Buy An E Bond Today-Hold If

57*h YEAR, He. 26 SUMMIT, N. J-, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1945 $3 A /EAR 6 CENTS V.F.W. Inducts Council Acts Hon. Jos. C. A To East Veterans 15 New Members; Housing Problems "Peari Harbor Day" Common Council on Tuesday night by resolution unanimously Next Thursday Eve Other Activities granted the application of Subur- Veterans of Foreign War* of the ban Apartments, Inc., signed by Tomorrow; Buy E Bonds "Athenaeum members will not need to be reminded that the U. S,, Beacon Hill Post No. 190 at Elmer N. Rinhart to conduct a With $90,000 in E bonds yet to be sold to reach the speaker for their December meet- its Monday night meeting at post lodging house at 595 Springfield quota, the Summit War Finance Committee calls upon the 9 ing on Thursday, December 13, it headquarters in 388 Broad street avenue for veterans of World War people of the Summit area to redouble their efforts in be? Hem. Joseph C. Grew, U. S. Am- iducted 15 new members, bring- n. The application was granted bassador to Japan from i.932 until ing its rook to a total of 179. under the following conditions: half of this part of the Victory Loan Drive. Friday, December 7, has been the fateful events o[ December, County Commander Dandell ob- room rental ehall not exceed two designated as "Pearl Harbor Day" 1941," said a member of the pro- ligated the new members and com- mrow dollars a day Including maid Tickets for Dinner and the committee Is appealing to gram committee today. plimented the post on the service service; that the lodging permit each individual to make it a fit- Mr. Grew's long diplomatic ca- it is offering returned service mea shall continue in force so long as To Mayor Cultis 904 when he was council shall determine a housing ting and memorable one by pur- reer began I" I in photostating free of charge emergency exists, that rentals shall chasing an E bond on that day. sent as a member of the staff to their discharge *. ' Being Sold Fast All ex-service men wishing to be limited to World War II vet- Bonds may be obtained at any of the office of the consul-general in erans, any sub-leasing shall be on Since the announcement last the following places: The Sumnait Cairo, He was assigned suc- avail themselves of this service are week Lhat Mayor G. Harry Cullis, asked to contact Leslie Nilan, 391 the same basis, and that at the Trust Company, The Citizens » cessively to the embassies of end of the emergency the quarters who retiree December 31, is to be Trust Company. The First Na- I Mexico City, St, Petersburg, Berlin, Springfield avenue, at any time. honored at a dinner sponsored by The post and auxiliary are mak- affected shall be restored to their tional Bank and Trust Company, and Vtenna, being ambassador to condition as a one-family house. the Summit Patrolmen's Benevo- ing their usual Christmas dona- the Hill City Savings and Loan Vienna when we entered World The question of whether or not lent Association on December 17 tion of canteen cards at Lyons Association, and the Summit Fed- War I, in 1817. lodger's shall be permitted to cook at The Brook, more than two- eral Savings and Loan Associa- Upon his return to this country Hospital at a cost Of $2.50 each. is still under consideration by thirds of the available covers have Plans have been made to hold a tion, as well as movie houses and in May, 1617, he was made acting committee. been taken. post offices throughout the area. chief 0/ the division of Wwiern joint meeting at the post rooms EVE RY H All persons who have delayed European Affairs in the Depart- on Monday evening, December 17. getting their tickets and are "A Victory Bond in Every ment of State. He participated in Anyone wishing to become a mem- planning to be present should Home by Christmas" is the slogan the Versailles Peace Conference, ber of this organization is asked Economic Warfare promptly contact one of the fol- adopted by the committee until and in the Lausanne Conference In to bring his discharge to lowing members of the committee: the end of t lie drive, All the » 1923; and the same year nego- post headquarters at that time. Chief Edward K. Egan, Maxwell financial institutions are making tiated an Important treaty with And World Peace Lester, Jr., or Henry McTernan, a special pffort this week to urge Turkey. He served as under-sec* otherwise they may find they are everyone to buy an E bond, Em- retary of state from 1924 to 1927; Don G. Mitchell College Club Topic too late, according to the ticket ployees of large corporations such committee. as Ciba Pharmaceutical Product), and as our ambassador to. Turkey Dr. Mabel Newcomer, head of from1927 to 1932. It was follow- Inc., Bell Telephone Laboratories, the economics department of Vas- and other local industrial con- ing this long background In diplo- To Tell Rotarians sar Colltije, will speak before the matic; matters that he was ap- cerns arc eacli running individual Summit Collego Club on Friday, Accident Free drives to help promote the sale of pointed ambassador to Japan Jn December H, *t 8:15 p. m., in Lin- 1932. Of Selling Methods E bonds, Public and parochial Don G. Mitchell of Oak Ridge coln School. Her subject will be' schools and Kent Place School Mr. Grew consented to come to avenue, president of the United "Economic Warfare and World tity Asked have had an organized drivft (lie Athenaeum only on condition Campaign Fund In Summit, and a Peace." among the children during the ! , that his speech be strictly off the member of the Board of Directors Dr. Newcomer was the only month of November. ' record. It Is with regret Chat the and of the Executive Committee of delegate to the United Nations For Yule Season "With these united efforts and com,mitteo reminds Athenaeum the American Management Asso- monetary and financial confer- Mayor G. Harry Cullis today members that guest tickets can- ciation willj^lc to Rotarians at ence held at Bretton Woods N. H., asked the people of Summit to the cooperation of the individual not be used at this meeting, be- their next meeting about selling, In July, 1944, At the conference, help keep the city free of holi- people of Summit," said Harry W. cause the regular members will she was appointed as a member of day accidents during the Christ- Edgar, chairman of the banking Mr. Mitchell Ui vice-president In mas season. Mayor Cullie ex- committee, "Wo are confident fill the high school auditorium. charge of sales of Sylvania Prod- both Commission No 1, to consider The meeting is scheduled for 8:i5. the eight billion dollar interna- pressed the hope that citizens of that this area will meet the chal- ucts, Inc.; New York. His respon- our city will actively cooperate lenge of that $90,000 that con- sibilities with, that company have tional stabilization fund; and of Commission No. 2, to debate the with the National Safety Council fronts us." to do .with the development of the and 130 cooperating organizations merits of g. world bank for re- Defense Coannil possibilities inherent in the fields in making this an accident-free of lighting anil elpctronlcs. construction where relief meas- Christmas. To Cease Work Mr. Mitchell had bile first expert- ures end. Petition Signed Besides lief teaching activities, "This is the Christmas we have ence with the McUraw-Hill - been awaiting," he said, "this is For New Lincoln Atfer January I lishing Company, *<.UIng industrial \TQ Purchase Dr. Newcomer has served ae an pes County Need expert in economics to the states the Christmas when the spirit of - Summit Defense Council, organ- adveitWrig of \.4\"» type.'. ' - Interracial f peace should permeate every heart. School Building bed at the beginning of the war' finally, -speoi?H^ed' in' ikk tyno of Lince Prcxerty of New York and California, and to the United States Treasury, and An accident will destroy that spir- Dr. J. Wayne Wrightstone, pres- With headquarters In the Atv' *»3vei;isli»jj uacll by biiuljjf" rail- it for members of any affected Meeting ^ kistfts - Common Council* Tuesday ov.-f.J Home? as a number of the Cwnmiesion ident of the Lincoln School P.-T.A., Stone Building In Summit avenue, roads, power companies, and cham- family. Therefore,-^t us make an bers of commerce In the 1820's to ting introduced an ordinance ap- on Intergovern mental Fiscal Re- ti^nsmik-ed to the Board cf Edu- will cease to exist af^er the first propriating funds for the pur- effort to avoid accidents during cation last Monday a petition, of the year. According to Direc- attract Industries to their loc&-' Negro Employment To Be League Topic lations. Her publications include: the holiday season. tlons. chase of land on Woodland avenue "Separation of State-J^nd Local signed by 864 Summit residents tor Maxwell Lester, Jr,, "There is The Summit Interracial Com- running through to MacGregor At the Monday, December W "If we are careful, considerate calling for a now Lincoln School nothinj more we can do," '•' He then went with'jtae Niagara meeting of the Summit League of Revenues in the United States"; mittee, S. O. Moiuan, chairman, road, generally known a,? the "Taxation and Fiscal Policy"; and courteous, we can further this building. Letters explaining the Equipment consisting princi- Hudson Power Corporation as di- Women Voters to be held at 2 cause for ourselves and our fel- need for a new school were sent Is sending out letters to members Hefi-rd or Lance property. "Facing the Tax Problem." > pally of desks, chairs, and filing rector of industrial development, The exact use for the property p. m., in the Methodist Parish low men. Above all, let us remem- at the same time to all members 1 being used by Floyd L. Carlisle, and other citizens, announcing a Dr. Newcomer is now serving as cabinets, is being turned over to meeting for Tuesday, December has not been definitely deter- House, the question of the need ber to hold down our speed on the of the Board of Education, to the the Board of Education, the Po- chairman of the board'of Niagara for a county nursing home to care chairman of the Committee on streets and highways to a sensible Common Council, the City Plan- Hudson in various management 11 at the Y.W.C.A., at 8:15 p. m, mined as council has gone on rec- Social Studies of the American lios Department, and other agen- ord that no permanent develop- for the chronically ill, especially figure, especially since cars are ning Board, and Mayor-Elect Max- capacities in the many! Industrial The letter: the indigent, will be the subject Association of University Women. cies. Blankets, quilts, and cloth- "One of the important fields for ment will be undertaken until the far below pre-war standards." well Lester, Jr. Ing will bo distributed by Mrs. enterprises in which itr. Carlisle under discussion. Mrs, Bjornulf The College Club will welcome was Interested. ,5 • discussion and action these days question of the site for the new anyone Interested in hearing Dr. Reasons given for the need of Gertrude Gross, overseer of the Lincoln School has been decided Johneen, public health chairman, a new building read a« follows: In 1933 Mr. Mitchell went with Is employment. It is of particular will be in charge of the program. Newcomer speak. poor. Medical supplies will be Importance to the Negro if he is upon by the Board of Education. Because three classes are now used by, the Board of Health, the .American Can Company, devel- Council has made it clear to the Mrs. Walter G. Farr, chairman Board of Education housed in makeshift classrooms rn , oping and putting oa the market to continue to r'aise his economic Most of the Federal property, level and to participate in the prog- Education Board, that the pur- of the New Jersey Citizens Health the basement—dark and poorly the paper container for milk, fol- Council, will speak on the "Care such as fire extinguishers and hel- ress and life of the community. chase, in no way, is to be con- Women Voters ventilated. mets have been placed In the hands lowing with the introduction of of the Long Term Patient through- To Invest Edi: the tin can for beer put on the The gains made in industrial em- strued as predetermining the loca- Because the school plant is out* of Executive Official Fred Mort. tion of anysehool in this area, but out the state of New Jersey." Miss moded—the toilet facilities are de« 1 market by the same company. ployment during the war 'must be Marion Walls, of the Elizabeth Give Results The executive official has com- maintained wherever possible if should the Board of Education de- plorable, the heating plant Ineffi- • pleted a check up' of such prop- These operations In the food and League of Women Voters will Money in Bonds there is to be continuing progress. cide upon this location, the city The Board of Education an- cient, no library and industrial erty in private hande with a re- beverage field led to his guiding speak on "What is being done to the tales of the Pepsi-Cola Com- "This will be the general sub- will turn over the property at cost. Of Opinion Poll nounced recently ita intent to In- arts room, and no gymnasium. quest that the custodians turn it Vacant land In the so-called care for the ill in Union County." Because the school playground pany to the high pitch this bev- ject of the discussion at the De- Mrs. J. Edwin Carter, who has The people of Summit are 76 per vest $300,000 of the Edison School over to the city official. erage now has attained. cember meeting of, the Interracial Lincoln area of sufficient acreage cent in favor of giving food to sale moneys in U. S. Treasury is totally inadequate—Ices than surveyed the local situation, will one-third play space per child Committee. It will be Introduced for school, park, or recreation also report her findings in Sum- people who need it in Europe. 2'i per cent bonds of 1959-62. The purposes is decidedly limited and than is recommended as minimum Dinner Benefit by a short talk by James A. Jack- mit. This was one of the findings of bonds will be purchased in $100,- Hi Y Clubs to Send son of New York. Mr. Jackson is the Council feels, with the present the Public Opinion Poll recently OOO-lota through the three local by experts. . ; For Children's Fund special representative of the Stand- demand for real estate for private conducted In Summit by the Sum- banks. Because the school Is located In By Kiwanis Club ard Oil Company of New Jersey, development, It is prudent to pro- mit League of Women Voters, The The Board of Education, with the business section—constituting Delegates to State Summit Kiwanis Club's annual From hla work he is familiar with tect the citizens from having to Newark Museum poll consisted of questions dealing the approval of the Board of School a traffic hazard to your child. dinner party for the benefit of its the employment situation in many pay an excessive price for built with international affairs. Estimate and the Council, has ear- Because present inadequate ftt* Summit Home for Children- Fund parts of the, country, particularly up property when, in the future, It was found, that the great ma- marked the entire proceeds of tho cilitics retard real estate devel- Boys' Conference will be held Friday, December 14 as it concerns Negroes. The talk land must be acquired for city Exhibition Opens jority of people who were inter- sale of Edison School for use in opment in the district. .Delegates to the New Jersey at the Biles Club in Maple street will be followed by a discussion. purposes In this section. viewed had definite opinions on modernizing and extending the Because you owe It to your child State Older Boys' Conference have starting at 6 p. m. Entertainment "It Is proposed to follow up this The cost of the proposed pur- the questions asked. Only 3 to 15 Central High School building. It and your neighbor's child to pro- vide an adequate school plant. been selected by the Hi-Y Clubs will accompany the dinner. A few subject with a discussion of the chase will be $14,250. In Summit Gallery per cent were undecided in their is the Board's Intent to invest these of Summit and Milltmrn. Edwin tickets are still available from Neist Jersey law against discrimi- The Newark Museum, following views on five of the seven ques- funds in interest-bearing securi- G, Lincoln, boys' program secre- Chairman Elmer Houston, of the nation in employment at the Jan- "Chinese tele" its usual custom of helping people tions. However, on Question 2 ties until such time as the money tary of the Summit Y.M.C.A., an- entertainment committee or any uary or February meeting. Some- to appreciate the cultural efforts which • asked whether England, is needed to pay the High School Overlook Hospital nounced today that John Barton Avery Lecture Topic of living artists, has loaned the construction costs. other member of the olub. one from the "office of the State "Does the struggle between Red Russia, France, or Argentina will of 27 Hawthorne place represent* Commissioner of Education will Summit Art Association a portion cooperate with us now that the The Board of Education has been the Charles R. Scott Hl-Y Club; Lt, Governor Henry Fuestel of China and Chungking mean civil of their collection of contempo- First in New Jersey Kiwanis was present and before present the subject and lead the war or unity? What will it do to war is over, 26 to 40 per cent' did assured of full return of principal , Frederick Speaker of 55 Fernwood discussion. This will point up the rary American paintings and not feel that they could express an on this investment. Through the delivering a brief address on "Ki- our relations with Russia—to our drawings, This is one way that road Is a member of the Hill City place of legislation in a program opinion on these questions. effort of Maxwell Lester, Jr., chair- Hl-Y Club; and Allan Turnbull wanis Fundamentals," made two exporE trade?" are some of the the Newark Museum uses to give For Veteran Care presentations; one, a ribbon for of social and economic improve- questions that make up the "Chi- Forty-one per cent of the people man of the Finance Committee of and Wayne Frey will represent more people an opportunity to see the Council, and Leonard Best"of Overlook Hospital la the tint tie Mlllbum Hi-Y Club. the club's having attained 100 per ment." nese Puzzle" which Miss Eunice their collection. This loan exhi- who were polled knew that the community hospital in Netv Jersey cent attendance in October; two, Bretton Woods Agreement had to the Board of Education, tile thre» Mr. Lincoln has been appointed Harriet Avery will discuss in her bition at the Summit Art Associa- to complete a contract with ths ' a certificate signed by himself do mainly with international local banks have agreed to loan general chairman of the confer- next lecture at the YMCA, Tues- tion's Gallery opened Sunday, De- the City the full amount of the Veterans Administration for the and Governor Charles Swalfl of money affairs. Men were better ence discussion groups, Twenty day, December 11, 3:15 p. m., spon- cember 2, with a tea for the new investment at the 2 nsltod to re- —28 per cent, ,x, /'' Dates G Injured. Ho was unable to give can be obtained. This booklet Is Place—Playhouse Association, 8 How nbout Argentina?' Yes—1(1 care," snld Mr. Turner, Church , 14,15 the number of the car. pi'inted in cooperation with Tho member the Christmas Committee Tulip street. DISCOVER FOH YOUESELF of tho Council of Social Agcnclos per cent; No—44 por cent; Unde- Social 20,21,22 Summit Herald which will publish cided—40 per cent, how soft and manngcablo our pcr- TO SELL YOUR PROPERTY, the material In an enrly issue. when thoy plan their Christmas Mrs. Cnmeron announces tho phone Summit 0-0O4O~Edward A. Armed Services 19 EXTRA LARGE, MORB-FOR- 3. Will you plonsc toll me In mnncnln ICHVO your Imlr. Cull A community calendar to clonr giving. new location of ALLUHA BEAU- Butler, Realtor, 7 Bcecliwood rond, N, P. Borough 24,32 YOUR MONEY Sftfo dd{>oslt boxes your own words whnt a tnrlff Is? THE FERNWOOD HAIRDRIGSS- avnllnblo In all price ranges. The. •dates for meetings and campaigns Checks may be sent to Mr*. TY SHOPPBJ to 332 Springfield between the Lyric Theater and the M. P, Township 25 No response, or Incorrect, 15 per ERS, 110 Summit Avc, Su. 6-8309. Sporta 26,27 First National Bank antf*Tf1ust has also been established by the Gertrude S, Gross, Chr&tmaa Avfe., Cominorclal Bldg., 2nd floor. Station.—Adv. (Continued on page 3) -Adv, CltuMlflod SI Company of Summit.—Adv. (Continued on page 3) Fund, Hamilton School, — adv. THE SUMMIT HERALD, THURSDAY; DECEMIER *, IMS i unrelenting campaign «fatoft the while Hairy XaraUll gave mm ChMft to Office nuttl*. flower dogwood and «th<-r < aasafrac. where they can be kept disease. "Oid docks" of tail iu>iu*Mk«t of the yearn Men's fardeti Club plant* that produce red berries fairly damp. They will sprout and Sales Factor The aale of setis hw been one toat followed, tmptmttrim the Now of Mot on be grown, grow Remember, though, that of the main factoi* is a preventive sunny character id Old Guard fel- Stonily toord Even mistletoe can be laiaed at mistletoe is a parasite. _ ini educational campaign. Despite j home, American mistletoe has i fi. And Tine Devices lowship. Then came Boy Baker, Hears Lawn Expert Effective on Monday, December progress made, tURtoUkrtUI I been found in New Jersey swamps, ! In the fall and winter months •peaking of recent chapters ia 8, the office of the Soda) Security a dangerous enemy killing at tbe ' and tbere is no reason why it can- only 24 pedestrians are killed in Board, located In Room 403 of the rate of one person every nine min- Old Guard Topic Ridgewood and Rutherford and Discuss Problems . not be cultivated if some care is : traffic accidents in the three on Xinas Mall naming the 12 chapter* now func- Jer- utes. "Ttck-tock," saag the "Old Local garden enthusiast! were t taken to study its habits of growth, j hour* immediately before suntet H. Doruld Holme*, 45 Maple Clocki" last Tuesday morning, M tioning in toil and in other treated to an informative talk, •ey street, Elisabeth, N. J., will j Save some of tije berrie* from your j tor eacn 100 who die in the three Street, Seal Sale chairman of Sum- Jet Fuels Not Paul Franklin of Chatham told state*. He closed by reading the which developed into a general be open to claimants and other I Christmas supply of mistletoe and i hours just after sunset, according story of a group of elderly men clients from 8:30 a. m to 4:30 |v jjvit, atatu that the Seal Sale re- Simple to Mote Ills comrades of the Old Guard discussion of topics relating to f putffhem on the b*r\> t a gum gr „'£ the National Safety council. r their story. Although time was who gathered in an English park lawns, when Frederick Smith of p. m. daily, except Saturdays, in- are eacouraging. By tire Jet-propelled engines will oper< originally marked by the aun, in 1931, later secured shelter in a O. Scott £ Sons addressed the stead of till S p. m., as at present, b day return* were *24,«W ate on anything from powdered man's "time sense" and his sense church hut and were finally given Men's Garden Club at the Y. M. under an announcement made by Union County, He, however, coal to Napoleon brandy, accord- of rhythm gradually developed a building of their own, (open C. A., on December 3, Leonard F. Sawvel, Manager. Tbe that prompt returns be Ing to David E. Day, manufactur- the clock for it« accurate measure- from 9 a. m. to 8 p. to.), and now, office will not be opea on Satur- ^ Often envelopes containing ing head of a large oil company, An expert on jeeds and turf ment. The sun dial u exceedingly (128 strong) meet every day. In days. " ttb* Mail arc put away and tempo- "There ia a vait difference, how- •peaking of the Future,- Hart cultivation, Mr. Smith entered old, but it was followed after The Elizabeth office administers rarily forgotten. He states that ever," Mr. Day pointed out, "be- Darlington said that the Old into a discussion of the circum- many years by the water clock the Social Security • Act; me Old- TIP" '* 'jthe Christmas Seal hw now be- tween just operating and operat- Guard will be what its members stances essential to attaining an and in 996 A. D. by the first clock Age and Survivors Insurance, for 4 tradition when u»ed on ing at peak efficiency under the wish it to be. He urged not only ideal lawn, which must have at with gear*. In 1880 came the pen- Union and Somerset Counties. For mall. It «!gniflea that varied and extreme condition* for the extension of the movement least six inches of good topsoil dulum, ako the first public clock the convenience of the residents from Santa .tin sender of the package or letter which a JP engine is designed. but also the individual service that to> insure success. in London's St. Paul's Cathedral. of those areas, offices are main- itu enrolled in a great campaign "As a consequence, present spe- members might give to individual "Care must be exercised in the From then on various, clocks have tained in Somerville and Plain- agjUiut tuberculosis which once cifications for JP fuels are very boys and young men by way of soil preparation," Mr. Smith stated, been made in continental Europe, field, in addition to the main of- •*•« the first cause of death in this rigid and in some respects are counsel, encouragement and in- "which should be composed of a lovely gift table ... in England and in this country. fice in Elizabeth, where represen- country but which now hae dropped tougher to meet than tbe specifi- spiration. Director Charles Thorp topsoil, as grass will not grow an The earlier one* had but a single tatives of the Elizabeth office arc do seventh place M a reault pf an cations for 100-octane gasoline." paid tribute to the men who have soil which has been excavated. hand, but then there were those In Room 4 of the Post Office Build- died during the year and urged Since most turf is lacking in de- S o appropriate for with wopden machinery, with ing in Plaln&eld, each Tuesdaj the extension of the Old Guard cayed vegetable matter, an essen- any woman that takes metal works, with several dials, between 10:30 a. ra. and 2 p. m., with astronomical Indications and through personal, contemporary tial ingredient, fertilizer, must be and in Room 3 of the Post Office pride in her home. other special features. The speak- friends in other towns and citlejs. introduced, which may be cither Building- in Somerville, each Thurs- er's lantern pictures showed a At the annual meeting preced- one of two types, organic or chem- Coffee Tables, End day between 10:30 a. m. and 2 number of famous foreign and ing these programs, Rev. Charles ical. The first has a slow action Tables, Lamp Tables p. m. The change in office hour* American clocks, including several N. Thorp was unanimously re- and should be employed only announced affects only the Eliza- and Cocktail 'fables. of his own. He was given a hearty elected director for a sixth year. when the temperature is mild, He thanked the members and beth office and no change hae vote of thanks and afterwards whereas chemical fertilizer be- spoke of the splendid co-operation been made in office hours in went with 66 other Oldguardsmen comes available immediately and he had had, especially from the Plainfleld and Somerville. from Summit, Westfield and soaks through the top soil, with program committee. He spoke also Plainfield to the fifteenth, annual the result that by summer the of the shuffleboard courts which luncheon of the mother chapter lawn often dries oul and becomes Red Berries, Evergreens A—WOODEN HOBBY HORSE at Madison's Bottle Sill Tavern. would be available in the Spring at the recreation field and for yellow." For Christmas Decorations ON STURDY ROCKING Charles Hall, the toastmaster at which Htnry AJUopp had provid- Mr. Smith outlined the different this gathering, divided the pro- BASE. ed two full sets of equipment. For types of lawn seeds which in- May Be Home Cultivated gram into three parts; the Old this the donor was duly thanked clude two varieties, the annual BY FRED D. OSMAN Guard of the Past, the Present B-CONSTRqCTION SETS. and aLso greeted on his 85th birth- which must be replanted every I nion County Agricultural Agent and the Future, as the Old Guard, day. —-Build your own toy 'like Ole Man River keeps rollln' year, and the perennial, which is Mistletoe, runningpine, ground- wagons, bridges, »tc. along." Arthur Truslpw spoke The speaker for the meeting on more practical in that it grows all cedar, almost any sort of ever- briefly of Its organization in De- December H (at the Tf, M. C. A. the time. An explanation of the green tree, and anything with red cember, 19J0, and of VM early ex- at 10:30 a. m.) will be Miss Flor- process involved in seed separa- berries can be put to zood use in- tension, especially In |New Jersey ence O'Brian of the Veterans' Hos- | tlon followed as Mrs. Smith spoke doors over the holiday season. Now pital staff; subject, "Feeding the of tbe machine which blows seeds is the time to harvest this mate- Mentally 111." Retired men are through a funnel, permitting those rial if you can gather any of it in Southern Rest Home cordially invited, of different weight to fall into your own home garden. I" PUInfleld, N.J. their respective compartments, Leaves and berries will fare bet- 792 Belvldere Ave. WL 6-8705 Do You Knew That— and the machine which separates ter if cuttings are made before Siwcltl Monthly Katra (or Krtlred' seels through a screening pro- Biulntu Man «t Wonwa Honey b a pleasant source of the weather becomes severely cold Maid Service with or without nunlni cess. and are then put in a cool, damp ear». SouMunt Ooklm available energy for growing chil- HISS WBIOHT, B. N, Owner-M«n«ie* Although, the Club, as its name place. Sprinkle them occasionally dren, denotes, is principally for men to keep them moist until they are several of the members brought ready for use. It is the excessive their wives to near an authora- heat and dryness of the average : tive speaker. living room that causes leaves and '4 For ' berries to drop. Just before Book en Life Insurance bringing the branches into the room where they are to be used, BOOKS FOR CHILDREN Qualify Cleaning At Summit Public Library cut tlie stems and place them in water or moist moss. Your clothes will stay Miss Bmille Hill, librarian of the • NtgM Before Christmas * Jolly Jump-Ups Summit Public Library has re One of the most useful of these looking new if you keep ceiv«d from The Mutual Benefit decorative materials is what is • Raggedy Ann • Animated Books sending them to our ex- Life Insurance Company of New- commonly called bittersweet, but LARGE SELECTION OF OTHERS ark a copy of "Tho Great Steward- which, is really false bittersweet pert cleaners. Ton may ship: A. Story of Life Insurance" True bittersweet is a species of OTHER SUGGESTIONS TOO be sure of the best clean- by Albert W. Atwood and recently solanum a.nd it is not nearly so ef- Ing service. . published by Harper Brother*. fective for decorative purposes as NUMEROUS TO ROY'S false bittersweet, celestrus scan- Mr. Atwood has long been a 1 LIBERTY CLEANERS & DYERS writer on finance and economics dens, HOBBY AND TOY SHOP for th« Saturday Evening Post and Unfortunately, a great deal of Summit 6-0901 this Christmas decorative mate- Open 7 A. Sf—8 P. M., 'Til Christina* Banking, the official organ of the riel has J been so wantonly gath- CALL AND DELIVERY SERVICE American Banking Association, ered in the wild that it is becom- PDYL 444 Springfield Avenu* Summit- 6-1875 and more recently author of arti- Plant Office! 529 Monti'Are. j Cjea on a vtuyety of subjects^ Ing %ar SUMMIT TRUST' COMPANY lessons or a complete course of Instruction to qualify SU. 6-6120 ESTABLISHED 1891 you for a license. Our instructors are competent—our ships dependable. 360 Springfield Ave. SUMMIT, N. J. Mimbir Mtmbcr WINTEIt WEATHER IS IDEAL FLYING WEATHER Lie. No, 738. V,i% on Mo, lJul. Dapeslt Imuranct Fadtral Rrnrv* Corporation Syittm SOMERSET HILLS AIRPORT EMPLOYEES Owned1 and Opnraltd by VniitA Aviation Corporation PERSONAL LOAN CO. Bittkiiif RUie, N. J. Bornanhvjlla 1561 THE SUMMIT HMMJ), THUKSOAY. DECCMUt «,' INI I up «nd try to kill time, ud Tfce Weaf her- Cart Saidburg, buy tickets to go •omewhert die." Toys for Al Ages 'The People, Yet," a book-length Be/ieve/f Or Not/ collection of Americana, written With the snow, which overtook Revolutionary Poet, Urgently Heeded Summit last week, fast disappear- in 1836, should have had the ing, further stormy weather can Pulitzer Prize, Dr. Trapp said. It By Thrift Stwp not be completely discounted, and ReadByDr.Trapp contains Sandburg's lovt of the la Johnny folag to get a new cold weather U expected to cover Many readers find Carl Sand- common people, with anecdotes, cowboy

floor of the store, new the ele- Finding Bareew. JTewUh Social , MM. Fred Pent, fiwMMt A lei. Service, Mount Camel Guild, vators. Customers nay select a I ter will be aent by the boevd to Gifts N. J. State Board of Children's case and take the card to Christ- NnN TO WwCnMp the Board of Education reooaa- Guardians, N. J. Urban League, mas stocking headquarter* on the "Let ua ail remember that ear •; l«y loot* meadlnf a study of teaoheza' MI- Salvation Army, Social Service third floor. There a volunteer America la great became we are* arles and particularly considering lign Hdqtrs. Bureau of Newark, Visiting Nurse Jefferson School children work- from one of the agencies wili de- the melting pot of the but (ram the necessity for salary Increases Association, Welfare Council of ed bard on a waste paper salvage scribe the ease In detail and the Europe and Asia. Our forefather* and the adoption of a single sal- Newark, Welfare Federation of drive and now see the result of Bamberger's donor may then shop for gifts or had toe courage to break away— ary schedule. Mrs. Ellen 8cartnal, ) Newark. of New JerseJ y will Instruct the volunteer to make and it took a lot of courage. Let their efforts In the addition of sev- treasurer, reported that the mem- an opportunity to help fill purchases. 1 ua not look back for oae minute eral new books to their library. In bership in the P.T.A. this year Is e's Emptiest Stockings" Filled stocking! will be delivered Las\ Friday * Snow to the old world. Look forward making this report at the Parent higher than in any previous year. i Christmas through a fitt cam- to welfare agencies before Christ- Brought Winter linb only to free America, where we Teacher board meeting on Novem- sponsored by Newark Wel- live and constantly do our utmost ber 28, Miss Graoe Freeleid, prin- mas where they will be delivered An army servey reveals that re- Federation with headquarter* to parents of the children. These To rMwItQ 5tfltlWI$ to help keep it free," F. Edward cipal, added that the book sale re- The unexpected snow which tailing and service enterprises ac- I* Bamberger A Co. gifts, representing the child's spe- Biertuempfel, mayor of Union and cently held at the school was a began last Thursday evening, No- count for 6 out of 10 of the types John C. Williami, president of cific request, will be presented to State president of the Association success and also resulted in the vember 29 and continued through- of American War Dada, told a of business enterprises of servioe- f-Btmberger's promise* "k stocking kiddies by their parent* as a gift addition of new books to ths col- out the night and most of the nest group of seventy new and re* raen who now have definite plans * -w«l be filled before Chrlatmaa Eve from good Saint> Nicholas and lection now available to the stu- for their return to civilian activi- day, brought some new bird visi- patrtated citizens November 36 in / each of the 650 needy caaea the source will not be disclosed. dents. ties. tors to the feeding stations In and Judge Walter L. Hetfield's Court. .mbmltted by the Welfare Federa- Sponsors of "Newark1* Emp- near Summit, as reported to James The group admitted includes Other business was discussed at ls BOO." He added that this will be tiest Stocking" project are: As- B. Hawley of Tulip street. "It is these from Summit. Bridget Som- this board meeting held at the PLEASE INFORM THE ADVER- Awe through the generosity of the sociated Catholic Charities, Babies interesting to see how quickly mo, 84 Park avenue; John Na- home of Mrs. Robert Wade, parent TISER that you saw his AD, in rftfuMlc and Bamberger Co- Hospital, Children's Aid Society, thaniel Jones, 401 Broad street; director, and presided over by the classified page. ' Workers. Department of Public Welfare, they find a banquet spread for Hiide Doming Roberts, 160 Sum- Essex County Council of Jewish them, with the first inowtaU," aaid Christmas trees containing mit avenue; Lea Reale, 165 Hobart Agencies, Hospital and Home) for Mr. Hawley. tmpty dockings, each with an at- avenue; Emidlo Poll, 67 Spring- Crippled Children, Jewish Child Mrs. John R. Whltlock of Val- tached description of a needy case, field avenue, and Benedetta De- are at present located on every Guidance Bureau, Jewish Home ley View avenue reported that 13 species of birds found their way Simone, 60 Park avenue. to the feeding station in her yard, and that the family was so enter- Sen. Taft at Morristown tained watching their antics, that they had little time for anything else oa Friday. A Chatham member of the Natura Club, MM. E. I* Newell, who maintains a winter bird feed, said that a fox sparrow visited It in the snow, probably a straggler AUGUST WITTER from the southern migration, as mechanical skills useful in watch- making. So that he could study in most of this species have left- of 541 Court Street, Elizabeth is bed, Miss Parentinl helped him now a patient at Bonnie Burn KP Duty Streamlined and Is 'taking a bedside course secure a book on watch repairing. Patients provided him with KP duty, still the bane of a sail- in watch repairing, watches. or's life, has been streamline on, CLEANLINESS He is one of the patients at Bon- Now he is permitted to work \irtually every ship in the navy nie Burn benefiting from the Re- six hours per week. With the There ii a saying that cleanliness is next to godliness. through installation of high speed habilitation Program being offer- money he earned from repairing This seems to be true when you consider how much easier it electrical food mixers, vegetable ed by the Union County Tuber- watches he bought more tools. As is to be clean spiritually when the mind, body and surround- peelers, juice extractors, Ice cream culosis League, Inc. Miss Irene he advanced in his study and ex- ings are kept clean. makers and other short-cut de- Parentinl is in charge of the pro- perience be found he needed more vices, all of which will be avail- A measure of the progress of civilization is the amount gram. expensive tools, Due to wartime able in smaller units for modern of soap and cleansing agents used. Mr. Wlttek had served for four restrictions, these tools are hard households when quantity produc- years as an apprentice in tool to find but funds have been made Water is the greatest oieanslng agent that we have and tion gets under way. every one should be thankful for the rain and snow that jAisc> making: and then worked as a tool available for their purchase. HON. CHARLES P. TAFT maker for 10 years. After con- Many of the patients in Bonnie clean the air of dust, smoke and acid gases, besides washing Light "jeep-type" airplane*, cal- will give the third lecture in the tracting tuberculosis he was ad- Burn are interested in having help the streets and refreshing the earth. led "grasshoppers" by their crews Fall Series in the Morristown vised by his doctor that he would in making plans for their future laid thousands of miles of tele- High School Auditorium, on Tues- Every parent knows the Importance of teaching children not be able to follow his old skill phone wire in isolated areas, set- work. With the help and advice day, December 11, 8:15 p. m. His to wash their face and hands especially before handling food. again. When Mr. Wittek was get- ting up communications lines in of the Tuberculosis League, sev- subject will be "The United Frequent bathing makes people more presentable and at- ting well enough to find that time, the Pacific jungle warfare. eral patients are now in schools States and the Future of Europe," tractive since it removes obnoxious odors and grime, Dental 3.50 set 3.50 to 11.00 was heavy on his hands*he looked and colleges taking courses which Mr. Taft is a aon of the 27th hygiene and washing the teeth at least twice a day will help around for something to do. He will enable them to again support President and is a Liberal Repub- to prolong their life and prevent cavities besides adding to ft began to tinker with watches, themselves and have an independ- lican. person's attractive appearance, Aptitude tests showed that he had ent status in the community. Y FILMS A limited number of single ad- One important organ whose cleansing is often neglected mission tickets are available at the is the nose. Since it is used to filter and purify large volumes r-. Cameras — Projectors Our Foreign Policy participating in the discussions Y. M. C. A. for each of these lec- of air, it is important to wash it out twice a day by putting Conference at Union from Summit will be Eugene Mul- tures. it several times into a double handful of cold water and draw- and ligan on the topic, "What should be ing the water in and out. The eyes1, ears and whole body also | Jr. College Wednesday our attitude toward the factiona] are improved by frequent bathing. strife in China?"; Dorothy Fora- Photo Supplies Students from all high schoo A clean bed, clean clothes and clean house are worth all berg, moderator, on the topic, In Union county will participate the time and expense required in their maintenance. in a conference on "Our Foreign "What about Spain?"; and Wal- A. Anderson • DEVELOPING Policy" at Union Junior College, lace Feibush, topic, '"How much If it is a good thing to keep clean externally, (with this • ENLARGING Cranford, next Wednesday. James national sovereignty should we FLOOR SCRAPER every one will agree) think how much mote important and E. Downs, late of the Summit High surrender to the United Nations necessary it is to keep clean internally where such marvelous • COPYING School faculty, and former stat Organization?" chemical processes are taking place that produce warmth, 10*25 .95 to 3.59 librarian and now on the facult New floors laid power to move, work, talk, think and carry on life Itself. There was a time when man, in his ignorance, chewed tobacco • OIL at Newark Teachers' College, wl ITS EASY to find "where to buy speak at the afternoon session. sanded, refinished and spit tobacco juice on the wooden sidewalks that were COLORING it" in the classified columns. swept by the ladies' long skirts. With cement sidewalks, The students will be welcoraei READ THE CLASSIFIED ADS HUNDREDS OF OTHER TOYS 25 Union PI. Summit paved streets and a sanitary code, this antiquated custom has at 10 o'clock by Dr. Kenneth about disappeared, SUMMIT PHOTO & Campbell MacKay, dean of Union Buy a Victory Bond today—and Summit 6-3516 Junior College, and Jerry Gotte*- hold it *"' > In a similar way, many people will live to see the day SUPPLY CO. man, Hillside High School, presi- when It will be equally old fashioned to see people smoke a dent of the Union County Student vile smelling poisonous weed, spilling ashes about the house, 457 Springfield Ave. Forum. A luncheon, election, en polluting the atmosphere and starting fires that are such a Summit Hardware & Paint Co. tertainment, and dance, will fill out loss to life and property. The poisoning of the Internal organs Strand Thea, Bldg. the day, following the convening by tobacco smoke is even worse and a contagious disease 359 Springfield Avenut Summit 6.0216 of nine panel discussion groups. propagated by advertising that falls to point out any benefiti Room 6 and also by the example of those who acquired the addiction "Me ...I'm staying under the false impression that It was the smart and stylish Everett I Spinning thing to do, What would you think of any one who tried to keep their faoe and hands clean by bathing In black coffee or yellow Insurance in the Army! tea? They would soon find their soft, supple skin becoming like a piece of leather. It pays handsome dividends to prao- 165 Union Place, Summit, N., tice Internal cleanliness by drinking plenty of water, milk, Tel. Su. 6-0177 fruit and vegetable Juices and to avoid the use of all Injurious THERE ARE PLENTY and drugged and foodstuffs*. Millions of people are finding that Internal cleanliness OF REASON!... produces better health, physically, mentally, spiritually, socially and economically. Please do all you can to promote both ex- AND HERE THEY ARE!" ternal and Internal cleanliness and thus help the foroei of VICTOR* construction to free the world of crime, sickness, accidents, poverty, divorce and labor strikes, HOWARD B. BISHOP.

"First, I keep my present grade. "Any time after 20 yean I •Coffee —Contains—1.159b caffeine 1 That means a lot 6 can retire at half pay increas- •Colas - " —.51 grains caffeine pir bottli ing year by year to three-quartere •Chocolate — " —1.9% caffeine' 0 "By reenlisting for 3 yean I retirement pay after 30 years of •Tea - " —8,30% caffeine • can pick my own branch of service. And the time I've already •Cigars — " —2 to &% nicotine service in the Air, Ground or served in active military or naval •Clgarettes- " , -2 to i% nicotine Service Forces, and can go to any service counts toward my retire* •Tobacoo — " —2 to 8% nicotine overseas theater I wish. ment time. Added Up—reenlist- •Seer - " —8% alcohol ment seem pretty sound to me!" *Wlnes — " —20% alcohol "I get my musterlng-out pay, •Whiskey— " -50% alcohol "Let's Finish The Job" 3 even though I'm reenlisting. Jlramie Jingle Says: Also, I get $50 a year reenlistment bonus for each year I've been in HUMAN ENGINEERING FOUNDATION Three times a day this loaf the Army. My dependents receive JANUARY 31,1946 family allowances for the full term Summit, New Jeney of bread of my enlistment. And I'll be AN IMPORTANT DAT1 Write for Free Booklet The Summit War Finance Committee advises that the eligible for GI Bill of Rights bene- IOR MIN IN THI ARMY Belongs wherever meals are fits when I get out of the Army. Summit Area is short of its Series "E" Bond quota by MEN now In Army who reenllil spread. "My food, clothes, quarters, before February I will be n*n- $90,000.00. 4 medical and dental care are all listed In pruenl grade. Mm hon- supplied to me. And I can learn srobly dlichargid ean ratnllit any of 200 skills or trades in the wllhtn 20 dayt alter dlicharge DR. DAVID W. ELMAN \ In grade held at lime of dis- Army schools. TODAY'S charge, provldtd they retnllir SURGEON CHIROPODIST On the eve of Pearl Harbor Day let us resolve to place "All of us who are reenlisting before February 1,1946. Announces his return from military service and the reopening w SUGGESTIONS 5 are going to have from 30 to of professional offices in his former location in the an additional "E Bond in EVERY HOME BY 90 days furlough at home with Vow m«y enllit AT AW TIMI full pay and our travel paid both for IVS, 2 or I year period's. MILLBURN THBATRfl BUimiNG ways. And we'll have 30 days' fur- (One-year •nllilminfi for men CHRISTMAS. now In the Army wild at Itail 350 Millburn Ava. Milfburn 6-1772 RAISIN lough every year with pay. ft months of nrvlct.) Hours by Appointment: 9-5 Pally; Wed. Eve. Until 8. Bread ... 15c ***************** Every modern meant for icientific foot care will be PAY PER MONTH- made available to you. APPLESAUCE ENLISTED MEN In Addition lo Foot*, Lodflnf, Marter Sergeant Loaf Cake .35c Gklhu and Medial Cue or Pint Sergeant #138.00 $189.70 Citizens Trust Company * Technics! Sergeant 114.00 74.10 (a)-PIm 20% Increaie for Staff Sergeant . . 96.00 62.40 First Church of Christ, Scientist * Service Oversea!, (b)-Plui Sergeant. . • 78.00 PINEAPPLE 50.70 lfl Springfield Avmut Summit, Nflw Jmuf 50% If Member of Flying Corporal... 66.00 42.90 Crow», Parachutlit, etc. (c) A Branch of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, -Plui 5% Increaio In Pay Private Fint Clnu 54.00 35.10 of Summit, New Jersey Cheese Cake 45c for Each 3 Yean of Service. Private . , , 50.00 32.50 Scientist, In Boston, Massachusetts Sunday Services at 11 A. M. Sunday School 11 A. 11 ******************************** Wednesday Meeting at 8:18 P. M.

Member Federal Reiero Bunk SCi THE JOB THROUGH HUNUSl NOW AT YOUK NMMSf PHONE . V. S. ARMY RtCRWUNQ STATION, Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ' II. S. ARMY Christian Science Reading Room BE A I OPEN TO THE PUBLIC P. O. BLDG. MO SPRINGVHI1U) AVENIM MAJESTIC BAKERY "GUARD/AN OF VICTORY" Newark, N. J. Optn dally 11 to 4:00, except Bundars and holidays i also frlday ROTH'S AIR, GROUND, Hitvict roitoif •venlnsi 7 :>0 to t :80 and after

Associated Catholic Char- ities, Very Rev. Msgr. Ralph h Glover. Babies Hospital, Mrs. George Barker. Children's Aid Society, Mr. Archie H. Ormond. Deportment of Public Welfare, Hr, Owen A. Malady, Essex County Council of Jewish Agencits, Mr. Daniel Shinum. The faith Hospital end Horn* for Crippled Children, Mr. Edward W. Scudder. Jewish Chili Guidance Leather picture frame in maroon of a Hero's daughter is at stake Bureau, Mr, Julius E. tretn or laddli Ian. 8x10" tit*. Flink. J^ mo Patricia's father has been in the Army for three long Jewish RomO Finding Bureau, Mr. Herbert ). years—and he won't be home this Christmas either, Pat wor- Hannoch, ries with her mother, because she knows the Government al- Jewuh Sochi Service, lotment hardly covers their food, rent and mother's doctor Mr. Milton M. linger. . bills, But, with the wonderful faith of a child, she still Mount Carmcl Guild, Smart ltd/1 wtlltl in sufplt Mrs, Thomas J. Smith. believes in Santa Claus, She isn't even asking for toys- lulher. Navy, rid er blown New Jersey State Board uilh three initials stamptd just for a warm skirt, which she knows she needs for school. of Children's Guardians, Int. (W Mist Mary E. Flanagan. Will you help Pat to keep her faith in the goodness of the Ntw Jersey Urban world for which her father has fought? League, Rev. L. Hamilton Itilbet tlbum tc hold the ftmil] Pat's is a true case history from the hundreds authenti- Gamer. pictures or the record of » reluming cated by a cross-section of Newark's Welfare Agencies and Salvation Army, htro's txfleitt. Urge ttii hanisomt. Mr. Carl K. Withtrs. $12.1(1 submitted to Bamberger's each year, There are other chiU Social Servict Bureau of ' dren of servicemen. Children in other families where sick Newark, Mr, John S. Thompson, ness and misfortune have atrucft. All of them children that Visiting Nurse Associa- Santa will miss this year... unless you help out. tion, Mrs. John O. Bige> low. Welfare Council of New- Man's uelltl its brown domes ark, Mr, George E. Wil tic alligator, pig skin linti Hams. YOU CAN DO ONE OF FOUR THINGS: Velfare Federation of Newark, Mr, Earl R, Come in to Bamberger'i and pick a ease history from one of our hfellen. • Empty Stocking Christmas trtu. Shop for the child's Christmas 1 presents yourself. Bring the presents to Empty Stocking Head, quarters,, third floor. Bamberger'i mil see that everything it delivered by Christmas morning. 4 Per his desk or her togee table - Leave the money you wish to contribute in Stocking Headquarters Cold loolti leather taltn- and our shoppers uill make the selection. "" "" '— * iit desk pad. Broun or leather cigarette box with band 2 ttd. tl pointed till lop, Vine, tin, horn. Telephone Stocking Headquarters, MArket 1-12U (or your local 3 Telemvice number), extmtion 3040.

Mail us your cKtch, er authorise ui to charge a spidfind ai to your Bambtrger account, and we'll fUl th* stocking. Birthday book uilb a horo- 4 scope reading ftr every day tj tbt year. Brown, turf, ma- roon or tuvy with told loot- ing, tin

Brown domritlt alligator key cue uilb tipper chtjng. $7.20 Kf

Price* include tax inhere applicable /V • • 'O'OUMSIU P mi ;p 66t BROAD ST. I I I mm & & '" CENTRAL AVE NEWARK 2 W? 15^ 5$ EAST ORANGE ' Open Wednesday Evening in Newark HELP FILL NEWARK'S EMPTIEST STOCKINGS Open Thursday Evening in East Orange THI SUMMIT HERALD. TMUISOAY, 4, 1141 r BaiMlag of tte Borsaa Road, UMAL ADvnmmaBNT i UBOAL DATES ran, P. DBCKM1UGK nClnJ JoNICS JTOTICE to CftEDirORS Final Ctapaign Acrois North- ESTATE OF GRACE BALDWIN BASK 8H18EROLD1M 2 to 16—Art AMOcifttio* Gal- west Italy .. United BUtes Army WHITS, D»c«as»d, TO ELECT filKECTOSS lery—Exhibit. Pursuant to tt>« orl«r of CBARLE6 RAID Myded in New Immortal Village .....PeatUe, D. A- OTTO, JH., Surrogtu of th* The annual meeting ot the (*. «—TnuM, 8:18 p. a^.—YMCA— Italy ud tbt Coining World, Couaty «f Union, mail* on th» tirenty- holder* of Vho Flrtt National Bank •Ixth day of November A, D., MS,and Trust Company of Summit win Member: QUAUTT OWH.J. Council Social Agtacki — Sturio, L. upon thwee anpapplicatiol n ot the under- be held at it* banking bouse, 101 Sprlnglield Avenue, oa Ttl»»dajr PubUAed tof TUB CARTER PUBUSHINa OOMPAXt •' "Community OrganUation." Books at Library HUtory u EMetitori of the.ettate of «—Tburr—K«nt Plact School mnrninir ,Tnnn«tr 8 1»4f btfmiMI _ o Butt Btftt,ffvT"Bll« ffpy Jiwy - _. November acquisitions of new RevdStloisi In Russia, to the credlton of *ald deceased to the hours of 8 and 10 o'clock, for the TttaptoM: fa. WHO books by the Summit Public Li- Trevir&nus, G. exhibit to tht lubicribert under oath election of directors of the bank and •-SUB, a p. m. — Football — or affirmation their claims and de- for the transaction of »uoh other hrary include "Short Stories ot Lake Ontario Pound, A. mandi Against the «state of u.id de- business at may properly coma b*. tt th. Port O«lw, Summit, N. J, M ••CM* '<*••• IfatUr Wildcat* v*. PlalaJleld Bar- Henry James," which Miss Snail* Album of American History, 0M*tt wilbln Bli month* from the fore the meeting, *cen»—Memorial Field. date of said order, or they will be Hailed in Conformity with P. O, D. Qrdw No. lMtT. Hill, librarian, say*, seems to In- Adams, J, fprever barred from proseciiUng or Official New«p«p«r cf Static City ud County. 10—Mon., 2 p. m. — L**gn» Of dicate that Summit has been recovering the lame agatait the sub- PttblUdud Thundty Morning Women Voter*. •crlbere, SOTICE TO CREDITORS caught up in th« revival of bis Correwtf's Mtw Headmaster CHARLES BALDWIN WHITE, ESTATE OF HE.NRTt A. SILVBI1U, , S p- nu—YWCA—Hang- writings that is sweeping the 17 Fernwooi Rd., Summit, N. J. Deceased. • Grats Par Copy Ing of th» Grecni. country. A number of mysteries, BMII *t 10 c#nt» JOHN H. WHItE, 10—iWon., 8:30 p. m. — United "Cass Tlmberlane," and a variety 70 Weat Beanian Av«., Freeport, County of Union, made on th» twenS. Campaign Benefit — "Stag* Long Iiisnd, New York, sixth day of November A, D., IMS, m hating iumi Ifmt for publication In tho ftVttM it of other books make up the fic- Exccutorg, upon the application of th» under- Door"—PUyhoiiM AMOC1&« Our Neighbors signed, as Executrix of the estate of ettei to ktno MUM In ih* editorial roan* at tarty M pMiifct* tion, Z5-Z9—oaw&v Fees—$7.80 tion. •aid deceased, notice is hereby «lven itorfe* In on Thursday, on Friday, on Saturday, on Monday, 8PMNGFIBLD - After nine In the new non-fiction list, more to the creditors of said deceased to 1 OHDI5AKCE L' 1/ pouible. Early copy rouu •art)'- typuttting. Copy not rtetivd 11—TUM., 2 p. m. — ChrlatmM weeks of study the Mayor ! Fact books on the fine arts are number- exhibit to the subscriber under o»tb Carol Singing by or affirmation their claims and d«. |7 Yto*« netv«> t»/w» «//lc« define tint* TiMiioy CS o'clock,) mar Finding Commute*, studying ed than for some time past; those AN ORDINANCE to Further Amend Schools—High School. iection 2 of an Ordinance Entitled: mands against the estate of sila A* Jw»* la £• omitltd from that »t*k*4 tun*. forma of r«cr«atlon, submitted its classified as social sciences In- ••AN ORDINANCE Relating to the ceaeed within alx months from the II—Tuw., 8:15 p. m. — Harriet report on a temporary winter pro- Repair, Closing and Demolition of date of said order, or they will ts clude "Modern Man Is Obsolete," for»ver barred from prosecutln* of Editor Avery Lecture—Chins. Put- gram, November 28. The report Dwellings Unfit for Human Habita- S. GARJS x "Freedom Under Planning," and tlon In the City of Summit, Oefln- recovering the same against th» iub» A*. •crlber. CHARLES A. MILLER „ General Newi was acted upon favorably but ran"Sixty Million Jobs," Henry Wal- ing Such Dwellings and Providing T. HERBERT HENDERSON - - Social, General Newt JS—TJJUM., 8 p. m—BsfusonFir* Into a mag over the wording of for the Remedies and Procedure In EDITH SILVEIRA, lace's latest book, Connection Therewith and to Assess Executrix. H. WOODSIDB New Providence Borough and DAR. « questionnaire which is to be sent th« Cost of Such Remedies and WILLIAMS A DEMPSEY, Proctor*. New Providence Township, BporU, General N«m IJ—Thur*., 8:16 p. m. — Atba- to the public to find its reaction FICTION Proceedings at a Municipal Lien 382 Springfield Av»., Ever After Beebe, B. against the Luidi and Premise!," Summit, N, J, &DWARD W. HOLLAND „_ Advertiitag Manager naeum. on a permanent program. The 25-89—oawtw Hurray Home to My Heart Passed July 21, 1943 and £u> Amend- Few—17.10 HAABOSCa •...,.,.••+..>.„• AwUtant Dlipliy Advtrtlatng IS—Thure., 8 p. m.—Community program Includes Ice skating, ed June 5th, ltjo, Church Men's Club. Byrd, S. BE If ORDAINKD BY THE COM- a LEGO . n .r- f-,, ^ ClauUied Advwtiiini coasting, adult gym class, youth's MON COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PEHIHNO OHDIHAKCB ALLEN , ,..j ClroulatioD 14—FrL, 10 a. m.—Garden De* basketball. In submitting its re- This Is Beverly Colket, H. SinStMItMTT: partment—Wreath Making- port the committee wrote that it Murder Before Midnight, 1-„ That Section I of an Ordinance AN ORDINANCE to Acquire by Pur- % U. GUEST - .,-.T-T-m , . Credit Manager and Circulation entitled a-» above be and the same chase CerUin Landi In the City Field House. "feels that if its suggestions are Cunningham, A, FORBES — • -ri j r • - Acwuntinj is hereby further amended to read of Summit, in the County of Unloc, 14—Frl,, 8;18 p. m.—College CIUD Incorporated in a winter program, Dead Men Grin Fischer, B, a; follows: That Gertrude S. Gross New Jersey for Municipal Purposes f V. BASS T-r-- Production Manager, Job printing of the City of Summit, Is hereby des- and Authorizing- the Financing of —Lincoln School. the present facilities ot Spring- Case of the Half-wakened Wife, 3, EDWIN CARTER _ a^j^ ,j»_ Publisher MAJOR PHILIP L. GARLAND ignated and appointed aa the Pub- Such Acquisition. 16—Sun,, 3:30 p. m.—Carol Sing- Held will be used to good advan- Gardner, B. lio Officer, to exercise the powers UK IT O11DA1NED BY THE COM- XJnspeakables; a Tale of Lom- prescribed by this Ordinance Her MON t'OUXCIL OF THE CITY OK THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1045 ing—Summit Art Associa- tage, with only nominal expense WEST ORANGE, N. J.—The An- service as such Public Officer to con- SUMMIT, IN THIS COUNTY Of incurred, yet affording ample rec- bardy Gay, L. tinue at the pleasure of the Common UNION, NEW JISHSJjy, follows Gallery, nual Father-Son Dinner of Car- Council. ag Hercules, My Shipmate, Graves, R, (not less than two-thirds of all the IS—Sun,, 4:30 p. m.--The MM- reation to all, especially those who teret School for Boys, West Or- i. Thl« ordinance to take effect members thereof .affirmatively eon- PEARL HARBOR DAY «iah" — Oratorio — Prwby- love winter aportt." Peacock Sheds His Tall, Hobart, A, ange is to be held on Thursday Immediately in the manner provided curring): ' terian Church. No Shortage of Men . .Hueston, E. by la,w. SECTION 1. The City of Summit, Four years tomorrow the Japs let loose their bombs on evening, December 6, in the school I, Frederick C. Kentz, do hereby In the County of Union, (hereinafter 16—Sun., 8 p, m. -' "The Me«- Short Stories of Henry James, gymnasium, It Is anticipated that certify that the foregoing Ordinance referred tu us "municipality") shall elah" — Oratorio — Method- MAPL.BWOOD — Chairman James, H. was introduced for first reading at a acquire liy iiurdiaee at a price not to jour fleet anchored in Pearl Harbor, in a sneak attack while George M. Wallhauser of the Vic- more than three hundred will at- regular meeting of the Common Coun- txcted $14,550.00 for municipal pur- ist Church. Glory for Me Kantor, M. cil held on Tuesday evening, Decem- posea, the following tracts of laud [negotiations were still being carried on in an effort to prevent tory Clothing drive for next tend. 17—Mon.—Dinner tor G. Harry Crescent Carnival Keyes, F. ber 4. 1945, and that said Ordinance situate in the municipality, and month is asking one garment per An alumnus, Co, A. C. M. Azoy, will be submitted for consideration bounded and described as follows' war between the two nations. Cullle, Mayor—Trie Brook. Cass Tlmberlane Lewis, S. will be master of oeremonies. Dr. ana passage at the next regular meet- BEGINNING) at « point in center 18—Tues., 8:30 p. m.—Common person in addition to any shoes Death in the Mind..Lockrld?e, R. ing of said Council to be held on line of Woodland Avenue ai lams and bedding that might be con- Raymond I, Llndquist, pastor ot Tuesday evenlny, December IS, 194S, was formerly laid out, dlstunl 169.25 This threw the world Into a global war the like of which Council- Hall, Girl to Come Home to... .Lutz, G. at the City Hall, at 8:30 o'clock, at tributed. Almost all committee the first Presbyterian Church, Or- feet on a course, of North 11 degrees) 18—Tuea,, p. m. — Court Repent In Haste Marquand, J. which time and place any person who 37 minutes East from intersection of ai never been seen. From there the Japs went on to conquer members have been selected. The ange, will give the invocation. may be interested therein will be said center line with center line of Benedict Christmas Party— Woman Without Love, Maurois, A. During the dinner community sing- given an opportunlly to be heard con- Crescent Avenue; which beginning 10 Philippines, many of the islands of the Pacific, and to de- quota for the nation is 100,000,000, cerning such Ordinance. point i» at Northeast comer of lands St, Teresa's Hall, Six of Them Neumann, A. ing will be led by Lou Noll. IB—Wed., 8:15 p. m.—Fortnight- FREDERICK C. KENTZ, now or formerly of B. B. Lawrence; tfeit the British at Singapore and other places. After the fall High Barbaree NordhoM, C. Following the Introduction of City Cbrk, thence (1) running along said former ly — High School — Chrtat- SOUTH ORANGE—The future Bated: December i, 19(5. center line of Woodland Avenue Most Secret ....Norway, N. the Headmaster-elect, Major Philip 2! j?of Corregidor, when General MacArthur was leaving, he mag Program. of the Bamberger Estate, accord- Fees—$6.00 North 11 degrees 37 minutes Baet Penthouse Mystery ....Queen, B. L, Garland by George Douglas 110.29 feet; thence (2) stllj along said »id, "I'll be back." And he was. And the result of that return Ing to George Levin, who owns the Perfect Round Robinson, H. PENDING OEDINANCE center line of Woodland Avenue estate with his brother, is uncer- Hofe, president of the Board of North 10 degrees 26 minutes East i the defeat of Japan on the islands and through the actions P.T.A. AND~SCHOOL Owl m the Cellar Seherf, M. Directors, Major Garland will give AN ORDINANCE to Further Amend 22.59 feet; thenc^e (3) still along said DECEMBER tain. It is 30 acres in extent with Orchard Hill Selfert, E, Title 23 Section 14 of an Ordinance center line of Woodland Avenue oa 23 acre plot* in East Orange and an address which will be followed Relating to Obstructions on Streets, a curve to left lvlth a radius of 212.51 5 Japan's home islands, aided and abetted by the atomic 6—Thurs., 8:30 p. m.—Waihlng- White Dear Thurber, J. feet 17.43 feet; thence (4) running the other seven touching Orange, by a sound film entitled "Oppor- Encroachments, Etc., Adopted De- ton School PTA. — "Pearl Nine Strings to Your Bow, ceml>er 7th, 1909 and Amended July North 82 degrees 33 minutes West b, Japan was forced to surrender. South Orange and Newark. The tunity Knocks Again." 3rd, 1923 and Further Amended Au- 283.93 feet; thence (5) running North , Harbor" Tea. Walsh, M. "*"* §fis 44 minutes West hd.U owners had originally planned to gust 21st, 1945, 6—Thun., 8 p. ro.—Washington My Indian Family. .Wernher, H, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COM- . ieWce (S) running North 39 We now come to the fourth "Pearl Harbor Day" with a build a |3,000,0ther war. There is always some man or coterie of men mary Christmas Assembly. other adjoining municipalities, for World Bible Ballou, R. deceased, notice is hereby (flven to stall be not less than six feet six Mathews and Southwest corner "f it was aanwinceoHast week that the creditors of said deceased to Inches above the sidewalk; and no said lands of Holly; thence (II) vho thinks he or they can conquer the world and become the 19-Wed., 7:80 p. jn.-Wasblng- Social Sciences exhibit to the subscribers under oath part shall project over the sidewalk South 0 degrees 7 minutes West ton School—Chrlstmeu Pro- the Victory Loan Drive had gone Nationalism and After....Carr, E. or affirmation their claims and de- beyond the line of curb atone or curb 421.?0 feet; thence (15) running along er or rulen thereof. It hasn't yet been done. With our over the top. The amount sub- mands against the estate of said line, or more than ten feet from the North boundary lino of lands now • many who are home, know that we are back of them, Christmas Program. County of Union, ma.de on the visions of this ordinance, upon con- South 82 degrees 33 minutes Ea»t 21—Frl.—St. Teresa's — Christ- the Civic group, It was suggested Pure Science Thirteenth day of November A, D,, viction thereof before the Police 322.1D feet to place of Beginning. ady to supply the money to bring those not home—home, 1945, upon the application of the Judge of the City of Summit shall mas Entertainment. that something In the. nature of Astronomy: What Everyone undersigned, as Executor of the es- be subject to a fine not to exceed Being further known on tha tax: a forum to discuss municipal, Should Know Allen, J. tate of laid deceased, notice la hereby the sum of Twenty-five Dollars and maps of the City of Summit as Block nd. to take care of the sick and wounded who are here and to given to the creditors of said deceased upon default of payment of said tine 130-B, lots 2, 2A, 2B, 2C, 2D, 213 and county and state issues be formed. Atomic Energy in the Coming to exhibit to the subscriber under may be Imprisoned in the county jail 2P. rnish the beat care possible. Therefore, it behooves each DEATHS Nothing definite along this line Bra Diet*, D. oath or affirmation their claims and for a period not to exceed 10 days. SECTION t. For the purpose demands against the estate of laid Every day that such -violation shall stated In Section 1 of this ordinance I every one of us to BUY A VICTORY BOND TOMOR- was worked out. Minerals of Might ..Hotchklss, W. deceased within six months from the continue after notice to alter or re- there Is appropriated $14,250.00 In- Alexander Guercken Western Wild Life ... Chaff«e, A. date of said order, or they will be move same shall be a separate of- elusive of all appropriations hereto- &OW-PEARL HARBOR DAY-AND MAKE IT AN E Funeral services were held forever barred from prosecuting or fense. foro made for said purpose, Includ- Useful Arts recovering the same against the sub- ing $712.50 as a down payment •which, Thursday morning at the Bur- MUXBUEN — Th« Board of 4. This ordinance shall take effect |OND. When the day is done and the tally is made, let's be Education at Its last meeting Hidden Hunger Macy, I. scriber. Immediately In the manner provided la Included hi the 3 945 Budget and to roughs Funeral Horns In Spring- L0NOLE7 a. WALKER, by law, meet said appropriation negotiable le to say "Bully for Summit 1" voted to pay tuition up to $200 for Return to Life Through I, Frederick C. Kenti, do hereby bonds each to be known as "Land. field avenue for Alexander Guerc- Executor. Purchase Bond," of the munlolDillty veterans who need further credits Contrology Pilates, J, FREDERICK C. KHNTZ, Proctor. certify that the foregoing Ordinance ken, 72, who died November 28 at was Introduced for first reading at a are hereby authorized to be issued for high school graduation or col-An Introduction to Public 833 Springfield Are., In the principal amount not to exceed Overlook Hospital from a heart Summit, N. J. regular meeting of the Common Coun- lege entrance, or who desire re- Health Mustard, H. 23-87—QIVI—6W Pees—(7.80 cil held on Tuesday evening, Decem- $13,637.50 pursuant to the Looal Bond, condition. His home was In Manor ber 4,-1945, and that said Ordinance Law, constituting Sections 40:1-1 to POTPOURRI . fresher courses before entering or Men Under Stress .,.,.GrInker,R, NOTICE TO CREDITORS will be submitted for consideration 40:1-88 of the Revised Statutes of Hill road. returning to college. The board Fire Protection Through Modern and passage at the next regular New Jersey. In anticipation of said, Mr. Guercken was born In Rus- ESTATE of MASFT. MUSGRAVB, meeting of said Council to be held on bonds, negotiable notes of the mu- If you have any toys—dolls, blocks, a fuzzy Uncle Wiggily felt that It would cost more to Building Codes ...... Wood, B. deceased, Tuesday evening, December 18, 1045,nicipality are hereby authorised to * »t you can spare, the Thrift Shop, 486 Springfield avenue, sia and had lived in this country take care of such veterans In Mary Hunt's Salad Bowl, Pursuant to the order of CHARLES at the City Hall, at 8 :3O o'clock, at be Issued pursuant to said Law, since 1927, The family came here the local school than for tuition In A. OTTO, JH.. Surrogate of th6 Coun- which time and place any person who SECTION 3. The maximum rate d like to have them. The toy assortment there has been Altfllllsch, M. ty of union, made on Jhe second day way be Interested therein will be of Interest which any of said obliga- two years ago from Wisconsin. Barrlnger High School. Those de- Practical Manual for Office of November, A.D., 1N5, upon the given an opportunity to be heard tions shall bear Is five per centum Icted and unless some come in some boy or girl will not Mr. Guercken was retired. He application of the undersigned, aa concerning such Ordinance. (ofo) per annum. The exact rate to siring such schooling are advised Workers Faunce, .F. Administrator C.T.A. of the estate leaves his Wife, Mrs, Nina Guerc- FREDERICK C. KENTZ, be determined by resolution of the |kve a happy Christmas. The Christmas spirit is in the air to contact Principal Faddis at the Fifty Years of Best Sellers, 'of said deceased, notice Is hereby City Clerk. Common Council of Bald City and jhd little children should not be disappointed. Toys are scarce ken, andT a brother, Paul, of New High school, given to the creditors ol said deceased Dated: December J, 1945. said bonds shall be In such form and 1896-1045 Hackett, A. to exhibit to the subscriber under 26 Fees—$10.56 contain such recitals as the Common the statement of the Thrift Shop and those that come into York. Burial was in St Teresa's Fine Arts oath or affirmation their claims and Council shall by resolution determine. Cemetery. demands against the estate of said SECTION 4. (a) The estimated i Shop are sold right away. . ' MADISON—Borough Board of Sight and Unslght; a Prediction deceased within six months from the JtH OBBIITA1TCE maximum amount ot bonds or note* of New Perceptions in Art, date of said order, or they will be to be Issued for aald purpose la $13,- Health pasted on first reading a T forever barred from prosecuting or A SUPPLEMENT to a.n Ordinance Rev. Dr. Steinmeti entitled: "AN ORDINANCE Regu- 537.50. new- sanitary code which calls for Guggenhelmer, R. recovering the same against the sub- (b) The estimated maximum The Rev. Dr. Rjllllp Justice scriber. lating Special Traffic Conditions Mrs. Gertrude Gross of the city's welfare department is, the licensing of all food venders. Tomorrow's House, How to Plan Existing on Certain Streets and amount of money to be raised for Is usual, accepting contributions for Christmas Cheer baskets Steinmetz, S.T.D., rector of St, Your Post-War Home Now, MORErSTOWN TRUST COMPANV Other Public Places In the City of said purpose from all sou reel li Paul's Episcopal Church, Elklns It is stated the new coda was pre- of Morrlstown. N. J. Summit, and Providing for Penal- $14,250.00 the excess of such amount \6 be distributed to those who may be in want of a Christmas pared so as to bring: into effect Nelson, G. Administrator e.t.». ties for Violation Thereof," Paased over the amount of bonds authorized Park, Pa.. |nd formerly rector of Houses for Homemakers. .Wills, R. HBNR1T B. TTVOMBLY, Proctor, November 15 th, 1938, and Further in Section 2 hereof being the amount firmer. Send any amount you care to give to her office in Ca^ry Episcopal Church, died all modern methods of public 226 Hobart Ave., Summit, N. J. to Amend Some ot the Pro vision! of said down payment. health and to raise the standard Book of Pottery and Porcelain, 23-27-oa wSw Fees—(7.89. ot Said Ordinance. •SECTION 5. The following: mat* Tuesday, November 13, at nls home ters ar« hereby determined, declared, "amilton School. And, by the way, Santa Claus Kelly is pre- of living in the borough. A pub- Cox,W. BE IT ORDAINED BT THE COM- in Elklns Park, after a month's KOTICE TO OBEDITOnS MON COUNCIL OF THE CITY OP recited and stated: ' ig for a party at the Summit Home for Children. lic hearing will be held on the Masterpieces of Painting; . SUMMIT: (a) Said purpose Is not a current Illness. ESTATE OB1 ETHEL B. TJNBBR- expense, and Is an improvement or proposed code In Hartley Dodge Cairns, H. HILL, Decaaied. / 1, On the streets and portions of properly which the municipality may Dr. Steinmetz was graduated Memorial Hall on December 11. Contemporary American Pursuant to the order of CHAHtAS street! let forth below parking and lawfully make or acquire. No part of We have a lot of feathered friends about Summit in the from Delancey School In 1897 and A, OTTO, JH., Surrogate of the traftlo regulations shall be as fol- the cost of eald purpose hns been ot Painting Encyclopaedia County of Union, made on the lows : shall bt specially assessed on prop- ntertime. While it is not so extremely cold now and thefrom Harvard University In 1901. Brltannlca Thirteenth Jay of November A, D., MAPLE BTRJSET from Morris Avo- erty specially benefited, He prepared for the ministry at SPRINGFIELD—A Bible which 1945, upon ths application of the nue southerly for a distance of 260 (b) The period of usefulnew of id is not frozen, those -who follow the weather closer On a Note of Triumph, Corwln, N. feet — Parking 1> prohibited on tht the Philadelphia Divinity School was presented the Springfield undersigned., as Executors of tht es- said purpose, within, the limitations the writer, say we are in for a hard winter, which of- Chess Quiz Relnfeld, F. tate of said deceased, notice la hereby West side at all times. of Section 40:1-34 to 40:1-36 of said and in June, 1904 he was married Presbyterian church on Novem- given to the creditors of said deceased WAPLB STREET from Morris Ave- Literature Law and according to the reasonable |ciaUy begins this month. You can find out how to cater .to to Clara Humason, daughter of ber 29, 1791, by John Meeker and to exhibit to the subscribers under nue southerly for a distance of 840 life thereof is forty (40) years, (The) Practical Cogltator; or oath or affirmation their claims and feet — Parking la prohibited on,the (c) The supplemental debt itate- jtt. birds in easy lessons if you will but read the column on the Rev. and Mrs. George How- his eon which had been missing demands against the estate of said East side 7:00 a, m.-5:00 p. m. on The Thinker's Anthology, ment required by said Law has been tother page. James B. Hawley of the Summit Nature Club ard Humason of Moorestown, N. J. for forty years has been returned deceased within six months from the school

ill" I

II SA i TENDER-LEAF WHITE-ROSE SUPER SUDS TABLE-TIME SLICED TEA-BALLS COFFEE CK PEACHES Box 16 I ^(J 23 ^QC an

EHLEB'S GRADE A PILLSBURY VAN-CAMPS DUDE-RANCH PILLSBURY SNO-SHEEN OLIVES Pancake Flour TENDERONI Peach Preserve HEINZ X Box 2-lb. AXLm A Jars BAKED BEANS FLAGSTAFF DAVIS OCEAN Dazzle Bleach V-8 Blended Juice MACKEREL W ° Cocktail C x Lg Small "|3C Doz1.60 J A ^ Jar "£' 16c 91 #» - IOV Bottle Large 28C - I ZLC 25 "°' • l» Can JOY Large-Double-Roll JOY S&W MUFFIN-MIX Paper Towels POPOVER-MIX APPLE JUICE B x Ro11 Box 3U Qt. TETLEY'S 13c ° ]9c 18c ilW Bottle CROSSE & BLACKWELL'S WHITE ROSE PURE EGG ORANGE-PEKOE TEA TASTY LA. PERLA 1 Jb BURNETT'S QUICK FIG JUICE ASST. BOX MUFFIN MIX NOODLES ORANGE MARMALADE MACARONI AND Q 17 C Bottle 8-oz. 1 1^ SPAGHETTI 'C ^ Boxes 25C Box IIC Mb. Jar X 1 C Jar WHITE ROSE LONDON BERRY WHITE ROSE Palmolive Soap Ice Cream Mix COFFEE French Dressing BATH SIZE...3 for]9c Bottle DEERFIELD CENTER-CUTS 21c 12c •** 29c £ REG. SIZE... 3 for 20C OCTAGON CLEANSER ASPARAGUS s&w 0. & C. BOILED BRILLO STOY DICED 15c White Onions SOAP SOYA-FLOUR c No2 BEETS '» 1 ^7n •VC Jar 3 Cakes "JQC 2 Boxes 25C 3 10 1 y t Can Crosse & Blackwell's HOENSHEL'S Spaghetti Sauce STEEL WOOL PLUM MINT-SAUCE FIG 7C Z O^s Z5C Lg Bottie FIG AND DATE /OC 4 25c 21c PUDDINGS SAVARIN COFFEE FLAGSTAFF Meat and Mushroom T Rolls *«W WHITE ROSE ASTOR WHITE ROSE TOMATO JUICE Paper Napkins or FLAGSTAFF GREEN MINCE-MEAT COFFEE Split Peas c Lg> Box J 18-oz. # | f* 3Q«» *7V Jar 12c ^^ Cans / j 1 V/ «»*^ Jar 32 * SANKA FLAGSTAFF Spic and Span REX HIGH-TEST COFFEE PEA BEANS LYE Jar Box FLAGSTAFF BEECHNUT STRAINED 35c 9C Box 17c 3 Cans 25C LIFEBUOY ASTOR RENUZIT GRAPEFRUIT JUICE BABY FOODS SPINACH TEA-BALLS FRENCH SOAP DRY CLEANER For Doz Cans 1 * C T 39c Gal. 52c 2 Gals. g6c 6 39c y Qc WHITE ROSE 40-FATHOM TEST-MARK HEAVY DIAMOND P rice MUSSELS Minced Clams Wax Paper Dyes and Tints Case 24, 2.95 " Veg. and Fruits Mixed ™* fl o Can 23C Can OOC Roll IOC CARNATION-NESTLE'S SUPPER MEAT SPECIALS WHITE ROSE BORDENS-LAND'0 LAKES U. S. CHOICE A "4 FRESH-LEAN ^k ^V ELDERBERRY JELLY EVAPORATED MILK LB PORK /UCL B LEGS OF LAMB Z^ J^ G SHOULDERS ^X -% Cans A \^JP 10-oz.' 1 *^C HONEY-OUBED • , +• ' FRESH-KILLED ^^ ^^ BONELESS ^\ -^ LB Briskets >% 1 C hB- FRYING XQc FLAGSTAFF MAINE Corned Beef • V-r A CHICKENS %J// STUEBEN

FROZEN TASTY-ASST. SUGAR-CURED SCHICKHAIS CORN PURE-PORK CATSUP Blackberries COLD CUTS Sliced Bacon Sausage-Meat 14 0Z Box Z5C 39c ^ 21c Lb. <3/C Cello. Bag 1 **7n ' ' ORDER YOUR CHRISTMAS TURKEY NOW! 1 yt Bottle CENTRAL MARKET, Inc. 366 Springfield Avenue, corner Beechwood Rodd Delivery Service Summit 6-4211-2-3-4 i FOR CHRISTMAS—MISTLETOE-HOLLY-WREATHS-CHRISTMAS TREES-PINE CONES-ORDER TODAY FOR BEST SELECTION IHf SUMMIT HttAU), MURS0AY. OfeEMKi i, 1941 Carroll'* tfet taslathp prtv&sf* ef offtrin* thin to the public The scarcity of women's wear- ing apparel has dictated the selec- tion of a which eal Estate Carroll's 1* offering to the public A Word to the Wise AND8USINESS tor the first time this season. The list includes, among other things, lamp* mounted on lucit* bates Apprevtd Kill, tote of Summit, who died and examples of cranberry glass la 191C. He Summit Truat Com- which have gone into the con- MOTORIST i $wmit E»tot« p$ay, triutet, wa# allowed 1 per struction of two urn-shaped vases "- Walter L. Httfiald, It cent on the corpus of $84,961,91 la and a Large circular compote. th« fifth Intermedia* Do net n»q\tct your ear! Most dealers haw the bequeat to Addle P. Hill, Cleve- Cranberry glass i« distinguished ; in the Mtate of Otorg by its dark crimson color and a land, Ohio, and Miu Mary Base mere new ear ordtrs than they will be able to percentage of pure gold mixed Donnell of Hotel Beechwood, Wil- Into the composition, before it U fill during 1946. 6«al I Lumbir liams * Denapsey, prootort, re- allowed to harden. In addition, ceived *760. Other balance* re- there is displayed a selection of Let us help you protect your transportation. ported were MfiMM for MM.wine sets and decanters and a pair Company Eliza Anderson of Hoboken, and of pale rose-colored lamps with crystal prisms. It. Summit Henry Hill of Waltham, Maw. One legatee, Jamei S, Hill bad died In order not to neglect the ap- We are now prepared to offer AntHoriicd Dealer For aince the prior accounting and bis parel angle, Carroll's also features several lingerie Items and knitted portion had been added to another Complete Car Service, including sweaters which harmonize with YORK OIL BURNERS bequest, aa the will provided, the leather and cord handbag*. Troop 15 is sending two boxes with food in will hear from her and her family. The letters will Motor, Body, Painting, Welding, „ SAUB fc SERVICI report aald. Philips Exeter Acad- them for a Girl Scout in Vardo, Norway. First It travel back and forth and this is how International emy also la a legatee. Christmas Club Payments Is going to the Girl Scout Council; then it will be Friendship Is started. Tires, Parts, and Accessories for given to one of the Girl Scouts' families in need SCRIBE—Troop 15. FUEL - OIL of food. Virginia MacDotiald and Mary Ann Thome are We are putting In a few sheets of writing paper, pictured from left to right. all Ford, Mercury, and Lincoln For Oil Burner Costume Jewelry a few envelopes, and our address, hoping that we Repairs Cars. Christmas Motif telephone to Police Headquarter) City Qerk Frederick C. Kent*, A new awning ordinance paise William Matteo purchased for J237 Come in today and let us check your car for All Makes Risk Estate Sells its first reading awning fixtures to a plot of land on Ashwood avenue Call Summit 4-0525 At Carroll's be at least seven feet above th near the Railway Valley Railroad. the winter months. The Christmas season Is being Union PI. Property sidewalk and flaps thereon no Mrs. Charlotte Ganz of Edgemont observed at Carroll's Department lets than six and a half feet abovi road paid $2,000 for a lot at the ire by a window displaying a the sidewalk. A penalty claus< corner of Edgemont and Summit variety of gifts appealing to the To Thomas Balish was included. Permit* costing f avenues. Guildford Motors, Inc. Christmas shopper. Thomas Balteh of 77 Kent place will be required of those wishlnj 520 Springfield Ave. Summit, N. J. Costume jewelry has a place in boulevard, president of Balish & to install awnings after the en' Son, 1 Beechwood road, recently, actment of the ordinance. PARIS SLIPS the window and represents a good Open—8 A. M. to 6 P. M. Daily—8 A M. to 1 P. M. Saturday collection. Much of It was ac- concluded the purchase of a Bec- Bur«Mil Rayon Crept A resolution was passed author Bellows quired at an early date In antici- tion of the block which is bounded in tearose or white — 32-11 izing the city solicitor to execute Summit 6-4200-4201 pation of the demand, and care Is by Beechwood road on one side an agreement with David Ludlow, $1.98 • $2.98 SPECIAL RESERVE manifested in Its selection. It in- and Union place on the other. The cludes spray pina, earrings, and area Is 100 feet on Beechwood architect In amount of $100 to Kays Shop 100 Summit Avt, bracelets of unusual design, suit* road by 81 fe«t on Union place, make preliminary sketches when able for both formal and informal and Includes the stores of B. L. and as If the City Hall Is moved from its present structure to Ham occasion*. HERBERT F. RAWLL Schloaser, J. W. Brown, F. A.. De- Rienzo, C. G. Meyers, E. A. Butler, ilton School. Dressing table sets of luclte, an Founder and President of Mrs. Gertrude Gross, overseer Singer unbreakable composition similar Christmas Club Amy McDowell, office of Judge P. C. Triolo and S. Balish & Son,ot the poor, was appointed public to glass In appearance, are dis- officer to succeed Walter T. Smith, played beside religious objects, in- Five hundred and fifty million beverages. resigned from the Sub-Standard Sewing Machines sluding porcelain figurines and dollars were distributed to seven The property, which belonged to Housing Committee. crucifixes for those who are re- million six hundred thousand the Risk Estate, was partially de- In the sale of city-held land by ligiously inclined.) A word about Christmas Club members by five stroyed in 1899 by one of the most Repaired the porcelain figurines to oxplain thousand banking and savings In- extensive and destructive fires I that they represent a selection stitutions and other organizations ever witnessed in Summit. The Your Erom a company which has given during National Prosperity Week, fire, which destroyed ten buildings and damaged two others, started All Free starting Monday, November 26, ac- Others Estimate! cording to an estimate given out at 2 :60 a. m.., on July 2, and lasted SPENCER by Herbert R. Rawll, founder and for 16 hours causing a damage Will Rest president of Christmas Club, a estimated at $85,000. Fire depart- You I Once Again corporation. ments from Madison, Chatham, because it will Morrlstown and Short Hills were TREADLE MACHINES The total distribution Is 10 per bq Individually ELEGTKDIGD cent ahead of last year and repre- called, the last two responding De$lgned to im- sents a high since the year of the with apparatus and firemen to VACUUM CLEANERS prove posture REPAIRED bank holiday. The average per- man same. Beechwood road at and relieve FRESH EG6S member distribution Increased to that time was known as Kelthock Hoover — Electrohu fatigue. approximately $72 aa compared place,- and the space now occu- Apes — Royal — Eureka with $70 last year. The total num- pied by Balish & Son, originally Westlnghouse — Premier at your door! ber of individual members parti- housed the Summit Post office, General Electric — All Others LEATHER cipating this year shows an in- and before and after that various AU Work Guaranteed businesses. COM crease of six hundred thousand SUMMIT SEWING over a year ago. In the near future, Mr. Balish for the EXECUTIVE 11 12 We are pleased to announce »4/5qf. 12 bottles Five local Institutions partici- plans to remodel the second floor SCPTOKTS MACHINE SERVICE and modernize the shop windows r«r Uitmn, (Ml Mi Bnul* pated In the distribution of Christ- C F. FUUREH, Mjr. Handsome accessories In gold-tooled sheepskin... the resumption of delivery on the ground floor. mas Club funds—Citizens Trust MARGARET K. PROCTOR Su. 6-0210 Company, First National Bank, Ideal gifts for the executive office or home library. service in this area. Call 8 Woodland Are. So. t-mi-Vf 96 Summit Ave. Summit The Summit Trust Company and It Wo Anwer Call Su. ••ODSS-'W Summit Pedjeral Savings and Loan Christmas Carols Portfolio file for answered and CH. 4-3777 Association and the Hill City Sav- ings and Loan Association. December 15-24 -« unanswered correspondence, $18.00. 1 Beechwood Road Wastebasket, $18.00. Ashtray with First Notional Bonk Applications of the Summit And Trust Company hardware and of Eastmans, both lighter and removable glass Phone Su. 6-1U2 A. Bahooshian Springfield avenue merchants, to Hon. Charles P. Taft Declares Dividends broadcast / Christmas carols from tray, $18.50. Bookends, $18.50 pair. WE DELIVER Chatham Township The Board of Director* of The dusk until 9 p. m. between First National Bank and Trust cember 15 and 24, were approved Company ot Summit has declared Tuesday night by Common Coun- Of Otc 17, 8. Department of State (XCIUSIVI WITH a regular dividend of S3 per share cil. and an extra dividend of 50c per A resolution was passed grant' Subject) The V. S. and the Future of Europe" BLACK, STARR HORHAM [ share, payable on December 21 to ing permission to Ciba Pharma- shareholders of record on Decem- ceutical Products, Inc., to continue CENTRAL AVENVI, EAST OKANGE, N. 1. ber 14, 1915, agreement with city on direct NEW YORK WHITE N.AIN5 OOPS, JUST TOO BUSY This Tuesday, Dec. 11, 8:15 P. M.

to write an ad this week m LETT U uSs REPUTE YOUR Morrlstown' High School Auditorium

CHRISTMAS is almost here Other Lecturet to comet Jan. IT, Owen Lattimore JOIN the rush' and see all iii ntiquei s Feb. U, John Scott the charming little Trinkets, mad things; gifts We'll Gladly Quote on • Antique raetalware can be re> plated to restore Its full beauty and Admuwlon $1.00 Full Information at Morrlstown wrapped gratis for you. » CHROME utility Flatware holloware chande- Open • SILVER liers or speclnl pieces reflnished to P your specifications. Phone for quo- Friday • CADMIUM tations. and • COPPER Saturday • NICKEL MARINO'S Or Other Flnlihe* Give Them Records fP» ""Si 641 West Front — Plalnfleld • L« A it • CALL 64242 • MERRY CHRISTMAS ...... BING CROSBY Including Whit* Christmas Get this Book— FREE! LA BOHEMB PUCCINI Here's a new, bandy and prac- tical GUIDE which provides yra COMING TO SUMMIT •with an accurate method of de- CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA termining tor yourself just what modernization your home needs. FAMOUS ARTISTS OF LA SCALA OPERA No more gueMlng what to do with living room—dining room- kitchen—bath—bedroom or porch to make them more llvabis and' IN DAYS charming. H.M.S. PINAFORE..GILBERT AND SULLIVAN WANTED 7 This booklet provides carefully worked-out CHECK LISTS which tell you at a glance exactly what should be done. It helps you avoid pitfalls; eliminates unnecessary work; saves you DOL- THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE LARS. It Is brim-full of novel ideas for transforming dult, THE NEW uninteresting spaces into charming quarters—for turning waste GILBERT AND SULLIVAN apace to use. It is profusely illustrated, and includes helpful hints galore. Fifittm Cms Thlt booklet la a MU8TI Before you modernize, be sure to get ALICE IN WONDERLAND your copy. It's absolutely FREE and Involves no obligation of Rigt FahBtlngs 1946 HUDSON any kind. " THE SELFISH GIANT Simply dip oat and mall coupon for yonr copy of "38 Ways to MODEIINIZB YOUR HOME." Aet now — while the matter is China Brk-A-Brae TO CINDERELLA' THE SNOW GOOSE before you. 'TWAS THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS OUR NEW AND SPACIOUS QUARTERS Sifter WfflNrfl IHHUilllvv CINDERELLA A CHRISTMAS CAROL U. S. Building Products Co. 553 Springfield Avt. Berkeley Heights, N. J. OPEN DAILY FROM 8 A. M. TO IS P, M, Write or Phone PEim 6-5185 MacMURRAY & WALLDEM MOTORS RECORD AND Plenty of FREE Parking Now Located at APPLIANCE SHOP Qentlemon: — Flense send me, without NOEL MAIL obligation, my FREE copy ot "38 Ways to MODERNIZE] YOUR HOME." 312 BROAD STREET RADIO REPAIRING COUPON UMBELS - FIFTH FLOOR • NEW TORK Name ,, TODAY! SU. 6-3150 20 l.xPiwwd M. In. 4-BS7 Summit H. J, Address I THIS CHRISTMAS QTVE HER ONE OF

S MOST PRECIOUS POSSESSIONS...

She doesn't think of It at a mere o*ny-tH ..iSS.W«* '" quisltely fashioned handbag Ii an Important part of her costume, reflecting her own good taste, and one she will be proud to carry with a flourish.

f

TOP TO BOTTOM A black broadcloth bag by "Jen- ny." Zipper compartment inside ... Lucite clasp. 13.95*

An overwhelming favorite with fashion-conscious women. Red, black, or brown cobra with mock tortoise shell frame. 29.95*

U • Fetal soft calf by Bath ... a pouch-fashioned bag with zipper closing; Fitted with comb, mir. ror and change purse. Black only. 35.98*

It's Corde for a "go-everywhere" hag. Black only, with an opaque <>and tuck a Dainty shell frame. 23.98*

lJii-'i,

A-sparkling conversation piece by Lujean ... a black sequined eve- ning bag with contrasting colored in Her Qift Handbag flowers. 29.98* *Fhu lft* Federal ftx

It'i the "extra touch" that she'll appreciate ... HAKDBAOa — STRMTrLOOR I the thoughtfulness beyond the giving of a gift. So if you're saying "Merry Christmas" with a handbag this year, slip a dainty hankie inside. 1.00 to 3.00

Batiste hankie with deep corners and edges of lace. 3-00 :.•}•. •••• White hankie embroidered with tiny forget-me-not3. 1.00 Swiss spun rayon hand-embroidered and scalloped.

HANKIE BAR — STREET FLOOR 10 THI SUMMIT HgftAU?, THUJtSPAV, MClMU *. IMS ULB.Cwp. Toys - -rOys Announces Hew Testing Table •II ond The L. A. B. Corporation of Union place announces a new test table that vibrates and shakes like a freight ear, wen to the piteb and toss, to test packages and products to be sure they will ar- rive in 2ood condition and will ^•N\ "work" without home tinkering. One hour's test will equal a coast to coaet freight trip. Freight car bumps and jolta cause a substantial part of the freight damage lose claims of American Railroads which are ex- pected to reach $100,000,000 this year, an increase of 60% over 1941. This represents three mil BY TH€ SELECTION. TOP QUAUTVi' lion man days of production time, not including administrative time. Better package testing will reduce Gift Wto for Vtrv Young Houfknpm these losses. Overseas shipping losses were reduced 90% between GRAPEFRUIT AND ORANGES FREE! the time of Caaa Blanca and V-J Mkkay ami Donald Day by better packaging. CHOCK FULL Of VITAMIN C DOLL HOUSE Cdmie Book fAT THEM ANP P&INK TH€M by Wait Dhnvy ff-HtALmvyov'D 8B/ HRMTIUE Tmutyfagt* -All Ntw StcHu V 98c « Brimful of Rich Juice Choice of living room, dtalng room, bedroom, toth i Ctfor. MmoU, welli mide pieces fritMully paturned aft« *• n»l tbisg. Com* In T«4en/ far Yew Ctw. FLORIDA ORANGES SWEET AND JUICY Color I Action I Sound I /Aft Mck*y and Donald Two eccentric shafts, oae under Ib. each end of a strong table cause PINEAPPLE VARIETY mesh bag the table to vibrate with a circu MAGIC VICTORY! lar motion In a vertical plane, and i LOAN . '• '111 I'!'»ir/j wit)} a displacement about the ! HEAVY WITH JUICE FLORIDA same M the maximum deflection b EXTRA LARGE SIZE 98° of average freight car springs and GRAPEFRUIT ™~*"™ 2 15' at a frequency similar to their SWEET THIN SKINNED ciriDinA 4 A AA BIKE natural frequency. The shaft a one end of the table can run either Rattle Push BASKET synchronously or out of phase with TANGERINES S?Z 12 C3 with the shaft at the other end, or Medium Siz* Fresh Grain 1.25 Lift op tha film and th» 1.39 at a different speed. As a result, bch the table has a mixed motion and Hew Crop Ib. Uskti cntartalalsg: sounds writing disappears like Has strong metal supports \t | Fresh Egg Plant California Broccoli «b«n It's puU«d ty tin 25- TEXAS BO heavy loads can be easily a "pitch and toss" in addition to Crisp and Fraih—Florida « M Firm Canadian inch'handle. magic! Pencil Included. carried. Two sturdy straw. its vertical and horizontal move- CLEAN* BRIGHT ments. The rhythm is similar to 6reen Peppers . . M3< i Yellow Turnips freight cars (all it lacks Is the IM 0 0M Q train whistle). The package re- Fvn for Ewrybody Pitted Dates ' "™"Now Crop '" peatedly bumps a fence secured to Girl's the table, giving it shocks similar With for Chrhtmat to car bumping or train jerks. Smaller packages may be stacked or larger boxes strapped down to duplicate actual freight car load TEA POT 23-Inch ing methods used. - Thus the table motion duplicates those of the floor of a rough rid' TEA BINGO ing freight car in both magnitude BABY and direction so that packing V, Ib. 1 Q method* may be comparatively pkg I C A. good old faroitt! Lot* of entMrUismint for Icng tested for efficency/rind coat, EAT, AND BE DOLL winter erealngi. Tea Pot Tea Bags <«>••*» ^ Table size 5' /*. 5'. Capacity 1000 lbs. / Upton's Tea .. : their Vitamin C, citi The vibratloir test machines will ot tniamin v~./( , ,alr lource Salada Tea w i and nboflavm and tie rich in H»r»'s,Fun for Mil expedite new product design, by ™,V"7<""" Md C°PPM> •» well M itn Indicating immediately those weak' White Rose &S port»nt fruit sugars. 8.75 nesses which otherwise show up ... DC S *,Wea Jt'1 °' golden beautiet this only in protracted field tests; ac- Tender Leaf Tea y r the for v 5 ^7. ™ "laluwi «">d enjoy eatin gg celerate life .and fatigue tests. and dnnkinfkingi them ofteoftenn. " Her eyes more and hev long laiihcs art definitely "glamour to jou. Show resonanae, flexure of struc- Versatile as the prism, on grandma's • "TlCSil-Jiir ,]\, ,,t H.II lhl mfvr rtrl.. <•,,„ i,.,,nrs t beautiful dresi. Composition liend. ture, fastener/ l'oosenese, welding; chandelier, citrus fruits can i California M__-- uiurse. oerv e theh mi in salads, u appetizers i NincjLyon arms and leg*. o: weakness, settling and operability maSm dishe^ s and desserts. ' \ Gtinl l/«ion Ham™*,,; Servic, under vibration; aid production . Here are two brand new jdea, for ,erv. « CbuKh St"Ne w Wu? quality control, by indicating va- 5m TOMATO JUICE >ng these healthful food,. ' j £&».•«& "yw coU«Ucn „, cmw Othtr Beautiful Dolls 98c to 13.9J riations from previous standards 4l football fame in component parts, jolnte, fast- j Nlme eners and workmanship^ assure Fteshpck j SJAU tba family can enjoy i correct operation on delivery, af- ' this tlrilUng gam*. Brery i ter transportation shocks, thus play«hlsownquart«rl)ackl eliminating field service, and pro- i *— moting good will; reduce freight Built to Last damage losses, and inconvenience T, DRINK" ' Mil Look WonJwMUnJtr tb Christmas T>M in collecting claims, avoid hidden damage often uncollectible; avoid 14 oi.' Broiled Grapefruit delays due to parts replacement; Grand Vnton bottle economize packing, by selecting J^* and comparing various package designs, so that a satisfactory V EOITOR V* <*» __* Walkil|g\ strong package can be had &t least cost; allow visual study, thus eliminating dependency upon the 30-lntn DOG inaccuracies of field reports and Wheelbarrow guesses. 1.9S 1.39 The L. A. B. Corporation la a Bright ted and Hue vitli I - pioneer manufacturer of vibration dseal design of a frisky dog. Pull the string and a» walks along, M nil* » UttU ptt M equipment. It has supplied the Tos^ Hot Cewfl^ you eiei s»wl S9T»n and a half-Inch height. needs of many laboratories and of Cat From The Finest Corn Fed Porkers Government contractors. It is the only manufacturer of three di- Stv«n-Cvp Capacity MALTEX ColonialDnlgn..-, Lovely Lacamed Finish ; mensional vibration machines and of tables simulating actual freight PORK SHOULDERS car vibrations. Besides the stand- CEREAL /Child ';» V SILEX ard machine, a special machine Is SWEET TENDER MEAT s COFFEE made to customer specifications. ECONOMICAL Ib. TABLE ANU War experience demonstrated that E MAKER A. B. vibration-tested products Tuna Fish Sr ^—27/ 29' CHAIR SET work right upon delivery even at distant destinations and further Evaporated Milk x;Branrd "cans4-35' ; TENDER JUICY-FLAVORSOME, 3.25 GRADE that successful new design can be fSrann Raane Freshpak Brand No. 21 completed much sooner, Ureen DvailS siic«d-Franeh Style can I PORTERHOUSE AA&A 45' T»ble top. mft(ie A* a Makei deliolosi oof fee All power and happiness are SMOTHERED WITH ONIONS-A MAN'S TREAT •Teiy time. Guaranteed Whole Kernel Corn 2S t 1 against h«»t breakage. spiritual, and proceed from good- M c haf M Onto Wlndtor chairs. Coffee measure Included, ness.—Mary Baker Eddy. Rice Dinner tn d Ar5 SIRLOIN STEAK " 33< The occurrences that come to a Spaghetti Dinner Bov FRESH KILLED-PLUMP BREASTED A A man are the fruit of his own c ib S»« Mat's CooJrm' character.—Emerson. Spaghetti Sauce »' ri4/ CHICKENS BROILIRS, FRYERS and FOWL -1) J} Now Avai/abfe/ A fl Pancake Flourj8 ;li ;,24/pr,12/ The Famous IlregtMe GranadaCocoa ;: ;12^ SAUSAGE MEAT ^Z '^It »i:H\E CHAMPION DUrUBII • nvIIHI Your Vitamins iarVUr SLICED BOLOGNA —- 25 The tire that rtays safer longer, and b HEW ENGUND STYLE lb the only tir» built with tte famona Hi-Ho CrackersS"n.h".'pk fl21^ PORK ROLL Oear-Orlp Tread; ertra Strom; 8aftl- filau Roaster l.Uft Xoclt, Onm-Dippod Cord Body; and Big tnongb for a alx-ponnd Saftl-Sand Oonstraotlon for gnateij roaat. Oan be nied, too, as strength anl longer mileage, a casserole. Holds every bit of good fiaTor In, OXYDOL ; "^AVAILABLrE ••*••

W BUY NOW ON OUR EASY \.AV AWAY OR BUDGET PLANS •>•*:. j *0«P(-LAKES-NEWBEAUT™" rf ^

DELICATE WASHABLES pk'9- | J|/ Camay Soap; Furniture Polish v,-*.,',' „>hM.'J [.. ! overlie n THE CHRISTMAS cake FJ ". CLUB WAY • • • at Savings Institutions 356 SPRINGFIELD AVL SUMMIT displaying this Emblem am each drive or walk, is which or red, ar* a real find, aad may be yellow pine, cedar, arbor vttt, The 1MI edition of The Old Btttsjr ROH had Hotting on to gather anything suitable. worked icto sprays or laid on the spruce and fir, are espacinlly good. Farmer"! Almanac, is its loJrd Be Careful How to Cater Prisoner of War Thoma* G. Es- Holiday Greens OMMS of all kinds and si*e« ex- mantel piece among green Hemlock sheds Its needles too ouuecutiv* annual Issue—4a the utt, Su Francisco, who stitched branches. They c*n be shellacked cept the very pltcby ones, which soon. SUM fooaat-and at toe same With Candles secretly at night to make an On Every Walk are fine for open fires); cones of too, To Winter Birds Ground trailers can be fathered prict. Several years ago Doctor the white pine, spruce, tiny hem- Bittersweet, If not in protected Be careful with Christmas candW American flag which «u flown An article la the Christian at the last minute or, if snow James B. Hawley of the Summit territory, holly, and bay-berry, are Brigham of the American Anti- lea, gays the «ational Safety rom the roof of the Naoefcsu PO Science Monitor suggests a way lock cones, and acorns, all are use- 0 Club, wbo last year estab- added as iouitf. Some iiilgiil like" quarian Society of Worcester, Council. Though seldom used any Yank of making sure of having plenty afile. Hose hips can be collected and kept in the cellar if moistened to use milkweed pods, either MasMuausetU, said that the OFA longer on Christmas trees, candles •—BiEed~a central bureau for infor- of greens for Christmas decora- and coated with white shellac to occasionally. pilots who dropped relief parcels. natural or painted with gold or was not only the oldest contin- are a major fire hazard in the mation and fact-finding is winter tions. That is, to have a carton in preserve their color and shape. Essaff used white duck trousers, silver or colors. uoualjr published almanac in home when placed on window sills some cool, out of the way place, They must be thoroughly dry be- bird feeding, ha* sent out a letter A variety of evergreens make p.j America but also the oldest pub- and mantles where they might Ig- red neckerchiefs, and a blue- and drop into it such materials for putting In the box. Even crab- to those interested in this project. more interesting decorations, ac- squired lication still running under the nite curtains and other decora- bordered Japanese mosquito net as one finds it One way to help apples arc treated this way. cording to the article. White and saop OU.AV,. W! •noursj •ante name, format, and price. tions. The letter: o duplicate Old Glory. do this is to take along a basket Tiny ears of corn, either yellow Catering to the winter bird*. If you would like to Increase the number of winter wild birds that bring color, song, and plea- sure to your garden or home, now Knsge • Newark if the time to start catering to them. If you make a definite start, certainly plan to keep the project active for the rut of the winter because the birds are establishing their feeding centers now. One of the first bird visitors, perhaps, will be the blue jay. If your sta- tions are well supplied, you will discover that he will be giving his -alarm call for other Jays to come *

BROKERS PROTECTED

UECU1IVI VICI PREbIDENI AYES SOMEBODY'S SANTA CLAUS ... thatS you ASSOCIATION "\r~vf•'?:<. \ --: ANTA'S FIRST ASSISTANT . • • thUt S US . j,a •V-.'.rt • /, , .• \ s 12 THE SUMMIT HIRAlD, THURSDAY, DECEMtER t, If4l 5H0HAHY good turner, but my wife Md I fttccpttoa Commits for Low Iracfctn don't like to ttxt another two and MAIL IAILY/ Mor CHIISTMAS! fears or MO of delay getting start- ed in life What do you suggest?" A- This is one of those indi- vidual cases that requires much careful consideration by the vet- eran and his wife, and thoughtful counsellors who kctw him and hi8 community. Two years of suc- THIS cessful study might mean the dif- ference between an ordinary liv- ing and a prosperous agricultural career. First of all, why not talk \v\ with your local county agricultural agent ? (Answers to veterans' problems are supplied by the Division of Veterans' Services, Department of Economic Development, Trenton. Readers should send their ques- tions to that address.) SUPERMARKETS Dorsey Richardson Out Returning from Germany THE MEAT ATLANTIC * PACIFIC TEA CO. through France, T/4 Dorsey Rich- ardson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arth- ur H. Richardson of Waldron ave- • At Advertised in Here's proof that grand eating can be inexpensive. nue, received an honorable dis- WOMAN'S HOME COMPANION This hearty, appetite-pleasing buffet supper costs less than 41 cents a serving. charge on November 25 at Fort for Oeeenber It's "company fare," too! Surprised at such modest cost? You needn't be! Monmouth, Thousands of A&P shoppers have found that with a little planning and Mr. Richardson, who spent 40 months overseas, was attached to regular shopping at an A&P "Super," they can serve meals like this every the 811 Signal Port Service Co. day, and still make their food budget toe the mark! For good eating at and worked at Newport in Wales modest cost, it's hard to beat A&P! and in London. In Germony last May, Mr. Richardson's assign- ments took him to Bremen where he was located for six months. Sgt. Kendall Discharged Returning to the United States t- FLORIDA-New Crop on Thanksgiving day, after tak- ing part in North African and Italian engagements, Sgt. John M. Kendall, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Kendall of 12 Gates avenue, received his honorable discharge from the Army at Fort ORANGES If any armed hoodlums decide to visit Summit, they will have a Monmouth. Sgt. Kendall was at- reception committee awaiting them. This is the promise of Chief of tached to the 1713 Signal Service •A jet Sweet and , Police Edward K. Egan. Here you see Police Sergeant Charles Birch Battalion. demonstrating to some of his fellow officers the operation of a ...»in «**• Full of Juice! Relslng machine gun, which la part of the equipment of the Summit The best portion of a good man's Police Department. Every Monday afternoon Sergeant Birch con- life Is his little, nameless,'unre- i flour ducts a class of Instruction for his fellow officers on the police range membered acts of kindness and of *ioi I" . _. » « 85c Fancy Spinach 1% ««—13c Buy Veterans* A. The law provides that on heating costs up to 30 per cent; They'r. D.M for Fr.ihn.nl SllCOfl BfiGtS COMITOCK M.i.|« J 2c and a.fter July 1, 1943, Commis- Other steps include: insulation of d ANOTHER Queries sioned Officers and enlisted per- wall and ceiling; weathcrsttipping; "i5« Diced Beets "ffi" riOc sonnel of the WAC— not the Wo- insulating behind radiators; proper ... A M Victory men's Army Auxiliary Corps— adjustment of heating plant; insula : Bond shall be entitled to the same tion of boiler, furnace and hot Gold, Merblt or Rolitn nn Tomato Puree % '."23c Q. Tho mother of a veteran rights, privileges and benefits as water tanks; automatic heating cor* POUND CAKE M9CUt20c Fruit Cocktail For EVERY she has heard of a U. S.other member)! of the U. S. Army. trols; keeping room temperatures Jani Parkir - Armed Forces Institute which Any person who sustained a dis- below 72 degrees/ and cutting off 23c Peaches •S»-a »««»24c Christmas .certifies the specialized training ability in the Women's Army unused rooms. ^ DROP COOKIES Auxiliary Corps prior to July 1, deceived in service In order to Gil us today for furthtr Informition about help a veteran qualify for college 1943, should file claim with the how to keep warmer thii winter. Orcfa entrance. She asks how to obtain U. S. Employees Compensation your Storm S«h now—before tht nnh. «uch a certificate, Commission. For clear vision, we Install I A, Write to the United States Storm Sash made with Llbbey. 'Armed Forces Institute, Madison, Q. An Army veteran In a rural Owem-Ford Window Glass. ^i county in New Jereey writes, "I had one year of agricultural col- ,[ Q: The wlf« of an Army vet- lege and my wife and I rented 40 eran asks, "If a veteran is in acres from dad to start fanning. J. D. LOIZEAUX pay received from the firm?" The Army found out I had a Ll'MBERCO. ' A. Yea, however, there may be knack with machines. Now I don't ;,a reduction in subsistence allow- know which line of work I want. 'ance depending upon the amount I feel I need more college to be » 361 SOUTH AVE. PLAINITELD ;of earnings. • ' Q, A former Marine asks, "Does 'tthe insurance granted servicemen t'by the Government contain, any ' restrictive provisions respecting RIGHT RIGHT j; military service, occupation, or IN THE IN THE Atravel which might limit the pro- Packaged f toction under the Insurance re- s talned—now that I'm out of the ORANGES MOHICUKS Ronzoni Easily Prepared Foods Service?" Ronzoni Pastena pl9 c -A. No. Fresh Prunes "ggj r ^ ^ Corned Beef Hash ARMOUR'S ^ 22C College Inn TS;irv.r1Bc Foods for Baby! Household Items Tenderonf "«««' 1 rtt.Jc Corned Beef HashKY ^22« Q. A woman reader Inquires, Llbby's ""WHKr11 ««8c iVPmfiSs2tt19i%r2iB Spaghetti Dinner ; "1 was discharged from the Wc- Vegamato ^•33c Armour's Treet «**34c i men's Army Auxiliary Corps but HEARING AID SERVICE Llbby's TofsV «'9e Window Sprayers APE 14c Argo Corn Starch >*> }c Tobln's Brunch "-33c V<8 Cocktail ':."15cr31c C9mDi.e|i>g 3^. 24c Floor Wax ,„&&« »-»*25c Nabisco Oysterettes 6 f ' c BATTERIES.CORDS.CARRIERS.EAR MOULDS FOR ALL AIDS Diced Carrots «S^t 13c Cawplie"8 P B ' Broadcast Redi-Meat'" 33c Clapp's TOWIH" i"8"'Bce Gold Dust . . '»•<*'<..*47 17cc Graham Crackers N»»C««i«Ot Z'a 20c 20 c etiili Con CameaWi" 29c SOFT WATER Authorized Dealer Carrots }&% C from every Clapp's ST file Lux Toilet SoapAv a, 3 «'•• 20c Plllsbury's Farina »«^1 Be Ravioli CHEF MWB ««"«1 5C WESTERN ELECTRIC HEARING AIDS Cecl Cottl Peas Clapp'ScE^L»«t2:c27c LifebuoySoap a,,3^20c Mello-WheatEs'r *j»*-15c ,,,.,5f FAUCET 1 A Dor8etCHIBKEN4WI((N1I IIH c Sauerkraut Beechnut TRS >«8C "33" Laundry Bleach^ 12C Corn Flakes twmui ««^oc Dorset focllltln, yeort of l B&M Baked Beans Beechnut 'SW • 1 tc Zero msiXmm t5c Pancake Flours Dhillinc CHICKEN PERMUTIT •»p«ri.nc«1mal(«u«lh« logical choice rnillipS NOODLE SOUP 4.IMTKM Io hilp you with your htarinj prob- 50 ForrtieNew p c E Conqueror Beans Berber's ^jf^ 2 Y',27c Unit Starch . -^Itc Aunt Jemima ^ 5f5 ^2c pjjjjjj^ TOMATO WMK1IN* l.mi. AuHioriied dealer (or Wutwn r a SOUP works like magic! Western Electric i 2c o I Ilithlc H«grlng AWi. Van Camp's Simple home appliance FUEK BEMONSTRATION Pabena . . . •«•*.• 19c Bull Dog Blue . »«.»*9c Baker's•«*»«• Cocoa %?:10e MushroomSonpKE»sTONE' :t-16eY m^'ics water eloriflmly p 1 soft. Get details from: Campbell's Pablum i-.rff.i9c »«^39c DogYummiesMl!&'«»^8i! Baker'So't'ACocoaX.19c Brill's ""SSScTSAUCE »»-«14«' JUU1WAM —TRY THIS CONVENIENT SUBURBAN SERVICE- Campbell's r CHICKEN Sweet Potatoes "17e hll' ODLE SOUP 111! VDRititleorVtK. l LUX FLAKES, CAMAY SOAP Flako Pie Crust I oi. pig. 13c HEARING AID BATTERY SERVICE iffrla S SCOOP When Available 519 MAIN STREET 240 LORRAINE AVE, When Available MAST ORANGB IJFl'KK MONTOLAIR MMVMM 198 Fur illibos, clilbet Hid 3 cakes SWAN SOAP ORANGE 3-1205 M0NT0LA1R Z-1028S *entr*' hk CROSS When Available KNGINEKBING t'O, CHURCH*THEATRE*SCHOOL Hearing Equipment II IImini HI. WE I.Q038 PRICES EFFECTIVE IN SUPER MARKETS AND SELF SERVICE STORES ONLY tVotttleld, S. 1. Bea New Store

25% OFF

EVEN though acute shortages of merchandise still exist-Busch & Sons think it good, sound business to offer this substantial reduction to command quick clearance prior to moving into their new store. Every- thing in our large stock is included-except merchandise price fixed by law. Don't miss this opportunity to Select Now for Christmas. The earlier you are, the larger the selection. A deposit will reserve any article until wanted. ••• • . BUSCH & SONS GO FORWARD WITH CONFIDENCE > V located at the corner of Springfield Ave. and Beechwood Rd. 1.' THE NEED for expansion is a real tribute to fiusch & Sons in the very heart of the business district. ability and sound business policy. We have outgrown our Our large modern store will bring to Summit every shopping present store, thanks to your confidence and whole hearted "•'/-: advantage of the large New York and Newark Jewelers. We patronage. We believe firmly in Summit, its people and its will have a much larger selection than ever before—so there future. We go forward with confidence and with justified will never be a necessity to leave Summit to make all import- pride announce a New and Greater Busch & Son to be ant jewelry and gift purchases.

^

CHARGE ACCOUNTS BEGINNING DEC 14 for Your Convenience Open Eves Till Xmas

375 SPRINGFIELD AYE., SUMMIT Mftntgonmyi Ala. SPRINGFIELD. Cor. HIGH. NEWARK 875 BROAD. Cor. WILLIAM, NEWARK BUYING OFFICES! NKW YORK-ANTWERP, BELGIUM H THE SUMMIT HEtAlO. THURSDAY. WCCMItt *. TVt Mitfcorfbt Cfcwdi Bishop T.R.Ludbw "The Messiah" Kev. O. C Nairn Need Religious Woodland and de Forwt Avenues Sunday, •:« a. m., Church Rev. W. O. KinMivlnf, Sector , School meeting in all department!. Rev. E. F. Frwck, Curate Guest On Program To Be Presented Robert R Diefendorf, general Tolerance In U. 1 Services at Calvary Church on Religion superintendent. December 9, the Second Sunday in " At Central Church At the morning worship hour, Advent, will be Holy Communion * Of Young Adults 11 o'clock, th« Pastor's sermon Says Dr. W.B. Pugh at 8 a. m.; Church School at 8:30,,^ The MeMiaJb, which will be eung topic will be "The Devoured Book." _ a. m.; and Morning Prayer and%J POR WHAT HAVE WE TO BE THANKFUL? On Tuesday evening, December by the Central Presbyterian Choir In an address before the Men's The Youth Fellowship will meet| the CentVaT PrelbyterTsu Sermon by the Rector at 11 a. m. 11, the Young Adult Chapter of on Sunday, December IS, at 4:30, club of (A Prayer) Calvary Church will sponsor » at the parish house at T p. m. Ail! church, at their annual fall ban- During the latter service there is is a work that has enjoyed con- a nursery (or small children in the When we look about us at the acts of discrimination program to which all members of junior and senior high school stu- j qUet Fridav evenjllCi November tinuous popularity for over two parish house. 'and prejudices that shadow our whole existence; when we the parish are most cordially in- dents are invited to attend. 30, Dr. William Barrow Pugh made centuries. It made its first ap- Calvary Vouth vited. It will begin at 8 o'clock at Notices i an appea| for re]igious tolerance look about us at the riots and lynching* that threaten our pearance in 1741, as a benefit per- The Junior Hi Fellowship will which time the movie, "Thy Will onday at 8 p. m., the Offic;al jn America. Dr. Pugh, who is the brothers; when we look about us at the economical condi- formance for the Foundlings Hos- jneet on Sunday afternoon at 3:30 Be Done," which deals with the Board will meet at the parish stated clerk of the Presbyterian tions, the back streets through which the sewage of our pital in London, where the com- p. m. in the parish house and the church's work in China, will be poser was then residing, house. Church and who is a veteran of presented. Following thu there Ypung People's Fellowship at 7:30 '•'neighbors passes, the crumbs from our neighbor's tables Though its first reception was Tuesday-The Woman's Society two wars as a chaplaiu, spoke of will be an address by Suffragan p. m. On Monday evening, Decem- •-we want to hide our facts in hurt and shame and cry out not tumultous, the oratorio was of Christian Service will meet j the heroic deeds of American Bishop Theodore R. Ludlow on ber 10, members oi the Y. P. F. 1 well received. George Frederick at the parish house. The program y0UI1g men in the widely spread „„ , ,"Q God—for what can we be thankful!" "Lessons from the Orient,*' will attend the meeting of the ' Handel, the composer, was already for the day: 11:3d—Business meet- j theaters of war which »he visited. Bishop Ludlow spent many Morristown District which a familiar figure to his London ing; 1 p. m.—Pot luck luncheon Dr. Pugh told of the vast enn- years in China ae a. missionary will be held at Grace Church, When we hear the piteous, continuous cry from our audience, his musical genius hav- planned by the fellowship commit- : voys of men and material to tilt- and will discus* opportunities la Madison. The Y P. p. js sponsor- brothers in Europe; when the mournful wail of our broth- ing won him a pension from tee. Dessert served by Group X; i Pacific areas; of the application the Orient for Christian Expan- ing a bridge party on Friday eve- Queen Anne. A man of violent Hostesses Group III; 2 p. m., Of modern scientific methods in ers in Asia crowds in about us; when we hear of the mil- sion. ning, December 14, at (he parish temper and coarsest manners, Christmas program bookalogue. | the remote places of the world. lions of "homeless wanderers—sick, hungry, cold, afraid, all A social hour, under the direc- Bishop Theodore H. Ludlow house. Tickets may be obtained nevertheless his generous nature "The Second Christmas'' by John and described air fields and im- j . . , . . at the parish Office or from any E* hope gone—of riots, disease everywhere, of death walking tion of the Young Adulte, will con- and kindly disposition had won H. Holmes given by Mrs. O. C. proved roads m the Pacific islands I r .. .. y '"' unmolested, unafraid, unhampered in those countries—we clude the evening's program. him many friends. member o lhe 2 o n Nelson. Group drawings for 1946 of American construction equal to ! Church School want to hide our faces in hurt and shame and cry out As the years went by, the ora- First Baptist Church Rosary Society are in charge of Mrs. F. A. j those in the U. S. Dr. Pugh paid The regular monthly meeting of ...'„ , ,,"Q God—for what can we be thankful I" torio gradually won a high place Doughty. tribute to the men who worked in the Church Staif will be held ou Rev. David K. BarnweU among the musical offerings of Tuesday, 3;30-The Junior Choir; key place. s like Greenland and Wednesday evening, December 12 Elects Officers; the period. It has become & tradi- will meet at the church. The group along the Persian Gulf. He de- Sunday, Dec. 9 at 8 o'clock, at which time final For what can we be thankful? Thankful—0 God— tional selection for the Christmas is working On special music for ! scribed the rigors of extreme cold plans will l)« completed for the 9:15 a. m. Church school for all season, because of the outstanding For strength! For strength to carry our weaker brothers, Urges Membership Christmas and new gowns are j aab. 28c Therefore all things whatsoever t O'CLOCK IJ-oi. pkg. chlcktn. ID. c jven up head-hunting and quite ye would that men should do toally organized. || Und.r 4 III. 39 f enerally subscribed to Christian- you, do ye even so to them; for The nominating committee, of Corn Muffin Mix \lt FhuryMt60.ri.23 Ib. 59c ity by establishing self-support- this Is the law and the prophets, which Leonard E. Best was chair Loin Chops 55« Ing missions under the guidance SATURDAY, DEC. 8 man, presented the following for Chocolate B5 X 13* PRESTO U Freih-Kill.d, "Grade A" «jf native priests. So grateful were Psalm 01 officers who were unanimously Ib. elected: President, Robert W. Sno-Sheen^iiS. 26™ * m "Today Christianity is again find* Gradi Grod* day^ Lord, beseech you that ye walk confronted by a crucial test of its BEEF AA A 1 Stnt « SUNDAY, DEC. 9 worthy of the vocation wherewith Sailed Nuls •-• ** 15(f strength. Totalitarian govern- fr*th Galatians 6 ye are called. > ments, in their attempt to sup- CHUCK ROAST 29c 25c itafooi Bear ye one another's burdens, One God and Father of all, who Fruit Cocktail S32{ '-• 43? 27c press religion, required state wor- 10 Cut dinner! and so fulfil the law of Christ. Is above all, and through all, and ship on the part of their peoples. Rib Roast " 31c 30c 27c For if a man think himself to bein you all. But the Church will arise again 4SC0 "Grade A" lb Fruit Hllat *f something, when he h nothing, he But unto every one of us is at it did in Roman times, when the Round Tip Roast - 42c 40c 35c decelveth himself. given grace according to the O/JO Haddock ib. 41c Christians went underground to Com But let every man prove his measure of the gift of Christ. Tomato Soup 3 Porterhouse Steak hnty BOSTON avoid persecution and set up altars 51c 47c 40c own work, and then shall he have WEDNESDAY, DEC. 1* BoMl n in the catacombs, where, unmolest- Enriched with Lou«llo Butt.r. Our tinwt quolity. Try it/ rejoicing in himself alone, and not Philippians S Sirloin Steak Mackerel ib. 19c ed, they worshipped God. For 30O 42c 40c 33c in another. CAMPBILl OCIAN SPRAY lb years .force was employed in an Brethren, I count not myself to For every man shall bear his lOli-ci. Round Steak •"••!••• - Whiting ib. 13c attempt to make them worship have apprehended; but this one 42c 40c 35c own burden. Tomato Soup 3 com Cranberry Sauce the emperor, and a huge stadium thing I do, forgetting those things ib. Let him that is taught in the AICO \0V)-*i, Can AUNT JEMIMA Plate Beef 20c Weakfish n>. 29c was built where 80,000 people wit- which are behind, and reaching 20c 18c word communicate unto him that Jir»y SIIMI nessed the martyrdom of thou- forth unto those things which are Hamburger ib. teacheth in all good things. Vegetable Soup 101 Pancake Flour 27c 27c sands of Christians. The emperor before, 27c Be not deceived; God is not DOU JO-Oi. Can Oysters doz. 39c even had his gardens illuminated I press toward the mark for the Pancake Flour^,. H mocked: for whatsoever a man by the burning bodies of Christian prize of the high calling of God in Virginia Leo SUPREME soweth, that shall he also reap. Crushed Pineapple 26^ Glenwood martyrs, serving as lighted can- Christ Jesus. NESCAFE 'rW For he that soweth to his flesh dles. *********************** Cataipjr^W shall ,o/tthe flesh, reap corrufitlpn; .Peanut BulterTi« 26^ Raspberry Fruit Cake "Three years ago the same thing* but lie' tnat soweth' to the Spirit HeinzKefchup ir.u22* took place in Japan, when the shall of the Spirit reap life ever- Mod* from HOLSUM Japanese Christians fled to the lasting. Dill Pickles "'"S.,, 27* Jelly old Colonial rtelp* hills to escape persecution by an And let us not be weary In well 35* 2H.29 emperor who proclaimed that he Calimvma Figs a 24* Peanut Crunch 12-01. Pock*/ in btauliful specially ttaatad aaraV doing: for in due season we shall Rug boord ''box, rauaabl*; with r*produetion» was Identified with the state and reap, if we faint not, 14c of famous Colonial '" should be worshiped as such. Now MONDAY, DEC. 10 Iphat the war is over, they are Orange Pekoe Tea jSHLffc X33c Colosslans S CANNED VEGETABLES emerging once more and uniting Shampooing b Clapp Baby Food Put on therefore, as the elect of to lead their country in the Way OSW "heat-flo" Coffee -124c 2.i ;47c STRAINEP Ofi CHOPPED \\A Sliced Beefs ,•,.•,„.„., God, holy and beloved, bowels of of Christ. Japanese Christians are All Work Called For 4>A-M, jar OV 7>A-o». |ar • I > p Mayfalr HSvTWerklng with MacArthur to jnercies, kindness, humbleness of Acme "heat-flo" Coffee - W" 28c Sauerkraut establish contact with' the farm- mind, meekness, long-suffering; fcr Beans ers, with whom they are formulat- Forbearing one another, and «r atralntt «»tra«al Spina^S« r ing an agrarian program. Bishop forgiving one. another, if any man STRUBLE n Baker of St. Bartholomew's In have a quarrel against any: even P.D.Q. Chocolate Farmdale Peas 1' \5t New York made this statement as Christ forgave you, so also do CHEESE FEATURES concerning the Christiana of ye. BROS. Flavored Syrup Japan: 'the conspicuous thing was And above all these things put Sharp Cheese Chateau *** T\JU JJjjiheir demand that they be recog- on charity, which is the bond of Tel. Mo. 4-1956 1514-M. BLUE 4-oi. M M fc nized as members of the world perfectness. American MOON pkg. BondOst C 49< church.' Nor Is evidence lacking And let the peace of God rule In 67 Bank Street Mukt. aapar aUk 4rlnki, etnl; U adl lea ert»m mndm, ale. of patriotism on the part of Jap- your hearts, to the which also ye MORRISTOWN New Improved Enriched Caveau Shefford J^Z M ** im anese Christians who fought" in ******************** Herb-Ox %& Italy and constituted a unit which Bavarian SS. Cream Cheese3Z°J2l received more presidential cita- Supreme Bread Shredded Wheo tions than any other in that thea- NABIICO , ter. It Is apparent how many sin- DID YOU KNOW? Why poy mow? Graham Crackers ,£ 20c Non« better at any . Ltrft rMBd cere Christians thers are in Japan 20-M. Mine* Meal '"Ib.20e VITA-LINK who wish to see their country . . .THAT FOR THIRTY-TWO •'".'• price! Try o loaf DOKM H4-o«. Pkr. and b* convinced! Loaf enter the universal Christian YEARS WE WERE THE LEAD- 9 Poultry Seasoning 1 •< FOOD SUPPLIMINT ^rotherhood pf nations, and we ING 'PHARMACY IN MILLBTJRN. muit look to them for the regen- NOW WE ARE IN SUMMIT TO eration of their country. OFFER YOU THE SAME CARE- 9-Vitamin Capsules "During the war widespread .Fresh Green FUL AND FAITHFUL SERVICE. llnglt Unit ^ ^ IM Capsulta g. M M^ wm damage which took place, has A Month'. C •• '"'lily Slit $1 O aW made It necessary to rebuild WE ALSO CARRY A COMPLETE Supply On* ^ W C * Month'a Supply Tl Vf J churches and missionaries and the LINE OFi Bunch Parser. **/ jf *" 4 P.rsona I * if **# churches of the United States have Mad* by woild'i lorgait vitamin capiul* monnfoeturen, guaranteed hljh embarked on a program of recon- HOSPITAL SUPPLIES C potency, untqualy pockad Individually (n c«lloph*n«. lns«r*t adtquot* struction which will require 25 ritomin |ntoacef on axctlUnt food aappl*m*nt. VITAMINS Serve tender, delicious California broccoli for • change! AND OTHER SUPPLIES SOAPS — WHEN AVAILABLE Juicy Florida R»pock Hav* your doctor phone HI your praierlptfon. ¥• b will deliver (I to you or hare it ready when you call. • Modlum Slio Oranges' Deion 35c Tomatoes « 33c Camay FREE DELIVERY Jumbo Paical M m Large Juicy Florida Ivory Soap a 6c Fruchtman's Prescription Center Celery stalk 19c 46 Maple St. Summit, N. J. SU. 6-4829 Grapefruit •«* 9c Fresh Green Sweetheart Toilet Soap 2 cakes 13c Crisp California b ch Kirkman's Soap Powder f^ 18c 0 Peppers >» 15c Carrots «» 10c Kirkman's Borax Soap 3 cakes 14c Fancy Red \A/lavir\CY Woih*» Wlndowi *) <-M. |,H|, -way Those who like Food Selected Idaho Z «I,, you use ee WINUCA Without Wottr BO >|f HAf^fc CL1*AN«BW Radishes'**** 5c 2 8V2-O*. , 'When hands »et really dirty, MF Potatoes 101.59c Whtn 24-ei. r Hind Cleaner works miracles. Stub- 1 AvallabU Pkg. Pkgs. 19« born greai* and grime vanish, even DUZ 23c from under fingernails and cuticles! Leaves hands white and soft) A boon lowirworkers!A"must"foryoung 15c 24-oz. 1 9-oi. • itersl A blessing for you Grap W Pkg. JmO** Pkgs. 19« who are trying to keep Large, luicioui foncy quolify emperor I'epei opiclalfy pricedl Oxydo AvailMI* : towels, wall) and wood- work free from dirty Cook with hand smudges! No home should be without MF Hand Cleaner. Git the , big red and white shaker FRESH-PURE boxatyour grocer today.

MI or COUP., OAKWOOD. N. j.

**' (Neil McAllister) people an opportunity to state in on rent questions, supply required 37 Summit Avenue PRUNING, CAVITY. WORK, a popular referendum whether forms, and help tenants and land- BLOOMERS Summit 6-1000 SPRAYING, eta they wish to have gasoline .taxes lords fill out the forms properly. sxxx $i,88 GAY STUFFED ANIMALS Specializing In tree removal and other motor vehicle revenues In Union county rent clerks are Phone Summit 6-4262 used for purposes for which these located in Elizabeth, Plainfield Kays Shop 100 Summit Ave. • Colorful washable little "pets" the 8 North Street, Summit taxes were originally assessed. In and Roselle Park. little tots will love. $1.29 addition he asserted that ''our . •It1! WASHING) MACHdJI great highway system is now REPAIRED rapidly deteriorating, and is wholly DAVID J. FLOOD inadequate to meet the needs of NOW IS THE TIME present day transportation." 861 Springfield Avenue to select the Ideql spot for your future home. We Summit 6-3361 SLEEPYTIME DOLLS ng the have a selection of choice lots, fully improved, in Rent Clerks For War • An adorable cuddly doll all Price, Rationing Boards various sections of town, at attractive prices. Consult— to come STEPHENS-MILLER CO. children Jove £ m AA North Jersey's 17 larger War 33 Russell Place RAYMOND W. STAFFORD to sleep with. $ I • #O xpect Summit 6-0029 Price and Rationing Boards will have specially trained rent clerks EASTERN FUEL COMPANY in attendance to help tenants and THE GLEN-OAKS AGENCY 233-239 Broad Street andlords with rent questions. This JACK'S PONY Summit 6-0006 REALTORS INSURANCE has been annouced by District • A strong, prancing steed OPA Director Richard J. Tarrant. 100 Ashlcnd Road Tel. Summit 6-2025 Summit. N. J. FUNERAL SERVICE They will be available for the pub- that will not ANDREW A. McNAMARA throw its rider. $7.45 Funeral Service Summit 6-1387 GENERAL CONTRACTING Concrete Work, Landscaping, Ex- cavating, Masonry, Driveways, Grading, Hauling, Stone JOHN VTTALE GIFTS FOR DAD 101 Park Ave. SU. 6-2853-W HOW wonder* STURDY WORK ful It will be to get INSULATION back to the good old Here's How To Be Good To Yourself c. American way of con* JOHNS-MANVILLB BENCH stantly making things belter and HOME INSULATION If you want your family to dine on banquet quality meats, while paying not a teller... when your Quality 80 Franklin Place penny more than you have to, save without stinting by shopping here. This week's Cleaning services will be' new Summit 6-3320 and improved ...yes, better thin menu Includes— $11.95 i pre-war. -^ ROMANO HOME INSULATION AND ROOFING COMPANY • The gift dad (brother Berkeley Avenue, Berkeley too!) will lllto most! A Heights LEG or SPRING LAMB real heavy duty, man sized SU. 6-6314 or Su. 6-5376 bench, Ideal for the home Grade A and Grade AA shop hobbyist, or just those Estate to Three Children repair jobs mom finds. Grace Baldwin White, who died FRESH KILLED NEARBY J Unassembled. in Summit, November 11, willed her estate to three children. They are a daughter, Esther; two sons, ROASTING FRY7Ne CHICKENS .37c designated executors, Charles, 17 Grade A [Up to 4 lbs.) Fernwood road, Summit, and John BUFFING SET—Has man/ uses •J,, 70 Seaman avenue, Freeport, L, I. Fresh LONG SHOULDER • Complete set includes buffing wheels—com- Store: 25 Maple Street pounds, etc. For all the polishing and cleaning Main Office and Plant: Nearly one-fourth of all drivers jobs. In fatal accidents In 1944 were of JERSEY PORK Chatham Road, Summit charged with a speed violation, ac- With Butts cording to the National Safety Council. GOVERNMENT SURPLUS SCOOP! LEG or RUMP of MILK FED VEALttf Sears does lt again. Strong aluminum CO#» ' Grade A Ib. «***» box-fiber lined! Leather handle. Size DTC each SHOULDER of MILK FED VEAL FORMAL OR MODERN r A. Fresh BEEF LIVER It's not too late to order Gifts for Christmas \--i Sliced .37c CM*** CONSTRUCTION LOAN from our Catalog Sales Dept. But hurry! •4: fof whichtvw type you plan to build, ••p«ciolfy SMOKED TONGUE deiigned for bullckrs, d«v«top«ri emd individual*. Short Cut • i Sfreom/ined S«rWc« • liberal Termi FREE PARKING IN THE REAR OF OVR STORE LOWEST INTIRIST RATES SPICED HAM or temHiKHon" r 33S Springfield Ave. °w": LUNCHEON MEAT L c .. 9-5:30 Daily FRANKLIN MORTGAGES TITLE GUARANTY co. Sliced % . Va .25c | Summit Sohir

Press Exhihif At Rutgers ^ An exhibit depicting the develop- W ment of the American press will be displayed in the Rutgers Uni- versity School of Journalism for the first three weeks of December, Dr. Frederic E. Mef> win, director of the school, baa announced, Following the showing there, the exhibit will be sent on ft nationwide tour. Event* In the history of the press in this country are featured ln 28 panels which comprise the # •xhlblt. They show the American newapaper not only as a recorder of history, but also aa an active instrument of freedom. Panels which will attract youti- ful attention Include one of the first colored comics, and those ahowing early cartoons, the out- bursts of "yellow journalism" In the late 19th century, and a montage of mechanical processes ^ In newspaper production. " As a group, the panels show both the development of the news- paper and the newspaper's record- Ing of contemporary history. Co

REAL ESTATE AUCTION SALE Dec. 13th, 10 A. M. Buy at a Bargain Price

40? HEYWOOD AVENUE ORANGE, N, J. fitam Biautiful rsilihnci located It- twem Berkeley and Lincoln Avtt. Finest residential section. large kndscttptd plot. Lot sin 100x32B'. Three-story and bate- mtnt frame one-family dwelling having all improvements, vac- uum sleam heat, lit floor, 6 roam>. 2d floor, 7 roonw. 3d Hour, 5 roomi. Three baths, 5 toilett, 3-car frame garage. Owner occupied — immediate poumlon guaranteed, Subject to lint mortgage held by Estate originally t30fl00—now reduced '". 'M50',

hud (or «ololoBu. wllh full Infor- motion. On» of 13 StparaU Prop, •riln to bi Sold m lh«

DAVID, CRONHEIM

AUCTION SALESROOM 4i Brnnford Ft., Ntwark 1 MA 3-1349 <• Hahne & Co., Newark, Open Wednesdays 'til 9 o'dock Visitor 45 Months Japanese Camp forty-five month* la a Jtp camp seems not to tent in any ill effect* for BUii .who U visiting nil niece h*r husband, Mr. and Mra. Scholnick of 729 Spring- avenue. Mr, Gordon, whose is In Los Angeles, weighed lbs. while be was engaged in construction of an airfield on bland whea Pearl Harbor attacked. Upon hi* liberation a prison camp at Hanoka, (Japan, he weighed only 115 lbs., bat recovered lost weight since Although hundreds of prl- fMen were dying from starvation A*0und him, Mr. Gordon attributes survival to his desire to see family again and return to his United States. Had he been less modest he might have jftddad hi* resourcefulness which ' m to learn Japanese in *J&a hope of escaping to Russia by f*W|jr of Manchuria. \'" Sequent beatings took place on iblp, which carried the 1,300 from Wake Island to ^'Japan, bi which ISO were packed into small compartments with no to stretch or He down. Mr. •n still receives treatment for Vbwjk Injuries sustained when be >ed a beating for giving a of toup to a fellow prisoner •~

•)&V Gordon was Imprisoned at ,tWjXMung, China, for almost a jV*M and then transferred to Wan camp near Shanghai, he saw Sir Mark Young, ftov. General of Hong Kong, who «uf fering x f rom bad'health, It of whom the Japs stood in :;'»w» owing to his . prestige. In ."August, 1943, Mr. Gordon was '"•eat to Kawasaki, Japan, where be was forced, along with other prisoners, to work in the steel and for which he received Ben a day. It required two . of work at this wage to Mf tow spoons of pepper. While Kir. Gordon witnessed, on Jtfftich 13, the first all-out super- fort raid on Tokyo, In which the jclty burned continually for five dayi, and which resulted in the Hospital hound.. death, of 25,000 Japs. After this the prisoners were traas- to work at hard labor In copper mines of Hariaoka, lo- NOTHING we can ever do can cated on the island of Honshu, where Mr, Gordon saw 143 pri- THE MONEY COSTS WILL BE HIGH soners, captured at Corregidor, adequately repay the more than 250,000 * who were- dying of starvation and, \ food poisoning. American heroes who died that we might Hospitalization of our wounded will re- The stupidity of the Japs lm- ressed Mr. Gordon, vho was able live. quire large amounts of money. This is only to carry a complete list of prison- ers' names strapped to his leg, But we can and must provide hospital one reason for the Victory Loan. Millions without detection. Mr, Gordon jftcalled how the prisoners acted of men must be fed, clothed, transported M tcavangers in the camps, dig- care and treatment for the hundreds of thou- ging In the refuse in an endeavor home, for remember, until they are restored toJ pick up scraps of food. ' sands who are maimed and crippled—some On August 17 an Interpreter to Civilian life the war is not over for them. proclamation, stating that lOsttlitles had been terminated by in body, some in mind, And it's not over for 'lUrtual consent, thereby Inferring the United States as well as To do less would be a lasting reproach you either till you do . had agreed to quit, and 11 later B-29s dropped approxl- your share- >Iy 20 tons of food from the to the free institutions of democracy for Of which the Japs stole 25 cent which they fought. '. Gordon was flown back to States via Iwo Jlma, receiving Ital care in Guam, Honolulu Oakland, Calif. He gave i to the Navy and other e« of the service for tho Iderats treatment he received them, which contributed to full recovery. SPEED MEM HOME-B(jy VICTORY BONDS ir's Earnings average man, pedalling a cle hooked to a generator, has JorBy enough energy to keep a 100- pmtt bulb lighted for three-quart- prlrt a minute. If he were able p the bulb from going out gh furious pumping, it would him four hours to earn one at the prevailing average for electricity.

THIS SPACE IS A. CONTRIBUTION TO OUR OOUNTRT Bit

BEDROSIAN RUG COMPANY '• »' ' GEORGE BROS. LARRY MAY, Roofing ROBERT H. STEELE, Real Estate Vti Springfield Ave. Linens tt Rags 16 Sylvan T«rrM» 8S Summit Ave. BLUE LANTERN TEA ROOM m Springfield Ave. 2 Boulevard ~ '--•-•"*••-•• " LEONETTE MOTORS Gmoccmo'8 CONFECTIONERY STORE N«*h Sates A Serrlo* SEARS. ROEBUCK & CO. BROWN BOOK SHOP U« BroBd Street 385 Springfield Ave. (36 Springfield Ave. 3 Ashwood AT6. OTTO SCHMTOT, JR. LIBERTY CLEANERS & B. BURSTER'S GLEN OAKS AGENCY Dodge 8s Plymouth Dealer ttt Morrii 806 Brood Street GUT BATE DRUG STORE 190 Aihland Boad ISO Sprlngflold Ave. L0UVI8 & CO., INC. STEPHENS-MILLER COAL & LUMBER HAHN'S MARKET Confectionery 88 Russell Place , ' - CHARLINE S CUT BATE DRUG STORE 4T Maple Street Ml Sprinrfleld Aw. 410 Springfield Ave. SWEET-KLEEN LAUNDRY, INC. |, "rtcy POP-way HILL CITY PAINT & WALLPH CO., INC. MANTELS DEPT STORE COLUN & SON, INC., Garage 15 Industrial Place I DON'T YOU USE 487 SprinifUld Are. v ' M Mapto Street t»t HANt> CLEANED" 14 Bunk Street SUMMIT HARDWARE & PAINT 00. BOLLS-GEAYER SHOE STORE DELIA, OF LONDON S. E. & E. O. HOUSTON 859 Springfield Ave. Iftn hinds get really tiircy, Plf 840 Springfield Ave. Real Estate ft Inturano* ', ill gpilnrfleld ind Cletner works miraclej. Stub- : 12 Maple Street ' SUMMIT DINER ' 1 gre«se and grime vmlsh, e«n EASTERN FUEL CO. '• •'••'. PEPE SHOE REPAIR SHOP Jt under fingernails »nd cuiiclcsl Summit Avenue and Union Place 238 Broiwl Street IANNALLA MARKET BO Maple Street w,rJV«h»nds whh« «nd soft! A boon : a-W Warworkenl A "must11 for youti({. 41 Park Ave, •• • .,•/:'_ •'' ," A. TEDESCO, TABLOR EASTMAN'S BOOK SHOP RILLO'S FOOD MARKET fieri! A blessing for you 11 Mnplo Street 380 Sprlngflold Avo. VI F&rk Ave. „ Who ire irfiriK to keep J. II. NELSON A SON !,,«>«til, wills and wood- E. L, rrCTEBKB, Linoleum J. M. Nelson, Prop. ROGERS GOAL AND LUMBER 00. TROST'S BAKE SHOP a,;JWOrlc free from dirty 4 Bank Street 427 Springfield Avo. I,'hand inudges! No home 20 Becchwood Itoatl MB Broad Street •^•"Sfiuld be wlihout DIF JOS. ZEIGNEK, INC., FurnltUW - * •nd Cleaner, Get the B. H. FRIJMKIN, INC. JOHN W. BROWN, Electrician ROSS RADIO SERVICE 474 Spring field Ave. ' . 8reil«iiJwliit

HP i.our, OAKWOOD, N, I, Tbh it mt o§ci»l V.S, Tbtmuty tdvirtiwmni- ***« *u of timmry mi War Advertising Council THE SUMMIT HERALD. THURSDAY, DECEMIER 4, 1*4$ If '-I - ,-i Ill—Hi Low Practice 1 Lt, 7KT Pfc. Mario Ocoae of }l North On November 30 the release ' fUymo&d W. Eckercoa, PttMZ c, j^>i WITH 1W 0 AMMP street, received aa honorable dis- i from active duty of Lt. Comdr.!«» * *r and Ita. A. G. Ecker- charge from the Army at Fort > son of Mountain avenue, was home Mocmouth on November 25. | Harold N. Ahlera, USNR. son of, for tw0 ^ on deIaved Or(JeM Mr. Ocone landed in Normandy j Mr. and Mrs. Carl C. Ahlers of 167 I from Mare bland Naval Hospital, Services six days after D-day, after train- ! Kent place ooulevard, was an- j Mare Ulaud. Calif. PHM2/C Eck- ing for 26 months in England. He nounced at the U. S. Naval Per- [ i~"on"e"3f the escorU in received five campaign stars for sonnell Separation Center, Newj charge of 22 amputees, on their Gwynnt Pearson in Manila Spending Leave at Hem* participating in action which took York City. Lt. Comdr. Ahlers serv- j way to Philadelphia Naval Hoepi- ed 40 months in the Navy and par- < ml, j Word has been received by his him across Europe, from France, through Luxembourg, Belgium ticipated in Normandy. Leyte, Lu-! J patents, Mr. and Mrs. Reginal F. ! Pearson of 316 Summit avenue, and Germany. At first connected zon, Iwo Jima and Okinawa en-1 Honorably Discharged that We. W. Gwyniie Pearson, of with an Ordnance division, Pfc. gagements. He served last on the j November 30 marked the date of , the Army Signal Corps, is living Ocone was transferred to the U. S. S. Golden City (APA 168)1the honorable discharge of Chief ; in the ruins of the Cathedral in First Airborne Division after the and is eligable for the Bronze Star , Ships Clerk Leonard R. Barrett of the heart of Manila. Pfc. Pearson "bulge" took place in December. Medal. 45 Woodland avenue. ; states he is pleased to be in his I After serving three years in the ; Lt. Comdr. Ahlers plans to enter A veteran of 33 months in the present location where, amid gen- i Army, Mr. Ococe's plans for the' | Carl Ahlers, Inc., New York City. Navy, Mr. Barrett's last duly sta- eral devastation, he is enjoying the future remain undecided. ! tion was Philippine Sea Frontier. Nationally Advertised luxury of electricity and running Lt. Cmdr. English Released Mrs. Barrett is married to the Cpl. Portine Discharged water. After four years of service in former Celeste Stelnburge and is MEN'S and LADIES' Joining the ever-growing ranks After training for over three the USNR, Lt. Cmdr. Woodruff J. a member of the Princeton Alumni of ex-servicemen who have don- years in the United States, much English of 80 Beekman toad has Association. ned civilian clothes is Cpl. Henri | of which was spent in Texas been released to inactive duty as L. Portine, son of Mr. and Mrs.! Receives Discharge where he was attached to a Tank LT. EALPH B. McCONNELL of November 29, During his Navy WATCHES Henri H\ Portine of 67 Baltussi'ol i Pvt. Nicholas M!. Cuillo of & Destroyer Battalion, Pfc. Pearson who has been in service since Feb- career, he was first stationed in road, who served 39 months with ' Lafayette avenue, received an was transferred to the Signal ruary, 1941, has resumed his law New York City and Newark in START the army as a link trainer instruc- honorable discharge from the Corps and received orders to go practice In Hackettattwn In the intelligence work and then over- 75 tor, i Army at Fort Knox, Ky. on No- AT overseas last summer. Pfc. Pear- firm of McConnelF^and Weeks, seas with the amphibious forces. Cpl. Portine, who received an vember 23. son expects it will be some time which hie wife, the former Leonie He received his training at Wash- honorable discharge from the j i next spring before he received his B. Weekjs, daughter of Mr. and ington, D. C, Ft, Schuyler, New service, was graduated from the discharge from the service. Mrs. Burton E. Weeks of 51 Black- York, Miami, Fla., and Coronado, Summit High School and before j AnaziBg Fast Relief For ! burn road, continued in his ab- Calif. In the Leyte invasion he Beautifully Styled entering the service was employed sence. He arrived back from served as assistant navigator Ens. Gladson Released ALAN MARKHAM by General Electric X-Ray Corp,; Europe November 9 on tho Queen aboard the assault transport, USS On November 24 EnsTgn Ed- as a service engineer. ! COUGHS LAPEL WATCHES Radio Technician, second class, Mary and four days later received President Hayes, and later becam? ward K. Gladson, Jr. (A1)L, US Mr. Portine, upon his return, in- a terminal leave extending to Feb- flag secretary of a transport di- Bronchial IrrHttioni Dui To Coldc NR, of 5 Gates avenue, was re- son at Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. tends to make his home in 12 Hill- i A Hare Combination—Compounded ruary 3. vision. from valuable Canadian Pine Bal- leased to inactive duty after serv- Markham of 186 Summit avenue, side avenue, Verona, with his wife,! Lt. McConnell went abroad in sam and other soothing healing in- ing 33 months in the Navy. Ensign Helen and son, Richard Lee. j He has resumed his practice of is home on a 16-day leave from July of li)43 and spent a year in gredienture ls s Buckley's Canadlol Mix- up Gladson's" last assignment was at law with McCarter, English and |t different from anything you Treasure Island, Calif. England before going to France, over tried—all medication—no syrup. the Naval Air Station, Norman, Writes From Philippines i Studer in Newark. BnckRy'a Act* 3 War*—To Loosen where he was a member of the Phlegm, To Soothe Raw Membranes, Okla. legal staff of a Court Martial Lt. (jg) Van Norde Home Board under the 1194th Military Lt. Bengtson Released °Youagget ™*UU"SFAST—you f Police Corps. His last assignment Word was received here that on Ijft ««^£*ft. <-««*»•<». was in Berlin with the MP unit for November 23 Lt. Clifford A |»lli TRIBUNE Bronze" Star with two clusters and B the Purple Heart. He is now BEE CULTURE (Root) $2.75 for d stationed in Czechoslovakia. Mrs. Hodges, the former Ara- A LIVING FROM BEES (Pellettl 2.00 WEDDING BANDS to Match CHARLES KOBERT TERRY, belle Banton, is mailing; her llome *SQUABS—HOW to Make Them Keep You (Rice] 2.00 I SO %/C with her parents; Mr. and Mrs. TURKEY PRODUCTION (Cline) 3.50 Arriving in the United States son of Mr. and Mrs, Charles A, Madison W. Banton of 79 Black- MODERN POULTRY FARM (Hurd) 4.00 from Tokyo on November 16, Lt. Terry of Franklin place, in a«re- burn road. that It's (jg> Peter J. Van Norde son of Mr. cent letter to his parents, tells of IMPROVED MILK GOATS (Te Walt) 1.50 DEPENDABLE his promotion to the rank of sec- F/O W. Williams Released HOW TO RAIS£ "RABBITS (Ashbrook) 2.00 and Mrs. Peter Van Norde of 147 ond class petty officer. He hopes It was announced on November ACCURATE...... •• Mountain avenue, is- spending a soon to leave the Philippines where 20 that F/O William G. Williams, CANARIES-Their Care & Breeding (Bird Haven) 1.50 leave in Summit before he reports he has been for 15 months. son of Mr. and Mrs. Howell Wil- *On our recommendation. at Washington, D. C. on January liams of 27 William street, receiv- PRICES INCU'DE POSTAGE Officer on 'Kingsbury' ed an honorable reiease from ac- 1 where he will be attached to the tive duty with the1 Army Air Full Library of Books on Dogs, Birds, Naval Air Transport Service. Forces. Animals, Sporting and Wild Life Lt. (jg) Van Norde served in the F/O Williams entered the serv- THE NATURE STORE Pacific as administrative and per- ice at Greensboro, N. C, on July sonnel officer of Torpedo Squad- 4, 1943, and was discharged at the New Jertey'$ Mini Complete Dog Shop ron 40, based on the carrier USS AAF Separation Base, Lincoln Army Air Field, Nebraska. Suwannee, and was on board that Stirling Center Corp. carrier when it covered the land- IThos. Shurman Discharged ing at Nagasaki last summer. I Pvt. Thomas Surman, Jr., of 224 VALLEY ROAD, corner Main Street STIRLING MEN'S and LADIES' Previously, he saw service at Oki- Morris avenue, received an honor- Store open evenings (ill 9 P. M. and all day Sunday nawa and Borneo and later enter- I able discharge from the Army at 10 kt. or 14 kr. STONE ed Tokyo Harbor, (Off. U. S. Navy Ft. Monmouth on November 21. Photo.) RINGS Car Owners Report: START AT PREWAR PERFORMANCE The Lasting McNAHARA ;\ Gift Lieutenant (j.g.) RALPH E. WEBER, JR., USNR is assistant engineer of the Navy attack transport "Kingsbury" APA AND BETTER FROM 177, which recently brought more than 200 returning naval personnel FUNERAL SERVICE from the Philippine area to San Francisco, Lt. Weber, who graduated, from S. ROYALS Yale Engineering School with the class of 1944, and from Annapolis Reserve Midshipmen's School, has K made two trips to Japan and writes Since Pearl Harbor "U. S." scientists have Su. 6-1367 of the incredible .poverty of the made as much progress in applying synthetic peasants, and of the vast destruc- tion seen at Nagasaki. His ftvc< materials to tire manufacture as had been day shore-leave on the west coast made in the previous three decades with Fine has been spent in part with Chap- natural rubber. ' lain Robert McAfee Brown, USNR, formerly of Summit, who Is now JEWELRY stationed at San Francisco. Result—car owners are sending in reports from every section of the country that they are getting prewar performance and better SPRAY PINS from their U. S. Royals. XLOCKETS CROSSES From tire dealers, tire service men and tire AUTOMATIC REGULATION engineers, men who have made tires their Jife ROSARIES work, the evidence piles up—U. S. Royals Identification BRACELETS are out in front in mileage, in safety, in all- . PEARLS round performance. SAVESWEL WALLETS etc. 24 HOURS A DAY! Follow this plan to got your If. S. Royal$: |yro matter how often or how •So to your U. S. Royal Doalor to- will uio Mi oxpsrt knowlodgo of If We have n limited number of dayforathoroughtlrolnipsctlon, tiro (aro to koop your car on W carefully you get furnace Regulators in Block. If you act HOLD 0W7 FOK actlvo duty until now U.S. Royali dampers by hand there's bound quickly, you can enjoy the fuel- •If you aro In urgent nood of now ore available. tlrot, ho will ihow you how to lo be fuel wasted even if your savings of automatically con- to got now U.S. U.S. ROYALS got thorn at tho oarlloM poulblo dampers are open o minute too trolled heat this •winter. moment. long. Watching over them is a You'll wonder too how you noodi whh your U. S. Royal full-time job that only nn Auto- ever got along without the step- * If your n»»d li not Immorflato, h* Dealer now. matic Hent Regulator performs saving convenience of control in real fuel-saving ways. from an upper floor—and the REGULATORS In these "fuel-nliort" days steady, even temperature which every pound of nnthracito saved an Automatic Heat Regulator NOWINSTOCKI counts in more comfort for you gives. PHONE PERRY T. BROWN and in tho conservation Unit Phono or como in today for Undo Sam dcsporulcly needs. complete informntion, Broad St. and Summit Ave.

S«tVi>iirC«miinny U.S.TIRE DEALER STEPHENS-MILLER CO. IJJO AViNUa Of THI AMIKICAI lOCKIFHLIR CtNTM . NIW YORK M,N.Y. CARLANS JEWELERS 38 Russell Place Summit, N. L UNITED STATES RUBBER COMPANY 449 SPRINGFIELD AVE. SUMMIT, N. J. SUMMIT HHUID, 1HUW0AY. MCfMMR 4^ l»4$

Traditional Holiday Silver Rebtkah Lod9e December 15 Bride PERSONALS Elementary School Fet« at Y. W. C. A.; Members and friend* of Silver Rebekah Lodge No. 83, I.O.O.F are Mr. and Hi*. Charlej L. Cue of Cadet Putnam Brodsky, aow ol Election of Delegates For Miss Gilson Norwood avenue ipent the week- Mr. and MM. Jobs C Brodsky of Christmas Carol invited to a card party on Tuesday, Social end in Wilton, Conn., with Mr. Mountain avenue, was home for Member* of the Y.W.C.A, will December 11, at 8:30 p. m. in the and Mrs. Norman Lee Swartout, the week-cad from N»w York open the Christmas season with LO.O.F. Hall, 21 Maple street. tag. There will be a reception at And Lt. Dearborn Jr., who formerly lived in Summit Military Academy In Cornwall, Program Tuesday the traditional "Hanging of the Greens" on Monday night, De- Prizes wit] be awarded and re- the Maplewood Woman'* Club. N. T. They attended the Army The Elementary School* of Sum- Elinor Virginia GUion. cember 10, at 8 p. m. The build- freshments served. Fedding Plans Miss Brewer, who ha* returned Mr*. Arthur Hodge* and Mies Navy game in Philadelphia on mit will present their Christmas daughter of Mri, H. Walford ing will be decorated upstair* and from 2% year* in the Wave* a* Marlon Banton, daughters of Mr. Saturday. carol program on Tuesday, De- Martin of Prospect atreet and the down with holiday trimming*, and a pharmacist'* mate, 1/c, will have and MM. Madison W. Banton of cember 11, at 2 p. m. in the high For Jean Brewer Me Herbert C. GlUwa, hju cm- the nienvb»n will gather in the her sitter, iiiss Helen E. Brewer -Blackburn road, attended—the Mm. ftalph Dr Welsh, ftwmeriy school" auditofiumrThis annual pleted plant for her marriage De- recreation room to ling carol* and a* her maid of honor. Bridesmaid* Army-Navy game in Philadelphia of Oakland place, gave a lunch- program ts under the direction of cember 15 to Lt Heary Carpenter drink the Christmas wauail. lAnd Lt. A. L. Baker will be another sister, Muse Nancy Dearborn, USNR, ion of Mr. am on Saturday. eon on Tuesday at her home in Misi Margaret, Thorp, supervisor J. Brewer; Mia* Jane Dougall and Mrs. Richard J. Dearborn of High | Morristown for twelve Summit of music, accompanied by Mlas A short biLslne&s meeting will Mr. and Mrs. Albert L. Baker of - Invitation* have been toitwd for Mr*. Lee Lewi*, both of Summit street friends who are members of a club Mabel Hickok. The scenery used be held and the nominating com- After a two week*' trip, the cou- Plymouth road are having as their in which «he was active while liv- marriage of MUa Jean S. The ceremony will take place at was made by the Art Department mittee will present a list of nine ple will live in Summit until Feb- guest* this week-end Mr. and Mrs. ing in Summit. »r, daughter of Mr* Harry 4 p. m, ia Central Presbyterian of the schools. < nominee*. From this group three ruary, when they both plan to re Stewart B. Smith and Mr. and Mm. will be elected aj delegates to the Brtwer of Summit avenue, and Church. Rev. Leonard V. Busch Processional—"Har)t, tlie Herald turn to college. W. S. Smith, who are coming from Mrs. Cbarlei S. Williams, Jr., National Y.W.C.A. Convention in 'ntl» late Mr. Brewer, to Lt. Albert man will officiate, assisted by th Angels Sing" ... Kelix Mendelssohn Hiasdaie, 111., for the marriage of daughter of Mrs. Osborn Henry "Lo, How a Roise" March. "I* Baker, Jr., USMC, aon of Mr. bride-elect'i uncle, Dr. Riuusel J Lt Albert Baker to Miss Jean of Hobart avenue, flew to Los Michael Praetorius Alan Summersby, daughter o Clinchy of Hartford, Conn. Ther< "Shepherds, Shake Off Your Druwsy * Mra. Baker of Plymouth road. Mr. and Mrs. John J. Summersb Brewer on Saturday. Lieutenant Angeles last Thursday night to Sleep" Besancon Carol will be a reception at Baltuero "Chrlstmai Bells" f'Ttw ceremony will take place of Fern wood road, has been elect Baker will have as hU week-end join her husband, Ensign Charles Jr. Service League Golf Club. guest, Lt. Randy A. Kenyon, who Grace Wilbur Conant 81 ". 'iB*turday night in Central Preaby- S. Williams, Jr., USN, who arrived All City Girls' Choir The second fall meeting of the ed vice-president of the Freshma Miss Gilson, who will be give; is a member of Lt. Baker's squad- r in port there. "Joy to the World" Junior Service League wae held • ttrlao Church, the pastor, Rev. Class at Radcliffe College In Cam' In marriage by her brother, Lt don and stationed at Cherry Point, George F. Handel "While Shepherds Watched Their yesterday at the home of Mrs. Rob- ; J)r. Leonard V*. Busohman, offlclat- bridge, Mas*. William R. Gilaon, USNB, wi: N. C. Mr. and Mre, Baker are Lt and MM. Lee H. Lewis of Flock» By Night" ert Diefendorf of Whittredge road. have as her bridal attendants, entertaining both the bridal party George F. Handel NORCROSS Lakewood are visiting this week Grades 4, 5, 6 and Choirs Mrs. John Daniels of Amityvilli and houseguests at a dinner party After the business meeting, the at the home of Mrs. Lewis' par- "Christmas Eve" Miles B. Foster League had as guest speaker, Mre. GREETING CARDS L. I., a former cla&smate at Vaa Friday night after the wedding re- cnts, Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Mac- "Shepherds in the Hush of Night" ear College; Mrs. Rudyard Colte hearsal. Geoffrey O'Hara Marjorie Zink, interior decorator, donald of Oak Ridge avenue. Mrs. "Gesu Bambino" Pletro A. Yon whose subject was "Homes of Our At of South. Orange, Mrs. Thomas Q Combined Choirs Lewis will be a bridesmaid in Miss American Ancestors." Gilson of Worcester, Mass., he: Mrs. William E. Eitner, daugh- "O Little Town of Bethlehem" Jean Brewer's wedding on Satur- Lewis H. Redner Tea was served, with Mre. S/EGELS sister-in-law; Miss Janet Brigg; ter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. day night. Robert Macdonald, son "Bllent Night" Frans Gruber of New York City and two sister Noyea of Springfield avenue, and Grades 4, 5 and 6 Charles Edwards, and Mrs. Sax- Stationery Shop of Mr. and Mrs. Macdonald will "Here We Come a-Carol!ng" ton Seward in charge of arrange- of the prospective bridegroom, her infant daughter, Susan, spent 114 Hprtnirlleld At*. Bimmll. II t. also be home from Lafayette Col- Old English Wassail Song menu. Mi&s Sally Dearborn and Mrs. Lei last week in Bethlehem, Pa., visit- lege in Easton, Pa., where he is in "Be Merry" .... Grace Wilbur Conant Souren, both of Summit. Marl' "Fum Fum Fum" Catalan Carol ing Dean and Mrs. Wray Congdon the freshman class. All City Boys' Choir Ellen Gilson of Worcester, niew and their daughter, Mrs. Robert "Once in Royal David's City" of the bride-elect will act as he H. J. Gauntlett Gayiord Eitner. flower girl, Lt. (J. g.y Peter J. Van Norde, "It Came Upon the Midnight Clear" Jr., of the Navy is on leave at the Richard S. Willis Lt, William Cranetoun will b Harold L. Brett, son of Mr, and Grades 4, 5, 6 and Choirs home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. "The Boar's Head Carol" the best man and the ushers wl Mre. Harold L. Brett of Summit Old English CHRISTMAS DANIEL GREEN Include the bride-elect's brother, avenue, was discharged from the Peter J. Van Norde of Mountain "Angel'a Carol" avenue. Lt: Van Norde will be at Grace Wilbur Conant Thomas Q. Gilson; Mr. Colter Marine Air Corps in Great Lakes, "Cantlque de Noel" .... Adolphe Adam is so much Mr. Daniels; Mr. Souren, brother. 111., on November 24. Hia rank home until New Vears Day and Combined Choirs then he will return to aircraft car- "O Come All Ye Faithful" In-law of the prospective bride was Staff Sergeant, and he served Latin Hymn, lTth Century groom, and Elwood Easton ol as a radio operator for three years. rier duty. Everyone Fun Newark. Mr, Brett was stationed in the Girls' All City Choir members from Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. David- six schools: Miss Gllson was honored Satur- Pacific area twice and wae deco- Washington School — Mildred day at a surprise miscellaneous rated with four Battle Stars, the son of Badeau avenue will enter- Brown, Audrey Hansen, Teresa Wla- tain at a neighborhood cocktail troski, Nicollna Buscalno, Pauline shower given by Miss Elizabeth Admiral Halsey Award, and two Oenna, Esther Kasparian, Rose The Bambi GIFTS FOR Husted at her home In Jane Place, Presidential Unit Citations. He party on Sunday afternoon to in- Bahto, Stella. Tedesco. troduce Mrs. Davidson's brother Roosevelt School—Alfredla Wade, Lovely satin in New York. is now vacationing at his home on Joan Cross, Loretta Scheppe, Irene Summit avenue. and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bailey, Barbara Doley, Genevieve TOTS Royal-^Aqua and Perry, Jr., who recently moved to Hardy. Jefferson School—Marilyn Valter, TO TEENS Dubonnet; Short Hills Chapter DAR Mfs. Ernest Knoblauch, former Summit and are living in Bellevue Joan Marcella. Constance Faccla, avenuei Carmella Tlcchl. 3.95 Annual Christmas Tea English teacher in the Summit Brayton School — Salome Smith, Junior High School, visited last Polly Betts, Jean Daniels, Mary With Illustrated Talk Mrs. Richard L. Miller of Beek- Louise Brown, Donna Samuel, Ellen week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jane Stiles, Ruth Davis, Katherine Short Hills Chapter, D. A. R.. George R. Martin in Blackburn man road had as guest for a few Grlswold, Marilyn Hollenbeck. will give its annual Christmas Tea road. days last week Miss Margaret Lincoln School—Susan Armstrong, on Tuesday, December 11, from 2 Hine of trie Washington staff of Judy Lynian, Betsy Seller, June An- derson, Nadla Burns, Linda Ridings, to 4 o'clock at Recreation Hall, Mr. and Mrs. John B. Dougall of the National, League of Women Holly Schultz, Joan Tilton. Taylor Park, Mlllburn. Voters. Miss Hine was assisting Franklin School — Nancy Harris, Ashland road, had as their guests Gall Martin, Janice Hartman, Anne The Regent, Mrs. Milton R. last week, Mr. and Mrs, Charles at a leadership Institute for board Thornton, Joanne Young. Schulte will preside at the open members of the Summit, other Substitutes — Rosemary Tuschettl, W, Beek of Worcester, Mass., who Rosemarle Rex, Lois Cochran, Eva • CLOTHES ing services. Mre, Alexander W, lived in Summit when Mr. Beek Union County and a few nearby Gallo, Gladys Puder, Brllget Zotte. Keller Is In charge of the program Essex County leagues. Carmella Bace, Eva Edwards, Carol was principal of the Summit Brydon, Gunette Clancl, Diane SmiJ- • TOYS There will be a special Christmas Junior High School, kal, Marie Langhorne, Stephanie Par- table decoration by Mrs. George R. Mr, and Mrs. A. Clifford Ber- sons, Susan Brewer, Doris Oulamer- Ian, Miriam Katz, Diane Teague, t DOLLS Soft black leather Evans. Mf, and Mrs. James S. Hecox ard of De Bary place have re- Lynn Pyle, Judith Connor. or quilted slipper The program will feature Meta of Countryside left by car last turned from a six weeks' motor Boys' All City Choir members from • STUFFED P.. Shirrefa of Elizabeth, who is week for Tampano, Fla., where trip to Mexico. Their son, Lt. six schools: in Delft or Dubonnet Washington School—Michael Ham- prominent In garden club work. they will spend the winter. George M. Bernard, USNR, who way, Vincent Glsoldl. v _ ANIMALS Mrs. Shirrefs will speak on "Christ has returned from sea duty in the Roosevelt School — Roger Adams, 2.95 Robert Miles, Jerome Kaplan, Ray. mas Legends and Traditions.' Mrs. William A. Schumacher of Pacific, is spending his terminal mond Jannelll, Leonard Lewis. T IC / *^a "For th* Carriage Trade" Her talk will be illustrated with Oakley avenue, left Friday for leave with his wife and family in Jefferson School—William Gerrlty, her own water color sketches and Richard Dennis, Donald Crann. Oak, Neb., where she will visit her Plalnfleld avenue, Berkley Brayton School — Jerry Farnum, other objects of interest pertain mother, Mrs. B. F, Scroggln. Heights. Dick Hill, Ashley Seward, Walter Ing to her subject. Shipley, Bob Delaney, Andy Cattano, THE JUVENILE SHOP Gerhard Hahne, Ty Frank, David Following the program, tea wll! Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Tur- Dr. Robert R. Williams of Sum- Orth, Donald SplUll. CHILDREN'S WEAR be served by the hostesses Mrs, geon of Locust drive entertained Lincoln School—Westy Tyson, mit avenue has gone to Austin, Charles Edwards, Allen Maybee, Ron- George R. Evans, Mrs. Spencer at a cocktail party laet Tuesday in Tex,, for the Winter to conduct an aid Brown, Clark Warren, Peter Ack- M. Maben, Mrs. James W. Me honor of their 21st anniversary. erman, Dickie Sltarz, Pernell Cooper, 378 Springfield Avenue Summit experiment on the value of en- Arthur Miller, Bill Lyman, Ronald Carty, and Mrs. Frank W. Olive. richment of bread at the Univer- Klaren, Mac Barker. Members of the chapter may in Douglas H, Baker, son of Mr. sity of Texai Department of Franklin School — James Klncald. vite guests, and Mrs. Douglas B, Baker of Paul McGrlffln, Dick Mayer, Henry Loll—a smart Chemistry. He will return to Sum- Ware, Donald Bourne, Edward Shea, Mountain avenue, was discharged mit for Christmas. John Biggs, Bruce York, leather slipper from the Army as a second lieu- Substitutes — Travor Oaskln, Ted Townley, James Polk, Paul Moore, in black Kent Place Fair Today tenant on November 26. He served Mr. and Mrs. James O. Nixon of Teddy Meyer, Mike Patterson, Wil- The Kent Place School Fair is for three years with the Office of liam Tennent, David Holllngsworth, Division avenue and Mrs. Nixon's Richard Smith, James Porter, Arthur BETTY TELFER - INTERIORS 4.50 being held today in Phraner Gym. Strategic Services and was sta- mother, Mrs. Thomas F. Brennan, Westenberger. BUI Marvin, Kent Shoemaker, John MacDanlels. For the first time a tearoom wll! tioned in Europe for a year and a have gone to Missouri for three be conducted as part of the fair, half. Mr. Baker is now living in weeks to visit Mr. Nixon's mother, The tearoom, In charge of the New York City, and attending Mrs. Clark Nixon, in De Soto and Distinctive Furniture Ninth Grade, and the Book Store, dramatic school at the Neighbor- his brother in St. Louis. Births managed by the English Depart hood Playhouse. A girl, on November 27, to Lewis ment, will be in the New Faoulty and Phllomena Rosato of 20 Clark House at 75 Norwood avenue. Miss Peggy Morse, daughter of Mrs. George S. Wlntress of Ho- Unusual Accessories Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Morse of bart avenue is spending 10 days in street. Troy, N. Y. Oak Ridge avenue, entertained at A girl, on November 27, to Clar- 521 Millburn Ave., Short Hills a dinner party before the Hobby ence and Muriel Burke of 161 Hall dance on Friday night. Miss Joan Clark, daughter of Kent place boulevard, Stay Lovely Dr. and Mrs. Raymond K, Clark A boy, on November 28, t< Mr. and Mrs. Jay W. Skinkle of Oak Ridge avenue, and RT 2/c Gordon and Barbara Furgason o: Allan Markham of Summit' ave- Morriatown, N. J. Summit, N. J. of Ox Bow lane left this week for 17 Essex road. Clearwater, Fla., to stay until nue, were guests of Miss Peggy A girl, on November 28. to Ber April Markham and Dr. Philip Roth at nard and Madelaine McFadden o: the Yale-Harvard football game in 43 Broad street. New Haven last Saturday. Fine Leather Goods A boy, on November 30, to Bail SUMMIT ANIMAL ey and Margaret Cowan of ISC THIS CHRISTMAS give a gift of Miss Jean Swoyer of New York MERRY Oak Ridge avenue. WELFARE LEAGUE was the week-end guest of Mr. both beaufy and durability. Give CHRISTMAS A boy, on December 1, to Greg FOUND and Mrs,'Walter William Patten of Bellevua avenue. A cocktail ory and Lucille Oberst of 57 New something from our large assort- Part Welsh terrier—female England avenue. party was given in her honor on ment of superior quality leather CALL —full grown. Sunday afternoon. KIND HOME WANTED goods . . . Su. 6-6399 2 female puppies—5 weeks Mr. and Mrs. Archibald Murray EXTRA SIZE Fernwood old—cross breed, Chow and of New England avenue enter- Extra pretty slips for Mark Cross Pigskin Wallets Spitz. tained at a Chinese dinner party Christmas presents for FURRUGS for a few of their friends on Sat- Picture Frames Hairdressers Call Summit 6-2948 urday evening. women to wear difficult to 116 Summit Avcnu* fit sizes—40-52. Fine Leather Cigarette Boxes a* Mrs. Theodore Welsslnger of Wilmington, Del. 1$ arriving this Bur-Mil Rayon Crepe or Compacts morning to spend the remainder Satin. l%fr*. of the week with her aunt, Mrs. India Goat Zipper Notebooks Wallace Alley. Mr. Welssinger will $3.98 • $5.98 Flowers For Christmas arrive Saturday and return to Wil- Five Year Diaries mington with Mrs. Weuwlnger on Kays Shop 100 Summit Ave. RUGS Sunday. Calfskin Playing Card Boxes We Suggest Cigarette Cases THE Scrap Books and Photograph Albumi. ; PERFECT POINSETTIA Jewel Boxes CHRISTMAS Sewing Machines CYCLAMEN Key Cases - GIFT A Few BEGONIA Zipper Letter Cases CHOOSE FROM OUR LARGE SELECTION SINGER CABINET ELECTRICS Morocco French Purses DISH •Xooped" Cotton Rug, approx. 27'W .... $10.95 Lady Buxton Wallets GARDEN For Immediate Delivery |. "Shag" Cotton Rug, approx. 84"x64" , 9.95 All WalUts Initialed Free of Charge Alio Bathroom Set 6.96 BOX OF With 22K Gold Numdah Bugs, approx. 4 x 6 9.85 FLOWERS Vacuum Cleaners Sheepskin Bug, linimitl shape 13.95 Siegel's A LARGE ASSORTMENT TO CHOOSE FROM PLACE YOUR ORDERS EARLY from $12. up Macdonald Florist, Inc. Stationery Shop Su. 6-2191 BED RO SI AN S Sayrt St. Su. 6-0308 Summit Sewing Machine Service 394 Springfield Ave. Summit, N. J. 428 Springfield Ave. Summit 6-050O 40 Deachwocd Rd. Su. 6-0209 H Summit Av«. Su. 6-0210 Summit, N. J. I— ,*.-*. I •&•• • THE SUMMIT HERAU3, THURSDAY, DECEMIER *, Married Saturday in Saint ToiWi Cfcurdi son Berglus Cowan, Friday, No- Seta BoHtdakUn of vember 30, at Overlook Hospital. •venue entertained fourteen «f Barbara Culberfson Sori V. Kuran Mr. and Mrs. Bailey Cowan of Mn. Cowan Is the former Mar- Oak Ridge avenue, announce the garet Berglus of Glasgow, Scot- friends on her sixth Becomes the Bride Married Saturday birth of their fiat child, Dickin- land. Thursday.

Of Robt. G. Hodge >•'« To Lester Esposito Mat Barbara Aim Culbertaoa, Miss Sori V. Kuran, daughter the creaminess of daughter of MrjiKL.Mi*.-A*tftttr Ml Mrs. Joseph of Beekman terrace, Springfield avenue, Irvington, was was married Saturday, December married Saturday, December 1, to December U the last month is 1, to Robert G. Hodge, Boatswain Lester G. Esposito, son of Mr. and MILKMAID LIPSTICK 1 4J» y»apjr and the jnast unpopular U. S. M. M, son of Mrs. Robert Mn. D. Esposito of Middle avenue ' month for changing residence. Hodge of Clark Township. The in St Leo's Church, Irvington. A However, if you are stuck and ceremony was performed by the reception was held at the Harriet comes naturally from | have to move, call in the service* Rev. John J. Kelley in St. Teresa's Hillaid. i ot The Summit Express Company. church. A reception followed at Mrs. George Hock, was the "; . » # » the home of the bride's parents. bride's only attendant and Bis- the fresh country creamnn it... _ ; If* been bard to fill the bill The bride was given in marriage worth Smith was best man. V* when a steel medicine cabinet was by her father and her only attend- The bride is a graduate of Co- the needed article. For folk* need- ant was her younger sister, lumbia High School, Maplewood, six'colors from a country- ing- a Sue, sturdy, roomy medicine Gwendolyn. Sgt. Robert Kellar, and Mr. Esposito graduated from cabinet, take a gander at those at U. S. M. C. R. served as best man. the Regional High School in Springfield; Rogers Coal ft Lumber. The ushers were Joseph M. Cul- garden . . . carrot, tomato, I .• • * bertson and Francis J. Ochs, brother and brother-in-law of the Summit Women Attend Pearl* of great price are right bride. for folks being rich from having melon pink, radish, red beet, The bride wore a gown of Brus- Children's Service Meeting money. The reat of us can get sels lace and tulle and a chapel Five Summit members of the some re*l beauties at a much lower length veil crowned with seed Children's Service Committee of chestnut. 1.50 each > price at Carlans Jewelers. Select pearls. She carried a spray bou- the Family and Children's Society Christmas gifts now. quet of roses and stephanotia. Her of Union County, attended a meet- • • • • attendant was gowned in blue Ing held at the home of Mrs. C. refills .75* I / tour preference will surely run mousseline de sole and carried red Hansel, Cranford, on Monday, De- to Pontiac if you see the finest of roses. cember 3. : the famous Silver Streaks at Mey- The couple will spend a month's Christmas gifts for the teen- I er-Viferner Motor Company. Al- honeymoon in Florida. agers who are under the care of •ADO 30% f ID. IU ' though in the low-priced field the society, were brought by the T. M, tt£Q, U.» tAr. Pontlac comes with extra value members. Further plans are being feattt«s«. Arrival soon. made for the letter of appeal which will be sent throughout •• » « t "Stage Door" J I \ I R I! HOUSE What is your favorite luncheon Union County in February. The *t Marie's Sandwich Shoppe & chairman, Mrs. J. F. Fast of Cran- South Orange • Summit * Westfield • Rutherford • PlainfieW fe Restaurant? I'll settle for liver 98th Production ford, states that the need is even more urgent this year than at any and bacon with onions. Whatever other time. •election you make, for lunch or dinner, you'll enjoy Marie's meals. By Playhouse Asso. The next meeting of the com- Last Monday evening at the now mittee will be held on April 22, 1946, at the home of Mrs. B. Mil- Hilma Johnson, Milliner, tells customary 8:40, the Playhouse As- sociation opened its 28th season ler, 80 Oak Ridge avenue. me most'of her customers prefer BIBS. ROBERT O. HODGE with its 98th production, "Stage oujtom-made hats. If you are look- Door" by Edna Ferber and George Pfc. H. Winthrop Greene, son of ing ' for someone ln-the-know to S. Kaufman, Once again Marjorie David H. Knowles, will be the Mr. and Mrs. Harold S. Greene of make, you a fur, cloth or velvet Christmas Greens Jefferson demonstrated her re- hostesses when the Seventh Grade Ashland road, has been discharged bonnet,; the address is 3 Woodland. markable ability in directing a In Theme and Practice from the USMC and has returned ; Group of Hobby Hall meets In the B. ALTMW & CO. • ' • » • from Okinawa, He will spend the Playhouse production, said Mrs. Garden Department Topic Masonic Building, Friday. | Some youngsters don't even atop William J. Pyle, Her unusual tal- Christmas holidays at home. at their quota of a quart of milk "Christmas Throughout the ent for coordinating the efforts of House" will be the topic of a talk a day. No wonder, if the milk they amateur players and putting a enjoy so much in Schmalz 'Dairy's at the Christmas meeting of the professional polish on their action Garden Department of the Fort- EMBROIDERY Golden Guernsey or homogenized a a constant source of pleasure nightly Club, Friday, December vitamin D milk. for the members who enjoyed an 14, at 10 a. m. in the Field House. FOR FLOWERS OB LACE excellent performance, by a large The talk will be followed by the Open the world of hearing to cast, on a very well designed set. fashioning of Christmas decora- some unfortunate soul shut out of Among the new actors Beth tions, an annual event .with the GIFT the conversational universe, An- Wade, in the leading role of Terry department. spach Brothers, Opticians, offer Randall, and Douglas Baker, as Mrs. Henry M. Kistner will be ILVIVDKEUCniEFS the Zenith Hearing Aid that will Keith Burgess, gave a very credit- the guest speaker, and afterwards | bring a new zest for living. A per- able performance, Mrs. Pyle con- Will work with the members on fect Christmas gift. tinued. Frank Daniels In one of their Christmas wreaths and other • * * the principal parts as David greens, as she combines the ac- Delia of London turns out the Kingaley added another marker tivities of lecturer, worker, and most exclusive creations in both to his string of well done charac- teacher in this field. top: white Swlsi cotton formal and Informal gowns, They terizations. 'Polly Kitchlng was Her flower arrangements and an fashioned to elevate your ego, particularly well liked in a good Illustrations are to be found in handkerchief with dainty giving, you a well-groomed appear- comedy role,* and another new various garden periodicals, ance.' Delia has all the right ac- comer, Betty Moore, gave an ex- This will be an all-day meeting, SUMMJT.NJ colored embroidery. 1.00 cessoriea for each masterpiece. cellent account ot herself as the members to bring box lunches and tragic Kay Hamilton. • • • i equipment for wreath making. center: sheer white hand- It is difficult to pass over any Coffee will be served. Want the unusual in Christmas if this well trained cast but space t gifts? 'The adorable Swiss music does not permit individual credits. rolled, cotton corded Swiu boxes of highly, jollshed wood are Suffice it to say, continued Mra. Hobby Hall a natural, From nursery rhymes Pyle, that members and their 432 Springfield Avc. handkerchief with o bou- to opera, take your choice, Vari- Mrs. Ramon J. Cabera, MM. guests will be throughly enter- Philetus H. Holt, 2nd, and; Mrs, ous scenes on the cover. tained all this week, and the.pub- quet. 1.50 Iic is sincerely-urged; to -phone ' Don't dilly-dally if you are Summit 6-1892, United Campaign bottom: dainty white lace- looking for a new shade for your Headquarters, to secure tickets favorite lamp, David J. Flood has for the benefit performance to be edged handkerchief with a wide selection of designs ,and ;lven next Monday .evening, De- 'sites, so hop down to Flood's and ember 10. Not only will they be linen center. 1,00 -N /"select one. ilghly entertained, but^they will • V • te aiding a worthy cause, as the ') A most unique and abundant (htlre proceeds of this perform- . presentation of lovely gifts is of- ance will go to the United Cam* SWEATERS fered'at Your Home,,Gifts, just lalgn Fund. ', around the corner from The Sum-, and 'intt Trust Company. OaaFyour eye ; on the stunning silver styled by 'drtraft Sketch • San Giovanni* . SKIRTS \ -Beautiful bags, beauteous blouses, By Robert Burns \ exquisite' coatume jewelry, oh just -' scads of gorgeous gifts for females • BAST 0BA1V6B ' ftt The Smart Shoppe this Chrlat- At Hahne and Co. 4mi* season. Take your list and Robert Burns, Associate Pro-! < {Church will be offered for all de- for the month of December. You Sizes 38-46 ceased members of Court Benedict may coll for an appointment. Personal Christmas Cards Imprinted With Your Name Our Beautiful Cards Are Ready for Your rayon crepe drew with a brghr Selection. ORDER NOW wide swath of color for e tiny SPRINGFIELD SUN midriff, a narrow glittery belt and STATIONERS-GIFTS - HALLMARK GREETING CARDS 239 Morris Ave. Springfield, N. J. new dancing skirt. Black with Open Monday Thru Saturday Until 9 P. M. turquoise, royal with shocking,

in sizes 10 to IB, 19,95

B.H. FRUMKIN INC. 408 Springfield Ave., 29-81 Maple St, Summit, IV. jr. Su, 9-8000

CENTRAL AVENUE EAST ORANGE ORANGE S-3000 t* 1HE SUMMIT HiRAtP, THUtSPAY. 4. IMff Son At Tf>« Mcadowbrook In Ctdar Grovt Kent Pi«c« School Today's Patttrn for Fifteen Oeata mote! All ea«y- Vegetables should alwajw be to-m&iw •tylea! AUo — printed washed in cold water, scrubbing Bond Sales $22,184.50 right In the book ii a pace of com- those having a firm akin with a The Kent Place School Bond plete direction* for you—an acces- vegetable brush. If they are to be Sale, which wu managed by the sories set: hat, jerkin and hand- kept after preparation, before Social Senior Claw, ended Friday with bag. cooking, keep them in cold water. the .sales of bonds and stamp* totaling $22,184.60. The money will el half way across the continent be applied toward the purchase of to view this collection, it would be equipment for Convalescent Hos- lewark Museum a must on our calendar." pitals. Marjorie Lee, president of Mrs. Curtis Prout, President of the Senior Class, and Louise Exhibition Opens the Art Association, spoke briefly, Tompkin*, president of Student welcoming the new members and Government, were chairmen of inviting Summit people and their the committee in charge of the In Summit Gallery friends to view the exhibition. She sales. ; (Continued froin page 1) brought out the fact that while The contest for the four Upper last year at this time there were School classes awarded the Ameri- geum, »poke regarding the work only 160 members, there are now can flag to the Senior Class, They of contemporary American artists. 270, including 21 service men. The had the highest percentage of She told how the Government had Art Association would welcome students participating in the drive. ployed a great part in fostering any local service men or women the work of young American art- to attend the painting and sketch- ift», and how, during the War, ing classes as a guest of the As- Formal Fashions pertain artists had been employed sociation. These classes are held to make a record of the War. The on Tuesday from 2:00 to 5:00 and Formal Fashions have the t Newark Museum, she went on, from 8:00 to 10.00. Mrs. Prout ex- greatest significance they have has also done much to encourage pressed her pleasure in knowing had since before the war. The Contemporary talent, as the major that each of the new members Miss Francine McGuire, of Woodland avenue, and Frederick J. brilliant opening at the Metro- part of the collection at the New- would have new ideas to contrib- Pike, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse R. Pike, Springfield avenue, smile politan Opera House justified the ark Museum is made of the work ute to the Association, thus help- for the camera at Frank Dailey's Meadowbrook in Cedar Grove. most enthusiastic predictions that tit living painters and sculptors.ing to develop it into a civic or- women are in a mood to dress $in. Holzhauer expressed the ganization of greater value than up again. Opinion that 'through organiza- ever. St. Elizabeth College Wellesley Cfub Highlights of fashions as they developed at this premiere include tions such as the Summit Art As- Mrs. J. P. Gourlay, Chairman To Hold Annual China Pattern B120 comes in women's sociation, a big job is being done Christmas Musicale Tea the return of rich fabrics like of Teas, was assisted by Mrs. John The New Jersey Wellesley Club I brocades and velvets; the strong sizes 34, 36, 38, 10, 42, 44, 46, 48. 'in fostering contemporary Ameri- H. Kohler, Chairman of the House Day Sale December 10 Size 36, jumper, 1% yards 54-inch; can art. She suggested that it acceptance of luxury furs like Committee. The Membership Com- The annual China day sale, at will hold their Christmas musicale I blouse 1% yards 39-inch. Would facilitate arranging exhi- tea on Friday, December 14, at' ermine, sable and chinchilla; the mitttee, in charge of the tea, con- the Collaje, of Saint Elizabeth, will new look of fuller, wider, more Send twenty-five cents in coins bitions in New Jersey if it were sists of the following members: possible to compile a list of col- be held in Santa Rita Hall, on 2:30 p. m. at the home of Fran j dramatic skirts, of off-shoulder or for this pattern to 170 Newspaper Mrs. A. J. Stromsted, Chairman, Monday, December 10, from 10:30 Lewis Lindsley, 115 Washington Pattern Dept., 232 West 18lh lectors and also of artists who are Mrs. Harry Croyder, Miss Anna opened-up decolletes. The off- treating work suitable for exhibi- a. m. until 8 o'clock in the eve- street, Bast Orange. The program shouider silhouettes are often street, New York 11, N. Y. Print this Christmas... C. Cromwell, Mrs, Boyd Risk, Mrs. plainly size, name, address, style tion purposes. Mrs, Holzhauer is ning. The proceeds of the sale, will Include Carol singing; allied with brief puffed sleeves, Harry P. Schaub, and Mrs. John number. Mrsonally acquainted with many K. P. Stone, Jr. Mrs.- A. J. Strom- which Is under the auspices of Why "the Chimes Hang Alden draped bodices, and crisp skirts send Mother and Dad a very "special" gift Jf the artists represented in the Road by Betty Miles Myers, '25 with a robe de style character. New—the Marian Martin Fall sted, Mrs. Walter V. Rockwell the mission unit, will be added to and Winter Pattern Book is yours current exhibition, and said that and Mrs. Arthur Truslow presided Candlelight Rogers The reappearance, below the jnost of these artists are those the fund for the reconstruction of Christmas Eve Hajteman at the tea table. There's a Song In Ihe Air Speaks waistline, of outstanding drapes, Vhote work is being shown In the Mission Chapel of the Sisters Sung by Ruth Martenis Sweeay, '23 pouffs and out-jutting fulness lovely new portraits gallery exhibitions in New York. Sunday, December 16, at 3:30 of Charity in China, The recent accompanied by Dorothy Parlin pronounced the took of regal The Time Is Now p. m. at the Gallery, friends and Romance Schumann and elsewhere. Several New Jer- bridge fashion show at the Col- Prophet BJrd „ Schumann splendor. B a c k-of-the-bodice in- of your sweet baby and you . . . «ey artists are represented. members of the Association will Intermezzo from the lege, arranged by the unit, netted FaschlagsBchwank Schumann terest, with asymmetric drapings, be led in the singing of Christ- diagonal shoulder straps, and a Miss Martha Berry, when asked mas Carols by Louise Goucher, $800 for the fund. by Grace Purlin Davis, '33 How Come Christmas Bradford partially covered-up look at one Taken the famous Jean Sardou way, to voice her reaction to the exhibi- Elspeth Fuller, and Jane and Opportunities for the purchase Read by Betty Myers tion, said, "I feel that the Newark Carol Singing (accompanied side only were also notworthy in Carter Harman. Louise Bozorth of lingerie, linen, baby clothes and by Ruth Eaglesfleld Reed, 'SB). Museum has sent us an unusually will be at the piano. jewelry will be available from Sis- significance. TO HAVE YOUR WATCH they'll be sparkling "personality" portraits Not to be forgotten was -the fine collection. It U conceded it ter Etheiberta's Chinese collec- PUT IN GOOD CONDITION . . . . gifts to be treasured for years. Wt circles that they have one o tion. Refreshments will be served Garden Department masculine audience resplendent in All work guaranteed. the finest collections in the coun in the team room of the residence Committee Meets white tie, and they expressed the Ask for demonstration on the try, and they are known from Charles and Molly hall. Friends, relatives of stu- opinion that this would be a white Western Electric Watch Hate COME IN BEFORE THE LAST MINUTE RUSH. The Garden Department com- tie year. Recorder. coait to coast for their collection dents, and members of the alumnae mittee of the Fortnightly Club pf contemporary arts. I feel that CHRISTMAS SPECIALS . . . LIMITED TIME are Invited to attend. met yesterday, Wednesday 8, at VAN C it ii only because Newark is so Open Antique Shop Luncheon Special Jean Sardou Studio DoivntlalrB »ear that we don't take advantage Sister Alma Marie who recent- 10 a, m. at the home of Mrs. ly received a decoration from the Chester C. Burley, of Glendale For a delicious and satisfying of thU collection as we should, luncheon dish—hollow out large tf it were necessary for us to trav Outside Dunellen Chinese government, at the hands road, to discuss plans for the an- n nual Christmas meeting. tomatoes, sprinkle inside with Charles and Molly Forbes, who, of Bishop Yu-Pin, has just left The committee members are: salt, invert and drain. Fill to- R. H. MUIR, INC. with their two sons, formerly lived with Sister Theresa Miriam and Mrs. Allison H. Hearn, chairman; riSato cups with diced cooked veal 308 Springfield Avenue Main and Prospect Street-- East Orange, N. J. BRASS ANDIRONS in Baltusrol road, have opened an Sister Carita for the headquarters U" Tell. tU.nb; S fold Sri-pen »rai» Mrs. Burley, vice-chairman; Mrs. mixed with chopped celery and antique shop one mile west of Dun- of the Sisters of Charity In the Summit, New Jersey ! Handle!, I7.S0; Black and Bran Lot Robert E. Brannan, publicity; mayonnaise. Garnish with sliced Holler, »T.50i Pierced Bran Fendersi ellen on Route 28, 235 Bound Hunan province of China, During formerly of Beechwood Rd. Mrs. Richard T. Carrlco, Mrs. stuffed olives. Open 9:30 Until OhrlHtmaa. Brook road. the recent war. Sister Alma Marie -, COLONIAL ANMQ.DE SHOP George H. Chase, Mrs. John N. Ever since leaving Summit the supervised the care of 80,000 sol- got Broafl 8t., Newark 2 HIT S-«U« d'Este, Mrs. Hugh K. Dunn, Mrs. We buy Antique Furniture, Figurines, Porbeses have been collecting an- diers In China. ' China, Clock*, Jewelry, Silverware, Old T. Earl Lenlgan, and Mrs. Herbert tiques for their own pleasure, and Ellen Conroy, who is In charge ' dold and Silver, Etc J. Osborne. found it was so much fun that of the sale is assisted in the ar- they decided they could atand do- rangements by Hasina Grogan, Something New ing it for a living, too, president of the mission unit. Motored to Miami Has Been Added Hence the little cottage type shop, Three Summit men, Donald Me- low to the ground, with brown and Glee Club Concert Hale, Prank S. Paul, Jr. and Toys! & More Toys! white checked gingham ruffles at The Saint Elizabeth College Philip Siiberman write under date the windows and a pot store to See Oar Large Selection at Glee Club, under the direction of of November 29: keep the place warm, Charles spe- Professor Frederic Joslyn, will "Arrived O. K. at Miami, Fla., in Unbelievable Prices cializes in old historical "relics" give a concert in the auditorium, our Model A Ford. The weather is and books and manuscripts which for the College faculty, on Mon- swell, temperature above 80. Plan- For Boys and Girls show a weakness for George Wash- day evening, December 10, at 8 ning to spend a week here. The ington. Molly loves old lamps and o'clock. beach is very attractive." • of all ages has some lovely ones to show, as well as bottles, china and glass. There is a small trunk full of but- Textile tons, too. And many other articles that might help out in someone's Treasure Shop Christmas list. IT'S THE LITTLE THINGS "Four Yard Goad* and Remnant Store" New Executive Secretary THAT COUNT 68 Elm Sfc, Morristown, N. J. For Summit Girl Scouts The Summit Girl Scout Council Open 9-6 Daily, except Sunday is very pleased to announce that ecause this year home gifts M———•————I—i Mrs. Lloyd L. Hughes will be their •new Executive Secretary, said mean more than ever, you'll want Mrs. Thomas N. Johnson. Mrs. Hughes needs no Introduction to 16 Shopping Days local Scouting circles, having been to choose the finest in home very active for the past few years. She was Professional Field Secre- Til Christmas tary for the Morris area from furnishings and accessories. You can buy all sorts of lovely 1939 to 1942 and Executive Secre-- tary for the Summit Council for Whether it's your own family Christmas gifts (including cos- the year 1942-43. She was a leader tume jewelry) at our shop—at of a troop in 1914 and Vice Presi- the most reasonable prices. dent of the Council and Camp rooftree or a brand new cottage Committee Chairman In 1945. "We are especially fortunate In FREE GIFT WRAPPING having Mrs. Hughes as our Execu- for two, our home decorating tive Secretary because of her un- derstanding of our own problems staff stands ready to help you due to her close cooperation with Hula's the Girl Scout Office, the leaders and the Scouts themselves during select big or little gifts to warm Electric Shop the past years," continued Mrs. Johnson, "Mrs. Hughes will be in Opponlte Slefart-Reei Chevrolet the office from 9 to 5 on Tuesdays all the hearts and hearths on your and Wednesdays." gift list. May we suggest these

WrfU For ideas for home gifts. . . . Our Beautifully tllti«tr«ted Catalogue GAY ACCESSORIES LAMPS "From^actory-To-Yoii? that will warm her heart and cheer her Christmas •JHrr • CHAIRS IN THE MITTENS—of buuny far, wool, wind resistant poplin 1.50 to 3.08* -TABLES •I "-:. KERCHIEFS—hand-Mocked crepes, wools, spun rayons ; 1.00 to 3.17 MIRRORS TRADITION SLIPPER SOX—embroidered woolen sox with , Remington Fur Company warm felt soles '. 2.50 to 2.98 RUGS efttn something extra in Fine Fun to women willing to go SKI GAPS—grand for the rain, too ...... 1.98 out of their way 1 SCARFS—of Nylon, crapes, wools 1.00 to 1.98 .' • FoTyen r«' discerning; women SOX—argyles, wools, cottons ...... 29ff to 1.00 have been beating a path to ,'the Flemington Fur Com^j EARMUFFS—soft and furry ...... 1.00 ' pany's Factory Showroom in- p* Flemington, Now Jersey ., ;'t DRIVE A LITTLE . r? •Plus federal tax. ! ' because they hove secured SAVE A LOT! ; lomething extra in fur crafts- !FUR COATS manship and values. from $99 to $3,800

THE LARGEST FUR MANUFACTURER IN NEW JERSEY Loultd At JOSEPH ZEIGNER, Inc. I Spring St,FI«mlnjri«l, N.I. I OpenDtlljtoHP.M. 8. M. 420 Springfield Av«. - SUMMIT 472 Springfield Ave. j Summit 6-0039

irfiuiitiiiiiiniiiiiiiniinnnrinniiiiniiiijTnrirninTiTinnimnnjinnTiiinniiiiiiiiifmniiinirmnTinnraininmTnnTm inimMiiini (0 THE SUMMIT HEftAlD, THURSDAY, OECEMKR t, 1f4f 21 Spicy TortWts wall; add egg molauei. together i tart shell* \ full and bake is * dry ingredients and add to first hot oven (400 F.) about 85 mia- LiMcMtox Wtoatr Seta Company mixture alternately with the milk-. utes, or until done. Make 6 email AM you looking for a new idea Dtsstrt Probltm Fold a the raisins and citron. Fill tartlets. is lunch-box aaadwlchec? Here Having company and can't i_ Women U one that a working man will think of anything to serve for des- particularly like, became it's sert? Well, everyone can think of "something he can bite into!" It something, but will the sugar sup- is suggested by Jessie Alice Cline, ply stand for it? That is the prob- ally. There are many variations home economist. lem these days as most of the old possible, including the ever-popu- The bologna make* the sand- Jack'n Jill reliables just use what seems to Combine Heat lar scalloped potatoes with allcea wich hearty, satisfying and nu-be buckets of sugar—but—to the cf ham, and baked or pan-brown- tritious. The variety of season- rescue comes good old molaiaes And Potatoes ed hash. ings makes the flavor really and in no time at all, yo,u can turn SANITARY The following recipet are some- •nappy. This Is a prize-winner for out as fancy and as tasty a dessert what more unusual. Thi tint cool fall days. as the moat particular guest could In Many Ways utilizes left-over mashed potatoes, Minced Bologna Sandwiches want. Top it with a gob of whip- Diaper Service Meat and potatoes are a well- adding dried beef to make an ap- 2 cups minced bologna ped cream and what do you have? established twosome at American petite-tempting breakfast or \i chopped green pepper Spicy Tartlets luncheon dish. The second com- Vi teaspoon prepared mustard «dinner tables. Boys and men, par- 1 recipe plain pastry bines lamb with potatoes and peaa '.4 teaspoon salt ticularly, lend to feel that both 6 tablespoons currant jelly "For A Happy Change" in tasty individual meat pies. V» teaspoon pepper of tbese items are a "must" for 1/3 cup shortening SERVING SUMMIT MOTHERS TWICE WEEKLY Dried Beef Cakes 3 tablespoons chopped pickle a satisfactory dinner, and often 6 tablespoons sugar '4 pound dried beef 2 tablespoons catsup ior a hot lunch, too. Incidentally, 1 egg, well beaten "4 tablespoons butter or marga- M cup salad dressing 53 Abbett Ave. Morristown the two foods not only taate good 1/3 cup pure New Orleans rine Combine ingredients in order together, but they also comple- molasses 2 cups left-over mashed potatoes given and mix thoroughly; Spread Phone MO. 4-0159 ment each other nutritionally. 1 cup sifted flour 1 egg generously on bread which has Now that meat supplies are so 2 tablespoons chopped citron Bacon drippings first been spread with butter or much improved and potatoes are 'a teaspoon baking powder Parsley ' margarine. Lettuce is a good ad- plentiful, homemakers can play '» teaspoon salt dition, but should be wrapped sep- up this popular combination with- Cut into small shreds all but 6 '•s teaspoon cinnamon arately for the lunch-box and out hesitation, says Jessie Alice slices of the dried beef. Melt but- 'i teaspoon ground cloves PHOTOGRAPHY • Cllne, home, economist. For va- ter or margarine and add beef, added when the sandwich is eaten. 1/3 cup milk . PORTRAITS riety, the potatoes may be baked, stirring and cooking until brown << cup seedless raisins and crisp, Combine with manned One of the three simplest, basic patterns in elementary design of Candid Wedding Photos boiled, fried, hash-browned S/Sgt. Nigro in Manila Line individual muffin pans potatoes -and beaten egg. Crop by home flower arrangements is to "compose" the display in circular creamed, scalloped, and served in BOROUGH - With the 132d with pastry and put 1 tablespoon large spoonfuls into hot drippings. form. Here's an example that suggests ideas—and shows how to Specializing in many other ways, Quartermaster Truck Company, of jelly in each. Cream shortening Brown on both sides and serve at achieve striking beauty with the help of a few simple rules. It is also a first-class idea to in Manila, is S/Sgt. Angelo M. and add sugar and cream togethe HOME PORTRAITURE »erve the meat and potatoes com- once. Garnish with slices of dried If your figured vase strikes a circular note, then repeat this theme Nigro, son ^>f Mr. and Mrs. John bined in the same dish occasion- beef, rolled cornucopia style by a flower arrangement that is circular, too. Above, 'Alyn Wayne, Nigro of 7 Laurel drive. Jules A. Wolin around sprigs of parsley. Serve* 6, flower stylist for^FTD, demonstrates how to do this witih just a few The sergeant spent over 21 "Jean La Valle" roses to produce an unusual and attention-compelling effect. months on the old French prison Individual Lamb Pies 290 Madison Avenue De Luxe 2 pounds lamb breast or shoul- island of New Caledonia, off the • Cut Flowers coast of Australia, before coming 1UVINGTON, N. J. Christinas der Meat and Fruit Make To prolong the life of a new Union 2-1923 or Essex S-S8M 2 tablespoons Hour fiber doormat, keep it damp for a to Luzon. He first landed in Ba- • Trees 20 Cards tanga and then was sent to Bay- 2 tablespoons lard Tempting Main Dish week by sprinkling it every two or With Envelopes ombong, Northern Luzon, only a 2 cupa diced potatoes Sausages and bananas turned three days. This will prevent the • Wreaths Boxed 1 cup peas Into tasty and nourishing dish. fiber from breaking, which hap- short distance from the bloody '/> cup finely chopped onion No—you can't think of sausages pens If the mat is allowed to get Balete Pass. During the period of Salt and pepper being regal,—but with bananas too dry, heavy fighting In the Cagayan • Greens 97c Biscuit dough they really are. And not only regal, Valley, he helped supply the fast Have lamb breast or shoulder but tasty and nourishing and really Buy a Victory Bond today-vand moving divisions with their much hold it. needed materials. SETRACK LIMITED STOCK cut into Mi to 1-lnch cubes. Dredge different for a hearty dinner. THE Roomer's Book Shop In flour and brown well in lard, Baked Sausages With Interior Decorator Place browned lamb and vege- it SIAI'i-K NtflUIlT Sauteed Bananas tables in Individual casserole Upholstering Phone Summit 1-3508 dishes. Season. Rinse pan in 18 pork sausage links i Spring House which lamb was browned with hot 6 rounds toast • Slip Covers * Draperies 6 small bananas River Road water; pour this over pies, Cover BOOKS FOR GIFTS • Yard Goods * Remnants and cook in a moderate oven 3 tablespoons lemon juice ',-i cup currant jelly Su. 6-0424 (30O° P.) until lamb and vegeta- • Window Shades • Wallpapers bles are done, about Ub hours. Flour Prick sausages and place In CHRISTMAS GIFTS Fifteen minutes before serving, * Furniture Repaired — Refinished E. n place baking powder biscuit moderate oven (350 F.h Bake for FOR ALL READING TASTES 23 minutes, Turn during baking rounds on top. Increase oven * Upholstery Supplies «a temperature to 425° F., and bake to brown evenly, Remove sausages Mrs. Mercy in hot platter. Cut bananas in half, until biscuits are brown, 146 South St. Morristown, N, J. lengthwise, Dip in lemon juice and GIVE THE BOOKS RIVER ROAD flour. Saute In sausage fat until YOU'D LIKE TO GET Toddler Outfit delicately browned. Cover center Clothes I 64-66 FURNITURE, of bananas with currant jelly. J Place on toast. Arrange on platter for with sausages. Garnish with pars- Town 64-66 RIVER ROAD ley. DECORATIONS, We Have A BOOK To Fit Everyone and "Look for the new building" Paintiitft, Ruts, Silvir When a grayish sediment ap- Country MMI5| i Mr «l iRiraM ImlHtt pears on furniture after it has t\ and Every Purse U Tel. SUMMIT 6-2681 Attractive and FroM Smral Mvi»» Soim* been highly polished, remove with a cloth dampened with one teas- Unusual Christmas Gifts Topthtr With Hit Projitriy ol poon of vinegar to a cup of water. Roemer's Book Shop MRS. DAVID B. JANOVER Dry thoroughly with a clean cloth. ** SPECIAL REDUCED XMAS GIFT RATES ON MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS *** MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTINGS AT REAL SAVINGS.—ORDER FOR YOURSELF—OB And Fran Othan Salt fish must not be actually boiling during preparation, or it FOR XMAS GIFTS. A'HfRACTrVE GflFT CARDS mailed free announcing your Xmas will toughen. Keep the water be- Gifts, reaching recipients December 24th. YOU CAN NOW ORDER MOST ANY MAG- AUCTION low the boiling point. AZINE YOU WANT! Wil, Tburs,, M&Sdh, PS0 9.00 7.00 3.53.60 aoo 8.50 4.00 > NELSON Alpha Sigma Phi , LDTE MAGAZINE (Military rate «3.50 a yr.) 4.50 8.50 12.50 8.50 4.00 5.00 2.52.K0O BOROUGH-From New Wil- LOOK 2.50 4,50 6.00 Each 1 yr.. gifgift $5.00 ' PHOTOGRAPHER mington, Pa., conies word that Mademoiselle 8.00 2.40 3.03,00 1.51.600 1 Edwin Dotten, son of Mr. and Mrs. McCaH's •••• LS» 3.00 4,50 6.00 3.08.000 > E. MLDbtten of Fairview avenue, Motorboatlng • 9M 4>0 8,00 12.00 8.00 4.04.00 has been pledged to Alpha Sigma National Geographic ;'••••,;;"• ° 8,00 7.50 0 5.05.00 2.62.50 21 Maple St. Phi, national social fraternity, at NATURE MAGAZINE (Children love it) 3.00 7,50 10.00 7.50 3.73.79 Westminster College, He I* a. NEWSWEEK (An excellent value) 3.76 8 9.00 » • 12.02.00 6.06.00 . Summit freshman, New Yorker • • .°° 7,50 11.00 7.50 3.53.60 ? OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 p.m OMNHtOOK (4 Best Sellers Monthly) 4.00 3,00 4.00 3.00 1.01.000 OPEN ROAD FOR BOYS (Boys 8 to 14) 2.00 6-2865 To freshen chiffon and m&ke It 3,50 5,00 3,00 LSL50 : like. new, hang It In the bathroom ON THE DAYD S CIRCLED .ON THE Outdoor Life • 2.00 8.00 7.50 5.00 2.22.20 j when the room is filled with steam; PAGEANT MAGAZINE ....._. S-00 3.00 3,75 3.00 1.51.500 j Parents Magazine V 2.00 then, hang out doors. CALENDAR. 4.50 6.00 4.50 2.02.000 j POPULAR MECHANICS 2.50 5.00 '7.00 5.00 2,02,000 1 STORE HOURS OTHER DAYS IN DECEMBER Popular Photography 3.W) 8.00 7.50 '4.54.50 2.22.255 1 9:80 A. M. TO 8:S0 P. M. Popular Science • '• • • 2.50 5.00 7.25 6.00 2.22.28 1 READER'S DIOEST For ALL SERVICEMEN and ALL EX-SERVICEMEN now in civilian life—2 yrs. 8.1 Redbook 2.50 4,00 6.00 5.00 2.80* SATURDAY EVENING POST ••• 4.00 6.00 8.00 8.00 4.00 Screenland or Silver Screen...... j..-^.. • 2.00 3,5(1 5.00 4.00 2.00 3.00 6,00 8.00 3.00 . Skyways • •"•...... 7.00 5.00 0,00 13,00 B.25 4.25 CLOSED ALL DAY TIME (New subs.) (Military rate $8.50 a yr.) 5.00 7.50 10.00 0.25 4.28 TIME (Renewals) (Military rate $3.50 a yr.) Summit, N, J. MONDAY, DEC. 24 ; 4.00 O.Ofl 8.00 7.00 3.00 U. S. News..... ••• ' 10.00 4.00 VOGUE MAGAZINE ••" 6.00 0.00 NOW LOCATED AT Vogue Pattern Book •• 150 Each 2 yr. gift $2.50 CLOSED MONDAY, DEC. 31st WOMAN'S HOME COMPANION (Military $1,00). 1.50 2.50 3.00 3,00 1.50 Yachting 4.00 7.00 10.00 7.00 3.00 6,00 5.00 2,50 SHOP EATUY THIS CHRISTMAS Your Life • 3.00 7.00 PUBLISHERS SERVICE »«. and A***. Must P. Oh. 36 DE FOREST AYE. Enclosed 287 SENEGA PLACE, WESTFHflLD, N. J.

SHOP EARLY IN THE MORNING... EARLY IN THE WEEK. How long «ew or caru w roau Renewal MORNING OPENING HOUR all thru December 9:30 a. m. Magaiine Begin

Name of Donor 8ruiN(H'IEI,1) AVE. Subscriber Q BAJNK * TRUST CO. (rlpn»c print) , (rii'imt prlul) NTRAN1) Til IU'I HP, M. EPSTEIN Morriitown, N. J. Address MM. imm.^...... m Phone Su. 6-0400 Address • "LOOK FOR T1IE SIGN" City and State Clly and State ,,,,...,I,.MMMHI Lincoln School few Provideace toroagfc Public library Story Hew Attract* Yemgittn W#Wflnl MCH Yule Assemblies Borough December 20 BOROUGH - Already the Air Codtf Discharge Christmas spirit Is becoming ap- parent throughout Lincoln School. ay School Teachers have completed plans for Yuletirae decorations and be- fore this week is over most of the Annual rooms and the school In general will be gayly decorated for the Christmas, Christmas Party The culmination of the Christ- BOROUGH-The annual Sunday mas season will come on Decem- Chrlitmu party of the ber 20 which will be a festival -Methodist Church wlU be held day throughout the school. On that day at 9 a. m. assembly, Mrs. ,"• Wednesday, December 12, begin- Esther Maher's fourth grade will ning at 8:18 p. m., in the Sunday present to the lower school, a School parlors. pageant, "The Christmas Story." This will be augmented by carol V.: All Sunday School atudenta, of- MBS. RICHARD A. BUSH ficer* and teacheri, u well ai singing with the aid of Illustrated slides. yarentt are invited. The program At the 9 a. m, assembly Santa will include community singing Claus is expected with all his Agnes Spatuzzi i ftnd tht rendering of Christmas trimmings. All pre-school children Mroli. A guest artist from East and through the fourth grade are And Richard Rush Orange will read a number of expected at this assembly. Through Christmas selections. the courtesy of the Recreation ] ,Tlie less informal part of the BOROUGH—George D. LewiB, Commission each youngster in Wed, to Live Here program will include the showing sen of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph M. this group will receive a present. BOROUGH - Miss Agnes Lewis of Ridgeview avenue, New At 11 a. m, on the 20th the of five reels of cartoons and one Spatuzzi, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Providence, was recently dis- Junior High School assembly will Anthony Spatuzzi of Livingston Of winter sports. Refreshments charged from the Naval Air Corps convene for its Christmas party ..'frill be served together with the avenue, became the bride Thurs- in which be served as an Aviation at which time Mrs. Maher's class day of Richard A. Rush, son of "V|maual distribution of Christmas Cadet tor two year*, Mr, Lewie U will repeat its pageant. Also there ,'*uidy. Mrs. Bridget Rush and the late now attending Lehigh University will be Christmas carols by the Patrick Rush of Mead street, Ne- - At the present time the enroll- in Bethlehem, Pa., where he is in audience. BOROUGH—Comes Saturday afternoon and you will find many row: Mrs. William DeHart (story teller) with William DeHart on her wark. The Rev. Edward G. Lar- . aunt of the Sunday School is tht sophomore class. During the afternoon of the lap; Ellen McCue, Fred DeHart, Allen Wied; back row, left to right, youngsters trekking to the Free Public Library for the story hour kin performed the ceremony at a around the 200 mark including 20th, there will be Christmas part- Ruth Boice, Sara Jane Parcells, Walter Wied, Balcom Parcells, and Nuptial Mass in Our Lady of 1 ies throughout the school. In the those in the Home Department Methodist Church which begins at 1:15. In the above picture you see, left to right, first Mrs. Lawrence Radtke, librarian. Peace Church here. A reception the Cradle Roll. At least ISO meantime in the art room, various for the immediate families was expected at the Christmas Rev. H. F. Dabinett sized packages and attractive held at the Hotel Suburban, Sum- 10 a. m—Sunday School under wrappings are on display. Doesn't Trust Japs Engagement Announced mit. the direction of Alien Roberts. Miss Grace Gizzi of Newark was LEOAL ADVERTISEMENT Honor Roll Navy Man Writes 11 a. m.—Morning worship. Mr. New Providence maid of honor and Joseph Rush BOROUGH Dablnett's sermon will be titled, was his brother's best man. Ush- l< NOTICE OF PUBLIC BALE "Thirty Percent Increase From Bowling League And Monument About Japan ers were Frank anil Vincent Spa- Life." •;-,#' NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, Nov. 18 Standings and Results tuzzi, brothers of the bride, and «'(pursuant to Revised Statutes 40:60-26 Women's Guild W, L. HO. Av. Firemen "A" 30 3 877 742 John F. Rush, brother of the '•?* tt the State of New Jersey, and Monday evening, December 10, To Be Decorated And Manila groom. ; ' amendments thereto and supplement! Five Aces 23 10 739 657 « thereof, that the Borough of New at 8:15, the Women' Guild will Men's Club 20 13 815 695 BOROUGH-As part of the BOROUGH — Allan Dampman, The bride wore a faille tafetta m V providence, a municipal corporation M & M 15 18 750 622 ' pf the State of New Jersey, will sell, meet in the church parlors to sing Firemen "B" 7 26 716 602 Christmas activities of the New M 2/c of the Navy, son of Mr. and gown with lace yoke. Her finger- * - at public cale, all Ita righti, title carols and to pack a Christmas Building & Loan 4 29 674 562 Providence Garden Club, the mem- Mrs. Harry Dampman of Lavina tip veil fell from a crown of and Inttreit tn and to all that cer- tain traot or parcel of land situate, box to be sent to a missionary and Building & Loan bers each year take upon them- court, took time out November 25 orange blossoms. She carried a '. lying; and being In the Borough of his family in Tennessee. A. Musson 123 US 135 selves the responsibility of decor- somewhere in the Pacific aboard colonial bouquet. The maid of new Providence, In the County of Dotten Ill 148 111 '„ union and Stats of New Jersey, and SomervlHe Meeting T. Musson 95 95 100 ating the Honor Roll and the the USS Loidlow, to write the honor wore blue diiffon and 1 , more particularly described at fol- Mr. Dabinett will attend a meet- Badfrley 138 103 87 monument with appropriate greens. Herald, in part, as follows: carried a colonial bouquet. ;. Jowj; Voegtlen 135 107 145 ing In Somerville on Tuesday, De- The bride p a graduate of Mt. Being known and designated as Lot This year, Mrs, G. B, Sawyer, "Included In our mail call yes- cember 11. Totals 602 571 Ji78 St. Dominies Academy, Caldwell, •IB In Block 3 on a certain map en- Five Aces president of the Garden Club, has terday, the first in two months, titled, "Lachawanna Park, formerly were several copies of the Herald. and attended Pace Institute and ;' known as Cedarhurst, owned by w. Christmas Party Rellly 151 128 119 appointed a committee for each of T. Brower at West Summit, N. J." Wednesday evening, December Kelly 117 138 the two places. For decorating the These were a reminder to send my Rutgers University. Mr. Rush is a '• filed in the Union County Register's Cross 129 106 long overdue thanks for your graduate of Seton Hall College ; Office on September 19, 1803 as Map IS, at 8:15, the Sunday School will Phillips 132 155 137 Honor Roll, she has named Mrs. < No. SO0-A. hold their Christmas party In the Simon 160 121 1!2 paper which has been such a from which he also received his Becker 130 134 J. F. Laverty, Mrs. T, F. Rellly •' Being further known and designate church parlors. and Mrs. W. C. Totten. pleasure to me and all the other Master of Arts degree. In addition, * ' ed as Lot 18 in Block 100 on the As- Totals ."679 640 ~650 fellows away from home. he is a graduate of John Marshall • aessment Map of the Borough of New Mrs. Arthur Sawyer of Mont- To decorate the monument, Mrs. • Providence. Law School. Mr. Rush was recent- olair will give some Christmas M 4 M Sawyer has asked Mrs. G. H. Sll- "The last two months have been • Said lands Bhall be sold for cash readings, Games, motion pictures, :ordlll» 156 138 quite interesting and included a ly discharged from the Army nfter ' to the highest bidder, but the mini- A. Church 113 145 veira, Mrs C. L. Eastman and Mrs, serving three and a half years, 21 , jnum price at which said lands may and refreshments will follow, sick-trip to Manila and two trips Delia 134 153 171 C. M. Blackhall. ALLAN W. DAMPMAN, QM 2/C BOROUGH - Mr. and Mrs. months of which were spent in the . be sold, however, is 1250. Choirs—Thursday F. Mea 185 168 140 to Japan escorting occupation The above described lands .shall b« J. Church 151 140 158 Chauncey Horton of Madison ave- European Theater of Operations, i sold subject to covenants and restric- 3:30 p. m.—Junior Choir at the Mandato ..; „ 126 143 forces. Luckily, we missed the nue announce the engagement of After a wedding trip tho couple : . tions of record, If any, subject to Presbyterian Church typhoons, so it was pretty much ' •onine'ordinances of the Borough ot home of Mrs. J. Wilbur Wahl. Totals ."ra ~730 ~750 their daughter, Miss Florence will reside in New Providence. c New Providence and subject to such 8 p. ra.—Senior Choir at the Firemen "B" Rev. C. H. Verkes a pleasure cruise. ,,' states of facts as an accurate sur- Men's Club Stops Hope Horton to Cpl. James Mc- W. VlKna.ll 150 115 145 vey and inspection thereof may dis- home of Harold Spicer. Fischer 92 130 165 9:45 a. m.—Sunday School. "The Japs really did a job Grady, son of tho late Mr. and Mra. close* Social Club Behre 99 97 118 of destroying Manila. We tramped Thomas McGrady of Bcrwyn, Pa. St. Luke's Ref. Episcopal >i The above described lands shall bi It. Webster 118 130 134 11 a. m.—Morning Service, with sold subject to an easement and Friday, Dec. 14, at 8:15 p. m., Plctroikl 122 139 154 the sermon, "The Messiah Prophe- Firemen V 27 for hours through the rain hardly Miss Horton is on the faculty of Ilev. Frank Kopprll rrilht of way given by wilber F. the Social Club will meet to pre- sied." found a building which wasn't Central Junior High School, Sum- The topic of Mr. Roppelt's ser. • '••• Brower and Lola B. Brower, his wife,pare for the Christmas party. Totals "581 "Hi ~716 scarred to some degree. In the cen- mon at the 11 o'clock service on i' to Borough of New Providence, 8 p. m.—Junior Christian En mit. Cpl. McGrady is stationed 'X dated July 21, 1986 and recorded In firemen "A" ter of town whole buildings lay on Sunday morning, will be "The deavor, Miss Myrtle Lawyer and Game Win Streak at Fort Hancock with the Coast /ith» Union County Register's Office Schmltt 129 171 145 their sides. Inflation is (or was) Magnificat." .. In Book 1326 of Deeds for said Coun- Holy Name Society Ayers 152 129 126 BOROUGH Artillery In defense of New York. ty, on pages 39 etc. Robert Williamson, leaders. very bad with most objects selling W. Oeborno 172 169 187 4 p. m.—Rehearsal for Christ- The express-train speed of This will begin a series on the Conditions of sale to bi announoed BOROUGH —A meeting was 162 156 at prices eight to ten times state- songs of the Advent as found in at the sal*. held Monday night in the Fire Parcella 160 142 161 mas program. Firemen "A" in the New Provi- Said publle salt Shall take place side prices. However, the people P.T.A. Meeting Dec. 13 the Gospel according to St. Luke. at the Borough Hall, Springfield Ave- House looking forward to the re- 6:45—Bible Study, under the di- dence Bowling League came to an Totals 756, 773 "776 appear quite industrious and with BOROUGH — Lincoln School There will be a parish meeting nue, Borough of New Providence, N, organization of the Holy Name so- Mea'i Clnl) rection of Robert Williamson. abrupt halt at the 11th session of the makeshift tools and materials ' J., on Friday, December 7, 1946, at Thompson 141 144 117 P. T, A. will hold its third meet- following th? morning service. All 4 U0 P. M, ciety of Our Lady of Peace 8 p. m.—Evening service, with the loop November 28 on the Hy- Walil 120 129 at hand are building a new Manila Ing of the season at a Christmas are Invited to attend. JOHN W. OAKWOOD, Church. It is expected a perma- Sked 158 122 the sermon by Mr. Williamson, Bowl alleys in Union. After Fire- on the wreckage of the old. It only Mayor. nent organization will be effected Johnbroer 173 177 1«3 "The Children of One Family." tea, December 13 at the school. Irving 168 229 148 men "A" had posted 27 straight seems right that we help them It will be the last meeting until OMAS C. MtfSSON, at a meeting planned for January Oppenheltner 104 146 Thursday, Dec. 13—Women's As- wins, "the Men's Club stepped up more than we are now. March. The December 13 meeting EXTRA SIZE Borough Clerk. at the Fire House. sociation Christmas party. Fees—114.08 Totals 760 ~776 733 on the 28th and won two out of "From Manila we went to Hlro will place emphasis upon an op- full-skirted flower LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT three, even if by a whiskef. The Wan which Is located some 15 portunity for teachers and parents garden povvns Men's Club won the first match, miles south of Hiroshima. I to confer about students. Mrs, Sizes 40-50 760-756 and the second, 776-773. wasn't able to get transportation William Landmesser is president $3.98 - $5.50 Irving and Johnbroer were the to the latter town, but those who and Mrs. Phoebe Bunce, chair- Kays Shop 100 Summit Ave. big factors in the success of the did were amazed at the damage man of the program committee. Men's Club. done by the atom bomb. Ordi- nary explosives did a thorough Irving won high individual and job at Hlro blasting acres' of gross game honors for the eve- hangars and creating a scrap ning. His 228 was the high indi- heap of Jap planes large enough vidual game tally and hie gross to fill a football field. of 645 was high In the loop giving him an average for the evening "The Jap Is a curious individual. Though fed on hate for years, he WRAP 'EM UPI of 181.66, Johnbroer's gross of 513 was third high for the night giving is extremely courteous and as far him an average of 171. W. Os- as I know has given a little trouble bortie of Firemen "A" won second in occupied Japan, For some rea- high honors for Nov. 28 with a son I feel safer there than say in total of S2S for an average of 176. Casablanca or along the Marseille water front. Jap trucks, full of LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT soldiers, slowed to be sure they NEW PROVIDENCE BOB.OUGH didn't splash mud on us. The store- Notice of Sale of Property for keepers were the epitome of gen- Nonpayment of Taxes nnd iality and those who spoke English Assessments for Year 1941 ana Prior Tears spoke unhesitatingly on all sub- PUBLIC NOTICE Is hereby given, jects. One said the atom bomb re- that the undersigned, Collector of Taxes of the Borough ot New Provi- sembled a huge budding flower. A dence, In the. County of Union, N. J., strange way to describe such an will sell at public auction at Borough Hall In the Borough of New Provi- occurence. dence, Wednesday, December 19, 1945, at 3:00 o'clock In the afternoon, the "However, the Japs are two- following described lands: faced and unbelievably poor. Two- A. F, Qullford, block 2, lot 4 1229.02 faced as shown by the war atro- Victoria Harrison, block 7, lot 60 82.56 cities and in the depths of their AI, Cohen, block 11, lots 401, poverty envious enough of our 402, 403, 404 2.05 casual wealth to take another R. Cohen, block 11, lota 394, 896, 896. 397, 398, 399, 400 8.56 crack at us some more advantage- M. Mocerlne, block 36, lots 13, ous day. It would be a long time 15, 17 ., 6.11 A; Swlngley, block 76, lots 39, before I would ever trust them." 40, 41, 42, 43 ..„ «.19 M. Schwartz, block 77, lots 81, 32, 33 „ U.09 A. Swlngley, block 78, lota 5, Active in College 6, 7, 8, 9 8.19 BOROUGH—Henry Stroke, son Chas. fiormley, block 78, lots of M. A. Stavitsky, South street, 15, IB, 17, 18, 19, 20 401.81 YOUR WATER PIPES are subject to freezing and Said lands will be sold to mako the Murray Hill, is a member of the amount chargeable against the same on the first day of July, 1945, as com- Newark College of Engineering bursting during bitterly cold weather. puted, in the foregoing- list, together Glee Club which was recently re- with Interest on said amount from tho activated. said first day of July to the date of TAKE THESE PRECAUTIONS NOW: •ale, and costs of sale. Mr. Stroke is the vice-president Said lands will ba sold In fee to nuch of the sophomore class, treasurer t Wrap exposed water pipes with person as will purchase the same of the American Chemical Society, subject to redemption at th? lowest old newspapers, rags or burlap. the "Weiterly Line of Zone C South rate of Intorost, but In no case In ex- and vico-presldent of the Music ing back from Zone C to Zone A on on the amendment plan from Zone : "I Degrees 45 Minutes East 125 "Zoning Map o( the Borough of New C to Zone A which accompanies and cess of eight per centum per annum. Club, 'eet to n Point Distant 175 Feet la mode a part of this ordinance. The payment for the same Bhnll be Providence" dated January 33, 1933, made before the conclusion of, the Mr. Stroke is taking courses in • Turn off and drain outside fixtures. OBDUTAITCB fortherly at Right Angles from the that portion of property described In All ordinances or parts of ordi- i Northerly Sldo Lino of Mountain snld (unending ordlnnnco beginning nances Inconsistent herewith are sale, or the property shall bn resold. the field of chemical engineering. , . I ORDINANCE! to Amend tn Avenuo; Thonce (3) Easterly Par- at a point In tho prolongation north- hereby repented nnd this ordinance Any parcel of real property for t Make your basement air-tight. Re* } Ordinance entitled "An Ordinance allel to Mountain Avenuo and Dis- oily or the easterly lino of lands of slinll'tako effect Immediately In the which there slinll bo no other pur- to Amend an Ordinance Entitled tant 175 Teot Northerly nt Right Slii'Miian C. Dny, thoreln distant 300 mnnner provided by law. chaser will be struck off and sold to pair broken window panes. Stuff The Zoning Ordinance of the Bor- Angles from tho Northerly Sldo feet northerly from (ho northerly sldo I, Thomas C. Musson, do hereby tho BorpURh of New Providence, In Seek Canned Goods . OUgh of New Providence' Adopted Line Thereof 821i Feet to a Point certify that the foregoing ordinance fee, for redemption int night per In the Prolongation Northerly of lino of .Mountain Avenue; from said centum mill tho municipality shall cracks In walls, around windows March 8, 1938," Which Amending point of beginning running; thence was duly Introduced nnd passed at For Use in War Ordinance was Adopted October 11, tho Easterly, Line of Lands of first reading at a regular meeting of hnvo the ennio remedies nnd rights ns Shormniv 0. Day ; Thenco (4) North- (1) westerly niirulli'l to Mountain other purchasers, Including the right and around doors which admit 1945 Changing from Zone A to Zone Avemid and distant 300 feet northerly tho Borough Council of tho Borough Torn Countries 0 on "Zoning Map of thn Borough erly In a Prolongation of tho East- of Now Providence held on Thurs- to bar or forecloao tho right to re- erly Line of Lands of said Day 115 nt right nni'les therefrom 825 feet demption. cold air. ny ; tinmen (I) iiorthgrly In n. pro- COMMONWEALTH WATER CO. ant 100 Feet Northerly at Itlghl Dated: November 0, 154II. of November, 1IMB. Angles Therefrom 825 Font More dence" dfltfld January 23, 1038 enr- longation of the enstorly lino of THOMAS C. MUSSON, 13. Q. MILLTOn, Additional Borough News or Less to n Point In the Westerly tnln pronorty therein doscrlhed tie, lnnilH nf miM day 125 foot tn the Borough Clerk. Collector, 'bins of Zon«,Ci Thoiiut (2) ftlong and It hereby Is, amended by clmng- jiolut or placo of. lioglnnlnr, as shown 25-2U Ff97 34-37 Foes—»31,S0 on Page 32 THI SUMMIT HKULD, THUKOAY, from Uw Air Fore* UUe 9 9 serving (or tiree yean, on* wttefc —^ law MMaiaaaaaaaaaW Hfl 41 |T-Sgt. ft L Aadhts nriy MornbK) TOWNSHIP - RHtoMl High Edna M. fey wu spent: is a German MM mm loosWs School's PTA to holding a Christ- Camp. He attended Summit mas party in the school on Thurs- School*. Gets Discharge, Auto Crash Fatal day, December 13. By action of the Becomes the Bride PTA's executive board, half of the Tlu bride, who graduated j K of a dinntr ten* Township expenses were paid of stven Columbia Grammar School DIF in cltaninj water Miss M. Marshey was soloist. tion of which Joseph MulhoUand Bowling League camp. 'ffort to raise money for its many The program inoluded piano washei painted w«lli, of Berkeley Heights is president. November »» Standing* .ctivlties, Last year the club Immediately following the cere- floon, glau in a jiffy... W h HO HT Mrs. Hartig, leader, gave an solos by Miss Madeleine French, takes "cling" out of Police Chief M, Chase Runyon of )ought a score board and tackling mony a reception was held at the grease and grime. A Pine Tree Inn 17 0 808 2287 account of the general council supervisor of music; vocal solos 1 Springfield declares the present 12 6 867 2342 umrny for the football field from home of the brides parents. The little joei far—fast Blue lit. Farms •••• meeting she attended in Plainfield, by Mrs. Margaret Relbls, chair- Every luscious bite of lighting at the school is dangerous Rescue Squad .... in 7 758 2162 he funds raised by the dance and home was decorated with chrysan- Don't forget, DIF g 723 2108 saying that these councils are man of the teachers' committee ii double quick for Aristocrat Ice Cream to police handling street traffic Delia's Home Supply Iso from club members' dona- thmuma. 3 Bar S Eanch .... 8 9 719 2033 made up of troop leaders and com- for the dinner, and caricature clothes and dithes, too. contains real nutrl* during night activities. He points Hilltop Service „ 9 730 1970 ions. sketches by Mrs. Jean Mesteller, Mr, Caporaso was recently dis- Firemen 4 IS 735 183* mittee members, and urging her out that the entrance driveways at 0 17 608 1590 Decorations were under the dl- Mrs. Reibls was assisted in her tional value, with leas the school are poorly Illuminated, Berkeley Garage ... hearers to take part in future c councils. She added that at each ectlon of Miss Kay Johnson, as committee work by Mrs. Mar- calories than many and that visibility is so poor that Sovember 10 Eesillti Blue in. Farm. 2, Delia's Home council, three reports are given isted by Harry Keene, Joe Ma- guerite Woods, Mrs. Florence other popular detsert** police officers cannot effectively ozzl, Bruce Saffery, Bob Bonnet, Stlllwell, Mrs. Alta Wolff, Mrs, regulate traffic. Police Runyon Sl by committee chairmen and dis- Enjoy it at hone or ¥ine Tree Inn 3, 3 Bar S Ranch 0. 'hilip Kelley, Fred Kugelman, Marlon Tllson, Mrs. Margagert recommends pole-mounted spot HlUtop Servtee 3, Berkeley Ga- cussions are held. Helen Smith, Eileen Bailey, Ruth Lemal, Miss Agnes Sayer, and Mr. your favorite soda lights to correct the situation and On December 8, Troop 7t will "itwue Squad 8, Firemen ». BataUle, Dotty Keith, Alice Liebe, Fuchs. Mrs. Louis Mondelli pre- flood lights at the rear parking December ! Matcnei see "Blossom Time," at the Paper fountain. ind Olive Anger. pared the dinner. Delia's vs. 3 Bar 8 Ranch, I p. ni. Mill Playhouse, Mlllburn. The urea and front entrance walkway, Pine Tree Inn vs. Blue Ml. Farms, to* be used whenever a nightime next meeting will be Friday, De- 7 event is held at the school. Berkeley Garage vs. Firemen, 9:30 cember 28, at the home of Mrs. P'Rescue Squad vs. Hilltop Service, Wilde, Twin Falls Road. 9:30 p. m. PLUMBING AND HEATING EXTRA SIZES Blue Mt. Farms Mondelli-Plccola Sales and Service Andrus 1*1 112 160 Pretty Seersucker Nighties Allan ->-• ]1» 120 117 Marriage Planned Schwartzi \\« 132 138 AUTOMATIC GAS WATER HEATERS Your Christmas present problem Anglebach 1« 148 94 For January 6 Urlch I20 141 no Boilers & Radiators OSM 46-54 $2.98 TOWNSHIP-Mr. and Mrs. Kays Shop 100 Summit Avt. Totals 69° ,728 *679 Lewis Mondelli of Park avenue, Bella's Home Supply Beatrice 1{* :;•; Berkeley Heights, at a buffet 128 supper Saturday night announced SHARP PLUMBING CO. ... TOPS FOR QUALITY Teste - }H iSJ 144 GEORGE J. SHARP A. Delia }«' J" the engagement of their daughter, 139 160 Ruggerlo 163 122 Marlon Edna, to Anthony Plccola 444 Springfield Av*. Su. 6-2951 Pepil-Cala Company, Long bland City, N. Y. 1S1 of Myrtle avenue, Madison. L, MondelU Franehiied Bottlers Pnptl-Ca\a Bottling Company of N. f. Totals «» 128 6" Mr. Plccola was 52 months over- seas as a staff sergeant in the Fine Tree Inn India, China, Burma Theater. Cerulll }jj< 161 123 Flgllollno - }?? 1B0 151 Prior to that time he served In OIL BURNERS Morgan — 143 92 Africa. He is a graduate of Reg- Monica ~'Z.. 182 156 148 Fisher _. 176 209 169 ional High School, Springfield, Installed and Serviced and is employed by the Federal Total* 806 808 "673 I Bar 8 Ranch Telephone and Telegraph Co. in 155 132 Newark. .. 137 121 Galla .120 129 The wedding is planned for Jan- Now You Convert 127 1" 122 uary 6. Oliu 189 160 114 Frkdmer I23 LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT Totals • «»» Hi DOAED OF EDUCATION Back to Oil Heat in Hilltop Of The *Boyce "9 134 164 TOWNSHIP Rogers -...~«— 182 163 Of Lawton U8 .147 NEW PROVIDENCE 105 156 Hew Jersey Tomasettl «• 79 Your Home Thompson 98 NOTICE OF II1»,000. BOND SALE R. Moon Totals 629 618 718 SEALED PROPOSALS will be re- ceived by the Board of Education of Let Us Replace That Oil Burner Berkeley Oarage the Township of New .Providence, Delia « ,'? J5 County of Union, New Jeriey, on Dom Itmso 7| \f "J December 10, 1945, at 8:00 o'clock Delbero "& 121 »» P, M., at the-office of th« Board of You Removed or See Us About a New One! J. Amodeo ...... »» H ,?U6i Education, In the Columbia School, V. Amodeo 108 " Berkeley Heights, New Jersey, for the purchase of J210.000 School Dis- Totala 464 Bl! 477 trict Bonds of said Board of Educa- tion. Bald bonds will bo dated De- ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY GIVEN Beicne Squad cember 1,1945 and will mature (10,000 Schant* -»-' »J 150 98 on December 1, In each of the years Of course you felt, "Thank goodness, it's Peterson }»! 117 135 1946 to 1963, both Inclusive, and over!" But try to imagine yourself at the NO OBLIGATION Crockett «° 133 99 $16,000 on December 1 In each of the Becklngham « — «» 131 109 years 1964 and 19GB, with interest head of the Array, or the Navy-with millions Patterson -..•• ••"- 107 100 payable June 1 and December 1 tn each year. of men to get home. Or in charge of supplies, Dummy _^°_. or responsible fot a hospital ship. No, the job ~541 Said bonds will be coupon bonds Totals 6«1 631 of the denomination of $1,000 each, is not yet done! All out for the Victory Loan! Automatic Fuel Oil Delivery reglsterabla as to principal only or as Firemen 102 M. Romano }« 122 to both principal and Interest, and HatB 1" 138 84 will be payable In lawful money at D. Amodeo .-.....-.'. JJJ> 110 85 the office of The Summit Trust Com- V'annatta "0 113 168 pany, Summit, New Jersey. Dummy 1"° 100 100 Each proposal must specify In a multiple of 1/4 or 1/10 of 1% a single Rogers Coal & Lumber Co. Totals . «... 852 688 639 rate of Interest not exceeding 4% per annum which the bonds are to bear, and no proposal will bs considered Contentment ts a pearl of great which specifies a rate higher than Broad St. Summit, N. J. Su. 6-0525 price, and whoever, prooures it at the lowest rate stated In any legally acceptable proposal. Each proposal the expense of ten thousands de- muat state the amount bid for the sires makes a wise and a happy bonds, which shall be not less tban $210,000 nor more than 1211,000. LET'S BRING OUR MEN purchase.—Balguy. As between legally acceptable pro- posals specifying the same rate of HOME! That's the most impor- interest, the bonds will be sold to tant thing! That's what they the bidder complying with the terms of sale and offering to accept for the want... what you want. But MORE OF A NECESSITY NOW THAN EVER LAFFIT-OFF: amount bid the least amount of •hips and trains and planes cost bonds, the bond* to be accepted being money. You can help your thos» first maturing, and If two or more bidders offer to accept the same country speed their return tight IHT'5 TAKE CARE OF OVR LET'S THINK OF THE FUTURE/ A Complete least amount, then to the bidder offer- now, with the money you lend By lending your dollars now, in tbt ing to pay therefor the highest price. OWN! America always has, The purchaser, must also pay an by buying Victory Bonds! This America always will! Think of most important bonds you ever amount equal to the Interest on the is your country's last great call our -wounded-the time they bought, you'll be gaining that goal bonds accrued to the date of payment of the purchase price. to your patriotism. Invest to need to get back on their feet... you've had in mind •.. the new The right Is reserved to reject all the limit in Victory Bonds. die monty it will cost. Your Vic- house, the cat, the nest egg that can BURGURY POLICY bids and nny bid not complying with mean so much in time of emer- the terms of this notice will be re- tory Bonds will help provide jected. care fot these gallant men. gency .Victory Bonds mean security. All bidders are required to deposit a certified or cashiers check payable COST ONLY to the order of Board of Education LET'S FINISH THE JOB I THIS IS THE IAST TIME YOU'LL BE of the Township of New Providence, New Jersey, for }i,20O., drawn upon CALLED UPON TO INVEST IN EXTRA BONDS* an Incorporated bank or trust com- For the first $1,000 en prlvatt residence. pany. The check of a successful bid- der will be retained to be applied In •Folltnrfof tha Victory loan the tals of E, F and O Savings Bondi will con- part payment for the bomb or to tinue through rcgulu authorized agenda and through Payroll Sivlngi PlinJ. Additional covtragt at greatly reduced rotes. Bccure the Bonrd of Education from any loas resulting from tho failure "Stop him, Mi$Hrr of the bidder to comply with th» Insures both your possessions at HOME while you terms of Ills bid. i ..No "t\ot 11 In tho event that prior to tha de- art AWAY and the things you TAKE WITH YOU. laltrayiWASo livery of tho bonds ths Income re- FOR PEACE ceived by private holders from bonds bit gun-ihyt, ot the same typo and character shall Fcatur«» of ifiii New Low Coit Inmrance I'll hi him takt bs taxnble by the terms of any Fed- eral Income tax law, tho successful WHAT IS INSimEDt Toirelrj. tun, silverware and all other peponal .-non—dto fan- bidder may, at Ms election, be ro- AND PROSPERITY property of »nrj description. This Includes nhrnb*. fences and ntlicr real (Thii lattit Oti'i Iloved of his obligations under tha proptrly In or out of tli« home ngalnit (he following hmnriHi idby contract to purchnse the bonds nnd In such cane tho deposit accompany- AMIRICAS ORKAT VICTORY LOAN ing his bltl will bo returned. 1. THEFT 3. ROBBERY 5. VANDALISM Proposals should be addressed to 0 Katherlna Patterson, District Clerk, 2. LARCENY 4. BURGLARY 6. MALICIOUS MISCHIEF Board of Education, Columbia School, Berkoloy Holghta, Now Jorsey, and 7. MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANCE enolosed In a saalad envelope marked on the outside "Proposal fop Bonds". The successful bidder will be fur- PULVERIZING MACHINERY CO nished with the opinion of Hawkins, Pelnfleld ft Wood that the hondi are vnlld and legally binding obligations Spencer [Tj. of tho Board of Education of the SUMMIT, N. J. Township of New Providence, In tlia Cpunty of Union, Now Jersey. KATHBIUNH) PATTBnSON 24 Beechwood Road Summit 6-1900 Dlatrlot Clark, By Order of tho Board of Hduontlon Dated; November 1!, 194B. 25-20 Fees—|33.3I THE THUISPAV, W«* to Go St. Teresa'sas HaHass I SfettlBft DiMMd Horseshoe On Sunday, December 9, Charles Elkj Club ROM of Newark, will lead a nine- Firemen mile hike over easy trails in the American L*gion Basketbal Team In South Orange Reservation. The Team in County Chomber of Comm»rce...._ KiwuiU Club „„ ....I. 1 group will leave from The Union Sports Irftoni Club ...-. ~™ «..«.««. FOOTBALL CYO Cage Loop Tnalffct'f Mate* Lack wanna League County Park Commission's Ad- American Lesion TI. Klwanit ministration Building, Warinanco After * l»pw of tour ye»n, St Sec II MtUII The Diamond Honuhoe team Firemen vr Chamber of Commerc* Park, Elizabeth aod Roselle, at 9 1 Teresa's CYO senior* are again DjLltofc* or North, Bummit a. in." TfieTike~itaFts" from Mill- on the march with the team enter- LToBi CIuSvgT Klwinii Club Hou»e, Frank Bauman, coach, Jersey Championship rfs Sidelights played it* first game with the burn Station, where leader will be ed in th» Union County CYO met, at 9:30 a. m. RACONTEURS OF ARMY-NAVY GAME League. Lincoln YMCA, Tuesday night in All war veteran* of CYO have the newly formed L&ckaw&nna Guests are invited to join the ©ioe of the local football raconteurs who was fortunate returned and are sharpening their Triple Ceiar Tie Buketball League. hikers. PLAINFIELD SUMMIT .Saturday to see the Army-Navy game tells us at eyes. These veto include Whit The following institution* are VI. ,'of a fine old Philadelphia institution, Leo Priviti, a Moroney, Bob Gaffney, Ed Gaff- In Bowling Loop represented in the League: SARACENS WILDCATS __Jof his who is superintendent of the Municipal Stadium ney, Joe Raskowskl, Roger Luria, Orange YMCA (Oakvood Monk TriolOr Fred Fleming and Branch). Pocket-Size Winter Haw'it first opened and since the first crack in the concrete UndcfMttd Greatest Frank Paul. Also playing with this As Roots Sweep Wwt Orange Community House. appeared in 1926 — a lonesome vigil but every so often he ha- group are Tony Bruno and Pete Platnfleld YMCA (Moorland Sports Folder Union County Semi-Prof essional Kisoanpanionship of 99,999 churns or more. Gerity. Roots go merrily along in the Branch). Gity Bowling League encountering State Team ; Even though this group hasn't Morriitown Neighborhood Champions ip ln- case you are interested, more than 400 gallons o little or no difficulty. Thursday played together since 1841, a prac- House. Soon Available night on Woodruff's alleys in mustard were consumed in Quaker Town Saturday afternoon tice session last week revealed Newark Friendly Neighborhood Springfield at the season's eighth An Illustrated pocket-size winter III 'fans during the classic between the two service school plenty of speed. House. session of the loop, Roots swept sports folder will be ready for dis- It may be recalled that St. Madison Settlement House. Jersey's Greatest Natural lip! — about .000023 ounces per hot dog per stadium capita three from the runner-up Masoni. tribution to residents of Union Teresa's lost in the play-off of the Lincoln YMCA, Summit. ji§|$£ chiseling wiener merchants! With Gargiulos taking three from County in a few days, officials of County CYO league in 1942 the last Summit Neighborhood House. Charllnes and the Commuters The Union County Park Commis- p! The pre-game scrimmage line Saturday in the City o year in which the loop carried on. The following Is the schedule of showing strength in taking two out sion announced yesterday. B|(|iherty Love was Broad street, south of Old York road St. Mary's, the team that defeated games by North Summit Neigh- of three from the Chamber of In the'folder are listed fifteen AT St. Teresa's that year, in extra borhood House: filtiiose motorists who made first downs south of City Hall Commerce, the league is all tied supervised and eleven unsupervis- periods in the finals, is also back Dec. 4—Lincoln at Summit. jjjptfc Billy Penn astride it) now have something to talk up in a knot except for first place. ed skating areas, many with heat- in-sthe league. Dec, 12—Summit at Madieon. 1 The C. of C, the Commuters, and ed shelters and lighting for night Mbout forever.-' Dec. 18—Newark at Summit. x Of interest to local CYO fans is Gargiulos are in a triple tie for enjoyment of this sport. m HONOR ROLL, ALL-STATE TEAMS PICKED „ the carding of the National CYO Dec. 21—Summit at Morris- last place, one game behind the Areas for coasting, skiing, to- Si: TJie Newark papers "dood" it Saturday, and Sunday. Th tournament this year at Seton town, Memorial Field third place Charlines. Jan. 4—Summit at Plainfield. bogganing, and sleighing are also Kiday papers labelled them AlKState teams while the Satur Hall College. Sommer of the Commuters Jan. 8—Orange at Summit. described. Direction of St. Teresa's this "burned up" the alleys Thursday HP slieet tried to dignify their classifications under the name Jan. It—Summit at Lincoln. In addition to information about year is by "Pop" Gerity assisted night, winning high individual SUMMIT, N. J. IpH&nor Roll all, of course, having to do with th Jan. 28—Summit at Newark. last year's winter sports season by "Chick" Salerno. The Rev. John game honors with a 242 and gross Feb. 6—Plainfield at Summit. Illeettoij of football teams from the public high school an A. Kelly, assistant pastor at St. honors with a total of 666 for an and mention of special events con- Teresa's is supervisor of the team. average of 222. This is setting Feb. 19—Morristown at Summit. ducted by the Commission's recrea- Illfparatory school ranks. March 5—Madison at Summit. tion department, the folder con- ipf-jtymmit, as usual, received little mention. The Saturda, quite a pace in .any league. Merrill, another commuter, took second March 19—W eat Orange at tains a listing of twenty-three Sunday, December 9 HHr's Honor Roll listed Bill Judge of Summit High School' honors for the evening, with a Summit, organizations and public depart- wj£team"as one of its six tackles. One of the Sunday jiaper! S.H.S. Sophs Drop gross of 599 for an average of March 26—Summit at West ments throughout the county lltolisting first, second, and third teams in the respective 199.67. Orange. which are kept informed from day Two Hockey Games Masons April 3—Summit at Orange. to day concerning snow and ice at 2 p. m. tt-oups condescended to list Harold Ahem Summit end, wh« Wieboldt 161 18S ISO The official roster of members conditions for winter sports In the Leslie 120 182 168 ^ajred tight forwards during the season and ran them fo Irving 153 11" ISO of the team is: John Sinegra, park system, The list contains Donations 50c teciidowns, and put him on an Honorable Mention list. Thi To Chatham Girls Loane 207 137 17* Junior Gallo, John Stefanek, phone numbers so residents may Swlck 2H 1611 146 toiTti' writer of said paper tried to dignify his Honorabl Summit High School closed out James Plana, Reynold G a 11 o, make toll-free calls to get this in- Kmtion classification by writing: Its girls' hockey season November Totals 855 785 828 James Ford, Allen Sampson, Nick formation instead of having to call llooti Martini, John Piano, Frank the Park Commission office if I E 'IHonorable mention in a field of 4,000 players carries J 27 when it sent two teams of sopho- Baum 191 154 173 Sponsor*.- by the Summit Sports Club more girls to Chatham High School Gast 18B 160 1S2 Strauu, Richard Ramella, Tomm they prefer. Ijjg^fc of considerable merit." Phooey, mister .... Ahern Shapiro 227 191 111 Sinegra. to meet two teams of sophomore Sohoenwiesner 178 163 190 Copies of the folder are available ^i Judge, and Harold Turley could make monkeys out o:girls from that community. On Kivlen 150 172 135 to those addressing a postcard re- PRESIDENT < ARTHUR HARMS tethrof the line youpicked for your first team in similar clas- a field where hip boots would Totals 1)35* Tio" ~m quest to The Union County Park VICE-PRESIDENT WILLIAM LUKAS have been useful, each Summit Racquets Club Commission, P, O. Box 231, Eliza- HlV4and the same goes for Clark, Miles, and Hazelton in thi Garfflnloi fcpkfield. Yes, these are Summit High School players, whi team proceeded to lose by the same B. Garglulo 156 190 176 beth. score, 3-0. Brooks 155 14:1 188 SECRETARY-TREASURER HUGH LEE fc far more as far as the records go, than you picked for mos GUgallen ~ 178 196 199 Bows, 6-2, Wins, 6-1 Summit Sophs (1) Chatham Sophs (i) a. Gargiulo 170 169 176 City Bowling League jjfyour second and third teams in the same class. The othei Kershaw O Nederrey Taylor 161 147 132 ATHLETIC COMM BENJAMIN SHEPPIE Edwards CH Vetrone DECJiMBKIt 5 STANDINGS ^|tjday paper in Newark, judged by its selections, doesn' Spooiier - LI Sampson Totals 820 845 922 Over Week-end W. L. Powell RI Seel Charllnci Rootn Ti 2 GORDON MURRAY feen know there is a Summit. Basnlght LII Unnlgan Brenn , 183 158 186 The Racquets Club of Shor Masons 13 11 PI BASKETBALL COMfiS ON THE SCENE Orldley lilt : Lenny Robertson 167 200 Hills played a return match witl Charlines in 14 Darwont TW Carras Dummy 125 no 125 Oargiulos « IS PETER KEVELIN •I Now another sports' season is on us. Basketball fans wil Stiles RW Barnum Moroney 192 125 169 the Montclair Athletic Club a Commuters !> 15 Noel LF Gulda Long 1S5 164 150 Montclalr on Saturda> with Mont Chamber of Commerce » 15 Sift an •opportunity Tuesday at 3:30 p. m, to get a view of thi MacBrldges RF Glsolde 158 KovoniliiT 8(1 lk'sults WILLIAM BRENN Gulamerian G Messenger Totals 802 784 "830 clair winning 6 matches to 2. Th Roots :!, Musons I). HI45-46 edition of Summit High School's cage team who wil Score at the half: Chatham 2, Sum- results were as follows. Gargluloa 3, Chailliies 0. KENNETH JACOBIS mit 0. Goals: Nederrey, Sampson, Commuters Commuters 2, Chamber of Com- host to Columbia High School of Maplewood-South No. 1 F. G. Charshee (R.C.) de- merce 1. Carras. Haynei 1"6 166 202 feated J. Callnnan (M.A.C.) 3-15, 13 Cllver 134 171 HO Toillplit'fi Mutclips 10, 16-17, 15-12, 18-15. Commuters VH. G-arglulun. GENERAL MANAGER ORLANDO POLLI ^Orange. Summit Sophs (!) Chatham Sophs (t) Moorman 188 175 152 No. 2 E, B. Davenport (B.C.) de Sommer 202 222 242 Chamber of Commerce vs. Masons. Johnson C Woodward feated Edward Clapham (M.A.C. Charllnej vs. Roots. B. Pryce „ CH Gibbons Merrill 160 209 230 15-12, 15-14, 15-12. ASSISTANT MANAGER JOSEPH YANATTI at center at which post he aver Flagler LI Talmadge No. 3 Rodrlo. Smith (M.A.C.) de Herblg El Shotnlce Totals 860 943 !« Do You Know That- aged over seven points a game Chamber of Commerce feated Marvin Henkel (B.C.) 15-8 Summit Cagers Herb LH MoCormack 15-12, 15-13, • Very few drones—males—are last year. He ended up the season Converse RH B. Smith Bebout 208 152 126 No. 4 Robert F. Roelir (M.A.C.i SUPPORT YOUR HOME TOWN CLUB .. W. Smith IW Kerwln Brewster 184 181 1S1 defeated Paul Welzmlller (R.C.) 13-8 tolerated by the colony in modern 14 points behind George, who led Korn 171 189 188 the squad with 134 points. LeCarl RW DeMovy 15-10,, 15r9. bee culture; they are consumers To Open Tuesday Humes LF Sampson Allen HO 16B 193 No. 6 Cyril Sasscen (M.A.C.) de- Powllng .1 RP Bennett Dorwart 176 160 188 feated Victor Bodzlanlro (R.C.) 17-15 not producers. Dlggs G Powns 15-12, 15-12. Children's Skating Score at the half: Chatham 2, Sum- Totals 877 848 878 No. 6 William. Sclieer (M.A.C.) de- Against Columbia Pond Planned Near mit 0. Goals: Woodward, Talmadge feated John MclCenna (R.C.) 12-16 Officials: Wagner and Grove. City Doubles League 18-17, 15-10, 12-15, 15-13. §||Slimmlt High. School'* baeket- Center of City Scorekeeper, Lorraine Farrell. Bruce Stltnetss (M.A.C.) defeated idll team opens Its 1945-46 eeason Korember 28 Standing! Vincent Hull (R.C.) 15-12, 13-15, 17-1 The Board of Recreation with Pta. HSG HTG Av. IMS. •• • |||u&aday at 3:30 p. ra., on its floor the cooperation of the Common Moroney-Brenn .... 21 393 1093 341 No. 8 Leon Hcuser (M.A.C) defeat- ligjlinst Columbia Hkjh School of Bamn- ed John B. BosenQUest 15-10 18-16 Council, Thos. Coleman, Jr., man Kiwanis to Honor Schoenwelnner .... 16 468 1231 376IE'10. fmttplewood'South' Orange. To date ager of the Commonwealth Water Dorwart-Wieboldt 16 425 1115 353 On Sunday The Racquets Club |»; Maroon and White squad of 45 Taylor-Gero 14 401 1159 357 Co., and Chief Thomas Murray of Casper-Faul 14 444 1158 335was host to the Short Hills Club Ipili^ii Including 15 sophomores the Fire Department, will try this S.H.S. Gridders Kivlen-Korn 13 399 1109 354and defeated the visitors 8 matches (0|tVsl had two weeks of practice Nardlello-Bontempo 10 355 1018 318 winter to provide a children's skat- Brydon-Relnauer .. 8 356 1007 315to 1 with the following results. glinder the guiding hand of Coach ing pond in the park just off Elm G HSG HTG Av. No. 1 Charshes (R.C.) defeated 'jJJlwood C. Conrog, assisted by And Coaches Baum 21 275 641 190.9C. F. Brown (S.H.) 15-11, 16-17, 15-10 street, between the American Le- Schoenwelsner .. 21 256 655 185.4 15-8. Sojfer Muse, javee coach. gion home and the Klwanls Wad- Their work ended satisfactorily, Dorwart ... 21 212 E81 180.3 No. 2 E. P. Field (S.H.) defeated feppomlnent among last year's ding Pool at-Mabie Playground, Summit High School's footballers, Taylor 21 233 627 179.14 Davenport (R.C.) 10-15, 15-10, 15-12 will be guests at luncheon Tuesday Korn 21 203 679 178.10 15-11. piltvftd; who are being missed this There is an area there which Kivlen 21 216 579 176.10 No. 3 Robert L. Cushlng (R.C.) de- pjsar are BUI George, Dick Shu- holds rain water for some time at the Beechwood Hotel with the Gero 3 186 530 176.2 feated Perry Monroe (S.H.) 15-10, Kiwanis Club as hosts. Coach El- Brenn 21 235 571 175.2 15-7, 15-9. Siaeker, Joe Kietzman, and Herb and by adding water from the Wieboldt 18 238 600 173.14 No. 4 Welzmlller (R.C.) defeate IjVleboldt, who racked up 305 of fire hose it is felt that there is a wood C. Cornog and his entire Faul 18 232 602 172.15 Steve Baker 15-5, 15-9, 15-11. squad of 21 lettermen, in addition Moroney . 21 218 538 166.6 No. 6 Rodsslanko (R.C.) defeated J jiiWt year's total ol 593 points. good chance a fair size skating Casper _.., 21 212 603 163.18 S. Baker, Jr., (S.H.) 17-16, 15-8, 15-7. |fcornog Is counting on Larry pond can be built up, With the to assistant Coaches P.eter Kan- Brydon ...... 18 221 548 163.14 No. 6 John McKenna (R.C.) de- ncie,/George Miles, Frank Donio, skating ponds in East Summit at drat and Morton Ashman will be Bontempo 18 212 637 163.11 feated Don Atkln (S.H.) 15-9, 15-11, Nardlello . „ 21 191 519 155.19 11-15, 15-10. 11 .HaseltoTi, Hafold Ahem, Bryant Pond and Lake Surprise, guests. Relnauer . 12 178 480 152.7 No. 7 Rosenqueat (R.C.) defeated iq Pedlcini, David Keitzman, it is believed the adults are well Principal speaker will be Dr. Gast . 15 211 688 178.13 Ross Barnes (8. H.) 15-11, 15-10, 16-17 15-8. taken care of for It Is not so much John W. Barley of Rahway, as- Clean 200 ir Pott, and Paul Dietche as Games Games A return match between thi a hardship for them to travel now sociated with the Chicago Cubs of 2 Schoenweisner 8 |tllfl backbone of his present squad. Racquets Club and the Short Hills that cars can be used. the National baseball league as 1 Brenn 7 §§pice is expected to get the nod .1 Kivlen 5 Club will be played at the Shor their osteopath physician. Dr. 3 Baum 7 Hills Club, Sunday, Dcember 16. Barley's worlds mostly with pitch- _ Dorwart 5 1 Taylor 4 See or Call Us ers and to him was given much of 1 Casper 3 the credit for the condition of the . Moroney 2 Hitler's Babbie Wins 1 Faul 2 For better bike repairs Cub pitching staff in the Worl' Korn 2 First and Second Prize Series. Dr. Barley will emphasize1 mt Wieboldt 3 At the American Kennel Ciub Brydon 1 sanctioned Puppy Match Show and rebuilding. We the importance of physical condi- • Bontempo 2 tion in athletics. 406 Team Serin held the evening of November SC 8—Baum-Sehoehwelsner at West Orange, HUIer'a Babbli have the machinery lor Secretary Harlan S. Kennedy, 3—Wleboldt-Dorwart chairman of the club's athletic 1—Casper-Faul won first; prize in the six to nin< any job. committee, is in charge of the 1—Taylor-Gero month's class. ALL WORK GUARANTEED program, Babble Is an elghtmoiiths' old Others scheduled to attend the City Doubles League black puppy owned "^y Mr, and JTortmber 18 Hemlti luncheon are Director A. J. Bar- Fta. Mrs. Richard Hlller of Beechwood LARRY SCARINZI tholomew of Summit's secondary Taylor 171 202 179—552 road. She is the daughter of their BICYCLES AND MOTORCYCLES schools, Assistant High School Gast 211 183 194 —588 Cogges Hall Christine, by Bash's Broad St. and Chestnut Ave. Su. 6-6028 Principal Al Gast, faculty adviser (19) 385 373 1140 Brucie.', She is a granddaughter for football. < of Ch. My Own Brucie and of Ch Baum ...... 212 202« 226»—«89 Try Cob's Cabdidate. Schoen-' 1 welaner L. 223 153 S06 •—581 Babbie won second prize in Oc ^435 "iil TsT liio tdber at the Fates Club' Show held at -the Hotel McAlpin, New York Moroney .;.... 157 149 169 —471 Brenn ;..... 210: 212 139 —561 City, This was a large show "ios loii sponsored-by the American Cocker \" lii "silt" 9baniel Clubi of New Jersey, Long Caaper ...... 188 188 188 —119 Island, and Connecticut, Ga»t .... 186 119 187 -642 "ils Is?"835 1081 (t) won roll-off, ... 17~ 17» 183 —531 Korn ...172 Kivlen .... 169 176 —m ~i« "sT?"lii 1047 Brydon ...... 161 184 163 —488 Relnauer ,...169, 172 147 —478 (30) ~iio- lii"E00 lii Nardlello .... 150" 174 142 —46A Bontempo ..138 112 200 —510 PLEASE <«0) *28S' lii""iil lii Wieboldt ...... 156 S23 161 -544 ... the <$ea&edf Flavor-of-the-Month Dorwart ...... 186 202 183 —571 Winter "m Ti?" 1115 (•) clean Here's Holiday cheer, brimful with the game goodness of old-fash ioned eggnog flavoring, Mixed Bowling Leagut Servicing December 1 Stnnfllnf skillfully blended with rich cream and other O. H. T. Ave. fine dairy products; Enjoy this timely treat MoMane 21 570 C569 312. 0VSTLES Wnffcntmls 12 538 3511 292.7 often during the Holiday Season; Just ask Swlck 24 566 0932 289. Of Cars for Sealtest Eggnog Ice Cream at your Flllll „„ 24 522 6866 286. Bontempo 24 503 6828 284. Oil, Tires, Spark Plugs and Bat- nearest Castles dealer — and take a quart T>. ft N 18 528 4985 277. or more home. Flncher 24 533 0858 265. teries checked In tlmn will save NEW JERSEY BELL Neon _ 18 458 .4710 201.12 you time and future trouble, Dnwson 0 416.2201 24I>. Molntyre 12 440 2005 217. Jllffli Women'* ATOMR* OARS WASHED TELEPHONE COMPANY ICE CREAM Motn McMnno—148.H DitiiicM t/Nitlmtil Dairy Pm/ucli CirtirtlUti High Men's Ayernge Alt* Moktfl of Meglla let Craam Bwlok—170,9 White Strvlct Station Tfleh Men's flnnu Lhtm fo '7/.. TtbpfwM How" Mtuulayt, 9 PM, NBC Join thijun h the Sealtitt Village Store, starring Jack Haliy, WEAP, 9:30 P> M., TburuUyt Kcl. MaManc—228 SIU'324f ItlKh Wom«n'« On me Ethel Bontempo—19B THUUMMIT H£*AU), THUtSOAY, OECGMKft 4, I94S If

ie Feast, C of C1W4 ForH. S. SummlMUgh School1* IMS let- Awards at Fal Wins* termen got together this week and •kcUi Harold Ahern and Coaimo - jT .1 «Spiff fn Shuffle Pedicini as co-capUlns lor tfie A. A. Assembly The Elks Club, leaders io the football season starting Septem- Summit High School's ithleUc City Shuffleboar.d league ber, #46. usociaUon will hold tts fall H- jtrengtbened their position the Ahera, the son of Mr. and Mrs. •embly program Wedn«sd« put week by defeating the Ki- Harold Ahern of Summit avenue, morning at which major awards wanis Club, 5-3, on November 26, reached his 15th birthday Septem- will be given to football and soc- and on Monday night the loop ber 25 last. He started out this cer players. leaden set the Firemen down, 7-8. fall's football program by being a Football letters will be present On November 29 the Firemen de- substitute end. However he ed Co-captains Frank Donio < feated the tail end Lion*, 4-2. The couldn't be kept long on the bench. Harold Turiey, Manager James Chamber of Commerce posted an Hit uncanny ability to get down Zotti, George Miles, John Clark, 8-2 win November 27 over the the field and snare passes made Co-captains-elect Harold Ahern HELLO! 4? American Legion entry. him an invaluable player. As has Cosimo Pedicini, William Judge, ' Elk* vs. Firemen: Caruso 4; Smejkal awards and Coach Fred S. Trend 13, Caruso (E) 5; Kennedy (K) 11, Adults Must Plan the soccer awards. RJbbaeh

mi Draper I Tto Safer and *• p EIYON where the word "aprons" now ap-, and hat been elevated to tto «U- a Ki«ak Ancient HUtory pears. it wag said of Adam and I tii£ of a world classic and trani- wiiiiiin RKini Bve that ". . . they sewed fig iated into «\ery language. Paul Draper, the man whatap- In "Blossom Time" By FRANK COLBY leaves together, and made them- the classics, and Larry Typographical errors, like the ' selves breeches." Christmas week at the Montclair' Andzia Kuzak returned to the Theater will bring Helen Parriah equally famous for' ill* Paper Mill Playhouse Monday lor poor, have always been with us. [ Another rare edition is the fam- They exist in profusion in old ous "Treacle Bible" of 1568. How- in Victor Herbert's musical, "Babe* of tie claasic* on the her portrayal of Mitzi Kraut la in Toyland." fcgrmonlca, will be presented in "Blossom Time," at the same time manuscripta that were written by j ever, it was not a printer's error, recital at the Mosque en making her third appearance of hand centuries before Gutenberg j but a change in the meaning of a 1 jKesday evening, December 13, the season, the greatest number invented printing by means of j word, which raised this edition of j Studying in England "Wider the auspice* at the Griffith for any prima donna this season. movable type. Misprints doubtless | The Bishop's Bible to the rank of BOROUGH-Privatc First Class MJuic Foundation. These are no Although "Blossom Time" is broke the spirit of many a Stone ; a collector's item. The familiar i Otto E. Hanser son of Mr and ftiuit performers, but born art- largely a man's show, with the f at- Age writer chiseling away for plaint in Jeremiah 8, 22, reads: i Mw. Otto Hanser of 103* Spring- !•!•• Draper taps the classics ELS .test roles allotted to George Brit- weeks at a granite slab. And "Is there no treacle in Gilead?" field avenue, former student at A tauter instrumentalist might do. ten as "Franz Schubert" and Don- surely the carvers of Egyptian The use of "treacle" for "balm" Upeala College, is now attending •tyfcdJng bis rhythmic beat with the ald Gage as "Baron von Schober," hiercijlyphics knew the feeling of was quite proper, however, when Shrivenham American University ftfease of a super-technician, He dainty Miss Kuzak manages to cold despair that benumbs the this Bible Wpublished,' "for until in England' where" he" u friildt his tap-dancing on the firm hold her own. writer's heart who finds in his the middle of the 18th century, the \ physics and electronics A mem- beloved opus the error typo- word treacle designated a balm or i ber of the 3246 Si-nal Baae Main- foundation of the classic ballet. While it Is not at all unusual aae JA fact some critics have styled for a prima donna to score in op- graphic, that "slippery thing and ointmen-'- •- • t used- as a sovereign !I tenance Company, Pfc. Hanae *""r ha»s JUfca the "Nijinsky of taps." His eretta as Miss Kuzak has in sly." remedy. been overseas 17 months. leaps are just as spectacular. "Naughty Marietta" and "The Every person who deals in words Wnen it comes to his own unique 11 Student Prince" earlier this season —writer, printer, proofreader, edi- "Little Women* fIfld, he can tap out a Toccato by and in other operettas in past tor, and publisher—knows the re- , • P^radles, a Brahma Intermezzo, years, it is not generally the case lcntless, immutable, and inevitable ! „ HOUSEWIVES OS a movement from a Beethoven that the same prima donna can nature of the printer's error. It Dec-ember 11, the March sieters will be starred at Styiata that proves not only vis- be so versatile that she is equally has been the especial nemesis of Would you like to earn money at home in grand opera and light the publishers of Bibles. the Montclair Theater in Louisa V0I/ delightful, but expressive of May Alcott's "Little Women," a from home? Oo you have J to 4 lnlnite shades of meaning. opera as well as on the non- For example, a Bible published musical stage. in 1631 contained a shocking er- play which was originally brought hours a day to spare? Do you jUirry Adler, for his part is A star in operettas at Detroit ror of omission which incredibly, to the attention of the American like to talk to people? If to, «qualiy astonishing. His instiu- and at Dallas, she has been heard escaped detection until after the public when Katherine Hepburn we have something very Inter- nt is a super-Chromatica har- 4VDY GARLAND assumed the role of Jo in the film on Broadway in the New Opera entire edition had been printed, esting to offer you. mknlca In the key of C. With thto has Been described as America's Company's revivals of "Cosi Fan bound, and distributed. The er- version i instrument be produces a wider Girl Next Door—because she ap- Tutte" and "La Vie Parlsienne." ror was found in Exodus 20, 14, The "Little Women," originally CALL MARKET 3-1776 r«fige of color and dynamics than peals to all kinds of people every- In grand opera she has appeared which read: "Thou ehalt commit written for children, presents a impossible in any other wind in- where. As versatile as they come, at Montreal in "Le Coq d'Or of adultery." Appropriately, this) l)icturi! »f home life in the last j for further lnforniatioa (t^ument, When Fritz Kreisler ludy's art ranges from musical Rlmsky-Korsakoff and in the New Bible is known among collectors i years of the nineteenth century h*ard him play his Caprice Vien- comedy to drama. Her latest con- York City Center Opera in "La as the "wicked Bible." »^—————^i.. . — DQla, he Was delighted and gave tribution to films is in M-G-M's Boheme" of Puccini, merely to Another famous collector's item Alter permission to play It in Western saga, "The Harvey Girls." mention her work of the current is the "Vinegar Bible," published \ public, Ravel was equally im- year. in 1717 by the Clarendon Press, STRAND THEATRE piessed by Adler's performance of SMtl NUHUl.D AVE. SUMMIT I 10(0 Straight drama has seen Andzia •JfTGdMEitY Oxford. The heading on the roar- Mai bft famous Bolero. These young Goodman a_:t)U. Eve i.w-tAb Continuous Sat, and Sun. tro'n " Wtlsts have opened new vistas Kuzak's name featured at some back after long service overseas, stops to chat with Donna Reed dur- gin over the 20th chapter of Luke Xo| a distinctly American method of the nation's leading dramatic ing filming of M-G-M's "They Were Expendable," In which the two reads "The parable of the vine- TODAY THRU SATURDAY o(. expression. centers which blazon during the are co-starred. In the film Montgomery will assume the same rank gar," instead of "The parable of summer season, including Prince- he really held in the Navy—that of Lieut. Commander. the vineyard," ton, Dennis, Mt. Kisco and West- A Bible published in 1823 con- Do You Know That port. An even different form of tains a curious misprint in Gene- Since bacteria which cause dls- musical entertainment, Gilbert Changing Tastes Dancer sis 24, 81. "And Rebekah arose, eues in human beings cannot and Sullivan, has been the occa- In Painting, Sculpture and her damsels . . , " reads thue: Ufa in honey, it is considered a sion for many appearances on the "And Rebekah arose, and her t safe as well a wholesome food, NBC radio network, Newark Museum Exhibit camels , . ," Obviously, this edi- On Saturday, December 1, tie tion is known aa "Rebekah's- '"Attention Hume Builden" Now at Paper Mill jNewark Museum opens an exhibi- camels Bible." tion of paintinj and sculpture In the "Breeches Bible," pub- ioppola Contracting Co showing "Changing Tastes in lished in 1560, an anachronism oc- Painting and Sculpture" over a curs which clothes Adam and Eve I General Contractor* hundred and fifty year period. It in a garment which was unknown Cellar Excavating—Grading will remain on view through early in Biblical times. In Genesis 3, 7, Thin ... ont by «nt Roads—Amiesire Driveways spring. ...mufdinlfu. 'J'bro Sdn.—).!0, 1.80, NOW PLAYING THRU At Newark Proctor's derbllt of Newark" in the '70's are used in making candles, insula- 9.40. Sat. Nlte, 1.20,9.40, 8.00. Mats. LOUIS HAYWARD In this group, Wed., Sun., 1.20, 1.80 (Ine, tax). "Th« House on 82nd Street," is tion, modeling clay, textile art Seats all perfs. Box Office. Barn- with DEC, 18, REOPENS WED. AFT., DEC. 26 currently being presented at Work by contemporary artiste GEQKGE ' ANDZIA DONALD work, cosmetics, floor and furni- tierser'i and Krengo'a. Mall orders. Roland Young'June Duprez R. K. O. Proctor's Theatre in of the present time are shown as ture polishes? Today the govern- Reservations now being Agatha Chrittle't Sir C. Aubrey Smith • Mischa well. BKITTON KUZAK GAGE Newark. ment needs the beeswax for war accepted for New Year'* Eve Masterpiece of Auer • Judith Anderson in SIGMUND EOMBERGS FAMOUS OPERETTA Starring William Eythe, Lloyd purposes. Richard Haydn • Queenie Nolan and Signe Hasso, the cast Nazis at their school for spies and Mytteryl Leonard • Harry Tnurston "BLOSSOM TIME" includes Gene Lockhart, Leo G. saboteurs, and working with the PLUS With C1ARENCE NOItDSTKOM, VOLANDA tUPACHINl and Carroll and Lydia St. Clair. FBI, finds himself caught in a Albert Carroll, Mary Dyer, William Sutherland Richard A Inn «ordon, Musical Director The film defines the calculated net of dangerous schemes of the PRICES: t Monday thru Friday Ere., 1.20,1.80, 8.10 steps of federal agents to protect designing Signe Hasso and the LYRIC THEATRE . .. i satorilaj Evening 1.80, 8.40, «.O0 Including Ta* ( ffod. ana Siit. iUU. «0c, 1.80, 1.80 "Process 97" and to rid the nation powerful forces of federal agents BEECH WOOD UQAO SUMMIT «-«7» BOX OFFICE OPES from 10 A. M. to 10 P. M. of the dangers from the enemy directed by Lloyd Nolan. Mat. 1:30. Eve 7:0O-8 :00. Contlnuoui Sat and Sun, from I p. m. Gloria JEAN Kirby GRANT Ticket! Also on Snle at Ktrmge Department Store, Newark within. Evenings nt BiSO^lliUlneeS ftt 8:S0-Mo Performance Bnndny "Club Havana," starring Tom TODAY THRU WEDNESDAY ERIC ftLORE J, Edward 6R0MBERG SFECIAI, IIOLIBAT MATINEE THDJISDA I, DECEMBER 27 Ethye portrays a German- Neal and Margaret Lindsay, is the GEORGE DOIENZ MILDRED LAW American, who trained by the co-feature on the program, SUNDAY—MONDAY—TUESDAY Was Love or j .madness to be her fate?

Morristown -• Central New Jersey's Entertainment Capital! First Run Pictures! Stage Presentations! Popular Prices!

Under Personal Direction of READE'8 . Wnltor Jtettfle JERSEY COMMUNITY Washington Street South Street - Tel, MOT, 4-2021) Phonn Morrlslnwn 4-0078 Cont. Siit., Snn. nnfl Cont. But, & Son. from JiM P. M. Holldiiyn from 8 IP, nr. Matinee Dnllji 2:so Sensational Double-Value Evening ! I t P, H, Stage - Screen Attractions Entire Week Starts Thursday Every Sal. and Sun. Matinee STAGE: Vnlil S p, m. WALLY KIBBLER all teat* Adulti 44c SINGING STAR Child., 16c of Tax incl. GLOOM DODGBUS t RADIO SHOW low ROBERT ALDA as GEORGE GERSHWINtfJOAN LESLIE Heard over WHN ALCXIS SMITH*CHARLtS COAURNtfAS THEMSELVES — Plus — price* Mnrtcil llroi. — Hits ft Bits AL JOLSONrt OSCAR LEVANTS PAUL WHITEMAN IIop, Hkln t Jump orcheilra Mnrlo Ktnnlry 74e GEORGE WHITER HAZEL SCOTT j> ANNE BROWN t—In 1'orson Ao1«—5 balcony •fkl&> SCREEN: 60c One Week Beginning Thurs., Dec. 13th Richard Dix child.. 25c "Voice ol tlio Whlsllcr" Tax Incl.

CL4UDETTE COLBERT WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY BING CROSBY PRODUCTIONS WHEN YOU THINK OF ENTERTAINMENT Present THINK OF MORRISTOWN!! "THE GREAT JOHN L" With Itcade's Community JReade's Jersey Litidn Darnell — Orpj,' MuClurc — Bnrbnra Britton "The Theatre Beautiful' 'Top 2 tor 1 Stage & Screen Shows" Gc/esr "BLONDE RANSOM" fi With ' Donald Cook — Virginia Grey THi SUMMIT HERALD. THURSDAY, HOMIER 4, 4941 It

tajr toMlenblp, irtich •on to Ur. and Mn. Robert B. westerly UM o( iud of G. has always presented a major Nearby Theatres Too Late to Classify Hennewy, foregoing property. Mr. u»4 lira. Rudolpn F. Woo* Paterson Vs Men problem. Mr. and lira. Eugene T. Stile» to Mr. and Mn Rty Zavtor W»nm, Accompanying Mr. Miller, were This time table i» accurate «t prata time, tV Eugene S. Stiles, property In property in the northerly sideline Jack Ault of the Paterson YMCA HJMSOT STBAND HfiLP WANTED-Fem«lc REAL/IESTATE FOR SALE tbe southerly aideline of Spring- Come to Summit staff and Howard Schooamaker, of Broad street, 801.48 feet b«n Dec. S, 0, 7, 8—"AND THEN THERE WERE NONE/'-Barry FiU- field avenue, intersected by the member of Paterww'i Ys Meat GLEN O'AK. S section. Modem 8 Middle avenue. f erald, Walter Houiton. Bell Telephone room Colonial, 2 baths A uiilur- dub. Wed., Thuwn »H, 1:19, 7:10, 10:08. nlnhed) den, lavatory, imlK room, To Exchange Views recreation rpoiq, gsu-flred, Insula- Sat., 2:00, 4:41, 7:23, 10:18. Laboratories, Inc. tion, screened porelj, attached gar- In the Interest of broadening th< T/4 Growl DiKhargtd "EAST TO LOOK AT"—Gloria Jean, Kirby Grant age. Call after ! P. U. for appoint- Wed., Thuw., Fri., J:18, »:02. MURRAY HILL, N. J. ment Price 119,800, •cope of the adult program of th< CLARENCE p. LONG Choose fours Now YWCA, & delegation of T» Mei Sat, 8:37, 6:18, 9:14, HAS OPENINGS FOR 333 Springfield Ave. Su. 6-53S6 Dec. 9, 10, 11—"DARK WATERS"—Merle Oberon. h from Paterson visited Summit 01 Sun.. 2:00, 4:48, 7:21,10:09. BUSINESS property, main street, uue November 29, to present an over WOMEN •tory, nice ironing, two stoics Mon., Tues., 8:18, 7:10, 10:08. (convertible to one) ba«em«it, coal, all picture of a club which has "SENORITA FROM THE WEST" •team, 1 lavatories. Cull after 3 • Christmas Trees 1.00 up PART TIME P. M. Price $11,000. made a real and concrete contr. Sun., 8:30, 6:18, 8:06. CLARENCE P. LONG i^mtion to its community. Mon., Tues., 2:15, 9:08. 33! Springfield Ave. Su. t-bim CAFETERIA HELP h *^ Represented by several Y SUMMIT LYRIC FOUR HOURS A DAV lien, including Charles Mille Dec. 6-12—"RHAPSODY IN BLUE"-Joan Leslie, Al Jol»on. FIVE DAYS A WEEK LOST * Wreaths 75c up former president of the Y's Mens Thurs., Fri., Mon., Tue»., Wed., 2:40, 7:00, »:2». EXCELLENT WORKING CONDITIONS HAVE you seen Patty? Welsh ter- International Organization, th Sat., Sun., 2:00, 4:26, 6:58, 9:30. Friendly co-worker*. No prevlout rier puppy with alight limp. Su. DELIVERY delegation said the club adherei experience necessary. 6-6921. h MORRISTOWN COMMUNITY to a policy of drawing its mem' LARGE, Burgundy, plastic earring, Dec. 6-12—"DUFFY'S TAVERN"—Bing Crosby, Dorothy Lamour. APPLY bers from those active in th< Mon, thru Fri. 8:30 A. M. to i P. M. on Hillside ur Main Keepsake. Ke- On Display Monday YMCA. Its foundation in eac Thurs., Fri., Mon., Tue«., Wed., 3:18, 7:15, 9:30. ward. Ch. <-2471-J. c community was precipitated by Sat, Sun., 2:25, 4:45, 7:10 9:40. LABORATORIES LOWER half of fountain pen. Parkt: point Reward. Call Ch. 4-369S-K. local need which had not bee SOUTH ORANGE CAMEO ' EMPLOYMENT OFFICE c Front of King's Market met, and unlike some civic groups Dec. 5, 6, 7, 8—"ANCHORS AWEIGH"-Frank Sinatra, Gene Kelly. Mountain Ave. SILVER necklace, It brown stones, which use weekly dinners as an ex Wed., Thurs., Fri., 2:00, 7:00, 9:80. Dec. 2nd, between cor. Maple and LOUIS Dl PARISI JIMMY LA SAPIO • cuse to meet the Y'H Men hav< Murray Hill, N. J. Springfield, Lyric, and Louvis'. fte- Sat, 2:06, 7:00, 9:30. rtJCall Su. 6-60i>3. n always attempted to follow BUB service available from Summit Dec. 9, 10, U-"GIRL OF LJMBERLOST." D. L. & W. R. R. station to the Labor- course of active service, In this atories hourly at quarter to each hour. Sun., 3:10, 6:20, 9:00. they point to a series of usefu h WANTED TO BUY Mon., Tues., 1:40, 8:60. programs they have initiated, BICYCLE, boy's 24" or 26". Mill "DUFFY'S TAVERN"—Bing Crosby, Dorothy Lamour DAY worker wanted 1 day week, which includes such projects as A veteran of the China-Burma bum 6-2C35. ' 140 Sun., 1:30, 4:30, 7:20, 10=00. Chatham i-Mi'i.Q h the establishment of summe campaign, T/4 Louis A. Graesl of LARGE doll carriage in good condi- Mon., Tues., 2:40, 7:00, 9:85. tion. Call Urt. Powell, Ch. 4-0S23. camps in the country, and th 400 Broad street, received an hon- HELP WANTED—Male subsidizing of small busines orable discharge from the Army MAPLEWOOD DRIVE to New York and return on November 29 at Fort Mon- daily. Capable of assisting In of- enterprises to give experience to Dec. 6, 7, 8— "THE GREAT JOHN V—Linda Darnell. fice work. Box l'ii, % MUlburn SERVICES OFFERED young men in need of such. In ad mouth, Mr. Grass! spent H months Thura., Fri., 8:48, Item. U8 In the service of which 29 months CAPABLE woman (mother) will care ^dition to rendering service in such Sat., 3:30, 6:15, 10:20. for children per hour, day, or "local enterprises as the Commu were spent in Assam, India, where "GEORGE WHITE'S SCANDALS"-—Joan Davis, Jack Haley. HELP WANTED week. References, Su. 6-3998-J. h nity Chest a,nd bond drives, thi he was associated with the Signal Thurs., Fri., 7:00, ld:20. MALE OB FEMALES Corps, and wears the Asiatic- Y's Men have broadened the scope Sat, 1:20, 8:10, 8:25. HELP WANTED Male or Female ..(6 of the group to include questions Pacific, American Theater, Good Dec. 9,10, 11, 12—"A BELL FOR ADANO." WANTED—Senior high or college Conduct, Meritorious Service rib- student to take orders for quality DEEDS of international Importance. Sun., 3:00, 6:25, 9:48. Florida oranges and grapefruit to ^recognition of their world ro bons, as well as the Bronze Star, Mon., Tues., Wed., 8:35. be shipped direct to home from Ethel R. Moffntt, widow, to Mr. Graesl will continue work our packing houses. Right person Vponslbllity was evident when "ADVENTURES OF RUSTT'-Margaret Lindsey. should make $25 to $100 weekly. Walter Perry, Jr., and Katharine in the communications field, In Rush full Information to SALTER from the Y's Men in for Sun., 1:20, 4:45, 8:10. Webb Perry, property known as 73 which he intends to seek employ- GROVES, ORLANDO, FLORIDA. ejgn countries were Invited to at- Mon,, Tues,, Wed., 7:00, 10:20. h A hint to the clever— ment. Bellevue avenue. tend conventions in the United MILLBURN States with all expenses paid. Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Coporaso A word to the wise— Dec. 5, 6, 7, 8—"OUR VINES HAVE TENDER GRAPES"-Edward FOR SALE i Although within the framework Synopsis of Minutes PEDIGREED black cockers, male and Anthony Caporaso, Jr., to Mr. A warning to the putter-offer— \}dt the local YMCA, the Y's Mens G. Robinson, Margaret O'Brien. and female, excellent type 'and Of Union County Board Wed. Thurs., Fri., 2:48, 7:00, 10:00. breeding from show stock. Call Su. and Mr«. Frank C. Worzel, prop- Club is not dependent on the 6-6005. h Sat, 3:20, 6:45,10:00. erty which begin* at the northerly larger organization, but functions Of Chosen Freeholders BRIC-A-BRA C, antiques, heater, In its own right as a self-govern- SYNOPSIS OP MINUTES "HIDDEN EYE"—Edward Arnold, book case, mirrors, odd) and ends, corner of lands of Bridget Duffy, START HOPPING Regular meeting' of the Union clothing. Su. 6-3812. h ing and autonomous group. Includ- aunty Board of Chosen Freeholders, Wed., Thurs., Fri., 1:38, 8:55. and at point In the easterly line •as held at the Court House, Eliza- Sat, 2:05, 5:30, 8:45. POMERANIANS—A lovely Christ- i>g only YMCA active members, mas gift from a kennel that has of Chapel itreet, near lands for- >eth, N. J., on Friday, November 23, Dec. 9, 10, 11—"IT ALL CAME TRUE"—Humphrey Bogart, Ann to your tie movement remains strictly .945 at 1:80 P. M. bred proms for 30 years. Georgian merly of John S. Badgley. Director McMane presiding. Roll Sheridan. ~- Kennels, 1260 Morris Turnpike, 1 ly group, with a salary paid only Summit. Su. 6-5841. •all showed all members present. Sun., 1:30, 4:20, 7:05, 10:00. William B. Capen to Wilamena t> the International secretary, Minutes of the meeting of No- TRICYCLE, de luxe for !-4 year old, j With a motto that professes to ember 8th., 1945 were approved as Mon,, Tues., 2:46, 7:00, 9:50, never used. Priced at cost, $25, Capen Currle and Florence Capen ier printed copies on tbe members CHRISTMAS SHOPPING "BORN FOR TROUBLE." Phone Friday evening after 7:30. "Acknowledge the Duty That Ac- fiks. Su. 6-1484-R. h Schneider, right, title and interest ojompanles Every Right," an em- Resolution that all bills approved Sun., 3:15, 6:05, 8:56, ie ordered paid, was adopted. ONE full size Brunswick pool table in property in Clark street, 699.29 %riha8ls Is put on activity rather Mon., Tues., 1:40, 8:45. with equipment, $100. Su. 6-2776-R. right now! Following communication* were feet from Springfield avenue. than organization, and the Y's end and ordered filed: MONTCLAIR STAGE FLAYS h Probation Office, advising Mrs. t "CLAUDIA"—Marjorie Lord, Eddie Nugent HOCKEY skates, size 10, worn once; City of Summit to Mr. and Mrs. lien's Club provides a course of mna P. Mesalnger returned to her boy's skates, size 6; girl's white And Here Are a Few direction for the YMCA in which titles on Nov. 8th. Evenings, 8:10. figure skates and ballet slippers, William Koch, property in Ever- City of Linden, requesting County tie Y's Men are represented on Matinees,, Wed., Sat, 2:40. size 3 or 4. All reasonable. Ch. 4- J take over Elizabeth Ave., as a 2371. c green road, 628.89 feet from Madi- ml strong committees. Since the bounty Road, and to Include In the No performance Sunday. SUGGESTIONS 948 Budget, funds that will permit ANTIQUE Xmas gifts, old pine son avenue, Y's Mens Club is a close fellow- he Improvement thereof, was refer- PAPER MILL PLAYHOUSE pieces, chairs, tables, desks, wooden ship, it provides a good vehicle for •ed to Road Committee. "BLOSSOM TIME"—George Brltton, Andzla Kuzak, Donald Gage. bowls, brass lamps and other Emily A. Brennan and Joseph, LAMPS — SOLID BRASS FIREPLACE EQUIP- Boro of Kenllworth, calling atten- lamps, china, glass and bric-a-brac. her husband, to Mr. and Mrs. Al- MENT — CHINA FIGURINES — GLASSWARE- on to a letter received, from Mrs. Evenings, 8:25. Green Village Antiques, Green Vil- Tellle Klsh residing oil Faitoute Matinees, Wed., Sat, 2:25. lage N. J. lMs ml. south of Madi- fonse Mecieativ, property at the FURNITURE—PICTURES ~ MIRRORS-HAND- | Tool and Die Makers! Lve., Kenllworth, relative to the con- son. Tel. Had. C-208O. c intersection of the northerly side- lltton of a brook adjacent to her No performance Sunday, DECORATED TRAYS ... in fact, we're sure we lin« of Elm street. i Areyou intereited in risking iroperty, was referred to Bridget, MADISON GIRL'S side walk bicycle, $16. Su. have the largest stock of giftwares in the com- I \l a change? rahiage & Flood Control Commlt- Dec. 5, 6, 7, 8—"RHAPSODY IN BLUE"—Joan Leslie, Al Jolson. 6-3943. h Robert Wilson, to Alexander munity. Come in and see. Wed, Thurs,, Fri., 2:10, 7:00, 9:30. SASY electric ironer, Iver Johnson, Wilson, property in Oak Ridge jFor experienced men we offer a Town of Westfleld, setting forth girls, 28" bicycle, wooden kitchen •esolutlon petition the Board to widen Sat, 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:25. avenue, 601.82 feet from Mountain (wonderful opportunity. Central Ave., between Lenox Ave,, tables. Call Su. 6-0202. h CHRISTMAS CARDS md Broad St., was referred to the Dec. 8, 10, 11—"FIRST YANK INTO TOKYO"—Tom Neal, Barbara avenue. ; Top, Wages—Overtime Hours load Committee. JAP mink coat, size 36, UOO j tuxedo, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph T. Chap- County Clerk, enclosing copy of Hale. dress suit, cutaway coat and trou- .Free Life Imurnnce, Accident « lath of Offlce-of ArthursR.,.Wendell « "GEORGE WHITE'S SCANDALS!'~Joan Davis, Jack Haley. sers, about size 46, GE sun lamp, man to Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. wlok Benefits, Hospital — Medical a member of the Union County $20 ; Alrite humidifier, $20; boy s Burgess, property in the southerly >nrt SnrRloal BonMlts. Paid Vata- 'ark Commission. LIVINGSTON COLONY white slipover sweater, size 14, $2; RIGBY'S "Ions. Work In oar own shop on Dec. 5, 6, 7, 8-"OUR VINES HAVE TENDER GRAPES." boy's 28" bicycle, fair condition, sideline of Blackburn road, 959.92 •ur own dies. .Vo jobbing work. ReglBter, advising Dorothy K. Wa.ll $10 s boy's Spaldlng tubular skates GIFTS FOR THE HOME as granted 2 weeks sick leave with- - Wed., Thurs., Fri,, 8:45. and shoes, sine 4Mi, $4. Call morn- feet from Prospect street. in pay from Nov. 16th. ings before 10, Su. 6-2660. h Frederick C. Kentz, executor, to i Joseph Davis Plastics Co. Probation Office, advising Jean- Sat, 2:30, 5:45, 9:00. Largcft Stock in the Community ne Wheeler has been granted sick "HIDDEN EYE"-^Edward Arnold, THERMOSTAT, show case, double Alfred S. Anderson, property in f Selinjler Avenue avo for 2 weeks, with pay, effective beds, oak dining room set, cake the northerly sideline of Parkview f Arlington, New Jersey Wed., Thura., Fri., 7:15, 10:15. 401 Morris Ave. Springfield MUlburn 6-0900 ov. 19th, plates, large platters, mattress and terrace, 178.55 feet from Oakland Election Board, advising Mrs. Han- Sat, 1:18, 4:15, 7:30, 10:30. bedding, portieres, curtains, antique Ins has been granted two weeks cuckoo clocks, needle point stool road, If extended, OPEN EVENINGS EASY PARKING Dec. 9, 10, U—"THEN THERE WERE NONE"-A11 star cast. ave without pay from Nov. 16th, and cushion, studio couch. Call Su. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred S. Ander- Election Board, advising that the Sun., 2:45, 5:16, 8:15. 6-1802. h lervlces of William W. Whelan were GLOVE SILK Mon., Tues., 8:45, scontluued as of Nov. 15th., and BICYCLE, boy's, 28", fair condition, at James J.- Delaney returned to "RADIO STARS ON PARADE"—Frances Langford. : BLOOMERS Is duties on Nov. 16th., from Mill $15. Call Su. 6-1519. h 3XXX $1.88% iry Leave. Sun., 1:15,1:15, 7:15, 10:15. KITCHBN set, baby coach, 4 guinea Boro of Mountainside, asking that Mon., Tues., 7:15, 10:15. pigi, black-board, chlld'B electrlo i reflectors be placed at Ackerman RBADE'8 JERSEY-(Morrlstown) machine. Chat. 4-2597 6-9 P. M. Kays Shop 100 Summit Ave. Coles Ave., Coles Ave. and New o rovldence.Road and at Summit Lane Dec. 8-9—Featuring Waily Kibbler, Singing Star of W. H. N. Doors Open at 3:30 FURNISHED ROOMS Sat, Sun., 8:30, 6:30, 9:30. ] COMFORTABLY furnished room ''VOICE OF THE WHISTLER"—Richard Dix. near transportation. Garage avail- iFor An Enjoyable Evening Sat, Sun,.2:30—Continuous. able. Su. 6-1245. a r ' VISIT ... and New Providence Road, was refer- red to ^he Road Committee. • NOW PLAYING!* Dept ot Institutions & Agencies, h THE VALLEY TAVERN asking the County to appropriate 16,191.00 for Blind persons In the 1946 BENNY budget, was referred to the Finance ); COCKTAIL BAR Committee. Following; monthly report! were re- ceived and ordered filed: Auditors GOODMAN (Wright, Long and Co.); Agricultural Agent and Third Dlstrlst Court. AND HIS ORCHESTRA ORCHESTRA EVERY FRIDAY Report of Committee on Public Welfare, advising of bids received for featuring th* furnishing and Installing new 400 AND SATURDAY EVENING horsepower holler In the present. Power House at Bonnie Burn Sana- FAMOUS SEXTET torium and recommending award of WITH contract to lowest bidder, was re oelved and ordered filed. RED NORVO MRS, CLARA SCHMIDT, Prop. Report of Committee on Bridges, Drainage & Flood Control, advising of bids received from the redecklng LIZA MORROW Phone MILLINGTON 499 of the roadway section of the lift VOCALIST span of the Baltic St. Bridge over Springfield Ave, Stirling, N. J. the Elizabeth River,' and recommend- 1 HUMBA ing the rejection of all bids, was re- ANTONIO TAIN'S BAND ceived and ordered filed. WITH DINOMH Following resolutions were Introduc- ed and moved for adoption: Continuous muilc and dancing from 7 p.m. hi 2 a.m. Dtllclow (1)—Freeholder Brokaw for the full csurit dlnnir nrved at modorat* priest from 6 p.m. to Bridges, Drainage, and Flood Control 9:30 p.m. Din* tuparbly and b» gloriously •nlirtoinni In th« Committee, rejecting all bids received for redecklng the roadway section of r*d«corat«d T*rrace Room. Partial, banquet! cccommodattd. the lift Bpan of the Baltlo St. Bridge FOR RESERVATIONS In Elizabeth, was on roll call unani- CALL MISS TERRY mously adopted. MITCHELL 2-1462 (2)—Freeholder Dudley for the ROOIVT Committee on Public Welfare, award- MOSQUE THEATRE BLDG. • 1020 BROAD ST. • NEWARK, N. J? Ing contract to Babcock & Wllcox Co., of New York, lowest bidder, at detutot % Mu&ic $9,865.00 for furnishing and Installing now 500 horsepower boiler In the power house at Bonnie Burn Sana- torium, was on roll call unanimous- JSMEMS ly adopted, The war gave many young people a deeper appreciation of the (3)—Freeholder Smith for the Fin- ance Committee, authorizing the CLUB FLAMINGO epiritual things in life. Some who! just played the piano a little AT County Treasurer to purchase seven New Jersey's Newest and Smartest Supper Club $1,000. 2 U^o Treasury Bonds of the have discovered new pleasure in further mastery of the key- SNUFFY'S current Victory Loan Drive ns an COCKTAIL LOUNGE Investment for the Sheriff's Em- board. Others who never were great listeners of permanent ployees Pension Fund, was on roll Opening Dates tor Banquets and Parties CLAMS and LOBSTERS call unanimously adopted. DANCING FINEST CUISINE music have acquired the deBire for further understanding of U)—Freeholder Smith for the Music by Waily Beam's Orchestra Steamed Under Pressure Finance Committee, authorizing cer- the enduring music of all generations.;:; Music is a creative tain transfer of appropriations wnl Lynn Grelner and his accordion for your tavorlt* wngi MANY KINDS OF SEA FOOD DISHES on roll call unanimously adopted. Sat. nltcn-Mory Williams, former WOR radio itar force in our lives. It relieves tension. It brings a healing sooth-i (5)—Freeholder Smith for the Finance Committee, approving two Closed Mondays ness to hearts and minds that have been hurdened with sorrow temporary appointments In the Shade Direction of R. W. Rowland. Main Road, Randolph Township Tree Commission, was on roll call VISIT OUR BEAUTIFUL LOUNGE and BE unanimously nflopted. Mt Freedom 7141 iand anxiety.;;: We consider it a privilege to be able to assist (6)—Freeholder Bnuer for the Road ENTERTAINED BY THE PIANO-SOLOVOX. 'ommlttee, granting August Stahnhe in your selection of a piano whether new, used or rebuilt; NO TAX / a three months lenvs of absence with pay, effective Oct. 23, 1945, w&» on roll call unanimously adopted. (7)—Freeholder Bnuor for tli« t KITCMN CVOJIJ AT 11 WHKDAYSi 1

Shut-In Society Makes Christmas Appeal JLHIS WOUNDED BOY'S BATTLE ISN'T from battle wounds to health is costly. The New Jersey branch of the . Shut-In Society, with a member- WON YET. Ahead lie days, weeks, A hospital ship costs $4,500,000; a ship of hundreds of Invalids'and months in a hospital—fighting to re- hospital plane, $110,000; supplies for handicapped people, will furnish names and addresses of shut-Ins to cover what he gave up for you. a thousand-bed hospital, $177,500. those interested in sending cards or small gifts. "These remem- So before you start to celebrate We must—we will—take care of our brances will bring much happiness again—before you treat yourself to a to the recipients," said Miss Mabel own with America's Great Victory Llttell of Prospect street, treas- buying-spree—buy a Victory Bond for Loan. Think of the boy who's still urer of the state branch. Mrs. W. B. Muller, 1040 Liberty him. fighting for health. You'll see why the avenue, Union, chairman of the Remember, today rehabilitation most important Bonds you've ever VICTORy • Christmas appeal, will supply names of shut-ins to any who and care of over 300,000 wounded are bought are the Bonds you buy today. • write, specifying the number of liililiiilaj 'shut-ins they want to remember. among America's gravest problems. Put what your heart tells you to into And every step that speeds a man America's Great Victory Loan. OPA Orders Refund By Summit Auto Dealer The District OPA, November 26 In Newark, announced a $212 re- lund by the Summit War Price FOR PEACE AND PROSPERITY and Rationing Board to Mr«. Armtda Moore on an overcharge AMERICA'S GREAT VICTORY LOAN in the sale of a 1937 used car. MM; Moore reported the overcharge and the seller, Otto Schmidt, Jr., 'of Broad street, paid $424 inta the U. S. Treasury in settlement of a 'damage suit as well as the $212 refund. Do You Know Thar— '; The worker bees-*terile fe- males—do all the work of the THIS SPACE IS A CONTRIBUTION TO OUR COUNTRY BY: hive. fa

AMY MCDOWELL SHOP DE LEON SHOP, SPORTSWEAR MABEN AGENCY, INSURANCE SIEGEL'S STATIONERY SHOP Wearing Apparel 436 Springfield Avenue 24 Beechwood Road • Beechwood Road 804 Springfield Avenue

DOYLE'S FURNITURE CO., INC. MAJESTIC BAKERY BAB'S SPITZER'S DRESS SHOP 420 Springfield Avenue . 465 Springfield Avenue . . 371 Springfield Avenue 412 Springfield Avenue BALDWIN'S MT. PLEASANT FARM, INO/ EDWARD A. BUTLER MANSER'S HARDWARE Livingston, New Jersey Real Estate * Insurance (31 Springfield Avenue SUBURBAN HOTEL J 7 Beechwood Ruad (70 Springfield Avenue BAKER'S MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR MARTENS CONFECTIONERY 426 Springfield Avenue FORMICHELLA'S DEPARTMENT STORE S88 Springfield Avenue 89-81 Park Avenue SUMMIT EXPRESS CO., INO. BEECHWOOD HOTEL 60 Railroad Avenue II Oe Forest Avenue ' ' McELGUNN'S MEN'S SHOP HALL'S SHOE STORE Springfield Avenue at Maple Street SUMMIT SHOE SHOP BROOKDALE DAIRY & DELICATESSEN 36 De Forest Ave. 414 Springfield Avenue 4(5 Springfield Avenue o.i. MCNEIL HEX CITY DELICATESSEN . : Interior Decorating CARROLL'S DEPT. STORE 26 Maple Street 56 Union Place TEMPLE'S HAIRDRESSING SALON 485 Springfield Avenue 9 Maple Street JEANNE BEAUTY SHOP. ., 4 MISS NELLIE SHOP 1 COLUMBIA CLEANERS AND DYERS ' 16 Maple Street Women's Apparel Chatham Road IS Becchwood Road THE FASHION STORE JEANETTE'S ^ Children'* Wear CULLIS & LEWIS 43 Maple Street ' , (25 Springfield Avenue Oroceri NEE DELL RED CROSS SHOE SHOP 458 Springfield Avenue SBO Springfield Avenue JOBS-BECK-SCHMIDT CO. THE STYLE SHOP DAVE'S WINE AND LIQUOR STORE Rent E»tnt« 817 Springfield Avenue 51 Union Placs ROOT'S STORES 25 Union Place 402 & 410 Springfield Avenue C. P. DEAN, INC. JUVENILE SHOF • ' THOMASON BROTHERS Electrical Contractors Childrenr« Wear B. L. SCHLOSSER, CLEANERS & DYERS Auto Ignition Experts 1 Union Place 878 Springfield Avenue 37 Union Place 808 Broad Street

This is an official U. S. Treasury aMHisetnent^prepartd under auspices of Treasury Department and War Advertising Council fPl FOX SALE FOB SALE WAKTBD TO StfY 8EBVICES OFFEJUID H. O. Locomotives, Mikado ooBoldv STAMPS, superb mint Mth century, URBPLAXaC WOOD SLEKOBRtCK, rsdnoe, r__«_t, f» Um and goat 24 caxi, klu, track, United States, Canada, Newfound- Not thoroughly leaaoMd bat vwrBABY »Ied and playpen wltl h_biliut«, take* inohe. off yew etc, 1178. WiU divide. Mlllburn land, British and other Colonials; good hard sound woods. Oak, ufc. floor. Bu. 6-tllE. also blocks and plates. Write W. B. figure the easy way with our alM CLASSIFIED (-1174. 120 swamp birch, black birch, mule and MSN'S u«ed clothing wanted; any derlser. A tingle tre_,un*ni U time. UMllweek! mother's help- Gordon, Balking Ridge, N. J. h elm. Cut In II In. and M In. lengths. ers, tU and l» week; fey workm. condition; cash ready. Zipper, 2JS to a let* kike, without FIREPLACE WOOD Delivered. Central iWth Institute, IXttTM - -.M CURL'S it" bicycle, assorted toys. Call H. F. RA.NNBI SprloKfleld Ave., Newark r East Or«ng« Emp. Agancy Su. 8-CU1. h It pays to buy the beat, sound, sea- Central ave., corner. Harrison «t. soned, split oak, cut In any length, Happy Hill Firm R, l>. I ga»- mtt Ore-figsOrangi., Mr_!/. S. B Trnposn iirf t Suuben st, Eut Ora»»». OS S-lMf Mo. 4-MJO Morrlitown _N._ L OK_ E_ pei ..r Busc__^h field ....glasse. c powe | r , immediate delivery. $25 a load, $18.50 1 J i Phyllss,. spMlailstspMlsllsl s ADVERTISING BMt( 10( half load. OR, 8-1191 between j jmd else I or 8. Su, 8-4106-f sage for men and women, MAN or womaa for part ttoe work. 10 a, m._ . -•"•" n CHRISTMAS CAUDS, with your nuse pointment, OK. Z-310.. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE DINE OK DANCE Capable o* doing finished bit* GIRL'S it" JSbu biey printed on. H for $1 and up. Spring- WOULD LIKE to puroh8us» ling pong and whltt sketchii, a"d {iroceued FARM PRODUCTS field SUN Stationery * 01ft Stop, JACK FAITOBB Kew ProvidenceP t oocupfincy HOSPITALItT BOtJBB ~ N O W Wlth'acceaswles. t S. 0. M1*_T Fancy hand "picked apples. Red and table, Short Hills 7-3075, 122 Lande h Courier, Chatham, N. J. Box 15, e l-pc. walnut bed room suites.... 89.00 ;wlng machine; up to $100 for your inets, chairs; competently done In AVAILABLE AT ' olal And Industrial. Also lots and Beekman Road, Summit. h l-pc. living room SUHCH, all acreage, suitable tor one-family BOOKKEEPER ...... $45 PROFESSIONAL couple, chemist and jlectrlc sewing machine; highest your own home. Call Joe De Stefano, MINIMUM INTEREST RATES teacher, desire furnished or unfur- OLD glass, lamps, brie-a-Ojrae, china, springs 149.00 irlees for vacuums, typewriters, shot- OR 5-3349, 330 Codd St., Orange, Prompt Service—Reasonable Feel bouses. .'Ictures, mirrors nnd home gifts, 40% JT. J. h D. W. McGEBJ COMPANY Receptionist-Bookkeeper ..!35 nished 3 or 4-room apartment or Italian pottery, tea set. Sale tins . and rifles. Small safes, dl.a- Jersey Mortgage Company Secretaries, stenographers -> to $40 house, willing to sublet while owner Thursday and Friday, 56 Beauvoir; )ff. See us before buying. Terms 1060 Broad st., Newark. MA 2-1028. irranged, h londn, old gold, silver, CORSBTRY — Your experienced Approved P.H.A. Mortgagee Nurse, Industrial good vacations. Permanent residents. Su. Summit. Near Overlook, h H. & M. Sptnotr Conetlere will call and 280 No. Broad st,, Elizabeth, N. J. i , ' h Typists (15) _ „ ;...._.,,»....to $SB 6-3500, Ext, 11, during working BEAGLE 'hound dog, female. Chat- MEN'S blue custom suit, 40-42, $15. 279 Springfield ave., Newark 3. give a free figure analysis. Call be- EL 8-0800. h FACTORY to lease, assembly apace Messengers (16 yn. up) ...to $25 hours, Su. 6-2160-J evenings, h lady's lilgh black shoo skates, $5; ham 4-5010-W. . h tween 6 & 1 P. hi Mrs. I*. Q. Martin for light precision manufacturing, Blllers, Dictaphones, Burroughs. boy's shoo skates, $3. Su. 6-4150-H. Blgelow 3-6452 OR 2-2578. Mad. 6-0107. MORTGAGE LOANS—i% lntereit; 1935 FORD, four door sedan, rea- h up to 20 years; company pays title 9,000 to 10,000 sq, ft,, outside ot h sonable. Within O.P.A. celling price. Newark, within 25 miles radius Forest Hill Emp. Agency REAL ESTATE FOR RENt 'LEXIBLE flyer sled 111 good con- PIANOS TUNED expenses, Call or write. William Call Su. 6-2011-M after G P. M. h Stulford, 1400 Morris Ave., union. west. Mlllburn 6-0086-W. h 744 Broad St. IIA 2-8700 h TWO girl's evening dresses, size 12, dition for 6 year old, Short Hills Reginald Belcher, Bloomfleld. SUMMIT—Corner store (JO x B0)— $3.50; boy's skates, sizes 5 mid IIAN'H winter overcoat, slzo 42, color 7-3070. 182 Un. 2-4300, h LIST YOUR PROPERTY NOW! STENOQRAPHElt-bookkeeper. 5 day Term lease. Consult. » ' i other household articles; all In ex- dous savings; selling direct frorh Lynch Studios, 17 William at.; COMPETENT full or part time maid. cellent condition. S. O. 2-6533. n home enables me to sell for less; South Orange Record Chatham Courier MI 2-0729 (1 block from Broad st), compare my prices. Barron's, 2 Good wages tor good worker, Su. FURNISHED room, bath and garage COW UK HORSE MANURE, well fr Newark, N. J. h_ 6-3205. ,• h Farley, cor. Avon ave.; BI 3-8776, available, Mlllburn 6-01118. 107 rotted, delivered. This month only evenings or appointments. v "" DANCING " EXPERIENCED stenographer with a $10 :nad foi $6. Chestnut Farm, South Orange 3-0700 Chatham 4-0600 HELEN MacHUOH—Tenohor of cor- knowledge of bookkeeping, Clean Hlllmdt, N. J, Unionvllle i-0253. GA3 stove, oven regulator, white, net ball room dancing, fox trot, pleasant working conditions with FOR SALE Price $16. Su. 6-6109-J.. h waltz, rhumba, tango, conga, Vien- ITOPSOIL AND MANURE. Also per- research organization located in FOUR month's old black thoroughbred manent ASPHALT driveways built PARKER shotgun, automatic ejec- nese waits, 3? Washington it.; HA New Providence, N. J. Salary $85. cocker, reasonable. Call Su. 6-6815. 3-0678. Open Sundays. . h_ H. Scott, Mlllburn 6-0890. tors, May be seen at "Your Home," t day Tvoek, Please state ago edu- h 29 Beechwood Rd., Summit. h cation, and experience, Box 40 '/<, KITCHEN cabinets, complete units *-! Sfi QIRL'S white shoe skates, slie 3, Maplewood News Springfield Sun Summit Herald h or Individual pieces, upper hangers DOUBLE bed, spring, mattreBs, $10; LOST Also wagon of colored Hologate to match, various styles nnd sizes. 2 RUB stoves, $5, $10; baby bnssl- BLACK picture wallet, Sentimental blocks, toy stove, refrigerator and Also modern plumbing fixtures, tile nctto, $6., etc.; 2 steel 50 gal. oil South Orange 2-3252 Mlllburn 6-1256 - Vftlue, Joan Granger, 8. O. 3-1303. GIRL for full time work &t soda washing machine. Short Hills 7- boards, Allowance for old plumb- drums, $2; single springs; house- 3107-W. • , 111 '•'•".'• • n fountain. CallCh, 4-5070, < Ing, Community Building Supply hold furniture. Su. 6-5342-W. h CROCHETED bedspread,' Handloom Co.. 100 Route 29. Hillside. Waverly MOTHER'S helper, no cleaning, no 8-6*86. BOY'S suits, 100% wool tweed, In MAN'S wrist watch, Friday rooming. laundryay . Full time. Sleep In or oout. blue and white bedspread, Short perfect condition. 1 slzo 8-8 years, From now on these six papers will run your Classi- .Reward. Su. 6-1887. h SoutSthh OOran& e 2-618326183 . IlIlll Hilts 7-3429. 128 ONE AS 100-110-V Motor Stoker, bin $1. 1 sizo 10-12 yenrs, $8. Call Su. BICYCLE, woman's, excellent condi feed type, excellent condition. Rea- 0-3298. n 8WABANKBOOK |No< 20481, Please return FULL time household worker, sleep son for sale, new addition to plant fied Advertising in all papers at the rate of 7c per t§t*Jf~to The Summit Trust Co. h In, small liouno and family, good tlon. Basket—new tires, $25. Mill- YOUTH bed, Inner spring mftttrcss, burn 8-1968-W. • HI requires larger Unit. The Braecher SOLTJIBFtS pot. dog, female, mixed salary to responsible person, Call Co., 12 River road, Chatham, $10; slzo 2, glrl'B shoo Ice skates, 1 Bernardsvllle, 467-J-l evenings, h MAN'S and woman's 28" bicycle, $5. Call Mlllburn 6-0559. s word (minimum charge 70 cents). • breed, tan, 5 months old, answers TOPSOIL—Screened or unecrogned. to, "Puddles," Reward. Su, 6-4070-J. GENERAL lioviieworkor, 5 days a Good mechanical condition. New STEEL couch, buggy, baby scale, : n tiros $25. Small tricycle $6. Short Manure nnd humus. Cull 1. F, Feins, , , week, $15. References. Su. 6-6273-J Hills' 7-3401-J. . 123 2440 Morris Ave,, Union, N. J. small bicycle, tricycle, bnthlnett, Whether you want to sell an old mirror, used after 8 P, M. h Unvl. ,2-4184. clothes hamper, jars, man's spring, winter conta, blackboard, nlzo 1 leb FOUND YOUNG woman or girl—full or part COAT, woman's, black, she 40, lamb'a wool lining, caracul collar, MI CUSTOM TAILORED SBAT nkntes. Cnll 194 Bryant Ave., clothing, a vacant lot; locate a house for your SUM of money ten (lays Rgo. Inquire time beauty operator. Josephine's 6-0U4-R. 130 COVERS—S1MONIZINQ, nny make Kprlngflcld. R Beauty Slionm, 2S2 Main St., Chat- car. Otto Schmidt, Jr., Dodge & at Rlchland Co,, 41 Mtiplo Street. BOY'S Elgin balloon tire bicycle, slae NEW PROVIDENCE—Corner lot, up- i h ham. Cli. 4-3788. < Plymouth Dealer, 306 Broad St, family; buy or sell a used car; find your dog or 28, Excellent condition, $35, Short 'Su. 8-1665, liroxlinnlely 1/1 acre. Fully Imiirov- T5b0»S-CA_'8. Sea Summit AnlmulWel- HOtJSraWOBKfOR, no cooking, light Hills 7-JB15-W. 184 «fl. Rpfltrlotpcl renldentlnl, Noar fare Leagus notice, social page Sum- laundry, good lalnry. Bus at door, IMMEDIATE DELIVERY new 194B school, bun. Summit 8-15G9-J, s mit Herald, If your dpg Is lost or Call' Mlllburn 6-0222. h Chevrolet trucks, Slofart-Rees, 315 obtain employment, use the Classified Advertising you want a pet. Su. 8-2848, h HXPERIENCED COOK, white, for CHEST, bed, Gas range. Cheap. Mill Springfield^ Ave. Summit 6-16E1, li ELECTRIC HBATER $5; Kerosene burn 6-0719-R, <• 10JL Iteator; Pot utovo with connections permanent position with family of ANTIQUE CLOOKS bought nnd sold, $15; Victor Cabinet Radio $26 Columns, of these six papers, which cover one of ANTIQUES 3, no work «xc»pt cooking. Call The Clook 8hop, Harris D. Rush, pair Victorian vases; convalescent ' 9. H, 7-8838. h CORONA portable typewriter. Good 257 Oi'charfl St., WeBttleld. N. J. chnlr (reclining); wlclM porch FORBES ANTIQUES h 235 Bound Brook Rd., Middlesex. One RECEPTIONiBT— Secreiary for doc- condition. Short Hills 7-2888. _J1» Hut; Htudlo couch; mahogany li- the most prosperous areas in the country. To place brary tablo; girl's BIM 20-1)8 enccoon mile west of Dunollcn Center. Cot- tor's office, Ability to meet publlo BIRD CAGE—Hendryx, heavy brass. SUBSCRIPTIONS nt Publishers' tars «hopp(, open dally, U noon. necessary is well us good steno- Price. Chatham Newn Service. Ch mint $20; Inmpa; k-d nkntofl, etc., Good condition. HO. Mlllburn 8' priced rofiKorinmo; muat see to np- an advertisement simply call any of the above graphic^ Ijnokground; s Profor •••'.•' • , h 1144, • llf 4-5029, o younger woinnn, tingle or married. Iirenlatd. IB Lorraine PI., flu Short Hills 7-1161 h AMERICAN antique couch, chairs CORONA portable typowrltors are (l-0036-It, ^h_ " APAOTMflNt 8 TO LET and other Itama all in good condi- here. Thoro'll bo a tow for Christ- papers and insertion in all six will be guaranteed. rtr, for tliMitrftl uftloc work In tion. ORange 6-7888. , _1 mas. Wo'ro taking orders now, IjAlirS) brown mmtllnh leather rid YOU NO business lady will share at- New York office, 5-day week, Good Springfield BUN Stationary St Gin Inpr boots, fltn 6 or 0% A dhoe, Htl, tractive 4 room apartment. Call Su, salary. Glvo ynrtlaulars. Box 35;150,000 cublo yds. ot sandy till. Will Sliop, 230 Morris Ave,, Bprlngflcld, 11-61 OH-J.h (•SHI.. . h Mfirilewood Mows, n deliver or load your trucks. Impeo- Open evenings. s t|on by np'polntment only. Will de- HAND crorliotfld 1I lioilRprn, Copy must he in our hands no later than WOMAN wltK moatilftted volc« to liver all winter, Coppnln Contracting THH SlflVMN HI8AN DIN? OR DANCE work on liileiihone canvasalnjt ftt (Mra Aniui O, O'lllKKltis) (rood ('omlltlnii, rcnsoiin-blo, lil All— Co., 110 Main St,. Chatham 4a,r« time, Bplemlln In- 0 Unlfiuo gifts from distant IIUKIB In oonio. Write to tlox 30 o/o Summit laoated, until Clirlnttnad nnly, op- imiinvTTKaiflnifii, Henmiiwi hnfd" ITALUN - AM1DRICAN DINN wood, dullvoioci, $21 por cord. (!nl Restnurant Bar Herald. , h BILT-ntts baby ewrrlaw, otlb, oo»> posite olmrelr In Mnrtlnnvllle, aevon 5 P. M. TUESDAY tOO Main St., Mlllburn, N. J. COOK, whllt, references r«nulr«d. toms*. ctr taut, ihoofly, loun»« Ot- ml)«i w«it of Mnrtlnsvllla on Wnali J:_i4Cw _ _h Mulkur»,«>l4Tii Ample parking •Bummlt Dm ploy ment Agency, S51 toman chUr, m»pl* ehUr, toy* (h. i Injrton Vnlloy rond. 11 oil ml Unxil .rnrVH lilnyclo. fur "rmjV. fimiiTc , Closed nil diy Tuuday k SpringflelilAvr., Humrnlt. h 4.472S-W. « m-3. h lion, rtciiHoiialiln. Mini, (-'i'M. ft THE SUMMIT HERALD, THURSDAY, MCEMIER 4, !W8

BOROUGH Library Welcomes Service Men Back Wreath Making Plm CMISIMQI Forty BOROUGH—The Women's As- sociation of the Presbyterian As Regular Borrowers; Story Hour For Veterans Church of Mew Providence will BiOROUG>HP=Slxty'toree—cmoit "The Long Trains hold s Christmas party on Tburt- of service men were pulled from Roll," by~SSpEer"~Wr~Meaa>f day, Decembt-r 13,. atjhe home of "Uncle Bennie Goes Visiting," by In Borough Hall Of Garden Club the active file of borrowers at Emma L. Brock; "The Hundred BOROUGH—The members of Mrs. C. Horton, Madison avenue. New Providence Public Library Dresses," by Eleanor Els tee; the New Providence Garden Club Devotion* will be led by Mrs. during the war, Mrs. Lawrence "Breakfast With the Clowns," by will meet in the Borough Hall, A. F. Irving. friday,December14 Radttce, librarian, has reported. Rosalie Slocum; "The Wizard and Wednesday, December 12, at 10 Hostesses will be Mra. Horton, : ' BOROUGH—The annual Christ- The library is looking forward to His Magic Powder," by Alfred S. a. m. and continuing through the Mrs. B. Fischer, Mrs. James Dietz, i Show of the New Providence welcoming them back as regular Campbell; "Saturday Magic," by day and evening, will make and Mrs. T. Reilly. $trdea Club will be held on Fri- borrowers. Jack Bechdolt. wreaths. ' 4ty, December 11, in the Fresby- Also "Private Pipps," by Ger- The club has been asked to '' twlan parish house, from 2 to 5 Considerable interest has been shown in the library by school trude B. Mallette; "Jasper-The make SO wreaths for the wounded DEEDS ' foloqk. children since Children'e Book Gypsy Dog," by Chesley Kahl- veterans in nearby hospitals, and BOROUGH —The following SHOP NOW ,;' Club members will meet at 11 a. mann; "Tim Thompson in the are devoting the entire day to that W. and will share a box luncheon. W«ek,- and the story hour on Sat- transfers of real estate have been fO* ««* Jungle," by Frank Buck and Fer- purpose. recorded in the office of Regis- SIIEC1ION •J She hostesses in charge of the urdays beginning at 1.15 p. m., is rery well attended. ria Fraser; "Two Is A Team," by Greens are needed for the trar Bauer at the Union County luncheon will be Mrs. T. F. Reilly, Lorraine and Jerrold Beim; "Rob- wreaths, and pine-cones for dec-Court House, Elizabeth: lire. John Boyce, and Mrs. H. F. Some of the books added to the uvenile section during the past ert Fulton-Boy Craftsman," by orating. The members are asking - Dabinett. for 'contributions of these mate- Mr. and Mrs. Theodore E. Kihl- wo weeks are: "Skippy'a Family," Marguerite Henry; "Ben Frank- gren to Mr. and Mrs. John Has- , Tea hostesses will be Mrs. Wil- lin-Printers Boy," by Augusta rials. If it is impossible to bring .' llam Kauffman, Miss Harriet by Stephen W. Meade; "Treasure them to the hall, some of the sler, property in the easterly side- n Gaspe," by Amy Hageboom; Stevenson; and "Rabbit Hill," by line of Dogwood lane, 616.43 feet - J»a4gley and Miss Helen Arm- Robert Lawson. members will be glad to call for two Sue Barton novels, by Helen them. from Mountain avenue, if pro- duced. There will be four classes In the Here's Happiness the Body and Blood of Christ is With an average driver at the Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Koch to offered anew to the Father: tor the Little Folks • y'J-r7anoy Christmas boxes. 72nd Anniversary wheel and traveling over a dry Mildred L. O'Brien, lots 18 to 20, '» a—Boxes of cookies tor chil- Fourth, That the Presence of road, it takes a car going 45 miles block 8, map of property of Berk- dren (for sale). Christ in the Lord's Supper is a an hour four times as long to stop ley Heights Association. presence in the elements of Bread r b—Boxes of articles for as one going only 20 miles an hour, Mildred L, O'Brien, unmarried, '1 Of Church's Start and Wine: adults, to be sold "sight according to the National Safety to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Koch, unseen." Fifth, that Regeneration ie in- Council. foregoing property. 'J—Table Settings. In I). S. Observed separably connected with Baptism. a—Christmas dinner table, In this area there are four Re- BOROUGH—St. Luke's Church formed Episcopal Churches. Be- b—New Year's Eve table. HORSE 1.98 n Murray Hill on Sunday joined sides St. Luke's, they include A gallant charger to thrill "8—Christmas arrangement for in the observance of the 72nd an- churches in New York City, at 317 the tiny tots. Colorfully .. - hall or living room. niversary of the founding of the Bast 50th street, of which Bishop Christmas Suggestions <""""?i painted. Twenty-three ''/t\ ff—Christmas arrangement for Reformed Episcopal Church In Howard D. Higgins is the rector; inches long. coffee or end table. this country. The Church of the Redemption, in i will also be an "opportun- PYREX WARE \ A * * i It was organized December 2, Brooklyn, with Rev. Thomas W. table," with articles for sale. 1873, at the Association Hail at 23rd Fox as rector, and Emmanuel COOKIE JAR ASSORTMENT SPKLL-IT ese will Include a very limited street and 4th avenue in NewChurch in Somerville, where Rev. BOARD . flUmber of Christmas wreaths and York, under the leadership of James Millar is rector. TABLE TREES WITH CANDLES lyags, as the greater number of Bishop George David Cummins, The organization maintains a CJhrlstrnas wreaths made by the CASSEROLES (Cromax) who had previously served as as- theological seminary in Philadel- Soft, Cuddly Members will be sent to the hospl- sistant Bishop of the Diocese of phia, from which the Rev, Frank BIRD HOUSES AND FEEDERS Kentucky of the Protestant Epis- Roppelt, rector x>t St. Luke's wae BIRD. SEED p copal Church. graduated In May. STUFFED ANIMALS Sports and Social It was a Low Church movement St. Luke's was organized in 56 FLEXIBLE FLYERS iragram for Winter which broke from the Protestant 1891. Dr. Jett was the first pas- PRESTO LOGS (6 in Case) 1.98 2.98 4.98 Episcopal Church and its main tor._ In 1922, the Rev. Dr. Henry Fifteen, twenty and twenty-four inch sices. Made of soft 1.49 ftelng Planned effort was a return to the prayer Short was named pastor, and he KINDLE LIGHT LOGS AND KINDLERS rich plush. All have moving eyes »nd big ribbon bows. Halpa the child' spell 81 {30ROUGH— The Borough's book of 1785—-the "proposed book" served in that capacity until his FIREPLACE GRATES (Combination) Little ones adore them I VOldi %xA aolva 26 prob- jtecreation Commission has tinder of Bishop William White, which death last December 23. lems! Wew, different, Consideration1 a plan for a winter was a close copy of the English CORDIAL AND TUMBLERS UUl fittal fporta and social program. This prayer book of 1689, which had jfrJU include dancing and basket- been brought to America by theDecember 17 Yule, Party OLD FASHIONED ball in the Lincoln School audi- Pilgrims for use in the Episcopal For Boy Scout Troop HAMPERS (3 Sizes) For Hours of Fun torium if the fuel situation will Church here. BOROUGH —Boy Scout Troop TWO-IH-OM Percale inake It possible for the Board of The Reformed Church was No. 63 sponsored by the Lincoln Ahti General Line of Education to permit use of the ounded to provide an "open door, School P, T. A. will have its an- Black funding. The basketball program an open Bible and wi open Com- nual Christmas Party, Monday, may be enlarged to permit the munion for followers of Christ." December 17 in the evening at KITCHEN WARE Board Organization of girls' teams. Plans The following declaration of prin- Lincoln School. are also being considered to flood iplee was drawn up: The troop's leadership council 4.98 the pond across from Maple street I, The Reformed Episcopal following its Monday night meet- fat a skating rink, Church, holding "the faith once ing urging all boys in the com- Hard ware 'v : delivered unto the saints" de- munity to join the scouts, it was frtdoy Assembly, ilares its belief in the Holy pointed out by Larry Mezzacca, Judy's Farm Scriptures of the Old and Newassistant scoutmaster. Edward. louse/oaves Jeochers Meeting Sheldon is the scoutmaster. Any MANSER. A famous toy little children Testaments as the Word of God, ^SUMMIT-N.J *; BOROUGH —Friday's assembly boys interested in joining the 431 SPRINGFIELD AVE; love! Builds a barn, fence, Told It up, there's a black- Soft, lovable little dog with /•it Lincoln School beginning at 9 and the sole Rule of Faith and Animals, auto, even the boarl. Unfold and there's a simulated leather ears and 'ractice; in the Creed "commonly troop are asked to come to Lin,c-. farmer's family 1 tall. His own collar, too. a, m. will feature De Mott, the oln School on Monday nights desk! forty-five Inches Mghl juggler. This Is an assembly under called the Apostles' Creed;" in the the auspices of the student fund. Divine Institution of the Sacra- Young children accdmpanied by ments of Baptism and the Lord's Enqc for Dot/ or Brother All S/zei one/ S/iopei their parents are welcome at this Supper; and in the doctrines of assembly. rrace substantially as they ft" Paratwlll Supervising Principal Allen W. et forth in the Thirty-Nln! SVRCOAT WAGOJf* Roberts, accompanied by Mrs. icles of Religion. of ...... , . Roberts attended the annual con- II. This church recognizes and vention of the N. J. Education GM 2/C, son j* O* BLOCKS adheres to Episcopacy, not as a Peter DlParlsi of L,. Well tailored, 'Association over the week-end at Divine right,' but as a very an- smartly Atlantic City. Early next week a nue, was announced on -ru-e...... styled — cient and desirable form of Church giving Day. 2.10 teachers' meeting is planned at polity." ? a Miss Montuorl, a graduate of which time reports will be made IH. This Church, retaining a enjoy Summit High School, class of 1644, About sixty blocks is on the proceedings of the conven- Liturgy which shall not be im- is employed at the Bell Telephone cunning,wood tion. School was closed here last perative or repressive of freedom Laboratories, Inc., Murray Hill. trttky double 1 wagon. Means hours Friday so that teachers could at- of prayer, accepts the Book of GM/2C DiParisi is aboard the of happy fun. tend the shore conclave. Common Prayer, as it was re- USS Saturn at Bayonne. He is a •ised, proposed, and recommended graduate of Thomas Edison Voca- or use by the General Convention Visiting Here tional School, Elizabeth. •,. BOROUGH—Mrs. Bettsholm and f the Protestant Episcopal l An Evtning of Funl ".ber small daughter, Phyllis Anne,. Church, A. D., 1785, reserving full ITJS EASY to find "where to buy Linen Finish I Easy To Install I / of Philadelphia, are spending liberty to alter, abridge, enlarge, ' several weeks with Mrs. Betts-and amend the same, as may seem* READ THE CLASSIFIED ADS. \ holm's sister, Mrs. B, P. VIrene of most conducive to the edification 0.95 •, Clinton avenue, New Providence. of the people, "provided that the J -.ftev. Bettsholm Is an army chap- substance of the faith be kept ;* lain, and la now stationed In entire." (.'fJXorea. He has been in the west- IV. This Church condemns and 1.19 twin Deck . Lt)rn Pacific area since Septem- 'ejects the following erroneous ber 1, tnd strange doctrines as contrary Bridge Cards o God's .Word: CHECKERS First, That the Church of Christ Bed and black xnasonlU 79e AUTO HORN ixiflts only In one order or form board, lezlS-ln. Toil oaa Tine quality! Oardi bare Twin trumpets with ft loud play backgammon on the colorful backs In aworUd dear Wast. Roman gold if ecclesiastical polity: b«ck of the checker board. nwUlustre finish* Second, That Christian Minis- __/ ters are "priests" in another sense * A * A WI ARK OPEN than that in which all believers EVENINGS TIU.9.P.M are "a royal priesthood"; Fil-O-Matic Coven... AND MiMY SUNDAY Third, That the Lord's Table te Bast Quality Separators an altar on which the oblation of Burglar Takes Jewels, Leaves Large Ring!

DELUXE

Reader• often THESE ARE THE GUYS ea£ CHAMPION EXTRA "1 lite the Hew LIFE HERALD TRIBUNE The Tire that Stays Safer, longer BATTERY because it gives me f* are the boys yrhio fought and won the war. 9.45 Exchange ALL THE NEW3 ••' A Many of them are waiting to be brought home— The only tire built with the famous Char-Grip Tread; extra & strong Saftl-Iiock, Gum-Dipped Oord Body; and Saftl-Bured Tor dependable, economical, some must remain on duty—some have been wounded Construction for greater gtrongth and longer mileage. trouble-free service, choose in loss time Champion of them all I a Firestone battery. Know and some are permanently disabled. That's why w» have tilt beat! That1! a quality MARY MAROAREt McBRIDI you'll appreoi&te Mary Margaret McBride, famous have a Victory Loan. It costs money to guard Japan radio columnist, tells of the burglar too* #•••«• who took time out for a bath before and Germany. It takes money to start men out again making off with the family silver. Bead the "No one would have known," said In civilian life. Hospitalization costs money and our Herald Tribune Mary Margaret, "if he had used pif wounded must be given the best of care. Buy Victory to remove the give-away ring he left for a few day8»»«»«« around the bathtub." Dif—the won- Bonds and hold them, der cleaner—cuts 's«e how well it fit* housework in half. your busy soru}dul««#j Your bathtub will sparkle, your kitchen stove ,wlll Bhinc. Dif PVBLIC®) SERVICE: makes the difference in washing dishes, clothes and woodwork THEY FINISHED THEIR JOB.;.LET'S FINISH OVRSI tool Look for.the W«« . A-JIJMJ 356 SPRINGFIELD AYE., SUMMIT