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Archery Championships of 1941 and Records

1941 CHAMPIONS

Man Champion-Larry Hughes, Burbank, Cal. Single York Round, 141-827; Double York Round, 279-1637; Single American Round, 90-744; Double American Round, 180-1464.

Woman Champion-Miss Ree Dillinger, Summit, N. J. Single National Round, 72-482; Double National Round, 144-930; Single Columbia Round, 72-584; Double Columbia Round, 144-1198.

Junior Boy Champion-Billy West, Joplin, Missouri. Single Junior American Round, 90-718; Double Junior American Round, 180-1426.

Junior Girl Champion-Dorothy Axtelle, Tacoma, Wash. Single Columbia Round, 72-516; Double Columbia Round, 144-1022.

Men's Regular Style Flight Shoot Champion-Herbert Henderson, Evansville, Ind. Distance: 483 yards, 2 inches. Women's Regular Style Flight Shoot Champion-Miss Glendolene Vinyard, Canby, Ore. Distance: 396 yards, 2 feet, 9 inches. Free Style Flight Shoot Champion-Miss Glendolene Vinyard, Canby, Ore. Distance: 423 yards. ALL-TIME RECORDS AND RECORD HOLDERS

Single York Round-135-829. Carl Strang, Dearborn, Mich. (1941).
Double York Round-279-1637. Larry Hughes. Burbank, Cal. (1941).
Single American Round-90-744. Larry Hughes, Burbank, Cal. (1941).
Double American Round-180-1464. Larry Hughes, Burbank, Cal. (1941).

Single National Round-72-522. Miss Mildred Miller, Milwaukee, Wis. (1941).

Double National Round-144-1010. Miss Mildred Miller, Milwaukee, Wis. (1941).

Single Columbia Round-72-584. Miss Ree Dillinger, Summit, N. Y. (1941).

Double Columbia Round-144-1148. Miss Ann Weber, Bloomfield, N. J. (1940); Miss Ree Dillinger, Summit, N. J. (1941).

Single American Round for Women-90-666. Miss Ann Weber, Bloomfield, N. J. (1940); 90-666, Miss Ree Dillinger, Summit, N. J. (1941).

Double American Round for Women-179-1309. Miss Ree Dillinger, Summit, N. J. (1941).
Single Junior American Round-90-720. Paul Cowin, Bethlehem, Pa. (1941).
Double Junior American Round-180-1426. Billy West, Joplin, Mo. (1941).

Single Columbia Round for Juniors-72-516. Mary Thompson, Phoenix, Ariz. (1940); Dorothy Axtelle, Tacoma, Wash. (1941).

(1941).

Double Columbia Round for Juniors-144-1022. Dorothy Axtelle. Tacoma, Wash.
Regular Style Flight Shoot (Men)-517 yds., 1 ft. Curtis L. Hill, Dayton, O. (1939).
Free Style Flight Shoot (Men)-614 yds., 6 in. Curtis L. Hill, Dayton, O. (1936).
Flight Shoot for Women-396 yds., 2 ft., 9 in. Miss Glendolene Vinyard, Canby, Ore. (1941).
Free Style Flight Shoot for Women-423 yds. Miss Glendolene Vinyard, Canby, Ore.

EASTERN ARCHERY ASSOCIATION

York Round Champion, E. Harold Potts, Moorestown, N. J.-Single York Round, 135-757: Double
York Round,_264-1500.
American Round Champion, Carl J. Weese, Newark, N. J.-Single American Round, 90-688; Double
American Round, 179-1359.

National Round Champion, Miss Ree Dillinger, Summit, N. J.-Single National Round, 72-494; Double
National Round, 144-968.
Columbia Round Champion, Miss Ree Dillinger, Summit, N. J.-Single Columbia Round, 72-580;
Double Columbia Round, 144-1136.

CHICAGO PARK DISTRICT

Senior Men--Marvin Schmidt, Lincoln Park.
Senior Women-Edith Radtke, Tuley Park.

Senior Men (open)-Dewey Thorsen, Geneva, Ill.
Senior Women (open)-M. McIntosh, Aurora, Ill.

Handball Champions, 1941

Source: Harold Rosenthal, New York City
Hill S. C.

ONE-WALL
Metropolitan Singles-Artie Wolfe, Trinity Club.
Metropolitan Doubles-Morton Alexander and
Marvin Hecht, Trinity Club.

N. Y. State Singles-Victor Herschkowitz, Trinity
Club.

N. Y. State Doubles-Morton Alexander and Artie Wolfe, Trinity Club.

National Singles-Artie Wolfe, Trinity Club. National Doubles-Morton Alexander and Marvin Hecht, Trinity Club.

Metropolitan Women-Miss Marie Zanetti, unattached.

Metropolitan Doubles Ed Linz and Frank
Coyle, New York A. C.
N. Y. State Singles-Ken Schneider, Castle
Hill S. C.
N. Y. State Doubles-Ed Linz and Frank Coyle,
New York A. C.
Junior National Singles-Ken Schneider, New
York.

Junior National Doubles-Ken Schneider and
Herbert Silver, New York.

Senior National Singles-Joe Platak, Chicago. Senior National Doubles-Ed Linz and Frank Metropolitan Singles-Ken Schneider, Castle Coyle, New York.

FOUR-WALL

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One-Man Single-Blade-Joe Ryan, Pendleton International Decked-Class-John Stierstorfer,

Canoe Club.

One-Man Double-Blade-Ernie Riedel, Pendleton Canoe Club.

Tandem Single-Blade-Joe Ryan and Lester Kruppa, Pendleton Canoe Club.

Tandem Double-Blade-Ernie Riedel and William Gaehler, Pendleton Canoe Club.

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Fours Single-Blade-Yonkers Canoe Club.
Fours Double-Blade-Pendleton Canoe Club.
Team-Inwood Canoe Club, New York City.

*Defending champion.

Shuffleboard Champions, 1941

Mid-winter tourney, St. Petersburg, Fla., Jan. 15-17, 1941

Men's Open-Henry Badum, Rochester, N. Y. Women's Open-Miss Bunny Hoover, Philadelphia, Pa.

Men's Closed (over 50 years)-E. J. Lillis, Peabody, Mass.

Women's Closed (over 50 years)-Mrs. A. N. Spink, Rochester, N. Y.

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Foil-Alfred R. Snyder, Olympic Club (S. F.)
Epee Andrew Boyd, Los Angeles Athletic Club.
Sabre-Edward Carfagno, Los Angeles Athletic

Club.

Women's Foil-Miss Helene Mayer, San Francisco Fencers Club.

Foil Team-Andrew Boyd, Edward Carfagno, Herman Hersum; Los Angeles Athletic Club.

Year

Epee Team-Victor Arnautoff, Louls Lataillade. John L. Thompson, Olympic Club.

Sabre Team-Edward Carfagno, Joseph Lampl Herman Hersum; Los Angeles Athletic Club. Women's Foil Team--Miss Helene Mayer, Miss Roberta Fritz, Miss Marcelle Woollen, San Francisco Fencers Club.

Women's Foil-Grace V. Acel, William & Mary

James E. Sullivan Memorial Trophy Winners

Name

1930.. Bobby Jones, jr... 1931. Barney Berlinger. 1932. J. A. Bausch,

1933.. Glenn Cunningham. 1934..W. R. Bonthron. 1935.. W. L. Little, Jr

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The James E. Sullivan Memorial Trophy is awarded annually to the athlete who "by his performance, example and influence as an amateur and a man, has done the most during the year to

1940..J. Gregory Rice.

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advance the cause of sportsmanship." The A. A. U. polls sports leaders throughout the country in its search for the No. 1, sportsman of the year.

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Source: An Official of Madison Square Garden, in Eighth Avenue between 49th and 50th Streets. New York City, has a seating capacity ranging from 16,000 to 18.500, depending on the type of the attraction and whether seats are set up in the arena. The Garden cost approximately $5.500.000 including building and land. The informal opening (Nov. 28, 1925) had the Six-Day Bike race as an attraction. This was followed by the formal opening (Dec. 15. 1925), also the opening of the hockey season, with a game between Les Canadiens and New York with

Madison Square Garden

more than 17,000 spectators present.
The last attraction in the old Garden was the
Terris-Dundee fight (May 4, 1925) after which the
structure was wrecked for the construction of the
New York Life Insurance Company building. The
old Garden cost approximately $3,000,000 and oc-
cupied the block bounded by 26th and 27th streets
and Madison and Fourth avenues. It was opened
(June 16. 1890) with Edouard Strauss, composer of
dance music and conductor, of Vienna, and a ballet
under the direction of Leon Espinosa.

Large Benefactions of 1941

Source: The John Price Jones Corporation and World Almanac Questionnaire

The John Price Jones Corporation's compilation of publicly announced gifts and bequests in seven large cities during 1940, and for the first nine months of 1941, follows: 1940 1941 1940 1941 Gifts Gifts Bequests Bequests $000 $000 20.434

901 963 1,369

Goelet, Robert Walton, New York City. RitzCarlton Hotel and site, New York City (assessed at $3,675,000) to Harvard University. Grimth, Dr. J. P., Philadelphia, Pa., $100,000 to Crozier Theological Seminary.

Hayden Foundation, $100,000 to Lincoln Hall. Lincolndale, Westchester Co., N. Y.

Hearst Art Sale (auctioned at Gimbels, March 25, 1941), $162,171 for New York Infirmary for Women and Children.

Hughes, Eugene H., $1,000,000 to Eugene H. 192 Hughes Memorial Hospital for Contagious Diseases, Hamilton, O.

8000 $000

New York

29,598

20,521

7.754

Chicago

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Washington

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Philadelphia

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Baltimore

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Boston

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585

St. Louis.

3,590

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Grants made by the Carnegie Corporation of New York (1941) were: $350,000 to the Teachers College, Columbia University; $190,000 for the development of libraries ($100,000 for Negro Colleges; $90,000 for State Colleges); $164,000, American Law Institute; $140,000, American Association for Adult Education; $121,000, Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching; $110,000, National Academy of Sciences; $85,000, National Research Council; $70,000, British West Indies Central Library; $60,000. Institute of Public Administration; $50,000, University of Michigan.

Grants made by the Rockefeller Foundation of New York (1941) were: Of a total of $3,714,450 in grants of $50,000 or over, $1,558,000 was for the medical sciences, which included: $600,000 to Cornell University Medical College; $200,000, Tulane University; $168,000, National Research Council; $150,000 each, University of Chicago and Washington University (St. Louis); $120,000, Memorial Hospital for Treatment of Cancer and Allied Diseases, New York City. Of the $548,000 allotted to the Natural Sciences, $150,000 was donated to the National Research Council; and of $574,450 to the Social Sciences, $200,000 to the Social Science Research Council and $150,000 to the University of Chicago. Other grants included $345,000 to the American Council of Learned Societies, $250,000 to the Rockefeller Foundation Health Commission and $104,000 to the China program in rural reconstruction and agricultural economics.

Grants made by the General Education Board of New York included $160,000 to the Meharry Medical College and $50,000 to Paine College. Other grants included:

Anonymous gifts totaling $6,345,000 to various colleges and universities.

Greenwich, Conn.,

Bagley, Mrs. Henry W. $500,000 to Greenwich Hospital.

Blumenthal, George, New York City, $815,000 to Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City.

Buck, Mrs. Lillian Brewer, $100,000 to Principia College, Elsah, Ill.

Bushwell, Mrs. Bertha H., $925,164 to University of Rochester, N. Y.

Butterick, Mary E., New York city, bequests amounting to $110,000.

Chicago Tribune, $125,000 to Medill School of Journalism of Northwestern University.

Christian Foundation, $500,000 to Butler University, Indianapolis, Ind.

Cohen, William N., $1,569,648 to Dartmouth College.

Commonwealth Fund of New York, $119,925 to University of Pennsylvania.

Craige, Burton, Winston-Salem, N. C., $150,000 to University of North Carolina. Daly, Mrs, Margaret F., $100,000 to Marcus Daly Memorial Hospital Corp., Hamilton, Mont.

Donner, William H.. $400,000 to Hanover College. Ensign, Joseph R., Simsbury, Conn., $130,000 to Hartford (Conn.) Hospital,

Gill, Sr., Dr. William T.. Washington, D. C.. $100,000 to Central Union Mission.

W. K. Kellogg Foundation, Battle Creek, Mich.. $500,000 to University of Michigan.

Kendall, William M., New York City, $100,000 to American Academy in Rome.

Leland, Mrs. Frances Eugenie, Boston, Mass.. bequests amounting to $360,000.

Ill..

Mather, Alonzo Clark, Highland Park, $3,000,000 for establishment of Alonzo Mather Aged Ladies' Home for care of indigent women: $250,000 to International Peace Bridge, between Buffalo and Fort Erie, Canada, to provide "suitable memorials."

Mayer, Mrs. Norman, $300,000 to Tulane University, New Orleans.

Mercer, Alexander G., from estate of, $200,697 to Harvard University; $100,349 each: Princeton University and University of Pennsylvania.

Morawetz, Victor, New York City, $2,643,090 to Boys Club of New York; $1,321,545 each to: Johns Hopkins University and Medical Society of South Carolina.

New York Community Trust, $222,964 in various grants.

Olin Foundation, Inc., $100,000 to Cornell University.

Palmer, Miss Virginia, New London, Conn., $194,633 to Connecticut College for Women, New London, Conn.

Parmalee, John, estate of, $509,710 to Cornell University.

Perkins, Mr. and Mrs. Joe J., Wichita Falls, Tex., $150,000 gymnasium to Southern Methodist University.

Pheiffer, Henry C., and wife, New York City. $400,000 to Clark College, Atlanta, Ga.; $150,000 to Bennett College, Greensboro, N. C., and $100,000 (pledged) to Union College, Barbourville, Ky.

Porter, James Hyde, Macon, Ga., $175,000 to Mercer University.

Rosenwald Foundation, $100,000 to Clark College, Atlanta, Ga.

Sarver, John M., Columbus, Ohio, $175,000 to Wittenberg College.

Stewart, Mirah R., estate of, $188,722 to Princeton University.

Stout, Susan Levin, from estate, $102,362 to University of Pennsylvania.

Swinney, E. F., Kansas City, Mo.. $75,000 to University of Kansas City, Mo.

Thomas, Mrs. Georgine Holmes, New York City. bequests amounting to $600,000, including $450,000 to Radcliffe College.

Thomas, Gertrude S., New York City, $500,000 to Post Graduate Hospital.

Townsend, Grace C., New York City, $150,876 in various bequests.

Tremain, Mrs. Esther Hull, Dobbs Ferry, N. Y., $153,000 each: New York Society for the Relief of Ruptured and Crippled Children; St. Luke's Hospital; the Salvation Army; Society for Relief of Destitute Blind; Stuyvesant Square Hospital, all New York City.

Ulmann, James, New York City, from estate of: $534,316 to Federation for the Support of Jewish Philanthropic Societies; $267,158 to Home for Aged and Infirm Hebrews; $106,863 each: Montefiore Hospital for Chronic Diseases, Jewish Social Service Assn., Beth Israel Hospital Assn., Mt. Sinai Hospital, Hebrew Orphan Asylum.

Waid, Dan Everett, New York City, $215,910 to American Institute of Architects, Washington, D. C.

Walcott, Mrs. Charles D. (Mary Vaux), $150,000 to Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C.

White. Miss Caroline, New York City, from estate: $200,000 to Community Service Society; $100,000 each; St. Bartholomew's Church, N. Y. Dispensary, N. Y. Eye and Ear Hospital, Lincoln Hospital and Home, N. Y. Orthopaedic Dispensary. Whitehead Foundation, Joseph B., Atlanta, Ga., $550,000 to Emory University,

Widener, Joseph E., Philadelphia, Pa., $100,000 to United States Botanical Garden.

Wilson, Mrs. Mary Jewett, San Antonio, Tex.. $180,000 to Yale University.

New Jersey State Government

Governor-Charles Edison; Secretary of State | Joseph Brophy; Attorney General-David T. Wilentz: State Treasurer-Homer Zink; Adjutant General-William A. Higgins; Quartermaster General-Stephen H. Barlow; Banking and Insurance Commissioner-Louis A. Reilly; State Librarian deceased, no appointment as yet; Commissioner of

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Labor-John J. Toohey, Jr.; State Highway Com-
missioner-E. Donald Sterner; State Highway
Police Charles H. Schoeffel; State Geologist-
Engineer-James Logan; Superintendent State
Wilbur: Commissioner of Education-Charles H.
Henry B. Kummel; State Forester-Charles P.
Elliott; Chairman, State Board of Regents-Henry
W. Jeffers.

New Jersey Legislature, 1942

Frank S. Farley, R
Lloyd L. Schroeder, R.
Howard Eastwood, R.
Bruce A. Wallace, R.
I. Grant Scott, R.....
Geo. H. Stanger. R..
Roy V. Wright, R..

STATE SENATE

P. O. Address County

Atlantic City
Teaneck
Burlington
Colwick
Cape May City
Vineland
East Orange

Gloucester... R. Hendrickson, R. Woodbury
Hudson.
Edward J. O'Mara, D. Jersey City
Hunterdon... Wesley L. Lant, R...Glen Gardner
Mercer.

!Crawf'd Jamieson, D Trenton

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Middlessex... John E. Toolan, D... Perth Amboy

Monmouth

Morris...

Ocean..

Passaic.

Salem..
Somerset.

Sussex..

Union..
Warren..

Haydn Proctor, R...
H. A. Pierson, R..

W. S. Mathis, R...
O. R. Wilensky, R.
J. R. Summerill, Jr., R.
R. R. Pyne, R.

Asbury Park
Morristown
Toms River
Passaic
Penns Grove
Bedminster

H. H. Hollinshed, R. Sparta
Herbert J. Pascoe.. Elizabeth
Harry Runyon, D....Belvidere

GENERAL ASSEMBLY, 1942, MEMBERS BY COUNTIES
Atlantic-Vincent S. Haneman, Rep., Brigantine; |
Leon Leonard, Rep., Atlantic City.

Bergen Stephen W. Lesko, Rep., Wallington;
Lillian A. Mathis, Rep., Hackensack; Roscoe P.
McClave, Rep., Cliffside Park; Anthony_Meyer,
Jr., Rep., Maywood; Harry L. Towe, Rep., Ruther-
ford; John Warhol, Jr., Rep., Mahwah.

Burlington-A. Matlack Stackhouse, Rep.. Moorestown.

Camden-Rocco Palese, Rep., Camden; Emory S. Kates, Rep., Westmont; William R. J. Burton, Rep., Collingswood.

Cape May-John E. Boswell, Rep., Ocean City. Cumberland-Robert G. Howell, Rep., Bridgeton. Essex-Dominic A. Cavicchia, Rep., Newark; Jacob S. Glickenhaus, Rep., Newark; C. Colburn Hardy, Rep., East Orange; Frank S. Hargrave, Rep., Orange; Gloanna W. MacCarthy. Rep.. Maplewood; Lester E. Mahr, Rep., Newark; Duane E. Minard, Jr., Rep., Montclair; C. Milford Orben, Rep., Millburn; Frank S. Platts, Rep., Newark; Olive C. Sanford, Rep., Nutley; Adolph Wegrocki, Rep., Newark; Jerome B. Wiss, Rep., Orange.

Gloucester-John G. Sholl, Rep., Pittman. Hudson-Peter P. Artaserse, Dem., Jersey City; Benedict A. Beronio, Dem., Hoboken; Leroy A. Cooney, Dem., Bayonne; Jacob Friedland, Dem.,

Jersey City; Charles F. Paulauskas, Dem., Kearny:
Robert J. Rubacky, Dem., Jersey City: George B.
Schaeffer, Dem, Secaucus; William J. Tierney,
Dem., Jersey City; Marcel E. Wagner, Dem., Jersey
City.

Hunterdon-Mildred A. Preen, Dem., Oldwick.
Mercer--Charles Browne, Dem., Princeton;
Thomas S. Dignan, Dem., Princeton; Hervey S.
Moore, Rep., Trenton.

Middlesex-Fred W. DeVoe, Dem., New Brunswick; Ambrose J. Mudrak, Dem., Carteret; Bernard W. Vogel, Dem., Woodbridge.

Merrill H. Thompson, Rep., Interlaken.
Monmouth J. Stanley Herbert, Rep., Sea Girt;

David Young, 3d, Rep., Towaco.
Morris Norman J. Griffiths, Rep., Madison;

Ocean-Lettie E. Savage, Rep., Lakewood.
Passaic-Manfield G. Amlicke, Rep., Passaic:
Louis P. Bertoni, Rep., Clifton; Mattie S. Doremus,
Rep., Paterson; William J. Hanna, Rep., Paterson.
Salem-Mayhew J. Dolbow, Rep., Pennsville.
Somerset-Freas L. Hess, Rep., Somerville.
Sussex-Alfred B. Littell, Rep., Franklin.
Union-Milton A. Feller, Rep., Elizabeth; John
M. Kerner, Rep., Union; Thomas M. Muir, Rep..
Plainfield; Fred E. Shepard, Rep., Elizabeth.
Warren-Francis L. Thompson, Dem., Stewarts-

ville.

Government of Hudson County, N. J.

MAYORS

Jersey City, Frank Hague. Hoboken, Bernard H. McFeeley. Bayonne, James J. Donovan. Union City, Harry Thourot. West New York, Joseph Stilz. Weehawken, John G. Meister. Secaucus,

Jersey City-Mayor, Director of Public Affairs, Frank Hague; Director of Revenue and Finance, Arthur Potterton; Director of Streets and Public Improvements, Joseph E. Colford; Director of Public Safety, Daniel Casey; Director of Parks and Public Property, William J. McGovern.

Hoboken-Mayor and Director of Public Affairs, Bernard H. McFeeley; Director of Revenue and Finance, William Gilfert; Director of Public Safety, Michael F. Kearins; Director of Public Works, Thomas J. McAleer; Director of Parks, Frank Romano.

Bayonne-Mayor and Director of Public Safety. James J. Donovan; Director of Public Works, James A. Mullanaphy; Director Parks and Public Buildings, Joseph Topeleski; Director of Public Affairs, Henry W. Murphy; Director of Finance, Horace K. Roberson.

Judges and Other County Officials-Supreme

John J. Kane. Guttenberg, Andrew Johnstone.
North Bergen, Paul F. Cullum. Harrison, Frederick
J. Gassert. Kearney, Frederick Law. East Newark,
John A. Reynolds.

Court, Chief Justice Thomas J. Brogan; Circuit Court, Henry E. Ackerson and Thomas Brown: Common Pleas, Thomas H. Brown, James R. Erwin, Alexander Ormsby, Lewis B. Eastmead; Juve nile Court, Morris E. Barison; Sheriff, Eugene Clerk; Surrogate, John H. Gavín; Register, WilProsecutor, Daniel T. O'Regan; Supervisor, John F. liam F. Sullivan; County Clerk, Gustav Bach; O'Neill; Treasurer, Frank J. Farley; County Counsel, Emil Walscheid; Probation Officer, Adolph P. Kern: Hudson County Board of Taxation, George Scheetz, Harry E. Bischoff, Patrick J. Monahan and Alexander Sullivan; Secretary, Joseph P. McLean.

Board of Chosen Freeholders-Members, Teresa A. Maloney, Raymond J. McDonough, Franq Effert, Patrick J. Donnelly, Thomas Boyle, John W. Sweeney, Thomas J. Fleming, James J. Rutherford and Joseph W. Buckley; Clerk of the Board, John McHugh

The total net assessed valuation of taxable property in Hudson County in 1941 was $1,259,119,243.24. In its settlement, New Jersey was not an English colony. The claims of the Crown, based upon early discovery and various grants, were ignored by Holland and Sweden. It was not until 1664, practically a half-century after the first occupancy of New Jersey by a white man, that England had much influence upon the destinies of the State.

In settlement, Holland was first to send out planters, under the auspices of the Dutch West India Company. Claiming both the valleys of the Hudson and the Delaware, because of the explorations of Hudson and Mey, land was taken up upon the banks of the Hudson, Passaic, Hackensack, Raritan, and smaller streams tributary to New York harbor, as well as at Gloucester upon the Delaware. By 1630 these claims were established by occupancy, and by the creation of a centre of local government in what is now New York City.

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The Interstate Commerce Commission requires reports from Class I interstate motor passenger carriers only those with annual operating revenues of $100,000 or more to file reports. The following information is taken from their published reports.

Year Ended December 31

Number of carriers reporting,
Miles of line..

Passenger revenue

Special bus revenue.

Total operating revenue

Total expenses.

Net operating revenue.

Bus-miles in line service

Bus-miles in intercity, charter or special service.
Combination bus-truck vehicle miles.

Intercity revenue passengers carried (line service)..
Intercity charter or special revenue passengers.

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201

189 193 197 173,470 179,331 184,847 188,439 $111,162,074 $118,839,721 $134,005,645 $141,736,180 4,638,664 5,028,498 6,317,625 6,536,528 120,647,105 128,054,851 144,722,375 153,204,502 105,790,367 111,513,739 124,178,281 134,462,786 14,856,738 16,541,112 20,544,094 18,741,716 499,625,215 511,764,461 551,234,977 586,116,353 9,437,088 12.079,960 14,308,215 15,594,550 1,073,433 2.893,543 817,646 714,753 199,796,702 202,012,962 217,970,077 276,556,018 2,191,676 3,183,282 4,316,087 5,284,187

Monthly Truckloading Index Figures by States

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In computing the index figure for 1937, 1938, 1939, and 1940, the 1936 monthly average tonnage is taken to represent 100.

Beginning Jan. 1, 1941, however, the monthly averages for the 3-year period 1938, 1939 and 1940 is taken to represent 100.

Intercity trucks, private and for-hire, hauled 46,000,000,000 ton-miles of freight in 1939, 8.47 per cent of the total volume hauled by all types of carriers, according to the ICC. In 1938, the figures were 37,000,000,000 ton-miles and 8.03 per cent.

No. Carriers

Reporting

Index

Number

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