with the ntm! arterrt - digifind-itwith the ntm! • vi v(ri(ie ah the activities arterrt |)f,:,lf...

12
With The Ntm! VI arterrt v(ri (ie AH The Activities | )f ,:, lf Town With Tour l [nrne-Town The Urgeft And Beat Shaft Aa S«nic«« tn The Are* Art Ow Advertisers. Pitronlit Thtml II-MO. 29 ieetness AND Light A* Catholic War Veterans Installed Neu> Sta/T ,,/n all munist along t ,p p the union tivr th? em- s. Metals in ibling, grateful g been facts about ,,r;. WP con u.iist. whose ;,<> comes out , n duos. They i.<rt)<] now that ,i Herbert Ler in).' also comes , ,.;ii. lined him ,,i I he 11 Com- ,vr sint'e been , 11 the hoose- .;ni,(. in a wick- linow the free by force and , whistle on B«r- ,•,, when I caught ,r;it then smeared i : nY.i) and Lerner , .rives when I got , ; mid started bat- ;lll |- a nd all I had h,i« them up . wilting to share •:. I'rnvls, the con ,nd Reid Robin I Mit answered to .,f a large section iixmt the time hi r i vying to borrow ,,: an employer with •n hud a contract md they remem ,i nut ol the Steel ii.pinK the union till iniiiunlst actlvltiM, : uMirse, that the i uiini nothing to do ,.••, i icw the minute 1 truth about It. . i hud the Job to apparently CARTERET, N J., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1949 Posts PRICK THRU CUNTS CAKTf.RKT—Offlrrrg and icuestn at thf hr-W latlon nf St. lames' Post, Catholic H'ni Vi'lor,in«, Inc., shown In abovr plctur? are. left to rinht: Jick Henrv, llrst Htale vice commander: Andrew Holencsak, commander: Alexander Such, (list vice iiiniin uiurr, .liitui Knnrz, srcnncl vice romniaMer; Al Siiksnn. tlnrd viic <<mnn;indt"r; .losrph Bailnar, nfltcfr of the (|;iv: Stephen SIIIIU.Y, itirriicAl Of- ci'i: Andrew sumiiikii, ndjuUnt; Stephen Turk, treasurer. Hold Joint Installation < oml>inr<l O r c m o i w i* IVi-nird Siir« i pj»s; Hear lYoiniiu'iil Speakers CARTKIlfiT With ceremonies :ip|)iopi'Hilc to the occasion, of- ficers of St .tames' Post No. 615. Sacred Heart, Post No. 619, St. Kilns' Post No. 797, all of Carteret, and Mt Carmel Post No. 591. CWV, of Woodbridge, were for- mally Installed by the Middlesex County Chapter, CWV, ritual team •jndrr the direction of County Conunnnder .lullus Bonk of Perth Atnbuy. The installation was held Monday evening at S'. Ellas' Hall, Andrew Hnlencsak was sworn In as chief executive of St. James' i Post; Stephen Shulick as Com- | rounder of Sacred Heart Post; Alex Fazekas as Comlnander of St. Kilns Post; and John Arva as l Commander of Mt. Carmel Post. ; Acting County Chapter Offlcer ; of the Day, Peter Cheche of Me- i tin 1 lien, nrvanitcd the newly elect- I i:d post officers In the form of a | , . ! cross, marched them before the Informal j County Commander, and presented , them for formal installation. Fol- lowing the oath of office by the otln ers in a body, each post officer was Instructed in his specific du- ties and responsibilities by the" Ch-.ipter officer holding the same l.tfir Union Discipline, USMR Apathy Playground Seen Work Vote Failure Cauzes gj[ e Given Bv Oil Firm CAHTKIIPTT- Thf next move by hnpr nn the i>»ii nl tin- company •ithpi M<tc In the 14-wee! strike thnl urUlemrnl »f the ainiter ,t thr II 3 Metuls Refining Com strike In Elif,*tifth augured » slmi- mtiy today remained rlotked in lar state of mind In Csrterct Th»i nystery or lndecl»lon. the complete opp<i»ili' of this thr- Tlic shallow m»r*in by which » ory in th<* c»w Li dctnonnmted ote blocked an Immedlnte return by 11 > th*d«fe«t nf thf propot*). o work under the term* nf the even If by ft thin mm urn, »nd <3> company's orlglnat proposal plus by the fart that almost iOprr he failure of almost 1,000 of the' rent of the workfr* rrmalnfd .trlkcrs to cunt a ballot, Indicates; away from the polls .hat since the company proposal' Rumors also were riff thai In was not designated a« a flniil j the matter of the pension pro- )ffer." a majority of the workers i posnl, for lruunre, the company [eel that further concessions may j is prepared to grant *n Increase >e miidp. On the ground that Mi In the monthly payment upon re- pay-days have passed without pay tlrement. If there Is any founda- envelopes, the likelihood is that j lion to surh refwrU—an thf work- the workers are willing to gamble I TS seem to feel there Is then Nrw Fire Alarm District* Will Go Into Efffd On No vein her 1 CAHTERKT- After a »erlei ol nf xnt-liuloni bftwfcn Maror 4k*e and memiiets of the Boroufh ' Council with Milton Fair, super* intendent of thr American OH Company, thf borough his d g n to obtain * plot of about IH frfl neni the Nuthan Hale B for H playground from the a little longer In the hope of sain-1 is undfrstandable why thf Initial iP*"? ing what they cdnslder better i noposal met with Indifference terms «nd defeat No plans for furthfr The 48B to 474 vote against a j 'alks were Immediately made be- return to work was achieved by | the operation of stern discipline by the union, as against mere tween company and union, but iext week may bring announce- nent of such plans Shell in Bid to Army to Acquire 160-AcreCarteret Ordnance Tract CAKTKRKT -r New onVm and guest at the Installation of St. Klla* 1 Post. 797, Cath(ilie War Veterans, Inr , shown In photo are, left to right: Peter Shrrhe, enmity second vice conininndei; Alexander Fairkas. commander; Michael (iulick. first vice commander: Steven Kunak, second vice ciimiiKinrtfr; Andrew Kuliora, third vice rora- mnurirr: Kdwurd lir/ak, :idJnt:int: (icorse Tnlh, trcisurei; (ieuree Kurt/, jiidffc advocate: Steve (ialalt, scrviie officer; Michael Kocsi, welfare officer: Stove Matriski, officer of the day; Alex incilii ill officer: .ioseph Cini, John Kunak, Gurfti and John Kurt/, trustees on the county level County Commander Julius Bonk I i-imitrntulated the new post com- manders and stressed the fact ihut tlii' success or failure of tlieiij individual organizations rested heavily upon their shoulders. He also called upon all post officers to cooperate fully with their re- spective commanders and dis- charge their office faithfully and efficiently. ReV. Dominic P. Dohanyos, •iim ,,.,111 since with s MUM have d e w e d i.uic more protnpt- men and their ,, us for tits to com- :,o that the pay Mart coming home in and I expect to to accommodate |II ,i i really need now U in mt his friend John il HI I when said OttM I:run the hOOMfOW |t up of conspiring to b«- hiiiini'v. to com* down • thf union. Aftw all, :' up to Newark to i;..tes and hU 10 CO- : .mainst freedom of Nriiom of speech, and i in a labor union, •^ mi.'ht return the eom- that the Ottteret •<M,<\ hear from a con- iinmii' in penon and get )-..i.<- direct—fOf com- '.-!• .:.-.s it may be, too, <:wi Rights Congress, uk<<i U p the tab lor their mnue in Newark, would :•' thing mCarttrirt, and ii.ti ,ie-walslei could split •triii between them again. •:.'"iKh. all this would •'. uues getting out of Presented to Alexander Barker, Wileittz: Early Docition .St | CARTERET Informal application was made by the Shell Oil Company to the War Department Tuesday (or pur chase of the 160-acie trad in Carteret now accupied as an D^If h b d This became known at the ra«t- Inn of i In- Bnrounh Council la«t nlKin when authorisation was granted to pntrr into a contract with the company. The borotaA will pay a rental of one dollar pW year. At tht tuggeitlan of Countll- •iiiin Patrick Potocnlg, the acting borounh cU-rk. Mrs Pranfce* Tap- pen, wus directed to write to the company nnd exprrM Its thanki. Ctiuncilmiui John L*lhlck. chalr- m,ui or tlie fire and water com- mittee announced that th* naw fire district Minims wttl go lnlo ef- fect Novi mber 1 The schedule Of tltnaU will br published in the Cailevel Press October 31 and No- vember 4. A letter will be forwarded to th* State Economic Development Com- the p u n l w accupied as an, made, the t™ctff will be added to that already owned by the company and on which it intends to build a multi-million dollar refinery. Sale to Shell apparently de Mr Alexander slnt»d that be- pends on the Army's ability to luie the Army could release tht find a suitable resting place for property for sale to a private bld- :ipproxlmately 18,000 rusty pieces, der it must be first offered to of automotive equipment. other brunches of the armed ser- The matter was presented to: vices for any use to which they Archibald S. Alexander, Assistant Secretary of the Army, by Carl Barker, assistant to the president .VIIKIH desire to put it. At present, the depot Is a sub- station of the Rarltan Arsenal and of Shell. He was accompanied by j he proposal has been made that David T, WllenU, coVnsel for; the equipment In question be Shell, and by Charles E. Gregory, ' moved there. Another possibility publisher of The Carteret Press. diaplain, Middlesex County Chap- ter, CWV, delivered the principal address of the evening. Father Dominic, as lie likes to be called, helped organize St. James Pest No, 615 and is Honorary Chaplain of that organization. He is at present assigned to St. Ladislaius Parish, New Brunswick, and ati i-.chaplain at the Aimj W»4f) o i-. n | r att <|. mp Kilmer, In his address,' 1 ' 01 *" J r . BOO Named (lo'Chairmm of Unit in Carteret CARTERET--EK,ward J Dolan i Continued on PftKe Veterans' Croup C. 0. P. Arranging Boosts for Wene [Several Meetings CARJKKKT— Siicred Heart Post, 61», Catholic commander W»r Veterans, Inc., Installed officers iind their (ur.it, shown In above photo, left to righl, are: J. I'ii|>[' Slutr Juditr Advucatc: Steve Shulick, E Slianer, second vice commander. T Tot»lansky, : treasurer; J. M;iltk, adjutant; 1' Grelfli judRc advocate; V. (ii>.V(l«s. welfare oftlcer; J. Jardot, medical ortlcrr; A. <;ayd«s, hS- liiriiiu, mid J. Sliulick, two-ycur trustee. I 1 "' 1 li 11111 i 1.finer shouldn't be inpseni Gates In P«r- mim membership, be- Mit of them already : ,,ii a public platform •: l<iner was Willing to 1 " 1 .i civil Rights CJmgress '• 'ie.uagainst Oatas' ! :«n Oat«* UWjuas- ''\ want to try to help m ins final, detperate >i lontrol over |> uoup " i>»w are lttdltatlng ! >nit they're through i.it.-d Mine. Mtn and beotuse-ol pin [to Mi 'Ai It' U t ] % lllC ! 1 - *s of thf'V. -iitii paying In duet iiunmiiata MM their ''» Being itaunch : •••:.- detptae 4nd 'de- Oll ""ia.i.-, m and ttiljr now < u > s *' I have ptoved It 1 i' their union leader - ;l "-1I infested Yareheski Plans Diabetes Survey Mass Screening of Woroj Population Manned in | Attack t>n Disease j CARTEKET Plans for the mass \ screening of the population of the borough to detect diabetes were announced today by Health In- spector Michael Yarcheski. The program Is the next step bv Health Offlcer Yarcheski in aj 5 |rable behavior. cLwaiKn to attack the chronic' diseases. •Surveys have demonstrated that there are currently as many undisposed diabetics as dlagno - ed diabetics," said Health Offlwi is Ai Tanked CAKTKRKT—Halloween fun can wholesome nnd con - structivt, Polite Chief (it'orge Sheridan, Jr. declared today. In their Halloween fun, he said, young people should de- velop an understanding lhat the property ut' others mult be re- spected; Unit destruction <if property is, wrons; that fun means laughter, good times and not behavior that annoys others, and that costumes and masks mean good fun and not unde- of Camp Father Dohanyos stressed the purposes nf CWV and urRed cloSe cooperation between the clergy and the veterans. Father Dominic wii.s lilvon ii standing ovation by tlw ;i.s:.i'inbjy at the conclusion of his address. Besides Pother Dohanyos, the following members of the clergy were present: Rev. C. S. Roskovlcs, St. films' Church; Rev. V. Leuyl, Mt. Carmel Church, Woodbridge; Rev I,. J. Petrlek, Sacred Heart Church; Rev. A. Huber, St. Eliz- abeth's Church; Rev. A. Poor, i Continued on Page 4> Kites Held Todav For Mrs. Barker | Dies as She Grieves Over 2 Grandchildren Suffering from Polio CARTEHET The funeral of Mrs, Orncc Barker, 74, 611 Roose- velt Avenue, was held this moni- in« A high mass o< requiem was Prr-Election Rally i« Set for Nov. 4; List Other (jini|)ni^n Data CARTERET—Final plans have who are employes of the U. S, Mr,ds Rpflning Company, ndw strike-bound for non-paymtnt of rent. Councilman Potocnli said 'lie men nlwav* paid rents on tint before the strike. Councilman Potocnlg repartfed that road program has been com- pleted and meets with complete satisf action. The council accepted an Invita- tion to attend the opening me«t- Inn of the West Carteret Acacia- lion at the High School, PrldaT night. October 28. Stevt Szebeledy applied for the uunsfer of his tavern license at 46 Roosevelt Avenue to Steve Mar- kov Its. The welfare department reported expenditure* of tl.S31.lt fnr 8ep- temb(M. while the oversMr Of th< IHior spent 1130 71 (or tht month. Police Chief" George Sheridan Jr. submitted the quarterly refcort nf the Police Department. Councilman l,e«chlck reported on the flre hydrant survey now lias been named Ciarteret chair-' been formulated for the monster man of the Middlesex County | card party to bo sponsored by Chapter of "Veterans for Wene the Carteret Republican OrKani/.a- for Oovernor" with Thomas Dev-1 Him, tonight at Fire Hull No. 1 at ereux as co-chairman. >8 P. M. Mrs. Jessie BUKUIH and The group, composed of ex- servicemen from practically every Mrs. Mary Kubala arc co-chali -! assisted Wene will Speak Here At Pavilion on county municipality, will meet Mrs - Marie Kublck. Mis. Anena a«ain toniffht at R P. M. in the ^ Mrs. Mary Collins. Mrs. Mary Duffy. Mrs. Elsie Bartok, Mrs. Gloria Hrcko, Mrs. August Hunde- mnnn. Mrs. Mary Solewln, Mis Theresa Kallllchoff, Paul Mucliu. Anthony Aiacli, Carl Grohman Carl PelllBilnl, Pa'Uy Caruso, Fred HoUnian. Herman Hell, Alex Ev- onitz, Philip Foxc, Samuel Sini. Paul BaKiiln, John Neville. John Brechka, Francis Oaydos. Leon Curran and Mrs Olive Buiinell The basket of cheer belnn spoil- [jegion Planning For Armistice Day i» Nunifd For Monday Night To Mark Coluinlms and 1 l'uluski Days ut Holy Family St'liool Monday offered in St. Joseph's fchurch. Burial was In St. Gertrude's Cemt- — Columbus and | ^,-y Mrs. Barker, who matte her home with her son-in-law and daugh- ter. Rev. and Mrs. Orvllle N, Da- K",; Yarcheslsi. "Undlaunosed and untreated diabetes progressively produce poorer health, loss of eye sight, increased accidents, acceleration Of the aging process and earlier death. "A proper diagnosed and treated diabetic can live a full, normal and healthful life. "The objective of the mass cnlng la to discover undlaij- ecrec no'sTd" dlabeus aud facilitate ac- curate, early diagnosis and tieat meat. ••The nurnose 18 U>enhance pos- •aTuVXHS! it J K?3 Promote lo^v.ty of diabetics. ••involved Is the foHowing tech- nique: Two More Polio Cases Reported Total in Boro Now l.'i; Five Home; Seven are Making (iood Recoven CARTERET — Two new po!U< cases developed In the borough during the week, bringing the to- tal of thirteen this year. The latest victim is Donald Da- vidson, four-year-al'd jon of Rev •»nd Mis. Orvllle N, Davidson, 611 !1 "'y havetanmls-| " !i itaking. U not a 11 behalf but In be- pay (.'AKTERE'l' l'ulaski Days will be observed by Knitfhts of Columbus ut Holy family School, Monday night. October 24, at 8:30 P. M. Principal speakers will be Anthony Gadek, Middlesex County Freeholder. Entertainment will also be in- cluded In the form of folk dunces i and ballet under the direction of • Miss Frances Wesolowska of New York.. Featuring Krakuwiuk, Ku- jawiak, Oberek and Mazur. The i dancers are as follows: Loretta Soltys, Helen Cap, Dolores Mar- k E Qenevieve Eva vldson, died of a heart attack at her home Wednesday night. (Continued on Paae 4' The group has already gone on record endorsing the $105,000,000 bond Issue for a veterans bonus , twi' and hus criticized Oovernor Dris- 4, and, Francis Pirlgyi, 13, both of whom were stricken with polio this week. She was the widow of Ellsworth Barker. Surviving,' besides Mrs. Dalvdson are two other daughters, Mrs. Prank Plrigyl and Miss Grace Barker; a son. Robert Oraemt-, all of this borough aad Ellsworth Barker, Jr. of Keyport. CARTERKT— State Senator Elmer Wene, Democratic cundi- datr lor Governor will be the principal speaker at the Demo- cratic rally to be held In thf Ukrainian Pavilion, Tuesday nlfht, October %i. Senator 11. W, Vogel and As- sembly candidate* also will speak. Edward J. Dolan, Jr. predicted that the rally will be thf. bor- oUlh's greatest showing for a gubernatorial candidate. Freeholders Chambers. County Record Building, to map a pro- gram for the flnal weeks of the j No. 2 at 8:30 P. M. for entire membership. November 4, special meeting and rally at Fire Hall No. 1 at 8:30 P. M. with Plank Siekierka, Municipal Chairman, and John J. Ciko, Campaign Manager, Co- has'also'announced his support of chairmen with County uiid Muni- the bonus question, Peter J. Smith cipal Candidates present, of Penh Amboy, chairman of the | November 6, general meeting of county roup, declared that "Drts- j all workers at 2 P. M. at a Mil hus put his personal kiss of; to be announced later, death on the bonus" and. Smith, Any organUaUon* who wish to added although veterans are not; have the candidate appear at sored by the organization win be awarded this evening at the card party. All members are urged to make returns as soon as possible to George Brechka at 21 Mary Street. The schedule of meetings to be held by the Organization Is as fol- lows: October ?6. meeting at Fire Hall OlInrVctivitieH CARTKHFI'—Carterel Post No Jii3 Aineiicaii Legion will have ten inembf rs representing It at Coun- ty American Legion aieetlnji. Communder Wnlter Colgan wtjl tend the dele«atton. Delegate] and ilU'iuiUes i\ie Francis TotnoSHa;. ['humus Jakeway, Walter WadUk, John Kuken, Han? Oleckner. Rev. Kenneth MacDonald, Miss ByWla •'vice. Francis Coushlln and J. Nevlll, Wlllium MuJUr WHS welcomed at u new member. Plans were fur- thered for the Armistice Day 8o- oiiil to be held at the Ukrainian Pavilion on the night of Novem- ber 12 The cormnnndera of the VFW ami CWV are (.specially In- vited and the event ta'open to the public D.uK-iiiH und refreshments will he uviiiluble all evening. The po.st wilt offer a donation and will puiticlpate in the Hal- loween puniilf sponsored by the Cuiterct Craftsmen's Club, Conimaiuler Coluan reported Unit the American Lesion Is pre- paring to .tponsor a Junior Drurr. cor»P J ^ ttofled 7 he mttn . ' their meetings to present their J ^ ^ t h e .nan^, ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ "continued on Page 4> i Siekierka or John J. Clko Impressive Services at Stadium Mark K. of C. Holy Hour .tiui BUKI »sted ate corps. All thoss inter- requested to report at Earlier this week Francis Pi- rlgyl, IS, son of Mr, ind Mrs l M Bid Street F was stricken with polio. Both were removed to the Mld- bht Bth Bot dleaex County Pollo,;beht«r- Both cases ata Ustftd as mild. Five of que: "Perform mass scale screening i those stiiolten have r i Perform tuts on urine for siigar iti t those tt while five, tn addition » the cur- i l ov ts on urine for s g "Refer all positive test data to iat physician while fie, rent two, are making llow recov- Refe p the person's private eries. There was one polio ;de.ttth this ? Wjl key industry, may ly. "Follow up positive cases until t h i physician" as p that of N»no?- Wojcle Follow up pos they have visited their physician. , two year; old. and aUCatholk prieata of the borotub. Cam S Carteret obuteb*. parll.lp.Wi * * fc T fLAN FOR MEETING CABTERET —ThJ Hungarian cirvU *m hold b 10 in crvU tt>va«iber 10 in the Borough Hall this Saturday at 10 A. M Comiiiaiultr John Pucns of Mid* dl«su County Is expected to ip- l)olnt Thomas Jalteway as Re- habilitation •aervlce clialitnan of county, PranlcsCoughlln u graves chulrman and Praacts Tonteiuk as County Public Relations officer. H e*t Carteret Asm. To Meet October 28 CARTERET — The West Car- teiet Association will hold a spe- cial meeting in the carteret High School auditorium 8 P. M- on btlday, October The meeting Is being held pri- marily to acquaint the lasidentfl of Carteret with tlieir neighbors In West Carteret. ami at the same time, to fumlllarlze the people of this borough with tlie inner work- Ings of the West Cartewt Clllo Association As an added attraction, tha sJ* caiidlduteti (or the Borough Coun- oll h«v« been Invited to praKUt then plutliiiin and vlewa In aratlon for the elecUon In Novem- ber. This should be of vital " •" terest to all. entertainment will bt by local talent.

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Page 1: With The Ntm! arterrt - DigiFind-ItWith The Ntm! • VI v(ri(ie AH The Activities arterrt |)f,:,lf Town With Tour l [nrne-Town The Urgeft And Beat Shaft Aa S«nic«« tn The Are* Art

With The Ntm!

• VI

arterrtv(ri(ie AH The Activities|)f ,:,lf Town With Tour

l [nrne-Town The Urgeft And Beat Shaft AaS«nic«« tn The Are* Art Ow

Advertisers. Pitronlit Thtml

II-MO. 29

ieetnessAND

Light

A* Catholic War Veterans Installed Neu> Sta/T

,,/n allmunist

alongt

,p

pthe union

tivr th? em-s. Metals inibling,

gratefulg been

facts about,,r;. WP conu.iist. whose

;,<> comes out,n duos. Theyi.<rt)<] now that,i Herbert Lerin).' also comes

, ,.;ii. lined him,,i I he 11 Com-,vr sint'e been, 11 the hoose-

.;ni,(. in a wick-linow the freeby force and

, whistle on B«r-,•,, when I caught,r;it then smearedi: nY.i) and Lerner, .rives when I got,; mid started bat-;lll|- and all I had

h,i« them up. wilting to share

•:. I'rnvls, the con,nd Reid RobinI Mit answered to.,f a large section

iixmt the time hir i vying to borrow

,,: an employer with•n hud a contract

md they remem,i nut ol the Steel

ii.pinK the union tilliniiiunlst actlvltiM,

: uMirse, that thei uiini nothing to do,.••, i icw the minute1

truth about It.. i hud the Job to

apparently

CARTERET, N J., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1949

PostsPRICK THRU CUNTS

CAKTf.RKT—Offlrrrg and icuestn at thf hr-Wlatlon nf St. lames' Post, Catholic H'ni Vi'lor,in«,Inc., shown In abovr plctur? are. left to rinht:Jick Henrv, llrst Htale vice commander: AndrewHolencsak, commander: Alexander Such, (list vice

iiiniin uiurr, .liitui Knnrz, srcnncl vice romniaMer;Al Siiksnn. tlnrd viic <<mnn;indt"r; .losrph Bailnar,nfltcfr of the (|;iv: Stephen SIIIIU.Y, itirriicAl Of-ci'i: Andrew sumiiikii, ndjuUnt; Stephen Turk,treasurer.

Hold JointInstallation< oml>inr<l Orcmoiw i*

IVi-nird Siir«ipj»s; HearlYoiniiu'iil Speakers

CARTKIlfiT With ceremonies:ip|)iopi'Hilc to the occasion, of-ficers of St .tames' Post No. 615.Sacred Heart, Post No. 619, St.Kilns' Post No. 797, all of Carteret,and Mt Carmel Post No. 591.CWV, of Woodbridge, were for-mally Installed by the MiddlesexCounty Chapter, CWV, ritual team•jndrr the direction of CountyConunnnder .lullus Bonk of PerthAtnbuy. The installation was heldMonday evening at S'. Ellas' Hall,

Andrew Hnlencsak was sworn Inas chief executive of St. James'

i Post; Stephen Shulick as Com-| rounder of Sacred Heart Post;

Alex Fazekas as Comlnander ofSt. Kilns Post; and John Arva as

l Commander of Mt. Carmel Post.; Acting County Chapter Offlcer; of the Day, Peter Cheche of Me-i tin1 lien, nrvanitcd the newly elect-I i:d post officers In the form of a | , . •! cross, marched them before the Informalj County Commander, and presented, them for formal installation. Fol-

lowing the oath of office by theotln ers in a body, each post officerwas Instructed in his specific du-ties and responsibilities by the"Ch-.ipter officer holding the samel.tfir

Union Discipline, USMR Apathy P laygroundSeen Work Vote Failure Cauzes g j [ e Given

Bv Oil FirmCAHTKIIPTT- Thf next move by hnpr nn the i>»ii nl tin- company

•ithpi M<tc In the 14-wee! strike thnl urUlemrnl »f the ainiter,t thr II 3 Metuls Refining Com strike In Elif,*tifth augured » slmi-mtiy today remained rlotked in lar state of mind In Csrterct Th»inystery or lndecl»lon. the complete opp<i»ili' of this thr-

Tlic shallow m»r*in by which » ory in th<* c»w Li dctnonnmtedote blocked an Immedlnte return by 11 > th* d«fe«t nf thf propot*).o work under the term* nf the even If by ft thin mm urn, »nd <3>company's orlglnat proposal plus by the fart that almost iO prrhe failure of almost 1,000 of the' rent of the workfr* rrmalnfd.trlkcrs to cunt a ballot, Indicates; away from the polls.hat since the company proposal' Rumors also were riff thai Inwas not designated a« a flniil j the matter of the pension pro-)ffer." a majority of the workers i posnl, for lruunre, the company[eel that further concessions may j is prepared to grant *n Increase>e miidp. On the ground that M i In the monthly payment upon re-pay-days have passed without pay tlrement. If there Is any founda-envelopes, the likelihood is that j lion to surh refwrU—an thf work-the workers are willing to gamble I TS seem to feel there Is then

Nrw Fire Alarm District*Will Go Into EfffdOn No vein her 1

CAHTERKT- After a »erlei olnf xnt-liuloni bftwfcn Maror 4k*eand memiiets of the Boroufh 'Council with Milton Fair, super*intendent of thr American OHCompany, thf borough his

dg n

to obtain * plot of about IHfrfl neni the Nuthan Hale Bfor H playground from the

a little longer In the hope of sain-1 is undfrstandable why thf Initial iP*"?ing what they cdnslder better i noposal met with Indifferenceterms «nd defeat No plans for furthfr

The 48B to 474 vote against a j 'alks were Immediately made be-return to work was achieved by |the operation of stern disciplineby the union, as against mere

tween company and union, butiext week may bring announce-nent of such plans

Shell in Bid to Army to Acquire160-AcreCarteret Ordnance Tract

CAKTKRKT -r New onVm and guest at theInstallation of St. Klla*1 Post. 797, Cath(ilie WarVeterans, Inr , shown In photo are, left to right:Peter Shrrhe, enmity second vice conininndei;Alexander Fairkas. commander; Michael (iulick.first vice commander: Steven Kunak, second vice

ciimiiKinrtfr; Andrew Kuliora, third vice rora-mnurirr: Kdwurd lir/ak, :idJnt:int: (icorse Tnlh,trcisurei; (ieuree Kurt/, jiidffc advocate: Steve(ialalt, scrviie officer; Michael Kocsi, welfareofficer: Stove Matriski, officer of the day; Alex

incilii ill officer: .ioseph Cini, John Kunak,Gurfti and John Kurt/, trustees

on the county levelCounty Commander Julius Bonk

I i-imitrntulated the new post com-manders and stressed the factihut tlii' success or failure of tlieiijindividual organizations restedheavily upon their shoulders. Healso called upon all post officersto cooperate fully with their re-spective commanders and dis-charge their office faithfully andefficiently.

ReV. Dominic P. Dohanyos,

• i i m

,,.,111 since with sMUM have d e w e d

i.uic more protnpt-men and their

,, us for tits to com-• :,o that the payMart coming home

in and I expect to• to accommodate

|II ,i i really need now Uin mt his friend John

il HI I when said OttMI:run the hOOMfOW

|t up of conspiring to b«-hiiiini'v. to com* down• • thf union. Aftw all,

:' up to Newark toi;..tes and hU 10 CO-

: .mainst freedom ofNriiom of speech, and

• i in a labor union,• mi.'ht return the eom-

• that the Ottteret•<M,<\ hear from a con-iinmii' in penon and get)-..i.<- direct—fOf com-'.-!• .:.-.s it may be, too,<:wi Rights Congress,

uk<<i Up the tab lor theirmnue in Newark, would:•' thing m Carttrirt, andii.ti ,ie-walslei could split

•triii between them again.•:.'"iKh. all this would

•'. uues getting out of

Presented to AlexanderBarker, Wileittz: Early Docition .St

|

CARTERET — Informal application was made by theShell Oil Company to the War Department Tuesday (or purchase of the 160-acie trad in Carteret now accupied as an

D ^ I f h b d

This became known at the ra«t- •Inn of i In- Bnrounh Council la«tnlKin when authorisation wasgranted to pntrr into a contractwith the company. The borotaAwill pay a rental of one dollar pWyear. At tht tuggeitlan of Countll-•iiiin Patrick Potocnlg, the actingborounh cU-rk. Mrs Pranfce* Tap-pen, wus directed to write to thecompany nnd exprrM Its thanki.

Ctiuncilmiui John L*lhlck. chalr-m,ui or tlie fire and water com-mittee announced that th* nawfire district Minims wttl go lnlo ef-fect Novi mber 1 The schedule OftltnaU will br published in theCailevel Press October 31 and No-vember 4.

A letter will be forwarded to th*State Economic Development Com-

the p u n l waccupied as an,

made, the t™ctffwill be added to that already owned by the company and onwhich it intends to build a multi-million dollar refinery.

Sale to Shell apparently de Mr Alexander slnt»d that be-pends on the Army's ability to luie the Army could release thtfind a suitable resting place for property for sale to a private bld-:ipproxlmately 18,000 rusty pieces, der it must be first offered toof automotive equipment. other brunches of the armed ser-

The matter was presented to: vices for any use to which theyArchibald S. Alexander, AssistantSecretary of the Army, by CarlBarker, assistant to the president

.VIIKIH desire to put it.At present, the depot Is a sub-

station of the Rarltan Arsenal andof Shell. He was accompanied by j he proposal has been made thatDavid T, WllenU, coVnsel for; the equipment In question beShell, and by Charles E. Gregory, ' moved there. Another possibilitypublisher of The Carteret Press.

diaplain, Middlesex County Chap-ter, CWV, delivered the principaladdress of the evening. FatherDominic, as lie likes to be called,helped organize St. James PestNo, 615 and is Honorary Chaplainof that organization. He is atpresent assigned to St. LadislaiusParish, New Brunswick, and ati

i-.chaplain at the Aimj W » 4 f ) o i - . n | r a t t < | .mp Kilmer, In his address , ' 1 ' 0 1 *" Jr . BOO

Named (lo'Chairmm of

Unit in CarteretCARTERET--EK,ward J Dolan

i Continued on PftKe

Veterans' Croup C. 0 . P. ArrangingBoosts for Wene [Several Meetings

CARJKKKT— Siicred Heart Post, 61», Catholic commanderW»r Veterans, Inc., Installed officers iind their(ur.it, shown In above photo, left to righl, are:J. I'ii|>[' Slutr Juditr Advucatc: Steve Shulick,

E Slianer, second vice commander.T Tot»lansky,: treasurer; J. M;iltk, adjutant;1' Grelfli judRc advocate; V. (ii>.V(l«s. welfareoftlcer; J. Jardot, medical ortlcrr; A. <;ayd«s, hS-liiriiiu, mid J. Sliulick, two-ycur trustee.

I 1"'1 l i11111 i

1.finer shouldn't beinpseni Gates In P«r-mim membership, be-Mit of them already

: ,,ii a public platform•: l<iner was Willing to

1"1 .i civil Rights CJmgress'• 'ie.u against Oatas'!:«n Oat«* UWjuas-''\ want to try to help

m ins final, detperate>i lontrol over |> uoup" i>»w are lttdltatlng

!>nit they're throughi.it.-d Mine. Mtn and

beotuse-ol

pin[to Mi

'AiI t ' U t ] %

l l l C !

1 -*s of thf'V.-iitii paying In duetiiunmiiata MM their

' '» Being i taunch: •••:.- detptae 4nd 'de-

•Oll""ia.i.-,m and ttiljr now<u>s*' I have ptoved It

1 i' their union leader -;l "-1I infested

Yareheski PlansDiabetes SurveyMass Screening of Woroj

Population Manned in |Attack t>n Disease j

CARTEKET Plans for the mass \screening of the population of theborough to detect diabetes wereannounced today by Health In-spector Michael Yarcheski.

The program Is the next stepbv Health Offlcer Yarcheski in aj 5|rable behavior.cLwaiKn to attack the chronic'diseases.

•Surveys have demonstratedthat there are currently as manyundisposed diabetics as dlagno -ed diabetics," said Health Offlwi

is AiTanked

CAKTKRKT—Halloween funcan b« wholesome nnd con -structivt, Polite Chief (it'orgeSheridan, Jr. declared today.

In their Halloween fun, hesaid, young people should de-velop an understanding lhat theproperty ut' others mult be re-spected; Unit destruction <ifproperty is, wrons; that funmeans laughter, good times andnot behavior that annoys others,and that costumes and masksmean good fun and not unde-

of CampFather Dohanyos stressed thepurposes nf CWV and urRed cloSecooperation between the clergyand the veterans. Father Dominicwii.s lilvon ii standing ovation bytlw ;i.s:.i'inbjy at the conclusion ofhis address.

Besides Pother Dohanyos, thefollowing members of the clergywere present: Rev. C. S. Roskovlcs,St. films' Church; Rev. V. Leuyl,Mt. Carmel Church, Woodbridge;Rev I,. J. Petrlek, Sacred HeartChurch; Rev. A. Huber, St. Eliz-abeth's Church; Rev. A. Poor,

i Continued on Page 4>

Kites Held TodavFor Mrs. Barker

| Dies as She GrievesOver 2 GrandchildrenSuffering from Polio

CARTEHET The funeral ofMrs, Orncc Barker, 74, 611 Roose-velt Avenue, was held this moni-in« A high mass o< requiem was

Prr-Election Rally i«

Set for Nov. 4; List

Other (jini|)ni^n Data

CARTERET—Final plans have

who are employes of the U. S,Mr,ds Rpflning Company, ndwstrike-bound for non-paymtnt ofrent. Councilman Potocnli said'lie men nlwav* paid rents on tintbefore the strike.

Councilman Potocnlg repartfedthat road program has been com-pleted and meets with completesatisf action.

The council accepted an Invita-tion to attend the opening me«t-Inn of the West Carteret Acacia-lion at the High School, PrldaTnight. October 28.

Stevt Szebeledy applied for theuunsfer of his tavern license at46 Roosevelt Avenue to Steve Mar-kov Its.

The welfare department reportedexpenditure* of tl.S31.lt fnr 8ep-temb(M. while the oversMr Of th<IHior spent 1130 71 (or tht month.

Police Chief" George SheridanJr. submitted the quarterly refcortnf the Police Department.

Councilman l,e«chlck reportedon the flre hydrant survey now

lias been named Ciarteret chair-' been formulated for the monsterman of the Middlesex County | card party to bo sponsored byChapter of "Veterans for Wene the Carteret Republican OrKani/.a-for Oovernor" with Thomas Dev-1 Him, tonight at Fire Hull No. 1 atereux as co-chairman. > 8 P. M. Mrs. Jessie BUKUIH and

The group, composed of ex-servicemen from practically every

Mrs. Mary Kubala arc co-chali -!assisted

Wene will Speak HereAt Pavilion on

county municipality, will meet M r s - Marie Kublck. Mis. Anenaa«ain toniffht at R P. M. in the ^ Mrs. Mary Collins. Mrs. Mary

Duffy. Mrs. Elsie Bartok, Mrs.Gloria Hrcko, Mrs. August Hunde-mnnn. Mrs. Mary Solewln, MisTheresa Kallllchoff, Paul Mucliu.Anthony Aiacli, Carl GrohmanCarl PelllBilnl, Pa'Uy Caruso, FredHoUnian. Herman Hell, Alex Ev-onitz, Philip Foxc, Samuel Sini.Paul BaKiiln, John Neville. JohnBrechka, Francis Oaydos. LeonCurran and Mrs Olive Buiinell

The basket of cheer belnn spoil-

[jegion PlanningFor Armistice Day

i» Nunifd

For Monday NightTo Mark Coluinlms and

1 l'uluski Days ut HolyFamily St'liool Monday offered in St. Joseph's fchurch.

— Burial was In St. Gertrude's Cemt-— Columbus and | ^,-y

Mrs. Barker, who matte her homewith her son-in-law and daugh-ter. Rev. and Mrs. Orvllle N, Da-

K",;

Yarcheslsi."Undlaunosed and untreated

diabetes progressively producepoorer health, loss of eye sight,increased accidents, accelerationOf the aging process and earlierdeath.

"A proper diagnosed and treateddiabetic can live a full, normaland healthful life.

"The objective of the masscnlng la to discover undlaij-ecrecno'sTd" dlabeus aud facilitate ac-

curate, early diagnosis and tieatmeat.

••The nurnose 18 U> enhance pos-•aTuVXHS! it J K ? 3 Promote lo v.ty

of diabetics.

••involved Is the foHowing tech-

nique:

Two More PolioCases ReportedTotal in Boro Now l.'i;

Five Home; Seven are

Making (iood Recoven

CARTERET — Two new po!U<cases developed In the boroughduring the week, bringing the to-tal of thirteen this year.

The latest victim is Donald Da-vidson, four-year-al'd jon of Rev•»nd Mis. Orvllle N, Davidson, 611

!1"'y have tan mls-|"!i itaking. U not a

11 behalf but In be-

pay

(.'AKTERE'l'l'ulaski Days will be observed byKnitfhts of Columbus ut Holyfamily School, Monday night.October 24, at 8:30 P. M. Principalspeakers will be Anthony Gadek,Middlesex County Freeholder.

Entertainment will also be in-cluded In the form of folk dunces

i and ballet under the direction of• Miss Frances Wesolowska of New

York.. Featuring Krakuwiuk, Ku-jawiak, Oberek and Mazur. The

i dancers are as follows: LorettaSoltys, Helen Cap, Dolores Mar-

k EQenevieve Eva

vldson, died of a heart attack ather home Wednesday night.

(Continued on Paae 4'

The group has already gone onrecord endorsing the $105,000,000bond Issue for a veterans bonus

, twi' and hus criticized Oovernor Dris-

4, and, Francis Pirlgyi, 13, both ofwhom were stricken with poliothis week.

She was the widow of EllsworthBarker. Surviving,' besides Mrs.Dalvdson are two other daughters,Mrs. Prank Plrigyl and Miss GraceBarker; a son. Robert Oraemt-, allof this borough aad EllsworthBarker, Jr. of Keyport.

CARTERKT— State SenatorElmer Wene, Democratic cundi-datr lor Governor will be theprincipal speaker at the Demo-cratic rally to be held In thfUkrainian Pavilion, Tuesdaynlfht, October %i.

Senator 11. W, Vogel and As-sembly candidate* also willspeak.

Edward J. Dolan, Jr. predictedthat the rally will be thf. bor-oUlh's greatest showing for agubernatorial candidate.

Freeholders Chambers. CountyRecord Building, to map a pro-gram for the flnal weeks of the j No. 2 at 8:30 P. M. for entire

membership.November 4, special meeting

and rally at Fire Hall No. 1 at8:30 P. M. with Plank Siekierka,Municipal Chairman, and John J.Ciko, Campaign Manager, Co-

has'also'announced his support of chairmen with County uiid Muni-the bonus question, Peter J. Smith cipal Candidates present,of Penh Amboy, chairman of the | November 6, general meeting ofcounty roup, declared that "Drts- j all workers at 2 P. M. at aMil hus put his personal kiss of; to be announced later,death on the bonus" and. Smith, Any organUaUon* who wish toadded although veterans are not; have the candidate appear at

sored by the organization win beawarded this evening at the cardparty. All members are urged tomake returns as soon as possibleto George Brechka at 21 MaryStreet.

The schedule of meetings to beheld by the Organization Is as fol-lows:

October ?6. meeting at Fire Hall

OlInrVctivitieH

CARTKHFI'—Carterel Post NoJii3 Aineiicaii Legion will have teninembf rs representing It at Coun-ty American Legion aieetlnji. •

Communder Wnlter Colgan wtjltend the dele«atton. Delegate] andilU'iuiUes i\ie Francis TotnoSHa;.['humus Jakeway, Walter WadUk,John Kuken, Han? Oleckner. Rev.Kenneth MacDonald, Miss ByWla•'vice. Francis Coushlln and J.Nevlll,

Wlllium MuJUr WHS welcomed atu new member. Plans were fur-thered for the Armistice Day 8o-oiiil to be held at the UkrainianPavilion on the night of Novem-ber 12 The cormnnndera of theVFW ami CWV are (.specially In-vited and the event ta'open to thepublic D.uK-iiiH und refreshmentswill he uviiiluble all evening.

The po.st wilt offer a donationand will puiticlpate in the Hal-loween puniilf sponsored by theCuiterct Craftsmen's Club,

Conimaiuler Coluan reportedUnit the American Lesion Is pre-paring to .tponsor a Junior Drurr.

cor»P J ^ t t o f l e d 7 h e m t t n . ' their meetings to present theirJ ^ ^ t h e .nan^, ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

"continued on Page 4> i Siekierka or John J. Clko

Impressive Services at Stadium Mark K. of C. Holy Hour

.tiui BUKI»sted ate

corps. All thoss inter-requested to report at

Earlier this week Francis Pi-rlgyl, IS, son of Mr, ind Mrs

l M B i d StreetFwas stricken with polio.Both were removed to the Mld-

bht BthBot

dleaex County Pollo,;beht«r- Bothcases ata Ustftd as mild. Five ofque:

"Perform mass scale screeningi

those stiiolten have ri

Performtuts on urine for siigar

iti tthose t twhile five, tn addition » the cur-

i l ovts on urine for s g"Refer all positive test data to

ia t physicianwhile fie,rent two, are making llow recov-Refe p

the person's private eries.There was one polio ;de.ttth this

? W j lkey industry, may ly.

"Follow up positive cases untilth i physician"

as pthat of N»no?- WojcleFollow up pos

they have visited their physician. , two year; old. and aU Catholk prieata of the borotub. CamS U« Carteret obuteb*. parll.lp.Wi * *fc TfLAN FOR MEETING

CABTERET —ThJ HungariancirvU *m hold

b 10 incrvUtt>va«iber 10 in

the Borough Hall this Saturday at10 A. M

Comiiiaiultr John Pucns of Mid*dl«su County Is expected to ip-l)olnt Thomas Jalteway as Re-habilitation •aervlce clialitnan ofcounty, PranlcsCoughlln u graveschulrman and Praacts Tonteiuk asCounty Public Relations officer.

H e*t Carteret Asm.

To Meet October 28

CARTERET — The West Car-teiet Association will hold a spe-cial meeting in the carteret HighSchool auditorium 8 P. M- onbtlday, October 2»

The meeting Is being held pri-marily to acquaint the lasidentflof Carteret with tlieir neighborsIn West Carteret. ami at the sametime, to fumlllarlze the people ofthis borough with tlie inner work-Ings of the West Cartewt CllloAssociation

As an added attraction, tha sJ*caiidlduteti (or the Borough Coun-oll h«v« been Invited to praKUtthen plutliiiin and vlewa Inaratlon for the elecUon In Novem-ber. This should be of vital " •"terest to all.

entertainment will btby local talent.

Page 2: With The Ntm! arterrt - DigiFind-ItWith The Ntm! • VI v(ri(ie AH The Activities arterrt |)f,:,lf Town With Tour l [nrne-Town The Urgeft And Beat Shaft Aa S«nic«« tn The Are* Art

tar tm •MMlt • «•*•!*• portltlpetlon

tun. in " t H I JOHN REEft KING SHOW"Sf>MW»d by FUGSTAM FOODS

7:30 P.M.Tuesday & Thursday nights

Holy Family Church is Scentof Krynski-Gluchoski Nuptials

Miss Alice O n r -vlfvi> Qludioiikl, datiRhter of Mr.SMIII Mrs Alexander Oluchoskl, 2

Street, beramr the hrldfAlfred Matthew Krynski. sonMr and Mrs. Joseph Krynski.

14 chrome Avenue, In the HolyFamily Church Saturday afler-

Rrv. M A Konopka, pastorof the Church, performed thednulilf -rlnR ceremony.

Mi OliK'hoskl gave hla daugh-lei in marriage. 8h* was attendedby hoi cousin, Miss Stella Olu-choskl as maid of honor, and Miss

OUichoskl, a sister, wnn(IcsmiiKl

Kar.imlr Wojclk served as theurn's best man and An-

Sosnowskl ushered.The; l)iides white satin gown

WHS colonial style trimmed with,swd peiirls and beads. Her three*-Her French illusion veil was at-tached to a halo of seed pearlRand trads and she carried a colo-nial bouquet of" white roaes, pom-pons and lilies of the valley.

The maid of honor wore a foWsatin gown, matching heufWhapebonnet, and she carried bronwpnmpons and yeJlirw baby'n toreaUrThe bridesmaid wort moss grepisatin, matching heartshape-bon^net. and she carried yelk)» pohv'pons and green baby's breath.

Mr. and Mrs Krynski are on aweddtn* trip to the Pocono Moun-tains and upon their return willreside at the Chrome Ateflue ad-dress. For Rolng away, the bridechose a dubopnet suit, grey ac-ceworta and ft Corsage of whiteroses.

Both are graduates of CarteretHigh School. The bride Is em-Ployed as a secretary by Merck StCompany, Rahway. Her husband.a veteran of the U. 8. Navy, Isemployed by the V. 8. Metals Re--fining Company here.

Most veterans now have theirInsurance refund blanks.

Johnson orders job aid for 136-000 dismissed employes.

The finest food* from the garden spots of

the world are. youri when you buy

Flagitaff-piclced at the peak of perfec-

tion. Taite them today - because tasting

is believing! . , . Ah-h, how delighted you

will be that Flagstaff quality actually

costs no more than the ordinary kindl

FLAGSTAFF1M HOLM WAT QUALITY BUM

BAD (MAWS) FOR YOU

MAY MEAN TRAGEDY FOR OTHERSIt's a horrible feeling—stepping" on that pedaland finding you can't stop! Don't let It happen.

LET AN EXPERT DO YOUR BRAKE WORK20 YEARS EXPERIENCE

NO GUESSWORK, EXPERIMENTING. DELAYSCOMPLETELY EQUIPPED SHOP

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PIN FITTING • COMPLETE STOCK OF PARTS

BEAR WHEEL ALIGNING & BALANCINGFRONT-END REBUILDING

RAHWAY BRAKE SERVICEFlagsta only n fri#n*y ntighborhood grocers

Motur Tune-up - General Repairing12G3 MAIN STREETSamuel J. Gaasaway /

24-Hour Towing ServiceRAHWAY 7-9€71

ii>M»h N. Gassaway

4 GREAT FEATURESFOR FINER RECEPTION!

, view it ki full room light as r»c-

#mm«ntW by ay* tpicialisli.

S. AvteMtb t*M«-tun« belt

Blcl«r*-T»und I* right every

tlmt.

4 itfMk ©•! many annoying

focal pltfwf |nt»ityijneti with-

out d dl

. Ininhtet thanwrj l\:lei'ttionr t'it ««»!« »cm-

Set flus table for price 01 set

New series " O "

with AUTOMATIC SOUND

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ili tENERALffi ELECTRIC2 4 MOHTHS TO PAYNO DOWN PAYMENT

Name TeacherClinician Aide!V1IHH Mary (i. Filofw

O t n Appoint mentFrom Kntger* <Jinir

CARTKRET - Mlw Mary O..lima, member of the faculty of•Nathan Hale School, has receivedappointment to the position ofAssistant Clinician in the Reme-dial Ufadint Section of the Rut-*e« UnlvmHy Psychological Clin-ic. TJ* appointment follows sev-eral yewa of tnterneship underhe gutdaw of Dr. Anna 8. Starr.

director of the clinic

Book ReviewNov. 10; Evening Group Meets

CARTFRKT-A book review byMr*. Lorei.io Nfvlll will featurethe next meeting of the Cartere.tWoman's Club November 10 InFire Hall 1 nl. 1 P. M. Mrs. JohnRuckrlegel. civics chairman willbe in charge of the meetltiR nnrihostesses will be Mrs. E. Ander-son, Mrs. E. Daze, Mrs. J. Krys-wwskl and Mrs. M. E. Yorke.

Evening DepMtmetitAt Its last meeting, the Evening.

Department of the club was givenInstructions In the art of wrappingand tying Christmas packages at-M'BCtivWy

Ml*of Bachelor of Science In Edwa-ion fro»n llutwws University and. .

,a IMS. «M granted the Degree of 1 "i t

Matter Of Art* In Psychological * M » n

rs ^November

wll > Ann

Uao holds a New JerseyState certlflcat* as- School Psy-'holorist.

During her university career,Miss niosa was received intomembership of Kappa Delta Pi!i national honor society in edu-lalion, election to which Is achiev-ed only through high scholasticatalnment.

Income of $300,000,000,000 at-Wnable, C. E Wilson holds.

clnski. Miss Julia Olnda. MissBlanche Zlemba, Mrs Elsie Swe-da, Mrs. Stanley Niemlec, Mrs.Thomas Brandon, Mrs. Albert

V. F. W. TO MEETCARTERET — Star Landing

Post, 2314, Veterans of ForeignWars will hear a talk on the StateVeterans' Bonus at the meeting,Tuesday, October 26 at 8 P. M. InBorough Hall. A social will follow,

Mntefy. Mrs, JoMph Algotlne.Miss Catherine Pllo, Mrs. FrankCzaja. Mrs. Ambrtee Mudrak,Mrs iJiura Oerek, Mrs. John Turkand Mrs Sophie Prywata.

Church SodalitySets Dance DateHoly Family Chyrch Unit

To Hold Thai&tfvinpNovember 24th

ArII,

in i \

Mark A fl-

CARTER^']'l

a i r <>l

*f>re observed t)v

Of that ni MM

D i v i n e Lit 111-..v «•„

" e v . F a t h e r j ( ) t l l , ,, ' .

u s a s s i s t e d iiv i], , |,'1 K i r h l i . . i , , h i ; ,

3 e a c o n N l c h d i a . ]>,,

>l 'k C i t y . F ; , , | , . . , , '

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SLEEPERS- ' -~'«ZES 2 TO 8 —

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CARTKROT—Ttefcttt h»ve beenplaosd on site far the Thanks-•tivitiR dance to be held by tlwYoung Ladles1 Sodality of theHoly Family Church to be hold Ini he church null Nowtnbe? 24.Whltey Kaye and MB orchestrahave been engaged for the eve-ning.

The committee Is composed ofJessie Mooarski, chairman; RoseBlalowarceuk. co-chairman: Lor-raine Akalewle*, Loretta Oinda,Oenevleve Orbaftikl, Eva BletoUAlice Ootowlckl, Lorettft andStephanie Soltyi, Oenevltve Kar-necki, Theresa Cayeewikl, VictoriaOutowskl, Oenevievft SawczakEugenia Flermle], Helen MaclochMary Pelc, Jane Hadyk, Mary andAngela Martosewlrz. Mary Sto-plnskl.

Also Rose Tomceuk, Stephanieand Josephine Borys, CeceliaKastlmor, Cecelia Oorecki, IreneIvans, Irene Kurdyla, Irene andVeronica YapcEynakl, Ann Mall-nowskl. Helen Mlllk. DorothyTrosko, Irene Krysto«iak and The-resa Penkul,

Honor Kri. ZulloOn 77th Birthday

CARTERET —A family dinnerwas held at the home of MrsCamlllo Zullo. Edwin Street, in

J honor of tier 77th birthday. Thei affair was arranged by the chll| rlmi Mrs. Zullo received manyj gifts and flowers.| Participating were Mr. and MrsJulius Andreas, Mr. and MrsNlel Zullo and children, Ann, NlelJr., Joseph AntNony, Mr and MrsJames Zullo and daughter. Mildred, Mr and Mrs. Carmine Zullimid son. Edward, Mlas Angela DeSantls and Mr. and Mrs. Jame:Zullo and son. John, all of this

Mr. and Mrs. John Zullo, PorReading; Mr. and Mrs CharlePaaquale and children. Doloresand Can, Mrs. Anrelo PaaqualeLinden; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph FoMid son, Joseph, and Mr, and MrsThomas Blssono, Elisabeth; Mr:Mario Caruso and children, Mil

I dred, Betty, Claire and RoberHillside.

f

Rtntc:. i. (

•enchetl n S H M I ' I I

shoir saiiR UIP in

llrenUon of Pr,,f •,

ihe. members nf n,,

(Ivt-d H o l y Ciiiiini

A banque t v,;r, ••,

irhood at ti». n^,

the evening MW

the clergy, oiii,,

•uxlllary mid n<.

l>oar dof trusiiM ,,

[UesU

Mrs. Paul K m .

' the orgarilz:iti.,r

members am) i.,,,-

i, local p:i I,,

iky, presldcni. I

rpaiur»r. ntul m!

;he bard and rh i

Mrs. Alfred n-

emt president, Mi

195 MAIN STREETWOODBRIDGE 8-1476

It's A Fact!IN WOODBRIDGE

MiladyCAN FIND THE

RIGHTHAT

AT THE

LOWESTPRICE!

Lee's Hat BarST MAIN STREETNext to Jackaon'i

b e r « o f S t . A n \ A i mDrlef a d d r e s s e s r«-, ihit e r h o o d o n I is s iv i .i r y .

Marks Columbus

CARTERE1was celebraied by ,i v,the Cleveland Kclmni Miat 1:30 In the K\\,-M-.,..^J

First Grade Oliiw.-Grade Classes willgram at 2M) IH |.ternoon The pi HIM;on Tuesday nfunn

First Uradi' pin-ute, school; M'nschool; The l.onl'How Do Ymi I

recltntion.De Nitto; clmuGross' Clnss. reelI n g , " K i o t i p , l e i I t i i i i n i )

bus," group: recitalumDreams," uroup. Num y HijKantor, Natallp Kmtlon, "Christopher OilJames I-eleszi, KulmidKenneth Llnd. I cntatlciumbus Hiirij.n.iSipos; rei'itation. "I'ol1

group; SOUK, "Bobbysembly; recitation. Coluflthe Flag," Carrie KluveivjKmlotek; rhythm iRow Your Bunt,' .1John Lenart. Lillmn MatillWai'htt'i-, John Mill.i Milchell, Aril-Mi1 KimMorris. Waltfi BuiicMorris, Gwendolyn

Recitation. "<mr 'I'-ntStewart. Ennl Wm lnff|-When I Am Bit:,tation. 'A Finv 1Ward, Harold Ho/elle I*ep; song, "builiin:seinbly; recitatum. 'Co!Plane Bauerbaml. Biuc|cogh. Caroline 7ABand Selections. 1Suili!i(!,|Columbus Went a •Sabos' class, MUM:assembly.

BOB'S RADIO & TELEVISIONl A L E S i l i d SERVICE, Inc.

& S«5JHM)1 Streete loodbrWie U9U

imuVitium CltinermV BINOfK CAN GIVETOB THE8E rtATUB&B:

tow, wtt gowiUwut

ALL SMART WOMENTURN TO THEIR

Singer Sewing CenterBECAUSE THEY KNOW THATFOR ANY SEWING PROBLEM ...

Singer Has the Answer!• SINGER SEWING MACHINES

are nationally known and tued,the world «v«r. Smooth lUteh-ini, dealt ned to nutke aewlnieasy, accurate and sufotsufulthey're the choice of all smartwomen.

• EXPEBT SEWING 1NSTBUC-TIONS are yours with aSINGER SEWING COURSE.V*u iitod not know a tUichubout Mwhif . . . yet youilactually make » drew while youlearn the Know-Ilow thatSINGKK can live >uu. Day andEvening Clasne*.

• FINISHING TOUCHES. NO-TIONS, D|E B 8 8 FORMS,MATERIAL—all arc availableat your 8INGEE 8EWLNGCENTER. Cuurteou* clerks wRladvlae and help you with yourvelectloni.

• E X P E R T M E C H A N I C8IRV»CE by 8UMT«r t n l m dwen wwure the properand electrification <rf ;china. RuJud b/ I

Up

l. No

Wmy-b«

itIW-

Mut It In ar an M

ttMi mm* tut •

CarteretLeave I'. A.

CARTERETGeneral Hospital reports I'ollowlng have brtu <Wfrom that inatltutiou:

thy SchwarU. 35 Lib.Irt. Walter Terebetski J*l

..venue and infant sonjWilliam; Mrs. GeoriseLelck Avenue and mhlet, Linda Lee; Mrs. Ailnlen«h. 38 Locust SL'et iPaul Kalita, 20 Lowell •infant son, Paul Fi'Hf

PLAN FOR OAN( fcCARTERET-The unit

olal »nd Athltiit dubtheir annual dam'f miNovember 5, at the st J.iLone fellow Street. Aihtaorche«tra will (»""ihJ•tc. Chwles Mak*"-"

Of the affair

of a com»t«y Uut h»« beenin b'uibuH aver 100 y « u i »ndwlU tilll be here for y«uni tocuinc you ean depend on h w -lo« nwdved the very fcrt In»frvlct. ' -

BUY FROMS I N G E RAND 1 8 fttWE!

Singer Sewtaii« »CTH SWIBT

*.,...-I

Page 3: With The Ntm! arterrt - DigiFind-ItWith The Ntm! • VI v(ri(ie AH The Activities arterrt |)f,:,lf Town With Tour l [nrne-Town The Urgeft And Beat Shaft Aa S«nic«« tn The Are* Art

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1049

Jshington-Nqthan Hale PTAL.v Class Mothers at Session

The Washlngton-••I'A lirld Its regular...•lay evening at

Soltw., Mrs. Alice Brpnnan. Mrs.Mamaret CavarmiiRh, John Hor-nak, Mrs. Helene Balka, Mrs J.

hool. Mrs. Andrew Plsher, Mrs. Ann Nascak, Mrs. Bertin the absence of Kopln, Mrs. Del Vacchto. Mrs. Pe-

: M.-T.oort, president, ter Trac?,, Mrs. Alex Nudge. Mrs.i,,.| aallicic. Public|Mnmle OreenberK, Mcs. Pay Rosen-

, -momlrs advlsnr.!Wum- M « - S. KaU. Mrs. P. Cho-dosh, Mrs. E. Shapiro, Mrs. Kiln-back, Mrs. ciup. Mrs. Larkln, Mr*.J. Dollnlch. Mrs. A. Dobrovlch.Mrs. A C . Hundemann, Mrs. JohnRomnnetz and Mrs. ElizabethWadlak.

uicinonstratlnn.

o.iin. :i«hooi super-•i t.ilk on polio. Class

ippnlntrd; they are:Mrs Oi-oine Feren-

Installation Set Sales of Television Sets HereFor IOOF Tonight(jirteret l odge Also

Marks It« 47th YearOf Service Here

KeaLlnu;i Helen Pllsko andi .|k;ich. Jr.; second,h svfiison and Mr3.

I bird crude, Mrs.. fourth KHUIP. Mrs.mil Mrs. Mary Lo-. ir|.. Mis. Andrew(i chnrles K?atlnpi: . ,]»hn Romanets'.

i i i ••.if t Dobrowskt;, Mn. Frank Krls-

,:\t\r, Mrs. Michael

;, class mothers are., ,iiday parties andhi'> Tliree specialwore Mrs. FrankMary Lovaaz and

I'-.u-h, Jr. .,1 Hila reported that• w,\ M success. A so-

md those assistUmhmonts were Mrs.

ki nnd Mrs. Marge

(1.1). A. PlanningChristnias FeteMr*. Stallato Named

Chairman; Other Plan*VI I i t< n . i i . l n existence in icMa<l<> hy (.otirt f l d c l l * and Louis VonahCARTERET

Stellato a

Are Booming to New Marks

nual Christmas party. Assistingwith arrannemenu. this year willHe Mrs. William Casey, Mrs. Ed-ward O'Brlen. Mrs. Frank Ourcy,Mrs. Helen Mullen. Mrs. Eliza-beth Sachinsky and Mrs. FrankBarbato.

At the last mectlni? held at the

CARTERET — Tonight In thelodge rooms of Carteret Lodge#287 of the Independent Orderof Odd Fellows, Installations willbe performed by Leonard Zlegler,district deputy of District 10, andbis official Installation staff.

Newly-elected officers of theOdd Fellows are George Sloan,noble grand, succeeding I«on»rdKuhn, also Sidney Smith, replac-ing George Sloan as vice grand.Installation degrees will also bebestowed on William Elliott, sec-retary; Benjamin Zussmann, trea,-surer, and George Richardson,financial secretary,

Carteret Lodge #267 Is 47 yearsIn existence in town. John Oerlg

are two of thew . I oldest members still active ln civicwith Mrs. Paul j a n ( ) ^ i , , functions of the lodfie.

. H?, *,re»Joseph Mosher. grand master, willof the eve-

ning. Other speakers will be Rob-ert R. Brown, past grand master;Peter Borden, noble grand of Law-rence Lodge of Perth Amboy, anda host of other grand court dlgnl-

CARTERET—Sales of televi-sion sets In Carteret appearheaded for n new record, dealerssaid today.

According to the dealers, thetelevision .sales boom had allthe earmarks of the radio boomof the 1920s when people finallydecided "the thing was here tostay."

Rome dealers admitted how-ever that the strike at the U. S.Metals Refining Company puta "crimp in sales."

Carteret television men havea variety of reasons for the up-swing In sales. One said thatthere are "more stations, moreand better network programs,more sports, more of every-thing."

Another said: "Television IsJust growing up."

"Sure prices had a lot to dowith It, but there ts more In-terest ln television now withprograms generally Improving,"said a third,

h i l l H n - i T ? 2 L I, J o s e P h MoshbelnK drafted by Court FWelte.. te t h e M l n

/or " I

taries.Holding appointed offices for

this year are George Brown, .con-ductor; Sidney Smith, warden;

inhcr

t - ui4bW>FI r VJIVJAIVJ uiijiwif waiur j i i f

home of Mrs, Stellate plans were , w l l l l a m s l o a n a n d R a y B r o w n

meeting wii) j |"a<k' ^ u t t™d ft card party ln | J r , 8 u p t X ) r l e r s ; J o s e p h O a y d 0 6

16, at Nathan I *}evi *or]i C l l y November 18 tin-1 a n d J o h n Q ^ g g u a r d | f t n 8 . a l s o

der the sponsorship of the Mary- S a m R o t h > O u s W u l f a n d 8 1 d n e y

•,'M its card party atlUli. School with Mrs.

.mil Mis. Mary Lo-

knoll Sisters and a donation was | smith, trusteesvoted to the National ConferenceWar Relief Services, Catholic

committee were:

Charities.A poetry contest for the stu-

irn'riiik. Mrs. Ann! dents of St. Joseph's Parochial,i • Benjamin Zu»s- i S c n o 0 1 ' w l l h M r s - Elizabeth Saf-

\iiii-w Abaray Mrs c n l n s k v h i ill bi * biw Abaray Mrs

Mrs. Helen Ed-!st>re«* b v

uth Hvenson. Mrs i I n n o n o r n f

chairman, will be spon-

birthday, Mrs.nwskl and Mrs,

wire won by Mrs.

William Cole, Brand reRent, waspresented with a cake made byMrs. Mullen. The special prize was

Mrs. Kasmlr, Mrs.! * o n bV Mrs. Michael Poll., Mrs. Kay Symchik. i Curds featured the social and, •' ! winners were Mrs. Mary Ahlering,

winfWs were: Mrs. Mrs. Stellato, Mrs. Elsie 8weda,Mis. Joseph Hasek, | Mrs. Joseph Kennedy, Mrs. Frank

mil, Mrs. Mary Sen- Cralgen, Mrs. Prank Koepfler,f'unmed Moore, 'Mrs. Mrs. Thomas Burke, Mrs. Howard•/.. Mrs. Marlon Pav-IBurns, Mrs. John McCarthy, Mrs.

Refreshments will be In chargeof Thomas Moss, David Jacobo-witz, John Gerlg and JosephOaydos.

TO MEET TONIGHTCARTERET —The flre depart-

ment Hallowe'en parade commit-tee will meet at Fire House #2tonight at 7 o'clock. Co-chairmenare Joseph Dolan and JamesVonah.

Food nnd Coke SaleAt High School flat. 19

CARTERET—A cake and foodsale will be held November 19from 10 A. M. to 4,P. M-'by theCarteret High School, PTA in thehigh school,

Mrs. Emll Blzub Is chairman andher assistants are Miss 'EthelSnyder, Mrs. John NemWh, Mrs.Oscar Anderson, Mrs. Abe Lavlne,Mrs. Joseph Makwinskl, Mrs, JohnFodor. Mrs. A. J. DMVecchIO, Mrs.William Kllng, Mrs. Helen Sklpka,Mrs. P. 8. Qalbralth, Mrs. ThomasBurke and Mrs. John Ruckxlegel

BUNDLE FROM HEJCEN i>

CARTERET — Mr. antl MrsJohn 8kocypec of 12 IjeftertsStreet, are the proud partnts ofa son, Wayne Joseph, born Oc-tober 12, at the Elizabeth GeneralHospital. Mrs. Skocypec Is theformer Helen Kushman.

Fire Prevention WeekObterved at School

CARTHRET-Cleveland Schoolcelebrated Fire Prevention Week.by having DrlHs and by havingthe Fire Department and FireTruck on exhibit so the childrencould nee and ask questions

Columbus Day wWt celebratedby a Columbus Day proRrnm

Second Grade program F\mSalute, school; sons "Amerlra."

i school; The 1/ird's Prayer. sonKBlow, Wind Blow." school; reci-

tation. Columbus, Richard Porter,i Raymond Bongiorno; recitation.Columbus. Christine Morris; solo

! and chorus. "I Wonder Wh»t n iDo," Barbara Erwln; choral speak-

| Ing and sliming. Mrs Harris classRecitation, -Columbus. 8t»nlry

R?.yba. Joseph Morris. James Pra-j ra : snmi and dunre. »Bllor'sj Hornpipe." Mrs Oailn's class, sololand choruii. Bobby aluftn. Ar-hene L n.sky, ;olo. '•Columbus was

PAGE THRU

BIRTHf)AV MARKFDCARTKRET In honor of

(mith birthday nl Ihrir danPhyllis. Mr nnd MrsRodowskl. Ro< <"Vfit Avenue.terUlnwl »t a party In their IPartlclpmtnn wrri- Charlottedal. Ar>ne Santa. VernaShhiey Makkai. Dennis . , „,Robert Matrtv and Kiss IrMB,",;Kurny

ft Sailor Bold Mnnurct FedltlB.Music fm i i ir i i ' l i imi by M M

Prnshuras

Carteret Troops PlanFor Girl Scout Week

CARTERET—A special programis being planned by the CarteretOlrl Scout Council ln connectionwith Olrl Scout Week to be ob-served October 30 to November 5.

At the last meeting of theCouncil, Miss Mary Feryo wasnamed chairman of the programwith Miss Marian Pluta and MrsN. Bryer assisting. Mrs. HaroldEdwards will have charge of re-freshments.

AttendinR the meeting wereMrs. Edwards, Walter Wadlak,James Lukach. John Q. Nevlll,Mrs. Bryer. Miss Pluta, Miss Vic-toria dutowski, Miss Feryo, MissAnn Gavaletz and Miss Marian

i Sankner,

FOCTOCNIG HONOREDI CARTERET—Councilman Pat-i rick Potocnlg was presented withun honorary firemen's card at the1

I last meeting of Carteret Fire Co. 1.

Kurtz, Mrs. Edward Lloyd, Mrs.Loretto Nevlll and Mrs. GeorgeDowdell.

The November 10 meeting socialcommittee will include Mrs. JohnMcDonnell, Mrs. Phoebe McDon-nell, Mrs. John Fee and Mrs,

r linnton. Mrs. Mildred Jowphlne Curcy, Mrs. George ' Barbate.

ROLLER SKATINGEvery Thursday NightSt. Cecelia's Recreation Center

OAK TUMI'. KOAD, ISIX1N, N, J.

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World's Champion Vclve-ln-Head Engine,

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Curved Windshield withPanoramic Visibility

supplying all that extra vision

which means extra sajety in

driving with a fuller, freer view

all about you.

Center-PointSteering

rtl'li control centered betweenlil1 li'ont wheels for maximum

ili i\ nig-case With minimumell |'O tutigue,

Certi-SafeHydraulic Brakes (

more outstanding than ever be-

fore with new Dubl-Lije Rivet-

less brake linings that last up

to twice as long.

Longer, Heavier, with WiderTread

the big car in the low-price field,

with all the advantages of more

riding-comfort, road-steadiness

and safety.

Fisher Unlsteel Bod>Construction

with sleel welded to steel above,

below and all around you for

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quietness and safety

Extra Economical to Ownand Operate

and traditionally worth more

when you trade; for Chevrolet

is America's most wanted motor

car-new or used!

5-Inch Wide-pose Rims,plus Low-Prassure Tires ,

the widest rims in the low-price

he ld-p lus extra low-pressure

tires—for greater stability and

riding-comfort.

EXTRA Values areexclusively yours at

. lowest cost in Chevrolet!

ECONOMY GARAGE CO.

WINDSHIELD WfPER H DEFROSTER TCST'.•^ADJUSTMENT

ANTI.MEI2E

FAN BELT CHECK

LIGHT CHECK

(NGINE TtfNf-Ufl

HEATER CHECK

TIRES

BRAKE TEST

WHEEL .ALIGNMENT, BATTERY TEST

GENERATOR CHEQK.

COID WEATHERUIBRICATION

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We wiJJ tune up your car to the manu-facturer's specifications with the latestand best electrical equipment.

REGARDI.KSS OF WHAT YOUR CARTROUBLE IS, Wi: ARK EQUIPPEDTO TAKE (ARK OF IT!

— STOP IN TODAY! —

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KKPAIKSACCESSORIES I'ARTS

T1RKS - Tl'BKSAM)

CAR W \SlUiN<;

PICK UP &DELIVERYSERVICE

OPKN 7 DAYS \ WKEKDAILY fi:30 A. M. - l« V. M.SUNDAY 8 A. M. - 10 I". M.

A.$S. SERVICENTER, INC.744 R A I I W A Y AVENUE — WOODBRIIMiE — WO-8-3057

for the Wa hmobilc Hannrr

OLDEST FAMILY CREDIT CLOTHIERS IN THE STf TE1

These folks are tops!They can charge their family clothing purchases anywhere;

but they prefer the Peoples because:• The Peoples offers a friendly, warm atmosph«r«;

f The Peoples understands when your work Is Interrupted tmu

your cash slow;

• The Peoples asks no carrying charge or Interest on yoor bal-

once, no matter how long drawn out;

f The Peoples are old-time reliable merchants; you can be lurt

of your money's-worth every time I

You t o o are invited to try t h e . . .

186 SMITH STREET PERTH AMBOY

OPENFRI.EVES. HZ /

F*

Page 4: With The Ntm! arterrt - DigiFind-ItWith The Ntm! • VI v(ri(ie AH The Activities arterrt |)f,:,lf Town With Tour l [nrne-Town The Urgeft And Beat Shaft Aa S«nic«« tn The Are* Art

H.flh ^h.4; lh'Saluted h\ Radio

,,> ..;1>,i-,-.T.l,.-v

o f C i i r i e f i H i t ii - r l n i . i i

. • ! t i id»- i i t : , v i m p a r t i c i p a t e d ir, l l i f

broaden*! were Mt«s Ml)dn«1 Mm

"ST" ! I

CARTERET Carteret Highbroaden*! w e M«s Mld«1 Mrl». singing "I Can Dream"; Mteig

School wan sainted on a nectal i O l o r l » N ( i m U h - P | a y l n B "I . . iri'Ijin»" nn th* nlnnn and Rbroadcast honoring the high schoolfor Its splfiullcl won In moldingthe future* of ihp young America.This broadcast was the first of anrlei of broadcasts by W8OU tobrinK to light the rmppler side dfhigh school nrilvitles. humorous

-s. nrul KPnernl currlcular ofthf school

Edwin (Juln. school supprvlwrand Herman Horn, principal ofCartmt Miiiti School were com-plimented for the splendid work

d'Lune" on the piano, and RlchfirdBrown president, of the StudentOrganisation who was interviewedby the star of the nhow, WilliamLawlor

WSOU is th« radio station ofSeton Hall College, located InSouth Orange

PLAN RUMMAOt SALECARTERKT—The LadlM' Aux-

iliary of the Congregation of IJOV-IHK Justice will hold a rutnmasesale oJl day October 36. 26 and 27

they are doinu not only in tench- i at 80 Roosevelt Avenue.Ing the Undent* of the liinh school | The sale will Include dothlnR,to become better men imd women • shoes, hats, dresses, and co«U forbut also for their excellent advice men, women and children.

Slimmer driving tukcs n lot nut of yourcar! Have It cheeked NOW and be sureof sufe, aatixfiM'tnry Winter perform-ance, ditch small symptoms before theyb*fomr hi; motor disturbances . , . buildup your car's resistance to cold weather,and sail through thi- winter with frwerrepair hills.

Dependable Car PerformanceIs Wise Economy . , .

A few dollars spent for a SUNSCIENTIFIC DIAGNOSIS to-day eaii save you real moneyand trouble later on. You'llknow the exact condition ofyour engine—no mesawork.All Faults are uncovered andcan often be simply and Inex-pensively remedied becausethey were cmicht in Ume!Dnn'l wait until your cirbreaks down - - . set a SUNDIAGNOSIS NOW!

OBEY that impulse—Come In TODAY!

SERVICE- Texaco Products -

Amboy Avenue and Convery Boulevard WO-8-0893SHOP HOIKS; 8 TO 5—MON. TO SAT. ONLY

»»= CHRISTENSEN'S ««•"THE FRIENDLY STORE"

SMI 11 Hi-I(Continued tram Page fftiei s

l.i that It be moved to Camp Kiimer which nan been ordered din*mantled but which might affordth« fncllltlm which now are Inoperation at Cartmt- The pointalso v u made that the entireplant at Carteret Is In such a. stateof disrepair that refurblshlnit Hwould Involve a staggering ex-pense. •

Advantace* Clta*If th« Ar.itnal or Camp Kilmer

can ibtorb the Carteret Installs -tlon, the tract could be put toprofitable use by Shell and thusorovlde Important Income forMiddlesex County, for Wood-hrtdge Township and Carteret.Employment opportunities alsowould be afforded for hundreds ofworkers in a time when the areais feeling the pinch of businessrecession Relocation of the depotoperation In either nearby Armyestablishment would not materi-ally affect any strategic consid-erations.

After hearing the Shell presen-tation, Mr. Alexander stated hewould discuss the matter withordnance experts in the depart-ment and would advise the appli-cant of the decision, Acquisitionof the tract woind assure Shellnot only sufficient ground %r itsproposed refinery — which It al-ready owns- but would also assureIt space for expansion which Itdeems necessary before making itsfinal plnns.

Treasury starts reducing Inter-est with refunding at l*fa percent.

Bid ParentsVisit School

Fathert and Mothers ofH. S. Freshmen Are

Invited for Nov. 2CARTERET - The parent* or

guardians of Carteret High Schoolfreshmen have, been Invited tovisit the school on Wednkaday,November 2, to meet the teachenand counselors.

Sponsored by the guidance de-f-parttnent and the freshmen home-room teachers, the .program willbegin at two o'clock in the after-noon with a musical program,prepared by Miu Oenevleve Kra-mer, followed by refreshments,served by Miss Olive Ounderson,

Invitations were Issued today byHerman E. Horn, principal andparents are asked to slin and re-turn them by October J6. Fathersas well .as mothers are expectedto attend.

Mrs. CougMin WillEntertain AOH Unit

CARTERET—Mrs. Leo Coughlln,Lowell Street, wUl entertain theLadies' Auxiliary. Anlcent Orderof Hibernians at har home. Novem-ber 14.

At the last meeting held In th»home of Mrs. Thomas Foxe, Srem-son Street, Mrs. Jack Rlngwoodand Mrs. Nicholas Sullivan wereaccepted as members.

A Fair Government of the PeopleFor All the People!

Vote for REPUBLICAN Candidates

BAREFORD BRECHKA RESKOON ELECTION DAY. NOVEMBER »

1$"- rj(Continued from Paie One)

has been handled they're Accept-ing It. M the 'lesser of two evils'.

The veterans have also none onrecord endorsing the housing ref-erendum and the bond issue forInstitutions which will also appearon the ballot.

Drlscoll's stand on the bingoquestion also brought rebuke fromthe group. Smith stated that be-cause bingo Is outlawed variousVeterans groups an dother non-profit organisations are deprivedof the opportunity of raisingmuch-needed funds,

"Bingo, according to Diiscoll Isgambling," Smith said. "In hisopinion horse race betting Is all-rlF.'ht because that's legalized. Ifbingo is gambling then horse racebetting Is hlRhway robbery."

Plans are being made for acounty-wide rally of veterans In-terested In banking Wene, Therally, Smith said, will p b bbe helH next week in New Bruns-wick.' ' '•

ne, Theprobably floods

St. Joseph's PI1 A.Sets Talent SaleAnnual Affair to be

Held December 4th;Committees AppointedC A R T E R E T — 8t. Joseph's

Parochial School P.T.A. has setDecember 4 as the date for Itsannual talent sale with Mrs. El-vira Martin and Mrs. John D'Zu-rllla as co-chairmen.

Serving on the committee forthe booths are the following: Mrs.Michael Poll and Mrs. Betty Cala-guarl, white elephant; Mrs JuliaHaJkovlch, knitting; Mrs. JohnAJMrnathy, kitchen; Mrs. NatalieKostyeh, Mrs. Marlon Cofley. fish-ing pond; Mrs. Frank Curry, wheeland toys; Mrs, Betty C7.ajkow.skIand Mrs. Eileen Casey, homemadefoods; Mrs. Joseph Kisty, aprons;Mrs. Julia Cromwell and MrsMichael Sofka, crochet; Mrs.Frank Barbato, flowers.

XU&JN. SESSIONR — The Wednesday

Kutfi held their meeting at thehome of Mrs William Carlton.235 Pprshlng Avenue. Mrs. Mi-chael Pancurak won the hostessprize Jpr the evening. The clubwelcotfted a new member, Mrs.Ed war j Green. Others presentwere Mfa, Stanley Gorecki, Mrs.Henry Gorecki, Miss Juliet Brownand MlS£ Cecelia Gorecki. Theneit meeting will be held at thehome of Mrs Michael Pancurakin Linden.

Fele Arranged(Continued from Page One)

Kilichowskl. Richard Shelang,Robert ^Peters and Anton Na-trcjek.

The ballet will be Chopin's pret*ude, and Nocturne dancers willbe Arlene Torok and Theresauolubicka. The piano accompanistwill be Albert Weslowski.

Members and members' wivesand children are welcome tothis affair. Refreshments will beserved.

COSTUMESWe pride ourselves in having the largest

selection of Halloween Costumes in the

Haritan Kay areu,

• CLOWNS

• COWBOYS

• INDIANS

A

• WITCHES

• Southern Bell

• Old Faahion Girl

• Colonial Girl

t Toy Soldier

t Drum Major

• Black Cat

Many Other Characters to Choose From

— SIZES 4 TO M

More Display Space - More Butchers'increased Sales Enable Us to Decrease Prices"

STEAK(Porter Houteand Sirloin)

CHUCK(Bone In} '

Chopped Reef Products

FRESH BEEF LIVER

BLS. POT ROAST

CROSS RIB ROAST

ROUND (Top or Bottom) .

.b. 49c

ib, 3 5 c

lb. Mk

lb. 42c

... lb. 46c

... Ib. 52c

..... lb. 52c

MILK FED

VEAL CHOPS i(Shoulders)

VEAL Cutlet <(Full Size)

VEAL RUMPS

CALF LIVER

VEAL STEW

FRESH TRIPE

CORNED BRISKET

b 39c

lb. 48c

.. Ib. 98c

. lb. 19c

lb. 10c

.. lb. 52c

Ate Urged Ti,Bike Rales To Then Chik

ALL OUR OTHER BEEF, VEAL, LAMB AND PORK PRODUCTS PRICED AS REASONABLY

ZUMAN ABATTOIRU. S. Government Inspection No. 273

OAK TREE ROAD ONK MILE PAST ISELIN CENTER.Open Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, 8;00 A. M. Till 8:30 P. M.

Thursday and Friday 8:»0 A. M. Till 9:3* P. M.Saturday 8:tt« A. M Till 7:00 P. M.

At the Iwt meeting with Mrs.Caroline BablUky presiding, a re-port on th« rtcent cake sale wasgiven by Mrs. Martaret Stoneand Mrs. Julia Halkovich. It wasvoted to purthaae Ice cream forthe entire school in celebration ofHalloween.

Mrs. Patricia Nlemles reportedon the membership drive whichwill close at the November meet-ing. Winners of the club projertwere: Mrs. Ann Baulk. Mrs. BettyKallta, Mr*. John Medveta, Mrs.Pauline Zwollnski and Miss Kath-leen Hlub.

Mrs. Ann LaRocco won the darkhone priw and the kindergartenclass was awarded the attendanceprlK. Sister Mary Loretto closedthe meeting with a prayer.

CWV Posts(Continued from Page One)

guHt speaker, St. Elizabeth'sChurch.

The County Chapter Ritualteam was composed of Comman-der Julius Bonk; John Papp, NewJersey State Dept. and CountyChapter Judge Advocate: JohnHenry, New Jersey State Dept.First Vive Commander and Aideto the County Commander: JosephRosco, First Vice Commander,County Chapter: Joseph JackoTreasurer: Helen Grzankowski(Miss CWV), Acting Adjutant:Stephen Bonk, Trustee, Sgt. Jo-seph J. Sadowski CMH Post, PerthAmboy: Peter Cheche, CountySecond Vice Commander andActing Officer of the Day, fromMetuchen. •H'tfU

Honorary guests presented tothe assembly were CommanderPatrick D«8antu), Middlesex Coun-ty, VPW; Commander Ewald Hoff-man, Star Landing Post No. 2314.VPW, Carteret: John Bullwinkle,Metuche'n, Middlesex C o u n t yChapter, CWV, Hospital Chair-man; Commander Anthony Cloon-ey. St. Francis Post. CWV, Me-tuchen.

Installation ceremonies wereconcluded with t remembrance ofdeparted comrades and the reci-tation of the CWV poem "OurDead", by Andrew Sumutka. Ad-jutant. St. Jomes Post No. 615.

Following the affair a social washeld. Refreshments were served tothe veterans and their guests. Ar-rangements for the social werehandled by St. Ellas Post.

This event was noteworthy inthe Middlesex County Chapter,CWV. for it represented the firstattempt at mass installation ofpost officers.

CARTERET -"When your chil-dren geti bicycle*, Please tee to Itthat Uiey know«nu obey t in rulesof the road." Edward •Cw^kowikl,supertvfor of the Jtlriler SafelyPatrol urges the parents of Car-toret.

"With, the growing popularity ofthe bicycle for transportation, rec-reatlon |sn<1 health, It Is Importantthat s iff riding rules be Umghtour ycungstf-rs," Patrolman CzaJ-kowskL declared. "Parents whowould never think of letting theiryoiinn1 sons and daughters drivethe family car without adequateInstruction to Its mechanical op-prir.lon i»nd In traffic rules, willoftr-n turn a youngster loose on nbikpi without jiving him any In-struction in Us safe operation."

j'.itrnlman Cziijkowskl said thatpatents can be of great help bymaking sure the bike Is In goodmei'h*nlcal condition nnd that 11fits i\w child so that he will haveno: difficulty In handling it. Im-pret s upon the child that he mustIcivji well to the right-hand sideof tt,ip road and if he's riding in agroup, ride single file. He mustobey traffic lights and signs, and

walk the bik«> , „ , , ,W h e n tumiriR i,,. l h ".Proper signal aim i,,,'n o car close b*-hin,i •..to the middle i,r :;,'"'left turn.

"When ym, KiV(> ,to ride the blk,. • | N | |kowskl said, •• W(, S| | )

l

on condition ii l ! l t h" 'to carry pnssrni:n ,h is control of | i iHM k ,his view. Have him ,irt a rack oi bn^kot ;,Ing and kppp ( m i ll( ,h

not to shoot on! i,|stunt, in tram,- f•',',agRlnst doors of mui,, ,Ing suddenly '

Pati'olman E(hva1(,also urges parenis in ight riding, but if i;:,be surcthe bike h;,,front and a i x i \\U]^at the rear.

DAUGHTER To l i in,NJCARTERET-. A ,i ; i l | ,

born to Mr. and Mi, i,finger, 38 Hnvrls s i , , ,Perth Amboy Qernni H , J

Show Room Special

1949 PLYMOUT(NEW MODEL)

Sweetness & Light(Continued from Page One)

OUR SELECTION THIS YEAH IS THE BEST

EVERFOH—

Variety - Quality • AttnctivmnShop Enrly While Selection! A»

wvm. 9-ii DAILY;Cl#l |P NOON TUL

When you give to the Community

Chest you help people in your own

community. You make your town a

better place in which to live. Red

Feather services need money to

carry on. Everybody gives. Every-

body benefits.

I

generated solely because I hawexposed the Communist InfluenceIn behalf of their remaining awayfrom work. The word is spreadingfust—so I bid the men, theirwives and their families to keepUielr faith. They'll be free anyday now.

LEGAL NOTICEi

Special Deluxe Club (]oujDARK GREEN

RADIO - HEATER - SEAT COVERS

*1869.00FRANK VAN SYCKlE.lm15!) Ni-w Rriinswirk Avenue IVrlli Amln

OPEN EVENINGS

USE YOUR CREDITBIG SAVINGS w tiut

.NOTICKT*kt- N » l l ' ' f t l iut a | i ] i l l i i i l i i i n lui>-

l ir c i i ina i lr to ll'i) M a y u r uihl I'.iutn II• »r ill.- H I / I U U K I I (if I 'KKfr . ' l , Nt-tt J I Tnti>, In I r a n s f i T to S T B V ' K MAJliKO-VI(*S, t h e 1 ' lenary U B I H I I I ' l i t i s i in in-tIon I J c e n n e Nuni ln-r <'-li. luiiuritid MTKVK S Z K B H I J O P V , for i n v m -\nv* lut'ittcil a t Nil. -tt! KouHi'VcKA v e i i i i c , I ' a i t t r e t , N e w J c m e y ,

Objt'i.'iliinn, If any, HIKHIM IH- nunU'

Cl«rk nf ttie HUIOUKII tif Cuilcii 't,

Sa'MVK MAIlKOVIiWSO Knnl'x S U M IOarteret, N. J.

COMMUNITYCHEST

Help' WantedHostesses

f Ftrt 7

Waitretses

Short Order Cooks

Soda Dispensers. OJriiwfton

dishwashers

Weekends iw4 Bt«iidy

Pleewht Working

LADIES'

!COATS

MEN'SOATSm

M

DEMVtRS

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< • < . . • • > • • • •

OUR FIRSTIVERSARY mh

I

FREE PARKINGVor your convenience our modernPWtlng lot at the rear of the storesis re|4y lor your Use. Entrance onN«w Street.

' - 1 < «r

• M i ' * ' «

THREE GREAT DAYS OF CELEBRATION!$120 in PRIZE AWARDS THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY!

We're celebrating our 1st Birthday with values! Shop our stores during

the party—You'll see a Birthday Special each day at each store . . . Watch

our windows for money-saving values.

You can win one of the six $20 gift certificates, too! Just ask for your

prize coupon with each dollar purchase at any of the listed stores.

Vei l be looking forward to seeing you during our Anniversary Celebra-

tioo! Come in and save, save, save!

FREE PARKINGFor your convenience our modernparking lot at the. rear of the storesIs reedy for your use. Entrance onNew Street.

!-S

MAIN At KIDDIEUND ftt TOW, Inc.Toys kind Furnitut*

KAREN'SWomen's Apparel

f l f BOOT SHOP1 Wimin'*, Children's Shoes

MODERN MEN'S SHOPStyfai cw seen in "Esquire"

VIVIEN'S KIDDIE SH<

^T WOODBRIDGE'S NEW, MODERN CENTER - 9 9 - 1 0 5 MAIN STR£ET.t WOOjDBRIDGE, N. J.

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PAGE SI*

f{sx Sophie VurciniakttiOrt.'JV fcrllridnl

Mis1; Sophie Mfll-

ak. rlniii:hiii i[ Mr and Mrs

I Marriniuk. Hi:: Hhiirol Street.

(K'.lnbiM :'!i us I ho date of

!P In ,I"l,n M Nledbnlft,

1 of Ml and Mrs Michnol NIH-

156 I.ytid S l iwt . Perth Am-

f. Thr fi'i'duiuiy will take place

the Holy fnmily (,'lmrrh here

; 4 P , M

,&> hnnur »f In-! upprnftfthltiKi IK |M I'iprctlvi" bride

I given n .SIKI«'CI lit thr Ukialn-i.n H win arranged hyMis'; Drli IIVS Mnrclniak

! Miss l'n:ii Alhiin '

FRTDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1949 IET

I Honor Otto Johnson ;On //r« «2nrf Birthday

i • i

j CARTERET--In toonor of hisWrthdny, O|to Johnson, 7 j

USMR Employes Vote to Stay on Strike by Slim Margin

Christopher Street was given a:party at his home. His daughters.,Mrs. Bernard Raymond and Mrs.Hlldu Oeronomnus arranged theaffair.

OunsU were Ivar Frwisen, Mr.and Mrs Bernard Raymond andMlsa Dorothy Raymond. Mr. andMrs B O Raymond, Jr., and<!auiiht,er, Dlnnne. Mr. and MrsReginald Johnson afid. daughters,.Inyrr and Janlnand Peter Lydon

Brnnnan. Tobln urne Petirialfarm aid to nvert a slump.

Miss Anna Ference WedsOhio Resident at Sacred Heart

1 s t A MNIVI: K S A11V (New Bldg.) I"/<•// You II hat Vm <,onmt Do" I

THURS. ft(j(V nrr Every Shirt

OCT. 20 * 4 _ _ ln The Store IFRIDAYOCT. 21 | n

Sweater IStore \

SATURDAY ftAf^ nrr Every JacketOCT. 22

' . ^

In The Store |

IIHEHS SHOP

these wer* the scenes Wednes-day durinn the voting by U. 8.Metals Reflnlnf Company em-ployed in Cartertt on the ques-tlon of returnlnj to work. Bythe sliin marfln of It vote*, thestriken voted to continue thewalkout. When the «*te w»«finally c o u n t e d WednesdaynUht, 488 employe* hadfoted Infavor of rotnlnulni the strikeand i',i cast ballots to return t«work.

CARTERET Bncred HeartChurch wns thr scene of the wed-ding Saturday of MIM Anna MarieFnenee, daughter of Mr. andMrs Andrew Ferrnce, 14 Charlei.Street, to O<WRR Pfender, son ofMi ami Mrs. Charlps Pfender,Pnlnnci, Ohio Rpv l,. J. Petrlck,pnstnr of the church, performedthr rlniihlo-rlriR rrrpmony.

Thr bride, escorted by herfnthoi, was attired In a White("hnntllly luce over satin gown.princess stylo. hovinR a mandarin•ollnr Her flngertlp-length veil OfIllusion was arranged from acrown of rhlnestonc and she car-ried white roses and lilies of thevalley

Miss Cecelia Ference, as hersister's maid of honor, was gownedIn cold brocaded sAtln, a match-ing sweetheart crown attached toa shoulder veil and she carriedbrown pompons.

The brde's brother, Jtohn Fe-rence, served as beat man.

Upon their return from a wwi-ding trip to Nashville, Tenn.. the

John Tryba and his Bride areon a Honeymoon Trip in Miami

I'arkiiiK Rear—Friday <>P«-n Till » |

103 MAIN STREETWOODBRIDGEN n l til WimlmirMrM

f.'AltTPUKT Miss CftL'mellaIliimco. diiimhler of Mr. and Mrs.Prank Uomeu, 335 Ejtn Street,

| Perth Amboy. became the bride ofi John Tryba. son ol Mrs. Annu

Tryba. 38 Fitch Street, this bor-ounr\ in tlio Holy Rowry Church,Pcrtli Ambny, at 3 P;,ty. Sunday.

Heater Range on

the Market!

ft

Special Offerl

deluxe Top Lamp andAluminum Griddle

included

Range Price. . . $199.50Lamp Price . . . 7.50Griddle Price . . 5.00

Total Cost $212.00

Yes, it's a $212.00Value for Only

$199,501

Yes, here's the greatest range value in "many-a-year!"This comptct, complete 30" wide BENGAL is really"Ibrte-rangts-iuont" for ii COOKS, BAKES andHEATS at the >am« time! Speedy, efficient heater pro-vides i steady flow of warm air to heat your kitchen...at low cost! It's "big-range" features include aspacititt 16' x 20" x 14' oven . . . large center cooktop . . . deep "slide-out" broiler . . . automatic ovenheu control and top burner lighting • • • automatic-stop, non-tilt oven racks . . , ma porcelain enamelled,folding coveralls.

Come in TODAY and see this ALL-N EW, ALL-GASBENGAL kitchen heater. Compare it with heaterrange* that sell at a much higher price and you'll agreethat it'* the "t*ngt buy of this year and mattj-a-yiar!"

Ruv. Candito Cecenne performedihc iloiiblp-riiit! ceremony.

The bride, Kiven in marriage byher father, was attired ln a white;;atin gown designed with an Illu-sion neckline and scalloped yoke,and a scalloped skirt trimmedwith bugle beads extending Intoa long train. Her flngertlp-lengthFrench illusion veil was drapedfrom a tiara of seed pearls andshe caviled a white prayer bookadorned with white orchids.

Mrs. Phyllis Sabo of Perth Am-boy served as the matron of honor..She wore a rose faille tafleta gownwith & Peter Pan scalloped col-lar, and a full gored skirt. Herheadpiece was made of flusn flow-ers and she carried pink and bluefleur d'amour.

Emll Sklba was best man forthe bridegroom.

Mr. and Mrs. Tryba will visitMiami. Fla., on their wedding tripand upon reutm will reside onElm Street, Perth Amboy. F,prtraveling, the bride wore a coral•suit with navy blue accessoriesand had an orchid corsage.

Dig BusinessLarge corporations usually mike

profits at a lower rate than smalloneB, but they also lose money ata lower rate.

Ml I

•ArtlUbb lot «M with

BABICS FURNITUREif. U* n p* I W *•* • HOUSE1 QUALITY PlJ«^ITOilB ? APPLIANCES - RADIOS - TELEVISION

ROOSEVELT CARTERET »-5

These Shirts

Have Their Own

Fullbacks

No matter what "signals"you call, you'll always gainin comfort with the fullback in all Manhattan andVan Heusen shirts.

It's annoying to wear ashirt that doesn't give youfreedom of movement . . .you'll like the way theseshirts fit.

In new Fall shades, collarstyles you like, they're formen who want to look wellat the right price,

$3.25 to $3.95

SMITH H»H» co* \m

PERTH AMBOY

DANCEEvery Friday Night

St. Cecelia's Recreation Center

OAK TREE ROAD, ISELIN, N. J.

Music by Jimmy (look Admission 50c

niwlywrds will rr.S|,i,land, Ohio. For trbrldp chose a white i„,,and white dress, bniwrles and a norsagp n( w

The brln>, a Hrnduntteret High School, wasby Yardlny's In Rnlmnv

band, a Kradnato of M(Pa.) HlRh Srhnnl. Myears In dip U. S. ArmyHe Is now attnidlnnCleveland.

H i I :, • ,

'] Hi (

I ' " 1 ^ . • r -1 III', ,..; ,

Illlc- ,,,,,..

'' Hi f \ ,

Aii r ^

mil,- -.

FRIDAY TO SUNDAYOCTOBER 21 TO ZS ,

2 ThrillingAdvenlure Future*

Maria MonUtTurhan Bty

"BOMBAY CLIPPER"

— Plus —

John Warm•I COVER TWE WAR"

Extra!Sat. and San. Matinee

S Cartoonsand Comndjr

4 BIG DAYS-OCTOBER 21-22-23-2WLUNFORGETTABLE! GRIPPING! UNCENSORED!

FROM SfCRSLGOVlT HIES

THIS IS YOUK STORY-BK SURE TO SEK IT'.

First I'erlh Amboy Showlns!

CRESCENT THEATRE PERTHAMBOY

RITZ THEATREI'hniir

ClirirrrtM-SMO

WASHINGTON AVKNIIK, CARTGKKT, N. J.w ST.VKTS A r ; r M,

SUNDAY AND MONDAY, OCTOBER 23 AND 24William Elliot Adrian Booth - Forrest Tucker

"THE LAST BANDIT"—Also-

"STREETS OK SAN FRANCISCO"Robert Armstrong - Mae Clarke - Gary Or»y

MONDAY—HONEY IKK DINNERWARE TO THE LADIESTUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, OCTOBER ZS, 2», tl

Dennis Morgan - Dorb !>.<y - Jack Canon"IT'S A GREAT FEELING"

—Also—"A WOMAN'S SECRET"

Maureen O'Hara^Melvyn Douglas - Gloria (ir»harptTUESDAY—SPECIAL!!

SI!) 19-Piece Waterless lookware SetGiven Away FREE!!

Plus 9 Consolation PrizesWinners Must Be Present

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28 AND 29Wayne Morris - Janls Paife - Bruce Bennett

"THE YOUNGER BROTHERS"—Also—

. "NIGHT UNTO NIGHT "Ronald Reagan - Viveci Llndfoni

Saturday Matinee: Kiddie Kir toon ShowSaturday—First Piece of the Swedish Stylo

^ Cut Glass Given—Z Pieces!!!

FORDSPOBD8, N. J - P. A. 4-Utt

TODAY TIUU! S.

James Caxnrv, Virgini,, M , . M

Edtnonri O'Hrim"WHITE HEAT"

~- also —Pfnny Slnnltton. Arthur I , i ,

"BI-ONDIF. HITS | ) | |JACKPOT"

3 Saturdny Mathirc ^CInlnr Cirtonni O

SUNDAY THRU T^^;sll^^

Dana Andrews, MirU r l l l r n

.Stephen MrNallv"SWORD IN THE D E s n c r

— also —Ctreiorr Peck, AVH (inrilun

Mflvyn DomUs"THE GREAT SlNNKic

BOYS AND r.lRi.S'Get Ready to Attrnri <>,,,Gifantic Halinwrrn r.uii

8aturtlay Mating Ortohn >m

25 Valuable Prim >;,awarded for

Best Dretnttt (nslumisFunniest Cnntuinrv

Moot Original (nstumrsa|no Games and (ontrsu

In Addition to Our Krnil.uShow

THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND

SATURDAY

"THE GREAT GAT8BY"

with Alan I .add

and

"STAMPEDE"with Rod Cameron, Gale Storm

SUNDAY AND MONDAY

"IT'S A GREAT

FEELING"

with Dennis Morfan, Doris Day,

Jack Carson

and

"THE BIG STEAL"with Robert Mlfchum. Jane

Greer. Win. Bendti

NOW IT'S EASY TO HAVEA MODERN KITCHEN

lit I urr you plan your new kitchenbe sure to see the new, completeMORGAN caUlonof kitchen cabi-net* . . . filled to the brim withhundreds of practical sugfestluiu.

Woodbridge Lumber Co.BUILDING MATERIAL STORE

Tel. WOod. 8-0125

WOOOBBIDGE, N, J*

TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY

"THE STRANGERMRS. CRANE"

with Marjorlc Lori,Robert Sbayne

and

"THE RED MENACE"

A Walter RenTheatre

STARTS FRIim

DanaMarta I oren

Stephen MrN,t|h"SWORD IN THh

DESERT"

••'rrd

FATHER WAS \FUU/BAtK

VAUDEVILLEIS BACK TODAY

ONE DAY ONLY!

7 - BIG ACTS - 7- PLUS ON 8CREEN -

"ALIMONY'with

Martha ,Vlckfr«-John FU,.I

Remember Every Thursday

VAUDEVILLEAT THE MAJESTIC!

A WalterTheatre

i s"RED STALMON IN

THE ROCKIKS"W l l k A r < b " r I ' • »" '

STATE THEATREWOODMUDGE. N. J

TODAY THRU SATURDAYAlan LADD - Betty FIELD in

"THE GREAT GATSBY"Plus

Maureen O'HARA • Melvyn DOUGLAS in"A WOMAN'S SECRET"

SUNDAY THRU TUESDAY

.Bud ABBOTT - Lou COSTELLO in

"MEET THE KILLER"Plus

George RAFT • Nina FOCH In"JOHNNY ALLEGRO"

WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAYlames CAGNEY In "WHITE HEAT'

ISELIN THEATREISELIN, N.L__ . PHONE ME-6-127•'

SATURDAY II DAY)IUrMII)»nd - Barbara Stanwyck •"

"CALIFORNIA" technicolor

soUarel * ittrfitn Uuf h tilt

•PAEDON US"KJdi! Com4> 9*e«*n&*rto» at Matinee

• ptu* C«l»r CartooiwSUNDAY ANO MONDAY

WKwarti • Linda Darnell InH HURRICANR"

^to4HU"8OBN1 Of THE CRIME

wife Van Johnson

TXJE«PAf AND WBDNE8DAY

N1TRS

Page 7: With The Ntm! arterrt - DigiFind-ItWith The Ntm! • VI v(ri(ie AH The Activities arterrt |)f,:,lf Town With Tour l [nrne-Town The Urgeft And Beat Shaft Aa S«nic«« tn The Are* Art

orials:-The Communitts Art Ctnvicttd

MR. iNSltiE AND MR. OUTSIDE

1,,-VP that every loyal American will" , the knowledge tha t justice has"mjrht up with 11 of the top Com-

. ' ^ i r r s i n ' t he country. Last week,,,f the longest trials In legal his-

I,,v were convicted by a jury on,, bring members of a conspiracy

7',iM)iit the destruction of the ga>-!, ,f uir United States by force and

oining as It did while we are en-rxposing the Communist and

„ , influences in a large labor union,,',,, (>r this trial are heartening In-,, .,,,1,,-at.ps the awareness of our law'..,,ni officials to the dangers of un-'., (,nn,unlsm; it proves the strength, ,,,,. of our court system; It fur-

„"','! ,i'iro tha t we intend to preserve',,,',,ity of the principles upon Whichl",.,uintry was founded.

nmunists, frantic in their defeat,,n their blasphemous attacks, principles and upon the meth-i,-li a free people give expression

irII, AII during the trial they attacked" ',,.,,-otd R. Medina with the most

ni.ruagp and behavior in the hope oficlay, confusion and possibly aT()() much credit cannot be given

,, Medina for his unwavering deter-,, ' to conduct a fair trial, nor tov which patiently listened to and

,lf,i ',!„. voluminous testimony produced

r

linr

both

Now, of course, the Communtota are at-tempting to make martyrs of themtelves. •They alleged, entirely without foundation,that they were denied a fair trial and shouttheir defiance of authority. We wonder howmany of them recall the trials under Com-munistic methods of the Czechoslovakspriests, and we wonder if they have takenthe time to compare American and Com-munistic notions of fair trials. We wonder,too, if they would prefer to have been triedaccording to the Moscow rules rather thanaccording to democratic rules. We wonderhow long thpy would be permitted tobadger, insult and revile a judge In Russiawhich they profess to hold up as an ex-ample of tht ultimate in government.

The answer is, of course, that they wouldhave been shot in Russia before they hadthe opportunity to utter a second insult—and thf chances are they would have beenshot if they remained silent, just so longas they were accused of any crime of criti-cism against sorerMgn authority as estab-lished by Stalin

AH we can say is that if they prefer theirfate to be held by a Russian court, wecertainly would not wish to deprive themof tht pleasure. We soYnetimes think thatthe most convincing evidence of theirhypocrisy Is their practice of Communismwhere they are protected by a Bill of Rights,rather thin in Russia where Justice Is ad-ministered out of the business end of a rifle.

Avoiding And Caring Colds

Opinions of OthersLKT'ft GO FISSION

All you nrfd la * little |a<1«rt.llfd i O i l e r CinmUr You ran

buy them now it II ir drptrtmentitorr for oftlv 154.50. Carry Itaround with you on picnics.walks, mayt* pvfn to work, Whoknows wh*rr t uranium todi> l«llkfly to turn up? Tlw O l i r r »-lllitart ticking whpn»v<T you ap-prMch anrililnii radlo-artlvr.And Unrle Sam nlTets tlflOOO rr-»«rd for fvwv uranium strike.

Uortllo A im should hive haddne of thr*e counters arid thetrek tram r»m to ilrliPB mtjluhave been much enilri But for-tune muklnii twist be in muchfaster to tir attractive In theatomic a«e The uranium rushwill Imve to be wnithed by HieCity Streets Department nrt(1 thfutilities. Wlio linowi where thai*tlrkers will lure flulon trailers l>dlaslrm? We have a dismal feel-Inn. hnwrvcr. the OHgeT counterwill never take the place ot th*radio quiz show! -- St. 1-ouU(•lobe-Democrat

vitality, no real iwanlnc TIMpart will defend and pnwrvt OHby frustrating the only potttt*present danier of MRrmtatOB. ,

Twelve nation* are now Mundtogether alont a peace front. Uwill betoine * war front In What-ever nbur an aijrMsor aatauluus. Let us hot delmtt ourtelTMthat, the treaty do« not bind uito sin to war If any other itgna*lory tx Mucked It doe) Wt can-not «vRde thut without dlnhonor.Nor can »r rxpwt dial If at-gresslon Is attempted, It will beon any »mle but the mlglitlwLIt will tonif only when the at-tacking power Is sure It has thtffliie, the mtitht to conquer us aD_

We have no* wbwrlbfd In fullfaith. and with o'ir eyes open, to« Iitct «f *) lorn sought l o If*nore that we are dUxem of UMworld. Our full acceptance ofitiat I'ltlr.rnshlp lives bettrtpromise than mankind hat everhad before when It* »t tU«m«used those hopeful phraaet—"toestablish freedom from a f i m -aton," " to promote and preaervipeace " Denver Port.

wnuifl not discourage anybody whohr has discovered a cure for the

.in (old, but, so far as science Is con-(i, there Is not yet any vaccine or

In; that will prevent an individual from,ime time or other, "catching cold."

t the be3t defense for the individual,Inus to prevent colds, Is to avoid thosei have one, dress warmly and avoid be-

ig chilled or wet, eat In good appetite,nough fresh air, exercise and rest.course, the above, rules constitute

,.d advice, whether one wants to dodgemid or not. .They represent common; applied to t i l l Job of living well. The:r will tend to prttent one from get-sickness of any kind. About all that

not help prevent is an accident or

the unexpected visit of an unwelcome

relative,The average person la apt to overlook

the possible serious consequences of theordinary cold. If taken In hand, a slightcold may not be dangerous but, if neg'lected, can develop Into a more seriousmalady. The experts suggest, if you get acold:

(1) Don't hesitate to take plenty of restand, if' at all possible, stay in bed.

(2) Eat rather lightly and drink plentyof fluids.

(3) Avoid mingling In crowds and, asnearly M possible, stay in an even tempera-ture. By keeping away from others, youalso protect them.

(4) If the cold continues and you de-velop fever, call your doctor, there may besome other cause for the fever.

Under the Capitol DomeBy J. Jisepi Grtbblis

Mortgage on Your Future Incomeof money owed by New Jer- Here's how

debt in New

S,iirts were noted today by the Newf.,,s,

is ^ SFrom 1939, through the war years,

.rental debt In New Jersey was onWne. Since the war, it has been m-

s this debt soan upward, the mortgageNew Jers^r taxpayer's income in-

The proposals

^

3Ute d e b t . , 0 0 —on the ballota e the

^ ^ l l t u t i o n s ;

^ ^ # 2 ; $105 miUlon for a bonus to

WorkI War II J c t ? J J s ^ m o n f hoU8lng>

redeveloPmeht.

Safe Hunting1 season for gbod.hunting is about to

Unless 1949 is an exception to pre-yi-ars, the newspapers will report

Nfius instances involving the wound-111 killing of hunters by accident.

[early every community in the nation,"dint; this municipality, has, at one'" another, experienced the sense ofun.-f that comes from a tragedy in

ll!|i- which, In the absence of human'1(Hilit have been avoided. Despite the

I('HI realization that flrearm$ are dan-luunan beings often take a chance

P >'v *> doing, take the life of somebody

seen several collections of safetyto ifftrn hunters of danger.

set otii by the Conservationof the fttate of New York -—

-For OthersWhen afield, hunting birds, keep

Q{ y o u r companion

TRENTON—New Jersey's closegubernatorial election will verylikely be decided In the heavyDemocratic roting precincts ofHudson County.

The repective campaigns ofOovernor Alfred E. Drlscoll, Re-publican, and State SenatorElmer H. Wene, Vineland Demo-crat, will be centered In all thepapulous areas of North Jerseyduring the final dais of the cam-paign ahead Both candidateshave- their eyes on HudsonCounty where anything canhappen.

Back1 ,on November 7, 1941,Wehe, an unknown, carriedAtlantic, Burlington, Camden,Cape May, Cumberland, Hudson,Mercer, Middlesex, Salem andWarren Counties In his race forthe United States Senate withH. Alexander Smith, of Prince-ton, as his opponent. He lost theelection by 2S.891 votes.

On November 5, 1958, Gover-nor Alfred E. Drfecoll sweptthrough the State carrying 19of the 21 counties of New Jersey,over Judge Lewis G. Hansen, ofJersey City. Drlscoll won thegubernatorial election by a plu-rality of 221,418, carrying all butHudson and Middlesex Counties.

Democrats are claiming a100,000 majority for Wene inHudson County this year be-cause the forces of former MayorFrank Hague and present MayorJohn Kenny, of Jersey City, are.supporting him and holding ral-lies In his honor. Democraticvoters of Hudson gave Wene an84.121 plurality when lie ran forthe United States Senate in 1944,and provided Hansen with uplurality of «K>.7L9 in 1946.

Republicans are ready to ad-mit Wene will carry most of theSouth Jersey counties but ve-hemently deny any huge plu-rality will be given him by Hud-son County voters. They insistthe 111 feeling between Kennyand Hague will i cut dawn theusual Democratic pluralities.They also claim the heavy Re-publican vote for Governor Dris-coll in Bergen, Essex, Union.Pasaalc and Monis Counties will

more than offset the tally forWene in Hudson County and therural areas of the State. Becauseof his promotion of anti-dls-criminiition laws, Governor Drls-coll also expects a large percent-age of the Negro vote In NewJersey, .sufficient perhaps toswing the election in his favor.

Both Republicans and Demo-crats agree that the future his-tory of New Jersey Is being writ-ten on the streets of Jersey City,Bayonne, Hoboken, and thesmaller Hudson County munici-palities.

MONEY;-State officials aremandinn more money to operatetheU- departments next year al-though the State Government Ispartially operating op borrowedfunds this year.

State governmental coats thisyear reached $159,532,397 andIn order to have the money onhand, $17,000,000 was borrowedfrom State highway funds madeup of gasoline taxes and motorvehicle fee's. Next year some ofthe money must be paid back toprevent Federal penalties Im-posed when road funds are takenfor purposes other than roadbuilding.

Salary Increases, new posi-tions, increases for repairs andmaintenance, new cars andequipment, extraordinary incre-ments, traveling expenses, arelisted by State officials in theirnew budgets as essentials. TheLegislature has even asked foran increase of $23,575. IncludedIn which are planned increasesin saluries for employees,

The Civil Service Commissionhas asked for more funds total-ing $60,642, The Department ofAgriculture wants $35,744.08more next year, while the De-partment of Banking and Insur-ance is asking for a boost of$54,703.09 next year.

Instead of $50,000 next yearthe State Department of Healthwants $100,000 to carry out Itsmosquito control program. Anadditional $22,000 Is wanted tocarry out th« department's alco-holism piQgram, and a, boost,ot

$9,215 is requested for rabiescontrol. Altogether, tht depart-ment wanU »105,»5e.«8 in addi-tional funds.

STATE HOUSE :~«ew Jersey'sState House Is having Its facelifted and by the time the 1950Legislature convenes In Januarywill be as bright as a jewel.

Painters are swarming overthe old historic structure, givinga grayish white texture to Itsusually drab walls When com-pleted the State Capitol will re-semble the bright new buildingpictured on postal cards.

Harry 8. Walsh, Superintend-ent of State Buildings, plannedthe project, and seven paintersare carrying out the task. All areState employees, Leon Seamanis foreman on the Job and thepainters include Jack White,Martin Mayer, Lou Rose, BertPlerson, Joe (labels and JohnSlnco.

PARTNKRS IN PEACE CAU8RTo Mtnlilisli (reedom from as-

Bipsslon1 and to "promote and TOWN HAS A MIUJONpreserve pence" ate phravn that PEHKYOPOUS. Pa.--Ambltlotttlime after lime have rung arrow p |BIl s tl, sp,,lu) Ul( , 2 310,000 will-thr world like (real solemn bellv ^ l h p tawn by ft , 0 l l M r r M |dentonly lo be silenced by the roar of M r s Mftry m]er rnl[fti oj phlla-gum and bombs In our own time. ( 1e lp | lia i „„„, ^fn w o l K«i Oui bytwo world warn have given them t spw>lBl r l n w n V committee afterboth a familiar and hollow sound. ft y f 8 1 o t sUl ( ly T h e m ( ) n e | w o u l ( iYet when President Truman b(. x p f n , m t h 1 , ; MiiraUon oen-used them aualn. after prorlal.n- «,,. MSO.0OO: municipal bulkUni,Inn the north Atlantic security nso.000 sewage disposal andtreaty In full fovce and effect, he w , l t e l <||,|nbution system. »««,-Tolced the hope thnt never dies 000: streets and highway*. IMout among men, in spite ofthe l l I ( f l l l l ( m , , , 0 0 o 0 : s h 4 d ,heart-!ilckne,« of long deferment. Mu , p,,,.kv , l g o O o , T n r t m M 0 |

We have done what we had lo the will specified thai hall th»do, No church belh ran*, no can- money be used for permanent Im-non were fired, when Truman's provements and half for upkeep,pen sealed te final step. Yet theoccasion ranked with the most n n n n u c i r i i a n n imomentous In our history. Once ulWD N \J ( > l B O U S

again Americans have pledsed NEW HOLLAND.their lives, their fortunes and 3 0° nellH>bor5 « » l n ^their sacred honor In defense of °>> «» f«™ °f **i»M Noll and IBpeace, with .freedom, under law. ^'™U h n u " ™\l the 4«.by-»

_ . . . . . , foot barn which wti destroyed by«or tha first time, we have fl j , , T h ^ ,

HIGHWAY OPENINGS:—Ac-cident hazards at openings ofsafety center Islands on Statehighways and congestion causedby the Insufficient operation oftraffic lights are receiving thespecial attention of State high-way officials.

To lessen the dangers of fa-talities, Governor Drlscoll hascalled upon State Highway Com-missioner Spencer Miller. Jr.,Attorney General Theodore D.Parsons, Motor Vehicle DirectorArthur W. Magee and State Po-lice Superintendent Charles M.Schoeffel to study necessaryphysical changes in he designof State routes.

The safety Island cross-oversare now the ateas of great po-tential dangers and the desiredgoal is to close a large percent-age of such Junctions. GovernorDrlscoll recently escaped serious

(Continued on Page 8)

made In peacetime a militaryalliance with Europe. The step , _ , „„ . .mm counter to the advice of R y s l e m t 0 « m _ ^ « . . . _both Washington and Jeffersonurged upon the Infant United HARD I.IICK CHAMP8Utes. Yet were either alive to- zioN, til—While hl» right »rmday, he would have signed with was still In a cait, Qlenn Taylor,no more reluctance than Mr. Tru- 9. fell and broke his left arm. As Ifman. For twice since their days u,at wasn't hard luck enough forWP nave been forced Into war- a nine-year-old boy, Glenn'* eTMtime alliances, and no amount werp Injured when a playmtUof cynicism can alter the fact threw dirt in his fac&.that we had to RO in for our own - - --.•—.defense.

That sgain la the dominantfact. The Atlantic Pact is to "es-tablish freedom from aggression."and it was aggression that forcedus into two world wars. It is to"promote and preserve peace."

• and that Is Impossible unless thethreat of aggrewlon Is first re-moved.

The President stntrd that thetreaty Is "within the frameworkof the Unltel Nations." It Is mnr«than that, for so long as success-ful International Intimidationcan go on. backed as It Is by thecontinuous threat of war, theUnited Nations has no safety, no

Carteret PressPublished by Cwteret Pre«

Telephone C»rt»t»t I-MMotrrict)

TO WaakllfUk An., flftvler*4. Hi i,Urt. riiarlvx K Ortjiary IMItot

Plnii»» K. OregorrMpyir [ionrnbltiin .i.Mports

SuhKiilptlun. |l.»0 PIT TtarKiuprr.l ai •tt-a».| c l i u maltar

Ju'c t, nt\, xl t'Hrunt, N. J., Pottuin.i', iimltr Hit KH • ' kanh I,1STS

Right InsurancePaus OFFwith CASHNO OBLIGATION

^^Wki^^^^^^^*™**^™1^^^^^^^^^^ _ ^ i n r v i r V i

97 MAIN STREET

GLAMOR GIRLS By DonFlowers

Woodbridge National opened 61% MOKE

special checking accounts THIS September

, , , In loading, never point a gun in thedirection of your companion,

(4) In climbing over stone walls andfences, first break or unload your gun,

(5) A bird quartering to the right in thevicinity of your hunting companion shouldnever be fired on by a hunter dn the ex-treme left and vice versa.

(6) Never leave a loadedagainst a tree or lying on thea dog may get at it.

(7) Always keepfrom your companiontalk.

(a) In handing a1. be sure It is u

in the your

E taking a' i ' y » i

*" '" take to'Uame:,;^ii'ver cf

Mil

C4

and wood- tt JM

inrlght oC the

at the

Compared/with September, 1948, the num-ber of no-minlmum balance checking ac-counts opened at the Woodbridge NationalBank last month was 64% greiter. Econ-omy Is largely responsible for this big In-crease. It costs less to write a check nowthat money orders range from 10c to 35ceach. AH you pay at the Woodbridge Na-tional U only 10c a check for a book of 10checks. Start your INSURED account thisweek With any amount; maintain any con-venient balance. 1M MAIN

Open Fridays 4 to 6 P. M.

RIDGE NATIONAL BANKiw^l^l^c.-opei?t|pn!^icorrect

•wtoMi

HBMBEB H0DI5KAL RISIRHVi IVITfeM

Page 8: With The Ntm! arterrt - DigiFind-ItWith The Ntm! • VI v(ri(ie AH The Activities arterrt |)f,:,lf Town With Tour l [nrne-Town The Urgeft And Beat Shaft Aa S«nic«« tn The Are* Art

EIGHT FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1940

7

'% ;

Famous HALL CHINA

DINNERWARE

16-PieceStarter Set with

card

&**

«° ' .«<• '

SAVE OVER 40%16-p!ece starter set consists of 4 plates, 4 cups,

4 saucers and 4 dessert dishes-only $3.99! Buy

now for gifts! You'll be amoied at the beauty

and quality! Act now! limited time only!

r OPEN FRIDAYS UNTIL 9 P. M.

Ocean Spray Cranberry SauceChicken of the Sea Tuna FishDel Monte Tomato SauceLibby s Tomato Juke

Spedol forOne Week!

ol for One Week!Label, 7-ox. con

Special forOne Week!

Special 'forOne Week!

Apple Juice M 0 T I U, 19cOrange Juice «»dI 21cBlended Juice 2 «?,3kPrune Juice lgN1T h... 27cTomato Juice SS.110cV et v.«.iabb 9 u*i. ^ »

'O Juic* CocLlail *• cant * * J WIDEAL FANCY

Tomato Soup 3 ' ! " 25cGiant Peas "r 19cC o r n shl,M0NTE

^ T T ^ I . *» 1 7 c

Tomatoes Xt1" 2 "2 21cSweet Potatoes ' - 1 8 cNiblets Corn 2 r 33cC 4*. • •«« Hurtf YtgriMfehf *• iwVi-oi. T T ^w U l i p Atp«r«f%tt, Tomato ' cum *»«JW

Tomato Soup S S I 10cSoup Mix i i r s 3 X 32cRice Z1T% X 20cSundaette;ih;:,.26;:;.27cHAU MARK IO-OI. pkg.

Pre-Cooked Beans 19cGravymaster L" 15c

Nabisco Ritz Pt, 32cNAIISCO

Shredded Wheat1;: 16cKrispy Crackers^ '25c

Educator Crax £ 27cIDUCATOIt

Tropical Creams '£'" 29cKEE81EH

Cocoonut Wafers 1! 35cC i d e ^Corn Soya

KiU0<w.U, 15cKeebler's

Town HouseCrackers X

Armour'sChopped Ham

47c'12-01,van

Armour'sCorned BeefHash 'ST 31c

* LJnicyMarshmallows

*w

CAMMU flilt-«. pkg 3 I CMarshmallows

M i l k Evapirolid 2 m

Spaghetti S ^ ^ / i :Gold Oust """St* 19cMcukies

Cream White ihtTl 28cCream White "STl 75cCodfish EE"

E?1

'tr 25cOld English Wax'? 39c3-ln-lOil T.19C

X 18cCodfish Cakesrt:120cUKHNUT 5ttuio.it

Baby Foods 104;: 93cJr Foods S 3 6 7.T 83cPopping Corn XJ™ 18cFlako PIE CRU5T a.., Fk, 16cFlakorn "*£ 17c

All-Bran KEUOOO1pk(. 16c

Asco Coffee £ 46c NTRicher blend. Ground fresh to order,

Wmcrest «*«*£, 42c ' . TLighter bodied. Vigorous flavor.

Ideal Coffee '"Zfi? 55cHeavy bodied. Tops them al l !

Cloridge Franks '^ 41cPrestoCAKI Floul ,** Pk, 39cVanilla MC0 Exlro^ 29c

Swift'sPREM

39c12'M. Mil

LummisPeanut Butter

'IT 33c

IDEALDog Food2 ' r 25c

BAB-0Cleanserl4~ 12ccan l i rV .

Glendale Club Cheese Food ',£ 25c £ 79cMarvelous flavor. Spreads, slices, melt s perfectly. Buy the economical 2-Ib. box.

Asco Margarine £ 25c f Domestic Swiss Cheese *• 59cDel Rich Margarine Z 31c | Aged Cheddar Cheese fc 69c

I b i Cheese * 65cMaenster Cheese MScAmerlodf Cheese Cota 49cMild Colored Cheese * 49c

Kraft Verveeta £ 29cSnapp/ Cheese *£t*> 20cgg

tggsltd Carton l l 12 / 7 C

•rod* I Carl*. « U 7 1 C

•> " i "

Fancy Eating

Apples 5 *£ 29cToday's best apple value! Featured at all Acmes.

Tomatoes Foncybox

Selected

Perfect slicing. Ijnmatchable for quality and value! At all Acmes!

Iceberg Letkice'r 15cFancy crisp California. Serve a tasty salad with your meal.

Fresh Green Broccoli ^ 19cFancy Red Beets T

FZ ^ 5jcCalifornia Carrots 2 bunch« 19cFancy Tokay Grapes 2 »>.. 19c

The Toast of the Town!

Supreme White

Bread';::;NOW—the best bread in the best wrapper—sanitary moistureproof

Hn!O fT1 OA ' r e 5 h e r - t r V ° l o a f foday! Keep your bread billdown the Acme way!

Louisiana Crunch Ring 45c• Virjmlo Lee, Mode wllh f,esh orongei. T,y one, you'll be delighted

Cinnamon Struessel Loaf 25cV.rgmio Lee. Try this coffee cake toasted for a real treat At all Acmes

Cherry-Filled Buns T1™ ft 25cVrrginia Lee Fruit Stollens2,« 39cFiFbert Layer Cake VI*OINI* -« S r

Golden Cocoanut Bar Coke 39cSupreme Asst Rolls4 HZX \ 5c

Skinned

m

d

HAMS2^r

'WhofcorShort Half)

5 0 W' dinner tonUjht!

"»• 35cRolls »57C

*49c* 6 9 c

lUi.ZVc

Chiffon Lux Flakes

.«.„ ,...+,tic

Lifebuoy

IMMJOY ittSwan 'Soap3 5KT 25c

CARTFT'ivr ,.,

Capitol i).

have be«,

•Tr

I i , |

14

on Rdut,. it ruck pnk rd it,, ,,,,'_a road opi>niiM> ,.,'

prevent a hond , „ ! " , ! ,Strenuous m,i,.,

to alteration, m ,1 „but tn keen i , ; ,n^H m s 8 or n , l l k ,niV|il

' I V M I , . , , |[lllll'Cl ,,

il lvT h e lmntl <«ivi;,, 1(

l i g h t s , when fnvuiina few locnl mliiO.ii „to net across n ,„,,,rftduced by so |,,., ,,flc capacity of n .,,,,asserted.

HOME WORKNew Jersey wurk | ,any similar ,,,-,„ , ';tflalms Miss i,,,,,,-,, ,'te&cher oi F:TIKII< J,at Bellsklll AciiiiMshirt, Scotland, wh,iWur ag an pxchnin-Theodore RoostvHI8chool In Wcsinchi

Ih Scotland tinar* lohger: nine ti» ten minute mi,afternoon, in W( tmore homework inand performed nwork.

Speaking of nH.School system sin.l 'found It the i>,-,-f.-, t ,Jthink I should k,,,, „ „ "It, for ir it ww,. 11H]ll(||IU entirety over thn.mlgn. I want to h,iold age."

JERSEY JIGSAWthan 1,000 spcak.v i,

Party to carry the Di,to the people dimm;month of the KiibenwtiPBlfn . . . Pavinn ui i!of the Delaware \(Vl

Route 29-A, frcm .SuRaven Rock in Hurn.n

'ty; has been h>sttiiHighway CommisMnn,for bids on NovcmlH-r lVeterans of Korcicn Wa|partment of New .icisivIterated support fmState bonus for vcterjWorld War 2Nematode, knownHe terod erastaying away from the]belt of New Jersey, accordthe State Depurtmem nl /ture , . . Membi;]-.s of local!of Tnanauers of the uviState institutions andhave formed themselves!general operating coimnSsecure public support of ta000.0001 institutional bonjat the November 8 tcncrjtion . . . Less money iva.on vacations at shore raNew Jersey this summmore people visited the |

ULTOlXllIli; t o t i l l '

Council . . . Mis.Price., Newurk sell.will be elected pivsulfiu |New Jersey Edir.ulmntlon in convention atCity November 10 to llKenneth W. Marron. 17-Newton farm youth,great recoynition furthe Future Parmeis of Al1949 Farm Electrincation IIn Kansas City for the]Atlantic states . . The INew Jersey has been ultelby the Educatumal PljCommission of New JeidlK up $34,000,000 tlibflruuice public school. . . Prom July 1 to Septemfifty bootleggers were c<|In New Jersey by Stat|agents . . . The average]of the New Jersey teachyear U about $3,413 but]buy less than the averageor $2,080 paid in 19311. >to the New Jersey EdJAuociation.

CAPITAL CAPKKS:than aspUln Is neededtrtfflc headaches, claimsC. Oiman, Manaeer of thjstone Automobile Club'sDivision . . . By adherins Ito air traffic rules, aviaiilprotect the rights of i1"'the ground and also exitlife expentancy, chumsRobert L. Copsey, Cluelr

nautlca for the smifJersey . . .

Curo

•Under normal conditiu"'eir corn ll huiked mul ni' l rtwUtUM content of IB

A L M E C H T ' S KEYtm*m " Nl l"n:

• " • " " A , ,

lo i

8H«

•«»«»>'O

CLI'(B«i;V#-i >

Page 9: With The Ntm! arterrt - DigiFind-ItWith The Ntm! • VI v(ri(ie AH The Activities arterrt |)f,:,lf Town With Tour l [nrne-Town The Urgeft And Beat Shaft Aa S«nic«« tn The Are* Art

•,:t;f,T PRESS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1&49

Thank You, Mr. & Mrs. N. M. Daviesof Congers, New York

We're Sure That Millions of Fanners and ConsumersFeel Just as You Do!

; v

. I . .

One of the wonderful things about Americans is their great tense of fair play.

Ever since the anti-trust lawyers announced Jheir intention of putting A&P outof business, tremendous numbers of people like Mr. & Mrs. N. M. Davies ofCongers, New York, have deluged us with letters, wires and phone calk.

These people are telling us, as Mr. & Mrs. Davies do in the following letter, whythey like A&P and why they don't want to see this company destroyed.

r \

M

I *

V :

+..l 1...#

, I

•f,"*M . "•

For 90 years this company has tried to build a sound business on the basis o1

giving consumers more good food for their money and giving farmers better markets for their products.

It is heartening to know that the public approves of the job we have done. . . toknow that our policy of fair, honest dealing has won us the friendship of millionsof consumers and farmers.We will always be grateful to all our good friends who have offered us their help.

We are proud to live in a country where such things can happen. !

\ • '

GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA COMPANY/ • ; '

*l,.y

1V ' .

• .*.* JS' ^ ^ . L A ^ ^ I ^ i- •-...Mit^B

PAGE NINE

Square DancingTakes Firm HoldInNewYorkCity

NEW YORK. Squir* daneln|—thai beloved r»crfitlon of lh# ruraland mounlitn people h i i u k M |

m hold of New Yorkeri muchttit i ime wir It h i i th*!r rural

roun»trparti-and much In tM :

•aki* way It* ch«rmi tr* b«ln|ovtml" br th« tf MI «|»ri « |

Uw nttlonLift lummrr, IVS.DOO (tcrioni it-

ttndtd th« iquiro danctt it thr*«oJ UM clty'i parki »rd pUyiroundi,

m»r« than a hitf million N«wY w t t r i took advantitic of a ilntl* .

irty ITM protram nf loclal dancing :toMucltd with populir bind! ka

i tnd planroundi nf * « cltj'ltent mot* populoui boroufhs,

The tquare d«nctii| profrtiM

Ulllj go Ilk. this;A loudiptaker boomi. A role*

ttlli UM danccri to form iquarta.Th« vole* belong) to the caller*—torn* on« like Ed Durlttchtr of th*Top Hindi tnd one of the elty'ab*it cal lm. f.d'i tnitmctloni ar*ilwajri larded with bits of taltjrhumor. Before the tyro or th* vhtl*tor can | iap out his lurpriu, h«hat acquired a pretty fair Idea « |•om* of the simple dance*.

H*w Purlachrr D m ItTake a typical DurUcher-eaQ*4

iance. Here'i how It went:Durlacher alertrd hia dane*ri

with a cowbell and announced that"Honolulu Baby" would b* UMnext dtnc*.

"Fac« your partneri," b* In* 'toned, "but don't get the horrora—Juit tace them."

The i*T«n muilclam itarUd pl*7»lnj . Durlacher began, "I'irat genttto th* right, circle, than hand!around. Swing with the other hi*low'i lady. When you have inrunfgo back where you belong andnrlng with your Honolulu Baby.

"Oh, you iwing her around, you•wing her up and down. Prom*-Dtd* with your lady. Your t r macroii her waist and you promt*nade to place— promenade w l Ayour Honolulu Baby."

Gain PopularityThe Square dances, which art

more popular thii year than *vtr,alio attract Walter 3, Mack Jr . , ,preildtnt of the company, whichiponion the square dtncei, andMri. Mackj Both watch th* pro*ceedlngi Intently.

EUewhere In the city thousand*of couplet who are not iquar*>dance addicti take part In loclaldancing iponaored by another com-pany In conjunction with th* parkdepartment. Favorite band leaden,Including Tommy Hyan, Sonny Dun-ham, Larry Clinton, Alvino Rey andBay McKinley play nightly onweekday* in a project begun forlervlcc men in the war and con-tinued at the request of the parkdepartment ami by jxipular de-mand.

Li | l i t t Cowboy ManafisTo BicomO Star In Rodio

BRANDON, M A N . - A leglesscowboy manages to do rather wellastride his nurse-H It doesn'tbuck.

The cowpoke Is Danr./ WUkta-son. who rode Into Brandon re-cenily as a ftur rudeo performer.On his horse, Turk, Danny whirledthrough a fancy riding stunt thatwon the crowd's heart.

Danny's no stranger to the sad-dle. He grew up In Alberta's ranchcountry and when he was 8 year*old he could ride with toe beat ofthem. He's 29 now.

As soon as he was old enough toJoin up In the second World War,Danny entered the Canadian army.He was in the paratroops.

'He went overseas and on Dee. 141944, he stepped on a land mine InItaly and lost his legs. ;

Painful months in the hospital fol-lowed and during that time Dannypondered whether he'd be able topursue the career he'd alwayswanted to tollow-ttnging hillbilly,tongs on the radio.

Late In 1845 he "got a hankering"to get back into the saddle. Ignor-ing those who said it would be im-pottlble, he rigged up a saddlesupport for himself and In no tlrotwas back on a hursu.

The support: One piece of potatosack looped around his body and.hooked over the saddle horn.

"It wai kinda tough getting usedto all right," said Danny. "It's O.K.as long a i Turk dues not buck."

Doctor Called to TreatD m Wit* Broken L i *, GREENVILLE, MA1NK. - Dr.WlUUm f TtompKM), on vaci lionhere, was roused from his c impbed a (aw days ago to treat a paldeer. '

The dee.r, 'named "Flag," ap-peared at a Moosehead Uke campwith a broken leg lutu at nightGuests took, up i collection to paya doctor to come lu lireenville toattend the fawn.

Then they learned that Dr./Thompson had registered a ( Mhours earlier, they wuke him wq,be applied splints.

Charles Harrinun, gamedin supervisor, told of ssaing(air-sized buck deer actuallying with a pair of horses andyounf cattle in the middle otWide open piiiuu-a" at West" 'Later, he suid, the detr went• farmer's yiiid and trotteda dog and a tiding crew Into

•M

InlereiUoi A»l«nal

The elephant i> » very l u , ,tag animal. There is no otherm»l wilh a n»«e drawn ifat*long trunk tha.t H u»*a;or whose skull Is U, '"-:'J.,which > ^

Page 10: With The Ntm! arterrt - DigiFind-ItWith The Ntm! • VI v(ri(ie AH The Activities arterrt |)f,:,lf Town With Tour l [nrne-Town The Urgeft And Beat Shaft Aa S«nic«« tn The Are* Art

NATIONAI, INCOMF

Thf national Inform ii.r ' i 'f\w*} ymr ended Juni 3<l In-creased to $22,200,000,000 as con}-pored with $201,700,000,000 In 1047«nrl $179 000.000.000 In 1944. t « U Ipny to employes In 1948 was ll§t«dat $140.00.00.000. up US.OOO.OfO,-000. from 1947.

PRILAY OCTOFLR :n * A I : I

lOVES LIFESAXONBURO, Pa-Celebrating

h>r I02ml blrtliday. "Grandma"Susan Stewart said she Tikes h>-!nc so well, "she'd like to do It allover aHflln."

INDl'RTHIM INJIIKU.Both Hie number and ri.qii«ny

of industrial injuries continued todecline during April, May F>ndJune, according to the Labor De-partment, which reported that thenumber of Injuries dropped tenper cent, while the averagt fre-quency rae was down ilx per centduring the three-month period.There were some SO fatal and4,400 permanent Injuries duringthe quarter, resultlrw In a loss of1,180,000 man-days of labor,

|W0HK KT h e r e were 375,000 s i .u <lui- ... ii

A u g u s t c o m p a r e d with 300,000

In July, involving approximately1(0,000 workers, about one-thirdmore than In the preceding month.However, the time lost declinedfrom 2,100,000 sum-days In Julyto 2,000,000 In August. ,

vH r lCII ' l lMunicipal

nsrr,i usls

ROAIn t transaction on August 21,

the U. 8. Treasury paid out 1U*e,0Oe.0W,0O0th Marshall Plandollar, according to the EconomicCooperation Administration.

the nations 37 InrRcst cities-n1>having more than 250.000 popula-tion each—totaled $2,771,679,000,a rise of 17 2 per cent over 1948,while revenue amounted to $2,-364,502.000, fqr an Increase of 14.2per cent, according to the Cenau*Bureau.

| i . h e Buri'BH Tn.' i n n w i tn ii'iiia

sters who unvp up joBb wt enterschool, there wi-s ''.ii'>m- e'lilpn",'that adult employment shrank tooOn the other hand, "The return toschool of numerous summer work-ers" also caused a 53,000 In em-ployment from the 1949 peakreached In August.

KMPLOYMOTBoth Jobs and Jobless dropped

m September, Becordln* to theCensus Bureau. While much ofthe 338,000 decline estimated by

Copra

Copra, the dried m o t of th«coconut, yields from 10 to 75 p«retnt of Iti weight In oil. The copraof 90 ordinary-iiMd coconuts willproduce about one gallon of oil.

FOR

rATKONIZi:

TIIKSK

ADVERTISERS

t Concrete •

HIGH TEST QUALITYCONCRETE

Laboratory Approved

Crushed Stone - Washed GravelWashed 8»nd - WaUrproofinfLime • Brick Oment - Plaster

Raritan MercantileCorporationrhone PE 4-0375

FRONT ANI) FAYETTE ST8.PKKTH AMBOY, N. J.

• Drug Stores §

Avenpl Pharmacy1010 RAHWAY AVENUE

, VVOODBRIDOE 8-1914

You Can't WPthe

QUDEand BUSINESS DIRECTORY

FOR TEI.UNf, YOU "WHERE TO REACH THE EXPERTS

PARTY MNES*VFSM».Nl,E MAR9, In.-A run 1 He-

phone party line Is credited withsaving DIP life of William Drone-,meyer, 58-year-old fanner, whowas burled by dirt and boards

I when the walls caved in while he•was working at the bottom of a34-fool well. His son sounded analarm tti the party line and with-in a few minutes several carloadsof neighbors arrived, and pulledhim out unhurt.

French Onvernmenlholt decline of Its Navy.

FOR

PATRONIZE

THESE

ADVERTISERS

HESCIiHlCNS

WHITMAN'S CANDIES

Cosnfie tics - Film - Greeting Cards

RAYMOND JACKSON

AND SON

DRUGGIST

88 Main StreetWoodbridge, N. J.

Telephone: 8-6554

• Dog Kennels •

GOING AWAY?BOARD YOUR DOGS

Dully, Weekly, Monthly RatesWashing and Stripping

Well VentilatedBest of Care

Spick & Spin KennelsBox 216, Inman Avenue

Runway, N. J.

t Landscaping 0

Parkway *

Landscape • Nursery

Complete, finished landscaping-We guarantee all plants to liveand check them periodically aspart of our service.

Call Metuchen 6-1S98-W

Lumber and Mlllwork •

Woodbridge Lumber Co.

Woodbridge, N. J.Telephone: Woodbridge 8-012S

Llqior Stores

HOTEL FOR DOGSPedigreed Cocker and Collie Pups

Boarding - Bathing - Trimming

lAncoliiia Kennel*959 OLD LINCOLN HIGHWAY

MKTIICHEN 6-3366

• Funeral Directors •

SYMWIECKI

Funeral Home

46 Atlantic Street

Carteret, N. J.Telephone Curltret 8 5715

t Furniture tCUSTOM MADE

FURNITUREREPAIRING ANDUPHOLSTERING

WEYbANDSUpholstery Shop

£3 Smith Street, AvenelCall WO-84M2-J

Telephone Woodbridge 8-1889

Woodbridge' Liquor Store

JO8. ANDRASCIK, PROP.Complete Stock of Domesticand Imported Wfhes, Beers

find Liquors574 AMBOY AVENUEWOODBRIDGE, N. J.

• Music Instruction tChildren and Adults

LEARN PIANOand Keyboard Harmony

In My Studio or Your HomeThoroughly, Pleasantly

Specialist with BerlnnersAdvanced Students

Also Accepted

Shirley GerzoffSUMMIT AVE.. FORDS

P. A. 4-6105

• Musical Ustruneits •THE ROAD TO

MUSICAL HAPPINESS— ENROLL NOW —

Expert Instruction

Musical .Instruments andAccessories

LIBERAL TRADE-INS

Eddie's Music CenterAND SCHOOL OF MUSIC

lid. Buukuakl, I'rull.357 State St. P. A. 4-1290

Esposito's Music ShopAUTHORIZED DEALERBuescher, Selmer, Martin

Epiphone, Sllnterland, GretschMusical Instructions on All

InstrumentsRental Plan for Students

465 New Brunswick AvenueFords, N. J.

Perth Amboy 4-6948

• Public Stenographer •More Work Than Tou Can

Handle?

Office Help Out Rick?

Call

Sylvia WarfieldPublic Stenographer

WO. 8-1547-RIf no answer WO, 8-2987

Legal - Medical • CommercialDictation and Typing

Radios 9

CAR RADIOSMOTOROLA AND PHILCO

Standard and Custom DeluxeModels in Stock

Designed to Fit Your Carl

Anderson Radio414 Amboy Avenue, Perth Amboy

Phpne Perth Amboy 4-3735

Radio Repairs •

Telephone CA-8-5189

AVs Radio & TelevisionSALES and SERVICE

Authorized Service EngineerOnly the Best Replacement Parts

UsedAll Work Fully Guaranteed

All Types Tubes and Batterie* inStock.

34 PERSHING AVENUECARTERET, N, J.

• Radio and Television •

WOODBRIDGE RADIOAND TELEVISION

SALES 4 SERVICE• Home and Anto Radios

• Amplifiers •Television• Expert Servicing

JOSEPH P. KOCSIK452 RAHWAY AVENUE

WOODBRIDGE, N. J.

Telephone Woodbridge 8 1308

t Real Estate-Insurance •

• Roofing and Siding t

Henry Jansfin & SonTinning and Sheet Metal Work

Roofing, Metal Ceilings and

, Furnace Work

588 Alden StreetWoodbrMge, N. J.

Telephone 8-1246

"SINCE 1905"

Netv Jersey RoofingCompany

Roofing - Brick gltis*

Metal Work309-313 NEW BRUNSWICK AVE.

PERTH AMBOY, N. J,

Tel. PE 4-0216

Pet Shop

Joe's Pet Shopt'eta • Fowl* - Simpllri - llur.tattutI'rvah Dallj - II. S. Uav'l (aiatrlt*

( «ro IUaU - tialnea - PrUkleaBird* - Case* - Supplies

156 NEW BRUNSWICK AVENUEPERTH AMBOY TEL. 4-3419

Pony l)ides

BUY ON THE HIGHWAYAND8AVK!

PALL A ^ON ALL Jtl|3J|9r!P$|S

//. Deter't Pony RidesAt »Upl« Tre* Plonk

Royal QardeiMOpen Saturday, Siipdajr, Holldayt

J-8 P. If.

William Greenwald

REAL ESTATE ANDINSURANCE

567 ROOSEVELT AVENUE

CARTERETCARTERET 9-5636

Donald T. Mason

INSURANCE

Representing BoyBton Brother*& Co. Over 18 Yean

Telephone Woodbridge 8-159V-J

t Repair Service •Tel: WOodhrhUe 8-flMJ

Nite: WOodbrtdge 8-2325

Clarke Repair ServiceREFRIGERATIONand AUTOMATIC

WASHING MACHINES869 Rahway Avenue, Avenel, N. J

AuthorUed Lauderall ServiceEipert Bendlx Repaint

TINSMITH AND ROOFERRoofing and siding work

guaranteedSave salesman's commisotonWhy Pay $300.00 for a

$150.00 Job?Nothing to pay extra (or

William Murphy99 Wedgewood Ave.Wuodbridfc N. J.

WO. 8-2279-M

Rigs

Service Stations •

Holohan BrothersGARAGE

Standard E&so Products

PhoneWoodbridge 8-0064 and 8-0533

Cor. Amboy Avenue andSecond Street

Firestone Tires and Tubes

Woodbridge, N. J.

Sewing Center

Frank Hovanec*sDOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE

AND NOTION CENTER

11.75 a Week Will Buy YourNew Sewing MachineHI TTOMIOI.KS II UIH

r.Kl.TN AND HITKI.B COVKIIKI)li i:>isriTrin\(i

MAI MINKS HKl'tlKKII AM)KI.Kt -TUII-'IKI)

67 WASHINGTON AVE.

Carteret 1-7206

TypewritersTYPEWRfrilRS AND ADDING

MACHINESBOUGHT - SOLD - RENTEDDoxens of Machines in StockGenerous Trade-in Allowance,

Expert Repairs.

P. A. 4-6580

Eastern

Typewriter Exchange171 Market Strret cor. Madison

PERTH AMBOY

Tiling

ART TILE CO.454 RAHWAV AVENUE

WOODBRIDGE

BATHS KITCHENSRUBBER FLOORING

{QUALITY FIRST)

Phones: WO-8-2927

E. W. NIER WO-8-2368

§ Used Cars •

"BETTER USED CARS"

BERME AUTO SALES

405 AMBOY AVENUEWOODBRIDGE, N. J.

Wdge. 8-1020 - 8-1021

Clarified AdvertisingwoonniunnK piini.imiiivo rn,IN (irrra Dtrcrt, Wooilbrltcc, N. J,

Pnhlffkfn of

WbODBRIDOE INBUPtNDENT.LSADCK

CARTBWtT PRK8SRARlTAN TOWNSWP-FOaDS

BEACON

THREE NEWSFAPERSTime Ho par lln*

Mo p«r lln»"3 Tlmcn 13« P«r line( Vlmr» l ie per lint

I YEARLY CONTRACT)•!,••• iiirci! p a p o r a . t l c p»r line

Minimum spni'p ill irfrcj—6 llnra.),m,. ,,r io|iy iJliuwtd mundi ly .1,'iii'rn in n llni- -f lM wor<lH.

VIL CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING• .vabie In ndvanrt . Except ion* ar t

init'lr fur MtatillalifMl account* only.iiM'giihir ln«*rtlon« will bf

ii:iiK<nl fur at tlm on«-t lm« rat*.Ails ntiioretl four t lmea " an.I

i..i.|,.,l i n l i n e !lm,t t ime will bti :ITK>II r<it* th« n d u a l number of

iiinns tile ad ii|>peared, charg ing atI'IH i:itc MtriMH!.

The Worxllirlclf* Pubtlahlng Co.t . -s i ivcx ihs rlgiit to iwllt, r«vl»e ori"Jft'-t nil copy •ubml t t td , ami willnut lit reu|i<m»M)le for more thanunn Inoorrtrt InMrtlon of any ad-vf-i'tl»cni*nt: Th« co-operat ion of theiidvi't'ilnerH will be appreciated., I . A W I R K D A D I ACCKPTBD TO

« * > A, M. W E D N E S D A Y

WOODBRIDGE 8-1710H K I . f WA^ITKD—MAI.K

USED Kt ,m'T | ' i rINO MA

mT|MAril lN

™nilltlon. Willl y P : u

i l r !•,.

IH, firm•Cl'lloi). I'llHlll'lli mm

Aerial m\Rutgers' \\, ;|

WAXTKI>: Pin netlera. Hnvr o p t n -IHK< U>T a few good bftm. M'jut

•!• ii! y.'iirn i,lil. Ap|ily »t Itnhwnyl:n ii'iiilmi I'I>,, | ( 0 ] CIIHIII s t r e e t ,Uiihwiiv, N. J. I«-IS, 20

• FOIl XAI,K •

ll mahuguiiy drup front ilenk.ll U'oi.iltirliiKe 8-2:159 tif ltr (1:30,-iln.is. 10-20'

NI> J-I-IKCKBRIHinOM 8KT

In lionil Comlit.i>nful l Carteret R-5»l!7

10-21

LOST A>I> PIII.VII

I^)ST—Sttrllnir S i lver J>arl BearttilU«iHiir,v. l^at e i ther In HIP vicinity

of HIP Smreil Henrt <'luinli or tlie'j i ial i ly Makery. If funnel |i|pa«c re-liini in til KilKKr SI, Of flfnllniftitHlvuliif. 10-21

• Window Cleaning •

Garden State

Window Cleaning Co.

R»hws»y 7-1680

Sand-

TOP SOIL

John F. Ryan, Jr.

Sand and Dirt PHI

WoodbrMge 8-1045-J

t Service Statins

Andy's Esso Servicenter

LUBRICATION - TIRE REPAIRS

Battery Charging - Expert Truck

Mil Aato K*p«ln

24 -Hour Towing Service

WOODBRIDGE 1-1549

AVKNKL, N. J., OM RpUTK II

Clarksonf»

ESSO SERVICE

Amboy Avtnue and Jsmet Street

Witodbridfe, N. J,

and Sldln| •- FRESH -FLOWERS

For All Qfoasioni

From Our Own Greenhouse*

HAROLD E.ANPERSON

HINES ROOFING 'CO.TOUR BBE>

Table, DrapK B«»tGutters • Lea4ers . SkyUghUSlate nnd AipJiaK Rwrf•

Bubberold SUnflipAll work covered by

Comptruwtloa and

GekBroi,Gulf Sen fa

j«k o#k JohnUnboIiUrinj andFurniture Repair*

AND NIGHTMETEREI) RATES

First U Mile 15cEach Additional', Mile . . 10cOFFICE: 443 PEARL STREET

WOOUBRIIHiE, N. J.

Bi fpr Had Gtm Fortun*In Hand, Didn't Know It

CAIRO, EGYPT.-A ragged beg-far who pleads (or alms in theshadow of the pyramids had a for-tune in stolen jewels. But he didn'tknow it. Police for months hadbeen hunting $80,000 In gems takenlast summer from Mrs. NahaiPasha, wife of the Wafdist partyleader.

Finally they caught the thieves.After hotdinf out until the policefed them a chicken dinner, they ad-mitted they had given many of theJewels to a beggar named Bahluk,•Th« Jewelt were wrapped in a pack-•l« and the beggw didn't knowwhat they were, they laid. He hadbeen, inttructed to hide them.

After queit'anmg. Bahluit was re-Itaftd. "I }uit never got around tolooking inside that cloth," he ad-mitted ruefully. ©

House Windows fleanwl' Promptly.

N.J. Skaters PoisedFor Big N.Y. Series

NEW YORK—The popular Rol-ler Derby will move Into the 69thArmory tonight with Manhattan Jersey

NEW sUniversity's f(Miii,longest, trip n! I,week whpn it hiN, Y., for u cm.thehlgh-flyinc ugate. This Hut inmark the fifm

gan In 193.

Coach Paul o ii,.Valley w a n u n , ,warm welcome ;.,man's s ta i f vwv,,cording to tvpnr: ,Upstate. Liisi vr.squeezed out » ;n i,In four KB in is -.' inot before the u.some hair HIMH-

In the mills' ,i(,,;

est schedule in •..ures the Rutwrhas more ilian u:W l n n l n R . P a i ' i n - i: i

field are Ainu 1-. •!•long toiK-hdnwii - ,:gers in 1948 Am,,,other fi>pt haltim,Walt Piebes. uimyard Jaunt lust vr,.anclng the Wanii"tack Is a sniihnmnaation, Tommy Ki-i

V(MH !II II I t I.I. •'1 111: C O V r . U t M Kj

.M l I r l l l l l l K i M h l i t . l l i i . i l - In In lh i l t k i i i K : i I n i ' l ' l i ; i ' > I " ! nl i | i M ' f l " l > , i l l - I s l , , M I I I 1 . ' ; [ [ MU l i i ' i ' , t - < | l l : l I i i , 1 1 , , : I " i n > ; t ! i ,T h i l l ' s K I I I K I I n l - - l u t ' S M M - l l M - . .

a n . I H t - u x i l i l i ' f i n v i m I I M I .

UK S.IKIC—UK IVMNK.I)

CYInsurance and Real Estate

93 Main Street WO-8-02J3WOODBRIDGl:, N. J.

slated to open up against a fastNew Jersey team. The two teamswill enter an eleven game aeries.

The New York team that willface New Jersey in the LexingtonAvf-nue Armory Is really a familyaffair. There are three husbandand wife combinations In the lineup. Leading oil are Coach BillyBogash and his wife, the blondeHelen, who Is returning to activeRoller Derby competition after

sidelined with injuries over ayear ago. The second combination

| Is Gene Gammon, a husky defen-sive player, and his wife, (Jerry

j 'Murray, girls' captain ana holderof one quarter and one half milespeed record for women skaters.The third duo is comppsed ofDOUKIUS Monte, 6'4'' brother ofKen Monte, the Brooklyn coach,mid Ms wife. Alice Edward, one ofthe prettiest girls competing Insports at the present time.

Not to be outdone by the NewYorkers, New Jersey also has twosets of married folks starring inthe line up. Carl Payne, coach ofthe newly organized squad, andMonte Jean Payne, who was MonteJean Kemp, sister of OeorgiannaKemp, the Washington captain.The other couple U still honey-mooning. They are Don !of 1tfari. _ . _ .pretty Iniilan tffrl -fromOkmulgeS,Oklahoma.

Jet Planes

It* latest Jet planes art riiade ofI U U I H ateel bec»uw friction atOfo speeds melts the metalsM«4 to Older typu.

IN RECORO TIME!Phone Mr. Brooks

Now—get $25 to $500on your signature, »uto,etc. 20 MONTH1 PLAN.

•Call

WO. 8-1848The cash you naed willbe ready to pick up in 15minutes!

87 MAIN STREETWuudbrldge L|P,7M

Colgate squad mr H» •center from Clifim: !•••:Englewood suanl; (\i, ,a tackle from Prith A:Ted Stratton, foini-: iHigh sensation.

Running is Stiun(j

Devoid of pas-iii' ;>>.ihas characterized It;,'the wur, Harman v "the Colgate offense \w..attack whirl) last v , .as second In the natwi, n:|

Rutgers has a lio.-ifield material; ;tll .i:been piling ui) y.inl.itilts with Ktnij.s l'liiia, T"ihigh and

LooklnK for iilfiuy mweek Is veteran ii.ili1

Hexing of Rosellf !'•suffered a leg iniurv -gate last yt-nr and «.<^of the season. Sun miyear, the blonde 18.;' i>ster may hit lji-. stnil>-

Harman will pnibm,of other barks m ••rolllnii.of Orannf. a iWl.i 1paclns tlie Si'Ui'letscoring. RutKfi's liri--ni'-si |defensive roles will I

Phnilpsburg;Root of East

LET U8

REVIVETHE EXQUISITE

BEAUTYOF YOUR

UPHOLSTERYRUGS-CARPETS

Call CA 8-6382JOHN LOKOS

11 HAYWARD AVENUE

CARTERET, % S.

All work don* i» >""'at your convrm""'

You Don't Pay BIG CITY PRICES INSmall Town! — Bm»U I'rolit*!

gt the "SURPRISE STORE1

BuyTHREE BOOMS OF BEAimWI.

BRAND NEW FURNITURE

— PLUS -•A NEW 1M» AUTOMATIC WASHER•A QUABANTEED O.E. EEFBlOtKAl<»'1

• EADJO AKD VACUUM CLEANER

All for Only $ 3 8 9 . 0 0•WITH NO MONElf DOWN AND |S.»»

AND M K » WfAT YOU GET!TOUB LIVING ROp*t: 1,-Pe. B»rl«« C ^ ™ ' ' M I , ' ' ' I , ''

H»4room Suit*,

l ,Pc. BolM'O»kllv«rw»r#, J)to.

i ,

Page 11: With The Ntm! arterrt - DigiFind-ItWith The Ntm! • VI v(ri(ie AH The Activities arterrt |)f,:,lf Town With Tour l [nrne-Town The Urgeft And Beat Shaft Aa S«nic«« tn The Are* Art

81. 1

Injury-Laden Carteret Team Loses To Sayreville By 20 toCarterd Alumni, Beaten By Perth 1st National Bank\mboyf 14-6, To Play Linden Pros\t Local Field Sunday Afternoon

.• |; K r The,,i (o the Perth AmboyI (i. before :i small crowd,iv nlnht «t Waters Sta-Mint was rtbnjt the Way(i :iir»d to RO. conslder-

irl.itive talents Involve]Mvirds of the two teamsi-, spnson,

nwri WHS about 1,200 an<lAmboy, with a string of

tnrlcs th four starts, addtriumph to their strlnR,

Cnrtoret contingent,

RmTnunn Oli-D'Amirn, Klleltu.

CARTERET (0i

ENDS Mwlwlrk. Moore, Elliott,

T A C K L E S - Hnrnskl. Wilhplm,

GlJAROCi - Nix, atrorh.

CENTERS- -Baiiasiak. Dubay.

BACKS ••• Ru^nvane. BroWtiMatthews, Pnlsal. E. Uubny, Phil-lips, Kost.en. .

by perods:Perth Amboy

went down to defeat, Carteret7—140-0

. ihud time this season.11 the Carteret teem has

,,;n's of winning one this•:im<lfiv afternoon when It

•: i- Linden Pros at the Wftl-. ,'iholl Slfldlum.

• ,. iillv nil the way, the\lut)iiv Alumni dominated

with iti great qunrter-•M.- (inli'tta. spearheading, k Alihuimh they threat-iH itedlv throughout th?j

.if U;o Perth Amboy teamid •icnreles'i during that j

.ml^ »n ft bit Of hick and Iid Curteret playing".vice were the Carter?; |rurliiH position, but on«e j

••iri'-il nnd the second time !• :'ie ball on down.1!.

Ainbov scored its first•, in the third period, on

,,,-,! drive from its own 39 j,-uverlns the distance In (

,v; Oaletta started thin us iwitha smash throunh

> for 17 yurds. This wasbv nn 18-yard Jaunt

:he same spot, bringing. the rarteret 43 Here

v !,,',;rWlHI hits the litfllt sltle(ialetu picked un s?v»n

i John Webber bolted th*• i two. GaletU had little;n .Tacking the line for the

i\re Antosl«wlec added the. int by hitting te left tackle

: r finul Dertod the Perth Am-, Mmnni marched 48 yards for, ! final score, With Jonnny

,!i-i itoing fltfef from -thr one-,-,i me on a quarterback sneak.,>,.;, vti»w<w converted.

PERTH AMfOY (14)KNDS Gutkow<kl, Kacsmarek., .. 1 Rybakiewict.niKLES—Collins. Brown. Ra-

:: <vlr. Barbarexuk.i,' ARDS — Theophllakos. K i -

! ,• 7,avodsky, Manguella.

'INTERS — SopoTOWnkl, SCUU,! . [ • : • ; •

ii v 'Ks— Webber, Cliulock, Nolo,,i. - '• \;\. Antaslewlcz, C 1 K H S .

touchdowns: Galetta, Webber.Points after touchdown. Anto-

slewlcz, Maewski.Officials: Yohn, referee; Coffee,

umpire; Brown, head linesman.

Bi«; Crowd LookedFor at Alumni-

Girls1 Teamleague Leaders

CARTERET—Winning Hhe firstKrirno by the slrrh Ynnrftln of onepin, the First Natlonnl Bank girlsWarn scored an unexpected two-game victory over the'Koohecte inthe Hill Bowl Womens Leaguethis week. Despite the defeat, theRocheeks still holdVflrSt place by•jne gamp

Illll Aowl Womens LeagueTdMfi 'iftatidlnit

W LKocneck's Pharmacy 13 8tody's Lunch 12 9Empress Beauty Shoppe 11 10first National Bank 11 10Eddie's Sunoco 10 11Clszak's Plumbing 9 12Aly's Dress Shop 9 1Krnle 8abo'a ..: 9 12

The scores) 1FIRST NATIONAL BANK (2)

CARTERET — After sufferingthree straight setbacks, the Car-teret Alumni will meet the LindenA. C. Pros In a football game atthe Wajter Overholt Memorialstadium this Sunday afternoonftt 2-15 P. M.

Linden, by virtue pf its recordof three wins- nnd one tie, is ahet'vy pre-game favorite,

The starting lineups as an-nounced by the opposing campsfollow:

Carteret Alumni—Ends—Medwick, Moore. Elliott,

Ellas.Tackles-Horaski, Wilhelm. Pi-

A. UawrotukiH, Uszenski ..,£. Abaray

WardDfssman .

12817J1143100

117124138122130

734 631

KOCHECK'S (1)J. Cole ,F. LauffenbergwH. Bartosti. TuoheyB. Tuohey

handicap

147156108144194

70924

138100weno611

24

98161129119

628

1141160

134107

55724

QPEAKINGO ABOUT SPORTS

733 635 581

ANDY'S 'LCNCHR. BubenheimerC. Ring woodL. D'ZurillaJ. EthertogeH. Cough'lin ..

(3)

m 'lie123 12094 161

142 147182 121

Ouards~Nix, Strack, Hann.Center—Banaslak, Shanner.Backs—Russavage, Brown, Mat-

thews, Paisal, Ernie Du-bay, Berlot. Casino, Chap-man.IJndrii A, C. Pros

hetl. end-DalZlel.Left tackle—Oallo.Left guard—Oreen.Center—Wadors. s

Right guard- Pratt.Right tackle—Plerucco.Right end—Spader.Quarterback—Berlot.Left halfback-Svoboda,Right halfback—N. Le?,o.Fullback—R. Lazo.

Flying DragonThe flying dragon glides from

,ree to tree on tails U (bin skin,••hiph ni'i-teh over its rpovf*1'* rlb»

Handicap644

11665

11

655 676

EDDIE'S SONOCO (0)I. Mlnue 173 118a. Kdpln 115 131V. Hoffman 134 125P. Vonah 118 96A. Kuhn 116 1112

13112392109144

59911

610

14113310113272

666 592 679

IMPRESS BEAUTY SHOPPE (2)

By a Strange coincidence, Cartcret's two footballteams are scheduled to meet opponents from Lindenover the weekend. The high school team, Showingconsiderable improvement since the first game, butStill seeking its first triumph, is preparing to engggeLinden High at Linden in what Is hoped to be a Car-tcret victory. Linden is strong this year and last weekbeatjUtfig Blanch, 7-0. Long Branch beat us the weekbefore, and'T|r 'simple arithmetic, the Linden boysShould beat fta. But !Frank McCarthy has been gearinghis boys and hopes they will be finally able to breakihto the win column over the weekend. The Carteretteam has suffered heavily from Injuries since the startof the season, and this alone has taken a heavy toll sofar.

On Sunday;jthe Alumni gridders will play host tothe Linden Pros in' what is also expected to be a hard-fOUght tussle. UKe the high school team, the Alumnihas yet to win its first game and hopes to break theice against linden this weekend. Last Sunday nightthe local contingent came out on the short end Of a14-0 score with the Perth Amboy Alumni footballgriclders.

Matt'sKeglersRollSpectacular 11 Win(lomtnercial league

CARTERET Smashing thewood for a spectacular score of1109, reported to be the first•leven-hundred score hit In this

county this season, Malts keglerswon a sweep victory over BabiedFurniture In the Carteret Commer-ciRl Bowling League last week atthe Academy Alleys. Al Mudraktopped the singles field during thepau week with a brilliant averageof 215. with scores of 195. 21fl and234.

TEAM STANDINGSW

Matt's TavernNemeth's BeveragesQrohman's Ins. .Price's Men's Shoptable's FurnitureBrowij's Ins

Triple Tie Fw Bhies TravelLead Marks Young! L i l Mkn Ten*Men's Pin League iH«pe For Vi

1197765

MAT'SE. MedreUMudrakI. MedveUM. MedveUHnrrivan

<3>202195220181182

214216238224217

172234177216179

As for some news from the bowling front, all we gotto report is that action during the past two weeks hasbeen heavy from both local alleys. The traces, in manyinstances, ette beginning to tighten up a bit and someof the favored leaders are getting plenty of oppositionfrom the second division teams. Two of the betterleagues organized in town are the Carteret Commercialoperating out of the Academy Alleys, with PinkyStekerka in charge, and the Carteret Major, withaction seen at the Hill Bowl.

We might have mentioned this already but the sec-ond generation of boys is seeing action at the'CarteretHigh School this year. Bill Harrington, looal attorneyand John Ignatz, both of whom were members of ourclass of '28, have boys Who are currently playing,with the high school grid team. To our knowledge,they are the first to have this honor in the historyof the school.

Lauter .DonnellySobieskiRayackUdiielak

960 1109

BABIC'840)

97

CARTEHKT A triple tie be-ween Rxemchak's, Kondrk's Tav-

ern and Dusty's Tav*rn existed Inthe Young Men's loop after Mon-day night's matches at the Aca-demy Alleys

Carteret Youm Men't I*afwSUndlnn

W LStemcsak's 11 4Mitt ftondrk's 11Dwty's Tavern 11Riiimo*lci ftBenJ. Moore's 7SoWert 5Watt's Academy , 4Midway Oarage . 1

CARTERET — An Infflrterct High Bchool tochine, playing it* best 1season, scored the f\fit Icgalnsl Sayreville !a*t 1

f a rrowd a( 3,000 at'i|fe|ter B, Overholt Stadium, fheavily favored Sayreville"". with an unblemished •caipe back In the same •More three touchdown*

41 order and defeat

,J. Brocowikl.> UkatwQ SabolJ. atefuraC Clees

200202191183

169169182163202

944 886

MATT'8 AOADKMY <0>A. YarrP. BodnaxX. Plttpatrlck .B. Siymborskl .Q. Hindermann

SierkaKazmerSecaSharkeyStojka

880

Comba 147Love 226Perka 146W. Bloan ... ..... 192M. Sloan 190

'Roll OfT

D. KarMyM. KlelrAanS. DaekoA. SawcnkJ. MedveU

88063-

813

M. Pavllnetz ..F. HumphriesH. Lannlgan ..V{. Spoganetzit, Nttsaak ....:..

12096

. I l l93

122

CHRISTENSEN'STHE FRiEMOI.N STORt"

542Handicap 15

557

33

126107

61115

1101521241321170

bo don* quietly.t-h S.wlighl puli illuminatioo

,I8M «t «.. ««<dto-P«W wh,,. i. I. •

molt.

ALY'S D R E S S S H O P (1)A. ChaloKuLJ. liauiudykM. Prokop .M. Karney ..M. Koby

160119124104151

137105117115132

15

,08

105117128129138

658 606 617

ERNIE SABO'S (2)Helen Papp 115ttuth SWensonM. Wilhelm ...it. ThompsonJosie Oiial

126107115127

5903

593CISZAK'S (1)

85104122112163

5963

119123114123176

6553

lesVanPeltRoHs3 Big Scbres InM a p Pin Loop

CAHT01£ET--In the only sweepvictory of the nlt'ht, MiikwinskiBuilders took three from Czaya'sDairy Monday evening in theteret Major Bowling • Leaguematches rolled at the Hill Bowl.Other two-game winners wereMatt Kondrk's Tavern and theHill Bowl, Les Van Pelt. Qreen-vald's. was the outstanding starof the Week with scores of 214, 224and 212 for an average of 217.

The scores:

MAKWINSKI BUILDERS (3)

R. MakWlnskl

599 658

Elsie DorkeAnn Gallagher .Lil GraemeSophie WusylykBlind

12212113810210b

155110166167100

158129127131100

Bd MedvetzAl MudrakM i Koby'..:..::.Mike MedvetzBuuk Hart-Ivan

G. MedwickS. Phillips ...P. SlomkoLes Van PeltM. Bodnar ....

TAVERN (2)158

... 197'...'179

191.... 154

, 879

AID'S

191145156180168

850

(l l

CurranMalkus

PRICE'S (2)169156

126110185214145

182137161224202

203156,218151173

901

177150180212143

O.MedwIckVargaMedwick

195128180

150140147166181

162162166

m1S1159139161

146160148141212

141182163149183

818

152182163162148

782 807 807

MATTKONDRK'8 <3>149149137188158

113127162200201

139149137200182

780 803

RASIMOWICZ 10)Al KrtttienJoe RailmowiczBill RaslmowlczJoe AntonelllStan Rastmowlcz

118141157148184

155173150168148

807

129189165133137

Ramblers. ?0-W. Tomorrow<noon the McCarthymen'•for victory when they m v r i jden to play Linden Hl»h.

De«Mt# the hea»y odflsthem, the local boy* pickMother touchdown Ih theoerlod hut that ws<* ts""'» In their senrlnn effort*.C»rlrret\ third l«n In W

hut th«v put op kof it name before goingdefeat.

Neither team thiratenfldously in the firm iiuarter

consummatedof the play.

Cart«ret's first touondOWB-r'«. in the wronrt h»lt.the ball on their own 30. thtand White team drove 70a score which came onMedvetz' s 20-ard pan toPusMlo In the tr.d none.vard TD march wasby John Little who al•xtra point to give Carleretlead.

Then SuvrevillethrestoucMnwns. all on |set up by Dennis Connor*, Ivllle's sUr quarterback. Th#one started wltlr At Draejjw ^tumlnv the klckoff 30midfleld. Charlie KolokowaklAl DrneRer collaborated Ining the ball down to the 39Connors t^k chnrue and wh

748 802 753

MIDWAY OARAOE (HDellB. CoughllnEd SaboEd WykesGus HundemanJ. Johnson

139126189'194151

165 163

178187156159

799 843

SOKLER'8 (4)J. Aherllng

780 906 862

T. Skropozki .M, MagellaP. MakwinskiC. Wlckley ,...-

189138176162176

573 688 645

Soviet commentator lays Frenchforest flm to U. S. plot.

841

CZAYA'S DAIRYE. ReskoB. Brechka .W. BednarN. SheridanM. Sawchak

:...' 161137158211158

210181156196192

935(0)162182167161171

191165194178181

178131171174156

825 863 810

HILL BOWL (2>E. Meyorek 149T. Coughlln ISO 170Arva 204 172D, Setnenza 218McLeod 133 197Lanlgan 184 160

790 897

AL'S TAVERN (1)8. Hriydtik 176 1873. Briflak 161 199L. Czajkowski 160 139H. Freeman 123 184J. Garvey 192 172

191

160173216

880

164176129168213

818 784OROHMAN'S (1) "

Slebert 161 198125156176

171 Ponzi196IF, Kurtiak

- — M. Kurtlak854JJ, Kopil

"\Y. Komunlcky

148168155144184

177178181161185

IBB187161170

867

181186163

13813

BorchardPusllloHorvnthVernillo .Johnson

132

174228157148

188161 '11*2

199 882 799

DU9TY'S TAVERN (1)

750 905 8461B

154 S. Komunlcky151 Stan Stawlckl

Barashkeluzas

J. LoveLoaei Its Bainaclei

Seattle'i deep, fresh-water har-bor baa saved both money andlabor for the city's shipping Indus-try. Barnacles, thoie peiky marinecrustaceans that hop free rides atlea on ship bottoms, die In treihwater and drop off hulls of ves-ie)i.

uoMCHiolweo Amman

Early Spanish settlers broughtwith them many of the domeitt-cated animals common throughoutthe United States today. AmongOthers, they trtnaplanted horses,cattle, sheep, goats, pigs, burros,ind cats into the Southwest whichIpaln held (Or more than 300 years.

BBNJ.MallnoWskiVernaohlo .fcopln •-...Chalowski .OlndaDobrowskl

142117112137136844

MOORE'S124

:... in132157180

160125190181160816

(2)184

124137100164

1281451U6141177757

158184

126158126

720 799 767

820 881 840

Death rnm Fire

About 11,000 Americans lose thelilives by fire each year-mow thanhalf of them women and children

$84.95 out napping mochin*.. hvolvteg Spool Pl«.longltd Of krek»n.

">'""" 9 t t * '

OW U V S WEEK

STORE HOURS: 8-6 DAILY,CLOSED NOON WKDNEHUAY

•1IIX

The Famtly Next Door...

"H«y Pop, you don't hgv to call Inform'ationl"

• Oat of the first things the FamilyNext Door discovered u that nearly«,«? fiuWb« % ^>tit h Miud it

wlephttw directory. Far Qewj ...oPtttfnibtrj ftotjjet lisw.ofthey wl Qn IaTofOMtiod. vhen

the UitOber dowp for flrtiire

klet F&mjrm by tk« T.k-

Hree Sweeps MarkCompetition InIndustrial League

a 10-yard heave to Al Draeger \raced the remainingthe'tiiuchdown. Draeger al«i,Bthe extra point on a rush 'the line.

The second Sayreville TDphortlv thereafter whenwas forced to kick and«°lied the bull In midfleld.era] running plnvs brought the]«kln down to the 28 wherenors apaln took over RS hen 20-yard aerial to Ed Mowho ran five yards to pay dirtT

For the second time Cartafter receiving the klckoft, <able to Ke'n arri was forcedtbito Sayreville. Sayr«vllle n t ihall on an out-of-bounds kick iIts own 45. Then Sayreville,Draeger anil Kolokowskl alt«rinn rniwhed down to the <12 and here flBain that 'ooy 1nosseri tun vards to MasakoWtktlthe end rone

A brilliant 70-yard drive by'Cte»t I'MRiiltpri in a touchdown, 1Johnny Little going over from I10-yard stripe. Medvetz addedextra nolnt on a run.

Neither side threatened In (A* ;

final period as the oltiy was co»»fined between the 30-ynrd line*, i

CARTERET U4)ENDS—Bartko. Puslllo.TACKLES — Wyman,

chin.GUARDS—HeiRhtchew, 'CFTNTER—Curran.BACKS—Little, MedveU,

mlnguw, Morocchl, Tract,chin.

SAYREVTLLE (20)ENDS—Mosakowski. Jo

Cannon.tACKLES—Noble.

lee Cotutnuptlon

More than 1300,000,000 worth ofca Is told in the United States>very year. Most of this la manu-factured tee, made by freezingwater In Ice plants.

SEASONWILL SOON BE HERE!

STOP INSEE OUR

COMPLETEU N E O F

UNIFORMSAND

EQUIPMENTFOR THE1949-11)50SEASON

SPECIAL TEAM PRICES!

Given to All ClubsGet Qiir Free Estimate

CAHTERET — Three sweepsmarked the competition Tuesdaylliiht In the Carteret Industrial Kef

BOWHUB League at the AcademyAlleys. The sweep winners wereA. A. C, I. T. Williams and Gen-eral American Tank Storage.

I. T. WILLIAMS (31Clees 187 217 128Stawlckl 172 156 190Blrl 178 183 187Horvath V 201 175 235Cliomlckl 178 174 183

sey.GnARDS—Nugent, VaSQUH.CENTERS-^Janfcer, Slnuk,BACKS—Connors, Bylko,

Kolakowskl, Zamorski,

Score by periods:Tsrteret 0 7 7Sayreville 0 20 0

Touchdowns—-Bvlko, Moski (2). Puslllo, Little.

Conversions — Medvetz,Kolokowski (2).

916 905ODD FELLOWS (0)

GerlgElliotG. RichardsonQ. SloanBubenhelmer .Handicap

158183144190326

5

1821761471S8205

5

903

1581861671371835

Ideal Pillow ThickWN

904 873 836

A. A. C, (3)Mudrak 232 183 205Soltesz 160 183 168Qallo 188 168 190Karpinski 168 183 212Galvanek 181 212 188Handicap 1} 8 6

931 005 909t

The Ideal thickness forIs the distance from th«to the neck for support,quently individual differsnc.es :both thlckneis and softneil ." ,be considered when lelectloi •lowi in the interest of masleeping comfort.

A I«dy Ban the MO

Rebecca Lukens wa« tht iof ironmaster Isaac Pennock,the death of her husband,Lukeni, she successfullymanagement of the famO)r;Coatevllle, Pennsylvania, from 1185*.

METAL & THERMlt 10)

NEW STOKE HOURS

OPEN EVERYMON. - WED. - FBI.

vnx • *. A.

R. SloanFVrko•jjinieone

biyskSleklerka

178134171195

tea

10s147162161150

134106128177214

846 822 817

IGBNSRAL AMBBIQAN TANK (3>J. M«4vetz

IT. 8e«a"Crook*

BodnwM. MedveU

VernilloHandicap

j BMcLeodMlnueSutoMitiokuMayorek

t, h. <-»*«

188

812

l iERRY (8)209168154157201

WESTVACO 'CampbellHumphriesBlrmlniiham

183

Page 12: With The Ntm! arterrt - DigiFind-ItWith The Ntm! • VI v(ri(ie AH The Activities arterrt |)f,:,lf Town With Tour l [nrne-Town The Urgeft And Beat Shaft Aa S«nic«« tn The Are* Art

PAGE TWKT,VB

/resiling ReturnsTo Newark Armory7ridav.Ori.28NEWAHK !,:)flv u i r s l l e r ; Nrll

wail the Itlnmlr Hlnnlnclmm.bombshell mil F.llrn I lwn. af Kraniliiiiiviim t"fmr, will

•or In ilie p'lnii|>;i] supportingHctlon In the luiM-Hft'ilHed milltine bPttt-MMi Antonio lAi'Rrn-

Roccn and Oenr iMr A:npri-tunlfp which will be stflKi*d

iday nlnlll. Odnher 2Bt]i. nt Ihpiwark Aimmy Kirsfx Avenueid Jny streei

Headline!1* in their own rli'lil,nation m e i I lies" I! nl s r rap-RUre will be spfitlmiit.rd on

blRRcsl wresiline slmw siaKfdthis men in mine iMan ti decade.

Thp lady wri-Mler^. mgny n l w r v -* rs ol the sport will tell you, are

very bit us nood ns their top-lght male mnlemporarli's. Theyre llve-sUr hnx-iidl.-p attractions

•use they an- s t iw fast, thrlll-nnii Bcilnn-pnckpil matches.Misses atewail and Olspn will

over I tip one f;ill to a finishite.

However, the brliiKiiu! together ofIdols of Iflevl.slon fans. Rocvn '

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1949

and stonier, took muny months ofiiPKotlRllnrm find Promoter* BuboCnlnnn and Willie GllzenbnR hadto outbid more than 199 promotersfor the hlwtent wrostllnR match ofthe fpnlurj' Kocni »n(i Mr. Ameri-ca have. »nrml to n one fall mutchor fit the rxplrntlon of the timelimit to ft referee's decision.

The first announcement of thisoutstanding wrestling spectacle,scheduled for Nr »'flfk Armory, Fri-day, October 28th. has been Kreetpdwith » sensational response fromATMtllne and television fans fortickets. In fart, the. response forpasteboards arc coming In fromevery part of New Jersey, as wellas from New York City, theBronx, Brooklyn. Queens, Rt*trnIsland and I/oni? Island.

But the promoters wish to im-press upon the fans that t.he spa-,clous Newark Armory ran takecam of at least 10.000 customersand that the reservations for tick-ets can be made by money order orcertified check made payable toLAUREL 8PORT3 ACTIVITIES,Inc. and mailed to 695 SouthOrnrmr Avenue. Newark. N. J.Ticket nervations will be handledin order of receipt.

(loughlin's Win 2,Hold Lead In HillBowl Mixed Loop

CARTERET • Coughlln's scoredR two-Rume victory over EsquireBarhir Shop to continue In firstplace In the Hill Bowl Mixed pinleague last Friday nlifht.

TEAM STANDINGSW

Cnuithlln'sMlnile'sEsquire Barber ShopRrsko'sKarney'sWcczcr's

7

111

Soft Coal

W;IRP5 in thr soft coal fnduitryare from US I" 70 |KT cent of totalcosis

RE8ULT8

M. KlcbanBlindJ.StlmaH. CoughllnJ. Coughlln ..

137 122 185141 141 141130 178 172131 160 172121 192 144

CIIR1NTMAH PARCELS

The Defense Department Is re-

mlndlnn senders that Christmas

intended for Army. Navy

byj,he holiday season. The weightlimit Is 10 pounds and maximummeasurement 100 Inches, lengthand girth combined. This is ap-proximately the size of a footlocker.and Air Force military and civil-Ian personnel overseas should bemalltd between October 15 andNovember IS to assure delivery

West will seek to cut occupationcosts In Germany.

J. Kelly 157 140 165

730 683 759

MINUE'S (2)M. Mimic 136 164 178I. Mimic 158 146 1448. Sabo 116 101 121E. Sabo 112 129 129W. Kuhn 201 154 131

723 693 701WEEZER'S (1)

660 7D0 794ESQUIRE BARBER SHOP (1)

N. Bherldan 183 168 1431H. K«lly 149 108 143S.Peru 106 H2 178J.Oaal 155 157 129

M. Wllhelm8. Narkoylt?!A. SurokRW. SurokaBlind

... 124 98 131114 141 144163 96 148

... 1KB 169 1S2140 140 140

644 756

Deadlock HoldsIn Foresters Loop

CARTERET O l n w (Ml and theQuestion Marks are still dead-locked for the top run* In- the For-esters pin league. at the Hill Bowl.Both leaders snored triumphs Inlast Friday night's mutches.

TEAM BTAND1NOSW

Clneg* Oil 9Question Marks 9Gypsy Camp 1Barney's 5

CINIOE OILA. PUMlloL. Kahnp. Molnar .A. Benaon .T. CampbellW. Wllgua ...Blind

81. 102 103

119 11189

144 138 123... 203 144 143

117 154120

657 612 621BARNEY'S (11

J. Zimmerman 158 152 155128 119 145104 104

120

M. urnsC. RamerlzH. ZabelR S«tbertBlind

NEW PLYMOUTH 2 DOORSEDAN

I'MJX TAX — A( CFSSOKIKS EXTRA

ONLY A FEW AVAILABLE

METCHIK MOTORSYour Authorized lh> Soto — Plymouth Dealer

110 ST. GKORGKS AVKNUK — OIM.N KVKN1NUS AND SUNDAY

RAHWAY, NEW JERSEY

108 101129 123 ISO

120

821 599 690

QUESTi6N~MARKS <2>S. Clszak 109 111 118M. Wnlnnsky 98 154 119A, Saralllo 130 129 151J. Dolan 136 166 169Blind 120 120 120

593 680 737GYPSY CAMP (1)

R. Sklmmons 101 112R. Balewlcz 157 152 137F. Staubach 158 102S. Demeter 134 152 1708. Fazekas 99 109

693 640 695

Clalmi First Co-op

The iUt« of Mlisliiippl, throughth« Mississippi Council of FarmerCooperatives (A AD, Is layingclaim to having had the firstfarmers cooperative in the UnitedStit«>—rntybt in the world.

\ „ .

Chlntu Runs Sum t f i lO ^Into En«rmoui Foriuni

SAN FRANCISCO.-A 88-rMr oldChlnene who enme to S«n Frinflico49 yean igo with IJ0 In Ml pocket*has run his wofldlj fortune Intosev«r«l millions by building •herb«l empire, buying r « l «st«te.and selling spicy night-club enter-tainment. '. '. "

He ii ftbuloui F"ong Win, knownmainly M the "king of the herb-alist! In North America." He ac-quired hli title by tre.ting thou-lands who claimed to surfer fromalmost ev«ry sllment known toman. >»

Although his miln business Wasb«en herbs. Fong Is miking thou-sands In retl ertit* »"<! Incomifrom two hotels he owns In SanFrsnclico plus restauranU andnight dubs.

lee CreamAbout 100 million gallon* of milk

are used annually bj th« let craataindustry In more than 4,000 planta.

ENJOY THE FOOTBALLSEASON WITH YOUR

FAVORITE BEER

ROCKMAN'SLIQUOR STORE

Randolph Street, (or, IVrshlnj

Telephone CA-9690

KN.IOY OURKItKK DEMVKKV SKRVICF.

tv. fHrob«* 1,11 PM

U. P 1 o l n f l « t d . . . . . .

Alio flo«, foil Iroim 10 lotllmort,Woihlnitoo, Mmbvn*, Ondwwn.toulivlllc -r,i % \M*I.

fto« lUfkt* 1-4*601 ttOtt iHmkhM 4-4700 hr MWIMHM.

BALTIMORI k OHIO R. R.

CRIMEDuring the fintt half of this

year, the nation's crime rhte rose2.7 per cent in t.he dtlea «u»d 7.8per cent In rural areas, as eom-pared with the same p*r!od of1948, Accordin.it to the PaderalBureau of Investigation.

Grain BlM(i pnyi to get grain bint clean

and rtady for th« ntw crop Well

ArH

Com Crop

Get rid of this "DEAD SPOT

with Columbia Window ShadesCUT-TO-FIT YOUR WINDOWS

Rid your rooms of dull, dingy, mis-fitted win<in<shades. Put up fresh, new shades.

We make it simple with our special cut-to-fit sorvnT

Let us cut your shades to the exact size you wuntSo simple and easy!

These are famous Columbia window shades, availablein a wide rang& of colors and mounted on sturdysmooth-working rollers.

Free estimates cheerfully given!

Here's how to measure:Width—measure rollers tip-to-tip with wood or steel rule.Length—unroll old shades all the way and measure rloih

Jot down the figures and bring them into

SPIVACK BROS.318 STATE ST, PERTH AMIiOY

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Just imagine being able to enjoy thrilling new 1950Motorola Television for as little u $119,951Motorola's exclusive 'Broadview" icreen gives yoularger, undistorted, truly clear pictures. Motorola'simproved, new circuits give brighter, sharper,stabilized reception at greater distances. Auto-matic Gain Control for "No Fade" pictures. New,simplified controls make tuning to simple a chfldcan operate them. Target Tuning lock* pictureand sound together. Before you buy any televisionlet make lure you tee the new 1950 Motorolamodels first!

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HUDAY.

EVENINGS JILL 9

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^ ^