lotchildren.
The portion of Pershlng Avenue '• ifrom Roosevelt Avenue to thebot- <torn of the hill will be closed to •-traffic from noon on and all Pub-lie Service buses will be re-routed 'ofl this thoroughfare s<) that therace may be held. The Public jService always co-operates towardmaking the Derby a success, Wt.Perkins, as previously, hat ar-ranged for the construction ofUheramp from which the races willstart. Decorations on the house*and buildings In the area have
Sul's neighbors and their spokes- already been placed by the Lions*
estimated at $7,500, broke oul at9 o'clock In the mominK and WHS
Construction Company which de-veloped a large portion of the East
brought under control shortly after Railway area, that the Boro Willnoon. Through the efforts of both iiontmuttl »» Pane 2)Are companies the blaze was con-fined to the . basement, but airducts carried the heat and smoketo rooms on the second and third; Hit eg Held Yesterdayfloors, where paint was blisteredand walls blackened.
Fire Chlel Leslie OlOricht listedthe cause of the flrtt as spontane-ous combustion.
John 9. Olbricht, former firemarshal, at a meeting of the Boardof Education last September, warn-ed of the possibility of such aflre, especially tht fact that airducts would aid In spreading ablaae. At that time,he reportedthere were 10 air ducts to the atticwhich were not in Use and recom-mended they be removed or sealed.
"If they are not made inoper-ative," he warned at the time,"they might create One huge draft
(Continued oil Page 2)
Mrs. Solof Succumbs;
CAIBTERET—Punersi serviceswere held yesterday for Mrs. AaronSolof, 83; who died Wednesday inthe Perth Amboy General Hosptal.Mrs. Solof resided with her daugh-ter, Mrs. Aaron Rablnowlta, 553Roosevelt Avenue.
Burial was In Chased Shel AmisCemetery, Carmel, N J. In addi-tion to Mrs, Rablnowltt, Mrs. Solofis survived by another daughter,Mis. Isadore Dlchter. Brldgeton;
three suns, Barney of Carmel;Harry of Mlllvllle and Nathan ofCamclen; 2fl grandchildren and 10great-grandchildren. Funeral ar-rangements were by the Grelner
i Funeral Home.
Services forHeld from St. Demetrius'
CARtlSflBT—Punetal «ervtoes(or Stephen akocyplec, 11 JohnWeetf, were held from BUWb Pu-
Houw. 54 Wheeler Avenue,—porotag * N WV- •"*"
ward Mlrek, Insurance; StephenCzyewski, membership, and JohnEstok, publicity.
Quln Is ChairmanSt. Joseph's Church: The Rev.
Casper Yost and James J. Junne,parish chairmen; Edwin S. Quin,chairman of council, assisted by
(Continued on Page 2)
Edward Kuclnski Takes
Miles Agency Control
C A R T E R S T—It was an-nounced this week by the RussellMiles Agency that Edward 8.Kuctngk), manager of the firmfor the past seven years, hastaken over the Arm in accord-ance to the wishes of the lateRussell Miles, founder of theagency.
In lauding Mr. MUesi who diedon June 39 o£ this year, tlwagency noten hie. passing as "aloss not. only to this agency butto the h "
; of St. Demetrim' 1
ProclamationAll-American Soap Box Derby Day
andLions Club Tag Day
WHEREAS, the All-American Soap Box Derby,.sponsored by newspapers and civic organizationsthroughout tne United States and Canada, will beconducted oh Saturday, July 19, 1947 in Carteret,and |
WHEREAS, the,youth of our Borough will competein the spirit of true sportsmanship in a supervisedrace of vehidles planned and constructed by themin accordance with national rules, and
WHEREAS, this event is outstanding through itsstimulation of American ingenuity and enterpriseamong the youth of this Borough and this n%tion, and
WHEREAS, this event creates a great interestamong our peoples in youth programs which willserve to inspire nipre program.s designed to assistin teaching boys to.exercise their natural talents andskills, and
WHEREASj this'classic boys' event offers oppor-tunity to develop a splendid spirit of friendship, good-will and cooperation in the Borough of Carteret, aswe unite to jj&y our tribute to youth, and
WHEREAS, the Carteret Lions Club, wiiich isaiding in thte'Derby, Day program, plans to hold atag day on the »ame day to further its civic andcharitable W0t1f in the Borough of Carteret,
NOW, TltpHtEFORE, I. Stephen C. Skvba, Mayorof the BonHljfh of Cflrteret, do hereby proclaim Sat-urday, July"•49, #947, aB All-Ame,nean Soap BoxDerby Dayibd liiona Club Tag Day, and invite allour cHwens'iq View the event and urge all our maleyouth to p«rtj(!jpate in programs such as this one.I also urge nsldents of Carteret to cohtolfoute freely•to the MoMli^t.; ( I . - . . . „
»' " StepheA 0,8kiba(
Club under the direction of Bor-ough Clerk August J. Perry.
Ample police service Is assuredthrough the help of Police ChiefGeorge Sheridan, and the CarteretFirst Aid Squad will be on hand togive any assistance that may beneeded. Both the Standard OilCompany and the 8hell Oil Com-pany also are (twisting,, the formeran amplifying system and the lat-.ter with lubricants and general
(Continu$i On Pogt 2)
Carteret CoupleMarks Anniversary
Ir. and Mrs. J.
Are Feted at Large
Group Celebration H
CARTERET —The seventeenth %wedding anniversary of Mr. and;;,Mrs. John Makkal, 563 RooseveltAvenue, was celebrated with a • t?arty at the Makkal home Satur- .lay night. The affair was arranged ,iy Mrs. John Bellak and Mrs. Wtl- ;lam Mucha.
Quests present were Mr. andMrs. Stephen Totln and children,Wayne and Verna Ann; Mr. andMrs. William Mucha and daugh-ter, 8ally Ann; Mr. and Mrs. JohnKullich and children, Patricia andDonald; Mr. and Mrs. ThomasOarvey and children, Thomas andMary Ann; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas ,Matefy and sons, Robert and Den-nis; Mr. and Mrs.' John Makkal, •',Sr.; Miss Mary MakHal; Mr. andMrs. John Merello, Misses Mar-garet and Betty Bellak, and John,Michael, Joseph, Stanley and Err»-<Kt Bellak.
Mis* Ann 321nko, John Wltkow-skl, Stanley O'Brien, John Albertand Shirley Makjtai, Mrs. MwyLacko and Rose. Julia and Ooldifl '•Lacko all of Perth Amboy; Mrs^ -•Michael Kooham and son Leon, >Elizabeth.
Full Military.Honors |Accorded Borp J eJeran
CAHTERBT — funeral serviwith full military honors werethis morning for StephenWorld War II vetwan, 34Street, from the Synowlecklneral Home, 49 Atlantic Btrfcet,from 3t. Ell«»btth'« Hum'Church, whare I requAemwas offered. R«t. Anthonyw u tirt eelebrabt. Burlil w «RosehiH C l t t h I4i»
were given by ibugler fromVU*UTr*ak
hnar,
PAQE TWO FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1947
f-.v
$$. Elizabeth HolyTo Hold Rorttf, Picnic
CARTERET—A plf roast forthe Holy Nam* M t t y fll 81
laiMbetli's church will be heldAugu.it. 3 on th« ground adjoiningthe church. Otorie Slomko inchalrmnn
The annual picnic of the Cocl-ety will be held A.umit U on th(church mounds. John Bodgk AndChnrlrs VniKa are co-chalrmMi,
I
u
BorvIn St. Mwbeth
CARTERET -The infant son ofMr. and Mrs. William Teleposky,Wheeler Avenue, was chrUtenedWilliam Joseph by R«v. AnthonyTuber at St. Elisabeth's Church.Mrs. Louis Kftdy and StephenTrnosky were the sponsors.
A dinner followed »t the Tele-poslcjr home.
Aircraft Industry, facing crisis,Asta action by the United States.
Council Demandsd Worn Paqt 1)
9ul to Police Court loran alleged violation of the build-in i rode, and that queitlon Is nowunder consideration by RecorderNi>vill Plans also were under wayto app'y to Chancery Court for aninjunction to compel 8ul to refrainfront lltteiins his urounds with avmVty of debris, since a numbernf official requests were allegedlylunored.
After a Isnglhy diiousslon dur-ing which the Council and MayorSklbu sUnined their sympathywith the residents of the sectionwho have bought attractive homesand spent considerable money IntwauttfyliiR them, agreement TOreached whereby Mr Schwartz, B.W. Hai-rlngton, Borough Attorney.and N. A. Jacnby, counsel fov r'ulwll! meet today in a final ef.irtto have Sul clean up his land. Ifthat Pftrley fulls, the Borough in-tends to hire a contractor to dothe work with Schwartz agreeingto pay the expense Involved.
WEISS'65 ROOSEVELT AVENUE
CARTGRETLIQUOR STORE, Inc.
CARTERET, N. J.
BEERSTEINIES
PI.D8
DEPOSIT
$2,40 Case$2.95 Case "UARTS
Rocking Chair y,™i.$7.99EBUNQ
BLENBED WHISKEY
Radio Station WCtU, 1450 onthe dial, In Niw^amswlck ht« an-nqunotd the fgjtawlng. special pro-grams which w ^ b e of particularinterest to the listeners In thisarea.
The airing of another 4-H Clubmeeting under the able directionof CluB Agent Raj Shaw will takeplace Saturday at 12:45 P. M
Sunday at 10.30 in the morn-ing the regular 8abb»th icrvlcewill be ca.rr.lwt from the First R»,formed Ctuich In Mew pmn,iwtpliwith the R»v. Orvtlle Hin* con-ducting the service. -
The. raftulsr and eptfrtylnSouth Rlv«r Variety Hour will beheard in Its usual spot at 1 00 ?M. Sunday.
8(wnd a pjeitant Sunday after-noon relating to the music heardon the Pamlly Home Hour at 2:00P. M-
The OojJimu.nlty of Punellen be-comes the feature attraction at3:00 P. M with the ea.r-pleasln,gmusical produptiop titled the"Dunejlifj %|*ty Show"
New )u««r tf> the Horn*Qardin are your* (or the listeningwhen ' Home Agent Anna Longbrings you more Ingenious hintsand information on her programMonday at 12:45 P. M.
Orley Bowen. Middlesex Coun-ty's Agricultural Agent presidesagain on his informatltve editionof The Daily Farm Bulletin Tues-day at 12:46 P. M.
Then Tuesday at, 8:00 you'll hearthe blow by blow description of theFt. Kilmer boxing show from, NewBrunswick's Municipal Stadium.
To BALTIMORE-WASHINGTON
DtEStl-ElECTRIC STREAMLINER
lv. E»»b«Hi 1.11 AM
Lv. PlalMUId 9.04 AM
A*. BflHmort 11.49 AM
Ar.Woihinglon 12.35 MA
f S « o l Cooch«i, Obnrvallon-LounJ* Can PaHorC«r;C««t i Shopp*j Dinar. Coach itatt r*i*rvtd frw.
OTOU mt Til AIMS TO BAtTIMOH AND WAJHWOTOtf
U. INnMtl 7.9) AM. H 5 2 AM, 1.11 m, 3.31 m, 4.16 *M, «.3I P*», R(.V. fl^KfHW »-Q4 AM, 12.04 PM, 1.24 PM, 2.45 PM, 4.29 PM, 6.34 PM, 12.3* AM
To PITTSBUReH-CHICAQO
lv. Ulltbttii 11.52 AM
* Tflal^tU PM(wwajl'l»dining I f al Coach*) and
with 5*tlki(u, ltdJOfmi und DrcwiM Baonu.AH VullntfK VMl »• Wmtiiiigfpii, with Doom-
itiff»t 5«nrlc»i Padki soil Train Siaolary.
l v , E4liob»*h , 4 , ) 1 PM\
lv, Plainly . . , 4.J4 94«o( Coa*.»j y
C«ri Slttpwi wltK Crawly h t
WoiMnihm. .
To CINCINNATMOUISVILLB-SL LOUIS
5 Separate Knights(Continued from Paqt 1)
Patrick D«anntis Jr.. John J. DowT
ling, John Kallyle and John FeeTheodore Huber, Insurance; Joseph Lloyd, memb«r»hlp, and PhilUp Fox Jr., publicity.
St. Elliabeth'B Church: The RevAnthqny Huber and Louis K»dy,parish chairmen; Joseph Panku-llc«, chairman of council, asiUtedby Armln Batha, John Ooyean andWilliam Babies; Frank Pallnka.i,insurance; Stephen Darko, membershlp, and Joseph Kgnos. pub-l l i t
The overall K. of C. programschedule for this year is as followsAugust 11, business meeting; Septembtr 8, Installation of oncers3»ptembei 22, business n>eetlnKOctober 13. completion of majordecree; October 26, 40th anniver-sary; October 27, reception of newmembeis; November 10, businessmeeting; November 34, commem-orative services; December f, busi-ness meeting: December 19. hosto the New Jersey Chapter f(a. 4and December 29, qhrUtmat p#rty
HufI Dopi Oiohi ItU\iti at NtwYtrk
Riding the Baltimore & Ohio is like takinga jtfjiday. There are comfortable trains towhisk you along, excellent meals to enjoy,service that's always friendly.
Whether you travel by day or by night,there's a fine air-conditioned train to servey o u - a train you know will arrive at yourdestination qi\ ({me.
if
NEW YOHK.~H«roln worth147,900, the largest leiiuT* ot nar>colics in New York history, w»l con-Sacatfed by federal agcnti frpm th|French freighter Saint-Tropez. ,
Agenti under Col. Girl«nd Wil-liam*, director ot the l^iri l bu-reau ol narcotic* for the fy«W Yptarea, worked on the case 48 contlnuous hours,
The find consisted of 459 oupew ofpure heroW, valued in the blackmarket at (2,500 an ounce.
An International ring of imugglerawas suspected when the wrapping ofthe heroin was found to be identicalwith the wrapping of $250,000 atheroin seized two month* ago fromthe motor ship John Erlcsftn.
The Ericsson since was damagedto an extent of $1,500,000 by fire ?tits North river pier.
The Saint-Tropez arrived fromMarseilles. Action started with apurely routine inspection of sta-men leaving the pitr.
Lawrence Murray, port patrolman,found In the money belt of CesurNegro, 28, a French legman, fourpackages, each weighing 8^ ouncei.
After the seaman's arrest federalagents were notified and undertooka flne-toothcomb search irf thefreighter.
In a locker for soiled linen, theyunearthed 50 additional packages.
Heroin U never iold pure to ad-dtcU, but U adulWrated heavily, uo-(fl ftn original ounce comet to manytimes Its original dimensions. It itthli which gives the narcotic drug itsexcessive black market value.
CAJtO QF THANKSW9 Wi«h to extend our sin*
cere thanks to our relatives,friend! and neighbors for theisany acts oJ kindness, donatedC*rs, beautiful floral and, spirit-ual bouquets given during ourreceqt bereavement in the lossof our beloved husband andfather Stephen Skocypec.
yie especially wish to tha»kthe Rev. Jphn Hundiak, theQjrls of the St. Demetrius'Ukrainian "Choir, Westvaco.Chlorine Products Co., V.P.W.Post No. 2314 of Carteret, Elec-tric Dept, of A. A. C. Co,; thepall-bearers; the Carteret Po-lice Dept. and the Funeral Di-rector E. N. Bizub for satisfac-tory services rendered. -
Mrs. Mary Skocypecand, Family.
fo Hwry Sttogmn, )r.CARTRRET -Mrs. Helen O.
Fink, Newark, hai announced thegafement of her daughter. Jean
Marl«, to Henry E. 8ttlgman. Jr.,son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry E.Btlegman, 1M Unden Str«et, C»r-
NEEDCLEANING?
of
CAWIWLT84WI
._,,_. Plnti Is a graduate of SouthSide High School', Newark, whileher fiance was graduated fromCnrteret High School.
Carteret Boys(Continued from Pant 1)
assistance in the running of theDerby. Various Borough officialsand rodents also will participatea* iudrefl, officials, time-keepers,etc. and there Is every probabilitythat tomorrows event will topboth In attendance and in Interestall previous races.
In addition to representing Car-teret In the Akron finals, the wln-n«r of tomorrow's contest will re-c#|v» many valuable prizes whichh*ve been contributed both by theChevrolet Motor Company and
| b,il*iness flJQU. Runners-upwill be Jiven awards and cold
tod* will be provided for thecpnte4t»nvs throughout the after
with the officials beinggVMU of T*W CARTBBET PRESSt the ftppsevtlt Hotel at the con-luttpin of the day.A pofflplete lint of th« entrants.
the nfaet U) be awarded and thepertinent. dttftlU of tomorrow's&HP Boil Perty will be found In
in tod»y's issue.
"Jj™"* "fStudent ff-Ol-R nnd U 8 allot-1 B*ttlesnH* North ^ ' l n » ' l , .W^1 1* "Jj™"* "f *"-rnentt tap town for living cc#u. [Wwhlngton join "motH»Ball fleet, l^lnth^nwt winter than i,,
Maps Plans(Continutd from Pagi 1)
in cpse fire breaks out. Such a draftmight spell disaster."
The former fire marshal in his1946 report also recommenUed theneed of an aerial'ladder truck.After Sunday's fire lie stated thatth* existing equipment did notallow a.scent by ladder f urther-t^nthe second floor and had the firereached the attic, the firemenwould have found it impossible toflfrtit'it.'
Sweetness and Light(Confinutd from Paw I)
cover; but that when the financecompany comes around to towaway his car the guy's apt to take,a high dive off the nearest cliff.
I wouldn't be surprised but thatJoe's got something there.
On the TipAlthough Cape Good Hope g«n*r-
njjjjs wniideced the |outhjrnrncil,t j j j f Abie*, Cape A j N » i »c-tuatii rftn tb»t dlituo^lon.
M A R K E TTEL. CARTERET »-B197 FREE DELIVERY TEL CA&TERET 8.519K
65 WASHINGTON AVENUE, CARTERET, N. J.
VEAL CUTLETS MILKFED Ib. 79.
YOUR FAVORITE MUMMER COOLER-AT THIS LQV? VKiCt ! ! !
APPLE JUICE MOW*, OR
KRASDAIE
QUART 15Hamburger 2J lb 48c Potato Salad °TS\» 19r.Sausage Meat {gr lb.45c ApplcsauceS 2N
cU29cButterChip Steaks 9kf. 20cSkinless Franks lt).48cSunkist Oranges dw 32cPeaches " " ^ S S ^ S cGreen Beans JST 2 ft 15cPlums ijgj lb 19c
Gulden's Mustard 8 l r 14<PARKPALE 21,
PotatoesPickles
5 t 23c
Pie ApplesWheatiesPyequickDog Food
CQCOANVT nkir I ' c
£3"* 2 M 29C
BETTVCROCKER'S
Red Heart *> fotA. B. C. •*
SONIA BRAND qt,KOSHER STYLE jar
SUNSHINE IVim. 1 oCRACKERS pk?. *OC
COME IN ANDSTOCK UP ON THIS
REAL SAVING
8CHIMMEVS
Strawberry o nPRESERVES J OSPIC & SPAN
2 for 39cC R I S C O
• MEMBER OP TWIN COUNTY
Pathwayto Piosperily
ar« tweks./ 'working tpgcthw, must keep thtm dear, so that nothing will
X ^fer«amt feom inching ouf got! ©f proipetiqr.
ttacki m joat tracks;;. the nllrond itieUli yow nil-M>«d. You rid« on it. You ship over it You own fhtres of itstwki your ioiurtoce cpm^oiw »nd bank* owa itt b ^ l o ^m
fitwntW security is Minted, to itf fio*acW WSVAVl*fittl Interest in maintaining, Its equipment, ft* W*
< ' 'I H
j J top«od td«juate return on
'mA m*
• flt' #
,-ARTERET PRESS \FRIDAY, JULY 18,1947 FAGl
IIS
1>V
(I
Groupalls Officers
K<-HI, Re-elected,Taking
I nun Deputies
11, IIKT The new omoers,,,' ivrs Council, Decree of
,, wn-e Installed a tiimri.inK held In F l / ;Mrs .John Reid is the
I PrlCnlinntns.
Zawadskis EntertainOn Son's 5th Birthday
CARTERET—The fifth birthdayof Stanley Zawadskl, son of Mr.and Mrs. Stanley Zawadskl, wascelebrated with a party at the Za-wadskl home.
Guests were Lawrence and Vic-toria Dudak, Lynn and John Ko-vach, .Robert Seel, Joan CyakLeona and Edwlna Urbanskl, AliceZawadskl. Stanley and EdwardKolttan. George OeorneMesaros. Caslmer Mosclskl, Frankand Richard Andras, Mrn. WilltftmEverett, Mrs. Edmund Urbanskl,Mrs. Julius Wlerony, Mrs. AdamDydak, Mrs. Robm Seel, Mrs. Ste-phen Kovach, Mrs. QeorRn Esslgand Mrs, Robert Deldka.
Italian Girl to Marry
: and Mrs. Fred Army Vetprnn, July 2 7 .
; installed by Mrs."l i l | n district deputy, andivn nughton, and 'Mrs.
!,, past deputies of NewM'cro Mrs. Laura Crane,
Mrs. Harry Mann,i,,. wiRwnm; Mrs. Daniel
,,..i rounsel; Mm. Edward
I .1 SCOUtlii .'it warrior.
i will henceforth be held
Mllih wiih the next meet-
rteret Personals- .ml Mrs. acitttn Symborskl
-,,,,.n, nonalfl and Anita.urn und Mrs. AlbertKii/iiiirth, are spending
'.,; wui; relatives In Ham-
Wiiia Walsh, PershtnglM,t Miss Helen Bodnar,
• Avenue, left to spend a.• A ' . n i l
Vuian Fodor, Lowell•.iniiiiiK a vacation visit
,MVI'-. in Bridgeport, Conn.Mm Solewin, Jr., is vislt-
,: i . ;ii Eunicetown, Pa.I HH! Mrs. Louis Kady and..,.! Mis. Joseph Teleposky,
- si:1!'!'!, entertained Mr.•;, OCOI'KP Csavics and
iiiini. of Hamilton, On-
; Jr.in Wieronlery, ofii•(•!. liii.s left for ChlcaKO,
;.'iiii'scnt Rider College,:: it ;i stenoprnphy school.
i .mil Mrs. Earl Foote* andVintinla Ann, Pershlng
id: yesterday for a two-....,11urn with relatives In
i,: !l, Pii.
!. Thomas Jakeway, Mat-\..nur. left yestreday toi neks' vacation with rela-
;:: Wilkes-BaiTe, Pa.
Edward P. Dolan Is MadeMeptber of Exempt Unit
CARTKKtrr—At Monday nightsmeeting of the local Exempt Fire-men's Association, hel, din FireHouse No. 2. Edward P, Dolan, amember ol Fire Company No, 2 for28 years, received a certificate ofmembership lin the organization.Stanley P. Mncioch was elected hissuccessor. Fire Chief Olbrlehtspoke on "Industrial Fires."
Final nrarngements were com-pleted for the rodeo to be held Au-ftust 3 at the Cartrret HiRh Schooltadlum. WiJllam Muller and Jo-ph Barak will assist Michael
farcheskl, chairman.
uneral Services HeldFor Mr$. Clotilda Hirt
CARTERET — Miss JosephineDappllo, Naples, Italy, niece ofMr, and Mrs. Sylvester RMMO, 114Lincoln Avenue, Carteret, will bemarried to George Kost, 34 Persh-Ing Avenue, on July 27 at 2 p. M.In St, Anthony's Church, PortReading.
Miss Dapplllo met her nancewhile he was serving with the US. Army In Naples, Italy.
Boro Youth FederationAttends Council Outing
CARTERET—The Young Peo-ples Society of the Free MagyaReformed Church attended an outIng of the Youth Federation ofthe Eastern Free Magyar ReformedChurches at Millstone Monday.
Those attending were John amCharles Katko, Margaret TothJohn Lazar, Stephen and MargareDouch, William Nemish, JosepNagy, Jr., Zoltan Varga DanielNagy, Jr., Helen Kormany, CharleKoroczy Mary Petruski, PearloSos, and Louis Urban.
Miss Emily MarciniakTo Wed]oi. TruMimki
CARTERET—The engagementof Miss Emily Marciniak, daugh-ter of Mrs. Nellie Marcinlfck, 20Charles Street, to Joseph Trustlh-skl, 2 Lee Street. South River, wasanonunced this week.
Miss Marciniak, a graduate ofCarteret High School, Is employedas a secretary In Foster Wheelerporporatlon, Carteret. Her fiance,who attended South River HighSchool, is an assistant sales managpr for the Singer 8ewlng Ma-chine Company.
The wedding will take place Oc-tober 11. i ' r
CARTERET — Funeral services'or Mrs, Clotilda Hirt were heldfrom the Huelsenback MemorialFuneral Home, Newark, Rev. 8. D.
hambers officiating. Intermenttook place at Hollywood Cemetery,Union.. '.. • . ;
Pallbearers were Reginald John-son, Harry Suydam, Arthur Bleck-schmld, and Walter Helnrick.
Mrs. Hirt was a resident of Car-teret for 55 years.
DAUOHTtt ARMVK8CARTERET—Mr. and Mrs. Ste-
ven Stmner, Lafayette Street, arethe parents of a daughter born,Tuesday at Perth Amboy OneralHospital.
Country's first billion-bushelwinter wheat crop It being cut.
WELCOME D/HJGRTmC A B T B R B T — Mr. andMri,
Steven Kovaa, 11 Mercer Street,are the parents of a duughterborn Monday at Perth AmboyQeneral Hocpltal.
Chilean President says hefa,vors Inter-American army.
WELCOME DAUGHTERCARTERET—Mr. and Mrs. Wal-
ter Milan are the parents of adaughter born at South BostonHospital, Mass. Mrs. Milan-U theformer Isabelle Ryan, ChromeAvenue, Carteret.
WEDDING DATE 8ETCARTERET—The marriage of
Miss Susan Raguccl to Mr. VincentB. Basilica will take place Sunday,Juyy 27 at St. Anthony's Church,Port Reading.
Legion Plans PicnicAt Budd Ijtke Sunday
CARTERET—At-a meeting Ofthe Carteret Post. American Le-gion, and Its auxiliary plans werefurthered for a plonlc to be heldSunday at Budd Lake. Reserva-tions for the buses, which willleave the Borough Hall at 9 A. M.,,may be made through ThomasJakeway and Mrs. Harry Oleckner,
A report on the convention heldHt Perth Amboy was made by Com-mander Alex Sakson.
Shot Travels FirA .22 rifle shot wilt travel from
1,800 to 1,200 yards while a highvelocity, steel-jacketed bullet willcarry IT ore than a mile.
DAUGHTER ARRIVESCARTERET—Mr. and Mrs. Jo-
seph Wacker, William Street, EastRahway section, are the parents ofa daughter, Christina, born at thePerth Amboy General Hospital.
Quality VENETIAN BLINDSand WINDOW SHADES
STEELCUSTOM-BUILTGALVANIZED
FLEXIBLE
4.49
QTJINCKY, Maw,—Henry Nle-land, Jr.. recently received hlawallet, lott three years at*, withan anonymous note explaining Uwlong delay—It wan Just an over-sclRht. The wallet contained noth-ing but papers.
HONKRT PEOPLE
WORLAND, Wyo —Plndln*patting meter out of orderhe pwked his car, an honest <Lit placed two pennies on topthe meter. Worland clUiena,M honest, left them there forhours until a collector picked 1up
10 §q. ft. tnin.
—We Also Carry—-CUSTOM MADE WINDOW SHADES — TABLEPADS — MIRRORS — PICTURES — RUGS
FRAMES — LINOLEUMSAMPLES GLADLY SUBMITTED—WRITE or PHONE
FOR REPRESENTATIVE
RAHWAY 7-3016-J
JAY'SUN V E N E T I A N BLIND A SHADE CO.
1440 MAIN STREET RAHWAY, N, J.
BEER2
BY THE CASE
40 *> .0012 OZ. ^ 0 QUARTS
We Specialize in Home Delirery
MAG'S LIQUOR STORE,250 Amboy Ave. WoodbrMg*
WOODBRIDGE 8-0828
* PETER DOELGER - EBIINO - PILSER
;/.iiiiiiil employe's output hasJ,)\ improved over 1946.
i turn inn took ynur forgot -
ii irui'h v nut of the drawer,
•I i .:lil it to us for exprrt
i111' |:'".; mountings, watch111 Mi|i|>!u'ii; and we also do
ulin; HI precious jewels, con-
it ii !ii|nr, into modern use-
>li" iml tr,(dc-in old pieces
PH It' H.
I 'HH.v.l* SILVER PLATING
i Jewelersn si., WoodbrldrelhridKe 8-1223I Hi,I,,.a Dlatrlbulor
FACTORY CLEARANCE
TOPPERSSolids - Plaids - Checks
$ 9 7 5 - S i 0 7 5 -
SPORT JACKETSSolids and Checks
$4-75 - $7.75
ROEBUCK AND CO
Direct from Factory to You
MARY JANE COAT CO.28 Rose Street, South River, N. J.
Off New Brunswick Circle
Telephone: South River 6-23S5
I didn't believe anyonecould sell this beautiful
Cor and Truck Owners
ENGINEERED~AND BUILT BY CHRYSLER CORPORATION
FOR
AU BRAND NEW PARTS
ASSEMBLED AND BLOCK-
TESTED AT FACTORY
DODGE
PIilmouth
DODGE 4 ^ TRUCKS/Iff
Improvemen
A FAMOUS NAMI IN HOMI nWNItM(H«l• lay It whwi you want QvoNty• Htm*m««r ft when you want tovfa»
AT SUCHLOW PRICES '
COMPLETE WITH FITTINGS
Available on Easy Terms
• 54 Inches Long; Two Drainbcai^
• $(<linle«t Steel Basket Strainor
• Aeid-Rfliiiting Enameled Sink
e Chrome-Ploted Faucet with Spray
It isn't often that you find beauty andutility as skillfully combined a» tteyare in the Homart Cabinet sink . . . Itis often that Sears' Straightline Dis-tribution brings you an unusual valuelike this! Here's your opportunity toget a modern sink and steel undersinkcabinet designed to beautify yourkitchen and ease your work—at areal budget-wise price. See it today!
MAIL THIS COUPON TO SEARS'PERTH AMB0V, TODAYSEARS ROEBUCK & CO.275 HOBART STREETPERTH AMBOY, N. J.
Without obligation on my part, please send your ejtimator to give us a Seartprice on item* checked below:
[ ] PLUMBING OB HEATING '
[] ROOF p INSUIATION
H STORM AND SCREEN WINDOWS
[J TORCH RAILINGS Phone
NAME
ADDRESS
Time of Day to Call
K VAN SYQKLE
Custom-Built AluminumStorm Window and Screen
Installations by, trained InstallersFully Guaranteed by Sears •
In Summer . . . cool, ventilated screen windows; In.Winter . . . warm, fual saving storm windows. Savesup to 30% in fuel. 0-ce instaM,-th« all-aluminumfram* slayf in psrrr.ansntiy.ChQDM Ufty *JStnnjOlh- *O
n*. Uglit in w^l,?, t o $ y j o t ^ W ' " ' T
AS LOW AS *iK>r00
Steel Door
Brand new Hup-up i*P« over-head floor hw r«n«M*»We Uiht-neu and eate at openUon.Simple to inntett. | tt*l wla>.7 feet blih. For
Ornamental RailingWrought* Iron Q OB
AS LOW AH » • * • *
A Homart railing that addscharm, dlli^ty to your Home.High quality durable wroughtIron, painted black. With ft»-tini«, ready to IwUtt,
Hoiart TlleboardHigh Quality 3 4 c Sq.ft.GMJT to make old rooms lute
new onea with tU«boanl..pftJiei.
tti enamel tons*!, Chff4?p ol
White and «ahm. « M *h««4
275 Hobart
J\'
PAGE FOUR FRTDA*. a, 1947 I M«!RP.
Bird's-Eye View of SportsBy The Obtvmr
I
So Oil? beat Joe Bank! the other nlgrht in Stockholmand surprised everybody. And Immediately the Yankslet out a yell that could be heard all the way back tothe Ozarka that they wuz robtotd. But the Yankashouldn't be yelling.
Even if the decision was close and Baski flupporteftithought the decision could have tone the other way,the decision is final—and the Walls of the vanquishedget old quickly. Our memory isn't so short either thatwe cnn't remember some finoogltas of the Yanks them-selves. Not that Tadberg'a win was finooglin. Wewon't agree to that!
Back in 1936 a guy named Schmellnf wtft nchtduledto get a crack at Braddock if he beat Joe Louis. Ofcourse, everybody thought Louia would murder him,but he didn't, So what happens, after that one?Schmeliiitf finds he has to fijht the same LOUIH againif he gets a shot at the crown. Louts took the crownfrom Braddock and SchmaHng never got the Brad-dock bout.
Now you're not sorry personally that thn formerNazi didn't get the title shot against Braddock. Theysay Schmeling has come out of some close decisionswith luck himself—like the Sharkey fiasco. But it justshows that the Yanks in the boxing racket don't know
' when to keep their gums from^bumptog.And what American i8 proud of our boxing set-up
in this country today? Why, it smells so badly you canhardly discuss it without a gas-mask. And then aSwede finally looks as though he might get a chanceat Louis—and the boys go wild.
Poor Joe is getting HO his only reereation is golf,the domestic pickings are so scarce. Maybe Olle won'tdo nay better than some of Louis' late oponenta butit's a cinch he can't do much worse.
The only thing that's puzzling us now is the methodthe boxing boys will find to make Olle fight Baskiagain before he gets a chance at Louis. If Louis wasn'tgetting so old, they would surely work it.
But they know that if Joe doesn't flght soon, he willhave to use a cane—and that's against the boxingregulations. Maybe they can find a way to amend therules and allow Joe to continue the defense of hischampionship with the aid of a cane. But then theymight never get him out of there like that.
No, they'd better not let Joe start using a cane.He might get attached to the championship and'nevergive it up. It looks like Congress will have to paaa alaw, limiting; the heavyweight champion to two terms.That would settle everything.
fiunmen Qet 50 Cents FromOne, SI,200 From • Quitt
MIAMI BEACH, FLA.-Four jun-Jnen paid a house call on ManuelBenitez, former Cuban national po-
,Hee chief, and took $1,200.50 fromhim and a friend. Bemtez, who lostonly the 50 cents, snid the job wasthtt of "amateurs."
The four bumiits abruptly enteredXtlt living room where he and hiswile were entertaining Jose de LosHeros and forced them at gunpointta lie face down on the floor, Benl-tei told local police.
Next, according to Benitei, tHtjtrussed their victims inexpertlywith wire clothes hangers and re-moved $1,200 from Heros' troujtri.But from Benitez they got only oneM cent piece, all the money h* waicarrying.
After ransacking the upstalri, h«tald, they made for tht front door
, with a pasteboard box full ol Mrs.Benilez' Jewelry. At the door they
' collided head on with Manutl Gon-X$Ui, who was arriving to ]abi thtP«rty. ^
Gonzalez immediately grappled'with the gang, and Benitez, who
bid (reed himself, snatched theJewelry from a bandit's hands. Alllour escaped, he suid.
' Bye Mikes DebutRye as a field crop was Ural
grown in America in New EnglandIII 1648.
Fremvit Mapped NattrtBetor* Gen. John Charlts Frt-
thCmt made Ms flvt expedltlom Intotht Wait, he wai preceded by Lewisand Clark, Pike and Nlcollet Fre-mint mapped the vast area be-twetn ihe Missouri river and thePacific. The trails be blkMd war*the ones over which flown) th« tldtt«(immi|ra1lon that started with thediscovery of gold in California andthe acquisition of Oregon. He laterterved a> governor ol the Territoryol Arizona.
Trade in BananaaBananai hate been group for
centuries in many tropical artat,but large soalt trade did not takaplace until the 20th century. TheUnited Statei Is the world'i largestimporter, uiually taking more thinball ol the tonnage moving ID inter-national trade.
DON'T DELAY!PLACE YOUR COAL
OR OIL ORDERWITH US TODAY
WARRCOAL & SUPPLY CO.
Tel. Woodbrldge 8-0721ST. GEORGE AVENUE
WOOOBRIDOE, N. J.
"Vacation time is abusy time for us"
rphe daily telephone call "bwk tarn*"JL U regular practice with ttttipMudi of
penova away fro* home and buafoe*during the Humour month*.
At times their ealla make the tele-phone circuit* to and from New JtaMy't•ban and lake tmorU ortW-tay butmoat call* go through prattfrt]}. W«have totalled new equipment and em-ploy**) ind trained addlU0n*iVy«jrator«thmuflMut the S u u to help handle theload. But thew'a Htlll « lot Matt tob e * * * '
We'ifait
DEATH NO MYSTERYSEATTLE, Wash—The mystery
Rtirrdunding the death of HolyPoly, the seal at the Wood landPark, was cleared up when anautopsy of the seal's stonwh re-vealed more than 100 copper pen-nies, 3 nlCkelA, 85 aluminum. plas-tk; and brass tax tokens, l bratslapel inaifnt of the Army'n 2ndInfantry Division, 2 tiny pieces ofsteel and a mteoellaneous collectionof metal washers and buttons.
Philippines showgains; ask to cancel pan of loan.
NO WONDER IT H U MO8WEOO, Kan.—A pftttant told
a dentist that his false teeth "arthurting like thunder." The doc-tor Investigated and found that theman was cutting a wisdom toothbeneath his plate
A weer laid he received hiit let-ter back, and under Ms signaturevia acrawl*d -Sir: I took th*aOnve mnitcr up with my neigh-bor* and they think It would be ftbusy trlrk."—lUadet'i DtfMt.
Arab* bur United Statedfrom U. 8. school in Palestine.
FOR CATSBtiboMTNtlTON. Ill'
lunches for the cats of the com-munity have been supplied ata raltfrtd plant Jiere rwmily.
lwh*n th* doors ot an axle shop| ar« swuni shut at the end or t-achday, a large covey of spanows IstrapWd Uttirte. When dawn comes,
t the fitfd* find the only exit—smallj spacaj |i*oiind the rails enteringI the $hop. They wriggle throughI the bjltnlnfcfi right Into the paws ofI the oats.
LOCK DELAYS JUSTICECOlfEh DftUKNt, Idaho.-flflpt
for to be taken to court, LeroyOnrdner's date with the judgehad to be postponed when thejailer couldn't gel his cell lockto work. After several hours alocksmith succeeded In openingthe cell-door and Gardner wastaken Into court to Teeelve athree-year prison sentence forstealing an automobile.
PCA advocates public owner-ship to mines, railroads, utilities.
Itorae Racing RcvebueYam state leads, with Call'
fornia In leeorol place, in tax reve-nue collected from horse racing-.
ATHLETES FOOT ITCHNOT HARD TO KILL,
IN ONE HOUR,3k I *d, your 3k I I M * at any
TH-OU ft HTttlWrl run-IT
If not pleasedtiriiif utoro. THOU ft HTglcldp. rontalna t*% ftlcoliql. ITI'KNKTl'.ATKH. ltMrhen MO1IKKi-rtnn tl) KIIJ. thi> ItBli. tnilnV nl
j . i
HW.ra bill asks P n i ,status for the Waves.
ALL TYPES OF
ROOFINGAll Work Ouaranteori
ARNOLD' P. SCHMIDTTel. Woodbrldce Mw,
Woadbridce Ave. * "fr st,,,,POltT RKADING. N. i
—Tt
I . I t '
YMHTf&.-
»*••" -
Actual laboratory analysis (proves Dairyirtit icecrtam richer and creamier fhan the three mostpopular brands. Made from rich fresh wholecream, milk, finest fresh fruits and pure fruitflavors. Favorite flavor combinations. Handyice tray package; melt-proof bag keeps ice creamfirm for 1 Vi hours without refrigeration. TryDairycrest NOW!
7
IDEAL COFFEES ?.r 45c|Unmatchable flavor lield at Itt best by vacuum picking. , "'
J Coffee i 39c 2 li 77c
PEACHES;Fancy freestone.
Serve peaches ^ | f l$ (
ond ice cream!
itermelo
.{j
Fine South American coffees, expertly blended and heat-do roasted.
* Win-Crest Coffee & 37c 2S73c? ,A lighter bodied, yet strong tasting coffee. Try It!
Large, sweet,jed ripe. 26 Ibs^vi
Fancy Selected
TomatoesH/'\ Celery Hear t s * 19<
At all Acmes this^week-end ,f
Hew Crop Jeney ^ '
Beets 2s"* t i9c
. . wllopKone -I C
Limes j«e^!!_~i~
Blueberries
Chi.49
i^aM0TT MrM 0 T T WHMK VAM CAMPli^a Mr
uice — 25c Tomato Juice t T 23c Beansice * 25c CocktaiT S 19c ^\\\19c
A ' r a o u r l r w l
- •
canAmaur'i Corrwd
Tender, fresh from nearby^
Nearby
, «Cp T - F l l c Cockla|!
Lemon w»' 1 «T. 17c *»«>« ««>•« ™»MOWEE SWKI I l l i f A ^ '**»Lcllion JUICc «,„ JC UiinKc T"IM>ts ^ *^L IQr "^" »>•», i*-oi. «nOUnwood SWMI GRAPEFRUIT 1111111 J Sauw J n * I / I AKMOUI1
Juice 3 r 25c r 19c ?"Zm i »* - 7ir ChoppeAHam "ZOrange S13U-29c S B H L Z - / X Nabiscopz lkV-8^:14c4t:;29c Spaghetti\ZZ\kPeas J Z 3 « 29c Bead ^ E U ' i l , 23c Arrowroot S ; J 18c
35c
i:
Beans
Cucumbers
* Enriched Sup-erne Bread loaf 1i2cIt tastes better, toasts better^ ond stays fresh longer. Try a loaf! ' 1/ *
W M U J C
' * - •
StringBeans2'^25c Corn " S J u ^ l 13c MilkButter Kernel,*? 17c GrahamsrM A.« odfc. e«™ t7 3-MlnuteOat$7* t9cv v l I I hyk« W 4 1 . «•« 1 ' w K .. . .1. . L i . . . . . • « »
• » « Mustard'*;,114cTomatoes , S S 17c Catsup "'"V,1 w™ 20c
StringLima Beans ^
DAIRY DEPT. FEATURES ,
Your f«vorit« dairy food it here!
< Good Luck Margarine j ! , . 40cc , Asco Margarine X.37c
_ _ • a '
-U-Trim givM you more »
C i r r o t s S 2 ^ 1 7 c Chili Sauce M _ 29c Apricots 2 9 c2?cBeets tlaf ' £M4c pi ruA < M^UKDW JQ Apricots
Asparagus ' i : 29c Pickles " S t i r ; 23c Mayonnaise
Ua»t
P»ra J .
I** F o w l U ^ l b ' 4 ^ c ? American cZ: *• 43c» S . . . tasty frlcasse. for . c h . ^ 1 | p ^ • a - j j ^ 23C
Fryers"&*» I b-45C LBortaChateau 2X.85cMid**, a«f»mi«i, ««"y pitp"^^ ' j Aged Cheddar * 67c
Boneless Veol Roost -55c > Glendale ClubFresh Ground Beef *49c , CHEESE FOODSmoked Tongues *47c
SWn^»' F p o n k s fe 4Vc
Beef LiverLunfcheon MeatUverwurst
Chef's BestPotato Salad
r 19cJIFFY
PIE tRUST
14c
JUNKETRmntt Pvwdtr
1 Vi-tau \f{*•adufi i V<
hr CMI, CrMMf lawMt-Cutta
SPRY| / / /
DevonshierOLD ENGLISH
Bread Crumbsl4-~ 14c
BALI Zinc-Top
MASON JARS
\ -
2179cOPEN EVERY
FRIDAYUNTIL £ P.M.
1
U N Tea Balls t s ?5c Woodbury Facial Soap 3 - 25chbal Fancy Apple Sauce "Z17c Noxon Metal Polish J S 21cZlfller s Apple Sauce 2 * £ 29c 6re-Sohent * * * * * * £ 2 ± 13cGrapefruit Sections *"*,£?*,, 15c Kirkman's Gran, Soap ? T 31c %^ J $ P B & J 9 C tt 35c Kirkman's Cleanser . 2 . £ Me [..Cream White * ? S 39c S J 1 . 0 Kirkman's Soap Powder r 23c rN H s Asparagus - n S S 35c F t e ^ 3 S c 2 ; 2 9 c i ! i 3 3 c IBORDEN HEMO*
BLACK FLAG
OLD DUTCHCLEANSER
KIRKMANSOAP FLAKES
31c i% BJ».T. i n »>-« M f
flMM. I / C Itttk) WV.
ARTBR
..„.,„,,; in the 8tate ol N e *,n<tny were officially t d -
,„ • i.nke It easy" In,,,,,(,s for thslr llvlni
,.,,,,, ]pS R Brdmen, Jr,| Con*,,,,, nf the State Department
lin,,mic Development declar-,; (..nantaln this State need
, | l l i n y to meet demands of•,!,is for leases with a IB per
IllTf>(,SP| as is apparently,1 nnrler the new Federal
n)i Hr expressed concern,,;,nv tenants m(ght be cot
-fPWMY, JOLY18,1947
wa» w c e w j in order to protectth* cjttaem of thij s u u .
Itota Aim i«%T N Me* Jertey I t* permJU,
th t twh (WfUto procedum, «n in-ctmm of 10 per cent only, warJujy t, ltH ranu. and wtitn thefederal law expires thii 10 peroent wfll be all that is »Uow«J.Therefore, if a tenant better*that a landlord U entitled to an
and withes to make a
,,io making, ,n t , at once for fear ofi,inipctlon when the federal
, nn February 28, 19*8..., iIP pointed out. leases
mm through coercion are, mutual arrangements re-
i,v the federal law.. ,,,, ionpr Erdman based his
i,, take It easy" on the• MI New Jersey citiiens will,,!,, led under a New Jersey
riTertlve upon procjama-.,-. ilie Governor, Which" will
.... nut!! when the federal lawMi- said the citizens of the
, i re lii no Jeopardy of beingprotection on February
, , n the federal law expires,of Governor DrlseoU's an-
, mmn that he would Invoke••:••>. Jersey law whenever Iti.inon.'itrated to Mils that tbja
voluntary agreement with thelandlord, the increase should notexceed the 10 per eent suggestedby the New Jersey law. since anyIncrease In excess of 10 per centwill become Illegal when the fed-eral law expires. Thij would re-qulre tjte lease and the possibilityof refunding to the tenant* anyexcess oer 10 per cent collectedsubsequent to February 21,1948.
Commissioner Irdroan addedthat he hopes tenants In New Jer-sey will rely Upon the protectionwhich the New Jersey st»tute af-fords them, and that the landlordsin New Jersey will recognise thefact that In another eight monthsthe New Jersey law will be Inoperation. "If this is done," hesaid, "there will be no unjustifiablerent Increases now or in the nearfuture. On the other hand, we allrecognize that rent Increases areJustified in certain hardship casesand the federal law makes pro-visions for adjustments in I'-;!:situations,"
H At m^lMl if NiftMPITTSBURGH. -The brain of>-
•rttlon in oft-roiivk'td borglarrequested a* • meant of ridinghlmielf of criminal tendenelMhai bern performed and pro-nounced a lurglcal tuccen. Themental remit* will take time todetermine.
The operation, known profes-sionally at a prefrontal lobotomy.wss. performed upon MUlBrdWright, 38.
Wright, father of two children,t« awaiting sentence for « lerietof burglaries Otmvltted manytime*, Wright couW bt lenteiteedto life under the habitual crimin-al /9Ct.
Brewing Co. President Is Named$i$ter Kenny Fund firm Head
Puts Hit Feet IntoIt, A
Developmentiittn Out
of tubeleii tlstswhich •rrilwdy rsyon cord construe*(Jon (•«* i"-n jnnouncfd.
OIL BURNERSAT NEW LOW PRICES
FOR IMMEDIATE INSTALLATIONCaUlJ$TODAYForAn
Eitimate36 Months To Pay Thru FHA
Complete Burner ServiceFuel Oil Supplied
CRESCENTELECTRIC APPLIANCE CO.
403 STATE STREET PERTH AMBOYp. A. 4-im
6-UMW Estimates Cheerfully Given
DANGELL, Inc.PEKSHINO AVtNDB. I8ELIN, N. J.
General Roofing ContractorF. a A. Arttnfement Ka4e
id iKiIrs on All Makes of Rqqfs Attic Converted Into Rooms
I hi Tar Hoofs, Ajfestet tafBrick Sldlnt, A»|*»W 8hlmt» B W M P o r c h M • OaragesKuuf.
leaders and Gutters(upper «r i
General Bcpalrs
Home l N « h U o i r Ail Work
Itidu by Frlind; 'fert'Ttofi'tTM Mush ShM in 8 « .
NEW YORK.-Joseph Gflmls notonly put his foot into It—he put bothfeet—and it took six husky cops toextricate him
Gikjili, a 40 year old Brooklyncoal company mechanic, met afriend employed at • nearby xall-road freight terminal, the friendsaid he had dropped a monkeywrench into an empty molassestank csr and asked Giknis to helphim get it out.
GOcnts said ture, and proceeded,to let himtelf down into the car.
H.'ght away he found the car notexactly empty, and himself in asweet fix—too much shoe li> the
The molasses was ankle deand, to put -It mildly, somewhatgummed up the works, not to men-tion Glknlt.
"What's the matter?" inquirednil friend from above.
"I'm stuck," said Giknis, with thefull meaning of the word.
The friend summoned other work-ers, who lowered a rope. Giknisdidnt budge, and neither did themolaM«i.
The workmen got a rope ladder,Giknis still'stuck to his stand In
the matter.A police emergency squad was
summoned. The cops studied thesituation—from above—and went towork rigging up a boatswain'schair.
Two hours after Giknis first founda kicker in the sticker, he fastenedhimstrf into the chair and the copshauled away.
Out of the stickiness came Glknii,unhurt but not unsweetened.
"(Jet the wrench?" asked his pal.
J. FAANK O'BONNBLL
The appointment of J. • FrankO'Qonnell. president of the PeterBreldt Brewing Company, pisbeth, as State Chairman of theannual drive of the Sister KennyInstitute for 1947, was announcedtoday by Commissioner Meyer 'lensteln. Newnrk, New Jersey StateChapter president.
No definite dale has been seby Inntltute officers for tjie commenccment of the annual drive,but it is to get underway aboutmid-September. Last year's SisteiKenny drive ran from the lasweek in November through Decem-ber.
The starting date of the driveand this year's quota for the Stateof New Jersey will be set whenChairman O'Donmll, President
Piitel Paskin' Patriili It
Flntd $$0 for Rtno DidtuRENO.—Pistol Pnckin' Patricia
Hoffman Nickerson Hoscheid of theNew York social register wai fined$50 after pleading guilty through herattorney to a charge of carrying aconcealed weapon.
John Halley, the attorney ap-peared in police court for the honey-mooning socialite arid entered aplea of guilty. Judge Guy Waltsimposed a sentence of $50 or 25 daysand HalWy paid the fine.
The pretty 23-year-old Patricia,recently Oivorced from Clark Wick-erson of New York and married toa Kansas consulting engineer, wasarrested two weeks previously whena Boston resident complained that•he waved a pistol in his face at anight club,
Marketing Costs HighSpecialization and localization ol
agricultural production, requlra de-velopment of a huge and expensiveagricultural marketing system toget goods from producers to con-sumer. In most cases, it costs moreto market farm products than itcostj to produce them.
U\4 Rea ftuUams. « •icuUvs tflreetor pi ititer ^ttinstltute meet with national dlree-iors of the Instltue
In accepting the post for thisdrlye. the state chairman t i'Th« Sister Kenny Institutedrive this year will call far theunstinting efforts of every man,woman »nd child in the United
No one person or smallgroup of persons could handle themany details, problems and graistamount of untiring work needed U
this drive a sucows.
"The Sister Kenny. Institute 1determined to destroy the DamOC|M sword of infantile pararMiwhich hangs over the heads of thChildren and youth of AmericaTh» future of this nation rests inthe hands, hearts and mindsour young people. Th»y must bephysically, mentally and morallyJU (or the task which lies beforethem.
"No organisation does more forthose Inflicted with the dread dis-ease infantile paralysis than theBister Kenney Institute. It is theduty of all of us to support thisdrive which will help stamp outthis b)qt on the nation's healthChart," concluded Mr. ODonnell.
Tlw newly appointed state ehalr*mart for the drive has been asso-ciated wit lithe Sister Kenny In-ttl(,ute for many years. He & thefirst vice president of the stateorganization, and was vice chair-man pf last year's drive. A veryactive campaigner in all drives andcivic programs, Mr. O'Donnell hasalso served as chairman of theU. 8. O., chairman of the Alco-holic Beverage division for U, SWar and Savings Bonds, countychairman for the Cancer Funddrive, and various other posts. Hehas always been a leader In thebrewing industry In New Jerseyand nationally.
State committee chairmen wilbe announced by Mr. O'Donnellwithin a week. These chairmen wilIn turn appoint the variaus countyand municipal chairmen. Personsto head various cooperating com-mittees wili be appointed by theend of the month.
Thepe committees will Includemedical, sports, publicity, radio,special events, labor, entertain-\ment, religious, industrial, educa-tion und many others.
President Truman Is Mid to bew y caaitferiqa aq officialto frMW The President h utee* report*} M oont«mj»iau
in HmJ W M
•ountry. He ipa rewm- jsjs t« the country that Is I
ly visited Mexico and Canada and I uty das* to the United 1
by t«snv to Srttll. he will be | tv- !
Have you a Problem?
COULD IT BE DRINK THATIS CAUSING IT?
Perhaps we can help you.
NO CHARGES OR FEES
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUSP. O. BOX 391
VVOODBRISGE, N. J.
Mate Rescues Army 'ChutistIn Plunge Toward the
FAIRBANKS, ALASKA.' - Anarmy paratrooper whose chute col-lapsed white he was 100 feet otf theground was saved by a fellow para-trooper who managed to grub pn tothe useles5 parachute as.it plum-meted by his own chute.
Hero o( the dramatic midair- r««-cue two miles north of here v asPfc. Raymond Kenyon, Greeowh,R. I. Kcnyun saw a crosswind cot-lapse the chute of Cpl. Charles A.Harris, Waltonvillc. 111. As Harris
urtled by, Kenyon grasped the silkhmud of his chute and the twoloated sufely to earth on Kenyon'thute.The army announced the para-
:hute rescue was the second on rec-rd, the first occurring over t«ongjjand, N. Y., in 1 *
PORTRAITof a Woman Doing a Wash
icvt if, or not ih* & '«&iww «ltctik wafers h»vc «11
kind* of iropiovjements. Th*y »v«wear and tear on flothfi. They w«han4 rinic and Iwpp <ty They cleanand <tr<Uo ihiraielvej. Youeven h » v » ^ f u |
clew,tbf ttwhes that
Swim in
You'll likeTo Be ShotEspecially when you arefilmed wearing a Bfiegs'casual jacket or sport coat.Juat picture yourself wear-ing one of these sport cqats'-and you'll get an idea ofhow V«U you will Wok,You'1.1 find there'll be nonegative idea.In smart patterns and suhwmer tweeds, you'll, flndboth comfort and n»ttjn«|3in their appear&po§t, Qafli-didly, they're just».t}»e"shot" y o u r wardwbe"needs for auninier. *•
, $?g.50td $35,00 'Worsted Gabardine Shicks
$15.Q0 and mMAnd evwythjng else you'llneed on vacation! ' •
• IfOHE HOURSAND ADOl
. if.
Comfort andSafety at the
Cliffwood BeachPool a*
•'4."I
1000 gallons sea waterfiltered and sterilized
every minute
Swim inwater aspure as
you drink.
Daily Admission 50c ~
\
--•fa i
PAGE SIX FRIDAY, JULY 18.1947'• • " • • • * *
JL
RETURN, By COLE RICHARDS^J*ll ld, cold-eyed man sidled
•lessly to the kitchen door,. » furtive searrhini! glnncr
the lonely mount Rins. andthe trail wlnrilim thrnimh
I to the distant canyon roadI at the bark of thr jiliimi)comfortably prflinc np-
I not three feet away.me, Ma 1'flpr.s?" hr
eredhim! By HIP creeping
tt, by the sirkrnlng thud of hershe knew him. Thr shinyknife ."stabbed through agreen peel. She turned,
irty. Sunlight touched her whitetad the soft wrinkles in hera, placid farr.Ill Dodd! You're home?"
hp snerrpd. "Don't Us 11•It wily seems like yesterday,
i ten years. Ma Peters." HateIn his voice. He planted
[Vis feet on the doorstep, andhis arms .stiffly. His wide,r shoulders cut ofT the sun.
thought: HP wants to talktit it. Oet It off his chest. She
"Bit down, Bill, right over
tell you all about it, Ie," he rasped.
i miffed deeply of apples andand pitch pine fire,
a' a apple pie? I like 'em.nber?"remember." She smiled
dly, but her 'heart struck a
d
\
il Keeps Lonely VigilRlvir; Master l» Missing
^ M M l D WINtJ, MINN.-In n tumble-T VSm ihinty on Wisconsin Island, In
headwaters of tht Mississippir, tits B little dog keeping a cold
„ lonely vigil. mRascal, a cocker spaniel, Is wait-
Jor the return of his master,.jrman George BrCnn, whose bodybelieved submerged somewhere
fine icy river,lllce believe Brcnn broke through
thin ice while walking over thein sloughs surrounding the is-
which lies between Mud lakeId the Mississippi river,When they brtike Into Hrenn's
shanty, authorities found his doglocked inside. Rascal had gnawed
j 'P»rt way through the door in an at-' 'tempt to escape. He had lived on
(!ereali< and pancake flour torn from,5 ijpckages o n t n 0 shelves.| - When police put Rascal into a
t ''boat and started back to Red Wing,the dog jumped from the boat and
I "twain back to the shanty.
IV.S. Takes Over $13,000 .• Paid by Japs lor Spy Work
1 WASHINGTON. - Attorney Gen-eral Clark imnoimceci that the gov-
' «rnm«nt had taken possession of1 '|I3,fji)0 which an agent for the Jnpa-
ttie government gave to a residentof New York City to obtain pre-
f JPearl Ifarbor jnformatlon in this- country.
Clark said the money was in the' .possession rf Mrs. Velvalee H.
Dickinson, the owner of a doll shop'who, h» said, was arrested by thefederal Bureau of Investigation in
I "Ifnuary, 1944, and convicted of vio-I' feting the censorship statute.> , Clark said that "it was through£ o t t e r s about dolls that Information*» io the Japanese was to be trans-5. inltted."
quicker, harrier beat. "I've thoughtof you often, Bill."
"Yeah, I've thought of you."His sullen mouth twisted wryly.His '-old eyes Rllttered. "Stared atiron burs, ami thought of you. Etroitrn cnib. and thought of you.You've smplled wild plum blossomsin 11"1 canyon; ever smelled buck-ets Mid disinfectant? Stars cometip peaceful behind the mountain;ever watch the light* go onthrnimh a cell door?"
His rising, enraged voice drop-ped1 to grating bitterness. "I wastwenty-five, then. Thirty-five now.Yeah. I've thought a lot aboutyou."
Ma Peters' plump hands trem-bled. Maybe if they were- busy,they wouldn't shake. She hitchedthe chair half around. The tablesupported her arms. She wieldedthe parer steadily. Oolden greenpeel traced curlicues under herfingers.
"You was makln' a apple piethat day," re recalled.
"I've made them for more yearsthan you've lived, iQlll," she ans-wered gently,
"Years!" He snarled, as if onlyhe could talk of years. His coldeyes fastened on her throat, andhe had to tear them away, "Yeah,you was peelln' apples, and alook-ln" out this door. You seen some-body hold up the Skull Ranchpayroll. Then when I dropped inlater, you pulled the blnck hand-kerchief from my hip pocket."
"Because it was such a mourn-ful color for a young fellow."
"You seen the eye-holes In It,and made out like you didn't. Youfed me pie, And then told thesheriff—"
"I should have let it go, becauseyou ate here," she snapped.
"They wouldn't have caught me,if It hadn't been for you."
"Well?" she asked, with spirit."Well," he grinned, "here you
are, all by yourself on a lonelymountain. Grocery boy comes oncea week. Nobody else comes reg-ular."
She was suddenly aware of beingfat and old and slow. She neverhad felt lonely, with automobileslike toys on the road below, withdeer coming in to drink, and avisitor for supper every few days.She felt lonely now. . ,
"Won't be no cowboys or Ran-gers for some days, Ma. A rlp-snortln' forest fire's runnin' t'otherside the Range. I started It.Startedit for a purpose,". If ever she stopped the applepeeling, some thing would snap.She had stabbing pains behindher ears, and emptiness deep inthe pit of her stomach.
"Took me a long time to figure
out how to give you ten years ofI hell in a few days. You'll be Inthe attic, tied and tagged. Longabout tomorrow, you'll «ee springsstart In' and waterfalls laughln'but you won't drink. You'll hatelife, and yoqTt H«s-Mil you die"
She thought she ctwld force theparing knlfa Into hie throat, Ifshe uot close enough. "I won't tryto stop you, BUI. I!m finishing agood life."
"A swell life 1" he sneered. "Glv-In' me ten years—"
She started to get up, In herslow, heavy way. Then she sawwhy his arm was stiff. He drew a
I tire Iron from hta coat sleeve.Bill Dodd knew how to hit. She
wouldn't be out long.When Bill Dodd returned from
the attic, he walked on the flag-stones to the grass under the pines.The grass was a carpet all the wayto the canon road.
He drove away leisurely, andtook his time driving forty milesout of the mountains. He pausedto watch deer grating, halted toeat a hamburger, slowed to markthe river holes where troutJumped.
Where the canyon opened on theplain, he ran Into a small gasstation.
A gray, heavy act man In blackStetson and wrinkled clothes lean-ed on the open car window, "How-dy, Bill."
"HI, Sheriff." Hearty greetings,to show he held no II! feeling."Thought you'd be over the moun-tain to the fire."
"Fire ftghtln' ain't for me anymore. Old folks ain't the matchof you young whlppersjiappers."
Bill smiled broadly. The. smilefaded.
The sheriff's eyes were as hardas cell bars and his face had setm grim lines.
"Git out. Bill." The sheriffopened the door.
Bill reached for a gun. An ironvise of a hand clamped on hiswrist from the other side of thecar. The gas station attendanttook the gun.
"I stopped by Ma Peter's placeto tell her you were out," thesheriff drawled. "Your name and.'attic' were written in apple peelon the table. Ma Peters can dowonders with an apple. Come on,Bill. Get Out!"
AT THE COOL
FRI. - SAT. - SUN.Gary Cooptr - Merle Obcron
"THE COWBOYAND THE LADY"
Eddie Cantor
"PALMY DAYS"SUN. MAT. 4 CARTOONS
Rayon Beach Team
One of the best looking of thissummer's new play fashions isthis one-piece suit lopped by astnock-{ype jacket. The suit Isstyled along Grerian lines witha graceful pleated skirt andhandsome wide leather belt,The coat has a peter-pan collarand loose, smart lines. T h e fab-ric Is a butcher-linen weave inAvisc,o spun rayon which w e a nand wears...
USES GLOVES FOR BANKv NEW YORK.—Mrs. b w a h Ten-ner has found an even saferplace for her money than the topofvher stocking. She stuffed $1,140in bills Into the fingers of herblack gloves and carried t h e m inher handbag. When three boyssnatched the bag, they apparentlythrew it away after a superficialsearch. The bag, containing thegloves and the money, was foundby police in a park.
STATE THEATREWOODBRIDGE, N, J.
TODAY THRU SATURDAY
A Five Bell Picture — in Glorious Technicolor
"THE YEARLING"with Grcrtty PECK - Jane WYMAN
Shown at 6:40 and 9:05\
SUNDAY THRU TUESDAY
Ronald REAGAN - Alexis SMITH in
"STALLION ROAD"plus Rosalind RUSSELL - Melvyn DOUGLAS ill
'THE GUILT OF JANET AMES"
WED. THRU SAT. — "THE TWO MRS. CARROLLS"
f Htymate Drowns Boy of 4;Says ' I Won't Do It Again'
NANTY BAR, WALKS. - Four-dtu>old Glyndwr Owen Parfut, hisHiye« alight with pride in his newM o e t , ran out to play and didn't re-Aurn After dnrji iviU'chers led byfyjt father, a I'UHI miner, found the
his hands mid feet boundthe laces of his new ilioes, in
River Afan, 100 yards from the[y cottage.
H-yeai'-uld playmate, protesting(-'"I won't do it again," was charged.' 'with murder in juvenile court.
JETPLANK RECORDrlca's current answer to the
airspeed supremacy, thejet P80R, set a new
I's record by flashing over acourse ul, speeds at time
> 632 miles an hour. The plane,ghtly revised version of the
rdjetpropelleci craft, trav-1 a >,86 mle course four times,
In. each direction and broke015 uiile-an-hour record set on','7, 194« by a British Gloster-
Ing Saucers! . . .*, Jiiuy lit-' cm iiiiii^inu i y t i l ing
\ i)Ut licit: ill M o d e m Mt-il.s
p, 76 MillII tfllt'«t, YVIIIHIIIIIIIKV
, 'hav« (lie rt!»l lliln^.t I'w y m uiiMlifuit , . . sin li us . . .
i ah(ll» Imthlng; U'unlis, spuni»-*»ltl »la<'k» . . . Slop In!
The cab is FLEXl-MOUNTED^-cushioncd <m rubber against roadshocks, torsion and vibration!, . .Driver's compartment is wider,with more leg room. Wider, deeperwindshield and windows increasevisibility by 22%1
Panels and pick-ups haveINCREASED LOAD SPACE. . . .New, stronger, sturdier FRAMESare designeti to carry greater loadsgreater disUncea for a longer i imc!
Tht Cob that "BrwfW
Fresh air is (fawnin from iJieout-side— heatedincoldweiither—and ubed airisforcalouil*
I .on^er wheelbiises give you betterload (listributiim. . . . l-hevrolet'alainous PUIJ.-n.OATINU 1IVPO1DK L AR AW bS urn jjearcd for the load I
America's FirstAdvance-Design Trucks
. . • acclaimed from coasf fo coasf/
Everywhere... wherever you go . . . truck users arepraising the sensational new line of Advance-Desi&nChevrolet trucks. Reason? They're really new, reallydifferent, Introducing the unique cab that "breathes"- that almost literally "inhales" fresh ah* and"exhales" used air,* plus scores of other new featuresand innovations l»ng-awaited—long-wanted! Builtto be first, and built to last, they're big-looking,big-loading, powerful yet economical trucks to do amore profitable Job for you. See them now.
I ChevroletVJL,_. , .. „ ...I BN<;iNBS are woyjd'l AtQ|t eco-
nomic ,il for their sun, , . .HYD*AU>I.K; iRUCK BRAKKttreiKchitMy
fur greater brakt-lkiog
CHIVtOLIT TRUCKS
QsmiMftplam Pump TirmtiMnt Widely Uud Maehlni
PHILADELPHIA -With only Mper cent of the nation's farmsequlpptd with the most universallyn«fd machine In the conntry-thecommonplace pump- the remaining71 pet c*nt are rapidly becominggn Important market (or th!» mech-anism Which outnumber* the auto-mobile, telephone and refrigeratorromhlned. •
Terming the pump the "un«ungCinderella of the mnchjne tamlly,"Richard H. DeMott, vice preside"1
of RKF Industrie!!, Inc.. in an In-dustrial report, said that of the coun-try'i 9,800,000 farms, only 1,879,000are equipped with pumps for run-ning wattr.
He eitlmated » a t the natlonnl"pump population" now tops 100 mil-lion, constituting one of the most Im-portant uien (or bull nnd rollerbearings. H<* compared the pumptotal with 34,000,000 automobiles, 19,-7B2.0O0 refrigerators and 27,800.000telephones reported In use at theend of l M , pointing out that eachmotor vehicle u*es at least one form'of pump.
Body of Harvard Athlete IsFound Floating In Lajoon
BOSTON.-The body of Sylvester(Jardlner, 22-year-old Harvard uni-versity athlete and World War IIveteran, was found floating in theCharles tlver basin lngoon. ,
Positive Identification was rrlade*y his father, former Gov. WilliamT, Gardiner of Maine.
MedlcAl Examiner William J.Brlckley said a brown overcoat and•hoi skates found on the body indi-cated that the young athlete hudbeen accidentally drowned whileskating at night.
1,011 RintVlilatlBMStN'Goupli to Prlun
NEW YORK.-Plesdlng gulHyto chargei citing 1,011 imUnc«tof rent ceilings vlnlfltiom be-tween U*t (March and October,two Harlem real estate men weresentenced to lerv* ilx months Inprison.
Federtl Judge John W. Clancyalso flned James Smith, TO, $5,000and hii ion, Raymond Smith, 29,11,000,
Federal Atty. Silvio Mollo a«;serted (h»t they crowded as matoya» Bve persons into roominghouse rooms for which theycharged $5 to $1140 » week.
Caitarlan Operation Sav«Baby Afttr Mother Dies
PORTLAND, OHE.-A healthy girlwas delivered by Caesarian opera-tion three minut»s after death of themother, Mrs. Mildred Wickstrand,31, from pneumonia in a hospitalhere.
The Infant, born a month prema-ture and weighing 8 pounds, 11ounces, was placed in an incubatorand was thriving, the hospital said.
Youth Stabs to DeathBlrl Friend of Granddad
NEW YORK.-James Quinn, 21,was held for fatally stabbing his 74-year-old grandfather's paiama-cladgirl (rlend. Q
The victim was Margaret cowling,42, a telephone worRer. Quinn's wifesaid her husband stabbed Miss Dowl-Ing after he accused her of stealingbis money from a bureau drawer.
RAILROAD SAFETY
The'Interstate Commerce Cora-iRRiim has ordered railroads to
install automatic safety devices on45,000 miles of track over whichfreight trains are run at fifty milesan hour or more, or passengertrains are operated at speeds ofsixty miles en hour, or more. Theorder provides for the installationof automatic train stops or traincontrols or automatic .signals, on26.1&8 miles of track and the in-stallation of manual or automatlrblock systems on 18,586 mites oftrack.
Clerk Pleads GuiltyTo $780,000 Theft
Livid Luxuriously and KeptTwo Private Yaehtt.
9 JNEW Y O A K , - William Arthur
Nickel, $M-a-wcek clerk who livedluxuriously and kept two yachtswhile he • embezzled $780,000 fromhis employ«r, pleaded guilty as hewent on trial with two of his threeco-defendants.
Nickel, who apparently will b<*chief state's witn*»s in the hug*Mergentbaler Linotype companysw|ndle, a,nt«Ted hji plea to a 202-count Undldtment Charging grandlarceny and forgery.
Tht 48-year-<ild foifner Mergen-thaler employee, . whose extrava-gance failed to aroVise suspicion un-til a fellovf employee discoveredfraudulent entries In his books, wasarrested last October in a Floridahotel.
Wlckel, who had fled to Detroit,Chicago and Florida when h« rec-ognized that his accounts wereunder scrutiny, talked freely afterhis arrest and implicated threeothers In the complicated plot.
Julius Lobcl, alias Jimmy Collins,a Broadway figure who hat been atliberty under $85,000 ball, and Irving Cohen, 45. known as "Izzy theEel," are1 co-defendants In the swlndie trial.
A fourth co • defendant, IsidoreRappaport, 55, president of theUltima Optical Instrument com-pany, was granted a jepara'3 trialbecause he and his firm werenamed in only 41 out of nearly 500counts in the indictment.
Rappaport, a war sub-contractorfor the linotype llrm, was said byNickel to have master-minded theplot in which fraudulent checksmade out supposedly in payment ofMergenth,Bler bills escaped com-pany detection. Ruppaport, how-ever, wai said to have been ou»iedin favor of Collins later in the plot.
ISELIH THEATREOak Tree Road Iselln, N. J.
Met. 6-1279
l'rl. ••id Xnl. - .lull IN anil IV"THK HTIIAXliK WOMA.V
nith Hrdr l.nMarr— al*n —
"THK I,AW IIF I'HVJ I,ASH"ullh l.rr Hul.rn. - Mar; Scull
Snlnrclny Matlurr Dulyi : i l r i l I a r ( i i u n » f u r ( l i e K l i l d l r n
•4tin, m i l l M i n i . - . l u l l -U I I m l Z\
" T i l l ; K i l l i n o rMONTI'; I l U s i w "
tilth l.tiulN Iliiyniinl millllurhara Urltlou
illHd ~—••V,\*\ CIIIIH. KANV lid"
i\i:l. fiarrj I'itc)irrnli| tuiil
Tllt-M. mill VVr-il. - Jul^ '22 anil ' 11
• t ' w n sMAir*- r u o n . K "nllli Lui-lllr Hall - Juliu Huillak
— alsu —"THK MISHISfl; l , \ m "
nllk KIIUP Illi-binond ulidBarbaru ilr-fd
•tll.VKKWAIIK It I Till'; I.AIKIS
in'Top Fare
Steel Industry, short of coalmakes first big cut in output.
Box Office Open* Mat. 12:45Eve. 6:45 — Continuous Sat.,
Sunday and Holidays
NOW THRU SAT.
PAULETTE GODDARDFRED M M M U R R A Y
"SUDDENLYIT'S SPRING"
Lee BowmanMfirguerite Chapman
"THE WALLS CAMETUMBLING DOWN"
St l Mitt. 3 CartoonsSUN., MON., TUBS, WED.
Cornel Wilde - Maureen O'Hara"THE HOMESTRETCH"
In Tecbnlco|«r
Julinny WelssmullerBrenda Joyce
"TARZAN ANDTHE HUNTRESS"
Next Week, - Thurs., Fri., Sat."CALCUTTA"
Alan U d d • (Jail RussellWilliam BendU
"LITTLE MISSBROADWAY"
jean Porter - John Shelton
WOodbridge 8-1&28—0750—0894.
• ORCHESTRA AND ENTERTAINMENT SERVICE
Towne Music Studio
Instructors for all Iiistrujnet)ta
INSTRUMENTS AND ACCES8OBIK8
448 RAHWAY AVBNUE WOODBRIDGE, N, J.
r ALWAYS2 BIG HITS!PERTH AMBOY
P. iL 4M28k
PAYS ONLV ~ IU1DAY & SATURDAY, JULY II & 19Kfcrloff - Colin CUve
in•VEANKENSTEIN"
Bel» Lucoci - HeUn Chuidlo;in
1 " P R A C V IA"8CNDAV AND MONDAY, JULV »0 AND 11
B»hdoiph Soott - Ann Rkbard , Oo«ri« "Qafcby" Hayctb
"BADMAN8Uo Gorwy wi9 th« BQV«7
"MB, firAA¥. , THTJI
v.
In hrr best role since she wonthe Academy Awarff, lovely JoanFontaine plays the part of anevil wife, who murders her hus-band, and then thrown Hnnplrlonnn her lover no that she may befree to set her c»p for t million-aire In "Ivy" now at the DltmasTheatre,
WHEATFarmers will be asked to reduce
their wheat acreage next year be-cause foreign demand for Ameri-can wheat Is expected to decline,according to Secretary of Agricul-ture Clinton P. Anderson. A rec-ord domestic wheat crop of 1,-409,800,000 bushels has been pre-dicted for this year. No surplus isexpected, however, In view ofheavy export demands and ft smallcarry-over from last year.
NoRro association maps fight oOduel education.
GI student veterans' totalshowed decline in May,
SILVER SCREE'NDitmai'
Suspense la the keynni,"Iry." which opened vested:,•.the Ditm»s Theatre,
Highlighted by a supni, ;
orjnnnce from Joan Pnnt, tih,teli title role, and ont.st.nn,-:
dliortioii on the part or :•.'Wood, this picture will keepon the erigeof your sent ni:i,to tlii> dramatic fadwiut.
Adapted by Cahrlps n™iii'i :l,ho novel. "The Story nt h \Mnrio Belloc-Lowndfs. tin- n ,Is taht of n Rlii wlio n i i» , ,ofv anyt.WnK but money s,..he1.' chance to get what she < ,.throuuli marriage to a miui.i illonaire, sh« poisons her hushnnd manages to throw thp ph,on the man whfl^professes | u
fnr her, figuring in this WHY t,.rid of both Witfe.,hcr slrirlr .Whether or not m e mircpcireally should se for ymirsiiicause the film is entcrtalnitii istart to
BIKINIBikini Lagoon will b" ,i .,
summer In the study of the **:,,of atomic bombs upon hf(materials, according to iiu •Department.,A forty-man '• ,scientists will be sent thev(. i,,,duct laboratory experiment', i
her marine life of H, as well as plani. :n, i
Ife on the atoll, will be >I,I,I
FORDSFORDS, N. J. - P. A. 4-«34l
Thurs., Fri. and Saturday
"THE YEARLING"with Ore if 017 Peck and
Jane Wymln
Sunday and Monday
"SEA WOLF"with Edw. G, Robinson, Ida
Lupino and John Garfleld
an*
"HONEYMOON"with Shirley Temple and
Franchot Tone
Tuesday and Wednesday
"ADVENTURES OF
MARCO POLO"
with Gary Cooper
and
"THE GUILTY"with Bonita Granville and
Don Castle
Also Dishes to the Udles
LATE SHOW S/ i i
NOW PLAYING
Gene TiernrvRex
I Georte
in
and
Mrs. Muir"
with
Edna Rest
Vanessa Brown
LATE SHOW SAT.
NOW PLAYING
On 5thAvenue"
withDon DeForcAnn Hardine
CharlieVictor MooreGale Storm
'•BACKLASH"
withJean
Richard Travis
SARG'S OLD CORRAL}Main Street at Route 35, Woodbridge, N. J.
PROUDLY PRESENTS
ANDY NELSONAT THE NEW
HAMMOND ORGANNIGHTLY—EXCEPT MONDAY
' Beit in Liquor*, Winei and Bear, Lunchet,
Dinners and Sandwich**
TODAYAMBOY
r, A.Thru Wedneiday,
I P I C KNQWIESAR
Uon« C M extend « cortJUl wilcomt-to* of ti i
, „,'„ Not be vnrtmmuuHni the D«H>y tomorrow. W« ktiow you trilll inpp that resident* pf the Beroujh b<j t h r i ] ^ d b y i t , .7 , ^ ^
drniandinj; IimflCaiatft and par- v...•,. .. . '*
'!|'r,,pHlrfi of the streets on wjtfch( nll... nrfi located, will givt a little11'i,'1)n(fht to the problem, which (>re-, ,11 jn any attefnpt to meat their
Opinionsof
Others
,,,) js bothered by a severe lack ofM(lw, just as it has been bothered(l()nr by. It shoulfl toe obvious to
ii,.,! without adequate money at,,,.,1 the Borough Council cannot atrits mads without resorting to the
;|, tho indiscriminate use of bondmtin gone by that1 la responsible(Ipplora'ble state of Carteret's
i,, tho paat decade and a half.,,tain, we feel, that eventually our,H \m improved and repaired topldr satisfaction of all, In the„ WP believe the people should
H,,l with the semi-permanent sur-hnb are being placed to the fullI |hi- community's ability to pay,I of improvement may not be the
rrt for by residents who have
for the present that it willbefore the permanent job
we believe that all the
uhi(h need attention so badlyhare in any improvement programthan to spend all the available
iust one or two of them. Such
A NATIONAL MANIASurprising as well at »lars|to(
Is the statement of Dr. (JbaritaBurllngame that the "priee*44ayemphasis on psychlstrfc dlawdanIs a peril to national BSfttinhealth."
And It Is a timely wsrnjfti ion,lor psychiatry u a mafic Mft-•II for all that's mentally wrong
w "rage" here In Americabut a mania, public reliance onwhich to effect cures of physicalas well as mentat maladies nowthreatens to do more harm thangood. For to eliminate our mortalIlls. Imaginative aqd otherwise,nothing can replace the Infinitecurative power to be found |n arettlrn to spiritual life.
All the more .surprising Is the
In n '1 •
Hospital Care Cotts Incrcate ToolWe earnestly hope that any who might
feel called upon at first Mush Wtritictee
the Perth Amboy General Hospital-tor
acceptance of the Inevitable—increase In
its rates—that they will take tlnie for a
second thought.'
The Perth Amboy General Hospital Is aoharitafole, non-profit1 institution which
v expedient of Sorrowing—and operates at si deficit. This to true lor npny: with short memories will recall r e a 8 o n 8 I n t ) | e flrst p ) a c e ( m u l U c , p a ? l t i e 8
have been sponging on the hospital for
years, sending in ward patients who miist
be provided beds, medical attention, medi-
cine, surgery, food, nursing service, heat,
light, water and other necessities—and
then paying the hospital a mwe token pay-
ment which nowhere near approaches the
amount which the hospital is required to
spend. This is true of Woodbrjdge Town-
ship, of Perth Amboy, of Carteret.
This means that the hospital ophites
,m for help, but we think that at a deficit, a substantial deficit. Wfth costs
iKh can make the roads pass- increasing in every possible and «onc0iv-
abte direction, it is juat a little too mttch
to ejtpect that a hospital can escape these
increases. These increases, ,it JiUist be re-
membered, affect not only thosd -wild can
pay their way but also those who cannot—
and even though those in thft fermer
category are billed at cost (whlph most: of
rtaking, we feel, would be eminent- them aren't), it cannot be expected thattfre, ,o those residents whose streets r e v ^ n u e f r o m t h j g 8 0 U r c e ,g ^ ^ fee
o pay for the unfortunate souls
depend on charity.
If the hospital only meet? its bare costs
in its charges to the paying patient and
the municipalities continue to send in 'in-
cidents will appreciate fully the digent patients and are willing ta pay only m o r e e m p h a 8 l s on s f f l rm*u«'
Burllngame la one of the world'soutstanding psychiatrists andhead of on« of the oldest mentalInstitutions In America. Explain-ing ttje logic of hla charge,'Dr.Burllngame says:
"People are apparently be-
that are being bandied abouHncurrnet literature. The publicmind is turned predominantly
MlI,I H|,nre in community benefits andihlic without special privilege being
Ir'.l I') iiliy.
;tl(. confident that a majority of
tendency contains the danger ofcreating unwarranted real andImaginary psychiatric Ills, par-ticularly In delicately balancedIndividuals. Peoples in all walksof life are.coming to believe thereis something wrong with theirmental selves."
Yes, It can be a dangerous andcostly fad. It Is leading, In notJust a few but thousands of cases,to morbid Introspection and ac-tual breakdown of emotionalfaculties. And with his warningof this malignant tendency theeminent doctor gives out a freeand effective antidote as the cure,namely, "a reappreclatlort ofspiritual values, parent guidanet,
I an
en1:-
v, as the program progresses. Let'smirselves further into debt thanliiTiiuse we're paying enough for
mi past borrowing now,
ut in which the Borough Council a s m a l l f r a c t i o n o f t h e e x p e n g e o f t h e j r
"•""". ™A w i U b e P a t i e n t a n d U"der" care, it stands to reason that the paying
patients certainly must be charged in a,c-
cordance with increased costs, If this does
not sound sensible, the next time you go
to a hotel or into a restaurant or buy a
,ndous responsibility will rest ™ " * • » * » > ^ * * • ? **o-p< twoIn tin members of the Committee toInamtMl by. Mayor Skifoa to pass uponhualiiiratiohs of applicants for the 21
easily understood rujes of health,and less emphasis on mental dis-ease." •
Opening our minds In days of8 t r e 5 S t 0 a11 t h e d ° c t o r s and »pd-clallsts In the world can n»vertake the place of op«nlnt >urminds to <3o<l,—Pfttenon f$ing CalL
THEThe National Association of
yean agpi or five. Then sit down quietlyand wait f pr them to back' up %« wagon.
IN1:; hrlllfft r a i iv
hear the park for war
is hard to underhand the. reasoning ™ £ j ^ S = ^that looks like a pickle, tastes
by the tnree oainoucposts, asking that a joint
n,al,ve be Included among Mayoriiuinmations, Will undoubtedly be
l Iiv Mr Skiba—AS it shou d be.tinnahly the Mayor also Will warn
which can accept the need for increaseseverywhere except in a hospital, More pe-culiar, however, is the reasoning of local
trhich continue in their re-the hospital even half-way
in their responsibility to provide for the in-digent. This is a situation which is becom-ing more and more acute—not only in this
elsewhere add has resulted in a
like a pickle and smells like apickle. The reason for the turmoilIn plckledom was the fact that |twas really not a pickle, far the
reason that It was not
thecareless words hurled In suddenanger, the violent debatns, theu b l e t h u m p l n g a 3 l h e t n r e e . m a n
board of pickle packing experts
Ml ;i:i other representative citizens ofi KmmiKh, and we know he will give
ii ttaught before deciding upon hisIftlullS.
lartcivi certainly owea to its veterans|oi)|)oi-tunity to liv* In convenient and
"table quartern^ Obviously, some•a-iis iiresent a grater Urgency than• s • and it will bl Hn'evaluation of> that will be thf Housing Committee's
Honsiliility—t6 dfltlde which veterans,s.s of any ofW consideration butII be acCoaUHQdatod first. We are
' confident that tilMe will be sufficientdents of the cottlilUuity who can bring•to • ommittee Judfjpent, impartiality| understanding, tHb will make them-
• available for W job ahead.Ilif success of .till intlfB housing project
'*!> in fact, ttlfan this Committee's•"""is. This is thfl Veaaoii we say that
admission to any patient for whom pay-ment for services is ribt guaranteed,
This-is a rule whose working is horriblete contemplate and one from which anyhospital would shrink. If the municipali-ties, though, will not meet a fair share ofthe cost of maintaining charity patientswhere, pray, will the money f6r Buch pa-tients be obtained?
lonsii)iiityi for the eyes of not onlyvt'tcran but of ivwy resident of Car-
W||li'euponth«W.
Tfc. Big Day!.irniw ^ the d»y of Carteret'a big"i I ii-rbv »nH wm «yn«rt th« larmst•• "1.1 oy,.ana We expect tne largest" ih« histoy 6f theBe cventa which
HiDHDiT unnnmtmt wi l l h« ™ hand•'i».ipu »pon»tfr»# will be on hAna11 t'urteret's young»teft Vie for the
l t l i fftur.vear ach6lar-f 'U l l
egeofehXe' ll(l'i>y whtoli will be run on the"«« Avenue MbiMfehc at 2;30, Will
"» contulMi
Black Market Bahiei At $2,500We have heard of a great many black
markets, due for the most part to thescarcity of things that people desire, butDr. Abner I. Weiaman, of New1 York City,nays that black market babies in Brooklynhive increased in price to a flat $2,600,
Dr. Weisman urges the medical men ofhis area to "face the situation squarely,"declaring that there exist "unscrupulous,dishonest, black market doctors . . . work-ing in cahoots with equally unscrupulousand didhonest lawyers, who have,been turn-ing babies over to the highest bidder."
In one section of Ndw York City, for ex-ample, he aays, «n infant girl brought$1,600 on the black market and a babyboy $1,700. Prices, (iowever, have g,0Pe upand he charges that "tnembers of the medi-cal profession are actually selling babies'under the counter.'"
No wonder the doctor urges that mem-bers oi th« Medical Society, social agenaies,the legal profession and other gQurdw workto organize a nationwide (oomp\|(^»fl to"to wipe out one oi th« g*e41
nomenon, Pernlckerty,but cat flan't be too careful innaming a pseudo-pickle. Visual-lie it! "Gentlemen, a happy com-
of pickle andus the naturel,
pickle of the future," thundersone plcklepacker. His confreresnorts la an unfraternal mannerand shouts: "It's weak; packs nopunch, I suggest we call it'prickle,' crowned pretender tothe pickle,"
And so it may have gone thatway all night. All the elemenLs ofdrama must have been presentIn tbis smoke-flUed room, pung-ent With the heady odor of nfty-cent cigars and pickle juice. Butwhen the dawn came, the wanbut happy pickle-packers hademerged with the new name"Quickie," they said, was theirnew baby, pasteurised and allready for entrance Into the martsof pickles. Now there seems to beone more than the 57 varieties, orisn't there?—Hartford Courant.
MOfcK ABOUT PAjMUNGThe action of the Borough
Council in limiting parking in thebusiness district to one'hour li,of courge, In line with the prob-lem, brought to a head by theInsistence of state authorities
AUTOMATIC STOKER91Carter*
.JUST.
ParagraphsT h a t attentive rttdtr
ChurchlU't dollar-a-word ra*olrei. whose mouth move* ureads, would be the tnoom-tL.man, counting. — R i c h m o n dTimea-Dtapateh.
Under the Capitol DomeBy J . Jtseph Gribbins
do their business indistrict within an hour. The prob-l e m o* enforcement arises, how-e v e r w h l c h a g B l h s u g g M t a m
possibility of parking metersW h l l e w e w o u l d to a g f t l n 8 t ^
lnatallatlon of parkUig meters forthesake of revenm, the tact re-
lour ltxnl authorities might oon-
nue to making *nMto «4di.
•VI
ilu'- worked ttlft 0» their » « • 'or wiling •babies."'• l«»tinijr thft%,%|i0vii»g,UiW hereu'lt\ and gi
j ' tomorrows « * TO. imir.» tffr ah* w.I "'l will go toitofy O. to take j»rt |^V«« «in dM dtfatt ««tIk^A^UM*
r n t ' T fil»<li;
h*v^fa^^ . <N. 1.) Km* " - ' ?> 'A\ ',!f r ^ J K S i w o k t Motor • '* ' : + » { # . £ ;*
''^TTTTlilifWBlii nf*
couldsp««dlng
itapney.Who point out 4wt«ke
i of our businesswenow:
TRENTON.—New Jersey will'Join with other States next fallIn asking the United States Su-preme Court to state definitelywhether lands under tidal andnavigable waters belong to theState of the Federal Govern-ment.
Ever since the creation ot theGovernment it has been
a uniformly established rule ofconstitutional law t,hat all, lan,dsbeneath tidewater and navigablewater are the absolute propertyQf the respective states. Underthis presumption, New Jersey,through its State Navigation Di-vision, has leased such riparianlands and collected- rentals for -many year.s.
But on June 23 the UnitedStates Supreme Court ruled theenormously valuable oil bearinglands under the Pacific Ocean offthe California coast belong to thePedWal Oovernment, Prior lothat time in 54 cases the SupremeCourt had uniformly held owner-ship of such lands rests In theBtates.
In the recent opinion, JusticeBlack ruled that California is notthe owner of the three-mile mar-ginal belt along iU coast and the •Federal Government rather, thanthe State haa paramount rightsin and power over the area. TheState of California has been is-suing leases on the submergedlands since 1921.
The Division of Navigation ofthe New Jersey Department ofConsflrvatlon Joined_ wlbh otherstates to become a party to thesuit, with Deputy Attorney Gen-eral Robert Peacock carrying theball for New Jersey.
Although Attorney GeneralTom C Clark Insisted that Cali-fornia alone would be atlectedby tli«,8upreme Court's decision,New Jersey authorities mairitalnthe ruling must arbitrarily applyto all coastal states.'Because thetitle to lands beneaith inlandnavigable waters, Including lakesand rivers, has also been claimedby states, they say that Inlandstates are also affected by thedecision.
What New Jersey would like toknow directly from the SupremeCourt Is whether the Californiadecision affects the title to ri-parian lands up and down Itscpaat. Other states would alsolike to have the question answer-ed. The Question will be put di-rectly to the Supreme Court ifI re-hearlng of the caae Is grant-*«d during the October term.
LEGISLATURE: — The boxscore ol the 1847 Legislature Is418 new law* and 73 vetoes com-pared with 318 statutes last year
Carteret Pressy Carpet'PrettCfcrteret 8-1601)
Kr«, obartM B: a*»g:afy......s»ito»
!•»<
and a nominal number of vetoedbills.
Because Governor Alfred E.Drlscoll took over two months tostudy and dispose of the meas-ures adopted by the Legislature,the number qf vetoed bills thisyear Is an all-time record.
Bills considered by the law-makers this year totaled 845, in-cluding 51^,.Introduced in, theOeneral Assembly atlfl- 330 In theSenate. Both houses passed 256Assembly bills and 235 Semitebills.
Governor Drlscoll approved315 Assembly bills and 32 Henatpbills for various reasons afterthey had been approved by bothhouses.
Because there is small possibility that the Legislature may berecalled In the fall to consider scash sickness program for NewJersey workers because of power-ful opposition against the plan,the 1947 box wwre is consideredcomplete,
LAWYERS :—A greater fussWill b$ made over the 63 personsWho passed April bar examina-tions and who will be admittedto the New Jersey bar on Sep-tember 11, than ever before.
Under arrangements made be-tween Chief Justice Clarence E.Case and the State Bar Associa-tion the membership of the en-
• tire Supreme Court will witnessthe swearing in exercises.
In addition to taking the at-torney's oath, the new lawyers,for the first tlmo, win also takea separate oath of a solocltor inChancery Court to be given per-sonally by Chancellor A. DaytonOliphant.
The planned ceremony Is some-thing new in the history of NewJersey jurisprudence. Heretofore,the new lawyers were sworn inance only in the presence of asingle Supreme Court Justice andgiven a speech on ethics. Thenthey culled it a iluy. '
The new procedure 1B designedto make the new lawyers feel theyhave leached an Important goalin life and that the eyes of theSupreme Court will be upon themduring their years of practice,
BOOZE: "Liquor by Wire"•ilinllur to the "Say it with Flow-ers" fiervlce used by florists maybecome the future vogue under•i plan of a New York groupwhich recently received the ten-tative approval of JSrwla B. Hock,New Jersey's State Alcoholic Bev-Bi'age Commissioner,
The plan provides for retailliquor dealers In all parts of the
• Country to be enrolled In the"Service" for the payment of $25yearly. A purchaser wishing tomake a g'f l ° ' alcoholic beveragesto a consumer in another Stateor locality would to to nearbymember of trie "Service" andplace'an order for delivery to afriend at a distant point as abirthday or other gift. An extracharge of forty cents would bepaid. , .
The order would be transmit-ted to a member of thfl'*'8ervice"at Uw distant locality w,hfl woulddeliver the liquid cood^ with anappropriate card, !
•Th* plan is dealfijad for thenonwnltnce ot sjtiftttmladsti
Who format ntfhd&ta &iul*"•, •*## sw^ Mjfsi iitfn^np w ^ w *
Who
bottle on a warm, cold or rainyday.
LABOR: —Nurses, attendants,food handlers' and farm workers
iCntitinued on Pant 12
Wallace says the coalshould be operated by the
eminent. Before this coulddone, the Governmenthave to learn how to operateL Lewis—Minneapolis Star.
WhtohTA Washington question* DMr
answers editor haa thU to 0M-tend with: "I wmnt tocompus. What are ttw Qtlons?"~Teh Detroit Hewi.
MatyBach member of a Pren«h «|M<
npt. we are informed, enjen IMfree use of a motor car,chauffeur. But not (or
,1 Punch (London).
UirastulHollywood In again doing
Unusual. By meant of pollsmovie producers are nowto find out what the public want*."-Christian Science Monitor.
So She Said ,,It's the little things In life that'1;
tell, said the sweet young Milas she pulled the kid brother I _from behind the sofa.—Orsst:Lakes Bulletin. i
In SocietyThe newly rich oil (srm6r, uo4 !
able to write, deposited tils flrstloyalty check In the bank sad ar-ranged that his signature shouldbe two crosses. Soon, a ebtckrshowed up signed with tte*|crosses and the banker iutt<moned the farmer for anatlon. "Well, my wife la . „into society," he explained, "she thinks I should have a odie name."—Santa Fe Msgatlnf
Jiut 8oWe understand that automobile
production has so Increased thatit's no longer the mode to be seenin a 1S36 model.—Christian Bel'ence Monitor.
Some Need ThemAn American visitor who had
not been In London since 1941says that what he noticed flrst onhis return was the absence ofsandbags round the statues. Wecan only hope that his subse-quent impressions were more fa-vorable.—Punch.
1
IS FOR TAILOR-MADE
. . . Tailor-made fire and casualty insurancepolicies fit your business and personal needs,Planned insurance eliminates guess work,increases protection and frequently savesmoney.
E. R. FINN A OO.
93 Skin StreetWoodMUle, N. J.
UNLESS YOU FEEL
• Better Pay by Check..
Mo need to pay for othtr psoplta*errors. No tense in being ih» victim ofyour own.
If you pay by check «nd other*pake mistakes, your canolltod chtcfc*will prove payment. If you ilip up afliforget to pay a bill, the stubs of yourcheck book will show yottr omission.' We invite you to opea i eheokia?
account with us.
FRIDAYS «:<H *:H ft tt>
; • ' « • • • - ! : • •
PAGE ElGftt FlUfiAir, JtJLf 118, 194? PRR
Health
By DR. SOFIflAFnilt »nr) V(*ct*ble JtftM
It, ts only within th« Hurt te*years thnt the publlr Is being wlu-catPd in regard to the value offruit and vegetable Julcw and arelearninK something about theminerals »n<1 vitamins which theyrontain. Tomato juice has nowrome into general use. It is deli-cious and nurses with Invalids andeven infants. If properly prepared.
Tomato juice contains the vita-mins C, A and B. when It is un-cooked and fresh The commltUeon foods of thp American MedicalAssociation asserted In referenceto the labels on the cans thattomato juice shall retain In thehighest degree possible with themost efficient available manufac-turing methods the vitamin con-
stant of the raw Juice. Productswith materially reduced vitamincontent shitll bear appropriateand prominent declaration to thateffect.
When tomato Juice Is submittedto the committee on foods, aminute description of the wholeprocess of canning, from thegrade of the tomatoes to the finalseallnu of the jars, is rigidly re-quired, A very Important part ofthe procedure Is to obtain fieldripened, tomatoes at Just the rightstages, and express the Juice im-mediately. Standing hurts thevitamin contents. That Is one rea-son why fruiU and vegetablesshould be eaten as fresh as pos-sible.
Not fhany fruits or vegetablesar every palatable when pickedgreen, ahd then allowed to ripen.They loa* much of their flavor,as well ftp their vitamin contents.
J E A N Q A I K J
Broiled cake topping is easy tomake if you start with a cooledbaked cake all ready in its pan.Mix together 5 tbsp. brown sugar,2 tbsp. cream, 5 tbsp. melted but-ter, !i cup chopped nuts and a'/a cup shredded coconut and spredover the top of the cake. Then setthe cake pan on top of the broiler jg::id aDout 3" from the top of thebroiler flame. Broil slowly until thecake top is toasted brown. Re-move from the broiler, cool andcut cake in pun, removing sliceswith a spatulu.
- Bacon curls for a canape dish—with a toothpick stuck through thefolds, or as main dish trimming,are easily curled If the baconslices are put on the broiler gridabout 4" from the gas flame andbroHed slowly until almost crisp.While the bacon is still pliablewhirl slices arauqd the tines ofa fork and broil ttntEl quite crisp.Drain grease oh ateerbent paper.
* • •
To make neat-edged butter slicesfor the table, wr$p the slicingedge of the cutting knife in waxpaper.
• • *
Summer heat calls for eool sal-ads and lots of variety in them.New idea for dressing Is maydn-naise with raisins and crushed pea-nuts added to pour over a fruitsalad — especially delicious overbananas.
It Is therefore of the utmost lm-i portanre In putting up tomatoi juice to obtain only field ripened! fruit, at the proper stages.i The canning of Juices l« now anImmense Industry In this country,and millions of dollars have gone
| Into machinery and equipment. A! (?rent deal of time and money havej also been spent in study and ex-(
j prrimenU In order that the high-i rat possible vitamin and mineral(•(intents might be obtained andpreserved In the canned juices.
Even the soil and fertilizershave H great deal to do with thequality of the fruit and vegetables.
In one of the universities It wasdiscovered that the pulp containedIn the tomato Juice was more Im-portant in furnishing vitamin Athan the filtered, clear, yellowliquid frep from red trnnato pulp.Pulp must be present to give itthe red color, flavor and vitaminA. One company uses a machnlethat divides the pulp so finely thatIt Is held in suspension and doesnot separate In the can or afterit Is poured.
Tomato juice that is pasteur-ized, and not boiled, naturallycontains a higher percentage ofvitamins than that which is boiledor subjected to higher tempera-tures.
Tomato juice has an acid tastebut It belongs to the class of fruitsand vegetables fnat exert an alka-llnlzing effect on the body. This Isdue to certain salts of alkiline met-als, calcium, magnesium, sodiumand potassium. "Organic acidscombined with the alkaline min-
erals and free acids, such as citric,I and acetic acids, are burned in the! body to carbon dioxide and water,the carbon being eliminated in
' respiration. This leaves the alka-j line metals available for combin-: inn with acid or acid reacting sub-i stances present in the blood and• body fluids.; Foods that are rich in proteins,as meat and eggs, when oxidizedIn the body, produce as end prod-ucts such acids as uric, sulfuric,and phosphoric, which are neu-tralized by the end product of otherfoods. As an alkalinizer of thebody tomato juice is very usefuland well tolerated by most people.Oranges and tomatoes both con-tain citric acid and are a valuable
i source of vitamin C.
YOUNG VET?Almost a half million war vet-
erans are not old enough to vote,according to the Veterans' Admin-istration) which poiints out that atabulation of former OIs by agesshow that 440,000 are less than 21years of age and 43,000 are undertwenty. Three out of five, or 61per cent, are under thirty. Theaverage age of all World War IIveterans.as of June 30th, is 29.1years.
Need Cash For
Vacation?
Sign outside a kennel nearPoughkeepsie, N. Y.: "The onlylove that money can buy. Puppiesfor sale."—Reader's Digest.
* < *
t* ftfa, m tut*f. fWl!
. , wo. «4«1
%
IVORY SOAPFor dish»j, laundry or bath
mtdium
IVORY SOAPFor dishes, laundry or bath
IAVA SOAPCleans dirty hands
2 «kei 17c
KIRKMAN'SFLAKES
For Fint large O "I
CHIFFON FLAKESff* and fint fabric!
IVDIY FLAMSetc
U» 1 \ B'V^
*.»»*v * a
1
('
%^/S
"
Everybody's going lor
•"AIP's GROCERY VALUESS-~- Popular brands plus popular prices make
A&P's well-stocked Grocery Department atremendously popular spot . . . to shop andgave and pick and choose.
Broadcast Corned Beef Hash . i«oz.can25c
Prem, Redi-Meat, Spam or Treet n » CM 35C
Libby's Deviled Ham . . . . 3 a. can 17c
Afmdtir's Vienna Sausage . . * <*. an 17c
Van Camp's Beans . . . . . 21 oa. can 15c
Ann Page Beans . . . . Wo».eaii2fw23e
Red or Kidney Beans Suiiana I4m.c«n2iorl9e
A n a Page Tomato Soup . 10$»*. CM 3 for28c
Beardsley Codfish R«dYioFry 10 oz. tan 19c
Icy Point Red Salmon . . . .' 8<*.em45e
lleXO Viable Shortening \lbiii.U9c 31fc»wH3- ' ' ' ' •
S u n n y f i e l d F l o u r 5ib.bag35e 10 ib. bag 65c
L a n g ' s D i l l P i c k l e a . . . . . quarti*r21e
A n u P a g e C i d e r V i n e g a r . . . <Mirtbc».19eSal f td D r e s s i n g Ann P»g» 33 01 i«r 5 3 c
Homesty le P i c k l e d B e e t s . 2001 can2iorl7e
Ritz Crackers nb.pkg.29c
Hartley's Marmalade . . . . iib.jarJle
M & M Candy Coated Chocolate 11 •» *«. 3*> '
Strained Baby Foods Various icwdi 1 2 k*" 95c
Morton's SaH . . . , . . . I6otpkg.7e /
Spaghett i or Macaroni A M P * * 8otBts.3f«r25t
Crushed P ineapp le Fancy S«IVM R«W 20oz.c*23c
R e d Cheek Apple Ju iee viwwn c quart 2O«
P u r e Grape Ju ice A M band pifttbot.25e
Sansweet P r u n e Ja i ee . . * «<*• iot.25«
Cut Asparagus vnMi I4v£oi<ml9«
D k e d Cftrrots lonatrand 20ox.CM3<or 19c
Cottage Mixed Vegetables « • . 20WCMI10«
Iopa T o m a t o e s . . . . • » I9«.e»nl7e
Fancy § p i n * c h A* B innd * « cm
Faacy Tomato PasteKellogg'» Rice Krispiea • • . 2 >tg« 25*Nabisco 1 0 0 ^ Bran . .,-. .Kitchen Charm Wax Puper .(Md Dutch C learer . . . .Herhox Boullion Cubes . .Vat Reserve Beer w« NP*« « «• M. 3 tw 2-5**Popular Beers Vvioui trwtt-ftqUtmit )2«.M.
Se V M H T IR9KMMTMNT
^ 11HrW^V
Sfr-
. . . «.d iVOg n u A w " ^
W M .u»pi* 1 Y r t * [ T """"""• large. . U i i t c i W . ^ ^ ' * " " melon
W
ItIV
SvfrykWy's Praising
A&P's PEAK-FRESH PRODUCEIn spite of the compliments A&P's fruitsand vtgrtables are always gettin§ fortheir wonderful farm-fresh flavor, theirprices remain mighty modest.
Grown bunch 5 e
e a n s Home Grown. % Ib. I 5 c
A Rif», luifirn lib.box 1 9 c
Y e l l o w OniwMft u s N» t sr«d« ib 7c
§w««t n*>«l P lan ts . . . K>19e
table IcUrY o,P x.ikl2c
Caatalonpeti ig*>u«15r •<!««« 19c
B a n a a n s WKM Avaiitbi* it> l ! )e
1I1IK DELLI-fRGESTOHE
PEACHESDelicious For Pies,
Cobblers or For.Slicing
Ivtrybtiy'i Delifhlcd will
A&P's HAIRY CENTER
* & " 9tyi» 55c
Everything in A&F* Dairy Cater la a ftedi de-light, for ererytnirig'* n»n*d hew rtraight fromthe country and k«pt at the peek «l frenieM mrefrigerated case*.
Swiss C h e e s e D*na«fi«-$a<a<» ib 6 5 «
Mel-O-Bit American ft**** OIK»» I» 43C
Cheddar Cheese Food c h ^ w 2 ib bo. 79c
Blue CheeseProvolone CheeseGoldN'RichPabst -Et t AiMrlean * *****
Cottage CheeseSnappy Cheese . . • • i *'* •PureLard tfc-2U
• Del Rich Margariae .' * * • • 4 . -:* VkSour Cream iwd*1'' PI«K^98<:
Heavy Cream •'Fresh Milk
8 ot cup l i e
lYetyttljr's Boiti to lite
A i P ' s BAKERY TREATSWho doesn't like luscious cakes, cookies,breads and rolls right out of the oren?Not many people, judging from theway our baked goods go!
Marvel White Bread . 16 01
Party Rye Bread Jane ?*i*t, n <*. loaf 15c
Marvel Rol ls f iiuri or swwicii Pk« »f 8 H e
Pound Cake GOU, M»rbia or IC*J 5iw« 10 01. cl*29«
Date Gem Cookies Jan.Pariw *.«33«
Applesauce Cake Jan«
£vfryM;-s aUm^ A Muriius I* mi m
Ten mkl» etuugh flavor to turvivetneltlni ice are worth talkjaf »boutand thej'ie the kind e»ctyiiuilj uM1UB| about . . . they're MVtf«m»a» nator-TesUd Mai.
Ivtrykody's
A&P's "SUPER-RIGHT" MEATSSmart ahtypert ctioote "Super-Hrgtit" qualitymeats because Iriey know that AjiP's Cloee-Trun-med "Super-Right" meat cutting method remove*ficeM waste and helps trim their meat bills.
Chickens
Fowl
Icoilinj and FryingSim Umltr 4 \bi.
For Fricaiita and Sumimr SaladiSiNi 4 Ib*. and Ovat
Veal RoastRoasting Chickens 4fe.ando*» •T u r k e y s Cllgrlm Irand Under 16 Ibt Ib. 57« * Ha and Qm
Smoked Hama R«aevie-ei(~wh«ie«MKfM|i
Prime Ribs of Beef short Cui-Uu Wa*
, Leg or Rump of Vetl , , . » » « *v Breast or Neck of Vetl
Pork Chops SMtywi^H^Crii •.
Duckl inga Long Ida**! FMif>
Plate and Navel Beef ha*)»tomiSmoked Beef Tongues , , »•Smoked Pork ShouldertFrankfurters m*
« .
* . « .
FlounderFiHd *&* frfeltog Mm '*.17eMackerel ^ *>Xl$ j / l t i ^ M ^ rmh *25c
h. 49«
*67eK> 65C
»• 55«»25cfc 49*'Ib. 33c
'»25c
u
rARTERET FRIDAY, JULY lft, 1947'?"'&.', •••<''!'
!,,, |tM rppRlrffrt, w*sh-,,,.., rppAlfd. Lawn
1 anil rpi)»lr»d. anil,, rM,,,,(hliiR. Emll H.11,-iill Klri-ot. I'urtsret
C P. 1-J to 9lf
ii.- K<"'Vfl REPAIRED,.., rile i>"il Klat n»of«.,l|., Wnter-proofed.,,;,|.-IM(I AND MBTALwullKHMiiinowlck Avenue
i .Amhoy.M.1. i | w
..IIIHT IIKPAIR*
,,li:T HOSPITAL,.,{ nlM-ven shortened,
,,., iinil i ulTn; reaionabl*
,.••!• VS SHIRT HHOP, IVrtli Amboy ^-H37
•/3K-7/17
KlntiH ofWORK
CIAIi I n« '!•: i
I T* BAHNABY
iE S-072S-Jt/21-7/17
K wrliilng Worksii anything But1,ken lipnrt.\VP , Port.i!i!gc 8-1943
7/10-7/31
I I i;i TIIIOAflS
Klwtrk Motorsmill llcwiiillld
I-'.I.K4THI<! CO.Avc , S-6410
7/10-7/31
AllTOg AAMS
i Huh k Century, 4-iluor, UAH
l Hull h Club Coup*. lt*H
l> fmillBi', -1-door, HftH
m i (.'hryalor Royal
19H8 Ford Coupe
1)36 Chevrolet, 8-door
KELBER AUTO SALESJ08 W. GRAND STREET
ELIZABETH, N, J.
Telephone Elkabfth 3-I10S
PAGKFOREIGN TRADE
U. 8. exports reached a newpost-war high of 11,481,700,000 InMay, according to the CommerceDepartment. This waa a sharp In-crease from the tout of I1.M1,-800,000 In April. In contrast, gen-eral Imports (or May decreased In
the—-^ to Mto.MO.OW fromApril total of 1611,290,000.
Russia to draft boys and girls14 to 19 for mines and factories.
t HELP WANTBD, M«t>B •
10 Questions Most Often AskedBy GVs; Answered by Vet Bureau
(7HKMICAL Operator*, Janitor, iiiniNljht Watchmnn w«nt*a for
ato«<1y work In Avrnel, New JBVUPVplant or phlladolpliia QuarU Com-Puny localnd nne-hulr tiildp itiif«outh of N«« JcrHoy Hlnte Refor-matory, it hour*,pay for 4* hournwork, . 7-17
7-17
KiTATK FOR *AI,K •
TWO LOTS — Khch 15x100, Twochlck«n co'opn, 10x13 ind 7x11.
Call Woodbrldge I-I477-W.S/n-7/17
INSTRUCTION
MRS. G. M. FRANKL 'Viennese Piano Teacher, InstructionIn classical or popular music; chil-dren, adulta, benlnnern and ad-ranced. 67 O»k Ave, Motuehen «-l«74.
6/25-7/17
REAL ESTATE
IP for your Drlvp-Top Holt. Band
r, N-1.1I3M7/10-7/31
AVAILABLE 30 days; 5-room brick duplex With
oil heat, tiled bath, oaltfloors and furniture if de-sired. Non-G.I. may purchasewith about $1500 cash, un-furnished. Inquire 36B SmithStreet, Avenel, or JerseyMortgage Co., 280 ' NorthBroad Street, Elizabeth,'hone Eliz. 3-0900. Brokersooperate. 6-20 tf
CHEMICALOPERATORS
SHIFT WORK
Apply Pnraonnel Uept.
Westvaco ChlorineProducts Co.
600 ROOSEVELT AVE.
CARTERET7-17
OPERATORS WANTEDTo work on Children's Dresses.
Steady work; one week vacationwith pay; good pay. Apply, Car-beret Novelty Dress Company, 62Wheeler Avenin, Carteret.
6-2 tf.
i II WU1SK FOIt
' s Lavatory baslna, toilet• ,M- medlolne cabinet!,i ,n:!'innllnn ntflk, copperi iiitniKx, brww and meelliiiitm*. •'.", 3", 4". 5" «",.il jilm- nnd fltllit|r«. Coal
v.iMtiiiK hnllrin, rust IronHiilMeri Supply
Abi'i St.pp
Portli Amboy,1/11-7/17
I A I -'
''.in,i, rrynlal andi i iirrn* hutt\tt>, van-m' liiini'H; fliurei;mirror*. The (.'ryp-
i'»!i Mlgli St., PerthDI. 7/1-7/14
Mi! :M.' of Office Supplies,,i iinip . I'lUers nnd Num-
! i I'niiDpt Dellvorlei Callll'J'WI WKISS HTATIONEltH
. i 1'. illi Amboy 4-55137/10-7/31
Hi isritNKH. MEN ONLY
IUIINERS $90.00(iuutype, 3 Controls-iI••« Co. Clifton, N. J.
k• . i•• w A\f. r»s»aJc 1-5SV47/3-7/24
PI. V WOODI il'i'K ,ind HOCK LATH
MOiLHINGSN'llMNti- Oak anil FirIS Iiit-Tliir mill Et!«r|or• i',V F!:AMKH ami MASH
i UK Alt (JAHAOE DOOIIS<\ n> I1,I>KHH *II"PI,V CO.i. MrfM, ivrik Anbtr , N. J.i: I. I-MIS or 3#9S
7/3-7/14
l.l'.H of nil kind"i""lx, piilnti an*.H|i|illc», (rravlty con-«l"'|i triti'tnr« (or
in'liouiic trailer*.: s (-ACAUB
. ' • " " • • 7 i - l - » . • i-crlh Amboy.
;iiinShou&« Electric Ruig<I>.TI» Well; P e r U o l
1 • • i i t l l t l o n .1 :'"'He 8-1IU-U.
7-1
I Combination RutgfMI " 'Mi and O a i )
Hardw«r« Co.'""••I liumlcy, Prop.'
1 Perth Aipboy 4-O91!7-17 tnru 8-
1 « I M K D IAHPIClt'TEBS •
HUMMERS
- Development
Box S
This Newspaper
1 1 4 " - i : WI.I1 WAWTUp
WANTED
8100 per week
TRUCK I FOIl BAI.K
1H-TON INTBnNATIONAL—1»36.CHEVROI/BT DUMP TrtUC'K, 19S8
HIGH HILL GAnAOEMain and Thompson Streets
Woodbridge7/10-7/31
WANTKD TO RKNT
PLANT MANAGER
DKfllRKS TO RENT
HOME OH APARTMENT
Ot5-Rooma or more, withI i m E D U T E OCCUPANCY .
No Children.
Will furnlih blg-h«it references,both Antnclal and character.
Writ* lull particulars to
BOX B-7
I1HOKPKNDBNT-LEADKH
7/10-7/31
• REAL ESTATE WASTED •
BUNGALOW In Point Pleaiant with9 or 7 room* — Call Rah way0J35-M. . 7/lft—7/31
LOST AND KOl'SD
XWT—BANK BOOK #14414. OwnerU o n a Nolan, T6 Main Street,
Woodbrldge. WO. S-05I1-J. 7-17
JOBSWITH GOOD FUTURE
FOR
Milling Machine HandsEngine Lathe Hands
Second Shift Bonus
SYNCRO MACHINECOMPANY
611 Sayre Avenue
Perth Amboy, N. J,
P. A. 4-5500
7/17—8/7
Veterans Administrationanswered the to questlontfrequently asked by World , „veterans about National fltntfi!*Life Insurance in a recent VA.survey. The questions and answersfollow:
Q. How can a a. 1. polldf offerso many advantages for so lowa premium?
A. BcoauM; theInninti all co«U of ntlon and of extra hazards due iomilitary and naval service. AHo,there Is no extra ehatfe calen-lated In the premium for MMMenrated In hasarteus occupa-tions, or for the waiver of pre-miums In case of total dimWHtffor 8 consecutive months ormore.Q When will I start Retting
dividends on my NSLI?A. Dividends will be paid as
soon as th« administrative workof determining the amount dueeach participant can be accom-plished.
Q. When will I receive a regularInsurance policy instead of mycertificate?
A. Policy forms are beta*drafted to Include chances madenecessary by recent Insurancelegislation designed to makeNSL1 fit the peacetime needs ofveterans. They will be distributedwhen the VA branch offices canhandle the extra work withoutInterfering with their primarypurpose of giving service tothose who are keeping their in-surance In force.Q. Why do I have to pay two
monthly premiums when I re-instate my lapsed policy,
A. One premium i* for the31-day grace period followingthe date of lapse, during whichthe insurance was continued Inforce without payment of pre-mium; the other premium Is forthe current month of the re-
to effective Is the monthly < Mdat« for each premtun.Q. Can I convert my N8U policy
to some of the private companies?A. No. Your National Service
Ufe Insurance (term plan) Isconvertible to one or more ofthe six permanent plans uw»dby VA. These are Ordinary Ufe,SV-Payment life, M PaymentUfe, 28-Year Endowment, En-dowment at Age (0, and Endow-ment at Age (5.
TEACHERS
Teachers in virtually every StateIn the Union will receive substan-tially higher salaries in the 1947-48 school year than they did inthe academic year Just ended, re-ceiving a total of $360,000,000 insalaries for the year opening in
I September. This mrftns a nation-wide average Increase of MOO perteacher.
Berriee have long been a wel-comed fruit and now that theseason has arrived, they shouldbe served often. All ripe fruitsthat can be eat«n raw are valuableon account of their vitamin con-tent. Thorough chilling of all ber-ries which are served raw is im-portant at this Improves theirnatural flavy.
J a-3 cup* flour4 teaspoons baking powder1-3 teaspoon salt1-1 cup s t i l t1 cup milk1.4 cup oleomargarine1 egg beaten1 ctip berriesSift and mix dry Ingredients
Into a mixing bowl. Add the milkgradually beating until smoothAdd the beaten egj, add melted
shortening. Add the berries whichhave been slightly floured. Pournto greased muffin tins and bake
^ an ovenminutes.
400 degree, for 38
Frown Strawberry Salad1 tablespoon butter2 en yolks1 tablespoons flour1-1 oup sugar1-3 cup lemon Juice2-3 cup milk3 cups strawberries1 cup whipped cream
saltMelt the butter in a double boil-
er. Add flour, beaten egg yolks,sugar and salt. Add the milk grad-ually and cook, stirring constantlyuntil thick. Cool. Beat In the lem-on Juice %n& prepared berries. FoldIn the whipped cream. Pour into
KABKUOE8The marrlagf rat? In the 1
States durlRn 19M was the ihighest In the history of Wecivilization. Anavtrogtp«:non.<; out of fv«y 1,000 ;tlnn R<n married, an \ner«um^about 25 per cent nrer theOIM rtlRh for thin country, 13.2 ]cent for paoh 1.000 in 1041
In ILs four yrars ofUNRRA spent nearly M000 to RMIst seventeenwith shipments of food,clothing and agricultural adustrtal equipment, Of theamount, the United Statestrlbuted almost 73 pm- cent, ieluding the MOO,600,000ear-marked for Grwk-Turklah iststtnee.
FKMALU IIKIJ- WANTED
TKLBPHONE BOMCITOItH to makeappointments for estimator!),
l Hom« H«i|Ulslte», ncason an-good eRrnlngs. Box IT.
7-17'
TYPlST and general office work.Five (lay week. Apply United'
llnoaevelt Savings & Loan Asso-ciation, 17 Cpoke Avenue, Carte-*N. J. 7r l» |
OPERATORS WANTEDSinger Sewing Machines
Light WorkGood Pay
Compensation and OtherBenefits.
Apply Between 8 A. M. and5 P. M.
S. S. SPORTSWEAR64 Cutters Lane
Woodbridge, New JerseyPhone WO-8-2329
• UBLP WANTKI). KKMAI.U •
1 «
Box R
Newipapet
GIRLS WANTEDExperienced operators on
shirts.
Girls to learn a good tradeon
Singer Sewing MachinesVacations and holiday*
with pay.
Insurance lenefits.
CARTERET SHIRTSINC
652 Eoocavelt AvenueCarteret. N. J.
ALL TYPES OF
ALTERATIONS
Repairing, Carpentry
Completed
S. LESINSKI45 bewey Ave., off Inman Ave.
COLONlAi N. J.
Or Call Leslnskl, Ex. 5-5805
between 6-8 P. M.
USED CARS FOR SALEHighest Prices Paid for Good
Used Cars
SEE JACK'Sat Route 25, Avenel, N. J.(Mfhllltr'a Strrrlcv Slallonl
Tel. WO. 8-1132
1936 La Salle, 4 dr.1937 Dodge, 4 dr.1918 Pontlac (six), 4 dr.1941 Ford (Super Deluxe), Z dr.194Z Studebaker (Commander)
4 dr. !1946 Chevrolet (Fleet Master)
2 dr.1947 Pontlac (Streamliner 8).
4 dr.1941 Chevrolet Convertible
< Special DeLuxe)All these c a n are in good
condition
Uista lenient.!Q. What is the difference bc-
tfeen TERM INSURANCE andCONVERTED IN8URANCE?
A, Term Insurance providesthe same protection for a speci-fied period to the Insured'! bene-ficiaries In the event of death,as does converted Insurance.However, term insurance ac-crues no cash, loa/i or paid-upInsurance values, as do the per-manent, life and endowmentplans.
Q. Can I choose anyqne I wishto be my beneficiary?
A. Yes. There is no restrictionin your choice of a beneficiary.Q. Can I use part of my Armed
Forces leave bond to pay my In-surance and receive the remainderIn cash?
A. No. The remainder of 7ourbond Is plated to your credituntil such time as it becomespayable in cash, or you authorisefurther premium payments fromthe balance to your credit.
Q. Why do I lose all that moneyI paid on my term policy while Iwas in the Armed Forces when Iconvert my insurance?
A. You don't lose it. Whileyour term insurance was inforce, you received insuranceprotection against death at avery low premium rate. Terminsurance is intended to provideno more than that.Q. How can I tell the due date
on my premium?A. In those cases where regu-
lar payments are being made,the date your premium pay-ment Is due is shown on eachremittance envelope mailed byVA to policyholders. If you arenot receiving these envelopes,you will find on your insurancecertificate the enective date 'ofyour policy. The Hate of themonth on which your insurance
HERE COMESMR. JORDAN
i
BRINGING YOU NEWS ABOUT
THRILLING VACATIONS
1
Y
9 An inviting finger bekons and invites you tolands of great beauty for that long awaited perfectvacation. *
Through the facilities of Pan-Pacific Tours you canvisit colorful and romantic Mexico and thrill to ad-venture South of The Border. Cuernavaca, Taxco,Xochimilco, Monterey, San Antonio, Paricutin . '. .steeped in picturesque tradition . . . and all underthe guiding hand of an all expense trip.
Or if you prefer . . . turn your steps to Hawaii andWaikiki, Mauna Loa and scenic Pali . . . with trans-portation, first class lodging and meals all taken careof for you.
We also offer a delightful trip to Alaska . . . bysteamer through the inside passage, or by limosineover the AlcanHighway or by plane . . . which evermethod you prefer.
All trips can be arranged and planned to fit yourvacation budget and your particular tastes.Toura and trips arranged for you to any part of theglobe.
A free sightseeing tour goes with every European,Pacific, South American or Asiatic trip.
AGENT FOR HERTZ-DR1V-UR-SELF AUTOS
» ' • • .
JORDAN TRAVEL BUREAUJUST CALL P. A. 4-6426
528 NEW BRUNSWICK AVENUE FORDS, N. J.
tray and freeze. Serve onwith fruit dressing. Oarnlihwhole berries.
Use large perfect stra*Wash and hull Add orange _r_to which a little chopped mint)been added. Sprinkle with ;ed sugar. Berve in rocktall glithoroughly chilled.
T
h;
you to join
iC)O:iisl .nflcition
Relust; to Pay one
fnt more ciMyw/u n
them thf.' LOW PRICfs
offeree)
It Pays To Shop In Woodbridge At
WANTED
WAITERSWAITRESSES'
11'A DISPENSERS
CASHIER
HOSTESSES •••
I'ORTERS
A LIVE WIRE DEALER WANTEDFor Perth Amboy and Vicinity to Sell Fastest Line of
MOTOR SCOOTERS and MOTORBIKES Known.
If you are set up for immediate business apply at
once. Easy to Sell and Finance.
PASZAMANT Distributing Co.9-11 JelinStrwt New Brunswick, N. J-
Call Perth Amboy 4-6100 For Appointment
Veterans ask "HOW"How can we afford to sell
AND)
18
HOWARDHN
NO DOWN PAYMENT and ONLY $2.
ffmZ BOTTOMEXTRA SPECIAL TERMS TO VETERANS
U rTot ZZ to buy 1HHO « O 0 ^ OF mtWTb only wh»tvoU newLrTot Z
row buy only
SURPRISE STORE
u p * '
SPECIALS A L E -
while they last
VIVIENSKIDDY SHOPcNllMAIN ST. WOODBRIDGE O L
BACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIALS
SPECIAL
SALE-
while they last
Dresses, all sfcesDresses, all sizesBlouses al sizes
\Valuts to
2,103.981.98
SpecialSale Prior
1.002.00
.75
Blouses, all sizesCotton Wash SuitsJersey Knit
Values to
2,692.982.98
SpecialSale Price
1.001.001.50
Weekend Special—this weekend only!
Training Pants, aizes 2 to 18 ,59 .29
1 uc. Seersucker Pajairu:• • , ' yvm t ,
2 pc. Seersucker Pajamas. • T , - ton* II U> 11Girl*' Gabardine Slacks
* / ' SiMtSt
(Cotton SlipsSiMtStfrlS
Sim t to «.
Vahes
, 1.49
2,98
, .5»
SpecialSale Price
.75
US
2.00
ValuM to
.98
Many other unadvertbed
Polo ShirtsSites 1 to ^
White Button-on Blouses 1.59, Slut I to t
Playshoes V IM:
Combed Cotton-knitBath Towels 1.79
it $en$atit>nd reduction*!
Bale Frfee
.50
1.00
Wi )B
Iw,
wan»
Hut
Cfaup! **
••;•• l i t ' i fr^f
PAGE TEN
Holy Family Nineloses Loop TiltTo South Amboy
CARTERFT • Carteret's HolyFamily tnssprs suttpred a 4-1 set-back at the hnncls of the SouthAmboy A. A. over the week-end.The victory was the 12th out of 18league starts for the cross-riverboys.
The tx>x score:CARTERET
ABtoralllo. cfSlom, 3bMUIk. cSabo. lbKoltbas, pCoatuhock, ssMakwlnski, rfMblczan, 2bMoskal, Iffenkul, RS
4444433231
R0001000000
Litns' SingleTrips Cards AsUkes Win, 6-5
CARTERBT—Oolng Into thelast frame fith a S-S deadlock.Johnny Lltu? sent a sizzling slgleto seme Wadlak with the wlnnlnjrrun as the Ukes' nosed out thpCards. 4-5, last Thursday at thehigh school stadium.
The game developed Into afierce pitching duel between Metrofor the Card's and OcreweUkl forthe Ukes, with the latter holding
SOUTH AMBOYAB R H
Carney, 2b 4 0 0Crowe, cf 4 1 lJ, Zebro, ss 4 0 1E. Zebro, rf, lb 4 1 3Simenek, if 3 l 0Macklel, tb 2 0 1Neumann. 3b 4 1 1McKeon, c 2 0 1F. Zebro, c 1 0 0Jankowski, p 3 0 1Steuber, rf 1 0 0T. Zebro. rf l 0 0
33 4Score by Innings:1 Ca rem o o o o o o o o i — l
ft. Amboy .. 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 x—4
Glacier National ParkQlacitr National park U so named
becau* In the hollow of Iti ruggedmountain tops lie more than MIttiall glaciers, the remainder! ofancient monsters which onee cov-eted all but the highest mountainpeaki, It 1s richly colored Ingigantic cirques, ruggedly modeledmountains, enormous twitting gUcler-scopped valleys, preclplceithoutands of feet high, innumerableruining, streams and hundreds ollakei of unusual romantic beauty.Ita geological history la identicalWith that of the Canadian Rockies,but the region lies In a much olderrock formation.
edge.The box score:
CARDS
J. Mltro.lfSabo, »Shanley, 3bPtrry, lbPitapatrick, cKollbas, p,MPlecsyskl, KMallnowskl, p. 3bHell, cfBasllici, cf
erklns, 3bM. Pitapatrick, rfM. Metro, p
UKES
J, Kendlerskl, ss .WddiaMfM. Bobenchik, 3bJ. Terebecki, rfJoe K«ndierski, lbDdmansky, cf :W. Terebecki, cfKaskiew, lbLtus, lbW. Bobenchik, cDerewetskl, P
AB1123332212203
25
AB33432123122
R0000110201000
R10102100100
Carteret Rec GirlsVs. f oodbridge inBenefit Contest
CARTERET The Carter*! Ref-lat ion Girls *ill play the Wood-(•ridRr Orelner Otrls on July 28 atB P. M. sharp at the Cartrrel HtKhSchool for the benefit of the FirstAid Squad. This game has been anunnual affair, and the entire pro-ceeds go to the First Aid.
The lineup of the local girls willbe chosen from the following girls;Kay Campbell, Elsie Nemish, RuthRusso. Vera Dudak. Irene Eosnsky,aMry Danes. Ruth Staubach, LucyRusso. Nlhla Shanley. Doris An-derson. Mary Pluta, Marie Balie-wlcz, Joan Jacoby, M. MlnucclJosephine Gill, E. Estok, H. KovalShirley Colnan, Janet Olnda. AnnMedveti, Alma Hemsel, Dot Sar-zlllo. /
Listed with the Oreinera areDot Kamlerek, Milly Williams.Cathy Jarowsky, Eleanor StatileMonya Frankowsky, Susie Vouna,Lena Pigionla. M. Dubay, Joan 8ulllvan, Helen Madder, Helen DlBoir,Terry Mlslock. Oray Osllnskl.
The affair will be under thejoint direction of Al Brechka, Rec-reational Director, and C. P. Per-kins of the First Aid Squad. Thecoaching will be handled by localcoaches Oreen, Campbell andThe Orelners are oraehed by BobSt. Andrassy.
28 SScore by Innings:
Cards 0 2 0 0 1 0 2—5Ukes , 3 0 0 0 0 2 1—6
Soluble Meat CaringThe hog Is famous for Its abllitj
to encase large quantities of vege-tables and other (ood products, butresearch promises to reverse thetables and encase the hog In filmsmade from the waste of fruits andvegetables. A new pectinate mate-rial made from citrus peal or applepomace can be used as a solubleprotective covering (or sausage andother meat and food products.
Orioles BeatenIn Tourney GameBy St. Mary's, 11-1
CARTERET — Playing underlights the first time this seasonwas too much for the Orioles asthey dropped a one-sided game toSt. Marys of New Brunswick atPerth Amboy Tuesday evening Inthe State District Baseball Tour-nament, 11-1. The locals unac-customed to playing under lights,committed errors by the scorewhich led to their downfall.
After the game, Frank Yap, lo-cal manager, stated that the "localkids simply had an oft day,"
Come Out and SeeCARTERET'S
SOAP BOX DERBYChampionshipFinals TOMORROW
SATURDAYJULY 19tl)
PEAK1NGABOUT SPORTS
Meyer
Clovers Hammer15-9 TriumphOver Mohawks
Lteed By *fop«« j Carterf t Nine» * » » pjaysMilhnwn
SOAP BOX DERBY DAY TOMORROWTomorrow 1* the biff day in rarterpt. For it is Soap
Box Deity D*y. The annual Ronp No* Derby, spon-sored by the CARTERRT PRKSvS in conjunction withthe Economy Garage, will b<> held. Hundreda are ex-pected to line both aides of upper Pershing Avenuewhere the race will take place. The Carteret LionsClufc, headed by Clarence Perkins, has again donea wonderful jolb in planning the entire event. Nothinghas been left undone to make th» year's Derby the'biggest and greatest held this year. Charles Gregoryand myself have been selected a» two of the judgwon the finish line. All in all, it will be a gala affair ar dwe hope the weather man will he kind to us and giveus a good break for the event.
Broxowtki Benefit GameWith Johnny Mitro as my informant, we have learn-
ed that plans are going ahead full steam for thebenefit ball game to toe played for Johnny Brozowski,who. waa injured in a Twilight League ball game lastmonth . , . Tflie game will be played on Tuesday night,August 26th, and will be staged under lights . . .Offers have come to the Carda who are sponsoringthe contest, from the New York Black Yankees andthe House of David nine, but both teams want ex-horbttant guarantees. It is very likely that the NewarkColored -Giants, totter known as the Newark Eagleswho last year copped the National Colored Leaguechampionship, will oppose the local All Stars . , , Forone thing the Newark team brings along its ownlights and that will be quite a saving to the local team.. , . Recently one of the players from tha Newarkteam, who resides m Passaic, was gigned up by theCleveland Indians. He was the first colored playerever signed up by the American League team . . .Much of the work in preparation for the game istoeing done by John PieczjBki, Frank Yapp and Al
Brechka,A Day at the Races
Accompanied by my brother-in-law and sister-in-law and wife, of course, we went down to MonmouthPark last Saturday to see the races. We left townabout 1:30 o'clock and got caught in some of thatweekend traffic, and reached the track about 2:35just in time to miss the first race. But it was a goodthing, 'because we would hae lost another two bucks.We picked the favorite in the. second race and hecame in sixth. In the third race we again picked thefavorite and he came in fourth. In the fourth race wefooled them by picking a 9-J shot, and 8-1, shot,planking down two bucks on each,..* .The nags camein one-iwo and we collected $17.10, much to ouramazement. From then on, we were playing with theirmoney. Well, 'to make a long story short, our net win-nings at the end of the afternoon were $1.50 and wehad a lot of fun.
The Carteret Alumni Pro*Fortified by a press agent, one Matt Udzielak who
is well known in these parts as an expert bowler andwho recently made an advant into sport3 writing,doing a good job, the Carteret Alumni Associationrecently piiked Stan Kosel as coach of the team forthe coming season. In naming Kosel to handle thereins this year, the boys could not have made a betterselection. Stan knows his football, is well liked by theboys and gets along well with them, With Kosel atthe helm, the locals should have another good year.In his days, Koeel played both college and pro foot-'ball and knows as much aa there is to know about thegame. We wish him and the team loads of success.
CARTERET—The Clovers ham-mered their way to a 14-hlt tS-*victory over the Mohiwlts In theCarteret Recreation Senior looplast Sunday afternoon at the highschool field. StomKo ;got five Torfive tor the vlotors, litdudinc twodouble*.
The box icore:MOHAWKS
AB R HS. Smith, 3b :...'.. J I 0Wilson, p i . J I 0Gumps, c '.... 3 1 2Brown, 3b -.... 4 • 1 0Moore, lb :.... 4 i 0Kinch.rf . . , . . 4 1 1Bell, If 4 1 2Relford, cf .' 1 0 1Garrison, cf 3 l 0Johnson, si '. 4 1 1
•ershing Ave... Thrills!..
CARTERfiT—The M*ple Streetsoftbfttl tswn announced its sched-ule for the coming two weeks
U*n«ay, July HAt Railway Reformatory; time
5:45.Thruaday, July 24
P. A. Amerks at Carteret. LteblgField.
Friday, M y »Bisons—Recreation League.
Monday. July !8Anchors— Recreation League.
Thnitfoy, M y 31Woodbrldge Vets. Carteret ParkAll tames at 6: IS.
Monmouth TopsMillion Mark -In Daily Betting
89 9 7
CLOVERSAB R H
Blomkd. 3b 6 5 5Bubnick, as 4 0 0Jn. Mtaluck, lb B « 2BalarU, 3b 4 1 1H. Masluek, rf 4 1 1Mirayka. p .....< 4 0 1Joe Mastuck, ef 4 '1 2Fitzpatriek, c 3 2Paslowski, If 3 3
35 15 14Score by Innings:
Clovers '. 4 8 8 0 4 3 0 - 1 5Mohawks 0 3 0 7 0 0 O - 9
Red Birds LeadRace In Midget 'Recreation loop
CARTERET—In the RecreationMidget League, the undefeatedRed Birds are leading the racewith five wins and no losses. TheHellcats and Eagles are deadlockedfor second place, each wth threevictories and two defeats.
The team standing follows:Midcet Leaf ue
W.Red Birds 5Hellcats 3Eagles 3Demons 2
Lions *Buddies 1
MONMOUTH PARK, N. J . -$300,000,000 a year!
It sounds like a Senatorial ap-propriation—but it Isn't. It'smerely the bankroll handled byMort Mahoney, king of the parl-muteuels. during the years actionon the American turf. Mahoney.currently serving as mutuels man-ager at Monmouth Park, the sen-sationally successful northern NewJersey race course, Is also in thesame capacity at Hialeah, AtlanticCity, Garden State Park, Narra-gansett, Rttfkingham, Plmlieo andseveral lesser courses, and Is todayJuggling those three hundred mil-lins of dollars Without battingan eye or a foul ball.
Mort could keep you UP nightsspinning yarns about horse racingand exciting episodes in a careerthat extends back morp than fourdecad«s on the turf. Some of themost colorful figures in the sporthave called him friend, and mem-ories shuttle through his brainof Riley Orannon, Pittsburgh Phil,Mike Dwyer, John "Bet-A-Mtlllon"Gates, "Chicago" O'Brien andothers who today live In the paResof racing's yesteryear.
"During my youthful years Iwas a Wall Street commissioner."Mahoney revealed the other dayat Monmouth Park as he preparedhis department for another on-slaught on the mutuel windows."One day some of the traders hada hot tip on a horse and I was
AtHomeTonijiCARTBRKT—Managpt H,,I
Clelland will bring his Milr.A. Into the Overholt Rudmnight to battle the tocal )i,lly nine In an Interbnm igame. Last Sunday thr M>A. A. won over the Pnn]7 to 1. For tonight's n,.visiting nine will have in n,.up; Poandl 3b; Sprat fun]KohTw ss; Rittman ?.h; HoE. Kohrer lb; Wlllenbmrkvlson cf; IJndtr p. The io(1
will have to port this gam*win column to stay In toh Pfor the playoffs Owns win6 P.M.
A meeting was hplrt hv :tefboro League MnnaKeixBrunswick last Tuesday •,,•time It was decided tn phualar »ame between theand Western teams of t he
The weekly results follow:Eagles 4 0 0 0 3 1 0 - 8Demons 0 0 0 1 0 0 0—1
Lions 1 0 0 3 0 0 0—3Eagles 1 0 0 0 0 0 0—1
Red Birds 3 8 2 S 5 x—21Demons 0 3 0 0 4 4 1—12
Buddies 1 0 0 0 1 0 2—4H*ilcats 0 3 3 0 0 0 0—6
Buddies 0 1 0 0 0 0 0—1Red Birds 0 3 0 3 1 0 0—1
Hellcats 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 0Eagles 0 3 0 0 6 4 0—13
DemonsLions ...
1 1 J 2 7 8 0—250 6 0,1 1 0 0— 8
Red Birds .• 1Hellcats 0
( o 4 >i \ 0 0 1
0 0 0—130 0 0—1
Maple StreetSoftballersLose, 7 to 0
pressed into service to take the betto the "track. It was my first visitto a race course, and during therunning I became so excited I lastboth my hat and my composure,and decided right then that it wasthe life for me."
Mahoney has come up throughthe ranks to the position of trustand auence he now occupies in theracing -world, serving in capacitiesduring the bookmaking days and,with the advent of the pari-mutuels, working In all depart-ments until he is today the mostImportant cog in the intricate to-talisator works that so accuratelyrecord the daily betting trend.
During the current year he willhandle upwards of three hundredmillions of dollars, as racing pa-trons vigorously back their Judg-ment through the windows, prob-ably as large a sum of money aswill flow through the hands ofany other man, regardless of busi-ness associations.
Of that sum, approximately $40,-00,000 Is expected to be handledat Monmouth Park, where wager-ing is showing a 49% increaseover last year's play.
The fame will be plnyH ,.,• .South Amboy or South i;August n t h .
At the meeting the mi:,:.of the schedule was irvi , ,rordlnBly the Holy Fattui- \have the following ftnmrFriday, July 18—Mllltown i •••Tuesday, July 22—Ponl'. -\
<away>,Thursday, Jnly 24—Kozian1
R. (away).Friday, July 25—South A::!;
hr>me>.Friday, August 1—Smith v>,
ihome>.Tuesday. August 5~St Mr
R <away>. ]
Friday, August 8—HAACS -;nSunday. August 10—P A. M>..,!
brooks 12 games, tuvnv
Manchy Girls TiNemish Girls, I;In League Game
CARTERET—Scoring f.nn .•;,in the second innlnR, the M,n,,iGirls triumphed over .the rtmGirls in the Carteret RcniMiiiLeague Monday eveninu at tli- clumbus School field, 7 to i
NEMISHAB
'
AmericanSoap Box Derby
1:3O P. M.
Sosnowitch HurlsHungarians to6 to 0 Triumph
CARTBRET —Pitching stellarball, Sosnowitch hurled the Hun-garian Reformed Church to a neat6-0 shutout over the Bisons in tiieRecreation Senor Softball LeagueMonday evening at Lelbig's FieldIn all, he limited the losers to onlytwo hits during the entire engage-ment.
The box score:HUNGARIAN REFORMED
AB R HBftsllicl, 3b 5 0 1filpos, ss 4 1( 1Lasar, lb 4 0 0Trosko, C 4 0 0Medwtek, 2b 4 1 0Mtlyo, K 8 3 »Katko, cf 3 , 1 1Vartt, cf 4 ' 0 3Kagy, rf 4 \ 3Fazekas, rf 3 Q 0Sosnowlteb, p 2 0 0
Orioles Win, 64Over likes InHurling Duel
CARTHRET—The Orioles, re-covering from their defeat at thehands of the Pirates last week,came back to defeat a fighting Uketeam, 6-4, last Sunday in the Ca-teret Recreation Senior League.
The game was marked by apitching duel between EddieBrechka for the Orioles and Mike
! Bobenchik for the Ukes, withrechka outhurling his more «X/
jerlenced opponent. I
The box score:ORIOLES
AB R HMickics, sa 4 0 0Fejauer, 2b 3 1 0D-ZurUla, lb 3 1 1Romanowski, of 3 2 1Makoekl, 3b 3 1 3Brechka, p 3 0 0Resko, c • 3 0 0Sawchak, rf 3 0 0Nadolskl. If 3 1 4
as 6
Kolanek, IfAB33
Fun!..
ftf ofDolan, e •-•Bww, rf .
ft
•M it Amateur Racing Evqnt
Ro0oo0oooo
H0\I00
. J0
J0 a
oooooe-n
CARTERET—The Carteret Ma-ple Street sottbaliers were shutout. 7-0. by Plalnfleld as Burnshurled a two-hitter lot the win-ners.
The locals play their first Mid-dlesex County softball tournamentgame this Sunday at Johnson Parkin Perth Amboy. Game time Is 4P.M.
The box score:MAPLE STREET
AB R HPavlowskJ, If 3 0 0J. Magella, c 2 0 0B.Kutney, p 3 0 0W. Riedel, 3b ...- 3 6 0J. Mudrak, cf 3 0 1A. Such, rf 3 0 1M. Holowatch, Lb .. 2 0 0M. Magella, 2b 3 0 0O. Magella, ss 2 0 0A. Mudrak, p 1 0 0
Red Birds TrounceBluejays, 12-4At Copax Field
CARTERET—The Red Birdstrounced the Bluejaya last Friday,
1!Shanley. 3b 3 nTappin, 2b 3 (INeder, sf 3 1Dudak, rf 3 1Dunfee, lb 3 o jBerg, ss 3 itNemish, c , 3 oMinucci, p :i 0Kuhn, cf i 0Koval. If 3 0
30 2 ]MANCHY '
AB R !M. Campbell, 3b ...... 3 «Sarzillo, sf « . 3 lK. Campbell, c . . . ._ 3 0Sosnowski, lb • „ 3 lOinda, rf 3 lMemsel, 2b 3 lRusso, p 3 lIrving, If .! ,... 3 1O'Donnell, of 3 1Reidel, ss 3 l
30 tScore by Innings:
Nemish 0 0 0 2 o o JManchy 1 4 0 0 0 •! 0
2 Big Rallies
12-4, at the Copax Field.The box score
RED 3IRD8AB
Epychin, P 8 !Boris, 3b 3Olue, 3b 2WawTzynski, lb 5Nagy, ss 8Andrella, cf 8Dayak, cf , 1Jackie, rf 1Vtosku, c 2Tookie, rf 3Stark. If : 8Taylor, 2b 4Kollbas, If . . „ 1
R1003601000030
Help BeaversBeat Jerseys 7-2
CARTERET~Two big l l iwrallies provided the matwnwhich the Beavers defeatedJerseys In the Midget Leusmthe Park Field Monday aftern7 to 3.
The box score:JERSEYS
, AB ItModrak, c 1 'B,utkocy, 2b 2 1Akalewlcz, ss 3 lClark, p. 2 iBella*, 2b 2 oRtptaos^b 1 "Sullivan, lb 2 i)Barlik. rf 2 »Hornak. If 1 "Kokolus, cf 2 J>
18 4
24PLAINFIELD
ABCaulfleM, o 3Dfbercllntch,H . . . 9Ftflintcfc 3b 3J, Oommue, lb 3Burnb, p 3
jn. tmd,Dunmmkl, lb
Joe Wwfaecki, IfJot tend, eW B U of
38
AB44
. 43
3
1, Commue, cfto f
6
H
ftoUmano, 3bH b l
3383
RI13100001
H
Runic, rfR. Walker, rf .R. Wilson, of...Q, Walker, as..A, Stmrt, lbWalker, pLeroy, IfBuck. 3bWilson, 3bRCKUtrC
39BLUWAY8
AB„, 3
.. a
.. 5
13 30
Boore.by inning):Cfcrteret 0 0 0 0 0 • ( M
...I.. 9 1 0 0 3 0 x -7
R0000
.001210
BEAVERS
Bodnar, c .O'Brien, 3b.Toth, IfCaps, 7b •Ryho, 3b ...i n i n l , s> ...Bwidrl, 8bWicks, ef ...Dewy, rf ...Collins, p ...
AB421433013•3
Score by lnntafi:Red Birds. 3 1 9 0 10 3 l l r 1 3BJueJftys... 0 » 0,« 0 fl 3 0 l i - 4
th« olitost form at multtton el
tatico «i 1&L At OM tlmi#*#**• JWW to U ra.pA M tt»^ l d U
Loc^lUkesTo Chester,TcAmOnSunday
24
6oo/« %Beaver* 1
f0 3 1 ° '
pfcai «
imore
i
pr"d l l i l
m WUlon P«"tt pound* \«>
Um vtlw of »
However, Manager (WUtov»bJp. flawing
IV» lessened mWtaer
Will
PAOB
Tryeiy lant
AeeMMtMts • t I n g Stores t
public AccotoHlni
Grill
,„„ •-*»»»Aito Storu i P
intirew J.i:.nr«l - H
Dealer
-,, ;••
C«r»«r«t
c , r t . S-5341
Avenue
N. J.
Building Contract**REMODELED
I-OHC1IK8 - OARAGESKITCHENS - BATHS
unoFWO AND SIDINGHINTING INSULATION
, , i m a t « Cheerfully Clten
M MacDonddAve.. W«t««M. N. J.
Raymond ]nekton
& SortDRUGGIST
U fah StrutN. J.
|;I5M
Fords Liquor StoreCoMpfeie line of
DdttMftic and ImportedWines • Liquors - B«ers
KW Ne* Brunswick Ave,Fords, N. 3.
t( you are holding a party, wed-ding, outing, etc., »hone
P. A. 4-MM
» Hallmark Card*
Puftfix Drug Store95 Main Street
WopdbridKe, N. J.Telephone 8.0009
FraKl * Vegetables
rr.'T XHI f&V'LY VHTHTHlll
'Vegetables
DELIVERYSERVICE
Jasper & Son96 Main Street, Woodbridge, N. J,
Phone 8-2353
Mason andContiritctor
:!S FREEMAN STREET
W00DBBIBOE, N. J.
Telephone
BuiMers ftp**
ARRE LUMBER
IIDINO MATERIAIA CO.
rnrl Streetmi Mutlnii)
Arewl, N. I
NOW AVAILABLE!t IINOUtUM• (oNOOtETJM »UG8t (ONGOWA1Xt INLAID
| u> Sp*eiaU»» to Cabinet Top*
. fiaumgartners*| MILDER * 8OTH/T COST.
l-hone CarUrt* • J H *31.33 RANDWB 8TBEET
(ABTEBKT, N. J.
Liquor Stores
W00DBRI06E OIL SERVICEOil Mtn«n Intteflet »ne1 Sclttoud
o GttMi W«k—Ttokttt PdMutfOn MeMV.
D»y and Night Sertloa
t7 Main St., WoodhHU* N. J.Telethon* ft-MlM — Mlll-M
VKT. LICBltltt
Telephone WOoArMft I-1M9
liquor StoreJO8. AFTOBASCIK, Pro*
Complete Stock of Doitwaticand Imported Wines, B«er»
and Liquors.874 AMBOY AVENUEWOODBRIDGE, N. J.
LlCkSlUtB
SERVING RAHWAY ANDVICINITY FOR 30 YEARS
Repairing lawn noir tn , $»rtnli)(il«, hikes, lock*, « « , ("<*•• iloophfrkut temilft ratkttHi etc.
I,ft our tone experience • •4 prerfnlnn nmolilnery fee in yoar bcurflt
Ml Kiir»« unrk IK oar shop!
Anthony's Sport A Key ShopANTIIONV J. IWRMMG, Pre».
1537 Irvine Street; Railway, N.|J.Rahway 7-ll»8
Birtirft
E. Wehcn
PAINTING AND PAPER-
HANGING
Atenel Street, ArfenetWoodbrldie 8-1492
• Minting & Deceratiig
• Fntra) llricton •
SynotcwcJti
Fiuterd Home
46 Atlantic Street
Carteret, N. J.
TeJephoae Carteret 8-5715
8AV1 H ON FOBCH ANDLAWN fTONITimE
SPECIALS USTED BELOlWP1IBCH HOCKK* I T *fPBJKO U S B STEEI, CHAIR T.«BUTRKI. CHAISE I.OirjfClE 1».MBEACH CHAIR *>TACHT CHAIft 1 J
BKAtH IJMMIKI.LA T.J5HAMMOCK WITH PILLOW .... S.M
Other Itema — Low Price*
Winter BrothersHIOHWAV W AVEMKI,. N. J.• ()»«• Vnllj 10 A. M. la N P. M.
P k t u WooibrM(*
Lumber ft MUlwirk
PAPER HANGINGAll Latest Design Papers
FJllmstfs Cheerfully Given
H. WestbergPhone VVoodbrktte 8-M36-W
1S6 B^CKNELL AVHWJEWOODBRIDOE, N. J.
n0wTnQ[ n ofeWf 9
If nYry /dniM A Sont i»B l«t «»d Skt«t M*tal Work
^ 1JPHOL3TERED. f M W U T W RUQS *
TACKED DOWN CARPETSCLEANED IN YOUR HOMEwtth our safe scientific proceta
6j E.tTERTSwra^pe^ for home storate
Stitw
op
Scotland T a r lt\m to
6 M S Waif «td Lwdtfi i n
TlWIOf
ggjg* 0ll*0u
. . . AboHarc_, ftrfwt, and TCOOK STOVES
A. MMctuI i t SonsMt »MO\ 8U Perth Ajnboy, N.
P. A. 4-2248
TailWOODBRIDGE
for ^ree BtUmatei Call
StAMLEY IOYES9oath Antboy 1-0967-R
»6 Amttrt* 81, South Afnbty
M-Nrt-Fin
ABBE LUMBER
BUILDING MATERIALS CO,I
Avenel 8tr«et Avenel, N. JWoodhrldge 8-tW.TT
Kitchen CaoinetoCabinet Combination Sink A Tub
linoleum Tops tt Formica Taps
Millwork of All Type*ALL WORK GUARANTEED
Acme Milling & LumbetCompany
Avenel Street, Near SchoolWoodbrldre 8-1 SOU
Woodbridge Lumber Co,
Pet Shop
FRESH DAILYu. a GOVT INSPECT™
HORSE MEAT5 lbs. — $1.00
JOE'S PET SHOP1138 IRVING STREET
RAHWAT, N. I .Railway M2*1
1 ft. f. thvUTE8T*D TOP SOIL
fitM PCR LOADSAND
1100 PCR TONGRAtlL
M FB* TON
BtEf UCrlEN, It. I,Pht«e taetuehen MS51
TAXI8-0200
» A t AND NiaflT SERVICEMKTERtD RATERMlle ISc
Each Wdlttoiul H Mll« . . 10«OrtTCK: 443 PEARL STREET
WOODBRIDGE. N. J.
• Real Estate-Insaraice
Donald T. MantonINSURANCE
Rcprc ten tint B»y»to» B*tttk«
A Co. Over 21 ? t * r r "
T.I. Woodbridg* fl-1512-J
John F. Ryan, Jr.
Sand and Dirt Fill
B-l*4W
Woodbridge, N. J.
Firs
CattrtagCATBRINO MD
FOR ALL pCCAWONSWK.DDINO RKCnflONB A
SPtCIALTYihuMn.Ft.. tiaa ia iu i , P
'!•• , i.-I. i M n w r i a t tonaWe
i .«. Buf»«t 8u|per« pre-: i Imme partlel.
-r ..... S,-rvlre,HalPi : ,:ni<iifd for. any *t««
' n Urge or small.••••• and 01&»war» for rent.
H.I.VS CATBUNG SERVICEOF PERTH AMBOY
i'. WAI,us , rtot.I' l l trH A.MBOT 4-M18-W
Cinder Blocks
PERTH AMBOtCONCRETE PRODUCTS
CO., Inc.
8x8x16 BLOCKS|atir Ktslslant FreWI*
I I'wtte St. P. A. 1-5445
WOODBRIDGEFUR SHOP
Modern Cold StorageON PREMISES
Manufacturing & Repairing
Woodbridge 8-077Q522 Amboy Avenue
Woodbrldie, N. J.
Hardware & Paints •
HALJ/S WAREHOUSE34 ATLANTIC STREET
CARTERET, N. J.FURNITURE MOVING
STORAGE AND GENERALTRUCKING
UNCLAIMED FURNITUREFOR SALE
CARTERET 8-5540
Departneit Stores •
"dies', Men'a, Children'^
bhoea and Clothing
^ Dep't Storestreet, Woodbrldfe, N. J.
BU1LDEBS' HARDWAREPAINTS * PAINTERS' SUPPLIES
STOVES - KITCHEN CAWNET8BADIOS - LAMPS
Baumgartneri, * 8UPPIT COB*.
Ph«M Cartarat 8-6851Il-St RANDOLPH STREET
CARTBRBT, N. J.
Insurance-- . —
Arthur F. Geis Agencyf i n and Caaualty Insurance
184 Green StreetWoodbridc*. N. J.
• • • • •Comprehensive coverages 'or pro
HOUSEHOLD, HEMSWKAR1NG APPAREL
VISIT OUR
|m«n >y and Uail/lae*
Dept. StoreWASHINGTON A U N C t
(ARTERET, K 1.8-MB7
Dry dealers •
M1KULAR,
T.I*a«Mi 8-0128
Moving
Ml, LOADS INSURED
, Lepper'sMoving & Storage Co.
Leul and Lone Distance MovincJohn Paiur, Prop.
OFFICE, 278 HOBART STREETPERTH AMBOY
Phone 4-2318Btentaf* and HeHdsys Call
Woodbridge 8-24511
# Mtsfcal listraments •
laniage.In«ur»nc»,
Headquarters for Quality MuslcaInstruments and AccessoriesTRXTMPETS, CLARINETS,
SAXOPHONES. ACCORDIONS,VIOUNS.
Eddies Music Centerand
School of MuiicUT State Street
Perth Amboy. N, J.Teleobon* P. A. 4-1290
SEWING MACEQNHSVACUUM CLEANERS
WASHING MACHINESEXPERTLY REPAIRED
CarUret SewingCenter
46 HUDSON STREETCarteret 8-6225
F. fernay
SAND13.00 PER TON
GRAVEL$3.00 PER TON
TIP TOPTAXI
CAB SEttVtCE, INC24-HOUR SERVICE
Ph*M WO-8-1400U GREEN STREET
WOODBRIDCE
15e First Vt Milel lo Ea. AM U ML
Tneklig
Veterans1 Trucking634 Amboy 'AvetiaePerth Afctboy, N. J.
P. A. 4-1239
Nf* Uitatr New OwnershipR. PEUCAA and TV. PURDYM*tlnc and General HauHnj
"Anything - Anytime - Anywhere"
Vacuum Cleaners t
• Service Stations
IMMEDIATE DELIVERYHOOVER VACUUMS
WITH ATTACHMENTS.HARDWARE and PAINTS
Forth Hardware Co., Inc.511 New Brunswick Avenue
Fords, N. J. P. A. 4-1040
CHICAGO. - In 1 NTMHA «•!whtrt August Rtdtttr. 71, and Wiblind tliter bad lived for to t«*M V « y«*ri In eondltlotw »kln topovtrty, poMr* found »n oM trunk
t f • hwrt 0* numey, stockiiind bomb valuH it mor« thin
mm.TtW heard w u dlieovwtd when
pelle* «tre ciUed to the nomt i(t*rRiehttr ha« auA«red t Matt tttack.Be d M la in in a> hotpltil, Th««lst«r. AiMlla, » , w i i iuf!«rtn|frolh a s m r t cast at malnutritionand was taken to a htuplti).
With the hoard wtt« two k»y» forlafety depoiH b<W«t which yt*W«dadditional Kcaritl*« whleh broughtthe total to approximately *M0<W
Mo or« could be Kwnd whomuch tbout the Rlehteri,
Detectives Thoma* Edwards »mlAl Candjfb* were called to theRlchter «»t by Uadore P»Hch. thesecond floor tenant, who »«l(5 Rlcht-er's sister htfl crawled up»t«lr« tohis door to lv»l«r« him to call helpfor her L»th«.
•All We Haw.'Af'er the brother had been re-
moved Amelia snid to Edwards"come with me." She led him to atrunk In Rlcht*r's room. "This isgll we have," murmured the iitfedw«m»n. With leebft hunds sheopened the trunk and in It wasfound $3,000 In currency, slocks nndbonds.
Later, from her bed In the hospi-tal where she Is undergoing treat-ment for malnutrition, Amelia toldall she knew nbout her brother'*hoard.
Amelia said that her brothersome years ago sold two farms, onefor $20,000 nnd one for $17,000, andthat she understood he made mmemoney In the stock market, but »hedidn't know how much.
Tells of Farm Sales.Amelia said that htfr father, Au-
fust, died at the age of 38 on a faTmin Livingston county west of Fontine, and that her mother, Anniedied at the age of 37 on a farm inthe same county near Long PointShe also recalled living on a farmIn Woodford county near El Paso.
In the Richter flat Rubens foundno records indicating stock markettransactions by Richter. A. power-ful, dank odor filled the apartment.Rags, clothing end papers werestrewn on the floor. Dirty shadeshung crookedly in the windows.
On a table were half a doien dirtyglasses, a knife arrd a loaf of stale-bread. A red velvet covered albumfilled with tintype photographs of-fered few clews to the family his-tory. A German Bible contained nolistings of births and deaths.
LAWN MOWERSHand & Power—Rp
and Precision GroundPARTS IN STOCK
Areraxe Chart* (or -Sharpening Hand Mower
$2.25
A. E. Larson •Tel. Woodbridte t-SUt-JT45 FIFTHAVENUE• AVENEL, N. J.
Andy's Esso ServicenterE. ROEHRS "DUTCH," Manarer
GAS, OIL, LUBRICATION,TIRE REPAIRS
Battery Charring, Truelt andCar Repairs
24-Hour Towing ServiceWoodbrUfo 8-1S4S
AVENEL, N. J.ROUTE 25
ESSO SERVICE
Aabay Attnaa a*4 ium itttt
w<omt«, it J.WO4-1IM
24-HOUR SERYICE
Lawn Mowara Sharpenedand Repaired. Saws Filaii.
Across from 2nd Gate «fSt. Gertrude's Cemetery
INMAN AVENUERAHWAY, N. J.Phone RA-7-07M-W
Restairaits
Mvslc Shop
Mortgage LoansAppr»U*U
SurH & thttfoi*I Mai* « » « , Wo fcrMie, N. J.
Esposito'sMUSIC AND RECORDS
4M KBW JWHDNSWICE AVENUEPORD8, N. 1.
Ptrik Amboy 4-6948Phonofraphj and Radio
ComblnatlonaAmpUfltnMtmUto
t-«Ut
JewiryOil Nrpers
OIL BURNERSNEW LOW PRICES
CAIA S TOT IESTIMATE
IFOR AN
PtJrT»« [ 30 jnonUu to w ta« F, H. A.
Gypsy CampMoat Popular Rendearou la
New JeraeyDEMETER, Prtf.
I A M
AUfO BOOV REPAIRS
Al ienaonable Price*
fords Body Works4*4) fftw Brtioawlck Are.
' FordaPerth Amb«7 4-2840
Venetian BlindsDRESS UP YOUR HOME
WithVENETIAN BLINDS
Clopay from $3.44Metal from $0.88
WINDOW SHADESLlntex—side hemmed 49cWashable shades—complete
59c and 69c each
FABERS GIFT SHOPHOt SEWAHKS
23 Smith St. Perth Amboy 4-4596
Wearlig Apparel
COMPLETE LINEQF
LADIES' & CHILDREN'S WEAR
GERTRUDE'S SPECIALTY,& YOUTH SHOP
58 WASHINGTON AVENUE
CAATERET 8-6512
VET-STUDENTSFor the first time since the vet-
erans' educational program began,more veterans of World War IIquit school in May than enrolledfor courses under the so-called"GI Bill of Rights." Administra-tion offlcals believe that enroll-ment of veterans will rsach arecord of more than 2,000,000 dur-ing the Fall and Winter semesters.After this, the veterans' educa-tional program is expected to taper
.off,
COLORED POISONSA bill requiring color in poison
powders, to lessen the danger ofhousewives putting poison powderinstead of baking powder intofoods, has become, a law with itssigning by President Truman.
In an effort ttftop to (nn | warfare inScotland Yard In trying a HM£Tic that Is caiwlnf no little Mf"m#nt to ptitmble dtlitaa kduty of th* pollc« to protect
London's law!et§ gangs,p*»*t, arf no whit less vl
of New York andielv*j with r»ior». Iron „ „
In rubber, revolver* tfl#(tin* ind hand grent
To avert an Imminentwhirh there had been warning,went out to police chiefs far kof the g«ng», who wert "bivKeeT*the yard.
"One by one they took their _on the m»t In Whitehall. Ttttftimed to n "straight from theder" talk from high policeat 'Scotland Yard. They wattplainly what they faced itlowed their men to begin
Mttea U Neatt*."I^oridon'j big "hots wet*
They thought the rltk wa» notit and agreed to call It peas*.land Yard's effort at 'PM*, ,detection hns succeeded for tttf'being.
"But the Stens and theare cached. A spark to theder of the mobsters' vanitytrigger temper* may yetdeclaration of war."
The London gangsters'methods and code bfsimilar to those with whichleans In large cities arefamtllnr:
"Their racket Is not thl'Blacking,1 by which they mitorting 'protection1 moneynight club proprietor! andcourse bookmakers. I
"A bookmaker refusing toprotection cannot hope for arace-course stand. If he triadflance he would be beatenBut as soon us he pays he cancompletely on an Invisibleguard. His safety is the gang'!
"Similarly the owner of a niclub would have his preinL^.. ,wrecked if he refused the tree r a t ,of his plate to a gang that demand.;ed it. He. too, may be asked-ft* -'protection' money. He is safe frontall rival gangs i' he agrees. , ,
Twenty to a Gang."For the first law of th* gangi. ia
that they shall not 'muscle' la at>each other's ;terrltory.' If t h e j d l tthen it's war-hitherto a war attixot*, ^armed cut-throats, but in the tuturt» ,)should It break out. a battle betweenmen armed like Commandos.
"The average strength of a famf 1is 20 men, but a leader who wlihet vto augment his force can do to by _'hiring toughs ready to stick at noth* "Ing. A mnn who 'enlists' like thllmay be paid as much as 20 poUftdtfor one nighfa "service.1 . ':
"The second cardinal rule ll that :in no circumstances mar a gtngiter ••squeal.' If it cornel to a fight and .;jB man is hurt then the gang will lookafter him. If he goes to the hoipltll Ihe muBt be primed with *, .Jrtacf! -jlthat will explain how he c a m e P f h i 4injuries. '•; ;$
"A third rule is that " far al i» ),'possible members of the public mu»t,,'*not be hurt In a gang battle. Thf,^rule is imposed for «elf-proUctlOftJ ;jthe gangsters know that if law-ing persons are hurt in theirthe mob cannot prevent poUfi#'ac»lion. ' • • ? •
"Gang leaders have their-0tbodyguards of 'strong-arm' ratfl."
j
Surveyget $400•4T-48.
shows teachers willmore- on average In
Mrlft Thru Days lit Wlifry
LEGAL NOTICES
Aaaelac BMoriMf 9 to I A. ML)hm«a|»-f W 11
Kal fcefret- - 6n«rjand Oreheatr* •
14 Eaaei Stntl C*rum H. f"hone: OMtlei I-MN
Geis Bros.S m C STATION
JACK, BILL, FRANK, PROPS,WASHING, GREASING
i f S I B tEJPAMED
• Wsldlig - Brazing •
Clark's Welding WorksWelding and BraiinjPortable Equipment
Window Gubrti MadeTrailer Hitches Made
369 New Brunswick AvenueForda, N. J.
Telephone Perth Amboy 4-0138Louis Durnya, Prop.Wootlbridge I-13M
t RooHig ft SUlf •
cMi&rWOODBRIDGE, N. J.
Hdlohan BrothersGAUGE
H1NES ROOFING CO.Gotten - iMim • S
SUte uid AipbtltR«bb*rold SUat
Roofing Co,m
TINS
EARNINGSWhile the average hourly earn-
ings of workers in both durableand nondurable goods industriescontinued to rise during April,workers In some branches of in-dustry, for the first tin\e since1942, averaged fewer than fortyhours. The averages for. April inall manufacturing were: $4744weekly, 40 w«jk& hours, $118.6cents hourly earning*.
, M> J.
mm
«
OUT
•-TOOBIOT
FARM SCHOOLSThe United Nations Food, and
Agriculture Organizations will con-duct courses in lum Uchnfcjur inEurope this aumnwr for the In-struction of top-ranting Europeanscientists. The schools will offercourses In toe moat recent develop-ments In hybrid maize bi'eedln*:.artificial Insemination and vac-
serum production,
8TQVIS
NOTICE OF PUBLIC -,TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
At a regular meeting ot th« Coun-cil of the Borough of Carterot haldJuly l(lth, 1917, 1 was directed t«ailvWtlsw the fmt ttmt on Tliura-«lay evi-nlnK, July Utit. 19-17, theMayor and Countll will m«»t at 8:0l>P. M, In the Cnuncll Chambers, Mu-nlvlpal Dulldlns, Cooke Avenue, Car-lerei. N. } . , auil expose and Idll atpublic suit! and to the highest bidderaccording to terms of sale on Itle withthe borough Clerk open to Innpec-tlon ana to be publicly read priorIn sulr, I.ota 1U lu '21 liuiuslvr, f'nr-UTel Aveuue, Mlock S4, BorouKl'of (.'arlcruL AHausomcHt Mitp
ffake further notice that th* Car-It ID I Uuri)ii(h Council h»», by raso-lutlon unil purauant to law, nxed *mlnliiiuiu price at which »ald lotaIn auld lilix-k will be sold togetherwith nil otliur pertinent detail*,.sttlit nilrilniiilii \it\ff h«ln)C flJWO 00pluu co«t.4 uf preparing itatd a"1'iilveitluliiK this sale. Said lutu Insaid I,luck, if tiold on ttrmij, will re-gulr<! ii down paymtnt of J12J.5O,the liul,tin't< of purWiude price to holiuld In runli upiin praicnUtliin ofdeu.l
take further no Hue tKat at salffutlt, or any dale to which It. mayba adjourned tha Mayor and Coun-cil re«erve» Hit right In Its discre-tion to rejwt any on* or all bid*„..- to H»II sulil luts tn auld bluuMn to•ucti bidder at It may <«l«ot, du«regard b«U\U flv«n to teruu andmanntir ot payment In cai« out orm«r« minimum bids shall b* re-ceived.
Upon accipt^nce ef th* minimumHid, or bid gjjove Wluliuuiu fcy tb*Major and Council ind th* parmaaltlttroof t>y tb* purciUaapv &QDQT<1U1X(O. the manner uf purohar* In wa-ourdanc* with term* ot Ul» oa.V*<tin Borough of Cartertt will <Hlt»#»a Bargain and Sal* Deed lor » M
KETCHIKAN, ALASKA.-DT. Blnkley, 25, or AUadena,spent three days adrift in thetry Pacific after the outboardon his imall boat failed, it ***,ported. He was recovering fromposure at the coast guard sick ihere.
Binkley was returning tq i#MacArthur after a visit at Cape & • l
clsion light station. The motor qrtHsoon after he started and he dedd«j|to row the rest of the five milea. . r
He tied up to a kelp bed tor th«/.night und the next morning he dte<;.;'covered he had drifted six mil«* *tt .sea. He rowed all day but was t#^able to reach shore because «< %heavy surf. On the morninf Of H Ithird day, he sighted the *t«*a*»|,Aleutian and Improvised a sigJKl'W.;igniting gasuline and oil mtaud {II:a can. He was picked up. /'0
Oreat range25 years away, S»y
LEOA1 NOTICES
50 Ton Stove Coal (n«w end)110 Tun Pea Caul (old naiSi .,
Cl«vtl«u< Sefcaul A10,000 gal.—-more, or losa—#^j,
WMllHglaa S*h«ol10.4W g*t,—mure or leaa^-i
NIC* Mekaul -, .W,t)0(l-70,OIH> g*\— more or
Bunker C Oil.At uald meHtlliK Wds Will t>* I
Hcly uuened and read. pepaMtf;on oil and eosl to he prei««Uff,'
Tii. Buai-4 ot fMi 'th« right t© nitet
Julk' IStli, 1917.:O. V. T-1S
«ttrlc
AUQUS]
toU, %ttt^LA%
ke ufCH
NOTICFe that
i%SSr».*S3yJ
...,,,1 of th» l - - -a trun»f«r • (
Capitol Dometinned from FJilnrid Page)
< various New J.-rsey StateJtutlems arc pritink a better
these days, because of theCAR of Ranford Bates,
Oommlsslnnri' of Instltu-I and Agent'lps.Itll January. 1MB, the twelve
day was common in manyitltutlons With a six day week,IBltans seventy-two hours per
In the elKliteen monthsthat time hours of workbeen Kenrrnlly reduced
lighout -,hp system to a max-i of 48 hours weekly.
1 of the jobsiUi the insli-are most, Important and
; be manned 365 days H year.With the six tiny week and
I twelve hour day it took thlr-)'«np!oyes to cover Mve postsJ1, With the rhiinup to nn elRht16MS, It becume neccssnry to,.approximately twenty em-
to irian Ilie.se live posts^continuous basis.
Olssloner Bales reportsi despite the difficulties in-Ml in reducitiE the working
ITS. of Institutional employes,program has ndVHnced with
riy satisfactory progress.
BEY JIGSAW:— Tenants in!ers(!y arc officially advised
; Charles R, Rrrtman. Jr., ofState Department of Econ-
Developraent to "take It' In glfuilnit nnw leases forliving quarters . . . Public
rice bus offlciiils HIM! driversi the first' to take advnntaNes
'New Jersey's antl-stdkc lawI arbitrate differences . . . The
.te Department of Agriculturelicts that New Jersey potato»er» Will dig 8,500,000 bushels
Ejjflpuds this year . . . Williamy, State Chairman of the
Veterans Committee,nces his organization wll
dde legal advice for WorkII veterans troubled with
fling problems . . . GovernorIred E. Drlsoolt is enjoying his
extended absence from hi; since taking oilier last Jan-
. , . Increased telephonei In New Jersey will not be-
J Cqme efteetlye until after Novem•7 next under orders of the
!*jgate Utility Board . . . Appolnt-; of enlisted men of the New
National Guard to attendi United States Military Acad-
Semy at West Point will be re-! foi the class starting July
1 I , Moir than 5,000 acres Iny Jeisey are devoted to nurs-
| W c r o p s , ai cording to the State) Department of Agriculture . . .• ffinactment of a special or local
,t ,_.„ by a two-thirds vote of the§J Senate and Assembly seperately,
' instead of the present eonstuu-' Uonal ptohibltlon asalnst specialL Statutes, has been recommended' by the New Jersey State Lea-gue of Municipalities . . , Tlie
i State Employment CompensationIfii < Commission has uncovered a
Courtesy Pays!Particularly, When It
Is Practiced byAuto Drivers
Ansc«ry
etiquette book Is a prettything, II you read It fromto cover, yet actually all*
thnsp hundreds of rules boil downto Just one thing — constantthoiiRhtfulness and considerationfor other people.
TIIRI kind of etiquette Is everybit as Important when driving acar, because while rudeness andlack of consideration may cootyou some friends, on the highwaythey am terribly apt to cost alife — maybe your own, maybesomeone else's.
A courteous driver never expectsother motorist* to read his mind;he makes his Intentions clearlyknown, well in advance. He signalsbefore turning before slowlnsclown, before stopping. At othertimes he refrains from pointing,waving, or making other confusingmotions with his slpialling arm.
If everybody applied that tinybit of highway etiquette, a humanlife could be saved every day dfthe year!
Candy Toxton nf New York Citywas selected Miss National PressPhotographer in a contest heldin Atlantic City.
r>IUNKIN<; OITIn spite of an estimated rise
of 35 per cent in the number ofAmerican drinkers during the waryears, a thirty per jcent drop Inthe consumption o r all types ofliquor in the first four months ofthis year compared with 1946 Isindicated. High prices of all alco-
holic beverages are blamed for theslump. ,
plaque in tribute to the memoryof five employes who lost theirlives in World War I I . . , Munici-pal authorities must- 'designatethe nearest parallel street for re-turn trips of auto buses wherestreets containing bus routes aredesignated one-way, under a newlaw . . .
CRlltiE OILBecause of a shortage termed
"critical," the Navy Is set to buy500,000 barrels of orude oil a monthfrom the Persian Gulf area andtransport it to the East Coast.By this means, in six months, theEast Coast Navy stocks should beIn "a position compatible with theNavy's obligation for national se-curity," according to John L. Sul-livan, Acting Secretary of theNavy.
BOY BITES ALLIGATORRTBERALTA, Bolivia —A Boli-
vian boy had presence of mindenough to save his life when at-tacked by an alligator, who hadbitten off the lower part of his leftleg, to bite the alllgatotr undera front leg. Stnpe. this Is a softand tender spot, the alligatotr letgo of the lad and he was able toclimb to safety. '
Quakers ask e,< more "concilia-tory attitude" toward Russians.
8hakespeareHollywood on the same movie lotwhere Mack Sennett last filorlnedthe custard-pie and where todaythe *ix-guns crack In Republic'ssagebrush dramas Orson Welleshas Just launched his unique effortto put "Macbeth" on film In justtwenty-one shooting days. Welles,by the way, Is producer, director,writer and star of the venture.
Hollywood has made an amaz-ing "discovery," the mine of storymaterial In English literature, SamKatzman, Columbia executive, re-cently announced two new pro-jects—a screen version of l^rdByron's poem, "The Corsair," writ-ten in 1814, and a film synthesisof Tennyson's "Idylls of the King"(1885) and Malory's "Morte d'-Arthur" (1470).
For once, instead of jacking upthe title of "Life With Father,"las is usually done with Broad-way plays) and sticking a newscript under it. Warners Jackedup the play's single set and builta town around it. And, to the de-light of those who saw and tre-mendously enjoyed the play onthe, stage, the film version of Itsticks as closely to the original
excellent In the role played on thestage by Clarence Day,
If you want to know the correctpronunciation of the last name ofDeborah Kerr, the new Englishactress who Is starring with ClarisGable In "The Hucksters," it's notKerr as In "cuv," but Kerr as In"care."
How's this for title changing?Originally, when it went beforethe cameras, Warners Joyce Rey-nolds- Robert Hutton vehicle wastltlod. "Head Over Heels." Then,It was changed to "Love At FirstSight." and now Its name Is1 "NeedFor Each Other,"
With Mickey Rooney in "KillerMcCoy," ts a virtual "who's who,"of old-time boxers, IncludingFrank Morgan, who fought JessWlllard; Jack Roper, who foughtJoe Louis, and Jack Renault, whobattled Jack Sharkey.
Claudette Colbert is one actresswho knows her own mind. Decid-ing on the hair style which sheconsiders most becoming, she re-fuses to change it to suit Mewhims of directors, etc. She alsoknows her most becoming style ofdress-tailored suits and dresses
as is possible. William Powell is • - a n c l w e a r s t n e m perfectly.
LfliDERETTtTaecdn S£LF -SERVICE systemnut
1575 MAIN STREETRAHWAY, N. ) .
< Apron* from Arme Siipfr Mnrkrt)
CAPITOL CAPEBS: — GeorgeS. Burgess, a member of the StateWater Policy Commission, has in-vited James M. Landls, Chairmanof the Civil Aeronautics Board,to visit his home in Madison overa week-end to hear the noise ofairplanes overhead . . . The NewJersey Taxpayers Association re-minds vacationers that they stillwork one day out of every fourfor the Government . , . The NewJersey Education Association fa-vors revision of New Jersey's taxstructure to meet the demandsof the 20th and 2lst centuries.
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• i . modern bedrooms ,,*.
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Summer furniture
and occasional fur-
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We have a limited number of selected used can.
with
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Contracts
y LOFT CANDY CQ. ,V AJ BOY * f & C».V LEBNEB »HOF8V ITOHIUN B*OS.V OpSTA I<Jf5 CRiSAM CO.V MABLCNK DET't
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I,J.LJ, Brings You A Spinet In4 » The Tradition Of Quality
IN GENUINE MAHOGANY $WOOD VENEER AT
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Fancy Burl Walnutslightly more
The manufacturer of this popular-priced piano U one of the leading spinet makersiri America—one of the originators of this new style musical instrument. He notonly h»g the "know-how1' but also "long-time connections", with the rightsource* of supply to get the quality materials necessary to produce a dependablemusical instrument at this low price.
Here are just a few of the qualhy specifications of thisspinet that make it a dependable musical instrument
• Full scale 88-note keyboard• Pratt, Read actiona Fiv*post back• Pins bushed with rock maple
* .,*,Hemarkably even overstrung scale« Folding music desk - i• Permanently crowned seasoned spruce sounding hoari V• Rock maple bridges / '"l-• Wool felt hammers ' "
* • Unusually long copper wound bass
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