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VOL. VII.—No. 45 FORDS, N. J., THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1945 PRICE THREE CENTS September Gets Navy Promotion No Cases Of Infantile Paralysis Hem? Plane Hits Joins Army Nurses Pine Tract Fischer Reports; Precautions-Are Issued Wire; Pilot Secession - WOODBRIDGE — Although medical care given early may |H«-; adenoid -operations during epi- there have been a number of cases vent many of the crippling deform- demics. Careful study has shown Scheduled of infantile paralysis reported in ities. Proper care from the onset that such operations, when done Out Safely Discussed " the State, no cases, fortunately, may mean the difference .between- during an epidemic, tend to in- have been reported in the Town- a life of crippling «nd good re- crease the danger of contracting Residents Wish To AH Delinquents Are ship to date, Health Officer Leon- covery." -infantile paralysis in its most seri- Iselin Man Suffers Urged By Collector ard Fischer said today. The health officer advises HJhat ous form. Slight Hurts; Rescuer Join Highland Park; Mr. Fischer advises residents to the following simple .precautions :5. Use the purest milk and water Cite Advantages To Pay Arrearage be alert to any early signs of ill- be observed: you can. Keep flies away from Burned By Electricity ness or changes in normal state food. While the exact means of WOODBIRlDGE— If you have 1. Avoid over-tiring and extreme ISElLIN—tin the first accident RA.RITAN '.TOWNSHIP — The of health, especially in children. spread of the disease is not known, not paid your 1944 taxes you had fatigue from strenuous «x«reise. at the new Iselin Airport con- .request of 72 Hownship residents "Do not assume," he said, "that 2. Avoid sudden chilling such as Contaminated water and milk are ducted: by Shitin Airways, an avi- that the Pine Tract section be per- bettsr get busy and pay them—or 1 a stomach upset with vomiting, would come from a plunge into ex- always dangerous, and flies have ator narrowly escaped-deaith and a mitted' to withdraw and become a your property will be advertised repeatedly been shown to carry in a tax sale next month. constipation, diarrhea, severe tremely cold water on a very hot Raritan Township policeman, who part of Highland Park was for- headache or signs of a cold and 12ie infantile paralysis virus. mally received by the Board of Tax Collector J. Trainer day. " • went to his rescue , was badly fever are of no importance. These <>. Do not swim in polluted burned when he came in contact Commissioners Tuesday. said yesterday that his office is may be the first symptoms of in- 3. Pay careful atteJriaon to (per- water. In this connection, Mr. with a live electric wire whkh had now preparing the list to be adver- Andrew N. Smith, Lexington fantile paralysis. All children and sonal cleanliness, such -as «.. thor- •Fischer warns against swimming been torn down by the plane. tised. The sale will take place in Avenue, the spokesman for a com- adults sick with unexplained fever ough hand washing before eBtrinsj. in abandoned clay pits. his office in September. According to Patrolman Elmer mittee of four residents, explained should be put to bed and isolated Hygienic habits should always be f. Avoid all unnecessary contact Krysko, Jean .Leriour, 3?, 2 Benja- To date, Mr. Trainer stated, the matter had been taken up with pending medical diagnosis. Don't observed. . . : . ; with persons with any illness sus- min Avenue, Iselin, was the pilot the Borough Council of Highland) there are approximately 500 sepa- CPO Lawrence McLeod delay calling a physician. Expert 4. If possible avoid tonsil and picious osf infantil paralysis. involved and Patrolman Edward 2nd Lieut. Grace Muchanic iP'ark and members of the latter • rate parcels of land on the list and WOODBRIDGE — Lawrence Mineu, who lives near the airport group- had intimated they would the clerks are still checking the McLeod, son of Mrs. William WOODBRIDGE—Miss Grace which is next to the Raritan Town- go along with the decision of the books. Turner, 8 East Green Street, has Muchanic, R. N., daughter of ship line, was the officer who was Mr. and Mrs. John Muchanic, commissioners. "In some cases," the tax collec- been promoted to Aviation Ghief Gas Station^ Rating Am@ng Fmsi 16 Is Givenburned. Machinist Mate Instrument. The 666 Lewis Street, has been com- Members of the board ques- - - tor said, "it is just neglect. In Lenour, who holds a civilian pi- new Chief Petty Officer is sta- missioned a Second Lieutenant tianed the advantages of the those cases property owners are lot's license, had rented a cabin tioned at the Naval Air Station, Local Board:^ Price Control in the Army Nurse Corps and change and stated they would advised to call at the tax office Store Looted plane from Shinn Airways. He was Pearl Harbor. His brother, Wil- assigned to Tilton General Hos- have to. consider Ihe matter thor- and make their payments to avoid attempting to make- a northeast 1 liam McLeod, Aviation Machin- WOODBRIDGE—Two cases of pital, Fort Dix, for her basic oughly .before taking any action. embarrassment. The list of delin- Record Established field, Belvidere, Keyport, Ewing •landing when he evidently came ist Mate Instrument, First Class, breaking and entering were re- training. She enlisted through Smith stated he represented the quents has to be advertised accord- Township, .IPhilMpsburg'h, Prince- in too low and. struck • a • Public is at the Naval Air Station, During First \4-Monfh , the Red Cross Nurse Recruit- Pine Tract Home Owner's Asso- ing to law. We have no other ported to the police this week. ton, Perth Amboy, Long Branch, Service wire about 26 feet m the Puerto Rico. 1 1 , ment of -which Mrs. F. P. Bar- ciation. He said the1 association choice." John Bocady, 27 Oak Tree Period; •• LhtedAs- 9tk Wbbdbridge and Toms River. air. Too latej Lenour made a tow, Dunham Place, is chair- wished to request the commis- ;' Meanwhile, Mr. Trainer de- Road, Iselin, reported to. Patrol- desperate effort to , pull out- and W'OQ'DIBRIDGE —•. Woodbridge- gain altitude, but the under fusel- man. sioners to allow the area to secede ". clared his office is making a drive man Frank Szallar that his fruit fiew Draft Contingent Off Lt. Muchanic graduated from from the township and annex to ~ _ to collect personal taxes. Score's War ;Priee! and'- Rationing' SbardV age became entangled ill the wires Salts5 On Spree store was entered . Sunday by and the plane, crash-landed along- Woodbridge High School and the boroug-h. of letters, he said, are being mailed which serves. Woodbridge For tiuty In Armed Forces breaking a window: Four dozen side of the hangar on- Wood Ave- St. Michael's Hospital Training to delinquents. ship, Carterei arid Metucheh, The representative declared the oranges, a portable radio and ?13 WOOBBRIDGE—Eight young nue, just missing the building.' School for Nurses, Newark. At residents realized there would be - " Commenting on 1945 collec- Pay $28 Fines .notified: this- week-that,4ts.price; men. left for service in the the time of her enlistment she advantages and disadvantages but .' tions, the tax collector said that in cash were stolen. ... panel has been, rated; -in the jks Wire Burns-Cop' arnied: forces yesterday on the was on the operating room staff looking at it from a civic view- as of June 30, 46 per cent of the WOODBRIDGE—Four English A water pump valued at $18, Rescue 'Crewa reached -Lenour ten -on/its compliance record 1 -9:24 A. M. train, Miss Anne at St. Michael's Hospital. point, the move would better that : tax levy has been collected. seamen, off a tanker now at the a grease pump estimated to, cost 5 The panels were rated, accord- -'Sutch, secretary of the local just as he was crawling out of the area. , - --- ' Cash collections for, the first Shell Oil Docks, went on a spree $25 and assorted tools worth $100 ing'to activities in' the detail food' Draft Board, reported. badly damaged plane;' He was half of the year on 1945 taxes and each of them is $28 poorer as were stolen from the Esso Gas . •; Of the eight, Richard Alan taken to the Rahway Memorial Smith pointed' out as a disad- and eating and drinking establish-: vantage the fact small .children • : -• amount to $660,475.99 against a the result of fines imposed by Act- Station on Route 3.5 owned by L. ment fields during the first four; VPonis, 5% South Hill'Road, Co- Hospital where he was treated for tax levy of $1,419,000 for theing Recorder James S. Wight. Bouk, 12)88 Kline Place, Rahway, ; Ionia; was a volunteer for imme- lacerations of the'fa.ee and abra- Mew Red, Blue have to. \valk a long distance to months of 1945. Such factors as? Stelton School. Children up to year. This amount is $23,390.33 Arrested by Patrolmen John the owner reported to Patrolman diate induction. sions of the chest and then re- Martin Thullesen. The .thieves re- the number of proprietors visited the third grade are permitted to more than for the same period last Ondeyko and Kenneth Van Pelt, leased. moved a pane of glass from one during surveys 'by price panel as- •;. The others were: Thomag W. Ration Stamps ride on the school bus but others year when $6.37,085.6'6 was col- the four are Thomas Higgins, 41, Officer Minue, .who saw the of the windows to gain entrance. sistants, the number of cases, aris-: :'Bnnyon, 19 East Green Street, walk through fields and" unim-, lected. and Robert Jones, 23, both of ing from the surveys and consum- /Woodbridge; Harold H. Lake, plane crash, got' into his car and rushed to the scene. As he left his proved roads in all kinds of •Southampton; Lawrence Mullaly, ;er complaints the number of con- .Jr., 291 Fayette 'Street, Perth Valid Aug. 1st weather, he said. If they could 41, Portsmouth, and Robert Evans, ferences ,'held -with, violators and: ;Amboy; Herbert M. Lane, Mon- car he brushed against'a live wire Collection Of Tin Cans that was hanging from a tree'. He attend the Irving School in High- Pushes Black- 19, Ellsmer Port. the number of voluntary, out-of- • tague Avenue, Woodbridge; land Park, they would a.t -least To Start At 7 Tomorrow cburt settlement negotiated by •John F. Manton, 611 Barron was treated by Dr. Hansen for live Ofliach In Book Acting Recorder Wight reserved severe burns of the left shoulder have the advantage of walking on decision on the case of Dezso violators with the price pane'l, were: Avenue, Woodbridge; Elmer G. 4, Can Be Used Till improved pavements and side- WOODiBRIDGE — Reminder to taken into consideration. E, A. L. Muller, Kensington Avenue, Co- and severe shock. ^Market Fight Batta, 34, 282 Augusta Street, Township housewives: November 30 walks. who was brought before him on Clausen, Green Street, is the lonia; David Kolan, 154,Hopkins Cites Advantages . , Tomorrow is the regular collec- I chairman of the local price panel.; Street, Brooklyn; Andrew Ro- WOODBRIDGE — Continuing complaints of resisting arrest and The spokesman claimed the ., •'-' tion day for tin cans. . Listed in the first ten, in. the: •irian, 126 Fulton Street, Wood- WOODBRIDGE—Five more red the fight against the prolific disorderly conduct. Nick Bakalas, Report 1 Case residents would be closer to flre ; growth of the black market, of the Highway Diner, charged Mrs. Chester G. Peck, chairmaa order named, are North •Plain- bridge. ••••'..'• stamps and five more blue stamps, all in Ration Book Four, will be and police departments. He as- Charles E. Gregory, chairman of Batta was disorderly in his place of the Salvage Committee, again sured the board he had no com- the local War Price and Ration- and kicked through a screen door urges that cans, properly pre- Of Meningitis made good for the purchase of rationed goods on Wednesday, plaint wtih the Stelton' School or .-"- * ing Board will confer in Washing- when he tried to eject him. Patrol- pared, be left at the curb before the police or fire departments. . *•- ton Saturday with Byron Miller, men Elmer Krysko and Martin 7 A. M., tomorrow when the col-#^^^ To :'ife'. Sought. •RARfTAN fOWNSHTP— One August 1, the local War Price and chief of the national OPA en- Thullesen testified that Betta re- lection is scheduled to begin by case Of meningitis occurred in Rationing Board announced today. Smith said under the present" __/; forcement division. sisted arrest. Township trucks. the Township during the' past Each of the stamps will toe setup the borough, the township In Correcting; Local Culverts month, Health Officer George worth 10 points, making a total and the county control part of the It has been the contention of streets and the three bodies never local Board members that the Rush reported to the Board of of 50 red points, which are being could get together at the same OPA has unduly emphasized the Residents Complain Of Health Tuesday. There were seven made goad for the purchase of and half of his victory garden had time to give them decent service. administrative phases of ration- persons bitten by dogs during the rationed meats, butter, margarine, 127 = Stars * Problems Caused By been washed away. If the section was part of High- _7. ing and price control, while en- month. •cheeses, lard, shortening, and "Mr. Forgiohe put sand in the land Park, there would only be forcement has suffered because of The names which follow are those of gallant Heavy Rainfalls Kpad and now it's in my back .V. B. Skov, registrar of vital salad and' cooking oils, and 5'0 lack of personnel and funds. As heroes. They are the names of brave men who went "Jfard," Hasler told the board. statistics, presented a quarterly blue points go-od for the .purchase the two todies to contend with, a result, racketeering in essential RARlTAN TOWNSHIP -— report for activities from- April of rationed processed foods. he said. " ~; away, their hearts filled with noble purpose and who Board of ^Freeholders will be F.orgione commented "someone commodities has swept the coun- now lie in the folds of an invisible shroud which we is likely to be. killed" because of 1 to June 3K). There were 29 The new stamps, all to toe good Smith also pointed out the try with legitimate merchants and asked for cooperation in correct- the condition existing at the cul-marriage licenses issued and 19 through November 30, are: U. S. government bad assigned - ; housewives the victims. call glory- May we, in deed, thought and action, ever ing conditions that: exist at cul- Red, for meats-fa.ts: Fl, GlHighlan, d Park as the post office : vert on Currier ' Lane, off Oak marriages recorded. Thirty-three Recognizing the necessity of strive to be worthy with them. - verts throughout the Township, Tree Road." births and 48 deaths were also Hl^ Jl, and Kl. for the section. price control, the local Board has according to a decision reached recorded. ' - ; Blue, for processed foods: PI, Commissioner Juliws Engel - i by the. .Board of . Gomrtiissioneis. v pursued its responsibility diligent- Frank Ablonczy, Avenel Stephen S. Kozmti Hopelawn Qli, Rl, SI, and Tl. questioned the police and fire de- at its meeting Tuesday.', Miss Evelin Nussbaum, child ly so far as enforcement is con- James Rivers Adams, Woodbridge Walter J. Kuzniik, Sewaren tfflghties' From Red Cross hygiene nurse; reported making The following stamps, made partments angle, asking if they cerned with the result that it ranks John P. Anderson, Colonia Angelo C. La Quadra, Woodbridge Commissioner James -C. Forgii 229 home visits during' the past goc>d in previous months, also would be any closer to depart- 9th in effectiveness. It feels, how- Walter Anderson, Woodbridge James Lee, Woodbridge one, who is in: charge^ of therroad Children moiith. may be* used in the purchase of ments in Highland Park .if the ever, that it has not received the Albert J. Leffler, Wobdbridfe department, pointed out ciilverts rationed foods during August: change was made. The commis- Gernaro J. Andonelli, Port Reading p Caron Jean- consistent, effective co-operation John Bartos, Keasbey Wilbert Lucia, Fords are under the jurisdiction of Red stamps Q2, R2, S2, T2, U2, sioner also stated for years the necessary from OPA arid that its Robert W. MacSkiiiisning, Wdge. the -board and described several, ijine, 13, IO'i rue des moulins, Will Of lak p V2, W2, X2, Y2, Z2, Al, Bl, Cl, residents have been complaining Walter Bartos, Keasbey' and Elaine Verscheuse, 14, 196 results have been completely nulli- Alex Bereski, Keasbey Lawrence McLaughlin, Wdge. hazardous conditions existing-, in- Dl, and El; Blue stamps Y2, Z2, about the paper that blows into , fied by refusal by Washington to Robert J. Madden, Woodbridgo cluding Woodbridge Avenue. rue de la gare, both of Bailleul, Clerk Probated Yesterday Al, Bl, Cl, Dl, El, Fl, Gl, HI, their street from Highland. Park _"" John Bertram, Keasbey France, appreciate what their ' 'recognize the spread of black mai- Nicholas Binder, Hopelawn Warren Maul, Iselin The commissioner first suggest- RARITAN TOWNSHIP — The Jl, Kl, LI, Ml, and Nl. and asked if the situation had ~-' American friends' have done for 1 : kets and the need to combat them. John J. Bird, Iselin Edward J. Mazur, Hppelawn ed Acting iClerk Russell B. Walk- will of the late Wilfred R. Wood- Sugar Stamp 36 Valid been corrected. "The whole situation," said the William P. Menweg, Fords er write to Freeholder Elmer them and have written letters, in Manuel A. Boncada, Iselin ward, township clerk and retired Four sets of both the red and Smith stated borough officials chairman, "can be summed up English, to the local Tied Cross 1 Michael Bucsok, Port Reading Edward P. Miller, Fords Brown and advise hini of the sit- principal of the Piscatawaytown blue food stamps are good during had said care of part of the dump briefly. There is no shortage of Chapter, expressing their appre- Edward Campion, Woodbridge John F. Moor, Woodbridge uation. When three residents ap-; School, was probated yesterday each rationing .period. Each set is was up to the township. Commis- anything in the black market. Fred J. Morrissey, Colonia peai-ed to complain of problems at ciation. Charles Chawey, Woodbridge by .Surrogate* Frank A. Connolly. good for four monthSj the first set sioner James iC. Forgione point- Scarcity exists solely on the William E. Nagengast, Fords their home caused by rain, For-J "Both letters, worded the same, Bernard M. Christensen, Fords Mr. Woodward, who died June being retired when the fifth set ed out the township had stopped I shelves of the legitimate dealer." Joseph Nagy, Fords gione decided it would feebes t 'to read as follows: John Cilo, '.Avenel 26, left his entire estate .to his becomes good. Stamps being re- using the dxlmp two years ago and Thomas C. Nevad, Fords have the clerk arrange a meeting "I thank you very much for the Joseph E. Cook, Iselin widow, Alice iD. Woodward, who tired this month are red stamps Engel added that years before the Richard G. Nimi, Woodbridfe with the freeholder. "I'll spend night-dress you have sent to me. John Costello, Woodbridge waa also made executrix. The K2 through P2, and blue stamps township started using the dump Alex Olah, Ifrelin two days with him and ' showj I am learning English and I am will was dated February 18, 1>944T2 thorough X2, which will not be the residents had the same com- Mary Andrloni Stanley Cottrell, Keasbey" Albert C. Olsen, Fords him what's wrong with culverts: very happy to write to you in your John M. Crumb Jr., Woodbridge and witnessed by George Rr. Mor- good after July 31. plaint. George W. Parker, Avenel i around the township," he de-language.; " The night-dress is very "What makes you think if you Stephen J. Csepcsar, Woodbridge rison and 'Otilda A. Mattingly; Sugar stamp 36, in War Ration clared. nice and I thank you again." secede you- will have better,roads Weds Corporal Joseph J. Czick, Woodbridge Frank T. Pastuszak, Sewaren both of iNew Brunswick. Book Four, will continue good for Rain Water In Cellar The night gowns referred to than you do now?" Engel asked. Czick, Woodbridge Nathan H. Patten, Woodbridge five pounds of sugar through Au- HOiPELAWN — Announcement >Patsy ,Salterella cotapJainied ev- were made by volunteers of the gust SI. Engel pointed out residents' of has been made by Mr. and Mrs. Michael Cziva, Keasbey Louis Pelican, "Woodbridgfe TO PLAN PICNIC Raymond T. Peterseii, Wdge. ery time it rains water gets into Production Department, Wood- other sections of the township g-et Mario Andrioni, 161, Charles Steve P. Danko, Woodbridge his cellar. Engineer Raymond P. bridge Chapter, Red Cross, under FORDS—Plans for a picnic to Edward J. Peterson, Woodbridge DOG GOES HUNTING their mail through New Bruns- Street, of the marriage of then- Ralph F. Darragh, Fords Wilson explained the state high- the direction of Mrs. John Breck- be sponsored jointly with the Nicholas A. Petro, • Avenel wick, • Rahway, Plainfield "arid daughter, Mary Bernice, to Cpl. Charles E. Dean, Iselin awy department has plans for enridge, chairman. James Sehaffrlck Association on WOODBRIDGE—A large police Perth Amboy post offices. .. Harold C. Sorenson, son of Mr. John J. Petrusky, Port Reading John Demko, Hopelawn B construction of a new culvert un- August 2,6 iti Fords Park will be dog killed a> rabbit that was in a. Mayor Walter C. .Christensen and Mrs. iChris .Sorenson, 63 High- John Pocklembo- Sewaren der (Lincoln Highway, lieaT Rari- made tonight by the Fords Repub- coop in her back yard, Mrs. George. stated the delivery of mair cer?. land Avenue, Keasbey. John DeSisto, Colonia James Raison, Sewaren tan Avenue, but he did not know Birthday Of Avenel Boy lican Club at a meeting in Frank's Barrett, 315 Florida Grove Road, tainly had no bearing in the The ceremony took place here William H. Roemer, Keasbey Hall, King- George Road and Mary Hopelawn, reported to Desk Ser- Michael Di Leo, Avenel how soon the W0Tk would begin. consideration -oi the decision of at the rectory of the Holy Spirit Robert M. Rogers, Fords h Celebrated At Party Avenue. geant Carl Sundquist, yesterday. William Dudash, Keasbey The engineer said a bad condition the board. The U. S.. government - parish with the Rev. Eugene Jerry Rotelia, Avenel Bernard J. Dunigan Jr., Wdge exists at the cache basin over the does not consider municipal Davis, pastor, officiating. The re- ^Stephen Sabo, Fords AVENEL—Mr. and Mrs. Fran- John B. Dunn, Jr., Woodbridge brook where two pipes stagger, cis Drost, Fifth Avenue, were boundary lines in any part -of the ception was held at the home of Fank D. Ebeinhoh, Woodbridge Harold J. Schneider, Iselin causing the condition. the bride's parents. Charles Scott, Jr., Colonia hosts at a party on the seventh Fuel Oil Situation Is Critical; United States and this should aot Arnold Eck, Colonia Louis' 'Gargan sta'te-d he hadbirthday of their son, Richard. enter in the argument, he said. Miss Louise Johnston of Wood- Albert S. Seach, Hopelawn 1 Joseph EIko, Hopelawn written the state department con- Guests were Mrs. Andrew Shaf- The mayor added the request bridge and John Sorenson. of Hans P. Ericksen, Fords Joseph Sharkey, Keasbey cerning a culvert condition and fords attended the couple. Cor- George T. Short, lielin fer and son, Andrew; Mrs. Arthur Users Urged To Fill Tanks Now was a large project that would' Ralph V. Favale, Port Reading had been referred to the county, Gisin and daughter, Cora May; WOODBRIIDlGrE —.Householders matter and can do a lot to assure have to be1 studied and suggested poral Sorenson has returned to William J. Finn, Woodbridge John B. Szlanskz, Fords officials. He had also written duties at Bangor, Ms., where he Martin Snee, Sewareij Mrs. Edith Crum and daughter, who heat their homes with fuel that the nation's limited civilian Highland Park officials likewise Robert J. Foerch, Woodbridge county officials five months ; ago \, is stationed at Dow Field. The Gordon W. Sofield, Woodbridge Joan; Dana= and. Raymond Peter- oil were urged today by the local fuel supply will be ready for use could not makd a hasty decision William Freedman, Fords and is still waiting action. ,;: 1 bride is residing at the Sorenson Bernard J. Sullivan, Sewaren som; Bernard, Francis and Robert War Price aind, Rationing Board when needed." as it bad ibeen indicated they home for the present. John R. Gensinger, Avenei "Someone said it is an act of La Penta, all of Woodbridge; Mrs. to prepare now for winter by hav- .Supply Drop Seen planned to do. John Sullivan, Jr., WoodbriSje God that the water backs lip Robert Gilroy, Iselin Peter Swallick and son, Wayne, ing their storage tanks filled a!t Two factors make it most im- Commisisoners Henry Troger . Frank J. Swetits, Avenel when there's a heavy rain, tut it Joseph M. Grady, Woodbridge Perth Amtooy; Mrs. Rubin Greco once. perative that every consumer fill and William P. Clarke also ques-" SON IS BORN , Francis Szkurka, Sewaren isn't an act of 'God that put those Steven F. Grezner, Hopelawn Ray J. Taylor, Ffcrds •and daughter, Carol Ann; Mrs. "Every tank must be filled this his tanks now, the spokesman' ex- tkmed the advantages to a change. CLARA BARTON —Mr. and Glen Philip Haupt, Sew&ren pipelines through," Gargan stated. Engel stated he didn't think there Louis F. Thomas, Hopelawn Henry Kennedy and children, soimmer to avert suffering be- plained. 1 Mrs. James Growney, Washington Arthur Heaton, Avenel Frank Hasler of Oak "free Road would be any benefits outside dt ; . Street, are parents of a son, Chester E. Thomson, Forda Peggy and Thomas; Mrs. Harold cause the civilian fuel oil situa- "First, fuel oil demands of the ; Thomas J. Heenan, Woodbridge also complained - of a condition the school situation. Engel pre- f~ James, born at Middlesex General Joseph Toth, Keasbey . fifanderhan and daughter, Carol tion will be even more critical this Pacific war are sky-roeketing daily William H. Irvine, Iselin existing near his property. The winter than 'last year," a spokes- and will reach a peak about the sented the motion to refer the Hospital, New .Brunswick. Mrs. Michael Tutin, Port Reading May; Mrs. Owen Roff and chil- Tulio Jacovinich, Port Reading resident stated part of his lawn man said. "Dealers report that or- time civilian heating demands are matter to the board for considera- Orowney is the former Audrey C. Eugene Urban, Ayenel dren, Barbara and Theodore; Miss Aldorton Jensen, Woodbridge Joan Visico and Miss Gertrude ders are .Beginning to be received greatest. It is haped that the civil- tion. Thompson. Bert S. Varga, Woodbridge —.———_^__ t Kenneth Johnson, Hopelawn Anthony Vizenfelder, Woodbridge SCHEDULE SESSION 'Crawford, all of town. but not in sufficient volume.to get ian fuel oil supply will equal last Wilbur A. Jorgenson, Woodbridge all householders' tanks filled with- year's short supply but the Pe- DONATE TO AID SQUAD UNVEILING SUNDAY Raymond Voelker, Avenel FO.RDS,—The Jumping Gills in the next few months. toleum [Administration fox- "War HOPELAjWiN — The Second. _• Joseph H. Kenna, Woodbridge John Wagenhoffer, Keasbey Girls Club will meet tonight at 8LICENSE THEFTED WOODBRIDGE—The unveiling William J. Krewinkel, Wdge. Robert S. Waldman, Ford* o'clock at the home of Miss Har- "Families have not heeded has warned repeatedly that it isWard Woman's Republican Club- of a monument in memory of Mrs. WOODBRIDlGE—While her car Stephen Kiraly, Keasbey W. Guy Weaver, WoodbrWge riet Anderson, {Laurence Street. warnings to. get their tanks filled. going to 'be most difficult to meet met at the home of Mrs. Jaanes Rachel Wolff, mother of Mrs. was parked at the foot of Berry John J. Kish, Fords Donald E. Woods, IseKa They must do so soon or this area both war and minimum, civilian Sehaffrick, William Street. A five Louis Cohen, Rabway Avenue, Street, Tuesday, the license plate needs. Adam J. Kluj, Hopelawn Lyle E. Wyckoff, Colonia will not be prepared for winter. dollar donation was made to St. will take place Sunday at two PICNIC SUNDAY was stolen, Anna Selasie, 32 How- Edward J. Kochick, Hopelawn Edward Wykes, jr., Ford* Those who delajr are doing them- "Second, transportation facili- John's First Aid Squad. The next o'clock at Gomel Hesed Cemetery, FOiRiDiS—'The Raritan Social ell Avenue, Port Reading, report- Thomas F. Kolbe, Port Reading Edward Zullo, Port Reading selves and their neighbors a dis-ties are going to be tighter this session will ibe August 1>6 at the McClelLan Street. Elizabeth, near Club will hold a picnic Sunday at ed to Patrol Driver Stephen Feier- service. Every ration bolder has home of Mrs. Walter STieeman, 13 George Kovacs, Woodbridgo John J. Zwolinski, HopoiawB winter than ever before so that the Newark City Line. Izzo's Farm, here. tag. . a -personal responsibility in thia Dunbar Avenue, Fords. Michael Kozel, Fords (Continued on Page 8) PAGE TWO THURSDAY, JULY ?6, 1945 RARITAN TOWNSHIP AND FORDS BEACON t FISH County Bond Drive Head ENTERS RPI Bathing Beauties Because civilians are currently WOODBiRIDGE — Roger D. Majewskis Observe _."«•" consuming so much of the summer Schaufele, 148 Valentine Place, Sselln Personalities --, ! catch of fish, a severe shortage of entered Rensselaer Polytechnic In- stitute, Troy, N. Y., in the class ; fish next winter is forecast by the Wedding Anniversary —Mrs. Stella Kovacs, Wilson —Mrs. Fred Webber, Cinder that opened this month- He is the 1 Wildlife Service of the Interior Avenue, has returned after vaca- Lane, was the winner of the Dress ^"Department. (Stocks of frozen fish son of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin A. WOODBRJDGE—Mr. and Mrs. Schaufele and a graduate of Stanley Majewski, 554* Myrtle tioning with' relatives .at Lake Club drawing sponsored by the • on June 1 were said to be 25 per Erie. Woman's Club Monday at the Li- Woodbridge High School. He is Avenue, celebrated their tenth --^ cent below normal, although fish —Miss Helen Karvan, iPershing brary. * production was running ahead of studying aeronautical engineering wedding anniversary Sunday at at RPI. Avenue, Miss Dorothy Kotehech, —Mr. and Mrs. Frank Steeber, f last year. ' „ an open house. Fiat Avenue and Mrs. Anna White, Fiat Avenue, visited Mr. and Mrs. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Stan- SEEKS GAMES Hillcrest Avenue, spent Sunday Albert Steeber, Springdale, Sun- ley Bongard, Mrs. Ann. August, at Mays Landing. day. SEWAREN — The Sewaren Dan August, Misses Eleanor and Bluebird baseball team js seeking —Mr. and Mrs. Paui Burton, —Mr. and Mrs. Roman May- CLASSIFIED Loretta August, Trenton; Miss Correja Avenue, entertained Mr, games with light senior age teams. Lottie Bongard, Skillman; Irving kowski, Cooper Avenue, are vajS<- Games Tvilljbe played on Wednes- and Mrs. Seymore Breskin and son, cationing in. Waretown. Whitenaek, Blow.enburg; Mr. and Newark, Sunday. OPERATORS WANTED day evenings and Sunday after- Mrs. Anthony S. Majewski, Sr., —Mr. and Mrs. John Lewis, So- To work on Children's noons at home or away. The book- Anthony Majewski, Jr., Richie Ma- —-Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jan- nora Avenue,-spent Monday visit- dresses. Steady work; ing manager is T. Bocklembo, 426 jewski, Eugene Majewski, Stanley ko-wsky, Cooper Avenue, spent the ing in New York. one week vacation witi. West Avenue. Telephone Wood- Majewski, Mrs. Stella Casko, Flor- weekend at Atlantic -City. —The . Boy Scout Troop. 77, pay; gaad pay. Apply bridge 8-2386. ence Casko, Mr. and Mrs. Steve —Mrs. Joseph Cullinane, Star sponsored by St. Cecelia's Church, Carteret Novelty "Press Gontarek, Alfred Gontarek, Elea- Street, vi-sitd Mr. and Mrs. Thom- is spending a week camping •• at Company, 52 Wheeler SON FOR .GEHRUMS nor Gqntarek,. Stanley Qonterak, as Gallagher, Elizabeth, Tuesday. the Delaware Water Gap. Ray- WiOOfDBREDGE-tMr. and Mrs. Alfred Toniezak, Mr. and Mrs. —Arthur Gill of the U. S. Army mond Elliot is the scoutmaster.f Avenue, tCjarteret, N.. 3. has returned to Walter Reed Hos- Statement of availability John G. Gehrums, Metuehen, are Walter Staniewicz, John Tuchol- —Mr. and Mrs, Robert Moun- Phillip T. Ruegger the parents of a son, Russell Con- ski, Mrs. Michael Markulin, Mrs. pital in Washington, D. C. after required. spending a furlough with his par- cey, Avenel, visited Mr. and Mrs. WOODBRIDGE — In a letter way, born in Muhlenberg Hospital, Jean Yusko, Robert Yusko, all of Harold Mouneey, Silzer Avenue, FOR SAJLE sent to the editor, Philip T. Rueg- Plainfield. Mrs. Gehrums is the Perth Amboy; -Mr. and Mrs. J. ents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Gill, Hard- ing Avenue. Sunday. DAY OLD CHIOKS. All heavy ger, Executive Chairman, Middle- former Elizabeth Hutchinson, Barron Levi, Mr. and Mrs. Frank town. —Miss Joan Furze, daughter of i bseeds available through July, sex -County War Finance Com- D'Angelo, Misses Addie and Ann Mr. and Mrs. R. Furze, .Sonoua August and September. Deposit mittee, expressed his appreciation D'Angelo, Woodbridge. NEW BOOJKS ARRIVE Avenue, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. required on all -orders. All orders to this newspaper and all those OBITUARIES M. Getto, Homestead Park. filled in ten days. Call Hallway who took part in the Seventh War COLONIA—New books received by the Colonia Public Library —Mrs. Fnank Steeber, Jr., New 7-3'019-J. 7-19,26 ;8-2 Loan Drive. The letter reads as York City, has returned home af- follows: and now on the shelves are: "Case febb, iiwatikee Girl Henry G. SchneHbe -FOR SALE of the Gold Digger's Purse/' "A ISElLIN—Henry C. Schnebhe, ter spending a week at the home "According to the final tabula- Lion Is On The Streets," "A Texan of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Steeber, TWO lets on Sherry Street, W°oA- tion, Middlesex County is'credited o'O Harding Avenue, a veteran of brMge, N. J. Inquire Mrs. Gura- at Oxford" and "Ride With Me." Are ttiW By lapr Wrld War I, died Sunday at his Fiat Avenue. with $32,106,447 in the Mighty home. He served as fireman, first —Miss M. D. Britton, New vieh/ 567 Amboy Ave., Perth Am- Seventh 'War Loan Drive. VANDALS AT LIBRARY hoy, N. J. Telephone P. A. 4-X9&2. At a cere- class in the Navy and was a mem-York City, spent the weekend at "'•'This is by far-the greatest con- W.OOSQBRIDGE — Stanley C. mony performed by Mayor Au- the home of Mr. and Mrs. George 7-2,6 ! ber of Dennis J. Metcal-fe Post, tribution by- this -county to- any Potter, a member of the Board of gust F. Greiner, Miss Joan Barnes, 542, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Britton, Sonoia Avenue. FOR SAJLE war Joan campaign. Directors, of the Barron Free Pub- Milwaukee, Wis., became the bride New York City. He also was a —Miss Doris Denea and Miss QUAjBTE,B bed with in- "This figure tops the quota of lic Library, reported to the police of Sgt. James R. W.ebb, son of member of the Enterprise Asso- Folrence Webber, Cinder Lane, ner spring mattress, coil spring, $18jO00,-Ct00 which was set for the .that someone broke one of the Mr", and Mrs. James S. Webb, ciation, New York City. have returned honie after visiting small dresser, night table and county^ by over $14,000,000.' The stain g-lass windows at the library Scboder Avenue. Mrs. Perkins, of Buffalo. over the weekend. Flirting with the sun in Eve Ernst's swim tojfs in' the Annual Mr. Schnebbe is survived by his desk, $25.00. Call Metuehen 6- qixotai itself was increased, by GE — Members of 8-6821. C.P. 6-2&tf GUTTERS - LEADERS PUEBLO, Oolo. — Spectators Wood-bridge Fire Co. No. 1 were SKYLIGHTS were amazed "to see feminine dain- kept busy over- the weekend. of this Clean, Farnify Newspaper PERSONAL ties hung from clothes lines strung On Saturday the home o:f Leon Rev. Elizabeth Ricker SLATE and ASPHALT up in a box car attached to a pas- I Adamski, 28.2 Smith Street, was CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR Seeress ROOFS senger train which recently passed Watch For ur i badly damaged although the flre- ' Free from crime and sensational news ... Free from political Commissioned Missionary RUBBEROID SHINGLES through Pueblo. The explanation .3men worked hard to save, the bias Free from "special interest" control . . . Free to tell yos, - -. SpMt Messages and Helper was that the train was loaded with home. the truth about world events. Its own world-wide staff of COM©» \; 92 Main St., Woodbridge, N. J. WAVES. , Sunday afternoon fire broke spondents bring you on-the-spot news and its meaning to you • 7-12,19,26* Hines Roofing Co. out at the home of Martin F. and your family. Bach issue filled with unique self-help features Jaeger, 119 Wedgewood Avenue. to clip and keep. HELP WANTED 456 School St., Woodbridge GRAND OPENING The blaze was started ,by a back ( The Christian Science PubnsUnE Society F j Please send sample copies \ EXPEEIENOED Mold mafcer_ re- Tel. 8-1077 |.draft from a pot stove in the cel- One, Norway Street, Jtostoa 25, Mass. quired for production of vitre- I I o! The Christian Science I lar. Sparks hit some laundry which Kame Monitor. j ous china artware. Permanent jofo. had been put on a clothesline near fiood possibilities for advance- the stove. The fire was checked Please send a one-month J ment. Write full details giving UNCLE SAM SAYS Saturday, Aug. 4th City Zone Siate • trial subscription. I en- % before, it could reach the living PB-3 close SI I •age, experience and salary ex- TURN THAT OLD CAR quarters. pected. WMC rules apply. Box C, c/o .Independent-Leader. INTO WAR BONDS I.L.6-28to7-26 5ts FOR VICTORY A Free Gift Will Be Given MALE HELP WANTED WE WILL BUY With Each $530 Purchase EXPERIENCED foreman required for production of vitreous china ANY CAR artware. Permanent Job. Good ANY YEAR OR MODEL AND BALANCED? possibilities for advancement. PAY YOU A GOOD PRICE All our meals are planned by a Write full details giving age, ex- friendly dietitian. She knows perience and salary expected. For Quick Cash how to balance a meal and MENTCHER'S WMC rules apply. Box R, e/o make it tasty and attractive, Independent-Leader. Results Call •too. No need to worry abaut 54 Washington Ave. Carteret, N. J. I.L.-6-28to7-26 -Bta UNCLE JOE vitamins when you eat here. WO. S-0149 OUR DAILY SPECIAL -40c Mortgage Money SPEEDWAY Available AUTO SALES Co. HHA Mortgage Loans 823 ST. GEORGE AVE. ...g.n.d what they mean to your ©wn telephone service Direct Reduction Loajis Woodbridge 155 SMITH STREET M QUALITY Recapping Refinancing Mortgage Lojans We sell good transportation, 'Attractive terms not merely used cars. PERTH AMBOY, N. J. Perhaps you've wondered why you sometimes have to wait MARGARETTEN & CO., INC. ami' forgei Tire" iirrits before your operator says "Number, please .. ." EEALTORS Perhaps you've wondered, too, why certain Long Distance 276 Hobart Street calls have not sped through as fast as they once did ... Perth Amboy, N. J. P. A. 4-0-900 ES-LIQUORS It's because New Jersey's telephone wires are humming this summer as never before! Returning servicemen are pouring HELP WANTED DIXIE BELLE GIN fifth 3.05 through this "nation's gateway" by the thousands .; . and they just can't wait to pint 1,03 get to the telephones. BAKER GOLD MEDAL GIN .fifth 3,10 Many of New Jersey's industries, stores, offices and resorts are also operating at WAITRESSES GORDON'S peak levels. HOSTESSES LONDON DRY <1IN fifth 3.32 AH this is reflected in the present tremendous volume of telephone calls. Every CASHIERS day, for example,*there are approximately a quarter-million more calls than on the corresponding day last year. And there's no let-up in sight. WINES; - PISH WASSESS Many switchboards are swamped from morning far into the night. Others have SHORT ORDER COOKS COHBIALS HIIES ADDED! rush hour peaks which are difficult to handle. We're doing everything we possibly SODA DISPENSERS DOMESTIC and IMPORTED can to meet the situation. But your help is important, too. GARDENER You can help by avoiding needless calls .;. by keeping conversations reasonably brief. Just one less call a day, and one minute less on longer conversations, will WEEKENDS, PART TIME Long Mlleagt BOTTLED BEERS mean better service for everyone. Now, more thaa ever, your cooperation is a AND STEADY. PLEASANT ^SStS WORKING CONDITIONS. AP- We Carry AU The vital part of New Jersey's telephone service. PLY AT ONCE. AVAILABIL- Popular Brands iliil RECAPPINfi * OPPORTUNITY FOR WOMEN: This is an urgent appeal to women to ITY STATEMENT NEEDED. Ready To Serve Join our operating force. Call your Chief Operator now, and ask for OF N, J, details. {WMC rules observed). iSinith and Elm Streets Perth Ambjoy Woodbridge Liquor Store NEW-JERSEY BEU-TElgPJIONE COMPANY JOS. ANDRASCIK, Prop. at C. R. R—P. A. 4-5577 Route 25 574 Amboy Ave., Woodbridge, N. J. Woodbridge, N. J. Phone Wood. 8-1210 PAGM THREE BAEITAN TOWNSHIP AND FORDS BEACON THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1945

stances which cause healthy Mending Fans LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES growth of bones and tissues. A good way to mend leaky pans Heter to: W-5G3; Docket 142/455 said block if sold on terms* will How's 'For a well man to expose him- and pails used out-of-doors for require a down payment of $30.a By Margaret Scott self to the direct sunlight to an watering chickens, dogs, pigs and cats is to give the bottom of the ves- TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: paid in equal monthly installments Your Health? ' extent in summer, does him no At a regular meeting- of the of $10.00 plus interest -and oth. : good. In some respects it harms sel a good coat of .roofing cement. Township Committee or the Town- terms provided for m contract ut —A successful carnival was and the 15th birthday of their Heg;arty, Miss Florence Heg-arty, By Dr. Sophia Brunson ship of Woodbridge heia Mondky, salt. Mrs. Fred Tobey, Plaitifield, him. Common sense should be ap- LEGAL NOTICES July 16th, 1945, I was directed T&Ke further notice that at said held by the Colonia Fire Com- son. Fred. Guests included Mar- to advertise the fact that on" Mon- sale, or any date to which it m»v tin Horning-, Mr. and Mrs. Emil Wedensday. plied to the question of exposure pany. Iselin Fh'e Company Dis- to sunlight as to everything else. liefer to: W-477; Docket 136/212 day evening, August 6th, 194S, be adjourned ths Township Com- trict No. 11 won the prize for the Breuer and daughter Doris, Cran- —Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lu-eas, latto?" She was evidently a Cau- 1 the Township Committee- w*H»-meei.' •mttltee reserves the rig-ht in it&-d4»- Unfortunately, all valuable NOTICE OF FUBMC SATJIS at .S P. M. fWTi in the Committee- cretion to reject any one or all biiL-i largest body of uniformed firemen ord; Mrs, Victoria Cogliolo and Caroline Avenue, entertained An- casian who had exposed herself so TO WHOM1 IT MAT CONCERN: Chambers, Memorial Municipal' and to sell said lots in said block present. The committee included daughter, Sybil, Mr. and Mrs. Wil-thony Lucas, Brooklyn and Mr. persistently to the midday rays of things are abused by extremists, At a. regular meeting of the Building-, Woodbnttge, New Jersey, tto- such bidder as it may select, cHie old Sol that the color of her skin and, on account of the harm that Township Committee of the Town- and expose and sell at Fnbiitr sat* Tfegard being- given to terms and Fred Sutter, chairman, Charles liam Hermsen and son, William, and Mrs. John Shumski and chil- ship of Woodbriclge held Monday, and- to the highest bidder acenrttingr.' Biamne-r of payment, in ease one or Skibinsky, Richard and Thomas Mrs. Julia Kordelski, Miss Doro- dren, Jersey City, over the week- was a dark shade of yellowish is -wrought, it often falls into dis- July 16th, 1845. I was directed to terms of sale on file with th»- .more minimum bids shall be re- ; •brown. Her hair had been blond, favor. The use and not'the abuse to advertise the fact that on Mon-Township Clerk open to inspeetlpa! ceived. Polhamus, James Tag-g'art, Regi- thy Kordelski, Linden; Mr. and end. day evening, August 6th, 19 45, tlte and to be publicly read prior' to Upon acceptance of the imhumiirc nald Brady, Fred Modavis, Wil- Mrs. John Hermsen and sons, but the sun had burned it so un-of sunlight is productive of much sale, Iiots 280 to 283 inclusive in —Mrs. George Eeseter, Middle- Township Committee will meet at Block 510-C, WoodbrMge Township bid, or- bid above minimum, by tlie liam Wels and Edmund Hughes, 'rank and Richard, Oak Tree and venly it presented a variagated good S P. M. (AVT) in the Committee Township Coroimittee and the pay- sex Road, is recuperating at her Chambers, Mem-or ial Municipal Assessment Map. i ment thereof by the purchaser ac- assisted toy other members of the lames Walker. home from a recent illness. dissonance -of chromatic shades. Building-,1' Woodbridge, New Jersey, Take turther notice that the cording to the manner of purehasi: fire company and the Ladies' Aux- —!M-r. and Mrs, Leo Klien, In- —Mr. and Mrs.. Benjamin Lo- This girl was seeking- to be and expose and sell at public sale Township Committee has, by reso- in accordance with terras of »alo on WED IN WHEELCHAIRS and to the highest bidder according file, the Township will deliver & bar- iliary. The next meeting- of the beautiful and stylish. Her misdi- lution and pursuant to law. Used a wood Avenue, entertained Sunday vell have returned to- their home STAYTON, Ore. — Before a to terms of sale on file with the minimum price at which said" "lota iraln and sale deed for said premises. company will take plaee August 2, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Diafenbach- on Colonia Boulevard after spend- rected efforts had only succeeded Township Clerk open to inspection in said block will be sold togrether • -DA-TBD: July 17th, 1945. church-full of interested friends, with all other details peftlhenti 8 P. M., at the fii-uh-ouse. er, Elizabeth; Mr. and Mrs. Frank ing a vacation at Long Island, in destroying the small claims to and to be publiclv read prior to sale, B. J. JJUNISAN, Township Clerk. Fred Camp, ' of Portland, and Lots 3S and 27 in Block 445-C, said' minimum price being $200.00 To be advertised July 26th auii —Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bissell, Adams, Union and Miss Gertrude Me. beauty that she -originally pos- Woodbrid^-e Township Assessment plus costs of preparing ae'eil- ami ;August 2nd, 134-", in- the l^orSs Be.' - Bernice Nightingale, both of whom Map. ~ - advertising this sale. . SalB lgt»_'ln con. Arthur Avenue, entertained at a Kuhner, Staten Island. They are —Mr. and Mrs. John Maas, sessed. suffered broken hack's at the age Take further notice that the barbecue Saturday, in celebration hosts this week to Miss Mary Lou West -Cliff Road, entertained Sun- A noted doctor says: "A thor- of 17, were recently married. Township Committee has, by reso- Diei'enbacher, Elizabeth. lution and pursuant to law, fixed a of the birthdays of Mrs. ".Bissell- day Mr. and Mrs. Berger Free- oughly tanned skin will never get They met a few years ago at a minimum price at which said lots and Leonard Slugel, and the fifth —Mrs. William Loeseh, Infield man .and sons, Hawthorne, N. Y. back to prize winning conditions. party given by a group of handi- in said WocJc will be sold together wedding anniversary of Mr. and Road, entertained Mrs. Anna Doo-' —The Fire Commissioners of with all other details pertinent, said 1895 CHRlStENSEN'S 1945 No woman ever tanned her skin capped persons who organized a minimum price being $200.00 plus Mrs. Walter Storrer, Denville. ley, 'Perth Amboy, Sunday. District 12 will meet tonight at S to a mahogany brown and later "chin-up" clti'b. After the cere- costs of preparing' deed and adver- Also present were Mrs. Slugel and —Mr. and Mrs. Charles Scott, o'clock at the nreiiouse. became known for a peash-bloom tising this jsale. Said lots" in said mony, the happy couple •wheeled block, if. sold' on term's, w.ill require family, Beatrice, Joan and Harold Sr., Enfield Road, were hosts Sun- —Mr. and Mrs. Fred Newkirk complexion. The only way such a themselves through showers of a dow.h payment of $20.00, the1 bal- Bissell. day to Mr. and Mrs. George Scott and daughters, Florence and Eve- woman ever gets a fine complex^ rice to the reception held in the ance of pin-chase price to be paid and children, George and Janet in equal monthly installments of —Mrs. Herman Brickwell and lyn,' Aniherst Avenue, spent last ion is by purchase. Tanned skins gift-packed church basement. .110.00 plus interest and other terms daughter, Katherine and Mrs. Wal- and Joseuph Scott, Jersey City. week at Ocean Grove. are somewhat prone to develop provided for in contract of sale. VACATION ter Laidlaw and son, Robert, East —The Civic Improvement Club skin cancer." Take further notice that at said Mrs. John Norris and daughter, sale, or any date-to -which it. may- Street, are visiting at Seaside met -Friday- at the Inman Avenue , East Street, are spending A great deal has been written Sandwich Combination be adjourned, the Township Com- Heights. Hall, with the president, Thomas a few weeks in New York State. Honey and peanut butter 'make mittee reserves the right m its dis- in the last year or two on the ad- cretion to- reject any one or all bids -: V AL UE S:- —Mr. and Mrs. Fred Beck, Am- ieworthy, in charge. A report on —Mr. and Mrs. Paskel Merritt, vantages of sunlight in preventing a favorable combination, for filling and to sail said lots in said block herst Avenue, entertained his mo- the recent picnic was given by Amherst Avenue, entertained Mr. and curing rickets; but remember sandwiches and spreading on toast. to such hadderas; it may select, due Mix honey and peanut butter just regard b-eirig" given to terms and ther, Mrs. Anna Beck, Newark, Walter Rosenberg and a vote of and Mrs. Milton Dunham, Bay- that.rickets is a disease of child- manner

lect ne iefiif eiattis

DO defrost the refrigerator once a week or whenever the frost becomes more thaii thick . We serve the very finest in Italian. Food - Fea- -—keep moist food covered —allow room for air to circu- turing Tomato Pies and real Italian Spaghetti. late inside the refrigerator Our cocktail bar is always open. Come in and DON'T crowd shelves Every Repair Job Fully- treat yourself to eating- and drinking pleasure. •—leave door open Guaranteed. For cleaning, —store hot food new parts or regulating, SEDDY KitOWATT, your efecfric servant bring your watch to ulian s ALBREN Inc. 394 PEARL ST. WOODBRIDGE, N. J. A-I86-4S 133 Smith St. Telephone 8-135S Buy United States War Bonds and Stamps * Perth Amboy f PAGE FOUR" THURSDAY, JtltiY 26, 1945 RARITAN TOWNSHIP- AKD*TO ACON by air and the makers of*airplanes are in- terested in the speculation. WILL THE WINDBREAK HOLD? EACOK Not all perishable farm products are PUBLISHED EVERY.-FRIDAY adaptable to air transport which will be

-•<•• :-*y— •-; feasible for products of high intrinsic value THE BEACON PUBLISHING CO. in proportion to "weight-and possessing a Poitoffice Address: Fords, N. J. value to the consumer that is enhanced by Jikihf- WOODBRIDGE 8-1710. . . speed in transport. JOHHSOH JPlBMB Subscription §1.50 per year . Such products 'Of the farm as potatoes, Himer 3. Vecsey Publisher and Managing Editor oranges and other products of this nature, Paris, among other things, has dertaking, deluding1 not only vet- Entered at the Post Office at Fords, N. J., as are not likely to be shipped by air. Present always been and always will be eran employment and reemploy- second class mail matter on April 17, 1936. >• synonymous with fashions that raent, -bat a similar sei'iiee rates are considered somewhat high fov thrill the feminine heart. Wacs though somewhat less high-priority the profitable use of aerial freight service are women and, as such, the vision toward other citizens -of. the com- of lovely things to wear in the fu- munity* " whose lives have been and much depends upon the development ture cannot be denied them. And, economically dislocated by reason . of return payloads for the success of such so, many -of our Wacs in Paris of their -participation in the civil- transportation. have become part-time designers ian phase of the general war . and spare-time seamstresses. They • Let's Consider The Veteran Etven 'after considering all the problems are taking advantage of an oppor- With more and more veterans returning and difficulties connected with the .possible tunity that will for many of them Indicative of what may happen^ become the foundation for future in other part^ of Borneo when the to civilian life, we are pleased to notice transportation of farm products by air, the business -enterprises. that" local industry is finding: a place for {Allies continue their landings, na- conclusion is inevitable that the. farmer, A well-known French dress de- tives of Brunei, which was occu- them. This is a policy which, we believe, is like other modern business men. will take signed, Madame Michele Amblard, pied recently by Australian 9th not only fair and considerate but which is conducts a class for Wacs in de- Division, elements, instituted re- advantage of the -speed the airplane offers. signing and sewing. prisals against the Japanese for the _ incumbent upon any employer who has savage treatment meted out to' Just what can be hauled profitably may Madame Amblard, directress of *any sense of responsibility and gratitude. be uncertain, but that aerial freight will the Chambre Syndicale dressmak- them and killed a number of Japa- An excellent example in this direction be accepted by farmer and consumer is ing school operated under a han-nese. Australian forces found sev- dicap. She speaks no English. eral natives chained to trees when •was taken by Mayor Greiner and the Town- one of the certainties of the future. However with the capable assist- they entered the town, the Japa- ship Committee many months ago when ance, of interperters, she does a nese had only allowed the natives fine job of" (passing on to her pu-one cup of "rice daily and many it was decided that no public appoint- were suffering from privation. ments, unless to meet an emergency, would WAC Rejected One-Third pils her chie tips in drape and One-third of all applicants for enlist- tuck. . be made until veterans had a full opportu- Youg French girls at the school JUST nity to make application. To date, this de- ment in the Women's Army Corps were re- spend two years learning the fun- cree has been adhered to rigidly and wejected for medical reasons, according to damentals of dressmaking, and trust it will be continued. Certainly, the Miss Dorothy La Salle, who says that the o-ne year • practicing what they Paragraphs have iearned, and t)wo> years mod- men and women who have served their thirty-three per cent rejections indicate an eling and designing. clothes, be- ' At Ease country in time of dire need have a right even more serious health situation: for fore they step out on their own. One of the midtown restaurants to expect every possible consideration upon At present, the Wacs are rising- was thrown into a pleasant furor women than the forty per cent'rejection bolts of rayon left behind by the by the entrance of a female ma- their return to civilian life and their claim rate did for men. fleeing -Germans. This is soon to jor accompanied by several mate subordinate's. • The major took on every job, in public or private endeavor, Miss La Salle says that the figures reveal be supplemented •' by materials ; must be respected, provided, of course, which they have ordered from charge of •ordering the .meal, then that physical fitness programs for"girls and home. When these arrive, there plunged authoritatively into some their qualifications are adequate. women are of equal importance to those will ibe- a flurry of snipping, cut- crisp exposition, to which the men ting, and pinning, and the dress- listened with attention and re- We fully realize that everyone, regard- for boys and men. She says that a large spect. Only 'the waiters and the maker's dummy will utimately 1 less of whether he has seen war service, is proportion of the defects for men rejected yield original creations with which other diners could see that she had entitled to a job but our point is that such were evidenced in elementary schools and the seamstress Wacs intend hold- kicked bothlier shoes off.—The positions as may be available should not ing a private fashion show for New Yorker. that the same conclusion applies to women their sister Wacs. be,filled unless and until a veteran who and girls rejected for service in the Wom- . >• Is It? There may be a few ultra little A woman's, best asset is a man's may wish to apply, has had a chance to en's Army Corps. shopp.es dotting this country's imagination.—Skyscrapers, U. S. do so. The selection in filling the place The fact that forty per cent of the men Under The State House Dome Main Streets after the war, trad- Naval Air'Station, Ne5v York City. must then be made 'on a basis of capacity, ing on the magic of. Paris crea- and thirty-three per cent of the women ex- By J. Joseph Sriiiiiins tions, and having their root in the Just So T equipment and experience. amined for Army service were, rejected for W AiC sewing class in Paris right Teeth are things you have out Let us all consider the veteran. He dephysica- l unfitness means that the nation TKENiTON. — State health au- what is known as the; Emergency ernment is paying subsidies on now. just before the doctor decides it thorities anticipate a rise in the Maternal. and Infant ;Cai-e pro- meat, bujtter, cheese, fluid milk, was your tpnsils, after all.—Hous- serves every opportunity we can give him. 1 must give more attention to a program to marriage market when New Jer-gram. The government pays hos- flour and 'bakery products, can- In accordance with orders is- ton Chronicle. safeguard the health of children. This must sey's 450,000 or more servicemen pital and medical bills for wives ned fruits and vegetables, sugar, sued by the Retraining and Re- be tied in witihh thhe educationadtil l system/Thit/This in the Army, Navy and Marines of servicemen whoi have babies, •dry beans, peanut butter, lard" a-nd employment Administration of Shipbuilding Record ^ •• Mall We let Japan OH Easy? \ begin to filter through east and provided their husbands are in the soy bean products. Once the sub-the Office of War Mobilization and It required' 244 days to deliver is impossible unless educational authori- west caast ports and return home £our lower paid ranks of the serv- sidies are dropped, up goes the Reconversion, there has been es- the first ' Liberty—• later in the We are hearing occasionally that the ties appreciate the importance of physical from the wars. ices. Approximately 1/000 mater- prices. • • tablished in. New Hampshire a program,, ships were delivered in less than 40 da'ys.—From "Ships. word "unconditional" should be stricken programs and allot adequate funds to pro- However, the increase may notnity cases are approved each New Jersey milk producers do State Veterans Administration, month in New Jersey. Selective Service System, and the but of the term "unconditional surrender"!mote some, such program. be great because of the fact so .not like' subsidies on milk. They No Doubt |as applied to Japan. many young men married before The State Department of •feel the in.cerased cost of milk United States Employment Service A circus manager says that con- they went .overseas. This is de- Health, which handles the dis- production should be passed on Local Veterans' Service Commit- tortionists • are the happiest per- Those who make this suggestion argue scribed as borrowing against the bursement of funds for this pur- to the customers. Because nearly tees have also been organized in for.mers. No doubt, because they ^ttiat japan should not be reduced to total Local And Small Business . future,. insofar as statistics are. pose, anticipates an increase in every family is flush with war- 54 of the cities and towns. These arc able to follow their own bent. concerned,, but in any event the this service during the coming time wages at present, they feel constitute the contact point and —Punch, London. defeat, because then we should lose a valu- The Surplus Property Board has declar- present . slump in the marriage year. . : . it is a good time to -authorize a the medium through which the able: bulwark against a growing China and ed a policy of preference for local; and market \vilr" be overcome;' vital long overdue. advance of at least federal programs with respect to •,- Dandelions statistics experts claim. ,MILK:;.—W,ord: .from Washing- one or two cents per quart of veterans' information and allied If- an isUuid 50 miles long can an ambitious Russia^ small business in the disposition". of gov- services will be conducted. ernment-owned war plants and facilities. | Dan Cupid got his work in early ton 'to the effect the Government, milk. be completely rid of Nips, you'd Why we should fear a strong and pros- fa working on plane to- shift the In addition to the functions think something could be done This is interesting but it will mean noth-^f*™ « f actual cost of various products, DRUGS:—Officials of the State presently exercised by the State about the dandelions in the lawn. perous China is hard to understand. On including milk, over to consumers ing unless small business and local inter- fore-sailing overseas. These are the Department of Economic Develop- and local Veterans' Service Com- He Does? the,: contrary, our dreams of "four hun- by dropping present subsidies, ment, New Jersey's agency for the mittees, other duties will prob- young m'eii who will marry, either The strict 'father still exists, a dred million customers," cannot come true ests can develop plans to use and money to should cause New Jersey house- promotion o-f post-war endeavors, ably from time to time be as- upon discharge from the service, novelist reminds us. Wu know of finance the acquisition of these plants and wives to expect an increase' of .one predicts the .State has a. bright signed. Under the establishing or- until China's standard of living has been or before toeing reassigned to the one who a'bsehitely insisis that all ; or two cents per quart of milk future as a producer of drugs. der, these duties may include re- untji Chila's standard of living has been •facilities. , • \ . Pacific theatre of operations to and- also higher prices for other his; children shall be home in time light the.Japs. The department points to Peni- training and reemployment en- raised. A developed, industrialized China Despite the preference announced, the products. deavors on behalf of former work- for breakfast.—The Humorist. The current drop in the mar- cillin, the secretion of a little green may/well prove the world's greatest mar- chances are that the larger business organi- New Jersey dairymen as well mold that has given the world a ers in: war .planes — a problem Mother's "Rest" riage market is reflected in fig- as State Milk Control Director which will confront some commu- ketplace, contributing t@ the well-being of zations, with.abundant capital and aggres- ures for the first five months of miraculous weapon in the fight American .mothers don't go on Arthur F, Foran have been con- against disease, as a leader in the nities in a -large way once indus- sit-down strikes. After standing on other; nations. sive programs, will manage to grab most 1945.. 'The Bureau of Vital Statis- cerned for some time about what trial reconversion begins, for the tics of the State Department of parade for new .drugs in thy fu- their feet all day, they sit down of the bargains that are offered for sale. adjustments in consumer prices ture. Manufacture of Penicillin entire employment problem must at night to rest and darn a while. As for Russia, we do not know that she Health reports there were 13,044 would follow the ending of the be regarded as a single great un- marriages in New Jersey this year is now big business and a fat share —Montgomery* (Ala.) Advertiser. will ever bother us. Jap'an has done so. We It will accomplish nothing for small government subsidy payments of that big business is centered in up until May 31, compared with now made to/milk: producers in should be making a poor gamble in ex-business and local interests to complain three year average of I>6,77i2 for the State of New Jersey, the de- lieu of an advance in consumer partment states. changing a possible aggressor for a certain and to grumble. The time lor them to make the same five months. Marriages prices. Many^eonsumers do ' not ,ff* 1 one. • . "• -. -•':.•-• their plans is at hand and if they want to during the month of June are ex-realize that their food purchases While all the firms in the United buy what the government wMl .sell,-they pected to increase this average have been subsidized about $1- States now participating in the Russia has rib creed 2,000 years: old de- somewhat. . - .- • 5iOO,OOO,O'OO ejaeb year by the Gov- penicillin program are currently manding that she conquer the earth. Japan" must be ready to act. "~ , Servicemen's wives are still ac- ernment to hold ceiling prices as producing about 600 billion units well as encourage production. of this microbe killer each month, has. v- •'•'.-'• .v ;'•, cepting financial assistance from the Federal Government under At the present time, the Gov-New Jersey producers alone are Russia has plenty of elbow room. Japan supplying about one-third of the . Another War Lean nation's production. •has«jnot. Now that the Seventh War Loan Diive is Scientists are now seeking to de SiUiouetfs Russia has no bone to pick with the a matter of history, it is well to bear in OUR DEMOCRACY- -by Mat discover what other substances was Finance Minister West, Japan, after defeat, will be inflamed stemming from similar sources oi France in 1759, mind the inevitable fact that an eighth may also help mankind and New tinder Louis XV. He with aji abiding resentment. Her statesmen war loan drive is coming. CONSERVING OUR RESOURCES- Jersey is already playing a major urged-' the people to and writers are already propagandizing a In fact, special $200-ivar bond will be role in this endeavor. lead simpler lives in "hundred years' war." , AUPUBON, THROUGH HIS LIFE-TIME STUOy OP j offered, carrying a quotation, spoken by AMERICAN WILD-LIFE, GAVE US AN APPRECIATION , FOREST- FIRES :_Fire fighters order to build a Franklin D. Roosevelt in a radio talk to OF THE VALUE OF OUR. NATIVE BIR-PS AND ANIMALS of the forests who protect 3,00'0,T stronger France. To rely upon a sworn enemy to help us [ curb a present and probably friend, one ofthe nation on December 9, 1941. two days iN PR.ESER.VfN6 OUR. FOR.ESTS, PROTECTING 00'0 acres of pritne woodlands,, or Caricaturists came OUR CROPS —CONSERVING THE RESOURCES more than 50 per cent of the total out with, portraits the three chief pillars of world security, after Pearl Harbor. ^ OF OUR. LAND* area of New Jersey, deserve much would seem to be the last word in folly. The Treasury Department invited news- credit for 'their constant vigilanee.- featuring only the "But," say our businessmen who used to paper men in- Washington to submit sug- At this time of the year when outlines of the head and should- the'forests and swamplands are ders. Thsycalled this frugal form ir&ide with the Orient, "we want Japan gestions for the words to appear on the green, fires are at a minimum, but of art a "silhouette." aftfer the war to be able to buy-from us. bond. The prize-winner was suggested by in the early, spring and late fall, Today America must watch If you destroy Japan we will have no busi- Daniel M. Kidney, who won a $100 bond the danger of fires sweeping over acres of prime woodlands is al- its "silhouette." To combat dan- ness.^ ' by calling attention to the following" .words: ways constant. In normal times, gerous inflation, our national Hpw about business with the rest of the "Every single man, woman" and child is New Jersey has S.SO'O trained fire economy must be reduced to the a partner in the most tremendous under- fighters to respond to first alarms bare black and white outlines oi Orient? We must in the long run choose when the woodlands begin to between business with Japan and business taking of our American history." blaze. The inroads of selective a silhouette. We urge you to With- Asia. ; Service and the war industries practice thrift for victory and have reduced this number by at security. Buy War Bonds. Build ' This is true because an unchecked Jap- Buying Power Makes lobs-: least 75 per cent. . ' , up your bank account. an'would certainly resume her program of There is considerable .publicity being Reduced fire fighting manpower monopolizing Asiatic trade. American busi- has been offset somewhat by the ness was rapidly being squeezed out before given to suggestions th'at income taxes be U. S. Forest Service which as. a the war. There could be no objection to this eased for business and corporations, but, so war .measure has furnished the far as we have been able to see, little, atten- funds and equipment for 23 rov- if it were based upon fair competition. But ing patrols that constantly patrol Japan used wage slavery, government sub- tion is being paid to taxpayers in-the low-. the critical areas of New Jersey sidy arid military force to achieve her er-income brackets. during the fire seasons. : .Fire hazards represented by the ends, The argument is made, in behalf of busi- hardwoods . in North Jersey and ,To let Japan off easy would be to per-ness, that reduction of income-tax levies the mixed pine and cedar of South will enable them to provide employment. Jersey are quite different in char- petuate this system. Japan should have a acter. Due to- the inflammability fair -chance to make a decent living—but This seems to vis to be somewhat erroneous, of the tree growth; and ground there is*no road to this goal except by way because employment will only be provided cover, South Jersey presents an by a continuous demand for goods manu- exceptionally dangerous , hazard. of complete defeat and international con- 'The sandy soil is dried very quick- trol maintained long enough to teach her factured. JUST AS AUDUBON LAID THE GROUNDWORK FOB. ly by high winds which sweep over, how to live and let live. The way to promote this steady buying is PROTECTING THE ENVIRONMENT IN,WHICH WE LIVE-" this terrain, creating a dangerous to make certain that millions of, copsumers W£, IN OUR. OWN LIVES, ARE LAYING THE condition even following . heavy GROUNDWORK FOR. THE PROTECTION OF THE FAMILY rains. •. ; . • have money to spend. A reduction of in- AND THE HOME. AS WE HUSBAND OUR. RESOURCES, Acting State Fire Warden Wil- Farm Produce By Plane come-tax levies upon citizens in the lower PUTTING OUR. MONEV JNTO WAR. BONOS, liam J. Seidel is proud of New The ideai is being advanced that farmers brackets will -automatically give additional LIFE INSURANCE AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS, Jersey's record in keeping dam- WOODBRIDGE NATIONAL BANK WE BUILD PROTECTION —AND age from, forest fires- down. For- Woodbridge, N. S, ... in. the future will find it profitable to ship buying power and this, in turn, will mean est fire watchers, located in stra- some of their fresh fruits and vegetables additional employment. AMERICA (Continued on Page 5) f RABITAN TOWNSHIP AND FORDS BEACON 1945 PAGE FIVE State House Dome (Continued from Editorial Page) tegically placed look-out towers, who are constantly overlooking —Miss Gertrude Owen, Boston, •—'Mrs. Wayne Faffath, Douglas New Jersey's forest area from the Mass./ is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Avenue, was guset of her parents, New York State line to Cape May, Robert Grimley, Woodbridge Ave- Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Hanson, Elk- deserve much credit for the fine nue. "•; ting ville, S. I. record of the State in reducing —-Miss Beverly Longmore, —Mr. and Mrs. James Thomp- damage form such conflagrations. Scranton, Pa., is the guest of her son, Brooklyn, were guests of Mr. uncle and aunt, Mr. and. Mrs'. Bur- and Mrs. Foster Burke, Douglas TOMATOES: — New Jersey's ton Seward, Burnett Street. Avenue. tomato saving army, will soon —Miss Anna Evering-, Liv- —Mrs. K. B.\ Meyers, New swing into action to process the ingston Avenue, is an appendec- York iCity, Mrs. Ella Jordan, Eliz- State's 1945 tremendous tomato tomy patient at the Perth Amboy abeth, Gunner's Mate 2/C and crop. I General Hospital. Mrs. James Lucas were Sunday Thomas E. Costello State Man- dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. power Director, has issued A call Like peach —RFC. Charles Nier, USMC, is Frank Lucas, Tappen Street. for thousands of cannery workers pies, tarts, cob- spending ten days at his home on —-Mr. and Mrs. George Mroz —males to do the heavy work and blers and sal- Woodbridge Avenue after nine females to prepare the tomatoes months in the Pacific, and children, Hudson Boulevard, ads? Then come spent the weekend with relatives for cooking and canning and label- —Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Al- in Trenton. ing—when the new crop comes in to A&P for brecht, Jr., 10 Park Avenue., are about August 1. —-Mrs. Harry Turfman and firm ripe peach- parents.of a son born Saturday at children, Donald . and Janet, Full time and part time work- St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Eliza- es at thrifty prices! Serve Brooklyn, were guests of Mrs. ers 'alike will be welcomed by the beth, Edward Moran, Douglas Avenue. canneries at Camden, Bridgeton, peaches every day while —Mr. and Mrs. George Sears, —Mrs. William Hacker, Ziegler Swedesboro and other south Jer- they're plentiful . , . and 16 Yale Avenue, are parents of a Avenue, is visiting hex son, Wal- sey 'points, Costello claims. Un- daughter born last week at Rah- can enough to last all year. ter, who is a patient at Camp like other New Jersey food crops, way Memorial Hospital. Pickett Hospital, Va. tomatoes cannot be held in. stor- —The Ladies' Auxiliary of age but must be. processed as ra- —'Girl Scouts of Wild Rose pidly as the sun ripens them and Avenel Fire Oo. No. 1 will hold Troop No. 6' with their leaders, a card party tomorrow night at the farmers deliver them to the Mrs. George Slivka and Mrs. Rich- canneries. 8:1,5 o'clock at the home of Mrs. ard Myers, attended a tour of a Alex Tar.cz, Minna Avenue, with radio station, and saw the Ice Show JERSEY JIGSAW:—Every man, Mrs. John Klubenspies as co- in New York City, Saturday. hostess. woman and child in New Jersey Those attending were Miss Ad- on the average, received an in- —Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Glen- rienne a'Frkas, Miss Peggy Bell, dinning and jlaughter, formerly come of $1,28'2 in 1943 compared Miss Doris Myers, Miss Shirley with $746 in 1939, the State De- of Yale Avenue, have moved; to Slivka, Miss Barbara Lakotos, Woodbridge Avenue. • • partment of Economic Develop- BUSHEL BASKET 3.89 Miss Delphine Seyferth, Miss Do- ment contends . . . Paul P. Wil- THE GREAT ATLANTIC 6 PACIFIC TEA CO. —Miss Mary Lou Monson, Man- lores Lott, Miss Nancy Palmer, liams, of Maple.wood, former clerk hattan Avenue and Miss Janet Miss Dolores D'Aprile, Miss Janet to the House of Assembly, has Young, Burnett Street, are at Cegledy and Jack Slivka. been appointed administrative as- Camp Endeavor, ocotch Plains. ORISP TABLE CELERY . . 19= YELLOW CORN r,-„,,,,„,„,,,, 4 25= sistant in the new Department of . —Mr. and Mrs. 'Leiner, Marie Pellegrino Chosen Conservation at $5,000 yearly... Avenel Street, have returned home New claims for unemployment POTATOES «•*•»°-' 1*-* si*. 10 b, 44^ WHITE CABBASE »<>««">™ ">-5° after vacationing on Long Island. For Pembroke Committee benefits filed in New Jersey dur- —Mr. and Mrs. William Nelson, ing June totaled 88,946, an in- FRESH CUCUMBERS ^ «. *7- CALIFORNIA LEMONS . . . 10= East Orange, were Sunday guests POET READING—Miss Marie crease of 2'7.S per cent. . . Harry of Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Perief, St. S. Pellegrin'o, daughter of Mr. and C. Harper, State Commissioner of .George Avenue. Mrs. Nicholas Pellegrino, 1G Labor, reports 186,994 accidents —Mr. and Mrs. Gustave Koch Fourth Street, has been elected occurred in New Jersey. factories have returned to their home on chairman of "Scout Week" at in 19 44, ' compared w ith 188,73 9 Canning Supplies Pembroke College in Brown Uni- Park Avenue after visiting their during 1942. . . Early varieties p versity, Providence, R. I. "Scout 4 son Paul Koch, HA1/C, at of New Jersey's 1945 apple crop luryea's Oorii Starch PoffedHieeSparkies P1ri2c Season Jars « rJ5c r: Week" is the traditional freshman Springsfield, Mass. are now in season . . . Despite war Uneetfa Biscuits 3 17c 5 Ideal Jars /o'ztfiSc zi —Mrs. Edward Kennedy and introduction to campus life. production cut-backs and reports KelSogg's Rice Krispies f£ i2c f daughters, George Street, are va- The Port Reading girl, a senior, of women retiring from the labor 'Ritz Crackers «*BMCO KeSI@ggs AH Bran' Rubber Jar Rings . cationing at Ocean Gate. has also been elected president of- market, the employment of work- IUI<9£An I'll" f^4flC BTDMADniU C^" 4 Metcalf Hall, one of the two main Premium Crackers NABISCO 1Sc —Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brecka, ers in New Jersey during June if|a9vll uai l^apo DtHnflHUlM ^,jc college dormitories, and served as Livingston Avenue, are spending showed little decline, War Man- Hygrade Pretzel Stix 13c Shredded Ralston ^ Paraffin Wax TEXWAX 2 Z two weeks at Dingman's Ferry, vice president-treasurer of dormi- power officials claim . . . Governor 2Ie Pa. tory council. She is senior board Walter E. Edge is very pleased Orape JBUI Heeker's Farina Sesto .... •«•«« —Mrs. John Castrovinci and member of War Council and also with his new granddaughter, Ca ANN Apple Jelly MABROWH-S ub.i«|gc PAGE oz.pkS.f 4c Miss Jennie .Oastrovinci, North of the Student Government Asso- milla Edge Lcc, 2d . . . New Jer- B/I.e, P. Fruit Pectin »- Bergen, were weekend guests of ciation and is program chairman sey's potato crop this year is re Marmalade HARTLEY'S nb.ia:28c Quaker Oats . Pickling Spice Mr. and Mrs. I/awrence Castro- f'or the Christian Association. In ported the best ever . . . The Wai SUHWYFIELD 20oi. | f . addition, Miss Pellegrino holds the Hoffinan Honey . H?.I«28C Ouick Cooking pkg. II" cinci, Hudson Boulevard. Manpower Commission has launch 8I post of advertising manager for ed its annual hunt for can'nerj Peanut Bytter SULTANA frf4c WHEAT iib. na. —Mr. and Mrs. Henry Nelson, GERM pkg. &W" Seedless Raisins &Z%T 13c Brun Mael, the college year book. workers to insure speedy process Mrs. Edward Ruth and Miss Plum Preserves SHERRY ^ 2Sc Plllsbary's PFL9URE 200z.pkg.ffc Oolman's Mustard ^^-^ 9e Frances 'Cagney, town, were guests ing of New Jersey's tremendous lb PfflCPyweC DAMSON PLUM ' -97i» PANCAKPE E ^0I.p(;g.Jc of Mr. and Mrs. James McHugh, tomato crop . . . Dr. Samuel L FLOHR Sider Vinegar SBLTANA qt.bot.f4fi Reception Slated Sunday Salasin, Health Officer of Atlantic ri ca©i vco ANNPAGE jar*iu Commercial Avenue, at cards Sat- 16c White Vinegar & *»*12i urday. For Supply Pastor, Wife • City, has been re-elected president Welch's Srapelade «•>-i»22e —•James Barna has returned of the Board of Examiners of to his home on Lord Street after WOODBRIDGE —Rev. Dr. Jo- , Health Officers and Sanitary In- White Rose Tea Hb.phi.23e spectors of the State Department Paneake .Syrup DIXIELAND ^;.22c spending two weeks with his bro- seph H. Stein, head of the Middle TStley'sTea . wb^aSe b Orange Juice » ther, (Lieut. .Robert Barna, Hamp- Atlantic Conference, will preach of Health . . . The new State Board !I a of Mediation has settled 25 Kara £S Syryp 24Oz.i,,i5c Apple Juice B ton, Va. the sermon Sunday at 11 A. M. Tender Leaf Tea Mb.pfc>-24c strikes and 46 other disputes —Miss Margaret Anderson and at the First Congregational B&0 islasses ««.n16c Fig Juice iflNfE-s n«.b among workers in New Jersey . . . ©2K6f S Dutch Type ls@S©2 pkg, 1 wC George Anderson, ANM, Sea Church. His subject will Be "Estab- O'flfflCk CORN MUFFIN „!,„ 1 1 p An organization that will voice L I)S S Prune Juice w SEAL <«.k Cliff, L. I., were guests of Mr. lish Thou the Work of Our Hands Oarnation MALTED MILK '-39C the opinions of New Jersey's rural |»fiyffl« WHEAT SOY 9 10cz. 4 C. and Mrs. Martin Maciag, Douglas Upon Us." aOIaen MUFFIN MiX * Pkgs. IOC Prune Juice AIRLINE «U OvaStlsie H young men and women in civic Rllfl'e "T MUFFIN. WAFFLE „. Avenue. At 3 P. M., a reception in honor matters of local and national im- UUil b or GINGERBREAD MIX p Prune Juice SUNSWEET «t.b •—Mrs. Robert Dilley, Irving- Oecssnalt •of Dr. and Mrs. Stein will be held portance is now in process of de- - BIME D Keiiegg's Oorn Flakes t^gs ton, was a weekend guest of Mr. in the Sunday School room. All velopment . . . Four-H Club mem-, S®i 0a Dromedary ;r «*••• and Mrs. Edward Moran, Jr., Liv- church members and friends are bers in Mercer, Middlesex, Pas- ; "Prest® Oake Flour *•*»•! Oern Flakes suNHYFiELB8or.ptg.St1 ingston Avenue. Dr invited. saic and Salem counties have be- To@tsie ¥-M ySkim —The Round-Up Sewing Clu'b gun a lamb-feeding project which Mi|k Cake Flour SU»NYFIELD I^.P^.S Sbredded Wheat HABISCO P^I 1 § met last week with Mrs. Charles Cilae'e VELVET CHOCOLATE 20oz.f will culminate with a show and Nofbntts ailGl & FLAVORED SYRUP iar^ Kellogg'sPep . •~i*.9r Koza, Livingston Avenue. Mrs. WEDDING RING, LOST 45 Cow Brand Soda sale at the College of Agricul- DE E D ANN 12 oz. 4» YEARS, FOUND Pftf JSQfKSIB'clfl Chocolate 1• 4c Minute iesssrt 8=z.Pk5.|2c Puffed Wbeat Spaitles;»: Ss relatives in Phillipsburg. ring with "fPud" engraved inside. are watching the cases mount hop- for good nourishment, too Investigation proved it to be the Campisell'SspSs^P^r i&C Yukon SSnb Soda K Kremel Desserts«BFhwn*g.4e PuffS SUNHYFIELD —Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mullens ing an epidemic may be avoided 10 ... . enjoy A&P's delicious K. and daughter, Fifth Avenue, have wedding ring of Mrs. Henry Bru- . . . The summer vegetable grow- Campbell's ?£ Soup *."- 11 c nei*, who had lost it 46 years ago fish! Fish is rich in protein, moved to Railway. ers meeting of the New Jersey" "" " jEgg Noodles with 16 oz. |jjc while visiting a relative at the Horticultural Society will be held jar plus important vitamins and residence occupied by Mrs. Read. CHEF BOY-AR-BEE ., . at the College of Agriculture, Rut- Prewired With Meat M««-i» minerals! And fish is a The ring was returned to Mrs. gers University, on August 18 thrifty dish, ioo! CLOSED ALL DAY Brunei- just four months before . . . The number of chicks hatched College SR she and Mr. Brunei- were to ob- by commercial hatcheries in New Vitality AHMOBR'S—For 4&o WEDNESDAYS serve their golden wedding anni- IlldlUA SravIes.SoBiw.ete. b* Whiting Fresh 1b.f2c Jersey during the first six months IMITATION .... DURING JULY and AUG. versary. MAPLE FLAVOfl bo). of 1945 has nearly equalled the Biitterf1st! •**'". 2|e total output of chicks during the ASS fl 6E Vanifla Extract Fi;r a *£• EXPENSIVE DIAMOND entire twelve months of 1944. Fresh Ib. OMAHA, Neib.—While feeding While Rice "IKS"* ».*.13c M^lffBSilfllp'e MACARONI of in. •: his flock of 250 chickens, George IViilGiier S SPAGHETTI 'lB>-f*s- 13c FrssS Ib. 29c Harr lost a diamond. He called Queen Mary traveled 600,000 Ann Pa(rjs MACARONI OF ,,h . 8 roR ins; THAN in James L. White to help him miles, delivering 600,000 troops. HIIII rdgS SPAGHETTI "lbPk9- 11c Fresh to. 25 find the diamond. White killed, Testderon! Fresh -, J*|. cleaned and dressed 250 chickens Wage rise to boost price of cot- For Chowder ««-*lwC before discovering the gem. ton textiles. Venice Mai 15e OUROWN-MAYFAIR Tcmato Paste «»™«* 18« Mortsn's Salt^'S 2 1& B E fl N s 2 -49c [20] Chili Sauce And a pair of slacks solves Cocktail Lounge THEIR BEST Flit Insecticide t s 5 Mel-O-BIt a£5Srii lb-3Sc [20] Chili Sauce much of your prolblem. We ' SaiU-Flusb [3]0hed-0-BIt [2oi Snider's 18t •have most sizes. We have %. 'TOV0R-SAW ROASI r [4]Borden s Eio] ¥-8 Cocktail them in fine materials and Italian Tomato Pies and Spaghetti SOLD !N THE colors. Sarcoleie [ 1 ] Lietferkrafiz BORDEN-S [10] College |mTlSitEflSM2JbS-3ll — i fi. CUSTOM GROUND - ij that can't be beat! [20] Brapefrait Juice 4*.f20i 1880-1945 S. h BLIND TO SUIT "S3" Bleach [siBsndost toSLr *-47c no] Blended Juice >°» TOUR TASTE &p Our 65th Business Milestone SOUTHERN FRIED LAUNDRY BLEACH [»l Crsafu Cheese 5SB \%. 11 e [30] Grape Juice ft Brand TONIGHT! CHICKEN—AND ReckittsBlie . 2 [ 3 ] Pabst-Ett §S 6Xr 18c. [TOI SUeed Apples &<$-„ 20 f 1 I If I"S#? HBlish. Pimento or ioz. flf. HOT MEALS p L ' ! nfaSiChiveCheeseSnreaiiswedga&lC [io] Apple Sauce r 1 1 if s'i'S-fr Relish or Pimento 5ni.< ft 10 SMITH and KING STS. .Cnt-Rite Wax Paper I ' J !\» tlSl CHEESE SPREAD glass I DC [20] Prunes T^/ • PERTH AMBOY WHITE HOUSE EVAPORATED FANCY CREAMERY CLOSED PAILY 8 P. M. THE PERFECT FOOD! Plui fall FRIDAY and SATURDAY 9 P. M. 739 RAHWAY AVE. WOODBRIDGE i Points BUTTER FRESH MILK Free Parking Lot-in Rear NOW ONLY 16 POINTS PER LB.T Closed Mondays Every pint of Whits House provides 'Get your butter requirements in our It provides more dietary essentials thai*' 400 Units of "Sunshine" Vitamin D. Lalry Deportment E any other food ... use it liberally! PAGE SIS THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1945- RARITAN TOWNSHIP AND FORDS BEACON LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES to: w-OSj- Docket TJO/44 Township Committee has, by reso- Chambers, Memorial Municipal JVO1UCK OH' 1'UBCilC SALE lution and pursuant to law, Pxed a Building, Woodbridge, New Jersey, MUGGS AND SKEETER —By WALLY BISHOP TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: minimum price at which said lots and expose and sell at public sale At a regular meeting of the in said block will be sold together and to the highest bidder according" with all other details perrinent, to terms of sale on file with the Township Committee of the Town- VDU SEE.HE'S HOT A DOES IT ^ WELL.SOFARIT THAT'S KIND NOT ANY MORE ...THIS ship of Woodhriclge held Monday, said minimum price being $'200.00 Township Clerk open to inspection July reth, 1945, I was directed ujus costs ut preparing ueed ana and to be publiclv read prior to sale, OURLlL- Ton-nsiup Uomrmtlee will meet at 53 to 55 inclusive in Block 517-O, THIS EXERCISE MA OOUPLA HOURS the balance of pur.cnase price to be Woodbridge Township Assessment BROTHER?LET HIM LOVES THIS.'! S P. M, (WT) in the Committee paid in equal monthly installments TIRE HIM OUT!! EVERY N/SHT! Chambers, M e m o r i a 1 Municipal Map. of ?10.00 plus interest and. other Take further notice that the Building-, Woodbridge, New Jersey, terms provided for in contract of and expose and sell at public sale sale. Township Committee has, by reso- and to the highest bidder according lution and pursuant to law, fixed a. to terms of sale on file , with the TaJce further notice tnat a-t said minimum price at which said lota; Township Clerk open to inspection sale, or any date to which *t may in said block will be sold tog-ether and to-be publicly read prior to sale, be adjourned the Township Conr- with a-11 other details pertinent, said Lots 140 and 141 in Block -202-A, imittee reserves the right in its dis- minimum price being $3fi0.00 plus cretion, to reject any one or ail bids costs of- preparing deed- aim ad'v:etf- Wooclbritlge Township Assessment and to sell said lots in said block Map. tiaing this sale. Said lots in sa-loV to such bidder as it may select, due block, if sold on terms, will requise 'lake further notice that the regard being' gi'v.en to terms and a down payment of $35.00, the bal- Township Committee has, by reso- manner of payment, in. case one or ance of purchase price to ue pa-iti.1 lution and pursuant to law, fixed a more minimum bids snail be re- in. equal monthly installments ot: minimum price at which said lots ceivedi in said blocK will be sold tusetner flO.OO plus interest and othec terms' with all other details pertinent, said Upon acceptance of the minimum provided for in contract of sale. Ccpr 1945, King Feature. Syndicw, Inc, "Wccid nghl bid; or bid above minimum, by the Take further notice that, at said minimum, price being $2i50.00 plus Township Committee and the pay- costs of preparing deed and adver- sale, or any date to wtlich it may ment thereof by the purchaser ac- be adjourned, the Township Com- tising this sale. Said lots in said cording to the1 manner o£ purchase btocK, it sold on terms, will require mittee reserves, the right in its dis- in accordance with terms of sale on eitetJon to reject any one or all bids THE FLOP FAMILY —By SWAN a down payment of $25.00, the bal- tilet. the Township will deliver a bar- ance of purchase price to ae paid; gain and sale deed for sa.id premises. and to sell said lots in; said Block; in equal monthly installments of t'o. such bidder as it may select, due ?10.0o plus interest and. other terms DATED: July 17th, 1945. regard being given to terms and B: .1. JDUNiG-AN, Township-Clerk. manner, of payment, in ease one or POUT r"EEL #J\0, OtF\#-\ ijrovidetl lor in contract at sale. To be advertised July 26th and further notice that at said more minimum bids shall be re- Aug-ust 2nd, 1945, in the Fords Bea- ceived. sale, or any date to which it may con. be adjourned, the Township Com- Upon acceptance of the minimum; mittee reserves the right in its dis- bid, or bid above minimum,. by- the cretion- to reject any one or all bids Refer to: W-144; Docket 120-3Mttm' the / paid in equal monthly installments Assessment Map. , • J the Township Committee will: meet of $10:00 plus Interest" and other pj

9 PORTRAYS F AMOJJS ROLE 75 SIVER DOLLARS BUYS K@mimky $ 3-Hitter Gives CYO Baseball Schedule BOND ALGONA, Iowa — Seventy-five Senior League silver dollars, all of 1923 mintage, 3~fi, Victory In County Tourney Week pf Jujy aftth were used by Major Louis C. Hut- Tuesday: Bluebirds "H" .vs. -St. James' CY.O. Ava Gardner, the ex-Mrs. Mick- ton, provost marshal at the Al- E — St. James' haly and Moskal had singled and gona prisoner of war camp, to buy Wednesday: Hungarian B. C. "H" ws. Alley Boys. ey Rooney, begins her long-de-'i jhaaejiall .'nine defeated the 'Trainer walked. Note: Due to fch,e inclement -weatb-er it was necessaj-y to a $100 bond. The officer obtained powerful* South River Maroon The CYO's third run was earned re-arrange the schedule. layed movie career. She has the the coins while working • ii the combine 3-0 at Highland Park in South Dakota Black Hills some a Freeholder Tournament con- on hits by Germain who stole sec- lead opposite George Raft - in ond, f olloiwed by singles by Train- Junior League "Wnistie Stop." yeai's ago. In The Mailbag: test. ,' , • er and Lo-zak in the fifth frame. Led by Frank Kaminsky, who Monday: Rovers vs. Barriers at ^Barrier Field. Screen rights to an as yet un- Outstanding play of the game Tuesday: Avenel Republican Club vs. Silver Streaks at Pords "PEEPING TOM" •Sgt. Herman (Chib) Stern" limited the hard-hitting Maro.ons miiblished novel, "The Lives and writes from France: "Greetings to' three hits while striking out was the double play worked by Park. McCALL, Idaho—Seeing a face Moskal, Yahaly and Germain that Times -of Uncle Jan Horak," by at the window, Mrs. Charles Tins- from Paris. Our outfit is all ten and' issuing no walks, the Wednesday: St. James CYO Jrs. vs. Maroon Jrs., at Legion Audi-y . Wurdemann, have been packed up and ready to move -and CTO ,pu,t the! game on ice in the ended the .game. Kaminsky was Annex. ley was terrified and called for I hope we go back to the good old master of the 'South River bats- bought by Paramount. The story, help. 'Sgt. -Carl Seiber, home from fourth frame when Ronnie Lozak Friday; Avenel Republican Club vs. Barriers at Avenel. centering about the life of a Bo- States. Paris is quite a style een- singled with the bases loaded to men, none of whom reached second the war front, ran outside and ter and the GPs are here in abund- base. hemian family in Wisconsin, is to fired a volley of shots at the in- shove across .two runs after Va- be published by Simon & Schuster. ance. Regards to $!}."'. . . ."A Con- Young Al H&klar c-apt.ur.ed the truder. His aim was good and he stant Reader" writes that PlFC. . Dana Andrews has a new eon-now has a six-foot bear pelt to crowd's fancy with his fiery alert- First Half Baseball Standings tract and he isn't shy about tell- Harold Honegg-er, Iselin, is sta_% ness all through the. game. He prove it. tioned in Berlin with the "Skeond Senior League ing its terms. He is to receive JJanton, In Twirling shows signs-of really - going places ; $1,500,000 over a period of seven Armored Division. Harold is a vet- in baseball. . - W on Lost Aires. It will be Miss CheirePs first Alley Boys ..^.. - 4 1 years! In it, the studio agrees to I eran of three invasions, a.nd jt is, Tex Moskalevich and Watsey important part in an American understood that he has 1-09 Farewell, 41 Winner St. Janies CYQ _ .4 1 pay his agent the ten per cent usu. I film. ' points . . . starred f'orthe losers 'who played a Maroons ..—;....: : ; j. 3 2 Miss Bette Davis has the lead- ally paid by the actor or actress. | brilliant game: even in defeat. Hungarian B. C ...;...... ; -3 % ing role in "The Corn Is Green" Micheline Cheirel, -once a- Buy War Bonds. WOODBRIDGE—Jack Manton, . The CYO will travel to .Central pitching-his last- game before leav- Bluebirds —.-. 1 4 at the Ditmas Theatre, Perth French screen and stage actress, Isljp, L. I., August 4 to play the Amboy. TELEPHONE 4-0075 ing- for the Army, gave up but strong Central Islip State Hos- Golden Bears „: ...„. .„.,...... „, _._.. 0 5 and former wife of John Loder,' Here And There: nour hits and gave the Alley Boys has been signed by RKO for the pital . team before, an estimated Junior League . Wish owners of empty lots a 4-1 win- over J;he Pertn^A'mboy crowd of 8,!0)0i0. it «is- customary Ditmas romantic lead opposite Dick P-ow- j wouldcut down the weeds. They Arrows. , Won Lost ell in "Cornered," a melodrama for big league scouts to frequent Terse with powerful drama, look unsightly and doing- away Fine fielding kept the Alley games played by the Islip team Silver Streaks A. 4 1 with a background of Buenos with the weeds now -would help Boys in control of the game which and the local'iboys-will beaut- to Avenel Republican Club 3 2 starring Bette Davis at her best, hay fever victims next month . . . went -seven and one~-half' innings do their best. The CYO will be St. James' CYO Jrs 3 2 Warner Bros.', latest emotional The New Jersey State semi-pra when, rain halted the playing. Barriers .....:....„...... ,.„. 3 2 Baseball League will • bring one guests of the Islip team at luneh- treat, "The Corn Is Green," at the Funeral Directors The score: "eon "and dinner. • . •• Rovers : \ 4 Djtmas Theatre, is a grade-A piece of its games here tomorrow night : . Maroon-, Jrs. ..i..._:..l .-..;;.-..„... ._..„ 1« 4 at six -o'clock at the Legion Sta- - - ALLEY BOYS " - - The score: of. entertainment providing the AJB R H ST. JAMBS' CYO ium. It will be between the Dia-Mosenthme, 2b 4 12 celebrated screen star with a role, 366 STATE STREET mond Roof of Perth Amboy and A!B R H the like of which has twice before Kath, e 5 0 2 Haklar, c 4 0 1 Painting is Fun PERTH AMBOY, N. J. the Curtis Wright Corporation of Moore, 1b 5 0 2 Keasbey Firemen Bow;Rockette$ Traiincei won for her an Academy Award. Wbm You Use . Caldwell. The game was originally Germain, lb 3 1 1 Cvoh &Dunn scheduled for Waters Stadium, Sverada, ss 3 11 Va-haly, 2b—...... 3 1 , 1 Transformed from *a Broadway Joseph V. Costeiso, Mgr. Perth Amboy, but due to the, many Capraro, cf 4 11 Moskal, ss 3 . 1 1 To Iselin Co,, 17-4 stage hit to a compelling motion postponemeiits on account of the Salvia, !f 4 12 Trainer, cf 2 0 1 BeadtMe. QUmats burner, rf O 0 0 picture, perfect in every detail, weather it was decided to hold Lozak, 3b 3 0 2 ISELIN — The \ Keasbey Fire WOiODBRiPCE—Last Sunday, "The Corn Is Green" ^ tells the some of the games in-thesurround- Kara, 3ib 3 0 1 Kaminsky, p 3 0 2 "There Is No Substitute— Mullaney, rf ' 4 0 1 Company bowed to the Iselin fire- the Greiner Girls met and defeat- story of a high-spirited English At Leading Paint & Hardware Stores ing communities . .;, • Geis, If .....: 3. 0 0 men to the tune of 17-0 at the ed the Kfew Brunswick Roekettes, For Burke Service* Manton, p 4 0 1 Gallagher, rf ...... 3 0 2 woman's struggle to raise the edu- Buy War Bonds new Iselin ball park. The highlight an all-negro team, toy a score of cational standard of the impov- of the game was a home run by 8-2. : 36 4 13 erished miners of Wales at the Tidbits: * : '•••]. 27 3 11 Ed Kenny, star fielder for the Ise-- Emilie Williams of the local ,club P. A. ARROWS MAROONS' . - linitea. pitched a beautiful game, getting turn of the century, and has flavor If you have a small Ice box you AIB R H . A-B R H eight strike-outs over the hard- and substance that leaves a deep no longer need, Jojln, Omenhiser, F. Buckwieie, 2b .... 3 0 1 The first inning proved fatal Olchasky, ss .'..-. 3 0 0 for the Keasbey combine when the hitting Roekettes. She 'also hit, a impression. Tender with poignant WOODBRIDCE, N. J. Relief Director, would like to Petersan, ss ...J 3 0 0 Palo, 2b .-.I....'.. 3 0,0 double and a single. have it for a very needy family. Beck, 3tb :.... 3 0 0 hard-hitting Iselin team - pounded moments of sadness and joy, the Just call him at Wootibridge 8- Vogel, If .3 0 0 Benny XJloff for«eight hits and The Hinton sisters turned in film is a moving, tribute to all men TODAY THRU SAT. Boland, cf 3 0 0 Moskalevich, 3b .... '3 0 1 some sensational fielding for the 1200 and he will have' someone •Ulrieh, If ..-. 2-0 0 registered six runs. From then on and women of good will who have Sonja HENIE in jail for it ... The youngsters are Maklary, c 8 0. 1 the game was' on ice. The Iselin visitors- while Marie Stumpf kept Karlbon, lb 3 0 1 Wright, lb 2 0 0 firemen went- on to bang out a up her steady hitting for the ivin- fought 'for tolerance throughout "IT'S A.PLEASURE" certainly enjoying the sandboxes Mossa, c 3 0 0 the ages. and swings at Woodbridge Park Jarosiewicz, cf 2 0 1 total of 21 hits. ers. (in Color) Raider, 'rf 1 2 0 0 Wrobleiwski, rf 2 0 0 Sunday's game marked the de- plus Lee TRACY - Nancy KELLY in . . . Understand that Russian War Fedor, p '. 3 12 The Keasbey team is ou.t f or re- j Relief has withdrawn as a mem- Watsey, p .'. 2 0 0 venge in the next game to be but of the Greiners' ten-year-old ber of the National War Fund due played at Keasbey Sunday. The mascot,, Laura Jean Jacobs. The SSELIN THIATRE "BETRAYAL FROM THE EAST" • -, 25 1 4 23 0 crowd was the largest yet to see to the fact that it contemplates a Score by innings: Iselin firefighters. have: lost but Oak "Tree Road change in. program involving less one g.iame this season. They-have a the .Mayor's team play and they SUN. THRU TUES. Alley Boys".....:.. 000 011 20' Nazis thwarted in launching the were well pleased "tto see them Iselin, N. J. Met. 6-1279 War Relief as such and more re- P. A-. Ar.rows ..... 001 000 0 —1 "world's largest flying boat. total of 18 wins to date. DorotKy LAMOUR - Arturro DE CORDOVA in habilitation and reconstruction ... ISELIN • ' pack up their eighth straight win Fri., Sat., July 27, 28 i ' "A MEDAL FOR BENNY" AJB H R and their twelfth win of the sea- "A Song to Remember" Buy plus Gracie FIELDS - Monty WOOLLEY 5n Bonds Dobbs, sf : 4 2 2 so,n. They now claim the Middle- starring Tel. Woodbridge 8-099S sex County championship. B. Cocoran, 3b ..,!- 4 3 _. 3 Paul "Muni, Merle Oberon • . "MOLLY AND ME" Operator 13 Reports: M. Cocoran, 2b -.'-... 4 3. 2 'Also over the -weekend the — Also —. WED. THRU SAT. That Helen (T.own Hall Chaney SHOP OF WOOPSRIDGE Osborne, cf .:... 4 2 2 Greiners beat the New York Al- "Rough, Tough and Joan FONTAINE in "THE AFFAIRS of SUSAN Is as happy as the proverbial lark. Kenney,- If 4 - 2 2 pines 2r$ .in an Interstate League Ready" The reason: The one and only has. 110 Main St., Woodbridge, N. J. Varany, rf ... 4 '3 3 game. This Sunday the girls will Sun., Mon., July 29, 30 returned fro® overseas, and rumor] Re-meta, ss .....: 3 2 1 play the Phelps-Dodge team of has it that "wedding bells will ring FOR SALE Lamberti, lb 3 1 1 Elisabeth. THE Strangest Holiday out shortly. . . . George (Avenel) i. iP-eters, rf • 1 1 0 The score: • THRU Flynn is home on furloug-h. . . , TWO PEOPIE EVER SHAREDI { LATEST USED RECORDS - USED RADIOS , H-uttftman,. p ...t 2 1- , 0. p GIRLS SATURDAY That a certain Woodibridge wo- Elliott,/e ....". 3 1 '•• 0 SELZNICK INTERNATIONAL presents man, who doesn't know a thing "" AlB R Statile, :2b 3 2 JULY 28th about baseball and has a son that .RADIO TUBES ,36 21 '17 eiNGEE BOGEYS > JOSEPH COTTEN is an exceptionally good player, Roman, ss 4 '0 is being kidded by her husband We have a limited supply of hard to get tubes KEASBEY Stumpf, c 4 0 SHIfiLEYTEMPLE. - . AB H R H. Seyglinski, 3b .... 4 0 these days. Seems she pulled two . ' AB R H boners. The other day her son for sale. We can replace practically any tube Kuzma, cf 2 0 Katransky,. If 3 0 0 Zullo, rf ...:... 3 1 came home and said he had played you may require. Cyrus, sf -3 0 0 a pretty good game that day, steal- ; Fanfcscak, rf 0 0 Payti, ss 3 1; 0 E. Williams, p :- 3 • 2 ling Jrwo bases. She indignantly RADIOS REPAIRED Parster, 3b 3 10 told him she wouldn't have him -, Zuccaro, sf ...:..- 3' - 1 Gloft', p 3 0 0 Kijula, sf a 2 5 CHARLES STARRETT stealing, and ordered him to take Wm. Hoffman Kress, ,1b ,.....'.. 3 1 0 "those bases back at once." . . . | Fe'dorseak, If , 1.1 Rodan, c .....— 3 0 0 M. Seyglinski, If ..."1.1 0 4 DAYS - STARTING SUNDAY, JULY 29TH On Sunday, the youngster was tell- Danback, cf -.... - 3 10 "Marshal of Reno" The Screen's First Great ing his father about the pitcher Peterchak, rf ..„:... 2 10" 30 8 10 Tues., Wed., July 31, Aug. 1 Dramatic Musical' declaring that he had given a Burchak, 2b 2 0 0 player "thre.fi high balls and then ROGKBTTES "Frisco Sal" with struck him out." "Wo you mean to 28. 0 AB P. H tell me that boys your age drink ' Anderson, sf 4> 0 2 Susanna Foster, Alan Curtis highballs and that your coach per- ROOSEVELT HOTEL C. Williams, 2b ...... 4 1 0 — Anil — E Lum and Abner in mits it?" the mother asked. LIQUPR STORE THEATRE Stout, rf 2 0 0 Buy War fitwids Emp RAHWAY Houstan, rf 10 0 "COIN' TO TOWN" Steve Kutcy, Prop. W[. Hrnton, 3b : 3 0 1 Didja Know That: FRL - SAT. - Borge>.ib- 3 0 0 Full Line Of Domestic "END of the R0AO" J. Williams, If 3 0 1 Frank Lucas' cow reappeared Edward Harris, Ju'ne Storey D. JJin.ton, cf 2 10 just as mysteriously as it disap- and Imported — Also nr- • Eato, p....:.,...... 3 o. i peared. Get along, little doggie, "UNDER WESTERN SKIES" S. Hinton, ss - 2 0 2 get along. . . . Amojig the. Town- WINES, LIQUORS AND RJartha O'P'riscoll, McGee, c _ 2 0 0 ship youngsters at-the Boy Scout Noah JBeery -Jr. - Dauda, Walter O-'-Re.ar, Pe.ter CORDIALS Saturday and Sunday Matinees • 29 2 1 Camp at Columbia are Janies 4 CARTOONS Score by innings: Szewszyk, John Ahimovie, William Roekettes ...'„.. 000 001 1—2 Late Show Sat. MeKinney, Harold Hanson, Rich- BOTTLED BEERS Greiner^ Girls -120 500 x—8 ard Crawford, Andrew Hacker, ALL POPULAR BRANDS Two-base hits: E. Williams, M. NOW PLAYING MARC PLATT-IESUE BROOKS VEDA #HH BORS • ROBERT Manuel Correia and Robert Dress- Hinton. Humphrey ier. . . . Arvid Winquist of Avenel SMALL BOTTLES and was around -Che town hall the other QUARTS day inquiring about the Keasbey NOW TO SAT. H. WEAN THRU water system. We wonder why? WE HAVE IN STOCK 1Q.0 CASES OF VIRGINIA DARE WEDNESDAY Buy War Bonds WINE, Red and White fifth bottle ROOFING & SIDING AUG. 1ST Last But Not Least: CASE OF 12 BOTTLES $11.52 59 Moffett St., Fords, N. J. Buddy Einhorn has been dis- OLD BRAND STOCK WHISKIES Telephone P. A. 4-S554TR charged from the service and is 3.91 back home. . . . Also discharged RED LABEL . ...fifth L JOURS)* MJ 6.31 lk.SElTEI-M«MtiO«lilEW!S and back home is Leon (Toots) THREE FEATHERS RESERVE ....fifth 3.91 lx »E1MSE» n Me HMO HCHK1 MC. Gerity, pounds heavier and wear- — Plus — ' ing a mustache. Understand he is OLD OYERHOLT, bottje bonded -—- -fifth 3.99 with interested in nursery furniture. pint 2.51 Alexis Smith And a Woodbridge housewife is i. W. HARPER - —-fifth 4.24 Wmimm FORDS, N. J. - P. A. 4-0348 1 Sydney Greenstreet not talking to her ^husband these OLD CWQW ..fifth 3.94 THURS., FRL, SAT. days because he gave her the ROYAL HARVEST ..fifth 3.14 Charles Drake •wrong answer over the phone on OLD GRAND PAD ~. fifth 4.83 ''-' - SEA<1RA1M S - ...3.46 JFred.. MacMurray, JToati. Leslie ter Tobrowsky at a F>oiHth of July SUN., MON., TUES., WED. celebration in Weis&^sn, Ger- SEAGRAM 7 - fifth 3.89 many. Lester, Ralph.writes, is a CALyERT RESERVE 3-90 k METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYEFt «'le iGreat Mike" leader of one of t^ie infantry, €A1UV£RT SPECIAL - —fifth 3.46 i$V PRESENTS OSCAR WIIDE'S -with StNiart Eryrin Late Show Sat. bands and looks very well. ld - 3-45 § *THE PICTURE OF Fril, Sat. - Chapter #10 Buy War Bonds fifth 3.45 "FEDERAL OPERATOR #99" NOW PLAYING LIGHTNING STRIKES TWICE I CLUB - .....jfifth 5.21 DORIAN (Thepfcfur^ - SUN., MON. TAiGOMA, Wash.—Rushing out B0YAL HARVEST - -fifth 3.14 "THE GREAT sinner^ in response to a fire.alarm during American Blended SCOTCH WHISKEY fifth 3.86 soul!) "That's the Spirit" : a thunder storm, firemen found at QUARTER AND HALF BARRELS ©F BEER jivith Jeck Oakie, Peggy Ryan JOHN L" had been sounded by lightning GEORGE SANDERS — Also — striking a pole holding an alarm WITH COOLERS with Linda. Darnell, HURD HATHELD „• DONNA REED 1 "liells of Rosarita" Barbara Britton, box. Half an hour (later, the alarm Order Now for Parties — Plus — with Roy Rogers and Trigger r^ng again. It was the same pole Free Delivery - Phone Steve, Cart. 8-9794 Greg McClure on the same corner^^struck by News • ~~ lightning again. . ;." . Bar Specials - all kind* of mixed drinks from old stock TUBS., WED. RECLUSE LEA V$5v $250,000 DELICIOUS HOT SANDWICHES ON "Man in Half Moon St." CHICAGO — Chflestino (Ches- SATURDAY NIGHTS with Nils Aster, Helen Walker ter) iChiesa, who •Ktfed,_ra life of Hot Roast Beef, Hamburgers — Also — "THE WOMAN a 'penniless recluse, was found to JACKOAKIE • PEGGY RYAH "Penthouse Rhythm" have left an estatft'.of f&SO/ttpO. A' Hot ^Sausage with Home Made Pickles Starts Next Tkur*. with Kirby Grant, Lois Collier IN GREEN" key, found in his r^geja trousersj LARGE PARKING #PACE IN REAR OF HOTEL "HAVING WONDERFUL • Selected Shorts with unlocked a bank- ^a'u^^njiaining CRIME" NIGEL RHrs ROSALIND the 'treasure. Mostf ttfj,'the estate LARGE ROOM FOR PARTIES - WEDDINGS, ETC. — Plus — Wednesday continuous matinee with Basil Rathbone left by the 75-yea£-«ia former beginning 2 P. M. Bruce Bruce. Williams • Ivan s. : CARTERET, N. J. "BETRAYAL FROM THE ' elevated failway guart' wttl gfo~to EAST" Dishes to the Ladies charity. _ ,-«~»£*- •PAGE'EIGHT THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1945 RARITAN TOWNSHIP AND FORDS BEACON

NOVEL ANNOUNCEMENT WANDERING 'GATOR MISTAKES SEASON attacked >by a roiled rooster—a CLOTHES LINES SAVE BOY BALK AT DIET SHENANDOH, Iowa—A novel •NEW YORK—An excited man OSMOND,Neb.—'Proof that the bantam at that. Higgins said that NEW YORK—The life of 19- MEDFORD, Ore.—Three orph- News From The Services wedding announcement was the telephoned police that there was a seasons are all mixed up can be he surrendered the yard to the months-old William Likely was aned kittens enjoyed the atten- rtooster, unconditionally. saved by ordinary clotheslines advertisement, inserted in the clas- •five-foot alligator in his backyard, given by Mrs. Martha Hauzlpr. tions showered on them by their sified columns of the Shenandoah whose Christmas cactus, which when he fell five stories to a con- trying to swallow some cats. Af- Good Advice adopted mother, a Leghorn hen, 'v, Pvt. Vincent Schmidt has re- advance Chinese .airfield, the team Evening Sentinel. It read: "Dear .normally blooms during the winter crete area way. The clothes lines, turned to his post at Aberdeen, ter convincing the police that he strung from apartment windows, until the hen tried to get them with much misgiving began to Gang—We were married in Atchi- holiday season, burst into full Under a stuffed fish in the: Har- Md., after spending a few days work, their only tools regular me- was a teetotaler, the police came broke his fall after he toppled to eat the food she worked so hard son, Kan., because we did not want bloom in mid-June. lem 'Up-rar' House is the price- •with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. chanics kits. Working until dark around, and, sure enough, there from his tricycle through an un- to provide—fat, juicy worms John Schmidt, Mary Avenue. to wait three days. Marguerite." less adage: "Take a Lesson From each day, in two weeks they had screened window. No bones were scratched .from the garden. Then - . , * * * The bride was identified as Mar- was the alligator. They hauled it to UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER Me-—I Wouldn't Be Here If I Had 110 vehicles in operation. T/5 broken. the kittens battled, paws against V, Dominiek La Penta, Jr., S2/C, Gentile has not been given any guerite Dorman, of Atchison, Kan. •fche police station. No one has any TOIPEKA, Kan.—As Tom Hig- Kept Ely Mouth Shut."—- Bili 457 School Street, Woodbridge, extra demobilisation points for his Iowa law requires a wait of three idea where the alligator came gins, mail carrier, made his regu- Farnsworth in the New- York Chiang Kays final victory for wing, as the hen insisted upon serves aboard the USS Shangri- work, but has won the commenda- days before marriage. from. lar rounds, he was viciously Journal. Chirui no longer in doubt. their eating the worms. La which today is a very real tion of the entire pipeline section : sourae of danger to the Japs and for his exceptional work. The local Sot just a mythical base popular- man entered the array over three feed; three years ago- when the years ago and has been overseas ©oalittle raiders hit Tokyo two years. Open 10 A. M. to 9 P. M. — Mondays thru Saturdays Planes from the Shangri-La help- * * * KOOS BROS, ed defeat the Japs in the recent Pvt. "Arthur Johnson, Jr., has Okinawa campaign, raining bombs, returned to Sheppard Field, Tex., rockets and bullets on enemy pill- after spending a 21-day furlough Clearance tags to the right of us . . . clearance tags to the left of us ... clearance tags boxes, caves airfields and comimi- with, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ar- nkations centers, in support oi thur Johnson, Prospect Street, ground troops. Woodbridge. all the way down our living room gallery. We are clearing out all the slightly * * * , News comes from Luzon that James Lucas, GM 2/C1 is spend- Pvt. Charles J. Monek, 114 Rus- ing a 30-day leave at his home damaged and shopworn living room furniture ... all the pieces we're tired of looking at. sell Street, Woodbridge, is now on Remsen Avenue, Avenel, after fighting with General MacArthur's 21 months service in Europe. Forces of liberation. He is a gun- A resplenden; group of sofas and chairs, including all the popular styles, marked at ner in an anti-awci-aft battalion William J. Ridyard, Jr., S2'/C, and landed on Sunday at Lingayen is spending a leave with his par- Gulf just a few scant minutes ents, Mr. and Mrs. William Rid- substantial reductions . . . identified by special clearance tags. after the infantry assault troops. yard, Trinity iLane, Woodbridge. Monek -was inducted into the army * * * in:'January, IS48 and trained at Pvt. Oscar Feld has reported to Whether you are interested in clearance items or non-clearance items, come in Camp Haan, Cal., before going Camp Rucker, Ala., after spend- overseas in August of the same ing a 10-day furlough at his home year. After stops at New Cale- on Clinton Street, Woodbridge. and see the most extensive living room displays in the state. Budget Terms Available, donia and Guadalcanal he joined his outfit on Bougainville and there "was subjected to the in- tense artillery barrages, the scores Mrs, Perm Entertains of air attacks and screaming ban- zai charges that featured the bit- For Ladies' Auxiliary ter Jap attempts to drive -our troops from their stranglehold on AVENEL—Ladies' Auxiliary of the harbor and airfield facilities Avenel Fire Co. No. 1 held a card of this largest of the Solomon Is- party Friday at the home of the lands. For bis service in the Solo- president, Mrs. William Perna-, mons, Pvt. Monek holds the Avenel Street. Asiatic-Pacific campaign medal Prizes at cards were won by with' combat star. Action on Luzon Mrs. Julius Leiner, Mrs. Joseph Has earned him the Philippine Lib- eration Medal with star, awarded Chipponeri, Mrs. William Russell, by Sergio Osmena, president of Mrs. Madeline Szalary, William the newly reorganized 'Government Kennedy. Non-players' prizes went of the Commonwealth of the to Mrs. Emma Vargo, Miss Sophie Philippines to members of the lib- Schmidt and Miss Johanna Miseh- eration armies. Monek, the son, of ler, while the special, award was UPHOLSTERED LIVING PIECES Mrs. Anna Monek, of the Russell won by Mrs. Leiner. Also attend- Street address, is a graduate of ing were Mr. and Mrs. Philin Mi- Woodbridge High School wheiehe celli, Mrs. Owen Roff, Mrs. E. E. IStii CENTURY CHAIRS MODERN CHAIRS played football. Raymond, Mrs. R. G. Perier, Mrs. 18th CENTURY SOFAS William Hofgesang, Mrs. Carl *' * * Was Was NOW S/Sgt. Robert N. Neary, son of Swetits, Mrs. Joseph Petras, Mrs. Was NOW NOW George Kufus, Mrs. Charles Koza, Authentic Chippendale sofa, Distinctive fallback chair, 79.50 Modern club chair, dark Mr. and Mrs. Chades W. Neary, green frieze - " - - $ 89 44 Gordon Avenue and husband Mrs. Alex Tarcz, Michael Ippi, wine floral tapestry be'ige floral tapestry - George Aimer and William Perna. of Mrs. Alma B. Neary, 52 Gor- Cozy fireside chair, blue Pr. modern occasional don Avenue, Fords, is currently The next party will be held at the Formal tuxedo sofa, wide stationed at the Redistribution home of Mrs. Tarcz, Minna Ave- wine and beige striped tapestry (Victory type) 69.95 chairs, beige pinstripe Station, Camp Butner, N. C, nue, with Mrs. John Kluberispiet damask - - Unusually lovely lounge damask - - - - - $119 ea. where he will spend two weeks be- as co-hostess. chair, beige with giant fore reporting to his new assign- Lawson lounge sofa, cocoa Modern wing chair, pat- rose and green tulip motif ment in the United States. Sgt. matelasse, fringe base terned rose tapestry (Vic- Clubwomen Continue (Victory type) - - - #219 after serving 21 months in the (Victory type) - * $179 tory type) » . - 54.50 • Mediterranean Theatre as a hos- Avenel Party Seties Deep - seated pilloiv - back Modern occasional chair, pital attendant in the Medical Lawson sofa, cocoa damask club chair, blue matelasse, Corps. He holds the Good Con- AVENBL — Members of the open arms, rose textured (Victory type) - - - $139 fringe base - - - $119 duct Medal, American Defense executive board of the Woman's tapestry - .... 39.96 34-50 Ribbon and European Theatre of Club of Avenel served as 'hostesses Tuxedo love seat, wine Comfortable platform Operations- Ribbon with Bronze at the tenth card party of a series damask • - - •• $109 rocker, tufted back, wine Pr. modem occasional chairs, Campaign Stars. Monday. Prizes at cards were won chevron weave - • 29.95 te-75 cartridge back and seat, 49-5® ... * #_ * by Mrs. Frank MacGarrah, Wood- Smart Lawson % sofa, blue turquoise damask • • 54.50 An ordnance contact team, of bridge; Mrs. Harold Skmson, Mrs. and beige stripe (Victory Knuckle• arm platform which T/5 John A; Gentile, son Harold Grausam, Mrs. Lawrence type) - - - $139 rocker, wine frieze - • 49.50 hi Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Gen- Castrovinci, Mrs. William Kuz- Knuckle • arm club chair, miak and William Kennedy. Chippendale love seat, rose MODERN SOFAS tile; iFulton Street, Woodbhdge, tufted back, ivine damask 39.50 was a member, helped to put to- Special award went to Mrs. damask - - . - - $109 Comfortable lounge chair, gether trucks needed by military George Mroz, door prize to Her- Lawson love seat, rose pat- Was NOW green textured tapestry Curved sectional sofa, .green pipeline engineers in China. When bert Head and non-players' award terned damask •* - $139 IIS. parts of trucks, weapon carriers to Mrs. William Falkenstern. Oth- (Victory type) - - 79.50 tapestry- $398 ers present were Mrs. Thomas Mc- Camel-back sofa, dark blue 9359.00 and jeeps began to pile up at an Lounge chair, round deep- Classic modern sectional Keown, Holyoke, Mass.; Mrs. Wal- traditional floral tapestry ly - tufted back, green ter Meyers, Colonia; Mrs. Robert (Victory type) - - $139 \ sofa, blue textured tapestry $179 Braun, Woodbridge; Mrs. James floral tapestry (Victory 159-oe letters Are Issued McHugh, Mrs. Joseph Sonntag, Directoire sofa with swans- type) - - - Modern lounge sofa, light Mrs. R. G. Perier, Mrs. A. J. Mur- neck arms; fully framed Knuckle-arm lounge chair, green tapestry, plume 160.00 By County'Surrogate phy, Mrs. Alex Tarcz, Mrs. Julius b a c k, traditional beige pillow-back, ivine frieze design $189 Leiner, Mrs. Robert Wells, Mrs. tapestry (Victory type) $139 8f|.5CI (Victory type). - - 79.50 John Ettershank, Mrs. Rubin Modern sectional sofa, chan- . W O O D B RI D G E—Surrogate Lounge sofa, mauve broca- Smart hostess chair, rose - Frank-A. Connolly has issued let- Greco, Mrs. Arvid Winquist, Mrs. nel-bacli, yellow-green tex- ters of administration to the fol- Kenneth Young, Mrs. Thomas telle, fringe base (Victory floral damask - - - 44.50 tured floral tapestry - - $329 lowing residents of the Township: Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. Frank type) .' - . . . $159 •79-S0 Dignified hostess chair, rose ; Cenegy, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Barth 2-pc. modern suite: Loun'gB Paul Swallick, 54 Liberty Virginia sofa, beige -medal- floral stripe ... 49.50 Street, Fords, on the estate of his and William Falkenstern. sofa and chair, beige and lion • patterned tapestry Charming hostess chair, gay wife, Anna, who died June 17, The next party will be held '89-50 brown floral tapestry, leaving $500. Monday evening, with Mrs. A. J. (Victory type) - - $149 floral print - - - 44.50 boucle fringe trim (Vic- ' Florence A. , Besecker, Wood- Murphy and Mrs. Vernon Birong. Pr. Chinese Chippendale Chippendale wing chair, tory type) - 289.00 bridge Avenue, Woodbridge, on as hostess. . love seats in radiant silver wine brocatelle (Victory < the estate of her husband, Eli, 1 brocade, goose - feather type) . - - - 69.50 who died June 27, leaving S500. ALL PIECES HAVE FULL SPRING : Anna Ondeyko, 21 Paul Street, Fuel Oil Situation cushions, mahogany Chippendale occasional frames, custom - tailoring. $259 ea. ea. chair, blue damask (Vic- CONSTRUCTION UNLESS MARKED Fords, on the estate of her hus- (Continued from Page 1) band. Michael, who died June 14, i lllhistratetl below) . ," tory type) - - . « 34.50 "VICTORY TYPE". ~" " leaving $900. any person who doesn't order fuel .•'-•".John Swetits, Woodbridge, on oil now may be unable to get it - the estate of Karl W. Ebling, later when he needs it. who died May 29, leaving $2,000. "Most people in the area have mailed applications to their war Rankin Girls Win 16 To 4 price and rationing boards and £* \A?r*** have, or soon will get, ration cou- DECORATOR CHAIRS For 4th Triumph In Row pons for the 1945-46 heating sea- Wa son. The few who have not re- NOW AVE'NEJL—The Rankin Girls won Pr. formal hostess chairs; yellow green and rose stripe, mahogany turned their applications should framed arms - • ...... 62.50 ea. four straight games during the do so immediately. Those who past week. Aided by the hitting of have ration coupons should have •Charlotte Eak, they defeated the all household tanks filled at once Pr. smart club chairs, green textured damask, plume design - $119 ea. If 3§»« Yellow Bowl team of Carteret, so that suppliers and dealers can ea. 16-4. refill their tanks while transporta- : With June Regensburg pitching, tion is still available. Pr. dramatic fanback chairs, rose brocatelle, fully framed in "1