BOND DAY DAY ress V - digifind-it.com · BOND DAY JOIN THIMY-UUMVINBI HAM ... possible of roime...
-
Upload
duonghuong -
Category
Documents
-
view
214 -
download
0
Transcript of BOND DAY DAY ress V - digifind-it.com · BOND DAY JOIN THIMY-UUMVINBI HAM ... possible of roime...
DAY
BOND DAYJOIN THIMY-UUMVINBI HAM
No, 37
I SUE ITI . 'm-m-r-r 1 "•IMS WAY
V
ress foivtcrotirB u y
MNTO STMIt KFE)I3!
CARTERET, N. J., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1942
1.1,,.iv Christmas, and., i;ii:i to bring peace,
i i he many good..vi'vywhcre are •wish-in i his earth, which
, :i, r only ALL the.,,,,1,1 he that way too.
. we see there's, ,.;minr oil and won-,,,nv will rush out to
. ,,,l ihni a* they have, (.:i, canned milk,
:'r,vi-. If they do there*i,,. n lot of very uh-!, „« i:nd girls I
t *
.,..,iion for two resi-,,mch energy and vim
,•.,. ever known . . .M,,l his sister, Henri-
:il ,, business; is prcsi-i.miis, nml a very con-; I hnl; serves as Boy:<i,,ncr and Air Raid
ihi. :ird and 4th dis-, nirl Friday to Elmeri,,.nds three nights a
,!i day Sunday as an I'crih Amboy Hoa-
, hi-r services. Mean-..,,1 iirr, Mrs. Jacob
..,, moat of her eve-ii.imlngea for the Red
|,t mil ut to mentioni ,,,,, Blood Bank W e
Promoted To Higher Rank [ l ions P lanStudentContest
FRICl THBflt
Ihc right Mid «ifnf
io,| („up <make blood pU«n« for
Lieut. Melvin Cohen Capt. William SidunCAKTKKKT-. Promotions to higher rank in the army were
among the Christmas presents received by the two young officerspictured nlinve. Captain Sidun, «on of Mrs. Charles Sidun ofChristopher Street, WHS among; the graduates of the First Chem-ical Warfare Service Command and Staff Course given at Edge-wood Arsenal, Mr. Before the war he was a chemist with theGeneral Chemical Company nt Cltiymont, Del. He is stationedat Baltimore.
Lieutenant Cohen, promoted today from second to firstlieutenant, was commissioned last September at Camp Lee,Virginia. A lawyer in civilian life, he was inducted in April.He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Max Cohen of Washington Avenue,and is stationed with the Quartermaster Corps at Belle Meade,near Somerville.
Review Of Organiza-tion's First Year ShowiMany Community Projects
CARTERET — The CarteretClub has announced a newnntcnt, to which BtudenU
Lion?essaynt Carteret High School areiblc The six awards will be in
High School Students ScheduledTo Resume All Activities Monday
Ji,.),[,i(y wlio ne i id i i t«
i seem especiallytime. We hear
nhiii, who recently tookli m High Street, Perth>ii :i turkey at the Courtwick, and if we remem-:v it was Sam Kaplani>\ »t the same place
ind day.• • *
Ik" i lot of others we're full,i'y>ii for our gals who'vework in defense plants,imil a ft'W whose names
t nought* at this time
Pauline
gDafgak
Ann Stima,(i iveicrs), Mary and So-.'-;iv, Julia Stlma, Rose-u'liruk, Betty Lakatos.•iiuiir, Ann Cherepon andllirnwnki, all of Eastern;n Linden. These eight
iin doing almost any-.ii assembling to inspect-
" K-rcat skill and care111. - -i they help make willp.TflTt . . .
i;;ri;iti' m two on whom. no mark, Mrs. Julia• Donoghue, (and we" »f her wonderful in-MI war bonds), and Mrs.
!•:.! of Warren Street,t thirteen robust young-
uliu looks like one of
tr . . . the lib girls ofworks having a partyinanski's the crowd in-, Rose Marciniak, Mrn.
luTtpon, Jean Kosel,
CARTKRKT While the arrivalof the Christinas holidays inter-rupted the many activities of stu-dents at Cnrtoret Hi(th School, itis mererly un interruption, withplans already formulated for re-sumption of these interests whenschool sessions start next Monday,
Group meetings are held eachWednesday hy the divisions of the.Victory Corps, each division head-ed by two members of the facultyand two students. These indi-vidual leaders are: Land division,Miss Mury Roueh, Stephen Bodnarand, Frank Hagen; production di-vision, Miss Dorothy Venook,Philip Got, Irene Nagy and Paul-ine Waiko; air division, Mrs. Wil-liam Conway, John Popiel, AndrewGombos and Harry Gleckncr, Jr.;sea division, Edwin S. Quinn, Jr.,Chester Wielitoliii'ki, Robert Shan-ley and William Szenicsak; com-munity Hervice division, Misa OliveGunderson, Miss Helen (iavaletz,Helen Strain and Willa Walsh.
Other WorkWork collecting funds for the
Middlesex County TuberculosisAssociation will continue, withMiss I<aura Tomczuk and MarcoPapi as faculty and student chair-man respectively, and the JuniorRed Cross activities will go for-ward also. Miss Sophie 'Prywataof the faculty and Joseph Kolibaarepresent the faculty and studentbody in this undertaking. TheRed Cross prepared gift packagesfor veterans' hospitals and alsosent Christmas cards to men fromCaiteret in the armed forces.
Members of the Senior Classare planning a memorial for grad-u t Of the sefSto!*^ ah in
puates Of the
gah inua
service. A service flag is to besecured for the alumni thus rep-resented, and a recent memorialservice was held for graduates wholiuve died during the war, TimothyDonovan, Terrence Brady, WalterOverholt and Anthony MichaelBryla.
\uir savings stamps and the. sub-ject on which the essays are tobe submitted is "Why PurchaseWar Savings Bonds *ni Stamps?"Members of the Rchoal faculty willbe judges and the winners will beannounced February 11.
This plan is the newest in themany activities of this club whichnow end* its first year of exist-ence. Every month has seen somenoteworthy project for the better-ment of the community and itsresidents and a record of theseundertakings is a month-by-monthhistory of the efforts of thfs groupof men to keep Carteret progres-sive.
In January Charter Might washeld, marking the official recogni-tion of this unit of Lions Interna-tional. John A. Turk arranged theprogram and the club also con-tributed to the Infantile ParalysisFund and the Red Cross WarEmergency Fund this month. InFebruary there was a Boy ScoutDrive, sponsored by the club withAugust J, Perry as chairman, andfor the first time in years thequota was passed. February alsomarked the departure for serviceof the first Lion to go into thearmed forces, Lester SokleV, nowan Army Sergeant. The Lionagave him a farewell dinner.
Collect Scrap MetalNext came the support of the
drive to collect tin cans for sal-vage, and in April there was aposter contest in the local schools,directed by Louis Brown. A »tu-dent in each school \von a priieand the contest boosted the saleof War Bonds.
July 4 tto liona joined with theLegion and V. F. W, to sponsor"I Am An American Day," witha parade and program at theStadium.
Throughout the Summer theLions carried on a program at theBorough Park in which each childat the playground there received,refreshments. In August Lion Al-
GARTERET — The Red CrossBlood Bank will comi> to Carteretfor donations Wednesday, Janu-ary 6. This is the newwit oppor-tunity for residents of this com-munity to show their support oftht 1,250 men who have gonefrom Carteret into the nation'sarmed forces. It is the first timetht bank has come into Carteret,but a number of local personscontributed blood when the unitwas in Perth Amboy some months•go.
Registration will be taken De-cember 28 through January 5 bymeans of the following arrangements: In person at police headquartern in the Borough Hall fromft »'<l«ek until four WH4 •rwno'clock until 9 each day of theperiod, December 28-January 5or telephone during' those hour;to either of these numbers, Carteret 6276 or 6387. Registrar!are being assigned hy Mrs. Thornas Thorn, who has charge of thearrangements.
The process of, giving blood acarried on by the Red Cross isimple, painless, and reported ian article in the Saturday Eve
Ing Port to b* of aetual benefito a person In good health. Aloctor interviewed by the authorf that article stated: "It's goodor you if you're in good health.There »M > r.erm of truth in the>ld custom of bloodletting. Theinly trouble was they us«d to take.oo much. Losing a pint (the
amount the Red Cross takes fromt* volunteer donors) ««ts youriody to tuning up all the bloodmaking machinery, nnd in a few;iays you feel better than cv
The actual work of taking theblood Will be done by doctors andnurses of 'the Red Cross MobileBlood Bank, coming to Carteretfor the one day. Lotal doctomwill m«mlif UM donon, and HitsMary Dylag, staff assistant, andnurses aides will be on hand foiany necessary duty. Workers othe Red Cross Canteen of PerthAmboy-Carteret Chapter, linedup \>y Mrs. Thorn, will serve coffee and sandwiches to donors s<they may return as quickly apossible to their homes or work.
The blood which is contributehere will be mado Into the pr«cious blood plasma which, lik
Depositors Sought For Blood Bank Ban FixedOn StovePurchase
hat other miracle of modernmedicine, the Rulfa drugs, is MV-ng the liven of so miny injured
men in th« armed fnrfes. It ispossible of roime that blood fromome donor here in Cartwet
might through the queer coinci-dence of circumstances, he ui#do aid some man from Cartcret at
a time when ha desperately needst. Such things have happened.
The miracle of plasma, madefrom blond collected in Philadel-phia on just such n diiy as the oneto be held in Cnrterot, naveil thelife of n man crushed in tho tor-pedoing of the U. S. S. Kearney,3,000 miles from Philadelphia.Carteret men now ar« on duty allovar the world, and the blood tobe taken here will go all over theworld. Maybe somewhere . . .well you figure it out.
I'lasmn itself is made from theliquid part of the blood, the fluidleft after the red and white cor-puscles have been removed. Allplasma is the same, regardless ofthe type blood of the donor, andyet in almost every condition inwhich a transfusion in needed,
(Continued on Page 3)
Refilations B7 OP ABecame Effecti? eOft December 18
Boro Clubs Celebrate ChristmasAt Parties During Recent Weeks
Air Cadet CarltonBiiried On Monday
lllKR ADOO . . . the waymanages to do anything
Miiinn « n i i BtMl keep go-guarding at Wheeler's
imding time to lend a.uid where it's needed;' i of people who've also• " »-• an guards in additionri^; Joe Preencb, just
- like the sou»d of his>n mid Joan Wolanski, a
! ••• LILirst and most active'"ins you over saw; Corp.I with vuuison for Chrlst-
•" the deer h* bagged;"iciii'3uk of the Coast
i' on leave, and also•••• home for the first
• he K>ft here ftv« monthsTotli, home on four 12-
'••>•* without catching a"•' father becauje pop al-
!"•'•" working during his! Munkaeay who's gone
'•"'' to sucond lieutenant•"iitha, mid now is at Fort
'"'•i-; the pound of but-1 ih'1 editor of this paper
!<"' herself, put in aII t» keep cofll until she
1 it home, only when that<t the bytter. had boun
'"• skill of iym locul waifc-• y Malnkk who'* ghvay»
Hona Gyorfy who caUbl at once and still
l t al.y"'re at OJI
Robert Brown Weds,Then Enters Army
CARTERET — Announcementhas been made of the marriagela.st Sunday in Brooklyn of MissAnn Cooper, daughter of Mr. andMrs. Samson Cooper of 537 EastFourth Street, that city, to RobertL. Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs.William Brown of 558 RooseveltAvenue. The ceremony was per-formed in the Concordia Club byRabbi Bernard Schram.
Miss Frances Eisenfeld ofBrooklyn was the maid of honorand Dr. David Roth of Carteret,now Private Roth of Fort Mon-mouth, acted as best man. Th«bride, a graduate of Ejaamus HallHigh School in Brooklyn and CityCilluge of New York, is an ac-countant. The bridegroom is agraduute of Carteret High Schooland the University of Richmond,Va., and also has done post-gradu-ate study in education at RutgersUniversity.
He has been employed recentlyby the 'Hammond Iron Works atWarren, Pa., and formerly led theNo. 2 Fire Company Band. He
CARTERET — Groups meetingtogether throughout the year forvarious purposes are celebratingthe Christmas holidays with part-ies, both of a special nature andas additions to the routine meet-ings. Some already have beenheld, others will take place be-tween now and New Year's, Atmany the members have made do-nations to charity, and some haveexchanged simple gifts amongthemselves.
Included in these holiday fes-tivities have been the following:
The Companions of the Forestheld their party December 15 atthe regular meeting. This was inNo. 1 Fire Hall, and gifts wereexchanged. Those in charge wereMrs. George DeBot, Mrs. JohnReid, tMrs. Harry Mann, Mrs.Prank Andres, Mrs. Ursula Free-man, Mrs. Charles Dalton, Mrs.Louis Date and ttU*. EggertIBfown.
The night of December 14 MissWanda Knorr's home in GrantAvenue was the scene of the partygiven by and for members of theEvening Department of the Car-teret Women's Club. Service boxesfor men at Camp Kilmer were pre-
be Mrs. Edward A. Strsck, Mrs.Harry Yetman, Mrs. Charles Mor-ris, Mrs. John Reid, Mrs. WalterVonah, Mrs. Harry (Jleckner, Mrs.•Frank Andres, Mrs. Ursula free-man and Mrs. ESggcrt Drown.
The Catholic Daughters have(Continued on Pagt 3)
Post Office Volant* TopsPrevious Holiday Figures
0ART.BRET,—The local postoffice this year has handled tholargest volume of mail in its his-tory, Postmaster William F.Lawlor stated yesterday. Pre-viously the office has transferredlarge sums of money to foreigncountries, tut since the war thevolume naturally has becomevery small. The record thisyear is for the sale of stampsand enwjjji»»^%,»i^ng. let-ters',' card* and-packages. Twelveextra employes have been addedto asaiBt the regular force thisweek, a number of them highschool students ott vacation, whohave served as carriers
Jewish Appeal CommitteeTo Plan Campaign Sunday
0ARTERET—A supper meet-ing has been scheduled for Sun-day afternoon at 4 o'clock at theBrotherhood of Israel Synagogueby the Committee for UnitedQewish Appeal. Ways of help-ing in the present great needsof persecuted and refugee Jewsthroughout the world are to bediscussed, with Rabbi SamuelGraffen of Teancck as the prin-cipal speaker. A social hour•will follow the meeting. Locallythe committee is headed by I. M.Weiss, and Mrs. Albert Jucobyis secretary.
BAR M1TZVAH HELDOARTERET—Mr. and Mrs. Rob-
ert Brown entertained at theirhome in Lowell Street "Sunday Inhonor of the Bar Mitzvah the pre/vious day <*f their younger son,Stewart. After the ceremony Saturday morning, held in the Con-gregation of Loving Justice Syna-gogue, they also gave a receptionat the temple. Guests were pres-ent from Carteret, Trenton, NewYork and Long Island.
lastwas Inducted into the armyweek and left for Fort Dix Tues-
fred Wohlgemuth headed thescrap drive which brought in manytons, and in this same month theclub secured enough furniturefrom local merchants to furnish aday room at Camp Kilmer.
Attend ConventionLast September local delegates
represented Carte rat at the statemeeting and at the annual Lionspilgrimage to the State Home forBoyd in Jamesburg. In Novemberthe Lions donated live kits for menin service and appealed to. tho Gov-ernor and State Legislature tomake tho teaching of AmericanHistory compulsory in the highergrades of all high schools.
Officers of the club are as fol-lows: President, Joseph Weiss;first vice president, Robert R.Brown; second, Alexander Comba;third, Dr. Leon Greenwald; treas-urer, Joseph Synowiecki; secre-trry, IJdward S. Kucijnski; direc-tors, Mr. Wohlgemuth, Paul Cher-gey, Louis Bollaci and Mayor Jo-seph W. Mtttuch. Frank Scrudatowas the first president of CarteretLions and James' J, Lukach hasbeen one of its most activemembers.
pared by the members. Decem-ber 29 the club group will have aprogressive dinner.
Monday night of this week theEastern Star celebrated Christmasat its meeting in I. 0. 0. F. Hall,with Mrs. Karl Grohmann incharge. A card party followed themeeting.
OARTERET—Navy Air Cadet"Mwaril Curlton, former residentf this borough and graduate of
;ho local High School, who wasilled in an accident at Corpus"hristi, Tex., last week, was buried
Monday in Arlington NationalCemetery. His parents, Mr. andMrs. Hugh Carlton, residents ofCarteret until a few years ago,now live in Washington, and thBservice was a requiem mass in St.Ann's Church in that city. Fullmilitary honors were paid theyoung man and both active andhonorary pall bearers were menfrom the armed forces.
Among those at the serviceswere his brother-in-law and sister,Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Spewak ofthis place, and their son, Thomas;Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Knot, Mrs.P. B, Harrington, and Mrs. MaryArmour and Edward Nash ofWoodbridge.
As of lastday, all new coal and new oiWheating stoves are rationed,announcement v u made bylocal War PT1C« and RatBoard.• Dealers are asked to pityticular attention to the followrules:
"On or after December 18,dealers, wholesalers snd man*turers must keep for 2 years:a permanent record containing!following information:
"1. all complete new coat,new oil-fired heating stove* (ijjspace heaters) in their kivtntat 12.01 A. M., December 18,
"2. The date of each delivernew coal or new oil-ftred heat)stoves received by them on or |ter 12:01 A. M., of Decemberthe name and address of 'firm from whom suchwas received and the mimb«rstoves or spsce-heaten oftype received.
"3. The date of each tale of 1stove.
"4. The name, and addreuperson making a purchase.
"5. The type of stove sold."6. The serial number of
tificate received for each"7. All certificates and oil
memorandum receipts of sbsold."
Dealers in the fael-oil rattanarea may purchase stovesmanufacturers anywhore in _United States without the surrtner of certificate but no shipm,.of coal-fired heating stoves canmade from inside the fuel-oiltioned area to any point outsuch area.
LONG TIME AWAYOARTBRfirr—Michael Molnar,
of Holly Street, who has been inBermuda for tho past year; isspending two weeks with his fam-ily here. '
At LibraryR- Uretto M. NevillTBROTSABOTA
'*m
«tlonof
is the suljjeci of a time-ly new book. This book uncoverssensational uvidenn! of tho tech-niquos and plans of Axis saboteursoperating in the United States,told 4iy two journalist* who have
nationwide reputation, 'foriiveatigaiions into fifth-col-
umn activities, and carefully docu-mented with hitherto unpublisheddata, this book reveals the amaz-ing ramifications and' deviousworkings of the secret Axis offen-sive against American war produc-tion and morale, Not only do the
" —-•.oma and
won *theirumn ac
Ml
tion and mi authors expose th« menace and•" WtyW* ,ff phy*te*l sabotage; they
present, for the flmt timi, thu# * # k?» * • Aai« baa de-
SABOTAGE! contains informa-tion that evwy American shouldknow. It teaches a vitfil lesson:that in this era of total warfare,mibotage has become the problemof every patriotic man and wom-an, for it directly affects their se-curity and their vety HVBB.
Containing approximately fiftypages of secret papers, photo-graphs, spy letters, and other ex-clusive documents, SABOTAGE!traces Nazi conspiracies aimed atwrecking or obstructing the Amer-ican war effort. It reveals, amongother things, the device* and tech-niques of N«i saboteurs in'Amer-ica; how ships at? sabotaged; whothe "brains" are behind the sabot-age network; how sabatuea get
GOLASZEWSKI RITESGARTERBT—Frank Gplaszew-
aki, of 14 Burlington Street, willbe buried Saturday morning. Theservice will be hold from his homeat 9 o'clock, followed by a massin Holy Family Church. Burialwill be in «St. Gertrude's Cemetery.The young man was twenty-threeyears of age and died Tuesday inState Hospital, Trenton. He issurvived by his parent*, Mr. »ndMrs. Hibolit Golaszewiiki; two bro-thers, Stanley and John in theArmy; two others, Joseph and An-thony, of the Navy; Edward, «fthis borough; two sisters, Mrs.Frank Silkuwtski of .South Riverand Mrs. John'Miller of Avepql.Joseph Synowiecki has chargeiofthe funeral,
Santa Appear*
Last Friday night the LadiesRepublican Club held its annualpaily in No. 1 Fire House, withMrs. Walter Vonah in charge.There was a Christmas tree, giftswere exchanged, and entertain-ment was provided by Elaine Car-sia, Andrew Chura, Walter VonahHI and August Hundemann.Louis IBollaci padded himself tomake a realistic Santa Claus.
Last night the Daughters ofAmerica held their Christmasparty in Odd Fellows Hall, enter-taining the children of* the mem-bers and presenting gifts to allpresent. Mrs. Harry Yetman,Mrs. John Merelo, Mrs. ArthurHall and Mrs. Cornelius Doodywere in charge.
Monday has been chosen by twoorganizations for their holidaycelebration, the Woman's Club andthe Pocahontas. Children of theWoman's Club rfiembers will bespecial gue»U at their party, to beheld in the afternoon, and theseyoungsters will provide the enter-tainment, after which they will beServed refreshments. Mrs., JosephHlub is chairman. Each child >villreceive e gift.
More Fe»tivitiotThe Pocahontas party will be in
No. 1 Fire Hall, wtyh Mis. GeorgeDeBot as chairman. Assisting will
i4rmv Notifies NewspaperOf Assignments To Duty
CAlRTERET — New promotionsof men in the services, and of theassignments of others recently in-ducted1 is among that received bythis newspaper in the latest mailsarriving before this issue went topress. Among the items thus notedwere the following:
Joseph S. Toth, son of Mr. andMrs. John Toth of 99 PershingAvenue, has been promoted torank as sergeant at Turner Field,Albany, Ga.; Fred A. Johnson, 50Thornal Street; Louis E. Sobieski,8 >Passaic Street; Stephen Cap, 50Larch Street; Anthony F. Sawczak, 11 Lincoln Avenue; and JohnL. Balka, of 48 Hermann Avenuehave been assigned to Fort Leon-ard Wood, Mo., to train for engineer combat duty; Joseph S. Moroney, son of Mrs. Margaret R,Moroney of fl Roosevelt Avenuehas been promoted to technicianfifth grade, at Camp i'ickett, Va.this young man formerly was employed .by the American- Oil Company, and his wife lives at 633Roosevelt Avenue; other recent assignments to Fort Leonard Woocjare seven new Inductees, who alswill train as combat engineersThis latest group consist* of thifollowing: Stanley Stankewicz, 69Randolph Street; Robert Sloan, 40Chrome A venae; Paul A. Kroop,563 RooaeveM Avenue; MironDacko, 60 Heftld Street; Alfred A.Perry, 25 Salem Avenuu; JosephKawensky, l i Hay ward Avenue;Bernard G. Raymond, 57 Roose-velt Avenue.
Mrs. Dobrovich ElectedBy Slovak Organization
CARTERET —Members of thoFirst Catholic Ladies Slovnk Iln-1
on, meeting for their annuallection Sunday in the parish hallf Sacred Heart Church, chose
,he following officers: President,Mrs. Andrew Dobrovich; viceresident, Mrs. Stephen Kazimir;
financial secretary, Mrs. Annairegor; recording secretary, Mrs.JosephJames
Hasek; treasurer,Lukach; auditors,
Mrs.Mrs.
Miss Venook WedAt New York Rite
CAIiTBRET—The marriageMiss Dorothy Venook, daughter s
of Mr. and Mrs. David Vonook «f"!77 Lincoln Avenue, to AHausner, son oi* Mr. and Mrs.Hausner of Brooklyn, tookSunday afternoon at Lenox ManVsion in New York. The ceremoAy:was performed by Rabbi LBOIIvJTrainer and there was special m)sic by a choir of ten singers.reception followed the ceremon;
John Fisher and Mrs. IgnatiDieleik; chairman of the sick committee, Mrs. Susan Mazolu.
Mrs. George Maiola is presidentoff the junior branch of the organ-tation and Mrs. Valentine Andre-lack as vice president.
Public Library To CloseSaturday As Fuel Saving
CAiRTHRET — The boroughPublic Library will be closed onSaturduy, starting this week,for the duration of the war, Thestep was decided upon by theLibrary Board as a means ofHaving fuel oil, and is in linewith action taken hy lihrariesthroughout the state.
Library hours now will be mfollows: 2 P. M. until 5:30 dailyMonday through Friday; Mon-day, Wednesday and Fridaynights, 7 o'clock until !).
OFFICERS NAMEDCARTERET—Generu! Stefanik
American Slovak Citizens' Clubhas elected the following officersfor I'M'A; Michael Stafura, preaidonli; Michael Kepich, vice presi-dent; Andrew Ihnat, financial secrotary; John Holub, recordingsecretary; John Mucha, treasurerMichiiel Kolibas und Michael Kudrak, house committee.
f
. Mr. Venook gave his daughWjKila teacher in Carteret High School,^in marriage, She WAS gownedwhite satin, made princeuand trimmed in seed pMfUh,her fingertip length veil
raped from a coronet of•aria. She carried a flower
white roses, an orchidouvurtlm. Her sister, Bertha, i .as her attendant, wore a gown (lue silk jersey and net, a pietui3||at to match, and carried eade bouquet of talisman roitH,|Vcting as best man was Lieut.man Grcenberg of the Army.
The bride is a graduate oferscy College for Women and 1ridegroom of St. JOIIII'H UnWpf
lity IJHW School in Brooklyniracticua law in thut city. Aft^, few days ftl New York City atid;lhort trip to New York Stateouple will make their bom*
FETE SOLDIER SON, » n d ; MrMr»,
ag n ;paid; how wJfottjjrs
b "-'—tb» Aii» baa de- have been
moralu
C A r a j ;Daniel 0'R.orke, formerly of Eraer-aon Street, Carteret, and now ofl.Woodbridlge, have been visited re*Wntky by th»ir tpn,< James J,OTjtorke, who. W*yei"with the Mili-tary 'Police at Lincoln Field, Nab.They entertained, (it • dinner fortwenty«ftve guests during 'theweek,eni)*t'thetr,'b«m* in Oramp-too .Avenue. M*. O'Rotke, for,
flrte fc fc i ta
4 New Arrivals To MakeTheir Homes In Carteret
— Mr. and Mnj.-Theodore Huber are the parents[•of a son, born in Ruhway Memo-ria;l Hospital, who has been namedWilliam George. The- baby'jmother 1» the former Mips HelenMayday of 'Plaimfleld.
Another new arrival In Caiteretl» a daughter, Chrjatino, born toMr. and Mrs. Willium 8amu' utLarch Street, ajid a third new resi-dent 1* the son -born m.IverlookH<nplUl, Summit, to Mr.'and Mr*.Jotjpph Binkuoao of Lincoln Avtf-nu». This baby'a mother it theformer Mian iPauline Sinkner.
Mr. and MM, A*<lr«w Htftavare the p«w>t» oi ft
Among The Carteret ChurchesS. JOSEPH'S
A high mail Will be celebratedin St. Joseph.'* R. C. Church nlmidnight tonight. The doors willopun at 11:80 P. M. and a halfhour organ reellal with special mu-ak by the clwlr will be held.
On Chri»timt« morning low mans.eg will he celebrated at 6, H, andB A. M. and hijfh matu at 11 A. M.The Jtev. J«1»M McLennan, O.S.M., and the H»v. Joseph Grabrianwill officiate »t the services. OnChristmas Dva conteasloa will beheld at 8)80 te 6 IP. M. and from7:80.tq&;30y.M.
FiTBK MAQYAR REFORMED
Chritt strvice will be
(>'hrit)tnuu) Day services on Decemtr 25 will include: Communionservice* at 8:30 A, M. and at 10:31A. M. , Afternoon service ato'clock to be followed by a ChristHIM festival for children.
In the morning of Christmassecond day, December 26, invalid:and shut-ins will 'have their Communions at their respective homesDivine seivict! will be held at JO:!A. M. n the church.
Sunday services; the 930 A. Mservice Vill be held in thelanguage, and the 10:30 A. Mservice in Hungarian.
Afternoon service at % o'clocto .be followed by the regularmonthly matting of tho. Man'* SicBenefit Society and «f Branch NA - . g * ,•_ . • V9.L TS *_i- * n.Ku«^
College Students OfAid Christmas Program-
CARTERET- -Miss Lovcy Met)if 29 Charles Street was one |ho forty juniors at New JeriCollege for Women who served !ushers at the Twilight Yule
eremony held in tbo collchaptil.; Miss Mi-lick, daughter |Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Melidclmajoring In journalism.
At' Monftlair 'Stale T«achJullege Mian Dorothy CoonJidaughter of Mr. and Mrs.Connelly of (15 Atlantic Statoo'k part in the traditionalcal pageant at the uchool.
BURIAL TOMORROWCARTERET—Funeral servK
wilt take place tomorrownoon at 3 o'clock in her home,Loub Street, for Mrs. Anna !twenty - three years of age,
died Tuesdsy in Rooseveltpiul. They will be fotlowaservices in St. Klisabeth'sof which the was a mutnber,'
|*urialwUl be in St. James '"tery, Woodbtidge, under the ition of Joseph Synowiecki.
Mrs. SoUk is survived b y jhusband, Alexander; a son,her father, ChnUn Bastrtbj
,:
Greet Chrittmai with joy• nd. laufhter—and may aVictorious peace follow toonafter!
ROOSEVELT FLOWERSHOP
Catherin Ruckriegel, Prop.
FLOWERS FOR ALLOCCASIONS
325 Perching Ave phone Carteret 8-0493 Carteret, N. J.
578 Rooievelt Ave.
Our but wishes toy o u for health,happiness and thefulfillment of yourd e e p e s t desiresduring the holidayseason a n d theNew Year.
MR. & MRS. MAX COHENWASHINGTON RESTAURANT
56 Washington Ave. Carteret
May this Christmas sea-son guide us safely intothe harbor of peace asour anchor.
OVERTRACKDEPT. STORE(Hill Section) Carteret, N. J.
Accept our iin-eereit CheerfulYuletide wiikeiwith the hopethat your happi-tieu it multi-plied.
BCSf WISHES76 Rooievelt Ave.
LEHRER'S MEN'S SHOPCarteret, N. J.
May all yom
d r e a tn • come
true, and thu be
the lilt wartime
Franks Variety Store77 Roosevelt Ave Carteret, N. J.
We extend our heartfeltgreetings for a MerryChristmas that will lightthe way to a New Year ofpeace and happiness.
' FAMILY LIQUOR STORES. Novit, Prop.
76 Washington Ave. * Carteret, N. J.Phone 8-0877
riii»iiiiiiiiTiiiii»iiiiiiiiiiiiiii»*iiw»iiiiinii>iiiii>iiii>ii>w»iiiii>i<iii>iaaii
I May our land be foreverI free, and the skies once more
be blue, is our wish forpeace at Christina*, may itsoon come true!
ALEX SUCHPtinl» and
Wheeler Ave. '
GREETINGS
Good withe* mean more than ever now. And they <som* to you all the more sincerely thUtroubled Chriitma. time, from your retailer* and tho*e who »erve you in many other way» inthii community. Because these nei|hbor« want to greet you perionally and extend the iplritof the tea*on to you—they have cholen the columns of this newspaper through which toblanket the town with heartfelt good thoughts for each and every one. Read these greet-ings . . . and remember that now above all, your storekeepers are striving to help in the fight forfreedom which will forever secure our enjoyment of all traditionally American holidays suchas this!
SANTA AND UNCLE SAM AGREE
BUY WAR BONDS
AND STAMPS
THE BESTGIFT ISFREEDOM!YOU CANGIVE YOURLOVED ONESTHE BESTGIFT OFALL—ANDSEND ACHRISTMASTOKEN TOTOKYO ATTHE SAMETIME.
COPPOLA108 MAIN ST.
CLEANERS(Next To Bank) WOODBRIDGE, N. J.
M»y your nomeb# bright withChriitmai light. . . and thank-( u I knowUdfethat rifbt willmake might!
PUBLIX DRUG STORE95 Main SU Woodbridge, N. J.
Greet Chriitnu with joy
and laughter—and m*y a
Victoriom peace follow
toon after!
WOODBRIDGE NATIONAL BANK"Friendly, Sound, Serviceable"
Member Ftd*raI*D*potit Inturanc* Corp.Woodbridge, N. J.
And the comin$ ytm\ii*ryov ,A tott of ihttfl
Green
MERRY CHRISTMASTO ALL OUR FRIENDS
AND CUSTOMERSW o o d b r i d g e Fruit E x c h a n g e ]
Fruits and VegetablesM MAIN ST
riion* 8-2120 WE DELIVER!
DRIED FRUITS-NUTS AND CANDY!MlftMiMtMtMtMtM
Merry ChristmasIt ii not richci or expensive gifti alone thatmake a Chriitmai merry . . . but the addedsimple, familiar wiihei of n«ifhbor« andfriendi. 5o .> .. :'•• ••• ~$z':n we raite our voicesin the homey, old greeting . . . Merry Chrittmai. . . to each and every one!
BEHRENS BAKERY387 School St.
Woodbridge, N. J.
O u r heartiest
#iea«t for • joy
oui Y u l e t i d e
LOUIS TOKE
WoodbridgeFUR SHOP
The House of Quality —Amboy Ave.
*
ASALLEN'S DEPT. STORE
85 Main St. Woodbridg., N.
l «»J l» ikJ . f :.vs..
Woodbridge
May fo» have food fellow-
' ihlp and cheer at you fo
yeur way, and the happiest
possible Christina* Day!
P. TOBAKGROCERIES A MEATS
291 Amtoy Ave. W*od»ridi.
Phone Wood. 04)202• • e
RONS WE WISH YOU ALL
WtWhhYoiAll
9myChri$tm$i
A Merry ChriitmaTo Allmm
The star of BethMun,
ing with the briphtn.'
Yuletide greeting an-!
for the New Year.
REV. ELIZABETH RICKEflSPlKlTUAL MEDIUM
90 MAIN ST. WOODBRlDi.I N.|
iHXH'Uf.'/ . ,
If our withe* are heededyour holiday tauon andNew Year will be filledwith merriment and hap-pines*.
Raymond Jackson& Son
DRUGGISTS88 Main St.
Woodbridge
TO OUR CUSTOMERS ANl
• FRIENDS BOTH HERE ANl
ON THE BATTLEFRONT
JASPER & SONQUALITY FRUIT a..d
VEGETABLE MARKU
M Main St. Woodbridge N.Phone 8-2352
The »tars andaijfipeft inspire
\ Otur Wtihes for• very MerryChrittmas and• bright NewYear.
Mai* Street, W«ribridfe, N. Johm EVEIMNGS
"th» «tfilaal ufW efAfrican prtdi At»Ay «eet e m wWfc !••do»e o f |MM« kr •*••ie« . . . U our farrtut
•^'MjfiiROfHAL'S
li^'i'1'*
M»y your hom, ^W With U.n.«a
and gua<^U
valor and «li through""' m
f'Ai' \ i , ••' • % J
Service:»-, H. HUBS, son of Mr. and
t,,i Haft* of 7T'fitoH-Bttwt,, ,.,| in the U,, S. Army Re-
,'„,,,!,. His wife Is (the for-: charlotte Nesterwiti anri
one child, 4 daughter,
Mnckcy GooiHnM, itm ofi Mrs. Maurice Goodman,
, i, transferred t o the Basic,li,,ol at Courtlahd, Ala.
William Sidun, »on of\M-\<>z Sidun of John Street,
, ^ mother during the Week-i. IM «tationed at BftHlmorc..; i,,-;-. Lieut. John Sidun, m,1 hiimc this wesVend from
the son of Mr. ami Mrs. Sebok o |mi M1«& Randolph Street.
Piivsti> ,1. 1'imillo ofouph now is Atationert7th School SqiiField, 111.
Mrs. Maur i s (Miodimh of »|>p*r
this lior-with the
at ChanuU'
Roosevelt Avenue is in Floridawith her husband, Lieut. Chodosh,who rerently completed a six weekcourse of military instruction inOfficer Training School at MiamiReac|
Francis Koepfler
nhn M. Budije of Jerseybeen transferred to At-UP (tra()uat^d from theMiami, Fl*., Wently.IN7.ciolft o f . th i Navy
] a 20-d»f '•**« whichi,,.iniiiiir «t the-home of hlK
Walter PWCWla, of 76•lli.w Street.
rhrk«f the ttwy left Mon-, s:in Diego, Cat., after vltilt-
|i:ufrits, Mr. and Mrs. Ste-ii,k of ftft t,liicel;i AYenup
::,: his first ldave in oter'.•em's.
- :• rulfi- Hebok, Jr., of th<!Ciiiinl, has be«n tranirfarredihi' Manhattan Beach 8ta-
::Miklyn, to Boston. He U
|Private f. c
is at home for a seven day leavefrom Camp Davis, N. C, He is theion of Mrs. Francis Koepfler of
rshinR Avenue.
Private John J. Arva, son ofMr. and Mrs. ,1. Aiva of McKinleyAvenue, had been promoted to Pfc.at Camp Oowder, Mo., where heis with the Signal Corps.
Mrs. John Dunne of AtlanticStreet, ami Mrs. James Dunne,have left to spend the holidays stCamp Davis, N. C, where CorporalJames Dunne is sationed.
Serjeant Robert Burke has feturned to his station, Camp Living-ston, La., after spending tw
ks wittt Ms •parents,' Mr. anilMrs. Thomns Burke of EmersonStreet
Francis J. Hasek, son of Mrand Mrs. Joseph Hasek of Charle:Street, has joined the Army AiCorps as nn aviation cadet.
High School Jayoees Open SeasonWith Two Wins By 13-9 And 12-6
11; I KltKT - M o t to be outdone!•;,• iiiir brothers—the varsity
, Ciiitcrct High School Jay-,pi tiid their court season by
n; 11 pair of triupmha. Theyi!cil the Unon Jayvees, 12 to fiI• i idriy and on Monday rolledi i;i to 9 victory over North
j tirlil High School's second
Meiers, fKuznia, cRiedel, eLakatos,
Elliott, (f
Cance l ( 1 2 )
1 ff
It-L.f.-I. f
I Union (6); La Vine, f .
Shrledc'v, f-ll,-r, P ..
Ammcan, c
•Tl'L
periods:30
G.201001000
4G.200001
F. P,
6 1 1North Pl»infi«ld Jiyveet (9)
G. F.Gidders, f 1 0Tarbons, f 0 1Manty, c 0 0Spangola, if 0 0V«rchak, c 1 1Looney, g 1 1
Library Roles< Continued from Pajff 1)
•merieans CRH fight against sabot-e.Another new book is CRES-
KNT CARNIVAL by FRANCESWKINSON KEYES.CRESCENT CARNIVAL is the
ory of Stella Fontaine, it Newrleans Carnival Queen in 1940,'|' her prinndmother, Hstelle Len-r, Queen of the name, Krewe flf-r years earlier, and of Estelle's
laughter, Marie Celeste, whoailed to complete the cycle herother began. It is no less the
tory of Ra_oul Bienvenu, theoung Cajun lawyer, who pRfresyou can go anywhere from *ayou," and of the Breckenrldge
men, thred (rencra-tions of charm-K philandering spendthrifts: An-
y Breckertridge, whom Estelleas afraid to marry; his son,
Breck, whom Maiie Celeste couldot ntarry; his grandson, Drew,thorn Stella refused to marry.
Most of ill, perhaps, it is the story•( "little" iPalty Forrestal, wholas the courajjo to carry on whenhe Carnival tra ends with the war,
and who challenges and inspiresDrew Ttreckenndge To reveal Thentent strength ftn(| fineness in aharnrt.er which other women havo
only weakened and coarsened.
Here is Mew Orleans, the su-preme Carnival City—sparkling,nsouciant, prideful, glorying: in
the past, jealous of its prestige,disdainful of its critics, romanticto the core. We see the Frenchquarter and the conservative Crea-ole families living in tt. W> seethe Garden District, with its morepxpansve way of living, its gradualemergence from the traditionalcustoms. We see the "shotgunhouse" converted into a love-nestand the "raised cottage" where thehomelike rooms resound withcheerfulness and the walls are ce-mented with family solidarity. Wesee the smart set that dines anddances at the Country Club, anilon occasion drinks too many Saz-eracs. We see scandals embodiedin lotieries and corruption incar-nated in politic?. And over andover aijain we see Rex riding onhis golden chariot, his attendantsscattering baubles as they go, and
Yard No. 1 Bowks, Presied To Wig2 Games, Trail Leaden By 41 Games. CARTERET—The Yird No. 1 (D7.«rllla
bowler* had all they could do to112 142
win two game* from the Mrohan-ics No. 3 to ketp in the rate in theU. S. M. R. Interdepartment bowl-inir leafcuo. The lots of a singleprame dropped the Yard pinn«r* to4 ft K*.mes behind the toarue lead-ing Mecahnieg No. 2 combine.
In other matches, the Smeltersurprised everyone by scoring1 athree-ijame «weep over CaittlnjrNo. 2, and the Silver Departmentrouting the L«ad Burners in threestraight garnet*,
StandingW. L.
Mechanics No. 2 30 3Yard No. 1 27Mechanics No. 1 :..,. 28Tank House 25Casting No. 1 22ScranBlant ".. 2S
halMJJo.
7SB 82!
SntltcrHoudemanDatkti . .DonovanMcDonnell
ISft
m120126ITS
158US144
18112614417720!
7B2 740 RJtO
N*. 9
Eps«a Saks Tiffatt*sGripOiftrtiPliCTh Winer Pk L«p
CAETSRRT—Ep«on Salts twrht-tn*4 it* grip on fir»t pl«r« in theWarner Chemical Hnwlinir leagueby scoring a truM-nniw victoryover Phosphate Monday nijht n!the Atademy Allcyv Despite ahatidieap, the lcajrue leader* wonaU three rmnp» rasily.
tn B (weohd Match the Mechaniciquteted out a two-game triumph
ItlTtSCARTBRBT — Service* were
jheld thi» morning from the Synn-IwieeM Funeral Home in Hudwp| Street for Andrew Lcwandownk*| who wm foand Arn\ Turtdiiymorninit at hi» home, 27 flalrmAvenne, Burial wax to be inROM- HIU Cemetery. Mr. Lewanriowski, forty-nint ysarl of »it«i, i«survived hy his wife, Mary. Heformerly was a borough jraibafrcollector.
J.|F. KurtUkBlindM. KurliakP, Sroka
115148126
164125122128
117IRQ186
m103
over Department 29.Salti
AUXILIARY MEETS
CARTBRKT—Mrs. Samuel KapIan and Mrs. Miiy Heller were theh««tw»p« this week at theof the Ladi'1 Auxiliary
ZimrierSeftehikFurltn
3 19MechaScrap Plant No, 2..'.., 18Yard No. 2 ..,...'.: . . . . .I lftSmelter „,.. IBCopper Powder 13Whltj |fgt»li l iMechanics No. 4 J 14Silver R*fineTy 11Casting No. 2 0Lead Burners 3
!i
111114'MwAanlei No.If, ,R. Thergtson17 ,S. Potta18 B.20 '0 .20
_ , iWwylyk. _ . . . . Ol»w. <873 8«7 0ft8
1SRi87
Mogkeit 1R8Sehur 108
187100200150
120
160141137ISO106
inM4144ISO
tflt1S714118fl155
used fnr ftve ytun aftt^trillion. At hattleaiual form in which It Ithy the R»d Croin it ilow fluke*, which issterile water before itaInto the pntient. Theprepares the plasma atlahfirstoriei withinhour- uftpr it lit donataAits pnwrtjiinf is com
into cartons,. , . , , and sterile water
(.ontrejation of I.ovmr Justice Slimed toSrikMogur. At this meeting Al- | u | i a M n ( h f , r p U t n
»rt Arva was announced the win- . ^ . . J ft*. ii~iicrofth«mefeh»ndia«eliibandit mMm p j n , , f o r , h f
was voted to ilonnt-' twoie Red (>oa».
Depositors<ContinuH from
nctunlly I*whole hlooil. It can ht
and
I u s pri" ? " ; * packe.1
75S 711 7RR
20
Ci»tln»B. VargaS. Hamulak r...S-. Turk ...:F. Donnelly
191104182(84
C. Jaeger 157
181195173121155
160161141170106
Dorn
143148
Yard No. 1lgei-tha,
22 |Pod*i .19303B
Curcy 174Cyiewski 176Sharkey 154
177 180166' 1AB169 145
CtlnkoU 123
1411»8130
9B136
M4Ml
147
107117
701 (193 712
878 808 766
3 II 9
O'Con-
3 0 C
2—122— fi
LEGAL NOTICES
IN CHANCERY OK NKWTo Jeanct to I.lllfy. ttpfwid
nor and IVIer O'ConiHir. Ibaiul, Frank AIIBUS. Arr-litf Fellim»nd Jean I'VIInn, ht» wlfi-, Jean Mi >•Krlton O'l'onnor 11 n«l Utioi-fvt> (VCun-nor. her hunhunii, IsHbello Madili-n,nn lufiint. Domtl iv MinUlvn an In-fant, Hr len Muililin, nn Infiuil, Jcun-»tt« Maddon, nn inCant, I.illLin 1U.|d«n, art InfHnl. Annn Mnililtn, imIlilanl. CIIIIIIMIUJ. Miulilen, an Infant.T h o m a s Mitdilrn. :ut lnfniit. Uli-lmnlM d i l p n . CnthfTlne <:»Rry Weberand Arth'Mi fl>l.cY, dnr Iniibutnl.Juhn CiifT^v, alr^o knnwti UH lohnCoffev. Jf.. '"tin Cnffcy. Sr.. U'll-llum .Idlin AIIKUH »nil May AniruH,h!H wltV, HIT! ttio t inknnwn licirw illlaw nml drvliFi'* of .liihn VV. I.HIi'y,
Citlrrel J»TT«« (13)
living, f1 Shiiiiisky,
G.11
F. T.0 20 2
H y v i r t u . . i>\ a n o n l c r nT lln- I ' m i r tOf <'!i:ilu'i-r> o l Nt'W .It'l'ury llunliin n N u v e m l M T L'U, 1 9 ( 2 , In H r u u n ew t i n ' u i n Klf>reiu o l . i l l e j " , J a n e tC . n n i i l ' H I . h u l l v l i l u n l l y a n i l a
M.
thionjfj proRsinp [orn-ttrd to watchthe Queen enthroned on her bal-cony, as the streets rin«r to thestrain or thp Carnival Song, "IfI Cease tn Love."
Here, too, beyond New Orleans,is the preat Breckenridge planta-tion, Splcndida, where ip winterthe colonnades and the carpetItrasa and the sunset are all thesame color of dusty pink. Wepenetrate to the beautiful Techecountryside and to the tangleddepths of fovest. We follow b«yous as they flow peacefully alongand find destruction sweepingdown through a crevasse in theMississippi River levees. Inword, we see Louisiana in an en-tirety which no other writer haaever achieved, not only as a livingentity in itself, but as the setting
972 825 788Yard No. 2Seibeit 124Pankulics 172 183Telepoaky 184 127 1B6Poasoby 186 181 181Kopin , : 1G6 203 IBB
Borough Clubs(Continued fiom Pane 1)
planned their Christmas partylater than most frroups, January 14being the date chosen. This will beat the home of Mrs. Edward Lloydin Lincoln Avenue. Those incharge are Mrs. Howard Burns,Mrs. Joseph Kennedy and Mrs.Francis Kocpfler.
Girl Scouts of the Free MagyarReformed Church enjoyed a
hriatman party Monday after-oon. Mrs. Helen Nemish, cap-ain of the troop, was presentedith gifts. An entertaining pro-ram was enjoyed.
Guests were: RoseFazekas,Mar-;aret Toth, Adrienna Cselle, Helen
Siilvasy, Dorothy Terjek, Annaiegel, Irene Daroczy, Helen
Sarah,, Sisko, Betty Fttdor,
SlWer R«firt«ry
F. Sosnowaki ....J. SosnowskiA. Thompaon ....A. LnkstosC. Thompson ....
128135182131152
11313517014(114ft
191122170111114S
CMJkowtkiBlindBlind
726 718 801
A. Vargo 14ft 128 151Nagy 117 118 135A. Seaman 76 9<l 98Beshak I l l 104 15(1Nohai 206 1S2 111
142187112112
Kudella 146Handicap' 40
18710211211210T30
1SH131121118
4
ment I I710 812 73
Geririte 142Jurlck 120Fishingcr 150O'Brien 141Plueddeman 109Montesl 122
142183184740
ISISIS14
11
(Sfl
l i l u n l l y at h e K n t a t i 1 or . lu l in
i l
TFLE1-HONE 4-0*71
K F . BURKEFmurd titrtclott
366 STATE STREETPERTH AMBOY, N. J.
Joieph V. Cottello, Mgr.
i n t n i HW . l . i l i i -y ,
"Tkeri I* NoFor »•«*•
tlii-
IIVCKUKMI, amii n i n <ii. , . - . . l l l ' l l l i f H l P U l S t W i l l
amt Tvstuni iMii o f A r c h i b a l d I.llli-y.ilei't^iiM-il, art- c u m p l n l n u n t H , niul y o u .di i ' i i i i s i m s IIIIDVI- iFumed mill u t h -f i n , l ire t l c i fn i l i tntN. y o u lire rrqnkr-i'il l o a i ipv i i r iiinl iiii.HW*-!' l l i^ tii l lof Hititl I 'omplninuntH, oit or l>*»ft*r*»Ihf L'lsl ility of Ji tht iurV. nvMt. or
ii| h i l l w i l l be t a k e n U K - I O T I -
Tht- HIIIII b i l l Is f i led ful I lie p u r -l i t i o n of i f i i H l n IIDHIH a n d iirtiinlH^Rin t h e IkirutiKli of ''ni'tei'fcl, C o u n t yuf Miit.lU-Hi-x unil S h i i e of N e w J e r -.11'j. in whli ' l i . lo l in W . l,IIJfy o w n -cil a Miii-liMlf in l iT i -y t a t t t v l i m pi<r Ins (liuitli.
Y o u . J r i i n t - l i e l . l l l e y , W l l l l u m.lolii i A U K I I S , [ i f s n i e O T o n n o r , l-'ruiikAIIKIIK. A i v h l e I V l l o n , .fcttiiett." P e l -tun o ' l ' i i n i i o r . ISUIMMII'l»orutli>' Miul i lcn. U ^ l e n
of passionate and persistent loveenduring from generation to gen-eration, und in the end rekindlingthe dead ashes of the past to nour-ish the bright and beautiful firesof the future.
NOTICES
becausemil
nu-iidefendun
Miiiidon.Mudueli.
Ji-iineiii MstiUifii, l.llllfin Mnilileii,Anna M.vililni I'lttlierlnv MmlJcl ,TIIUIIKIH Maililfii. r u t h e r l u e ColTey\V»her, Jolin L'DlTey, alau known daJohn I'uiti-y, Jr.. unil the unknownlu'lin at law iiit«l uVylsm'H h
W, I.illey. itf.-eascd, art;tVndants btrauHe you an- tenant* incnmnion I" mi 111 landn us lielrs ofJohn W. l . l l ley: anil you, Muy An-
!* O'Connor, Jean K<iUon,anil Arthur Weber
urc muili> dt-ft-ntlttntsur<' tlip HitdUHeH of tenants Inmoil In mild lands; and youanl Mmlden, are made _ijei-aiiHe you aro the survlvln,....-.,.„ ,,; iaahelle Felton Madden
I, a niece of sftlil Johnlitut a» HiU'll yoUlley,
may havt or >•said
Sr.
,,,,., „. . lalm HOIHB intereHt Ilands, by way of uuurteRy, o
iiwlst; and you, .lolin Coffesare made defendant bemuse you
B5n 575 651
Scrip PUnt No. 1Keating
, , . ineenm. m e ne« <f ' " b » n d . " million pints for. kit bags ta N m w _ P
Sf1 h f ,(
Tsnni-I Vl«lony » pervin h«!i a ipin
6f vlllnn of «bmil hnl( n circle—90on fithpr ulrtr Howtvtr.
•bout one otrt of fvfrv 100 drivenh»i limited lide vlslnn nnd \ht ef-fect if that of .looking through »tunntl. II l pftfon cunimt ?ct ob-ject I dearly *t the side, he should
t j H ^ l y cautious «t lnt<T»ec-UQM,' iStT In "pl»ce» where people
llk«ty to be walking nt the sidttt tht rond.
Ttwmi.i Rtnctrktn the mIMl* ltOOi, Thomnj Han
cock, plonetr rubber manufacturerIn England, and Reuben PhllUmpatented t rubber reclaiming prnc-e n coniliting ot bollini vulcuniicdwa»t» in turpentine.
B«r War Bondi
200,1100 pints haveWill yours be »mon|group? Rememhrr th«the way to register, andRKiHT AWAY.
INDIAAppointing William
veteran diplomat, a" hlarepresentative in India,:
Roosevelt pointed outPhillip* would not carryany «peci»l plun nr fo
Solution of thp Indian
Not In U. S.It M'cm.i clear that pi
not di-rivi' from thepnrr."- Virginian-Pilot.
Byrnes lift* foilingwages, shift* control to
104Einhorn 160Goeti 178Comba 150Harrivan 218
906Copper Powder
(Forfeit)
14019319423.!181
USi fin-nono188
952 707
H«w A beat a Beef lew Day?Here's an Idea that might be cop-
ied 'In every city in the UnitedSUtea: The mayor of AshUnd, Ohio,has iuued an official proclamationdesignating every Thursday, for theduration, "beefiest day." So long >tthe war lasts it ii unlawful "to beef,grumble or complain" in Ashlandon Thursday.
New Year's Specii50
Lovely
GOWl
of Johnmade Jc-
i
are tin* HUI'WV'IUK upouue of IsabellaI.IIU'y Ktlton Ouffpy, det'eased, a sts-ter of suid .lohn W. I.Ulev. deceased,nnd is tiui-ti you may huve or claimsoul* InttTust In said lands by wayivf i-nurli'sy »r otlierwl«e. 'Imti'ij: November jiOtll, Wl.
Rimer E. Brown,ttfillrllor of Complainant!),,".7« HoOHovfllt Avenue,1'iirteret, New Jersey.
Matftifda Seaman, Rose Kisli, Mar-sraret Bodnar, Helen Slinsky, IrmaYuronka, Elizabeth Toloncsak, Ma-ion Kuhn, Barbara Mille'r, Bettyiatik and Elsie Nemish,Miss Lauia Tomciuk was
his week to the Stitch and ChatterClub at its annual Christmas partyat her home in Warren Street.Gifts were exchanged by the mem-ben and dinner was served.
Guests were: Miss Ermina deMartino of Plainfield, Mrs. SadieDomina of Newark, Misa Mary Solena of Highland Park,( Miss JaneHarrington of ^venel, Miss OlgaHerthogh of Perth Amboy, Mrand 'Mrs. Ambrose Mudrak, Mrand Mrs. Stanley Tomczuk, Mr.and Mrs. George Gavaletz, thMisses Irene and Helfin GavaletzAleo. Prywata. Miss GenevieviPenkul, Mias Wanda Neimiec, th>Misses Sophie and Loretta Prywata and Mrs. Charlotte
Golf of 81amFrench IndO-Chlna and Thailand
occupy most of the sweeping horse-ahoe curve of the Gulf of Slam'scoastline. It is only at the entrancewaters that the Malay states arenvolved. Burma has no outlet on
the Gult of Siam, though the Bur-mese-Thai border at one point is I•hly 3» Tfllles from the gulf coast.From Bangkok to Rangoon, Uur-mese capital and once ttie gateway |to the famed Burma road, northwest |across sea'and land, is about 370 iair miles. |
LargestSupplies 61 the four principal feed
grains on October 1 were the larg-est on record, being 11 per centgreater thjn the supply last yenr,teportt the U. S. department of ngrlculture.
NOTICETin: ntinunl meeting nf Ibc wbure-
:iolil«r» of the United IlooKi;VfllSavlnKH ami Loan AnsootaUtin willlie held nt file office of tbe. tmsiji'la-tlnn «t 1" Cuake Avenue In the bur-oupli of (*flrteret, New .lerst-y, onTliui'Hiluy, January II, 1943, at 7 P.M., for I be purpose »f ele<-tliiK dl-
iorn and for the trunsaetlon of'Ii ntber hufltneitp An may pr<i|>-
ti'ly I'omu before the ipeetliijr.l!ii»sell 1,. Mllen, aeirelury.
('.I1 12-24,31:1-8.
AT FIRSTSIGN OF A
U S E6 6 6 TABLETS. SALVE. NOSE DROPS
XMAS GIFTS—EDUCATIONAL TOYS .»d BOOKS for CHILDREN from Me
• 50c$1.00
' SOc
DUCATIONAL TOBOOKS FOR ADULTSGAMES FOR ENTIRE FAMILYDOLLS AND ANIMALS - - •MINIATURE GAMES FOR SERVICE.
SERVICEMEN'S WRITING KITSXMAS CARDS
CORNER LENDING U I R M Y BOOKSHOP
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:Pursuant to the provlalnns ot an
Act of the Leslfllature.nf the Slateof New Jersey entitled "An ArtConeerninK Change of Nnm$, revi-sion of I9SJ, 1-67-1, Chapter J7" andihe Aolu supplementary thereof «ndamendments thereto, Notice la here-by given that 1, the uncierHlgnei],will ani>ly to the Judge at the Courtof Common Pleas of the County ofMld<tlenex at the Court Houne. atSlew Brunswick, New .Jersey on thefifteenth day of January. 1943, HI 10o'clock ffu-enoon (KaHterii WarTlmei, or iiH soon thereafter n» Ican ln\ lieard t'oi1 an tlrder to au-tlintiir mi. to at>Hiim» another name,lo wit:—TIIOMAH KI-HNHIUTHON
TOBIAS U'KINKKTHON THOMl'HON,"I lCsBex titrest('iirieret, New ,lerm>y.
Hdhert I.. Uruwn, EHUAtlofimy of Petitioner
l!oo««velt AvenueNew Jersey
GIFTS FOR THE FAMILYYou, «Lrtm |h4 W«d. will
AnnouncementDr. Samuel Jaffe
SURGEON DENTIST
announc«i the opening; of his office*
for the general practice of dentiatry at
93 MAIN STREET WOODBRIDGE, N. J.Hour*: Dally 10-8 Except Wedne.d»y Telephone WO. 6-0725
Give Him GiftsHe Can Wear...
*5.45CAPESKIN AND WOOLCOMBINATION JACKETS
fromDRESS SHIRTS
KINDLING • FIREPLACE
- WOOD -FAMOUS
READING COALKOPPER'S COKE
MASON MATERIALSFUEL OIL
Phew Woodbridf* 8-0724
WARR COAL kSUPPLY CO.
ST. GEORGE AVENUEWOODBRIDCE
AT
EACH
Alio HigherPriced Drmtea
* SEE OUR LINE OF SUITS AND COATS
SHIRLEY SPIEGEL161 SMITH ST. PERTH AMBOY,
DRESSGLOVES
from q 39
SILK DRESS ROBES
6
PAJAMAS
*1.49U P
Good »M0rtm«nt ofh d 8*t y<m» now.
WOOL DRESS ROBES
*6.S0H P
SPORTSWEAR $1 QOSWEATERS l*?° up
CAPE5K1N and SUEDE JACKETS
GIFTS FOR StJlVICB Mf HLIKE OF WOltlC & O T H £ j AMP WQKK
Schwartz Men's
A yctf ago, when japan struck at Pbrl Harbor, some people luil misgivings
tbout the railroads, lliey knew the raiiruads had been through twelve tough
ye«rs . . . that they had about 25 per tent fewer freight cars »iul locomotives
th»n in 1929. Vet they were being alle<J on to shoulder the weight ol the
grettest umunent program in American history, if not in the world. Now,
what docs the record show? Briefly summarized, it shows t h i s , . .
"Hack Ut*l*i" far all Unlnn, nil-roirfi «n fuiAinf l« At Etit tbout800,000 k#frtl..f ./I rf./ly.
7W*r t*l\n*4i «rt 4*\ir110,000,000 KM of W«At * iWnHk,l it ftMNft tvtiff itiAtlrkltttry.
TlrM Hmu.u mmr tratpih A* Hnt 10 mtn&i *i In tkt M M
l«( w*r-8,000,0p0.
*Mr*\\n*4tt*tl»h M M M .
fp k**f Irtdvttry foinfw*rm, th* rtllmdl k«v« l*ult<f1,400,000 (*iu 0/ c**l • 4»r-
Y«l 4*tplti Oiah- w«r Uvi, ttm
rtlknh «n M « | *Wr btit IsM«tI *matUI Inm*
One qwMion JtiU remaiiM tttuntw^d. How could the railroads do so much,
with VliKl*? In the "lew" ftai. they replaced the old with new. So.
when ww. c«ne, thcttiltoada w«e wtdy to do their share. ..and, keep
•emroUini!"
BAILROAD
V« " >m i • T *,
*te
CARTERET PRESSTelephone C»rter«t 81600
Published by Carteret PreM
OFFICE79 WASHINGTON AVE., CARTERKT, H.
LUCY GREGORY ••----•MEYER ROSBNBLUM Sports
Subucriptlon, $1.60 Per Year
Entered as second class m*tt*r June B,mi, «t Carteret, N. J., Poit Office, undt*tt« Act of March 8, 1879.
Is There A Santa Clout?(Herewith In one of the moat llluatrlou* editorial)
tn* history of journalliim. it > u written byBel* P. Clmrrli ami wan ftrnt printed on Hnplembptlt»7. In tlie Now Ynrk Hun. Every year on t|t«b r i l M n K apj>»ar» us The Sun's KAdlDK1J»7. In tlie [New m m r.,,., ,
F before riirlNtni8» it appears n» The Bun's IMdtntnlorlal and It la with grnteful nrkn(iwlf<J|ment toBe Sun thnt wo reprint It.)
pleasure in answering at onceid thus prominently the communicationlow, expressing at the same time ouriat gratification that its faithful author4uunbered among the friends of Thein:
Dear Editor: I am 8 years old.'. 5ome of my little frienda aay that UiareIt no S*nta Clauk. Pupa says "If you t«aH In The Sun, it's so."
Please tell me the truth, it there iSanta Claus?_ VIRGINIA (yHANLON,f 115 W. Ninety-Fifth St.I Virginia, your little friends are wrongf Tbey have been effected by the skepticismyiCjjE a skeptical age. They do not believeIncept they aee. They think that nothing*&M be which is not comprehensible by•their little minds. All minds, Virginia^Whether they be men's or children's, are
jiljttle. In this great universe of ours, man!|b a mere insect, an ant, in his intellect, aa
;M I compared with the boundless world aboif• ,'Wni, as measured by the intelligence capa('Me of grasping the whole truth and knowl
ej. Yea, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus|He exists as certainly as love and generiOUflity and devotion exist, and you know,!that they abound and give to your life itsfMghest beauty and joy. Alas! how drearj'! Would be the world if there were no Sant
Certainly, our thoughts and our pray->«, in this Christmas season, will go wher-iVer our boys may be, and especially pre-:ious will be our faith that, in God's iroodtime, they will come home. Nevertheless,Itoplte our faith, we know that some williot return and this will be the last Christ-
mas that some brave Americans will ob-serve.
H is not for man to discern the work-Inge of Providence or to anticipate unduly;he price that must be paid in suffering, in•lasted lives and the torn hopes of hu-
man beings. All that we can do, in the'ace of such a threatened catastrophe, is tojut our hope in God and trust in the Di-ylne wisdom that uses all men to complete;he great purpose of human existence.
So, this Christmas season that findsilder persons conscipus of sorrows thatimpend, should persuade us to be morejharitable to those who are unfortunateand more willing to let the children of theearth, wherever possible, enjoy happinesshat is unequalled throughout the year.
With supreme faith In Grrd HTid thework of men who live in the service of theDivine power let us resolve to put asideour -fears and live bravely in the hopethat much of what we fear will not come toUB. Let us reverently observe Christmas,l{J42, in the blessed assurance that mil-lions now alive will, in future years, facehappier Christmas days.
SWEETNESS AND LIGHTBy CHARLES EL GREGORY
Argentinians Honor RooseveltMany people in the United States will
be surprised to hear that a huge assemblyof Argentinians gathered in Buenos Airesrecently, to pay "homage to Roosevelt."The gathering wns arranged by a com-mittee, headed by former President Justo,and was widely advertised by posters andover the radio. In contrast, a similar meet-ing was forbidden by President Castillolast year under authority of a "state ofseige."
While it is difficult to determinewhether the meeting in Buenos Aires rep-resented the sentiments of a majority ofthe people of .Argentina, there is reason tobelieve that this is true.
Nevertheless, it must be rememberedthat many Argentinians feel that thewouia oe me TVUMU l t n a t m a n y Argentinians ieei mat me
Glaus. It would be as dreary as lf t h e r c , r j n i t e d s t a t e s h a s b e e n u n f a i r to theirwere no Virginias. There would be n o j c o u n t r y | p a r t i c u l a r i y i n r e s o r t i n g t o a ..san.child-like faith then, no poetry, no ™-i regulation" to prevent the importa-j * „ » . u f n i f t m h l e . t h i s e x i s t e n c e . . . . . . . , , 1 pecflUoflf mance to make tolerable this ex i s t e n c e-j t io n of c e r t a i n m e a t products.
;We should have no enjoyment, except in': »eiwe and sight. The eternal light with%hich childhood fills the world would be
.extinguished.Not believe in Santa Claus? You
V might as well not believe in fairies. Youmight get your papa to hire men to watch
I jh all the chimneys on Christmas to catch•;i iSanta Claus but even if they did not see'7 Santa Claus coming down what would thatf i prove? Nobody sees Santa Claus. The..4 most real things in- the world are those| tjtiat neither children nor men can see.! Did you ever see fairies dancing on the| lawn? Of course not, but that's no proof| that they are not there. Nobody can con-j eeive or imagine all the wonders that areI unseen and unseeable in the world,
You tear apart the baby's rattle andgee what makes the noise inside, but thereB a veil covering the unaeen world whichhot the strongest man, not even the unitedstrength of all the strongest men that everlived, could tear apart. Only faith, fancy,
PI, poetry, love, romance can push aside thatifj curtain and view and picture the supernal
i beauty and glory beyond. Is it all real?'I Ah, Virginia, in all this world there is noth-I ing else real and abiding.
| ; No Santa Claua! Thank God!—Heivilves and he lives forever. A thousand
•<r — from now, Virginia, nay ten times,teil thousand from now, he will continue,
to make glad the heart of childhood.» iM i j . . . , I,
• Christmas, Sad But hot Hopelw!... The people of the United States cele-J hrate their second Christmas of the pres-ident war tomorrow. This newspaper wish-Hea that its readers and all the citizens of
great republic will have a joyous holii, which they will long remember.We arc deeply conscious of the sorrowthe war brings into million^ of
Argentina has meat and agricultural sur-pluses to dispose of, there is a certain com-petition between this South Americancountry and this Republic. .
In the future, it will pay the UnitedStates to make reasonable concessions tothe Argentinians. By doing so, we willgain much in the regard of these peopleand, in addition, secure a rriuch largerproportion of their buying.
Abolished UnemploymentThose who have the idea that the Brit-
ish people are extremely conservative andthat the empire belongs to a few aristo-crats know little or nothing about whathas happened in England, Scotland, Ulsterand Wales.
Long before the United States assumedany obligation whatever, in regards to thesocial security of its people, the Britishhad a far-reaching program of benefits.Looking ahead the government is nowstudying a report, designed to relieve, theBritish people of want in the post-warworld.
, Sir William Beveri'dge,' one of theworld's leading authorities on social insur-ances, says that unemployment can beabolished and he asserts that, twice in hislife, it has been abolished in England, cit-ing the World War and the years of thepresent conflict.
It is somewhat paradoxical that na-tions, engaged in all-our war, involvingdestruction on a mad scale, can spendmoney without limits but, when peacecomes, must revert to silly theories thatrestrict governmental activity to incom-petence.
I can't quite seem to get it through my noggin .n»hy the Party of Humanity, which i« tunning thingsthese days in Washington, can let fyft heart bleed overbums and incompetents but suddenly becomes ane-'mic whenever the plight of the postal employe ismentioned.
• • * •
The War Labor Board, which is only a cheapimitation of the real thing, and whoae wfiole historyhas been weak and vacillating and smothered in thedirtiest kind of politics because it is scared to deathof the administration, blithely tells every other em-ployer that if he hasn't raised salaries up to 15 percent since last March that he better, or elae. I am nottoo quick at understanding but isn't it strange that Ithasn't said the same thing to the post-office depart-ment wMch hires out hundreds of thousands of menand women who make up a pretty considerable partof our economic system? I think it is.
This didn't start out to be a tirade against theWar Labor Board, and it.isrift gOtflg to bo, but ¥v*been itching to take a crack at that muddling, med-dling disgrace to a patriotic nation for a long while.It has-been blackjacking industry ever since it startedto do business and has cracked the lash over the barebacks of employers regardless of whether they wereadversely affected by the war. Many businesses, par-ticularly those that can get cost-plus contracts fromthe government and can thus pass along to the tax-payers all the charges for labor, certainly have noquarrel with the Board because they can raise wagesto hell and gone and the treasury of the United Statesof America will take the rap.
If some 'business—and there are many—mustabsorb these increased costs itself, the War LaborBoard doesn't give a good hoot whether it meansbankruptcy or not. Raise 'em and take the conse-quences, it says, and if you die in the attempt whatdo we care, the bread-line forms to the right.
The post-office people, I u^s, are just taken forgranted—like the soldiers. They're both in therepitching in the service of their country, stopping bul-leta or climbing snow-drifts in sub-zero weatherwhichever the case may be, and the Party of Human-ity is too busy maintaining the 40-hour week in pri-vate industry with time-and-a-half and double-timefor extra hours to pay much attention to either ofthem. It's having a swell time sitting some galootdown at an assembly line to turn a single bolt betweenyawns so he can live in the style to which he has be-come accustomed since men began to die at Bataa£,bat those wjio*Wve ^ved long and honorably in ct^reers of hardship and sacrifice for the people of thenation, must meet increased costs of living the bestway they can.
Of course by this time, too, the postal employesare catalogued pretty well politically; the man on theassembly line isn't and if he didn't vote the straightticket in elections gone by, there are others ahead.Putting him in a good soft job and compensatinghim far out of proportion either to his capacity or theresponsibility he bears, certainly never hurts when thepolls open.
Congress in its dying days, while the administra-tion looked on, gave the post-office people a nicewhizzing by voting an increment for practically every-one in the Federal service except most of them. Thebill carrying the extra allowance is Ml of whereas-esand is away beyond my meagre comprehension but abulletin from the National Federation of Post OfficeClerks calls it "not satisfactory." It points outfurther:
" . . . under the provisions of the resolution,post-office clerks who work Saturdays and receive com-pensatory time for such services would not receivethe 10 per cent bonus, and if they did not get anyovertime on other days they would receive no addi-tional compensation whatever."
And here comes the pay-off:"The Committee (the Civil Service Committee in
Congress) readily saw this injustice and agreed toamtond the resolution to provide that postal employeswho are not required to work on Saturdays on whodo not receive overtime compensation for work per-formed on Saturdays, would be granted the 10 percent bonus. However, when the resolution was re-ported to the Senate it did not carry that provision."
What the hell kind of goings-on is this, anyway?
ParagraphsOmitting An Immortal
The list of the 1(1 greatest i-njci-neers of all tinm, .selected by thodeans of American colleges of en-gineering, signally failed to in-clude Casey Jones.—ArkansasGazette.
Quite So
Objection to hymns becausethey ^re emotional is objection tomusic because it is music.—TheDetroit Free press.
They Like To Talk
Hollywood Notebook
you know a dozen dandy1 ways toregain vim and vigor if you onlyhad tim«.—Publishers Syndicate.
— ~ _ ~ ~ ]Saat of Reuon I
Some men never change theiropinion because it's been in thefamily for generations. — OhioState Journal.
Naturally •A congressman naturally spends
lots of time fixity? his fences, be-cause that'* where he aits most ofthe time.—Southern Lumberman.
Can lit Com* At
Awful thought.
The Time?
Suppose theAwful thought S p pmillennium, when at last it comes,is held up until ratified by the sen-ate.—Los Angeles Times,
Evary TimeAn ambulance has the right of
way because the pedestrian lias theriffht of way and there is a pedes-trian In the ambulance.—-The E>troit News. ,
By ANN MARSTERSOn the set of "Assignment in
Brittany," Pierre Aumont, por-traying a British agent, was do-ing a scene in which he supposedlyparachutes into occupied France.Just as he lands, a burly bit play-er tackles him and flings him tothe ground. When the scene wasover, Pierre row groggjily to hiRfeet and addressed the bit player."That was some tackle. You shouldhave been a football player." Justthen, Director Jack Conway step-ped forward. "Pierre," he said,"let me introduce you to SIBUWyrick, Ail-American tackle fromU. C. L. A I"
Wally Westmore, director ofmakeup at Paramount, says thatthe question he is asked more frequently is what to do about freck-les. He also says that he thinks-'reckles are charming—but he iswilting to suggest a remedy. Purelemon juice is Simple and effec-tive. It should be applied with acamel's hair brush and allowedto dry and remain on the face forthirty minutes. Use daily, alongwith a lemon oatmeal pack twicea week. For the pack, mix thewhite of one egg and the juice ofone lemon, and add powdered oat-meal to make a thin paste. Leaveon the skin until dry."
Kay Kyser, who boasts of thefact that he never wears a hat,has to wear eighteen of them in"Right About Face." Hjb ap-pears in e,very scene wearing adifferent hat, all of which meetdestruction in one manner or an-other,
ni t r ic^
Mi [,!•:•
Ih o.<e •aruica^Hf irittifl
ofl
A sto|;i. nil
- beil
FOUR DEMOCRACY
B&Q homes and, yet, we do not think it in-ipropriate to express the sentiment,
irly five million of our finest men in theled services and many homes will m\spid ones who, in camps and on field* of;le, stand guard over all that is dear
Plipiristmas, ha«i h i . ,*,'•>. ^ . . . . .XI .
t ch«** tq
tp! of the Christian»it expresses the
TotMir hopes
The'New Books |
J I D A M W VI h CknaIn September, 1,941, Joseph C. Grew,
U. S. Ambassador to J«pan, wrote a Jap-anese, friend that tie Chinese had a say-ing that the moat dangerous spot in anyChinese city or town attacked by Japan-ese planes was the American Mission.
The ambassador, in a'recently pub-lished book, says "Japanese bombers wer^following a concerted plan to drive Ameri-can mwionariw, j dwcfttianal, rodfcat jyjd
activities out of China /perma-nently."
>*M
. ty but it ra«ysome. >.wJove4h<f-J#p«Befe"
l not be »ecur«
The .most crushing defeat thewhite* ever suffered at the handsof the Indians was on June 25,1876, when General George Arm-strong Cutter attacked the com-bined villages of the Sioux andCheyenne* on the Little Big Hornin eastern Montana. Cuater's sol-diers were wiped out to a man.Among the chiefs of the tribes,one was pre-eminently responseble. That was Chief Crazy Hone.
The story of this Indian leaderis told in a new book by Mari San-don, "Craiy Horse: The StrangeUtn of the QgUUu,"
Giwy Horu « u different inmany ways f^om the oth«r» of histribe, H»; ww, so light in oolor(that itrsmrars oitari Mlerrsd to
Judy Garland'*ery Is 13-yoar-nlil hamJohnson. Judy recently aia dance rocitai in llnilvw.,.one young dancer rau^hi )terest. • After th>- pci f .rmanshe went back stii i> t» meetgirl. Soon uftur D.i,i,.| .icin,signed to an Mt!M contract.she is already cast fur ,m impoant role with Judy and MidiRooney in the new tmir-icM "GCra iy . "
Jean Renoir is in the miilstdirecting Charles l.ouclitnn aMaurten O'Hara. All three arthe process of becoming Amtricoitiiens. And the name <>fpicture is "This Liunl Is Mine
Of- course there MV
Hollywood who arc f, trying to think up wny- <! around that salary ccilm
wealthy producer is snthat his wife he iruule hiate—at 60,000 a year.
PRODUCTION JOTSof the KaiBer shipyardsfive,-day building mirucli'.prepared by Republic for uiieits top-budget films of tin- y«Title will be "Victory Ships" .The pre-invasion i'M>l"iis ilf
Gen. Clark and his ui.li1- i.< hcirushed into pro<lurti\munder the t ide "Mission iAfrica" . . . Now thai iiitr«atrnent of "The Son* •>dett*" has received ih"of the Catholic ch.iiviJennifer Jones is ilriunfor the leadinR i >lc.
Three famous a m ^
Howard Baer uml Han>:i
mund~dccide.il to (UM:
j n t k i n g ankles in 11 •'
Marilyn Maxwell, "I
with Ted Weems' I
screen contract or.
ed out to bu thi1 ll '1"1 '
ankles. The arlist> "
Maxwell has ankles wl
trim, slim, patrician ai; i .
exciting."
Keye Luke has si^n..
termer with MGM »'"him one of the feu i !nors ever to be putby a major studio-_rpear«d in "Or.Assistant," and ising in "Salute V->
Wally Beery l>his 12-year-oldAnn, isn't going t> '"• •'
after *U. : ^ e ' s K i;
mwh«nic. He retui"-lother, waning to timl >"
allowed themselves to be bribedby the white men—the "Loafabout the Forts/' as they werecalled. Craiy Horse was never an'appeaser, Sometimes the othersmocked Craiy Horse became ofhis odd ways., but their jokes end-ed when he went into battle.
That day the Sioux > and theChey«nn<W massacred Ouster's sol-diers, C m y Horse outdid himself.The famous Ctyef Sluing Bulltpftk part in the,battle, and. manyother chiefs, but Craiy Horse was4ppar«n% th« hardest fifhUr ofthwnay. g*c»meAiitof "tie 4wiy p«4 *wwraaty fromuch killing, but .without *
X Uttfe overby
1.1M
I"1"
;tprcy^pflow. Caroldl« of the parts ioH together agaii'-
Whitney, f»n-
hi' '"I
t J
Bury
•old trick ofCMdd on the fl*""1 '•»pd Picking then. »|.Without J»ndi»gh<-'\ j O i k l
I**
nil
I l l l l
say,.
Vl. 1 "
CAR!
'Christian Scfon&Church Calendar
" , i,,,,rh of Christ, Scien-f'r, ,,,.„, i* a branch of the* : i,lll('h, The First Churth»'''.' [. scientist, in Boston,"' ''. ,,,,|,lV aervtces 11 A. M.
•'• !„„,!, 9:30 A. M. W«d-,,,,tnonial meeting:, 8 P.I,,, reading room, 2 to
I,AN SCIENCE" is the,,-,.-,,-, subject for S u *,,!„.,• 27, in all Christian, | l i n hes and Societies, ii,,v world.
.,.!,.„ i vx t is: "If ye,, i nmmandments. And,1,, Father, and he shal
;,,,,,iher Comforter, that!,,,|(. with you forever
"spirit of truth. (John
• I,,. U'.won-sermon cita:i,,. following from th<
n,lUl,(>it when he, the,ih, is come, he wil
,„,„ all truth:" (Johil]
How's Your Health?By The Medico
A PUAYER FOR CHRISTMAS"Oh God, because the peoples of
he earth have forgotten Thee nmllave become enffrossed in the put-ult of worldly pleasure* whllo
worshipping the (kilden Calf ofmateriaj riches, Thou hast per-
itted them to become utterly en-meshed in their own evil devicmi.As a result the whole world in(lunged into a maelstrofn of con-'usion and agony.
Hew us, Father, as we humble•oursehres before Thee. Forgive,we pray, our foolish blindness and'oily.
Oh God, we beseech Thee, that
we may repent of our ingratitudeand for<ri-tfulness of Thee. In deeppinitenee, in sackcloth and ashes,may we return to Thco, realiiingW Thou and Thou alone canst
hern us.
Give us, we pray, a governmentwise, loyal, praying men and
women. Endue our President with;rue wisdom and clearness of vis-
Blew our country's defend-Some of them «re so younginexperienced, so tender
long-Wmted; Slim
are only boys who havnleft their homes before
hnjr •fcri-t i iju ''
.„„ ?ormon also include;aniK passage from th:<l lf.nC6 Uxthoflk, "" 'H.-alth with Key to th
i,y Mary Baker Eddy;..irr'snid, 'But the Com-
shall teach you allWhen the Science of
n K appears, it will lead:tll truth." (page 271).
1 1 1
li;
CM.MNE3S SAVES LIVES<..,.--When fire w» f i d l s -„ „ theatre building in„. were 300 patrorfs, thecalmly stopped the pro-.-Lchino and said to the
•Our projection ma-broken down. The show
Vl, ,,„• the night. Please step,„,,! y,,u may have your ad-
;;,,,, refunded." Not until thev,l ,,.;i,-hfd the lobby and &afe-,1,1 tiny see the flames and
<„,,,!;,• None of them remem-11, mk for their money.
LUCKY BREAK,,A V.irk—Stopping to tie hi,, I,,,,.,,, Leonard Fess, 17-year-mvssiMKfor boy, set his brief
fi ,-nntiiininfr $12,000 in billsu, „„ the running board of a
tkvd automobile. Suddenly, the,t;,itc<l up and sped away
I,T were notified and 90 minf liih-r, » man in Bayoniie, N,viM.rted thut he had found the
brief ca.w, intact, on thet •himrd of his automobilK reached his destination
MEWS FROM THE SCREEN WOULD
TRAPPED FISHAiinda, Pa.—How's this? Af-sinner half a day, Donald Al-i;nl not caujfht a fish. Wad-imiijjh a stream, he stumbled
tr :ui ulil rubber tire which bept Imiue. Luter, he discovercl,(PI'.NI inside the tire, a five-
buss.
»A DANGEROUS SURPLUS"'linci-ton, 111.—Residents of thisn received a Christmas pres-frum the City Council when
y rnrived "paid" bills coverthin- December UB8 of alec-
|cny The explanation wus that•'• w;is "a dangerous surplus"In- treasury of the community-i'-'l electric light plant and of'!' ilceided to give the resi-
, of the surplus.
Pattern 9043 may be orderedonly in women'i lizet 34, 36,38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48. Sii«36 require* 4% yards 35 inchfabric.Send SIXTEEN CENTS in coin.for thii Mari«n Martin Pattern.Write plainly SIZE. NAME,ADDRESS and STYLE NUM-BER.
Ion.em.andSomeniverThey have been used, to havingtheir mothers tuck them into bedat night. Oh dear Lord, theirhearts are very sore, and they arevery homesick. Sometimes whenthey arc alone, they brushtheir tears. Oh, keep them in themidst of the dangers and temptations that beset them. If they escape the enemies' bullets, forbkthat they become human derelictwrecked in body and mind, thvictims of vice and inebriety.
We ent.rtfat them to Thee. Protcct them against the dangers anevils thn surround them, Grantto the commanding officers a re-alizing sense <rf their responsibil-ity in Riving them decent sur-roundings, so that they will notbe subjected to the defjracinjf in-fluences that some With alcoholind accompanying evils.
Father, comfort those whoseovert ones will never return.
Cause us all to realize as did Mar-tin Luther, that "A mighty fort-ress is our God; A 'bulwark neverfailing."
Let us come to Thee as onepeople, knowing that we cannotnut our trjist in man-made im-plement* or human power alone.To Thee must we look for a vic-torious peace.
Christmas is here, the time atwhich we celebrate the Savior'sbirth, when antjela sang "Glory to(Jod in the Highest and on Earthpuace, Rood will to men." Sendus Thy peace within our hearts.
Oh, God, make us worthy of avictorious peace Prepare us toreceive it without rancour or hatetoward our enemies. Please helpua each to do his port to bringabout thn fulfillment of the mes-sage that the angels brought onthe night of the Nativity. Amen.
With the increasing scarcity ofactors, studios are lacking forscript* In which the leading play-ers are women. On* such projectis "Cry Havoc," Allan Kenwtrd'ipl«y about -trotontter nursw onBatttn Penlntnla, whleh MOM hasannounced for production, withMerle Oberon and Joan Crawfordas co-star*. Thtt pity ha* in allfeminine east
A picture portraying the ship-building career of Henry J.Kaiser, under the title "VictoryFleet," hat bee'n announced by
Harvest," in which iht played the van Strohefm and Aktapart of • «horoi girl during World She will be the onlyWar No. 1, dancing and showing cant,th ld t h t h h d l f
g gthe world thtt she had left of
h the could he proud. Row-h
KkUjr Carlisle, whe has 1p jever, she foet back to "old-ltdy" st«n on the aerwn tine*ralei In her next movie, "Madame peared In "A Night tt UM •Curie," In which she will probably four year* tgo. has been glpotray the great scientist at the leading role oppoiite AUtBtge of 70. 1 in Unirtntl's "Cnm
Extension Of your meat supplyunder voluntary rationing is themealtime problem of the moment—and t-h*-prt>brent-«ilver par ex-cellence turns out to be real may-onnaise, for it binds your leftovermeats and vegetables in »n olive-opped loaf that doesn't need tjhe
stove for Its making.' Diced left-over meat tnd tegetsJblds—«venthe vegetable.cah ,be leftovers—are the basis of'this lovely loafthat needs no, cooking. Addhot soup and' you have a speedylunch; add destbft and you havea quick arid thrifty main mealPretty it up wtth, a_ grape lealgarnish aftar you make it withthe following roclpe: ,
Leftover Loaf
2 tbSps. gelatin ' 'cup cold water ' '
1 cup 'boiling .water2 tespB. grated onion1 tbsp. drjurfed horseradish2 tbsps. prepared mustard
Vi cup real mayonnaise.
4-ounce bottle stuffed olives,sliced
2 cups diced, cooked left-overmeatcup dicniJ, cooked carrots
Republic, which sayi that the ideahas been approved by the ftmou*Mr. Kaiser, who reserves the rightto approve the script tnd th* tctorwho is «elect«d to portrty him.
Orson Welles hta accepted hisfirst straight screen acting en-gagement when he signed a con-tract with Twentieth Cen|ury-Foxto appetr i s Rochester ft AldousHuxley's Aim adaption of Char-lotte Bronte's "Jane Eyre." JoinFontaine will htve the title role.
When the wtr is over, LewAyero, woh is now with the Medi- Twentieth Centnry-Po*ctl Corps, plan* to mtke a world- bring hetdllne* to theWide tour, studying the religion* when it produces itr filmof the world, concentrating etpe- t itorv <rf th* 8olo«*ndally on the mystleil beliefs of Acting written by RiehtwlIndia tnd Burma. Then, he pltm gttkl, newspaper corto return to tht*. country and The tentttlve title ii "Gutspretd the Gntpel (•> he sees tt) Dltry."in t nation-wide lecture tour. Ru-mor has it that he ii definitelythrough with Hollywood.
The first picture for Joan €»r-»oU, •hiU-'iUtMaa, sin«« sh« tp~
% cup diced,' cooked V e e n beant P e»«d in "Obllirlng Younr Lady."v • • - • in 1941 will be "Pettieost Ltr-
ceny," whl«h RKO has scheduled.
Soften gelatin in cold water 6 A f t e r p r o t e , t i n ( ( t h e h a b i t o f
cup diced cucumbercup diced celery
mins. Add boiling water and stir h e r b o M f l , i n
i I d i l d Addh e r p o r t r a y
l h
"Randomhghtly thickened. Add mustard o p p o , i t e d , r e c t i o n , t n o
and real mayonnaise. Blend withrotary beater. Pour thin layerInto well-oiled loaf pan. Chilluntil almost firm. On this arrangeBorne of the olive slices in a de-sign. Anchor by pressing slicesinto jellied layer. Chill until juatfirm. Add remaining olives, left-over meat, and vegetables to re-maining gelatin mixture. Addsalt and pepper if necessary,Carefully pour over jellied layerChill until firm. Unmold and gar-nish with additional olives. 6 to8 servings.
Jean Arthur, who does 11In "Merry-Ge-Ronnd," Is Hthtt the Insists thtt t hug« 1
JennHer Jonen, 22-yetr-old new- *• P t a c w l • iw ln<l h**1 *•>•»omer who was recruited from »he prtcticed the dtnee on thf |
Midwestern tent shows Itst yetrCHEAP AT THATby David O. Selnlck, has been
the Importtnt role of St. Berntd- wmitmsport, Pt—WWl« Hi
™te .'",. U l«JJ l m D
Ver i l0 t l ° f ***** A r t h i l r * Thompson 125Werfets "Th. Song- of Berntd- h i , o w n ,We, h e mhMj~ette," which tejl* the story of the jt>§ t]it^t , tRoman Catholic shrine tt Lourdes 420-pound bear while hei n France. hunting. Thompson shot tht
mtl. Wardens then flleflaffiinrt him and Thompsonfined $25 for nhootinf t hiout of season. ' „
Secretary Knox aees Japta,1
pertte for maritime strength,'
Ann Btxter, dainty tnd capableyoung actress, who made hits in"The Magnificent Amberaoni" tnd"The Pied 'Piper," will hive thefeminine letd in "Five Graves toCairo," with Frtnchot Tone, Eric
LIVE'WIRE KILLS COUPLEOrlando, '• Fla.-yWtulc trying to
locate the ca^se. of1 a fire whi^hhad awakened them, Mr. and Mrs.D. B. Smith camt in'contact witha live wiro, which electrocutedthem both.
United States Steel spendinj,'$700,000,000.on plant expansion.
PET PANTHER SLAYS CHILDOxnard, Calif.—-A pet C-months
old panther, tied in the yard of aneiRhbor, so seriously clawed lit-tle Donald Fletcher, 2, son of Mr.and Mrs. Roland Fletcher, that thecvhild died. No one saw at at-tack, but the coroner said thepanther evidently struck the childin the throat with its sharp claws.
«i«wi»Mw«i<«««w««i«>«*itittii«»«(t,iMi»i<iti(tw!<if«itifit»ii<itici«i»>«iei<i««i«i«^
FARM LABORA plan is being worked out by
the D«|>aitaiii'iit of Agriculture,the Office of Education and theWar Manpower. Commission totreate a national volunteer farmlabor organisation inMayandJune,consisting of high school and col-lege youth who will take over rela-tively unskilled farm jobs.
The youth land army is expect-ed to bo mobile, transferable tnvarious ureas within u state andto relieve critical farm labor prob-
vejjetables andlemsIruits.
in picking
GIFTSTHAT ARE BOTHINSTRUCTIVE ANDFUN TO PLAY WITH
Give ThemArt Paint Sets
A full lint Of supplies for the ttudent or the artut
Oil Pa|»t Sett starting from *!•'»
BLACK-OUT SHAPES^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ • • B a M l M pu|| line or
Bros.
May Our Prayers Be Heard
Once again - we pause in a war torn world,to celebrate Christmas and though at the mo-ment there seems to be little of 'Teace on earth -Good will toward men" - the spirit of Christmaswill live to the end of time because it is the sym-bol of everything for which we are today fight-ing.
If each of us will solemnly resolve to leaveno stone unturned - in our effort to bring thispresent strife to a victorious end -- we will alllive in a happier world - where "Good Will To-ward Men" will forever prevail
So - with a silent prayer for those peacefuldays to come - let us make it a real old-fashionedChristmas - with carols and songs - and heartsfull of hope. Let us turn to those we meet - andto one another - and say - simply and sincerely- as Bond Clothes now says • "A Merry Christ-mas to You."
NEW BROMSWIOC FACTORY
REMSEN AVE. at HOWARD ST.NEW BRUNSWICK. NEW JERSEY
OpttDaUrfc» fl.M. until • P.M.
, Thunder <n«t Satofdarwill 1P.M.
A ;..
RAldtD A (MORTGAGEBROUGHT A HUSBANDBOUGHT A TAXICAB
By BETH BROW*. Han't extremity fi God's opportaniiy.
What is your problem? Whati$ your need? Whftt «re you ask-ttig of life?
HAVE YOU A MORTGAGEYOU MUST PAY—WITH.OUT THE MONEY TO PAYITTA mortgage come due w»« what
'tumbled the Johnsons. It hungOrtt their head* like an auction-
MP* ax*;. They had called on their rela-tives. They had called on theirf They had celled on ev«ryone ttwy knew. Tonight theyl i t in their lowly little kitchen''-tailing on God to help them.
There—on the kitchen table—• a s the notice from the mort-tafef. It was the final notice. IfIts money WBH not at his office3 ten o'clock the next morning,
JufinA Hie. Johnson could takei little walk. He was taking over
fie house.• There was nothing more thatthe Johnsons could do. Therewas nothing more that the John-son! coutd sny. Besides, therewas nothing to say, God—whoJtnows everything—knew aboutthe Johnsons. He knew abouttheir mortgage. And He knewtint two thousand dollars had tobe paid no later than ten o'clockin the morning;.
The Johnsons sat in their kit-chen, praying without saying aword. How would he feel, BillJohnson kept asking himself if hereally wtre free of that mort-
rs? Yes, how would ne feel?'put on the feeling* like a new
overcoat and he sat there—weai1-ing it, believing it to be so.
Along about midnight, he felta great peace. He had the innerconviction that God, his seniorpartner, would take care of that
for anyone to care for us betterthan God.
Torn fear into faith and it Willdo the rest. Once you learn this—the world is yours.
ARK YOU IN LOVt WITHSOMEONE WHO IS NOTIN LOVE WITH tOUtDon't lose heart. Don't worry.
Don't «eep. Take your faith outof camphor and put it to work.
This is the true itflfy of a girlwho loved a man. But the mandid not love her. He Was not inlove with any woman. Me wan notinterested in women. He wasnot interested in marriage, Hewas married to his career—hecared about nothing else.
But this girl was determined.She wanted wha,t every womanwants—love, a home, and a childor two. And she set about get-ting all three.
No, she did not write him ar-dent letters. She did not lend himfetfeh f i fe , 8h» Mm throwherself at him—and so proceed tolose him.
Instead, she went quietly towork. She prayed morning andnight, knowing one thing only—that desire and supply are one.In spite of the fact that she sawhim but seldom—in her mind'*,eye, she saty herself constantlyat his side. She even went so faras to prepare" her trousseau—buying the lovely things that shethought he would admire in thesanctity of their boudoir. Thetrousseau was the bridge she builtto get to the opposite shore.
Each time th« met with a rebuffshe answered back by rushingdowntown to the stores and buy-ing another item-other—which she
-and stilladded to
« nher
mortgage for him.atairs to bed—and
He went up-for the first
time in months—he knew what itwas to sleep soundly.
He was having his breakfast thenext morning when the telephonerang. It was a call to say thatthe mortgagee had dropped deadduring the night.
Now make no mistake about it.Bill Johnson did not pray for themortgagee to die. He merelygrayed to be free of the debt. Andfaith—which works in an imper-sonal manner—took the law intoits own hands. It gave the John-son's time to raise the money. Iteven raised the money for them.Out of a clear sky, a lawyer noti-fied them that an old Woman wh6had once boarded at their homehad left them two thousand dol-lars in her will.
But it wasn't the money thatimpressed the Johnsons.had something piuch more pre-cious. They had learned a price-less lesson that would serve themfor the rest of their lives.
The trouble with most of us isthat we put nut affairs into God'scare—and if results are notprompt—we promptly take our-selves out from under His handsand give ourselves over to hu-man hands—as if it were possible
hope chest, Each time they saweach other, she matched his gameof indifference with outward in-difference of her own. She gavehim no sign to Bhow that she wasinterested. Knowing that eachman is the architect of his ownlife, she kept on building. Sheshopped for the future, and, in theend—the future came to meether.
Today, she is his wife and theOf course, the time of the har-
mother of his child. And today,he is the happiest man in NewOrleans.
No man can say no to you—ifyou keep saying yes. Nothing canresist your faith—if it weathersthe storm. Faith never fails. Italways works.vest depends on the sort of seedthat you plant. Everything toits season. Everything in dueharvest. It takes longer for anacorn to become a tree than itdoes for a radish to grow into avegetable.
Most of us haven't the patienceto wait for harvest. We plant ourlittle seed and—when we think noone is looking—we dig it up tosee if it's growing. We open thegoose to see just what lays thegolden egg.
We pray our darndest on Sun-day. Then, beginning with Mon-day, we proceed to doubt for therest of the week. We speculate.We reason. We break every rule
of the game df faith-flkpwt to win out all mWell, it just doesn't work thatway.
You've got to remain constant.You've got to hat* full confidence.IS IT A BIG BUSINESS YOU'DLIKE TO BUY OUT OR A TAXI-CAB YCHJ't) LIKE TO BUY
Well, live in the accomplishedfact—and it will be so. Every-thing in this world is belief solidi-fied.
Thi next time Jimmy drives you'around, let him tell his story—astory that changed his life—in thehonest hope that it may changeyours.
Jimmy was driving a companycab. He had been driving it forsome seven or eight yearn. Oneday, one of his regular customerscomplimented him on the way hedrove. She told him that beforevery long he would be driving hisown cab.
Jfnimy did not reject theecy—as so many people wouldhave done in his pMce, Jimmydid not ask himself—or the ladyeither how, when, where or why.He accepted the good news as ifit were actually so. He gavethanks that it was so. Somethingclicked inside.
You know the sensation, It'shappened to all of us—at onetime or another. Somewhere inMs head- i t was really within the1
depth of his soul—Jimmy sawhimself driving a cab—his owncab. At the moment, that wasenough for Jimmy.
He wasn't in church but here inhis cab he had said a prayer. Hewas close toGod and he knew it.
Within three days, as the' for-tune tellers say, the prophecy ofownership came true.
It was made possible throughthe law of expectancy. To hissurprise, Jimmy was approachedby a fellow driver who had justbeen called into the Army,
He offered to sell his cab toJimmy at the very low price offour hundred and twenty-five dol-lars.
.Jimmy did not have that muchmoney. In fact, he had no moneyat all. But he had a brother-in-law who loaned him one hundred,dollars. The bank gave him therest.
ELZA POPPIN fty OL8EN &
SKIPPY —By PERCYWHA.T* THC M*TTef? WITH DOTTIN'
Cojt IH1, Km| laiufci SynJiciir. Inc , World "chit
KRAZY KAT -By BERRIMAN
Today,own cab.
Jimmy is driving his]For the first time in*
years, he takes his wife and thechildren to the park on a Sunday.He is driving toward a home ofhis own. Th<}re is no limit to hishoriz&n.
Jimmy knows there is power inthe world. He knows enough tolisten- He may be only a talidriver, but he knows the meaningof faith. He knows what it itthat sets his cab into motion. Heknows—when he puts his foot on]
A UAS7\t
AlfcXT
knows—when he puts his loot on | »-r 4 f i ir» -\jthe gas—that his cab never fails IN iV i " Ito roll.
That's the way you, too, mustoperate your faith. You call onelectrkity to give you light Youhave faith when you press the" hut-ton in the wall—that the darknesswill vanish. You liave no doubtt will.
(Contimifd on Page 7)
-Bv Wi TI3MAI
WHEN YOU THINK OF
THINK OF
EYESAmerica is conservation minded.Therefore we think this is a goodtime to call attention to thatprecious asset — your EYES.Good eyesight is important inthis war because your work, di-rectly or indirectly, contributesto victory. Everything counts intotal war! ;
So protect good eyes—'withGOOD LIGHT. Make this protection effectivelymaintaining good light ip your home where you read,write or do other dose work.
An excellent help in m&intftinmg good lighting isto keep reading limps CLEAN, Lamp shades should
l l l to d Ub Wbo ihwted fre^NWtly. l l e t o i r e w d Uftbt': should be waahW (and thoroughly dfitttl) at regular
OOSHfY'SHOULOAWHEN THERE?.'MR.BAILEY GAVE U* All © GOOBER6IKI* AN1 EV£RVTwYG<?rfHtoft
DETECTIVE RILEl
AHMETACOPV?WE HEARDYOU GUY6 ^§\ >W«V I GOT ONEYOU GUY6 r ___ _ • ~ . ^WT'CHER )=[ : -==/ HEW!WELLPITCHERS f \ ( WHAD6AYA KKOWIN TH' v^VEAHf I ) ABOUT THAT?T«!
Y'GOT V. V ^ - TSKf
WETACHMEOSWUH.
WE HWfi CATCH W t f t / W K Y O U ,WELL ,ACHM£Of,' W A U f f
WILL YOU WALK ) / N O T . . . . U M
—By BOB AHiIJIUY DOES NOT RKf, IftffcAD
ME STUDIES-me INFORMATIONHAS GIVEN H I * .
FACTS YOU NEVER KNEW
FtANE APPROACH^ I>ILQUACttRS Of
AH All ,'RfST IS A TREASURE 1)00Off Hi TAKEN FOR&RANTED,'SHALLWEiI I VBE ON OUR WAY?
"TV"--By IICHAK1)
iwctMiwuERMawrtiasooJ1HIR8 A«l S04MNV MINIMWf
timeK1WWB5.--tMEAN--
f^M-
CPEAKINGD ABOUT SPORTS
by Meyer ____THE YEAR 1943 " *
The year 1942 passes slowly into oblivion . . . ItHie first full year for sports marked by this country
,, w;ir, fighting to protect the liberties that our jrrand-i .,t IIPM fought and died for back in the RevolutionaryWar . .Rationing, curtailments, price ceilings, W.I H., priorities all have an effect on our sports pro-, r;im but we are hippy to see that aportg activity isiill going strong as a morale and body builder
Aa the year 1942 fades slowly over the horizon]i us look back in retrospect over the past twelve
mniiths and summarize, very briefly, the outstanding, iMit.s in our town during that time . . .
The htgh school athletic teams, we can clearly,..•, ,ill enjoyeThTjjfhTy successful seasons, as has beeni,, custom hare in the past few years . . . Starting
•>,ifli basketball, Joe Comba, who has since enlisted„ ih(- Navy and now hold,8 the ranking of Chief Spe-inlist, had his usual brilliant cage team and won the
,.;,<\ majority of its games only to fall out in the state'..innoy . . . Joe never seemed to have any luck with: hi' state tourneys, anyway . . .
I» baseball, Frank McCarthy continued his goodoik with another winning ball club—one of the
nit standing in this section of the state . . . He won themajority of the games on the schedule, which isn'tanything new for Frank McCarthy, if you have fol-lowed his teams at the high school during the pastiVw years. . . .
Came football and another good club for FrankMcCarthy, even though the 1942 edition didn't livenII to the brilliant record compiled by their predeces-• ui's during the 1941 campaign when they won alllit one game.. . . After a slow start, the High School
nines hit their stride and had a good year, winningfor the 'teenth time the Central Jersey diadem ini inuip 3 . . . McCarthy has won these laurels so often[\'< {jetting to be a habit with him . . .
Independent teams suffered greatly by the draftMost of the independent baseball teams around
ioun were disbanded after losing most of their play-11 . . . And even bowling did not get by without feei-ng the affects of the draft of men into the armed11 vices . . . Basketball, never flourishing well in this «
immiigh even during normal times,, is out for thed u r a t i o n . . . • - • • •
In the sphere of professional sports, no discourse•A mild be complete without mention of Joe1 Medwick,I'urteret's big leaguer . . . Joe had, in our opinion,ust an average season, skimming through with an
. wii .MO by the skin of his teeth . . . While his hit-imtf. particularly early in the season, was a potent:;.iior in the brilliant play of the Brooklyn Dodgers,i t took a landslide in the last month and had all hemild <!o to keep in the honor .300 class . . . Tis saidlilt \w was put on the block but noclub wanted him
Somehow this does not seem logical to us, for thet .nteret player would still make the outfield for any
;mi in the National League, or American League for' i : i t m a t t e r . . .
Boxing, locally, was centered around Andy BistakIK. has since enlisted in the Navy . . . Andy, after a
1 vof], came back to the ring and enjoyed a number••I suiTessful boutabefore he began to slip . . . Then
save it all up as unfinished business . . .There comes the copy boy and we've got to make
•!:r deadline . . . So we'll wind up by wishing all ofmi a very Merry Christmas and Joyous New Year
. And hope that the New Year 1943 will bring•>ut the complete annihilation of the Axis powers.
High School Cagers Store Two Victor!2 $ Ai AHejs TtatnScores Big Victory
CARTERBT—With Joe Ver-
nillo, No. .1 nwn on the Carteret
team, rolling* a neiisatlonal (fore
of 2R9 for a new loop recofd, thn
Academy Alleys closed in within
two frames of the league leaders
in the County Major Bowlinfc Lea-
gue by scorinjf a brillaitt tfcree-
game triumph over the Metncjifh
Recs last Sunday nhjht at home.
wasVornill-o'fl three-game total
709 for an average of 236.
To saw that the Academy Alley
won decisively would be putting
it mildly for the local maple maul-
era rolled their best scores of the
season by ttiraisg l» toUiee *t
1071, 1046 and 969 in the final.
Meanwhile trl« Academy Bar hasits hands full with the league lead-ing Burtews. The Bar rolled 1038which is ordinarily goad to winbut Burlew's topped them with amere 1102. The Carteret team,undaunted and atill flfchtinp hard,rolled 1090 in the second game towin as e,very man rolled Rbove the
(Continued an Paqc S)
Steve Nagy Sets PaceIn U. S. M, R. LeagueWith 184 Average
was released for publication thisweek by Stephen J. Comba, lee-tary of the league. The secondhalf program will get under wayon Jan. 12 and will wind up onApril 22.
Fifteen teams will be it) therunning during the iceotid halfwith the Cooper Powder1 drop-ping out due to losing a numberof their "regulars" lit the draftCaitinfc Ho. 1
vs.Jan. 13—Casting No. 2
20—Lead Burner28—Mechanical No. 4
Feb. 3~Mechahlcal No. 311—Mechanical No. 1i t . TU.-.1. tTntlfc* i. i
24—SmelterMar. 3—Open
10—White Metals17—Scrap Plant No, 224—Silver" Refg.31—Yard No. 1
Apr. 7-Yard No. 216—Swap Plant No, 121—Mechanical No. 2
Cattiaf N*. 2Jan. 13—Casting No. 1
19—Mechanical No. 427—Mechanical No. 3
Feb. 4—Mechanical No. 29—Open
18—Scrap Plant No. 124—Silver Refg.
Mar. 2—Yard No, 29—Yard No. 1
17—Meehanical No, 123—Scrap Plant No. 2
CARTERET—According to theiAP r- l~Lead p l e n t
6—Smelter
2nd Half Schedule Lukd ForUSMR. LeagaeOptningOnJan, / I
CARTERET—The aeeond half
schedule in the U. S. Meteli bv
terdepartment bowling
latest averages compiled by AlbertAnderson, secretary of the loop,Steve Nagy is leading the race inthe U. S. M. R. interdepartmentbowling league with an averageof 184.
There is a triple tie for secondplace between John Sharkey, MattSloan and Eddie Charney, eachwith 179.
Averages of players who bowled24 or more games to the weekending December 18, 1942:Name Games Ave.
NagyJ. SharkeyM. SloanE. CharneyM. SiekerkaJ. HarrivanF. DonnellyS. KazmerG. MedwickG. Paterson
34363430393933331)036
E. Czajkowskl 36
it;:1
Hogi: slaughter in the 12 monthtmnt; October 1 is expected to.•bunt 65,000,000 head, accord-: the bureau of agriculturaltiut-s of the U. S, departmenticullure.
DeferredThe selective service system hat
been directed to request iti localboards to classify in Group 3-B al!livestock and poultry farm workerswho are deferred on grounds of de-pendency.
A. ThergesonS. DerewskyL. Bertha
I O, McDonnell| S. KaraS. CombaW. VargoT. Dzurilla
A. BurrL. PottsM. PosaobyW, BorchardB. MegyesiM. MtglectC. SimeoneM. Coppola0. Schur
GoetzHamulak
E. EinhornPanekRichardson 24
M. Pnssillo 27TeUpoaky 39
S. CyxewskiPalinskyCurran
A. HundemanUrbanski
J, CapikA. SchsJfer
8.
jv i(<(i(wiwfiMWMNMmMNif|l<M«M***B • • • - " —
Solve Your Gift ProblemsAT "
WEISS'Carteret Liquor Store
M Rooaevdt Av«. Crteret, N. J.Complete Stock of Domestic
And
Imported
BEERS
27273228363536363327283535313532'1138363838
t.CORDIALS
P. JacovinichWllgus
J. PankuliosS. TurkR. Thergeso"J. PasipankiV. HopyaA. CrawfordJ. BozoA. WallingP. SrokaM. KurtiakA. ChambraJ. KopilA. Vargo *J. NohaiF. KurtiakG, Beahak
S.
253333332832302432343328312736U8036283630.33322480
184179179179178178176 ^174172
471#71
170170169169167166164164164164163162162162161160160159159158.158168167156166166156164164153161161161149.148147,146144144143143142140140139137136136126123
HG226246223236232256
••bat236212216231222226222232214244235207216199221225200208220213216208197197224201206220198239200188
13—White Metals20—Tank House
Mechanical No. IJan. 13—Open
20—Mechanical No. 226—-Lead Burners
Feb. 3—Mechanical No. 411—Casting No. X16—Silver Refg.,26—Scrap Plant No. 1
Mar. 3—Yard No. 111—Mechanical No. 317—Casting No. 224—YMd No. 2
Apr. 1—Srnelter7—White Mitals
14—Tank House21—Scrap Plant No. 2
Lead BurmnJan. 14—Mechanical, No. 4
20—Casting No. 126—Mechanical No, 1
Feb. 2—OpenFeb. 10—Mechanical No. 2Feb. 18&Scrap Plant No, 2
23—White MetalsMar. 2—Smelter
10—Tank House18—Yard No, 123—Mechanical No. 3
Mar. 1—Casting No. 26—Silver Refg.1
13—Yard No. 221—Scrap Plant No. 1
Mechanical No. 2Jan. 12—Mechanical No. 3
20—Mechanical No. 126—Open
Feb. 4—Casting No. 210—Lead Burners16—Yard No. 123—Yard No. %
Mar. 2—Silver Refg.9-r-MechanicBl No, 4
18—Smelter26—Scrap Plant No. 1SI—White Metals
Apr. 8—Tank Rouse13—Scrap Plant No. 221—Casting. No. 1
Mechanical No. 3Jan. 12—Mechanical No. 2
2182072131992111962031862041862461741722011871901T9191V181190166147
First PlaceHolds AsKondrk's Both Sweep
21—Open27—Casting No. 2
Feb. 8—Casting No. 19—Mechanical No. 4
17—Smelter28—Tank House
Mar. 8—White Metals11—Mechanical No. 117—8crap Plant No. 128—Lead Burners30—Scrap Plant No. 2
Apr. 7—Y«d No. 114—Silver Befg.20—Yard No, 2
Mechanical N P . 4Jan, U—L«sd Burners
19—Casting No. 828—Gasiinf N», 1
Feb. 3—Mechanical No. 19—Mechanical No. 8
16—Yard No. 224—Ywd Ho, \
Mar. 4—Se«* >l*nt No. 19-7-Mechankal Mo. 2
16—Tank Houie23—Open30—Silver Refg.
Apr. 6—Scrap Plant No. t15—Smelter
UARTBHET - Nem*th'» didt o n , e greit bowling In iheTounjrM.en'3 League Monday night todefeat the Carteret b « h hFe«.straight games at the Mil #U*<y».Donwrk's Bar »1*° Morn*-* ***(fv i c t m y und »i a result the dead-
loek for tint pJ«««meth's and K«ndrk'8 B.r
ed tighter than a pair »t
S r Plant No. 1Jan. 14—S«r»p Plant No. 2
21—Yard No. 187—White
Feb.'
B»r hadthe first i f f *17 pins, » l ftwo
17—Mechanlcaj No. 326—Mechanical No. 8
aN o , l
19—Yard No. 221—Yard No. 1
F*b, *—White Metals10—Smelter18—Lead Burner*88—Open
Mar. 4—Tank House11—Silver Uttg,17—Casting No. 188—Casting No. 280—Mechaniaul No. 3
Apr. •—Mechanical No. 418—Mechanical No. 2SI—Mechanical No. 1
BnaAPklSkffmQpNtB?(MwtjrBowlers
1J—White MetalsM—tank Honse
b. J—Yard No. 8*9—Scrtp Plant No. 1
1«—Mechanical No. l**=SSiTffig- Wb". 2
Mar. 2—Mechanical No. 2
It*
trim* setback by Condenser l»«'trWay night, at th* Carteret R»rreatitrn alley*, the Brew A teamcontinues to hold undisputed p©<-tenon Of flrtt plicc in th<> FosterWheeler Bowling League.
In other matches, Boiled B t™vthw* itralfht from Caning, Erf,'tlon scored a sweep win over Mnchin* B, Br*M B tallied a rl<>*?two-fame triumph over Boiler APhd Machine A trlmmfld Pump nnr8h**t In three in n raw.
<«)Byrtn* 13«Htt* 180laitptita 187
Poll
R08(3)
Marclnlak 196Tok«r§W 165Donovan 158Vero 183Ruggeri 198
(0)N. Lucas 152Tony 154Grtente 153Misdom 149J. Mayorek 151
759feilo- B (3)Yellen 171Dolineh 200
\l Poll- 143BssigMusyka 150M. Luoas 212
Mtehin. B (ft)Mitrolca 204Kowal 139CoppolaMaskarinec ..E. Mayorek
Erection (3)J. Medvetz .
t
Boiler A (1)Robertson 180Wise 169Blind 125Mudrak 148
11—Scrap Plant No. 219—Open24— Casting No. 1SO—Mechanical No. 4
Apr. 6—Lead Burner14—Mechanical No. 322—Yard No. 1
SmellerJan. 12—Silver Refg.
20—Tank Housei6—Yard No. 2
Feb. 3—Yard No. 110—Scrap Plant No. 217—Mechanical No. 324—Casting No. 1
Mar. 2—Lead Burners9—Scrap Plant No. 1
18—Mechanical No. 224—White Metals
Apr. 2—Mechanical No. 16—Casting No, 2
15—Mechanical No. 420—Open
Tank HomeJan. 13—White Metals
20—Smelter27—Silver Refg.
Feb. '4—Scrap Plant No. 110—Yard No. 217—Casting No. 125—Mechanical No. 3
Mar. 4—Scrap Plant No. 210—Lead Burners16—Mechanical No. 426—Yard No. 1
,30—Open
Apr, 8—Mechanical No. 214—Mechanical No. 120—Casting No, 2
White MataUJsyi. 13—Tank House
19-*8Uver Refg. .27—Scrap Plant No. 1
Feb. 2—Scrap Plant No. 211—Yard No. 117—Open23—Lead Burners
Mar. 3—Mechanical No. 3 '10—Casting N6, 116—Yard Ko. 224—Smelter81—Mechanical No. 2
Apr. 7—Mechanical No. 1 iMortsea
J3—Casting No. 222—Mechanical No. 4
Jlh. 12-Yard No. 2 {££„81—Scrap No. 1 \ walsh
.28—Scrap No, Ii J v e i
Feb. 3->-Smelter11—White Metals16—Mechanioal No. 2•24—Mechanical No. 4
Mar. 3—Mechanical No. 19—Casting No. 2
18—Lead Burners25—Tank House31—Casing No. 1
Apr, 4—Mechanical No. 314—Open22—Silver Refg.
No. 3Jan. 1?—Yard No, xl
19—Scrap Plant No. 226—Smelter
Feb. 2—Silver10—Tank House16—Mechanical No. 423—Mechanical No. 2
Mat. 2—Casting No. 210—Open c16—White Metals|4—Mechanical No. 131—Scrap Plant No. 1
Apr. 7—Casting No. 1IS—Lead Burners30—Mechanical No. 3
_j« to the Copper Powder
dropping out of the League, each
Mam will have an open night onae
during the second half. In th»
tfent another tean\ should ent«r
ta* Itafue, the Open Night will
be tilled in by that team.
i thm Shoppt LasMtik* U On How—TvoictOAiOTBRirr—When it comes to
taking H on^the nose, Aly's Dr«»(UMpfe toot it not only once bdl«*te«f In the Academy Woman'sJtowUng League thiB week. U«tThuwday they dropped a three-rofenfor to tirahin's Drttgi t Xon Monday night they lota threentofa game* to Babies Fumitate
iu (3)
171102
17244*188178
no1651420S18!
811 Rl
Swamp Union 45-14, ThenDefeat forth Plainfield 32,
CARTEBOT — ILermi* Hort'«artewt High School ctgerp openvil their »e«»on in a blate of (loryy Morinjf two hijhly Impressive
LLast Fiiday afternoonn their horn* court th* Blue and
White sharpshooter! did evvv-hlnjr but sweep the floor with
Union by scoring a crushing 45 to4 victory. On Monday afternoont North flainfleld the local cs(t*rs
piled up a third period lead tocarry tVm to a clone and hard-'ought conquest of North Plain-Reid, 32 to 29. The team will re*main inactive during the holidaywpek, renrwinc activity with High-land P»rk at home on January Ii
Outplaylnr, outclauing and oui-Miooting Union in evi'iy depart-ment of the Komi;, the Carterptcagfcri rolled up a 15-2 margin inthe first quarter, holding th*ir op-
to Ortty two ftrul
opelaml, gbnilln, |
late* (14)off, f
Schtisbblf, fMcCarrltk, fMf, f
1R9182152100210
21316514ft139
S94 878 845
148177143162149
148165138168
778 782
125200
136176171
164155170208157
876 808 .854
1571791811
134179.139131198
16C130205
880 781 859
The Cart«r«t offeiwive e«»c(l off sbit in the xecod period an (uachHorn sent in hl» >«ond tenm. Inthe third period the vsrui'.yback into action mid rolled up an11 to 1 advantage to lead by U t7. By this time il wss all ovebut the shouting for the Unionclub.
Against North Plainflelit thBlue and White combine had macstlffer oppoaition, In the fir?quarter the home turn took a two-point lead, 9-7, but the CartereCagers tallied In the second period
t to 9, to take the lead at halfwsy, 19-17.
In the third period the Careret heavy guns got into actioniutscoring North Ptainndd by:o 3 and boosting their lead to 2,o 20 going into the Anal stamnhe home forces put on a 1«?
perod rush that almost proved fu- jtal to the Blues but Carteret mi •
ived by a three point margin, 82o 29.
Kendiersky wai the Btar of the-Union gnnie with thirteen point*on six field g'oata and one foul,-while Lou Mikics led the attack
gainst -North Plainfield wlfli ten
G. F. P.2 2 61 5 76 1 1 30 0 00 2 2
164Jimmie 183Chester 156 .. .M. Medveta'. 154Molly 246 134 200
201171,216
192184
Andres 176 150 172
927 882 901
160
212148125147169
202141125147140
782 801 756
180157143136
157102196
15921214117
aten, timmi't.
Scorn hy period*:arteret , 15'nlon 2
m
r<i»k. Spam, R. L<Schtnltttr.
Carlcrtt (St)ikieK, fleckonr, f •
Kendieraky. cA- Perry, gR. Hhlnlty, jr . ». .H. Perry, jr j.
Sftrjlllo, jr -
N.Gaub, fBoyland, fLeUo, cKretchmar,Vilell. gtliliwater, gRooney, irAlcxamhr,
(48)Mikics, fGleckner, fKendiersky, cElliott, cA. Perry, g,
Kellish 135 ...Menda 171 147 188
787 797 8H
Score bylarteret 7
N. Plainfield 0Referee, Walder.
skim. Scorers, Linjer
V,1i
Machia* A (3)Nascak 202Solewin 143Price 213Van Pelt 809Molly 183
16819316918S195
14697171189186
950Pimp * Sheet (0)>vCsehlak 188
146186160
Sideris 176
910 789
SkayHolowatohSafchinsky
186172143166195
134lf>5187145180
855R. Shanley, g
8721
May peace, Victoryhappiness revealwives through tb«hole of the future,Yuletide hope.
7514 6'
qi IWITH H p..
PERTH AMB<
NOTICE!
j$, ©alewic*% <jfcafn«y -
117I7t
14t151
m M7
ii"!:»W^,,ij
JLoNG DtSTKNCE telephone linn Just can't take the usualholiday calls this year in addition tp the trttntndous load of warraessajei now being handled ntef day.
Unlew unnecessary holiday calls are given up, there will be seriousjams on long dUtantie lines and switchboards, delayingImportant measages aod preventing some from getting
tUffJOfs: at a*3. Even with every available operator on duty andevery line in tis*, there will be unstoidabk delays in service.
|f you must call persons in war»bu»y centers or in the S«uth, FarWest and Canada, please do it before or after Christmas. And callby number—It «AVM time getting connections.
NIW IIRSIY MLkmil»H»NI COMPANY
I Drift 48 DaysOn 2 Life Rafts;
Eat Raw turtlen of a Torpedoing
Lose From 40 to 58Pounds Each. 9
YORK. - Nine men whoMtW YORK. Ninedrifted on two life rnfti for 48 day*to fhe Atlantic after their ship wsitorpedoed and sunk by a Germanijibtnarine told their story at an•l!tjt coast port.• Among them wore seven Norwe-glani, t Dane and a Swede. TheyWre members of the crew of 44tboatd it Norwegian merchant vei
I Ml that wns stxuck by two torpedwfll Jun* nbnut 31)0 miles oft the At-lantic coast. Thirteen men were
jtoll and Ihr ship went down In IS'ttkutes. The sinking of the shipjtttt been previously announced by
life belts, cootitheir regular
O N THE SILVER SCREEN ~]
and Chopin's "Two1 Preludes," hind the 7-Ball,
,f:,Wearing rubbertOA sweaters over
'fltoftes, the 31 survivors abandonedihlp and took to two lifeboat* and
"twriMts.1 Of the survivors 17, Including theCaptain and tlie wounded, were In amotor bout, five in a Jolly boat andnine on two rafts. The boats and»ft« were lashed together at first,
iwith the mntorboat towing,I Try to Get Help.' When smoke was sighted on the[wcond day, the Jolly boat let off in,an attempt to get help but failed.ThtX night the jolly boat jtarted tortend alone. On the third day the^notor boat did likewise, after thejcaptain decided It was necessary to|»ave the wounded. Both boat«jreached land a week after the sink-WI The nine were left alone on theirjtWO rMts. which were lashed togeth-
. | «i by tow line. They were only 200(miles from shore, but from then on
, Ithe gulf stream kept moving themjjgtward. The tow line kept break-ling. At the end the tow line had:b*en reduced from ten to twoI firthoms, •i On their 16th day afloat the men1 sighted a ship only two miles a Wayland sent up flares, but she failed to•top. Again on the 30th day they
'taw a vessel, headed straight forithem and only a mile away. TheyTan up signals, but she turned and\ttfi away at full s,team., "I am absolutely sure they sawM," Bald & spokesman. "Theyprobably thought we were a sub-marine trap."
Three heavy gales drove the ratehundreds of miles out to sea.
"•When the first gale struck most[at us were asleep, and we were;nearly swept ofl the rafts," he said.j"We clung to everything in sight."j Ate Raw Turtles.
.1 The men had rations that lasted•three weeks, or less than half theittae they were on the rafts. After'that they caught flsh and turtles.t "We caught three turtles, each'.about 50 or 60 pounds, and I guessjit was the turtle fat that nourished|l«," said the spokesman.| They ate the flsh and turtles raw,and drank the' turtle blood. Theyalso drank rain water that theycaught in the sails.
The men bathed in the ocean In'turns, others wielding oars to driveofl the sharks that swam aroundthe rafts.
When the rescue ship picked themUp all nine were able to climb the
! ship's ladder without help. OnejdiVed from the rait and swam 100'yards to grasp a line thrown fromthe ship.
j The nine, who ranged from 21 to169 years in age, had lost from 40 toIM pounds each. The ship's doctorfound them suffering from malnu-i trltion, but otherwise all right pbys<,lcally. They said the Bummer.weather and their life suits savedithem. When interviewed ashore,;,they had regained much of their lost(•weight, and were bronzed and Clear-,>yed. •
All said they were ready to go,|t»ck to sea when fully recovered.
DitmatIn her latent picture, Warner
Bro*.' "Now, Vojra««r," whichipenit tomorrow at the Dltmss
Theatre, Bette Davii hat a new,glorious role that lurpanaei any-thing she has done before. Sheplay» the part of a neuroticdaughter of a itrict New Englandmother, whose only escape fromher sordid world in a frustratrdlove affair. In the male lead issuave, handsome Paul Henreiri.
Charlotte Vale, (Miss Davis'role) in interviewed by a psychi-atrist, Or, Jaquith (Claude Rains)who was brought there by her sister-in-law (Ilka Chase).
After a period of trial readjust-ment at T>. Jaquith's rest homo,he advises Charlotte to take a tripbefore returning home. This shedoes, and during the voyage, meetsand falls in love with Jerry (PaulHenreid) an unhappily marriedman whose love for hia child keepshim attached to his invalid wife.Despite the fact that her love af-fair can never really reach its ulti-
¥ tainted At Ditmat
Continued From sport Pure200 mark. Burlew's was too strongin the final, winning 10S2 to 926.
Exchange Of Gifts HeldAt Gaihl Yuletide Party
WOODBRIDGE-^Mrs. KennethM. Krpli>r, of Railway Avenue,was hostess to the BuschmanGuild of the First PresbyterianChurch at a Christmas party heldat the Manse Monday night.
Mrs. Eugene Burns led the de-votionals and Miss Jeanne Horn*-by sang "O Little Town of Beth-lehem" and "O Holy Night." Twopiano selections, Handel's "Largo"
StandingW.
Bette D.Yi. and Paul Henreid a. they appear in "Now Voy-ager" to b . sho»m at the Ditmut Theatre for .even days start-ing tomorrow.
Burlews1 81Academy Alleys 20Tom English ': 28Academy Bar : 24AUgair's 23Brennan's 23Fords 17Metuchen 17Woglom'fl IS
ylo's 15South River 13Thomas 13Perth Amboy 18Sayreville 12
Academy All«y»(3)Derewsky 267Donnelly 185Vwiillo 234Galvanok 191IChomfcki 204
1071 1964 959Hreauchen (0)Bubenhe'er 147 242 160Dudas 189 145 13GMario ,.., 168 188 177Miller,'-. 287" IWIffSTauscher 186
Grahrn't D*n*jt (3)
170
T.Flrin.r'noW And only 63 days after being admitted to
KtfSlVSi iih-UuW^ n-. u th. ».TM«O-.story of Eleanor Borner, 4 * year, old, who .. shown habpilygreeting joyous mother, Mrs. Rudolph Born.r upon beln, ft-fe7..d from Medical C.n.er, Jersey City. In the *«**«•** *Joseph F. FitzGorald, of C.rterM, State Cha.rm.n of th. Na-tional Foundation for Infantile Paralym.
mate, Charlotte's relationship withJerry enables her to return homea completely changed woman bothin appearance and mentality ,
jxtra good measure, the film pre-sents Sonny Dunham and his or-chestra.
The Ritz Broth are, who shouldappear on the screen more fre-quently, are welcomed headlinersin a very funny film comedy, "Be-
were played by Miss Ann Ander-isons. Christmas carols were sungand games were played with thefollowing winning prizes: Mrs.Leland F. Reynolds, Mrs. WardBrown and Mrs. Willianj Balder-son. There was an exchange ofgifts during the evening. MissAnn Parsons, Miss Bess Donnellyand Miss Mae McAuslan were' incharge of the program.
Christmas Carol SingingOn Church Unit Program
W O O DBRIDGE — Christmascarols featured the Christmasmeeting of the Breckenridge Aux-iliary held Monday night at thehome of Mrs. John E. Brecken-ridge on Green Street, with JtfissM. L. Woardell as issisting hostess.
Mrs, Harry Reyder was in
morrow at theorrow a aAccording to audiehoe reaction,;hia extraordinary Universal pic-ture is sure to win the currentpopularity sweepstakes. It con-tains large portions of juat abouteverything necessary to provokeaughter, suspense and admiration'or the Hollywood form of entor-:ainment. ,
Appearing with the hystericalirothers are Carol Bruce, Dickroran, Grace McDonald, Johnnyiowns and William Demarest. For
! I
Mrs, y ycharge of the program. Mrs. Em-
d a ChristmasBailey, Mrs.
ersonstory
of the progWhite read
by TempleThomas Wand sang a Christmasgong and Mrs. LrC. Holden play-ed a medley of carols. Therewan an exchange of gifts.
which opens toStr*nd Theatre.
MajesticAbbott and Costello, rated as
Hollywood's beat-liked and best-patronized comedians, are againon the run. Following an extend-ed movie chase that started with"Buck Privates" and hit the laughceilitig more recently in "PardonMy Sarong," the No. 1 clownsMy Sarong,have a new offering called
/ d l d tWho
Done itf?" scheduled to openChristinas Day at Reade's Majes-tic Theatre, Perth Amboy.
From Universal studio, whichmade the comedy, comes the an-jnouncement that "Who Done I t Vbears little resemblance to theteam's previous iflughfilms exceptthat the comics have been pro-vided with funnier material thanever before.
Bin-lew's (2)E. Hmieleski .... 249Pavlilt 195Krohne 229Urbanski 222J. HmieleaW 207
1109Academy Bar (1)Yiutak 195Cha.rney .„ 196Harrivan 204Sharkey 199Clark 244
One |f by LandIt takes 280 tank cars, in four or
five trains, pullBU by as many loco-Rft4 oris on? motives, to replace the average oilB M »u& 8«7 unit, , in ^ fleet ^ t once.deliv-
ered 95 per cent of the Eastern oil„ supply. By diverting tank cars fromaoo 226 c t t i e r a r e a S i t l w o v e r l y movement176 190 0 , o i l to t n e E a s t hBB b e e n nepped214 247 u p tenfold. But sUll the East coast214 151 gets only about one barrel of oil175 218 for each two barrels It once re-
•— ceived by sea. That's th« reason977 1032 for fuel oil rationing.
212213229224£12
181145192174234
1038 1090 926
Headlight GlareEyes of everyone are affected by
glare of bright headlights and allmotorists should drive cautiouslywhen facing such bright lights. How-ever, many drivers are almost blind-ed by bright lights. Their eyes re-cover very slowly. The car maymove several hundred feet beforevision clears up. Drivers shouldremember that glare blindness in-creases with age, thereby increas-ing the hazards of nigbt driving.Black eyes, in general, are less af-fected by headlight^ glare than arelight eyes.
'Hundreds' of VillagesRazed in Yugoslavia
•. LONDON.—Geriiiuii and Italiantroops have, destroyed hundreds ofvillages throughout Yugoslavia in anattfcmflt to break patriot resistance,a Yugoslav government spokesman•aid.,'V^Uoting "unimpeachable" reports,fee spokesman said that along the
'Montenegrin coast on the Adriatic,Italian warships hud wrecked wholevillages in the interior with incen-
/djiary bombs. In June, the spokes-|TORn said, the Italians burned 42 vil-Images in Slovtniu.
; "{n some provinces of Yugoslavia,villages were wiped out and farms.burned lu tin- tjiouud," he asserted.
New Books{Continued from Paqe 4)-
of her father, which received wideattention when it was a Book-of--the Month Club selection someyears ago.
West Texans like to boast abouttheir wind and sand storms, BayiGeorge Sessions Perry, in his"Texas: A World in Itself." Whenasked if the wind blows that wajthe year around, they're apt treply, "No, a big part of the tinvit blows the other way." , . . ThSouth is famed for its hospitality.But Virginia Moore, in her book:"Virginia is a State of Mind,"saya she's known of one casewhere hospitality broke down.Some neighbors of hers invited anEnglish friend to come and visitthem, At the end of the first yf arthey were mighty glad to havehim. And at the end of the sec-ond, third, fourth, and fifth. Butafter aix years they—wondered.Did they speak to him about it?Oh, no, they > couldn't be rude.We sold Algoma (their homo),"they^,old her sadly, "to gut hUfeet off the mantel."
Prospects for EggsA new record in egg production is
expected to be set in 1943. Sincefeed and egg prices stim likely tocontinue favorable to feeding layers, experts believe there will.be flto 8 per cent more layers on farmsthe first of 1943 than a year earlier.Despite the record egg production,it Is believed that egg prices wil'be even higher next year than in1942.
Quaker Wore Red RobeIn 1790 a Quaker chemist by the
name of John Dalton purchasedbright red robe, believing thatwas gray in color. His friends chided him for his jaudy taste, causinhim to realize that he could not distinguish colors. This is the first recorded case of tot l color blindnes»ays the Better Vision Institute.
Judging SpeedEyes with good co-ordination—that
work together in unison—are neededto gauge the speed of other cars. An•rror of a split second at a crossing
frequently results In an accident.Studies Indicate that substantialnumbers of automobile drivers havelow ability to judge distance—anddon't know it.
An British Sunji .Two hundred ninety-five million,
eight hundred and twenty-seventhousand Indians live in the 11 Prov-inces of British India and are Brit-ish subjects.
First PlaceContinued From Sport Page
dive and Kondrk's Bar won by de-cisive margins.Carteret ri.t (0)¥. -Medvet* 167S. Dacko 163Kosty 180 168Jimmie 190J. Medvetz
Harrivan
856 887 813lometh's (3).mundson ........ 186 189 247
Sunvutta 140 138ErockmaiL 225 182Nemeth f. 164 147Marciniak 196 179 189'oil 191 184 213
Mary had a little car-No bigger than a minute,
But when she joincJ die Swap-Ride dub'
She got six peoplt in i t !
I D t S
167166
207165190
145205
146172205
8967, 915 978
Kondrk'. B.r (3)E. Mayon*MasgarinecL. Van fe l tJ. Mayorek
H 2165203152y
M. Lucas .._ 150
170147181184148
134172195180193
Eye Strain in Hosiery MillFaber Blrren, Industrial color con
sultant, tells ot a well-lightedhosier; mill which still had manycomplaints of headache and eye-strain from workers who had to loopthreads over a series of fine needlesIt was noted that the needles simplj"stood-out" in space; equipping thimachines with side ar.d back panelof light gray-blue corrected the'condliion at once.
German OccupationThe dally cost to France of Ger
man occupation would build 2,5«modern workman's homes.
KAHWAYFRl. to SUN
Continuous Xm«» D»ySong-sparkling fun!
Chicks Ncod SpacePoultrymen who grow more win
ter chicks this year to help supplythe wartime rifled for meat are re-rtjlnded by poultry specialists tbathese chicki will need edequatispace arid comfortable housingMany of'theie chicks wlU spend atheir lives Inside the cMcken coop
(CohWhued tramUdstelak
Handicap174
IK
Chamra .K. Medvet*
ErdeleM. MercitrM. FeinbergG. Udzielak
Handicap
(O)
10k
121!
M l
I ' M
H.'i
in;ii1 r i,
Bnfro Named"The Rocky Mmi
not a bird, but a l)uby proipectors beenmals's raucous hr,u
for Mh
Faitl.(Continued from I
T h a t ' s action l)r,K,.,i
T h a t ' s the deepest f,lllMtWUTCTS th6 button ;in
Confident that HIP l i^, ,on—knowing Mini i...da rknes s—the re i» nlm,br igh t , loving nml ;n •beyond the unseen n .
Before you mil, <;,„swer.
JINX FALKCNBURGCo>F«atura
WILLIAM BOYD"TWILIGHT on the TRAIL"
Starts New Y u r i DayDOUBLE
HORRORShow
912 830 814(O)
Dobrowski 176 138Pencotty 166 168Molly 145 164Megyesi 14fl 141Potts 169 142
139160156128145
796 763 728
bite Crow ReversesAdage in Illinois County
IpiJERSEYVILLE, ILL. — The old"*iw*"H»rison of "block as a crow"
y have to bo discarded In the Jer-p county area, for this locality has(flow-white crow.
,j spring, according to observ-l pair of ciuws nestled In a big|n the vicinity of tba Williamifer farm northeast of Delhi.
,, i young birds emerged, thr^efb}aok and one was white. The
., to adult size,p Terry, assistant caihier of
j y State bar*, rec«U» »«•-tfte crow in almost the MU»«
, about 40 yeafi ago.
' • •'
TOYSA Complete Selection
' Dolls
» Pool Tables
• Desks and Autos
» Table and Chair Sets!
» Sleds and Wagons
* Yelocipedes
• Rocking Horses
» Rockers» Bowling Alleys
Educational Game* andToy* from 50c up
BIG TH1U ACTS
will look like new and will beDECIDEDLY SAFER in a new, mild-
e m setting. The cost is verymoderate. Let us submit priceeand dciign*.
ROBERTS& LIEBERMAN
QUALITY JEWELERSPERTH AMBOY, N. J.
VOKOfl. W. J» t. A. «««»SUN. - MON. - TUES.
Tnii SundayY refular ihowtlarti at 3 P. M.
John Wayne - John Carroll
"Flying ""Tigers"— AUo —
"Tux»Wo Junction"with Weaver Brot. & ElrirySpecial Matinee Mon. from
2-S P. M.
GALA HOLIDAY SHOWSCONTINUOUS XMAS
AllWED. & THURS.i Jonei - Jane Frazee in
"Moonlight In Havana'— Also —
Basil Rathbone in"Sherlock Holmei and
The Voice of Terror"Free dishes to Ladies Wed.
and Thurs.
F R I D A Y * SATURDAY ~BIG NEW YEAR'S SHOW1
Betty Grable - John PayneCarmen Miranda in
'Springtime •» the Rockies'Also
Lloyd Nolan - Carole Landis
"ManUa "Calling"Continuous Matinee New Year's
Day from 2 P. M.
— 2 HITS 2 —
CALLING "RBIUESPI
SUN. - MON. - TUES. - WED
Theperfectrole fortheperfectactress!
CLAUSE RUNSKTAQRANytLLEGLADYS CQOPEft
— I'llM —Allan Jones - Jane Fraxest
"MOONLIGHT in HAVANA
NEW YEAR'S EVEGALA SHOW
O Big Features
(• Hours of Continuous FUN
Perth AmboyTires—Tire?—TiresUsed Can with Good Tires priced lowfor a quick sale. For the best buy of
see Joe JanasAUTO
STATE THEATRE• WOODBRIDGE, N. J.
— ' " ' ."•I' !• . ' 'Wfc. ,
TODAY THRU SAT.FRIDAY, XMAS DAY, CONTINUOUS2 SPECIAL HOLIDAY PRODUCTIONS
Mick** R«Mi»ey In I Ann SotjberV- iUd Skelton in
"A YANK AT EATON" | "PA»Aftl4 HATT1E"THRU
H.nry Fonda - LwdU. Ball in I«THE BIG STREET" | "Tb« *hn»
• •ADDED 8UNNIT1;
kh
m 5
II 1ii
MAJEiWJ f . a t ~ t H Q N E ' > . ' Q ' . X
ItATB SI. AT FIVE COHNElS • W O r i t PACONIINUOUi OAl t t MOM I r l t
)!39
SATURDA
CONTINUOUS « O M I f,M,-fHONE PA «-'V
7 DAYS - S T A R T I N G XMAS DAY
DOVLEVV
D-4 D 1 * ^ S«nny DunhamKitx Brother! ANU nil oiuin^m
BEHIND THE 8 BALLSbow Slarti 1 f. M
XMAS