MOST PROGRESSIVE TOWNSHIP WITH THE SUBURBAN NEWSPAPER LARGEST IN GUARANTEED THIS AREA CIRCULATION "The Voice of the Raritan Bay District"

VOL. V.—No. 24 FORDS, N. 3,, FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1940 PRICE THREE Good News A Lot Of Fence HOME GUARD Hendrickson To Attend Big Rally ALIEN P(H| Clara Barton B&L, In New Enclosure At Arse- Of Fords Republican Club Sunday Liqiiidation, To Pay nal Ordered; Will TOLD ABOUT G. 0. P. Gubernatorial Nominee To Head Notables A HERE OPENI Six P, C. Dividend Cost $92,3.12 Picnic; Program Of Athletic Events Is Scheduled RARITAN TOWNSHIP —- A FORDS—According to an an- fence, costing more than $92,- 5TH COLUMN FORDS—Robert C. Hendrickson, Republican candi- ON TUESDAY nouncement by Jacob H. Bern- stein, association counsel, the 312, will be constructed at Rari- date for governor, "will be the guest of honor at a picnic ABC Head Commends Rari- Clara Barton Building and Loan State Says Workers Must tan Arsenal here as a protec- Agent From FBI Addresses to be held at Varady's Grove, Ford. Avenue, this place, All Non-Citizens Will Be Association declared its third tive measure against sabotage, Sunday, September 15. The affair is being sponsored by tan Township Officials dividend to shareholders this Pay Own Transporta- Senator William H. Smathers Home Defense Unit At Registere By Postmast- week. The organization is in said. the Fords Men's Eepublican Club. For Aid voluntary liquidation. tion To Projects Allocation of this sum, Sen- Meeting Tuesday A large committee is working on arrangements to er Edward Seyler Notices have heen sent to all ator Smathers said, had been accommodate nearly 1,000 persons. 1 shareholders to apply at the approved by President Roose- A feature of the day will be a POLICE ALSO LAUDED office for their dividends. ORDER TO AFFECT 64 velt. PUBLIC AND NEWSMEN Softball game between two rival FIREMEN'S BAZAAR FINGERPRINTING ALSO The dividend is for six per The work will be performed club teams. There will also be IN. LETTER TO BOARD cent and brings the total paid I LOCAL WPA EMPLOYES as a WPA project and is ex- BARRED FROM SESSION free dancing and a complete spox'ts REQUIRED UNDER LAW out since August 15, 1938, to pected to get underway immedi- prog-ram. CONTINUESTONIGHT 43 per cent. ately. Special features will be free Michael Riesz, Samuel Hodes Because of its defense nature, valuable prizes which will be Illicit Liquor Seized, Al- Town Had Appropriated Prevention Of Subversive awarded hourly and a $25 award Raritan Engine Go., No. 1 Failure To Comply With and A. H. Rosenbloom are the the local government ordnance Annual Event Features leged Owner Arrested trustees. Sophie R. Jensen is Total Of $7,000 To Pro- depot is expected to obtain ad- Activities Discussed By to the person identifying Mr. X Rule May Result' In the secretary. ditional funds to carry out other at the picnic. Special Awards The day's activity -will get under On August 10th vide For Conveyance work required to insure safety 5 Fire Companies PISCATAWAYTOWN — The Heavy Fine, Jail against saboteurs. • way at 10 o'clock and will continue late in the evening. annual bazaar of Raritan Engine EAEITAN TOWNSHIP—E. W. CLARA BARTON—About 250 Company No. 1, which opened 2 WOODBRIDGE — Unless the Varied athletic events, and FORDS—Postmaster* Edward Garrett, acting commissioner of members of the recently organized games will be conducted arid re- Tuesday night after being rained Seyler announced today final ar- State changes its mind, free trans- Volunteer Firemen's Home De- out the previous evening, will con- the State Alcoholic Beverage Com- freshments will . be available rangements have been fnadje for. mission, in a communication to portation of 64 Township WPA fense Corps heard a representative throughout the day. tinue tonight through tomorrow WITIN_5JIUTES Fords' part in a nation-wide regis- Victor C. Pedersen, director of workers to the Dayton Highway of the Federal Bureau of Investi- night on the firehouse grounds at Four Cars Damaged And and Cheesequake Highway projects MARKS LAND SALE gation talk on the control of sub- Plainfield and Woodbridge Ave- tration of aliens—August 27, to- public safety here, lauded town- versive activities of "fifth eolmn- ship police for the splendid co- 13-Year-OId Boy In- will be halted next week. nues here. - December 26, 1940. Township Is Better Off By ists" and other duties of a home DINNER MARKS 5TH The bazaar includes many operation afforded investigators of At the beginning of the year, defense unit at a meeting held The registration will be *.cou- the ABC in a raid Friday night in jured In Raritan games, booths and other entertain- ducted in the postoffice on New the Township Committee appropri- $400 As Result Of Tuesday night in the Amboy Ave- ment, operated by the firemen and Raritan Township. RARITAN" TOWNSHIP — Two ated $3,000 for WPA- transporta- nue firehouse here. B1RTHDAY_OF CLUB Brunswick Avenue. Sample forms accidents within five minutes at the Brisk Battle for the benefit of the company. Commissioner Garrett wrote "I tion in its 1940 budget with the One of the features of the af- are now available at the post office" intersection of Woodbridge Ave- The session was an entirely for~aliens to study. note with particular pleasure and understanding that the municipal- WOODBRIDGE —• Spirited bid- closed affair—newspapermen be- First. District Democratic fair is a special award which is nue and Nixon Lane Monday after- ding by John Deak against Mrs. 7 thank you and the several mem- noon resulted in damages to four ity would be reimbursed by the ing prohibited from attending. made each evening. Mr. Seyler pointed out thattbJ© bers of the Raritan Township po- Victoria Smalla gave the Town- Organization Observes registration and finger-printinjt- cars and minor injuries to a 13- State. A bulletin issued by the The federal agent'informed the One of the largest crowds of the lice for their splendid cooperation ship $400 more than the $200: Event At Party - week attended the festival last carries no stigma* year-old boy. old State Financial Assistance minimum bid offered for a lot in audience, which included firemen .afforded to investigators of this de- A car owned by Frank Hack- Hopelawn, at a public sale of from the Township's five compan- night which was the Firemen'; All aliens 14 years of age "or. partment in the seizure made at commission stated municipalities PISCATAWAYTOWN . —. The ler, of Woodbridge Avenue, Fords Township-owned property held ies and the. Metuehen department, fifth anniversary dinner of the Night celebration. Ten fire com- older are required to register. Ivory Place, Potters Crossing, Rar- section, driven by George Zigre, of would be reimbursed by the State Monday nigiit in the Memorial Mu- panies and women's auxiliaries at- Alien children under 14 years mast of the possible duties of home de- First District Women's: Demo- itan Township, on August 16. 27 Carlton Street, also Fords sec- at the rate of 1 cent per mile per nicipal Building. Mrs. Smalla was fense units in the event all Nation- tended. be registered by their parents -or tion, skidded ahd struck a parked ratic Club was held last night at i "It is gratifying- to learn that, man. the successful bidder and paid $600 al Guard companies are mobilized the Blue Heaven Inn here. . The Chief Thomas Swales, Jr., is ;uardians. Generally speaking, in addition to the illicit liquor ear owned by Edward F. Coffey, of for the lot. serving as general chairman, as- foreign bom persons who have, 390 Delevan Street, New Bruns- In May, when no • funds were for active service. affair was an outstanding- success, seized, the violator was appre- Deak offered the original $200 sisted by all members of the com- riot become citizens of the United wick. forthcoming from the State, the The FBI man, who name was according to Mrs. Herbert'Pfeiffer, States are aliens. Persons, with hended as well. bid, but Mrs. Smalla, who was the chairman. . . • pany. Proceeds will be placed in According to the police, Zigre Township Committee was forced not disclosed, explained the vari- the children's Christmas Party first citizenship papers must regis- "Continued efforts in this direc- owner of the property before it ous methods employed by "fifth Sheriff Julius C. Engel served as was riding toward New Brunswick to pass, an emergency appropria- was sold at tax sale, seemed deter- fund. ter. - tion will soon teach bootleggers we when the car skidded on the wet tion of $4,000,. making a total of columnists" and the ways in which toastmaster. Members assisting mean business and eventually mined to regain title to the land Mrs. Pfeiffer on arrangements The registration of aliens "is pavement, turned' around and which adjoins her home. The bid- every citizen may .aid through bring about a sound control struck the rear of the parked ma- $7,000. The last appropriation guard against possible sabotage ncluded Mrs. Mary Tomaseo, Mrs. compulsory. A specific act o£ runs out in a few days. ding 'was increased five dollars at through legitimate channels." chine. Both vehicles drove through each turn until the final $60ft bid and espionage activities. John O.'Connor and Mrs; Anthony DINNER TOMORROW ongress—the Alien Registration Raid on, August 16 a guard rail and crashed into a Meanwhil.gv with -the new state !stvan. Ac tof 1940—requires 'all .-a pole. '" was-reached. •• Police Chief, Charles. .Grand- The commendation referred to relief set-ui|, the announcement jean, of Raritan Township, and The club will sponsor a bus ride to register during the official M Shortly after, a car driven by was made recently that the State Other parcels of property sold to Sea Girt tomorrow to attend ON CLUB CALENDAR ration period, August 27 to: Be-' a raid staged at 11 P. M., August Sheriff Julius C. Engel, of Nixon would not be-responsible for any were as follows: Police Chief Willard B. Huteh- 16, in which Agents Carson and inson, of Metuehen, also addressed Governor's Day ceremonies. Buses Raritan Township Unit To cember 26, 1940. Allaliens-14 Lane, was struck in the rear by a WPA transportation bills for 1940 Lots 27 to 30 inclusive in Block will leave the clubhouse in Player years of age or over must b'e'fin- Grover, Commissioner Pedersen, car driven by Frank Manino, of 600E to Stern and Dragoset for the delegation. Kenneth J. Shep- Sponsor Affair; Nagy Lieut. Henderson, Acting Lieut. Township Attorney Leon-E. Mc- pard, chairman of the corps, pre- Avenue at 11:30 A. ,M. gerprinted as part of registration.' 40 'Louis Street, New Brunswick. Elroy said yesterday the Township Alfred and Marjorie Baker, $500. A fine-of $1,000 and imprisoa- Stout, Officers Jacobs, Loblin, Sheriff Engel had stopped, polict is in no position to increase its Lots 1 to 4 inclusive in Block sided. Heads Committee Rolf, Calamoneri and Doll, and said, to make a left turn when- the The next meeting of the defense ment for six months is prescribed budget any further. If the State 600K; Lots 59 to 62 inclusive in CLARA BARTON—The Raritan by this law for failure to Special Officer Hansmann partici- accident occurred. doesn't reverse its decision, the Block 600K; Lots 1 to 8 inclusive unit will be held Tuesday night, BOARD POSTPONES Township Forum Club will spon- giat, pated. Manjno's son, Charles, 13, was men will have to get to their jobs and 11 to 14 inclusive in Block September 17, in the Plainfield for refusal to be fingerprinted, or " sor a shore dinner tomorrow night "or making registration statements They raided the home of Wil- thrown ag-ainst the'windshield and through their own means, he said. 600L to John Di Leo for $2,000. Avenue firehouse, Piscatawaytown. at Ye Cottage Inn on Route 25 liam Reddick, 66, negro, of Ivory sustained a minor laceration of Mr. McElroy suggested that the Part of 32_and 33 in Block 477 :nown to be false. and Eastside Avenue. The affair All records will be kept ^secret place, Potter's section. A small the forehead. He was treated by WPA transfer the local men to to Frank M. Parker for $1,050. is open to club members, their quantity of tmtaxed illicit liquor Dr. A. M. Carr of .Bonhamtown. Township projects. Part of 47H in Block 533C to and confidential and will be; made -- Officers John Jacob and John SCHOOL CALENDAR Expects To Make Selection families and guests. available only to such persons' as" was discovered on the premises. "There is "no need to send 34 Helen Simonsen for.$150. Louis Nagy is general chairman, Calomoneri investigated both men to Dayton and 30 men to At Session Slated For may be designated with tMe ap^ '_ Reddick, arraigned before Re- crashes. No complaints were Lots 127 and 128 in Block 5-H assisted by George H. Thompson proval of the attorney general of corder Alfred C. Urffer last Sat- made. Cheesequake each day," he said, to John Bacso for $200. FOR W41_ LISTED Next Tuesday , and Leavenworth Tyler. urda morning, was released under '"when there is so much road work the United States. -. to be done in Woodbridge. We Lots 65A and 65 B in Block Dancing and other entertain- $500 property bond to guarantee 139D to Joseph S Samonek, for WOODBRIDGE — Eight recom- ment will be on the amusement A receipt card will be sfet to appropriated money for WPA proj- Schedule Calls For Classes every alien who registers. .This his appearance before the grand $375. mendations submitted to the Board program. jury. ects at the beginning of the year 186 Days, Opening On card will serve as evidence of reg- and very little of it was used the Lot 838 in Block 4480 to Grace of Education Monday night by the istration. first six months because the WPA Magnani for $100. September 4th Teachers' Committee -were ap- has not seen fit to make up a pro- Lots 6 and 7 in Block 373J to Mr. Seyler announced- that gram here in Woodbridge. It seems Myrtle and Webster Prop-per for WOODBRIDGE — Victor C. proved without comment. PICNIC IS ENJOYED here is no charge for the finger-. utterly ridiculous to send men out $120. Nicklas, supervising .principal of Appointment of another substi- printing and he warns all aliens to i Helen Egressi Compliment- of town when there is so much to Lots 216 and 217. in Block 17 to Township schools, submitted a ten- tute teacher .for the 1940-1941 BY CHURCH CHOIR beware of unscrupulous persons ' be accomplished here. Charity be- J. Ambrose and Helen Pastor for tative calendar for the school year school year and discussion of other who may offer to "help" them for ed; To Become Bride $500. 1940-1941 to the Board of Educa- a. fee. gins at home, they say, and it is school matters will take place at a In September about time we began to profit from Lot 119 in Block 43F to Vic- tion Monday nighif. St. John's Chorus Has Out- Unemployed Members the proverb." toria Smalla for $260. Michael The schedule, listing 186 pos- special informal session of the Ing; Mrs. Schuster, Miss BONHAMTOWN —Miss Helen Kertes was the original bidder on iible school days, was adopted toy board Tuesday night, August 27, 01 Post Are Requested Egressi, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. In the meantime, the men em- ployed on the projects are worry- the property for $200. the board pending possible changes at 7:30 o'clock. Fullerton Hostesses OUTING TO BEACH lo Register Julius Egressi, of Suydam Avenue, Lots 21 to 27 inclusive in Block which may be required due to this place, was feted at a shower ing about their jobs as most of The recommendations of the them have no means to get to the 1079Y to Ed-ward and Katheryn weather or other uncontrollable KEASBEY—A most enjoyable FORDS—A meeting of Harry in honor of her marriage which Doody for $1,400. conditions. Teachers' Committee, accepted by picnic "was given the choir of St.' ON PARISH SLATE Hansen Post No. 163, American projects, both of which are new is to take place in September. tate highways. With school reopening slated for the board, are as follows: John's "Chapel of Fords recently Legion, was held Tuesday night at The event was held at St. Mar- September 4, the schedule shows 1. That Miss Charlotte Ull- at Butler Park by Mrs. Charles Fords Church Will Sponsor the home of Bartolo DiMatteo in garet-Mary's church auditorium. For Fait Activities 19 possible days for the month. man be continued as a substitute Schuster and Miss Ida Fullerton, New Brunswick Avenue. Mrs. Frank Dobos, a cousin, and Triano General Chairman Scheduled By Fishing Club Holidays and vacation periods for teacher in Physical Education organist. Excursion To Rye, N. Y. All unemployed members of the Miss Grace Bendict; a friend, were the year are as follows: for the year 1940-1941, the com- Among those present were Mr. post are urged to communicate hostesses. For Fishing Club Supper ' PISCATAWAYTOWN—A spe- November 5, Election Day; No- pensation to be at the regular and . Mrs. Charles, Schuster and On September 8 with the employment officer, Ben- . More than 62 relatives and PISCATAWAYTOWN — Ar- cial meeting of the Owl Rod and vember 11, Armistice Day; Thanks- per diem rate for High School children, Kenneth and Marie, Mr. FORDS—The annual exeurakm - jamin Sunshine, 50,Maxwell Ave- friends of the bride-to-be were rangements are now being niade Gun Club will be held tonight at iving vacation, close at 1 P. M. substitute teachers. , and Mrs. Sandorf and daughter, Our Lady of Peace Church will nue. ' present from New Brunswick, by the Twilight Hunting and Fish- the home of William Greer, Lake- November 20,.return November 25. 2. That Miss Elaine Zischu Roberta, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ful- e held Saturday, September -7,-" view Boulevard, this place. Julius Easter vacation, close Thursday The next meeting of the organi- Highland Park, South River and ing Club for the annual fall get- be appointed as a substitute lerton and daughters, Virginia and o Playland in Rye, .New York, it Perth Amboy. together supper to be held Sep- Black, president, will preside. 1P.M., April 10, return April 21. teacher in German for the school Ruth, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fuller- >vas announced yesterday. zation will be held at the home of Plans for fall activities will be Memorial Day, Friday, May 30. Sidney Dell, in Fifth Street, Sep- tember 22 in Colasurdo Grove in yea"r. 1940-1941, the compensa- ton, Matthew Jago, Constance Members and others planning to discussed and a number of fishing Schools close for summer vacation tion to be at the regular per tember 3. Player Avenue. trips will be arranged. June 20. VanHorn of Fords; Mr. and Mrs. ttend will leave on the S. S. New- Fords Residents Again Ask Final plans for the affair will diem rate for High School sub- Charles Wargo of Piscataway; York from the Perth .-Amboy city - Repairs For Grant Street be made at a meeting- of the group stitute teacher. Mr. and Mrs. William Day and dock at 9 o'clock in the morning. LUNCHEONETTE OPENS; Monday night, August 26, at the 3. That Mrs. Sareda Brady, Mrs. Margaret Day of Plainfield; Tickets are now on sale at th« FORDS — Residents of Grant Second District Democratic Club Wet Clothing Trips Youthful Pair whose maternity-leave of ab- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pfeiffer, Mr. •ectory of the church and at Buck- - • OFFERS WIDE SERVICE Street, Fords, submitted a second headquarters. Patrick Triano is sence expires in September 1940 and Mrs. George Fullerton and ey's drug store, New Brunswick " petition to the Township Com- serving- as general chairman. be returned to School No. 1 and sorr, Raymond, Mrs. Martha Ful- Avenue. • •-" Special Businessmen's Meal mittee Monday night for the Sought In Keasbey Tavern Break that Miss Frances Ryan be trans- lerton and daughter, Ida and Wal- Several hundred persons .from To Be Served Daily, improvement-of their street which ferred from .School No. 1 to~ ter Bertram of Keasbey. Fords, Keasbey, Hopelawn - and they state "is in a deplorable con- Art Classes Are Projected KEASBEY—The steady, heavy called on Zavorsky. School No. 2. aritan Township are expdeted to Owner Announces dition". rain early , Saturday morning Upon being- questioned, Zavor- 4. That Miss Joanna Mar- make the trip. : -v , Township Clerk B. J. Dunigan At. Play grounds In Raritan bore mute testimony against two sky insisted that he was in bed at ko-w be transferred from School FORDS -A new and complete Keasbey youths and as a result Keasbey Plant Is Entered, was instructed to acknowledge the RARITAN " TOWNSHIP — The ten o'clock Friday nigrht but when No. 9 to Hagaman Heights stationery and luncheonette took petition and inform the residents Captain John Egan cleared up Captain Egan asked to see- the school. Tools, Equipment Theited its place in the business section Recreation Division's playground ANNIVERSARY PICNIC of the street that a WPA project staff is accepting- registration from a robbery at Meyer's Tavern, clothing he wore the night before. 5. That 'Mrs. Virginia Haine, of Fords this week. Located at to cover the repairs is being con- Smith Street, Keasbey, a few hours He found the clotlve& were soaking KEASBEY — John Grim-ley, HELD BY G. 0. P. CLUMP 506 New Brunswick Avenue. all those interested in joining- the whose maternity leave of ab- manager of. the Fiillerton Truckine sidered. The matter was also re- art classes to be conducted every after it occurred and took Adam wet—and it did not .begin to rain sence expires in September 1940 Kline's Stationery and Luncheon- ferred to-the Road Department. Zavorsky, .19, of Maplewood Ave- until three o'clock Saturday morn- Co., at the Natco Factory, Keas- Slovak-Hungarian Organi- ette is modern, sanitary and cen Thursday afternoon at 3:15 by and that Mrs. Marion 'Storholm bey, reported to Captain John Mark Bernstein. nue and a fourteen-year-old com- ing! The fourteen-year-old boy's who had a leave oi absence dur- trally located. panion into custody. clothing -was fou>nd 'to be in the Egan, Monday af ternooii that"their zation Has Outing. In :} Forsgate ice cream, made on the 2 Watches, Valued At $100 The weekly classes, which will same condition. When faced with ing 1939-1940 be returned to tool shed was broken into some farm, .is served. It is also avail- start next month, "will be held at Aboub four o'clock Saturday these facts the boys admitted School No. 10. time . Friday night and several Fords Park Sunday Theited From Iselin Home Piscatawaytown Commons under morning, Leonard Meyers,-who- re- 6. That Mrs. Dorothy. Gold- magnetos, carburetors and garage able in a convenient home package. sides over the tavern, heard a noise breaking into the tavern, Captain FORDS—The Slovak-Hungarian Kline's fountain service uses only ISBLIN—Two wrist watches, the supervision of the recreation Egan said. •• ' finger, whose maternity leave of tools were stolen. Republican Club of Fords, Ke»s-' pure fruits and syrups. The lunch- department. Children and grown- downstairs.- He went out on the absence expires in September Mr. Grimley also reported that valued at $100, were stolen from, back porch and saw two figures Eight dollars, a box of cigars >ey and Hopelawn held 'it'filtf eonette features hot soups, salads, the home of Jack Mastrangelo, of ups interested are asked to register. 1940, be assigned to School No. thieves broke into Mr. Fullerton's y picnic Sunday 'aOhe grilled sandwiches and coffee. A leave the rear of the building. He and a box of gum were found in 15 and, that Mr. Joseph Najavits boat, "The Mazda," docked at La Guardia Avenue this place, shouted and they began to run, one the home of the younger boy and ords Park. Several hundred per.- special businessmen's lunch is ser- sometime Tuesday afternoon. CONSTABLE NAMED be transferred from School No. Keasbey, and took brass fixtures, ons attended the affair. . •" ved daily for thirty cents. of them dropping some of the loot. were returned to Mr. Meyers. Za- 10 to School No. 15. copper tubing,and a pximp. Mr. Mastrangelo reported to Of- KEASBEY — In a resolution Investigating, Mayers found that vorsky was held without -bail for Games and dancing- werV en- ~ In the stationery department ficer William Roinond that- the submitted by" Police Commission- cigars, cigarettes, chewing gum the grand jury while his compan- •7. That Mrs. Grace Gibson SON IS BORN oyed throughout the -day. - 'Re- can be found greeting cards, films, theft occurred between noon and er Herbert B. Rankin Monday and about eight dollars in change ion, was held for the-juvenile au- be assigned to. School No-. 6. FORDS—-A son was born Sun- ireshments were also served. cameras, school supplies, maga- 3:30 P. M. The thieves entered night, John Blando, of Keasbey, were missing. Meyers gave Cap- thorities. Both boys have, been in 8; That Mrs. Kathryn. Chalk- day to Mr. and Mrs. Lafayette Liv- John NaRy served as "chairman zines, imported and domestic to- the 'house by forcing a rear win- was appointed a . Township con- trouble,"with Jthe^authorities before, ier be: transferred from School ingston, of 15 Dunbar Avenue, at •nd was assisted by large -com- baccos and sundries. tain Egan a meagre description of a o-w. stable for one year. the pair and as a result the latter Captain Egan said." "*..." '" "No. 14 to School No. 7. the (Perth; Amboy. General Hospital: nittee. PAGE TWO FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1940 FORDS AND RARITAN TOWNSHIP BEACON Bus. Bide To lake Enjoyed New Curtain Drop For E'S NAUGHTY DOGGIE I Fords- Boy Scout Troop 52 j An Outfit Of Many Uses N DENIAL WOODBRIDGE:—Nine-year-old SMI T0PS BtlES Returns Home From^nting By Dukes Athletic Club Stage Is Okayed By Board Beverly Stern, of 175 Clinton OF DARBY ALLEGATION Street, was bitten on the right leg FORDS—Members of Boy Scout FORDS—The Duke's Athletic WOODBRIDGE—The purchase by a stray dog Wednesday after- !Di LEAGUE FMCAS Troop 52 have returned home after Club held a most successful bus Says N. L Official Erred In of a new gray curtain drop for noon, according to a report made s spending a vacation at Camp Rar- rid e to Dunham's Lake in James- S&yitig Local Bonds the high school stage at a cost of at police headquarters by the itan in Columbia. burg, recently. Thomas Marlms $165 was approved by the Board, child's mother. The dog had been of Education Monday night. | Rojbetis Gets two Singles. Following is a list of the tests was chairman of the affair. Are In Default seen in the vicinity of Manor Ave- Those members who, participat- WOODBRIDGE. — Township It was pointed out that the pres- nue and Sherry Street, she said. '- Jo Pace Winners In the boys passed while at camp: ent heavy gold color curtain, huna rl Cole, life saving; Albert Han- ed were: Oscar Yuhasz, Francis Treasurer O. J. Morganson an- The girl was treated by Dr. Mal- Pords Park Game Yuhasz, Steve Homa, John Kipila, when the auditorium was built, is colm Dunham. sen, life savins;; Joseph Kahutas, nounced this week that Wood- in an almost unusable condition - FORDS—The Shell Oil handed first class swimming and merit John Yanik, George Liddle, Mich- ael Grega, Joseph Hrabik, Steven dgB Township is not in default The new drop will' be 'obtained -the Fords Dukes a 3 to 2 spank- badge swimming; Edward Swanik, frqni the Lee Lash Studios, New 1 Hrabik, Steven Rimar, Michael by $1,080 on bonds as erroneously ing Wednesday night at Fords first class swimming ; Joseph Cur- York City. ?TPark in a township league gams. Palko, Joseph, Palko, Peter Litka, stated in recent daily newspaper ran, mapping; Theodore Dillworth, itories. The papers in question Roberts, with two, hits, worked mapping; Charles Eingled, track- Paul Vincze, Charles Buleca, John ACTIVE FLYING *Jbest -with the stick for the winners, ing- and signalling; Robert Dill- Nash, William Nagang-ast and quoted a statement by Local Gov- The Army Air Corps will begin •while P. Lytka, with two bingles, worth, knife and hatchet; William Richard Nagangast. ernment Commissioner Walter R. Arctic weather flying tests in •starred foi- the losers. Rasmussen, knife and tracking and Darby in which the supposed de- Alaska in November, using the Duke* (2) hatchet. fault wa3 listed. Morganson de- new $7,000,000 test station at AB R E Two Canine Pals. Causing clared: Fairbanks. . J. M-elder, cf _ 4 0 1 Numerous Complaints Here "This is absolutely incorrect, in- -"P. Vincze, Zb -..., 4 0 1 BANDMASTER TO TRAIN asmuch as our annual debt service GREATER CLEANLINESS WINDSHIELD WIPERS at Palko, lb 3 0 1 WIT® NATIONAL GUARD: WOODBRIDGE—While walking as well as all other obligations of Gas is the only energy source AND SHOCK ABSORBERS ~'J, Koczan, ss 3 0 0 along. Barron Avenue Sunday af- the Township are being paid that has the distinction of cleans- Drive Your Car in- NOWl 'B. BTrabik, 3b 3 0 0 Hoops Given Permission By ternoon, Edward 'Borgart, 10, of promptly when due. ing action as it is used. Gas is ''Jr. Kipila, sf ..._ 3 0 0 553 Cedar 'Street, this, place, was "The item of $1,080 represents microscopically clean—its blue . or E. lo attacked by a stray police dog that a balance of 'baby bonds' which flame being clean enough for ster- 'G. Grega, rf a 0 0 bit him on the left hip. The young- M. Grega, p 3 0, 0 was called for payment in January. ilization. Gas creates no ashes, in Ann.nal Brills* ster was treated by Dr. Henry Be- 1937, but which amount has notsoot, dirt, carbonization, oxidation .P. Lytka, c 2 2-2 laf sky. -W.'Nagangast, It 3 0 1 W'OODBRIDGE — Theodore yet been presented for redemption or so-called rust. When gas serv- 257 New Brunswick Ave. According to the police there by the bondholders. ices appliances for cooking, water Hoops, high school band instruc- have been numerous complaints (at Elm St.) s Totals 31- 2 5 tor, was granted permission by the "Revenue is available for the heating:, refrigeration and the about a stray police dog which has liou.se heating- equipment, greater Perth Amboy, N. J. Shell OIL (3) Board of-Education Monday night been running around the Barron payment of these 'baby bonds' if 3ranches: Newark and Jersey City ; AB R E to participate in a brief training and when they are presented for cleanliness in the home is main- P. A. 4-3259 Avenue section in company with a tained. Monteealvo, 2b 3 0 0 period with the New Jersey Na- bull dog, which is also said to be redemption." Open 8 A. M. to S P. M. I Riebar-ds, 3b 3 11 tional Guard. vicious. The dog warden, however, i'Genevese, ss 2 0 1 Hoops is a warrant officer and has been unable to catch them. bandmaster in the USth Infantry - Sehuler, If 3 0 0 FOR campus or country, for motoring or autumn sjports, this Permission has been granted by * Montazzoli, cf 3 10 Band. The board voted him a leave p2-ope2-ty owners in that vicinity cape will be the friend of your life. The red shades ar.e in wool • Hup*, * lb 3 0 0 of absence effective September 4. for the dog warden to trespass on " Roberts, c , 4 0 2 As in the case of Ceasar Zullo, plaid. their land, if necessary, to catch GoL-echaldi, p. ., 4 0 0 of Port Reading-, a commercial the dogs. teacher in the high school, who is ' Knight, rf - 3 1 0 now participating in a cruise with Good Samaritan Act Gets ' Grig-gagy, sf 0 ' 0 0 the United States Naval Reserve .'Donovan, rf 0 0 0 Shannon Buckshot Shower Mrs. Euttemann. Is Hostess Officers' Training Corps, the board l agreed to reimburse Hoops the dif- ISELIN—Because he wanted To Bridge Club in Iselin ' • Totals 28 3 4 ference in salary which he may to be a good fellow and help 1 Shell Oil r. 002 000 001—3 lose while in training . his friend, Harold Kuhn, move ! ISELIN—Mrs. Charles Hutte- , Dukes 001 001 000—2 Collision Occurs On Route from his home on 25 Brown .mann, of Fiat Avenue,.entertained Avenue, Eugene Shannon, of the members of the Friendly Six 35 On Monday-Night; Rahway, had to have buckshot Club at dinner and cards at her lew Brunswick Ave«, Cause Undetentished pellets removed from his back. home recently. PRABE IS HEAPED \ Those present were: Mrs. George Shannon and another friend, .Woods, Mrs. George Degenhardt, FEATURING WOODBRIDGE—A collision be- Roger Brennan, of 153 Lake -Mrs. Ru.ssell Furze, of town; Mrs. RELIEF STAFF tween a truck and a pleasure car Avenue, Rahway, were helping ;Thomas Limoli, of Menlo Park and Finally Lands Role He's at the intersection of the Route Kuhn carry out the furniture :Mrs. Harry Ghioffe, of West iff. J. Official^ In Surprise 35 ramp and New Brunswick Ave- and loading it on a truck. On iOrange. Been Seeking Ira "Bfoaey nue, Hopelawn, Monday night sent the final trip Brennan carried i yisit, Lauds Employes two men to the hospital. out the gun,while Shannon walk- : Contraceptives iThe accident happened when the ed on ahead with a pieeeof fur- ; The Connecticut supreme court ; Foi* ^Co-Operation' niture. Bxenhan said he be- Theatre audiences will undoubt- truck driyen by Stanley Me Crack- f has upheld the state anti-birth con- Greeting Cards • ® School Supplies en, of Perth Amboy, and owned by lieved-the gun was unloaded and trql law, which prohibits the use of ; • WOODBRIDGE — After a sur- edly sigh with relief. Jeffrey unthinkingly pulled the trigger, ; • prise "visit to the local relief office Lynn is now a two-fisted, fast talk- the Middlesex Dock and Founda- ) contraceptives^ without exception. Imported-and.-Domestic Tobaccos ® Sundries tion 'Company, of Metuchen, the buckshot entering Shannon's 1 yesterday mprnrng, William 'Post, ing, regular guy on the screen. He back. The latter waSi treated .by ® All Latest Magazines j Supervisor of State Relief Stand- finally landed a role he's- been erashed into the car traveling in Films - AH types of Cameras the opposite direction, and driven by Dr: Orton, in Rahway, Captain. |arda, expressed. Ms satisfaction wanting. John Egan investigated. J'with the manner in. which the office At the Strand Theatre where he Prank P; Siviec, 33, of Perth Am- CLOTHING boy. -is being conducted*and with the co- will star in "Money and the Wo- TO HONOR SKOHFI operation of the employes since the man," starting Tuesday, portrays a Edward Wickberg, 37, of Perth ' FOR THE FAMILY -State took over the management Amboy, a passenger in the truck WOODBRIDGE—-The Legion of young bank detective. In his first Honor degree, the highest; honor Only. Pure Fruits and Syrups. Used of Township relief. scene in the picture, Lynn walks and Sivie^i were injured. The for- ON" CREDIT mer was treated for lacerations of in De Molay circles, will be confer- On his recommendation, mer- -up to John Litel gives him a hearty red upon Richard Shohfi, oflselin, Eo,west Terms and Prices chants and landlords are being ask- slap on the back, a firm handshake the right cheek, right arm and right leg. Siviec, who was taken a member of Amerieug Chapter, ed to hold- up the presentation of and a "How the devil have you Order of De Molay. to the Perth Amboy General Hos- Mils not already submitted until been?" The scene is a tip-off to The -ceremonies will; take place Jsagjher notice. The, request is be- Lynn's characterization through- pital in a radio car by Officer Dan- CLOTHING CO. iel- Paneoni, was treated.for aibra- Monday nightj August 26, "at. the Hqjt Soitos ® Grilled Sandwiches. "''HiffTnade to give the State time to put the picture. Craftsmen's Club. De M;olay 90 CHURCH ST. prijjt new: bill forms. Hereafter Off the screen, Jeffrey is a hard- sions of the forehead and right ! New. Brunswick Salads - » Delicious Coffee knee and possible concussion of the members from all over the state relief 'bills will not be submitted working- conscientious young man. are expected to he present. tpx regular T^ownship billheads but He is appreciative of his roles to brain. He remained at the hospital Business Men's Lunch Served Daily on special State invoice forms.' ,date, but like any ambitious busi- for observation. In the meantime extensive re- ness man he wants new assign- pairs are being made in the relief ments. Before entering pictures local Store Gets Contract EVERY MONMY M6HT office under State supervision. One Lynn was a leader. He was an out- of the petitions has 'been knocked standing track athlete in prep For School Athletic Needs out; desks have been rearranged school and college and has many : 300/ • : - . 341 •m near the windows and the walls are medals and victories to his credit. WOODBRIDGE — The County to be painted a lighter shade. Of- Besides being a standout in dra- Sports Shop, Main 'Street, this Mce hours are now from 9 A. M. to m'atics at Bates College, he was place, was awarded the contract to 4 P.M. editor of the school paper. Upon supply athletic equipment for the 1141 graduating, he served as a clerk high school Athletic Committee this year on its low bid of $512.43 General Motors-Delco has constantly s'n\cn to improve in a department store to earn some the quality of auroraa tic heating equipment -ind to lower money before taking a try at the The local firm was $4.59 under 500. the bid of Levin's Sport Shop ot its price ToQij, new ind impro <_J ricajction facd"" theatre. After appearing in sev- itiesas d ,nr ^rtm*- engineering ic\-ii ex BACKED BY eral New York plays without at- Perth Amboy. The Levin figuie —Bernard Growl, of Simpson was 1517.02. St. James' Auditorium Waodbridge with gixati) incre-istd s-des, m-ke f-osuhle _ Place, was honored at a birthday tracting attention, he finally se- sensation-! price reductions on E>cLo party celebrating- his ninth birth- cured one of the leads in the No. Automatic Hear, e \ M day at the home of Miss Kitty Sul 1 company of "Brother Rat." It livan in South. Amboy. was this part that resulted in his < obtaining a movie contract. VJ. —Mr. and Mrs. iP. E. Castner Lynn thoroughly enjoyed his _J M and children, of Second Street, were Sunday guests of Mr. andfirst experience with a screen role iiiii Mrs. Joseph Luther in Plainsboro. that allows him to be himself. He —Mr. and Mrs. John Calomo- hopes this part will convince execu- neri, of Chestnut Street, visited tives he should stick to rugged at Fort Monmouth .Sunday. types. •^-William Graff, of Columbus Moad Repa.tr Earns Thanks BELCG Avenue; Alfred Blanohard, Jr., of OIL Silver Lake Avenue, Merle, Vir- For Committee From Manse ginia and Adair Michell, of Old BURNER Post Road, visited friends in WOOD BRIDGE—When a resi- Franklin Park .Sunday. dent knocks the Township Commit- At the lowest prices la its —Miss Gladys Brodtmann, of tee for not fixing a particular road, history, General Motors- Mo&dow Road, spent Sunday at that is not news. But when a resi- Delco offers you an even Seaside Park. dent expresses appreciation for finer and more efficient -^Eleanor and Robert Grand road repairs, that definitely is Oil Burner^ featuring such jean, of Plainfield Avenue, are •news. Important and exclusive spending two weeks, with their un , At a meeting of the Township advantages as Rotopowes efe at Seaside Park. Committee Monday night, a letter Unit . . .Thin-Mix Fuel '—Mr. and Mrs. Aage Hansen 'was read from Floyd N. Manse, of Contro!.,.Built-in Oil Con* amd family spent the week-end at Colonia, expressing "appreciation ditioner...Delco-I)esigned their lodge in the Poconos near 'for, the fill in front of St. George and Built Controls, Dingman's Perry, Pa. Mrs. Han-Avenue and Chain-O-Hills Road, OF QUALITY, seh and the girls remained for the Colonia, It is a very desirable im- DELCO MODEL B weefc. provement both for safety and ap- pearance". INSTALLATION -,^-Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Wait, AND ECONOMY! Poor Writing Gostly \fe, of Silver Lake Avenue, visited Before you buy any Auto- rMsiives in Bayonne recently. American business lost $80,000,000 last year as a result of poor pen- matic Heat, let us show yoa, - r^-Mra. Frederick Meyer and manship, estimates Doris E. Almy, right in your own borne, Talking dtffiftfen, BoTothy and Fred, Jr., president of the National Associa- Pictures which, offer PROOF that Price subject to Of Woodbridg-e Avenue; Miss Doro- tion of Penmanship Teachers. Delco-Heat design and engineering local ordinance thy MoNally, of Overbrook Ave- assure unsurpassed Quality and Per- TMe, and Mrs. Meyer's sister, Miss formance . ., that the vast combustion Mary- B. Reed, of- New York, re- EIGHT knowledge and experience of General turned from Laval ette where they Motors, plus the exclusive Delco spent a week. • laboratory-Type Gold Seal Installa- EXHIBIT ~~Mr. and Mrs. I^ank Woerner, tion> bring undreamed-of Economy! Gonoral Motors Sttf^ NEW YORK of Ofd. Post Road, have returned | And remember... Delco offers every ELVINATOR, the family-sized electric WORLD'S FAIR bfflf visiting friends in New type of automatic heat for every type K refrigerator, is proving its worth in of fuel. Mr., and Mrs. Barton Chap- thousands of American homes. man^ of Washington Avenue, have retened, from a, visit with rela- Its many plus benefits—trouble-free oper- tives MI Ne% Haven, Conn. ation, low operating cost, long fife—make -rMr. and Mxs. Richard Munch it an investment worth making. and daughters, Beverly and Ma- Sped, andPred Munch, of Meadow Visit our shov/room today and pick our THIS COMPLETE INSTALLATION B'oad, were. Keansburg. visitors re- the Kelvinator which suits your family's cently. needs. . —feMrs. Clifford P. Voorhees and daughter returned, home from St. Fetor's Hospital, New Brunswick, Washers Oil Burners jSMairday. Radio Air- Counties Uniform Televisittn condiiioning- IHje area of most counties in the Creators, of Fine Furs * THI RED CROSS NEEDS~YOUR HELP tT#ted States is zoughly between 100 195 Smith St. Perth Amboy; ami' 200 square miles. PAGES FORDS AND RARITAN TOWNSHIP BEACON FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1910

Virginia Takes to the Sun Nagp-Atk& Country Cfub QdraBlaavelt, James H, SMdmme —Miss Elizabeth Yuhasand Mi1, S^MriuyhNewBtmmwkkChurck and "Mrs. George Del Grosso'and Are Married In son, George, Jr., have returned ©OiST'HA'MT0"WN—The marriage Kosa, organist, played the PISCATAWAYTOWN — In a Curren, flower girls, wore pink after spending- some time at Sea- frosted organdy with picture. hats of Miss Margaret Nagy, daughter music. ceremony performed by the Rev. of Mr. and Mrs. John Nagy, of 78 A .reception for "5 guests -at the side Park. Emmett B. Waite in Berdine's to match and earned 'shower bou- quets. 'TVoodbridge Avenue, this place, bride's home followed the cese- —Mrs. Otto Maier, of Anne Corner Chapel Saturday afternoon. and Williaftn -P. Acker, son -of Mr.many, after which'the caudle ]£$$ Street, Mrs. Florence Borup and Miss Clara Blauvelt, daughter of Carl Stamm was best inan. Ush- ers were William Blauvelt and Leo and Mis. "Peter Kaymdwicz, of far Atlantic City where they will Miss Lorraine Feddersoii, of Ever- Mr. and Mrs. Harold Blauvelt, of South Plainfield, was solemnized spend their honeymoon. UpoTrjre- green Avenue, are spending two George's Road, Berdine's Corner, Meyers. After the ceremony, a reoeption Saturday afterndon at the Magyar tiirn, they will reside in BonKam- weeks at Budd Lake. "became the bride of James H. Skid- Reformed Church in New Bruns- town. —-Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Jones was held at Cranbury Inn and the j more, son of Mrs. Martha Skid- couple, left for ..an unannounced Mrs. Acker wore a black iravet- and family, of Evergreen Avenue, more, of Koute 25, this place. The ceremony "was performed by are spending the week visiting rel- destination. Mrs. Skidnrore wore ing dress with white accessories " 'The altar was deeoi-ated with a traveling- costume of dusty pink, the Eev. Andrew Kosa in a setting; for- the trip. atives in Pennsylvania. of patois and flowers. The bride's palms and the ceremony "was per- with white accessories. A graduate of North Plainfield -—Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Fedder- formed in 'candlelight. Edward father 'gave her in marriage. son and son, Harry, of Evergreen Upon their return.the couple w .High School, Mr. Acker is employ-^ VanDeursen played the organ and live in Eexdine's Corner. The bride wore a Juliet style Avenue, spent Saturday at Budd silk ch^Ton g-own and long veil ,'ed by Coraell-Dubilier Corpora- Lake. Miss Helen JBeaute, of Laurence tion South Palinfield. The .brid« Harbor, sang-. sprinkled',with lilies of the valley, —Mr. and Mrs. Louis Kirsh, of falling frc>m a headpiece of ozangg was graduated from New Bl'UTis- New Brunswick Avenue, entertain- Given in marriage by her father, wick High School and works for the bride wore a gown of white blossoms. She earned white roso's Dr. Estelle E. Kleiber of New- ed friends from Connecticut this «atin trimmed with lace, with a and lilies of the valley. '••week. Irene, the 'bride's sister was Brunswick. —John Toth of Doug-las Street, high neckline, long sleeves and —Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Niko- train. She wore a long- veil of net vits, of William Street, visited maid of honor. -She wore a gown -A Classified AdT. Will Sell-ifc— spent a few days in Montreal Can- of pink silk • chiffon with "blue ac- ada, recently. . edged with lace and trimmed with with Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Niko- seed pearls, and carried a shower vits Jr., of Passaie, Sunday. cessories and a headdress of Am- —

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Business and Secretarial Schools PERTH AMBOY NAT1ONAI BANK BIEHJ. 313 STATE ST. ••'. "The Home of Better Fur GarMents" V 17 Cooke Ave. PERTH AMBOY. W. •$. : Good Positions Secured for Graduate* :S22AmboyAve. ,•_..-;' .,.; .. , Tel, Wood. 8.0770 - PERTH Garteret, N. J. Wrti. C. Cope, D. C. S., President COdM C 5 A. J. St. John, M. 5., Restden) Mgr. PAGE FOUR FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1940 FORDS AND RARIVAN TOWNSHIP BEACON retailers; and that the cost of such adver- piP tising raises the price of goods or services. p It will be news to many reads, there- The Oldtimer Mr. Willhie s 'Acceptance EACON fore, to learn that a brand new advertiser PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY An Editorial From The New York Times —by— has now appeared in "the paper match- REMEMBER BACK TO THE DAV5 N«HEN,0ILL THE BEACON PUBLISHING CO. cover field. The new advertiser is a branch MOW THE P/20PQH7OR OP THE OT/5 In the heart of a Middle West that can no longer With Offices at of the Federal government itself! DEPARTMENT 5TOK& WA? A LITTLE LAO •611 New Brunswick Avenue, Fords, N. J. cherish its old faith that it lives in secure isolation behind TELEPHONE: PERTH AMBOY'4—2123 Paper matches are now being "distri- Ik AHQ HAP A LEAWWAPE STANP the ramparts of the protecting seas, Wendell Willkie Subscription $1.50 per year buted accompanied by this message: r accepted on Saturday the Presidential nomination of his £Imer J. Vecsey Publisher and Managing Editor "KNOW YOUR MONEY. BEWARE OF party. A grim fate set the stage for this performance in Entered at the Post Office at' FordsT N. J., as COUNTERFEITERS. SOUND YOUR . MO second class mail matter on Apasl 17, 1936. a quiet Indiana town. Here, to meet the eye and ear, were COINS. EXAMINE YO.UR BILLS.—THE WILL 60. NO U. S. SECRET SERVICE, TREASURY DE- all the pleasant and familiar trappings of a gala Notifi- PARTMENT."' cation Day: the friendly crowds, the banners flying in And the cost—why, that's passed along the streets, the party slogans and the marching bands, to the taxpayer! And the homecoming of a favorite son. But the echo of the Trained Men For Defense German bombs that fall on England could be heard by Arms are worthless unless a nation has What Size Navy? thoughtful men in Elwood above the music of the bands. trained men to use the machines of war. And those echoes shouted the warning- that the dread Once again the Congress faces the prob- attack on Britain had begun, that the full fury of German The $10,000,000,000 that the United lem of deciding how much money the States is spending to secure the national United States should spend on its Navy. air power had been loosed against the only democracy / defense means nothing unless, at the same The admirals and their specialists are that still guards the eastern approaches of our own time, the nation trains enough men to advising Congress as to what they think Atlantic world. The man is blind who does not. see that handle the guns, etc. that may be needed. the nation should do in regards to a Navy, j Mr. Willkie spoke on Saturday at a fateful moment in the The bill now before Congress to pro- Admiral Stark, very sensibly, reminds them world's history; that not since the days of our own tragic vide for a limited selective service draft that wars are fought with the navies that War Between the States has it fallen to the lot of a is designed to assure an adequate supply exist when the fighting begins. There is Republican -to accept his party's leadership in an hour of trained soldiers. It is, in our opinion, no time to build ships before the decision is fraught with greater danger to his country. better than no such statute although not as reached. It can be said to Mr. Willkie's credit that he met broad in its application as it should be. The size,of the United States navy de- courageously and honorably the responsibilities which The United States may come to the pends upon world conditions. Just now, this occasion and this crisis imposed on him. He spoke place where it will draft, not only the the outlook in the world is rather dark. straightforwardly. He threw his influence on the side men between the ages of 21 and 31, but There is much uncertainty. We do not of national unity. He showed once more that he has a those of all ages and, in addition, the know what will be the conditions next year, true understanding of the tremendous forces which are " entire resources of the nation. The inter- much less five years from now. Conse- now challenging the world's history for many years to national situation is such that the possible quently, the only safe course is to prepare coine. enemies of this country threaten-to mul- for the worst possible contingency that may Other Editors Say To those of his own party who have recklessly advised tiply. be reasonably expected to arise. SWEETNESS AND LIGHT the American people to believe that we have no proper The present authorized strength of the Less than twenty years ago this nation By CHARLES E. GREGORY Wallace's Nomination* interest and no real stake in the great clash between two Army, as provided in recent months, is junked millions of dollars worth of naval Wallace is a good man, an hon- ways of life in Europe, he '-affirmed his own belief chat construction under the mistaken idea that est man, sincere and serious, -who, 375,000. A year ago the authorized Here's Hoping The Pup Wins according1 to his best lights is doing there is no such thing as isolation; that the destruction strength was 210,000. A year ago the disarmament paved the way to peace. In- Up to the time this was written, the combined efforts a notable job. He would have of British sea power, and the consequent domination of stead, it paved the way for aggressor na- Army had 175,000 men and it has recruit- of the Health Department, dog warden, a squadron of made a g-ood candidate if he had the Atlantic by Germany, "a power hostile to our way ed, about 95,000 since June 30, 1939. tions to make- new conquests. Having been properly nominated. He may of life," would be calamitous for the United States; that cops and some irritated neighbors have been unable to get even now recover. He would have Without a compulsory service law it will destroyed much shipping we find that we been properly nominated if a good while we must seek to avoid military involvement in this take the Army several months, or maybe need more, unless we are willing to per- their hands on a police pup which allegedly goes around politician had engineered his nom- conflict, we must extend to democracy in Europe "the until some time in 1941, to reach{r the mit the fate of the United States to depend biting people indiscriminately. I'm on the dog's side and ination. As it was, the country for material resources of this nation"; that we must recog- upon the good will of other governments. two hours saw open rebellion roar 375,000 level. I hope they never catch him. at the 'President in the convention nize that "our way of life is in competition with Hitler's • It should be understood, however, that I know him very well and I know, furthermore, that of his. party. The country saw a way of life," and tell ourselves that if we wish to pre- fumbling, messing political job serve our freedom we have no alternative but to out- if this country becomes involved in a major 900 Planes A Month he isn't-vicious. I've passed him on the street any num- His fellow partisans and his inde- The production of airplanes in this pendent, followers who for years distance Hitler in any contest he may enter with us, and war, during: the next four or five years, ber of times and we always pause on such occasions to before the two-ocean Navy, stands guard country is now around 900 a month and had rejoiced in the finesse of his "beat him on our own terms, and in the American way." exchange greetings. If he's vicious, so's your Aunt Minnie. diplomacy, in the genius of his over our shares, the Army that the hatian Wflliam S. Knudsen, Chief of the National strategy, saw his political feet of These are blunt words and honest words. They give will need may exceed the 375,000 plus Defense Commission's Production Divi- This so-called dog menace gives me a pain in the clay, baked cjay, hard clay, glazed the lie to the suspicion that once he became an active sion, says that production will reach 1,500 clay, booting the delegates around the National Guard. It is a good idea to neck, anyway. I don't believe a fraction of the tales that in a bossed convention that made candidate Mr. Willkie would drop the quality of plain have the men trained so that they will be a month this Fall. are tifcjl about dogs just biting folks because they appar- the Tammany machine look like speech that won him the respect and friendship of so available if needed, even if we continue Especially encouraging is his revela- ently haven't anything better to do at the moment. That's the lilies of the field. It was a many people who are tired of the customary cleverness tion that the United States is now turning sad and, in. spots, a terrible spec- to hope that they will- not be required to just j||un- bunk and anyone who says it, isn't, is,light of the politicians. Mr. Willkie is not afraid to say that serve the country. - • out 2,200 airplane motors a month. In tacle. William Allen) White we must face the threat of-Hitler. He is not afraid 'to view of recent talk of "bottlenecks" which in thewiead. Any dog, unless he's sick or tormented, won't Emporia Gazette. ,) tell us that we must do a great deal more than we are League's Failure Is Costly threatened the production of planes and bother a soul unless he's told to; all he asks, is to be. let A Third Term? doing now if we wish to keep Hitler and his ideas on his motors it is good to' hear that the experts alone to go his way. He doesn't like to be stoned, natural- "It may be observed, however, own side of the Atlantic. He is not afraid to tell us, Now that the League of Nations has al- as a general remark, that repub- believe that this country should be produc- despite the advice of the timid politicians, that he favors most ceased to function, we read about ly, and you can't blame him if he resents having his ears lics can commit no greater error ing close to 2,500 planes a month next than to adopt or continue any fea- selective service as "the only democratic way" of obtain- its failure to achieve the high aims of its pulled or his tail practically yanked off his carcass by some Spring. tures in their systems of govern- ing the trained men we need in adequate numbers for our founders. witless brat. ment which may be calculated to This will be a long ways from enabling" create or increase the love o-f pow- national defense. He is not afraid to tell us the un- This is not strange. The United States us to supply the British with anything like 'It's Not Fido's Fault, Anyway er the bosoms of those to whorr pleasant fact, which the Roosevelt administration either declined to associate with other nations in the 3,000- planes they want to buy each necessity obliges them to commi glosses over or does not really understand—with possibly I will say that the local authorities have been sadly the management of their affairs an effort to set up machinery that- would, month but it will be many steps to the goal. and surely nothing is more likely tragic consequences for all of us—that we can become a it was hoped, prevent war. lax in promulgating any kind of regulation over the canine to produce such a state of mind stronger nation only if we all; work harder. - The political leaders of this nation sold population of the Township, a fact for which you certain- than the long continuance in an of- Schools To Open Again ly can't blame the dogs. In the first place, no dog should fice of high trust. Nothing can Fo.r it is greater production, a thriving industry, an the idea that participation in the League With the Summer moving-. along we be more corrupting; nothing more America prospering as it once prospered, that furnish would involve this country in war. , They be allowed on the street except qn'a leash. I've suggested destructive of all those noble feel think it timely to remind the youngsters, ings which belong to the character the only real assurance of an adequate national defense; asserted that the United States, by avoid- such a rule to some of our officials, but they say it can't of a devoted republican patriot. happily enjoying their vacations, that it be enforced. That's just nuts. A rule just like this one is and Mr. Willkie rightly insists that in the same direction ing any relationship with European na- won't be long before school will reopen When this corrupting passion once lies the only sure road to social progress. "American tions, could live in peace and enjoy life enforced in New- York City every day of the week, and takes possession, of the human and they can resume the delightful pur- if you don't believe it, just try and take your pup out for mind, like the love of gold, it be- liberalism does not consist merely in reforming things. on this side of the Atlantic ocean. suit of knowledge, so-called. comes insatiable. It is the never- It consists also in making things." It consists in producing Unhappily, the frail League of Nations an airing without a leash and see what happens to you. I dying worm in his bosom, grows in abundance the necessities, the comforts and the luxuries Adults who take their schools for submit that the problem of enforcement in New York City with his growth and strengthens \ did not prevent war from engulf ing-. Europe granted are as silly as children who desire with the declining years of its vic- of life. It does not consist in the prescription of which but no one should imagine that it failed to nothing more than a prolonged and end- is no greater than it would be in Woodbridge Township. tim. we have heard so much in recent years, and with which do much good work. Also, unhappily, the less vacation. Parents should pay some Anyway, I don't see why the dogs should take the "If this is true, it is the part of we have experimented so disastrously: the doctrine that wisdom, for a republic* to limit the United States, by staying out of the League, attention to the work of their schools. In rap purely because the politicians are afraid to put. the service of that officer- at least to it is possible for all of us to grow richer by working did not gain the assurance of peace and the interests of their children they should heat on their owners. They're the ones who are responsible whom she has entrusted the man- less and by producing less; that it is the proper business security that was promised. and they're the ones who should know better, and should agement of her foreign relations, of a Government to subsidize large numbers of its people; become acquainted with the educational the execution of her laws, and the This year the Congress of the United system, as well as the people who operate have a sense of civic responsibility. A summons to a few command of her armies and navies that there exists somewhere a great fund of wealth which States, with almost no dissenting- votes, is it. , L_^_ ,,;-• • of such offenders, plus a substantial fine, would remedy to a period so short as to prevent has only to be divided more equitably in order to make his forgetting thai: he is the ac- appropriating nearly ten billion dollars to 337,640 Draft Dodgers the situation in a hurry. Instead of trying this method, countable agent, not the principal; everybody happy. attempt to make certain that this country It is surprising to be reminded that they go out with guns looking for some poor dog who was the servant, not the master. Until Upon these questions and these differences of opinion thrown off the premises even before he got his morning an amendment to the Constitution will not be attacked. 0-ur security, now 337,640 persons were listed as draft de- can be effected, public opinion may and of judgment Mr. Willkie offers to meet the President in question, may be gained by sacrifice and serters during the World War and to be stretch and couldn't get into the house before night if secure the desired object. I give in "the tradition of face to face debate that is justly money. ' told that some 160,000 men escaped the he tried. If a dog showed as little sense as this he'd un- my aid to it by renewing the pledge honored among our American political traditions." It is doubtedly be called mad and a menace. heretofore given that under no cir- conscription machine entirely. cumstances will I consent to serve an offer that deserves to be accepted; for it would lift The Law And A Beard Justice Department officials recently Speaking About Menaces a second term." President Wil- the discussion of the forthcoming campaign to a high pointed out that 163,738 of the draft liam Henry Harrison, inaugural level and reaffirm the dignity of the democratic process. Now, here's a novel question for the Furthermore, there are some real menaces to the address, March 4, 1941. learned jurists of the land of the brave dodgers were apprehended. Some of But whether or not the offer is accepted, Mr. Willkie de- them, as we recall, as a result of the offer health and,.jseeurity of the people of Woodbridge Town- serves the gratitude of all Americans for the tone that and the home of the free. ship to which I commend the attention of the politicians $25,873 Received In July One Harry Strauss, alleged killer, slated of the government to pay $50 each for he has set in the first speech of the campaign. He has their arrest. ; and their hirelings. I mean, first of all, the mosquito-breed- By Real Estate Division talked fairly to the American people. He has talked to come to trial next month, is growing a ing patches which dot the entire landscape and which can beard in prison while detained to await While the number of dodgers seems high WOODBRIDGE—Nineteen sales, about real issues. He has met the test of a great occa- it is not exactly amazing when we consider provide more serious consequences than all the dogs put both cash and contract, totaling sion with courage and candor and foresight that do him trial. Prosecutors allege that his hirsute together. They're full of depressions smelling with stag- $25,873.80, were made by the Real honor. growth is part of a plan to create an Im- that 24,234,000 persons were registered. Estate Department during the nant water and are grown high with grass and weeds. I've past month, according- to a report pression of insanity and to disguise his made by William Allgaier, director long since despaired of ridding the town of these spots on for wisdom and might are his: . . . identity. Japan Outlaws Rotary the basis they are eyesores, but maybe I can get some ac- of the department, to the Town- Japan has now discovered that the ship Committee Monday night. he giveth wisdom unto the wise, The prosecutor insists that prison offi- tion if I make my appeal on the hazard to health they Exactly $14,458.64 was collect- • Christian and kncwieige to thn that kaow Rotary elubs are "hotbeds of espionage" present. ed in July by Mr. Allgaier's office understanding." (Daniel 2:20, 21). cials shave the man and his attorneys as- Among the Lesson-Sermon cita- sert that he has a constitutional right to and consequently the Japanese clubs, as follows: , yielding to pressure, are changing their I'll be glad to take off any afternoon and cart the en- Deposits on Real Estate sales, Science Church tions is the following from the grow a beard, if he so desires. The judge tire Township Committee around the municipality and $235; cash sales, $820; contract Bible: "The fear of the Lord is the reserved his decision, instructing the at- relations with the international organiza- sales payments, $9,958.10; adver- beginning of wisdom: a good un- tion. point out exactly what I mean. I'll also be gjad, if they so tising costs,, $291; interest-con- Calendar •- derstanding have all they that do torneys to-submit authorities. his commandments: his praise en- Incidentally, it is to be remembered desire, to compile a set of ordinances showing how dogs tract sales, $586.41; taxes as addi- are regulated in other municipalities. I'll go even further. tional rent, $1,102.15;" miscellane- Christian Science—First Church dureth for ever." Psalms 111: that Germany and Italy have already dis- ous, $7.00; Township rent collec- of Christ, Scientist,- Sewaren, is a 10). Shoe On The Other Foot covered that 'Rotary clubs are dangerous. I'll guarantee to walk up to any dog anyone of them can tions, $515 and rent assignment branch of the Mother Church, The The Lesson-Sermon also includes provide and make friends with him in a minute and a-half, collections, $943.88. First Church of Christ, scientist, the following passage from the Theorists in this country have from They are barred from both countries. in Boston, Mass. Sunday services Christian Science textbook, "Sci- time to time taken some pretty vigorous Japan had forty-seven Rotary, clubs, with allowing of course that its master doesn't direct his pup 11 A. M., Sunday School, 9:30 A. ence and Health with Key to the whacks at advertising, intimating' that it 4,000 members. otherwise. We can find out in practically nothing fiat, by GET DAY OFF M., Wednesday Testimonial meet- Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy: this method, just how many vicious dogs are running WOODBRIDGE — Teachers of ing 8 P. M. Thursday, reading "When we realize that there is one places an unfair burden on the consumer. It is interesting to note that these coun- the Township school system were room, 3 to 5 P. M. Mind, the divine law of loving our And various high officials in Washington around or even are in captivity. After we know that, it given permission by the Board of "MIND" is the Lesson- Sermon .neighbor as ourselves is unfolded; tries, when undertaking- their aggressive jfiducation this week to attend the have declared publicly that they believe programs, make a point to outlaw organ- will be pretty simple to see whether they ought to spend subject for Sunday, August 25, in whereas _ a belief in many ruling their time and efforts on protecting the community from New Jersey Educational Associa- all Christian Science Churches minds hinders man's normal drift government should regulate advertising; izations, like the Masons and'Rotary, which tion convention November 8, 9 and and Societies throughout the towards the one Mind, one God, dogs, or from the stinking vacant lots they permit to con- 10. The opening day, Friday, is that "too much money is spent for advertis- exist in practically every free country of world. and leads human, thought into op- tinue. the only day which requires the The Golden Text is: "Blessed be posite channels where selfishness ing- by manufacturers, wholesalers, and the world. closing of local schools. the name of God for ever and ever: " reigns" (p. 205). FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1940 Alice Faye AM Don AmechePlay. RAFT AND BENNETT Spectacular Drama Of Prehistoric Days Is Screened OF COLLEGE £ Leading Roles In 'Lillian* Russell' In One Million B» C« 'Opening Tonight At Crescent PERTH AMBOY r 'House Across The Bay' Is 'The life and loves of Lillian from start to finish. "Lillian Rus- With a cast headed by Victor 'Those Were The Days' TODAY THRU SUNDAY ;,Russell, "the most beautiful wo- sell" revives many of the "popular One Of Finest Pictures Mature, Lon Chaney, Jr., and Ca- Goinss On In One Millon B. C. Gives Splendid Cast-.Op- JUMBO MATINEE man in America/' have been made song hits of her day, including role Landis, the great spectacle •'into one of the greatest pictures "After The Ball Is Over," "Eosie, Of Recent Years portunity'Of Lifetime Show Starts At 1 P. M. of all time.: Opening- Wednesday j film drama of prehistoric times, You Are My Posie," "My Evening The gala premiere' of "The "One Million. B. C," will have :i 10-Big Events-10 at the: Crescent Theatre,"Lillian Star" and "The Band Played On" "Those Were the Days," -the .-; Russell" -features Alice Faye in' House Across the Bay," at the gala premier at the Crescent to- One Full Hour of Selected ("Strawberry Blond."} Crescent Theatre tonight will prove comedy romance about college life ; Shorts Including Cartoons, the title role, with Don Ameche, : Lillian Russell was the most night. t •'> Henry* Fonda and others. .••.:. to b.e an exciting event, in motion The story centers about the at "Good Old Siwash," opening . Comedies and Sports. colorful of all the personalities of picture history. • Not only has tha Monday at the Crescent Theatre, | . ,",:: It is a motion picture that brings the most fabulous era America Shell People and the Rock Tribe, • PLUS • ; ' . "out the strength of Hollywood, for producer made another top-notch two -peoples who may be described and received a summa cum laude ' ever knew. She lived a vivid life motion picture, but. he has spot- 2 - Big Features - 2 : "Lillian- Russell" has everything. as cavemen in the days when huge rating from everybody present. , Drama, comedy, pathos, action, that lends itself to screen adapta- lighted a story which is positively AH For The tion and Zanuck has spun a really dinosaurs roamed the earth. The Perhaps it should be explained that Regular Admission '•' color—-all have been deftly blended one hundred percent audience en- Shell People are less savage and .} to make a superb picture, that will great, motion picture about her life tertainment. With the three non-English words in the and loves. more advanced than the Rock Free Comics to the Kiddies ..keep you absorbed and fascinated in one of his punchiest and most Tribe. A volcano and an earth- preceding sentence mean in oui exciting roles in years and Joan quake bring disaster and desola- tongue "with highest praise," and Bennett giving ihebest perform- tion to the land of the Rock Tribe that's just what must be applied ance of her outstanding career, and later a gargantuan dinosaur "The House Across.- the Bay" is to this picture, to the playeis, attacks the cave of the Shell Peo- headed by William Holden, Bonua without question one of the most ple. These dangers eventually An Easy important pictures to come out of unite the two hostile tribes and to- Granville, Ezra Stone, Judith Bai- Hollywood in many a moon. gether they undertake to build a rett and Vaughan Glaser and to •.. ,- director-' of manv new civilization on a peaceful Producer-Director Ted Reed. notable hits, was at the megaphone basis. It would be best to discuss the Hit to Manage for "The House Across the Bay," For ten days the company mak- praiseworthy elements in the or- No. 1 and he has infused "the picture with ing the picture was on location in der named, taking the picture in A Pre-Historic Film Spectacle H rich drama, with stirring emotion, Fire Valley, Nevada, an isolated its entirety first. As older read- wiLh swift action and arresting . . . Thrills That Will Challenge valley of- rugged, red sandstone, ers have guessed, it is based on the The Imagination. Hair - tempo. Never- once does the action about as prehistoric a spot as can George Pitch Siwash Stories about lag for the dialogue, for Mayo has Also Wii be found anywhere in America. a mythical campus of that name, combined the two. into. an exciting- But it was back in the studio, which ran in the Saturday Evening- HIT No. 2 role. Laurels must also be sent where scenes with an atmosphere, Post around 1911. . And a fine job •Style! to the cameraman and the rest of sometimes" grotesque and eerie, BOBSTEELE the technical crew who were re- has been done on the writing, ring- suggesting the early days of the ing in all the college highjinks In A Punch-Packed Western sponsible for the excellent lighting earth, were photographed. Feature When we permanent wave your hair, we and photography as well as the imaginable, romance with a block Spectacular Sets letter capital R, and props which 'MESQUITE BUCKARQQ' stunning: sets and tasteful costum- Here, under the direction j>f shape it so you can manage to wear it several ing. ;, -. will delight the heart of anybody Nicolai Remisoff, sets that go the who. remembers gas lights, buggies, MONDAY and TUESDAY Raft and Miss Bennett are bril- real thing one better were created. chaperoned dances, and dear lav- IT'S JUNGLS LOVEIi smart ways, easy for you to comb. Look as liantly supported by Walter Pid- They covered four stages. Huge Above is an artist's conception of one of the unusual scenes ender-scented ladies who " looked geon, Lloyd' Nolan and Gladys slabs of synthetic sandstone, caves, the other way at times. attractive all week as the moment you leave George, all of whose acting turns from "One Million B. C." regarded as one of the really unusual pools of water with plants of for- screen productions of recent years. In addition to stupendous Then, there is the cast. Seldom this salon. To make your appointment . . . "The House Across the Bay" into gotten worlds hanging* over them, sets and magnificent photography, the film boasts in its cast such has a " more talented group of a film that can truly be called an festooned with draperies of mos.?, players as lovely Carol Ladis and handsome Victor Mature. It young performers held forth in a achievement in_sci-een annals. No vistas of distant, purpiing rocks— is on the bill at the- Crescent. motion picture. William Holden I PHONE WOOD. 8-2394 S little praise • must be given to OCAHMINflTi MURIEL AHGELUS these were achieved under the is the prankster "Petey" Simmons | l«»NE OVERMAN for selecting the magic hand of Remisoff. the actors. Since no one could say their trunks; dates grow upwards to the letter. Bonita Granville | and- story as a film property and for One of the strangest and most exactly what the world looked like on transformed sycamore trees, comes through with a right smart giving it one of the finest produc- interesting sets represented a lush a million years ago, the studio let and huge Abyssinian banana trees, performance ,as Martha Scroggs, tions accorded any film in a long primeval oasis when the world was its imagination run riot. Thus, on giant South American stagehorn the girl he sparks. time. young, and it was dubbed "The this set, tree ferns, ten feet high, ferns and exotic fruits from Af- LABOR DAY SPECIAL! Garden of Eden" by the cast dur- imported from Australia, are seen rica grow in wild ahandon, with | RARE STAMP SOLD MISSES DOG, BUT— ing filming. The tropical profusion to bend grotesquely against gnarl- little regard for accepted zoology. New York — A stamp, said to be Aurora, III.—Swerving his auto- of the setting almost overshadowed ed trees with roots half-way up "One Million. B. C." was filmed the world's most valuable stamp : v$C PERMANENT FOR ^.50 mobile to miss a dog on the high- from the original, screenplay writ- and one which the late. King way, Dr. K. M. Sears, of Elburn, ten by Mickeli Novak, George George V of England sought "vain- WED. and THURS. ON THESE DAYS ONLY missed the dog but crashed into a READE'S Baker and Joseph Frickert. Pho- ly to buy, has been recent- farm wagon, killing- two mules and tographic effects were handled by ly by a New York department another dog. Dr. Sears and the Roy Seawright, and set decorations j store for an unnamed client. The Aug. 26-27-28-29 and Sept 3-4-5 driver of the wagon were injured. were designed by W. L. Stevens. stamp is a 1-cent British Guiana Alice FflYE-Don AMECHE print, issued in 1856 and valued ODD JOB , The special musical score for the HOTI FONDA - EAntd ARNOLO STARTING WITH picture was composed and con- today at $50,000. It is listed in the Dubuque, Iowa — Dan Smoth- i'lr-'-^d by Werner R. Heymann. stamp catalogues as the only ex- ers and Charles Davis have an odd ample of its kind in existence, and avocation, but they like it and are is the only stamp of a British pos- LAGRACE good at it. 'They collected a total SAVES BROTHER, DIES session missing from the royal col- of 140 rattlesnakes and received V iligh Bridge, N. J.—Dorothy lection. CHRISTENSEN BUILDING bounty of 25 cents for each set of 1 ' man, 12, saved the life of her rattles delivered at the county au- i1 i ler, Robert, 14, when she RADIO LOVERS 97 MAIN STREET ditor's office. Figure it up for your- HI -ied him out of the way of an San Francisco — According to self. - ',> i oaching freight train as they; Neville Miller, president of the Na- 1' i walking down the tracks. She tional Association of Broadcasters, ENAMELWARE i unable to get clear of the there. are 45,000,000 radios in use To the Ladies TEL. P. A. 4-3388 1 MI herself, however, and was ' in this country, with over 9,000,- Mon. & Tiles.' Tin Tin ' 000 being sold during the last year. 7:150 PLUS TAX FIAJ.S Children JOe Except Sundays ; 2-1 oli (lays and Ut All 'l irfies Prevare Nite Continuous SEVEN (7) 40e lit All Other 2 to 11 P. 31.' ON STATE ST. AT THE EIVE CORNERS Tunes Plus Tas Manhattan flights... Deb forties SEVEN (7) DAYS—STARTING SATURDAY ... 8 Bucks to Squander!

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J FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1940 as&s; DEAD OK ALIVE

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What does George see in Hazel? (She's a dead one." "Well, George has made up his ind to get her, dead or alive." C'MON MEN, NOW SCO5E IN \

HAH& OSS HOODLES Tom—If you were to choose be- tween Freddie and me, whom would you marry? IS'MON NOODLES Helen—Jack. UP TK' TREE *E6 5 OUR OHL.V i (P

DER OSTKtCH 1SS A BlED OK THATSTHEKIND IT SKYS HERE HE ISS PERFECTLY j SOSH'WE: you like the Gregorian I KNOW ANIMALS 'OF KNOWLEDGE HARMLESS EXCEPT WHEN VEXED | A ANIMAL. HE DINES OFFA MUSNY chants?" | UNT DEiR TABLE r' KIDS SHOULD liNT DEN HE !SS A HOW, TERROR J ^ I play the ponies now and I MANNERS PROM \ SHEEP SHEARS .UNT MONKEY R)LE HIM -btifr that's as far as I go with I SOUPS R.EENS TO f WKEWCHES. HIS FAVORITE these games of chance." E PUOF *—} TOOTH P1CK GAME ISS HIDE UNTSEEK !S £ONA CEAtK USA FE , „ MIGHT COME ACROSS ANIMAL •=? TO THE j |

^OLLY'THATOLDOSSI (HEYANNIE!Lt&GD IF YOU DON'T FEEL S (JPEROSTEICH TOOK ISS VERY SAVA6E J j NOW THATS \ 6EEWMI2Z! ITS LUCKY FDR TH-E LUVA PETEj 4OT THIS 'FIRST AID' HANDY Dentist—I hear . you're paying IS PEEVISH 'BOUT J (THE"PKOFESSOR\II^ 6UY^ BEE2ER! UKE LECTURING ABOUT! •] LIBEETY M!T ME FACE UNV BUT IN MOMENTS or / WHAT I CALL PeOFESSOR.TELL'Bi your bills—do you expect to reach \ SOMETH1M'! F~ HYENAS I'M WILLING ) h=r WGOLDVATCHUNTCHAII. 6EEAT DANCER'IF YOU if "SEFUL A Fu NNY STORY j me? TO r^^pT DOOR KEY-BUT I'M >. r

YOU SEE IT? {YEAH BUT fM READY TO —AND THEN MISS rfs DER SAME WAY ' \\NEVER MlNDTHE UDN$ IF YOU FIX A UOH 1 AINT TAKIN FOR THE t.uv« DIDN'T 1 TELL KNOCK-OFF AND BEAT IT ELEPHANT SAID TO MIT LIONS! IF YOU KNOW*. i-ETiS61T0UT0' HEEE MIT A STEADY EYE NO CHANCES MIKE.' HOW You IjOtJT OF HEEE HOW TO HANDLE'EM K«|M1 WITH YOU!? vr HEIL QUAIL LIKE A ME FOB THE THEMcofSSu \~il *^ STEADY EYE1 Jj,, Wine—What do you think are the I ' CANNOT PUT YOUR HARMLESS NOW LETS SEE WHIPPED SAVE AW Sim , IKTHE LIONS iGAfat! most attractive features of this COLLARS IN HOW THIS LOOKS OUTSIDE beautiful display? FEOMTHE FRONT Hubby (shortly)—The tilings we can do without. - (THEY COME '

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only for ancient times, but for allwas supposed to be proportionate hair were pei'fectly preserved. her head over Anthony. . She had Stable Business time. to its offensiveness. While medi- This mummy was not even in aa wide knowledg-e of medicine. The United States has a soft drink The power of the mind over the cine became separated from magic glass case but was exposed to thePoisons and anesthetics especially concern "whose sales and profits are body is practically without limit, 'centuries before Christ, yet it wasair. interested her. She experimented so stablp that liiey can be estimated • She—I read just now of a man and this the ancients well under- bound up with religion. When Alexander the Great con- with them upon criminals in ordei" •within 2 per cent a year in advance, stood. says Collier's. A radio manufactur- who, upon being released from jail, MEDICINE "IN ANCIENT TIMES m the University of Leipzig, •Many of the mummies show quered Egypt in 536 B. C, medi- to- find out the duration of ef- asked to be sent back. He can't We have records of physicians Though the date on the back is Prayers and incanations were where broken bones were very cine took a forward step. Ptolemy, ing firm that makes more than in Egypt as far back as 4,000 B. C. fect. She foiled the designs of 60,000 sets a week; and a bank hav- value his liberty very much. about 1,553 B. C, there is strong uttered by the physicians when skillfully set, and other surgical a great general under Alexander, Octavius by ending her own. life At this early period the healeTS preparing medicines for different ing 379 officers, 74 of whom are vice He—I don't know about that— evidence that much of the mate- operations had been, performed. became the ruler in 531 B. C. atby a subtle poison and so escaped were priests and priestesses who parts of the body. "O, Isis, thovi We have no record of dissections presidents. didn't it say he was married? rial dates back to 3,400 B. C. Be- the death of. his chief. He founded being taken by him to Borne to mixed superstitions and a -belief great enchantress, heal me, deamong- - the Egyptians though they a dynasty that became extinct in sides prescriptions there are in- grace his triumph. in magic with their art. cantations to be repeated by theliver me from all evil, bad, ty-were very careful to-preserve the 30 B. C, with the death of Cleo- Incomes of §1,000,000 phonic things, from: demoniacal bodies of the dead. The art of em- 7,000 Burrows "The earliest medical writing's sick man -wHile taking his pre- patra, his descendant. Great Husband, 100, Sues One Arizona prairie dog town con- In 1929 there were 513 net in-of Egypt that have come down to and deadly diseases, and pollu- balming was practiced by themedical schools were established comes of $V000,000 or more. scriptions. The following is an ex-tions of every sort which rush in Egyptians has been lost. The Amos Charles, 100 years old, of tained more than 7,000 burrows. us are the Medical Papyri which in Egypt. Medicine had its hey- Ada, Okla., has filed suit for divorte dated about 1,500 B. C. The Ebers cerpt: "Whom God loves He quick- upon me." writer saw the mummy of a tall, day. ens: I am one whom God loves, .and says he. plans to marry again. First One' Jtazor Blade Shortage Papyrus,. translated from hieratic Many of the doses contained in handsome Egyptian that was at 'Cleopatra was a physician, also His petition charges his wrte, Char- into German by, Joachim and into therefore, he quickens me." least 3,000 years old. The skin was William Sarovan is the fi Makers of razor blades in.Egypt the Papyri were nauseous, and dis- a literary genius, and showed ity, 80, abafidoneel -him three yeascs Snright to receivfe toth -feg of iron. .. English by McAllister, is preserved That is good psychology not agreeable. Doubtless the efficacy soft and pliable. The .n.ails -and great statesmanship until she lost ago. I FORDS AND. EAE-ITAN TOWNSHIP BEACON FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1940" PAGE SEVEN SJfe Gain League ALIIMN Bears To Face Jersey City GRABUATMITAKIS Municipal Marinas Vital Aid In Recreational Boating Expansion In Night Game On Tuesday Golden, Hurling- First Con- NEWARK—The Newark Boars, test For Locals, Ties. currently waging- their battle for Foes With 7 Hits•-. the International League pennant in the Canadian provinces, will re- POCHEK T4PS TRIPLE Sporting- Club Stops Hun- turn to RuppertStadium nextTues- Frisco Faces Task Of Shapp-' day~ night for a one-night stand. INTER-CITY BASEBALL garian-American Club mg Club Around- loex- - LEAGUE " Their opponents will be the Jer- Standing At New Brunswick sey City Giants and since this will psrieaesd Players W. L. be the Bruins only home engage- FIRST GAJfTAT MGMS v Woodbridge 10 3 TRAIL GOING. INTO' 4TH ment until September 3. the New- \ Lance Ass'n 9 3 ark management has declared- it a WOODBSIDGE — Woodbridge Foj-ds „.:. .— 9 3 PORBS—Getting off to a slow special ladies nigM. High School will launch its 194$ Blue Coals 1O 4 start,- the Fords Sporting Grub gridiron season Friday night, Sep- • Keasbey 5 8 a sudden blitz at the Hungarian- Forced to play most of their re- tember 20, at Legion Stadium, ac- Romeos _ S 9 American Athletic Club of New maining, games on the road •while cording' to an announcement by the So. Plainfield 4 9 Brunswick, at the county seat Sun- their Rochester rivals for tophon -Athletic Committee of the "Board Milltown ...... -..—. 4 9 day afternoon, and emerged vic- ors will, for the most part enjoy of Education. torious, 6 to 4. all the comforts and advantages of The opening skirmish, slated for WOODBRIDGE — The Wood- The Hungarians stole an early their, home lot, the Bears need all 9 o'clock, will find the Red and bridge Sporting Club blasted three lead and were out front 3 to 0 the encouragement North Jersey Black varsity pitted against an. South Amboy Romeo . All-Star going into the fourth frame. A fans can offer them and it is-hoped alumni eleven made up of gradu- pitchers for a dozen, hits and de-four-run attack by Fords in the that the inducement of ladies night ates of 133S and 1939. feated, the cross river club, 12 to lower half of the fourth stanza will fill th Newark arena to the While arrangements are berns 7, to take top position in the Inter- put the locals, ahead momentarily, brim. advanced for the contest by the City Baseball League. as Brunswick tallied twice in its Athletic Committee, an attempt by Billy Golden, pitching his first half of the same inning to tie the this newspaper to reach Coach Nick game for the locals, held, the Ro- count. That ended the H, A. A. C. Priseo for player details concern- meos to seven safeties. scoring. Fords registered a pair ing the 1940 campaign failed. Bob Simonsen paced the winners of counters in the sixth to win the Present indications, however, at the .plate -with a trio of bingles. game. are that Priseo will be required to-, Karnas and Zick followed with two Koperwhats and Mezo, with two build an entirely new club this apiece., Zick's home run drive was hits apiece, starred with the stick year. Lost to this season's com-. the longest clout of the game. Po- for the winners. OF bine are such brilliant performers, chek's triple was also a feature. The box score: as Alex Ur, George Wasilek, James- The Woodbridge victory was an Fords 5. C. (6) Former Takes First Of 5- Bedi, Nick Daprile, John Trosko,-. important one as the A. J. Lance AB R H Angelo Pellcgrino, Ernest Bartha^ Association of Perth Amboy, Ions Game Series, 5 to 3; Walter Holub, Walter Flowers, M.1-' Virgillo, 3b - 40 1 chad Remar, Ray Daub, John Cipo, the leader, in the tight race, met Milscik, ss — 411 Lose Second, 13-5 Steve Pochek, Alex Toke, Robesfr defeat by the Perth Arnboy Blue Allie, c :.... 3 11 Hanson, Steve Tobak and possibly Coals. Kriss, lb ....:.. 3 11 John Koyle. The Lancers have but one re-Koperwhats, 2b 3 0 2 TRGUNCEIWES TWICE maining contest and that -with the Bandies, If 2 11 Hold '40 Hopes Wcodbridge crew. The locals have Mezo, cf _... 3 12 WOODRRIDGE — The Mayor Prisco's 1940 hopes rest in •Se- another engagement, however, Anderson, rf _. 10 0 Gr.einer- Association Softball com-' mak, Karnas, Gyenes, Aquila, Ba- •with the Blue Coals. Anything may Fischer, rf 10 0 bine copped three out of four kas, Balint, Barna, Barowski, Clio- yet happen. Parslerft rf 0 0 0 games played over the weekend to van, Cilo, Dietrich, Fenick, Forten- - The box score: Matusz, p 10 0 Municipally operated boat basins, yacht harbors and anchor ages are doing much to further the cause of pleasure boating on the bring the number of victories this boher, Galbraith, Horowitz, John- - Woodbridge (12) Jacobsen, p 2 11 waterways of the nation, although construction of these safe har bors for small craft has failed to keep pace with America's con- season to 34 and the losses to six. ston, Jones, Kozar, Kozma," Ma^-^ AB R H stantly increasing recreational fleet. The six marinas shown above are typical of the waterfront improvements being made to meet The Cooper Dairy tribe of Ise- kulin, Mcloceo, Nahay, Serko, Vac^ Karnas, ss 5 4 2 Totals 28 6 10 the demand for boating faciiities. . Belmont Harbor (Picture No. 1), is only one of a series of boat basins along Chicago's Lake Mich- Iin was halted, 5 to 3 in the first haly, Vargo, Yura, Quinn, Hladiftj Zick, 2b 5 12 igan -waterfront. The Englewood, N. J., mariaa (No. 2) is one of three operated by the Palisades Interstate Park Commission on tilt, but came back in the next to Finn and William Trosko—IF they" ~ H. A. A. C (4) report back for service Gyenes, ef 4 11 AB R H the Hudson River. Miami's municipal yacht basin (No. .3) was one of the first developments of this type in the country. San Fran- whip the Mayors, 13 to 5. These Golden, p 5 1 1 Juronics, If 2 11 cisco, another leader in the municipal marina movement, is starting to enlarge its present basin to a 5,OO0-boat capacity, (No. 4). were the first of a five-game series Barcellona, lib 4 0 0 Kulash, 3b 3 12 United States Army Engineers are constructing a series of four marinas at Washington, D. C. (No. 5). The municipal basin at for the Township crown. In the I, ' Simonson, If 5 2 3 Csobor, ef 3 11 Gulfport, Miss. (No. 6) is the first of several now being beilt along the Gulf of P^exico. double-header with the Perth Am- Leffler, c 3 2 1 Molly, lb 3 0 0 boy Hubs, the Greiners speared Pochek, 3b 2 11 Anderko, ss 3 0 0 both, 5 to 4 and 6 to 1. Gadek, rf 5 0 1 Boda, rf 3 0 2 Barnacled Boot Fun For Two Kuzmiak, Fitzpatrick and Ur. Morgan, 2,b 3 11 worked best at the plate in tho Totals 39 12 12 Anthony, c 3 0 0 first melee, with two bingles apiece. South Amboy (7) Kalman, p 2 00 Kuzmiak, with three hits, paced AB R H the Greiners in the second clash. MacNamara, 2b 3 0 0 Totals 25 4 7 A.. Ur and J. Ur each got a due of Defeat Slugs, 12 to 7, Tj9 Jankowski, 2b ....'2 0 0 Score Ly innings: safeties in the third tussle to lead Simehak, cf 5 0 0 Fords S. C 000 402—6 =BY ELMER "STEVE" VECSES" in batting. The final tiff found iaike iitle; Barra Satsky, 3b 2 2 2 H. A. A. C. - 300 100—4 every member of the club, with the In 8th Decisive Crowe, ss 3 0 1 Pastor-Conn. Bout Postponed ... exception of Potts, collecting two Buekelew, If .... 2 0 0 Postponement of the Pastor-Conn get-together hits apiece. Kelly, lb 5 1 2 The box scores: TWO HOMERUNS 'ChormiHo, c 2 0 0 from early in August to September 5th arouses some Greiners (5) WOODBRIDGE—The Cyelones Rush, cf 2 11 speculation as to whether this heavyweight bout was AB R II today are proud possessors of the Kazmarak, rf ....!. ,1 0 0 turning into a financial calamity or no. Uncle Mike Kuzmiak, 3b 2 12 mythical championship crown of Meinzer, p 10 0 Jacobs had the rain to blame it on—but we thought L. MeLaughlin, 2b 2 11 the Woodbridg-e Playground Soft- McCarthy, p 10 0 J, MeLaughlin, ef 2 10 ball League. The achievement was * Soo, p 2 10 Fords-Keasbey Tilt Post- a day,-or at most a week, would have been long enough Fitzpatrick, lb 3 0 2, brought about by defeating the E. Jankowski, c 2 2 1 poned ; Former To Meet to scare those clouds away, unless, as we said, they Zick, ss ,. 3 0 1 Slugs, 12 to 7, in the final contest Stader, If 1 o 0 were financial clouds. Gari, sf 30 1 of a seven-game title series. rlainneld bunday Ur, If 3 12 Totals 30 7 7 * # * _ « Genovese, rf 2 0 0 Five runs in the first inning pav- Score by innings: FORD'S Wet grounds forced Miller, c _ 2 11 ed the way for the Cyclone vic- tory. The decision, however, waa Woodbridge .... 130 150 200—12 the postponement of the Fords And then, too, Jacobs changed the location for the Potts, p, _...... r 10 0 Romeos 200 200 030 7 Sporting Club-Keasbey Field Club drama from the Polo Grounds to Madison Square Frankowski, p _.. 10 0 up in the air in the seventh frame Two-base hitts: Simonsen, Zick. diamond tilt here Sunday after- Garden. While he was doing this, thousands yawned. The outboard motor is becoming at which point the count was 6-5 Three-base hit: Pochek. Home noon. The game was a scheduled just as important an adjunct Totals 26 5 11 in favor of the champs. The eighth A warning sign to the boat own- runs: Satsky, Zick, Rush. Sacri- Inter-City Baseball League, clash. There had been a lack of ticket sales, betting, excite- on a day's outing as the lunch Coopers (3) stanza found the Cyclones mov- fice: Poehek. Stolen bases: Kar- Fords will meet Plainfield in a loop er is the barnacled boat, show- ing further ahead with a four- ment, etc. It has become apparent since that the hamper and thermos jug. Effi- AB R H nas, Gyenes, iSimonsen, Leffler 2, game Sunday at the Fords Park, ing what happens to untreated fans didn't think there was a capable challenger to W. Blythe, 2b , 3 10 run barrage. Soo. Left on bases: Woodbridge While Fords remained idle, the boat bottoms in salt water. cient, low priced and economical E. Blythe, 3b ....1 3 0 0 Segylinski, Barcellona and 3; Romeos 10. Double play: Kar- Perth Amboy Lance Association Pleasure craft should be hauled Louis between the whole two. of them, and very few to operate, outboard boats and Burger, ss 3 0 0 Dunfee paced the winners at the. nas to Zick to Barcellona. Struck dropped from first place into a fight fans were whooped up about the battle. motors- are leading the parade Raphael, sf 3 11 out: by Golden 2; Meinzer 0; Mc- out in mid-season and~bottoms plate with two hits apiece. Livin- second place tie with the locals as Difino, lb I..-..,...;. 3 0 1 good each connected for a homer. Carthy 1; Soo 4. a result of the Lancers being de- and all gear carefully inspected. * * * # in the rapidly growing move- Dube, cf „ 2 1 1 Cyclones (12) feated by the Blue Ccals. Anti-fouling compounds are best ment of recreationalists to get Varanay, If 10 0 Fords still has an excellent Conn Was Favorite . . . Leary, rf 10 0 AB R. H, LIKES DOUBLES protection against marine growth out on the water. , Tnlio, p 5 2 1 Tommy Holmes, Bear outfielder chance for top berth. It has three and borers, as demonstrated by Whether the interest will increase by September 5 Poygena, p 2 0 1 games left to play. Keasbey is Bahr, c 10 0 Huszar, rf 3 2 0-, -who leads the International the lone clean spot oil the boat remains to be seen. Conn was the established favorite Nemeth, lb 5 2 1 League in total hits, has joined definitely out of the race for up- per-half honors. where marine bottom paint was before the initial date for the fight and probably will Totals 23 3 4 Segylinski, cf 4 2 £ the short but distinguished list of Vargo, c 4 0 0 Newark players who have hit 30 applied. be again in the first of September. However, the Score by innings: Greiners 010 040—5 D'Angelo, 3b 4 10 or more doubles in one season. INSULTS FLAG; FINED only factor that made him favored over Pastor was Bablyon, I. I.—Admitting that Coopers ...-. 0.0 210—3 Barcellona, ss 4 2 2 The Brooklyn youth, a sure-fire the appearance of the two; boxers while training and Dunfee, If 3 0 2 major leaguer for next year, also he had flown an American flag from an outhouse on the rear of a bit of idle chatter as to Billy being the next victim Five-Day Meet To Feature Greiners (5) Dubay, sf 4 0 0 leads the circuit in starting dou- AB R H Zuccaro, 2b 2 11 bleplays from the outfield. his Summer cottage in Deer Park, (challenger) of Joe Louis. Salvatore Lampasona, 36-year-old Annual Fair Opening. Kuzmiak, 3b 3 2 3 Italian alien, was fined ?50 by * * * * • . On September 8 I«. MeLaughlin, 2b 4 0 0 Totals 38 12 9 The experts predicted Conn needed at least a •J. MeLaughlin, cf 4 12 China's closer tie to Russia is Justice of the Peace John C. Rib-IL S. Champs AH Entered Slags (7) seen in new trade pact. bins. year of further training to rate a crack at Jolting READING, Pa.—The tradition- Fitzpatrick, lb 4 3 0 2 AB R R In 100-Mile Labor al sports feature of county fairs, Zick, ss 3 0 0 Joe just a short while back. Taking into considera- Genovese, if 3 0 0 Boland, c 4 12 Day Classic tion that Pastor is one of the toughest assignments harness horse races, has developed Ur, If 3 12 Minsky, lb 4 11 Louis ever had, it seems very unlikely that Conn (who into a big money proposition at Miller, c 3 0 1 BLath, cf ' 5 0 0 LANGHORNE, Pa.—Champion Reading Fair, site of the only Signprelli, sf 3 0 0 Livingood, rf 4 3 4 motorcycle riders from all sections NEWS isn't even supposed to have a punch) will rock Bob Grand Circuit racing in Pennsyl- Potts, p 3 11 Gurzo, 3b 5 11 of the United States have filed Roshal, 3b ; 3 0 1 AND to sleep, or even win by a wide margin. If he wins it vania and where the equines will entry blanks for the sixth annual is our opinion that he will have a hard battle all the totals 32 5 n Ur, 2b 4 0 1 Helpful Hints 100-mile national, championship star during a five-day meet the Coopers (15) Doching'er, ss 3 0 0 race, scheduled for Labor Day at way. And- that is—if he wins. week of September 8. to 15. AB R H Byrnes, sf 4 0 0 Langhorne Speedway. * * * * Honneger, cf 3 11 Baloga, p 8 10. SEASON NEARS CLOSE Only Ted Sparks, of Canada, Racing secretary Caleb B. Dowd Burger, ss 3 2 0 Boating along1 Smith's Creek, Sewaren; Jenning's, Keasbey, who won last year, is among the Pastor Given Edge ... stated recently that in the 14 Hutterman, 3b 2 2 1 Totals .— 39 7 10- and in Piscatawaytown entered its final month of activity . . . missing as the pilots mark time This corner gives Bob Pastor the edge. And if Bob years Reading Fair has. been run- E. Blythe, 3b 110 Cyclones -500 000 142—12 Soon after Labor Day, pleasure craft owners will begin hauling for the big event. Sparks, how- ning its famed futurities, the only J. Dube, lb _. 2 10 Slugs 000 011 302— 1 out their yachts for storage until next spring. ever:, may be available but there fights the way he did against the Bark Destroyer ones held on a half-mile track in Difino, lb ; 2 12 Before the period of hibernation sets in, however, yachtsmen is a great many who doubt that he either time, he ought not to have any trouble. And the United States, a grand total Raphael, sf 3 11 UP THE LADDER are cramming in a heavy cruise schedule for the next three will be able to compete because of as to the question of a capable challenger for the of $109,876.96 has been paid out W. Blythe, 2b "/" 3 11 The Bears rise from fourth to winners, many of whose names place, where they wore on June,: , -JS! weeks . , . Members of the Sewaren Motor Boat Club and the war conditions. heavyweight crown between the two, Pastor would Leary rf x 0 0 Raritan River Boat Club will turn out in full force at Red Bank The Middle Atlantic Motorcycle be an overwhelming choice with us. appear as winners of the Hamble- A. Dube, rf 2 0 0 15, nine games back of Rochester*-' Sunday to witness the speedboat races in the Shrewsbury River. Dealers' Association, under whose tonian harness racing classic held Bhr, e __ 3 2 1 has been studded with gruelling The annual outing and moonlight sail, held last Sunday by direction the event is staged, re- - . * * * * at Goshen, N. Y., annually. Lambert, If 10 0 battles. They have played 44 one- " (Continued on Page 6) •. run games, winning 23 of them. the Sewaren club, was a complete success . . . Nearly 100 persons ports an entry list that contains The decision along that line comes because we It will be a greatly varied pro- were guests of the organization ... A delicious dinner was well over 150 riders. agree that Conn needs at least-another year, or more, gram of horse racing that the served at the Robert E. Lee Inn at Morgan. Only forty of these -will qualify before he can expect to have a chance with Louis. Reading Fair will offer starting* SOME SEA SPRAY for the championship race in trials If you remember Pastor's two fights with Louis, you Monday, September 9. Listed on RA-HWAY RECREATION BOWLING CENTER It is estimated there are as many as 300 one-design sail boat that will be staged on Saturday, the 22-event card in addition to the 1603 COACH ST., RAHWAY, N. J. classes in the United States, providing competition in their own August 31. The non-qualifiers must admire his boxing ability.. In the first fight (10 Grand Circuit and Reading Pair class for thousands of owners. will be allotted places in prelimi- rounds), he stayed the distance arid while being futurity harness races are running Opposite Y. M. C. A. - Telephone: 7-2350 For your day's outing aboard the family sail boat, don't nary races which will be' contested whipped, was not beaten very badly. events and steeplechases of the forget to bring along a supply of drinking water. Thermos over five, ten and fifteen miles. A .**•••*•*• Central Fair Circuit. The Fu- BAR AND CRILL bottles containing water, or iced tea and coffee may be utilized. 15-mile sidecar race also is on the turity events will be slated for the 16 New Alleys - Lounge The experienced yachtsman always is careful in putting program. Then came the return bout (20 rounds). Pastor first two days of the meet, accord- the anchor over the side. A fouled anchor has practically no The first event on Labor Day started very shaky—Louis seemed trying for an early ing to tradition, while the remain- Make reservations for season now. holding power as the line entangled in either the hook or the wilj get underway at 2 P. M. East- K. O.—but he weathered, the champion's withering ' der of the Grand Circuit program Alleys open - Free instructions arm will surely prevent the fluke from digging- in. A properly ern Daylight Time, with the d the running races -will be set anchor, which later becomes fouled by the boat swinging championship test starting about fire and came back strongly in the later rounds.: stretched out the other three days Men and Ladies' leagues now forming. around, can easily be broken out by a pull at the line. .-•"•-"' 3:30. , Y - (Continued on page 6) .:••.: A in; a series of pYernight races. ;PAGE EIGHT FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1940 FOUDS; XND EAEITAN TOWNSHIP BEAGON

LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES

Woodbridge held Monday, August 19, bargain and sale deed for said prem- Block 958; Lota 'H4i and 1442 m By virtue of an Order of the Court barg-aln and sale deed lor said prem- 1340, I was directed to advertise the Block 960-A; Lots 1465 and 1469 in. ises. ises. of Chancerv of New Jersey, made fact that.on Tuesday evening, Sep- DATED: August 20, 1940. Block 361-A; Lots 1477 to 1480, in- on the day of the date hereof, in a DATED: August 20, 1940. tember 3, 1940, the Township Commit- clusive, in Block'961-A; Lots 14S7 B. J. BUNTGAN, tee will meet at 7 P. M. (EST) in the B. J. DUNIGAN, cause wherein the Township of Township Clerk. Committee Chambers, Memorial Mu- Township Clerk. and 148S in Block 962-A; Lots 1510, Woodbridge, a municipal corpora- Notes & Bolts To be advertised August 23 and nicipal Building, Woodbridge, New To be advertised August 23 and 1511 and 1528 to 1530, inclusive, in tion of the State of New Jersey, is August 30, 1940 in the Fords Beacon. Jersey, and expose and sell at pub- August 30, 1940, in the Fords Beacon. Block 963-A; Lots 1613 to 1616, in- complainant, and you and others are lic sale and to the- highest bidder clusive, 3627, 1528, 1629 and 1630 in the defendants, you are required to BY Block 96S-A, on the Official Tax and Kef or To: W-405 according to terms of sale on file Refer To: W-Coha« appear and answer the bill ot saiu. WILLIAM "JUICY" FAUBLE with the Township Clerk open to NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALB Assessment Map of: the Township of complainant on or before the 15th NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Inspection and to be publicly read TO WHOM IT MAT CONCERN: Woodbridge in Middlesex County. day of October next, or the said bill TO WHOM IT MAT CONCERN: prior to sale, Lots 118 to 120 in- At a regular meeting of the Town- And you, the above named, are will be taken as confessed against At a regular meeting- of the Town- clusive in Bloelc 517E, "Woodbridge ship Commitee of the Township of made defendants, because you have you ship Committee of the Township of Wood bridge held Monday, August 19, or may claim to have a lien or liens, We hear that a voice that tink- else he does—almost . .-.' , We re-organizatxon will be outlined Township Assessment Map. The sairt bill is filed to absolutely Woodbridge held Monday, August 19, Take further notice that the 1940, I was directed to adver- or some right, title, interest, estate, debar and foreclose you from HU led like silver bells called up at the hear that Fred Christensen if af- at a meeting in the near future 1940, I was directed to advertise the Township Committee has, by reso- tise the fact that on Tuesday eve- claim in or to the premises des- right and equity of redemption O-, taci that on'Tuesday -evening;-Sept- ning, September 3, 1940, the Town-, firehouse and asked for CAPTAIN ter a certain fellow 'who stole . . . At the rate George Ilko is lution and pursuant to law, fixed a cribed in said bill of complaint. in and to the premises described in ember-3, 1040, the Township Commit- ship Committee will meet at 7 P. M. certificates of tax sales dated May buying bowling balls to try to minimum price at which said lots (BST) in the Committee Chambers, Eugene Blankenhorn, Jack Prekop . . . Windy Kalmar his kitten and who is always tee willl meet at 7, P. MU . (EST(Jib 1J ) in thetne ln said bIock wlll be sold iogrether IS 19?1, March 16, 1922, September Memorial Municipal Building, Wood- Solicitor for and of Counsel has broadened his profession—at sending him ransom notes . . • find one that fits he'll.be able to Committee Chambers, Memorial Mu- wlth a]1 other details pertinent, said 10 ]935, October 10, 1935 and April nieipal Building:, Woodbridse, New bridge, New Jersey, and expose and with Complainant,; open up a bowling center in a minimum price being S90.00 plus 24 Commerce Street, 16, 1936, covering Lots 12 to 17, 36 present he's acting truck driver Corky Matusz should get a medal •Jersey, and expose and sell at pub.- •costs of preparing deed and adver- sell at public sale and to the highest and 37 in Block 776; Lot 20 in Block Uc sale and to the highest bidder bidder according to terms of sale Newark, Nw Jersey. boss-for his brother Sandor . . . for having a guy by the name of couple of years or if I was tising- this sale. Kaid lots in said on flle with the Township Clerk Dated: August 16th, 1940. 777; Lot 52 in Block 776-A; Lots according to terms of sale on file block if sold on terms, will require 29 and 30 in Block 784: Lots 36 and Hey "Cinzo", -what happened to all H. Plavin do his shoveling for George I'd bny one of those with the Township Clerk oven to in- open to inspection and to be pub- F.B.S-23,30;9-6,13, l flown payment of $15.00, the bal- licly read prior to sale, Lot 1 (in 37 in Block 785: Lots 36 to 40, inclu- , the bonitas that Fred Leidner and him that's something to -write "grip test" balls there's plenty- spection and to be publicly read ance o£ purchase price to be paid in sive, in Block 786-AA; Lots 25 and prior to sale, Lots 196 and 197 In tq'-ual monthly installments of $.T.0H part) in Block 491, Woodbridge CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY _ Bill Pqrna sent over—gonna run home about . . - of holes in it ... According to Block 137C, Wooabriclge Townshif Township Assessment Map, more • 13O/G0 •>6 in Block 779; Lot 52 in Block 780; plus interest and other terms pro- particularly described as follows: Lots 7 and 8 in Block 811 and Lots a clambake? . . . Shorty (Liquor Store) Secreda Assessment Map, vided for in contract of sale. TO: George Fleisohrhann and Chris- S to 8, inclusive, in Block S5S, on the Congratulations are in order for and Mickey Archy those air con- Take furthe-r notice that the Take further notice that at said Beginning at a point in the north-. tina Fleischmarin, his wife; Wil- Official Tax and Assessment Map of Township .Committee has, fay reso- »rljp Jine of New Dover Road distant liam Ziegler -and Mrs: William Mr. and Mrs. Matusz who celebrat- -sale, or any date to which it may the Township of Woodbridge, in Heard that Al Levi was trying ditioned cabins in Seaside Park lution and pursuant to law, fixed be adjourned, the Township Com- "asterly along the northerly line of iiiegler, his wife; Agnes Reynolds Middlesex County. to get a break on a pair of shoes ed their 32nd wedding anniversary are certainly "windy" . . . a minimum price at "whiGh said lots niittee reserves the right in its dis- said New Dover Road. 71.35 feet and Mr. Reynolds, her husband; •in: said block will be sold together Annie E. Snoddy and Mr. Snoddy, And you, the above named are last Saturday— that's a long lon£ oretion to reject any one or all bide from the south east corner of.Lot 1 made defendants, because you have at Mai Goeffre's s'hoe.store One r with all other details pertinent, said .and to sell said lots in said block 1 in Block 490 now or formerly her husband; Anna Weber and Mr. ' -.look at AI's number 12's and Mel . time- About those guys who said Hopelawn Harps— minimum price being- ?1,200.00 plus- to such bidder as it may select, due owned by Joseph Chmely. Thence, Weber, her husband; Carl Weber or may claim to have a lien or liens, costs of preparing fleed and adver- and Mirs. Carl Weber, his wife: rjr some right, title, interest, estate, remarked, "Al, I'm losing money they were leaving definitely for Did you know that: regard being given to terms and 1) northerly and parallel with east- tising this sale. Said lots ln said mariner of payment, in case one or erly lines of lands now or formerly Arthur Howe and Mrs. Arthur claim in or to the premises described now" . . . The A. S. & R,, Co. California August -15—Methinks By promenading or by motoring block if sold on terms, will require a of Joseph Chmely, 610.5 feet more, Howe, his wife; Biaco Petrocello in said bill of complaint. mow minimum bids shall be re- and Mrs. Biaco Petrocello. his * Bowling teain is expecting to it's a lotta hooey as they both down payment of $lL'0.0n, the batanct •eiveri. JT less to a point in southerly line Eugene Blankenhorn, through Keasbey a- person's of purchase price to be paid in equal Upon acceptance of the minimum of other lands now or formerly of wife; Mary Stahl and 'Mr. Stahl, Solicitor for and of Counsel with i "bowl again this year at the signed up to bowl with the South thoughts tend to turn hack to the monthly installments of $10.00 plus bid, or bid above minimum, by the Joseph Chmely, known as Lot 1 in her husband; Mary R: McKay, and Complainant, interest and other terms provided Block 489; thence; (2) easterly along their or any of .their heirs, devis- Craftsmen's alleys, according to Second's this season . . . Attention "'Ghost Town" of the wild west Township Committee and the pay- 24 Commerce Street, for in contract of sale. ment thereof by the purchaser ac- ;aid line of lands now or formerly ees, executors, administrators,- Newark, New Jersey. Capt. Fortenbacker . . . While all you auto salesmen especially films . . . And detected during that Take further notice that at said of Joseph Chmley, 142.70 feet to a grantees, assigns or successors in cording to the manner of purchase rifrbt. titlp or interest. Dated: August 14th, 1940. we're on bowling, the Hy-Way "Rocky" Stango and "Cig" Tobias recent hot spell Johnny Cipo and' sale, or any date to which It may in accordance with terms of sale on aoint; thence, (3) southerly and fRlt13M98!S be adjourned," 'the Township Com- Sle, the Township will deliver a parallel with the first described •tSiner is looking for recruits as —-Johnny (Fords Restaurant) his school chum Steve Kosma saw- mittee reserves the right ln its dis- bargain and sale deedfor said prem- "ourse 610.50 feet to a poi"nt in the Harry would like to enter a team Tankochick lost a wheel on his old Ing wood vigorously—and not cretion to reject any one or an. ises. northerly line of New Dover Road: AUDIT REPORTS—COUNTY OF MIDDLESEX "at the Woodbridge Rec—Here's dilapidated 1933 Buick and he may bids and to sell said lots in said DATED: August 20, 1940. thence, (4) westerly along said snoozing either Coach Prisco! . . . Block to" such bidder as i't may se- B. J. DUNIGAN, northerly line of New Dover Road. atipHarry—Al Hirner is looking be in the market for a car—then Mentioning Steve — he should lect, due regard being given to. Township Clerk. 142.70 feet to the point or place JANUARY 1ST TODECEMBE R 31ST, 1939 for a spot on some team . . . again I don't know Johnny too well terms and manner of payment, in jf Beginning. • clinch a backfleld berth on the icaae one or more minimum bids shall To be advertised August 23 and • Certified Public Accountant (N. Y. and N. J.) Anna Grenda and Eddie Scott . . . Signs of election — Dippy be received. Aug-ust 30, 1940, in t?ie Fords Beacon. •' 280 Hobart Street. Perth Amboy, N. J. forthcoming Woodbridge High Containing 2.00 Acres being part - ,.-•:. •. -• Telephone 4-2717-2718 will be looking for an apartment Kutcher getttnig around and con- Upon acceptance of the minimum of Lot 1 in Block 491 as shown on School gridiron team . . . Take no- bid, or bid above minimum, by the Woodbridge Tax Map to be known = iteff. Municipal Accountant, (N. JO soon . . . And if Dot McG's boy tacting people . . . Jimmy Varady Refer To: W-»8 Doeket / > • . ••:•-.- . . June 1, 1940. tice Mr. Navigator—we in Hope- Township Committee and the pay- Kecorded: Book 1121 Pagre :-K5S as Lot 1-C in Block 491. , , , friend don't get hep pretty soon, has been ga-ga since he met a cer :ment thereof by the purchaser ac- Take further notice that the Roarct of Chosen. Freeholders, lawn have a suitable opponent to NOTICE OP PUBLIC SALE Countv of Middlesex, .; he'l be soloing . . , tain flame in Keansburg . . . cording to the manner o-f purchase Township Committee has, by reso- challenge Mr. Deter's undeclared 'in accordance -with teims of sale TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: lution and pursuant to law, fixed New Brunswick'. Nep' jersey. on file, the Township will deliver a At a regular meeting of the Town- I minimum price at which said lot Honorable. Gentlemen: •: supremacy on the checker-board— An audit for the period, from-January 1. 1939 to December 31. 1939, • .Lou Peterson and a certain At a meeting Tuesday night at bargain and sale deed for said prem- ship Committee of the Township in said block will be sold together Paul Dargo . . . ineidently Stan- ises. of tVoodbridge held Monday, August with all other details pertinent, paid of-the'financial Bccounts..and records of the following County officials has blonde- "eyeMl" (arelikethis) . . . the Fords Rec. the Commercial DATED: August 20, 1940. been completed fiv representatives of this office: ley reminds the ladies of a "Holly- -19, 1940, 1 lvas directed to adver- minimum price being- $600.00 plus Ana'if that Turnfoald lass who re- League has reorganized for the B; J. DUNIGAN,- tise tile fact that on Tuesday eve- costs of preparing deed and adver- . ."- r"--••,-- . •• William A. Allgair, Treasurer. wood Glamour ] Boy" in agree- Township Clerk. ning; September 3,1940, the Township tising this sale. Said lot in said Frank A. .Connolly, SurrocatR. cently came back from a Porto coming season, and elected Abe - George Gathers, County . Clerk. ment with the clothes that he ' To be advertised August 23 and Committee will meet at 7 P. M. block if sold on terms will require Jtican trip doesn't stop talking Rosenbloom president and the August 30, 1940 in the Fords Beat-on. CKST) in the Committee Chambers, a down payment of $60.00, the bal- -.:••• ." .—Edward J. Patten, County Clerk. wears! . . . Expected shortly: Sir Memorial Municipal Building, Wood- ance of purchase price to. be paid The: reports of the Surrogate and County Clerk are submitted under about a certain Porto Rican Clark reliable Joe Romer as secretary- r ere •Stork at the .Prebulowskis . . . •Refer To! W-27S Docket 12S/637 bridge, New Jersey, and expose and in equal, monthly installments of separate covpr-. • • G-aible the boys are gonna get mad treasurer. Tb.. will be 16 Recorded Book 1151 Pag-c 2S8 sell at public sale and to the highest $15.00 plus interest and other terms I HERKIrt"CHRTIFT tliKt. in my opinion, thp accompanying: exhibits, And observe very closely: ::Gee" NOTICE OF PUBLIC SA1.B .bidder according to terms of sale on provided for in contract of sale. ... Joe (Cabbage Head) Racz, and teams in the league which makes schedules and comments set forth the true condition of the financial affairs Grossman, snubbing his best •TO WHOM IT MAX CONCERN: 'file with the Township Cleric open Take further notiee that at said if the Board of Chosen Freeholders and County Treasurer, for the period eousjn Steve, will be Serantbn visi- it the largest one in the town- • ' At a regular meeting of the Town-- toinspection and to.be publicly read nndpr review,, SK. obtained' from the books, records, and documents sub- friend—or can the "Model T" that .prior "io sale. Lot 1 in Block SI. sale, or any date to which it may tors, over the Labor Day weekend ship- The opening date is set ship Committee of the Township of .be adjourned, the Township Com- mitted to. us for. inspection, supplemented by personal inquiry and inves- he remodeled last "week, be the real Woodbridge held Monday, Angusl 1!), Woodbridge Township Assessment mittee reserves the rig-ht in its dis- tigation as outline's herein. . . .Shadow X reports that Frank for September 10 and a double .1940, I was directed to advertise the Map. reason?,... . By the way, who is that cretion to reject any one or al] i A copy of this report' and those of the Surrogate and bounty Clerk (Cataldo) Lomoriico goes "moon shift will be used to roll the •fact tha. on Tuesday evening-, Sept- Take further notice that the iiids and to sell said lot in said fill be filed'in the b'flJce of the State Board of Local Government, Trenton, stocky mason who is building a ember 3, 1940, the Township Commit- Township Committee has, by resolu- block to such bidder as it may se- New Jersey: • •'•'• - hunting" in Iselin quite regularly games on one night starting at tee will meet at 7'P. M. (EST) in the tion and pursuant to law, fixed a shower in his chateau, in order to lect, due regard being given to terms Bp^pectfulJy submitted, .' . . another report comes in that 7 P. yk.—The Industrial League •Committee Chambers, Memorial Mu- minimum price, at which said lot and manner of payment, fn case one NATHAN LIPMAN (Signed) take a shower after a Saturday nicipal Building, Woodbridge, New ;in said block will be sold together or more minimum bids shall be re- Cfaire (Orchid) Bixel is traveling Jersey, and expose and sell at pub- -night "Tea" party! . . . Paul Simon, with all other details pertinent, said ceived. Audit report of tlv Counts of Middlesex for the year 1939: alone these days . . . and what sin- lic sale and to the highest bidder minimum price being $700.00 plus "local tennis champ, is definitely at according to terms of sale on file costs of preparing deed and adver- Upon acceptance of the minimum BALANCE SHEETS — CURRENT ACCOUNT gle six-foot mail-carrier is having a bid, or bid above minimum, by the Exhibit A GREINERS, COOPERS love-one,. . . Reports say Paul will wlth the Township Clerk open to t-ising this sale. Said lot in said Township Committee . and the pay- house built on. Freeman Street . . . "inspection and to be "publicly read block if sold on terms, will require Increase or be "Deuced"—probably in Janu- ment thereof by the purchaser ac- (Continued from.Sport Page) .prior to sale, Lot 37 un part) m a down payment of $70.00, the bal- cording to the manner of purchase ASSRTS .Tan. 1.1939 Deo. 31.1939 Decrease* ary '41 . . . Spotted not so long Block 477, Woodbridge Township 'anca of purchase price to be paid in in accordance with terms of sale »n <"*a«sft on Deposit 45S.7S2.13 ? 67«,"(;X.il5 217.4SR.S2 2,-KIO.OO ' Iselin Ink Spots—John (Real Varanay, If 2 10 ago: A local coal dealer dancing Assessment Map, more "particularly equal monthly Installments of $20.00 file, the Township will deliver a bar- Cash. on. Hand 2.100.00 described as follows: plus interest and other terms pro- gain and sale deed for said prem- 1939 . Taxes" "Receivable 1?,,000.00 13,000.00 'Estate} " Hassey is sporting Poygena, p 2 10 furiously to "Madame LaZonga" 22,371.9 1* Beginning at a point where the vided for in contract of sale. ises. 1,eing on file in the office of the er; John Carroll and Mrs. John Fitzpatrick, lb. 3 11 .County Clerks.of Middlesex County, Upon acceptance of the minimum ? 1070,613.74 $ 781,016.00 $ 289,597.74* around Iselin lately—he was Mike . . . Say, whe is the gent that New Jersey and lrom said beginning; bid, or bid above minimum, by the Carroll, his wife; Edward N. Rid- Totals seen coming out of a certain • Genovese, c 2 10 frequents the Amboy Candy Kit- To-wDFhfr Committee and the pay- dle Company, a corporation; Mich-, point- running; (1) westerly along ael Lengyel and Anna Leng>el hi" house on Fiat Avenue Tuesday Miller, rf 3 0 1 'chen? ... I wonder ... Is it the the southerly line of Middlesex Road ment thereof by the purchaser ac- along ajf-urve .o the right having a cording to the manner of purchase wife;; Joseph Sztavicsak and So- LIABILITIES nite which is a sure sign that A. Ur, 3b ..„ 3 0 2 ice cream or the' pretty blonde radius of 4S3 feet, and arc distance in accordance with terms of sale on fia Sztavicsak, his wife; Andro Tax Anticipation Notes 372,500.00 420,000.00 47,5(10.00 Saliga and Rosie Saliga his wife Baby. Tax Bonds 1,250.00 1,110.00 140.00* election is not so far off . . . Signorelli, rf S 1 1 waitress? . . . And we wonder . . . of 140 feet more or less to a point file, the Township will deliver, a of tangent: thence (2) along the bargain and Sale deed for said prem- Macko Polkabla and Katie Polka- Other Liabilities for which JWUckey Cocoran has moved to J. Ur, sf 2 0 2 If Nick Semak will be transformed ises. bla, his wife; John Krivenyko and Cash is Required tangent 7.576.37" .35 js missing from Iselin . . . The town really built it themselves bids and to sell said lot in said minimum price being $200.00 plus rig-ht and equity of redemption of, Municipal Bonds, on Hand 2«,669.5G 27,669.56* Genavese, If 3 12 0 •controversy between Ed Rhinehart , . . Joe Kochick, John Purkall, block to such bidder as it may ae- eosts of preparing deed and adver- in and to the premises descubed in Stock Investment—New Bruns and Pat (School Principal) Boylan Miller, 2b 2 12 iect, due regard being given to terms tising this sale. Said lots in said certificates of tax sales dated Oc wick Tru t Compin% 6,051.00 6,051.00 Mike Kochick, Bob Kochick and •ind manner of payment, in case one block If sold on terms, will require tober 11, 1921, September 7 1922 3oi ough ind Township State A. Ur, p : : 3- 1 "2 r i? at a new high—going into the Eddy KocKick recently made a or more minimum bids shall be ru- a down payment of $20.00, the bal- February 10, 1931, October 10 193 Aid Recemble—Roads 4,421.54 115.19 4,3»6.35" Signorelli, cf 3 12 lieived. ance of purchase price to be paid in and April 16", 1936, covering Lot Trust Cash Deficit 1<\472.54 0 10.472.51* second round . . . Billy Fletcher fishing trip to Beach Haven. Be- equal monthly installments of $10.00 J. Ur, rf 3 12 Upon acceptance of the minimum 3Ti9 to 362, inclusive, 387 to 393. in- son of Howard Fletcher found a lieve it or not John Purkall •plus interest and other terms pro- clusive, in Block 936; Lots Sfil anr bid, or bid a,bove minimum, by me vided for in contract of sale. Totals $ aiO,49fi 46 $ 210,641.50 S9.S54.96* purse belonging to Anna Mosca- Potts, sf 2 0 1 caught a fluke on a piece of sa- Township Committee and the pay- S62 in Block 944; Lots 879 880 SSI SS2, S9I. S9S, 906, 907 and 910 in relli recently, containing a large lami . . . Bob by the way has ment thereof by the purchaser ac- Take further notice that at said cording- to t/ie manner of purcllase sale, or any date to which it may Block 950; Lots 927, S2S, 9") 93i Bio LIABILITIES sum of money and promptly re- Totals 28 6 19 found something very interest- in accordance with terms of sale on be adjourned, the Township Com- 954 to 95fl, inclusive, 970 ind 971 DedKTted Appropriation Re- turned it—We congratulate Billy Hubs (1) ing in Colon ia . . . Have you .ile, the Township will deliver a mittee reserves the right in its dis- in Block 951; Lots 986, 9S7. 991 am serves 45,197.IS 45,41)7.-IS jargainand sale deed for said prem- cretion to reject any one or all bids 99S in Bloi-k 952; Lo's 1600 and 160] AB R I c nsion Funds $ 10,474.90 11,600.39 1,125.49 "for his honesty . ..Martin Gal- H seen Milly Schefcik's new bike? ises. and to sell said lots in said block to in Block 966-A, on the Ofhciil Tn Hue to Srite of \'en Tel^e\ J. Burns, cf — - 2 0 1 She got it after returning from JATKD: August 20, 1910. such bidder as it may select, due re- and Assessment Map of the Town- 3 938 Taxes Payable 0 5,676.40s braifch is again butchering the wood gard being- g-iven to lerms and man- 5^676.40 C. Burns, 3t> 3 0 2 the hospital after a short illness B. J. DUNIGAN, s/n'p of Woocibridg-e, in Middlesex 90% State School Tax- on the model homes for Better Township Clerk. ner of payment, in case one or County. Overpaid _ .02 0 .02* Homes In. Woodbridge . . .Herb Drajerotta, If ..... 3 0- , 0 ... We hear that Vi-vian Munn To be advertised August -3 anc more min-imum bids shall be re- And you, the above named, are State School Funds Payable Springer, lb ..... 3 0 0 August 3D, 1940, in the Fords Beacon. ceived. made defendants, because you have lri.SS0.92* Goodman, is back in town visiting— is going in training In Septem- Upon acceptance of the minimum . to Municipalities "... 2 51, SOS. 2 3 13S,927.31 Kelly, sf : ...... 3 0 1 ber ... Hob Rudders and FYan- or may claim to have a lien-or liens, Trust Bond' Payable ..'.... 27,6(19.56 0 27,609.56* can't stay away long: eh Herb? . . . lelex To: W-ll Docket 11S/43S bid, or bid above minimum, by the or some right, title, interest, estate, Reserve for Cash -Bail Account 2,932.92 O'Brien, e ....:.:., 3 0 1 ces Rudders are sponsoring a bus Towns??ip Committee and the pay- claim in or to the premises des- Reserve for Interest and Divi- 2,932.92 NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE .oient thereof by the purchaser ac- Fords Fickles—Joe Hollo is Hubner, rf —._:. 2 1 1 ride to Atlantic City Sunday r cording to the manner of purchaso cribed in said bill of complaint. dends—Cash Bail Account 1,006.51 62.70 TO 5\ HOM IT MAY CONCERN: Eugene Blankenhorn, Borough and. Township Slate back from his vacation at Ham- Gallagher, 2b ... 2 0 0 August 25 ... Harold Beckman At a.regular meeting of the Town- •in accordance with terms of sale on 943.S4 •He, the Township will deliver a Solicitor for and of Counsel Aid—Tiec-eivable—Roads .. 0 29(>.!>5>* mond Ind.—He looks as" if he O'Hara, ss ,. 2 0 .1 of Howard Street should say ship Committee of the Township of with Complainant, Miscellaneous Trusts ; _ 2111.17"= iVoodbridge held Monday, August lit, bargain and sale deed for said prem- gained about 3 ounces'•'*'. . Steve Herman, p .. 2 0 0 "And How" instead of "I Do" ises. 24 Commerce Street, Reserve for Stock Investment 2'2l'.'l7 1940, I was directed to advertise the Newark, New Jersey. New Brunswick Trust Major almost sold his boat the to a nice number from Newark act that on Tuesday evening, Sept- DATED: August 20, 1310. ember 3, 1940, the Township Commit- B. J. DUNIGAN, Dated: August 16th, 1940 Company ^ .'._..._- - 6,051.00 other day It's like everything Totals „:.„;... :..:...... 25 1 7 the 31st. ,ee will nice at 7 P. M." (K.ST) in tht Township Clerk. F.B.S-23,30;9-6,13 Reserve for Borough "and 6,051.00 . • • -\ Committee Chambers, Memorial Mu- To be advertised August 23 and Township State Aid Re- nicjfca! Building-, Woodbridg-e, New August 30, 1940 in the Fords Beacon. IN CHANCERY OK SEW JERSEY ceivable—Roads ..." :„•..._ 115.19 4.3H6.35* LEGAL NOTICES Jersey, and expose and sell at pub- 130/050 Trust Surplus ....;..:.; . . 4,421.5.4 4,490.67 4,490.67 lic .sale and to the highest bidder ?tefer To: W-IO Docket 11W/SS5 TO: Fred Thomas and Mrs. Fred Thomas, his wife; Summit Laun- Totals ...I..:::.:.:-.::.:.....:..:.:.:.:-. 210,641.50 Itefcr To; W-15 pocket J15/70S cccording: to terms of sale on file Recorded: Book 1.1 J7 Fnpe -r»(> 99,854.96* tvith the Township Clerk open to NOTICE OP PUBLIC SALE dry, a corporation; John Gallagher: $ 310,496.46 SPORTS ECHOES 1 K«^ 4< Mike Mitrik and Susie Mitrik, his nspection and to be publicly read TO WHOM. IT MAT CONCERN: NOTICE OP PUBLIC SALE •rior to sale, Lots SI on<3 S3 m wife; Thomas B. Flannagan and BALANCE SHEETS—CAPITAL ACCOUNT (Continued from Page 5) To Whom It May Concern: ' 31ock 24E, Woodbridge Township At a. regular meeting of the Town- Mrs. Thomas B. FJannag-an, ins ship Committee of the Township of wife; Any Hramiec and Rosie Exhibit C At a resrular meeting of the Town.- Assessment Map: Woodbridge held Monday, August 19, Balance Balance Increase or ship Committee of the Township of Take further notice that the Hramiec, his wife; Thomas Novak Woodbridge'heM Monday, August 19, 1940, I was directed to advertise the and Helen Novak, his wife; George ASSETS . Jan. 1. 1939 Dec 31 193!) a. Everyone gave him a, chance alo.ng about the tenth Township Committee has, by reso- fact that on Tuesday evening, Sept- Cash -.:.. „ ;; .-._ J 236,646.54 $ !)S,33» 32 1SS.31.-1.22* 1940, I was .directed to advertise the lution and pursuant to law,' fixed- a Kiraly and Terezla Kiraly, his fact that on. Tuesday eyeninsr, Sept- ember 3, 1910, the Township Commit- wife; John Tundik and Anna Improvements in Progress .'... 102,835.02 4C9.5C5.3S 36ti.730.oti ""-* heat. But, suddenly, Bob became so confident that minimum price at which said, lots !ee -vvill meet at 7 P. M: (BST) in the Improvements Authorized" and ' ember 3, 1910, thp ToivnsVnr. Commit- in said block -will be sold together Tundik, his wife; John Acklus tee will meet at IP. M. (EST) in the Committee Chambers, Memorial Mu- and Mrs. John Acklus, his wife; Uncompleted ••..'...,...:...i 152,659.32 69,27S,43 83,380.49" V; 1t& changed his style of fight from a "get hit and-run" ,vith alt other details pertinent, nicipal Building, Woodbridg-e, New 'Estimated Proceeds of Bonds Committee Chambers, Memorial Mu- .-laid minimum price being ?2o,0.0v Madeline B. Lucas arid Mr. Lucas, k type to a "hit and run" style. But one of those times nicipal Building, Woodbridg-e, New Jersey,, and expose and sel! at pub- her husband; Paul Kozjak and and Bond Anticipation Jersey, and expose and sell at pub- ojus costs of preparing deed 9 . lie «.ale an-d to the highest bidder ac- Kate Kozjak, his wnfe; Jane L,. Nbfes Authorized But Not ' • - • - "when he was playing "hit and run", he charged in !ic sale and to the hJgrhest bidder Advertising this sale. iaicl lots In ewraMng to- terms 'of sale on file with Bailies and Mr. Butties, her hus- Issued :... _' 5^4(100 00 524,000.U0 ; according to terms of sale on file said block if sold on terms, -wilt re- the Township Clerk open to' inspec- band; Nicola Gruttadauria and Surplus nevenue^l837 50.593.7S 5(1 5.93"76 with the Township Clerk open tc tuire a down payment of $25.00, the tion and to be publicly read prior Maria Gruttadauria, his wife; Capital Aids Keceivab.le :.: |2,9U8.00 2 SOS 00 - to hit and didn'.t run. MORAL: Better one should balance of purchase price to be paid 53,150.10* inspection and to, be publicly reaJd '6 sale. Lots IS to 20 "inclusive in Lester H. Goodkind and Mrs. Les-Uncompleted Contracts —. 53,150 10 0 ;" play with dynamite, but not Joe Louis. .. prior to sale, Lot" 4 7 in RlocU- 2Jf .n et/ual monthly installments of Block 46 Woodbridge Township As- ter H. Goodkind, his wife; Jacob Amount in Sinking Fund 161,810.57 155,251.54 6,559.03' Woodbridge Township Assessment {25.00 plus interest and other terms sessment Map. A. Wolf and Mrs. Jacob A. Wolf, Deferred' Charges to l*'uture -""•••.'- *##*... s Map. . ; •••;•-. •. -. provided for in contract of sale. Tak-e further notice that the ills wife, and their or any of their Taxation ...-.....":...., ....' %247,6S9.43 5,695,248.46 552,440.97 Take further notice that the . Take further notice that at said Township Committee has, by reso- respective unknown heirs, devis- Mundy Avenue Bridge Im- Township Committee has, by reso- •ale, or any" date to which it may lution and pursuant to law, fixed ees, personal representatives, ex- provement ; ...:...„:.. 16.37 0 16.37* \" Chance To Get Third CrmkAt Joe lution and pursuant to law, fixed a he adjourned, the Township Com. a minimum price at which said lots ecutors, administrators, grantees, minimum price at which said lot in mlftee reserves the right in its dig- in said; block wil-l be sold, together assig-jjs or successors in right, Totals •—...... ,....„.., 5-7,008,309.71 § 7,065,17S.S9 ? 56,869.IS -i •_ Getting back to the Pastor-Conn bout, if Bob does said block will be' sold" together with jcetion. to reject any one or all with all other details pertinent, title or interest; ail other details pertinent, said hids and to sell- said Jots in said said minimum pi'ice being $SI>0.00 - jwin the fight by either a K. O. or a decision (and the minimum price, being $2.00.00 plus block to such bidder as it may se- plua costs of preparing deed and By virtue of an Order of the Court , LIABILITIES costs of preparing deed and adver- lect, due regard being given to terms advertising this sale. Said lots in said of Chancery of New Jersey, made Term Bonds : :....."..:.:_'.- 255,500.00 ! 240,500.00 15,000.0!)* L latter is p'rohable should Pastor win), he may be tising- this sale. Said lot in said ind manner of payment, in case one block if sold on terms, will require on the day of the date hereof, in a •Serial Bonds " 6,154,000.1)0 5,610.000.01) 5-14,I.XI0.OU* block if sold on terms, will reciulre )r more minimum bids shall be re- a down payment of" $80.00, the bal- cause wherein the Township ol Bond Anticipation Notes""" 255,000.00 524,00(1 00 ceived. - -. 269,000.00 \"ipfen a third crack at that guy named Joe. Another a down payment of $20.00, the bal- ance of purchase price to be paid Woodbridge, a municipal corporation improvement Authoriza-tLons 152,659.92 69,279.43 83,380.49* ance of purchase price to.be paid Upon acceptance of the minimum In equal monthly installments of of the State of New Jersey, is com- 'Bonds and Bond Anticipation .- Pastor-Louis fight wouldn't be quite as "dry" as one m^ equal monthly: Installments of bid, or bid above minimum, by the $10.00 plus interest and other terms plainant, and you and others are Notes' Authorized But Not _, migljt expe^- Pastor might again give Joe a good ?20.00 plus interest and other terms Township Committee and th^ pay- provid&d, for in contract of sale. the defendants, you are required to Issued --...... : -. 524,000.00 524,000.00 provided for in . contract of sale. • ment thereof by the purchaser ac- Take further notice that at said appear and answer the bill of- said improvement. Contracts Payable 53,150.10 0 53,150.111* Take further notice that at said cording- to the manner of purchase sale, or any date to which it may complainant on or before the 17tS; Reserve for Improvements in zig-zagging battle, for a while, at least. .sale, or any date to which It may be in. accordance with terms of sale on be adjourned, the Township Com- day of October, next, or .the said Progress Funded'with Serial flle, the Township will deliver a mittee reserves the right in its dis- So, summing up the heavyweight picture, we adjourned, the Township Committee bill will be taken as confessed Bonds 38,1-11.02 11,340.79 26,800.23" reserves the right in its discretion bargain and sale deed for said prem- cretion to reject any one or all bins ag-ainst you. Three Percent Ileser've on Tem- ises. • and to sell said lots in said block _ earrtfind hardly any heavy we'd rather see tackle 'o reject any one or all bids and to The said bill is filed to absolutely porary Indebtedness 10,961.27 9,161.27 1,S00.00" sell said lot in said block to such DATED: August 20,' 1940 to such bidder as it may select, dua debar and foreclose you from all Reserve for Down Payments bidder as it may select, *ue regard B, J. DUNIGAN, regard being given to terms and right and equiLy of redemption of, .. Joe than Pastor—although there may be one or two 1 on Capital Improvements 33,750.00 23,750.00 12.OUO.00* being given to terms and manner ToWnshio Clerk. mariner of payment, in case one or in and to the premises described in Reserve for Capital Aids Re- To be advertised Aug-ust 23 and more- minimum bids shall be re- exceptions. However, those exceptions wouldn't of payment, .in case one or more certificates of tax sales dated Ocr ceivable i,-_ 2,908.00 2,908 00 mini-mum bids shall be received. August 30, 19*0, in the Fords Beacon. ceived. tober 11, 1921, September 7, 3922, Surplus Hevenue—1837 50,593.76 V be-Max Baer, Tony Galento, Arturo Go'doy, or, lastly, upon ^acceptance.-of the minimum Upon acceptance of the minimum February 10, 1931, October 10, 1935 Capital Surplus •".: 50.M3.76 bid, or bid abofe.minimum, by. the lii'fcr Tin W-C5 Oneket 117/r»02 bid, or bid above minimum, by the April IB, 1936, October 15, 1936 and 1,645.64 1,6 15.61 IteetTrted: f'ook 1114 Pase'374 Township Committee and the pay- -Jack Dempsey, Of course, Pastor may not even Township Committee and the pay- June 1, 1937, covering- Lots 683 and Totals ...-.:...:...:...... 7,008,309.71 7,065,178.89 ment thereof by the purchaser /ac- NOTICE 1Of PUBLfC Sil.R ment thereof by the purchaser ac- SSI in Block 941; Lots 936 and 937 56,,S (ill.IS j, defeat Conn to get back into the betting odds, you'd cording-

WING wide the doors, and let the children in. They are America's children, sound of mind, strong of body *'• and free of spirit. They ask to learn, for education is the fountain from I which they drink the draughts which 1 give them strength to face the future, 1 and confidence with which to assume 1 their responsibilities as adults in the years ahead.

The school doors open for another H term, and in march the children—alert, aware, interested as much Is the world today as in the geography and history of an older world. Swing wide the doors, and let the children in! For once again it's time for school days to begin.

School-Time calls for many Send them back to school in needs. The Merchants' Ads which style! Timid first-graders to proud appear in this issue have the High School students. Clothing: and furnishings, answers to hundreds of your ques- warm, colorful and sturdy to with- tions for those going back to stand long- wear and tear cor- j school. rectly styled to please parents. PAGE TWO FUIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1940 BACK TO SCHOOL SUPPLEMENT In the forefront of participation Something For itdl Use by young men and -women in their PELL-MELL MEALS SAFEU UNIT5 AID late teens .and twenties will he thousands o± £ormer -sehool patrols DEVEOPING CHILD members alert to any demand for their services. Teach Yake Of Co-Gpera- Aside from this new universal Main Foods Often Are Ig- training feature, the patrols rhave nored And Main Ener- tion And Stress Value made -a ajeal contribution to-cMH Of Discipline safety. Fatalities involving school , | gies OyerlodkeH children between >tke ages M five BY RUSSELL E. SINGER and nineteen have been steadily Frequently called the most im- General Manager reduced, while those involving portant meal of the day by dieti- American Automobile Association adult age groups have steadily in- cians, breakfast is especially so School safety patrols, while or- creased. for the school child. Too often ganized primarily to safeguard As a result, the white Sam it is a pell-mell, rush meal where sehool children from traffic haz- Browne belts, shining badges and the main foods are ignored and the ards, have become units of a great yellow rabber ponchos worn by pa- full energies that breakfast should national youth movement offering trol mem'bers on rainy days, have give a child are not supplied. effective training in civic respon- become widely recognized as sym- Fruits, cereal, toast with butter sibility to many thousands of bols of youth training and youth and milk should be served, '& young Americans. service in the highest tradition of good way to vary the cereals is to At least two million youngsters the American way. let the children make their -own have served in the patrols since An outgrowth of the patrol combinations. Have a variety of movement is the National Parade they were organized twenty years and Assembly held each year in cereals on hand and do not f orget ago and -nearly 300,000 will be the importance of hot cereals for the national capital. Approximate- at their posts of duty with the re-ly 16,000 patrol members "were ia breakfast. A mixture of any two opening of schools in all sections cereals is excellent and children the 1940 parade and passed in re- of the country. view before many national digni- like to make their own combina- Not only do patrol members in taries. President Roosevelt and tions. 3,000 scattered communities pro- members of Congress always show Fruits too can be varied. Ap- tect sehool children at street inter- some recognition of this great spec- ples, for instance, may be baked, sections and on rural roads, hut tacle of youth. Plans are already stewed or made into sauce. Eipe they also learn to work •hanfl-in- in the making for the 1941 parade bananas, baked or raw, are good hand with "police officers and school in Washington. An annual parade for children. Oranges, whether in safety authorities and in addition is also -held on the west coast. juice or sliced, are an:important Awards for life saving in traffic they_ learn the value of discipline. : and delicious breakfast food. The result is that school patrol offi- are features. _ The school child's breakfast is | cers and. members rank high in So with twenty years progress the meal that affords all mothers | other student activities. in the school patrol movement be- an opportunity to see to it that the hind the plans for the future, this child gets the one egg a day that FOR autumn Hunts, for

liJ Health!

$.iys\^}/^&

' ^^^^J^I|S

Teacher:—Do you know why hoys and girls should drink a generous quantity of Milk?

Mary; —Yes, because Mother tells us that Milk, like: Bread, is the Staff of Life. . Strong, healthy children drink plenty-of'Milk! ' '

Teacher:—It is a smart mother who builds her child's diet around PURE, WHOLESOME PURITAN DAIRY MILK. Every child should drink at least one quart of Milk daily. •

Make your child's first lesson 'at school be a study in.health. Let the nourishing . goodness of Puritan Dairy Milk build strong, sturdy bodies and everlasting health. .

PRODUCTS WITH AN ENVIABLE'REPUTATIOW

Fayette' and Wilson - Sts., Perth Amboy Phone Pp A. 4-0115. BACK TO SCHOOL SUPPLEMENT FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1940

In-Safety Units Again This Year Members of the ever increasing army of school safety patrols are ready to take up their strategic po- sitions on the street corners of Am- sriea to safeguard the movements of millions of troops of children on their daily journey to and from school. Although only about 25 years old, this army today numbers 300,000 boys and girls. Their in- signia is the now familiar white With Clothes.Like Sam Browne belt, in some commu- nities augmented with badges 01 ami bands and, more recently, the Those College Men white raincape. ' ,_ The growing strength and size of this army is due to its splendid Are Wearing! contribution to the reduction of child traffic accidents. This reduc- your boy back to school tion has been so outstanding and continuous that school safety pa- ,.^2? proud as punch and full of self- trols have now become an integra1 part of school and community ac- confidence, with a wardrobe tivities/ '. • Sound Principles for every occasion and every It also has become apparent that change of weather. the fundamentals underlying the', ,8011001 safety patrol are a contri- bution to sound education, in addi- tion to the value of its primary objective—the protection of child Pe- . • ' 1 : The lack of organization and uni- formity which marked the early years of patrols, when many were allowed to direct vehicular traffic or stand in the street, .practically Plain crew neck . . . Zipper and button fronts is eliminated today. In these early Tu-Tone combination leather fronts days the equipment of patrols visa. and cloth fronts. even more varied. Some wore belts, some arm bands and still others .caps. START the school year i ; the August Good Househec;-.: Today most patrols are organ- suggests this plaid dresi witn ized and function in accordance box-pleated skirt and side-buttone with standard rules compiled and bodice. approved by representatives of five national organizations—the Amer- ican Automobile Association, Na- tional Congress of Parents and PF Teachers, National Education As- •VAL sociation, National Safety Council, and United States Office of Edu- .Responsibility For ^Pro- GET YOUR FALL SUPPLY cation. tecting Children Belongs With New Collar Styles These rules specify that "the function of the school safety pa- 'To You. , . There are new refinements trol is to instruct, direct and con- in collar design to give you trol the members of the student Motorists are usually adults, better fit, smarter appear- body in crossing the street at or usually parents, and a reminder ance and new styling. Your near schools. Patrols should not that children will soon be going choice—on our Shirts at .1— be charged with the responsibility back to' school, sounds an im- of directing vehicular traffic, nor perative note of caution to be allowed to do so, other than them. signaling to a motoris|; who apr Responsibility for the safety proaches the crossing after .the of the youngsters in traffic will student pedestrians have left the in great measure be that of the Preferred Pajamas curb." car driver. Fresh from vaca- White and colored shirts, Group Activities tion, these youngsters will not COMFORTABLE LINES be as alert to traffic dangers as plain or fancy. In many schools the patrols have they will be later when School Coat, or Puil-over Styles organized group activities. Often Safety Patrols are trained and these groups are entertained by classroom safety education re- Outfit yourself with a sleep wardrobe for Fall. Well civic bodies and include social as news their alertness. •well as educational programs at tailored, these are pajamas with a purpose, namely their meetings. A-newer feature -Motorists have a civic re- —comfort and Wearing quality. . in -the activities of patrols is spe- sponsibility right now, there- cial summer camps. A few have fore, in seeing to it that their ATTRACTIVE PATTERNS been held throughout the country automobiles are in perfect me- during the past few years as an chanical condition: that brakes SOLID COLORS _ experiment. These have been so will function smoothly and $1.29 successful that their number is in- quickly when a thoughtless creasing. Those already tried have youngster darts into the street; been repeated each year. that worn tires are replaced by ones with good traction-grip- Manhattan Shirts and Shorts 35 C Fine broadcloth pajamas, ping treads, that ignition sys- plain or fancy patterns. LAUNDRY KITS 'MUSTS' tems are freshly attuned against 3 for $1.00 ' sluggish motor performance. FOR BOARDING PUPILS All this," the motorist must see to immediately. Take that JAdequate Supply Of Clean car of yours to a service station BEFORE school starts, and have Clothing Necessary For it checked for safety in the in- WOOL BATH ROBES _ Sleek Appearance terests of the future Generation These Robes have every quality of Americans. feature that men look for . . . plus Many a boy who attends an out- the best of looks . . . plus good of-town college owes that slick, Sweater Is Important Item well-groomed appearance to the value $4.95 sturdy laundry kit which is mailed In Wardrobe Of Schoolboy home at regular intervals with a jumbled assortment of soiled laun- Sweaters form one of the most BLAZER STRIPE Swank Jewelry and dry and returned neatly packed important items in the wardrobe SOCKS with a supply of fresh socks, shirts of any schoolboy. Those with Key-Chains and underwear. sleeves are usually worn in place of a coat and they may have "Any mail for me today?" be- round or "V" necks/ Solid colors 1.00 comes an anxious inquiry if the —dark blue, brown, green and laundry kit is delayed for even a tan—are best. and for a variety day after the suctomary lapse of there are any number of weaves to BOYS' WOOL SLACKS time. suit Junior's particular. taste. Since delays arc inevitable the Many high school boys are tak- thoughtful mother always tucks a 2.45 •* .2.79 : ing to the light woolen sleeveless few; cakes of soap into the laundry- slipovers in place of a: vest, a habit kit. This not only encourages fre- that English youngsters acquired quent bathing but comes in handy some years ago. in those emergencies when the ex- isting quota of clean socks or SAFETY POSTERS shirts is exhausted and the dormi- One and a half million A.A.A. e & Cunneen tory wash bowl is called into ac- safety posters "were- hung up in tion for the next -day's supplies. classrooms during the past school Kits of their kind are "musts" for year—1940-41 school year will find 163 SMITH STREET, PERTH AMBOY, N. J. •: college boys. and girls too. '.- even-more. -• —-• - - •'•• •-*'••_.••- PAGE SIX FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1940 BACK TQ SCHOOE Tweeds Speak With Burr! Here Is Usi Of Pointers CITIZEN TRAINING Iff Selecting €hMs- Shoe Here's what mother should STARTS JNJCHOOL ' Idote for When fitting Junior or his young sister with a Back to Jeaching Prepares Youths * School shoe: Youngsters Can Do Bette: The well-fitted foot-wear Work.If Proper Tools. . :Jo Take Part In Otor should be from a half-inch to - National1 ILile inch, beyond the toes and high Provided For Them enough to prevent pressure. To give the school child a calu •"White-the citizenry of this great The heels should be close to nation unites to bulwark the ram>- attitude toward the return t avoid rotation. classes, parents should best avoi parts of democracy, the ringing- of The underareh should be bells—graven into American his- last minute rush by selecting an. high enough, to support the in- filling the school bag days ahea^ tory to the symbol of liberty—be- step. gins sounding in the distance to The "brief case with prope . summon all children Back- to The shoe should be supple to identification, must be light -ii permit free elasticity for the weight, with binding reinf orcemen School.. - . child while walking and running. Those distantly ringing bells are for strength and sectional con With these precautions when struction for orderliness. school bells replicas in more shopping carefully kept in mind, sense than one, of the famous bell An automatic pen and penci the parent need not worry over set does away with sharpening am that pealed 164 years ago to pro- the child developing pigeon-toes, claim the birth of a nation in which ink-dipping operations: neverthe humped heels, flat feet, fallen less a pencil box must go along free speech, a free press and free- arches, and s'he will also be as- iloin of religious •worship,, were and in it ready-sharpened pencils sured that such a fitting goes a pen and points, ink and penci enunciated as the essence of Am- long way to prevent bad posture erica. erasers, pen wiper and pencj and general body weakness later sharpener, compass and crayo5 - In solemn realization of the on. sharp:'contrast between thfe peaces pencils of the type that can b> ful pealing of school bells in-Am- sharpened like a lead pencil. Rule ericai and- the -wail of waraiifg- si- Girdles* Brassieres Used and -blotters complete the. "sta rens to •which children must quick- tionery" requirements. en their1 frigMtetied-stfepgiir Europe By Most 'Teen-Aged Girls A small notebook in which the —and what this contrast meansf to daily homework schedule will "b< the future of America^—parents A questionnaire issued by The written; looseleaf notebooks fo, and educators alike approach the Amei'iean Girl magazine resulted separate subjects; and scratel^ forthcoming school term with a in indication of the baying habits pads for note^jotting take careo. new sense of responsibility toward of 25,000 teen-age girls. every writing demand. the younger generation. Among the mdst interesting For each textbook, the we! facts is this: 30 per cent of the equipped boy and girl should hai For in the "Back to School" sea- teen-age girls wear a girdle or a firm paper caver. A small di son oif 1940, is; a phase of national foundation garment, and 44 per tionary is an invaluable aid. preparedness that reaches beyond TWEEDS that almost speak with a Scottish burr are going to any current emergency, into a fu- cent wear brassieres. And a small pocketbook will be among the 'musts' for autumn. Here are introduced two hold lunch and carfare, mone; . ture day when children will have charming ideas. (1) Green, red and natural plaid wool, the •become the citizens of tomorrow SURPRISE THEM safely, plus a small comb to main ana when it will be their job to jacket with rounded lapels, a four-gored skirt. (2) Tan, white A few of the pleasant surprises tain a neat appearance all the da, carry on high the torch of freedom and teal blue Glen plaid, a long jacket, a four-gored skirt. that will delight a child for lunch- long. that" will have b.een preserved for time are: a few raisins or cur- them by the adults, of today. . FAVOR BRIGHT COLORS 'Jumpafore* Combines Best 300,000 SCHOOL PATROLS rants, a square of some good - Bright red and bright ^ Starts. Witk the Beginner Close to 300,000 boys and girls candy or a few nuts, or a little flannel and wool jersey shirts ar •This phase of American prepared- Points Of Jumper,. Pinafore serve on School Safety Patrols in celery. Any little food surprise ness starts with the six year old going to be all the rage at schoo The college and high school more than 3,000 U. S. communi- like this will make opening the this year, with the favorite styl who is going to school for the first ties, daily protecting the lives of lunch box an adventure—and keep time in his life. It grows more im- crowd is going back to school wear- a cox>y of that worn by the Cana portant as the concern of the indi- ing a style that combines the best 8,000,000 schoolmates. them interested in their lunch. dian Mounties! vidual parent is with the bright points of the jumper dress and eyed and more modern, mature the pinafore. grade school and high school Aptly called a "jumpafore" the youngsters, and it reaches its peak garment is unruffled, has an all- of parental responsibility when it around skirt full or princess sil- involves the boys and girls who houette, and buttons or slide fas- are those who will be going back to tens-up the side, back or front. - /.,i\-, -.-.; colleges and universities this fall. • Planning their wardrobes, their SAFETY FOR CARFARE accessories, the home background [Little girls need no longer be against which they progress, hav- encumbered with pocketb^ooks, on ing them looked over by the physi- school days—or have reason to be cian, the dentist, the eye special- chastised for losing carfare and ist—all this must be undertaken lunch money! A very new style immediately if they are to be sent in coats for girls . going back to away to school ready in the full classes, has two little pockets— freedom of the American tradi- one tucked in either sleeve, to hold tion, joyously and eagerly resume change safely on the way to and their training for future citizen- from school. LOOK AT OUR PRICES! Pencil Boxes Chock ship. Given With Shoe Purchases Teachers Also Prepare PREPARING FOR FALL WHY PAY MORE? And even as the parents of Have the police, school and traf- school children go about their task fic officials in your - community of seeing to it that their young- been sure to put traffic guides in NON-WILT COLLAR sters are properly attired, health- shape for the fall? In many eom^ REG; 69c ily fed, happy in mind and strong munities they are bringing cross- of body, their teachers too will be walk markings up-to-date, reno- REG. 10c getting ready for the opening of vizing traffic signals, otherwise school; and the administrators of making a safe route to school for Double Crotch. NOW the school systems will be making their children—and yours. classrooms bright and lighted to ALL SIZES receive theni. CAREER BOOKS "If your children haven't started REG. 69c reading the 'career' books now be- Pompadour Is Approved ing featured, we suggest that you have your librarian recommend a Hair Style By Young Set few," says Alice Dalgliesh, Chil- REG. $1.69 dren's Book Editor of The Parents' \ School girls will show prefer- : Magazine. She suggests them as ence, for the hair-do without a gifts for school children with the SOLID LEATHEE OXFORDS part—jut brushed straight back, idea of helpings them choose a Jield with barrette~or bow at the career. iback, the hair long. SUNDIAL OR FOR BOYS AND i i The pompadbut", the hair reli- GIFT DRESSES HAIR BONNIE LADDIE OXFORDS GIRLS REG. $2:95 ed over a ribbon tied in a bow A complete- electric hairdressing at the front, and sleekly brushed outfit comes as a boon to daughter . ihait" with loosely curled ends are whois~a*way at college as well as .other: school girl preferences-. to-the bachelor girl living by her- BOYS* UTTER KNICKERS REG, $1.69 self. It includes a waving rod, a W* BREAK THE FAST curler clamp, and a slip-on comb r TOMMY TOCKER Breakfast really means just that and serves both as a curler and a *—"bi-eak fssfe'\ It eoines when waver. BELL SHIRTS 69c STRETCH-BAK the body has been longest without1 food and at the beginning of the CROSS AT CORNERS .day's activity. It is just this pe- When you walk into the street WOOL SWEATEES ' riod when the body is in greatest from between parked cars, you are REG. $1.39 need, not necessarily of large inviting injury or death, A.A.A. 1 Quantities of food, but of proper studies show that even at reason- foods. . . able speeds, the driver just hasn't Girls ' .. $1.00, Now Reg. 69c, Now enough warning to protect you. Cross at. corners when you're sure 1 Complete with '•' CALCIUM CONSCIOUSNESS the way is clear. GIRLS'' ^ Dieticians are increasingly stress- Boys RAINCOATS Helmet & Whistle CAPES ing the importance of an adequate PEDESTRIAN AID supply of calcium in the diet for Many" motorists who turn on a FINEST BROADCLOTH. REG. 69c normal energy and correct func- green signal do not realize that BOYS* SUITS Solid Colors and Tu-Tone Combinations' tioning of-the entire body mechan- they must yield the right-of-way ism, and its special importance iri to pedestrians-. As greater atten- the school child's diet for strong tion is given to pedestrian protec- VALUES T& $T.4S- teeth and bones and. normal tion^ motorists who fail to- aid BOYS' BETTER SUITS ALL SIZES growth. Milk remains-the Best cal- Walkers will: invite arrest,, tlia ,«iuM- food available. A.A.A. warns. BACK TO SCHOOL SUPPLEMENT FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1940 SEVEN

•And mow the Bond/Clothing Factory Presents

in a nclass" by Use

•"We're all set to send you back" to .school—looking like a million dollars .,,. ... Yes -siree! Our 1940 Fall Line of Student Suits—Topcoats and Over-* coats—reads -like-a "What's What".in the clothing field. i

In Greys-Browns-Blues and Mixtures '---styled of course, -by Bond's, own invincible designers in 2 and 3 but- ton models—-and tailored just like your Dad?s suit. ONLY

Ea !*"

Sizes from 15 to 22

'' • New .Brunswick factory REMSEN AVENUE AT HOWARP STREET OPEN" DAILY FROM 8:30 -A.-M.-6 P* M. EVENINGS-TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY, 'UNTILp P.-M. M,,,-.- ••• BACK TO SCHOOL SUPPLEMENT

AVOID MONOTONY CLEAN LUNCH' BOX For The Traveller The school lunch box should Lunches need not, any more, be be thoroughly cleansed each day. Children Should Call On Dentist the starchy sandwich-cake monot- Mother can relieve herself from ony they were years ago. Nowa- this additional burden by having j "Before Resuming School Studies days the" wise mother packs calo- the youngster tend to it. And it's* ries and vitamins in with the good training. TKere is probably.nothing more Dental examinations for begin- waxed papers and napkins. important among the many things ners before entering school is of LONG DISTANCE mother has to think about before special importance. MALNUTRITION . With long distance phone rates the children are ready to go Back Considerate parents who are so economical, many parents are to School than the care of their sending boys or girls away to col- Malnutrition in children is fre- urging boys and girls who are teeth. lege will want the family dentist quently attributable to inadequate away at college to phone them ones Before classes begin is the time to assure them that their older and hastily-swallowed breakfasts. a week, or twice a month, in ad- to send them to the family dentist children may anticipate no trouble If breakfast is inadequate then dition, to writing the usual letters. , for the semi-annual inspection. - with their teeth while they are the child is denied one-fom-th to Later, after school starts, may away from home. Make an appoint- one-third of the day's essential FARM CREDIT make it most inconvenient in re- ment for them before they leave foods, a deficiency that is difficult "Various agencies of the Farm lation to their school duties, and the home town. . ° to make up at lunch or dinner. Credit Administration expended it is much better to" have young Before children go back to $313,454,000 credit to farmers molars checked up before they be- school^—no matter what grades f Louis Johnson resigns his war during the first half of the cur- gin to hurt than afterwards. For they are in, their teeth should be post; Judge Patterson named. rent year. teeth that hurt invariably are teeth examined by the dentist. that are in trouble. •Preventive dentistry, -which is the object of regular dental in- spections, is designed to stop trou- STYLES OF CAMPUS blesome and painful decay. '. Furthermore, the necessity for FOR traveling, for football reminding the children about games, for motoring or town, cleaning their own teeth daily, a smartly designed fur coat and rehearsing them in the proper College Modes Are Color- that will please the eye and wear method that they should use, is ful^ Stylish, Practical, diligently. It is of Laskin mout- something the family dentist can on with an inset of clotK a£ the 196 SMITH ST. PERTH AMBOY do better and more effectively than Say Experts waist that ties in front. Phone PA 44056 can anyone, perhaps, than those The time has passed, when the teachers in school who make it a schoolboy wanted to "dress like SOCK-'EM GLOVES i practice to teach youngsters per- Dad." Today, he wants to dress Refusing to be considered "the sona] dental hygiene. like his college brother, because weaker sex," school girls of 1940 campus styles provide all the com- will keep their hands warm in fort, colorful casualness, practica- sock 'em" gloves, which are enor- bility, and easily care for char- mous mittens, styled exactly like Everything (or the Co-Ed for every occasion. HATLESS ERA GONE, acteristics which cater to the needs'* the gloves worn by fighters in the of active youth. ring! STYLISTSJECLARE ..By the college man's clothes, FOOD FOR THOUGHT then, are patterned the styles, for Children need plenty of water New Modes Captivate Col- "upper classmen" in grammar and should be encouraged to drink grades, and for all high school it at. definite times in the morn- lege Youths Who Used ages. So that whether the parental ing and in the afternoon. Some j To Go Bareheaded budget is focused on distributing of it they will of course get in itself over the wardrobe of the liquids and beverages, and there The fad of hatlessness to which boy just entering his teens or are such nourishing ones as milk, college boys sometimes succumb graduating to his twenties, the milk soups, cocoa and fruit juices. Slips, Gowns, Pajamas, Robes and Blouses. will no doubt be shoved irretriev- same basic garments are essential, ably into limbo this season—for and they will follow parallel lines of styling. SPENDS DAYS ON FLAGPOLE which many a mother of high Hackensack, N. J. — Michael school boys as well as campus A suit is a "must". In tweed or Dunay, 46, defied the heat, the celebrities, will raise a prayer of Shetland, monotone, herringbone humidity and the police and spent thanks. or glen plaid it will preferably be the day at the top of a 126-foot - Gloves, Hosiery and Underwear Fashion will in great part, be single breasted in style, with three- flagpole in or-der that he might1 the reason, in view of the increas- button closing. The big color this be sure to see the American Le- Foundation Garments ing popularity of new rakish pork- year is hurley brown, rich deep gion parade. Climbing up before pie, tyrolean and snap brim mod- and ruddy—and with it will be 7 A. M. by means of a rope, he Nemo Sensations els, and their greatly enhanced worn haberdashery in agate blue, rested at the top in an improvised comfort. But the final deathblow a clear, cold tone becoming to boys boatswain's chair and did not re- Maiden Form Brassieres to undergraduate and high school, of all complexions. turn to the ground until 8:30 P. and other- type undergarments for Students and perhaps to more mature mas- M., long after, the parade had ', Sports Coat Needed culine hatlessness, will result from passeid. The sports coat is indispensable the inspiration of one popular, hat and it is seen this year in longer designer reflecting something in length. The more brilliant its col- the nature of genius. or and blatant its pattern, the • This hat designer is impressing- Wonder Wear to Pack/in Your Back to School Bag smarter its appearance. Well fit- college football schedules into hat- ted, it will be,worn the year-round bands in all fall models for young- with the suit trousers and separ- er men this season. ate slacks. Now mother has an additional reason for believing that both un- Boys love the great outdoors, so dergraduate and the high school a really warm overcoat becomes a boy who is headed for college, will major requirement. If it isn't in a not go bareheaded this year. 1 light-but-warm fleece wool, it may be in covert cloth with zipper lin- BUY CHILD'S CLOTHES ing, making possible all-season wear from the one garment. s EARLY, MAKERS ADVISE Although kntted caps are worn . Made of Fine Spun-L® by the younger lad, his older broth- Unsettled Conditions En- er goes hatted this year, with the Briefs puggree trimmed pork pie felt an Panties danger Supplies; Prices overwhelming favorite. Also May Advance No boy's wardrobe is complete Stepins without a sweater, preferably long Vests . With conditions unsettled, it is sleeved, either in a perfectly plain particularly advisable this year knit stitch or in the rugged cable that mothers buy their children's stitch which has fast become the Luxite undies born to travel, and clothes early and complete their campus leader. outfits before time for school to here they are at a price that says open. Jacket Important "buy plentifully". Easy to pack! For knockabout wear, the jacket Leading manufacturers insist of tougli wool, sheepskin, suede or Put your entire school supply into a that there will be no shortage of leather is a warm and comfort- small space. Wrinkles shake right woolen and other materials but it able standby, affording more free- is- possible that the demand for out. . - dom than is possible in a full children's clothing of all kinds may length overcoat. be increased due to the numbers ^ A raincoat is considered essen- Easy to care for! Rinse out, hang of boys and girls of school age ar- them up to dry . . . presto! Laundry riving here from Europe. tial, but if the overcoat is of re- versible water repellant construc- Indications are that clothing chores are done, no ironing-required. tion the separate garment may be prices will not advance noticeably Easy to wear. Cool and sleek. All dispensed with. dtiring the coming winter and in Basically, this is a sensible in the soft, lustrous "Spun-Lo" some cases advance orders for school and college wardrobe which rayon that wears so well. 1941 merchandise are somewhat offers correct apparel for every lower in price than those for this occasion, enabling its owner to fall. meet the" world with self confi- Australia is sending more of dence; while Mother and Dad send her wool than ever to America; him off with, pride. Levy Brothers our own supply is" increasing and . BROAD STREET if more is needed the South Ameri- Survey indicates return to popu- . ELIZABETH, N. J. can market is close by. While it is larity ~of business leaders. • possible that certain importations . AIR CONDITIONED may be delayed there is a strong $5,000,000,000 in gold to be trend toward development of Am- "mailed" to-Fort Knox vaults. Second Floor erican made woolen and worsted Army sets up nucleus of G. H. Q. fabrics. - to direct training,