COMPLETE OVER 5,000 Coverage in News and Circulation - - - Read People in Springfiold • |» r

VOL. XXV_No. 5 • OKK1LIAL NKWbl'AJ'KK SPRINGFIELD, N. J., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 194? OFFICIAL NKWSHAl'KK BOKOLGII Of MOUNTAINSIDE TOWNSHIP OF SI'IUNGFIKLD IO(C A COPY, $3.50 BV THE YEAR UNBEATEN REGIONAL AND R TEAMS MEET IN HOLIDAY GRIDIRON HERE All Set for Turkey Day Battle^ LISTEN Scarlet-Bulldog ackfieSd Duels Feature Game A crowd of 10,000 is ex- SERIES VICTORIES pected tojTwek the Spring- LED BY RAHWAY field County "Park field to- K.UIWAV vs. rii:i,10NAI, morrow as Regional and Rail- way's undefeated football titans meet in their tradi- tional Turkey Day classic n which is expected to go a' FRIENDS;; . liltulmiiy II .Illli'iiliiiiul II long way in deciding the I'Ulinuil 7 mythical Union County grid :iHitiih\iTTv— n The fact thai SpriiiKfield'fl l:il(,-i;liiniil 7 I championship. Board of Education back in lO.'iO 'Imiiiltiiliilliiii: Itiihiuiy wun In. lust •<. I The game \» scheduled to gel un- boiightrnrpiece uf land-f<>i'-$l«,!J()O der.way .at 11 a.m. However, Re- which the Township Cummittee I gional authorities have announced sold last week for $11,300 has no- j ftcgion.il High s gtlduon wamois donned then best imiioimb loi Fiank Vuendese, Frank Festa, Dick Schindlci, Bob Rittwoget Ail Liison that the gates will be opened at. thing Lo do with the qualities of tins \pubonk pictuie Liken Kay Doft.crjois C. Nolan -78— years, most of then for nearly two sult of the lamj deal t . . the. .decades. •- Both teams are expected to be property was hiiiic/ht, for future Merchants' PBea •15 lioi) Kittwcger K.UT~ Falcsky 77 -I'.np" for tomorrow's game. The school purposes, hut the future •17 ti'ranli Festa RufteF" " !)5 ' Special .service pins were lo be situation today was similar to the K.T. resented at tonight's meeting of backliished . . . public vote ap- For Dec. Respite 3() Jack Haskel R.E. I.,cwis 07 two past years when (he tennis met, - proved tho— purchase so it «5 the Township Committee to Pafrol- Hmvnvw,—i+i—each—BHWJ—although •II C»corp;e Fisher QTB. Ziiobro r C. Selander and A. Nel-- t—lxfr- •—HMgures,- tactics in hot political campaigns, sands of partisan rooters from plan tq lift "the rush-hour Lcated_that the ambulance had | Funeral services for Mrs. Eva Springfield .competes with the bcKl Morris avenue parking ban TACKUW E.vns ~ Oil Androvich 81 Marsh Railway.and the six municipalities Bert Jones traveled 250"~yai'ds and that ; D. Kallens' of -12 Battle Hill av- which support Regional: New Pro- of them . . . otherwise we feel we during December. lirBob Ruggeri Gl Castor 82 Scott have a pretty swell town, belter by Al KeresU'S approximately 60 man hours i enue, who died Saturday al her vidence To w n H h i p, Springfield, . A plea for lifting of the ban-had 20. Frank Rapp GO Cherubino 83 Lewis home after a long illness, were •••far~"thnn most oilier communitier, Orv Mesker Clark, Garwood, Kenilworlh and been math? l)y the Springfield 07 Brusco "S-l'Jardot of service by squad members held yesterday < Tuesday I at IL of similar size . . . but last week -I-jfiu—I-jiirz ~ 25 Ray DeBerjeois -Mountainside, hundreds of football have been recorded;- This did a.m. from Smith, and Smith (Sub- we heard Vii=_j-fi>!'~t| Universityh ^ lie -pinys the alto horn. , In the last four years Regional has theatro-pr-opoK-ition . . . plans and thill the state I.s giyuTgrthc-tuwn- TO ADDRESS PTA tion. _"" won 31 of 34 games. In tile last costs (ire m the Mew York offices ; ship a,iiI and -iitfUw+t-wl-that if it i.s Plans Discussed ihreo~T?:ihwny has' 1os,f only two of of the movie concern and nirsnrm :.rc<|Uijslud -t-lif—s-in-tc might rcwir- 2f.. Neither school hii.i been able to y,-i_a_cleoiHioiv-is-niarlc known we'll Mare XTr>iTJ.s_n_yenuc. It also might Won at Festival complete a season, with a" undo-- relay the information; assist with an off-street parking For feated record, It 1st the first time prjijcel-r-i-l—was said. ~ The annual Regional Boost, i - More than forty women from ' tlie teams have—met with both They say it will he fourteen S Meanwhile tlie committee re. ; Dance will he held tomorrow nlf,i,t Spiingfield attended meeting Mou- boasting no set-backs. in the high .school gumnasium thy night at the home of Mrs. Rus- stores and a KM-family apart- j cently appointed by Mayor Mar- Tomorrow's contest is expected Members of the Regional Illg 1 sell Post of. 110 Suiter .street to ~ mr.nl. project for Kevolutionary shall to study the parking proh- to be a battle of backs with Kenny School alumni and student body discuss plans for the organization Square, j lem has had several meetings with Belliveau and Frank Vicendose have been invited to attend witn of a locnl Women's Club. j [ Chief of Police M. Chase Runyon, bearing the brunt of the Regional their, guests. Tickets will hi 7n A'total of 1IK1 hitters to the ,ed-1 Township Engineer Arthur H. Lcn- Mrs. Maurice Hatton, local resi- ball .carrying and Nate • Smith, . 1 cents. ' • itor hnvc appeared in The Spring- • no. : and representatives of civic dent, introduced Mrs. Bertram', Union County's leading scorer and field Sun- during the pa.st year J groups. Using some of tlit* ideas Plans also were announced tins Stewart, of Union, fifth district Chuck Amaslo being the RalAvay (Nov. 17, 1018, to Nov. 17, Hint> . .. ; advanced by the representatives of week for the annual dinner of the vice-president of the New Jersey workhorses. ! I he Chamber of Commerce as a Regional Boosters' Club which will Federation of Woman's Clubs, of these, 100 were on purely local Regional will also have Boh Zie- I basis of a plan for immediate re- be tendered members of the si hool's speaker of the evening. matters . . . others dealt with gcnfuss and George Fisher, the re- : lief as well a.s a long range casing football team and Hie couches. The some aspect of the, national or Mrs. George Koeehlin of Field- mainder of the Four Horsemen of traffic conditions, the commit- affair will be held Tuesday, De- international scene, or were mere- stone drive, WHO named temporary unit, in the Regional backfield. ly gcoernliticK of commentaries of tee indicated it. expects to submit cember li at The Flagsnip, Routu chairman. Committee members aie 2i), Union. However, beyond Its famed hack- tile times . , . although the news- a comprehensive report to the Mrs. Kenneth Bandomer, chairman field Regional i.s handicapped by a Booster Club officials- have an- paper's policy requires Mint every Township Committee early in I'.lfiO. of the nominating committee; Mis lack of reserves whereas Coach nounced that Ilooster Membership letter ne signed with the actual j Consideration of a number of Robert Hayes, Mrs. Russell. Post, Earl Hoagland has a host of re- Buttons, "Beat Railway" em.hlems, nnme of die writer before being i technical points i.s scheduled and Mrs. Bryant Haan and Mrs...Fred- placements in'the event hi.s Scnrlcl dance tickets and dinner tickets accepted by the oilito^r, "thiv-,wish conferences with officials covering erick Sylvester, members of the hacks are injured. • of a person who niny want lo use specific factors involved will be nr- air will he sold at the county field nominating committee; Mrs. Man if KKANCKS CI.ARKK SAYKIIS There nppenr.s to be little to a. noni de plume lor, none at alii, j ranged. Following thesn the com- prior to the game tomorrow. ice Hatten, chairman of the by- choose between the two lines of is respecter! . . the only -exception'•j nrittee will -start to. write its re- laws committee, assisted by Mrs. to this policy concerns the politi- Leonard Fields, Mrs. George these formidable gridiron adver- port. School District. Clerk A. B. PARENTS ATTEND saries. The Bulldogs are heavier, cal letter which must be published Anderson heads the group. Riehclo, Mrs). John Kennedy, and over tin. wi'iter'h- full signature ... STUDY SESSIONS , Author to Address Mrs. Jo'seph Pollzzotto. Mrs. Hcr- more powerful on the jump and generally rate slightly stronger in unsigned letters hit the wasle has- NAMED TO BOARD A total of SSI parents attended hert Kuvin wa.s named recording [the special child study meetings secretary. the air. Their passing defense also OF SALES CLUB | held "in the HCIIOOIS under auspices P.T.A. is believed to be. a bit superior to The Springfield Womiui'a Club of the Springfield school system the Scarlrt's. The election ot John .1. D'Klia, (ill A capacity crowd I.s expected ftt was unanimously .chosen by the CALDWELL STUDENTS and tlie parent-teacher association. . Railway's pro-game edge i.s in its Sherwood Road, Springfield, to as- the Jnmos Caldwell iiuditorium group to be the title for the new Teachers e-f each grade invited reserve and in the speed of its JOIN JUNIOR GROUP ofsiafe membership was recently Monday evening to hear Mrs. organization. announced by the executive board parents of the students to come Franca; Clarke Sayers, childron'ti Auctioned at last summer's Girl Scout strawberry fes- baekfield. No Regional player i.s All !W!i student^ I,, the James Meetings have been slated the for tlie Sales Kxecufive Club. lo school to learn what, was being (lilthor and Superintendent of tival when she weighed less than a pound,'this buxom tur- ^kely to .catch the mercury-fnoted Cnlcjwcll School registered i , the first Wednesday evening of each t D'Klia, sales manager of Tlie done: Tlie need of close coopera- ;\Vork with Children In the New key, now-six months old and weighing 25 pounds, was de- Nate Smith in the event "he breaks American Junior Ked Cross as the 1 month. The next seesslon will be K our Plating Company, Inc. of tion between home and school wan York Library, in a program ar- beyond the line of scrimmage. enrollment drive ended (his week. held December 7. livered yesterday with'all the trimming's to the-winners, Mr. Ziegenfuss caught Smith from be- Newark, i.s well known in metro- strch.icd. ranged by the Springfield PTA. The organization makes blankets and Mrs. Robert Dussler, .1.1 li .Linden avenue, .Spring, iold. .hind in last year's game but tho politan husiuir's groups. Formal Supervising Principal benjamin Mrri. Sayers was born and Fr.OIUDA VACATION lor' hospitals, ..semis' parly favors Patty Bandomer, whose dad', Isen,.raised the bird at his odds are that Coach Bill Brown .introduction of D'Kliu to the. asso- Newswaugi r consulted with each brought up in .Texas, and Texas Mrs. A. H. Werner mid daugh- to hospitalized veteran:! at Lyons 1 Mouiitainview Kami in Springfield, took a, liking'to the will devise -a defense in which an ciation , will be made at I he club's teacher u; .ariil tair fi.shp li.in-h- MOUNTAINSIDE INN ! hath 'lod wrou::!! ." J'in.or '.'no; Aiv w,- going to sit and let tills !i:p .Main Street, Millblnn j-4.i.—... - ;,.. • ' 11 a.m. I' Mountainside LEADING LEAGUE condition cuntinuc- lii-i'mv we know In. Ijn-. Ifiiuh U', Dickinson, Il4>ctur • Saiurdfiy. t: pa.v. i;',»;.' from "^ci- j .Special ur ')'.- MOUNTAINSIDlv Mouiu;iln,,idi it, we'll have mure rats here- than uni'. - a.m. Holy Commui::"n. • '.< >i.in.i Jr. Caf-uh.-i •i! cla.s.s. CHURCH i-alilt •.'.•:11 j Ki:y t-i ni'-in it ihi •J:1"J a.m.,». (".'ii'.i.'L-ii • S.-iiOol ji.in., Jun:'ir II. V" i'.-h '•'•'• Kavi" it 'tin- eove'tcil positmn. l!!i- we'll get a squeak mil of Ihem. Church (if ChrUt, Krii-nlist ;ii:p. . ,. .,.- Author to Address ;BeafivPoiice Teanf 11 it.ni., i-'ji-i Sar.iiay in Miontii: wine, with whom the Iminien wen- Tin- Springfield Revolver Club Alice K, I-Jdinondson. Truth. Tivn i-r'ro r d:.sap- 1 •:.'.') p.m., .Si r.i'.r Hi Youth !•''••- Holy 'Communion, chor ! , N. W. ancy, Alias Mfsmi-ranrnn'l Ilyp- 11 • 11.111.. Church .N;nwi-y for i.-lii!- side Drill.'. d..-f.i- still."' .Monday, Springfield Po- Thursday November ill. Thanks- r.olii'iri, Di.tl'juii'j'.'d" is the ..••ubjj.ct :Y1- to a child. W'i'.tn .-ii,- wnii only Trami, W I. I'll. strolls: in th'.- behalf of lli'-ni wh '., November 'J7 for nil agf-.s from nursery through twelve, she read an article in St. ] all the contc-.tuiiLs. Ullwlsr IS 12 heart is perfect to-.var liiin. II moufi. There will be a jihort busi- !l:« a m. Bible School. .»:nior high school. Departmenti; Nicholas-• Magazine about chil- 15 Chron. ness meeting during the evening. A "lucky turl. The" l'rospi'ct I'msbyterian—Cliurcli-.—r-nn-n'd libMraianw and decided thiit Yiinks H __,Sermon-_J^W"es Jjom . h, "'""t .-P"raHy undeunderr qualifie^jij^^/rlmrsdayd su- T|lllrsduy,, from-2 p.m. ..to_!>. 1' 111 held with Patrolman A. ,Ne!t;on ! thai wa.s \\-iiat. s!ie Tnps IMli.-r 1'J sermon topic will be: "Exceeding "King James version of Ihe "li.b:,.- W'viMon. A warm welcome av/alfs , U)(. AnnuaAnnlln l Fair hpou.wrcd by tin Prospect SI reel at Tuscan Itimd v/iinti'il—1«—bo.- "STih7s"~[TT winner. —n—- Great and Precious Promi.ien." • you. j Today sho has one of tthe most Watc-l'i Ilill include: '•Surely there is no en- ;>'""• I W.S.C.S. Many choice articles will —T^-t.1—p.ni.....F.\;i'ninK Service. "At-'- difficult nn,-| icti -rest ing library Patrolman. Daniel Maidlinp; tied eh:mtment against Jacob, neither' :»: 1." a.m., Early S.- rvjee of Wor- i be un-display and for .sale. The l**mpts to hide from Ood." Arthur Nelson ISul/.. !).»., Minister r tlK Con f Ll -;,;- there any divination against•' i-hili. Parents may attend thifi serv- j public is invited to attend. Also, jJl/..«LJiJJ_ ,-in. thv.«e. UnjtoLSiutes^n»^.ii »Ji .iir,i,, /I'llAll i, ',fi ' °, , ;• WlUiaii n i-ThompHOii i ,i j CAR HITS HOUSE, Ul mnU> bl tho 1 ten t Tiiiwilay, November 2!) 1 1 of her ho.**, incidentally.'may be i'" " ' ," . ";." "" ' , J.sru.'.-I: 'according to thi.s time it rice-tn%Aher while the children are j <;::{0 p.m., junior choir;• 7:1)0 I -" -' Him,i,iy Nov. 27. namo W(us )!ncotl on tlle llst f tho AWAKENS FAMILY shall be .said of Jacob and of | in their clas.-iiTi. Music by thee ', senior choir, Friday, Men'i; Howl-1' found in the Springfield Public ! ! . ? " 1 MOUNTAINSIDE—A car crash- rtt-in a.m., Church School. Library...... five becmrse—his rapid and ing Group at local alleys, fi::;o p.m. ins Worship.- Dr. I time fire scores were higher than ed into a house next to Mountain- -The businr.H.s nieetinR will start side Polico Headquarters and over- and 9 p.m. .» ~ But/, preaching. Nursery Clas.v. prompLly at fi:15 under the direc- Tho Rl,vo,vpr cluh wll, shoot 1Ui turned about 5 a.m. Saturday, Springfield rri'Kl>yti-'rittn Church a::-;o p.m.; Tuxiii-Council Meet- after leaving the highway, striking .on o Mrs. 1 homa., P. Dohcrly. ] ncxt match Suml(lv !lfll.nmon wltll Bruce VV. Evans, .Minister ing. Sandwich Supper. . local PTA priviiduit. Benjamin F. and wplitting a pole mid hitting a 1 the Summit Police Reserve Ro- 7 p.m., Supper for Church Hcp- Newt'wanei small tree. 0:.'!'J and 11 a.m., Church -School •r, .supervisins; prlnei- ! volver Club at the Summit Range, re.wntdtive Committee o! Kid. Tux- pal of schoo s, will be in charire ..„ - • r ., vt ., -, The Stanley Bori fiim.ily, who- Af/cnts For Innior.s nnd Seniors meet ' ,, —,—. :, • • • •-1''11''1- This is one of the North Jersey McetinR. Tojiic: of tile remainder of the program occupy the house in Springfield ut the early hour while Bcgjnnera Revolver League Mutchc*. Mellows Film-.Urip - "Children-of the Hnr- j (1))(| M,.S| ]Ubvvi Bllnno]1 whosll . Rd,, off Route 20, awoke with " USUALLV and Primary Students (ago*; three -vest.^ " Outreach Commission in *Kjirini:rii>1d Itavolyjir Club "•'•I the buying of the chil- i Russril St.wnrt n-l-llll-!)(j start. The noise of the impact DO NOT MARRy through eight) meet at the '''"'''"'Tchurce •ipf-etor.s at Older Youth EACH OTHtR, 1 could be heard a block away. hour. Classes arc available for nil iMeeting ill We,:tfle!d Prc.sbyte.riau R books for the local library, i JJ'|.'JlJli" p,.rrI>m'' "iT-IHl'-lvi A passenger in the ear, Mary nges under capable and qualified j I ha.-: arranged an exhibit of new ! Herbert Kuvm M-OS-'D'H 27II & Church. books. They may be exomided by. i Hurljert Dnlley 1)4-87-90 271 Coleman, f>9, of White Plains, suf- lendershlp. Parents are cordially ' Monday. fered chock, hut the driver, Simon invited to enroll their children. parents after the meeting. ! 7lT4 7 p.m. Mariner Ship No. 7. Girl Hicks,. .IB, nloo of White Tlains, 11 a.m., Worship Service. Children's Book Week was eele- 1 Springfield rolli'o Dcpnrlmi-nt • Scout Troop Xo. 37. wan uninjured. 7:15 p.m.| Christian Endeavor brnte-d-Bimuitunoously in countries wilburtoiluuler Ss'-ot'-M fm Police Mild Hiclta was driving 7:30 p.m., Girl Scout Troop No. Vlnci-nt Plnknvii ui-liii-OG 272 Meeting in the Chupel. On Wednes- all around the globe November 13- Nflsnii Stllos 03-00-RB 207 euftt in Route 29 when he lost con- day cvening".~ftovembccvoningrNovemr 30 mem- 111. ' II), and it was with this in mind Lt. Wm. Thompson IM-00-RO 2113 trol of his car. The vehicle was Tuesday. bers of the Church "ill gather in I that. Mrs. R F. Linelt, PTA pro- badly damaged and there was Studies of TiTiuan (Stanford University) •3:1S p.m., Girl Scout Troop No. | ,-am chairman, decided to devote 1171 the Chapel for an evening of social K slight damage to the foundation of 0. j "'is particular PTA meeting to the tcml to show tin: li'iulcnry, Is fur llkn fellowship. This meeting will bo the house. Officer Emmett Dugan to marry like — Unit, there Is a fair ror- in honor of new members and an 7::iO p.m., Teachers' Training i Library. Grimm, Andorsnn, DeFoo Discuss Heed for investigated.1 ri.'Iatlon between husbantl and wife In appropriate evening of oritertahT-- -Class. Mr. Rosisman Vail" , leader"." —these authors nre read wherever Intelligent, ii|i|ie:iranee, elr. Ui-nned. All mem- S p.m.. Prospector Recreation. there are books for children. Even bers of the Church are urged to Wednesday. naughty Peter Rabbit slips under Classroom Space Mr. McGregor's gate in Holland, MOUNTAINSIDE—Members of Dear Editor, attend. ;!::iO p.m.. Westminster Junior in France in Germany, in Italy! I th'e Special Survey Committee I don't think you'll publish this: DON'T Choir. • • The.- St. .lumen Church r home* serve. »» a binding' whlch hnj. hopn tidying tho fu- I hope you will. , i p.m.. WeMminster Choir. Me betwcdi children of nil races Springfield ture growth of Mountainside- and • This Is a trent! S:lfS p.m., Mr. and Mrs. Club and creeds.. FUMBLE the need for a new school met Have you ever walked down n Suntfay Masses: Meeting. 1'Vw homes can supply all the nice street with modern homes, Thursday, with the Board of Education lnst 7:30, a.m. books demanded by the eager week in the Borough School. The pretty lawns and gardens, ' and THIS ONE!! 3:30 p.m., Westminster Chil- WINE^IIQUOR STORE 8:30 a.m. young reader, and it is for this school 'will reach its capacity by thought what a nice development? 9:30. a.m. tlrenti1 Choir. mison—t-lwl—t-hfi—loL-n-l—Piiblic-Li- the ctul of-t-he-present school year, Then taken a few more steps and 10:30 a.m. 8 p.m., Motet Choir. n-ary i« of such importance to all the board was told. stopped short, lifted your head- 11:30 a.m. j S:15 p.m., Maple-wood Service Chickens! A big ugly chicken p'"'01ltfi- Additional school facilities will Sunday School Class, -I to League. eopp; tho aroma Is just too dcvlnc. dinner No. 12830 bo necessary next fall and it may ,p.m., Monday. 8:30 p.m., A. A. Meeting. be necessary to have two sessions Your lungs can't take it-(especially.! PROMPT I>BLIVERY 1 1 Rcscrvo District No. 2 High School Cfiw" ? to a \TJi -Friday.- Report of Condition of unless the board can provide addi- in July), ao you run in the oppo- THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK Monday. S p.m., Annual Chrlotmns Con- tional space, Rolfe Kristiausen, site direction in hopes you . won't 01 SprliiBllelcl in tho Sune of New drop before you're out of the vicin cert of the Choi no-. .JT. y --. ill.,--,-„,„- th" clos,— ! of busines••••- s board president, said. Russel's Men's Shop will be - • TtyT Until ThiH has happened, you WH0OE6! I'LL BET WATCH 1 KNOW WHERE SI. .John's Lutheran Cliureli November 1, 101!) published In roHnoiiBt ir»—r—.-i • ;—; ; LooH OUT, SO% Of THE PEOPLE 5O% WHERE VM&OIM.MAOAM MORRIS AVE. to cidl miidi- ijy conipu-nlliM- of the rur-l No (iccle'0" wns reached as to a haven't lived. proud +o prosont a FREE EGPLE YOU PE - Summit: ri'llcy, uiuli'i- Section 5211, U.S. Re- site for a new school, although SPEEDY* '. THOLJ6HT MOTOR CAR vised SLilLlltcs. i h h VOU WEPE 6OIN6 TQ SITTIN IN HEOE After getting your breath, you NECKTIE to every Regional CO., INC. Kev. T\'. S. Hiimmn. rii.I). ' ASSETS the JBorough Council 1,4 holding a HIT THAT DIZZY OAK/TET ! Cash, balances wltb other piece of property in Central Ave. decide lo look a little further and player who scoros a touch- -4KJD THANK THEM TOP THEIB !):30 a.m., Bible School. bunks. liK-lucllii!.; rcjiervu for possible future needs. find that chicken dirt has been WONMPruL JOB OF 8PAWE ^PJUSTIMo balunce. and crash Itenir, down—in— tomorrow!*- gamo 1 10:13 a.m., Worship Sermon: The practically dumped in your yard THAT SAVED WR LIFE 111 profess of ccillccl Ion ? 7511,41:1.(12 Members of the Survey Com- Christian Co-Getter. Unih-cl Siatrs Government. mittee are A. C. Patterson, ehnir- Wondering why such a condition i>'>l!nU'.lnu.s, dlrecL and • Mnnrl.ny '''Sill) Mf-n.-J CUD), ijiinrHi'ltecil . _. . 2,27(1,11(17.711 nuwi, and Lee Rcn-lih, Herman exists, you then decide to do Speaker: Mr. Jules W. Marion, lloneclier—iTTm—T.—It—Stvilmun; •i-nmethltip nhnnt: il. In the hope of f pollllcal Mibdlvlslons 7,nO2.5() Sr. of I he N. .1, St'Ui:—D.eBk. .P _Cimiunau_stut!ka.jlucltKlln.':_ They will continue the study, of making Springfield a cleaner town Conservation, Color film on plveas- $•1,750.00 stuck of Futlcnil the school problem nnd n .special In which to live. THEM WR ME TOO Itescrvii bank) . _. . . •!,750.00 Loans und cllficount:; du- meeting may be culled in the near You first .state your case before el u cl 1 ll K 55'IU.M ovor- future to discuss the matter fur- the Council, which pass It on t; drillts) .. 007,350.17 the Board of Health after issuing Bank promises owned $41,- tlioi\_ 500.00, furnuure and fix- The bid ofSa'.lOO from^the SDm- grunts and groans. After a Blight -.turcs S15.17O.5O •-.-. _..'... 50,070.-50 postponement, the board meets, an:l Real estate owni-cl other Frset BUB Company for lulcll- than bank iiremlses 1.00 tlonal bus to taltc enre of the when attending, you find they, too,- Other assets r 1,055.30 rnti.sp h ~can~grui.it:;.~You also discover that TOTAL ASSETS •-•..-.$1-,BT4,05B.a>l vns. nccuptccl.. .. is cmcircrf? The board will—hold a cnucus and believes' it is good to breathe • LIAnlLITIES neeting' Dec. 2 to discuss the chicken aroma. Demnncl clcpushs of In- nidget for the coming year. Don't the people of Springfield (llvlclunls, pnrlnershlps. und corporations . , . W,270,(inn.(l0 Tlmu clcriuavts of lntllvtcl- GIVE THE FAMILY tluuls, pnrtnnrhlilpu, und eovporntlons . . .. _ l,!)II2,05tl.l7 Di'lioslts of United Stntes . DR. A. WOLANSKY Ciovcrnmi'iu dnclucllnt; postnl snvliiBs) _ . 10,011.211 OPTOMETRIST —875 Morris Avenue Deposits of Suites iiiul political subdivisions . . 380,074.22 Other (lepoillts—rcvr-rtlllctt Eye Examinations Millburn 6-4454 and nisblc-r's chocks, etc.) 112,01)1.1(1 TOTAL DEPOSITS— - $3,(105,1127.70 Free Parking Other Liabilities ... • 53.02 321 Millburn Avenue TOTAL LIABILITIES '....$3,805,880.01 (Woolworth Bldg.) MILLBURN, N. J. CAPITAL ACCOUNTS Capital Stock: 0:30-8:30 Dally Millburn 8-1168 Common stock, total par • sii'i.iMO.mi $ ii2,snn.nn Evenings by Appointment .Surplus :—_ , 50.non:no Undivided nrnflts . 46,57(1.00 TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - _.$ 20n,070.0()

TOTAL LIABILITIES w- AND CAPITAL HK ACCOUNTS .M.OM.Cin 07 FLOWERS FOR MEMORANDA Assot.i plodi'.i-d or ussltinnd to socui-p nubilities nnd lor other purposes .'. 11C535.H Sluto of Ni-\v Jorsoy, C'nunty of Union, ss: I. Curlylo H Ull p -o!"lb<-iihnvo-ninnocl hunk, do soloinnly jiwoiu- tliut tlio nbovn stul.emont l! CHRISTMAl true to the best or my UnowlcdKo. nnd h'.-Hcf. OABLYLE H.-RICHARDS, Vlcu-pre.'ildimt Correct—Attnat: Exclusive Capehart Tone ROBERT S. BUNNELL, N. C. SCHMIDT. brings iolfvision 1o life! Hear every word MORRIS LICHTF.NSTKTN, THE CAPEHART Dlroctoi-H. in a lively lyric . . . every high pitched or Sworn to and subscribed hr-foro mo nils lOtb dny nf Novnniber, lO'lO. deep-throated instrument. Comedy, sports, PRELUDE . DOLORES ii. niiLLirs, Notnry Public, of N. .1 news ... entertainment of every sort comes My Commission expires September l\ 5:i vividly to life through ihe magic of Onpe- WITH POLATENNA Nov. 23. 1053 Foen:—S10 0? hart tone. (built-in anrlnl) 'Float Don't Bother Mo Send your hostess beautiful flow- Exclusive Poiatron Tube s, I'm Dystad with ei3 this . Chrysanthe- brings new clarity lo every image! With @ PULVEX DDT". mums—the traditional Thanksgiving, the exclusive Capeharl; Polatron* televi- sion tube glare and I'u/./.iness of ordinary flower—make the most exquisite television screens are eliminated. A whole centerpieces. And if your wife is plus tax mid new Atfilrld of television listening and sec-: ' Instnlliitioti .. KILLS MAS your hostess this Thanksgiving- ing unfolds for you! PULVEX .. KClPi '(M OH> P L I A POWDER surprise' her with a table arrange- "T.M, Reg. Available at slight extra eo.st. Tho SPRINGFIELD PHARMACY ment, fresh cut flowers, or a corsage. Ave. MI H-02IU Attractively priced to suit every ENJOY A taste and poekctbook. SHORT HILLS RADIO SUPREME ECONOMY $ OIL BURNER ON- & APPLIANCE CO COSTS LESS COMPLETE RALPH HOHMANN, Prop. lo Iniloll and lo opv Ml. 6-1118 We Deliver

40 CHATHAM RD( Across from Short Hills Station. SHORT HILLS SUPREME FUEL CO. 1 'New Jptitfy t loiqeit Fuvt Dualv CALL SHORT HILLS 7-2545 '.^'C'AU OR 2-4500 TODAY • lup r r;A |/ THE SPWNGr-lgLD -'''.U[j1..V'. - ' * . NOVftUPER 24, I949J 3 :t> inn lliiinmint for i hi- party. Mrs. Paul Cahott of NYw Mdrlcrt, [Regional Graduate Springfield Couple, Married BORO NOTES " * ttl.io Mr. and Mrs. (ieoi^e Slants" PEOPLE WE KNOW Wed in Westfielcl 50 Years, to Mark Wed Date- Mr and MM. .Ir,M.ph Hcrcln-y :n< \Vw Mark, t on ThanUsgivinj-. By ANNE SVrAKSTKIl J'"ai;u!t\' ad\'i.'.nr to 'and •• il.ui-ln.-r Wilina-Ju of Odli liny. The welding of Miss Mary M Trrr mad. will entertain, tin- fol- • -Mr. u,nd"Mr?.~l'?~.TrPi iiiaii^rand • irfigun, AuiKhUtr.'of Mr. uiul.'.Mrs. n?g"iVriigT~7ia(iglit('i:s^P7itTy'-Triii^.aiui I Jii;. <'ii-~" iu'iii a m |i:ani.n7;—;'i''j|iiam. »t FniTilc.J.•'Supiii'li of , joyed-a-few- days vacaii,.,vnt At- -'-—» [ sin.-ft, VVr.stfk'ld, to .)nmi's F..> /hiliJn.ri. *• j;i:!, 'J'tun anil Sui, of ,'Ki IryiiVHi.nn ' SU .'ti'n.l' Mrs. William ; lantic City. (JM November 12th. Clinton M«.'.- Burn* of Wtstfiek). a Regional ' noii.-ihaw av.-nu*-, spent I.IM Sun- Nov. Mill. MirJ. Lal(r Ili-rki-th anil MIIY I'rti-r and daugh- > • — >.'. :.. U< i' w.it. honored by K family dm- High School gr«du«t<; and son of : liny with Mr. ;ir;ii Mrs. Carl Mc- t.r .li-mfrr of Xi-w Providence A .'-on, DOIIBIILS IJar'y, kVi-i.-^hiiiK ri-r party "n the occasion of hi.> Mr. and Mrs. Jarm* Ft. Burns of Cruin at Wutrliunj;. !!.•>.^u lor p..uiting mil- humlri-d jjt,rf>ll-.ij, M,-K. _\I Maximoff r.| trn poimdi, four ounc.-s, w(i^ burn Kith birthday. It was held .'it this Rankin avenue, Garwood, WHH liilip.-.. Mrs. J'ui-ii-r gavr an cxcil- Suinnin. alxi Mr. John Kculi-r of NovrinlK-r 1^ lit Overlook Hospital. L l".i'^t Morris i,\ T;.. •• —tr»-.M r nnd Mr.-. I^ro Frey of L'fl There were 10 gue^t- prc.ii-n!. all I'.*., is visiting at tile honif of Mr. Holy Trinity Church, UV.stf irldj (•hildi-i n, following tlu- plan-i.'iigiTly, Hcii.'.haw iivi-nue. They liiivr two and Mr:,. Haiok] Fruti-lvy of H5 Saturday. The M.sgr. Henry .1. Wat- J'lanlid 'tin- huib.s. Among tht- Mr. and ' M r.»! .lolin Cflhott of ' other children. I-arry. 4. and r»t whom were relatives with tlu Hryant avenue for approximately tnrrton officiated, and a reception ilnldrin prf\;fiit uric: Willie Kiiuti. 20 will i-nlrrtain Mr. and ' Karen, 1. <-\c<>ptlon of Mr. mid Mr.s R C. 10 days. :nnd dinner followed at Maple Tree A)'i.'S.i, club |)ri-.si(lcnt. Li>:^ Di.- ; • : —• • • f)rag<>r and son. Richard, ••! j Inn, Fanwood. mari'-.-.i. M-cn-fary, Lawrence Hob- OranK" Carol Ann Lcv.icr of ]7!i Short The bride was attended hy .her Hills HvrniU1 W;LS hosl<\';.s at her s is U- r.,=...M iss" B mtrfrr!—fl rognn,- HH- chi-ltmi, Bobby Curtis, Jimmy' 7th birthrliiy party onT Monday. Mr- on'l.Mr.'i. KiiK«nr G. Bnehrn maid of honor, and the Misses ( Boyle', Johnny Putermiin. Bobby I Tne following children wore pre- nf 410 Mciscl avenun cnlehrutocl Bernicr Traynor and Eileen Me- . Zininiermunn, Eddie Roedcr, Mar-] liicir 10th WK'lding anniversary .s-nt: Phillip Rltti.Tshiichtr, Mi- 1 hii'-i Kiivin, ,1 licit Odcll, SlinrMi Ivclvey of We.stfirld, were brides- ion CJn-i.si-r. Bn-nda Kapkc, Shir- ] ,i.s L week! Their two" rhil'lrf n. maids. Raymond Rums was best li-y Ciin-lli, Audrey Miska, Peggy Eu™cm; .Jr., aiiri Dorothy Ann, ac- Odnll, Arlinr Hayes, Elaine Rob- erts, and .Joanna Lawlcr. The man for his brother, and David ""irrciiattin, Carolyn Johnson, Sally companied them to the Schwae- Smith of Bloomf,ield and Edward Aluarii. and Norman Wooluy. i hischc Alb in Warrcnvillr for ilin- umia! nfrthrtay refreshments wore cnjoywl. - Fitzgerald of Jersey City ushered. nrr. The bride wa« graduated from Mr. apd M_r.s._I;|o_w(ixd M. Clark GOOD-LOOKING GLASSES ; Holy Trinity High School and | of Mil Aldcn St., Westfii-ld, . Young, of Parjjway, MOUJI- nnd Mrs. Earl Henrl'rick.son of "wlOj graduated from Union .Junior ASK YOUR EYE PHYSICIAN ! tain.siile. The couple- are graduates Mclsel avenue, Mr. Stanley Jaeo- On Trip South College and attended Rutgers Uni- Mr. and -Mrs. [-'red I!, liohl hun of 489 Melscl avenue, formerly versity, A navy veteran of four j of Regional High School in Spring- of East OranRe, Mr. anrl Mr>. Traveling through the South on i yeara, he Is now a member of the i ; fidd. their weddiriK trip uro 'Mr. mid Colcbratino; thoir. ffjoldon wedding nimivfirsai'v are Mr. Fred Bciswincer and rliuxhtcr, I Westfield Police Department.! MiYMl Bhl f IJ I' f The couple, Mrs. Edward Mullin of Evcr- Kthol, of Mci.HRl avenue, formerly Mrs. Herbert J. Caseoe. The bride, and Mrsri'YorMl. Bfihl of .IJ After a motor trip through Vir- who WCI'C niiirricd in Brnnklyn IlliU'cd Id .Spl-ing'fiolrl o2 ! pret-jj Court .appeared on Tele- of pjFizalieth. AIHO present, were the former Mr«. Edith S. Hankins, daughter of Mrs. William Stiles of ginia, the couple will live in Wi'st- ; visio Mr, and Mrs. J-.ee Andrews, daugh- ycars ago, and arc residing ai. i.ln homo ol' Ihoir diiiis'htof ' P station WAAT-TV, channo! I 541 MAIN ST., EAST ORANGE, N. J. Springfield, and former senator fleld. 1;!l OK 3-1001 ter, Dorothy Lee, and won, Robert, and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Cl.nyl.on. i Tuesday evening, in a fn.shion I 344 SPRINGFIELD AVE., SUMMIT, N. *.. iUMMIT A-384» and pr<-«ent County register Vns- Mrs. Andrews' mother, Mrs, Mar- I'.'-how, modelins a bridal party and ; uarct. Doiins and .son, .lolin, from ! coe were married litst Thursday. St. James Bridal " • . 'gowns fur the Jo-Lynn bridal shop Thn Itf.'v. Bniee ISvan.s, of Firj;l N'oftdk, Conn., Mrs. H. P. Vance "Just Retting nlnu- logrtlifr" :-; Thi-y y:.\,- marniij filly yr-ars i" Wesifield,. After the show there j Prcsbytcriiin. Church performed 1 nnd Mrs, K. Bandomer. Refresh- For Dandrea-Zarra our motto fnr married ivlirs. in - :ign in Uinuiilyn and ramr to the eeroinony at lfl a.ni.' at 'the ments were served. 1 cording to Mr. and Mrs. Fn d I!.. SprimUirld. whirr they have re- liome of the bridr, .'18 Washington" St. James Church was the set- Bolil, who will celehratr their .-ided the pa.,"t :i2 yean;. avenue. The couple will rcidc at ting Sunday afternoon at 4:30 Barbara' VI>Km.b(11--2n.-An i)|.,-n hou.e .„ lhl. .s,,,,,,,,, ,,.M p!,.,nl „, ,,„. t.ii«> avenue is at Overlook Hospi- Mrs. Daisy .Tohnson, tho-bride'H ter of Mr. nnd Mi's. John Dandrea will h,. held by the eouple from 7 K|iZ.,|,,.t|lt,WM \V'alcr Co tal for the last two wecltK. She sister, and Robert L. Pascoe—the of 23 Mountain avenue in nmr- to 10 p.m. at the horn,, of ,.!„,,• ,.;,,,.„,, ... Mr,' rhiyU>n nl- lhc i.i cominR alone nicely and hopes bridegroom's, were the only at- riape »'itli I-Tnrvey 7>ll-rn. son of daughter vin-.—^Phe^-ujiiiii'l''Slid .she represented Springfield was mnid of honor. Rridesmnitlo birthday refreshments Were served. on the executive committee. were Mls« I^orctta Plcciuto, fvf Mr. Pascoo, a former state sena- MiUburn, and Mrs. Anthony Se- Mr. nnd Mrs. Louis Iorio nnd tor, has'been twice a widower. His reno, both cousins of the bride. rhildrcn, Dolores and Louis, Jr., first wife, the forniei; Mary A. Al- John Dandrea, Jr., brother of the Call early and got your Thanksgiving order on time . . . We are havr moved into their new home hurger of Philadelphia, died in bride, wns best man, nnd Bc-h at 20 Henshaw avenue. They wore WE OUGHT TO BE ready ro serve your every need with our complete line of fine wines, I!).'!!. Hid second wife, the former Hagcnhush, George Cummlngs former residents of Irvington. liquors, and beers ... Edith V. M/irsh of Hillside, died and Frank Bond ushered. A THANKF'UL LOT, Mr. nnd Mrs. Leo Frey of 22 in 10-10. Mr. Pascoe w

malda were dressed identically usual courteous, efficient manner. You are our "PRIZE SPECIAL. in satin govvrns of pale blue, fash- Best Wishes ioned with .vweetheart neelt!ine«_ and cap eleeve.s. Half lints and gauntleLs of matching ""material For A completed their outfits. The ma- tron nnd maid of honor carried yellow roses, and the. bridesmaido ciucri'acL.rcd runes. . For receiving'the giiestrf'jit'the recepTion, Mrs. Dandrea, mother Holiday nnd of the bride, chose a hostess dress of dark green crepe, and corsage" Opposite FirNf National Bnnl! of yellow roses. Mrs. Zarra, mother of the bridegroom, wore taupe lacn PROMPT-FREE DELIVERY Victory and crcpc>, with a corsage of red roses, 246_Morris Avenue The couple left for a .short wed- ding trip, and will re-aide in West Springfield For Our Regional Team Orange upon return, For travel- ing, the new Mr.s. Zarm—chwre-a* green gabardine suit, brown ac- cessories, and a corsage of yellow roses. Mrs. Z«rra was graduated from Regional High School and is em- ployed as reeeptioni«t for Dr. Gam- MOORE FURNITURE CO., Inc. riel J. Llull. Her huisbaiid was graduated from West Orange High Ruffs and Carpets School-arid is attending Seton Hall College. He Is employed in Bloom- field. ANNUAJLTFAYR The WomciiH Society of. Chris- Livirifj Room Suites illadcrto Order tinn Service- will hold its annual fair Thursday, December--I,—f-rpm 2.to f p.m. at the Methodist. Church. -K9-Morris Aye., Springfield, N. J. Mi. 6-4486 Chairman of the affair Is Mrs. Harry Quin/.el of Plemer nvenuo.

The Family Hext Door.. •

24 HOUR SERVICE

AT NO

EXTRA CHARGE CeBlophane Wrapped

"I War} To Bo A Telephone Man, Too!" Perfectly Laundered • There's something about telephone ^vorl^ that attracts tho smnll fry, even as young as the youngest member of the Family Next Door. Grown-ups Yhut tolaphoha p«opl» thatmilvvt think arc interested in telephone \york, highly at t Work la «uoo»>'»J too, since good service adds so much by Ihg (ocl thai In lh» N.w J.t.oy Boll lh.r« to our everyday living. And with ar* 103 knoth«r dud ddtighlt^ e CUANERS telephone men nnd women there is 162 fdlhar dnd t«n Icami) 49B brathtrt and 65 Union Place 304 Millburn Avn. the feeling of doing a really worth- 1,314 .l.l.n-all halplng I* p

NEW JERSEY BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY 1 SERVICES OFFERED It is expected that tbeiv will IH; .(in. ', t.'ii; n. «-•- and ,l;i|«iiii^e hymn- • liii:es. or thru- i i|Ui\a|ent, «re 1 Oil IIII1K arrivals from Italy in the inur als, nnd v;ir:uu", iii,ii;.^i.-r.,i] iu-Iji.s :e.id.v, the .-irietiny lor Kuropc Church World Service Headquarters 1 Herti-Driv-UR-Self Syttem futuri.-. The majority 'n r e• I'oi.-s, fur Mi u^r:;;nj; chun'lii.s aeri-.^ - the ..and..tile •n-i'ivdinir fur Asia ai- IV'.sciii'rr cars and iruclca 10 hire. Lithuaniiins and I^itvian^, though .sea.'*. 'I'hr.-.- Miation wagi.ii.>- fi::«•', .'ii.i ].',«• c.-nj v.'r.h jeinh.st.s f:i.Aii tlieir repre- T> H.'i 'l'|iii'L,Kt... conH-r .lumen til. ••""•" • T-TVTTe. i'at'lil't'l'ili.i! fin Hi".• :."i - atTuJTrs' T.IuJ " >Ve'r~r"i*ire^T'.wi)rlH7" .rutiici' 7fi'pr7.*i(j(i 'Swfin.iiB plftowf," Trrn;1 i;nn'.r--|i; :"!~ifv( "t'nurrh V\\ r|,i Service il L (5-IN-l COMBINATIONAL I NKI-.IJ... /;••"'<• "': jia'-sen^er car? II'TO- rme^come.i upon a large jsubstant'lal oiis. accustomed to w^-Jdnj; Imrd •Tunimg from till- d'.vn trui'lung and it.s own booking • (-Jlnislflrd Advi-rtli,ln« will bo Initrtcd In ulj five .of tho ntwnpupcr» Hated below j ; ales looking building — the wnrehouse on the land, in furtoii,,) and inone'.1- gldlice ! il!Is on i on the ,-iteanisluji.s. thu.-j .living out- fc* only suvim. omit per word Included HI (iiu|il(-\ (.'lub Mjsrery I'alr Final Clur row five Their Mirname has connotation nnri offices of Church World S«>rv- commercial and pinfe.-.sjonal enter- hugi' geni'ivitur.-. fur sii: • Iriiiilliiig fr' -Aill he ent by The iMthi i wiMlul wn|-i|,j of R NliV.'.S-RKCOHD . «u S-U300 .- I;-'.:;, I Mm 11 town 4-ti!ii;o hou.se for the good deed* of the ily iw-n and lire deeply K-liciim.s, tile I'riv.bytenan li.. lid j Km • nn ilern popular .-ong about "far ttuillli- Orunn« 3-070Q .SI'IUNGt'lKLD BUN 2:i—CAIll'tNTEUS LOST .-ijin Mi.-.^Kin.-. "t,, hi>.-»|.|tHU in uway pliiL-L-ii" tuinei to one's mind Bomb Orunuo 2-3-52 . Mlllnurn (i-127d PASSBOOK No. 702B. Finder please American churches ovcr.scnH. one r'-allKi-.f thnt we, in Aithtiea, ' CHATHAM* COUKIKH" MII.l.IIUR.N-KHORT HILU3 ITKkl - . ri-tum to Citizens Trust Co. of Here ono findfi a whole floor de- have a Kre: J'.Vi. summit pi.' Jlllf- '.WtlxiU'. preM-nall'. 1 ... lalicy inem stopped; finder please return .sured in advance of a place to infanus, a teiit'hrr tmining center, n-p.i book to hank. bags me dumi-ed unto big t.ib!(;.'», Interest in Local Heiald. ' .-- .LlJpie.'i, u](l Ja^iilolied lllcl<(iry f.inuked M.TCI.'US. cabinet;., piirclies. etc. Let 1Y1('; 1 live, a job th«t cioca not displace instruction in English und other ."lioe.s ..xtraeted, tom clothing tak- I1.1111 and bacon, dressed sailMiiic. : m) your job. ,- lar^e-or small. Unlonvlllc SMALL Kroy chunHe purso on Mlllburn SKCItK'l'AKV-steiioiil'.iplli-r 'i'llli ex- Whitman's I-' a r m :., liiTlliirdsvlllc. ^.i;ri;]2 12411 Miiimnlla I'lacu. Union. Avenue and Main Street, November another, that they will not become activities. _ en out for repair* in Ihe sewing Ijcrlenei In ••ujjeivl'ilim maintenance Ro ml. MoniMuwii. —107-Roward. Mlllburn 0-4402-M. stuff 1 Civ iralnln;-. i-xpcrl'-m'.;. and a public charge arid thrit their On another floor'in the building, room, and the jest united into Budget Pays Off, re! ••! CM.. 111 appll'M! lull li';X .;.'i.. rail' IA—riiti; HOOD UUII.UKIt urid KiMH'ral contnictor, home transportation from port of ontry one leflrns of the work of the refu- biiv cfintainiiig-ortielcfj-o: various o! .Silinnili Ilei.ilil. repiilr:;. jilt'-iittluni, und roofliiK- Vur- FOUND KIRKI'LAC K LOGS to destination will he provided. catcKorie.s. After thai il ,jn again •A'ell MMMined — standard • nun Pu'lliloro MI 0-0024. diiyn. MI fl- DOGS—CATS—Seo Summit Animal gees. This is an entirely separate R.'a.'.dnablle ratii. i •lo:i(l-M. iivi-nlnr,a. _ . Welfare LeaRiio notice. Uoclal png« ' Arranging for (insurance je a big problem from that of the Displaced inspected, folded and laid in piles Plaee-vour ( ircler now i 2IA—nitliSS.MAKJNO ~ 'umrnlt Herald. If vn'ir dop Is Irtat -undertaking, but that i.s only the on other long table's. ]•*• 'o'lii hen; IV Active citizen.1; interest in local Daniel Hnlozimek Person.-?. In Germany alone there beginning. Church World Service, Inicljjet iind tax problems pays div - Phoni; Sunn nlt'li-Kill DRKSSMAKINO—Alti'riitlona. At home DIAMOND APPRAISERS are 12 million. In Palestine. Greece, is placed in the baling—machine or In prlviito homrs tlnlonvlllo 2- through its ntalf-ln Now York and _ idenils in Rood municipal govern- •nuj-.iai '; I HRKI'I.ACE Ions, clean dry oak. India, Pakistan, Korea, and China — just ."iic'h a machine a.s farmers laduate. 1 1'r'imp' delivery Eckeil- K.uins. es- Diamond Apprilsera. Sidney Europe, holps to fiecure the person lU'e for cott;;n 01 hay and eom-ment, according I" Alvin A. Bur-, SKAMSTHKSS. T Holt, Est. 1882. MA 3-3730. TIM are millions' more. While the liPs •.v.irkne: ci.11(11- in ^er, reseai'i'h director of the State .iiiv a! Huiiiml!, prtvsle llulili nit ii-2():ia-w. Broad street (Market): takn el. to or family 'desired, meets them on nre mostly of non-German origin, pr<'S.';ed. A ;:enerous handrul ol by letter. In IS.JJC ] TIVII Ireejlcl'.els I. the Strand I heater. J nth floo- arrival in this countfyT am)" net's" victims of the N'n/.i regime and mclh-flr.ke.s is laiU1 >Iis11 (j 11 in l'.ili) hut Has hcen-com: 10 a.m. FlIUNlTUttB UPHOLSTEBV clicking off telegrams to .sponsors, cally very good. KOOCI tlrw, new duced to a minimum. The increa.se plelely revised—and—hroii(;hUiip to . Ultmned by machine brake:!. Phone Un. 2-4054 W. the cxecutivcfi in the D.P. depart- will need much n.qtsistnnee from VVOMKN'FOR~LK;HT'CLKAM AS- I-' 1N1*: mission oiik dining nuim lurnl- THE WALLMASTBB WAV in. -weight aftei packing is only date In response to niinierou«—re- ui:i., Invfly old !,;i|icstry. .Summit (i- No nun;:., strenkii. odor or nolno IIUICK Kpechll sedan. 1037. Clonnrkootl ment looked somowliat we'aried voluntary oignni/.ations like SKMHLY WORK WITH (.JOOJJ 1 condition. Hi^ator, dofrostfir. Orig- five pounds Ur 101! pounds of (piests Iroiii local laspa.\'er and Cull UUiiuni- 4-3112'j [or (tiitlmuto and harassed, and the place was a C.W.S., especially in providing PAY. PLUS BONUS. APPLY IN r inal iai'ni'1, Heu.sonable. Call South clolhing. civic groups in Xi>w Jersey ilu'l I-iN ph-cr (lining riiiiiu sull. l. i Ovrr- Orniljzp 2-02HB. — veritable hive- of activity. clothoK." PKRSO.V KSSKX KLKCTKON- Inok Rdiirl, Slliillnll. WILLIAMS t.liriiiiejioiit the coiinlry. .SPECIAU/iINC IN-W1NIJOW CLKAN- 1041 KCfilD Deluxe Station Wagon "Delayed I'ilgrlms" (jioocl Used Clolliing Volunteer Workers ICS, UKRKKLKY • IIKHIHTK. LADYS oak desk $5. illllllll! mum set; | , , KI.OOR'WAXING. 5 Nr ANI .Chatham 4- 5'i-M;jOT5-_ Jn his -stateinenl, the Chanihcr NEW JERSEY. SX'i, nne dresser with lar;;e inlrrur j i6 chestiiul. Ave ' Suinmlt. N J More than !IO per cent of tho Used clothing is being selit In The c(Vit ol packing is still tur- i'.'il, inahnKiiny ociai;on table 55. I phone: Sooth Oraniie ;i-:i5im 1041 HUDSON four door sedan. Very research director pointed out that reasonable. Chatham 4-254G-W, DPs come from camps In the U.S. the warehouse all the time in ad- ther reduced by Ihe-willins volun- Himim.l (i-HK-H-M Call jnvnllr^ 1.^, |m, u,k,,,:, ,„ „„. „,,.„,„, lhn,t^; i municipal expenditures totaled Zone of Germany, «omn from the dition to hooka, toys eind other teers, who innie from ehiirches HELP WANTED—Male TWO i.llLililly used Aineilcan Oriental j Suminil. are belli;; held lor A. Hel-I04I1 PLYMOUTH deluxe, coupe, excel- j nearly .->-.'.l .1 HKIJIIIO in I'.MS and that, iii;;:. !l x I'-i. privately owned. Can( maih ni (in Woodland avenue, Sllill- lent condition, heater and defroster, British Zone and a few from the articles. Right now, however, there and other organi/Aition.s all i>\'cr new tlrns^jM.425. Summll_B-T370-M. 1 his represents an increase in ai>- be iieen. al ll.'drosliiii!-, '1211 ,Spiliu;llcld j mil, at I he Herald ««"»• W"'" .j:»me.'Lsupplied. bedrooms and tierce, bntlift on necond. GLEN-OAKS AGENCY, sites, brook, choice, hectlon, only 11 few served. Land of Noel Employment Mrs. T. H, -Drockob ',Breakfas,a t and heutiMl i:ariu;i:, e optionalp . New) Slnftcr round bnbhin, 448 Sprlnnlleltl Ave. Other features lneludo open porch, two . Realtors —' throe to five acre plots left. Priced citizens." ' •• - 7 Agency, fill Main aLrcet, Mudlson «- •bcaullful caliinet. new low to sell at once. \Vlll take back lnort.- Telephone • after 0 p.m. Summit 0- %1'12 50 i Suminil. N. ,1. Suinmlt jO-6745-W car attached KiiraRC, hard surface 40 neechwood Road t 0002. Included in the pamphlet is 11 m '"'liil'i'Sf "^l'ly inil|"V|tC'1 rli'to,-,nll fln'fl, lioJ for half of sale nrlce A jjfiil In- I S IhiiiUT-; rni->m--tep-—rV.nF- wTfi i i rtcni, rocR' •« l.si.'i 42 yyiirs; nn7 slPir6'nu HLlcs. Cou- 3117 SprliiKfleUI Avenue Summit 0-02711 LIGHT TRUOKINO Hash. Phone at once for nn appointment roum at("ache'd; Cnnvenleni '1:0 sta-rector of tlfif Division 'ill Local Gov- 1 H. G. SEARL1SS Hi SONS. 204 Morrb Excellent location overlooklni; Watch- QUALITY and compare this property with any tion and .bus. Summit li-27(i()-.I, t.'K. cooks"," prant icul mini" :;, 1 ernment, acknowlcdginc receipt o( Pii, etc. Situations suppliedpp , 'rofi.'V- RUCiS, broiicllooni—two taupe; one, 0 avenue.^ SprlllKfleld_ Ml. 0-0790-W. unr' Reservation. Modern plan olx roomn, lVu batlid, other, A real chance, while 11 last. :. I3IG comfortable sleeiilniT room, • next v feet hy D feet 3 Inches; one I! feet an advance copy of III* report and " 1!)71) Slllpu M AvcA , MMapUU- ~ 32—1'AINIliS'G.—Ui'SdOK A.1ING- . - Priced nt $33,500. colonial home constructed by cHtab- to halh. 2(10 SprlniUleld Avenue. woncl'. South Orange - 0 Inches-by- 7 feet 7 Inches; on« llshed builder tor over 40 yearn In Nearby 40 acre plot with brook and Sununlt. exprcssinp; his opinion Hint it ^reell, 0 feet by 0 feet. Kxcellellt PAINTER- nncl paperhanRcr wanu Summit. Quality fcaturon Include can woods MOO per acre, 20 acre plot. , ... coiullllon, price very reiisonnhlo. work. Interior and i!Xterlor work. fired alr-condltlonlni! unit. Factory finest view Imaginable, $250 per acre, ppURNTSTren room with kitchen prlvi "should he helpful to. any Rraup 1 EMPLOYMENT WANTED Call between n and 11 p.m. Summit Workmanship Ruarantood. Reaaon- finished kitchen cabinets, fully "Insul- 12 acres with same view,, treetrees and lenes. Woman in-elern^l. Sumnllt. fl- willing to take, the t'fme to study 0-31175. atalo -Fred I'loper, 1 Springfield ated copper fliislilnKS. .Attached ga- brook, $250 per acre, - 7414-,! ndernoons or cvenliii'.s. WOMAN wishes Mcnuliiy and Tiins(||iy_ SEE A.NY it as a preliminary to n. budget Avenue, Sprincflold, N J Mlllburn raRn with ' protectiyl entranco. Full ONE-room 111 Hprlniillrltl^—gentleman dnyB work. Call Summit fi-snivj. ticreenn throuirhout. Visit homo at 35 VILLAGE REALTY ASSN., RUG. (I x 12, $(i. Chatham 4-775(1. _ fi-0700-B- SUMMIT pn'fcrred Near buses. MI. ((-•IHHD-W. study." TT ING, iinytl' KlcTi7rVy Falrview avenue today. Realtors y y _ PAINTING—PLASTERING Director Darby also stressed lur l l lUl KITCHKN cabinet. mlriois, dishes, ERNEST VETllSCHI, State Highway 32, Dnnklni! Ridr,c N. J. FRONT room to let. for married eou- , p wlt,h clHUlrcn. ple, kitchen prlvliec.es, HlOlt hnuse- Snni.li Ornnuo 2-11(117. curtains, etc, ' 1102 Sprlni;fleld Ave- PAPERHANGING REALTOR Bernardsvllle. 11-1212 or 1213 opinion that thro—Strctc-ehunilier'n nue, or Summit H-0227-.I. ——Builder keeplni.'. available December 1st. YOUNG man wants days work. Call INTERIOR—EXTERIOR Sununlt (i-ni'17-W. general—siiKKcstions on the way LAWSON couch, Krcen frieze noverlni;, Call Summit (1-0461 or your own broker 5—CHATHAM Off Season Prices. De.it Material* 7 Ililiplewhlle cherry chest, brass fire- TWO free tickets to tho Strand theater, LARCil ; lileasahT" i-noin, convenient 10 in which local groups should ap- WOMAN wishes Tuesday (lay's work place set. Call Suminil. 0-11121-M. _ Summit, are bttlnit held at the Sun town, for elderly I'ciilleiuan. Ref- proach a municipal midget study In SumiuK*. Oranue 4-07011. BOB FABRICATORS COUNTRY HOME" HI HO EVERYBODY 2182 Morris Avr.nuo Onion. N. J. Vicinity - Summit, office for Mrr,.-LJmiQjmier, 7 Park Have a look at this lovely six room erences desired, - (iaraj',e optional'. Vv-cro of the utmost importance. IlHFniC'iKHA'I'OH Aprxr—Bflcn motor. \lanc, Sprlnsfleld. Chalhani 4-0715-.T. WOMAN wnntlThii'hy Hilling evenlnus, 61- cu. ft., excellent condition, $50. Call Unlonvlllo 2-3086 •—WITH- modern colonial. It has everythlni;, Suinmlt (1.20.10-M. 15.435 aquaro feet of land lamo llvlnn room, porch, oil steam all- Included~in these general sug- Summit 0-1000. MANY FRUIT TREES SM'ALL well-furnished rQQm_t.Qii_ui>ntle- BAHY sitter, mature, avaliablo .eve- - J. D. McCRAY nplc-ivnd-span, plenty or Rarden iipuc-e, gman. Short Hills 7-,'1223-W. gestions by the State Chnmbc SA-r-MACIIINKKV Painter, PapnrhanKer. una Decorator TaxeH only 4150 ~ ^Opportunity near bus and good schools, $10,000. nlrms. South Orani;e 2-t)0'Ul. SU d-(134O Conventional flrat floor. Pour" TJWI^ LAROE room with bath attached In I were tho following: woiiuui wants jKisltlon aa AUTHORIZED" DEALKnS. WorthlHR- • • FOR J1ETTKR vVORK rooms and bath on" second. $14.1100. CLARENCE D. LONG private home for Kentlemiin. Refer- I "Don't wait until the public hear- baby sitter. UNnlonvllln 2-7505-.I. Newly painted, excellent, convenient. OiA Lifetime ences re(|illlc(l. South Oianne 2-71174. 'ton pumna.. air e.onipre.naorii, Sturpr A. KEHOE 332 SprlllKfleld Avenue ing nil your local budget is held " WOMAN1, coloieil, wishes rlcnlllllK and vrrnt bloworii, Wentlni^liou.nu, Cen- W.A. McNAMARA, Realtor A ndlldly built oldor home on a two- Summit 0-5:1110 -' 0,1!)02-J. SOUTH OraiiKC slimle rnoiii, warm, all tury, U S Eloctrlo mntnrn:- com- d'i Taylor St. Mlllhurn, N. J. acre plot In excellent location, close to tnuisportat|on, male, r c a s o n a h I e before you get busy on it. Ironing by day. Also dinners to cook summit n-anno - a-7oon 20—MADISON nncl jiervc week-ends. Day work $fi,i)0 pleto stock pumpa. air comprcwiorH. SIMKI a curd for estimates town and station, yet boastlUB rustic South oriinne :I-:I;JO;I. "Don't be satisfied with making and fare Unlonvllle :!-;ia20-J.~ —pulre-3'n;—rrrotorn~fnna; blowura, unit COMPLETE MOVING JOD necluslon; tennis court, garden, outdoor heatorn, UchtlnK plants. Ras nnslnoa. "TIARSE BEDRO~6MS fireplace, crape tirbor, benutlful trees FOURTEEN room house, wonderful niccr7mlortable sfeephiKrooiiir next a general plea for lower taxes. Pub- plnco for boarding housp,_hi\s_ejeva- Falrbanka, Mooro ant' Cloultla well :l Rooms ...... «n.50 Mid shrubs, threo-car KnrnRc; elnht to hath. 200 sprlURlleld Avenue. lic officials are much more im- Wanted—Female 2 TILED BATHS bodroomn, four baths; UvlnK room, tor, $111,000. Madison 0-2402. Mr. Bo Emjp pumps, a pump for .evory ncr.d; aliin 4 Rooms . .' : ... $20.0(1 automatic nlootrlo wutnr hoatora HUB first floor Htucly (or bedroom) music, voom, llbrnry, dining room, pan- Salltls. 4 Lincoln Place.. pressed with suggestions as to IJAITNDHYAITNDH . Hnmi' 'lmulim. s 5 Rooms . .. . -$22.50 fleneral I'llectrlo Equipment Co.. 135 with ndjncnnl full bath'ln Mils suporbly try, kitchen and powder room on first where and how reductions can hi.- on shhis und c\irtulns 'i'2 Maplit Veteran Owned and Operated ninlutninod 10'U center hall Colonial. floor; hot wate.r"f,'as heat, lull Insula- 20A=MADISUN VICINITY Avenue, Vaux Hall. UN 2,iU:i) Mulberry ntreot. MI 2-S020 - FURNISHED APT. TO LET FRANK Ci, UONSAVAC1E Icloul rncroatlon room. Gas A.C.-hnnt. tion; wine collar, larRe dry basement made." _. _ a~-MI_SCBl.liANKOUS_ Dxonllont Dmyton School locution af- with lavatory and laundry, slatn.r.o.of, TWOycar old Colonial, perfect condi- .."nABY-SlTTINO. Ally time day or _ Cranlord O-lfilM- tion, UvlnK room with fireplace, APARTMENT for rent— (nrnlsl)ij(Phed- "Many .small savings pave the, n|chL_MUluurn li-Ofl-Vl. * _ fordu mfixhuum tnvoHtmnnt Rccui'lty. nix Jlreplaccs. This lovely property cmi CHRISTMAS cards that am dlftercTTt. SOHMIDT and linn'awi!h'r."P»ltittni(,_ •Gall-owohr's aRcnL for lnnpectlon ap- bo_ boufiht—unbelievably cheap. dining ropm, scloncc kitchen, Unit room, kitchenette. $10 week, covers way to a substantial tax reduction. r _ floor, Throo bedrooms and bath sec- all ^'xpeuscs of cnoklnji, lli;ht, heat. 'MORNING " ]iiirt" time" Job> Ftvi" day.'l Complete selection TII-IMteel with your paperhiinBliiR and dccomMng.. Call pointment. Budgets are seldom reduced hy per week. UllUmvHIc 2-:iU2ll. iiiune. Wtda-.prlce. raiu;e; ulso hnxed Union 2-71SI1. OBRIG,JElealtor ond floor. Attached KnriiRe, well In- Water. Use of wash'lllK machine Mey- sulated, KIIR air condltlopefL heat.' ">ersvllle center MIllliiRtnn 7-0245 3-2 eliminating entire, departments or TVSsrST"m~~lll)rar.v nr sludy hall, also' assnrrnu^llts and unusual wrappings WAN'fKD: li6uS15S~TO PAINT, O. B." R. T. STROMENGB 21 Mhiplo Street _ Summit. N. J. III sloclt. ncaciiii Hill Company, 23!) Nicely Inndscapcd plot. 50 x 125 In- Klmple clerical ii^xJi. -'•'- -Dndowlllt Whli... Jr.. Painter slid Decorator, ?A 'nlackhurn -Road Summit «-4024 Summit 0-0435 - 50(16 - 2708=M~-"- Kood nulclcntlul section. Madison 0- •M'i_vicrn; fcnolc for and. plilK -up- ' M.ii Tl:, Avenue. Spiini;llckl. Mlllburu VACANT seven room ' Iiofi5e~fir~i!bocl Road. Wllllmrn. 21 Ed!;ar HI...—Uunimlt.' SUmmlt 6- — 2408-J. APARTMENTS FOR RENT- |~the small leaks." .. 1.IQ,'I-"R. Free Estimates. _ secflon, newly redecorated^ $10,800. .HERE IS VALUE -- A renovated-Colonial—hoiiso, Center IUC.H chair. Ba'iy llntl - Chatham 4-4072. • — FOR-SALE- " Rfn. Summit li-7414-M. rlfli! room, llbraryr dining room,. NOW RENTING "powder room, open scroened porch. YOUR piano runed hy n-i;mt.er cr.nfla- _SUQRIi AC'RISS 1—ANTIQUKS . man. 'Rec.lnaUl Ilelcher. Tel. MO. 4- -Second floor: four twin nUcd bodrooms The dellRhtfully (llffer.ent family col- Warns Motonsts- rinnsn AnMr|non—rolli.elni'.;' water beat'ers, 2 hot.-watur_Uilllcs. —feK-Klr-Plauou s re-flnlshcd 'or polished h Schoo t nnd four modern batha with showcrn. LOCUST GARDENS" - hkllIj hlt 'k ony. Cottaires. ne.w-itnd_turnlshcd—b«i*r ~ LoiMisf Drive, Summit d—IliirRnlnii. I.neat.ed t'lul nf Call i-iimunll li-'.'.li()H. hy_j;kllI(Kj ciihlnet wni'kern. -Nj!.\v_lim\tlnK plant. Concealed radia- bu'slnewi sites. SomrlhluK (pr all ' Here's a home for n family and only tion, all new plumbing, automatic heat, - :i, 't-'.u, 4 ROOMS MODERN SCIENCE n—Blfeet. 'Morris! own .T^-- LIUNJiL c con- A COMPIiKTE piaun service. Guaran- lli>nd». Free booklet. Terms. Closed KITCHENS; palr $12 I teed workmanship. II. Heuer, tech. one' block to school — lour bloekn to full Insulation. Situated In a solect-lo- conditio cution on a plot 100x300. Pine old trees. Mondays. UnlnuvHIe a-IHIII-IOIIO. station. ' ISDLTII WOURNKR AMTIQUK MANTLK. Antl(|ile doors The first floor Includes n center en- Offered below cont of renovation. $22,- (-.'IIOlnE OE COLORS Kill ROOM Road Conditions with original, hardware. Suuln Or- COAl, liii 1111 in; Imuiiler, soil chick cupac- 41—CKSSI'OOI. C1.1CANINO SHORE ACUlSa. N. .1. DECORATIONS. trance hall, UvliiR room, dlnliiK room, JtlOr-Inapoet any time. With' snow, lei' and haMircloii.t allise 2-ll!171 cvenlllKs. liyl . HHhe l onahli' Suminiil 0-51110511177 study, kitchen, pantry, and screened 1 EXPERT JOHN H. KOHLER, Realtor 45-STIRLING ANTIQUK [•ouch $7h. Suminil li-.U'.'.ll-M. TllllKt: slmsh beds; music cablnel; porch. Second floor has four Renerouij . E. & E. ('.. HOUSTON trafllc conditions in the odiiiR, Mo- Call evenllms. bedrooms and hath. It has n 75 foot 40 Boechwood Road tor' Vehicle nin>ctor Arthur W. \Ue. lawn inowi'r. iwn tllt-tnp lahles, SANITARY CESSPOOL front lot and purarce. Summit (1-B550 - 4010 6-ROOM housn with hath, -laundry, :ilin SprlliKllelil Avenue 1 ch.rry •ellllbuarrl, hvn Hllchenek beautiful basement, with oil hurner. Phone Summit (i-U4ii4 NEW SHOP opcliln;; Dec I, I'M.I SprtUK- There, is motlernl/.lnp: tn be done hut MHRIV? lost \vceli mntioned car lleld Ave., Ma]ilewond. Ant Irples. pld ' cluiirs, lew ani ique.s. Summit -(>-n'jii7 sisaviow 2-SUMMTT VICCNITY Lot 50 X 20(1. Recently redecorated (ir you'll have plenty to spare as thp own- Inside and out. in Warnn Ave. AlUiNT ON TRIlMISKS and tnicli owners to nivo thoilfillt idass, china, lamps, bric-a-brac line I.IONKI. (127 ciecirlc 1'rains and rum- ers are only nsklUK $16,500. Call Robert CESSPOOLS AND SEITTO TANKS—- Stirling, to winler Safely equipment and l;lfls/1'elephnne Soulh Orange 2-U144. plelely l;uid.--c aped lavoul. I.ocomo- GLEANED REI1UILT, s. Stafford. llve. teiul.i1, |iasscm;ir and freight RKPAIRED GLEN-OAKS AGENCY, HERE'S A BUY 4D—WGSTFIELD OFFICES FOR RENT to put their vehicles into the IM>M cars l:>. truck, 4 switches. House'., Lovoly 8 room Colonial, 3 years old, of condition for the bad weather BOY'S blcycl... :!fi'.' two speeds, coiisl- liuinels and other accessories (.loud CARL GULICK Realtors tile bath, hot water, oil heat, large CHOICE LISTINGS SI 1.500 up OKKICK space lor rent, 300 Sprlniilleld c.inclll I.111. SU li-7;i:!4. IUI.VK din-ad. . er i\m\ hand hralcc, cxcell.'P.! condl- Box 530 40 Beechwood Road kitchen. Convenient location. Lot 75 REYNOLDS & FRITZ, Rcnllors avenue, Summit. 144 st|. feet 435 a tlnll, $lil; inntdr .scnut.i'i'. Ibree .-iprells. , Summit 0-2025 - O;l57_ .month, 52.1 HI. feel $10(1, heul, Iliiht, r r I1AI1Y cnrriaiic. cnacb $15 00, Crib and MORRISTOWN x 234. Iniiiilated. Storm sash. Garage. 302 K. Brond St. W.stfleUI 2-1010 t'.ood eniulltlon, *. iij Suminil ii-:i. i:if). inatti-ess $11110. llh'.h elnilr. $.'..011 All Only tl3.500. Janll.tir service, available November T«l. MOrrlstown 4-20BJ Members Multlpl" Llstlni; System 1 I'i. K. and Ii. [1. llmislon, Sunuiilt HOY'S Scliwlnn hlvyrli' lull size, rx- i;.Kid coudli ion su. li-'Hi.*i:l ^EXCEPTIONALLY" FINE" OBRIG, Realtor OOIIM Sf-ill an Upward Trend cellent (•(ilulltlnli. lnctitl, basket , hi'ild FLAT-TOP (ill ice (IcsU, IISsSll. $5. Madi- Mudbrn center hall, New England 21 Mnplo Street Summit. N. J. and lull lU-.bls. I \vn spc.-d ^,r;ir sllll- WANTED TO BUY Cojnntal. just pre-war mi 100x1100 lot. REAL ESTATE WANTED In New Jersey Savings 1 son ii-i!72:i-.i. Summit, 0-0435 - 51100 - 27DB-M nlili- Inr lull cllinhUii . IMinne sum- Four larKe bedrooms, two baths, Lava- vVANTKD—111 the Ornnniw. Maplewnmt nill f,-:!!!.'!'.!-.!. I1AI1Y ciirrl.ie.i1. loldlnn slyle. iinnil coi'i- tory on first. Franklin School. INSTRUCTIONS A' upward trend continiKvi both WK PAY OAHIl ror your imun furni- FORESIGHTED Short Hllln. Summit, Chatham, eto.— 1 (III1.ill, $1". Mlllhurn li-IUVII-M ' in .^ivinK. * momhiTK mid net nav- IIK'VCLK. 2li" b(iy\"cixciille.nl ' ciindl- ture iintlqnes. ullvur. bookH, br'o-tt- LISTIKQS - HALES - APPRAISAIJ3 1'IANO INSTRUCTIONS Klven In your brac, paliitlni^M. works of art. etc. JOHRII. KOHLER, Realtor INVESTORS . home or at studio AI.IIKRT -UUI'AHC l Ion. Ch.iihiiin .l-.'i"Mii-W t "til Sun- SIX wllKlnw;, and iw.i screens, ;|0"X47". '10, neechwood Road MANAQEMKNT - INSURANOB iiiK.s ,Kain for member d.sisociation.s day, 1-1, p. in , Monday, any time, Siiulh (lr.illi',e 2-ii!)4ll. iJKOnUK'H AUCTION ROOMS Old frame house with one 4-room and DONALD W WILLETT. Realtor •—Pianist Siuiunlt O-1'Bll'.i-J. 113 SUMMIT, AVE. j^ Summit fl-(lSSn - 401(1 thrive a-room cold water apartments 2,1 Halntrrt St., ISant OriniKc. N. 3. in the New .li.'r.sc.v SavinK.'i and Tel Summit 0-1)30(1 TWO tree tickets to the Strand theater, liXPURIIONCKD teacher will tlllor In' 3—LTOTIIINfl 10—M r 1 s 1 (•'A i!"" i N s'i'if ti'si UN r s affording good Income In heart of Phonn Oil 3-2(12:1 Hven.. OR S-5204 urade und hlr.h sclmol sllhlects. llnx I,o:iii r'veaKile, (or thr ninV COII.SI^CII- Wn will buy vour attto conttinc.i -'Summit, are helnit held at. the Hun business oentw.of fast-growing New THH ROI1IN Iinoi7~Shnp '.! 'Iiiylor MASON .K: IIAML1N lillind, Spinets office for Harry Nnsll, 1)2 South Maple 'ISO. Short Hills. tive month.s cnilinp; in Sepleinhi'r, CASH FOR your old Hooka—. Imm«]l- rrovldenco. 45 feet of valuable busi- . streia, MUlhurn sells used elm lilni; ?.;n.'i (Kl up. Five-year iniuninlee. Dowe street, Sprlnnfleld. ness-zoned frontaue.. Low taxes. Com- WANTED TO RENT VIOLIN INSTRUCTION In your home it linj-t been reported hy Arthur T. utn Removal. Call PUitntleld ^-IIOOO. 1 of betler (Miullty for rvery member Iteh'illldlm: Service, llil 2-ll!)IHI. pute for yourself Un long-term or Charles I' . Relsch, Jr., 22 Jellerson of the family. Mlllbuni ii-11211. JUST reduced below reproduction costii, NEWLYWKDS, very relluble, iiooil posi- Udiley, cxeeuti\(. \'ice-president of PIANll I.aillir sludlo sU'.e, u VVK PAY hlKheiit cash priced for any- riulck-roturn Investment possibilities. tions, desire unfurnished or fur- Ave., Maplewood, N, J livenhu'.s stone front Colonial owner built In tiOuth Orall|;e 2-05711. the Summit Kedeml Havings and UICKKY-KUKKMAN overcoat, •I'e"^!, pla 111 ilnod riindlllnii. 'Phone after thlnr: AniUiues, china, wMvt»r, brlo- UI47. excellent location, very con- Kit her way, a safe buy. • Asking only nished apartment In SprliiBfleld or a-hrac. palntlimii, ni(;;i. Your uttlo brown tweed, nii^lim type, i;odil cull- •1 P 1 Kainvnod _ 2-7171). venient to ttriide, hliih school and tfl.OOO, vicinity, convenient to 70 bus. W,iv- C.'LA.SSICAI. or iiiipillar plain) liislrlli'- IJ(KI«I A.so. iciotion and vice-prci'i- (III I.m. Hli'M'Hlee ill $ill. Siiiumll li- cnnteiitn our specialty. iihopplni:. Center hall, llvlni; room,. erly :i-24H0 or_Market :I-I1457. llnn, Hi'i'lnners or advanced, I.alesl dent of Ihe I.,ni;;llo. •12'IS-M IMMMCiIlT |il:iiiii iTndbench $757 Sum- SUMMIT AUCTION ROOMS dlnliiK room, streamlined kitchen, HOLMES AGENCY, mit ti-:il2H-M, Cull eveiilii|.,..i 1 MIDDLK-ACIIS coupln. wish two rooms, melhiKli. Also planu accordion In- 47-4!) Summit Avt. lavatory and screened porch, ftritt Realtors i.lriictUins and SIIIF.IIII1, lesson;.. Sne- AH (if. September .'10, u.total (»f ftp- HOY'S wool, two pl.ee medium blue BUmmU 11-ai'lH. • kitchenette and bath, .rent reason- suit. size 111. iicrfiTl cniulllliill II—Itlltl)^ AND PUTS fluor, Tliree bedrooms, chlUl'ii room,, •elal allenllon lo lier.lnners' UMll.V tile hath, second. Basement, playroom,, 4S Maple Street SOnimllJ-IM! able, references. Box 351, Summit proxiiuately ir.'i.nou pi'rson.i had . rilune Short Hills 7-:K15.'i-,I SINdlNCi nanarli's" From Prize VVI11- TWO free tlckcls 10 Ihe Sfcraud i\w- Herald. (ILATZ. Ii" Myrtle AV.. across from alre SiunpUt, III'.1 hellif.- held for hvee/.eway to two-car yuriine. Oas St. Leo's Churi-h. Mssex :i"i;ili:!. .siivingii aecoiint.s -in a.sMneliitiimN . III.AOK il coal, excellent cmullllim, 11I111: slock. Tel. Sboi,-!. Hills 7-2505-J. heat, full Inmiliitlon, storm mish. WANTMD by business executive and .laeoh Crdodsfcln of IU1S Rldi^ewood TWO free tlcltels to the Slrand theater, th;'n|>- I hnokkeepllU' and lax iences, lai'Ke rooiii.'i. parklni; area and \S'e buy and sell. W'r ahai buy estates, 1 IHIM.'S two piece snow :,ull, : l/,e Ii, -MIVll'.' It iahle • Cal'l heiween II CLARENCE D, LONG Karaites aviillable. Veterans' preter- pnixiinately twuily per cent ovi'r l» HI. Matchlnc, hut, I;IHKI CIIIUIUIOII. BUY U. S. BONDS and II n. or alter 0 p.m. .Short PINli-PONU liible. rer.ulatlon sine. ana Sprlnuftclil Avenue • Hiicc. 44S Morris Avenue, Sprlimtlekl. Keptemher of 10IH. yiimnilt n-ooiii, i 11 Ill's 7-:i!IH4. Chin hum 4-,'i(lli;i-M. Kummlt fi-5;il!ti - fi-11724-M Mlllburn fi-0750, THE SPRINGFIELD SUN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1949 Paga S A cannon ball, fired during a may still be nem lodged in-the Pastor^ Daughter Joan Ann Horner skirmish between British mid wall of ilm b-ritiidn —M Know four Government YOUR LIBRARY HAPPY.. To Wed Drew Man Feted at Shower American troops in June 1778, Hoiifee at Crosswieks, N. J. By N. J. Taxpayers Association,, The Rev. und Mrs. Charlts, K. ^7t TYTTrTTTfTTmroun bridal shower BIRTHDA w.i\> rn'-rit.s ; Muii. unil I'Vi. VA'I-H. T.'M to i> p.m. "A Happy Birthday" iK-.-xti.ndud iind now residing ai.427 VVesi'Side Horner of Sevir,ini avenue, ij. hon- K'-'Ju'-t-ion :n tin.- nu:ui>« r (>i 1J'-'- '•>'- b'jii.b'.r.s ;ir:.| a:r( :'.:ft n: r]--!;i. Nov. 21 Ihe following rtsid.'nts of -Spring" avenue, Jerycy City, ' IKIVI; an- or of thc-lr dailghier, -Miss Joan nounced the engagement of their ),'. ril.;lj| (,: i'./lll- b.; Oil..- Of t(l(; )jU.sil'.st \V.-.'I(S tile NO\ K.MHKlt / tiixwiy.-r.; .:"-"! MI:...DM ann'.wil.y. .Spnnnfi.'ld I'ublii- Library him OojertHg, son, of Mr. and Mrs. Mi.ss Homer's rnarruige ta-Rob- u 21 Mr.s. Allen..- Osborne 'i-'l -, • , |.v, ',',- o| ,.-i>- r"n' •'••' -'l, i-i'.-;l;ar. r.-ojitro. r.: ! ::..- arnw.d Frank H- OnterUig of 277 Clark ert Neil Allen. on of Mr. and Mr.s. . v. r (.-^pcrit-'ncM-d^ Tiic- c-o'orfu! di.s- Alice Muidment rt that .;.•,..- fruMi |.a.--.s.-c-.. of Hi-- :-r.'v.-.= . an-l r;u-:n.-^-!:1<.- >,.id».-l- .street. Hillside. H. Clifford All™ of Rollintfmt-Hd..- p'ay of juv.-nili- booli.-, dri.-w admir- Mr.s. Joseph T. Em.--r.son T.v.'liruv. li:ll, tin- IS:!! wiii'-Ji "»- •"'-'. a.-roim;:.:;; yn'l o..,/-ialir,- Princeton, will be performed to- ing i-pniincnts from parc-run aiiu-ul! Clark H. Smith Mi.ss Peterson wan graduated night (Wednesday) at S p.m. in__ jil.-mml.-d the Hvov..•!• (.:O;JI:III.-..».OJ liiod.s. us children. Amonp; thiS^-jooU.s to Mrs. Henry K.-rn , from Regional High School, stu- in.-rit .sp.-cial m. ntion w<.\; tlioso ,-. roMiin.-udaKon:. to unify tin: 1" - 'I'!:.- H"ov.r Coii:inir.s:on w.-i.s Nicholas Kuhish died two ywirs at Brothers Col- First Presbyterian Church by ihe y.TJUf.-n by Frances Cliirki; Sayori. [i.-ii-triM-nt of U.-f.-m..-. T;;.-n- mv .-'..-K-.-.-n.-d v.-itii -..;.<-rn:.iv> lias w.-i-n Di.sr.>: ir'lin;; urniimcTU.M on .]<- h|)eaki.r at the local P.T.A. mtet- iiiR on November 2Sth whore many Joseph J3. Kastner -Mr. Ostertag IB a graduate of We Never Infrude (JiruiJtcd to rli.'xicr. <'irn-rH.-> "i' '"'- r"-'"' i"'-'-hod.s, tin- Hoov.-r, Cora- Two LocaJ Girls r:iiion nou-M, Hint many tnblflK-nnd—ehnirs lutd Miss Elizabeth Gunn Barbara_R,_ULb_ni.di^_claiiEh.tor_of_ l!: 11 11 j In June, he was appointed pastor choice of an ostentatious service for (inuiin-nl ''' '''•'- '' - .^ub.^tar.tial annual to he made available for thc.ir~ii.ip Mr. E. A. Ulbrich of -2255 Short Edward P. Steitz of the Port Murray and Mount A'-tualiy tlw IIoovi r Comiii;.-.s:un s-tv..i:;;.< running inlo hundixds of in other looms. -. Irene Clark - Hills avenue, attended a tea in the !-Bethel Churches In Warren Coun- one whose life has not normally been in it:> i-i..(•iiiiiiu< siirl.'«(ii'lil Avenue, Snmnilt, N'. .1. i.: open to nil who wish to attend. Mrs. Oscar Prn.suhn nd faculty opportunity to become tomorrow (Thursday). Guests will Thc~topics— cover many current 2"—Mi.ss Jenn Fleming cqunrntod, YOUNGS A Ijr.ineh "( Till: MO'l'lli:!! ( IIIIUII. Till! 1'MtsT Clll.ltCll ()!• be Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Chioholm CllltlST SCIENTIST. In Huston, Mass.. problems of the home maker, Ihe Howard Smith The guests were entertained December lii.scu.sslon being on of Main street, and Mr. and Mrs. FONERALMOMr Suiulaj Servlre, ll:ilil A. M. Sunday Krlinnl, 11:11(1 A. M. Mrs. Leon E. Robinson :lurlng tho tea by Mins Gertrude Wednesday Meellm;, K:1.1 I'. M. Chrlfftmaf! planninp;. i H. L. Chisholm of Keeler street. Mrs. Alfred Schmitz, Nfcidli'ngcr and her "Musical Mis- Alfred/; llowuf. fHredor Keiitllni; Itiium, :i|ifS|>riMi:lielcl Ave. Opi-ii daily 11:0(1 In l::i(l except On Saturday morning Mrs. Vio- Jule.s Cou/.ens Son Born mps." MIU. Kiiml.'iys and Hnllday-: also Friday evcnlni:s 7:30 lo 9:311 ami let Brooks entertained n largo 145-49 MAIN ST. - MILLBURN after Ihn W'i'duesduy -Mretlne. Mrs. Thomas Keppel Mrs. F. R. Kohlcr Jr., of 137 group \of wide-eyed, interested 28—MrsrMax Weiss Tooker avenue, and infant son, ZH Years of Service youngsters at the monthly Story William Mifflin, have returncd- George P. Brown, 101 Baltu.srol Hour. In December Mrs. Brooks Mr.s. Frank Holler home from Overlook Hospital. iVay, Springfield, wcis presented a makes ihe Story Hour particularly Herbert Pennoyer, Jr. The baby, weighing fix pounds, fold .service emblem recently, attractive and tells Christmns Joseph Morris John Barter, Sr. ; eleven ounces, was born November narking completion of twenty-five stories, both old and new. 'ears' .service with Public Service 29—Russell Frost 6., Mrs. Kohlcr is the former Jane On Friday the llhrnrinn,—Mta Slcctric and Gas Company. Mr. George L. Smith" ' Cooper of Springfield. Phoebe Brlggs, attended the Times Brown iw employed at the com- Mrs. William English Book Fnlr at the.-Museum of >any's Essex electric generating" Dudley Schneider Natural History in New York City GIRL itation, Newark. Our Sincere Wishes ns one of the New Jersey llbrnr- Walter White Sr. Inns who were invited to be host- • Mrs. Arthur C. Ackerman LARGES Eugene E. Richelieu SCOUT — •"'. 7> YJDAJL esses for that day. The largest government arsenal New books received—thi«—wc-ok- Doris Rutschor a located on Rock Island, 111., close aild now rondy for clrciilntlou are . Dawn Wendland "Corner :o the city which took its name 1 For —"Happily Ever After' by I-Iart- 30—Raymond Vohdcn By Adelc Itnppnport 'rom the island. 7.cll Sponce—"The Sunset Tree" Mrs. Gordon C. Christensen VISIT by Martha Ofitenso—"Colin Amber- J. Nell Jakobsen Sr. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS— A_Happy Thanksgiving ley" by Victoria Lincoln—"The Mrs, Lucy Jakobsen Forsythe Troop Activltlcn —ESTATE OF LOUISE SUITER, Dc- ceitsod. Road Ahead" by John T. Flynn— .-,1^-Franlt Jakobsen "Troop 1—Flag bcarers'and color guards for the year were chosen Pursimnt to tho ordnnrf-OHABLES "Killers,of the Dream" by Lillian J. Nell Jakobsen Jr. • . L. OTTO, JR., Surrognte of the County Smith—"One for the Road" by by the girls at their lost meeting. if Union, inuclo on the flfteonth day THE TOWK HOUSE Carmen Catapuno American flag bearera are Anita if November A.D., 1040, upon the »p- Robert Ruark—"For Heaven Sake" Mr.s. Paul Karlin jlicatlon of tho .undcrslRned, as Ad- by .Hannah Smith— Doherty and Rosemary Bednarilc, mlnlHtmtor of the estate of siild dc- WESTFIELP'S FINEST COCKTAIL LOUNGE • Lowell Hardy =cn»ed, notice Is hereby Rlvon to the troop flag, bearers^ are Evelyn :rcdltorr< of mild docenncil to exhibit to Hughe.1) and -Diane Kcrr, and world ihe BubBcrlher unctor onth or uffirniii- .lon their clnlmn nnd denmndu nKulnsl• flag bearera Faith Fee tor nnd .ho estntn of nald clpceasnll within six Nlttiienc Drinlcuth. nonths"from tho diitc of nald order, . ... . Pleasant and friendly atmosphere ar they will bo forevor burred from Troop a—The flrat i##?V.;> High School and 2, Robert A. Congdon H. HprlnKflold Ave. _i 0a- Oil ,V. T. V. Leo Sons KvcrRrecn Ave \ _.(I(1A 122-120 •1. Elizabeth Frnny. Remojl Avo...... \. .... MJ 18 Any of the rirnct.s or lots may be redeemed by tho \payinent to tho uiiclcrulnnrd before tho unlo ol tho amount due thereon, Ineludlni^jxiteresi nt eight per cent. fromlJuly 1. 10W andthe cn.nt nf .mlvertlslnK.- Tarochial SdiooT Giils! \ CHAttLKS Sh-H-UFF Given—trader my hand this 21st day of November, 10,4(L_ ' yT~~ . - "CoTIcctor of Taxes. Nov, 23, Dec, l-il-15 "~T. . Focn;—$37.80 OULD you like to make 6ome BENEFIT BY THIS Wextra money for Chrislmns shop- GOOD NEWS ping in your spare time at home nnd COMBINATION compete with your fellow students for YOUR HOME TOWN PAPER MOUNTAIN FLORIST p | *un

Flagstaff Coffee — because tasting is believing.' Th« ChHitlon S

FLAGSTAFF (aMrauk •liL- THZHOUSETHAT QUALITY BUILT ; ;, L .—«....•••••-"— l.llyt lltoH) flagstaff Foods Sold only at friendly neighborhood grocers Pago « THE SPRINGFIELD SUN, THUR5DAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1949 the (.'.'ifi.'ti-i'ici after the inoetine,. lures. Mr. Post helped us arrange ular TtiesHny dancm. Aii iii'.-nf brought h'-r .doll carriage "• 1 'i, .-.•'r.'->A :n _ti^.- af:>-nioon :-ti that LUNCH ROOM Mrs. Zdlcr .it'n,-. 11 JJ !or The menu next week lit liay- tin- mothers came in and had them We each wrote a story ahoul one (mending. t:.-- .-.'.oiy. " i. inou'l Chisliolm lunchroom will ]iin on ih'-'ir imiin-ti. something we thought was inter- The Kecreation Levi^'Uo of the Tin- i,•,:,[.>-. uii'l girls h.'i'l f'-in be: Mrs. Bu.-ch toll) tin- mothers a Springfield Schools was held Mon- SCHOOL NEWS 1 sp'i-i-dy back from btvaking into 1 (isting about tlit'Me, regions. We I'li'-t'.'.'ini;. farm bii'fJr. in Art .C'.ai--. >- Monday little about.jf(:-llivra.ii with Yi touchdowns \'::i: uf'<-rr.oon. with #ravy, butU-rcd carrots In art we made big tnrkcyo— (it lunchtinie last Thuiciday. He and eight conversions has rolled up Both Schools O\iv motiir-r.s \-:sitod our C! on M'>nd:iy, NVA'tm- nesday. November 22 at 11 o'clock. milk. and remind w of Thanksgiving. u large buck deer. Mr. Murtinka. similar -number of touchdowns has about Thank.'i^iving. Mr.--, f.'iinn- r. ,.., , .•,.,. n.. ,• if, have .loan bi-r II. Mii-ti .Smith told tin-rn The program was as follows: Wednesduy _ -W^-hAV-"-learned many songs about has been hunting in Canada. accounted for 7S points. Aniasio has d!cr'.-: group is making postorii of Arnold .:i,'l Hobby Kdward.s back about tho bookt) we usi.- and tho Chow-niein, rice, noodles, pea- "Come — Ye Thankful People, tiling ili'-y are .Jhankfu'. for. Mr.1-. ' in .Mr.-. S:::di-r'n .• 1 -1.---.- iigain. Tin-y the turkey—gobblers too. Our Reading Chart looks much scored seven touchdowns nnd con- •.vork v.-o do during the year. Some nut butter sandwich and milk. Come", by Fifth Grade and Audi- better this week. David George Dunn's class have tulked dbout bar] to b'- out for .-evernl liny.s of our papers wero hun^ up. for In Second Grade we are working verted lf> times for M point!-. 1 Thursday ence; Bible, 100th Psalm. Theresa leads, with Bob Boilfr,. Martha the Indiana, pilgrims and what we h'-iau.^i of :1!IK:.-:.- our rno'-hor.s to .see. Our workbooks extra hard with our oral reading- The latter is a plunging back 1 Beef noodlo soup, livor-w-urat- Ki.wh and Billy Lynn in close pur- . .shall ho thunkful for on .N'ovr-m- The <.-n:!dreir diut meaningful Grazi.'ino; Lord'a Prayer. Thanks- usc-d when the opposition spreads 11 1 sandwich, ])eauhe and milk.- 1 suit. her'Jl. Both groups .^aw lili'n ofrlp.'; .-Tory o!" "The Kuniiy Baby' on our de>!:,i for our mothers to look H emphiiK is--U)—special—\w>rd£. ..{uid-| s: PrnyerJjy Fifth Grade . a i;at andu pa.r o!" rhoes bread, butter and milk. favorite olory to read to Fir.st Thanksgiving" by Joan Roland, They are doing a good job with' ' way. Whether this so'.up will stop Mr. Post nhow'-d 11.4 liow to Tljiri menu --is-—subject to .liinrny Haggr-U nnd Bobby Kirk from her. mother and Ah.-i- _\I"id- nialtf our own patterns for hip; Grade. . • ' Nancy Boiles, Elaine Worrilds, tools. i the Scarb't backs or whether the turkeys mid how to cut out and change when absolutely neces- (•rndi! Two Anne Worthmann and Bud Quin- Our best sewers are Dorothy lighter Railway line will be able to pa.'.ti: Uii-m 011 a larRi- .sheet of sary. •iiA\ Play "A Welcome • Visitor", Atigenstein, EliwibetirTTTnier, Vir- stand up against the heavier Bull- Twenty-one molheriJ came to the cliuxa.cten? were 'Hope'. Joan Wag- papi-r. We h make them $11-1 oijostions to which 10,0110 per- Hradit '1 i.s U?arniiiK 'ill about a Most mother* were pleased with 'John', Donald Campbell, '', -Ji-hrrry:—Wi—will—iM-rn—all—n-bnut-j- better wives. sons will come out to see tomorrow, I-1,'2Dougla, 3 san dBell four; ;Song Plasy b"Thy eGrade Trues library cardii, libniriams, etc. We time, preceding a tour through-the felt their children could do better I Regional authorities have iin- Meanin-p; of Thanksgiving", char- "Bead" comes from "bidun." an hone to m'.iki; a small library in! plant, slides were shown and ex- if he tried. Mrs. Charles Miller, ' nounced that the game will be. acter's, 'Flora*, DoriH Helmstetter, Anglo-Saxon—word meaning to A Layer*/CLOUD, our room and have a librarian plained. Guides were assigned to the class mother, had charge of i played r<};ardless of weathei''con- 'Vivian', Nancy DeLcona.rd, 'Glenn', pray, but it has come to mean a ~r0VE!ING"»'A'NB»JTAN IN AUEA, too. Many of the boys '0u this lr.-tler to the linnl process of grinding, Star Spangled Bnnner" by the Mat. l:M) Daily TONS/ packing, boxing, storing and load- a lovely cake with candles for the audience. The announcer was Da- ill order to tell you weare loam- | children. We nlLenjoyed it. STKAM vi's. IVom ii:,Sfl V. M. inK how to write letters. Vrstord:iy I ing in freight eara. The most fas- vid Prichard. we wrote letters to our cla«smatrn. cinating procedure was the man- Grades Two and Three Grades Six, Seven & Eight THUR., FRI., SAT., NOV. 24-25-26 We like to write letlnrs to our ' ner in which the can« from- the On Tuesday, November 15th, the Hats ..off to our upper grades friend-) Miss Lindonloyor i.s RO- American Can Company were "parenU of tho Second and Third who presented a positively excel- Omtimious Tbank'-cix in|; liay to lot us write lelersUo boys urou-ght over on conveyor lines Grade children met with Ml«fi lent "Variety. Show" at our reg- TIME ADVENTl^ICK iJKKATS! and jvirls she latipthl in Florida. lo the machines that filled them. ParkhunU to talk about the work ular Thursday assembly. In fact, We will like that very much. Inspection of whether the can to be covered during thcjicst of it wan so good that wo couldn't •Love. wa.s filled was also Interesting. A the school year. The parents who help laughing through the entire Grade .') HRILL treat in the cafeteria climaxed__the were able to come were:' Mrs. performance. Ori-strrality and real Our 11:'•! hers eame in our room educational tour. A souvenir of Bataille, Mrs. Blomborg, Mrs. Car- talent were._d.isplnyod in a. quite to a tea. They t---:iw the work Hint plastic measuring dipper for dinal. Mrs. Doering, Mrs. Frank- unusual manner. Even the par- we do. We .saved our. papers in a coffee wa.s given to all the vioit- lin, Mrs. Kisch, Mr«. Morrio, Mm. ticipants seemed to enoy them- folder. We got—olir_rciKi4i|^caa:da. ing members of the eighth grade. Olsmiilskl, Mrs. Havnla, Mrs.'Nei- selves just as much «3 the audi- MjnuljrturittJ Industry 1 llvit day too. On Friday, the 7th and 8th gel, Mrs. Pelnhardt. Mrs. Pettinic- there 15 an investment ence. We would like to teel you 1 ti!y»6.000 I We made paper turkeys with Mr. grades held their last social danc- chio, Mrs. Rowlings, Mis, Ruban, about every act, but perhaps you in plant and equipment ; Post. They will be "place cards" ing hour. Everyone enjoyed it and Mrs, Wolf. will get a chance to BOO them for earn employee — 1 for opr TlKinkspivine, dinner. We mmeiiM-'ly. We hud a multiplica- Those in charge of tho refresh- sometlmo so w,e will not go Into W^S«R-^W Bulin ttu Waterworks Industry, liiade enough for our whole family tion dance, a Sadie -Hawkins' ments were Mrs. Pelnhardt, our detail. The nhow consisted of the the invtitment in phut ind and our gu«U.s, dance and an elimination dance. class mother, Mrs. Cardinal nnd nets as follows. A Dutch Song by equipment comes to approKtmlMy Our class made pictures of tho Seventh graders, Faith Rector and Mrs, Kiseh, ^70,000 per employee' Virginia Gregory, Sylvia Feldman, thiiiRs we were thankful for. Then Fritz Puntlgam were chosen ';best tirade Three Elizabeth Huber, Frances John, couple" The record of the week we wrote ,n pontonce- about the We were glad otir mothers' could Elcnnore Klcilo, Dana Lindauer, SPECIAL MORNING SHOW pictures. \Ve found many things brought in by Ml'. Nies, was the 1 come to our class room laflt week, Nancy Moen nnd Carole Mat^ck: to be thankful" for; iotir homea, 'Peony Bush". Skit by Jeanne Anderson and Sue FRIDAY, NOV. 25TH AT 10:00 A. M. Commonwealth trees, cars, food, places to play, We certainly enjoyed the.film Tuesday. They sat at'our desks and met the mothers of our friends. Charles', Football tackle by Bob ships, plnneti churches, post, office, Mr. Brown ohowed us ill science Shaw ond Roger Smith; Quiz Pro- clothes and our parents. class. It was called "Adventure in They helpedjjurateachcr know us KIDDIE KARTOON belter. There "wore twenty-five gram conducted by Howard Mason (ir.uli! four Research". It wa.s on the latest and assisted by Pat Mcslnr, Betty wonders of electronics, radar and mothers present. Mirf.s Dcrivnux'.s fourth grade We had fun making Thanks- Couch and.Doris Rosoelet; Fashion KARNIVAL class presented an original play television. giving place cards for our tables. Show by Roger Smith, Bucky I entitled: Thanksgiving In the Special Class Browmmd Ralph Haselman; Mag- -j year 1(121. Announcer: Carol Voor- We hope our families will liUe We are trying to Improve our them. ic Act by Jack Wycoff and Eleanor Cartoons On One Bill hces speed In reading. We have speed Grnklo Four Grab; Carmen Miranda by Marilyn Mother—Kathic Runcie teets several times a week. Four Mnrtilak; Toe Dance by Mary Lou Tickets Now On Sale Robin—l/trry Vierheilig of us have improved so much tliit Our, class has been studying about the hot,'wet lands of the D'Ella; Skit by Vivian Fischer, Paul—Douglas Woodring we have been given a more diffi- Jeanne Anderson and Nancy Ba- -1-tn^k—Er-i <>—Dw-lr-ymplo —,— Amazon ond tho Congo. Wo have Mr. Browser—Robert Gather learned about the kind of houses tnillonvTBstliTiEMnhiv I Mr. Standish—Bruee Brigg« the people live in, the kind of Wyekoff and Warren Smith OB the 1 Raymond Chisholm food they eat, and the—kind of wrestlers* and Bo)) .Wyekoff as Mr. Allen—James Fundieon Grade One 2 DAYS ONLY—SUN. & MON., NOV. 27-28 Mr. Win. Bradford—Carl Cinr|iiina clothes they wear. We havo referee. Richard Bishof ftbly per- We were pleased to have had so learned about tho weather, too, We formed as Master of Ceremonies. Tho I.nngest StrettH ....:. -"'i8^!& ] Patience-Carol Rehberp; Of Danger With this Law ,'C3 Chiirity—.lean Curialo many of our mothers visit wchool have made two large pictures, five We. wish to thank Miss Guorin —David Freedma.11 _ on Monday of lnst week. Twehl-y- foot by three foot, .showing thingr* and Miss Corcornn. In charge of 'RICHARRRDD """""VAUNTINVALENTINA ••' ;;%.|, Mr., W.inslou;— Bill. French flve of them were able to come and seen along the Amazon nnd' the curtains and lighte was John Rah- njrviv-trie, gencraLo,3.Hl«tan! t be- CflllE • CORTESA Prudence—Barabarh Hoerwagen visit lit? iater in the year. pic Cures. 'Sue" "Keancv Sandra" "Kty- cli7rain^o #re5TOS?SS In addition to the success of Mr. Carver—Vinnie Martini Mrs. Roberta acted as room lor, Beverly Marchell, Charlirie the show itself, it provided over Faith—Patty Graham mother and she and several o'tlief Collins, Jamefl 'Donlwm, Roger vf l-motliers—arranged for ctip cakes Smith and Cislto. doFroytag did thirteen dollars which will be used MHflUIE.imun'MIIGHELL — ;?' 7~MT7 Clark—Bobby Keith jo»r •• and coffee which were nerved in a great deal of work on the plc.- to purchase records for our reg- I Hope—.Judy' Comislcey CHINA — in — • " 'T|:- ••! Mr Mullin Douglao Woodring Indian Squaw.s—Nancy Anderson, O THE THIEVES' mtiHWAY* Gail Chfisfensen, Tommi'o Nell ADIES 2ND niO HIT Davis, Stella Byam. MONDAY Chief MasKOKoil—John Mertz "HENRY THE RAINMAKER" Indian Braves—Richard Holler, LYRIC THEATRE with Rnymnnd Wiilhurn - Walter Catlctl Dennis Beehe. Ronnie Denman, •Jimmy Finn. SUMMI" After the play we ate tile pies (i-2070 that were used, in the play. TUES., WED., THURS., NOV. 29-30-DEC.l Mrs. Dalrymple, Mr«. Dcnmniv NOW PLAYING PARADISE; UNTAMED! Mrs. Finn, Mrs. Burtt, Mrs. I-leer- Uiilly CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE THANKSGIVING DAY wngen find Mrs. Vierhci'.ig very Btilt. 2 P.M. Actually Filmed In Kvfiti. From Tho South SCHH generously contributed the pies for 7:00 P.M.- " THE SEASON'S our lilacs. Cont, Every Mis.s Friedman's claso have been Sat., Sun., . TOP MUSICAL! Holidays studying about India and have SONGS, ROMANCE been making paintings of India. Most_nf us have finished these and AND nOWN-TO-EAHXH are starting on a frieze. Mrs. HUMOIt! Heard, Sandy's mother, came In i nr^ Thursday andgiive an inter- esting Uilit on life7 customs7 and LAGOON people of-India, .. -- - with •lean Simmons - Donnlrtjtoiijtton ~ Grade Fivc~ On Wednesday, November UVwe 2ND JUG HIT - mv-il.ed our mothers to visit the Ever since Miles Staiulish arrived in Am'crlTa on the -^ DAVS OF-DANGER NIGHTS OF ROMANCE tlu<'best work from everyone in ""Mayflower" with his iron tobacco pipe, the art-of CONTIN- Slnvonsnn « pipe manufacture-has been typically American . . , our cl'ttss. Thf teachers talked about our objectives for the year UOUS Ailvmitiiru and New Jersey leads the nation in the production -and asked our parents to cooper- of pipes. ate with the school in making this EVERY year a happy and profitable one. Koth/um Jote Today, fifteen- million pipe smokers pay tribute After Ihe business meeting the SAT. to New Jersey as the "pipe-producing state." And following children acted as hos- & SUN. tesKet) and served refreshments: GRAYSON * ITURBI the line pipes made, in our great state, ranging in .loan P.etz and Andrea Stvppe in price from 50 cents to SI,000, are smoked, in all four Mrs. Diinpegno's room and Sam Wronsky, Carol Lorenz, Betsy ETHEL BARRYWIORE cornets of the world. Ha IT, Ruth Prinsle and Evelyn It's not surprising that New Jersey-lias' the largest Iluuhes in 'Miss Pursiil's clows. WYNN Richard Cageiano, Thomas Dohor- KEENAN pipe-making concern in the world—as well as many ly, John Hannlnvinn and .Iny j! CARROL NAISH • JULES MUNSHIN COMING FRI. - SAT;, DEC, 2-3 smaller manufacturers throughout the state. Here Smith were ushers. THOMAS GOMEZ • MARJORIE REYNOLDS is just one more example of the skill and diversifica- S'nee so many mothers came to and Introducing the most sensational now voice since Caruso! tion of the industries which make New Jersey a great the meeting we feel sure that-they are interested in what we do at ALL ITS funr.r, state in which to work, lo Vive, ID phiy. i-iohool, tirades Seven & lOighl MARIO LANZA The eighlh grade mo!uborK,a.('- X«"SD> Public Service, Public Serynnf of a Grewf eonipriniwl by Miss Ijcchowsln and Mr. Rro.wn, made a trip to the AND Sfnfo, commends llio pipe induiiry on /Is Maxwell House coffee plant in 13 JEROME KERN'S HIT TUNES progress and on its plana'for future growth. llobokcn, 011 Monday, November WXTHA AODJ5O ATTllACTIONS V MARCH OF TIME—"STOP HEAVY TRAFFJC" ' •FU EW BURNER WALT DISNEY'S CARTOON—"THREE FOR BREAKFAST" d;lC * SERVICE A SUPREME COMBINATION OF PERSONAL SERVICE Entire Week—Starts With Prevue Wed. Nitc Nov. 30 BpHe Joseph Ddvid ^ ^ ,Ruth Get rid of hedt.ing headaches , INVASION or DAVIS COTTEN BRIAN ROMAN NORMANDY RHINE CALL OR 2.6500 . rREEING GERMAN BULGE W0MWCAMPS - "BEYOND THE FOREST" CAPTURC Of BOMBARDMENT SUPREME FUEL CO. REMAGIN IRIDGf Or GERMANY ; s BATTU Of ST, IO NAII SURRIHOtH t Ntw Jtrttfy'i'Largest Fuel Dealer" Coming Soon—"TASK FORCE"—"EVERYBODY DOES IT" 'THE SPRINGFIRLD SUN NOVEMBER 24, 1949 SECOND SECTION The Japanese- fielded the brtter trie playen wen worn out, th» uvirn, togged out in new uniforms. Kame w'--rirtl*-(>'lt->il,—tiu-r<( ,->chool bill; locfll property taxes American women, in .some ra- Riven recently, to the- overcrowd- . tiiroujfJi 1 ftSS oh a sUite-wlde ba^i.s, may not b- uny need for aInrge for .schools went up about 4-1 mil-«pcct9, are weak of will! American woman protect? She Opened Since JanuaryJsL_ ing in our public t>':hools, and tin' -nn(] Hj,ow £nftt by.then there will expansion of physical f.'ii'i itko. lion dollars, according to the Ed- I know they have proven their \ does not. A de«perate sigh may con.*;«ucnt toucher and building ucational Planning Commission. worth in many fields which be fall from her lips, but she will It casts dbout J260 to educate fore the turn of the century the biindly follow' the leader through each new pupil, and when the stronger sex maintained were "For the ordeal. How About You? Planning Commisulon multiplied Men Only." But_whcn it comes to Perhaps one day the female will -thls-hy the—167,000 new puplloon something that cc*icerns~the~fe- the way. they came out with the male species, they submit with pa«- ngainfit the tyrannical D. D. S. that answer that by 1954 It will. co«t they will sutrmlt to her. If they Current odu siveness. This "something" that I j $-13,420,000 for the public to ^am writing about l« Fashion. must dictate, they might-try to J cate thp.se nc-w pupils. And. tITey Women will latch on to anymoke the lowly male u'nhappy,-in- Dividend [add, this makes no provision for typo of clothTrTg~5o long as It is stead. higher expenditures to attract the "latest fashion," no matter how teachers, build schools or provide it makes them look. Though this "World Series'" Won additional services. same American womiiri~w!ll fight By Tokyo Silk Sox Under the present system, the. -variantly-for-a-demoerntic cau.ip—j Insured Protection local taxpayer foots practically all —A-bflst'bnlHM!m-made-i]p-of-Gen— she will let herself be dominated INSURED of the local school bill. Out of each Douglas MacArthurV) economic ex- local tax dollar, between .40 and by a regime which I cull-the Do- | ports slugged It out recently In For Your Savings .50 cents of each dollar goes to the signers' Dictator Society. The D.D. j Tokyo with a team of top officials support of the school system. S. (my humble apoloj;ie.s to thcJ oT"TtTiT"3a~panene Ministry of Inter- Large Increases IrTschool expense* dental profession) apparently Is national Trade, according to Path- Send for One of Our Savc-by-Mail Folders arc therefore quickly apparent to a group of sadists. They will de- finder news magazine. the property—owner. slgrr-nn article of clothing which" A~flvprtTsetl a.s CluT "Burnaucrats1 New Jersey ranks 46th among makes woman look as .she should -World Series," it was the first mp INVESTORS SAYINGS —completely feminine, This -will the gtates In the proportion of jor U.S.-vH.-Jnpan .sports event AND LOAN. ASSOCIA T-I O N please tho fairer sex, but alus, its school money being raided by since MacArthur enfted occupation ! Mlllburn Office Union Offlc. Brick Church OfHe* the state government from non- for a year or twor for thelawsjillrnving Americans to mingle TMiiIn Street Stuyvesant Ate. Plac*

THE CHITiDRKNT AlfK COMIKG, polntg_out the Kducatlonal Planning Commission of New Jersey. They estimate that by 1954 there will be 167,000 more pupils in the elementary schools of tho state than 'there arc Eo71ayT~"Atovc, four of today's school generation, top: Susan Dlakos, Charles Munson, bottom: Paul Corum and Valeric Walker, all of Summit.

shor-togo,—MJiny—m be—a~totnrl—of—870^63—3t-ude(vl«—in-pSomfi—of—tho_elcjnnnlarv schools orea are operating with public schools. This year there | are not now filled to cnpacity, and particularly in tho elementary were • fi39,.'!!)7 students hi New ! three ronmn were nddod this year. grades, swollen beyond normal Jerecy'H public uehools. According i More dramatlc~is tho cnt>u of capacity. Some schools have had to estimated figures, there will be | Union. . to provide classrooms by makehiU almost fl.quarte r million-more chil- j x :1!M2 .there were 350 children method.1), often curtailing other n (Iron in public schools in "ft c w | |n uindorgnrten in Union .schools. facilities which a r e deemed de- Jeraoy In 1958 than are in flchool | 'I'hifj year there are .100, ^ tcm. Dlhers have neon forcocl to inaugurate classes on a shift sys- In the more, immediate; future, (5(50 children [n_kinflcrgarti>n, ac- tem. the commission points out, thecording KT Clmrk-s T. Hassard, ^supervising principal. That this problem i« not merely crc.st of Now Jersey's baby wave" an immediate orio, but rather one will hit first grade in 195-1, swell- Overcrowded Now which will face this area awl this ing enrollments to 167,000 more —Bven now the Union schools are Ktate for some years to come, is pupil« ..than we have at .the pres- overcrowded. In one school, built presently being emphasized by the ent time. to accomodtrte—HS0—ptrptlx;—there Educational Planning Commission From these figures, the Educa- are now 870. I.n another, also de- of New Jersey. Chairman of this tional Planning Commission drawn signed to fit the needs of 630 chil- lay organization Is Leonard li. the conclusion that within the next dren, there are 770. Best, Summit, rtroasurer of the10 years New Jersey fo.ces~t h e In order to make room for the Richard Best Pencil Company, greatest educational task in the"children, teachers' rooms, libraries Springfield. entire history of the state. and home economics rooms are The crux of the zooming pupil To' take care of_.the added 167,- cither doing double duty as diT.ss- attendance in local .schools. Is the.000 new pupils in 1954, they potnir -rooms, or have been cut in eize incrcaned birth rate. For instance, out that the schools would need to provide space for the chldren. the commission points out, in the!i,000 more toachem than they now According to Mr. Hoasard, the 10,'iO's the average number—of have. The State Department has township will need" 30 additional babies horn in this state each year j recommended that the State elementary ckis.srooms within tho was DS.OOO. The yearly average, for Teachers Colleger, in the next 10 noxtjiye years at an approximate the ISMO'H, they say, will be 83,000 | years, graduate a yearly average cost of .PO.OOO apiece. —25,000 higher. And experti pre- of 1,100 " potential elementary With increased enr-ollmoiitK,- dict that the wave of babies will teachers. From 1939-1918 tho av- budgets, too, have incrcii.sed. In continue at least through 1052. erage number ofpelementary teach- 1938, tho Union school budget wnt> -Determine Future Hnrollnientx cr=prraduate3 from thes_c__col!cges . By analyzing the Iwth rate fig- was 332. ures, school ailthnntk'K can deter- •To nei'ommoTkite the~increflsodV. mine with a groat degree 6f~ac- enrollments, it has beon recom- curacy the number of kindirrga-,..r. : moncfeel that tho schools In tho Uphoisfered M i 11 b u r ten and- elementary school pupiln | utoto would need 8,217 new clotifi in the—yearn-to-come. This, of | rooms, which—at—preflont—pr-ioes- FFiWtFtn local movi'menlw, is j would co.st~ttOo-Tiftlllnn. aH~byT!)82. accomplished with jrre acciii'ii- i Those are some of the problems, . • and cy on a state-wide hiiabi, Hum at a on o state level, which face the local-lovcl;. '•• • public q.H well o.i the educators The year TM7,~fb"r"~exa"mpie, saw within the next 10 yoars_ — Carpefs— more, babies born in Now Jersey At liOenl Level than ever before in ito history— On a local level, it has been c«- CSeaned 10(5,086. The 1917 bnhy-crop ha-sn't timated that attendance In the reached school yet. This year the public «choolw of Maplewood «ihd IN YOUR HOMI state Iw educating the 75,000 tables South Orange will Increase from bom in 10H. But by 1953, 1917'a. the present 5,500 pupils to 6,300 in BY OUR CERTI-FOAM It LIONEL METHOD FACTORY TRAINED -zs REPAIR MEN Selection of Trains In Stock MILLBURN TRAIN CENTER 301 MHXmiJRN AVE., MILLUUllN. TSU. 6-1211 See Our Conijifefo Line of Toy$

Moving with cure. - Everywhere .\ •16\:',V/. ALTERATIONS REPAIRS II* LAYING DYEING l»iek up a pdncil and tee who's drrlving hero on Novembir 25

His hours are l0:O0 to li-.OO and 1:00 to 3:00 MILLBURN 6-2000 STORAGE MOVING • RUG CLEANING FOR KSTIMATB MILLBURN His pack is filled with our toys from 1.25 to 19.95 RIMBACK STORAGE CO. CLEANERS INC. ij-MOO DlvUInn IClinliiuik SioraKo Co. NOVEMBER 24, 1949

DIET? Wjlh Cold Weather Ahead, It's Time to Fix-up Inside YOUR GARDEN If >nu arr >lll lliul >11ur fiwid pnili- Home and I.IIK 'sDlVi'li Hi "sTHAITrKN, "Jli; Miirrli ,lir, sprllliilirld. X.-OlSMAN'. ..._ -.. ...;

: . Dublin tops hjivi» bi.'iti killed by WrdennPage frost In muny places, so now tin1 problem of storing the roots romis EVERYTHING FOR to the fore. Three day* to a week YOUR GARDEN i nfter tho tops have been killed Is Q u ii ! i t y t'ViT^i'fi-ns, trri's, the usual time to leave thi'm in the Some Hints for Getting shruii.s, i lou't-rs, fruit tr»;i*tf ground before digging. However, it r.iiM'd in ami f»»i* thirTTimate. is better to get them out before a 1 Also M-fils, frrliliziT - all at heavy freeze occurs, a. - froM may reasunabli' priri's, Homes in Order for Winter 1 work down through the stalks. i.t}inl>i't\]n' ( ontrtwtora tfet to work. Scrape off the looae i There are various methods of With the unusually long period • handling them. Anyone who 1ms a of almont nprlng-llke wtaiher' paint, then «and the entire, frame. MM I H >B" It Tmrny •-cin-«-fll-lly^ and—r«- U'll Milllillrn Avi'.. Mlllhllrn, S". J. . aKe._if_.tho temperature rioes__not Al \'.MI\ >I:i 11 and Hlci|;.-»,Mi,l HoarU into a false seiue of security. putty the window. A putty knife •Ui- much above 4,1 degrees. But riiiiiir .Mlllhiirn ii-i:i:m " Nevertheless, winter Inevitably voill i.i an easy tool to, handle—oven the person who has only n cellar conif, and whim It docs, happy in for the rank amateur. Let the with a concrct*-fl«or, with a henterrj' 'the I)ftr.son who«o linmt- l.H jdHiK'y fresh putty net for about 2-1 hours, has a real problem. Perhaps this i Hf.'Ciir(;(l and repaired'for winter's then paint. Use a V% Inch brush personal experience will help. on.Hl.'Lii({ht. for best n«ult«. Also, you'd bet- Tho dahlin.i were dug carefully you have already nc tw.huve a acrtiper handy to take frhp yu y off- the dried blobs of paint you so that the roots were broken as | —BUYING cnmpli«lR'(l .tint necessary chores will find on the glann after you little a.i possible and with all the ~~iir"'>im'il the house In prnpunitlon have flninhed. As a preventive soil possible left on. The chimps STORM WINDOWS? ~~f«r the colder mcntlui nhead. But measure while you're working with were then placed on the cellar if you haven't,• n<)\v In a good tlr/.e thft brush, however. It's a good floor until excess moisture was Why Does HUNTER Give to do them, and with these hints gone, and the stalks cut back to ' irira-to—luu'c—at—himd. a soft rag You More Satisfaction than to holp, the job mny he a hit and .some turpentine with which "injoiil~3r"lncHes from the crown. ed.sior. i you can easily wipe off the smears Where there were broken roots, Any Other Storm Window? You probably will want to paint I on the glo..s«. these were smoothed off with n your screens before- pultinK tin in knife J Any tUllroJ A.Ma>«l " | roof of your-hou.so. .Your roofing ALTHOUfiH TIIK l.'NlIStj'ALLY lonp; poriorl of almost spring-like weather wo have been having In mftterial was also applied~tn the flow.s, check the frames and wir« Eallly Kem0V«d InlurH j may be of wood shingles. If HO, recent weeks mny hnve templed ninny homeowners outside, Winter is sure to come. In fact, we had cut end of' the stalk. for siKn.i of- deterioration, thwi S.It, Sebduixl Fl.Ub ' [ stop and think n moment. How the job for you, charging' so "much the first tunic of it last woclt. When colder wonthor comna to stay, then la the'time to do somo of tho An soon as tho excess moisture Htack them up dng..togellier i gallons can do the job yourself. lined with several layers of news- •flomo tn.sk for yoii, you might try I of raw linsond oil, 2 giillons of conl- purchase-a caulking Run^ SjColors" for Tulips and Companion Plants papers. After the baskets were applying the paint with an orri: tar creonole oil and 1 gnllon .of hardware store. filled, they were covereri'-witlrthlck HUNTER flowering dogwood, lilacs nnd nary Kponge, instead of a brush. japan drier. If you want a darker lty HENHY It. AUL [ with, red, purple nnd other deep layers of newspapers and placed ALUMINUM COMBINATIOH You're likely to have leas difficul- .stain add huj'nt umber-in-oil to the How i.'i your hiusemont? With Tlx're are no other flowers which j tTOPni ttrHt»sr Pink daisies nniT azaleas are white flowering shrubs an far from the furnace its pos- ty with the paint, "running" and mixture. An alternative, of course, the .summer and all ilts charm*-! now lend thoniselves so surely to color! deeper pink .tulip* are_n_dc|j.caio_ and trees that create a (letting for sible. STORM WINDOWS & SCREENS clogging up the orifices between pink or red flowering tulips. The for free DvmonKtratlotif Call. in to use one of the well' known past, you might reconsider that schemes and eombinations as the combination. In January, such roots as wero tho wiroa. When 'you've, finished, brands of prepared shingle stain. •oM—i+lffl—jMJH^vo-.hnd about throw- BliK' fnrgel-me-nots and blue yellow Father Hugo's rose i« roln- Imbedded In soil were plump, but EASTERN FUELrGOr- tttoro the screenw^In—a. clea.n, dry (-lining -flowering tulipn mid the rforced with yellow or orange tulips -Von!- local hardware dealer can ing together a Rumi'JIroom or den and hiennidl.s t h a t ' divuricata. are in timowltlr those that stuck out of the soil plnce where they, will be safe from l 1 SUmmit 6-0006 give you advice on this Tine. in that—basement corner where WHi)m-'with''thein''i| i'' April and! l''"'< "'"' crimson toned tulipn ' Fnrm onc' Vnnhnutte spirca, blue. themselves. cellent condition. It would be bet- ftte the dimcutly, but if the win- try skill you can. put together Tn general, you will find the ter~tb put the bnskets again In the If the paint is cracked or peel- dows leak badly it 1« probable sturdy framework and then fin- mofit pleasing color combinations ' coolest corner of the cellar. ing and the putty lins dried out, that the flashings around them ish off the wall« lit; you wish, based on three different but fairly are worn to the point where they according to your taste and purse. simple systems. There are those If you have a method of storages : that Is successful, continue to use no longer n'enl the crevlcca |—Whirt-ta-do about the floor is a combinations connoting of flow- Your Suburban Garden If you don't want to go to the opc.dal problem. If your base- It. If you have had difficulty, you ers having shades and tints of the By Alexander Forbrs might try my system. expemio of replacing them with mentig-falrly free from dampness, name color as different pinks, yel- Plant Now now flashings ft likely alternative you probably will do well to con- lows or Vt'oletsr A second system Wherever nature produces an- spring. Tho fall sown plants f hardy varieties niny decay in crease in pu'pils, and the added Minimum oil -lient.ing comfort! . ALSO DAFFODILS, When uoing muriatic acid be dwarf and crested irjs_. Weeding in tho cold wet ground but Hie .expense which would, under- tho Coniiinni room ionvpernturos to, heart, Leopards bane (Domniciim), within n fruclion oTn dftRroo. Over- LILIES, HYACINTHS, careful. It is extremely corrosive. hard seeds will lie safe if pro- present nyslem, fall primarily on fsi7.od filtorrt nnd blnwor nra amnx- Wear rubber gloves, rubber over Virginia bluebell (Mertenski), blue tected from being wnshed out of the property owner, the Educa- inRly quiotV" Floorn fll-ny warm, CROCUS, ETC. FOR shoes, old clothes, eyeglasses or phlox divaricatn, fnrgi't-ino-nois, the soil by mins or injury in some tional IUannJne; Commission • of drnfta urn K°"o, ovory room hcaU SPRING BCOOM goggles. Don't let tho acid splash rockcrofifl (Ani'bis) and candytuft other way. — NewTlorscy auks 'Hint'"a real stoto .10 Madtrn Tnilli'r Homrs / Accnni- ftvonly. SUVOH fuel COHIJII A wide on you. When mixing the acid (Iboris) are among the congenial aid system he adopted now. Diotl.ithir; Up To fi I'erxoii.s, Open for ranjjoofw/.a\and!yport. Seoitlodnyl Annuals which may be crown Vour Insjiortlon On Ilmito 2!), be- with water, ahyqya pour it nlowly early perennial companions that |_succ ess fully from fnll'-fiowing In- They specifically ask that New Drive Over into the water, stirring constantly "bloom at—tho sarai time as"trJrc~|' tween North Plnlhflcld nnd Hound clude nlyflsum, calendula, -ea.l!iop- Jersey join ITTose states in which Hrook. For Your to prevent Spattering. Preferably, tulips. Pn.nsie« .nn , d English daisies sis, candytuft, cantaurea cyan us the state government poys about mix it In ai wooden container— (Boll Is half the costs of schools through- Seo-Theni Today! LENNOX perenms) are two note-I ' :. , , . Garden Needs never in n ( galvanized pnll—ni\?\ j worthy biennials, or perennials | or state-wide, non-property taxes/ WORLD'S LARGEST MANUFACTURERS IND u. „,„,„ ••_ „...„!. I Cornflower"ia o,r Californiclarkia, a Poppiescosmos,, OPEN !1 to 9 DAILY stir'It with a stick or wooden that are. treated as biennialo, that euphorbia or Snow-on-the-Moun- Through this programrih"c~com'=- ENGINEERS OF WABM Alt HEATIKG SYSTEM! spoon, | are used in large quantities ovory Cnnh or 1/^ down nnd up to tain, gypoophila or Baby-Breath, miasion ways, three things would R. F. Stengel & Son FORBES year to edge and face down tulip larkspur, lupine, nicotlnna, pe- be done; local taxes would be kept 4R month!; on nai.incn plantings. tunia, pholox drumniondi, Iceland •down, there would bo moro at- 125 STATK IIIfiHWAV 20 Test Gardens Tulips and their companion nnd Shirley poppies snnpdragon traction for teachers, and It would HARRY WILLIAMS plants supply cheery spring* color SALES "n.rt'ctT-wc'Pt p «ra; free local resourced for building; UNtnnvilln 2-12IR Promote New, around such gnrck>n features n.s a nc-eds. "THK TKAILEKMAN" 1 It; Rpqulri's no Special Skill ^gateway, shelter, bench m terrace, Whether n broader base of state Call us today!' We aro A seed bed of fine fioil In the ' DUNELLEN 2-8087 GARDEN Better Roses |The entranco—U>-Uie house imd on taxation Is advisable or not, the the sunny- side of the- porch. But, border surrounded by a temporary YOUR CERTIFIED LtNtiOX DEALER 'A unique system of trotting new wooden curb is nn excellent, plnce educational problem facing this Routfe 10, Hanover, N7J. Ortt the ye.tl The "OVERHEAD DOOR" ro«p« over a two-year period is the here ngain, plan to have peren- proved in chamtiion qualltiei by talcing • f^nll annuals. A cold frame state in a real one, and this at wcather-btitltiK «ll over the world. So, lx\sis__f_of-the famous All-America nials or-bionniiiln that will hloTJnT Just Onn Mile West nt vie is ideal but many sow least is one solution to the problem. _"wber«ver-ynu-m*y—(irfr-diy-tfler dtty,^^ j-iiwiiZsH i H-1111 hAT1 w'lV II' I i"" ii ri mnilly""with them lo give a—cmvrph-tr+y Livingston TViiMo »ciion throuKhout waxin your "OV1!U- seeds in the opcn_£ar_den in a III!A1) nOOn" cm he ilepcmleil upnn. chooses the lipST'of the new varie- finished performance,- or combine To know the—IOAJUS at God In Ic'i an edordeu rltiRer-touch and The border where experience ha.s shown nature- and revelation, and then —Phone WHippany 8^0375 "OVKRJIIiAD-DOOIl" will rlw ilriinht.- j ties. Tho program was started 10 them 'with early flowering shrubs _up and ilide I-N-S-I-D-E, overhead. Own- j years ngo by a number of leading miRO is good. If «ec ttl fashion t-hrr-reffecHoria-ftwl—w111. 11 and trees to have color hh.':h and 1 -aii-dmiuBhaut-lhe-world-iay-!- !!* lure ! ro-<*|=pnTly-tulipf>, wilh thr 'i'i'.l ion oC_| ONt.V the Overhead Door Co. ^ appear early in thw~ or Phone MArket 2-3740 • nukei The "OVERIIKAD DOOR" now -varieties—sor^tlml ITKFre rtl'.e the tnrwll lw>l—t.he- (T) I 94R Ovortmnd Door_Co. today actually more than 5,000 487 Washington St. Clljmnttl Wllfcoul Ol.JVjl/o» firfit t'o come into bloom about Replace Your Old Unsani- available to the public Tn many the middle of April and they re- Sow seed thinly. mixiiiR Newark 2, N. J. OVERHEAD DOOR CO. cases the average gardener is main in bloom for two to three .small Heed with dry sand to help tary Wood, Linoleum or 1(177 Springfield AVP. '. thoroughly bewildered when con- .scatter it nnd do not sow much yiomelfke,.. weeks. The single early ones come Ceramic Tile Sink Tops And We'll Deliver Sin pip wood SO a-«770 fronted with the problem of what slightly ahead of the doubles. Rnlh deeper than you would in the spring. Many p/irdenere cover the to include in his rose plans. have a wide range nf clear colors With NEW There is notliing that s.ivnrs To eliminate some of the con- carried on stems ten to sixteen sei'd with a thin Inyeir-'nt sand fusion and doubt about new varie- inches high- They find a congenial after sowing. In the iseed bed or of commercialism at either .eolilframe, after the ground has ties, All-America Rrvio Selections locution along the informal path Beauty Bonded our Newark' or Springfteklr sponsors the thorough-going rose or border nn well as in the more | frozen, a light mulch of leave.'? or trials in IS official test, gardens formal arrangements. salt hay may bo placed over the "homes." l'.ach presents the MY SAVINGS | bed lo keep the frost in nnd pre- throughout the country. These gar- The whilo Ihunberg spiiv:i i;i in vent, thawing of the noil. This aspect ol' ;i fine resilience dens are located in different, parts bloom wilh I he early ningle and of the country so that the new null ill should bi' carefully removed n double lulipK a's Is the white flow- furnished with reserved varieties (Nin he. studied under in the spring, preferably before HOW ering almond. There is not « col- Uvautifut FORMICA top* in tho Sam Li varied soil and climatic eondi- 1 the needs sprout. ored tulip in either group lint will good taste and each has t ions. (Yi.nilitinm-f in the spring are not look well planli'd around their rotor you tfrrrif, in'// luHt for yettm ..and are INSURED! usually fine for tnuisplaiiting, and ever)' modern comfort and These...."provlmy frmundt-i" 'ire lo. base. Tho early-flowering quince ITI I I'll nt. leading universities, nurit- . plan's may Jin 'mov'eil from the ntni yettr* . * . f/ieyVr uuhurtnod convenience. rhalo who gui'cln thin with its orange-ncarh'l blooms , ^ ,„,,, ,o lM1. ,,,„.,!,„• where they Small sums, sot aside each wook, or eries and municipal gardens wheiv i $64,000,000 Intrifuflon i.s a colorful companum \o \*i ]low- I hy fruit ndnd cleiqly ; ed nnd the expert.'* carefully ob- plcturo. Al.'io group daffoililfi with PHONG TODAY i'Olt A FRGE Linoleum * Asphalt Tile Mlllburn 6-1383 BIRCIOW 3-2I3S OFFICERS serve tho plants on each count. the enrly HinKl, AjjL.S.cti. NEWARK: 2, N. J. flowrrini; bulln-. While eandylul'l, Open Till H T, M. Mon, Him I'VI. William MnlNi, Complr. Ahout. "one-fift.li nf the Id million paiuiiefi, Knslish daisieii and whil.'' unlsts in Iho t'.H. are women. Yui'lti'iv.'is t'urninh .'ihurp contrast NOVEMBER'24, 1949 PA no 3 Hidden Whispers 'Electric Roaster Family Life Needs Plenty of Marshmallow Mix Is Short Cut Dessert / j • Storage Space Ky MAKIO.V MrCAItllOUL Today. p—nfWirr ,- . . •»iMjrt--it~nV(;"!'iin7I to get an n4y—err? . Iiv PhUUn KrudhhiiM' for the coiri- ''ICititiTK 1 nlv ruitv u vker and i a.^- .Do My Own Money ;idy. I lie hi '"ln;-» mnm-.v ;> miiif-. 1 rurnt" , It, ;md ynu IMII'I tak<- it ;iw;'iy, "f equipment'.' A lvisic niahnhmallrtw mix oulcl ;i ]1.,yfar-old to his f.'Uhd Actually tins' is iin Important >'*HI e.Mi,M i-pi-Hulist i» rt,nr<-.s to hf- fiv.'aff- that H 'UIH^M *:'o"i!les for both purpose.*. ome nian.'i^.'ini-nt a" Rul ^'t r:> I Ini- t,1! relfit :oc>iiip (-s-'.'y.[s br'^icn th: For rx'unplo. next time you're rsily. While .'ill i •! i • i ' r: r- roa.Mer Wvr and VKI, WHO \:\ rij;h'. ,th entertaining, make JHL_JI bnti'h of, > portable, n usually ).* large and fat hr For t liifi we Ho IIHI Ilonipmade ^fal'shm(^!lo\^•^l and •r or .son cumbersome to niovr-. It should he r n o r f bnekgr placed wherp it run he used enn- thp .«nnic time, using thp Lf I us go \iufit far '-nou^h tn l>.i/-ic niix, prepare your vf-nicntly. P.ul .-it thp samp timr it 1 f:nd that Ihi.' faiivr h.'ifl been per- should not rob v;ilii:ii)!p counter til' evening's dinner. ;.'ind vc hi* son an ollow- i: Home untile ^tarslllnallow>.: rd to gl . ;>;i(w. If i:-;tr;i rountt-r .^IKUT is no* 1 .'nice ; -nrrwfv,-r, tiii.s"fallicr . t oo. .<>on had no realization of the fam- that a rectangular shape furnishes The father had no real under- more room than oval. A broiler Makes nbout n pound of mnrsh- ily's financial .situation. HD thought mallmvtf;— .•tandlnc of tho value of the nllow- his father' wns "menn" about rnck in an Inset pan is more con- annc n.s nn educational device. He JHEXLOTHESLINE venient than one in the roaster "•"Maritlininlliw' Amhro«i«: Pre- rarmnjT"So—when he got to hrglr pare B-'isic. Marshmallow Mixture

r rr T found in-'ynur a" rirttiVe slcirt; "rlo-nan"~nri

  • II I.UN'CIIlioN AND DINNIClt rugged best in "Utah," while Gene live-—and it was a nig one wi s department of this eight member leasing the better pictures of the Anlr.y will be KeorT"ii'nd hoard in to__^decentralizc the New York'group. past for home viewing. 1 "Lorelwr than you nmwmheri'tl it" "The Laiit Roundup." fhooTor.' Their hope was to estab- Shortly after the Irvington the- "Studio One" Ul)t^arm8tenb lish a_jiermanont theaLqr in ]rvin;v "tor opened, Mr...Martueei, speak- Also included in the program will With, the exception of the "The •ton- which would become—an in ing for tho group commented that THE be six color cartoons. Ford Theater" no other hour long p?^- tegral part of community life tliei • Mew York and other big cities dramatic video show has hnd such An added treat for the first -100 and in the surrounding area. have become the centers of this —FARMSTEAD ccciaislcnt high caliber of plays n.i lllltlo WHIPPANY children will be free popslcles. Last week this group—the Ivaiir n's theatrical activity, prac- "Studio One," seen Monday at ten hoe Players as I hey named theni-'llc""-v Lo lho delusion of the rest In the best Western tradition, over WCBS-TV. Some of the «how.s Old-fanitta/i***! cooking in the atntos- selves-announced that they would ol tho "ati°»- H'1 envisioned perm- phere of tin Itilh rtn\tury farmhouie. the management requests nil outstanding dramatic .treats, wore have to close up. shop, temporarily unmi>' Professional theaters In "The Rival Dummy," "Tho Bnt- LUNCHEON 12:0(1 to 2:3(1 patrons of the -ld'or show to check at least. .thousands of communities all over; AFTKHNOON TEA 3:011 to 5:011 their guns at the door. : „, ,.,,,, , , . 'the country,, of which his group tlcship Bismarck;" "Flowers From DINNKR 5:30 to a:on The group which had banded to- woulf, b(j ononeo .< , a stranger," and the comedy "Boy I.nrntrd four mill's fruiti Morrlstown on IVUtppntiy Hond gether with the origination of The.-.! Ml, and many like him, Meets Girl." (CI.OSI!I> MONDAY) . WHIPPANY H-0B7II aler Showcase at the Meadow- l'i'c-1 that that such a "dccentraliz- Much of "Studio One's" success l'r tvill clom1 Sunday Evening, ^ovrtnbfr 27lh for the. Wintef brook in the summer of 1DI", were • ing-movement" would be a hoalthy-Iris-duo-to-the-mn.ste-rful-pi'oduelinn all young, professional actors—- shot in tho arm for what some job of Mr. Worthlngton Miner. Mr. WeeldyLjCrossworcL^uzzle "their ages ranged ISeTOPen IK an I consider the decadent American Miner {ec]n simplicity is a key iti- by their success at 25. Spurred theater. in fvnnrl lnlmri;iin|| tTnin ITs For A —PJiryhmiTtr; Grd/rrr a Towt^rtt . ..D.u r i n g~ th elT-two—nrefn th~s tay-atr| Tion and believes more restful, con- 'Grove, this past summer theL yy h'ul 10 \Z 14- 15 Ib 16 , . , , ... , ""••'';, '"' "'"'-the Ivanhoe, the group nut on four centrated viewing could be ob- n ] panned to establish a theater o ' , , n£ \ tained with fe\V-er camera changes. K In ti Cozy Attnonphere ami with All The Triniwintf*! 19 22 Myoiv own which would operate aJ ..c,liuclill.. ,Dcar R ,,Ul., ,For Love "Studio One" hn.i presented and z\ ,-weeIts out of the year. • or Monoy,, U(| llpeg Q', My Hearf „ jjwill, I am sure, present some of — $2.50 — Although the temporary closure To do this the members often television's most memorable plays 2b I might emphnsize the difficulties: worked 12-15 hours a day, not only WE SUGGEST YOU TELEPHONE J n.nd performances. i Involved in setting- up a com-juking part in rehearsals, but also . FOR "Cimilid Cnnwra"' 28 2.9 30 munity theater on a profrssin'h-il jur-U-Ui-g-up, making and dr^ifinlng 1 Don't be _siirprls£d: If _soniehody I nnsl?...- ! .?.PPnJTJU!.Y_lin.s...nr)l. (Urn-, tho-;u;L:;-nnrl-al to.ndiiiK--lo-t.he:.iis- !S!TfTe7r-L1ffl!ik.s—roUfficttTcl-"- wllh cp- erating a theater. There was, for a while, nnd then nnnouncco quiet- 51 Main Street, Madison, N. J. MAdison G-08G!) ly "Did you know youF mi tele- 40 42 . 44- 45 4b 'S Instance, the matter of sending out "/( Fine /V'I'IB Jrrmu Enlinp: 10,000 pieces of mall for—oacli-UvO". week performance1. time for tho remainder of the 50 SI I'locc" 49 52 seat.i for which there was no en- "MOIINTAlfNVnSW, N. J. As Mr. Martueei put it, "We have OLD FASHIONED NEW ENGLAND On the Ncwarl: ' Pnmpton no place for a star complex .here. trance charge. They estimated that 51 54 5b 57 58 Tumpllin iRnuto 211 i Everyone pitches in." in order to pay their way they OUR -JUui—pl.'fyors' salaries ranged bii- would need an average audience of Wi. bS tween ,.?2.ri-S30 a week, but despite 500, giving ah nverage- contriblLtiQflJ THANKSGIVINCTDINNER THANICSG5VING the small remuneration, they de- of 60 cents per person. COMPLETE WITH ALLS t.6 b9 71 dared that they were doing what As it worked out die average- — $ IS A TREAT they wanted to and were their own contribution, not Including the re- 1.95 , THE FIXIN'S 1.95 served seats, was boLween_..3Q-3ft (Children under twelve J1.3B) 72 75 7b bosses." Although-.thorn appeared to boioonta for the nearly 400 persons an increasing interest in the the- who viewed _their plays each night. —SERVED NOON UNTIL 8:30 P. M 78 64 79 ivter on tho part of the public, Faced with such obstacles as —COCKTAILS SERVED— j according to Mr. Martueei, two ob- those, it seemed advisable to term- 90 For Reservations call Miss HART SPECTACULAR istncles stood in their way which inate operations for Ihe time be- at MlllburiHi-2181 .|.ci»entually necessltated-suapensionj'nS- Some members of tho group 94 95 96 of operations. have located temporary jobs. Two One of the largest factors was arc working as movie ushers, oth- HOWARD JOHNSON'S 100 101 102 103 ers arc making the roundst.of New 97- Sft that the group could only have the Route 29, SPRINGFIELD, N. J. ballroom Monday through Thurj- York thenter offices, and one baa 104. IOS 10b 101 108 109 [day, which cut out profitably a job as a toy demonstrator for the week-end trade, also that public Christmas season. But, according to Mr. Martueei. 110 112 114 115 financial support of the theater LOVELY AND was insufficient to meet expenses. the drenjiLJs.__stjlLthore,._ and_.they plan to make a permanent com- 119 120" 122 12V Ulten, too, tho players-would' los. TALENTED ns their theater because i,f a pre 4-niunlty-thcittcni reality, They hai'e viouslv scheduled appointment for definite plans for n sunn: 12b 111 IZ8 129 1 the ballroom. att'!'. ind in the meantime ' are A—fnw—wepks—agor-for instance, I looking for "aTroTTier. thuatoi1 loca- Ryse Alfonr 112.. 133 Mhe players arrived at their "tha- tlon which—they can use between Accordion, rat01'" to rli.irnvei* thM—1\ rpplitie,il January and Jiinc. "" •lSfe-1 137 ~b"cim~~aclft'diilcd foTT vvltl1 unemployment M a 20-year — Artist the ballroom for that evening.. Due| Penk !nr actor's nil Broadway, there to a misundersta-ndingr-they would aeon In he a place, even a NIGHTLY VEWTICAI. • had; HORIZONTAL not beep, notified. need for community theaters. Wednesday Thru StimJay- •Tnioir~ 48—Caster !>2 . Kniall 1—Crack 38—Romantic 84- Record ;~| With Ihe prospective audience But as Mr. Mnrtueci renmrked, : 40—Herb 87- Foorf Srrvnl Until I .-(. ,1/. s Amount of r>0—Little mass sturgeon 2—Subside •Moor wailing for a show which would "the going is a little rough." :t—On open grace 80- •Pucker assessment 52—Bleaching 0-1- -Be pro- not go on, tho group hurriedly Members of Lliis company in- kler •—?-•—- 'fu be rant 42—Milkllsh 02- •Race II 10- •One who water rounded up a motion picture pro- clude Jane Gregory. East Orang,:, S3—Denary .0f>- •Play 44—Degenerate of makes up •!—Tf jector, a film, and a spare room a graduate nf Leland I'mveis »•(—Craft D7- •To mark 5—Iterate 45—Call out wheat large J in the building! They herded r.ho .School, Boston; Ian Kirk, a (lan- SG—Get up 00- Born 0—Watchful • 4fl—Glass In 03- -Induced HISTORIC INK bundles adian and graduate :>f the Amer- 15—' again " 100- •Hard 7—Stanmim state of 04- •Stake waiting audience into rhe room and Tree ican Acndemy; Elsie Hnrlman, E. Front St. & Park Ave. venerated 50—Toddler mineral 8—Dant of fusion 05- •Prefer anil after some difficulty with t1i« pro- by Greeks 60—Suffers 102- Pliant Himala- 48—One who 08- •Error •Inhnny jector showed them lho only film Union, u graduate of Ihe American Scotch Plains they had been able to got their Academy; Vilma Snla.sh. Ww York; ns Immortal 02—No matter 304- More yas uses of Fliinngiui (Just Off Itiiiiln :.'!! ill. Mniiiimcnt) godly conduct hands on- "Getting Gertie's Gar- Jack Traey, East Ormu.e; (lerrii- 10 •Qu|et what one 0—Salad rattan .with 20 (13—Badly: 100- Kuss plant 40—Transform 101- -Inorganic ter." MacGrath, Maplewood; and Steven -The flower •I(dm Ciirlin 21 -Sharp noinb. form 108- •Of that 10—Raillery 51—Casting 103- -Mean- "The audience seemed to enjoy it. Thomas, a gradunle "f University thing anil •SPECIAL FULL COURSE. mountain 0-1—Northern 11—Branches mold time (ilory Pillar though," Mr. Martueei recalls. nf Washington, w-ho has also ap- •Delight spur constella- 100- Superficial, of 55—Male 105—: Tlie group had adopted a policy peared In Ihe City Center Group, $0.00 22—'Centra) tion show learning sheep In The. I'recisionnltes New York. Pick l.'olyer, New York Thanksgiving Dinner r •Was 57—Click 107- Verbnlly of charging for reserved seats, but American (!, )—New Zen- H0-— 12—Hawaiian nnd nn All-Slar ('us( lnlermisslTni 'a manager of stage production. dormant beetle 100- Basest SERVED- FROM 1 P. M. tree land rail garland ' Twn'sitnws Mlllllly 0:00 & 12:00 23- -On shielded fll)---Hynopnl« 112- Operated 13—Barracks ' 58- Convul- 111- Normal • aide . fi8 -Legislatlvv' 11-1- •Decree 14—Mollify sive sigh contour Full-Course Dinners •Cartilage 24- —Expressing body llfi- 15—A hydro- 01—Fund feather from $2.00 repentance 7n - Hound 110- Mark of carbon of 03—Threat 113- -Live 2R —Glacial snow veiisel omission paraffin 05—Inscribed 115- •ValcK Oanciiifi lo Mill Hayintnul Orch, •Changer 07-—Japanese Tenacious 27- —Largo plate 72—Crowd 121- series 11G- Kt'ni'nnlion.H • I'Mionville 2-illOl 20 —Marks to 7:i—Ite-establlsh 125- •Become 1(1—Son sash grasp remain 7fi Taro paste oxidized of (IS— Remain 117— Unfa-sh- (print.) 77—Hard inoncy 12(1- •Unbearable Adam quiescent loned SQUARE DANCING no-—rounded 80-Klo.ver " 120- •Solemn 17— Ardent 00- Harden 118- -Inaulate IWith WKI.L-KNOWN STAK1- observance Coconut", 32-—Low, hardy organ . affection • fish-nets 110- EVKKY MONOAV NKJIIT shrub 81—Volatiic 1.T0- •Vain 18—Reward 71—-Simulate husk M —Rubber tree lif|iild ketone 131- Gastropod 25—Bold and 74—Exact by fiber 3S —An herb 85—Mtwtollno mollusk greedy way of. 120- -Account NEW 31V —Accord anlmnl W2- A medicine fish levy 122- -Bobolink 30 -Kind of 86—-Astrm 133—•Sitcrcd 28—Doctrine 7,5—In good food FLAGSHIP light 88—-Worthless, picture 31—Reptile 1 neimon 123- Town on 41 —Rodent snarling 13-i ,Small, 33—Stout 77—Shatter Thamea ROUTE 29 Hon.Mlllbut«8.1«n.-4017 SPRINGFIELD, N. J. —Two, one fellow dandplper 35—Little 78—Mottled 121- -Burst SHOWBOAT Mutlc mi tliii Hmnmnmi lli'|!an frimi Hi.'tn Daily behind RD--li'or • 13H- Worry star 70—Rust 127- -Coal Roufo 29 Union, N. J the other 00 Land of t;wi /I'll!1! DKOlSOXAlltS, a. four piece dunce cniiibn, have -recently been Slightest .'1(1- Refuse,, 82 — Gear stillate I'Kcelli'iil. iMiellilles for Private Dining floojns /or Baiiqncta and Partict •17 —Soothing shamrock 137- sinned for mi engagement at tho IIIIchin* Tost, dining and night spot (illlW mining "• tooth 128—:Large ItitliiiuelH, Weddings ,v I'artii'H' exclamation 01—Kmmet better 37-^Rumlnmits 83—Recess uiake Route l!!l, Union, PpqeS NOVEMBER 24, 1949 Profiles of~Suburbaoites Public Says $60 a Week Minimum Income Indents JPevsrm a 1 igerl TWgl aV. 41arm OF By KENNETH FINK or IeaJ would do. One out of every wick, Atlantic City,- and Union YOUR MIND Director, The Ne\V Jer«ey Poll three (31%) named a sum greater Chy.jj/In cities with populations A mBJority_of the New Jeraey than $60. 9% expressed no opinion public i« of the opinion that fami- on the matter. over 100,000 like Newark and Tren- 40 Seconds of By KARL PLATZEK, P»yefaolori»t_ lies of four in this state can get Here are the minimum amounts ton — all set the median minimum along on $60 a week. Why is it thai when a child has \~12 in number i« just about right New . Jersey voters believe four- needed at $C0. This was the finding when New Concentrated Noise to allow the interactions of group member families need to get along Farm and «miill towTTand village been steadily marked as failing In Jersey Poll staff reporters asked Hy .TANK IIA'ItTKLS dynamic* to function, and at the on these days in their communi- a school subject, the parent who the following question of 1,000 men people set the median minimum same time to allow each pupil to ties compared with those given a 1 Do you have to stroll down-lone.-.. can-afford to do so hires a tutor, and women in all walks of life amount needed iv bit lower for Jy lanes where i-very stray sound nnd Hfter a remarkably short time, j get the individual attention he year ago: living In 16 of the state's 21 coun- their type of community — $50 a - coming—from -behind yr±u makes the child has learned the work? | needs and deserves. It must, how- Today Nov. 1948 ticj-and In d!ffcrent_com- the hair on the back of your neck [~Why is it that a pupil who hits been ever, btTY-niphasi'zed that even In «/."" week. — — 5 atnnd on end? When you stay hy consistently graded a.i below aver- | a small class the teacher who munities: J3Q-49 3 Although mrrny people In th» yourself in thn honso do you get age in school can undergo a thor- thinks and Is oriented In terms of "What do you 10 13 stiite would consider it Impossible., think Is the - that chilly feeling when the stairs ough program in remedial reading groups will continue to teHeh the $50-50 28 31 for their families to try to live on smallest weekly crenk? WY hope that you will be where it is indicated, and emerge group and not each pupil,. The NEW JfRSH 17 IS $60 a week, It must be kept In mind " income an avcr- $60 doing nnne of thesr- things, but if as a good student? Why.ia.it that teacher who thinks in terms of $61-69 9 thai-New Jersey Poll stuff re- 1 ag~e—family in v dxi_ihem . you • must, a .Summit a child whose report card. ) show each child entrusted to her care by $70-79 13 portcrw «sked for the smallest Its parents will overcome nny ob- your .community inventor,- Arthur P.. Chapman, regularly falling mnrlts can receive $80 & over . 7 amount needed. Many families stacles to teach each individual — a man, wife, —thinks he can make life a lot more psychotherapy to dear up his emo- 6 with children In this state, do, child, almost regardless of the size, ari"d~two children Don't know 9 comfortable for you. Chapman's tional tensions and maladjust- The median average of nil the however,' get iilong on less than thn ments, and often prove himself «s_ c^ the — needs to get $60 named as the median mini- along on these sums named for both this year is railed the Beau Alarm. one of the brightest in the dims? Before any teacher dares grade andJast year U exactly the same mum neecfed". Very obviously, the answer lies SMIIICANCE days?" Beau. Alarm is a sleek looking a pupil as poor or needing im- —$60. A similar question asked by n. in th.e lack of the teacher and Three out ..of article less than six inches long provement in a subject, let her ask national poll of a cross-section' of school to give enough attention to every flyejeople The fact that the name median —-.-m alarm devices Chilli Doesn't Fail for most of hi.i life, but he got the —Make no mistake on this point. idea for the Beau Alri'rm only about NO CHILD EVER FAILS IK two years ago when he was .spend- ARTHUR K7 CHAIRMAN 'exhibits his pocket burglar alarm, the_ [-SCHOOL. THE TEACHER FAILS ing some .time in a hospital follow- Beau Alarm. It is designed to give greater security to the individual" OR THE SCHOOL. FAILS, 01 ing nn operation. Hi.i nurse, a Miss in lonely placcsc. . THE COMMUNITY FAILSJWhcr r7cBbaiI~leaTnnd"what business ho the teacher grades the child as fail was in, and "dcirmnded .to know Ing, What she is really doing i why something had not been made Claims Press May Agencies Plan i marking herself as having fnilei to protect people like her who had \ with that child. THERE-IS NO \ to come to work at odd hours, Have Averted - |To Standardize CHILD WHO CAN NOT B,E \ through deserted streets.-Chiipmnn TAUCjHT. When the pupil Is \ confessed that he did not take the National Slump Building Code marked as having failed to learn, \idea very seriously -at—first, but The press and radio are polntly it really means that the teacher Miss LnBoail gave liim no peace State Departments of Labor; has failed to teach him. until lie left the hospital, and by credited with nn important part. Health, Conservation and Eco- So many examples could bo cited that time the thought had begun in averting a business depression nomic Development and others, to prove this point that there is no to intrigue him. • during the spring a.nd summer of are working with organizations of doubt of its truth. I have In mind __ Lightweight Unit .10-19. Tribute for their prompt and plumbcm, electricians and build- one girl of 16 who failed steadily During tliB next year, Chapman effective action i« made In an ar- ing Inspectors in the production of in mathematics. Contrary to my ! worked over thn-'-Idea- with en- ticle on the significance of un- a standard building code for New usual practice, I recommended j gineers at hi.i plant, the Electro- employment .statistics appearing in Jersey. Announcement of the un- that she attend a private day Protective Corporation in-Newark. the current issue of Review of dertaking w