ihi sale miohiiig board acts to stem harrington learn hit nate … · 2014. 2. 23. · ton, pa....

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'.;'&& \V III. —NO. 16 O IHI Sale limbs To High CAITOTX*, *„ n m m , JULY 28, PRICK THRHI Miohiiig Board Acts To Stem Flood Of Tire Applications < k \V priory Payroll Deduc- ions Add $144,915 Past TwoMonths , [li;KT The newtotal of ( i,, i.n.m Ponds sold in Car- ' :|.:::in,«87.50, an increase , ; ; i;.n nvcr the total of 'i:,.:iii announced list week ,liiii mil n, Emil Stremlau. i,i,,i report from Mr, i,,, HH-IIKICS the sale of "E" , in local factories , ',. payroll dedu«U?ft two months sales u;iy amount to $144,- thtough other agencies J.IHMI. the two local Mmr and loan associa- ih. Carteret'Post Office, m.i,. $100,000 of the y|.|,V». r > In "E" bonds IHTII reported. , IM.il Of SlUt sales now credited follows; . 7.482 sold, for bonds, 20 sold for, linriHs, 23 sold for notes, 1 sold, for ', certificates, |MG,- S. Treasury notes, .•'.; Treasury bonds, CARTERET An ordnr d*>- sighed to Btcm the flood »f appli. cation* since "15" and "C" K »* ration holders were made eligible for (trade I tires, has been issued to all local war price and ration- ing boards, it was'anm>tftice'd to- day. Uniter the'ord• r, the local War Price andRationing Board has the authority to request a re-irwpeq- tion of thf passenger cHr tires be- fore giving further consideration to the application. A re-inspection will be ordered where the appli- cation does not fully Indicate the condition of the tires, and it will be used primarily where the ap plicant asks for two ormore tires of TTNT re-inspectionR ..Ml ordered, «4 Mt applicant* back. Of the <1 who eomplitd, 7 wert fo*»d have originally reported ent serial number*. Rmuon For Oriar It was explained step* had lie taken to eliminate the essary applications from the mate ones. The aVtknrl* «f plications which has twaaawd lo- cal boards for the Mat two mosttw, has ibeen attributed in M auaafl degree to poor Inspection «f tir**. OPA officials emphasized tibat application* are uot tiled in ta# order in which they are r«e«i Of primary consideration is tike importance of the applicant lathe (Contitmd on Pagt 7) Parish, Civic Leaders Honor Quarter Century Of Service St. Demetrius' Pastor, Very No 'T." ' Day Racord lilr'.e reports have hi- nale on Tuesday, " day, marked foi to sell this type agencies, however, in showed greater than lire usual on n New Babies Arrive, e Mother Former WAC \NH!KT -The first graml- i Mi, Koepfler family in iii i n Ami Kdvpfler, born thin i St. Mary's Hospital, ,, I,I Mi. i.nd Mrs. Paul |,i|,. ,r ::sii Central Avenue, , :: . Mi Koepfler is the for- Mi Ami Reisener of this ur ,,,: ';i- brAy'a father is s i Mi- Fiank Koepfler of m;: Avenue, and the late Mr. In iii i in w arrival to a boi ; |. K lack Catt Layne, N.i" nis are Mr. and Mrs. \ I. iviie. This baby was i i: 'may Memorial Hos- M i Layne is the 'former H,'.'•!. I'auline darr of the K, -•..• > si-L-tiuii, who served A-, H,us Army Corps bi 1 - •> Mi -. William Pencotty Hi II Street also arc the i new child,! a (laugh- «• forth Amboy Ho»- CK.R.S INSTALLED lAiiiKKKT—The social unit ' Wardens' d u b in officers at Fire Hall 1 nislit. They are: Presi- ' ' f'uno; vice president. ' •: • • • i r secretary, Walter ii•• •, Meyer Weismau; •II ins, Frank Nieman; I'I' i fanik, Amos Hoff- •l i,miry Ginds. Rev. Hundiak, Feted At Service And Dinner CARTERET —The Very Rev. John Hundiak, pastor of St. Demetrius' Ukrainian Church WPR presented with a pold cross and chair Sunday nijfht. at the special services marking the 25th anni versary of his ordination to the priesthood. A dinner followed at the Ukrainian Pavilion at- which several hundred guests paid trib- ute to Father Hundiak for his interest in the progress of the church and the community. Attending clergymen escorted Father and Mn, Hundiak and their daughter Gloria to. the church where they were welcomed by Father John Renchuk, of S^Hn- ton, Pa. Mrs. Kundiak was prc sented a corsage of orchids and Miss Hundink one of gardenias, by Mia. Paul Kawcnuky and Mrs. Harry Wilanfiky on bohulf of the SinU-ihuod of tin- Bitted Viinin, The dinner was sponsored by tho board of trustees' of t-he churrh, headed by Hurry Wnlan- sky, president; Michael Proskura, secretary, and Harry Hayduk, treasurer. They were assisted by th» Vei-y.ttev. Michael Kapa^yniuk of Ttenton, all the societies"of th church and choir. In the opening address Wolan- aky congratulated Father Hundiak Since Father Hundiak tutt the United State*, he da* beenas- sociated with different Ukrainian newspapers and magazine* M cor respondent, assistant editor and editor. He held pattoratet in Bin ler, Pa., Herkimer, N. Y.. «t. Joseph, Mo,, Chicago, 111. Mirwrt- ville Pa., Troy, N. Y., an! Car- (Continued on Pege Z) Honored Fn Semu Harrington learn Hit Nate At ToptitDemocratic Ticket T»IWed««ting Per- ffWidmt of the Lion. Club, 04&* »'h«* wm art **«« if !*r «w is 11k T.fcwWW Rev. John Himdiak "hurch Hews I s ' MARK'S EPISCOPAL "<> I', Kenncdi MacOonald •i>il Meditation will be 1 •' Murk's Church next '"r.ht ai 7 o'clock. Led 1 > in charge, it will be 1 •' iln' men and women ••I tlu'invaeion 1 front. MAI;YA RRKFORMED 11 - !<>•«. John Huaditfc iiviccs: The 0:30 ivu t > will ,be held in '" i<) 30 service in Hun- ''"''I'g the Hungarian : vuung people will be '.' j ll|l » the membership "•">ii. The afternoon serv- 1 "initted. W«Ulv 1'ilile H have -i-tiool i i »ix P" I and expressed appreciation of the parish for his leadership and con- tribution to the progress of the church in general and of the local parish in the twelve years of his pastorate heie. Then he intro ducfld Father Zapaiyniuk who act- ed H8 toaatiuaBter. Speakers included Mayor Jo seph W. Mittuc-h, Fathers Sen- cliukj JoRoph Ynletchko of Hud aon N. Y., Andrew Ku&chak of IJempstead, N. Y., Basil Kushil of Stapleton, N. Y., Luke Kachor of Eautport, N. Y., Vladimir Klod- nycky of Newark, N. J., Hilary Wroblewsky of Coatesville, Pa., also Messrs. V. Kediowsky of Me- tuchen, John . Ciko, Oscar Stein, John Lukasikewiw, Hairy Hay- duk, Michael Proskura, Mrs. Ka- wensky, Mrs. Geoige. Elko and Eugene Wudiak. Mr. Woiansky presented Father Hundiak with a purse from the parish. Many priests and laymen of this country and Canada and the serv- icemen of the parish sent their felicitations and gitte- Miss Hun- diak presented her father with a cake with twenty-live candles. The church choir directed by S&ostaczko sang at the at the dinner. Ordained In Can«U Father Hundiak was born July 7 IBM in th« village of 'Ptuhiw,, Western Ukraine, and upon grad- uation from collet came to the United States in October, 1IHJ. He attended St. Charles College, Catonsville, Md., St. Mary's Semi ,,ary Baltimore, Md. He,was or- dained to the priesthood on July 28 1919, by the Rt. Rev, Bishop Nicetas Budka in Winnepeg, Man. Canada. Rita Here On Smdsy For Mrs. Joseph Wattach CARTERI* Rabbi David H Wice of Temple B'nai JeBburuti Newark, conductej nervieet Sun- day afternoon for Mrs Wanloch, wife of Dr. Wantocli, ul Carteret Avenue, who died Ltttdf Thursday after a long illness. The nervier took •followed by Vludimic church and 0:30, the School of the its closing «xer- whioh vraa held weeks, was well j wift be tho aterciaei and in- .md friends I 6:30 P. M. the •J will have, ita rejju- Ml aid pace »t cremation Hill Cemetery, Linden. \cUn|{ au pall bearei* James Dunne, Julius Ktau limn Coughlin, David Lacuri, J. Gervtt.se Nevill and WiUUiu Greenwald. Mrs, Wantoch is survived her husband; two brothers. John S. and Anthony Olbricht; <w sis ter, Mrs. Tillie Jackson; a son. Corporal Irwin Wantooh, daughter, Cadet Nurse Wantoch, all of Carteret. 14GirlScoatsO*Tri* To New YorkUetsUy CARTERET - Chaperoned i>> Mrs. Elsie NemisJi and Mies Mar- garet Balog, troop eapt*» assistant, member* of Girl Seeut Troop No. 3, sponsored by Free Magyar Reformed had a trip to New Y*rk on Tin* day. The party wept to " lor Center and «iso attended theatre performance. Those making th* iri|> Misses Marian Ktthn, Re*) f aw kas, Betty Zatik, Kathleen Wei«v Margaret Bodnar, Gloria 4114 £3 sio Nemish, Margaret T»1fc. mo- both Poloncsik, Helen Simon and Social and Personal Mr, and Mrs. Harry Axon, Charles Morris and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Yetman are vacationing,in the Poconos, »n their return Mlsa Dorothy Yeanmn andMis» Helen Wllwn of the High School faculty Will go to 8urf City for two weeks. Mr. and Mrs, Frank Scrudato. ot Lincoln Avenue, are vacation- ing in Maine, where they jomed their isons who have been there a won*. , . • - Mr* David Ulnj»n 8n( ** sm 'W' of Atlantic Street are vacation. . at haahqw./flww * e y w Samuol Roth of[ Street, clerk iu tie loc*i,aw* ncu, t, , leaves this week'for tfcr *c- C»mp at DaiMiwBe, $. V * tiakhfatm atuuwwwijr &Hk* rf «b atuwrik, Lokach, former __ are schednled to leave tMMnow for Chicago as di legates f# MM Liona Convention, repre- the Carteret organisation. Ike meeting held Tuesday «t the Oirpiy Camp rest«u USB* JAMpb Pukash was welcomed •a a new member, and planx were to go to the dedication of at Camp Cowaw of fcr M*f Semta on A«pnt«. Thin s DM MUy shop at the camp Nrifc fWM fond* to which this or- contributed. Ferluns appointed commit %tt ehrtrmen for the coming year dttae Wmf a* follows: Albert v attendance; Brn IMMIMWIU, constitution Alexander Comba, Koftai't Jt. Brown, Lions' 'Lmit Brown, program (odiMki, publicity; Prank , (Military affairs; Alher liona' work; James J boys and girls; Chaile, Ctmkt, dtiwnship and patriotism A, Torfc, civic improvement «<MnmaBity betterment; Kurt CrataWft, education; Lttigi Bol- h«atth, safety and welfare, md tk« entire dob, membership. CLCsMa,Mn.hheway EUtUJ By County Legion CAHTBRET—Clifford L. Cut- ter of Lowell Street was named «ne of the vice commanders of (be Middlesex County American Legion at the convention held Saturday in Perth Amboy. Abo elected to office was Mrs, Thomas A. Jakeway, ehown treasurer of tho Ladies Auxiliary. Other* <frOm Car- Unti attending the convention and the banquet which followed included Mrs. Harry Gleckner, formerly a county officer. CARTERBT—Bentdtet «. Har- intton former rintton «l Atk#tk Stnwt. former president «f tSe Cajrlawi Board of Education, mad* In©** today he will not be the Democratic can didate for May* of thk boronfh »t the General Eketiok next No- vember. His Utter of »aa%nation wan sent, he said, to County Clerk Edward Patten, and to the local organization. , When aaked the reaioni for hU withdrawal from the race to op- pose Mayor Joteph W. Mittuch for a sixth term, Mr. Harrington tad h 1 4, Fume CARTERST-Mr. and Mrs. John 8oanowakVttf 80 Chrome Avenue were W i l l e d this week that their ton, iPfc. PrankSoa- nowtki, had4>t«n wounded In ac- tion in France Junr 14, Soinowski entered the army in September, 19*1, nndreceived hit basic training as an infantryman at Pert Banning *nd Camp Qor- don, Ga, He went overseas in January of this year, A graduate of Carteret High School, he was employed at the Carteret plant of te U. 8. NeUU'Rertnlng Company. A brother, Cjrt. Henry Soanowiki, li in the U. 8. Army Medical Corp* in England. IWWLLTOWN '—A gnnip of lncal held a picnic at Edit Milltown this week, thosr being: Mr. and Mrs. Jofen Teteposky and son, Jack, Mr. Frank Skiba, Mr. and Mis, Steven Goyena and son, Ste- «n, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. (Stanley jfaybt* and son, Mr. and Mrs. An- drew Hotencsak, Mr. and Mrs. Armine Bittha and daughter, Mi Mrs. Ijflui* Kady and son, l*utK, Jr., Mrs. Mary SekoBky and Sefranko of Eliza- a statement which does not criticize the party which backed him, hut the administration In power for the past ten years. It indicates a desire to pursue this criticism u an individual "whose sincerity cannot be attributed to a desire to be elected." At a meeting of local Demo- cratic leaders, scheduled for last night, no successor to Mr, Har- rington as head of the ticket was chown, so far as could be learned There is no need forhaste in till- ing th« -place, however, since it can be done at any time between now and the date in October which f i l l s thirty-four days be fore the election, it was stated. Siur A P«iiblli(r Among the names mentioned prominently as potential candi dates when the ticket was chosen for the May primary was that o William Sitar, proprietor of 1 Ka»olinu service station in Wash Ington Avenue. Mr. Sitar did not become a candidate, but his name now looms again as a possible choice to replace Mr. Harrington. Mr Harrington's statement »i given to this newspaper Is follows: "In my personal business as an attorney, 1 have had the opportu- nity to wnld| the inner workings of the present administration and the effect of its inefficient man- agement on this community. "Inasmuch as this community had been selected by me as the place {or my future home and business, I was sorely moved when Gas Ratioi Curb Opei August 1 Board To Relate St#| pleneat Mm RN* Poo) Plan I, AdopM CARTERET—Th. local ^ Price and Rationing Board been Instructed after AafostJ to rtfuse full gasoline rattona,' holders of "B" or "C" rations Fazekas Arrested As Drunken Driver CARTIRET August 7 has been get for the trial of Charles Faiekaa of 82 Frederick Street on charges of drunken driving. Meantime, following his arrest Monday afternoon, he hai been released in |2BB ball after his arraignment before Recorder John H. Nevill. The arrest, made by Sergeant John Harrlgan, followed an acci- dent involving the automobile op- erated by Faxekaa and an oil truck driven by Charles Raichart of Clifton, at Washington and Roosevelt t Avenues. Dr. Otto Walker pronounced the defendant unfit to operate an automobile. Also listed In the police record of this week wa* the arrest of Timothy Cherry, 28 year old Negro, of 16 Avcnel Street, Free- hold. He was turned over to FBI authorities for alleged evasion of the draft. Sergeant Daniel Kasha made the arrost, and also brought in Charles Walker, 34, anther Negro, of Leesville Avenue, Rah- way, wanted there on charges of non-support. actions of tb* present »dniiiu»tra tion had an adverse effect upon the advancement of this commu- nity. "I Watched the tax rate, under Uie present municipal government, rise from $4.34 to over $7, during a time when collections increased to 90% and back taxes of over $300,000 were paid in. Nothing new was given the people of Car- teret for this increase. The pres- ent administration ha» taken credit for new roads .(built by the (Continued on Page 2) St. Elias Parish To Honor Patron CARTERET—Members of St. Klias Greek Catholic Church on Cook Avenue will celebrate the name day of their patron saint Sunday, August (t, with a high IIIUSH to be held outdoors. This will be at 11:30 A. M. { according to announcement this week by the pastor, Rev. Constantino S. Ros- kovics. In the afternoon, a festival will be held with folk dances as a fea- ture. Father Roskovics will be as- sisted at the mass by Rev. John Gabriel, prior of the Franciscan Monastery, Saranab Lake, N. Y., Rev. John Slivka, of Rahway; Rev. use tiuit" car for driving and cannot show thatl belong to a car ponl and are i htrly carrying a full car load. "After the August 1 date," 1 the Board, "if you ire under the regulations to balonf | a car pool and \t you don'(, In j' likelihood you are only going.' get sufficient gaiuline rations 30 days of home-to-work, instead of the usual 9 months 1 tions yuu have been receiving,, you won't get your supplei ^ rations until youshow that yot| obtained sufficient passenger* fill your carl" F»w Exceptiont The Board eipiaintd that • about every "<B" an« *&' who uses his car for home-b driving is required to*» ka 1 pool. Holders of sute 1 use their cars in I M their work, for example, do aro not required to belong pool. A recent government showed that only IB per all automobile operators bek to 4<nr ponli. If an applicant claims, for 1 reason, that he is unable to' tain a full quota «l riders, local board will require him present full and conclusive deuce, ( ' The OPA district direc warned that the customary all which would souad pretty fanb tic to some O.I. in a> foxholi won't get the applicant very If an applicant pleads that h« J cannot bo part of a car pool / adequate public transportation available, the board will be 1ft- structod to refuse supplemen rations. ' T!5$ ijsJ ihaving order Is* only in effect in the seven conll-n: Of Gemak And Duffy Make Bon War Toll Now Were Ust Two Days Asmth France, One , One In Channel €A*nO£T That two more from this borough have sac- 6 their lives in the war be- N M t kspwu definitely this week, tfct toll of deaths'to date Uf. sajf Hn. Andrew Germak 129 Fencing Avenue were tte War Department Suu- •f the death in France heir son, Pfc. Mi who wai twenty je«?» of age. leanjen John r, nf*rt*d missing, in the is- of «» aewtpaper on June 30, m cowWered dead, a cuualty rough weather while he was per- forming his duties This unfortu natf accident occurred at about 10:42 A. M. on June 19, 1944, while the ship was taking part in the recent operations off the northern coast of France. "Although all possible steps were taken to rescue him, includ- ing the use of two fast motor craft, all efforts were Unsuccess- ful. To date bis body has not ibeen recovered." TO ATTEND RETREAT CARTERET—A group of mem- bers of Carey Council, Knights of Culutnbus, will leuve tonight for a retreat at West End,..returning . . . ''* cuuaay I Sunday, The party is to include (*• tones preuing into France Jal| , es j Dunne, Juieph Caitaleggi Afia Markue Uuk. Street was hostaw »t her twaw when ha plunged over- mt# th* English Channel dbrtng; bwdmg operations. ffe, Oemwk attended 'ocal Mri»««l» Mhf graduated from the County Vocational fetHMH U ttfifian life he Was em- fj« a*Ik* American Agricul- ftnf Cktmkal Cempany. He an- ttnt Ha-aewke Hay 11, 1942, M aUtr twftiiag at Camp Gor- 1 <fe m4 Oanjp Johwon, fla,, ped to overaeaa duty in #f th?a year. Ht» parents • letter f wm him June & U Mid "I'm Ming IMrt wwry aboot m«" Ut* aanato fc« U jur- If a tvothtr, ftt. John, ata- I IAh City, and three at horn, lira. •fthlbor- mt J** AwttMpHttu*t Julius Lelett, Daniel and Rober McDonnell, J. B, O'D^nnell, F.d ward Lloyd, Michael Wadiak, Wai ter Safran, Adam Stymborki and John Safchiniky. y ties comprising the Trenton tridt hut throughout the na< It is ainiad at conserving senger oars as well as gasollnr and tires. At the 'beginning ^of the war,, there were J!7 million passenrar cnr.3. Sine* then th« lft rate of cars has reached over 000 fcerapped 1 per riay, Accordl) to conservative estimates Joseph Woytovich, of Fords; Rev. ttre n o w o n!v ^ illilllon Julius Grigassy, Rev. Nicholu»l W3 0I1 t he road Ullli B3 P 8r Saboand Rev. Richard Molnar, of of these .cars I U of 1987 Perth Amboy, and Rev. Joseph Smithson, of New Brunswick, The festival will be in charge g of George Gavaleti, Nicholas S«i- bert, Michael I/>zak and Nicholas Yavor&ky. 2nd Birthday Celebrated At Party In Baby's Home or older. Break-Down F e u t d OP A said that when the nun of cars gets down to 2Q million I serious breakdown easentl CARTERET Barbara Ann Molnar, daughter of Mrs. Anna Molnar, 22 Mercer Street, cele- brated her second birthday with a party at her home this week. Her guests were Patricia Hus- zar, Antonette Gudatto, Olga Si- kora, Theodora and Carol Ann Rozanski, Helen Toth, Carolyn Kondas, Kathryn Deckus, Phyllis and Evelyn Bo^ykowski, Jean and Agnes Rozanski.* Adam Kazan ski, Private Louis Rozanski, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rozanski, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Iluszar, Adam Rozanski, Mrs. Pauline Hayduk of pHi'l«t'«t. Mr. and Mrs. John Rozanski uf Elizabeth, Mr, and Mrs. James Toth of Metucben, Petur Rozaji ski of Linden and Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Rozanski of Perth Amboy. in transportation can be since in normal times 93 per ci of all passenger transportation by private automobile. , Car-pools, sharing a ride, is \ most important answer to ing our dwindling number of senger autoniobilou. When five caV, ; ! owners have; a car pool, the " of each car is increased flv compared with each of the 1 driving to'work in his own Tires will last five times as and the consumption of gasolj will be reduced as much as 80 i cent. With Our Boys George J. Jrechfca of 21 Mary Street has returned from Sioux Falls, S. D., where he ^visited his brother, Pvt. John E, Brechkn, there attending the- Army Air Forces' Techntw . Training Com- inand .Radio Opeiator Mechanics School. » * , « » Word has bifin received from Emil R Qndilloak, aon of Mr. d M 8 J J k * E 9*1,9 Pi, •« th. son of «J4 tnd Mrs. S. Ofidrsjcsk of Ran dolph Str«et,"th«t he has oecn pro rooted to the wwkr of khlpfltter, third, chu*. %$M» overseas, »ta- tioned i t s m w i n a l , for *ome time. an4 wwW <|h«r« s»t hi» eou- has spending nine days with his par- ents, ,Mr. and Mn. Vernon Ethe ridge of Upper Roosevelt Avenue. *. * SUff fisrgeantj Thomis Lloyd, son of Mr. and'Mre. Joseph Lloyd of Penning Avenue, rettntly re- turned after two years overseas, has been, visiting relatives on Long IiUnd and at Worcester, Mass. He was wounded early in the war. . . * # Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brady of Washington Avtnue, h«ld come party *t th«tr wel- kat we*knd for their ton, Michael, home after 4 king 'period of duty in the Pacific battle »ne. , -. a/ . a UichMl J. Sc.Mpy,, KM S/c in tii» Navy, has rafurnad to duty) In the f*#l« a/aa alter Ilia " VoS*nJ Port Reading Field Fire Threatens Nearby Ha PORT READING—A field fanned by a strong wind, time threatened three homes' Went Avonue, Monday. Clouds of smoke hampered} Port Reading firemen who the Woodbrloge fire CompanyJ help. However, when the unit.Hrrivvd the blaxe wa» under control. GROWING OLDER CARTBRBT Stephen Torok, Jr., celebrated his birthday thit week at a lawn ] (?iv^n by his parent* at thetai 24 Washington Avenue, guests attending were Morris, Gertrude Crawford ( Julian Soanowski, Marian u i w m n , i IJrhan, Arlgne, Stephen and | nis Torok. Mrs. \Mary Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mo seph Mikica and Mr. and Charles Mottk ,Mr. and Mrs> forok their guests this -week Mrs.'. Crawford and 4* at Avenel. and and IECOVEIA FROM

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  • '.;'&&

    \V III. — N O . 16

    OIHI Salelimbs To

    High

    CAITOTX*, *„ nmm, JULY 28, PRICK THRHI

    Miohiiig Board Acts To StemFlood Of Tire Applications

    In "E" bonds

    IHTII reported. ,IM.il Of SlUt

    sales now creditedfollows;

    . 7.482 sold, forbonds, 20 sold for,

    linriHs, 23 sold fornotes, 1 sold, for

    ', certificates, |MG,-S. Treasury notes,

    .•'.; Treasury bonds,

    CARTERET An ordnr d*>-sighed to Btcm the flood »f appli.cation* since "15" and "C" K»*ration holders were made eligiblefor (trade I tires, has been issuedto all local war price and ration-ing boards, it was'anm>tftice'd to-day.

    Uniter the'ord• r, the local WarPrice and Rationing Board has theauthority to request a re-irwpeq-tion of thf passenger cHr tires be-fore giving further considerationto the application. A re-inspectionwill be ordered where the appli-cation does not fully Indicate thecondition of the tires, and it willbe used primarily where the applicant asks for two or more tires

    of TTNT re-inspectionR

    ..Ml

    ordered, «4 Mtapplicant*back. Of the si-L-tiuii, who served• A-, H,us Army Corps bi1-

    • •> Mi -. William PencottyHi II Street also arc the

    i new child,! a (laugh-«• forth Amboy Ho»-

    CK.R.S INSTALLED

    lAiiiKKKT—The social unit• ' Wardens' d u b in

    officers at Fire Hall1 nislit. They are: Presi-' ' f'uno; vice president.' •: •• • • i r secretary, Walter

    ii•• •, Meyer Weismau;•II ins, Frank Nieman;

    I'I' i fanik, Amos Hoff-•l i,miry Ginds.

    Rev. Hundiak, FetedAt Service And Dinner

    CARTERET —The Very Rev.John Hundiak, pastor of St.Demetrius' Ukrainian Church WPRpresented with a pold cross andchair Sunday nijfht. at the specialservices marking the 25th anniversary of his ordination to thepriesthood. A dinner followed atthe Ukrainian Pavilion at- whichseveral hundred guests paid trib-ute to Father Hundiak for hisinterest in the progress of thechurch and the community.

    Attending clergymen escortedFather and Mn, Hundiak andtheir daughter Gloria to. thechurch where they were welcomedby Father John Renchuk, of S^Hn-ton, Pa. Mrs. Kundiak was prcsented a corsage of orchids andMiss Hundink one of gardenias,by Mia. Paul Kawcnuky and Mrs.Harry Wilanfiky on bohulf of theSinU-ihuod of tin- Bitted Viinin,

    The dinner was sponsored bytho board of trustees' of t-hechurrh, headed by Hurry Wnlan-sky, president; Michael Proskura,secretary, and Harry Hayduk,treasurer. They were assisted byth» Vei-y.ttev. Michael Kapa^yniukof Ttenton, all the societies"of thchurch and choir.

    In the opening address Wolan-aky congratulated Father Hundiak

    Since Father Hundiak tuttthe United State*, he da* been as-sociated with different Ukrainiannewspapers and magazine* M correspondent, assistant editor andeditor. He held pattoratet in Binler, Pa., Herkimer, N. Y.. «t.Joseph, Mo,, Chicago, 111. Mirwrt-ville Pa., Troy, N. Y., an! Car-

    (Continued on Pege Z)

    Honored Fn Semu

    Harrington learn Hit NateAt Top tit Democratic Ticket

    T»IWed««tingPer-

    ffWidmt of the Lion. Club,

    04 &*»'h«* wm art

    **««

    if !*r «w

    is11k

    T.fcwWW

    Rev. John Himdiak

    "hurch HewsI s ' MARK'S EPISCOPAL• " I', Kenncdi MacOonald

    •i>il Meditation will be1 •' Murk's Church next

    '"r.ht ai 7 o'clock. Led1 > in charge, it will be1 •' iln' men and women••I tlu'invaeion1 front.

    MAI;YA RRKFORMED11 - !•«. John Huaditfc

    iiviccs: The 0:30ivut> will ,be held in'" iMrs. Elsie NemisJi and Mies Mar-garet Balog, troop eapt*»assistant, member* of Girl SeeutTroop No. 3, sponsored byFree Magyar Reformedhad a trip to New Y*rk on Tin*day. The party wept to "lor Center and «iso attendedtheatre performance.

    Those making th* iri|>Misses Marian Ktthn, Re*) f awkas, Betty Zatik, Kathleen Wei«vMargaret Bodnar, Gloria 4114 £3sio Nemish, Margaret T»1fc. mo-both Poloncsik,Helen Simon and

    Social and PersonalMr, and Mrs. Harry Axon,

    Charles Morris and Mr. and Mrs.Harry Yetman are vacationing,inthe Poconos, »n their return MlsaDorothy Yeanmn and Mis» HelenWllwn of the High School facultyWill go to 8urf City for two weeks.

    Mr. and Mrs,Frank Scrudato.ot Lincoln Avenue, are vacation-ing in Maine, where they jomedtheir isons who have been there awon*. , . • -

    Mr* David • Ulnj»n 8n(* *sm'W'of Atlantic Street are vacation.

    . at haahqw. / f lww * e y w

    Samuol Roth of[

    Street, clerk iu tie loc*i,aw*

    ncu,t, ,leaves this week'for tfcr *c-

    C»mp at DaiMiwBe, $. V

    i» *

    tiakhfatm

    atuuwwwijr &Hk* rf « b atuwrik,

    Lokach, former_ _ are schednled to leave

    tMMnow for Chicago as di legatesf# MM Liona Convention, repre-

    the Carteret organisation.Ike meeting held Tuesday«t the Oirpiy Camp rest«u

    USB* JAMpb Pukash was welcomed•a a new member, and planx were

    to go to the dedication ofat Camp Cowaw of

    fcr M*f Semta on A«pnt« . Thins DM M U y shop at the campNrifc fWM fond* to which this or-

    contributed.Ferluns appointed commit

    %tt ehrtrmen for the coming yeardttae Wmf a* follows: Albert

    v attendance; BrnIMMIMWIU, constitution

    Alexander Comba,Koftai't Jt. Brown, Lions'

    'Lmit Brown, program(odiMki, publicity; Prank, (Military affairs; Alherliona' work; James Jboys and girls; Chaile,

    Ctmkt, dtiwnship and patriotismA, Torfc, civic improvement

    «

  • New Booksf At,, (Continued from Page 1)f. Former foil*-* Oiptsln J J.V Dowlinir and Mm. Dowling- of Up-)h p*r Rnn*( vacs-

    in ('iiiniilii.

    Mm. Amuml Amundsen of Cari teret Avenue i» upending two

    •> werk* nt Stockholm, Me.

    • The Misses .lean MOM an M»ryMI Dunne (if pershing Avenue are

    nt Aibury Park.

    i i ' M r s . W i l l i a m B i s h o p n n i l,{•< foughter, Bnrbnra Ann, of Upperi Roosevelt Avenue have returned

    •7 after a two-week visit in Cleve-\i land, Ohio.'.. » « •

    Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hlul) and':, daughter, Kathleen, have returned« t* their hiime on Wa»hin((ton Avcj flue after upending a vacation at

    Mrs, Meyer Kodinblum of Pla-shing Avenue and her daughter,Sandra, are nt Bradley Beach,Where Mr flosenblum htu joinedthem for a few dayR.

    * • •Miss Johnsye Patterson and.

    Mi«» Liiin Hicks of SnuthernPines, N, C,, have, just returnedto their homes after a Uy*e-wi%\%\t with their aunt, Mrs.Stherldge, of Upper RooseveltAvenue.

    t * *

    ' Mm. Nellie Foote of PershinjfAvenue nan been visiting her bro-

    Sier. James \Vhelan, of SMUwater,• • *

    1 Georfte Gavaleti at WashingtonAvenue is expected to return tohis homo Sunduy after throe weeksin the surgical nection of the Mcili-tal Center in Jersey City. I^terin the summer he will go to the|hore for further recuperation.

    • * *

    Freeholder Elmer E. Brown -ofEdgar Street has returned froma visit to MrB. Brown's relativesin Maine. She and their fidn, Rich-ard, remained there fyr a longerstay.

    • • •

    John Cooper of Ontario, Canada, is spending a month with hisuncle and aunt, Mr. and Mi;s. J, .13.O'Donnell of Carteitt Avenue.

    • • •

    Mr. and Mr?, Prank Graven ofHmerson Street have been on avacation in Atlantic City, whichalso was the vacation spot chosen

    1 by Miss Sonia Wolanaky of Ran-1 Solph Street, clerk in the Tux Qf-

    flee, and ijeveriil friends.* * *

    Mr, and Mrs. John H. Brittonof Wheeler Avenue recently cele-brated their twenty-third weddinganniversary at a dinner in theirhorne.

    * • *Mrs. Otto Wollenberg of Union

    Street has bueii slaying In'ArfturyPark,

    • * *Mrs. George M. Miller and her

    daughter, Katherine, are visitingher family in Woodbrldge. MajorMiller, formerly frf WashingtonAvenue, Ca^teret, will join herlater in Hie mouth, He is sta-tioned now in the Army Hospitalat Morifantown, W. Va.

    « « •

    Misa Mary Lloyd of PershinjrAvenue, teacher in the local schoolsystem, is visiting bit. And Mrs,Mark Owens on Long Island. MissMargaret O'Connell of Worcester,Mass., has b,een visiting her par-ents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lloyd.

    * + *

    Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kuhn andchildren, Elmer and Marion, havebeen visiting relatives in Medina,N. y.

    « * »Mr, and Mrs. Joseph Hasek and

    Miss Blanche Smolensky have re-turned from a stay in Topeka,Kan., to visit Lieut, Francis Hasek,navigator on a 'B-25' bomber, whois 'bused there.

    • • •

    Edward J. Coughlin, of 116'Washington Avenue, is on theWest Coast, visiting his son-in-lawand daughter, Mr and Mrs. JohnDemeter, at Sun Diego,-Cal.'

    SURPRISED• Philadelphia. •-- No one was

    more surprised than the watch-•-nian when tiro truokB ovld(?9 «6me Ofthe best comedy scenes of thebook.

    Here Is Kellahd at his best, (lieant master of humor, excitcnuntnd adventrfre. "hea>t On Herl " l« 0 iflnf combination of

    All these qualities with big busi-ness operations and large scale romance. H is charged with excitement from beginning to end.

    (Continued from Parje 1)teret. He has been In the boroughsince OctoBcr 1&, 19?E.

    He was appointed to tho Carteret church by the late BishopJoseph A. Eult.-A member of theconsist#ry of the Ukrainian Ortho-

    'Githolic Chnrrt of Aniei lea,father Hundiak w u raised to th<rank of .anchprlest by the Rt, Kcv.Bishop Bbhtlan on 'January 1.1-938.

    AUMI N«vr QtiM«iIn faftwtt, Fatht r Hnrfdiak nan

    been active in civic affairs. HPserved for two years on the Locnl

    IP

    Steven Kubicka of Grant Ave-nue, second assistant engineer ona merchant ship which deliveredsupplies for the invasion of theNormandy Coast, was among themore than 400 merchant seamen•brought hack to Now York recent-ly by army transport/

    • • •

    Tech. Sergeant T. J. Jurnu-toski is stationed, now at MiamiBeach, Fla., and Pfc. Charles Du-mont has been moved from Jack-son Barracks, New Orleans, La.,to the 204 H. P. Co., Oak Rjdge,Tenn.

    • * *1

    Pvt. Walter Karmazin has beenmoved,to Fort Sijl, Okla., fromCamp ^landing, Fla,, and Pvt Jo-seph Weiss, recently home on fur-1

    lough, to Cinnp Berkeley, Tex.» * » '

    Joseph Gurney, petty officerthird class of the Nnvy, has re-turned to duty in Virginia aftertwenty days with his parents, Mr.and Mrs. Joseph Burney of iPulaskiAvenue.

    • • *

    Corp. Anthony J. Pusillo Imsbeen moved from Pensacola, Fla.,to San Diego, Cal.

    AuUtance Board and aided K2members of his parish in obtainingcitizenship' papers. He is a mem-ber of the • Ukrainian Working-men's Association, Ukrainian NH-tlonal Association, Orthodox An-glican Fellowship,

    During his pastorate in Carter?tthe n«T'»h completed the buildingof the rectory, acquired a tract ofland on which thV Ukrainian p«vilton was erected, and paid offall debts on the church property.Flans pow are uader way to re-model and paint the rhureh build-ing, ant! erected a modern commu-nity qentar. Father Hundiak or-ganized the Sisterhood of • theBlessed Virgin Mary. St. Ann'?Auxiliary, St. Mary's Sodality andAltar Boys' Society.

    INJURED J1TTERBUCDallas, Texas.—A young Negro

    •boy, admitted to a hospital withH torn ligament and a partial frac-ture to the pelvis, explained thathe had incurred his injuries while!jitterbugging.

    PLANE HITS TRAILER CAMP

    South Portland, Me,—Six per-sons were killed and more thuuft score seriously injured when anairplane crashed in the midst of

    l100 trailerscamp.

    at a nearby trailer

    —Photo courtety New YorkInttltUt* .

    A three-piece outfit to lire max-imum larrice on tscation ii thisDude cotton eniemble of pinkwith n»Yjr stitching; n»lt«r-toppad thorti, button-on «kirttnd bolero.

    Sturdy denim playclothai «rnanother choice, the »U-in-6ne-pieee "ihortall" and teparate•hirtl and (horti (or real coun-try roughing and at pin mone/pricei.

    Cotton dirndli for baaoh andvillage, and strapped, ««mi-back-leti drenet (or getting the molt•un anywhere outdgofi ar* oik-«r vacation ideas.

    A COSTLY CHICKEN DINNER

    Phreveport, La.— Unable tocatch the chicken he wanted fordinner, Joe Emery got his. shotj

    gun land shot the hen. He had topay the fine of $17 in court fqrdischarging firearms within the'city limits.

    (Coming from Page-1)cQjinty «tid W. £. A.); they havetalnn cnkHt for the park {built tryth* W. jj\ A.); they have takencredit for the stadium (bylit bythe W. IP. A.).

    'All of these facts, plus theflagrant disregard of taw in theoperation of borough affairs andthe rise to power of 'gangster'lenient* affected my rlecislan to

    accept the nomination for Mnyorin order to forcibly bring horn'to the voters of Carteret what washappening In their town while theywer? preoccupied with winningthe war.

    "I havx losrnod, howrver, inpresenting these Issues to the gen-eral public that, because I was acandidate for Mayor,.they doubtedmy sincerity in making state-ments, feeling that I was prompt-ed merely cy the rleftlre to beelectee!.

    ('l have 1)0 desire for public of-fice. I uri'^rtly desirous of cor-recting conditions I that are killingCarteret's future 1

    "I rjjDW «m withdrawing frommy position as candidate forMayor •on \}>e Democratic ticketIn pnjer to show the people ofCarteret what is happening totheir town; and to lead the fightsguinst inefficiency in government

    •without the cry of 'POLITICS"."The new candidate for Mayor

    On the D«BWP/fltir tirk«t will hnv^my whole-hearted support IF: hepromises to return the administra-tion Off the 'borough's affairs buckinto the borough hull; if he prom-ises to work to clean up this town»o that the returning veterans ofthis war may And a worthwhilefuture here; if he promises toclean up the gas situation thatnightly assails the residents ofCarteret; if he promises to carrythe fight for more palatable water;in short, IF he promises to lookupon the people of Carteretcitizens equal to the same rightsas the people of other communi-ties in this nation."

    W-umen t»nnes reach their na-tional quota of 19,000.

    w*l*fifarm buildings Ii beint:

    tŝ jfh fif My hoiisp 1

    Sli / lBfeetinsheior lU,«fy.|6w6. It . ,„ , , . . .that p ! » H e n d to end n,. "would ektend slmost B , ,three qujirteri, Nine by using one-third cup sugar, one-third CUR of honey or one-halfcup sugar and one-fourth cup cornsirup to a pint of water.

    Berry VitaminsThe black currant contains two

    or three times a« much vitamin Cas the orange; (h* strawberry hasabout the tame amount and the redraspberry about one-half as muchas the orange.

    tlnjealrabte Q«»MT \Rubber Is not without Its uruje-

    slrable qualities, one of whioh Is ihigreat swelling encounUrtd In th*presence of mineral oils and : theconsequent loss in strength.

    Carry DivisionApproximately 87 pasienger and

    mixed trains are required to mowa division when all Impeduiwita g<along.

    lfl TuberculousFowl tubareulosii Can „,„!

    Ing transmitted to hogi m ,r*t« but •« itlcntlik .ihows that It «aonot be i •-• f

    Tuberculqila (npouliryilblt ior alwblt losses inand causes about 90 per •isme dbigaiM tit swine.

    Ah ibmMl t,«t« of 14.1pound* of pork and pmihas been •oaUrnned ;n w.tubercuioilt, 90 per cent n,i- 1fUult Of poultry carrier.

    V. 8. IncomeTh« total ifieome nt r

    vlduals In IMS was n<double U» 1MM9 aye,.,,,pcodituMa for |ofldi anil 1only m p«r cent of iv<

    SLOWING DOWN

    Springfield, 111. — John H.Ki!est, Sr.( 7R, is Blowing down.At the age of 70, he walked 24,0miles in five hours and 50 min:

    utes, On his seTCnty-tlfth birth-day he took all of six hours an/120 minutes to make the same trip.

    Bowles says textile rise- will costI the consumer 25 to BO millions,

    GAMEJACK POT $100.00

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  • Hollywood Not around. Always1 the lfltltItalian gfrP«»» tip f»m * «t»l b»Uhungry.

    And there was so llttl* work.Wlen she learn#d that et» at «MAmerican *\i force officers wts ttr-ln | native gids to strva ittl)* Iwafl-qufrteri mcis, she dreswd in her-threadbare best and applied for a3 o ! L •" • «

    The *0 lire, 40 cents a day,, didn'tmian to bach. The real attractionwa> the tact that after they had fin-.Isiied serving, the gfris themselves|i to «at the tim« food dished outto •, the* offlcTers. Scores of Italiangirls came to ask for work, butTlfta. Who\was ptrttj in a dark-haired way, (Jespite her thin formand thinner legs, imiled her best,rop«a her lovely Mown eyes Mid lh«m*ss officer hirtd her on the spot,It' was htr nmilo rtiore than herhimger that gut her the Job.

    little Tina worked 19ce a Tro-jan teat first day. .

    th» tooi was too wonderful, meat,potatoes, vegetables. She took a

    1 ItConB plattful, and bread, lovelywhite bread with butter and jam.It had been weeks since she hadtailed white bread and she had for-gotten when she had last tastedbutter.

    Come of the other girls paused nd-mirlngly to watch Tina put away'the grub. Her small stomach be-gan to bulge like a toy balloon.6uddenly,~as She raided ahotherpiece of bread and jam'to her mouth;»he collapsed and fell from herthair. ,

    Screams rang through tha room.The frightened Italian girls begancalttng on their favorite taints.Someone ran to the hotel desk andsummoned an army doctor.

    He briefly examined the writhinggtrl.

    "It's nothing serious," be smiled."Just Indigestion. Her stomachwasn't used to that much food andshe has eaten herself sick."

    fhat was several days ago. Tinaitnl eats tnthUBlastically but withmore moderation.

    -%

    mEva

    O t * . - H a l 1 t d fhtoon »n intfrxleatfei

    dent mut* plead Ma •wnf taking out his pad and lUrtinfHUn*. He wrote and wrote.

    When he finished, h* handed thejudge 15 pagtm of scrawl** ttitUmony, The judge took one look

    nd dismiaswd the cite.

    8a1»Ub City:

    charted with soiHqnor to Iib«r—by

    alcohol.

    Still anothtr gtflto which ingenious Latin Americanahave tumad Uwlr UUnte Is ««m. InMexico and Central Amtrlca, b«k*dinto (1*1 «ak«s and othn larUAaiwith meat or ch««st, It eonMltuUtan almost nnlvertal food u * • «•!•-brated tortilla.

    SHMt UFEifte%»Qft, Mo.-

    field, 97, and John T.date friends' for two .„to their induction Intoon the same day, Vtl&itt, w#f» nulipYtolunit, were trained incimpn and went ov*r»»*1The men, accordiiif to.tlon received by relkilled in action in th«arts; on the same day,,1944.

    Port Ritduf Hmt Roll Committee

    rn^us SU«< Pi*r at AtWntlc Cltjr ira th*«« ttl-y He-E. 1*44*1 ultra-faihionnble swim luiti, A^ong th*

    We alw have 3 FEATHERS at$4.29 a fifth

    S, Novit Family Liquor Store7ft WASHINGTON AVE., CARTERET

    Cluit«r tMifectabla biti 'of cui-vaceoui fiUttaity . ^ .... . . ,._, .creation! kre one and two-pfetft Cataliliui, 3kfltt«nt, Hawaiian flotd pn'Mi, Lltttv yolVoWi andblue cottm «m«mblei with ritltlet at \he ikftuMcr* »nd ikirl. Ttie occitton Is tht «nno«l prerinwof what the summer girl will dlsyUy (th« iuiU, we mean) at the »hor* this laaion.

    Oil From Nnt ShellsFilbert till Is said to be one of the,

    best ot tdlblo oils as weU as balnguseful to pharmacists at a base t«rlaxatives, for Unlnwnts, and-*•••*base for perfmnes. It has the prop-erty of absorbing and retilnktfodors. As the kernel of filbert* con-tains from 90 to 40few cent oil,, theamount secured U" exceptionallyhigh. '

    7na car

    are WeUBeets and7 carrots sture well, so

    plant early ones for use during thesummar and later varieties for stor-ing during the fall and wintermonths.

    Stake T»matoesVictory gantatr* ' wtH> smell

    plots would do wen to consider stak-ing and ptiMhif Ihttr totiwtoplants In ord«r to conserve spaceand increase l^d

    lBlredBcea\, DistHlitlonThe process of distilling liquon

    from srabi was . introduced IronInd̂ a Into E u ^ y in HSO A. D.

    if tadwtry ]DlgltaBa beteiwi to the foxglovt

    family and' is a biennial sometimes 1grown ak an omarnental plant. Thayoung plant's are started in greenhouses and transplanted to outdooraeed beds and Uter to fieWR. Grow-ers are producing the crop undercontract basis for.medlcal liuuses.

    Pranttral MetalFaucets and drain controls will

    continue to be made from brass be-cause this Is tha most practicalmetal for machining and finishing.

    rr

    Cultivator* AvailableThe War Production board has

    lifted all restrictions on purchase ofhand sprayers and dusters andwheel-type hand cultivators, to en-able gardeners to get them easily.

    Egg Ca»ii«c»«onFoultrymen should expert a de-

    crease in calcination of' egg shellsin tprlag as birds art going out ofprodutflon, Unlesa thin' iballed tggfare found dn a large.scale, thtfdletshnvrtd not b» blurted for th» oondl-tioii. • ' ..

    Walnut BullsGreen walnut hulls have 20 times

    the vitamin C potency of orang*Juice. An extract made from them Isbeing Uttfl to fortify food products,

    Seep CoolAccording to recent government

    rerortg, the tap aflelf of the kitchenIs not the most ideal place to keepprecious jams, Jellies and preserves,'even though it Is convenient. Toprevent spoilage, these products are

    1 pest kept in a eon], dark, dry place.

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  • ARTERET PRESSTelephone Cnrteret 8-5600

    Puhltahfid by Carfent ftm

    OFFICEIt WASHINGTON AVE., CARTERF.T, N. J.

    tlTCY GREGORY ._ EditorMEYER ROSENBLUM Sporti Editor

    Subscription, fl.EO Per Year

    Entered u lecond elasa matter June II,UU, «t C»tt«r«t, N. J., Po«t Office, underthe Aet'M March 3, 1879.

    Bigotry Must Not Win The Warare touched and moved these days

    4 y newspaper dispute hos and newsreel|cenea expressing the joy of the starved,

    4eateti, fear-haunted people of Europe al;liberated after the long horror of

    rule. Yes, we have a right to belleased that America stands before theseithetic human beings in the soft light of

    and heroism. We have beensd to the victims of aggression and life

    J F again worth living for them. Once thetftttlook had Hi-emed hopeless. Instinctivelys.fhsy knew that they could not find any

    fcppiness in H world of German domina-jon because that world was based uponI fierce arrogance of race and a terrifying

    of bigotries. The (iermana had beenematically indoctrinated in intolerance

    jfaifist all olher races, religious and po~llcal parties, Neither Catholic nor Pro-

    int nor Jew nor liberal nor intellectualBor honest journalist could be happy In

    a diseased environment.It does us credit as a nation that we

    |ave consistently loathed and condemnedboBe cruel, malicious, ibigotry-inspired

    primes and persecutions which were per-petrated by Germans over and beyond the

    of war and usually long after all

    trganized resistance had been overcome- - - -»e Germans should have taught all ofthe ultimate meaning of unchecked big-

    f iry. And yet at this very moment in his-)ry we Americans must, if we are candid,j$»dmlt that wo aru not innocent of fierce,

    "cruel, ignorant bigotries. Indeed there is;a terrible irony that race and religion ten-sions are sn worrisome oh the home front

    ./even as our flno American lads are rescu-

    the German 'branding Europe fromJigotry.

    •'! purely we mi).st see this thing for whatIt (p. We cannot Jet race hatred at homeBake a mockery of our country's greatrole as liberator overseas. Our forth.com-Ig victory cannot be suffocated in the

    TheBoyh-TheT*nttThis war turns up more varieties of

    heroic, breath-taking specialization thaTiany other ever lought. Take the Navy airgunner—not the pilot but the tfuaner, thelad who rides in the turret and with luckbring* down the enemy aircraft, 'living hisown plane and "hip and perhaps Ir ing theshot that turns danger' for hundreds ofmen into victory.

    He is likely to be Aunt a boy. Any old-ster, thumbing through the booklet whichtells what a Navy Air Crewman has toknow, will feel like retiring into a darkcorner in shame at his own coiogsal igno-rance. He has to know his guns and, howto take them apart and fix them 111 thedark. He must be able to ahoot accuratelyunder the most ^appalling conditions. Hemust know something about engines, ra-dio transmission and reWj^ioiV bombsdio: transmission and bombs,fuses, and torpedoes, the shapes of his ownand enemy aircraft and the theory andpractice of flight. This is the youngsterwho was having trouble with his planegeometry Just the other day.

    Whether he is.scared or not when hegoes up to meet the enemy, nobody knows.He may say he is, but that proves nothing.Being scared* isn't in the books, at anyrate. He has to do his work in mid-air asprecisely and accurately as though lm>were a skilled worker in a safe little shopfixing a watch. And he does.

    The Navy air gunner's prize insignia isa pair of wings, an anchor and gold starsfor combat. It would be worth whilewatching for these marks and paying someattention to the youngsters who wear them.

    He takos a beating that only youth canendure. Sometimes he is beaten down,that being the nature of war, If he sur-vives, nothing this Republic can offer inthe way of honor and opportunity will betoo good for the Navy air gunner.

    Opinion Of Others

    toss

    Under The State Home DomeByUo$tphGnkbins

    TRENTON—Health authoritiesof New Jersey are keeping calmin the face of reports from NorthCstollna that cases,of infantileparalysis there are i m h l n g epi-demic proportions. They expert nil

    toother residents of the Statefollow their ftood example.

    Thus "far this yenr only thirteei,cases of infantile paralysis werereported by local health officials

    J Th f thtain New Jersey, Three ofcases were reported last January,one each in February, April andMay, four in June and three thismonth. During 1943, 95 caaes ofInfantile paralysis occurred inNew Jersey, the highest numbersince the liH6 epidemic,

    But health authorities warn thatin the late summer infantile par-alysis cases usually increase. Dr,•I. Lynn Mahaffey, State HealthDirector, who is closely watching

    situation claims **hat "womight, expect to have additionalcases reported during the comingmonths, even though there is noabnormal increase as yet reflected

    the ciute rates." Dr. Mahaffeydeclared • that instructions areavailable at local health' offices

    the proper rare of victimspolio striken.

    feon gas of race hatred at home.)try must not be the final victor.

    Big-

    Remember The DatesI>idice has become a name that will

    H«ver be forgotten. That village wasfeurned to the ground, and its male inhabi-

    tants were murdered, on June 10th, 1940.^ date and act are sjhee annually re-

    i" horror, as a testimonial toconduct. •

    f'here is another name for us to remem-ber now. It is that of the village of Czechlalin. Like Lidice, it too was burned to

    ground. But here, the inhabitants, ofi ages and both sexes, were penned with-

    ,;the flaming buildings. Three hundredseventy-four Czechs,, of whom one

    and nine "were children, andx Polys, were thus burned alive

    br iho t as they tripd to escape. One manM two women escaped to tell the-tale.

    The date of this German act was July$ It is a date we can easily remember,

    i ifallu, ironically, one day ahead of thatlous one on which, in 1789, the French

    | a n their Revolution for the freedom oflittle men of France, with the fall ofprison of the Bastille, symbol of om-

    ission. July 18th. is then historicallydoor to July 14th, the great day of a

    ice now again enslaved, not by its ownlllty, ite own aristocracy, not by the

    of its native feudalism, but by theGermans who* penned children with-

    e consuming- fire of Czech Malin.

    by day, item by item, these savagejan doings come to light, are docu-

    |nted by those who miraculously escaped* Cftthem, are patiently listed and record-| | | fa inst the day when, the United Na-

    " shall have crushed Gertnany intQ•iaurrender. ., , • .<

    ffot shall we do with these docu-itiad murders, with the murderers; on(1; day? Shall we raise our voices for

    I peace'for that Germany which .end

    No. 1 Critical War MaterialDonald M. Nelson, chairman of the War

    Production .Board, calls scrap paper "thenation's jNo. 1 critical war material."

    In an appeal to the people of the Unit-ed States to save waBtc paper in everyhome, Mr. Nelson declared that the Armyhas asked its troops on the beachheads ofAfrica and Europe and in the South Pacificto salvage what waste there is and ship ithome. . I

    It may be hard for the average citizen-tounderstand the importance -of a smallamount of scrap paper, but if the amountsaved, during a week,, is multiplied by. thenumber.of Americ*ns, it ought to be obvi-ous that .the tonnage will be large. ,

    While the campaign for the salvage ofwaste paper has 'been underway for manymonths, it muat be admitted that there hartbeen considerable delay in formulating aneffective collection system, especially inthe smaller towns,of the nation.

    Hioweve'r, with the critical demand forscrap paper, which .is necessary for themanufacture of containers, it is hoped thatevery American will make it his, or her,business tocontribute to the success of thecollection of scrap paper. .

    Simon BolivarOne hundred and • sixty-one

    years ago today (Monday), in thebeautiful valley that shelters thecity of Caracas in the Venezuelanhighlands, was born Simon Boli-vnr, who called himself "The Lib-erator." No man deserved thattitle more than he, for he put theimpress of his'ldeas and personal-ity on .half a continent. Peons whohave not the ability to read asingle wurd of the millions liewroto can quote you his sayingeby the hour. His manifestos andotters and public speeches still

    color the actions of officials hornalmost a century after his death.Today his memory is as green inn the hearts oi the common peo-

    ple of South America as the for-ests that hem its rivers or thegrass Lliut rovers tha- hills aroundlis birthplace*

    Bolivar has been called "tfceGeorge Washington of SoijthAmerica." He was something moreand' less than that, a strange man.part sage, p»rt child, part saint,part sinner, at times coo! and nil-

    h int' moments «K im-

    Post-War EmploymentThe activities of the people of the United

    States have been greatly increased duringthe war emergency and there are millionsof Americans wording who never workedbefore.

    When the war emergency ends, therewill be an inevitable slackening of ;warproduction but it is hoped that some meth-ods can foe developed to maintain economicactivity somewhere clo*u to the presentscale.

    Some idea%of the problem appears whenwe realize that there will be about sevenmillion discharged military personnel andsomewhere around- twenty million warworkers. The employment of those whointend to seek work will be a considerableundertaking. ',

    "Obviously, the% will exist something ofan economic cycle. The demand for goodswill depend upon the volume of employ-ment and vice versa. Undoubtedly, theinitial demand will be tremendous, due toshortages dunjng war years and, to.thje factthat many Americans have managed tosave some money for future

    petuous ^s the loiionls that luge^ u t oT tho aiiow-oapped An-Mountains to lose -themselves

    in the farjn waters -of the Carribe.In his petton were most of theparadoxes that still confuse theNovth American looking to thesouth.

    jTttle trained in the formal tac*tics or strategy of war, he ledsome of th^ most brilliant militarycampaigns of history, never rest-ing until he had, upset the lastmonarchical system in SouthAmerica. As great in spirit as hewas in action, Bolivar accepteddictatorial power only to use it foitho liberation of the people. When

    pled June 10th,&|y'14th?

    Which

    • . / •

    Yoangttt Naiis Are WorU •Marin, former Minial^r'of thxj

    bli l iFrench republic, recentlyFrance, and in the ^ ^he has made in, finations that 'any

    , w^rna the Alliedtoward the

    wlli^|tt^ft*wo]f '

    uti

    w»s achieve,; 3:c ialways re-urned it to them. Those of slight

    faith who profess to find in ourvolatile neighbors to the southittlu hope for freedom or democ-

    racy or progress should study theife of Bolivar. So long as his

    memory lives in the heart, of oneman south of the Rio Grande thespirty of liberty is not dead.—N. Y. Tlmw.

    Republican Candidates AsSpeakers

    As Governor Dewey pronouncedthe opening sentence of his ac-ceptance speech—"I am profound-ly moved by the trust you haveplace in me'V-it was apparentthat the Republican Party, forthe first time since l9jA, has nnominee who speaks the'langimgeflawlessly, In tho radio **ge, thisIS" a matter for the party's s e l f 4 w h c n h (V

    congratulation. *'

    It appears advisable that if aI'hild shows symptoms of illness,including digestive upsets, thechild should bo kept from othersas a preventive measure until thetrue character of the illnessdiagnosed," said Dr. Mahaffey.

    The State Health DirectorThe S Qadvised grown-ups as well as chil-dren to avoid over tiring and ex-treme fatigue from strenuous ex-erciee; avoid sudden chilling suchas would come from * plunge intoextremely «old water on a veryhot day, and to pay careful atten-tion to personal cleanliness, in-

    reported Jortfcs. "The ,moved around in a whmiand IB unable to walk. Wo,,word from her not long »K,,ever, bha* «ho would nut ,assistance any further an ?),self-supporting,

    "Going Into the caur w,that she had obtained n ]•.,doing housework for thi>,ont persons, She wlme]B !,„,their horaen and with tho..,era' assistance manages in ,side the home; they place ]the floor, end she can mand crawl all around thrand do the cleaning thai

    "She whs willing to w.>$2i50 per day, but her em,are so satisfied with her »•«they pay her $3,00. Shr h ,ly a very 'hijp|py pernonpresent time.

    "We are continuing our itigations on the case sn n;, icourage the woman in evnypostible, and "to toe ready isume the responsibility of n,,.if it should ever again i,,,necessary." •'

    ' BERRIES:—A record blurcrnp this year U pn.li.t,,i JState agricultural expertscranberry prospects guthere wilt be plenty avaihThanksgiving and the < liholidays.

    New Jersey cranberry iis I expect to come back with ;i p:i(|

    crop exceeding 100,000compared to only 62,000 i,;mtl

    ,., I

    cluding thorough hand washingbefore eating.

    If possible avoid tonsil andadenoid operations during epi- quality crop since the infant

    plast year. Summer weal he,been favorable following i :winter which resulted in ,

  • SPEAKINGJABOUT SPORTS

    • by Meyer

    Rocket Ramp Abandoned by Nans

    I'.-1

    Jo* Malitzewakl '

    H I K Joe" Malissewaki, better known to most of, ,. iust plain "Mai" wa» ^ort of a happy-fto-lwky,•„„„«•. with a good natured way abdut him that was

    il(|Mlii-..(1 l«y his friends and a s s o c i a t e . . . They always

    s;ll(i ihat he'd never hurt a' fly and that just about

    tii,.(I his character.

    Now he's Sgt. Joe' Malwz&wski, serving with,l,. Sam's forces over Jn France . . . He took part,!„• n" Day invasion . . .Bi l l Gibson got a poppy

    in jnc which was picked on French s o i l . . . Joe saidMV hodies strewn all o v e r . . . while in England hem the Military Police u n i t . , . While in England

    MH.i. up with his brother S t a n . . .,l,,i' was a former member of the All State Basket-

    il 11 am . . . He was picked to the all-stw team dur-il,r year that Carteret copped the state champion-

    ,, ;,i Convention Hall, Asbury Park . . . T h a t was,,i thn most thrilling games this reporter has ever

    ,„ sid . . . Joe was put out on personals with aboutto go and h« atartod to bawl like'a child.

    was, trailing by one point in a nip and' tuckThen with seconds to go Knobby D'zurilla,

    i;niiliii,; under the net, got a pass from one of his,atoH and laid the ball up for an underthe-net.hat won the game for a gallant Blue and White

    . Most of us who had the pleasure of seeing

    , , „ , g; memorable game will remember it for a long timeK i>f rially Phil Foxe'u eagle-eyed shots from mki-

    nt that kept the Carteret crowd in a frenzy

    I...- also played independent basketball with,, si Joseph's team which had Joe Medwick andill licisftl playing with them that year . . . He was,» ni the leading bowlers for the Scrap Plant teammil at the U. S. Metals interdepartment league

    IA try summer Joe and two of his closest buddies,liarlrv Szelajr and Charley Terjek (all three are inni,t now) would rent a bungalow down at Pointli i nil and spend many a happy week-end there . . .

    Devils bOrertmejGame By 2-1 Score .

    TARtERET —Cojning throughwith n ning-l* run h) the extrainning, the Bruins dciaated theRed, Devlin, 2 to 1, last Friday tosend the American League flnt

    i U tie with

    American engineer* are ihowa trarveylmr a 7WWoot ateel tatt DM-erete unfinished ramp in Nofmandy, which to believed t« bava beenplanned for me by tb« Onrmans a* a launching site for roeket betnba.Assembly line of concrete mixers abandoned by the Nail* li In tatbaokfrddnd. Not enough and too late was the story «' thta Nail etfcrt.

    Big Pull Behind Allied Push

    half winner* into athe Bruin* and Cards.

    BRUINflAB R

    Kolodiiejiki, cf 3 0>Penkul , l b 2 0Moska l , 8b 8 0Mole t a n , p 3 \Catrl, m 3 0O'Connell, c •,. 3 1Gluehoski, If „ , * 0Wassy, £b ....: 4 0

    roung Miglecz Hurls Perfecthme For Cards In Rec LeagueACTKRKT—-Young Richard

    :l»/,. Mm 8 10 x—27hiU: Elliott, Myers 2

    Kaskiw. Three bane hits: Reidel,Î ituB. Home run: Mbeksl. Urnpirej: Klelman and Muchl.

    or In Oontrmt of 8aloTnke further nolle. w

    nip. nr any dftte to whlth fitljourrml the Major amHerViis the rlnht In II*o rHciA any oni. or Kit bM

    aril >«M lota In nalil blocklliier as It m*v ii>l«ct, do

    lielnit Rlvrn to t«rma and mar y m n i t In (Has on* nr monmum lildx sliall he received

    lT|»on nnepUiud «f theild, or bid above mlnlrfluiMrnr »nH Oouncll *nd tin |

    r̂ nf by th* purrh>a*rto tha tnannar of purohcorflama wlih-ttrmi f(ti« BorouBii of CuflTA bargain and *a>a

    lU 3.

    BorTo Im «clf«ri|,»d Ju)y

    IS, Mil. In the C t r t

    NOTICET»K« notke tliat W.

    OiiANOlK hUi'tidn to upWorough I'Dunell of (lieCtrlpriit for A Inntttt ..iwtitll Conmifnptloit llcrnn

    ^elofore l«nueii to lira.'Uror tor premlgoa «lluat«lonAVtMti Avenue, CArtersi,

    Obiei'tloiiH. If »ny. •hould b» |Immodlmely In wrltlnit to;Perry. HoroMdh Clsrh, Curt*

    ._ _ od) liKOHOE TOPOl

    AL SAKSONFLOWERS FOR A U , ;

    OCCASIONS

    133-143 LontralW Sjk.|

    Cart«r*l, N. J.

    oM Cwtwrvl

    Score by innings:

    t'ards 1 2 2 2 0 2 0—0gtgleg 0 0 0 0 0 0 0—0

    Two-baae hits: Makwinski, Epy-chin. Umpires: Kielman andMuchi. 'i

    mecreation League Box ScdresAmerican Laa|H«

    BRUrNS

    cfAB

    .. b

    .. 3

    .. 4-

    .. 8

    .. Z

    . . *

    .. 2

    .. 3

    .. 4. 2

    R0223200002

    Ml 11 9

    ITIM.

    imp..

    Hi, d

    Hi-., IIiili-tU.II

    KAGLE8 iAB'4

    2b • 4

    rf

    if

    aid

    Lesky, IfHolowchuk, cfTarnowsky, rfBarna, 2bMyno, 2bWolansky, rf ..Bartko, c f ,

    . 0

    . 11

    .. 0

    .. 1. 1.. 1

    20Ramblers 105 2 4 0 - 1 2Ukes Boys' Club .... 000 102— 3

    National U a f u eDRAGONS

    ABAlbreeht, lb 4Thompson, 3b *Cherepon, c *J. Mogella, w *Makwhuki, If *MG. Magella, pKo'y»to«iak, cf 2Bakjg, rf x

    Pavlagki, 2b 3

    6 7PIRATES

    Hli,sh,.

    PluUi, lb ....Shonuky, uElliott, lb ..

    AB6

    FjUpatrick, IfKyan, 21»llate. cf •••'

    3 3

    34 19100!} OBI 1 ~ :

    600 001 0— 6hits—Thompson,

    UafeUa, Makwiiwki, Ryan, Mate,

    arltan

    Sergl. U. S. McOall of Augusta, Oa., meets two youiif Ruaslan womenloldiera at one of the new secret air bases In Kussla being used by U. S.planes for shuttle bombing. Dolh women arc il years old ami vnleranaof (he battles of Leningrad and Stalingrad. Several ol these bases aranow being operated by V. 8, air forces In Bnssift. #

    Drang Nach Oaten in Reverse

    itAB2&8

    K,12

    H0I

    i

    B«WJ. ha. broBght the B w i l a i . newly 1M mllea nearer tom a j •*«?• »h»w| how the Bntalau m ^ i?ww>so w a i n

    t W d B l i AU U ftf Warsaw and Berlin, AU fcmUw «f escape, except dinaa4 forM|», Wl tato Bwiajan hands. „ ,

    HEI'CHM CHOO BABY"(WITH A DIESEL BOAR!)

    Qieael locomorivej b«vc succeMtuilr

    proven thenuclyes for certain types of hauling oa

    many of America's railroads. The Jersey Central

    made history as thefint railroad in this country to

    jpurcbiM this type,of motive power.

    Put Into service nineteen ye«rs ago, "Chop Choo

    Baby," No. 1OOO to u s - U still going «roag. Thfr

    300 horseiwwtx Djend-elecirlc 1OCOO«H1« dots

    her daily «iot of switching csxi in the bpsy Broai,

    R V.; wminal yards of the Jwwjr QynrtL

    S i n » t 9 2 3 , the Jersey Central bju «&d«red thirty

    1 loconotivw Ipr i f t t u t d

    The Utest ten, of 1000 horsepower each, are

    rapidly going into operation to help handle the

    tremendous volume of freight in Jersey Central's

    metropolitan district yards.

    A JOB WITH JERSEY CENTRAL

    location I

    *l p*B8ion and uneiploywnt l n -»unino«. Persona not d

    Ajr,»nt. or apply to anyof tto United StaU? EteloServloa or the toT

    &• s: t'ft.

  • ,f^.ir •

    ^ ? 1 ^ $ ? . ^ ^ virpppf'i^pi^ii^

    OCCUPATION • •BT JIUl WARRKN

    Every year Hollywood motion"tinli« hund out rnntraets

    to do"1!!!! of pretty young- f(iri"i

    in the hope th-it with coiich-»tid camera experience theyt w e r y us futmi' -lonn Craw-

    fttrdt mid Liiiui Turners. MovieWnt* pluck amliitinux hopefalafMtn Wile theatre*, heiiuty con-fairi, department stoics—or flny

    j . ftlftCt tJipy happen to find them.''(•ttt nin« timoi tidthon hops into bt>d *nd memoriMiher weiies for the next d*y. A4nine-thirly the light got* dfl I lid(jloriA U awny to dresm land,

    When not Actually thooting, herschedule ia not u itrict.but Glo

    Pattern »129 comes In I I M I I I ,S, 4. 5 and 8. Site 6, mndresi, 1 yd3Bln. bo«net, % yd Ruffles on'•undreM 4pri hnnnst optional.^• ThU ptinern. together with tneedlework pali«rn of u*eftl mildecorative motlfi for tin«ni andgarfnenu, TWENTV CENTS, fc-

    8«m) TWENTY CENTS In colntlor thatt patterns (o 170 M»*«-paper Pattern Dtpt.. 232 Weit^lSth6t, New York 11. N Y. Writeplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRE8*,•TVLE NUMBER. * • » . » ! • !' 8»nd PIFTGBN CENTS morsfOfthe Marian Martin new ind biggerSummer Pattern Booh. S2P«g«,eaiy-tomnke stylo* Free {wtlttnprinted ID book./^"* "~" I

    ria is a busy young lady with publicity stills, interviews, song re-hp.irsals and wardrobe fittings,etc. And she takes a daily lessonfrom the studio drama coach. "Irealize 'I have an awfnl lot tolearn," she says, "so I spend asmuch time studying as I can."

    She workB at the HollywoodCanteen two nights a week, danc-ing with Berticernen and servingsandwiches. Gloria is popular withthe-,G.;I. J°esi and they• always a«kher to sing. She has made' manyappearances on the various WnvDepartment broadcasts whfch areBhortwaved to our fighting manoverseas, art*cl has recorded severalalbums of song* which ar« *ent toevery spot on the globe where ourboys are stationed.

    Outside of the. fact that she iaa successful starlet headed for bigthinfft in Movletown, Gloria isvery' much the average girl bfnineteen. She likes clothes, dates,movie*, bands and Prank Sinatra."Oh, I'm not the swooning tyiie,"she hastens to explain, "but I lovehis Voice."

    She is one of the most popular

    glrlr of Hollywood'* yonngftr net.She lovn Ifl (jo dune ing and t.opreviews. Her favorite companionla Dave Horn, the well-known mu-sician, and compofwr of "HolidayFor String*." Dave is in the*ervic*.

    Sh« wnnU to &t Married Mineday and have a family, but forthe tim« brine »h«'* sticking toacting. "! don't thitk nMrriiigpand a career rhlft tifo Well. Myparents were in t^e theatre (herfather, Carter De Hitven, was nwell-known Mujre MAC) but thrywere divorced when I was very

    unK.Gloria doesn't have any sensa-

    tional beauty secret*. She hax oneof those peaches and cream com-plexions must eirld dream aboutand keeps it by the «imp)e old-fashioned method of using glycer-ine and roue water, She doesn'tdrink or smoke and never has towatch her weighr. She bits herfingernails, ibut in trying to stop.

    •She hiss two ambitions at themoment—to learn to drive' a carand to liml a blfgcf (ipartment forher family. The De Havens areuver.cruwded in a three-roomapiirlmenl. I.ikp many other Caji-fornians, they are victims of thehouidng shortage.

    Gloria think* it would he won-derful to be in a New York musi-cal comedy. But M.ti.M. has pic-ture plans that will keep her busy•for Ihe m-xt few yrars'Hor week-ly fan mail is in the thousands.

    It's not easy to keep your feetfirmly on the ground when youclick in Hollywood, but yon can]bet on this I>e Hsiven kid—she'sall right.

    Christian ScienceChurch Skleniar

    First Church of Christ, Scien-tist, Sewaren, in a branch of theMother Church, The First Churchof uhod herve crtQU^h

    elU wnosh't tlimKio'of thot/couS« l-went'in on'the. librarianhod a bottle of smeJIin'-jalts an* JO did other ltbrorians,butthey didn't know ju i t whot todo/'cousc the police was allin bock of me, but she wys, when she let me (Jo through,"you're os welcome as an undertaker,""

    GUVS AREGANG \NW DCM/NHPUH-ieNTY

    HEY YOU GUVSf W KWHAT'RE Y'TRYIN'FAIN'T DAT TCJ

    ^ B D r i f wrME WITH A - ^ D A T V/t

    ROTTEN T'MATER.'^HITV HA «/iTOONTCHA KNOWI'M A NEWSPAPERPUBUSHCR.'.'

    DETECTIVE RILEY By RICHARDGUESSW6U X _WH€RC0l0veu \THIS)HOWSOON^ IMMLPAKHJ( DID KXi HEAR \ SAD 0W.V WAS~) n CtttCKEDON A l l T OKAY( \HAVETOROONDl FIGURE ON WT TING "\ IS ffJBR JlDlDtuv,UPAILTHEGUVS 1 HALF TMEHUMAN / S A M VWON'T HE? J HOEKPOStP WIRES

    / / E F ? L 6 TFOR PAW/ } $PEAKTOTHEGUY

    WHO OWNS T«tsJOINT/AIUV....UPONGTH

    1THAT

    W KM3HQRT OP OWJNWW COM

    10 Ubt W&T̂ HO BEAD i

  • Icbeid*' HjSrIn

    wffl, . . , bill of i trahsRcikinR if1 tiiat n»tu

    hi.th tha American and ,J>e penalued to theituHî ball Letguea in the the law."

    group. Tho (whcdule . - : - , - -

    J ^ " f ? '—Mafirtrate. throughoutNew Jersey 4 re i m p 0 9 | n e heavierpenalties on wartime trafflc lawViolators in an effort to dlscour-ajre law infractions.

    Records of th« State Motor V«-"' ^ » r t m e n t show that dur-

    1843 fltttg imposed In caseswhere arreatiave* made by mntnrvehicle inspectors and State troop-ers which revenues g0

    ! into the

    VllONAL

    Pirn tea « . Ulwa.Humbler* yrnhltig Avenue, Cai-,). Statement of avail-uired. CPC-lOtf

    I \ S H X

    [iH ;

    ALTERATIONSI ' O N T R A C T O R . Special-

    m brick WOrk, concrete,n,if mid asphalt. S. Lembo,l, 2-1)063 6-30;7-7,14,28

    (jorp» . , . State headquarters fortne New Jersey campaign for tht!Oewey-Uricker ticket will be lo-

    „ „„ cated at the offices of th« F.i>n.ilican State Committee, 139 EastHanover Street, Trenton . . .

    machine p 0 P u l a r an UIH plant withoutnew tires. Plant officials, however,attribute this development par-tially to the desire to enjoy a doyoff during the hot weather and tohe idea that the applicant believes

    he can high-pressure his board1 tospeedily approving hLs application.

    Plant transportation committeesthroughout the d'»Uict are co-operating tfilhOFA in solving thiavexing problem. Workers are be-

    ff Blanket!Remember Uiat wool blanked

    can't itand h.at ov«r 100 dtgrtctFahrenheit, harsh joap and wring-Ing. Hot water cause! wool fibers toIhrlnk and stiffen. Soaps containingtoo much alkali will harden and ulti-mate^ destroy th« fiber.

    Leftkiag PipeTo repair a leaking pipe, ihut off

    d h i d T

    Itlanders In the CarolineWanders in the Caroline area

    have fared on fish, taro, papaya,breadfruit, mango and the intro-duced, orange. Nu quadrupeds atenative to the Microncsian islands.Water buffalo, cattle, horses,males, pigs, goats, cats and dogshave been Introduced, but mr nntill-found an every Inhabited island.Copra, pearl and turtle shell havebeen the Islanders' stock In trade.

    There's STILL PLENTY of HotWeather Coming

    I I'MiMAKE•:»S cSR fiAll RRPAIItER

    ;i;i-.\IKEIVB HK

    OPEHATOIU)ATCIUUSN

    PANlf». WYCB.llanaier

    ••it Keadlnf Terminaliv.i-t rtoadrnc, N. J.

    ihiH Pun Only We Con--I I'l'uii I teferral-by tlie

    ilftirumunt p p a r i ori'ii>ikh>Yitient Service.

    HELP

    OFFICE GIRL81 ASHlERjBUOBTEBfilJBWAITERSWAITRESS^ "- U D A D U '

    F 1 'HKNDIi,''"• ^'K. flM" l N I ' lT10N8. .11 ^'lAHS. Af•u A n . A B m T i

    WANTEDU«*d Furniture

    DOOLEY802 St. J^jorf* ATB.Woodbridge 8-2228.J

    the water and let the pipe dry. entightly bind on two or thret layersof friction tape. Such a repair, ob-viously, is only temporary. But pvenso it may last several years or untilpipe Is available.

    ing urged to recap rather thanwait for applications for new tintto bo tilled,

    Shon You Art AnA i n t r l r n n andDUplny a P i t *

    rrlfF FlaKu ntailill»nTi«r» Miilf tn'Order,

    DMH>n4loan Far All OrrnMiuiN

    We have Flag-i of All Nationifor Sale or to Rent

    INTERNATIONAL FLAG CO.' S. Potenione, preiident

    MT Blimmllflil Air.,Nriv«rk, T, N. .1.

    Eec. LeagueAnwler, rf

    If

    34 15 10

    CAADBAB

    t b •,.

    ,Cutter, pk ftb

    O'ftrlen, Jtf I.;,....,...;..... Y00

    MigJiaci, 8b I ",0 0Andrella, rfIlnat, cfToth, c

    , 4 . 0 J., 4 0 «

    2 0 0

    Scwe fay innings:s;eo a;o 3—19

    Cardlnali ...101 200 0— 4Two-base hit*—•Mengel, home

    runs Clark, Reiko I.

    RAHWAY

    FJv* nHM* JiwaM with ^

    •Jr «w4itlonint, two jmurt oltf, > t

    Siii Mfia Mnd-bunfaiow, (UtfdM^ *"lot kbout g f e l U ptioej

    i*om houM and

    •irhwt ,...*:: prio* J j j

    ROSS DI COMO A(,KN<239 Hamilton St. Rthway, N. J.

    Rahway 7-0M2

    Swuw Cbara for Spinachi i chard, a ipeel* of beet, may

    be Bubatltuted for iplnach duringtht hot days of lummer. It hai lux*uriant broad leaves, which may btcut at tha ground. Tha roots willlend up a new crop of leaves.

    COOL

    for hot

    £tybp!$ffoQ

    Mw.,

    m*.

    HELP WANTED-MAIE • FEMALE

    Our SoldiersHave A

    PAVE YOU?,They're Doing A Jpb ]Pot You

    DO A JOB FOR TJPJl

    BV (WORKIhi

    t, tyjty 8:00 P.-M.

    ANl.KY KIBITZER KILLS MAN

    New York—iAn unknown kabit-zer in a pinochle game becameangry when Domlnick Brricolo,60-year-old laborer, disregardedhis advice as to how to piny hiscards. This diaKruiitltHi spectatorrammed tlje, s.tem of his smokingpipe into Errlcolo'a car and thenpounded fthe bowl With th*-1 heel at" i hand. Erricpl'n died befori?nitidlcul 'aid could be summoned';In tho confusion, the kibit»«r die-appeared and the other three, play-erg could giva police only a vagueidescription of him.

    SHORTS BANNED ON STREET

    Long Branch, N. J.—Tired ofseeinjr "200»pound, 4O-y«ar-pldmanwa tr'ylpg to make themselves;pin-up girls," Frank A. Bfazo,commissioner of, .public safety, or-dered all women over IB yeawho were found 'orr the street?wearing shorU, swimming costumej.tir bathlttjK robes,; to Qhome and change.

    £atim*iei'

    Voodbri

    Wo,J.

    DONALD T. MANSQNJ. . . Insurance ,..Offiqe: Beiidence:

    F.A.44S00 Wo.8-1692-J

    Aianclated with Boynton Bro(he"

    Uf

    ft Co. ov«r

    n S O E SAM SAYSJNTO m

  • ":tjTA8HIW;T0N •Ilieh officials(Britain and Amrri™ Mivo thatiijtihin mnim-nl the N»7,i l̂ ndern| Germany un- ilrlintinir the name

    tlon thnt IHCPH the Kaiser'sl»ent in the "iimmr of

    t l . The himr IIIIK come whentr»dilionnl .1 linker leadership

    t Germany, convinced that the|g M ( wimlil nurmnlly mk

    1 i n armistice to save the 'holy'an soil from hcinif turned in-battlefield and to NHlvnir ;IK

    a* ponHihli- »f Ormnn mili•nd prnnnniir Btrrn(fth 1" IK1

    thp fnlinrlttlinn for a thirdWar, Hitler's plan, on (lie

    flisnd, i« to rally his people toit-dltch stand against Alliedtiers, (till in Ilif Impc of furo-

    negotiated |H'nt-i- Mo Mil]that the rapid advance of

    ftusnians will tempt Britaint America into n separate ponce

    Europe from "Bolahe-

    Willkie would »meff« the ttronf-edt flgurp in his party.

    Wi 11kio'R friends say that he haaalready decided on hin cournc ofnotion during the I'nmpxign. Itin hardly lik«ly tlial he will tup-port » candidate whoso platformhp cannot acrrpt.

    NEVER SATISFIEDMadison, Iml. — While drilliiiK

    for water on hii farm, WilliamCafihman struck a pocket of (fas,enough to heat hi» home, refriger-ate hin fiMiil anil rook hln mpalsfor yp«rn. But he'd Mill drilling

    policy ma-kinc tug of waren Hitler arid the army lend-

    ts seemingly heiiiR decided inPptOt Hitler's plim. Kill ofti

    In London anil WashingtonI,'not quite convinced that the

    an high command will let^>t nwfly with it, especially

    k}tw of the closeness of RiiS'i troops to Prussinn soil. It in

    Ctly possible that. Germany, surrender thin summer, with

    and his close followers be-,made the goats l>y the Ger-

    for their loss of the war.brio from the undergroundi tend to hack this view by

    that the Nazis fenr Buch•lopment. They have already

    [ plans for carrying on Riier-|-warfare against their enemies

    the Nuzi regime collapses.

    war production past it«lk and cutbacks and uneniploy-

    ' appearing, the War Produe-Bosrd is anxious to make H

    ..ck »tart on allowing factoriesi begin reconverting to the mi»n-

    ettire of much needed civilianThe theory is that the

    SUch reconversion in begunI smoother will he the transition

    wartime economy to pcace-i | t o e economy; whereas if the mid-

    «*n collapHc of Germany -or .lupun'-. ij^wes before we have started ro-';*PjlIlV«rting, H Hevi'i'i' criso* wouldj» fjUmediately result, with the con-

    ttggravution of all otherpeacetime problems; ui\-

    ., unstable price struc-«, shortages of civilian gooila,its of war goods.Indications in Washington are,

    'er, that the Army and NavyeVent resumption of civilianproduction before the deti-

    collapse of Germany. Ourly.men arc refusing to tuke

    Cnance.s on reconversion untilny is finished, no mutter

    the pressure. Consequently,the war with Germany is

    Hid, -civilians will have to hang:;tO their ration Ixioks, for sup-

    pf gasoline, food, clothing^household goods will remain

    the same as at present.

    crmore, when rcconverdoes take place, production•expect that civilian goods

    UfftCtuied' will be sold Hiranging irom"ih'/< to 80'/<their pre-war figures. It

    he some time before suchbecome really plentiful andpre-war prices return.

    jf interest, in the Democrat-fliinatmg convention is cen-

    on the fight for the vice-ilential nomination. Although

    opposition to the renominu-of Henry Wallace is expectedpresent incumbent- is still the

    |»,»aost likely to he named forplace on the ticket. One

    i|tf'factor in f«v«tile c.«"ilinir« sendscotton to sixteen-year hiph.

    ing Film

    /P Ah WAY

    CHARLEf

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    MSEfH

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    STARTS THURS,

    Charlei Bayer and Ingrid Berg-man in ik romantic interludefrom "Gmlight," the new filmcoming lo the Rah-wny Theatre,Sundry. Jot«ph Cotten i< co-•ttrrfd

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