ffflk ti'4 Cart _ late tomorrow. Law flled Bank Area f •wrigtt in mid Ms and woL Ugh Y~ Copyrlght-The Sad Bank Register, Inc. 1966. tomorrow la low Mi. Sunday's DIAL 7414)010 ouOook, during ud cod. MONMOUTH COPmVS HOME NEWSPAPER FOR 88 YEARS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1966 PAGE ONE Witnesses Tell of Suspect's Anger Lynch Called Hotheaded in Howell Township, Aug. 10. defense counsel, will put Lynch ert, who like Lynch is also a iNunevHler, who was arrested for FREEHOLD - Edward A. aiding and abetting Lynch but Lynch emerged yesterday from would seem from the picture on the stand today and expects Bartender, as having been en- drawn by witnesses to have to offer seven other witnesses. raged a week before the kill- who has not been Indicted, said testimony at his murder trial Lynch was "mad at Mrs. Mc- as a hotheaded man angry at been motivated only by seething Monmouth County Judge Thomas ing when Lynch, serving her a anger. J. Smith, who is presiding, will drink, at the Town Tavern, Kenzie because she was causing the woman he is accused of him trorble," phoning him at killing because she had criticized Prosecutor Vincent P. Keuper, recess court over the weekend where he worked in Toms River, and send the case to the jury spilled ice in her lap. work and at home and annoying him and was trying to get himwho is asking the death penalty Lynch's wife. for the 34-year old ex«onvict Monday. "She jumped up and said fired. Nuneviller, 39, a kitchen work- Far from a deepseated mys- from Silverton, presented 14 wit- Mrs. McKenzie, 44, of Toms •You're not a bartender. You'll nesses and rested bis case be- River, was a mother of (our bynever be one and you're fin- er, said Lynch feared Mrs. tery, the fatal shootini g of 1 McKenzie wanted him fired so Dorothy Louise McKenzie, whose fore 3 p.m. a previous marriage. She was ished. " he testified. Joseph F., Mattice, assigned depicted by her husband, Rob- Another witness, William J. that her husband could return body was found in her own car there as bar manager. Mr. McKenzie formerly worked in the Toms River bar but had moved 4o a night shift in Kings Grant Inn, Point Pleasant, be- B52s Deliver 1-2 Punch fore the. killing took' place. Witnesses put this story to- gether of happenings leading to discovery of Mrs. McKenzie's At North Viets Near D-Zonebody/ partly stuffed under the MYONEK AND RIFLES GUARD FIREMlEN — The bayoneted rifles of the California dash board of her own car after SAIGON (AP) - Giant B52|below the demilitarized zone. es, 13 bridges, nine antiaircraft and pilots reported hits with na it mired down in sand behind National Guard ara silhouetted against the flamet of a lumber yard fire in San Fran- bombers delivered a one-two The Marines occupied the post sites and eight buildings. Three palm and 500-pound bombs which the Regent Diner, Rt. 9. Cisco's Bty View -district, where roaming bands of Negroes last night were throwing punch today in two raids against and found 51 North Vietnamese of the antiaircraft sites were in touched off four secondary ex- Visited Ban the Dong Hoi area and con- plosions and a fire. bombi.. Guards were assigned to fire trucks to protect firemen from snipers. North Vietnamese forces bodies. Lynch and Nuneviller had fighting U.S. Marines just south 2,500 More Yanks tained 24 guns. Air Force B57 Canberra bomb- visited several bars before ar- : • ' ^ • IAP Wiraphotol I the demilitarized zone. U.S. forces in Viet Nam rose Air Force Phantoms made sev- ers struck a supply area four riving at the Town Tavern and The mammoth, eight-engine to 317,500 today with the arrival eral strikes on a storage area miles north of the buffer zone, meeting Mrs. McKenzie. She Superforts unloaded tons of of 2,500 more men—most pf them Inside the demilitarized zone, (See VIET NAM, Page 4) (See LYNCH, Page 3) )•;'• Coast Negro Patrols bombs on infiltration routes, and support units—of the 4th Infan- supply and assembly areas for try Division. U.S. forces in Viet the Communists fighting on the Nam now outnumber ,the 317- southern edge of the zone divid- 000 men which South Viet Nam's ing North and South Viet Nam. regular army claims by SCO, al One raid hit 20 miles south- though the South Vietnamese al t Race Violence so claim to have nearly 400,000 Inez Perils Cuba west of Dong Ha, now a major MIAMI, Fla. (AP)-Residents; Naval Base early today, the Na-I Thousands were reported home- My Tbe Associated Press Mayor John Shelley blamed rest—this one in St. Louis—ap- base for Marines battling North |militiamen, local forces and the of southeastern Cuba, remember- tional Hurricane Center at Mi- less in Haiti and the Dominican Hbplng to bring racial peace racial discrimination, especially parently eased last night with Viet Nam's 324B Division in Op-|like. ing with dread the terrible ami said hurricane winds and Republic. At least six deaths to the scene of three days oflin employment, for riots which the arrest of one Negro youth for eration Prairie. The other bomb- The 4th Division now has about|deltrucUon of hurricane Flora, tides to 10 feet above normal were verified in the Dominican violence, - San Francisco police erupted. Tuesday after a white throwing rocks. 6,500 men in Viet Nam, and the ! ing attack was made 18 miles braced themselves today for Inez would batter the island. Republic's Barahona Peninsula, hive enlisted, with apparent sue- policeman fatally shot a Negro But there was no repeat of northwest of Dong Ha. rest of the division is to arrive|and her 100-mile-an-hour killer Inez bore down on Cuba after increasing the storm's toll to ceis, the aid of young local Negro youth running from a stolen car. vandalism, which had followed The two raids came less than within the next few.weeks. winds. striking the Dominican Republic 29, excluding those killed in Hal- volunteers. "In my opinion the medieval protest demonstrations against 12 hours after Marine artillery, U.S. planes flew 126 bombing Inez, weaving a path of death and neighboring Haiti, leaving i where communications were The youths, wearing police- practice of discrimination by the Saturday shooting of a Negro mortars and napalm rained down missions over North Viet Nam and devastation, was expected many dead in the Haitian town poor. provided armbands, patrolled some labor unions is just as prisoner by a policeman. - on a Communist command post yesterday, and pilots claimed to strike the coast of Oriente of Jacmel where a flood tide Hundreds of flimsy homes in residential areas of the troubled sorrowful and Just as unfair as in a valley a mile and a half damage or destruction to 52 barg-'Province near the Guantanamo accompanied her wrath. both nations were destroyed by Hunters Point district last night About 100 shouting, milling the archaic attitudes expressed jNegroes, mostly teen-agers con- winds up to 160 miles an hour. while, by mutual agreement, po- by some members of employer Others were swept away in the lice confined their patrols to a fronted a ring of officers around or management groups," Shelley police headquarters, but dis- swirling'currents of huge floods. main commercial. thorofare. said. •••..'•. •• ' - . - Although Inez' highest winds An 8 p.m. curfew was enforced ced peacefully. The local The mayor urged all SaftFran- chapter of the Congress of Racial Welfare Workers Rap Board, at her eye had diminished to OB the predominantly Negro|cisco ^residentt* ;ti??; go home by about 100 miles an hour by last but "National Equality said there would be Guardsme* n 100 p.m. andd stat y therthe e untitil another demonstration tonight. midnight-due to her battles with wtio • had cleared streets ofldswn, when "we can', start work the forested mountains of south- • Crowds tha previous night\ ... [on a creative and exciting pro- CORE had sponsored the three western Haiti-Cuban Prime Min- withdrawn after only sporattfc tjratn to cure dbrqlltiess." nights of demonstrations, but sail Claim Policies Deprive Needy ister Fidel Castro was taking no violence yesterday. _ Another outbreak of racial un- (See PATROLS, Page 3) . By DOXW KUUMN ton resident* would RED BANK.— Caseloads four; Workers assigned to the Aid government has set a maximum times the • approved maximum, to Dependent Children program lot 60 cases per worker as a re- advanced degrees, leaving Havana Radio said Castro In Wake of State Police Raids inadequate salaries, a tapid turn- have caseloads of 100—)0 above quirement lor matching federal their caseloads uncovered. went to Oriente Province and i. •. ... f ,. ; - ... —— ; -^— , over in staff and some admin- the approved maximum, the wel-jfunds. —The Welfare Board is hiring personally appealed on a local istrative policies of the county fare. employees said,- while, those Th~ e welfare workers also com- people with master's degrees in' radio station for coastal resi- dents to take precautions. Many welfare • Board are depriving working in the Old Age |Ast(sv plained that: social work but no experience Monmouth County's; poor of tanco and Disability programs —The Welfare. Board is 400 or familiarity with public as- families were evacuated from Ifeuper Eyes a Shakeup needed services, welfare work- may have caseloads as high, as cases behind and applicants wait sistance programs to (ill super- tow-lying areas. ers declared last night. 300—more than four times the up to six months for an initial visory posts, leaving the case- Castro recalled the havoc FREEHOLD — Record-shatter- -"To the best of my knowledge lated operations working Inde- The complaints were aired in approved maximum. interview. (See WELFARE, page-3) • (See INEZ, Page 3) fc»t raids by State Police on 'at this point," he said, "there pendently." questions to a four-man panel Momnouth County gamblers last is no indication of a syndicated Asked if lottery game runners at a meeting of the Monmouth Tuesday may lead "to a ehakeup gambling operation, the indi- would not of necessity be re- County Welfare Board of Em' Gtes Policy in Union County to county laiw enforcement. catfons are that these were iso- lated to a larger operation, Mr. jployees Association. Approxi- Oounty Proiccutor Vincent P. I Keuper said he was not preparedmately SS persons attended the Ksupw slid yesterday he is to comment in this instance meeting in the First Methodist afraiting State Police reports on without halving
. RIVERVIEW Red Bank OVER Mr. and Mrs. William Good- CHARGE son (nee Andrea Chapman), 2 Harvard St., Red Bank, daugh- ter, yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Furiato
AN01 Ike MHIUI HHI TI COIW "STOP THE WORLD, I About 80 years ago J. Kridel began clothing WANT TO WO men, then their sons, grandsons, etcetera. Open Man. and Fri, eveningt 'til 9 4 HAMKE HOKOVTTZ Sej*. 30, 19« THE DAILY Hor 66, Operated ft OBITUARIES taSut-Ask Police Pay ikaad/caae to ttt* <*a*2j° NEW SHREWSBURY - A He said bad we*tfe*:,|pW p tn jFiiir Haven petition to put « tawtep p«r lans to canvas* the e&Ure . GBQBGE E. HICKEY DANIEL 1. SCARPONE, SR. WajfW A. Dillon of Wdtewood, and Mri. JTwewa* brforTnwUl here RED BANK - George E. raise question tor local police orouch. - * MHXaLGTOWN - Daniel J. Leona Williams of Wayne, Pa., three years ago, Hickey of 58 McLaren St. died AW - on the November ballot wu »u> Scarpone, St., 48, of 110 Stateilr He wa* a carpenter and build- yesterday In Riverview Hospital ssr&a«- routed to Jerome Reed, borough Services will be heW at 1:15 here. PI., died suddenly Wednesday In Ul, Red Bank. RedBenkedBenk. er tot M yean before ids le clerk, yesterday. Riverview Hospital, Red Bank. Born ia Newark, ha wai the p.m, Sunday in the Adams Me- ttoemeM Bom in Orange, he was the Born in Jersey City, be was son of the late Tbomu L, and morial Home, Red Bank, with Rev. Mr, Horowtti was a member of Local police collected 720 signa- Mr. Scarpone was born in New- eon ol the late John J. and the ton of Mr. and Mn. Anthony Mabel H. Morton. A former Canon Charles H. Beat, rector of Carpenters Local 209. the 917 tures on the petition in a ceavus Matilda V.H.Hickey. He retired ark, son of Mrs. Gertrude Ca- Lotigo of that dry. He was em- South Orange resident, lie dad Trinity Episcopal Church, Red Club, the Golden Age Club of of about one*alf the borough, four years ago as northeast vanaugh Scarpone of that city ployed by *• Public Service lhwd hare since U». A graduate Bank, officiating. Burial will be the YMHA and th» Cbudnover a spokesman (or the Patrolman's divisional manager for tJie Na- Co., Kearney, and wai a mem- ol Newark High School, h« wu la Mount Pleasant Cemetery, KUV, all of Newark. Benevolent Association said. tional Drug Co. of Philadelphia. and the late Daniel Scarpone. ber of the Keansburc Democratic active as a member of Its foot- Newark, Monday, He wu the widower ot Mrs. He said 558 signatures- are He wu a coatmuntcamt of St. He had resided here for the past Club. ball «nd hockey teams. Susie Horowitz. needed to assure the question « James Catfiolie Church, here. 11 years, and formerly lived to Surviving besides his parents Surviving are three sons, Isaac spot on the ballot. • Surviving are his wife, Mrs, Mr. Morton formerly wu auo- MM. CHARLES C SCHOCK Newark. are his wife, Mn. Margaret La- HorowiU and Mortimer Perls- Voters will be eafced to ap- Helen Longstreet Hickey; a son, clated with Ha tetter fn Model MATAWAN - Mri. Helen T, Manna Longo; three sou, An- weigh, both' ot Newark and Leo prove a PA per cent salary raise Robert CHickey of Miami, Fla He was a driver (or Hie South Storage and Warehouses,, New- Schock, 82, ol Edgemere Dr., Service thony F. Longo, Jersey City, Perlswelgh of Panorama City, n 1997 and 7 per cent more In two daughters, Mrs. William H, Orange Independent Bus Co. for ark. He was president of the Wednesday in jFitkln Memorial Joseph G. Longo, Red Bank, and Calif.; three daughters, Mrs, Mil- «, according to the iPBA Conover and Miss Florence C. firm from 1938 until IMS- Until Hospital, Neptune. the past 22 years. Salvatore A. Longo, «t home;' a his retirement, he operated an dred Enda of Wanamassa, Mrs. spokesman. Delicatessen Hickey, both here, and a siste Mrs. Schock was born in Red Mr. Gcarpone was a member brother, John Longo, Ridgefleld antique shop here. Gertrude Lasher of Elizabeth Mrs Marg'.erlte Griffin, also Bank, daughter of the lata James He said top pay -for 'a .first of St. Anthony's Catfiolie Church, Park; three sisters. Miss Mary Led Auctioneers and Mrs. Sophie Eisenberger of here, Longo, Mrs, Charles Passanta L. and Mary Anna White Ter- Irvlngton; •brother, Morrii Hor class patrolman here is 9,6(0, Departments Red Bank. He w*s a member He was a past president ot (he reached to the fourth year on A Requiem Mass will be offered and Mrs. Joseph Gordon, all of bune. owiti of Irvuigton; a sister, Mrs. N.J. Auctk>"eer"« Society and was the force. Top pay tor a first of the Now Jersey State Rural Jersey City, tnd two grand- She was a member of the Edith Eaker of Newark, H grand- NOW AT In St. James Church at 9 a.m. a member of $• Shrewsbury class patrolman on the Red Police Association and Local 1156 children. First Presbyterian Chun* here, children, and 11 great-grand-chiU Monday. Bwial will be under the River Yacht Club and the Mon- Bank force is $7,800. he said. of the Amalgamated Association A Requiem Mass will be of- the Daughters of the American dren. . ASBURY PARK direction of the Adams Memorial mouth County Historical Society. fered In St. Anthony's Catholic Revolution of Monmouth County. , The funera_l wa.._» Wednesday »h. . The PBA spokesman said the Home, here. of Street, Electric Railway and He was • life member of the CLIFFWOOD Church, here, at9a.m. Monday. the Historical Association of for direction of the E. Beraheim door-to-door canvas found '.'the Motor Coax* Emjiloyeas. Coast Guard Auxiliary and a Burial, under the direction of the Monmouth County, and was a DEAL member of the U.S. Power & Sons. Memorial' Chapel, New- overwhelming majority" of resi- In addition to his mother, he William S. Anderson Funeral Squadron. resident of this borough most of ark. dents . favoring the pay raise. UTTU SILVER is survived by his wife, Mrs. Home, Red Bank, will be In Holy her We. Mr. Morton was also a mem- "We are well pleased with the Grace J«cone Scarpone; « ton, Name Cemetery, North Arling- She is survived by her hus- LONG BRANCH Daniel J. Scarpone, Jr., of Red ton. ber of the Monmouth County support we received," he said;, Philitnlist Club, a member of the band, Charles C. Schock, a Viet Nam PORT MONMOUTH Bank; two daughters, Mrs. Mary (Continued) Ann Lloyd of Rumson and Miss MRS. VELMA M. LAMARCHE Hearing Postponed RARITAN TOWNSHIP Gun Club and the men's aux- of Matawan, and two grand- and pilots said they triggered Carol Ann Scarpone, at hone; SEA BRIGHT - Mrs. Vekna children. four secondary explosions and ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS - A two brothers, Joseph J. Scarpone iliary of the Women's OK* ot SHREWSIURY M. LanMrche, 62, of 1 Center Little Silver. The funeral will be Saturday two fires. Borough Council hearing on of Rockaway Township and Rob- St., died suddenly Wednesday in charges against the Homestead He was also a leader of local morning at 11 o'clock in the During raids in the south today «t akop carry a iBdt Hlec- ert Scarpone of Newark; three Monmouth Medical Center, Long Inn, Center Ave. of the alleged tkm of MnasentJ and ntrten Boy Scout and Sea. Scout troops Presbyterian Church with Rev. a U.S. Air Force F100 Superb sisters. Mrs. Rose Stopero of Branch. sabre crashed while en route to sale of alcoholic beverages to SUPER .. . beantM, pwnawnt aad FJoritttn Park, Mrs. Jean Bolpe and was a member of the Sons Chester A. Galloway officiating. Mrs. Lamardie was bom here, bomb a Viet Cong positio" n 1"41 minors scheduled for last night optrkV ami M M tone. of Newark, and Mrs. Claire tal- of the American Revolution. Burial will be in Rose Hill Ceme- daughter of Mrs. Ethel White miles northwest of Saigon. The has been postponed to Monday Thi Mr. Morton and his wife, the tery under direction of the Bedle MARKETS ly of Rockaway Township, and Deckert of New York City and former MM Ida Robrecht of Funeral Home here. pilot was rescuedd. it 8 p.m. one grandson. ' - " the late William Deokert, and Newark, celebrated their 50ft A High Requiem Mass will be had been a life-long resident of woddtog anniversary June 7. offered tomorrow at 9 a.m. in this area. A former secretary of the Fair SPECIAL : St. Anthony's Church, Burial will She was « member of the Sea Haven Chamber of Commerce, MMHHMS be In Mount Olivet Cemetery. Bright Democratic Club. Mr. Morton was also an' avid twi Mlddletown, under thp direction In addition to her mother, she collector Of antique guns. of the John E. Day Funeral is survived by e daughter, Mrs. He was also a member of the JOHN VAN KIRK & SON Home, Red Bank. Walter Mulstay of Central Valley, Fair Haven Volunteer Fire Po- as Cerotr M., Mlddlttawn off Rt 3S N.Y., three brothers, John Deck- lice and was a founder and first NOW Iron* Smtf «d 9MM An* Prini »r»wij>»ry—747.555S at DEATH NOTIOK ert of this place, William Deck- ONLY 8CHOCK. H*lm W . of Uiemtn president of the New Jersey Opt* Sun. • A.M. to B P.M.I MOD. thm M. Evts. till 9:00 Htadon's Corntr ;«•«» 38 lm S er* c/f Shrewsbury, and Wtnfleld 5fTSKJ«K£ -oSsSt. xTmra*- Antique Club. He was chairman IT'S THI Dir-HR-BNCI THAT COUNTS. . , GMIvttlfent Ttrml 747-350 loved «»• ol Ch»rie« C. t»irot«il moUi- Deckert of Walllngton, and three ot the Fair Haven Board ot Wel- «• ot Ch»le> C, Jr, FuierU tarvlce granddaughters. Any dealer can wll yo« Stom PrpdeeM—We do wertl. . . •Jat., Oct. i, 1& «.ra., ** the First fare. 5? PreibrUrUn Church of UtUwtn. Vlllt- A Requiem Mass will be Surviving besides his wife are Wright Dist.. Inc. SCOnS PRODUCTS SFMAP PR IE! Inj. Fri.. Sept., 30 «t Urn Bedto Funeras to'sl offered Monday at 9:30 a.m. In n a son, Thomas Morton, here: (8 IROAD ST. RED BANK Mia. »irtlra(* $40—Cka*e« It—Tar »a oily H Holy Cross Catholic Church, daughters, Mrs. Margery Rumson. Burial will be in the family plot under direction of the John E. Day Funeral Home, Red FOR ANY. OCCASION Bank.
HONEY BEE FLOWERS WILLIAM DUYM RUSSELL T. HODGKISS . POINT PLEASANT-William Ride Rmfe New\\4we for W! 444 BROAD STREET iDuym, 72, of 3710 River Kd., died SHREWSBURY Wednesday in Point Pleasant Hos. Ipital. 741-4020 He wu the father of William iC. Duym of Little Silver.- At your dealers tillable Slaca 1127 Mr. Duym was born in Newark and had lived here five years. BY WIRE ANYWHERE He was a fireman with the Newark Fire Department for M years until Ms retirement 20 years ago. He was a member of the Fire- now! men's Mutual Benevolent Asso- ciation, Newaut,...... f John E. Bay Also surviving are Ity'tme, *>" .«.! ' '« - Mrs. Bertha MMslnger Duym, another son, Arthur Duym of Fan- wood; two daughters, Mrs. FUNERAL HOME Bertha Gahan cf Union and Mn. Ruth Valols of Ryetown, N. Y;; a brother, John Duym of Jensen 85 Riverside Ave. R«d Bfcnlc Beach, Fla; a sister, Mrs. Ruth Strunck of Newark, and nine C. SIDUN.Mgr. 747-0132 grandchildren. The funeral will be tomorrow at 2 p.m. in the Robert C. Neary Funeral Home, Manasquan, with Rev. Joseph H. Brady, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, Manasquan, officiating. Burial will b« in Greenwood Cemetery, iBrielle. Wordeti Funeral Home WILLIAM HEGARTY.SR. 1967 FORD XL 2-Door Hardtop- DOVER - William F. Hegarty, the ultimate in sports/luxury can Sr.. 70, of Hlghvlew Ter., died Wednesday at his home,. He was the father of John E. Hegarty of Oakhurst. Mr. Hegarty was born in Ire- Day and Night Phone land and came to the United States 48 years ago. He lived In 747-0557 Newark before moving here 11 years ago. He was business agent (or Lo- HARRY C. V. JAMES A. . ROBERT F. cal 112 of the Laborer's Union, Newark, for 19 years before re- tiring six years ago. Also surviving are his wife, Mrs. Margaret Keane Hegarty; two other sons, ReV. Frederick J. Hegarty, a missionary in Santia go, Chile, and' William F. He- garty of this place; two brothers, The Adams Memorial Home Frederick Hegarty and Patrick Hegarty, both of Ireland; two sis- ters, Mrs. Teresa O'Hagan and 1967 FORD LIB 2-Door Herdtop- Mrs. tfosie Otter, both of England, one of the world's quietest luxury cars and IB grandchildren. Successor to Mount Memorial Home A High Requiem Mass will be offered tomorrow at 10:30 a.m. In St. Mary's Church, Dover. Burial IUNIRAL DIMCTORS will be in St. Mary's Cemetery, Dover, under direction of the Flood Funeral Home, East Or- ange. The funeral will leave the funeral home at 9 o'clock. 110 toad Strwt Rod lank, N. J. JOHN H. MARTTNETT FAm HAVEN — John H. Martlnett, 84, of 144 Buena Vista Ave., died Wednesday at Garden State Manor Nursing Home, Holmdel, where he had been a patient three yean. Born In Trenton, he was the 1967 Thundcrblrd Four-Door Landau-one of three all-new Thunderbirds 1967 Fairlane 500 Hardtop-lhe car that gets sportier and more popular every yeai son of the late Henry and Mar- garet Moon; Martlnett. He had two-door models, and for the first time lived here nine years and in 18 Fords: The strongest, quietest, best Better Ideas from Ford for '67... built Fords in hiitory. Choose from luxu- in history... an elegant new four-door. Red Bank five years before that. SeleclShift Cmise-0-Matic trinimlislon that rious new LTD's, sporty XL's, stylish Mr. Martlnett was a retired shifts automatically afll manually... auto- Galaxies, Customs and wagons. 13 Faltlanes: Big-*ar roominess and carpenter and Contractor. He matic door locking...Comfort-Stream Ven- You're ahead in a performance in a lean middleweight. You was a member of the First Pres- tilation that lets you close windows, yet be byterian Church CDA PLANS EVENT KEYPORT - Plans were dis- il cussed for an annual luncheon and fashion show at a recent 142Cu.Ft. Frpstless Make your '67 vacation meeting of the Catholic. Daugh- ters of America, Court St.' Jo- seph, in the St. Joseph's School || ONE TO REMEMBER cafeteria. Mrs. James Ellis, general jj RIGHT NOW, start planning for chairman of the affair which will be held Saturday, October 8 at your best-ever vacation next year. 12:30 p.m., stated that The Bou- Coldspot Refrigerators Start saving now, to make those tique, Red Bank, will present fall f plans come true. Our generous fashions. Reservations must be earnings will help pay the cost... made through Mrs. Anthony Farlcllo, Matawan, or Mrs. Rob-1 Reg. $249.05 give you more money to spend- ert Preston, Keyport, she said. more happiness to remembert Mrs. Frank Lctwenske, grand II 3 cubic-foot freezer section main- Open your insured-safe vacation regent, read invitations to the 12th anniversary dinner of Court tains zero-degree storage of frozen savings account today. Marian, Colts Neck, to be held [ Monday, October 17, at 7 p.m. [ food. Full-width, 'slide-out crisper. n The American Hotel, Freehold, |[ and tho 50th jubilee of Court Lo- Butter storage and egg rack shelf on rctto, New Brunswick, with a Golden Anniversary banquet the door. Magnetic door gasket* for Wednesday, October 26, at 7:30|| p.m. In1 The Pines, Edison. a sure airtight seal. It was also announced that the II sixth annual CDA State Court of New Jersey luncheon and fash- ion show for the benefit of the 1500 HIGHWAY 35 Phone Priesthood and Scholarship SHOP AT SEARS AND SAVE AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Funds will be held Saturday, Oc- Satisfaction Guaranteed or MIDDLETOWN 671-3800 10 BROAD ST. • DED BANK, N. J. tober 15, at King's Grant Inn, Sears Your Money Back 741-3700 Point Pleasant, from 2 to i p.m. out, aoiiccK AND co. Open Mon. thru Sat. 9:30 'til 9:30 "Ifhere Ynu Save Dun Make a Dillerence I" jfj Reynolds Bros, will present the II faction show. mm The Registers Opinion Children and Cadi " Teaching children tbi value of money b an lmpottfBi. New Shrewsbury's Abrupt Decision task. It cannot be done. They are born spendthrift! or tight, wadi and, like the color of «yei, nothing will alter It Ai The New Shrewsbury Planning took the most expedient action when the father of four dtughtert-ill delightful tprittt who learned Board wasted no time Wednesday they shut off discussion and hoped how to play fether before they «ttnM kindergarten-I assure night in {tilling the proposal to estab- that would end the matter. you that the dollar lign it important to all of them. And what hurts is that among It ii second in importance only to thoM lish a halfway house and orientation flea-bitten lounger! called boyt. All of tha center on Shrewsbury Ave. for re- those who never received a chance children were twsw of the other tex long leased jail inmates. to speak at the meeting was Sanford before the young men understood any men Bates, former state commissioner of •bout females thin that they ire weak, The abrupt manner In which the institutions and agencies, who came effeminate and giddy. Ai a meant of defense board acted makes us question the especially to New Shrewsbury to dis- against cold logic, all the gtrU undentood wisdom—or, better yet, the lack of the value of teari and laughter at the age of cuss the project. Frankly, it was an it—for rejecting the proposal. More three. They never forgot it and have never insult to him that he was never given than 100 residents traveled to the •topped using it. ' an opportunity to speak. * * * board meeting—many of them want- IN THE MATTER of baiie economic!, ing to be heard on the matter. But What happens now with plans for BISHOP the orientation center is a good ques- we have four girls with two opinion*. Vir- they never had the opportunity. No gina Lee the oMett at 28, la the mother of seven children sooner had Chester A. Apy, attorney tion. There can be no doubt that such and would rather empty the bank account buying new drttMt for the Morrow Association offering a home is needed in the county. That tnd suits for the little onei thin ait and itare it the balance the plan, made his Initial presentation there is a group here that is willing In a bank book. If necessary, the would prefer to glvedt tw»y to aomeone more needy. than the motion was made to deny to fight for it is encouraging. But, af- ter what happened in New Shrews- This keeps her husband, Charles Frechette, hopping. When the site plan. he helpt to bathe and put the little ones to bed at night, be bury and in Long Branch before that must sneak t look it the bank book to find out what new The surface reason for the board's makes us wonder how long the Mor- catutrophe occurred in a ttore window by day. Virginia Lee action was that the zoning code pro- row Association can go on trying to has • fine feeling for money. It's oiled contempt. If the hibits such a use — although, from benefit an unfortunate segment of so- world caved in tomorrow and the hid to take her brood to what Mr. Apy said, this is open to ciety that is in desperate need of help. • furnished room, it wouldn't natter to her at long as they interpretation. were together. We hope, at this point, that Mr. Gayle, the next in line, It a tightwad. At the age of five, But, deep down, there is no ques- Apy and his associates will not con- she began to show signs of understanding what a buck h. tion that the Morrow plan is a hot sider the New Shrewsbury matter Her older sister wanted a dollar for something and Gayle laid: potato, political and otherwise, and it closed—even though many officials "If I give it to you, wiU you give me a dollar and twenty- there like to think it is. There is a five cents next week?" would take exceptional courage on the This is against the law, and the kid could have been part of any municipal official to bring side to this problem that has not been i slammed into the pokey, but Ginny bowed to the demand and it out and discuss it fully. New heard. Common decency dictates that •lid: "All right, Cheapskate. You Have a deal." Gtyle poafcrtd Shrewsbury Planning Board members it should be—in New Shrewsbury. it and tlid: "For calling me a bad name, it will cost you $1.36." The sound of gnashing teeth is akin to the routing blades of a rutty liwnmowM. The Right Way in Fair Haven Sylvia Porter: Your Money's Worth * * • I PREDICTED then thit tomeday we would ill be working Things went the right way at this borough equipment using the site for Gayle in a sweatshop. The prediction it still valid. At week's Fair Haven Council meeting as a parking area. To now add an the age of 22, she is the only one in the family with real in regard to a plan to locate a bor- equipment garage there would work a The Dollar in Polities money. Recently, she wrote to her lawyers: "Whit do you mean, my money it earning four percent? I can get lix in a ough equipment garage. further hardship on these residents. Between now and election day, our rising who recall previous war-inspired inflations good bank." Gayle it thort and dark and plump—like her A petition was presented opposing It should be said that the residents cost of living will be front-page politics. and can put this new phase into perspective. father—and will open the sweatshop at soon as she can find in the affected area are going to great Neither you nor I need another poll to tell To help you find your way through these a place where they don't believe in the minimum wage law. the location on a borough-owned us that this has become a great political as weeks of political palaver, here's the dollar's Karen, 13, and blonde and statuesque, gets spending money tract. And, after the bids for the efforts to build up their residential well as a key economic issue of 1966. postwar record divided by administrations. for washing the boat down, cooking dinner when her mother It properties. Governing body members We're "feeling" the I've chosen 1948 as the base year of 100 be- project were deemed too high, they busy at the typewriter (and the can cook!), and doing odd accelerated climb in living cause it was the first "normal" year after were rejected. Council authorized ad- should applaud them for this. We do. jobs around the house, like falling over her own book big on costs where it hurts — in the World War II inflation and it is a recent Now the plan to construct a garage the floor next to her bed. vertising for new bids returnable our pocketbooks. We're enough year to make sense to most voters. Oct. 10. there would make those people won- "living" the accelerated Assuming 1948's dollar bought 100 cents of Her understanding of economics it "Give it to me quick der if the borough is trying to help depreciation in the buying goods and services, the subsequent tale is: and I'll thow you how to spend it." In July, she wit given a But the most significant action windfall of $2S, and she said: "Oh, goodie. Christmu tnd came when Councilman James T. them or hurt them in this respect. power of our dollar where $1 val. end it also hurts—in the dwin- President—Bates $lloss of period birthdays ire coming up, so I'll buy a few gifts ahead of lime." Buckley, Jr. moved to refer the peti- It is encouraging that this matter dling real value of the dol- Truman: 1/49-1/53 9.8c 90.2c Her younger sitter, Kathleen, 11, tossing blonde pigtails toward tion of protest to the borough's Citi- Js now before the Citizens Advisory lars we are saving for our Eisenhower: 1/53-1/57 _....3.2c 87.0c the back of her neck, said: "This is going into the bank. I zens Advisory Committee lor study. Committee where, we hope, it will get future financial indepen- Eisenhower: 1/57-1/61 6.3c— 80.7c should get about a dollar fifty a year on this, free." dence. Kennedy-Johnson: 1/61-1/65 _.3.7c .77.0c I listen, and I am always startled. With girls, you can This, as Mr. Buckley said, is why the the thorough discussion and recom- PORTER never be sure what kind of emotion will pop to the surface. I mendations needed to help Borough There's no denying that Johnson: 1/65-7/66 2.9c -74.0c group was formed—and situations of the superb 195345 record for price stability # • • have seen a tweet tad smile come up with teari on the lids Council make a decision. when I mentioned that they should have new school uniforms. this type should be handled by the has been stashed this year. The rise In liv- OBVIOUSLY, the worst record of all wait On the other hand, I have bought them new thots and they committee. Meantime, we must praise Mr. ing costs in 1966 is already at 3>/£ per cent during Democrat Truman's last term. This have made a (tee and said: "Ick," whatever that is. We can well understand the op- Buckley again for taking what poten- and still speeding up, The dollar which bought covered the Korean war's outburst and also you 100 cents of goods and services at the * * # position of the residents to the bor- tially is a sticky situation and turn- the continuingly sharp rise in the prices of start of 1966 will buy less than 97 cents many-goods and services which were still SO I WENT OUT and bought Karen and Kathleen i few ough gauge. They live in a residential ing it over to a group formed wortfi wfien millions of us go to the polls in blowing off the lid of World War H's controls. shares of Lone Star Gas and Oklahoma Natural Gas, solely to area—and already are bothered by specifically to air such problems. November. Obviously, the next worst record was teach them what stocks are and how they appreciate and de- This is unquestionably serious inflation— during Republican Eisenhower's last term. cline in value. At once, both girls abandoned the comics at although it is modest, compared with the This covered the inflation which accompanied breakfast in favor of stock quotations. Karen wanti to tell Our Merit Semifinalists runaway inflation of the World War II period. the spectacular boom in business spending in the moment the stock earns a small profit. Kathleen asks will The 100-cent dollar of 1939 was worth only Scholarship competition. Last year, 1957 and reflected the lack of any curbs over I give her a dollar a week for shining my shoes to that the We're mighty proud of the 17 stu- 66 cents by 1946. It is also modest compared the leapfrogging of prices and wages. can buy more shares? dents in the 11 Monmouth County there were 26 semifinalists and five with the inflation of the Korean war period. But Just as obviously, Democrat Johnson Karen says: "Let me get it straight. If Lone Stir Gat and The cost of living jumped 11.7 per cent in high schools who have been named were selected to receive Merit Schol- is now making a bid for the same unhappy OWUioma Natural Gas go up a little, they owe me money, arships. the two years of 1950-51. category. Actually, the decline In the dollar's right?" I tay right. Kathleen says: "If I am now a part- semifinalists in the 1966-67 competi- * * * Before the school year is over, there buying power was only 4.5 cents from Janu- owner of these companies, they're working for me-right. NEVERTHELESS, it # "BIS W" club president, holds gift packages of books which will ... Discount Pricts I be sent to the war area. Businessmen NOTICE TO PERSONS Set Retreat DESIRING ABSENTEE BALLOTS ISLAND HEIGHTS - The Monmouth County Chapter of the If you are a qualified and registered voter of Full Gospel Business Men's the State of New Jersey who expects to be absent Fellowship International will outside the State on Nov. 8, 1966 or a qualified sponsor a retreat for ministers and laity of all denominations and registered voter who will be within the State Oct. 7 and 8 at the Island Heights on Nov. 8, 1966, but because of blindness or ill- Presbyterian Conference ness or physical disability or because of the ob- Grounds, here. servance, of a religious holiday pursuant to the The theme of the overnight tenets of your religion, or will be a resident at- retreat will be "Life in the Holy tendant at school; college or university, will' be Spirit." Subjects to be covered unable to cast your ballot at the polling place in on the agenda are: spiritu your district on said date, arid you desire to vote guidance, "Gifts of the Holy in the'General Election to be held on Nov. 8,1966, Spirit," effective witnessing, pre- kindly WRITE to the undersigned at once re- vailing prayer and lasting, and questing that a civilian absentee ballot be for- Seeking the Will of God." warded to you. SUCH REQUEST MUST STATE Moderator for retreat discus- YOUR HOME ADDRESS, AND THE ADDRESS sions will include R«v. Bernard TO WHICH SAID BALLOT SHOULD BE SENT, Mumford, Bible teacher now do- AND MUST BE SIGNED WITH YOUR SIGNA- ing advanced study at the Re- TURE, AND STATE THE REASON WHY YOU formed Episcopal Seminary, Philadelphia; Rev. Al Haig, for- WILL NOT BE ABLE TO VOTE AT YOUR mer assistant to Norman Vincem USUAL POLLING PLACE. Peale at Marble Collegiat Ohurch, New York City, and now No civilian absentee ballot will be furnished dean of the recently formed New .or forwarded4o any applicant unless-request York Christian Academy, Brook f lyn; and Kiev. Albert Mcfilfreiih, therefor is received not less than eight days prior pastor of the First Christian to the election, and containing the foregoing in- Assembly, Plainfield. formation. Local reservations chairmen are Raymond Rafferzeder, At- Dated September 23,1966 lantic Highlands, and Georg Stowe, Deal. J. RUSSELL WOOLLEY TO LEAD DISCUSSION County Clerk FORT MONMOUTH — Brig, Hall of Records Gen. Paul A. Feyereisen, deputj Freehold, N. J. 07728 commanding general of the Arm; Electronics Command for plan: and programs, has accepted ai Note: Requests forms are available at Municipal Invitation to lead a discussion oi Clerk's or Cqunty Clerk's Offices, as a "Ethics and Bigness in the Mil public-convenience. tary" at Trinity Church, Asburj Park, Oct. 5. Before it's too late... Chevelle SS 396 Sport Coup* NOW, as many kinds as there are kinds of drivers to enjoy them-from the SS 396 (the Chevelle for > the DRIVING MAN) to the brand new Concours Custom Wagon! ', Long live Chevelle! And its trim dimensions! sharp performance and great maneuverability. , on For '67, there're a new grille, new wraparound talllights and distinctive sheet-metal changes. The effect is a newer, more ;, your contemporary look for all models. As for specific models, one is completely new: the sumptuous savings Concours Custom Wagon shown below, featuring the rich look : of wood outside. Then there's the SS 396 with a 396-cubtc-fnch Turbo-Jet V8, special suspension and an even more remarkable • capacity for delighting the stout of heart. Other models,too: FEDERAL RESERVE BANK REGULATIONS Ma'libu, 300 Deluxe and 300, all with Body by Fisher. MAY SOON PLACE A NEW CEILING ON In addition, every '67 Chevelle carries a multitude of new safety features such as a GM-developed energy-absorbing INTEREST RATES. \ steering column, four-way hazard warning flasher, dual master ! cylinder brake system with warning light (and more). j IF YOU INVEST NOW you will earn the FULL Try a Quick-Size Chevelle at your Chevrolet dealer's now. | 5% oil our Certificates of Deposit and this rate For '67, everything new that \ could happen... happened I | will be GUARANTEED for your choice of a Now atyour Chevrolet dealer's ' j period of TWO or THREE YEARS. (Available in amounts of $5,000 or more.) INTEREST BEGINS ON DATE OF PURCHASE For information on how to transfer fund* immediately without losing interest, stop in at any office or Telephone 775-3800 or 222-1200. Chevelle Concours Custom Wagon-brand new for '67 ew Jersey [\lational am CIRCLE CHEVROLET COMPANY ' I OFFICES: Aibury Park — DMI — Lengf raneh — Ntptunt OMni ttrav* —> Ouanpart — Octn Townililp — Wtit Ung Branch 325 MAPLE AVENUE RED BANK 7414131 . Sept 30, 1*5« THE DAILY RJWISTH '•%fo "~ffiM&3S0i Garden Club Lists Aides -,' *A1I OCEANPORT - Mn. Norm wood Baxter, membership; Mrs. E. Pratt, -president ot the Ocea James Layton, hostess; Mrs. Cy- port Garden Club, named cot rllle Le Blanc, telephone; Mrs, mittM chairmen at the' Mason Edward Urion, publicity; Mrs. opening meeting here in the Cor George Peaff, horticulture; Mrs. munity Center. Harold Hendrlckson, conserva- Named are Mrs. Raymor tions; Mrs. Robert Hoeft, ways Sculthorpe. program; Mn. and means, and Mrs. Joseph Bry- an, flower arranging arts. Home Furnishings Should Reflect Spirit of the Era, Designer Sap The club co-sponsored a flower bright colored legs in trumpet arranging demonstration by Mrs. EDITOR'S NOTE - What's cause the whole approach, new la tbs borne lunlthlags wrong. It would be better designs. John Langenberger of Navesink, field? What do some ot the design short-term paper furn: An all-over upholstered sofa with the Village Garden Club of top designers say are the ma- ture — frankly cheap, whimsical and chair has a puritanical ele- Middletown as its Initial project. jor problems facing them? Is fun. It could be discarded gance; but, a sofa sheltered by The club was represented in mill production smothering used in a child's room when ot! a canopy offers cozy intimacy. the annual flower show in As- creativity? What can the eon- er furniture is purchased. Thi A set of wide-arm tufted love- bury Park by the Monmouth turner expect In the future? approach is better certainly thai seats with ottomans make com- County-Elberon Horticultural So- These are some of the ques- the vulgar, cheap furniture xul fortable reclining arrangements ciety by several of its members tions AP Newsfeatures Writer stitutea one finds — metals faked that look as if they were de- including Mrs. Hendrickson who Vivian Brown discussed with to look like wood and such." signed for bundling, the early won 11 awards in horticulture five Important U. S. furniture Baughman is giving som American courting custom. and arrangement. Mrs. Peaff re- designers for the articles In thought to a paper line. He like: Baughman likes an "accidental ceived an award for an artistic this aeries. to try new things. His New Con look" in home furnishings. It is arrangement and Mrs. Scul- cept line is a close-to4he-floo hard to define, he says, but can thorpe, a first for an on-the-spot By VIVIAN BROWN look, chair seats go just abov be such a good mixture of an- arrangment. AP Newsfeatures Writer casters, sofas rest on short leg: tiques and modern that it all is There is a new spirit in eacr or recessed bases. A New Di simpatico. new era that should be reflected mension line reflects the Thir- Right now, there is little justi- Farewell Party in our home furnishings design, ties with its furry upholstery, fication for anything but a mo- says designer Milo Baughman of chrome and smoked glass. De- dern furiture influence, he points FREEHOLD — Mr. and Mrs. Wellesley, Mass. If the spirit i: signed for Thayer Coggin, thes out, but we are entering a style- James Green, Park Ave., who will missing, something is wrong include • tradition-inspired tui less market. * eave shortly to make their home with the design. chair, tuxedo sofas with marsh n Monrovia, Calif., were hon- mallow or buggy tufting, loose A modern furniture revival red at a farewell party in the Baughman, a rugged-looking seat and back cushions, modern must coma from the middlebrow Youngsters Love to lome of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest individualist, has been trying to chairs with chrome and swivel market devoid of symbols want- Potter, Jr., IS Waverly PI. succeed with that philosophy for{ bases, tables with lucite and ed by the avantegarde. There Take Dance Lessons the 17 years he has been active is too much stress on function in It opens up a whole new Attending were Mr. and Mrs, in the design field. In 1948 he modem furnishings; whereas, world to them. Give this Robert Beck, Mr. and Mrs began on the West Coast in a modern man wants to satisfy "a pleasure to your child. See us. Seorge Dock, Mr. and Mrs. Don-modern vein, came east to work Fitkin Offers universal emotional need for Id Cusson, Mr. and Mrs. Donald in Shaker-influenced design, and love, warmth, security and beau LEAH MAUER "erry, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mc- has since departed from rigid ty." Wit, whimsy and nostalgia piATfORM SOFAS mar«hmallow-tufr«el on rowwood, art part of MHo. Baughman'i 'oy, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Sea- modern concepts. He became Refresher may be bound uup in this ex- ru#Mrwim »™, ' SCHOOL OF DANCE nan, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ma- interested in traditional furniture pression ot individuality. naw concspt in horn* furnishings. ^^_ _. : . • ; PHONI 747-M52 loney, Mr. and Mrs. George when he moved to New England. People interested in new mod-| 17 sW Front StiMt />wry. Mrs. Herman Simpson, "Some designers are such pur- Training irn things are not going to aacri MD IANK 1rs. John Burdge and Mrs. Sa ists, they cannot adopt another NEPTUNE - Fltidn Hospital 'ice comfort for any intellectual viewpoint, even if they need the will hold a six-week nurse connotation, he explains. They To Describe ^Europe's Art Galleries work," says Baughman. "I efresher program this fall as lave different reasons for their think people who do creative lart of a statewide effort to lome decoration, a status thing RIVER PLAZA—Mary Gordon don has familiarized herself with The American Home depart- things should get away from it return inactive registered nurs- n many ways. [of Trans-World Airlines, New international customs and tradi- ment under the chairmanship of all at some juncture of their life, es to active practice/ Some people want a nice par- York, will be guest speaker at a tions. Mrs. W. Gilbert Manson, Oak then they msy come back to the The course will "begin Nov. 7 >r because in the little town meeting of the River Plaza Wom- Miss Susan Cook, a senior at Hill, is conducting workshop drawing board with fresh per- and run through Dec. K. The ley came from everything was en's Club Thursday at 8:15 p.m.•Middletown Township High meetings in preparation for a Hol- spective." program of planned theory and ilid traditional — Hie grand in the Colonial Room of the fire School, also will be a guest at the iday Fair which the club will hold In 1956 Baughman interrupted supervised clinical practice will iano, silver, the china in an house, A travel adviser for the meeting. She will speak on high- Dec. 1 in the fire house. his design career for four years run frm 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Mon- airline, Miss Gordon will present lights of the Citizenship Institute Hostesses for Thursday's meet- to study (or the Mormon minU-j otposed closet. Some southern days through Fridays, during that ind New England aristocrats buyja color-slide program, "Art Gal-she attended in June at Doug- ing will be Mrs. William A. Pe- , His new interest put de- leries of Europe." The program lass College where she was a ters, Mrs. W. Gilbert Manson, sign In its place, he says. He period. rnlture the way they choose Mrs. Helen J. Smith, director e right sweater or .prope r .jack - is being presented by the art de-delegate sponsored by the River Mrs. Myron V. Brown and Mrs. began to see that purism in de- There are people too, whopartment of the club, Mrs. Plaza club for the New Jersey H, Conant Speer. sign is all right if it doesn't be- of nursing, said the refresher come a cult or some quasi-reli- program is designed to help re- 'ant to escape" from the kind George B. Voorhis, chairman. State Federation of Women's gious thing. Modem design must lieve the acute nursing shortage furnishings they knew before. Miss Gordon, who sets a lively Clubs' annual student program. be viewed as design rather than by assisting inactive R.N.'s in pace gathering first-hand infor- Miss Mary Wheaton, president Schedule Tea ^ an ideology, otherwise you can updating their education. Hold Open House mation on travel, began her TWA of: the club, will report on her at- be led into design traps. The course Is being held as career as a flight hostess follow- tendance at the federation's fall For Nurses He came to the conclusion too, part of a statewide project of re 25th Anniversary ing her graduation from Stephens conference Wednesday at new LONG BRANCH - Martha L. '['. during this respite, that design- the Hospital Research and Ed- HIGHLANDS — Mr. and Mrs.College for Women, the Univer- headquarters on the Douglass Sacci, director of nursing ser- ers shouldn't give the market ucational Trust of th8 New Jer- .ndrew Soyka, proprietors of sity of Colorado and several campus. vices at Monmouth Medical Cen- everything it wants but that no sey Hospital Association in con- .ndy's Shore Bar, celebrated years of teaching in California ter, has announced an afternoon designer had the right to assume junction with the Vocational Di- ne!r 25th wedding anniversary at schools. She has logged more tea will be held at the center Turn o lovely Moth»f into e that people are at fault if they vision of the N.J. Dept. of Educa- in open house party In the bar, than 2 million miles on all of Cadillac Unit Tuesday for nurses not employed don't like what he designs. tion and the N.J. Division of Em- i2 Bay Ave. TWA's 50,000 miles of routes. in a hospital. *• , , , gracious hostess.' Present her 1 "We are in a great transition- ployment security. They were married Sept. 7, During her extensive travels Installs Officers Miss Sacci reported that In- wlthth* sparkling beauty ef stem- al period. We are groping but 941 in St. Thomas the Apostle 'throughout Europe, Africa, Asia HIGHLANDS — Installation of active professional nurses may r, ware. Elegance and distinction, nothing seems to emerge as the Fitkin's program is open to all inactive registered nurses. If a Catholic Church, Rahway, and and the United States, Miss Gor- the Cadillac Civic Association of- still register for the refresher ~ plus a look ef luxury to grace New Modern. But one ot these Ived in Colonia before moving to icers for 1966-67 took place Satur- course which, will begin "Oct. 10. ": days it will emerge, a style that graduate nurse who has been reg- ihe tablt. istered has let her registration highlands in 1960. Mr. and Mrs, GOP Women Plan day at a dinner meeting and cos-and run for 10', weeks. ?'At the *f will endure for a decade and a oyka are members of Our Lady tume shipwreck party here in the open housfehBJd recently *' Pattern shown/ mutually Tow half." (apse, Fitkin will beJp. her be- come re-registered.' Perpetual' > Ifelp Catholic Fashion Slioic Cedar Inn. Forty-four members nursesvMgisHreif for " The industry should avoid :hurch, here and of the Bay- FREEHOLD — Plans for a of the 52-home Cadillac Jevelop- Nurses iriayv«.oti And a Committee of Four Fills Her Shoes As Chan-men MATAWAN - Mra, John Wla>. RUMSON - For 'almost » Han ^nse to Port Chester, das, president ot the Columbian years Mrs. Percy H. Eadtord N.Y., on Oct. 5,1903. They apart Auxiliary of the Knights of Co- found time in th"e busy most of their married Ufa on a " lumbus Cardinal Newman Coun- schedule of her wedding anai- private estate which Mr. Had- cil, announced thfr iappolfltin#it. vereary week to Uke charge of ford supervised. The couple of committee chairmen at » an annual rummage tale for the moved to Rumson from Connect-. naeeting in the hom* ^ffMn.. Women's Aisociaton of the First icut in May 192» to take charge Walter Sskowtki, Ab«riall. M- Presbyterian Church of Rumson. bt the Henry K*l estate. For- Mrs. William Matthaey ml1 Next week when the ev*nt is merly Mr. Radiord had charge serve as chairman ot the wel- Used here in the auditorium of of the E. H. Weitherby estate in fare committee; Mrs. Walter 8a- Greenwich, and actress PauliM Fellowship Hall, MM. ftwJford kowski, membership, and Mrs. Frederick's home in Groton. for will be absent for tee first time Lester Bauer, social. in til these years. 17 yean he mma|ed the LeRoy McKlm property on Naveiink Due to the resignations of the 'On Oct. 5 Mr. and Mr«. Ra*River Rd. in Locust, well-known vice president and secretary, ford, who livid for 15 yean at for its beautiful gardens. A dis- nomination, and elections were 4S3 Sain Ave., Long Branch, and tinguished landscape gardener, held. Mrs. Joseph McAleer and previously in Rumson, will be he exhibited with the Monmouth- |Mrs. Ernest Welgel. respectively, celebrating their 63d wedding an- Eiberon Horticultural Society were elected to toe two posts. niversary in the Monmouth Con- and served u its financial sec- Rev. James King, oh Wave valescence Center, 229 Bath retary in former years. from mission assignment in Bra- Ave., Long Branch, where they zil, gave a sjide-lecture oil th» Throughout the years Mrs. now reside. They are both S3 work being done, by the Rede«p- years old. Radford has been known locally for her "Yankee humor," which torist Fathers in that area. Stepping into Mrs. Radford's die described as being "gener- Koch Florists, Mlddletown, will Job are four women — a number ally devilish." In addition to provide a program on fall floral that Mrs. Radford would, no staging the annual rummage arrangements at .the Octobtr FOR TOMORROW —The,Hoty Crois, Parerrt-Teaeher Association will doubt, consider a compliment to sales consistently from the time meeting to be held in Jhe home her retired status. They are Mrs.she Joined the then known Ladies U In- hold* i^VNiw Mothorj T«a" tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. in tha school'! auditorium, Rumion of Mrs. Bernard FJjgleir, .*" "' Charles S. Callman, Mrs. Gor- Aid Society in 19M, ahe alio field La., Matawan. Rd., Rtfthion. Sistar Mar/ No»[, principal, meett with the chairman, Mrs. Thomas Eadon, don W. Goldrick, Mrs. Harry L. planned bus trips for tfce Worn- left,' a^ Mr*. John Otwald, president of+he PTA, in praparation for the event which Kettel and Mrs. Marion Krouse, en's Association. The aanual all of Rumson. will welcome mothers of new jtud«nti and mothori of kindergarten children. trip to the Easter show and COMMITTEE AIDES — The annual rummage tala of the As a committee — and follow- Christmas sSow at Radio City Rumion Pr»tbyt»ri«n Church reeei/ei the attention of, ing the procedure of Mm. Rad-Music Hall in New York became WHY PAY ford, they have requested that a tradition with the association left to right, Mrt. Harry Kettel, Mrs. Marion Krouie Horns such as clothing, shoes since its first trip in 1917. Mr. and Mrs. Charlei Callman, chairman of the event which furniture, books, dishes, and bric- Radford didn't share Mrs. Rad- MORE? Cynthia S. Walling Is Bride Si slated for Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m., and Wednesday a-brac, be. brought to the audito- ford's enthusiasm for these bus rium Monday and Tuesday be- trips — he preferred fishing ai from 10 a.m. to I p.m, in the Church Auditorium, Eatt KEYPORT- Miss Cynthia Sue Mrs. George Fischer, Brooklyn, The bridegroom was graduated fore the sale opens. Anyone de- a pastime. River Rd, at Park Ave. Co-chairman it Mr$. Gordon W. Walling, daughter oi Mr., and sister of the bridegroom, and from Xaverian High School, siring to have rummage picked Mrs. Radford also Is a charter Mrt. Henry J. V. Walling, 283 Miss Susan Hayden, East Keans- Brooklyn, N.Y. He attended up is asked to call Mrs. Robert Goldrick. . member of the Rumson Auxil- Laurel Aye., West Keansburg, burg. Brooklyn Community College and D. Haven,. 110 Hillcrest Rd., Fair iary to Rivervlew Hoipital. lias become the bride of Louis Five-year-old Mary Louise Ver- is presently attending Rutgers Haven. just band me the jobs.., and I lescence center yesterday con- Edward Vernarelli, eon of Mr. narelli, at home, sister of the University, New Brunswick. He In commenting oh the many do them." cerning the couple, The Register and Mrs. Louis E. Vernarelli, bridegroom, was the flower girl. is employed as a surveyor by Mr. and Mrs. Radford, who activities she had taken chair- Now her Job is is the hands ol was told that they were well and 4 Fordham Dr., Matawan. Richard Capuozzo, Great Kills, Levitt & Sons, Inc. have three married daughters, manship of during the years a committee. are able to receive visitors be- Rev. Josepli S. Rucinski, pas- S.I., was best man. Ushers were were married in the Presbyte- Mrs. Radford once said, "They In contacting the. conva- tween the hours of 1 and 8, p.m. tor of St. Clement's Catholic George Fischer, Brooklyn, broth- Church,, celebrated, the Nuptial er-in-law of the bridegroom, end Mass, and performed the double Richard Nazaro, Red Bank. Barbecue ring' ceremony in St Joseph's A reception followed at the Donald Sturmfek Wed Catholic. Church. home of the bridegroom's par- To Follow Dennis E. Walling, at home, ents. RED BANK - Miss Lorraine HN Strumfels, before enlisting NEW SHREWSIURY escorted- his sister to the altar. When they return from a motor Ann Prajka. Lt. (|.g.) U.S. Navy in the Navy, was graduated from SlwwjbBTyAn.otKt.il She wore a white satin floor trip to Ohio, they will reside Hunt Meet Nurse Corps, was married here Red Bank High School and at- Lecoftd la length gown with appliques o! in Parkview-at-Madison, Lau- MARLBORO - The 12th annual to Hospitalman Donald L. Sturm- tended Newark School of Fin Aliaarie lace. The fitted bodice had a rence Harbor. Hunt-Meet barbecue will be held fels, of the Navy. He is the sonand Industrial Art. He is at- •coop neckline and elbow-length The bride was graduated from by the Marlboro Hospital Auxil- of Mr. and Mrs. George Strum- tached to the Marine Corps as sleeves and the A-line skirt ter- Raritan Township High School iary Oct. 22 following the races fels, 57 William St. field medical corpsman present- minated in a chapel train. Her and is employed in the Civilian at the Woodland Farm estate of The bride is the daughter of ly stationed at Camp Lejeune, shoulder-length veil of French il- Personnel Division at Fort Mon- Mrs. Amory Haskell, Mr. and Mrs. John Prajka of N.C. mouth. lusion was attached to a flower The event will be held at the Woodslde, LI. headpiece. Monmouth Hills Corporation Club- Rev. James Harris officiated Mrt. Richard Capuozzo, Great Dance to Benefit house, Rt. 35, Highlands. at Saturday's double ting cere- Kills, 'S.I., Was matron of honor. mony which took place" in the Marlboro Auxiliary is one o: ? Jravl^4ftnU ^4tiociation The bridal attendants were Hospital Fund First Methodist Church. the many local beneficiaries of FREEHOLD—The dance con* A reception for the immediate SERVINfe THE NEEDS OF THE TRAVELING mittee of the Marlboro Township the Hunt Meet race's and mem- bers have supported the event family was held in the Lincroit Ready-Made Hospital Auxiliary met Monday Inn. PUBLIC OF MONMOUTH & OCEAN COUNTIES. in the Some of Mrs. George over the years winding up the brisk, fall day with the fund-rais- The bride is a graduate of Saathoff, Topanemus Rd., to Hunter College,' New York City, Atbtry P«k Travel UrAn O'Daaaell Travel Avjsacy and Custom make plans for the. second an- ing dinner. Sizzling steaks, baked and the Metropolitan Hospital nual dance Nov. 5 in the Walnut Idaho potatoes, ealad, hot rolls Mils Laura J. Adams Miss Sat Asa Updyka 775-0050 741-5080 Room o! th« Marlboro • Fire and homemade apple pie and cot- School of Nursing. CareliTrav*l House. Ralph Caiaizo's orches- fee make up the menu. Music 741. 899-5300 tra will play. for dancing will be provided by Sbroptfrnist Club 1 Betrothals Announced Co-chairmen* are- Mrs. Austin the Guardians,, members of, the Wright and Mrs. John Tergis. Old Guard of Red Bank who EATONTOWN - Mr. and Mre FREEHOLD — George Mo- Lists Projects also auxiliary members. M.H.Adams, 285 Broad St., an- Other committee chairmen are >sckin, 29 Marcy St., an- HIGHLANPS-The Soroptimists BED- William Stolz, master of cere- nounce the engagement of iheii The rustic atmosphere of Mon- lounced the engagement ot his Of the Twin Lights Area opened daughter,., Miss Laura Jean Ad- monies; Mrs. Harry V. Holmes, mouth Hills will be enhanced by their fall season ot activities ams, to Pfc Robert E. Brown- [randdaughter. Miss Sue Ann refreshments; Mrs. MUlard Lam-decorative pumpkin? filled with h a dinner meeting here In He is the son of Mr. and Jpdyke, daughter of Mrs. Juani- Interior designs PREADS berson, tickets; Mrs. Mat Laub fall flowers, foliage: and corn- ing. He is Bahr's Restaurant. Mrs. David Browning, 372 Bath •ad • king liia spread for a quaan and Mrs. Lawrence Youngman, stalks, bright yellow and white Mrs. A, W. * Updyfce, S71 Park Ave, Free- Engebretson, president, named » bad? W. fcava ill ... or cm special ways and means proj- Ave., Long Branch, , ••-. Icontempo house checkered tablecloths and a told, to Byron L. Marriner, son chairmen of forthcoming events """^^••••^a^pBlBjHSJBajSajBlaiSaii ^^l^^a^B^SSJPJPasSppt]f^''(^^B'a^B^B^i^aj^atVaB^v^^BBSJ^jaHppH| aka It. Com* in and taa how you ect; Mrs. Franklin Collins and crackling fire to set off an eve- Miss Adams, an alumna of il Mr, and Mrs. James Marrin- and announced various projects lean add an wctra touch to your Mrs. Youngman, decorating; ning of gay Informality. Monmouth Regional High School, 1 Ibsdrooco with a ipraad from our •r, Marlboro Rd., Farmingdale, the club will undertake. These Living room, dining room, dan; family Mrs. John Tergis, hospitality; Tweeds; wools, and sport jack- West Long Branch,-Is a senior include the fund for the Bayshore (•olltclion. it a party Sunday. Miss Barbara and Miss Apryl ets are in order for the day, both at Mountainside Hospital School Community Hospital, adoption of room,, bedroom or complete interiors. Armstrong,.posters; Mrs. Albert for ^e races and tne barbecue. of Nursing, Montclair. She has Miss Updyke and her fiance a foster child in Hong Kong, Mount and Mrs.. Waiter Grubb, Mrs: Orion Whitaker, Long enlisted in the Army Student holiday gifts to' nursing home publicity; Mrs. John 0. Bennett, Branch, is chairman. Assisting Nurse Program and will serve ire graduates of Freehold Re- patients, and holiday baskets for Interior Designs, Jr., dance adviser. Refresh- her are Mrs. Bert Van Duzer, two years in the U.S. Army ;lonal High School. She is em- a needy family. ments will be served by the aux- Nurses Corps after graduation. Counstling & Planning Freehold; Mrs. Henry Grimm, iloyed as a secretary at 3M, Chairmen are Mrs. Peggy iliary members. Pfc. Browning, who also wag Shrewsbury, tickets and invita- toehold. Mr. Marriner, who at- Bahrs, October hat show which Sitvice AH proceeds will go to the graduated from Monmouth Re- tions; Mrs. Laurence Toole, Lit- will be staged in the restaurant, SHREWSBURY Greater Freehold Area Hospital gional High School, attended Ml ended Utah SUt^ University and tle Silver, Mrs. Clark Vogel, and a supper buffet which will 468 BROAD ST. Fund. The dance is open to the ami Dade Junior College, Miami, he University of Kentucky, la a Rumson, decorations; Mrs. Irene be held at her home at 79 Port- Call 774-7400 CdU 747-4422 public. Fla.. and Colorado State Uni- Haviland and Mrs. Morton Winer, itudent at Fairleigh Dickinson land Rd.; Mrs. Helen Thomas, versity before entering service DiHf'fflAWed. t FrL'tUt Red Bank; Mrs. Philip Bernheim, Jniversity School ot Dentistry, Keansburg, mystery bu3 ride; n the Army. He leaves Saturday Locust and Mrs. Stanley Butkus, Mrs. Dorothy P. Fenwick, Mata- 3209S«MlAn.(tflli.35),U«frirk for Viet Nam. feaneck. "JAZZ FOR TEENS" Belmar. wan, fashion ahow; and Mrs. *_ AlSO Edna Gentile, Matawan, dinner- dance. TAP • IAIUT • ACROIATIC Sell Fasti The Daily Register Four Paintings Sold The ckrb will hold its next Dance Nursery Classes llassified. dinner meeting Oct. 6 at Bahrs. Student* accepted at age 3' RUMSON — Mrs. Robert Smith, manent collection, three oev Member Dance Masters of America president of the Art Auxiliary members were introduced bj of Monrnouth Medical Center an- Mrs. Smith her* inker borne HAVIIAND DANCE STUDIO nounced the sale of four paint- They are Mrs. Mlln Palmer, Mil t 741-1820 ings from its current exhibiting William Hall and Mis. Thomas RUMSON READING INSTITUTE 75>ilelA*tMST. RID BANK totaling 1900. William Amman's Turchan. "18th Century Repose," which re- Plans art under way for th« the fragrance ceived the Best in Show Award; fair exhibition which will be hunf FALL SESSION llRuth Vail's "Sea Scene" and AnnOct. 10. that can llMitehell's "Point Pleasant" and 1 The nominating committee pre r NOW ENROLLING "Winter Sea" were those sold,, sented the slate at officers foi READING, ENGLISH, STUDY SKILLS At a meeting ol the auxiliary, 1967. They are Mrs. Gerald Pell* shake your sier, president; Mrs. Theodon which is dedicated to staging Saturday mornings or weekday evenings. This course is KATIA FOREST changing exhibitions in the halls Geiser, vice prelident; Mrs world o! the nuJcal center and pro- John Ryan; treasurer, and Mn offered at all levels from 7th grade through college, with viding works for the center's per Edward Gentile, secretary. students grouped according to ability. It helps students School of Ballet to nad with speed and comprehension, to write gram- fralnad' in Ptrl» by Baleriiw Madam. Kieht.. matically and logically, to spell accurately, and to in- tlntka otth» Ruiiian Imperial Ballet, St. Pafar.. crease vocabulary. This course is popular with serious burg. Studiad it Ida School of American B«l- lit and tht SWoboda School of Ball.t in Naw THE students who want to improve school grades and to pre- fork. Tha tnathod ef instruction !• of th> old pare for college boards or other exams. Russian Billit School. DAILY CLASSES READING for children in grade* 1-6 Two V/2 hour meetings a week after school. This course CHAPEL HILL ROAD emphasizes phonics and sight vocabulary, paragraph BODY POWDER MIST MIQDLETOWN lono mile from Oasis) comprehension, phrase reading. The children meet in The new way to envelop TRADITION small groups according to reading ability. PHONE: 291-1590 yourself in a mist of Chantilly-leaves Our Flowers Help Make MATHEMATICS skin smooth, cool It That Day of Days Courses at all levels from basic arithmetic through ad- and comfortable. HARRIS CATERERS 6oz.$3.75 If you want the unique for your vanced algebra and analytics. All courses are planned to develop a logical approach to problem-solving and to wedding, 'consult us for all your CATERING develop facility in applying mathematical processes ac- EAUDE floral needs. We give you what curately. . TOILETTE FOR EVERY OCCASION you want, help you etay within Luxuriate in the your budget, All crartti ndtr Hi* dlrccrim *f Ruiull <*. Rm**y, fragrance of Chantilly • OFfle* P«HM ftmwrlr AiseelaM DlracNr, NYU Rat-aUae. luHtvte. —splash, and sprinkle • WaaMhg RMtitriMi lavishly, here, there, • Ckirek Fwwritm Send for bulletin I everywhere.' TWO PINING ROOMS Phone 747-1832 twin »o <»d i4o at the From tha Home of Houblg&nt HARBOR RESTAURANT Art. Hlgklu* Yaekt Wiln RUMSON READING INSTITUTE 291-2004 LITTLE SILVER of count ; Av«. ef Two Rivms 8420 650 Ruiraen Family Pharmacy lUPNTtVlftYSAT.andSUN. 50 '•••!>•* VpU CAN IAV UITUSILVM or 542-4777 Church St. & Prospect Ave., Little Sil line vs. in Key 'A' Game The key game In the "B" Di- bury where Monnouth Regional, Monmouth-Toms River battle will Neptune will open defense of Branch, and was Impressed by his coach after playing a good but coach Tom Karlo is pleased especially junior fullback Bob Da- vision finds Central Regional vis» with the team's showing in wha is (Ml, 202). He expects the 20-7 victim of Lakewood on also be an "A" Division tussle. Its shore Conference "A" Divi- the aggressiveness of the Lions. defensive game. Iting Matawan Regional. The lat- outdoor practice it has been able :olonials to display a lot pf spirit Monday In a non-conference That is the final "A" division A two-touchdown performance Red Bank, an easy 40-0 win- ter was an impressive 51-4 con; sion football title tomorrow af- to get in. Karlo feels that "the while trying to make Figgs' de- game, will be host to Toms Riv- game. Long Branch will be host ner over neighboring Red Bank querer of Southern Regional, ternoon when it visits Middle- by Len Bianchl, a junior half- line is coming along well." iut a winning one. er, which suffered a 20-14 set- to Red Bank Catholic, while Catholic last week, gets its first while Central tripped up RariUn town Township. back, paced Middletown to its There will be one change in A game of opening day losers back at the hands of Brick Town- Brick Township visits Phillips- taste of conference competition ship in an "A" Division tilt The burg tonight. Township, 2B-7, last week. Coach John Bednarik's Fliers triumph over the Green Wave. the Red Bank lineup tomorrow ill take place in New Shrews- tomorrow when It travels to the were idle last Saturday, while John Werner picked up the other county seat to visit Freehold Re- as Al Griffen will start at wing- Dick Kleva's Lions were defeat- 'six-pointer. gional. The latter will be making back instead of Charles Carter, Shore ing divisional foe Long Branch, After the game, Kleva had high who will see action as a de< praise for his team, stating that its debut under new coach 21-fl. tensive halfback. he has good young club that Charles Figg. Conference Neputne has 14 lettermen should progress as the cam- Red Bank came out of its open- Sees Tough Battle back from last season's cham paign gets further along. Sopho- er with no injuries. The recent Karlo expects a tough battle pionship team, but 11 of these more tackle Ken King came in wet weather has cut down on from Freehold as he feels the Football are backfield men and three are for some individual praise from the Buccos' outdoor practices, Colonials have a lot of big boys, , A DIVISION ' ends. Bednarik lost a total of W t 22 seniors from last year. Middletown (1-0) • 1 » The Fliers' biggest problem is Brick Twp. (1-0) 1 0 the interior line, where there is Red Bank (1-0) '...- 0 0 Freehold Reg. (0-0) 0 0 not a single letterman back. Neptune (M) 0 0 Over-all team depth is also a Moumouth Reg. (0-1) 0 0 major concern to Bednarik. Long Branch (0-1) 0 1 Bednarik was in attendance Toms River (0-1) 0 1 B DIVISION when Middletown defeated Long IV L Central Reg. (1-0) -. ...1 0 Jr. Bowling ^"'^iSic^***'^^ o Matawan Reg. (1-0) .0 0 So. Freehold Reg. (1-0) .0 0 Opener Set Manasquan (14) .0 0 By JACKSON CUNNINGHAM Lakewiod .(Ml)' 0 0 RED BANK - The Parks and SCHOLASTIC FOOTBALL'S 1966 season is but a|oc«aOceann TwpTwo.. (0-1(M)) 0 0 Pat Wallace Recreation Department's Junior week old, b\it already mighty important games dot the Raritan Twp. (0-1) Lion Quarterback Bowling League season will open C DIVISION tomorrow at Recreation Lanes, schedule. Fifteen contests are on tap over the week- W L Newman Springs Rd, here. :nd, starting tonight with Brick Township playing at|shore Reg. (1-0) „ - l o High School The league, open to boys and ?hillipsburg and winding up Siinday afternoon when Pt. Boro U-0) 1 SCHEDULE girls in grades S through 8, will Southern Reg. (01) 0 dater Dei travels north to Arlington to face Queen of Wall Twp. (0-1) 0 run until March. The boys will FOOTBALL begin at 9 a.m. each Saturday, •eace. Keyport (0-1) 0 0 Jackson Twp. (0-1) __..O TODAY while the girls will start at 10:30. A record of 11-2 in last week's opening action Brick at Phillipsburg Tomorrow's sessions will be de- Pt. Beach (0-1) 0 sends us into this weekend's play. with a per- INDEPENDENTS TOMORROW voted to instruction on proper centage of .846, a lofty mark that may very easily W A DIVISION techniques and scorekeeping. The Rumson-FH ,1 Red Bank at Freehold first few weekly sessions will be tumble. Here's the lineup: R. B. Catholic ...0 Neptune at Middletown devoted to open bowling, after RED BANK AT FREEHOLD REG. — While Red Mater Dei » Toms River at Monmouth which teams will be formed for running attack left something to be desired al- Asbury Park .0 B DIVISION league competition. SET FOR BRESETT DAY tomorrow at Long Branch High are principal Herbert Korey, hough the Bucs still ripped Red Bank Catholic, 40-0, Ufr, and athletic director William "Chief" Bsatty, who admire the program for the Central at Matawan The league championship teams im Mottine's passing and a rugged defense should be So. Freehold at Raritan will receive trophies. Individual occasion. To honor Edison T. "Ted" 'Bresett, former teacher-coach, the board of ed- more than the Colonials can handle. RED BANK, 20-7. Golf Class Jackson at Ocean •wards will also be presented to ucation renamed ths school stadium Bresett Stadium. Long Branch will hot Red Bank R. B. CATHOLIC AT LONG BRANCH — The Lakewood at Manasquan outstanding and improved bowl- Catholic in the scheduled football game. At Keyport C DIVISION ers. Green Wave should make Ted Bresett Day a big KEYPORT — The Keyport Shore at Keyport success and give new coach Ken Schroeck his first Adult Education program has a Pt. Boro at Wall win. Long Branch, 27-0. little "zip" in it for students with PL Beach at Southern 1 OTHERS " NEPTUNE AT MIDDLETOWN TWP. — Lions golf instruction scheduled. i Pro Andy Sikora of Beacon Hill R. B. Catholic at Long Branca Strikeout Mark for Sandy ihould be in thick of "A" race with quarterback Pat Country Club will conduct the Rumson-FH at Metuchen Wallace leading the way. MIDDLETOWN TWP., 14-7. course which will start next Asbury Park at Hamilton Wednesday. Sikora, veteran golf SUNDAY TOMS RIVER AT MONMOUTH REG. — An instructor, will hold classes once Mater Del at Queen of Peice important game in "A" race. Indians may be a week lor a 10-week period. (Arlington) As Dodgers Up Lead to 2 down after losing to Brick, giving Falcons easy chance for upset TOMS RIVER, 20-13. ASSOCIATED PRESS el when he struck out the side when the Cards' Curt Flood hom- his 13th loss against 13 victories, The Los Angeles Dodgers last in the fourth inning. Koufax ered over the left field wall. Astros Nip Reds MATER DEI AT QUEEN OF PEACE — Queen of night increased their National struck out 306 batters in 1963 and Singles by Orlando Cepeda in In yesterday's only othei 'eace rolled over Harrison, 27-0, in opener and should League lead to two games as fanned 382 last season. the second inning and Tim Me-1, game, pitcher Don Wilson last be 2-0 after Sunday's game. QUEEN OF PEACE, 20-6. Sandy Koufax stopped St. Louis Walter Johnson of the Wash- Carver in the fifth, and Flood's night got a victory in his firsl 2-1 on four hits and became the ington Senators and Rube Wad- two-out double in the ninth were major league appearance as thi CENTRAL REG. AT MATAWAN REG. — first pitcher in major league his dell of the Philadelphia Athlet- the only other hits off Koufax. Houston Astros edged Cincinnat Here's a big one in the "B" race. In a high scor- 10- FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1966 tory to reach the 300-strikeout ics previously were tied with The Dodgers scored their first 3-2 on home runs by Chuck Har- ing affair, MATAWAN REG., 20-13. level in three different seasons Koufax for the record with tworun in the second inning on three rison and Aaron Pointer. The victory put the Dodgers 300-strikeout seasons each. singles. Jim Lefebvre, who beat Wilson allowed five hits am SHORE REG. AT KEYk)RT — A win can send fn position to clinch their second Strikes""tot IS 'out a slow roller dotvn tfie third 'struck out seven in six* innings Shore off winging in "C" race. Raiders, losers of 10 straight pennant tonight if they Koufax, who also struck out base line for a single, scored on of relief. straight, won't toe easy. SHORE REG., 19-7. Major Leagug beat Philadelphia and second the side, in the sixth inning, Wes Parker's ground single to Harrison homered in the sixth place Pittsburgh loses to San wound up with 13 strikeouts, left. ' after Sonny Jackson singled. SO. FREEHOLD AT RARITAN TWP. — Rari- Francisco. The Dodgers and Pi-marking the 14th time this sea- In the fifth, John Roseboro Pointer belted a solo homer in tan needs a victory to stay alive in "B" title chase. rates each have three'games re- son and the 96th time in his ca-singled to short left center and the seventh, his first in the ma- In what should be a close one, RARITAN TWP., maining. eer that he has struck out 10eventually scored from third on jors. Koufax, now 26-9, went into or more batters in a game. Willie Davis' line single to right. Art Shamsky homered for thi 13-7. the game with 294 strikeouts. He, The only run off the arthritic Al Jackson, the Cardinals' start- Reds following a single by Lee JACKSON TWP. AT OCEAN TWP. — If Ocean By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS reacted and passed the 300 lev-left-hander came in the seventh, ing pitcher, was charged with May in the seventh inning. makes fewer mistakes than in last week's loss to Rum NATIONAL LEAGUE New York, Downing (MI) it ion-FH, OCEAN TWP., 14-0. W L Pet. G.B. Chicago, Wages (1-0), night ; RUMSON-FH AT METUCHEN — Rumson-FH LOB Angeles .. 94 65 .591 - Kansas City, Nash (11-1) at De- Pittsburgh .92 67 .579 2 troit, Wilson (1&-11), night i won by a single point last week, while Metuchen San Francisco .90 68 .570 3! Minnesota, Grant (12-13) and. lost by the same margin. Another close one for Philadelphia .85 74 .535 9 Merritt (6-14) at Baltimore; squads in Rumson-FH's Garden State Conference Atlanta 8J 76 .522 11 Palmer (15-9) and McNally (U1 St. Louis 80 79 .501 14 5), 2, twi-nlght :. debut. RUMSON-FH, 20-13. Cincinnati ..IS 82 .478 18 Only games scheduled. "•- ASBURY PARK AT HAMILTON — Here's one Houston .70 89 .440 24 .3 THIS IS OUR TEAM that^could go either way. HAMILTON, 13-7. New York .... 65 9J .411 281 Chicago 59 100 .371 35 LAKEWOOD AT MANASQUAN — Defending Yesterday's Results Freehold f "B" Northern champion Manasquan making debut Los Angeles, 2, St. Louis 1 Houston J, Cincinnati 2 Results i in "B" play against Lakewood's defending "B" 1ST—Put, 1-Mlle, ll,!60, T: M!.«g Only games scheduled Surater Sally (Webiter) 17.00 8.40 s3 Southern tltlists. A dose one. LAKEWOOD, 14-0. Tonight's Games SUiy r»m (Chappfll) (.SO IM Plucky 'Wick (Lncnento) . IM PT. PLEASANT BEACH AT SO. REGIONAL — Houston, Dierker (10-7) at New Also—Frlcka, Mac, Freda CaiUM Stone Haven, Junle Hanover. Stint HoK JND—Pace. l.Mlle. ll.IM. T: SilT.tt With nothing to go on.PT. BEACH, 7-0. York, Fiiher (10-14), night Qnmn-a fllamor (Scott) B.OO 3.«0 J.fj Los Angeles, Osteen (17-13) at Easy I.ravln Olunti) 3.80 ].• PT. PLEASANT BORO AT WALL TWP. — Klllarney Pete olarrlner) I.S Philadelphia, Short (18-10), Also—Wntrh Key, Fnlrilds BrookeE Panthers off to fast start in "C" race. PT. BORO, Caah Onion. Mr. Marathon L, Ftdffl night Herbert, ^ 21-0. San Francisco, Marietta! (246) (Dally Double T Today's THE DAJ1Y BEGHWER Surf, Field and Entries rs out ( nut ui» (n) At UUMUM a,*! (cott«> Surf casters Have Bonanza ByDlCKRIKER were running leven to eight poundi. Monday wn ilbacore SUNRISE WILL COME SLOWLY to New Jersey's bow hunters day, tnd the water was white from Sandy Hook to Monmouth tomorrow as another taw tod arrow detr and bear season gets Beach as tens of albies slashed the school* of baitflah. There started. Robin Hood would receive quite a shock If he could were times when a baseball bat seemed more appropriate than see today's bow hunter. The modern longbow, used for hunting, a fishing rod. Late in the afternoon, when I got into the fish, has a draw ptdl weight of at least 35 and often SO or 60 the albies were picky and often refused to hit the metal hires — .__-. — Drivw)'. • "• pounds. The bow hunter, like his gun-totlng counterpart, will they had been taking with gusto all day. They would almost us. awrsym wni» ...... • Freehold TO 20 YEARS TO PAY Driver's Slaodlngs (As el Wednesday) 1st PAYMENT-JANUARY Sts 1st Id 3d Ave Thomas ...... 117 44 M 27 .417 HIT US HilP YOU CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEITS TagarteUo 17 ( e .414 i i Sse koto ft ess «MS»lldaft all yaw dtbtt Myer ...-, N It S 8 .142 ,' >'*•« sww Mw Monthly pqrniaats. Hnnunsr .1.71 14 11 11 FHIOO ...... _ 54 1 1 11 Ml.m S^86 Proof Jaeger ... „... 71 11 14 11 408 After a really rough day, you'll Welcome the gentle taste in whiskey. Exclu- Caroden i~ a as 11 JM sivewith Bellows Partner. Choice because it is a light blend of our •mootti* MONMOUIH CONSTRUCTION CO. Patadli _ ...88 i n 7 JU 89 Musts ... M i 8 I JM ett top-line whiskeys gentled out with prime grain neutral spirits. That's r HIGHWAY 35 AT HEDDONS CORNER, MIDDLETOWN Hubbard-. -HI u M 21 481 why so many who try it stay with the gentle taste in whiskey tor good. Bellows Partners Choice. Tiy it yourself. Tonight. 741-5060 — 776-6600 Sell Fasti Tot Dally Register Classified. ' ; Morale 'Never Higher* Tlim in Viet Nam Chaplain Lauds Caliber of Youth By JANE FODERARO Monmouth who has seen action in the Vietnamese conflict. lics, six Protestant and a Jewish auxiliary <*»plain. FORT MONMOUTH-Col. Daniel 0. Wilson,. chaplain of He is also the first member of the Army Chaplain Corps to "The real bulk of our work lies in counseling, Chaplain , the Army Electronics Command here, says young soWiers be reassigned to this installation for a. second tour of duty. Wilson «aid. "The chaplain is really the young soldier"! ; today make the transition from civilian life to army life "in He was deputy post chaplain here from 1957 to 1963, confidant. : a remarkable way. • . •',•.'. When he was deputy post chaplain of Fort Monmouth, "Our job is made more effective," he said, "because : we can use the referral agencies at our disposal. "The boy with the long hair turns out very weB," he he had a major role in the planning and construction of the said. The chaplain attributed (ills success to "the high calibre post's modern tri-falth chapel center and it was he who, in •The parish minister can go just so far with a personal jj of American youth." July, 1962, officiated at the first Protestant services held in problem, but we can refer a young man to another poft | the new sanctuary. Recently returned (root a year's tour of duty in Viet Nam, agency, such as the medical center, for treatment. . -»^| Chaplain Wilson said: In his present role as chaplain* of the Army Electronics "Every once in a while we run across a soldier whtf | asks 'Can I Mil a man?1, and we must find a way to help hit| I "I have been in military service for 24 years. This far my Command, Chaplain Wilson says that be "does everything third war. And I have never seen higher morale or esprit de that a parish minister does." • • come to terms.with the problem. '•.'; »,:! corps than there is in Viet Nam. He said that, in addition to services for all denomina- "Men with pacifist attitudes can be reclassified «o *Jj*f | "A man cannot have high morale," he continued, ''with* tions, a great number of religious activities ure ottered to arms-bearing will be kept at a minimum," fee explained. Fo*: f out a pretty good soul that he takes care of." Army families on the post. There are young peoples' groups, instance, he said such a soldier could become a medic. ,-;•» ^ To illustrate the spirit among the men now serving in adult classes, women's groups and choirs, "A chaplain can usually tell if a man's reasons are genuf t Viet Nam, Chaplain Wilson said the number of men who CANTONMENT CHAPEtS Inely religious," Chaplain Wilson said. "A soldier.caii glvft t two fruitful years of service without being embarrassed, ? | re-enlist right in Viet Nam is "amazingly high." In addition to the facilities at the main chapel at Fort DECORATED ' Monmouth, there are two cantonment chapels, one at Camp ' • In discussing the chaplain's role in warfare, Chaplatoj | Chaplain Wilson was the senior Army chaplain in Viet Wood and one on the base. The Signal School uses Meyer Wilson said: . V ••>', § Col. Daniel 0. Wilton Nam. He was decorated for his services there with the Hall auditorium as a religious center for Protestant and "No one can justify war, but he can justify what -fif-right-1 Legion of Merit and the Air Medal He also holds die Bronze Catholic activities. in a given situation. Over the centuries, warfare has change!; J Chaplain of the Army Electronics Command, , Star and two Oak Leaf Clusters. Chaplain Wilson says that, in the near future, a total of but tiie fact that men die in war. has not changed ; Fort Monmouth Chaplain Wilson is the first chaplain assigned to Fort eight chaplains will be assigned to Fort Monmouth—two Catho- therefore, the chaplain's role has not changed." Services in ST. AGNES CATHOLIC ST. JOSEPH'S CATHOLIC METHODIST BIBLE PROTESTANT TRINITY EPISCOPAL Atlantic Highlands Keyport Red Bank Robertaville Matawan Sunday masses are scheduled Sunday Masses will be at 6:30 The Service of Holy Communion The Sunday service will be Sunday services will be: Matins for 6:30, 7:45, 9, 10, and 11 a.m. and 7:30 a.m. and 12:15 p.m. in will be at 8:30 a.m. in Squire at 11 a.m. with Rev. Edwin P. and Holy Communion, 7:45 a.m. and noon. the church; 8:30, 9:45 and 11 a.m.Chapel Services at 9:30 and 11 Spencer officiating. Family Service, 9:15 a.m.; and The sacrament of baptism Is in the school. i.m. will be Worldwide Commun- Holy Eucharist and a sermon by administered every Sunday at 1 ion. Rev. Edward B, Cheney will ST. JOHN'S EPISCOPAL. the rector, Rev. Carroll B. Hall p.m. LUTHERAN OF THE give the Communion Meditation: Little Silver at 11 a.m. REFORMATION 'Seed in Good Soil." Sunday services will be: Holy ST. ANN'S CATHOUC West Long Branch Communion at 6 a.m.; and Holy FIRST BAPTIST Keansburg Worldwide Communion Sun- OLD FIRST CHURCH Eucharist and a sermon by Rev. Long Branch Sunday Masses will be at 7, lay will be observed at the 9:15 American Baptist Convention Canon Stuart F. Gast, rector, at World Wide Communion Sun- I, 9, 10, 11 and noon. ind U a.m. services with Holy United Church of Christ 10 a.m. day will be observed at services Dally Masses will be celebrated Communion. Rev': W. Robert Middletown to be held at 11 a.m. and at 7:45 p.m. The Lord's Supper witl be at 7 and 8 a.m. except on first )swald, pastor, will preach on Sunday worship will be held at METHODIST CBA FATHERS MEET — More than 450 fattiers attended the first meeting of the year! served and Rev. Homer Tricules, Fridays when hours will be at 'Mission of the Church" at both 1 a.m. World wide Communion Eatontown pastor, will deliver a sermon, of the Fathers Club at Christian Brothers Academy, Lincroft, whan plant were mada for | 6:30 and 8 a.m. ervices. iunday will'be observed. Rev. Worldwide Communion Sunday Baptisms will be administered Webb Leonard's communion will be observed at'the Sunday 'The Marriage Supper of the a dance and other events. Officers conferring are,- left to right, Charles Henderson,,!: Lamb." at the first service. He every Sunday at 1 p.m. CHURCH METHODIST meditation is entitled "Walls." service at 10:45 a.m. when Com Rumson, treasurer; Clifford Clark, Lincroft, secretary; Brother A. Stephen, principal;.; will speak on "Doom" at the eve- Fair Haven munion will be served and Rev. Thomas Warshaw, Middletown, president,! and Lawrence Donohue, Eatontown, vice: CENTRAL BAPTIST The Sunday service will be at EMMANUEL BAPTIST ning service. William Joel Wright, pastor, will president. Z Atlantic Highlands .1 a.m. when Holy Communion Atlantic Highlands Jve a sermon, '.'The Meaning GETHSEMANE LUTHERAN Church services are at 11 a.m, ill be served and Rev. Charles Rev. William Bisgrove, former of Holy Communion." -and 7:30 p.m. Youth Fellowship 1. Hankins, pastor, will deliver pastor of New Monmouth Baptist Keyport is at 6:30 p.m. Rev. Harry W. sermon, "An Open Invitation." Church, will be the guest pastor Sunday services will be at 8:30, at the Communion service Sun- REFORMED 9:45 and at 11 a.m. Kraft is pastor. Colts Neck Autumn Recital Series Set BIBLE BAPTIST day at it a.m. Speaking at the ":30 p.m. service will be Vincent The Sunday service will be at CHRISTIAN RELIGIOUS SOCIETY Hazlet Earecksaon, who is studying at 11 a.m. when Holy Communion Colts Neck OF FRIENDS Rev. George J. Elliott will Princeton Theological Seminary. will be served and Rev. Samuel The Sunday service will be al Shrewsbury preach at the Sunday Communion LaPenta will deliver a sermon. At First Methodist Church II a.m. with Rev. Larry Calhoon Sunday meeting is held at U service at 11. Evening worship will be at 7 with Pastor Elliott CALVARY BAPTIST officiating. RED BANK — The ministry of The other three recitals will be At the 325-year-old First Church a.m. speaking. Oceanport METHODIST music and fine arts of First on the remaining Tuesday eve- in Albany, he directs a large' The Sunday service is held at Atlantic Highlands LUTHERAN GOOD SHEPHERD Methodist Church announces its nings in October, semi-professional choir and plays FAITH REFORMED CHRISTIAN SCIENCE The Sunday service will be ai autumn recital series which will one of the largest organs in up- 11 a.m. Rev. Paul Smith will de- Old Bridge Mr. Wells is a native of Grand Hazlet Red Bank liver a Communion Meditation. 11 a.m. when Holy Communion Family Bible Hour will be held begin Tuesday, Oct. 4, at 8 p,m. state New York. '• ; Sunday services will be at 9:30 Rapids, Mich., a graduate of the Sunday services will be The evening service will be at will be offered and Rev.-Harvey Sunday at 9:15 ,a.m. and Family with an organ recital by Robert n^'his Red Bank jeoltal Mi and 11:00 a.m. Holy Communiqn University of Wisconsin, and -has 9:30 and 11 a.m. The lesson sub- T.-3O. Rev. Smith will speak.""'"^ E. VAi saver, pastor, will speak worship service at 10:30. Rev. C. Wells, director, of music at Wells will play Psalm XtX,,Ben*- will be observed at both services. done graduate work at V n i 0 n ject wlil be* "Unreality," . on "World Wide Communion Harley E. Meyer will ^speak on the.Fjrsf Church. In Albany {Re- detto Marcelio; Adagio,'Jose) Rev. Theodore C. Muller wil Sunday." .-..-—.... Theological Seminary's School of MONMOUTH BAPTIST 'The Church-Her Work." formed). Hector Fiooco; Concerto in p preach on "Friendship With Sacred Music in New. York. He GRACE LUTHERAN (Southern Baptist Convention) Other artists appearing in this, Minor, Giuseppe Torelll; two God." was the winner of the 1957 play- Freehold Eatontown HOLMDEL CHURCH COMMUNION BREAKFAST the fourth annual series, will be ing competition of the Wisconsin chorale preludes by J.S. Bach; 1 World Wide Communion Sun- Sunday services will be held Holmdel FREEHOLD — The Rosary Robert Spencer, tenor, of Red Chapter of the American Guild "Vater Unser in Himmelreich,', PRESBYTERIAN day will be observed with Holy at 11 a.m. Rev. M. R. Haire, pas- The Sunday service will be at Society of Our Lady of Mercy. Bank; John Ferris, Harvard Uni- of Organists. and "Wenn wir In hochslen Noth- Rumson Communion at the 8:30 and 11 tor, will preach on "Men of Hon- I a.m. when Rev. John W. Church, Englishtown, will hold a versity, organist; Laurie Gold- en sein;" Fugue In E flat Major Sunday services will be held a.m.' services. Rev. David G. est Report." At- the conclusion Waldon, pastor, will give a Communion breakfast Sunday at schmidt, recorder-player; Wini- Mr. Wells.has served as or- (St. Anne) by J. S. Bach; David at 8:30 and 11 a.m. The Lord's Volk, pastor, will deliver a ser- of the message, newly elected World Wide Communion medita- the Polka Club, after 10 a.m. fred Widener, dancer, and Her- ganist - choirmaster of several Lacey, Prelude on "Georgetown;'1 Supper will be observed and the mon, "One in Christ." deacons will be ordained. The tion. Mass. bert Burtia, organist and harpsi- churches, including St. Uriel the Richard Purvis, Prelude on theme of the meditation, by the evening service will be at 7:30 chordist. Archangel Episcopal in Sea -Girt. "Liebster Jesu;" Miles Martin, Rev. Harvey C. Douie, Jr., will PRESBYTERIAN Rev. Haire will preach on "Let FIRST SPIRITUAL OF REVIVAL MEETING Prelude on "Divinum Mysteri- be "A Posture for Fellowship." Red Bank Man Examine Himself" after DIVINE ROSE LONG BRANCH - Holy Cross um;" Healey Willan, Scherzo In which there will he the obser- G. Minor; John LaMontaine, World wide Communion will be Belford Pentacost Church will sponsor a vance of The Lord's Supper. Unique Pilgrimage Begins Evensong; and Gordon Jacob, CROSS OF GLORY LUTHERAN observed at the 9 and 11 a.m. The Sunday service will be at Revival Camp Meeting Monday l 8 m at the church wl Festal Flourish, ;• • ^ Matawan-Marlboro services. Rev. Ivan H. Barker, 8:15 p.m. with Rev. Phoebe » P- - > Rev. Richard A. Weeden will assistant minister, will assist at REFORMED Dailey officlatimr . Broadway; Services will be con- Sunday in Asbury Park the 9 a.m. service and Rev. Al- This, recital and thos» on OcfL preach on "One Is One" at the New Shrewsbury ducted by Rev. J.B. Walker of ASBURY PARK — The Origi- church organliations will be held, 11, 18 and 25 are open to the pub? Sunday service at 10:30 a.m. in bert T. Woodward, associate min- Sunday services will be at 9:30 Trenton. KING OF KINGS LUTHERAN nal Pilgrim Virgin Statue of Fat- Rev. Marcellino Romagno, pas- lie.' No tickets are, required arid the all-purpose room of the ister, will assist at the 11 a.m. and 10:30 am. Rev. Isaac C. Middletown ima will be enthroned, for three tor, said the church, will be open an .offering will be: taken. v; Strathmore Elementary School. service. Rev. Dr. Charles S. Web-Rottenberg speak on "We Call PRESBYTERIAN Sunday services will be held 8 days—Sunday, Monday and Tues-until 10 p.m. each of the three Holy Communion will be cele- ster will present a brief com- It 'Ecumenical'' Worldwide Shrewsbury day— at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel evenings for those wishing to visit munion meditation. a.m. and at 10:45 a.m. Holy brated. Reception of new mem- Communion Sunday will be ob- Communion will be administered Woldwide Communion will be Catholic Church, Asbury Ave. Our Lady of Fatima. bers and a "Coffee Hour" will be served. New members will be re- observed Sunday with the Sacra- A Triduum will be conducted Mrs. Michele Braun, chairman CHRIST EPISCOPAL at both services. Rev. C. Roger held following the services. ceived into the church. Burkina will preach at both ser- ment of the Lord Supper at the for three days by Msgr. William of Blue Army Cell No. 1 of the Shrewsbury vices. 9:30 and 11 a.m, services. Rev. C. McGrath, who, for the past 18 church, pointed out that Tuesday HOLY TRINITY EVANGELICAL Holy Eucharist will be cele- BAPTIST James R. Steele, pastor, will de- years, has toured more than 700, has been designated World Peace LUTHERAN brated Sunday at 8 a.m. Rev. New Monmouth liver the sermon, "The Men Who000 miles in 125 dioceses, in all Day by Pope Paul VI. Mrs. EMBURY METHODIST Red Bank Ronald G. Albury will preach The Sunday service will be held Came to Dinner— But Couldn't parts of the world, to conduct the Braun said between 2,000 and Little Silver Services on Sunday will be al on 'Man's Pride" at the Parish at 10:45 a.m. Communion will be Stay." unique pilgrimage. 3,000 persons are expected for A Communion service will be 9:15 and H a.m. Holy Commu- Eucharist at 9 a.m. and at the observed. The evening service Evening devotions will be at the Triduum, Including residents held Sunday at 11 a.m. in ob- nion will be celebrated. Rev, 11 a.m. service. will be at 7:45. Rev. Donald N. TRINITY EPISCOPAL 7:30 Tuesday, To conclude the from throughout the. state, as Scofield will speak at both ser- servance of World Wide Com' Red Bank • ••• Triduum, a candle light proces- well as Staten Island and Long Harold Horoberger's sermon will munion Sunday. Rev. Sanford be "Descisions Your Church FIRST PRESBYTERIAN vices. Holy Eucharist will be cele- slon with school children and Island In New York. Matawan M. Haney will deliver a sermon brated Sunday at the 8 a.m. ser- Would Like You to Know." entitled "Who Cares?" Sunday services will be at 8:1 ST. CLEMENTS EPISCOPAL vice. Morning Prayer with an ad- GOSPEL HALL ST. JOHN'S METHODIST and 11 a.m. The Sacrament of the ST. AMBROSE CATHOLIC Belford dress at 9:15 a.m. wilt be followed Long Branch Hazlet . Lord's Supper will be adminis- JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES by a coffee hour. The service Old Bridge The schedule of Sunday ser- Sunday services willbe: The There will be a celebration ol tered during both services and Kingdom Hall at 11 a.m. will be Holy Eucharist Sunday Mass is held at 6:30, vices: 7:40 a.m., Matins; 8 a.m., Lord's Supper at 9:30 and a Gos- Worldwide Communion at Sunday new members will be received in- with a sermon by the rector, 7:30, 8:45, 10 and 11:15 a.m. an Holy Eucharist and sermon; 9:30 Fair Haven pel service at 7 p.m. services at 9:30 and 11 a.m. to the church. "Distress on Earth Accompani- Rev .Canon Charles H. Best. 12:30 p.m. Daily Mass is at 8:30 a.m., Sung Eucharist and sermon There will be an anniversary ser- es the Birth of the Kingdom in a.m. and Saturday Mass at by the Rev. Ralph Edwards en- CHRIST CHURCH UNITY vice at 3:30 p.m., a fellowship BAPTIST Heaven" will he the subject of a.m. Rev. Bernard A. Coen wi titled "Go Up Higher." JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES Asbury Park supper at 5:30 p.m, and an eve- Leonardo Sunday's two part discourse to be (Klndom HaU) The Sunday service will be at ning service at 7 p.m. when Dr. officiate. The Sunday service will be al delivered at 4 p.m. by Theodore ALL SAINTS EPISCOPAL Fair Haven 11 a.m. when Rev. John Manola David Flucfc; M.D. will, eip'eak. 11 a.m. Rev. William Carr wil Winn and George Aljian, Navesink "In Solving Problems, Where will preach on "Rejoice Ever- ST. CLEMENTS CATHOLIC preach on "A New and Livin, Holy Communion will be cele- The "Watchtower" study at Do You Turn for Counsel?" will Matawan-Marlboro Way." The Lord's Supper wi more." ' St. JAMES EPISCOPAL brated at 8 a.m. and 9:30 a.m. 5:10 p.m. concludes the discus- be the Bible talk subject of Mar- Long Branch Sunday Mass is held at 8, 9:31 be observed and the Fellowshi the^e will be a family service. sion, "Jesus, the 'Object of Hos- vin rZ. Hall Sunday at 4 p.m. and 11 a.m. at the- Matawai Offering will be taken at this ser- BAPTIST Low Mass will be Sunday at At 11 a.m., there will be a cele- tility,' Upholds Jehovah's God- The "Watchtower" study follows Matawan 8 aim. and again at 10 a.ml with Grammar School. Rev. Joseph vice. The evening service will be ship." bration of Holy Communion with at 5:10 p.m. considering, "Jeho- Sunday services will be held an address by the rector, Rev. Rucinski will officiate. at 7:30. vah's Witnesses Endure for His sermon by Rev. Harry R. Soren- at 9:45 and 11 a.m. Rev. Paul James Murchison Duncan, sen, rector. Sovereign Godship REFORMED L. Jackson will give a sermon Middletown METHODIST UNTTED PRESBYTERIAN GOOD SHEPHERD LUTHERAN on World Wide Communion en- The Sunday service will bo 11 titled "Around the World in a Oakhurst pnicgiioflle? Lincroft Holmdel-Middletown a.m. The sacrament of Holy Com- Day." Worldwide Communion will be That's the question. Independent FIRST CHURCH World wide Communion service munion will be administered by The Sunday service will be at observed at Sunday services at will be observed with a special Rev. Earl D. Compton. 10:45 a.m. at the Thompson from what, 'and for what? It's es«j OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST METHODIST 9:30 and 11 a.m. Dr. John D. service at 9:30 e.m. for the School, Middletown. Rev. George Blair, pastor, will deliver a medi- sential to know. Whether you're« J. Frank, Jr., will preach on Matawan church school staff. The regula CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY tation and officiate during Com- teen-ager or an adult, your free- 'Being Honest with God." Sunday services willbe held 211 BROAD STREET service will be held at 10:30 a.m. Atlantic Highlands munion. He will be assisted by dom depends on it Chains drop- RED BANK, N. J. Rev. William J. Mills will pre- The Sunday services will be at 8:45 and 11 a.m. .when Rev. Donald T. Phillips, Sr., will ok assistant pastors, Rev. August aid horizons are unlimited for, sent -the sermon "Together." held at 11 a.m. Tine lesson-ser- METHODIST Klebsattel and ' Rev. Donald serve World Wide Communion. those who find the spiritual basis mon is entitled "Unreality." Middletown Vroon. ST. MARK'S EPISCOPAL The Sunnday service V/iU be at There will be a reception of mem- »f life. Hear this public Christian; bers at the second service. CHURCH SERVICES Keansburg ST. GEORGE'S BY-THE-RIVER 10 a.m. when Rev. Wayne Con- CHRIST CHURCH EPISCOPAL Sciencelecture, "How indepentfent Sunday services will be: H0I7 Episcopal rad, pastor, will deliver a medi- -Middletown Communion and sermon at canyoube?"byTHOMAStf Sunday 11:00 m Rumson tation entitled "One Body" and BAYSHORE COMMUNITY Sunday services will be: Holy a.m.; and Eucharist at 9:30 POYSER, member of the Board of Holy Communion will be of- will officiate at Holy Com- East Keansburg Communion in the new church Wednesday 8:15 PM a.m. Rev. John M. Crum, Jr., fered at Sunday services at 8 munion. The lay reader will be Sunday services will be at 11 at 8 a.m.; The Office of Morn- lectureship of The First Church of- rector, will deliver a sermon fol- SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:30 and 11 a.m. Rev. G. P. James Ewln. a.m. when Rev. Richard ing Prayer in the new church at Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Masv lowing this service. R. Schwartz will preach on "The 11:00 A.M. Melllck Belshaw, rector, will de- 9:15 a.m.; and Holy Communion liver a sermon at the 11 a.m AMEZION Blind Spot" and Holy Communion In the old church at 11 a.m. Nursery Available During ST. MARY'S EPISCOPAL service. Red Bank will be served; and at 7:15, also Sunday Services Keyport Worldwide Communion Sunday a Communion service. SALE, LUNCHEON Sunday services begin with WESTMINSTER will be observed at the 11 a.m EATONTOWN - The Woman's Morning Prayer at 7:45 followed PRESBYTERIAN service when Rev..Thomas H. FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD Society of Christian Service of by Holy Communion at 8 a.m. Middletown Coursey, pastor, ttlll deliver a Shrewsbury the Methodist Church of Eaton- READING ROOM I W"Miyi,12NoDnto4:30p.ni. The 9:15 a.m. family service wil Sunday services'will be at 0:15 sermon. Holy Communion will be Sunday services will be Com- town will hold a rummage tale 209 BROAD ST. J ™% S«8H be Holy Communion with a ser- and 10:45 a.m. Rev. Harlan C, offered end there will be a re- munion and reception of new and luncheon Thursday at the FIRST CHURCH mon by the rector, Rev, Henry Durfee will preach on "Dimen- ception for new members. At 4 members at 11 a.m. and a ser- church, The .rummage Bale will OF CHRIST SCIENTIST ' A. Male, Jr. The 11 a.m. service sions for Communing Together. p.m., The Zion Travelers singing vice at 7 p.m..when Rev; J. Wes- be from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and will be Holy Communion and 14 IrcaJl,. K.^.M. i. ALL ARE WELCOME The Sacrament of Holy Commun- group will present an Miniver- ley Clark of Akron, Pa. will be the luncheon from 11 a.m. to 1 sermon. Ion will be observed. sary program. guest speaker. •«. 3—tils r.M. Unit Forupied THE DAILY BECISXER Sept. 30, 1965-13 lAbrary Slates Reading Hours To Celebrate 167th Year A* MIDDLETOWN - h \Cttittt» Iron M to 1»:» am. (a tto HAZLET J- The M7tfc aanrver- i Chonit, a mnHeel fro* K*TAWAH - For tt. third Children1! Library, Main St Par- MM|H(jMle]nMi,«a Anti-Utter Committee has been mm&m m, the laary ot St. John's Methodist from Kortb tasty, will prwieS eitti nay register their children Church, will be celebrated Son- tha program. The director, Cany «pelt»r. Jtt Ms • tele- formed by a group of citizens, Fire* PoMJe Ubriiy will ipowor a pre-tcbool children'* reading is the library at any time. day, with special honor roll Mr- Teabolve wHl lead a male ohtivaCany, vWogustn Vd *Ot shew hi the i ht with forme* Mayor Earl Moody hour, beginning Oct. 14 and con- According to Mm. Herman Ho- vices. a brats quartet, pianist and or-FbUadelphia area and be recent- named ajr president. tinuing through the winter. nig, 57 Ivy Way, games will be World Communion will be cele- ganist. ly spent two yeara serving at Other officers are: William Lar- played between stories and an brated at 9:30 and 11 a.m. ser- a Christian volunteer io missions Each five-week' session will be At 5:30, a fellowship supper ten, vice president; Arthur Lain- limited to a maximum of 18 chil- innovation of stories on records vices. At 1:30 p.m. a musical In Africa. He ha written several brecht, secretary, and Vtetoi dren and will be held on Friday* will be presented program will be held. The Ten-wiU be served. At 7:30 p.m. Dr.books on relit** «* I**"* Lieker, treasurer. The group will appeal to the Township Committee to adopt an anti-litter ordinance, and plan a promotional program to beautify the township/., SAVE YOURSELF ' * FILMS FOR SCHOOLS — Leon Zuckerman, diractor of public relations and advertising for New Jersey Natural SOME DRIVING Gas Company, right, presents four reals of Film, "Michel- angelo—th» Last Giant," to William H. Matkill, presi- Check this list for the location dent of Monmouth County Roundtable, as county super- intendent Earl B. Garrison holds copy of -study materials Everything's Shipshape for teachers. Tha film is offered free by the gas com- With SAVIKGS! pany to all public and parochial schools in the county nearestyou and go see through the Monmouth County Film Library, Belmar. E«fr g«»rati«t lq*ks far guldnn to most who dim MM amrirac* 1 IM ytan Mhlnd ttwn. Twch your youngitin Mrif Hi* volw «f tav- the exciting world of ing rtjulnrly, with d high dlvldind tearing Sovlngi Account gt Marlni Conviction Is Upheld ,yt»w. . , . TRENTON (AP)-The state's examination of a state's wil Annual second highest court yesterday as." Total Electric Living •thldend upheld the drunken driving con- The defendant, tfenry T. Flor Compoundad viction of a man who said a test czyk of Point Pleasant Beach, Quarterly. taken by police to determine the was given a $200 fine and h alcohol content in his blood Dipotlti mod* license was revoked for twi at a Gold Medallion while he was unconscious by Hw I Oth years. earn from 1st. "influenced" the trial court Police said Flqrczyk's cat though it was not introduced in overturned on Feb. 27, 1965, in evidence. Colts Neck Township. A state Home or Apartment. Marine View The Appellate Division of Su-trooper testified that he smelled SAVINGS & LOAN perior Court saldr alcohol on Florczyk's breath Highway 35, Mlddletown when he found the driver pinned You may not want to look any "It is to be noted that: underneath His car. 671-2400 neither the test nor the results further. Total Electric Living isn't just Hwy. 36, Atlantic Hlghlaidi . . .were received in evidence Florczyk claimed the police 291-0100 during the course of the trial. issued a summons charging him with drunken driving on the up-to-date; it's years ahead. There's Llncroft Shopping Centtr The first reference thereto was made, not by the state, but bybasis of the blood test. 842-4400 defense counsel in the cross- The Appellate Division rulec not a flame in the house. Everything's that "this fact in no way af. fects the legality of a convictlor done electrically, even the heating. Visit based solely on adequate evi ROOF or GUTTERS dence independent of the test.' one of the models or call one of the UAKIHO? Carnival Nets custom builders listed below. Squad $30/ Don't let water SHREWSBURY-Another chil Total Electric Custom Homes Franklin Court Apartments Empire Court II damage destroy dren's backyard carnival hi JackFarrell Wall Road Stevens Avenue added $30 more to the treasu: Gold Medallion Homes 2306 Sixth Avenue Spring Lake Heights, NJ. SouthAmboyCity.MJ. your hbme! Call . . . of the Shrewsbury First Aid GUfordParlcNJ. Grand View Apartments Fenimore Apartments Squad. Colony Company Custom Homes MeLaughlin Street 213-2nd Avenue The donors were Steve ,and Cor. Route #35 N. & Surf Road Thomas Giannattasio Point Pleasant Borough, N.J. AsburyFark,NJ. RED BANK Joel Rubinstein and Larry Jack Ortley Beach, Dover Township, N. J. 736 Drum Point Road Leisure Village Fifth Avenue Apartmenu son. BrickTown,NJ. Custom Homes & Apartments RobiMnc. Fifth Avenue' Taking the Mea from a earn! Belmir.NJ. Aluminum Co. SamAHoway Custom Homes Route #70 val that raised $20 for the squad Opposite Shopping Center StreeperKarr.III Govemor'sCouTtApartmenU 741-3939 Free Estimates iJ-akewood.N.J. . •• .= ,,'!W '!« , )•• in June, they held a, similar BrowruMilta,^. Spring Terrace JrLakeinore Drive -. event 'io support the squad's an- . CustomHomes, . Mayfleld Manor Apartmentt* "*"'" New Country Lakes SeaGirt,NJ. TOUR NEIGHBOR IS nual fund drive, just completed Frederick Davies Highway #714 Monmouth Avenue Browns Mills, N.J. Spring Lake Heights, N.J. Heiman Apartments OUR NEXT CUSTOMER 703 Jersey Avenue Sell Fast! The Daily Registei Custom Homes New Country Lakes Apartments Brsnchport Avenue West Deal, Ocean Township, N.J. Long Branch, N.J. Classified. CustomHomes O'Brien & Son, Inc. LakehurstRoad Joseph Hayes PembertonRoad Browns Mills, NJ. Imperial Gardens Browns Mills, NJ. Patricia-Anne Apartments Wall Street' Riverside Drive Custom Homes West Long Branch.KJ. Wall Township, NJ. 101 Avery Avenue Reed Construction Company Long Branch, N J. Inlet Terrace Apartments CustomHomes Springfield Meeting House Road J.Kreisler,Inc. > Riviera Garden Apartments 201 Second Avenue Jobstown, N J. Belmar, NJ. HadleyAvenue Custom Homes Lake Riviera, Inc. Toms River, NJ. Dennis Roe Brick Boulevard JamesburgMsnor • CustomHomes - ' Todd Road BrickTown,NJ. LakeStreet Werner Landmesser Toms River, NJ. Rossmoor Leisure World Jamesburg Borough, NJ. 234 Springfield Avenue Custom Homes ForsgateRoad Jan-Lou Apartments PineBeach,NJ., Tracey&Hankins (Exit 8A, N.J. Turnpike) 680 Second Avenue . CustomHomes 1277 Hooper Avenue Cranbury, N.J. West End, LongBranch,N.J. Robert Lee ' TomsRiyer.NJ. Spring Terrace - , Jay-Del Apartments 99 West River Road Fowler Brothers, Inc. Lanza & Scott 309 Seventh Avenue Rumson, NJ. 4703 Belmar Boulevard AsburyPark,NJ. Spring Street : CustomHomes Wall Township, NJ. Freehold, NJ. June Terrace Apartmenu JoeLuty&Son New Country Lakes Walnut Park Plaza 507 Ocean Avenue Rico Avenue Intercontinental Homes Arctic Equipment Co. Belmar, NJ. Shelter Cove Browns Mills, NJ. Walnut Street Lands End Apartments Toms River, N J. Pineview Homes Toms River, NJ. New Jersey & Boston Avenue* CustomHomes Mike Laino, Inc. Point Pleasant Beach, N J. Anthony Piccola OtterAvenue Manuquan Garden AmrtraentJ 11 Lake Drive Browns Mills, NJ.\^ Total Electric Route #71 iBlakely Avenue Eatontown.NJ. Scores Construction Company Apartments Manssquan,NJ. CustomHomes 710UnionAvenue*» Marthett! Apartments VincentJ.Russo UnionBeachBorodiKNX B.J. Apartments BayAveoue Rumson Shore Estates Silver Bay Uppincott Avenue Atlantic Highlands Borouih, V J. . 45 West River Road Long Branch, NJ. Rumson, N.J.. John Clayton, Inc. Mason Court Silver Bay Drive Bayview Apartments Mason Street Dina Construction Toms River, NJ. Beers Street South Amboy City, N J. < Palmer Avenue Keyport Borough, N J. Ocean Township, NJ. Snug Harbor Monmouth Executive House James J.TuIly Betsy Ross Apartments Ocean Boulevard & Glen HoUy Homes Fischer Boulevard Clark Street South Bath Avenue 610WaysideRoed Toms'River, NJ. Keyport Borough, N J. Long Branch, NJ. . Neptune, NJ. Borden Avenue Apartments Pacelli Apartments Green Island Henry Schwier Total Electric Borden Avenue Williift Church Streets , Green Island Road Point Pleasant Borough, N J. Keansburg Borough, N J. Siiverton.NJ. Gold Medallion Apartments Bridgeview Apartment* Pineview Apartments First Street Stnecali Forbes Mustillo Builders Aberdeen East Club & Apartments PinehuntRoad Tyson Drive Aberdeen Road Keyport Borough, NJ. Matawan Borough, N J. New Egypt, NJ. Fair Haven, NJ. Colony Club Apartments Poplar Gardens P&/Builders, Inc. Cannon Point Village Allaire Road Spring Lake Heights, N J. Poplar Street 3145 Bordentown Avenue Spring Street Keansburg, NJ. South Amboy City, N J. Red Bank, NJ. Dennis Roe Apartments ' Rbva Farms PembertonHeighU Colonial Arms Apartments Cor. Boulevard k Decatur Avenue Rova Farms, Inc. P. HansRottau 1201 Ocean Avenue Seaside Park, NJ. Thompsons Bridge Road third Avenue Sea Bright, NJ. Diplomat Apartments Jackson, NJ. iPemberton, N J. Ocean Boulevard & Crestview Apartments Royal Apartments Phalanx Farms Route #9 Brighton Avenue Sayreville Borough, NJ. Long Branch, NJ. Ocean Park & Beach Avenues Phalanx Road Bradley Beach, NJ. ColtsNeckTownship.NJ. Crestwood Village Elberon Gardens THE DISTINGUISHED TWO TROUSER SUIT South Lincoln Avenue Sanaa Apartments Royal Estates Kokes & Zimmerman Buckalew Avenue OF WOOL WORSTED SHARKSKIN FOR THE Aric Construction Company Route #530 near Railroad Station Whiting, NJ. Elberon, NJ. Jamesburg Borough, N J. Queen Ann Drive San-Bar Apartments BUSINESS MAN WHO RECOGNIZES VALUE Bay Harbour Estates DeerfieldPark Eldorado Apartments Ocean & LaReine Avenues Brick Town, NJ. Westerlea Avenue Hancock Street Bradley Beach, NJ. Seacrest Beach ' Hightstown.NJ. Keansburg Borough, N J. Sandpiper Dunes Apartments Cor. Route #35 N.&New Eaton Crest Club & Apartments Elena Apartments Cor. 24th & Central Avenues Sale *77 Regular $90 . Brunswick Av& Pine Brook and Hope Roads Viola Avenue Berkeley Township, N J, Dover Township, NJ, Eatontown, N.J. >• Keansburg Borough, N J. - • ..-Here'* your chance to save and save handsomely ,_,.—_, Sherwood Forest Fairway Apartments Empire Court Sea Bright Apartments Ocean Avenue '•..' ' • suit. You get 2 pairs of matching trousers for doubly long wear. Main Street Greve Avenue ' North Broadway - SayrevUle Borough, NJ. Sea Bright, NJ. Well tailored of wool -worsted sharkskin that's comfortably ••• - Spring Lake Heights, NJ. South Amboy City, NJ. Spotswood Gardens lightweight for any season and maintains its neat appearance Main Street ': * • 'round the clock. Choose from 2 or 3 button classic and con- Total Electric Homes Spotiwood Borough. N J. temporary styles in dark blue, dark brown, dark gray and bottle Sunset Park Apartmenu ' green. Regulars, shorts, longs; but be quick, not all colors are CustomHomes 1 • Andren Brothers SlOFifthAvenue in all styles and sizes. • • ' ' ' -r \ . .Silver Bay Point JCP*L AsburyPark,NJ. SORRY, NO MAIL OR TELESERVICE. Men's Suits, (Dept. 10), Mall Lev& Bam- Siiverton.NJ. Surf Apartment» Custom Homes JEMEVCEItTMl $ MWKRUr ,•'•. berger's Monnouth and Cherry Hill. Oslmor Associates NWIRtLMHT 215 Washington Avenue MeadowsStreet mmiuMrr Toms River, NJ. NO DOWN PAYMENT, TAKE UP TO 18 MONTHS TO PAY WITH A Windsor Park Town House Apartmenu Toms River, NJ. McClintock & Central Avenues •AMBERGER'S HOMEMAKER'S CREDIT ACCOUNT (plus service charge) imrEtTOi-owNii OECTMC COMMNIIS Ocean Grove, NJ. Of Spermaceti Cove - Sandy Hook State Park Although most visitors to Sandy Hook State Park go there for ocean bathi and fish- ing, an increasing number of visitors to the park are taking advantage of the nan interpre- tive and educational services offered there. • , Gulfed Tours of the Wildlife Sanctuary are conducted by trained Naturalists throughout the year. Tours are available on weekends only by appointment, from September thru Jiine. Tours are tailored to fit the interest of the visitor and the staff of Naturalists include special-"\ ist^ in the field of botany, biology, earth science, ornithology and nature photography. Setf-Giiidad Tours are utilized by park visitors and school groups at all times of the year. Brochures, available at the park office, take a visitor on a numbered tour through a half mile of sand dune and holly forest. A self-guided geological walk covering one mile of identified rocks on the sea wall proven popular with high school earth science classes. Six Nature Lectures have developed from Sandy Hook's Nature Library of 35mm color slides. These lectures are available lor showing without cost to interested groups of 25 or more , persons. • _ . . . • • ""* ' •• •''''•':' ' A number of educational programs are available to the person interested in serious study of the natural sciences. Thai enrichment courses offeredI have received wide acceptance and in- terest. They include an Elementary Educational Program for the Middle+own Township area, a summer school program for students of grades 7-12, and on adult evening program in the fall and spring. • ••••.:.•.-...••., :'. .••.•/'.• ':.-. : •'.'.'<:• • "•:.•' \:'-'-'-,:\^ Events For October, SATURDAY-OCTOBER 1 SUNDAY-OCTOBER ( MONDAY-OCTOBER 17 . MONDAY-OCTOBER U ' . ,'• . Red Bank—8:90 A.M.—Junior Bowling for boys in grades 5 Shrewsbury—Recent work of Sigmund Kozlow, oils and Shrewsbury—Recent work of Sigmund Kozlow, oils and Shrewsbury—Recent work ot Sigmund Koziow, oils and thru 8. Red Bank Recreation Bowling Lanes. pastels. Guild of Creative Art. pastels. Guild of Creative Art. pastels. Guild of Creative Art. . . Red Bank—10:30 A.M.—Junior Bowling for girli In grades 5 Middletown—2:00 P.M. Lancers—Community Center. Red Bank—7:30 P.M.—Baton twirling' instruction for girls Red Bank—8:09 to 10: Ot) P.M.—Red Bank Community Adult thru 8. Red Bank Recreation Bowling Lanes. Middletown—8:00 P.M.—Advanced Square Dancing Club-Com- in grades 5 thru 12. Red Bank High School Gym. : . School Classes. Red Bank High School. Middletown—9:00 A.M.—Children's Ballet Classes-Community munity Center. Red Bank—8:00 to 10:00 P.M.—Red Bank Community Adult Red Bank—7:30 P.M.—Baton twirling instruction for girls Center. School Classes. Red Bank High School. In grades 5 thru 12. Red Bank High School Gym. • • • • Middletown—2:00 P.M.-Junior High School Teen Club-Com- MONDAY OCTOBER 10 Fair Haven-7:3O P.M.-Mens Volley Ball at Knollwood Fair Haven-7:30 P.M.-Men's Volley Ball at Knollwood School munity Center. School. • . School. • " Middletown—«: 00 P.M.—Lancers Dance—Community Center. Shrewsbury—Recent work of Sigmund Kozlow, oils and pastels. Guild of Creative Art. Middletown—6:30 P.M.—Cheerleading Class—Community Center. Middletown-* 30 P.M.-Cheerleadtog Class-Community Cen- SUNDAY-OCTOBER 2 Red Bank—7:30 P.M.—Baton twirling instruction for girls Middletown—8:00 P.M.—Beginning Ballroom Dancing Class- Shrewsbury—4:00-6:00 P.M.—Reception to meet Sigmund Community Center. Mtddletown-i8:00 P.M.-Begirining Ballroom Dancing Class- in grades 5 thru 12. Red Bank. High School Gym. Community Center. . •• Kozlow, recent work in oils and pastels. Guild of Creative Red Bank-8:00 to 10 P.M.-Red Bank Community Adult Middletown—8:00 P.M.—Intermediate Millinery Class—Commu- Art. nity Center.. . Middletown—8: W P.M.—Intermediate Millinery Class-Commu- School Classes. Red Bank High School. ,-nity Center,' • ' ' : ' • Middletown—2:00 P.M.—Lancera—Community Center. Rumson—10:30 A.M.—First Lecture of the Junior League of Middletown—9:00 P.M.—Intermediate Ballroom Dancing Class MONDAY-OCTOBER 1 Community Center. Middletown-9:00 P.M.—Intermediate Ballroom Dancing Clwi Monmouth County annual Lecture Series. Speaker, Walter -Community Center. Red Bank—7:30 PJtf.—Baton twirling instruction for girls Slezak. Congregation B'nai Israeli TUESDAY-OCTOBER 18 in grades S thru 12. Red Bank High School Gym. Fair Haven-7:30 P.M.—Men's Volley Ball at Knollwopd School. TUESDAY-OCTOBER 25 Red Bank—8:00 to 10:00 P.M.—Red Bank Community Adult Middletown—6:30 P.M.—Cheerleading Class—Community Center. Shrewsbury—Recent work of Sigmund Kozlow, oils and School Classes. Red Bank High School. pastels. Guild of Creative Art. Shrewsbury—Recent work of. Sigmund Kozlow, oils and Middletown—8:00 P.M.—Beginning Ballroom Dancing Class- pastels. Guild of Creative Art. . Shrewsbury—Recent work of Sigmund Kozlow, oils and Community Center. Middletown-8:15 P.M.-WE MUST CARE Program, films pastels. Guild of Creative Art. and speakers on the fight against child molestation. Fairview Little Silver—12:30 to 3 P.M.—Film Show and Music, spon- Middletown-8:00 P.M.—Intermediate Millinery Class-Commu- sored by the Senior Citizens Group. Methodist Hall, Church Middlesex-8:45 P.M.—WE- MUST CARE Program, films nity Center. • , School P.T.A. and speakers on the fight against child molestation. Middle- Middletown—2:00 P.M.—Senior Citizens—Community Center. St. . . • ' • : Middletown—9:00 P.M.—Intermediate Ballroom Dancing Class Middletown—2:00 P:M.-Senior Citizens—Community Center. sex Women's Club, Middlesex High School. —Community Center. • Middletown—8:00 P.M.—Beginning Bridge Class—Community Shrewsbury 1:00 P.M.—Informal Tea-Looking Forward 1966- Center. Mid 741 6900 DAY Dial - Copyright—The Rfad B»nk Register, Inc. lfl». 40c PER 741.1110 NISHT SECOND NEWS SECTION '.",»11 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1966 7c PER COPY Coiinty Harcotics Commission Plan Will|& Proposed by Daly FREEHOLtf-Freeholder Mar vise freeholders In the "formula- to carry out, an orderly opera- vided by the Monmouth County backing from civic, service, and cus Daly announced yesterday tion of a comprehensive plan for ttloi n so ththat the commissioii n coulld Citizens Committei e on NNarcot- church groups and out-of-pocket that-he will propose the estab- long range development — function effectively, said Mr. ics, which he explained has done funds, its members have been able to obtain drug rehabilitation lishment of a county Narcotics through utilization of ' federal, D«ly. However, he did not speci- 'extensive research" on, cases for 17 Monmouth County addicts Commission. state, county, local, and,private, fy a budget figure. not in public records. resources — of adequate services Membership would be ' com- Noting that he has been re- — in centers outside Monmouth The proposal — which Is ex- County; pected to be approved by the and flifacilitiei s fof r thhe prevention posed of persons representinpg g a searching the question since county board — will be made at and control of drug addiction and cross-section of the county popu- April, the freeholder, .stressed And for the past year, the com- Tuesday's meeting of the Free- the diagnosis, treatment, and con- lation. The freeholder noted there there is no basis on which to as- mittee has been waging an up- hill battle to obtain approval from holders. trol of addicts." ' are many persons "in an walks sess the seriousness, of the prob- the federal Office of Economic Mr. Daly's move is a result of In addition, the freeholder stat- of life in Monmouth who already lem since official figures are "misleading." In many cases, Opportunity for a $10,000 grant a three-year drive by the Mon- ed, such a commission would ad have shown an active interest in arrests are made on other charg- to conduct a survey of the scope mouth County Citizens Commit- vise the board on "the promo- the narcotics problem and who might be willing to serve on this es and only later is addiction sus- of the county drug problem. tee on Narcotics for official coun- tion, development, establishment, commission." pected or detected. Purpose ot such a survey would ty support in establishing a drug co-ordination, and conduct of uni- treatment and. after care center fled programs-for Pr.event.ondli di- He added that "it would be The citizens committee for the be "black and white" proof of t •' - agnosis, : treatment,, rehabilita- well if this commission could be past three years has been work- what the citizen unit's experience in Monmouth. latest effort tion, and control of drug addiction activated in such time to give ing (or a drug treatment and has proven — that a dire need The committee'mm s in co-operation with federal, It the opportunity to make sug- after care center based on its ex- exists for a drug rehabilitation was Wednesday when seven of state, county, local, and private gestions to the board that might perlence with county illicit drug and after care center here. its members requested Mr. Daly, agencies." be implemented in the 1967 coun- users in their homes, on the The OEO has indicated that county welfare chairman, to ask To Supply Funds' ty budget." streets, in jail, and outof-county until such proof is submitted, YOUNG PEOPLE'S CANDIDATE —Congressman James J. Howard, D-3d, got support the Board of Freeholders to pro. Members of the commission, Mr. Daly told reporters he is rehabilitation centers. there is little hope for federal aid vide a drug rehabilitation-after from two organizations at a congressional reception this week in the Brunswick Inn, to be appointed by the Board of reiving on information on the Without county, state, or fed- in establishing a Monmouth drug care center for county drug abus- Freeholders, would serve without existing drug abuse problem pro- eral support, but some financial center. Eait Brunswick', by tho New Jersey .Democrats. Bruce Robinson of lincroft, right,, presi- ers and apply to the state for a compensation, but the county dent of the Monmouth County Young Democrafe'shakej the congressman's hand. At 75 per cent grant to staff it. would supply the necessary funds eeh'ter is Debbie D'Amio, a leniqr at Neptuno High School who is forming .a Youth To Advise Freeholders Leaving Hess Lone Nazi in Spandau In a prepared statement yes- .forHoward organization to.support Mr. Howard's bid for re-election. At left is War- terday, Mr. Daly said purpose of r»nWiUnh, D»m?bratic candidate for U. S. Senate. the commission would be to ad- Time Running Out in Union Beach Freeing 2 Nazi Convicts BERLIN (AP) - Two more labor and prisoners of war In Von Schirach, 59, lost the fight of the Nuernberg trial war crim- the Nazi production machine. of one eye In prison and was inals go free at midnight tonight, divorced by his wife in 1950. His As they walk out of the sprawl- leaving Rudolf Hess the only Nazi mother was an American, he ing prison into the glare of tele- Democrats Look for Candidate prisoner in West Berlin's Span- claims to be the descendant of vision and camera lights, Hess, 1 dau prison. three signers of the Declaration UNION BEACH — Democrats been annoyed enough at develop-trona] difficulties by the latter ; The GOP theme here will be Hitler's one-time deputy fuehrer, of Independence, and has a (li- here are running out of time ments leading to the deadlock to withdrawal. 'Had Enough?" will become the only inmate of Baldur Von Schirach, the first able inheritance in the United to name a replacement candi- talk freely. Split by factionalism for sev- Mr. Flynn apparently has had the fortress-like prison built by leader of the Hitler youth move- States. It has been held by the date for, James W. Flynn who eral years, Democrats gave them- enough. the Prussians to hold more than Some fear-that if the party is ment and later the Nazi gauleit- U.S. government and it Is likely officially will withdraw his name forced into a write-in campaign selves new problems last week He departs for Pennsylvania er of Vienna, completes a 20- 600. today from the November ballot when John D. Crowley, who head Sunday afternoon. His parting he will take legal action to claim a Republican victory could re- year sentence for complicity in it. ; {or Borough Council election. sult- ed the,victorious Club campaigi comment last night: the murder of 50,000 Austran Hess, 72, is serving a life term for the primary election, lost out "If someone there asks for inciting and carrying out ag- The faction-torn county execu- The committee is slated to Jews and providing slave labor He Is expected to live near tive committee, under municipal to Mr, Sm[th for the leadership, me what party I belong to, I'll for the German war effort. gressive war and plotting against meet again Sunday night as the Club Democrats, still staggering tell, them I've, never voted." peace, The British, French and Munich and write his memoirs. chairman Paul J. Smith, has 4:30 ..p.m. Wednesday .deadline {ailed so far to come vp with from this upset, then learned He has accepted a new posi- Albert Speer, a brilliant archi- Americans have asked 1he Rus- Speer, 61, has been described draws near. 1 a name that can get a majority Mr. Flynn's withdrawal. tion in that state. His family will tect who ran the Third Reich's sians to agree to his transfer to as a model prisoner. Monmouth County Elections join him when his house here is armament industry, has served a smaller jail, but the Russians vote and meet with .the .approval Since then, the most unguarded He kept himself fit by working of Andrew J. O'Bb"sky, the re- Clerk Stanley A. Davis said the secret in town has been that sold. Marcos Daly the same term for 'using slave have shown no sign of in the prison's spacious garden. maining candidate. name of the replacement, en- the replacement must meet with agreeing. In one of the last rem- dorsed by at Jeast six members nants of four-power ocupation co- At least four nanjes — Rich- Mr. O'Bosky's approval oi He will reside with his wife in of the committee, must be pre- else. operation, the four World War II Heidelberg and plans to resume ard M. Bracken, Thomas J. Per- sented to him, in writing, by that i no, Peter G. Walker arid Her- Meanwhile, Republican candi Matawan Board Indicates Allies run Spandau at a cost of his career in architecture, spe- time in order to appear on the dates Charles A. Hart and Ira C. $100,000 annually to the West cializing in house design, his law- ' bert^F. Klein — have been con- ballot. sidered, The Register learned. Werley, considered underdogs be- German, government. yer said. -Reportedly, .only, WM^ Bracket, SJUJUW the deadline pass, be- fore the new hassles developed, • would have been acceptabl•' e fc~ fore a candidate is named, the are moving ahead with campaign U.Mqy.:.QiveIn on Raises iv n 1 plans. : Mr. O'Bosty. ' '"' ••'• '• ' party will faje lhe::$bSJ>«t of .... MATAWAN TOWNSHIP -f- With the pos- field representative for the New Jersey Edu- Secrecy Sworn? conducting a write-In campaign Theduo is expected to ope'rati ShMeTfee sibility of sanctions staring it in the face, it cation Association, for assistance in its bar- ' Although .committee members for Mr, O'Bosky's running mate. from Bayshore Republican 0 appears that the Regional Board of Educa- gaining efforts. reportedly have been "sworn to And, if the replacement fails gaiiization headquarters, sched- tion has changed its tune regarding retroac- Up until last week the board had flatly re- tecrecy" on the entire matter, to meet with Mr. O'Bosky's ap- uled to open next week on Rl tive increases for teachers. fused to renegotiate the current year's sala- Association Approved several Democratic officials have proval, the party will face addi- 36, Keyport. Meeting behind closed doors with a ries. Teachers Association bargaining team for Questioned before last night's meeting on- EATONTOWN - Fifteen mu- ever price was stipulated when 3'/2 hours last night, the board gave indica- whether the association had considered sanc- nicipal Shade Tree Commissions the contract was made, regard- tions that some, if not all, of the $200 raise tions if its demands were not met, Richard last night approved organizatloi less of fluctuations in the market Education Leaders Discuss sought by the instructors will be approved, G. Holler, association president, commented: of an Association of Monmout at the delivery time. A second meeting is scheduled for Wednes- "The possibility of sanctions always County Shade Tree Commission: Two commerlca,l nurserymen day night when the board is expected to agree exists." and- adopted bylaws putting thi told the meeting that the con- to the association proposal or submit a Rumors were rampant among teachers unit in operation, tracts offered mutual advantages. Public Schools' Problems counter offer for consideration by the bargain- yesterday that the association might also John Scott, of Atlantic Higli Burt Flemer, of F&F Nurseries, ing team. call in representatives of the AFL-CIO Federa- lands, who had been narrn Holmdel, and Rick Hinkle, Both men also objected to fed- ATLANTIC CITY (AP) -Pub- Public education in New Jer- Should the latter occur, at least one other tion of Teachers for consultation. Mr. Holler, chairman of the organizing group, Princeton Nurseries, said that erally financed programs being lic schools in New Jersey are sey, h e added, has been meeting would be scheduled if the team re- however, said there is no truth to this. and a committee of four otherr purchases this year will be made run by persons who are strictly confronted today with three key divorced from politics compared quests it, The AFL-CIO federation is an advocate named last spring, will rema from very lean stocks because administrators, rather than problems, that could seriously to many states, "but this pro- The Register learned yesterday that the of teacher strikes as a "last resort",to re- until regular elections ne> on adverse weather conditions. posal could toss it into the polit- trained educators. affect the educational system, teacher.unit has called in Hayden Messner, solve pay disputes. spring. They said that contracts, made ical arena." two prominent educators claim Irwin and Branom deplored for purchases three years or They said these were the pro- Branom pointed out.that both what they termed the low sal- Purpose of the group is to cc ordinate the- general objective: more hence, however, would per- posed creation of a state agency departments would establish aries paid beginning teachers. mit suppliers to plan for delivery (or higher education, encroach- academic standards for their They attributed this as the of the local commissioners, OK Matawan School Plan; promote educational and beauti and provide what was needed ment of the federal government respective systems. prime cause of the teache fication programs, and to im not just what might be on hand. and a "continuing teacher short But both systems actually shortage plaguing the schools. Mr. Shaw reported that Mrs. |ge.. • . . ' prove communications and dis overlap," he said. "Education "Why -should a person Just ou tributlon of public information. Laura Prout, of Asbury Park, _ ;' The educators are Leonard B. is a continuing process that of college become a teacher at a See November Referendum chairman of the county commis- The others on the organizln * jtrwin, iwho will be Installed t°- can't logically be separated." salary of $5,200 a year when MATAWAN TOWNSHIP - school on the Lloyd Rd. site Parochial school construction is sion who has been a medical committee were Neal Munch, day as President of tlie New Both educators also expressed private industry and the federal Schematic plans for the Matawan adjacent to the school now under expected to reduce enrollment patient at Fitkin Hospital, Nep- Jersey Association of School Su- Freehold; Mrs. Peter Cartaiell apprehension that federal aid government are offering begin- Regional School: District's pro- construction, and the construc- by about 430 pupils. tune, for several weeks, hat re- perintendents, and - his Immed- of Rumson: William Duryea, c to schools is "slowly eating away ning salaries at $6,500," Branom posed building program have tion of a 31-teaching stations in- The adjusted enrollment of turned home and is recovering. iate predecessor, Wayne T. Mlddletown Township, and Ar local, contro]." declared. • been approved by the state De- termediate, grades school on the 6,951 will be housed in facilities Branom, superintendent of thur Sass, of Little Silver. .Irwin said the federal govern- The educators pointed out tha partment of Education, Business site authorized by the phase I ref- having a functional capacity ot ichools In Hillside. . . ' 'Lay Away Plan' ment sets up a general formula Administrator Edward J. Scullion erendum and located on Mata- 5,485", a shortage of space for - i Among the Best the teacher-student ratio in the for distributing aid*, but that it state is one to 28. The idea reported today. wan Ave. near Grove St. 1,466 students. The proposed pro- David T. Shaw, superintendent Find Body Both men emphasized in an Dften fails to meet the needs of ratio is one to 20, they said. The approval paves the way Superintendent of Schools Lu- gram will meet this need with a of the Shade Tree Commissipr (nterview that New Jersey pub- local districts. They also noted that higher or consideration by the Division ther A. Foster anticipates an en- primary school housing 580 pupils and executive secretary of the as- lic schools are among the best He said he knew of some dis- draft calls for the war in Viet of Local Government of the fi- rollment of 7,381 students by and an Intermediate school "hous- sociation, presented a suggested Of Infant In the nation with their compre- tricts that received federal mon- Nsm have siphoned oft teach- nancial aspects of the program. 1970-71. He lists existing and un- ing 900. contract for use by local com- hensive academic and vocation- missions in contracting with nu MIDDLETOWN - The body of ies for the purchase of library ers. Branom , said' teachers "The present schedule offers a der-construction facilities as hav- The primary school will consist al programs. books, but the schools lacked.th« should not be exempted from late November date for the lo- ing a maximum capacity of 6,- series on a "lay away plan." newborn girl was found at : : of two kindergartens and 16 reg- Sandy Hook beach yesterday, Nevertheless; they cautioned, shelves on which to put the the draft. cal- referendum," Mr. Scullion re- 956 and a functional capacity of The contract would permil Acting Police Chiel Joseph M. the three problems could disrupt books. ported. ' 5,971. ular classrooms, a multi-purpose towns to contract for purchase McCarthy reported. the schools. Books Purchased The building program, phase The proposed abandonment of. room, library, lunch room, facul- of a certain volume of trees and Dr. C. Malcolm B. Gllman, Irwin, - superintendent of The schools purchased the Three Qualify II of the district's long-range pro- the old Matawan Grammar ty room, health suite and office shrubs in a future year and to county physician, said the baby ichools in Haddon Heights, said books rather than lose the mon^ TRENTON — The state Civil gram, calls for the construction School will reduce capacities bj pay for them by collecting fund; area. The building will house low- died of asphyxia — lack of oxy- the proposal to set up a separate ey, Jlrwin said, with the eventual Service Department said yester- of an 18-room primary grades 540 maximum and 486 functional, in appropriations over a period er elementary grades. gen — and had been in the wa- |tate agency for higher educa- hope of getting money to build day that three Monmouth Coun- of years. ter no more than one to two tion could have "undesirable additional shelves. ty applicants are qualifed for ap- The intermediate school, simi- Mr. Shaw said the intent wa: weeks. political effects." , • Branom complained that the pointment as municipal patrol- lar in facilities to the Lloyd Road to allow purchase of trees i \. He said the agency and the federal government hired pri- man; • • > JV. J?s Nurse Shortage Intermediate School, will contain accordance with a planned sched- He reported that it was a healthy baby and an unusually existing Education Department vate industry to operate educa- Two rated for Raritan Town- 19 regular classrooms, four sci- ule instead of just buying an- large one — 26 inches long as Would be forced to compete fbr tional programs designed for ship were Arthur N. McCallen, ence rooms, three home econom- nually because money was avail- compared to the average of 19 available, funds. public use. 659 Fifth St., and John J. Fether- Is Seen Worsening ics rooms, fine arts, general shop, able, to 20 inches. "Thus the decision would have He said these companies op- ton, 238 Fourth St., both of and remedial instruction rooms. PRINCETON (AP) — A chron- er need for nurses paused by 'Escrow Contracts' "This does not look like a to be made by the governor who erate at a, profit and that "there West Keansburg. Boys' and girls' gyms, audito- : c shortage of nurses in New increased patients loads because rium, library, music and faculty Called "escrow contracts," the poverty case, because the baby after all Is not an educator, but shouldn't be a profit in public Listed for Freehold was George rsey has, become worse this of Medicare; the positions opened room, health suite, guidance and agreements would bind nurseries was well nourished," he com- a politician," he said. education." . Thompson, 68 Mechanic St. ear despite some higher sal- for nurses in many anti-poverty administration offices are includ- that participated to furnish tree mented. aries,, according to a survey by programs, and a new state law ed. at the time delivered for what- Chief McCarthy said the body To Eliminate Hazard Under Navy Bridge the New Jersey Hospital Associa- requiring all schools to have a The school will conform to the vas wrapped in a towel with the tion. registered nurse in attendance. long-range plan of providing equal :owel encased in a piece of plas- Hospitals In New Jersey re- Broader reasons given were intermediate grades level facil- Driver Hurt tic. The body was removed to sponding to the survey indicated general prosperity which makes ities In the northern and southern 'osten Funeral Home, Atlantic Raised Walkway Plan Studied lighlands. that 22.6 per cent of authorized it less necessary for married sections of the school district. nurses to continue to work; a In Accident There was no evidence of FREEHOLD — A raised walk-he has written to Middletown solid construction with a width taff positions fer registered nurs- The program will be financed trend toward earlier marriage LrrTLE SILVER - Victor leatlng, Dr. Gilman said. way, four to five feet off the Township Mayor Ernest Kavalek sufficient for two people to pass, :s are unfilled, compared with by a school district bond issue for women, which ties in with the Soto Maldonado, 35 Broadway The body was found at 5:41 gurface of the street, may be advising him of the development. arid with the necessary guard ").i 'per cent a year ago. of {2,500,000. The cost of' con- preceding reason, and a short- Long Branch, was charged with m. by a fisherman,' Joseph built under the Navy bridge at No date for action was mentioned. rail and wire protection that Vacancies have increased also structing and equipping the pri- age, of teaching facilities which driving without a license after falsh, 197 Joyce Kilmer Ave.< Newman Springs Road, Llncrott, The lack of t\ safer pedestrian would be necessary.' most other categories of mary school is estimated at to eliminate a pedestrian hazard. causes many girls to begin/ their his car crashed into a tree and Jew Brunswick, the chief re- passageway has been a source rained hospital employees. 1718,000. Intermediate school cost A Wn for the construction of "The underpass as it now ex- nursing education and careers in utility pole. crted. of complaint from Lincroft resi More money apparently is not is placed at $1,557,000. Fees, the .Monmouth County highway ists presents a very dangerous other states. Police Chief John H. Foster He said the tide was north to dents for several years. " quick solution, an association bonding costs, and contingencies is being prepared and will be condition for those persons who said Mr. Maldonado was driving outh, Indicating a possibility A year ago, in response to sug- pokesman said yesterday in dis- State officials are studying the iccount for the $225,000 balance. studied by Henry Ney, county have to walk there. Mr. Ney will east on Silverside Ave. when lat it could have floated down gestions from some residents, the mssing.the, survey• results. problem including that of train- "The school district's excess traffic safety engineer. If okayed,, evaluate'the'fclan in light of 1 his car apparently hit a puddle, le "Chapel Hill channel" to the . freeholders painted lines along Strikes by nurses in New York ing facilities, the spokesman )f debt limitations presented a the work would be done by order the curb to indicate an area for accident potential. said, and some recommendations went out of control, crashed in- andy Hook area, from New ity and San Francisco this sum- limited financial ability to sup- ork Harbor. i Of the Board of Freeholders. walking and to give a warning to "It U hoped i that the walkway are expected soon. to the tree, continued a short ner apparently was a factor be- port new school construction and Patrolman Ronald Lundrlgan Freeholder Marcus Daly, who motorists.' But it has not proven can be constructed in such a distance and hit the pole. ilnd substantial pay raises grant- Another attack on the prqblem called for emphasis on economi- id Detective William Halliday lives in Lincroft, said yesterday satisfactory, Mr. Daly said. way as to^not, Interfere'With the He was treated and released id'to nurses recently, by some which seems to be producing re- cal procedures while giving strong re. investigating.. -He declared: vehicular traffic. It would, of few Jersey hospitals. But the at Monmouth Medical Center, Price's Restaurant-Long Branch ults, he said, is the statewide considerations to providing for Long Branch., "The county traffic department course, give residents a greater lortage continues to expand. refresher training program for an excellent educational pro- Munu, All Colon Banquet and wedding parties Is proceeding to develop a plan sense of security for the children Some immediate causes cited Capt. Walter Stearns and Spe- You plck'em, we'll dlg'em. $1 inactive nurses, now in its sec- gram," Board President John J. cial Officer Warren Herbert in- catered 222-7200. (Adv.) in r the underpass. It will be of and themselves." by the association were the great* ond year. Bradley stated. plant. >R»ttman, 7 Bridge Rd., vestigated, Little Sliver. 747-44B. , (AAJ f Taylor 16—Friday, Sept. 30, 1966 THE DAILY REGISTER Red Bank Area MLS Gives Talk 19 Northern Monmouth For Realtors Closes 9 Transactions 1 BRIELLE — Harry A. "Bud RED BANK — Members of Egan is with Merrill' Lynch, Board of Education. Mrs. Taylor, president of the New Jei Area Homes Are Sold the Red Bank Area Multiple List- Pierce, Fenner and Smith of New Dorothy Rodgers of the Russell ley Association of Real Estate M. Borus Agency, Fair Haven, Bell Telephone Laboratories, Mr. ing "service this week' reportlyork City. The Egans have three Boards, speaking at the annual M1DDLETOWN — Ninetee: J. Doyle, who are moving with listed the property, and it was Breunissen having been trans- the closings of nine realty sales. young children. The Bourbeaus meeting of the Monmouth Coun- homes in the northern Monmout their two children to Saigon, sold by Theresa Smith of Walker ferred to the Chicago area. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Trelease moved to Rochester, N.Y., where ty Board of Realtors at t h c County area changed ownership South Viet Nlm. Mr. Doyle is and Walker's Holmdel office. associated with Chase Manhat- have moved from Chicago, III., Mr. Bourbeau is associated with Manasquan River Golf and Coun- this week through the realtor Mr. and Mrs. James Zani and The former home of Mr. and tan Bank. Frank A. Miller of to their new home on Brookslde Eastman Kodak Co. Joseph P. try Club last week urged realtors members of Northern Monmouth their two boys have moved from Mrs. Edwdrd M. Just at 63 Malta Van's Agency, Matawan, handled Dr., Rumson, designed by Mr. | Foley of the Russell M. Borus to take advantage of the edu- Multiple Listing Service. Hialcah Dr., to the home which Ter., Middletown, has been pur- negotiations < for the purchase JAgency, Fair Haven, listed the cational opportunities offered b; they purchased on Creamery Rd., Treleaie and Gerard A. Barba, shased by Miss Norms Hall, who Four of the seven sales re- The home had been listed through Rob-|property tnd1 it was sol^by The the state and local boards and ti both in Colts Neck, and on which arcWteVIind Is associated with the Book Store ported by Van's Agency, Mata Sterling Thompson and Associ Dowstra Agency of Red Bank. keep informed of the legislate they plan to build a large addi- ert Lee, Rumson builder. Mr. it Monmouth College, Long wan, were negotiated through ates, Matawan. and (their problems affect!n tion. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Aspdm. Trelease is with Estey Metal Mr. and Mrs. John F. Ames Branch. Mr. and Mrs. 'Just moved Marvin Eisenberg of that agency Products Co. of Red Bank, which|have moved from Cheshire, their business. the former owners, have moved Sold by Potere, Inc., of Eliza- to Dallas, Tex. The property was Five of the sales reported were to Middletown. Mr. Aspdin is as- is building a new plant on Shaf- Conn. with their two children beth, was the split level home listed with members of MLS by The Realtor who prepare: through the Holmdel office or sociated with The McGowan to Rd. in New Shrewsbury. to 8J Leedsville Dr., Lincroft, at 25 Calt Dr.. Hazlet, to Mr. Eugene Fitzpatrick of Walker himself for tomorrow's prob- Walker & Walker. Agency, Red Bank. J. Donald There are three children at home. which was purchased from Mr. and Mra. Daniel O'Mara. Eugene and Walker, Holmdel, and sold lems," he said, "is the one whi Forty-eight hours alter thi Roche, Colts Neck realtor, ef- The oldest son. James, teaches| d Mrs. John A. Herndon, who A. FiUpatrick of Walker and' an by William M. Hall of Hall Bros., is successful. In buying-or sell;n ranch home of Mr. and Mrs fected the sale of the property. at Star of the Sea Academy, moved to NapiervMe,'111. Mr, Walker, Holmdel. listed the Mrs. Ray Smith Fair Haven, real estate, there are three ba Raymond J. Shaw at 73 Ford Long Branch. Kenneth L. Hahn|Ames is with the Scovill Manu Dr. and Mrs. Alan Lowenstein property and arranged for its tic rules which you should follow: ham, Dr., Matawan, was listed of Walker and Walker, Shrews factoring Company, New York are residing in the farm house sale. Mr. O'Mara is a certified Know your product; know you by Mr. Eisenberg, he arranged bury, handled negotiations. City. Vivian Sauvage of Hall style home which they have pur- public accountant. The family prospect, and get excited aboui .for its sale. Purchasers are Mr. Joins eiicy Capt. and Mrs. William B. Vau-Bros., Fair Haven,' listed the chased on Hartshorne Rd. in Lo- formerly resided on Staten Is- both." jand Mrs. George Bayron, who RED BANK — Consuelo S. trinot of New York City have pur- property and it was sold by Ei- Rite-way cust from Mr. and Mrs. Richard land. 1 Mr. Taylor reviewed the formerly lived in Brooklyn. Mr. D. S. Bryan. Purchase of the imith has become affiliated with chased a home at 44 Heights wood A" Armstrong of the agency complishments of the state asso- and Mrs. Shaw have been trans- home was arranged through Mrs. Mr. and Mra. Wallace H. Gil- he Jean K. Irwin real estate of-, Ter.,MkWletown,formerlyowned of the same name ip Little Sil- ferred to Dallas, Tex., by Shell Ham of Asbury Park have pur- by Mr. and • Mrs. Robert C. CORRIGANS ciation, which, he said, has 39 Mari L. Runyon of Joseph G. Ice at Marine Park "On the local boards in its membership. Oil Company. chased a lot on Reid's Hill Rd., Lee, who have moved with their Dr. and Mrs. Edgar S. Zim- McCue, Rumson realtor and lavesink River" in Irwin Yacht Among other things, he said, the Also sold through Mr. Eisen member of Red Bank Area MLS. Marlboro, from Mr. and Mrs. three children to Napterville, 111., merman, formerly of Bradley PLUMBING ITorks. . state association has sponsored a berg was the colonial home of Edward J. Dodd of (hat agency Allan Grayzel of Little Silver. where Mr. Lee was transferred Beach, have purchased a home HEATING bill providing for more rigid qual- Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Buckley had listed the property for sale. Arrangements were handled She will specialize in residen- by Bell Telephone Laboratories. at 7 Oak La., in Rumson. Dr. through Donald Van Note of Carl ification requirements in the at 441 Line Rd. in the Strathmore Dr. Lowenstein has maintained ial and waterfront property sales Vautrinot, a port captain|amme'rman7'an "orthodontist, re- 24-HR. SERVICE granting of licenses to real es- section of Matawan. Mr. and Mrs. a dental practice on Tindall Rd., F. Zellers, Holmdel realtor. Mr. throughout Monmouth County. for Esso International, has just ceived degrees'from Fairleigh tate brokers, and has played a Donald E. Tucker from Logan- Middletown, for a number of and Mrs. Gilliam anticipate returned with his family from Dickinson and Georgetown Uni- A resident of Monmouth Coun- small part in the defeat of the ville, Ga., are the new residents. years. building a home there in the Epsom Surry, England. There veraty, and maintains offices in controversial Title IV in the Civi' They are the parents of a son spring. for 20 years, she has been are three children. The property Lincroft and Rumson. He and his Mr. and Mrs. Steven Martin Rights Bill. and daughter. Mr. Tucker is as- was listed by Mr. Hahn of Walk- wife Judith have one son, Mi- and their three children have From Wisconsin ctive in scouting, a member of sociated with Merck Chemical er and Walker and sold by Frank chael, who attends the Deane- moved from Bronx, N.Y., to the Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. J»b- PTA groups and the Junior Ser- Company. Mr. and Mrs. Buckley A. Miller of Van's Agency, a Porter School in Rumson. The CUT Drazln, Ross Open home which they have purchased lonicky have come from Brook- have moved with their live chil- ce League. member of Northern Monmouth property was formerly owned by at 2 Central Ave., Port Mon- field, Wis., to occupy the home Real Estate Agency dren to Boston, Mass. Frank A. MLS cooperating with members Mrs. Elizabeth H. Hurd, who re- mouth. Sale of the home was which they have purchased at Mrs. Smith and her husband, Miller, also of Van's Agency, of Red Bank Area MLS. sides in the Hamiltonian Apart- EATONTOWN - Robert Dra negotiated for the owner, Charles 37 Avalon La., Matawan. They lay, and their three children re- tin and ATvin Ross have an- iad listed the home for sale. Mr. and Mrs. James E. Egan, ments, Monmouth Beach. Jay E. Kolossa, Sr., of Hopelawn. by are the parents of three boys de at 5 laurel La., Rumson. Mr. and Mrs. Rene Jacot have formerly of Hazlet, have pur- Holly of Glazebrook Associates, nounced formation of the Drazin- Raymond Schooley of The Kir- nd a girl. Mr. Jablonicky is FUEL jold their ranch home at 18 Over- heir children attend Rumson- chased the former home of Mr. |Rumson, handled the sale. Ross Agency, a real estate firm, wan Co., Raritan office. Mr. Ko-with J.C. Penny. Mr. and Mrs. look Dr., Holmdel, and moved air Haven Regional and For- ind Mrs. Richard Bourbeau at with offices in the Surrey Build lossa listed the property for sale John R. Skvarla, the former Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Thic- with their two children to Argen- 94 Linden Dr., Fair Haven, Mr. ing. 269 Rt. 35. with Carlton H. Poling, Keyport owners, listed and sold estdale Schools, Rumson. mer of Teaneck have purchased tina, S.A., where Mr. Jacot is The firm will specialize in realtor. Mr. Martin is employed their home through Mr. Eisen- the former home of Mr. and Mrs. associated with Alcan Aluminum tales, sale-leasebacks and invest- in New York as a machinist. berg of Van's Agency.' William Orr at 43 Leland Ter., BILLS ment properties and financing. Jompany of Canada. Joseph J. New Shrewsbury. Mr. Thiemer Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. De- Most Changes in New VW Howard of Walker and Walker, Also listed and sold through ts with Bell Telephone Laborator- iroat have sold their ranch home Holmdel, arranged for the sale Mr. Eisenberg was the Cape Cod ies in Holmdel, and purchased with an at 6 Stephen St., .Raritan Town- {BEFORE COLD WEATHER! of the home to Mr. and Mrs. home at 36 Idlewild La., Mata- Wagons, Trucks Are Inside the property through T.E. Hall, ship to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mai- SETS IN Harold F. Warner, who have wan, for Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jr., of the Ted Hall Agency, Fair zahn and have moved to Stony, ORANGEBURG, N.Y. — But outwardly, Mr. Stanton AMERICAN :ome here with their two chil- ohnson, who are residing with ;Haven, just one week after it Point, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. olkswagen's bus-like station:said, in keeping with Volkswag- Jren from Boxford, Mass. Mr. their three children in Old agon and box-shaped trucks' en's "improve the car but don't had been listed by Mrs. Gloria Malzahn and their two Bridge. Mr. and Mrs. William STANDARD SEAL YOUR Warner is manager of Memory [corporate a number of im- change its appearance" philoso- Niison of Walker and Walker, :hildren formerly resided at '. Degnan, parents of five, are roducts for Indiana General ovements for 1967, according phy, the 1967 panel and pickup Shrewsbury. The Orrs have Locust Grove Trailer Park, Ha^ the new owners. The family for- ^>rp., Keasbey. Listing of the Arthur Stanton, president of trucks and various station wag- moved to California. DRIVEWAY lome was through Mrs. Dorothy let. Mr. Malzahn is with Tom's merly lived in Queens Village, GAS odd-Wide Volkswagen Corp., on models look virtually the with COSMICOAT Ford, Keyport. Mrs. Theresa D. V.Y. Mr. Degnan is with Rheem. Mr. and Mrs. Loren B. Scarsi lewman of the Walker and Walk- /W distributors in New York, same as they did last year. r office. Smith of Walker and Walker, The new Tanch house on Mar- have moved from Allenhurst to PratKtt ajcrint dtttnic- ew Jersey and Connecticut. their home at 79-81 Branch Ave., liei by' fa, oil aid other Holmdel, handled the transaction gin Rd., Middletown, lias been At least one improvement will BOILER harmful «l«mM« . . . addi Here From Murray Hill on the home which had been sold by Mrs. Olga Snoddy of Among them, he noted, are show up on the outside, after Red Bank, formerly owned by ytan t» pawiMRt III*. Mr. and Mrs. Josiah L. Merrill listed through Sterling Thomp- Walker and Walker, Holmdel, to eavyduty 12-volt electrical dark—brighter headlights on all Mr. and Mrs. George Coudrier, Irom Murray Hill are occupying son and Associates, Matawan. Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas J. Mall- stem, improved transmission [truck and station wagon models, who moved to Tihton Ave., New • faptrt appllcarioB the ranch home at 3 Blue Hill 85-Year-old House ria, recently of Yonkers, N.Y. tio in third gear and numberldue to the new 12-volt electftcal I Shrewsbury. Mr. Scarsi is with • OMiatMd protection -Jr., Holmdel, which they pur- The 85-year-old colonial farm Mr. Malizia is associated with new convenience and safety system. ' Jersey Central Power and Light chased through Donald Van Note house at 190 Harmony Rd., Mid-Herman Volk and Co., New 'eatures for both drivers and Co. Frank W. McKenna, Jr., Red f Carl F. Zellers, Holmdel, and Among safety and convenience Bank, listed the property and it dletown, has been Bold by Mr, York City. They are the parents passengers. features added for 1967 are re- MAYER •hich had been listed by Mr. and Mrs. Allen W. Roberts of a son and daughter. It was was sold by George Nemeth of 'an Note. Mr. and Mrs. John W. designed door latches on the the Weart-Nemeth Agency, Red through Calvin G. R. Ohlsen of built by Norco Construction, Mid- >>iinty Grand Jury | front doors, soft rubber knobs for ASPHALT SEALING CO. ireunissen are the former own- dletown builders. ' Bank. Navesink Associates, Middletown. the dash panel controls and lap-j trs. Both Mr. Merrill and Mr. The new residents are Mr. and Association Meets Mr. and Mrs. Raymond 741-3227 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Capan- type seat belts. From ireunissen are associated with Mrs. Joseph Brown and their FREEHOLD —The Monmouth Schleich have moved with their zan and their two sons are new The door over the gas tank son from Liberty Corners to their children, formerly of East Keans- lounty Grand Jury Association 00 residents of the raised ranch filter neck Is now held closed home at 105 Parkview Ter., Lin- burg. Mr. and Mrs. Roberts have home at 29 Court!and Dr., Ha* teld its first meeting of the 1966- been transferred to Wheaton, by a spring catch which replaces croft, formerly owned by Mr. et, which they purchased 967 season Monday. the lock requiring an oversized and Mrs. Richard Dottcr. Mr. '345 III., by Bell Telephone Labora- through Mrs. Bertha Foley of tories and listed their home Committee chairmen appointed key. The lockable storage com Schleich is with Bell Telephone plus Installation Walker and Walker, Holmdel, partment between-the-axles and Laboratories, Holmdel. Mr. and ihrough Mrs. Peggy Hulsberg of and which had been listed by y Mrs. H. A. Pujals, president, beneath the cargo deck of theJMrs. Dotter have moved to Lan- Navesink Associates. Mrs. Olga Snoddy of that office. were: Membership, Mrs. I. S. Clean, quiet, economical. pickup truck now is equipped caster, Pa., where Mr. Dotter is The previous owners, Mr. and ipellman, and legislative, Wil- Lifetime cast iron con> Purchasers of the Cape Cod with a push-button latch. associated with the Lancaster home at 52 Ayrmont La., Mata- Mrs. Malcolm Thompson, have iam Gillis. structisn. Call for a free wan. are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph moved to Pennsylvania with their Plans were made for future estimate. Convenient Four children. Mr. Thompson is F. Bryne who have moved here projects. Mr. Gillis is to report terms. • with their three children from with Trans-American Insurance George C. Koeppel & Son, Inc. an apartment on Sutton Dr., Co. Mr. Capanzan is the new the Nov. 28 meeting on the • OFFICE • Plumbing « Hnlln«-G.E. Appllincu Matawan. Mr. Byrne is assistant owner of the Gulf Station on Rt. iresent status of Grand Jury ALCOA 141 First An. All. Highlands manager of Winter Stamp. For- 35, Hazlet! PKOM If 1-0810 presentments which have been mer owners are Mr. and Mrs. John, 127 OAKLAND ST. The home at 91 Florence Ave., handed down during the past Leonardo, formerly owned by /ear. Arrangements for the an- SIDING RED BANK, N. J. Mrs. Elizabeth Kosma of Sum- iual brunch to be held in De- mit, has been sold to Mr. and WM. "BUD" MAZZA cember are being handled by Mrs. F. Oster of Port Monmouth. • Aluminum Gutters and Leaden 747-2706 to. S. Sestito. They are parents of a son. Mr. • Aluminum Windows and Doers "your modtrnlzotloR Oster is with Robert Forman, Inc. Purchase of the home was FOR FREE ESTIMATE CALL 741-5535 headquarter*" negotiated through Harry Leigh- Sell Fastt The Dailf Register EVENINGS CALL 741-4638 ton of The Kirwan Company, Classified. LAST 2 DAYS] Raritan office. Frank A. Miller of Van's Agen- FINAL DAY SATURDAY at 5:30 cy, Matawan, listed and sold within four days the colonial home of Mr., and Mrs. Daniel Dorney at 7 Fawn PI., Matawan, Lawna-maT Mr. Dorney is a salesman with Continental Can Co. and has been transferred out of state. FREE Also sold through Mr. Miller was the ranch home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Smith at 653 Lloyd Rd. in the Strathmore sec- GUARANTEES INSTALLATION tion of Matawan. Mr. and Mrs Smith are residing in Slmsbury, WHITE Conn. A GREENER, MORE BEAUTIFUL HEAVY DUTY CLU Rating Introductory For Canfield FALL SAN FRANCISCO, Calif.-Alan D. Canfield, formerly of Red SPECIAL Bank and now agency director Ttl Bit: here with The Guardian Life In- SEEDING surance Company of America, PRICES INCLUDE (lib. pir 1,000 H.IL) was awarded the Chartered. Life Costs Less Than FERTILIZATION Underwriter designation at na- ALL LABOR AND (35-5-10 plul 38% U.F.) "HUSKEE" nM. UWHII nun it~ .. v «w (for up to 4,000 iq. tional conferment exercises of the TOWER AERATION ft. irn. Each add1! American College of Life Under- ALL MATERIALS: ^t-Yourself F0WH ROLLING 1000 M- It. $9.) ALUMINUM COMBINATION writers in Boston, Mass., Sept. 8. t Mk. A A graduate of Rumson High STORM and SCREEN WINDOW School and the College of William > :>". YEAR 'ROUND GUARANTEE With our and Mary, Mr. Canfield began "GREENSKEEPER CARE" PROGRAM his insurance career in Red Bank LAWN CONDITIONING MIX tmiNa in the George A. Hollywood Agen- • !EEO(1*. pn • FHTILIUTIOH cy in 1955. There, he earned 1,000 H. It.) (33.5.10 ptuif • FERTILIZATION 38%U.F.) membership in both the Leaders SPECIAL (U-3-lophn • P«E-EM!RC[HCt Club and the President's Club of UK U.F.) CMBCRUS INSTALLED • CDUB.MOOFINO CONItOl The Guardian Life. • rOWEK • WEED CONldOl SEED (lib. per 100010, ft) AEMTIOH • POWEH Mr. Canfield is married to the ION • WU. UMTI0N former Jeanne Plant of Rumson 0 plus, • MU • STABILIZER BAR FOR EXTRA SPOT WEED dONTROL 3 STRENGTH • GRUB-PROOHHQ • POWER AERATION SUMMM • CLEANS FROM INSIDE Earns Captaincy • rOWEIRDLUNl • FEKTIIIZATION KADENA, Okinawa — Thomas • TRIPLE TRACK T. Stames, Jr., son of Mr. and • MINIMUM SIX WINDOWS Mrs, Thomas T. Stames, Sr., cf • FULLY WEATHER STRIPPED 304 Main St., Matawan, N.J., has been promoted to captain in the U.S. Air Flrce. Capt. Stames Is assistant chief of administrative services at Ka PROWN'S dena. He is a member of the Strategic Air Command, Amerl. ca's long-range nuclear bomber LAWN A MAT of MONMOUTH 32 Broad Street Red Bank and missile force. The captain, a graduate of Ma- DAILY 8 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY TIL 9 tawan High School, was commit 291-1013 sioncd in 1962 upon completion 741-3647 of Officer Candidate School. DWEOS FETEQ Friday, Sept 30, 1966-17 Signal School Brigade Has THE DAILY BEGISTER ^ M M*»on Dr, 10 Sales Reported «naer jwttu *t fee hoine of New Chief, Headquarters Sett Turt %» Dtiiy Register «r. tad Mrs. Bdwtal KovsL PORT («3HMOtrm- i&. Celt•«f«| I. MMI ISCOVER 53 rusuciwtKB irOUND With >|K» i ou and bi«fik and Brown tu*. Cotter. YOU'RE AHEAD IN A (Mere CtaMtOtd Adi THE BIG JfiSf LOST — tide Well* UrrUr. Browt Oa Ti» Next Fefe) nialtr. Bewtrt. tll-tm. ADVANTAGES AUTOTFOR SALE AVTO5 FOR SALE of '67 FORD! LEASING! HERE NOW... 100% GUARANTEE ON ALL USED CAftS TOTAL FINANCING'- ONE PAYMENT CREDIT WHY BUY? NEW STYLING — NEW SAFETY SPECIAL RATES AND TERMS TO HOMEOWNERS OM* S27II •M Cwdltae •M ctew »"•» FORD HAS A BETTER IDEA! Full Powtr. HX»r Horttop. Air ImpoB. 4flO«r Hm*; top. Air Corn). Full- co«4. * Way SMI. See our advertisement on Page 4 '44 Cervfir $H»| ORDER YOUR '67 CAR NOW! •« OKs $24*1 •41 C«e-Ilta« M4« •tack Whlta Top. : •'«''• >-Ooor Hardtop. Coup* Dtville. Air . Real Pew. Full Powtr. Cond. All, Itw «tra. (ANY MAKE OR MODEL) '41 Ckevy lltcoyne Stotlw Wan. '44 C«4lllM $«H Ixtr* am. • t Pouengtr Sfotlon ENJOY WORRY-FREE DRIVING 4-Door HordhP. Air ' Low W Wgn. Full fewer. ^ Cend. HoeK vinyl too. •M Ckwralet LEASING Offer* you th« LEASING Firmly estab- •a nm •44 Cdlllec - *17« 5-Docr Hardlofi. Air |tl Air tta. wgn. new car *nd model of your choice, lishes a fixed monthly budget which CatollM. Pull power. g 5t«Hon Cond. Full Powtr. equipped to your specifications. Our eliminates unfoneen expenses and Wgn. Full Ptwtr. leaie plan is designed to fit the predetermines yearly transportation •*4 oi*s sun •44 CWIIIe* f»» tins needs of every requirement, from F-U. Air Cond. Full I-D«er Hardtop. .Full «to. wgn. po costs. Power. 4-Or. Horttop, power. Low Mlle«9«. one car to a fleet of units. Enter our contest for 5,797 valuable prizes clean, •M oi«i ii m •44 CedlhM HIM ' 'Ml. White, Black M3»or Hordtoo. Full . impolo/ ifloof Hot*... LEASING Eliminates LEASING Makes avail. fop. Full Power. ' A-l USED CARS AT FALL PRICES Com. Full power. Power. Rtal Clean. hefdechei and expenses such as in- able to you the personnel with the ' " lutra Mm*. . .'• terest and carry charges; rapid de- •el retria* I17H '41 Cadlllee $11*1 experience and know-how to advise ItlAlr. Autonwtic preciation, high insurance rates, pur- 1964 LINCOLN Continental, Air Cond. $2995 Cololliw 'Station Wgn. Conv. Full P»wer, on any automotive problems. Over » Panengtr. LwttMr Interior;- chase and disposal problems, and ser- Rnl Clton. 41 years of automobile experience. vice, repairs, tires, ate. 1963 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille $2295 •»3 tattle* 11*11 '44 CwlllkK IU» Bonnivillfe Conv. Coupe, black wllti Station wooon. ' Ml l"ow»r. wMte top, full power. 'CXTTQ FIR MO. 1965 MUSTANG $1595 '67 CADILLAC num. '67 FORD $125 $91 1964 GALAXIE Convertible $1495 OVER 100 OTHER FINE CARS TO CHOOSE FROM '47 CHEVROLET $89 '67 VALIANT IMPALA $79 1964 GALAXIE Two-Door Hardtop $1495 AUTO and 35 other assorted makes and models. AUTO SALES MONMOUtH COUNTY'S UR^EST FORD DEALER EACOAST LEASING Ntw Jtrwr Over 41 Yean 210 NEWMAN SPRINGS ROAD , RED, IANK 210 NEWMAN SPRINGS RD. RED BANK MOUNT-ENGLISH EXIT 109 GARDEN STATE PARKWAY (RID IANK) ~. 741-1234 SINCE 1904 MONMOUTH * MAPLE AYE., RED BANK—741-6000 741-1234 ^ KROLL MILLION DOLLAR OVER 250 NEW & USED CARS TO i FINANCE MEN ON PREMISES • 11 FINANCE PUNS 1st PAYMENT NOV. '66 • 2-YEAR GUARANTEE ON ALL NEW and USED CARS BIGGEST SELECTION OF NEW '66 MUSTANGS IN THE EAST FORDS FORDS CHEVYS CHEVYS COMPACTS OTHERS OTHERS ••5 MIRD '65 MUSTANG $ 'iS CHEV. •64 CHEV. '64 CHEV. '66 LINCOLN '61 RAMILIR Hardtop, V-». Hardtop, olr leaon, auto,, , •2791 Automatic . Impala convertible. Bel Air lodon. Mallbu sedan. conditioned, loaded „ •5191 im Lowfri «,..,, -,...._ , '2091 Auto., UH '1391 Auto., R&H .._ '1391 Bower altering '691 •6b FORD '63 FALCON •65 DODGE Goiaxlt 500 wton, Sprint convertible. •65 CHEV. Coronet convertible. '61 RAMILER VI, outomotlc. V-l, like new Station wasoni luggage, Radio, power ftetrlng. •2491 V-9, aufomatic . >„ „ '1091 Impala 4-dr. HT, V-l. '63 CHEV. •65 VOLKS '1991 rock, loaded :"... Auto., power steering. •491 '62 FORD '2091 Impala convertible V-l. Convtrtlble. '64 tUICK '66 FORD XL Auto., power steering- •1391 Four-tpttd, radio — M291 Country Squire. V-l. Convertible- Convertible. '65 CHEV. '60 PONTIAC Auto., PS _.. . '991 Full power „.„ '1591 Itotlm wagon, V-l. Full power „ Caprice 4-dr, hardtop. '62 FORD Full power,.. .„ •62 CADILLAC Auto., pwer •491 '45 FORD •1991 '62 CHEV. •63 FORD Golaxll 500 noon. Falcon v/oaon, Nova hardtop. Foinone *» wagon, Sedan Devlllt. Aulo./ R&H _,., *1991 Aulo., R&H '791 '65 CHEV. Auto., MH " „„ '991 V* out»., power _ •991 Full powir ,., •1391 '60 DISOTO '61 FORD 4-dr. sedaon. Factor/ loaon. Mly '65 FORD olr cond., loaded '65 RAMILER • quipped ....„ _ •391 Golaxlt, 2-dr. HT. '1791 Motion wagon, auto. Squirt Falcon. '62 CHEV. '61 .TEMPEST Aufo., R&H ,-. '1891 V-l, auto., P». , '591 Fewer iteerlng '65 CHEV. Impala 3-dr. HT. Sedan, oulomdllc. '64 PLYM. 'B9HYM. '65 MUSTANG '59 FORD Bel Air sedan. V-l, Auto., power etetrlng. •991 Radio end heater ...... '491 Nlne-pon. wagon, Golaile con«., V-l. , Ante., olr conditioned. Mr. ledon. Converligit, tix-cyi. '1791 standard, RIM Auto., R&H .1 '191 Itondanj *1891 Auto., powtr steering- '391 •1091 •61 M1RCURV '65 FORD •59 FORD '65 CHEV. •60 CHEV. •62 BUICK '87 CHRYSLIR Oalaxl itdon. Chtvelle udon. Bel Air Kdtm. Comet, outomotlc. Electro convertible. Man, Mustang 2 plui 2> Factory air cond. : '591 Radio' and Tieater .... '491 Loaded '1891 Automatic '191 •1491 Fully equipped Full power -- ••• •1091 . Aunmarle ...—.• - '91 KROLL -FORD 671 BROADWAY, LONG BRANCH SALES CA 2-3400 • SERVICE CA 9-3800 F01 JAM m rot IALE FOR SPARKLtSHIMY 1967 CHRYSURS FLOORFLOOSS a.mmjtai. gam 1967 PLYMOUTHS •titUwall tire*. , __,.. numths^st'wholcMle nevt »,>.»«. .... "JRntevar condition your floor* art In[Ust price 15.JTM3. bis Prtet till am «TUDBBAK1R COKVmtT.-— needsd. Imall montiily parmats. CRSVROLXT 1N3 — OouverilMe. Poll OWNi Take over paymenta of W.TO ) per »BS- SSA- •aw, you won't know them altar va BRIGGS CHEVROLET I IIONZA DSMONBTRATOE - rAN-,V-a, four-avswl, bnrJut Kttl. Haiti power. No eaah nMded. TAKE OVER per week. SEAWA^MOTORI, WC. WA •OTOR*TlSc.. «.ft»'W ' •MB «r elean, wax, polish and boll TABTIC CAVINaa. McCAJttlW Chevro- otter. IW-ftll. «««r 5 p.m. UM OPEL - Two-door aadM, _- PAYMENTS nf I14.W per w«k. BON-m. S5. w»ptune. n«-wo». Broadway * Main It •oath I-. lit AT>., m-Utl Atlintlc High- DEU AUTO SALES, At IS. Htptutw, m-Moo. 7214400 It* CHIVROLXT BIL, AIR — Fwir- blua. t.m> mUts. Faetonr E"-'""}!; CHtVROLET 1M91 — BelAIr , sUUoB 19S0 T-fiIRD — Black two^oor hud- land*. door sedan. Blx cylinder, standard Save with this ona. BOB WRIT* rn-titn. waaon. NO MONEY DOWN. Tlks over top, full power, utru. Excellent eon- PONTIAcm - DBtUUB transmission. Immaculate. BOB WHITE BUICK 1414200. CADIIXAC mi-Convertible. TuU pow-paymenu of 17.10 per week. SKAWAT dltlon, left. W4-MM PARTIBt TO TAKI OVXR PAT' BUICK. 7M«0O. I ' MOTORS, INC., Rt. 31, N«pptunet . —fit TRAVEL - TRANSPORTATION MINTS ON RIPOUMKD BUICK 1M4 — Wildcat convertible. er. No cash needed. TAKE OVER PAY IMt CHEVROLET IMP ALA M»-Ttela CALL MR. (BELLY. MS Mil, UON MENT8 ON IUCPCBSE83ID CARS. IIBW BLUE AU8TIN HEALST 3000- [Full power. NO MONEY DOWN. Take MENTB of 111.70 per week. BONDEi: 9000. speed. PosllrMtlon. Perfect eotuHUoa. RIDERS WANTED — Kesjlsburf-Hsz- MOUTH UOTORI. AUTHOROTD CALL MR. BHKLLY. M2-2IH. MOK- Wlre wheels, disc bnkes, tl.OTt. over payments We're put to win you over with the biggest, boldest Plymouths that ever roared down the pike. Crisp new-styling. A little longer. A little sleeker. A little more sensational. Engine options that , "THE PLACE TO BUY" range from a budget-hugging 170 cu. in. Valiant "6" to the ' famous Plymouth Heml. Convertibles. Sedans, Hardtops. 2-doors. 4-doors. And every one of 'em, new from the top to the tread. Do they sound expensive? No sir! We said we were out to win you over—and we will. By kseping prices at rock-bottom ... by dealing Irom the heart on trades. Come on in. Test-drive 'em all. But be prepared to.loseyour heart. BUICK-OPEL Plymouth is out to^ //DOUBLE CHECKED USED CARS // NOW ON DISPLAY AT MOTORS CY BARRON INC. HIGHWAY 35 (just south of Pky Exit 117) KEYPORT CHRYSLER — PLYMOUTH 264-4000 •f HIGHWAY 36 542^5500 EATONTOWN TKKKS m U1Z TtACTOtl BOAT! AND ACCEM0WZ4 THE DAILY REGISTER A1/TMF0R SALE AUTOS FO* SALE AUTOS J>0* BALE UN — BonnerDJe i iBUUUC* — niTleetipa DerVinaT 20-F rid»y, S«pt », 1966 r, (MM: UM Co»»e, X£THM; >»M turouols», nlecK toe, •rtor hardtop. PBU pever. MO —T v-orertlolt. tamiim 000Y.rUl.le, Full power, **«*•» — mlie |DW«rT»*i_«v.r .twm&-« I cond! •SIM. Ul-OOtO. ate. One owner. Immasulat. 1 UM OewAtt,, HJ-ttU WtMAWA |ttarV. lu.t traded IK*. Call Mr. tMkta MSllMl O^mpyHf^fjIPT mti n irmn , AUTOS FOR SALE S 1M3 DOOOB—Four-door station wagon. _ UM PLTltOUTH iATKJTI—. CHMi CRATT — Wtta |M2-2414 KONHOUTH MOTORS Hw». Built plus gear. 4-11 rear tad. MOO mjiURYAU-, — Uk* new. Us«B c«lr «s pri- WANTED AUTOMOTIVE offer, call - FOREL »D, 1MHeptune1 — .Coumn W r Squire station New alternator, muffler. Call after « 33 Eatoatowe. liin. Wto. PIMM tMHM vatUe pMatnter car. Ideal (or ~~- ibin. B4M " "" p.m. 741-«8O0. M Avchen CL, Middle1 ^^ merolal or sports use. 747-ae»f). num. BtncK un-turdtM. vun <«». NOiruon. V-t, full power. No cub need- CHEVROLET 1MW-Inpala V-8 Hard UBBO CARS — nation wwom, pick euh needed. TAKEOVER PAYMINTB eoVTAKE OVSR PAYMENT! of ».« town. Oft Red Hill Rd. 1 t«4 HALJBU — White with red In- FLORIDA BOUND-OWNER mult lelj top. Good condition. One owner. Call ertor. rilw and heater, trhHwalU.: upa. Crown (Opposite Two Owl), Mid Of 1S.M per »«M. BONDEU AUTO Mr week. BONDEU AUTO SALES, Rt1992 CADILLAC PLEETWOOD — Oo«|7iM359, after 8 p.m. dlstown. «71-«M. Mr. Dwyer. a' Cruiser aleeos tour. Twin en«lne. •Alia, Hi. 38, Neptune. 77MTO0. 38, Neptune. 774<70O. itandard trarumlsilon. J1000 firm. Call LoalM with extru. In water. Aitot condition. Air conditioned. Automatic 747-33S9. MOTORCYCLES CHEVROLET 19(4 — Impale hardtop. windows, etc, Low mileage, one owner, 1064 VOLVO — 122S, four-door sedan OBT OAJH roR TOUR FORlIIOrl - I3.W0. 1M-4M3 afier « p.m. BU1CK ISM — Hears, convertible. CM 671-3M8. Gray with while leather Interior. Beju AaUUUOAN — AND SPORTS CAJU Full power. NO MONEY DOWN. Take Full sower. No cash needed. TAKE llfully cared for. BOB WHITE BUICK .set ML'STANO — V8, four-apeed trana-j IMS HONDA. — ISOcc with wlrMlhleld A MONMOUTH MTOKB WO HTtlf ttARBLEHEAD fAMILT CRUHIR over parments of 16.80 Mr WMIL SEA- OVER PAYMENTS of (ltt.eo per week. 1W3 CADILLAC — Fleetwood. black. 741-1200. minion. Rally pack, radio reverbera- and helmet. Low mutate. I3S0. Call " Batontown. S4M414. —1M2. Excellent condition. In WaUr. WAY MOTORS, ETC.. m, S>, Neptune. BONDEU AUTO HALES. Rt. 35, Nep- Original owner. Excellent condition. In- tor, told. A-l. Call M«H» ' TU-U49 or 741-0S94. The YACHT «HOP 774-MOO. *• tune. 77I-*7OO. epect by appointment, call MZ-0438 or VOLKSWAGEN — >B00, 184 Ocean Ave., ftea Brliht. M2-K13. M2-4M3. 1475 or beet offer. Call 65 CHgVROLET — V4, autbmatlc CADILLAC U6t-Coupe DeVllle. F«cPLYMOUTH 1S65 — Fiirjr III hardtop, 787.0m LAMBRETTA MOTOR BOOOTBR —! AUTO PAKTS-^tEPAKS \V 8ILVERT0N - 1M h.P. «ielt«r top, tory air, fun Bower, No cMll needed. pull power.' NO HONEY DOWN. Take CADILLAC - 1961-Seclan DeVllle. Blue an«mlsalon- Oood condition, 9100. Call tl5O. Call jhlp-to-Bhore, head, V-bunkf. Excellent TAKE OVER PAYMENTS of OtM per over payments of 113.20 per week, SEA' with matching Interior Including six- 1962 FURY STATION WAOON — Nlni 767-0181. M2-30M. CHEVROLET - Holor condition. Life vests and cushions, week. BONOIU AUTO SALES, Hi. 33, WAY MOTORS, INC., RL 39, Neptune. way seat. Very low original miles. passenger. All power. Very good coil' iMI2 CHBVROLET SUBURBAN CAR- 1 ^ockptt and winter canvas. 12,300. Atk Neptune. 774-«70O. 77<-BOOO. Tirei like new Including two extra •IIIIon. Beat offer over *875. 7474SM RYALL — Like new. Used only u pri- li tUfo^g or Earl, 8U-OS44. CHEVROLET IMS — Bel Air stalk* OLDSMOBILE 1063-eS herd lop. Full enow tlrts. Muit be seen to lie ap19S- 7 CHEVROLET — 6lx cylinder, Btic^ vate paasenser car. Ideal for comraer- MOBILE HOMES RUNABOUT —IV JPTBEROLA*. SS nioi. Pull power. NO MONEY DOWN power. No cnh needed. TAKE OVER preciated HW6. Call Mr. Fields 642- shift, four-door hardtop sedan. White- Hal or sports use. 747-56D0. Evlnrmle electrle start, Maatercraft Take over payments of (10.40 per PAYMENTS of 18.60 per week. BON- 2114 MONMOUTH MOTORS, Hwy, 35walls, , radio, heater. Perfect condition »OATS AND ACCESSORIES Eatontown. BetMHI owner. «3S0. Call 291-1787. l»7 VOLKSWAGEN — In food run- MOBILE HOME — bit. Air condition- trailer. End of season salt, $460. M3- week. BEAWAY MOTOKB, INC.. StDE. U AUTO BALES, Rt. 35, Neptune. ing. Aluminum awnlnc and tool ibed, *5, Neptune. 774-eooo. «7OO 1995 VOLK8WACJEN — 12,000 mllei. ing condition. *125. Svenlngi or ftun- ! STATIO00 N WAGON — Four-door Falcon ay! call 741-5435. Excellent cotiditlon. Call after 6 p.m, , PRICES REDUCED W PACEMAKER — Convertible e.d«n, THUNDERBIRD 19«S—Convertible, full Heater and radio, 11,385. Perfect condi- i *!. Automatic. Hadlo and heater. 2M-4809. CHEVROLET IMS — Impel 1 hardtop. tion. Call 7*H4J8. Aluminum boats, Larson botti, cuoei 1M9. condition mint Fully ejqulppid V-8, full power. No cash needed. TAKE power. No cash needed. TAKE OVER *375. M3 CHEVROLET IMPALA — TVc- and many extras. PAYMENTS of 111.90 per week. BON- MOBILE HOME FOR BENT trailers, Mercury outboards and use* WliliOVE R fAinAitlPAYMENTO UlS »fc*.-»i ofr *U.4pet Owtsn pe. r week. 1960 . THUNDERBIRD .— Very clean. I960 CORVETTE — Excellent condl loor hardtop. Power steering. Excel- boats -euid motori. THE YACHT SHOP DEU AUTO SALES, Rt. 35, Neptune. Good condition. Call tlon. Call after 5 p.m. mt condition. Mint sell. «,177B. 747-0144. Hlthlandi, N.J. , BONDEU AUTO BALES, Kt. 3», Nep- H-87O0. Call 84&337>. BOAT, SKI * SCOOTER CENTER l«4 ocean Ave.. lea Brliht. MM»U. tune. 774470O. 261-3337. 294-51« PLYMOUTH 1362 — Btatkm wagon. 75 Whit* St. Red Bank 741-112 ONE-Y'IIAK-OLD «' PLAtTIC DINGHY FALCON ITATION WAGON 1H1 — Ra- OLDBMOBII/E 1856—Very reasonable. I860 BUICK CONVERTIBLE — Orlgl- 1964 RAMBLER AMERICAN — Start' Not one cent of your own cMh* nccea- HOLLTT HUJ, SAILBOAT RENTALS —With Mats, 195. OHftna) east 178. Call dio ud neater, IMS. Call Ctll after 4 p.m. ' owner. Forced to sell. Call dard shift, must isll, beat offer. is.fr down. Bank will finance, (995 at MOBILE HOME BALES Cayiallets - Ml» • Scows • Sunfli •71-3774. 747-1075 291-9068. Call M6-SMT. M10 weekly. Call collect, TC1.710O, MONHOUTH MARINA s Motora, Ht. fi, Bayrevllle. new and Used 20' CABIN OUTBOARD CRUISER, J100. Complete l!ne of 12' widea. Featurlm S West Bt. Uonmouth Beach 223-3493 «• HARDTOP BKIFF-WITH 60 H.P. AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE JHEVROLST 1063 — Xropata two^oor Holiday Cottace and Holiday Manor Evlnrude motor, $385. Burfslde Marina, AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE tardtop. Absolutely no castt needed with exclusive baseboard hot water , THE BOATMAN'1 S SHOP aos Ocean Ave., sea Brliht. 842-OS44 lown. Bank will finance «fl*>5 at * leat. other models^ on^diaplay.^ ODtnipenl]INeN w Jeriey ! ltrgeit marlaa luppl meekly; Call collect, 731-7100, OAS1B|» a.m. — I ~p.m~. dally, Bat. to • p.m.Sit. h.muse, 34 Wharf Ave., Red Bank, ft: FOUR-WHEEL BOAT TftAHJER — El- MOTORS. Rt. 9, Sayrevllle. South Aroooy. 721-5888. M cellent condition. |2to. 1410. Ocean Ave., Sea BrlgaL Ask lor" Pens or Frank. FIVE 1W JOHNSON OUTBOARD MO- AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS TOR SALE TORS — »'/i li. p. 1140 each. Call 2»1- 2276 between 8 am. and 4) p.m. CUSTOM MADE DUCK BOAT (Sneak Box) KM LEFT OVER Call 747-1041 TRANSFERRED - Iff PENN YAK. 75 h.p. Johnson, Equipped. Mead, full canvas, Winter cover. Good condition, SEE THE... will demonstrate. 741-8160. __ 5 h.B. X ... rude. Complete with Gator trailer, (WO. Call (M-M13. CLEARANCE ZOBBL "8EAF0X" 80" — Cedsj bull, Chrysler Ace. Runs good. Head, electric bllie pump, electrle wiper. navy top-new. Aeklni $1,400. will listen FABULOUS NEW to offer. Call 741-OI0S. after 6 p.m. Off SSOBXL SEA OKIF' Perfect Condition 022-6H3 SAILBOAT PENOUIN No. 7023—Prac- tlcilly new, built by Beacrtit. Seldle- men 'all. All «ccesiorle>. Quick elle. 37 H^4^2!S. _j 17!4 WHITB SKIFF—W h.p. BvlnrHie. 1647 Al trailer.^ P.O.E. NEW 1966 FORDS BOAT DAVITS — Blocks eutd fails. Danforth ancbor. Four propelltrs. Bronze exhaust olpei. TSUfUS | IS' 1.YUAN — <40 li.p. Johnson. WOOlf MUST BE SOLD PUS6Y BATLBOAT, two salll. But oiler. 74»t?l«.. MX tor Ctiet 18' TROJAN-SO h.p. Xvlnruda motor, TO MAKE ROOM FOR nav; top, all sKcesaorlea jacludsd. In NO. water, 671*0706. ,t THE 1967's COMING IN MONEY DOWN STORAGE AND SERVICES OUTBOARD MOTORS — Picked up, wlnteriEed/stored-arM delivered to you id Sprint. Call 222-36.M auiytlme. FANTASTIC SAVINGS MARINE CONSULTANT AND IUR- VEYOR — Cheater B. Locldln. P.O. ALL MODELS NO 3900 Box 166, Atlantic HlgWands. gil-MH. BUSINESS NOTICES SEE THEM TODAY MONEY DOWN PER MONTH BALLROOM or HALL-ROOM when floon need to' b» dtrlpMd, cleaned and waxed call u» today. You won't believe your «yei- when vt're throuth. 741-8253 foe fre» inUmaUi Ciutom, Homer-Commtrclil TOM'S FORD MONMOUTH MOTORS INC. Bom* ImpiwenwBt 200 HWY. 35 KEYPORT AUTHORIZED DEALER 264-1600 HWY 35 542-2414 EATONTOWN MONMOUTH MOTORS INC. (More CUMifled Ads AUTHORIZED RENAULT DEALER On The Next Pige) HWY 35 542-2414 - EATONTOWN AUTOS FOR SALE MAURICE SCHWARTZ & SONS ••••••••••••••••••••"A •••••••••••••••5' is pu\ to win yqu over... DISPLAY AT THE BIG IRCLE HEYROLET with the new 1967... OMPANY PLYMOUTHS- CHRYSLERS • ( IMPERIALS • c "STARRING THE FABULOUS" •( •c •c '67 CHEVROLET CAMARO see them today at •c •c New Jersey's Friendliest Dealer 6 Hi NN MAURICE SCHWARTZ is out to ii^!ZOt k RONS. INC. Bi^HiiSlI SINCE 1919 '67 CHEVROLETS NOW ON DISPLAY FOLLOW YOUR FRIENDS TO 141 W. FRONT ST. RED BANK CIRCLE CHEVROLET CO 747- 325 MAPLE AVE. 741-3130 RED BANK THE DAILY REGISTER Friday, Stpt. 30, 1906-21 V BUSWEB8 W0T1CE8 BUSINESS NOTICES HELP THE FAMILY CRCUS lyJHI BELT WAMZB-MUZ CHJRLJtS HOWZ* •—• MA*ON COX- THJUOKFlt — JIMidiKll!. Comma-real SEWIWS MACHINE Out, *WUM»s. Csja J«t««L tSxAxiM sutdsltty. 1(74tn REV , -DEPENDABLE FEOOR OPERATORS DRIVERS BLACK TOP DMVCWAX* — Tw Mil, •tazto T* HOUSES FOR SALE "THE MONMOUTH11 XKER Faur bedrooms, three baths. Faxturino, luxurious, authentic REALTORS AND INSURORS end distinctive Colonial cabi- nets, all raised panel doors. $ Fireplace in family room, full basement, two-car ejaiaeja, hat 35,900 water haat. SHREWSBURY OFFICE MIDDLETOWN OFFICE 741-5212 671-3311 MORTGAGES AVAILABLE TALI STATELY TREES 30-YEAR, 6% CONVENTIONAL . BEAUTIFULLY MAINTAINED RANCH HOUSE URGE-REDUCTION Only ont of tha many delightful features of AS LOW AS 20'/. DOWN. Rail lank. Fin* reiidantlel ttraer, ill con- this custom constructed four-bedroom Home Convenient location in Little Silver. Four good sited bed- with three full baths, huge living room with vtnlencas, six rooms, plus gama room In rooms,' two baths, 15x20 paneled dan. Spacious living wood-burning fireplace, formal dining room, USE OUR EXCHANGE PLAN room with fireplece, formal dining r»om. Two-car garaga. basement, huge trees, dees) l»t, Immediate family eat-in kitchen, larga family room, ex- Asking (34,000. K you're having difficulty telling your ,pr*i*nt poiieiiien. $19,WO. ceptional closet space, two-car garage and basement. An excellent choice for only hem*, why not talc* advantage of our exchange) $2f,000. Now's th* time to move up and plan? Call us today for cempleta details. move in. Call 671-3311 for tha best in REAL BEAUTY Monmouth County. Almost n*w three-bedroom ranch surrounded FAIR HAVEN RANCH, vacant FAIR HAVEN COLONIAL by nature and wtll planned homes on the SPARKLING AND SPACIOUS Quick occupancy. Living room Four bedroomi, 2 '/> baths, liv. DIRECTIONS: . . . Heritage Hills is located on outskirts of town. Fully equipped kitchen, See it todayl Lovely living room, dining with firaplac*! dining room, ing room, dining room, deluxe Kings Hwy. East, one-half mila from Middletown family room, rwo ceramic tiled baths, sepa- room, cheery kitchen with built-in ovan and kitchan with dishwasher, lovely kitehan. Dan, plus gam* room, Bank and Post Office. rata dining room, wood-burning fireplace In range and eating area, three comforttbl* paneled dan, three bedroomi, lasement, two-car garage.'Very living room, Large screened porch, tfo-ear bedrooms, waldwoed paneling . in family fwo baths, basamant, garags. room, I '/> baths, partial basememt, two-car good location. $42,000. garage, baiemant. Nasr school. Quick «c garage and wall to wall carpeting. $19,100. Excellent schools. 131,900. MODEL OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK lien wanted. Widow liking $27,*00. » A.M. TO 6 P.M. CUSTOM BUILT RANCH RED BANK Middletown. Spacious throe bedrooms, for- mal dining room with eat-in kitchen, rwo Walking distance to canter of town. Si»- full baths, hot water baseboard, haat, full ANOTHER FINE COMMUNITY IY re)em, two-story housa. Thre* badrooms, I 'A bsiement with outside entrance, garage. NORCO CONSTRUCTION CO, moderniierj baths. Oil heat. Low taxat. Quick Close to shopping, schools, churches and transportation. Owner leaving state. Call atcupancy. Asking f 17.950. Call tojayl pplebrook Agency for appointment now! Lilted $22,500. EXCLUSIVE SALES AGENT 112 Ave. of Two Rivers MULLANEY REALTY 661 BROAD ST. 2068 HIGHWAY 35 842-2900 SHREWSBURY MIDDLETOWN 671-5151 OPEN SEVEN DAYS-.24 HOURS—SEND FOR CATALOG TRADE-INS EXCHANGES -. JU A §$>J;f • ' , , f ill : i .' ")-. i •- v • f New residential community byLevitt andSons in historic countryside « >'< • i ',, f where Americans have lived since before the Revolution BS than an hour from New York the rolling at Monmouth Heights. Prices start at $23,990 and farmland which surrounds Monmouth Heights include everything: Central air conditioning and looks much as it did when Washington and Lafay- major appliances by General ette rallied their troops here. This is a place you'd Electric, professional larid- be proud to call home. , scaping .of the half-acre Shops, schools, houses of worship-all the prac- grounds, membership in the private swim and rac- tical things are nearby. What's more, pleasure is quet club. All are included in the price of each here in abundance, too. A swim and racquet dub house. And there are no closing costs-of ten a $500 will be built within the community for the exclu- cash expense elsewhere. sive use of Monmouth Heights residents. Its pools, Come out for a breath of fresh air and go through tennis courts, picnic and play areas will be yours to the beautifully furnished exhibit homes. It's a enjoy without leaving home! In fact, detailed plans pleasant drive and you can make a day of it by visit-. have been submitted for township ing the historical sites too. We're open every day 1 approval. There are state parks, of the week'til nine EM. You're welcome any time. - 4 golf courses and riding academies How to get there in the area. And the great resort From New York: Take New Jersey Turnpike south areas of the Jersey shore are but to Exit 11 "Woodbridge-The Amboys" to U.S. 9 a half hour's drive away. southbound. Continue on Route 9 fifteen miles to Monmouth Heights exhibit area. J\Iost important-commuting is From Brooklyn and Long Island: lake Verra- i Air conditioned express buses make the zario-Narrows Bridge thru Staten Island continuing on Interstate Route 278. Gross Goethals Bridge to run-to Manhattan and Newark in less than an hour N. J.Turnpike South to Exit 11 and proceed as above. -and there are almost 100 buses a day! From New Jersey: Garden State Pkwy. south to Interchange 127. You choose from six completely different homes From there take Route 9 fifteen miles to Monmouth Heights exhibit. Important: Financing as usual—no mortgage money problems here. ' I" ! -..1, v. INCORPORATED SINCE 1929 MONMOUTH HEIGHTS, ENGLISHTOWN, N. J. • PHONE (201) 4624800 *-Fri4*y, !kpt M. THE DAILY BXCISTER -lEGAt HUIKB •"•• Gas Finn Kings Furniture Stalst* smywhti* for pat t/aa»*<»rt*- HOUSES POS SALE HOUSES FML SALE Out of OMS HK(I will E« nxttvtt iff vsicm, tin atoud <* fcfutaUon of tM Boruifk Market Nears «« F,«. OeC Win» Prize Has . _ oau MM »»- tht astals — posals will bs opcrrtd UK publicly read audited and slated, by; the lurrogsle NEW YOfttf-New Jeney Nat- RAY VAN HORN REALTORS at a mutliif to ba hald «t that tlm«. of tilt County of Hosuaoum sod re- New Showroom Specifications and bid formi for Kit ural G»s Company hat been «- roula iQd a ataodard form «r qutstloo* ported tor settlement to The Moo- nsire may be sscursd from the office tnoutli County Court, Probate Division, lected to receive « second award LAKEWOOD - Th« «riad OVER THIRTY YEARS—ALL THE LISTINGS of u» Secretary, 20 Obn Plict, on Friday, the 4th day of November its,' ' (or its stockholder annual report opening festivities for Kings Fur- school diyi. A P., 196«, at 9:30 o'clock a.m., at the County Court House, Monument in the 26th annual report survey By ED MORSE Every one of the 15 most ac- niture expanded new showroom- UNEOUALED FOR CONVENIENCE - Crisp white clapboard and Th* Board reserve! tiie right to re- and Court BtreeU, Freehold, New Jer- ve stocks declined and most of gray stone. Three bedrooms. l'/J baths. Ranch with space to spare. ject any or all bldi. sey, at which time Application will be sponsored by Financial World, the NEW YORK (AP) - Discour- take p'ace this week *t the DOM1WC 1. ACERItA made for the allowance of Commis- these volume leaders came un- Expansive living room. Gracious raised hearth fireplace. Muac Assistant Secretary sions and counsel fees. nation's oldest business and fi- aged selling produced another chain's Rt. 9 location. room. Den with abundant built-ins. Cool screened porch overlook- Sept 30 14.37 Paled September 13th A. D. IBM. nancial weekly. sharp loss for the stock market ler the category of glamor The new showroorp occupies BlbS WANTED THE MONMOUTH COUNTY Thursday but, trading continued stocks—issues which earlier this Ing ^-acres of dogwoods, tall oaks and eyecatching plantings. Just Sealed proposals [or the one-way NATIONAL BANK. RED BANK, This is the fourth consecutive more than 30,000 square feet and, listed at $28,500. • ' ind/or iwD-way transportation of one (By: ROGER J. FITZ8IMMONS, moderate. 'ear had some impressive gains. Trust Offleerl, year New Jersey Natural has according to Alan. Silver, Kings pupil rrum Nrw Shrewsbury to Atlantli It was the second straight big DELUXE - IN RUMSON — Four-year-old ranch on secluded I'A- Klihlands wilt lie received by the 303 Broad Street, won one of the three top awards Volume was 6.11 million shares. president, is twice the sii« of Board or Education of the School Dis- Red Bank, New Jersey, and drop for the market and brought acres of tall trees, excellent plantings and sunken garden. Five trict or The Tlnton Falls Schools at WILLIAM E. DENYEE, in its category, and is the only The Dow Jones industrial aver- the firm's showrooms which 8:00 F. M. on Tuesday, the Eleventh el Wallace Street. gas company in the country to it very close to its 196$ lows age fell 8.29 to 772.66. It closed bedrooms, three baths. Recreation room and den. AU rooms lllh) day al October 19S6, at the Red Bank, New Jersey. were expanded on the same lo- spacious. Two fireplaces. Centrally air conditioned. Excellent Tlnton Falls School Building. Specifica- Executors. gain that distinction. The firm's reached Aug. 29 in the Dow Jones at a low for the year of 767.03 on cation. tions may be secured from Louis A. Uessrs. Doremus, Russell, industrial average. condition. Owner transferred. $66,700. Btelnmuller, Secretary. Fssano and Nicosia annual report is prepared by Aug. 29 and that was the lowest Featuring 17 "inspiration The Board of Education reserves the Counsellors st Law, Leon Zuckerman, director of pub- The question in Wall Street was close since Jan. 2, 1964. rooms" of Kling Early American k Wi will be glad to h«lp you! right to reject any and all bids. 73 Broad Street. lic relations and advertising, and whether the '66 low would hold as September 30. 16H Red Bank, N. J. The Associated Press average furniture, designed by several of Sept 18, 23, 30, Oct. 7 W4.M Joseph F. Hunter Harold R. James LOUIS A. STEINMULLER is printed by Lind Bros., New a support level, or whether the jf 60 stocks fell 3.0 to 279.2 with the nation's top decorators, the Secretary of The Board ot Education NOTICE market would break through it. Olivia 8. Dutcher Donald E. Charles 674 Tlnton Avenue MONMOUTH COUNT*" York. industrials off 4.6, rails off 1.5 new showrooms feature the larg- New Shrewsbury, New. Jersey HURHOGATF/K COURT This was Important from the Sept. 30 . 14.83 In 1964, the company was ind utilities off 1.3 est Kling Galleries in New Jer- Notice to Creditors to Present awarded first place: and in 1963 technician's viewpoint. 804 RIVER RD. 747-4100 FAIR HAVEN Claims Agalnit Estate Of 1,396 issues traded, 964 fell sery. Every period of furniture NOTICE ESTATE OK JOHN RITCHIE and 1965 it was selected for third Glamors Fall Back An Ordinance entitled "AN ORDI SMITH. DECEASED and 223 rose. New lows for the can be found in the showrooms, NANCE FURTHER AMENDING AND Pursuant to the order of DONALD place honors among gas com- Stiff setbacks by many of the SUPPLEMENTING AN ORDINANCE 'ear totaled 170. Tie single new including contemporary, Italian, HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE J. CUNNINGHAM. Surrogate or the panies with annual revenues un- most prominent glamor stocks ENTITLED "AN ORDINANCE ADOPT- County of Momnouth, this day made, high was Continental Oil. French, Mediterranean and tra- LITTLE SILVER — Near stations, near ING THE RECLASSIFICATION SUR- on the. application of the undersigned, der $40 million. featured the session. This oc- schools, near .hopping. Three-hJdrpom. VEY CONDUCTED BY THE DEPART- ditional. OHARMINO OLD COLONIAL IN LIT- Naomi M. Amlth, Sole Executrix of Most blue chips put on a drab two-Bath ranch In excellent condition. MENT OF CIVIL SERVICE OF THB the estate of the ssld John Ritchie An attractive certificate will be curred despite recoveries by Mo- BTATE OF NEW JERSEY FOR THE showing. The expanded store also fea- TLE SILVER ON A LANDSCAPED Smith deceased, notice Is hereby given presented to W. Daniel Williams, torola and du Pont, each of which ovely tint, trepj and shrulis. Match TOWNSHIP OF MIDDLETOWN DATED to the creditors of said deceased to Prices declined in light trading tures a boutique gift department, this at B7.30O. GLAZEBROOK ASSOC APRIL 29, 1968, CONTAINING CLASS- present to the said Sols Executrix president of New Jersey Natural lost several points in the previous ACRE. Ucluilve nelihbomood with INC., Realtor and Iniuror, Exclusive ES OF P08ITIONB, DUTIES, SALARY their claims under oath within stx on the American Stock Exchange. and enlarged bedding and carpet- RANGES AND ANNUAL INCRE- Wednesday, Oct. 28, at a banquet two sessions. Their example- agents (or Rumson Shore Estates, 45 months from this date. Volume was 1.42 million shares ing display areas. vliw of Little Sllvir, ralr Hiven, am W. River Rd., Kumson. 812-1700. MENTS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES, Dated: September 2nd, IMS in the Grand Ballroom of the New linked as they were to downward AND REPEALING AN ORDINANCE ' NAOMI it gMITH The Exchange's index lost $.17 In announcing celebration, Mr. the ocun. 3S' Uviu room, 20* dinlm HOLM DEL ENTITLED "AN ORDINANCE ADOPT- 328 Broad Street York Hilton Hotel. revisions of earnings estimates- Beautifully wooded secluded acre. ING THE CLASSIFICATION PLAN OF Red Bank. New Jersey at $13.22. Silver named ,Sam Levlne ' as room, kltdnn. II' den or turn bed- THE PROVISIONS OF THE OIVIL Presentation of the awards wil were cited as depressants for the Bootless two year Colonial. Living room Sole Exscutrtx Corporate bonds were irregular- general manager and Joe Bianco (fireplace) dining room, farm kitchen, SERVICE ACT OF THE STATE OF Vincent J. McCue. Esq. be before an audience of more entire list. room. «' lanwroom. Four bedroorai family room, four bedrooms, V/t baths, NEW JERSEY, APPROVED AND AU- to BrosM Street ly higher. *U. S. Treasury bonds as sales manager of the new two-car garage, full cellar. Low taxes. THORIZED BY A MAJORITY OF THE Red Bank, New Jersey than 1,200 business, industrial and As they rebounded, however, of unuiual il». Threi full bath*. Ot TOWNSHIP OF MIDDLETOWN, COUN- Attorney rose slightly. showrooms. " 'UNCROFT ASSOCIATES, INC. TY OF MONMOUTH, AT AN ELEC Sept S. U. 23. 30 B7.60 financial leaders from through- they provided no stimulus. • ran IscllltlM for four can. A once Real Estate Broker T1ON HELD ON NOVEMBER 3, 1959, out the United States and Cana- DuPont ended with a rise of < Opposite Howard Johnson) WHICH ORDINANCE WAS ADOPTED NOTICE In > liteUraa opportunity. »«1,MO. THE 7S5 Hwy. 3! Mlddletown ON MARCH 22, 1981," ADOPTED ON MONMOUTH COBNTT da, V/t and Motorola recouped < 671-5333 JULY 26, 1066, AMENDED AND SUP- SUKROOATE'S COURT DOWSTRA AOENCY, »1 X. Front PLEMENTED ON AUOUST «, 1986" Notice lo Creditors to Present Approximately 9,000 annual re- Typifying the mood of the COUNTRY LIVING was presented for Introduction and first Claims Afalnit Estate a choice established community. ports were reviewed in 97 classl- market, KLM Airlines was the Itreet, Red Bmk. 741-8700. reading on August 23, 1968 br the ESTATE OF FREDRICK Successful Colonial and country styled home*. Township Committee of the Towmhlp PITSCHKE, DECEASED. fications in the 1966 competition most active stock, down 10>/£ Four and five-bedrooms, modestly ot Mlddletown and on September 14, Pursuant to the order of DONALD RID BANK - South Pearl St. Two >rlced for this prestige area. . . from 1966 wss finally adopted and approved. 1. CUNNINGHAM, Surrasatt of the marking the start of the second points at 130% on 139,700 shares. duple» nouiei. Three-bedroom «P«rt* 36.600. ERNEST O. KAVAUEK County of Monmouth, this day made, quarter century of the magazine's ment. *ach. Mr,v« Into or* now vs. DIRECTIONS: Hwy. 35 to Chapel Hill Mayor on ths application of ths undersigned, Yesterday's closing stocks: canl* other Hirer rented at $150 per ltd. (street next to Oasis); continue ATTEST: Nancy Bird'. Pltschke, Sole Executrix annual competition to promote Investing month. Will consldtr second monisae. on Chapel Hill RH. to Tlllon ltd., turn THOMAS T. CONRAD of the estate of the said Fredrick A. the improvement of shareowner 40H I-T-E Ckt Brk S5!4 Call HJ-3000. left on Tlllon Rd. to Farms Rd.. Township Clerk Pltachke, deceased, notice Is hereby 5611 Johns Man left on Farms Rd. to models. liven to the creditors of said deceased LEONARDO-Colontnl lll-level home, Sept. 30 I9.ee annual reports. Air Prod 27H Jones 9t h lp SILVEItMINT HOMES—Call 7U-1M0 to present to the ssld Sole Executrix Air Keduo 55% Joy Mtg eljht roomi. I'-S bulbs, teramlc 111" TAX SALE NOTICE By Roger E. Spear MOM!!! Waltz through housework In their claims under oath within ell Dr. Joseph H. Taggart, execu- Allec Cp SU Kaiser Al kitchen wftri wall mm. Tile laundry at Real £sut« In the Borough of New months from this date. Allei Lud Kennecott Spear room Living room, dining room with :hls Immaculate Capo Cod In Little Shrewsbury for Non-Payment ot Taxei Dated: September 2nd, 116*. ive dean of the Schools of Busi- wall-to-wall carpitltii*. larse recrtatlon Silver, Three bedrooms. Step-saving Alleg Pow Koppera and AiBCiimenti. NANCY BIRD PITSCHKI Kresge, BS Q) "Is it right to buy new ple who will run the company, room, three b* By WALT DISNEY MICKEY MOUSE By WALT DISNEY MICKEY MOUSE lll.l|.Wlll....l-l..-Jir—^ 2»l By SAVNDERS and OVERGARD STEVE ROPER By SAVNDERS and OVERGARD STEVE ROPER 'I ^«)MT5AYVDUf»ln^ PESERVE MIMKA.'-MUSTYE HIT tO DO TIME IN THE CLINK-IT'S HIS HEAD ON I JUST THAT MRS. RICHWTCH BURWS/ DUI \ MEJJP-THE WAY SHE'S PuLLIHg^VOUlL BE \THECAT-AHyMOUSEBIT.- ~^~ ~ WE'RE 76LLINS N0B0OY-VET/ FOLLOW ME OFF THB PLANE, KID/ By JfJIf BURISETJ and GEORGE CRENSHAW NUBBIN By JIM BURNETT and GEORGE CRENSHAW NUBBIN RECKON 1HB86'd ACHANCBf. MARY WORTH SAVNDERS and KEN ERNST MARY WORTH By ALLEN SAVNDERS and KEN ERNST COMEON.DON.'-HHIlt. WE AKfiUB WITH HERMANM Mil I MEAN IT, HOWANN' NW MOTHER TO 6WI CRAWL BtHIND THl'JHRUUKV ANO THI5 K JTRleiW A HEH-TWt HIT THXT DOOR WITH THE 010 you wMErooa OFT-TfcOat PLAY! PAKry AND m mm wu IF THE PHANTOM By LEE FiLK THE PHANTOM By LEE FALK WHEHIKWBPEML- ^^OTTA TAKE THE THOSE 8IACK PCMIO CIVER9 REACH THE CHANCE/ THOSE ENOUGH TO AWE THE BOTTOM.-THiy BLACK PfiARLe At?E TON WEALTH/ IP ^ WORTHnwiLl,IONS'> THJYU RVm 8BL ORTHAOtTHtM- THPR IPOL . OOMETOUfE? By WALT KELLY, POGO fly WALT KELLY MARK TRA5L By ED DODD MARK TRAIL ByEDDODD HtY, VMNME...Z, 60TSOVETHIN* ... ..M .-,1 • -.,1. .' .'-• .•S.l;..'>>., ;•: Sej*. M, 1566 THE DAILY HEG1STEB %-*dtn for T« %-rtm M»ort t-tum 47-tHUew I fteyKa I urimeveronw fctwyF s urn Complete Program Listings 7~4«or THW Art Wnk H* Ol H-Cssni T» <>«»» 47 Ponufarno Wowmol rid* t-.m I . WCBS-TV Channel S , _ WNEW-TV , WOB-TV 4-TV Church SChoof 4-CODI MeCoot-Color O-Slng, ChlKlrsn, . WPK-TV S-UP Beat-Music f-Kews And Weottwr 7-*oyooe-On 4 WNBOTV Channel 7 , WABC-TV I:H 9-Fllm-The Kentuckton- 7—Owr-Cortoon—Color Burt Lancaster—1 tin—Color 4-eirtnooy Houoo-Cols* H-Emlorllig *:» f-Fllm-Onrlle Cbjplln Fettlvol- 9-Oirlstopner Program f:S FRIDAY *—Lsfi Make A Deal—Color 11-Bla Picture-Army U—Fllm-The Sea Stall Not Hove 3—fllm-Scondol at Sccurle— 90 mln.—Color 47—Spanish Forum—Discussion 5—News AFTERNOON Creer Garson—«0 mln.—Color 11—High School Football 2—Symposium On Peace—Color I2:M Them—Anldiotl Redjrawe-90 mln. 4—Jewish Fourth R 31—Profile—Interview 4—film—Th. Yearling— ' 11 :» 2—It's About Time—Color 1—Leave It To Beaver 7—DatlnaGome. 5—Love 01 Life—Serlol Gregory P«dt-n mln. 2—Lone Ranger—Color 7-Cortoons-ChIldr«n-Col»r 5—Lock Up—Mystery «-Woiiir Adventures-OJlor «—Jeopardy—Game—color 9—Senator Case—Report 4-Wolt tllsney's World-Color i—News—DlckeiW-Color 7—where The Action Is 4—Jetsons—Cartoon—Color 11—Otfenoers—oromo 7—Film—The Lady Takes a Sailor— f—Romper Room-Cnlldren 9—Mike Dougkn—variety 7-Mogllla C-orUlo-Cortoons—Color 11—Lets Have Rm-CMIdren—Color Jane Wymon—W mln, 7-Oonno Reed-Comedy »:» 31-4ale Driving J—Password-Game—Color- 11—Surprise Show—Color AFTERNOON <7—Commercial Dlaloq e—wtilrlyblrds—AeVenture ' o_Nevra-Wlnoote. McPhllllpi s—Days Of Our Lives—Color 31—Profile—Interview 11:00 4-Lets Talk About God II—Biography—Documentary DEMOCRATS TO MEET 11—Cartoons—CWIoren—Color •—Senator Javlts—Report ,. 0'M 7—Newlywed Gome 5:00 I—Road Runner—Color 2—Ed Sulllvan-Varlety-COIor »:» HOLMDEL — The Hotadel 12:25 9— Sports Special—Color S-Bugs Bunn/-Color 4—Top Cat—Carlson—Color t-«ews-Joe Befltl-ralor 4-^iewlsh Herltag*' 5-Lowe« Ttamos-Trovel-Color 4-News-Alec Gltford-Color Democratic Club will hoM Its 31—General Psychology 7—Local News—Martin/ Beutel 5—Lowmon Western 7_4=B I-Oramft-Color 1 1-Gloontor—Cartoon 7—Bugs Bunny—Color 7-UnDsv-Cartocn-Color next meeting at 9 p.m. Friday, 2—Seordi For Tomorrow Jl-Fllm Feature -12:10. 9—New Jersey Report 31—Studio Redtal-Muslc 2—CandW Camera 2—Houle Party—Unkletter-Color 47-ttlv*rboa»-Advenhire 4—Eye Guess—Gome—Color 4—Swlnojn' Counlry—Music •—Doctors—Serial I—Beagles—Cartoons—Color Oct. 8, at Township Hall. The 7-Faltter Knows Best 7-Weother-Tex Anlolne 2-Eorty Bird Special 5—Peter Gunn—Mystery 7—Time For Us—Serlol 4—Survey— Interview—Color 4-Hey Londlordl^Comedy-Color agenda will include final discus- e—Joe Franklin— Inlervlcwl S:2t 7-Mllfon The Monster-Cartoons— 4-Youth Forum-Olscuutel 9-fllm-Acnu the Wide Missouri— *-Jame» Beard—Women 5—Oplntan In The Capital Clark Goble-90 mln.-Color 12:41 7-Local Newt-Mortln, BeuM Color 7-fieony And CecH-^Color. sion of the platform and cam- 2:45 ll-Twentieth Century ll-Rock«t Squod-Pollce J-Guldlf>fl Uolit—Serial o—Wrestling—Woshlnaton 9-Polnt Ol Vlew-Olicusslon 3)—Americans At Work il-«uiVey 61 Tlw Arts paign strategy as well as selec- 2:55 5-Pool Wlnchell-Color 10:» , M:10 4—Newi—Edwin Newman 7—News—Marlene Sanders 11—Thru Stooges—Comedy 3—Tom And Jerry—Color t-Wav To Go-Rillglon 7-Kews-Mlkt McClellait tion of election committees. 1:00 31-Llvlno For The Sixties 4—Research Prelect 4-Man in Offk»—Interview 2-«arry Moora—Comedy-Color 13—Parlous Francois I 2—News—Jensen, Murray J:00 J:4J 5—Third Man—Mystery 7—4>eter Potamus—Color «-Bonan»-Western--C0kir incumbent. Towiship Comroit- 2—To Tell The Truth 5—David Sussklnd—Discussion—Color . • •' '• 10:25 - «—P DO—Game—Color 7—News—P«ler Jennings 7-«opplty Hooper—Cartoons—Color 9—New York Report 4—Another World—Color 7-*Hm-«ov« Over, Darling— 4—News—Vonocur—Color teeman James Ackereon awl can- 5—Film-Adventure— U-Frlendly Giant—Children 11—To Be Announced . ' il:« •••.'• l3-«clencekntd-Educatlaii Clork Catle-2 tin.. 30 mln. 7—General Hospital 2—Camera Three Doris Day—J hrs.—Color didate Archie R. Price will be EVENINO •-^Im-The Stranger's Hand- 10:10 7—Sen Casey—Drama »—Film—Yukon Vengeance— 2—My Little Margie—Comedy 4-Seorchlloht— interview presents answer questions,' The Klrby Grant—90 mln. , Trevor Howard—90 mln. 2-Severly HilRHIIIes 11-^Contlnentol Miniatures . Jensen—Color . 4-Proflle On The Arts 7-Bullwlnkle—Color 1:30 II—Romar—Adventure 9-Fllm-Charlle Chpplln Festival— 11—Pulaskl Day Parade 4—Concentrations-Game ~ meeting will be followed /by .a 4-News—Jim Horn-Color 5—Thin Man-fMystery 31—World Of The Arts 5—I Search For Adventure 5—Ai The World Turns 31—Colleoe Humonlllei 7—Film—Assignment—Outer Space- 7—American Bondstanil 90 mln.—Color social hour with refreshments. 1:25 11:10 47—Pumoreto—Variety ll-Mock And Myer-Comedy' Archie Savage—CO mln.—Color II—Roller Derby 10:00 2— News—Edwards—Color «—Film—Son ol Hercules In Die Land 2—Legislative Hearing el Fire—Part 2—Color t— News 4—Direct Une—Interview j—Candid Camera—Color DANCE 2%* 2-Edge Of Nlahr—Sertol 11—News—Martin O'Hara •J-Bawball—Color < 7—Discovery 'eo-^Chlldren-Color 4—Andy Williams—Variety—Color 4—You Don't Soy!—Gome—Color lJ-Whofs New-CMIdreri S-jFHm—Underground— AFTERNOON 11—Suspense Tfteoter—Oroma SAT. & SUN. Matinees Only Hlghtitown Country Club 5—Ctiuck McCaim—Color 31—Investors Roundtable Phllki Dorn-90 mln. 12:00 31—ItolKn Opera—Anno Motto Fridayi arc great fun with Hit 7—Nurses—Serial 47—Dlsc-O-Teen—Zacherley 2:05 2—Newsmokers-rlntervlew 47—Film-Ail Es la Vlda— at 2 p.m. Open 1:30 11—aoio—Cartoon—Color 1:10 I-College Counterpoint 4—Open Mind—Olscuulon Enrique Mulno—90 mln. Mark Hllburn band, $1.50 . . . 31—Film Shorts 11—Local News—John Tlllman 7—Youth Wonts To Know 10:10 Aid* W«llt — Sot. Night — 4:M 11—Baseball—Yonkees—Color II—Uncle Woldo-Color J-What's My Une?-Con» 2—Secret Storm—Serial 4:25 12:15 9-iFiim—Chortle Chaplin Festival— 11-Wearner—Vivian Farror 1:90 Jo* Mneka. Every Wcdneidav, 4—Match Gome—Color 2—Interfoce—Science—Color *—News—Mori Dean , 90 mln.—Color Frlmdshlp Dance for folks 25 S—Sandy Becker—Color 7—Wide World Of Sports ll:N 11—Step This Woy—Dance 7—Dork Shodows—Serlol 5-Fllntstones-Carfoon-Color 2-Face The Notion •-Laurel Am) Hardy 9—Fllm-charlle Chaplin Festival— and over, adm. $1.00. Always 11—Eighth Man—Cartoon 90 mln.—Color 5—Fllntstones—Cartoon—Color 2—News—Reasoner-^color fun hen alone or couplet. 31—Around The Clock 11—Superman—Adventure—Color 7—Page One—Interview * 4-Mews-BIH Ryan-Color 4:25 11—Regional Report l:oo 9—Kingdom Of The Sea-Color 5—Joe Pyne—Discussion—Color 'It's the nice place to go." 4jews—Floyd Kaioer—Color 31-fllm Short 2—Turning; Point-Panel It-Eastern Football-Color 7—News And Sports f.AS Sl-Studlo Recital-Music 11-Word Of Ule-Relljlon 31-News And Weather J:JO 4-Newi-Bob Teogue CPfW 47—New Jersey Today ' 2-Eye On New York-Color ' 1:00 4-Weather—Field-Color 7:00 S-Fllm—Up In Smoke— *-4V '• ! daatneuiltn. Scout Neighborhood Picks THE PAIIT gtyCISTCR Frifcy, &yt 30, 1966-29 At the Movies Levitt School tar DAILY CROSSWORD tianum MPPUttWrK Wwtlbw* KM 21 ttmm. Theme at First Meeting urn/am lemug Due DM Hat UaSSm a» «kVK*m! LPaBsva. OHJCK- MATAWAN - "Saving the niori in Strtthroore: and "Mrs. • tUslltr to nova Into Monuath MJtti Community Ttat XT»t> Servo Us," Hieodore Elder, Brownies. 0.1 Saw Next Fafl wu the season's theme selected Mm. Kenneth Daniel* Is the »:» MANALAPAN TOWNSHIP - by the Neighborhood Association borough troop organizer aad Mrs. COMMUNITY- f LOEWS DRIVE-IN- The Levitt school wlU open in] of Girt Scouts during their initial Richard Polity, Strathmore troop fiih 4. Quantity «* OolAlatir 1:00; I:M; 1»:«: Dr. Ho TtX, SAT. a SUN. — Cirtwm 7:10Septembe: r if final plans, pre- stalks of meeting at the home of Mrs. John organizer. Ail new scouts must 10.BWI Dear Joan r:H; 11:00; Nona But uisented to tjie Board of Education p WllMt SAT' * (UN. - AdvtDlutM of •Tom Brava »:15. Conlin, Main St. be placed through the organizer i»w7«r >:W; OoidlUl»r t.U: 1:00; PLAZA— last night, 'are satisfactory. BACKERTS U. Afternoon BMUfhU Dr. No *M; *:M. Wboa Afiaia ol VIrdal* WncU T:U: Mrs. William Quinn, Jr., chair- and not directly to a troop. All receptions protMtftff NUVE-IN- Charles E. Wikoff, Jr., presi- man, Introduced the season's con- leaders were urged to notify or< lS-Toanfftcn: •a tovenler TKL * SAT. — Cutoosi T:W: Fu- SAT. ft SUN. — Wddla Slww: Flaltjr tuUe Voyaji T:K>; U:»; Tiki Htl 2:00; Who'a Afrau ol Vlrtinla WmU dent of the Manalapan-Engllsh- HORMHUUS eultants: Mrs. Warren Messer- ganizen immediately whenever colloq. 6. Across 37. Cries «hfi Mtn »:«. 1:00; T:30; S:i9. town Regional Board of Educa- schmldt, Cadettes; Mrs. Richard a vacancy occurs as there is a IB. Owns 40. Amour SUN. — rutuUc Voj««e »:10; 10:M; KEYPORT * HATUMN* T«k« H«r Sbf I Hint 1:10. tion, said that the September Cetshall, juniors in the borough; constant waiting list for place- lT.Paddle-likft 8.Larg* •LUywof 8TRAND- FREEHOLD FIU. It SAT. — KUdU Matlnaa: 1:00;date was projected last night by Mrs. William' Montgomery, ju- ment process WUR& Iris 41 Swap*: FUEEHOLD- Th* Pawsbrakar TOO: 10:10; umbral. Levitt's regional manager. Er- Wtio'i UnU <* VlrrlnU W«U 1 laa of Charbotirt 1:6a nest Hurwitz, who met with the section of l&MUata *]. %M. R51.- .-_ "56™"»a oI_Ch«rbow. Boston 16. Stand up §4. French «AT. — Kiddll Biow: FIullT J:M: board to present the final plans Only daytime harness racing! n. Genus of 19. r pronoun Who'i Afraid o( Vlrtlnll Wool! t:M and specifications. 124 1:30; 1:90. EAST BRUNSWICK Uw cuckoo. tvti. — Kiddl« Shoo: fluffy i-M, Mr. Wikoff said that the board point i 2. a I } yfhot Afraid ct VlrtinU Wooll 4:10;rUlNPIKE- OUTDOOR-aolJfimer 1:00: 11:80; will meet with its architect, Ed- 23. Corroded FAJRMINGDALE SLJtuslo |6 Dr. No l»:oo. ward Hickey, of North Bruns- OCTOBERFEST SHORE DRIVE4N- SAT. ft SUN. — Ooldllnitr ':X>wick, within the week to go over hot* Cartoou 7:00: LoM Comnu< 7:33; OCT. 14,15, 1* M. Occasions it 12 11:10; Coma Blow Tour Horn 1:55. 11:20; Dr. No 1:80. the drawings. FREEHOLDc INDOOR—Ooldfluaer 7:30; 11:%); pr. 28. Briny SAT. * SUN. — Lott Command T;00; (A 11:10; Coma Blow Your Horn »:M. No 0:30. Preliminary plans have already 7-PIECE BAND SO. Plural A SAT. * SUN. — Qoldllnitr 1:00been approved by the state De- * Wwrifs 10 RACES POST TIME I DAILY DOUBLE I TWIN DOUBLE, I NEPTUNE CITY A ending 46 * <:W: 1:13; 12:10: Dr. No 21 so: 1:10 partment of Education. It will DAILY! | £00 P.M. | 1:50 | TOO! StOldwelgit it II It NEPTUNE CITY-" 10:30. Tha Oitar |:t9; Stop (hi Woild T:0O take the state about six weeks for wool PERTH AMBOY to review the final plans, Mr. OKN YIAR ROUND Biutii N.Y.C.! Port Authority, Consolidated) Newsrki Public Strvlea. 88. uncoininoft a. SAT. — KIdlla Show: ril|ht o( UilAMBOYSDRIVE-IN- N Can Turnplk* Exit 11, Garden Slat* Parkway Exit 123, to Rt 9. 84. Place w Lo«t Balloon 3:00: 111* Oicar 9:00: ntl. 4 SAT. — Carioona 7:00Wikof: f said. SCINIC DRIVE Ik »:U; Slop the World 7:00: 10:U. Payckonth r:H; |O:95: NaUid Pity The school, to be built on a 12- M.Humbl» zt SUN. — til. Olur 1:10: (f:10: 10:00 SUN. — Cartoom T:0O; Paychopatll ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS 88. Not good Stop (ha World <:»; S:1S. T:1S: 10:50; Naked Vni »:1L acre site on Taylors Mills Rd., 89. Snobbery SO 41 it MAJESTIC- east of RL 9, will contain 21 43.mii North of Red Bank aoldtlniar 1:50; 7:00: 10:40; Dr. Hoclassrooms, an all purpose room VI >:00: S:49. 291-0224 43l Dec «, V SAT. * SUN. — Klddla Show: Ad-and a utility core sufficient for ALPINE MANOR w vanUirei ol Tom Sawrar >:00: Gold- CLOUD TUBDAY. Dec 31, etc ATLAimC HIGHLANDS (Utstr B:U: 10:40; Dr. No <:U; I:2J.34 classrooms. 45. Source of W 40 JjfJ HWY. 36 ATLANTIC- ' MENLO PARK Levitt has promised to build indigo FRL Si IAT. — Walk Don't Run T:00; HIGHLANDS 41 - CINEMA— 46.Boy*s * SUN. - Want Don't Run 1:00; S:00; FRI., SAT. 4 SUN. - FanlatUc • t 872.1773 nickname m 7:00; S:00. Voyata 3:00: 4:01; S:01; »:tt); 10:01. 47. Ancient 41' 44 IHTMTAINMINT NITIUY >• 48. Impudent 4-1 tallc BANQUETS to Hit GENTLEMEN >• % Fri. and Sat. Nights )• TV Highlights FOR ALL OCCASIONS PHONE 741-8344 ifAlways Gracious Dining" M (7) - Turn Tame]. "The Day the Sky Fell In." Our "ASTRO-GUIDE" By Ceean two time-trapped scientists are caught up in another hair- the CobbleStones Saturday, Oefebor I raising adventure which ehould keep the kids glued to the set. Tony and Doug find themselves in Pearl Harbor just as Restaurant Pr»$ent—For You and Your* • • • Monks the whole place is about to erupt, (color). Highway 35 Middletotcn hour* are the most favorable put of tbb day. Get M:M (U) - Special. "Jimmy" (Repeat). This was an- necessity tasks out ©f tha way before 12 o'clock. ticipated as a truly revealing first-hand study by the National "Overlooking the beautiful Navesink River" After noon, aspect* denote trouble through forjtd Education Association on attempts being made to urge a drop- letters or document*. People terid to be sarcastio and out back to ichooL What it points up, instead, is a shockingly r— DANCING FRI. & SAT. N1TES TO —i negative approach to the problem of building up the confidence gloomy, and cirelasneu it general Trawl incoo- of a sensitive, lost soul of a boy, aged 17. Tune in and see if venknees are strewed. you agree. , I SAL BERTQLO TRIO | S:SM (2) — Hofan's Heroes. The spying shenanigans of Tues., Wed., Ttaurs., Sun. Music by Sal Bertolo The Day Under Your Sign those clever POWs are finally uncovered by a Nazi, who must Arlis. torn Mir.21 toApr.lt Ubfi.S.pf.2ltoOet.22 have been a New York hood before the war. (color). Featuring the Finest Steaks & Seafood .Staf my from wfffarfli pco* Ml (2) - Friday Night Movie. "The Geisha Boy." (1958). BANQUET FACILITIES UP TO 120 pis tad «xploiiTe ittotUoot if ttioniao which could tartyo m 3ma vould amid bcartacfae. cwttr. Jerry Lewis labors mightily for laughs in this farce, playing , • Wedding* • Office Parties • Executive Banquet! Tiuru«.Affll 2O(»Wiy2O a magician who joins a USO unit touring the Orient. He suc- Voo could set iinolral in a dif- Sc*rp!o.OeJ. JltoNev.2t • Engagement Parties .'* Showers ficult altoatha U jreu ii« io So what no cu to ena» ill ceeds to a fair degree; some nice visual backgrounds are a fedlan an* la cbeer up tioat help; Suzanne Pleshette and Nobu McCarthy are decorative; to in inpoltt. witk whan yoa writ. Gwninl. M.y 21 to Jan. 21 Stgtttarln. Nev. 22 (• DMt.ll and there's a good sight gag involving Sessue Hayakawa, Gv&unqd WHARF AVE. RED BANK Anld egotnrenUl Mbjeeu with BiiturSint re»a nuy «rrltt, especially for those who saw "Bridge on the River Kwai" last a irlttd onlew yoa trt fire. but \<• not u tad as it Mama OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK partd for ratteqaat tut iv&t *t fint Sunday, (color). ARE YOURS WHEN t^L-i liiis. Capricorn. DM. 22 to Jan. 20 I-M (7) — Milton Berle. Our traveling comedian, Bob Under New Management C*nar. Jura 22 to July 21 Teuion cooH be tnceabl. to Work trhleh yoa ordinuily ch. Hope, walks on for a monologue and trades gags with Berle. joy miy ictm tedkmi under tie fact that ptopla are under tod»j'» ntsitiTe tail. mdverae ra/f. In another spot on this rowdy hour, Milton plugs his guest Lao. July 22 to Aug. 21 Aquar!u..Jan.IHoFab.P Star in there and pitch dapitc part in an "F Troop" episode and joins its stars, Forrest Ibt aitaation il only wnporarf Tucker and Larry Storch. For the rest, singer Donna Loren, Open Every Friday, Saturday tod you'll be fooli«h to let it m tetbaek. ,Yon tare the sece* Ctt you down. Hty baekbooe. Johnny Puleo and his harmonica, and heckler Irving Benson Virgo.Au9.22toS.pt. 72 Piicu. F.b. 20 to March 20 are featured, (color). If your conscience u dear. Tfcia ia not a red fetter ESTABLISHED 1919 HOWARD K. SURPLUS, READING DIRECTOR SUITE 219. HOTEL SUBURBAN. 1411 HARRISON ST., EAST GRANGE - Phww 478-3535 • 3 SCHUYLER PL, (WASHINGTON BUILDING), MORRISTOWN -Phone 2674800 ut Buk lUflitei laloarporfttod The American attitude would surely be con- for a "soft," or Khrushchev-type, genera- If and when the House gets a crack tion to develop in Red China, as it did over U. HAIOLD C.EIXY. T'•bUahsr M4 QcMnl ltuuiK«r ditioned by fear. The nature of the response It the long-withheld anti-poverty budget, would depend on the degree of provocation: a 40-year period in Russia, for history today AMlmf L KmmlD. Editor there is a very good chance something will Americans need the sinking of a "Maine" is running too fast. nanu 1. Mr muum r. Huilatt be done about Senator Mansfield's complaints. Bucuuvt Editor Aiitcuii Bailor or a Pearl Harbor or a Cuban missile crisis The logic of the generalissimo's views Is nut W. lUrtonJ OkulM A. JakHUa to bring them to accept the risk of war. I In the Senate, Chairman Joseph Clark, Mlddlitonn Buntu Mir. rmholl Surtui Uir. that a succesiful pre-emptive invasion of the D-Pa, of the subcommittee handling this •aid there would' be a howl from the Left if mainland by the Free Chinese before Mao legislation, favors an Investigation of the lubicrlotlftit Yrloai tn Advance the Free Chinese were to try invasion, and and Lin have atomic power will save the flinili cow Kt counla^ 1 canU: br milt, to eentf ' entire antJ-powrty program. He is talking mentioned the American attitud1 e ai of the United States a great tragedy. But will the 11 mpnUii-ttt.M I n»nUii-4I.19 year 1937, when Franklin D. Roosevelt'* of getting ontyunder way next year. t minlli»-» ».ro I mnu> —tl'fO easy, optimistic American people listen? ^ Ilka It? It's the now Blnl«rob«l*|. i Monnwulh Beach PTA Friday, Sept, 80, 19W-7 THE J>AJLY REGISTER Old First Church Hold* Pint Meeting St. Set Church Activities At Old Bridge MONMOUTH BEACH - Gator Plans Festival OU> BRIDGE — R«w Huto/ •JO, films of the June Field Day at iflDDLETOVN — Old Fto E. Meyer, pastor of die Lutheran grades » «nd 10, on