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FOR ICTORY BUY UNITED STATES

VII.—-No. 23: FORDS, N. J., FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1942 PRICE THREE CENTS Get All Your Scrap Together! Board John's Diner And Lounge Razed By Fire; Draftees >r fir; Septembir 14th Drive Protects Damage Is Estimated At Nearly $125,000 To Leave BARITAN TOW'NtSHiliP—A fire, by the Piscatawaytown Safety is unknown, some of the firemen POBDiS— Township trucks.will driver; Harvey Lund and Harry which started in the cellar and Squad. • - were of the, opinion that it was canvass the Township, door-to- Fedderson, helpers; Sis-olak Truck- spread through the "bar, dining The kitchen in the rear of the caused by a short-circuit. door on Monday, September .14, ing Co. truck; Joseph Sisolak, Teachers room and kitchen, left John's diner was gutted and food and All Raritan Township policemen August 27 in an all-out salvage, drive under driver; Chester Smink and Robert Diner and Coral Cocktail Lounge, ; the sponsorship of the local. Sal- utensils were destroyed. An ex- who could be spared from their PA\CIarifies Rules-,g-: Sisojak, helpers; Township truck, Will Keep Jobs Open For located at Route 25 and Amboy pensive upholstered bar was dam-regular posts were called to the High Percentage vage. Committee. •'•'•••:'• Joseph Naylpr, driver; Mike Cur- Avenue, in ruins early Tuesday "•'/ All. kinds of scrap metal, rags, aged beyond repair and approxi- scene where they worked under the a Eliminate Scores tis and Mike Smalley, helpers- Those In Service; To morning. The damage according mately sixty cases of liquor in the direction of Police Chief Charles Of Those Examined rubber and the usual "tailored" Others Who Helped to John Sehleicker, owner of the siding Such Books tin cans will be collected on that cellar were destroyed. A Ham- Grandjean and Commissioner Vic- ' Green Street Circle and Colonia:: Fill Posts 'Temporarily' building, is estimated at $125,000. mond organ, piano and musical in- tor Pedersen. Traffic on Amboy Have Met Requirements day. .''Scrap should be left on the Township truck, Louis Grode, driv- EDS —-.; Misinterpretation : •FiOR'DiS — Township teachers The place was renovated a little struments in the bandstand were Avenue was detoured for several RARITAN TOWNSHIP — The curb., early in the morning for the er; Charles Fauntroy and George more than a year ago. nisunderstanding' of"some of trucks will have to start at a very who are advanced from lower also destroyed. hours during the height of the names of those men examined at Chaney, 'helpers. There were patrons in both the asoline i*ationing regulations early, hour in order to cover the gades to the upper , grades and Although the cause of the fire blaze. Newark last Tuesday who were ac- Iselin: Cooper's Dairy truck, diner and lounge when the fire equire the recall of a, eonsl^ entire Township in one day. from upper grades to the High cepted for, military service have Frank Cooper, driver; Ed, Cooper broke out shortly after midnight, le .number' of "C" ration ; Last week's tin can collection school due to the enlistment of been announced by Local Board and Bill Breen, helpers. but they all left quietly before the , the local. War : Price .and resulted in. 7,690 pounds of tin other teachers in the armed forces No. 2, embracing Highland Park, Port Reading: Tom . Witcher's fire gained headway. Roy Hoag- aing Board stated yesterday, which were delivered to the Vulcan will hold such "positions only until Red Cross Chapter To .'Furnish Raritan Township and Metuchen. truck, Witcher, driver; Arthur land, chief bartender, discovered ong those to be by. the Detmning .Company in Sewaren. Mafinsky, helper. such time as the war is over. Those The men who met the physical re- in service will be given their posi- the fire when he went to the cellar cation orders issued' by .the' .: The drivers.. and helpers were as 1 quirements represent a high per- Sewaren: Township truck, Frank to investigate the odor of smoke. Hospital Sun Room At Kilmer of Price Administration in follows: . tions when they return. centage of those examined, and LaFarr, driver; Chris Olsen and When he opened the vault where rk by James Kerney, Jr.,; Di- John Wickstron, helpers. This decision was reached Mon- WOODBRIDGE-—Woodbridge Township Chapter, American they have been placed in the en- •, -will be those who are lising Avenel: Avenel Coal and Ice Co., the liquor is stored he was forced listed army reserve and scheduled Woodbridge: Woodbridge Hard- day night by the Board of Educa- back by billows of smoke, he said. Red Cross, with the aid of Township residents, will furnish a iger cars, with'. or •without (truck, Joseph Godby, driver;.Louis tion which passed a special resolu- for induction at Fort Dix next ware Co. truck, Joseph Cohen, The Raritan Township fire com- sun room at Camp fCilmer, according to an .announcement made ercial plates, for delivery i Rossi, Steve , Coharsky, Elmer driver; Bob Finn and Ed Olsen, tion to that effect. Thursday, August 27. Those so ses. Under Mr. Kerney's rul- Hobbs, Jack Everet, helpers.; Lau- panies answered the alarm but as this week by Mrs. C. H. Rothfuss, chairman of the project. helpers. , Service Hardware Co. Miss Blanche Schoenbrun was chosen are as follows: ;he regulations do not permit za's. truck, .Louis 'Gilbert driver; the fire gained headway the Me- Mrs. Rothfuss explained that there has been set up at Camp truck, William Taggart, driver; temporarily appointed teacher in Matthew Joseph Balint, RFD, than an A and B book for Adolph Elster, Lawrence Edgar tuchen. fire companies were called Kilmer a Red Cross Camp and Hospital Service Council consist- Perth Amboy; Edward Henry Mar- Dave Cohen, helper. Drummond's the upper grade school, Fords No. upon to help. It took the firemen vehicles, although" motor-, and Frederick Alston, helpers/ truck, L. L. Drummowd, driver; ing of two representatives from each Red Cross Chapter in the tin Bammann Jr., Metuchen; Mich- i are eligible for C books f or 7, to fill the position caused by until five o'clock in the morning to Keasbey and Fords: Lund's Theodore and Robert Drummond, the enlistment of James Brown. northern and centra! parts of the State. ael Bodnarik, Raritan Township; '.vy and messenger services." Service Station truck, Peter Beal, bring the blaze under control but Donald George Brunstetter, Me- helpers. Miss Elizabeth ;' Dunigan was by that time the roof had col- The council at Camp Kilmer meets every two weeks at tion \vagons may receive a present when the officers in charge of the camp explain the most tuchen; Peter Bernard Canta- pplement provided they are given a similar appointment in lapsed over the lounge. messa, Metuchen; and Alan Mari- ;ed in one of the pursuits School No. 11, to take the place of pressing needs of the camp, especially in regard, to the hospi- John's Diner got its name from tal. It is the purpose of the council to fill these needs as far as nus Christensen, Metuchen. Bed as "preferred driving." Medical Services Personnel Thomas Limoli who in turn has John Schleiker, who started the Also, Warren Russell Dickson, are but fourteen classes been assigned to the High School possible by the representatives carrying the word back to their business a dozen years ago. Two respective Red Cross chapters and having their local committees Metuchen; Clitford Nathan Giles, 1 this group. . to fill the vacancy caused by the and a half years ago he sold the Metuchen; Oscar Gurshman, Me- enlistment of Miss Joanna Magyar fulfill their commitments. , Kerney reported that.of the In Raritan Township Enlarged diner part of the business to tuchen; John Edward Holton, in the Woman's Army Auxiliary At the last meeting of the council at Camp Kilmer the appeals -which have, been Thomas Karsalas and devoted him- Metuchen; Herbert C. Jensen, RARITAN ... TOWNSHIP—-New been added at Stelton: Mrs. Corps. Miss Adele Fullerton was most urgent request was for furnishings for the sun rooms at- to him from'the decisions of self to the tavern trade, remodel- Metuchen; Daniel Edward Kapler, named teacher in the High School tached to the hospital units. It is these rooms where convales- rationing boards, only 5 .per members are being added to the Charles Barts.ch, Mrs. R. Ander- ing it into a cocktail lounge. Piscataway; Martin Kriegl, Metu- to fill the vacancy caused by the cent boys can go for a change from their hospital beds, read or iiave been allowed. ;v personnel of the first aid stations son and Mrs. Robert Filmer. Overcome By Smoke chen; Albert John Kosup, Fords, leave of absence given to Mrs. play games and entertain relatives who visit them. At present le bulk of the appeals," he in the Township as soon as they Those added at Oak Tree are: Two firemen, Chief Engineer and Peter Martin Kukan, Fords. Mary Kuzma. these sun rooms are bare of furnishings. "were from traveling- sales- complete^ their first-aid courses in Miss Dorsey Kirby, Miss Mabel Arthur Latham and Arnold Buck, In Contingent Martin, Louis Kraus, _ Gerald •Other appointments as recom- The Woodbridge Township Chapter has been pledged through real estate, men, . insuralysa an effort to enlarge the emer- both of Company No. 1, were over- Also, John Andrew Kuritz, Fords; Kraus and Ben Ashler. Miss Nel- mended by the Teachers Commit- tien • and persons using- pas- gency medical service of the Lo- come by smoke and 'were treated (Continued on page 2) Patrick Joseph Maglione, Metu- r ears for the delivery bt li Schryba and Miss Olga Koncur tee were made as follows: chen; Dominic Mantuano, Piscata- and commodities who mis-cal Defense Council. will act as clerks. 'Miss Claire Ernest to primary waytown; Anthony Tony Marci- ly believe themselves entitled Station wagons have been of- Nurses listed ,are as follows: grades in Avenel School; Miss Ele- Men In Third Registration Croup Now Receiving syn, Metuchen; Clarence Douglas gasoline rationing books." fered for auxiliary ambulances Oak Tree, Mrs. J, Nagy, R. N.; anor Harned to primary grades in Mawbey, Metuchen; Frank George Keasbey School; Miss Olive Spen- Help Is Asked and ! they include; one owned by Mrs. Dorothy Lindquist, R. -N.; Mislyan, RFD Perth Amboy; Emry cer, crippled children's teacher. urged that salesmen not en-,Mrs. Henry Troger of Wood- Mrs. S. Hudson, R. N.; Mrs. Lil- Questionnaires From Selective Service Board James Hemeik, Fords; Steven Jo- Transfers Approved [ in selling- "of necessary pro- bridge Avenue, which has been lian, Iselin, Mrs. Mary Michaels, WOODBRIDGE ' The local ing; Stephen Kurucz, 193 Straw- liam Dudash, 64 Oakland Ave., seph Petercsak, Perth Amboy; and re equipment for farms, fae- assigned .to the Piscataway First Mrs. Violet^ Ulrich, Mrs. Nora Transfers were approved as fol- berry Hill Ave., Wdbge. Keasbey. Joseph George Phillips, Metuchen. lows: Miss Edna Nolan from mid- draft board continued to send out , mines,: oil wells, lumber Aid Station; Commissioner Tro- Quammer, Mrs. Bertha Ashley, questionnaires to the men of the Carl Flensburg, Middlesex Ave., Charles MeCann, 75-A Wood- Also, Joseph Alexander Pinter, ger will be. the driver. The Stel- dle grades at School No. 14 to up- 3, and similar productive or and Mrs. Myra Ranco; Piscat- third registration this week as Colonia; Fred Dimock, 546 Maple bridge Ave., Wdgbe; Thomas Lindeneau; Harry James Sinclair, ton First Aid Station will use the per grades in School No, 7, Fords; etive establishments or of awaytown, Mrs. Charles Matthews, follows: Ave., Woodbridge; Michael Sil- Egan, 20 Ford Ave., Fords; Ed- Metuchen; Lawrence Sorensen, station, wagon owned by Charles ,R. N.; Mrs. Leon Withem, Mrs. Miss Hazel Gilhuly, from upper Metuchen; Charles Alexander Tim- :al supplies, if the marketing Harry O'Connor, 465 East Ave., agyi, 55 Third St., Fords; George win Hough, 3 Silzer Ave., Iselin; ch e ijuipment or supplies by Horn, of Lincoln Highway, as an Frank Fumia, Mrs. Frank Wheat- grades in Keasbey/to middle grades Joseph Petrusick, 145 Elm St., per, Metuchen; Michael Steve ! Sewaren; Thomas Whelan, 149 Legones, Oak Tree Rd., Iselin; nen, is essential to. the war ef- auxiliary ambulaiice. '.'••' ley; Mrs. Charles Paul, Mrs. Anna, in School No. 14, Fords; Mrs.. Fords; Charles Yavorsky, 15 First TotQi, Hopelawn; David Ti^ Helen Reed, from upper grades, Clinton. St., Woodbridge; Albert Max L. Wagenhoffer, St. Steph- ' to refrain' from making Hempe and Mrs. M. T. Brownlie. St.; Port Reading; Stephen Bish- Tremblay, Metuchen; Joseph Uh- The fbitowmg first aidersvhave Keasbey, to upper grades in School Panyko, 111 New St., Wood- en's Ave., Keasbey; John Jordano, Is..- '.'••••/ .;•.;.;; •:.•• •:." v : ," • • rin, Metuchen; Michael Uhrin, bridge; Augustine Lolargo, 188 op; 420 Woodbridge Ave., Port aeh appeals," he said "would No. 7, Fords; Mrs. Edna Neebt 38 Third St., Port Reading; Er- Metuchen; Roderic Bradley Webb, Woodbridge Ave., Woodbridge; Reading; Henry Zupko, 14 Jersey seless and would sirflply add from primary grades in Keasbey to nest Kiraly, 30 William St., Keas- Metuchen; Chester Matthew Wei- primary grades in School No. 7; Gilbert Lanterman, Woodbridge Ave., Hopelawn; Alton Doliber, :essarily to' the already heavy Township^ Owns 50% Of Land; bey; Morris Swirsky, 74 Main St., 224 Fulton St., Woodbridge; rup, Metuchen; John Joseph Wos- of work, of the staff at State j Miss Susan LeimpeteV, from Keas- Ave., Woodbridge; William Mor- Woodbridge; Joseph Neupauer, atka, Metuchen; Frank Yackinous, bey School to School No. 14, Fords. ris, 289 Oak St., Woodbridge; George Kolibas, 20 Vesper Ave., headquarters.". : ;: Charles St., Colonia; William Woodbridge; Emery Konick, 475 Metuchen; and Michael Yackulich, Mrs. Cecelia Dunham, of Fords Terrence Riley, Jr., 11 Harding 3 Woodbridge board will be- Saves In State-County Taxes Johnson, 10 Crampton Ave., Mereline Ave., Avenel; Paul Gur- Metuchen. and Mrs. Charles Donigan, of Ave., Iselin; Fred Foerch, 59 Car- review of all :C book-holders •VSoodbridge; Fred Schwenzer, zo, 337 Oak Ave., Woodbridge; Woodbridge, were named manager oline St., Woodbridge; Michael :e in order to fpllowthe OP A , 'F 0 EDS — In discussing es on property from which the 607 Linden Ave., Woodbridge; Jo- Karney Romano, PO Box 906, Township . never received .any and assistant manager respectively Demko, 124 Howard St., Hope- % in every respect, , tax title liens and the success of seph Dambach, 552 New Bruns- Long Beach, Calif.; Raymond An- taxes. At least we do not have for the new cafeteria at No. 11 lawn; Michael Kudrick, 28 Lee the refinancing program in the wick Ave., Fords; William Gerity, derson, 227 Main St., Wood- Township, Township Attorney to pay state and county taxes on School. St., Port Reading; Robert Wood- ward, 395 6th Ave., Port Read- 52 Milton Ave., Woodbridge; Wil- (Continued on Page 5) Leon; E.. McElroy estimated yes- the property we" have ' acquired. Mrs. Helen Sloboda, teacher at terday that the Township of With the tax title lien program No. 14 School,' was given a leave Ill During Blackout we forced the redemption of 4,- of absence at her request. Woodbridge owns approximately WOODBRIDGE — No formal 50 per cent of the^parcels of land 659 lots which brought in $1,046,- Miss Violet Salva Weds Rites For Miljes complaints have been filed by air- in the Township. 340.44." • raid wardens or police reserves of , "At the same time, "he said, "we Explains Bills any violations in connection with R'DS — Captain and. /Mrs. County Legion- Unit have sold over 3,000 lots which, . Mr. McElroy said that new Conrad Dueker In Fords ChurchTo Be Held Sunday the two-state blackout Tuesday 3 H. Tapley, of 103 Hornsby with their improvements, have comers in Port Reading and Ave- night. * ae, announce the marriage of FORDS—Miss' Violet Salva, George Dueker, brother of the ' RARITAN TOWNSHIP —John : added approximately a million nel seem to be having difficulty Names Fords Woman daughter, Gertrude Emily, bridegroom, acted as best man. Miljes, Jr., 21, of 62 Dartmouth The only incident reported was dollars in ratables." in understanding their tax bills daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul the sudden illness of Mrs. Minnie ivate Robert O. Dalsgard of P O R D iS — A number of .Salva, Sr., of Ryan Street, was The bride, given in marriage by Street, was instantly killed Wed- Continuing , he stated that up and the reason for their fire as- Thullesen, of Cooper Avenue, Ise- ;hen. The ceremony was per- Township residents were elected her father, wore a gown of white nesday afternoon when he was until August 1, last, the Township sessments. married Saturday afternoon to lin, an air-raid warden, who suf- sd' Saturday night at eight to office during the Middlesex tafFeta with a sweetheart neck- hit by a crashing "I" beam and has foreclosed and acquired title Conrad Dueker, son of Mr. and fered an attack while patrolling k in the Crescent Avenue In Port Reading the fire dis- County American Legion Conven- line trimmed with seed pearls. Her wooden boom from scaffolding at to- 26,224 lots of land of sizes trict tax in 1941 was .32 for an Mrs. George Dueker, of New fingertip veil of illusion fell from near the Green Street firehouse. >1, Plalnfteld. tion held in Dunellen Saturday the Perth Amboy plant of the Through a priority phone the De- vate \ _DaIsgard is stationed varying from 50 x 100 to acres. $8,000 appropriation. This year Brunswick, in Our Lady of Peace a tiara of orange blossoms. She National Lead Company and fell when John Kennedy, of Carteret, Church, here. Rev. George Tala- fense Council message room was ;he present at Georgetown, "By the end of 1942 we will the fire rate is 1.24 on a $10,280 was named commander of the carried a colonial bouquet of 40 feet to the ground. have 27,372 lots. Next year we appropriation due to the loss of ber performed the ceremony, af- notified and the Woodbridge Emer- The couple will reside at County Legion. roses. Miljes, employed by his father, gency Squad ambulance was dis- will probably acquire 500 addi- railroad taxes. Seld where Mrs. Dalsgard has "Vice commanders elected were: ter which a dinner for the imme- The bride's mother wore a pow- a wrecking contractor, was en- patched. Mrs. Thuilesen was taken employed on the regular staff tional lots and that will end the , In Avenel the fire rate in 1941Joseph Me Andrews, of Colonia; diate families was held at the der blue suit with accessories of gaged in burning off the ends of to the Perth Amboy General Hos- te . Plainfield Public Library tax title: lien program," Mr. Mc-was .45 on a $12,044.74 appropri- Harry Hansen, of Fords and Ben-home of the bridegroom's pa- a contrasting shade and a corsage the "I" beams projecting from the pital where she is under the care le past ten years. Elroy stated. . ation. Thjs year it is .81 on a jamin Trzaska, of South River. rents. of red roses. The bridegroom's exterior wall of the building when of Dr. C. H. Rothfuss. "When the Republican admin- $23,612.72 appropriation for the McAndrews also served as vice mother was attired in navy blue the boom by which the severed Avenel Fire district voters ap- Miss Helen Hedges of town was Leon E. McElroy, Township co- istration took over there wei-e commander last year. the bride's maid of honor and on- with white accessories. She also beam ends were being lowered to ncil Considers proved the purchase of a fire ap- ordinator, said he was satisfied 52,000 taxing parcels on the Speakers included Roy Ander- ly attendant. She wore a gown wore a corsage of red roses. the ground gave way, striking him books, but for years the munici- paratus, the cost of which is to be with the results. All units report- fare Of Children son, of Woodbridge, Department of pink net with a head dress of a After a short wedding trip to and plunging him to a railroad ed as soon as the sirens were pality paid state and county tax- wiped out this year. Commander; William McKinley, matching shade and carried a cas- Atlantic City the couple will re- flat car on a siding below. 3ODBRIDGE—Leon E. Mc- blown and residents showed a fine of Jersey City, national executive cade of orchid colored gladioli. side at 13 Ryan street, Fords. Coroner Eugene Mullen said spirit of cooperation, he said. y co-ordinator of the local ANNOUNCE MARRIAGE Wool Is Available For committeeman and Alfred McCor- the victim suffered a fractured ise, Council, said today that MiENiLO PARK—Mr. and Mrs. mick, of Dayton, past Department skull. ;roup was taking under con- Red Cross Knitting Harold Lake Named : Albert Christoffersen, of Hamilton Commander. -Large Percentage Of. IB Class Funeral services will be held ition the -request of Leonard ATenuej. announce the marriage of A Township woman, Mrs. .Ben- Sunday afternoon at two o'clock On State ¥. F. W. Staff fuss,,; State Director of Civ- their daughtei-, DoriSj to Edward WOODBRIDGE — Wool for jamin Sunshine, of Fords, was from the home, with Rev. Fred- Defense who has ask'ed Io- Miller, sOn of Mr. and Mrs. Ed- the making of soldiers' sweaters elected president of the Woman's Already Reclassified' Says Bird erick Niedermeyer officiating ISELIN—Harold H. Lake, of )efense Councils to promote ward Miller, of Metuchen. and scarfs and navy helmets will Auxiliary which convened simul- Burial will be in the Alpine Iselin Post No. 2638, Veterans of >rganization of a committee The bride is a graduate of Me- •be available on September 1, taneously. Other officers elected WOODB'RIDGE — Woodbridge tally unfit for service, or shifted Cemetery. Foreign Wars, has been named 8th ovide for the care and wel-tuchen High School and is. em- were: Miss Mary Seeman, of Township will not be greatly af- to 1A. district Chief of Staff in charge of •>f chiidi^en whose parents are Mrs. John Breckenridge, chaiiv Middlesex and Somerset counties ployed at'-' Raritan. Arsenal. They man of production of Wood- Perth Amboy, first vice president; fected by the abolishment of the The order is efiTective today, said working in war production will make their.home on Lafayette Mrs. Edward Beck, of Metuchen, "limited service" Class IB (the an announcement from Selective by State V. F. W. Chief of Staff 5..,' •;-. . - bridge Chapter, American Red Road, Metuchen. ;..-.• ' second vice president; Mrs. Eve-group with minor physical defects) Service headquarters. Body Of-Train Joseph H. Meade, of Camden. gland has met this Jieed, Mr. -.'Crass, said today. lyn Schmidt, of Perth Amboy, by the Selective Service system When members of this group are Lake's appointment was made Cuss said, by -establishing -—Private John Nagy, who is Women, who have, finished treasurer; Mrs- George Nowne, of as most of the men in that class reclassified, they will be sent to in- Victim Identified known in a list issued from the care centers, day nurseries, stationed at. Atlantic City, spent articles made from wool rf the New Brunswick, chaplain; Mrs. were reclassified some time ago duction centers as local boards fill Department Headquarters in the xy. schools, within reasonable the week-end with his folks and last quota, are asked to turn Douglas McDermott, historian and when the standard of qualifications their quotas, and the Army will de- War Memorial. Building in Tren- lee of the home of the em- them in as soon as possible to WOODBRIDGE—The body of ton. Mrsi John Nagy of. New Bruns- Mrs. Elizabeth Jakeway, of Car- was lowered. cide after their induction whether a man found on the main line of d women where young chil- wick avenue. '•-'.' •;•"'• Mrs. Breckenridge. teret, sergeant-at-arms. This statement was made yes- to assign them to full or limited the Pennsylvania Railroad, about may b;.e, eared for in safety, , Mrs. Sunshine appointed Mrs- duties., nutrition and general health terday by Eugene Bird, secretary a mile north of the Iselin Station Authorities Still Cynthia Shapiro, of Fords, as sec- In the reclassification process, >ved and normal development of the local Draft Board who said Wednesday morning, has been retary. • the men will be re-examined by Working On Bank Robbery rsonality may be assured. Sehm^Opens'September 9-But- that "there are some left in Class identified as Michael Turko, of •: Dreyfuss stated that he IB and they will be reclassified the local draft board physicians MacAdoOj Pa. " <- WiO'ODBiRmGE—The FBI anil I the: promotion of a local Raritan Social Club immediately in 1A or 4F." •• to determine whether there are A letter signed by Turko and the local police are still tracing littee whose chief responsi- Bere*sYour: Vacations, Kids! Nearing exhaustion of the pool any physical deficiencies which addressed to the draft board in every possible clue in regard to the shall be to ascertain the Plans PicRic Sunday of 1A registrants those free of would prevent them from per- Shennadoah, Pa., in which he ac- recent $15,000 robbery at the FORDiS ''—--. With.: school, schedclose- s Wednesday, December 23 at nt and future need for 'the any known physical handicaps and forming any military service. If cused several persons of following Woodbridge National Bank with- uled, to -lip-pen on .September % -the 1 P. M., and opens January 4, 1943. FORDS—A picnic will be held jyment of women in the in- not deferred from active duty for such defects are discovered, the him, gave the police their first out any apparent success. Board of Education Monday night Friday,, February 12, Lincoln's Sunday at Izzo-'s. Farm on upper ial plants in their area, to the any other reason, the Army Te- registrants will be placed in Class clue to the identity of the victim. Local police admitted that a few accepted ' a tentative schedule Birthday; Monday, February 22, Ford Avenue urider the sponsor- that children of working cently called for induction of men 4 F. A teletype message sent to Penn- new. angles have developed in the of ,lioli(iays to be observed dur- Washington's Birthday. Easter ship of the Raritan Social Club. ers may be provided for dur- from-the IB class. A few of these While physical deficiencies sylvania State police brought rel- case but that they could not make ing the coming school year as fol-vacation: School closes on Thurs- In case of rain the outing will 1 ;he working hours of their men were in the recent August were the only basis for assigning atives of the dead man to Wood- any stateme^ at the present lows : day, April 22, at 1 P. M. and opens take place the following Sunday, its, whether this be day or Township quota. men to class IB in the original bridge. time. Monday, October 12, Columbus on Tuesday, April 27. August 30. Al Thullesen is gen- classification, the local boards Turko, they said, was about 47 Day; Tuesday, November 3, Elec- Decoration Day falls on a Sun-eral chairman and he is being as- This decision, resulting in filling FIRST AID SESSIONS were warned that their • status years old, and has been "on the tion Day; Wednesday, November day and will therefore be observed sisted by the following: the local quotas with 1A and IB PISCATAWAYTOWN — Prac- may have been changed since that road," since the end of the last The Second Ward Woman's 11, Armistice Day. Thanksgiving on Monday, May 31. School will Mrs. A. Thullesen, Mr. and Mrs. registrants, has made the latter tice first aid sessions will be re- time, and possible deferment for war. They very seldom heard blican club held its meeting, vacation': .School closes on Wed-close for the summer on June IS. George Ryder, Charles Toft, Miss classification meaningless for all sumed on Monday, August 24, at dependents, family relationship or from him, they told authorities. light at 8 o'clock at the home nesday, -November 25 -at 1 P. M. The board has figured that there Miriam Lear, Miss Grace Toft, practical purposes of the Selective 8 P. M., at the oldTown Hall, Pis- occupation should be taken into Relatives arranged to have the rs. Anthoay Balint, Maxwell and opens on Monday, November are 1&6 possible school days in the Mrs. Melvin Bonis, Mrs. Mary Jo- Service syste.m, and its members catawaytown, for first aid squad consideration in each case. body shipped to Pennsylvania. it);

\ •it. FAGE FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1942 FORDS AND RARITAN TOWNSHIP BEAC

Iselin Man Sent To Trcdn belin Fair Winds ^ ON THE SILVER SCREEN For Special Army Duties Marjorie Beddall Becomes ISELIN—Private Charles E. Up Tomorrow Night —Sergeant Robert Neary, who Majestic Mirth And Music Dean, of 12 Silzer Avenue, is now Bride Of Soldier In Nashville j is stationed at Fort George ' G. A combination, of swift-moving stationed - at Helena-, Montana, ISELIN—Two big programs arc Meade, Fort Meade, Md., was in , FORDS—Miss Marjorie Bed- New Haven, Conn.; Mr. ai planned for tonight and tomorrow action and powerful, believable with the Special Services Forces, Fords for a three-day leave and which includes training in para- dall, of Bucknell Avenue, Wood- L. McCoon of Keyport, 1 night, the last two nights of the with his bride, the former Miss drama, plus the presence of Wil- *> •' bridge, formerly of this place, was big Country Fair at Iselin, spon- chute jumping, skiing and com- Mrs. L. Diering, Louis j Alma Beatrice Cavallito, who liam Powell and Hedy Lamarr, mando tactics. honored at a personal show«r sored by St.s Cecelia's Parish. went to Fort Meade for the cere- makes M-G-M's "Crossroads," Saturday night. The party was Marguerite Diering of Ms Rev. John Larkin, pastor, an- The Iselin man volunteered on Mrs. Alfred Johnson, Mil mony. She is staying at her pa- which opens today at the Ma- May 6 and was assigned for duty arranged by her aunt, Mrs. Arthur nounces that special prizes will be rents' home, 658 King George Overgaard, of Main Street, Fords Johnson of Tottemville, Ml awarded each night with $200 in jestic Theatre, one of the year's with the Quartermaster Corps at Wood of Hempstead, L. I,i road. .. . and was held at the home of her 1 War Bonds being awarded tomor- most entertaining pictures. Fort Francis E. Warren, Wyo. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marions Mr. and Mrs. Alex Wa row night. On Monday night Miss —Mrs, Samuel Berkowitz and He graduated from the Army Ad- and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sg The production has pace, bal- ministration and Personnel School. Hendrieksen on Bucknell Ave- D. Moore, of Metuchen won theson, Edward Chester, of New ance, suspense and is expertly nue. sen of Perth Amboy, Mr. m special prize and on Tuesday night Brunswick avenue left yesterday acted from the leads down to the Harry Beddall, Mrs. Hows Miss M. Sequine was the winner. for two weeks' stay at the Cats- Eugenia Bucher Miss Beddall left for Nashville; lerton, Miss Viola Fullerio, smallest bit part. Every role is Tenn.j today, where she will be- Despite the blackout on Tuesday kill mountains. in the hands of an expert. The Alton Wolny, Mrs. Phillip £ night the affair was a decided suc- —Miss Viola Fullerton of New To Wed Colonia Man come the bride of Wallace Boll- Mrs. Robert Reilley Jr., \ sure, meaning-ful touches so neces- ISELIN—-Mr. and Mrs. Walter schweiler, son of Mr. and Mrs. cess. Over 3,000 persons were Brunswick avenue has returned sary for a smart, smooth film are Mrs. Arthur Overgaart present at the time of the black- home after spending the past Bueher, of George Street, an- Alex Wavei-czak, of Jefferson daughter Chrystal Kay, j injected in just the right quantity nounce the engagement of their Street, Perth Amboy. Mr. Boll- out. The orchestra kept playing week as the guest of Mrs. Horace by Director Jack Conway. And Oyergaard, Walter Ove in the dark and everyone appeared Wood at Hempstead, L. I. daughter, Eugenia, to Eric O'Con- sehweiler is in the Army Air Raymond Overgaard, all • to be calm, Father Larkin said. the builfl-up to the smashing and or, son of Mr. and Mrs. Percy Corps. Miss Beddall was accom- —The Fords Fire Company No. unexpected climax is one of the place; Mr. and Mrs. Mariiri 1 will hold its annual clambake O'Conor of Colonia. panied by her mother and sister drieksen and daughter, J3 neatest cinematic achievements of •Miss Bucher is a graduate of Dorothy. . Sunday at Hotel Pines, Metuchen. all time. of" Woodbridge. The chairman of the affair is Ben Woodbridge High School and is Guests at the shower included Jensen. The bake will start at "Crossroads" is studded with big employed by the American Can names of the stage and screen. In the following: Weak Nerves 1 10 o'clock. • Company in Newark. Mr. O'Coa- Mrs. Paul Enggiero Sr., and Sarah Ling addition to Powell and the alluring or is employed at the Celotex Com- Pessimism is only the nar FORDS—Sarah Ling, • 83, died —Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Olsen Miss Lamarr, the film has a stun- pany in Metuchen. son, William of- Woodmont, men of weak nerves give to ^ suddenly Wednesday night at her of New Brunswick avenue were ning cast of favorites including- Conn.; Mrs. Paul Ruggiero Jr., of —Bernard DeVoto, - the guests of Mrs. Olsen's brother- The Andrew Sisters, as always, more than Hold up their end of home on King George Road. She Claire Trevor, Basil Rathbone, tlie entertainment and are as tuneful and effervescent as ever WAR AFFECTS PARK is survived by her husband, Jo- in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Felix Bressart, Margaret Wych- in "Private Buckaroo" at the Strand Theatre starting tomorrow. Yellowstone Park, Wyo.—War- seph B. Ling; two sisters, Mrs. Carl Dunbach of Rahway, Satur- erly, Sig Rumann, Vladimir Soko- time conditions, which have hit all Gertrude Baker, of Plainfield and day night. loff, H. B. Warner, Guy Bates Post, opens Saturday at the Strand types of transportation, have cut Mrs. Cecelia Leonard of" • Railway —Misses Helen and Vera Salva Reginald Owen, Frank Conroy, Theatre. Red Cross travel to this famous park to less and several nieces and nephews. of Highland Park, with Miss Mae Philip Merrivale, Fritz Leiber, Harry James, the hottest and (Continued from Page 1) than 35 per cent of the 1941 sea- The body is at Garretson Funeral Lopeyanski of Perth Amboy, and James Rennie and Mitchell Lewis. most tuneful trumpeter these ears son. Ghapel,, Perth Amboy, where the Mrs. Paul Salva, Sr., of this place, have ever heard, is the • orchestra its -representatives to furnish one funeral will take place Sunday visited Pvt. Paul Salva, Jr., who is Ditmas leader and with him to.help along of these sun rooms. In order to afternoon at two o'clock with stationed at Atlantic City, on Sun- A companion piece to "Mr. the entertainment and the plot are fulfill the pledge the following Rev. Townsend officiating-, Buri- day. Chips" was found by Metro-Gold- the famed Andrews Sisters, Joe E. will be needed at once: al will be in the Alpine Cemetery. •iiiiiii •—-Miss Irene Chete, accompan- wyn-Mayer for Greer Garson in Lewis, top night club performer Two settees, six lounge chairs, ied by the Misses Mildred and "Mrs. Miniver," Jan Struther's who makes his first bow on the Perth Amboy, N. J. Shirley Brand of Brooklyn, re- six occasional chairs, one fiber touchingly human story of an aver- screen here, Dick Foran, Ernest rug, two card tables, eight card cently attended the performance age, English woman of the middle Truex, Shemp Howard and a lot of FRIDAY THRU MONDAY of "The Merry Widow" at Car- table chairs, four, standing, lamps, classes facing the horrors of war- other charming and. talented four wall lamps, one radio, two 2—BIG FIRST HITS—2 negie Hall. fare on the home front. The pic-people. —Miss Ruth Nixon of Lillian ture, teaming Miss Garson and large tables (seating six) bamboo Without resorting . to formula, screens, bowls and vases and other street spent the weekend visiting- Walter Pidgeon, tells of the quiet Universal seems always to hit upon FREDDY MARTIN i < relatives in New York. heroic courage and abiding faith decorative articles and numerous and his "Piano just the right combination in its packs of playing cards and cheek- Cbncet»"orchest« y&s.•'"*f CONTINUOUS —Corp. James Schmidt of Fort of a people under air attacks and sparkling screen musicals, and the it/tth Jackson, S. C, and Mrs. James raids. It is now playing at the action and music come so fact that Schmidt and son, Roy, of Tot- Ditmas Theatre, Perth Amboy. the company is lined up for the Learn While Laboring \W1N0£HI£LS> WIPEBS tenville, were the recent guests of final chorus before you realize that The story deals with Mrs. Mini- Candidates for war production Mr. and Mrs. William Thomsen of ver and her husband, Clem, living you've been watching.a show that New Brunswick avenue. runs "more than an hour and a half. jobs can learn while they labor A Man of Mystery... in a quiet village. Their son is at through -the system of "in-plant" Seven —Miss Marge Heri of Lillian- Seven Oxford. He joins the K.A.F., be- training. This is a process whereby Days street has returned home after comes engaged to the village belle. Crescent "lead-men" are trained to "ex- Starting Days spending a week visiting relatives There are air-alarms; episodes in A gangland melodrama played plode' ' complicated tasks, into single Friday Starting in . aiar raid shelters. Clem joins the to a stunning climax amid the operations and direct semi-skilled Aug. Friday —Mrs. William Nixon of Lil- older men, going in ramshackle shifting lights and shadows of men' to perform these operations. A Woman of Courage Aug. 257 New Brunswick Ave. lian street has returned to her boats to .aid.in the rescue at Dun-Broadway and pleasantly, spiced The system is training "job instruc- 21st -<(at;EIm St.)* home after spending the past week kirk. Life goes on among the vil-with the sweet harmonies of Fred- tors" at the rate of 8,000 a week, "- Perth Amboy, N. J. •with friends at Easton, Pa. lagers as nearly normally as pos-dy Martin's band, is RKO Eadio's each of whom will train probably Branches: Newark and Jersey City sible. Finally an air raid wrecks novel,film offering, "The Mayor of 10, production workers. P. A. 4-3259 Morgenthau cool to plan of the village, kills many—'but with 44th Street." Open 8 A. M. %o 6 P. M. "forced loans" in financing war. calm courage • and faith, the vil- Thoroughly up-to-the-minute, Tagged Birds • When 3 lagers continue to "carry on," asthis picture presents the seamy Wild birds are occasionally ob- Americans ft; they listen tp their vicar in the served sitting on a twig with a go into side of the jitterbug-boogie-woogie- action! Shell-torn church. swing vogue, with a courageous small metal band on. one legjs These bands are attached to the birds by boy and girl waging a bitter strug- co-operators with, the U. S. Bureau Second Feature Strand gle for survival against an un- of Biological Survey, the purpose be- "DRUMS of the CONGO" What happens when the maestro scrupulous overlord of crime. ing, to trace the migration of these of the, top swing, band of-the coun- George Murpny, whose twink- various wild birds. try hears the call to .arms and joins ling feet have earned him top rank up? Why, his whole outfit goes as a dancer, broadens the scope of right along .with-him. his talents by ena'cting his first This problem and answer are dominantly dramatic role. He is tunefully propounded in Univer- effectively teamed with Anne Shir- sal's "Private Buckaroo" which ley, another youthful star who re- DIYMA? veals' a personality of expanding AVENEL ST.. AVENEL, N. J. charm. — Also — 'STATE ST. AT FIVE CORNERS • PHONE P.A. 4-3388 FRI., SAT. - AUG.'21 - 22 SAT. and SUN. ONLY " *COM«MUQU$ PAW ./ROM I P.M./" ~-"T PAYS BENEFACTOR CHAPTER NO. 8 TODAY thru THURSDAY Paducah, Ey.—Believe this or Mickey Rooney There's- COPPER in ike *v« <' not, but E. N. Smith, . who had Judy Garland incfi shell'this hasty- \>. S. ' " Marine ts -shaving htfrat .an ^ : been feeding crumbs to a robin "BABES 0N Seven Extra haiti 3 transport aj sea. ', ! daily, declares that- one day the Days Late robin showed up at his back-door Show S Starting iHISHiiiiilS with a dollar bill in its beak, drop- ° Friday Every ped .the bill and fluttered off "ATLANTI€CONVOY" Aug. 21st Saturday again. TUES. - WED. - THURS. SUN. - MON. - TUES. 2 - BIG FEATURES - 2 On Giving Freely AUG. 23-24-25 Liberality increases the value ol •*! POPULAR BRANDS IN riches.—Vauvenargues. Bud Abbott BOTTLES Lou Costello JoRelieve Misery of "RIO RITA" "JOE'SMITH •m AMERICAN" with Robert Young Marsha Hunt CONIINUOUS FROM 2 P.M.—PHONE.f\A. 4-1593 LIQUID.TABLETS.SALVE. NOSE DROPS WED. - THURS. 7 DAYS STARTING SATURDAY AUG. 26 - 27 "WE WERE DANCING" Norma Shearer Melvyn Douglas — Also — "PRIVATE -::V, Offers Unusual "Submarine Raider" BUCKERGO" Advantages ALSO in Substantial SVIEN OF TEXAS SAYINGS-: Special Added Attraction Robert Stack, Jackie Cooper, FRIDAY THRU MONDAY Brod Crawford, Anne Gwynne .IF' "KNOW YOUR LAST TWO DAYS. AIR-RAII> WARDEN" . MILLION miles of telephone circuits YOU were added to the nationwide long distance system last year. But today the network la crowded in manyareas as war calls continue BUY to mount. ffOWff Ask About WHAT IS YOUR STATUS We could use another million miles of cir- Our Lay-A-Way Plan © Are you an American Citizen between 18 to 45 and qualified physically? cuits this year, but this year's copper is "fight- A HEW WARNER 8«OS- TRIUMPH, wit* ing copper"—it'a going into bullets and shell : WALTER BRENNAN -JOAN LESLIE A • casings to send another kind of message. Even A.. G:R £EN.HOUS€ GEORGE TOBIAS " STANLEY RIDGES H a machine gun in action four minutes uses aa Open evenings till 9 19S SMITH ST., PERTH AMBOY, N. J. Plus — ® Are you going in the Army, Navy or Marine Service? much copper as there is in a mile and a hallof Frances Johnny telephone wire. Lansjford Downs 9 Chamberlin Trades School can help "ALL AMERICAN CO-ED" On the home front, the present telephone system must carry on, about as is, for the STATE THEATRE duration, and it must take care of a load that WOODBRIDGE, N. J. SUN. - MON.*- TUES. - WED. TRAIN YOU NOW! increases from day to day as the nation's war effort moves toward its peak. TODAY AND SAT. * " * ® Get full details immediately on - To make room on the wires for the greater Rosalind RUSSELL - Fred MacMURRAY volume of war calls we ask everyone to use the in "TAKE A. LETTER DARLING" APPROVED RADIO COMMUNICATIONS COURSE telephone sparingly. Please avoid unnecessary calls...both local and long distance...and when PLUS —8 month training,*-day or night— you call, be brief. Your cooperation will do 'MR. BUG GOES TO TOWN" (in.color) much to keep the messages that are part of the PREPARE FOR SPECIALIZED — Plus over-all war effortmoving promptly. SUN. - MON. - TUEs\ Wallace BEERY I Robert PRESTON MILITARY DUTY NEW JERSEY BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY "JACKASS MAIL" I "PACIFIC BLACKOUT" BUY UNITED STATES BONDS AND STAMPS Chamberlin Trades-.-School, inc * COMING WED. TO SAT. 220 St. Georges Avenue, Rahway, N. J. Tune in "THE TELEPHONE HOUR" '<* Mondays at 9 p.m. • WEAF • KYW •ABB3FF AND COSTSL0 in "RIO RITA" Produced by EDWA8P SMflLl Apply for interview daily 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. Write or phone Rahway 7-2 FORDS AKB itARITANTOWNStiP FRIDAY, "AUGUST 21, 1942 PAGE THREE led "Sitap of Fairflelil Terrace, the ; seven ty-nine (371-i>; un the south by Rahway Theatre Offering In Chancery o£ New Jersey., £e- property of the Township Develop- lots 'thr^e hundred and sixty-seven twten M. Elva Lee, Executrix of the- ment Co., ^ituatea in. Woodbridge (367) and part si: lot three hundred Estate- of Cora Mo'ke, deceased, is Township, SitTidflJesex County, N. J , and sixO'-eig'hr < '.UiS \ : and on - the Piscatawaytawn - Personals t^oniiplainant, and Mike Yanovsky, surveyed an. dned on Friday afternoon at her George Graff. sen of Franklin Park and Mr. and premises dated .August 12, 3.942. as follows: . Being' a ]iavt oi" ll'e same premises ime in honor of the birthday —Mr. and Mrs. Russell B. Mrs. William Baldwin of Powers By virtue of the fibove -stated, Beginning at a poznt on the conveyed to the >=:iicl IMike lanovsky writ", to me directed and del ive reef,- soiitherly side of Joyce Place dis- and M.ary Ta nov.^kyL . his wife, by miversary of her daughter De- Walker of Lillian street enter- street, New Brunswick, were the I TVHI expose to sal& at public veil-- tant easterly one hundred and twen- deed from t!u Township Develop- clue on • ' ty-five feet"! 3250 from its intersec- ment f^o. dLiied Jan. "Jfi, 1926/and re- res Ann. Guests were Mrs. tained 50 guests at their home on guests of Mr. and Mrs. Louis tion with ,the easterly line of Clum corded in t he JM idillesex County zra Grant and children Joan and Saturday night at a farewell party Pettit and family on Overbrook WKDNESDAY, TJ-J12 SIXTEENTH avenue; thence (1) running south- pier's Oilite in Huok ^:;y of: Deeds, BAY OF SEPTEOVIEER, A. D., 1942 *erly parallel with'Glum avenue one icky, Mrs. Jack Bertram and for their son, Russell Jr., who left avenue on Friday evening. at l o'clock Standar- d Time and 2 hundred - feet (10(1'); thence .. (2) l^eiug" the i>remise.s co mm only lughter Patsy and Mrs. Anna Wednesday for New York 'City o'clock Day If g lit .War Time in the easterly -parallel. ,~with . Joyce Plaice known ami cieslyriiM u*d as No.. 11 —Miss Dolores Brown of Old afternoon .of the said day, at the thirty-seven and one^half feet .lovi'e si root, Poii1.^. New Jersey. achmaim of Piscatawaytown, where he was inducted into the Stony road spent the week-end 'Sheriff's Office in the City of New 137%.') to the nlfddle of , lot three The appro Mima tr amount of tiie r. and Mrs. W. C. Merrill, Miss Naval Reserves. with her1" grandmother in Me- Brunswick,, N. J. hundred .and seventy-nine (870); decree to bn salisiit:d by said sale All that certain . tract or. parcel thence CS) • Northerly parallel with is tiie slim oi' four thousand two 3is Merrill and Mr. and Mrs. —Guests were present from tuehen. of land and premises, . hereinafter, the first described course one hun- liundred f«irty dollars ($-1,2-10.00) to- particularly described, situated;. ly- dred feet (100') to a point in the illiam Dennis of Highland Park New Brunswick, Highland Park, —Mrs. Gertrude Taylor of Main ; gether "with ~ tlie cosi s of this Rale. ing' and being' in tlie Township of southerly'line of Joyce Place; thence Tog"ei her with all a ml singular id Mrs. Jacob Genet of Mill- Piscatawaytown, Metuehen, South street was the week-end guest of Woodbridge, in the County of Mid- (4) westerly along the sputlierlj- the rigiits, privileges, hereditaments dlesex and State of New Jersey. lin'e of Joyce Place- thirty-seven 1 ir t 1!;! wn. River and Milltown. Mrs. Anna Griggs of Bound and one-half feet (37^')" to the aiid aT"P - '- "* nt'es I.hereunto be- —Russell Jr. is a graduate of Brook. Being*. known and designated as point ,or place of beginning. . longing" or in ;-niywise appertaining'. —Mr. and Mrs. Leonard "Wait lots numbers three hundred and . Bounded on .the North by Joyce Wi'l-L.I A ^1 A.' A TJ -O A L R, Sheriff •. gave a family party at theif the township and New Brunswick —John Lore has returned to his eighty (38(1) nnd the westerly half Place; on fhe East by the remain- ALFUKD 1>. ANTOXLO, Soitoitor. of three hundred and weventy-nine ing half of lot three . hundred and $36.3 2 mie on Saturday evening, hon- High Schools and has been em- home on Lloyd Avenue from St. Pat O'Brien, George Raft and Janet Blair are the "co-stars in (379) on a map of property entit- •ing Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wait ployed at the Mack International Peter's Hospital, New Brunswick, "Broadway" which comes to the Rahway Theatre Sunday. ho celebrated their sixth wed- plant. where he had been a patient. ng anniversary. Other guests —Mrs. Russell Harrison was —Mr. and Mrs. Russell Harri- Palac-Conover the honor guest at a party given son, son Raymond and Miss Lot- ere Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Wait Five Get fr. K. Engagement Is Told id daughter Linda, Mr. and Mrs. on Saturday afternoon at the tie Smith of Main street, spent &'• JO:* eonard Wait Jr. and son Roger, home of Mrs. Frank Danford on Sunday with Mrs. Harrison's fa- ISELTN—The engagement of r. and Mrs. Clarence Wait of Bergen place by the Go-Getter ther, Charles" Haefner and other To Buy Bicycles Miss Violet A. Conover of Per- r Social Group, in honor of her 25th relatives in Hulmeville, Pa. 570. New Brunswick Ate. oodbridg-e and Mr. and Mrs. WOODBRIDGE—-For the first shing Avenue to > 2nd Class Elec- harles Richards of Metuchen. wedding anniversary which was —Mr. and Mrs. Herman Frey trician's Mate Walter Palac, son celebrated last week. and daughter Janet of Lloyd ave- time, the local War Price and Ra- —Commissioner and Mrs. Hen- tioning Board has issued certifi- of Mr and Mrs. Anthony Palac of Troger and son Henry and —Other guests were Mrs. nue spent Sunday with Mrs. Frey's Fiat Avenue, was announced . re- George Duryea, New Brunswick, mother, Mrs. Dora Messier and cates for the purchase of bicycles. teir house g-uests Mr. and Mrs. Those receiving certificates were: cently. EATS oy Chase and son of Brooklyn Mrs. John Nelson, Highland Park, family in Chester. Mrs. Joseph Brundag-e, Mrs. Ar- Ernestine J. Columbetti, Irving Miss Conover attended Wood- iturned over the week-end from A. Kahree, Gene Ryan Neary, June bridge High School and is employed PRIME BROOKFIELD two weeks' vacation spent at thur Brundage, Mrs. Herman Frey, Mrs. Clifford Giddes, Mrs. Child's Glass Bingaman and Kathryn Hinkle. as a supervisor at the Cornell Dub- e Troger Summer home in Lav-Ernest Lucas, Mrs. Frederick Certificates for other articles lier in Plainfield. Ib29c ette. were issued as follows: Mr. Palae is a graduate of CflUC!KROAST. ..".:;:. Meyer, Miss Lottie Smith, Mrs. Woodbridge High School and is in —Sunday guests of Mr. and Gertrude Taylor, Mrs. Walter Walter Merwin, two recaps; FANCY-•FRESH'-" KILLED.^ rs. Robert Wiinhenberg were the U. S: Navy. No date has been EXTRA FANCY LARGE Cheatle and Miss Mary B. Reed. William Fitzpatriek, two recaps; set for the wedding. 'r. and Mrs. Arthur Wunnenberg —Miss Evelyn Gulyas of Silver Stephen Bakos, two recaps and a ad children of Franklin town- Lake avenue is recuperating at tube; Shell Oil Company, four-re- Long iIslani! Bucks -/£.: lb 25c lip, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wun- her home from a tonsil operation. caps, three tires and three tubes; Leffley',Chosen To. Train FRESH KILLED '••"••' - enberg Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mr. and Mrs. Charles Weigand Abe Patnoi, two recaps; . John SWIFT'S PREMIUM funnenberg and daughter, and and son Jack, Miss Patricia Peal Prefer, two recaps; Maple Hill As Aviation Navigator "r. and Mrs. Harry Latham and and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Chea- Dairy Farm, three recaps and three FRY!RS<2*to3lbs> .11b. 35c aughter Mary-ethel Latham. W O OD BRIDGE — Aviation tle of Bloomfield were the guests tubes. • . •: Cadet Walter Leffler, stationed at —Miss Beverly Munch has re- of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cheatle Henry J. Stueber, two recaps; FRESH KILLED arned home from a visit with San Antonio, Texas, has been se- of the Lincoln Highway on Fri- George E." Kourtz, - two second- lected for training as Navigator LYNDALE day evening. grade tires; Harold Prang, two in the Army Air Forces. He" is FOW L(allslzss).;... Ib34c —Louis Caravallo has returned second-grade tires and two tubes; the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Menlo Park to camp in Florida after spend- Karl. Kreucher, one passenger au- Leffler, of 75 Woodbridge Ave- SMALL ing a furlough with his parents, tomoib.ile; Alton M. Newton, three nue. | AMD Swift's Premium MONMOUTH GUEST Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Caravallo recaps and three tubes; Harry Mil- —Mrs. William Laspley of on Lloyd avenue. Another son, Al Leffler, sta- LEGS) ib38c /ood avenue announces the mar- ler, two second-grade tires and tioned at Barksdale Field, La., age of her daughter, Miss Olive two tubes; Clover Green Dairies, has returned to duty after spend- elle Hanks, of St. Elmo, III., to tow recaps; Nielo D. Mrnucci, two ing a ten-day furlough with his Eye eif'Round '..*....-,.•Ib45c ames J. McCool, Jr., of that Rabbi Bernards tubes; Michael Berepzoski, three parents. SILVER SWAN lace. recaps and one tube. (Prime Meat) TEMPERED —Mr. and Mrs. Virgil P. Owens • Recent reports that the British BONELESS ad son, Wayne, of Cedar street Receives Call Here WALL OF WATER TRAPS 8 Wenatchee, Wash.—A wall of have agreed to the appointment 'ft on Saturday for a week's va- WOOKBRIDGE — For the first of an American soldier as Su- 38c \tion at Brightw&ters Beach, Amusing characters from Dum- water which hurtled down a moun- ictapfi Cleanser time, Adath Israt-1 Synagogue on bo decorate this Safedge glass tain canyon after a heavy cloud- preme Commander of the forces All Solid Meitt ear Lavalette. which makes drinking milk a of the United Nations has heen —Mrs. D. Leon Jennings of School Street will have a resident burst, trapped nine persons in an Rabbi. pleasure to Brenda Taltot, age automobile, killed., eight of them tempered by Criticism of such a JERSEY FRESH OCTAGON incoln highway and Mrs. Austin Rabbi Saul Bernards, of New 2. Light and sturdy, these step in. Great Britain. I Snyder of Michael street mo- glasses are ideal for children and carried the automobile several York City, formerly of Chicago, hundred yards down the hillside^ PORK LOINS (rib end) lb 32c >red to Hackettstown on Satur- and a field student of the Jewish because of the beaded rim which Stimson rejects Nye request to ky, visiting Miss Roberta Jen- is guaranteed against chip- The driver, who was thrown free, furlough soldiers for harvest. Theological Seminary, received crept through the mud and de- ings at Camp Morris. and accepted a call to the local ping. A special process makes —Mrs. H. A. Koerber, daugh- the rim eight times tougher bris to the highway, where, he was Synagogue and he will assume his than the sides. found by a passing motorist. sr Gloria -of Hamilton avenue, duties here on September 1. He nd niece, Miss Elsie Arrandale, will be officially welcomed by the ho has been spending the past Mercy and Humanity congregation on Sunday, Septem- No Discrimination When a man cares not what suf- aw weeks here, returned to ber 6, when a reception and sup- Prejudice and discrimination have ferings he causes others, and espe- rooklyn -on Saturday. per will be held at 8 P. M. in the no place in the war for freedom. cially if he delights in other men's auditorium. Make democracy worlc in your sufferings^ and makes.._them his. Rabbi Bernards at present is on plant. Millions of Negroes, aliens, sporty this is criielty. Arid not to be a wedding trip. He was married citizens of foreign birth and other affected with, the sufferings of other, JACK'S TOYLAND minority peoples are trained for people, though they proceed not from on August 16 in New Orleans. war work and anxious to get jobs. When be begins his duties here us,' but from others^ or from causes Hire through the United States Em- in which we are hot concerned, is ,he intends to start a Hebrew ployment service. School, a Sunday iSchool- and a unmercifulness. Mercy and human-, choir. Sabbath services will be ity are the,reverse of these. held every Friday evening. Rubber Bands Don't throw away those worn out Labor for Victory Beauty Parlors Old, Too rubber bands you found in your Hitler forces his "slave labor" to desk! Singly they don't look like produce at the point of a gun. Uncle The modern beauty parlor, where much, maybe. But the 30 billion of women go regularly to have eye- Sam asks free men to work for the them made last year would put preservation of "their, rights. The Selling the Largest Stock and brows plucked, their bodies smoth- treads and rubber accessories on 500 ered in mud and their hair waved, War Manpower commission drive to Best Quality of Toys at Lowest tanks and bullet proof fuel tanks on find a job for every man and a man Prices. is just an outgrowth of the ancient 300 heavy bombers. Egyptian days. The Egyptian beau- for ever job; is a voluntary, not a teicycles, Tricycles, Velocipedes, compulsory movement. Free labor Dolls, Boll Coaches, Desks, Auto- ties went through the same per- Traffic deaths in June were re- mobiles, Lionel Electrie Trains, formances—all for beauty—and they will out-produce forced labor any Table Sets, High Chairs, Pool ~wore high heels, too. duced 32 per cent under 1941. day in the we^k. . Tables, and a Complete Line of Other 1942 Toys. Indian Schools Good assortment of bicycles on The enrollment in-Canada's Indian hand. Get yours now. schools during 1932 was more than 17j000 and the average attendance exceeded 13,000. There were 80 405 State Street residential and 270 day schools in, Cor. Broad Perth Amboy operation in 350 Indian centers. -1 ' \'!'

EUGENE JACOBS MID- SUMMER SALE

Let's blast Japan—and Germany—and Italy—with the chain lightning of destruction that can be built from the scrap in our cellars, attics and garages, on our farms and in our places of business. Scrap iron and steel, other metals, rubber and waste materials. It will all be used to make tanks, ships, planes and the fighting weapons our boys must have. It is needed at once. CEILING" PRICE $1.65 Sell it to a Junk dealer—'give it to a charity or collection igency — take it yourself to the nearest collection point —or consult the Local Salvage Committee... If you live oh a farm, SPORT -fl.00 and have found no means of disposing of your Junk, ge't in touch with the County War Board or your farm implement SHIRTS ... 1 dealer. • $5.00 SUCKS $3-99 Throw Y@UR scrap Into the fight! ® $2.00 SPORT SHIRTS $J.&5 This message approved by Conservation Division • $2.25 MANHATTAN SH|tTS .'. $1.65 WAR . PRO D U CT16 N . B-OARP This advertisement paid lor by the American Industries Salvage Committee 55e TIES 3far$1.1 (representing and with funds provided by groups of leading industrial concerns). LOCAL" SALVAGE COMMITTEE Woodbrldge Fur Shop H. WARREN AVERY, Chairman 522 Amhoy Ave. Woodbridge Telephone New Brunswick 2710-R ugene Jacobs Mrs. John Weisenburger, Mrs. Stewart Robertson, Mrs 139 SMITH ST. Louis Molnar, Mrs. Helen Sallitt, Mr. Paul Nielsen Municipal Building Telephone New Brunswick 4200 PEIDAY, AUGUST 2% 1942 SRAR President's Chief-of-Staff, warns America that the war picture today is "grim," and The New Books THEN—AND NOW EORD predicts that this "will be the toughest, PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY hardest, most merciless war we have ever "City Lawyer," the autobiography of Arthur —by— Garfield Hays, reads more like an adventure story THE BEACON PUBLISHING CO. fought." With Offices at From his post in the' Pacific, Admiral than a success story. Lawyer Hays has had one of 611 New Brunswick Avenue, Fords, N. J. the most varied practices of our times, including such TELEPHONE: PERTH AMBOY 4—2123 Chester W. Nimitz, Commander-in-Chief of the U. S. Pacific Fleet, declares that widely assorted clients as the Dionne quintuplets and Subscription $1.50 per year Jehovah's Witnesses. Elmer J. Vecsey—.-.Publisher and Managing Editor victory will be achieved '"only through Entered at the Post Office at Fords, N. J., as undreamed of sacrifices and privations." He was' with Clarence Darrow at the famous second class mail matter on April 17, 1936. 1 These leaders are not trying to fool the Scopes "monkey-law" trial in Dayton, Tennessee. He American people. They want us to under- was chief counsel' for the Civil Liberties Union, in stand the serious battles that lie ahead and which capacity he defended people in their right to to summon the full power of every Amer- free speech—whether or not he agreed with what ican, including those on the home front as they had said. He was present as a defendant of the Watching 1,00000 Enemy Aliens ', well as those in the services, to the needs accused in the Reichstag Fire Trial, and one of the While actual sabotage has been al- of the hour." most interesting chapters in the book is thl account most non-existent in the United States, of the proceedings there. Like many others who lis- Government intelligence agents are radi- tened to the testimony, Mr. Hays was tremendously cally tightening- their precautions against Hope Of The Future impressed with Georgi Dimitrov, one of the accused. the one million enemy aliens now in this The average human being is inclined to He says of him: "I have never seen such a: magnifi- country. have his own way, regardless of the rights cent exhibition of moral courage. The man Was not With more than 900,000 German, Ital- of others and without too much regard for only brave but reckless and selflessly so. Whenever ian and Japanese aliens, according to theresponsibilities that have descended upon he got to his feet he would by force of his person- census registration, only 5,324 have been us through the long advance of civiliza- ality place the court, the prosecutors, the German tion, i taken under direct government supervi- audience and the Nazis on the defensive." . BUDDY, D'VOU KMQW sion. This does not include the appre- This trait is undoubtedly human but it The part of his practice which Mr. Hays seems hended in the recent round-up, which is is only when the individual rises above to like least is that having to do with alimony cases. I CAM MOOCH A continuing in various sections of the coun- such selfishness that spiritual development He tells of one woman he offered to defend after COUPLE save him where the 190 present police and . The Chamber's report places butions and other sources falls fa ers, wise enough to make no errors, it army and nation." It is said no one thanked him for short of what is needed to cove would be very surprising to intelligent from execution. He boasts that his love this, helpful household hint. promised benefits during the lif men. for Germany is stronger than for his of the funds. adopted country. "Fourth, the laws make no pre Wise Americans know that their lead- OTHER EDITORS SAY tense whatever of placing th ers will err. Patriotic Americans will The conviction of this German, upon a funds on anything like an actual support their war effort regardless of the charge of treason, is said to be the first of 'Occasional SBowers' available gas supplies meet bar- ial basis, as is required in the cas its kind in 148 years. Stephan has until There are South Sea islands est needs. This is particularly of the State Employees' Retire fact. Ignorant and disloyal citizens will where it rains every day in the true of motorists in rural areas ment System and the State Teacli grumble, stir up discord and sulk. Nov. 13th to see if his hero, Hitler,-can year. There's one spot on the who must travel long distances— EAT RIGHT- ers' Pension and Annuity Func save him from hanging. Olympic Peninsula, in Washing- long, that is, as gas meters read PROPER FOOD and of all private insurance com ton, where the average rainfall these days—to and from inspec- IS ESSENTIAL. panies as well." The report con is more than 200 inches a year. tion depots. tinues: Railroads Enjoy Prosperity • On Oct. 8 and 9, 1903, New York We believe that in this emer- "Unless the present State law Wall Street operatives are quick to Youth And Crime City had a sustained rainfall to- gency the necessity for even an- SEE yoUR DOCTOR- 1 are revised to provide for a mor Sense a change in the financial position of Something of a challenge to the home taling 9.4 inches. During the nual inspections has not been ful- BEFQRE YOU GET SICK , adequate and equitable system o and the church, as institutions, comes with month of August, 1875, a total ly shown. The factor of highway financing our police and firemen' the country's railroads and in recent ses- of 10.4 inches of rain fell here. safety enters and we all know pension funds, the situation is des sions of the New York Stock Exchange, the figures recently released by the Fed-On April 5, 1926, 1.03 inches of that it is more necessary than tined to grow steadily worse unt eral Bureau of Investigation, showing that rain fell in one minute flat, at ever to avert preventible accidents eventually every fund will becom railroad bonds and shares have provided and to keep cars rolling. If we most of the daily business. . 18.5 per cent of all persons arrested in the Orpid's Camp, wherever that is, bankrupt of assets and each year' in the San Gabriel mountains tff are ready to concede that pater- benefit payments thereafter wi Many experts estimate that the rail- first six months of 1942 were under 21 California. nalistic policing by a state bureau Have to be met by deficiency a,\ ways will earn $660,000,000 or more in years of age. But, dag-nab it, this isn't Opid's is the only means to compel a propriations by the municipal Camp. It isn't the Olympic Pen- fringe of irresponsible drivers to 1942 despite heavy war-time taxes and ex- The 19-year-old group led the nation in keep motors, brakes and gear in ties." insula or the South Seas. It isn't Plan of Remedy penses. This is explained by the fact that the number of arrests, 12,991. The next 1875 or 1903. It's New York, repair, then we must continue state inspections. The report outlines a propose passenger business has increased eighty age-groups, in order were 18, with 12,865; and it's August of 1942. So cut plan to remedy the present situj per cent and freight eighty-five per cent 21, with 11,946 and 20, with 11,830. it out, j you up there! •' Enough's If we believe in this emergency tioTi. This plan embraces the fo enoughj and we had enough some drivers can be trusted to car vol- SOAP AND WATEK- lowing features: above 1939 levels. All of these young people represent time, "back: Scram, begone va- untarily for their cars, that they USE PLENTV OF IT. PLAY EACH OA»Y- "I. Bring all local funds tc It should be noted that the railroads the post-World War generation. They moose and make, yourself scarce! will be mindful of their obvious IT TONES YOU UP. gether into a statewide system t h'ave been operating- far below capacity for are not the products of the emotions gen- In short, lay off and give us a obligation to themselves and their be financially supported by contr chance to dry out.—N. Y. Times. country, then we should do as butions from each participatin many years. Preparedness and the warerated during the conflict. Presumably, other states do and put motorists municipality, from the individus have brought them the difference between they had the advantages that exist in this Those State Inspections on their own. Newark News. members, and from the State go-\ operating at a loss and making a substan- republic. Motor Vehicle Commissioner ernment on some carefully plai tial profit. This does not mean that the Magee announces that hereafter . India Can Lose Our War ned, equitable basis. Somewhere in the training that society only one state inspection of au- Maybe it's wishful thinking, "2. All present members of li process of profits is unlimited. When the provides for its youth these criminals went tomobiles . will be held annually. but we believe efforts will be made cal funds should be induced.to bs full slack of the operating roads has been astray. It might be well for social, reM-That is welcome word for motor- to mediate the British-Indian con- RESULAR HOURS COUNT MOST. come members of the statewid taken up, new business will require expan- ists harassed by gasoline ration- flict. The potentials for Allied system, and all future employee gious and other leaders to seek 'the causes ing and thinning tires.' defeat in this dispute are so ob- should be required to do so. On! sion which will be a losing proposition un- for the delinquencies that affect young The remaining • inspection peri- vious that compromise diplomacy regular members of the polic less business holds up after the emergency people. od is defended by Mr. Magee, who seems inevitable. and fire forces Bhould be eligib] .passes. says its abolition would bring back What worries us is that such for membership in the new fund. the horse and buggy days. It statesmanship may be too little "3. Just as annual fund contr The Japanese are well-satisfied with isn't possible to go all the wayand too late. That would be even butions and other revenues shoul the enormous territory they have cap- with Mr, Magee on that. Con- more costly than the tardy mili- be reasonably increased, so shou] Warning All Americans tinuance of state inspections would tary effort which lost Burma. Ma- THESE HEALTH MULES JS£COMM£/VP£O BY THE MST/TUTE OF the present schedule of pensioi Admiral William JD. Leahy, who served tured; no doubt they would jiiake: peace be more likely to do that, especial- laya and the Indies. Past mili- LfFE MSCf/ZANCS ANO SU/ZGSON GEA/E/ZAL THOMAS. PHfZ/ZAM disability and death benefits b as Ambassador to France and is now theon the basis of the status quo. :, ;• . - ly for drivers:hard pressed to make (Continned on Fage 6) OF THE UMrEO STATES PUBUC HEALTH fo (Continued on Page 6) FORDS EARTTSN "TOWNSHIP ^ -*5- FRITJXY, 'AUGUST' 21, 1942 Men In Third Registration Group Unbeatable Team—Soldier, Bond Buyer Wow Receiving Questionnaires (Continued \rom Page I) St., Iselin; Charles Martinello, 11 ridge; Edwavd Bader, 144 Main Elmhurst Ave., Iselin; Stephen >t., Woodbridge; Elwood Donnel- Axway, 703 Ridgedale Ave., y, Sonora Ave., Iselin; Archie Woodbridge; Joseph Illosvai, 51 ooper, Fairview Ave., Colonia. New St., Woodbridge; Bernard Heidgen, West St., Colonia; Peter Also Receive Forms Jacovinieh, 164 Central Ave., Peter Kardos, 159 Fulton St., Port Reading; William Romer, 11 Voodbridge; Andrew Sindet, 18 Livingston Ave., Fords; Joseph iyan St., Fords; Francis Kelly, Cosky, 57 Mary Ave., Fords; John .8 Willry St., Woodbridge; Wi\- Boros, Crows Mill Rd., Keasbey; im Thompson, 242 Freeman St., Austin Austin, Claybourn St., [Voodbridge; Victor Jensen, Fiu- Woodbridge; Lawrence Dambach, |rie St., Iselin; James Brown, 19 Fords Firehouse, Fords. • N". Railroad Ave., Oakwood [leights; William Fritzen, East Wilbur Freeman, 881 McLean t>t., Golonia; Eugene Schepers, 20 St., Iselin; Louis Tomko, 69 Ford fale Ave., Avenel; 'William Han- Ave., Fords; John Smalley, 40 on, Jr., 666 Leone St., Wood- Second St., Fords; Carmine D'Al- >ridge; Richard Eberle, 115 Ham- essio, Second St., Port Reading; lton Ave., Fords; John Almasi, Clarence Dillworth, 51 Hansen r Ave., Fords; George Yuhasz, Clin- 8 Main St., Woodbridge; Arnold ton Ave., Keasbey; Albert Men- valamen, 31 Paul St., Fords; weg, 49 Ford Ave., Fords; Michael Charles Trimble, 123 Grove Ave., Plaska, 144 Main St., Wood- Woodbridge; Joseph Dobos, 28 bridge; John Feliks, 88 Second 4 b$ 10 Oleomargarine Princess Pound Billings St., Woodbridge; Alex St., Woodbridge; Bernard Yaruse- Facobs, 401 Middlesex Ave., vich, 6 Pendern PL, Fords; Her- Gold Medal Flour £ 1 Mild Store Cheese 29c iVoodbridge; John Mullen, 63 Al- bert DiLeo, 51 George St., Ave- )ert St., Woodbridge; Raymond nel; Charles Hill, 29 Pershing Fancy Sharp Cheese Dverg-aard, 440 New Brunswick Ave., Iselin; Walter Breil, Arch- i.ve., Fords; Thomas Sorbie Hill, Evaporated Veiveeta Loaf Cheese 2 !2 Dartmouth Ave., Avenel angel Ave., Colonia; Joseph Cor- i I L Harold Gardner, 32 Burnett tez, 57 Second St., Port Reading; s c tail William Vincent, 486 Cliff Rd., •• IT LEAST isz m mm PAY iwm PAYIAY Premium Evaporated Milk B* n ° 3 American Loaf Cheese SL" 2 it., Avenel; John Barony, 257 Famous Pound ? Sewaren; John Ashmore, Demar- ulton St., Woodbridge; Edmund Package Limburger Cheese Wisconsin Package 3urke, 11 Moore Avenue, Wood- est Ave., Avenel; Nicholas Gutow- NBC SHREDDED WHEAT ski, 459 - Amboy Ave., Wood- Four new color posters soon will be seen all over tKe United States, 1b. bridge; Joseph Puschman, 300 emphasizing new themes in the War Bond sales campaign. The Jouglas Ave., Avenel; Oliver Har- bridge; Joseph Romond, 150 Clin- NBC Premium Crackers pkg. 17* ton St>, Woodbridge; Anton Lar- poster reproduced above stresses the .double-purpose utility; of War Glenwood "J No. •is, 284 Fulton St., Woodbridge; Bond purchases. ' """ i»<«- • y § Treasury Dent. Fancy Grapefruit Sections 2 AcmeMeats are Tops'in- Theodore Hanby, Marconi Ave. son, 116 High St., Woodbridge; Brand Harold Schiller, Ziegler Avev Ave- md Fiat Ave., Iselin; Joseph Gif- Ham Berry, 65 Manhattan Ave., FLOUR Gold Seal Enriched bag 'ord, 707 King George Rd., Fords; nel. Ave., Iselin; Charles Kosty, 3 Wal- Quality & Low in Price William ^reen, Green St., Ise-Avenel; Louis Sharrie, 207 Fulton nut St., Avenel; Joseph Gyure, 74 Guaranteed tender and full flavored or every cent of your money lolger Hellegaard, 23 Third St., St., Woodbridge; Martin Braun, <"ords; Herman Brickwell, TEast lin; Joseph Mazurowski, Alford 'Caroline St., Woodbridge; .Simon Better Pound '; back. Be convinced—try Acme this week-end! St., Gharlestown, Mass.; Percy 31 Mary Ave., Fords; Bertram Kluj, 6.2 New Brunswick Ave., 3t., Colonia; Lester Poulsen, 14 VanCleft, 20 Minna Ave., Avenel; Crax Crackers Package •Veeman St., Woodbridge; AT- Austen, 397 Summit Ave., Se- Hopelawn; John Julian, 20 Lillian waren; Jacob Ercegovich, 240 John Duffy, Oldenbloom Dairy, Ter., Woodbridge; Ferdinand Leyh Farmdals No. 2 Chickens stewing n,.35c nando Carvalho, 2 Silzer Ave., Woodbridge; John Dinsmore, 109 selin; George Bowen, 20 Wood Old Rd., Sewaren; John Kopko, Jr., 19 Colonia Boulevard, Conolia; CORN Golden Bantam Fancy Fancy, delicious tender. Up to 3% lbs. 340 Crows Mill Rd., Fords; Bar- Watson Ave., Woodbridge; Steph- Frank Mazza, 36 Lee St., Hope- fa d ive., Fords; William Joel, 191 en Cipo, 53 Clyde Ave., Hope- decker PL, Woodbridge; John tholomew Giacalone, 326 Fulton lawn ; Joseph Stahl, 27 Hollister BEANS Sfringless Z :t St., Woodbridge; Julius Tomko, lawn; Robert Dale, 121 Trento PL, Fords; Michael Dudik, Jr., 22 fioore, 202 Green St., Wood- St., Iselin; George Osborne, 42 Chickens "SvSF '".38c )ridge; William Barbour, West Wm. and New Sts., Woodbridge; William St., Fords; Kenneth Van SPINACH Prepared QuaIify Marconi Ave., Iselin; William Horn, 90 Hornsby Ave., Fords; Fancy fresh killed. Guaranteed "tops." St., Colonia; Edward Miller, 12 Alfred Rodney, Jr., 412 East Hala, Copernick Ave., Keasbey; 3rampton Ave., Woodbridge; Ave., Sewaren; Joseph Smith, 102 Luis Cuevas, 135 Oak St., Avenel; TOMATOES Selected •£? Sugar Cured Smoked Thomas Geradino, 9 Almon Ave., Frank Kaminsky, 71 Loretta St., ID Walter Flowers, 24 Summit Ave,, Russell St., Woodbridge; Frank Woodbridge; Rodger Hawn, 122 TOMATOES Standard £ Galas 4 to 6 lbs. average " 31c ''ords. Acker, 99 James 'St., Woodbridge; Hopelawn; Albert Lebeda, Jr., 60 Lafayette Ave., Suffern, N. Y.; Smith St., Avenel; Pasquale To- Boneless Brisket Joseph Anders, 15 Sewaren Walter Roder, 25 Fifth Ave., Ave- Sidney Stafford, 110 Prospect nel; Edward Duffield, 22 Trento masso, Oak Tree Road, Iselin; Ste- Bee Fresh or corned ib. 29c: We., Sewaren; William Pirnik, 23 St., Woodbridge; Joseph Pender, phen Kotzun, 94 Main St., Wood- •OSCO "Grade A" jee St., Port Reading; Alfred St., Iselin; Charles Julian, 72 1 Oakland Ave., Sewaren. TOMATO Fifth St., Fords; John Josko, 383 bridge; Frank Yoo, 7 Oakland LAMB iYank, 10 Moore Ave., Wood- Ave., Keasbey; Alfred Whittam, >ridge; Robert Graham, 16 Henry Florida Grove Rd., Hopelawn; Oscar Sundquist, 488 New Most sb Joseph Church, 1125 Raritsn Brunswick Ave., Fords; Ellsworth Arieste St., Iselin; Gaber Yagrin, 46.2 Crows Mill Rd., Fords; Charles HEINZ Assorted Soups Kinds Legs of Lamb -35c Ave., Highland Park; John Ban- Stokes, Chestnut St., Avenel; Wil- Minute dies, 22 Oakland Ave., Fords; liam Sedlak, Brown Ave., Wood- Coffey, 14 Vanderbilt PL, Wood- |b CLASSIFIED bridge; George Blum, Woodbridge, Noodle Soup MixMan John Lettice, 128 University Ave., bridge; Ernest Glaucke, 15 Van- Chuck Roast Lamb - 23c derbilt PL, Woodbridge; William N. J.; Michael Crowe, 24 Jean Metuchen; William Girdner, West Court, Woodbridge; Philip- ,Mc- PRUNES Large Fancy MALE FELP WANTED Koyen, 610 Barron Ave.. Wood- Ave., Port Reading; Adolph Ras- Guire, 174 Main St., Woodbridge; Ideal Large size bridge; Harold Sandorff, 55 Fair- mussen, Middlesex Rd., Colonia; Albert Pfaeffle, 72 Charles St., TOMATO JUICE Grade A 20-oz..can Loin Lamb Chops "»-49c RELIABLE BOYS wanted for field Ave., Fords; Alvar Johnson, paper routes. Must have bicy- Harold Lake, Jr., Oak Tree Rd., Hopelawn; Alan Leisen, 259 Am- ROB ROY Full quart | fi-L plus Berkley Ave., Colonia; George Ba- BEVERAGES Assorted bottle deposit :le. Inquire Iselin News Co., OakIselin; Stephen Sable, 70 Caroline boy Ave., Woodbridge; Fred Web- Rib Lamb Chops ft-43 St., Woodbridge; Dennis Frigenti, las, Smith St., Keasbey; Herbert D 29-oz. "Jjr;^ plus free Road, Iselin, N. J. 8-21 er, 77 Howard St., Hopelawn; Pe- Oak Tree Rd., Iselin; Edward Cline, 60 Ford Ave., Fords; Peter ter Vogel, 82 Main St., Wood- BEVERAGES Krueger bottle* deposit iIOVIE OPERATORS and man-Fitz, 69 Maxwell Ave., Fords; Matyi, 38 Sewaren Ave., Sewaren; bridge; Meyers Sindet, 34 Third Shoulder Lamb Chops «>• 43 agers—Fords district - movie Thomas Polhamus, RFD #2, Flor- Ferdinand Kramer, 32 May St., St., Fords. 8-oz. T lb •ircuit work - 2506 RKO Bldg., ence Ave., Rahway; Stephen Bar- Hopelawn; John Sedivy, 54 Second asm Pkg. York. 8-21* tos, 29 Fairfield Ave., Fords. St., Fords; Victor Drummond, 99 Toasted Lamb Liver fH' - 31c John Egan, 153 Liberty St., Grove Ave., Woodbridge; Emil Je- 50 Chicks Valued At $100 ,00 AL SALESMAN-DISTRIBU- 2!-oi. Fords; Joseph Paul, 56 St. George datchek, 1001 Main St., Fords; Stolen From Iselin Coop Silver Dust With Towel package TOR—.Sell cigars to stores; $40 Ave., Avenel; Emil Nielsen, 22 Thomas Rader, 10 Ferry St., Sa- 2H weekly;' return postage for de- Corey St., Fords; Arthur Gisin, waren; Louis Minsky, 75 Coley St., ISELIN—Fifty white Leghorn Fairy Toilet Soap •J cakes Sliced Bacon 2 PS: ; 33c ails. Sales Manager, 180 Jay,14 Fifth Ave., Avenel; Philip Hop- Woodbridge; Joseph Remak, Wood- chickens, valued at $100, were 36-oz. Ubany, N. Y. 7-17 to 8-21kins, 16 Trieste St., Iselin; Wil- bridge Ave., Port Reading; Tilgh- stolen from their coop Saturday Gold Dust Soap Powder package Skinless Franks «>. 31c HELP WANTED—FEMALE liam Applegate, 184 Woodbridge man Laubach, 10 Warren St., according to a report made by Ave., Woodbridge; Robert Gard- Fords; Paul Baumgarten, 40 SWAN SOAP Piece or the owner, Mrs. Delia Cooper, of ts Sliced Ib. ^OMAN wanted for general work ner, St. George Ave. and Wylie Clyde Ave., Hopelawn; Hans Middlesex-Essex Turnpike and 2Q-0I. BOLOGNA in delicatessen store. Apply St., Avenel; John Conger, 94 Schafft, East St., Colonia; Charles Berkley Terrace^ to Officer Daniel Dethol Insecticide can iVoodbridge Delicatessen, 102 Maple St., Avenel; Ivan Pozhar- iLaQuatra, 13 Rector St., Wood- Panconi. FILET OF HADDOCK ib. 35c Hain St., Woodbridge. 8-21* sky, 462 East Ave., Sewaren; bridge; George Osborne, Jr., So- Ib John Klein, 65 St. Stephen Aye., nora Ave., Iselin; Fred Ahrens, Smumph Fancy Shrimp - 35$ CLEANING WOMAN wanted. nue, Keasbey; Charles Stocker, 19 Hollister PL, Fords. Opossums hunt food mainly by Crisco 123c -• 64c Short hours, good pay. Apply 200 Thorpe Ave., Avenel; Wil- their sense of smell. piDiiiniiiiiiiiiaininniiiuMnimiiiBDiiiiiuinw^^ my morning 9:30 to 10:30. Clifford Conover, 122 Cooper )eutsch, 542 New Brunswick We., Fords. 8-21* Supreme FOR SALE FOLDING BABY CARRIAGE Enriched and walker, good condition. Both for $9.00. Inquire Mrs. J. PLEASE DON'T Enriched by using a yeast high in vitamin Bl content, niacin and iron, Why pay more! Try a loaf today! | Hi!ii,ii iiiiiniiiisin in raiiuinraii item 3'Donnell, Railroad Ave., Iselin, OVERLOAD ME! ^nipSO8V2-ox. pkg. 9c Z 2)V2-oz. teed. Everymake, 290 State pkgs. LEMONS Large.cSKaS for 15c Street, Perth Amboy 4-2262. 1—You save strain on the motor If you avoid overloading the > 12-5-4 l-52t i !t:!!i;K;r:i:, rrt;iituir[i(irf[nii[iiiin[iiii[{i;i]([!ir{[iirtHiniiiii!i[ti;iinn[![atr[!i:iniutii(!ai{|!ii(iHin!inift!0c washer with clothes. Know its capacity and keep within \J-Lm PackageHOM-DE-LITd EX Superb Quality | Size PERSONAL that limit. MEET New Friends through our MAYONNAIS Extra Fancy New Jersey personal service dedicated to 2—You can save time and wear on the motor—when washing ;he promotion of friendships. QUART Discriminating clientele, all reli- very soiled clothes—by soaking them for a half hour before C JAR gious faiths. See Page 197 New turning on the washer. , Salad Dressing *{£*• 21c; 33c fork City Manhattan Telephone Selected extra fancy New Jersey apples specially priced! Directory; also page 241 Manhat- 3—You can save wear on the wringer by being careful with but- tan Classified Directory. Write to- tons, clasps, buckles and other hard objects. Remove them 3ay. Visit our offices or phone California Seedless Grace Bowes any weekday from if detachable, or fold into clothes, so that sharp edges do not 10 A. M. to'9 P. M. American cut rubber wringer rolls. Service, 236 West 70th St.,'New lbs. fork City, ENdicott 2-4680. 4—Ask your electric dealer for other Information on care of your Grapes 2 7-31 to 8-28 electric washer. Sweet fancy seedless Californias at their best!

Buy War Bonds Ivery Pay Day . PVBLIC * * * £ef'$ Double •* BUY UNITED STATES WAR SAVINGS BONDS OR STAMPS '*- Our Quota A-9I01 FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1S42 S AND SAHITAN TOWNSHIP BEACON MUGGS AND SKEETER -By WALLY BISHOP WHAT; YOU I'M SORRY,,,. YOU LOSE YES, ...IF YOO WEREN!T BIGGER ... BAD N EW S!! LOST MY BUT, IN A MY SUIT... IN A THAN ME, IT By Jack Lait harm in it. Definitely never Hee's feet, by habit, turned to- B/KTHfNG WAY/ IT^ ...AND IT'S WAY" WOULDN'T HAVE again. Is that fair enough?" ward the little lunchroom^ But Elsie wasn't talking to Hec. ? YOUR FAULT! SUPPED OFF OK "It "may be final but it's any-as he neared it, his steps became MY FAULT? THE FIRST DIVE' And that wasn't the first time. thing except fair. I've played short and slow and hesitant. Elsie had a peppery temper, and, cricket with you. And you— He stopped and looked into a being young and attractive, she phooey! I imagine I smell per-haberdashery window. was in high demand and man-fume on you even now and that "She is a grand sport," he mus- spoiled. there's crimson lipstick on your ed. "Arid she took it like no- No chap had ever moved in oncollar." body's business. She let me off her with quite the speed and con- "Well, it's your imagination. easy. And I gave jny word.- I— viction of Hee. He had clicked Now, will you forget it and letand yet-—but—maybe, after all-r- and they were sort of engaged. me start a new deal?" anyway this once—if—" That is, Elsie had told him he "On probation, only." With sudden resolution he could marry her if he wanted to It was a very lively and en-popped into a drugstore. His •—and he had said that he wanted joyable week-end. Elsie.was true hand shook a bit as he dropped a to. to" her word. Though she had a nickel in the phone and dialed -By PERCY CROSBY No date had been set, no an-flashy temper, she wasn't a nag- Elsie's number. nouncement had been broadcast. ger. "How're you, precious?" he e on? You They were both rather modern— When he dropped her at hersang. "You know, I've got a great OH,VOULL HAVE/ W oh, not surrealistic or . anything home early Monday and helped idea. Can't imagine why we've EVER COME FROM ( like that, but 1940 streamlined her out with her bags, he beamed overlooked it so long. It's this, -£^-&^ TO*JHOO' T UKE J O FOR6t\)£ ME" * ^ models of their sex, age and con- and said: baby: Why not you and I, we two, THAT? ditions—and the musty old "ask- "Beautiful, you're gorgeous. have lunch together every day my-father" stuff was as unneces- Spring's here, Summer can't be from now on, huh? You would? sary as proposing on one knee. far behind. And then we—you Great. • We • - start tomorrow. Hec was something in a big and I-—us—zowie!" Where'm I? Oh, in a drugstore bank and Elsie was what caption- Lunch-time came next day. —having iny lunch.'-' writers would classify as "home girl." Not "society belle" or "prominent debutante," for she wasn't quite in those brackets. Ho&'s Vent Health? . Her father was a $5,000-a-year By The Medico executive in a transportation of- fice and she was the only child. Your Looks And The summer due to the beneficial af- Hec was a tall, good-looking, Summer Sun fects of the actinic ray of the sun. athletic lad with better-thaiij-aver- Acne, a very disagreeable skin It has been pointed out before condition which, manifests itself ELZA POPPIN -By OLSEN & JOHNSON age prospects and able to marry in these columns that unwise and without apologies. He had a plan by a succession of pimples on the indiscriminate exposure to. the face, chest or the. back of adoles- in the back of his head to marry rays of the summer sun often re- JSi Elsie in the Summer, when he cent young men and women^ is sults in great harm and suffering. helped by -sunshine. VOVAQA ^OO cTOI^E To THE 5o rated his two-weeks' vacation. Some human beings seem to Elsie was in no burning hurry, lack the capacity for sane reason- The outdoors is generally con- and that arrangement suited her ing. They have heard that sun- ducive to -health, for fresh air and okay. shine is good for the health. There a certain amount of exposure to She had by now cut off all the is also a fad for getting one's self sunshine promote the • general other young men, and took it that tanned. And so at the first op- well-being of the body., Vitamins Hec had washed up with all other portunity they proceed to expose are more readily absorbed in a f emmes. sunny clime than in one that is as much of their bodies as possi- foggy and murky. So, was she flabbergasted when ble to the blistering rays of Old one of the fellows she had given Sol. If you examine the skin of a notice to phoned her and said she To their dismay the skin turns Negro under the microscope, you might be interested to know— very red and unless they are ex-will observe a • thick layer of She was plenty interested. tremely fortunate they are in forblack pigment in the true skin. What he told her "vvps that he had a very miserable time. Fever of- This was put there by a wise cre- seen Hec dining and dancing with ten develops and nausea and vom- ator to protect the inner delicate' a petite blonde at the Essex-Plaza. iting comes on. The skin may tissues against the destructive He came over that evening, rays of the African sun. -^ fiitKi i ^ pop out in a mass of blisters which Cppr. 1942, Kim^aturcs •'yndicate, Inc.. World rights rcserv which was the one directly fol- are not easy to heal. In the South, where the Negro lowing that other evening, and children live much in the sun- Elsie, direct and forthright, tossed The writer was called not long ago to see a patient who had spent shine, they flourish-if fed on plain KRAZY KAT -By HERRMAN it right at him. He looked very wholesome food. In the North, frank and said: the day before at the beach. She had remained in the water for it is necessary to give Negro chil- WORM'S-EYE View/ ) "That's right. Wife of a friend two Tiours during the hottest part dren, especially in the cities, cod 15-THfe WAV "THIU&S ) of mine. The sorehead who had of a July day, arid then laid in liver oil to prevent rickets. The A . ^ nothing better to do than call you white child suffers less from insuf- didn't by any chance mention the sun in a backless bathing suit \NOkM'S for perhaps an hour. ficient sunshine because he lacks »re was another man in the the pigments possessed by the Ne- SILLV. The poor creature was piteous groes which prevents the small I to behold. Her whole back and amount of the Northern wintry pid not. Not once." arms were covered with blisters sunshine from being absorbed [ege mate of mine. Been of various sizes and shapes. Some into his system. for months. Came back were as large as the palm of the |{ed me out to dinner with hand. Her sufferings were acute. Like all good gifts from God, til the Mrs. So I went. • SoThe proper remedies were applied sunshine is a blessing; wrongly what?" and she recovered from -her sunused it is harmful. "You didn't tell me about it;" spree, a sadder but wiser girl, in- "I intended to. It only hap- stead Of acquiring the tan which -JU.ST- pened last night." she coveted, she resembled a boil- Cnpr 1942. fctng FeamcesSyndicate, Inc, World rscfiM rercrvcd <3*^I "You didn't discuss it when we ed lobster for some time to come. talked on the phone today, before Frequent and prolonged expos- Paragraphs I got that tip-off." ures to the rays of the sun dry out —By IRV TI1MAN "Oh, I was talking in a noisy the natural oils of the skin, pro- It Hasn't lunchroom. Couldn't say much." duce freckles and pigmented spots Well, the price ceiling hasn't P-S-STf HERE HE J/ THIS "H'mph. Why didn't you take which are a blemish to beauty. got low enough to knock our hat OKAY NAPPYf HURRY' UP AM' GET- 7HHEH/H.ea'SUFjE i me?" COMES , NAPPY/,^7 BAT IS WOT'LL WE SOME ROPE , AN' I1S5 LU£KY WE / Too much exposure to sunshine off yet.—Dallas News, I JE5 1TCHIN ? DO WID 'IAA WE'LL TIE- 'IM UP V STOPPED THAT / "It wasn't my party. I was in- permanently coarsens and rough- OKAV. STAH' BACK FER A CHANCE' vited. Last time before this that Gone But Not Forgotten 1 s. NOW? WHILE HE'S STILU / .GUY FROM / ens the skin. AN WE'LL NAIL 'lM AT THAT GUY'S OUT/ ( SWIPING YER J I saw old Piske, I didn't know you, There is a skin disease known Stupid Steve says: "Gone are SOON'S HE' STICKS DOME' \ CAMERA/ / so he would not have known about the days when you could kiss a HIS HEAD as psoriasis, which improves in OUT TH' DOOR.' / AIN'T »T -\ you. He does now. And sometime girl and taste nothing but the I OGLE.THORP?/ soon we'll take them out." girl."—The U. S. S. Vee-Jay Peli- That., ended that, Elsie didn't Other Editors Say can. open her lips about it again for two weeks, and Hec didn't renew (Continued from Page 7) What, Alas! the subject either. Then she said, tary blunders at least left the What's become of those old- quite casually: Allies the bulk of Asia as a base. fashioned strawberries of "way "When are we taking out theBut if an Indian settlement comes back when" that were so sweet Harpers?" . too late the United Nations may they didn't need sugar?"-—Bruns- "Harpers?" lose not only that key country but wick (Ga.) News. "Yes—your old college chum China and Sibez-ia as well. and his little wife—" If that happened our chance of It Rambled "Oh,—that Harper. Oh, he'sdefeating Japan would be much In Tennessee a vacant bunga- out of town. He'll give me a hail less. Japan would have a perfect low,, missed by the owner, has soon's he gets back." setup for concentrating against turned up on a lot some blocks "I—I thought his name was us. away. One of those low, ram- DETECTIVE RILEY —By RICHARD LEE Fiske." So the Indian interest of thebling structures.—The Detroit News. "Th-that's right, Fiske Harper." United States is direct and im- BUT.-BUT- IT'S ALL PERFECTLY THANK YOU, SIR RONALD. MISS LEE AT YOUR SERVICE.' "Fiske nobody. You were cor- mediate—as is that of China, Presumably 1 DON'T SIMPLE, PROFESSOR/ VERY FLATTERING,INDEED. VERY |JNlADYLlKE,ItL AGREE nered and you slipped me a fast whose only remaining supply UNDER- THE CHAP'S 8EEN I DON'T WISH TO APPEAR RUDE, GENTLEMEN, BUT YOU MUST route is through India. Military Candidate for Congress will re- one." ceive enough extra gas under the STAND/ IMPERSONATING GENTLEMEN,BUT I REALLY ADMIT If HAS IT'S PO/Nfs/ And, of course, that was theconsequences of the loss of India new rationing to permit them to AND RATHER WELL MUST BE GOINGft TRUST YOU actual lowdown. could be worse for us and for I THINK.' WON'T MAKE IT NECESSARY FOR China than for England herself. campaign. Presumably they will . There hadn't been any third furnish their own air—rPathfinder. ME TO USE THIS ' party, and the little blonde (not Already England has officially that he confessed it to Elsie) was foresworn control of India after Harvest Note the cashier . of the lunchroom the war, and though its loss ncre On account of everyone being where he took his mid-day snacks, would cripple the empire an< o busy in the harvest there will and who had been his off-evening threaten the Middle East, thi. not be any preaching services at sweetie for months. would not imperil England as di Prairie Chapel Church next Sun- rectly as China and the Unitec day evening. Even our minister But his stuttering and fumbling States. %vas enough for Elsie. She knew is doing his bit by helping in the he was lying. She handed him But it is not possible to sepa harvest field—Oberlin (Kan.) his hat. rate the relative military stake; Herald. of Britain, China and the Unitec When he called on the phone Thought For Today next day, she told the maid to say States in India, even to prove tha America is more than an idealis- In the Kerch Strait, connecting that she had no desire to speak to the Black Sea with the Sea of him. So he stopped calling. And tic onlooker in somebody else's family row. For relative interests Azov, the water near the surface Lincoln Newspaper Features, Tiur. almost two weeks went by. are swamped by the overall fad is less salty and flows from Azov Then he sent her a wire which that we are all in it together. to the Black Sea; lower down, the read: WE HAVE WEEK-END What counts is the United Na- current is reversed.—Columbia DATE WITH HARKINSES tions' interest in survival. Encyclopedia. FACTS YOU NEVER KNEW -By BOB DART MADE THREE WEEKS AGO Nothing short of genuine In- STOP SEE NO REASON WHY OW LONQ \WILL. i?,«vi WE SHOULD STAND THEM UP dian co-operation to beat back tht common enemy from India ant Police Pension HAD TO / only—we—•" ang Kai-shek. All of our necks "5. Set up a competent board WITH COLLAPSABLE 38 INCH SWOKEt A' are in it this time. Here is one of trustees composed of represen- STILTS FOLDING INTO THE PIPE/ "After all this time, and you SOLES TO ENABLE SHORT . haven't got a good story for mebattle we dare not lose by tootatives of government, the fund little and too late.—N. Y. World members and the general public, PERSONS "TO pBW OVSR.THE -- HEADS. OPCmHEUS /SvTPOBLie SHOWS/ yet?" Telegram. . to administer the Statewide fund." "*.£ Lincoln Ncw?pa2?> „ "She's a girl I used to know. No FORDS AND SARITAN TOWNSHIP S1ACO!? FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 194-2 FAGS SEVEN

Stand-Off STARS ON ICE.., Hagaman's DOING THEIR PART - - By Jack Sards In Fords Overcome Hangs On Beavers AALFBAcK 1934, WAS WOODBRIDGE — The rain Heydens, Barons Tied Hand First-Half Win- crossed up the double-header slat- For 1st Place, Battle Le Op THE Cc&AL ed for Legion Field Monday night ners 7-6 Beating In SBA-. M in the interest of the USO, but noi To 4-4 Deadlock oA

PAGE EIGH131 FEID'AY, AUGUST 21, 1942 FORDS 'AND SARITAN TOWNSHIP BEACON

$100 BILLION IN BOMB COIL TROUBLE CANADA HAS 4,000 AIRWOMEN Christian Science INSURANCE . s Sharon, S. C.-^Tohn Wilkes HIS HOBBY IS New York-—According to insur- didn't pay much attention to it SWIMG MUSIC! SKY FIGHTER* HE KEEPS A ance officials, bombardment in- when his radio . suddenly went - Church Calendar STACK OF HOT RECORDS 1W HIS QOAPTES31 surance placed with the Federal silent early one ' night recently, IMACBO8ATIC War Damage Corporation so far • First Church of Christ, Scien- FLVING but he decided to investigate when HELPED TO amounts to at least one hundred MAKE HIM it suddenly blared forth about tist, Sewaren, is a branch of the ONE OF AMERICA'S billion dollars and final figures midnight. The trouble proved to * WI LOOKS AT WAR Mother Church, The First Church EIE BUILT GREATEST AMD FLEW F1SHTING may run as much as one-third be a big black snake which was . fe|CORD NOT ENOUGH of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, MODEL P1LQTSJ PLANES AS higher. "WE CAN LOSE THIS WAR" A 5CHOOL- leisurely crawling out of the set.— Mass. Sunday services, 11 A. M., BOV AND _ What the Office of War Infor- STUDIED Sunday School, 9:30 A. M. Wed- AVIATION Definition Sanity in the Home mation calls an "informed and ENGINEERING intelligent understanding of the nesday Testimonial meeting, 8 P. AT PITT- Social Tact—Making your com- Only rarely does a man with a, status, and progress of the war M. Thursday, reading room, 2 to pany feel at home, even though hobby go crazy. But think o£= effort" is especially hard to ac- 4 P. M. they wish they were.—Boston^ his poor wife.—Brandon Suit} quire because of conflicting infor- "Mind" is the Lesson-Sermon Evening Transcript. Canada. mation and divergent interpreta- subject for Sunday, August 23, in tions that are set before the pub- all Christian Science Churches lie. and Societies throughout the Buy Witt Confidence from a world. , Reliable Furrier It is possible for an experienced The Golden Text is: "God hath j ivriter or politician to assemble all not given us the spirit of fear; SAVE! facts and arguments of a pessi- but of power, and of love, and of mistic nature and convince almost a sound mind." (II Tim. 1:7). as much as JOHN STWVN anybody that the war has been Among the Lesson-Sermon cita- IS SAID TO lost. It is just as easy to report YOUNGEST tions is the following from the LIEUTENAN=NANT COLONECOLON L only the optimistic items and thus Bible: "Who hath directed the IN THE US. AEMV Al lead readers and listeners to the AGAINST THE JAPS IN Spirit of the Lord, or being his THE PHILIPPINES WON ON GUARANTEED conclusion that the fighting is HIMTHE DISTINGUISHED FINE QUALITY FURS Smart and serviceable are iKe counsellor hath taught him?" SERVICE CROSS FOR about over. GALLANTRY IN ACTON' new' uniforms of the R.C.A T. (Isaiah 40:12). FUR COATS REPAIRED and RESTYLED (Women's Division). This sum- /.: , The Lesson-Sermon also in- All work done on our premises The recent review of the war mer uniform (above) is a was li- cludes the following passage from AT GREAT SAVINGS DURING AUGUST situation by the OWI insisted that able sfeirt"H^aist dress of bin' the Christian Science textbook, "as a nation we are not yet more fabric, with a six-gore skirt anil ^ _j«gin»- j^»>. ^a^. jtma^. -gate*, jflBa^ • irflgTrni iiiUffTlillii ntfiffHTTii iffllfftnii a brass buttons. The sports uni- "Science and Health with Key to HIS FIRST FORW IM AUSTKAL1A. BUZZ TOOK than ahkle-deep in the war" and PART IN THE MOST TERRIFIC MASS DOGFIGHT OF HIS form is light, practical and .•!- the Scriptures" by Mary Baker BEIU-IAMT CABEEJS.I PLANES WERE TUMBLING AROUND presented some discotiraging facts. tractive, as this photograph (.iL IM ALL SOHTS OF MANEUVERS,BATTLING FOBTWENTJFIVE POSE FUR SHOP .J Eddy: "If Mind is within and MIMUTES UP" AMD DOWN TKIRTV MILES OF COASTLINE; Just the same, however, it under- 1 A sninll tieposit right) of a shapely, young aii- without all things, then all is WAGNER SHOT DOWM THREE JAP PLANES IN THIS BATTLE. [272A Madison Ave. P. A. 4-31681 lined the basic problems that con- will hold any woman demonstrates. The ui'i- Mind; and this definition is scien- PERTH. AlMBOY purchase until fronted the United States when it ••: Pi Prepared in cooperation with U. S. War Dept. Permission to repro- form is in a soft grey-hluv tific."— (p. 257). duce is hereby granted. wanted. became involved in war. shade, the shorts of fine cotto*i twill and the pullover of knitted WAR SAVING STAMPS ON SALE AT SCHINDEL'S Calling 1942 "a year of pre- cotton. paration," with our allies doing most of the fighting, the OWI points out that "we must move great numbers of men and vast News'From The Screen World masses of material over enormous By Emily Enrighi distances." We must do this be- fore our enemies "succeed in in- Just as everyone thought the point or of fostering good rela- flicting crippling blows on our al-battle over as to who was to play tions between the United States lies." the role of Maria in "For Whom and Latin America, practically the Bell Tolls," with the selection every studio has one or more pic- The report admits that we have of Vera Zorina, word comes that tures in production or contem- not given our allies "as much help the dancer-actress has been re- plated . with either a Spanish or as we have led them to expect," lieved of the assignment and In-Latin-American flavor. Prominent and points out that the cutting of grid Bergman borrowed for the among them are Orson Welles' the Burma Eoad and German ac- "It's All True," and Paramount's tivity around Murmansk make it role. Miss Bergman has been STOCKS "For Whom the Bell Tolls." harder to supply China and Rus-mentioned all along as the most sia. suited to the part, although Par- <0 OFF REGU LAR PRICES! Every Item at COST, BELOW COST amount insisted that the change During a scene in "The Crystal was no reflection on Miss Zorina, Ball," Ray Milland hits three tar- At home, our production, "mea- gets placed in a row—likenesses 1OVE COST—Come Early!---SOME QUANTITIES LIMITED! sured by standards of a couple of who will be put to' work immedi- of Hirohito, Hitler and Mussolini. years ago, is amazing" but, mea-ately in dance sequences in the When he hits Hirohito, the dum- sured against what we need to dostudio's "Star-Spangled Rhythm." my Jap emperor kicks Hitler it is not yet enough." Specifical- SATURDAY NIGHT TILL 10 P. (next to him) in the pants. When ly, the nation fell below schedule While Latin-American films in the past have not been generally Milland scores a "bull's eye" on in June in total military planes, Hitler, Adolf promptly kicks Mus- Hurry for These Out They Go! in. total combat planes, and in profitable from a money stand- solini in the same spot. When GIRLS' WOMEN'S 2-PC. 300 NEW SUMMER most of the individual types. Al- Mussolini is struck, Benito forth- though we made more planes than Looking to the future of this with kicks himself—which is ex- any other country in the world, total war, in which "defeat by actly what Director Elliott Nugent "we did. not make as many as weour enemies means destruction," thinks is happening on the inter- said we were going to make." The the OWI says that we can lose national scene. same observation applies to tanks, this war and that it is necessary most types (bf artillery, and naval for Americans "to realize how Walter Wanger is planning to vessels. j hard we are going to have to work produce a sort of free hand ver- Regularly 88c, Last call for Reg. $1.59. Solids and to win it." It adds, "Too many sion of "The Arabian Nights," as these unusual values; sizes striped patterns. Ideal for Lovely Copies of Higher Priced Models 'The "tremendous plant expan- people seem to feel that we arehis contribution to the escapist work, beach, play or at sion" of the past two years has 4 to 12. Limit 2 to a cus- fighting this war out of a surplus" films. Its only relation to the tomer! home; sizes 12 to i.8. given us more factories than we of resources and production capa- Burton classic version will be its can use on the basis of raw ma- city and of time, but that "this title. Wanger says it will ap- DRESSES terials at present available. Tem- is not true." peal more to the eye than to the When You Want 'Em porary shut-downs have been oc- intelligence and for this purpose, Children's Washable casioned by faulty control of in- CARGO FREIGHTERS such houris as the original Petty Women's Shantung FOR ventories and of the flow of ma-500 ARE ORDERED girl model, the model for the Jant- terials. While the public debate about zen bathing suit, and an Arapa- SOLD SINGLY the construction of a stupendous hoe Indian from Ozone, Wyo., , Concerning the first eight fleet of aerial cargo freighters months of the war, the OWI named Acquanetta, have been im- AT $1.59 EACH continues, Donald M. Nelson, ported. •ifflHlDi.1 iitfiwii nilR^ttlti—jdffUftv-^fl^tt*-- ihakes these interesting observa- chairman of the War Production tions : Board, has authorized Henry J. Taking the results of a ques- REG. $2.98 VALUES (1) Our naval forces have been Kaiser, West Coast shipbuilder, to Reg. 79c—Bib Top Newest styles in pastels, spread "far more widely and far tionnaire circulated in Fort Knox You've never seen a more diversified collection, all prepare plans and data on the as to the requirements of the sol- Bib top suspender style. stripes, and white; sizes 32 more thinly than had been fore- facilities and materials necessary Prints and soiid colors; sizes to 40. Cellophane wrapped. at one low price! Chic smart fashions to see you seen" and, as a result, we have diers' "dream girl," Hollywood Buy now and save! to construct 500 Martin Mars producers decided that Jane Rus- 2 to 10. through the rest of the summer! Sizes for juniors, paid for perfect protection for cargo-carrying planes. misses, women. troop convoys and in the South sell and Marjorie Woodworth Seas with "heavy losses off our more nearly filled the bill. • Bargain Seldom Seen The Martin 70-ton Mars was A Big Value! MEN'S BASQUE own coasts." Sinkings far exceed- built for the Navy by the Glenn The new ending shot for "Tales GIANT-SIZE—24 x 48 Hit of the Season ed new construction for the first L. Martin Company and will serve of Manhattan" shows Edward G. WOMEN'S SUMMER MEN'S B. V. D. half of this year, and it will prob- as the model for the Kaiser un- Robinson being rehabilitated af- BOYS' SANFORIZED ably "be well into 1943 before dertaking'. The Mars has a pay- ter being a bum in James Glea- PULLOVERS We have as much merchant ship- load capacity of 14 tons. Mr. son's bowery mission. They fig- SPORT SHIRTS ping as we had on December 7th, Kaiser says that he can build the ure that the public doesn't want 1941." "small number" without inter- sad endings now, what with the rupting or curtaining work on war and all. EACH $^-.98 (2) Our forces in the Pacific, Liberty ships in his yard, and Mr. Pick a different color for each Crew neck pullover; short after Peai\L Harbor, "worked hero- Nelson says that the contemplated War damage insurance total is member, of the family. Blue, Goat arid, slipon styles in Shantungs and novelties; sleeves; solid colors includ- ically at a heavy disadvantage, in construction -must not interfere put at $100,000,000,000. rose, green, gold or peach pastel shades; sizes 34 to 40. convertible collars; short ing whites; sizes small, me- Inner-outer sport shirt with numbers as well as in distances." borders on a tig-htly woven dium and large. Reg. 59c with the "present combat plane President urges all to join in white ground. Value 39c each. All new styles; short sleeves. sleeves; all colors and sizes. slacks to match; all colors; Coral Sea and Midway were program." hunt for scrap materials. Stock up! each. sizes 8 -to 16. Worth' $2.98. "brilliant victories against supe- rior forces" but "the wonder is not that we lost so much but that Cannon Hurry for These While They Last! we held on to so much." WOMEN'S SUMMER Hurry! Super Values! Boys' Cool Summer (3) Apparently taking cogni- MEN'S SANFORIZED MEN'S DRESS zance of criticism, the OWI in- sists that our forces are disposed Sizes 72x99—72x108, BASQUE SHIRTS according to the judgment of mil- 81x90 SLACKS itary commanders and that, since SHIRTS December 7th, "no strategical c , .00 39c plan or operation, calling for or using American naval, land or air ea. EACH REG. 59c - Remarkable value. Below Gay prints in all colors; also Reg.f$1.69. This season's forces has been adopted or car- newest and smartest pat- Whites and fancies; built- Boys' pullovers in striped pal- ried out, except on the recom- today's mill price. Slight solids in cool summer fab- terns. Every pair pre- terns ana white with colored imperfections. up collars; reduced from our trim: sizes small, medium and mendation and with the approval rics. Limited quantity! shrunk. higher priced stocks. largre. of the top officers of the American Army and Navy." "Money Saver! While They Last! Speedway Auto Sales Co.. will give $5.00 in War Clearance Special! RAYON & COLONIAL WOMEN'S. SUMMER FOR SPEEDY CLEARANCE Savings Stamps with, each used car. purchased. MEN'S GABARDINE SW1 TRUNKS SU ER Come and. see our selection' of .49 .00 Values to SI.98. Priced for a EACH Footwear fittest used curs at our quick sellout- Cool summer For single, %, and full size fabrics. .. Choice of slacks, "Utica" make. Satin lastex swim suits; jackets, playsuits, Regular Values to $3 i beds. New full assortment etc. Coine early for . best and gabardine; all colors lowest nnces: in colors and patterns. choice. and sizes. " Big selection. © Whites © Colors We sell Good Transportation not merely used cars. @ Combinations Closing- Out! \ Final Clearance! 5 Out They Go! "Every dime and dollar Special This Week SUMMER DRESS ® High or Low Heels not vitally needed for WOMEN'S NEW MEN'S SANFORIZED absolute necessities 9 All Sizes in the Lot] should go into WAR BONDS and STAMPS to add to the SLACK SUITS FOR WOMEN AND MISSES striking power of our armed Delivery, like new forces." —PBAHKUN D. KoOSEYElT, $2-49 • President ojthc United States. REG. $3.98 * * * Percale, gingham, chambray, You'll find just the right $3.98 VALUES Think War! Act War! Buy organdies, voiles, Printed suit in this brilliant collec- Just the thing for all out- es Co. poplin. Sew and save! On tion. Priced for quick clear- door sportswear. Sport shirt WAB. SAVINGS BONDS—at sale.—Basement. least 10% of your pay every 823 St. George Avenue Woodbridge, N. J. ance. and slacks to match. i

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