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1300 Weekly xiv.—No. 40 CARTERET, N. 4,, U, I»41 WUUM THRBS TwoBoroUplesMarkAnnivmary CANDIDATES Of Their Wedding Fifty Years Ago r A n D A A D n Mr. And Mr$. Jamt Gurka At Tim Mm&a*ri*y; ™H DU JtRU Conplands'Cdikate Sunday At Daughter'$ Home 11N f | p P I Tl p fk National.Officer! Not •„ Re Named Until fyeiday -\ INSDALE RE- (0., PRESIDENT crH . O r To MoWWtt Ii ,t Chosen; Moody "•"• RWain Hit Place [ 1 c Harold i-'.T - The two local i-ni for the year »t M Tuesday, although .1, first National Btnk ill im* ..,,,|ny. ni rot B A k and Trust .! dividend of 8% Wls hi to be paid Febru- I .t National Bank Am- , ilv. superintendent of . ,v Water Company, l to the dirrttorat*. . tiirmcily had be«n a ' ihis institution bttt re- i- time ago be6toie of ,• of other business. Also in.ctor of thii institution M Clark. Other di- ,,,. Joseph W. Mittuch, ! Wiiss, Iaador* Matuner, .i/i-rsky, I P. Goderstad ;i;n 1). Glass. /in,i. Company did not i in -(-tor to replace the ,i Mulvihill, who died ith. Officers' chosen i' nt, Williaih Lonsdelcs i.yni.t, Harold I. \ ' nraii mid t:uy and treasurer, i; Kenyon; assistant trets- .. ,sci Gunkel. .,. nf thi- trust company '. ( hriatennun, El met E. Mi t'onr»d, Mr, Lonwlale, ; Met USaw.-MfiJUn- \li. Stremlau. > BY F-W Committee llaskins DANCE JHEDULED EMPLOYES Named Tc ft P. beth Fe CARTKIIKT 'Otter-Wheeler hold a dinne Seott Hotel, Kim Miss Ann ll;i D'Zuritlii mi' II Evelyn Emit ti< Muaic will Ii Kirch Dinner dancing 'til i >"| The ticket William Von t)n Helen Mud i uk Nicholas Lucas Edward Cunning cock, Vera t><> vanek, Walter ( Mitroka, Walt, Oberle, Charl«t( Farrell and MRS. MAI DIES IN Hoiband dreo Survii live In St. friary 1 ployres nf the point inn will | i! at WinfieH h, February 1. i niid Franz rmen and Miss halrman. CARTBRBT—Th« past week- nd WRB marked in this borough by the celebration of the fiftieth wed- ding anniversaries of two couple*. Saturday Mr. and Mrs. John Gurka f 87 Fitch Street 'marked the ;olden anniversary of thnir wed ding date and on Sunday the same occasion WAS celebrated by Mr. and Mrs. James Couptand of Locust Street. Matt I* Held The Gurkai attended an anniver- sary iftass sung in Sacred Heart Church by the pastor, Rev. Andrew J. Sakson, and then received their relatives nnd friend* at their hotne Many gifts and congratulatory messages arrived throughout the day. Mr." Gurka retired about five years ago from hU work it fore man for the Central •Ksllrosd of New Jersey, The CO«B|| were mar nied in New York «M Bved in Perth Amfooy and in E*«t Runway MOM timiim W m<a» Bute ««•( d'ence in Fitch Street whert they have lived many year*. They have seven children, fttephen of Por Reading, Mrs. A. A. Deilly of Rah- way, Mrs. A. F. Thompson o: Fords, Edward of Batway and three who live in Carteret, Mrs Joseph Furian, Funk and Michae Gurka. There are also eleve nishe<l by Leo ied lit eight; ttee include* Walter Dodd, mas Brandon, hn (ioodman NEW CONSCRIPTS ETED AT WNNER Local Municipal And Civic Units Tender Banquet To Service Mm CA-RTBRET—A banquet held Monday night In No. 2 Fire He-nse wan the borough's farewell to the five men who composed its seeon irroup of men leaving for a year in the army under the Selective Ser- vice Act. Joining to sponsor this farewell were the Fire Company, the American Legion and Star Lang Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars. Dennis FiUGerald was toastmaster and presented each of the 4rafte«a a gift,Iran, Jjhe. LA- dies Auxiliary of the Legion. The men honored at the banquet were: Francis Thomas Tomtauk) Both Parties Still Trying To Fill Slate In Time For Deadline NUMBER OF VACANCIES STILL UNDER DISPUTE Kryszevrski, Haury And Mndrak Terms Expire; 1 Seat In Controversy Carteret 117 Per Cent Alien Postmatttr Laalor Armu At Ttit Cmduioii Alter Comptrfnif ftffiriraiioii Of Non-Otiiens total J. Uwkr teUl of n««. A f««d CARTE*ET—AJUM tMttitMl* U.7% *f popnUtloa. Flfvm «MU(M ky PmtMttor fron IIMt*M«t M|blntl«* •( *HHI liTh« W»r. 1,404 aoa-«itls«u HT« la CarUrat. Of tU* total away «*r« *r« wsaca tb«a many of (•«*• nan, k«w«T*r, kav* afV tf •ad « krga aiaktr an taa whrat of etftani aa4 wttt BMSBI* citiimi tka«M*Wa& la rwraallag laa ra««IU aWlarnlntd ajr (ha <««ta> Mr. Law- lor alto i«ra*J a wamlaf to th*«* r*t\»tm4 aliau thai th«r ara ra^alraj to rtawrt aay eh«Mfa In thdhr pannaaaal ra>l4*"c< uMraw wttUa in 4ayi. Tkii r«|»rt matt ba maJa ta tha laiaii- Cratiea aMl NatarallaatkHi Sarrlc* af tha Departaot of Jaatica in Wuhiatta*. Faran far thta raporl m»f ha had at tha Pott Offica. A paaaltr of taa aaal inpriioaaiwit It pravMad hy law for any f«il«Va t» aiaka taaa raportt. Whaa raportlnf taeh a chaat* af ida>»»», aliaat ara ta glva both thair M M aaJ raflitratiaa aaiabar. Hawavatr, Mr. Law- lor »d*!t»J, whara allaai datlra te tnbatlt • ahanfa of a4drati oa Form ARH aad hava not yt» racatrai thair racaipt. Form AR3, thay ahoaU forward tbit artt forai, AR11, withoal tha tarial nanhar which th«y ha»a not yat r—Wod. AS POLIC HEAD HER James Krupa, Domintck Russo, Anthony Michael CARTERET—With midnight of cxt Tuesday the deadline for fli- ng petitions for the Board of Edu- lation election February 11, neith- r party in th» borough ia dacid«d is to its choice of candidates. Lists }f eligiblcs and possible candidates are suggested daily, but to fir at , Warren Bab i, Mary Gal- G.RAPP 10SPITAL (rrandchildren and two great gram children. CoapUnd Celebration The celobratiion tit Mf. and Mr°. Coupland was held at the home of their aon-in-law and datfgbtcr, Mr. and Mrs. William Walsh, of Per ECITAL IS GIVEN HALE STUDEWTS t In Seriet 0. Three Loncerts It Presented By Piano Pupil* i>' l-.KKT—Seven merajbers of I" dub at N«than 'Hale 1 imh i» sponsored by Miss .• •> !. Kramer, entertained : > •! < i> and daaimates at the i iiitily on Monday. This ' pmno solos and duets .: i of three in which dub .ill appear. Kathleen ••••-i Thumasina Siplak wer i u IIf the program and : > !-' ik' the- announetr. -tiira WM as follows: it tn flies, Msclachtan, Dq- i.; Fur Elsie,Beethoven, :.ihmuwitl; Parsdeof the IIUTB, Jess«l, duet, Miss .!.• Howard Wohlgemuth; IL'. Beethoven, "Elaine ii.uk-, Hurgnuoroler, DorU Song, A- SUmep- Berg; Minuet, Pade w Shaaf. shing Avenue. Mrs. Coupland is the former Miss Helen Augusta lioun. Michael | Gildersleeve of RoMville, Staten • ilvanek, Jack | Island, She and Mfi Coupland iiewuk, Hc-rtii- w e r e married in St. Stephen's •Spellinan. (Church in Staten Island and came to live in Carteret thirty years ajto ! Mi. Cc;upland is employM at the U'ibijf plant of the American Agri- cultural Chemical CompafiV. Guests at the dinner Were: Mr. and Mrs. George Walters, Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Van Bo»k«*, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Walters and children, 1 Albert, Elisabeth and Victor, Jr. | of Farminfdale, L, I.: Mr. and George Doban, Brechka. Speakerg at the banquet were: Charles Walling, commander of the V. F.W., Jack Price, commander of the Legion, Clarence H. Slugg, chairman erf the draft board, Wal- ter V. Quin, board member, Na- thaniel A. Jacoby, the board clerk ikiuncilman William Greenwald nd William Carney, chief of the re company. The following morning the quin t of embryo soldiers left th< Jorough Hall at 7:30 A. M. for renton. Mr. Slugg conducted an nduction ceremony. Many friend nd relatives were present for thii last farewell. Fhree Chil- ; Was Ac- rt'i Church CARTERET- me Kapp, pron Civic worker, morning in Kuh pital after u shJ taken to tlv N Mrs. KH|>|I was I Rapp unil iil children, Han >'J lt 1 ) 1 Schwai dren; hei imithl mu; two sisu-rsJ this borough, i bur of RahwHy;| William and George of N'H Robert of Kahv A member <>f.| mittee of St. of the Duiitsht also held mem er local orita luded the K Coropur.'uns of j era of Pocahon Daughters of Auxiliary of tlERET ICIfflJ- FUH K Official Snow. Mo- At High School AJ- sembly On Friday ! Maud Grae- ; i-hurch and -I Wednesday Memorial HOB- be*s. She waa i: on Monday. ;fe of William i \ ivcil by three li.un and Mrs. iif ^rundchil- is. Ella Grae- John Reid of is. Peter Wil- four brothers, of (atteret, ; iinswick, and •xccutivo. com- -. Church and St. Mark, she i in many oth- ns. These in- Stur, Shrine, Oath With Mayor OT« AHeted dumber' PU r - ing Outer Caoie HAURY IS APPOINTED TO HEAD DEPARTMDfT ; fy TA IS ARRANGING PECIALJEEnNG To Have 'Father And Son' empts to settle on a definite slate have failed. Democrats were scheduled to make their final se- ection last night at the time this issue went to press, and the Re- publican organization will meet to- night in another attempt to make final choice. In addition to this indecision as to candidates, a further difficulty exists in a difference of opinion as to exactly how many vacancies are to be filled. Terms expiring are those of Board President Frank Haury and District Clerk Charles Kryazewski, Republicans, and Commissioner Ambrose J. Mud- rak, Democrat. This, plus the va- cancy caused through the resigna- tion of Dr. Louis S. Downs, Re- publican, is admitted by both par- ies. The difference of opinion is whether a vacancy exists in the place to which John R. Sxelag "was Series Of Home Parties To Boost Paralysis War Fund, Opens Here Mrs. NeviH Hasten Yetttrday For Twenty At Tea Mist BHWk TQ flfflfttofa (M Ittxt Tnrtday CARTERET—The first of the home parties planned to raise funds for the relief of infantile paralyais was held Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. Gervase Ne- vill. Twenty guests attended, these being: Mrs. William D. Casey, Mrs. John Hundiak, Mrs. Andrew Christenson, Mrs. P. H. O'Brien, Mrs. John |)unne, Mrs. J. H. Nevill, < : S- Metals Reflnln* Cam -'"•wed a film, "Htotbry of 1 i» student* at Cajt«Toi "l»»>l last Friday. Tn.nlm 1 -'itcrtt at w*rk ana a I UIM) present! scenes in ""ti.: in color, showing the 'i ' artelet sildior* here 't World War. fjie fljia aUc ''"•liKinised u •'» feporte4 at the school »•"'* that » l«rgCBumb«r # ' students itttfldedv the linns re-union W II ( 'lub. Tai* III Hale School. ">'• Freshman I' 1 -iy u film i " from the wn. This men s Auxiliary men's Assr Auxiliary of th sociation of wh)f dent. Members tions have call p»y their tri lulls' menu are not BAR CARTERET- vices were held at the Brothcrhj s for Sanf< Mrs. Rebecca Cl Louis Choilosh. Solomon ctmducj Afterward the/ft the temple and attendaq home.! ihc Keliekahs, tiea, Ladies' llxempt Fire- id the Ladies' Kxempt Fire- id the Ladies' e Cliiefl" AB- he was presi- her lioine to lerul arrangc- miplete. [I /VAH : i: MiUvah ser- ' ii'day morning i f Israel Syna- 1 liodosh, son of Ii h and the late l: tbbi Ephraim ii the ceremony ii it reception at in Sunday 125 mother at the port, L, L; Mt. and Mh. James Kingston, of Brooklyn; Mr, and Mrs. James Kingston, Jr., of Bel mont Park, L I.; Mrs. Florence M Wiel and children, Bdwin, flor ence and Firth, and lir and Mrs James Coupland and ton, James, o Rahway; Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Coup land daughters, Nancy and Mar jcuerite, of Woodbrldge; Mr, an Mis. John Sarik and Mr. and Mrs John Sarik, Jr., of Carteret. William McCarthy Elect* To Employes' AssociaHo CARTERET-rln a special election held Tuesday, William McCafthy was elected as repre- sentative of the U. S..M. R. Em- ployes' Association for the Sco- met Department, succeeding John Gasior who had resigned. Gasior was chairman of the as- sociation. John D'Zurilla, vice-chair,- miin, has moved up into the chairmanship of the association and wilt hold that office until the expiration of the current year. James P. Pftnovan, chair- man of the committee during the past year, waahamed vice- chairman, succeeding D'ZurilU. eltiei Are Planned CARTERET— A Fathers' and Sons' Night will be sponsored by the High School Parent-Teacher Association Wednesday night, Jan- uary 29. Plans were made Tuesday afternoon at a meeting held in the school library under the direction of the president, Mrs. Harry Gleckner. Joseph Comba, Herman Horn and other male members 0 the faculty will arrange a basket ball game and a weenie roast wil! follow. Mrs. William Reidel i chairman of arrangements fo this, and will be assisted by Mor- is Cohen, Mrs. Michael Sofka, Mrs. Robert Shanley, and Mrs Max Schwartz. GOP. To Name Candidates For School Bmd Tonight CARTERET Carteret Re- publican Glut) wull meet at Fire Hall No. 1 tonight, at which time a slate of candidates for the School Election will be present- ed. After the meeting cards will be played and Nfreshmeuts served. The committee in charge consists of Mra, D. Williams, Mrs. K. Walz and Mm. 0. Sager. ilected last February, but which be waa prevented from filling though, proceedings instituted by the late Dr. Herbert L. Strand- berg, on which one year, now re- mains. Dr. Strandberg having been (Continued on Page 2) DEBUTANTES PLAN TO HELP CAMPAIGN Local Girls To Sponsor Dance For Benefit Of Paralysis Sufferers CARTERET — Miss Dorothy Overholt, chairman of the Debu- tantes Committee for the Birthday Ball for the President, announced Mrs. Peter P. Lewer, Mra. Fred Bauerband, Jr., Mrs. Harry Axon, Mre. Thomas Thorn, Mrs. Joseph Hlub, Mrs. Harry Gleckner, ; Mrs. J u W. Mittuch, Mrs. Prank O'Brien, Mrs. John Hila, Mrs. Miehael Holowchuk, Mrs. August Hundemann, Mrs, C. E. Gregory, Mrs. William O'Brien and Miss Mary Carroll NevilL Those attending this party, a bridge-tea, were asked to hold aim' ilar parties in their own homes to ?well the receipt* in the borough. Such parties are new this year And were started at one held jn the White House by the wife of Presi- dent Roosevelt, in whose honor each year the Birthday BaU celts orations.are held throUjrhout Jan- uary. Only one definite.date has been set so far, this to.b,e a party next Tuesday at the home of Miss Floryce Brown, which will be at- tended by members of her bridge club. Same Decoration* Decorations at all such parties are to be identical, consisting of a pyramid of red and white roses flanked by candlesticks in red and blue holders. These are set on tablecloth of white covered in streamers of blue and red. The scheme was) planned by the Dennt son CoinpaVy. Excellnet reports of the progress Plans also were completed for a this wcek lnosc who woul(i serve ;ard party afternoon Brothers be held on Tuosday 'ebruary 4, at Kpoa Rahway. Butes will leave the Ritz Theatre at 1 P. M., and tha Nathan Hale and Washi- ngton schools immediately after- ward. Restrvations may be made with Mrs. Harry Yetman, Mra. Morris Spewak or any member of the P. T. A. The P. T. A. will also assist at the testimonial banquet to be given the Carteret high school football team on Lincoln's birthday, at S t James' Hall. The high school band, under the direction of George Fleischman, will furnish musical entertainment Several prominent speakers will e present at the affair. Mm. C. Perkins is in charge of tickets or the P. T. A. In Match, a mothers' and daugh- rs 'affair will be held, the feature [ which will be a fashion show iut on by a prominent stylist. ommitteea will be named at a ater date. The Carteret Qakthes ST. ItlRIUS ,t JAM; .1 the feast «f|| observed at St.| church u»j of the dMne service*! in the in Htu',,1 of thuble a/tenjinder «fl will tie nietriua Ukrai- : jay. Obsevv- uy betfiiis with meimnation of the baptuim of Jesus by St. John the;J?aJ?Ust. '. The water blewwd ta the church is carried to the the pari- Conclusion of f h shioners. During |*e week after and njhtg; service* mo room i-W 1 ^ ' At the ing services the ii;: of water will v iter is hlemed •ii bautism which [ to receive on •|.,ok in the eve- oonsiBt of tha id Vespeis. Ser- w\ In .inifllin. liiuTTfy «n Sun- i l(( jjtrved at 8 of Ml Epiphany, R«v. Vitim-.'i'to) Hun diiak, pastor, wliHtisIt »hd hless t« homes of all pajrtohloneri in ac oordanue with th* oUitonl preserved by all fcrauehea'.jliJW Ba»teiii Orthodox C»UK"' ~" the early en of St. Demetrius part In the concj jtiven by the c* * Baptist Greek Perth Amiboy with her. These young girls are annually a pretty and colorful fea- ture of the Birthday Ball and are honored by making a special ap- pearance. Serving with Miss Overholt will be the following: Caroline O'Brien, Eleanor Melick, Florence Overholt, Eleanor Harkiewicz, Irene Stal- minski, Eulalie Beech, Eleanor Gatbraith, Mary Carroll Nevill, Rosalie Klosa. Shirley Donovan, Willa Walsh, Wilma Spewak, Dorothy Haas, Emily Marciniak, Johanna Moron- ey, Ethel Kaskiew, Edith Gregor, Anna Marie Dunne, Louisi| TPUV latino. Mary Kilyk, Evelyn* Wadi- ak, Hilda Sokler, Olga Bleaka and Lillian Koblentz. being made were given this week to the local chairman, Frank O'Brien. Plans were furthered for the dance to be held by the Recre- ation Sponsoring Committee at Nathan Hale School under the sup- ervision of Edward A. Strack. Those attending will be asked to donate to the paralysis drive and two representatives of the com' mittee will be present, with a con. tainer for the March of Dimes, to receive contributions The birth- day card committee is delivering and collecting contributions to be made this way, and a canvass also will be made to secure patrons. MEDVETZ FUNERAL TO BE HELD TODAY Victim Of Asphyxiation To Be Buried In Perth Amboy Cemetery CARTERET-Funerul service? were held this morning for Mich- ael Medvetz, seventy-two yearn old, whose death on Wednesday was attributed to asphyxiation The service was conducted fvon: the home of his daughter, Mrs Andrew Karaskai, at ii Leick Ave Tutc, and a solemn high mass fol lowed in Sacred Heart Church Burial was in the family plot i Holy Trinity Cemetery, Perth Am boy. According to Coroner James Flynn Mr. Medvetz was smoking i: bed Tuesday night and ignited h bedclothing. Mrs, Karaakai discov- ered the fire and Dr. J. J. Reason administered first aid. Immediate- ly afterward Mr. Medvetz was tak- en to Perth Amboy General Hos- pital by the First Aid Squad, and he died there the following morn- ing. Although he suffered severe burns, Mr. Flynn said that his death was due to asphyxiation. A resident of Carteret forty ears Mr. Medvetz was the widow- of the late Anna Damich Med- Fifkt Comes Ai Aftenuib To Proposal To Extend Pool-Room Hours CARTERET—A disagreement, between Mayor Joseph W, Hit*] tuch and Councilman Clifford L. Cutter at Wedneaday nlght'i CoWMttt i p a a t i H lawl*ia • » • Mayor removing Mr. Cutter froJJ i his post as Police Commisslonet ' «nd from mamVefaaiy on U» jice Committee and the appoints ment of Councilman Frank H»urf as Police Commissioner. Council- ' man Charles A. Conrad was nam- ed a member of the police commit- i tee. •.'' The battle which enlivened the meeting followed the introduction y Mr. Cutter of an amendment an existing borough ordinance y which poolrooms would be re- uired to close at 2 A. M., week- ays and 1 A. M. Sundays. The resent closinif hour is 11 P. M, Mr. Cutter introduced the propos- after which the Mayor urged members of the Council to consid- er the measure carefully before taking action. He declared some Jarteret poolrooms were "gamb- ing dives" and did not think it for the good of youth here to al- low such places to remain open until so late an hour. He said he had no objection to proper places where billiards are played, The measure however passed, Mildred Brown Engaged To Sidney MA, 0/ Bronx CAOTBRBT—Louis Brown, of 18 U n i o n Street, announct* the mgagement of his sister, Miss Mil- dred Brown, to Sidney Smith, son af Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Smith of the Bronx, New York City. Mb» Brown is the daughter of the tot« Mr.' and ttnr, £amuel Brown of Carteret. No date hw been set for the marriage, Ths p t y brid« graduated from Cartewt High School and attended the Lab- oratory Institute of Merchandism* Y k Mr. Smith U d d D. Of A. Official Installs Officers Of Local Chapter CARTERET—Mrs. A«nes Mul- llns of iPerth Amboy, State Coun- cillor of the Daughters of America, accompanied by her staff officers, came to' Carteret Thursday night and installed the new officers of Pride of Puritan Council, the local chapter of .the order. The cere- monies took place in I. 0. 0. F. Hall and refreshments were served afterward. St. Elizabeth's Sodality Has Election Of Officer CAJtTERET—Officers who havi been elected by the Junior Sodality of St. Elizabeth's Church are a follows: President, Miss Louise Paul; vice president, Miss An Vemjen; secretary, Miss Elizabet! Bellock; treasurer, Miss' Stoke; publicity manager) Mury Makkai; spiritual adviser Rev. Benedict Stulc. Ethe Mia: etz. In addition to Mrs. Karaskai ith whom he lived, he ia survived y two sons, Stephen and John; riother daughter, Mra. Joseph Willua, and five grandchildren, all if Carteret.' The funeral was in barge of Emil Bizub. Ex-Capital Correspondent Addresses School Pupils OARTEROT^Robert Ripley Lane of Summit, editorial writer and lecturer for the Newark Evening News, spoke on current affairs at the weekly High School Assembly. Mr. Lane has surved the fiaws for twenty-eight yeais, nine of which were spent as Washington correspondent. Mr. Lane went tu Hie unpltal in the Coolidge administration and re- mained there during that of Her- bert Hoover and Franklin Roose- velt's first term. He received his education at Amherst Col- lege in Massachusetts and taught school before becoming a news- paper man. He is a member of the Gridiron Club and the Na- tional Press Club. Officers installed were: Mrs. Charles Morris, councillor; Mrs. Cornelius Doody, associate coun- cillor; Mr«. George DeBot, vice Councillor; Mrs. Lillia Kuhfahl, junior past councillor; Mrs. Sidney Barrett, associate vice councillor; Mrs. Fred. Staubach, Inside senti- nel; Uh. Harry Yetman, associate recording secretary; and Miss Alice Barker, trustee. . Fornm At Synagogue To Consider Jews 'in The Current WorHScene' PLAN DANCE CARTERBt—Plans are being wade by the Polish Lady Falcons Writtau MBaciallf far Tat Cartaret Pra*t by Rabbi S*(Biiel Detitich. CARTERiJP—Jewg in the cur- rent world scene will be discussed in the flnt of a series of Forum programs to be held tonight at the Roosevelt Congregation of Loving Justice, 25 Roemdt Avenue. The program, whlc* will start ait i;15, will bet In charge of Samuel PeuUch who will act as »ffkl«tiug rabbi in wvlcee to precede the Forum dtseupslon. Representative* of the H e t o w Spclnl AJtijmee and tha N»ir Turrtid, apon»M* of the wrUs, willgtMt Uw tafterte*. ' are being jeopardized at the pics ent t,ime and that there is no basi; to the assertions of racial Kupiein acy being made by the Nazis. The tremendous lespoibi now being thrust upon Amciioai Jews vili be explained by inferenc and the optimistic assertion that i British victory will ultimately m religious freedom will be sure stressed Spatial Pr«y»r» -Parts of t^e services to preced the Forum lecture will be read in English a^d special prayer" sheets will »•• distributed* Communal the two DemooMtie Council Alphonse Beigert and Mr, Co in the affirmative and Mr. Haury and Councilman Joseph Gahanek in the negative. Councilman Wil- liam Greenwald was absent. Feb- ruary 6, the next regular meeting, ' was set for public hearing, and the Mayor said he invited clergy-i, men, heads of civic organizations and others to appear and oppose the measure. He warned that if it is passed he will see that it is en- forced strictly. , Cutlar In Dafaote ' Mr. Cutter defended poolroom* taunchly and said he could vouch ; they are conducted properly. Mf« . Haury said he opposed the 2 A.M. .closing but would compromise on midnight. "Don't kid yourself, att: poolrooms make a living from poot| tables," he said, and added "some, have to cater to gambling,'num- bers and bookmaking to pay their ' : rents." :v During the dispute, Mr. Cutter charged nothing had been done tflj , .eliminate the writing of numbersi after which the Mayor ask«d hint if it is true numbers are written . here. "Don't make me laugh," Mr. Cutter replied, whereupon the Mayor charged him with failure ta carry out his duties as Police Com- missioner. He pointed out further Mr. Cutter held the post last year and was reappointed this year. Mr. Cutter's removal then followed, espite h)s protest the Mayor did ot have the right. The Mayor as- ;erted he did, and forthwith nam-,, d Mr. Haury his successor. ; A delegation of merchants was., present in the interest of adopt-M ng the federal Food Stamp plan !* for Carteret and Mr. Cutter uigecL' ts adoption, with Messrs. Beigertjj and Conrad supporting him. Mi Haury asked the plan be delayj until he had time to study it his committee was directed, make this study and report, Recaipta R*port«d Rorough Recorder Michael ko turned over $107 colle flues during December and 1. Hereford, building, )iuid in $40 as fees tor ] work to cost ?V8,B00. Taxi or Alexander Coraba rep cumber tax collections were | ,725.20. Mr. Cprabs was sutf thu pruper person to titles and a bond of $88,0 authorized tor Wm, banks ware na.rn.ed ones for boiuugh Jtwo local newspaper* for the publioattojB, notjeea. : Philip Dlednchfrf-J

1300 Weekly - digifind-it.com · 1300 Weekly xiv.—No. 40 CARTERET, N. 4,, U, I»41 WUUM THRBS TwoBoroUplesMarkAnnivmary CANDIDATES Of Their Wedding Fifty Years Ago rAn D A A D n

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1300 Weekly

xiv.—No. 40 CARTERET, N. 4,, U , I»41 WUUM THRBS

TwoBoroUplesMarkAnnivmary CANDIDATESOf Their Wedding Fifty Years Ago r A n D A A D nMr. And Mr$. Jamt Gurka At Tim Mm &a*ri*y; ™ H D U J t R U

Conplands'Cdikate Sunday At Daughter'$ Home 11N f | p P I Tl p fk

National.Officer! Not•„ Re Named Until

fyeiday- \

INSDALE RE-(0 . , PRESIDENT

c r H .Or To MoWWtt Ii,t Chosen; Moody "•"•RWain Hit Place

[ 1 c

Harold

i-'.T - The two locali-ni for the year »t

M Tuesday, although.1, first National Btnk

ill im*..,,,|ny.

ni rot B A k and Trust.! dividend of 8% Wlshi to be paid Febru-

I .t National Bank Am-, i lv. superintendent of• . , v Water Company,

l to the dirrttorat*.. tiirmcily had be«n a

' ihis institution bttt re-i - time ago b e 6 t o i e of,• of other business. Also

in.ctor of thii institutionM Clark. Other di-

, , , . Joseph W. Mittuch,! Wiiss, Iaador* Matuner,.i/i-rsky, I P. Goderstad

;i;n 1). Glass./in,i . Company did not

i in -(-tor to replace the, i Mulvihill, who died

ith. Officers' chosen• i' nt, Williaih Lonsdelcsi.yni.t, Harold I.\ ' nraii mid

t:uy and treasurer,i; Kenyon; assistant t re t s -.. ,sci Gunkel.

.,. nf thi- trust company• '. ( hriatennun, El met E.Mi t'onr»d, Mr, Lonwlale,; • Met U S a w . - M f i J U n -

\li . Stremlau. >

BY F-WCommittee

llaskins

DANCE JHEDULEDEMPLOYES

Named Tcf t P.

beth FeCARTKIIKT

'Otter-Wheelerhold a dinneSeott Hotel, KimMiss Ann ll;iD'Zuritlii mi ' IIEvelyn Emit ti<

Muaic will IiKirch Dinnerdancing 'til i >"|

The ticketWilliam Von t)nHelen Mud i ukNicholas LucasEdward Cunningcock, Vera t><>vanek, Walter (Mitroka, Walt,Oberle, Charl«t(Farrell and

MRS. MAIDIES INHoibanddreo Surviilive In St.

friary 1ployres nf thepoint inn will

| i! at WinfieHh, February 1.i niid Franzrmen and Miss

halrman.

CARTBRBT—Th« past week-nd WRB marked in this borough by

the celebration of the fiftieth wed-ding anniversaries of two couple*.Saturday Mr. and Mrs. John Gurka

f 87 Fitch Street 'marked the;olden anniversary of thnir wed

ding date and on Sunday the sameoccasion WAS celebrated by Mr.and Mrs. James Couptand of LocustStreet.

Matt I* HeldThe Gurkai attended an anniver-

sary iftass sung in Sacred HeartChurch by the pastor, Rev. AndrewJ. Sakson, and then received theirrelatives nnd friend* at their hotneMany gifts and congratulatorymessages arrived throughout theday.

Mr." Gurka retired about fiveyears ago from hU work it foreman for the Central •Ksllrosd ofNew Jersey, The C O « B | | were marnied in New York « M Bved inPerth Amfooy and in E*«t RunwayM O M timiim W m<a» Bute ««•(d'ence in Fitch Street whert theyhave lived many year*. They haveseven children, fttephen of PorReading, Mrs. A. A. Deilly of Rah-way, Mrs. A. F. Thompson o:Fords, Edward of B a t w a y andthree who live in Carteret, MrsJoseph Furian, F u n k and MichaeGurka. There are also eleve

nishe<l by Leoied lit eight;

ttee include*Walter Dodd,

mas Brandon,hn (ioodman

NEW CONSCRIPTSETED AT WNNER

Local Municipal And CivicUnits Tender Banquet

To Service MmCA-RTBRET—A banquet held

Monday night In No. 2 Fire He-nsewan the borough's farewell to thefive men who composed its seeonirroup of men leaving for a year inthe army under the Selective Ser-vice Act. Joining to sponsor thisfarewell were the Fire Company,the American Legion and StarLang Post, Veterans of ForeignWars. Dennis FiUGerald wastoastmaster and presented each ofthe 4rafte«a a gift,Iran, Jjhe. LA-dies Auxiliary of the Legion.

The men honored at the banquetwere : Francis Thomas Tomtauk)

Both Parties Still TryingTo Fill Slate In Time

For Deadline

NUMBER OF VACANCIESSTILL UNDER DISPUTE

Kryszevrski, Haury AndMndrak Terms Expire; 1

Seat In Controversy

Carteret 117 Per Cent AlienPostmatttr Laalor Armu At Ttit Cmduioii Alter

Comptrfnif ftffiriraiioii Of Non-Otiienstotal

J. Uwkr• teUl of

n««. A f««d

CARTE*ET—AJUM tMttitMl* U.7% *fpopnUtloa. Flfvm « M U ( M ky PmtMttorfron IIM t*M«t M|blntl«* •( *HHI liTh« W»r.1,404 aoa-«itls«u HT« la CarUrat.

Of tU* total away «*r« *r« wsaca tb«amany of (•«*• n a n , k«w«T*r, kav* afV tf•ad « krga a iaktr a n taa whrat of etftani aa4 wttt BMSBI*citiimi tka«M*Wa&

la rwraallag laa ra««IU aWlarnlntd ajr (ha <««ta> Mr. Law-lor alto i«ra*J a wamlaf to th*«* r*t\»tm4 aliau thai th«rara ra^alraj to rtawrt aay eh«Mfa In thdhr pannaaaal ra>l4*"c<uMraw wttUa in 4ayi. Tkii r«|»rt matt ba maJa ta tha laiaii-Cratiea aMl NatarallaatkHi Sarrlc* af tha Departaot of Jaaticain Wuhiatta*. Faran far thta raporl m»f ha had at tha PottOffica. A paaaltr of t aa aaal inpriioaaiwit It pravMad hy lawfor any f«il«Va t» aiaka taaa raportt.

Whaa raportlnf taeh a chaat* af ida>»»», aliaat ara ta glvaboth thair M M aaJ raflitratiaa aaiabar. Hawavatr, Mr. Law-lor »d*!t»J, whara allaai datlra te tnbatlt • ahanfa of a4dratioa Form ARH aad hava not yt» racatrai thair racaipt. FormAR3, thay ahoaU forward tbit artt forai, AR11, withoal thatarial nanhar which th«y ha»a not yat r—Wod.

AS POLICHEAD HER

James Krupa, Domintck Russo,Anthony Michael

CARTERET—With midnight ofcxt Tuesday the deadline for fli-

ng petitions for the Board of Edu-lation election February 11, neith-r party in th» borough ia dacid«dis to its choice of candidates. Lists}f eligiblcs and possible candidatesare suggested daily, but to f i r at

, Warren Babi, Mary Gal-

G.RAPP10SPITAL

(rrandchildren and two great gramchildren.

CoapUnd CelebrationThe celobratiion tit Mf. and Mr°.

Coupland was held at the home oftheir aon-in-law and datfgbtcr, Mr.and Mrs. William Walsh, of Per

ECITAL IS GIVENHALE STUDEWTS

t In Seriet 0 . ThreeLoncerts It Presented

By Piano Pupil*i>' l-.KKT—Seven merajbers of

I" dub at N«than 'Hale1 imh i» sponsored by Miss.• •> !. Kramer, entertained

: > •! < i> and daaimates a t thei iiitily on Monday. This

• ' pmno solos and duets• .: i of three in which d u b

.ill appear. Kathleen••••-i Thumasina Siplak wer

i u IIf the program and:> !-' ik' the- announetr.

-tiira WM as follows:it tn flies, Msclachtan, Dq-

i.; Fur Els ie ,Beethoven,:.ihmuwitl; Parsdeof the

• IIUTB, Jess«l, duet, Miss.!.• Howard Wohlgemuth;

IL'. Beethoven, "Elaineii.uk-, Hurgnuoroler, DorU

Song, A- SUmep-Berg; Minuet, Padew Shaaf.

shing Avenue. Mrs. Coupland isthe former Miss Helen Augusta

lioun. Michael | Gildersleeve of RoMville, Staten• ilvanek, Jack | Island, She and Mfi Coupland

iiewuk, Hc-rtii- were married in S t . Stephen's•Spellinan. (Church in Staten Island and came

to live in Carteret thirty years ajto! Mi. Cc;upland is employM at the

U'ibijf plant of the American Agri-cultural Chemical CompafiV.

Guests at the dinner Were: Mr.and Mrs. George Walters, Mr. andMrs. A. T. Van Bo»k«* , Mr. andMrs. Victor Walters and children,

1 Albert, Elisabeth and Victor, Jr.| of Farminfdale, L, I . : Mr. and

George Doban,Brechka.

Speakerg at the banquet were:Charles Walling, commander of theV. F.W., Jack Price, commanderof the Legion, Clarence H. Slugg,chairman erf the draft board, Wal-ter V. Quin, board member, Na-thaniel A. Jacoby, the board clerkikiuncilman William Greenwaldnd William Carney, chief of there company.

The following morning the quint of embryo soldiers left th<

Jorough Hall at 7:30 A. M. forrenton. Mr. Slugg conducted an

nduction ceremony. Many friendnd relatives were present for thii

last farewell.

Fhree Chil-; Was Ac-rt'i Church

CARTERET-me Kapp, pronCivic worker,morning in Kuhpital after u shJtaken to t lv NMrs. KH|>|I was IRapp unil iilchildren, Han >'J

lt1)1 Schwaidren; hei imithlmu; two sisu-rsJthis borough, ibur of RahwHy;|William andGeorge of N'HRobert of Kahv

A member <>f.|mittee of St.of the Duiitshtalso held memer local orita

luded the KCoropur.'uns of jera of Pocahon

Daughters ofAuxiliary of

tlERETICIfflJ- FUHK Official Snow. Mo-At High School AJ-

sembly On Friday

! Maud Grae-; i-hurch and

-I WednesdayMemorial HOB-be*s. She waai: on Monday.;fe of William i\ ivcil by threeli.un and Mrs.iif ^rundchil-is. Ella Grae-John Reid of

is. Peter Wil-four brothers,

of (atteret,; iinswick, and

•xccutivo. com--. Church andSt. Mark, shei in many oth-ns. These in-Stur, Shrine,

Oath With Mayor O T «AHeted dumber' PUr-

ing Outer Caoie

HAURY IS APPOINTEDTO HEAD DEPARTMDfT

;fy

TA IS ARRANGINGPECIALJEEnNG

To Have 'Father And Son'

empts to settle on a definite slatehave failed. Democrats werescheduled to make their final se-ection last night at the time this

issue went to press, and the Re-publican organization will meet to-night in another attempt to make

final choice.

In addition to this indecision asto candidates, a further difficultyexists in a difference of opinion asto exactly how many vacancies areto be filled. Terms expiring arethose of Board President FrankHaury and District Clerk CharlesKryazewski, Republicans, andCommissioner Ambrose J. Mud-rak, Democrat. This, plus the va-cancy caused through the resigna-tion of Dr. Louis S. Downs, Re-publican, is admitted by both par-ies.

The difference of opinion iswhether a vacancy exists in theplace to which John R. Sxelag "was

Series Of Home Parties To BoostParalysis War Fund, Opens HereMrs. NeviH Hasten Yetttrday For Twenty At Tea

Mist BHWk TQ flfflfttofa (M Ittxt TnrtdayCARTERET—The first of the home parties planned to

raise funds for the relief of infantile paralyais was heldWednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. Gervase Ne-vill. Twenty guests attended, these being: Mrs. WilliamD. Casey, Mrs. John Hundiak, Mrs. Andrew Christenson,Mrs. P. H. O'Brien, Mrs. John |)unne, Mrs. J. H. Nevill,

<: S- Metals Reflnln* Cam-'"•wed a film, "Htotbry of

1 i» student* at Cajt«Toi"l»»>l last Friday. Tn.nlm

1 -'itcrtt at w*rk ana aI UIM) present! scenes in

""ti.: in color, showing the'i ' artelet sildior* here

't World War. fjie fljia aUc''"•liKinisedu •'» feporte4 a t t h e school»•"'* that » l«rgCBumb«r #' students i t t t f ldedv thelinns re-union WII ('lub. Tai*III Hale School.

">'• FreshmanI'1 -iy u film i

" from thewn. This

men sAuxiliarymen's AssrAuxiliary of thsociation of wh)fdent. Memberstions have callp»y their tri lulls'm e n u are not

BARCARTERET-

vices were heldat the Brothcrhj

s for Sanf<Mrs. Rebecca ClLouis Choilosh.Solomon ctmducjAfterward the/ftthe temple and

attendaqhome.!

ihc Keliekahs,tiea, Ladies'llxempt Fire-id the Ladies'Kxempt Fire-id the Ladies'e Cliiefl" AB-he was presi-

her lioine tolerul arrangc-miplete.

[I /VAH: i: MiUvah ser-' ii'day morningi f Israel Syna-

1 liodosh, son ofIi h and the latel: tbbi Ephraimii the ceremonyii it reception atin Sunday 125mother at the

port, L, L; Mt. and M h . JamesKingston, of Brooklyn; Mr, andMrs. James Kingston, Jr. , of Belmont Park, L I.; Mrs. Florence MWiel and children, Bdwin, f l o rence and Firth, and l i r and MrsJames Coupland and ton, James, oRahway; Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Coupland daughters, Nancy and Marjcuerite, of Woodbrldge; Mr, anMis. John Sarik and Mr. and MrsJohn Sarik, Jr., of Carteret.

William McCarthy Elect*To Employes' AssociaHo

CARTERET-r ln a specialelection held Tuesday, WilliamMcCafthy was elected as repre-sentative of the U. S..M. R. Em-ployes' Association for the Sco-met Department, succeedingJohn Gasior who had resigned.Gasior was chairman of the as-sociation.

John D'Zurilla, vice-chair,-miin, has moved up into thechairmanship of the associationand wilt hold that office untilthe expiration of the currentyear. James P. Pftnovan, chair-man of the committee duringthe past year, waahamed vice-

chairman, succeeding D'ZurilU.

eltiei Are PlannedC A R T E R E T — A Fathers' and

Sons' Night will be sponsored bythe High School Parent-TeacherAssociation Wednesday night, Jan-uary 29. Plans were made Tuesdayafternoon at a meeting held in theschool library under the directionof the president, Mrs. HarryGleckner. Joseph Comba, HermanHorn and other male members 0the faculty will arrange a basketball game and a weenie roast wil!follow. Mrs. William Reidel ichairman of arrangements fothis, and will be assisted by Mor-

is Cohen, Mrs. Michael Sofka,Mrs. Robert Shanley, and MrsMax Schwartz.

GOP. To Name CandidatesFor School Bmd Tonight

CARTERET — Carteret Re-publican Glut) wull meet at FireHall No. 1 tonight, a t whichtime a slate of candidates for theSchool Election will be present-ed.

After the meet ing cards willbe played and Nfreshmeutsserved. The committee in chargeconsists of Mra, D. Williams,Mrs. K. Walz and Mm. 0 . Sager.

ilected last February, but whichbe waa prevented from fillingthough , proceedings instituted by

the late Dr. Herbert L. Strand-berg, on which one year, now re-mains. Dr. Strandberg having been

(Continued on Page 2)

DEBUTANTES PLANTO HELP CAMPAIGNLocal Girls To Sponsor

Dance For Benefit OfParalysis Sufferers

CARTERET — Miss DorothyOverholt, chairman of the Debu-tantes Committee for the BirthdayBall for the President, announced

Mrs. Peter P. Lewer, Mra. Fred

Bauerband, Jr., Mrs. Harry Axon,

Mre. Thomas Thorn, Mrs. Joseph

Hlub, Mrs. Harry Gleckner,; Mrs.

Ju W. Mittuch, Mrs. Prank

O'Brien, Mrs. John Hila, Mrs.

Miehael Holowchuk, Mrs. August

Hundemann, Mrs, C. E. Gregory,

Mrs. William O'Brien and Miss

Mary Carroll NevilL

Those attending this party, abridge-tea, were asked to hold aim'ilar parties in their own homes to?well the receipt* in the borough.Such parties are new this year Andwere started at one held jn theWhite House by the wife of Presi-dent Roosevelt, in whose honoreach year the Birthday BaU celtsorations.are held throUjrhout Jan-uary. Only one definite.date hasbeen set so far, this to.b,e a partynext Tuesday at the home of MissFloryce Brown, which will be at-tended by members of her bridgeclub.

Same Decoration*Decorations at all such parties

are to be identical, consisting of apyramid of red and white rosesflanked by candlesticks in red andblue holders. These are set ontablecloth of white covered instreamers of blue and red. Thescheme was) planned by the Denntson CoinpaVy.

Excellnet reports of the progress

Plans also were completed for a t h i s w c e k l n o s c w h o w o u l ( i s e r v e

;ard partyafternoonBrothers

be held on Tuosday'ebruary 4, at KpoaRahway. Butes will

leave the Ritz Theatre at 1 P. M.,and tha Nathan Hale and Washi-ngton schools immediately after-

ward. Restrvations may be madewith Mrs. Harry Yetman, Mra.Morris Spewak or any member ofthe P. T. A.

The P. T. A. will also assist atthe testimonial banquet to be giventhe Carteret high school footballteam on Lincoln's birthday, at S tJames' Hall. The high school band,under the direction of GeorgeFleischman, will furnish musicalentertainment

Several prominent speakers wille present at the affair. Mm. C.

Perkins is in charge of ticketsor the P. T. A.

In Match, a mothers' and daugh-rs 'affair will be held, the feature[ which will be a fashion showiut on by a prominent stylist.ommitteea will be named at a

ater date.

The Carteret QakthesST. ItlRIUS

, tJAM;

.1

t h e feast «f | |observed at St.|

church u»jof the

dMne service*!in the

inHtu',,1 of thuble

a/tenjinder «fl

will tienietriua Ukrai-: j ay . Obsevv-uy betfiiis with

meimnation of the baptuim of Jesus

by St. John the ;J?aJ?Ust. ' .

The water blewwd ta the church

is carried to the the pari-

Conclusion off h

shioners. During | * e week after

andnjhtg; service*

moroom

i-W1^ '

At the• ing services theii;: of water willv iter is hlemed•ii bautism which[ to receive on•|.,ok in the eve-

oonsiBt of thaid Vespeis. Ser-w\ In .inifllin.liiuTTfy «n Sun-il(( jjtrved at 8

of

M l

Epiphany, R«v. Vitim-.'i'to) Hundiiak, pastor, w l iHt i s I t »hd hlesst« homes of all pajrtohloneri in acoordanue with th* oUitonl preservedby all fcrauehea'.jliJW Ba»teiiiOrthodox C » U K " ' ~"the early en of

St. Demetriuspart In the concjjtiven by the c* *Baptist GreekPerth Amiboy

with her. These young girls areannually a pretty and colorful fea-ture of the Birthday Ball and arehonored by making a special ap-pearance.

Serving with Miss Overholt willbe the following: Caroline O'Brien,Eleanor Melick, Florence Overholt,Eleanor Harkiewicz, Irene Stal-minski, Eulalie Beech, EleanorGatbraith, Mary Carroll Nevill ,Rosalie Klosa.

Shirley Donovan, Willa Walsh,Wilma Spewak, Dorothy Haas,Emily Marciniak, Johanna Moron-ey, Ethel Kaskiew, Edith Gregor,Anna Marie Dunne, Louisi| TPUVlatino. Mary Kilyk, Evelyn* Wadi-ak, Hilda Sokler, Olga Bleaka andLillian Koblentz.

being made were given this weekto the local chairman, FrankO'Brien. Plans were furthered forthe dance to be held by the Recre-ation Sponsoring Committee atNathan Hale School under the sup-ervision of Edward A. Strack.Those attending will be asked todonate to the paralysis drive andtwo representatives of the com'mittee will be present, with a con.tainer for the March of Dimes, toreceive contributions The birth-day card committee is deliveringand collecting contributions to bemade this way, and a canvass alsowill be made to secure patrons.

MEDVETZ FUNERALTO BE HELD TODAYVictim Of Asphyxiation To

Be Buried In PerthAmboy Cemetery

C A R T E R E T - F u n e r u l service?were held this morning for Mich-ael Medvetz, seventy-two yearnold, whose death on Wednesdaywas attributed to asphyxiationThe service was conducted fvon:the home of his daughter, MrsAndrew Karaskai, at ii Leick AveTutc, and a solemn high mass followed in Sacred Heart ChurchBurial was in the family plot iHoly Trinity Cemetery, Perth Amboy.

According to Coroner JamesFlynn Mr. Medvetz was smoking i:bed Tuesday night and ignited hbedclothing. Mrs, Karaakai discov-ered the fire and Dr. J. J. Reasonadministered first aid. Immediate-ly afterward Mr. Medvetz was tak-en to Perth Amboy General Hos-pital by the First Aid Squad, andhe died there the following morn-ing. Although he suffered severeburns, Mr. Flynn said that hisdeath was due to asphyxiation.

A resident of Carteret fortyears Mr. Medvetz was the widow-

of the late Anna Damich Med-

Fifkt Comes Ai AftenuibTo Proposal To Extend

Pool-Room Hours

CARTERET—A disagreement ,between Mayor Joseph W, H i t * ]tuch and Councilman Clifford L .Cutter at Wedneaday nlght'iCoWMttt ipaat iH l a w l * i a •» •Mayor removing Mr. Cutter froJJ ihis post as Police Commisslonet '«nd from mamVefaaiy on U »jice Committee and the appointsment of Councilman Frank H»urfas Police Commissioner. Council- 'man Charles A. Conrad was nam-ed a member of the police commit- itee. •.''

The battle which enlivened themeeting followed the introduction

y Mr. Cutter of an amendmentan existing borough ordinance

y which poolrooms would be re-uired to close at 2 A. M., week-ays and 1 A. M. Sundays. Theresent closinif hour is 11 P. M,

Mr. Cutter introduced the propos-after which the Mayor urged

members of the Council to consid-er the measure carefully beforetaking action. He declared someJarteret poolrooms were "gamb-ing dives" and did not think it

for the good of youth here to al-low such places to remain openuntil so late an hour. He said h ehad no objection to proper placeswhere billiards are played,

The measure however passed,

Mildred Brown EngagedTo Sidney M A , 0/ Bronx

CAOTBRBT—Louis Brown, of18 Union Street, announct* themgagement of his sister, Miss Mil-

dred Brown, to Sidney Smith, sonaf Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Smith ofthe Bronx, New York City. Mb»Brown is the daughter of the tot«Mr.' and ttnr, £amue l Brown ofCarteret. No date h w been set

for the marriage, Ths p t ybrid« graduated from CartewtHigh School and attended the Lab-oratory Institute of Merchandism*

Y k Mr. Smith U d d

D. Of A. Official InstallsOfficers Of Local Chapter

CARTERET—Mrs. A«nes Mul-llns of iPerth Amboy, State Coun-cillor o f the Daughters of America,accompanied by her staff officers,came to' Carteret Thursday nightand installed the new officers ofPride o f Puritan Council, the localchapter of .the order. The cere-monies took place in I. 0 . 0 . F.Hall and refreshments were servedafterward.

St. Elizabeth's SodalityHas Election Of Officer

CAJtTERET—Officers who havibeen elected by the Junior Sodalityof St. Elizabeth's Church are afollows: President, Miss LouisePaul; vice president, Miss AnVemjen; secretary, Miss Elizabet!Bellock; treasurer, Miss'Stoke; publicity manager)Mury Makkai; spiritual adviserRev. Benedict Stulc.

EtheMia:

etz. In addition to Mrs. Karaskaiith whom he lived, he ia survivedy two sons, Stephen and John;riother daughter, Mra. Joseph

Willua, and five grandchildren, allif Carteret. ' The funeral was inbarge of Emil Bizub.

Ex-Capital CorrespondentAddresses School Pupils

O A R T E R O T ^ R o b e r t RipleyLane of Summit, editorial writerand lecturer for the NewarkEvening News, spoke on currentaffairs at the weekly High SchoolAssembly. Mr. Lane has survedthe f iaws for twenty-eight yeais ,nine of which were spent asWashington correspondent. Mr.Lane went tu Hie unpltal in theCoolidge administration and re-mained there during that of Her-bert Hoover and Franklin Roose-velt's first term. He receivedhis education at Amherst Col-lege in Massachusetts and taughtschool before becoming a news-paper man. He is a member ofthe Gridiron Club and the Na-tional Press Club.

Officers installed were: Mrs.Charles Morris, councillor; Mrs.Cornelius Doody, associate coun-cillor; Mr«. George DeBot, viceCouncillor; Mrs. Lillia Kuhfahl,junior past councillor; Mrs. SidneyBarrett, associate vice councillor;Mrs. Fred. Staubach, Inside senti-nel; Uh. Harry Yetman, associaterecording secretary; and Miss AliceBarker, trustee. .

Fornm At Synagogue To ConsiderJews 'in The Current WorHScene'

PLAN DANCECARTERBt—Plans are being

wade by the Polish Lady Falcons

Writtau MBaciallf far T a tCartaret Pra*t by Rabbi S*(BiielDetitich.

CARTERiJP—Jewg in the cur-rent world scene will be discussedin the flnt of a series of Forumprograms to be held tonight at theRoosevelt Congregation of LovingJustice, 25 Roemdt Avenue.

The program, whlc* will start aiti;15, will bet In charge of SamuelPeuUch who will act as »ffkl«tiugrabbi in wvlcee to precede theForum dtseupslon. Representative*of the H e t o w Spclnl AJtijmee andtha N»ir Turrtid, apon»M* of thewrUs, willgtMt Uw tafterte*. '

are be ing jeopardized at the picsent t,ime and that there is no basi;to the assertions of racial Kupieinacy being made by the Nazis.

The tremendous l e s p o i b inow being thrust upon AmciioaiJews v i l i be explained by inferencand the optimistic assertion that iBritish victory will ultimately m

religious freedom will besurestressed

Spatial Pr«y»r»-Parts of t^e services to preced

the Forum lecture will be read inEnglish a^d special prayer" sheetswill »•• distributed* Communal

the two DemooMtie CouncilAlphonse Beigert and Mr, Coin the affirmative and Mr. Hauryand Councilman Joseph Gahanekin the negative. Councilman Wil-liam Greenwald was absent. Feb-ruary 6, the next regular meeting, 'was set for public hearing, andthe Mayor said he invited clergy-i,men, heads of civic organizationsand others to appear and opposethe measure. He warned that if itis passed he will see that it is en-forced strictly. ,

Cutlar In Dafaote 'Mr. Cutter defended poolroom*

taunchly and said he could vouch ;they are conducted properly. Mf« .Haury said he opposed the 2 A.M..closing but would compromise onmidnight. "Don't kid yourself, att:poolrooms make a living from poot|tables," he said, and added "some,have to cater to gambling,'num-bers and bookmaking to pay their ':rents." :v

During the dispute, Mr. Cuttercharged nothing had been done tflj ,.eliminate the writing of numbersiafter which the Mayor ask«d hintif it is true numbers are written .here. "Don't make me laugh," Mr.Cutter replied, whereupon theMayor charged him with failure tacarry out his duties as Police Com-missioner. He pointed out furtherMr. Cutter held the post last yearand was reappointed this year. Mr.Cutter's removal then followed,

espite h)s protest the Mayor didot have the right. The Mayor as-

;erted he did, and forthwith nam-,,d Mr. Haury his successor. ;

A delegation of merchants was.,present in the interest of adopt-Mng the federal Food Stamp plan !*for Carteret and Mr. Cutter uigecL'ts adoption, with Messrs. Beigertjj

and Conrad supporting him. MiHaury asked the plan be delayjuntil he had time to study ithis committee was directed,make this study and report,

Recaipta R*port«dRorough Recorder Michael

ko turned over $107 colleflues during December and1. Hereford, building,)iuid in $40 as fees tor ]work to cost ?V8,B00. Taxior Alexander Coraba repcumber tax collections were |,725.20. Mr. Cprabs was sutfthu pruper person totitles and a bond of $88,0authorized tor Wm,banks ware na.rn.ed •ones for boiuughJtwo local newspaper*

for the publioattojB,notjeea. :

Philip Dlednchfrf-J

HUDA& JANUARY 17,1H1

Modern Litrnttitre TopicClub Nhrting

</ARTFT?FT \fi-- I

otmhun "f th»' Knp-lf'h

ifnt at ''«' •<••>< f Mich Srhiwl «|i"l.i

n mnrlfin litnntin" hi-fmc" m m

r* of thr KicrritiK Department "

• Ciirli'rrl Woman*" <'\«b Mtm

f nifht. Th* m»<>1in« w«« h''V

the home <>f Miss HHen lloil IIT

pper R n w i f l l Avert"'1 nin*'

fWi-hr Ziirnhn. W;III<I« Krtorr, C*wine MloCnthfrin* (Iri'di, Annt IJTWHII-W'sky, .Iiilin (ilnd». Albinfl Mur-

larclln, Mrs. Witlinm Thorn, Mrsilin- Heindtsofl, Ml«»ml \fiss Utfl, Hi

of at the conclusion Tf the pinrnm.

TO MOl.T> DKNCBCARTKKKT The Bronme ami

invninn (lirls will hold their thirdflnunl rlnncp SftturdAy nilOht, Kcb-Bury **, in Fnirnn Hull. At Kiilla'srchi«lfft will pvnrinV thf nwair.

BAND TO REHEARSECAUTKIIKT Members of !he

AM bond of No, 1! Ftff„•,.!. furt II-IICBIHHN

TO MARK ANNIVF.RSVUY'AKTKUKT Mt-mhoi . ' Courtr l r . \ ' M i l ' l i . t : i t ! i . . h i l > n i i ( r h -

. n f A r m - I T U , I I O W | ' l : n - ! " t « » M

, .,, ,| | , . | i > i f . i i H i r i i i l ) •'• u n i t

CLASSIFIEDFOR RENT

FOR SALE

l l M l l l > l i > >

**frhra1r '*"* Mvryiticth nnr

,f ttV I""!! on April 1 >H P t i t - : i ' i - i n i - l i : i ! | ( r n f V

bl f - i injr . M r s A l p h o r w f J l

i.-- l l n V ' i i d I f u r n ' ii-

IlMlim" F l l m k r .

John

PkttyikiOf Cardinal AthleticClab

fin Mittvth Store (ontntAVithnr »"»•«»CARTERK.T

DHVKI Cnrsim of Wn

Awnn* nre nnnonnrnlwinner* nf the first pii?'.Junior Fluxine** Moildot o t which has liern <•• >liy the two MiMurh Drmr Htori-sfor thfV"t w v o m l mnnllm.

E«*h Hoy will r i f v c n

in thf('on-

Mill

Hi i ' f I T • ! • : ii

\ ' I ; | I | I | |

-. Illi-HI

H « |

I d I I j O l l i l H t d l l l R

I ! I H M ! f o r u n t o

v i i f i l i i l n n . T i ' l f -i-k I I : M - M . I - I Imm net. Apply' i . r l i r c t . 1-10

WANTED' A l ",l' .1. • ] ! . 1 . • i • r I ,Mire. N

Tor rr. IS

\ N'TKl)

thirty other winnor* will \<c giv-en awards. The»o will In- (tiventomorrow ri«ht at 8 IV M., «ttin' .utmi's, KUHHO w<rn tIi<• (on-to«t which h«d its h*nili|tiiirtemnt thp nthiT at 61 KnowvetiAvfnnc nnH Canion trinmphertin tho one coniluctnl nt th<*store loriilril lit 71 Wiiilnnifton

Special Prizes Are GivenAt Party h Bwnet Hme

< ' A R T B H K T . M r « V<-<»<\> <'•*>•n nnrl Mr*. Ttinmm V Kurkc re-• ivrrl jipn'iiO iiwnrd1: Tncsrtny

n i / h t ; il l l u 1 i . i i<J j u i i : y j I ' . i ' i i h y

C A U ' l T l i K T T h e C : n t . ' n ' l C m

( l i n n l * A t h l i - l i c a n d S»>ri«l ( h i l . IIM*

i - l i ' c t i ' d t h f f n l l n w i h l ! i i f t i i ' i ' r - • I ' l r ;

irt*!!*, .Inwph (1ip<i'',v»l<i; v-icr (iri'sident, l.ro Vovjil.; ii'ctcfni y. JohnJ.iislcv; finiiin'inl •"'rrrlin y. Thf<dorV I!*>f"wM; tr^mirrr, StfltilryM8r(cTt*r.i*k; rtntinKir of (hV> liir-c

Candidates ForI I'trntiiuiftl frniv /'(tiff 1)

ro elri»tpi! to thiv Imnrd n shortlime hrforc his denth in February.

«(ter,

The rm trudictory situation itis pointprl out exist* in that thfl>cr»oernt.i, while preventingS^.el.tit frbm «ittiri(? on th*(intend he is n^WtVptpim sllll R

linll li'nm. Cnluid Cnmhii; rspt.-mi,. nifmhrr of tho hoard through its,lf*ri rti7*>trrwt*i; Iwiokin* mnn failnri* to declare His seat, v»c»nt

.!orm Mnc7ynsl<i; |inliliritv' hy A specific resolution. Rls n«nn*Frank FVnknpfrtk ; sci is im'tiift*1^ in the roll call at each

(fcnnts-iit-ai'iiiH, linymond Bun- hoard meeting, therefore he i«,flh<l K<)wnTi1 Cifi'sVn; IIIH htitfllsn ii! not a m'eTrther, I*V this

Walter ntinmnsH Kdw«r.| rensoninp. Their iMerrtmn, a* f i rus rfm he learnci), is to run onlyfour candidate?! next month.

Tin1 He]>ithlicnns, it is rfnorted,fnnfpnii on the otrret hand thatthere are five vscarrcitti in that

ters,Vltis!«t »nd Frank Prokopiak

y Fmn B<tr(f Attendffbfy Home Dinner Sunday

CA'RTFsRKT Twouly loralmen went, to Trent'ni Sunday toattend th» diwrSNUh conferenceanJ dinner of Hrdy Name Sooie-tiw, Tr*M represented the so-cifti*s nf fhnr (!ftrterct Catholicctttirfhes shil werr ns follows:Si, Joseph's Church, Rs». JamesnfrLennon, O.S.M., Frank Kear-ney, J. B. O'Donnell, I.eo Cou(;h-lin, Edward Dolan and EdwardLloyd; Hdly N»me Church, Rev.Df. Jflset>h Ytt'tfiAMt, MichaelYarrheski, Joseph Synowiecki,Stephen Ciy7*W3ki. Charles

!li<.' lime diirirrir *hlc,ti Mr.r'oulil hnvc appcnlerl his case ex-pired some time ago, therefore heis not officially « member of tha

Jbonrd. They plan to nominate five

home in Ijiiinwinner'; ivi-reMrs. MortonBehest!*, Mrs,Michael Hrml

fi'llow Strcri: Mr«. WillinmLeVnn, Mru.Krnnk Crnipii.y, Mis: Miiiy

Oth«i''nlc.

Mrs,

ii ft• . ' ; . , /

i if

MISCELLANEOUS

iKI,H<T1II(

in H ip«|M)iist-f

}r. -<tilontIn! and CinmrrlillI,((rilling und Wiring

,1*7 School HtrrHWomlhrldnf, N. .r. fl-lStr,

FIREWOOD

Wy, Mrs. Eiwood V:inr>e venter,Mis. Arthur MfcNully. \fr«. JohnKfnnerly, Mrs. Hreurd nnnis, Mrs.Alrnn Kelly^ MTK, l .m Cmiiphlin,Mis* M«ry SiiKnic and Mr , Ron-nor.

JOSBF»H CLBMENTINO

f'AFlTERBT -Fum-ni l M-rviceswere helH rft th* l.ymmi luneralI-Trtmt- on Friday for .li^opli n*Trt-cntitio, nixty years of age. of 231Perxhiiifr Avenue. Mi (llementino,also known «« Clement, dieil Wed-nesday in Perth Aniliuy CenernlHospital. Burial was in Hose HillCemetery, Linden.

nPHHATOns TTAYfEnU'N.Y I M.M'SNIOII COMPANY

II:AM-TTK ST,

SITUATION WANTED\t: M ' H I S n f i iff , . I t i -Bt l - I 'M c t l i p l ' " ' -

n l . A l l \ k l n i l n ! n ' W l t a t ' < ' , ' j i t -

. - m i v « - i . r l < i n , . f i - r r , ' , | . A i l d r . - » 5

A , l i i i l i ' i n ' i i i l r ' u i - L c i u l i - r 1 - 1 7 *

'blueyou can't heat it

SAVE— buy* it NOW

JOHN! BITTINGCALL WO IMW12

n-rr- ..mi.. ,,.,

Free Buses T<rIEN0SH1? PARTY

at Scott Hall, Elintbrth

VERY WEDNESDAYND FRIDAY MM

IllKh mAb

Avt, H( Wi.hlO« XI., Perth Ambilj

Ilulldlui,

toiiacvrlt Avr«.,

The Dm

tllM p, M|

aviB P.M.

DiS* P.M.

* ttoevf-uuuull

iRMT INDUSTRY

A short • i 9i In any owrofeur th, . tMi will qldiitfr y*« lor a b l |

ring jolt building akplaMi Ofiliplana molort. All <aun«( « •

i undt/ my « r.d

dual** I*/ air-

•Ir cnrMi ««nlnji. Mm day•v»ninj t|tttt«t new lormlnf,

Mp

D* M >

HiriM- f*

HAS OPERATIONCARTERBT--Mrs. Lenn D'Al-

lessio of .11 Pershinj; Avenue is apatient in Lincoln Hospital, New-ark, recuperatinfc from an optaTK-tion which she urxlerwciit on Sitt-urday.

OLBRICHT ILLCARTKHKT- ,I,,|,i] S. OlhripJit

ot No. 'l Kno CnnipHiiy is ill «this home in Locust Street.

St. Elitflwth's Church, Rev.BeneilUt ^itilc, O.F.M., John Ps-linkas, Stephen JBCOI), Stephen

«nd Miichacl Lec-koj sacred(Mmr, Wv. • AmffT^ ,r., ,h»wph Mukowsky. .lo-

aeptl (\. ShutHIo ii rid .lohnIVIIIHIIR

Agw-in the suggestion has- bewn

I that om; of the candidates be a| woman. However,.the general feel-ing is thai thi* would ntot be a'populnr or wir.ninR move, at thmtime.

Hanrr Ii fttluettneThe (r al-trr of earrtifiJatfe* arid

j the refusal of severe! incumbentsI to run airfin has brought into con-sideration many iww nam«. Mf.Haury it is RAid by his fHendA,

(,'ented he he on a slate inc-hidingforoicr Commissioner Joneph (!al-vanek, Mayor Joseph W. Mittuehand John Reid. This ticket, felt tt>

8l»rt f«m will find eowpletf | bp a strong one, however i\\A notcoy«ra«« of «J1 local tCtWMes OP • ,)>atpriali7.o as MCSSITB.th% gpttu PWrti

erf'ARTERET Announreinent

hm lw*fl mnile by Mr. omi Mir,MaWrice Spfwait nf 2R8 Roflsevrtt Aveniif of t\w (fi)r«(f»>tnpntof their daughter, Mis? (Char-lotte Wadanis Spewnk, to Ste-p(s<*t B»k*a, »on of Mr. and Mr*.Cnnrles nnksn nf H'.O HighStreet. Misn Sp«\vftk in a £l'*<iv-»ie of CRrtctrt Wi(rh Sehnol nrrt»the Prntt Secretarial School inNPT» York. Mr. Baksn KradlrttMfloni <"arteret Ftiph School andfrem Steverft FnWitirte of TVch-

t in

such nominntions.Mudrak also has declared himselfirtderidod as to whethnt- he wfllrrtn a*»in or not. The chdke ntrunning mates for him is also be-lieved to influence hi* decision.

Mr. KrysT.ewksi is reported aswiaMrrit to retire.

Names undei consideration byt ReptaMicnn* h*ve included An-

drew Bodhar, Walter Vonah, Jr.,Hercules Ellis, John Terebelsky,Rev. Alexander Daroczy, formerBoard President William D. Ha^-ah, Piter Kuhula, pTesidont ofthe BobM of Henlth, Wiilium Sit-ar, Charins Rldun, Robert Farisaand several others.

Trw> Democratic slate it is be-lieved by many will be composedof Adam Makwjnski, Mr. Mudrak,Frftnk Kenrney and Stephen Ski-

pirt forward as a possible candi-date and should a woman be nom-inated it is believed the

would run Mrs,crats

n*mm mm

| und Mittuch refused to accept any election board.

Demo-Frank

O'ftrien (the former Miss Jose-phine Dfvereux) a member of the

EVERY

100

St. Jiames'

BSHSMtiHBfflBSMM

MONDAY

§

MM.

NIGHT AT 8

e266

r

6:3«P. M.

seeWowlbridfe

ARE YOU PREPARED- TO Btivl NOW?Then why not come in and make acareful examination of our stockIn 26 yearn thoujanda of people have purchased

uaed car* from u». Mkny have repeated, Which, toi», i« a teetimonial of service and satisfaction.

Thi» record ha» been made powible by the care-hil selection of u«cd car* we offer for sale to retailpurchaser*.

Wrecks and cars that have beetl abused throughlack of care of extensive mileage are sold at whole-sale and not in our showroom*.

We u»e our used caf department to build satis-fied friends who we hope will eventually purchase anew Buick.

150 BARGAINS HO CHOOSE FROM

The followiog are j ml af^wexamples1940 Pontiac butiness

coop*, 8 ojrllndef, »pien-did Bedford doth up-boiM«ry, lkr|^ insidereap ded*;. very smallmileage, $$26.

Packard "8"tedan, popular

1937 Dodge de luxed»n, in attractive greVimohair uphoUterly and'ill e c h anical conditionA-l, radio and heater,from original owner,$37B.

1939 Oldtmobile 4dftortouring sedan, 0 cyllivder model, black, «tl<around condition exwsl-lent, an economical c*l"for hard wear, $575.

1938 LaSalle trunk sedan;radio and heater, oriolnal factory paint niutht<$675.

1939 Mercury convertiblecoupe, «eat» 5 paaMHogera, ha» radio an*heater, and penetratingipotlite, whitewal(>tiM*it'» in a beautiful ma-roon color, tan top, hadone careful owner, $A9S-

Low»»t General Motor* finance charge, and smallmonthly payment! t» At y»w automobile bydgat

towndark

blue, siit cylinder model,radio, heater, durableslip covert, white walltires, mechanically per-fect, from the originalowner, $69S<

1939 Mwxury, sedan, 4-*wr, with radio andheater; white wall tires,attractive Bedford clothupholstery in like newcsndition^ its a genuinebi

fLmm

Heed the advice of wise Be« Franklin—"Takecare cf your pennies and your dollars will takecare of themselves!1* To which we add, SAVEPENNIES WHERE PENNIES£OUNT . . . on yourdaily needs! Buy the BIG StZE . . . you get morefor your money and our rock-bottom prices assureyou of even greater savings!

2 Quart M f t

Hot Water Btttfe 4 M500s

Ponds Tissues$1,00 Irooized Jmi (..fi7c

35c M s fapernb ...Z7e25c B. C. Head>

ache Powd«r> 19c

40c Laxative BromoQuinine 27t

1.00 Rem fbrCoughs 79c

VITAMIN TESTED

1 pt. Pure God LiverOil . 4 9 c

60c AlkaSdtier . . « c4-OZ. S1ZB

McKesjoti's Vitamin ».Complex Liquid'$1, I f

l-QT. SI2E#

Nyseptol Antiseptic 69c

23c sine Lirterine TowtfcPa,t«, 3 tubts for 56c

Kot«x rtMrve pkg,,30k

Chevron Electric(3 Heat,)

5 lb. Epiwn Siit

r15c

RIGHTtb the Point

Ingredient* measuredby- u* bKlaace perfectlywith the quantities spe-cified in the prescrip-tion TSiff iv imporUntbecause the eificlentyot the medicine . . ,sometimes lira itself . .depend* uoott the ac-our«y with which the* « * • ar* dispensed:"Wat is why We nevergive "good m»a«ire"but insist upon every-nwature being RIGHTt» (he point

M i r T

S t a t e t a x . • o l l e . - l i o n s ( " f I " 1 1 , ' . . d a r t f M| , ,n- '1 - l > 0 '

IffiASt•Te e s t i m a t e d M* S J.CK1'- ,.,,,,.. : rO1« « ^ » m » W 8

out, that t h e y • • I " ' " ' , | „,!»,' • • • ' « " • f f <*' Hxitmtj 20thettnie ftt «

Btef offered by AcmB M a r k ^ . " ' • _mnrkef affords. This b«M .* «"» ^ f

of Agriculturf. expert ,

^ Acme i« th in ly

Smoked Hj2?-%,ft^-Milk-fed V*Legs or f

Onr finest mllls-r.it n-nl. i;n.»n In \< ' lM"

Government Gra

Chuck Roisl n>21The >.iune mi Hi . „ „ , . ( , , ( 1 I , H i n t . , f , , n • by ttwr

Pot Roast»,.*• „•.,»

i , , , , i r , .r t i n "0. s.

SEASOU' PAMDUS BLUE GOOSE

Bby! Alt msaiyt large andt ] qutJity.

Jumbo jrfeiafruitolorNatur? Color Orangti

BHhfCtttoGardeiSpinacK

IB ** 23cbunch.

JuicySunkiiCaliforia Cttcvo RtaraFiticyT«n<teiC«i

4 »• 13cIOc

CAMAYLaundry Soap

8 """• 23 C

CHP3OFlaktt. . GHUttlm

l«r({i'

Kritpy CrackersNBC Pride AssortMtit

••fee

n>

n>lsmliltr't Mitt MM

21 UriiWWfiifc—J10-1)2

con

5-oi

Mid.frinter Sean Sale! Cooptrati^ wUtttft* Htttio*'$ Bkan Growers

PEA BEANS 3 ?i 15Dried Bbby Lim«t cSU0^ 2 »• 13c <d5Z0 Pteft &r BtoiM *u 5c

W A N S

hM-t Natural **"

GRAPEFRUIT JUi:iOxydol

'J mcfl.ISC

Kuirmlil

i '•

Iwith pnrt-lMM« ul

$ Clfcftl 1BO.

7>gg Prices Are Down! Eat M*9g**Lfer H**lth mi Vitality

anl

tin. Altar l»y*%*>mrish e«ioy«r« fiWyfUW^tSf' M

M S . OWENS' KITES

,,y..; nttetKrintf the pdrtyV.lko, Walter1 TtarWrtfllnlowrhuk, *ohn Oik

,i Klk<>. Joseph Li,,hn J. fiinda, Harry

h , Krunk 'Waal**it»,siiink-y

,,:,!,, Walter Skotlpecjand

Reformed

he pHstor 3 anstatanjtted to'

Father Doyle Sings HigtiMau Of Requiem At St.4

Elizabeth Monday {CARTERET—Punsral service!

for Mrs. Evelyn A. Owens, toift'of James Owertu of !2& Atl«'Street, were held Monday at

•nd in S t Joseph's OWirchRe». Janws A.'noyle, Of-8.

Oelebtated a W|jh httMt Mteqnlem. • father'Doyle atao'ewi-tdutted rites at *he frrave in St.GeHrodVg.CeiWrtery. 'ft«v. Jamai

services at

f y *<•».-£Sunday Seh

fnr All.iti.ll#O''\*ith

Wie JnniforSermon )>yT

>t 9)45 with'mint; worship'ial

OhlfjHen's Tof the

7:46.'

Choir jThevSenior 0

trffht \rtll b* <*]JteWrt' Sloan,

One week fjfas '

p tor on /'Our,o- "^

fan* •»illvt«te

Rehearsal fo-tf "Jfrs.

the Church and »erv-,,,,| accepted. There ice.will lie inI'ifeKlield during1 the'tha younit p«op. u'lir, .V2 of the aer-[

:, ,] , ! fori h-ndance

• .i.inir anri 'R2 aterneoni 1 Hi *dult« l%e>%t«r-

iM>f the-moTnieB :«r-, CJIRTBRBT-HI and that of tlwaiter--were held Wedldnv morninfc in

luring tha'jeif al- St. Jowph's

i rvires. Hw W s dttdfatui^ayi MX times during the Hospital. Rev

jyllftWWofcl. N.TIU

— "THE <fRO/ANMBkltA, Sdttttor

Martfri f W new Hook, Wrw at therfl*">y, *oV«rs a'tttpk of tfnUlJ'ln-ttftat Nd American qiJwrtions ChevHarihtteat of "Trijan H o t V ' K -*W!tte» in this douatry, 'What lieWants to knb'w, ind to knoVqalflk-ly, wfhetiaWrfc arfti «xtftnt of triese

Mw. ;0WeTis died Friday after d1on(f.flln««». She was hornirf

New 'TPtok/andi hadtwenty-dtfht y«»rs.

IMhy flowers

lived here

worefrom 'relatives > and frlemls 'and,be^Wr -IWe employees ;of tti'eAmerican fiyarjmid Company in

tialttd fti the Owetig •hrime

Ji Coug;hMn, John-lowers,'i Jdh-rf Connolly, Pnst-

manter'William ' ]. Uwlor andJohn H. NeVill.

»«*Wes tier Mtfbaml, ihe-iit lur-vived by a "dauirht«r, !M nere i s ;three sons, Robert of AWtodUrKH,and James P., Jr., nhd'Pteyd, o*thi» -borrmfh; three brothers,Ployd LaV«J4v of BloomfiekL andDr. f. U. »n<f taW iHVaJley o?New York, Mid four praudchil-dpen.

. li

mid bnrial wastuppo|*4d Inan- twy, "WoAtfbi u

b

J, Bcnjap ..The*'Bkjd«ln «•)(}

mailed out thl*year Mr. Trainer

Cbu>if i4«<»»iJf PartySponsored By Slovak Union

CARTERET—There was a largeattendance Tuesday night at theeard party in Slovak Hall which

, , "as sponsored by the First Slovak«h for J « m e n | ( k t h o l i c Ladfea' Dnion. -Special•ch Street, who '

-AmboyMeLeonan

James ceme-Fall -brtrers

pt'uen wore a*ar*«d as fallows:'Mrs. John Dobrovich, $2,50 in

1,166 opmrau- celebrated ii hi« piixa of requiem c * 9 h :" M "- Frank Born, Metric^ - • toaster; Mrs.'JoSephrne Oa*I, Hand

tinbroidered pillow esses;'Mrs. Jo-seph Knot,' lilnchflon set, and Mi&s

At library

ThoVe 'n obvi*u»lydne'-man who Is ^ l l f l d '

i information. That Is why Mai.liri Bies ttkn'WrHfen this WOM *)tnnprVced^nted nationall8WBe. , (

For more Mian two 'j*in,'t1ie'Dies Ommitte«1ia« been nticover-

• lun>-Am«rfcan atMvlttes.em*ity and Ingenutty it 'has madean exhaustive, thorowph invwtlga-tion, The tmi«raHeled power*g¥(mte.d silch a ConffeAaional t'oin-•mitteC'have eriftblrd it to employ a

staff of exrterta, to take teg-tiirio-ny from' anyotic it chose tocall. That the restilts have 'lieensdartlinsr »«d Highly worttiWWfchas been apparent from the rtart,so much so that they have con-vinced even the <noat bitter politi-cal opponents1 of title cotitmittee,

•W factd'arc revealed forthe fifat time in 1*irf l ook. Rutmost important is thfi "peiipectivc itogives the reader, revealmg theTnethftiT Mid scope of the Whole in

l nnd tihowinjc the'signifiof its findings'.

The press report* have

statistical summary of thethr plays "that have run overhundred |terfl>rmafifrs onway," the blrtifyUtae afid birth-dntei of prominent Attorn, and' the"necrology."

Following is t W l k t of plays in-cluded in!tlU» WJlntne: "SkylaVk""Key Urgo," "The Male Anrmal,""Life With Farther," "Margin for•Error," "Morning's Al Seven,'World We Make," "The Time'ofYour life," "There Shall Be NoNiflii" and "The Man-Who CameTo Dtntftr."

UP

the newspaper reader they "Havet«'rn woefully incflntplete w d mislending. The itienning of much ofthe most important material wftiehtakes a period of time to develophas been missed. nltoRfthtfr.other rfvehitioTis, 'iiflrfpttd'to

of

t e r W P e a k , la a third hook.This I* a different kind 'of a

, composed entirely of*a *eriesof letters that deal in a TruntoKnisvein wfth the important Und baf-fling bnsrnesa of herpmg a' boy to

eamdel and •flsrahCe*t*r, '

the1 paV«?ntii of tJ year 'old FYed-ttc)f1SclitnrtiW«m,-houg^t not only«he eolljptote "tfcrary for Parents"but 0a4d-f2 Wttrt *or'the "unlimit-ed perSoriaf ileWice'f of the Youth•LeadeMhip Serytce which worfldentitle UfBrh'-to-Ttave arlswe^ed <imany questions they nhoHild desire during the next sir mfmths.

It wns not long' afterward thatDr. J. Barnes Lohgthought, DiTeetor -of'Yeuth Leadership Sefvic(he rari to Barry on an alnVtat'tfecorrespondence with Haimiel,,Sarah, or both.

esSlai

Wednwday. A momwt of silentprayer wag offered in rnemory .ofjMrs. Maud Rauu, a""a*lparte(l mem-1her

A doriaWtm 'oMKk»0 ifto the Middlesex Gounty Tubercnlosis ~"

Wtt l7#Hh)arV««WWmenu in charge of Mrs. Elsie H.Bartpk.

per Vts'wrWyed %t -theCamp. The committee In ge

ngifteiTof Mrn.lVWfl](a'm OaseyWrs'S.' HfrNally *hrf'Hrs.' li

The dark horse award Wby Mrs. H. Staubttch.

BIG SAVINGS!

ObESCARTBRBT-Joteph Pollock «lj

Edgar Street h'as left to spendthe Mnatrtrlcr'of1 the Winter'inFlorida, . , •

DM* to aflll n'trt' Jm'.

TheCoffee Eilraotor

'nmH'evtofe1

4*.4

cei«r'»* 'i

nn inwor.

on'the coffee-pot. A nev{ mac^inejUM6NMS

people, theiM«mb«r w«re the follow mf-mberfiof.the {Sp l) , r 'n o c > l o n c n * n «ct- a"11 M l «tn the tniMft tjt- borough Street ( irtment: A<Wph K h t h l e e n Dobrovlch,* targe cake

dl(l*tv*»Yf«*<ft«r NWlmr. Bcnia Kav. Walter More than 100 more prizes wereKay, Walter More than 100 more prizes wereawarded and Slovak"toekies were

[iurvived by his served. Mrs. Joseph Hasek and

*, 7 wed- of the Fitch1 Mineral during 1 N 0 dtfkRhMi, Mrs.< people were confirmed and a MII, KdwJ

sistar, Mw» Kill Mary Trainer, "M"8- Andrew Dobrovica were co-address, a chairmen of the affair.

OlBrien,h.»th of Pater-

•il into churchmember- «on, and anothcan, James Train-: ihe yi»r. er, Jr., of Newivk.

'Venntrut M«nFor DeniaJH«l» Dead

'•'• "!i, the expenses were

winn m<>ti#*i»'W<r«'»Ub.I .i-U'ptnlihy Uae church••]•• the Kiijrlish lang-uaire.i! tn' introduced on the.nit.iiv ami will be held

Sunday of every month, j. i.-.'i will be held1 on Suti-• in A. M. WofUyi-rc-• i >u lions ton public-andi ''.mlentH will be intro-

i!v The intertor *>f the|,. 11 b. r*nio«telled dur-! part of Ui« year.

DKEN ENTERTAIN

I'.llKT—Children Df M».\ st nick's class, a t Wasfc-• -I rnlt-itaiiiftd the Arnti n-ades ut the vnetnbly

inoi iiintf. DoTody' ;lliain Schmidt, FlortDM

in! Robert Bi ihoppre-i <\ and a ffrAup ofM. in their own compo-

ut Kifts they r«eeiv«d

CAMBHIDGIipeed rec—an automatic |

, 78 7 tei&<«f Sotfto H«ro. Vti ttsertod an

•> »dvertl»«ment in localj|ASS. — A Mfh- I H I rcau^ ^ _ «. *4 < n -

tropbotometci "'"Mr. Joht'E. Wad«wo«h withes

- h a s been «cV|W«s Institute i

the devlte imateriab

i George R. Hartfctool'storiw. Itmins, hormone!

hint;' that com-i iol

at Malla'chu-

nU4 by Prof.director of tbe

hysics labors-study of vMa-

er biochemicalable chemical

AltoSttBchlna recordsthe rate of varteal reacttons.

JHmUarWthe

to lay that report he is dead andburied ii absolutely folte."

Injured slightly in' a bus accident,Wadsworth first learned of his re-ported death when a friend arrivedfor the funeral.

V«t,T>i«qu«lifi«d by Age,WillFijhttdXietinAttny

have, been distorted. We knowthat a Vnst fleeurrrfihttioir of evi-dence exists. We know that thereis dynamite in it. "What it Tieeds isreview, emphasis and interpreta-tion. That is what Martin Diesdoes in this l>ook.

Here is a reasoned and realisticanalysis. The time for Red-baitingand politics is past. We aTe con-fronted with a whole mass of agen-icies from avowed CoiAirrunists andfeho German-American'Bund to theFur-Workers' International andthe TransporfWorkers' Unions amia host of "Christian" and '"Patri-otic" fronts. "I propose to tellwhat I know about them," says Mr.Dies. "It is a (?reat deal."

THE BEST PLAYS OF 1939AND 1940, selected by critic BurnsTtfantle, are also on'the shelves atthe local library.

Comedy has been the life of the1939-40 season in the'Broadwaythewte. <rP*ttt%j_years both the Drama Critics Krtleand

ntid forth have a food deal ofhomely htmor1 in th^m,'they nlsocontain much of quiet, helpful,pointed' sdvice tn parent*—advicewhich, might be considered sen-'oimly.

The 'irtairascript was'written 12years apo. 'Then'tfhe'daya U. ofM. stiMtent Was ''itMtijrTtteitihg' xrpiwme paper*'iri- Mr./Mai!iPp»k's'Lde<i Iand'he r'an a'crosstherrM'n'ugcnpt.The title intriffued htm and' he ask-1ed if lie1 ffltyfht 'borrow it to rWul.He retnrfied it two days later1 withthe statement that he had read italoud to his room-mate and they,hn<l chuckled over it far into the'niffht. '''Weeks later they 'quotejl',incidents from the little yarn.

f hjust Introduced callk for coffee mak-thg Wily bilte-'ior'eiibh'p'Ouna ofcof-fee. kinie'rnefchme profloeii amtract, by a cold water drip process,*eliitlhlalmg at'thc i a m e O m e thecHIortie fihd:ibad Pastes in coffee,

' im twrttit mm tohot water as the user desires.

BRAKES

anklr TVnl(»i| ml<ir

In. lip)- rniiuKk for(he iitlBlir, nf'"l»rwln<rr Knt| for »r»lWfntfc «l W* luW

HAVECAftfERtfT — Mr. and 'Mrs.

James Catriisle of'WashlriRton'Ave-nue are the parents of a newdaughter. The baby was bom inPerth Amboy Hospital and hasbeen named Joyce.

\mvMuMlMftD

JAND SHOCK

Your in

SYSTEM

:liN's Ski Caps

257 New

Perth Ambby, N. J.Sranchei; Newark und ienmy Citvj

'P.yA/<-«it»«»Ojwn 8 A.'M. to 6 P. -M.

Men's Fur Lined Gloves J l 'Flannel Pajamas

's %\ m St i irtslf iMen's $1.69 Blanket Robes

ir Anne Pi'okop,< harlutte g.

imrii Sharfcey and'Join:'iv was also ait i.uyiloa of the tecond

i-V.lk.iW:i .in or<J«r a( the Co art"i Niw JOTM?, 4i iiu> dnu hereof, In

ilw i r N r T t t i ) A Bi W

S'a Cameling SweatersAny universal remedy must

"be a eheat, for thoug-h It .be ever'so valuable an aItself, It la uttefiyhint li can lip equally applicableto nil persuns." TtleUe .,..,

by j . Fr'tpid, W'jfe l>tl'••lemurv physician, are true today, L

"ptiVslrlnn b«rfOVs re- 'in Cure-Alls. j.

agreed on an award,Time of Your Life."

head-liners, "The Man Who CameWhere Science and Ettiln ltttltn,

1'rfi^riptlOa Labaratorln ol

To Dinner," "The Male Animal,"and "Life With Father," kept-thotheatre-goers laughing until theramatic last-minute entrance of

"There Shall Be No Night," whichfocusaed attention on the news.

J.W,Mi*h.chApotbweHry

81 Rooievelt Are71 VfM~ibntonA<,CAftTfeRET,'tf. J.

REG. *1 TO »1.57 V*1

TAMAQUA, PA-Leslie Williams, This and "Margin for Error" salt82, World war veteran, was rejected a collection whieh makes one of thetor military service because he wasmoat entertaining in years.

Despite his'disqualifica- In addition to the ten most rep-tion, Williams appealed to Daniel resentative plays, which ate includ-Boyle, itate jud|e advocate of the ed by excerpt and summary, theVeterans of Foreign WWrs, to inter- Quality ' thirtt for *»•»

^ U . m « f a'-Wr-'volume lists the full casts tvn every

t « e with tovetnmeftt officials so heinterprets analj^esults and ellm-rto-

production of the year, the numbereould enlist In the motor transport of performances each playathi'ev-

d, the dute on which it opehed andthe thentre in which it played.There is also included the •usual.

reeor "revioutly hours itkrt*npfancy patternt and jof plain ' 4hite; tiiet' 14to 17. 'SroiWUpthis'tile price!

were needed fiphase. TahlULbne

The Tahiti or Fertlan lime hascome into prominence of late forculture in Florida and leveral bun-

Idred aorei have reoehtly been, plant-'ed withthU varlelff. Itie chief cen-•ter» of lta cultnr* at present are.the S

the avalor

Mr.md Mrson

rt*w. whereof (he

state furchjld

In Dade c*iiBly, sMth of Miami,tnd in the RidSe *ettl6n of Folkand*Hl«Uatids coimues. 4 PtertfRE UKE IT!

Is cvetaiuer; Shooting ebb.

free trans^or-ving more

PwomswnlPftitnli mwms_J)M

COOPER«ALE!ANJTA LOUISE

GENE

One-half mile fi too).the state «

however, hunrion (kpartriMiit,«ed any 'trant-

• < >>,.. h i l l o f M 0 d•ii •'!• iii-rnrti t h « f l m

H Women'* Storm

rrtlleih and evtrCftr-

tventbflbwwfrt, ^•nd Ltttl. OutytMr dewnatn

wWtor.

PiltTONrotn•' • • • i n b u r

-HAM t> 0• I . . ] ' ( > r

I ; " " » i - V f | t A V B , ,

• ' • ' • ' . N . J .

'••'-"•her 11th. l » t l /1 3.11,17

'"1INTY!• W NuiW J,t I U th«

be

IcrMlty?

JARTERET PRESSSunnrripiinn, $1.50 Per Yi"»r

Ti'lfphom' Cnrforct H-lftOO

Published by Carteret Presa

OFFICE1$ WASHINGTON AVE., CARTERET, N. J.

LUCY GREGORY EditorMEYER ROSKNHI.IIM Sports Editor

Entered a« second' rlnsft matter June B,1924, at C»rter?t, N, J., Post Office, under- -thtt'Att of M»rrh 3, 1879.

t$In State Budget Procedure** During the next six months the people

-M thia state will again witness the exhi-bition known as the annual "state budget

' l i t t le."> • While the battle is on, and even afterft is finished, interested spectators will wit-neas some of the weaknesses which make$ontrol of the state's expenditures so diffi-cult. Connpicuous among these weaknesses

the practice of "supplemental" or extra

rest on the laurels already won. There ismuch mom to be had.

The New Jersey State League of Mu-nicipalities urges a concerted effort to thisend. Thr dividends will be marly timesthe labor involved. The gains thw farachieved can be made the forerunner ofothers- the beginning of a new era of pros-perity, increased greatness, well-being andadvancement.

Ja t p pfjppropriations which provide for expendi-tares in addition to the regular state bud-

tget.Preliminaries of the budget battle are

llready under way. Hearings by the state^udget department in preparation of fig-

for the Governor's budget message re-P^,. . the customary greediness on the partof departmental heads. So many of trternhave requested, bigger allotments that itWill be necessary for the new Governor toslash them deeply to keep the budget with-in reasonable limits.

Even then the spenders, if they runtrue to form, will carry their fight for moremoney into the legislative phase of mak-

i n g up the state's budget, and press their; •demands upon the joint appropriations; committee, which holds extended hearings' before drafting the annual appropriations;;blll.

If the "spenders" are beaten in thatground of the fight, they will get* another chance to get more funds by push-

ing for the enactment of "supplemental"* spending measures. By this means, evenf if they are turned down in both the Gov>1 ernor's budget message and the annual ap-* propriations bill, it is still possible for themto receive extra funds through special ap-

' propriations. !

The chief fault is that the state's bud-get making procedure gives far too many

| opportunities to increase state govern-mental spending, and but littld opportunity

| to check excessive spending. Groups with(Special "pet" .spending schemes may push:th«m through to enactment in the form of] "supplemental" bills with little or no re-

to whether fumia are available in thestate treasury, and thus throw the state

•budget completely out of balance.

The constitutional amendment pro-tposed by the New Jersey Taxpayers' Asso-ciation which would require a three-quar-' ters majority in both houses of the legisla-ture to pass a supplemental appropriation,is rapidly gaining favor as a sound step toprotect the treasury from "extra" spend-ing blows. It would be a smashing driveagainst the "pressure" spending groupsand give the taxpayers more effective de-

Jense in the annual budget battle,

Enforce Traffic RegulationsThere is little use in citing the figures

that reveal the number of Americans 'whowere killed on the highways of the nationduring 1940.

Neither is there much to be gained incondemning those who are involved infatal accidents, uqless they have been guil-ty of driving motor vehicles while underthe influence of intoxicants.

It may be .advantageous to call atten-tion to the necessity of strictly enforcingall laws and regulations designed.to com-pel observance of safety precautions inconnection with highway travel. Thismeans rigid enforcement of even the minorregulations that may help to teach driversthat traffic reguationa are to be obeyed.

In this connection it may not be amisato observe that enforcement necessarilysuffers when officers, charged with the dutyof enforcing these regulations, presumettmt tire? «PThe public will not believe that traffic of-ficers take their work seriously unless theyset the example of obedience,

The Comet FooU MHere's a report on Cunningham's

comet:The astronomers were led astray by

the comet, we were misled by the astrono-mers and you were, probably, misled byus.

Up to a few days ago the comet hadfailed to flare aa brilliantly as expected.The tail remained invisible to the nakedeye. It took an expert to identify thecomet, without seeing the tail.

We have searched the western sky onseveral occasions but we have seen nocomet. We still want to see a comet andwe are not going to get mad with Cun-ningham's celestial visitor. If it will justcome a little closer, or shine a bit brighter,so we can see it with the naked eye, atlwill be forgiven.

Battleship Building^ 3

The InauguralHeat

Numeroussociaton To

„,„„,],H n,», la to,

Thn

carriei.

igh anut o|

Assori.-Hon

i ipmi 1'iese

m imi r ' [> ; i l a n

| , :n o i-tain H

, h o l d

a i e g a

rn i ' l i c "fll

fuPT- w i t h 0

C n i n i i y Hoatf

Miinu • ipal i t i

I,IH|I> •; h a v e

I lie I;I\VS d s

inttiExtfnti • ^the >4l session ,<tf theto i , t * | a thoroughinio of the multitude

"spending" l i* 8 , ^ a t o r a : ; fl

by an impressive wray of supportteftid i lacampaign, plane carefullv

,-illi

A Reporter In WashingtonBy H. S. Sim*

THREE FLEETS ON PAPERMANY NEW SHIPS COMINGHUGE DEFENSE BUDGETACTUAL SPENDING SMALLTHE DEBT AND TAXESARSENAL FOR DEMOCRACYFOUR GREAT ESSENTIALSNEW DEFENSE LEADERSA CALL TO ALL CITIZENS

Reorganization of the UnitedStates Navy into three fleets, ef-fective February 1st, may not af-fect the distribution of the morethan 300 war vessels now in ser-vice, but it will mean something inthe Navy is doubled by the addi-tion of nearly 400 units now build-ing.

With the main fleet in the Pa-cific, stationed at Hawaii, the Navyhag maintained a patrol force of125 vessels in the Atlantic and anAsiatic squadron in the Far East,In the Philippines and China, Thebattleships are at Honolulu, withthe exception of two or three in the

r^aoinj^snbniy

finance a pay-as-you-go defenseprogram would interfere with thefull use of our productivecapacitsesand restrict general consumptionwhich, he thinks, is inadvisable "as.ong as unused capao.ity is availableand as long as idle labor can be cm-ployed."

The President's message on theState of the Union gave officialutterance to national policy, al-ready underway and generally ap-proved by the people. Defying thedictators, he proclaimed our unitywith the cause of the nations fight-ing aggression and insisted thatthe role for this country is that ofan arsenal to supply munitions andwar supplies of many kinds to thenations at war with the aggressors.He took a Arm stand against peaceby appeasement or negotiation,warning the nation against thosewho "would clip the wings of theAmerican eagle in order to feathertheir own nests."

J Great OpportunityAlmost 3,000 new industries have come

*to New Jersey during the last two and one-half years, reports the State Advertising

. Council. The record speaks well for theIwork of the council, since half of the period,'covered by the report precedes the out-break of war in Europe and the launchingJpf America's defense program, the com-*bjned effect of which has been to boom^industry in practically every state.

•i In other words, only a part of the in-^lUjstrial and business impetus the State.is|((jcperiencing arises from the war and de-

preparations. In turn, this fact• f': ^presents a challenge, not alone to the StateI Siutto every municipality and smallest aub-; | division as well, to aee to it the new indus-; l i l i e s are encouraged to stay and to ex-

and, to become a permanent feature ofe life of the State.

The benefits accruing, some of whichalready apparent in relief rolla re-

f J4u(;«d to a point giving New Jersey thecost figures of any of the industrial

;| Sitates, are obvious. Business growth meansJ j^hore building, both industrial and for resi-d e n c e . The report lists $24,000,000 of

fdustrial construction alone and estimates1,000 homes erected or in progress, Add-

|d ratables are thu^ provided, making forwider distribution of the tax load. New

BSideJlts coming with or attracted by theiustriea stimulate community life gen-ally, increasing trade in dozens of ways

ud spreading the flow of cash.As the first state to receive a billion

The naval strategists of the world seemto be satisfied that the battleship is thebackbone of sea-power.

In the navies of the world, as of today,the experts estimate that the existing 55battleships are divided as follows: UnitedStates 15; Great Britain 14; Japan 10;France 1; Italy 6; Germany 6, and Russia3.

This does not reflect reported Italianlosses although it does take into considera-tion the destruction of French battleships.

The seven nations are now engaged ina mad building race for naval supremacy^Altogether they have 45 additional battle-ships planned, or under actual construc-tion. The United States leads the way,with 17; Great Britain follows with 9;Japan has 8; France 4; Italy 2; Germany2 and Russia 3.

nejr, cm!rlfies and gunboats.

The ships being built for theNavy will' more than double thecombatant units of every type, ex-cept submarines. The 17 battle-ships, 12 aircraft carriers, 48 cruis-ers, 170 destroyers and 82 sub-marines will represent an additionhat is equal to any existing navyn the world today. In fact, when

completed, they will be equal to theJapanese navy as it exists plus allunits known to be under construc-tion.

The President's budget messagefollowed expectations, proposing

j required tttict r f p i w fttty'scions unexpressed hopi'K of war-time profits." I.nhor was assuredthat no sacrifices would he nskcdunless "rflatclitd l>y » correspond-'ing sacrifice of capital" and warn-ed that a totalitarian victory willdestroy the hard-won rights of la-bor and that "both capital and la-bor will become th.. invnluntarv

" ' State"vassals of an A-powciful S

sprinliiig—-a

pnliiiral pat

phiiforms e;

ChristianScience Church

Calendar

This, of CJ

"spending"

havi! taken

fill statewi

Women V

cil. the Sta

Survey.

ThoroughLatest to

of mandato:advised inbe studiedcharacter,and pointehome bynot only bthe way to

unprecedented publics w U h , among other thing,, r ^ounty governments appoint certain offlcimUM salaries and make mandatory' I o c a l government* to these requLto the ability of taxpayers toI t a t county and loca,,

e4Sa«d many individual municipal goveMuirtered vigorous opposition to themnve them of adequate control over \t

last year, for the first time, both mail..*-m,New Jersey included planks in th /nesting condemnati f thcondemnation of the arbitrarymandatory legislation.rse(>fa only part of the forces opposing« . Many state and local citizen gr W jnnatand on the matter, includingrroups such as the New Umy

of Commerce, and the Princet

Chriitian Science---Kirst I'huicliof Christ, Scientist, Sfwari'ii, is abranch of the Mother Church, ThrFirst Church of Christ, Scientist,in Boston, Mass. Sunday services11 A. M., Sunday School, !>::i0 A.M., Wednesday Testimonial meet-ing 8 P. M. Thursday, readingroom, 3 to 6 P. M.

'Life" is the Lcsson-Sornjot] sub--Sermon ;ject for Sunday, January 19, in all

h h dto a world

Attention Inventors!The attention of inventors, if such there

be around here, is called to a recent articleby Stuart Chase, famed economist, in arecent issue of the Rotarian Magazine.

Pointing out that, during the last war,a Naval Consulting Board passed on 110,-000 "inventions," the author says that 75per cent were worthless but 2 per centwere useful, which means 2,200 worth-while ideas were uncovered, including animproved bombsight, a rapid-fire gun, &method of manufacturing gun'tubes byhydraulic pressure and a seasled carryinga full-size torpedo at 50 miles an hour.

There has been set up in Washingtonthe National Inventors' Council to whichevery citizen is invited to send "inven-tions," They will be surveyed by expertsand carefully considered and it your ideahas something, "you may find yourselfsomebodj who is somebody in Washing-ton."

expenditures of $17,485,049,000 inthe year bsginning the first day ofnext July, About two-thirds of thetotal is for defense, with from twoto five additional billions likely tobe requested for all-out assistanceto the fighting democracies. Theexpenditures will result, it i.s esti-mated, in a deficit of more than$9,000,000,000, thus increasingthe public debt to an all-time peakof more than $68,000,000,000.

In connection with national defense the President pointed outthat expenditures during the lastsix months amounted lo about $1,-760, 000,000. This is a small sumcompared with the huge appropri-ations already made by CongressActual expenditures, however, wilincrease sharply during the nex'half-year period, being estimatedat nearly five billion dollars. 'Thiiwill bring us to the beginning ofthe 1942 fiscal year during whichsuch expenditures will leap tnearly 11 billion dollars.

The President recounted thedefense program, including appro-priations, authorizations and rec-ommendations, covering the periodfrom June, 1940, and including es-timates for the fiscal year that willend June 30,^1942, showing a total

He looked forwardfounded upon f o u r . a s ^ ^ jfreedoms: (1) freedom of speechand expression; (2) freedom ofevery person to wuisliip God in hisown way; (3) freedom from want,or economic understandings whichwill secure to every nation ahealthy peactime life for its in-habitants, and (4) freedom fromfe«r, or world-wide reduction ofarmaments to such a point and insuch a thorough fashion that nonation will be in a position to com-mit an act of physicul aggressionagainst any neighbor.

The newly created Office of Pro-duction Management gives WilliamS. Knudsen and Sidney Hillman,together with Secretaries Stimsonand Knox, almost complete powero supervise the natior's mammoth

defense program. With the promi-nent industrialist and labor leaderworking together there is reason toexpect unusual cooperation be-tween labor and industry. ThePresident says he has delegated thepower as far as possible and thathe wtil,l not interfere although hewould advise if requested to do so.

Christian Science Churches andthr wnrld.

The Golden T«xt is: "I will giveunto him that is athirst of the foun-tain of the water of lifo freely.He that overcumeth shall inhuritall things; and I will be his God,;.nd he shall be my son." Revela-tion 21:6, 7).

Among the Lesson-Sermon citii-tiona is the following from theBible: "Verily, verily I say untoyou, If a man keep my saying, heshall never see death." (.luhn X:51).

The Lesson-Sermon also includesthe following passage from theChristian Science textbook, "Sci-ence and Health with Key to theScriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy:"Divine Science rolls hack theclouds of error with the lif,rht ofTruth, and lifts the cuilain cm manas never -born and as never dyinp,but as coexistent with hii tit-ritoi"(J). 557).

support to the drive for study and revlaioIWB is the Local Government Board whic

.itert annual report that "these laws shout,•fully . , . with a view to'determining the]

bility and effect upon local government*t that "in view of ,the heavy burden notestate to New Jersey, such a study wouli'.great interest but would undoubtedly poi3w possible relief of 4hia, burden."

Declaringiat "the majority of fhew laws are souniin principle he,report expressed the vfcsw that "manothers are ilkvised, unnecessary, and were thrust upo!local govement in the interest of special persons (>,groups." •

An inspdjjtn of the bills that go into the legislatehopper eac | ar reveals how strongly these "special pesons or groj»;" high-pressure the legislature for specialmandatory luslation for their own selfish ends. LasJyear more th; forty bills were introduced calling for mardatory salarynd tenure requirements. Fortunately aler.prompt actfoby organized taxpayers and by economy

The four members of the ntwset-up immediately requested the'active, aggressive and enthusiastic

cooperation of every man, womanand child in the United States" inorder to make America an arsenal"adequate to the successful defenseof democracy and freedom." Theywarned industry tn he satisfied witha normal return for new capital

mindedlaws last yea

Serious Obttlei NumerousEven so, t) hordes of laws still on the statute bookj

dominate thepending policies of the local gand place sfiius obstacles in the way of economy efforts

The New irsey Taxpayers Association recommendthat steps bfeken without delay to correct this situationpermanently-that the Local Government Board -be em-powered by.ecial legislation to make a report to theGovernor aahe Legislature, designating which law» ;"ill-advised, ineceasary and thrust upon local govements in thmterest of special groups or persons" orwhich "suryi because of tradition."

This wouUlace in the handB of the Legislature a real|opportunity reveal or revise the laws in accordantwith the puc's interest. .*

a i'i

STUDIEDThe Reuther plan to utilize au-

tomobile plants to turn out 500planes a day is being studiiil withmuch division of opinion evident.'Some experts the idea i.s im-practicable bat it has not beunabandoned.

TheSHIPS

Maritime Commissionports that, during 1910, 17L.> newships for the merchant marine werebuilt, or put under construction atu cost of ^450,000,000. Kvi-iy shipis capable of quick transformationinto naval auxilmfiis.

T H E N E W H O U S E K E E P E R

Jersey

The German IdeaWell, we see by the news that high

German ofccials now declare that theEnglish channel will protect the Britishonly »o long aa Der Fuehrer permits it.

In other words, the Germans pretendthat the narrow channel is worth no moreto the British than the Maguiot line wasto France. The/lessons that have beentaught the Italians by British sea-power ft

of $28,480,000,000. The A m ygets $13,704,000,000, the Navy$11,587,000,000, industrial expan-sion requires $1,902,01)0,000 andother defence activities takes up$1,287,000,000.

In discussing the national d«t)tthe Chief Executive pointed outthat national income had increased'moer than 30 billion dollars abovethe depreaMon depth and that, inthe same period, annual federalinteract charges increased by only400 million dollars. He declaredthat the bonds of the United States.... the "safest securities in theworld" arid that "our tax burdenin still moderate compared to thaiof mo»t other people."

Mr. Roosevelt opposes » pay-you go basis for defense "expmdi-

• 1 111! tt ^

th*i« it nd a«rre.ement on how much

tboM«<ilterwean aeera to be ignored In

News torn The Screen WorldBy Emily Enrifht

Mickey Itooi U the leadingkmoney-maker the movie

stars of llollyil for 1940, ac-cording to the !>on Picture Her-ald, u trade puttion, He is fol-l dlowedGable

by apt,Gene

Tracy, Cl»rkt Tyronetwji; Tyrone

Power, Jamei , ,e/ , Bing Cros-by, Wulkce ] y , ifette Davisand Judy Garl

And, sneakin polls, we mightmention that film Sevinwerlists us \\\i seleii of the ten bestfilms of 1940 ifollowing: "TheGrapes of Vfr - "T^e Baker'*Wife" IKrencltn), "Rebecea,""Our Town," " Mortal Solro,"' Pride and Prece," "The GreatMcGimty," ' 1 U v yHume," "The i: tHet>tor/««J

aoiu." Ynight not «fr««entirely with h/.uteTkry lone o*these flints are ; l } e h t , , .

Lionel Is a very ver-""iii. a 8 beinf an ex-

actor, i* | t t *ccom-pli-ln-il artist i , ] ^ j Wuiicl»n.fit fact, ao Mi w u ha when''« heard a . / | .}$j*,ony ,«r-

ll1' lmmi'<i'»t# Wrapflf-to thet»Kk ,,f contf, , n S ^ w ^I'Uty he h»4,t«d"Wj» timea t ? » . . . . '• ,' • • • ; • • • ' " *

: ,M

I '111 I

,'11-

ull

nuke a r o n a a t k %am of themSo intent *ftre Jack Benn>

Fred Allen in stealing jcencs teach other in "Love Thy N>bor," that they didn't noticeMary Martin was stealingshow. . . .

Ueanna Durbin will go to W .<-!;•tnyton the latter part uf Ju.nu..rv-for the Preeident's Birthday H.iilon January 89th

Vivien Leigh and Lawn i a<Olivier sailed recently for Hm:!.,:i iwhere they Inland to remain i'the duration." . . ,

The call letters, KMASH !,-been granted tp Egbert Tayli i i-hit privateeral iThe la»t> H. t--tr /Wnthe inltl4lk 4 T*Ww'» real

,ne

—Arlington $W0gledFred A»tair« » « « o much

during tr* ftlujltur of hiei t " % i Q "picture,

doctor* httfttplete

ijlomantkAAkni^OfModmHdressBadtgromdLrGliaeringNewOberjn Vehicle, 'OverlhtMoon'

,, (,n,i romanUc advtn-,lim|,.rn-(li<y heire«a who1,.,,,-n nhout the jrlittar

„, ,,f life in all the COS-•ipiiills h*f^re she m»r-

,,„ ,,h,. loves are draTha-,„„,- The Moon," a ro-.,,,,,lv (>o starring Merle

,,(„„ an engagement at•iVntre Tuesday.,,n,t headed byUnula

Robert Dottg-

ttee »nd Ui mamRifcht after he rdecUton, the %\T\

nnd Cecil Ramajre' f anwu* heiress f\

jmpports | n thisacrttn production nbout a uirl vphoinhirtt* a vnut fortune Upon thedeatti of hor p-an ifnther atid (toss

f -T thr Kay apntji••<> what, fun nh«

can find. Rrx l i e rinon p!»ya the

allof Europe just te

role of DrstrligW/lardecide* to

Jafviacom >ry doctor who

rkshire prse-

extremely complicated.C««ple Pkr

The romantic coupto part In Lon-don when he feats that they artheading for disarter. She is takenin taw by two social pamitea whohelp her spend her money onl h

p p mney onclothes, parties, yachts And chamr

h

'f girl he loves.'kits this grave'•iimes a world-natters become

« • 1S£$$StS£AN EPIC OF COURAGE!Swiping to tfi* sen* It * Hitidventarous sphit of t in nation'smost colorful eral

Errol FLYNNaid

Olivia de HAVILLAND1

i i

$S

pmrnc. Our heroine a««g the yand futility of her way of life aft«rshe encouhtm a young man Whois even richer thin the. She de-.cidet to gt> and get the man she

loves. A smash climax iaprovided when bo h hero and hero-ine go to Italy to convince eachother that the «Sft,ar in really theirgoal.

Skvrwood AuthorThornton Frceland directed

"Over The Moon" from a itcreen-play written by the well-knowncomedy expert, Robert B. Sher-wood, and Rene Hubert designedthe spectacular wardrobe exhibitedby Miss Oberon in the film. Set-ting* for the production were de-signed in color by Vincent Korda.

3 BOGEYMEN COMETO PLAGUE KYSERAnd 'Twixt Them All, A

Very, Merry ComedyIs Provided

wttfc

Raymond MasstyRonald ReaganAlan Hate

.. (.;

-ALSO-

Vl^ f T ^

surrounds himself with three ofthe screen's foremost bogeymenand a bijf cast of film and radiotalent In aupplylng th» novelty en-tertainment <if his new picture"You'll Find Out," sUrtiriR tomor-row at the Ditmas Theatre, PerthAraboy.

In thin musical mystery melodyrama Beter Lorre, Boris Karloffand Bela LugOsi supply the menace that upsets the romance oHelen Parrish and Dennis O'Keefeand terrorizes^Alma Kruger and

| Kyser's entire band, particularly| by Ginny Simms, Harry Babbitt,Ish Knbbihlc! and Sully Mason.

Fietween broadcasts of the Col-legp of Musical Knowledge in aradio studio, Kay Kyscl anil hisband fill nn en(raj{ement to enter-tain at a hip week-end birthdayparty in an old mansion in a de-serted location. Seldom did gaietyhave a more eerie setting than thefantastic edifice built by a nowdcaii archaeologist and occupied

' KOmanca of the RioGrande", which utarti at theCreicent Theatre, Perth Am-ooy, hai an exceptionally•trong featured cmt headedby Ceiar Romero (top) whoagain portrayi the Citco Kid.Beiide him it Lfnne Robert!and below are Ricardo Cortei,Chrii-Pin Martin and PatriciaMori ton.

EVE AMEN, FRYORNEW COMEDY TEAMHave Leads In Crescent'

Screen Story, 'SheCouldn't Say No'

R E A D E ' S

MAJESTICContinyoiu from 2 P. M. Phone | A . 44)108

by his spiritualintically inclinedsister and his pretty young (laugh-

J tor.1 Kyaer am! his pals are affectedby the gloomy atmosphere and bythe ^rim personalities of Saliano,a fake medium, and of JudgeMainwarinft, the family lawyer.They arc even more affected whenthey learn that several mysteriousattempts have been made on thelife of the (laughter. One of theseattempts nearly kills Ginny Simms.

Kysur and the band decide toleave the spooky place but a boltof lightnniK blows up Ihe bridge Iwhich is the only exit from the es-tate. They pin their hopes on Pro-fe»»or Fenninger to solve the mys-teries they meet around everycorner. Fenninger has been en-gaged by the heroine to exposeSaliano's crookedness to her aunt.

A pay, delightful comedy whicmakes for reaJ lighthearted enter-tainment, la "She Couldn'tk " which opens at the CrcscenTheatre.

The film is a lively melee thamixes romance with legal intrigueand breach-of-promise suits, star-ring a trio of popular and capableplayers. Roger Pryor, handsomeiand leader-leading man, ia star-

red with Eve Arden, talented stagestar, who l)as made a name forherself in pictures. Cliff "UkeleleIke" Edwards ia featured.

Pryor plays the role of WallaceTurnhull, attorney, and Miss Ar-den portrays Alice Hinsdale, hissecretary and sweetheart, also alawyer.

FE TRAIL'MAJESTIC FEATTM

ictareiqne Film Arrive*F«r Showing In Am-

boy TheatreErrol PJynn's new itarrinft pic-

urc had started oh Monday.On Wednesday yp flfrured it

uit about th« right time to go>ut to Warner Bros, dtudlo andee th« ftght. Michael Curtii, thattxciuble old master of frontieruloon brawls, saber duels onTTand stalrwtiyi, triny chargesnd naval broadsides b«4n(r the di-ector, we timed iijttrt right.Hollywood claims tn»t Mike can'tet three days in a row go hy with-out arranging for gome sort ofviolent physical action, especiallyif his star in Errol Plynn. Holly-wood is x*Wom wrong in thie onenstance.

Flynn and a group of otheryoung men were in one of the up-itair* barrack* at Wert Point, year1854. This was the hour just be-fore taps and some Were studyingit denks under the light from oilamps, some were stretched out on,h.eir Army cota, on« fellow was•ending aloud to three other ca-leta.

The reader was Identified asVan Heflin, not exaotlya new-comer to Hollywood, but bettertnown on Broadway. There, lastloason, he played opposite Kath-rine Hepburn in "Philadelphia

•iwry," Thto ImreMMt) twwt- Mtprofesicifal reputation and hisweekly salary figure as well. Nowhe aeemalikely to jro places on thescreen.

It was Heflia who was to havethe ftght with Flynn; In "SantaFe Trail," which opens todayat the Majestic Theatre, PerthAmboy, Flynn plays J. E, BStuart, the fiery Virginian whofought with glory for the south inthe Civil War. Heflin is Rader,northern-sympathizing renegade

touicti Treat At tHtmu

If there ever was one. Their battlewhich results in Heflin bcinf? dishororably discharged from WesPoint, is over the slavery question

FARM INCOMEGains in farm income arc ex

pected in 1941, According to a re-view issued by the Bureau of Ag-ricultural Marketing. Increased in-dustrial activity is expected to bithe biggest factor in atimulatinifarm, income.

AHERNEIN PATERNALCones To Retcne Of'

an Gurnet In 'Th*Udy In Q W

Kay Kffiter, the Profauor of the College of Muiical Know-ledf*, and two beautiet who appear in "You'll Find Out," Kyi»r'»•econd mmical, ttartlni tomorrow at the Ditmai Theatre, PerthAmboy.

POWER AS ZORRO'IS COLORFUL ROLEPlays Part Of Famous Cali-

fornia Bandit In Cres-cent Film

in tfrwoni e w y frait m»r'* eW-ier there is one great outstandingole that seems made to order for

his talents and his personality.

for Tyrone Power this part hascome in "The Mark of Zorro," thetitte*role of which is undoubtedlythe most famous and colorful thescreen haa ever known.

Zorro, the mnsked bandit of OldCalifornia's most excifing days,whose swofd mark—a jagged "Z"—struck terror to every heart butone, was the role which gave thelate Douglas Fairbanks his greut-est fame.

Now, in "The Mark of Zorro",which comes to the Crescent The-ater Wednesday, it marks for Tyrone Power a triumph greater thanthose he scored in the memorable"Jesse James," "In Old Chicago"and ''Alexander's Ragtime Band."

At the peak of his fame, on thes§t of "The Mark of Zorto," whichfeatures lovely Linda Darnell op-

posite him, Power recalled hid firstunsuccessful attempt to "crash"the movies. Hi- hud gone west to

[join the cast of "The Miracle jMan," but a siege of casting of-fices yielded nothing, When it look-ed as though there w»» no placefor him in pictures, he left Holly-wood for New York.

Finally Geti 'Br«alt'He finally pot a "break" as an

understudy to • Butgcn Meredithin 'TidrWfni of flfe Fof*k," & playstarring Katharine Cornell. Fol-lowing that he appeared with MissCornell in "Romeo and Juli«t" and"St. lout,"

Brian Aherne doe* «nch anin* job in "Th* Udy in Qiaccording to advance r«po(Columbia wanU to bring tlwback In another comedyand in another eharutMKWhich brings up «n inpoint:

Columbia'* chanm initar to do a "repeat."

Because of impolicy ofing stars, rather than maiftla largo ranter, Columbia hM;ways been more nr lessmercy of other lots. Notother studio* "crack down"way—an appearance inpictures Is tantamount toincreased fan favor and,greatly increased box-office•wh«n the borrowed stars TVtheir home k>U. In "Th«

j Question," which opensthe Strand Theatre, Aheme 6,red with Rita Hayworth, abia Player, in » delightfulromance which, Hollywood

agree, does muchthe stock of both players.is »een as a kindly, middlecycle shop proprietorpathies go out to a girl imurder, so that he takes 1his own home despite thefled suspicion of his wife and |children.

Maritime Communion repfliftMpansion of the merchant

Board uki i\* \to forestall inflation thr«at«.

READE'S

GREErflOUSEJANIARY

FUR CLEARANCE

CREKEHPERTH AWBOY, N. J.

FRI. SAT., A SUN.

Free Comic BooksTo Every Boy and Cirl

Saturday Matinee

I I . I I

Hit

of

FASllON VALUESFor Wh|h You, Our Customers,

l a i t Each Year!

— AND —

Romance ^^Rio Grande

( I SAM UOMI.UO

4 Day* Starting With

PREVUE T0N1TE!

OK STATE STHHKT AT THE F1VK C'OBNBRSCONTINUOUS FBttM 2 I \ H. PHONK P. A. 4-HB88

TWO COMPLETE SHOWS

REVUE ToNITE!THREE COMPLETE SHOWS

LAST COMPLETE SHOW STARTS AT 8:41 P. M.

P

-MN-

, • 1 t

Inspect l i e marvelous fashion-right clothfes

and wiAnths of Winter still ahe»jj in Which

to wearPm l

1.1.Choose

furred (

These

Respo

i l H

Yours Nfi our entire stock of furr$

Coats. Ridiculously prieftd to clear.

l i . ( ; . i n K i d

— Pliw —

CHAPTER * 8

"THE GREEN HORNETSTRIKES AGAIN"

MON. and TUES.

THE HARK1 OF

BRIAN AHERNERITA HAYWORTH«j»k OIINM FORD • mum ]UCH-MOtOICOUtOtHUt

njts Have Had Excelled'd%unj«

11 Through t h e Se*wn. '*''*'•

m,dk^,^

Coat MustAt W<W No Low* Carry

WEb. ni THURS.

mm

FIND OUT

U l , L > S l - l i ! : . l L N PARRIS

'\\,i\\[.- M.MA KRUGF

kUPAT O'BRIEN— AJNU — u *

St P»H|W

LAST* TIMES TODAY<rBITTIR SWEET"

^iiiteiiilSiMfi^s

LATE SHOW SATURDAYSLait Compl«U Show 11:00 P. M.

All S.at. 28c, Ta» Includad

STARTING WITH

PREVUE TlffiSDAY WZ

j* UtktittlltAELEASED THRU UNITED ARTISTS

ON OUR STAG&-SUNDAY NITE

STRAND FAMILYFree China To Ladies Thursdays

• * *' . BANK NITE

PARTY NITE WEDWE8DAYCASH N l / t e ; : J., CASH A

f LIM JIM

"Say, whrn an vim c. i n : i

me bark thai J]l) >•.-:j l>.,i! ,-n

" I toM you Vi\ r i> " i n v.

g»t fofifl -:ini| rr.nly m<1 i \ rn mv

belt fr iends wi l l I f l l v - ' i then s

nettling Ki"«l ,il>ni:! m i 1 ' "

Hush.ind—You want mnri> mnnrylor the dressmakur? Why, 1 gaveJOU $20 for th.1t last week.

Wife YPS, denr. but she didn'ttend her bill then.

(10TTA"Do you think steel itocks will go)IP or down if the Mar continues?"

"Yes, I think they will. Theyrarely stand still, and they can't

J1S7 ABOUT NOWRiDi

60*T

6O5H'lM0NLYHAD MY HAT

AND COM ANDCustomer—I'd like to try on that

pair of shoes in the showcase, Ifyou please.

Smart Clerk—But you'd lie muchtnote comfortable out here, mudam,in i chair!

IAND SAKES1 WHAT5

' IT VfiTW H BRASS BAftf>,

M, jBois—I'm tJuiiiK to |iut you to

!

' %%Ofk in the uccuuntin^ depattment.i «IVe you had any exper^nce in' Wllng?

'New Girl—Heaps. And cooing, too.

• • T NOT FROM WORK

d*oce<1It*ml

t. .Vbho

fewer thao 1,000 meteoric fall*have bsen ncorded Uiroughuut th«world, ahhongh the earili la (truckby at b u t 1(000 meteor* every year.

lusectt KftponslbleIniects wer« responsible fur theaking f

The Jspntew.empire tdatetf ktuUi ;date at r«rioje as M C ,

'JJmmH,., popu-larly believed to be a direct oft-•prijig of the fW«, became the flrit

ftt a'Ji«#litt|Jit WHb ,do not burnMit »t tiw « m e time. %Mher than

ponsible fur themaking of paper, according to ••tory t h t Chi

p p , according to ••tory that a Chinese suge, watchinglonte was bi ldi

g , tchingwasps building a neet, con-'(h Id

p bulding a neet, con-eeived (he Idea which resulted in theflrat m a d

( which rlflrat man-made paper.*ew»on o^the, Htw la almoit

to park.

titHhtMt^tjatk*, M*rl>- do«bt« that

to rthe

p p j , >

w laUatect^y dustcloth, put t e m a l drops ot oil on anold c l o u v t a d pJ*«e 11 to * * | *M

fr1 aBoj*—BetauuB it's your birthday| i ^ o r r o w I suppose you're uoing to

• yholo day?tlr Stenog — Worse thai) that,p— I'ni goirrg to lute a whole.

fori tour Gmftmhelro foun-

o n tbi X^itfl ind

ITfttib Tongue• Welsh, or toore properly Cymric,U an ancient tongue, a member atthe Soroance family and, EntjlJihbelong* to the Qermanlc family.Then is an txteusive modern litera-ture ,In, W«Wi.

jCandtet and tsucei can' be pve-

t d 1 bUta owr * i mrth

frb' tout, it p»Bd>:#*ii«bjmy ifd f U ^ h

|,and more evenly u*'«J*n-lW*i treatment

K A»ricB,.int., tbt ajipteiw maoufcaturing te-'dintry bt»»!lAcr*«M^,plant faelll-(UN in MCeot months that, It nowM i * rtfodv*tKm'M>a«lty tf 1 300

m

jar with two other clothi. One willbeWwve it and one beta* 11 L«tr«H ft* oue or two days before mlllg.

Pt^MWtR repousse work nick

y*ritor wbeV»nti a i ••

V.

nbeaten Comba Cagers Score Two Big Wins At Hoiurns,

OCKEDCAGE

FORL E A

Win Games In,,,.,,(ion Junior

Game*

RAR1TAN GIRLS' TEAMCARTERRT -Barney's Lutty1

i wen two cftmen in Sj-spettalfrtWn th* Ikritko Girfc1 teatn

gun&y at P rth Amboy.'< tewt'1 Lnrffy SWlfc. (I)

Telliho 142 118 102134 184 11012fi 114 105144 162 101120 147 128

tostGAMES, 61 TO 40,

2f

EAK1 NIP H. S. BANDThe Pirates fend

, ,| fur first place 1*at

Helen SefcikPat Kardo*Agnes Medvet* ..Sklppy Janosko

Totals

Junior,| victories in„„,;. The PlraWH

H,irn, :!r> to 9, while11

,..,.,! out the Boagie

Mkry MackoWart* MhtskoHaUM H Wtm MacVoMtry.Kovac

WM»

lUritan Girlt (1)870 549

Sundin|i

11000

mgue Sch«dul«», January 20

97

10599

U9

123137'104

97129

108

121

Carter«t Cageri Suffer Dis-astrous Weekend With

Triple Loss

JfLAY HOMETOMORROW

SPEAKING' ABOUT SPORTS

A WOWStf CAUSEUpwards of 160 beittiU evenl* arttmiy have bwn

scheduled this month and h*ruary to aid'ttie 1^41' "fightInfantile Paralysis" campsijrn, it wMMrtmwiitMd recentlyby the National Sports CoUftCil of the Committee for the

JI Celebration of the President's BUNtdltf... tWItt**ian Social- Club towers fw theyj other events are in the msrtHng, Chairman Grsntland Rice

mjdirop|>ed m> lessW d t118

p|Wadtr.

516 590 B*78

tripli-j

ST. JOES, PIRATESGAMES t I K

CAGESt. Joseph's Root St. James,

33*8, Wfifc PiratesTrim Youngr Uk«

11parts vs. Oriolesvs. Bund

('7)

7 S 17A. A. ( U )

G2100121

On Saturday night he totals losta frte-nhooMng enttfUntef- to tM*New fork Ukrainians by a 61 to40 score at the high school court.

>On Sunday the local contingent^1

traveled to Newark where theydropped a 41 ten 83 engagement t«th* Ukrainian GetAeV Bfo. OHMfcrtxtay night they irrwdetd SouthRfv%r when the cttrtk Wttl Pi Clubtook them over the .htfrrilw, 43 to

itTomorrow evening the Ukes will

play in their regular weekly gameat th* high school gj&n.

• GirttrM U. Si C.

reported.From Key West, Florida, where Pedro Atmflirr, aborts

editor of the Key West Cittern, has arranged baseball andsoftb all games, up to Mtfto*? Whew Athletic

h

Midget League opened its sched-ule last Friday night At the Na-than Hale Schoor* gym. St. Jo-•tph's tossers trimmed the St.James, 33 to 8, while the Piratesscored a rout oveT we YoungUkei, 33 to 5.

G F P

Director M. E. Morrell of iotttfbm Collie is staginf 8swimming meeting ftetweta Bowdoin and MassachusettsInstitute of Technology, on out to Tacoma, Washington,wMftre Athletic Director lied J. Frank of the College ofPu(jet Sound in planning aibasketball game with WhitmanCollege, the sport* world ha* cheerfully rolled up itssleeves and pitched into the flght to rout this dreadeddisease.

Truly, the fight is coast to coast and bonier-to borderwith every type of sports enlisted in th« vast drive.

MBEN NARfiDi TO3 GAMES IS LOOPScore Tvno Gwne Victory

Over GrrimT* WhileSoMffftUw 3

OTHER GAMES LISTEDCARTRRfiTT — Tatoftg full ad-

vantage of a thtee-gaitts defeatsuffered by the Soklers at thehands of Turkey's Autos, the lea-gue leading Stephen's Rooferswidened th«rr margin in the CityLeague to three ga*»w by scoringa two-game triurwph over Gruhin's

Mt€mihy N**" ft""For High fetal Confetti

CARTERET—Wtak MeCr.y, 4M«tot of atfcUtlu >H Car-

lfK SeK*ol, araM«**4thli wtofc thfct uhaltaiu tut allW*h ttheol tetlutball |«ani wHIh» Afl«M«*nt*far iUdanU andtw»nlt-AT« c*BU f *r ftthan Wilhtha •xc«|it{«n «l tkr f*llowlnftkrta !«•••«—Jaaaary 21, R«-•iaaall Ptbraary 1, Unit* anJr«)>r«arr Hi Rakway.

TOP SflUTHAfffiPiRTHFOR SffiJPete Yirti'i B«k«t b j

ertidlr Period ToS6rihrW 31-39 j

BEAT ABBOY, 28 TO

DlUjfB.Team SUadinr

Stephen's RoofersSokleTSIdeal ServiceTurkey'sAutosSynowiecki'3Washington GarageGruhin's pmgsLincoln Auto Store .

w.3734282826252115

L.172026262629334a

MOVE m HISTPtACE IN LEAGUE

Metal ft ThermitAs Lwdfcrt In Gart«ret

Ihdustfial LoopCARTBRET — ArmoufB bowl-

Ing teatnreplaceif Metal & Ther-in first phwe in the Industrial

Wuy, fShamansM,

Sort*, gBubnick, gWadiak, g .

St JM«pii'i

Monaghan, fPuhan, fLakatos, c

G20

130

F00

-MUw^Awttl^Ji^^^ ,jm JOMStKA; t0.J0 raise money for this worthy cause, fhrpghout the state,

o o basketball games were heldi the proceeds of which were[Kwhj'.......

Gruhin't Drugi ( I )

Bowling League by scoring aswtep victory over the V. C. 0,Company bowlers white th* Metal& Thermit boys were losing twogatnes to the A. A. C. Company

Monday night at the

CARTBRET—Coach Jotba> undefeated C»rt«retSchool basMh»H caKer«down two more formidablethis week to extend theirstreak to six stnrifibt gam**.Friday before a capatity.lat the new high school gymBlaes won a thrilling ov«counter from South Ri^r,SO, while on Tuesday evfore another sellout att(they were standing in the ( Ithe Cotnba-coaehed combinefeated a highly heraldedAmboy High' School quintet, 21 'j

1 80 00 20 14

Totals 18 4 40,N«w York Ukei,

a46

Slitaky.c 8

Nesteruk, f! Stankowitz, f

3 2B!Modre'tsky, g 6" Sh4pk«i g 00

Htom, f 0 » <Hu Stwyer, g -4J. OTtonrke, g 0 0 0 | B . Demchuk, g 2

F0 '»0 120 161 13

7 2 Uavers 13, BoSgiM 4.K. Wadiak am'

•urer-Millk.

15 SSt. 1

Suhay,F00O00

~ 3» 8 61Referee—G. Comba.'

Cart.r.t U. S. C,'Tr

used to stamp out this dreadedCarteret was fortunate last year and alao is this year

in having one of its outstanding citizens, Joseph Fitfcger-aid, as head of th,e state organization. Afao, CarteretHigh's athletic director, FrMk McCarthy, as directing theactivities of the state sports comniittee.

THEH.S.CO0»tTUltJoe Comba is doing another grand job this year as

his Carteret High School bksketball cagers now down oneopponent after another.f Undefeated in six games andplaying against some of the outstanding scholastic com-bines in this section of the state, trie high school bays aregoing into town in real ftwhlon for- the second straight

11410710H

100159

Totals S24 887Stepfctft'i Rbofert (2)

Varga 215 167PunrreHy 171 218

.r.jtak 145 103Herom*i 193 189Diekson 139 165

17S188106

2121651B6207153

The

T««M

j ..Uilil. K**i-. ,»„

Won Lost7 2

3

Totals 863 900 917

Metal £ Thermit 6LeIMg's 5J. B, Berry 4Gen. American 3V. C. C, Co. : 2

A. A. C. Co. (2)199 181

4 0 8St Joseph's 12 33S t James1 8 8

Referees—E. Wadiak, Resko..

Zapp, f pBoben, f "3Kaskiw, c 1Wuy, c - :.. 0Biibnick, g 3Sofka, g I

P2ft0010

season.

Felluar, c 2Hayduk, c S

Wadiak, g

Totals

5 0 10

15 3

SchnidM, fPipp. f

f

G1I»

F000

This past week—rather from Jast Friday to Tuesdaysight—the boys add«d twb ^>«re ilfustrious triumphs to

i t S t h R i r High a n d

SbVUt. (0), 189

+ 173202206

Bertha .Derczo ..SharkeyRogers ..Chomkki 151

156170146189176

195218

Totals

s ight the b y ^their unbeaten record by nosing out South River HighPerth Amboy High, two of the best eliib» in Central Jer-sey. Both games were wofn by e?c*«dinfly Close scoresand after a hard fight,

.. , What w,ith tvj.o,successful season* in a row ir^Jjasket-it's beginnin^o look HketlteimiooT spwt if—'-- ]

M. SiekierkaBtojkaKa«merFedofL. Zyslt

. 920 837Atrtoi (S). 184 202. 171 191. 193 146. 186 207.. 209 164

95ft

210192214182192

Packo 1W 181Donnelly 161 181Collins 179 159Mtodrak 194 181Galvanek 183 182

907 864M«tat * Th.Tmit (1)

Kamienakl 17,8 183Werff 183 164Versegi 201Siekierka 157

Totals 943 910 97Q

20417$199170190

9S8

Zysk 187

198172203

2 i coming the second most important sports activity in thejj I high school curriculum. 'Certainly with the bigr crowds

Koppoli,f ;.. 5 2 12 o n han^ f°r ^ i e court conteate it's almost a sate tfet to sayMcCue, c 6 t 121 that the indoor sport is beginning to pay for itself after

\\ many long years of being in trie red.

Wa.WwHOKli.fat> (2)jOhMnra .V.'.r. -183 198Ohadwick 22a 206Medwick 171 166Lehrer 191 197Harrivan 191 179

Babiak, fHappy, SBodnar, gDidy, g

Totals . .- ,-• 17CarteMt U. & C.

P 1 - . • G

0 iBob*n, f 6K*akiw, f 2

k 0

'11 l2 21 3

7 41

P. P3 15

S. Hamutak, c

Bubnick, g 2\ ,

Totals : 11D.lli Pi Club

GHotO!, f 2Winkler, f 0Ktotowski, f 3Ifaroek, f 0'Rechage, c 03enko, c ..., 2Nowicki, g 4Uaskay, g , 5Bode, g 1Bonus, g 2

5124

27

P40720

Totals

F0012010 81 110 20 4

being in eIt was only in tho-last two years that Comba has put'l

basketball on such a'high plain. The availability of a'new gym has been one of the reasons for this transforma-tion. Also holding basketba.ll games at night, when mosteveryone has a chance to see them, instead of dtiring theafternoon, has added to the upward surge of interest inthe cage sport.

Credit also is due to the team itself which during thei ith th high schoolpast two years has come

i thi tio

the temto its own with other high schoolpast two y

court teams in this section of the state.

Sttond Half Schedule Releasedfor V. S. Metak Bowling Leap*

iarnaHabich .

'ustakIkay

CoppolaLarson .

19 5 43

L PADDLERS WIN[ATCHlNJtAHWAY,9-3

I Kl'rr- -Thirteen|«m ii,, Ki'creatlon Ping

which beganactivities this week, released thefolk>wing"play«r lists Mid sehudtite.Gene Wadiak again will direct thetourney,

Dr Roth's Paddlere—Dr. David i pottsRoth, Dr. Ralph Wexler, Bob Klosa,SJd LeBow, Emamiel Roth, EdwardUlm»n, Paul Koepfler, Phil " "

Sloan, Louis Nagy.

KLEIN'S TAVERN ANDLESCHEKS DAIRY WIN

CARTlRfrf—Klein's Tftvewand Leschek's Dairy emerged tri-umphant in the Young Men'eBowling League Mondty night atthe hill alleys.

The scores:Chudick'i Barbart (1)

154 132159 164

S u p Eugene Ginda, Michael Kato

Menechina 21-18,

lust to Doclpco, 21-9,

defeaUd

CARTEBET—The official second!half schedule for the 20-team U. 8.Bfcetal* Bowling League whichstarts January 28 has been re-leased for publication this week byStephen J. Comba, chairman of thepin loop.'

The factory league which is on*of th* largest and best organizedin this section of the state is mid-way through its fourth consecutiveIwafeoit. At the current writiing,the Mechanics No. 1 team, defend'ing champions for the past threeyears, are leading but they ire geVeing some stiff opposition from tftkYard No. 1 club.

The official second half schedulefollows:

M t c W c a l No. 1V..

CastingScrap No. 1 1Copper PowderLaboratoryWb^e Metal*

Tank House No. 1Yard No. 1Lead PlantCoptxMechanical No. 2'Silver No. 1Smelter No. 1Yard No, %

,N«.» ;V,.

White M«talaSilver N«. 1 'UtwnMwy , V.TapfciRwitttof

Scrap Kmt No. X

at«/29/«/13/20/26/6V12i/eo1/26/3/10/15/24

Data1/301/8

2/132/198/27S/63/188/20

Mechanical No. 3'

SiWer No. 1Tank House No, 1Yard No. 1Swap No. 2Silver No. 2Lead PlantLaboratoryMain OfficeCattingSmelter No. 1Snwlter No. 2Yard No. 2T. Howe No. 2-

2838121318133

CopaxMeoknlc&l No. 1 BCasting E

4/24/10MM

Scrap Plant N». 1All.y Vi.

323'1

Totals1 958 843!&>.( SWrita (1)

cLeod 235 187>onovan 132 145regor' :... 166 155rva 182 191alvanek 189 177

185163192173

879

1B1202164183227

906 920onrt (3)

E. Walsh 184 203P. Fraiterold .. 184 193A.UhouseU) (2) 124 171Q. Pliar <8) .. 138JCronenberg ....'• 196G. Richardson.... 191 209

85 J 971

v. c. c. c«. (o)Chamra 163Toth 129DeH 174Perkins 112Vernillo t 151Banich

Totals 903 855 927

(3)203 202202 210237 167 21!)

186203

15&

205153209

226

195

153198IP156169

729 812J. B. Berry (1)

Masculin 201 17VMinue 161 173Suto 137 136

156 134144 236

DonnellyMcLeod

211173166152220

922

183190

160

IP*8C4

1*78-153

140212132

815

182167136158244

25.It was Pete ViraR who pfO

Frivictory sfitnattiiebrigade. With but five seconds 1in the fourth quarter and Cartrtilltng by t*B p«rnta, P«te,is the third brother in theknown Vi'rag family to dlatinhimself on a high schoolball team, flipped in a basktt iin the score as thu Ca

rooters literally went mad.n the extra session, after

River had taken the lead on • ishot, Virag tossed in a basket/!give the Blues a hard-earned vfitory.

Against Perth Amboy itAdam (ilncnowiki who brouhohie the bacon a he scoredpoints on six fltld goalsfoul.

It wits a close game thropwith neither side leading bythan four points at any stag*;the proceedings. Both clubstied at the quarter, 4 to 4,also at t'.t half, 11 to 11.gained a oife-point advantage;the end of the third period, 20*Jand held a slight advantage toijfinish;

With the score tied and ,•mare than a minute to- go infourth quarter Virag scored'cut-in shot and Raymondfoul to sew it up.

Carteret's Jayvecs lost aiminary tuMle to the Perth

boy ReterveB, 29 to 14.The scores:

CarUnt (31) ...

G. mlKing, f 0Virag, f • 3Gluchoski, c 3Raymond, g 2Ginda, g 1Peech, g 4*iTataewski, g :... 0

799 .854 887

Totals ...: 1006 933 1020Lincoln Auto Store (0)

Richardson : 234 155 175•Sobieski 173 i&l 196Rasimowicz 15ft 181 202S. Kopin 285 159 168J. Udzielak 178 178 16»

floyCT,Cen, Anmrican (2)

Eek16? 181187 182

Barkhonse 160 148Masluck 138 B15Peterson 211 • 181

157148161190165

13.Strath Rirar (30) •

Murock, f ....Zolnero'h, f

, f ....c —

812, 857 821

Totals 884~ j Academy Ktglers Bow To

Trenton Nine>Pin Teams

Sivess,

IS, METALS CAGETEAM TO^HERCKS0'Hara Sc«re« 10 Pwnts

A» Carteret To«»ersWin By 36 to 31

CAiBTKRET—-the U. S. Metals

CARTB5RET—It was a bad dayfor the Carteret Academy bowlingteams down in Trenton last Sun-day. For both the "A" and "B"teams came out on the short end,total pins counting, losing to theWillis No. 2 and 2 teams at theCapitol City.

The results:Willii No. Z

T. Homan 191 191L. Homan

Stanik, g 0GuWwski, g - 2Jtologinsky, g *

Totals UCarteret .... 9 6 7 7So. River .... 3 11 10 5

Referee; Mclntyre;Yohn.

H2«)

lasketball leum,Donovan, openeu

pp PowderMBchaiiital N». 2Tank House N», 1Vartt No. 1Whit*. MetalsYaM-No. 2Le«d KantMalff OfficeScrap No. 2

Wednesday with a 36 to 31" victoryiver Mei'cks in a cloa* game i'

at the Franklin School coui,itahwuy.

The score:fckrebs

Bennekajttper,

ledits

by Dannyseaaon last Totals 12 l

Cartw«t (IS)G.

TotalsPerth AmWy ....'4 7Carteret - . i ^ V 4 ; -7

Otficials^Coffee and

R, Orr, fHenry, fWukovets, c J>.A.d*nwt cV, Oxr, gPfetrusko, gCornell, g

Totals

fau.i \-McUughlin, t.

Ogderi, i

hulgw,

PAtfE EIGHT FftttUY, JANUA&Y IT, 1M

2nd Half ScheduleContinued Kinni .Spoil

1/48/131/191/171/14/3471«4/IS

Otto1/881/4t/181/181/171/SJ/1SS/264/S4/94/171/28

I

i/80t/6MIl/«0| /26S/41/128/19a/26

4/22

to

1/138/20S7274/S4/104/174/23

tat*1/28

a/138/192/25•/•8/12

* 8 /198/874/8in4/174T/E4

>> t / 2 9; 2/e

2/12t/18

8/fl'x «/u:. i/19: 8/27

4/i4/104/164/22

fUteI;2B'2/68'U2/182/173/58/18

4/17

m/3/10/18

n\

•ftJU

Alley123122tI1:i

2

Vnr.l Nn, ISmeiter NoMnin OfficeTnnk House No. 2Smeller No. 2 1Scrap Plant No. 2Mechanical No. ITank House No. ICopper Powder

Ceiling

Mechanicud No. 1Y»rd No. 1.Strap No. 1 tSmelter No. IT. House No. 2 IMnin OfficeTank lltiuco No, 1Mfchanicad No. 3Silver No. 2

TIE FOR FIRST PLACEIN ARMOUR'S LEAGUE

(1AHTERKT Two learns aretied for first pine'' in the ArmoursB«wlin(t League as both licpt 8.F S and the Shop won theirmatches thin week at Ihr Academyalley*.

Araoar'i L»«|U«Shop

S. PiitiarRoehnerPolanFrnttordo

(3)142120Iflfl168

1651158ISA149

180174141182

Total*

ByeraRnkosiPetersonBlind ....

Total

B92 828

A. D. (0)I A3170123126

162170133125

687

1391(6148126

How's Your Health?By Th« M«dico

681 680 668Offtei

All.r

212312.127313

I.AlmratorySmelter No. 2

CopaxVi.

Scrap No. 1Yard No. 2Tank House No. 1Silver No. 2Mechanical No. 2Smelter No. 1White Metal*laboratoryMechanicnl No. 1("oppcr PowderCantingYard No. 1Lead Plant

J. ScheinF. ScheinA. KromenbergJ. Vernillo

102141147Ih9

159120148156

180163168176

Total ...

P. NochtaTucker ....

T. Gindic .G. Piuan .

Total ...

Copp«r Powder

'P. SaundersS, Margiatto

|E. WalshG. Richardson

4 ' • - • • ' • • • • • • - • •

.... 549

. F. 3..... 161... 133.... 119.... 146

.... 668Dock.... 216... 162-.... 146.... 169

683 677

148161140176

104124144171

616 543

179168186163

Alley123213

121322

Vi.Yard No. 1Load Plant IMechanical No, 1Tank House No. 1Scrap Plant No. 1Tank House No. 2

Total 682C. F. D.

m149

T. Price 136

178167160136

696 631

M. SekoakyW. Bartko

CastingWhite MetalslaboratoryCopaxSilver Nn. 2MechanicalSilver No.

A. Uhouse 191

153122163182

108126167162

ALCOHOL"From the figures of the United

8tatci Internal Revenue Bureauwe learn that in this country thetotal amount paid by consumersfor all kinds of liquor by the peo-ple of the United States i* |4,-661,936,967 annually."

In hi* book entitled "The Amaz-ing Story of Repeal," FletcherDobyrni of Chicago, a lawyer, saysthe repeal of prohibition in 1933has been a swindle and wasbrought about by a campaign offraud and hypocrisy unparalleledin America to mislead the peopleto demand the repeal of prohibi-tion.

He declare*, "It was a conspir-acy against the government, Thaleaders in this conspiracy pretend-ed to be opposed to the saloonwhile they were secretly plottingto bring it back to promote thesale of liquor and increase theliquor revenue."

Instead of banishing the saloon,it has brought it back in increas-ed numbers, and women as wellas men are now purchasers, andyoung women numbering over amillion are tending the bars,

Alcohol is debauching the man-hood and womanhood of our coun-try. A fearful reckoning is on theway.

Even in Germany, the land ofbeer drinkers, Hitler is putting aban on It, Brewers are panicky.

sued orders that the people mustdrink less wine atyi spirits,

Q m t Britain,, M a war meaa-

ure, has put restriction* upon the. tavern* and public houses, andupon the consumption of alcoholTheiie restrictions have come aaan aid to winning the war. So wesee that in a time of dreadful fearand danger, liquor is tabooed. Thatis only done that the people maybe rendered physically more fit,and to bolster up their morale.

These government! demandobedience and abstinence, becausethey want their people to haveclear heads and strong bodies. Ina time of crisis they cannot brookbefuddles brains and moral weak-pens caused by indulgence in al-cohol.

The drinking habit crows onone. The person who in known asa drinker seldom has the desireto study, read and sacrifice, tomake his life a success. He eitherjust manages to "get by" or hebecomes a total failure, a burdento his family and friends. If heallows the drink habit to masterhim, he may end in suicide, acrash on the highway, or he maybecome a permanent resident ofgome state institution.

Most crimes are committedwhile the perpetrators are underthe influence of liquor or drugs,or both. We are shocked todayat the vast number of youths whoare filling: our jails and peniten-tiaries. Many of these revoltingcrimes are due directly to the

trut that these drunkards whomake themselves so offensive Htlong to a type that are ratherw«ak mentally. Some of thebrightest and most intellectualsuccumb to the drink habit

A crest number of these peopl*. IIPIMI reclaimed from th« low-

^r depth of degradation throughturning to uod lor help. He heardtheir cries and reached down »ndsaved them. There are many «ac-

rifldal worktn tmltg .^. rand outers, whG tytfld tin !••

helping to save othtti,Don't form the haolt of drink,

hut if y<>" Arc * Victim of th«

lUtoolat*.

8>ort W u wtil t i uM v n i p of all loea)the iporta pact.

The majority of occasionaldrinkers become the Steady drink-em or the drunkards, It is not

Total

No, 21

LaBoralory

666 620 664Teem Standing

W, L.: 5 I

6 13 3

S. A. D :. 3 3C. F. D 1 6Office 1 6

S. F. S.g Shop

I Dock

Alley2313211322231

Smelter No. 2Scrap Plant No. 2Mechanical No. 2Mechanical No. 1Tank House No. 1Yard No. 1Mechanical No. 3CopaxCopper PowderT. House No. 2 :1Smelter No. 1CastingSilver No. 2

1/62/112/192/253/5

L 3/133/jg3/204/14/g '4/184/23

Lead PlantAIL,

123322I1

31

- 313

Scrap Plant No. 2

Mechanical No. 3CopaxCopper PowderLaboratoryMechanical No. 1Scrap Plant No. 1CastingMechanical No. 2Lead PlantYard No. 1Silver No. 1Main Office

2/5Copper Powder L 2/11White Metals /20Miiln Office. 2/27Smelter No. 2 E^/eMechanical >'o. 3 3 / nMechanical No. 2 3/19

Mechanical No. 1 3/20Silver No, 2 E 4 / 3Tank House No. 1 I4/9Scrap No. 1 1Tank House No, 2Copax

Main OfficeAlley Vi.

3 Silver No. 21 White Metals2 Tank House No. 23 Lead Plant3 Smelter No. 12 Casting1 Silver No. 1li Mechanical No. 33 Yard No. 22 Smeller No, 22 Scrap Plant No.1 Scrap No. 11 Tank House No, 1

|4/24

D»te'1/302/42/13

Tank Home No. 2Allay Vi.

8 Smelter No. 1 L1 Smelter No. 22 Main Office

1 Mechanical No. 22 Casting I3 Copper Powder9 Silver No. 22 Silver No. 1,2 Scrap Plant No. 22 Laboratory3 White Metals1 Lead Plant3 Mechanical No, 3 L

Yard No. 1AlUy Vi.

1 Copper Powder2 Casting3 Mechanical No. 3 L

2/182/253/68/133/203/264/14/84/164/22

Date1/292/62/122/182/253/43/113/203/254/24/84/154/22

DaU1/202/62/122/202/268/63/123/203/274/14/94/164724

2313313212

Yard No. 2Silver No. 1Laboratory I,Mechanical No. 1 EScrap Plant No, 1Smelter No. 1White MetalsTank House No. 1CopaxMechanical No. 2

Yird No. 2All*r

3112132132131

Vi.Tank HouseCopaxSilver No. 1Yard No. 1Scrap No, 2Silver No. 2Smelter No. 2Shelter No. 1 LMain OfficeScrap Plant No. 1Mechanical No. 2Mechanical No, 3Mechanical No. 1

White MataliMUr

21

.33212113822

V..Mechanical No, 2Main OfficeLead Plant -Smelter No. 2 LMechanical No. 1Scrap No. 2 ECopaxCopper Powder EScrap Plant No. -Yard No. 1Tank House No. 2Silver No. 2Emelter No. 1

Silver Refinery No, 2Alley

312

123331321

Vi.Main Office *Smelter No. 1Scrup Plant No.'2CopaxMechanical No. 3Yard No.2Tank House No. 2Smelter No. 2Leud Plant'CastingCopper Powde.1'White MetalsLaboratory

(E) Designates games start at6:45. (L) Games start at 8:45.

Alley No. 1 designates alley 1and 2; No. 2—3 and 4; No. 3 —5 and 6,

Synagogue Forum(Continued Worn Page 1)

general theme of the Jew in thecurrent scene. The second Forumprogram will be a roond-tabie dis-cUBsion on Jewish problems in Am-erica and how they are being met.

Participants will discuss Jewisheducation,the problem of discrimi-nation, the problem of anti-Semit-ism, and the responsibility of theindividual to the community. Mem-bers i>f the Hebrew Social Alliancewill participate in this round-tablediscussion, which is scheduled forJanuary 31st. Rabbi Deutsch willlead the services and the discus-sion. t

Admission to the series of Forumprograms is free. All programswill start promptly at 8:15 P, M,

Members of the Nair Tumid willparticipate in the third Friday eve-ning program and will present adebate on a tope of Jewish inter-est, to bfl^uoounccd later.

Children of the Carteret HebrewSchool will join in the singing ofparts of the services.

Oil Baae Products CountlessWhat come* out of an oil well?

Oil is the obvious answer, but thenumber and variety of marketableproducts are practically endless.One company which operates fourrefineries gits approximately 450different products out of crude oil.Among them are 26 types of jaso-lins, 30 different solvents, fivegrades of diesel oil, IS grades offuel oil, 35 types of oxidized as-phalts, 15 industrial oils, 40 typesof highway asphalt, 80 greases, 25home and automotive specialties,and 135 different lubricating oils.

Smelt.r No. 1Alley

3121323113222

Vi.T, House NoSilver No. 2Smelter No, 2CastingMain OfficeSilver No. 1Scrap Plant NoYard No. 2Yard No. 1Mechanical No.LaboratoryMechanical No,White Metals

2 L

THAT THEHOLIDAYS ARE OVER

Everyday living begins again. Holi-day decorations come down. Thehousehold commences to functionnormally,

Housecleaning once mote comesto the fore. Muddy feet, dust, dirt,and ordinary winter wear and tearpresent quite a problem for Mother—unless she has an electric vacuumcleaner on her side.

•wv<

AJley212aa\2$3

11 •

3

Smeller Nu. 2Vi.

LaboiuluiyTank IIHUM; NO.

tSmelter No. 1White MetalsU'«d PlantCopuxYard No. >>Silver No. 2Silver No. 1Main OtiieeMtH-hauical Nu.Scrap Plant No.Casting

"to*Vicmu,

you liaw. yUvl U M T . With to it

ii b * m«-

Come A'Running!

Overcoat and TopcoatOALC:

Ends SaturdayHUSKY SAVINGS ARE €WAITING FOR Y O U -

BUY NOW!

$• ••. :. , v , . . . . . , * .

.85

You know the nationally advertised retail price, of Bond Clothes—

«• there is no p e n work about how much you sare. What's ttore,

no retail store can equal these values and javings—for W e at

Bond's Factory no retail expenses or retail profits enter the picture.

WOOLENS ARE GOING SKY HIGfl!BE CLOTHING WISE - BEAT THE

BUY NOW!

I ' \

HEW BRVKSWICK FACTOR!

REMSEN AVENUE AT HOWARD S T R E S S y. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J, * • * > -

.1 "• 1 1

OPEN DAILY, &30 A. M. UNTIL ftTHURSDAY AND 3 ^ ^