<*WVfi I' .- - DfftrftuKon / BANK Today ft* to**; tow, M», fartlr cloudy tomorrow; high, M*. 17,300 See/tide* and weather page 2. I R PAGE0N E luutd Dally. Mondiy throum Friday. «Und M BeconiJ Clan MMIM RED BANK, N. J., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1960 7c PER COPY VOL. 83i NO. 106 at U» Pott Ollln »t R«d Btnk. N. J.. und«r th» Act ol Mtrcb a. U7». ^^ S Raising Money Meyner, Stout Agree For Institutions On Two Judgeships Provides Issue By DONALD F. BOLLES In Monmouth County TRENTON (AP)— Republicans FBI Arrests and Democrats today were a TRENTON — The talking year apart on how to pay for new state institutions. Last Suspect /as good here yesterday, Republican senators yesterday Influx of Bogus Bills ,t least as far as resolving rejected an Assembly - passed appointment of two Mon- penny increase in the state In Kidnaping mouth County District cigarette tax, and decided to LOS ANGELES (AP) - FBI gtick with a $40,000,000 bond issue FIRST TIME —Dr. Jam«t W. Parker, Sr., pushes the twitch to turn on Christmas lights Is Reported in Area agents converged on a startled ourt judges and a new referendum on the November, Frank Marrone at a Los Angeles on Shrewsbury Ave., Red Bank. Wethide merchants, through the sponsorship of the 1961, ballot. RED BANK - An influx of /lonmouth County prosecu- intersection early today and ar- Westiide Civic Association and the Community Chamber of Commerce, provided the counterfeit $20 bills in the bor- or. The legislature will meet rested him in the kidnaping a yuletide lights for the first time this year. Also at the lighting ceremony, left to URII was reported yesterday bv •gain Dec. 19 beiore starting week ago of wealthy sportsman Manslaughter State Sen. Richard R. Stout, he Community Chamber of the 1961 go-round. Democratic Anthony Alessio. right, are Councilman Dr. Lawrence R. Burdge; J. Daniel O'Hern, association secre- vionmouth Republican, emerged !ommerce. Senate leaders indicated yes- The FBI said Marrone, 31, a 'rom a 15-minute conference with tary; Louis Vaiti, president, and Louis Scotti, Christmas lights committee chairman. The local branch of the Mon terday they'll fight the GOP convicted murdered with a long Case Goes Democratic Gov. B. Meyner and mouth County National Bank re- stand tooth and nail, favoring police record, was unarmed and aid: ported a number of the bills the $8,000,000 annual yield offered no resistance. His firs Decision Next To Jury turned up yesterday, several of We are in substantial from the cigarette tax which comment, agents related, was: them in night deposit bags left agreement and I understand would be available immedi- "I knew the FBI was smart, bu FREEHOLD - A jury will be- during the week-end by mer- the governor will make an- ately. I've never seen so many in one gin deliberation today in the chants. Some also came over the nouncements to cover the sit- Minority Leader Joseph W. place." Neiv School Plans Criticized, manslaughter trial of Herschell bank's counters yesterday. uation later in the week." Cowgill, D-Camden, said the GOP The agents said Marrone—driv- Byers after hearing one day of Merchants Trust Company offi decision means leaving retarded The senator would not dis- ing his own 1953 automobile- testimony here. cers reported none of the bills children in homes instead of in carried currency identified as cuss names, but he would not Byers, 18, of 1218 Corlies Ave., was received there. ititutions, and prisoners in over- part of the $200,000 ransom paid deny the "substantial agree- But Proponent Has His Say Neptune, is charged with caus- The bills were described as on ment" was on promotion of crowded cells. He called the de- by the Alessio family to secure ing the death Aug. 15 of Donald the Federal Reserve Bank of cision "an absolute outrage.., his release. Prosecutor Vincent P. Keuper, New York with the letter B in just plain cruelty." EATONTOWN — Walter Smith, $100,000 more than the class- vote on a bond issue of $790,000 Applegate, 19, of 1420 Tenth Ave., a Democrat, and Red Bank Aiessio, 41, abducted from in their seals and the figure 2 in a taxpayer with four children at- rooms alone would cost. The balance of the proposed Neptune. Mayor George A, Gray, a Sen. Wayne Dumont, Jr., R' front of his fashionable San Diego ach corner of the white centra tending parochial schools, spoke "From past experience," he school's cost would be financed Assistant Fjfosecutor John A. Republican, to the two newly- Warren, who stood alone for the home last Tuesday, was found portion. unharmed later in a San Diego strongly in favor of the proposed said, "I think we should be a by a $300,000 federal grant and an Petillo stated that Applegate died created $I8,000-a-ycar posi- cigarette tax as his colleagues Distinguishing features are the motel. He is executive director $1,173,000 elementary public little farsighted, and provide appropriation of $83,000 from sur- as the result of injuries he re- tions. made the bond issue party policy, small markings J 147 in the low- of the Caliente Race Track in school at last night's public these facilities. plus. ceived Jan. 12 when struck by The senator was also reported said, "It was a stupid political er right corner on the face o Baja, California. The track is be- hearing. "I am going to vote 'yes' on Mayor-Elect Critical Byers at the Casino Arcade, As- iy intimates to have advised decision." the bill, and small figures 870 lieved to be owned by the Alessio His speech came after plans this proposal." Mayor-elect Werner maintained bury Park beach front. he governor he would have no The bond issue bill was spon in the lower right on the reverse family. for the school had been roundly Referendum on the school will that it is not right for the Board ibjcction to advancement of sored by Sen. Walter H. Jones, "Called Me Names" side. condemned for nearly three be next Tuesday. It will call for of Education to "usurp all the ither First Assistant Prosecutor R-Bergen. He and Dumont are A widespread search for Mar- Byers testified at the trial be- The engraving of the face o hours by a long list of citizens, tax dollar." Solomon Lautman or Assistant leading contenders for the GOP rone commenced after the FB fore County Judge John C. Gior- Andrew Jackson reportedly is o including Mayor-elect Herbert E. He cited borough needs for s Prosecutor John W. Applegate to nomination for governor next arrested his wife, Selma, 25, and dano that the incident occurred poor quality, with heavy eye Werner, Chamber of Commerce new municipal building, a stree bo prosecutor. year. But one influential senator another couple in Hollywood last Boro Rents after Applegate had called him brows and hair and absence of president Karl F. Wihtol, Magis- program, 'library, more street said the governorship race did Friday. Agents recovered $77,900 names. He stated that he went detail in the hair. Mr. Applegate is Monmouth of the "ransom money at tha trate Peter J. Edwardsen, real cleaning equipment, and a build- not affect the vote. over to see Applegate to ask Robert Williams, head teller a lounty Democratic chairman and, time. tor Harold D. Lindemann, and Space For ing to house the equipment. Other Republicans said two "why he called me names." Monmouth County National, said f named prosecutor, would be The other two are James R two former school board mem- "I am not anti-education," he main arguments swayed the the bills were described in the wpectcd by the governor to fol- Gorman, 29, identified as an es- bers, Seymour Koteen and John stressed. "I don't like to talk in Byers said Applegate "then GOP senators as they entered Oct. 18 bulletin of the New Jer- ow Mr. Keuper's lead, taken in caped convict also wanted for a White. Police, Clerk this vein, but it has to be done raised his hands as if to choke the four-hour caucus ready to sey Banking Association. A num- 1955 when he was county Dem- $13,000 Huntington Park, Calif- Mr. Smith said: FAIR HAVEN - The police de- Called 'Grandiose' me." go for the tax. One was that ber of them had turned up ear- ocratic leader, .to give up the market robbe'ry, and Gorman's 'Willing To Pay' partment and borough clerk have "Plans for the school are It was then he hit Applegate Gov. Robert B. Meyner might lier, he said, in the Sayreville political post. wife, Ruby, 30. 'My children may never use found a home here, for a year grandiose. They are far too ex- once, causing him to fall and use the yield to balance next area. The FBI, adhering to cus- the school, but I think it would at least. pensive for the borough to af- strike his head on the terrazzo Choice of either Mr. Laut- year's budget, and the other A federal grand jury in Newark tomary procedure, declined to be a good thing for the borough A motion authorizing rental of ford." floor, Byers said. man, who is mayor of Deal, was that the bond issue could yesterday handed down a nine- say how agents happened to and I am willing to help pay for a store at 603 River Rd. owned He said the borough council or Mr. Applegate reportedly have been on the ballot this Died In Marlboro count indictment charging a man catch up with Marrone. it." by Jesse and Anne Bennett was had been putting off other ex- would have the support of May- fall except for the Democratic Mr. Petillo said Applegate and a woman with .passing am Agents said he was carryini Chief criticism of plans pre- approved by the Mayor and penses for years so that the chil- or Paul Kiernan of Long Assembly. spent eight weeks after Jan. 12 possessing bogus bills of th> part of the ransom loot in $10, sented by the board was that it is Council.last night, pending ap- dren could come first. Branch, state Democratic com- (See INSTITUTIONS, Pg. 2) in a coma in Fitkin Hospital, same description. $20; $50 and $100 bills—both in too costly. proval of the lease by the bor- "Now this plan has got to be mltteeman. never fully regaining conscious- Indicted were Charles Mucc his wallet and his pockets. There was general agreement ough attorney. pared down if thrt borough Is to What made the closed-door ness. grosso, 21, of Belleville, an Marrone has been free on an by most critics that the addi The borough will pay $3,000 a progress," he stated. conferences, conducive to pro- Miss Arlene Nardiello, IS, o appeal bond from a 1959 murder tional 22 classrooms are needed year, effective Jan. 1, 1961, with Mr. Werner said, however, that He returned, to his home in gress on Monmouth County ap- Order Trial Roselle Park. conviction in Alaska. „ and must be provided. The addi- an option to renew at the same he had been told by the Board of April, but was returned to th' pointments was that the Re- Assistant U.S. Attorney Josepl His arrest record dates back tional facilities—gynasium, com- rate. Local Government that if more hospital on ' June 27, and was publican Senate caucus agreed R. McMahon of Rumson sai In Fair Haven to 1946 for burglary, robbery, bination cafeteria and auditor- - Questions Agreement money is needed for borough ex- moved July 1 to Marlboro State to return to Trenton for an- giary, roDDery Miss Nardiello admitted passin forgery ium, library, shop, and music and Milton Kosene, mayor-elect, penses, the board would consider Hospital where he subsequently and murder, the FBI a number of the bogus bills Oct. other meeting Dec. 19. said. arts rooms — were attacked as questioned the agreement on the granting a request for it. died, according to the prosecu Zoning Case 24 at the Union Shopping Center. (See JUDGES, Pg. 2) His latest arrest was on a local "expensive frills." basis of whether an option on Magistrate Edwardsen said bor- tor. Mr. McMahon, who described TRENTON — Suportoj Court's Mr. Bennett's adjacent store ough improvement plans should warrant charging flight to avoid Mr. Smith said that all these Byers is represented by Harry the counterfeiting operation ai Appellate Division yesterday or- should not also be included, for (See SCHOOL, Pg. 3) Shure, Asbury Park. prosecution for kidnaping. facilities would cost only about 'nationwide," said the pair wi dered a trial to determine whet!: use as' a library. Car, School be arraigned Dec. 9 before Fed er a proposed store building in A reduced rate could be ob- eral Judge Richard Hartshorn the Fair Haven Shopping Center tained, he said, on both stores, in Newark. Bus Collide conforms to the local zoning or- Two More Broad St. if a longer lease were procured. Jughandle Possible dinance. Mayor Russell H. Minton ex- MIDDLETOWN - Forty chil- The court reversed dismissal of plained that he and the council dren escaped injury' yesterday the suit against the borough and had just received a report from 3 Pinball when a school bus collided with Allen Brothers, Inc., the firm Variance Requests the library board, giving its For Five Corners a car on Navesink River Rd. According to police, the bus which plans the structure at Riv- recommendations for new library MIDDLETOWN - Plans are in RED BANK — Requests for Machines was making a left turn into er Rd. and Smith St. facilities, and wished to study it the offing here for re-designing two more variances on Broad St. Statesir PL, from Navesink Riv- The,suit was filed by William before taking any action toward the Five Corners on Rt. 35. will be presented to the Zoning relocating the library. Hollo Bus er Rd. F. Olsen, Jr., Colonial Ct, and High School Assemblyman Alfred N. Bead Confiscated 16 other homeowners near the Board of Adjustment tomorrow Firemen Need Space Police said a car driven by leston, R-Mon., said a jug MIDDLETOWN - Police yes shopping center. night. The police headquarters and Arnold J. White, 214 Seventh Hearing Is handle might be constructed a terday confiscated three pinball Mayor-Elect Is Lawyer May Lose Both requests are from doctors borough offices have been housed Ave., Long Branch, tried to pass the intersection. machines in a township crack- Representing the group is Mil- who seek to maintain offices in in the fire house on River Rd. the bus on the left. The assemblyman said he was down. ton Kosene. Sincd the suit was the A residence zone, but do not since their former premises on Tomorrow Accreditation want to live on the premises. informed by the state Highway According to Capt. Raymond T. The driver of the bus said he Instituted, he has been elected Fair Haven Rd. were destroyed KEYPORT - The Public Util- had his direction signals on, po- ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS — Dr. Samuel S. Adler wants to Department that a major im- Walling, the drive will continue mayor here. He takes office Jan by fire on Feb. 15, 1958. ities Commission will conduct a lice said. The Board of Education received move his residence from 229 provement is being planned for :oday. 1I.. A proposal to construct a new hearing tomorrow at 11 a.m. at its a warning last night that Atlantic Broad St.,- but continue to main- the area. The machines were picked uf Both drivers were issued care- The Appellate Division said the library and municipal hall build- offices, 101 Commerce St., New- Highlands High School's accredi- tain his office in the house. The A department spokesman would by Detective Lt. Joseph Mc- less driving summonses. Mning ordinance was revised in ing at River Rd. and Fair Haven ark, on the application by Rollo tation may be withdrawn a year family plans to move to Fair neither confirm nor deny the Carthy and Detective Roben 1959 after the firm obtained a per- Rd. was defeated by public Transit Corp. to discontinue its from now "if physical facilities Haven if the variance is granted. possibility of a jughandle being Letts, with the use of a townshi mit for the building but before referendum last year. bus franchise for the Bayshore of the school are not improved." constructed at the complex in- Road Department truck. It started construction. The second application it being The fire* company has re- area as of Dec. 31. (ailed in Lieu presented by Drs. Robert B. Rob- tersection. According to Capt. Walling, the A trial should be held to de- The letter, signed by R. D. quested that the space in its Rollo presently operates eight ertson and William L. Wood to He said plans are being drafted machines were confiscated be termine if the suit was started Matthew, chairman of the state building occupied by police and bus runs through Freehold, Mat- s their offices at 258 Broad for some sort of realignment of cause they are in violation of th< In time and-if the plans for the Commission on Secondary! clerk be vacated so that it may awan, Keyport, Union Beach, Of $85 Fine St. Their offices now are at 79 the area. tate sta'ute on gambling. building conform to the new or- Schools, reported the school's ac- be used for fire company pur- Raritan, Keansburg, Middletown LITTLE SILVER — A Neptune Branch Ave. The department completed sur- The machines did not offe dinance, the court said. creditation had been extended to poses. and Red Bank. driver was sent to county jail Dec. 31, 1961, but warned of "a veying the intersection several cash prizes, but did offer frei Dismissed In March Dispute Gone The firm contends it has lost last night in default of $85 in likelihood that in November 1961, weeks ago. games. The suit was dismissed in A potential controversy regard money on the operation for sever- raffic fines. the commission will act to with- Local officials have long sought He said the machines were March on the grounds that it ing the property at 258 Broad' St. al years. draw the accreditation." County Jail a realignment to correct what laken from Middletown Lanes Magistrate Richard D. Porter should have been filed within 45 was erased when the Monmouth Edward W. Currie is the at- they term a "dangerous inter- Max Shear's Luncheonette in the fined John Lambert, 1012 Heck Residents of Atlantic Highlands days of the building permit is- Unit of the New Jersey Associa- torney for the company. section." shopping center and Jim Ave., $55 for careless driving and and Highlands will vote Dec. 22 tion for Retarded Children an- For Gajgic suance to Allen Brothers. Most of the Bayshore munici- Four major arteries intersect Lunch, all Rt. 35. $30 for no license and registration on a $1,295,000 bond proposal for nounced yesterday it is withdraw- Mr. Kosene contended he did RUMSON — -\ 2*-yeaM)ld palities have indicated that they at this point. No charges have been prefe in possession. a new junior-senior high school ing its application for a vari- not know the permit had been Rumson man was sentenced last will have legal and other repre- Kings Hwy., Tindall Rd. and red against the store owner: for the two boroughs. ance to have a training center in Mr. Porter ordered Lambert Issued and, therefore, could not night to 10 days in county jail sentation at the hearing to op- Mountain Hill Rd. converge on pending further investigation. If approved, the proposed the house. held in county jail for 30 days file the suit within the specified on charges of assault. pose the application. Rt. 35 at this point. Henry Hudson Regional School or until the fine is paid. time. Arthur R. Murray, Atlantic Sentenced by Magistrate Wil- At a meeting of the Keyport A compjex system of islands will be built on the Trask.prop- Also fined $30 for no license in An Interesting aspect of the Highlands, at the unit's applica- liam I. Riker was Anton Gajcic Mayor and Council last night, now exist at the intersection, de- erty adjacent to Twin Lights. Resignation possession was Mrs. Thelma ease now is whether Mr. Ko- tion hearing Nov. 9, said the 34 Allen St. Red Bank attorney Harvey Hart- signed to channel traffic through Commenting on the warning, Randolph, 384 Willow Dr., Long sene will continue to represent house would be donated to the The complaint against Gajgic man was named as special coun- the intersection. Board President John Joslin unit if a variance could be ob- Branch. the 17 homeowners. was signed Nov. 21 by Mrs. Mar- sel to represent Keyport. Highway officials said the start- Is Accepted Kosene'* Decision said: tained. tin Walsh, co-proprietor with her Erving L. Carr, 618 Broadway, ing date of work on the project KEYPORT - The Mayor an There is little possibility that "The one-year extension clearly However, at the same hearing, husband of the River House Rest- Long Branch, had his license and the cost have not been de- Council last night accepted the the trial will come up this year, indicates that unless additional John P. Arnone, an attorney who aurant ns Lazaro UN Nepb r*9W Siftff ^ QWHy mildfwftfi mm ni» ttHnm Elderly Homeowner* May Cadi For Dayin Court:Ruling Is y>, Wfh rMffof from (fee up-Dies at 63 i W 50* ifl the porthwest to the NEW YORK — (Service* for Awaited tow or middle Cfls in the ixtrtmrationally known orchestra lead- PASQUALE F, AMAT0 Get Tax Break Next Year Congo Costs Another Due southeast. Clearing and turning er Gus A. Lazaro, 63, were held LITTLE SILVER—Pasquale F. UNITED NATIONS, H. Y. (AP) ASBURY PARK — A Long NEW ORLEANS (AP) — An colder tonight with low in the Wednesday at the Daniel George Arriato, 88,.of 431 Spring St., died TRENTON (AP) - Elderly •m • ' • ,—A new East-West clash was Branch man arrested yesterday other day of uneasy truce loomed 30s. Wednesday partly cloudy uneral Home, Brooklyn. Burial this morning in Monmouth Med- homeownen may be able to get inStltUtlOllS 'promised tloday as the UN turnedon one charge of disorderly con- :oday in the New Orleans school and seasonably cold with some as in St. Charles Cemeteryj cal Center, Long Branch. I to a $66 million question: Where duct, one of drunken driving, and integration battle as the city snow Hurries over the north- armingdale, L. I. a tax break as early at next one of driving a car with a faulty awaits a ruling by three federal western hills. High in the 40s ex- He was born in Calabria, Italy, (Continued) |is jt gojng t0 get the $66 million and came to this country more year, under a proposed bill. The legislative session - first.to foot its Congo bill for the cur- muffler, has had his first day in judges on a request to delay rac: cept about 40 in the northwest al mixing. corner. than 65 years ago. Mr. Amato The measure was introduced in since Sept. 12 - was devoted;rent year? . | court. He will get a second Dec. had lived in this area 50 years. The two previously all-whit Cape May to Block Island the Senate yesterday by four sen- mainly to closed party confer-j The 99-nation financial commit- He was a retired barber. His Stanford L. Spatz, 18, of Union lementary schools which Small craft warnings are dis- ators headed by John A. Wad- ences to discuss bills, and thejtee was slated to take up the wife was the late Concetta Amato, dington, D-Salcm. It is the spe- passage of many special bills, issue in the wake of a warning Ave., Long Branch, after a sleep dropped racial barriers Nov. 1 played. Easterly winds about 10 cific bill to back up the con- in the city jail, was found guilty to admit four first grade Negrc knots early today becoming Surviving are six sons, Carl P. many on emergency procedure.!from Secretary-General Dag Ham- Amato, with whom he lived; stitutional change approved by The Assembly met for a brief! marskjold that the whole Congo by Magistrate Eugene Capibian- girls were virtually segregate: southerly 15 to 25 knots and the voters Nov. 8. co of disorderly conduct. again yesterday as classc; shifting to westerly late this af- Domenic and Hugo Amato, both session in the morning, recessed operation might have to be junked of Los Angeles, Calif., Victor Although it sets Oct. 1 as the until mid-afternoon, and passed unless the General Assembly He was fined $50. Patrolman started after a week-long holi ternoon or evening. Mostly Anthony Salerno testified Spatz day. I northwest winds 15 to 25 knots and Arthur Amato, both of Keans- date to fix eligibility for the ex- 23 measures. makes quick arrangements for burg, and Stelladoro Amato of had used abusive language after The three Negro pupils wen tonight and Wednesday. Cloud> emption in the next year, the el- The key Assembly-passed bills members to pay up. Long Branch; a brother, Pepino a high speed chase on Main St. the only students at McDonaugl today with some rain at times derly could get the exemption for were five measures to stream-j The Western nations are cer- | Amato of New York City, and 12 into Interlaken. No. 19. At William Frantz, twi mainly in the northern portions all of 1961 if they filed before line operation of the state's rail-'tain to blast the announcement by grandchildren. next June. road subsidy' plan, sent to thejthe Soviet bloc that it will not After the arrest, Dr. Herbert white students attended alon Clearing tonight and parti; governor; and a bill to require!pay one cent of its share of the A. Knapp, assistant 'Monmouth with a lone Negro. cloudy Wednesday. Visibilit The William S. Anderson Fu- The tough part is that they ! cc :ll! near one mile, but occasionally neral Home, Red Bank; is in would have to prove that they public meetings of government '$66 ~millio"~n 'earmarke—-•«<.-i'-crnatorial nomination. a tough gamp, construction and cleanup work Mrs. Anna Aldus and her son, MISS EMMA L. SICKELS ; Lou's won the $410(10 Profession- Frank, will seek a variance to 3R Mitchell Dr., Eatontown, formed to set up standards for] Hillery said he. intends to ap- "1 was wasting my breath. The al Dnwlcrs Association national remains. The project also includ- daughter, Saturday. NEWARK - Miss Emma L. wcnt in convert n two-family house in • racing and operates a program point Sen. Charlfs W. Sandman,!club over-confident and championship. ed modernizing the highway for Quartermaster and Mrs. Fred Sickels, (IB, of 16 Fulton St., died designed to better the sport. R-Cape Mav. chairman cif the; it ruined us." 1.2 miles around thn intersection tho B residence zone at 47-4!) RACING Oakland St. Into four apartments. S. Soules, 28 Shore Haven Trail- in St, John's Hospital Sunday. Crtrden State was accepted as n powerful Joint Appropriations Resides not wanting to go The larger Rt. 18 project in 1 NEW YORK-Fnur trucks, Hia- er Park, Hazlct, son, Sunday. She was born In Elbcron, member In 1944 and Balmoral In Committee, the usual stepping- through the agony twice, Ewbank leah, Washington Park, Arlington East Brunswick is due to be fin Sgt. and Mrs. Glen R. Mon- daughter of the lato Ellas and jn.ir>. stmie tn majority lender. said he skinned looking at tho Park and Balmoral, resigned ished later in December. BOY CYCLIST KILLED day, 75 Mitchell Dr., Enlontown, Lavinla Sickels. The resignations mean only But he said he isn't looking,49nr gamp film to "start think- from the Thoroughbred Racing MOUNT HOLLY (AP) — A dnughtnr, Sunday. 1 The highway department sak Surviving are several nieces that the tracks involved will op- forwarnrward too prcsidimpresidim: over theIho'in ingg right away about thee DelnrDclro'll Association. jiit has earmarkerarniiirkndl funds for an- 10-vciir-nl10-vciir-nlrdl Imy was killed ycMerycMer- Sp. 5 nnil Mrs. Carl Davis, 4R1 and nephews in the Long Branch rrijte without membership in the Sen.iIrnnttr next yrnr There will be Lions next Sunday. They need1 Nl-W YORK—Miss Wedf^wnmliotlu-r Rt. I overpass at Wood- day when struck by a enr on Pine Brnol! Rd., New Shrews- area. TRA. The TRPB will continue to •nnlinual ninneuverinr, by guber- plenty of Ihourjit." j ($20.50) wnn the TRA Purse at| liriilg.- Ave. in Kdir.on and for! RL Mil. bury, daii'ihter, Sunday. The funeral will be tomorrow police the tracks. Gulfslrcmnlnntorial candidate aiirl intend- Th" I.ions. last home nppnent-Atuicdm modernization of the highway be- lie victim, Mark Null nf at 1 p.m. in the Woollcy Funeral Piirk In l-'lnridn 1% another track fieri antagonism between Rcnuh- nf thn •.c.v.on for liallimnrc. ilc-' I'AWTUCKKT R. I. - I WITH Liviiiijslon Ave. and tliojCfiliiinbiis, was ridinj: liis bicycle No problem finding tenants Homo, l.nnt; Branch. Burial will thn) is nnl a TKA member. Il;licans ami nfmoci.it!., Killery. ff.ilrd Hi- Coif,. ,1017, in tlioii-. Ru-nsa (%'.)) captured the feature! lit. IIIO liafdc circle, in Niirlh I when .sliucl; by a cur driven by '"b"n von ndvrrthn The Register be in West Long Branch Ceme- withdrew several years ago. predicted. first meeting Oct.2,1. nit Narrananse.lt Park. 'Brunswick. 'Luris Winn, 05, of llalncsport. way,—Advertisement. tery. • / [Tenure For RED BANK REGBTEt / . -r- ; /-7vK >Right-to-Know'Bill; : Magistrate*/ Lincroft Man No Fishing Faces Battle To Address On Hunting TRENTON (AP)-A proposal Sent to State Senate > grant municipal magistrates Appraisers On Parkway RED BANK — The fishing and TRENTON (AP) — A "Right-1 Jiorized or investment of public enure faces rough going on its ATLANTIC CITY — Raymond hunting along New Jersey's sea- to-Know" bill, revamped by Gov. unds is decided. iecond trip through the New Jer- A. Mulhern, 127 Shelbern Dr., Robert B. Meyner's office, has 6. When public disclosure sey legislature. Lincroft, will be the principal shore and pinelands stretches art won Assembly approval and is 'ould defeat the object of the Gov. Robert B. Meyner con- speaker at a joint luncheon this undoubtedly good this season, but now before the state Senate. ifficial action. In this case, the itionally vetoed the measure week of the six New Jersey chap- not on the Garden State Park- The revised bill, designed to ;overning body would have to resjerday. Its chief sponsor, ters of the Society of Residential way. assure public access to meet- lass a resolution beforehand Majority Leader Le Roy .J Appraisers. Vice Chairman John B. Town- ings of government bodies, was itating the general nature of thi D'Aloia, D-Essex, accepted Mey- send of the New Jersey Highway passed 57-0 by the Assembly yes- •usiness to be conducted and ner's proposed changes and an \uthority said the parkway terday a few hours after it was ihy it would be harmful to thi amended version of the bill seem nvites sportsmen to motor down Introduced. It was sponsored by njblic. ed headed for quick approval in 0 the many salt-water fishing the lower house. ;pots and hunting grounds but not seven assemblymen from both 1 parties. But then Assemblyman William 0 stop on the road for such ictivity. The original bill was proposed The Boys . Musto, D-Hudson, interrupei by the N. J. Press Association :he debate and won D'Aloia'; Authority regulations prohibit and was passed by both houses agreement to postpone the vote my person from hunting, trap- earlier in the year. But Meyner Will Have until the legislature's next meet- >ing or molesting any wild lift said some of its provisions were "ng, Dec. 19. m the parkway, or from, fishing too sweeping and might be Sources close to Musto said hi m or from the parkway, unlen harmful. Their Fun would oppose the measure as an there are designated location! TRENTON (AP)—It may haw Infringement of home rule. or such outdoor sports, Mr. Alfred N. Beadleston, R-Mon- 'ownsend said. mouth, mouth, chief sponsor of jeen the late hour, but the Sen Meyner's veto message said hi the new measure, explained that te chamber was the scene o! did not think granting municipa State police patrolling the 173- it allbws some groups to conduct iarbed comments which hai magistrates a lifetime job durin mile parkway have been alerted secret sessions when the public strongly political and personal good behavior would completely TREE PLANTING — Three hundred trees were planted at Memorial Field, Red Bank, to the danger of motorist hunters Interest might be endangered. ivertones. solve their problems but "at leas along the road, he added. On the recently by the Parks and Recreation Department, assisted by Boy Scout Troop 17 of )ther hand, toll collectors along The bill permits public access The principals were Senat t will insulate the magistral the Red Bank Methodist Church. Scouts Robert Johnson, left, and Craig Lewis, he parkway have been alerted to to all meetings of governmental 'resident George W. Harper, R rom the unpleasant pressure: provide motorists with directions bodies where official, action is Sussex, Sen. Walter H. Jones, R which are sometimes felt when right, lend a hand to borough maintenance men Angelo Gelso, second from left, m how to reach their favorite taken, with specific exceptions. Bergen, and minority Leader Jos- continuity in office depends and Frank Bevacqua. fishing or hunting areas off the Any action taken in violation of eph W. Cowgill, D-Camden. the will of another." It was supposed to be all ii superhighway. the law can be voided by Su- The governor recommendec Raymond A, Mulhern perior Court. fun, discussing a bill to chang. hree main changes in the origi he law on Episcopal Church par- School The luncheon will be held in The major exceptions: nal bill: ish meeting dates, but at time: 1. Grant tenure only upoi (Continued) conjunction with the annual four- S&L Holdup 1. The governor's office, the he smiles vanished. reappointment after seven years ot be abandoned at the ex- day convention of the N. J. As- state Parole Board, the legisla- The conversation went liki service, instead of after 1 ense of the new school. sociation of Real Estate Boards ture and the judicial branch of this: years' continuous service. "I've backed you on every- beginning Wednesday at the Suspect Is state government. Cowgill got up to speak on thi 2. Make retirement at 70 yean ling up to this point," he told Traymore Hotel. 2. Whero .it is contrary to law,bill. Jones protested—The ma- of age mandatory. le school board, "but now I Mr. Mulhern, international vice Indicted 3. Where public disclosure jority sponsor usually speaks 3. Provide for removal fo: link we have come to the part- president of the Society of Resi- would endanger receipt of fed- first. cause by the state Supreme Court ig of the ways." dential Appraisers, will speak on NEWARK - A federal grand eral aid, such as relief payments Cowgill, to Jones: "You didn nstead of by the municipa Chamber of Commerce presi- "Progress in Appraising." jury yesterday indicted Paul F. 4. When the purpose of the get up—It's my bill too." governing body. ent Wihtol hit the cost of the Mr. Mulhern will point out the Burns, 28, of North Arlington in secret meeting is to discuss pro Majority Leader Thomas Hi! Before Musto interruped thi 3.4-acre site at Broad St. and necessity for qualified appraisers, connection with the $5,612 rob- cedure at a public meeting. [ery: "There shouldn't be an; debate, Republican Assembly /yckoff Rd., which the school particularly in the residential bery Sept. 19 of the Totawa Sav- 5. When an investigation is au- 'euding over church matters." men Raymond E. Bowkley . onrd holds an option to buy forfield "where the importance of nigs and Loan Association. Jones: "May I be heard? Hunterdon and Benjamin Frank 86,000. the concept of valuation enters Assistant U. S. Attorney Jos- have that right." in II of Morris urged granting into mortgage investments, con- eph R. McMahon, 75 Buena Vista Harper: "I recognized the sen Wants Condemnation demnation of real estate for the Ave., Rumson, said Burns is Big Volume of tenure to County Court judge: "Why can't this property be ator from Camden," also. future development of public charged with armed robbery and ondemned, and the board take jeopardizing the lives of three Jones: "I know all about th At present, only Supreme Court properties comprising school fa- president's prejudices but I in hat it needs?" he asked. cilities, road building and indus- bank employees. Marks Busy ustices and Superior Court J. Edson Allen, board presi sist on being heard. This bi! judges are granted tenure upoi trial expansion." Burns was arrested two weeks would. . . lent, replied that if it were con- ago by the FBI after a hidden reappointment. lemned, the board would still The society is an internationa Market Day Harper: "We are speaking or professional organization of spe- camera, triggered by a teller, the emergency resolution." lave to pay "fair market value" photographed the thief as he was NEW YORK (AP) - The tale or it. cialists in residential property val- Jones: "If you want to say it' uation. Organized in 1935, its aim leaving the bank. of the stock market yesterday bad bill, you go right ahead, "It has been appraised by an The alleged robber is being was one full of sound and fury, Road Men is to promote higher standards of Harper: (An aside, not heard. ndependent appraiser, at more residential property valuation. held in Hudson County Jail in signifying nothing much in the han the price at which we have default of $50,000 bail. way of price changes. Jones, to Harper: "Since yoi As of January, society mem- finally quieted down, I'm glad t Win Praise n option," he pointed out, "so bership includes 2,618 senior mem Mr. McMahon said the bank Turnover came to 3.86 million ve would lose by condemning was robbed June 17 of $7,323. A ihank brother Cowgill for passin; FAIR HAVEN — Councilmai bers in 76 cities plus 9,570 as shares compared with 3.19 YEAR-AROUND SERVICE — Looking over some of the Mosler Photo-Guard camera was this bill so expeditiously;" Edward Stratton had nothing bui sociate members who are direct- Friday and was the larges Warren Sandbach proposed installed three days, before the Cowgill: The last time he wen praise for the borough's road de- merchandise at the Four Seasons Gift Shop in the Mon- ly concerned with residentia volume since 4.03 million share: :onverting Memorial School into robbery for which Burns is un- to see his son at Lawrencevilli partment last night when he gav mouth Shopping Center, Eatontown, are Carmen J, Mag- property valuation. changed hands Nov. 10. I got three of his bills passec 1 junior high, for seventh and der indictment. Popular averages also reflec the council a report on its fir: gio, left, and Thomas X. Beach, co-proprietors. The new :ighth graders, and building an and with a lot less effort." three months of existence. Burns was positively identified ted the standoff on the day. Thi Sen. Anthony J. Gross!, D-Pai shop was officially opened last week and will carry a ilementary school on the Maida in separate police lineups by five Associated Press 60-stock averagi Dr. Stratton, chairman of th ract. E-SU Plans saic: "Amen and pass the hat. road committee, listed as th wide variety of novelty and gift selections. different witnesses, Mr. Mc- ended unchanged at 216.30 with Blames Ramsay ' Mahon said. industrials down .50, rails up 0.1* major accomplishments, the oni Mr. Allen explained that this and utilites up .30 Matawan Man Hurt month clean-up after Hurrican would mean addition of new 'Jolly' Meal Dow Jones average of 30 indus- In 4-Car Accident Donna which struck immediate!, Should home economics and shop facili- FORT MONMOUTH — Col after the department had bee;Parachute Club Harold McD. Brown, command trials was off 1.04 at 605.43. MATAWAN — Richard A. Fa Try Baseball ies at Memorial, and obviate Steels were weakened by an- formed, and completion th lie transportation savings ex- ing officer of the Army Signal iello, 20, of Washington Ave. wa week of a three-week borougl CRANFORD (AP) — A 23- other low operating rate sched- Is Organized year-old school teacher -was pected if the new school is built. Research and Development Lab- P charged with careless driving a clean-up campaign which nette oratory, will deliver the address uled for this week. U.S. Steel result of a four-car collisio: KEYPORT —The newly or- fined $75 In municipal court Mr. Sandbach said: 1 40 truckloads of junk weeded oi "I am just a layman, and so of welcome tomorrow at the dropped ' and other performer Friday at Main and South St. of attics, basements and yard: ganized Asbury Park Air Termi last night on charges of ma- similarly. are all the members of the school opening of the three-day, ninth Police said Mr. Fariello wa In addition to these chore: nal Sky Divers Parachuting Club licious mischief, disturbing the ! (Write to George for up-to- Chrysler was the weak sistei board. I blame (superintendent annual communications Wire and treated by a local physician ft Newman Walden, supervisor, an held its second meeting last week peace and assault on a police date advice. Three chairs, no among motors, dropping 1 y t of schools) Bill Ramsay for our;Cable Symposium at the Berke- 2 a nose cut and bruises on th Robert Frank have performei at the home of Joseph Potts, 41 officer. waiting.) 38 %, a new 1960 low. America1 chest. dilemma." ley-Cartefet HoteV Asbury Park. many carpentry and mason . Third St., here. The defendant, Michael J. De- Howard F. y. Kingsley, West Motors slipped % as it yieldei He will be arraigned in Mi At the organizational session Beck of 211 Ave. £, Bayonne, A woman who left later with- tasks which previously had bee: out identifying herself • rose to Long Branch, is general chair- Dear George: most active honors"to Transitron nicipal Court Dec. 19. last month, Richard J. Lewis was accused of throwing rrcks done by extra help, the cou Mr. Ramsay's defense. man. Fred W. Wills, of Inter- I don't have a dog-goned prob- This electronic issue, whic The other drivers involved wei cilman said. was elected president. Other of- through' windows at the Cleve- laken, is co-chairman. em that I can't solve by myself, had been depressed recently, rosi Thomas J. Anderson, South Am land Junior High School hcl\ Defends Superintendent 3 The usual road departmei ficers are Leon Potts, vice presi- Twenty-five technical papers on so you can go back to sleep. — 2 '/2 to 37 A on turnover "We should blame ourselves, boy; Virginia Schwarzenber, Pai jobs of cleaning catch basin: dent and William Graham, sec- DeBeck had resigned from progress in the communications Fearless Freddie 98,300 shares. American Motors lin, and Garrett J. McKeen, Jr. the school a few days before not Mr. Ramsay," she said. "We s cutting grass and patching roa retary-treasurer. wire and cable fields will be Dear Fearless Freddie: closed at 19 / on turnover Valley Dr. . never even attend school board t have been efficiently performec Additional charter members in- the incident, which occurred presented • during morning and Send for our phamphlet "How 81,600 'shares. Next in line cami meetings. Then we come and he added. Nov. 16. afternoon sessions. To Stop Living and Starting Ampex off % to 23 Vt on 58.30C clude Joseph Potts, William Van criticize. When arraigned last week, Worrying." and Jersey Standard off y t Horse Caught Pelt, John Burke, Jr., and Henry "The whole impact of the tre- The symposium banquet will t Poland. DeBeck told Magistrate Charles be held Thursday night in the! NEPTUNE - A horse whi mendous growth of our schools 39 % on 57,300, The membership is limited to J. Stevens that he was prompt- hotel's Crystal Room. Dear George: broke out of its stall at Rivei has been borne by him. I think Other active gainers include Egg Market those with previous parachuting ed to break the windows be- The symposium is sponsored by; I have been a good dog but my view Academy, Shark River Hill; it is disgraceful of you to pub- General Instrument 2 yA, experience. However, the club cause his job had aggravated the Signal Laboratory. master will never take me walk- and raced more than a mile in NEW YORK (AP)-(USDA) licly blame and ridicule him." Chock Full O'Nuts "when issued' says it will furnish details on him. Speakers .listed for the open- ing; he makes his wife take me Neptune City, was roped an Wholesale egg offerings of larj Other critics of board plans stock up 1 % Newport New: obtaining requirements for those DeBeck said he planned to ing session are: on all the walks. Don't you think captured by two Neptune City o and mediums about adequat were: Joseph Walko, Victor Pet- Shipping, with a $156.5 millio interested in joining. get a job that didn't bother Maj. D. T. Patterson, Army my master should help take care ficers. other sizes and grades short ers, Andrew Meyer, Merrill aircraft carrier contract in hand, him as much. Signal School; L. C. Platau and of the family dog, and wouldn't spurted 3 % and National Dair> Patrolman RaymondWhite, whi needs yesterday. It is expected that facilities for Beam and Mrs. Beam and Karl instructing beginners will be Bowers. R. H. Cranmer, Signal Labora- you put that in your column for was up 1 % after announcing heard the horse race past polii New York spot quotatioi tory; W. D. Parker, Rockbustos made available soon. Mrs. Larry Goldberg arid Wil- my master to see? — Winnie the plans to get into the liqui headquarters on West Sylvani follow: Wire & Cable Co.; E. T. Pfund, Visitors are welcome at the Apalachin liam Wood spoke in favor of the Dog weight control product field. Ave. and Special Officer Lavei Mixed Colon Jr., Electronic Specialty Co., and Air Terminal to view parachut- school as planned. Dear Winnie the Dog: Yesterday's closing stocks: GaNun made the catch Frida: Extras (48-50 lbs) SS '/2-5: P. S. Klasky, United Electrody- night at Windsor Court after ha' extras medium 50-52; slanilan ing Which will take place week- Personally, if there's anything ACF Ind 37 1-T-B Ckt Brit U ends, club members said. Convictions Outline Proposal namics, Inc. /dami Ex 2«?1 Johns Man 55 ing pursued the horse In a poli 51 14-53 %; checks 43-44. Plans for the school were I can't stand it's a complaining Air Reduo 73«i Jones & 51 The afternoon program will in- dog. You're lucky you have a AIICB Cp 97i Joy Mfg .16 car and on foot. White* presented by Mr. Allen, Mr. clude: Allcg I.ud . 341i Kaiser Al 37 Extras (48-50 lbs.) 56 >/ -5! Reversed roof over your head. Now shut 76 2 Ramsay, Dr. Henry Hollings- Allied Ch Kennecott Grid Officials E. D. Katz, E. O. Baver, and up and get off that couch. , Allied Stn 45 W Koppers 3S extras medium 50-52; top qualil NEWARK (AP) - The U. S worth and Frank E. Johnson of Allla Chal 23% Kresge, S3 28»i Hunter Ousted P. E. Fox, Bell Telephone Labor- Alcoa 647k Lelilgli CAN 11 (48-50 lbs.) 5842; mediums 52-5 Court of Appeals in New York -icht and Johnson, architects, atories; R. J. Ettinger, Good- Am Alrlln 18S Leh Port C 27' Confidential to "Girl in Ever} Lch Val Ind 1U WALL TOWNSHIP - A huntei smalls 42-44. Dine Thursday has reversed the conspiracy con Englewood and Herbert A. Ca- Am Brk 8h 3715 rich-Gulf Chemicals, Inc; E. C. Port:" As far as I know, it's Am Can 3l»i Lch Val RR ordered off private property fac Browns SPRING LAKE HEIGHTS — victions of three New Jersey men rusoe, board auditor. McKannon and R. E. Shaw, E. Am Cyan 42% LOF Glass 51»( a hearing Dec. 10 in Municipi Extras (48-50 lbs.) 56 '/ -5f impossible to sail into Tucson, Am M*Fdjr 7D7i Lib McN*L 101; 2 The annual dinner of Trenton who attended the 1957 ganglan' Mr. Carusoe said that if the I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co., Am Motorj 19«i Ugg ft My 83 Court on an assault and batter Ariz., even if you are out to Lukens Stl top quality (48-50 lbs.) 57-5! convention at Apalachin, N. Y bond issue is approved, the bor-Inc.; L. Rosenthal and T. Hazen, Am Smelt 56 531; Chapter, New Jersey Football set the North American record. Am Stil 12 Hack Trk 3l\ charge. He is free in $1,000 ba mediums 50-52; smalls 42-44. Officials Association, is slated Twenty men in all heard the ough's total tax increase, which Union Carbide Plastics Co,, and Am TeltTel m-i Martin Co %« Bruce Searing, 1112 Ivanhi Am Tob 60'i Merck for Thursday night at Beau news that their convictions were will also include municipal cost R. M. Sherwood and S. J. Boron Am VIIICOM 40% Metro Gil 4014 Path, was accused of striking X Minn M&M ZULU NAMED BISHOP Rivage. reversed. Increases and increases in state ski, Monsanto Chemical Co. AMP Inc 64H 67 seph Morton Saturday after M: Anaconda 4414 Mo Pac A 30 CAPE TOWN, South Afric Football coaches, their assist- The New Jerseyans are Loui; and county taxes, will be in the Two other major Signal Corps Utility Unions Armco Stl 64 V! Monter Oil 3S Morton and Joseph Vasllngha: (AP)—A member of the Zu Armour * Co 37*S Mont Ward 28.. ants, and officials from through- A. Larasso, 34, Linden; Frank neighborhood of $1.10 per $100 symposiums are scheduled for Armst CU 48«l Nat BIBC 76«i owners of the Hidden Brook Oi tribe Sunday was consecratec Nat Dairy out the state will attend. K. Majuri, 51, Elizabeth, and An of assessed valuation. early spring. They are the 15th Ashl Oil ' 20 60 >i chards, told him to leave thei a bishop of the Anglican Chun Atchlnon 2214 Nat Distill The usual main speaker, one thony P. Riela, 63, West Orange, The architect, Mr. Johnson, annual Power Sources Confer- OK Contract Atl Refln 40U Nat Oypa a-* grounds, police said. in St. George's Cathedral hen Avco Corp 13Vi Nat Steel 77 of the top football men in the Larasso is a labor foreman anc said construction costs would be ence, May 9-11, and the 15th an MORRISTOWN — A 4.85 per NV Central They reportedly advised hi He is Alphaeus Hamilton, fir: 1 flalinck ft W 31'.i 1514 country, will probably be miss- former trustee of a laborers anc $15 a square foot. nual Frequency Control Sympo- cent hourly pay raise was included Bald Lima 12U Nln M Pw 38< the property was posted for thei African bishop ever appointed b; Halt & Oh 27'i No Am Av 45 ing this year. hod carriers union local. He hac Simple Construction sium, May 31-June 2, both at the in a 23-point contract approved Hayilk Clg ""32»'i Nor Pac 42 exclusive hunting use. the church. liendlx 65 «i Nwst Alrlln 15 In all probability, the replace- been sentenced to four years. Construction would be simple Shelburne Hotel, Atlantic City, Friday by seven union locals of Jieth Steal 3D Norwich Pti 44 Majuri, a construction worker, and economical, he said, with the New Jersey Power & Light Boeing Air 3671 Ohio oil 34' ment will be one of the top en- Bortlon B7>,( Outb Mar 23' tertainers of television and the would have served five years painted cement block walls, Scout Banquet Co. and the Jersey Central Power Borg Warn 33 U Owens III 01 Riela, owner of a Newark mote wood roof, and no ceramic tile, & Light Co. Brunswick 89H Pan A W Air 17K LOCAL SECURITIES stage. • , ' Buckeye PI 38 Param Plct SI had been given four years and not even in the toilets. Set for Tonight Ballots from the 2,400 members Bucy Eri» 13U 42 The following bid and aiked quotations, from the National Assc Thomas, Phipps, Red Bank, Penney, JC {10,000 fine. Statewide average for school ASBURY PARK-The year-long of the International Brotherhood Budil Co 14% Pa Pw ft U 27 elation of Securities Dealers, Inc., do not represent actual transa chairman of the Shore group, Bulova 1S« Pa RR ' III and Jack Kelly, Lincroft, secre- There was lack of sufficien construction, he pointed out, is observance of Boy Scouting's of Electrical Workers were count- Burl Jnfl Phil El 61 tions. They are a guide to the range within which these securitk 50th anniversary will come to an Cruse, JI Phlll Pet 53 could have been sold (indicated by the "bid") or bought (indicated tary of the Trenton chapter, will evidence to support the convic $17.52 per square foot. ed Friday. Cater Trafl 30M Pit Steel 11 tions, ruled trie Appeals Court. The great majority of the 70 end tonight with a Golden Jubilee Five locals voted Thursday and Colannse 22T, Pub 8v E*O 41 by the "asked") at the time of compilation. host the Trenton group. Chea & Oh SDH Puhllck Ind » BANKS Officers of the chapter include The prosecution had chargei people present at last night's banquet at 7 o'clock in Conven two voted Nov. 10. Chryaler 3R»i Pullman 32 tion Hall. Cities Svc 47H Pure Oil 33 Dlv. Bid Askei Ed Valyo, president; Mr, Kelly, that those who attended the meel hearing were vociferously op- The contract also calls for a ColR palm 3271, RCA 511' Allenhurst Nat'l .50 80 ing were mobsters with siniste posed to the school as presented. An estimated 1,000 Scout of- sixth day of paid sick leave each Colutn Oaa 2171 Reading Co II secretary, and Pete Dllco, Coml soiv !07i Itcpub stl 52 Asbury Pk.-Manasquan Nat'l 1.30 35 treasurer. motives. They met at the hom Confident Of Approval ficials and their wives from the year. It continues overtime pay Con EilH 64 Vi Rcyn Met 4071 Asbury Pk., Ocean Grove 2.50 53 Cont Can 32% of Joseph Barbara, Sr. Board president Allen, how- Monmouth Council are expected for work in off-schedule hours. Rey Tob 90 Belmar-Wall Nat'l 2.00 58 Cot Mot Rob Pulton 37 The defendants had been in ever, at the meeting's close, said to attend. This provision, part of the con- Corn Pd- St Jos Lead 20' [Central Jersey Bank .60 . 17 Crown SSell Three Fined Silver. Beaver awards — Scout- tract since 1952, was one of the 4!>»1 Bt Reg Pap 3(i Farmers & Merchants 1.00 48 dieted on charges of defying th he believes the referendum will Cruc Stl ' 1B14 Bears Roeb 6«7i ing's highest honor—will be pre- main issues in the negotiations. CurtlM Wr 1BM Shell Oil 40 First Nat'l, Bradley Beach 1.25 50 law by conspiring to conceal th be carried. Del ft Hud 2371 Sinclair 36 In Red Bank purpose of the meeting. "If the Allen Homes vote sented to five leaders. Kendall n«nt • Bu|i 24 M Smith, AO 30' First Nat'l, Freehold (xx) 12^ 14 1>OUR Alrc RED BANK — Two men H. Lee, Asbury Park, is chair It pays to advertise in The 30 Hocany 38 Keansburg-Middletown 12.00 375" comes out in force," he said, Dow Chem 7(1 «i Sou IMo 20 Long Branch Trust 18.00 charged with assault and bat- man of the banquet. Register—Advertisement. Jlu Pont 1RR Sou Ry 4,V 525 "that could very well be the de- Dun Lt 2(1 18 Matawan Bank .30 tery on their wives, and a man Milk 'Record Sperry R(! 9 ciding factor." Knnt Knrl • Ht.l rfrnntl Sll Merchants Trust • .70 22 charged with being drunk and End John Btil Oil Cnl ' 4B% BRATTLEBORO, Vt. - Th Mr. Ramsay said: TJrlo Lnnk Rid Oil NJ 3D (4 Monmouth County Nat'l .12 4'/ disorderly were fined yesterday Holstein-Friesian Association ha; "We will keep right on fighting 1-'! minim 37 Btucl Pack New Jersey Trust 1.00 42 ynnl Mot fir. Tnxnco 8171 by Magistrate John V. Crowell announced the completion of a for the school, up to the time /.INTEREST ON YOUR flcn Accept Peoples Nat'l, Keyport 3.00 Tex (1 Prod 82S 70 Benny Williams, 29, of 11- official production record by (!li on Traniamer 2.V INDUSTRIAL Ofln Motors 4114 Wn Carb|[|« 120 $50 and given a 80-dny suspended Colts Neck, N. J, wo will have 17 classes on dou- Oen Pub Brockway Glass 2 27 Ut 2.174 Un Pnc 2771 30 Jail sentence for hitting his wife It is Limestone Zodiac Iiett; O Tol * El M'i I'nlt Alro 381 Electronics Associates (xxx) 2 ble session In 1962, even If the '-r^ SAVINGS film AM 1174 "nlt»d Cp Hanson VW-M 3% 4 Mrs. Louisa Williams. owned by Douglas T. Newbol state education authorities and flnclrlcli 4D UH I.lnos Oomlycar 3(17!, UH l'lywil Hnyclu Industries 1/1C 3/ Somuel P. Parker, 30, of 101 Morrisdon Farms. Fort Monmouth continue to let (It A * P .11 "j I'd Huh a Lnfrd & Company ,,. ow nw Montgomery Terrace, Red Dank fit No ny { IW Rmrlt 27i ; The cow produced 15,731 pound us use Ihc 10 temporary class- llrryliciitid US RIPFI Tl Monmoulh Pnrk .45 8% 9 was fined $?.5 for nssaultlnR his of milk and f>-17 pounds of buttc rooms at the fort." Oillf Oil Vnn Al Htl 31 N. J. Nntural Gas .00 25% 2!V TIITC Pilr wife, Mrs. Bessie Parker. fat in, 322 clnys on twice dai erchants Wnlworth 71 N. J. Natural Gns 6% Pfd. 1.20 2O'/ 21 Til Cent Warn 11 Plr S'.'i 2 Settimio Mnnzo, M, of River- milking as a thrcc-ywir-nld. It adds up! More and more Int Him Mch West I'n TH 4(|i Trad Electronics .01 .1 Tut Itnrv WMIK Kl 40' OW side Ave, Red Dank, wns fined people use The Register ads each Int Nlrk Whlln Mnl 3D U.S. Homes and Development Corp. BW Tnt Piipir Wnnlworth Bill 'Plus stock dividend, (xxx) 2 percent stock dlv. 1958; $25 and Riven a 30-day .suspended It pays to advertise In The issue bcciuise results come fas- Int TelATtl YnRIl Hll ft T 80 (xx) 6.7 percent stock dlv. 1058. sentence for being drunk, Register—Advertisement. tor.—Advertisement. RED BANK HOLMDEL FAIR HAVEN r, Sir. », MM 1E0BANK REGISTER I —»r>»rieaal«t what dfc»» fffoff /. •M ^Mft ••• flltt VoYT BABBl (ore ttw HMMT nuMtractM cut iMt *f *• CtyfM, 71* if Inaugural Troubles under tfw fwifdictfm of • Joint So whatatont tke isaufural Senate-HouK committee, S»t* n? TWi'formal affair alw if are free, but *t )e««t SO,0N re- by invitation, And your name Plan to AlleiHl? So Do Thousands quests are expected for the' lf,3M j murt have been on the pre-in spaces available. i augural committee invitation list Then there are the attendant since about Oct. 12 when mem- WAREHOUSE Of Others, and Space Is Limited spectaculars, such as the two- be"rs of Congress were asked to i hour parade from the Capitol to submit names—"with priorities By ERNEST G. WARREN I "We don't know Washington so the White House, the inaugural noted." JERSEY CITY NEWARK _!„». ,.„. , iwill depend on you to get us three y ball, the pre-inaugural dipner, the Ticket prices haven't been fixed! WASHINGTON (AP)-Are youjhote, r'oomS| pr eferabry a,onB the governors' reception anil Consti-ifor this year. Four years ago| planning to attend the presides.parade route so we can see jt tution Hall concert, and the like. they were $30 a couple, or for an \ tial inauguration in January? ;fro m the windows i{ the wealher These are under directiqn of a eight-person box $500. Thousands of others are, too, js ^ citizens' inaugural committee. In 1S57 there were four simul- MID-WEEK SPECIALS for TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY and the headaches they are ere-! ',,. '., , „ | They cost money, but even mon- taneous balls at which the prin- ating for Congress members and •"cidentally, we may use your offic as a sort jey won't buy space that's already jcipals and their attendants ap- party officials shine through this f ° headquarters 1 on Jan 20 u th e filled. ;peared briefly. Because the Sec- BISSELL composite of the letters piling up ; T . '"augural 32" PRETTY PIXIE in Washington since Election1?"ts, dolnS- T "member you said Seats in the inaugural stands ati ret Service had such difficul- ithe Capitol are reserved for in-1 ties then in moving their charges n •• !tom hanin g my hat there whenever HOUSEKEEPING KIT -As you know, my family anrj! '' Washington. vited guests only. through the traffic and crowds WALKING I worked awfully hard for the! "Sorry we couldn't carry our For his personal and official from one ball to another, there ticket during the campaign. So!Pr* DOODLE Add to these the diplomats and ing referred to a citizens' inau gural housing subcommittee for lattery operated let prop families; the electors; the fami- airliner with lor»llna lights, lies of governors; state party allocation to groups and individ- retractable landing gear a*d I leaders, etc, etc, etc. uals. dual controls. Well, you say, if we can't see Hotels have said that regular our leaders sworn in at least we rates will be maintained but that People put money hers can find a place along the two reservations must be made for miles of parade route and cheer four full days—Jan. 17 through which they wish to STAY Jan. 20—and that payment must ! them as they pass. Standing room D»r> spin automatically, ilrfn PUT. There seemi to be j if you can find it, is free. Seats be in advance. blasts warning, launclnrs rist, count down clock ticks oft ... at count also will be available, for a fee. Have you a Washington friend List J(5 ifro r«cktt and satttllto automat' less "temptation" for you Contracts have been let for with a good rollaway? Llmlttd 1 U a family ically fins. Ootrotn on battoriti. Limit lit g lamlly semi-permanent (wooden, that is) COUPON ONLY 6000 NOV. » AND 30 COUPON ONLY COOD NOV. 29 AND 30 •>••. to use your savings, here spectator, stands for 15,000 per- ' sons at a cost of $164,016. In ad- Safety Record •for current spending. jdition, 25,000 bleacher type seats i will be put up with another 23,- PARLIN — A 25-year safety record — more than 10,500,000 000 to be held in reserve for Famous RENVML quick erection if seat sales war- man-hours without a single time- Famous MXRX REVOLUTIONARY RED BANK SAVINGS rant them. losing injury on the job — has VISIBLE AND LOAN ASSOCIATION The costs of all these side been achieved by employees of events are underwritten by local the DuPont Company's Photo V-3 ENGINE WAR SET 10 Broad Street Products Research Laboratory merchants and associations who Tht fabuloui tranipartnt op- Red Bank, New Jersey i hope to get their money back here. erating auto tnglnt assembly kit. Ovtr 100 moving parts. Chartered I8R7 ' through ticket sales. If there is A dinner recognizing the I a loss, as there was in 1957, the achievement will be held Dec. 7 at th e Col nl a C94 Open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. underwriters take it. If there isii . ?. . Country _ClubL The a profit it goes to charity. speaker will be Emile F. duPont. Includts Colonial n.od. Monday thru Friday Uif$IJ ajuarftrs, cannon and In 1957 parade route seats, de- director of the du Pont Employee limit 1 to • family fortifications, Colonial COUPON ONLY Relations Department and a troopi, Irtdcoats, norm, GOOD NOV. pending upon location, were priced acctsiorltl. If and 30 Tel. SHadyside 7-0330 from $3.50 to $18.75, the latter member of the Board of COUPON ONLY COOD NOV. 2» AND 30 I near the presidential pavilion Directors. Accounti Insured to $10,000 and reviewing stand in front of! other guests will include John ; the White House. This year the ;M. Clark, general manager of the 7 DAY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE • HEADQUARTERS FOR FAMOUSIRANDS committee hopes to break evenjdu Pont Photo Products Depart- ntHTr 0F !at least by filling the stands al|'"ent; Dr. Frank K Signaigo. JERSEY CITY NEWARK ASBURY PARK I director of Photo Products Re- 714 Jeney Ave. if Market St ROUTI 35 corner ot Ttnth St. search, and Kurth H. Johnson, '/i block from limbfr««r's at Ookaurst manager of the Photo Products Just 4 blocks from tht 2 Milts Sautb af Jtrioy City tntranca t* Parlin plant. lha Holland NimH. O»t« Dolly t:30 a.m. lolontown 'raffle Clrclt to «:30 ,.m. OPEN DAILY Oata Dally 10 a.m. fa t:30 •.•«. NJ. WAREHOUSE It adds up! More and more O»M Sunday 10 •••. 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. OM« Suadoy IB a.m. people use The Register ads each tet a.m. ^ 3 FABULOUS CENTERS Clostd luaday to a a.m. issue because results come fas' ter.—Advertisement.

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7Sk Lambs' Wool 25% Orion* acrylic Magnificent shawl-collar pullovers in 6 of today's smash-hit colors: minted gold, jet red, tangy olive, classic camel, platinum, charcoal. S, M, L, XL. Put extension phones in color on your Christmas list— «DWV«I Til This holiday sc;ison, choose I'min a lull linr of phones — lovely I'rinecK phones. Extension phones arc so appreciated in styles lo ple;iM: ;my inembri of your family--.colors - yet cost so little. Place your holiday order now. MONMOUTH SHOPPING CENTER Eatontown Circle, Eatontown Just call the Telephone. Business Ollire. oraskyour OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'TIL 9:30 P.M. UNTIL CHRISTMAS to brighten any room in your home. Pick from step- saving table phones, spa< c-.saviiifr. wall phones, little and 'telephone serviceman. NEW JliRSliY UliLL •bv, Vor. 29, 1960-5 Gib* Induct / RED BANK REGISTER . Four Bobcat* n$ SHREWSBURY ._ New Position cuWWer of Pick St, Muctt4 By HAL BOYLE \lour /ww member* »t (art week*! Ipsck meeting in the icfcool. / NEW YORK (AP)~Why is it wives love to keep For Forsyth | Bob cats inducted wer« Wil- their husbands waiting? NEWARK -William A. For-'"3."?.' S'ark- Philip Gedovese, The'habit of wifely procrastination probably has sylh. 39 Crescent Dr., Riverside ph'"P Harr.son and Robert Ger- annoyed and puzzled more men than all other feminine Heights, has been promoted to ar°- assistant branch manager of the Skits in keeping with the theme idiosyncrasies put together. Howard Savings Insitution, here.,of the month, 'Other Worlds" are If two women agree to meet at a department store presented by Mrs. Robert Varrel- luncheon counter at high noon, they miraculously mann's Den 2 and Mrs. Thomas Ryan's Den 8. j)rrive simultaneously as the clock strikes 12. Tood donations were made by Each would get there exactly on the Cubs, and baskets for, the needy were presented for Thanks- time if she had to crawl through snow- : giving. drifts on her hands and knees to make I The Webelos, led by Robert it. Neither would think of keeping the Wilson, participated in a phsyci- other waiting. A woman simply doesn't cal fitness exhibition. They also conducted the opening and clos- do that to another woman. ing flag ceremonies. , Before marriage a girl is also • Mrs. Joseph Sergewich, den fairly punctual meeting her boy friend j mother, was presented a one-year I Pin. on time. But once she gets a wedding 1 Cubs receiving achievement BOYLE ring on her finger, sl^e changes almost awards were Thomas Healy, Jef-l . Instantly. From then on she seems to delight in keeping jfrey McNally, Frank Russell,- (John Wardell, Howard Caplan, her husband waiting. GIRL SCOUTING'S HIGHEST AWARD, the curved bar, wai awarded yesterday to five members of Troop 24 at a William Balmer, Daniel Leary, If she is to meet him after work, she arrives 45 court of awards in Shrewsbury school auditorium. Troop leaders in charge were Mrs. George Steck, left, and William Lees, Bernard Aiken, Mrs. Rolf Barrnanri, right. Curved bar winners are, left to right/ Lynn Tuzeneu, Christine Barmann, Candy Steck, Paul Sadkowski, Arthur Snow, minutes late - - and she doesn't show up out of breath Ralph Santangelo, Thomas Skid- either. If they are leaving from home to go to a party, Judy Keller, and Jacqueline Edwards. more, John Skimeles, Wayne 'she dawdles before her mirror while her husband, Sergewich, Raymond Coryell, William A. Forsyth Alan Cavaiola. Gregory Hensler fully dressed, fumes and paces impatiently in the livingToday's Business Mirror Cub Pack Gets Leaves For Mr, Forsylh, with and Kenneth Kodama. room. ince 1954, will sen New Leader Advertisement An hour after they should have departed she Dollar Jitters Antarctica PORT M0NM0UTH — "New Springfield Ave. branch. MEN and WOMEN NEEDED enters and says: "Oh, are you all ready, dear? Why By SAM DAWSON BOSTON - Raymond J. Jones, Worlds" was the Cub Pack 88; He is a graduate of Asburyj didn't you tell me?" Navy engineman third class, son theme this month. Skils were]! park High School and attended; TO TRAIN FOR NEW YORK (AP)-A bad case West Germany) and probably a "I been hollering at you for a full hour," he yelps. of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Rider College and Hobart College; CIVIL SERVICE of jitters on the London and greater share in the cost of new was 'alter serving in World War II'WR r>r»par» men wom'n, »r» But a lot of good it does him. Tokyo Stock Exchanges has coin- weapons systems by western Jones, 214 Cambridge Ave., Fair Three new Cubs were wel- ' " to 55. No -- > nicfussry. Europe. Haven, N. J., has departed here with the Army. :! Rrnmmnr nclinol education usually Year after year he moans, cries, screams, sobs cided with speculation that the comed and 20 Cubs received ar- _ sufficient. Permanent Jobs, no lay- and bellows: "can't we ever get anywhere on time?" new U.S. administration might Foreign stock traders might aboard the icebreaker USS Gla-row points. He has attended the Ussexloffs, short hnurs. HlKh pay, irlvance- go still further than the present see all three of these as a threat „ . , . . ... rnent. Seri'l name. home. aitflreM, cier for a six-month cruise to the' George Cassidy replaced LouisiCounty chanter, American lnsti- I»I mimner and time home, write He never quite adjusts to the fact that no, they can't. one in trimming American dol- to the continuance of Europe's P W Antarctica. JDeutsch „ . ',„ m. , „ , . Hox M2, Ited Bank. It rurnl live. The other day a group of office water-cooler lar spending abroad. economic boom of recent years I Deutsch as cubmasler. Mr.! tute of Banking. dirrniom. It also follows a call by Pres- —and hence to the market value The ship is participating min ,, " .- . '," ,"_ "," Boy Scoutis associatep Iosepd with hCnyl thee philosophers was discussing this strange penchant of ident Eisenhower's Commission of European stocks. Operation Deepfreeze '61 a sci-' "°° - • wives for making their husbands wait unnecessarily on National Goals for still more entific research program con.'s assistant cubmaster, and Rob- President-elect Kennedy in his 1 1S halrman f the Here are some of their views: strenuous measures to halt the campaign promised vigorous ' ' byy 12 nations in the ice- ^J ™™ ° ° outflow of U.S. dollars and gold steps to get other nations to re covered South Polar region. A charter review meeting was "Frankly, I think it's simply a matter of revenge," and for widening the gap in U.S. move artificial barriers to Amer- The Glacier will be concerned held recently to re-register 53 exports over imports. LEON'S said one oldtimer. "I went with my wife three yean ican goods and to share the for-mainly with oceanographic and Cub Scouts. , before I decided to give her a break and marry her. At the same time the head pf eign aid burden this country has hydrographic research and ex- Mr. and Mrs. Cassidy helped, OFFERS YOU ALL THESE For three years she didn't know whether she wasthe Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. borne since the war. ploration of the Ross Sea and instruct leaders in craft work at FINE SERVICES! of New York asks for an increas- Goes Further Amundsen Sea. a Pow Wow held last week in ing purchase of American goods • DRY CLEANING • RUG CLEANING winning or losing. That was a long time to wait. After Henry C. Alexander, chairman the Monmouth Shopping Center, by funds from foreign aid grants marriage she started making me wait. She was just of Morgan Guaranty, goes even rates overseas. And just how Eatontown. • LAUNDRY • PILLOW RENOVATION and loans. further in suggesting cures for many are aimed at taking advan- getting even. Fears that this time Uncle Sam • FUR STORAGE • FUR REPAIRS the loss of U.S. Gold to otheritage of growing foreign markets, No problem finding tenants' means business are thought to CALL SH 7-2800 FOR FREE PICK-UP and DELIVERY "Thats the way it is with, all wives. They're nations (our supply is now below So far measures to stem this flow when you advertiie The Register | have been behind the heavy sell- 64-76 WHITE STREET RED BANK $18 billion for the first time in have not been suggested. way.—AdverUsen ent. simply getting revenge for the time we kept 'em ing that hit the London Stock Ex- 20 years.) dangling." change Monday morning and a He wants Americans forbidden similar big break in prices on Another said he didn't think it was that simple to hold gold abroad as they al- the Tokyo stock market. ready are at home. He recom- "Actually it's a kind of feminine psychological If he does intend to take stern mends repeal of the requirement warfare," he said "When a woman keeps you waiting measure to protect the value of of a 25 per cent gold reserve the U.S. dollar, one of the main- she knows she has you off balance. It gives her a men- against the notes and deposits of stays of the continuing boom Federal Reserve banks (this im- tal edge." abroad, the flow there of U.S. reu.c ."' "T I .iVTn- , : A third marital veteran said it was all a matter dollars may turn shaky Or at mobilize, .bout $12 billion of our of feminine showmanship. least foreig- • n stoc".»•k trader» y: s » present supply.) He wants our pear to believe so. gold held only for making inter- national settlements. "Wives' don't keep their husbands waiting to Position Clear 1 The us 1 And so an emergency measure, punish them," he said. "They'just like to arrive late ' - Secretary of the Alexander wants future loans and because it is exciting. It gives them a sense of drama.' Treasury made'the American po- grants tied closely to the pur- sition clear in his recent visit to chase of American goods. But a fourth • husband had. still another explan- Europe: We can't go on carrying There are two other things ation. all the burden of aid to under- feeding the outflow of gold and "I feel sorry for wives," he said. "They all have developed nations and our pres- dollars: imports and investment ent share of the cost of defend- by U.S. corporations and individ- a secret inferiority complex. When they get some- ing Europe. The President has uals abroad. where late, it creates a stir. Everybody asks, 'where ordered a cut in spending by Complaints by American manu- have you been? We were worried about you.1 This U.S. military and diplomatic mis- facturers of increasing foreign sions and their personnel. competition are rising, and with builds up their feeling of self-importance. The President's commission them doubtless will come fresh echoes this, calling for a much attempts to get Congress to dis- "Poor dears, when you realize this about them, higher export surplus, a smaller courage imports of these goods, you can't be mad at them. They're so starved for proportionate share of assistance whether by higher tariffs or by attention. You have to pity them." to underdeveloped nations (put- outright quotas. ting the finger specifically on The steady flow of U.S. invest- Well, ladies, what about it? What is the real ments .abroad in recent years reason you keep your husbands waiting? School-Time Sailor seems likely to continue, if not increase. Overseas plants - get around foreign import quotas or Members of the lights commit- currency restrictions. They usual tee are Anthony J. DeStcfano, I Liglliting Set Printed Pattern ly take'advantage of lower labor chairman; Mrs. Margaret Mos-j ca, co-chairman; Mrs. Ann, -LEGAL NOTICE In Little Silver Forbes, Emilio Grilli, Harold Gib-1 LITTLE SILVER - A dozen lin, Gerald Geiling and John! PROPOSAL Ferrogiari. Nolle* li hereby jlvtn th«t sealed •trings of Christmas lights will WrU will be received In the Reception Room o[ the office of the Director, be turned on at a special cere- Dlvlifan or Purchii« And Property School Officials To 2nd noor, rear. State Home, Trenton mony Friday at 6:30 p.m. 25. New Jersey, on December 8.1980 at 2:00 P. M. and will be opened and The lights were installed by Address Civic Group read Immediately thereafter, for the the Little Silver Businessmen's following: HOLMDEL - Harry K. Lub- EXTKRIOIt PAINTING— Association. Nine strings will be VARIOUS BUILDING* kert, Board of Education presi- SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF WEST TRKNTOX, N. i. You get low bank raUa when you finance your car through a full-service bankl In the Prospect Ave. - Church dent, and Harry D. , board Bids mint be (1) mide on the Hand. «rd proposal form. (21 enclosed In the St. area and three will be at thevice president, will address the special addressed envelope. I3I accom- railroad station. Civic Association next Tuesday panied by either cash, or a certified night. check drawn to the order of the Treas- Members of the Christmas urer of the StHtn of New Jersey, or a lild hond. any of which fihnl! he In the Shop and compare*•• finance your car through lights committee of the associa- They will discuss the 1961-62 amount of 5T. of the bid. and (4l de- livered at the above place on nr be- tion and Borough Council mem- school budget and the proposed fore the hour named a« no bid will bers will be at the lighting cere- purchase of an elementary school be accepted after the hour specified. Bids not no aubmltted will be con- mony. The association will hold site. sidered Informal and will be rejected. a full-service Bank in Monmouth County The Director reserves the rlRht to re- a Christmas dinner-dance Satur- The- meeting is scheduled for ject any nml all bids and to award day in Old Orchard Country Club. 8 p.m. in the elementary school. contract In part or whole If deemed In the heit Interest! of the State to do flo. Tlip successful hlddrr will t>r Sec how much you can wlirn your car is financed by your required to furnish surety hond In the What if a (ull-iervice bank? It orftn you mere thin full amount of the contract, of a com- local 'lull-service bank, eillior directly or through your dealer. •ny other savings Institution. It's the only place that meets pany authorized to do business In the all your banking needs. Here ere tome ol the many lervlces State of New Jersey. When you do business with a full-srrvicr hank in .Moiiinoiilli County, BRING YOUR ROLLERS Plans and specifications, form of available at lulMervlct banks: m.s,Ma oth.r «i»lnn bid. contract and bond for 'the pro- •ink Inllltutlini posed work are on file and may be you help build your personal bank standing . . . your financial 2 TO FROWN'S AND HAVE YOUR obtained upon application to the Direc- Ctisoklng aoooiints YES no tor. Division of Purchase and Proper- reputation and prestige in your community. Actually, personal baiik • SHADES MOUNTED WHILE YOU WAIT! ty, State llouae, Trenton 25. New Jer- sey, on deposit of twenty-five dollars Savings VES YES (125.00 )for each let, this amount to standing is one of the most valuable assets you can have. he refunded to the bidder upon return of such documents In good condition Personal loan* YES no • White Washable fiber within 30 daya after the award of the Build yours by doing your borrowing and financing throtigb your contract. Car loans YES no DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASI'RY Division of Purchase and Property nearby lull-service bank in .Moiiinoiilli County where, your savings • WINDOW SHADES CHARLES F. BUI-UVAN. Director. Home) loans YES YES Nov. 22. 2f» S1P.14 and checking accounts will also be more convenient. Mounted on Your Rollers •uslnais * farm loans YES limited riiii.ic Nomt: — Up to 36" Wide — An ordinance entitled "An ordinance Parsonal bank standing YES no establishing a code regulating retail SPEAKKKS AND FILMS food handling establishment*, refiulrlnfi FIRST QUALITY permits (or npernltnn thereof, providing Need a speaker for your next meeting? Contact for inspection of flr.cli establishments your local full-service Bank. In addition to a nnd fixing penalties (nr violntlons# was presented for Introduction and first Speakers Bureau, this Association has sound films Better livijxg begins at rending on October 27. infill by Town- (or classroom and assembly visual aids in elemen- ship Committee of Atlantic Township mill nn November 17. I960 was finally tary and high schools. See your local Bank. yoviv jull-service Bank a i0I>tr6? pattern—add 10 cents for each nnd thereafter, ns authorized hy chap • BUDGET TERMS • FREE DELIVERY pattern for first-class mailing. Irr ill. l.lius of 1 IHiO. nf the male n; New Jersey. (An act concerning IILX- DAILY and SAT. 8 A. M. to I P. M. Send to Murinn Martin, Red Bank nllon, aupplemenllnR rhnpter 1 of title M, revising purls of Hie statutory Inw, WED. and FRI. 8 A. M. to » P. M. Register, Pattern Dept., 232 West nnd repealing flections ,r» 1:1-:U. nl:l-o 18th St., New York 11, N. Y. 'in.I ,'il:l-:i, in of the revised eilntutrn WHS presented for Introduction and first Clearing House Association Print plainly name, address with eutlltiK on ("hioljer *J7. IPfill by Town, ihlli rnminltlce nf Atlantic Township zone, sizo nnd style number, IMIII fin November 17. IfifiO was finally powns L New! .Send now for our IDb'O nlopteil and ni'prnveil *• TEMPORARY LOCATION lrnll and Winter Pattern Catalog WILLIAM Mt'i'K, Mayor In Monmouth County look for "BANK" or "TRUST COMPANY" in the name. Atlantic Township 9 Broad Sir. JK *-/JUQ Red Bank —pvoiy pnge in exciting color! Mini: Over 100 styles for nil sizes, nil llnriv Crlne, It is your assurance of full-service banking plus Federal Deposit Insurance. occasions plus school . . . 35c. Oik, Nnv, 2fl J.Vni 1Ud tank Ktgista A$ W m DIDN'THAVE TROUBtES ENOUGH n,y n.3. Wt by MM H. CM* and Htary Clay Be Orf ' THOMAS IRVING BROWN, Publisher 1928-195* GRAND BAHAMAS—The stars are too big. They JAMES J. HOGAN, Editor M. HAROLD KELLY. General Manager W. HARRY PENNINGTON, Production Manager hang, unblinking, in a tropical sky that is never black. Soldier crabs walk the lime roads like dignified drunks. Member of the Associated Press Th» Aiioei&ttd; Preii li actltled exciuilvely to tht us? (or zepubllcatlon ol all tfi» local Dtwi prlntid Strawberry groupers tread the warm sea lazily, staying a thli mwipiptr u wtU u ill AP ne»» dlip&tclies. in the night shadows of the sloops at anchor. Four Member Audit Bureau oi Circulation little boys dance for coins in front of Th» Ked Binlt Register tsiumei DO financial reaponBlbllltlei for typographical errori ta advertise* menu, but w',11 reprint without •»***rge. that part of an advertisement In which the typographical error oo- the Blue Marlin Club. curx. Advertiser! will pleua ^Bfy tbt management Immediately of any error which may occur. A brazen jbulb glares down at the Tin cewipapir aisumea aa napoDilbllltlii (or itatementi ct opinions in letter! from lti readera. boys. They have the true rhythm that Subscription Prlcei ta Advance On* year 113.00; 81x month! |8.00 Single copy a4 counter. 7 caau Single oopy by mall, 8 cent! God reserved to Negroes who love mu- sic. The bare feet shiver, the knees TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1960 knock, the dark faces split in snowy grins. They watch the grown-ups — Negroes and a few whites;—move into Welcome, Lily-Tulip BISHOP tne ciub. Until sundown,' the British flag flies over the town of West End. When it comes The announcement last week the proposed Raritan-Holmdel indus down, the natives play. that Lily-Tulip Cup Corp. will build trial park, and Lily-Tulip. The woman at the door takes a dollar from every a multi-million-dollar plant in Holm- Not only is this ideally located patron. She wears rhinestone earrings the size of golf del is good news to all of Monmouth geographically for industry on the balls. The Blue Marlin is a big oblong cinderblock County. Eastern seaboard, but it has an al- with a service bar on the left, 50 tables around a dance floor, and a band on a stage up front. The band hits Based on present plans, the cup ready-existing labor market as a everything hard and loud. The waitresses balance the and container plant might employ result of the housing boom brough big trays over their heads and they walk calypso style up to as many as 1,500 persons— on by the advent of the Garden State between the tables. most of them county residents. Parkway. Sweet Bland Pride That would more than make up And, it would appear, we have West Indian Negroes have a sweet bland pride. for the 150-employee cut-back re- the "right" kind of labor market. They love the sea and they love each other. They per- cently announced by the A & M mit white guests to visit their club, but they do not Based on surveys made by hi; Karagheusian rug plant in Freehold. want integrated entertainment. They speak a cadenced company, Walter J. Bergman, presi rhythm, like the lyrics of a song. Their names too are Karagheusian, which was once a dent of Lily-Tulip, made this state- These Days; colorful: Onward Jones, a cab driver; Poppa Skeeter, 1,700-employee plant, is moving a ment: WILLIAM a self-appointed official who will meet you, marry you, division of its operation to North send you to jail, sell liquor to you and bury you. "You have the type of people in listen Yankee Carolina next year. When this move There is Jimmy Bowlegs, as dark as a well-kept Monmouth County who will give a By GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY S. WHITE is completed, coupled with other secret; Cue Arlington McQueen, who is simply too Karagheusian cut-backs over recent day's work for a day's pay." Prof. C. Wright Mills is a professor of sociology MEXICO CITY — Look home- much, and a girl named Constant Bennett. The West at Columbia University. He has written a piece of press ward to this hemisphere for the years, it will bring the "total plant That might sound like a worn most immediately critical of all Indian women have the most erect carriage I have agentry, "Listen Yankee," for Castro's Cuba which if cliche, but to an industrialist, it is the foreign policy problems with seen. They also have a gentle sway that was not taught employment down to 400. neither sociology nor advantageous press agentry. II which the new Kennedy admin- one of the highest compliment! istration must quickly grapple. in the local Sunday school. I asked my room maid This, of course, is not good news is so emotionally over-cooked that it becomes taste- what her name is. which can be paid to an area. The cold war with the Soviet —but from a broader perspective the less. The learned professor writes: Union is, of course, infinitely "Pot," she said. She spelled it Pat. "Pot Cunning- fact is that Monmouth County's in- According to present plans of the "My major aim in this book is to larger in the ultimate sense than ham, but they calls me Pot for shortness." present the voice of the Cuban revo- the crisis which Cuba's Castro dustrial star is very much on the firm, the Lily-Tulip plant will be the has created below the Rio Grande. At the club, the people drink and dance. They like lutionary, as clearly and as emphatical- rise, with the $30 million Bell Labs largest industry in, the county and But this second example of warm Norwegian beer and they dance warm. Some- ly as I can, and I have taken up this international communism's dis- times, they dispense with feet. The men glisten, the research center, now under construc- the largest paper cup plant in the aim because of its absurd absence from ruptive power almost certainly will be the higher on Kennedy's women perspire, the boy shaking the maracas tosses tion, the New Shrewsbury industrial world.. the news of Cuba available in the Uni- first world-affairs list of business, his face toward the ceiling as he swings the sandy park, the new Bendix Corp. plant, We welcome you! ted States today ..." for our troubles down here are of the hcre-and-now kind. potato mashers. At midnight, Sidney Garvey, the own- This might have a tone of impar- They must be dealt with at er, asks everyone to be quiet. The show is about to SOKOLSKY tiality, of the research scholar objec- double time or they may become go on. Your Money's Worth; tively seeking after the truth except that Prof. Mill? too inflamed to be dealt with at all, and Mexico under President Garvey's father is the best Negro limbo dancer happens to be a member of the Castro propaganda Adolfo Lopez Mateos can fairly on the island. Tonight he is missing. A man in a loin- organization in the United States which calls itself be said to hold the balance of cloth comes on the dance floor and does a fire dance. Here Is Where Your Food Dollar Goes "Fair Play for Cuba Committee," which has on its list power in Latin America. We must prevail upon him to weight that He blows a benzine breath and a broad blast of ruddy By SYLVIA PORTER many whose names always appear on such commit- balance in our favor. flame hits the palm fronds on the beams. They singe. tees. Prof. Mills spent two weeks in Cuba in August Effective Agent The man crouches and wheels and snaps his hips-am' When the cost of living is dis- half cent; other business expen- average about the same as they 1960. One of his conclusions is that: A visit here makes one deeply blows more fire. cussed, the "price spread" be- ses up three cents. These "oth- did eight years ago. They're Source of Trouble aware that to checkmate Castro tween what the farmer gets and er business expenses" are ulti- even about two per cent below as an effective agent of Com- The Cemetery Man is on next. His face is mad-- ivhat you pay at the grocery store mately made up largely of state those in 1958 despite the increase "I believe another source of trouble is that many munist imperialism we must have up white; he has a white mustache, a swallow tailcoat, is likely to be a target. But can and local taxes, local transpor in the over-all cost of living. North American journalists simply do not know how the genuine support of other this "spread" tation and the labor, tax and Index Increase Latin-American powers. Any and long John underwear. His dance is interpretive. It be narrowed to transportation costs "wrapped One reason people think the to understand and to report a revolution. If it is a rea action against him taken strictly suggests an old medicine man on his way to the happy improve the up" in the supplies, services and cost of food has gone up is be- revolution—and Cuba's is certainly that—to report it on our own would injure us ir- cause the government announce- hunting ground. He dies in convulsive ecstasy and the food cost pic- equipment bought by the food in involves much more than the ordinary journalist's reparably. The Mexicans have ture? dustry. ments to the press refer to the bitter memories of past American people shout and slap their thighs and laugh. Paul S. Wil- "Retail Food Price Index." This routine. It requires that the journalist abandon many Profits Increased? interventions. Though the decisive A dark girl in fringe comes out with a sullen ex- lis, president Q. Porter: Haven't food proc- is a combined measure of gro- of the cliches and habits which now make up his very people here don't like what Castro cery store food prices plus res- pression. She begins an aboriginal shiver and, in a few of the Gro- essors' and distributors' profits craft. It certainjy requires that he know something in is doing, they would like even less cery Manufac- increased, too? taurant meal prices. The restau- anything we might do in Cuba minutes, she is in a happy coma, shivering everywhere. turers of Amer- rant meal part of the index has detail about the great variety of left-wing thought and which smacked of the Big Stick. A, Willis: Over this same per- increased 19 per cent since Jan- The little band plays faster and louder and the wait- ica Inc., has iod they've declined as a part of action in the world today ..." answers in to- uary 1953, while grocery store From many conversations here PORTER the food dollar. On a combined resses bring more drinks and the people begin to swing day's interview prices for foods have remained Many journalists in the United States have spent with men from President Lopez and moan in their seats. basis, the average net profits of stable. Mateos downward, it would ap- —one of a series of interviews food manufacturers and distribu- many years of their lives-studying, researching, re- I conducted recently with a se- Q. Porter: If the mass food pear that the beginning of a The owner's girl comes on and does a native dance tors now amounts to a little less porting revolutions. I, for instance, started this task solution might be found in the lect group of America's leading than four cents of the dollar you production and distribution in- that is native to every port in the world. It is, shall industrialists. dustry is operating so effectively in 1917 in the city of Petrograd, where the Soviet Revo- wav: pend for food at the grocery 1. By early Kennedy-Lope2 we say, basic. The customers chant with the music Q. Porter: Why does the.far- store as compared with five cents why aren't food bills lower? lution began; I lived through nearly 14 years of revolu- mer get only '40 cents of the food A. Willis: In a real sense, in Mateos meeting. This correspon and some of the young men at ringside laugh so hard in 1946 and nearly six cents in tion in China. I know other reporters who have had dent is informed by very high dollar I spend at my supermar- 1939. relation to today's income, food at the girl's antics they slide to the floor. ket? prices are at the lowest point in similar experiences—if not for so long a period, per- quarters here that Mexico would Incidentally, your grocery bill be pleased if such a conference Not a Dry Eye A. Willis:—This question on the history. The American factory haps more intensely in equally difficult situations. Prof. today includes many items you worker today can buy the gov- could be held immediately after At 1:30 a.m. the show is over. The band plays "price spread" puzzles many previously bought elsewhere — Mills has had no such experience and two weeks in Kennedy's inauguration, and people. The "price spread" or ernment's standard monthly "Danny Boy" with a beat. Ned Moss shakes his head things like cigarettes, magazines, "market basket" of family foods Havana in August, 1960, did not give it to him. Mexico would be pleased indeed the W-cent difference between kitchen utensils, garden supplies, if Lopez Mateos and Vice-Presi sadly. "Danny Boy," he shouts above the din. "I'll bet what the farmer'gets and what with earnings from 38 hours of towels, even items of clothing, work. In 1952 it took him 51 Resorts to a Device dent-elect Lyndon Johnson could there isn't a dry eye in the house." He and Bob Brum- you, the consumer, pay, covers like hosiery. When your hus- meet in the meantime to make assembly of products from many hours. In 1947 it took him 61 So the professor, not having knowledge or experi- band complains about your gro- hours. This is the real way to! the arangements. by leave. Brumby is a short square man with dark farms, transportation, all the cery bills, he probably doesn't ence, resorts to a device. He will write as though he 2. By all-out American support processing functions such as can- find out whether or not your food slick hair and the beady eye of the benevolent pool realize that the light bulb in the is a bargain today. Figure out were a Cuban and as a Cuban, he will blame everything for Mexican efforts to develop a shark. He used to be a columnist on a New York news- ning, freezing, pickling, pack- lamp next to him is included in common market in Latin Amer- aging, storage — more transpor- the number of hours it took you on the United States. He comes up with this learned that bill. or your husband to earn the ica. This would help to arrest paper called PM. Today, he is press relations director tation, warehousing, wholesaling, The fact of the matter is that scholarly paragraph which I hope no editor will censor those economic conditions on and then more transportation to money to buy your monthly food of The Grand Bahama Club and he hungers for news food prices at your supermarket market basket. Compare it with because Americans ought to see what an American which Castro feeds. Thus it would your grocer—and finally the re- assist in neutralizing Castro. of New York. tailing costs. It also includes the number of hours required for professor writes when he tries to imitate a Cuban:" the same food 10 years ago. Lopez Mateos grants as much — The customers dance a little. When they leave, the cost of selling, research, ad- "The gay tourist city of Havana—in the old days though he quickly adds that the vertising, plant and equipment CARMICHAEL they say hello and good night to everybody. The little it was more than a place of sin. We Cubans, like every- common market is not being depreciation and many other ex-! formed for anti-Castro purposes boys have gone. Across the street, old boats ride an penses incurred by food manufac- one else, we know all about sin, being Catholics of a (his emphatic line is that Castro- turers, wholesalers and retailers. Newsmen Hear onyx swell. An elderly woman squats in bare feet at sort. But in Havana, sin was also the big money for ism is "not a Mexican problem the edge of the water. Remarkably Low WITH but a Cuban problem"). Q. Porter: Isn't 60 cents of the Detective Chief the few, and every filthy practice of the brothel for She has a fish on a flat rock and her short knife food dollar too much for the price &00P £ OFF girls 12 and 14 years old, fresh from their bohios. On 3. By the appointment of an RED BANK — Chief of Mon- cuts a spiral around his body and all the bones come ipread? tHAKAetl*— YOY U the Prado and on the narrow street called The Street American ambassador, in succes- A. Willis: Actually, the spread mouth County Detectives John M. sion to the able and retirinp out in one piece. She washes the limp remains in the Gawler was a guest of the Shore Is remarkably low in view of the NEVER HAVE AMV of Virtues, they and their pimps solicited you—and Republican Robert C. Hill, hold clean salt of the sea. Tomorrow her son will have rapid increase in rates for wages, Press Club Saturday at a meet- ing close personal friendship with ing in Old Union House. then Batista and his henchmen got their cut." queen trigger for breakfast before he sails out. 'taxes and transportation. These Then he goes on to say: Kennedy. What is needed is a are the cost factors which make The chief and newsmen from man politically strong enough to There is little money here. The people hoard up most of the spread. Moreover, the daily and weekly papers of "Maybe you don't know two facts about the gam-bypass the State Department Monmouth and Ocean Counties happiness ... the services for which the spread bling and the whoring. A lot of that gambling money careerists. They seem chronically pays are a tribute to America's discussed mutual problems in ob- unable to see this area as cur- mass production and mass distri- taining fast coverage of major ended up in the pockets of a corrupt Cuban govern- rently of even more urgent "Thf Way I <;«| It, Th« Nrw Prmirfent crime news. bution system. Without "price ment, which your government (the United States) and imoorlnnce to us than Europe. Pliins To Unleash Tin- U. S."- Chief Galwer, a member of the spread" your steak would be an- some of your corporations supported and helped. Also 4. By the exercise of some other steer on a Western range, Monmouth County Police Chiefs Association, said he would report much of it ended up in the pockets of your gangsters small sense of responsibility macaroni would be durum wheat among the Hollywood producers In the Dakota plains, cheese on the discussion to the associ- from Chicago and New York and Los Angeles. The ation and suggest a Joint meeting who provide the main picture of would be milk in a Wisconsin the United States here. farmer's pail. Without spread of the club and chiefs. money you paid for our whoring sisters . . ." the farmer would be virtually Chief Robert Berry, Oceanport, For an illustration, the other Wickedness of Women night at an International film out of business. president of the Chiefs Associa- Of course, this may be some sort of special plead- tion, had been invited to be pres- festival in Acapulco the U.S. of- Q. Porter: But the farmer is feririK wns a hate-sickened thine; Retting fewer of my food dollars! ent also but declined because of ing but decent people do not traffic in prostitution Illness. cnlled "The Fugitive Ones." It now than he did in 1946, i and the Cubans would not have had this, to say about oresented racial troubles nt home A. Willis: No, he's Betting! Thn chiff said ho would also their sisters but found an American professor of so- in terms so savagely extreme as nomewhat more dollars from each give the club's views to Prose- ciology who was willing to attribute the downfall of to revolt even such members of standard "market basket" than cutor Vincent P. Keuper and the a visiting American press party he did then, and more "market county physician, Julius A. Toren. Cuba to the wickedness of Cuban women who took as hold nn advanced civil rights baskets" are being sold. How- Problems created by deadlines advantage of American tourists. position. In nil the world, there ever, he Is getting fewer pennies for different editions of dally pa- Prof. Mills does not apparently recognize that So- could be no more worse place to of each dollar spent. Costs have pers, according to Joseph Perlnle show such a melodrama, for the gone up, and so today the prlcei of the Newark News, club presi- viet Russia has established a political and military base Mexicans nrc infinitely sensitive spread has increased from 4? dent, produce the biggest diffi- 90 miles off the coast of the United States. This coun- about rnclnl discrimination. cents of your food dollar In 1946! culty for newspapers in obtain- to 60 ccnls today. Mere's where ing news as It huppuns. try has been asked by its neighbors to protect them Some of us walked out of llw they went: higher labor costs, from Cuban attacks on them, utilizing' Soviet arms. ilm curly, preferring lo seem •even cents; higher intercity j g rude rather Ihnn lo seem In sup- Sweden had a turnout of 8ii.fi Fidel Castro, Raul Castro, Che Guevara have time a nor! such n fanlnsy of ugliness, trnnsportntirin costs, V/j cents;] per emu of rligiblc voters for federal taxes on food processors' And Me.xicnn offie.lnls pointedly, <•>- iW. 2'J, the country's ruccnt election to time established their close association with the Krem- and distributors' pro/its, up onc-l and in advance, avoided any its lower liousc. lin. Bui. all of this Prof. Mills docs not know. ussociiition with it. RED BANK REGISTER Tiwd-y, Nor. 29.

Shows to TUESDAY AFIESNOON "Belle Starr" W- (2) hove a Uit - (i) Feli* tn4 Friend* \t;n- (t) Movie—Dr»m» »9 VIEWING TV O) Truth or (I) Kews ''Shadows in the Consequences (11) Popeye Night" it'Ah HAL HUMPHREY , Watch (7) Texan (13) Highway Patrol 12:45- (5) News; Call to Prayer i (9) Guy Madison «:15— (7) Q.T. Hush 12:50- (2) Movie—Gomedy 1940 TONIGHT (11) Great Plays in «:30— (4) Local News "Brother Rat and a Rehearsal (5) Cartoons Baby" City of Excuses 10:00—(Ch. 7)—Alcoa Presents 1:00- (4) News — (Choice Viewing) — William (13) Day Watch (7) Tommy Seven 2:30— (2) Search for Tomorrow (II) Quick Draw McGraw (7) Evening Prayer Shatner promises his wife to give 1:05- (4) Dr. Brothers Tells ip his trade of bomb deactiva- (4) It Could Be You (13) Movie—Drama 1957 . LAS VEGAS — For some silly| hands akimbo. At the flash of a ion, which was a profitable trade (5) Cartoons "China Gate" Why , reason, no one from Hollywoodilight, they drew and fired their 1:10- (4) 13th Hour i London following the war (7) Beat the Clock 8:40— (4) Weather 6 ever comes to this gambling oasisiblank charges. An electric tim- 'ears. He goes on one more as- 6:45— (4) News (9) Almanac Newsrce! without some trumped up excuse. I ing device recorded who fired (9) Assignment Danger 1:40— (4) Sermonette ignment, and there's an acci- 12:45— (2) Guiding Light 7:00- (2) News lit is considered gauche to admit]first, and judges walking along- lent. He is killed but "allowed" (4) Phil Silvers 2:30- (2) News that you jusl want to play the! side of each contestant determ'"" 12:55— (4) News 2:35- (2) Give Us This Day o keep one more promise. Psy- 1:00— (2) News (5) Coronado 9 slot machines and stare at the ed if the contestant fired too hi :hic research provides the back- (4) Dr. Joyce Brothers (7) Expedition! WEDNESDAY MORNING girls in the French nude shows. or too low. ;rounds for these interesting (5) Cartoons (9) Terrytoons 5:55— (4) Sermonette Either you have come to meet After two days of eliminations, itories. (7) About Faces (II) News «:00- (4) Continental some relatives from the East, or a young hombre named Jack (9) Movie 7:05— (2) Local News Classroom you are a close pal of Frank Sims from Mountain View. Calif., 8:00—(Ch. 7)-The Rifleman- (11) Fun at One 7:10—(2) Weather 6:15—.(2) Previews Sinatra's and he insisted you at-had the winner's medal. He was The old West is a mightly tough 1:05— (2) Burns and Allen (II) News > 6:20- (2) Give Us This Day tend another of his openings. wined and dined by the Sahara place to make out in, as young 1:25— (4) News . 7:15— (2) News 6:25- (2) News , As a TV columnist, it is neces- Hotel and Colt firearms makers, 4ark McCain discovers. Espe- (5) News 7:23—(11) Weather sary to reach even farther. My co-sponsors of these things. 7:30— (2) Exclusive! 6:30—(2) .Sunrise Semester :ially when he has to buck a 1:30— (2) As The World Turns (4) Continental excuse this time was a fast-draw I didn't attend the finals, be- item schoolteacher. Arnold Moss, (4) Laramie (4) Dial Four Classroom contcst(with Runs, not cards), in cause I had promised Lily St. vho always • gets these mean (5) Movie (5) Tightrope! which nearly 200 pistol-packing Cyr I would watch her disrobe oles, plays the teacher. Some (7) Bugs Bunny 7:00- (2) News (7) Susie (4) Dave Garroway civilians tried to out-draw each as the star of Minsky's Follies :ast changes have helped series. (11) Science Corner (9) Movie—Musical 195G other for a paltry $1,000 first at the Dunes Hotel. I figured "Bundle of Joy" 7:15- (5) Call to Prayer 1:50—(11) Journey Into 7:26— (7) Morning Prayer prize. this was legitimate duty, because »:00-(Ch. 4)-ThrilIcr-A bomb (11) Men Into Space Mathematics (5) Ding Dong School Since television and fast guns Lily once appeared on TV—in an this is the night for 'em) set to 2:00- (2) Full Circle 8:00— (2) Father Knows Best are almost synonymous these old Mike Wallace interview. etonate in six hours is thrust (5) City Assignment (7) Early Bird Cartoons (4) Jan Murray 8:00- (2) News days, I believe anyone will agree While in my room changing my into the purse of an unsuspecting (7) Day in Court (7) Rifleman that I would have been derelict shirt, I flipped on the TV set woman who becomes the object (11) Divorce Court (5) Sandy Becker 2:10—(11) Our World Neighbors (7) Little Rascals in my duty not to attend such and was surprised to see Dinah STORY WITH WORLD IMPACT —"The U-2 Affair," of a desperate citywide search in (IS) Mike Wallace Shore and note that it was just 2:30— (2) House Party 8:10- (2) News an event. "Impulse." Seems a disgruntled o:20—(13) Dialing The News j;t past six o'clock. Apparently this premiere program of the "NBC'White Paper" teriet on (4) Loretta Young 8:15— (2) Captain Kangaroo ars citizen had plotted to assassinate 8:30— (2) Dobie Gillis .. ,, , ,, , is a special service at this time, the NBC-TV Network tonight will tell the story of Francii (7) Road to Reality 8:30—(13) Religious Prosram candidate for mayor, but his (11) New Frontiers in . (4) Alfred Hitchosk I^""":.^!-" for Ramblers. Miss Shore was plan fails. Elisha Cook plays (5) Mackenzie's Raiders 8:45—(13) Comnmnitv Newsrecl Hollywood TV stars in attendance Gary Powers (shown in pilot suit and at his Moscow Science giddily happy as usual. the bomber. He's made a career (7) Wyatt Earp 9:00- (2) People's Choice —Clint ("Rawhide") Eastwood, trial), and will examine the aftermath of hit flight and 2:55— (5) News Barry ("Tall Man") Sullivan and There used to be a ban on TV mt of such roles. (13) Play of the Week (4) Family "strip" here. capture in Russia. The full-hour program will offer a 3:00— (2) Millionaire 9:00- (2) Tom Ewell (7) I Married Joan Gene ("Bat Masterson") (4) Young Dr. Malone operators figured that any- minute-by-minute chronology of the flight and will in- 9:10 — (Ch. 2) — Red Skelton (4)Thriller (13) Physical Culture to mention a few. Jack (5) TV Reader's Digest aid-de-camp, Hugh Downs, was | thing which kept the customers Show—You'll get Red in all his - (5) Wrestling 9:25- (5) News in their rooms longer than five clude hitherto unrevealed facts. Chet Huntley of NBC true coloring tonight if you have (7) Queen for a Day 9:30- (2) My Little Margie hanging around wearing a wes- (9) Film Drama (7) Stagecoach West minutes was a detriment to prog- News will narrate. the right kind of set. This is the (9) Movie (5) Topper tern hat and a gun belt slung over (11) Movie his shoulder. I thought this was ress. season's first colorcast. As Clem (11) Flight (7) Memory Lane Seizure of Altruism Kaddiddlehopper, a man who's (13) Day Watch (13) Day Watch reaching a bit, but a girl sitting and Mrs. James Egidio, an or- 3:30- (2) Verdict Is Yours 9:30- (2) Red Skelton It was no sudden seizure of al- ganizer. Each was present' spent a lifetime among animals (11) Danger Zone 9:50—(11) Adelante en Espanol behind me at the shoot-out said Founders Red suddenly discovers that he (4) From These Roots he looked very young and chic. truism which finally induced tha with a gold pencil. 10:00— (2) Garry Moore 10:00— (2) December Bride hostelry owners to install TV sets. can talk with his barnyard pals (5) African Patrol (4) NBC White Paper (4) Dough Re Mi None of the Hollywood TV con- Mothers attending were Mrs He becomes an animal psychia (7) Who Do You Trust? It was the realization that a lot Honored John Hammers, Mrs. Harol (7) Alcoa Presents (5) Movie tingent did any exhibition shoot- of family trade was by-passing trist. (9) Movie ing with the regular contestants. ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS-Girl Metsinker, Mrs. Nicholas Mika (11) New York (IS) Day Watch the "strip" because kids are not Mrs. Walter Lang, Mrs. Josept (II) Star Performance Confidential 0:10—(11) Living Language Last year, at the first of these Scout Troop 259 celebrated its 4:00— (2) Brighter Day allowed in the casinos or the McNee, Mrs. Carl Hillman, an 10:30— (7) Dangerous Robin 0:30- (2) Video Village fast-draw affairs, I'm told that French nude shows. third birthday and Founders' (4) Make Room for Clint Eastwood and Peter ("Black Day at a tea recently in St. Mrs. George Kelly. Photographi (9) Movie—Musical 1956 (4) Play Your Hunch Now a family's every wish is Daddy "Bundle of Joy" (7) Ray Milland Saddle") Breck put on a side- Agnes Catholic School cafeteria. Also attending were Dorothei (5) Douglas Fairbanks fulfilled. While brother and sister McNee and Kevin Allen. (11) Pro Football [0:4O-(H) World,, of Numbers show shoot-out and Eastwood Refreshments were then served (7) American Bandstand won. Brock's series was canceled stay in the room watching Mar- Girls attending were Jane Unit Meeting Highlights 10:50— (9) News and Weather by Angel Patrol. Mrs. Carl Hill- (11) Abbott and Costello soon afterward, so now these cow- shal Dillon outdraw Pecos Pete, Abrahms, Cheryl Bellottie, Vir- (13) Playback 0:55— (9) Almanac Newsrecl man donated the birthday cake. 4:15— (2) Secret Storm boys are a mite leery of showing Mom and Pop are down in the ginia Cooper, Theresa Hillman, 10:35—(13) Movie—Drama 1949 11:00— (2) I Love Lucy casino being outdrawn by the A pantomime was presented Is Thursday 4:30— (2) Edge of Night "A Letter to Three (4) Price Is Right off their prowess with a gun. Elizabeth Kammers, Eilee (4) Here's Hollywood blackjack dealer. by Mary Ellen Allen and Elains Kelly, 'Joyce Kozak.-Kathy Lans FORT MONMOUTH - A new Wives" (7) Morning Court Gene Barry was very much im- (5) Mr. District Attorney Well, I saw Lily, and she was Egldio. Sandra Lucas, Danielle Mahin photographic paper which can re 11:00- (2) News (9) Herb Sheldon pressed with the contestants. (11) Laurel and Hardy just fine—matter of fact, she can A "Scouts' Own" ceremony ken, Cathy Mika, Laura Welsh cord data at the rate of 40,000 (4) News (11) Sneaking English 'You keep on practicing," he told (13) Woman's Club strip faster than most of these was under the direction of Mrs.and Patricia Wilson. inches per second will be the sub- (5) News I:20-(lI) Tell Me a Story them, "and someday you may getfast guns around here can draw. 4:55—(11) Spunky and Tadpole John Cooper. ject of a talk by Dr. Heman D (7) News 1:25- (5) News a TV series, and then you really Membership cards were givei Hunt at Thursday night's meet- 5:00— (2) Life of Riley (II) News 1:30— (2) Clear Horizon Flinders' honored were Mrs. will have trouble." . to the scouts and a five - yea ing of Monmouth County Chap- (4) Movie 11:05— (5) Movie—Comedy 1954 Donal Allen, first troop leader; (4) Concentration Drew and Fired pin to Jane Abrahms. ter, Society of Photographic Sci- (5) Dateline Europe "Meet Mr. Lucifer" Mrs. John Cooper, her assis- (5) Romper Room entists and Engineers, at Mye (9) Mischief Makers 11:10—(2) Weather It was quite a sight to watch tant leader; Mrs. William Mount, (7) Love That Bob! Sea lilies are really animals Hall, Fort Monmouth. (11) Bozo the Clown (4) Weather pair after pair of would-be Earps Neighborhood chairman in- 1:40—(11> La Puerta Abierta but they look like the plant foi Dr. Hunt, a research cheuiis (13) Crunch and Des (7) Weather waiting for the announcer to strumental In starting the troop, CARLTON which they are named. at the duPont Photo Product 5:25—(11) Clutch Cargo (11) Weather and Sports shout "Walk!" and then move Research Laboratory, Parlin, pre- 5:30- (2)-Movie 11:15—(2) Movie-Drama 1938 toward each other in a sort of sented a similar paper on "High (5) Big Beat "Her Jungle Love" stoop-to-conquer crouch with Shows at 2-7-? p.m. RADIO Speed Direct Recording Papers" (7) Rinjin Tin (4) Jack Paar MOVIE TIMETABLE at the Fifth International Con- (9) Movie (7) Movie—Drama 1936 RED BANK LAST TIMES TODAAY 1 WABC 770 WNEW 1130 gress of High-Speed Photography "MAGNIFICENT 7" 880 (11) Three Stooges "King of Burlesque" Carlton—Magnificent Seven 3: 1 WCDS WOR 710 in Washington, Oct. 10. (U) Studio 99'/ "KEY WITNESS WHTG 1410 WPAT 930 ? (11) Movie—Western 1944 20; 9:20; Key Witness 2:00; 7; L WNBC 660 WQXR 15(0 The recording papers are use 30. to record rapid-sequence events STARTS TOMORROW • AFTERNOON WNU MsrgaaBeattr of the type that occur in rockel EATONTOWN WO* Neva, Drive-In—The Searchers 7:00 IHOO—WABC Nam; Dick Shtpard Gabriel Beater and missile operations or hig WCM Newi 11:35; The Naked And The WHTQ Monmouth.Octan Till—WO* Capitol CIOM-CP speed flights. WCBS In Person, Dead. 9:24. Newi Summary Interviews The image appears on the pa WNBC N«w>; Jim Low* Tl4S—WNIC Wayne Howell Sho per within one second^ after ex HAZLET WOR News, John Scott WON Carlton Fredrickl posure which is accomplished bj llllS—WOR Th« FitZKiraldl Till—WAIC News; Farrell Smlt Loew's Drive-In — Cartoon 7: WCBt I.nny Ron •lOO—.WCH World Tonight high intensity light. liilO—WHTO County Agent WON Newi, World TodaT Dr. Hunt joined the Parlin Re- 00; 10:10; This Island Eartl ttiSO—WCBS Coupl* N»t Door • US—WCH Ed Joyce 7:05; 10:15; Land Unknown 8: WHTO Ktwi: •HO—WCBS Ed Joyce search Laboratory in 1952 and Relaxing llualo WON Sporta; has concentrated on studies of th 50. 12:4S—WCBS Right to HapplMM McCullough k Eliot fundamental chemistry of the si ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS IMS—WABC Newi: Dick Shtpard • ISS—WAIC Newi; Farrell Smlt • lOO—WNIC Newi; Bob Hiym.l ver halide photographic process Atlantic—Dark At The Top O WNBC Emphaiia WON News; UN Review 1,OO—WCBS WbispKlng StlMll WCBS Newi; Ed Joyce He attended public schools i The Stairs 7:00; 9:15. WHTO Utadlinn. EBf •US—WOR McCullough * Eliot Seattle, Wash. In 1949 he was Frlcel, Muiio •••S—WABC News; Ed Jordan KEYPORT 'Sunrise at Campobello," in WNBC Newi: Jim Low* IOIOO—WCBS Neva; granted a bachelor of science de- Technicolor, starring Ralph Bel- WOR Newt WNBC News; Bob Haymea gree from the University of Pu- Strand—Night Fighter 6:45; 9: lamy and Greer Garson, and HIS—WCBS Mi Perkim WOR Newi. Lei Smith get Sound and in 1954 a doctor 46; 30 Ft. Bride 8:25. WON Carlton Fredrick* toils—WOK McCullnngh & Eliot Fort Dobbs," starring Clint tllO—WCBS Young Dr. Malon* WCBS Dance Mmle of philosophy degree from the LONG BRANCH Walker and Virginia Mayo are WHTG News: IStSS—WABC News: Ed Jordan University of Washington. the features that will be shown Relaxing Muaic lllOO—WCBS News ' While at the University of Baronet—Where The Hot Wind for four days starting Wednes- 1149—WCBS Second Mn. Burton WNBC News; Boo Raymii Spencer Tracy argues heatedly with Fradric March in Blows 3:25; 8:30; Key Witness day, Nov. 30, at Loew's "35" USS—WABC New*; Jack Carney WOR News Washington, he was a teaching WNBC Emphasis llllS—WCBS Starlight Salute fellow and the holder of a du United Artistf gripping rtleat*, "Inharit the Wind." The 2:00; 7:05; 10:25. drive-in theater. t;OO—WCBS Newi: Bait Seller WOR Rnoki And Rient WHTO Headlines, Muilo IUSO—WCBS Mualo 'Til Dawn Pont research fellowship. show itarts tomorrow at tha Carlton, Red Bank. ASBURY PARK 'Circus of Horrors," in Specta. IH40-WAiC Qulncy Howe • Color and "Sign of the Gladi WNBC Niw>; Jim Lov* He is married to the former Lyric—Carry On Nurse 7:30; 1 WOR Newt, Us Smith 1H4I—WOR Rlble Reading Rhea Harris of Seattle. They ator, ' in Colorscope. starring HIS—WOR Galan CraVa IIIOO—WABC Bit; Joe 9:30. Anita Ekberg, are the films that tUO—WCBS Allan Gray WNBC Newn All Night li have three daughters and live at Hollywood: WHTO Newa: If. T. 102 Willshire Dr., New Shrews- Mayfalr—Midnight Lace 2:45 and Tuesday, Dec. 4, 5 and I Relaxing Musis won tanrvTAhTi 7:15; 9:30. at the Lnew's "35" drive-in. tiSS—WABC News; Jack Cirnty MORNINO MOBMMI bury. WNBC Kmphaeia TiOO—WABC Newi, Al Lohraaa St. Jamei—Can-Can 8:30.. 1:00—WCBS News: Martha WCBS .Tick Sterling Wright WHTO Monmouth-Ocean A New Career WHTO Henrilinrs, Muiito Newi Summary Yule Party WNBC Newi; Jim Lena T,gst Prices GOP Group WOR NCWB: Lyl« Van WOR News: By BOB THOMAS catcher in his gridiron days, and Warden Unit till—WOR Arleim Francle John Gambling Is Dec. 19 he's still taking life as it comes. SIJO—WHTO News; WNBC News; BUI Cullen AP Movie-TV Writer To Celebrate Relaxing Muilc COLTS NECK—The Woman's His view: Meeting Set IUJ—WABC News; .ruck Carney 7,10—WHTO New.: ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS-The INHERIT Wnke up to Muslo League for Service of the Colts HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Twenty "I don't know what the Lori WNBC Emphttsti 7145—WHTO Civil Service News Neck Reformed Church met last Republican Club will hold a vic- 4100—WCBS News: uick Noel • •00—WABC News: Al tohman years ago, a giant with a body has in mind for me for the future NEW SHREWSBURY - The WHTO Closing Stock tory dinner-dance in Doppelt's WHTO Headlines: week at the home of Mrs. Ber-like a Greek god was playing I'll just wait and see. He's don Warden Division of the loca ** WIND Feport; Music Wake Up To Muslo Hofbrauhaus Saturday night. WNBC Nevs: Art Ford nard Freeman, Manor Rd., with superb football for UCLA. all right for me in the past.' Civil Defense and Disaster Con- GENE KELLY WON New*, John WlngaU WCBS News; Jack Sterling Mrs. Henry Hammond, Jr., as trol organization will meet to- Plans for the event were made 4HS—WOR Radio New York Show Today, the same Woody Strode DICK YORK WOR Newi co-hostess. Mrs. E. J, McCarthy A brick-mason's son, Wood morrow at 8 p.m. in Tinton Falls at a meeting last week in GOP FLORENCE ELDRIDfle 4HO—WHTO Monmmith-Ocean WNBC Newi: Bill Cullen is carving out a new career as grew up in depression years i News Summary S:1S—WOR Dorothy and Dick presided. an actor, and he is still a hard- School.. headquarters, 4130—WHTO Dnw-.Tonei SlSO—WHTO Newi: ' The nomination of officers will Los Angeles with never a though Frederick Rohver is division A nominating committee, head- (slKn off •iMS p. m.) Relaxing Mumo muscled, flat-bellied g^nt of a of going to college •"We went t 4l9S—WABC News; Jnck Carney SlSS—WAIC News Reports be held in January. man. chief. ed up by Robert Earle, was ap- WNBC Emphnsln •100—WABC Brenkfant Club A Dec. 19 Christmas meeting school to learn a job in thos At their unit's meeting pointed. Others serving on the • IOO—WCDS News: Dick Noel WCBS News: Jack Sterlln EATONTOWN WNBC News, Art Ford will be held at the home of Mrs. This time he is playing for thedays." But in a couple of year! unit are George Rich, William WHTO Headlines; Wednesday, the wardens met Po- DRIVE-IN THEATRE WOR News, John Scott Strictly for Women Richard Flock with Mrs. Edward John Ford team. The cantank- he turned' from a^ short fat bo;lice Chief James Herring, the Allen, Mrs. Phil Hanson, Herbert •llS—WOR lindio Now York WNRC News: Rill Cullen erous director gave Strode his into a slim athlete and attracte ROUTE IS al the CIRCLE SlSS—WABC Mown Zaleski assisting her. new CD-DC deputy director in theReed, and Edmund Caputo. - Uiiliiliij, (Ipen «:3O— Movlrn At 1:011 WOR News: Galen Drake first real dramatic part in "Thescholarships to several colleges .Suniliij, Only Oprn 5:30 Movlri I;00 EVCNINO • llO—WHTO News: Attending the meeting also borough. The group is planning to keep Relaxing Muilo were Mrs. Granding Van Note, Trial of Sgt. Rutledge." He play- He chose UCLA. Woody ha Chief Herring will be respon- open the headquarters all year •lOO—WABC Jack Carney CSS—WNIC Emnhaats ed the title role as a frontier LAST TIMES TONITE 1 WCBS News ISiOO—WCBS Newa: Mrs. Frances Winqiiist, Mrs. Nell to study in extension division fo: sible for the training and forma- and make it available for group "THE SEARCHERS" WNBC News: Spo->s WABC News; Dick Shepari soldier accused of raping a white WOR News, I.vie Vnn Case, Mrs, Harold Gunther and two and a half years befon tion of a special police division. activities. "Naked and the Dead" •US—WABC News, Eri Sllvarrrun Arthur Godfrey Mrs. Rudolph Czyz. woman. qualifying to enter the university. WCH* Rnorl". tlnhCnoka WHTO Headlines, Munle Attending the meeting were: WNBC Art Ford WNIC News: Art Ford Woody is again working for He starred at end on a team Mrs. Beverly Summers, Mrs. r WOR News: John Wlngata WOR News Report! About 17 million of America's Ford, this time as a villainous that was also notable for Kenny STARTS TOMORROW • • ISO—WCBS News: Riislnesi lOllS—WOR Martha Deane Dorothy Granthmum, Mrs. Ann WABC .Trihn Daly tOlSO—WHTO Newi, workers are covered by some Indian chief menacing James Washington and Jackie Robinson Gillespie, Mrs. Joyce Hollar, and Acclaimed by Critics! WOR Nows, Relaxing Muile sort of private pension or retire- WOR Interview!, Stewart and Richard Widmark In After the war, Woody ramble Mrs, Ruth Lione. "ROSEMARY" Henry Rlailstnna Martha Tieane ment plan. "Two Rode Together." through pro football, then drifte Also, Edward Fields, William •140—WABC l'innnrlnl Nffwn WNIC Emphasis plus 2d thrill hit! WCBS Financial Nnw> IliOt-WCU Newai Home Party "Ford browbeats me, but it'sinto professional wrestling. Th' Barlon, Jr., Jack Lemon, Sr., WEEKDAYS OP1N «>30- MOVIES AT 7:00 WNBC. Flnnnclnl Newi WHTO Hendllnni: Muslo great working for him," Woody latter, he admitted, was gooc George Strimple, Spencer Case, SUNDAYS ONtY-OPSN 5:30-MOVIES At 6:00 "Nudt In a Whiti Car" (145—WABC llownrd Cosell WNRC News: Art Ford [iimuiivi. hin in III niin -IIIII Sim our WCBS Lowell Thomai WOR News, Guess Who remarked. "This is a great part preparation for an acling career Max Singer, and Roy Webb. WOR Snnrts, Stan I.omax lilts—WOR McCanns «t Horn* for me, the first time I've played WNBC Tlir«(iStnrf;*tra WCM Carry Mnor. Jungle Chlel JHISISUHIDEfiRTH Free In-Car Heaters •iss—WCBS Snorts Tlrno WHTO Red Bank Neilatir and Indian, If I can pull it off, SHOVELING SNOW Technicolor TiOO—WABC Rdwnrd P. Morgan Newi, PsteHefrmi it might open a whole new field His performances as a T\ Pour heated paraffin on your JtrTHORHaW . FAITH DDHERGUE WCBS News; AmoH 'n Andy WOR McCnnnn at Home WNBC News: Wayne llowell 11I4O—WCIa Croflby.Clooney for me. If not, it's back to thewrestler led to a role as jungli shovel before removing the snow WOR Fulton t.rwl. Show chief In a Tarzan film. Mand Unknown TltS—WABC Far roll Smith jungle." from the sidewalk. The harden- JOCK UAHONSY'SHAWN SMITH WAYFAIR "' llllS—WARC News ed paraffin serves as a smooth WIIUAM ffffrWOlDS WOR Illinois: NPWI WNBC Kmpha.,. Woody has had a long, hard "I had done some jungle film; CHilDM U1IDSR12 TltO—WCBS Lurry Loueur TRAMPOLINES OPEN lllll—WHTO Mlilday S»ock II, po: pull up from the sports jungles back in 1940, but I photogra base from which the snow slides Ml IVI ..4 ALL Dir 1AT. A tUN FREEI "Midnight Lace" and then through the lairs of plied too light," he said, "The} off easily. Preview Tonlte of Tarzan and Ramar. Through tried painting me with everything "North to Alaska" it all, has remained the same including shoe black, but It ncvci as when he played for UCLA, looked right. It wasn't until rccen RADIO REPAIR SPECIAL physically and temperamentally, years that they perfected filter; BARONET ,!?' „ How docs he do it? that would make me look natura ill a native." ANY MAKE OR "WHERE THE 200 Pushups | HOT WIND BLOWS" Woody played in the Ramar TA 'MODEL 5-TUBE "KEY WITNESS" Two hundred pushups every scries, ns well as epics like "Th morning," said Woody. That 10 Commandments." He ha I AC RADIO .99 helps maintain his 6 Feet 4 Inches attracted attention as an nctor ii at a trim 205 pounds nt a time "RullcdKC." "The Lasl Voyape, I REPAIRED AND when oilier men of his years are "Rachel Cade" and "Spartncu. | FULLY GUARANTEED Acclaimed by Critics Centrally located In Enlontown—New Shiewsbur, worrying about mlddlc-ngc in which ho has an epic ball "Carry On, Nurse" sprrnd, with Kirk Douglas. He lost the IHII!

\ L Vm. », WO MP BANK J ttmww v&'Wwp VTA Vmtf School Seeks of fptedi wto activftiM, Follow, ing th* competitive mat*, wto- Speech Arts nerf in each cttegory will repeat To England Plan* Party GraduatUUUICe • imtf tut Dtputmi**Ed* their selection* for toe entire •J*' cation evaliutkm of die ClMf or Event Slated REP BANK — The Moomoutb EAST KEANSBURG -A Chritt- Information I960 to the high fdtooif of «• Prizes .will be awarded in each County Branch of the English- mas party for children will be state. Authorities also consider LONG BRANCH, — The local Speaking Union will award its given by the • East Keansbjirg LONG BRANCH — Students the information useful to school of the areas of competition. Parent-Teacher Association in the high school will be host to stu- The festival, which will be open second $750 scholarship to a coun- who graduated from Long Branch personnel in planning curriculum dents of Monmouth County public ty resident for six-week's study school Friday, Dec. 16, when High School last June have been evaluation and revision. to the public, is the second of Walt Disney film, "So'Dear To and private high schools at a its type in the county. Last year next summer at a British univer- sent follow-up forms to indicate sity. My Heart" will be shown and what they are now doing. Speech Arts Festival Thursday, 12 countv high schools participat- Santa Claus will present gifts. Jan. 19. ed in a similar meeting at Rum The announcement was made Herbert A. Korey, principal, Patrick Henry delivered his by branch president, Mrs. Fred "Give me liberty or give me Mrs. Harrison J. Merrill willjson-Fair Haven Regional High Mrs. William Meehan is chair- has urged graduates or their fam- direct the festival,! which is be-jSchool. erick Frelinghuysen, at Tuesday's man of the event. Cakeless sales ilies to complete and return the death" speech in St. John's ing arranged for the purpose ofj meeting, which featured an ad- to be held this month and next, forips. The information obtained Church in Richmond, Va. "treating a greater awarness of dress by Keith Kyle, British col- for which Mrs. Neil McGinley the value of developing a broader Lions Plan umnist for the New York Post. will be chairman, will benefit the fbility in the arts of speech." Any county resident who will party. QGix competitive projects are have received a bachelor's de- At the last meeting, Mrs. Ed planned. Tree Sale gree by June 1961 and intends ward Rosenbaum, Mrs. Roberl Participating schools will be UNION BEACH — The Lions to teach or is now teaching is Ensign and Mrs. Lawrence Gard SAVE AT represented in extemporaneous Club ladies' auxiliary will aid the eligible for the award. It includes ner gave reports on the receni talks, poetry readings, humorous Lions Club in a sale of Christ- tuition, board and travel expenses PTA convention in Atlantic City. ind serious dramatic readings, mas trees and wreaths Dec. 9-24 to and from Oxford, London, Ed- A film sponsored by the N. J, inburgh or Birmingham. PROWN'S prepared speeches by students in ion the ground of Tess and Ted's Bell Telphone Co. "Lesser Leg- grades 10 through 12, and pre-j Restaurant, Rt. 36. The summer courses offered by ends 'in New Jersey," will h pared speeches limited to students! John Scoras of the Lions Club, these universities are: presented at Monday's meeting, in grade nine. sale chairman, discussed the proj- "Shakespeare and Elizabethan at which fifth graders' mothers In the extemporaneous Drama, at Stratford on Av- FIRE SALE! cate- ect at last week's meeting of will be hostesses. gory, each participant will draw the auxiliary. on; "Art, Literature and Music © I960, Slug Fftm* SrnSctU, Ian, World right, reservri. in England from 1660 to 1780" Present at last week's execu- two topics concerning national Proceeds, he said, will be put tive board meeting were Mrs, ************************************** at London; "From Renaissance and world events. Entrants in the in the children's Christmas show Robert Fields, Mrs. Robert Ev fields of poetry reading and the fund. The show will be put on to Revolution: History, Philoso- classrooms to supervise the pro phy and Literature" at Edin- ans, Mrs, Thomas Johnson, Mrs, CHRISTMAS dramatic readings may select at Union Beach during the holi- gram. Books and materials have Martin Dolan, Mrs. John Cramer, readings of their own choice. day season. burgh, and "England, 1870 to the Stress Reading been issued to teachers. Confer Paper Napkins -'Plates - Cups Present Day" at Oxford. Mrs. Bruno Koslowski, Mrs. Pe- Upperclassmen in the category Auxiliary committee chairmen ences have been held with par- ter Geronimo, Mrs. Frank En- of prepared speech will be asked for the sale are Mrs. Frank Kane The branch scholarship com ents, teachers and supervisor to ORNAMENTS mittee is composed of J. Howard At Union Beach glemann, Mrs. John Bohach, to talk on "What Youth Hopes auditor, and Mrs. Fred Kaufer, review problems. Mrs. William Meehan, Mrs. Neil From the New President." Mrs. Isaac Roberts, Mrs. Al- Burnett, chairman, Atlantic High- ************************************** lands; Randolph H. Beardsley, UNION BEACH — Curriclum McGinley, Mrs. Rosenbaum, Mrs Ninth graders will direct their! fred Trampler and Mrs. Frank emphasis in the public schools NINTH BIRTHDAY Ensign and Mrs. Gardner. *peeches to the topic, "Self-dis- Raccioppi, telephone, Middletown, and Mrs. Randall H CHILDREN'S SNOW SHOVELS Keator, Jr., Rumson. Application here is improvement of the read- cipline: The Key to Success." | The December auxiliary meet ing program. KEYPORT — Penny Jacobs, ************************************** Herbert A. Korey, principal of ing has been canceled but special forms will be furnished by Mr. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George SCOUTS NAMED The initial stages of the effort the high school, will keynote the meetings will be held during the Burnett. acobs, First St., entertained at EAST KEANSBURG - Bets; festival by discussing the value began with two professional days a birthday party. Attending were Anderson, Lou-Ann Cocuzza, Deb- SLEDS tree sale. held before school opened in Brownies Making Susan Kirk, Marjorie Jones, orah Delvechio and Signe Ham viinan Diniifl^ the fall. Barbara McCarthy, Loro Silcox, mond were invested into Gir! BIG SAVINGS ON Christmas Gifts Nicholas Maldari, elementary Taffy Fredericks, Lucillic LaSap- Scout Troop 329 recently al supervisor, and Harold Book, po, Baby Terry Stabile.Nina and Hesse's Gun Club. Mrs. Wayn BAMBOO ROLL-UP BUNDS HIGHLANDS — Members of reading teacher, with the aid of Camille Dematteo, Denise San- Dickman and Mrs. Peter Geron- RUBBERMAID BATH MATS Brownie Troop 84 worked on a committee of teachers, or- toro and Ninia Jacobs. omo are troop co-leaders. Christmas gifts for their mothers ganized the professional days. Values to 3.29 50* last week under the direction of Mr. Book held two reading their leader, Mrs. Howard Paron workshops, one for the primary PLASTIC WINDOW SHADES to, and co-leaders, Mrs. Rober grades and one for the upper Robertson and Mrs. Murray Ni elementary grades. chols. RUMSON READING INSTITUTE They met at the home of Mrs Teachers were shown methods Paronto, 15 Fifth St. of •grouping children for reading, after-school supplementary classes in Now in Progress at Dads' kids buy them ties at J. Kridel. I A visit to the Highlands Twin testing and organizing classroom lights is planned for the near fu reading programs. Books and READING - ENGLISH - MATH iiiiuuHuuiuiuumuiuiNiuiuiauutiumiuiiuuiuiiuuiuuuuuiuiiiuiuutuniimiiittiiinni ture. materials were displayed for the staff. lit grade through college 41 Broad St., Red Bank At the beginning of the school year teachers evaluated the 3 doors North of our former store strengths and weaknesses of in- THE RANNEY SCHOOL dividual children and began to I HOURS formulate temporary reading Full-time elementary school MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 8 A.M. to 9 P.M. groups. Mr. Book and Mr. Maldari SATURDAY, 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. spent time in classrooms helping Russell G. Ranney, Director the teachers organize their ADDITIONAL MERCHANDISE BROUGHT IN groups. The teachers and Mr. Send for bulletin Book administered reading tests. DAILY FROM OUR 3 WAREHOUSES. Ave. of Two Riven, Rumson RU 1-1650 After the program was launched, Mr. Maldari, visited beyond comparison! Full service for 8 all the pieces you need for dining elegance...

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Section Two RED BANK, N- J., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1960 7c PER COPY Betancourt Yesterday New Jersey Today In Promise To Revise In Legislature Washington Senators Assail Moves To TRENTON (AP) - Here's News Briefs By The Associated Press New Industry Zone vhat happened in the New Jersey Senate Judiciary Subcommit- legislature yesterday: Associated Press opens hearings on govern- Crush Riots SENATE Bingo, Raffles HOLMDEL — Officials of both lent agencies. One-cent increase in the cigar- NEW BRUNSWICK—Gov. Rob- he Planning Board and Township CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) - ette tax to finance mental and ert B. Meyner says New Jersey Special House Subcommittee Committee said yesterday that Strict security measures were Complaint penal institutions unexpectedly must plan for a sharply rising amed to investigate campaign he new "H" industrial zone will enforced by troops .today as shelve?! by the Republican ma- population. Meyner, in a speech xpenditures holds closed hear- >e amended in the near future President Romulo Betancourt's jority in favor of a bond issue prepared for delivery at dedica- Commissioners is a result of recent objections To Be Filed moderate Socialist government tion of a new $2 million pack- expressed; by Telegraph Hill-Old referendum in November, 1961. moved to crush leftist rioting aging plant for E. R. Squibb and NEWARK (AP) - A state Sen- •1anor area residents. Bill to eliminate 15 per cent re- that has raged since Friday. Sons, said the state has seen a ate investigation committee has The zone runs along a section striction on number of college $54,880 Savings Against Davis The rioting, apparently inspired !5 per cent population increase released a 176-page report sum- if Rt. 35 and extends south of the scholarships which can be used by admirers of Prime Minister the past decade and future marizing its criticism of the state KEANSBURG — Councilman lighway for a depth ranging outside New Jersey passed and Fidel Castro of Cuba, resulted responsibilities on state govern Bingo-Raffles Commission and Louis Collichio said he will file rom 3,500 feet to 5,000 feet. sent to the Assembly. in one person being killed yes- Bill to implement voter ap- ment will increase. He praised $270,150 Awarded its former executive director, court charges today in the name It touches Telegraph Hill Rd. terday. Altogether four have Arthur A. Weller. of the Borough Council against proval of property tax deduction the pharmaceutical industry in it a point only 1,500 feet to the been killed since the start. Scores Edward J. Davis, heating inspec- for homeowners introduced. the state for its planning for in Titled "Control Through Fear," outheast of Old Manor Estates. have been injured and up to 200 tor. The councilman said Mr. Appointment of Superior Court creased future demand. the report, issued yesterday, des- The proximity of the zone to are reported in jail. In Refuse Contracts cribed Weller as a martinet and Davis will be charged with vio Old Manor, the township's only Judge Vincent S. Haneman of The rioting so far has been "the high priest of control lating the borough's heating code. major housing development, and Brigantine to Supreme Court con JERSEY CITY — Julian K. MIDDLETOWN — Township confined to Caracas, the capital firmed. Robinson, a 30-year-old Negro, through fear." Mr. Collichio contends that Mr. the fact that it abuts Telegraph Committee yesterday awarded of this oil-rich nation. Riot lead- ASSEMBLY today became the first of hlj Two of three investigators pro- Davis, as a private contractor, Hill Rd., resulted in a strong $270,150 in contracts for the col- ers have directed their fiercest Five bills to streamline opera- race to hold executive office Board Asks posed that the five non-salaried failed to submit diagrams with protest at Tuesday's hearing. lection of garbage over a three- attacks on police stations. tion of state railroad subsidy pro- in Jersey City's municipal gov- bingo commissioners be replaced applications for heating work he year period in the three township Southwest Portion The army warned that looters gram passed and sent to Gov. ernment. Robinson was named ireas. New Building by one man. This recommenda- did. and anyone attempting to set Township officials indicated at Robert B. Meyner. deputy to Finance Director At an adjourned session, the tion was made by spokesmen for He said he was filing the com fires would be shot on sight. hat time they would consider re- Bill to exempt agricultural co- James F. Murray at a yearly joverning body awarded con- the American Legion and the plaint in the name of the gov- :oning the southwest portion of Authorities had a free hand operatives from state corporation salary of $8,000. A lifelong resi- Tacts to Fereday and Meyer, For Library N. J. Catholic Conference. They erning body because Mayor under a suspension of civil guar- tax passed and sent to the gover- dent of Jersey City, Robinson are Sens. Joseph W". Cowgill, D- he tract. ewark, and M and O Disposal FAIR HAVEN - The Library James J. Gravany was "reluctant antees. or. is a 1956 graduate of Dart- Camden, and Charles W. Sand- A 130-acre parcel, in that sec Inc., Cliffwood. Board has advised the Mayor to do so." mouth College and received his man, R-Cape May. ion (the former Hutchinson The army announced that al Bill to allow the public to at- Fereday and Meyer was and Council that it favors build- master's degree in 1959 from Last week, the governing body farm) is owned by Shoreland vehicles in and around the city tend most official meetings warded a $92,990 pact to serv- ing a one-story 40 by 80-foot li- Jones Dissents New York University. At the unanimously voted to cite Mr. Construction Co., Hazlet, an af- were subject to search and that passed and sent to the senate. ice area C which comprises dis- brary on borough-owned land on Dissenting was Sen. Walter H. time of his appointment, Robin- Davis for the violations after the filiate of the West Kcansburg suspects would be held in pre BOTH HOUSES tricts 5, 6, and 7. River Rd. opposite Memorial Jones, R-Bergen, who agreed borough attorney ruled that Mr. Water Co. ventive custody until fully inves son was director of school-col- Adjourned to Monday, Dec. 19 M and O received a $177,160 Park. with the New Jersey Council of Davis had technically violated the At Tuesday's meeting, Shore- tigated. Political talks . the Assembly to meet at 11 a.m lege relations for the National contract to handle areas A and The board's report, following a Churches that a single man wou'd code in failing to submit dia- land officials did not express any banned from the radio. and the Senate at 2 p.m. Scholarship Service and Fund B which covers districts 1, 2, 3, study requested in October by be subject to too many pres- grams with his applications for objection to the request by resi for Negro Students. , and 8. Mayor Russell H. Minton, was sures. permits on heating work. dents for a change in zoning of According to Mayor John T. given in a letter from its chair- He urged that the three pres- some portion of the tract which Mr. Collichio said Mr. Davis TRENTON—The New Jersey ,awley, Jr., the contract figures man, James A. Robottom, which ent commissioners who held of- abuts Telegraph Hill Rd. violated the code covering dia Sen. Stout Declines Assembly yesterday defeated a resulted in a $54,840 saving over was read at last night's council fice- in 1958 resign as soon as grams at least 89 times. Bernard Goldsmith, Planning bill designed to strengthen the :he bids received two weeks ago. meeting. possible. Board chairman, said yesterday Mr. Collichio also said a court powers of municipal policemen. He said also the pacts were less The following requirements One of the commission mem- that the board must first decide complaint against Mr. Davis Sponsored by Majority-Leader lhan the current cost of collec- were recommended by the bers, Merritt Lane, Jr., of Mon- how much of the tract to. take CandidacyComment LeRoy J. D'Aloia, D-Essex, the would be filed by Russell Dixon tion in the township. board: mouth Hills, said last night he out of the "H" industrial zone. Collins Ave., on charges of vio- measure would have allowed Officials were unable to esti- Requirements has no intention of resigning. He said the entire question is TRENTON — State Sen. Rich- ator. Mr. Forbes later lost to lating the plumbing code. municipal police to arrest with- mate whether the new contracts Merritt Lane Comments on the agenda for discussion at ard R. Stout of Monmouth County lovernor Meyner, and Mr. Kean out warrants people who vio- 1) No basement. 2) No parti- Mr. Collichio said Mr. Davis would raise or lower the gar- Mr. Lane, who has been serv- the board meeting next Tuesday said yesterday he was "happy" lo U. S. Sen. Harrison A. Wil- late local ordinances in their tions. Areas would be divided by would be charged with failing to bage collection tax rate. ing in a holdover capacity since night. that "a number" of supporters liams, Jr., presence. Assemblyman An- furniture and book racks because comply with the code in that he March, 1959, was appointed to were urging his name as a Re- Woolley's Support thony J. Volpe, R-Cape May, Uniform Rate the library must be staffed by did not make a water test on new i Reach A Solution the commission in 1954. publican nominee for governor Monmouth County Republican and others said the bill was one person. 3) Doors additional plumbing work installed for Mr "I am sure we can work this It was noted that while the He said he had seen the report next year. Chairman J. Russell Woolley has too strong and would eive po- to the main entrance only if re- Nixon. out to the satisfaction of Old new pacts were less expensive but not yet read the lengthy doc- "But I don't want to make any pledged to give Sen. Stout sup lice too much power. The pro- quired for fire safety. Manor and Telegraph Hill Rd. than those in existence, the cost ument. Mr. Davis is both the heating further comment at this time," port for the 1961 nomination for 4) Wash room facilities for em- esidents," Mr. Goldsmith com- posal received 29 affirmative Df operating the landfill might Inspector and plumbing inspector he said. governor. ployees only. 5) Lighting suffici- Asked to comment on specific mented. "It was never our in- votes—two less than the 31 it sffset this saving. Leading the senator's re-elec- ent to permit reading in all parts charges of the Senate committee, tention to establish a zone which The senator, who won his third needed to pass in the Assem- Officials also indicated there tion campaign last year, Mr. of the building. 6) Heating and Mr. Lane said, "I think it's a would be detrimental to any sec- term a year ago, is one of sev- bly. There were 24 votes was a chance the new pacts Woolley said he wanted to build air conditioning. 7) Fireproof commission matter." tion of town. eral prominent Republicans against It. might result in a uniform gar- Bishop Ahr whose names seem to show up up a substantial majority to give construction. 8) Interior walls of 'Abdication to Weller' "As a matter of fact, in the bage tax rate. on most political observers' lists Mr. Stout a sendoff for the 196 such height as to permit later in One section of the report a:- initial stages of master plan- The new contracts become ef- of "interested and available" race. The senator was elected NEWARK-The Newark Fed- stallation of a balcony for addi- cuses the commission of "com- ning, it was proposed that the in- fective Jan. 1. To Officiate people. over Democrat Thomas J. Smith, eral Grand Jury last night in- tional books if expansion is de plete •abdication of authority" to dustrial zone include all of the dicted Charles G. Forman off The pacts were $10,000 lower Four Others Mentioned after a spirited campaign, b; sired. 9) All windows except for Weller. area to the west, right up to the charges of embezzling $4,000 from han those submitted by the next Others are Warren County Sen. more than 15,000 votes. front to be above seven-foot level The three senators also split on At Dedication edge of Old Manor, but the board the Elizabeth bank where he lowest bidder. Wayne Dumont, who has a one- The last year, however, has to allow uniform height book whether Democratic Gov. Robert rejected this idea for one reason worked 42 years. Forman is Other firms bidding were RED BANK-Dedication of its and-one past record in Senate seen the senator in two difficul racks. Meyner had deliberately impeded —to protect Old Manor." prominent Union County Repub Shore Material Company Inc., new school will mark a mile- election contests with Democratic positions. According to Mr. Robottom's he investigation. Mr. Goldsmith said that It lican and former vice president and Edward E. Bennett, both stone for St. James parish. The Governor Robert B. Meyner; He delayed confirming Gov letter, the study took into ac- Jones called it "an astonishing would be "helpful" to the board of the Elizabethtown Banking Co Belford. 24 classroom school, auditorium Bergen County Sen. Walter B. ernpr Meyner's nomination o count the recommendations, pf and altogether successful effort." if more residents, and officials of Forman was a vice president ii In other business, Mayor Law- and cafeterias located on Peters Jones, undisputed leader of that Democrat Theodore J. Labrecqui the Library Fact Finding Com- Sandman and-Cowgill said they the Civic Association, attended charge of mortgages and wa; ley reported that he had dis- PI., will be dedicated Sunday, big-Republican stronghold; Cape of Fair Haven to the Superioi mittee, reported in February, did not want politics injected in- regular board meetings. considered an expert in the mort cussed the lifting of a deed re- Dec. 11, at 3 p. m. May County Sen. Charles Sand- Court for months on the ground; 1959, and other references. to the report. gage field. He is slated to be ai striction on the beach area east He noted that the,"H" zone, man, undisputed leader of that county Democratic leaders couli 20-Foot Setback Catholics Complain Bishop George W. Ahr of Tren prior to its formal adoption, had raigned in Newark Federal Cou of the state marina with Mi- little-Republican stronghold, and not agree upon Labrecque. The A 20-foot setback was recom- Complaints from Roman Cath- ton will officate. been discussed "for severir Friday. chael Dempsey. GOP National Committeeman senator later moved the con mended to permit some landscap olic churches touched off the In- Parishioners oversubscribed months" at board meetings, but Bernard Shanley. firmation, explaining he coulc Mr. Dempsey deeded the 400- vestigation. the miminum need of $300,000 that "not a single, resident raised NEWARK — A car carrying foot beachfront area to the town- ing. Senator Dumont, who has said not wait any longer for thi The churches claimed that in the school fund campaign. At any objection until the last min- two "gaily chatting" sisters-in- ship with the stipulation that Mr. Minton turned the library that on Thursday he will an Democrats. harsh and unnecessary penalties the end of the campaign, pledges ute when a delay in the zoning, law crashed Into a signal light there would be no charge for use dilemma over to the board for nounce he is a candidate, and In the Ocean Township mun were levied for technical viola- amounted to $417,701. Today they generally, would have been detri- at 50 miles an hour last night of the beach. study early this fall after a pro- Mr. Shanley, ex - Eisenhower cipal election earlier this month tions of the 1954 Bingo-Raffles mental to the township." without swerving or slowing The committee is interested in posal to build a municipal hall stand at $593,320. Total pledge White House aide, are the only two incumbent Republican town act. down. One woman was fatally developing the beach area and and library at 'River and Fair payments amount to $320,188. ones listed with statewide elec- ship committecmen lost theii The committee reported that injured and the other was in wants to charge a fee to cover Haven Rds. was defeated at pub- Recent pledges paid in ful tion experience. But both were seats to Democrats. The senato- some charitable groups have critical condition. Mrs. Helen maintenance costs. lic referendum. Include memorials by the Junio losers. lives in the township and is abandoned their licenses rather Belford Man Wianeckl, 35, of Hillside, Mayor Lawley said the owner Alternate suggestions, includ- Catholic Daughters of America, The senator was defeated for township attorney. Democrats than "face the hodge-podge of mother of two children, died agreed to allow out of town resi- ing building an addition on the Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Arnone, the gubernatorial nomination in made as their principal campaign rules and regulations and red shortly after she was taken to dents to be charged for use of present fire house, were heaped Miss Helene Barnes, Mr. and Is Absolved 1957 by Malcolm Forbes, former issue a series of township tax on the mayor and council at that tape that beset a simple desire Mrs. Peter M. DiSciullo, Mr. foreclosures in which, they con- Martland Medical Center. Her the beach but insisted that resi TRENTON (AP) — lhe Ap- Somerset County senator, and time amid charges that the prob- to operate a game for the ben- John F. Giblon, Jr., Mr. and tended, purchasers were permit- sister-in-law, Mrs. Norna dents be allowed free use of the pellate Division of Superior Mr. Shanley lost to former Con lem was becoming a political efit of charity." Mrs. John A. Heckle, C. Edward ted to delay payments at the ex- Horre, 26, of Linden, was in facilities. Court yesterday absolved a Bel- gressman Robert W. Kean in the football and an election issue. 'Harsh Penalties' Hoffmann, Mrs. Beatrice Isaacs, pense of the township. critical condition In St. Mi- Mrs. Gertrude Neidlinger, of ford man of any blame in a 1958 GOP primary for U. S. sen- The report further asserted Mr. and Mrs. John L. Keaveney, chael's .Hospital. An eyewit- Concord Ave., Leonardo, re- three-car crash on Rt. 35 that that the commission "has follow- Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Knott, ness said he saw the. women minded the committee of the resulted in a $134,365 damage ed a policy of harsh penalties Mr. and Mrs. George E. Koenig; as they pulled away from Leonardo Taxpayers Association Sewer Plant award. in dealing with charitable groups, Mr. and Mrs. Sebastian Lutz, Mr, Improved Public Relations traffic light "gaily chatting to proposal tb gain revenue for which has severely affected the and Mrs. John Warren, Jr. The award was won by Mrs. each other." The car struck beach operations by setting up a Bond Issue inclination of these groups to Mr. and Mrs. John McGann. Sr. William J. Rainaud, 90'Statesir the signal pedestal that con- paid parking plan rather than raise funds for their proper pur- Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. McCabe PI., Mlddlelowii, against Mrs. Sought by School System trols traffic going up the ramo beach use plan. Edith A. Lentz. to Rts. 1 and 22 from the south poses under the statute." Mr. and Mrs. Theodore L Mayor Lawley said he would Is Approved end of Broad St. Jones said he is relaying two Maione, Mr. and Mrs. Thoma Rainaud was driving his car RED BANK — A program aim- meet With Mr. Dempsey to dis- on Rt. 35, Middletown, Dec, 30, ed at providing better school- KEYPORT — An ordinance aspects of its probe to state E. Maloney, Dr. and Mrs. Georgi cuss the matter further. authorizing the appropriation of 1956. He stopped'in the left lane community relations was launch- agencies for further action. Massell, Mr. and Mrs. Haroli Cop Proposal NEWARK—Carl K. Withers $363,000 for a sewer renovation to'make a left turn and was ed last night. The report said there has never Mangarelli, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh East Orange has been given thi project was adopted by unani- been a Negro employed by the hit from behind by Mrs. Lentz's Dr. M. Gregg Hibbs, superin- Murphy, Benedict Nicosia, Mr. car. He was driven into the path American Cancer Society bronzi mous vote last night following commission, that "it was a de- and Mrs. William H. Pennington, Is Killed— tendent of schools, outlined a list medal award, presented annual Snowstorm of a car driven by Dominick J. public hearing. liberate policy of exclusion car- Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Michael of 16 areas through which the in recognition of an importan Mullaney, 389 Leonardville Rd., There were no public objec- ried out by Mr. Weller," and Rafferty, Dr. and Mrs. Carmen public could receive more infor- contribution to cancer control Belford. Is Sweeping tions. that the state Division of Civil Cyril Sidun, Mr. and Mrs. Elwood With Silence mation concerning the operation the American Cancer Society ai Monmouth County Judge John The ordinance provides for Rights will get this testimony. F. Searles and Mr. and Mrs. of the public schools. nounced today. Withers, presiden C. Giordano dismissed the KEYPORT - The proposed $255,000 to be raised through a Expense Accounts Edgar V. Spaeth. Business: Rei He discussed the proposals with of the Hospital Service Plan Rainauds' suit against Mullaney amendment to the police ordi- Eastward bond issue. The balance of $108,- The second finding was that school officials, representatives New Jersey, has served as a vo Bank Manor, Inc., by R. Thorna: and Rainaud appealed. nance was killed last night—with 000 will be covered through a of Parent-Teacher Associations, unteer with the New Jersey div CHICAGO (AP) - The season's Weller allegedly directed com- Bowers Management Company, silence. federal grant, already approved The Appellate Division ruled sion of the American Cancer S mission investigators to falsify Fair share' payments includ public relations men, newspaper first full-blown snowstorm by the United States Public Mullaney did nothing wrong. It At the Nov. 14 meting 6f the ciety since its earliest days. expense accounts and investiga- Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Arkle, reporters and radio representa- iweeping eastward across the Health Service. said he was faced with an un- governing body, Mayor Norman tion reports—one to cover chauf- Mr. and Mrs. Edward Antczak tives. Great Plains, hammered wide Borough Attorney Edward W. avoidable emergency situation J. Currie sought to revise the fered trips from his Neptune, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph G. Carney, Much Not Known ATLANTIC CITY—A govern areas of the Midwest today. Currie announced that the state and apparently did his best to police code, creating a second home to Newark, and the other Mrs. Mae Calt, Mr. and Mrs Dr. Hibbs said that a question ment entomologist suggests th A blanket of snow and ice Department of Health has issued stop his car. lieutenancy and also curbing the involving a policeman at the Cam- Carl F. Clark, Jr., Mr. and Mrs naire sent to parents of school many of the world's underdeve! covered many sections of the a certificate of necessity for the Rainaud suffered broken powers of the police chief. den bingo game. Jones said the M. Joseph Conry, Dr. and Mrs children disci se dthoaf'much is oped countries can increase thei Eastern plains and Upper Missis- wrist and other injuries. His wife project. proper law enforcement agencies Andrew Colando, Miss Juli The proposal was termed children disclosed that "much is own available feed supply b sippi Valley—up to a foot in suffered head injuries which lef It is expected that council will should look into the matters. Conry, John, F. Conry, Mr. am "political" by Councilman Henri not known" about the school sys- staying a jump.ahead of insects some places, The late November her unconscious for five months advertise for construction bids The report said Weller did com- Mrs. Bruce Crispell, Mrs. Flor- J. Hansen, Mayor-elect Charles stem, and there is "much misin- Insects, said M. P. Jones yestei storm, erupting after a week or and paralyzed her on the left side. next month or early in Janu mute some suspensions, a mat- ence E. Daly, Mr. and Mrs, E. Applegate and Police Chief formation" concerning the public day, frequently get to the foo more of fairly mild weather, hi ary. ter which the commission said it George Grefe, Jr. LeRoy Sprout. schools, supply before peoole do. Jom hardest from the Dakotas east- In other business, council de- has little information even now. Mr. and Mrs. Jerome M. Havel, Councilman Robert J. Strang, The questionnaire asked par- is president of the Entomologica ward into western lower Michi 'erred until its next meeting, Rt. 36 Crash The report said the commis- Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Harvey, police committee chairman, op- ents to list what they would like Society of America and employee gan. Dec. 12, a decision on reconsid- sioners abdicated their duties to Mrs. Helen Kcrris, Miss Ros posed it also. to learn about the schools; what by the U.S. Department of Agri Gale-like winds whipped the eration of a Planning Board Injures Two run the $30-million-a-year bus- Ladiso, Miss Helen C. Lang, Mrs they liked about the schools, and culture's federal extension ser\ snow into huge drifts in some recommendation that a Rt. 36 But the governing body did iness properly. "Whether they Marjorie Gilman Lloyd, Mr. an WEST KEANSBURG — Dom- what they disliked. • ice. America should set UD a g: areas. Traffic was curtailed, lot be rezoned from residential to agree, at that time, to "recon- did it because of the high regard Mrs. Nelson Maddl, Mr. and Mrs inick Bellezza, 49, of 142 Carr He said the answers received gantic program to teach pes with roads blocked in some sec- general business. sider" the proposal last night. control to underdeveloped na they felt for Mr. Weller, or for Graham L. Miller, Miss Marj Ave., Keansburg, suffered a scalp from 444 parents filled 51 legal tions, Visibility was cut to zero The lot owned by Mr. and A multitude of official busi- tions, he said. By establishin any other reason, they are sti!l Morris, Mr. and Mrs. George wound last night when his car sized papers. in Grand Forks, N. D,, by snow Mrs. Russell Travers, is between ness was taken up during the 21/£- such a program, he continued accountable for the result. It Murphy, Sr,, Miss Bertha Power, was struck by another car on Rt. Members of the informal group driven by winds of 63 m.p.h. Broad St. and Atlantic St. and hour session—but not a word was the United States would fulfill was a bad result, and the stats Mr. and Mrs. George Schluter, 36 and Palmer Ave, pointed out that in order to im Blizzard conditions were reported has a 118-foot frontage on the said about the police code. moral obligation to the world' of New Jersey is stuck with it." Miss Margaret M. Salmon, Mr Mr. Bellezza is in fair con prove school-community rela- in sections of the Dakotas and highway. hungry people and win friend and Mrs. Daniel Skclton, Mrs, dition this morning' in Riverview And after the meeting, no one tions, a first step Is to create Minnesota. Last month, based on the fact everywhere. LABRECQUE SUCCESSOR Ann Sutphin, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hospital. had any comment about the mat- enthusiasm among the school Power and communication that a gasoline service station ward S. Wade, Mr. and Mrs Police said Mr. Bellcza's car ter. faculty and staff for the program lines were disrupted. Schools had been planned for the prop- TRENTON — A long-delayed Hartwell Webber, Mr. and Mrs was struck by a car operated by One result of tho questionnaire were closed in some northern erty, council voted against re- appointment was finally approved Board Requests yesterday when the Senate con- William T. Wlchmann, Mr. an Edward Purdak, 37, of 50 Smith Marine Recruiters sent to parents, Dr. Hibbs said Midwest areas. Gale warnings zoning. Mrs. Stanley J. Zalesky and Mr St., Sayrevillc. will be publication of the Red were posted for all the Great Speaking for Mr. and Mrs. firmed Civil Service Commis- and Mrs. Walter Gunn. Police snld Mr. Purdak ap- Plan Orientation Night Bank Public School newspaper Furniture Fund Lakes. Traffic in some cities hit Travers, Woodbrldge attorney sioner Harry A. Walsh of Trenton parently fell asleep at tho wheel which will be mailed to parents. EATONTOWN - The Plannlnj by snow and sleet was bumper- Robert Vogel said last night, to succeed Superior Court Judge Theodore J. Labrecque of Fair STEAL $2,000 and his car crossed the highway ASBURY PARK - A "Marine The newspaper was published for Board last night decided to as! to-bumper for miles. however, that plans fnr the sta- and smashed into the Bellcza Parents Orlentntion Night" will about three years until It was Borough Council for $700 for ol Temperatures dropped sharply tion have been dropped. Haven on the state Division of Tax Appeals. TRENTON (AP) - Two arme cnr. be held at the high school here discontinued in 1952, Dr. Hibbs flee equipment and furniture. as the stiff winds fanned Arctic Both the attorney and Mr. men held up the Curtis Bowllnp Mr. Purdak was treated for Dec. 6 at 7:30 by the local and said. The board plans to equip an> air across the mid-continent. The Travers declined after the meet- Academy on S. Wnrrcn St., enrlv cut forehead at the hospital and New Brunswick Marine Corps re He ndded that the aim of the furnish a board office in th Icy winds dropped the mercury ing to snv whnt type of business MEYNER NAMES TARNOW yesterdny and nindo off wit released. cniiterf. administration is to provide more former police room on the sc to far below zero in parts of the Is now planned for the property. TRENTON .— Carl Tnrnow of about $2,000. He wns issued a careless driv- Highlight of the program will knowledge of the school system oncl floor of the Borough Hal Rockies and sent temperatures Council approved the transfer Keansburg has been named by Police said the two men bouri' ing summons by Trooper Kiigcne be n lecture and film on recruit to "parents, pupils, staff and both Council will be asked to inclu plunging over most areas east- of one of the two taxi licenses Governor Robert H. Meyner lo the owner and his iissistniU an< Hopper of the Keyport state po- training nt tho Marino Corps Re- the interested and disinterested tho $700 request In the 10i ward through the Mississippi Val owned by Joseph Sacco to John succeed the Into William Dennis cleaned out the cash register. lico barracks. cruit Depot, Parrls Island, S, C. public." budget. ley and southward to Texas. Raab, First -St. on the Shell Fisheries Council. /;• 29,1960 RED BANK REGISTER J Patricia Raszka Bride Of Kenneth Grove* Area Man Intr AAUW Set^ Program NEWARWARK -— MnMr*,. Elizabeth iHHHBHBHHHiBHiHiHHHiHIi^ fleevM en*nid trimmetrimmedd o onn th thee fron frontt -. I *m i BM>*», C« Migilio* St., ao'j of tfc* skirt with Auttrtliio rut' nounces the marriage of her! fles. Their headpieces were To daughter, Miss Patricia Ann sprays of lilies of the valley, and seems to be Lt. Col./ Robert Raszka, to Kenneth Grover, son their old-fashioned bouquets were RED BANK — The French, On Music For Monday Wurtz, who with his wife. Mar* of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gowers pompon chrysanthemums. they say, give to the world the guerite, and their young son, SHREWSBURY — "M u s i c The bridge group will meet j of 52 Memorial Pkwy., Atlantic Walter Jelinsky, Jr., of New- best in fashions, foods, the arts, Stephie, decided it was time their Through the Ages" is the pro- Tuesday, 1 p.m. at the home of Highlands, on Nov. 19 in Our ark, the bride's nephew, was the and of course, Brigitte Bardot. French frienfls and neighbors gram to be given at a meeting Mrs. Smith in Little Silver; Dec. Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic But it was an American lieuten- page. had an opportunity to taste that of the Northern Monmouth Coun- 20, 1 p.m., home of Mrs. Alfred Church, Highlands. ant-colonel, formerly stationed ty Branch of the American As- Mack, 197 Queens Dr., Little Sil- The bride's mother chose a at Fort Monmouth, who fast delicacy, corn-on-the-cob. Rev. John G. Domin, pastor, lavender colored cocktail length sociation of University Women ver, and Wednesday, Dec. 14, 8:15 officiated. month introduced to many To do this, Col. Wurtz sent Monday afternoon in the Shrews- p.m., home of Mrs. C. R. Friede, dress of Chantilly lace, worn Frenchmen the food which many Mrs. Charles Kohlenbusch of with matching accessories and a home for some hybrid sweet corn bury Presbyterian Church house 635 Prospect Ave., Little Silver. Highlands was the organist. The Americans consider "the most" seed, planted it in his own back- on Sycamore Ave. corsage of deep lavender orchids. —sweet corn. The oil painting group meets at church was decorated with large The bridegroom's mother was yard garden at the Saint-Denis Guest speaker will be Mrs. ths home of Mrs, Leon A. Abel, arrangements of gladioli and dressed in royal blue satin, with Johnnie Appleseed, they say. de l'Hotel, Orleans, France, Bradford S. Jahnes, of the public 107 Queens Dr., Little Silver. pompon chrysanthemums. matching accessories and a cor- took the apple seeds to our great where the family lives. relations department of Bell Tele- Meetings will be held next Tues- The bride was given in mar- sage of- yello• w roses. ' Northwest and planted orchards During the summer he tended phone Company. Her lecture day and Dec. 20, both a 1 p.m. riage by her uncle, H. E. Samp- there. His modern counterpart Walter Jelinsky of Newark, the his garden with great care, then traces the effect of various cul- son, 86 Highland Ave., Highlands. The French conversation group bride's brother-in-law, was best showed his agriculture-minded tures on music, and reviews the Her full length wedding gown was will meet Thursday, Dec. 8, at man. Louis Gowers of Atlantic Bridal Shower neighbors the techniques of rais- development of instruments used made of white Swiss lace over 9:30 a.m. at the home of Mrs. Highlands, the bridegroom's ing sweet corn. Then came the in the present-day orchestra. satin. The bodice had a sweet- Jack Kohn, 96 Stratford Rd., New brother, was the usher. For Miss Cordts October harvest and the family Shrewsbury. heart neckline and three-quarter- invited their neighbors and At the branch board meeting A reception followed at the EAST KEANSBURG - Miss Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Neil A cookie feast and recipe swap length sleeves, and the white friends over for another Ameri- satin bouffant skirt terminated in Cabin-in-the-Sky Atlantic High Augusta Cordts, Main St., Keans- can custom, the backyard barbe- G. Smith, Prospect Ave., Little has been planned for the meeting lands. Floral arrangements were burg, was honored at a surprise Silver, it was announced that of the gourmet group Tuesday, a chapel length train. Her bouf- cue. The menu feature, of course, fant styled illusion veil fell from bronze and yellow chrysanthe- bridal shower in Buck Smith's was corn-on-the-cob. Mrs. William ' G. Mair, Little Dec. 13, 8:15 p.m., at Mrs. mums and ferns. Restaurant recently by her bridal a crown of seed pearls and Corn is something the French Silver, was named first vice pres- Coddington's home, 45 Laurel Dr., For her wedding trip to Niag- attendants, Mrs. William Bach- crystals, and her cascade bou- just don't seem to grow, not for ident .after the resignation of Fair Haven. Members will bring ara Falls and Canada, the bride man, Mrs. Janet Garnett, Miss quet was white orchids and white food anyway. They consider it Mrs. R. Dean Coddington was a dozen of their favorite Christ- wore a gray wool suit with Delores Greco, Mrs. Edgar Wid- roses. something to feed their animals. accepted. Mrs. William D. War- mas cookies, together with the matching accessories and a cor- mann, Miss Mildred Burlew and Mrs. Walter Jelinsky of Newark Thanks to Col. Wurtz, they now ters, Middletown, was named recipes, for exchange at the ses- sage of white orchids. The- couple Mrs. Joan Walters of Washington, lecond vice president, a post sion. was matron of honor for her are changing their minds. sister. Her cocktail length bouf- are now at home at 7 Sixth Ave D. C. formerly held by Mrs. Mair. and Ocean Blvd., Atlantic High- As the Orleans newspaper, La "The Four Poster," by Jan de- fant styled dress was lavender Nouvelle Republique, said of the The Contemporary Literature Hartog, will be reviewed by the taffeta. The bodice had a Sabri- lands. group will meet Thursday, 9:30 The bride, an Atlantic High- party: "The press was there as drama group at its Thursday, na neckline and rows of Austra- well as the radio. Was the de- a.m. at the home of Mrs. Charley Dec. 15, meeting at 8:15 p.m. lian ruffles trimmed the front of lands High School graduate, is C. Nickerson on Battin Rd., Fair Mrs. Kenneth Grover employed at Fort Monmouth. The velopment of raising sweet corn Mrs. William Magee, 35 Irving j the skirt. She had a pearl crown in France being witnessed? Is Haven. The subject will be "View PI., Red Bank, will be hostess. headpiece, covered with a short t, mint bridegroom, also an Atlantic from the Fortieth Floor" hy by the honor altcndan was The flower girls wereC HeleJ n graduate, this a new resource in perspec- The Recent Graduates groilp matching veil, and her cascade laffeta, she t00 ,vore a Glowzenski Middletown and tive for the French agricultural Theodore H. White. ls Motor Co. will hold a discussion meeting ! t,«,.^,,»bouque,t ...... was. ..„,,„..yellow. pompon |rrmirn g match Noreen Horan, Highlands. Their; economy? First of all the initial Saturday, Dec. 10, at 9 p.m. at chrysanthemums. full length bouffant styled" frocks at crop had to be harvested, which ing veil and her cascade bouquet (Mrs. Grover's wedding picture the home of Dr. and Mrs. Jack Miss Diane Guarnieri of Verona was bronze pompon chrysanthe- were mint green taffeta, design- has been accomplished; it had BPW Hears Kohn, 96 Stratford Rd., New was her cousin's bridesmaid. Her mums. ". in y to be introduced, which has also Shrewsbury. They will review the dress, styled like the one worn been done. So in a few years, lecture series to be offered by who knows, perhaps at big din- Physician Douglass of Monmouth, the Mon- ners and French receptions the mouth County Douglass Alumnae Kitty Kelly: guests will nibble on golden corn- MATAWAN-Dr. Myra Zinke, group. Speakers will be profes- Carolyn Hermann Wed on-the cob, and the name of Col. Matawan's first woman physl sors from Rutgers and Douglass, Wurtz will become as famous as cian, was guest speaker at a re- and the series will start Satur- Can't Forget Old Flame, that of Parmentier." cent meeting of the Business and day in Rumson-Fair -Haven Reg- Professional Woman's Club in Tne Stars and Stripes report- ional High School. To Joseph W. Rennie ers were there too. Their report Midway Hose Company fire The branch will hold its regu- Man, 29, Asks What io Do house. on the party: "Setting up an lar story hour program for chil KEYPORT — Miss Carolyn ist. A reception followed in the array of charcoal braziers be- Dr. Zinke, a resident of Ravine dren of the kindergarten, first and Dear Kitty: She now has two children, has'Marie Hermann, daughter of Mr. Oak Shades fire house, Matawan hind his house with a heap of Dr. for five years, was intro- second grades at the Red Bank When 1 was 19, I fell In love!been married twice and is still,and Mrs. Carl Hermann of Mid- Township. freshly picked ears near by, duced by Mrs. Mae Dominick, library, Saturday, Dec. 10, 10:30 iwith a girl a year and a half one and a half years older than land Ave., Morgan, and Joseph Escorted by her father, the Wurtz invited in his fellow towns- health and safety chairman. A Miss Augusta Cordts a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Mrs. Robert older.. She had been married at myself. I am 29 and feet ready William Rennie of 134 Broad St., bride wore a waltz-length gown, folk — the mayor, the parish native of Buffalo, Dr. Zinke re Billings, New Shrewsbury, and 17, had a baby boy and was di- for marriage. How do I win Matawan, son of Mr. and Mrs. styled with a fitted Chantilly lace priest and the neighbors — to ceived her degree from the Un'v Gifts were placed beneath a Mrs. Robert B. Kimble, Jr., vorced. We wrote each other back the love I didn't realize was Joseph.P. Rennie of Brooklyn, bodice that had a scoop neck sample a 100 per cent American versity of Buffalo. She interned decorated shower can and um- Shrewsbury, are in charge. while I was in the service and so deep until it was too late? were married Saturday in St. line, and a bouffant skirt of taf- treat. and received a residency at the brella. Attending were Mrs. Ern- after my discharge, I have never married and don't Mary's Episcopal Church here. feta. Her veil was fingertip Jersey City Medical Center and New branch members are Mrs. went est Cordts, Mrs. N. E. Homicko, "After some preliminary In- jgether another year. want to be to anyone but this length, and she carried a white was a trainee at Seton Hall Col Harry Barbee, Jr., Mrs, George But Rev. Henry Male, rector, offi- Mrs. William Cordts, Mrs. Al-' structions by Wurtz and his wife idea of her being married before girl. I think she loves me but prayer book covered with orchids. lege of Medicine under the aus- Bray, Mrs. Julian W, Blake, Mrs. ciated at the double-ring cere- bert Cordts, Mrs. Joseph Bren and son, the guests were soon and older than I, mixed me up. won't say so either because she pices of the National Institute of Ronald F. Duncan, Mrs. Robert mony. Mrs. Charles Chessick of Mor- ner, Mrs. Pat Morgan, Mrs. roasting their corn over the coals, 1 moved to another town and does not believe me, or is afraid Health, specializing in internal Fouratt, Mrs. George Heyson, Miss Esther Davis was the gan who was matron of honor Leonard Frenza, Mrs. Laurana shucking it and smearing It ex- didn't write for a whole year. of being hurt again. What to medicine. Mrs. R. H. Jeffery, Mrs. William soloist, and Earle VanPelt, organ- for her sister, wore a lavender Watson, Mrs. Fred Kalhkof, Mrs. pertly with butter. L. Locher, Mrs. Julius Selinger, When I did write her, I got a do?—Smokey. Richard Trenery, Mrs. Anthony Dr. Zinke is on the staff of chiffon and taffeta gown, styled "Once they got the hang of Mrs. George Strong, Mrs. Emery short answer saying she had re- Dear Smokey: Quite under- Gonnello, Mrs. Edward Hermann, Riverview Hospital and Mon< with a waltz-length bouffant ^kirt. handling the cob — nibbling from Wingerter and Mrs. William Yea- married. standably, the poor girl remem- Mrs. Emma Hermann, Mrs. mouth Medical Center and also Woman's Club's Her veiled headpiece was at- left to right, like a typewriter ger. Five yean later I traveled bers the hurt of your walking Louis Trinidad, Mrs. Mary Calla- is on the faculty of post graduate tached to a crown of sequins and beating its roller, they agreed 2,000 miles to see her for a short out that first time. I admire han, Mrs. Edward Brush, Mrs. medicine at Monmouth Medical Show Is Tonight seed pearls and her colonial bou- that it was indeed a delicacy, 30 minutes. Another year later her aloofness. She has pride, Jack Van Pelt, Mrs. Joseph Center. LINCROFT — The Woman's quet was pastel colored flowers. especially when washed down 'Follies' Ticket Sales (last week), I called her up andt A prolonged siege is the only Boyle, Mrs. Peggy Sheldon, Mrsi with good Beaujolals, which the Club will hold its first card party Gay Lynn Hermann of Mata "How to Stay Healthy" was found her husband had died eight answer. Send her thoughtful Frank McCleaster, Mrs. Joseph colonel had thoughtfully pro- KEYPORT — Area captains and fashioh show tonight in Lin- wan was her aunt's flower girl her topic. A discussion period months ago. We talked two and little gifts for herself and the Santo!, Mrs. Fay Bennett, Mrs. vided. At party's end the con- followed. have been named by Mrs. Hy- croft School. Chairmen are Mrs. Her short frock was sapphire man Schwartz and Mrs. Saul a half hours on the phone. I children. Write her friendly but Robert Swift and Mrs. Walter Evelyn Strobel, Mrs. Catherine census was that mais (pro- Miss Kathleen Merritt con- told her how I felt. I've written blue organdy, and she wore a Sahner ticket chairmen of "The not too affectionate letters. Bauer. Selah, Mrs. Artie Scharff, Sr., nounced mice) had arrived In ducted the business session. Do- five letters since but no answer. matching crown headpiece. Her Follies of 1960." Give her an idea of your hopes Mrs. Fred Scharff, Mrs. Michael Saint-Denis-de-1'HoteI to stay." nations were approved for the and dreams and daily life. Modeling fashions from Claire's fireside basket was filled with La Vatola, Mrs. James Gravany, and The Mad Hatter, Red Bank, yellow flowers. Other comments on the corn, Public Health needy family The performance, sponsored by It's a case of getting ac- Mrs. Christian Widmann, Mrs. are club members Mrs. Newton as quoted in the town's news- Christmas fund, Boy Scouts and the United Hebrew Congregation Woman's Club quainted all over again. The William L. McDonough, Middle Eva Whitehead, Mrs. Ruth Dil- Baron, Mrs'. Harry DeSamper, papers, included "good," "revo- Girl Scouts. The club will again and the Hebrew Women's League few years difference in your Village, L. I., was best man for lon, Mrs. Herbert Baxter, Mrs. Mrs. Richard Devlin, Mrs. Ray- lutionary," "cereal prepared in sponsor the local Senior Girl and directed and costumed by Department Has ages might have mattered at 19 his brother. The ushers were Chris Bahlburg, Mrs. Harrison mond Lenartowicz, Mrs. William that manner is delicious." Scout troop. The Jerome H. Cargill Agency of but it can't now. You're both Karl H. Hermann of Matawan, Boggs, Mrs. John Robertson, O'Brien, Mrs. Carl Rosen, Mrs. Col. Wurtz is the son of Mrs. Final plans were made for a New York, will be staged Dec. Yule Program mature people. Don't try to the bride's brother, and Ernest Mrs. Joseph Toplass, Mrs. Her- Donald Sickles, Mrs. Val Tomai- Frederick C. Wurtz of Reynolds bus trip to Patricia Murphy's, 7, 8 and 10 in Keyport High pick up where you left off. Frank, Morgan. man Boschen, Mrs. C. S. Pecyni, MfDDLETOWN - A Christmas no, Mrs. Howard Taraboor and Dr., Eatontown, a former resi- Dec. 10. Mrs. Gertrude McLane, School. All seats will be reserved. She's changed and so have you. Mrs. Chris Kopp, Mrs. Genevieve program was presented by the Mrs. Walter Bauer. The bride's mother wore 8 dent of Short Hills. He served at chairman, 12 Cornell Dr., Hazlet, Mrs. Albert Abramowitz will Keep that in mind when you're Molt, Mrs. Ida Mae Andrews, is in charge of reservations. literature department of the brown taffeta and beige lace en Fort Monmouth from 1954 to 1957, have charge of tickets for the Woman's Club at a department selling yourself. Introduce her semble with matching accessories Mrs. George Faccas, Mrs. Mary and is stationed at the Coligny Miss Merritt reported on the Split Rock area; Mrs. Jack Alt- meeting last week in the home to the new, adult you—a pur- Third Birthday and a corsage of white orchids, Scabet, Mrs. Richard Havens, Caserne in Orleans. New Jersey Federation board The bl ide r Mrs. Olga Zeigeler, Mrs. Frank mark, Raritan Ridge; Mrs. Mar- of Mrs. Albert Johnson, 56 Mc- poseful man who knows what cHRFwsRimv rv,i b" S °°m's mother was meeting held Nov. 19 in Arbor N Mandia, Mrs, Joseph Kucci, Mrs. tin Olinsky and Jerome Feuer, Cormick PI. he wants and intends to get it. NtW bHKbWbBURY — CO]-; J _f,j i;n„ darHarl/k- greer,n»n laclirae writwith FIFTH BIRTHDAY Inn, Plainfield. She was accom- Fleetwood Park; Mrs. Jules Sel- Icon Marie O'Brien, daughter of roc James Alexander, Mrs. Elizabeth panied by Miss Mary Hausmann, The program was arranged by a corsage of-white orchids. MATAWAN - Rhonda Alexa inger, Matawan and Freneau; Dear Kitty: Mr. and Mrs. William F. O'Brien, McEwan, Mrs., June Rescorl, Miss Theresa Hausmann and Mrs. John Windas, department For her wedding trip, the bride Chocha, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Siegel, Holmdel; Mrs. chairman. A My husband and I go out danc- 22 Hope Rd., celebrated her Mrs. Edward Schmidt, Mrs. Al Mrs. Bernice Van Pelt of the cocktail hour also wore a cocoa wool costume with Mrs. John Chocha, Jr., 234 Jack- Harry Brier, Middletown, and was held. ing once a month with (our or third birthday last week with a fred Kotenbeutel, Mrs. Jack Matawan club. matching accessories, and a cor- son St., celebrated her fifth Mrs. Bertrand Goldstein, Keans- Mrs. Wylie G. Pate of Rome, five other couples. It's fun. party in her home. sage of white orchids. Upon re- Zwick, Mrs. William Brady, Mrs. The club members voted to file birthday Friday with a party in burg. Ga., formerly of Middletown, and Everybody dances with every- Guests included her sisters, Ne- turning, the couple will live in William Peterson, Mrs. Joseph for county and state incorpora- her home. :a charter member of the club, body else in the party. But, if ville, Gail and Ellen, and brother, their recently purchased home Stager, Mrs. Al Eckman, Mrs. tion. Tickets are also available at Elsie Huylar, Mrs. E. Crawford, Guests were Valerie White, Costa's, Keyport. was a guest. She described club there is a single girl in another William, and her cousin, Kerry at 151 Parker St., Morgan. Mrs. Mary Stoddard and Mrs. life in her new community. Her party, my husband winds up Marie Dowd of Rumson. Also Mrs. Nan Eastmond, Mrs. Ed- Muriel Hamilton, Susan Houri- Mrs. Schwartz, 19 Pershing PI., The bride, a Sayreviile High Edna Porter were guests. Host- husband is the former superin- dancing with her too—and they Shawn Mooney and Shay Varone, ward Watkinson, Mrs. Rita Chris- han, Dorothy Gardner, Judy Dal- esses were Mrs. Frances Thaler and Mrs. Saul Sahner, 80 Maple School graduate, is employed in lenbach, Pamela Paltridge, Rocky tendent of schools at Middletown not even introduced—and I sit Rumson; Judi Rogers, Mary Jane the commercial offices of the talhakus, Mrs. Jane Baker, Mrs. •nd Mrs. Miriam Hulsart. PI., are in charge of mail orders. and Terrie Bucco, Sharilyn Township. out the dance. Then he tells me Maloney, Andrew DeWitt, Dana Jersey Central Power and Light William Snyder, Mrs. Frank Fer- how wonderful that girl .dances. and Avery Smith, of this place. rugia, Mrs. George Althammer, Smith, Mavis Seehaus, Debbie Taking part in the extempor- Company at Keyport. Her hus- and Susan Downes, Chris, Wil- aneous readings were Mrs. John- I admit I don't dance as well as Mr. and Mrs. O'Brien recently band attended McKee High Mrs. Eugene Connelly, Mrs. John I used to sinca I have had trouble returned from a stay at Wil- O'Neill, Mrs. Raymond Walling, liam and Robert Jeandron, and son, a poem, "Tempo," Mrs. Har- School on Staten Island and Maxine Chncha, old Hannigan, an essay "Keep- with my leg. Am I wrong to be liamsburg, Va , whore they at- served in the Navy four years, Mrs. Andrew Gallagher, Mrs. ing Christmas"; Mrs. Windas, a so sensitive?—Wondering Wife. tended the Paper Industry Man- He is employed by the Brooklyn Howard Aalbue, Mrs. Robert Wil- poem "Knighting by Charles II"; Dear Wondering Wife; Ad- agement Association convention. Union Gas Company. son, Mrs. Robert Husselby, Mrs. Mrs. Walter Springer, a poem, mittedly your husband should Bart Grimley, Mrs. Harry Sea- "How To Get What You Want be . more considerate of you man, Mrs. Edgar Widmann, Mrs. DID YOU For Christmas"; Mrs. Edward but—don't be a kill-joy. If, be- Alfred Rowe, Mrs. Edward Gar- Stanley, a reading of St. Luke's cause of a physical handicap nett, Misses Judy Gonnello, Joan "Birth of Christmas"; and "The you can't dance every dance, Van Pelt, Virginia Wooding, Mar- Falconer's Christmas," a play- see that he does and with pret- garet Robertson, Marguerite Sca- KNOW? let in which all the group parti- ty girls too. The more rope bet, Noreen O'Neill, Dorothy cipated. you give him, the less likely O'Neill, Alice O'Neill, and Mona TTiere's a Mrs. John Kneale and Mrs. Lee he is to stray. Schiagenweith. Hassinger also attended as Miss Cordts will be married guests. Dear Kitty: I went with my brother to look Dec. 17 to Louis Rowe in the The next meeting will be Jan. Presbyterian Church, Red Bank. 26 in the home of Mrs. Springer, at a little dog. When I got home Dogwood La. I asked my mother if I could get the dog. She said no. I asked Hospital Auxiliary her why. She said we have Accompanist enough dogs. (We only have one Theater Trip Set dog.) Everyone in my family RUMSON — The Rumson Aux- For Apollo Club has had an animal, a dog or cat. iliary of Riverview Hospital will to serve you in Do you think I should get the conduct its annual bus trip to ASBURY PARK — The Apollo dog or not?—Unhappy. EATONTOWN Club, which will present its first Radio City Music Hall Thursday, Dear Unhappy: I love ani- Dec. 15, to see the Christmas concert of the season Thursday, mals too and, if I had the Monmouth Dec. 15, in the Berkeley Carteret show and dine at Patricia space, time and money, would Murphy's in Yonkers, N. Y. Shopping Center Hotel, has announced the appoint- probably acquire enough to fill ment of Miss Alice Myer of Mrs. P. H. Radford is chair- MIDDLETOWN a zoo. At present I own a man, assisted by Mrs. William Ocean Grove as accompanist. little Dachshund named Chris- Rout* 35 and She succeeds James Dehaven, Cromey and Mrs. Marie Clancy. ENJOYING THE SUNSHINE in Nassau are Mr. and Mn. topher, and an African gray Two buses will leave at 8 a.m. also of Ocean Grove, who re- parrot called Mile. Coco. They Middletown Rd. Vincent McCarthy of 19 Ridge Rd., Rumson, pictured at signed to continue his musical from the corner of River Rd. and need a lot of loving attention Blneham Ave. the Nassau's Loft House Club pool. Mr. McCarthy is education. and, when they are sick, money tales director for the U.S. Industrial Chemical Corpora- Former assistant organist at to pay the vet to make them St. Paul's Reformed Church, tion. The couple returned to their Rumson home Satur- well. Perhaps your mother was OFF ON A CRUISE to the West Indies are Dr. and Mrs. Ocean Grove, Miss Myer is choir thinking of all these things G; Paul Butler of Little Silver Point Rd., pictured last day, director and organist at the when she said no to your hav- delicious hot Brielle Reformed Church and ing the little dog. week prior to their sailing for a Thanksgiving cruise. organist at Monmouth Reformed If you are prepared Io care The couple are the joint authors of the travel books, Congregation, Shrewsbury. for it yourself, love it as your "Butlers' South America" and "Butlers' The Caribbean." A student of both piano and very own, and pay for its food it's a gift organ for 12 years. Miss Myer and doctors' bills, you might was the recipient of a scholarship ask your mother to reconsider BAGELS CHILDREN'S SLEEPERS to the Guilmant School of the the question, especially if you Organ, New York City. SLIPCOVERS with plastic soles or ski pajamas. are willing to assume full re- Every Sunday Morning Holiday prints, too! sponsibility. The experience Is ON HONOR SQUAD 3 Pieces $QQ.5O > From 3,00 one of life's lessons which you • Vat dyed at HARTSVILLli, S. C. — Miss will have to learn sooner or • Pre-shrimk 99 / Audrey Edmunds, daughter of later. • Prints & solids < Overlooked scams Mr. and Mrs. Edward Edmunds, O>£ rom ,>fr > Queen Ann Dr., Shrewsbury, Sojid your problem Io Kilty N. J., a freshman nt Cokcr Col-.Kelly, Knclnsc a slumped, sclf- Sherman's MAYFAIR SUPER MARKET UJ'iO- YANKO'S Irfie, has been, named to the addressed envrlnpn ami ncldrnss honor hockey squad, She was her in carp of tlie Red Iliink Home Decorators IN-STORE BAKERY BROAD ST.j among 25 fiirls rccojjniml for.Register. Helpful leaflets avail- 4K8 llroml St., RED BANK! top performance in field hockey (able, Write (or "Are You Sen- Shrewsbury tournament competition. sitlve." 56 Newman Springs Rd. Red Bank REGISTER Deejay Cleric Honor Retiring Church Sate BED BANK •:nx Line Foreman To Addres* RED BANK - More (JIM »» Japan Study Around Monmouth 9 riends of Michael Mod, Bell RUMSON - A study of Japan ' ^.,., ...... j 'Challenge i 'elephone line foreman, Red will be conducted by a return WITH Mlllf Bank District, gathered at the missionary, his Japanese wife, I ASBURY PARK — An award- "ountains Motel, Long Branch, to (and two students from Japan in! / By Mrs. Albert J. Hruska winning religious disk jockey will lonor him on his retirement af- the Goodwill Methodist Church, be featured at a meeting Friday , , , . ... er 44 years and five months of of Challenge at 8 p.m. in the Washington Si. Sunday At 6 p.m velouThes weather has been so mar-j Pammie, Jame, and Jbbie ctive service. there will bee a pot-luck supper ivelous " doesnt seem possible j Nagle, children of the Robert E. high school. there will bFellowshie a pot-lucp kHal suppel for|r itliat j t wi" "doesn' be Decembet seem r possiblThurs-jNaglee j Nagles , ochildref Rumson onf thhave Robere addet Ed. The committee on arrange- served in | h h ddd He is Rev. John DeBrine, ments consisted of Charles Col friends of the church1 u. !dav. Ithrethreep mormoree swimminswimming medals to Boston, who spins top tunes with ns, Robert Malcheski, Don Van- A highlight of the evening will! Be»y (Mrs. Robert 0.) Thatch- their collection. Bobbie won first er chaDel Hl Rd Cna el Hll! and Pam- a "celestial" beat on his "Song irunt, Robert Brown, Robert be a film strip with sound made< . " < P - place, Janie second, ls havin luncn toda at the Un individual time," heard weekly coast-to- Baggett, Robert Benson and Jc- by return missionary Rev. Ar- S y " mie third in their coast on 90 U. S. stations, in- thur Gamblin. Fellowship sing-!10n League Club in New York with classes in the county champion- eph Scott. Francis Dinen, tong Vir nia cluding Hawaii and Puerto Rico. Branch, was toastmaster. ing, a coffee hour, and a discus-l g' Waring, wife of Fred ship meet at the Asbury Park Y Challenge is a shore interde- Among the speakers were L. H. sion period also will be held. I Waring. Mrs. Waring heads her Saturday. nominational group, designed to Young people of the Navesink!own very successful interior de-j Bishop, division plant manager; ;si n firm since B tlv a ver promote Christian ideals among G. F. Nagle, district plant man- and Rumson Methodist Churches 8 - c . >s y| Larissa Oleson, the not quite the" youth of Monmouth and will meet at 4:30 p.m. with the;talented interior designer, too,1 7-year-old daughter of the Mar- ger; B. J. Coughlin, district con- u s Ocean counties. It was formed itruction supervisor, and Arthqr Japanese students and mission-j ' possible an interesting asso- shall Olesons, Middle Rd., Haz- early this year, largely through Ryan, a former division constrtic- ary. For their devotional they ciation mayy follow this tete-a- let, won two more prizes in art' the efforts of Mr. and Mrs. :ion superintendent. Wallace Bell, will use an English translation of tete. Betty will leave for Wash- contests recently. Charles D. Rodgers, New Shrews- Long Branch, a lifetime associ a Japanese worship service from ington later this afternoon for a bury. ate who came to work in 1893 the United Church of Christ in brief visit. Dining along the "Champagne Mr. and has been retired since 1936, Japan. Circuit" over the week-end were clergyman to be named an "Out-also spoke. Rev. Mr. Gamblin will preach Jimmy Starr, a new young Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Turck of standing Young Man of greater Representing the Jersey Central at both services Sunday: Nave- singing idol and son of Sgt. andNew York. Mr. Turck is the in- Boston" by the Boston Junior Power and Light Company were sink at 9:30 a.m. and Rumson, Mrs. C. F. Goddard, New Shrews-jtcrnationally known engineer and Chamber of Commerce. Frank Dwyer, Allenhurst; Fred 11 a.m. The pastor, Rev. Milton bury, is under contract to Laurel j author of the book, Idea Inertia The 34-year-old pastor of the itillwell and George Predmore, G. Killebrew, and two Japanese Recording Co. His newest re- and Achievement" The Turcks Baptist Church was commended Red Bank. students from Drew School of lease "Choo-choo to Heaven" is spent the week-end at the Rum- by the Jaycees this year for ex- Mr. Mead will continue to make Theology will assist. headed for the top 10 lists. Jimmy son Hotel. ceptional achievement in his THE RED BANK WOMAN'S CLUB will hold its annual pre-holiday bazar Friday in the his home with a sister at 27 Lo- also appears as guest star on Also there were Mr. and Mrs. chosen field and for services to clubhouse. Luncheon will be served. A number of original design gift items, made cust Ave., Red Bank, for the Clay Cole's television show. Howard Kavookjlan of New York the community, state and nation present. by club members, will be sold for early Christmas shoppers. Committee aides, ar- Party, Sale Set and Rumson with Mr. Kavook- . .the He directs the -non-sectarian ranging a display booth for the bazar, are left to right, Mrs. Lyman B. Lockwood, Holiday party dates are begin- jian's son Howard, Jr. teenage rallies on Saturday nights By Garden Club ning to fill the calendar all the Charles Hendersons of Ward In the Park Street Church on Mrs. Charles Toop, and Mrs. Joseph E. Ca rroll. wa int0 Ave., Rumson. . .Connie Andrews NAVESINK - The Navesinkj y the Boston Common. An average Adult School of Fair Haven with Jack Embry Garden Club will hold a Christ- Larry and Kay Carton, Wig- of more than 1,000 youths from By Gcttermann wam Rd., Locust, will be hosts jof Sea Bright . .Bert Crockford all of New England participate Adah Chapter mas card party and gift sale Term to' End Tuesday afternoon, Dec. 6, in theat a cocktail party and buffet at of Cobble Close, Middletown. . . each week. their home Dec. 11. Sally and and the Robert Peacocks of Ty- The deejay cleric received the RED BANK — The current library. Dessert will be served Slates Luncheon at 1 p.m. /like Guarino, Sycamore La., son La., Rumson. 1959 annual American Baptis semester of the Red Bank Com ?umson, have issued invitations award for the unique contribu- munity Adult School will end next LONG BRANCH — Adah Chap Mrs. John Kanner, ways and or cocktails and supper at their tion of his "Songtime" program week as approximately 600 stuter, Order of Eastern Saar, will means chairman, is general ome Jan. 1. Katja (Mrs. Orest) "Instead of condemning rock'n dents complete classes in 40 sub-sponsor a Chinese luncheon Wed- chairman, and Mrs. John Broc- Forest, Chapel Hill, has planned 'roll, youth leaders should offer jects. nesday at 12:30 p.m, in Masonic key is in charge of card party ; series of "at homes" Saturday teenagers something worthwhile Some of the courses introduced Temple, Broadway. arrangements, Mrs. Bernard Bar- Ights. The Junior) S erv i ce In its place," Rev. Mr. DeBrine for the first time in the school Mrs. Clifford Oates, Long rett is chairman of the gift League's Christmas Ball at Rum- said. "I don't think our youth is this fall and which gained ac- Branch, worthy matron, will be tables. ion Country Club Dec. 9 will be as far gone as some critics would ceptance were golf, briefhand hostess. During the past several weeks, ireceded by many cocktail par- have us believe." memory and concentration, and Mrs. Lyman B. Lockwood, members have held workshop ies. he use of office machines. Shrewsbury, is in charge of ar- meetings at Mrs. Barrett's home These and other favorites such rangements, assisted by Mrs. to make a variety of items for Mrs. Samuel Thomas, Thorn- BARTON'S as languages, contract bridge, Evans Green, West Long Branch; the event, such as Christmas dec wood Farms, and Mrs. Mildred To Abolish social dancing, typing, sewing Mrs. Clifford Ostertag, Monmouth orations, gifts and equipment for N. Norton, Cobble Close, both and painting will be repeated in Beach, and Mrs. William floral arrangement. Workshop Middletown, are on their way to the winter term which opens Jan, Schanck, Middletown, workers included Mrs. Nelson Arlington, Va., to visit Mrs. HolidaySpecialsl Personal Tax 23. Benedict, club president; Mrs. Thomas' brother, Edward Mer- FAIR HAVEN — An ordinac Registration for that term wil Gerard A. Barba, Mrs. Harry none, an executive on the Polar- providing for'the abolishment o: be held Jan. 9, 12, 15, aid 1! Brothers Celebrate Corwin, Mrs. Harry Craver, Mrs. is missile project. They will spend n the high school. Joseph Durrer, Mrs. Frederick the personal property tax here LINCROFT — Mr. and Mrs. several days, in Pimlico, Md., at- was introduced at last night': Willard F. Browning, school di Eldridge, Mrs. Jessie T. Fon- lending the races. rector, is working with the cur-Richard Jorgensen, 276 River- taine, Mrs. Phillips M. Goodwin, borough council meeting b; Thomwood Farms entry "High- riculum committee on plans fo brook Ave., were hosts Friday Mrs. Richard "Gorsuch, Mrs. Reg. 2.98 BARTON'S Councilman Eugene M. Magee. at a joint birthday party for their land Lassie" is scheduled to run Slated for final reading Dec the winter program. Arthur Grandjean, Mrs. Robert sons, Dean and David. Dean is 8 "I'll only bother you for a moment, Dad. All you Guest, Mrs. Donald Hembling, oward the end of the week. 2 lb. Fruit Cake 12, the measure would add Fai The committee consists of Wil years old, and his brother, 7. Ham E. Firth, chairman; Ray- have to say is.'Yes'!" Mrs. Richard M. Hurd, Mrs Haven to the growing list of niU Guests were Robin and Nancy nicipalities taking the same ac- mond G. McCartney, board presi David Jackson, Mrs. Leo Lewis, Hold Investiture dent; Samuel W. Laird, Mrs Goldstein, Marci Flanders, Patty Mrs. J. E. Robertson, Mrs. Rob- tion as a result of a new ruling Daly, Rita Gorski, Mary Cronan, NOW $2 by the state legislature callin, Eliot Tarlin and Rodney Hibner, 2-Day Holiday Brownie Unit ert Rothwell, Mrs. Saul J. Sha- Margaret, Susan and Ann Quinn, piro, Mrs. Walter E. Sutter, Mrs For 3 Brownies for new collecting procedure! Mr. Browning said the adul 1 school is open to everyone am Debbie BWallman, Gary Bitterly, Bazar Slated Visits Hospital Francis E. Swartz, Mrs. Eric RED BANK — Investiture cere lazed cherries,, pineapple, which would cost almost as muc! Maribeth Moran, Debbie Ander- monies for three new members as the amount levied. is not limited to residents of th< RED BANK — The Women's Williamson, Mrs, George H. Weis son, Clifford Holley and Rickie EATONTOWN — Six Troop 101and Mrs. Kanner. were held when Brownie Troop dates, pecans and almonds in The council also received a let- immediate Red Bank vicinity. Association of the Presbyterian brownies delivered homemade He added that the curriculum and Drew Jorgensen, all. of Lin- 64 met recently in Mechanic rum-flavored cake, in color- ter from the borough's two work- croft; Neal and Patty Wenger Church will hold its annual holi- candy and pine cone turkeys to Mrs. Brockey and Mrs. H Street School auditorium. In- Ing special officers, Raymond T. for the new term "is being ex- day bazar tomorrow and Thurs- patients at Monmouth Medical Rfchard Stern are in charge o: ul gift tin. panded and diversified toincludi and Rita Lough, Middleton; Kar- vested as Brownies were Susan McCue and Melvin Stout, askin( day in the church hall. Center, Long Branch, Wednes- ticket sales; Mrs. Lawrence A as complete a range of course: en Elholm, North Bergen, "and Knoll, Ellyn Roth and Rhonda that their hourly wage be raiset Susan and Carol Elholm, Brook- Highlight tomorrow will be a day. Carton, refreshments; Mrs. Fred Silberstein. from $1.75 to $2.25 to conform and interests as possible." family style dinner to be served erick Eldridge and Mrs. Donald lyn. The group was greeted by Mrs. Also during the ceremony, Dru with nearby municipalities. between 6 and 7 o'clock, with Also the boys' maternal grand- Irving Diamond, director of pub-Hembling, posters; Mrs. Guest, cilia Warren received her second- The regular policemen re- Mrs. Ole A. Klady as chairman. lic relations at the hospital. She cookie sales, and Mrs. Curti quested pay hikes at the coun Santa Clans mother, Mrs. Martin Elholm, Lin- year pin. First-year pins weni Reg. 2.59 BARTON'S croft; and Mr. and Mrs.John Mrs. Lawrence R. Burdge and guided the unit on a tour of the Gary, Mrs. George Howland, Jr. to Delta Rose Albano, Robert! cil's last meeting. Mrs. Harry C. F. Elholm, North Bergen. Worden are main floor. Mrs. Ward Denison, Mrs. Harry Friedman, Pamela Gale, Susa Miniature Chocolates Visit Slated general chairmen. Members of Participating were Cynthia Corwin and Mrs. F. J. Eglies Greenberg, Nancy Katsin, Mar- Riilgers Gets KEYPORT - Richard Hamme the 10 circles that make up the Jacelon, Patti Jo Zaorski, Joy general committee aides; aw garet Levinson, Linda Maudsky president of the Chamber of Com Attends Institute association will man the bazar Cass, Patricia Scarle, Barbara Mrs. Shapiro, publicity. Dale Patterson, Lynn Senion booths selling foods, Christmas Kesselman, Patricia Dean, Mrs. Christine Wopat and Cynthi NOW $2 merce, announced merchants an .PRINCETON — Mrs. Hubert $750,000 Loan planning a celebration to mar] decorations and gifts, fancy work, Raymond Cass, Jr., leader, and Warren. M. Farrow of Red Bank, co- Mrs. Charles Jacelon. Couple Honored WASHINGTON (AP)-The Com the arrival of Santa Claus to thi toys, and other items. Susan Greenberg g r e e t e i ordinator of volunteers at River- The girls returned to their A light and dark assortment munity Facilities Administratioi borough Dec. 10 to open thi Thursday, a luncheon fashion On Anniversary guests. The colors were presentee view Hospital, was among 95 meeting place on Lafetra Ave. announced today a $750,000 loai Christmas season. show will be a feature starting by Linda Madusky, Nancy Kat- of fruits, nuts, truffles, crunches, directors of volunteers attending following the tour, wrote a letter MIDDLETOWN — Mr. and to Rutgers University, New Santa will arrive by helicopter, at 12:30 p.m. Mrs. Albert Mc- sin and Drucilla and Cynthia the regional institute last week of thanks to Mrs. Diamond, and Mrs. Albert Hopps, Field Ave. cordials, cremes and caramels. Brunswick for construction of 96 landing at 1:30 p.m. at Loew': Cracken is luncheon chairman. Warren. in the Nassau Inn. decided to sjart work on Christ- ivere honored Sunday at a gather- units of housing for student fam 35, Drivc-in Theater, Rarita Fashions will be by Wilhelmina The institute was sponsored mas favors for the patients. ing of their family and friend A play, "How a Brownie Cam ilies. Township. Mayor Norman Curri Dobbins of Red Bank. Her dis- to Be," was given with Delts Jointly by the Association of Di- play will include party dresses, at their home. The occasion wa; The loan, coupled with $327,000 and borough and chamber offic rectors of Volunteer Service in the couple's 38th wedding anni Rose Albano as narrator, Chris of the university's funds, will bo als will be present at the recep as well as suits, coats and casual tine Wopat, Dale Patterson, Pam Hospitals, Metropolitan New costumes. Film Viewed vcrsary and Mrs. Hopps' birth used to build seven apartmen tion. The High School ban< York, the New Jersey Association day. ela .Gale, Lynn Senion, and Rob-These 2 Barton best-sellers are buildings for married students and glee club will present a pro Luncheon tables will be dec- ert Friedman in the cast. of Directors of Volunteer Service orated by Mrs. Harold Lartaud, By Bnai Brith The Middletown couple, forme available at these special low They will be built on a 15-acri gram of Christmas music. Refreshments were served b; in Hospitals and the Pennsylvania who has chosen "Winter Wonder- RUMSON - "A Letter from a Rutherford residents, have lived prices only until Dec. 3. site owned by the school at Un After gifts and goodies are dis Association of Directors of Volun- Deborah Cook and Margaret Lev land" as her design theme. Soldier," a film on prejudice in Riverside Heights six years, versify Heights, Piscatawa; tributed by Santa Claus to thi teer Service in Hospitals, south- Party hostess was their daughter, inson. Township. children, a parade, escorted b; starring Marjorie Main and Keefe eastern chapter. Brasselle, was shown at a meet- Mrs. George St. Peter, Middle STEINBACH'S CANDIES State Police units, will leave thi Name Auxiliary town. > It pays to advertise in The theater and continue to Sout ing of the Bnai Brith, Women, Red Bank Chapter, last week in Mrs. St. Peter is the cduple' Register—Advertisement. Street Floor and Asbury Park 101st Birthday Main St. and Maple Place, the: Two-Needle Set Committees only child. They also have twi down Beers St., to the busines Bnai Israel synagogue. MATAWAN — Mrs. Anthony ;randchildren, Susan and John district. 936 Mrs. Jerald Freeman, first vice Is Observed Guigliano, newly-elected president St. Peter, who were among the Stores will remain open unt president of the Northern New of the Haley Hose Company Aux- party guests. 'LAST 5 DAYS! WEST LONG BRANCH (AP)— 9 p.m. beginning Monday, Dec Jersey Council of Bnai Brilli Miss Mary Lavenia Mount, whi liary, announced committee Women, presented the film. A Guests included Mr. and Mrs. 12. From Dec. 19 until Chris chairmen for the coming year at was "never afraid to work whei mas stores will remain open unt: discussion period followed. St. Peter and family, and Mr. meeting in the fire house. Mrs. Joel Stein is in charge and Mrs. Daniel Higgins, Middle- I could and liked people," cele 10 p.m. DRY CLEANING Mrs. John Rainko and Mrs. Jos-of a cookbook, "Cook's Tour," brated her 101st birthday Sun Gifts will be offered by bus: town; Mr. and Mrs. Ma:; Smith, eph P. Vaccarella will serve on distributed by Bnai Brith Women. day. ness places the afternoon of Dec Red Bank, and Mr. and Mrs. Miss Mount, of 446 Monmout the welfare committee; Mrs. Mor- Mrs. George Beckman, philan- Nicholas Nauss, Bristol, Conn., 10 on West Front St. Tickets ti ris Inguaggiato, publicity; Mrs. Rd., is the sister of the lat be distributed at the entrance o thropies chairman, asked mem- former residents of Middletown. Mayor James R. Mount who diec Frank Gray, Sr., Mrs. Frank bers to donate toys for Bellefaire the drive-in will entitle driver: Gray, Jr., and Mrs. Theodore In 1953. to the gift. Children's Home, a Bnai Brith D'Aloia, trustees. * project. PTA Has Finat WILSON CLUB TO MEET HOLIDAY PARTY A Christmas party will be held Mrs. Seymour Wiesen and Mrs.Meeting of Year RUMSON - The Red Bank Wednesday, Dec. 14, in Rollo's Leon Mond were chairmen of the LITTJLE SILVER — The Mon RED BANK — John Dziezyc mouth Wilson Club of the Wilsoi Auxiliary of Riverview Hospita Post House, Keyport. Secret pals refreshment committee. DEC. 3RD is holding a Christmas can will be revealed.. showed a series of pictures taken College Alumnae Association wi on his family's, trip to the West meet tonight at 8:30 at the horn party and holiday bazar today a GETS HOCKEY EMBLEM Carol Proaram this summer at the recent meet- of Mrs. Daniel Huebner, 154 Li: Rumson Country Club. Mrs. An RED BANK - The Shrewsbury ing of the Oakland Street Parent- .tie Silver Point Rd. Members wi thony J. Perrotta is genera TROY, N. Y. — Miss Micheal Severance, daughter of Mr. andChorale will present a program Teacher Association. MEN'S TROUSERS discuss plans for spring fund- chairman of the event, assistei of traditional Christmas music raising projects and for thi by Mrs. Douglas Edwards, Mrs Mrs. Craig Severance, Rough This was the final PTA meeting Sunday at 7 p.m. in St. Thomas for the ar. The next session annual tea for prospective Wilso; John Buchanan, Mrs. Stephei Point, Locust, N. J., was awarded SPORT SHIRTS Episcopal Church. will be Jan. 24. students to be held Feb. 4 Casagrande, Mrs. Clinton Hough a hockey emblem for proficiency the home of Mrs. John T. Hen in that sport at the fall field day The 54-voice chorale will be The parent-education group will WOMEN'S SLACKS Mrs. Andrew Dedick, Mrs. Jo directed by its founder, Alden meet next Tuesday, Dec. 6, in drickson, 30 Irving PI., seph Gluck, Mrs. John Husban' of Emma Willard School. She is Bank. a member of the junior class. Hammond of New Shrewsbury the school at 8 p.m. The speaker BLOUSES • SKIRTS (plain) I and Mrs. Richard Sause. Mrs. Lee Johnson is the group's will be Mrs Thelma Coleman, No problem, finding tenants accompanist. The group will sing special reading teacher, who will SWEATERS when you advertise The Register both European and American explain her part in the school's continuing our way.—Advertisement. carols. program. Grand Opening Special! WIUL $15 Permanent Wave Baby cables create rich, tex- PLUS FREt TUBE OF (ION tured effect—big, big pompon TV ALBERTO VO5 adds fun 'n' fashion. 99 HAIRDRESSING 10 JIFFY-KNIT cap and mittens —smart for skating, skiing, win- We have Ihe most modern equipment. In- ter! Done on two needles only. YOU RECEIVE FREE cluding the latest dryers that dry hair In Pattern !)30: directions small, S&H GREEN STAMPS medium, large included. 25 per cent less time, Send ,35c (coins) for this pat- WITH EACH DRY free gifts to all who visit tern — add 10c for each pattern CLEANING OR for lst-class mnlnlng. Send to our salon this month Red Bank Register, Needlccraft LAUNDERING ORDER Dept., P.O. Box 101, Old Chelsea for your appointment phone LI 2-0967 Station, New York 11, N,Y. Print plainly pattern number, name, At Store Only address and zone, JUST OFF THE PRESSI Send Ethers Beauty Salon now for our exciting, new 1(151 Nccdlecraft Catalog. Over 125 TO RAISE FUNDS for Christmas charitios the Now Shrewsbury Woman's Club will UNION-IMPERIAL vontplvln beauty service designs to crochet, knit, sew, embroider, quilt, weave — fash hold its annual Christmas charity ball Saturday at tho Molly Pitcher Hotol. Going LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS 108 Maplo Ave, (Just off Lowij St.) Eatontown Ions, linmufurnishlng.s, toys, gifts, ovor final dotaifs for tho ovont are, left to right, Mrs, Donald Colo, ticket chairman; ,500 BROAD ST. SH 1-2228 SHREWSBURY1 bazar hits. Plus I'RIil.C - In (AMPLE I'AKKING) Open Dully thru Sat,, 9 (o S—Thursday 8 to 8 P. M. structions for six smart veil caps. Mrs. William Sutor and Mrs. Vincont D. Roacho, Jr., gonoral chairmen, and Mrs. : ;:;:<*>::.. Hurry, send 25c now I Edmund F. Sickols, ticket salo chairman with Mrs. Colo. iors Draft 21 Meii friM New Washington Club Acquires Navy's Joe Bellino, 2 Yale Linemen John Gabler and On AP All-East Football Team

LOUISVILLE, (AP) — The'regular draft. It henceforth will .clubs by taking in Los Angeles. First Year Men Selected New Washington club of the|get special priorily in American (However, the outcome of the A total of six first-year men, American League acquired its League waivers. This indicated! summit meeting with Frick on were selected. These players are; ALL-EAST AU-STARS-J960 first players yesterday— Washington definitely expected to Wednesday can shape the entire bonus men who had not been John Gabler and Ray Semproch operate in 1961. i future of baseball. taken up to the parent club ros- ters. Minnesota grabbed two of , —as the majors drafted 21 men Knotty Problem The American League, which from the minors for $447,000. [already has frozen a list of 120 these boys, Gerry Arrigo, a 19- A 22nd man also was picked Doherty's drafts emphasized the-players (15 from each club), took year-old lefty pitcher from San in a delayed draft by Bill Veeck, knotty problem facing the majorsM6 and the national only five, Diego who had an 8-1 record at president of the Chicago White in their expansion moves. The I Veeck's \ffo\ie Sox were the Clinton, Iowa last summer and Sox, but Commissioner Ford American League has nine clubsjm(Jst a:UvE>| ,aking four men p]us Gary Dotter, another 18-year-old Frick ruled the club already had and wants to go to 10 by taking, the delayed selection of loft- southpaw from the Miami roster the maximum 40 men nn its ro- in Los Angeles, also for 1961 !handed pi(cher Ted Davidson who had a 3-3 record at Keokuk, also in the Midwest League. ster. Frick said the roster was Commissioner Frick won't ap-tfrom jersey city H(, is a fir5t frozen Nov. 7 with 36 players and prove of a second club m Los man who had a 9.5 record Among familiar faces back for A rtnnln^ until 1^1 r rtVl^li * C rATr1- . > >->• • . • MI • • yesterdav four drafts filled it Angeles until baseball's terr: at Palatka, Fla. in the Florida another trial were catcher Valmv torial mle has a "fair and equi- up. Veeck dissented. State League. But Frick has Thomas, drafted by Cleveland table" amendment. said this can not be allowed. from Rochester and catcher Hank Ed Doherty, general manager Frick has called league presi- Veeck took Bob Roselli from Foiles, picked up by Baltimore from Denver. Foiles was with PAUL TERHES s Kansas City, Cleveland and De- Richmond farm of the Inter- troit last summer and hit .282. III Bucknell national League as his first of- ficial act. Gabler, a 30-year- cho, a left-handed pitcher, from Each regular draft cost $25,000 old right-hander had a 3-3 re-j suitable amendment. Toronto of the International Lea and each of the six first-year men Baseball men see little pos- only $12,000. cord with the Yanks and 4-4 with] ; ue and Win5ton Brown a ri of Na iona Leag u> \ « ' Philadelphia's John Quinn, gen- Richmond last season. I ™ * ^jhanded pitcher from Louisville |J £ aa, oof f^jhanded pitcher from Louisville of eral manager, had. the first pick Jach expand tojlhe American Assoc.at.on. Semproch, 29, was picked rromj Ame'rican that Jach expand s x c u and he took Clarence Coleman, a ] ' ' bs did not participate in the Spokane roster of the Pacific njne ciui)s jn '(;i and p]ay an l catcher from the Dodgers'Spo- Coast League. The right-hander inter-league schedule. The j the draft which topped last year's jkane farm. He hit .257 in 93 pitched with the Phillies and National has voted to expand to j total of 14 men. Kansas City games at Montreal. The first Detroit in the majors and had ,n i in 1962 by taking c UDS in and the new Minnesota Twins draft by an American Leaguer •n 11-2 record at Spokane as Houston and New York and is was Kansas City's selection of Ed Minneapolis-St. Paul entry (form- well as 3-0 with Detroit. having no part of a compromise. Keegan, a 21-year-old right-hand Washington was permitted two American Leaguers appear de- "ly Washington), each picked up ed pitcher, from the Phillies •elections after the close of the termined to push ahead with 101 three men. Farm at Buffalo.

ALL-EAST, I960.-— This is the All-East football team for I960 as selected by Associated Press sport writers. The team includes ends Mike Ditka, Pittsburgh, and Fred Mautino, Syracuse; tackles Stew Barber, Penn State, and Mike Pyle, Yale; guards Ben Balme, Yale, and Al Vanderbush, Army; center Alex Kroll, Rutgers; backs Paul Terhes, Bucknell; Joe Bellino, Navy; Ernie Davis, Syracusa;^and Alan Rozycki, Dartmouth.

ASSOCIATED PRESS There was little dissent in nam- together, both on offense and de- The second team is made up of Joe Bellino, Navy's great half- ing Ditka and Balme to the first fense. Pyle, a center for two Penn State's Bob Mitinger and back, two linemen from unde- team. Ditka, a 6-3, 215 pounder, seasons, learned his new duties Joe Sikorsky of Boston College feated Yale and two holdovers is a crashing defense player, a well as tackle. A fine player at at end, Dale Kuhns of Army and from Syracuse's 1959 national fine blocker and an able pass almost any position, he is an- Dave Meggyesy of Syracuse at champions form the backbone of catcher who can go for the extra other who has drawn attention tackle, Navy's John Hewitt and the 1960 Associated Press All- yards after getting the ball. He from pro clubs. Larry Vignali of Pitt at guard East football team. clearly outplayed Mautino, the Completing the All-East line and Frank Visted of Navy at other first team end, when their are center Alex Kroll of Rutgers, center. The backs are Tom Sin- Bellino, the unanimous choice teams met. of the Regional Board of selec- guard Al Vanderbush of Army gleton, Yale; Fred Cox, Pitt; tors, is a runner almost without Balme generally was tabbed as and 233-pound tackle Stew Bar- Dick Desmarais, Boston Univer- equal and an all-around player the man who held the Yale line ber of Penn State. sity, and Bob Blanchard, Yale. of great talent. He climaxed his career by leading Navy in a 17- 12 victory over Army last Satur- day. He did a little of everything, gaining 85 yards from scrimmage and making a game-saving inter- ception in the last minute, and was named the outstanding play- have thousands of warm er in the game. OCEAN RACERS HONORED — The Jersey Ocean Rac ing Club honored its tailors Saturday night at a trophy Bellino is the key man in an dinner in Shadowbrook, Shrewsbury. Gerry Gasque, directer of the Jersey Coast Boat Show, second from left, All-East backfield which has presents Jim Gabarine, "Shark Ri/ar, the Jersey Coast Boat Show perpetual trophy. Mr. Gabarine was high point drawn covetous glances from winner of the season. Don Asay, second from right, commodore of the club, presents an award to Phil Andrews, most of the scouts of profession- feenJs... al clubs. Bellino, however, pres- winner of the Texas Tower race. This race, out to the tower and back, totaled 138 miles. ently is looking to a Navy career instead of one in pro football. The other backs are quarter- Business Units back Phil Terhes of Bucknell, a Five Tracks Resign From TRA superb pro-type passer from a comparatively small college; Will Honor Ernie Davis of Syracuse, a 205- pound runner faster than Bellino As A Result of Long Feud and just as unstoppable, and Al- Buc Cridders an Rozycki of Dartmouth, a SHREWSBURY — Red Bank; swift, elusive runner, adept pass NEW YORK (AP) — The! TRA directors interpreted thejofficer under the president and High School's Shore Conference thoroughbred Racing Associa- resignations to a difference in j board of directors of the TRA." receiver and fine defensive play- Class A grid champions will be r. tions, Inc., a group which makesj policy concerning the authority, Drayton said that "naturally,' I honored "at" Snadowbrook""here Davis and Fred Mautino, a 1959 up a

day bv the withdrawal of five [convention in San Francisco, ob- given to me by the board ofi i. .,_ •• ' r •. J- ., i- i track groups. jections were raised about Drav-idirectors and the full member L * u he flrst conferen«! Spearheading the line are , h r_ , . .. , ton's Dowers Dravton resigned ]w -• memDer championship won by Red Bank i guard Ben Balme and tackle on s w s It was the culmination of a:j JDU™t ,P°tnethe TR"K-A praytoboardiraI n retuscresignedto, ship. Um^.mlsince th.e ,!»;„..-JI.-.-J-J .•_ U. D,,IPyle. »orf v,Yalue ..anid DWPitt's. big, ki. !I Ions-standing feud with Spenceri . ' ™ He sa,d he did not expect any * able all-around end, Mike Ditka. j X Drayton, TRA executive vice' acceP' " and he remained. i further resignations. divisionS| A nd B ! Bark in the old one division;. president. The resignations reduced thi' "The full membership is right | lea cue* Buccos were co- However, the TRA in its lDthjTRA membership to 43 tracks, j here in convention, and if anylcnam piOns"ln "w3 innual convention here issued all of which contribute roughly,others should want to walk out, Dr Alfred Coder' Dr Alfred Coder former coach Golf Show Slated! t statement indicating that it $500,000 per year to maintain thej I suppose it would be known bV|Of Montclair State College will be would steer a clear road ahead,; racing organization. Jnow." jtlle majn speaker Dr Coder following its code of standards) John G. Cella, president of thej The TRA voted to meet againjcoacned Montclair to an unde- Beacon Hill In spite of the withdrawal yester-jTRA and head of Oaklawn Park|in New York next year, and all •feated season in 1947, the year LEONARDO — Officers of the day of Garden State Park in Newjat Hot Springs, Ark., said he re-jdirectors of the now-43 member Buc Coach Lee Walsky was a!state PGA Winter Golf League] JerseJerseyy, Hialeah in Florida, and gretted the five tracks "will not TRA tracks were re-elected. squad member. will conduct a golf show at Bea-i three Chicago tracks, Arlington continue to work with us in our, Other guests include Edmun.djCon Hill Country Club Sunday.] ...Because £sso Heating Oil and Washington Parks, and national program for the better- J. Canzona, Board of Education; Pro Andy Sikora of Beacon,! Balmoral which onerates in ment of thoroughbred racing,"Weihenmaye" r president; Superintendent of j tournament director and secro-i meetings at Washington Park. and added: Schools Gregg M. Hibbs; Royal tary for the league, will be mas-! burns hot and dean.., The TRA was organized in 1942; "™s action is occasioned by jH. Hintze, principal; Frank J. ter of ceremonies at a buffeti and the thoroughbred racina prr-!a matter that arose two vears ^Elected Tiger jPingitore, athletic director and dinner to be held prior to the' a tective bureau (TRPB) followed; K°-Mr. Lindheimer and Mr the coaching staff. show. keeps tneir homes snug and T/ram" In 1946. Dravton came in to M™ suggested that the for 'i All stages of the golf game, should have a permanent ar h"ad the TRPB, the policing force Pro Basketball from the driver to the putter, of TRA tracks. paid president. This idea was! PRINCETON (AP) — Prince- will be discussed with several Nothing guards your comfort like Drayton was the FBI agent in accepted by our board and a| ton guard Edwin A. Weihenmay-, league pros participating, committee was appointed tocarryjer last night was elected captain j Kxlrrn Dlvlilon charge of Chicago who directed W I, pri. S.B.J Golf films will be shown. A: the"capture"of"pTohibit'ion"gang.|out the job. [of the Tigers' 1961 footballjH^ton^^^ 1 sq f, 'question and answer period will iter Roper Touliy. ! "The committee was composed! !!f ' svracinB Z""l.i in 7U follOW. "WATCHDOG" When Drayton set up the T.RPB of John B. Kelly, Atlantic City; [ Weihenmayer, 20, from Jen-m : :: ; In 1st PGA Winter Golf ]tita;LM ' At Its Highest Season Level LEONABPO — Msrty Tolomeo, In Raritan Loop Twin Brook Country Club, Wat- Rod Laver, 12-14, 7-5, 6-2, 7-5 j In the other singles, Howe, who chung, was low pro yesterday in CBA Preparing RARITAN TOWNSHIP —Har- MELBOURNE (AP) — Amer- the first tourney conducted by mony Park has squeezed into ica's Davis Cup stock was at Monday. eliminated Wimbledon champion first place in the Raritan Athle- Big Barry MacKay of Dayton, Neale Fraser, goes against young the state PGA Winter Golf its higest level of the season to- For Indoor :ic Association basketball league Ohio, and Earl Buchholz of St. Mike Sangster of England. League on the links of Beacon day after two teams smashed in Hill Country Club. iy nipping Foxwood, 40-38. Louis also gained the semi-finals Wednesday's doubles semi- Tolomeo led the pros with a 71Track Season Both teams entered the game to the doubles semi-finals of theby defeating the strong Aus- finals send Realston-McKinley card. The winner went out in 36 undefeated. Foxwood had three Victorian tennis championship. tralian tandern of Bob Howe and against Italy's Pietrangeli and wins and Harmony showed two. and returned in 35 to gain top LINCROFT - Wtih a success- Three of Uncle Sam's youth Bob Hewitt 6-2, 6-2, 2-6, 9-7. Orlando Sirola, and Mackay- honors. ful cross-country season now Harmony came from behind to ful stars previously had gained It was their most impressive Buchholz against the top-seeded Angelo Petraglia, Spring Mea- completed, the Christian Broth- in s^ Foxwood broke from a the singles quarter-finals. i. exhibitio- n of the .year. combination of Fraser and Roy dow, and Ted 'Graygor, Asbury ers Academy track squad has 19-19 halftime tie to lead by as "We are not conceding anything MacKay. Buchholz and McKin- Emerson, much as seven points early in P«rk Country Club, tied for sec-started practice for the indoor to anybody now." said team cap iley also gave the U.S. its best| -rt, Italians, who face the the second half. e ond place honors with 72s. track schedule. tain David Freed. "We're just;representation in the Victorian,Americans in the interzone final* The program will include 10 Harmony kept chipping down beginning to roll. "A few day«|singlcs in many years and set up! p rj n,.]] defeated Frerl Petraglia had a 34 going out he deficit and finally went ahead at ert)l ec •nd toured the back nine with a indoor meets beginning on Dec. ago it looked as if Australia hadjthe possibility of the first A1I-Istolle* and John Pnarce of Au«;. 10 with the Bishop Loughlin meet to stay at the three-minute mark. 38. Graygor carded a 33 on the Missed foul shots —13 in all — the doubles point clinched. ThatjAmerican final in this tourna->trajija 12_]o. d-1, 6-3. Fraser and first nine and came home in .1a9t the 102nd Engineers Armory, is not the case any more. Weimen;. ! Emerson beat John Fraser, New York City, and ending in played a major role in Foxwood's have shown we can hold our own! In a round of eight scheduled for his 72. downfall. Neale's brother, and Doug Reid Andy Sikora, host pro, copped the same armory March 6 with in the doubles." for today, Buchholz faces Laver 7-5. 6-3, 10-R. the annual Christian Brothers Harmony, last season's playoff The fuzz-faced scramblers, Den- in a possible challenge round the fourth position with a 74 king, displayed a well-balanced The singles semi-finals are set •core. Sikora completed the' first Schools Championships. CBA won nis Ralston, 18, of Bakersfield.ipreview. MacKay goes against for Thursday with the finals Sat- the freshman title in this meet attack led by Joe Fromm, who Calif., and Chuck McKinley, 19.'Christian Kihnke of West Ger- nine in 36, and toured the back scored 11 points. urday. The doubles finals are nine in 38. last year and now will be rep- of St. Louis, gave U.S. hopes aimany, -, and McKinley plays Nicola , Friday. ' resented by an all-sophomore Sol Bunin kept Harmony in the Francis Goger, Beacon Hill, tremendous lift by whipping Pierranseli of Italy, the top seecl-i The'U.S. success and the slump varsity team. game the first half by tallying won low amateur gross with a Australia's National champion'ed foreigner and best amateur in,of Australia's brightest stars has Track Coach Brother Robert all of his nine points. Jack doubles team of Bob Mark and'Europe. 71 card, to tie the low pro score. George of the winners also had out a different complexion on the Second low gross also went to expects help from Augie, Zilincar, Davis CUD challenge round sched. a 48-foot shot-putter; high jump- nine, while Foxwood's Ray Hoehn a Beacon Hill member when Bill opped all scorers with 13. Will Gotham Bowl Live or Die? uled at Sidney's White City courts Fenwick turned in a 37-36—73 ers Torn Bolger, and Joe Coup- Dec. 2G-2S. land and sprinters Art De Fazio, Upper'Raritan (2-1) took over icore. hird place by handing the NEW YORK (AP) - The "f must say I feel better." Joe Stevenson, Asbury Park Bob Boyd, John Husson and Freed said, "If Ralston and Mc- Jackie Kohms. Raritan Police (2-2) a 46-39 de- Gotham Bowl will know by noon Country Club, was next with a feat. After trailing by eight Kinley happen to lose easily to The mile and two-mile relay Walt Alston today whether it will live or die 39-36. Fenwick also won low net points at the half, the lawmen in 1960. Pietrangeli and Simla, T know I honors with a 73-5-68 card. teams will be drawn from George put on a drive which temporarily FOOTBALL'S A HOT POTATO — Pass juggling in a bat- lave another team to throw at Jackson, Terry Broderick, Lenny Committee-man chairman Bob !hp Kalians." Next event on the circuit will gave them the lead with five tle for ball by New York Giants' end Bob Schnelker (85) Signs For Ready (of Rumson) said early to- be held at Colonia Country Club, Bellezza, Charley Dippcl, George minutes left in the game. MacKay and Buchholz played Sheehan and Denny Germane and Philadelphia Eagles' back Jim Carr (21) in Nov. 27 day that "we sat by the phone all Rahway, Monday. Upper Raritan's Nicolay bro last evening and called and goalmost t faultlessly in the first two Marty Tolomeo. Twin Brook C. C. The cross-country squad also game in Philadelphia makes it appear Carr is trying to 8th Season sets. Their serving, particularly, K-3K—71. thers, Bill and Harry, combined •calls, but we still won'l know Angela Petraglia, Spring Meadow contributed contenders for the for several quick baskets to put hand th« ball to Giant player. Actually Carr was at- LOUISVILLE, Ky., (AP)-Wal-juntu'late this morning whether was impressive, each hitting on »4-:iB -72. mile run in Doug McElhinney, 75 per cent of first services. Ted Graygor, Aibury Park C. heir team out of reach. Big tempting to break up pass play. Eagles won, 31-23. Alston last night agreed to aor not we are going to have a I3-3D-72. Joe Hylton and Frank Cooper. new one-year contract to manage Ralston played up to the form HaJ Lfttifrdon, Cnlonfa C. C 3,v:iO—7:t Jake Helfrich of the Raritan bowl game." Andy Sikora, VBeacon HIM C.C. 36 In addition, continuing intra Police took scoring laurels with (AP Wirephoto) the Los Angeles Dodgers. Ready admitted that Rutgers which marked his Wimbledon 18-74. up candidates for the field and John Bellurardo, Orchard Hllla 37 17 points. Bill Nicolay paced the It will be his eighth one-year still figured in its plans but triumph with Rafael Osuna nf 17-74. mural activities will be turning winners with 11. term. Alston has won three wouldn't reveal the names of po-Mexico. McKinley, not as steady y Newman. HomeMeart 3R-3S—76 Lou Marfrle. Blue Elm C. C.