24 - Millburn Public Library
24 - Millburn Public Library
24 - Millburn Public Library
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[AUGUST <strong>24</strong>. t»sni<br />
Vets Students<br />
Active Service<br />
Veterans now pursuing a course<br />
of study under the G.I. Bill, wno<br />
may have to interrupt their<br />
studies to go back into active<br />
military or naval service, will not<br />
be bound by the July 25, 1951 cutoff<br />
date for returning to training<br />
This announcement was made by<br />
Joseph F. O'Hern, Manager of the<br />
Veterans Administration Newark<br />
Regional Office.<br />
Mr. O'Hern explained further,<br />
that a "reasonable period" will be<br />
allowed these trainees to resume<br />
their training following their release<br />
from active service. This<br />
holds true even if they get out<br />
after the deadline date next July.<br />
It was stressed, however, that<br />
the veteran's conduct and progress<br />
while in school must have been<br />
satisfactory and that the amount<br />
of training he may be eligible for<br />
after diecharge cannot exceed his<br />
original entitlement. In all cases,<br />
his course cannot extend beyond<br />
July *25, 1956 which is the date established<br />
far termination of the<br />
program.<br />
<strong>Millburn</strong>'s Complete Paint Store<br />
14 MAIN ST.<br />
<strong>Millburn</strong> £.1055<br />
FEATURING QUALlfFlPAINTs"<br />
DU PCNT — MASURY — NU ENAMEL<br />
SPRED SATIN — BONDEX — AMPRUF<br />
AND ALL THE LEADING WALLPAPERS<br />
NEED MONEY!<br />
THERE'S A NEW SERVICE<br />
IN MILLBURN FOR<br />
QUICK — CONFIDENTIAL — FRIENDLY<br />
LOANS<br />
$25 to $500<br />
CALL<br />
"THE LOAN MAN"<br />
BILL SCHWAB<br />
LIBERAL FINANCE<br />
SERVICE<br />
350 MILLBURN AVE.<br />
(MILLBL'RN THEATRE BLDG.)<br />
MILLBURN 6-4455<br />
MILLBURN, N. J.<br />
L1C. NO. Ill<br />
Know Your<br />
Government<br />
Property valued at nearly one<br />
and one-half billion dollars ($1,-<br />
407,796,301) is escaping taxation in<br />
New Jersey. -<br />
This is greater than the total<br />
value of all property subject to<br />
taxation in the combined counties<br />
of Atlantic, Burlington, Cape May,<br />
Cumberland, Gloucester, Hunterdon,<br />
Middlesex, 3Vfonmouth, Morris,<br />
Ocean, Salem. Somerset, Sussex<br />
and Warren. Taxable real<br />
ind personal property valuaiona<br />
3n all of these counties<br />
aggregate $1,313,154,197 or nearly<br />
100 million dollars less than the<br />
valuations placed upon the exempt<br />
property. The latter do not include<br />
veterans exemptions totaling<br />
about 86 million dollars.<br />
New Jersey permits various<br />
cinds of property to escape taxation<br />
if it meets certain requirements<br />
estblished by statute. In-<br />
cluded are properties of the Fed-<br />
eral, state; county and local governments;<br />
public and other<br />
schools churches and charitable<br />
organizations; cemeteries and<br />
graveyards; and various other<br />
classifications of ownership.<br />
Whenever another property Ls<br />
:xempt from taxation it is fre-<br />
[liently pointed out that remaining<br />
property owners most shoulder<br />
an additional share of the cost<br />
if government.<br />
The varying degrees to which<br />
New Jersey's 31 counties are affected<br />
by property exemptions are<br />
neasured by the New Jersey Tax-<br />
>ayere esociation in its forthcomng<br />
annual publication, "Financial<br />
Statistics of New Jersey Mulicipalities."<br />
Ranked according to<br />
:he percentage of exempt property<br />
within the county, the line<br />
ip as follows:<br />
Salem, 5.6; Sussex, 7.69; Union,<br />
L0.56; Gloucester, 10.73; Bergen,<br />
12.28; Atlantic, 13.55,; Ocean, 14.13,<br />
Warren, 14.31; Hunterdon, 15,16;<br />
Pasaaic, 15.61; Cape May, 16.74; E6-<br />
jex, 17.03; Monmouth, 19.17; Oamlen,<br />
19.98; Somerset, 20.17; Cumlerland,<br />
21.35; Hudson, 23.15; Mer-<br />
:er, 29.51; Morris, 31.30; Burling-<br />
:on, 31.31; Middlesex, 33.52.<br />
REMEMBER<br />
A r o Lower Prices Anywhere<br />
DAVE'S LIQUOR MART<br />
18* ESSEX ST. MJUburn 6-4202|<br />
Don't miss the new<br />
Buster<br />
Brown<br />
SHOW<br />
See tha famous Buster<br />
Brown Gong and Smilin 1 Ed<br />
McConnell on Television—<br />
it's just made fortheirkind of<br />
entertaining fun and stories.<br />
6:30 P.M.<br />
AUGUST 36th<br />
STATION WNBT<br />
And m we for til*<br />
famoyi Butler Brown<br />
Shos* thai all th*<br />
By*t»r Brown Gang<br />
WMn-s.<br />
VOGEL'S SHOES<br />
349 <strong>Millburn</strong> Ave.<br />
.<strong>Millburn</strong> 6-0585<br />
Plan Now To Switch To<br />
OIL HEAT<br />
IN YOUR HOME!<br />
Oil is Economical, Clean, Plentiful.<br />
Quick Installation or Conversion<br />
On Easy Terms, No Down Payment.<br />
Fully automatic '<br />
No coal to shovel<br />
No ashes to dispose of<br />
No fear of fuel shortages<br />
Enjoy the convenience of oil heat. Call the "Mitchell Man" today.<br />
MITCHELL OIL SALES COMPANY<br />
147 Orange Road Montclair, N. J.<br />
Distributers of<br />
GENERAL ELECTRIC - HEIL - THATCHER OIL HEATING EQUIPMENT<br />
CPL. KENNETH C. WHEELER<br />
of 109 Main street who has been<br />
serving in the Korean War since<br />
July 8.<br />
Cpl. Wheeler<br />
At Korean Front<br />
Word has just been received that<br />
. orporal Kenneth (Buddy) C.<br />
Wheeler, grandson of Mr. and Mre.<br />
Charley L.utz of 109 2£&in street,<br />
<strong>Millburn</strong>, with whom he lives, has<br />
been actively taking part in the<br />
Korean War since July 8th, serving<br />
with the 65th Engineering<br />
Combat Battalion in the 2oth In-'<br />
fantry Division.<br />
Corporal Wheeler graduated<br />
f rom <strong>Millburn</strong> High School in 1948<br />
and joined the Army shortly thereafter.<br />
He was stationed at Fort<br />
Eustie, Virginia, for two yeara<br />
and was sent to Japan in October.<br />
While at Fort Eustis he went to<br />
school for engineering.<br />
Corporal Wheeler is to be dia-<br />
:harged in July, 1951.<br />
Don't Neglect<br />
Your Hay Fever<br />
By FRED W. WITTICH, M.D.<br />
Chairman, International Association<br />
of Allergists<br />
The sneezing and sniffling that<br />
egins this week for millions of<br />
;ay fever sufferers is a warning<br />
to one out of every two of us.<br />
More than half the U. S. population<br />
has some form of allergy,<br />
which, if ignored, often develops<br />
into more serious conditions. This<br />
:an be avoided, however, because<br />
new methods of treatment are<br />
dramatically effective in coping<br />
with theee annoying allergies.<br />
The standard treatment for allergy<br />
has been the avoidance of<br />
whatever it is you are sensitive<br />
to and 1 "shots" that immunize you<br />
against the offending agent. More<br />
recently, however, m-edical research<br />
has turned up drugs that<br />
are making the lives of many allergy<br />
sufferers more liveable.<br />
During- the past year, we have<br />
confirmed the fact that the actihietaminic<br />
drugs, properly used,<br />
can provide considerable relief to<br />
most sufferers from allergy. Medical<br />
evidence indicates that almost<br />
50 per cent of allergy victims, especially<br />
those suffering froni hay<br />
fever and hives, will obtain spectacular<br />
relief from these drugs.<br />
Another 30 to 40 per cent will get<br />
at least partial relief.<br />
Actually, these drugs have becii<br />
•known, for some time to the medical<br />
profession, but the first chemical<br />
used produced side effects,<br />
such as sleepiness and drowsiness.<br />
The newer drugs in this field,<br />
however, have proved remarkably<br />
free from these side effects and<br />
have been used with complete<br />
safety by millions of people.<br />
These are the same drugs which<br />
ere made available to the public<br />
for use in treating the symptoms<br />
of the common cold this yearr and<br />
which have attracted so much<br />
comment both pro and con. As<br />
to their effectiveness, there is no<br />
doubt that in most allergic conditions,<br />
there is release of a substance<br />
which doctors call H-substawce<br />
or more loosely, hietamine<br />
which is largely responsible for<br />
symptoms. It is now clear that<br />
the autihistaminic drugs do block<br />
the action of histamine on the<br />
system. Innumerable experiments<br />
have proved that when the antihistaminics<br />
are administered the<br />
effects of histamine are counteracted<br />
and the allergic symptoms<br />
CARS RIDE<br />
QUIETER<br />
WITH<br />
UNDMSEM.<br />
RUBBERIZED.<br />
PROTECTIVE COATING<br />
Protects Against Rust,<br />
Absorbs Botly Noises.<br />
Keeps Cars New and<br />
Quiet-Biding Longer.<br />
CALL MILLBURN 6-1529<br />
HENRY'S GARAGE<br />
35 Willow St., <strong>Millburn</strong><br />
(Off Main St.)<br />
Free Pick-up and Delivery<br />
The <strong>Millburn</strong> & Short Hills ITEM<br />
are greatly relieved if not completely<br />
eliminated.<br />
The'discussion this year around<br />
the antihietamines has centered<br />
largely on the 1 question of safety.<br />
There have even been rumors that<br />
these drugs have actually harmed<br />
people. I think my experience<br />
and that of allergists is in accord<br />
with a statement recently made<br />
by Dr. Morris Fjshbein, former<br />
secretary of the American Medical<br />
Association, who reported<br />
recently that he had not seen an<br />
actual case in which these drugs<br />
have ever done any harm. Said<br />
j Dr. Fishbein, "I am unaware of<br />
any scientific verified published<br />
evidence or unpublished evidence<br />
of harmful ness."<br />
Take for example the case of<br />
Nechetramine, the drug known to<br />
the public as Anahist. Recently<br />
Dr. Harry E. Tebrock, Medical<br />
Director Si Sylvania Electric<br />
Products, using this drug in 3500<br />
cases in a cold study, found only<br />
2 per cent of the people showing<br />
any side effects, and these were,<br />
as he put it, no more serious than<br />
the effects of a common cold.<br />
In another experimental study,<br />
this drug was given in doses of<br />
500 milligrams a day to patients<br />
every day for six months. Drs.<br />
Judd and Henderson of -the<br />
Pennsylvania State Department of<br />
Health, Hamburg, Pennsylvania,<br />
reported not a single untoward<br />
effect in any of these patients. In<br />
another experiment this drug was<br />
given to a series of 232 children<br />
from 6 months to 12 years of age,<br />
again without any untoward side<br />
effects. It was only after these<br />
and similar te#U that this drug<br />
was released to the public.<br />
Other an tihistamines, such as<br />
Chlor-Trimeton, Perazil, Benadryl,<br />
Pyribenzamroe, Thephoran, Decapryn,<br />
NeoAntergan, HydryJlih, Histadyl,<br />
Pyrrolazote, each have<br />
PAID ON<br />
SAYINGS<br />
INVESTORS<br />
Savings & Lean Assn.<br />
., 64 Main St. g&<br />
2 YOU<br />
Better<br />
similar wide experimental backgrounds<br />
though they are available<br />
on a doctor's prescription.<br />
Another new development available<br />
to the sneezing, sniffling<br />
public this season is the use of<br />
antihistamines in an Atomizer<br />
that applies the medication, directly<br />
to the effected parts of the<br />
nose. The medcal profession, has<br />
long known that fine sprays are<br />
s even more dramatic<br />
and immediate than internal<br />
medication which has a siowej<br />
though more sustained action.<br />
However, most of the drugs that<br />
we have used in nose drops or<br />
other internal medication have<br />
been suspected of adversely effecting<br />
the lining of the nose or<br />
excessively stimulating the central<br />
nervous system. The anti-<br />
Pago 3<br />
histamines do not have these<br />
properties and may therefore<br />
prove a real boon tliis summer to<br />
hay fever suiferers.<br />
And recent evidence seems to<br />
indicate that untreated hay fever,<br />
for example, or allergic skin conditions<br />
may in many cases develop<br />
into serious asthma.<br />
Every sigp proMQS, that<br />
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l YOU<br />
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