Ordered Isting Local Form of Government and Decide Whether It Should Be Finance an Expanded OMI Quick Start on the Accounting Moor Can Then Be Removed
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* *} ,' " 'V Weathei DUWbu+ion Today 20,900 •ra --• , high h tke «s. sat Dial SH LOOIO VtL'N, NO. 117 RED BANK, N. 1., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1962 7C PER COPY PAGE ONE 9 Charter Revise Migrants Dwelling Restrictions UPPER FREEHOLD TOWN- ally eligible for relief benefits." on for longer periods by farm- "Some of the migrant work- ing law which began a year HIP (AP)'— The Township Knlesler added that the com- ers to work a longer market- ers have stayed on and be- ago. Ing season. ; i come permanent," Knlesler Kniesler said the previous ^ J ordK 5*^^ said. "Then they move on and Unit May He said the marketing season six-month ordinance had bees yesterday providing that ing to?, the. abandonment of you get charged back by other for potatoes, the' township's enforced "as far as possible" all dwellings occupied by mi- municipalities for the relief migrani t workek r dwellingdlli s for main crop, was once Restricted by the community authorities. costs these communities incur grant farm workers be vacated six months annually. to the summer and fall, but In No Discussion in their support." Continue annually from Jan. 15 to March Affects 5« Workers recent years had been length- There was no discussion of . The new ordinance affects The mayor said the ordi- the new measure as it passed ' MIDDLETOWN-The Township 1, effective this coming:! year. ened through the farmers' use some 50 workers on 10 farms of expanded storage facilities. nance was constitutional "since its second and final reading at Committee last night voted to Mayor Frederick C. Kniesler in the township. ' to the best of my knowledge it the committee meeting. Knles- recommend to the new adminis- said the purpose of the, order The mayor said the commit- He said relief was now a was drawn up properly by our ler said. The township has a tration that it give the Charter, -was "to prevent migrant- work- tee acted to revamp the old factor since the workers could municipal attorney." population of around 3,000. Study Committee an extension ers' from establishing residence ordinance and - changed the stay on in the township Ions He said the committee's ac- "The ordinance Is readily time to mike its report. in <he township for a full year length of abandonment because enough to establish the needed tion was part of a general re- more liberal now than It was The charter committee, in a 'and thus becoming automatic- the workers were being kept period of residence. vamping of the township's zon- before," said the mayor. letter to the governing body, asked for at least 90 days to complete Its research and pre- pare Its findings. Named In August Since the today period would extend into next year, the gov- erning body decided to recora-, mend to the new administration mjergency that it agree to the extension. The group was named In Au- gust to determine whether the question of formation of a Charter Study Commission be placed on the ballot' in November. Such a commission would study the ex- Ordered isting local form of government and decide whether it should be finance an expanded OMI quick start on the accounting Moor can then be removed. kept or changed. - TRENTON (AP) — The first FAVOfcW NAVAL K.OCKAD*—Adlai I, Stevenson, order under New Jerseyls emer- staff and to establish a foolproof job. The governor ended the old Committeeman Earl Moody gency milk price system was in method of determining a deal- Hughes has said once the acsyste- m of retail price controls said he saw no reason why the U.S. ambassador to th« United Nations, it ihown during er's costs. counting system is set up thein mid-October. Retail prices new administration would not Ms appearance on TV show in New York whan ha reit- effect today with a freeze for up Alampi said the state plans to stale: will be able to enforce a dropped in many stores around agree to expending more time to to 180 days on dealer-farmer pur- Sj Will erated hii denial that ha had opposad tha naval block- the state. Dealers began to is- the charter' group to make Its chase contracts, i have the cost study done by areguilstio! n against below-cost sue cancellation notices to farm- report. •4e of Cuba. Stevenson said ha had approved the The state Office of Milk Indus- private firm. He said this would sales. He said no other props blockade at least thr«a> days before the government d»» try (OMI) ordered the freeze a eliminate the need to set up a would be needed for milk prices ers, saying, they would seek The Democrats will take con- state bureaucracy and allow a then and the emergency price cheaper out-of-state milk. Phillip Alampi trol of the committee in January. cidad to impose- it. (AP Wirephoto) few hours after Gov. Richard J. The committee adopted four Hughes signed a bill authoring resolutions seeking federal aid the emergency system yesterday, under the federal Accelerated The bill allows the OMI to getFarmingdale I*ubllc Works program for sever- floor under retail prices for Wo JCL Service Gut in '63' •t major capital improvement Adlai Receives 180 days. NEW YORK - Jersey Central P.M. Shoemaker, president of preservation of main line JCL projects here. Man Killed : The freeze order nullifies no- Lines yesterday assured com- JCL, said yesterday that as long service. Earlier this week, the. Sidewalk Program tices by milk dealers who muters that use its trains to as JCL trains do serve the shore railroad, in its publication "Com- The governing body Is seeking sought to cancel, purchase con- In Rt. 9 Crashand from stations in the North "club cars now in use will be muter's Almanac," which is dis- $65,084 toward its sidewalk pro- tracts with New Jersey farmers. Jersey coast area that they will maintained, w i t h o u t change." tributed to passengers had gram. The over-all cost of the The notices had 60-day grace HOWELL TOWNSHIP The WASHINGTON (A>>-Pre»ident prudence of our policy and its ex- not lose their "JCL service in Several commuters, he said, had termed the legislation urgent if project has been set at $130,169. periods under previous; regula- head-on collision jof a compac the coming year." Kennedy hopes his public decla- edition, in which, you played such called to ask about possible club the line was to continue service Also sought Is $250,000 for tions and were to start taking ration of 'fullest confidence" in an active part" car and a Public Service bus A spokesman for the railroai car curtailment. considered "essential to the pub- drainage work, $100,000 for road effect In two weeks. killed a local man and injured said that "January, 1964, in the Aside from North Jersey coast lic interest." reconstruction and 113,750 to- Adlai Stevenson will put an end The White House said Kenne- to speculation that the U.N.,am- Bans UceoM*i: four others yesterday. earliest that we can project'plans operations, the big change JCL ward the cost of an addition to dy:* letter, readied Stevenson at for such a major change." wants to make Is to build a con- The Almanac ssld the changes bassador may be on his way out the United Nations about noon The OMI regulation also bans the new executive building. Julius Altaian, 62, of Hulse' He was commenting upon tb< nection that would tie in the JCL- proposed "will cot eliminate all " le^r from Ken-Wedneiday. But there were indl-licenses "for new milk dealer- ':, town- Rd., Farmlngdale, was effects of a measure passed Mon Lehigh Valley, tracks to those of losses incurred In Jersey Central =..._.. atfm.Q^ig^ J^J- „„„ ^ ghip, m the next ISO days, un- passenger'operattons In the state pronounced dead on' arrival > a day by both houses of the Nev Pennsylvania In the Newark vi- chip attorney, was fied after' a Monday conference less the applicant can prove that of New- Jersey. It should, how- defenSLHwronhd the ZoninMg Board ofoCA. A** He bJy th««,,.,e Whil, e Hous_. eQJ Wednesda ^ud,^y Paul Kimball Hospital, Lake- Jersey Legislature, which Go cinity. This would mean that >Unight. Officials saidM the'* . ever, reduce them by one-third, with Kennedy that he- had- the the public health and -welfare re- wood. He was the. driver ot th main line JCL commuters conld (gee CHARTER, Page 1) Richard' J. Hughes has said hi exclusive of substantial Job pro- to give It out wa» prompted by President's backing in spite of the quires it. car. will sign shortly, calling for ride into Newark's Pennsylvania the President's In the article that Any dealer wishing to switch tection payments for several According to State Police, Mr. revamping of JCL service, to, sav Station and, from there, transfer 'years. - • '; '•>• ' . • try to remove aay uncertainty .omeoaaf in the administrate his sources of supply during die the railroad from continuing over to the tube trains of the about Stevenson's future.— ' might be trying to jut an. Cad UMay period m#, sliow good Altaian was headed in a norther YuleMail ly direction oa Rt.» and wamoney» ' losses caused by passen Hudson and Manhattan Rail- "Reduced losses,' together with The speculation stemmed, from t.-..-.^.._o his UN. career. ... j!awt.exl«afog|«e change. ger operations. road, now an operation of theincreased payments under state publication of a Saturday Evening ^ly 'attempting a lef said Tuesday that If " PMHlp " ' "*"" —"' Port of New York Authority, to passenger contracts, should In- Services written by two Wash- into Ford Rd.