h j commission commission campaigi buys $750, … the air medal with three >ak leaf clusters,, as...

6
Lyndhurst Public Library. Valley Brook Avas.," LyniSurst! îî. J*. KNOW THIS EMBLEM! * HE HAS SERVED! and THE SOUTH BERG UN REVIEW VOI YYVI TV-. 9 In tw M ■» sacontf claaa mattar April 7. 1*31. at t*<« Pont Ofllea T U U AA t 1, iXO. ¿. , t Ruthsrfara. N. j ., m u im Act 6 » March a, tar». LVNDHI'RST, N. J.. THURSDAY. Jt’LY 5, 1<M5 raoNt Bum »-mi m um m m im m u »<u r. o. iM n h *. im« curra Commission Buys $75,000 in W ar Bonds Cash Surplus Used for That Purpose on Sug- gestion by Favier The Board of Commissioners at a special meeting voted to invest $750,000 of the township's surplus cash in government bonds. On recommendation of Finance Com- missioner Louis Favier they will purchase 1Mi per cent Treasury Bonds due in 1950. The purchase will be made immediately so that credit will go to Lyndhurst’s 7th War Loan total which closes Sat- urday. Commissioner Favier said he had investigated all types of bonds and believed there would be less fluctuation in the 1H per cent bonds ln post war days than there might be in other type* of- fered by the government. He of- fered the opinion it was a good investment for the township and the patriotic duty to invest cash this way. - - LICENSES RENEWED The original purpose for the special meeting was the renewing of liquor licenses. All preseht li censees were granted renewals. There are 36 plenary retail con sumption licenses, 12 retail distri bat ion licenses and S dub li censes. License fees received to taled $14,000. The S B. Penick Co., Inc. ex pi used willingness to pay for th< paving of Grant avenue betweer Second avenue and the railroad and for the installation of a storm sewer to take care of drainage there and requested the township to vacate Grant avenue between New York avenue and the rail road. .... It was the consensus of opin ion the portion of Grant avenue should not be vacated because, there are township water mains running under the street to which tiie town must have access should a Are develop in the vicinity It was suggested some sort of lease might be entered into with the company giving it use of the street but keeping title in the name of the township. The attor ney was directed to discuss the matter with the A rm y attorney and to present a resolution to the Commissioners. V PAPER COMPANY HERE The Joseph Garibaldi Company of Hoboken, for its client, the Oneida Paper Company, which plans to erect a factory ort Page avenue, two blocks long, request- ed plans to place water outlets at regular intervals along Page avenue be eliminated because this factory would not need )>ut one or two, and installation of so many would be uneconomical • *- Commissioner Sherwood tailed attention to the flood conditions pft-vailing at Lafayette avenue Lyndhurst Boys M eet in Paris Mark independence Day Lt. Horace Bogle Cited Shown ;ihn\t\ from .left to ri^lil, are I -Sjrt. ( jrm ior DrMco, l’vt. Michael Prriimanu ¡«nil S-Sgt. Daniel < h«-«ki- Three Lyndhurst boJTlJTParis, neighbors while living here, ami each on a 3-day pass, met acci- the reunion was taken up witft dentally and had a real time Ih reviewing the Jiiwd UWHW“the- the French eapiU||. The bo.v&, T- had at home. _____________—— Sgt. Carmine DeMeo, 822 Valley In a letter to his sister. Sgt Brook avervue; Pvt. Michael Pie- DeMeo told of the meeting. arvt inzand, 285 Warrcijt street, and how they spent their time tofeth- S-Sgt. Daniel Cheeki, 658 Valley j er, ineluding a visit to a photo« Brook avenue, were practical!;," I rapher. Sgt. Gagliardi Is Home Again Lt. V. Paterno Arrives at Home Sgt.. John Gagliardi arrived at lemr last week after spending ilmost a year as a prisoner of ,var in Germany. He is the son of Mrs. .Nettie fltagjiardi, 214 l.a- 'ayette avenu/ and has been in. service since TJeeember,- 1912. lie wears the Air Medal with three >ak leaf clusters,, as well (Is one lattle star. Sgt. Gagliardi was a waist gun- ner on a B17. His plnne-w.is shot down in flames on May 12, 11*44, on Gagliardi's 2Uth mission. He parachuted at 17,000 feet His de- scent was uneventful, except for two German fighter planes that ■'bussed" his chute. Sgt. Gagliardi explained that the German* would*speed by very close, thus sucking the wind out of the chute and causing him to drop suddenly. They did not shoot at him. Upon landing, lie was seized by a Gestapo agent who tried to take him aw»y tn m aflTr», bill twn German soldiers came along and forced the agent to turn Gagliardi over to them. He was in a prison camp until February of 1945, amf then staTT? ed an M-day march of snrt milm. until freed fy the 104th DM. moo While a prisoner he lost forty pounds ^ . Honored Here at Surprise Shower M r G iis S e lie n o f L y n d h iirst a ve n ta ; w a s hostess M o n d a y e v e - n in g at h e r hom e at a su rp rise m is; < 'U .n eo u s sh o w er fo i h er si*. t<<f , *11 js- A n n a * T rA o u tlm k . w h o w ill I n o m c the b rid e S a tu rd a y o f l-r.in k K tcn o f Je rse y C ity A n u m b re lla , arran g t d in b lu e . Lt. Vincent Paterno. 35, son ct Mr, and Mrs. Juseph Patera«, *2! Milton avenue, a liberated prts- onec. of war, is visiting bis par- ents. Lt, Paterno had been cap- tured by the Nazis Lt. Paterno was a lead naviga- tor for a glider unit, and took. m*my part in the. airborne inva»»«>o si rsdr Imhm far*. pubUtkrr Ib r Iff«» hmmt Ret orW, ■fe mm to tprmltrr. Woror Jt Hnttlr «1.0 ipnkr 1km ftmfrmm )m ihr <!«> let« mmdrt Jfca tkrmum aj Commit- Jaan 4 Rrrtim. Capt. Sherwood Gets Bronie Star C*pt Clarence Sherwood, sod vt C«*»imiasloner and Mi-* Clar- m n Sherwood. J7S Travers place, -*** awarded the Bronze Star ?<« w n-y« during the war » Gt Tmsn; V The otagMwi Accompanying the award faOt»tn > - The rttatmn follows Clarence H Sherwood •MM317 Cavalry, United States Aotj For me ritorious aervidbt at is ^ p it cf combat operations fr w. * July 1944 to II January 1M w M r Owing this period, r ^ ln n Shetwood. a* Air Officer at a Corps Headquarters, was in- lit coordinating the of the.Corpa to pro- maximum air support Holland in September. 1944. when p**afale during the »uccesaful ad hh glider was shot down «an» «I U»e Corps Irum north of During his period of impmur- Kemw U* the Arno River, ment the lieutenant taught later during the crnaaiog «* »be Flench to his fellow prisoners He A rw Riw r and the breakthrough had majorée! in that langu^ÿé ihftM Gà&Éttc tjiw defense* ' a student at St. Peter» Coltfge taw* Shenna^s loreslght. good Jersey CUy, and careful attention to (truri were oI immeasurable as ji, fsUNKV and bis thorough knowl- , .. ... «tt* iA «»powers and Umttatwn -vas commis .oped at Honrto J H wJ ^ n/wrth whkh !ve ras j«f extreme value to with whom the air sup j coordinated Later dur- unmedlately following ti( n from college, he enlisted. cummissjio in November, 1943, overseas in February, HM4. H» was based in England wtiefe H» was piomoted to tlie raids «rf ßr*t.. z oeuteuant and ««Ml awardart - Air Medal. A brother. Sgt. Angelrrpst. rw radio gunner] iji the 14th Air B re in China, was injured early tlti y e a r when his plane made a craal landing .iftt r its wheels had h«ei shot-off during a mission. * ", f*'* % : Commission Campaigi Enters Sixth Month Administration Critics Challenq« Board on All Issues Monday Nignt; Defer Action on Zoning 'I he Haanl t.f I ollinil.-toner« el. elo.ll c ioipalgn e » Irred ¡ 1» *itlh WmMIi <«w Moit.lat night Hie e«iii|wiign, oft* 11.illt • inle.1 <«tt Mat Nth. i« .till going «Irnttg. with a ilm liw l l»o-'iluhtt that it iMtÿht tv <>tt until the next il.ition, four tr.if- h« !»« e Ikt-lealeti |H,I|IU al rlriurltu, al«le<| ht the one Ilirrai* lu) anti-admintatratK»! h M hU i « ' Hi, : », lfi,; 'ap|*l«at.->n h* .tmpao«>imwH I I'tgf oow ffom Rtdge road 4» tiiti»- ••™.Srhut|er avenue baa lM * É I* . ' , ,4 t)M, . *W*d die Wat fr**W|«W. ...jm . _f. It.Kid a* ntm mmml fniMi». V,,, fiinjrt.'i • t-OilVi Jama-a Appeared at t h t * n«e*ttng Ntondaj *VrR, at th« majority iw » l H,M . rU. TK#-» . » ..i, , ,l » t*i' /Haiti-it m drt v* t V ttw ConuttiMMWts ! * - Mrst m#tl* f t* * tion .*f rev 11 - * nanee ta aikM’ fe )a*a futm . c’»!ifafS«lg ha < modern < o Mina m I* The > ' *ô i|ia rijr ' "iuo*tn**t tiedite, ■witt HI (I n Mitt M id Mfc t » « I i I'wnan,«. li Work*. Was authnriMd , *»sl aal. -Mi» itrioal » 1! a 4 . , î to lia» « i>-tfi TV e l.tmlhuiat Helena^ e i a ‘d turned «ver a etwwl fur •«,. UM t$ In ttw l'on al »1*« ** «ting the t>aiao>. «f tV w ., la, fpid» ratvited frwü». sale tail i. a!Mf>' Th0i i«p| ** nfk **r(éhu#i»«n» *1 * íí*.^ l«#| wiwli i » •-4 A »tiptii $t*f IIH I9 w m -êèÊÊ$ thf T*t HmflM Í xWWWNH ' Collins Reports on Bond Drive William C Co i li os ehiiirrran ¿hi Lyndhurid War Finance Co» iti’ttee. announced 'early t . week' that Lyndhurst ha*, mere Ilia'll i lout led it* qu«MÍ.’f‘> i I V« nth W ;i! 1.oi>n ------ A t . u l ,,f 4.277 bond- ha*- hi en ¡«lid at a value of $K.to . ' O Ä t. i I, n /un ti and Jackson placc, following any pjn(< >ntl y,.||,.w. Wa- the.center heavy rain. He declared the Df the decorative achem) Stfi n water there was an accumulation (,rs from the umbrella which came from Rutherfoid and covered th,, gift -kag. which offered the opinion ,no relief (, ,ntri nfd manv iauut if it I and weuld be possible until the new va|uabr\eifls for the pr-. < t i .. highway goes through w hen (¡ride \ - - storm water sewers will prob^h-^ UuesU-rricluded Mr- Huthe. ly be installed to take care of ex -s and 'd.mghter !>■ cess water. He predicted resident; hereas the qtmt bip was $400,000 TI, t - quijta ofw E $lf»3,iKiti O f the a i« " were .1 <123 bonds so of f IK ..2«! 2% . Colli' rhal v ,tbin tb< w .1 ,-■I t î i E ! -I.ds-lea fo r th< rpa . toe i otps iroopa mo f »«»dip. to iter west CO»*! of Italv \ - th# threat of the German aill~— If in the Serrhm Valley. Sherwood displayed su j 9 Ê àwowledge of air-support ki a^airdmattng the use of ground ,rei»iia*K«iB' and Rover Joe fa nluun ttiroMgh which maximum - w»s provided to the *»-*rr area Captain Sherwood’s i» at» «■ twi fartnanee at duty, of j t«- under hazardous conditions ,*Vrf rrsaterialiy in the planning and r.--n3.nation of the air sup i- \ i+ f these Operations and wtia ieme.nts ieflei « greal r-rdM ..|*#! him and are in ke<*p pg wtgh the hlgbrnt tradiliona o^ ... V-..-Í Fore.-» of th< United H a i ' f ' a e r v l e a | Ijrádtnarst. New Jersey " i r«a»w* » »Mined by Majtir , «i W ill» D Crtttenhergrr. inflHirlC Ute urtnnieodaiiTii itT Admiral W F\. Hal« v fommaodi of tli* Third Fleet Comm«nd« r Allan T f'lertung < onioiatidiog or hear of the Naval It,dm Ti.m.tnn 'a houl at SI Simon Ua,.wl,c < l^. Bogle la now stationed , - I making til, SH-Mfd stat'bos beside Lt .Ihiglr- f l.f <ill > It* ■ .. * ilA* „1 (I, . I H Aghter director oflteer aboard ib, '.on. n w |..*|.„. «a# «l>n..on mendei by Admiiuil H.iIm y It I’ ,• tm ¡not M a t — «»• t vt, llofare It Bog!' . ' ' *' Robert Blake Gets Shepherd Reports Army Promotion ort Overcrowding rrutfl \* *td»«i44 I- #< - j rip |! fig * * life « ■ » Unrtl imPI |h* ;l l alstvtta eltniW • Nr» f a d *r Va|i •v hr neh afe* a. 4 app>- i»ia4iotf **tm tn> Hh »aa paaaed m . «4 an i Ihm »*adi«m nsi» rm mût h» n*»tw«i a*.«» iMioim juU' ta. - r w w i*m *m mm, I ttdfaiaa m aadary Vh* i I— Iwaw m . an " Ma hMM hW . *h*f a~t I Iftli Air loree Tn- 'P « aine» I ommaiKt PhilipiMno H il J Btaikr mm of Ml and Mi» ti J Hlaki ÎM l*"»l Ijjjd hiieal, N J ».1 - » aeilal engin,,! » Ilji/ tna»p cal ha» si in ti.»H< K*fe M F- ta, 4 + iU .ftar ftmni *41» Peu-rson. of 7S4 ta ill at her home Mr* Mamie Malh-y IS trsattMlg with tier tif the vicinity^ would be pi esent at a cominissiiSn n M h in t aoon t protest. Victor Schreckenstcin. township custodian of federal equipment acquired by the Civilian^ [>efens. Council, informed %he sloners the township w>>uld b, th v. M r G la d y s D ik é m a n .. M i H M M e k e rn a n , M rs, A n n H a u ck o f Je rse y C ¡ty M r . H a ir T ii« o u th tc k an d M r* R aym oti W illia n -, o f Ruth* j fiird M i , M O b a n i f N ew ;V o ik C its M e A n n e O ist-o P o rte b estre , N V M .rs. A n ita -W tu tn e y . M ts. K I ihss. M r* U ngar M u rp h y a r Lt. Cronkshaw Trains Dogs j for Battle oh Okinawa able to^turchase tWfequipti ent it M i j,.hr--Fov I-- wants from the federal govern ment now He/was directed to m»ke a complete inventory of tin materials for presentation to the board Youth Fellowship Presents Comedy T i a r T o ^ '" i |^nn«'iwp*'Mr' w Lyndh. (st Mfthodiat Church pre sented ewnedy. "The Poor Mai ried M i\ at the church Friday evening Mrs. Williair. Justice di reeted The e I* t irvluded S am uel taw Sliifim I Kiper. lx>l* Field ar*-*t <»f Kenneth (Alltnprr. Lincoln Ju* Monday tiee, Ruth 'ullina. Robert Walter, Sgt Del H e le n H a a e t. Ruth Justice, R u t! reasaigm McKeen an PorbHPierwm day lurl' A lso , M r* C U rtn e e ? M i- S id n i'V W a lk e r M r Ifa ssa rd M C K H « » fo o rg e H K o e h le r M r F ie ld in g M it M ai tin h n , M i> H o s. K illy V i K u ch e r, M rs G M -N* i Pauline St* in la u f M rs t, 11. the' gw ctt ..f h o n o r. ! V, uthK-k an d iK ê h '> t, S . lien a ll Ilf. L x n d k iia l Demarest Report* Okinawa idelavedi m o n th s p i io r to th* i th is fo rm e r Ja p a n e se h in d F irst 14 A lla n h aw o f L y n d h u ra t, n o fS cer 'o f a M a rin e -W u t .- k »n ,-i » ortif*n rnt. rntn « f.«hi % t . ting « m M r StmOi If imp* ir** te «left , •? I I « CtfMafl U»«T > l»m* iter W * t lAag pUlt#M 1,4 SK and #» Han4 M v r tar*#« t | f te% wwf-- am i % ** C « » tir Hw fit* M a Wssi^B - Ä ll Had X2 4v«üs "ÿl A *«r«*4 ni Ut I i. f w * * , rtiMti »d wmm mmtm 1m i»t. .»nr - 4 ^ r V; * <*% it* » nt ly t'* '»Jff ’* ; flH ai M-i k* eti • - i «>V!»rar*ft, b r i»*t iM ft* i I > iat in* y laht'fi Pi finu < ; MNrvw** lH'n»l nmmm* n. '■>< ar«*a llrfi*rr . July II HNI Hçt Huk* ti l.y« 4hu»«j 1aittj r*m f tn\4» v»m í •% »-i d iw ' hf ibr f<*hpm Cf*ri> »U i t t •iv«t$ I it* art *«rpH»tm pwdiafti 1 »* Tt*dhhiral t I mtf*. HHh mttti tWf* T W Î «t R m u i Citv M . II- I *if nani t«* th»‘ Trtifji C"*i t mitid »ft Fi.-ljfii«» y . IMI « nt f#\ r f '»«. «• ti» »ti t illi Mit S ft Hl.«ä< * unii t f,v allfü if, ihr f* h & * ; T »♦•»»t# CmttJm* muH i irtfl »HtM« 1tilling fl»*'-' wtmrmtwii* *â (%ti1 ¿j* tw iftfvtsI *W ? * ! *•<{-! th# r v r u i t U i > t i Ih# frw fi« Iff Sgt. BittnerHnme After Liberation j t * » 4 i >*ai «•* ih m !» a n i T ttw iB HirfMoy Party Held for Carolyn ietiie Menqano‘t Betrothal 1 $ ToW NOTICE 411 VInirtpai llftrr. wtll"W on ^atilliial * during Jul Uad \tigM»i. reopening .m ^attlr^^at. lemlier R, 1 l i The Ta i«*fcrr «atll lie «pe« f*»r Iwttlr«* <*« the §r«l Mondât M Jul» and \ii*ud. al T.Ml (• ni IIO M IM I K J I.IIEIJJ, F»an>ii)> i.Utk. Jmmr 2B and J % à. l'Ha ft mm ê JBpß*li* I» W»g if*r I fil#' W»f f Ibgf j iM 'Higwr tuf immm m * *** "§*-* ‘M# k»' m - mm *4 INMI € t mtsâtMÊi» "a RBM I •«H VMIV •4P a*r*rrr •“•i li» li nflf— 909Ê %Mm ^ » mi lêm j ”*^66 C'a V . â tmm»m y

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L y n d h u r s t P u b l i c L i b r a r y . V a l l e y B r o o k A v a s . , " LyniSurst! îî. J*.

K N O W T H IS E M B L E M ! *

H E H A S S E R V E D !

a n d T H E S O U T H BERG UN REVIEW

V O I Y Y V I TV-. 9 In tw M ■» sacontf claaa mattar April 7. 1*31. at t*<« Pont Ofllea T U U A A t 1, iXO. ¿. , t Ruthsrfara. N. j ., m u im Act 6» March a, tar». L V N D H I 'R S T , N . J . . T H U R S D A Y . J t ’ L Y 5 , 1<M5 r a o N t B u m » - m i m u m m m i m m u »< u r . o . i M n h *. im « c u r r a

Commission Buys $75,000 in War Bonds

Cash Surplus Used for That Purpose on Sug­

gestion by FavierThe Board of Commissioners at

a special meeting voted to invest $750,000 of the township's surplus cash in government bonds. On recommendation of Finance Com­missioner Louis Favier they w ill purchase 1 Mi per cent Treasury Bonds due in 1950. The purchase w ill be made immediately so that credit w ill go to Lyndhurst’s 7th W ar Loan total which closes Sat­urday.

Commissioner Favier said he had investigated all types of bonds and believed there would be less fluctuation in the 1H per cent bonds ln post war days than there might be in other type* o f­fered by the government. He of­fered the opinion it was a good investment for the township and the patriotic duty to invest cash this w ay. - -

L IC E N S E S R E N E W E D The original purpose for the

special meeting was the renewing of liquor licenses. A ll preseht li censees were granted renewals. There are 36 plenary retail con sumption licenses, 12 retail distri bat ion licenses and S dub li censes. License fees received to taled $14,000.

The S B. Penick Co., Inc. ex pi u sed willingness to pay for th< paving of Grant avenue betweer Second avenue and the railroad and for the installation of a storm sewer to take care of drainage there and requested the township to vacate Grant avenue between New Yo rk avenue and the rail road. ....

It was the consensus of opin ion the portion of G rant avenue should not be vacated because, there are township w ater mains running under the street to which tiie town must have access should a Are develop in the vic in ity It was suggested some sort of lease might be entered into with the company giving it use of the street but keeping title in the name of the township. The attor ney was directed to discuss the matter with the A r m y attorney and to present a resolution to the Commissioners. V

P A P E R C O M PA N Y H E R E The Joseph Garibaldi Company

of Hoboken, for its client, the Oneida Paper Company, which plans to erect a factory ort Page avenue, two blocks long, request­ed plans to place water outlets at regular intervals along Page avenue be eliminated because this factory would not need )>ut one or two, and installation of so many would be uneconomical •

*- Commissioner Sherwood tailed attention to the flood conditions pft-vailing at Lafayette avenue

Lyndhurst Boys M eet in Paris Mark independence Day Lt. Horace Bogle C ited

Shown ;ihn\t\ from .left to ri^lil, are I -Sjrt. ( jr m io r DrMco, l ’vt. Michael Prriim anu ¡«nil S-Sgt. Daniel < h«-«ki-

Three Lyndhurst b o JT lJT Pa ris , neighbors while living here, ami each on a 3-day pass, met acci- the reunion was taken up witft dentally and had a real time Ih review ing the J i iw d UWHW“ the-the French eapiU||. The bo.v&, T- had at home. _____________— —Sgt. Carm ine DeMeo, 822 Valley In a letter to his sister. Sgt Brook avervue; Pvt. Michael Pie- DeMeo told of the meeting. arvt inzand, 285 W arrcijt street, and how they spent their time tofeth- S-Sgt. Daniel Cheeki, 658 Valley j er, ineluding a visit to a photo« Brook avenue, were practical!;," I rapher.

Sgt. GagliardiIs Home Again

Lt. V. Paterno Arrives at Home

Sgt.. Jo h n Gagliardi arrived at lemr last week after spending ilmost a year as a prisoner of ,var in Germ any. He is the son of Mrs. .N ettie fltagjiardi, 214 l.a- 'ayette avenu/ and has been in. service since TJeeember,- 1912. lie wears the A ir Medal with three >ak leaf clusters,, as well (Is one lattle star.

Sgt. G agliard i was a waist gun­ner on a B17. His plnne-w.is shot down in flames on M ay 12, 11*44, on Gagliardi's 2Uth mission. He parachuted at 17,000 feet His de­scent was uneventful, except for two German fighter planes that ■'bussed" his chute. Sgt. Gagliardi explained t h a t the German* would*speed by very close, thus sucking the wind out of the chute and causing him to drop suddenly. They did not shoot at him.

Upon landing, lie was seized by a Gestapo agent who tried to take him aw»y tn m aflTr», bill twn German soldiers came along and forced the agent to turn Gagliardi over to them.

He was in a prison camp until February of 1945, am f then staTT? ed an M -day march o f snrt milm. until freed f y the 104th DM .moo

While a prisoner he lost forty pounds

^ .

Honored Here at Surprise Shower

M r G i i s S e l i e n o f L y n d h i i r s t

a v e n t a ; w a s h o s t e s s M o n d a y e v e ­

n i n g a t h e r h o m e a t a s u r p r i s e

m i s ; < ' U . n e o u s s h o w e r f o i h e r s i* .

t < <f , *11 js- Anna*T r A o u t l m k . w h o

w i l l I n o m c t h e b r i d e S a t u r d a y

o f l - r . i n k K t c n o f J e r s e y C i t y

A n u m b r e l l a , a r r a n g t d i n b l u e .

Lt. Vincent Paterno. 35, son ct Mr, and Mrs. Juseph Patera«, *2!M ilton avenue, a liberated prts- onec. of war, is visiting b is par­ents. Lt, Paterno had been cap­tured by the Nazis

L t. Paterno was a lead naviga­tor for a glider unit, and took. m*my part in the. airborne inva»»«>o s i rsd r

Imhm fa r* . pubUtkrr Ib r I f f « » h m m t Ret orW,

■fe mm to tprmltrr. Woror Jt Hnttlr «1.0 ipnkr

1km ftmfrmm )m ihr <!«> let« mmdrt Jfca tkrm um aj Commit-

J a a n 4 Rrrtim .

Capt. Sherwood G ets Bronie Star

C *p t Clarence Sherwood, sod v t C«*»imiasloner and Mi-* Clar- m n Sherwood. J7S Travers place, -*** awarded the Bronze S ta r

?<« w n - y « during the w ar » G tTm sn; V

T h e otagMwi Accompanying the aw ard faO t»tn > -

T h e rttatmn followsClarence H Sherwood

•MM317 Cava lry , United States A o t j For me ritorious aervidbt at i s ^ p i t c f combat operations fr w . * Ju ly 1944 to I I Jan u ary 1 M w M r O w in g this period, r ^ l n n Shetwood. a* A ir Officer a t a Corps Headquarters, was in-

lit coordinating the of the.Corpa to pro-

m axim um a ir supportHolland in September. 1944. when p**afale during the »uccesaful ad hh glider was shot down « a n » « I U»e Corps Irum north of

During his period of im pm ur- Kemw U* the Arno R iver, m e n t the lieutenant taught later during the crnaaiog «* »be F lench to his fellow prisoners He A r w R iw r and the breakthrough had majorée! in that langu^ÿé ihftM Gà&Éttc t j iw defense* ' a student at St. Pe ter» Coltfge taw* S h e n n a ^ s loreslght. good Jersey CU y, and careful attention to

— (t ru r i were oI immeasurable as j i , fsUN KV and bis thorough knowl-

, .. . . . « t t * iA « » p o w e rs and Umttatwn-vas commis .oped at Honrto J H wJ ^ n/w rth w h k h !ve• ‘ ras j«f extreme value to

w ith whom the a ir sup j coordinated Later dur-

unm edlately following ti( n from college, he enlisted.

cummissjio in November, 1943, o v ersea s in February, HM4. H» was based in England wtiefe H» was piomoted to tlie raids «rf ß r* t .. z oeuteuant and ««Ml awardart -A ir Medal.

A brother. Sgt. Angelrrpst. rw radio gunner] iji the 14th A ir B re in China, was injured early tlti y e a r when his plane made a craal landing .iftt r its wheels had h«ei shot-off during a mission.

* ",

f * ' *

% :

Commission Campaigi En te rs Sixth M onth

Administration Critics Challenq« Board on All Issues Monday Nignt;

Defer Action on Zoning'I he H a a n l t.f I o llin il.- to n er« el. e lo .l l c io ip a lg n e »

I r r e d ¡1» * i t lh W m M Ii <«w M o it . la t n ight H ie e« iii|w iign , o ft*11.i l l t • inle.1 <«tt M a t N th . i« . t i l l going «Irnttg. w ith a i lm l iw l l» o - 'ilu h t t th a t it iM tÿht tv <>tt u n t il the n ex t i l . i t i o n , four t r . i f- h« !»« e

Ikt- lealeti |H ,I|IU a l r l r iu r l t u , al«le<| h t the one I l i r r a i *lu) anti-admintatratK»! h M hU i « ■'

H i, : », lfi,; 'ap|*l«at.->n h * .tm pao«>imwH I I'tgf o o w ffom Rtdge road

4» tiiti»- ••™.Srhut|er avenue baa l M * É I* . ' , , 4 t)M, . *W*d b» d ie Wat f r * * W |« W . ...j m . _f. It.K id a* ntm m m m l f n i M i » . V , , , ■ fiinjrt.'i •

t-OilVi Jama-aAppeared at t h t * n«e*ttng Ntondaj *VrR, at th« m ajority i w » l H,M. rU. TK#-» . » ..i, , ,l » t * i ' /Haiti-it m d r t v * t V ttw ConuttiMMWts

! * - Mrst m#tl* f t* *tion .*f rev 11- * nanee ta a ikM ’ fe )a*a futm . c’»!ifafS«lg ha < modern < o Mina m I* The > ' *ô i |ia rijr '"iuo*tn**t tiedite, ■ witt

H I ( I n M itt M i d Mfc t » « I

i I'wnan,«.

li Work*. Was authnriMd , *»sl aal. -Mi» itr io a l » 1! a 4

. , î to lia» « i> -tfiT V e l.tm lhu iat Helena^ e

i a ‘ d turned «ver a etwwl fur•«,. U M t$ In ttw l'on■ al »1*« ** «ting the t>aiao>. «f t V w . , la, fpid» ra tv ited frwü». sale té tail i. a !M f> ' T h 0 ii«p| ** nfk **r(éhu#i»«n» *1 *íí*.^ l«#| wiwli i» •-4 A »tiptii $t*f I I H I 9 w m -êèÊÊ$

th f T * tH m flM ÍxWWWNH '

Collins Reportson Bond Drive

W illiam C Co i li os ehiiirrran ¿hi Lyndhurid W a r Finance C o » iti’ttee. announced 'early t . week' that Lyndhurst ha*, mere Ilia'll i lout led it* qu«MÍ.’f‘>i

I V« nth W ;i! 1.oi>n ------A t . u l ,,f 4.277 bond- ha*-

hi en ¡«lid at a value of $K.to . ' O Ät . i I , n / u n t i

and Jackson placc, following any p jn(< > n t l y ,.||,.w . Wa- the.center heavy rain. He declared the Df the decorative achem) Stfi n water there was an accumulation ( , r s from the umbrellawhich came from Rutherfoid and c o v e r e d th,, gift -kag. which offered the opinion ,no relief (, ,ntri nfd manv iauut if it I and weuld be possible until the new v a |uab r\e if ls for the pr-. < t i .. highway goes through w h e n (¡ride \ - -storm water sewers w ill prob^h-^ UuesU-rricluded Mr- Huthe. ly be installed to take care of ex -s and 'd.mghter !>■cess water. He predicted resident;

hereas the qtmt • bip was $400,000

TI,t- quijta o fw E $lf»3,iKiti O f the a i« " were .1 < 1 2 3 bonds so o f f I K . . 2 « ! 2 % . Colli' rhal v ,tbin tb< w .1,-■ I t î i E ! -I.ds-lea

f o r t h <

rpa . t o e i otps iroopa mof »«»dip. to iter west CO»*! of Ita lv \ - th# threat of the Germanaill~— I f in the Serrhm Valley.

Sherwood displayed su j 9 Ê àwowledge of air-support k i a^airdmattng the use of ground ,rei»iia*K«iB' and Rover Joe fa n lu u n ttiroMgh which maximum

- w»s provided to the*»-*rr area Captain Sherwood’s i» at» «■ twi f artnanee a t duty, of jt«- under hazardous conditions ,* V r f rrsaterialiy in the planning and r.--n3.nation of the a ir sup i- \ i+ • f these Operations and

w tia ieme.nts ieflei « greal r-rdM ..|*#! him and are in ke<*p p g wtgh the hlgbrnt tradiliona o^ . . . V - ..- Í Fore.-» of th< United

H a i ' f ' a e r v l e a |Ijrádtnarst. New Jersey " i r« a » w * » »Mined by Majtir ,

« i W i l l » D Crtttenhergrr.

in flH irlC Ute urtnnieodaiiTii itT Adm iral W F\. H al« v fom maodi of tli* Third Fleet Comm«nd« r A llan T f'lertung < onioiatidiog o rhear of the Naval It,dm Ti.m.tnn 'a houl at S I Simon U a ,.w l,c < l^. Bogle la now stationed , - I making til, SH-Mfd stat'bosbeside Lt .Ihiglr- f l . f < i l l > It* ■.. * ilA* „1 ( I , • ► . I HAghter director oflteer aboard ib, '.on. n w | . . * | . „ . «a# «l>n..on mendei by Admiiuil H.iIm y I t I ’ ,• tm ¡ n o t M at — «»• t vt, llo fare It Bog!' . ' ' *'

Robert Blake Gets Shepherd Reports Army Promotion ort Overcrowding

rru tfl • \**td»«i44 I- #<- j r ip | ! fig ■* * life « ■ »

U n r t l

imPI |h*;l l a ls tv tta e ltn iW

• N r» f a d *r Va|i •v hr neh a fe* a. 4 app>- i»ia4iotf * * tm

tn> Hh »aa paaaed m. «4 an i Ih m »*adi«m nsi» rm

M« m û t h» n *» tw « i a * . « » iM io im ju U ' ta. -

r w w i*m *m w » m m ,I ttdfaiaa m aadary Vh*

i I— Iwaw m . an " M a h M M hW .*h*f

a~t

I Iftli A ir loree Tn- 'P « aine» I ommaiKt Philip iM no H ilJ B ta ik r mm o f M l an d M i» t i J H la k i Î M l* "» l I j j j dh iiea l, N J » .1 - »a e i la l e n g in , , ! » I l j i / tn a»p c a l

ha» si in t i .» H <

K*fe M F- ta, 4 + iU .ftar ftmni

*41» Peu-rson. of 7S4 ta ill at her home

Mr* Mamie Malh-y IS trsattMlg w ith tier

tif the vicinity^ would be pi esent at a cominissiiSn n M h in t aoon t protest.

V ictor Schreckenstcin. township custodian of federal equipment acquired by the Civilian^ [ > e f e n s .

Council, informed %he sloners the township w>>uld b,

t h v . M r G l a d y s D i k é m a n . . M i

H M M e k e r n a n , M r s , A n n

H a u c k o f J e r s e y C ¡ t y M r . H a i r

T i i « o u t h t c k a n d M r * R a y m o t i

W i l l i a n - , o f R u t h * j f i i r d M i ,

M O b a n i f N e w ;V o i k C i t s M e

A n n e O i s t - o P o r t e b e s t r e , N V

M . r s . A n i t a - W t u t n e y . M t s . K I

i h s s . M r * U n g a r M u r p h y a r

Lt. Cronkshaw Trains Dogs j for Battle oh Okinawa

able to^turchase tWfequipti ent it M i j,.hr--Fov I-- wants from the federal govern ment now He/was directed to m»ke a complete inventory of tin materials for presentation to the board

Youth Fellowship Presents Comedy

T i a r T o ^ ' " i |̂ nn«'iwp*'M r' wLyndh. (st Mfthodiat Church pre sented ewnedy. "The Poor Mai ried M i\ at the church Friday evening Mrs. W illiair. Justice di reeted

The e I* t irvluded S a m u e l t a w

Sliifim I Kiper. lx>l* Field ar*-*t <»f Kenneth (A lltnprr. Lincoln Ju* Monday tiee, Ruth 'ullina. Robert Walter, Sgt Del H e l e n H a a e t . Ruth Justice, R u t ! r e a s a i g m

McKeen an Po rbH Pierw m day lurl'

A l s o , M r * C U r t n e e ? M i - S i d n i ' V W a l k e r M r

I f a s s a r d M r » C K H « »

f o o r g e H K o e h l e r M r

F i e l d i n g M i t M a i t i n

h n , M i > H o s . K i l l y V i

K u c h e r , M r s G M - N * i

Pauline S t * i n l a u f M r s t ,

• 11 . t h e ' g w c t t . . f honor. ! V , u t h K - k a n d i K ê h ' > t ,

S . l i e n a l l I l f . L x n d k i i a l

D e m a r e s t R ep ort*

Okinawa idelavedim o n t h s p i i o r t o t h * i

t h i s f o r m e r J a p a n e s e

h i n d F i r s t 1 4 A l l a n

h a w o f L y n d h u r a t , n

o f S c e r ' o f a M a r i n e - W u

t .-k »n • ,-i » o r t i f * n

rnt.rntn

« f.«hi % t .ting «mMr StmOi

I f imp* ir** te «left

, • ?I I « CtfMafl U » « T

> l»m* iter W *t lAag pUlt#M 1,4 SK and #» Han4

M v r tar*#« t | fte% wwf-- am i% ** C « » t i r H w f i t * M a

Wssi^B - Ä ll Had X2 4v«üs "ÿlA *«r«*4 n i U t I i. fw * * , rtiMti » dwmm mmtm 1m i»t.

.»nr - 4 ^ r V;* <*% it* » nt ly t'* '»Jff ’*

; flH ai M-i k* eti • -i « > V ! » r a r * f t , b r i » * t i M f t *

i I > i at i n* y laht'fi P i fin u <; MNrvw** -«lH 'n»l n m m m * n. '■> < ar«*a

llr f i* rr .Ju ly I I H N I Hçt Huk* ti l.y « 4hu»«j

1 aittj r* m f tn\4» v »mí •% »-i d i w ' h f ib r f<*hpmCf*ri> »U i t t • iv«t$ I it* art *«rpH»tm pwdiafti1 »* Tt*dhhiral t

I mtf*. HHh mttti tWf* T W Î «t R m u i C itv M . II-

I * i f nani t«* th»‘ T rtifji C"*i t mitid »ft Fi.-ljfii«» y . IM I « nt f#\ r f '»«. «• ti» »ti t illi Mit

S f t Hl.«ä< * unii t f,v a llfü if, ihr f* h & *

; T »♦•»»t# CmttJm* muHi irtfl »HtM«1 tilling fl»*'-' wtmrmtwii* *â (%ti1 ¿j* tw iftfvts I *W ? * ! *•<{-! th# r v r u i t U i > t

i I h # f r w f i « I f f

Sgt. BittnerHnme After Liberation

j t* » 4 i >*ai «•*

i h m !» a n i T t t w i BH irfM o y P a rty H e ld

fo r C a ro ly n

ie tiie Menqano‘t Betrothal 1$ ToW

N O T I C E411 V In i r t p a i l l f t r r . w t l l " W on ^ a t i l l i i a l *

during Jul Uad \tigM»i. reopening .m ^attlr^^at.le m lie r R, 1 l i

The Ta i«*fcrr «atll lie «pe« f*»r Iwttlr«* <*« the §r«l Mondât M Jul» and \ii*u d . al T.Ml (• ni

I I O M I M I K J I . I I E I J J ,F »an>ii)> i.U tk .

Jmmr 2B and J % à. l'Ha

ft mm ê JBpß* li* I»W»g if*r

I fil#' W »f f Ibgf jiM'Higwr tuf immmm ■ * *** "§*-*

‘ M #k»' m- mm *4

INMI € t mtsâtMÊi » "a

R B M I

•«H VMIV •4P a*r*rrr

•“• i l i » l i

nflf— 909Ê %Mm^ » mi lêm j ”*̂ 66 C'a

• • V . â tm m » m y

Mrs. Duaham Honored At Shower Held Here

and M rs. M yrl I). L e w is , o f 252 L iv in g sto n aven u e , had a s a gu est for se v e ra l d a y s th e ir d au gh te r, C ad et N u rse R o b erta L e w is , " o l St. B a rn a b a s H o sp ita l, N e w a rk .-

M iss A u d re y B u llo c h , d au g h te r ? I M r. u n d -M rs . G e o rg e B u llo ch . 1-15 D el afie ld aven u e , le ft S a t u r ­day for* Long Island w h ere she w ill be an e n g in e e r in g aid e at G ru m m an A irc ra ft . B eth p ag e .

'.lav not th e A u th o r of the . e rst’ ask from - us as s jp u p a- ic-a fa illi s s w e dem and fro m

■ t lie r ? ” — ia m e s M artin eau .’ '

& Firat Church of Christ, Scientist

In Rutherford, N. J vE . P i e r r e p o n t & L i n c o l n A v e n u e s

Branch of the Mother Church, The f i-st Church of Chrl*t Scientist, of Bcsterv, Mae«.

- mi.,> ü.-ifvh .-s H fi in.' "A a .m . , p i t t n l a y ' ?>.'nout » W dii t -s day K v e i l i u s Meotl nK a t R: 15

. . . !... k.i t. a d i n p Rolini a t 5 Station Sqtfnri*

... i dally irf.m II am . to f, pm. exc.pt o n S u n d a y s and lepal holiday»*

nd .on Thorf'day eventiiB from 7 to n

r i t t h e r k o r b b a p t is tCHURCH

Rutherford, N. J.

S u n d ay , J u ly 8 th -9:45 a.m ., S u m m e r B ib le school.1 1 a.m .. "C h r is t 's A n s w i i .t<

W orld C r is is .'' R e v H aul K . Crtn rad , seeretai-y o f the D ep artm e n t of S te w a rd sh ip for th e N o rth ern B a p t is J C on ven tion .

M rs. L o u ise F u lle r o f New J e r r y aven u e , is sp e n d in g 2 w e e k : t t ie r cottage a t D eal.

A P R IL 22— Main Drive A P R IL 29— Mop-Up Drive

School Drive Sacred Heart Parish Miscellaneous

M r an d M vs. Jo h n T r iiik a , 2 0 ir R ic h a rd g p U< s. n V a lle y B ro o k av e n u e , h ave as and M rs. R ich ard K c n U r. i uests fo r th e h o lid ay , Mr. and R o o se ve lt avunut - sp e n d M rs H en ry M ack o f Nev. Y o rk . ^ U g jm e r at H aw th orne. S t

Mr, an d M rs T h o r :. ~ W hil< and ch ild re n . 429 S tu y *e > » n t » v e ­nue, a re at S e a G irt fi>. th e su « i m u '.

M rs, E . W. K och. 324 Pfe-i a v e nue, is spend in g the i j .T - t :« r a S e as id e H eigh ts,

M r. and M rs. Jo s e p h C o lie ol T o n tin e aven u e m ark e d th eir 21lt.h •w edding a n n iv e rsa ry S a tu rd a y .

l in- following clothing was s r.itv Wareli:t»jw un tier iiis lri State» Treasury Department

M rs. C . F 1 ohne, place, is spending a P oint P lea sa n t

CARTONAM iss L illia n A . W ikoff

road is , spendin g the - j G ladston e

M rs. B erth a M W in; p rim a ry su p e rv is o r-o f L> schools, is - at her sun-.m* at N o rm an d y B eai h f u t! t ie n , period

, T U E N R WF A S H IO N S E R V IC E

By E thal B . r f eo I C W W rGraduate: McDowell School

C6*tume DesignRK ADV MADE M U S S E S

's A N ew L in e^ -- im m e d ia te D e liv e r y

IIE I.P S FO R HOM E SEW ER S

Finishing — Ml T y p «SEWING INSTRUCTIONS

2 IHM K 1 I « t l\ $1ALTERATIONSR E M O D E L IN G

Custom '/ill/e I lolht sIndividually Styled-

PR1CES RE ASON AB I E Hours: 9 ant. tu S pm

E v e n in g s by AppowtaBral

753 Ridge Road, L rn Jk a r t lPhon« K l the rlord ! l i t i J

Dr. Harry WagnerC H IR O P O D IS T

AM - F O O T A ILM EN TS C R E A T E D

Î1 Hoad, Rutherfordj R l'tjie rfo rd 2 6776

H O U R S :

u e £ a T H u n s to « pp A v fe : 7 P to « P

TYPEWRITERS

RENT Only Lat« ModelaAddina Machine»

b e r g e nTYPEW RITER SERVICE AU Malrea New and U.ed

Si” Titolila»' Kpi-copal C .hurt'll M il' sW YTHI MR> I I I VKN>

Heed M m o ria l t ju lxd P ro livu riau < Lurch M U ' I I IM » h K 'u V

< 72» K ii l | r Roail \ui. m u .v M —

MRS II I IH T M V '. " M R? 1 K IIC .I.» V>'Il ls ' jttHN 'ttN M B ' 1 H IN .»VIIts t. V1I:M!IIIN«. MU'- t -x lll'K

l<it \ alle» KrtHik Ut'iiiM-

RENTED, REPAIREDEasy Payment Sale«

T ra d e Where Satisfaction la Guaranteed

ZS3 Main St., Hackenaack HAckenaack 2-SJ4)

V is * M VII\ U t U .n «MHH I THU MASON M I'S E M’H W - U <•it')- . ' v w n i i \ : i " m v in t i la tMUi I. K t'lM HI»! M l" I vl lit »HE t•IH1 V I.KI I I I MK- ¡II 111 1 SVIIt V M. K IM V\ * ' IH V I I VM i

U U i l l . V R W 5TR1BI TU>Nl . i r i « ’ l.e-ttler- U l t i»

M l " J » » H ’ HINE l l o R ' I M W 'P - .I l ï l l . . â ' T l A *E. VN I* M O

i t i n \ R i t t i » i H i i f r i o i'"> i " -IR EN E R»M-LE“ »«OUI 1*1,1. N V 1**KI

H || t ( W M VH V 1 V < ‘ " I I 1 E I ’EMt »w , m I M U I. I . l lu r T H l i a , i >li VvM l t V\ M l l im (0 4 I1 I1 M «**«>11 I Y IM t o n i l i V O I* * i n n i l ' « «I K l I III I \KI I I ‘ I CM ,iM v i ! | V N » V « r MAR IT I * >1I.V » N-f . i 'E IH IS H t .V ! . | n M l**VN 'M « ¿ » S t . iI I v i N < U(IN< |*H 1' t lid t i.NIMENI H e » » " « ' I f " t R ‘ >Tt V'TE1.I « I J M 1 I V*VRt».KI| TRI i fIR IN » H U IN IV R I S I m i HIN, víknl M V IlfH -'VN m i i i v v i- iM TO V n K l U I. N * N' V » I* I I • f-I tlllT llE " S P ‘ f * * * «• * » « ¡ '

vM l<# t H M M J l « M H A I4 1 I

I* V S * *"ÍT1 E l.R VMT iM«vaiM< K t I ' l l It M 'E T T E M IU H N t»K 'TEJ M Vi K

/

ThuVwJuy. July 5, 1945

Dorothy Kowal's Engagement Told

Mr. and Mrs. John Kow al, of 11G V a lley Brook avenue, an­nounce the engagement of their daughter Dorothy to Cpl. John Germain, son of Mr. and Mrs. E d ­ward Germain, of 46 Livingston avenue. No date has teen set for the wedding.

The bride-to-bjtv a graduate of Lyndhurst H igh school, is em­ployed at the Western Electric Co., Passaic. ,

Cpl. G erm ain , also a graduate o f L y n d h u rst „H ig h school, i s - In the M arin e C o r p s , station ed at H ingham , M aM ss

Mrs, Jarvis ElectedBy J.egion Women

' i <1 _____

T h e -L a d ie s ’ A u x il ia r y of H. G.I . r r in g e r Host m e t last week at

j « the L e g io n Homo. M r s J a r v i s ,

<-i.it v ic e ' pr< i . i e n t , p r e s i d e d i n

„ —t h e ab sen ce o i M rs. S. B a r r i n g e r ,

president.E lection oí o llicsrs was held:

■ w ith th e fo llo w in g being chosen:. P u ident, M is. W illiam Ja rv is ;

first v ic e p resid en t, M rs. J . Lins;nd vice p resid en t, Mrs. M.

le a d e r ; treasu rer, Mrs. A. Arm- strong. s e c re ta ry , Mrs. E . Blaut;

' ch ap la in , Mrs I Barringer; his- • ton an . M is. C . R alp h ; sergeant

at arm s. M rs K Holuherr.Delegate.-; to th e county conven­

tion w i l l be M i‘s. Ja rv is , Mrs. A rm stro n g , M rs. Heinsdorf, Mrs. H U lzho ir, and M rs. R alp h . Alter- |"|V W ill be M rs. Lins, Mrs. J ’tut’k n e r , Mr- W eier, M rs Feld- i- Pn .-in■ I Mrs. E a g er.

M n fln ltzh err and Mrs. Heins- £ . : d-'H w e r e hoBWMBM 'tee the eve ­

ning

The W om an's C lu b , on recess for the um itier m onths, is plan­ning to open th e com ing season w ith a luncheon m eeting early inO ctober

, I

Birthday Party forFrank Pollara, Junior

Mrs. Frank Pollara, 143 Orient way, entertained last week at a party in celebration of the third birthday anniversary of her soil, Frank Jr . The child's father, Pfc. Frank Pollara, is w ith the 79th Division, in Czechoslovakia.

I Games and refreshments were enjoyed.

Guests were Mrs. John Cardillo and children Jchn and Mark, of Palisades Pa rk ; M r. and Mrs Louis Po llara and children Frank and Joseph of Manandu, N Y.; Mrs. Joseph Fusaro and daughter Christine, and Mrs. Michael Mar- rone of Bloolnfield; M r and Mrs. Joseph Pollara, Mrs Charles Ca- rella, Miss Aurora Pollara, Mr.. and Mrs. Arthur Caulconer and children Arthur, Michael and Paula, Mr. and Mrs. Pau l L iberti and children', Carmel, Marietta. Alfonso, Joseph and Teddy, a ll of Lyndhurst.

M r. and Mrs. Nicholas Carella and daughter Elaine, Mrs. thony DelTufo and son Anthony, Jr., M r. and Mrs. Samuel Sangi and daughter Beatrice, Mrs. G Carella, Miss Joan Caputo, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Carella and ch il­dren Charles and Angela of Lyndhurst; Mrs. C lara Carella and children, Ernest and George, of Jersey C ity. ™*

. H e had been a r * n d * » i t of Lvnd- ' hurst for the p.L«t 4C> v. ur%. and i prior to t h a t h a d l i v e d " f o r f i v e

| years i n N u t t o y U n t i l h i s ' r e t i r e -

I ment 1 5 y e a r s a g o , h e w a s a

| boiier m a k e r w i t h t h e L a c k . ) - j wanna Railroad

S u r v t v o r s r a r e h i s w U M

| Ire n e M arch iam ’ P e r i I I o: . d iu g h tw , M r s . J o h n J t t i

C lifto n ; s ix sons P h i l i p " - „ I J o ­

s e p h of L y n d h u r s t . Pfc. \m e . T ech . Sgt. S a m u e l , - T - , 5 F ' - a ■ a _ k

an d R ich a rd ; A S , U S N . i mx g ran d ch ild ren .. . "

Ronald Hanson FetedRoland Hansan^stm o f M i a m T *

M r s W a r r e n l l a n > < n , 3 4 2 F o r e s t

a v e n u e , h a s j u s t m a r k e d h i s 1 5 t h

birthday a n n i v e r s a r y g i . n - i

mother, M r : A C . K « - y e i t ' .

P e r t h A m b o y , m a i ' k e d ! . o . .

versary o n tin s a m e d a y

T h e t w o e v e n t w e r e c e l e b r a t - -

W i t h a f a m i l y g a t h e r i n i , a : V

H a n s o n h o m e . G U e r e M

a n d M r s A C . K n v e n , P e n h A

b o y ; M r a n d M i ; - . 1 1 A K o y e n

A r l i n g t o n ; M r . a n d i - , -

H a n s e n , R olan d H a n . - ' n . a n d L e

a n d G a i l H a n s o n , , f l . y u u h u i

E a r l s A t t e n d S h o w e r

Louis P. PerelloA mass of requiem w ill be of­

fered at Sacred Heart Church at 8:15 a.m. this morning fur Ixims P.' Perello, 68, who died at his home, i l4 Kingsland avenue, after a long illness. Interment w ill fol­low in St. Joseph’s Cemetery

M r. Perello was born in Italy.

M i s s E d y t h o E a r l a n d h e r

m o t h e r , M i s H a r r y * j. i ; „ i i , > i M i

i L i v i n g s t o n a v e n u e , a n d M t H

j W . J u r g e n s . m I 1 5 4 I ’ . u u \ . u u *

i w * r e « m a t s a t a i f t - r a , l i a l J t v ' - i ' T .

g i v e n S a t u « 4 * > , , , » c i c i ) m . . a t

h o m e o f M i s s B e t t y B u r d e t t e > > i

R i d g i - w o o d , T h e s h o w e r » a s It- - !

¡ f o r M i s s G l o r i a B e n n e t t - > ! i- . t

P a t e r s o n w h o w i l l l . e i ' - m i t h e

j b r i d e - o f C h i e f P e t t y O i l i . , H *-

: E a r l , J i , o n . A u g r e t 1 4

| M r a n d M r > J a n . , • ■ N t ' t r r • •: t

■ fam ily, 324 G i - e i i i f v i i n , ' , u . : , i

- S e a s i d e H e i g h t s ■ f o i t h e i n , -

a o v a n « " !

Maw J.ilal

i Cotti

f ' MODIt A-l-A Standard A il f. %\ Conduaioa . . . . . . .

mODR A44 lapii-pom Ail- tCA Condurlo. . . . .*50

' MOOM M-A Buo*-Cooda» . . ...........................»50

e - AU m i» tm ■■■' V , * .

' .So/,-' IH atrihu tdtsfor L y n d h u rs t

L E V Y ’ SPH ARM ACY

2»» S T I 'V V K S A N T A V E N U E I.Y N U IIU R 8 T

K l'lh frfo r il 2 1026

1W ’’' ' &

^ .....The coi♦ of fune/oli il frequently miiundentood To give

\ you o true picture of the facts, we quote figure» from a

recent study by National Selected Mortician», covering

104,179 funerali conducted by members In the United

State*. W e ere proud to be a member of thu group.

Funeral service» under $200..................26 2 %

funeral torvicet $200 ■ $350 .............. 36 2 %

Funeral service» $351 • $600 . .............30 7 %

Funeral (enrice* t¿01 • $1000........ 5 8 %

Funeral «enrice* over $1,000. . . . . . . . . . l t %

John D. Crane & Sons

241 K lA H N Y A v e m K.

K e a r n y . N » w J t .H s u

I f R i i t » , t 4 * * * * * » » » a ........................

9 k m . . .

W A R L O A N r •

Let’s finish the fight; let's hasten the day of final victory. The goal of our "T h a t They Shall Live,” Campaign is the sale o f enough W A R BONDS to

purchase ten field hospitals.

O u r “ K e e p P i t c h i n * S l o g a n " C o n t e s t

». CLOSIS MIDNIQMT, JUIY 7

T lte tc is « i l l tim e to cn tct o u t o w e * » ft >v »

bu<HÌ « any P u b lic S e m a r o ffice o r th ro u g h a Pul*

S e rv ie r em p loyee «*<1 <ry to t m one «»# r h o c j*f./

f i r t i p m t S«, mil fm T M f n u

I too in W es I ge l l* T íu . » - « » o « b »

. W m V i r l M é '

h f i t W itmtè pntt, H i eecb

W » w l t le h lm t u k$ 10

V « Bu

P e e e e o e

Only the Best for

J t c m e G J û n ia Ï

¿ " ¿ s -

j L u s c io u s F a n c y F r e e s to n e

W ê É Ü Ê î B Îr M v l v s v ,

s "

Pii ' i d a t th# p*ol(/of Iheir noturol ijoodness ond ru ih e ^ fro ih from th* leading Qtovivfo your neighborhood Acme Market! En^oy the»« large.luscious rip# free s to n e » now o l »hi» irm a tk c ib le lo w p rice !

z

i b , 2 i c' l - r l l - . u -, I ' . l y ' W « l C o l l f . - l ' ' . - Ì ! ' - r e t l l l i e - . t 1 y » i : - | 1 \ I I K - t f *

Iceberg Lettuce « 15 cT e n d i ” , f r e t t i , i r I ' P I . ' . I V . 11 t i e : , - v i i - i r - , . ! '

3 e e t s F f s s h r l e a d e r B u n c hA d d c o l v f CM i d f l a v c r t. V o i I l i i l l ' i l o ' . . « « I l t I « - ' - I

C U C U M B E R S

A f t A c m e P r o d u c e Is T o p s in Q u a l i t y í l o w m P r i c e ■ ^

* 3 câg ew f o i t e * ' . * « • n ü v y

l* m hG*9+*\

; * '

Scallions, Radishes •“~h5cMuihed If -"' nfortty Jersey forms fr , . > tK,t toim titsii Uovcirl

C elery Hearts •-*» 2 9 c

K u vh ed ltv-m n e o it iy ie r s e y fo rm s t r e > tti^ i to n n t i t s i i U u w r l

lu n c h

re fit le r , c r is p fu l l «I H ovcn ^ » , .s h .»vJ u t i l i t é »

Fancy G rè tn “ 2 ,b* 1 5 c

T o m a to J u i c e 20«Rotifer d Fancy 46 « i c a n , 10 pt*

41 * G ru lle A I n n .t,- (u iC t» Y óU l l jR i| ó y . »ft l i c h ^ fvril tg m o t,. t'wv* r

• M t « M il a U M A*

Ormge June V 20c

°* Haddock *-oi«F loundefs 11 cW h i t i n g s 1 , , e

F r e s a i B o s t o f i

a ck e re !

à tCU l|-M lef ¡I *4« i f pit i

Tom. Juice Cocktail 12c( . l«HU <1 •*« It pit

Tom. Juice Cocktail 18<V 8 Cocktail,,:;;»^: 15< lemon JuiceApple Juice Ta.7»** 20<

R A T IO N C A U N O A R R .d $ » e « . M ^ to

A* te I*»t f l««A

■ lua l*em|>s T* to Z 1A ’ to N ’

«..•a, i * - i i * i .a i

Suge» I t s * » I Iww**4e • %•

• ilM W J# rnm I »# 0** *

Blended Juice 18c Prune Juice * Z . I k Prune Juice r * T ?9c Prune Juice

M

C/fvmooci "Grade A ' Sweetened or Unsweetened

G r a p e f r u i t J u i c e ‘ ~ 1 3 c " ~ 2 9 cI. »I finiti ) ttillfr U»h | * f y l l * -dfulai f Uj*v‘f - O h**

Àcrìcai GhaU-'l Pi i n Winning Butter’ ' V Ì t â - L ¡IffcS w e e t C re a m : < *** i C * # f o o o s u m u m i n t

( ¿ l w c 9-V itam in ^Capsules- ^ T T . . ! S.«#« ifc.» mm m * I . . » « f ^ mm

j - k I I - *— * » I l K I I. ■ »-W*I « * • - J T r V 4 • ***»'. I - M

I a- a. .>> * •Try Those l aul y C h s & e I t a t u n s ci Change

BUTTER lb Carton1 i i i I no i »

Chateau IT : Vl< 1UP a b s te r rnVelveeta . T l 2 71c

Pabstett ; American St efford I

VH |-Caveau- e.T 14c I Bavarian M T t . 14c

2 U P i m e n t o M e

M.4* i f *«*M * •*»#**• •••el»*le<(«4 |e*>**l>W fcHf l l- - » «ri*»« i w*M*m+Ì4 >«4'» -* .4*«»>»»« I <•«*««« *4*19409J II# •**•****! t—i

E vap. Milk I arm dule ? (.Òli lo t J p l*

D D C À n U p e M t o l « t o l t o d O ,D L \ J'~ r l »**e ZO e* to*» / C

6*1*4 N* - • *

9 r’°" 18c »»«Bind u-1oc Wiiiei:r i r mÍ Giifmiiv iOc i Piumi S S * He

Social leas 111 Catsup 1Royal Puddings — {# Catsup 19<— r r l s C O Evaporated M i l k 2 . . . . 19c

C o r n A c m e W h o l e K e r n e l " ; Z 1 4 c * i n e l T S p i n a c h S o u p CH T T 1 2 <

A s p a r a g u s O e l M o n t e _ ¿ e a r s « * . V , *.* 3 3 c C c . i p b e l l A s p a r a g u s S o u p I 1 < f l S C O O r a n g « P « k o «

A s p a r a g u s I t t e a l A l l G r e e n » * V . " 3 1 c K ^ l j o c j q s C o r n f l a k s ¿ r . . . 5 < T C A

P o r k & B e a n s A s c o ' U * U V r H f A H I S 2 X 2 U > < € 1

V e g e t a r i a n B e a n s v ’ * - c w L ’ C . ' ” t ? C * s a . ! » . “ I k

i S o í i l Peas J

l|| 17< -, f t Rkg 33c

S p i n a c h , “ t . I k ^ ' : Z . ? 0 c 0

A p p l e S a u c e|4> A N N I N Q N I I OS

•«II lrf*ol ____ _G> r-. M ood G ro d e A N o 7 to r i iu p«anl* 15c Fruit Jars ¿=69c t=79c

*€* #Uf tm** t*r

1 ( X " ; i a i ) < j s S v > i t f P e l i s h * ” l ( k J « f s ' 7 . 6 S < t T I ' A F r u i t P e c » m ^ 1 0 c

7 ;J k Dufrk ̂ U . Dressing 'V' I U M l'<fe - 1 0 c Whi»« H o w Z Z I 2 <

‘ • "•______________ 1 4 c 2 P c MelilCaps- 1 9 c S o r t J t f l ^ 1 2 c

* • > c ) J . l k ~ 4 5 c i a r P i n g s ! * CfCIO ^ 24c. r . t t f i"w , 5w 32c‘ ,2?,^ c i P i t d f a W t » 4 - ^ t k 13c

Sunshine KrtspY Crackers JT. 19c Preslo Cake‘Hour 3r^ .. u*Prcsfrvmg Jars 55c 65<

k i t t l e W Coffee : Z4c Camay Soap 3— 20c

Sparkling Water * Citrus Marmalade Rob Roy Cola Ong» AieGídpeTfe^fiei

( 3 S L 0 h e a t j l o _ . . .

Coffee 24« Camay Soap 3Lava Soap 3

Acme C ' rr°e £.28c Qe |hoC U M 17c

33c

J k Ë U & J i a i â A

_

Thursday. Ju ly ä, 1945

CLASSIFIED ADSFord Motor Heads Hold Long MeetingT H E B A R G A IN C O U N T E R

Thousands have found that these small advertise­ments are the most eagerly read in Bergen County. Convince yourself by buying them. Through ihettt rent, buy or exchange; find the bargain for which you have been searching. Telephone or write your classi­fied advertisem ents to our offices; 255 R id g e R q a I) , L y n d h u e s t , or 124 R id g e R o a d , Noktii A r l i n g t o n . The teleph one numbers are R U t i i e j i f o r d 2-1031 and KKarny 2-1906.

O ne insertion is fifty cents.T w o insertions are seventy-five cents.T hree insertion» are one dollar.

Dcai born, Mien. — Plans for119.46 Fo id , Mercury, and Lincoln car and truck production and dis-

Itnbution proRiam were dissussed here this week by Ford Motor Co

'executive:-, regional and branch ’managers" and assistants, and branch friant superintendents.

The meetings opened Monday in the Ford Rotunda with a talk by J . H. Davis, d irector of sales and advertii ing.

I Datis- indicated . that the post- 'war( line of Ford, M ercury and Lincoln automobiles would be

I greatly expanded to provide mod­els am i body styles to cover every price field from the lowest hi the* finest in style and perform­ance in the automotive industry

The meeting was highlighted Wednesday by a luncheon address from lk n ry Ford IT. Mr. Ford spekc* to the entire Ford super­visory family of approximately 200 executives and department heads.

Mr. Ford covered the.trend of the automotive business for the past 10 years and projected in de­tail 1 he engineering,* manufacture mg and distribution plans of the (Mimpauy that eventually will provide thousands of* additional

IN C H A N C E R Y O F N E W J E R S E YBetween Cnrlstadt M u tu a l L*mn and

Building A v i a t i o n liqu ida ting Corporation, a corporation of the State of N ew Je rsey. complainant, and N orm an F. X . B y rn e . M rs Nor- nian F . X . Byrne. hi* w ife. Huth<*r- (ord N ationa l Bank, a backing-cor­poration of the L'ntte-d Sta te s of Am erica. and John Z im m er. defen­dants. F I. ta. Returnab le. August2». A .D . m i . —

D O M IN IC K MAR*B y virtu»* o i the above stated w rit

to me directed and delivered. 1 have levied upon and » i l l eap© ^ for «ale a t public vendue at the C*»urt Houae In the C Jty ot Hacfceoaa* k. on

Wednesday. Ju ly I I . t f * S s at two o'clock in the aftern^ht East­ern War Tlm^jMLJhat certain tract

kor, parcel ot land and pr«*nii9i-s. situ­ate. lying and being In the Tounship of Lyndhurst, County e< and»taie 01 .>ew Jersey, and bring nrv>re particularly described a» follow

Known and designated as» part ot >• * «« wnd R7 »ip lai.l d*>wn on a **r-taln map on file in the Bergen County Clerk's Office entitled ' Map of l«.m- hurst Pat*. Property of \\ J Burke sind I.. N. N ic holson. Lrndhurst, N. J. ," August. ll*S. Ad^n and Brown, Kngineers, Rutherford N J . and more purti* ularty d«,«nt»'id a* follows:

Beginning at a point the South ­westerly side of S ixth Arpnu-1 distant three hundred" find th§rty--»*ht (31*» leet Southeasterly from tb** corner formed l»y the ln t» i^ c lw *n of the Southw esterly side of 8ixi.li Avenue w ith the Southeasterly *lde of L a ­fayette- Ptage and runn ing thence *1) southeasterly, along sa id side- of Six th Avenue thirty-four 134* feet, thence *2) Southwesterly, a t righ t angles to Six th Avenue one hundred and t »«*n- ty-ftve (12f»» feet; 1 th» n* ̂ ^ » „N o r th ­westerly. parallel w ith S ix th Avenue th irty-four f i t ) feet and th-rv e ft* Northeasterly, parallel w ith the *e/, - ond course one hundred and Iwent/jr- flve (126) feet 1» Uw point o r piaee of Beginning.

Together w ith all and « in t ’ilAr the rlKhts. lib. i ties, prh ̂ - dPainents and nppurtenan« thereunto belonging or in anywts#* api-eart iinii^K. and the reversion and r^i’tamd-r«.. rents, isHiies and pr*.fj*- tb*r*of and also a ll the estate, righ t title int*r- ••*t. use. proper» lafan *»»d demand of the aeld defendant ts andout of the same, he . »old to par andsatisfy In the firnt pho«- ante » e sai.1complainant, the »uni of lawful Interest thereon from »he JStb day of M ay. IMS un til th*,* '**1'* !•* paid and aatfafird. and *!#» th** cofta of the said complainant whi h have beelW lu ly t»*'»'«l *»♦ *he w r# *>» 1224 44

K G R E R T S T n T 'N 't ;SherWf.

R VIM&O - T .vn « i('o m a l IA t Jun e 14.21,2«-Ju ly i S B F IWTg

1 Fees— $.11 1?

FOR RENTN I E . cool furnished room, flood bed.

Oenflevnan only. 321 Forest avenue. I.tndhurst 7-5,12,1!»

t D R S A L EH IC K E X S . large b r e e d , l a y i n g o vvjr <*» p e r < * n t < «11 o r phon e , a l t e r V m . at.-, n i c h t S t e v ç m . ¿43 ( i u t h e i l

l a t e . L V n d h u r s t . I t l ' t h . 2-6260-M.6-21.28-7:1»

I X K i S B O A R D E D

- 1 4diug soia bed. ne<v iost llr»K p ro * $.10. tw in uwiple »■id*', u ith g<*od hair mat-

ifMit table:, mahogany «hair; a it irmi oak ;u UfcT h.iir, fu l l

S U R G IC A L S U P P L I E ST R U S S E S , surgical belts, elastic hos«v

Experienced II t t I n g, satlafactloa guaranteed. I »rices much lower than Newark. Appliance» repaired, altered, duplicated. Silk Surgical Supply; X lg Street, corner fV n tra l Avenue, H arr;» mon. Phone H arrison fi-*803-I

P IKC F. K IT C H E N S E T * orafiti«vn lt*asotiable 721

j l iVndl*ut s t i i1 1 hÜ Ä K Jjf'A ltS AND TRUCKS

BOC<;l IT A N D SO LD Best Prices

Towinfl Servies S A L ’S A U T O S A L E S 630 Riversids Avenue

i yndhurat HUtfcr 1

W A N T tIF TO R E N T

\v a n t e i«.f Î - Î » .

i n f a n t V Leader

« n**rfront ftH E L P W A N T E D — Male, Female. No

•apertene-** nece«Kary, "light work.C «il r«y . f«H or |*art time work, for

f ,nl«*.t shift. IHasticraft Mfg Co . M A r*y le PI««:«. North Arlington. K J u

yA IN TIN C ; «I U ECO R A TIN OPA 1N TIN O . D ,E ( ‘ ó It a T I N <1 Hi.fl

I ’A P E R H ANf l IN f î d^n'e ressotiably F.stlmateH cheerfully »riven e lunH,JUS KuurU) üUtb. ï ilM-k.

IN C H A N C E R Y OF N E W J E R S E YBetween Home Ownef«' Loan..Corpor-

xiloli, a body corporate of the I'n lted States, coniplainniit. and Oll- nier S Ze ttv and . Bernadlne L . Zetty. his w ife and r'hnrles F Bank s and M ae Hank«, hi» wife, de fendalo* F I fa Returnable. S e p ­tember &, A l » , 1945.

< ’H A R L E S L B E R T IM I, Soi'r. tty v irtue ot the above stated w rit

to m*; directed and deliv«re»l. I have levied upon and will expose for sale a public y-iidue a t the Court House In the C'tfv of Hackensack, on

W ednesday Ju ly 11, 1945 at two o'clock In the afternoon. East ern VVaY Time, all the res! property 5; It listed tn the Township of Lvnd hurst. County ok Bergen, and 31irte of New Jersey, described as:

B E f i lN N IN O st s point on the southeasterly side of Tenth Street dis- tnnt thereon twto hundred thirteen and five tenths feet northeasterly

W A N T E DY O U N G M E N and W O M EN

I « T O 18 A N K O V E R Light W o rk — Steadv l*o#ltlolia

ÛCKAV MATERIALM. C A R I O LA N O

268 K Infjslanci Avenue. Lyndhurat- r4 »ffl* It*I D e f e n s e <’«iUIi( ll

S a l v a g e C’o l k e i n r B U Y S O L D R A O S N F WSF’ A P T R 3

M A G A Z I N E S . A l l K IN OS O F M E T A L S . OI D B F D S

S P R I N G S ,K M A T T R T S S E S I ’h o n e R l ’th* r fo r d ,2 137»

M in . jiin iis HuSscll Lippincott.mil (ImukIiUji-, who have been Kiicst: .it the hi in f of the former's p.neu).«, Mr. and Mrs H a rry Lin- n ii: 22;! l ’ont ¡ivenue, have re­lui ne.I tn ttieii i home in Washinß-Ion, n, c I . -

NO r x r a t o f K N K C K H SA R V

Spanish War Auxiliary Entertains Visitors Tues.S e v e ra l d ep artm en t olflc« it. v is ­

ited the L a d ie s ’ A u x ilia ry . (.Jen era I Jl»hn J . I*< ' Innv. > ‘ 'Carnp. 8|>anii h -A w e^iean - W ar W-te» v!i!.\ at a me» tm u held f t t T u e sd a y niL'lil. -.Mr M arv S m ith , pnesi d en t, vva in charr.e o f a r r a n r e

p a t r o l m e n .P a t r o b u e n ,)*»tre*l»neii Louis Mion

Tile Contractor “Q uality P r*dac«J By

M a.t«r M ecbwac»-W e Invite y o a to tee

, . p u r show room ■HOW ROOM ANO O T ric«

56 KEARN Y STREET LYNDHURST. N . J .

E X P E R IE N C E D halrdr

IIL L P W A N TED - MALE sntuberlv from P**- i B l O C K 186. L O T 73

Hot approximately on not«h* ¡;l.\ *id*UiimI \ venue <11 i.i iiI mat eh 1>» 4 -caste RIVer-Klrte Avellile

B L O C K 187. LO T S 22p lu t Kppi 'OKlm ate lyon Hrtutherlv •«Id* ̂land Av¡ hue diet an Itnately f»H' west»- Tenth street

from the cnirner formed bv the In te r- serf Ion of th*4 north»sster.ly Hide of. Kingsland Avenue with the south* ast- • rl.v side of Tenth Str*-« }. and from ; th»nee runjilhg (1) southeasterly par- nllel wl*h Kingsland Avenue, one bun- dr*d flftv-wev* n and forty-four hun- rtrertths feet; thence (2 1 narth fortv- three *b«rees fifteen- jnlnutes e«LSt th lrty-sl* feet, thence fl> northwest­erly. nearly psrsllel w ith the first course '*ne hundred ilfty i«eve n nnd alxrv five hundredths feet to fhe Knutli* astefly side of Tenth Stre«wt, and thence (4» slong the same south forty-two degrees flftv-flve m inutes west thlrtv-six snd one hundredths

HKRGKIN AI’PI.IANCK COW A S H E R S

BOUGHT, SOLD ANDR E P A I R E D

J6 8TIIYVF/SANT AVF.N1'* LJfNDHrRST, N. J.

RUTHKRKORn 2-4071-W

Muiical ln«truction»k- P O P U l.A R ft C L A S S IC! PIANO . . . MARMONYI W o V IIIN O . • COMTOII»'

’ ^ PIANO ACCOHOIOM rO P U i.*» SINOINQ

TAIH1HT »ITVICTOR FRANGIPANEL O IO N « O IV IN AT VOUM

home oh my rruDio C all K l ’tfc. 1 M U J

ii- albui*'-. and B id Fbrm Ml ¡.i tie o fib te of Ron

i 'n « n.ihlp'Kogtneer, 12 liutb* rf-ad. N J . No

I .a tn will be given outI, I ..(|,. J u l | 1$ f » » * n i be acctunpahled bv •. u or casti in amounl ier centum ii# % » of the

**f th* bld cVrÜfhd!>• in n ' In p a y a b l e to t h e

T o w n s h i p <*| l .y ndaa rM tjit * WtmbtsbiiiefH, fe -ht i " w.itr# a n \ Info»

ÔLOCK 206t-UJlT \Plot « * p p ro n lo i\ e - x 5 nn we^l. rly - »dX *.f I it»- Street diluii» «»Lpro.iie- 1V I(»(»’ ‘¡■.iltberty from Im |»la* *

BLOCK ZP*. PT. LOT iPlot approfinmtelv 1h* x *• .It We*». I I v. ob a » >v»

* Street db tout aporo*!«* *' h it*' so ithcriv from P

Charles HHpod'fitartrr* ftC O N C R E T E S r W I A t T l E S

I ItM P A N VT> L A W R a i l r o a d Y a rd *

L y n d h u r s t

Rug deeming• * «

• Domestics Shampooed$3.95

o n i r a s in r R o r o s n o N S le n i r , rack tac . Kepalrlnc

H A R O L D H . A L B R I G H T

U K i r A V E .. R l T lIF .fcrO R D ■ITHKRFORD »»SI 15

my cm mi-HlWrttHtU,/alii n. fate. Ml

Plumbing and Heating

Contractor

ANY CALL FOEHOSPITAL - INFORMATION

C . Savino A gen cy255 Ridge Road. Lyi*illuir«t Rl th

L.COAL MOTICIO R D IN A N C e No 1010

a n ( i i i o in a n .- k A i’T i i o n i * t v n T H E P P B L 1 C O li P R IV A T I® H A LF n i. l ’K U T A lN P R O P F R T 1 K S NOW * » W M D IIY T i l t : T t iW N S I I IP Ol* I .V N D IH B K T in T l i r m iT N T Y O F H K tn ll '.S A N D 1 IX IN » ! T m m ¡A N J » m im v i 'M p u h irat T i i w w » r P 1 .^ S i ' A N T TO N J R K V IS K D ST A T l ' t l ì »sii 40*0 9« et seti AS A M IA DICI » A N D U t r P r t JE M E N T W »

Tbe lt<*anl «»f ( omml*"b.per» nf tlle Tow tishlp of t.yn.lhurst In thè Cotinty

B L O C K rt. LO TSpUit am*r«»a1ma» w i t h fronta li* o*

RUtherford 2-6575 'írientlfir Tufl^-Up— Allan T w ln lAbove. AH — A Good Roof SMUi - Pioteetion - Appcaianct MATTY'S AUTO REPAIR

w A C H n ars d e l ic a t e sse nc t s a r L r r c L n n o r i .i u p o r s - w w n * s r a a s

Every Fr'Hay Special I Try Oar D d M w PM Cahta at Boa» Ma«a Ctaai CWw*» A LARUB STtlCS or HONOR BRAND FROSTRD rOOO»

Phone RUttorford 2-1175 •S3 RIDGE ROAD LYWDHURST. N. J

S/mriahzt't •

Ford, M ercury, Lincoln Z eph yr

Rrptár» Mt ,111 M ah et nf Cart —

351 ©reen A verrue LyndHurst, N. JKINGSBURY ROOFING COMPANY

, i i Terrari1. Iti ili- 2-1.16Ü L> n«liiur»t. N. J Telephone Nutley 2-2400-1

V IO L A BROS . , InMASON MATERIALS

mfm. i w r r -in* .*'i»es la i« *hJLND KATiadAIji

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SEA It*. ROF.BI '< K A 'C l f 2 1 2 M ^ m « » n S t r i i f —

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v . « k i t r r t R K s * » m i j n . m i i i i t h i v r M i . l y n i m s « ' tJIMMIE'S TAVERN«rf. >• M iW h p ia » -at Iwti. I* b. r w . .

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413 Ridge R oad, Lyndhurst, N. J Cement, Bricks, Pipes, Bloch, Lime Adamant Stone, Ashes, Lath. Etc.Clay, Top Soil, Agricultural Lime

W A SH IN G T O N AVE. hfciTUY

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Com e in and T ry Our Specials

E very S atu rd ay Night

R E G E N T

Thursday, July 5, 1945

L IN C O L NTHE SPORTS W H IRL V

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Al I M 'S nM IT II

"The Horn Blows at Midnight"

E t c a p e in t f f t D e t « * r t ‘Ph ilip III . li H i In,til H u m « .

U n U n itili Stales during thè yeai i HI, a Itist\ a-U)2 set and which pincfd fourth in the Count? il.i.irpinnstups ,«t Hackensack, being nosed uut of first place by 19 pins B a te report« tit« team w ill bowl under the name of the Suprrin r Home S l* :v iiU if t C«i ■ U t i l i II im i i iM in- represent^ as an insiliate n salesman. (Taki

'■nule 'you home-ownel s' ) * » t * ,■ t > ) 1 | ) > ■'!Mom H r l u r s i i

IM IM O im M .I .l l l i l

"The Enchanted Cottage"

" P A N A M E R IC A N AHi Ik n u l l ? I r r t v ttd rn

I n n sjt 't il H Only I t Ol OK I \H | im \1*1 ( I l 4 | > t r l » 1 I h l l l l l l l t

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b o v w i m . AT h e l .v n d h m s l R n M en ’s . In ­

d iv id u a l C la ss ic ram « to a clow la s t w eek. W allv P s t in k won the c n .w n fi.it tin- set unit. i-f.iiM-i-utiv -- y e a i t h i s tim<- he nosed out J im S e u rh y b y the s le n d e r m a rg in o f

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BUSINESS AS USUA I D UR IN G ALTERATIONS

DOMINICKS BRASS RAIL

29? Chase Avenue Lvndhuiitin mi itnTHh ; wt.: v

A W A IT A N N O U N C EM EN T OF G R A N D O PEN IN G ! (

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THE W H I S i i m» H t f i j l » I « I r l f*it«> M*

I I I I «.Oil« » » ,** '• I r t j l i i '•<*• k"i-M u q q i R id»* A<i*tnR u th e rfo rd National ha* develo peil new tocluii-

<j«ies to meet the everw iden ing need for lru%t

N ow , »* we c r le l» r» lr our fd tle lli an

In 1895, when Rutherford National Bank was first established, este* settlement * u ■ «airly

simple task, and only comoarativply large est­

ates received the benefits of corporate adminis-

tralion

However, in the fifty y«*r, sine« then, tax ar- r o un t in * , real estate, i»\ estment, and related matters affecting the administration of estates

have become in creasing U complex — and their

trust service* have become correspondin'!) more

valuable. B a t their COST is sMf Uw.

Aionx with « d m jrogrciiv* A m sw m

■ iv e H w y * 'm o d e s ! estates can enjoy e lle m t .

econom ical handling plus the ev ira sal* . ujiriiv

that only a perm anent, re*|*o«isrhW .astUu l.an

can provide.1 1 VvModern trust serrice ran halp )»o assure »»ur

family and beneficiaries of ih» secarli» we htn*w you want ibem to enjny Rcgardles of ->i«e • I your estate, you ara IBMted lo <«Wie'|in and

talk wver ym n »state J » H ^ ia r mi In . I officers — without ahli«aUo«, ot m nuii."'

P r e w s t p r ’A

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CfiotHankzLEVY'S PHARMACY

1

Pig# S i i T H E L I . A B E RThursday. Ju ly 5, 1945

u

Commercial Headern lim S O U T H B E R G E N R E V IE W

Established 1921

Published tv try Thursday by The Commercial Leader Printing Company a t 255 Ridge Road, Lyndhurst. Telephone RUth. 2t1031. h

^ E d ito r ..... . Carm ine Savino, 'Jr.f*r Business M anager Ernest J . Dabinett

Entered as second class matter April 7, 1938, at the Post Office at Rutherford, N. J . t under the Act of Marth 3, 1879.

Subscription $2.00 Per Year Five Cents' Per Copy

Lyndhurst, N. J., Thursday, July 5, 1945

CRITICISM ESSENTIALR e t a i l b u s in e s s m e n o f t h e n a t i o n have been leader* in insisting that practical controls be enforced to prevent the dizzy spiraling o f prices. Some o f the difficulties we are now experiencing result from the refusal o f those charged with rationing and price control to give heed to practical sugges­tions that have been offered. This is excusable in a large degree because it is impossible to please everybody, and, furtherm ore, because when a country changes from a free econom y to a controlled econom y, whether it be for a war emergency or other reason, harsh conditions will result.

W hen people seek legislated security from some real or imagined danger, such as inflation for example, they give up much freedom of action in return. Therefore, it is unfair to com plain of the “control” system under which we now live until we are ready to take our chances under a free economy. H owever, this does not mean that there should be no criticism or effort to improve operating methods o f our control system. If rules and regulations governing prices and production are definitely destructive of increased out­put, correction should be made. Unless this is done, the pur­pose o f rationing and price control will be defeated. The duty o f O PA is to cooperate with producers and retailers because it is on them that the people depend for all the ne­cessities o f life and not on the regulators who, in them­selves, are powerless to clothe or feed a single Soul.

As controls are relaxed,-both producers and retailers will face a tremendous obligation o f .voluntarily basing prices on reasonable profits. From this angle, organized re­tailers and mass producers of merchandise will be the na­tion's greatest price- control assets, for the simple reason that their business lives depend on volume turnover, and that cannot be secured except on a minimum profit per unit sale. Therefore, business milst Accept the responsibil­i t y of policing its own price policy. ~

THE TASK FORCE CORNERThe Leader reM rre i th i i spaca fo r the boys in

service — who they are, w hew they ore and w hat they are doing. O ar newspaper, which is sent w ithout cost to any Lyndhurst service m an who want» it, has proved such an aid in keeping each o ther inf owned about their whereabouts th a t wo will each week aet aside space fo r them. If relstivea receive interesting le tte rs the ir neigh­bors m ight enjoy reading, w e will gladly p rin t then».

Ledo Road, Ju n e 20, ’45. Dear S ir:

It has been a long time since I have seen a Comm ercial Leader. I often wonder w hat is happen­ing in Lyndhurst, or where, of how some ot the fellows w ith whom I went to school, arc m ak ­ing out.

During the rainy season here in Burma, it. rains 3D tn 40 Inches of rain a month, and HO to 120 degrees of heat is not uncommon.

— Lt. C. P. Fernery O-i l 18309 Co. A, 45th Engr Ttrgt A PO H8fl, Postmaster,New York C ity

Ju n e 22, 1945.Dear Editor:

I ’ve owed you this letter for quite some time. I t ’s been on my ftiind for a while. So if I don’t have an interruption, here 1 go.

F irs t of a ll, I want tft-thank you for continuing to send me the Commercial Leader. It has followed me from K e lly Field, Texas, to Melbourne, Australia, to Calcutta, India, through Burma, ar.d finally here to "somewhere” in China. So you sec, I imagine I'm your furthest subscriber from home. Of course, Lyndhurst has not been my home in a few years, as I lived in Avon after I mar­ried, but the people of Lyndhurst were my friends and neighbors for many years, so I still class it my home town. The people in your paper, week after week, are the people I grew up w ith and-1 remember a ll Of them. You can bet one thing: I ’ll be glad to see them all again some day soon. From what I see here, the Japs are getting one hell of a pasting, and it shouldn’t be too long until I do see you all again.

U p here, 6,500 feet above sea level, it rea lly is beautiful. We are entirely surrounded b y even higher mountains which shut out a lot of the severe winds. Right now we are in our monsoon sea­son, so it has been raining quite a t it . But w e have our combat boots, helmets and raincoats, so we are well protected. A t night, it really gets cold up here and we are glad to get under aur blankets.

I ’ve been here quitp a while now, but I ' l l never forget my trip to get here. I drove a two and a half ton truck from Ind ia over the new Gen. Stillwelltfcedo Road and then ove r the old Burma Road, just retaken from the Japs when we came through W e saw quite a few sights which wouldn’t make too nice reading, s o .I’ll skip it. Someday, when "T~gct back, I can tell you 'm ore about it. For every mile of that road,, sftmc American G . T gave his fife. So I'm kinda proud to carry out his yart up here at the front. Right now, I'm working 7 days a week, »nd nigkta, besides. And you know som ethingrTdon’t get over­time forTt Kinda makes our fel-

I lows mad to read about labor

trouble and strikes. Over here w e ’re all one gang.

Yesterday I received my March 29 copy of the paper. And I have a slight favor to asiT I see you have a ca ll out for softball play­ers. I imagine Mr. Donald is still w o r k i n g hard, running the league. Would you mind asking him if I could play this year? A ll kidding aside, I sure would like to.

I was glad to read about the good luck the basketball team had this year. It ’s been a few years since we had a good team. B y the time you get this it w ill be almost football season, so I hope you have a successful sea­son.

I enjoy reading about the other fellows in the paper. W e sure are scattered all over the world. I haven’t met anyone from home ov6r here.

I was interested in ,L t.’ Savino's article, in which he wrote of his meeting w ith M r. RayT

Cpl. Herman Katzenstein , 42114830

472 Q M Platoon, 301 A ir Dep A PO 627, Postmaster,New York,. J i . Y.V ; N.

Erding, Germ any, Ju n e 17, 1945.

Dear Editor:It's been quite a w h ile since I

I<ist wrote to you, but I have been aw fully busy. Our outfit has jjjist moved from Belgium to Germany and there was plenty of work fpr a il. w - 1

Thursday morning, bright and early, we" were all set to climb on

Jodigne, Belgium, and 11 a.m. we were a t Erding, Germ any, 20 or 30 miles northeast of Munich. It was a sw ell ride. You can ce r­tainly see the beauty of a coun­try w h ile flying. You can spot the places of beauty, see the natural colors of the landscape and see thcrbeauty of the rivers and lakes. Hit'ips’s story is that they needed “ living room.” I don't know, m ay­be their cities are overcrowded, but there sure is a heck of a lot of uninhabited land. I realize they need farm ing land but I do be-

-licvt they had plenty of land for farming and for building cities, too. The Air- Force sure knocked heck out of some places. You can sec the ruins from the air. (Bu t I still g ive most of the credit tq the Infantry.)

We landed at the airstrip here and were treated to a wonderful sight. TTie field was literally strewn w ith wrecked Nazi planes, both conventional and je t types. I have pictures of them.

W e're in a beautiful spot here. I can look out my window and see green grass, trees and rolling land for miles around. There are a few children playing in the yard now Everyone is spotlessly clean. One little boy has a big scar on his leg. Shrapnel. Thank God this war is over.

There are a lot of factories and warehouses around here and there are plenty of Lugers and other guns in them. But, as usual, they are off lim its to us.

Pfc. J . M. Hannagan 42019234 1st In tr Dep G rp 3rd Po rt Intr Dep Sqdn A P O 149, Postmaster New York , N. Y,

V-June 26, 1945

Dear S ir:I would like you of

my new address here a\ Cherry Point, so you can continue your very good idea of sending the Commercial Leader, which is received by me eagerly. I haven’t received m y copy for a month or

looks like : A fte r about a year or two the memory gets a little bit hazy about many things. So I though the Leader" could run a picture of the main streets, for the benefit of servicemen. This would be a wonderful w ay of giving the fellows a better idèa of whpt is going on in the town, anc' they could see ..some of the improvements taking place.

The 30 days I spent home were very happy ones, though they passed too rapidly. I am now en­gaged to a v e ry wonderful girl. M iss Patricia Neuner of Wood- Ridge.

Thanks ve ry much for your thoughtfulness in sending me the paper.

S-Sgt. George E . Hollister, U SM C RA ir Warning Group 1, R Div. Cherry Point, M C A S, N. C.

v -We publish the addresses of the

following men for the conven­ience of their friends:

Charles A . Chamberlain, A-S Co. 321, E-1.1-V Ù SN TC , Sampson, N. Y .

Sgt. J. J . Check i 32391265 - Sqdn S, Project R E B G Grand Island, Nebraska

P v t . P. Cagnacci 12102209 3704th A A F .B a s e Unit Sqcjn M Class 645 Box <33 Keesler F ie ld , B ilox i, Miss. Cpl. H. J . St. PeterHq St Base Ser G rp 25 A ir Se rv G rp A P O 447, Postmaster —San Francisco, Calif.

P v t . Robt. McDowell Personal Affairs Office,U S A General Hospital Camp tìiitner, N. C.

so, because of my changes of ad­dress. which have been a bit too frequent. And now I find that I have been, missing all the "dope”

the trucks and head for the air- 11 used to find in the local paper, port. Boy, what a moss! Wednes I was home on my 30 day fur-day night, everyone was a ll set lough in April and M ay and it and ready to go bat, somehow or was good to see what the old other, Thursday morning they a ll home town looked like, after a remembered they had things t<- year and a half away. 1 should tu rn into “supply." That's me like to make a suggestion to you W e ll, we finally got straightened for the benefit of the many-other out and went to the planes! C47s boys who are still out there in the they were. A t nine a.m., w e left Pacific, wondering what the town

Robert A . Goetzl, EM2-C U. S. N avy Station 3149 E-ll-24 Assembly 15 F lee t Post OfficeSan Francisco, Calif.

W . T, W ilczynski, F l-c 712-27-2V*USS L S M 120 F lee t Post Office,San Francisco, Calif.

Statement of ConditionJu n e 3 0 , 1 9 4 5

-A S S E T S

Cash on hand and in -o th erFinancial In s t itu t io n s $ 345,905.13

United States Govt. Securities J,158,150.00

Total Cash and U .S . G ovt. Securities. . $3,504,055.13Stock of Federal Hom e Loan Bank of N. Y. 175,000.00

F irst Mortgage L o a n s................ 2,914,754.21Office Building and Equipment.^. ...... 1.00

Other Assets . . .................................. 9,103.64

$«,«02,913.98

C A P I T A L A M ) R E S E R V E S

S a v in g s A c c o u n t s .................. ..................................... $5 ,950 ,673 .05

R e s e r v e s .......................... ........................... «52.240,93

$ « ,«0 2 .9 1 3 9 8

P u r r l ig n e Y o u r W a r S a v in g ) « S t a m p * a n d B o n d * H e r r

B o il in g S p r in g s S a v in g s

a AND LOAN A s s o c ia tio n2 3 P ark A venue,R utherford , IS. J .

F U E L O I Ld*

■ M eiered and Hffd n fad

D E L I V E R I E S ^

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Keller Engineering Co.R U t i i e b f o r d 2-0060

Oil Burner Service

PleaseAFTER READING

TH IS PAPER PLEASE SAVE IT FORY(SiJR N e x t

^ S A L V A G EDRIVE

P A P E R j

Is a No. I W a r Material SH O R T A G E

SUM M ER

NECESSITIES

AT

BARON'SONCE A YEAR!P R IM R O S E

H O U S E

P R IMr

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DEODORANT/

FRESH

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YOUGanDepend OnUS

• I h ir in g the w intrr just past, the fuel emergency s « i met In *ueh vigorous, concerted action on the part of coal dealers that few families, if any. Miffered ml u s I hard-hip. It *'ti*ok a hit of doin' . . which w ill prob­ably have to he repeated next year. We propose, with your help, to meet any fuel emergency that may srise!

• Hut it is doubly important that consumer ¡mil dealer work in harmomoii* co-o|*eration. which mean« that they mii-t iiinler»lan»f each other* problem» . . . and pull in th«- «ante direction. That i« why we particularly "want you to know these facts:

• RECENT A N TH R A C ITE COAI. P R I C E IN- t R M S E S R E P R E S E N T OArf I T H E t M T O F H it .HER W AGES CH A N T ED TO T H E MINERS AFTER ARBIT RAT ION O F TH EIR THREE- VtEEK S T R IK E . T O U R F l 'E I . DEALER IS S T H I S E R \ INC T H E PI B U C ON T H E SAME CROSS M \ R C I N O F P R O F IT H E HAD BEFORE 1’1 \Kl HVRBOK IN SPIT Fa OF HIGH ER OP- ER VI IN C C O STS . . . A RECORD Dl PLICA TED i n n m R E T A IL BUSINESSES AND EXCEED­ED BY .NONE!

D E O D O R A N T 43cM U M •••••;• 2 9 e

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A M O L INY O D O R A

I Mil. KRVNV f'r iu tirn t

L 'M K K C ittC ï.>i» * « i i »

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ODORONO J l 'S P E C I A L

REAL RUBBER- B A T H IN G ^

C A P S

9 8 'W e Ki ir r i f the Rtpht to Lim it 1Ju*int$ii**$

B a r o n ’ s

CUT RATE DRUG STORE 88 Park Ave. Rutherford

HKINI Kt TU ESTOCO S-T«H