, -9 ^pif""*E^s^pJ^"^^^"sWB^^t§ ^W*" WW$w^l^^B ,m>,ffoMMat. $•», at. •bowen (feu?*. FQga ti the u^ Red Bank Area J per Sit. Tomorrow, eJoody with •towers. High teraperatare to low '"''. "'"*" 'y-J Copyright-Thi *e4 Bank Register, Inc.^ 1M$. Na. See Weather, page 2. DUl 741-0010 /.r.-lX MONMOLTH COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER FOR 87 YEARS PAGE ONE VOL. 88, NO. 94 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1965 7c PER COW
SAIGON (AP) - U. S. pilots The attack was the sixth in two support, facility Were also wiped U. S. forces now have reported been observed at various points. Six. U, S. planes have been off. But American casualties al- U. S. officials said about fivt said they smashed another mis- days against SAM sites. Pilots Out. destroying five missile installa- The spokesman said it was hotdowned by missiles since June. so were heavy, because the U. S.companies of Communist, troop* sile site in North Viet Nam to- said they encountered moderate One' of the raids was only 22 tons in North Viet Nam and dam- known if the site* hit: yesterday In the ground war, U. S. 1st troops were "so damned aggres- were involved in the battle against miles from Hanoi, the closest at- aging seven others since July 27. were mobile or fixed installations. Cavalry troops, outnumbered 2 tosive," one field commander said. two companies of air cavaj- day while a big U. S. ground antiaircraft fire, but all the planes 1, scattered a big enemy force in U. S. officers expressed belief force searched (or more' Com- returned saiely, a spokesman tack to the capital so fax, the Number Not ToM All targets of previous raids have rymen, , spokesman said. 0. S.. officials have given lit been mobile units. savage fighting 8 miles west of the enemy was a regular force of munists near Plei Me in thecen- said the Plei Me special forces camp the North Vietnamese Army. The American troops had gone tral highlands. Attacks by 45. U. S. Air Force Navy A4' Skyhawk pilots re- tie information on the number ot One plane was shot dowa by to Plei Mo l«t week to help three missile launchers detected in conventional ground fire during In the central highlands. American officials reported last The pilots said they Struck a planes yesterday destroyed; two ported' heavily damaging 'Damned Aggressive* week that five regiments of that lift a 10-day seise of the camp surface-to-air missile (SAM) insurface-to-ai- r missile sites de- other Soviet-built missile sites North Viet Nam, reporting only the raids yesterday but the pilot manned by about a dozen U. S. 180 that five permanent sites have was picked up 20 miles off the U.. S. officers reported count- army were in South Viet Nam, stallation 60 miles east of Hanoi fending a key railroad bridge and north of Thanh Hoa; about most of them in the central high- advisers aqd 300 Montignafd mis- a missile support facility, a U. S.miles north of the border between been observed ringing Hanoi, and coast. He was reported in good ing 56 enemy bodies and believed •nd heavily damaged four more enemy dead were carried lands. (See VIET NAM, Page 3) , . gilts and four launchers. spokesman said. The bridge and North, and South Viet Nam. a number of mobile units have condition. Dream Realized in Ocean Township Mighty Orbital Missile
Is Displayed by Soviets OCEAN/TOWNSHIP - A dream lere are 400,000 young people in Noting the large number of of 15 years came true for Robert he state. Without (hese young ichool dropouts, he said that 13 - , MOSCOW (AP) - The Russians yester- the Iron Maiden, five feet in diameter and H. Prall, Sr., president of the people, Dr. Warner continued, the Iropouts occur every hour in the day displayed three new missiles plus an solid fueled. , Board of Education here, yester- state would be extremely poor. itate. He said, that the responsi- older one which they said can orbit the earth . The other new missiles were described as day at the dedication of the first bility for this belongs with the Intermediate Range Ballistic Missiles (IRBM). Listing some of the attributes of with* nuclear warhead. . junior and senior high school Jie young, he said that the young parents and the teachers. • Soviet missiles were shown during the with a range of between 300 and 1,500 miles. for the township. jeople are bright, healthy1, alert "We must accept the responsi- mammoth military parade marking the 48th ! A fourth new weapon, tank-like in ap- Mr. Prall Sr. told the estimated :o human values and to the needs bility for our mistakes," he ad- anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution. At- pearance and mobile, contained four antf-air- 1,500 visitors that the opening ol )f society, interested in world monished, "society has no place tacks on. the United States were relatively craft guns of about 50 caliber. . ., this school made him very happy jroblems, possess a greater drive for dropouts." mild. ' An announcement said the orbital missile. and that he had waited 15 years or more education than, any About 10,000 high school stu- could put a nuclear, warhead into orbit and for this opportunity. ither generation before them and lents fail one course or another, The orbital rocket, shown first last May it then could be fired from the ground. Day, was given the place of honor in the Making the dedicatory address, ippreciate the arts. ie said, as he listed the next The missile at 115 feet, was the longest lability as too many failures in parade of 250 pieces of military hardware. Dr. William Warner, Director of He quickly addech-"the Beatles nuclear missile ever displayed here. It is Secondary Education for the ichools. . Behind' it, came a mobile missile which three-stage and liquid-fueled, similar to. the lot withstanding." state, addressed the people as He .also' commended today's Dr. Warner said that as schools the Russians described.as.invulnerable. The rockets, which launch Soviet spaceships. stockholders, explaining that the recome larger they also tend to Russians claim it was a new intercontinental A United Nations agreement, signed by teachers for their high degree of taxpayers are the stockholders in dedication. jecome more depersonalized. He ballistic.missile. (1CBM). Western experts both the Soviet Union and the United States, the youth of the community. :old the group schools are not for estimated its range at 1,500 to 5,000 miles. prohibits the orbiting of a nuclear weapon. The second asset was intellect* he production of conformity in The term "invulnerable" was taken to mean Continuing with this analogy, he I, he said. Schools today are The United States'has tested missiles to presented the balance sheet of he students. it could be moved on the ground to avoid destroy attacking missiles in space, but has providing more up-to-date cur- 'All students cannot be mea- attack. <.. secondary education in the state, riculums with newer ideas, newer not claimed to be able to launch nuclear mentioning first the assets. sured by the same yardstick," he attacks from space. developments and with more in- It'appeared to be a revised version of The Human Asset trinsic teaching of the courses. said. . . < the "Iron, Maiden" first shown last May. It Since both the Soviet Union and the The first was human, he said. Bricks and mortar are noth- Dr. Warner mentioned the , was about $0 feet long, 20 feet longer than (See SOVIET, Page 3) Explaining this he related that ng," Dr..Warner said, "without shortage of secondary schools in progress in education." the state, saying that New Jersey ias the smallest number of col- The last asset is physical, he leges in'the country; As an ex- continued., He said that, of the ample, he said twice as many ap- 158 schools constructed that he ply for colleges in the state than Psychiatric Center knows of, this school In Ocean the schools can accommodate Township was the most economi- This, makes it a deadend for 50 cal. ' . per cent of the high school grad- "Not one school can' compare uates, he said. ... PROUD MOMENT .— Calling attention to the balance with this economical beauty," Dr; He also stressed the need fo sheet of secondary education,, .Dr. William Warner, Hew, Warner said, .' revamping the financial system Next on the'balance sheet were of schools in the state. Catling Jersey's director of secondary eduction, is,shown a».h». iMt-fixm cutting c«temony,«t:thenew marked the beginning ot the «*»•• the liabilities. He amphasiMd that the present system obsolete, he gave ah address in Ocean Township for the dedication these liabilities cannot be' fiver- '"•-'- building.. It rwHJ provide, office ter'ai $127,000 fund drive for 1966. of the first, junior and senior high school-there.: ' te fifth jumlversary families. sjStijj?ttitl '.'!re^facflltiegr itriSfe ^nVnews conference preceding looked.: •-...,, -ifci.y-r • (See DEDICATION, Page 3) yesterday with dedication of its s other two buildings, at the dedication, .ceremonies, Rob- man Alfred N. Beadltston, Free- ert Eisner, prtsWefit of the cen- Tnrockm&rfon Av«. and'an ."open holder: Director Joseph C. Irwin; for expanded treatment arid) re-ter's board of trustees, and Dr. house" at th e three renovated and Eatontpwn's Mayor Hsrbeft Howard 'Lee Wylio, its medical search programs. 1 o Charges'FaceSaving' buildings now housing the c«n- werner officiated at the nb- also director, outlined the center's ac- complishments in .the past fivi FREEHOLD - Earl it'Tax Board, rendering the and tax board appointments can't lished and other unspecified acts. years rand discussed new pro- be made until he returns in De- grams'planned by the non-profit suspended Monmouth County JaU panel powerless, although its This was three days after a warden, denied yesterday all li principal work, consideration of cember. Grand Jury had found narcotics organization in 1906. charges Sheriff Joseph A. Shafto 1965 tax appeals, will have, been Sheriff Shafto fired Mr. Smith, The new projects include expan- has filed against him and ac- completed before the new sheriff pending a hearing Oct. 28, alleg- traffic existed among jail prison- sion of consultation services t cused the'sheriff of preparing leaves his! office. ing insubordination for a critical ers, security, risks had been em- county courts, schools and wel-them to "save face" and to put Governor Hughes is on vacation statement the warden had' pub- (See JAIL ISSUE, Page J) fare agencies dealing with emo- Sheriff-elect Paul Kiernan on the tioriilly disturbed children. spot. The center to now conducting workshops for juvenile officers At the same time, Mr. Smith's Warden Answers Charges from various sections of the coun- attorney, Charles Frankel, said will hold similar semi- none of the charges, even if true, nars for probation officers. Other warranted dismissal and ques- programs planned would provide ioncd the procedure outlined by diagnostic assessment of selected Mr. Shafto to have Mr. Kiernan Defense Will Quiz Shafto cases, group therapy preside at a hearing on the and individual treatment for charges or to determine not to FREEHOLD - Sheriff Joseph tions the retiring sheriff present- And in several answers the youngsters on probation and thei hear them. A. Shafto will be called upon to ed to him last Friday night. The warden relies- for his- defense on parents, and recruitment, train- The attorney said the charges testify under oath for the defense answers will reach the sheriff facts' lie says are best known by ing and supervision, of non-pro- should be aired before the state in .a hearing on misconduct tomorrow on. the final day of :he sheriff, . • . •' ',{• fessional" volunteers to serve as Civil Service Commission. Mr. charges he has filed against sus-j his term. , : The warden's attorney, Charies' "friends'*.of youngsters on proba- Shafto has said the commission pended Monmouth County Jail The Warden turns many of theFrankel, said .the sheriff-will,- would enter the situation only on Warden Earl A, Smith. questions around, suggesting that, have to • testify, in support of his • (See CENTER, Page 3) appeal from a hearing conducted This is made clear throughout if.there had been any laxities, charges and will be cross-exam- by the sheriff who is the appoint- the answers Mr. Smith had pre-they had been on the sheriff's ined. ' '.'•' ing authority of the warden. pared in reply to the 11 accusa- part.'..//. Wednesday Ceremony "These . charges,"; Mr., Smith erts Like charged, "are vague, ambiguous, Meanwhile, the swearing in of Smith to Ask general in nature. They do not Mr. Kiernan, variously listed, Post Office specify dates, months, or even RIIBON CUTTING — Monmoufh County Assemblyman Alfred N. Beadleston snips the Junked Plan since his 10,000 vote margin elec- Reinstatement years. . . and you know as well MATAWAN TOWNSHIP — tion over Mr. Shafto last Tues- as I do that they are untrue, ribbon and opens the building at 72 Throekmorton Av«., Eatontown, recently acquired day, for today and tomorrow, FREEHOLD - Sheriff-elect What is the future of the munic- Pau| Kiernan will be asked to Dedication not based on fact, and you'can and renovated by the Children's Psychiatric Center, Inc.) for office space. Other par- ipal hall here? has finally been set for Wednes- not prove them." day noon. reinstate suspended County Jail ticipants in yesterday's dedication ceremony are, left to right, Robert Eisner, president Public opinion, earlier this By state law, the sheriff's term Warden Earl A. Smith when be Plans Told Seeks Information of the center's board of trustees; Freeholder Director Joseph C: Irwin; Eatontown year, doomed plans to enlarge takes office Wednesday. In. the interests of. expediting and renovate it. Republicans will expire tomorrow midnight. action; the warden said he was Mayor Herbert E. Werner and Dr. Howard Lee Wylie, the center's medical director. Monmouth County Judge Edward Mr. Smith's attorney, Charles e and Democrats, during the re Frankel, said yesterday that de- attempting answers while, also cent campaign, sought credit J. Asher had planned to admin- contending', he was entitled fo ister the oath to Mr. Kiernan in fects In the procedure employed 1 for aborting these plans, advance at noon tomorrow but, by the retiring Sheriff Joseph have .much, more particular iiy; Still, E. Eugene Oross Asso- at Mr. Kieman's request to avoid A. Shafto In suspending Mr. formation. , ':;..' Aluminum Hassle Rages ciates, master plan consultants, any possible controversy, has sc Smith and filing general char- He noted that the sheriff had recommend that expansion be the ceremony for Wednesday. ges against him open the way bee,n quoted last Wednesday as WASHINGTON (AP) - The cause of increased defense re-Us this year for the three major undertaken. In the face of still having decided against making government is releasing part of quirements, and tha1 t !it would off- In the interim, Mr. Kiernan for the warden's immediate re- ""'—" •" "' " " companies - kaiser, Alcoa and further protests, the planners turn. charges, only to change-his mind Its surplus aluminum. Private set Mr. and Mrs. William Oviatt here 19 years, moving from cal College and interned at Cum Peter Mahon. A former resided Union, New Brunswick. Also surviving are his widow parently attempting to hook ur berland Hospital, Brooklyn, anc Mrs. Ruth A. Patterson; a son (nee Joan Lockwood), 7 Fifth St., •Shrewsbury. of Brooklyn, Belmar and SpriBi Surviving are a son, Ericl an outside light to work on a car. Metropolitan Hospital, New York Harold Patterson, here, and Weather West Keansburg, son, Friday. • Born in Newburgh, N. Y., Mrs Lake, lie had lived here six years, Friend of Archer Cdty, Tex. anc State Police said Freil was work- City. brother. Mayor Charles Patterson Mr. and Mrs. John Maynard 'McKenna was ths wife of Frank He was a past president of the! her daughter, at home. ing on a friend's car on Pinecrest| NEW JERSEY: Variable cloudi-| A Presbyterian of this township. (nee Joyce H. Hart), 185 Spruce W. McKenna, Jr. She had bee St. Rose Holy Name Society, Bel The funeral will be Wednesda' Rd. in Brick Township when the ness but with some sunshine and The fcineral will be at 2 p.m, Dr., Shrewsbury, daughter, Fri- .« New Jersey Bell Telephone Co He was a former president ft mar, and a member of the Noc< at 10 a.m. at the C. H. T. Clay accident occurred. cooler over northern part today tomorrow at (he C. H. T. Clayton day. operator here for 25 years. the Presbyterian Church board ol turnal Adoration Society of Si ton & Son Funeral Home, Adel- Franklin Lakes— Abo surviving are two sons, to New Jersey medicine. Joanna M. Franzino, 434 Outwa- in low 4»s except in 30s over wood Ave., Long Branch, son, Surviving are bis wife, Mrs. WEST LONG BRANCH - Mrs, •Frtnk W, McKenna, 3d, here, and Surviving are his widow, Mrs. MANALAPAN - Mrs. Char- ter La., Garfield, was dead on northwestern New Jersey. High Friday. Rose McManus Mahon; thre Lucy N. Hanaway, 68, of 1090 lOavld E. McKenna, with the U. Marjoiie Barton Green Herman; lena Williams, 63, of Bergen Mills arrival at Valley1 Hospital Ridge- Tuesday fa low 50s. Mr. and Mrs. Budd Rancatore sons, Edward A. Mahon, Jr., of Broadway died Saturday in the Arniy in Germany; a lister, Mrs. a son, William G. Herman, Jr. Rd. died Friday at home. She, wood. She was a passenger in a (nee Minnie Natale), 465 Saira Point Pleasant Beach, Francis J Mary Lee Nursing Home, Eaton- MARINE £dith L. CoHo of Rumson, and of Springfield, Mass.; two daugh- was the wife of Smith Williams. car driven by Patricia Stewart, Ave.j Long Branch, daughter, Mahon, here, and Vincent P town. Cape May to Block Island: brother, Whitney W. Bunt of Ea ters, Mrs. James W. Herron of Born in Leeds, Ala., Mrs. Wil- 21, of the Garfield address, which Friday. Mahon of Wilmington, Del; fou Born' in Long Branch, Mrs. Northeasteiily winds 10-15 knots tontowu, Pittsburgh, Pa., and Mrs. Row- daughters, Mrs. John Demurle; liams was a member of the Ship collided with an- auto driven by Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Truglia, Hanaway was a daughter of thi of Zion Bapist Church, English- today except westerly winds at land Fairlie of Interlaken; of New Shrewsbury, Mrs. Harry Ralph Valles, 23, of 186 Christie Jr. (nee Elizabeth Hornbostel), A Requiem Mass win be of- late John and Raphael Nastasia town. 10-15 knots south of Atlantic brother, James W. Herman of L. Murphy of Wall - Township, Ave., Clifton. Miss Stewart and 42 Meadow Ave., Monmbuth fered tomorrow at 10:15 a.m. In She had lived in this area all hei City. Winds becoming easterly at LaJolla, Calif.; a sister, Mrs. Mrs. Mary Truex of Bradley Also surviving are two sons, Valles were hospitalized in fair Beach, son, Friday. St. James Catholic Church, here, life. 0-15 knots tonight and continuing Durwood Kennedy of' Rockvilte' Beach, and Mrs, Clifford Farrei Willie Williams of Millstone condition. Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Walker by Mtgr. Emmett E. Monahan. She was a past matron of Ada through Tuesday. Visibility better Center, N. Y.; three granddaugh- of Belmar; five brothers, James Township and Smith L. Williams (nee Naome Foster), 104 Maple Burial, directed by the Worden Chapter, Order of the Eastern of Howell Township; a daughter, than five miles except three to ters, and three great granddaugh- Mahon of Verona, Matthew r PI., Keyport, daughter, Friday. Funeral Home, £0 East Front St., Star, and a member of St. Luke', Mrs. Helen Underwood of Phila- ive miles in rain tonight and ters. Mahon of West Orange, Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bates will be In Mt Olivet Cemetery, Methodist Church, both Long delphia; a brother, Daniel How- Tuesday. Variable cloudiness to- Services will be held Wednes- Mahon of Kearny and Eugem (nee Patricia Dumas), 54 Wood- Middletown. Branch. ard, and a sister, Mrs. Anna Police Car day and cloudy with a chance of day at 2 p.m. in the First Presby- Mahon of North Plalnfield;. three row Wilson Homes, Long Branch, Surviving are a son, Charles Boyd, both in Alabama, and 10 rain tonight and Tuesday. terian Church, Asbury Park. sisters, Mrs. Thomas Brennan ol daughter, Saturday. MRS. WHRTM ELIZABETH Norton of Little Silver; five sis- grandchildren. Biirial, under the direction of the West Orange, Mrs. Catherini Crashes,Hurts High temperature at Long Mr. and Mrs. Donald Brodie BOYCE ters, Mrs. Raymond Brown, Services will be at 11 am, Ely Funeral Home in Asburj Grey of Schenectedy, N. Y., am Branch yesterday 67 at 12:50 p.m. (nee Arlene Kollins), 117 Forest Mrs. Francis Hart, Mrs. Ray M. Wednesday at the Ship of Zion BRICK TOWNSHIP - Mrl. Park, will be Genwood Ceme- Sister Mary Eugene of St Philip'i "JOW last night 49 at 4 a.m. Ocean Ave., West Long Branch, son, Dennis, Mrs. Sheldon Winkle Baptist Church with Rev. P. Fai- Whilda Elizabeth Boyce, 28, of 83 tery, West Long Branch. School, Clifton, and 18 grandchil- A Detective imperature this morning 50. Saturday. pleck and Miss Juliette Nastasia, son officiating. Burial, directed Nottingham Rd. died yesterday in dren. LONG BRANCH — Police Det, all of Long Branch, and two by the Freeman Funeral Home, TIDES Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Conte Point Pleasant Hospital, where REV. SEMERIAN B. BROW1)I Michael A. Irene suffered minor! The Daniel A. Reilly Funera! ;randchildren. Freehold, will be in Maplewood Sandy Hook (nee Patricia Pattern), 816 Deal she bad been « patient four days. ASBURY PARK - Rev. njunies Friday when his police Home, Belmar, is in charge of ar- The funeral will be tomorrow Cemetery, Freehold Township. TODAY - High 7:10 p.m. and Rd., Oakhurst, daughter, Satur- car and another car collided at! A resident here four months, Semerian B. Brown, 63, of 126 rangements. at 11 a.m. at the Woolley Funer- low 1:16 p.m. day. South Bath Ave. and Ocean Mrs. Boyce was born in Red Adtins Ave. died Sunday in Fit al Home, 10 Morrell St., with TOMORROW - High 7:26 a.m. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Falco (nee MRS. MINNIE LAWTON Blvd. Bank, a daughter of R. Wdton kin Hospital, Neptune, after Rev. John R. Carry officiating. and 7:50 p.m. and low 1:18 a.m. Helena Rockhill), 409 Prospect MRS. MINA SIEBENSON KEANSBURG — Mrs. Minnie and Whilda E. Wilson Branln. long illness. Burial will be in Glenwood The police reported that the and 2:46 p.m. Ave., Union Beach, daughter, Sat- FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP - Geisler Lawton, 85, died yester- She lived in Eatantown before Rev. Mr, Brown was a former Cemetery, here. southbound car driven by Sebas- For Red Bank and Rumson urday, Mrs. Mlna Siebenson of Easi day In her home, 45 Forest Ave. moving here. pastor of Quinn AME Chapel tian C. Bracey, 77, of 22 Airsdale nidge, add two hours; Sea Mr. and Mrs. Abram Van Hall Freehold Rd. died yesterday ii Born in Jersey City, she was She was a member of the Atlantic Highlands. Ave., was making a left turn on- Jright, deduct 10 minutes; Long (nee Carmela Sills), 68 Trafford Monmouth Medical Center, ROBERT LARKIN a resident of this place more tontown chapter, Order of the ^o South Bath Ave. when it col- ranch, deduct 15 minutes; High- St., Shrewsbury, son, Saturday. Born in Balnbridge, Ga., he was where she had been a patien FAIR HAVEN — Robert Lar- than 40 years. Eastern Star. a graduate of Morris Brown Col- lided with the police car driven lands bridge, add 40 minutes. Dr. and Mrs. Carl Schwartz four days. kin, 84, of 123 jfarvard Rd. died She was a member of St. Besides her parents, with whom lege, Atlanta, Ga., the Payne Col by Det. Wesley Mayo. (nee Charlotte Smolemky), 149 yesterday atTrbme after a short Mark's Episcopal Church and ol SATELLITES she lived, she is survived by a lege, Custer, Ga., and Lincol: Born in Newark, Mrs. Sieben Det. Irene was taken to Mon- Branchb'rook Drv," Bellville, Illness. ' the Ladies' AuxiHary, New Point ECHO I — At 4:38 a.m. tomor- son, H. Edwin Boyce, at home, University, Philadelphia, where! son was a daughter of the lati mouth Medical Center, here, and daughter, "Sunday. .Born in Ireland, Mr. Larkin Comfort .Fire,^!-.-,,-,^/, pi r-. row, south of New York City, 9 and two brothers, Robert W. he studied theology. HeTeceivwjJohn and Kntherine Oh! Vetter, iyas; .treated for-cuts,,and bruises was a son of the late George and| degrees above horizon, moving Branln of Hghstown and William a degree from the Industrial Insti- She had lived here five years. Surviving are her husband, on the right knee and for a Rachel Tomlinson Larkjn. He had YOUTH ARRAIGNED W, BranJn of Port Monmouth. tute of Monrovia, Liberia, in Wes She was a member of th Frank Lawton, Sr.; two daugh- bruised left elbgw and was re- NE, ived here 23 years, moving from Services will be tomorrow at 2 Africa. American Bible Society, New ters, Mrs. Blanche Beyer of this leased. RED BANK — Domiirick A. Kearny. He was a retired clerk p.m. at (he Worden Funeral York City, and was the widow ol place and Mrs. Mildred Westcott No summons was issued. Mattress Fire Caiazzo, 19, of 18, Crawford St., Home 60 East Front St., Red Ordained in the Conference, ol '. Christopher Siebenson. for Prudential Insurance Co., of Fords; four sons, Frank Law- Shrewsbury Township, was ar- Bank, with Rev. Stanley M. Wool- AME Churches in 1932, Rev. Surviving are a son, J. William Newark. ton, Jr., of Sayrewoods South, MRS. FLORENCE M. CLANCY In Fair Haven raigned yesterday before Mag- Brown served as pastor of several Surviving are his wddow, Mrs Hanjld and Robert Lawton of ley, rector of St James Episcopal Siebenson of Orland, Pa.; a! LONG BRANCH - Mrs. Flor- FAIR HAVEN - Firemen were istrate Francis X. Kennelly on churches in Pennsylvania. In New Elizabeth Robinson Larkin; two this place and Earl Lawton of Church, Eatontown, officiating. laughter, Mrs. Paul E. Hedden ence M. Clancy, 81 of 109 Frank- called out at 2:15 a.m. yester- a rape charge. Tersey tie was pastor of St sons, Robert Larkin, Jr., of Colonia; 15 grandchildren, and 22 Burial will be in Fair View Cem- if Freehold; four grandchildren, lin Ave. died Saturday in Mon- day when a mattress caught fire Bail was set at $5,000 and fames AME Church of Hights- Woodland H(Ils, Calif., and Al great-grandchildren. etery, Middletown. md six great-grandchildren. mouth Medical Center after a in the home of Lawrence Cook, 1 Caiazzo was held in the coun- town, Bethel AME Church ol fred R. W. Larkin of Ed!na; Rev. John Crum, rector of St. Services will be Wednesday al 1 long illness. Hayes PI. ty jail pending a hearing here Rocky Hill, St. James AME 10:15 a.m. at the Higgins Memo- Minn.; three daughters, Mrs. Mark's Episcopal Church, will of- RALPH AYERS Born in Tlnton Falls, Mrs. Clan- Fire Chief James R. Acker] tomorrow night. Church of Woodsville, and the Al- rial Home, 20 Center St., Free- Rachel Cockcroft of Red Bank, ficiate at services Wednesday at FREEHOLD — Ralph Ayers, cy had lived-in this area most of laid Mr. Cook who was occupy- According to Police Chief len AME Chapel, here. He was hold, with Rev. Bernard McK, Mrs. Gwenn Albert of Conoga 11 a.m. in Ryan Fuijeral Home. 06, of 9 Lafayette PI. died Satyr- her life. She was the widow of ing the bedroom, escaped un- George H. Clayton, the charge a member of Phi Beta Sigma Garlick of St. Peter's Episcopa! Park, Calif., and Miss Marion Burial will be in Fair View Cem- day after a lengthy illness. Tiiomas Clancy. 'iurt. was filed by a 17-year-old girl. fraternity. Church, Freehold, officiating. Larkin, at home; two sisters, etery, Middletown. Bom In Klddeminister, En- Firemen, on the scene for two The girl was examined by Dr. Surviving are his wife, Mrs Entombment will be at Fair- Mrs. Mary Carson of Toronto, She was a member of Star of gland, Mr. Ayers was a weaver lours, confined the fire to the Alfred A. Podell, the chief said. Docia Mae Brown; two sons, Na< mount Mausoleum, Newark. Canada, and Mrs. Charlotte Gar- MRS. JULIUS WOLFE (he Sea Court, Catholic Daughters for A. & M. Karagheusian Co., diner, In Ireland; 13 grandchil- l>edroQm, liw chief said. He said The alleged offense occurred "hanlel C. Brown of Glenside, POINT PLEASANT-Mrs. Edna of America, and a communicanl here, before retiring in 1952. dren, and 18 great-grandchildren, of Our Lady Star of the Sea Catho- there was some smoke damage late Saturday, Chief Clayton Pa., and Semerian B. Brown, Jr., MRS. LILLIAN F. ANDERSON Kossman Wolfe, 63, of 816 Bor- He was a life member of Wel- of Reading, Pa.; a sister, Miss The Worden Funeral Home, 60 lic Church, here. in the hall outside the room. said. • come Lodge, F&AM, Amsterdam, FREEHOLD - Mrs. Lillian F. East Front St., Red Bank, is in den Ave. died Thursday in Point Cause of the blaze hasn't been Detective Sgt. Robert D. Scott Elizabeth Brown of Lakekirst; Surviving are two sons, John N.Y.; the Quarter Century Club •nderson, 99, formerly of 64 East charge of arrangements. Pleasant Hospital. She was the fetermined, C" t \ ' • I 1 I'VI rn irp ifccr nine grandchildren, and five wife of Julius Wolfe and the J.' Clancy of Saranac Lake, N. Y., of A. & M. Karagheusian Co.; great-grandchildren. Main St., died yesterday al St. Peter's Episcopal Church Homestead Private Nursin MRS. LOUIS DE FAZIO mother of Mrs. Adeline Rusin of and Joseph A. Clancy, here, and here, and the Foresters ol The F. Leon Harris Funeral Home, Freehold Township. WEST LONG BRANCH - Mrs, Red Bank. three grandchildren. Settle only for America, Freehold Court. Home, 140 Union Ave., is in Born here, Mrs. Anderson wa Elizabeth M. De Fazio, 44, of Born in Hazelton, Pa., Mrs. A High Mass of Requiem will He is survived by his widow, charge of arrangements. member of St. Peter's Episco f4 Victor Ave. died Thursday at! Wolfe lived tin Jersey City before be offered at 9 a.m. tomorrow the best... Mrs. Frances R. Ayers; two step-j lbs funeral will be Thursday in pal Church. She was the widow Monmouth Medical Center after! moving here five years ago. She at Our Lady Star of the Sea SHEHADI sons, Stephen Tanay of Farming- the Bethel A.M.E. Church, As- of Frederick Anderson. a long illness. was a member of Floral Chapter, Church. Burial, directed by the dale and William Wood here, and bury Park. Burial will be in Surviving Is a son, E. Cecil An Mrs. De Fazio was supervisor1 Order of the Eastern Star, Jersey Hoffman Funeral Home, 415 Installation four step-daughters, Mrs. Bar- White Ridge Cemetery, Eaton- derson of Mexico City. of the Component and Materiel City, and a member of the Good Broadway, will be in Mt Canned bara Rees of Albuquerque, town. Services will be Wednesday al Division at Fort Monmouth. A Shepherd Lutheran Church, here. Cemetery, here. N. Mex., Mrs. Frances Patterson :30 p.m. in St. Peter's Church lifelong resident, she was a com- Also surviving are a son, Ed- of Levittown, Pa., Mrs. Ann DAVID MILLAR with Rev. Bernard McK. Garlic! municant of St. Jerome's Catho- win Wolfe, here; another daugh- JOHN NOVACK Hartnoll of Amsterdam and Mrs, WESTFIELD - David Millar, ifficiating. Burial, directed b; ic Church. ter, Mrs. Jean Gudaitis of North FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP-John Edith Hindel of Tiberton, R.I. 84, of 926 Cleveland Ave. died the Freehold Funeral Home, A She is survived by her hus- Bergen, and 12 grandchildren. Novack, 72, of 116 Waterworks A Requiem Mass will be of- Thursday in Overlook Hospital East Main St., will be in Maple- band, Louis De Fazio; a son, Ar- The funeral will be at 1 o'clock Rd. died Friday at Veterans Hos- fered at St. Peter's Church to- Summit, He was the father ol wood Cemetery, Freehold Town hur De Fazio, and two daugh- this afternoon at the Wheeler pital, East Orange. Funeral Home, 1105 Arnold Ave. morrow at 10 a.m. by Rev. Ber- Mrs. Dan Sullivan of Morganville. ihip. ters, Helen and Mary De Fazio, Born in Poland, Mr, Novack nard McK. Garllck. Burial, dl Born in Ireland, Mr. Millar all at home; her mother, Mrs, had lived here 40 years. He was CHARLES A. READ reeled by the Freeman Funera! came to this country in 1910. He FREDERICK J. DOYLE Mary Christopher, here, and a a retired employee of NAD Earle, Home, 47 East Main St., will be lived in Cranford 18 years- before NEW SHREWSBURY - Fred- brother, George Christopher of LONG BRANCH - Charles A. A veteran of World War I, he Avon. In Maplewood Cemetery, Free- moving here two years ago. He Tick J. Doyle, 81, of 45 Barke: Read, 79, of 135 Hulick Ave. died was a member of the Evangeli- hold Township. had retired as a self-employed Ave. died Friday In Monmoutl A Requiem Mass was offered Thursday in Monmouth Medical cal Baptist Church, Freehold. cattle dealer. Medical Center after a long ill- this morning in St. Jerome's Center after a long illness. Surviving are, his wife, Mrs, MRS. MABEL T. BROWER Also surviving are his wife, ness. Church. Burial, directed by the Born in New York City, Mr, Stella Novack; 'a son, Walter EATONTOWN - Mrs. Mabel T. Mrs. Catherine Henry Millar; two Born in Tucson, Ariz., Mr. Woolley Funeral Home, 10 Mor- Read was a son of the late Novack of Freehold; a daughter, Brower, 77, of 193 Broad St. ditd other daughters, Mrs. Margarel Doyle, a former Freehold resi- rell St., Long Branch, was in Charles and Mary Ellen Pierce Miss Helen Novack, at home; a yesterday in Monmouth Medical Rouvet of Cranford and Mrs, lent had lived here five years Woodbine Cemetery, Oceanport. Read. He was a retired agent brother, Frank Novack of Pres- Center after a short illness. Mary Reilly of Garwood; two sis- He was a retired poultry farm- 'or the Central Railroad of New cott, Ariz., and five grandchil- Mrs. Brower was born in Al- era in Ireland; 18 grandchildren, r. ROBERTS SERVICES Jersey. dren. Jaire, daughter of the late Robert Only Lees would go through everything you and IS great-grandchildren. Surviving are his wife, Mrs, FRANKLIN - Services for Surviving are his wife, Julia Services will be at 2 o'clock and Cora Thompson. Her hus- Services were this morning in Olga Nelson Doyle; a daughter, Thomas J. Roberts, Sr., of Bev- Radford Read, and several cous- this afternoon in the Evangelical band, Trevone Brower, died in Mrs. Audrey Allstaedt of Carl. have to do to make this gorgeous deep pile he Gray Memorial, 12 Spring- erly Hills Estates, killed in an ins. Baptist Church with Rev. Victor 1923. itadt, and a grandchild. ield Ave., Cranford. auto accident here Thursday, Services will be at 2 o'clock Narkevitch, pastor officiating. She had lived here 40 years and twist carpet of specially selected wools— A Requiem Mass was offeree were held this morning at the his afternoon at the Woolley Fu- Burial, directed by the Higgins was a member ot Wall Chapter, STANLEY P. LAVOIE this morning in St. James Me- Ramsey Funeral Home, 1 Main neral Home, 10 Morrell St., with Memorial Home, 2ft Center St., Order of the Eastern JJtar, Spring and then call it "Simplicity" morial Episcopal Church, Eaton St. He was a brother of Mrs, Rev. Harvey E. Douie, Jr., of- Freehold, will i» in Maplewood Lake Heights, and of Daughters LEONARDO - Stanley P. La own, by Rev. Stanley M. Wool Harold Hanrahan of Red Bank, ficiating. Burial will be in Glen- Cemetery, Freehold. of America of Allcnwood. /oie, 54, died yesterday in Frank- ley, Jr. Burial, directed by thej Mr. Roberts, an assistant lay wood Cemetery, West Long Anyway, Lees did it. And we've got it Surviving are a sister, Mrs. in Delano Roosevelt Hospital Damiano Funeral Home, Long minister of the Newton congre- Branch. MRS. ELIZABETH WEIS Vernon T. Burdge of Point Pleas- dontrosc, N.Y. He lived ,at 86 Branch, was in Woodbine Ceme- in 22 great colors gation of Jehovah's Witnesses, ant Beach, and two brothers, 3urllngton Ave. tery, Oceanport. LOCUST - Mrs. Elizabeth lied when his car collided with MRS. VERNIE E. WILLIAMS Stanley G. Thompson of Avon and A veteran of World War II Weis, 83, of 18 Wigwam Rd., We're proud to present this stunning nother on Ogdensburg Rd., less LONG BRANCH - Mrs. Vernie Robert C. Thompson of Jersey rir. LaVoie was the son of Mrs died Saturday in Monmouth carpet by Lees, America's great car- MRS. JOHN DORSEY han a quarter-mile from his E. Williams, 79, of 141 Washing- City. Catherine Lane LaVoie and the Medical Center, Long Branch. pet mill. Pick up a sample swatch. CLIFFWOOD BEACH - Mrs, lome. ton St. died Saturday at the Services will be at 1 p.m. late Charles LaVoie. Mrs. Weis was born in Ger- Feel the, weight of it. Take a close Estclle W. Dorsey, 63, of 77 Po Home for the Chronic Sick. 99 Wednesday in the Robert A. In addition to his mother, Mr. The other driver, Frederick J. many and had lived most of her mona Ave. died last Monday in look at that sturdy back. Lees does Braun Home for Funerals with AVoie is survived by a brother towett, 18, of Ogdensburg, son Born in Cherry Valley, N.Y., life in Baltimore. For the past Irvington General Hospital. not skimp on the wool. Simplicity is Rev. Robert W. Reed, pastor of, harles LaVoio of Atlantic High- if Police Capt. Robert Rowett .Irs. Williams had lived here 50 .rear and a half she had lived U Born in Newark, she had lived packed with dense pile, woven of the Presbyterian Church, officiat- lands, and a sister, Mrs. Eileen here, is hospitalized with a con- ears. She was the widow of with her son, George H. Weis, lere three years. She was a re- ing. Interment will be in Allen- 3eke, of Leonardo . :ussion and rib injuries. Harry Williams. ^vho is' plant manager of the the finest, toughest wools the world per •red employee of General Elec- wood Cemetery. The funeral will be Thursday Born in Jersey City, Mr. Rob- Surviving are a son, George American Smelting and Refinery can produce. ric Co., Newark. .She was a Tts lived in Paramus until mov- A. Williams, here, and a grand- """ Card of Hunk. t II a.m., in the Posten Funeral Co., Perth Amboy. and. Mil. David Cabman and son. Airman tome, Atlantic Highlands. Burial member of the Cliffwood Beach ing here four years ago. He was hild. Mrs. Weis was a member of; Vc David J. Cnrmnn, wlsti to eapreia )emocratlc Club. (heir deep appreciation (or Uie kind- /ill be in Bay Vjew Cemetery, itnployed 40 years by the Lehlgh The funeral will be tomorrow thd Grace Evangelical Lutheran ncM nhown by Krntliburj Fire Co. 1; /.•onardo. Surviving are her husband, /alley Railroad in Jersey City. 11 p.m. at the Hoffman Funeral Church, Baltimore. Rugs co Hew Polnl Comfort Fire Co.; Exempt tohn S. Dorsey; a daughter, Mrs Also surviving are his wife, Firemen; Ladles' Fire Auxiliary; Po. DKVm NOTHK Home, 415 Broadway, with Rev. Also surviving are two grand- lice Department; First Aid; Itorough "leanor Ablazcy of Englishtown, firs. Marjorie Leeming Roberts; KT. 35, SHREWSBURY 741-6272 amplaycn, and all othftn at ttif time BIB, Xllcabeth. 18 Wiftvam Ril., Homer Tricules of the First! children and two great-grand- JOCUAI, on Nov. 6. Devoted mother and four grandchildren. Open Dally 10 a.m. (o 5:50 p.m.; Fri. evening 6:30 to 9 of Her Moved liuilnnd'a. Divld I'. " Oeorga II. Welit. Furiernl Wednei- wo sons, Thomas J. Roberts, aptlst Church of Long Branch children. O&rmnn'i death. Our aincerrat trmnkfl. y, 31 *.m. al the l*onard J. Ruck The funeral took place Satur- r., of Beverly Hills Estates and ifficiating. Burial will be in HUT Ood DleiM you aM, funeral Home, 6300 Harford n. David Co.:.mun and ion, Divli illlmore. Interment Parlnraod Cenu- ay with a Mass offered In St. 'avid W. Roberts, at home, and 3reen Lawn Cemetery, West it 11 a.m. at the Leonard J. J. Carman lery, Baltimore. Open Dally 9 a.m. lo 5:30 p.m.; Wed. & Fri. evening to I Leo's Catholic Church, Irvington. grandchild. Long Branch. ' Ruck Funeral Home, Baltimore. THE DAILY REGISTER Monday, .Nov.. &, . COATS MIMING Warden,} Viet Nam St Geineiit's Aluminum Center "Y«j (Contfnoed) nufflberof catb tnd Jacket* were by Jail Issue reported mtMtag to the police astor Moves c*jxlsl WM O per cent Uoo uti tixwe rowroed from cor '•' "Yw 0KB tit butt to awtit nbesmea tie miie» north of Sri- --r- ia o$*r (feW»." {rectiootl lnstitinlonj. (Continued) toe o*eome of d* elettlos wbkt by tetntgets %fce attended t >n. pared with 11.2 per cent for otter The cemer iis-growo IMold -w*i Md for you .. , Your ten- ance Saturday night at the West Industries. I M«re Nunery Spate J .jlojred as guards, tnd In that battle near!/ «0 en- Into Rectory lincelt fiest oppRd its doors In and control was bacli or* WM repudiated ud rejected, End Casino. emy dead were counted, but since Meanwhile, Ackley's predeces- The move Of non-treatment per-! I960 to provide direct out-patient sor, Walter W. Heller, said he Saaito It Bhuned by t msjority of clow to 10,000 Police reported four formal re- hen U. S. military authorities MATAWAN - Rev. Joseph Ru- sonnel into the Throckmorton reatment us> emotionally dis-j agreed that the aluminum price Though both sheriff and mtu." ports and a myriad of telephone iave revised the figure to about nski, pastor of the newly orga- Ave. building will provide more urbed county youngsters under] increases aren't justified. He • Charges, Aniweri Mi ized St. Clement'* Catholic and better room for the nursery the age of 18 and their families, Jen denied the narcotics "situa- calls by parents and teenagers. said on NBC's television-radio Here i» a summary of thej Church, has moved into the Rec- school opened by the center two ts original staff-numbered four, tion, Mr. Smith blamed ail the Ail four reports listed black The weekend encounter near program "Meet the Press" that! (target and the answers: !>ry at 16 Orchard Pkwy, Morgan-! years ago for emotionally dis- t now has a professional staff of •est in his statement on the »ber- leather coats as missing. 'lei Me was fought at close quar- the government sales "will tend 1. Placing known escapee in Me. turbed pre-schoolers — the first 30 and a non-professional staff of a. • The crowd was estimated toj ;ers, "almost hand-to-hand," said to hold prices below what they ; temporary quarter! when tighter Rev, Rucinskl was born In school of- Its kind In the' county. [0. In addition to its treatment The sheriffs charges backtag >e 700 teenagers by Sgt. Fred- ?apt. Join Richardson of Balti otherwise would have been." •ecurity quarters were available. more, Md., commander of fersey City and educated at the! It will now be possible for program, it ia an approved train- ip the suspension order midf rick C. Karrberg, who was on And McNamara, in response to \ This referred to one ol two 17- me of the two U. S. companies, Sacred Heart School, Manville; other staff members to partici ing clinic for both child psychla IO refereferencn e to the d^ •-year-olds who fled the county duty at the dance. Peter's High School, New a question, said the governmen pate in the school sessions and rists and clinical psychologists, itatement, nor to any acts of dis- "It was a nightmare," said Sgt. sales are "bound to relieve some jail. annex gymnasium, being Police Chief Thomas Pesano runswick; St Mary's College, to incorporate the school into the with nine professionals currently ibedience. Mr. Frankel seized Of! >aul E. Key of Kokomo, Ind. of the pressure on prices." used as a temporary juvenile aid this morning that Sgt. Wil'We were out in waist high grass. orchard Lake, Midi.; and St, center's various training pro' n training, and sponsors a re- his in drafting the warden's le- detention 'center, Sept. 8. Mr. Ham B. Walling is Investigating. They were firing from the trees." Bernard's Seminary, Rochester, McNamara said about US.OOC grams and research projects. search program. 'lies. Smith said neither he, Deputy) '.Y. He was ordained May ,30, ot the 200,000 tons would be sold Mr. Eisner said that of the 16 Ralph Cook nor Lt. John Ander- Richardson directed the firing to defense contractors rathe: Delays Reduced Noting thal the sheriff lege weekends," Mr. Smith said, 1 942. children who attended the nur- son had knowledge that the youth artillery to within ISO yards than on the open market. Center personnel, who inter- given the text of the charges'jp "Officer Philbrook picked her up if his men and planes dropped He was assistant pastor at Holy sery school before this past sum' newspapers Thursday night.'.a had previously escaped from An-: The aluminum stockpile 1: iew about 600 families a at Princeton Junction for me napalm and high explosives even :ross, Trenton and St. Mary's mer, 13 have adjusted enough to day before Mr. Smith was servraj , nandale. maintaineidd fof r defensedf , space year, has approximately 250 when I was working, after his :loser, but most of the fighting •outh River. Later, he had his attend normal public or nursery and two days before Mr. Franltjjl and emergency needs. The na 'amilies in treatment now and a The warden said he later working hours and in his own fas too close-in to permit much parish at St. Peter and school classes. One again is at- jot a copy, the attorney said )jjs learned that Ralph Neils Olesen, wn tion now has about 2.1 million waiting list of 100. Dr. Wylie said' car when I would pay for his re support. , Great Meadows. In 1959 tending the center school, one was following suit and giving a#- the correction officer, was aware tons of the metal, some 1.4 mil the introduction of a six-week pe- gas, or sometimes he would U. S. troops swept through the e accepted the pastorate In St. has been referred to the count; iwers to reporters immediately. of the fact and that, after the es g lion tons above stockpile require riod of intensive treatment for Inn's Catholic Church, Browns- Association for Retarded Chil The formal answers will be cape, had related it to Mr. Shaf- drive my car. enemy, took high ground and ments. new families to determine the ilia and remained there until dren, and one requires the in mailed to Mr. Shafto today affil to though not to the warden. Mr. "It it pertains to the time my apened up with withering fire' Government • industry disposa need for long-term help has re lie was assigned to St. Clements' tensive day care for older chil copies will be sent to Mr. Kiernan Olesen was one of the jail guards wife was hurt working at the hat drove the Communists back. talks have been under way sinci duced the waiting period con- June of this year. dren not now available in Mon and to the Civil Service Com- who has sided with Mr. Shafto in Monmouth County Shelter (where 'That's what saved us," Richard-j September, and were pushed lasl siderably. He formerly was the county mouth County. the current controversy and whoshe is matron and where the son said. week at the direction of Presi- Fees, tailored to each family's mission. Smiths reside) and was trans rector of the Confraternity of1 A similar class for children broadcast paid political adver- dent Johnson after the price in- ability to pay, range from token "I'm sending Mr. Shafto's copy ported to the hospital by one ol Hiristian Doctrine. He now has aged six to seven, begun las tisements on a radio station in creases were announced. payments to the full cost of $30 :o his home," said Mr. Franke!? the guards In my car while I more than 900 families in January had to be discontinue- his behalf. The government's decision per interview. However they 'He won't get it until Tuesday remained on duty at the jail Soviets s new congregation, serving in June because of a/lflack o: "I pleaded with you on many brought quick criticism from the cover only 12 per cent of the and he may not be spendlffg then so much of it is true. (Continued) Aatawan and Marlboro. funds and space. occasions," Mr. Smith told the companies. center's costs. much time in Freehold by then." United States can orbit and re- U. S. Grant Asked sheriff, "not to put juveniles in "If it pertains to the occasion Aluminum Company of Ameri Mr. Eisner paid tribute to the turn manned spacecraft, it is as- You know there when I drove to Philadelphia to ca, the nation's largest aluminum The center has applied for $49, county Mental Health Board, It will cost about $325,000 Xo the annex mmed they can do the same toilets, no drinkingj jet my daughter's clothing at her producer, said in Pittsburgh thai 199 in federal funds to pro which reviews the center's operate the center in 1966, exclu- were no thing with a nuclear warhead, Master Plan and that security was college, I asked for and received the government bought the meta: vide psychological services t budget and makes funding recom sive of the $100,000 which will tes water, iources said. But U.S. experts bad . I reported to you tha your permission to use the jai' (Continued) when it was most disadvanta- participants in county anti-pover- mendations to the county and required to finance its anti-pover- station wagon." :onsider ICBM's and IRBM's geous to producers and buyers,« ty programs. state, and to the Board of Free ty program and the expanded we had 19 inmates there with ac produce the same effect at less The county Planning Board, ac- 7. Permitting an inmate to be "to dispose of it now in blocks It also has been developing holders and the state Departmenl juvenile court program. •„•; commodations for 12 ... but you' :ost and with greater accuracy :ording to the consultants, sees stretched out on the floor aftei of such magnitude as to possibl; data processing system to enabl< of Institutions and Agencies, Governmental allocations ai£ refused to listen." than an orbiting missile. ,Ioyd Rd. as a county secondary 2. Being absent from post and falling down stairs with the war- rtery which, when extended will disrupt a key industry, with con rapid and systematic evaluatioi which provide a large share o! expected to provide $156,000 p,f assignment without leave of supe- den's full knowledge that he had Also in the parade were "guide- irovide access to Rt. 35, Garden sequent damage to the economy and review of its case load am its income. the total — about 47.7 per cent — rior officer; on occasions of un been injured: failing to take any line" missiles which the Soviet State Parkway, Rt. 34, .Rt. 79, is incomprehensible." the effects of therapy. To provide some idea of the and patients' fees are expected authorized leave, leaving the jai action in connection with the in- Union has supplied to North Viel Rt. 9 and the future extension of Reynolds • Metals Co. declare Emphasizing that treatment o cost of the center's programs, the to provide $40,000 — about 12'5 without proper supervisory per- jury; failing to make any report Nam. These 35-foot, surface-to- U. 18. that had the government contin individual children always mus necessity for limiting the nursery per cent. For the remaining $127,- t sonnel In charge. of it to the sheriff. air missiles have downed six U.S ued Us private talks with thi remain paramount, Dr. Wyli' class to six students with highly 000 or 39.8 per cent, the center planes. U.S. pilots claimed yes County Projects looks to a community aware of '"This' is an absolute false Mr. Smith said a man did fal! companies for a few more days cited the expansion of the cen specialized teaching made th< terday they destroyed two launch- Other county proposals are: Rt. the magnitude of the need and hood," said Mr. Smith. On Sept on one occasion and was no! everything "could have been re- ter's consultation services as on' cost $950 per child. To a large ing sites and damaged three oth 16 to be a secondary artery, willing to help meet it. '- 7, g and 9, as had been his cus- moved, because the extent of hi; of the most important aspects ol extent, the program was made Cliffwood and Amboy Aves. are tom for three years, he said, he injury wasn't known, until a doc- rs. Alcoa said the companies a its plans for the future. possible by the Junior Service o be county collectors, and accompanied his son to registe tor arrived and directed that h The military parade was viewed ready had agreed to a method 'oi A large number of emotlonall; League, which contributed Sell Fast! The Daily Register Church St. a county collector • at Staunton Military Academy, be taken to Fitkin Hospital fo: by top Soviet leaders and Cuban unloading the stockpile excess. disturbed children never come ti scholarships. Classified. with a connection to be built In Virginia, with Mr. Shafto's observation. "The hospital dis- Prime Minister Fidel Castro's .'. permission. Deputy Warden Cook charged him as a malingerer," brother Raul, atop Lenin's tomb, from County Rt. 4 to Rt. 52 " was placed in charge. Notice Mr. Smith said. "The sheriff wai After the military parade, more IKeyport - Holmdel Turnpike to was posted on the bulletin board, notified." han 10,000 civilians marched, Laurel Ave.). Cook In Charge 8. Failure to set up procedure! carrying flags, banners, ballons The consultant's proposals for municipal roads include: "I placed Mr. Cook in charge, for fire drills, failure to ever con- through Red Square. — Realignment of both ends of the same man," he said, "you duct a fire drill. ^Defense Minister Rodion Mali- iouth Atlantic Ave.; on the north .• put in charge when you suspend- novsky, the only speaker at thi Procedure Set . direct connection to Atlantic ed me ... Do you still maintain parade, again charged the United that the jail was left withou Mr. Smith said a procedun States with imperialistic interfer- Ave. and on the south a T in- proper supervisory personnel in has been set up and that eac ence in the affairs of other coun :ersection with Rt. 34. \ charge?" jail guard is required to be farm! tries and with barbaric raids on — A connector from Van : 3. Removing from confines o! iar with it and sign a report thai Viet Nam. But his remarks weri Brackle Rd. to Lloyd Rd. to be county jail and permitting re- he is. "I have all of the signa- milder than in May when he salt built privately as apartments de- moval of prisoners to Marlbon tures^ Mr. Smith added. the United States was threatening elop. State Hospital without prope: "Sheriff, would you really haw a wider war. — Only north access to Rt, 34 guard or without any guard. me lead all of the inmates out o! Irom Van Brackle Rd. because of Mr. Smith said this was untrue jail and take a chance on es he proposed center barrier on if it applied to prisoners being cape. You can't be serious." Hi the highway. Richard Vermilyea, h^ld in the county jail. If it ap- cited one instance of a fire in Dedication defeated Republican candidate plies to prisoners under controf building adjacent to the jai! (Continued) for Township Council, suggested of local police departments wh however, and said all Inmates said that New Jersey cannot be the south access be converted to were brought to the'jail tempo- were safely evacuated and tha proud of its antiquated system a one-way road, rather than be rarily for examination by the Jai)county newspapers commendec which broke down years ago. eliminated, to service northbound physicians and tor commitmen the jail staff for its actions. much more flexible and limitles! traffic leaving Rt. 34 at that , to , Marlboro, the transportatioi 9. Permitting storage of hypo system is needed, he said. point. . w»s a los*lrejpon»ibility. dermic needles and other sue! Sheet Doesn't Balance Prospect Ave. 4'Permitting prisoners toleav paraphernalia lit: the- ice box, The balance sheet does m — Prospect Ave: to be carried the. confines of the county jai without knowledge or consent o: balance, he said. The! assets out across Cliffwood Ave, to County without authority of the sheriff. the sheriff, where, they wen weigh "the liabilities. Trie n'exi Rd. to connect the two tftflustrlal Mr. Smith said this was un available to inmates. balance sheet he told the grou areas. true, but cited one instance wrier Mr, Smith said the only needle: will depend upon what they want In-Cliffwood Beach, a cir- he said Rocco Caponigro, ser- possibly involved contained penf Dr. and Mrs. Edward Dengrov cular connector between the end geant of • sheriff's officers, at- cillin, which required refrlgera presented the school with an 181 of Orchard St. and Raritan St. tempted to remove a prisone tion, and were kept in a smal copy of the Franklin Gazette. D with the end of Center St. be- without the warden's knowledgi icebox in the office under con- Dengrove said that this new: coming a cul-de-sac. ' so that the latter could supposedly stant surveillance of desk office: paper was printed by a son-in-la — Cul-de-sacs at the ends of pinpoint narcotics dens in th< 10. Failure to make regula of Benjamin Franklin. The ga- Charles St. and Anna Ave. with county. reports of conditions in the jail zette will be placed in the schoo! a connector at the end ot Willow "The deputy warden-refused U particularly irregularities or un library. and Euclid Aves. usual incidents. permit the prisoner to leave oi Frederic Fessler of Fessle: — The extension of Jannarone my order aftet' conferring witr Records Kept Boyken and Moss, the architect! Ave. from the west side of Lloyd me by telephone . . . your ma presented the keys of the schoc Rd. Mr. Smith said that a dail; — Connecting Line Rd. to Rocco Caponigro was very un- blotter, and memorandum booi to Mr. Prall, Sr. Mr. Fessle happy . said this was the second time h Llyod Rd. south of New York had been maintained until las and Long Branch Railroad tracks 5. Putting a correction office: March when they were removec had the privilege to present th to work knowing he had a prisoi keys of a school in the township to eliminate the Line Rd. grade at the sheriff's direction. Sine* crossing. .record and not notifying th< then, he said, he has maintainec "We're ready to accept youi A proposal to establish a cen- sheriff of same. his own records. He said he wi! next assignment," he said wit! tral rail terminal within the town- "I have never hired an em: produce the latter at the hearln] a smile as he gave the keys ti ship is given little chance of get- ployee during your term," Mr. and asked that the sheriff pr< Mr. Prall,' ting off the drawing board with Smith said. "Applications wer duce the books previously kept. "This is a great day for th filled out in your office .,. Yot 1 borough officials determined to 11. Depriving correction offi- community, ' Edward G? German, directed me to show the prosped keep the station at its present cers of proper vacation time. superintendent of schools said, through the jail and if he chos location there. "This is emphatically denied,1 "But it is even greater for to take the job that was it. I dii Mr. Smith said. "Until a short young people of Ocean Town Parking Lot nbt even have the right of veto. time ago, jail' officers receivec ship." However, Harold P a I n k e n, "However, each was finger- two weeks vacation. You will re- He said that it was Impossibl township transportation commit- printed and you, sheriff, receivec call that Deputy Warden Cool to measure the value of th tee chairman, sees increasing pos- A year the FBI'report on each one sr and I asked you to advise thi school. He thanked all who pa sibility that land may be obtained that you received official notifi freeholders that guards were re- ticipated in the project on behal from the state Highway Authority any criminal back quired to work on all holiday! of the Board of Education. for use as a parking field. ground ... You hired about 2 The acerage is between the park- "At our urging, and with you Only A Symbol ] a 11 employees during youi way and the railroad tracks, off help, the men now get 12 paii Mr. German said at the cornel term ; Lloyd Rd. holidays and 16 days vacatior stone ceremonies that the stom from today , ;•' Concerning Errands which they can take at one tim was only a symbol for the libei As reported several months '|f. Sending correction officer; or separately through the year. ties which made the country ago, the consultants recommend oil the county payroll on personal Noting that the sheriff made n great. construction of an additional fire errands and at county expense, reference to a seven-page state Placed in the stone were th house to serve Strathmore. Such "If the charge pertains to m ment he had released to new: prize winning brochure of thi a facility should be located on daughter coming home from co! papers Oct. 27 criticizing th school, information about th Lloyd Rd. at Church St., site of yon can share sheriff for a breakdown on jail school system, all the studen the First Aid Squad unit which discipline, Mr. Smith said: names attending the school an serves the area, the consultants "I must assume that you agree the first page of the "Horn' contend. with me that focusing the spol News." Another fire unit is proposed light on the truth and exposing After many ot the school boan for the southwestern section of conditions involving the welfan the township when that area has this too... members added cement to of the county to public view anc stone, the mason had to scrap* been developed further. The two judgment is not insubordination off the excess before sealing present aid squad units are seen "I don't believe that durin into the building. as being sufficient to serve im mediate and future needs of the, your term you have spent mor< The school on West Park Aw township.' than a total of 24 hours in th: contains 34 classrooms. Some < very important institution. the specialized rooms are fo: Utilities Plan "Had you shown more interes science, music and choral, shoj Eventually, the planners, rec- OUR CHRISTMAS CLUB PAYS INTEREST and evidenced a degree of co homemaking, audio visual, a ommend, all water and sewer operation, the most recent pagei facilities should be under control and other specialities. The buile Be wise and save for '66. Join The Ceutral Jersey $20.00aweck-$1010.00 $2.00a-week-$101.00 of history may have had a dif ing also contains three gymnas and administration of the Utilities ferecause of the Veterans Day less?" March, 1943, and December, 1946 to rob Russell Johnson, 58, ;chool holiday. No gtwu-work Iwrt. Only inswri- The council, in caucus session IS OUR -A) Thank you for the implie Are they still earning interes 158 Ridge Ave., Asbury Park, need ptiMMtl handl* your good last night, met with John Cogan In addition to parents' school MONT- W«V» 01 your Mrvleit x^ompliment. I'm going to try Would the tax on this interest the tatter's home, Sept. 4. M; BUSINESS 1 of the state Bureau of Naviga /isits, the staff members have '-"repay it by being very frank. N considerable? I have an outstan Johnson shot and killed Cowser . Earl V. Painter tion to discuss the dredging of -novice should tr/ to make mone ing debt of $500 to my chun confederate, Warren Washingto 4% ANNUAL DIVIDEND streams feeding into the Shrews- TAXPAYERS MEET TODAY Jo. very low-priced speculativ and would sell these bonds "if in the exchange and the jui bury River. The only other feed- COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY stocks. Money has been made could avoid paying Federal i ruled no cause for indictmei Promoted NEWARK - The 35th annual er stream is Turtle Mill Creek. fthem, but not very frequentl come tax. What is your advice against Mr. Johnson. RED BANK - Earl V. Painter! neeting of the N.J. Taxpayers' . with the market at its preset J. James T. Connolly, 19, of Wan of 78 West Front St. has been The Manahasset project, which \ssociation takes place here to- "Very high level. A few hopeful A) Your Series E bonds a townL Kenneth G. Connolly, 1! named director of product devel will total about $70,000, the may- lay in the Robert Treat Hotel, MARINE VIEW opment, hospital division, at may have bought Brunswick either in their second period of Middlctown Rd., New Moi or said, will be financed 59 per rhe annual banquet at 6:30 Highway 35, M!ddl«tow« Hwy. 36. Atlantic Highland* mouth, William H. Jennings, 3 Johnson and Johnson's Research ..the 8-10 level. I believe thei extension (for the March, M cent by the state and 25 per cent 'clock follows a day-long busi- 671-2400 291-0100 of Middlesex Dr., Cliffwood, an Center in New Brunswick. I chances for profit are dim b issue) or their first period (f< each by this city and Monmouth iess session. Ronald Stringfellow, 25, of Georg cause Brunswick has seen ean the December, 1D46, bonds). Th«; Mr. Painter, who joined John- Beach. are accruing interest at the ra St., River Plaza, breaking an. son and Johnson in 1949, moves ing power drastically diminish* Operations will have to wait un- of 3B per cent compounded sem; entering and larceny of cash air up from research associate in fi- til the state gives formal approv- — You should — over the Ion annually if held to maturity, valuables March 20 at the Da ber technology. He had previous- al, the mayor said. He noted the term—achieve capital enhanci the amount accumulated whei lenbach home, South Beers ly been director of research at city's application for funds has HELP WANTED "merit by buying the very best they were extended. Holmdel. the firm's Chicago plant and for been pending two years. stocks and waiting for stead If you sell, you will be liab William Dauber, Newark, issc the Filter Products Division. Residents ol the Troutman's for Federal income taxes on ai ing seven worthless checks tota A native of Dallas, Tex., Mr. A NEW interest accruals. How much th ing 5318 in June to supermarkel Painter is married to the former Creek area have been vocal on would be I cannot tell you, sin n Oakhurst, Neptune City an Evelyn C. Clemow of Houston, the issue of mud fiats which are I don't know jiour income bracl Belmar. Tex. The Painteri have one son, exposed there at low tide. They et. I see no reason for you Fred Jones, 53, no home, coi Evan, at home. claim the flats constitute a sell these excellent bonds, and tributing to the delinquency health and safety hazard. FOODTOWN HOT WATER would devise some other method minors for buying beer for a 1 Mayor Mazza said further EVERYBODY WISHES. of paying my church obligatioi year-old and a 15-year-old at R 92 Fifth Graders dredging of the channel would WILL BE OPENING IN THE VERY NEAR FUTURE Bank May 29. The boys face i> merely accentuate the erosion tion of juvenile authorities. Collected for UNICEF process along the banks and ON HIGHWAY 36, PORT MONMOUTH Leo Martin, Jr., Union Ave HAZLET - For the past twoj would not, without bulkheading, Asks Prayers Hazlet, carnal abuse of a gi years, children of the three fifth relieve the mud flats. WE ARE INTERESTED IN TAKING APPLICATIONS at the Keyport High School fiel< grade classes at Middle Road FOR MALE AND FEMALE HELP Nov. 11 For July 30 and at a shack in Holm School have co-operated with a del Township Aug. 31. local weekly newepaper in the Organ Society WITH OR WITHOUT EXPERIENCE Martin also was indicted fi annual UNIOEF Halloween col' Viet Troops breaking and entering the Norl lection. This year, 92 fifth grade Dines Tonight IN THE FOLLOWING DEPARTMENTS: Centerville fire house, Raritai pupils in the classes ot Mrs. Bur-j RARITAN TOWNSHIP - Ma; Township, and stealing two case ton Leder, Mrs. John Ketehow MIDDLETOWN - Hugh Bell • MEAT DEPARTMENT • GROCERY DEPARTMENT or Marvin Ollnsky Thursday pri of beer and $20 cash. will perform Bach, show tunes claimed that all township res and Miss Marilyn Sheehan again 'Louis P. Petruzzello, 32, participated in a "trick or treat" and jazz at the Rodgers Theater • PRODUCE DEPARTMENT • DAIRY DEPARTMENT dents offer a silent prayer fo Organ at tonight's meeting of the lut q«r that tat wottr tfct Holmdel Rd., Raritan Townshi effort to aid the needy children the success and safety of ou Monmouth Qrgah Society in The IASY war ... with our Futl troops in Viet Nam at 11 a.m receiving six truck tires won in more than 100 countries. • DELI DEPARTMENT • BAKERY DEPARTMENT $1,600 which had been stolen froi Cobblestones. Oil I For bttt ptrfennaact .. . Nov. 11. The classroom bulletin boards Joseph Grasso, East Frai The meeting will start at 8 • CHECKERS • STOCK CLERKS « fair prlcu... coll ui today. were decorated with posters show- This, he explained, is part cis Ave., Morganville, Aug. 15. p.m. after a 7 p.m. social hour ing the good that a penny, nickel the Veterans of Foreign War; Joseph Thomas, Springda! to which the public is invited. Operation Boost. The program or dime contribution can do when WE ALSO NEED DEPARTMENT HEADS! Ave., New Shrewsbury, aiding an Monthly meetings of the so- designed to raise the morale i put together for a "Share-Not abetting grand larceny, in thel oiety are held on a rotating spon- fighting men in the war In Vi< Scare" collection. ot a car owned by Schiffmin Ai sorship basis, with a different FULL PAID BENEFITS Nam. It is also aimed at ofl to Sales, Inc., Shrewsbury Ave organ manufacturer presenting setting the effect of anti-war pro New Shrewsbury, May 21, an Sell Fasti The Daily Register the instrument and program for tests. APPLY: FOODTOWN, HIGHWAY 35, MIDDLETOWN petty larceny, of a set of licens Classified. each session. The Township Committee alsi plates owned by Thomas Hughes adopted a resolution "supportln; Cherry St., New Shrewsbury, th and endorsing the policies of th same day. government and President Lyn- don B. Johnson in the war i Viet Nam." Crash Injures 2 Mayor Olinsky ottered co: M1DDLET0WN TOWNSHIP - lowest Price Ever... Anywhere! gratulations to Republican Com two people were injured Thur mitteemen-elect Joseph A. Mo day in a head-on collision at 6: ales and James M. McKay, J p.m. on Rt. 35 near Grove St. He invited them to attend a George Gazell 58 Hialeah Ave caucus meetings and executlv was driving his car east on R HEAT sessions. He said he hoped th; 36 and was in collision with a would bring them into, the go' automobile driven by Steve Doc: ernlng body with a degree 42 Luther Ave., Hopelawn, poli experience. said. Robert Gazell, 16, 'a pa: The committee reported th senger in his father's car, n FLUHR it will meet with the count; ceived multiple cuts, and Mi 1 Board of Freeholders Nov.' 151 Docs injured his knee. They wer FUEL OIL i discuss the possibility of acqui aken to Riverview Hospital b Boa Ufa utts sERvnf ing county funds for the insta East Keansburg First Aid Squai lation of sidewalks on Middle Rd, and were treated and released. nut SHI 6ioo Middle Rd. is also known a: Patrolman Vincent Zemalkow County Rd. 516. ski is investigating, Come in Now for Atlantic's FREE PICKUP! ME DELIVERY! FAST SERVICE! MONSTER America's FINEST Quality MIRZA RUG CLEANSING
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The Cm Slke TeacherStrike fttrt'Ftnatfeacser Orjaniz*- am 80. . I (ion will meet tonight tt 8:15 '(often bland Acttoh Careful planning for parka and o'clock in the school. Guest Conference in Amboy low-density development can ipeaktr* will be members erf the NEW YORK (AP) - Staten PERTH AMBOY (AP) — For and teachers for their part In the Ieltnd Is where the action U spare the island the mistakea : Services Team. the first time since the city's strike. GOT. Nelson A. Rockefeller «aid make by suburban communities teachers' strike.began one week Ask State Action today, painting to the sharp rise flooded by people moving from ago, opposing sides will confer The union fired off a telegram in highway and home building on cities after World War II, today at a joint session called to state education Commissioner the Island since construction be- he said in remarks prepared for by Mayor James 3. Flynn. Frederick M. Raubinger yester- gan of the Verrazano-Narrows delivery at the' annual building The gravity of the walkout day after high school teachers bridge. awards luncheon of the Staten received telegrams from school Island Chamber of Commerce in heightened over the weekend "In some areas, the hum of when the Board of Education or-authorities summoning them to the Tavern-on^he-Green restau- report for duty at 8:30 today. busy traffic has replaced the rant in New Dorp. dered the Perth Amboy High chirp of the cicada," he said as School closed beginning today un- Charging that the school board h« outlined a highway system to til further notice because of the planned to assign high school take traffic speedily across and Sell Fasti The Daily Register strike. teachers to work In grammar around the island and toand Classified. • Robert Bates, president of Lo-schools where they have no certi- cal 857 of the New Jersey Fed- fication, the union asked Raubin- eration of Teachers, AFL-CIO, ger to Intercede, said last night he hoped the talks The commissioner said he would pave the way for a quick would send a personal represen- TOILlTFLlrt settlement and a reopening of tative to look over the situation Toilet I the high school. All other today. Unlike ordia schools will remain open. Perth Amboy school superin- FOR CRIPPLED— Dr. Harold A. Murray of Sea Girt, doe* oat permit uuuiu—t W«t mtajrwtta' to ipbdi tacfcareMp* The striking union, represent- tendent Anthony V. Ceres said center, president of tha Monmouth Count/ Society for With UriUflCTtfm lull mMumfc*" ing about half of the city's 276 the strikers were mistaken. He "How come Crippled Children and Adults, presents a check to David through the clo|gla« mi*e eatf teachers, wants an eleotion to ssld the teachers would be as- •wUhet it down. Cart ni»t '" choose a sole bargaining agent foil signed to non-teaching chores V. Carter, administrator of Fitkin Memorial Hospital, for everybody i SUCTKKMMM STOK BUUMWCtt all teachers in the school system and that only those also qualified equipment to ba used in the dental clinic. Dr. Benjamin doesn't eat it?" The board has refused, contend- to teach in grammar schools cantMntnr.cMntno — ing such an election would vio- would be asked to volunteer for Rubin of Asbury Park, left, an associate attending dentist Don't let -the weather fool you. J. Kridel's late state law. such duties. and chief of tha orthodontic, section, demonstrates tha rugged North Country outerwear, now! AT HAttWAU STOW aVOW—l Not everybody knows this Demands Agreements Instrument used in the treatment of children with crippling bread is sold only at A&P. Joseph Cascelia, field represen- Fur" Favorites malocelujion. But now you do. We guar- tative for the American Federa- tion of Teachers, parent of the "AIM said was: antee you'll like it or your local union, said he foresaw no to several other stores when fire- money back. I Million men arrived shortly before 3 return to work unless the school a.m. board signs an "iron clad' Show me a filter that reajjy delivers taste and I'D eat my fiat." agreement to these four points: Shops Fire The fire burned for many hours, JANE PARKER 1. A representation election. shooting flames through the shop 2.; The right to bargain with the roofs and pouring smoke over school board on contracts and Hits Orange the neighborhood. Large crowds other issues. ORANGE (AP) - A spectac- gathered to watch. The ruined 3. Written guarantees on all settlements. ilar fire destroyed seven ad' shops included the cocktail 4. No reprisals against students joining shops at the corner of lounge and an insurance agency Main and North Centre Sts., on Centre St., and a beauty par- yesterday lor, shoe store, dress shop, drug An unofficial estimate placed store and baby apparel store on the amount of damage at about Maia St. (1 million. WdllARDjOHnJOnJ Six firemen suffered burns and Deputy Fire Chief A. Joseph two of them were sent home, The Di Benedetto, who directed 120 firemen from Orange, East Or- rest stayed on duty after treat- ange and West Orange, calledd went at the scene. Di Benedetto the blaze one of the worst in hurt his back but remained on Harvest the city's history. the scene after treatment. De Benedetto said the fire ap- The fire department said today TRY NEW LUCKY STRIKE FILTERS parently began in a cocktail that the causa of the blaze still 'S/ Twkqr iounge and already had spreadwas unknown. Special SHOP Red Bank, Asbury Park Wednesday and Friday 'til 9; Brick Town Monday thru Friday 'til 9J30 p.m. Through Nov. 2t
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X i top to bottom: Hedgerow Forget-Me-Not tha place: You know that you can phone almost Finfandia ' ' Red Bank Telephone Building anywhere. But do you know what hap- Heritage 183 Broad Street pens when you do? You'll be amazed STEINIACH'S CHINA and GLASS, S.eond Fleer • Red Bank ilia Aibuiy- Park, Brick Tow* tha time: by the thousand and one operations > 7 P.M.-9 P.M. that stand behind your phone serv- ilia data: ice. Be our guest for the evening.And Mon., Nov. 8 bring the family. Tues.,Nov. 9 Wad., Nov. 10 New Jersey Bell TI^ j~ Jim Bishop: Reporter Register's Opinion Can Animals Reason? • Can animals reason? The question has been in dltputi • Hard Choices in Brazil long time. Families with pets attribute human qualities to The tweeping new powers arro- chosen not by popular vote but by dog*, cats and canaries. Some look upon the animal at a member of the family. I knew a My painter who .to dtaner gated unto itself by the Branco gov- a majority of the present congress. in candlelight, served by servants. Opposite .her was her at ernment removes any doubt that While we would much prefer to Jn a high chair. She carried on a one-way converntion with Brazil is ruled by » military dictator- see effective democratic rule of this the animal throughout the meal. • _ ThiJ is not reason, on either tide. It* ship. It has abolished all political largest and most important of our word reason itself ii nebulouJ. The noon parties, increased executive powers at Latin American allies, it would be reason mean* the purpose or motiva tor in th« expense of congress and permitted self-deluding to pretend that conditions act. The verb, to which I have particular reference, means to analyze, to deduce, to the president to pack the 11-man Su- for such rule exist in Brazil today. Un- reach a decision. f preme Court by naming five new happily, they just don't. To reason properly an animal mutt Rm judges friendly to the revolution. The hard fact is that the Branco become aware of a problem. Secondly, it must devise one or more solutions. Third, The revolution came in April, 1964, government has been fighting valiant- it must test each one and recogniia toe when the military overthrew the left- ly and with some success to check correct one. Most scientists feel that only ruinous inflation and to provide some man can reason properly because he can ist government of President Joao BISHOP pass knowledge on to others by speech and measure of economic stability. Until > Goulart. It installed an intellectual through the printed word. - general, Humbert© Castelo Branco, as that is done, it would seem madness Each animal must learn for himself, by experience, wnat president and sought to preserve a to permit the country to slide back his ancestors knew unless the matter involves instinct, which into the hands of people whose irre- is built into the brain through repetitive experience over thou- facade of constitutional government. sands of generations. A cat who has never seen a dog is afraid sponsibility forced a revolution 18 of the first one who comes near. A puppy will love the odor But the facade began to crumble months ago. of meat long before the first taste. In the October elections when the Until a strong'middle class emerges My German shepherd is 8 years old. He it black and big people of two of the most important' and fretful and kind. The dog next door is a 6-montns-ola and is capable of exercising an effec- shepherd named King Pat. He breaks the leash in hii ga- States elected governors put up by the tive republican form of government, rage and leaps to play with Rocky on the lawn. My dog parties that had once backed Goulart. Brazil seems destined to face the mis- pushes the young one back toward the garage until he get! This was a signal to the "hard-line" erable choice of a military dictator- him inside. Then he growls at the youth to scare him into remaining where he is. , militarists that the leftists would again ship or a dictatorship of the prole- take control of Brazil if the election Is this reason? It could be instinct. On the west tide of tariat. The Branco government has Manhattan a group of terriers had fun with a rat. They of a president by Oct. 3, 1966, were been on the economic track most like- circled him. He squeaked. Then he saw a truck. He ran be- left to direct popular vote. ly to lead to a strong middle class. tween dual tires. The dogs could not dislodge him. When the truck started off, the rat crouched and ran between the President Branco has decreed, But Its seizure of additional power tires. therefore, that while the election could have a regrettably corruptive Aristotle, the great. Greek, observed animals closely. He schedule will be adhered to, the next influence. There is no silver lining in wrote, over 2,00ft years' ago, that animals can learn and re- the present clouds over Brazil. member but cannot reason. He was a wise man, and yet I president—barring himself—will be doubt his wisdom in this case. I feel that animals can reason, but only in desperation; only when their lives are at itake. It is as though the power to rationalize is present In such The Question: Angels or Apes? John Chamberlain: These Days a small degree that it can be called up (or use as a last- ditch device. . Cancellation of a high school pro- on their minds, the American people Frank Beach, writing in The New Treasury of Science, duction of "Inherit the Wind" In New could afford to take time out to argue cites the case of a hungry octopus who, in an aquarium, was * York State appears to have created with fervor whether man, as Darwin Soaring Auto Insurance Rates separated from his prey by a short sheet of glass. The octopus somewhat less controversy than the proclaimed, had evolved from a com- slammed his tentacles against the glass many times. If he had There's been a to-do In the stats of Con- lative chamber. But, regardless of their moved sidewards a little, he would have passed the glass Scopes trial in Tennessee, on which mon ancestor with the ape, or, as the necticut that makes one despair ol Republi- wishes In the Constitutional battle, the regu- and had the dinner. It never occurred to him because his mind it Is based. Bible said, had been created "a little cans ever getting together. The affair, which lar Republicans had no decent business in told him to aim directly at his target. lower than the angels." has embarrassed no less a person than the trying to prevent Dirksen from coming to A baby chick in a group escapes from a henhouse and In 1925, when Clarence Darrow, Republican Minority Leader of the U.S. Sen- the state to exercise his right of free speech runs across a highway. Some are killed. Those who live grow But all that was 40 years ago when, the agnostic lawyer, dashed with Wil- ate, Everett Dirksen, is on a subject close to his heart. up to be chickens, and hatch eggs. When they see their bsbiw regarded as an age of faith or age of worth looking at because it The regulars pulled "protocol" on Dirk- run toward the open highway, they haven't sufficient rational* liam Jennings Bryan, "the Great Com- .doubt, life- for the individual or the is symptomatic of Republi- sen. Working through Ray Bliss, head of or memory to turn the little ones away from danger. moner," over the right of one John can sickness all over the the Republican National Committee, and A female gorilla in a cage learned to operate certain human race was infinitely simpler than f. Scopes to teach Darwin's theory of country. bringing up such local big guns as former mechanical devices by reaching through the bars. One morn- it has become. Senator Prescott Bush and former Repre- First, let us paint a bit ing, when the trainer called her, she came to the bars ready evolution in his high school biology sentative Horace Seeley-Brown, to pressure Today, with the world divided Into of the Connecticut back- to work and found puddles of rainwater in the cage. She Dirksen out of his original acceptance of the class, everyone was more certain of ground. Last winter the lo- looked, scratched her head, went back to her boudoir, and two nuclear-armed camps following invitation, they got the Republican Minority his opinions than now appears to be cal Republican State Cen- returned with dry straw. She dropped it and »at. the Armageddon of World War IF, the Leader to beg off. "The flak was just too tral Committee chose to This sounds like reasoning. The old device ot placing I the case. great," so Dirksen told Mr. Lupton in say- doctrine of evolution, however scien- outlaw a mildly conserva- chimp in a cage with a chair, and a-banana hanging from th« ing he couldn't make it. The war "to make the world safe tific, seems to have become rather tive organization called the ceiling, is called to mind. Give the chimpanzee enough time The real irony of the situation, so far and he will grab the chair, place it under the banana, and for democracy" had been victoriously inconsequential. CHAMBERLAIN citizens Committee for the Republican Party. I call this committee mildly as Dirksen is concerned, is that he was per- stand on it to get the fruit. concluded. The League of Nations, If man was created "a little lower conservative because its guiding spirits were suaded to give up his scheduled speech by a A week ago we locked Rocky in my office when the family without American participation, was prepared to support William Scranton or Nel- local Republican organization which Includes went out to dinner. He felt betrayed. When we returned, the than the angels," why can't he find highly placed individuals' who have scoffed getting along, seemingly, all right. The son Rockefeller for the presidency if ha had brass doorknob had been bent and broken, the lock had sprung, the way for Dations and people to live happened to get the 1964 nomination. When at the Dirksen Amendment as being, a and Rocky was in a corner, head down, with a worried ex- United States, overcoming a slight in peace? the plum went to Goldwater, however, John "farce." Some of tha "regulars" In Connecti- pression. Does he have a revenge motive? I .don't iknow .but postwar recession, was bounding along Lupton, the executive director of the com- cut even went so far as to impugn Dlrksen's we found that, whils we were out, he had i topped into our If man evolved from the apes, why probity by saying that Gordon Reedj a, mem- toward unparalleled prosperity. mittee, went all out for victory in his job as bed and Mrs. Bishop's side was covered with dog hairs, I», does he often make the apes appear campaign director for all the Republicans. ber of the Republican Citizens Committee it accidental that she was the one who locked him in- th«- So, with nothing else particularly much smarter? This annoyed many of the "regular" Repub- who used to be the regular Republicans' fi- office? Still, revenge isn't good reasoning. - nance chairman, went down to Washington licans, who proved to be sour-grapes party The best proof of the power of reason is to submit the to "buy" Dirksen's original acceptance ol members. When Goldwater lost, the sour- animal to a problem he has never encountered and note how the Invitation to speak. The President as Dad grapes element leaped for Lupton's throat, many solutions he tries. If he solves the situation in a few even though today Lupton stands ready to Because of the rift between, the regulars tries, he is obviously superior. The more he trie* ineffectual and the Citizens Committee in Connecticut If there Is any truth In the unde- he has done well Indeed. At some lupoort any and all Republicans who are solutions, the more hysterical he becomes, the more his power the backbiting and caterwauling grow apace. nted—tout also unconfirmed—report point along the line, to be sure, he nominated for Important office. to reason leaves him. The regular Republicans can't rais« money, It sounds like the story of my life ... that President Johnson's 18-year-old has to surrender. Far from being the kiss ot death, repudia- for the older angels of the party, most of college freshman daughter, Luci, has Mr. Johnson may command the na- tion has not visibly affected the Citizens Com- whom live in the rich end of the state around been seeking her father's blessing for tion's best brainpower to advise him mittee. It has held two highly successful off- Greenwich, support the Citizens. The result year rallies, with Senator George Murphy is paralysis—and a prospective free run to an engagement announcement, LBJ on war and peace, but he had no presi- and Ronald Reagan, both ol California, com- victory*' for Democrats In 1966. Events of Years Ago will have the sympathy of most fa- dential advantages that we can think ing to Connecticut to pack them in. Recently The Idiotic thing about it la that it's all thers of teenage daughters in the of in handling a daughterly romance. tha Citizens Committee invited Senator Dirk- so needless. The Lupton group has even of- country. sen to coma into tha state to speak for the fered to bow out and let the regular Republi- However reluctant a young man might < Dirksen Amendment designed to guarantee cans reaffirm the invitation to Dirksen, with 50 Years Ago The only strategy, of course, Is to be to risk incurring the disapproval of geographical unit representation In one- house the privilege of keeping all the money gained of the local legislature to any .state that play for time. Every year gained'is a a prospective presidential father-inr from selling tickets for regular Republican Harry Doughty, son of George Doughty of Fair Haven, wishes it. Connecticut is about to vote on a coffers. Instead of helping to exacerbate wat in Long Branch Hospital minus two toes. He shot" hit toei triumph for marital sanity. If a father law, the diffidence is not likely to be new Constitution, which will Include "one divisiveness in Connecticut, National Chair- off in a hunting accident. gets a female child through high reflected in a teenage daughter. man, one vote" reapportionment for both its man Ray Bliss should be playing a peace- school, he has accomplished some- Let's face it, LBJ and all other legislative houses. Conceivably, a speech by maker role, with all working organizations Rev. and Mrs. Arthur A. McKay of Oceanic celebrated Dirksen would affect the vote on the Consti- permitted to strive for Republican victories thing. If he can follow this up by their wedding anniversary. Rev. Mr. McKay was pastor of tha dads: It is the natural instinct of tution. The regular Republicans are mostly in the ways that are congenial to them. This Presbyterian Church. persuading the starry-eyed damsel to daughters to take advantage of any supporting reapportionment despite the state is what the Democratic Party does—and th« go through a year or two of college weakened fatherly condition, including tradition of unit representation for one legis- Democrats keep on winning. Olaf Neilsen of Asbury Park won a wrestling match from Ajax, the famed Norwegian wrestler. Ajax had agreed to before she entrusts her life to a swain, the post-operative one. throw Neilsen twice in 20 minutes, but one fall wat all ht Sylvia Porter: Your Money's Worth could manage, Robert S. Allen, Paul Scott: Inside Washington 25 Years Ago
GOP Divisiveness Persists William Barclay Harding, chairman ot the New Jeruy The 'Great Society* Overseas Stats Aeronautical Council, supported the enlargement of R«d So far this year auto insurance rates Finally, other factors are the soaring ex- Bank Airport to«enable handling of military and large com- President Johnson is considering several perts and university faculty members and have been hiked in 46 states, with the in- penses of hospital care and zooming court mercial aircraft. It was planned to make the Red Bank instal- unique methods of exporting his "Great graduate students. crease running from .4 per cent to 25.6 cash awards in liability cases. The average lation a Monmouth County airport. ~~ Society" program* overseas. Their job would be to organize and direct per cent. In 10 of these 46 states, insurance jury awardHo auto accident victims is climb- The principal proposals, drafted by • operations of "short and long-range social, departments have approved two rate boosts, ing at a rate of 13.6 per cent a year and The Matawan Journal and the Keyport Weekly published Jpecial presidential task force, call for economic, educational and political develop- with the combined Increase some awards are running into millions of dol- anniversary issues commemorating SO years the two papers establishing a National In- ment projects in undeveloped countries." in one state amounting to lars. Many of the awards are justified, but had been published by the Brown family, relatives of the late a whopping 36 per cent. also many—in the opinion of judges who stitute for Educational and Faculty members and students enrolled In Benjamin F. S. Brown. The anniversary edition) had 84 pagei have spoken out on this issue recently—ar« Technical Co-operation and FDS would be permitted to divide their work Before 1965 ends, more printed in six sections. grossly exaggerated. a Foreign Service. between overseas, Washington, and universi- Insurance rate hikes surely To function is part of ties participating in the program. will go Into effect. By the What Is being done about this trend— the multi-billion dollar The new corps would be comparable to time this year's increases which vitally touches the pocketbooks of the Cynic's Corner By Interlandi foreign aid program, (he the career foreign service in pay and retire- have been tallied, the In- overwhelming majority of U.S. families? proposed institute and FDS ment benefits, and qualified members would surance Information Insti- To cut over-all accident rates, state and would undertake to give be permitted to transfer between the two tute In New York predicts local governments have stepped up auto safe- universities and colleges a services. 1965 will set an historic ty campaigns, have made motor vehicle in- major role in the planning record for a single year's spection mandatory, have greatly expanded and directing of this new PORTER auto Insurance rate rises. driver education at the high school level. At ALLEN foreign venture. THEDAIIY Just within the next five years, one expert the same time, automobile manufacturer* The institute, which will have to get I T REGISTER forecasts, our auto insurance rates will have added new safety features to 1966 cars, congressional approval, would bo i separate double. ranging from padded dashboards to rear corporate entity with a board ot trustees t- MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1965 Why the relentless climb in auto insur- seat belts. and an independent budget. ance costs? To give safe drivers some protection from The trustees would include representa- «Mt llroad HI., Hud Rule, N. 1. Ml Ht. 13. Mldillrfowa, N. J. First is the simple fact that cars are climbing insurance rates, the auto insurance tives of government agen- 10 Knit Mala HI., Frrrtoid, N. J. multiplying on U.S. roads. More cars mean industry has revised its rate schedules to cies with major interna- 379 Broadway, •<"»! Rranrh, N. J, more accidents, more insurance claims, more penalize high risk drivers and reward safe u*1 ll>nrjr Clay tional programs, plus rep- Kilnli. iniTii7~Joil«rH. CooiTiuuri dollar losses. drivers. A 17-year-old boy, for example—the resentatives oLthe universi- t>> Thv llxi Bunk Rfilitrr Incorporalfd Second is the steady rise in auto repair riskiest driver today—pays 230 per cent more M. IIMU1I.I) ties and distinguished lay- and tirnrral Manatrr costs, reflecting rising labor costs and the than the average auto insurance premium. men. Arthur %. Kanila, Kdllor addition to today's cars of a wide variety But a woman between the ages of 30 and 64— Thomai J. Illy William F. Baodford The, Institute would Enrmtlvr Kililur AiMXIatt Killtor of luxurious extras which ore brutally costly the safest driver today—pays only 90 per cent absorb the functions of the rraab IV. lltrlxiur Cbarlri A. Johmloa to repair. A decade ago it cost $44.49 to of the average. MlilillrliiM'ii llureau Mir. FrellwM Iliiremi Jl«r. Slate Department's Bureau replace a front fender on one popular make The auto insurance industry also Is con- of Educational and Cultural Mrmlirr of tha Aitoclaled Preaa car; today it cost $94.50 for the same Job. sidering offering a $200 or more deductible Tlit Auoiialeil i'reai In antltlad axclualvelj' to tht »I0 Affairs, which handles for rniiiuikiiiun lit ill tin local mwa prlntail In thif Third is the sticky and growing practice clause on collision insurance at significantly scientific, educational and newapaixr aa well aa ail AP n«wa aiiiulctui, of repair bill padding. A less than scrupulous lower rates to benefit safe drivers and to SCOTT cultural exchange programs Memher of Aiiifrlrtb Niwipapsr Puhllibe» Anoc. repairman will use a post-accident repair job curb the zeal of repair bill padders. Another with other countries, including Ruasia. Airii• tier Audit Bureau of t'trculmioo to fix up preaccident dents. Or he may hike more drastic move under high level study The staff would consist of personnel from Tltt Red ll.ink Kegiiter, Inc., aiaumra no financial his total repair bill to cover the deductible would revise today's entire liability benefit universities, foundations and government rai|ii)tiillj|)ltla3 lur lytJvijgraplilcM error* In MilvirUieiiienli, $50, with a kickback lo the automobile's system to give legally-fixed amounts of com- lint will reprint without i-liargr Hist l>art o[ an ailver- agencies "who could move in and out of it :liem<*iil In which lilt lyjiograplilcnl error occuri. AiU'crtliera owner. pensation to ,8,11 insured accident victims—re- will iilcnae nollfy lliV maiiagtmtut Immediately of any as llie situation required without loss of trror wlildi may occur. Fourth Is the upsurge In auto thefts. Last gardless of fault in the accident. This would perquisites attached to their normal employ- year 466,805 cars were stolen, an average sharply curtail amounts of claims paid. ment." 'i'hli nawapaper aanumei nn reaponsllilllllea for itala- menii u( opinion In Irttpra from Ita rtailera. of one car every 68 seconds, representing a Major moves have become Imperative to THE NEW ARMY — The Foreign De- 17 per cent rise over 1963. While .nine of 10 combat these awful statistics: an annual loss - lirhncrlptton Prlcea In Advance velopment Service, which would function a« llntla copy at rounlir, 7 esnti; by mall, 10 canli stolen cars eventually are recovered, one of now of 50,000 American lives and of $10 bil- »e Institute'! operating branch, would also 11 montha—111, Avoid umaa LOM's mm J,-K'!,'; ! '.Mil 1 I •.Backbone* note opeataj with • wnr;WN* ttut- Arid There's 8-d«t out! Bridge Advice T.Oppowd 38. Bay card major suit (like the hearts} It Plant of BJy &On» of the •Win- family Kennedys dow* Prefer a weak minor suit Irony Asthma Formula Still a Tie 12. City la ». Biblical M. Keg»- Haaisc Is man's only defense he look the spade linesie at the Mug Frankenstein Bulk MUM tlve Igtinrt a hostile fate. Thirls FREEHOLD - Hie tie is the saa asaa ua first trick. The contract is un- 13. Black and 10. Cushion* 30. Trent- aa aaiso osa especially trui la bridge, whtre beatable if he wins the first trick Presented by Pupils Most By Doctors-i thing in the rook salt business. blue 16»"Stowe" porta- BEfflOa 803(43 you must struggle not only agalnit with the ace of spades. HAZLET - Fifth grade pupils Just when the Monmouth Coun- 14.Insert chaneter tion 15. Level bad cards tod two opponents, but South draws trumps with the of Mrs. Joyce Geis at the Syca- Now Without Prescription ty Board of Freeholders got an 18. Irish poet • •ystem: also against your partner. The indication that closer competition 16. Comes in 19. Help abbr.. Aimer ace and queen and then leads the more Drive School presented a Stops Attacks in Minutes... Relief Lasts for Hours! 17. Verbal 2020. OOff the chest 33. Gorse thought grew out of a well-filled queen of dubs for a finesse. East play "Miss Frankenstein," a Hi. Ynk, It.Y. and farmers dummy's Queen. East took the and answer quiz, 8 medlcinei (in fuU prescription ark, and Charles ScJiaefer & Sons, swelling colloq. measure of dubsdb , and gets to dummy with Civet hours of freedom from recur- strength) found most effectiT|)a 24. Key king of .spades and returned the the king of hearts to discard During the talent section of the rence of painful aithma ipaimi. Elizabeth, have been submitting 10 combination for asthma dlstrtsi. 26. Uprising I i. 5 4 S b 7 Queen of diamonds to the tee. play, each student sang, danced Thli formula it to effective that Each perform! a special purpose. equal bids for the county's an- 27. Church diamond on the ace of clubs. it is the physicians' leading asthma My partner drew trumps and or played a musical instrument So look forward to tleep at nls**. ticipated yearly need of 800 tons office II It DAILY QUESTION Robert Russomanno and the prescription'-" -— so safe when used as • then tried the club finejse. directed tha...t. now it can be sold- and freedom from asthma ipssma, of sodium chloride to salt high- Sl.Netr to YA As dealer, you hold: Spades— school band provided the accom Gtt Frtmateiw «t asy drugtttm. ways in the snow motnhs. 32. Scene of the u i4- East took the king of clubs and withoot prescription in most states Trojan War • defeated the contract with two A Q Hearts—K 6 4 3. Diamond paniment for each contestant. And every year the freeholders 33. Buddha IS Ib diamond tricks. have been splitting their business. 34. Mint again Thursday the Winans bid for 87. Certain 7A "It is not my night," my part- Here's no mud in your eye n ner complained. "Two finesses, 1965 supplies was (160 over Schae- dogs % fer's. But there was a third com- 3d. South I9 ZOVA %it and they both failed." petitltor, Yardville Supply Co., American "A great pity," I agreed. "I Yardville, and its offer ' was river IS V have partners in the United States $1S,400, identical with Schaefer's. 40. Wool fabric A % who are just u unlucky." AD Pan 34 Maple Avtnue Opeaini lead — * 10 SUPERMARKETS
BONELESS...TOP QUALITY
Smoked . N Ib. 79 BONELESS BRISKET; ECONOMY CUTS Beef Ib.59 CHICKEN LEGS S M9c FINAST OLIVE LOAF * 2* CHICKEN BREASTS *Z -59c SWIFT FRANKS » 5* FINAST TASTY LOAF •-*» 29c FINAST BACON PEARS starts sooner and lasts longer POTATOES lor 10,321 members of First Merchants HEINZ Chose & Siinborn TOMATO SOUP COFFEE osCfii6 $1,630,01X25 JN THI MAIL Join Our 1966 II. C qjf cans (£ JT CM 75 If you are one of the foresighted members who had a 1965 Chmtmas Club Now Christmas Savings Account with Krst Merchants you'll en- CLASSES TO FIT ANY BUDGET joy a pay-as-you-go gift shopping season without bill wor- NO ENTRANCE FEE VAN CAMP'S MAZOLA Deposit You Pay In You ries. All it takes to join this happy throng for 1966 is a trip Weekly 50 Weeks Receive* BEANS CORN OIL $ .50 $ 25.00 $ 2525 to any one of our 9 Community Offices to open your Christ- 1.00 , 50.00 50.50 2.00 100.00 101.00 1ft. mas Club Account. Enrollments are being accepted now.... 3.00 150.00 151.50 en 5.00 250.00 252.50 there are classes to fit any budget and, at First Merchants, 10.00 500.00 505.00 we pay interest on completed clubs. 20.00 1000.00 1010X0 BAB-0 PEELED * Interest Paid On Completed Clubs CLEANSER TOMATOES
MOHTIHI ITALIAN
PUCES EPFlCTlVf THKU TUESDAY, NOV. Wi e* oil NEW JERSEY, NEW CITY, PEAtl MVK aM) STATEM ISUND riai^t (.«~pt PUINflElD, WISTFItflD, EllZAIETH and HACKEN5ACK). We ret«ve If. r^M t. IhH Wl NH Ibb (er lyp««niphle>l (fran. • . • faellMk • Mnmtwi • NMth Atony HA • .FalrHtrm • IMmM • CotoNtric • Irirtt • •-'••; ;'•••; Htod Offfct; 601 AAottlion Avenut, AibUfy Pork • WtMii tr Drlvfl, MM, .W hmjU Hmn«A\[ mm . REP BANK, 362 BROAp ST. 1IEMURIEDEKAL BESEKVE &K61ku£.» EEDBSAX 4DEFQS1X INSUBAMCB GOBFOEA330N J> 'V; "•• •., y, Nw. 8. 19(55 ' M BCH t*aOCM4 «*« pr, K* fl NScfoiolTime tfctot, wifc «onanitt«e cm Ifn. Btaxte •«*•*'»« 4 W OftxMrter TSaxfitt miwukm THE DAILY RjECISTSg mataWj-ia^udiaf Swtord Wto-Ma. Dorothy M«rck wan too- Vincent Tianmenem. ed that ft«ft flag had flows over stop, Wtbctoa; John INi, secre-duced, M well w tte new Cube, An American flag; waa present- the natioo'a capital. After ths Concept Told ttry; FFrank k RtRetoo , ictlvitiesiii ; LL*> Jeme* P«if, Jamej FTJIM, ed to the pack try Comroander meetingu^Jag, a.HailJweea apple dunk- Zingler Leaves on Qearl, treasurer, and Martin Thomas White, Robert Weber, Joseph Meier of the Vetemni tf ing contest was held and refresh- By Kmaey Kiely, committee chairman. Eugene Bronner tnd Peter Merck. Foreign Wars post, Commander ments were served. RUMSON — A new concept in Pack to Join scheduling aimed et making best use of facilities, time and person- nel is proposed by Dr. John F. Boy Scout Unit Kinney, superintendent at Rum- HAZLET - Cove Road School son-Fair Haven Regional High was the recent scene of a meet- THANKSGIVING School. ing of Cub Scout Pack 234, the A system of maximum practical last at which Robert Zingler flexibility which he called the would preside. "modular concept" was described Mr. Zingler will resume duties Thursday at a meeting billed as with a Boy Scout troop which his DINNER ON US! « preliminary budget survey for son recently joined. Mr. Zingler the public. has been active in the pack since A small audience heard Dr. its formation. Kinney explain how division of the school day into modules of time lasting 21 minutes would Stay Away, give each student a more Individ- A dellclout U.S. Gov't. Inspected Turkey Ii yourt ually-shaped kind of education. Success of the plan, if it gains Man Told l with Hie purchase of 59.95 or more of our value school board approval, would be packed furniture. Place your order today i largely predicated on students' acceptance of it as en experi- By G)urt ment, the superintendent said. LONG BRANCH - With a << Conflicts encountered in sched- TURKEY! promise never to return to the uling after-school activities city again, Cosmo Saccone, no With pvrehatt on or after Nov. 4, 196S would be eliminated by having address, received ?. suspended -'HI Nov. 24, IMS . . . any depo.lt them all available during school fine of $50 after pleading guilty will hold any Item until Chriitmu . , . hours. Dr. Kinney said. Im- Thursday to charges of unlaw- You rteoiva your turkey right away; no proved teaching, Independent ful loitering and causing a dis- waiting until your furniture It d«llverad, study, informal seminars, super- turbance Wednesday, REMEMBER! Any deposit will hold vised discussions and extended X. periods for laboratory work would Acting Magistrate Theodore i your election until Chrlitmos. 8-PC. BEDROOM be areas that would benefit under C. Mirabella cautioned him that| KHDEUVERr • Dr«u«r • 2 lompi the modular concept. should he return to the city • Cheit • Mirror • Boekeaw led Drawing up schedules would again the suspended fine would Can bf purchased require about $800-$I,000 worth of become effective. He had to pay itparartly data processing, he said. the |10 court costs. ! The plan also must gain state Mr. Saccone received a simi- authorization. lar admonition in March, 1964, 5-PC. KITCHEN SET when he was fined $35 and told CHROME or BRONZETON8 * Table • 4 Matching Chain First Aid in the Home to stay out of the city. 3-piece Early American Can bi purchaiid «t90 Is Subject of Course Herman E. Holmes of 313 Myr- Nylon Frieze 2-piece liparolily _ ?ew tle Ave., Neptune, was fined Living Room RUMSON — The Rumson First and $5 court costs for oper- Living Room Aid Squad will conduct a "First ating a vehicle without a license. • Solid foam e Sofa 8-PC. LIVING ROOM Aid in tfie Home" prpgram in Mr. Holmes admitted that he cushions • Marching wing • Sofa • Step Tablet the Rumson-Fair Haven Regiona • 2 Arm Chain • 2 Table had no license and that this was • Choice of colors chair High School Wednesday at 7:30 • Cocktail table lamps and fabrics Can be purctioitd p.m. his third similar offense. • Foam cushions Petro Lebrom of 346 Chelsea separably $119 Local residents are invited to Ave. was fined $30 for leaving attend the session. It will cover $139 159.95 the scene of an accident. An- mouth - to - mouth resuscitation, burns, bleeding, broken bones and other summons was written in MAPLE BUNK poisons. court when it was learned that No Down Payment! Take 2 Years to Pay! he had no driver's license. He A question and answer period will follow each subject. was fined $15 for this offense. 3-Pc. Rock Maple HOLLYWOOD BED OUTFIT John C. Montague, 35, of 12 Philip Duffy heads the program DANISH LOUNGE University PI. pleaded guilty of Complete with committee. SOFA BED SUIT! WALNUT FRAME taking $51.50 from the home of BED FRAMES ladder, guard $^95 his sister-in-law, Mrs. Margaret • Sofabed • 2 Arm Chain All foam euiMoni with ilppen. roll. ... Milcing flit -leant..'with tta "In" crowd! Fire College E. Montague of 8 Ellis Ave. Regular 54.95 3.95 FAIR HAVEN - The fall ses- Since he promised restitution, sm.w 129.95 Cotb -and carry fttrikly fun b«g> twinging from ihouldar, hand sion of the Monmouth County Fire he was fined $15 with the pro COMPLETE ollege will be held tonight at vision that restitution be made. o12Kt. Gold Filled jewelry by Corocraft excitingly priced!
sold filUd jiwilry perfect far younelf or •> flifti . . . Fer tht fin) tim» evir it thai* v*ry lew priceil
PINS $3-85 with eulturad pearls
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antique styles $3 B. Model SC916C—French Provincial credenza elegantly Interpreted in hand distressed warm-toned cherry veneers and matched solids. Fluid EARRINGS deep carvings at doors and grilles emphasize its romantic old world heritage. Golden latticed grilles are removable so that drapery can be hoop and wadding changed to compliment your room decor. Rich antiqued door pulls and band styles $4 • hinges tastefully enrich the exterior suggesting the excellence of the high fidelity components housed within, $875* DUAL, 1009 PROFES- SOLID STATE STEREO SYLVANIA AS4O0O AIF SIONAL 4-SPEED AUTO- TUNER AND AMPLIFIER SUSPENSION SPEAKER MATIC TURNTABLE 200 watt EIA (320 watt* STEINBACH'S JEWELRY C Model SC919K—Early American cabinetry sensitively depicted with the SYSTEM Picturing V-15/WS-1 high peak), frequency respome Rich, unootli dlitortiofrfrai Str.it Floor characteristic refinement of design exhibited at the height of the period. compllanca magnetic cart- 15 25.000 epi ±ldb. 12 puihbutton Function Control bats. Crisp, clian highs. ilto Albury Pirk, Brick Town Master crafted in rich warm mellow tones of satiny maple... with antiqued ridge with pre-imp. Diamond Excellent response. Acctt- hardware ... chamferred and geometrically balanced front panels . . . long pity styfos.TnekB and Center with AM/fM/FM Stereo. McyjKkiyU massive overhanging top, fully skirted base ... a tribute to the skillfull tripi at it low u tl gram. excellence of the colonial craftsmen. $ 1150* •STEREO CONSOLE MODELS START AT 1279.50
Other Syhania 'Maestro' consofes in Contemporary and Medilemnean styling. See and hear them today at,,, 30 BROAD STREET THE STORE WITH A RED BANK, N.J. ANDERSON MUSIC FLAIR FOR ELEGANCE SHOP Wednesday and Friday 'til 9 CAtSCOIXTOE THE DAILY REGISTER JCwuiay, Nov. 8, Apartments Now Planned BEACH-A» automo- 4 Holiday Estates lots .... . o*t» . the project, W *pp« - but tiue* time* £M firm w bile driven by John P. fesnet then. HONORED AT DINNER again, ..... RUMSON - AJfrtd O. FreiBd, 7 constructiopu n oVf eotiy gained the needed tin ven a exteasioa. 710 MomingiM* Ave., w« Through a misulun publiriw) U-itory g mortgage commitmenti s enablir Mayor Maua said the revised collision with a car driven announcement, sufipg (tot. a. 3 Conover La., wak' recently Bld Get Planners' bouse *t Ocean Blvd.. and Avery it to Wart cOMtrucBon, the ma) tans must be approved by the Joseph E. Gutowski, Jr., Thurs public hearing was slated for the honored for 25 yean' service to Ave., The Excelsior, Is seemingly or said:. . uildlng inspector and the Plan- MARLBORO - The Township At a proposed township master plan, Merck, and Co., Inc., Rihway, on-again, but now the plant have day night at 11:41 on Union Ave., At a public hearing on an ap- The plans had been stalle ng Board. An ordinance is re- for preliminary approval the-township hall was jammed„.., at a dinner in the Carteret Hotel, been trimmed to seven uired to change the specifica- near Park Ave. Planning Board reluctantly made plication TMe board said there had been when the firm was apparent! a "favorable' recommendation to of a 62-lot major subdivision for of Elizabeth. Mr. FoBind in env Construction on the buHding unable to provide financing fo ans. The building will still cost Patrolman Robert Frazer Is in- a' mixup and that -a'series of the Township Council Thursday "Sleepy Hollow," on 82 acres on ployed in the pharmaceutical and which was to have been com- the construction. •ver {I million, he said. vestigating. the east side of Pleasant Valley preliminary discussions will be night to approve a 33-lot subdivi- held throughout the township on chemical corporation's Merck, pleted last spring will probably Ttfree times the City Counci Rd., Spencer Embree, Igoe Rd., Sharp and Dohme International begin next month, Mayor Vincent sion of half-acre lota in the Holi- withdrew reservations previously the plan before a formal public instituted action to invoke th hearing is held. Division. • . , J. Mazza said Thursday night. reverter clause in the deed day States development of expressed. The DeZag Realty. Co., which ia portion of the land was c'rty-owne "ASTRO-GUIDE" By Ceean Honvanian Brothers. He said he was no longer con- The reluctance was emphasized cerned about possible drainage Tuesday, Nov»mb»r 9 : • on 10 lots he owns across Pleas- The Place To Go For Tlie Brands You Know in a resolution by assertions that Present—For You and Yours—-A realistic at- the Planning Board had no other ant Valley Valley Rd. because titude and logical consideration will help you solve choice under the circumstances. the developer plans to buy his lots. I WeRetape -JBOt-ANY "500" a puzzling situation that confronts you on. the job. The builder had obtained pre- • TIMELY CllOTHES • PALM BEACH You can make great strides if you capitalize on your liminary approval before an in The Planning Board deferred terim zoning law was adopted action for further discussion by • CLIPPER CRAFT • STETSON HATS talents, contacts and knowledge. Ask yourself why some people succeed where others fail, then emulate earlier this year fixing minimum the township engineer, Leon • MCGREGOR • ALLIGATOR RAINWEAR lot sizes at one-acre and had Avakian, and the developer on ; And Record the successful ones. VAN-p-PRESS SHIRT by VAN HEUSEN otherwise met all Planning Board other over-all drainage problems The Day Under Your Sign requirements. Atlantic Seaboard Home De- ANY TYPE OF JOHN DANIELS According to an order by Su velopment Corp., which has Arias. Born Mar. 2 Ho Apr. 19 Libra. Sapt. 23 to Oct. 12 perior Court Judge Gene R. preliminary approval for lots in 23 MONMOUTH ST. RED BANK All: for what it due you, tiut The unexpected may happen Mariano, the Planning Board four sections of Village Homes MIN'S AND STUDENTS' CLOTHING be diplomatic » others KING SIZE COLONIAL SOFA Exhibit Brawn and gold print. Solid foam $ | M Work on Night Vision rubber (fats. Was $385 IUU At Library 5-PIECE DINETTE SET Is Assigned to ECOM LITTLE SILVER — Pottery Tablt and four 5 FORT MONMOUTH - Th in-house and direct a sizable con' manufactured in M o n m o u t h U, S. Army Electronics Commani tract program. County during the last cen DRY CLEANING matching chairs has been given top responsibili The new organization will be ttfry will be on exhibit at the 3-PIECE DANISH LIVING ROOM Little Silver Public Library this Sofa bed and two chairs c n *A for the Army's increasingly im known as the Combat Surveil portant work on night vision. lance, Night Vision and Targei month. Was SI 69 .... IUU ECOM's Combat Surveillance Acquisition Laboratories. The pottery, on loan from Ed- ward H. Geltus, Jr., director of HOLLYWOOD BED and Target Acquisition Labor. Or. Wiseman, considered on tory, headed by Dr. Robert S. the county Historical Association, Cemplttt, posture firm foam mattress, of the nation's outstanding au- includes a moustache cup, ink- box spring, headboard on legs $ M*% Wiseman, this week was assigned thorities in his field, came to management responsibility for the well and bulldog jug from the Was $79 ; .'. *IO ECOM last April from Fort Bel Rue Pottery in Matawan. They Army's night vision laboratorj voir, where he was chief of thi Over 100 Special Bargains Throughout The Store I The night vision laboratory wil are of the type known as "Ben- Warfare Vision Division of thi nington pottery,'1 which actually CREDIT . . .ALL YOU NEED remain at its present location i Army Engineer Research am Fort Belvoir, Va., where the ai was developed here by potters Development Laboratories. In thawho later moved to Bennington. tual research and developme post he conducted research and IRWIN S Furniture work will continue to be done. developed equipment which en- Also included in the display is 27 MONMOUTH ST. RED BANK The Virginia laboratory employs ables soldiers 10 move, observe, a grey stoneware loop handle jar by Nicholas Van V/inkle of Her- Parking In Rear of Store — 747-0011 about 200 persons who perform fight and work at night. ch and develo nt jot 1 bertsville, dated 1832, and a strap- With the actua night vision re- handle .jug by Warne and Letts search and development work re- of Cheesequake, circa 1805. IMPERIAL maining at the Fort Belvoir por- tion of the laboratories, little per- Booklets on the history of pot- sonnel shifting is likely. • tery making in Monmouth Coun- The only personnel change ,wi ty also are available at the li- be the movement of 14 positions brary. in the Materiel Readiness and Library hours are: Monday Procurement and Production through Saturday, 10 am. to areas from the Army Mobility noon; Monday through Friday, 1 Command's. Mobilito. Equipmen to 5 p.m.; Monday, 7 to 9 p.m and Friday, 5 to 9 pjn. pr.i StJfLouis.fpo., f> th E!«otrbiics' "Command here anc Pfoiadelphia. Both ECOM am Has everybody buzzing. MOCOM are major elements the Arjny Materiel Command. Withjthe shift of top responsi- Especially our employees. But they buzz anyway, they're, bility in night ylsita to Fort Mon- mouth; the labdrsfones here alsc bees. Their job is creating the three superb honeys that go are assigned responsibility as the .into Golden BJossom, And believe them, there's nothing Materiel Command's "lead lab- oratory" in charge of all combat sweeter or purer."Better stock up now on this prime source surveillance, night vision and tar- of good-tasting quick energy. get acquisition technological areas..This is in accord with th AMC'a integrated commodity management concept of "Tech- nology Centers" with over-all re- sponsibility, in specified techno- logical fields. Wood to Lead Oceanport Drive oi driving'.
Clinton W. Wood OOEANPORT -; Clinton W. Wood, Jr., Oceanport postmas- ;••-.. . V... ..-: . t ter, has been named chairman the Oceanport drive for Mus- :ular Dystrophy. Mr. Wood will direct local ac- tivities In the drive to raise IMS Dodf. Polara funds to combat MD, a disease afflicting more . than 200,000 Americans. A former borough councilman Mr. Wood haa been postmaster since 1954. ' We set sales records with the '65 Dodges, and we're out to do ENGINEERS' MONTH TRENTON-<3overnor Hughes even better with the great new Dodges for '66-^-by its proclaimed November, 1969, ofiering you the best deals on the hottest cars in.town. look "Tool and Manufacturing Engi- neers Month." The governor 'em over. Dart, Coronet, Polara, Monaco. Then pick the itated in a proclamation recent- one that says you—and go! Join the Dodge Rebellion against dull driving that The American Society • and high prices in a hot new '66 Dodge from The Dodge Boys. of Tool and Manufacturing Engineers Is contributing sign- M— aif the '86 9o«K«s at your Dodge Dealers today! ificantly to the industrial develop- NflMA, ment of New Jersey and that through iti proposed programs during November focused on the Importance of education and pro- UBRIOU MOTORS, INC. WERNER'S AUTOMOTIVE, INC fessional development to techno- 120 E. Newman Springs Rd. Highway 36 Now you can buy tht best at a now low price. logical advance, will contribute to the store of practical knowledge Red Bank Betford possessed by New Jeiiey engi- terl and industry. T1:H •S-ttw 94 Wt~Ctrti)m ^ «. 1565 TELEVISION • THEATER • MOVIES •• BfUSIC • DUVUVG OUT DAILY REGISTER t-L*at Htws-Jlm Herhr l!-#op*/i—Cortwn 7~L»wi Kwrs-t«rt Vtactnf * 2-Spo -Fronk GIHord I:N Complete Program Listings lias Report 1:51 Television Highlights J—Weather—Jodrmy Andrews I-Htwt on* Wwttier S-FHm-Tht Lift of Emlle lolo- Channel 3. . WCBS-TV Channel 5 WNEW-TV duuuc! B . WOR-TV Poul Wlunl-I hrs., 10 mln. •' 7:S#-8 H) — Hullabaloo. The younger let broad, slapstick comedy practiced by th« 2—Dtnnls the Menace OiauM WNBC-TV Channel 7, . WABC-TV Channel II. . WPBC-T? 7—Editorial-John Gilbert 4—Blrttiday House—Children 1$ in for a treat when the attractiver Seren- Three Stooges and Martha Raye. While stand- 1I:M 7-Glrl Tolk-Panel up comty Bill Crosby and Tim Conway de- 2—Film—The Glory Brigade- »—City ol Tlme-HWory dipity Singer* double as hosts mi performers. MONDAY 1:15 7:M Victor Mature—1 hr., 33 mln. 11-Jack La Unne-ExnclM , England's Dusty Springfield ("Som« ol Your liver amusing monologues on kids with guns AFTERNOON I—News— Doogloi voroi 2—News—Waltw Cronklle 4—Johnny Corson J:JO 4—Mews—Huntley, Brlnkley 7—Film—The Tlngter— Lovin'"), Marvin Gaye ("A Taste of Honr and Tarzan's son, the Stooges and Miss Raye 12:08 2-Edge of Night- . a I 5—Soupy Sale*—Comedy 2-Lenve It To Beaver J—Low ol Lift—Serial Vincent Price—1 hr., 05 mln. cavort and throw pies in a wild "Helliapop- 4—You Don't Soyl—Game 7—Passport 7—Travel 11:30 S-D. A.'S Mon—Police «y"), and Little Jimmy Dickens ("May the *—Jeopardy—Gome 5-Ctiuck MeConn-ctilldren t-Marahall Olllan-Weitem 11—Passing Parade— Nesblrf 7—Film—The JockK Robinson Story— pin" type act. Spike Jones Jr, leads his fath- 7—Donna Reed—Comedy 7—Younj Morrleds—Serial Jockie Robinson—90 mln, Bird of Paradise Fly Up Your Nose"), spell 11-Huckleberry Houna-Cartoont 1:M 1—Cartoons—Children »-World Advenlures 9-Mlke Douglas-Variety • out *« rest ol the cast and their flavor, but er's band in zany musical slapstick style, 11—Congressional Report 4—News—Bob Teague !J—Electronics At Work 11—Bozo—Children 7:15 II—Best of Groudio—Quli but Miss Raye actually sings "I Left My 13—Eiro Pound—Dljcuulon 9—News and Weather the Serendipity Singers give the show tome 1125 ., lt-Sovlel Press This Week 1J-AII About You-Physlology 1:05 style. (Color). Heart in San Francisco" straight. Nothing J-News f 4:M 7:30 •:41 i-Secret Srorm-Serlol 2-News subtle, just laughs with Thomas and guests. 11:39 2—To Tell The Truth-Panel W—Exploring Our Language J:JM (7) - The Legend of Jesse James. 4—Match Game 4-Hullolwloo-fViuslc 7—Film—Santa Fe Possooe- . »:5J i-Search For Tomorrow John Payne—1 hr.. 45 mh. (Color). 7—Never Too Youno—Serlol S—Enslon O'Toole—Comedy «-News-Bob Wilson "The Judas Boot." A spree for action fans. 4—Po»l Office—Gome »—WhlrlyWrdj—Adventurt. 1:10 7—12 O'clock High-Drama 18:08 10-11 (2) — Steve Lawrence. Lots of tunes S—King and Odle—Cartoon 11-Beachcomber Bill 2—Film—Rhythm on the Range— A member of Jesse's band is betraying their »-Fllm-The Lost Time I Sow Paris- J—I Lov« Lucy—Comedy 7-Falt«r Knows Best 4:25 Bing Crojby—I hr., 45 mln. plans and before he's uncovered, there are tonight from Steve and his guests. After 3—Explorlno Nature Van Johnson—2 hrs. 4—Fractured Phrases—Gomt 4—News—Nancy Dlckerson II—Lloyd Ttraxton-Varlety 5—Yoncy Derringer—Wwlerti Anthony Newley solos to "It's All Right With 11:45 4—Film—It's a Woriilerful World— fist-fights, gun battles, and a shooting finale. 4:31 13—Men Of Our Time 11—People Are Funny J—Serj Hunt—Adventure Clourjftte Colbert-1 hr., 40 mln. Me" and "Yes, We Have No Bananas," he J-Guldlnrj Light—Serial 1:N 10:10 8:34-10 (IS) - "The Impact cf Martha 4—Film—Deep Waters— 1:13 5—Cartoons—Children *a 2—I've Got A Secret-Panel M—Porlons Francois II Graham." Everyone who is aware of the and Steve get down to a medley of Newley Dana Andrews—90 mln. 5-Newl Il-Buckaroo 500-Buck Weover 4^-John Forsythe—Comedy U:2B 5—Astroboy—Cartoon 2:55 style and rhythm of the modern dance, must songi like "Stop the World. I Want to Get 12:S5 5—77 Sunset Strip—AAyitery 7-NtwS~BIII Owen 4—News—Frank McGee 7—Where The Action Is 2— Film—Hotel Imtxrlcl— b* simultaneously awar« of its debt to the Off" and "Gonna Build a Mountain." Coun- 7—Mike Douolas—Variety 1:30 Ray Mlltand—90 mln. 10:25 1:M II—Elflhtti Man—C"-'^on 2—Lucille Ball-Comedy | . 4:25 4—News—Edwin Newman . great American dancer-choreographer, Mar- try western star Roger Miller does "Kansas 4~Dr. Kllctare—Drama 7—Fllm-The JockH Robinson Story- 5—News—Hyams, Murray 5:M jJ-Fllm-Ud/ Bodyguord- 7—Jesse James—Western Jackie Robinson—K mln. tha Graham. Tonight, in addition to demon- City Star" and "Greensleeves," before he 4—PDQ—Game 2—Film—The Golaen Hordo— Eddli Albert-75 mln. 11—Honeymooners—Comedy 13—Historic Shrines ; strations of her work by members of her cur- duets with Steve to his dittips like "Flies in 7—Ben, Cosey—Dromo Ann Blyth-JS mln. TUESDAY 9—Divorce Court—Drama S—Paul vVlnchell—Children 13—Martha Graham—Dance MORNING 1«:» ?:» rent dance troupe, and a taped excerpt of the ButterfieW," and "Rose Through My 1—Scarlett Hill—Serlol 7—Film—7th Cavalry- <:00 2-McCoys—Comedy 3—Onct Upon A Day Randolph Scott—1 hr., 20 mln. 2—Andy Griffiths-Comedy *—Education Exohange 4—Concentration—Gamt Miss Graham's performance as Jocasta in Toes," and sweet-voiced Judi Rolin returns 4—Danny Thomas—Variety 5-Lock Up-Mystery 1:25 11—Surprise Show i:20 5—Film—Desperate Journey— -her ballet "Oedipus Rex," guest stars Agnes for "The Sound of Music." (Color.) 5-News 13-Once Upon A Dov 7-Newt II—Cartoons—Children ) Errol Flynn—2 tifs.' IS mln. 1:l« 3:39 <:M DsMille, famous as a choreographer in her 10-11 (4) - Run For Your Life. "The 7—Shenandcotl—Western 3-Let'i Make Puppets! ._ 11—Three Stooges— ^...medy 2—Sunrlst Semester Savage Season," Very good entry. When our I-Al The World Turns 11—Dick Powell—Drama li:M own right, and William Schman, composer 4—Let's Moke A Deal 13—Cartoons—Children 4—Bwana Don In Jungle-La, •:» 1 2-Andy G)rllfltt>—Comedy < hero gets involved with some syndicate hoods, j_Fllm—Allai Mr. Twilight— 5:40 7—Prolect Know—Education and Lincoln Center President, discuss Martha 2—Haul—Comedy 4—Morning Star-Serial ' Glgl Perreau—1 hr., 25 mln. 13-Frlendly Glant-Chlldren 7:0O he takes full advantage of his medical death 7—Ptyton Place—Serial 5—Nlghl Court—Drama Graham's art and Impact. II—Film—The Deadliest Sin- EVENING) 2—News—HVoms,. Penza o—Twilight Zone—Drama 7—Youno Set—Discussion sentence by standing up to one of them. Paul Sydney Chaplin—Vi mln. CM 4-Todoy M:S0 (2) — Andy Griffith. A strong story- 10:00 9—Tell Me, Dr. Brottiers-Advlce 13—Children Ol Other Londi *—New*—MocNell, Pressman 7—Ann Sottiern—Comedy line, a ticklish situation, and a nice perfor- becomes the hunter, which makes for some 2—Steve Lawrence 11:15 1:59 5-Sandy Becker-Children 7:11 good action sequences; Henry Silva and Har- »—News—John Wlnnoie ' 4—Run For Your Life—Drama 5—News 1J—Portons Francois III mance from Andy Griffith, combine to make 3—Hobla Esponol—Language 7—Ben Casey—Drama old J. Stone are fine as the heavies; and Jill 11-News-Martln O'Ham 7:15 11:15 this a lively show. Andy dates a Hollywood 1:S5 ll-What's New-Children 11—Profiles In Courage J—Editorial—Mictioel Keating . 11-MocK and Myer-Cotmdy Haworth plays the inevitable girl in trouble Kolber <:io 13-World M Ten 7:30 starlet only to hear about it by phone from 10:30 11—Local News—John Tlllman 2-News-Mlke Wallace IJ-Wondsr of Word's whose problems interest our hero. (Color). 13—New Jersey Observation! Mayberry, from his girl friend Helen Crump. 2—P ass ward—Gome e:15 5—Survey of tttf Arts 11:« 11:00 11-12:30 (II) - Merv Griffin. Merv has 4—Days ol Our Lives—Serial tMrValler Klernan 7—Gale Storm—Comedy 5-Newl The jealous phone call scenes turn out well, 2—News—Jim Jensen 7—Nuriev- Drama 4:20 7:55 1]:M French singer Jean Paul Vigon, Dagmar, 4— News— Frank McGee but the best moments of the entry are those 9—FUm—Tamango— 7—Local News—BUI Beutel 2-Nevn J-Dlclc Von Dykt—Comedy 7—News—Beutel, Martin comic Reni Santoni, and vocalist Emily Yancy Curt Jurgens—90 mln. •—Sports—Masher 1:09 4-Parodlj« Boy between Andy Griffith and Ruta Lee as a 9—Film—Mogambo— l:U 4:25 2—Coptaln Kangaroo 5—Romper Room—Children on his schedule for tonight. Clark Goble-2 hrs. starlet who doesn't happen to be a kook. I}—Places In The Nevn 2—Weather—Johnny Andrews 5—Ca rtoon s—Ch I Id ren •-Memory Lone^-Jo» Fnnkltll 11—Merv Griffin—Variety 11-Carol Corbett (Color). 11:30-1 (4) — Tonight. Johnny Carson's 2:21 11-Weofher-Vlvlan Forrar 7—Cartoons—Children 13—Electlves—Educallon 11—Fair Adventure 11 -M been moonlighting the last two Monday nights, I}—Planet Earth—Geography 4:M Mt (4) — Danny Thomas Special. "What 0:15 13—Exploring Science l:W 1— Newt—Jim Jensen but he's back at the job tonight with Shari »-Lefs GoOhio Question — I am flip over "Th 'Light Badge, which was long • STARTS WEDNESDAY * Atuwtr — It is very doubtful Man From U.N.C.L.E." and par overdue because of g change in Of Displays you i\i" that Jim Nabor will dump his tlcularly that gear, great and sim HAZLET - Middle Road School hit series "Gomer Pyle, USMC" ply wild Ulya Kuryakin. Pleas* cubmaster and den mothers. Matinee 2 [will observe American Education snd try an all singing and danc tell me when he will have a show Cubmaster Sam Beatrice award- Ev.nlngj71.W5 Week from Monday through Sat- -JOAN CRAWFORD ing variety stanza. Although ol his own, not Just an occasion! ed Webelos Arrows to Boy Scouts r urday. The annual observance is many fans enjoyed his pleasant episode. By the way, all mj rom Troop 239, including James sponsored by the United States SM MERJiN JONES' musical fooling around on the re- friends feel the same way abou Bennett, Jr., Gerald Crosbie and WED.-"SHIP OF FOOLS" Arthur Beatrice. Also receiving Office of Education, National Ed- cent special, I doubt that he would David.—'N. FP, Son Antonio, Tex ;he Webelos Arrows were John ucation Association, National Con-1 score as big if he invaded Dean Answer — David MoCallum ii Calamari, John Oliver, Peter gress of Parents and Teachers Martin and Andy Williams' do- /ery happy with an occasions Strongoli and Gregory Bastolot- jand the American Legion. Acrei ol Free Parldirgl Smoking Sectloni main on a permanent basis. episode to himself and all th< to. Troop 149, and William Cahill, The theme for this year is "In 24-Hour Phone Service! No Extra Charge adoration of the'fans which have Troop 147. zest in Learning." Many classes 1 made him a star in just one am Question — Several years ago, at the school are planning pro- a half seasons. He will be seei George Koren, Robert Krokus I saw a wonderful movie titled! grams on such topics as learning Sinatra in the film "Around the Worl and Vincent Marino, Cub Pack | NOW THRU TUES. "A Farewell to Arms" and I through the home and commu- Under the Sea," with Uoy U9, received their Webelos "MARRIAGE would like to know it it has ever nity, citizenship, family living and Bridges and Brian Kelly also i badges. Otfher awards were pre- ON THE been shown on TV. I'm not talk international understanding. The the cast. MoCallum will also ar> sented to Robert Gearty, John ROCKS" Ing about the recent one with .children will prepare reports anc TSA ANOTHER MEMORABLE pear as a guest star on the forth Conley, David Youngclaus Ger- Rock Hudson and Jennifer Jones |posters for their room bulletin coming "Carol Channing" TV spe- ald Luminoso, Vincent Marino, but another one, with, 1 think, boards, as well as displays or Everybody who's DAVIS PORTRAITI cial scheduled for Feb. 18, 196f Paul Kozlow and William Seidel ever be«n funny Cary Grant and an actress who this year's theme. ^ doesn't work any more.—Mrs. F. Pack 149 welcomed and pre- Vincent G. Finelli, principk KIDDII SHOW E., OswegO, N.Y. sented bobcat-pins to Michael (For an answer to your Broome, Donald Paolicelli, Ste stressed that BIB best aspects oi THURSDAY, 2 P.M. Answer — You're thinking of tion about any TV program o: ven Delong, Michael Rylander, observing "American Education the 1932 film version of Ernes Week" will occur upon parental SPENCER TRACY , actor, write to Steven H. Schetr Melvin Ullmeyer, Robert Aloisi, MILTON BERLE Hemingway's tragic love story Randall Davis, James Keane, visitation to the school for the "McHALES ,er, Television Mailbag, in car SID CAESAR WORLD" which starred Gary Cooper and William Wentz, Brian Kelly and scheduled parent-teacher confer- BUDDY HACKETT Helen Hayes, and offered a very of this paper.), ences, as this is the most effec- NAVY" Wayne Basilotto. Y By tive method for eadi child to re- E HAr : TERRY THOMAS •k Cartoons A welcome was extended to ,ceive the full benefits of the un- JONATHAN WINTERS • JIMMY DURANH Mrs. Dorothy Ansell to serve a! derstanding established between IN ULTRA PANAVISION and TECHNICOLOR den mother in Den 4; Mrs. Wil the parents and the child's teach- iam Whitaker, Den 2; and Mrs. er. STARTS WEDNESDAY • iJames Keane, Den 5. Recruiter Parent-Teacher conferences at badges were awarded to Arthur They'd Rather Switch NOW | Hl.t«»«»e«l»<«»»l«»»n««>» the school are scheduled to take Beatrice, Samuel Beatrice, Ron- place Thursday and Friday, Nov. Than Fight . . . riimuiAMT.Hiuiiiootr: ald Whitaker, James Keane, Wil- 18 and 19. Parents will receive MIDDLETOWfJ -N.Y.J«irMlAin«K