Tin Can Collection Friday July 27 Put Cans Out By 9 A. M.

Complete Local News Of A Population Of THE WEATHER t 1 Cloudy, with occasional show­ ers today; partly cloudy tomor- 18,556 IH _row.______' ______

Entered as second clans mall matter. January 31, 1925. at the Post Office at Ellznbeth. New Jersey, under the Act of March 3. 1879.

Vol. XXI, No. 1082 ESTAHIJS1IKD 1921 OFFK IA1, NKVrsrAI'KR HILLSIDE, N. J., THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1945 OF THE TOWNSHIP OF HIM,HIDE PRICE FIVE CENTS Revenue Agents Stop Tax Certificate More Local Servicemen Explains Appeal Overseas Autos On Highway Nine thousand automobiles were Sold By Township Given Their Releases Of Injury Award Changes Proposed stupyed •Route 29 lieu; and in Union last Wednesday by agents of Will Institute Suits Two Fought During —Curtis Says Insurance A cts Are the Bureau of Internal Revenue On Rent Arrearages in April, 1944, and was stationed Company Brings Suit checking on purchase of the $5 Invasion Of Africa at Camp Wheeler and Fort Ben- Another township tax certificate Additional members of the armed ning, Ga., until his recent ’transfer The compensation award of For Ilitili Schools Federal tax stamp. Summonses, re­ was sold at the meeting of the to Fort Dix for discharge. He at­ $1700 to Miss L. Cecilia Bobertz, --- turnable this week at the bureau’s forces from Hillside have received teacher in the Abram P. Morris Addition Of Periods Oil Leave meeting of the Township Commit­ tended school in Port Richmond, field office in Newark, were issued their releases, according to infor­ S. I., where his mother resides, and Junior 'High School, is not being And New Commercial Som e To Receive to 132 autoists. tee Tuesday night to, Edward M. mation received here this week. before entering service was em­ contested by the Board of Educa­ Strange Meeting tion, it was announced at last Autoists in the armed services Zeitz and Mrs. Margaret E. Zeitz. P.F.C. Peter Capro, 26, son of Mr. ployed by a floor covering firm Subjects Suggested Pacific Training They paid $275 for a certificate to and Mrs. Charles Capro, of 1424 there. Thursday night’s board ineeting by who did not have the stamp on Hurli H, Curtis, president. The Revisions!'!! the curricula of both land on Conant street. An offer of Hiawatha avenue, was honorably Release Unexpected Of II. S. Students A ltd- Furloughs their windshields were not given discharged from Fort Dix on June Aii unexpected release has been matter is no longer in the board’s thi lor and junior high schools SeVL,r.,l residents" of Hillside re- summonses, but were warned to $30 a foot was received from .29 with a total of 110 service points. received by P.F.C, Donald Kling. 29, hands, he said, the appeal being Guard Finds Prisoner • iv recommended to the Board lu;,u'.d home on furlough from g'Ot the stamp Thomas A. Dwyer for 219.16 feet Ho had Served with the 341st En­ husband of Mrs. Eleanor von den solely the concern of tile insurance ..I Education last Thursday night service this week. on Wilder street between Roanoke gineers and the 289th Infantry* in Steinen Kling,, of 295 Fitzpatrick company. Former!) Lived Here An appeal was filed last week in by Dr. Wayne T. Branom, super- Thcy include T/5 Walter C. and-Salem avenues. France, Belgium .and Germany, street. He had' boon home on fur­ Two former II illside High School Union County Common Pleas Court students, one in the l ile of guard \ .. in., principal of schools. If Johnson Jr., 28, husband of Mrs. On recommendation of Township having been overseas two and a lough and Was preparing to return Shirley Doremus Johnson, of 113 half years. He crossed the channel to duty with an—engineer utility frdm 'the/Vfirdict of the Compensa­ of a POW end in Germany adopted, the changes will aid one Unscathed In War Attorney Emil A. Herrigel, the tion Court on May 24. Miss Bobertz and the other < of the German period a day in the senior high Hillside avenue, who served as a committee directed suits be insti­ to* France shortly after D-Day. He unit in Le Havre, France. On re-' dl.in's assistant. He was in Eu- wears three campaign stars oh his porting to Fort Dix, however, he had been injured when attacked by prisoners wilhir the enclosure is high school and two daily in the tuted to collect rent arrearages ETO ribbon. a robber while entering her car in the strange story of one of Utmost ,.0pe With the Eighth Division for from eight tenants. Herrigel, to­ received his discharge-with a total junior high school. Both schools 20 months, variously attached to Shot By Accident Capro entered the service in of 107 points. Elizabeth December 21, 1943. She bizarre meetings brought about by gether with Engineer Henry Kreh have been operating on a five- the'First, Third and Ninth Armies. Although he came through five January. 1942, and received his Overseas since September 22, had just left a Christmas party and 11 vi* fortunes of war. reported they are making prog­ training in Virginia and for a year meeting of the Hillside Girl Re­ period basis. On V-F, -Day Corp. Johnson was campaigns in the South Pacific un­ ress witlrcplans for the extension of 1942. Kling was in the invasion of /T he. POW guard is S Sgt. Daniel serving"with the British Second worked on the Alcan Highway in North Africa with the 16th Infan­ serves, junioi* high school organ i-y/j^Jc'|^ar Mrs. Rose'Ko- The purpose of the change in the scathed, (jorp. Lester Yuill, ,23, of Ramsey avenue to Chestnut avenue. zation of which she was faculty1 Army. 1205 South Long avpnue, who had Canada. He was formerly employed try, 1st Diyjsiori, attached to the ehan. of 1237 Robert street. lie re­ senior high school. Dr. Branom said, A, letter from the Elizabethto.wn by Anthony Capro & Son, oil First Army; H e^aight in Tunisia, adviser.' She sustained a fractured cently wrote to his wife that while At the time of the Normandy In­ been released fm?n the service last Water Company informed the com­ skull and was hospitalized for 15 is to give evea-y student an oppor­ vasion he was with the First Army. Thursday, accidentally shot himself burner dealers. Algeria and O r lr being wounded on guard duty, he heard one of the mittee that 350 feet of 6-inch pipe Wounded In Africa by machine gun fire in March, 1943. days in the Elizabeth General Hos­ prisoners speaking English. After tunity to Enroll in a minor subject. He was with- the Fourth Armored Friday while cleaning a .22 caliber will be installed in Voorhees street. On being released from the hos­ pital. Division when it broke through at rifle. He sustained gun shot wounds A fire hydrant.will be provided by Credited with a total of 92 points, questioning him, Sgt. Kochan He revealed that Miss Alice Bar­ Brest last August. He was in the of the abdomen and thigh. the township. P.F.C. Sewalls, 29, husband of Mrs. pital he was reclassified for limited learned that he was George Baesler, den, home economics teacher, will driv. through Luxembourg in Sep­ Eleanor J. Horton Sewalls, of 274 service and assigned to the engi­ 26, who formerly attended Hillside Husband <,of Mrs. Juhe ’ Hercey The attorney/ was authorized to Clark street, has been discharged neer utility unit. He has received High School while, residing hero on offer a new course in social prob­ tember and in the fighting in the Yuill and " son • of - Ethan ' A. Yuill, prepare an ordinance providing for V.F.W. Offered lems and that the commercial de­ Hurtgen Forest in October. The di- the DlJ.rr*Knsp'~nf a Irinln Pnmhinn. from Fort Dix. Attached to the the Purple Heart, Good Conduct Bailey avenue. The two knew many of the Hillside Fire Department, the purch'ase^of a triple Combina­ First Armored Division, as .driver Medal. Pre-Pearl Harbor ribbon mutual acquaintances; * partment will be expanded to in­ visiuii was in the drive for Dorn Corp. Yuill had served overseas 34 tion hose wagon with 500-gallon of a half-track, he landed at Oran. and the'ETO ribbon with four cam­ To New Veterans Sought Last Look clude mathematics, science and and Cologne on the way to the months. He enlisted June 9, 1941, pumper and booster tank to replace He fought in the Battle of Tunisia paign stars and the arrowhead. . languages. Ruhr Valley and on V-E Day was and returned to this country last old equipment at fire headquarters and was wounded in North Africa, He entered the service August Cuno Schmachtenberg, command­ From other sources it has been In the junior high school the aim at the Elbe River. October. Since then he 1 had been on Hollywood avenue. receiving the Order of the Purple 13. 1941. and received his training er of Maj. John A. Davenport Post learned that Baesler was' born 'in of the. change is to broaden the Chaplain’s Duties an Army Air Force mechanic at The committee directed Township Heart. On his recovery he took at Fort Belvoir, Va., and Fort Jack- 1722, V.F.W., this week issued the Germany. He yttended high school program to enable students to take Among the assistant chaplain’s Drew Field, Tampa, Fla., and Clerk Howard J. Bloy to write a part in the campaigns of Southern son, S. C. He was formerly em following ' statement regarding the here and Wilbur H. Cox, former special subjects outside the regular duties'“were writing letters of sym­ Milleville until his release last letter to Public Service Coordi­ Italy and the Anzio Beachhead. He ployed by the Lincoln Blueprint/ veterans organization: principal, this week recalled a curriculurfi, to permit them to work pathy to families of men killed in week with more than 100 points to nated Transport protesting use of is the holder of the Combat In­ Company and with his return to In a feature article under the strange request by Baesler during in the library or take part in other battle arid keeping a record of the his .credit. Williamson avenue by,. No. 48 buses. fantryman’s Badge. civilian life has been made general Heading, ‘Shall There Be a New the summer before he returned to school activities under guidance. Germany with, his parents. Baesler names of men buried in Army He is a graduate of Hillside High .Bloy will also obtain bids for paint­ Sewalls returned to this country manager of the firm. Veterans’ Organization?’, the July Teacher Pay Report graves. When, his furlough is over School and was formerly employed ing' the exterior of the Municipal issue of True carries statements by came to Cox and asked, permission . Corp. Johnson will report to Fort Building. the V.F.W. Commander-inChief, to roam through the halls* of the Mrs. Emmet T. White, chairman by the Western Electric Co., school for a final look before going of the Teachers Committee, re­ Leonard Wood, Mo. Kearny. Jean A. Brunner. Significant para­ On leave until August 6 is Lee’s Coast Guard Bronze Star Medal graphs in his statements are these abroad. Thf*n~-‘ permission was ported negotiations on teacher pay Charles L. Sanford, Radioman 2/c, Radio Venture For “ ‘The distinction between -over­ granted. are proceeding favorably and that husband of Mrs. Lillian Mesz San­ seas veterans and , veterans who Although Baesler isVeported to the conferences with representa­ ford and son of Police Chief and Three Motorists Unit Rescues Two For Totterweich have served their country’s flag have/ been a member of the. Hitler tives of the Hillside Teachers As­ Mrs. Norman L. Sanford, all of 1430 Junior Achievers only within the continental limits ol Youth, he insists that at heart he sociation on the subject will con­ Parkview terrace. He has been Fined By Recorder The Jersey Shore Division of the A Bronze Star Medal has been the United States, did not originate is really an American. tinue. She submitted a report com- serving in thS" Pacific, including Violations of the motor vehicle A state-wide Junior Achieve­ Coast Guard Auxiliary, command­ awarded to S/Sgt. George M. Tot­ with our organization: The United Sgt. Kochan is withv the 159th iring Hillside’s teacher salaries ment venture in radio, which will ed by Lt. Arthur T. Lee, formerly Stales Goveqjment itself has al Infantry Regiment, a unit of the with those of 12 other municipali­ the New Hebrides and New Cale­ regulations brought fines to three of Hillside, was credited Sunday terweich, son of Mr. and Mrs. ties in the county, and remarked donia. He was on submarine patrol motorists in police court Tuesday be open to boys and girls of New Michael Totterweich, of 284 Holly­ ways recognized a distinction be­ 15th Army. He has been in service Jersey between the ages of 14 and with the rescue of two men from tween domestic and, foreign ser­ almost five years, serving 26 months that Hillside compares very favor­ duty bn Navy Catalina flying boats by Acting Recorder Samuel H. Atlantic Highlands after their sail­ wood avenue, it was learned here ably with the others. In the mat­ and Dauntless dive bombers, touch­ Gooen. 18. was inaugurated at a meeting vice. That distinction is reflected in the Aleutians before being at Newark J. A. Headquarters re­ boat capsized in a-sudden squall off this week. Col. P. A. Wakeman, in pay increase for overseas ser­ shipped to the European Theatre ter of maximum pay rates, she dis­ ing most of the small islands of the Leslie. Baylis, of 369 Columbia Sandy Hook. closed, eight towns are lower,and Pacific. At the conclusion of his avenue, was fined $2 for driving cently. signal officer of the Advance Sec­ vice, the award of war theatre rib­ in March of this year. Hillside furnished some of the Those rescued were Harry Keen bons, gold chevrons or bars, com­ two higher, while in minimum rates le,ave he will report to an advanced without a license. David R. Lodge, Sr. and his son, Harry Jr., and their tion Communications Zone, made six are lower and four higher. In turret school in Memphis, Tenn. of 127 North Fourth street, Le- first volunteers who will supply bat pay, etc. talerff and ideas for the program, pet dog. Lt. Lee and six divisional the presentation. Sgt. Totterweich “ ‘We believe that the overseas the remaining two the rates are the P.F.C. William Romanyshyn, 35, moyne, Pa., and William Marks, of officers had been testing a power same as Hillside’s. Min of-Frank Romanyshyn, of 1278 433 Oakland avenue, were fined They are Herbert Henoch. Martin operates a telephone switchboard veterans of World War II should Adler, and Herbert Klein of Pro­ boat given recently to the auxiliary with the 3112th Signal Service Bat­ join our ranks at the first oppor­ Helps To Prepare Four new teacher appomtments Liberty avenue, is also Home on $13 and $8 respectively for speed­ by a Red Bank' resident but had talion. were made, Miss Arline Kollani, furlough. He is the husband of Mrs. ing on Route 29. gressive Arts and Crafts, and Ger­ tunity because they owe it to ald Gottesman, who is not affiliated been forced to halt because of the He took part in the campaigns in themselves to preserve and Mrs, Geraldine Heatherman, Miss Ann Romanyshyn, of 108 Besler On a charge of being drunk and storm. Lt. Lee noticed the capsized Berlin Radio Show Marion Wessels and Arnold Keen. avenue, Cranford. With the 415th. disorderly, Albert Rujzizka, of 209 with any company here. In October Normandy, Northern France and strengthen the -only veterans’ or­ a weekly radio program will start boat about a mile away and he and Germany and has been overseas ganization that already has a back­ American occupation forces in The last named will teach biology Infantry of the First Army, he Hillside avenue, was fined' $10. his companions went to the_ scene. since May, 1944, having entered the Hid Spanish in the high school. A took part in two major battles in on a Newark station. It will be ground of forty-five years of prac­ Berlin heard their own radio sta­ written-; directed, acted and man The two men and the dog were service in December, 1942. He was tical experience in the field of.wet- tion for the first time Saturday leave of absence was given Germany and was awarded the found clinging to the wreckage of graduated fro/n Hillside High Mrs. Marjorie Mason, kindergarten Combat Infantryman’s Badge. He aged by teen-agers just'as the local erans’ welfare, and one that is night With the assistance of Pvt. Howard Snyder Is J. A. •; companies are . The sub­ their craft after the storm had sub­ School and studied mechanical en­ simultaneously deeply concerned Gabriel Levcnson, son of Ivan Lev- te« cher in the Hillside Avenue will report after his 30-day fur- sided somewhat and were pulled gineering at Newark College of onson, president of Jones Pies, Inc., School.. Appointment of MQss.Jean •Jough to Fort Dix for training and ject matter of the radio program with the future security of the men Advanced In Rank will include all things of interest aboard. They were given dry cloth­ Engineering. He- was employed by of World War II. We are offering of Route 29. The station, beamed Schnabel as assistant director of redeployment to the Pacific. ing and taken ashore, but did not Howard W. Snyder. 31. whose to young people, including sports, the Western Electric Co. in Kearny them the structure of an established strictly for the G.I.s, is called HOW, the Hurden-Looker Playground and Timberwulf Sergeant fads, fashions and musical record­ require, medical attention. before entering the service. organization, one which they are at initials of the ‘‘Hell On Wheels” Miss Marjorie Gulick as school Also home on a 30-day furlough wife, the former Margaret A. nurse were confirmed. Demon, lives at 1385 Harding ter­ ings. liberty to take over, enlarge and Division, otherwise known as the Sgl. Simon E. Kaplan, 21, son Danny O’Keefe, president of operate as their own.’ If there are U. S. Second Armored Division. Painter Has Trouble "f Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kaplan, of race - has advanced to yeoman, N. J. Association of Achievers and any veterans who would like to HOW, with a range of approxi­ Abe Eauff, painter who reported 12.5(5 Oakwood avenue. He served third class, USNR, while on duty mately ^0 miles, is a mobile trans­ at Camp Bradford, Va. sales manager of a company in Two In Europe Lt. Col. Nulton become plumbers, our Post, the he was unable to begin work at , with the Timberwolf Division of Glen Ridge, is the leader of the only one in Hillside is Major John mitter on top of the Titania movie the First Army in France, Belgium, At Camp Bradford, where officers the Hurden-Looker and Hillside project. He has stated he needs, A. Davenport Post 1722.’ ” theatre building on the Schloss Avenue Schools because of inabil­ Holland and Germany and was and men are trained for duty “voices, writers and Qriginators of Wins Bronze Star Irasso. It provides music and en wounded January 14, being hos­ aboard the LST (landship, tanks), Bein" Processed ity to obtain help, was directed to good ideas.” vThe latter will be tertainment for the American oc­ report again in 30 days. John Ha- pitalised for 81 days. He holds the Snyder is assigned to the trans­ young people who like to do script WITH THE 13th ARMORED DI­ Lt. Col. Henry G. Nulton, of 33 Cox Nominated For cupation troops at chow time daily Purple Heart, Good Conduct Medal portation department. , VISION IN THE ASSEMBLY Beechwood place, clerk of Union berbush and Leslie R. Tichenor writing. County Legion Head Pvt. Levenson, who formerly submitted bids for installation of :i»d iho ETO ribbon with several A former employee of the New Hillside youth who are inter­ AREA COMMAND—Enroute to the County on military leave, was .wrote radio scripts, is known as the Jersey Bell Telephone Co. in New­ United States from the European awarded the Bronze Star Medal on sanitary facilities at the Conant battle stars. He, too, will report to ested in any part of the program Wilbur H. Cox. of Hurden-Looker coordinator of the project, ^vhich Street Playground and ffir plumb­ Pen Dix and redeployment to the ark, Snyder entered the Navy in are invited to contact Junior continent—Corp. Robert Li. Mar- July 3, it was learned here this Post 50, was nominated for com­ involved hauling up a studio table quardt, formerly of 1129 South week. Lt. Col. Nulton is in charge ing repair work in the senior high Pacific when his furlough ends. July, 1943. He is the son of Mr. and Achievement Headquarters. 106 mander of the Union County Com­ on a hot afternoon. The studio was school. P.F.C. Robert Herbster. 25, son of Mrs. Wilson B. Snyder, of Route 4, Halsey street, Newark, or Martin Long avenue, and Corp. Joseph of the G-3 Section of the AFWES- mittee, American Legion, last designed under the supervision Ilcsok, of 166 South Bright street, PAC, supply unit in the Western A recommendation was submitted < t ifiitinued on Page 6) Pottstown, Pa. Adler, 1380 Harding terrace. Thursday night at the Elizabeth Lt. Charles Sanborn, Signal Corps, by Herbert R. Otto that wings be ------O------Hillside, N. J:, are now being pro­ Pacific. Y.M.C.A. He has no opposition. of Richmond, Va. A brunette Red cessed at Camp Atlanta in north­ added to the backstop on the base­ Election of the officers is scheduled Cross worker. Areta Kelble* of ball diamond on the high school Holds Democracy eastern France as members of the for August 9. Chicago, served as talent scout and First ETO armored division to be Four Men Bailed On Leading a veteran organization lined up hillbillies, cowboys and field and that the overhang be ex­ ordered to the Pacific*. tended. The action followed com­ Foreign To Japs will not be a new activity for Cox, other music makers from within plaints from the Liberty Park Com­ Lt. Alan Thompson. U.S.N.R., Corp. Marquardt is a member of Gambling Charges who served as commander of Rie the division. The first voice heard Service Co., 45th-fl Tank Battalion, munity Association that baseballs former mayor of Mountainside and Four men were released in $100 Hurden-Looker Post in one of its over IIOW. was that of Pvt. Nor­ going out of the field into neigh­ 2 WI W ention l Westfield attorney, told the Hill­ and Corp. Ilcsok of Headquarters boil by Acting Recorder Samuel outstanding years, 1941-42. He has wood McLendon, of Temple, Tex., 3 boring yards damaged gardens. Co*, 67th Armored Infantry Bat­ side Rotary Club. Tuesday it would, H. Gooen Tuesday to be arraigned also served as county membership who formerly entertained over Sta­ Samuel Dubow and Albert Vree- Students Should Approve require half a century to get the talion. They served with the 13th July 25 on chufges of gambling. chairman and. enjoyed giving the tion KTEM in the Southwest. Armored Division in the Battle of land wero) named coach and assist­ Japanese to begin to think in terms They are Mike Contrilla, of 12 group its ,highest membership up ant coach of the football team re­ Woodfield Stadium Again? of the democratic way of life. Lt. the Ruhr Pocket and in the drive Ocean street, Millburn; Gerald De­ to that time. He has been a county through Bavaria into AUStHa. Both spectively. Mrs. Alice P. Dunham, Thompson commanded an LST in lane, of 407 Lafayette street; jdee commander,'has acted on Hill­ district clerk who resigned as of Vacations—Not As Usual the South Pacific for two years. have two campaign stars and Corp. side’s advisory committee to the Ilcsok the Combat Infantryman’s George Kuhn, of- 210 Sunscj/reve­ lissing Soldier July 1, will continue in her post It* the plan proposed for increasing tlje number ° . L '1 ' / / / Americans, Lt. Thompson said, nue, and Ignasius Groza, 325 New Selective (Service -Board for 104 through the month of August. lie senior and junior high schools is adopted, it oug < < make the mistake of believing the Badge. York avenue, all of Newark. consecutive weeks, initiated one of juite a with the students. We don’t imaged the sc oo y Japs can assimilate the same pro­ The 13th, popularly known as the The four were arrested for shoot­ the outstanding school stamp and Was In Hospital lengthened, so breaking it up into more periods-will add more cesses of thought >as themselves, Black Cat Division, captured more ing craps in the rear of property at bond sales campaigns for three Named Trustee Of •ost .upd variety to the curricula of the two schools. And e P whereas actually the Jap mentality than 20,000 German prisoners in the -445 Hillside avenue. years, directed a records-for-fight- A long silence since he was re­ )osal to add fhathematics, science and languages to the comme ci has been trained in an entirely dif­ fighting in the Ruhr and took a-n ------"!------— ing-men campaign irL town to top ported missing in January was Union Junior College -urriculum should go a long way to eliminate one of th^ cmei ferent direction. The Japanese, he additional 19,000 in Bavaria. In Uie most posts in the stdrl* and other­ broken last week by a V-Mail let­ Title isms of the high school. It scorns that.a pum berof studenis pointed out, consider courtesy a closing days of the war in Europe, Biaza Training For wise helped in the war effort. He ter from Pvt. Jacob H. Stone to CRANFORD—Election of DeWitt n high school are not sure just what course they shoTO pursue. weakness,’ while ruihTessness is re­ it captured IliUcr’s birthplace-city also has acted as president of the his family at 75 Route 29. He told D. Barlow, formerly mayor of of Braunau, Austria, and liberated Fhoso who elect the commercial course find later on that they r c yy garded as strength. Maritime Service Colgate Uniyorsity a 1 umn i of North of being.the* victim of combat fa­ P.lainfield/ to the board bf trustees should have taken something else, but are unable to change because 14,000 Allied prisoners of war. Jersey and president of New York tigue while in action in EtIFopS and Corp. Marquardt is the son of SHEEPSHEAD BAY, N. Y.—Now University’s New Jersey School of of Union Junior College was an­ ;hey have not had some of the subjects required to make the trans- JUNE HEALTH REPORT in training at the U. S. Maritime of being hospitalized for several C1\ These subjects are usually math, science or languages, an wi Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Marquardt, of Education alumni, president of the months. During that time, he wrote, nounced July 12 by Dr. A. L. John­ The report of Health Officer 69 Osborne place, Irvington, N. J., Service Training Station here is Union County Teachers Federal heir addition to the commercial course, one big obstacle will av Samuel M. Jowitt for the month of John P. Biaza, 29, of 374 Long ave­ ho received no mail from home, son, the board chairman. His guid­ >cen removed. June, submitted to the Boara of and Corp. Ilcsok is the son of Mr. Credit Union, president of the Hill­ all letters and packages addressed ance, said Dr. Johnson, “will be S* ■ * * • and Mrs. Ilcsok, of the Hillside ad­ nue, Hillside, N. J. side Rotary Club and other local, Health Tuesday, showed the fol­ to him being returned. He has since invaluable in the college’s expan­ We hear that the plan to use the new high school field for foot- dress. Both will be given furloughs Apprentice Seaman Biaza will county and state organizations. recovered and is now in Metz, lowing contagious -diseases: mumps sion program.” all will have to go by the boards for another season, at least, it 1, chickenpox 5, scarlet ‘fever 3, before the division begihs its train­ receive six weeks of basic training, France. :e,ns that a football field, like a good lawn, cannot be built over- whooping cough 6. Seven persons ing for action in the Pacific. including lifeboat work, fire fight­ Bogus Service Man Pvt. Stone, 23, is attached to the President of the Atlantic, Gulf teht. Tackling and scrimmaging on hard ground apparently are ing, breeches buoy, mess, sea rules Infantry, and has been oversqas and Pacific Company, world-known n«« Tackling and scrimmaging on hard grouriu were bitten, by dogs during the and traditions, swimming, ship conducive• to. imprdvingP . the physical ,__:_i ___ condition-offootball ,-any iootDau month. Mealia Training At Enters Guilty Plea since last August. He entered the dredging company, and a civil en­ Riad. The field must have a springy turf, so.that When the, boys ' Jowitt reported the issuance of construction and equipment, gun­ service in October, 1940. He is a gineering graduate of University of nery and physical training. George F. Secor, 21, of 13 Hur- graduate of Irvington High School. ’ down, they don’t come up with broken bones. Well, a landscape 60 permits to keep chickens. Sampson Naval Base den street, recently arrested in Pennsylvania in 1901, Mr. Barlow irdener could have tipped them off about that in advance. was pfesident of Plainfield’s Board » * • * Patrick F. Mealia Jr., of 1381 Newark for illegally wearing a * * * * the of Education from 1924 until 1937. The cold and rainy weather would ordinarily have a bad effect Liberty avenue, has joined -uniform of the armed services, He also served his home communi­ U. S: Navy and is now stationed at Custom Made to Fit Yohr Car pleaded guilty Monday before ty as a councilman and. with the y the shore and mountain summer resorts, but these are not oreff- MAKE OUR STORE YOUR Sampson, N. Y. He is the son of * Judge Smith in Newark., Sentence LOANS! LOANS! ajy. limes. A lot of people have more money than they ever had was defer reef tq/perm it an investi­ Board of Health, prior to becoming 't°rc, and this is the time of year when they have to spend some Cooling Headquarters Mr. and Mrs. P. F. Mealia. He was Auto Seat Covers mayor in 1937. Jt, so they take' what they can get—when they can get it. And graduated from high school June gation by the F.B.I. Secor had beeiv To Make 1-~ Mr. Barlow is a member of the 20 and left for the Navy the fol Auto Upholstering convicted on two previous occa hat they get, and when they get it today, they probably would For Luscious Sodas sions for the same offense. advisory council for the civil Engi­ iv e given the go'-by only a few short years back. lowing day. y Repairs neering faculty at Princeton Uni­ versity and a member of Sigma POWELL’S Clinton Auto honorary scientific society. Bora in LAWN MOWERS Hillside Philadelphia, in 1880, he was re-, See Us for TIRE RECAPPING CONFECTIONERY HILLCREST AGENCY Upholstering & Fabric Co. cipient of a Simon Muir scholar­ (Formerly Mailer’s) 1313 Liberty Ave. - WA. 6-1414 BILL GOLDBERG, M*t Sharpened and Repaired National Bank ship at U. of P. | Official Tire Inspection Station No. 591 Atrto — Fire HILLSIDE GRINDING He also hats served as chaiiro&n ■ 253 HOLLYWOOD AVENUE 201 Clinton Ave., Newark Hillside, N. J. of the .citizens committee for the 1 HIRLEMAN’S ESSO STATION f HOSPITAL EXPENSE SERVICE Princeton Local' Government Sur- i EL. S-96S0 INSURANCE fll 2-8897 vey and «s chairman of the DredM ! HOLLYWOOD AVE., corner CONANT ST. 225 Winana Ave. WA. *0-1911 *4 r Owners' Protective AMOdlatioo. 1 Page Six THE HILLSIDE TIMES, THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1945 Church Services Sinai Congregation WANT ADS Serves Forty Years Goldberg Returns Recent Bride 5 Still Together IN GERMANY Rabbi, Eliezer Cohen. With Telephone Co. Church of Christ the King:, Rev. During the week beginning Sun­ John J. Finnerty, pastor. day, July 15, the schedule of ser­ Help Wanted Fem ale‘ In Army Overseas Sunday Masses at 7:30, 9, 10 and vices will be as follows: From Overseas WOMAN or girl, general house­ This is the stury of five local 11 a. m. Children’s mass at 9 Morning-services, Sunday 8 a. m.; P.F.C. Melvin Goldberg, 21, son boys, now serving in Germany. •Monday through Friday 7 a. m.; work, two days per week start- 6'clock.------— ------1—— i tig- -a-f-Ur August 4. JLaq-LLiiaL_. hoforo of’ Mr. and Mrs. Carl Goldberg, of They went, to school, and after­ Baptisms after the 11 o’clock Saturday 8:45 a. m. •28~BTTili'y a venue, aw -v-ad home this,—j wards, inlfo the service together. Mincha 'services, Sunday through July 21, 1007 Westminster Ave., mass every Sunday. Hillside, EL. 3-5634. week from the European Theatre Tlrey progressed - -through—-various- o Thursday 8:15 p. m.; Friday 7:30 encampments in the Slates, some pf p, m.; Saturday 8-p, m. WOMEN to help around bakery. enroute to the Pacific. Attached to which were Camp McCain, Miss., F irst Church of Christ, Scientist, Maariv services, Sunday through Call at once. Jones Pies Inc., Route the * 95th Infantry Division, he the Amphibious Naval Training 1251 Fairmount avenue, Elizabeth.' Thursday 8:40 p. m.; Friday, Kab- 29, Hillside. WAvcrly 3 7600. WMC served first with the Third Army bases of Fort Pierce, Fla., and Sunday School 9:30 a. m. Morn­ bolas Shabbos and Maariv imme­ Rules observed. tf and subsequently with the Ninth Camp Pickett, Va. They left for ing service 11 a. m. Midweek serv- diately following the Mincha ser­ Army, seeinaLctelion in /Northern overseas to England, and while vices; Saturday 8:45 p. m. GENERAL office worker and typist. France, -the jRhinelandT~the Ruhr there the outfit was put into an Tisfiah B’Av services Wednesday, Phone WAverly 3-7100. 7-5-45 pocket and/Central Germany. He Amphibious Brigade, which par­ The First Baptist Church, Hill­ July 18 at 8:40 p. m. and Thursday, has four battle stars, and also holds ticipated in the invasion of Nor­ side avenue at Harding- terrace, July 19, at 7 a. m. f WOMAN to clean office, 2 to 3 the Combat Infantryman’s Badge. mandy on D-Day, June 6. Rev. Raymond Marlow, pastor. Meeting of Board of Trustees hours daily, 60c hour; Green Fly­ P.F.C. Goldberg was inducted The live boys are Robert Huber, SUNDAY 9:45 a. m. Sunday Thursday, July 19, a t'9 p. m. er passes door. WAverly 3-7700. February 22, 1943, and received his Harry Howarth, William Solosy, ■ Snhnnl Tin not lpf thp warm weath- 7-12-45 training with the Engineers at Phil Scheater and Frank Mursko. er keep you from your class. Our JO Si: I’ll S. UklNlURT------Camp McCain, Miss. He went over- All have been together since Camp school will remain open during the Funeral services were held Mon­ ■STO5 jh m c 96. 1044) and after MuCnin, m the 2Q3rd Combat En­ entire summer. 11 a. m. morning day morning at the Growney Fu­ Help Wanted Male month in Englahd crossed the chan­ gineers, and have beep in General worship, sermon, “Letting Christ neral Home, 1478 Maple^srvenue, for nel with the Engineers. He was Hodges’ First Army through. Live In.” 6:45 p. m. Y.oung People’s Joseph S. Reinfurt, former Hillside ICE CREAM PLANT transferred to the Infantry on De­ France, Belgium, and then the Bat­ meeting. 8 p. m. evening worship. resident who died at his home in MAN WANTED for unloading and cember 26. tle of the Bulge, and finally into Brother A. Meier will preach in loading trucks, cold storage room; He is a graduate of Weequahic Germany. They have been, in five JULIAN W. ARONS Elizabeth last Thursday. A solemn High School, Newark, and was a Photo above is that of the for the absence of Pastor Marlow, who hj£h mass of requiem was offered permanent job; good ^vages; good engagements for which they have is to preach at the Brookdale Bap­ working conditions; old established student at New York University at m u Miss Elsie. Orban, daughter of P.F.C. Julian W. Arons, 23, 0f at St. Catherine’s Church and in­ C. C. HASS FELD Stdfan Orban, of 1284 Myrtle street, five bronze stars on their ETO rib­ tist Church, Bloomfield. company. Apply Mr. Cassidy, Phil­ the time o f his induction. bon. While in Germany, the outfit Newark, partner of I Tabatchnick terment was in St. Peter’s Ceme­ ------and the late Mrs. Fanny Orban, WEDNESDAY 8 p. m. The Hour tery, New Brunswick. adelphia Dairy Products Co., 596 C. C. Hassfeld, of 37 Beechwood constructed the second largest fixed of Tabs Herring Products, 1534 of Power! You are invited to hear Market St., Newark. WMC rules place, who began his long career who was married June 17 to Louis Maple avenue, is in charge of a Reinfurt was born in Elizabeth Nemeth, petty officer, U.S.N.R, of bridge in the ETO. They are now Brother Ralph Walter, a member 58 years ago, the son of the late observed. in the telephone service as a helper Hegeman Transferred awaiting the Bronze Arrowhead civilian survey Jfor-r reconstruction of the church, who is studying for in the repair shop in Newark where Linden and has now returned from purposes at his present post jn Casper and Georgianna Reinfurt. ,1 wedding trip to Washington, Award for their participation in the Gospel Ministry. He resided in Hillside for a num­ instruments aiid switchboards were To Pacific Theatre the Normandy campaign, and the Germany. THURSDAY 7:30 p. m. Trustees’ Furnished Room For Rent reconditioned back in July 1905, D. C- Employed in the office of the In the service thrqe years, he nas ber of years and at one time was 58th BOMBARDMENT WING, tax collector, she will reside at Presidential Citation. meeting at the church. Hillside correspondent for the New­ has been awarded a gold emblem TINIAN.—P.F.C. Percy E. Hegu been overseas Ijj ’ month.-, and \\v- ark Evening News and also wrote LARGE, airy, corner room; private by the New Jersey Bell Telephone /nan, of Hillside, N. J., .is now lo­ home here for the duration. formerly attached to an Engineer for the Hillside Times. At the time home, good section; near buses. Company in recognition irf-hi&^ar- cated on Tinian in the Marianas Helped Byild Vital Headquarters Company in Belgium, Hillside Presbyterian Church, of his death he was employed by 1464 Morris Place, cor. Clark St. rival at his fortieth anniversary!^ Islands with the 58th Bombardmen Communication Lines He also saw action in Germany. He Rev. Geo. M. Runner, pastor. the Elizabeth Housing Authority. i 8-9-45 the service. The emblem was Pre_ 'Wing, pioneer Superfortress unit Four More Receive recently took a trip to Paris and 9:45 a. "m. Church School. He attended St. Michael’s School, sented to him atnt luncheonln n ch p n n lastl6ct which , was .transferred r.....‘ 1 recently,1 S/Sgt. Joseph T. Marino, of 1217 )ls 'environs. P.F.C. Arons is a 11 a. m. sermon, “Rivers of Elizabeth, and was a communicant Thursday by P. T. Kraus," division from the India-China Theatres to Service Releases Broadway, is a mej&ber■ pf the 431st graduate of South Side High plant superintendent for the Com­ School, Newark, where lie starred water.” of St. Catherine’s Church. Real Estate For Sale the Pacific to join with the XXI (Continued front Page One) Signal Heavy Conflruclioh Battal­ Plans afe already being formu­ Survivors include his wife, Mrs. pany./ Bomber Command in thp intensi­ ion, serving in Italy. This Signal in football and baseball. Mary T. Ziegler Reinfurt; two sons, When Hassfeld embarked on his fied aerial biows at. the Japanese tached to the 29th Division * He is Corps unit has just ’ been releadted lated for the fall get-together of PRIVATE modernized home in a graduate of Hillside High School. the congregation in September. Sgt. Harry Reinfurt, with the Army career, the old Ndw York and' New •mainland. from its assignment .with the 1945 H . S. Graduate in Germany, and Sgt. Frank Rein­ business zone A on 3 nice irregu­ Jersey Telephone Company pro­ Wounded Three Times Twelfth Air Force, an integral part The official groups of the church lar lots, with Venetian blinds, ar­ egcnian -is a truck driver will have charge of the pulpit dur­ furt. in France; a daughter, Mrs. vided service in northern New Jer­ in one of the air service groups Wounded in action three times of the M.A.A.F. which ffas been one Stationed At Sampson tificial fireplace, over which is a sey. Newark’s telephone growth ing the vacation of the pastor in William Morris, of Elizabeth; three which perform the maintenance and having a total of 103 points, of the most effective instruments Daniel Hauck Jr. has joined-the brothers, George and August, of large mirror; enclosed radiators and was just sufficient to watrant open­ and,supply work necessary to keep Hausler was released on July 4 in accomplishing the defeat and the month of August. bookcases; 6 rooms, bath, garage, U. S. Navy and is now stationed at The Brotherhood is introducing Elizabeth, and Frank Reinfurt, of ing a second telephone exchange, the big bombers in perfecr -condi­ from Fort Dix. With the 11th In subjection ^ f Hitler’s Europe. and big porch; convenient to Branch Brook, to relieve the origi­ Sampson, N. Y. He is the son of Nj^new games into its social meetings Linden, and a sister, Mrs. Cather­ tion. for their long-range opera­ fantry of the First Army at the The 431st Signal Heavy Con­ Daniel Hauck Sr., of 1418 Boa place, ine Riessel, of Elizabeth. schools; now $7,500. Theresa M. nal Newark (Market) central of­ which take place the second and Rensen, sole broker. EL. 2-9833. tions. He has been serving overseas time of the Normandy invasion, he struction Battalioji fcas a note­ and the late Rose Hauck!" fourth Thursdays in every month. fice. with the 58th Wing, formerly was transferred later to the Third worthy record of service., having June 14 2128 July 5 Experience Varied Hauck was the memboi’ of the Red Cross meets .‘every Wednesday unit of the XX Bomber Command, and then to the Ninth Army. He provided telephone communication high school graduating class who, Hassfeld’s career has for the in the chapel. Workers are always Fined For Theft At SMALL 2-family house;‘an excel­ since the B-29's went into action was wounded fn June and again in facilities in England, North Africa, was unable to receiv.e his diploma . wanted.- most part continued to be in the against Japan more than a year July, 1944, and the third time Southern France and Italy, for XII St the commencement exercises lent buy for a business woman or Newark district, where for the last ago. Bristol-Myers Co. srpali family; 8 rooms, 2 sun parlors, February 25 this year. He has the Air Support Command (the Ameri­ last month because he was called Pleading guilty to a charge of eleven years he has been district His brother, Stanley Hegeman, Purple Heart with two clusters, the can element of the North African into service the same day. 2 baths; 30x150 ft. lot; in good con­ assignment supervisor for the com­ Eliz&beth Avenue Presbyterian | petty larceny by the Bristol-Myers dition in and outside; near 7 buses, resides at 557 Puree street, Hill­ Bronze Star Medal for completing Tj^-’tioal Air Force), the North Af­ Church, Rev. Arthur Northwood, Co., of 171 Long avenue, John A. pany with offices in Irvington, but side, N. J action with his unit while wound­ rican Strategic Air Force, the pastor. 9:30 a. m. graded church schools, etc.; price $7,850.00. Ther­ ------------DEATH NOTICE ! Hayes, of 606 Thomas street, Or- esa M. Rensen,Vsole broker, EL in his earlier years he gained ed, the Combat,.. Infantryman’s Twelfth Air Force, the Fifteenth school. 10:45 a. m. worship with | ange, was fined $25 Saturday by wide and varied experience in the Badge, FTesidential Unit Citation Air Force, Mediterranean Allied MARESZ, on July 11, 1945, Ru­ 2-9833. dolf, beloved , husband of Anna sermon, “Open the Windows.” 7 | Acting Recorder Samuel H. Gooen June 14, 21,28, July 5 business from coast to coast. Be­ Gibas Commissioned with cluster and four campaign Tactical Air Force and the Medi­ p. m. Christian Endeavor. 1 in police court. tween 1908 and 1916 he ‘served as stars on his E.T.O. ribbon. terranean Allied Air Force. Two of (Dynowska), father of Frances R„ an installer in Chicago, as a switch­ Ensign In Reserve Hausler entered the service the most important achievements Emil N. and Arthur R. Maresz, of board installer and inspector for 285 Millard avenue, Hillside. Rela­ For Sale Midshipman John T. Gibas, son May, 1942, and was trained at Fort of this battalion-'^officially recog­ Help Wanted— Male and Female the Western Electric Company in Meade, Md., and Camp Blanding, nized as the outstanding signal unit tives and friends are invited to at­ SINGLE BED, firing and mattress, of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gibas, of 1291 tend the funeral from the Honey­ Chicago and Omaha, as a switch- State street, was among 865 men Fla. He went overseas in Septem­ working* with the air forces in the like new, $15; ice box, insulated, boardrqan in Trinidad, Col., and as ber, 1942. His -wife is the former entire European Theatre of Opera­ well Funeral Home, 1070 North 100 lbs. ice, like new, $30. Gilt Pic­ a troubleman, switchboardman, test commissioned as ensigns, United Broad street, Hillside, on Saturday State Naval Reserve, in ceremonies Ethel Hamilton and he is the son tions), were the building of the ture Frames, 1530 Maple Ave. deskman and wire chief at San of Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Haus­ communication network /of the XII at 8:30 a. m., thence to Christ the Diego, Cal. In New Jersey he has held last Thursday in the Cathedral King Church, where at 9 a. m. a of Saint John the Divine, Ntew York ler, of 45 Baldwin avenue, Newark. Air Support Command in Tunisia W A N T E D 5 H.P. MOTOR, 3 phase, 220 volt, worked as a lineman, installer, He is a graduate of Irvington High high mass of requiem will be of-' together with new rheostat; quan­ City. The group was the twenty- and the communication network WOMEN AND switchboard Wireman, wire chief, School and before entering service for the Fifteenth Air Force (the fered for the repose of his soul. PACKERS tity BX cable wired for power. equipment engineer, district main­ fourth class to be graduated from Interment at Holy Sepulchre Ceme­ Phone ES. 2-0281. July 12:19 the oldest and largest Naval Re was employed by the W. W. Jelley strategic arm of the Mediterranean MEN LABORERS tenance supervisor and district Furniture Co. in Newark. Allied Air Force) in Italy. tery. equipment superintendent, and serve Officer Training School, and GIRLS CHALLENGE Type-Hi plane, cost brings the total number Of gradu­ ------o ------PRESS OPERATORS $45; good as new, $20; 6 column central office equipment supervisor Age 16 and up before takingvhis present post in ates _ from the Training Center to Your Country Is Still BU Y A lT EXTRA casting'box $35; assortment of type 1934. , approximately 22,000. LEGAL .NOTICE ESSENTIAL WORK—WMC REGULATIONS and job and newspaper chases, rea­ Principal speaker at the cere At War — Are You? W AR BOND sonable. Phone ES. 2-0281. He is a member of the Telephone TOWNSHIP OF HILLSIDE Pioneers of America. mony was Rear Admiral Monroe NOTICE __ July 12-19 ------o------Kelly, USN, Commandant, Third TAKE NOTICE, thut on Tuesday, SUN TUBE CORPORATION Naval District. The officer’s oath July 17, 1945, at Municipal Headquar­ 3-PIECE mahogany finish living was administered by Commodore ters, North Broad Street, HillsidjaH'-New lo t LUING AVLiNUL HILLSIDE, N. J. ncom set, black leather uphol­ BUY AN EXTRA Jersey, at 7:30 P. M., the Township of, \ stery, settee, rocker and chair, $22 John K. Richards, USN, Command­ IlillBide will offer for Bale at public sale er, U. S. Naval Reserve Officer u certain Tax Sale Certificate No. 1642, Phone ES. 2-0281. July 12-19 WAR BOND Training Center, New York City. appearing on the Tax Collector's list In the names of Edward M. and M. Zietz, ANNOUNCEMENT. INDESTRUCTO wardrobe trunk, and which said tax sale certificate 21x23x42; Excellent condition, $65 covers promises known ‘and designated . . . f Help Wanted— Female as Lot .No. 77 in Block 93 on the Tax Phorte ES. 2-0281. July 12-19 Assessment Maps 9f the Township of Hillside; CABINET SINKS ELIZABETH AVENUE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Said tax sale certificate was given by Elizabeth Avenue at Wilbur Arthur Northwood, Pastor the Tax Collector of the Township of CABINETS, (for sink), linoleum Hillside to thg Township of Hillside on Pine Tavern OPERATORS top, double drain board, com­ 9:30 a. m.—Graded Bible School. the 9th day of August, 1930. The amount required for redemption plete, deck faucet, chrome strainer, 10:45 a. m.—Worship with Sermon, OPEN THE WINDOWS" of said certificate, including Interest (Formerly Jack Ross Bar) FOR POWER PRESSES, FOOT brass trap; $75; other styles and 7:00 p. m.—Christian Endeavor. and costs to date of sale and the amount sizes in stock or made td order of subsequent municipal liens with In­ terest, costs and penalties, exclusive of PRESSES, DRILL PRESSES AND Community Bldg. Supply Co., 100 the current taxes for the year 1945, 1* 240 LONG AVE. HILLSIDE, N. 1. Route 29, Hillside; WA. 3-6685. $696.03. The said , tax sale certificate will be ASSEMBLY WORK publicly offered for sale a£ the time and ELECTRIC MOTORS, compressors, lilace above set forth and will be sold machinery bought, sold, repaired- WAverly 3-7923 — If No Answer, Call ES. 3-7861 to the highest bidder, subject to con­ NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS 32 volt bulbs in stock. Dowick Elec­ firmation by the governing body of the GEISSEL MFG. CO. STAR WINDOW CLEANING AND Township of Hillside at Its next regulur tric, 1482 Vauxhall Road, Union meeting after the^sale. UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT f UN. 2-6286. ^ The Township of Hillside reserves the 109 Long Avenue Hillside, N. J. FLOOR WAXING right to accept or reject any or all HAND STORAGE CO., Unclaimed NAT KATCHER, Prop. Imls. No bid, however, shall be'accepted WA. 3-1404 for. less than $275.00 and all further furniture outlet — Jefferson at 15 GOLDSMITH AVENUE NEWARK, N. J. and higher bids muSt be in multiples Drop In And Meet BILL and GUS Dickinson. Furniture for every of $25.00. room. Open 8 A. M. to 6 P. M. The purchaser of said certificate shall EL. 3-9265, Elizabeth. be required to pay on the date of the Help Wanted— Male sale 20% of the bid price and the bal­ MAKE A DATE FOR OUR ance of the purchase price within 10 -ASH CANS, good, sturdy, $.75 each days after confirmation of the sale by Frank ZanJt & Son, 136 Route 29 th6 Township Committee. JOHN’S TAVERN The sale shall be made subject to the opposite Doremus pi., Hillside- WA provisions of the Revised Statutes of the GRAND OPENING ' WE NEED 3-8533. JOHN MAZURKEWICZ, Prop. State of New Jersey 54:5-114.2 to 54:5- 114.8 inclusive, and any amendments or BAGATELLE - - - BILLIARDS supplements thereto and the purchaser PART-TIME HELP BUILDING MATERIALS, lumber, in bidding agrees to abide by and com­ SATURDAY, JULY 21st mason material, trim, hardware, 330 LONG AVE. ply with the provisions of said Statute UN 2-3036 Laws. for ESSENTIAL WORK paints. Builders’ General Supply Dated: June 26, 1945. Company, 336 Centennial Avenue, By Vlirection of the Township Com­ 7 P. M.-ll P. M. GOOD PAY Cranford, N. J. CR. 6-0505 mittee of 4 h e Township of Hillside. FREE PLATTER ENTERTAINMENT Mar. 8 tf - ' HOWARD J. BLOY, Township Clerk. PLATFORM WORK Jply 5-12. ALL DIABETIC, 100% whole wheat LOBIANCO ELECTRIC and Soy Bean Foods—Sun Dried ELECTRICAL WIRING - RADIO REPAIR HARRISON MOTOR FREIGHT Fruits—Gresh Goat Milk, Natural CENTRAL AVE. & RACE ST., HILLSIDE Wheat Germ. RELES HEALTH Wp Solve ) our Elerlrirnl Troubles FOOD STORE, 941 Elizabeth Ave. II ilURDEN STREET HILLSIDE. WAverly 3-8600 Elizabeth, Y I. ELizabe'h 2-014' Men Wanted as \ FLOOR EDGCOMB STEEL CORPORATION PAIN rj^iG.^perhanging and dec T a k e care of them 460 HILLSIDE AVENUE orating. For quality work call Now Serving The War Industries HILLSIDE, N. J. Ernest Stay, 367 Yale Ave., Hill­ side. Phone UN 2-5416. INSPECTORS STEEL DISTRIBUTORS v NEILL & SPANJER PAINTING and paperhanging. Re­ Day and Night Shifts I aspect them regularly Urgently needed liable expert work. Free esti­ Mahogany - White Pine and Hardwoods EXPERIENCED SHEARMEN (Drop Shears) mates. Frank Pacner, 253 Keer Ave Newark. WAverly 6-3092 1350 liberty Avenue Tel. UNionville 2-1717 SHEARMEN’S HELPERS Several Good -Recap when they get smooth FLOOR LABOR I handling Steel Bars and Sheets) Jobs Available . Also can use part time help racking steel. ting and Storage All work inside heated warehouse. HAND STORAGE CO. — Moving This is “ESSENTIAL WAR WORK” and a permanent business. Packing-Storage Modem Ware- •j* Best hoods Moderate Prices £ Excellent Pay J-iconomize with our Service AVAILABILITY CERTIFICATE REQUIRED hpuses, 609 W. Elizabeth Ave., Lin­ den, Jefferson at Dickinson.’ EL 3-9265 or EL. 2-2939 f , SUPER DINER Post-War Future I ROUTE 29 near BLOY ST. HILLSIDE i k^end us your tires for repair } Management of Gabriel A. Gabriel X MEN T * 60 ft. long and 20 ft. deep. Table ana counter service. t WMC RULES % Bring the family. You will like our food and our service, j* FOR FACTORY J. MERTEL, Merchant Tailor. IMMEDIATE WORK FOR “VETERANS” OF Cleaning, pressing, dyeing and re­ “WORLD WAR II” pairing. WA 3-0206. 1423 North GENERAL' Broad St, opp. Mertz Ave. WMC Rules Observed Phone EL. 2-9323 POSTWAR SECURITY INSTRUMENT Vi IMMEDIATE CONVERSION TO POSTWAR BUSINESS Beauty Parlors A SAVING HABIT . . . SHOP AT NO LAYOFF CORPORATION NEW RAY Permanent Wave,' en­ Szarko’s Liquor Store A&BHales Cor|»« THE J. R. WATKINS CO. tire head, $6 95. THUR RAY, 1317 LIBERTY AVENUE HILLSIDE, N. 829 Newark Ave. 231 JOHNSON AVE., NEWARK, N. J. entire head, *5.50. Wood's Maple Call WA 3-0659 for Free quick delivery Barber and Beauty Shop ISM Elizabeth 39-53 LONG AVE., HILLSIDE Maple Ave., WA 34U3. K. W, KEGS BEER - - - COOLERS FOR Wntir THE HILLSIDE TIMES* THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1945 Page Five Hillside High Ace Hurls took first place and Esther Chad- only 62 and has fanned 68. He has ten the better grip and what with CHURCHES OF CHRIST, don second. pitched 14 complete games and has the help of a few pertinent ques­ SCIENTIST Many of the children are kept played the role of relief tions and a bunch of innuendoes, “GOD” is the Lesson-Sermon 1 once, that against Rochester when we know a lot about each other sub- First No-Hitter In Loop Hillside Playground News busy with handcrgft projects. The ject for Sunday, July 15 j he pitched the final two innings to compared to the first phone call. GOLDEN TEXT: “The Lord hatil l Hurden-Looker holders are made of different col­ older boys and girls are weaving save Dutch Houtz an 8 to 6 victory. It took about, three months to Sulkowski Turns Back pot-holders and pocketbooks while prepared his throne in the heavens; ’ At the end of the second week ors and will make very nice Christ­ Drews was bom in Eltingville on get to the age question, but that and hijj kingdom ruleth over all" ■ the younger group have started on Staten Island. He graduated from finally, got straightened out, except Suburban Leaders, 8-1 Hurden-Looker Playground has mas presents. The enrollment to paper bookmarks. SERMON: Passages from the „ Bears Play Chiefs New Dorp High where he began for me I am the woman and I King James version of the Bible- , Averaged* 420 children per d;LihiL. date is 285. his pitching career. Drews was a don’t tell so fast. We have advanced include; Suburban League won three games In order to satisfy the needs of Caivin Coolidge Tntchcr in high --eehoel- until—h*- la the aches and pains department and are now prescribing pills and '■■'Wlitui the^-evun-was com during the P3^ week and moved the various ages, it has beep neces­ Total registration at Calvin Cool­ broke a finger in the spring of 1936. brought unto him many that were iwin Bill Sunday sary to plan a supervised free play His coach persuaded him to try home remedies to each other. I to a tie lor lourth place with Mont- idge Playground is 250. The young Drews Of Bruins possessed with devils: and he cut Frank Hiller and Ed Mackay will program ,for the morning session. pitching, and Karl has never re­ wonder, if we had ever seen e&ch out the spirits with his word, and The afternoon program consists of children have been busy using the gretted that broken digit. Drews other, would we have recommend­ Slick Sulkowski, Hillside High . \he . slaPting assignments healed all that were sick.” (Matt. boys’ and girls' handicraft; weekly sandbox to create the latest models Bound For Yankees is 6 ft. 3 in. and weighs 180. He is ed the same cures? 8:16). Correlative passages from against Jewel Ens’ Syracuse Chieis The kind of work that we do has ace gave the best performance of in Sunday': doubleheader at R un- contests consisting of paddle tennis, of ships and aircraft. The newly- a good tennis player and is musi­ ‘‘Science and Health with Key to ally pitcher so far this season when hopscotch, checkers, Chinese 'check­ Karl Drews, the shut-out king of cally inclined, though he admits he sharpened our imaginations, and I pert Stadium. Hiller will be after installed baby swings have been in the International League, .^is Yan­ the Scriptures” by Mary Baker he pitched a no-hitter against the his 11th win of the season, while ers, jacks, horseshoe pitching, and constant demand by the small chil­ can’t sing. imagWb you to be about the grand­ Eddy include: table tennis. The evening program kee bound. The Bears' tall right­ est. most heart-warming, most sto­ league leading West Orange club Mackay will be shooting for his dren. The older boys have formed hander has pitched four shut-outs "If God heals not ihe sick, they at Colgate Field, West Orange, oh fifth victory. has been planned to take care of ic, heaven-sent tnortal that this a softball team and are prepared to date. He has won 10 and lost world has ever known. If you ever are not healed, for no lesser power the 4th of July before a record Dick Baker will be using his con­ the recreational needs of the boys i to challenge the other playgrounds, four. The last two Drews lost were The Human Element equals the infinite All-potyer; but crow d. The score was 8-1. The only and girls working in defense plants disappoint me, I shall be a miser­ tact lenses for the first time in i A horseshoe singles contest was shut-outs. On June 19, the Bears A voice over the wire—a few able wretch!"The telephone will be Gad, Truth, Life, Love, does heal run scored against Slick was un­ Sunday’s double’.ieader. He got the during the day and .intra-play­ | held last Thursday : with Angelo got only one hit from Smola of the sick through the prayer of the wed Tn starl, the fourth inning ground activity. words—a stretch of the imagination an aversion to me in fhat case. knsos this week ami Kk horn Fortunato coming in first and Ed- Toronto; Drews allowed only four —and I have made a new friend— righteous.” (p. 231). Slick walked Schlager, the West “Thf----Horde n-Luokci---- boftbah- But you lake chance,., too for wearing them for an hour a day. ward Buucher—second.—Quite fifts On June 27, Drews lost to Rad- m a y h e diMQ»t>oinl mo. ■disup- Orange.first baseman. Schlager then He has been advised to become ac­ Team defeated Conant Street 3 to number of the younger boys were ler of Rochester 1 to 0. He allowed stole second. The next batter, Mc­ 2, in a softball game Monday eve- j My telephone friend! I have pointment to many and to my seif, customed to them beio he wears interested in competing in the con­ 5 hits; the Bears collected only never seen you but we have spoken so I may be to you, too. Therefore, Nally, tapped a slow roller to them in an actual game. In batting nmg. Hitting of Jusinski and Sha­ test but due to the variation of der and Kent’s fielding were out­ three. So the record of ten and four so very often—sometimes' ij has I hope that, this may always be a short.' Toby Radice, the Union practice, Baker used them and age a separate contest was held. does not give a true picture of the been as much as three times a shortstop, threw wild to first and standing in the game. telephone friendship. and that found them to be satisfactory. He The junior champ turned out to marvelous mound work Drews has week, for this past year. We have nothing will mar it. The distance, Schlager scored the lone West Or­ says that by Sunday he should be Dens 4 and 5 of Boy Scout Troop be Robert Giovini and second was turned in. 198 are scheduled to play softball become well acquainted, although the wires, the phone- -they cover ange run. Radice led the Union accustomed to them. John Ackerman. His record for the year shows our conversation evolves around up all the shortcomings and make batters with two hits. Red Rolfe, former Yankee third Tuesday night. The winners will The checker contest was held on play Den 1 ai a latter date. that in 135 , he has business. At flj'sl no personalities me happy. Oh, Alexander Graham Gives Newark Two Hits baseman and no'Y coach a( Yale, Tuesday and Angelo Fortunato allowed only 88 hits. He has walked entered but our curiosity has got­ Bell, what good you have done! Sunday afternoon at Morris Ave­ may be a visitor to Ruppert this On Thursday afternoon the girls nue Field in Union, the local team Sunday. It was Rolfe who sent are going to feature a doll show. So won a double-header from Newark Mackay to the Yankees. Charles far dolls from Russia, Norway, by scores 5-3 and 6-2. Sgt. Frank Loftus reports that h erasked Yan­ Denmark, Holland and China are Schulte, from the Newark Air Base, kee Scout Paul Krichell if he registered for the event. won the first game but he had thought Mackay was a major The Hurden-Looker Playground’ some tight innings and finally had league prospect. Krichell replied, is under the supervision of Miss "We never si^rrlr player unless we Jean Schnabel and Thomas Greene to have help in the ninth inning Jr. when he loaded the bases with think he’s a major league prospect.'’ only one out. Lefty “Butch” Fierro So Yale is rooting for Mackay to Conant Street came in to retire the side without come tnroufp for the Bear? and The following contests were held a score. Rolfe and Loftus will be in New­ at the Conant Street Playground In the second game, Sulkowski ark to lend a popia-Bofola yell for during the week; girls’ checkers, again gave a stellar performance their alumnus, Ed Mackay. with Betty Cole as winner and Lita by setting the Newark club dpwn Davidson in second place; girls’ with only two hits to win 6-2. Leo Chinese checkers, Ann Seber first Jerolemon, towering firsts sacker, Two More Training and ’ Ruth Mitchell second. 'and the veteran Andy Tote led the p Yl„ jt ; C,, A softball team has been organ­ 13-hit attack on three Newark hurl- r or lYldl llimc OCrVICe ized by the girls with the foliow- ers by garnering three hits apiece. SHEEPSHEAD BAY, N. Y—The ink^as members: Betty Cole, Mar­ This Sunday at 3 p. m. Union following men from Hillside, N. J., garet Hackett, Ruth Mitchell, Ma­ travels to West Orange again, are now in training for service rie Bishop, Joan Kelly, Nancy Manager £)ick Hartnett will start with the merchant fleet at the U. S. Maurer, Shirley Blazier, Betty and Sulkowski on the mound with Bill Maritime Service Training Station, Jean Buchanan. The team/ expects Hicks behind the plate. Sheepshead Bay, N. Y.: Milton Bra- to play the girls from George neck, 17, of 281 Williamson avenue, Washington. and Edward Palkovic, 28, of 1305 Handwork is one of the most dog b it e s c h il d Bright street. popular forms of recreation at the Marion Lanzafama, 9-year-old playground. Belts, suspenders and daughter of Mrs. Catherine Lanza- photograph albums are being made ;fama, of 1136 St. Louis avenue, was Send In Your News from cork. Boys and girls of all treated Monday for a dog bite by iges have been w- aving pot h fil­ Dr. Milton m . Liien, township phy- Patronize Our Advertisers ers. Handwork is held every morn­ ing. The boys’ softball team played a game with Hurden-Looker Mon day evening. The game was very closely contested, with Hurden- See Ray Hetzel when you are ready to Looker winning by the score of 3-2. The feature was a freak home run by Jasinski of the victors, due to wild throwing by the Conant Street boys. The talley proved to be the BUY NEW TIRES deciding one. George Washington Activities at the George Wash­ We have Goodyear, Gillette, ington grounds are in full swung There have been 250 children xeg- Kelly-Springfield, U. S. Royal 'tlered. The evep p Dpuiar contests are al­ ways met with enthusiasm by ihe boys and girls,’ as was shbwn by the "checker contest held Monday. RAY HETZEL The winners were Willy Ricker- hauser, first; Johnny Young, sec­ ond, and Ralph Schwing, third. SUNOCO STATION Senior boys of the playground are forming a team lor softball and LIBERTY AN1) HILLSIDE AVES. will be ready to play the other • WAverly 3-9848 playgrounds next weex. A peanut nunt will be held this Thursday and all boys and girls will par­ ticipate. Municipal Playground Dolls from all countries of the world, made from all kinds of ma­ terials, came with their young HOLLYWOOD LIQUORS mothers to visit the Municipal Playground on Thursday, giving & DELICATESSEN the judges, Mrs. Stanley liegeman 249 HOLLYWOOD AVE. — Elizabeth 3-8961 and Mrs. Harry Dellinger, many Harry Bergman, Prop. anxious moments! In the final cision of the doll contest the fol­ LIQUOR SALE! lowing awards were made: Pretti­ est, Joan Massa; 2nd place, Emily Old Grand Dad, 100 Proof, Pints...... $3.04 Sladeki; the largest doll award Old Taylor, 100 Proof, P in ts...... 3.04 went to small Patsy Price, while the oddest doll, u Mexican mama PM Blended Whiskey, Pints...... 2.21 and her baby, was entered by Di­ ana Massa, while. Irene Revuck Carstairs White Seal, Blend. Whiskey, Pints 2.18 look second place lor her Eskimo doll; the funniest, Carmen Miran­ Gordon’s London Dry Gin, Fifths...... 3.32 da, belonged to Colleen Rettino All Popular Beers Sold by the Case with a clown doll of Joanna Pfist- ner coming in second. Prettiest rag doll came with Susie Dempsey and twin French rag dolls with Joan Crichton. The smallest doll was Catherine Honour’s, while the doll with largest eyes and lashes' be­ longed to Ruth Honour. In the pigtail'contest held the MEN OR WOMEN same day Ruthie Honour’s long red braids took first place with Judy Klink a cllose second; the prettiest to coiffure A& longed to Emily Sladek Give ‘em a chance Grow! These Are Permanent, Post-War while Jo n ^ n a Pfistner’s were the Shortest. \ The Picnic Club is now. enjoying Positions, At Good Pay With lunch each week out in the woods It doesn’t take any spade work to cultivate this kind of Victory Rich or poor—you cannot afford to ignore the rich return with the following group attend­ Chance For Advancement ing: Jane Felber, Marvel Riley, Garden! your country offers for the loan of your money, or the wisdom Donald Jupa, Janet Baba, James Dill, Carmen Dill, Donald Meslar, All it takes is common sense. of this, the shrewdest investment you can make! Catherine and Ruth Honour, Rob­ ert Ilealy, Joan and Jesse Ann If you plant a War Bond that costs you $37.50 you get a DRAFTSMEN Crichton, Donald Senz, Dwight and Buy Bonds now when your country needs your dollars to Robert Kirkpatrick, Doris and yield of $50.00. The wisest financiers will tell you there’s no, help win the war. 0 Charles Bishop, Jean Kenopensky WITH DESIGNING EXPERIENCE and Phyllis MinettL better investment in the world. An investmentTrce from every Woven pocketbooks are being kind of risk—every future disaster! An investment that offers And once your money is safe and sound in War Bonds— made by the older girls on the grounds,* with leather comb cases you, in the uncertain years to come, tangible security guaran­ don’t be tempted to cash them in. Wait for the golden harvest | and marionettes finding the young­ er folks’ interest in handcraft sat­ teed by the,United States Government. you’re entitled to—wait till they’re fully matured! isfied. Lay-Out Detail Hillside Avenue The end of the second week found the Hillside Avenue Play­ ground going strong. Horseshoes Keep Faith With Our Fight ers — Buy War Bonds For Keeps! and basketball are still the favor­ DRAFTSMEN ites as far as the biggep boys are concerned, while checkers, pick-up- with at least six months experience sticks and Chinese checkers take THIS MESSAGE SPONSORED BY up most of the younger children’s time. An occasional game of dodge WMC Rules baj,l or Red Rover brings the en­ tire group together for a short while. a p p l y at o n c e , em plo ym en t o ff ic e The past week found the girls giving Lilly Dache some competi­ MORRIS MACHINERY CO. tion. Hats of various sizes and shapes were made from very pretty EDWARD FEINS Incorporated GENERAL INSTRUMENT C0RP. pieces of wallpaper. The results JERSEY FARM PRODUCTS made quite attractive sun hats. NEWARK, N. J. From the lookg of things a num­ 829 Newark Ave., Elizabeth ber of mothers are going to be deluged with pot-holders for Christmas, birthdays, etc. Tiwpo4- Page Four THE HILLSIDE TIMES, THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1945

. AAAAAAAAAAAA.'.A.'.AA.V t * < ' * * ' p WlllTWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIffl ...... 1...... | Your Victory Garden J It’s A D ate Today | “WHERE TO BUY IT * -“WHERE TO GET GOOD SERVICE By FRED OSMAN I cum ber beetle, Colorado potato Board of Education meeting. Tuesday With mid-sumfner ap- squash ,v,ine borer, tomato horn "Bourd tit Health meeting. CARDENBARDEN proaching, the Victory worm, aphids, onion thrips. Consult July 24 Gardener should start th e Victory Garden or Home Gar­ Township Committee meeting. | planting his fall garden. den Manual for the proper control August Cabbage And Us and apply it promptly. Board of Education meeting. Relatives August 14 WA Township Committee meeting. VICTDBY Cabbage for late crop, ■ cauliflower, Brussels August 21 sprouts and broccoli should be set Board of Health meeting. out as plants before July 10, in August 28 Township Committee meeting. BUSINESS DIRECTORY order to secure satisfactory devel­ lUllllllllllll iiiiiiiiiimin iniiiiiiiiuimiiuiiiiiiiiiuiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiniiiiniini opment before winter. Broccoli and a u m m m m UUUUUyj Brussels sprouts may often be har­ Wheat Graduate Of Accountants Building Supplies Use This Convenient Electrical Contractors Musical Instruments vested up to Christmas and plants I Bomber Crew Course • set now snould yield eood CiE Hoofing - Siding - Insulation FLUORESCENT LIGHTING A IN ­ orator bomber crews given at the J U \ v erly 3-8233, Ul.i/.ubeth 2-239!) D U STR IA L FIXTURES, 2-40, #18.75 the soil loosely until about half the U. S. Naval Auxiliary Air Station, FA13YAN PL. & LYONS AVE. KITCHEN FIXTURES, #7.35 MUSIC STORE Weekly ami Monthly Hookkeuping ACCOUNTANTS Not connected w.ih mv hole is tilled. Then pour in about a Jacksonville Municipal No. 1, Jack­ Income & Payroll Tax Servic- NEWARK, N. J. WA 3-0200 1151 Liberty Ave., Hillside, N. J. cupful of the solution. If you can sonville, Fla., and is scheduled for Shawcross Accounting Service, 1450 music M|nro get the completely soluble 13 26-13, combat duty in the Pacific, it was N. Broad St., Hillside, WA 3-8235. m u s ic a l Merchandise use a tablespoonful to a gallon of announced Saturday by Command­ APPETIZERS, PICKLE PRODUCTS EXPERT REPAIRING water. The Victory Garden 5-10-5 er Salem A. Van Every Jr., USN, ON ALL INSERT MKNIs Commanding Officer of the station. ® Appetizers, Pickle P roducts * Cemeteries Irving Tabatchnick, 1554 Maple Feed, Poultry and Dairy fertilizer is also satisfactory, used Ave., Hillside, WA 6-1612. Hethodn—Sheet ...... at the rate of 3 tablespoonfuls to a Professional Tcneliurn IRVING TABATCHNICK CRACK L A M ! AUTO BODY WORK Telephone MUchr], ;;-29"4# gallon or a cupful to 12 quarts of Poultry, Daily, Dog Food at water and allowed to soak for a 'TABS" Herring Products M emorial Park Brunswick Auto Body Co., Inc., 438 82 Springfield Ave. Neiratk few hours to' a day and stirred Kenilworth, N. J. Elizabeth Ave., Newark, BI 2-9537. DRAKE COAL COMPANY at Smith Orange ,Vvp, while using. After the solution has Pickled Herring at its B est FREE PERPETUAL UPKEEP R. S. King, 5 Mertz Ave., Hillside, WA 6-1612 1554 MAPLE AVE. A Garden of Sacred Memories In a 343 NYE AVE., IRVINGTON soaked in, fill the hole with loose UNITED setting of rarp beauty and exquisite near N. Broad St., WA 6-0548. Special prices for parties, FShuy 3-3730 soil and do not tamp it. This gives harmony. The cost is surprisingly low BAKERIES the plants a good start. GROCERY CO. Organizationsf Bar Mitcvahs with free perpetual care. COAL FUEL OIL * Pet Shops Plant Seeds Carefully T E LEPH O N E ROselle 4-5760 Hillside Center Bakery, 1315 Lib­ This is the last call for sowing erty Ave., Hillside., rutabagas. Plantings may aiso be Groceries BELTING, PULLEYS WATTS PET SHOP made of carrots, beets, turnips, * Auto Body IVorl Ehrich Supply Co., Route 29 ^nd Florists snap beans and loose-leaf lettuce* • Cleaners and Dyers John St., Hillside, UN 2-3083. “Gifts That Live Arc the Prepare the soil well, make the fur­ Fresh Fruits, Vegetables Anthony K. Schuler G if ts to Give” rows and distribute the seeds. Then BICYCLES AND REPAIRING FUNERAL DESIGNS Residence ORange 3-0303 JOYET • METAL FEEDERS w^ter with a starter solution made Tindall’s Bicycle Repair Shop, 1234 CUT FLOWERS jusl twice the strength of that sug­ AUTO COLLISION WORK DRY CLEANERS Woodruff Ave., Hillside, EL, 3-1349. • FOUNTAINS 1420 N. BROAD ST. DELAWARE VALLEY gested above for transplanting. BRUNSWICK BUILDING SUPPLIES • BROODERS 1574 MAPLE AVENUE • MASII Pour the solution carefully over the Marilou Neu- AUTO BODY CO., INC. Ruck Building Materials, Inc., Fab- ' NURSERY \ BUSY BEAUTY— Corner Wertz Ave. WAverly 6-2418 • CHICK GRAIN seeds in the furrow^ a teacupful to m ayer is one of N BC’s busiest 1.18 Hr.lZABUTII AVE, N E W A R K yan PI. and Lyons Ave., Newark. !> IH N. BROADEST. cor. King SI. a foot of row. Then draw the soil in Bleelmv 37 IMione Flii/.iiheth 2-3(120 - actresses. She’s heard in ‘‘Ma PICK-UP AND DELIVERY WA 3-0200, Other Supplies loosely. It is a good plan also to Perkin s,” “Campnna’s Grand ,, mulch over the rows with dried H o te l” and “Doctors Look Ahead." I CEMETERIES OPEN EVENINGS Graceland ■ Memorial Parx, Kenil­ grass clippings or similar material Refinishing of Motor Cars 1193 E. GRAND STREET td conserve the moisture. worth, RO 4-5756. Body jpd Fender Work Furriers Opp. Phone Co. ELIZABETH Fertilize Tomatoes And Beans * Coal, Fuel Oil CLEANERS AND DYERS As soon as tomatoes have fruits Estimates Olven Joyet Dry Cleaners, 1574 Maple set, the plants should bes fertilized DANIEL LEEDS MILLER,Inc. R. S. KING A N'KlGHHOUI.V KKKVH'i: Ave., Hillside, WA 6-2418. F O R COLD FUR STORAGE at intervals of three weeks. Use a 5 MERTZ AVE., near N. lkroaad 8t. solution 3 tifnes as strong as the 1356 NORTH BROAD ST. HILLSIDE, N. J HILLSIDE WAverly 6-0648 ANTHRACITE COAL COAL, FUEL OIL Call WAverly 3-1565 • Printers, Stationers transplanting solution mentioned OLGA NUT COAL— COKE Independent Coal Dealers Asso., 14 Also Repairing - Remodeling above. Use a quart of solution about \ Phones: EL 2-7123, WA 3-1938 INDEPENDENT COAL Hoffman PL, Hillside, ES 3-5530. ^#each plant. If the area is mulched,- DEALERS ASSO. FOGEL & CEFAL REINHARD-MUELLER CO, II HOFFM AN PL., HILLSIDE, N. J. DRUGGISTS pour directly upon the mulching Hillside Drug Co., 1279 Liberty Ave., 242 LYONS AVE., NEWARK material but avoid pouring the Bakeries Essex 3-5530 PRINTERS - STATIONERS Hillside, WA 3 -9537. — - ...... y lution. on the stem of the plant. If 2 HOLLYWOOD A VMM K clean culture is being practiced, Lovely BIRTHDAY & WEDDING* ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES loosen the soil v/ith a hoe or culti­ CAKES TO ORDER a t Wallraft' Appliance & Sales Co., Phone ELi'/alndii 'MKH'> vator before pouring in the solu­ • Druggists 1224 Springfield Ave., Irvington, General Merchandise tion. Hillside Center Bakery George C. Hebbe, Prop. ES 2-7733. Pole beans, especially pole lima Try Dr. Leo's Famous beans, require a good supply of fer­ 1315 LIBERTY AVENUE ELECTRICAL SERVICE HILLSIDE TRADING POST tilizer to produce crops, so these Fresh Cakes, Ties, Bread & P astry Vitamin Tonics Dowick Electric, 1151 Liberty Ave., Radio Service would be benefited by a similar ap­ Daily. Buns, Doughnuts, C rullers Hillside, UNionville 2-6286. NEW & USED MACHINERY plication of fertilizer. HILLSIDE DRUG CO. FEED, POULTRY AND DAIRY HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES WALD RADIO Insects At Work 1279 LIBERTY AVENUE Drake Coal Co., 343 Nye Ave., Irv­ 213 HILLSIDE AVE. WA (i-3210 Records—Electric Appliances Insects that may be at work .now Belting, Pulleys WAverly 3-9537 ington, ES 3-5730. are the Mexican bean beetle, cu- • W e Huy - Sell - Trade for (ash HOBBY SUPPLIES FLORISTS RADIO* REPAIRING — OUR NEW LOCATION - I Ylonville 2-3083 KKncny 2-OLV,' Delaware Valley Nursery, 948 N. Alter 9 a. m. 275 Lyons Ave. cor. Clinton PI. Broad St., cor. King St., Eliza­ NEWARK. N. J. WAverly 3-2731 Ehrich Supply Co. • Electrical Appliances beth, EL 2-3620. Hardware Get The Hillside Times at BELTING — PULLEYS ------FURRIERS Fogel & Cefal, 242 Lyons Ave., MILL SUPPLIES ESsex 2-7733 Newark, WA 3-1565. KIZYMA HARDWARE • Refrigerator Service AL HAUSER ROUTE 29 & JOHN ST. lllLI.SlDi; GENERAL MERCHANDISE PITTSBURGH & WALLRAFF APPLIANCE Hillside Trading Post, 213 Hillside DUTCH MASTER PAINTS Vincent's Refrigeration Stationery Ave., Hillside, WA 6-3210. Also Plumbing Supplies & SALES CO. and Oil Burner Service * Bicycles and Repairing HARDWARE 1190 LIBERTY AVENUE Toys - Candy 1224 SPRINGFIELD AVE. Kizyma Hardware, 1190 Liberty 2U7 RYAN STREET Ave., Hillside. TINDALL'S BICYCLE Phone ELiznbetli 3-8889 Newspaper Delivery IRVINGTON, N. J. INSURANCE REPAIR SHOP CERTIFIES) COAL Kathryn A. KeHer, 1444 N. Broad ® Insurance New Bicycles - Parts - AeccHSorici Refrigerators - Radios St., Hillside, WA 3-8891. 437 YALE AVENUE and Repairing Coke Fuel Oil MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS nue, twenty-five feet to lot number 1231 WOODRUFF AVENUE Bendix Washing Machines KATHRYN A. KELLER sixty-five (65) as said lot number sixty* Cor. Bloy St. UN 2-3023 ELiznbetli 3-1349 Billy Dorn’s Music Store, 82 Spring- five (65) is shown on said map; thence — —BUY WAR BOND S------field Ave., Newark, MI 2-2940. Northeasterly along raid last m entioned General Insurance lot and again parallel with llilton A'* PET SHOPS 1444 NORTH BROAD STREET nue, one hundred eight and (orty«H# Watts Pet Shop, 1193 E. Grand St, hundredths feet to the salJ Southweit- Elizabeth. TELEPHON E: WAverly 3-8891 erly side of Bakors Koud twenty-five and Complete and Efficient Service forty-five hundredths feet to the point PRINTERS, STATIONERS of BEGINNING. A m e r i c a n H e r o e s Together with all the right, title and -by JULIAN OLLENDORFF. Reinhard-Mueller Co., 2 Hollywood interest of the said mortgagors of, In Ave., Hillside, EL 2-4882. and to the land In Bakers Hoad lying LEGAL NOTICE In front of and adjoining said lot to the RADIO SERVICE centre of said road. The promises are known as 6 Laurel Wald Radio, 275 L#ohs*&Y£.f> New­ LEGAL, NOTICE Avenue, on the tax maps ot the Town­ ark, WA 3-2721/U S P E C IA L MASTER’S SALE— In Chan- ship of Maplewood ai 1 the Township of REFRIGERATOR SERVICE ee ry of New Jersey. Between \nna Union. nenderson, complainant, and William The approximate amount of the De­ Vincent’s Refrigeration and Oil B ro c k , et als, defendants. Fi. Fa. for sale cree to be satisfied by said sale is the Burner Service, 207 R yan St., of m ortgaged premises. su m of One Thousand Five Hundred Six B y virtue of the above stated writ of Dollars and Ten Cents ($1,506.10), to­ EL 3-3289. n e ri facias to me directed, I shall ex- gether with the costs of this Bale. p ° f e for 8al© by public vendue, at the Orange, N. J. June 13, 1945. orfice of the undersigned, 309 Main Named To Administer JOSEPH C. CASSINI. S tre e t, Orange, New Jersey, on Thurs­ Special Master In Chancery. d a y . the nineteenth day of July next, at War Casualty’s Estate tw o o’clock P. M. all that certain tract MELLINGER & RUDENSTEIN, or parcel of land hereinafter particu- Sol'rs. Mrs, Sue Urbine, of 208 Boston i a r l y described, 3ituate and lying ana Geing partly in the Township of Maple Fees $31.08. avenue, has been named adminis-1 w o o d , formerly South Change, In the June 21-July 12-4t. tratrix of the estate of John Mag-1 C o u n ty of Essex and State of New Jer­ na, her brother, Hillside soldier sey , and partly in the Township of who died in battle on April 29, ac­ U nion, County of Union and State of cording to papers filed w ith Sur­ N e w Jersey. ivnown and lesignated on a cm tain rogate Charles A. Otto Jr. this m a p entitled "Map of Hilton v Heights, week. The estate is valued at situated In the Townships of South Or* $ 1,000. s-nge, and Upion, New Jersey, surveyed D ecem ber 1899, George H. Gardner, Sur­ v ey o r, Newark, N. J.” upd filed In tha p ro p e r offices of Union and Essex Coun­ ties on January 3rd, 1900, as and by lot number sixty-four (64), end which s a id lot according to sold map is bound­ ed and described as follows: BEGINNING a t a point oil the south­ w e ste rly side of Bakers Road, distant ...... ■ — J-is company sur- seventy-six and thirty-five hundredths f e e t Northwesterly from the corner pm d by Japs in the early morning, tech. Sergt. Henry G. Bohlen lo im e d by the Intersection of the South­ of Kansas -leaped from his foxhole, killed six and wounded several w esterly side of Baker8 Roa/Af I # Northwesterly along Bald last mentioned lo t and at right, angles to Hilton Ave- REG’LAR FELLERS-By Pipe Line By GENE BYRNES r KP “ . ( \ JtHEY’RE all big days for Long Distance these clays. Our job is to take them in stride and get NOW LEMME ocA h , i'd like. THINK—THERE'S NO your calls through without waiting. T'GO TO TH' BEACH LAW ABOUT TAKIN' WITH YA, BUT I MERCHANDISE Most ot the time it v^orks out that way, but some* CAN'T TA K E TH' ON A STREETCAR. times there’s an extra big crowd on sprne circuits. DORG ON TH' IS THERE? / S T R E -E T CAR! Then Long Distance will say —“Please limit your call to 5 minutes.”

RETURNING SOLDIERS or* arriving at N e w Jersey camps by the thousands, often 10,000 to 15,000 In a single day. Iv e ry soldier wants to call home. To h an eile these calls we need additional operators In ovory town In Now Jortay. A p p ly ,by calling the •‘Chief Operator” in your community.

WMC Rules Fully O b se rv e d NIW JERSEY BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY THE HILLSIDE TIMES, THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1945 Pi& Thu#

Informed public opinion Ui the m ost po- l.nt of all restralntH upon misgovornmcnt." "A free press ilaadi ss imr of tbs jgrcatMt — U. 8. Supreme Court. interpreters between the fom nm rnt and the people. To allow It to be fettered la to fetter HILLSIDE TIMES EDITORIAL ourselves.”—C. 8. Supreme Court.

This is a very delicate task, yet it mother is glad to see him happy OHIO STA^E STUDENT is-ttttl-y reeont years -Umv liu* has .with his playmates. From now on, ^ Eve S. Schulman, of Hillside, is ftTF ffttm ftp tttniPB been more properly recognized. however, she has no full control I m il Cl prw among the -aunuaer quarter stu- WALTER R. LEE Here we can only mention the fact, over his behaviour and the shaping I K U l o l v l 'O denis enrolled a t Ohio State U ni­ printed and Published every Thursday at adding that it is due to ignorance, of his character. The outside influ­ versity at Columbus, Ohio. Director of Funerals 1443 North Broad Street, Hillside, New Jersey, poverty and other miseries that ences have much to say about that. by have tormented and terrorized Here is where society should step Township of Hillside to Supreme ISfSS SALEM AVENUE HILLSIDE, N. J. B u y More THE HILLSIDE TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY prospective mothers as well as in and join the home in guiding Cleaners Holding Company, Inc., Elizabeth 2-4*47 careless and dissipating lives of the childien further in their property in Hillside avenue, known W ar Bonds < f . Sidney Silverstein ...... Business Manager mothers themselves, which brings growth, if it wants upright men as lots 12 and 13, block 39/1, tax Robert Kaplan ...... Editor so many abnormal and defective and women. Let us bear firmly in assessment maps. Telephone WAverly 3-2465 children. Write to the children’s mind that the child is now in its Mr. and Mrs. Peter Makomski to bureau in Washington and they most impressionable period of life Clara Kraeuter, single, one tract in will send you startling information and that it enters into the outside the southwesterly line of Long ave­ SUBSCRIPTION RATES on the crimes committed upon un­ or the social life still moved chiefly nue, 280.01 feet from Liberty ave­ TIMES will be sent to any part of the United Stales I born children and babies. This, no by wants and passions before ca­ nue, and one tract in the southwest­ Of doubt, was the reason that Labor pable of the needed reasoning. erly line of Long avenue, 305.10 lllc rlai.ir subscription price ol $2,511 a yeill1, Single cuplfe b dChls ScLiuiuiy Ftikuis luuuntly—asked ThCl'OfHf'L1 lime where the guid' feet from Liberty avenue. Pq.j A j, Canada and foreign countries must be added to these rates is the President for a large appro­ ance of children is of a most deli­ Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Kline to I COMMUNICATIONS priation to be spent on prospective cate nature. This means providing Mr. and Mrs. Morris Gold, property mothers and small children. This is accessible centers, whether we call known as 1,455 Munn avenue. The 1IMES is always pleased to publish letters and other item.. a very good move, of course, but them nurseries or pre-kindergarten Mr. and Mrs. Harry C.-Warring- 0[ interest to readers, and invites suc^h communications. The lame the danger is that the politician schools, to attract the children all may creep in and squander the ton Sr., to Mr. and Mrs. Allen P. and address of the writer must be given in every case, not necessarily the year round and guide them into Glass, property in the northerly OUR THANKS TO THE money. Besides it is specially in lor publication, but as an evidence of good faith, Anonymous 'com­ orderly life. Such centers would line of Williamson avenue, 546.63 munications will not be published. congested cities that the real prob­ plug up numerous sources of evil lems exist. The first step most vital feet from North Broad street. that now flow “and blight the chil­ John Dziadek, also known as in life then, is to see that children dren’s lives on the streets, and nip are rightly born, which has been John Jadek, trustee, and others, to -Letters lo the Editor- much of social evil at its very ori­ Joseph Rosin, property known as unpardonably neglected in the gin. I am glad to point again as a JERSEY past. , 17 Buchanan street. PEOPLE OF NEW living illustration to Mrs. Bern­ * . ■ • ' . « No Improvement Later stein’s nursery this summer. She Armit Corporation to Stersan Opinions Of Our Readers Neither is the condition of chil­ not only gave' us a model example Corporation, one tract in the south­ dren much better after they are of what coald be done for the chil­ erly line of Trinity place, 52.51 feet born. The same ignorance, negli­ dren arid the working mothers, but from Fairview place and one tract * For (heir Participation in gence or suppressed surroundings in the southerly line of Trinity IM P R O V IN G t h e w o r l d freedom of will to choose which to how to enlist the sympathy and co­ augment the already unconsciously operation of others. place, 265.02 feet from Fairview Editor, Hillside Times: ' follow and reap the consequence place. i of recent years 'there has been thereof. Strangely enough, he has acquired predisposition toward bad From such centers the children tempers and evil tendencies. Here gmw and enter "further into their Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Burns to Our War Bond Campaign puch talk about a “New Order" chosen the evil and thereby per­ Sid Burns and Dorothy Burns, ten­ !or the w’oriijU Hitler undertook to verted and degraded himself. In is just one illustration: not long ago ydfbols, playgrounds, social gath­ 1 met a womgtn in this'stown wheel­ erings and- life in general with ants by entirety, property in the Lquer all other powers and es­ other words, man is by nature a southwesterly line of Schley street, tablish a new world order over free moral being but he has not ing ai bab^ carriage. It was a hot, much different spirit and tenden­ sultry day. The baby's head, was cies than they may have done in 400 feet from Field place. yhich he was to rule by sheer chosen to live his moral life. He Mr. and Mrs. George C. Burke Our "That They Shall Live" war bond campaign is over. lorcc. That was as unnatural for buried in a soft, pillow and its body the past. lives some inferior creature’s life plunged in an' equally soft mat­ and others to Edna R. McLean, Mankind generally as it was lunacy and thus made a freak of himself S. V. TSANOFF. property in the southerly side of in the part of Hitler and his fol- and a mess of the world. tress. The baby was crying and You bought bonds and those bonds will buy field hospi­ writhing in its extreme discomfort. Bauer terrace, 170.63 feet from Sa­ owcrs in particular;. it ended as it The first thing to do then is, as lem avenue, i/ould naturally have done sooner stated, in a previous lettep- to the “Madam,” I told her, “don’t you see Makomaski Training Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Harry Child tals. You may have the satisfaction of knowing that your ir later. “Times,” to humanize the man by the baby is suffocating in that po­ t.o Sylvia Kepnis, property known Now the democracies of the restoring him to his God-given na­ sition?” " oh,'she is nothing ..but a For Rescue 01 Fliers as No. 411 (formerly known as No. bonds will be used to help our wounded men. Field hos­ ivorld, also realizing there is a ture. From that nature will spon­ crank,” was her reply. It was use­ KEESLER FIELD, Biloxi, -Miss — I, 564) Schley street. leed of radical readjustment of hu- taneously spring, not a new order, less to talk to the woman any fur­ F /0 Casimir S. Ma^pmaski, soff) of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kahan to nan relationships, are fervently devised by the whims and notions ther. Now, we all know howMoften Mr. and Mrs. John G. Makomaski, Catherine H. Wilson, property pitals are equipped to give emergency treatment and by vurking on some plans for estab­ of perverted men, but a Natural we hear cradle babies crying to of 569 Yale avenue, Hillside, N. J., known as No. 31 Long avenue. lishing a new order on “democratic Order, flowing from the minds and which little attention is paid. has arrived at the AAF Training Emily H. Doremus and David H., so doing, save countless lives and ease untold suffering. irinciples,” that will insure peace hearts .of men sincerely and hon­ Mother is busy and lets him cry. Command’s Emergency Rescue her husband, to Mr. and Mrs. John nid good will among men. No estly wishing to serve humanity "That’s nothing, let him cry; it de­ oel od at Keesler Field for an in­ J. Gavin, property known as No. Our “ Keep Pitchin’ Slogan" Contes! drew a large num­ loubt they will agree and put on and bring peace and order on velops his voice.” Little is it real­ tensive air crew operational train­ 99 State Highway No. 29. laper many good ideas; but, how earth. ized that the child is crying in pro­ ing course to prepare him for du­ Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fischer to keptical they are themselves in Need Revised Education test of some discontentment, which ties ’With an emergency rescue Mr. and Mrs. James J. Nolan, prop­ ber of entries and the winning names will be announced tarrying these ideas into practice! All this means that our educa­ reeflcls badly on his temperament. squadron. erty in the easterly line of Bank fear and suspicion of each other tional systems must be recon­ Then he gets out of the cradle and Emergency lescuc squadrons, of street, 66.75 feet from Coe avenue. just as soon as the judges have given their decisions. ieem to hound them at every step structed to build true manhood and begins crawling around; mother which he eventually will become a Mr. and Mrs. J. Arthur Du Plessis jor"truthless fotces are ever pres­ womanhood. It must, of course, be puts him with the other children crew member, are charged with the to Mr. and Mrs. James Edward Public Service and its subsidiary operating companies et to ravish *it will.” Let us not plain that this cannot be done in in the play rooms. There again we important mission of searching for Murphy, property at the intersec- 'orgei that the Versailles Treaty of a single stroke. It can be achieved hear continuous frictions between and saving the lives of Army Air of the easterly side of Salem wenty-five years ago contained only evolutionary; but we have the children moved by wants and pas­ Forces personnel who nave been avenue and the southerly side of join Uficle Sam in thanking you all for your response to nany good, things an paper, but power and facilities to lay a sound sions before capable of reasoning. forced down or have been forced Hurden street. • heir application created Hitler and foundation for it right now by be­ Mother often has to leave her work to abandon their aircraft over land Mr. and Mrs. Morris Schafer to the Seventh War Loan. nought the- present most devaslat- ginning with the children in lead­ to settle disputes among them, yet or water in tne theatres of war. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Katz, prop­ ng war in history. We, of course, ing them to be what God through dismisses it all. There again little Using surface boats, OA-lOA fly­ erty in the northeasterly side of ike to believe that experience has nature meant them to be as men is it realized that through all these ing boats, B-17 flying Fortresses Williamson avenue, 131.43 feet from aught us lessons; but has it? Evi- and women. “Teach the child in suppressions, irritations and abuses carrying the new A-l lifeboat, and >Crescent avenue. lence plainly indicates that na- the way he should go and he will the child develops instincts and other life-saving equipment, these Westminster Corporation to Mr. ions and world leaders forget the remember it when he gets old,” so feelings that this is an unjust and highly versatile rescue squadrons and Mrs. Eric C. Pearson, property —PVBLIC-- " ■■ (K) SERVICE1 ■■■■■ "■* iast and face the pressing problems the Scripture confirms it. cruel world and he must fight for already-have saved more than 1,500 which begins at a point at the s their selfish interests dictate, and This brings us directly to our his rights. This is carried on men from death or capture by the southeasterly corner of lands of whatever they -agree to carry out subject. What is the natural order throughout his life. enemy. Gregory V. Pearson and wife, dis­ together, is done with “risks." of child’s guidance? There is an Yet, for good or bad, up to now tant southerly 55 feet from Notting­ Attributed To “Nature” old saying that the education of he is -entirely under the control ,of ham way. Whereof all these setbacks to the the home and especially the mother. the child begins with his grand­ Bank Statement forts for order in the world? “It father. This is a too far-fetched an There is no other substitute for 111111(1111 hi iiimi IIITTTTITITIITTfTTTTTTTTTTTITTTIIlTI I IWIIIIIHU s all due to human nature," they idea for a practical consideration that except instructing and en­ Charter No. 1 1727 Reserve District No. 2 ell us; selfishness, greed, animosi- here. Suffice it to begin child abling mothers to fulfill their du­ ies, hatreds, strife and contention REPORT OF CONDITION OF T1IE guidance with his pre-natal, natal ties properly. HILLSIDE NATIONAL BANK OF re all part of human nature, which and post-natal period of life. One Home Influence Supplanted HILLSIDE, IN THE STATE OF NEW nay take "thousands of years to writer advised the children that After entering his third year, JERSEY. AT THE CLOSE OF BUSI­ radicate.” Hence all the evil and intend to come into this world to however, he hears the voices of NESS ON JUNE 30, 1045. miseries of life, which man must Published in response to call inode by start first by selecting their own children on the streets, and a crav­ Comptroller of the Currency, under heck and control the best he can. parents, and then gave a very tact­ ing awakens in him to step over Section 5211, U. 8. Revised Statutes. How hopeless and disheartening ful gesture to the parents on how the threshold and join them. In this ASSETS The Hillside National Bank wuld it be .if it was so! But thanks to proceed in locating a nice and mother readily lets him go. Here Loans and discounts (In­ j the all-wise and kind Creator, cluding $7.49 overdrafts) $ 2,230,87-8.87 healthy boy or girl. It was very let us note that this new step in United Status Government i is not so. Man is by nature a wise and direct'advice. Taking it the child’s life is most natural, ana obligations, direct and loral being, endowed with all the for granted that they follow it and guaranteed ...... 8,190,200.00 1320 NORTH BROAD STREET, HILLSIDE, N. J. should have iW natural course. The Obligations of States and otentialities to build millenium on set the newcomer on his or her child does not run away from political subdivisions .... 138,000.00 arth. if he wishes to. But he is journey, it is all up to the mother home, neither does the mother Corporate stocks (including ndowed also with the faculties to to lead him through this natal chase him out. He simply responds $13,600.00 stock of Federal now good and evil, and also with Reserve bank) ...... 11,602.00 period safely to his earthly home. to his gregarious instincts, and Cash, balances with other FOUNDED 1920 banks, including reserve balance, and cash items in process of collection.. 2,740,704.68 Dank premises owned $47,000,00, furniture and ^HERETO G O - U / H B T TO flo fixtures $20,000.00 07,000.00 (Hank premises owndd are subject to No liens not * assumed by bank) Offers Complete Banking Facilities TOTAL Atj&E‘ETS .$13,392,285.56 LIABILITIES Demand deposits of indi­ viduals. partnerships, and corporations ...... 4,600,581.07 GRAND OPENING . . . THURS., JULY 12 | Time deposits of Individuals, LIBERTY partnerships, and corpora­ Statement of Condition FREE! Antepasto and Ravioli Dinner tions ...... 5i 169,786.79 Deposits of United States Government (including 1458 Liberty Ave. WA. 3-9576 f postal savings) ...... 2,*2 3 4,9 G 3.0 3 INN Deposits of Stales and poli­ June 30, 1945 tical subdivisions ...... 326,332.36 Other deposits (certified and cashler’fc checks, etc.) 563,880.67 TOTAL DEPOSITS $12,895,643.82 WE CATER TO PARTIES Other liabilities . . . .’...... 2,459.64 ASSETS DIRECTED BY TONY’S MEETING ROOM AVAILABLE TOTAL LIABILITIES ..$12^898,003.46 DAVID II. DOREMUS CAPITAL ACCOUNT# Cash and Due From Banks. $ 2,746,704.68 Capital Stock: V ice-1* resident 245 HOLLYWOOD AVENUE Common stock, U. S. Government Bonds . . . 8,190,200.00 TAVERN total par $200,000.00 200,000.00 HARRY W. Do A k MUS Surplus ...... 260,000.00 Other Bonds and Securities. 151,502.00 Undivided profits ...... ■ v: * 24,282.09 Vice-President, C. I'\ Hubbs & Company Reserves (and retirement New York, N. Y. account for preferred Loans and Discounts...... 2,236,878.87 ERIC GODFREY INVITES YOU TO stock) ...... Banking House and Fixtures 67,000.00 RICHARD S. EARL TOTAL CAPITAL President THE MEET YOUR FRIENDS AT THE ACCOUNTS TOTAL LIABILITIES JOHN lyiRADiN BEAUTIFUL CRESCENT BAR AND" CAPITAL AC­ $13,392,285.55 Vice President, Pennsylvania Coal & Cuke Corp. COUNTS ...... $13,^92,285.65 New York, N. Y. 1425 N. Broad Street, Opp. Mertz. Ave. MEMORANDA Pledged assets (and securl- -ttaa-lQflned) (book value): LIABILITIES JAMES A. ONEIL United States Go v 3rn r Executive Vice-President ment obligations, direct and guaranteed, pledged Common Stock ...... $ 200,000.00 to secure deposits qnd EMIL HERR1GEL 2 BIG FLOOR SHOWS NIGHTLY oth^r liabilities ...... 2 ,100 ,000.00 Surplus ...... 250,000.00 Herrigel, Lirulabury & Ilerrigel Other assets pledged to se­ I0NNY CARROLL’S For Banquets or Parties—Large or Small cure deposits and other* Profits ...... 24,282.09 Counselors at Law, Hillside, !N. J. liabilities (Including notes Undivided Phone Blgrclow 2-8826 For Reservations and bills rediscounted and GEORGE W. KUHLMAN 149 MEEKER AVE., NEWARK, N. J., Opp. Wcequahic Park securities sold under re­ Reserves ...... 20,000.00 SUPPER CLUB purchase agreement) .... U. S. Government Deposits .. 2,234,963.03 Vice-President, The Heil Co. TOTAL ...... $ HiUside, N. J. Secured liabilities: Deposits ...... 10,660,580.79 Deposits secured by pledged HORACE K. CORBIN. JR. assets pursuant to re­ Other Liabilities ...... 2,459.64 quirements of law . LEMUEL A. HULL i green gables “ 7 i r C " SNT TOTAI...... $ 2,101.f00.00 Vice President, A ir Reduction Co. r fl i \ J 1G r » TIT WAverly 3-9560 STATE OF NEW JERSEY. $13,392,285.55 COUNTY OF UNION, ss; , New York, N. Y. TAVERN 1571 Maple Ave., Near Williamson Ave. I. HARVEY W. PEACE, JR., cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly 6-we^r that the above statement la true to the best of my knowledge and be­ lief. HARVEY W. PEACE, JR., G' Cashier. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM CORRECT —Attest: We Cater to Small Parties JAMES A. ONEIL DEPOSITS INSURED BY FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION D. H. DOREMUS . RICHARD 8. EARL EL. 3-9323 Directors^. Sworn to and subscribed before me Cochrane’s this 9th day of July, 19416. 1274 North Broad Street MARIE T. SINNOTT, COCKTAIL,LOUNGE Notary Public of New Jersey. My commlMlon expiree July 26, 1949. m m w m m m THE HILLSIDE TIMES, THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1945 JL Daughter, Nora Ann Cernigliaro, Dr. Samuel J. prest( Andrew Hathaway to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cernigliaro, “A Royal Scandal” A Quiet t alk on 408 Yale avenue'. Surgeon Chi round;,. Righteousness exalteth a Nation; D a y Office: 1 vulsl Weds In Columbus Vital Statistics Twin daughters to Mr. and Mrs. Social Items but sin is reproach to any peo­ a su c e n t r a l a y i :., Albert Keizer, 280 Shelton terrace. l t v COLUMBUS, O.—T/Sgt. Andrew — . - B SALLY McGHEE = Now At Mayfair ple,” Prov. 14:34. Read Acts 9:1-9. HA. 3-oni N . MARRIAGE LICENSES Frequently we hear people talk­ 7b Maple F. Hathaway, son of Mr. and Mrs. BIRTHS John W. Westrich of Newark and Saucy, naughty and intriguing is athaway. of 1429 Munn ave A Royal Scandal." featuring Tal- ing about saving religion. Now and P h o n e " A 0-3101 rles Richard Wisniewski, Irene H. Zakovic of 526 Yale ave­ again some organization arises to irs: 6:30 P nue, Hillside, N J.,. was fnarriei to Mr. ahd Mrs. Stanley Wismew- nue. khead, Charles Coburn June 30 at Lockboume Army Air ski, 230 Boston avenue. Edgar P. Eaton Jr. of Boston, home party in honor of their son, S, SGT. HENRY FREDERICKS, ;ind Anne Baxter, which corr Base to Corp. Nina M. Biggard, of of North Broad street, has returned the Mayfair Theatre tonight, Fri- some that the present war is being Son, Edward Stano Jr., to Mr. Mass., and Rita B. Shachat of 33 P.F.C. Frank Pogowski, who re­ waged to save Christianity. Byt a Altoona, Pa. The ceremony was and Mrs. Edwarc^ Stano, 340 Bloy Williamson avenue. cently returned home after serving to his station in California afteri day and Saturday. The associate performed by Chaplain Urbane L. with the armed forces in the Eu­ spending a furlough with his wife. | feature will be '‘Patrick The great teacher has said: "The oniy street. Edward A. Pavlofski of Alabama way to save religion is to allow re­ Gibson in the West Chapel here. . Son, Marc Jay Weisenfeld, to Mr: and Gaetana Camarata of 162 Sil­ ropean Theatre for the past 28 MRS. W. E. BURNICK, of Bank j Great," starring^Dohald O’Connor, Best man was S/Sgt. Leo J. Bian- months. Guests included Mr. and street, had as week-end guests re- j \n a hilarious movie, offering fq.n ligion to" save-you.” It is not what and Mrs. Alan Weisenfeld, 1067 ver avenue. we do for Christ but what Christ chi, who was in the same crew as Fairview place. Raymond G. Parks of Passaic and j Mrs. A. Kinsgal, Mr. and Mrs. V. cently Mr* and Mrs. N@y • Coklyat I with music and entertainment ga- the bridegroom when they were Josephine H. Switana of 1283 Baker! Kinsgal, Mr. and Mrs. G. Stelling, and family, of Nutley. I lore. does for u: and through us that with the 8th Air Force overseas. Son, Edwin George Vroom Jr., to street. | Mr. and Mrs. A. Nevolis, Miss M. MRS. CAMERON MCQUEEN, for- j Roars of laughter will be on the counts. Corp. Mary Henke served as maid Mr. and Mrs. Edv/in Vroom, 337 Frank DiLeo of 130 Baltimore Konopka, Mrs. H. Konopka, Mr iherly of Bank street, has moved card with the presentation of "The Saul, "Yet breathing out threat-- of honor. Sanford avenue. and Mrs. S. Walwski, Mrs. W. Horn Blows At Midnight,” starring enings and slaughter against the Son, Daniel Robert Blank, to Mr. avenue and Rose Dordoni of 322 Newark. Set. Hathaway has been stationed Hillside avenue. Walwski, Mrs. P. Gozyp, Mr. and P.F.C. RALPH BEWLEY, of Jack Benny and Alexis Smith, disciples,” sought to save religion. at Lockboume for the past year. and Mrs. Robert N. Blank, 188 Bos­ Carmen Dill of 1170 Liberty ave Mrs. L. Tre'ger, Mr. and Mrs. W. Fitzpatrick street, who has been which comes to the1 Mayfair The­ Peter sought to save religion by While overseas as a B-17 top turret ton avenue. home on a 30-day furlough, has re­ atre for three days starting Sun­ refusing to permit the Master to Daughter, Gail Lee Summer, to nue and Ann Calabro of 1170 Lib- Stalkowski, Mr. and Mrs. J. Son- - gunner he was .shot, down un his ■er.lv avenue. icki, Eli Plant, C. Novkenic, Miss turned to his station in California. day. The singing, swinging addi- wash his feet. It was only when first mission in November, 1943, Mr- arid MK. Benjamin Summer T F raildis. Mr . ana Mrs. J. Be ...... nil. Rcmem they'- yielded their wills to Christ Jr., 124 Virginia street. Frank W. Dilkes of 1133 Church ...SIDNEY LU-NDSTROM, of Coo tirtrml fw-kiro will be over Paris. Although wounded, he street and Edna E. Alton of 37 Wil­ Costa, Mr. and Mrs. F. Fedowitz, avenue, is spending a two weeks ber April,” with Gloria Jean and that both they and religion weie ■ was never captured. With the help Son, Harold Vincent Heres, to Mr. and Mrs. E. Voelk, Miss M. Kirby Grant. A special matinee is saved. It is time that we as persons Mr. and Mrs. John Heres, 21 Wil­ liamson avenue. vacation at Atlantic City. of the French underground, he John J. Tecza of Camp Shanks, Litkowski, Mr. and Mrs. H. Wor- MISS HELEN HURDEN, of Rob­ presented ?very Wednesday dur­ and as a nation allowed God to dodged the Germans for almost liamson avenue. ner, Mrs. M. Graff, Mr. and Mrs. have His perfect way with us. Son, Anthony Rizzo, to Mr. and] N. Y., and Anna Wellet of 1216 ert street, has returned to business ing the vacation period. three months and made his way Broadway. Jay S. Pruchinchi, Mrs. John Rog­ after a week’s vacation at home. All true National greatness is Mrs. Phillip Rizzo, 307 Winans ave­ based upon the spiritual devotion £ack to England. Peter Rung of Elizabeth and Eve­ ers, W. Sotka, T. Speck, E. Callan, MR. AND MRS. ERNEST RET­ The bride has been stationed here nue. a ' w Radio Repair of the citizens' of that Nation. Cer­ Son, Harvey Michael Rose, to lyn Wilson of 75 Williamson ave­ Mr. and Mrs. Dumanski and TINO, of Fairbanks street, recently for two years and is now laboratory nue. daughters Julia and Florenc^zaskd returned home from a visit to their Service Is Opened tain spiritual values are eternal, chief iii the base photographic of­ Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rose, 270 but only those countries whose Hollywood avenue. Louis . A. Nemeth of Patuxent1 Seaman Second Class John Zelko nephew and his wife, Mr. and Mr Announcement is made of the fice. River, Md., and Elizabeth Orban I MRS. ROSE D’ANGELO, daugh- Vincent Rettino, of Winthrop, opening of a new radio repair ser­ people demonstrate these can ex­ Daughter, Susan Catherine Suv- pect a future of continuing worth. ittiere. -to Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Sav- of 1284 Myrtles street. ter Marion and son A. D’Angelo, Mass. Young Rettino is stationed at vice for Hillside, Loeffler’s Radio Have a Pair Edwardi j J.. Bloomer- . of .Irvington . j u.S.N., of Jersey City, Joseph Ret- Service, at 1314 North Broad street. There is, however, no way to ac­ ittiere, 66 Mertz avenue. the Fort Bank induction center. quire heavenly virtues save by the Police Department Daughter, Pamela Bartolotta. to and Edith Jean Hicks of 1038 Pros-: tmo and Miss Del Rio Cassel, MRS. JOHN WERT JR., of Fair­ A pick-up and delivery service is peel street. \ Wave stationed at Washington, offered. medns to which Jesus referred In Reserve Mr. and Mrs. Ross Bartolotta, 13# banks street, had as week-end when he pointed out the necessity Basket Picnic Held Conant street. John G. Robinson of Ringoes, j were week-end guests of Mr. and guests Mi\ and Mrs. William Han­ The proprietor is Henry E. Loef- N. J., and J. Irene Mackemull of [Mrs. Ernest Rettino, pf Fairbanks of being born again. Some may Daughter, Raylcne Frances Sgroi, son, of Staten Island, N. Y. fler, of 1211 Robert street, who was Don’t 1m- helpless Members of the Police Depart­ 1441 Compton terrace. street. in military service for two years. think it strange that National ment and their families held their to Mr. and Mrs. John Sgroi, 126 P.F.C. JAMES LAMONT, who is greatness should be associated with when your glasses Clark street. - Richard A. Dwyer of 156 Virginia I MISg BETTY 'mcCRAITH, of stationed at Fort Dix, was home to He was honorably discharged from inual basket picnic Sunday at the s reei and Janice V. Johnson of 212 Robert street, is spending a week's the new birth, tu t actually they break. See that olish-American Citizens Club, 400 Daughter, Mariane Helen Pipicz, spend the week-end with his par­ the Army Air Force,last yeac and to Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Pipicz, Hn lywood avenue. vacation at Sea Girt. has been engaged in war work. cannot be separated. The people of you have an extra gBloy street. Children were permit­ Nicholas Bircsak of Newark and ents, Mr. and Mrs. James Lamont, Jesus time were blind to this fact ted to bring a friend and^there 140 Puree street. CHARLES SANFORD, S2/c, son of Hurden street. Radio tubes and GE Mazda lamps lla*r b.r just such Son, Theodore Richard Tischv to Louise Palmer of 68 Hillside ave­ will betf carried in stock, and elec* and our present generation does were games for the youngsters, nue. . of Police Chief and Mrs. Norman MISS HENRIETTA CHRlSTSEN, not seem to realize this truth. emergencies. with prizes being awarded the Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Tisch. 12 Sanford, arrived home from New of Salem avenue has returned home trical appliances will be repaired Hurden street. William Leisslcr of .1565 Wynd- here. Several lines of radios will Jesus broods still as He did over winners. Officer Eli Plant was moor avenue and Marie Lang of Caledonia on Friday to spend a after- spending a vacation at .Al­ Jerusalem in the long ago. For Appointment chairman of the event. Daughter, Ronrlie Joyce Senner, 30-day furlough with his wife and fa ur y Park. be sold as $oon as available which to Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Senner, 289 Crann street. may be £arly this fall. Spiritual power is the result of Fred H. Roever Jr. of 322 Trinity parents. 1st LT. WILLIAM YUILL, who religious regeneration. Surely the Phone Bigelow 3-0258 43 Hollywood avenue. is stationed in Detroit, is home on Birth> Announced Daughter, Nancy Jane Kasalis, to place and Helen V. Funkhauser of MRS. GORMAN FISCHER, of most constant need in Christianiz­ 1217 Salem avenue. North Broad street, left recently for a furlough. His wife, the former Helps Capture Nazis ing the social order is for more Seaman First Class and Mrs. Car­ Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kasalis, 1278 Virginia Stevens, of Union, re­ DR. FRED H. mine Sci^orzo, of 1434 Chestnut Liberty avenue. Fred C. Kunz of Newark and* Erie, Pa., where she joined her regenerated individuals. There is Loretta E. Saidel of 1212 Howar#- husband who is on a business trip. turned with him. F leein g From Reds only one fundamental reason why ROEVER, JR. avenue, announce the birth of a Daughter, Paula Ann Manko- MISS EUGENIE McCRAITH of WITH THE 35th INFANTRY DI­ daughter, Catherine Rose, on J ug witz, to Mr. and Mrs. Abraham street. ' V |T’om there tii^ went to Youngs­ man is on earth—to do the ever­ John J. Carragino of 1420; Boh' town, Ohio,’ and Detroit, Mich. Robert street, is spending the sum­ VISION IN GERMANY. — Corp. lasting will of God Almighty. Optometrist 30 at Newark Beth Israel Hospital. Mankowitz, 134 Clark street. mer at Sea Girt. Lawrence- C. Seifert, of Hillside, Seaman Scuorzo, who is stationed Daughter, Ursula Louise Drech* plade and Anna Brenkach of 1486 Vfc>heir*spn Peter is with his grand- “They that trust in the Lord shall at Camp Endicott, R. I., was home sel, to Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Drech- Franklin street. : mother in Union and their, daugh­ N. J., and P.F.C. Robert F. Glass, be as Mount Zion, which cannot 237 CLINTON AY KM' ter is with Miss Sally McGhee, of Alameda. Cal., of the 448th anti-air- for the week-eud. sel, 1030 Union avenue. Samuel S, Sutter of New York be removed, but abideth forever.’ Opp. Elliabeth Ave. and Philipina Pfeifer of 1446 Bond Coe avenue. Methodist Youth cruft outfit, were dragged out of Ps. 125:1. street. JVIRS. ROBERT McGHEE, of bed at the crack of dawn recently NEWARK. Y .1. DEATHS North Broad street entertained sev­ Visits Other Groups by an excited Russian girl who told Marie Oksienik, 25, of 1223 Broad­ eral friends at dinner on Saturday. them the Germans had returned to Send In Your News way. c , Her daughter, Cadet Nurse Louise The Methodist Youth Fellowship the area during the night. A Sparkling Smile John D. Rae, 60, of 612 Chapman McGhee, who is stationed at Som- of Franklin Memorial Church re­ After investigating, the Ameri­ street. errset Hospital, is home on a three cently visited youth groups of two cans found two Germans hiding in John Mo^yczka, 67, of 1272 Mir­ weeks vacation after toeing oper­ neighboring churches. On Sunday, a barn and ready to surrender iam place. ated on for appendicitis. July 1, they were guests of the They had crossed the river during Depends Largely on Jule C. Harmon, 65, of'1409 Hia­ LT. WALTER HORNING, of the Christian Endeavor of the Eliza­ the night in order to get away from watha avehue. hillside Fire Department, Mrs. beth Avenue Presbyterian Church. the Russians. / Edward' P. Baker, 81, of 216 Dor- Horning, Mrs. John Gerndt and THfere was an inspiring song sfer*- Corp. Seifert is the kon of Mrs. er avenue. sqn Norman, of Union, are spend­ yice followed by an interesting dis­ Helen Seifert, of 481. Fairbanks Healthy Gums... Christian Jacobsen, 63, of 1047 ing a week’s vacation in Sussex cussion of national race problems. street, Hillside. Announcing The Opening Thomas street. County. The following week, on July 8, the group visited the young people Mary A. McLaughlin, 80, of 1036 MR. AND MRS. »LAIRD DOWNS, AAF Ground Crewman North Broad street. of Bank street, have as their house of the First Baptist Church wfiere o f\0 Use IPANA and MASSAGE William E. Madden, 64. of 137 an interesting talk was given by Sees Germany’s Ruins guest Mrs. Mary Thompson, of Con­ the pastor, Rev. Raymond Marlow. Summer avenue. necticut. AN EIGHTH AIR FORCE SER­ Sadie Boxer, 68, of 134 Clark VICE COMMAND STATION, ENG- street. MATTHEW W. MURSCOE LAND.—How Japan will look to­ Loeffler’s Radio Service Lincoln P. Russell, 67, of 49 Look Funeral services were held Tues­ morrow was seen by P.F.C. Sam er street. day morning at the James J. Hig­ Weisholtz, of* 1577 Wainwright 1314 North Broad St. 3 Hillside, N. J. Adam Kowalski, 84, of 1310 Lib­ Spinning the Disc at gins & Son Mortuary, Elizabeth, for street. Hillside, N. J., when he re­ erty avenue. Matthew W. Murscoe, of 819 Union cently flew in an Eighth Air Force RADIO JOE’S avenue, who died Saturday morn­ bomber over defeated and devas­ ing at his home. A requiem mass tated Germany. During the eight- ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES REPAIRED Granted Citizenship RECORD SHOP was offered at St. Catherine’s hour flight he got a bombardier’s- Church and interment followed in eye view of such former centers of For Service In Army THE FLOWER DANCE Gate of Heaven Cemetery, Han­ BUSY HOLIDAY Nazi war production as Cologne, HEADQUARTERS. REPLACE­ FRIEND OF YOURS over. Mr. Murscoe was 52 years old. Essen. Frankfurt and Kassel. Sales and Service — Portable Batteries MENT AND TRAINING COM- —Frank Sinatra He was born in Austria Hungary It was P.F.C. Weisholtz’s first op­ HEN you brush your For Ipana is designed not only HOMESICK, THAT’S ALL and came to Hillside three years MAND, ITALY.—In a formal cere­ —Frank Sinatra portunity to view, the destruction W^eeth—don’t forget to mas­ to clean the teeth but, with mas­ mony recently held here. 165 men KISS GOOD NIGHT ago from Elizabeth. For 30 years wreaked on the Third Reich by sage your gums. For brightsage, to aid the gums. Each time and women of the Armed Forces, —Woody Herman he was in the piano business and bombers of the Eighth Air Force in GE Mazda Lamps — Radio Tubes GOOSEY GANDER had be 3i manager of several. Grif­ teeth, a sparkling smile depend you brush your teeth, massage representing 33 countries, became —\Vooabr

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