VOLUME XCIII HIGHTSTOWN, MERCER COUNTY.' NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 1941 NUMBER 10 Battle of Stockton Street Establish Office Board to Sell ‘Aluminum For Defense’ At Borough Hall Mercer Street Begins As Enemy Uses To Aid Farmers School Structure Campaign Begins Friday; Dive Bombers in Attack Helps Migrant Negroes; Not Used for School Town Will be Canvassed

The Battle of Stockton street has begun and full scale war opera­ State Employment Service Purposes Since 1939; Aluminum coffee pots, frying pans, double boilers, tea kettles and a tions are under way. Communiques issued by Chief of Police Carlton Opened Here Wednesday Built in 1894 score of other items will be tossed into a large wire bin which will be H. Conover and George Forman reveal that activities are advancing constructed and placed at the rear of the Acme Market on Friday as ■'according to plan.” As yet no communique has been issued by the The shortage of farm labor intermin­ The eight-room brick structure located Hightstown’s “Aluminum for National Defense” campaign gets under enemy. Full censorship is exercised there. gled with the annual migrant problem on Mercer street and formerly knowm way. has resulted in the establishment by the as the primary school will be placed Gradually reinforcing their shock troops who appeared earlier in New Jersey State Employment Service on the auction block this summer and Boy scouts and girl scouts working under the supervision of the the summer, the enemy has brought up enough reserves to make Stock- of an office in the Borough Hall for the offered to the highest bidder according members of the Mayor’s Defense Council and Conservation Chairman ton street residences apprehensive of the outcome. Yes, sir, those starl­ purpose of aiding both the fanners and to a decision reached last week by the John Braun will make a thorough house to house canvas of the town ings are out in force this year. ------the migrant Negroes. East Windsor township Board of Edu­ ■*and trucks will be at work on each In the iiightstown area approximately The pestiferous alien horde pos­ cation. street gathering th e now-precious Escaped Negro 600 Negroes have arrived from the For fifty years local children were Work ou Local sesses bombers of a 11 types—dive, South. Last year at this time there taught the three R’s in the old school metal to be contributed by patriotic medium, and heavy. Accompanied by were 2,000 migrants here, according to building which was constructed in 1894-. Returned Here the estimates of the State Employment Bowliug Ceuter minded residents. Collections will full squadrons of pursuit .planes and in­ Since 1939 the edification has not been Service. used for school purposes and at th at' begin at 9 a. m. terceptors, the enemy is making life To Stand Trial Major Plow’ard J. Lepper, administra­ time the local system was centralized Gets Uuder Way Those contributors who will not miserable f o r families living between tive assistant of the State Employment in the Grammar School and High School Center street and Summit avenue on Service, said that officials of both the structures on Stockton street. be at home and in order to speed Stockton street. Local police have lodged an escaped employment service and the agriculture Work was started Tuesday at the The eight-room building occupies a Phillips-Conover garage located on the up the collection are requested to place Is Yearly Campaign Negro in the Mercer county jail after department were aware of the acute plot of ground fronting 100 feet on Mer­ corner of West Ward and Mercer any aluminum donations on their front he was captured in New York state and farm labor shortage. Approximately cer street and runs several hundred feet ])orch. If there are any residents missed No self respecting bird could act in 75,000 persons are needed to handle streets for the construction of the the manner which these screechers have waived extradition to return and answer to the Pennsylvania Railroad in the rear. Iiightstown Recreation Center. The they are urged to drop their contribu­ crops and work in canneries. Leppei" The structure, of brick and stone, is 72 tions in the bin in the parking yard done in the past week or so. In fact charges of breaking jail. Another Ne­ estimates the shortage of 15,000 with the structure owned by George E. Phillips the present battle has reoccurred each by 50 feet and its eight rooms measure and Walter Conover was leased for ten by July 29. ; gro is in the hands of New York police Agriculture department estimate from 23 by 27 feet each. Four other rooms Efforts have been made to acquaint year for the last several years with 25 to 30 per cent. years by Abe Neinitz, proprietor of the neither side admitting defeat. In 1940 after refusing to waive extradition. At­ in the building were used as offices and Pennington Recreation Center and residents with the campaign and hand­ the birds suffered heavy casualties and tempts are being made to bring the sec­ The office which opened in Borough for library purposes. sponsorer of the local academy. bills and posters have been .printed and Hall, Stockton street, Wednesday, will Until 1913 the building proved suffi­ distributed. retreated to heavily prepared lines on ond Negro to trial here also. Eight bowling alleys will be built, ac­ another strreet only to return when de­ endeavor to serve the farmers and the cient for local school services, all grades cording to Neniitz, with the opening of The ^cam^paign is under the direction mobilization had been ordered on the Ozzie Williams, local Negro, involved migrants. Mr. Lepper said. Miss Alma ■ including two years of the high school the center scheduled for sometime this of 0. T. Fenton, head of the local de­ original battlefront. in an escape from the Highlstown jail Evans is in charge of the office work. course were housed there. Several years fall. Sumner Norton, local carpenter, fense board. George E. Phillips is vice- Thousands upon thousands of starl­ five weeks ago along with Clarence Pat­ Howard Swann and two assistants will later only primary grades made use of and his men are already on the job re­ chairman and Plugh W. Logan secreta­ ings have lodged themselves in trees in terson, who is still at large, was appre­ handle the field work. the building. moving the wooden floor in the show ry. front of Forman's house and other hended in Riverhead, L. L, last week All migrants will be required to regis.- It has been reported that a local or­ room and tearing down other .parts for­ An official statement on this matter houses along the street. Before fifth and returned here last Thursday night ter at the local office. Farmers, if in ganization is interested in the property merly used by the automobile agency was issued recently by the War De­ columnists reported weak defenses all by Chief of Police Carlton H. Conover need of help, may contact the local of­ as a home and meeting place for the holding forth there. partment Mr. Fenton said. It reads along the line, residences were happy and Officer W. Cecil Daley. fice and if possible they will be supplied group which has a large membership. For the past several years localites “Aluminum donated by the public will in the thought that perhaps there would Also apprehended in Riverhead, L. L. with the necessary help. Since discontinuing the use of the have been seeking some way in order go directly into defense uses. The col­ be no invasion this year. This hope last Thursday but refusing to waive ex­ The labor shortage was anticipated by building, the board of education has to establish alleys here and when work lection program is of vital importance in was blasted a couple of weeks ago when tradition, Thomas Boxcar, Florida Ne­ State officials, Mr. Lepper added, and withheld offering for sale the structure started Tuesday it climaxed a long peri­ helping the Army meet its defense a complete victory was scored by the gro, living here the past four years, will the department will endeavor to assist and grounds due to a clause in the old od of probability. needs. Metal collected will be convert­ airfleet who quickly gained control of be sought by local police officials to be the farmers and canners in objaining lease which donated the ground on the “The best equipment made,” Nemitz ed into ingots which will be converted air Qperations. brought here for trial. _ workers. The migrants will be given an basis it was to be used solely for school said, “including one or two of the new into ingots which will be analyzed for It takes little disturbance to put these Williams was committed to the Mer­ opportunity to contact employers. purposes. Pleirs of the original donor, telescorc machines probably will be put use in airplanes, battleships, tanks, shell birds to flight, and the sky is darkened cer County jail by Recorder Franklin K. Hcrefore, farmers and canners han­ J. C. Ward, gave up their claims to the into operation. We plan to do this and bomb fuses and inilitarv equip­ when they all take off for reconnais­ i-lampton to await grand jury action on dled their own problems. The larger property, clearing the way for its sale. thing right and work on it gradually ment.” sance. Returning early in the evening charges of breaking from the local jail. until it can be considered one of the best percentage of migrants were employed centers in this area.” It is expected that hundreds of pounds these blackbirds start their offensive Officer Howard Lewallen arrested through a contractor and in past years of aluminumware will come out of the that is definitely offensive. Williams and committed him to the bor­ The alleys will be 83 feet long in­ there was a surplus of labor. cluding the 16 feet approach and will basements, attics, dusty shelves of ough jail on a non-support charge on A survey of the migrant labor prob­ Reeves, Hudson homes. It is speciflcally stated that no FHA Refuses Loan. June 15. Patterson was arrested on a east and west with the entrance on lem was made last year. According to the Mercer street side. Nemitz also aluminum is wanted that will have to be For one thing, the squawking, screech­ charge of breaking the jail lock and data gathered there were 5,500 workers replaced by new purchases, only all that ing starlings are late retirers and early abetting the escape of Williams. He Write College stated he may secure individual benches emiiloyed during the potato season. for each team engaged in league bowl­ can be spared by residents. risers. They don’t care who knows it. later escaped after being in the custody Reports were made by 319 farmers who And it certainly is a "scandal to the of the local police only a few hours, ing play which undoubtedly would re­ Other members of the local defense operated on 47,OCX) acres, of which 24,- Debate Book lieve any congestion and speed up the council working in conjunction with the jaybirds" what goes on in the trees at leaping 15 feet to the ground from a 461 acres were devoted to potatoes, with 4 a. m. Crowded living conditions forced second story window at the rear of po­ play. program a re Richard H. Whitby, 4,159 workers. Thomas Malone, Dr. Harold C. Cox, the birds to ask for FHA. help, but lice headquarters with a pair of hand­ J, Walter Reeves, head of the public Calvin H. Perrine, Dr. Wilbour K. Saun­ when refused a loan the bird decided cuffs locked to his wrists. speaking department of the Peddie ders. James S. Turp. Daniel O. Gafgen to start their regime of terror for the Boxcar was involved in a scuffie sev­ School, is co-author with Dr. Hoyt H. Church School and Dr. Joseph L. Schultz, Ralph Luria, neighborhood. eral months ago on the R. D. Norton 4-H Members Hudson, chairman of the English and John Braun and Leon Babcock. Residents feel it's okay to wake with projierty on Stockton street and after Speech Department of Princeton Uni­ the birds if it is at a recent hour. Now attacking Chief of Police Carlton H. versity. of a new college text book, Holds Visitation however, they can’t even get to^ sleep Conover with a knife, leaped from a Schedule Picnic “Principals of Argument and Debate.” to wake with the early risers. The all second-story window and escaped. Recently completed the volume is be­ Day Tomorrow Registrants night hootin’ and hollerin’ gives little Chief Conover and Officer Cecil For August 23 ing published by 1). C. Heath and Com­ time for rest. Daley located Boxcar in the tailor shop pany. Other books written by Reeves On one hand there are the bird lov­ of George L. Ford, also Negro, at River­ a r e “Fundamentals of Argumentation “Visitation Morning” will be held to- j To be Integrated ers who are so much in the minority at head, while returning with Ozzie Wil­ Representatives of three counties met and Debate” and “ParUamenlary Pro­ morrow between 9:30 a. m. and 11:30 a. • present that no complaints have been liams, one of the two local negroes recently at the home of June I’ropst, cedure.” He is also co-author of “Ef­ ni. by the local daily vacation church By Local Board entered from this side. On the other making a get away from the local jail Uunhani’s Corner, where plans were fective Speech.” school according to an announcement several weeks ago. hand are those who have taken up arms made for this year's "Tri-M” 4-FI pic­ Reeves is a member of the Executive made by Mrs. Stenson W. Rogers, di­ in an attempt to settle the is.sue. Chief Committee of the Eastern Public Speak­ rector. The public is urged to attend Local Board No. ] with offices at Conover and his son employed shotguns nic to be held at Green Grove, Wash­ ing Conference, and was formerly presi­ and observe the work the young people 1 rinceton has been sent a copy of the Monday and Tuesday nights to rout the ington Crossing State Park, August 23. dent of the group. Graduating from the are doing at the sessions held at the master list of last Thursday’s drawing enemy, but it wasn’t long before the Candidates This will be the third annual picnic ,par- Fairmont, W. Va., Normal School in First Baptist Church. Initiated for the of numbers of the 21-year-olds register- startled starlings were startled no more ticipated in by rural youth from the 1906, he entered Wooster College, first time the visitation will replace the ing; J u I y 1 by State Selective Service and returned. counties of Mercer, Middlesex and Mon­ Wooster, Ohio, and in 1911 received his regular closing program. headquarters. The board will integrate For Council the cards of these new registrants for Bird* l*»ue Commtiniqoe mouth, and has the backing of the Coun­ B. S. degree from that institution. Dur­ Irigures released by Mrs. Rogers show ty Advisory Councils, says Joseph B. ing 1911 and 1912 he attended Emerson that more than 145 children have been Uncle Sam’s Army with those of the Last year the birds were driven away To File Petitions Turpin, county club agent. College and took graduate work at on the lists of the church school whic originals. An order will then be deter­ when shotgun artists ^appeared in con­ mined in which the new group will be An older youth organization known Harvard University in 1912. That year began the seventh of July for its annual certed action. Dead birds falling at ran­ he was appointed to the teaching staff four-week period. Opening day found called for service. dom hindered the infantry^from taking Candidates for elective offices are pre­ as the Mercer County Youth Forum will 113 boys and girls registered. The aver­ The integration will work in this man­ join with the 4-H clubs and share their of Peddie School. In 1915 he received ner: a greater toll among the winged squad­ paring for the political battle which will his M. A. degree from Princeton Uni­ age daily attendance for the initial two- rons. Each time someone shot into the events, taking the responsibility for week period has been. US. If the board has 1,000 original regis­ close on general election day, Novem­ much of the evening program and the versity. trees all had to duck and get out of the ber 4. Primary election will be held Among the enrollees are 29 beginners, trants and 100 new ones the ratio would concluding campfire .program. On the As chairman of the Peddie School be ten to one. Thus a new enrollee ^vay of starlings plummeting earthward. speaking department Reeves has charge 53 primary students, 35 junior and 30 Before using shotguns, the residences on Tuesday, September 16. Mercer County committee are: Charles intermediate pupils. There arc 28 young holding Sequence No. I” or SI would Nominating petitions must be filed Gierman, Highlstown; Lillian Tindall, of all oratorical cpnte.sts and of the be subject to call only after ten men employed every tvpe of noise-maker Forum and Dramatic Club. Since 1930 children attending from Cranbury. possible to clear the trees of the with all proper officials at least forty White Horse; John Tindall, Dutch All departments of the school engage of the group registering last October days prior to the primary election. The Neck; Ina Lipman and Mrs, Ruth Har­ he has been Secretary of the Fathers were called. S2 would be called after squawking birds. New Year’s Eve in­ Association of the school. in periods of worship, music, Bible struments were dusted off and put into last day for filing such will be Thurs­ greaves, both of Titusville. study, handicrafts and supervised play. the next group of 10 old registrants and use a little early, but even they were day, August 7. Sessions are conducted each week day so on. to no avail. in t h e borough of Iiightstown two morning from 9 to 12. On this basis a man holding SI will The density and unu.siial height of members of the Common Council will A staff of four teachers and their as­ probably be called by the local board shade trees on the street explain the un­ be elected as the terms of Robert E. If You Haven’t Met Rummy sistants in addition to Mrs. Rogers have within the next month or two. wanted phenomenon. The enemy has Dietz and William H. Thomas expire been handling the duties of the school. The initial number drawn in the na­ finally issued a cornmnnique. "Situa January first. Petitions are already be­ They are Mrs. V. A. Carson, Mrs. Jos­ tional lottery last Thursday night—196 tion well in hand. All quiet on the ing circulated for Dietz and Thomas as It’s Time to Shake Hands eph L. Schultz, Mrs. Stanley K. Ganibell —did not effect Board No. 1 as the western front at present. Frequent sor­ candidates on the Republican ticket. and Miss Alberta Mount assisted by the highest serial number held was 149. The second number—98, however, was held ties have resulted in few losses by us In each of the three election districts Misses Alta Schanck, Rita Roszel, Shir- and great annoyance to the enemy.” The smarie.?t dog in town! The bes* i the pooch, but he held off. At last some- lev Applegate, Catherine Ann Hertzog, by Herbert Smoller, R. D. No. of here. in the Borough a male and a female Third In line was Edgar Archer of member of the Republican and Demo­ rat ! 'The best known and most one concocted a medicine that did the Ruth Virginia Hancock, Myra Croshaw. loved fido Highlstown can boast! Also Alice Stackhouse. Muriel Locke, Stockton street with number 96. cratic county committees will also be trick. Jimmy Diblin painted Rummy’s According to a report the ratio at the Tindalls Honor Daughter elected on primary day. That’s t h e record of Rummy, Jimmy nose with it. and the pup licked the stuff Elizabeth Owens, Elaine Applegate, Damasco’s pet dog. Although he’s a Ruth Scott, Janet Shivers, Jeanette i rmceton board offices will run some­ In East Windsor township the term of off. tie began to get better under the thing like nine to one. Newly registered At Birthday Party Paul V. Nau as member of the town­ nondescript brown and black cross be­ infinite care of “Dibby.” Wolfe, Id e 1 e n Walker, Miss Carlolta tween a dachshund and an airdale, Davison and Mrs. Willard Davison. men should keep in touch with the local ship committee will expire January first. Rummy had a berth in the back of the board who will iurnlsh them with the Mr, and Mrs. Elmer A. Tindall of Seeking t h e Democratic nomination Rummy is known both in the canine and the belter social circles as th e winery on a pile of rags_ and bags. necessary information in regard to their Windsor entertained the following rela­ for sheriff, Stephen E. Karezewski of “Dibby” would watch over him, putting Bennetts Entertain Guests .status. The office is located at 2 Cham­ tives in honor of the third birthday an­ Trenton is the first aspirant for office “trickiest" dog in town. blankets over him when he needed them. bers street. niversary of their daughter, Barbara in the September primary to file nom- It was in 1933 that Jimmy opened his Finally, Rummy shook off the effects of At Steak Barbecue Supper Local Board No. 1 must supply a quo­ winery. Shortly after the onslaught of Joyce; Mr. and Mrs. G. Elmer Tindall, inathig petitions with the office of Coun­ his illness. ta of seven men in Call No, 16 on Au­ ty Clerk Charles P. Hutchinson. First repeal Jimmy received a ,puppy from his Mr. and Mrs, John D. Bennett enter­ gust 7. Mr, and Mrs. Charles A. Robbins, Mr. brother in Newark. The nameless purp And so the greatest ratter that the to file for one of the Republican free­ town has known got off the fl_oor_ on tained at a steak barbecue supper Fri­ and Mrs. H. LcRoy Tindall, Mrs. Lena holder nominations is Alphonse J. Pone w as the scrawniest, funniest looking day evening at their Stockton street puppy Jimmy had ever seen. the count of nine. Followjng his sick­ Pellett and H. LeRoy Tindall, Jr. of Trenton, senior clerk in the county ness, Rummy started to rid Jimmy of home. The affair was in honor of Mr. Former Chilean President Four generations were present, the clerk’s office. Only slightly smaller than he is at his nemesis, rats. He moved on to other and Mrs. Bennett’s birthday anniversa­ great-grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Rob- In Mercer county, three members of present, the pup soon found his way into fields, becoming the top rat catcher in ry- To Speak at Princeton the General Assembly, a sheriff and two the heart of jimmy and his pals. Poppa The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Wil­ nins' grandmother, Mrs. Pellett, moth­ the business section. “ 'Mascus still liam P. Dye of Allenhurst, Mr. and Mrs. er, Mrs. Tindall, and the guest of honor, members of the Board of Preeholders James tagged many a moniker onto the talks about the rat Rummy pulled out Carlos Davila, former president of will be chosen. The terms of Freehold­ pooch, but none stuck. “Smoky” Tabler of a hole by the rat's tail. B. W. Van Ness of Belmar, Mr. and Chile, will speak at Princeton Univer­ Barbara. ers John O. Gretton and Leonard A. christened him “Rummy’’ one day, and Mrs, Grover E .Stults of Ocean Grove, sity on Tuesday evening, July 29. His Plant expire January 1. The term of the name became a byword. It stuck. Rummy hates butchers. The dog Mr. and Mrs. Grove B. Bennett of Free­ talk, “Inter-American Political Rela­ won’t allow Alvin Dey or “Boots” Crater Sheriff Harry E. Hartman ends Novem­ Wags tried to call h im "Drunk," hold, Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Dey of Day- tions,” is one of a series sponsored by Norman Pullen Celebrates to come near the store. He bares his ton, Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Mason, the University's School of Public and ber 15, “Beer,” “Whiskey,” a n d "Kutnhound,” teeth and growls at the sight of the but he answered only to Rummy, Jim­ Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Dye of Cran­ International Affairs as part of its sum­ Fifth Birthday Tuesday long white aprons. He just can’t stand bury. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Bennett, Mr. mer program. LOCAL ATTORNEY ATTENDS my’s pet became the pet of everyone the sight of them. Master Norman Pullen, son of Mr. coming in contact with him, for Rummy and Mrs. Ora J. Bennett of HHhtstown. On Thursday, July 31, Prof. Robert G. PRACTICING LAW INSTITUTE Any day you can see Rummy wending Albion, director of the summer session and Mrs. William Pullen of Stockton had a winning smile. No listerine ad­ HAFNER-AlxiN vertisement had him beat. His wistful his way via Stockton and Center streets. and professor of History at Princeton street, celebrated his fifth birthday Tues­ Albert C. Barclay, local attorney, is He needs no one to show him the 3vay. Miss Dorothy Louise Allen of Moores- completing his second week in N ew looking face made even the hardest of University, will give the conceding lec­ day with a party fir 10 in the after­ hard Noiled eggs crack. Nothing interrupts his progress. When town and Charles Joseph Hafner of ture of the series. York where he is studying federal taxa­ you call, Rummy merely stops and says, Haddonfield were married Thursday, noon. Refreshments were had and tion and bankruptcy at the Practising About a year after Jimmy had taken Both k ctarcs, whicli will begin et 8 “Sorry, but I must hurry ^m e. Jim- July 17th, at noon at the Presbyterian p. m. in 4b McCoih Hall, are open to games were played. Law Institute. the purp under his wing (or vice-versa), Rummy got caught in the toils of dis­ my^s waitin’ for me.” And he continues manse by the Rev. Stanley K. GambelL the p a ^ withowt charfi. Children present were Elsie and Ruth The institute, a non profit organiza­ on his homeward path. They were attended by M iu Mary C. tion, chartered by the New York State temper. No one could do much with Coward, Marie and Kathleen Kelley, him. Old Doc Reed attempted to give As 1 left Rummy the other night he Yc»mg and R. Alien of Moorestown. reoiiW iM tti Frieda Albright, Alice Ha«eman, Sandra Education Department, has lawyers couple will reside at Jackson A M I m « f ------from 34 states enrolled at its summer him medicine, but it did little good. was off for that rat in the back of the Fttflen, lagis^tin and Robert Vetjck, and ‘"Maithis” was all set to chloroform store. Don’t worry, he’ll get him. Heights, Long Island. ikaaon BaimUsc session. Tmm HIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE, HIGHT6TOWN. MERCER COUNTY, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 1941

HIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE GEO. P. DENNIS, Editor and Pubhialiar KNOW NEW JERSEY-No. 14 W. PALMER DENNIS, Aasociat* Editor 3yG. A. Bradshaw Phoo. 373 THEY MET IN BOMBAY TH U R SD A Y , JU L Y 24, l»41 “They Met in Bombay” shows at the Entered at the Hightstown, N. J., Post Office as second class matter. local theatre on Sunday and Monday featuring Clark Gable and Rosalind Published every Thursday at the Gazette Building, 114 Rogers Avenue. pvusscll who arc cast as a pair of jewel thieves who meet m a. B ombay hotel where both are hanging out to secure TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION the famous stone, Star of Asia. One Year.—.....„...$1.50 Eight Months...-....._...$1.00 Six Months... ..75c Gable poses as a Lloyd's of London Four Months...... 50c Single Copy...... 4c sleuth and AHss Russell as a baroness hiding most of the time under a white hat ,one-half as big as the dome on the White ITouse in Washington. Little Wonder A Man Objects The two of course eventually fall in love and are followed by the police from Bombay to China. After foiling When He Can’t Get A Gun to Fight the plot of Captain Peter Lorre upon whose boat they take refuge they escape Objection to an extensdon of the period of service under the Con­ to Hong Kong. scription act steins mainly from the treatment given men now serving Flere (Bable dons an army captains uniform in order to rob a Chinese. in the Army. While they sweat and toil and trudge under the hot sun However, he finds himself mixed up for meager pay, their compatriots sit back in easy chairs after a live- evacuating British nationals from a city surrounded by the Japanese. Single- day 40-hour week and meditate whether or not they should strike for handed he puts down the invaders and shorter hours and more money. is awarded the Victoria Cross for his bravery. Reginald Owen is also includ­ This dislike for undergoing training for more than a year does not ed in the cast and does a good job as the British general. arise from lukewarm patriotism. America gives much to her subjects Miss Russell and Gable perform ably, that no other country can afford to give. For which all Americans are not up to their usual par, with the show entertaining enough although loose in thankful. some spots. One visit to F'urt IJix or any other encampment into which trainees THE DEVIL AND MISS JONES are sent is enough to dishearten any man. A man already inducted tells “The Devil and Miss Jones” appears his friends to escape the draft if at all possible. And more so does lie at the local playhouse next Thursday emphasize his statements now that there is a great possibility that he and Friday and here we find Charles A Fisherman’s Paradise Coburn cast in the role of a rich and may stay for more than a year. powerful department store owner. He The inductee's voice is bitter when he talks of what he has left Well-stocked trout streams throughout New management and annual restocking, the New picks up the pa,per one morning and Jersey will lure an army of enthusiastic fresh Jersey State Fish and Game Commission for finds that he has been hanged in effigy behind. Fie is an educated man. Graduation from college, a good job water anglers to the rural sections of the State years has made New Jersey a fisherman’s outside one of his large stores. Think­ ahead, plans for marriage—all have been blasted by the draft. F’irst when the annual trout season opens April 15. paradise. The thousands of licensed fishermen ing he should delve into this thing and It will close July 15. From the world-famous who participate in the annual trout season find out the cause of the trouble he dis­ he was to be in only for a \-ear; now he is in for the ‘‘duration,” guises himself as a clerk in his shoe de­ hatchery at Hackettstown where trout are constitute a vigorous compliment to the un­ partment and begins to have a good Separated from his job and his family, forced to surrender much raised by scientific breeding and feeding, ceasing work of the commission. Receipts time. of his freedom of civilian life, placed under unaccustomed regimentation tank trucks have been dispatched for weeks from fishing and hunting licenses are used While in this capacity he meets Mary to public streams to liberate thousands of exclusively to finance this great work in re­ Jones (Jean Arthur) who attempts to and discipline—he is required to work hard and long for $21 and ;f3o[ these healthy legal-sized fish for the enjoy­ taining wildlife in the State at no cost to the instruct hiin in the tricks of the trade a month. Where is his live-ilay 40-hour week. | ment of licensed fishermen during the open taxpayers. ami lends him money for lunch. season. Through continual work, careful Robert Cummings furnishes the other Industrial workers strike in vital plants. Defense supplies are held j Hcxo Jersey Council, Slate House, Trenton half of the romantic element and Ed­ up becau.se union men feel they aren’t being paid enough and they are,! mund Gwenn jiortrays the section man­ Don Redman, the jazz great of small ager wlu) rules clerk Coburn with an being worked too hard. They are safe from the draft; they are vital I -\raxine Sullivan’s maxims: A song iron hand. An amusing show and jilenty Notes To You I writer who tries to get drunk for in- Stature, snapped up the inspiration for of fun. to defense. If the Army could say work or be drafted, the little men ispiration will never get beyond the first his latest song hit, scratched out the would trample over each other to see who could get hack to work thcj three bars. melody and polished off a “hep” lyric By HARRY KRAMER * 4c (luring an eight-minule ride from Times fastest. The Army has yet to apply this sanction. ; (Copyrij^ht 1941—H arry Kram er) And Meyer Davis points out that the j Square to Harlem. Maneuvers are held w.ith dummy tanks, anti-aircraft guns, rifles,' it was good news for the Negroes 'horsey type of girl never seems to get ' The sung is modestly sub-titled “What when iienny Goodman broke down and a groom. ; a Song,” and according to Dun, “They’s U. S. Army maneuvers look more like grown men playing a kid’s game also broke iirecedeiit by naming his idea 4: 4c * j just all plumb got together with my of cowboys and Indians. Rang! Bang! Your dead. Bang! Rang! of the finest hoi soloists in tiie business. ’ 'I'he jiarade of top name bands march­ (head and bang—1 felt that electric light e s on at one of New York’s favorite j gleamin’." Women are dime a dozen in Wash­ I am not. You’re dead ! As his favorite orchestras, the nation’s ington, _Men^ well, they command a favorite bandleader picked Duke Elling­ I dance spots with Clyde Lucas and his j :|c tc 4c One group of citizens .sacrifices everything. Another group exploits I orchestra. Lyn Lucas (Clyde’s brother) I ^ Just a year ago, trumpeter Charlie belter price. They are 25 cents a dozen, ton and Count Hasie. and the women aren’t particular whether Soloists recommended to the “Times’ ” j and Johnny J.)e Voogdt are featured Sjiivak gave up his chair in the Jack the nation in time of necessity. Unions reason that they’d better get I with the orchestra. I Teagarden orchestra, and set about or- there are good or bad ones in that doz­ straight-laced readers were Teddy Wil­ en. All they want is men. Latest cen­ the gravy now or they never will get it. son and Count Hasie. pianists; Lester ^ 4f * i.ganizing his ow’n baud. This week i Just before any long train trip the Charlie is celebrating the first anniver­ sus reports reveal there are only 91.1 General Marshall has presented sound reasons why the selectees Young, tenor saxophone; Cootie Wil­ men in Washington, D. C., for every 100 liams, trumpet; Joe Jones, drum; Wal­ (girls in Phil Spitalny’s “Hour of Charm” sary of his highly successful crew, which should be kept. Men over 28 would probably lie released with younger I orchestra draw the names of baseball .is currently heard about fifteen nights women. _ That is the greatest dispropor­ ter Page, bass violin; and Jack Teagar­ tion registered anywhere in the country. men replacing them. The General wants to be able to meet any emer­ den. trombone. j teams out of a hat. The ones with the 'a week via tlie Columbia and Mutual (higher scores for that day get to ride . networks. So you can see. the women are having gency, Men trained for one year could not meet an army .such as Flitler Who are these men who have just i in the lower berths. a hell of a time, but don’t the men love received the Goodman accolade? Well, * 4! 4: 4c 4= 4« it. is able to held. Probably they never would have to. Rut if that neces­ Count Pas'e is a band leader in his Johnny Long’s band continues on its (finny Simms, Kav Kyser’s songstress, sity came, wouldn’t a guy like Tom Hopkins or Harold Rovett look silly own right. So is Jack Teagarden, who meteoric way by remaining at a fa- , is the only one who can truthfully say formerly played with Paul Whiteman. ! mous New York hotel for the duration j she's got the bandleader’s goat. Kay Joe Jones, formerly with Stuff Smith, There’s a hot time in the Vatican City facing a 20-tou tank with a rifle. of the summer. This reward, fitting I got a gift goal named "Slinky” recently during this summer. Pope Pius XII, now plays Avitli Count Basie, as does and deserved, was given to the Long .and had it shipped to Ginny’s California Americans are not willing to admit a national emergency is at hand. Walter Page. Lester Young recently ranch. unable to vacation at his summer villa, band as a result of a record breaking Caste! Gandolfo, outside Rome, because War is so close one can feel the breath of Mars down his neck. Failure left the Count to form his own band. initial thirty day stand. I 4c 4« * Teddy Wilson was a member of the fa­ of the war, will find relief from the to e.xtend the Selective Service act "might well involve a national trage­ 4: 4< 4< I For^the late.st news and gossip about heat in the home of his head gardener. mous Goodman Trio, now has a band of 1 )ick Stabile and his orchestra now on I your favorites in the music world be dy.” his own, and Cottie Williams, famous a theater tour with Eddie “Rochester” The head gardener will move into one I sure to tune in "Notes to*You” briiiad- of the Vatican palaces. Poor guy. Congress must accept the judgment of professionals who know what “growl” trumpeter, is a member of Anderson. Grace Barrie, Mrs, Stabile, cast daily, 11 to 11 ;3() a. m.. over WINS Benny’s own band. is the featured vocalist with the unit. —I(X)() On your dial. war is and who are responsible for the national defense. “The nation’s rifle problem has been There are many problems connected with the draft and its extension solved,” so spake Robert P. Patterson, that congress is reluctant to solve. Congressmen are opposed to assume under-secretary of war, last week. Pro­ duction of Garand semi-automatic rifles responsibility when they can push it off on someone else. They would BOOK of the WEEK has reached the LOOO-a-day mark, ac­ rather blast at each other in their chambers and make fools out of them­ cording to Patterson. At present there are 200,000 Garands with the troops and selves. Their verbal blasts are the closest they’ll ever come to a battle­ within a few months every soldier au­ field. They should worry. thorized to carry one will have one. “It is a trait cleverly observable amongst us that we History lists the man's achievements and gives to pos­ What will he do with it after he gets it? Americans are prone to go to most amazing lengths in terity a battle cry that still is ringing in the ears of sail- suffering injury, to avoid envolvement in war." or.s. No captain could watch his ship sinking and shout, There Are Two Kinds of Picnics, "I have not yet begun to fight,” without a beleaguered So spake Tom Foiger in the year 1808 in Nantucket A baby is not a luxury. A Chicago people taking his words as a battle cry of freedom. couple kept an itemized account of its The First of Which Is Well Prepared where ships by the hundreds were tied to the wharves, baby for two years, IBrsL year’s cost— forbidden to sail by President Thomas Jefferson's embar­ JPJ Originally N*med John P»ul 1^270.17. Second year's upkeeij—$225.05. ft_ shouldn’t^ be long before the baby Picnicking is at its height. It is often said (by Lew Lehr) that go. Seamen in those days knew nothing of union wages, will be making money at that rate. (A hom*s, and comforts. lii fact, every sailor was out of Commander Ellsberg goes behind the veneer of the picnickers are the craziest people, but they have a lot of fun. Picnick- young captain who was commander of the first vessel lot of Hightstown males would like to work. find a “babv" that was not a luxury. ing's chief value, sociologically speaking, is to teach people the comforts to fly the stars and stripes. The reader is surprised to This is too expensive for them). of home living. Commander Edward Ellsberg begins bis latest novel, find that JPJ was originally named plain John Paul. What "Captain Paul,” with words, that have symbolized the Uni­ made him add the “Jones" to his name is a story in it­ Flot weather is the time for picnics. It is also the time for ants, ted States from the time if began as an offshexit of Eng­ self. The Army's oldest pigeon—Kaiser, 24 bees, spiders, and bulls to pasture in the nicest places. land to the present era. The author delineates the life ■ysoon will become a father again. He Picnics are of two kinds. First, one that is w'ell prepared and of Captain John Paul Jones, probably America’s most fa­ History makes a hero such dull and uninteresting is expecting his 74th and 75th squabs at Fort A'fonmouth next week. Kaiser •thought out ahead of time. Second, the kind that lovers go on—the spur mous captain of the sea. stuff. It remains for novelists to come along and redis­ is the only living veteran of the World of the moment stuff. “Don’t you think it’s a nice day for a picnic” and An historical novel, “Captain Faui” contains what so cover the. conquering heroes of old. Merc words cannot War among the Army's thou.sands of homing pigeon s and has long since all that gush. many other books have thoroughly revealed before. The describe the effect created by Commander Ellsberg's pow­ erful but sometimes imdigestible narrative. After read­ doubled the average life span for birds The family council (do they still have them?) decides all about the inefficiency of the early congress—a procedure that has of his breed. (No Hightstown pigeon not yet been remedied. The winning of battles in face ing thi.s book the reader will regard the whisky of the can boast of such a record in procrea­ first kind. Everyone offens suggestions. Everyone is unwilling to ac­ of insuperable odds—no American has yet lost one of same name as too weak. Nothing could be that strong. tion). cept the other guy’sideas. And Pop meekly says yes to each one in them, so ail authors agree. The words of Tom Foiger, a young Nantucketer, gives turn. Mother, who usually doesn’t want to go anyway—she always is Description* Long snd Drawn Out the story to the reader. Will wonders never cease? How Atlantic City is starting a drive to left to clean up—decides the where and when part of the picnic. such a man in such a x^osition should have such a com­ eliminate unnecessary noise in an effort At last the day arrives. It is going to be a simple affair. Peanut Taken as a whole, the book is good. But the descrip­ mand of tlie English language. to inake the shore resort a peaceful city. tions of Nantucket in the days of 1808 and of the whaling Violators face a $200 fine or 90 days in butter, jelly, ham sandwiches are fixed. Olives and pickles are in jars Ihere are few novels written that in one way or an­ jail. Wonder what will happen when all cruises at the time are too long and drawn out. It takes with screw tops on them. This eliminates forgetting the can opener. other do not connect the period in which the plot takes those bathing beauties coine to town? Commander Ellsberg too long to get into the main part If the police think nobody is going to place with the period in which the author lives. The nov­ It’s off to the races, pardon, the open spaces. of liis novel. What happened to him in this case has hap­ hoot and holier then, they are crazy. elist must alwa}^s bring forth his opinion of the world The major problem is where to eat. Mom had decided but when pened to many an author. He becomes over-effusive. ITe of today as filled with chaos and destruction. And Com­ is overcome with the thought of his descriptive 'power. He they got there it didn’t look too good a spot. Too many other people mander Ellsberg is no exception. It happens in this case, The transjiortadon bottleneck in the loses the reader in a deluge of words that depict a picture ■W'-ere ahead of them. F’op finally gets nerve up to speak and he finds a though, that one can’t laugh off the plain truth, oil industry, caused principally by trans­ spot. even better than a camera could do. Perhaps he is mak­ fer of SO American oil tankers to Brit­ ing up for the lack of kodaks in. the old days. “There is in congress a collection of the greatest men ish service, soon is to be aggravated Everything is fine until Pop finds they left the beer can opener upon this continent, in point of abilities, virtue, and for­ by a shift of additional vessels. The When the Commander strips his writings of the em­ government is considering taking from home. And he can’t break the neck off the top of a can like he could tune. Every man in it is a great man, an orator, a critic, bellishments his work becomes one of excitement, thrilling 25 to 50 more tank ships from the Texas and a statesman, and therefore every man upon every with a bottle. So he drinks milk. to read and to imagine. But when he fires the broadside, Gold Coast-Eastern port runs for use in The usual impediments are handy. Sand gets into the sandwiches; question must show his oratory, ius criticism, and his poli­ part by the British and in part for the rides the shots into the rigging of the doomed ship, splits tical abilities.” expanding activities of the U. S. Navy. ants are all over the place; no bulls though, thank heavens. the mast in half, kills a couple of seaman, and then falls If John Adams ever said that, he certainly said a The picnic was a success. That is, until it started to rain. What over the other side into the ocean—that's going a little mouthful! In the average New Jersey community kind of an evening did you expect anway! loo far. Six hundred pages is too long a book, even for GW T^' 82 per cent of the school children have Captain John Paul Jones has never been presented decayed teeth which endanger their The other kind of a picnic. Oh, you mean the lovers' attempt. which didn’t stop there. By cutting down on his wand­ to his admiring public in such a light as Commander Ells­ health. This wa$ the result of surveys Well, the was in a fog and couldn’t eat anyhow. She tried to be prac­ erings into the briny deep and keeping to the subject, the conducted by the state department of berg (presents him in this book. Any man who at 21 has tical, hut he wouldn’t let her. It ended up with both of them talking author could have made his book more readable. His health during the last year. In small been a pirate, slaver, and captain of a merchantman would book is good, but the reader doesn’t know it until about municipalities where dental facilities ahont ^ bees, and the birds, and the flowers, and vou know what were lacking, more than 90 per cent of attract even the dullest of youth. And JPJ is more than the 200th page. By that time the reader has turned to c te . that. the children require immediate dental Dick Tracy. treatment. and yews for the smaller ones. Prun­ tfimMHIlHllllltlMMMMlliMiagimiiMHttMUMMUIIMIUttMffnHniftltNffl ing about once a year should be ample. Another plant worthy of consideration Your Home and Garden for hedging purposes is the American holly. It will grow in well-drained soil on the acid side, and once established ! Home IN THE Kitchen will last for a great many years. The Amii holly does not resent pruning, and one Youi' Garden This Week plant usually grows around two or two- such treatment a year is sufficient. blooming perennials may also be sown Another advantage to the use of holly first Jersey Starr apples to bethe more vitamins and minerals in and near and-a-half feet high, and blooms in late at this time. brought in this season. By A, C. McL e a n June or early July. If the faded blooms is that the pruning may be left until the skin than in the flesh near the core, (N. J. A^ricuJtural Extension Service) Since biennials seeds are usually fine, just before Christmas, when the clip­ "Don’t overlook the numerous possi­ it is advisable to cook apples with the are cut back, the lovely blue or white bilities these tart green apples, fresh flowers appear practically throughout they should be sown to a shallow depth pings may be used for decorative pur­ skins on. Recent research in the cook­ After the recent heavy rains flower to produce best results. Protecting the poses indoors. from Jersey orchards, offer homemak­ ing of this health-giving fruit revealed borders may need an application pf fer­ the summer. Peachleaf Bellflowers are seed beds with a covering of burlap un­ ers who wish to keep their summer that freshly prepared and unstrained tilizer, especially one rich in soluble longJived and they grow well in almost til the seeds begin to germinate, allows There are many other plants to choose menus economical as well as wholesome applesauce made with unpeeled apples phosphorus a n d nitrogen. The rains any well-drained soil that isnot too acid. retention of moisture near the suarace for hedge purposes, as a trip to your and appetizing,” Miss J. Kathryn Fran­ had more of the original vitamin con­ have been so heavy that available food Among the better forms of Campanu­ level, and thus promotes ideal germina­ nerserymaii will quickly reveal. cis, Mercer County home demonstration tent of the apple than sauce made from materials have leached away in many la persicifolia are moerheimei with tion. agent, advises. "Since the fruit cooks apples peeled and strained. soils. H plants in your borders are not double white flowers, Telham Beauty a The covering, however, should be re­ to a soft pulp very quickly, it should growing but seem to be standing still large light blue, and Ladham’s Giants, moved just as soon as the plants peep be used for dishes in which this is a and starting to turn yellow, an applica­ of which there are several strains which through the ground. Avoid keeping the desirable quality—applesauce, juicy pies, Spice Puffs tion of fertilizer now would be a big are very large flowering. Plants of beds too wet, as too much moisture is o f lf » apple betty apple snow, and apple tap­ advantage. some of these are not yet available in damaging and often causes poor ger­ ioca. Incidentally, this is the time to 1 cup .flour Don’t use too much fertilizer, how­ this country, but seed can be obtained. mination from seed rot and encourages makers of the county. Since there are 1 teaspoon cinnamon ever; six or seven pounds to 1,(XX) Peachleaf Bellfiow’ers may be raised damping off. SMAfilNES make a ^supply of tart applesauce for Ya teaspoon cloves square feet is about right. Faster re­ from seed or one can buy strong plants It is well to remember that seeds of the coming winter. Early summer ap­ % teaspoon nutmeg sults may be obtained if you use this in from most nurserymen. Double-flower­ a n y of th e perennials and biennials ples make exceptionally good canned teaspoons baking powder solution. Most seed stores and dealers ing forms do not come true from seed which will germinate within a week or applesauce. % teaspoon salt in farm supplies have what is called sol­ and very little seed is produced by the 10 days may be planted at this time of MARINES ON GUARD "If your family prefers a pie that] Y2 cup granulated sugar uble "plant food” f o r transplanting. true double. Nurserymen maintain their the year. is a little less juicy and has more body, 1 teaspoon vanilla Apply this in w-ater according to the di­ stock of the choice double kinds by Scores of ex-Marines are helping to you may wish to combine with Starr Y2 cup milk rections given. These transplanting division and by taking cuttings. guard the wealth of our country from apples a few of the Winesaps still avail­ 2 tablespoons fat. melted mixtures are not expensive and will re­ Fall is a good time to plant this bell­ In Planning to Plant coast to coast. Virtually every bank- able in the market. It. is easier to make 1 egg, beaten store plants quickly to health and vigor. a successful pie with this combination, Mix ingredients and beat well. Half­ flower, although it may also be done in inj'- house of importance on either coast This is a good time to look over dah­ the spring. Seed sown now should Hedges, Consider Materials and for this reason some cooks prefer fill deep custard cups, well buttered. lias to see that they are staked prop­ make plants large enough to bloom next includes a number of soldiers of the sea it to using Starrs alone.” Fasten waxed paper over the tops, hold­ erly and to run them back to encourage sumrner—but remember, don’t plant ex­ Gardeners who are planning to plant among its group of guards. Like other fruits, apples help balance ing in place with rubber bands. Steam your growth around the base and flow­ cept in a well drained location that is a new hedge, or to replace the one now Well-disciplined, stalwart men, some the day’s meal plans by furnishing cer­ 35 minutes. growing, ought to consider materials tain minerals, vitamins, some acid, and Or put all the batter in a large-sized ers in the fall. A little extra fertilizer not too acid. of whom have grown gray in the ser­ now would be a help—about an ounce that will give a well-kept appearance roughage, Miss Francis reminds home- mold and steam an hour. or two per plant well distributed over with the least amount of pruning care. vice. secure these positions after leaving the surface and worked into the soil. Hard Rains, Winds The plants which have been used uni­ the Aiarine Corps mainly on account of Here again, liquid fertilizer has an ad­ versally for hedges are the common their training and their ability to shoot privet and barberry, but their mainten­ vantage. In general, the same applies Knock Down Plants straight. ITonorable discharges, usually NEW MODERN SHOWROOM to chrysanthemums, but it is a little too ance requires continual care during the late to pinch these back now. In sunimer many thunderstorms and growing period. covering periods of from 16 to 30 Displaying Hightstown Frayproof This is a good time to lift and divide heavy winds play havoc with the plants Both these plants are reasonable in years, give proof of their dependability. Bigelow Tailormade and spring-blooming perennials. This in­ in the garden. In good gardening prac­ price and easy to obtain from friends An organization called the Ex-Marine and are not difficult to grow, but on ac­ Alexander Smith Floor Plan Rugs cludes a good many garden flowers that tice this task is attended to before the Guards is located at Los Angeles, guard­ bloom before the first of June, such as plants are maturely grown. A well- count of their vigor in developing they RUGS FOR EVERY ROOM IN THE HOUSE cariy-fluwering asters, primulas, a n d staked plant has a better chance to with­ need a lot of maintenance. It is es­ ing national defense plants against pos­ Also—Sloan-Blabon Rugs and Linoleums stand a severe storm. pecially necessary during wet summers sible sabotage. Smartly clad in olive pyrethrums. By dividing such plants drab, the former sea soldiers recently RUBBER GLOSS FLOOR WAX, CLEANER now, resetting and giving them a good A sturdy, rigid stake embedded in the to cut the California privet quite a few times to_ make it look presentable; passed in review before a group of offi­ •nd FURNITURE POLISH start, you can have strong plants for ground to a depth of 12 or 18 inches, to cials. next year's bloom. This may be done which each large stem or stalk is tied otherwise it gives a straggly and un­ J. w. ARCHER any lime up to September I, but the securely, but not too tightly, will hold kempt appearance. Later they demonstrated the approved earlier it is done the better the plants the plant flrmly during most storms. A The common barberry has its short­ military method of guarding key manu­ Phone 26-W 208 N. Main St. become established for next year’s flow­ good method is to tie the stem at two comings in that one needs to be care­ facturing plants, with emphasis on de­ OPEN EVERY EVENING HIGHTSTOWN ers. Remember, however, that colum­ or three different heights for overall ful when removing the prickly clippings tection and control of fire. A team of bines do not divide successfully; it is support. after pruning, as they make nuisance instructors also presented an exhibition scratches in the flesh. It, too, requires of ju-jitsu. better to raise a good supply of these Not only do staked plants withstand frequent cutting back to keep it within The Ex-Marine Guards number about from seed. storm damage; they also improve th e bounds. Be sure to keep roses sprayed regu­ appearance of the garden. Many of the 150 men and five officers. Most of them larly, for this is the season when black- Barberry hedges near shade trees, re­ have seen service in many parts of the tall-growing plants such as delphiniums, quire a lot of time in the fall or spring SEMI-ANNUAL SALE spot finds conditions very favorable, par­ chrysanthemums, michaelmas, daisies, globe and they are now on 24-hour duty ticularly if we have a continuation of for removal of fallen leaves that collect in the Los Angeles. They patrol air­ hollyhocks, lilies and any of the other in them and slick like glue to the thorny craft plants, tool and dyeworks and the moist period. Also keep a lookout tall varieties last longer and look better MEN’S FINE SHOES for late outbreaks of aphids or plant branches. These are time factors in steamship companies. when tied up. In borders, where caring for such type hedges that should lice. Regular spraying with arsenate of peonies are planted, they, too, may be lead or some of the rotenone compounds be taken into consideration. as low as tied lip to reduce their spreading sur­ Tliere are other plants to choose from Green Apple Pie Is Still also destroys or drives away Japanese face, if annuals are inlerplanted. beetles. One of the rotenone-sulphur that are slower growing and very at­ mixtures is a very good dust or spray Tying up plants after a storm has tractive the year round; they may cost Man’s Favorite Dessert All Boys’ Shoes Reduced for summer work. This can be used blown them over is a difficult task, be­ more at the beginning, but they are All Summer Hose Reduced either wet or dry, according to direc­ cause of the danger of breaking them. much more satisfactory and economical Once upon a time there must have in the long run. Your nurseryman has been an ingenious cook who decided to tions put out by the manufacturer. For a number of hardy and attractive shrubs be just a bit daring and take a chance further information about spraying con­ on putting green apples in a pie! She sult your county agent or State experi­ Mid-Summer Tasks that provide the desired beauty with ment station. much less maintenance. Among these certainly deserves a place among the Late July or early August is an ex­ are hemlocks and yews, either of which world’s unsung heroines, for green ap­ cellent time to plant seeds of pansies, will make a handsome hedge. The hem­ ple pie has been a dessert favorite ever English daisies, forget-me-nots, Siberian locks are most useful for larger hedges since, and can be made right now with 80 £ . State St., T renton Peachleaf Bellflowers wall flowers, and any other early bloom- inging biennials that are considered By A. C. M cLEAN hardy when planted in the open ground. (N. J. Agricultural Extension Service) Seeds of these plants germinate well in late summer, witli the exception of the Among the most satisfactory summer-1 pansies, which resent continued tern- blooming perennials is Campanula per-. peraUircs over 75 degrees Fahrenheit, ‘sicifolia, Peachleaf Bellflower. This] Seeds of delphiniums and other early Join the Shopping Throngs H 0M EonB3 Who Will Come to New Brunswick for the w R M G E 'Vne^^ Big Bargain Day of the Year

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1-24 By Soak gelatin in cold water. Bring New Brunswick bouillon to boiling point and add to ELIZA gelatin slowly, stirring until dis­ solved. Chill until slightly thick, M. ened, add the mayonnaise, and beat STEPHENSON thoroughly. Add other ingredients. Pour into a mold which hr been Home Service oiled with salad or olive oil. Chill Director in the refrigerator until firm. Un- mold on chop plate in a bed of let­ DAY J ersey C entral tuce. Arrange chilled carrot strips, P ower & L ig h t small cooked peas, marinated in Co. French dressing, celery hearts, hard THURSDAY, JULY 3Ut cooked eggs, and radish roses SALADS FOR HEALTH around the salad. Serve mayon­ naise or French dressing. (Small pT* OR many generations salads hot biscuits or buttered toast with have been recognized for their hot tea or coffee contribute to yovw health-giving qualities. Today we salad success.) know salads are an excellent source of vitainins and minerals. Due to Frozen Fruit Salad the variety of vegetables and fruits that are available, there seems little 5 ounces cream cheese. need for monotony in this part of 1 teaspoon salt, our menu planning. What dish is cup mayonnaise. there more versatile? Whether you Juice 1 lemon. fccrve A delicious crisp fruit sa'ad Y2 cup diced pineapple. the first course or after the meat 1 cup diced orange pulp. course, or even a fruit salad with a 1 banana, sliced. dressing slightly sweetened for des- 8 maraschino cherries cut k sert, your idea will meet with equal quarters. success. Vegetables, seafood, fish, 1 cup whipped cream, nteat, or chicken offer an abun­ Y2 cup broken pecan nuts. dance of material for the main dish Mix cream cheese with salt, salad. A combination of vegetables mayonnaise, and lemon juice, then and nieat with an appropriate dress­ add the fruit and nuts. Whip cream New Brunswick Merchants Unite in a ing is fit for a king on a hot sum­ and fold into the fruit mixture. mer day. Pour into freezing tray. Freeze Molded salads are good possibili- with cold control set at coldest hes for time releasing meals, and point until salad is frozen. Set cold Great City-Wide Bargain Saie That arc, as well, the simplest type of control back to n o r m a l position salad to garnish attractively. Brush until serving time. Serve in a plat­ the inside of the salad mold with ter in a bed of crisp salad greens. •alad oil before pouring in the salad Garnish with strawberries and Has No Parallel in the State and you will never need worry halves of pecan nuts. about removing the salad for serv- *ng. Salad oil or olive oil docs not Dressing for Fish SaUds harden when exposed to refrig­ Yi cup diced cucumber. erator temperature so you can be Yi cup fresh tomato pulp. Bargains for Women! Bargains for Men! Bargains for •ure that the salad will be released 1 teaspoon onion juice, perfect shape. There is on the 1 teaspoon lemon juice. market a'great assortment of dishes 1 teaspoon salt. the Family, And Bargains for the Home! of all sizes and shapes to help you Dash cayenne pepper. make delectable looking pictures of 1 cup mayonnaise. your salads. Peel and dice, -the cucumber mfo Ham Moutae SaU4 small pieces. Peel and cut toma­ Leek for Hm Mficial New Bratwiek Day Sips et Pirtleipalln Usm 1 tablespoon gelatin. toes with small dice and drain % cup cold water. thoroughly. When ready to serve, 2 cups bouillon. mix all the ingredients with ^ cup mayonnaise. mayonnaise. H cup dked celery. ipiaw eR THE l»TE-TI«l$., y cup dked tour pkkla. If you have questions about these H top minced plmiento. or any other recipes, write or call Iqr Om BeUU DhrUoa New BnDMwkk cup minced green pepper, Mrs. Stephenson, Jersey Central eC cup chopped cooked smoked Test Kitchen, Allenhurst, New . ham. Jersey. F aft Poor HIGHT3TOWN GAZETTE, HIGHTSTOWV, MERCER COt;NTY. NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 1941 Farr, Pullen Pace Mates in 12-10 Victory Over St. Anthony’s Churchmen Will Play Southenders Gran bury Driver Tuesday Night for Championship Among Leaders

Amidst numerous and profuse arguments, with a protest that wasn’t Kenneth Applegate, Cranbury's repre­ sentative in the 200 mile championship a protest tossed in for good measure, the Dairymen surprised St. An­ stock car race at Langhorne Speedway, thony’s Monday night on the grammar school field. Roy Pullen’s mates Forsgate Drops Sunday, finished e'ghth in a field of forty starters. tripped the erstwhile league-leading Cluirchnien, 1 2 - I 0 , knocking them Out of League, In gaining one of the to.p positions into a tie with the Southenders. Tossin It Around Applegate started 38th from the pole The playoff tilt between the Stultsmen and the Keltymen will be and gradually worked his way up among Lacemen Return the leaders by keeping a steady pace played Tuesday night on diamond No. 2. Roth tens have w(jn seven • with george foster with his 1938 Ford coupe and pulling games while losing one in the Hightslown Community Softball league.! into the pits for water and gas only Roy Pullen’s Dairymen scored the up­ on three occasions. The Southenders-Dreadnoughts till® When the time comes that players try to think for the umpires and set of the season Monday night and Going into a spin in front of the pits scheduled for that night will be! Garners Four Hits sent St. Anthony’s into a tie for first midway in the race Applegate gave a j must forcibly try to have them think their way, it’s time to quit playing place with the Southenders. This neces­ fine exhibition of car handling when he moved back in t>rder to get the first | I ball. The Dairymen-St. Anthony’s tilt Monday night which the former sitates a play-olif tilt to determine the brought his Ford out of it. half plav completed as soon as pos-’ j won, 12-10, resulted in a situation that was supposed to have been pre- first half champion in the Plightstown Rounding the north turn coming over sible. Community Softball League. It will be the tunnel he skidded, sliding broadside : vented at the meeting of managers before the softball league began. placed Tuesday evening with Charles toward the pit mechanics and specta­ Seventh Inning Rally Stopped ^ I Several flareups came about because of the tension existing. The Howard scheduled to umpire behind the tors. but the Cranbury boy pulled his Outplayiuj," i h e Churchmen in ^ plate. car back into control, still threatening j game was close and both teams wanted to win. As a match, it was one By defeating tlie Churchmen, 14-8. the to turn over, straightened it out and every department, the Milkmen ! of the best. But too many players thought they knew more than tlie ililknien moved into undisputed third continued on as if nothing had hap­ place two games ahead of fourth place pened. tagged Bill Rhoades for 15 solid blows i umpires and wanted them to know® asitirants—Rangers, Dreadnoughts, and indiuliiig three doubles. Dune Farr ac- ' peared, they drove offi and didn’t even 'I'he race was won by Roy Hall of At­ !it. Dutch Neck who are all tied at the .500 lanta, Ga., who started second from the counted for three singles and three runs lliank Russ. mark with four wins and four losses. Ijole, led at the first turn and never re­ in three limes to have a perfect I At the managers’ meeting every- 'I'ied for seventh place are the Jersey linquished it to go on and be flagged ;one agreed to be doves of peace at Homesteads and I''orsgate. Last place as the winner. Seven accidents took evening lor the victors. Mike Radische • Emil Woife is telling this one on is occupied by the Methodists who were and Charlie Cullen were the big guns I the lilts. No arguments, no baiting of place during the race with no one seri­ himself. One day last week he was on unable to gain a victory. ously injured. for the losers, each drilling out three umpires, etc. What haiipens? As the Only nine teams will take part in the .singles and tallying three times. i officials aren’t paid and are reluctant to the Peddle golf course and feeling in second half, Forsgatc has dropped out good shape. Teeing off at the second Keltymen Win Seventh The lead see-sawed back and forth, exorcise the authority of tossing a play- and no one will replace the Jamesburg hole, Emil took a mighty swing—and lads. Non-league g a in e s will be ar­ changing hands three times in six in­ ler out of the game, the player^ lake As Dairymen, Rangers fell smack on his face. ranged with the Peddle Summer School nings. A St. Anthony’s rally in the ’ over. to take ui) this slack. 'J'he Native Lace Some golfers may be slower than otli- Also Rack Up Victories ^ top half of the final canto was cut I J/X'al soflballcrs won’t admit the um­ will again be included. Ttip ^”(1 women may be slowest of them short after Joe Radische had singled pire has any authority at all. , „ , , jail. Here is one story that accents the! Hightstown Community Three games were played Thursday and scored on an infield out and an ; threatens to toss a fellow out lor abu-|]auer statement. i night in the local softball league with overthrow. sive languaKc or arguing too much, ami j Thompson went golfingi Softball League the Dairymen, Rangers, and St. An- Tim Kelly. Jr., proleblcd the game idle player is all set to square off. yn the Ikddie links one Sunday after-j tsony’s chalking up victories. The Kel­ Standings tymen scored their seventh straight win during this inning, but he later found he ii'ighting will settle whether or not the noon recently. While she was digging! 1\'. Tv. Pet. 1 had no grounds for a protest. Joe Rad­ JOHNNY CAMPBELL plavcr will leave the field or not. The,‘l>™ts, Mrs, J a n e I), 'rhompson, her j to draw nearer the first half champiou- ^ J • t * mothcr-m-law, went to Trenton to watch I 7 1 .875' shij). ische had singled and advanced to sec­ lump give.s up m disgustand quits. Its j \ 7 1 .8751 ond on a wild pitch. Mike Radische' Roy Pullen’s Milkmen were behind, sad but true. ' Mrs. Jane 'Phom{)Son was home ani.in Conung from belmul m both contests st. Anthony’s to determine the: grease-monkev. Mv job will be to as-1 All-Amcrieaii bus siatioii on 42nd street, lulmsuii, 2b 2 0 u K arsh’nbaiini, rf 3 0 1 Lvenngham who outraLed Braun to q,,. Pane's garnered a win in the initial , • ' rn r ri iriisi In rpnoiritip- broken nv-les tnns!uis-i their troubles bej-aii. fl'he eight o’clock S. H utcli’son, sf 2 t) 0 Rudin, p 3 u t) first for the final putoul ami the ball feature on the brilliant n 1 1 c h i n g of halt chamions.. Iowa d ' st m r ^ bus pulled in wilh defective brakes. The 1 Totals 27 6 7 Totals 30 5 6 -h o was invinciWe from n S c e l r t ! liA ^ d o A llr A s and cAAA v iA l | 8:30 bus came in late and it also had Dairym en ...... 0 U 0 1 0 5 X—6 Tbe first three men UD for the ihe third frame on ill. Afchm Uenels- jn.it iii„no ir ne ca maae ii. . rie usual , remir -ind service” something wrong. So, all in all, it was 1 J ersey ) loinest e;uls ...... 3 0 1 0 1 0 0—5 The first three men up t o r the a 5 to 4 L J"”.!’® 1” haseball league.s m 1 cnton|ity to repa . and sc tee. | iiiidnigln before Charlie reached Highls- Churchmen banged out hits and -Miing in to upper half of th e ^'i Anthony’s knotted the counted- in the Peterson. Jr,, allowed but eight bingles Russ Cottrell is some sort of a hero maneuvers and I imagine that will be Rhoades, p 4 McCarty, c 3 1 1 this week. Friday of last week he quite an experience. They will last un­ string catcher for the Dairymen’s soft- G. Byrne, ss 4 2 Clayton, lb 3 0 2 fifth by manufacturing two runs on two wvith Gore giving up eleven in the final 3 0 0 singles anti a . | contest. stoiiped a runaway horse in Trenton by til the end of September and then I un­ ball team last week. He tangled into a A. U’Reilly, cf 4 2 \ an Cleaf, cf derstand we will start getting our fur­ few dogs on his milk route one day and B. O’Reilly, rf 2 1 U Ibbetson, 2b 3 0 0 The Milkmen regained the lead in , 1 ^ hormanmen will face the league leaping off a truck and grabbing the F. Byrne, If 3 u 0 Cooke, If 3 0 u horse by the mane. loughs. So T may be home sooner than emerged the loser. In attempting to Kelty, Tf., lb 2 0 Sly, p 3 0 1 the latter half of the sixth inning and 1 ennm.gton club Saturday after- 1 expect. break up a dogfight on M o n m o u t h R. Byrne, lb 2 u 0 neve rreleased it. Farr smashed out his latter s diamond in a He and Francis Bagot were riding on Llamilton avenue when they noticed a “Choppy” a,ppreciates letters from any street, Phil succumbed to the concen­ 11 Totals 32 5 10 third straight bingle. Johnny D e s c h u ! with the initial game get- trated attack on him by the canines. Totals 37 followeil with a liner to left center.: under way at 2 p. m. Only a week horse running wild down the street pull­ and all of the boys. He says, “A letter .... 3 2 2 2 1 1 -U Palmer Dennis knocked Farr in with a leaders to ing a wagon behind him. Russ had Fran down here to us soldiers is worth its He wra])ped a pillow around his hand Forsgate ...... 10110 0— 5 weight ill gold.” Here’s a chance to and wrist and waded into the mess. long single to left center. Earl Pullen,^ f i r s t g a m e drive up as close as possible, and Russ leaped to the road and grabbed the give away a lot of gold, boys, without it The next thing onlookers saw was two sent Deschu and Dennis scampering, p^yea (g) Hightstown (5) Chamberlin, Carduner, homew'ard with this second hit and the I abr h o a ab r h horse. After being dragged a few paces, costing you a cent. How about drop­ dogs turning on Phil, They sank their fourth consecutive single off Rhoades, DeflIasio,3b 5 1 3 11 Campbell,ss 4 1 I 0 Russ finally stopped the horse. ping “Choppy” a line? fangs into his wrist and he backed up. Ellis Sock Homers; Howell, 2b 3 0 1 1 1 Morris, 2b 3 0 0 2 Soothing the frantic horse, Russ wait­ Now, however, he has recovered and will Pullen tried to make a home on a Zm uda, ss 4 0 1 0 0 Dey, cf 3 0 0 1 start as catcher for the Milkmen. fly ball to short center after he had Klidza, rf 3 0 0 1 0 Reed, lb 4 1 1 8 ed for the men who were originally Forsgate Wins Finally Curry, 1( 3 1 1 0 0 D’lielsb’k, n 4 0 1 1 driving the animal. The wagon was be­ reached third by means of two wild F alzini.cf 3 2 0 3 0 Peters'n, 3b 3 0 0 1 Charlie Harris had a bit of trouble pitches. Connie Decker filed to Mike Gore, Ib 3 0 1 6 0 Braun, rf 3 1 2 1 ing used to advertise the milk strike convoying his c^harges to a ball game in Radische who threw a stirke to Cullen. Dearolf, c 3 1 2 9 1 Barlow, If 2 1 1 2 in Trenton. When the two men ap- Brooklyn S-«nday. He got Marvin That early Sunday morning tennis Dairymen (16) Rangers (S) Cullen easily had Pullen for the final bchomp, p 4 1 2 0 0 Lacy, c 2 1 0 5 quartet is blossoming forth into a big­ ab r b ab r b ger affair. Now that Jim Dawes and S. H utch son, sf 3 W hite, ss, If 3 0 1 out. Totals 31 61121 3 Totals 28 5 6 21 10 E. Pullen, lb 2 Tornquist, lb 4 0 1 Pages .0400002—6 Herbie Luteken are vacationing, Stu and L. Pullen 3b 2 E. Archer, 3b 4 0 1 Hig-htstown^ . .... 2 3 0 0 0 0 0—5 Second Half Softball Ernie Simp.son are hard put to locate 2 3 C hrist son, If, ss 4 0 0 Rrrors: DeBlasio, Zmuda, Scliomp, Peterson, players. Last week they imported New­ 3 2 2 W . Archer, p 3 0 1 Milked to Perfection Barlow. Runs batted in: Schomp, DeBlasio, Ellis. V, 2b 1 2 Chamberlin, c 2 1 1 Flowell, Zmuda, Dearolf, Gore. Two-base hits: ell Davis from Cranbury and T. Ely G. H utch’son. rf 4 U 1 Ralph, sf 3 1 2 DeBlasjo, Reed, Curry. Stolen bases: Curry, Hutchinson of newly marride fame. 1 Robbins, 2b 3 1 0 Dearolf, Schorap, Dey, Braun. Sacrifices: Mor­ Schedule July 24-Aug 22. 4 2 3 Ritter, cf 1 1 1 ris, Barlow, Bacy, Gore. Struck out: By Den- Ely and Ernie took Stu and Newell 0 0 Dairymen (12) St. Anthony's (10) 2 1 2 Pierson,cf 2 elsbeck, 4; by Schomp, 7. Bases on balls: Off over the hurdles, 2-6, 7-5, 6-4, 6-3. Stu 2 0 U To. Ritter, rf 2 1 1 ab r ab r h Dcnelsbeck, 3; off Schomp, 1. Wild pitch: Den- July 24 Diamond then turned around and beat Ernie, 6-3, ilyrne, 3b 1 0 1 Dennis, If 3 2 M. Radi.sche, sf *1 3 3 eisbeck. Umpires: Calderone and Bransfield. Thurs. Dairymen vs. Dutch Neck 1 Scorer: DeStefano. and Neivell. 6-3, In singles. The boys 32 5 10 Pullen, sf, 3b Cullen, c 3 3 SECOND GAME St. Anthony’s vs. Rangers 2 Totals 41 16 17 Totals L. Pullen, c Braun, If 3 1 2 25 Fri. would like to start a dub of Sunday Dairym en ...... 1 2 1 7 5 0 0—16 Decker, rf Barlow, 3b 2 0 0 Hishtatown («) Page* (7) July Native ^ c e vs. Jersey Homesteads 1 ab r h o a ab r h o a morning tennis - enthusiasts. If inter­ Rangers _____ D 3 0 2 0 0 0— 5 Burtis, 2b 3 Rhoade.s, p 3 0 0 Methodists vs. Dreadnoughts 2 Ellis. Ivilis, 3b 3 Kdty, Sr., lb 3 0 0 Campbell,ss 5 2 3 1 1 DeBlasio,3b 2 3 111 ested, please contact Stu Simpson. Home runs Oiainberlin, Carduner, S. H utch’son,, sf 0 Robbins, 2b 3 0 0 M orris, 2b 4 1 2 3 0 Howell, 2b 3 1 1 4 1 July 28 Mon. Native Lace vs. St. Anthony’s Ernie may leave his pals in ‘a lurch Ja. Ritter. Dveringbam, lb 3 G. Byrne, ss 2 1 0 J)ey, cf, 3b 3 0 0 3 3 Zmuda, ss 4 1114 1 Farr, ^Vhite. Carduner, p 3 2 0 0 Reed, lb 3 0 1 6 0 Falzini, If 3 1110 Jensey Homesteads vs. Rangers soon, though. He has applied for a B. O’Reilly, cf 2 MethodUts (U) Farr, S.3 3 F. Bym e, cf 1 0 0 Den’Isb'k, c 4 0 1 2 0 Dearolf, c 3 1 1 3 2 July 29 Tues. Dairymen vs. Methodists transfer into the dying cadets. All he Forafate (23) ffi)eschu, cf 3 J. Radische, rf 3 2 2 P 't’rs’n,3b,p 4 2 2 0 0 Hough, Ib 3 0 2 9 1 ab I ab r h Braun, rf 3 0 1 1 0 Callahan, rf 0 0 0 1 0 Southenders vs. Dreadnoughts 9 has to do no^Y is pass a physical exam W. Stahl, ss Bigger, c 33 12 15 Totals 30 10 10 i Barlow, If 3 1 1 2 0 Krol, cf 3 0 1 1 1 July 30 Wed. and he’ll be in the air corns. Good Totals Forman, p 0 0 0 0 0 Gore, p 3 0 0 0 3 Native Lace vs. Rangers 1 luck, Ernie. Cadeli, sf Qavton, 2b Dairymen ______1 5 0 3 0 3 X—12 Crawford, cf 3 0 0 0 Q July 31 Thurs. Smoke, cf McDonald, if St. Anthony’s ...... 3 4 0 0 2 0 1-101 ______. ______Jersey Homesteads vs. Dutch Neck 1 Dobenski, H C. Hunt, sf St. Anthony’s vs. Methodists Saunders, c Weslover, 3b Three-base hit: Braun. Two-base hits: L. I Totals 32 6 11 18 4 Totals 24 7 8 21 13 2 SOUTHENDERS TRIUMPH; Pullen, 2; I)ecker, Braun, J. Radische. ; Hightstown ...... 1 0 1 3 1 0 0 -6 Aug. 1 Fri. Ibbetson, 2b Campbell, ss I P ag e.s------4 10 110 x—7 Dairymen vs. Southenders 1 Hunkle, If Dougherty, lb Errors: DeBlasio. Denehsbeck. Runs batted METHODISTS STUMBLE Neef, 3b Comer, cf Aug. 4 Mon. C ook,lb Smock, rf I in: Reed, 2; Morri.s, Barlow, Campbell, 2; Jersey Flomesteads vs. St. Anthony’s 1 Ranjerfl (17) First Legalized Betting , Zmuda, 3; Hough, 2; Dearolf, Falsin. Three M ethodists (5) Slye, p H. Hunt, p I base hits: Peterson, Dearolf. Stolen bases: Ue- Aug. .5 Tues. Dutch Neck vs. Dreadnoughts ab r h ab r 1 Totals 47 14 16 Scheduled for Freehold I Blasio, I-l'owell, 3; Hough, Campbell. Sacri- Southenders vs. Methodists 2 W hile, ss 2 2 McOouald, Ib 4 0 Totals 1 hces: Howell, Callahan, Braun, Barlow, l3ovible Aug. 6 Wed. Tornqui.st, lb 1 0 Campbell, sf 3 2 F orsgate ___ , 10 4 0 0 3 2 4—23 I play; Morris to Dev. Struck out; By Goi'c, 3; Native Lace vs, Dutch Neck 1 E- Archer, If 2 3 C. H unt, si 1 0 Methodists ... . 3 0 2 1 0 4 4—14 Eyes of the trotting and betting world by Peterson, 3. Base.s on balls: Off Gore, 2; Aug. 7 Tlnirs. St. Anthony’s vs. Dreadnoughts W. Archer, p 2 Comer, 3b 4 1 are on the Fr-eehold Race Track today, off Forman, 2; off Peterson, 3. Hit by : 1 Chambcrliu, c 0 Doupherty, ss 0 By Gore (Reed). ^VVild pitciies: Forman, Peter- Southenders vs. Jersey Homesteads 2 Mu.se, rf X 1 W hite, p 1 where a 13-day light harne.ss meeting .son. Hit.s: Off Form an, 2 in one-third inning; Aug. 8 Fri. Rangers vs. Dairymen Byrne, 3b 3 2 H. H unt, cf 1 with the first legalHed betting in the off Peterson, 6 in six and two-thirds innings. 1 Ralph, 2b 1 3 Schanck. rf 0 Pa.H.sed balls: Dearolf, Denel.sbeck. Losing R itter, cf 3 0 Smock, 2b 0 state since 180, is scheduled for August. pitcher: Peterson. Umpires: LippincoU and Aug. n Mon. Native Lace vs. Southenders T h e meeting was authorized by th e t R. Archer, sf 1 1 Johnson, c 0 Bransfield. Scorer; DeStefano. Rangers vs. Dreadnoughts 2 D orn.c 0 Softball Stale Racing Commission which has Aug. i2 Tues. Lloyd, If 0 granted the Freehold Racing Associa- St. Anthony’s vs. Dairymen 1 tion a permit for 13 clear davs of racing, i ^ ‘ Jersey Homesteads vs. Methodists 2 Totals 42 17 14 Totals 33 5 7 Aug. 13 Wed. Dutch Neck vs. Methodists Rangera ...... 1 fi 1 4 3 2 0—17 beginning August 9th. Granted goodlT,! ‘ The 1 Methodists ...... 0 1 3 0 0 0 1— 5 B atting weather, the meeting will be.gin on a i ™ ‘‘’" Aug. 14 Thurs. St. Anthony's vs. Dutch Neck Saturday and end on Saturday, August] ® 1 Southenders (14) Dutch Neck (4) Aug. IS Fri. ab r 23rd, but the ’meeting will be extended Sonja'Henie may be a fancy ice skat­ Dairymen vs. Dreadnoughts 2 ab I for every day of rain. er, but tor a ski scene she was a "flop.” Rangers vs. Southenders 1 Dubell, If 5 1 H. Coward, cf 3 2 1 Coming jost after the grand circuit Radische, ss 4 2 W. Sanders, p 4 1 2 . . . For trick photography in “Sun Val­ Aug. 18 Mon. Native Lace vs. Methodists Thompson, cf Rose, lb 3 0 2 Averages meeting at .Goshen, the meeting is as­ ley Serenade,” she was to glide grace­ 1 F idd, c A. Coward, lb 1 0 0 sured of a plethora of horses to com­ fully on skis past the camera . . . and, Jersey Flomesteads vs. Dreadnoughts 2 C. StuUs, lb Page, 2b 3 J 1 pete for the $26,000 prize money, accord­ Aug. 19 Tues. St. Anthony’s vs. Southenders Dennis, p Mather, ss 4 0 2 since the scene was on a sound stage, 1 E. Turp, 2b C Tindall, 3b 4 0 2 ing to S e c r^ ry Norman L. Marshall. the skis were equipped with rollers and Rangers vs. Dutch Neck 2 W. Stults, rf T, Perrine, c 3 0 0 Officials of the American Totalizator invisible wire and towed by propnien. Aug. 20 Wed. Native Lace vs. Dreadnoughts F/x;ke, 3b G. Conover, If 2 0 1 N e x t Gom^uiy ai^ now at the track installing .''tkim Tamirdff has been signed for a 1 Hopkins, 2b, p M. Tindall, sf 3 0 0 Aug. 21 Thurs. Eldridge, if S. Perrine, rf 1 0 0 i ipteKzcr to4 a "tote” board, and some leading part in “The Corsican Broth­ Jersey Homesteads vs. Dairymen 1 Konover, rf 1 0 0 SVActtuig boMhs beneath the stand, and ers.” Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., was re­ Rangers vs, Methodists 2 Aug. 22 Fri, Totals 40 14 14 T otals 32 4 11 inor«

Pacific Coast Indians gaged in the pillage of the city, even the qtwen. bad hinio.B at., Small Adv. Column making attacks upon Spanish women. tempt to incite a revolution aniiift RATE 5 %* »dT«rtiMaicnt iiiMrted to jjjj, eolamo for lets thui as Record Tribal Chants Twenty-four of the culprits were con­ He was tried and cemdemura to death. ttttU . AM one cent for each word or abbreria- The songs of the Makah, Clayo- demned to death, but no one wanted to On February 21, 1601, Hangman Deri- tion idwre 2Sc. Large lixc heading 10 centa be the executioner. Essex thereupon a tr a . Pottage atampa are eoceptablc. Ada quot, and Quilete Indian tribes, rick had the painful duty of behead^' mierted only on rccei;>t of caah. whose homes are on the coast of pardoned one of them, a sailor named ing the man who had pardoned him in Derrick, in consideration of his hanging Cadiz five years before, and he wielded Washington state and Vancouver is­ the other 23. which he proceeded to do. Ivussell A. Egnor as agent announces PERSONAL land, have been recorded on phono­ the axe as skillfully as he had hitherto The nicest courtesy you can show the rental of the apartment, 138 Mer­ Derrick evidently did a good job of manipulated the noose. your guests is to have their visits graph records by Frances Densmore cer street, to Elmer B. Parker. MEN, WOMEN! WANT VIM? of the Smithsonian bureau of ethnol­ it, for upon his return to England he But his name became a synonym for mentioned on this page. The nicest was made hangman at the famed 'J'y- courtesy you can show your friends Stimulants hi Ostrex Tonic Tablets pep ogy in Washington, D. C. a hangman, and by extension to a gal­ Ji'Iiss Catherine Grover, Miss Lydia up bodies lacking Vitamin Bl, Iron, Cal­ burn prison in London. In the mean­ lows or other hoisting device. Thus the is to let them know of your visits As the three tribes spend most of time Essex had incurred the disfavor of through this page whenever you go Bollengier and Miss Ruth Taylor are cium, Phosphorus. Introductory size their time hunting and fishing, their useful derrick came to be so called. away. Even we will consider it a enjoying a motor trip to Florida. only 35c. For sale at all good drug songs are about these everyday pur­ courtesy whenever you will give us stores. suits. an item of any kind. Mr. anti Mrs. Flo ward C, Davison have been spending sometime at the FOR SALE For example, they have songs re­ Chalfonte-FIaddon Flail, Atlantic City. lating to the whale which could not Edward Juris has opened a Ford’s be eaten and another one designed 5, 10 and $1.00 store in Allentown. BAY Florse, 12 years old, good work­ Get Delicious Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Pullen and fam­ to make wounded whales swim to er, single or double. Chas. E. Storer, shore. They also have a “potlach” Mrs. Alex liarris of Cranbury has ily were Sunday visitors at the home of Wyckoff Mills road, near Flightstown. Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Reed of Rosedale. 8-*4t. song which invites members of the been spending sometime with Mrs. Jos­ tribes to congregate while a brave eph Longstreet of here at Eavallette. F r u i t s and Private Thomas 0. Hopkins w’ill leave RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY gives away his most prized posses­ Fort p ix today for Camp Davis, North Two-story frame residence, 8 rooms, sions. William Eoftus has been announced Carolina. Songs of native dances, wars, zs the winer of the 13th week of the all improvements. Lot has frontage on suit club of Hutchinson’s Men’s Shop. Mercer and South street. Wm. M. Per­ dreams, for the sick, for little chil­ Jamees F'luy is enjoying his vacation rine, 301 Mercer street. 9tf. dren, and all other forms of social V e g e ta b le s Mr, and Mrs. Gi’bert PI. Bagot and this week. He is employed at the local gatherings for special occasions son, K.eiinetli, of Stockton street are en­ auction market on Mercer street. INVESTMENT PROPERTIES have been preserved. joying the week at Manasquan. —Flouse, double house, store in busiest In singing the songs of social Hours Fresher Miss Jean Perrine of Glen Ridge is section of Flightstown. Owner must gatherings, a brave starts the Mrs. Preston Hoyt, Mrs. Robert Per­ visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. sell. Phone 158, Egnor Insurance Pro­ song and other tribal members sons and son, Todd, of Academy street Van Dyke Perrine of Stockton street. tection. spent the week end in New York. chant the melody without using Jim Taylor, Jim Fuzy. Fred Ferris and ONE TFIOUSAND used potato bags, words. Then a woman pronounces in Your A&P Miss Charlotte Brasch spent last week Sam ll'alt went fishing one day last suitable for picking .potatoes. Phone the words and the tribe joins in. with Miss Beth Keeler of South Main week. 522. Mach Lumber Yard, Etra-Perrine- Some of the songs are accompanied 116 MAIN STREET street at Manasquan Beach. ville Road. by drums, rattles, whistles, and the Master Norman, son of Mr. and Mrs. HIGHTSTOWN, N, J. Mrs. Thomas Hann of Detroit, Mich., beating of sticks on a plank, while William Pullen of Stockton street, vis­ others are unaccompanied. is visiting with her mother, Mrs. Wil­ ited Mrs. A. Weigel of Pompton Lakes F O R RENT liam H. Thompson of Etra Boulevard. Principal singer for the bureau’s last week. ______FOR RENT—Two large, cool fur- study was a former medicine man. Mrs. Albert C. Barclay and children James S. Turp and son, David, saw, Phone 320-W of Cranbury spent last week with Mr. the St. Louis Cardinals defeat Stockton street. and Mrs. Albert Priory at their Mana- Brooklyn Dodgers in Flbbets field Friday | ~~ A ROGUE’S NAME LIVES sqiian Beach cottage. afternoon. ROOMS and board at Central Hotel. Flightstown. Hundreds of thousands of stately der­ Gerry Bagot, Joyce Chamberlin, and l\[r. and Mrs. James Dawes of North ricks dot the many oil fields of the Mary Ellen Potter are spending two Watermelons Main street are enjoying a motor trip THREE or four room apartment. world, and many other thousands of weeks at a Girl Scout camp in Central to Virginia Beach a n d Williamstown, Fleat and liot water furnished. Phone I smaller hoisting devices also bear the Valley, N. Y. Va. ______337-J. Mr>«. W. G. Riley, 231 Morrison avenue. 2tf. inaine of “derrick.” How this name Mrs. Fred Powell, Miss Mary Pow­ Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pease and son, ; came to be applied to various forms of 59c each ell, Mrs. Walter Schenck and daughter Dwight, of Bernardsville. were Sunday )'OR U E N T -U r';e funiiTicd front iapparatus y interesting, for it Carol and Mrs. Carolyn Daley spent a visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Calvin H. room, suitable for couple or two gentle-!I confers sort oi nnniorlality upon day recently at Metedeconk. Perrine of South Main street. I men. Call after 8 p. m. at 241 Stockton i rascal who became a famous hangman, NONE PRICED HIGHER street. * i When Pob'^ri, Earl of F.ssex. a favor­ Mr. and Mrs. George Forman of Mrs. Enos M. Hutchinson is employed ite of Queen F.lizabeth of England, aided Stockton street spent a few days recent­ for the potato season at the othce of J . 2-3-4-5-rooin_____ apartments, houses, shore ! capture of Cadiz, Spain, in 1596, Ib«. ly at the Chalfontc-Haddon Hall, At­ M iteCauley, corner of Broad and bungalows,imrnifivv< farms,hirm< farm la'inl anrland build- sailors iindcr Iiis coinmaud en- New On.ions 3 13c lantic City. Monmouth streets. 'it,,, f,,,- qj- rent. Phone 158, Mr. and Mrs. George W. Weed and Egnor Insurance Protection. James Vandenbergh of North Main, lbs. daughter of South Main street are street has returned home after visiting! Refrigerators Peaches ■27c spending their vacation at Willoughby friends a n d relatives in Muskegon,' FIVl;l-rooin bungalow, water in house, Farms, Orleans, Vermont. electricity, very reasonable. Phone FOR SALE Michigan. j 83-J-2. I'hilip Slapack. SWEET CALIFORNIA doze: The Windsor Methodist Church Mr. a n d Mrs. Edward Dennis and ELECTRIC & ICE PLUM S 12c served 428 dinn'ers at their annual har­ daughter, Edwina, spent Sunday at | WANTED at reasonable prices vest home held on the churcli grounds Alanasquan with Mr. and Mrs. H erbert' CRAIG & HORNOR CO. last week. Lutekeu and family who are enjoying; A A1 lDI)EE---\GEn white woman for, the week there. j light hou.sevvork and care of 2-yoar-old [ MASON Mr. and Mrs. Alfred M. Ma.sonheimer SPECIAL JELLY of South Main street arc spending sev­ Air. and Mrs. Milton D. Bedell of child. Phone 93, between 5:30 and 7:30 i eral weeks at their siimincr h o ni c at Long Island spent the weekend with P. M. 10-2t,______200 CARS and TRUCKS JARS .MeadoAvmak, Maine, Mrs. Bedell’s ,parents, Air. a n d Airs. Highest Cash Prices , dov/n, including license tags. GLASSES ClitTord Shangle of South Main street. QUARTS PINTS Mrs.'Betty Malcohmson and Mrs. PAII) F'OR ALL KINDS Oh' EAR , Easy terms. See us first. M!artin Wright of Detroit, Mich., were J. Ernest Davison of South Afain CORN, new wheat, barley, rye, baled'; BARKER AUTO SALES doz. doz. recent guests at the home of Mrs. Wil­ street was taken to the Jefferson hospi­ rye, wheat straw and hay. Do not sell, phone 4767 321 Perry St. 3 9c liam H. Thompson of Etra Roulevard. tal in Philadclpltia Tuesday where he without getting our quotation. Write TRENTON 69c ^“"59c will undergo an operation today. post office box 126, Perth Amboy, N. J. Mr. and Mrs, Donald Tichnor have Raritan Grain Elevator Co. 8-4t. SUNNYFIELD 2 11 c returned to their home in Albany after Air. and Airs. I'rank Dey and son, CORNFLAKES 2 large pkgs. 15c spending several days with Airs. Tich 1 Robert, of Mercer street are enjoying VEAL calves wanted. Phone 18, OR RICE PUFFS nor’s aunt, Mrs. C. Stanley Stults, and ' his annual vacation for a period at their Joseph Riordan, 112 Main Street JEDDO-HIGHLAND WHEAT ^pkgs. family of South Alain street, summer cottage at Alanasquan Beach. Hightstown. 35tf. Mr. Dey is enjoying his annual vacation DONUTS JANE PARKER - - 12 in 10^ Robert and Douglas Alalsbury have from his duties at the local post office. WOM.AN (lesire.s laundry work at he ; Buy C O A L Now been spending sometime at the home of home. Will do family size wash. Spe­ EIGHT O’CLOCK ...... 2 Tib. •> I their uncle and aunt, Air. a n d Airs. Mr. and Airs. C. Sanger Robinson and cialized ill men’s shirts. Phone, after I Aristocrat of Anthracite ^ bags ^ T Percy J. Alalsbury of Imlaystown. daughter, Sandra, have returned to their ]). m., Hightstown 272-R-. * home on Laclede avenue in Trenton af­ TOMATO SOUP - ■ ...... 3 "“ ‘ 17c Adiss Marilyn White of Lakewood is ter spending the past two weeks with spending sometime with her cousins, Mrs. Robinson’s mother, Mrs. Mattie MISCELLANEOUS Wyckoff Bros. Mr. and A'lrs. Walter Schenck of North H. Perrine of South Alain street. Main street. When you think of INSURANCE, DAVID G. ALLEN "EXMILAMTIMO Air. and Mrs. Charles Mitchell a n d think of EGNOR. Eleanor Coiner, daughter of the^ Rev. family of Brooklyn a r e spending the Phone 183 Hightstown and Airs. P. Richard Comer of Stock- summer in Hightstown. Air. Mitchell, AIONEY to loan on well secured first ICED T€A! ton street, has been spending some time who is a member of the teaching staff mortgages, no payments required. —declare thousands of women who formerly with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. of the Polytechnic Country Day School Phone 158, Russell A. Egnor, Insur­ bought other, more expensive nationally known Robert AdacDonald of Fleislerville. of Brooklyn, is teaching in the Peddie ance & Property Management, l58 Rog­ teas but who now serve delicious Nectar Tea ers Avenue. and save up to 20%! Guaranteed to please. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest J. Thompson of Summer School. Hightstown South Main street and Mr. and Airs. Alichael Radische of Center street, GRAIN storage space available. We | Oscar Young of Newark are spending accompanied by Robert McQuay of store for your account. Raritan Grain | some time in the New England States Princeton a n d William AIcArthur of Elevator Co., Post office box 126, Perth | Potato Office NECTARA NATIONAL FAVORITE TEA* 29$ motoring to various points of interest. Dutch Neck, enjoyed a motor trip Amboy, N. J. 8-4t. : through the southern states last week Among those attending the stock car and en route visited the latter's grand­ Special Insurance | racees at Langhorne Sunday were Vin­ parents, Air. and Airs. P. Al. Alinter of ton Taylor, Palmer Dennis, Voorhees Charlotte, .N. C. Covering two motor vehicles, second! N o w Open Enriched! Dated! A. Craig. John Compton, Mr. and Mrs. one insured for less than $1.00 per] Sliced ! E x tra T h in ! White Sail William Pullen and Raymond Mount. Airs. Courtnay FI. Pitt of East Ward month, written Jn A-Plus Stock or' street entertained at bridge Tuesday af­ Mutual Companies. j MARVEL Mrs. William AI. Cox, Mrs. Walter ternoon. Among the guests were Mrs. Workmen’s Compensation J. W. McCauley SOAP Eye, Jr., and sons, Walter and Carl, William S. Fleyer, Airs. Weinier Hicks, of Cranbury, accompanied bv Mrs. Ar­ At 10% dividend saving without other SANDWICH LOAF Mrs. Homer Thompson, Airs. Joseph L. insurance. Also all lines of Insurance and Son thur Duryea, are spending sometime at Schultz, Mrs, Daniel I. Alessler, Aliss 36 slice Pleasant. Service. FLAKES Louise Messier, Aliss Helen Fenton and POTATO DEALERS m ib. Real Estate A fishing party composed of Alonzo Aliss Helen Buchanan. LOAF lOc FOR FINE FABRICS Dey, Earl Wilson, Fred li o d k i n s, Sale or Rent, farms and town Charles Fleider, ace barber in Blel- properties. PHONE 6 S DISHES aud HOUSEHOLD George Cottrell and Johnny Brandt weiss’ tonsorial parlor, will celebrate his brought in 30 bonita off Forked River 42nd birthday tomorrow. Born in Croshaw Agency, Inc. Monmouth & Broad Sts. STANDARD SLICE large Sunday. 1899, Heider belonged to the next to the Office Phone 112 SeeV 117-11 pkg. 307 N orth M ain St. Hightstown MARVEL 14c Charles Flarris of Stockton street, ac­ youngest military class ever called to companied by Aiarvin Chamberlin a n d serve the colors of the German Empire. James Ritter of Mechanic strect,_ at­ Fie was only sixteen when he w e n t BREAD tended the Brooklyn Dodgers-Pitts- to the front. FEPPGER’S WEEKLY CHAmS White Sail burgh Pirates doubleheaclcr at Ebbetts Fie became a gunner, or No. 2 man, m IW lb. Field Sunday. the mounted machine gun battalion and loaves 2 5c fought in the V e r g e s s e s mountains. THIS WEEK’S SPECIAL — JULY Z4 - AUG. 1 2 loaves 17c loaf 9c Cleanser Miss Marjorie Dennis of Stockton Shortly after the war ended, he came to Jphn Dee,-* two-row potato digger, 7-ft. 22-inch with |>ower lift, street was guest at the wedding recej)-.the United States, 5469J)0 N et C-a.h, Thi* .peciel price ex p ire. Aug. l.t, tion of Air. and Mrs. Walter Fullani of' JANE PARKER 3 10c Princeton Saturday afternoon. , AI i s s BOGGS POTATO GRADERS Dennis and Mrs. Fullam were class­ No. 3 wire belt elevator, $40.00. .Side elevating double bagger for mates at Beaver college. .econdt, $27.S0. All R epair.. JELLY The Holy Name Society of the St. Eels Naphtha Anthony's Church held their first annu­ FAIRBANKS SCALES. $24.00 BAG RACK EXTRA, $3.50 al picnic Sunday at Joseph Nolan’s farm, BAG TRUCKS WITH RUBBER TIRES, $8.95 i $11-95 ROLLS Sweetman’s Lane, Perrineville. A soft- SOAP ball game and refreshments highlighted JU T E & COTTON SEWING TWINE, 25 cu. to 32 ct., lb. “Ereryom- thinks kis sunk heaniesi" the affair. 15c b a r . —■Herhfin %, 3-plc„ 50-lb. PICK IN G B A SK ETS, 80 ct.. up 4 19c Harry B. Morris, Jr., has made ap­ plication to the Hamilton Township TJva I6-qt. PEACH BASKETS, 6 eta. % TOMATO BASKETS, 8 ct.. Committee for the transfer of premises 23—Glonn Curtiss, ^pioneer JOHN DEERE 16-DlSK TRACTOR GRAIN DRILL, $315.00 located at 4140 South Broad street, a'/ialor, died. 1930. Yardville, the plenary retail consump­ SHERWIN WILLIAMS PAINT tion license heretofore Issued to Cath­ -Cotton sold al 12.65 cents, S.-W, P. hou.e paint, $3.00 gal. Roof paint, Black, 60c gal. Red, erine IMxson. 1930. $1.55 and $2.25. Mr. and Mrs. F.'R. Williams of Sher­ man street, Jamesburg, announces the •First U. S. experiments 26 GAUGE COP-R LOY GALVANIZED STEEL ROOFING with Smokeless powder, C banneldrain, 6^4 eta. ft. C orrugated, 5J4 ct». ft. engagement of their daughter, Vera J., 1891. to Albert Patterson, s o n of Mr. and JOHN DEERE & NEW IDEA MANURE SPREADERS Mrs. Charles Patterson, Maplewood 28— Franklin elected first avenue. Cranbury. T h e wedding will postmaster-general, 1775. 2-wheel tracto r drawn rubber tire., $227.50-$263.0fl. 4,wheel, $175.00 up. take place next month. JOHN DEERE TRACTOR PLOWS The young married couples club of the •John L. Lewis denounced AND TRACTOR DISK HARROWS local Presbyterian Church had a beach Gamer, 1939. party at A'fanasqnan Beach last Wednes­ FENCING BARBED WIRE STEEL POSTS day evening. The affair was planned by 28—Dr, Will Mayo died, 1939. Mr. and Mr.';. F'dward Dennis, Mr. and Mrs. Willia-", Gierman. a n d Air. and THOS. PEPPLER, SON & CO. Mrs. Frank Moore. The next meeting 29—Sea wall at Galveston. SAMUEL PEPPLER, Prepiielar Tex., completed, 1904. of the club will be held on Sciptembcr PHONE 143 HIGHTSTOWN. N. J. 17th with Mr, and Mrs. Gambell as host and hostess. HIGHTSTOWK GAZETTE, HIGRTSTOWN, MERCER COUNTY. NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, JULY 24, m i

“Just go and have a good time, but jutant General also handles matters Burial was on June 18th in Evergreen those receiving first honor, with an av- don’t forget to come back,” he said. concerning the education and recreation Cemetery .Gettysburg, Pa., where sh e erage of 98.14. Second on this list was _____Slices of Life^at V. Fort Dix “Don’t forget that Independence was a of enlisted men, and under the Secreta­ rests beside her late husband, Dr. James Robert E. Hyatt of Bordentown with pass for freedom for all times, but this ry of War governs and controls the Witherspoon Moore. an average of 94.94. Albert D. Burlen Since leaving Peddle, Mrs, Moore of New York City took third place with A rumor was circulating the other day lot of conversation these days, but once pass is only good until 6 a. m. Mon­ United S t at e s Disciplinary Barracks day.” and its branches. He conducts exten­ lived with her brother and sister-in-law, an average of 93.29. Next on this list that the following conversation took in a while some trait is evidenced that Mr. and Mrs. Albert Culbertson, R. D. was Kenneth G. Scheid of Flushing, E. place between a newly arrived selectee Danc«« sive correspondence concerning the mili­ the “new” and the “old” army are after tary service generally—it is a wide­ 2, Gettysburg, and it was at their home I., valedictorian of the graduating class at Fort Dix who was being interviewed A veteran Fort Dix soldier, who owns and graduated “with high honor” a n d for his classification: all pretty much the vSame underneath a car the other day ])icked up a young spread custom to address the Adjutant and in their devoted care that slie died. General when in doubt as to where com­ While she lived in Hightstown Mrs. with a 93.05 average. Another member Q. Flave you any preference as to the skin. soldier who talked with a Texas drawl. of the graduating class, J. Bruce Rankin It turned out that he was from Texas. munication should be s e n t—distributes Moore was a member of the Presbyteri­ your position in the Arnay? A certain Fort Dix corporal was told War Department regulations, manuals an Church, where she was very active of Newark, Del, took fifth place on this A. Yes, sir. to get a detail of men for a certain un­ Fie asked the driver if there were any list with an average of 92.63. John W. dances at Fort Dix. and other documents and considers all in the Amaranth Club. She was a mem­ Q. How would you like to be classi­ savory job. He ordered the men to applications for awards of military dec ber also of the Peddie Woman's Club Sprout of here also received a first honor fied ? line up, and then proceeded to inform The “vet” said that there were and with an average of 92.35. give him a few directions. orations and service medals. and of the Kalomathia Society. Mr. and ^A. As an ex-service man with a pen­ them that he wanted some volunteers. Mrs. Culbertson are her only surviving Twenty of the twenty-six awards went sion. He got just about that far when he no­ The Texan then drawled: “Wc used Officers of the Adjutant General’s De to students receiving second honors. to have dances in Texas, too. Used to partment are assigned to the headquart near relatives. Fatigue ticed the expression on the men’s faces Col. Starr G. Cooper, Six of these were members of the grad­ . . . so he just continued by adding: have about 75 girls come in. Of course, ers of the larger Army units, such as A squad of selectees at the Fort Dix wc had to limit the number of men.” divisions, corps and field armies, and to formerly Secretary of the Faculty uating class, as follows : Robert K. Reception Center finished drill the other “You and you and you” and at the "What was the limit?” he was asked. the headquarters of the various Corps of The Peddie School Burke of Parlin, John J. Fox of West day, and just as they were about to fall same time ijoinling to his “chosen” vol- “About 1,000 men,” w’as the Texan's Areas. They function within the or­ Shelter Island Heights. N. Y. Orange, George W. Henry, HI, of Phila­ out, the drill sergeant said: ! unteers. reply. ganizations or units to which they are delphia, PI. Richard Plornberger, Jr., of "Are any of you men fond of music?” I The Fourth Verbiage assigned as does the Adjutant General here, J. Norman Jones of Bangor] Maine, With visions of hearing a concert, or Captain Burtis and Fleadquarters and In Army slang, if you believe the sol­ within the entire military establishment. and James S'.'Tipscomb of Jersey City! getting a soft job at the very least, eight I Headquarters Company of the Recep- diers at Fort Dix, the guardhouse is re­ List Compiled Others who received second honors men raised their hands. The archives of the Adjutant Gener­ are as follows: Stanley Abensur, John jtion Center at Fort Dix was snowed un- ferred to as “barracks 13”; an auto­ al’s Office holds more than 656,000,000 "All right, you man, take the piano jder just before the Fourth of July by matic rifle as a “Chicago atomizer” and Reuber Allen, William H. Boynton, Wil­ out of the recreation hall and put it in records involving upwards of 33,000,000 Showing Gas liam D. Burke, John T. Burroughs, Ben­ ;scores of requests for three-day passes a tank as a St. Vitus davenport.” men who have been connected with the the day room.” I over the w’eckend. Finally, the captain jamin L. Crue, Jr., of here, Vincent H. Many Are CKocen United States Army at one time or an­ Hennessy, Donald P. Kahn, David R. 'hoisted the white flag and told the other since 1776. Its historical files con­ Tax in states The “new army” is the subject of a i whole comapny to take the time ofT. Kiviat, John M. Patterson, Frederick A. Y O U R A R M Y tain priceless documents including the X Rager. Robert C. Sprout of here, Wil­ original oath of office of General Wash­ Going touring this summer? Well, liam Van Dusen, Jr., and Alan J. Wurts. ington and his offices at Valley Forge here’s what you'll have to pay in gaso­ (This is the {ourieenth of a scries of articles prepared by Army Information Service, 90 in 1776. line taxes. Church Street, New York City, covering the The Adjutant General’s Office receives The Keystone Automobile Club has liistory of the Army and giving facts and lig* d e f e n se ures on its organization. Succeeding articles thousands of requests daily from the compiled a list showing that in one All set for a shampoo ■ will be published each week until the series is general public, by letter, telephone, state and the District of Columbia the BOND Q u iz completed.) telephone, telegraph and personal visit total lax—state and Federal—is 3j4 and no hot water I The Office of the Adjutant General is for records of individuals. These rec­ cents; in ten states, 4^2 cents; eighteen Q. W hat is the price of a Defense, one of the oldest in the Army. It has ords, however, are not “public records” stales. 5^2 cents; ten states, 6^$ cents; Savings Bond? in the full sense. The records of in­ functioned continuously since Major five states, 7^2 cents; one state, 8 cents, A. For the smallest Bond, you pay General Horatio Gates was appointed to dividuals are regarded as confidential and three states, 8J4 cents. $18.75. The Bond will increase in the post in the Continental Army on and are released only to committees of A question very frequently asked by June 17, 1775. At three dilTerent peri­ Congress, other departments of the motorists planning long trips is the gas value in ten years to $25. For $75, ods it was combined with the office of Government charged with settling you get a Bond which will increase claims, to courts entitled to see such tax rate in the states they plan to visit, Inspector General and, for a brief in­ and in numerous instances plans a r e to $100; other Bonds are in propor­ terlude, in 19(X)-1907 it was filled by an records and to theindividuals them­ selves. changed to avoid those imposing high tion. officer known as the Military Secretary. taxes, club officials assert Its major functions have always been The Adjutant General under the pres­ Q. What will the Government do Following is the tax rate by states in the same, regardless of any additional ent law holds the .rank of major gen­ with the money I pay for my Bond? duties wliich may have been imposed on eral while in office. liowever, the posi­ 19-10, including the old 1 cent Federal it from time to lime. tion has been held by lieutenants as tax and the new Yz cent defense impost A, Your money will be put to work The Adjutant General is charged with “acting adjutant” on four different occa­ which became effective July 1st. at once in the National Defense Pro­ sions and at intervals by captains, ma­ 3^2 cents—District of Columbia, Mis­ gram to protect the freedom and the duly of recording, authenticating, souri. and communicating to troops and indi­ jors, lieutenant colonels a n d colonels. safety of the United States, and of An old iltn€ water heater The last officer below the grade of colo­ _ 4 ^ cents—California, Connecticut. Il­ in the cellar hat failed viduals in the military service of the all its people everywhere. United States all orders, instructions nel to hold the office was Captain C, J. linois, Iowa, Kansas, Massachuskts, again. The water should Nourse who served as the Acting Adju­ Michigan. Minnesota, N ew Jersey, be hoi . . . but it’s COLD, and regulations issued by the Secretary Note.—To purchase Defense Bonds of War, through the Chief of Staff or tant General from May 8, 1822 to March Rhode Island. 7, 1825. Since 1861 no one below the 5yz cents—Colorado, Delaware, Indi­ and Stamps, go to the nearest post otherwise. He arranges and preserves office or bank, or write for infor­ Have dependable HOT WATER the records of the military establish­ grade of general officer has held the of­ ana, Maine. Maryland, Nevada, New ment in his custody as well as the rec­ fice of the Adjutant General. From Hampshire, New York, Ohio, North Da­ mation to the Treasurer of t h e service . . . Install a modern ords of all War Department administra­ 1861 to 1898 the office of the Adjutant kota, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South United States, Washington, D. C. Automatic Gas Water Heater tive business concerning those records. General was filled by a brigadier gen­ Dakota, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Wiscon­ His functions include the procuring of eral. From 1898 until 1912 a major gen­ sin, Wyoming. In your home. officers and enlisted personnel for the eral was the Adjutant General. In 1?912 —Arizona, Idaho, Kentucky, Mon­ Army; preparing and issuing commis­ tlieAdjutant General was again a briga­ tana,^ Nebraska, New Mexico, Oregon, Then you will have ready-to-use sions ; handling correspondence, and dier general but in August 1914 a major Virginia, Washington, West Virginia. hoc water—always—for bathing, conducting examinations for Admission general was appointed to the office and cents—Alabama, Georgiy Missis­ for dishes, for laundry and all to the United Slates Military Academy the Adjutant General has held the rank sippi, North Carolina, South Carolina. of major general ever since. 8 cents—Arkansas. For Vacation your needs. A small amount down as well as issuing the appointments to successful candidates for the Academy. (The fifteen article dealing with the Quaar* 8j<4 cent s—Florida, Eouisiana, a n d and a small amount monthly buys tennaster Corps appear next week.) Tennessee. Swimming or Loafing Hof wator, aufomafl» In conjunction with the Corps Area this heater. Trade in allowance The following states have sales taxes: cally by gas, costs only Commanders the Adjutant General pro­ for your old heater. Ask us or cures candidates for admission to Citi­ IN MEMORIAM Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Califor­ a fow cents per day I your plumber for information. zens Military Training Camps when BLANCHE CULBERTSON MOORE nia, Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Missouri, New Mexico, North such cami)s are held, and also for the Friends of Mrs. Blanche Culbertson Officers’ Reserve Corps, the Ivnlisled Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Okla­ Moore, for many years Matron of The homa, South Dakota, Utah, Washing­ Reserve Corps and the Reserve Officers Peddie School, will be grieved to learn ton, West Virginia, Wyoming. PVBLIC KlSERVICE Training Corps. Fle participates with of Mrs. Moore’s death on June 16th. Ollier Government agencies in dealing She had been an invalid since last Octo­ with _ the general administration of the ber, and during her last weeks was com­ Civilian Conservation Corp.s. The Ad­ pletely helpless in body and mind. Peddie School Awards Honors

Dr. Wilbour E. Saunders. headmaS' ter of _ the Peddie School, announces the awarding of twenty-six honors for the For Peak school year. David Thomson of Washington, D. C., again took first place in the list of

NOTICE CREDITORS OP Mary Ewma. Cross, De­ ceased, arc, by order of the Surrogate of Mercer dated July 1, 1941 upon application of the subscriber, notified to bring in their debts, demands and claims against her estate, under oath, within six months from aboTc date.— oath, within six months from above date. d f a n t z e n SAMUED BARD (Executor) ySEDCUVAUIB Cunningham Bldg., /T»- , Hightstown, N. J. Trunks (Hightstown Gazette, July 10, 1941.—dt.) (Fee 16.10.) » j / . ./ Knitted trunks with !Las- tex. Shorts in gabardine NOTICE and whipcord. CREDITORS OF Mary Kelly Bcckedorf, De­ ceased, are, by order of the Surrogate of Mer­ BEACH ROBES — BEACH cer County, dated June 30, 1941 upon applica­ tion of the subscriber, notified to bring in their JACKETS — TERRY CLOTH debts, demands and claims against her estate, AND OTHERS under oat^ within six months from above dake. THE I^IRST NATIONAI, BANK _ . OF f r e e h o l d (Administrator). Present Qaims to: R A DOHNEta McDERMO'TT & FINEGOLD, Proctors, WAilACN t l l i f 1-3 W est M ain St. •1 lAtT ITArillS Freehold, N. T. TRENTON, N. J. (H ightstow n G azette, July 10. 1941—64 1 (Fee $6.10.)

Refrigerator prices reduced

J?

The average price of an electric re­ frigerator 20 years ago was $600. T he average price today is $154—■ for a lot better product. One thing that made this price re­ duction possible was that millions of people bought electric refrigera­ tors. Volume brought prices down. And one thing that made volume p o s s ib 1 e was advertumg, which taught people to w a n t electric re­ frigerators. That’s how advertising helps bring prices down. Hightstown Gazette MERCER COUNTY. NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY. JUI^Y 24, IW

CRANBURY in Belmar. Their father and mother from a visit of two weeks with relatives ner never attemoted before. There will Mr. and Mrs. Harvey R. Scott of Cra»- will return to their home in Cranbury. in Baltimore, Annapolis, Md., and be a real gala spirit exhibited in the city Colonel Allen Named Washington. D. C. bury. The wedding took place in tkn Mrs. Henrietta Chittick has returned Mrs. William M. Cox, Mrs. Walter of New Brunswick on the day of the Mrs. Florence Stults, Miss Dorothy sale. More merchants than ever will To Draft Board No. 1 First Methodist parsonage at BaUair» to her home in Old Bridge from a year's T»ye, Jr., and sons, Walter and Carl, ac­ companied by Mrs. Arthur Duryea of! Stults and Miss Rebecca Pollltt have participate in the event. Greater quan­ Md.. with the Rev. George Ogg per­ exchange teacher from the Cranbury been spending several days at Belmar. tities and larger varieties of merchan­ Colonel Frederick W. Allen of Mor- Hightstwn, have been spending some­ forming the ceremony. school to Hawaii. Every member of her dise will be offered at bargain -prices. ven Place has been appointed to Mer­ time at Point Pleasant. Miss Peggy Gould of Machias, Blaine, Mrs. Scott wore a street length dress class came to the boat to bid her fare­ is spending the summer with Mr. and A cordial welcome to shop in New cer County Draft Board No. 1, it was Mr. and Mrs. Fred Elker are enter- of Chinese red chiffon and white acces­ well and showered her with leis. Ummg for several weeks, Mrs. Pauline Mrs. Adrian viin Ravesteyn. Brunswick on New Brunswick Day is announced. He has been made secreta­ Mrs. William C. Hoffman and daugh­ R e ^ of Birmingham, Ala., and Mrs. K. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Grove left last being extended to all out-of-town vis­ ry. sories, a corsage of red and white roses. ter, Margaret, their house guest, Peggy E. Trent of Mobile, Ala. w'eek for their vacation and remained itors by the merchants and the sponsors Both Mr. and Mrs. Scott are gradu­ until Saturday with Mr. and Mfs. Wil­ of the event, New Brunswick Chamber He succeeds William R. Dorman of Wilson of Trenton. Mrs. Frederic Mrs. August van Ravesteyn of Brook­ the Province Line Road, who has been ates of th e Jamesburg High school Granger and Mrs. Raymond Offt and lyn has been speriding sometune with lard Grove at Maplewood. This week of Commerce. they w'ere guests of Mr. and Mrs. Vic­ called to active duty in the United States The couple will reside on the Scott farm daughter of Montclair, spent last week Mr. and Mrs. Adrian van Ravesteyn Navy. Other members of the board near Cranbury, at Sharks River Plills, They were joined Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred h. lioff- tor Wheeler of Camden at their sum­ Newton Dairyman Heads are S. Leslie Tattersall of Library Place, by the husbands over the week end. man the past week were Mrs. Albert mer home at Somers Point chairman, and Harry B. Taylor of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kelsall are Adatte of Bound Brook and Miss Eliza­ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Danser and chil­ Board of Agriculture Windsor. The offices are located at 2 Margaret Dumont, the long-suffering spending the summer at their cottage at beth Mitze of Plainheld. The ladies dren are at Manasquan Beach for a va­ Chambers street Princeton. lady of many Marx brothers movies, X,ake Placid. spent one day at New Hope and at- cation. Jacob A. Blakeslee, dairyman of New­ has been reversing normal routine by Mr. and Mrs. H. Earle Butcher and getting fan mail for not appearing in a t ended the performance of “Golden Miss Grace Renk has been visiting ton. was elected president of the New family left last week for their bungalow Boy_ at the surmner theatre there. Miss Carolyn Plance at Red Bank for Miss Jean Babula picture. Miss Dumont has been with Miss Hilda Hickey has been spending several days. Jersey State Board of Agriculture last the Marxes off and on for 15 years, week. playing Groucho's girl friend. In their sometime at the Admiral Hotel in Cape Mrs. Frank Cornell left Thursday Bride of Gruca WELLER BROS. May in company with friends. Blake.slee was elected to the board in last movie, “Go We.st,” there was no morning to visit Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Miss Jean Babula of Robbinsville, and role for her. She was missed. Scores CIGAR STORE Mr. and Mrs. John W. Duckett, son Allen at Uttle Neck, E. I. Fler husband 1938, and operates a dairy farm of over John and Roger Cook have returned Stephen T. Gruca of near Allentown of fan letters told her and the studio ‘'Smoke Shop" and son joined her for the week end. 300 acres with a herd of 80 Guernseys. .so. Miss Dumont is at her old stand m a i n s t r e e t HIGHTSTOWN. N. J Miss Joan Ely, daughter of Mr. and James C. Weisel of Frenchtown was w’ere united in marriage July 12 in St. in “Bargain Basement.” WINES and LIQUORS Mrs. Warren Ely, spent several days reelected vice president. Weisel is vice John’s R. C. Church. T h e ceremony PENNYS TAVERN recently with her grandmother, Mrs. president of Kerr Chlckeries, a director was performed by the Rev. Thomas A. at ETRA LAKE Hicbtstown-Perrincville Road BEER and ALE Marie Worthington at Trenton. Gribbin, pastor. A complete itock of natioiuOly advertiaed _ Mrs. Mary Hileman of Springfield is of the Flemington Auction Market and Attending the couple were Miss Mary KELVINATOR Good Times Every brands of WloM. Uciuors, Baer and Ale al economy prices. visiting Mrs. Frederic Granger and fam­ president of the Jersey Chick Associa­ Gruca of Allentown and Andrew Babula FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHTS tion. FOR PROMPT DELIVERIES PHONE MS ily for a week or two. of Robbinsville. Following the ceremo­ — Shuffleboard — JAMES DAMASCO Mr. and Mrs. Arthur A, Clayton and Roscoe C. Clayton of Freehold and ny a reception was held at Springdale ELECTRIC 1»7 STOCKTON ST. HIGHTSTOWN. N. J Mr. and Mrs. Bertram S. Clayton were Edward H. Phillips, Jr., of Cold Spring Park, near Yardville. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest McMil­ were sworn in for four-year terms as Notary Public lan at Wilmington, Del., on Sunday. members of the State Board of Agri­ REFRIGERATORS FRANK MORRIS Mrs. Robert Ramage and daughter culture. They succeed James C. Ewart Miss Moore Weds GEO. P. DENNIS DISTRIBUTOR FOR Gael of Scarsdale, N. Y., were guests of Cranbury, the retiring president, and Ol6c*—At HIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE ROCKWOOD DAIRY Friday of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Carlson Lester Collins of Moorestown. Cranbury Man Gazette BuUdin#, 114 Roners Avenue GOLDEN GUERNSEY PRODUCTS and family. Her daughter, Margaret, Clayton operates a potato farm, has Sold by Alto H, R. Benton't Coventry Farm who has been visiting the Carlsons for been prominent as an agricultural lead­ Mr. and Mrs. 0. V. Moore of Vine Golden Guerntey Raw Milk two weeks, will return with her. er in ilvlonmouth County, and is a mem­ street, Jamesburg, announce the mar­ L. E. WETHERILL and Walker Gordon Products riage of their daughter, Laura Marion Rev. and Mrs, L. B. ITawk’s visitors ber of the Freehold Township Commit­ Moore, to Joseph Kenneth Scott, son of W H E N GOOD RES, PHONE 85-M U9 OAK LANE the past week were Mr. and Mrs. tee. 240 M O N M O U TH ST. PH O N E 2M Charles Hensley of Morrisville, Pa., Mr. Phillips, a dairyman of Cape May cleaning can be done cheaper 'and Mrs. Russell Burley and daughter, County, h a s o n e of th e outstanding AWNINGS Louise, of Burlington, and Mr. and Mrs. Guernsey heads in South Jersey and has WE will do it Lewis Watson of Collingswood. served on the board of agriculture of his VENETIAN BLINDS own county since 1920. Dependable NEVIUSVOORHEES Electrical Contractor ‘New Brunswick HIGHTS THEATRE Store Hours: Daily g to 5. J0 . . g to i Saturdays HIGHTSTOWN. N. J. Tel,: Hi»htstown 131 Cleaners & Laundry Estimales Given Promptly Day’ Plans Set MATINEES (During Summer months)—Sun, 129 M E R C E R S T R E E T CLARENCE E. CONOVER Mon., W ed., FrL, Sat. S tarting at 2:30. i The retail merchants of New Bruns Evening Shows Starting nt 6:30 P. M. and' an d 109 R O G E R S A V E N U E PHONE Z53-W HIGHTSTOWN wick through the Chamber of Commerce 9:00 P. U . j )ummer Greatest Savings Event! have made final plans for this city’s fa­ Thursday & Friday, July 24th & 25th. mous mid-summer sale known through '•THE FLAME OF NEW ORLEANS” with Marlene Dietrich, Bruce Caiyjt, Roland Young out the state as “New Brunswick Day,’’ and Mischa Auer. | to be held on Thursday, July 31. This annual midsummer bargain event Saturday, July 2G. One Day Only. ! HALF HOLIDAY SALES Use QUAKER CITY LIMITED Double Feature Program i is looked forward to by thousands of “WASHINGTON MELODRAMA” with Frank' TO shoppers throughout the entire center Morgan, Ann Rutherford, Kent Taylor and Lee of New Jersey as tlie major bargain Bowman — aUo - “THE M.tN WHO LOST HIMSELF” with Brian Aherne, Kay Francis Store wide reductions you need to we.ir and Philadelphia or New York event of the year. and Henry Stephenson. So great has become the retribution to use . . . every Saturday morning from 9 to i of this annual sale that people from far­ Sunday & Monday. July 27 & 28. FARE Clark Gable anjl Rosalind Russell in ‘ 4 HEY away lilaces. who ordinarily do not shop MET IN BOMBAY” with Peter Lorre. Jessie p. 111. , . . every department is cliock full of HSGHTSTOWN-PHILADELPHIA JO ona way—IJO Round Trip in New Brunswick, make a yearly pil­ Ralph, Reginald Owen. grimage to that city to avail themselves HIGHTSTOW N-NEW YORK .80 one way—$1.45 Round Trip Tuesday & Wednesday, July 29 & 30. special clearance values. Make this bargain of the marvelous opportunities to save Double Feature Program on commodities ami merchandise of all “REACHING FOR THE SUN” with Ellen , finding time for the entire family. 17 WEEKDAY SCHEDULES EACH WAY sorts which the merchants offer at that Drew, Joel McCrea, Eddie Bracken, Albert Dek- ker—also—“THE SAINT IN PALM SPRINGS” ; time. with George Sanders, Wendy Barrie. This year, greater effort than ever MOTOR TRANSPORT CO. has been made on preparing to make Thursday «St; Friday. July 31 & August 1. “THE DEVIL AND MISS JONES” with Rob- ; HIGHTSTOWN, N. J. PHONE 128 the event top all present records. ert Cummings, Jean Arthur, Charles Coburn. | Streets will be decorated in a man-

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poor health, committed suicide, police “Mushy” Callahan, once a leading 23.10. Studios report their employee# said, by hanging himself on a farm lightweight title contender, now snaps donated $465,000 to charities last year. near Allentown. toy slingshots in the movies. When Dr. David A. Fluck, deputy_ county Walter Huston’s writer son, John, has The Churches physician, issued a burial permit. Wayne Morris, playing an outlaw, joined the director ranks. His first as­ crouches inside a house and fires signment is a remake of Dashiell Ham­ la a ipodara preqrassiva atmotphtra, aa uallmitcd RUFUS P. COPELAND through a window at an approach­ "paroda" of laateaabla foods of moaoy-saviag price* mett’s "The Maltese Falcon.” It is a 80, husband of Mrs. Lucy A. Copeland, ing posse in “Bad Man of Missouri,” new title, “Knight of Malta,” with Mary ST. ANTHONY’S CHURCH died Wednesday, July 16. at his home, Callahan stands outside just beyond REV. LOUIS F. COGAN 30 Fairview avenue, Trenton. Services camera range and, with a sling- Astor getting a leading role with George DEPENDABLE ACME QUALIH MEATS were conducted Saturday by the Kev. window shade besides Morris to repre­ Raft talking of Hammett, his Nora and Mass every Sunday at 8, 9:30 and C. F. Mayhew, pastor Clinton Avenue sent bullets fired by the posse. Nick characters in the “Thin Man” No mottor wkoii you buy Aemo QHality Moati youVo olwoyi kiiro of i 10:30 A. M. Baptist Church, at the Kemp Funeral series have been sol dto Metro for $50,- completo latUfaction. Aiwoya 9Harontoed fe ploaao. JTome. Interment w a s in Greenwood Here’s how movies figure a film dol­ 000 outright and frow now, the studio TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH cemetery. At one time he was employed lar is spent: Players 24.65, director and can continue to star William Powell and REV. THOMAS B. BRAY. Priest-in-Charge cameramen 13.20, sets 9.90, costumes Myrna Loy without further payment to One Price— Reaidence—179 N- Main St, as a machinist at John A. Roebling’s Fancy Frash-Killad Frying None IllKher Sons Co. 2.75, locations 2.75. raw materials 7.70, the author. Services— All Top Survivors, in addition to his wife, are Quality P^irst and third Sundays, Holy Com­ two daughters, Mrs. Olive Yannut of C h ick en s munion and Sermon at 11 a. m. I'liglitstown and Mrs. Inez Seddon of One PrIce~?Jono Higher Second Sunday, Holy Communion at Trenton; a son, Robert Copeland; a Pork Shoulders Lean Fresh City Dressed 9 a. m. Morning Prayer and Sermon brother, Albert Coipeland; a sister. Mrs. Freahly at 11 a. m. Jennis Haddon, and two grandchildren. American Legion Carnival Diced Beef Cut Fourth (and fifth) Sunday, Morning I’lverett C. Stevenson, individually and One Price— Prayer and Sermon at 11 a. m. Hightstown, N. J. Tandar Standing None Hlsrher as executor of the estate of Julia E. Feast of Saint James the Apostle, PTi- Plammell, had filed a petition of appeal CornCed day, July 25th, Holy Communion at to the Mercer County board of taxation R ib R oast Quality 10:30 a. m. requesting reduction of assessment from July 21st to Aug- 2nd $2,{)00 to $1,0(X) on the house and lot, 122 Rain or Shine Smokad Shank End ST. PAUL’S LUTHERAN CHURCH Morrison avenue. The petition recites Skinned Up to 7 Iba. 1 9 « Broad Street, Hlghldtown, N. J. that the residence has been unoccupied NIGHTLY ATTRACTIONS Large Hams M. E. DENETHUM, Pa«lor for more than 40 years. ’M 5 c Hama lb 10:00 A. M.—Sunday School. JOE MARTIN and his orchestra Store Slicad Laan Flat Rib 11:00 A. M.—The service. WILLIAM J. DONNELL Funeral services for William J. Don- FREE DANCING CHURCH OF CHRIST. SCIENTIST nell, retired lumber dealer of Perth Am­ Bacon 14< S o u p B e e £ ' 10« PRINCETON, N. J. boy, and husband of Mrs. Eva Rose Ih “■ lOo Donnell, 22 Sea View avenue, Ocean Calves Liver 65c Lean Breast Lamb “Truth” is the Lesson-vSermon subject Grove, who died in Fitkin hospital, Nep­ lb Fresh Sea Bass ■» )2o for Sunday, July 27. in all Christian Sci­ tune, Sunday, were held Wednesday af­ Baked Loaveslrrt":;'’^ 13c ence Churches and Societies throughout lb Fillet Ocean Perch "• I9e ternoon at the Farry Funeral Home. As- Luncheon Meat”''*^ 15c the world. bury Park. Interment w as in Cedar DEFENSE NEEDS YOU! Dried Beef V4 lb 15c C rabreal 39c The Golden Text is: “0 praise the Hill cemetery, Hightstown. Lord, all ye nations . . . For his merci­ Lebanon "SS* H Ib 15c Fresh Fillet Sole «• 23o Besides his wife, Mr. Donnell is sur­ ful kindness is great toward us: and the vived by two daughters, Mrs. Sheldon There are excellent positions awaiting you in. Defense SlioHid«r-Roa>} prosh L ar9« truth of the Lord endureth for ever.” Cadmus of Newark and Miss Eva Rose Work . . . To help in the emergency, RIDER COL­ lb (Psalms 117:1, 2-. L a m b ,: r T :: k 1 9 « C r o a k e r s 9 o Donnell of Ocean Grove; a son, Warren LEGE has instituted special, intensive, short courses. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH N. of Matawan; four grandchildren and REV . S. K. CAMBELL. Pastor sister, Mrs. Richard Morris of New Firtf of the Season Brunswick. Call at the college for a helpful conference on your The morning worship at eleven o'clock Mr. Donnell operated the W. J. Don­ Hew Pack Park Hall will include the sermon, “With Christ nell Lumber Co. of Perth Amboy 35 place in the National Defense. Help your Qounti-y! in the Village.” The choir will sing, “I years prior to his retirement four years Help Yourself! Walked Today Where Jesus Walked,” ago. He had been a summer resident TOMATOvi! by O’Hara. John Cole will sing the solo of Ocean Grove 14 years until making 15 of the morning. the resort his permanent home upon his Write for free cataJogue or telephone Trenlon 8111 JUICE The Sunday School session, beginning retirement. at nine forty-five o’clock, is in charge Q r a u g e Juice 17«) = "E? 20« of the superintendent, James S. Turp. ALBERT S. SCHUYLER RIDER COLLEGE FIRST METHODIST CHURCH 79, retired bookkeeper, died Saturday Virginia Leo Fjemon-Llme ^ REV. P. R. COMER^ JR., Minlater at his lielmetta home. Services were conducted Tuesday at his residence by Founded 1865 Trenton, N. J. L AYER CAKE‘S* 2 9 c The Sunday church school meets at the Rev. Andrew Braun, pastor of 9:45 a. m. The annual picnic of this Milk Caram els i roiteii Jamesburg Methodist Church. Inter­ body is planned for Saturday, August ment was in Bordentown cemetery. A SuigarWaferfi^rincca83pkgs |O t 2nd. native of Florence, the deceased is sur­ A >aa.I...a.A_ C aliforn ia •* ta ll i The morning worship service is con­ A p rico ts Whole Natural ^ cans » vived by his wife, Ina E., a son, Gosta ducted at 11:00 a. m. The sermon topic A., and a brother, Joseph B. Schuyler of FORCED TO VACATE 8lu.b.rrie.cSi“'!:a2™:;^33c this Sunday will be “The- Value of the South Amboy. ITe retired in 1934- after Christian Community.” ^ cans 35 years of service with the George Monmouth County Farmers Exchange Building At 7:45 p. m. we assemble for eve­ W. Helme Company. Pineapple 2 19 c ning worship. “But Pie Was a Leper” Crushed or Hems. Temporarily Located at w'ill be the theme of meditation. WILLIAM J. DONNELL Fonry Wei Pack Thursday, 8:00 p. m., the mid-week service of praise and prayer is held. William J. Donnell, son of the late SHRIMP 27c There is a welcome for all in these ser­ Noble and Margaret Donnell, and broth­ Maple Shade Garage vices. er of the late Nettie M. Donnell, died Our Bast Pure Fruit in Fitkin liospital, Neptune, Sunday, af­ on and after July 28 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ter a .short illne.ss. Mr. Donnell, who 12-01 * REV. PAUL M. HUMPHREYS. Mini*Ur was 73, lied all his voung life and grew Jars to manhood in liightstown. He was en­ Preserves 2 ”“25 Communion will be observed on Sun­ gaged in the lumber business over 40 Lawn Seed-Lime-Pratt’s Feeds Your choice of Strawberry, Blackberry, day at eleven o’clock. The pastor will Raspberry and Cherry years, retiring from business several deliver an address entitled, “On Getting years ago. Wayne’s Feeds W hat We Deserve.” The ministry of For the past 20 years he spent about Choice No. 2Vs S music will be u n d e r the direction of Oregon Ripe can A six months of the year at his summer Fresh Prunes Miss Jose,phine Silver. home. 22 Seaview avenue, Ocean Grove. Rob-Ford All Green No. 2 The B. Y. P. U. will direct the wor­ Cut Spears (with tips) cans His winter residence was 93 Hellar NELSON C. MOUNT Asparagus 2 9 e ship programs in the Adult Department Parkway, Newark. F. D. Green No. 2 of the church school during August P H O N E 11 end W hite ITe was a member of St. Paul's Meth­ MONMOUTH ST., HIGHTSTOWN Lima Beans 2 cane 1 5 « Miss Myra Norris is chairman of the odist Church, Newark. U rge ^ ^ committee. California, Surviving him are his wife, Eva Rose oval S The Young People meet at 6:45 p. m Sardines ia Tomato $aUCe 2 cans • S Donnell; two daughters, Mrs. Sheldon “Baptists in Alaska" will be discussed Cadmus of Newark and Miss Elva Rose Rob-Ferd 1 7 -0 1 by Robert Clayton. Myra Croshaw will Jumbo Peas Tender Green eana 22« lead the devotions. Donnell of Newark and Ocean Grove; one son, Warren N. Donnell of Mata­ The Sperklinf Rev. Plumphreys will be absent from wan, and a sister, Mrs. Richard Morris *Plna Uepoelt Q 2 5 c the pulpit throughout August. The fol­ Rob Roy Cola lowing speakers will preach in his ab­ of New Brun.swick. Four grandchildren Also Giuger AJe, Boot Beer, BarMparilln, etc. sence: August 3, Dr. Wilbour E. Saun­ also survive. ders; August 10, Dr. Oscar W. Plender- Funeral services were held Wednes­ Gtea-Csia 6 25« day at two o’clock at the Farry Memori­ Old Hights Inn nilSI Depoalt O hota *3® son; August 17, Dr. Charles M. Bond; al ITome, Asbury' Park, with burial in Bsld Msdal FUur 6 ^ 26c Gat Rita I So August 24, Dr. E. Herbert Dutton, and Cedar ITill Cemetery, Hightstown, B i M B san t 15c Skoa Wfcitc *i;S 9o August 31, Dr. Rittenhouse Neisser. cordially invites you Bleach A gt I On MRS. EMILY THNDALL HAWK $aBaicr|it*?2.“ '‘2 ““ 27e Clorox Ulalnfectanl bot ■ W 52, wife of Daniel E. ITawk, died to >t« Wednesday at her home on Brunswick Pike,' near Princeton traffic circle. The O b it u a r y funeral will be held Saturday from Aeat-^'ROASnO Kingston Presbyterian Church, with Dr. 3rd Anniversary E. VanDyke W hite officiating, assisted All Hw rich fall Covor at cpaclally talaetad by the Rev. _E. C. Burke of Hamilton aad aapartly Maadad coSaa davalapad by PATRICK L. MURPHY Square Baptist Church a n d the Rev. this faBMai sclaalISc roaitiay procait. Robert Berger of Matawan Presbyter! Wednesday - July 30 Popular Wia-Crttf Funeral services for Patrick L. Mur­ an Church. Interment will be in Dutch phy, 52, were held Saturday morning at Neck cemetery.- 9 o’clock at the Peppier Funeral Home, Mrs. Tindall was born near Edinburg. MUSIC BY COFFEE Allentown. Requiem mass was cele­ She was an active member of the Kings­ VnawSH*S32£c Sava Ceupgaa for Vatuabla Premiumt brated at St. John’s Church, Allentown, ton Presbyterian Church. In addition to at 10 o'clock. Burial was in St. John’s h e r husband, she is survived by tw o Blue Cadet Orchestra ■onaar Day 2 25e Acme ^“3* "‘ '•■26c cemetery at that place. daughters, Mrs. Mabel Davis and Miss Pie is survived by his wife, Sarah E. Annabelle ITawk; two sons, Daniel, Jr., featuring Murphy; three sons, Joseph V., Charles ,J^^WOODSIDE Stdtinet by and Albert E. Hawk; a sister, Mrs! A., and Williarn L., and two daughters, Mary Hankins of Hightstown; two ‘i Larry Taylor f Pine Creamery K E E B L E R 9 o Miss Helen P., and Miss Elizabeth A. brothers, W arren W. and Albert D. Tin­ Murphy of Allentown. dall of Plamilton Square, and fwo grand­ ^ romantic baritoua Mrt.Solilarsr’s S23“";{V‘9o Murphy, who is said to have been In children. B utter ' Walek’s firape Jules ^ 19o I Llnburgcr Cbeaso ^.‘ ITe fiM U a e Fleur S.',‘ l9o Charge Purchases Made on Saturday, July 26, 3 9 " MatfarJ, Bebferd »,"8o and the Balance of the Month Will Not Be SWERN (S Pure Creamery Billed Until Sept. 1st! China Baattiy Dmnor Table Batter OPEN SATURDAY NIGHTS TILL 9 Chow M ein'”'* 5Se u n h a m ’s L ______GARDEN-FRESH" FRUITS a VEGETABLES AIR-COOLED AIR-CONDITIONED Urga yw«»ly loeaaeuhla p n *s te at aMaaytavlag pricat No• 14* July White Sale O U R G R E A T ANNUAL Fresh Tom atoes iuiri4‘ 2 - 15« L e ttso e " Cannon Towel Ensemble August Furniture Now Chroon Apples 4«*15« Bath Towels, _ ~ Size 22x44 ...... 39c ‘ 1 5 « SALE! Guest Towels, il Na, I Mow l aleslad Jersey WtiHo ~ Size 17x30...... 29c Our entire stock of furniture 1 0 - 1 » reduced! Savings as high as 50% Face Cloths.. 15c Because this is an annual event, for which we’ve been famous Our famous Cannon towels . . . many years, we planned it months ago . . . when nierchandise Main Sbreet that make a fine art of drying was a little more available and prices were a good deal lower! n^p im m sfiif ne #• you quickly! Thick, t h r i s t y T hats why we can once more bring you &e unforgettable pnaFMHiMQ M ear ui solid pastel colored beauties values for which this sale has become l^ w n t with dark borders. All bath­ room colors. EASY PAYMENTS ARRANGED ! Terms as easy on yo« bwlmt as the prices th e ^ lv e s! Or ase Duaham's Domestics - Street Floor our hy-away phal .. Ib a CwS CMv_ — SOUTH BROAD AT LAFAYETTE, 11tENT(W t-PM (M E f «t* -