Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Asbury Park Press from Asbury Park, New Jersey • Page 3

Publication:
Asbury Park Pressi
Location:
Asbury Park, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ASBURY PARK SUNDAY PRESS (THE SHORE PRESS), OCTOBER 8, 19U ScanningNewBooks Name of Shore Youngster Carried Above Skies in Battle Plane By John Selbi "LEE'S LIEUTENANTS: GETTYSBURG TO APPOMATTOX," by Dougla Souihail Freeman (Scribners; 5). In 1934 and 1935 Douglas Southall Freeman published the four When little Theodore John Ku Homefront News For Battlefronts Here's a roundup of nil the important nrus events of the prist ueek at the Jersey Shore, written especially for mailing to servicemen overseas. Clip it and mail it and give your fighting man one of the best morale builders the news from home. Asbury Park is now committed to a beachfront of the future that will find no buildings jutting out to sea with the exception of ths present Convention Hall and Casino and possibly an open public fishing pier. A resolution was voted upon by the Asbury Tark planning board to have a boardwalk in the future that will be unmarred volumes of E.

Lee," which Ellen Glasgow has called the greatest lpba. the year-old son of Mr. and m.rinn u. Mrs. Theodore Kuleba.

805 Fourth ft.Mim ail i yiMi ii avenue, Neptvlne City, grows up --v. yiujcti. ifn ai. i iccuiflii wan gti Hiooaihes going to tell nis companions of material bearing indirectly on the general, and an idea. slosurrou nd: LeeA Author of the Week with 0rar nnnnram tt he's had a great deal to do with whipping the Germans and the Italians in World war 2 even tho his main contribution has been a great big smile.

The youngster has been lucky in that his uncle, an aerial photographer with the American air force in the Mediterranean theater thought enough of him to have by construction on the seaward side. Working under direct orders from Commissioner Alfred E. Di'ts- his big plane named after him or rather has had the family pet name "Little Butch for a lucky coll, stale alcoholic beverage control department are staging a vice, drive on Springwood avenue. So far, disciplinary action has been recommended against three Springwood avenue taverns, two women have been named in complaints for prostitution and further reports omen in more than 50 operational-flights against the enemy. "Little Butch" Kuleba has beenj painted on the side of the plane; of violation are being assembled.

"LITTLE BUTCH." Staff Sgt. Arthur Fawcett shown beside his plane, named for year-old Theodore John Kuleba, Bradley Beach, somewhere in the Mediterranean area. At right, Sergeant Fawcett with a large aerial camera. in the act of Hurling aerial oombs about with reckless abandon. His uncle.

Tech. Sgt. Arthur Fawcett. who visited the Shore last summer, is convinced the little fellow has been a factor in bringing good luck to the crew members of the plane bearing his name. Sergeant Fawcett.

in addition to being a crack aerial photographer, has also shown himself to be an: expert with the camera on lie unuiaiiip in y. 1 1 1 1 his subordinate commanders would be the chief figures, a literary canvas not unlike the famous picture in tht Battle Abbey at Richmond which shows Lee and his generals together under a tree. This would, however, degenerate into a set of brief biographies without some unifying agent and nothing is more boring than a collection of brief biographies. Dr. Freeman had an inspiration at this point, as he usually seems to have when confronted with a difficult problem.

He decided to unify his sketches by imbedding them in a study of the development of the army command under Lee. He has now published three volumes of this study, and it is complete. For my taste it stands beside the "Lee" in quality, and in some respects it is even more exciting; for one thing, it is more varied and by its very nature, has a tremendous sweep. The third volume "Lees Lieutenants: Gettysburg to Appomattox" is a particularly good illustration of this. Much new material has been uncovered, and very often the swing of the narrative takes over and the reader forgets entirely that he is presumably reading a series of biographical studies.

Dr. Freeman changed considerably the traditional portraits of Jackson, Longstreet and to a some- Ernest E. Megill, a patrolman on the Neptune police force for 20 years, died of a heart attack while working In a field on his farm on Route 33 west of Collingwood Park. An army officer was killed and nine enlisted men were injured when a one and one-half-ton army truck loaded with soldiers crashed into the side of a Central railroad train at the Hope road crossing on the fringe of Shrewsbury township. Second I.t.

Roswell D. Isnn, 19, of Tallulah Falls, Ga was the officer killed while the driver, Lt. Frank Miller, of Ada, Okla suffered lacerations, contusions and possible back injuries. Funeral arrangements for the lieutenant were cared for by his wife, Mrs. Frances lson, who was residing at 25 Pierrt avenue, Manasquan, at the time of the accident.

Everett Franklin, trucking contractor whose services are em. ployed by many Shore municipalities, was burned severely when gasoline he was using to clean a motor in the cellar of his home ignited. Returning home after escaping from the enemy when his plana was shot down, Lt Louis It. Abromowiti returned to his Bradley ground. The photographs which appear on this page and which Sergeant Fawcett took in and around Rome after the entrance of the American forces show a deep understanding of his subject.

Recently Sergeant Fawcett wrote that the "Little Butch" has been retired after a vigorous battle career. The second of Douglas South-all Freeman's great literary projects has been completed with the publication of the third volume of "Lee's Lieutenants." Dr. Freeman's four-volume life of R. E. Lee has been the definitive biography of Lee for nearly 10 years, and one of "the great American works in its field.

"Lee's Lieutenants" is a set of biographies of the commanders under Lee, imbedded in a narrative tracing the downward ii "Ml Beach home In time for the conclusion of the Jewish holiday Yum Kip-I pur service. Alfred N. Bcadlcston announced his resignation as administrator of the Asbury Park area office of civilian defense and coordinator of Ithe area, the resignation to take effect on Nov. 1. Ross B.

Fountain, Civil Service Needs Workers course of command in the armv The United Stales Civil Service commission needs clerks, typists and stenographers In Washington. Applicants must be 17'i years of age and will be required to pass a civil service test. what lesser degree Jeb Stuart. If of northern Virginia, in the War deputy area administrator, will be in charge of the Asbury Park area office when Mr. Beaiileston leaves.

The Monmouth county War Fund campaign, which covers the V. S. (). and 22 other wartime relief agencies opened this week with a house to house campaign to collect $125,000. The house of Mr.

and Mis. Frederick Wilke, Union Reach, used as a refuge for neighbors in the recent hurricane because It was situated on higher ground, was destroyed by fire last week. The linns had been the only one in that particular area left standing after the if im.A Us" IVIIS. I. n.

uijiiir, iriiuiiiiii fauoha alii- there is a 'moral" it is that anj Between the States. Technically, American army must have a "Lee's Lieutenants" is a much nucleus of professionally trained more difficult job, and Dr. Free-officers, and that the failure of the' man manages it triumphantly. Confederacy can be laid to the loss of such a nucleus, and the deterioration of command for that and other reasons The word "great" must be used for "Lee's Lieutenants." "THE TOLI.IVERS," by Maleel Howe Farnham (I)odd, Mead; People who have not been lucky enough to "be 'born and raised" i nsmall towns may not quite understand all of Mateel Howe Farn- ham'a rtiirnc in i i represenianve. is in me iniieu States employment service office at 649 Mattison avenue.

Asbury Park, to interview applicants, both male and female. Mrs. Blythe will be in the U. S. E.

office, 20 South Broadway, Long Branch, Oct. 10 and 11 between 9 a. m. and 5 p. m.

Living conditions in Washington are good, the civil service office savs. Single rooms range in price THEV SUFFER MOST IN ANY as fought today spares neither the old nor the young In these pictures sent home by Sergeant Fawcett the extremes of youth and age are shown In a nation torn by conflict. The little Italian boy reaches for a tid-bit while two other children smile in anticipation. The old lady at her open doorway seenis serene enough altho her clothing is pretty mueh the worse for wear. storm.

The Asbury Park Press was declared the outstanding newspaper in its class in New Jersey and The Sunday Press was adjudged to have th best-appearing front page of all Sunday papers in the state at the 23rd annual Institute of the New Jersey Press association recently held at Bulgers university. Six awards, four of them for first place were awarded to The Press papers In the annual competition. ('apt. Charles J. Crammer, a World War 1 hero and a member of juinvria, uui rvrn miry will nave i good lime in tin with the book.

It is certainly one of the best small town comedies of i with board mav be had from $42.50 to $55 a month. Appointees will be met at the Union station by a the Asbury Park (lie company for 24 ears, will retire from the depart- 'ment this week it was announced at headquarters It will he at least two or three weeks before shows rn he resumed at the St i and theater in I.akewnod. A fire which had apparently been jextinguished in the morning broke out again in the afternoon. Flames 'ruined the screen and hind-speaker system as well as many seats, carpeting, decorations and drapes Pal, a non descript dog. who has attached himself to the ited Hank recent years, and in some ways the best.

Mrs. Farnham imagines herself a girl grow ing up in a New York town of about 10.000 souls and several Tollivers. It is not that the Tollivers are soul-less, but merely that their souls are of a different order, and therefore the Tollivers are suspect in Otsego. The family introduced itself to Otsego curiously the only son of the family defrauded a bank, blamed it all on a presumably innocent woman, and then killed himself. His mother took him to the cemetery in a white hearse with her daughters inappropriately costumed in the entourage, and the Tollivers were launched.

representative of the housing division and will be assigned a room Salaries range from $1,752 to $1,971 a year ith 48 hours a week. Experience is not necessary. Mrs Blythe will give the examinations and make the appointment so that no time is lost. The government will pay your transportation for some of these positions. ijr s.

-5. -7m nw i V7 it i i Persons not now employed in They lived In one of the best houses in town, precariously. Mr Tolliver nearly always was away, seldom financially responsible, and Ze anv week be- tween 8 30 and 5 p. m. including Saturday for interviews.

Persons unable to call during these hours, may telephone for an appointment. '1 i station platform gives travellers, waiting on the platform, the jitters as he (lashes from one side of the platform to the other under moving trains. Miss Elizabeth Menard, pioneer teacher in the schools this city, who lived with her sisters In the family home in Manasquan died suddenly at home. As a group of cheering and screaming Long Branch hovs and girls raced up Cookman avenue following the Long Branch football victory over Asbury high, a group of a doen or more youthful sailors from the pi e-midshipmen school stood aghast shaking their heads in wonderment. "What's it all about?" shouted one to a group a top one of th cars.

"The Green Wave Just took the Blue Bishops!" yelled hack th group in chorus "Meek," muttered onelif the gobs. "I thought we took Berlin!" In response to a request from the bo at the pre-midshipiiirn's school for a pin-up picture of the typical Janie," 16-year-old Janet Cashman, of West Allenhuist, was chosen to portray the typical kid-sister or gnl next door. Signalman Fust Class Anthony Sortino has returned home on a 30-day leave after spending the last 18 months In action In the Pacific. His destroyer was part of the famous Task Force 5H, which took part in the invasion of the Marianas Died Frustrated LONDON l.l'i Montague Holbein. 83, who made nine attempts to swim the English channel, died at his London home.

His last chan 4 i. f. I I a 1 on the one occasion when he made a dent in Oswego, he was quite vocal and extremely flamboyant. One way or another, the three Tolliver girls married well, and one after another, the three good marriages went on the rocks. The girls were always on top of the heap, or buried under the debris.

The town was alternately shocked and alive with curiosity; It would have liked very much to write off the hole thing, hut how could it when a single Tolliver could marry a man she never had seen in her life, could acquire English gardeners and Bostonese manners, and could then toss it all over and eventually marry a movie magnate with a private railroad car? Or when another There is no point to cataloging Tolliverana. Books of this sort can he ruined by too much emphasis on caricature. Mrs. Farnham never once relaxes control, her gaycty is Infectious, and her background impeccably painted and full of variety. "INVASION JOURNAL," by Richard L.

Tobln (l)utton; $2). The finest writing about the invasion of western Europe I have seen is contained in a medium-sized hook by Richard L. Tobin. called "Invasion Journal." Mr. Tobin's honk is a very personal one.

and cer- nel hid was at the age of 41, but! i a he failed when only 5U0 yards from his objective. BUTTER SCOUT BOSTON. (Pi Mai. George J. Cronin, state purchasing agent, has hired a special butter scout in an attempt to obtain enough butler for 25.000 inmates of institutions Cronin.

said the state advertised bids for butter in carload lots with- LEGAL NOTICE THE REAL 'LITTLE Bt 'K II' Theodore John Kuleba, for whom the plane pictured at the top of the page is named gives with a cheer. Compare the hippy, healthy American youngster with the ragged little Italian hi' at the right, whose picture was snapped by Sergeant Fawcett and sent home. LEGAL NOTICES notii or sri sr or oi st tainly he will not convince all his readers that all his statements receiving a reply. MOSMOI TH Ol ATV Kl RRO-t. A I r.

Or 1 1 Fault Mmhfl rilrahnh l.lliirll, lit mi mi i nxnaiK i jii ii.bwi In Ih Mftdrr of Hi Ptlalr of rrnrM R. I.uhrt1, hra4. Notir In 4 rdilort tn Prrariit 4 laimt Afaint tat. pnraup.nl ii ih cudT ol Dnrman Mr Padititi. HiirtngMit of ihr f'ounrv of Mon-in-iiiih matlr mi th 'I wfinv-nnh rtav of H'Dtriiitnr, IU-44 on th a lip 1 1 ion nf l.u .1 Kan arimini' i ator nf ih Maia NnfliR ll tifrfby tvffi hl Ut (ntinta of lli ti6i i ibri rtfritinr and truntr of ih r.t'ti of kti'l tlf i PtthUl finer! nd turd hy ihr HurniRftift of th miniv of Monmouth and rrixinrri for ri Irmrnt in th UrDlnni Courl of faift C'titiniv.

nil V-v it 'Uuufccldv, Ui twfritv-suth dv nf Or -1 ui Kftmrra l.nimhrd, rlrraftt), nnln luljfi' A I. 1U44. 10 00 i lot lo mli.bll. la thf for ihr nUorn a at rummlwiorn nd jtisira'ni' aliirfepui, ihir drhia and rt msncia aKailt! Th aaid slai. unrlrr loaih, within r.x mnntha from in rial nf ith afntrsa mdr.

nr Ihrv 111 for vi bar id of i hir a ion a ihrlnf ati in at th aaid tuhti nbr. la'd, rrhold. N. J. 8pimbr 21, I 1944.

l.RO .1 KAT. Hoad. Npuin City. N. i.

conn! frpa Daid Hfpipfrihrr 12 A 1) 1044 AHHI1HY PAH NATIONAL. bANK AND TRI'HT OMPANY (formerly Achnrv Park Trut Mv MtHtVH MtU.l.iN, 1 nut OfTii r. Anburv Prk. .1 Inn uior nil tnifttr. Ruhftid Biout, WAerutr.

Rid Aiburv Pfttk J. Proctor, 30 ftfout At Hasan Aahurv Paik. N. J. Prnrtora.

'HQ) mir, wmcn is unimporiani. ome people, in addition, will feel that a 60-page introduction in which such familiar staples as a convoy trip to England and English food are described once again is a little too much of a curtain-raiser. But for me, even these ell-chewed ideas and well-known scenes were pleasant in Mr. Tobin's remarkable fluent and controlled prose. When he at last gets down to business, the effect is first rale.

"By the end of 1943," writes Mr. Tobin. whose home paper is the New York Herald Tribune, "the combined chiefs of a staff had a good picture of what could happen in the west and how it could be made to happen. It was a work of imagination. It was a combined operation on a scale without precedent in the history of wars, an invasion against an enemy that had been fortified for years.

It demanded special invasion ships, and boats, and amphibians, and water-proofed steel. It demanded specialized training. Above all. It demanded imagination, and in Roosevelt and Churchill it got imaginative treatment. Stalin called the invasion 'the most imaginative, heroic military step in all his-tory'." This paragraph is the key.

Mr. Tobin's narrative supports at all limps his belief that what actually won the beachheads and later France wis properly Implemented imagination. We had. the hook indicates, better materiel and more of it, but we had also more flexible minds which is only another name for imagination, after all. "THEY DARE NOT GO A-HUNTING," by Dorothea Cornell (I)odd, Mead; Some months ago a girl from Louisville named Dorothea Cornwell arrived In New York to receive a $10,000 check, It was a prize for a novel, contributed by Dodd, Mead and Redbook magazine.

Mrs. Corn-well was the prize-giver's delight, because she was young, photogenic j-3 MONMOI TH ORPHANS I Ol Kf JOHNS-MANVILLE Guaranteed Roofs Now la th llmr In rt-rmif hiimr with quality prnilui'l nf K0 ymr' Ktandini. ita no mur than an ordinary roof. Auk (o tut our nii' rtrmn-Ume (irtvii and Huff Asbei' lot 5irlni0 Shiiiylfi Ror.b Wonl Insulation in. atallfd Pnffuniaticairy by Johna-Manvilla Co.

tRUr. ESTIMATES TKRMS IF IIKSIRKn Al.l. ASIil KV PARK SIM In th MaUrr mt th lalat of Mar? Sana, Ilcraad On ftHlon fr Sal ol and la Par ltla. Ordrr to Hlmw aua. Anbtir Park Nai ion a I Hank and Trust.

Company, ailminianauir wah th Will AnnPti, nf lha ata of Mary Arm, dr-cKiitd, haviiiR rxhiblird undr ciaih a intn acrnunl of th piaonal rita1 and dbn of naid lntHtat. whii'iT It appara that, th prraonal ria of 'he aaid Marv Hna. drrad, ib inauffn int to pay hr drbia and i ing th aid of tin comt in th prinina It U)rrijpon on thia Bix'h dav of Sep-irmbfr, 1V44 utrlnrd that pet anna in lart-aird In (h larxla. tnmn(i. hiff1tia-mnti and ral aiat of tha aaid Marv Hrna.

raftt-4. appear bfort Una Court at ih Court Hnu tn th Borough of frhiM on th Thirtirh dav of November 1U44 at 10 A KaMrn War Tim, to ihow rauit ahv ao much nf th aaid landa, tnrnnta hereditament i and real aai of th aaid Marv Rena. dereaaed. ahould not be aoid aa will ba iufflcint to pay her dr'a It funher ordered that thli order he publUhed In tha "Aahut Park Htinday on nf tha npapra of thta a'at for tic wki at lean oncg in each wk. DORMAN MrTADDIN.

RuiroRai. J. ntWAHU KNIGHT. Judge. IN WAKE OF WAR.

Here is a bridge near Cassino where the Germans and the Allied troops struggled and died for many bloody weeks during the Italian campaign. Blasted by heavy artillery and shellfiie, Cassino was reduced to rubble-as this picture by Sergeant Fawcett clearly shows. Take My Word for II and not too worldly-wise. She enjoyed her week in the limelight so much that the most hardened glamor experts of the two were charmed and participated willingly. Now Mrs.

Cornwall's book is published. The book is a novel about a repressed girl, and the title is "They llnm Krmndrtlnc Co. 112 Anbury Avtnuc By I-'rinr (Ioi.bv Your Neighbor Is a Boor I villain was siniph. one who Oared Not Go A-llunting," which is a nice-sounding title that does not I have too much connection with the story, but enough. The background! is small-town, altho the town is presumably close enough to New York Don't call your neighbor a i dwelled in a villa, or country.

Li "boor" to his face, for it might i home. I uacK-yara lend, mil, An, aiM) (hji Vour 10 snare me summer mistiness pernaps mageneid, l.onn., might be i proper model. And the cast of characters includes doctor, as has bpen the case with many winners of this particular prize. Julia is the repressed girl. Her mother has slow ly withdrawn her literally, the word neighbor means a The original "a nearby boor." However, the c.revk word idiotes referred, not term is not as uncomplimentary to a person of dci ani-ed mentality monmoi th rorvrv hi Run.

iIEH oniir. DICE DOESN'T SCREAM HERE AW MORE. This picture, taken by Sergeant Fawcett, should be familiar to Shore readers, even tho there's something missing. The "something" is ex-Premier Mussolini and this is the balcony from which he an long threatened the world. a it appears, for the original An- but to a orivaie person." that is CUT FDEIL30 ROCK WOOL INSULATION rnramallrallr or Manually Inilallrtl Combination Window Screen and Storm Sash self from th world flpr thp death of hrr husband and hpr very young gio-ixnn neanKetitir meant a ltiu.ll In.

on; she ha told her dauRhter that only her dolls and her mother andlnigh nearby) husbandman 'farm- That beintr tin- -aw. niir nemh- In th Matlrr lh WMHn mt MariutrKr M. Nwlan. Nellra rdltri I rrnvnl lalmt Atainvt Kntal. Furbuanl.

In the nl Dnrmin Mr- her home are real and dependable, and that the world is a trap and n- hor is a vuk.ir heathen. Vulvar inevitably a disappointment. At the last moment I)r. Scott saves her! And. strangely enough, the word stems in the Latin vulyuy "the idiot, a villain, a farmer, a hus- ale nf th f'ntlniv of Mon- Sa I'oHir Main Viimn: rm ihf Twnlv-mxth dav of inuxoann oriKinaily did not nrw-; people; the pubiic And a heathen ami a uuui from hor mothfr nd hfisplf by forcing hor to hub hrr long hair, buy Hptmibur, IB44.

on lh aopliratlnn nf NKW VOKK tI'i A Norwegian1 IsanJy designate a man who had is merelv "one who dwells on the Ann that wnere we came in. Mar Panllin. Hole Exfrumx. of the pump ODI'iatl'd by the beating of or Maruarll M. Nolan, dfrraxrrt CARD taken a ife; the original Icelandic heath." word husbuandi meant 'one who- nut everyone knows that a iiolir.

ta hrirbv sifn lo the trednor of iMvuic mtv id, 1 waves against the vessel's side lias itnnini io nmbit in in aubarnhr heal hen is a natian Hut is that Exarutrii, a alnrnaid Iheir deon Full Length Storm Sash u.j-. i i. i f.ela Comnton. 84. told folks com- and demand.

th. un- a nw hat, tastt a little of the world. The taste lead Julia into a share of a somewhat different "triangle," and some other difficulties. There is a New York newspaper woman and handsome red-headed young man mixed up In the business as well as the doctor and his dy ing ife. I'm under the Impression that Mrs.

Cornwell knows more about simple peoplp than about alleged iophistirates such as her newspaper woman. These last are a wlllnn aix mnnllia liom Ih Zt, Ih, moih Magazines w.ve half i dwells in a nou.se. Hut today, the word husbandman usually designates a farmer, and farmer derives primarily from the Latin firmus, "firm, durable." Ihf aftirexaid order, or thev will From.t Initallatlon. SH Month! la Tn fore your neighbor is a rustic K8rv the fomoton meer hi'. il flai'ned, will h.

fnr b.rri I ih'ir peasant. Hustic is from the Krent )h thr PumP 'J'''1 one ton i n. Brpifmbtr riictirnio frnm tl.o l.alin i-iivt ifii a nf VL'alpr a minute i 1944. Now. since etymology has shown 1 I MtOV X.AKJVTM I.Ane.

LI .1111 lit lllllll. i t'n oik in inini. i bit out of drawing, and so is some of the villagy atmosphere, and some neighbor is a farmer, urmilKHIK 'tl lilt- ri.uiin.. I rv i nr iirwiy l.illliu loll' B.vn,. WEATHERMASTER Thnne A.

P. MIN BRni.rV BPAf'H nf tha Dsvrholoeiral tanele Mrs ornwell hnnk is nri ni.tain Pfoperly reler to ant. primanlv. OPMiinaies one wnn Keeps mere nerause sue oe used on vessels unner H'imar, ni ine ps rnoiogirai langie. V-Oineus oook is gooa eiHPItain- a.

1 1. iimti Durand Ivmi canon. ment, nevf rthfless. 0 l.r nllitlllllll III III" fl imrn inin prujic nnw urnu nrix'ii ivnn null 11. uir atllrT Park loffense at that, tho, for the original tic, a pagan, a heathen, a vulgar to incjune.

ideal for fishing boats. Proc'ori..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Asbury Park Press
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Asbury Park Press Archive

Pages Available:
2,393,614
Years Available:
1887-2024