"T r "*~~ . • .^""—^Vrr . • ' . B^1*'

A TR'JE^VOICE SERVJNG OF SPRIt*Gfl,ilD WITH MEWS TOWNSHIP FOR 30XRS7-

SPRINGFIELD, NEVUERSEr THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, T964

Kite Pro Plan referral to Township Committee. Ii t:he_ Board- of •looked .Proposed garden apartments favorably upon the applica—- :~—for_the jakobsen- pr'opefijL -jlon,-. iLAvauld_ha.v.e._been nee- _.The questions of eliminating \ Dr. were.'unanimously rejected by" essary to~referTr~tir Planning - classeS-iir-Qaudineer cafeteria .tyved - the Springfield Board" of \Ad- Board for -an-advisory—report 'because the property- lnvoiv.es — • and expansiop n of^inst-ru- GaucUneer -justment -at—a—public—hear\in'g- mental for more than five acres and then musiic program received ^^ type of decision. A lot must heldrTuesday_night before 60 ( "to. Township Committee .for . .attention-of .Springfield Board Vand other come-from the-supexjnrendent Citizens.. to meet. the~need. final action. " — -' of Education Monday, Feb. 18, be sought By a decisive 4-0'vote, the John Gacos- seconded this mo- and principals-involved.-It is a ' In making its decision, the - • DTCaldurell School. , . _ ' .jot more complicated than that. Board decided in favor-of deny- 'board announced no. reasons for Before 1 vote on such a motion; ing the Jakobsehs the right to refusing the variance'. However, — 1, would like to hear from the turn their 5;_38'~acre plot of a .board spokesman after -the educatorSjJEhey are better able land, on Mountain Ave. ' and meeting indicated It was not to- dec ide on that.' * : "' Shunpike Rd. into .a 76-unit shown that_thfi larid-eould-not Dr.' Josephso'n-^sa-id-he heard —garden apartmeni^^' —In addition to testimony both be developed for what it.is comments from teachers that zoned; ,...„•'' one teacher- has' 'never had a .. • pro . and con7 the -Board^ fiad : The property. _is_in an S-75'.' ' ^homeroom, of ..his'own since to .weigh the validity of a 48- zone fffr single-f'amily-homes teaching there—and — another -=Tsignature-petitio'n-foF^the-j with 75 foot frontage ' leader duebu^r-Hrke-teseh-ing-ia Mrs. HekuM^-h'rancis was.~raSZ .. ture .petition -against the pro- square-foot-aEsaSj_ •as director «f Spring- . Headquarters in Morristown.'.tb.e.cafeceFieb- ' : posed planT" Before the IHase was pre- field Tree Public Library ef- and then as librarian at Fair-. .Haydtrcontinued: 7 sented, Nick Myntanino Jr. of — The vote was 4 to 0 in favor Jfecrive Feb. 1st at a_mectmc_lciiiirDickinson University;__ "There has been discussion Warwick CJr.^ raised the ques- _ of_ denying the application. Mo- of the -Springfield Library Madison. . of moving classes to thetejnple- tion of whether or not to hear .tion was made byi-R«bert—Gv Board (if Trust not t0 e lm bUt C make the application since the appli- ' f'ej^-nr - vvife-Sf-KoTTeft H. F«*«». i ^f^ ° " Planer and seconded by R.C. the-library. — •_ _. . hPr of morelTvabie. - , RECEJVEzAWARD1-The Springfield First Aid squad-receives .the coveted B'nai B'rith cants had been given previous" n Francis is a m m Schramm. Voting yes were Mrs. Francis1 replaces Miss sugge_stedjan_.citizenship award "-at/ ceremonies held~Sunday; -Pictured left-to-rtg-htr-BrObert Voorhees, consideration on garden apart- Springfieid _ Planer^ Schramm,. A.W. Mox^_ ~JZ "HeIeu_C Reyner as director, ..rnwn.»nm--u alternate plan for elimination Captain of the First Aid Squad;.Mrs. Arthur Palkin. Chairw.otrTan of the B.'nai B'rith.Civic ments on several jjccasionsr, , rhp [yiKr - rison, and Chairman Robert of the American Association of might be preparedwUhrtema - "Affairs Com.mi^ee;\WittwB=SealeT President of the 1st Aid Squad; Mrs. Wallace Ca'Hpn- -Board—Attorney Stanley.Gruen' ^ wtm_rgtircd Jan. 31st after 10 ~CT Mtltei^Hie^fifth- mern.b5T~ : University Women, the Library ter taken, up with the adminis- President_gCthe Women's B^Tiai.B'rifii and Raymond R. Kravetz, o™-^irni-nf-HiTr-ssfirfmT«= said' it "was the 'discretion" of~ ' "~ ' yea rs • wltlrths.-1 ibra ry. of the board, MarvinH. Strauss, field B'nai B'rith Lodge. " — • ----- the boarc^ whereupon the board ^disqualified himself-fEom-con-- —serving as «*_*.».!£, -MV.«.wrw--.-L_=..-r pjp... iprsgy LiDra-cv—a_s_>oi-io--__^— - •* -_ —— . Isideration- -.of the proposalf" .post. year. .She-«me-to --tte ^Tand the AmericairLibraTy-oripTal motion and «was , citing a^possible conflict o_f the hearing, • ^ . • .' _-: SpnngTiefdlibrary as assistant-^-" » -. • .-- - _ :rC---6iae_-rti&J_Jministration should interest; He said he had" .Applicants were J. Neik'— director in April, 1%2. _AsSociauon. .... _- submit by the-board's next; represented one of the appli- Jakobsen of I^ewBEOvidehceand -Akhough a,native,.of TfriTa- . A -tithe•• Thursday board j"neet- meeting an alternate" proposar Gets_ _ _ cants on twtf occasions.- — Franklin-Jakobsen of ' • delphia, Mcs—Erancjs.has lived—-jng,.. the employment oLX)ian^-to" provide a sqlution-fp the_ JULMflrris County most-of her' Eiise-BtrssetSjf; VVestTIeld .at" ^^w-^^pTTrSTnaiimrusenofthe- Ffofff-TnarB'TitH ; _erators of_a^nurser-y-buslne&s^- _ ^3,00.0 yearly salary to replace cafeteria for classrooms in itself and- does not re- life when not travel-ing or Work- 7 at the! location. The business,"T' ing -in othe r parts of TTTe wo rid. Mrs^Tlelem _ _.,^...n. Zwigard-o^.,. -...... f Shor.t ttb „, ¥^dirdi„,. „ =: T : l 2i b lyluuiull .-• The First Aid Squad of; Lither,e since—1915r ls = a~non= Slit .majored ~in 'sociology'at' "Hills, circulatioivrdeskk assisi - the adminTstration to proceed Springfield was honored .Sunday ~ Superintendent of . Scriools iei R. Murray, Walton School ^Sonfonning use". . . ;.•• - -NMZIlEsey_CQllEg£—for Wo- tant, who resigned, was ap- expansion of the instru- with nightT^when they, received-v the.- ^enjamin_.F. Newswanger, a principal, 'to that post. Murray Deadline Nears The case was presented by men (Douglass) and has^.a B.A.' -proved'.. Duties and hours are to. ntal music program ancLen- '\yhp_'_came to the Spririgfield" me . annual^ciiKenshiFGa-ward of the member of -tha_ Springfield Henry~MpMullen7~"Springfield- degree' in-LibraTv-'Sgrvice-and--^be-deteJ5iriinedJav tli_e director. -g g ^an additionalinstFumeiitar 1 -system "as a teacher in 1951, r a e locaT B'riat -B'rith'' 'before 'a ""school "system" since 1925 and attorneyrMe Claimed his appll^ "• -an M.S. degree fr-o,m^Grad- ^^ ^^^ , music -teacher t^obe^ssigned —Gontinues to serve as both Wal- Announcement was-made thatthat crowd of 20CTpebple, ~ ~ ___ • superintendent the p"Ssr~16 cants', had " exceptlona.l,_prac-~ , H. of I i.brary Ser- ^ -„„___„, _ _ primarily tth PrlmacllY years, will retire June- 30th. ticardifficulties" indeVeloping -fYoir Haydu, Members Millecrassistanc librarian, had"*6™- rrit - "For~outstanding community^ The school" official made the,-land which represented an- .. Been painted "by- ' staged the sterling. known- his plans in acommunir 3T^I Next Thursday, Feb._29th, is undue hardship.-He contenaea _ Pbookcasi eb._14. and,ad-, "r--tl .day_1963_.municipal ' ' ' * ^members^of Q^^^. and nald ftlmeri j squaf^e held at dressed to August Caprio,, r members^will be Mountain Aver the property was - l«ef ^ith. Ihe^lnfomation cu on ^urator. Jom^unicalion with - f JT^f' Tempi* Beth Ahm.-PresenLa- --Identiof- Springfield -^landlocked, through no fault ^zmce in Thaillnd. Pf ^^ was made by -Education. of the applicant, r The school The attorne.v-submltted sev-^ > ten ls today for a proposed.outside stairway _QfTtne-TVo"men s B'nai; ..Efoltrr edged the letter ..at its Monday,2 \ ^ 'R^ard Werner eral airplane views of the site ,'.- -" '•-u- — Library "in_ Bangko'k, where'Ifte seven to two vote. a Chapter. •• _' • ^=^ " night organization meeting in will accept allrtown- ^and^a_petition indicating-'48~- - ._ book—collection was in Robert— Sbu with Springfigld^t-axpayers were -in-- _ ncy-pt Caldwell "School and accepted ... ffirfirst-come- languages:' Thai,.Chiiiv'so,"atBP ^ conterided_the favor or the proposal. He_ re- _^ referred to 1 -was "overstepping^ its " Accepting the awafd-for the it withjregrets,—. — ^ . _ basis regardless of .^English: _..'. - . _ ------•-.-• S5rv?a ^° - _ ..ported __uppn.-;qtiesi;ioning"by_-a Wa'lter'Kozub-for-his-perusal, -First Aid Squaa"were William It_was noted~tfie retiring su- whether or not they we re chart- :; , thw-^eeuntry- while randi was-but ; it— W-t-B-1 a rri "it was -reported,_T.he J3eale7-Pres"iaent _o_f- the Squad superintendejit and also once er rhember-s-last year. "^ serving as AtlultServices Lib- man-to replacer". After the ses- Total pool.qubta is.5200 per- Chirgoti's "would be the owner— ~ tion ,unde —^-Bender, chairman of build- and Robert Voorhees, Squad _rarian for the—State. Library sion.PresidehrC.aprio indicated" sons 'and. membership wlHcl"o'se McMuHen—-presented Daniel— replace The present apparatus at ings and grounds, reported ,-eaptain, ~ln'-TrdntflrI, PubUc and Softool consideration could be given to years. Joseph Bender said the when this figure has been reach- C. Hanrahan,--an^E-lizabeth _ the library on~advice of the fire there- has been boiler trouble board had no chotee^but-to;ac- Library—Se-rvices Bureau, she department which-considered it Toastmaster for the-eve-- either "inside or Ghildren lander 18 months- realtor^ broker, who said dem- cept the resignation and im- was—director of the~American ^jipsuitable.for-children^ use.; program. Springfield .sys-_ are not counted in the amount; the greenTiouse smoke"" mediateiy ..volunteered his ser- Heritage 'Project of New jer=- _ R. in-.A spjcialjrieetlng oP^he-" - Several—hundred-.residents ^tack would c'ostJS.SOO andim^ It was noted Mrs. Anita ism and theft also dis- _? m sey. "~WTule director of-f-his Kravetz^ who introduced" the board_has beencailedlorTues.,' vices-for-a testimonial 'dinner who • -provements wo'uld total $34,500 •Epstein; new" -lrbra-Fy-^trustee, cusse"3 with . . . project, she—received a grant guest speaker Arthur Falkin, Feb. 25 board-offices in the future. are waltingforMarchlstto join, thus improvements alone-for and Mayor Robert D. JHard- given to the possible installation .• fporn the Ford h-oundalion for Springfield- "Township—'Co'rn'-_ School. . ' • Newswanger's absence from -Rurjy-SBid. These people repre- the_16 lots-which might be ob- _grwe and Mrs. Hard grove are" advanced study |n-axnalt educa- "of a burglar-alarm"-'system, it mitteeman-and Chairman of the_ years, ago, the board" the Monday Board meeflng~wis new residents who have- -tained from the_slte would-be —tion-jand to observe adultliro- planning to attend-the Library was said. —= '. — caused by his attendance^ at a $2,00CPto $2,500 aiot—Reasons -B-nai B'rith Civic Affairs Com- created the position of assistant — 'V6fitinued-onLi>aC^'2._ — grams in "public libraries in Seminar Ji£ cired against development of ^-various staiea^Shfiiatecserved ——family"': homes were:

from .. rite ^"'residential-.'zxagj

Aygj—not .-jcenducive^-r

August Caprio of Arriving' by shipinNew York, spreading fast; A letter was Rd. was unanimous!, Tea with Mrs! Lyndon B Mrs. Boshouwers madeSpring- William G.Chlrgotis, Spring- recently just addressed "MrsT as president of the board. Mrs. Johnson at the White House on ileld .both her first and last field architect for the proposal Johanha~E. BoslTouwers; Etc." Sonya Dorsky of 247 Milltown'. Friday Dinner with Mrs. stops. Mrs. (Joan) Thompsen also spoke. He. said he intro- and it reached her.. All post- Rd. was unanimously' elected Theqdore Thompsen, 5-i Janet met the kind arid jovial Dutsh duced garden apartments in.. men know the "woman who gets- as vice president, replacing Ln., Springfield on Sunday lady_ in 1S!62 uppn arriving in/ Springfield .abgut 15 years ago; mail from all over the woridl that's part.of the trail Mrs. , Holland alone and suffering'7 John Gacos. built, owns,' and manages Home to the Dutch hostess Johanna E. Boshouwers of Am- from a . severe cold. Mrs. Caprio, who is co-ordinator General Greene Village, built is a sparkling white and orange : sterdam, Holland has blazed Thompsen was beginning a-six-, of the foreign language program Short Hills Village, and de- . houseboat, one of 3,000 dotting through America since Novem - we'ek'tour of Europe at the time.- throughout the Regional High signed almbst every-apartment the canals in the crowded city, noglDtorod 'with the wiirt School District, is entering his hnnsp. in the township. He said where housing is nan tittnyearon tne Doara. tie was garden apartments'do not bring The comfortable boat boasts fice, Mrs. Boshouwers extended vice president of the, board in It sounds iike a fairy tale and the' Springfield traveler •'] hardship to a community, do not . the friendly, Dutch visitor is the electricity, a shower, telephone 1962' and completed, the late cause a traffic hazard- or in- and radio.. It is there she has pitality and helped her arrange Howard Smith's term as presi- first to say it is-a dream made accommodations in Paris. crease car,density, and serve possible by American people, greeted, -aiid entertained about dent that year..Caprio was elec- A correspondence between ted president inT963. she has .entertained, as tourists. 30 or.'40 Americans since taking the residential...;... and,com- , the ,two developed. When- in^' * Mrs.' Dors'ky," a "substitute: ~~ "MrsT B"osHouwers'"is~_'gran^-" "over its ovSr'rfef ship and licehs e mercial areas. formed of the trip to the United teacher at Jonathan Dayton Re- rnother, a registered nurse not two years ago. He" described the plan thus: States, Mrs. Thompsen was one • gional High School, is entering working at it, and a student Jvlrs.'.Boshouwers has re'- a five-building complex, con- of £he many who looked forward her tiiird year as a member of at the University of Amsterdam ceived numerous invitations to sisting^ of_. 2-1/2 story apart- to seeing Mrs. Boshouwers the board.TJuring 1963, she was when she has the time. Vthe States", but never believed ments of Colonial architecture, again. Mrs." Thompsen's chairman of the" supplies com- Being a guide and interpreter she would be able to accept. with 46 one-bedroom units and mother, Mrs. Charlotte Daly of mittee and also served on the for the Amsterdam Tourist As- The trip became a reality with 30 two-h Elizabeth, also enjoyed meeting I—school government committee, sociation, a member of the Uni- the aid of an American electri- would 1 the visitor, especially ivhenjier and the school advisory corn- versity People-to-People- Pro- cal engineer working in Holland. area; family density per acre He needed a place to stay .and own ancestors, named Feimly, gram and 'Witii Get In Touch who have lived in New- Jersey she.decided to move into other third TOesday of "'With The Dutch monopolize since 1.785, came from Holland. most of her' moments. She is quarters and rent him her boat. Altogether, ' Mrs. Boshou- usually head-over-heels, in .This woulu eventually provide wers has seen approximately making foreigners feel at-home- meetings. .National State Bank Tunds "for the trip, she thought, 30 families" including "Tier ten~-r tercet -in Holland. of Elizabeth was designated as IS hi helping her move her be- ant's mother in Meadvilie, Pa. would be included and-scavenger Mrs. • Boshouwers . speaks longings, her tenant. saw the depository. service would be-prov-ided. She has spent time in Miami,.' •The president announced the' English fluently, has translated small quarters she planned, to New Orleans, El //in Holland to Americans is repaid tq Hollander visiting-Spring- McMullen said the plans show a book from English inlo'Dutch, use for herself .and promptly field. Mrs. Johanna E. Bashouwers (center.) of ;Arnsterd,am,/Holland visits .friends Mrs. new and. some day hopes to' be an paid six months rent in advance Theodore Thompsen of 54 .Janet ;La. Mohtvnnd Mrs. Th'omrosen's mother Mrs.'""Charlotte. Buffalo, CFUcago, Boston, and a m . English teacher. for the houseboat-to hasten'her J3aly oJNSrizabeth. -, ' In Amsterdam, "her fame'is

1' 5 /

SPRUiGF-JELD SUN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY-2

Subject Meeting Monday sen "Does .your youag-"te'enr-ager P On Computer come home to tell you that, "all the kids" have more spending"" LADY didn't invite me for cor—trip was the White House invita- Continued from Page 1 '~ northbound Jand- 383*southbound the application__lncluded Milton 01 and at 6 p7HC_427 northbound Zisman, 104 Warwick Clr., who; money than he has; or, that "no- Continued from Page 1 fee|» .. - tion. She. hopes her American^ _. . High'^School' • A week later, while staying tenant believes It and has al- --~°umJ[.' ^°? applicant had decided to with- and 582 southbound. The char- asked the board to stop the body else" has anyTiousehold ~ lsl announced that- at-the YWCA In New-York, she ready sent him clippings to £ "" L°Lr,tories of Mur. draw, _ . . acter of the traffic! there was commercial encroachmenF70n chores to do? Is there an.an- even Montreal, Can. She has Abram Slmoff East Orange classified j.s commercial! not the'residential area. He esti- noying sTtuation~ar70ai' home been_ referred from friends and received a"telephone call from break the news.— 4^rX fenSaaco - -inval.ving_the-jise_jaf_tJhe_t£le- relatives and has delivered all JKMMHff^-^K, -Wvebeen, , The Dutch^e^^ea^g^^^g j^g^ Inarklng and "traffic-consultant, . residentialr-he-sj^^arcteir^^ phone, because .your junior high Kinas -oLinessfiEesT^he-Dntrh thinking about what you said- d-Amenca_™u uer wmuuw . . claimed Mountain Ave. could apartments would create a $10,000 each minus-HO^OOO an ionalDistrictlnpre school-aged—child has—torn- relatives -and has delivered all Mrs. Johnson thought it would wnen sne neaas lor-nome oy ^ng'athreepartlettSrepro-. handle Increased volumes of greater—traffic density than demolition and improvements kinds of messages. The Dutch Mrs. Johnson thought it would ^J^^^rll s^tintaAreeparttettSrTpro- - -.. mn bfe a good Idea/. An Invitation freighter.- But-not-befo-re^she jenttn|j^y^^^_. — - • one-family homes, wnnlH r^eyconpy' costt s would_hring the applicants py p CraVe ie ha -traffic—a«d~-said—the garden y ner ahniir-$130.000—This Is no hard- • Hnw'about your sixth-grade . ^.. n ^^-J^/wg-^iaaHoTt-eTranheWhlte jl™t touches Norway, Sweden, ^m^uo * \,t. tu.w%. U«M ww.— —-.——p—- - • - - natT BoarDuuiu—ivicrrrocTd Me —i imn^-t •—: • jy L daughter insisting" on going, to miles-and all-uii.^^yyj^aL y Houge the ^ext day (F_eb.l4)>. and Deimluikl : -^.-.Dr. ThomaB s ^i- Crowley Jls oL/oapartmeni uiiviiiti -usuwev »vfo*r th*..*e- prbperrr-j,»—P- — --J SSUCUILHpeciflc2" IIA-IyyY aHCJJ^Cskedhim."l'wouldU lliiil* 1 nuuiu. ship— • , herald. ? hfy-girl—parry despite your Greyhound bus ticket,- she adds. :Cornpletelyj surprised/ Mrs. is a suitable use. He reported--Bay they wouidr^"imt)ffTeplled^ -- Da ^ ^-- of 381 Mountaln At disapproval, just because " Christmastime,_she felt Boshouwers 1 ^-replying "Of course, ner about herplans^" The offi-_ lectures at the _ _ ' rJS^rS:^ ^: ^t^e-openinglLthe-pubiic Ave. said^^sal wo^d "everybody else" is allowed- she would like a_ reminder ot home and expressed a desire to go." Arrangements were cial,. according to Mrs. Boshou- ton-RegionaU-jigh School: --H> 9 jum^b-ved 526 vehicles hearing. MrsrWarionHarlem^Ljead, to a^nge™• ^rac- to? ._ — • .' . - February 19 -- Introductions s.tay In Holland, Mleh; Hospital- day, she-wers, found^it-difUcult w=te-' • February 19 -- Introdt 140 . .Sh..mplk^--Ra-.- "questioned -ter of Thg- neighborhood and These and nrariy other ques- ComputeT7~What Can ?J. . ^ . ••- '.. . . -rvlin™ CTlmn |)f Pltt~"'Rd. _••/• tl"OTTS~dealmg-with the bewJlder- a.mi and lleve she had so. many friends Do? How-does It work? ^the--zoning—ordinance in regard also advocated keeping Sprlng- hours' * In- this country. Mrs. Bqshou- February 26 - Applications: to hardship cases.. and"^em- field residential. " Use the little" ognized today, wili-bediseusjed phaslzed wha_t was before the land' • that's^ left for Its-best at the next Florence M.Gaudi- jm community touched ed she and a wuple from^Peru -Areas of board was a-"use" variance., use," said Stanley Schurr• of_ neer PTA meeting to be jield i^fLaniLOuri agreed shhe must haxejmarvelh-^ — ""We donp.t wanno beJled as- 97 Pitt Rd. The land his home on Monday Afternoon, February •her heart with-ttte clustered " ^~"-ouflfriends;- Interested,, how- WhaTwe-possible, job-opp.or- tunltles in e tray," she declared. -is on was once farm land and 24th, at j.;15.p.m. in.the school Afti? a "nicetalk-wlthMrs. evef.Tn Mr*-Boshouwers'wel- ' * computer.fieM? Th res onse " -c_w ^^i^ . - it Is now a beautiful residential m. the Dutch visitor said -farTklone in a .stmgeland, the u « P to this program - Nlck-K-ontanlnp. Jr. of War-- area| fie added- Mrs, Rayna _^JCtejgniLexperts_wUl_be^two pressed she cpulSn't resist she looked up-rreference-lMng—offici"' «^ -nn vffi-mv -has^eenjnflatjnifauaUaflc-as. ^ -wiek-Clr. presented a petition Kea-^, well-quaWied - teacherl^Nor^" leaving -a silver .spoon, atreas- they oppo si- manXeBoeuTand William Pfei-. -.ured, family heirloom to the ":"•''" —or """ -"--- no • lopugrapuy i«u^"" cup ot tea,~te"aslhi . i-the- -fer-,-anoVjwo-discerning.-.moth- museunv _ tlon. He appealed to the board • shnwn an-d there was no & new-hostess. she.N —m athem at4cs_5xaii._=Eie_v.e.nttL^ J ers-Mrs^zLeenard Kriegman Actually the White House visit pare her~tea with that served Phonographs to deny • the application on gnipi w# zahn, 18-Warwick Cir. and "twelfth grade mathematics and Mrs. Seymour Margulies., camerahout_in_a\Jest- - the grounds there'was no hard- ajso 0] students at Jonathan Dayton-Re- - UNION-CAMERA EXCHANGE I-ship- and showed a plot pan "to The, moderator jvill.'he_Mrs. : WhHe. in the nktional capltalr ^oS:y gional High-School are being 4^e7HhpZh»5rH^JJ far-17-lnr. ^ p : 1022 STtr¥VESAPFF-AV-Er g btepneStephen uenoBeno, Ch"t^nwrL-nairmmrui-uie—~~—.gf-rh'»--Mga. —Boshouwers . -.._—; lokingl.y .re •- twinklcwuiue unthes wuonly thinUUUgB whicmuni"h ex-- . \ . #»• JL^J afforded a w.onderful_opportun. r and-two st-Eeets In the property, the proposition .included Ueo- UNION- MU 8-6573 Springfield Council of Pa«ntr"'^«^^.^^J?k, |_ B^^-±8ustedpy ' her durlng-ier:.entire..RetirBitieilt-biatCCLity to^ become ^familiar with *,Others •' speaking against hard Best'of Summit.". Teacher^Associations. amazlng^ut )rour FIRST the worklnfiE>of computers, the nature_prprogramming, andthe EndOf impact of computers on-our'so- — i continued 1rom P_ageJ_ ciety. JNVJTESWV L -This age otthe—Computer- meeting of the American As- RevoiutioniMs being_compared soclation of School Superintend- wltf the famous.. industrial Re- p OATTENDOUR . ents in Atlantic City, it was Volucion '' in • importance- and pointed out:. ... - scope, as the"ctigTtal computer' His. letter to Caprin said:; ^g-^eyttftg-a-^henomenai lm=- " After careful consideration' pactOn our, present day world, of all the f-aetbrs ihvplved.-l . -. —,— __— . Ti'ave' decided to take advantage . . —. •: ~;-- ' of the benefits provided in New_Cxiiei-eria Classes ..-; t_ Jersey- Senate BUT #16 and re- . ' " . tire as of june.iQtJgav. May Come To End . ' "I wish to thank this board "" " - - CEEEBRATIOI^ and alTmembers of the-Spring ~GontUlV.edJricmJPa.ae 1' . field. Boards of Education who As_chairman of the advism-y during-my 16 years of tenure a &T school—planning committee, 21 superintendent have assistedTn""Be"n"der~SBld~he-had-noTreportr^ building, maintaining, and im- --Dr. "Josephson, lunchroom px'uvlu^ Uie^eoUicatlohal'faclU-^chalrman, announced a profit- ties, programs, andisefsonnel of $55:65 for last month with of the schools foftfie children a tptsl loss"-to date'Of$520.09. , of Springfield.'[ „ ",*..:. '-^— _Gacos Jridicated the Recreation l^Newswanger came_to Spring-^~Commission is planning tojix- field ffi 1925 to7 teach seventh- pand lts"roller skating program —We're having open house—^nd YOU'RE invited. Come in, browse =^and eighth grade' math"emaflcs_in_GaudlneerSchoolinthefuture -aroundT-see-all^thaPBTiew-in-the-Wprld!:-otxE^iiniitliEeSHiaJi^aMLEigty^. I at—Caldwell^School—after only to—taekide—--^sl;-"-h e^^th American gallery. See bur Provincial.and Contemporary (Selections-sofasr • "three years of college. He had and eighth graders. r sectionals, chairs.'dinettes, rugs.-carpeting;-giitware^timepieces, knick- been— attending.. Millersvjlle Pre'sident^August __r (Opposite Barely Farms) laeksti .everything for the horne.- . "State "Co-llege, Pa.,_and was ported he_ has conferred with- Springfield the mayor and plans are under-. Do come-in - alLron can-lose'is^your hearts :•-. when you see this ex- LSupervlsjnj:. Principal Fred J. Way 'fpr_ihree- meetings OPEN EVERY EVENING UN1% 9 R.M. . —^r traordinary Furniture Selection. •. ~__ •••- Hodgson. He continued his edu- - ^ % cation In New Yorki^recelvihg~ ,-a-B.S. degree~fi»m NYU in 1929 Ai-Treasure House of VALUE^^miTmf" with a math and social, studies It's Springtime ,av\s »W L major and a seience minor and pt£Q ae=° .— •y w .; j^t-'"-- in supej^isteflr- ,n» con" \sl» —an •qu *tio' ,.V\.o' ome ,. Co v\ce. .and At EARLY4J1ERICAN _ ~;our^ TeacherC_College, ~ Columbia. omp" University. CONTEMPORARY In_addition Jto~math, News- REINETTES wanger also later taught sci- ence in the Springfield syatem :orn Cobblers ^:l'X^M .and-sexved—for some'time as principal of_Chisholm Schppl_- -Allysa before "he assumed the super- • DIMNG ROOMS intendent pQSLin.Sep.t,ri9?8~OTr :inderella ""the-Tres-ignatton-of-Superintenaf ' BEDKOOMS •• rrvt -eir-1- College Teen NINETTES^L -••"•" r3!S*.. H/, CARPETING Deadline News R.A.RT rc For Pool Members Youngland Polly Flinders • TIMEEIECES^ ContinuedLjtom^Eage-l- _IH2Yed .lima the township and Claire Brooks ~ _ • LAMPSAXABLES those who applied for member^ RXJ0M ship too-late"l-tgM"Year' '?'" Recreation ".Depar-tmeM-

~pFoivtne-A Country -__

In contrast to: the 10-w'ee"k"'prpl" gram- last year. June 22 has been i w Billy the Kid mm •A \ \ set as the- tentative opening M W ?m date. • Kute Kiddies m w&Ml *ft'; ;.K.3.ay,w,'.,H h ;\ ftl y • .a • \ili a Considerable work .has been f jMS Fownes m done at the pool site in prepar- mm ,f - ation for the new season. FJye Quiltex —• MJz "or six large.truck loads of ex- posed rock vw, T t;_ n^., „ of winterizing the, pool ufider 246^MORRJLAYE. contract specifications. ,The wate'r level was slightly lowered SPRINGFIELD 5uiS- with most .the water remaining U rnl • UNTIL 6 PM in the pool during the off sea- OPEN DAILY 9:30-9 son.- THURS.-FRI. 9:30-8:45 . 2624 MORRIS AVE;, UNION, N.J. MU 1 -8G7G

—r" J

_ SPRIKGFIELDs"UN, THURSDAY; FEBRUARY 20/m* PAGE 3

FTotxTMeetingr ' Combiifed Rotary— Clubs BeDe ni e&3yRttfg e rs of Summit,^ Millburn,. and Area Greek -Springfield,—held—a—joint_fel- Tin.-"".Greek Orthodox Corii- chairman of-thTr-propirm' soir,-, afl all-purpose room7i2'clasvs- - Upon cpniplttlon, the complex _. ..—AbAUt-^OO-qualifled appll- man class of 723' in 1963 to" sldering-the" unquTiTifieci stu- lowship meeting JL the Hotel inunitv of 'Union •County, £jn- mittee. _' . rooms, and-administration of^- -•-will, provide facilities . for the- cants will be denied admission 825. The Rutgers College of dents, it seems extremely-likely• Suburban,JSummit on Tuesd^y r bracins many. families in the .Approximately +50 famihes- fices. Step Two will involve/ \ instruction of several .hundred i:6" the State University this Year. __South Jersey—in - C arnden - will—that. we will haveto turn down FebnoixJt-^oesTs—efch«;n/|>t* niifield area, has selected in "Union County are involved the ichurch edifice" itself and child reli fronr 10 surrounding predicted by Dr. George increase its. freshman class by " from-^-,000 to 4,500 qualified included Jack Wilson Millburn- a four-acre plot in Gallows HiH in the program. There is -pre- -Step Three pll_ concern " the communities^ The children are A. Kramer.-R.utgers admissions^ 25,.but the other divisions will students. ' Rotary President, John Marti, Rd. ,_\VesffTeld, for the site of sently' no Greek • Ort-hodux rectory." presently receiving instruction director, on the basis of the holdjit'lasiyear's level. ""Improved guidance frfom the Springfield Rotary -President building program, it was Church in the immediate .area. Pldns. slcctrhes, and archi- through^? co-operative Greek •current level oLappHcaUpflS^—T-h-F. -Unive-rsity plans to_highj;chools has but the num- and Kenneth Almy, Summit announced this week._ f n 7 fl harc nf flp7r Two such churches -are locat tect.hav.e not yet been selected. School system meeting in.public^. r._K.rnm;r roprts fri"T h" ••have frpEhrriPn.'c1asB°q IL 1 .; ""r" appHranrs-, tary President and Chairman.of —The—sale— ot-the—pr-6"pe*rty=; -pasto^wi-iia.lso»be-3etecm-inea_ -Wheels" liTsp"r"ingfie'ldTsprin i Irving- 1)nlversltyUa-iua«—unHor thp a rh" rnllagpa fnr'Mpn In-Ntew"; anrl WP find that .the great ma- ththe Joint'• committee' meeting T expected to be_ consumated "Perth Amboy at n later date. . ton, Elizabetheth , Unden, and Liv- |—'heaviest admissions pressure Brunswick"! '680 at the Newark jority of those who make out. wi behalf- of the host club. hland Park.—: A general meeting--etthe ingston...Some^6trhildren,living in its history. • ' Gollege of Arts and Sciences— the full ^application a-pe fully "A program was presented by" T — chase of the property-is subjec J t A fund rat 'ill- c-roup will NHK-H-Tues,, Mar^ 1 UnlvorciTy' -HH hava H ?n'n at r-flnyTwi. - : "capahle^^of-~'-dbinfr—eollege —Eufcene^O-'Nelll. project man- ^" ' _ > '. > - an •frnm ' April'?-?—• -ft p.m. in rhf First' Hills, age'r o; room for a total of-3.,555 fresh- ~As "do many universities^ work,', he notes. ager or tne' lelstar project^-- ^ j fluthori\lc.s.forthc, t« June.'I?,. Some $52,000 in byTenan ~Parxsh_ House, Main Mountainside, Madison- and |—men—In—all—its—divisidris-next—Rutgers—admits^-Jiearly_twice. __^The' most, serious -—-a^miss—- Satellite Communication•s Lab- Jgemblage -6f the lots so.that gash anci'pledKC'3- Is already in St., Sprin'gfreldznA sucial func- Summit arc meeting at CHd-^ . fall. By the Feb. 15.appITca- as many stadents as it expects^—sions problem within theJJn- oratory, a subsidiary of Amer- be used as one piece iean it • can be used as the building fund. A 'goal has tion, sponsored by the Women's well School, Springfield, on? Mons^-deadline, it expects to actually to enroll. Cn the basis iversity is faced by Douglass Telephone and Telegraph of property, not been set, but i•^-was pointed Auxilian'.i will __be_ held Fri., \Ve3m.'Sdny from 4 to 6 p.m. in have, received 14,000 applies- of past..experleTTce-lt can'gxpect College. ( -Company. '_ ... — a-suitahle- Mar. 6 at Mr. Investigations tions, over 80 per cenLof which' somewh¥t more- than -50-per Despite-^the fact that next— Assisted by slides, Location -for the needed_ for such—< -Summit. are from—tuily. qualified stu- rwit rt^rhnqp arirnirred to attend, year's freshman class will be" .O'Neill described o the . "his- of the^ church have been under- ' 'building project is being, —The.greup'ls heifcted fiy Peter .. structptl in tht Greek language ^s. : ^—!• '-gut|'.' K-rarae-r—says, "even rhi> rarppgT-nn'nplag-; ha-; tory of events onTrans-Oceanic ^s^—raawy—months. Thnma<:' inrn' rh rpfi~;^ii--ps. 'Srpr' hacakss__ ot~'Murray Hill. and rarochism. ' ' — ^=—"'; . Kramer attributes the-heavy allowing for this, and not n-r admitted, coThmunications Fagoulatos •Cranford is One ^wP'l concern" erection of Dresident. admissions pressure both to ™ r: 'the fact-that there will be about -'Tho NOW THRU L20.pe.r_cent more New Jersey WE CANNOT TELL A LIE! WE'VE

I—high-strhool graduates this year SUNDAY 1- - _=: ]-than last, and to-increa^tng"re^_ CHOPPED PRICES DURING OUR DOLLAR ( OHO Wlfl^ At cognition of ' the quaHEy of _educ.atiiol07ailable-at RutSers- 1 .Despite increasing numbers- PFTESC RTP fiQN i |"^of"applicants, tHrState~"Uniyer^ ~-ji^gzDeputy" will be' the DAYS U is .1 LOWER-PRICED sity_fflilj be able to take only forthcoming ^sermpn Friday- a few nro-re—students than if A* SAV-ON evenlng at Temple Beth-Ahm, Provt' il yonf-ell t—yea-r-^-The—lar-gest Springfield by Rabbi- Reuben "RECEIVE 0NEJf!l).L_mE_FIL»r7rWlTH - th*"np'xl time you increase will come afDouglass EACH BOLL DEVELOPED AND PRINTED -R> Levine7 service to begin icHO PLAZA Mountain Ave.FREE OF 8 OR - MORE GOOD PRINTS . . .' to be filled. |. .QoJJege, the women's unit here, ^545 p,m. ^'-5.45 p,m. with Cantor Irving DRUG STORES BLACK-AND-WHITE OR KODACOLOR. '.which wlll_lncrease its fresH- ^Krammerman SIZES 120, 127, C2010NEDAV SERVICE and, the choir Route 22 Springfield, NJ. FILM ON BLACK-AND WHITE? =T^T- as 9 n THICirEFFEOTIVI THRU FEB. 26 _ WE RESERVE THE RIGHT Fo no wing" QUANTITIES, ADJ3LFEDERAL TAX Suburban Deborah g OPEN ALL DAY -_F - _wlll be anOnegShabbat in honor WHERE APPLICABLE aw-e^Cflhan.- son_of..Mr.- Mrs> Seymour_Cphan who A~.:l 11 Piiii" "^Ul be Barlvlitzvah'd on Sat- A^TLI II .Jt*B— urday morning services.at 10:00 TfllNLESS STIEL [LGUMQIU '-• . ' a.m-. _ ' ' . .. •'••••'" EVENFLO NURSER ,i - On the evening, of.- April 11, All friends and members HERSHEY 8:30, Suburban Deborah will be PERSONNA -REQ. 79C-QUART are inyitediojttend. Lr EA.79C VALUE IEUERVSRV |- -participating in a co-ordinated . Temple-Beth Ahm's annual - PACKAQEr^S _effort. with_ local Deborah -Masquerade :PtirTrrrTlaTicB^anS~ ILK OF MAGNESIA Chapters In" the "FirstDeborah -parTy^wiir' __ ' REQ. 98c, QUART [ ] Heart Ball" attheEssexHouse, auditorium on March TsT PRICES Newark. " • Sunday evening beginning MINERAL OIL A delightful evening of enter- 8:00 p.m. jainment has ^ been- prepared Flora Lichter and S.ydT-aber, [-along with the- popular music co-chairman in charge have "of Marty Ames ahd_ his orT_ announced that admittance will \. chestra. Tickets foT this' gala be $2.00 per cougle-irTcostume5 [. affair of dinner~and dancing (which-includes a mask). Tlfere'' 75cTfl» are, available for a donation wm_ E^_.a xuntest for the ori-. $25.00-per muple./tLcl^Js^ginal-que_en-Esther-(Men's and BRYLCI! |—may-teobiaiied by'contacting r.adie's) costume as well" as VICK DRESSING .Mrs." Louis .Scolnick at AD'2"^ prizes^fbr various catagories . VA-TROJtOL 1^-3590. The :public is invited to' ' of costumes.— I'^attends ;; —i-^ ~ —. . Free—r-ef-reshments _aiilLbe 1.00 VALUE 6 OZ. ' S1.34 VALUE Jthg^=fand&—will-be_for.-t-h&=r-.seriV:eli;-. music 1 POUND CAN '- benefit of the Free Non-Sec- Cy 'Greene and his "orchestra,, playtex BISODO 1 |-~tarlan. -Deborah nHospital at" JAII _raemiers are urged • •— s S-M-L-XL SIZE Browbs Hill'sT for Heart-Sur-, -attend--^--and----to-H ALL PURPOSE BIBtJO&ACCO living MINK gery, Tuberculosis, Operable friends for _a very enjoyable CREAM- BY PANTS • Lung" Cancer and .all diseases_-evening: of *fun 98c_VALUE, 2 O2r- 1-of. the_^Chest and will hasten, Temple B"eth"Ahm, Springfield. SPONGE theJiailding of the new Heart n -desiring informal ABSORBINE | -Institute. please contact Ralph FASTEETH MOP On Feb.-.25, at the Temple ^ or- Sam Greenfelt,-or ADHESIVE Beth Ahm, Springfield,- the lo- _arjh'e-Temple. . - •: prnnp wiH-hnlH if'g POWDER Irregular rneeting_at which time^.jh'ere will be a Senior League |—the"—program .foCtfie^evening_J_jneetlng at^-Tsmple Beth Ahm. 1.00 Value, 7 Oz. wlll=be a Chinese Auction:Mrs- Springfield, at .1:00. p.m. "aTT [^Morton -Goldberg is in charge^—members are urged- to attend. JOHNSON'S MBY COLD CAPSULES SHAMPOO

College Preparatory School for Boys" 2J3"T^oftTTAvenue, Hills We "^ UNGUENTINE announces that • • ~ —ERTRANOE EXflMIHATTONS . JOHNSON'S PLEDGE SUPPOSITORIES: ROARI1S- M-irCHUM'S ;'•—••" For the fall_6f 19.54 AND 69c Value; 4.2-Oz IRONING PAD S1L.ICONE COVER ^grAdmi.B.sion to Grades 8 through 11 WITH SYRINGE ATTACHMENTS .. _ WERNETS ' -' Will be given on ~ HOT-WATER-BOTTLE DENTU-CREME ~SATURDAY7MARCH 14, 1964 PUSHBUTTON SIZE 120, 127, 620 SHAVE CREAM For further information FILM Write or call the School _ ^; Fl ^fVM Menthoiatura

ISODINE ROLAID ^ ANTACIlHfllNTS; GARGLE/ DON'T JUST STOP Telephone AD 3-0003 FREE COTTON SOOTHE DETERGENT FEELING EXCEDMN RICOJ»"lifMD MURINE '"• HANDS GIVEN WITH PURCHASE TIRED* TABLETS EYE LOTION -^HEAL TROUBLE OF 9B0 SIZE OF LIGHT FinST AID OnCAM THEM!

AND LOAN ASSOCIATION BROMO PEPTO . 175 Morrli Avtnm BISMOL Sprlnffltld, Niw Jimy QUININE LIQUID OR TABLETS REG. 51.33 .. 88e_V«lue, 3»/» Of. u.L.APPR6VED"•""•; Feel Stronger Fast .Thls'associatlon belongs to and Is operated solely U»C VALUt . -in just 7 days! for the benefit of its members---it is a safe, profit- NEW MIRACLE HEALING CREAM HOT PLATE able place to save mone^-and a friendly, efficient ENDENTO SAVE "FORMULA 44" 'place to obtain funds to build, buy or improve a'home. SEE results overnight! |1.00 COUGH SYRUP BUY THE Shampoo^ FJEEl it'work instantly! ECONOMY 68c VALUE, 36'S For FIRST AID.^too SIZE! FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE no otk*r anliisplic' ii to lofs, yst ^ froa parking AspergumJLl IO affactiv* on Due Io iron deficiency Hours: . • 8:00 A.M.'to 7:p0 P.M. Mondays . ". 8-.00 A.M. to 3'i00 P,M, Tuesday to Friday Tablets 98c Value, 2.3 Oz. ASPIRIN A Service fsr . Sprlngfl»ld BOTTLE 100 NenmiAT LIQUID A • EACH 79c VALUE, LIMIT 2 COLD MEDICINE SHAMPOO •.r*

PAG14 -JFRJNGFIELDSyN, THURSDAt.TpBJ^RY 20, 1964

ts—R o eky ^R e^Uiy lana N^L G o verfi o r ? i n ce Bernhcrrdt After thts- •be—a-consider- BY HERBERTJAFFE BY LOU4S S. WARSHAW able hiatus when there won't be ANY 1 AssO/CW±£ Publisher Associate Publisher-Editor ••?-&&S&&lsC2i3r*-.' - letters from vour_d.augh_ter and your sori- in-law. You, of course, will be writing Did you ever, stop to wonder who's .governing the State' at least once a week, and • you'll find of New Y'ork? Of course we as Kew Jerseyans couldn't c-a-re yourselves ready to explode because your less, but now that Nelson Rockefeller has ^become a touring -letters~gcr»nanswered. Don't doJllThey're citizen of 50-states, somennp musr'-be warr-hing. rhp srnrq. going to write only_ whenHhey -feel like Just the-other day Rocky came out with the statement that Highness'and Your Grace: it, and-all your lhreats,,c-njclerics, pleas dSy in tne New Vork fillies _should_he not become President, or a member of the Presl- !«" -i will- not produce.a single note from them. dential administration after next November, he~would return^ "*s,ve saw Ograph-of-ycu, yourdaughter the Princess Irene,your to-Albany and a full-time -governorship aggln7"WhgttrigrgpT— •^i'-u-^X.'Trr ; -VOU-TWO WlLTTSPEND long evenings 1 f '•^ f utu re~—s on - in •-1 H w~ Who's ixr say that=ti«g{»"r; ° nf Np»7~YnrK "Together, railing at the ingratitude of your \*?^-M:^\:r *- "-£4 .-;.: Prince Carlos and his y would want him. after a year's desertion. children^after all you've done for them. ... patents. It was a lovely JThen_there's Barty Goldwatervfull time You will both wishjaau were dead, and picture.^?., such a.warm, Presidential aspirant, part time U^.Senator. then you'll assure each other that there's" Ttrerrgpod-constituents of-Arizona ' TTo.poTnTTTrnra krng-yourscives J'sic-k-lFEout— •T^-==5N5"-one,' could- "possibly" I just, aren't getting their ffioney's worth. While will then promptly fell from'your' happy, Sen.- Goldwater- is off touring GOP-one-'nlght make yourso-lyc-s "sick about it," But try smiling faees what you stands, various important pieces_p_f leg- not to;~lt will get you absolutely nowhere.— iWere really going islation are belng_discussed in the United- Let us no\v_turn . our attention to-the States. Senate. J through I in-law problem. . , and don't kid yoiir- "TBut we could! We were . selves, -there's going-tO-b_e_Qiie..-Y-On nrr . I-AS THE just there, you see. It's determined-to love them because they are," true That no Parliaments 'shapes up next moffltr.in-New Hampshire, it Louis S. Warshaw. after all, the parents-of yourJJaughtef's Horbort-Jo.lfe becomes -incfeasingly-appa-rent-with-each-new-._ were in danger of top-~ i belovedT^SnEl^tlien it musTTolIow, as does \Republican candidate that former vice presidenFRichardNixon - plirigi-l-t s^-eqiiafly~t-rue-that-.no crisis._oi_ - the night the dny^lhat_all-your-interests— looking mofe~~and more like a shoe-in for the party's nom- state developed, and-ne-ha-eried ministers -are • opposite. You' like__Rembrariat7TlTe7~ . of the" Kingdom were rusRIng hither and prefeX El Gt'ticu- ui Vela^ipe^. You^pJ.-ay= ttie Senate also, while Goveniuis Scranton of Pennsylvania and _ynn ro stavp off some dire emergency. -phhlo, Y"!' prpfpr Romney of Michigan" are casting hon-committa.l..mppn-eyes at But we, too, made the same happy pic-. quiet little tetes-a-\e.te, theyjifce large '^ New Hampshire. ' • ' - ture that you did (we think w.e also de^ parties. You like-skajing on.a frozen., There are-a "host-Tof lesser possible candidates being- _veloped a nervPus tic,) when OUR daugh- canal, they go ln"for watch"lng"bull flghtsT". . menttoTredr-such as Henry Cabot Lodge, ambassador to'Vlet_ ter announced HE=R-engagement, ~Na_m; Gov.' MarjLJjatfield~of Oregon; and favorite sons'fronri "almost.every other state. - ~ . ' __ PLEASE DON'T 'FEEL —BUT—VeU-ANP--T-HE-in-laws have one—- thing- in common (and for_heaven's sake,- _ This -.all.-leads to~the-cojiciu£jon_that if the time, effort _.-or alonel At this.:_very_l;m6ment millibns and money taken'to conduc-t a prftnary~c"tectlon were ear- of parents—whose daughters ftsve just avail yoiirselves~of it),'the kids are behaving marked to one cornerr-SaJrjTar'eas of poverty,-disease and puiled-the-same coup as did the Princess like -brats.i It will help you, in your fain Ing. could-be-erased,and_restored to^good health.. _' • _=- _ Irene are smiling broadly ancLtelling jHe~ ommunal misery, to while away the long world • that—this-marriage was exactly evening, hours when you're visiting- eac-h • other, to talk about • how'-^polled, selfish", I.-V-- PUBLIC OPINION specialist George Gallup' has (found that_, what they had hoped ~fo'r. OLcaiirse, Nixon is gaining momentum as the GOP Presidential choice. ij--.fe.w-.people,.if_any", w.ece;joojed^_because_ nd~uiirealistic ' they . a'r e^.— Accordingly, Rockefeller appears to be lostrig'g'round, while' SUH Congratulations —Jthe-same-thin&-had-also-happened_tcLthem... to do'ab'ouT'it? '~° *— At v this-moment you are doubtlessly .Above ail, Dear Queen-anTFrrnfcerdpn't . Goldwater^seerris_ to remain status quo. None qf the numerous.. plishment, should make-the board mem- lesser candidates in the Republican cross-country, race are The ^Sun- congratulates -Robert T wondering where.you .made your first even SUGGEST to them how.to-furnish • Southward, Joseph A. Bender^and John bers realize that they not (inly are looked mistake with the Princess. Wassjtit_that the apartment, don'rTiint to the Princess likely, at this~tlme. t6"paesent much of a problem f^j, Nixon — upon with favor by the townspeople, but if he wantsTthe nomination. '—^ ~ ._~— —CL-Gacos for-sttccessfully retaining their day, on her first birthday, when youdidn't that she's not"\vearing her hair attracfiv- that their job is still unfinished. There ely<»— orthathernewestdfess is a horror. Nix-on, who turned his, feacjcto..publlc~orfic e after his defeats seats on .the Springfield Board of Ed- change her -diaper on time? Was it be- ucation. Since-all three men were.runrring is always . room—focLaccompUshment cause you each vowed to the otherrwhen Just—pay—the—bills-and-say-noth-higT—It's— "for President andTheTgovernorsh-ip-of California, has returned in the rurmlhg~ofTrsthOTl-"systeTnv-- - unopposed, obvious confidence has been ' sfie_was born, that you would never spank easier that-way. - to a private law practice-awi-has -moved to NewJYork City. • Now that the. members - are assured of Playing ircoy, he has slated that he-does not actively seek the placed in these men by the local citizenry.' her because all the modern, psychologists The small percentage of registered^— another term, we are-eager_j:o see how -—said-such a thing was, '-^a^solutely ve.r- —nomination, but he hasn't said that He would refuse the. prize quickly and eff ectlve/y further action will ^voters thai actually=vi3ted=ha3fadchQsen__ boten"? Was it because you dIdnT"Fiave _ In any case, don't desp-girJ Don't think •^if' presented to him by_the^Republican_NatidnaLCommittee—- be ' taken towarrijimproving— me-=ed-- capable and qualified personnel to oversee the nerve to-say "No", when she- askfii" ^you've lost your daughterr-"forever7~At""" ucation-system of "the township^ : ...-'• -the... functions sit ...the SpringflelcbSchool.--._ for thar p!5ny-aBd-ea-Ft? the first, sign of tr-ouble_ - orZii "some the- T . system. It is up to these men_nowi.tp_.~ JGTISIS'.'should."arise, -wepromise you tHat " . SO~-THE~DR-AFT~Nixon"campaign rollsr into high gear.. U t 0 retainjicl board .1-JJy? P ffielrpromises-and ideas madej~-~ _ .-LEt 'US'REASSURE you', it would have Irene_will come—scrambling home and; —Chances ar!umsy andDaddy _.. Since, the board members have 3ut we both read water and_S.mith campaigns. • . _. ~ --_and anything you sw will be-O.K.-withy ' Complacency Is often the rule when "children, of their -own on thVattendlngi — Gesell a-nd llg (a_pair ot American busy- Should the natioflis- first -primary reveal enough unsolicited \ • men are retained to a post when while™ " township schools,' we_are . positive they -> -bodies who are always telling youTiow to~ Al^'DON'T BLAME yo.ur- for^Nixon, the race, may for all practical purposes ; "running unopposed, but it is_ho*ped that will do their best to-pr'ovide a continued raise • kids)—.- and—we -followed 1 all the '* ITh"aT^way-4^ies--mXdnle^sT~T:!jne~ it*—atr#he-start-j—arisljhe campaigh could-.conceivably " - this, will not be the case locally. Another thorough education for- their own children. 1 rules--with7graa l-f id el ity, but our daughter Princess is probably a really JweeTafld" alter Itself into a popularity contesf~fer_the vice presidency.- "term'^ln"whicluto:render further acconr-- asTwell as the other, township pupilsv 1 r came—through exactly as did the Princess nice girl. She certainly looks it from the _ Irene._She didn't ask us — she didn^t photographs we've-seem-She's-verv pretty - "consult us -^ she simply told us_T^^ ~* and can probably" whip up a rnean"lamb^r BDLITTCAL CHATTER Tribute We don't- want to be presumptuous and stew-if she-ha^-to.- - . • .,, - -~._ The iiamgzgf-George Washington has. a •-. -of the -coamry for wnose jurvival he was . tell a Queen and a'Prince~Cons6ft~wharto ~ • ••.*'*..*» — '_ em'terent meaning" to wery'.persons—=—z^-^- IZidflZlnlsuch-a'dlre • emergency---j do have some pretty-sound advice fojt. . Of course you've, m&ae. mistakes with _3Eh£BQUANIMlTYof-his person, that is, Reaction To someiit represents a holiday-frolfr— you,. You see, we've beenthererandyou're .herr What.-parpnrs havpri'r? We know a. —; " -.v^-- his-EVENNESS_and composure, served •school-^or—work; to others, it's merely just getting, there. Consequently, while father .who just_ga.ye... his son. a 1964 • the fa'ce' and plgtailed head ori-^a-thcee-^- him -well and lent ETERNALITY-to his we're, no great shakesratbeeupy-i-ng-a-throne, convirtible^ because^he-BtBN-^T—flunk_all_^=^ "•— _ | Sigh f ;."cent stamp; to stilUotkers, this name is'* - deeds. ' ' . " •, " we're^eeaLauthorities onlthe- conduct oT ~ his subjects.- Parents are_like'thati^iftiu : .' one of many in".the drama of - a-vaguely— The first letter of the word ^ -rebellious kids. ' ., . -• can't win I Kids will grow up and tell . "IJtion, patriotism and nerve-to _^.remembereri_hist:ory text. " •**-*'** - - • • - - - BY DAVID SrKLEIN -Mommy and^Daddy jtis-tT\yhere'theycanget__ " risk one's life for his nation, -represents WISDOM, a XfSii with which he FIRST PIECE OF advice is for offr-r-r-aTid-Tria-ybVthat's the way it ought__ Ex&Gutive Editor- but it does 'not take~political Lots of us,.Ho-doubt, could-blithely-re^_^ must have been ampiy-endowed in order to you not to take on about the .whole-thtngr .Last week's column dealt with savvy "on,civics education. Tola rtrp such .true-but isolated facts as "He "fulfill the challaige ol Um ntska. he faeco^- to be. /IBITIONr tasra-gifrliber ally-bestowed— intp a firsts The"—rtghr-fb'ivote -age limita- a voter ^oest " ^elass—mar-FiageT—as^-ourldaughter's did. longer than, we-expected—---. - rionsr^uid-was a defense of the We must therefore depend on ""TTS^Presldent." enabled'him to AIM high. \ : r~.—-— _^-— All the" pain and doubts you're- it .to .be, but that's because" we under- um jgo~tielng kept at'21, the "old.enough" ponple-to-vote- Bnr—let-s- look evenm^re deeply-than, will probably have been for naught. We srand. If you ev&c-get-so-depress£d:about_ ~inste.ad"oftheJ8 level'current- for those they-feeLwjll keepus SINCERITY of ' personality , and -do, however, want to_forewarn you about the v/hole business that-yau can no_Ionger ly being urged, by., seveTaToit of com"rJat. and ifjhis fails, this.' _ STRENGTH of character are-vividly shown in tHSwayTie_haBdLed_the familiar Cherry — what to'expect. -• endure it, just drop us a note.and~we'ir "statesmen. . ' we mUst all stand ready—to 1 J Embodied in then^Tetfers^composing Tree incident. ^Z After the wedding, -weeks will go _by see if we can comfort you. It's true that | —••-•— -—' - In'rebuttal, manyletters have nrake'suprenve sacTrlftcesr - this mah'sTiame are tRe^ qualities which •without your getting a letter. Don^tfretl' been received, in favor of the 18 A third reaction came froma-"' make him a memorable figure, and which, This is-standard operating procedure and we're only a small newspaperpTrtslish-. ._ '_ limit rather-than 21. In all fair- . - He displayed both HONESTY and HONOP 19-.-year-ol73 Union Junior Col- .through Itim, contributed tojhe progress for newly-weds. When the first letter does er and a housewife - "but the four of us ^ttessj~many.-have made logical, in that-^-famed declartion, confessing his lege-students, who said: "Reel .. and3uccjesjs_QLQUc=natlpn...' _-.-__ —— come,—it—wil-1-probably be^^reguest^Jor are, after all,-parents, Vn"d parents have well-put points, but that will be" ^guili_et_£he~cherry-tree saying: "Lcannot^ that I "am more-gapablg now of . —:money. After you've sent the money (and got to stick together if they hope to sur-' — for you to determine. -tell a lie, father. It was I." voting intelligently than many —you will)~there-will-be a S£Cpnd~tetter, — .. One response went this wayi'tpersons oFTar 'greater years. „ „ fo.—r GREATNESS— , . fo--r- GtS-._ - -—. INTEGRITY must"indeed have beeiriis: orie which._uull be long_and accusatory ——^rseems-most logical to me+whyTdg_ you ..feel thqge of J18.19- r MOUR and ni'-ORVr-but-Washiftoon's gla^ZZ^—tcflnstani t companion, fbr.GeSrge^asTiing—, ^^and-a harrangue abouT. ygyr^absolute ia^~ -bet-'s hear from you. - sthauhe_nTti5rprfiaentIWnfxirm- anH 9Q r ^riii-ikJris'-when we a P ability-to understand tHeljipjJn.Ser""geiTe-r-

try3rentecTAmeri =5ss4sfance'-• te, -among ____^_ ^jg -neees-sar-y-frames of reference Again, in answecwe wiunld7" TRUST and confidence "th"5y could have-in 1 to develop ._such opinions, and like to know—how- the student But he also saw his OBLIGATION and pared~for delivery before Plain- In.Monmouth-Counryrfef ex- treatment faclliti this man. are so enthusiastic that they .would administer those 17-year answered the call by working right along field Business Association Park ample,- exploratoryjalks have eral government alsra Iras-funds would make the best "voters -old who~said "we are almost with his soldiers. Hotel, Plainfield-, Thursday, been going on among seven available -for' planning joint Gefirge Washjngton'was an OUTGO.ING, Feb.-13. communities bordering T^The - studies. this nation could cultivate." 18 non, why can't we"v"0tetaiT7" OUTSPOKEN1 individual who looked ON- True—partly. It is undeniably We would further like to know He never could have reached the pin-, As businessmen, you jrta-n- Shrewsbury .. River" with the ' In order to assure-that urban WARDT'Jio the future. He inspired OPTI- 1 nacles he did without the sense-of RIGHT- ahead.'This is accepted, indeed thought of establishing;a single renewal! Tor example, is inkthe so that the_college studentsjiave who has the responsibility to MISM in. the men and women withwhomlhe.. the best -chance. In- the country- EOUSNESS which burned within him. expected, ' as sound" business major sewage treatment plant interests of—the__neighborhoods draw the ljne, to say that this lived and worked. . " to become informed voters.But 19-year-old'may vote and this practice. It is also good govern- to serve all. ' „ - afferrsaT' a workable program His Inherent GENEROSITY stimulated they must first be given the one may not? It. is definite that mental practice-, although'some • Would seven individually- concept was initiated. This is ' him to do without rations and other com- These -qualities help explain the NQ- chance to learn what to do. how _a positive limit be . set. That profess, tp see something sinis- built, individually-financed designed to provide assurance ntov 3, few extra BILITY of George Washington and per- to react and how to disseminate limit is 21. It should stay that teriti it when it involves more ^treatmen t plants .dischargrftg ^by the Communities to the-Fed- luxuries. His quality of GIVING is also naps lend' s6rt(5 UiiUwatuiiiUug lu ILIIL. news and- speeches into, intelli- than one political subdivision. HU tin •M- way. . ' . . reverence and awe with which we honor 1 gent opinions. seen in the way he unflinchingly gave of his In fact, sitting down" with ones bury River be an improvement people have long-range plan for time, effort, and self for the nourishment thedate of his birth. .To take a .college freshman, neighbors across town orcounty .over a single joing, jointly fi- over-all community develop- who-in truth is just a-shade World's fair Exhibit lines is often essential to the nanced, with sewer, line's ment. Relocation plans for those .removed from...a._hlgh..school A preview of exhibits at the efficient.'and effective ...use"""of capable ' of discharging the displaced are included. student, and thrust him into the 1964-65 New York Word's; Fair': public monies. __ ' treated waste beyond the River, But' the Uprooting of-families ,. •;• responsibility of a voter would was seen Thursday by members FROM OUR MAILBAG Throughout New Jersey, the and "info the Atlantic Ocean?'T.he' from ."-old"-neighborhoods-.--has- be unfair both to the individual df the Rotary Club of Union at most highly urbanized State in answer seems clenr. tnvpn rise to second thoughts arid the principle. the Hitching Post in Uryon. the Nation, there is a growing The Federal government may" about urban renewal. In some College is of conrsp rhp bfest Elizabethtown Gas Company Editor Sun; $1,000 collected last year is is being' carried on by Edward trend among our communities also have a role" in this project. places, The 'emphasis has al- aid to learning "how" to vote, presented a motion picture, The very fine photo on the being put to good use in the Schwartz in Springfield and to plan together when it becomes For there is a Federal.program ready shifted". but why not wait until the les- "Come to the Fair" which showed front page in the February 6th children's special schools in certainly deserves the support sons have.been-eempleted, not many of the pavilions now unjjer issue of the ' Springfield Sun, Wirifield, New Providence and of all residents because of the when they first start? J\ construction, including the "Fes- .is certainly appreciated by the "Westfield.^ • local nature of~the programs. ^ If yo-u have a RETARDED SPRINGFIELD A second argument, ' as" -we tival of Gas ".exhibits Which is Directors, Officers and mem- The-,«v£?L&ilts are some- CHILDRENS ENVELOPE IN knew it would, came like this: one of the Fair's largest. Eliza- bers of "the Union County Unit thing local residents of Union An Independent Weekly Newspaper Scmna Spiingficlit YOUR HOME, please return it PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDflj; -.BY GARDEN STATE WEEKLIES "If my son ls-eligibletobecome bethtown is one-of the sponsors Of the New Jersey Retarded County can actually see to Ed Schwartz, Sycamore Ter. a wartime casualty defending of-the-gas pavilion. Childrens Association, Inc. by visiting any of these l.o'ca- : 1 or myself whichever is more Second (-|II.".S Pnstaiii- r:ili- p» iil nl Spr in«f i«»1. i, N^w .Jf- T.«o v. . • • the country, why cannot he The film pictured architects', . However; the 1963 fund cam- ' tlons or the outdoor camp Jn Mountainside during the s'um- convenient. IIERHKHT JAFKK, Assot-jnle I'ubli,sher-Kditor ».1.(K'IS S. VAHS1IAW, Assfjcinic PubFisKer therefore decide how his coun- renderings qf_how:niany*of the paign referred to in the captain ; 1 PAVID-S. KLEIN. Exgcunvo Editor '. ". .". HARRY D. GOULD, AdvlerlisiW Dkoclor try should be run7" national, religious", state and was specifically for the above rfler. '•-• ",- f^--'*--' --'-----•-->-:••-— ..' • • . . -.. .Sincerely, . :;*•....-. And any county resident can ' . . . " Henry S. Wright GEORG^FALLON; Phbl6qraphy~Edrt^r -~-l_; ' JULIAN•'sA^«OTTN'5frSnalTrd'vertI31ng Manager^ •Thft'wg^covegecl-last -week Industrial ^exhibits will appear organization and not included • take advantage of the programs Union -County -Retarded Chil- ROCCO DE PASOUALE. Productton MHnagor ISRAEL HOROVITZ, Advertising -Manager- with all due—respect and a"d^~ ~^i«iiIJopiSjiIZoii_ApriL -ln-the general category of men- for- retarded children regard- drens Fund Chairman, Union miration, a soldier is not an 22.- Details of the United States tal health. Local offices are less from which municipality. County Unit Directors and intelligent voter. He may be exhibit were depicted and some- maintained; in KenUwortH and of. the many activities available the people of Springfield can The current fund campaign, Members. Candidate fPr Board 200 MORRIS AVENUE, SPRINGFIELD, NEW JERSEY • DREXEJ_^9-6990 % started in November ,of 1963, of Chosen Freeholders. ' "Tnn Cints per copy, mailed s\iH$criptioit rote ti $2.00 pef year, outside dMjnion County $3.00 P<= takes^cburage, bravery.^ievo- inT'New -Y6rk -eity== visitors -to •-be •- assured ^every. dollar ,pfthe the rF air were shown. ,'•;••.I-. \:r. -; /• ;. / [•• • .;/•/• - .

•v '•.•-'. r ^ -SPRINGFIELD SUN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1964 PAGE 5 Presbyterian

;•; •<*•' —' - "r- -

Sitting "before a broad-desk- -refteets ,his response^—tcLrhis rest on"past rrioments-^hat a— The students of the_Jiinior, iri~~his_carpeted off'ice_at the job, "1.Usually- have my- 40' -history '^dating.. 'to-.4745. has High -Department of the Church Presbyterian .Garish -House, hour week in by Tuesday'", bestowed' on it, _or. as hejsut' School of the'First Presbyterian.. 'artlrp'ri in. an nliv.e sharkskin Rev. Evans came , to the' it. "The barnacles''start'•' Springficlfl Chapter of Had-* Church, Springfield, will leave business suit svith -. heritage laden church at 37 biting when you do tha^-". • ' . assah-wrH hold their Founder's — 1 ( —chartered—bus^on—Sunday, pee-ring . out of tffe^pocket, -the SpringfielcTAve. in 1947,, Born _;-Since- coming^to Springfield, Buy ;:ieetiny tom?ht Thursday,' morning, February~Z3rd, at 9:15 Rev. Bruce Evans, minister of and raised in the soft coal the minister has lipped the* ._FeTTri];ir,' 20 31 8:30 p'.m. at._ a.m. from-in front of the Chapel the Springfield Presbyterian country ot^Veston,.. Pa., the member-ship from 200 to TeippJ'j Shnrey Shalom._ Mrs. to attend Church WocsJiip Serv- Church strikes the figure of a minister'rnatriculated at Wash'- '-nearly one thousand. ..Pay iri_SrJnya rtZ '"'J7T1 1 preside._ ices In the Riverside Church corporation executive board Jefferson College,' .He uses a-standard-piiactical a 'sriiall—rvimplpfpri his'-riiviniry. school- approach to religion. Evans 1 anrl... ,rhp „ Marhlp .r.n.llRgl'arft -member p —tendwe ' to the 59_cjiarter rafm- points, out that to prgpHr_e_ a her-s who -.verc- the- first group Church, New York City. •• - > town minister. - ing at Princeton Theological really .good sermon takes- of women to work IirSpr The seventh grade students- —He-graces the visitor—with Seminary. After serving for a about -10 minutes of_prepara- _ will, attend the Riverside Church a warm smile and exhibitb s a short ' tenure as-associate min.- .L.fie'ld for the hunianilarian pro- accoTTjpaniftfr"fiv~Mrr7ames'~G; rarhpr rired expressionwhieh- i~q~rer at' the "University' of j:ion for..every minute oHength. 1n\r lladassah- ''jeets spons' _ Marshall, Jr. and_Mrs. Earl B. Illinois,. Cha.rnpaign,-he served L his oluce^_wnic'ft Orgaiiivsa- Leaycraft, teadi©~sr.!Itegfg iii tie Navy for four years as a is usually the'~ca'seV-"Evans is_ "non, Cti'lPT~"5VeTfa're Services^, grade students will attend, Haberman chaplain. out. niakineH-iospJtal visitations Vocaiional VlucatirTfi, "Jewish Mar.ble-Gollegia.te Church ac- CarefUI to preserve the im. "and ca'lls lo member families. • Nati'nwil 1-un'i, nnct-tts-Amcrican ^corhpaniecT~bYTJvlr7~VVtlliam R. •portant-heritage of the chu-rch, HHe works'^with the local ju-..<5._ Affairs pro.'rai::. • Finnie, Dr, -Raymond A. Con- . Haberman hasTRev. Evans attempts to promote venile conference whereby he '; A -review- of' Springfield nTakes recommendations to the stantian,' Mr. Thomas B. Creeds hppn ^p intRrj_ Sprtngfleld and --build, .his- parish into a "~nar'a e.in, Chinese-wm g0 Qn a tW)roftheUnited cnairman. . Springle of 580 S. Springfield- fin-alizt—•'jrraii',;ernents for bus noodles, rice, choice ot fruit, Nations Buildings. - Ave., -Springfield,- has com- • 'transportation To New York- -pleted~eight weeks of military bcead,.butter, milk. -••• — : JewishXommuhity Council '"'".—" -•&•"••• — •"••-•-•' 'p'r'nlip'~\vll'l~lrinc'h";af Tuesday: Oven fried chicken, - The Richard E. Werner Agen— Rered Proi of EsseRsse'x Countyrountv.,' hahasbeenNes been Newu - Pohee iralnla^ajLFon Gordon,- Mama. Leone's, restaurant and cranberry sauce, candied sweet Prescriptions Filled -eyr-KO W.-_57 th SnT-rtY.C. of" .;i"i—••—ark;area-chai«nan and general Georgia. "~ • see the new show "Funny-Girl" buttered,' spinach,; ; He entered the arrrjy in.Sep-" "Eyellassea-Bepaired Life IrtauTanOe potatoest. To Analyst By -solicitatlon~chaicm~gn~ i'n~pre^ : milk'. tom'ffor and—Feeejved-,his basic Prompt Service ,,.,' '''-•""-•'""_> ''•"""'-j. ' "u" ("Company was named as win: "btOaQ, bu vious'UJA campaigns, 18. Tii-kois will he distributed , 7~ ... • , u x, •• Wednesday;—etem chowder raining aTCEort Dix. '• I C o. She has been a member of^the 1 of the ngency of the Year- soup', minute steak sandwich, _ , •• —- , T; -7- c . , • u r-j • Pvt; — SpringlK 6 e - is .presently.! board of the Jewish Education __ c ,, „ ., ' J. NORWOOD VAJTNESS ai-ti)e nieetina. • ' . •_••-, >« . ,• *-• u , • jL-»^__ ^ • stauonea at Sandia Base, New ., ._ ,, , award in the Metropolitan Field pnraKT chips, choice of pie, -Robert J. Reed.. -, of- 3*8 ,Hen - Association~"of-&ssex County, .-- . \ rs.~tconfjreensteinanc co-- . ; j Guild Opticians --, • ,. - , „ . judginDivisiong .__^^ Criteria^ us^ed. shaw Ave.,Springfield,hasbeen a •-foca- l. •-UJAbeneficiar• - —• ^-.'. _..-y agency: '.-.Mexico. . cliainnan.Mrs.' Bred Braun are .... . • ._. , . Thursday;- Roast beef, , • , • •. -. , balancejudging d foagencr this_awary activityd include, agen-^: proffioted to assistant researph. -""y\n active member ofT^nver- 248 MORRIS AVENUE whipped ....potatoes, grav-y,- now taking- reservations for the "analyst by the. Prudential In- ican Women's ORT, anoverseas- ITEIITRSS SPRINGFIELD, N. J. with Jhe company,' field, and '.buttered carrots and_peas, annual Donor dinner ro be held surance Co. beneficiary,' she is board -| DRexel 6T«10B •_ •this- year at Goldman's Hotel in advancement of the- ageneyy-as •--brownies, bi?eadB-butter.^milk. Reed,-a_member. of the.graup member_of theiAVLomen's Di- PRINTING ninp ""April-^th. MembersTnd- ""^"'"—"-:" -• •••- -a~—;, 1— Wcrst Orang• ,' e of. f Wednesday', eve, - ~weH as overall contribution to Friday; English muffin pizza, pension actuarial division, had -vision—of_the.Greater Newark 30 ttols 24"~Years guests planning to-atteno\ this , _ .... • to"ssed salad,^ apple crisp, been a . , , — ' r_.-i —, the Company and life insurance " .calculation -approver American-Jewisfix.ongress. — gala function are askexTrocoire \—, . ' . , • ; Phont DR*xt.l 1-4600 . -j ,• ,, industry in geheral. 'bread, "buiter, mTlk. _ prior to this promotion, "He- • — — ^10. the•Sonor re.s rvation table r -. ^ h x over UTTERBAGS joined-, the—Prudential as' a ,._...__.£_ f Tin 19637 _.NEW_YQRK"(tlPI) —Litter--trainee in 1957, fB-ltowlng¥6ne= "Mrs. ATbert 'Wfrliofrig, p.rb- '& sizeable gain-ove-F~-any |>re- bagsrthose-handy caich|-nallsJor: yearjasso~c"iation witri Equitable" vjous~year, -and r-anked-second_. family auto, can help-ve-_Life. ~—:—r=~_ Tjj"am ( cliairman and VMrs. 1 -the Ejpanuel Magid'. education nationally among, the company ? duce the amount of lUtte r From 1953-557Tie served 276 M0/WS AVENUE ' chairman .have plannedya most 110 agencTes in paid premiums. • _strewn over the nation's high- g Army. P/iont DRtxil 6-0536 ways and roads, according to "-^-exciting program incelebration . Werner, a member of the He rfiCeived a bachelor's and • trie Glass" Container 'of Brotherhood Week February Springfield -Boa-rd-ef'Education, degree^t SetonHall REALLY DELICIOUS •=—tOTersztesfttuter^ftnmual—high- 16-237-iSpTiTigfield 'Hada-ssah is jpined_Manhattan-IfctfeJn_19S9 . =T J ew i s h^Gqn g re*s; way cleanup-can cost as mOCR "delighted to present twofoTeigrv after spending ton years as an ^as $50 per mile, GCMI says. TotelU rexchange students from _Drew agent and supervisor for the Meets Monday- University; who will ^ReaR. Mutual' Benefit. Life "Insurance PIZZA PIE —JTetephone DRtxal 9-9315 about their iespeetive- coun- - Cpmpjanjr __of NeA«ark. He ob- Members and- friends. are -somBone f~rries and in a. questioquestionn ., and taineda tnth£e covececovetedu "Charteremanticud cordially inyifed^to attend an : •••" -answer '- period an. 'e»^ange'":Life'-'--Unde_rwrttei^-'designation -open meetingTofth&UnionGoun-^ KALIAN ^^ol—id eafr— beiieispromises Jast'-year.. ~~"'-'•' . ' ' Ty-etiapterof-Ameri3«n Jewish ' To" make" 'this a •stimulating He ' was ^thp .founder" of Congress, Feb. 24. •'. \ evening. An invitation to non- tne'.'"HSchQlasJic Press ,, As- __J.oseph Marzell, progcawi Optometrist -Eyes Examined members is cordially extended sociation o£-New_Jersey, and -chairmair, is pleased to an- telepone -througli-thfs-iTiediurn^—. ~"" ' graduated^i^jm.JJp.ga-laCjjlege,_JoUnce that the_.guest_speaker -East Orange, in 1950 witha-B.S.^_0f the evening will" be the dis- iri^EconomiCSr^hE^rottegeeiteiaSifmgu-ished—R-a-bbi-Paul-Leven- EEFP-ER-ANIbONIONS 14 Evsrgriti Avs. r lam' in~1957~f6T~"outsTan-dlng SOn-of" —oijice -exempjification of the highisr Fords, N.Jr, whose topic will p By-Appointment —— - — Springfield, N.J. SAUSAGE .-HOT DDGS 'AMONG THE BEST' -be Tdeals". _ •-_ ^-Coe Mag former Anne SfniMarriet of Newark,-they-resided to the LSI NATALIE WOOD 36 South Maple_Ayenu'e,Spring- - SLICED STEAK y Held, wSfrtheif^three children. _j

HEADE- STERLING ' EnteiUiflfflint-p |™.MANFROMGflLVfST0N Oi'rectoiy— -g_ 1 IEFF HUMTEH- JOANNA MOORE COMMUNITY MO LOEWS NEWARK • BROAD ST •HELD-OVER-* KITCHEN The 3rd BltrWEEK" -m observance of

2t**f- 1 l^hftWONI ZEM.AND spsft^

NOW. Charade JCP<•I JEBSEVCENTRAL POWER 1. LIGHT ( J tttLal Vmm • KCHNICORW AN INVE-STOR-OWNEO XLECTRIC COMPANY Gommonwealth-Water_Ciistomers i'\: ^T*E£A^1H "Com- pn AJK JPfli 5isaMi= "^Sat.'Sui ex7^-Mromsj7

ORESTV«W3-aB00_ __ply=outlook-fdirl'964 Is excellent. ly expect to enter tn'e-p season in_July with more than enough- NOW PLAYING THROUGH TUESDAY water in storage to carry us through: •»r"*Wf£*$v/ goes way-out on.his own! SKIRTS'SWEAWtS- curtailment, we believed it to be in the drought in 1963. We pledge our the public iterest t*o have taken this best efforts to continue fo provide the V WAIT DISNEY BLOUSES $5.00 precautionary step. high quality water service which has The improved.-outlook is due in been' traditional in the 75 years we THEMl^DVEfflVRESOF have "Served our community-area. large measure to the doubling of • .^__. ORIGINALLJ $10.98 and up COMMONWEALTH WATER CO. Slvnng i, Manager ..•-.* ANNETTE M3JMM1RRIS AVE. SPRINGFIELD TECHN1C0L0IT EXTRA^ OPEN FRIDAY TILL 9 CHASmGtHESUH DR 6-5191 FREE PARKING REAR OF STORE Dedicated to Good Water Service and Community Progress -.-.

:fri - •- -•

• ! George Cat DoWn The Cfcerry^ree

. Newberry$~ot ;ZZZ Springfield Cut Prim And Offers The Best Buy

.•—/••••

SPECIAI MULTI-USE CABINET LA *2< This value is SPECTAC- _" ULAR! For records, " books, many other things. Simple, un- \ - cluttered lilies . . . in ZL. richly handsome rrfahog- _~ any, walnuU>r limed oak _tiniBlr On~gracftful,"tap- ered legs . ., space-savTng ^Tiding door. 40;']ong, 18~" ,. " Eai deep, 26"- high -; Q p |yr

^"?!sIvTvT T^^1.^ .V - I 18 PATTE V FRUIP OR NO IRl 3i^H1 FAMOUS FIREKING 1m1 /A 1 Hi y _9 -?irptiiTi.r -_-— FOR 1 11 8" ROUND CAKE PAN 5x9 DEEP WyArrAM IPTA1TF0R1 j% QMTILITC BAKING ROBES,BEA| YARDS At PROCTpt: PANzl Qr W/COVER WHITE, SOI TA1 :*-':-'. Another nationally- famous Proc- R£G.- (FappHance.,Two slice -toaster-, . .i"th-l-i.a-hMo-aarJc^olpX-S,elector- • It.ji3_

ALUMINUM FRAME EXTRA BED WITH FOAM MATTRESS FOLDS COMPACTLY FOR lA^SiTORAGE-

VUTO CHEF-12" SttUARE ELECTRIC FRY PAH Shop and |l. Con-trplied tieat^over 6,66 entire' bottom fi^1^ — Compare l2rMaster control for per- MIRRO 10 CyP-PERCOtATOR 13. High done self bast- Famous Mirro "Kitchen . _ I ing cover - — ; Pride" completely amie- I4; Washes like a dish • - -matie-electri^percolator-, |5. Easy to-see cookings - ' Guaranteed fo^-one year by ^ONLY guide mfr. ' " p. Stay cool handle . |7. Made_^f~Alcoa Alum- inum. LIMITED _reg.-!2.95

" ' -—== ' ' ' — HY^FRY^UIOMATlCELECTftlC^-^ COOKER AND^

l^iS^J^^-**

f Bucks Make Your Dollars G* further Real " AtNewberrys

Real

George Good (or $1.00 toward the CANNON ASPEN purchase of any individual Buck item selling for $3.T)Qj>r •-72x90" BLANKET • .more. A-Luxurious Blend of 94% Rayon WITH • 6% Acrilan and Acrylic5 Fiber F0R 5.99

^^aS»«JK^^5B->^U»*''^»^ r i

-__' VRTRGFTELB SUN, THURttWr, FEBRUARYJO, 1964^ PAGE 7 '•. r

endrTuesdayFeb. 25 th

=rr|~ MON. TUESrTHURS . FRI 9r30 • 9:00 WED. 9.30 5.

SAT. 9:30-6: 1)0 7 —- .,--- . ~:-..

Ova I B r a i d e d R u g s

LATEX BACKED NON-SKID

THIS FANTASTICALLY-LOW ^_ vnymfW'. -Reg. $39.95 .

merKan Full Bolts 3&"-37"; ayon rues LONG WEAR1N^DECORATOR COLORS. CUSH IONED WmFNON-SKID FOAM RUBBER.

TOCHOUSE— jjfijf45% wool, 41% TTOH, LITTLE oth'er f fbre Content .REQUIRED. Fast cdlors also comes -hi:-20"xT2 •:-

th, 36-37" Cotton

LADIESLPANTIIS^ -REG. 390 EACH

REG; 39.97 REG. 89.95

JIMMY Little PRO PIERSALL'S BAT-A-ROUND LITTLE PR BAT-A-ROUND

5-PIECE DISH DRAINER oufographad AND SINK SET AT TOY DEPT. phofo of Rogtr Morli

OFFER Expires Tuesdoy-Feb. 25th § Dram Board or sooner if stock is gone. • Dish Drainer $1.67 • Sink and Stove-Mat- • Soap Dish.__• Sdjd separately • Sink Strainer. . This weeic'-s-teac "teaching degree . in Health ""Community " Health,., and Child in Morristown, N.J ;Children's_activities" that have carry-over- favorite -pass-the^lme=ln.-ther by DAYTON DATELLNE takes this dedicated young lady hold's - She pointed our that- good afTd PhysicjUEducationatTren- Grovyth and DeveloprnenuV-T-he "Country Home in Mountains'ide_valuelEor lelsure_Xime_enJQy_- sun activity. Roses -are her"" — the form 'of a valentine forth is conducive to learning health and good health condi- ton State Teachers College _flnal^phase of health-fnr-rhe: N J. The girls also conduct a ment. It should include-* favorite flower. ' •_ . • vignette of~ MrlT Dolores because one can feel the respect _ tions must be nurtured.-They where she actively participated schooj year closes with the' very popular "Child _£are"-health education progra'm that • • - -Howard, a ''sweetheart" of a These young students hold for cannot Be taken for granted. ln_.the"'GAA ^program, which Sophomore on "First Aid unit based on Dr. Spock's. book—enables thfrpV> ' VindgrcrnnH ' yics. Howard seconds the teacher the- gIFPs health Mrs. Howard."S-rre i,s admired Poor health and poor health con-— forms-.. the_,he.art of-Dayton's* and Civii-Defense.".Health ed- ^LRrjc_t:ic_aLpr_ep_aratlons. . ^ health habits__and "heaWtful, MedlcallSocletyjrf New Jersey and physical education depart- l l (,'labbbi_ b are wiuluiied .dltlonsmuse be Improved,—_ ti—glrlo.'~phyolcal. education ucation—is—far more—th"arr'a~ —Mrs.'—Howard, began, her.—living-practice's, " —--whpn-jr"^i ment at Jonathan Dayton Tie- with a minimum of personality possible. They .cannot be -tivities. subject in school—it is a vital teaching at Cape May High DoloFes__belongs to th"e- like-peace, is' the^tranquility. - gional High Schoolfor the past ^clashes and the optimum^ of neglected, or~ignored. For these •- The course of~study of. health force, dealing with~~real -pmS^School.—She--was. appointed_NJEA, NJAHPER, AAHP'ER of—order.' It is the achieved - twelve yeacs. I'Mrs. Howard" cooperation and efficiency. Jun- reasons, .health ^education - education which is drawn up by blems and real people. It-points girlis'- physical education, in- NEA, Nai^ Farm Women's harmony of Tfving "that results i_s a 'towering' personality with iors, Freshmen, "Seniors and" courses are essential in our Mr. John Mr-Brown.'Coordina-'the way to -betterrhealtrr and a- sunny disposition", -dcom- Sophomores—all benefit from schools. The "chief onrc-ome of tor of Health, PFysical-Educa- bet-t-ec=tivteg-fer- the'comblned years at the CaperShiriTelpecl~.com er ' s Club;' and. St. of many~ diverse, parts rtor- mented a petite young~fresh- health education is happy -and tion, Athletics, Driver Educa- citizenry'of AnTerica. All-ac- deyelop..thdevelop .the Dayton girls' ae—Patrick'ae—Patrick'Patrick':ss Cfiurch orchathani. __ _ man girl "as" she'1 gazed-with to present health education^ in a successful living, which^ every —tion, and Visual Aids, is di- tivities, whether undertaken tivity! program into_one_of the she ^nd—Art—ar^ ardent fans gether for the good of the'whole ._I~ the tall, slender, and palatable manner. '• man,' woman, -and. child 4n yided into four _nine wee! ~ gly or "in groups, depend finest*in—the state."Mrs. Ho=—oFBroaaWcryTheater and have Like peace,-tooj- good-health is \~very" cKarming teacher"wftosc Mrs. 'Howard feels that America hopes to attain. blocks ai dally instruction. The on health ward has served on evaluation seen and enjoyed_the current sometimes most appreciated ' •>'• . \ presence -makes G_-l just as "Health is_the esserice.of life- "A valentin¥'_vignette must- first nine week block is-de- Mrs. Howard explained that committees jind as master "Girl Who Cam^slo Supper", when-it has teenJost; and onGe • -bright and cheerful as-can be. the most, important thing irr-the-contain rflmance^-this —is-ae^roted to ^Junior Health and in- her group. s will visit thVfol- teacher for college student - and Arthur-Miller's "AfterThe lost it is" frequeftTly most dlf- ••• f : ' "Mrs. Howard is patient, un- world. it 15 -of deep concern, exceptionl Five years ago Miss eludes theor* y oL' D_rl_ :ver Ed^- lowing—~~ "instltuTi&Ss™ "in "ofder","teachers'." Doloresr-retufned'fo". Fair'.,. "Gardening"'"is"" 'HeF" ficult tO-xecapture:"—^^ •derstanding, ancThas a wonder - not'only ttoo. TndivTati-als '-and Dolores. JCendalt" met and' mar-; ucation_-and^^CiJrTen„-„,.),.., .^A PS,-,—.f- T.IHealt—-1.Uh. .<--that. 1he—r students'"shoul....-J --.i.-..,dJ ...=.wit-" the_clas's-room as health ed- ' ' ' - •- • — — .. , ful sense of humor, but she homes and communities, iui_riied the handsome —Mrl Art ProSlems". The-second nine- ness-"real problems" -being ucation-teacher last-year.-Her H also to our entire country.and Howard—^and \hey ljave been weekTilcick consists-of Fr55tr=—Jtealt with in the Senior class philosophy of • education is ing,"... another freshman girl to the world. The present phy"- aappilywed ever-since.jrheir man Health'and "Personal menta"n~jalBTprograrhTKessler_ based on the premise that alt~ :; r n ^V-olunteerecrFat.h« gloomily but sical fitness—piugiam spon—''ppldpnc .at 5 Oak Htll R ad—Health-and-Nutrition^-while_the institute and Rehabilitation high_ school girls : should- with a nice sense of levity! sored_uy_the late President, in Chatham is a- riappy home. ~thir.d.---and_^c'urrent nine-week' ^Center for Physisally Handi- have"" a health and physical ed--. ~ "Her classes"- are interesting ...indicates^ the importance or DolbresV' attended^\ Madison "block is devoted to Senior capped of All Ages at West-—ucation program that develops ed—heal ^ur—Amer-ic^rF^High^eho&l—and-receiyed-her Health arid—^'Mental Health,—Orghger NT"J GreystorrerPark—thelr^skite ano—knowiedge-'Of- another—co~ecl;-'-'but—how-can---— you express yourself when the ~ THIRD PERIOD I -ift-G-1 give your stock- Regional Releases Listing Of Honor Roll Students " Students of Springfield -Re- Wolosky, Rose Woods. .. . DavidGershen, Zelman Gersh- -Scobey, Paul Selinsky, Nancy- Hazel Zucker.'. gional who have'attained honor ^~ JUNIORS j -^- —win, Steven Ginsberg, Jeffrey Shatten, Ronald Smollnski, - FRESHMEN roll marks' for the_ third Micturer-Adlckman, "William Greenberg, Franlc.Haydu.Susan Maccla Spigel, Robert Wuertz. . Nathan "Batalion, Thomas marking pVriod were announced Althoff,—Barry Antonacci, John—Hendiin^—Maureen Higgins, _ - • SOPHOMORES/ Brownliej_Barbara Bruhlmaan", today•••by~the Guldarice~off,ice. Aragona... Arlene^ Arends,^ Linda.-HOdapp, Jack Holland, James Bender, David Black, WiUiam Bur-ftftt, James Can- oHthe school. " . —6ep.rg.e- Ax&y_rls, Lynne Dteae" lohnson^AllysonKalem. Cheryl^ Boyle,yLawfience non,. Patricia Cesta, RTclTard' 7 SENIORS _ .. Barham, Melanie Bauchner, Alan.Katz, Jeffrey-Katz, Lindlr^Buiiislf, Richard Cinquina,-Lin- Cohen, "Robert . Cohen, Iris BVrTy""" Black,. Arthur Robert Blythe, Marilyn Brown-_Kis"s7 Michael -Kraemer,- Ann da Crosett," Joseph DeChris- ConklTn,x 'Eileen-" B'uehrer, Thorn as BurnsT-PataEa^" Iie7 J.Terr.i Chotiner, Joan -Machln.', ~r ' :; ''- 'Topher;—Michael' Deita; ndith rie-Jo Frank, Susan Fried, . Cain,' Terrif Caine, Ann Marie^Clngar. DavJd^Cohen, Carolyn——Also,'DavidMacMillan, Tina Edelsrein.Xiridar Enz.^jeffrey • Ronald. Fry,, Mark. Gladstone, - parberry, Meredith Chotiner, Cowles, Barbara .Damlaho, Marzell; .lames. MattieT; Carol FeldmanFld , MMar y FklFranklini , MMax- . RobeRobertt GleitsmanGleitsmannn , Wayne Hollis Cox. Peter Creede, Susan "(Jrace Del Campo, Patricia Matturro, Maureen McGevna, - ine , DavHUollander. 1ATH MAH Cunningham^ Gerard Dehner, Dessewffy, William Dietmeier, Christine Mindas, Richard Barry iawrence^ Johnson, V»lue»" to %*S»= Gregory-Del Corso,-Carole De- Jane Driscoll. Moore,. Mark. Muller, Ellen diner, Carla Gerstein. . AnSrea Jones, JeannetteKalem, Oddi vinsky,_ David' Devore, Anita- Alsor-El-len Farb, Marguerite Parker, Suzanne Perker, Joan Also; Laurie ""TGoodman, Linda Kalet— Susan -£oplik, Diamond, Bernice Doerr, Judy- li Franzese, . Rawltz, Hov/ard Roller, Diane Rhodd Greenfelt, Evelyn Grim-' Mary Leone, Steven Loprlte, Emmert. -=- - .sKpfe Steven Hartz, j -v ^jacobgon;-. —Ann • -Karneenj; To Me barthT-lra Piller.^_irr..,!;..,:....z -..-_Ai?9.i.::- Barbara .,_Ragucci,^ : ~^~~ ' ' 1:-''_ .Kayerick.. _"Carol-' ~RaTrg~ftEfatfgRS Topic at- Fair WT IR and a farmer "-p'ea'n- °i ATso-i',-Gail_.P.ost, Mary.Lou "Joanne ..Royal,-Susan S'esgTrtt; "f^ram^^oWTff^^vT^^mfe^^0"^^^^ .-.Pnfkhiser.; Arthur- Seli-koff. Gary Simps<5n: Lipfert, Harriet Lips'chultz.' ground, of race xelations-which The "-meeting, /ppen.-To^all. Mary Ann Raciop.pL-iifl(|a^S^.dnie^; Stevens,. WiUiamSto- — -Also, JoAnn "Maczak, Ad- has lead'up'"to7ToBay's Negro'- Springfield--residents,^will fre . Reisbegg, Stewart Rosan, Rona meyerT Frederick Title, Judith - • rienne:- rM-arder^John-Me^e—-White* relatiorisHpTwiU, be the—held -at StlSTp.m/atjheTemple ' Rbth.jSusan ScheGhter', Jacuita Waldt; Karen WassermanV. "dith: Barbara~T\4iele. 'Barbara', topic 'of-thetaTk at-the Spring-— Beth Ahm"audit&rium, Baltusrol Smolinski, MarciaSolkoffJLes'j^J^aren Webec,. BarbaralWein-r Moor-ej Susan Picone, Barbara^ field Fair HousingComjnittee's Wayr ——..'./;_ '-•-'•.' He^-fitarkf 'Judy. Steinhoff^Bar-^bel, Weil Weinb.er^gr. Shacon^. PopefT S tev en'Rabinowicz, general meeting-nextThursday,-^- The problems in race fela- bara Tropp, Robert.'Wa'ldmaTi, Weisspian, InaWhite, Lawrence "Hafcla" Rosenthal, Kathleen -Feb. 277 .'' '_- ' riPTis -today, according io~Mr. ' DianeTWysocki,DavidYuckmariL Wolosky; . Rusiniak,-" Betty Russo, LloyJl— Speaking- "will be George Goodman, are basically dtre to SOMETHING FOR NOTHING -SchaefSx, Dianne Spiegef, Mar- ."GoodmanTT public. affairs-di^__the fact that when-many white fHa~Tafel7"SusaTr\VehTlBriTwiri rector of Harlem'-rtdio station" people talk with-Negroes, they. ^ listen to what the Ne; DOES IT! -We will elfer /is really' saying. Mr. Goodman . will explore^tbe-effects of this — z : "apparent Trits^matching -ln 4n=' -you +h«-riit)tt-b«t-t1itngra-chaiie«-to-cafry-off-tom»-Very- . -terrae-ial .cpnver"satipns~ilf_Kis i fine aroarugirafour actual.cost or~l»5i. Moit art dii- tEe7probleTns~a Negro facepin- attempting to find suitable hous -con+iira ing for his family. ^Mfi GOTdman,' a natifinally_ all'are darn good buy*. Help ut make room-for-fftrTTew- known aulliuiityun die-integral -••ttrfd* unujuaJ, rt» afcvolute in area-rugs. Mott ona of a •—tiorr .movement, -appeared last. WASH'N WEAR week on thlTE'liahnel 13 discus , kind and limited quantify of course.- sion^prograrfT7~"The• Gity", in=^ which the New.York'school sitr VtxcluSive —-• =iatexPaint uat-ion was discussed.-Epllowing— >ftcrypolyrene •• 5. 4_x 6 — Reg. IW His talk Thursday, a questioa- — "temjula! IJs'e —and - answer, open-discussion brush or roller.1 session will be held. Dries in 20 min NOW 7.00 To 60.00 ,tcTs4ttny- beauty^—t Ceilings!^- _ lOdorless. Covely, LEGAL 1TOTTCES scrubbable colors! .6.55 gal.

ESTATE OF HARRY J. DOYLE, also ._ ;uburban known as HARRY JOSEPH DOYLE, Dg-

Pursuant to the order- of MARY C. colors. Easy-to apply — _ •_• Reg. £70 qt. KAN\NE, Surrogate of the Countfof Un- :clean ufrwith.«ap and water ~ mode on the Iaurteenth_dfly of Feb-..-^-,— , upon the applteatlonoftho- ~ CARPETS undersigned, as_Execytrix! of the estate of ^ere^iveflto»rtffi - creditors of said deceased to exfilmrto the er under oath-oc-afflFmatlon-theiC

will be-lojrever

^^ '—~—.1.IJ': /I Els"le*Eyely-n Doyle j : : "SWn • moneyT^eTryo^7have-a-Mrs-t-St-ate-Baftk-&J ieG fcCredit Account" en, Attorney.. — 41 Mountain Ave. ^ J?I SLmply-apply for. a line of credit from as little as $360 to as much as Springfield, N.J.- """-> • 732 MORRIS TURNPIKE, SHORT HiUS '- Springfield Sun, February 20, 27, Mar. 5,12 Between A & P .1MB LJiLfl ., Pr.KrlPtlori Co«m»«c5 , 52,500, then you can write your own loans whenever a need arises. Fees: $19.20 & WoolwOrA . Vn O"dOaf FREE FAST DEIIVERY Final Clearance! _~ -Stop in or mail this, coirpon for complete detaiis. Sandmeier Girls Exclusive Agent '"•ST79C 3 days only Jhurs., Fri. &,Sat .- Mail this coupon to: Weekend At Form : for - Girl Scout Troop No. 772 Russell Stover THE FIRST STATE BANK, 1930 Morris Ave., Union,, N.J. oPThelma L. Sandmeier School,,. Springfield, spent Lincoln's Candies..;„. ttCOKBIC Please send information on First State's Check-Credit PJan Birthday at the Hudson Guild Farm, Andoyer. • .' . Reg. 1.35 -The trciop of 5th graders NAME .1 1 spent the day hiking, ice skating Skin Creim *-*c.*;l andjrplicking in theshoy/. They : STREET •;..•.;;.. - v; _,•;•• jrjavieled by bus ..accornpanied J 100 ."'" CITY ZONE STATE by their leader's, Mrs. Irwin Weinberg" -and Mrs. Martin' Vogt.. • Previous , to their outing, Juniors • Teens • Children's • Fashions these busy young ladies fin-" NEVER ished a Valentine Service Pro- BUY FILM A6AINI Coats • Suits • Dresses FIRST STATE BANK, OF UNION ject. They made tray favors^ e for Valentine's Day for hos- ' FREE! iM 9. 1.49 Snow Suits • Jackets Sportswear UNION NEW IEK.SEY pitalized children. Of Film With Every . All Sales Final ' Cash & Carry Helping -.these Scouts work.. _^ RoH Developed to\yard their toy maker Badge 127-120-620 are Mrs. Philip Goldhammer, Mrs. M. Ogonowsky and Mrs. Reg. 1.35 Kayser MAIN OFFICE—Mouis Avenue at Buxke .Parkway TOWNLEY. BRANCH •• . HIGHWAY BRANCH. . The girls jare" also working Nylon Stockings —THE _Moxris_Avcnue_at Route 22. at on their Cooking Badge under SET— —" • " - • »* e Street Member Fedtral Dopojlt* Insurance corporation C 326 MIUBURN AVE., MILUURN- Getfand, Mrs. Walter Canter,' Telephone MUrdopk 8-4800 Mrs. M. Ogonowsky, Mrs. David Brown and Mrs. Joseph Segal.

,-^^^t^^- SPRINGFtELO-SUN, THURSDAY,

owns errrrari

and Loan Assocratton, is chair- studies,-later receiving a cer- sHITs as prober and evaluatpr ther offenses. seat with _rapable dedicated ' "It is m''H- i.':an 1 ever an— However, there is a two fold man.pf ihe legal commitjeejit tificate- from_the"-Rutgers Law and' not merely executioner as has .an added boost in exped- hands. " ~ricipated, iio'vcvf')- the job-is of representative community purpose to the* Magistrate's job "the Temple" Beth AhTTTand par-~ School. For hobbies hejikes to. in the_case.of a.traific violation. ience since he has two young- challenging an '• I Uke to get clergy. leaders, whcLserve an_as^he-must-assurrie a role of Judge Shernvan is not new to ticipates with hLsJaroihfiXSJS'a- sandwich" in an occasional- ~BuT as anyone who has been sters of -his' own. The Sherman inside of people."! • • ~ . instrumental purpose in making authority as well as counselor. public service. He served as an than and Isadore in. ajucrative m/ound on the links and .reading endowed with a traffic ticket- family resides at-303. Alden Thar -is. at'/jrnev Max Sher- recommendations in juvenile^ And of courserthat "role of au- -attorney for Springfield .town- building-contracting business riovels, __ . — .. knows, a sharp reprimand, fine Road. . _ cnthusiastically,. stated c:ases.. "Such .jpommittees-are thority_is bound to spell misr- ship from-1952-58.-In addition ev : 1 . „.. liz-nncc eii'gnpnsion bv the :Max Sherman!s-Zeal and un- -ro his full time-private lawprac- ^and_residential home ^ ^°P~—^maagggggg^g^ggtttKMWKM. ''upiiiiun u! Ins .ii'. thtTjaiagis-—fui imuTfur-souie peuple. ; magistrate is- strong tonic j_s _derstanding of his job seemingly tice, Sherman serves ascoure. position as SpnrtHfield Town- trate-,-andTplan tJ"S-vaiTmyself Deterrance of crirnTandpro- -Upon, graduation^from South-.P a preventive measure-for fur- Jill- the township's magistrate " selor for theGrestmontSavings ship "Magistrate. JudsfeSherman of sucTTcommittees", he said,^tecUonSof Society are_two^Ig side High School in Newark, assurried~the three vear-tf-frfT Judge Sherman- cpmmentecLelements in his job and~ptrnish^— Sherman entered Newark Uni- ^nr. i.ti j.-in. ], 2_ -•• that~there are many young peo-. ment often—has-to~be metedout - not-quit', user! to his new ; to accomplish these purposes. — work "and cornph?tion-of-his-la«~l "—title nf •"Ju';.'!'e"| the "-The -magistrate hears a wide "WHATEVER-tllBT-OCca- ~ami articulaiilStrerman'has dis- range 'of ca^esV-T-BTiging from sion it costs no more, covered tlv increased respon- '" ^'violations whictrencom- to hold youL_pirty. at !' Vx :'•' sibilities' have a'.lded even many "pass.a large shanfbitfle-weekly^L. N.J.'s foremost cabaret 1 "iTioi'L "'Jmi( s_L>n.tf) hi s~ crowded court docket, to matrimonial Dlexel 6-43Q0_ CLUB WANA _ "schedule. •iproblomot A'gtop sign violator .For Expert •. BllTTjTTdg(?"5TiFrm>n is a nuuT or jaywalker usually"means a Oil Bumer-Sew-ree—— FoftnlrrnfM. who likes to ki-ejThiisy, aryl tie i-ather Foutine set fine oF'pun- — contact our'banquet has foun>! "a tor jinly six weeks iver juvenile manager. • on tftc-job, .ihat lie. can derive cases or family or marriage -f^'i-T-"< '. __3-prJvate roois. ~T~eal satisfaction from probing problems—call for tremendous a-j. —-into thf-prbblums uLpuople who insight and evaluation;—~ BROADWAY floor show come Beiore mm in c-«urT and intshmgnt-and fines natur- -eyery-weeienil.. The only. getting to the roots of these ally cannot always bedetermin-- Schaible Oil CQ. show place for miles IM 'problems TrTo rtlerT 6 cleTe rm fne ed as effectual^deterrances of miles aroaml. ._ . " 192 Mountain Av«. the motivation ami origin of a further- offenses or curb con- • SEE.: particular criminal offense. tinuing problems. And it—ia-Tn- SPfelNSFIElD ; Judge Sherman is. a firm such a case as a matrimonial COJ)_^ TJjkL OIL • coki advocate of re,hahihtaticLft.pro- Another REAETY CORNER: salerproperty at 34 Rose Avenue, Springfield.- fold Metfred\.peHv problem where he must use his forHT. and Mrs. Sol Herman to Mr. ami MrsTTSseph B. Rile of Millburn. Mr. Rile grarfls foT'people who do make forHT. and Mrs. Sol H -- Budget Pl»n mistakes of a crimina*l nature. is connected, with the Criscietfello Construction uompany-of-N^wark-and-is-a HEADQUARTERS BIG SCOOP _ r Chontbir of Cammltct °and is not satisfied, until he can pie in the Springfield-area, not member of Local-526. This sale iyas' attanged by Barbara K. Heide, an^ssociate — JUOt) SPRINCI II ID AVI in the juvenile eategory but in .~8T. LOUIS- (UPIT — The St.' ; -get to the-bottom of a problem- r Louis-based Peabody Coal Com-- of ANNE SYLVESTER'S REALTY CORNER. __ " and TTialc? a recommenciatioji, the 18-21 age group . who; are pany soon will boast what is SXich as recreaiioiwlfvpoirrams, defiriitely~Tn.need of guidance.' being Billed as the world's larg- psychiatric care, miirnage The sHprt astute looking Judge est ".shovel" 'to dig coal. =Ptc7~3s- person-as beingjhe ._-The^MarJcrLshovel Company care fut; th mild unassumingrfatheFly type of Ohio is building- ihe shovel-. The Judge was quick to ex- and his faee shows the earnest whicli_will have a —digging" plain that the Magistrate "dan't interest-that he keenly holds capacity 74 per cent larger than .•be God but must look to other in"waSfiiig--_.to help people-and "Those in use now. ___-^ ItS i sources of recominendatiQTrand getting to- the roaxs of _their -Thg-shnvpl will f;t-Brid VltglTfr help. He cited the work of the troubles. than a 21-story buiidirtgr^Trd- each bite into rock would filj_a_ six-room house. The-slze of the shovel will enable it to deposit its load a football field .and a half away from the digging . GUESS THE WEIGHT OF THIS GIANT • a y 490,000 POOLS NEW YORK JVPV — More don't thaivj69,000 n e'w -swimming pools were btittt in the U.S. dur- ing_ 1963, representing a record shop $1 billion (b), according to ~*f. This was a ?0.percent increases over-1962^and-biings the total numbeirof pools jn thisr country_f to ,490,000 against 10.800 exact- Iy-15~years-ago. -~==l=i-. — 'Y' Open House MORRISON^SIWF YoutltProgran^^ "Edward.Ewen,. GeneralTSec- retaryr-announ^ed-record - -breaking: participation ihT"Y" -week-activities which concluded —with more than three'thousand youngsters and adults taking Cadillac Of Deli part in the OpenHousepfogram at the "Y" recently, ~ "Robert Fuller, "chairman -of rri of Prices You Can the ''Y" week committee, ex- ~pressed his pleasSfe-with thg response-on the part"of non- member youffiOrBb'took -P.art__ in the Buddy Day program ahd- The Closest Estimate WINS the response of parents and - Jriends-to-the various programs oTfered during tRS day. And Registerjfoui^Guess ^^Activities were planned from No Obligation - just |—8:45 in. the morning untillOWO Contest and Prices effective at M illburn Mail Store only at night. Two large chpreh-yo'uth ~ groups participated in. gym- swihv^dancing-ahd gameTTOom activities at night which also featured the start of a new Top Quality Kosher series ef_-l!Y"~square -dance "Wessons. 7ir=~~~~Z^_-=^---r.. Mambers-of—the-^sTB Pad .„ - nf Dirsctors—werfi=^on~han

CUiiensPMtting "ThorKrFri., Sal., & Sun. Only , Development^Gfoup h 1 • • • H ElBHMH Wans are underway for the , establishment of a non-parti- san, citizens graup to be ^con- •a cerned with developments' In',. Vova Sfcotia Springfield.. A spokesman ex- plained purpose of the organ- • CORNED BEEF • • PASTRAMI * ization would be to serve as LOX LOX a "watchdog" or "vigilante" . • I • xaa.' 3ui.Ii' mira- tion with town-wide represent- ation might be able to conside'r • such things as zoning questions Ib objectively, it was pointed out," »> i I - %..lb. _ '.i Ib. Organization of the, commit- • tee 'is being spearheaded :by- ; • Thuri., fri-i Sat., * Son. Only- Mrs.1 Bernlce Friedman of 119 Thurs., Fri., S«»., * S'on. \ .,"frli Sat, I Suni Only "' Pitt Rd., Alvin Schneider of J 383 Meisel Ave., and Irwin Bross of 65 Evergreen Ave,' Interested citizens are request- ed_to, contact, any-of these resi- dents. Local Girl Named When you do shop by phon-e, you don't have to spend twenty minutes getting the. kids" Mt. Ida Class Exec Miss Karen Cole, of 32 Reo. . bundled up. And you don't have to cope with wood Rd.- in Springfield, has what. comes~1ater: .drrppy~rai:nroats;-rttnny- "KeiT"elened-Sec,retary-of-the— noses, snowy boots, tracked-up rugs, chapped freshman class at Mount Ida Junior College; Newton.Centre, , Millbum Mall * Millburn Ave. & Vaux Hall Rd. all sorts-of wet clothes drying in executive secretarial course^an NEW JERSEY BEU (. bathroomrGqod idea? Mount Ida. SPRLNGFIELD SUN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1964

for 1963 —njta l_tBi_lflfi SYNOPSIS OF MINUTES OF-BECULAR , AuSlt reportJ-ot Ihe Surrogate's Office, _ '-.As S)o_d|fled By • MEETINC OF-THE-tiNlON COUNTiUJOARD ResHKf'i'Of [Ice and of the County fines-— ' ' —±-~ Ail••Trajailcrs -OF_rCHOSEN FREEHOLDERS HELD ON "Magistrate Courts _ .-

Regular Meeting -of-the-fnion County T-reisurer's'.Office onH-^nff Jm^_ Board o( Health— Board of Chosen Freeholders was held -.—Weitarc Fund. .•- • . -1 -Z'i-"^''— nd Wages it' the Court House. Elizabeth, N.J., -on DEPARTMENT 'OF PUBLI.C"HEALTH,. Thursday, December 19,. 1963 aull A.Mr-' -—WELFARE & EDUCATION:' ~7Ron-"Call—showed'-the^(oUowing77nem=— pg Other Expenses bers present: - Freeholders Donohufl^Dunn, of-Visiting Nurse - Conttacl Fofrester, 'McDonough, Moofe.-Osborne, olution recommeivllng. automatic doors be Administration c>[ Public Assistance Rinaldo, Tiller and DirectapStemmer pre- Installed for the safe a.nd proper entrance Salaries anJ Wages " - - 1,900.00. 1,850.00 1,850.00 siding. Also ip_rese_ni were: County Treas- .and-egreas— of—wheel chalrs-and trU-CHs' Other Expenses "200.00' -2oc..-oo • i 17L84 urer Bailey,^Asst.'Tounty TreasurerSle- through an enclosed passageway frorn the." Public Assistance (State- Aid Agreement) 2,000.00 3,150.00 3,1-50.00 nlcki, Asst*. County-Attorney Bauer, Supt. main building to the- nowlyLsO-bed-nurslng — It u hcTcby-rerti.'u--"n,at :ric k..Vrt .''•>•'• <" Mi ntal Health Progra of Public Works De Luca, Secy, to the Supt. unit. - —_ - ' . f ttir governing fto-y or. Urc liir. lay ' ' '•' : 'Jr> nth..r of Public'Works Lapp.'CountyEngtncer Dav-— St. James Methodist Church, requesting use of-parking lot'on South Broad Street , m and DBputy~CleTirAniston, also Super- visor of Roads TomisuJo. for their parishioners. 1 Following resolutions - Introduced and oiT This Uth day jiFcbruar,, IW4 RLCREATIO.N AND EDUCATION Prayer and salute to the Flag. roll call adopted: Parks and.Playgrounds Free]iolo>r McDonough made a .motion II 19 hereby tcrtllu-J^iat !l;..--lii.!i:i: ar.nexc : 'I'-r'.'Io a-. ^••.•:f, •• J-i- J ,' Jia lanes and. Wages- that the minutes of the-meeting c Freeholder Forrester for.Dept. of I letlth, • lerk of the govtramp, body.'-lharall additions art raxv-l ai|.: tl-.at al. slali-r •. -.Other Expenses •bar 7, -^963, be approved, which motion lf and Education, declaring an emer- KKEPERICK J.STEFANY wtis— duiv seconded • bv Freeholder- Moore. gency exists, which will not.admit of the • Anniversary or Hollda and on roH'cal] shbweQ 6 members voting. and authorizing Dor-0-Matlcj5f New York, Certified by rrv Other Expenses 1T500.00 in-tho afflrmatLVBTand'One member, Free- Inc., to immediately proceed with the Instal- This llth day of l-chm.-iry, IVhA Hamrrnance ol l-ree Public LibT holder Dunn-pass.lng. .. ° latloh of automatic doors at the John E, ' ., I ()( ATt'lU,! 1 .\UIl< 5j/,66O,OO ~ Salaries and Wagea COMMUNICATIONS ' Runnells Hospital for Cheat Uise«ses~for -S't-ction 1.. ^_ - . . /_ .. — • . QlitA Expenses ^_g|j_ l:ocal Hulf'.e! «f thi- TOWNSHIP '•! M'HiNf Mil' 1 I r. l-^uiy .: i:Ni(,IV-'.. ^^^ _ : referred to: ." * - Freeholder ^Forrester for Department of . Ro it KeToivcd, that (fi V RLCREATION AND EDUCATION... DEPARTMENT OF PL-BLIOAFFAIRS: Heai'th, Welfare ind Education, engaging ' Be TFl-urther Regtrlvrd-THhai ^ai ' I'n :..'c-J. \-*l im.'.l.i .i :-.^ Maintenance of FreeTAiblic Library -StaleAid 1,374.00 1.009.48 Jack R. Karel, Deputy Coordinator of the film of Suplec, Clooney and Co., Cer- Th ^i _ 1,046,014.00— py p, y o., Cer - Total Operations 5.314.00 Tfh 1,000.00 Clvil DTfehse Ei Disaster—Control, rec- rrfled T'ubllc Accountants, to review the pur- (fj) Connn r,ouu.uo _ qmm.endlng^appointment of a Deputy Med- chasing procedures; at John E. Rutinells Rkl'ORtll-.O VOTIi 1.047 014.00 1,046,314.00 ;'973,286.14 Total Operations- Including Contingent Ica1~Co~oYdinalor for liospljal Servlees^—Hospital and to rapor-t-upon same. ' Ayes . Detail: _ "TJEPTRTHENT OF REVENLE S, FINANCE: Freeholder Forrester lor Department ol 606,480.26 Salaries and Wages 628.874.52 L'nion-_County_Mci5qultO—Extermination —HeaWt;—VVelhire—sfltl-Edueationr-accepttng Nntirt^js hrreby given t.'.ai -.hr hmltjc-t in ! tax rrsuluuunwas-appjuveJ :•'.' :: i' 1 Other Expenses Commission, submitting report of work, Md ol Chain Curtain Stores, Inc., for 36C..805.88 3U»;y-j( Union, un February II 1V-4. (Inc luding_Conl ingent) methods and expenditures for-.mosquito the furnishing of fireproof drapes and ven- {C) C.apual Itnprcivemejus ^control work in-lrnlGn-Goumy-for-ihe-!-!^ 'ellan tilings for the Jsjiin E. Runnells Hos- •, which time, am! fjlaco jihjLeiinrt<; :r, Knir.i^-i.-.vr^-i—'-t-nr-rt-t-!••?.< • ipual Improvement Fond—-- cal year-f-rom October 1, 19b2_iQ_Sjjpt. 30, • pital a'nd granting permission'to Harry C. persons. .'V^ ' • —— JTotal Ctfpital Improvements ! 1963. • ' ' ' '".."' Partridge, Jr,, ind Sonsi lnc.jjb"withdraw " - _- _. ^ • • [ > -=-(D) Municipal Debt Service • • • — • , DEPARTMENT OF PLJLU£- HEALTH, his bid." • '•....- 'SL'MMAKYt7r-ri:nHL-N'I fUM'J S!:C I MS nf>"\f'l •«( >M.lj [-.[''. X.lJl Payment of Bond principal' — - " 40,000.0t) 40,000.00 40,000.00 40,000.00 - WELFARE &.EBUCAX10N-_ : . rEreelioider.'Mobre tor.Departmentol pur- Cent-ral A[)pff7pnaTfor.s " ' ^ ftyrtient. of Bond Anticipatlon~and~Capual Notes- ' 18,275.00— - Township ol--.Sprinplield, advising their chases and' Public -Proirertv. -accentmc 9,200.00 1,500.00-: "~1, Municipal F'urpfjst's .1 ,., . . 1,213,128.70 S 1.1 "".91 1.00 • Interest on Bonds 11,480,00 12,700.00 10,700.00 - Btrafd of Health-is-vttsiiy-interested in'our lowest quotations (oc various aiuumoblles,;. 2,5O0.Q[L - 4,199.79 30.21 3. Reserve for fir >JI)ecu- i T^^-'P^ITr^TTTti^V' ^.4.T 2.1H Interest on Notes- -' _ 3,000,00 4.500.00 proposed program-lbx^SalJin oral vaccine, vans ajvi. (ruckb (oji the CquntyT^use. 4. .Total General AppTopri.i!i<.r.s ~ '. Total Municipal Debt Service ' 72,755.00 - 55,200.00 55,200.00 53,399.79 1,800.21 Schiavone Construction Co,, with refer- Freeholder Moorelor Depi.-of Purchases . 5. LcSSr^TTtrnpatc^Rtvifiiucs WHifr TIi.i:. <. u;;;i:;l |i^;xr!-. Fax (L) Deferred Charges and Statutory Expenditures- ence to certain catch basin3~that~tiTOSt be and Public Properw, rejecting blUsreceiv- 1 7 1 {I.e. Surplus, JvliiCfNaniTius _R_< vcimS ar; ' Kt^fi" " ''Tor. : h hv'i^i: t 1 iv s) _ Municipal " '" ~ """" ' '"raised"by"Trec!~D7 Baunvarfn-.ind~a~com^ dffh 6. {)if-(&p«ne«4-A mount- t'i be-" kaiser! liv ' f-• •. f s EwSi^pp-rt uf Mumc ipal Hi; :,:-.4 (as : \. , f-K II., l,;: "I .i - . ^ H5J ,255. I Emergency Authorizations 3,000.00 3,000.00 3,000.00 lng his position relative to the catch basins- : Workers, Plumbers anj Operating En- ~~ Deferred Charges to future-Taxation - .. ai_the John'E. Runnells Hospitaii^^ , gjneers in the Court House and authoris- ~ " SLMM.VUY Of- ]9M API'KOI'RIATIONS i Xl'LNDi .O'AMJ Kt Si I Not Bonded . — "PEPAJITMENT OF ROADS "L BRIDGES: ing Committee to advertise for new bids '• EviTgrt.'t.'ii Avc. auJ SoutlvSprtngjield-Aver-—'•—=== — Guy—oi—SuroFBWT—andottng Ordtnance-- Swl'ir Peal Lxplanatum nt "At^nn>priario;)s;for Sidewalks ...... 222."70 _^_atn.endtng the Traffic Ordinance. Freeholder Moore lor Dept. of Purchases Utility " " ' —. . "Other Lxpenses" (2J-STATLTORY EXPENDITURES: Boro of ^RoseJJa, enclosing petition tued and Public .Property,.- accepting low bid of Budgt-t ApproprlatnVis - The amounts apprnpnated under the trrle-tJ! "Other Coninbutlon.to: with the Boro Clerk relative iu the "traffic ~Aibans Bar and Restaurant Supply, Ellza- Adopted Budget \ 1.351,346, IB - ' L xpe rises " a i-e fn rope rating costs other than 'Salaries Public Employees' Retirement Syi-tem 16,475.00 14,500.00 un Wood Avenue, " "• -• -^^ IjethT'for furnibhint; one JDishwn^her, to the ^.System (n.A.gJ ) '-^ * =3.000.00 7,500.00 Township olgcorcKprarns, enclosing res- Jail,'for the sum of $2,975,00. Added by Chapter 159,'• Suir.t- u! the items included-in "Other Expenses" Cons'oTidated Police and Fi men's Pension olution"'iT5kTng~thrs"Board, to include in its Freeholder Moore foT department of 1,192.40 are: • - . . -t.-« - Fund ' _• _ -•••• . 6,500.00 6,500.00 6;SO0.00 .5,307/60 1964 budget/an amount for a new bridge on Purchases- and Public. Property, accepting" Total Apprupriancins \ I,3»l,a4».ia ^Material, supplies "a'nd-rortfcnT^ie-blr equipment. Police and-"FIremen's Retirement System. Cooper Street, . low bid of MedjJCal-Physicfans and Hospital' 31,700.00 E-xnenditures: .< Repairs and maintenance of. buildings, ecjuTpnient, 35,000.00 34,700.00 Division of Motor Vehicles, reference Co.. Elizabeth, in the sum of $8,050. for . Paid or Chargea—• 1,272 312.84 46,191. U(> rxjads, vie, I —.Pensions: —=— to channelizaii^b UH Cenrra] Ave., between furnishing one Powerclave Sterilizer to the ^- Reserved • ~ luy,5J.i.J4 1-.658.94 '' *'• r.m'r.irrnfl] _scrviccs fur garbage and trash re- Tax Collector^ = '.1,200.00 .: 1,200.00 90O00 • Rarltan Road" and Garden State Parkway, Cougty Jail. Total Expenditures ' "~_ nioval, fire hydrant service; etc, . , __ Total*Deterred Charges and Statutory Clark Township. . . Freeholder Moore for the Dept.'of Ad- v 34.705.27 and Unenpende' Bal- - —. Printing an.! aJveriisinf,, utility services, insurance Expenditures - Municipal 66,197.70 63,700.00 64,400.00 ; 29,694.73 ' _COUNTY ATTORNEY & BOARD OF ELEC- ministration*. approvmg"personnel actions., 1 ance-s Cancele-I l,l il,H46J8 jr)ti many other items essential to the service ren- " (H) Total General Appropriations-Tor Municipal ; fIONS: ' . • ._ in various departments. 1097533.34 * (leTeii"by municipal government.' "' _ _Etirposes'(Itenia 8 (A)_to_(G), inclusive) 1,213,28,7.70. ^ l,17O,914.O0_ 1,170,914.00 1,061,380.66- Engel Brothers, Inc., relative to the public .Freeholder Rinaldo for the Public Af- (M.)Jleserve for Uncollected Taxes i 206,595.26 210,932.18 210,932.18 2I0,932.lT fairs Department", 'authorizing the Director" • , /•j ; 1O9.53J.34 9. Total General Appropriations •' 1,419,882,96 - 1,381,846.18 1,381,8l,.]M,5S0.b5. a:i increase- of >52,299.57. _. Total Revenues DEPARTMENT OF PLRCH^SEStTPUBDC JjyLbounty. DEDICATED SOTKTPOOL UTILITY BUDGET - - -PROPERTY: Freeholder Tiller for the Committee o/ The indicated amc^unt tc.be raised ml9f>-j fo^Rcp'onal ihjM' S.h.r.ul |\jrpust-H i? 5873/,n5.-V7, an incrt-asc^of 5'iJ,51"(.66. Appropriated Expended 1963 The estimated amount io be- raised in 1964 for County Hurposi-s is >54(),O[)O,, an inimsc nf $23,716.32 ~ • Commission of the Blind, asking lor con- _the Whole, 'authorizing paymenl 13. APPROPRIATIONS FOR Swim Pool UTILITY Total for 1963 side ratiorTTor-a-venthng stand in The new to Pat McKally of Cranio rd, for a fox-bounty. The amount to be~allo\vcf! as crochet apamst the (9(»4 '-;•; f-.r Vt-Urai;s will bv i5O.no ;,,:: pavud tt. S14—15 in 1963, a,nd for Senior (or 1964 tor 1963 As Modified By Paid or Charged Reserved ed to $5AM in.Nf53. This cham-e •^lU^p'iult in an incn*.T£r 1:1 ifi^ 'l%-4 tax lr;-y af S2I.M9.0O. Court House Annex, ~ • Freeholder Tiller for the Committee of 4i All Transfers COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE: •the Whole, authorizing "payment of $5.00 "Cfiairmari, Dept. of A.\-M VSISOI- TAN RATIS Operating: to Thomas Wolfe of Scotch Plains, for a .— Salaries and Wages lie property; enclosing"copies of vital doc- -fox bounty. " ~~~ Other Expenses uments wlth-reference to Uie'inSiallatltfn of Freeholder TiHer foFThe Department of ~—Capital Improvements: fire doors in the County Jail, -by Fauly Kojids an3 Bridges, approving Ordinance Loral School Purposes 1 Regional High Sclutpf I'urposes . Capital-Improvement- Fund- _. Jail Building C6.,'also copies 6f com- of the City of Summit, insofar as~it aS- County Purposes _ £urchase of Land '" munlcations froni Led Kaplpwitz, Co.unty At- fects parking on County' Roads. Local MumcipaT Purposes Purchase ofEqu.ipment torney, addressed to RaymondTMoore and Freeholder Tiller for the" Department _Allovvancc-to_V£Cerans an-LScniof ___ er_vicei_'_ _.' ,- _Pauly Jail Building Co. ~ . . of Roadb and Bridges, accepting work of —- Leo Kaplowitz, County Attorney, asTffrig1—eons true ting a new reinfoeGod—concroto—^=-- Totals $ 7.0:1 56.87 Interest on Bonds ;•——.—^-R^siatcd to permit a'-propcr cprnparist'in with 19647-gi-\Tnfi vU-ec t-10 legislation cha'pRint;.the manner of grantlng'allowances to" Interest on,Notes_. for addltionarinvesHgaUue-staff. -_ bridge and related work on Wallace'Road. r :ges-and Statutory .Expenditures: . - ... Jjenry S,j\Vnght, making* certain_r_ec- ~near-Rose-Lane^-Summit, and authonzing- -.-'W.eran^anYScn.or.C.ttons. ~ . ' :c[^^WS\i^^^TU>.R^kl^' ' ' " •'• \ •'• •'T .-^- ._ STATUTORY' •••— omTnendations. " '-•••--"-'—-t' -~ ' ".'-firiivl—payment lii'the sum of.5S.6'49.35"wr*^"•'.', '-' - ~ ' ninni. 11 iiniMiiam 1 . --•'•-.i. --.,- . .... - Am.icipiiled --. . . . • Roahiea'rn. •, • '-,-—,- Social Security System (9.A7SJ,) -^ 500.65 " "99.35 ' Chairman, Uept. of Purchases and Public ' Dan-Bro Constructors Corp,,- after . the" _ • v ^-467191:06'*•._ '• 1,658.94. ~"'wKrif\"rn"PVF\n"s • '"—' ' ~—"•*• • —-•' ism. , \9b):^ casii LP 1963 .-TW.—T TotaTTTppropriaUons—r_—^^, -^-Rroperty-f advlsiTng'i]UoutionsWWP Tw/»)ygr*" VxpTrarin^'^or^ffl^aays-'frriiffritarg,-there&i~ . -: 'I, Surplus AnneWt-" --•'•• -'• " '— -• i IHu.uw.jjl) » l«U.O0O.Uji_.$ 180,000,00. for automobiles In Various-departments. FrmjlioMer Qbliornti lur Loiiiinitte?uf tlic •/ : : —^_, Dedicatiolrby Rider-N."J7Sp4OAT 1 ?39-"The dedicated revenues a'nuclpaied during*th,e year 1964 from DOG LICENSES are hereby an- Bids were recelvea lor tfie-following - Whole, extending best'wishes to Vincent _tlGipared as revenue and are.hereby appropriated-foE-lhe-purposes._tp^.which said revenue is dedicated by Statute or other, legal equip- L icfiiscs: •. ——for the year 196-1: - Furnishing • Bunker Carolan.-upan-hLS-reclremtJiU- -rr:9*n>.n(i ;,' 7.1UD.00 7,000.00 Almhnhr Rrv 1 C Fuel Oil to the Court House and John . ~. Freeholder Osborne for Department,6f 7,200.00 8', 130.25' -•^-^ — . _.^i • - -' j-- , _ APPFNmv TO RltrmFT STATEMENT „-,v^- , Other -^ „ J>^.._ ". r E. Kunnells Hospital; heating--oilnpiedium-- Revehue- and—F4nancc,—approving-^paymeuL-J- Kces ami lJtrm to the v^arious-€OTncy;lacatieiis;ityp.e\vrite.r_ of a pension, to Vincent Carolan upon- nspectlons; gasoline for the County: Main- his retirement-on i^oc, 31, 1963, Sjld pen- . ;-—. CURRENT FUND BALANCE SHEpt ^^* 1 OPERATIONS AND CHANCE IN CURRENT SURPLUS . .a,ining and servicing Uniforms to the Build- sion to be effective Jan. 1, 1964, a_t, the — .""I DECEMBER 31,1963 .__ ' ml-.Maintenance- workers, pi Limbers, .and op- rate of one-half of the salary received by ASSETS - = -~r--^ ZZ.^ •• YEAR 1963 YEAR I962_ ( 5.-IU0.O0 ' 6,248.(10 - Surplus Balance ' - ^^ er.itiiiL' engines rs^ in_ the Court House; him at riTCTTrmc of- retirement, \Vliich is 7r77l^0^-~^^7;721.00- Cash and Investments 1.52&.O49.24 _. ^_Wlndo.w_CIeaning; (urnlshlng'3V000 loaves $3,250,00 per annum. -m Statc.Ro.id.Aui Formula \-\wd State Road Aid Allotments '. January 1st ~ 299.U6.03 271,924.62 1,374.00 1,609.48 L of bread,, more or, less, per month to the ^^ Freeholder Osborne IOT DuptTul Kev- State 1 ihrary Aid - ^Runnells—Hospital, and_the_Couxt_tlause. H63"appropriations-.— — — Interest and Cos 15*on As's^ssrm'nts ~ " Tax fltle'Llens Receivable ' 747.00 * —Current Taxes -•— r "12,900.1)0 4.669,36 •{Percentagecollectei Also bids ton.new roofing-and sheet metal—- Freeholder Osborne lor Dept. of ReVeniiiTT^ _—Parking Mt'iers „ .——~ '_ 3,566.67 Property Acquired ty Tax Title LienZl! 1 " 3,500.00 -1963_96%, 1962 975g) " =work at the Road Dept., -Building;_£urjiish- and Iin^Tnce, approvuig-lrtlls, .^> set iurth, .Bus RfCfip* ; Taxes ^ — Liquidation- -. . 87,00000 Delinquent Taxes ' 75,'656.14 87^482.83. ing one Powerclaye sterilizerto-the Jail (or payment,'. ~ " -——-" ~~- Other Receivables • J ~ 3,754.64 ' 98,000.00 r ReveiitrerrtEt *J~ and furnishing one dishwasher to the Jail; -.There-being no further business to be con- Gross Receipts Taxes — " — Total Assets " '._. ""-"" 1,654)908.56 • Payments in Lieu of Cross, Receipts Taxes' - • Additions to Income " 39^,863.03 54O,635.17_ furnishing window) accessories. (Drape±.^~\s|dered "and upon motion of Freeholder . — ••f-i '•'PrivaU' Water Companies (R;S. S>t::i()A:-**Ji"et-srq.) 19,970.00-—"-" 20,996,00 . 19,981.91 . --TowI"Funds" _^__Jj.l97,132".59 3,972,028.26- anJ -Venetian Blinds) forjhe nursing unit Diinn, duly secondedby FreetroiderOsborner—- K -T - LIABILITIES, RESERVES ANDSURPLU5- r5uTt^ - Aid -Migliwny-Ligtmnj 1,50(1.00 - ' ~ l,5nOT3O- 1,769^10-, ^Cash Liabilities .-•,... 1,172,870.66 EXPENDITURES AND TAX ' ^- ' •—.," -"at the John E. RunneTls"Ho5pltal. K^l-~D]rectqiH:-btemiTffi"rf=afiC-lifir^=dw^inJ!ertng—r icncral Revenue Anticipatetl With Prior Wiiticn Consent Reserves Jor Receivables-^—: '• 128^(59^2 REQUIREMENTSl . . — - -•—-,-. ' -^worth Manufacturers As'soc, with reference adjourned.' '"" """ " •*." :' " • Surplus - ' - __~~ 353,178.58 • Municipal Approprla- ". 'to proposed Route ^278." Henry C. Part- Verbatim minutes' and tape recordlng-on ^^ -C'npual - IQ.QOQ.BO 10,000.00 tlons ;T L.17'0 ,-914.00 1,113^20-95 ridge,—Jr., and Soni. Inc^-requestlng their— file-ln-theXHtice. or the Clerk ofthe Board, — Trust Surplus ' _ Total Liabilities, Resvirves ^^ldforvenetimT^linds^nd^rape'rles^t-the--C^ur^-House>^Elizabeth;-N.J. _. , :- ,..^_ Total Miscellanepirs RtVenia^ . ___ ^-""295.591.00 __aacL-Surplus $1,654,908.56 - Local and Regional)" 2.149.375.09 2,027,844.38 John E. Runnells Hospital,-'be^wltH'dfa^n^ Next regular meetlng~Wtll=t«^lTeld=on==- .4. Receipts from DelinqtifntTaxes r— County Taxes (Including Township of Hillside, enclosing resolu- Tuesday, December 3), 1963 at 10 A.M. "464,215.40 ^5. Sub-Total Corieral Revenues (Hems 1, 2, 3 and"4) — •' Added Tax.Amounts) 522^62.51 Eg,jy rCHARLES E. RABlC, JR. —6» Amount—TO^be Raised by Taxes for. Support of'Mumcipal .Buil^t-i: School Tax LevjrUnpaid 1,IHS;558.68 Other Expenditures and - _ Plaza^-the^entlre"blpck»of grounds oFwHIch =ClerVofthe Board 1 - 70.031.50' _ (a) Local Tait for Municipal Purposes Including Reserve, for Uncollpcted Taxcs_~"l -849.291.96 " 854-.255.18 'Balance lncluded-in^ ^-^=—- — Deductlons-fcon Income 1,102.41 is located JhecBllTslde MMnlcJpai_BuildJllg^ Spr ; ' - Total Amount to be" Raised by Taxes foc-SiiJTportjOf-Miinicipal Butlgfl— • 964,491.97 Above 1 Total Expenditures' and Sun. February 20. 1964 '7—T-otal-Ceneral-Revenues- •',»- , , — ~^ - ' • " "' "~ 1,419,882.96 1,381,846^8 1,530,935.32 - "Cosh Liabilities^1—1.048,558.68 . Tax' Requirements 3;843,954.0i 3,675,912.23 - LessrExperiditures to be ~ L"~* _ Director Pro Tem Moore—advised the By virtue of tha ibbvc* stated Writ, to 1 PUNU-. APPROPRIATIONS • _ " Raised by FutureTaxes ^ ~ 3,000.00 Board that Dlre&tor Stemmer-Tias appolnt- me directed. I shall expose for Sile by ,\~~ roprutted—• " lixpentled 19i>3 ~- Total-Ad jus ted-"Experiditures- - - •' ed "Matthew "J. Rinaldo to serve-on the-fol- -Public Vendue in the Board of Chosen -^L SBNisRAt-AHPROPRlATIONS " - :: •_- {- "Total for-1963— . and .Tax Requirements 3,843,954.01 3,672,912.2i_ lowing committees: - Chairman, Depu'Ot Freeholders' Meeting Room, 3rd_Floor - ' — —for 1964 ' * ' for 196J- ; As rvT^tHficd By -Pind or Charged Surplus Balance — — — Union-County Court Home-Awiotr In-tfte—'• 353 178 58 Public Atfalrs Committee and a member of " - -.-1^- __ __ All Transfer?:— ~ December31sr- ~ f - 299,116.03 _: Dept. of RevenuTXnd'Finance and Dept, of City of Eliiabeth, N.J., on Wadneadty, the_ __ — Proposed Use of Current Fund Surplus in 1964.Budget . G f£KERXL~CJ)VE RNMENT Riblic Health, Welfare andj£d_ycation. 11th day of Mirth A.D., 1964, attwoj&lock' ' ~~ Administrative and-Bxccutive Surplus Balance _^ • in the afternoon of said day, all tha right, There being no further~faus7ness to be Salaries and Wages 25,000.110 29,700.00 29.7O".OO $ Z9,423c ft $ 276,88 — • December 31,1958-' 353,17lC5B~, title and Intel-eat of the above-named de- —-consldored-and-ypon-motion-of Freeholder— Other Expenses 24,550. (IJL 23,200.00 2J,200.00 17,887.62 6,312.38 Current; ' -' Tiller, duly seconded by TfSeholder Mc- ~fenda"n " FiriainciariSh l Administration -—. Anticipated tel964—~ t6^vlt^ " ' : - DonoughrDirector-Pro-TemMooredeclared— . • Salaries and Wages - '.-. ~" 6,:)nu.-oo ^ ^r- 6,TTi.46 86.54 ____Budget ' 210,000.00 Springfield Sun. February 20, 1964 -the meeting adjourned. ' _ • Airtha-fcJIowlnr-i Other B^penses 800:00 " 301.85 498.15 Surplus Balance- of land and pramliefl, (lerelnaltef'mofd _A*sscssment of Taxes Remaining 143,178.58 Verbatim minutes and tape recording on particularly deicrlbed, situate, lyingtnd —file In the-Off lce-oLJhjLCjerk-of the-Board, r- - Salaries ami Wages .' - li, 3 75.00 1.1,375.00 13,275.00 100.00 b*Vng_Jn the Township of"'Springfield, ' Other Expenses ' 2,150.00 2,150.00 209.44 Court House, Elizabeth, N.J. County of'Union, State of Newl^eraey. Collection of Taxes - SYNOPSIS OF MINUTES OF REGULAR appropri«lon and asking lor consWeralta —pinowlng resolutions - introduced «nd on Next regular~riieeting 'will~be~ held qn_ — BEGINNING Inthe aouthoafterly Una of 10,700.00 (or an allocation 0(^25,000.00 In the-RST- -,, . . .Thursday, December 19, l?63~"aHLl A.M.- Mountain Kv't. at a point distant-682' " Salaries and "Wages w.snO.no MEETING OF THE UNION COUNTY BOARD calUdopted CHARLES E -Other Expenses" . 877.48 122.52. • OF CHOSEN FREEHOLDERS HELD ON •"•dgeu __^ —— Freeholder Tiller (or Committee o(-the' — - RABiG. JRv northeasterly'from the intersection of laid 1,000.00 i of the Board Liquidation^ "Tax Ti tic .Liens anti ' DECEMBER 5, 1963 — Rutgers Slate University, submlnlngjhs whole, extehdlng sincere'sympathy to the llne.-of~Mountaln Ava, with the present Foreclosed Propugty- —-^Regular" Meeting of_the__Union County Mosquito fam"uy' Of Thtfmas J.Walsh. —--- .northeasterly llne-of^Hillside Ave, araT hosenr-ffeeliolders was held'aT •Freeholder. Dunn_for Committee of the " from~ihence runningi(i);8outh.44 degrees _.thc Court House, Elizabeth. N.J..or[_Thurar COfiTOfTTliBSFTHE'WHOtE = Whole, reBDlvln2_thal_the *DfrectO'r 'of " '"•"•*"' - f2lJiorth-47 dayT December's lorih

nB rs—to-take place dujjng JNlOtLCOUNTY^^lT gpcnrn^Dn-Satu'rdays'and certain hblldQys.. DOCKET-Na. M-Z553 83

27250". 00- ^ttoVrieyBauer, SlipCQfsEllliUerWorlcstergeT^Pi^^mm^oiie^^ tusef-'ina^WelcOui*- .laytti Other Expenses _i" "—15(100" 400^)0- 264.29" ~ 135*^ DeLuca.Clerk-of the Board-Rablg-antfDep—---theSiulliogqt oplrfiS-DnnlBKr3n j 1»4> ^ Local Assistance Planning Prci^ratn uty Clerk AlHston. —John Wnlezak and.Mrs. William Sheehan, members," Freeholders Dunn and Tiller, cess upon the dtfendd')[ in a. uidancc The Sheriff rsrtrvtnha right to adjourn --.-• Other Expenses . . l,,i:o.l» I.37O.0O . 1,366.68 ' *3.32 The Clerk stated In. the absence of" Di- making application to operate the snack voting in the .negative and four njembers, ' wllh' Rule 4:96.2 should not be inquired: this sale. — — Board of Adjustment . rector Stemmer, it would be necessary to bar. located in the Court House.' Freeholders Moore, McDonough, Osborne ' It is on tnt-3rd day ol January, 1964, — RALPH OR1SCELLO, Sheriff on motion orf Gerald M. Freuridllch. >t- Salaries and Wages — J,45(1.00 850.00 850.00 85^.00 . appoint a Director Pro Tern. Freeholder Mr. and Mrs. J.N, Shanley of Berkley and Rinaldo, voting- in the affirmative. Julius P. Lltwack, Atty. . torney for plaintiff. Other Expenses " 1,000.00 400.00 850.00' . 612.35 • 737'£5 Tiller • made a motion that Freeholder Heights,"relative to the Union County Park Director Pro Tem Moore-declared the res- Dj d SS CL-317-02 _ Shade Trees 4 ^—=^^- ' Moore be appointed as Director FVo Tem Commission expressing an Interest In their olution tabled. ^=SD1" ~ Ordered, that the, absent defendant do . • nswer the plaintilf'a complaint by serv- Springfield,Sun, Elb, 13, 20, 27-March J Salaries' and Wages " . " >v . 10.gp0.00 .6,"00,00 6,"00.00 6,300.53 39 9.4 7 which motion was duly seconded by Free- property and that theyare opposed to same. Freeholder Tiller for Committee of the F I! holder Mcponough. Roll call showed seven ing on_JUcJ:efore the 31st day of March, .. " H4.88" . . • - ^»-JOther Expenses . - -\ 2.550.00 4,200.00 4,200.00 J.365.48 83-1.52 The Elizabeth Times^advlslng they will Whole, authorizing the sum of $10.00 be f r members voting in the affirmative. ftart publlcatlQD-oXweetly newspaper on tiext? and fiiF h^r^ answer and proo "'. Industrial Committee ' ' \ paid to Donald Holler, as a bounty for the service in duplicate with the Clerk of the Salaries and Wages 120.00 Prayer and salute to the flag. ' JBn. 8,1964. . . jg destruction of a fox. _ OFFCEOF THE T6WNSH1PCLERK- Superior Court, State House Annex, Tren- TAKE NOTICE THAT at a meeting of •- Other Expenses . • • , .1,880.00 '2,000.00 • 2,000.00 1..859.61 \ .14.0,39 •" Lt COMMUNICATIONS v County Treasurer, ravising he has pur- Freeholder. Tiller for Depu of Admin- chased $100,000 U.S. Treasury Bill due Feb.*' ton, New Jersey,.In accordance with the the Township Committee of the Townslilp Insurance- ; .. • Following communications -receivedand istration, approving personnel action forms -rules of civil prac'tlce and procedure, and .13, 1964 at a basis of 3.55% for $99.102.64. of Springfield. held on February 11, W64, , Group Insurance Plans.for Employees 13,500.00 ,11,000,00 13.400.UO 13,353.80 . 46.20 referred to: "iirvairtous departments. ' in default thereof .auoh Judgmetv be ren-< Other Insurance Premiums " ' 27,700.00 23,500.00 23,500.00- 23,142.13 DEPT. OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS "'•'•• SurVogate Kinine, e'nclOBlngOithaoffour . approval was given to the application as "Freeholder Tiller,.for Dept of Adminlsy dered against her as the Court shell think* aubmltted'by Carmen S,-Catspano, as rec- • ;_R. Karel. M.D.. Acting Deputy COT clon, granting Longevity to Robert ye=" - «"»'»nl« "« }"'<• • " of Adlustment, Other Expenses • 8,000.00 8,000.00 ' 8,000.00 942.29 "brdlnator, relative to proposedCounty-WIde" ^Surrogate. T~~' ~ ' ! nezio. Building MalhteMfU!el>eptUlll»n, And it la further ordered, that utenotice for a variance to uae the premises for an Civil Defense, and Disaster Control' and Chairman, Dept. of Purqhaaes and Public 'Painter, In the Dept. of Public Works. of this order prescribed by law and the office building, located at 27 Unden Ave- . PUBLIC SAFETY •' . Police Radio Network, '. ' : Property, advising of bidi s receivedd fof r •Freeholder Tiller for the Depu of Pur- Fire ' . . SPECIAL- FLOOD CONTROL COMMITTEE furnishing Pharmacy Supplies to the John ' rules of this Court shall, wiihln-30 days nue, Slock 34, Lot-9, Springfield, N.J. chases & Public Property, resolving that hereafter, be published in the Springfield Salaries and Wages 105,150 n" 102,600.00 102,600.00 102,537.05 62.95 Boro of Fanwood,' enclosing resolution E, Runnel Is Hospital for the month of Said application Is on file In the Office of bids heretofore' advertized to be offered Sun, i newspaper printed atSprlngfield, in Other Expenses IB.000.00 19,280.00 19,280.00 16,046.32 3,233.68 opposin-*,,.—^g .._Assembl„ y, —BU I _8_3 ..for. financinog December and alao for furnishing of meats the Township Clerk and Is available for for lthe furnishing of certain furnishings this State, for four weeks, successively, 26,950.00 . 26,799.65 150.35 of Flood Control Projects by the County. , - and meat products to the Jail for the month '" "°. •»«»'»»»'• -* "" "'•* •"••""••'.?- public Inspection. ' Fire Hydrant Service • . , 28,000.00., . . • 29,000.00 r ' at least once* In every week; and lc is Police DEPT. OF ROADS 8, BRIDGES " ' of Decemtrr • • " " • • ••'•- '^ e^Pment for the John E. Rtinnells ,: Eleonore H,' Worthlngton McH^lupt., of.Weights ;. fc. Measures, ""P"'1 on P^.y. Dec. 6.1963 at U A.M., further • Salaries' and Wages ' " 233,9O0.0fi~ ' ?232,100.00 230,600.00 223,357,87 7.242J3 . State Highway Depu, relative to Juris- Township Clerk be ind the same shall not be accepted it '-*;' Ordered, .thit aervlca upon th« defend- 1 1 diction, maintenance and control of Rahway advising there were no solid fuel licenses February 20, 1964, Springfield Sim : - Other Expenses 23,710.00 .. j 25 ,O00.0O 26,500.00 15,354.12 11,145.88 that time, and that the bidders submitting ant of the complaint and of this order as Avenue - Middlesex County andWoodbrldge or plates' issued during the month of No- Fees: 14.90 - Traffic Control (Sohool Guards) bids be so notified and authorizing the Depu service substituted tor personal service Road - Union County. vember and enclosing hla monthly report. Salaries and Wages i 33,000.00 ' i 30,900.00' 29,85.0.00 27,979:90 1.870.1Q to Immediately advertise for new bids for Df process within th. State be made w't* - / "V Other Expenses 3,800.00 ' 4,000.00 4,000.00 3,118.48 881.52 Borough of New -Providence, expressing Various communications and personnel In thirty days hereafter, upon H. Kirch- . » NOTICE TO BIDDERS appreciation for the expedltlous'Jobthatwas action forms were received from Eugem - Municipal Court ,J . ,r . J \t* ,-r- vm .n c. m».»* Freeholder Rinaldo for Committee of the gessner, uncle of the defendant at 2508 SEALED PROPOSALS will be received Salaries and Wages , ' " 7,900.00 ' '71450.00 7,450.00 7,447.77 2.23 done In connection with the improvement South Mllmar, Sarssota, Florida, person- until 2:00 P.M. onThursdsy,Msrchl2,1964, Other Expenses . -.800.00 700,00 700.00 542.27 t 157.73 of the third section of South Street from ally or by leaving said papers at his place and then opened and publicly read In the Inspection of Buildings Oak wood Drive to Mountain Avenue. Freeholder Forrester for Oept. ofPubllc of abode, or by certified mall, return re- office of the Secretary of the Board, of Salaries and Wages . . 7,500.00 7,250.00 7.250.O0 |7,250.00 Boroygh of New Providence, enclosing DEPt/ OF PUBLIC HEALTH; WELFARE Health, Welfare U Education, accepting low ceipt requested.' * ' Education, James Caldwell School,36Cald- Other Expenses \ 325.00 400.00 400.00 142.77 257.23 resolution approving Agreement with the . bid of Wolfes-Jensen and Co., Inc., for the < Respectfully advised well Place, Springfield, N.J. for the fol- lowing supplies for the 1964-65 school Civil Defense and Disaster Control . County retating to construction of storm hill'an W. Coujens, relative to the 100' construction of a 100' concrete chimney WILLIAM M. DONNELLY , water drains. reinforced concretechlmneyatJohn.E. Run- year: Instruction, Industrial Arts, Janitor, ' . Salarle»,and Wages ' '•' T',200.00 , 750.00 750.00 ' 700.00 •. • 50.00 at John E, Runnells Hospital and luthorlz- STANDING MASTER • 2,862.47' 2;537.53 Marvin B. Whaley of Westfleld, calling nell. .HMPM1. the bid. received,ind^recom- * Ing Director and Clerk to execute agree- Mcdlcali-Dental. Office, Athletic, Science, . . Oth'ei-Expens.e.s . t , \ B • 4,300.00 ' ' 5,400.00 • 5,400.00 S.M. attention to a condition which exists In mending Wat bet«en now and the time ments covering same. and Fuel .Oil. S* new chimney K completed, that.amebe FRANK J. KINOFIELD ' . STREETS. AND ROADS' - ^ " front of his property, j "Freeholder Forrester for Depu otPubllc Specifications may' be obtained from the Health, Welfare & Education, declaring an Rnad Repairs and Maintenance - • . Freeholder Dunn read into, the record, a * Springfield Sun, Feb. 13, 20. 27rMarch 5. office of the Secretary of the Board of Ed- ,. Salaries.and W«gc« ' 48,600.00 3W5.00 31.639.52 25,461.10 6.J.78.42 communication which Freeholder Tiller, "FrMhoWer Dunri read Into the record a. exigency of public service exists at the- . ucntloru Contracts will be swarded to the pregent time and authorizing Wolfes-Jensen F«« ' JSMO —Other Ejpcnses'"' '"" •-••-••••-• - 6;500.00 ' '" «.9,01O,00. • d,010.Qfi... 5,156.90 3,853.10 Chairman of the Dept. of Roads and Bridges communication which he forwarded to the j .lowest bidders, the right being reserved to Me™«poilt.n-Re lonM GpuncU. a.klngthem ' and Co; of 'Ctilcago tolmmadlately proceed -_C^nstnict^ton, Reconstruction, Repairs '•senfcjo the Mayors of thevarious municipal- g .reject any..pr all bids or to waive In- B ities and read a communication received ,o advl»e \» thlt we are not member?. with the reinforcement of the chimney at .'• 'It" • SHERIFF-S'SALE '"V ' ' formalities therein. -ancFMtimerTance wlth^StatcAItrby Formula 8,880.00 . 8,880.00 8,860.00' 8.88pfOO V 3,024.57 from A.J, Lltrmanr President of the Dis- He also read Into the record a telegram John E, Runnells Hospital for the sum of SUPERIOR'COURT OP NEW JERSEY By order of the Board of'Educatlon of itTcel LlghTmj — ~ -38^00,00—: rK - posal -AreasH >«T-r«latW«-to-thieJispQsaI__ " h> received from Maxwell Uhman, - -LAW dlyJSION the Township of Springfield, in the County ofpavement sweepings on Union County SANITATION • Executlvertc-retary of MKC, advlnnrthap • of Union. New Jersey^ Roads In all municipalities and commented Union .CoontyJUl not .luted as. a formal • - -—:-r ,, Garbage and Trash Removal -Contractual 81,500.00 74,907.39 6,892.61 U Finance, authorising transfers of various _>: \xurXNDERsoN; on same. • . < , •' Secretary' . Sewer System' m M R appropriations. •-NAT1ONAL NEWARK ti ESSEX BANKING L Salaries and Wages 13,770.00 4,746.74 dEPT. OF REVENUE & FINANCE F™MhoWe r McDonough stated that he too' Springfield Sun, February 20; 1964 reouested the same Information from MRC Freeholaer Osborne for Depu of Revenue CO,, a Danklnc corporation. Plaintiff - Other Expenjf s . .... •2,500.00 2.500.00 1,787.45 ' • United Cerebral Pa I ay Leigufe of Union Sc Finance,' approving bill's, as set forth, Fees: J6.86 3.13 County, expressing appreciiUonfor:thel963 and also" received, the' .ame telegtam. va . SAMU8L/ PRICE, JR., Demandant. =28rl60.O0— for psyment. . , ' / —- • SPRfNGFIELD SUN; THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20,1964 PAGE 11 SOt. CASE REPORTS

€orrg that this longest peacetime ses- with education,. .-depressed =u tions. process...\vhic-h provides gress had passed only one of the the operations fully aveTr be- .But this is not the entire sipnTln two decades had really "— lP^—a n-^r-i ndec islve and dragged--on and on until, almost thirteen m a j^r appropriation fore the budget mess^e is pre-'oaie by any means. Tire im- areas, urban, "affairs, mass Va"elllating"B6ard of-Direetors the last day—of—the yeax_and the lifeblood of government. The- j^ ppp only rna_rked time, on meeting pared. The ' budget has to go portant tax_cut bill could and transportation, and an academy" •the nation's problems. ran the financial affairs, of a__ejided its first' session" with pattern of agency programs is bills. .Six months—later, six through so many stages of con- <:hmilri havp heen"enacted last for-pur,foreign service-officers. set by theshaping of its funds. yg And -what can you do to help large corporation the vvay^Con- most of the problems yet un- months after the new fiscal year. The. same applies even have "been 'Hung up, -too, often The Federal government, as year'-hadreommenced, Congress sideration iW reconsideration CongrTTs shake off its "gress handles those" Of the Fed- solved. —..' __ wearily approved-the final by levej^within each agency, re strongly for'vthe civil- b.y the decision of one person As the articles—stated, in most of you know, operates on a .wearily approved—the final m(i lethargy? Your experiences as eral government, the disgusted • ' • ,•' hill on theTiext igendy-directors,cabinet-mem- .rights "bill. The dilatoriness of who happens-^to be chairman of stockholders-- vvoirld—rise—nr rbuMnfcSS this kind of conduct fiscal year basis with the year businessmen, whose welfare appropriation _. calendar bers, the Bureau of the Budget__-Congress* resulted "in' niime*- a committee or suhcommTtTce depends on your ability tojnake Thrnw thpm r»ir nf ' wniilri nor hp tnlerated by the beginning July 1 and extending n —Wi n ui nun—i m »n "• to tne isst ^ay_^- — - _^ • ••• andpflnally, the Preiigenr^im-— ;"bills y^i t -'"h™"^ ?n the :witri'iurisdieUon over thatlefr. stockholders. P'if how • 0U office." This was the/comment effect of such's -self, that there Is"-often a two- ' legislative-Shelves'without "the lslation. _._ _ tradition, , is • invaluable' in. . of a local newspaper here last sto&)*«lders "of- the- lethareic- Congressional pace^year lag between idea and im- . oppoHurutyTof-X.vote by the ' ' ThWe is the. conventional "States—the American pegpfe" and . convincing others that we~need_ fall; '- ' .:. ftrrustraTnew ideas and-Plementation. ' .--Congress, " - -*^-™ • 'hat government is .TO"shake thc^mojhballs out of p mr liKmS udraSd^^'^^'^^W~^ "^ =o«=-vice— Many ofyo^hTv^be^-r4HHudrrineff-ic-ient^bUt--mpst-t-h.-srnec-= Congressional practices and. . • ^series of comments on the sad suffer with a Congress that is Appropriations for .hfil.new presidents couldn't be more the p.,,..... ----- . —iFecorrl__of the—8fllh Congress, long -on~=woKls—afl4-short in year. This is the.theoryl nli2e Sei^efuS presidents couldn't be more witr L about . lho perWRgb- .cssarily be so? For example, procedures. -=—— "would seek. Inany~bu iness, soft thorough, . but when CongresCongress Stabilization- legis- thert} is no logical reason why Your membership, as 1 am . The 88th started . 1963—with a deeds? ' ' • . ^Actually, last year when June S fails, to carry_ out its,part of the lationQualit- v-.^iaiacl, it .sometimes., most of the bills which 1 liav..- series of problems to solve, ft Let us Took at-the appropria^' 30 rolled around,^he 88th Coh= "spots in operations would- be •always reminded in election -and remedies timetable, agencies ofgovern- !ems-as if mosx rtrug Stores listed earlier as hanging-over" years, is active in both maj.or rnent are blocked from carrying ^.^^ Jersey, and-'a-few from from the ficst scission could nut- , plied, 'but the parties. Your warm greeting have ' been brought to' a vot? the Fed'eral budget-making out changes and-improvements acrOss the Hudson as well, tontght to Congressmen of both - process works, this ' i's^ot for another six months. The have-" wrwritteHlenn mmee l .irTTiehalH f of • relatively, early in. 1963. ln-paTtics confirms this. 1 know. stead- 'they Tiave- hgei+4eft to -HH^m^TrTq-TTe-c^ssanrTor r-es-u, t:—G-0_\iej:-n.rrLeji_t_jln^_t.n.i.s_4eg1s43tU)n.j?ba:v^_ . ^_^ 1 IJrSS^iS blan^o&ficiency; Wasti^nd a short- "^ ^ pi . r 1964 to b^origfckred hastily sition to make your influence agencies., to. maj^e pioua -i"i . -• sid'e o f thppne Plegislation nn rhP othe, but or -brushed asiUe'.-entirel'yr- h has boon fdt in the'-prepa'ration of bjpt-- revisions and tmBrgvernents"tir^anging of the taxpayer. despite this great public 0ne technique forms, for'both, major parties'. -interest-imcicai, thime is_sueus.^- wav,.*c.^.,.„..s left onc„e suggested,, with which 1 have -ThcJast review of -CorTgres-X again on the shelf unvoted amii much sympathy, is to send au- sional prcicedures was in 1946 V ration ^undeter-rn'irjed. ^toTnalically any . ITWJUE-.EHI;S,L=_ "aStCordlTiStifiiiZEEUlFpf-0b 1 erfft-" ^' Another bill, an outgrow.thof .dentjaLp-ropos-al to-ilrrHouse o^ ims- c4iant;e\! dr; -•--a Hoover Commission recpm- Senate —floor- if the cummittec\ t-fien.. .., V - mendatlorTT which would create a—tftth- appropriate jurisdictfon Of Housing If you "care* about •the In-—~ Joint Committee on the Budget. ti 60' oiCorig.ress.and\want to The Open-Housing Commit- tata^aojLlnhousji* w«:jy to-look at budggt as ari entity_ I venture.that.if this happened aintain its co-equal standing,.. tee of Summit, New Providence-^arnPie, not by talk alone. rather than -a collection of un-~ a few times .-eemmirtee chair- inV_our tripartite- system of -xelaieiLpieces. was, alsu left men wouknTasten action on re- -ggwTi-nme-nr-—your pffnrr in untouched and untested. —• maining Presidential billsr+hw- making this "a plan!; in the -A'national wilderness bill of is not to-say .that -any or all party platforms' will help ' grear^ interest and "concern to Presidential proposals should achieve this. - * negro and was^successful in- -be—enaeterf—in to- ' ' -housings conservatioruflTinKi others was ^Fne pTottem—whfeh repre- its efforts to achieve fnttin^- the Chief Executive, elected by Milgram, president of more by the sentative fiove-rnment faces is tegratlon. Green Belt-Knoll, j of last year. -all the peopler the President .- restore Congress' power to ned Commttftit-ies,' Inc. and is- entitled ' to a vote, u ) or •Modeni Community Develop- Chairman of t vote, and thus^make it J.n fact class, two more _the House-lftterior Committee^" down, —^ _ .ins legislative"-body—the- Con^-_. ers, inc., •aTTd-auu a wimcbuildeir *»in"th* w*.^e . $25, The first s.gssTqn_of the 8Rth Philadelphia—and- Princeton like' developments in Prince- was opposed- to the bill and, stitution envisaged.- Reform., 1 therefore, it Has".' been" "eon- rCongrcss -saw- a few acebm- cannot, be accomplished by SPECIALS areas' since 1947, described ttig" tpn,vwere .also; successful.. "- — ^HIsrfments',.but these a.reover- various Integrated-eommuni^ Milg-sam pointedrout that pro- signed to "nowheresv'ille." — effoxxs from inside Congress • Numerous .other bills dealing shadowecT by .a.genecaJ—Leeiing. ^alone. . •• .,.-...... ,..^_ -.. •; FEBRUARY 20 THRU 23! ties throughout the: country. He—perty values have continued to -polnted-out rharlrha-aureRfis^ul—.rise In Princeton, rather than integration-of housing, although go down. Atlpresent, the larg- BLAC . Get an-actual fact, was-very often, est builder of. p.p,;en"hoQSing- CHOC. PINWHEELS not played up in the "news, and communities'is T he Eicle Cor- that success stories do not poration in Palo Alto, Callf- Acquainted "make as much noise" as" the ornia. CHERRY CHOC. PEANUT BARS bad Incidents. ' Milgram also suggested that ^RUIT DRINK Milgram wenr on to explain open housing can be helped With that the best way to achieve - by _following the example of ":Planner*~'House in Indfanap'o^ [HALF ^GARDEN ^TATE Us, whiclw'helped Negro"

A question aud answer- per •? fARMS H=or Wednesday Tod -f ollbwed=the-talk, - andl-plarisll Mitll WPPP "°HfiTnV fl'ttyr>meetings. - L --,—--^-- .-. Iflllll-The next meeting will be on . '-Spring Ahead" it is I The March_lCLw.hen_a-movie, "Cri- 9- BOTTLE date: February 26 at 9:30 a.m. sis ln Levlttown," will be The-Place:; B.Altman's, The shown. ^— ~ '"—' , Mall, Short Hiy^ Where Middle- T h e Executive ' Committee" bury Alumnae and frlends'.wll^ will meet on February-27-^ • gather-Jor_Jiie^jnflual_Brunch__Members were also informed and Fashion Show sponsorecfEy of the four-part seminar on the Mid-Jersey Club of the", open housing, which begins on "Mfadlebury Alumnae-Asspcla- ^eBruary-26,.^nd will b"e~giv"en . _tipn.JMrs^BarbaraNagle, fash- :by-the_Regional Adult School— JUG MILK NO DEPOSIT BOTTLES ion coordinator for^-Altnvans of Berkeley Heights at the 6o- ' — VITAMiN-D -will-moderate the-event.IClub vernor Livingston-High School, NINE DELICIOUS -members—will- sery.e_as mo-'-—Berkeley Heights."" _^_: ; HOMOGENIZED ji—,, PASTEURIZED F LAVORS dels. • - ". '. ~ —. •... AH—residents—of—New—jPro-"~ CARTON Chairman of the~afftir Is vldencepB_erkeliyTHeights anct:- TO-{=-HQ€&EHFRPM —MrillBariiard^DyerjjfJ^Fitz-^ neighboring—communities are i;randolph - Rd.,_ West Orange.—Invited to~talce-ipart-ift-the se- ^2-'LB. CARBON 59L.'SEV£H=OiHY$ A'W.E.EK—; -of Chatham, Mrs. Barbara Luke OPEN.10 of Florham ParkrMfs; Charles ••----. . - 62 MOUNTAIN AVE [4S0 SPRINGFIEU.D AVE. DAIRY STORES UScheldecker-of-Mountainside, F Edward Blertuempfel.ttie \ BERKELEY HEIGHTS "^PRINGPlELD all Middlebury alumnae arid-Mayor of Unicm^lias indicated Mrs. Thor Gustafson of Brook- to this paper hisiesire to be": • I sTde,jnother oiGwendaGustaf- elected as one of-the District sarr, a Middlebury C o 11 e'ge Delegates from the sixth Con-- BUSINESfrSERVICE DIRECTORY Freshman. , _ gre"sslonal District to the. Re=^ Mrs7"Hiranrc.^arksdale of—puBlican National ConYention in "-_ r~ !„_„ ^jg cummer. -Biertuempfel. was elected to are in charge position, .four years ago, ^For All -Your of reservations. Publicity—is- by

^R3vTptlTtifi*y SNEWJERS yg and-sXiccess...as a party worke at State'Capitol Redevelopment Program. Trenton CENTER wmmm ' A girl to-Mr. and Mrs. Ml- has fitted me to. represent th Bte. Z2 Sprincfleld OPEN SUNDAYS TIL 4 P.M DR 6-0440T chaeL Salside, 133 Short Hills "people and the sound principles A'Ve., Springfield. of the republican party proper.- Real Estate A'boy to Mr. and Mrs. John ly,", "If the screening Corn- . ../> ^ faderi/unrlfon renew*/f Lewis, 19- Powder Horn Way,—rnittee" does not endorse .me, I- A& A 2 BigJOffices! ~ Berkeley Heights. • I will do wha^ all good Repub- 'New Jersey .is among the rfation's leaders" iruur'ban Buy! Sell! Rentr A girl tbM:5. and Mrs. Har- licans do, work for the elec- renewal activity. At this very momeffE7~sixty-eight RADIO TV ry Klein, 1596 Grouse Lane, tlon1 of the successful candi- 1 'Thru Mountainside,,^^. . datej" Biertuempfel'cited. . communities are engaged, in _progressiye, vigorous Mlchael SERVICE SANTACROSS 1 n 11 clSli 1V44 —livbnn VQHT'wn -pr"ff*T TS-'—H trparpH tn makinp-'hur 270t MOttRIS AVENUE REAL BITATI • D«UBANC« CHINA state a .better place to live and work. Urban renewal ^ UNION N.J. "' ACT TODAY! PACKTOMOItBOWl FOR A TRULY activity has progressed at an accelerated rate, with MU 8-5800 1700 Sprtoflleld ATB. SKY ' Nw ProTlience UNUSUAL GOURMET over fifty percent more-communities nowcduJhe- plan- SAME DAY PRINGFIELD SHOPPIN&XENTEH ADVfNTURi 818 Sprlnffteld A

.)!-.„- - i .1 . ) . • f PAGE 12^PRINCTJELD SUN, THURSDAY,, FEBRUARY 20,jt964 3

" Girl's Recreation Pros to a win. Linda average. Cail_Poznans1-' '.:7.~T!if Slnkr-si however, last" AVt-ek is rcr bowlers* back-court man, took-the rnea^ kurtz " ; "S~ "li—Mike Catapano .with 13 points vitation last week when they split their —1 1 BasT.L rullwl a lrST-rrrrhis game " Administration- wrll prescriit -shops and symposia. Bill— GlezmajiI3S-th 12 points Madisan, Millbu-ni, and WHiip-' "_\Tust-^;—for the front-running : ^5pacei"nollll.(. TTlrr S-p-a-r-f -m nhi-l-r-w n p (-• ratp -^cta—antl—they—toek—the-vi' -1 ••':'! • TIt'y• • went to tho~' Gorl'tarrl. Space eign countries. A- team of the Jets victory \yas Victor .-" Manvjlle. FG FT T Alt Heyman of the New York 1II St;irs~wli'». .r:illie-d..bc- Greenbelt, Maryland with Hen- Spacemobi-l;e 'lecturers will "Sarokin. Vic"" bowled a big Y£uth Ba"s"ketbaU_Program ' recounci shon5y~Ralph~Losap.no Glezman 6 0 .'. "T2~Kuick('rljoi-krrii'uM'd to be the < ti L i<><>.".! efforts c>: Bonnie drtk I luclson»iancl Robert L. Bush presi-nt the* overail'picture of 15-l;^ame. Leading bo'wler of ' Ivy League with one mirmtp remaihlna. With Walsh - -, 0 . 0 • 0 nextdouv boy (>f t'x-.KnK'koi'- T 11 IV'n; 1 u h,\s Iicenl.'owlirif,' as lecturers, at the Dayion the nation's S£acc?_ effoft to'- the day for the Jets .was, . ' -!_-== ' W .- —but 24 seconds left in the game Wesfbrook* >•'_ 3. 0 1 6. boTKeT iTliiYt'i' Marry LjItlinttlT ~-i. li i''l l.ne anH'-lier 117 fimo SlThool~tlris~T-huFSclayI£eb_. 20 approximately 8,000. s-tudents, Columbia 6 Howard. Speilman of .Columbia Patrj'lo-' \ 1 9 now coach nf the • Srr^Ltraif. h Mitch Wolff with.a seeies-ef-26& r —r--rt-'l'lit; r-'l a person.il higlf-f«H=—at.'fiiS-S-a-.m. to 9:25 a.m.- ~ teachers, and .Jay people—ea"ch lor two 'gamei bowled. Teddy Cornell _ 5. jiir"irsldtLj.ump shot to put his—Bartok :s 0fJh. ;NaTiiT;::il Basket-, h-. i- "lins st'.'ison. Kathy Ton"k(j The lecturers trace the ori- week. Dartmouth- 5 ahead to stay/J?his was-_Soriano 0 )— 0 bull Assochitioii. _ • x Rosenkrantz "Was Uie- leadirfg • Herman, pluVina lu'TT asainst —a-l-s'-.-li -l'-'i-l—well—in-rbe-s<"-«"nc.l—gin_aJiiJ-il(ii4t;Lopnient of rockets ~4 the only time i-n- the. game that Piesa 1. 0. Eatile )>ouier with a "245 ser- Harvard • — —=^-Ga'llatin's Acata-. "j't-called the" ai'l the Stars. BDwfing us'in" models1 and demons!ra-_ 1 •Columbia' wa^ ever ahead. Ho- -'Hart 0 --G ies, Yale ' Q time the' Htymini.s and Galla- Bornstein wars spielrna-fiT-Raiph Losanno; Kruczek xO 0 n —the. afternoon "was" tion equipment-They/' expla-in The. Bom bets were abte--to_ Princeton b .. ^pUn.T^vtTe lit'ishboi.s iit |——. Sha* G.ajgTron for thTr Four how certain.principles WFre re- K'ljtiYiv\}-ie^l^nlrtni pitk jip. one" game in . their. and-Kenny Braverman lead the—King_ "0 0 --— ...side. Li:iv: Island '.'I usi.'d to ; : l . "'" "" ' ~— _ cogni-/.ec\-and stated-us p\^i-- J - j the HrSnf^unnlng- The light blue of 'Columbia :.a.uarlr~ti>-p.ac-e—this, Total. ; 16, ••2-, " "3fc play basketball'at lh;*l licop in- er inntcii last Tuesday— cal laws by Isaac Newton-.and League Ttclton •Jfels. The. bom hers-defeatedltlig met 2 big red o_f Cornell last big -wiir. Ted' O'Cofinell -"and Springfield FG.. FT T your backyard.-"-youim Hi;ymiin ,,ii'-. ri:'. Leo Newman's 200, ttey—woFi-aws-game-fn- a the—game by, the score" of 23- bv the- score of ^34-26. Bobby :.cuhics'l_Lu-lead_her. team. Alyse" Flight in Mercury, GemimT-ajKl__£hick Danziger's 211, and ^a two frame-roll-offT"Rick Rawitz 21. In the first half it was all Catapano: was leadinfr, scorer (,K,|H^_lea.! thrrFour Wonders-J\pollo. -. _ : OSTOS' 200 Ind 220 with'a 587- paceci—the . Bombers in_ the CorneirTThe big red-lead after for Harvard as -he'TOs'seti-in TV jyjnrw " y\rj*vj^- . ,. Thelecturersjjtil-bfe-'Thelecturej a spec7 - ae-rios.^Jhe^League=vri-U-oot .the first period bv the score of; 13 points. Mike C-atapano7ra4ao 'Bowlers? ially desigueid '10-3. At"Mftime~:tWe-5c6fe was ; of' • Harvarf-i^wa^-^str-ong.- l Sha '..-,JAW-strikes. Evan\Vasse«nan's SpacenToFile^':'^w-"tfan^ftg5t..'. ^!^^ffi:-;^pnprinid^^^^"0^ ; -Thr'"oU|houf-'the'game Mike're-^ 1 'IW-was-ffigh; in'th«*Ki .'•.HII'L'S of first place. authentic scale_ ? models of NASA Joachim- -Prinz at a Temple -2-. . " - game. -Larr.• „y; DevIrTsTCn -._,y_ seconsecond "ha"halkf bT^Ugnroutacl'new^^—bounde'd'^welbTbUghn l and tossed" In 9"' The. ftiiaTlT(Tatch"of the after-". hardware used in the lecture- breakfast. TJifi League's «*- the TOrricanes-was high"" Columbia team. With a detfer^oints.' Johnny -.Joins''•£[_ ; seven teams are within seven inatl to wl n -.,.^3loxu'i-W.aaL-l.te—Pros split 'With - demonstration^ man in both-gamesforhis-teara;.. ^ °" u e Columbia held • Princeton was agawi high t-he" H11 iJj-eakers.^ The— P^oi • The _typical demonstration PetecsonJEoints of ea~cfrother. 1 ' Thp fina'i' rnairli nf "thp dav Cornell to but 5 points lit the en- scorer for_the game.—Jehnny-^ _aiv tilt- niily team nm in mm- requires about fifty—minutes Team \V L. . P nitrprl rhp-R-eekprs aeainsT the'-3"1"6 second"'" half- "Columbia .^scorecblS-points^in this-game. petition "Tor .firsTpi'ace" - a'net- and is intended for pcesenta- •Schuckrnan 36.5 --29.5 ^rr _ UlCLcU tile—IMstReLb dgdlUbL Ulc . ,. , , ^ .• , — .- _ J > 51 5 ull:ed Zlatin 3615 ' ' 29^:5 . 5-0"R3ideH7Behb,dSomeex^irent P even iij-ffiegame^ia . The final game of thersfter^ • tlk'v JU: lHi.? 'providintLS43flfleTs - tion indobTS. It is suitable'for individual bowlitig the two —^ 'as'Tliey d'.-feliT—the c.ontendingy~STr-hoo 1 assemblies, science Granick 36 - 30 • 48 " - ^'DartmoutTioonnwas^ha higtoohk .scjjringjiffairthe measure. - 1 teams, split the two games — teams. The first game between fa-irs, civic g'roups,, jeacher "Doros- bowled.-Larry Freedmanpaced \fc of Yale in this contest by "the _ ••-• tlics'j.-two tcinris went to-thfrf'i'n wo-rkshops, higher—education T3prnsteln 3Te' Rockets to a victeiyin the '7 score of 50-32_T-he-game was \ "liroakers. Lind? .Norulak wRM-~programs, adult education pro- Glover and" tuck until the final " r_. whUe Bruce Gerstein .Men 'nip" •'strikclTlii the sfinjl fra-me-lead grams, and general "publicau- "Newman • when Dartmouth ran-up • "TTtiiM- teairi' to a 9 pin"vlctory. diences. ' ' ' ~3Ad_ler 20 points to put the game out of -The—sec-ond-garne—saw—G a il-^-ljSh^Spac^mpb!yg^l:e:c.tunfir,.s Hufcvy.i tz i=:lost-.a7fe\v.7pins^^^ was high P.oy.nanski and Carol=rTTodes: also - lead -classroom discus- Atkiii : week,7BuL continues „:to 'Bowling League,, nine people scorer •fb-f-Daftmbutl>_as- he.- L ad the^league in the .indivi- Scored-260 'or over. They TBreJ*-*";- V points. ^ il. al'averages..Bruce Gerstein, E. MertZ, 233;-S. Falcone, 222; ws-jlso high for Dartmouth. Service I teammate of Dave, is be- R- Hertzel, ZO^nrStoaitrZOS;^^1 ^fc^ni^-'.-P^'- ••lining toj.com - RrGrimm, '205; PrDaperor205p ; DH Cubbferiy sESr -d 15p]ojnts yales;cause. Doe n was high puition-forlhTgluwer-age.BruceT~S. -Elegyr^02i G. Cleim, 2010 ; ^ y ' NOJERVICE^HARGE" r -IFed his average to 125. Mitch -STBoettcher.^00. ' ^an for the-Yale team, Willis- Wl£~r" f Moreland has "a hit for 12..pointsitorJjelp the game-un.H " _. DR 9-^767 -' jpot injhe standing§rMItclTnow Schmidt won AI.•»_games "itanris at'lln". Vic Sarokin PC- lOSt-27^ . _ ciipies the fourtfTspot with; an_ _Andre\STand Stewart have both—| average of H5r7]imm.y-Sarokin—;Won-i£vga5ies^anC i- at .114' is fifth in the league in. The remainder of tRe stand-.; -averager- The remaining' Ingsare as follows: bowlers-injhe top ten and their. Name W average?" are: Robert Sliincller Henry— " ' ' 36.5 RtibinfelenOS, TedRasenkrantz • Hedstrom 35.5 • •• .105, and^Exkr Wasserman 104. Eppinger Wood Isley.-'.— Evers , ercio.

fei -^ t rf_ 63 Mountain Ave. pringfif of .fi-ostblte is a"" ,-, *. •-A—-=,^=—= "Pins and needles" feel- DOWllIlg ACtlOIl Phoira: DR 6-5505 ing and, then numbness, says . ~. BONELESS TOP S the AMA. Tlie affected part will _Hal LeibeskindJs_ieam wins FQrn.whtte or gray, and later three games to tie Harry FfiEE ^_ SIRLOIN 'red. ^ Stein's team for-j^first place First degree frostbitFsslmllar tie, in the Temple Beth Ahm DELIVERY OVEN ROAST to sunburn, is likely to attack Sunday League. Oscar Baroff the ears. to*s. fingers, cheeks or bowls high of 236, followed by nose. SccoHdr—degree frostbite Sid D.orfman 235.-Abby Wein- produces blisters, and third de- berg bowls 580 series' (211) fi mine,, aimiiuej dup UJ- !-• sue.s.,._Much of the frozen part lor nign benca. •• • • may be lost, the AMA'said. • High games: Sid Dorfman, Treat the frozen part with' 235; Oscar Baroff 236,"Bernle !?entleness.-Don't• rub'or ma-s- Lester 215, Hal Lelbeskind 212, : -;age. Ice or snow applied to the Lee Saro'kin 207, AI Borsky 213, •& jPRiEE PARKING OVER 4000 CARS Hank Roth 201, Lenny Cohen —frozen, part, merely delays,.thaw-. : ing. • .. . 2O4;""''"A1 '•• Shreiber~2UrMilt - "LENTEN -"""" MOST STORES' OPEN" FRI. 'EVENING Billett 209, Sanford Kessler SWEET 221, Stan' Bruder 213, Manny SPECIAL DIVORCE RATE SALE SPONSORED BY ^ Manheimer 201. FROM POTATOES WASHINGTON — w L About nine of every 1,000 mar- SCHMALZ RETAIL TRAPES DIVISION ried women are divprced each Harry-^teln 38.5 27.5 •; year, .reports the Population Hal Leibeskind 38.5 27i5 DAIRY 2 LBS WESTFIELD CHAMBER Reference Bureau here. Milt Billett 37 •29 29 ' According to_ the latest sta- Dan Rosenthal 36.5 29.5 GARDEN SALAD OF COMMERCE tistics, there are almost two Stan Bruder . 36 30 million divorced wonien in the Seymour Wortzel 36 30 OR ORANGE FRESH FISH count'ry and although the na-. Hal Davis • "'•. 35.5 30.'5 TUNA tion's divorce rate Is only about Lee Sarokin 34 31.5 PINEAPPLE WED^SAT. half that of the' postwar peak, Mel Zeller ' • 34 31.5— it remains one of the highest Mort Parish- • 34 31.5 COTTAGE afEESE SPECIAL ORDERS in thR world. .- . ^ judd —- 3.4.5- 31.5 ": "' -' - (3"eorge'-Wlcldrn 3T~ '"W :ull./foiind . Confectioners use more corn Marv Gould 34 32 syrup than any other food'in- Jules Wasserman 33' 33 dustry in the United States. San Kessler' 32. 34 " The Cianr..'.6-"7 anc/ d try.e_gih/ete.

-= ; —Keeper's height is used to advantage on this-)umpef£tidaynight against_Cranf or d±^ befetrs«^s-onoffier Kretzer forte. Here he blocks attempted CoALgar shot.. Jtom behind, yef

"f tp.

H1S-HEIGHT is so pronounced an,advantage -that,. this_ 'good.defensive move by a'Cranford-player is for naught," -_as. Kretzer's.sliot goes,up and-ever- outstretched-arm-.--;—-

Next. Tuesday the battle~ol words comes te an abrupt halt and": " |the most unlikely.contest since David picked;on-poor old Goliath i_ I..' will""take place in -Miami Beach. And wouldn'rrTEe something if. J ,. JDavTd (Cassius Clayf~tbok the,.measure,oliGpliath^ (heavyweight -^champ-Sonny-ListonXXox-theJie.avyweight championship. . Not, that it's impossible, you understand, it's justthat Liston is" - 1 a 6-rchbice by every bookmakerfromSingaporeto Portland, Ore. This is the-dlfficult-to-understand part, Listonis ove-r-whei-ming choice. It is no. doubt predicated on theJfacEthat he made ground^-, meet'of Floyd Patterson-twice.in the total time of a shade over I —^-etfTTHttmes.-But itHsn^fato-i^o-the-talents of Clay.,-whatever they y^g otgab, gall and-poetry. ^r": =ifTs" crue-thiL-E8gesojvjwelghed-^STTorJi1 s

- bear"^, as he likeg to bm"e~authority.^.^

ALL ALONE, "seemingly, is Big Bill as shot goes-up-and in, past tiopelessly-ou hands of Cranford defender. . ; belleVe century in boxing. » We' saw Clay's fight in New'York's Madison Square Garden last winter and, while not Impressed to the point of deathless 6-6 AREA STAR prose, did mark off.the fact that he did manage to stay away from Jones, who is faster than either Clay or Ctetpn. And he did sock Jones a few good shots to the Jaw,--although failing td deck him ^once. ' ' " • - We are also certain th,at, since that fight, his manager has corrected the suicidal style of fighting with his arms hanging at ton, this .would be the best way of getting knocked cleai^lnto Disneyland. • Liston's forte is sheer brute .strength. He is not much of a box- er, and he .is about as graceful,as.an elephant in a snow drift. He BY JAMES HITCHCOCK grammar school basketball for "I have enough to woriy abojit_ , the^ other_tearh's.top scorer." --Seton -H-a-U-Hlgh-called next is—and was'during both championship bouts with Floyd—wild and . Special Feature St. John^ the 'Apostle, Clark,- Without (having to • go home at - -.- The hard-w6rE.lt..has ;taken.;. and Dec, still-a 'midget' at DEC FEELS-THAT'this inaccurate with his punches, Those that did connect, of course, has to/skip supper In order night," he added. "But don't to learn to hold the other guy, '5f6", enrolled at the South; year's Seton squad has not re- . spelled doom for.the trouble*Patterson. ' - ****** .— !.<-•. -• - -—....-• • - r-^- Richie Dec,. Wlnfleld- Park';s to pla/ a game that night. geTme wronger CTr)oy;£very—has -prayed~offhandsomely-for- Orange-school, because his old- alized Its full potential. He ad-^ gift to Seton Hall, sat slurpped mlnute of it, and wouldn't trade Dec. • This season' Regan has er brother, John Jr., had gone mits that he has been guilty SO THE FIGHT, FROM these points, is not as prerdestinedas In a big easy chair. His long It for anything." given" him the assignment of there. of throwing the ball away on the 6-1 odds for Liston would indicate. It is a better than remote chance that the Mouth can do it, and uncrown the big ugly bear for legs were crossed and his huge BUT DESPITE the work load guarding many of the country's numerous occasions. 1 hands folded in his lap. It was top point makers. He has held_ "This was the only place the championship. He would need a few things going for him in Dec still manages to stand a- as far as 1 was concerned: It one of those rare moments bove_the rest in everything DEC IS ONE of the tops in Georgetown's Jim Crlsty and "The tough part of the sched- addition to luck, however, things like a careless slip in Liston's during the basketball seasor. he does. •"' ' his class besides being the Wagner Fred . Klittich to 10 offered me the chance to get ule is ahead of us and I'm guard, things like the savvy to take advantage of"an opening, and when he gets a chance to re- team's second leading scorer, points a piece. a real college "prep" education looking forward to beating some, things lika-being able to stafy away from the dynamite in either of 1 "I have plenty of time to "and" enabled me to play basket- lax ~ and he was taking full top febounder and defensive . * * * -..'*. 'of those clubs." : Liston's hands. ; " - - . • .. *"' -" relax during the summer," ball for a big school. advantage. •' ;_> ace. _ , •,._...... _..•_...._._.„.;. . DURING HIS school days the ' If Clay^can accomplish all these things, and keep the fight Dec. explained yesterday. "So going, it is a.fair to. good < wager that Liston would tire, anxy," Dec continued. But Clay must swalj.ow_jwhatever he calls pride and stay away "year; It'sf 'Sr" lot"~beuei- "than-; -ing-foT Dec. The-slim-young-; claims he has never even given Dec" Is ; on" the'rnover Classes s t e r performed a summer It a thoughtr"He":.'hopes"."'to;do: -from-thli-geari^efflUsT^^^ for not- having-anything to dp." rod, Dec learned the firie art "Quite a few schools sent me the fan appeal but. may be very good for young MrrClay™~ ~~ and labs keep the, chemistry One thing, however, that the of defense, lacking Jh'many'ol league sponsored by the, Win- graduate study and then go to major busy most of the day offers and I toured a lot of . Should the fight go Into the 10th round, we are sure those former Seton Hall High star, today's college players. field Community Council. Na- campuses, . but after careful work in industry. and the remainder of the time turally, he was the best and 6-1 odds .will be a thing of the past. There may even be more than .is devoted to Richie Regan's 'refuses to 4§ is drive'* back "I played guard in those study. I decided on Seton Hall With his atnbltion, and talent a few who would then give the odds to Cassius, he of the bubbling and forth between- school and days," Dec was-saying, "and won the-outstanding, player basketball team. Sometimes the because of its fine science labs he'll be a suocess. In anything mouth and fairly good shot at the heavyweight title. because—I_was small (he was award for Two straight years. -T6'5"—youngstery—who—playedr jiis Jipme .at 70 C Wavecrest and it was close to home." he does. Ave. ' ' -.-•--"-' •* ••••-•- •,5'5") and fast—1~was t t

6SDRMANDIZII For Distinctive Dining-The Westwood In Garwood —Bt-LXUJJS-S.WARSHAW wlth"a--erelicious-c«ektail.--T-his- the clams adequately^but we're . • • * don't ordinarily engage in this sort of thing, "found ours elves We've always felt that when is what we -and the lady only going to say that they were ~\VE'VE"£EWAYS FELT about-, accor.iyanying us cJld7The first among the best. we've ever- our favorite dishes, such as playing host to -a very nice_ an entrepreneur opens a dining young man we'd never met and drinking place he^s got tomarl of a good restaurant-is - eaten.. - _ -."... Lobster Fra Diavolo, that we the -opening cocKtatl—and=this After the clams, our lady COuld never eat enough of it. beJorerancTnTs'very pretty wife. make up his. mind as . to the We found ourselves danclrig with. character of the placer Is it test was.superbl.p y passed by the was served_served_a^delicioua deliciouss dish Last Saturdayy, atthe-Westwoqd, "hVrt^er--wTio"believes 'that"a"called "Ch"fck"en"ScampI"rWe "Th6re""abanddn "than "ijre've known" -going to bo "an Italian,, or _we'''li]iaIly~~ate~~enoughT'To -rench-Italian, a Continental drink should really be.a drink sampled u andl_it,was_delight- tempi us further, our-host in- tor many-years, weteit.miaci, restaurant or a Steak House? and. not a ' Ihlmble-ful of .ful. All we can say about it is, troduced,us to something we'd like two important guests at a -Is' it going to,, be strictly a_n_ whiskey and.lots of the mlxings;- -that if you're ever had "Shrimp never eaten—before... Veal large and nice party. • _ Then comes 'tne ainner. In a-Scampi" (and who hasn't?) this—prahcesca. Veal Francesca i's_ "^T trust ..eating place—or will it assume making oui the character of_a nightrclub?. ..mood for Italian food? There a.re is the same thing only with the a^n exquisite Mending^ofrVeai—;^7JrxrVoiI •diicken-Substituted-for-ShFlmp^-Marsala-and'-VeaHScallopini--- In short, what will Tts per-pastas -of every description,. taurant, go to the. Westwood; sonality and its atmosphera>be Veals-Pannlgiana and Scallo- The end result was palate- and_is. much more. Ain_than tickling, to say the least. We either^ If you want. a. gay night-spot, like? ' —^. - -pini",' Zuppas redolent of-garlic go to the-Westwood. If you.want in turn had a servtng"of Lobster - The -Westwood" Restaurant "and oia Italy, clams baked^nd As • we were pursuing our both together oh the same night, Fra._Diavolo, _•_ - • and Lounge, located In Garwood sauted and heavens^knaws what leisurely way through our fine -go to the Westwood. else, Chicken-Cacciatore and _at 438 North Ave., has,-dem- = Mfl W Bid litmUS ' dinnervjjubtle change began nn.qrrateri rh at it is no\nec- SteaiT~PpzaTola77.and il yeu''fc"* Wj W 9 JjJ inrU iH=^7to-manifest itsel&inrbTTbit. —essary for a mood for none, of ..these the W^twood was_biginnirigjo~ CME^EHV IMPORTANT and J serve rigid •-wles in the^e exotic things—there's nothing lose its-character.-as a res not-to-be_overki.oked icem. The areas. A sterling and affable" to prevent you Jrorn_o_rdering taurant, and was.-sHwly, but prices_are_staggering—only'wa gentJeman by IRe name of Al.in the- good old American surely, becoming a gay night- don't mean staggeringly hlgh-^ p sizzling. Hesco Has apparently MUC-\ fashion— 'that spot. Th.e:bar wog crowded,-the, we mean m'odorato to low. If ceeded in achieving the impos-\ steak, juicy . broiled lamb-^ g-dance" floor was alive with-'tr's noLtoq busy when-you're" dancing-couples, people_were there, wEyi don't you asfc^Al sible. A dynamic and restless \chops or pork chops,-to say j .restaurateur, he has managed "nothing of - a-host of other "Twending^-^therr—way-about-~the- pFesco"to introduce you toTony place_andjjreeting friendsy and--Viscel--he'sinthe—chef—whos. tq_c'ombine the very nice~st in * ArSreriean dishes. n an Italian-American cuisine-- " • -*«•*- - .--- . S- "~ * master hand—tunns. out the and then has g"one a step or.two- SPEAKING FOR ourselves, described above. _ Boy,^Seouts who- helped-ist-r-ibute SabhrOral beyond. - "•-" " " "r— ^&u-r- tastes—run t-o -foreign • -T-HE-SPJFUT-WAS-exactly:the_ r. 'same-as-the-one-that-seizes-you——And—new-:> ygg -——~= *'•'*' « " - —••—> foodsv)—we—ordered a dish^of : *sManpower-Committ.ee of the County Medical-SocietyrScouts are Rena-ljl .Madjestki, left, -^ROUGHLY, THIS IS what' 'rlafnj'roJStart with--andSignor, when you-attend a particularly _food, loyeiy^cTientele,moderate •-... .nice house-party, where thefe's prices, gay night-spot, and when - And-Daniel Lyskowski-, both of Troop 2-7 of St.- Adalbert's. C'liuTcli,-Elizai>ettu—l——--- ..' . ^happens when you go to the—Piesco outdid himself. He Eave J westwooa Kestaurant andu uss twLWUo ocisets-of-clams,Oreganata oixioi..^,v.-o o "There—takfe a good looH, jots Of ele-gftat' food rolenlv oT~y?iri piTr'thBm-T;tV-tfifether•, they "'Lounge. Yoli arrive at aboutl^and-Baked-eassino. We wishwe THat'i_why mommy won't buy fine liquor, and an attitude of ,come out spelling the Westwood? you a wigT* funThd" relaxation. Wei who~Try itl 'eight-o'clock and 'seilleTiclc_had the_talent foLdescribing Rough, Chapped Skin- bong How To Deal With It CAROLYN THE M0STj3BV10US_damage Associate HpMe Agent — is "pump_bumps"' at-jhe-top_ Can you hejmmunlzed against - of the-6Boe-heel^and the bptto; _" polio?—lY-es,—says -the medical Rough, of~thez1ieel_-WlUch may-even- profession, and it's easy to do." winter \veatheF~seeiihj:o go to- become callous. These roughs ~~ All you—have to do is take gether, whether we like tt or areas are not only unbecoming— ~tfTree doses of the tasteless not. but often ruin, stockings. Sabin Oral Vaccine and" you're While a brisk wind I—-To smooth thl8_arjea,_letvour— immune. The vaccine is given temperature^gives you-a-Fosy heels soals uvhot^ soapy water. fplexion it. • also-driea' and- on lumps of sugar or in dis-cort _ Sccub gently fiu't firmly with a r0Ughens your skin The com - • tilledlwatef to-those whecanoat ; _sofrbfn5lr^Stubbom callouses^ take sugar. _ •- - bination of wind, f?ost ^d siem hea: work tOgecne^J4Ol "and bumpsrwlir yleid_with There are no after-effectsT use. of a pumice stone. Dry Nor only does the Sabin r ide ' the. condition corn- p 0V 8y^^_ ^ -.^~' VaccliiS' Jmjgiunize -yourtE^siio p y ; -^ prevents you. from becoming a y ' amount- of tream or__lotion pn- "^yflU.'loye'tp-touchV.U ^.. . ___^Ihree .doses are . needed to tetlwi^harias becSu^ - protect., the body. against the 00, .su£fer the three"Btrains=of=polip. . i effects of weathered t .'"Every—resident: of Union work. The knuckles" and; fi County will have^an-opportunity' . gertrps par£icUiariy get to participate^in amass immun- roilfR, cracked and-sore^ ization program-sponsored by "• -the Union County; Medical _So- KNUCKLES-andi ^l^r^g^dlscblorea^and^ scaly, too. The cos't isT minimal-25 with a sol part peroxide to —eents dose for those who can these _ --luxurious but effective w- treatment for elbows, knees, warm.^oapy ery ^^ ^d gt Q ^ ft ^ ^^^^^SS ^advance in ^

better hands all —' * . - 've—had -flcult—To. healr-prequently, a — , Even if, band aid saturated with the -worse during cold e — carrier.- weather. ~M

•—~ iI..L .General GreerrShoppiB^Xenter jide_to any ^p9|•"" — ~~.— .--

ianoi_edlicatiOTlal- ... — £C^-glittiBJEiB^RHBlI| ;-^ ., —•-

B—r — - . ——~ i

c '^!_- ^== ,= I •.. - helo W ^^ A cohipleTS line of 24 TTtWtli III'-"Mli i.iir ' "."I"'" .""'V " >—"^^-"-_-VLH=-- ; --o- -- f —'—~" Dssigngr Color*' us. We will phone you for a.co,nvenien"t.time when we^ean^ [_ 12 glittencolors... plus present our story. " ''.-'. • 3 shimmering . The new Lindsay CROWN PRINCESS is designed to Jjustrp-colors. Shu-Mak-Up - applies easily and- giY£ you all the luxuries and benefits of sparklingVifWfree, peTfectly... eolors (and soft, conditioned water . .~ and at a nsw low price. recolors!) old "shoes, You will find this presentation well worthwhile, and^you*. new shoes, all shoes. . will receive 1000 S&H Green Stamps FREE—just~76> : —•— ^>d Itolbnw. 9u wad the coupon today •, this offer All you need is being a goo conditioner, .50, . . is for a-limited time only. Shu-IVIak-Up color-coating, yl.25, and (optional) More peoptf BUY Lindsay than any other Water Conditioner ^TiuL £Ml over-wax, :25. •.-• BY LINDSAY From sparkling heel... to twinkling toe . T JAYSON-LINDSAY BRING IN OR SEND THIS COUPON TODAY! color LINDSAY ..-••SOF x WATER Yes we'd like to hear your interesting atory about the Princess and b.e glad to accept 1000 S&H GREEN STAMPS- your FREE! / •WE OWN O1JK HOME fj WE NOW. IlEffr A WATER SOFTENER shoes WE NOW OWN A WE Do" NOT HAVE A-WATER. . .SOFTENER SOFTENER ' N MAPLEWOOD, N.J. SCOTCH PLAINS,N.J. STREETS SOUTH ORANGE 3-5550 FANWOOD 2-7202 CITY. CREST VIEW 7-4039 • ••••••aiiaBI H-aiJii

ft- |L_ J Old England A Rare Cultural Experience

BY ISRAEL HPROVITZ The.Tatc Gallc-ry proved even ; being judged by her_p.exsj>nal There is an existing attitude more exciting than the Museum, growth pncl"not being judg< "' .in. these United States lhat any- " The ensuing.days held the.dis- group or class—standards. The .•.r.thirig -British,_mo_re specifical'-. covery_of the Victori^end Al- key... to her discovery_ was the : l?ly/- 'English,' 13 somehow su- bert Museum-and^aiHncredibly rfoun-INDIVIDUAL. •. ,v—peribr—to any American-coun- updated Graphics Show at tKe" Such might be the key to the ; terpart. It "ls_diff.icult not to Royal College,of Art. ,-' _-stature of the Englishman. She -be. impressed ..with, the English; Most important, ho-wever, ~rejt perhaps-the hopelessness of pomp andTsometimes', ci-reu-m- was the-Hammersmith College the^Englishmaji's finances -- stance. . • ~ • of Art. Bonnie quickly made his inability t^~even_.conceive Thousands of Americans trek friends of other" Art Students of personal wealth- or fortune the'3,000 miles each year to who, with equal speed,informed -— ..alloweda 116wed ' .him_lQliCh.O£se. a see-for themselves.-Unfortun- her--she was attending one of ttie~ ""more intellectual life — per- ately, they return 17 or 21 days worst institutions the LCC could haps to _seek an identity that- later with stories, of little-more possibly offer. She was soTne- would afford him public atten- interest than accounts of-Wind- how surprised at her facility tion, subhmatfng—the-hope of sor Castle,'the changing-oi-the to cTefehd HER Hammersmith financial prowess,- Qiieenls Guard, or theToveabte- -College ot Art, She defended — 'th> freedom and the'attitude of old Beefeaters at the_bad black "' THE*- REFLECTIONS of this that school." " • • ' Tower of London. attitude were7" easily "seen There exists', however, a Se- ^Hammersmith, Bonnie could --_IWT prnnp arp'ohij i'fs~who have agqnmp rhpqp reflections would Come On In!! "~ ^Intured a—yea-r* or "more ~ir rather candid opinion of Eng- be manifested even in the pri- Londo__n ^t o study Tn. d perhpa. s_ lish Education^SJie realized the 'mary--levels '.of. schooling, as provemagicayyabcorbthd "culture" ocf thmue-h-ape Londar- - ^elation^ie-betweerrthe sTOTteritr they were possessed By each and And Celebrate George Washington's Birthday afld tnarhor was somehow dif- »'""•" 1 ngrrnrtnr— parh ra rry- .Native; These lucky fplks-usu- ferent. The student was accept- ing a strong, honest, and ag- return with a strange new ed as'an-aduit —"capable of- gressive 'intellectua-1—Merit- with us at iamjrtity. accent and a set of rugged tweed _d_isc_ip_UniPJ himself, capable of_ As Bonnie walked,"returnfi kmckefbockeVs. . . ~ growing intellecttnrfty with his 16" lie? own standards._ a \Vhimpy Bar, wh"eTe theequiv- _'• NOT TO BE overly satirical She—easily recalled thestrin- olent of 200 could purchase a or unduly unjust, let KS-..cpn=_ gent and_som.etim.es ridiculous -too-familiar hamberger. And . Domestic Original Lamps of all Typ9$. — sider thp jylarivp hpnpfrt of a schedules and "core reqi.fice=- -then—siie tesllzed thee law of year of study- in London. Let ments thai stifled~iTDr entire Diminishing Return allows Tor us exemplify the most com~ American Undergraduate edu- the metallic hand of "progress" _ ~pi£n' of our" exports"™- afie- • cation. _to reach even, the' mosl-'eon- —malc Art Studfnt. — She "became—aware that her •str-iGted^ef all societies — the "^ —10 circumvent overtones, we' work at -Hammersmith -was islaiiaT > " '. ^ shall-assume she is Caucasian LAMPS and~riamed~Bonnie True.-After' Bonriie-'s^basic expenditure of ALL $800, wardrobe-.and travel mon- Cheese ies, she has—settled for-* the • moment in a rather smart bed- VA111L$16 TO $35 —-sitter—off^the Kensington High Substitute Street and is en route to her ' first class at the-Ham,mexsmith Cottage_ cheese, rich in COTTAGE CHEESE NOW ~ College of Art, a County Coun- valuable nutrients, "Is an_-ex- — CROQUETTES cil school on Lyfne Grove. ^_ cellent substitute'..foGjneat_in 1-1/? cups Checkbook prominent^—"sne the Lenten menu. ~ ' ^7" 1-1/4-^reaspoons baking, power 995 ft enti?s~the Registrar'-s Office^ ~ It i -noted—foc=lts-7rl/2-tea,s.pbon--.salt . LI and—discovers her fees for the high_ source ot - and 2 First Semester are 9/10/2~Tjr— calcium ^whlle containing rela-—3-tablespdons finely-diced onion..; $25723. A^ bit dismayed,'she tively few calories. One Half cup 3 tablespoons minced parsley .quer'ies'the- obvious —Is-tha^—pf- creamed., cottage7..c.heese...,.l. .. teaspoon - -Vtorcestershire^ "^Tfliy'^^and receives 'a proper ; contains.' only 120 calories lind——sauce - Dash.of.pepper .•-•'• -• --~—•-_ tein as three ounces of-cooked -2 cups cottage cheese TABLES lean meat. 3 eggs, or 3' slices-- 2 tablespoons meltei butter;. ~~AND"-S'Q-OUR Bonnie walks of-cheddar-cheese. '.--.:_.. • ^,1/4 cup fine bread crumbs . • timidly to her first class,Struck"-81"'Along with being high in Sift flour, baking powdeFand_ PJN-UP tural Design in Pottery, taught—nutr-JefltSr-eottage cheese is LAMPS by a small'beMy-eyed Welsh- also~'economical- and time ingcedientsr-Addonion, parsley, LAMPS man wlthVrazpr-sharp goatee .saying; The c&st is.relatlve low; Worcestershire sauce and: and a fat lower lip. He prompt- there is'no waste and it can be -pepper to cottage cheese; com-1 Volte-:; 1 =^ly:4ntFodueei^himself and tells prepared in numerous wavswith bine with flour mixture; adding . ~-why-he, really doesn't chink he'd "little effort. -•---__.. •, ^ melted-butt.er. .Blend and shape I enjoy -1-ivlflg-in America and fi-' Into croquettes. Roll in crumbs -naily proceeds to lead our he=_ _,JINCE COTTAGE cheese is a—rPlace on a well-buttered baking "7 roine on a-tour—of inspection. perishable food,, care must "be pan_and bake in moderate oven :aken_to-pr.eserve_its.delicate,;:j5Wegre^s_l,^^r_45minutes, '_ COFFEE ;--firprl rpHnr-rinn appealing flavor. AXTMUM*L 'be-^until-Hghtly-browned; Makes76"" 1 ,.kLl.ns_and_seemingl_y y expensive_:keptRightlp y closed in the-re- -servings ,-and modern-emUpntem-— ainh~frfgeSatoF~an"d used while"; still COTTAGE-CHEESE- AND "abundance. __ • . fresh. — _ •^—'—- — .*_*.-•"— A versatile- food, cottage 2 cups-cottage "cheese LET-US-NOW-brieHy-discuss—cheese is deliqlogs" served 1 cup dry bread.&pumbs Bonnie's .-Undergraduate.\sludy plain in its original creamy—1—eup-chopped cooked carrots_- at her "American Alma^ater-,^ goodness .-but • ir~isTe'auallv-=l=cup bplUdince at h?7Vmriy qy — ; - ' a ,stateroam"e(3'Cotte-gerperhajea._aptietizJng .combinea-wlth-otheg—L cup. choppel_cpokecLcelery —-the Massachusetts College-of" foods. Try cottage cheese atop-1 teaspoon^alt . _.„ - - Art in Baslon Th«-reTTeFtu'iTion3P5ncake5 ulith Jel1^ as a salad 1'tatlesPoon onfon and 'fees reached-$2SO3nL d a gas-__with any fresh, dried, canned or Paprika -• . • ^titad reduction kilrFwSBTiu -fr fi-uiO-wiija ap known .only to professtonel pot- vegetables^or. w4th-meat, fish 2 tablespoons butter (melted) ters. . - • "•" •——^eggs.and otheF cheeses^ ._. ,1/2 cup milk Now back to London where Include .the .tasty recipes % eggS7"well beaten , _ Bonnie-is assigned a locker,.a that follow wFen pia-p-nin-gryfinY'——Mix—Avell.in order ."given— -s«pply-orBasi.c«]uipment, and a Lenten menus!" " Knead into a loaf and pack into formal schedule of herclassesi '. - ~a-Well-g*eased loaf-pan. Bake =— As this day wa"s-the.first of the \_ —i^~^_ ,i/Sl Jti-a'moderate oven, 350"degrees nesrer, it ended .as a~for- -F., until firm in.the center. uicKly, leaving much ol Serve with tomato sauce. Makes _ the afternoon f&F-an expedition 6-8 servings. Mn. Fiye -ZCOTTAGE CHEESE ;_and -Tnai. .-:SALM0NX0"AF" mt^^^L^Jkm^mmi ^When-you - .photograph ygur^^-^nveiope' unflavored gelatin^

monster be -suun-1? Ves, indeed the pl-a-qw !n_gsla.tln_in_ha]f. of"the at the ga'te spelled those very with-obviously out-of-scale back- milk. Heat remaining milkuntil • words. And so she entered, grounds. Watch your lighting so hot. Add.gelatin. Stir until.dis- change-purse in hand, only to that -shadows cast by the .car solved. Add onion, salt and. discover the museum _\\ras , match those in the backdrop. cottage cheese. Lightly, oil' -1-1/2 qt. loaf pan. Arrange pat- without ,an admission feei She The 1958 Thunderbird is'-con- walked sensing awe" through the iidered the finest T-Bird ever tern- of unpeeled cucumber ground floor room of Roman jroduced and turns up regutarly slices and plmiento pieces on Sculpture — frightened to ab- in customizing versions. This bottom of pan. Cover with surdity by the very quantity of modern classic has been repro-' cottage cheese mixture, Chill: ducpri'in kit fprm hv Monogram .. ' lth 0QimDh lavor Models, In<>'. in the popular %" cop wlcn D'"n>on-iayoi'.. - yond expression by its wor,th and scale.- The kit includes many Salmon. Layer; importance. alternate features so you can'1 envelope unflavored gelatin A few hours later an older build the car as a stock convert- 1/4 c. cold water " .and .wiser Bonnie True ventured ible or hardtop, a-custom car or 1 tablespoon lemon juice a futuristic bubble top. There's the foil owing'question to a even air alternate front suspen- 3/4 cp. mayonnaise or salad 'we'athernbeaten, we 1,1 un- sion "system" for assembling-a -. dressing -••'••- ••-.-.- — •:•-.- iformed guard: "Where is thedropped front end "California 1 c. finely chopped celery modern painting?". The oldrake." * 2 tablsp. chopped"" sweet guard whirled as a wounded *, • * pickle or pickle relish From February on it's time to leopard. "Modern7 MOD- watch for signs of new life on 1-1 lb. can. salmon Pictured here are just a few of the many • ERN??? This is a museum! the plants you put away in a cool, Soften gelatin' in cold water. What do you mean by Modern??" dark place last fall. Gradually Heat over boiling water until Not to be undone by her ob- acclimate the plants to warmth gelatin dissolves. Add lemon . vious error, Bonnie's reply was and sunlight, then start using juice. Cool slightly. Combine wonderful Items available aL.'• — .fast and hard. "Eighteenth Cen- plant food. '- gelatin and mayonnaise. Add tury" spolce she, with a vic- - * • * celery and sweet plckel. Add Popularity in model building liquid from salmon. Remove-. torious-.guffaw. .The old-guard seems to go in 'streaks', and. right now customing car kits and mil- skin and bones from salpon; U.S. HIGHWAY 22 winced and replied slowly with ita an attitude, as definite as in- ry vehicles aree "big"big." Bui FlFlakke ^ _ad caTT 382-3179., 1582 Irving St. althougrhh thrh*e '" axi,*iso "rvSmain'remaincs 43~BehU«Lin ' 201-WA 5-4286. . . '__ ? . ••tilted at the sa'me angle to the place •* ^^ :'earth":S -Or-biti— its direction in 45. A certain ; = : MOVING & STORAGE -"- chicken 3Z- — TUTORING.-by' -ynion-;-;-Pui>He "MOVING'? --We m'nyfi -^ou-any-—i;-p-gee—chaTrges^r-continuously- - ALLSTATE — lamps 1 — SchooT"" teacher. All s-ubjects -where. To all shore areas. Also _ •^Uke a wobbling.topr - : see to appreciate-. DR 6-1425, KOSELLE PARK — ~—Gfiaes 5 to 8. Call' 548-2545 looking ^or" " steady work ThiS precession result-s4rom.. 47; DocTrlfie "—• Credit C!e .tk—._ ,"' . . CONVENIENT J •44 after 7-p. mi ~ hauling. New 18-^. closed van. h moon's -gravitational pull 48. Appoint- If you have auto-investiga- CONTEMPORA_RY DREXEL Located in this excellent "6- t e ment to . OR 6-4181. •— - the earth and causes stars tion and/or collection ex- walnut dining tabie and buffets -r-oom eotonial; 1-1/2 baths; LQST AMD FOUND on meet perience-with "a bank.or fin- Sealy postrogedic twin JERSEY trucking -arsociated-tvith the seasons to DOWN steam gas heat; 2-car garage; CESTMONT SAVINGS &LOAN, 47 ance company..this spot could matrress and spring - almost shift slowly over- the years. 1. Musical in- jnodern" birch kitchen. Priced ECHO PLAZA .OFFICE,—.rubbish removal, all_types_of_ strument J At the'" same time of night, be for you. No typing needed veryjlow~20's. SPRINGFIELD- Pass book~ hamtirg1 cleanup stores, wrecks but there is heavy phone work. CLUB CHAIR, ran chair, slip inspect. _=_-^- • —• ^,64000. _.,": =-: -ing-garages,- --od oddd jobs. Fast.._star positions^ shift eastward- s e r.v i c e. Call -Bl 2-8968- about half a degree' (a distance ^Top opportunity to~-get-in on- "covers included. Chimrcloset, LOST, COCKER " SPANIEL- ^h.e__grourrd floor of a brandy " ' BI-8-3245. "the diameter of the moon) every 3 leather-top tailes - very'good -Realtor." ;• young Serve Tear Rpund^Tasty Fare 36_ years, according to Dr. T-e-a-sonable. T5B5 Morris Ave., Union answers to •MUT--REWARD- MUSIC"DANCING Agrpn. • In 2,000_-years__there . MU 8-3434'." :..'. U 8-7558 ^_ PIANO Instructions given' - -dSBEN-E VES; ASP- SUN. - ^ ' -is_a,Js'})]ttxpf=.3O degreeo. pver with Canned or Frozen Fruits - china, QM^, PETS • 5 -period-.-, of^ .6,500' yearstf'"..". T——' ...... ' p a i rrt i h g s r-'guns; - -p-i srt"o-I-si stars become jlw,in- BY MARY W;-ARMS.TROKG~~less appeal.ury addin£rda_sh- lar. experience nee- swords, brass, copper,-rugs, BRICK .AND STONE - 3 bed- dividually-Large^ inside area, ter" stars apcLVfai?" sinrs.he~T-Uni61fCounty HomeTtg'int ' of cranberrr'juiterto gfye^ essuryr-We will-train yoirfor--- -etc.., Art ExchairgBifappraTsers) r Q.OJK-- raneh^- o/ersized,. porch, ladder,, and. yard, or We _can include~7colorful, appealing blush. • . •—.— further advancement and op- ajg—Millb'urn Ave. • Millburn. attached'"' garage.. Corner- lot; heated, room in.apartrnent,- Gall grapefruit 'sections- .-portunity. Excellent starting - DR 6-176^- • outdoor fireplace, wall to wall PR 610533.. week." Lessons and rentals IN 13,000 YE.\R57~th"e earth's T3tir-menus-ati-year long. Winds can~b ,ed '.in- sated-a^-^yell' —a'dlary-i—P:leasari":""working"'" carpet, dishwasher. .^$18,500. as fnr~hrrrakfasl-: on most instruments. ' JLaxts.iy.lIl.'.h'aye.revolved" 180 de- can blow arid sno.w^can-fhrbttt= •' conditions.- MlSCELaNEOlJS --- "_- KP5-8964 • - - BUSINESS '•-' IORIO MUSIC'CENTER ' greesr he-say.sr-Then, a bird the'.,.« raspberries, cherries,; -S°°d extender fopother fruits ; Refrig..RLC.A, Whirlpool igasf_M0yNTATNSfDE" - Exceptional'" ' 1. 19 East Elizabeth Aye,_. viewing the. night sky willTBe" pineapple.-peaches, grapefruit, jn_toit cocktail, ' automatic ice cube maker, 11 vajue in^prestige location; dra-~ WRKTORt HU 6-4172 - facing the opposite-side ofthe and even oranges safely on the Ambg-ihe frozen fruits, sup-_ This is a Jjusy job for an • Linden, ~N.-.I. s of cu~ft7^cpst $.6507, exc. £ond., inatic..8-room frontrto baete-~ sky pattern'ffoffrt—blrd'look- :Shelican be enjoyed. Whether-P.^ " strawberries and _^ active galrfGoqd typing and C/fflffiNTRY-—rTvppq « • c H- . PIANO TUNING ctferries are lower-thanlla some experience necessary. sac. S 175.00-EL 3rS407. -^Ht; large"liviiig=rooTnr3-bed--=- ing at the "nigty" stars today. it's~Juhe or- February,-.a wide TYPES..repairs "'ncLaU.^^^^^^^.^--^ .variety of frozen fruits-can. ' ear . HOSPITijFieds, wheel chairs7 rooms, family room,^T-2-l/2- terations, attic, basement, kit- In -25,80-Q years,-ithe stars will • V Come- into our- 1 , —— . .be served without going out -apricots .are in better bupply. walkers, sun.Jamps, for—sale baths, full basement lowjpw then, roofing", siding and paint- re airea m Rave returned to ,their_present -burba-n-of-f-iee-today-and'find CalLHeinzeEi 3-4677 or P - Y " " relationship, to-seasons •of. the house bylfiose who have, Frozen-raspberries-ar.«goUr- —-—:"but about our top. Cenef: ^.-,^ - — met item.. They ate delicious " -{i^ograraj-adyancemenr opr- man's Prescription- Center,'•'•> LmTORSAJLE ^ T Maplewood. •••• CARPE-NT-RY^-ALTERATIONS "' portunities, _ progressive Summit. C R-ttYTk-" - -" -^ - ' WAT-CHUNG ^MOUNTAIN .ADDITIONS. -Free Estimate's salary administration. Balde,ssa .3.5rnm less than'six .MR. EXECUTIVE . and tlie Call .E~y.enings.DR 6-642bV___^_ BATHROOM & KITCHEN TILE «f the ceiestrial equator. ' ~ V will-provide ari^lmost" " Ymi-'H hr find you did I fl. 8 lens, m-x_ WHY: COMPROMISE 7 " " "-slowly moves stars of-unlimited—number-^-of—tastr Tightful parfaits. FRED_ STENGEL, carpentry, ,_RE"EA~1RED"" light meter, . CUSTOM BUILT""""'. salads, and— - ^^ • *• * *:__ -•INrTER-V-IE-WS MON. THROUGH repairs^, alterations, cabinets, . •r.angefinaetT-shutterL speeU.- To^COMPtETE WITH .BUILDING WE'RE-PR|)MISED FRIDAY, 8:i.5_ AM,.to' -3;30"PM bars, formica tops, recreation 500, f-stop to 16. With leather* LOT— - — _• -than last year.cropT5PValencia rootps', additions^ 1248 Magnolia 7 ca $27,200: : -PRICES OF processed fruits" This means .that when "--ALLSTA-TE-' "''— I",.--" ^'^ cage^gjaraBjeius flash- T..^_. —___ __ -Plastering And Patching —years. agp.^.the"lS.QUth~ern oranges. always —^_-- "" -• a 11 a ci\-m7e-aii-^.Brire '145-^aa-wlU build 'for you on se£ Hare. 1 irrmn7TN..I7 new work~and~repairs,"Z;ellin CDuld""be~seeb n north of yuebec, are not higher than_ _the-paekin _ .g of-drang.e juice con- -. . INSURANCE -COMPAtllES Call ""WA7' 5-3222, Mr. Klein. leCted 1-1/2 acre-wooded lots, J EN E~R"AL Carpentry, re^ but-now it can3BB"seen=o'nTynh=-"-P1'ices of'fre-sirtndEBweiKwheifccentraterdue to start-soon, is, M6untainAv-e.,_lsluxray_Hill, NJ— ;— _—-^^^^ __ T— located in built-up ^executive" modeling._Specializing- in fin- method, 1st class workmanship extreme southern-Florida;•-ainr ^P%.tter-are injeason^But completed, the supplies=Mifc WOROTBOOK and areas, a home' featuring^fonr—tstrtng—=Httie.s_^!uc.el]arSl —-~Jl=Qn 7.0334 -Texas," Agron s'aid. _ generally, canned- and fxozen increase-markedly. frufts nave —^^m-look-ing-for— a p -Kc —. ., * *— -"^rap-pfH^MfiBft-U-iihp State been a little higher - -But in the meantime, canned- = FIRST INSOLES - _CalI- in 1 -desires to work for a "mis- room, dining room arid're.cxea-r AD 2-5451. .PAJNTlftGHPAPEft HANGlJfGi Tjniversity scienti'st continued, P"" ^ t.fiis-^ason than asual mandarin oranges seem to be BUDGET.TERMS PL-7-3366 J > erable _ boss' '-narae"own tion room-, plus a two-car gar- ELE"TRIC REPAIBS~~ " t AlNTlNG-Inside) and Outside__,.also change due to slow move- because the commercial-pacKs—peadi-ly-a-va-iiable—These.offera —antl ihcome. Become, a.part of. Jerry .GiannimxiF: ment of the stai-s-themselveSj were^about-10-per_cent-smaller_pleasant change .from juise-at than a.year ago. .Some^are in breakfast. They are good1 fo~r=^ the largest direct•-selling com- ADEQUATE ELECt SERV; estimates. MU 6-79-8: Over long periods—ef "time, p.any in the U^S^ -_For confi-

— . ~> _ -— u^autuul ^3=*j-2±mr5f-AU. uOiteiSs^e^^^^^ SiS¥^^SS^ de s^ert thatjSj- as well as'in receiving'matur- ._.. ..'Minutes-to-206T-Hghway andnew- Harrison recor'ded"-allTfls-musi- cal numbers with co-stars An- economy, "'winietl^irap'^frutt— MOCK'P-EACiH MELBA ~lals. ' Lift truck experience'"^*pb^v'0Pf?s= drey Hepburn and Wilfred segments are considerably- Ipkg;-vanilla pudding mix; preTerred, but not essential. garage, make own gas hot water ment...Sacrifice $L500 an acre. Hyde-White before the-cameras more available than list year. 2 cups milk Permanent job benefits. •heat. Economical, paneled kit— Eves. Call Mr. Zaremba. • -chen, tiled bath. LSI 8-2064 or RA 5-6581 . Eves. EL 6-5566 Mail This Form Now began rolling on "My Falr.GraDefi-Uit jUjce, t00i iS in re- 5 peach halves Lady", at Warner Bros. . ; latlvely better supply. 1 pkg. frozen raspberries^ Stirling •Plastics.Co." _^ PO 1-5557.' Unl'oh Countys lBadir.9 chain of Weeklies OHDEN LEADER" Plainfield, • • "thawed. Sheffield St. Mountainside PLA1NFIE1-D LELAND GAR- Clawson Ave. off Pafk Ave., GARDEN STATE NEWS * ROSELLE-ROSELLE PARK Combine pudding and/milk in DENS.-_3 '•& 4 rms. Modern •Real Estate Sales Profession 3' building- "lots for sale. For, LEADER • UNION- SUN 'SPRINGFIELD SUN 'BERKELEY ^^Sth^wT wa°s PERH-APS TH.S is, good time a saucepan, Cook as/directed Apts'. for -rent. PL 6-2339. _ t0 Young' men, over 21, who are information call CH 5-6236. HEIGHT'S BEACON and the MOUNTAINSIDE ECHO. a radio writer for Burns and experiment with serving a on package. Cover s/rface with personable, neat, anxforre~t6~get An.average of 5, five letter words will till one.line, In the Allen, Henry Morgan. Fred Al- different citrus juicefor break- wax paper. Chill.. len and Milton Berle.. fast." If the paler color gives »hailri, »nd witting t< ease of longer- words. 2 spaces must bo allowed'. COST To serve, rem/ve w'ax paper Well planned training program. MAY BE FIGURED BY MULTIPLYING NUMBtn ur and beat, pudding until creamy. A lifetime Real Estate career, WORD.S BY .10* per word. MINIMUM CHARGE Of 4 LINES First Insertion'.50 Per Line . Spoon into individual serving active in Union, Middlesex, and at $2.00, Based on Approx. 20 words. dishes; Top/each with a peach Essex counties. Only grade Four or more consecutive Insertions .45 Per< Line- Discipline And Punishment half, cut side down, spoon thaw- . --school education required, for Ten' or more consecutive Insertions .43 Per Line' PRINT ed fruit jover peach. (Makes 5 licensing, plus taking of State • FLCty-tvyp. consecutive Insertjoris .40 Per Lin^e "Often parents seem to be concerned and confused about dis- Real Estate examinations. Mr. ^ f A B LE OF C H A-RG ES d1hDlihidihi eventually teaching the ^child self -"discipline and control which Pfeil or Mr. Garfinkel. Lines Number of Insertions ' Janmar Realty are necessary for responsible adulthood. Punishment is not the 315 Rahway Ave., Erizabeth. One Pour Ten - same thing at all. ' ' - j Neighbors 4 2.00 1.80 1.72 Instead of this leaching and training, often parental attempts . . 351-1300. S 2.50 2.25 2.15 / are limited to-punishment. This is a bird-in-the-hand theory/ HELPWANTEP ' ' — 3.00 2.70 2.58 7 3.50 3.15 - -3.01 beaause it is true that punishment may stop the child from doing MALE-FEMALE 8 4.00 3.60 3.44 something'his parents don't .w^nt-him^jg^diOj— // COUPLE WANTED supt., 9 4.50 4.05 3^87 MA/LTO Even'though he stops, parents. should ask themselves wJKat'he • full timer-good salary, Plain- 10 • 5.00 4.50 :' 4.30' is learning. Will this help him grpw toward selMiSCipllne? field 6-233S). , All Classified Advertising appears in 7 Newspapers' GARDW STATE Or does he stop because he's afraid, and resentful; just waiting with.a total Circualtlon in'Excess of 36,0.00. Berkeley for an opportunity when'he'won't,be, caught? Or does he stop, but SITUATION WAITED Heights Beacon; Mountainside' Echo;' Springfield "Sun; 200 MORRIS AVE SPRMWID NJ. do something worse? ., ..v. ,- ..__ , ;:> RETURNS--Federal & Non- Union.Sun; Roselle-RoBelle Park Leader; GARDEN STATE On the other hand,- punishment may not'stop the/child. Re may" Ne-wa;xLinden_LcadBr. Deadline lor-A-11 ClassifTe"d Insert NAME tlons; GhangoB.or Canc»Uatlons-is Noon on Tues, W«efc_oi7 pete nxl y. __grepaTej." "Cain the attention uf ipantehrnent ehavGSj-no- PubKcaUon; No Classified Ads will be Placed on Sat,, CITY. PHONE DR~6-292T ~T' 'Sun., or Holidays. Errors after First Publication are Not one bothers with him; but when he misbehaves he becomes die MAN WISHES part tune eve- the Responsibility of GARDEN STATE WEEKLIES, Or- center of attention.. .''"./ 1 ning ' porter work, tall . Those That, do Not Alter or Affect the meaning of the Ad' NSERT DATE __# of Tlmes^__Cost per.jnsertibn.— 'Discipline is the long-term plan for developing the full potential Box Numbers Available dt 25*. All replies kept Confi- MU 6-2975 of. ar child. Parents really need to know^thn^ e processep s of growthg, , "I trace it all back to. th^e dential,, and Forwarded ii desired. TO PLACE YOUR AD (TCheck () Money Order because disciplinli e teaches when it works hand in hanhdd with the -moment we dashed out on the,, si'tting ; - $J.pO per hgur. CALL"BP 9-WbO. . . ; • Amount Enct, child's growth and.development.-' / ' • ' ,• • field to face'em." --— dR 3-7487. •"•'•-•'•' •'• . ••"• ',*.

Stmkholders_ Florence Dwyer Announces "WILMINGTON, _Pely, 0fferr|d[ Pont de Nemours and Com- A question heard many times- of-research- at-Fairleigh Dick- room? in the.Military." ' Training Is glyen in the"mllj-- pany, Inc., was owned by' 233,- during the_soucse_of,adayatthe inson. "~ •' 9BftstockholdefS_a9 s Of DeTerft- local' OS Army Recruiting Sta- • The wide educatio™r enter- tary-in at least L500 skill arenas- ber 31, 1963, an increase of tloit at 9 Caldwell Place, Eliz- "According to the-aruthors-the- «eisp^T-ti»e==&nnied- Forces and-at most times there are Term 3,375 over thenumberrecorded 'abeth, -ts-f

r The film, narrated by Alis'talr USD/U ...- Cooke, depicts theproblemsin- volved in attempting to save CHOKE—-Ib = _cienxmoiiumentTniZS"s fromdestruc" - Sen- Williams. THe Congress— •tlon- by "the backwaters oTSe"woman consistentlydenledruch Aswan Dam. The film, also a possibility, however. _ SAUSAGE MEAT «. 35c__rSALMbN^TEAKS—^" The For Your Shopping Convenience -.shows how, under the sponsor- " Peopled Union County MUSC- have been ood co me PARK'S SAUSAGE FANCY SHRIMP ship of. the United Nations, in- _ £ "" , ishe UMA CH0lce i plans are beingmsdetq- declared in-explaining therea- *OPEN ALL DAY* SHOULDER STEAKS SEA SCALLOPS «>««»» «« sons sne |j_ accomplis-•-h thi• •—s tremendous dec filed-to run for the pp PRE-COOKED SEAFOOD SELECTIONS^ House lnstead~of~tlre-Senate.-— M SAT., FEB. 22nd Haddock, Perch, Cod FlIlefs YOUR iiaslOTdayiFeb^4;Tuesday;-" y constituents and IJave- Ib. eb. 25; and.thursday.Tep. 27, developed a cioseworkingrela- WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY Fish Sticks, Fish Cakei CHOICE. 55 -at-4 p.m. each day, Dr.1 Harold tionship which has enabled_me;, N.:M6rdenke, dlr-ecto-fTofTraii- t0 &• Increasinglrfhelpfut: side, win conduct one-half-hour because of the grewingisgniority : ve ••nBture;talKs- for-chfldt^,--Tte-*^-^ -^ven-jn.e...pn;^po^-j topic selected for-thethreedays-^t House committees.. ;-,- , BROOKSIDE NATURAL CHEESE S61ss?"lBiH -is- .''Smaller •Animal-H6"mes.'' — ''r knirtv^-Bistrict and the -' ^i^-^. \%MOSS^'2WiO© GREEN STAMPSM ;:.•-•"•.'. -y±2\ The lectures will be Uiuatf ated PeoPle of the District know me, - pkg. with color^sUdest__t£> j^ and I. believe-t-he-results have-- »—«^=^lj WITH A PgRCHASE OF $7.50 i{; The T^allsid^Nanjre and beeTl mutually beneficial^_ 1=| -,-.;v;ll»jjI V M^AOJJlI^tlOAtriTISj^TOIACCO.^itl«t> ,£» S| Science Center is open to the **•*•_ ri ? public each weekday, except . DURING HER MORE than RICHMOND-FINE FLAVOR iiiiillllllllll GOOp TSRU SAT.^FEB, 22 ||||| GSW| Friday) from"3 to 5 p.m.,-and seven years Jiohe House, Con- on" Saturdays, Sundayj^and-hol- gresswoman-Dwyer—has—won—J idays-from lto5p.m.Thepublic special renown for her role in rpeciat 0 n a is iMiited to viGlgtheNaRKie^ndZJ J'gi8 gZ~4011 0Congressional in- Scierici^^G^tST^^ew'the-vestlS * -- ^ the'-BJUie Sol~ IADDOCK 89< thousands—of indoor . _exhi- Estes - Department-of-Ag-. CODFISH CAKES bits, anbT~partioipate—Inivthe ricultuce scanaaTTln enacting FINAST SCALLOPS scheduled programs. , ' th'eJEqual Pay for Women law, D0WNYFKKFWAFF1ES 3 'P^ '" -her—leadershTF-in- strengthening cooperation_be-._ GORTO ~=—tweeri-Federal, Scate^and locaT " an -_ijeyels of government so as to JObPOINT PINK SALMON lit Meadmbroo ~preventTindue~concentration-of—| QUAKER STATE PIECES & STfMS -"—Thfc. Meadowbryok Dinner power- in the Federal Govern- KING ^ ^ Theatre inrCedar Grovehas_aifc_ment.— _ ' - FINAST SPAGHETTI JSS"^»^Z no'unced-its "s6ffedule~fo*116wing She has been a leader- in b JjarJgadoon" starring—fciddle^devislng-more- effective wavs_ FINASTPRUNB~ T^S- " "^69c B'rackenT-^Denise Lor and of protecting consumers In - SIAR.K1ST SOLID PACK-3. OFtlABEL ^ -RED-HEART DOG FOOD »^^85c^ $ • T o m m y^ JLeonetti which ter-. terests,- improving commuter SUNSWEET PRUNE-JUICE £&•"* 39c ^= mlnates Sunaay7March78r' ~;transpoTtation^=providing"heip" "Fanny"—follows, opening fox elderly persons, streng- _ flNAST=SHCEDiBEETS -ApFiP5-^MTr4ng-^orotfiy^£pJ-_-Jth5ning_h^althn?^ndL^UMt^^ FINAST PRESERVES £S lins andt-y- runs through April" programs, and supporting mea- 26. sures to.-create' more'jobs, CREAM STYLE On April 29 'The Red Mill" increase foreign trade arid pro- -is—the--choice gunning" through tect human - May 24, star to be announced ' . —i later. r~ MRS..JDWYER HAS also op- -•• Jerry -Van—Dyke-in-4^yjsh^pos.ed_unwise^orexcessiveFedr jf-inast JjaMery *^>pecials VouWere Here" lSTiJe cho'ice--eral spending,-working'to make- of- producers Gary McHugh and—the foreign-aid-programrLmore^ ...John- BeanTnrmt-opening-May Z7 ijfficieot and effective—and=to= SLICED PINEAPPLE "» ' Vn" 41« -fCHICMN of y Pie ; 45' refornuthe-area^redevelopment it J^^C _ ~^r-

Uke^New Jersey from-jinfairj. _. EGG RAISINBREAD 3ouce%Sh£PUghr=AttgU!Sj:, -with—petitibn."~T~^± ^^=^^^«^^ENGJJSJM|UM1^^^

WELL INSURED EEH-HNAST BANANA PONUTS NW YORK n^- Three out of. every four civilian Amer- Theitriembers and guests of 5i£49*; — ~ BETTYtR0CKH -Stainless Steel Cookware Special- icans had some kind of health the Union Cpjjnty Hiking Club ]>b ] insurance by- the end of 1962, will have a choice of three hikes AJAX 32c 79« JYORY SNOW "^ 34c : %79< famous REVERE PATRIOT WARE according to the Health Insur- SAVE AT FINAST • FIRST NATIONAL being offered over the.weekgnd UUNDRY DETERGENT ance Institute. of Feb. 22 and Feb. 23:. ; wOlllM C lb pV9 C 3lb iOT C On Saturday, AdolphWappler, THRILL ' 35 •««• 59c TIDE ' •'"- -28 - '»**72 • Westfleld, will lead a gamble UQUID DETERGENT • WASHDAY MIRACLE DETERGENT . . - 7/^Debunfcer in Echo Lake Park, Mountain- ,slde and Westfield._-The group 41

-. :l RRCENTfKARY TW.ES 1° Gen. Washington's Winter or Surcease From Sadness BY JQHN T. CUNNINGHAM but one winter—gpent-irrjhe- laughed and danced*-and found- Somerset -jncainpment at plained that "our-prospect of- officer's _.vyiv.es. .When pretty *1779, -Cmini ah Washingtoa Laughter and' gaiety seldom pleasant - hill's of Somerset , s,ur^aas_e-^_frfi.mr the madness; "Iviiddlebrooltin the fali of 17?8;=&u;age. is' Very. Indifferent," girls are. present, partjes foh- sriowed-an unusual' interest in ofwar.-. ~ Althougtv-Quartermaster-derpr—-lujn-ber—a-nd--bri£Lks_for soldier low, came the way of General-Wash- County can be remembered as - 1 tngton durin&J-the Revolution: one time when the general - Washington's aides set up the eral Nathanael ~Gf eehe\c6'nv"" -Buts abounded. • The Washington^ entertained Greene-" himself " wrote of " '" ' Officers, too, found com^—often at th'e~Wallaceljouse with .Washington's " extraordinary • fortable quarters throughout small"! formal' part.ips. Tra^ dancing feat, recording that' the region, from Pluckemin to dition records-tTiat the_.winding ••\\{s Excellency danced with v SomefvilieT^Washlngton chose staircase in the Wallace "House Mrs". Greene for three hours'- llyoujust as his headquarters the--hand---was_'"a delight to flirting -without-^sUttiig'"' down." Even rbought-an ecohomy_ -some new home that Mrs. John—couplesiil-Surelyi' the Walhing-^allowing fQr minutes seeming allace of Philadelphia ° had tons entertained.cm their 20th longer to an ever-loving hus-^- car, donlt/eacl this n\arly finished in Somefville. wedding anniversary injan- band, the"'"dancing of General —you1!! cry! ^^ r uary, although that~Is not-Eg=~~wqRh.jpgrnn and Mrs. Greene corded. • ^ -" must have been a_thing to be- Records of other—partying hold. '. ~• '_ ': r MG --CONFIDENTLY at are plentiful. On--New Year's ed of a finely-drilled Da-y,=GeneratJ.ohnMuhienberg Hfot> armv-^aygstitngtoh had eveny. good spirit wten he THE LONG- NIGHT of plea- viting many young ladies ol pme rville on Decem- sure wore away." Greene_con- gritish had been the neighborhood," No.one was cluded his letter on.the-dance_ off brilliantly at Monmouth, permitted r_o. retiFe beiore '3 - £y writing: • "Upon-the-whole' a.jn. the-French gqvernmeflt-had be- ' - we had—a pretty little frisk." xojne frfeMw, prospects;for a * .,* * _ MiddlebrooK—was -"not all one" THE BIGGEST party ffrrhe g party. Alarm's sounded often !»«»»»« »#»*»»»*# Christine OCII=III.B » _ .affair^was -held in Pluckemin ^~^ Chrysler's .be- vastly differeftfrom the f^.^^. windows and—knelt with-r-ifles— Lee's . ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY 1 t0 celebcalejhe all-new economy car, -previous—yearr-wtv^sValley Forge nlghftprr- e of the..^ p[ thg prpnrh A ^ aimed into the darkness while H^totrs EMERSON AND KRYSTAL KLEAR cers began-to arri in town ^ ryone ~with_the -slightest all the heat-Twshed out. Then, - - Va1 'iiilii boulevard, watchung, new jersey „„_ _position"was Mrs# Washington recalled, she SIM£AJK)00i MON., WED., THURS., FRI., & SAT._ ington arfived.to setjhe VVa^f ^^r ^f^T^^/Z Addled under quiltT-and com- s.nco 188B PL 5-011 1 T^e House-in orde^Kc^s-^^^J^^^JI^^ forters ir, , hops^ • that -the.: l«#» »»»»»»» 351 • 1822 ' ~S6 Cherry St,' ELIZABETH ^nf buzzed, throughout the _all'--m^t*™«iig_— ••-••(i . • - faflcie-a General; Knox wrote-of the. quickly. hills: this would be~a- winter affair: to.remember.) ~ , . ' •- The parties and the dancing The \Washingtoa; acquired' a , "Everybody allows it to be and the lunches gayeaway to set of-Wedgewood queensware the first-'of the.kind eveX=ex^-.JEealityi vV.as.hington and his .DINNERS SERVED and- Jiiblted .in- this state at least, army moved out in June^rested' New Brunswick t^Fance' the we nau aiiour. bcveni>. iduics, anci happy; to resume the-war. .aiT of the •.-first,--too -tn--lhe-_ . / hington-returned to- fine "rdBrtB and furnishings of r Mrs was .ENTERTAINMENT- State. We danced all nlghtfe ^um; -Vernon and the "tifcle th —comes-tlrst^AND-every-S-monlhs. furnlsrT'evidence of.-this required A PQSH Banyusijoom with Party Facilities —^ PuTTp'ou'rsR " 'I service to an Authorized "Slmca U«rsi_llNL^.rriaay 6, Oaiuruay evenings ^ITALIAN • AMFRICAJi — ITALIAN DINNER A ARKAY Dealer or other Chrysler Motors *'' ">• i~r.K; ~Served.Tues., Wed. -Jl _requestrhimrto .certify-receipt' of - (Room, tig- ^hamfiio/tA. For Golfers t"ursa*r- such evidefrce and-youtcar^rnjle-... WA:. 3-18-08 age. Simple enough for such inv_ -W-E-CAXESJ1CLPARUE5;_ . .or write ^ =pj)rJant protect|ojT7 ^ .. —_jlzir. 119"SO. ORANGE AVE; FLORHAM PMrCFfl 7 -4445 —ZT6-EA.GL5 ROCK-AVEr - OPEN.EV.EBY EVENING ^HANOVER, N. J. 15 ST. JAMES^LACE ^^ReseTvatipif: 952^7425" —NEWARK^NrJr Zz? vjujwjw'Mvjsnw^^ 30R^3Z41 -.. z: = = T ? ^ F lT Y Liail ^juburban K^octeh -ENJOY 64 Brick Qhurch-Plaia East "Served tn an atmosphere of chqrm und friendliness . . .. iLIEVABLE •ii -^ SMCA 000 ^ ! — —. •- • — Luneh-Dinner

/Cocktail L^un^e--Banquet.FacilUj.es ^7 ——••" _ HOUSE 1080VALLEY ROAD, STERUNG, N.J. CUSTOM- BEST PROTECTED WI-.7-290O- _ Fol low Springfield Ave., Summit • • ". West Vinyl^4rVhBB>- -import in America — Luncheon & Dinner Covers^W.W. " BEST PEREQBMERJEQ£yi= . =•_ ^ . '. =_r-3r~ ConfSenMHl^Afmosp/ie - With Porsche synchronizers, IT'S~AL-W-A¥S-SOO.D —'•• HOTTER J_ NEW'64 MODELS wmm z- indspeirrdentsuspeiisiuii.

..- Rt. * -j-^^-iahia-TfeRRgj^:-: •——= ' ; - • • -. >-t

' ^"1:. '' ' '''ui. '.'."i( ^r^*^^ 1 r'/^MWBSS^MKvi

— Charcoal Bfoiled Steaks Chops' 1 l^~?y~''miimmJ£^T£w Ul ji^r- Sea Food Banquet.facilities ALL COLORS • I Ml is just across the street; IMMEDIATE CREDIT APPROVAL

WE MAKE Beef and Pork-Bar-B-Qffe 'hone PARKAtte-MOyNTAlW-AVES. SCQXCH PLAINS'.- Applications FU 8-6902 Just $ 1595i- the low-priced. '/(•' • . AT0P.1HE HOTEL SUBURBAN, 141 So. Harrison St. E. Orange, N.J. ORante-3-1200 all-new import. 3 EAR5 T Y FIRS T I>;V ME Appearing nightly-Wed. thru Sun • NO MONEY °°^ *- y °—^ • - ^- ---*--- QRange 2-9741 FOR YOUltiJfl^ERTArlNMENT f{ • UP TO $300' CASH REFUND •'KAI 556 Valley St.- ORT ALL USED THE MAGNIFICENT - '•••-'. " ORANGE, N.J. •«J T-B1BD '59 T-BffiD : $895 AL RANDO at the Organs » Hardtop $2995 2-Door Hardtop — '60 VOLKSWAGEN •S9 FOBD - '5S T-BIBD $895 $2095. Country Squlra- ..... $895 •5»' CHRYSLER -.•- >-••• •• •S! FOM) $1795 '60 F08D 2-Door Hardtop —— $695 i SIMCAIGOO QaUxle XL Starliner ^ — $895 '59 P1TM0UTH OLnsL floods ...ihL QiaUan. "'Si'FOBD .$1745 •60 CBEYBOLET 4-Door Hardtop $545 Coontry' .Sedan —• $795 '59 F.ORD OPEN DAILY EXCEPT TUES. •62 FOBD 2-Door Sedan Custom 4-Door — $595 Galaxte .Convertible $1695 '60 FORD '58 PONTUC Country Sedan $795 Starchief 2-Dr. Hardtop '82 RAMBLER ' .$1545 $595 MOO' Wnspn '•==- '60 PLYMOUTH $691 -'51 FORD •62 FALCON . 2-Door-Sedan^ .., • '600 4-DoorH7T $495 2-Door Sedan :$ii95 '60 FALCON VISIT THE NEWLY DECORATED •57 FONT. Starchief Te8tdrlvea1000here. m •82 COMET Wagon — $695 2>Door ^lardtqp $495 4-Door Sedan '60 FALCON '61 CHEVT Impala .$1195 2-Door Sedan 7- $645 Monterey 4-Door $395 COCKTAIL LOUNGE Convertible -, "^ '60 FORD '61 FORD Gaiaxle $595 •56 FORD $95 & RESTAURANT S-Door Hardtop 2-Door : — . 2-Door Sedan formerly '69 FOBD PLAINFIELD DODGE, INC. Coach & Horses '61 RAMBLER !$1295, $795 •S3 CHEW $100 Member Of The s Clanlo 4-noor Galaxle 2-Dr. Hardtop. (Choice. Of 2) "niKiFDDINERSt rumCLUB'" '51 MERCEDES-BENZ after Minimum Down Payment Station Wagon •220' — . $995 . $895 :._ARLINGTON- AVE. . •-"tUNCH-And DINNERS SERVEDD A1LY MOTORS • BETWfeEN 5TH a 6TH ST THE HAMMOND ORGAN. AUTHORIZED . • PARTY & MEETING FACILITIES FOR UP FORD DEALER PUAINF1ELD, N.J. TO 60 PERSONS - • 931 ST. GEORGE AVE.RAHWAY fU 8-6900 PL7-23Z3 : _UJ._HL6HWAY22.^M6lMimSIMi?>»li^!^ 9*3 MAGIE AVE., UNION EL 2-6251 ' \ADViliWfSOVS-MNUS- jJ THE TIME TO TRADE IN YOUR' D a i sy s~ Does m-od-ex-n^ automatic water detergent is used. White Never launder, white^nylons__ laundry, equipment' make.'.'a^and .-'light 'cblorfast.clothes—wlt^eoloFed-gapmentsj nylorfis B* MARY W. ARMSTRONG 1 Union County-Home-Agent- ir -* rt PrR« International breeze of wash day? Some folks should, be-washed in water trf a scavenger. It plcks-_up color; unu think it should, especially with at least-140 degrees~F—\\"ater from_ anyrhmg-with- dingy re- =:r ~ T\ie late weeksof wmter-are '-^whiah=shaiJd.^e=eaten_Lv Bated, sliced, or pureed. sweet such ,c_a_rrf_ul jristruccions temperature no higher than 90 suits. »; a good time to experiment with and. grow .with abandon as for fork. • - • potatoes cannoeTfozeir-am-ieH pfmfed. on_soap and QeCergent to 105 degrees should be-used _ •' • ' neW ideas. And the chance to instance in six counties, south —HOW TO COOK FRESH" -upTo".12 months iViiTreDdrlf pioces^s boxes, .Madern equipmenLJaniUQc-silkspsBolens,qpUQcsilkspln, - certains-yny - • GGREASE STAINS repond to -and. north, of Saji—Francisco-' ARTICHOKES' ancL-figred eorieot y„ rfrauriany-aids dcTTave time ajid. thetic -and non - roterfast—various - treatment.-^ try ~om new—faocrs-=-&fid—ptew the-Atebama_E_ictenslon Se.uc . ^^ ^ ^ ^^ ^^ ^.^ . _ ^ 'minlne prewashing in hot water more .adventurous^.. menus—-where the climate Is;mostly ' Wash artichokes, trim stems yiHICLf should-not be overlooked. Globe frost-free and the summers are "and pull'off and discard the. - ~-." T._,._t" for is the'keyoasuccessfurfesults. -/yellowing of-dothes is some- and~a*~full' measure of deter-.-. bm h 1 S a "artichokes • are-one of tiie am- cool ond foggyTWhen the sun_and— tough outside.leaves -at thTEase. ! ,. n c m^mfies Three common laundryprob- times caused by an inade9uate__gent helps. Then use^regular •<•'*?: common foo3s~you might want soil aren't to their liking nothing of-a-r.tichok'e. Cut sflLthe top machine atleast lems and their solutions Ulus* amount of detergent bunnran—wash cycle, .using freshwater to-get. to know. -Ea*|ng^hem_wil)-make them grow, _ —rtird and-spread a rt i c h o k e s n'e a month - trate this"." TheyTre: 1. gray^also be caused by impurities and 'detergent. Very greasy HiLLSiDEjVILLYS -is an exer-c-ise something lik<; l^s-juat as important to know . open by placing them upside -- , ' .," ,- . ' ing or yellowing of clothes; 2. in the water. Iron in the water_ clothes may require extra de- plucking daisy petals. - how to eat artichokes as hew down^on~a table and'pressing- To clean under your—tele-1i^st6r4flg—dingy white, clothes is a well-knowrroffender. __ tergent. Grease can also . be SALES & SERVICE An artichoke—looks -like a m fook them. After cooking",' buds fiunly.—' phone dial. use~a-cotton s"waF to their former brightness; and -"• Laundry ^experts, says that removed from clothes by adding |12Q9 LIBERTY AVE. HILLS^E, -pine coriejijind is' the edible an .artichoke may-be eaten as a Stand artich&kes upright in a dipped in-ammonia. _3. removing greas£_sLaliTS~oT graying—and-yellowing are not household ammonia to the fresh "'bud of a 'plant related tcT hot vegetable with-mefaed butter deep saucepan just'bigenough-to _ « »• » . ,_ other outdoor stains. , - _caused by tou much.deiergent.. ^ using 2/3 cup per—10 FL 1-2150 _thi&t4es- and sunflowers. Top or another sauce or it can be fit snugly or- tie them with a an extra-delicious cake.- Graying—is- most^'frequently However-, vyashing act-ioMn gallons of water —quality"a-rt-ieliokes- have-tightly—se-rved 'cold in " a jjlad. string so that SibsUtute-a Slnall can of drain--^caused by in,co"mplete removal front-loading' machines/, and- closed leaf-scales.;-they should •:. The tende? bottom-end-of-each. their strapeTTilU'teaspoon-s*lt,- ed crushed pineapple.-for half of soil, or what is cdmfnbnly -washer-dryer combinations can be~compact and heavy anci of. an - leaf has a delicate nutty flavor. ltablespooh freslrfem'otr]uice_' ' the waterjii your regula^cakeicalled • ..idlj.t backwasfrT^TJTfe-be hampered by excessive suds. attractive green-eolor. Small to To eat it, take a leaf by the and " boiling water to eove-c-^xecipe. -r --• •- .- ^. latter means that soil removed -Tliat^s^-w^hy—lew— sudsing deter - - medium Sizes, are preferable-, tip; dip the botrom'end iniauce, Cook.covered, 45 to-60 minutes ^ "~^ ,*,J7^~"^^O. fromcl'oTITes ls_reaepes1ted"wtnTej'.grauR nfe recoTnihended." -end or until 'hasp is soft. Lift out This is the time to try this .. mouth, close your teeth and pull with 2 spoons and let drain up^-~ water-=-Factors con - TRY -CONDITION INC- epicurean bud for 'most 'of the The leaf out, stripping zaff-the side cluwn. '• 1 , •>" » —j*'~— tributing ~To~.graying are not looking clothes in the washer. 47 million pounds-of artichokes thin layer of meat.-7he- resM)f- HOW-TO SERVE ARTICHOKES fulf flavor alwaya-coolc enough detergent, overloading ~Do - this by using 1i6t_.water i jjannually ~tn~the "Tli" the leaf is tuugh-antKHscardedrougrrana-atsca-raear. - —if a whole ^r •ln^the-same-^ ater-tBe—»vasher, imprnper sorting and;no snafi nr deterggj^JJse cquntry reach produce coun- "Artichoke. leaves are strictly ^to eaoti-peFson, place them on they, were soaked in: — before washing, • and too low instead a double-measure .of. ters duting the spring months, a finger food. - - indlviauaTsala'd plates, so-the .water temperature. a good water~softener and run well tete-May.;-..-..z..._ • -Once the leaves haveall been waste—leaves—will-.not clutier- ^^Slip-covers will last twice_aa—^_ . •_, * •; * ' __ She clothes througha full^vash- -stripped off and"eateh; :pne by dinner- plates. S half of an long if exTra slip-ori arms are YOU'RE ASKING for trouble ing .cycle. WliefTdorng yout~pe-- to .j A RTICHOKES^A'R-E believed one,."the "choke" is yisiblej-it artichoke may be served on the fashioned of the same material, if you wash dark non-colorfast gular laundry, graying Qf_wJiite to be. native to _the Med- ' looks somewhat like a f'uzzy_ dinner plate. •' •~ *-•""* ' • ' items with Iighte"f^cl5the"s~or- clothes ^can Be prevented b-y NEW WESTWOOD re ?auce, if^thin, in small_ Hanging a picture?. Mask the VaslfafP'TnT^'soiled item with oareful measuring of soap or- 4 ffien'slLujnc h fo7"jHousands of/years. When _o£t-wltra iork and discardeds-^paper-"-cup?4-or %in""tiny" bowls "spo'^t for"lh" ° nairwitlv""' a*" ™""'s- otheFcKtRes"fiT\vater ffiafisn't detergeht, and addition of a arrichokes are happy in soxner-TTTis leaves the delicious heart placed onlhe sa-lad plates tene*"""d "•""• finger. • hot water softenertothejirst.rinse.. 12 to 2 pm R^mfember thaf rlorhe^-•— are whiter- arid brighter when, relaxed atmosphere washqdrin-sofrwater, and they, requj^less soap or detergent. Delux Dinner

SPARKLES! ITALIAN AMERICAN For especially gooi,- ^. rera-traded:—used . \ - CUISINE- cais-one owner, low milage and' reputation.-- _JDancing Fri.-& Sat. guaranteed...CALL FOR WASHINGTON i BIRTHDAY ADamsJ-3TP0 d his CYCtONES i NO MINIMUM ROTCHFORD 438 NCLRTH AVE. GARWOXO) NO COVER 433 North. Ave^Westfie Id

Doors Open WA^INGIC^^JIRTHDAY Prompily af 9 OWE MONEY ON YOUR CAR? If you do, Dom can give you TO PifrY a new, quolity cor ot lower lsl Poyment Ap.til_,", monthly payments in-many rnc«cl' ^ '' "

•64CHtVR01IT.-vi, WS9S 62 PNT lmpalar^DoorHardtnp - C>.ilaxli!.2.Door.Jl!irdinp •Minllli Hlrtto»._y.B. «IS»llli, fill, '63 CADIUAC $369J •61CHEVMUT JU37 J »l»«, KtH. • 4>nnnr H;irdlop: Fully Knuipi'i-rfl llDill '63 CHEVRMIT ...... >I9»I '62 FORD — Rel.UrStalioirWugon '• y CHntry Mai ttatiiia 63 CHIVROUT...... |18«S 61 FORD *«»»— •ilwill), lioiiif itwUi. — Impala I)nor SI iition. Wagon b 61PO1>CI ttlult MaNttt, V* a>t««tli, Itjh- : 4-spcedbox! '61CADIUAC. *14»5 '62 FALCOrT ^1364 •63O1BSMOBIU $1S»I Convcrtihlt!; Full\ 4-IKKl Mil, DiliH-trl», iitMMtlt, <)R- Sport t'oupu •61CORVAIR ...... $99$ 63 COMIT »U»5— •~T . Manid 2-Door __:J.Door •Aolretn '«2 CHIVMUT »I695 — M-nonrSliilion Wagon «ilixir?:*D«r tmn, y-l, \ Impala Convertible - •60CHIVROUT ...... »10S0 v itMrlni, «IH. : -' '62 BUCK 11730 OE $864 \ Kli-tlra'22 __•tl*OHl\Ai^^.. .„... 1179* — 4-DoorHardtop. 2-Dew, V-S, •atofiatli.'inar itnrlt|,~ -~ —-felt 0POmiAC...... I» 'M*CHT1»C '..«ie«S Calnlina4-DoorHardlo "60 FORD ^-$1164 i BonnpUtli^-Doorllardtnii CoiHtiy Mil™ JUIkn Wi|dii,~ V-8, '61POMTIAC _ Giilaxie aatoaUli.-tMKJtKrlna, K1H. Slou> . „ .r;it^l[n>K.'onvcr '60 UMCOLN .'. $II9J llaik with rrfi 4-DoorHardtop _ •60 ei«YlUR77r.T. .T77$1l9f '59 CADILLAC $1564 '62C

SHOP THE _ REST THEN UY THE BEST I 'B9 CHEVROLET—$895" VuU |Uj Impo la 4«door Sedan I '60 CHEVROLET 51295 ALWAYS SURE Impala^dr. Hardtop. Full "., .-..,' . Full Power, A ir^ondv \ ; .AT THE PLYMOUTH ^t 195 g -Suburban Station HOME OF Wagon ' ••"-.. " USED

82 CHEVR0LETSI895 CARS ation Wag-

'I2 CORVAIR $.395 1135 CHESTNUT STREET dub Coup* ROSELLE «CH 5-7930 I Authorittd Shop Morii, Tuesrr Thurs-. and « ktfttlwerth- Z Frl.. 9:3QJL1M. to 8:30 P.M. ^Wed. * Sat. A.M. to 6 P.M. Morris & Commerce Ave Union- Mil 6-2800 WE SHOOT FOR L0W3CWSS; PRICES. . Is Rated Excellent Asked To QpeEHaJNegroes The Individual owners" of race, and. were given evasive ments. ' ••• jj. The. Commonwealth Water for voluntary curtall- a golfcourser,afoodstDrechain, Answers when they questioned . In addition to the general non-. _^-Cornp'any7~Short Hills.' tuduy_ wont rf—wawt—usa was ex- > swimming club, and a garden the exclusion. The branchof the discrimination policy which the_ —assured 4ts more_ than 51,000---cellent,-' —the~.veteran, water apaHthent development, hav|g ^^jj-^mg) Tithe Days at'the Route 22, Springfield-StSEe^as^store manager'Gordon out difficulty, even if the-meeting.the water needs of the •servotrs t67more-than 80 jer Map>wood, Millburn, plishmenTs *~tirl9637-cbulthiot to save some . nature talks for children. The :< —Pebi 13 at the Bow and Arrow Bedell. . ' " monu- , "'V7a MOUNTAIN AVK. ' cent of^heir combined -capacity Pravidence, Springfield," Sum-; Manor, West Ora,nge, HJ. - ' • • —_. have been won without the .co- 3 ancient topic selected for the three of three'bimon gallons," Mr. "mit, West—Orange, Passaic -Henry Bedell of 78 Forests The district-—^previously operation ~of. every person in. ments from destruction by. the days Js ^Smaller -Afflmal- -Caleman^aTd. "This-gives us -Township.-»and- Chatham-Town- -sained—the—^Eres-ident's. Ci- his organization. . . backwaters of ~3Te Aswan Dam. HomesJ' The lectures will be" DR. 6-444B inoWjhl^lprBilTlon^iriln The film^also-slvpws howpunder. illustrated with .color slides. in storage, or m&re thandoub'le =wliat- wehad_a-year ago at this Angers-Gets time. This is a vast improVe- Inent, from. low of Board Position 23 per cent on October 31v 1963." ~ Mr. Coleman expressed his -Mrs. Arthur_F. Ackerman, —eompany's thanks to municipal President of the New Jersey . officials and' customers for Ass£ciation\for Mental Health —their voluntary, eurtaitmont-_of_ stated[ "itik with_great pride. ^^.water-^uac—during1 the water that thPrNewJersey-Assoeiat-ion— emergency brought about by last for..MenI;ai -Health announces the " Year's prolonged and -record-,.election to the Board- oLJQt "•breaking drought.- .- _- rectors and Executive Com- F?-..-_ln-iYtee-s--o^..Ur<^+W4lliani^i$>ul.J .:•:.•.,'-,' ••- ~ ' '""'" '-" Vnote' ' ••-"--'•--;'—•-- ;'"•'•'••

Counselling". — isplaying Art Dr. Angers is Associate Pro- fessor of Psychology and Di- —rectcfF=of—Counselling at New- JalnrgrCo. ark State;€bllege; a graduate of Miss Joan Elste of 935 Lam-.^_Po.rovidence~College, Catholic _ berts-Hill-Road, WestfleTdTNTJ. University of America ajid re- is currently exhibiting her Art ceived his^Doctorat'e in Philos- -work consisting of _Ch'a'rcoal ophy from '-the University of drawings at JalnTTTCo. Mill- Montreal. Later, he received a Burn Ave., Millburn.. '„ Ph.D. in Psychology fronrthe Miss"'Blste received of Qttowa and a De-

Museum^Gollege of Art in 1962. She is the-resipient-of -a-Medal_.York.. : =-•— " Before of Honor awar&toriwatercolors _from the Painters and Sculptors—wgs-a-n_Associate_ErQfessflr_of. Philosophy, at'the University of She has-also-received a prize Wtintreal; -anT^Associate Pro- fo'r an oil pairi'tingltrthe Atlantic fessor of Psychology "Snd of "Couns elling^ lustration award from-the At- Center at_Newark Cpllege_of

delphia. Sb.e-xecently.had ama- -jgisj.::_at__Fordriam University, _- jor painting-acquired by Mon^—stafLEsythothecapist at Alfred mouth College, West Long~~Adie£=6™sultatipn' Center and •" --Blanch, N.J. for its peTrrranBnnrMental Hygiene Clinic collection. ' " ; the. Community Guidance Sery- . • In July 1963 she was selected ice~io New Tffrk. ~ by Bajnberger &Co., as a"Dls-' DrvShgers .hol'da'profoccion- Jinguished Woman of N.J. "^ in al memberships in many Na-" recognition of her activities in tionai and International Associ- .the fieid of Art. In August-W63 ations-including the famed Royal she held a one woman show~at of-Arts and the Ameri-

and ptiEIIcations^have thcoughout tHTworld.

•EF^The Red;:C%6^s: Eighth Exhibition of Contemp- Care-course .tcCBe. offered ar "^rafyTvIew^Jersey Art;—^^- - " TT«r'SprTng<"se'ss'i'orroi;th-e-A"dult County Oratory School'will include presenta- tions by two guest lecturers. Contest Thursday Mrs. R.A, Thompson, a Regis- tered Nurse a,nd" certifiecl in- National State Bank,of Elizabeth The semi-finals of the Union structor of the Millbarn Red has just introduced hew~pbstagef-paid THE CQunry_ Oratory Contest are Cross.. Chapter, made the-an- -scheduled for Che American nouncement In a" release'thts~ .Toank-by-mail service. Whether, you • Ldglon Hall, North-TrlvettSt.', week. , -, , •- '• r . :. -are in Union. County, New Jersey,' or navr Thursday flt . The ten week course to be The Legion invites the public, taught by Mrs. Thompson is v place in the world, especially .young citizens and sponsored jointly by theSpring- you can bank by mail FREE at any " boy and girl scouts to hear the field and Mlllburn-Short Hills office of National'State. Every mail- discussions on. the.topic, 'T"he Chapters of the American Red .Constitution, of. the United Cross in cooperation wich the _hoxLat any time of day or night, will .States. .... ,..,...'• .' ...,', ' Regional Adult School.. help speed your transaction-to-us.

Make a Date with National State. Open youi 'account today and enjoy this new convenience. -

ELIZABETH HILLSIDE KENILWORTH RAHWAY FUNERAL DIRECTORS ROSELLE PAUK SPRINGFIELD SUMMIT WESTFlELD /) ' ' • "' ' ' Arnold Salb«rg, Mgr. . , MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

"• "; ••?!-: • *-~"-•••••••*" •• • "'-&:•••::••• •.-••' '

318 E. Broad St. ., 12 Springfield Av», Rhon» AD'3-0J43 Phon> BR 6-0092

-,--,-'. ,-: _. ..•&': .£•'••;. ..._:„:.._.