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The Record from Hackensack, New Jersey • 1

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The Recordi
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Hackensack, New Jersey
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1
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a TY EDITION Bergen Evening Record Generally and fair, not quite to- so WEATHER warm today probably morrow. Volume 48-No. 28-Total 12329 24 PAGES -Two Sections HACKENSACK, N. FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1937 Member of Associated Press PRICE THREE CENTS STORM ERASES EARHART HUNT ZONE AT ZERO HOUR Colorado Sends Up Planes In Squalls To Comb Islands REEF AREA OUT Search Is Narrowed To Thinning Patch In Phoenix Group (By Associated Press) Honolulu, July 9-Equatorjal rain squalls threatened to interrupt the search for Amelia Earhart which Navy airmen considered was entering its most crucial phase today. Despite a forecast of rain and poor visibility, officers aboard the battleship Colorado planned to catapult her three planes aloft again in expectation of completing an aerial search of the Phoenix Islands tomorrow.

Today and Saturday, they said they felt, was most critical period since the Coast Guard cutter started the search just a week ago. Airmen felt in flights yesterday and Wednesday they definitely eliminated the possibility she was in the area around Winslow Reef. REEF ISN'T EVEN THERE By sea and air search for the missing aviatrix and her navigator, Frederick J. Noonan, has encompassed approximately 136,000 square miles without even sighting some of the shoals and sand spits supposed to exist in the vast area. The flyers vanished a week ago today in an attempt to fly the 2,750 miles from Lae, New Guinea, to Howland Island, a dot of land but two feet above the sea.

Three planes from the Colorado, steaming steadily from the Equator southward to the Phoenix Islands, soared over the area east and south of Howland Islands yesterday but sighted no trace of the pair. The planes, piloted by Lieutenants (Continued on Page 4) FISH ACCUSES MRS. ROOSEVELT Charges Radio Contract Is Tax Evasion (By Associated Press) Washington, July 9-Representative Fish N. told to a Congressional Investigating Committee today that Mrs. Franklin D.

Roosevelt had availed herself of a tax loophole. The New Yorker read what he said was a photostatic copy of a contract which Mrs. Roosevelt signed in 1935 for radio broadcasts. It stipulated, he said, that after each of ten programs the sponsors were to pay $3,000 to the American Friends Service Committee, Philadelphia. "If she can avail herself of Fish said, "then ANybody else in America can do the same thing." DECKER HIGH Glen Rock Glider Fourth In International Contest Elmira, N.

July 9-The Soaring Society of America proposed today a 10-point program for the development of gliding in America after the Eighth Annual National Soaring Contest is complete. The Society's program includes establishment of an airport especially for gliders, a glider school, and increased housing for the planes. The contest, led by Peter Reidel, German pilot, is being conducted here. Reidel has A total of 186 points to lead the international field in the race for individual honors. Other leaders were Emil Leheck, Long Island City, 177: Richard C.

du Pont, Wilmington, 176: Chester Decker, Glen Rock, 163. Wall Street (By Associated Pressi New York, July 9-A tired-looking Stock Market today recorded moderate price recessions for most of the leaders. the opening was moderateWhile ly active, drifting tendencies later. a slackening of the pace brought of fractions to! a Declines point or SO were in the majority hear the second hour. buoyant steels of yesterday The tripped over profit selling at the start.

Motors and rails also gave ground without much resistance. On the downside were U. S. Steel, Bethiehem, Republic. General Moern Pacific, Chrysler, N.

Y. Central, SouthChesapenke Chesapeake Anaconda, Ohio, Kennecott. Consolidated Edison. Aircraft, du Pont, and Westinghouse. Implement stocks did better, ineluding Oliver Farm, Deere and Caterpillar Tractor, American Telebuck American Can, Sears Roephone, and Western Union also moved against the trend.

Bonds were major commodities. narrow as were the 6 HUMIDITY'S DROP ENDS HEAT WAVE HERE BY TONIGHT Temperature Starts Up Again, But Bureau Promises Relief YOUTH IS DROWNED Thursday's Topmost 93.4 Crowds The Pools, Kills At Least 53 The heat wave will break tonight. Lower humidity and a drop in the last 3 days' record-breaking temperatures was forecast by Weather Bureau officials at noon. maximum will not adWeather observers, promised that vance beyond 90 degrees, although unofficial temperatures recorded in the sun may hit 95 degrees or more. Starting at midnight with a temperature of 84.

degrees, the thermometer fell gradually to a low of 80 degrees at 6 but quickly mounted, and at 9 a. m. a temperature of 84 degrees predicted another scorching day. The temperature chart follows: 10 p. m.

90 a. 80 11 p. Midnight m. 89 a. a.

SEE 80 84 6 80 1 8. m. 83 a. m. 81 2 a.

m. 82 8 a. m. 82 3 a. m.

79 9 a. m. 84 One of the thousands who took to the water in refuge from yesterday's blistering 93.4 degree heat was a victim of drowning. Salvatore Meglia, 16, of Columbia Avenue, Passaic, failed to revive during an hour and half of artificial respiration after he was dragged from the Passaic River at the foot of Page Avenue, Lyndhurst. He was pronounced dead by drowning by Dr.

Paul Liva. CHILDREN GIVE ALARM Police were notified that a man disappeared beneath the water by several children who were swimming in the vicinity. Patrolmen John Patterson, Orlikowski, and Walter O'Neill grappled for the body and found it within 3 minutes. The men worked over the body for an hour and a half with Dr. Liva standing by.

In Ridgewood a 51-year-old man committed suicide by hanging. Relatives they believed the heat had back a mental condition which the man suffered brought, several years ago. At the Hackensack, Swimming Pool on 1,150 persons paid admission during the day. No figures were obtainable, but Maple Springs Pool was crowded all day, as were the Oritani Field Club, the Y. M.

H. and the Y. M. C. A.

pools. Palisades Amusement Park cials said that 10,000 persons had used the facilities of their pool yesterday. At Hartnett's Camps on the banks of the Hudson River in Edgewater, hundreds of New Yorkers took advantage of the cool but net too clean river. At the Graydon Park municipal swimming pool in Ridgewood, more than 300 persons sunned and swam in the waters. Yesterday's top official temperature 93.4 at 3:15 p.

m. fell far short of the 98 set in 1876. The mercury column will have to go some today to hit the all-time high mark of 102 set last year. Elizabeth, with its recording of (Continued on Page 2) BAKERY TRUCK, CAR COLLIDE; 2 INJURED Wissner Breaks Leg Unhurt in Morning Hackensack Crash The passenger in a bakery truck suffered a double fracture of the right leg, and the driver less serious injury, when the truck collided with a coupe at Passaic and Linden Streets, Hackensack, at 6:40 this morning. Both were taken to HackHospital by Patrolman Edward Davison.

The driver, Isaac W. Wissner, 19, of 147 Cambridge Avenue, Garfield, was treated for bruises on the right side of his body and muscle strain, and released. The passenger, Michael Billanin, 14, of 50 Grant Street, Garfield, was held. Police said that the coupe operated by James H. Baucum, 37, 195 Central Avenue, Hackensack, was southbound on Linden Street, and collided with the truck while making a left turn to go east on Passaic Street, the direction in which the truck was going.

The force of the collision threw the truck up against the curb and a tree on the south side of Passaic Street, so that it was badly smashed on both sides. The coupe was aged less seriously, and Baucum WAS not hurt. Foschini Sends Check For $51; Simpson Fund Tops $500 Mark Councilman Paul J. Foschini's, check today for $51.90 sent the Bergen Evening Record's drive for funds for crippled Miss Jessie Simpson well past the $500 mark, the goal set for next Monday, The large donation was the entire purse received by the Paul J. Foschini Association's baseball team in their battle Wednesday night at the Hackensack High School athletic field.

The Association's nine was beaten by only one run in a close tilt won by the strong Negro aggregation, the Brooklyn Royal Giants, 8-7. With this latest contribution Miss Simpson now has in her own private account in Hackensack banking institution the sum of $508.90. Meanwhile, the committee Ar- COP FIGHTS OFF LYNCH MOB, SAVES BOY ACCUSED BY GIRL Cliffside Bans The C. I. 0., Warns It Will Use Force Borrell Says Organizers Halted Workers, Then Throws Out Lewis Union's Attorney Cliffside Park officials today placed C.

I. O. organization in the Borough, It whose ordinance to prevent organizers literature is under Supreme Court appeal. Mayor Thomas G. Fox and Police Chief gave a cold reception yesterday to George I permission to distribute circulars to Ford living in Cliffside Park.

GAG TEST COLLAPSES Slaff, an attorney, is associated with the Workers' Defense League and United Automobile Workers, a C. I. O. affiliate, and is counsel for her appeal for Miss Nancy Cox, Montclair socialite who was found guilty in Edgewater of violation of the ordinance on distribution of literature. He had announced he would test the Cliffside Park gag by placing men on Gorge Road, which leads to the Ford plant on the Edgewater river front below.

Slaff had declared that the test would take place at 3 p. when the Ford employees start their trek homeward. No organizers were there. But Cliffside Park police were WHITCOMBE HAS 292 FOR FINAL Leader Slips 5 Over Par On Last Round Associated Press) Carnoustie, Scotland, July 9 Leaders at thirty six and again at fifty-four holes, Reggie Whitcombe of England slipped to a five-overpar 76 on his final round of the British Open golf championship on the rain-drenched Carnoustie links, to post a total score of 292. Unable to finish with better than 76 in the terrific downpour, that nearly submerged the greens, Alf Padgham, 1936 champion, relinquished his title as he ended the 72-hole grind with a score of 298.

Johnny Revolta, lantern- jawed American who won the U. S. pro title in 1935, scored a closing 76 for a 311 that put him far down in the final tabulation. Shaking off Ed Dudley, leading American at 36 holes, and Denny Shute, principal U. S.

threat, Britgolfers took over control of ain's, situation at the 54-hole mark. Reggie Whitcombe, youngest of the three golfing brothers, retained his two-stroke margin by posting a three-over-par 74 for 216. His 74 duplicated by his brother Charles, who gained exclusive hold on second place with 218. Another shot back, at 219 after his third-round 73, came Henry Cotton, England's favorite until the Whitcombes jumped to the fore. No American could break in among the leaders until Shute, Dudley and Byron Nelson, the latter shooting A fine 71, joined defending champion Alf Padgham at 222 as the field moved into the last 18 holes.

Well out of the running were Walter Hagen, with an 80 for 228; Bobby Cruickshank, with a 77 for 228, and Johnny Revolta, who soared right up to an 83, twelve over par, for 235. Carving out the first sub-par round of the day, a 70. burly Charley Lacey, of Great Neck, N. edged in a shot in front of Shute, Dudley, Nelson And, Padgham with 221. Out in par Lacey cut a stroke from standard figures with a 34 on the back nine of the rain-soaked course.

Another 70, also compiled on the strength of a -nine 34, put Henry Picard seven strokes off the pace at 223. Bill Branch, former English internationalist, filled the 220 gap between Cotton and Lacey by carding 73. He lost a chance at a better A score by dropping two strokes on the back nine. Ralph Guldahl, slope-shouldered U. S.

Open champion, joined Picard at 223 as he went three over par with a 74. Sam Snead and Horton Smith, starters among the eleven last American entrants, also skidded over par. The long -hitting younghad 75 for 224. while Smith, ster with two sub-par 69's, went medalist eight over with a 79 for 227. Final scores: Britain 151-79-76 305 J.

J. Taylor, Busson. Great Great Britain 153-83-76--312 Jack Johnny States Revolta United 152-83-76-311 Reggie Whitcombe. 142-74-76--292 Great Britain Sid Fairweather. Great -315 Britain Cox.

Britain 305 153-82-81 William J. Britain 146-76-76 -298 Gt Alf Padgham. Great Ernest E. Whitcombe, Great 152-81-77-310 John Burton, Great Britain Britain 151-77-82-310 Bobby Cruicksheank. United, 152-77-85--314 States Used Cars Of Distinction The car you drive can easily be one of the newer sleek shining models.

The to obtain one of these way better buys is to consult the Classified Section-Used Cars. The reputable dealers offer you their best wares at the most reasonable prices. Look them over now. $45,000 Fire Drives Families From Homes In Little Ferry The photograph of Little partment of film exploded. The Bergen County residents, attracted Ferry's $45,000 film storage plant two homes shown were destroyed by the glare against the sky, Thousands Watch Early Morning Film Blamed On Heat Wave--Film Plant, 2 Homes Are Complete Loss Seven Little Ferry families fled their homes early today when a fire destroyed a large Street.

Two homes were tensively damaged by the $45,000 AUTHORITY BARS BRIDGE TOLL CUT Notifies Fort Lee Slash Is Now Impossible The New York Port Authority last night, through its secretary Lawrence F. Keefe, replied to the action of the Fort Lee Mayor and Council in demanding a reduction of the tolls on the George Washington Bridge, by citing a debt of $205,817,000 and the cost the construction of the new Midtown HudRiver Tunnel as an obstacle to the introduction of any change in son the toll system this year. Keefe said that the Port Authority had many demands made on it similar to the one from the Fort Lee Borough officials. "We are glad to hear of such demands but there is no possibility of reducing the toll charges on the George Washington Bridge in the immediate Keefe said. He pointed out that the construction of the Midtown Hudson River tunnel, which will connect Northern New Jersey with Manhattan through Weehawken, will cost about $80,000,000 when completed.

"There certainly will be no change in tolls until the tunnel is opened and its effect on revenues is Keefe said. unit of the tunnel will be ready for use in January, 1938, and while the toll charges for the new tunnel have not been definitely determined, Keefe said that they will probably be the same as those for the bridge and Holland Tunnel. 50 cents for automobiles and $1 for buses and trucks. 'Any change from the now charged at the George Washington Bridge and the Holland Tunnel would cause undesirable competition which might seriously upset the planned flow of vehicular Keefe said. It would be unwise, Keefe said, to reduce tolls on George Washington Bridge without making A corresponding reduction in tolls on the Holland Tunnel and the Midtown Tunnel.

Keefe said that the total debt of the Port Authority in its operation of the bridges tunnels connectNew York and New Jersey was $205.817,000 on January 1 of this year. Gross revenue during 1936 totaled $13,085,100, a 9.3 per cent (Continued on Page 4) BLAST SHAKES CITY Munitions Stored In Finland Castle Explode, Scores Killed (By Associated Press) Helsingfors, Finland, July 9-An undetermined number of persona were killed today when ammunition stores just outside the city blew up. The entire city was shaken by the blast and scores of persons were injured. The munitions were stored in Sveaborg Castle and caught fire before they exploded, Youth, 15, Battered At Riverside Park; Patrolman Beaten FATHER IN LEAD Toolen Gets Young Strubel Away In Attack Attempt a virtual ban on adjoins Edgewater, from distributing I Frank N. Borrell Slaff, who sought Motor Co.

workers ready to repulse any C. I. O. attempt with force, Borrell said. Chief Borrell said he would invoke the Disorderly Persons Act against C.

I. O. organizers. "I am justified for the protection of the residents of the community," he said. He asserted an attempt to induce workers from the Aluminum Company of America plant to join the C.

I. O. was made by two men on Edgewater Road hill, leading to Edgewater, at 12:30 a. m. The men, he said, blocked the narrow roadway with a car, and shoved flashlights into the faces of workers as they trudged up the hill to Cliffside Park.

"What do we have to do, beat (Continued on Page 4) RIVIERA IS PUT UNDER INQUIRY Breslin Sends Detectives To Hunt Gambling Convinced that gambling is carried on at Ben Marden's Riviera, the $300,000 night club in Fort Lee, Prosecutor John J. Breslin assigned two detectives to watch the night club this week-end. Efforts to investigate the Riviera early under the direction of Lieutenant John E. Guidetti were refused admittance to the night club by Marden. The detectives assigned to work with Fort Lee police in keeping a close check on activities at the RIviera are Walter Fraser and William Dietrich.

The raid led by Lieutenant Guidetti the first since the new night spot was opened. Efforts to disclose the person who tipped off the Prosecutor's Office met with little success today. Prosecutor Breslin said yesterday his information came from a reliable and official source but would make no further comment. PAINTER IS SUICIDE IN RIDGEWOOD BARN Family Believes Nervous Condition Brought On By Heat Jacob M. Storms of 926 East Ridgewood Avenue, Ridgewood hung himself from a beam in the barn at the rear of his home early this morning.

His death makes the fourth Ridgewood resident. to commit suicide within a year. Storms, a painter, had been working yesterday on a roof in heat of 105 degrees. The family believe that the nervous condition which he suffered several years go was brought back in the strain of working under the intense heat. Assistant County Physician William Greenfield pronounced death to have occurred at approximately 5 a.

m. this morning. The body was discovered by Mrs. Storms at 7:45 m. when she went out to feed the chickens.

Mrs. Ida Tremper, former wife of Chief of Police R. Floyd Tremper, a resident of the Storms home notified the police immediately, Storms born in Saddle River, on January 1879 and has been a was, resident of this vicinity all his life. He WAS 8 member of the Junior Order of United American Mechanics, Bergen Council. Funeral services will be held on Monday.

They are in charge C. C. Van Emburgh Mortuary where the body was removed this morning. Sergeant Stephen Placa, and Patrolman Herman A. Adicks and Peter Higgins, and Theodore Bouma investigated the case.

Surviving are Mrs. Ida M. Storms wife and a daughter Nellie. Police today stood guard at the Hackensack Hospital bed of a 15-year-old sex-crazed boy who was nearly torn limb from limb by a lynch-minded mob after he attempted to assault criminally a 7-yearold girl in Riverside Park, Hackensack. Battered from head to foot, with several fractured bones, bruises, lacerations, and possibly internal injuries, he owed his life to Patrolman Owen Toolen's courage and powers of persuasion.

Watching a baseball game in his civilian clothes when the vengeful father and a large crowd of his friends sought to take the law into their own hands, Toolen nearly shared the boy's fate. His clothes hanging tattered from his body, he was finally able to get the boy away from the mob and take him to the police station and later to the hospital. TAKES GIRL AWAY film storage plant at 365 Main destroyed and two others were exfire. THREE BURNED THREE BURNED Three injuries were reported. No record was kept, however, of slight burns and other minor injuries to firemen.

A number of the firemen were affected momentarily by the heavy fumes given off by the fire, but none collapsed. The injured, all members of the same family, were burned as they from their home. They are Mrs. Anna Greeves, treated at the Hackensack Hospital for shock and second degree burns, and her two sons, John, 12, and Charles, 13, treated for first degree burns on the back. Mrs.

Greeves received her burns when she fell in the street while carrying her daughter, Patricia. The child was uninjured. The boys were burned as they ran across the street, They were taken to the Hackensack Hospital by Vincent McAvoy, 542 Chestnut Street, Teaneck, The value of films destroyed in the building had not been determined today. The building was owned by D. J.

DeTitta of North Bergen, who stored Alms for the Twentieth-Century Fox Corporation of New York City. DeTitta, reached at the Alm company office late this morning, said that there is no estimate on the damages available at present. In addition to the loss in films, other property destroyed included the $30,000 storage plant, two dwellings, two garages and one shed, and two automobiles. THOUSANDS WATCH The brilliance of the blaze luminated the entire sky and was visible for many miles throughout County. Despite the hour, several thousand persons lined the streets.

Route 6, a block from the fire, was jammed with cars. The flames were so bright a short time after the alarm came in that a second alarm was turned in soon after firemen left headquarters, The flames attracted of neighboring towns who sent assistance without receiving any formal request from the Little Ferry Fire Department. All six companies of the Ridgefield Park Fire Department sped to the scene to assist the two companies which comprise the Little Ferry department. In addition, firemen from two companies in neighboring South Hackensack, and one from River Edge responded. The flames were first noticed at 2:10 a.

mn. by Robert Davison. Abend Street, Little Ferry, who was on his way to work in a nearby market, noticing the flames shoot up from a corner of the building 8.5 he rode by. In the meantime the intense heat and noise of the fire awakened all seven families who left their home hurriedly. The fire soon enveloped two of the buildings and threatened the others.

The bullding occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bassano was the closest to the plant and was the first to go up. Bassano was caretaker of the plant. All five members of this family escaped without injury, They were awakened by Miss Ida Bassano, who was sleeping in a room (Continued on Page 2) -Bergen Evening Record Photo, fire early today was taken as a comby the flames as thousands of looked on.

RUSSIA FIGHTS JAPAN INVASION Stay Out Of Siberia, Tokyo Is Warned Moscow, July 9- Soviet government warned Japan today to keep out of Siberia and declared Russia would use all possible means to prevent SHE invasion of LIDA territory by forces. The newest development in dispute over the ownership of Ennufu and Bolshot Islands in the Amur River along the SiberianManchoukuoan boundary the Far East came after the Japanese ambassador had told Russia that border clashes were too numerous. Soviet Foreign Commissar Maxim Litvinoff promptly rejected this protest as untrue. An official Russian communique accused Japan of failure to evacuate troops from the barren sandspits in the river. Litvinoff told the Japanese ambassador, Shigemitsu, that the islands belonged to Russia.

A clash at the islands on June 30 between Soviets and JapaneseManchoukuoan troops brought an agreement between Japan and Russia for mutual withdrawal of forces. Litvinof also requested Shigemitsu to inform his government that alleged invasions of Siberian territory by Japanese Manchoukuoan forces were occurring too frequently, He added the Japanese planes were making repeated flights across the frontier of Siberia from the Japanese inspired Manchoukuoan state. The communique said that Litvinoff, at this point, warned the Japanese Ambassador "Soviet frontier troops have firm orders in no case to allow Japanese and Manchurian troops to cross Soviet frontiers, and upon their appearance on Soviet territory to drive them out with all means." As an indication of the stiffening of the Soviet attitude in the crisis, Litvinoff told Shiegmitsu frankly, the communique said, that Soviet troops have had drive out Japanese and Manchurian detachment from Mount Vinokurka on the Soviet side where Japanese and Manchurian ammunition was found as well as blood--an indication Japanese had been wounded in the (According to reports from Hsinking, capital of Manchoukuo, battle referred to took Monday and resulted in 20 Soviet casualties while only one Japanese was killed and two wounded.) Shigemitsu Was summoned to the Foreign Office yesterday discuss the latest outbreak of hostilities on the long-disputed SovietManchoukuoan border. "The Soviet Government expects the immediate recall of the Litvinoff told him. Japan has interested itself in the Manchoukuo-Siberia border crisis through a mutual assistance pact with the nation it carved out of northeastern China.

U. S. OFFICIAL DEAD IN CHINA Associated Press) Chefoo, July 9- Charles J. Brennan, United States vice-consul here, died of a heart attack last night. The 33-year old American consular official was a native of North Adams, Mass.

Even after succeeded in identifying himself a policeman, had, the mob did not give up their efforts to tear the boy away from him and complete pounding him to death with their fists. They did not know then that the attack had failed, and that the little girl was little the worse for her experience. Chief of Police Frederick Ripperger heaved a sigh of relief when the boy was safe at the hospital. "If ever there was a mob bent on a lynching" he said, "this was one." He was full of praise for the coolness and courage Toolen had shown in handling the angry mob, and said there was no doubt that the patrolman saved the boy's life, The intended victim of the ASsault also had cause to be thankful. The fact that Fred Strubel of 93 Sussex Street was unable to carry the criminal assault was (Continued on Page 4) PROBE IS ON Civil Service Commission Otherwise Silent In Cliffside Fight Investigation of statements filed by candidates for the Cliffside Park postmastership are under way the Postoffice, under the Civil Service Commission.

C. L. Coombs of the Commission interviewed candidates yesterday, mainly checking on statements already made when the office was thrown open to examination several months ago. Candidates who filed, numbering 18, had heard nothing thus far, although Democratic County Chairman John H. Doscher 2 months ago at a meeting of several County Committeemen and women struck from the list the names of 5 candidates described by him as Republicans, including Harry V.

Dietrich, who was recommended as Acting Postmaster by Congressman Edward A. Kenney last February. Kenney has made no new recommendation, George Wagner, former Municipal Chairman, had 16 signatures to a petition for the Postmastership last year, but the petition failed to obtain the endorsement of Kenney, Wagner is opposed by William J. Woods, who succeeded Wagner As chairman at a hectic session of the Municipal Committee last November. There have been no meetings since.

Other leading candidates are said to include former Mayor John Cadien, former Councilman James J. Rouan, and former Assistant Prosecutor John F. O' Toole. INDEX PAGE ranging the benefit show to be held next Wednesday night at the Oritani Theater, Hackensack, were lining up today the greatest galaxy of stars of the radio, stage and athletic world ever to appear for such a performance. Tickets are still on sale in many Hackensack stores, at the newspaper's Main Street office, at the Oritani Theater, and the Hackensack police and fire departments.

They cost but $1 and entitle the holder to sit through two hours of star-filled thrill- packed entertainment. There are no reserved seats and the first to come will have the choice of the seating facilities. Ben Marden's Riviera revue headed by Miss Irene Beasley, radio singer, will lead off the 2-hour show at 11 p. m. From midnight on there will be scores of personalities presented by the show committee.

Amusements 19 Business Records Central Bergen: Bergenfield Bogota Dumont Hackensack Little Ferry 14 Maywood New Milford North Hackensack Oradell Ridgefield Park River Edge Rochelle Park Saddle River Teaneck Classified Advertisements 22-23 Comic Page ..18 Death Notices East Bergen ..10 Editorial Feature Page 16 Hurricane House .16 North Bergen Northern Valley 12 Radio South Bergen Sports 20-21 West Bergen Woman's Page 17.

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