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by Matawan Teachers Draws 250

SEE STORY BELOW

Sunny and Cold Sunny and cold today. Clear . HOME and cold tonight. Cloudy with .'„ ft Red Bank, Freehold mow developing tomorrow.' •„*. "*" >• Long Branch FINAL '•,«A." *• JMommouth County's Home Newspaper for 90 Years VOL. 91, NO. 136 RED BANK, N.J., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1969 28 SPACES TEN CENTS Two Items Probers' Targets TRENTON (AP) - A leg- Camden, and Lee B. Laskin, criminal complaint that Bren- County prosecutor. The other ther-in-law. But none of them oration at that time because islative probe of charges that R-Camden, denied the nan testified last week had identified himself as Jules remember Mrs. Johnson—or we were talking about a lot some lawmakers are "too charges. been "quashed, killed, or any Periera, a witness in the Miss Curran." of different things," said comfortable" with organized The second case involves other term that you want to case. "But you have no explana- Woodcock. ' crime centered on two items continuing testimony in pri- use.? He said Assemblyman In another phase of the in- tion?" Beadleston asked. Woodcock said he first" . of unfinished business today vate session about what com- David J. Friedland, D-Hud- vestigation, Sen. Joseph C. "No sir," replied Fiore. heard about the allegation as. the investigating commit- mittee members call a case son, "somehow partici- Woodcock, the chairman of Woodcock said that he had that Fiore was being pres- tee pushed to wind up its bus- that involves a criminal mat- pated" in that. Friedland said the Senate's Law and Public asked Mrs. Johnson, a for- sured by Catena when a news- iness before the new legisla- ^ter. he simply entered the case to Safety Committee had testi- mer reporter for the defunct paper reporter called him settle what he called a usuri- ture convenes next week. Sen. Alfred N. Beadleston, fied that an aide told him New York Daily Mirror, to Dec. 19. He said he called up ous loan. Three legislators, identified R-Monmouth, the committee "to look out for" Assembly- call Fiore and try to arrange Mrs. Johnson to find out in news accounts as being on chairman, said after a mara- Beadleston said that from man C. Richard Fiorc, R-Es- a meeting between their two about it and she told the rest the list of Asst. Atty. Gen. thon session yesterday that the information he had at this sex. But Woodcock said he committees and state law en- of the story. < the case involves' a conspir- time that he didn't think the William J. Brennan III as be- didn't learn until a year later forcement officials. Afterwards, Fiore said Mrs. ing "too comfortable" were acy. legislator would be the one in why the aide wanted him to serious trouble. But he said that for a va- Johnson must have invented scheduled to testify in public "I'd have to say from what look out for Fiore. riety, of reasons the meetings the story. The committee spent much session before a bi-partisan we've heard so far that some- Woodcock was called after never took place. body along the line's going to of yesterday taking testimony "Here's a woman I never committee. his aide, Claire Curran John- "What did Mrs. Johnson be in serious trouble," Bead- from two witnesses m even, met," Fiore said. All three — Sen. Frank S. son, testified last week that tell you about the call?" Farley, R-Atlantic, and As- leston added. private. One of them was Fiore, chairman of the As- "Here's a- woman I never Woodcock was asked by Sid- saw. How could she say I , semblymen John J. Horn, D- The testimony concerns a Edward Dolan, the Middlesex sembly committee that ney P. McCord Jr., the com- would discuss G«rardo (Jer- corresponds to Wood- mittee's counsel. ry) Catena with her? She was cock's, had told her he was a reporter for one of these under pressure from Gerardo "She Indicated that Mr. Fi- ore could not make the meet- papers that dealt with sensa- (Jerry) Catena, reputed ing," Woodcock replied. tionalism in crime. I think head of the --Mafia in New Youth Fined $300 "Did she say anything she must have been looking Jersey. Fiore denied talking CRISIS — Miss Marie Panos, president of Matawan elser-McCord asked. for a good story." to Mrs. Johnson or knowing "She did say to me that Regional Teachers Association, describes educational Catena. Senate President Edwin B. Mr. Fiore was a man to look Forsythe, E-Burlington, said crisis teachers believe threatens Matawan Regional Just before Woodcock took out for," Woodcock said. he would consider extending . School District. Miss Panos moderated forum pre. For Theater Melee the stand, Sen. Beadleston, in- "Did she elaborate?'.' Me the life of the special com- RED BANK '— A 19-year- for Melvln O'Neil,19, of South of the five who were appre^ ttoducedf-into-^evidenceL_ a_ ~Cord-askedr mittee past its Jan. 14 re-_. lented by MRTA last night in Matawan'Regional High old Atlantic Highlands youth St., Atlantic Highlands. hended were juveniles; O'Neil Pj>O"e bill showing a 13-min- "No sir, there was no elab- porting date. "School. ''„•.,''''——„ ' '. •-—(Register-Stafl-Photal^ was found guilty yesterday of O'Neil had been charged was the only adult. His bail »» «"1 on Dec. 28, 1967, "charges-brought-against him with-assault-and-battery-and wa&j»Lat. $250 on the mght_from Mrs. Johnson s- number by a Red Bank police officer disorderly conduct while wait- of the disturbance, then in~Palisades-Park-to-Fiore-s- after a melee that broke out ing to get a refun- d- fo- r movi-e raised to $500 the follow- in Newark. in the Carlton Theater on the tickets at the theater, by. Sgt. ing morning. His parents, Mr. Fiore, who took the stand night of Dec. 8. Vernon Patterson who was and Mrs. Melvin O'Neil Sr. after Woodcock, still denied "After hearing three and a detailed to control a line for posted bail.. . having the conversation.. half hours of testimony Judge refunds at the theater im- "You have no explanation Straggle Outlined of that call from her number Irving Zeichner, sitting in mediately after the distur- When he testified yesterday, Municipal Court in place of to your number?" he asked MatcnvunTeacher Forum bance. O'Neil was fined $150 Sgt. Patterson said he had Judge William I. Klatcky, or- on each count. Fiore. MATAWAN TOWNSHIP — students to write on and with During negotiations, the as- to do so by the teachers. been detailed to control a line The Matawan Regional teach- no dictionaries available. sociation president related, "They are now adopting a dered rf total of $300 in fines Contrast Noted "I can't understand it," of people seeking refunds for ers Association called it a labs at Attorney the board agreed to negotiate budget without having com-: Before Judge Zeichner an- Fiore replied. "I was con- their tickets in the crowded fused the other-day and I'm forum on "Crisis in Educa- Jabbing at the'board's at- only 15 of the 36 points out- pleted negotiations with the" nounced his ruling, he noted lobby. He said O'Neil was tion.' torney, Vincent C. De Maio, lined in the association pro- that testimonies of the de- more confused.- There are a teachers," -• Miss Panos out of line and he told the lot of people in my house. I The Eegional Board of Ed- she conceded Mr. De Maio posal (drawn. Up by the' charged. ; fe ,; fendant and-the complainant,- = as well as witnesses who tes- youth to go to the end of the asked my wife, my daughter, ucation termed it a teacher- "may know something about NJEA), but found even these (By state law, the board tified in their behalf, were (See YOUTH, Pg. 2, Col. 1) my mother-in-law and my fa- sponsored discussion of an law," but added that he, like negotiable points unaccepta- .was required to introduce a diametrically opposed. impasse in negotiations. .the board members, knows negotiable points unaccepta- tentative 1969-70 school bud- The difference in terminol- , nothing, about education. She ble. get no later than last night; "I regard this as a very sccjrra. thOgard for paying serious matter," the judge ogy perhaps epitomizes differ- The board maintained its It did so.) : , • • w ences in educational philoso- Mr. De Maio "?50 to $7? an, position, -while the associa- Pressure Urged said, ". . , it is most unusual ^liour" for 13 fruitless nego- to have a theater closed' Viet Varfront phy and legal interpretation tion ^ was willing to yield, on Courses open to the public tiating sessions and ques- down." that have stalled negotiations three point* "and discuss att~ •to .remedy the alleged educa^ , between the board and, the tioned why the board "wasted the others, Miss Panos said. tibnal crisis are twofold, Miss.. The theater on Monmouth association since Dec. 15. money" serving 219 cOfies of Thus, she added;-was the im- Panos said. She urged the Street was closed during a 250 Listen an injunction barring teacher passe reached after a mara- public to put pressure on their Sunday-night movie when lo- Action Calms job action on MRTA mem- thon negotiating session which , representatives on the board ' cal police were called in to More than 250 persons — bers "when one copy, served SAIGON (APf — The U.S. U.S. troops were involved in lasted from Friday; Dec. 13, and to "vote carefully Feb. disperse youths who were and South Vietnamese com- only one of the two fights at least half of them teachers on me, would have done as through Sunday, Dec. 157 4 — replace every single one creating a disturbance. When mands today reported only Tuesday, a clash about 70 and-association members — well." The Baste Purpose police arrived, they were at- listened last night in the high of the nine board members two small skirmishes and two miles north of 'Saigon. -Artil- Miss Panos cited a teacher tacked by a group of Negro shjlUng^ in what, appeared to _lery and helicopter gunship school auditorium while Miss The purpose of last night's with those concerned with youths. Police Chief Georee be one of the"Vietnam war's" cnSvsorthTIstT'Aif "CavafijT Marir Panos, MBTA presi-*—turnQyerj;ata.in_the-rfigional—forum. jvas-to-.bring-the-«du- —quality education.';!_*—__.:. -, ' system of 18.6 per cent year- catiQnal crisis to public at- ..H. Clayton reported at the quietest days since .theJParis Division spray^asmaffehe-" dent, and John -AT Molloy, ,,(How the nine board mem- time. Off-diity policemen" arid" negofiaflohs_began. "my~ Band "with rockets, and" ~fteld"" fepresenfatrve" oTTHe" Jy^^jiearlyOwice4he-county^--tentIon,-the-assooiation-presU —bers-ean—be-replaeed-when--— *• N.J. Education Association, average of 11.6 per cent — dent explained, only four board seats are at TRIAL RESUMES—Defense officers from seven neighbor- The U.S. Command also re- machine-gun fire, and 16 ene- ing towns came t o theihi r aidid, ported a battle-damaged Air my bodies were found. There took turns explaining why the and,blamed it:on "low sala-' Miss Panos said the board stake was not explained.) motions to set aside in- resulting in'a brief "but open Force Phanton jet crashed in- were no American casualties. teachers contend a serious ries and unbelievably bad refused to take part-in last Mr. .Molloy, who appeared working conditions." - night's forum, though invited —dictment of Sirhan Bishara battle between aporoximately to - an American' artillery 14 Guerrillas Slain crisis has developed in the (TEACHERS, Pg. 3, Col. 5) camp yesterday, killing two regional education system. Sirhan, above, and his plea 60 policemen and an unde- In the other action, a South termined number of youths. U.S. soldiers and a Vietnam- of innocent coma before Vietnamese militia force re- I^iss Panos forthrightly Two local police officers,' ese civilian, in the camp. blamed the alleged crisis di- judga In Los Angeles to- Patrolmen Peter Knight and The Command also reported ported it killed 14 guerrillas rectly upon the Board of Edu- day as his-trial resumes on Robert Clayton, the chiefs' two helicopters shot down during a patrol in the Mekong cation, declaring flatly in re- Hope Fades on Talks son, were treated in River- earlier this week; with one charges of. murdering Sen. Delta 49 miles southwest of sponse to a question from the view Hospital for injuries and crewman killed and two Saigon.. audience that "no one on the PARIS (AP) - A U.S. dele- talks started. Lain told news-' have . been the continuing Robert F. Kennedy. ' five arrests were made. Four wounded. * board knows anything about gation spokesman clung pub- men the two "studied various ^ search for some sort of seat- The South Vietnamese re- education, although two of licly today to a faint hope possibilities for the opening of ing arrangements that ported a district town and a .the members are teachers." that the Vietnam peace.con- •the new conference." will conform to Saigon's re- Special Forces camp were The board, she said, spends ference can be started before American sources said the fusal of anything suggesting shelled during the night. Ten money on "showcase items" President Johnson leaves of- two discussed many problems equal treatment for the. 15 Firemen Quell Big Blaze mortar rounds hit the town of fice in 12 days. But unoffi- such as the large expanse Of expected to arise when the NLF and at the same time be Tan Canh, 272 miles north- windows in the facade of the cially there is hardly a shred talks begin. Such problems acceptable to Hanoi and the MARLBORO —Fifteen firemen. The majority of our need more men, like shift west of Sajgoii, wounding one high school while educational- of hope for a start by that include what shape a cease- Front. • firemen from three compan- force works days outside the workers, who are available civilian. T?»i rounds also hit time. area. For a night fire, we during the day in the depart- ly important items are ne-. fire might take, arrange- ies in' two towns, wearing a Special Forces camp at glected. The United States, accord- oxygen masks, quickly can get 45 firemen out. We ment." ••'•.. Thanh Tri, 43 miles west of U.S. delegation members ments for troop withdrawals, ing to its spokesmen, is wil- quelled a smoky blaze Saigon, inflicting "light cas* She cited an English class are spending most of their insurance against North Viet- ling to sit down at a table at sweeping through a home ualties." held in a music room with itime preparing the ground- namese infiltration through which the opposing side ar- nothing but music stands for here yesterday afternoon. work for what will happen af- Cambodia and Laos, enforce- ranges itself any way it ter Richard M, Nixon be- ment of the demilitarized sta- : pleases, with the sole reser- Men and equipment from comes president Jan.. 20 and tus of the buffer zone be- vation that the seating ar- companies in Robertsville, a new negotiating team takes tween North and South Viet- rangement does not represent Marlboro and Madison Town- Haztet's Committee over.. nam, and a range of compli- any change in the American cated political problems. ihlp responded to a fire in a There.Is no dialogue at the. view that the Front is the ranch home on Rt, 520, one- moment with the North Viet- Also up for discussion be- creature pf North Vietnam tween the two allies may and not an independent entity. ." quarter mile west of Rt. 9, at On Time — at Last! namese and the Viet Cong. But there is much for the 2:51 pjn. The fire, was quick- HAZLET — For the first During the brief meeting, Americans and their - often ly put under control and was time in recent memory, ob- the committee announced for- balky South Vietnamese al- quenched in 45 minutes. servers last night saw the en- mation of a seven-man munic- lies to talk about. The im- tire Township Committee The house's three oc- ipal pool committee which pression is that the Ameri- The Inside Story emerge from its caucus cham- cupants, Mr. R. W. Davis, his will study the feasibility of a cans are making progress bers at 8:30, the meeting's Matawan school budget up .Page 3 wife and young son, all es- community pool and make inch by inch toward some for- appointed hour. mula which can bring the ad- Complete schoolboy basketball coverage..,. caped unhurt. recommendations to the gov- -Page The committee's procedure erning body. versaries face to face across Hy spots nice guy who.finished first. ..Andrew Samson, ex-chief of .Page 23 has been to meet at 9 p.m. The advisory committee, some sort of table, whatever tho' Robertsville company, and township residents havo its shape may be. 'The Innocent Bystander' .....;...... m._....n.page 23 yet to be named, will include No action on Highlands ordinances Page 26 said, "One room is complete- learned to enter the munici- two committeemen, two pal hall at that hour. Opposes Equal Status Scouts slate bakcoffs , .....;..., Page20 ly gutted and there Is exten- 'members of the Recreation South Vietnam wants no Former Mayor Marvin Olln- Nuptials and engagements ...... Page 21 sive structural damage to tho Commission and three pri- formula suggesting equal sta- sky, former Commltteeman vate citizens. Mayor Joseph, - tus at the table for the Viet roof and attic of the homo. George Paterson and Donald Allen-Goldsmith „ _. 6 Sports .22, 23 A. Morales will bo a member Cong's National. Libera- Amusements 27 "Apparently the fire was Malloy, all Democrats, ex-officio. Successful Investing is tion Front. The North Viet- Births 2 Television „ 27 started by a short in tho elec- • entered, just as the meeting It is hoped the committee namese want no formula sug- Weal'system," Mr. Samson ended. They made known Jim Bishop 6 Women's News io~*l will suggest, within a short gesting a two-sided rather Bridge . . ..19 Movie Timetable ._.jn said. their disappointment at losing time, the feasibility of estab- than a four-party oonferonce. ; the opportunity to hurl chal- Classified 24-28 When asked why only 15 lishing a municipal -pool, Ihiless this deadlock is bro- Comics _.,.. 26 DAILY REGISTER men turned out, ho explained, lenges they had prepared for which has been considered by ken, tho talks cannot start. PHONE NUMBERS tho Republican - controlled Crossword Puzzle ...... ] 19 "We're very short on daytime the township for several Cyrus It. Vance, deputy Editorials fi Main Office 7«-Ml» committee. • months. Both the Recreation "• Notice chief of the U.S. delegation, Hcrblock 6 Classified Ada 741-CMt Commission members and tho 1960 Tax Book will bo open AFTERMATH OP BLAZE •— Firomon intpocting dam- ~~ Mr. Savlno's met yesterday with South Stock Market 15 Home Delivery .. 741M1* committee hnve traveled to for inspection on Mon.,.Jnn. 13. ago after houso fire on Rt. 520 in Robortsvillo. Throo Now open at their new loca- Vietnam's Pham Dang Lam, James Kllpatrick ; 6 Mlddletown Bureau ..€71-1250 tion, 1431* Broad St., Red Bank. municipalities which, havo Neither gavo iiny indication Hours 0 a.m. to 12 n.m. Mi- firo companloi fought the bloio yostorday aftornoon. Obituaries 4 Freehold Bureau .... 482 2121 chael R. Hrennan, Tax Asscs- Parking in rear. Call 741-8851. pools to study their operntlon. that they, arrived at any new Sylvia Porter S Long Branch Bureau 222-N1I (Register Staff Photo) (See HAZLET, Pg. 2, Col. 4) initiative toward getting fho r> tiQp"1' N* Jl (Adv.) (Adv.) 2—THE DAILY REGISTER, "wVdawdiy, Jurat*? 3, 1969 Haslet **, Children's Servte gjgfc Matawan Couiicfl Kills it would Continue to press the Gains Favor on Office Plan on Board Board of Freeholders for a MIDDLETOWN — S. Fred The board sent the request of the tract into office and traffic signal at Poole Ave. LONG BRANCH—The city storage space. Stockham will continue as Zoning Board last night rec- to City Council for its approv- and Middle Boad despite lack An application by Mrs. Dor- chairman of thejfconomic De- Garden Apartment Ban ommended approval of al.. • • othy Belin, 36 Patten Lane, to velopment Commission and . of success In the past. -in..* an application by the Family The non-profit organization Paul Bova vein retain the asks to convert the house, construct a house on a lot MATAWAN - Bjorough Councilmen George C. Con- line and Henderson casting Mayor Morales read^a, let- and Children's ,Service Inc. with less than the required post of vice chairman, it was - ter from former Committee- located on property across decided at Monday night's or- Council last night kffled a nor, Stevenson J. Enterline negative votes. to convert a Bath Avenue frontage was held for study. proposed ordinance that, and Howard A., Henderson Mr. Yacker said. "I wish man Raymond Anstett to the the street from its headquar- ganization meeting. 1 dwelling into administrative Mrs. Katherine Miko, would have banned further voted against the proposed or- the people could vote on this freeholders urging quick ac- ters at 191 Bath Ave., and a Other commission members tion __on Jhe^sjgnal and ex- office facilities. a neighbor, contested the p dinance, while Councilmen . issue once more before 300 ^garage apartment at the rear plaii. She^sald an-existing are Harold Copeland, Edward— Mayor Edward E. Hyme Lawrence J. Bucco, Yacker, apartment units are built." plaining that several previous easement to the riverfront *on •XM. Resell, Matthew F. cast the tie-breaking vote and Richard Siss cast affir- "It's too late for the people letters have been ignored. Mrs. Belin's property has 'Schink, Joseph A. Oliva, John - which defeated Councilman mative ballots. to speak," added Donald T. Long, Hazardous Walt been changed improperly and Lentz Jr., J. Joseph Mikula, Stanley Yacker's proposed or- Immediately after the de- Day, leader of citizens oppos- "The intersection grows Boland 'Racist Attitude' that board approval of the Lloyd Curtis, Ralph Peterson dinance aimed at changing feat, Dr. Siss proposed a reso- ing garden apartments. more dangerous daily," the request would deprive her of and Floyd Smith. the zoning of the Rt. 79 tract lution which would place the mayor said, "and the wait to the view of the river she has Mr. Stockham said the. com- garden apartments question Council adopted a resolu- behind the Magnolia Inn to tion accepting a performance cross it' gets longer and more Scored by 20 Priests enjoyed since moving there. mission will meet the third prohibit construction of gar- on the ballot in the November Monday of each month, but general election. bond of $43,736 from Hamil- hazardous." NEWARK (AP) — Twenty year-old archbishop said he The issue will be continued at den apartments by Poets ton Raritan Inc. of Old Roman Catholic priests have was out of town and that no next month's meeting. has not yet been assigned,a Dream Inc. Resolution Adopted The question of the Line Bridge. to guarante- e constru,e Boad realignment once again accused the Newark Archdio- statement would be issued. An application by Wareham. regular meeting place..,,•: The Planning Board grant- The council .adopted the cese of being "essentially ra- The archdiocese contains "We hope to get the.meet- , resolution by a four-to-two tion of public improvements -»came before the committee, Construction Co. to complete ed site plan approval to Poets next to Marc 68 Inc., a ma- p ^ realignment cist, bigoted and apathetic • about 1.5 million Catholics, an unfinished apartment ing room in Township Hall," Dream Inc. in November. vote with Councilmen Enter- lans tov the chairman raid. .: ,jor0 subdivision on Ravine have been ^^ by ^ New and evading" American and 500,000 of whom are Negroes, structure at Ocean Blvd. and Drive. York and Long Branch Rail- Christian obligation to 500,000 in Essex, Union, Bergen and Avery Ave. was withdrawn The Zoning Board meets Mi\ Bucco, reported that road and by Matawan Town- blacks." Hudson counties, New, Je'r^ by the applicant. the same night. arrests had declined in last ship, but none have been suit- The priests, 18 white and sey's largest. Their cities in- Youth Fined $300 year to 59 from 81 in 1967; able. two Negroes, also charged clude Newark and Plainfield, but added that break-ins had 4 ArchDishop Thomas A. Boland sites of racial disorders in (Continued)^ - - Nicky, and two other boys. Hazlet is asking the the past two years. They said the boys were increased from 41 to 75 in the • realignment to eliminate a yesterday with having a Union Beach School line. Officer Patterson said 'standing in line to get refunds same period: • "white racist attitude." In a brief statement an- O'Neil "bumped into my hazardous grade crossing. for their tickets while they Hazards Cited The road would link with The priests, calling them- nouncing the news con- arm" and uttered obscenities. stood in the center of the lob- Mr. Henderson urged coun- : selves the Innercity Priests ference, the 20 priests said: Budget Reported l/p He told the court that he told Lloyd Boad in Matawan by. cil to notify- the Regional Township just south of the United for Christian -Action; "We have survived faiots, enue School. The rink will be O'Neil he was under arrest, Board of Education concern- . , said they would declare their burnings, beatings and shoot- UNION BEACH - The , grabbed him by the'lapels Says He Pushed Her railroad overpass. ings. We cannot survive as open between 3 and 6 p.m. ing hazards created by the , A plan drawn- by the rail- "independence" from the Board of Education last night Monday through Friday. Skat- of his outer jacket and re- One of the girls, Debbie archbishop's attitude at a Christians unopposing con- introduced the 1869-70 school Register of 91 Washington St. closing of the Little Street road was not satisfactory to ers may use the rink at their moved him to the sidewalk bridge. Residents had cbm- news conference tomorrow in trived archdiocesan apathy." budget totaling $1,162,860. The where he placed him in a po-, said she did not see O'Neil Matawan Township, whose a Newark hotel. NThey said own risk on weekends. . plained, of children crossing own engineer's plan lined up The Rev. Francis E. Schil- total reflects an increase of lice car. He said the defen- swing at the police officer, the span despite barriers and they would document their ler, 29, of Newark, a spokes- Board member Thomas Cdr- dant resisted and struck him hut saw Sgt. Patterson push- the wad to ^oTn Lloyd Koad charges at that time. .man for the priests, declined j 188,590 over last year's bud- rado, chairman of the build- the elimination of railings, he across from Jannarone Ave. about the arms and mid-sec- ing the youth out the door. said. A spokesman for the 73- to elaborate. get. ing and grounds committee, Her sister, Pat Register, said forming an intersection. said the rink should be ready tion. The lack of sidewalks on Board Secretary Donald Os- In questioning Sgt. Patter- she had walked over and U. L. Edwards, owner of irander, who now serves the for activity early next week. Bavine Drive^ was cited by The board voted to suspend- son defense attorney ThonF stood next to O'Neil before William A. Bommer of 96 Ra- the Edwards Industrial Cen board on a part-time basis as Warshaw, aske- d- him if he the incident. She said that, ter on Lloyd Boad, objected Skin Grafts Slated and who will relinquish -his evening hours in the school vine Drive who complained library because of poor at- was in uniform at. the thea- afterward, she went up*, to that children in the area were to the plan because it ren- - position «n June 30 to a full ter; the sergeant said he was Sgt.' Patterson and told him forced to walk in the street dered parts of bis property time secretary, explained that tendance. not. Mr. Warshaw then pur- that O'Neil didtft do any- to get to school. useless. For Shrewsbury Girl the largest increases will oc- thing, but the officer pushed /sued a line of questioning to "It's especially bad after The subsequent railroad cur in the tuition account, establish whether Sgt. Pat- her away. plan is presently being criti- BOSTON, Mass. — Skin here, where Kelly has been a where an additional 147,000 Hudson Seeks a snowfall," Mr. Bommer de- patient since a dramatic terson had identified himslf Rodney Husker of* Atlantic clared. . cized by Matawan because grafts for Kelly Jean Kerner, must be raised and in the as a police-officer to the de- Highlands, who said he had tt forms an off-center inter- 61,4-year-old daughter of Mr. transfer by air on Dec.- 18 teachers salaries account Moriarty gone to school with O'Neil, "I agree," said Mr.. Con-, and Mrs. Charles Kerner, from the Red Bank Airport to NEWARK (AP) — Hudson fendant. The sergeant testi- nor, "but what happens when section at Lloyd Boad, south 1 where an increase of $72,000 fied that his badge was in related that he was standing of Jannarone Ave. Patterson Ave., Shrewsbury, the Shriners' spedal'hospital. is slated. County's fight to recover $2.4 people don't shovel their He added tiiat the child was his pocket and that he did not about "eight people" behind, Concerned About Cost N.J., are tentatively sched- The present budget, which million of gambler Joseph him. He said that he did not walks? The township is hav- uled to begin later this week. doing "extremely well," and "Newsboy" Moriarty's money tell O'Neil he was a police : totals $964,270 in current ex- see 0'Neil-swing-at the man: ing trouble in that-depart* . jMazlet doesn't care where The word came yesterday _described_ her condition as from-the-federal-government ^ -officer when he arrested him. —the-Toad~goes—so-long—as-it "penses7~"was" defeated~twice" Appearing as a witness, who was pushing him, nor did from a spokesman at the "very good?' opened in court yesterday Mr: Yacker suggested a does not cost us more than Shriners' Institute for Burns, Patrolman Anthony Abbate- he hear any indecent Ian- the original $15,000 estimate," with a carpenter telling how study group to investigate he found the money in a tool- -marco-told-the-eouit-that-he—guage- the possibility of pulling in Mayors-Morales—explained n he was in uniform at the theater Another witness, John Ko- once' again. R'«iirTW»niPtf1'' ' * sufferea-secona-aTTd—€ouncU7 box. sidewalks, but Mayor Hyrne Xfctll A/CIilCU. third degredecree burns over her MeefTuesday Isadora Glauberman,. spe- and close to both the com- chow, also of Atlantic High- was quick to reply: 'He added that the "state plainant and defendant. He lands, said the defendant and arms, back and chest when Board and council will meet cial counsel for the county, ^ •"You haven't sat in on a Board of Public UtilitieSvCom- her bathrobe went up in in closed session Tuesday said he saw O'Neil push Sgt complainant bumped into him missioners, which approved Man in Jail argued that the county has budget meeting yet, Mr. flames as she leaned over an night to discuss the new bud- prior claim to the money be- Patterson and "Sgt. Patterson as they went out of the lob- the realignment concept, is «lectric burner on the stove, pushed back." He also said he by. He said he did not know Yacker. After you do, let's get. cause it was gambling, con- see what you say." presently encouraging Mata- Break Case which her mother had just heard obscenities uttered by that the man who was push- wan officials to accept the turned off: after heating a The budget will be aired traband. However, U.S. Atty. O'Neil Patrolman Abbate- ing O'Neil was a police offi- railroad's , proposal so the FREEHOLD — Superior baby's bottle. publicly Jan. 28 at 8 p.m. in David M. Satz Jr. maintained marco said he followed be- cer until two days later. project may begin. Court Judge Elvin R. Simmill the all-purpose room of Me- that the money should go to hind as the sergeant ushered "Three or four cops ran (af- Sills Won't has denied a motion for bail She was cared for at Riv- morial SUhool. the JU.S. Internal 'Revenue O'Neil out of the lobby and ter them) through the door, The state will carry 85 per by Steven Duffln of Asbury erview Hospital, Hed Bank, Only board member Harry Service because it had filed witnessed O'Neil striking the and about 15 people ran af- cent of the cost, which origi- Park, who is serving a state immediately after the acci- Woolley dissented at the intro- tax deficiency liens against police officer. The patrolman ter the cops," he said. He al- Again Probe nally wasn. estimated at $100,- prison sentence for attempt- dent until her doctors here duction of the budget. He Moriarty before the money said .that he did not assist un- 000, with the township ab- ing to break out of the Mon- decided her condition:, had so said that he did not see improved to the point where would not comment on his was found. . • v til another yoiith, who also O'Neil swing at the officer or sorbing the rest. The.current mouth County jail in 1967. reasons Jor. voting against it. Among several witness- was arrested, jumped on Sgt Into figure has jumped to $125,000. 1 she could withstand the trip use profane language. Duffin, in his motion, said to Massachusetts. The board hired Mrs. Mary es yesterday was Charles Patterson out on the side- TRENTON (AP) - Atty. Officials here have repeat- he has appealed the sentence Gottschalk. He said he was - Told of Charge a Herdman of Red Bank as a walk. Handcuffs were used on Gen. Arthur J. Sills said yes- edly .stressed they -will not and wanted bail while the P- reading teacher under the Ti- working as a carpenter tear- the defendant outside the, thea- The defendant's father tes- terday that he sees no Tea- bear more than $15,000 in peal is pending. 'Applegate Elected tle I project at a salary of $5 ing down a group of garages ter, Patrolman Abbatemarco tified that he was notified of costs. They said If the cost sons to reopen the investiga- He was one of tfiree in- ' ATLANTIC CITY (AP) — per hour. Mrs. Herdman will on Oxford Ave., Jersey City, said. v , the arrest by one of the girls exceeds that figure, the rail- mates charged with: attempt- teach two hours daily. when he and other carpenters who had been in the theater tion of charges that a now' road will have to assume it Norman Applegate of Free- Another witness, Patrolman r ing to escape from the_cojnty hold was elected yesterday as ___TojQversee Jtink found the money nearly six at the time of the incident. retired State Police official Detective Thanked - - jail June 24, 1967. "." After much discussion, the years ago in the trunk of a Paul Lang, said he had been Mr. O'Neil said that he and received $7,200. a month Conunitteeman -Nicholas president ofcthe New Jersey in the balcony, dispersing a He was sentenced to an in- State Horticultural Society. board voted to hire an adult 1947 Plymouth in one of the his wife went to police head- in payoffs from organized Setteducato, chairman of the determinate reformatory term supervisor to oversee the skat- garages. The .car was owned crowd, before he entered the quarters where they spoke to police committee, announced He succeeds John Traino of lobby. He said he saw Sgt crime. and later was transferred to Marlton. fog rink at the Florence Ay- by Moriarty. Sgt. Patterson. They were that Detective Sgt. Holmes state prison. Charges of at- Patterson holding O'Neil by told of the charge of assault Sills, whose office and the the collar and1 raniip to give State' Investigation Conunis- Gornjerley has received a tempted jail escape carry a and battery, he said, but not congratulatory letter from the -jna&mum •three-year—prison — him—assistance. Patrolman. to afSin^BBswnr ldd by Gov. Richard J. Hughes "HumMe Oil Co. ' sentence. Lang said that, in the lobby, said his son by Gv g -The-company—thanked-the-- up pretlyHbia. had looked into it detective for The return of said hee Police Interrupt If the honeymoon O'Neil's. grandfatherndfather, Alfred in 1987 and «"w e were un- threthreee stolestolen credireditt cardcardss . ItIt . krms with a night stick, and Post Office Burglary both officers then pulled him U. Pitts of Red Bank also able to substantiate it." . said in the letter that the po-. testified. He said he came to "I don'l think I should lice officer had returned a PARSIPPANY (AP) — Po- out to the car. police headquarters around reward sent him for the re- lice interrupted an apparent Charges Dealed waste my time re-investigat- midnight and saw Sgt .Pat- ing things I've already in- covery, and praised his work burglary of the Farsippany is over, serve this ad The defendant, however, terson. He said no reference vestigated," the attorney gen- in the investigation, Post Office last night and denied that he struck the po- was made to a disorderly per- eral said. "If something new The committee announced within a short time'arrested lice officer or used obscene sons charge that night, but comes up, I'll look Into it." its next meeting will be Tues- two of three men they said language. O'Neil said that he was given the following small craft 'warnings remain BIVERV1EW Mr, and Mrs. Melvin Anna Other officers are John in effect for northwesterly Yannuzzi, secretary, and Wil- winds 15-25 knots with higher Red Bank (nee Patricia Minister), H Lynn Drive, Neptune, son, liam Maushardt, treasurer. gusts loday becoming varia- Mr. and Mrs, Stanley Poz- Line officers include Rich- ble about 10 knots tonight and arycki (nee Marcella Palys), yesterday. . Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Kline ard Wagner, thief; John Tru- east to southeasterly 10 to 20 467 Ferndale Place, Keyport, ex, captain; DonaJd Ahlers, knois tomorrow. Fair today son, yesterday. (nee Karen Gray), 2 1U, 33, SECOND AND BRIQHTON AVENUES Freehold, daughter, yester- first licuterlant; Robert Nor- and tonight. Cloudy tomor- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bur- den, second Meutcnant; Wil- row with rain developing, pos- den (nee Mary Lou Peduto), day. • sibly beginning as snow. Vln- Mr, and Mrs. Charles Com liam Mason, chief engineer, BY LUXURY OF AN EARLIER CENTURY, FINE FOODS 62 Manor Pkwy., Lincrofl, row (nee Barbara' Hendrick- and Malcolm I'eseux, A. Fred lbillty five miles or better low- son, yesterday. son), Hall. Court, Farming- Hussman and John Foulks, as- ering to one to three miles WINES, LIVE ENTERTAINMENT EVERY EVENING. GIVE YOURSELF A JERSEY SIIOKK MEDICAL sistant engineers. locally. I.ess than one mile dale, son, yesterday. In precipitation and fog. OF THE HOLIDAYS; A NIGHT AT THE TIKI, GETAWAY FROM IT ALL... IVcpiune Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sfm- The fire company anniver- Mr. and Mrs. Chrisofphcr merman (n% Maureen sary committee will present TIDES "fj- W I" i III ill ii'lj Devoy (nee Susan Butkus), Doughtcry), 101 Beverly awards to 25-, 40- and 50-year • Sandy Hook" .OPEN EVERY DAY FROM 11 AM t» 2 AM, CLOSED TUESDAYS, SERVING LUNCHEON.DINNER, LATE, SUPPER, 407 Ocean Ave,, BcJmar, son, Boulevard, Brick Township, members, at a dinner, Satur- TODAY - High 11:06 p.m. yesterday, M daughter, yesterday.. day/ Jan. 25, and low 4:54 p.m. i DAILY IN THE ONYX LOUNGE—HELEN TREMAINE... \ AND IN THE PUNK ROOM—THE TIKI IRIO.' *Post at River Street RED BANK - Joseph Mc- tions set by the .board and Kay, vice principal of the the community for the prin- Indicates Tax Rise for River Street School, has been cipal's post aren't easy to assigned the principal's duties find. .•...• . NEW YORK — Twelve crewmen from a research ves- MATAWAN TOWNSHIP — 831 is a 21.9 per cent increase with'most of it reflected in an and an audio-visual direc- while an expanded search for The board is looking for tor.. In additional, the total is sel that foundered in the North Atlantic were plucked from A tentative budget adopted over the 1968-69 :-total of $4,- instructional salaries. Sala- a principal continues. . applicants with 10 years ex- last night by the Regional 622,970. Though state aid will ries will rise from $2,942,139. figured on teacher salary in- . a liferaft today after spending 26 hours in the open sea, the Mr". McKay will assume the perience as teacher and prin- Board of Education would rise $211,980 to $1,739,790, the this year to $3,485,231 in 1969- creases averaging 3 to 10 per Coast Guard said. The crewmen were wet and .cold but principal's duties today, per- cipal "or equivalent," and ex- raise the township tax rate amount to be raised from lo- 70. Board president John cent ^-5:2 per cent for in- were otherwise unharmed. ' mitting Miss Lillian Jordan, perience in developing suc- Bradley explained the pro-. creased cost of living and the acting principal—at—Biver- cessful educational programs ,79 cents per $100 of assessed cal, taxes will increase more The Essikristine, a Norwegian freighter, picked up the valuation and~the borough Iharr32-percent to $3,882;578r—posed-figure-ineludes-sal aries- • resUor.JU)nnaL-annual^incrfrL__ Street since September, to for minority groups and the •ments. , men at 2 a.m., a Coast Guard spokesman in New York said, return to her post as" princi- culturally disadvantage. rate 54 cents. • The bulk of the budget in- for 25 new teachers,, two' after the deck officer spotted flashlight signals. pal of the Oakland Street The job is being advertised The budget total of $5,636,-. crease is in current expense, guidance counselors, a librari- May Go Higher The 12 men huddled in the single liferaft after abandon- School. at a minimum salary of $14,- Since the appropriation was Henry Ols, who has been 000 a year. The board hasn't computed before agreement Ing their ship, the Sea Surveyor of New London, Conn., at set a maximum salary. midnight Tuesday, 20 minutes before the vessel sank about a special education instruc- has been reached with the tor at River Street, has been The post has been vacant 1 eacners torum Draws 25W 280 miles southeast of New York. Matawan Regional Teachers assigned the vice principal's since William Pazicky. re- (Continued) other residents who. spoke area. He broke the 36 items Association, the total may duties there. signed to become principal of 1 to guide the forum program from the floor. down into three categories: have to be increased if nego- Restorative Center Considered The Board of, .Education I a new experimental school in Herbert J. Parker, a board Salaries, working conditions BRIDGETON — Anthony J. Volpe, state director for the conferred last night with Dr. Middletown Township. through Miss Panos, took the. member, explained the "board, and fringe benefits; hours tiations lead to still higher Division of Veteran's Services, said yesterday his depart- Milton Steinhauer, the Rut- The board appointed George microphone to explain the was required by law to adopt worked daily and the school •teacher pay. , , ment may establish a Veterans Restorative and Rehabilita- gers University educational J. MiteMLiffi the post, but u lack-of progress in negotia- its tentative budget last night. calendar; and managerial • Total, current expenses will tion Center. • consultant it hired to help in transferred him to an admin- If settlement with "the teach- rise from this year's $4,046,* ' tiie search for a principal for istrative position in Superin- tions to date. Stressing that • items. / '.,.•••" the impasse results from di- ers is reached before public • The board is perfectly will- 524 to ^4,803,963 in 1969-70. River Street School. tendent of Schools Dr. Robert hearing of the budget Jan. 21, Murder Weapon Is Sought , The board and JDr., C. Hoops' office when com- verging educational philoso- ing to negotiate on salaries, Capital outlay will decrease he added, any teacher salary working conditions and fringe from $139,620 this year to $89;- . CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Investigators searched today for Steinhauer reviewed the Jack munity organizations pro- • phies and interpretations of increases will be inserted be- the weapon used to kill Jane Britton, 22,.a Harvard°gradu- of progress to date, and will tested he lacks sufficient ex- the Public Employment Rela- , benefits, he stated. "We were _ 355 in the proposed budget.' fore final adoption. u\ negotiation until Miss Pari- ate student whose body was .found sprawled face down concentrate on expanding perience in a school with a tions Act by board and teach- Debt service will increase the search. multi-racial population. The Mr, Parker declared de- os declared the impasse," he from $436,825 to $653,512. across a blood-spattered mattress in her apartment.- ;; River Street School is almost ers, he stated the educational mands received from the as- added. . A medical examiner said the daughter of the adminis- Difficult Problem crisis is "accentuated in this A more than 7 per cent rise Persons with the qualifica- 50 per cent Negro. sociation are those received The other two categories trative vice president of Radcliffe College had been struck district." by every other board in the. in pupil enrollment is antici- ' are considered nonnegotiable pated in 1969-70, bringing the a massive blow on the left side of the head behind the ear "The board is the major by the board, Mr. Parker ex- by such a weapon. Investigators theorized a hatchet or a cause," he added. ' number of pupils in the school plained* because "the board system to 7,259. The cost of cleaver was used. 'Mediator Promised doesn't want to set a legal Pick 2 More Jurors .The next step in the nego- Youth, 17, educating each child will in- precedent that may force it crease $76 to $674. Sees Wiretap Bill Boosted tiations is intervention by a to give ground on manageri- Public hearing of the pro^ ALPINE — Assemblyman Peter Moraites said yesterday • mediator selected by the Pub- .1%. Stabbed al items to make ground on For Murder Trial lic Employment Relations salaries." . posed budget will be at 8 the controversy over Assistant Attorney General William J. Cagle is charged with the FREEHOLD — Two ^ Commission, Mr. Molloy ex- In Red Bank -, Agreement Voiced•--—~ p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 21, in the Brennan 3d may have given a "psychological boost" for the jurors were selected yester- murder of Oliver A. Newton plained. The mediator has al- Sr., 78, o/54 Liberty St.vLong RED .3ANK — Police are - Herbert-Federr- another--high-school. If the-budg0t-is— --passage of a wiretapping bill. ' ; ~ day, for a total of five, in the ready been promised. ""•""". board member, agreed, the The Bergen County Republican, who is the new Assem- Branch, Nov. 22, 1967. Mr. Mr. De Maio, however, said investigating the stabbing of adopted then, voters will ap- murder trial of Larry A. Newton allegedly was as- a local youth last night at board's concern on non-salary prove or reject it Feb. 4. bly speaker, said, however, that he had rounded up enough Dec. 15 thsi "mediation items is that it could tie its • votes to insure passage of the controversial measure. The Cagle, 19, of 22 High St., Red saulted and died days after is not going to work," Mohawk Pond. being injured. according to the NJEA repre- Police Chief George H. own hands. By negotiating wiretapping bill passed the State Senate, but failed by five Bank. . said,-the community is ceding votes in the Assembly last year. Jury Selection. for the re- "So far, 21 prospective jur-. sentative. Clayton said Emmet Hen- Former, Judge nesey, 17, of 24 Irving Place such ' questions,. Mr; Feder maining nine continues today ors have' been questioned. Vlf it doesn't, let the re- said, the community is ceding While 14 are needed, two will ,. spbnsibility rest with the. was stabbed in the back dur- Is Hospitalized, Unrest Spurs Campus Closing. before Superior Court Judge ing a fight with another boy. its prerogatives to the teach- Clarkson. S. Fisher. Three be dismissed before deliber- board," he concluded. ers. . . WEST LONG BRANCH - ] NEW YORK — Queens College administrators have ations. Mr. Molloy's appearance - Hennessy was admitted to jurors were picked Monday Riverview Hospital where he Former Monmouth, County closed the campus today and tomorrow, fearing "serious dis- during the first day of the The state, represented by drew sharp criticism from a "Legalisms can kill you. Judge John C. Giordano to- ruptions" by dissident Negro and Puerto Rican students and housewife and parent, who was reported to be in fair We are not simply being ar- trial. Assistant County Prosecutor condition this morning. day was in critical condition some white supporters. ' • - , •',,-' , declared she was offended be- bitrary; we are concerned for coronary care unit at - -Joseph PrMcMurray, president of Queens, a branch of Franklin Goldstein, is not cause Mr. Molloy, and not the The chief said Lt. Charley " the City University of New York; said last night that he seeking the death, penalty but MRTA as represented, was B. Jones was detailed to the George A. YounkTieere, a Long Branch, where he was' is seeking a first degree mur- apparently in charge of the pond at 8:25 p.m. where he candidate for a township seat —hoped to "avoid possible physical violence and injury to was told that a youth was admitted Monday. • anyone on the campus." • der conviction which could forum. on the board, declared teach- Mr. Giordano is a principal mean life ' imprisoni8eTit~ -in-the-law-firm-of-Giordano, MRTA is an affiliate of the tlie hospital. At the hospital, not descend to "1 Giordano and Halleran, Mid- Colorado Winds Cause Havoc should the jury vote for max-. NJEA, represented by Mr. the officer learned that Rob- labor practices in their deal-, dletown. He was a coun- BOULDER, Colo. — Hurricane-force winds which peaked imum sentence. Molloy. ert E. Weber, 23, had been ings with the board. ty judge 25 years and was 1 at the pond and attempted to at more than 125 miles an hour ripped through Boulder LONG. BRANCH — A hear- Marshall Selikoff of Free- The resident was not molli- "Men of goodowill can leave formerly associated with' the last night, leaving mangled telephone poles,-downed power ing of charges against Patrol- hold and Robert A. Coogan of fied. '-"'.' break up the fight. ' some things unsaid. I| is de- late Julius J. Golden, Long lines; splintered trees and wrecked homes. man William Bonforte by Eatontown, both- assigned Two board members and a When the one boy was meaning to put such things Branch city attorney; who The winds were blamed for the death of James A. Mad-- Frank Vanore, city business through the Public Defender's ' board candidate were among stabbed, Mr. Weber took both into a contract," he said. died last month. den, 28, of Greeley, Colo., killed when a pickup camper administrator, yesterday was office, represent Cagle, , boys to the hospital where "That would be nice if we wzs blown off Interstate 25 north of Denver and turned over held over until Friday morn- the victim's assailant jumped could take each other's word, twice. The jury is not being se- out of the car and fled, the but it doesn't work," Miss Plane itijacked ing. questered during the trial. Man Is Held The policeman has been chief said. Panos retorted. ,. HAVANA (AP) - A I This is the second trialof Tpe Hennessy boy was Spina Reactivates His Squad charged with fighting with sev- i Cagle. The first ended in a Another citizen asked if the Man airliner with 56 passen- NEWARK — Newark Police Director Dominick A. Spina, eral Monmouth" College stu- After Try treated for a wound in the teachers intend.to strike if gers and crew members was 1 mistrial last October when left side of his back and a cleared two months ago of charges he failed to crack down dentsNov; 22 when they were the widow of the victim suf- negotiations fail. He urged the forced to fly to Cuba yester- on gambling in the city, has reactivated a gambling squad constructing a float for the bloody nose,, then admitted. association to consider care- day by one of the passen- fered a seizure while At Stickup Police expect to charge his1 fully before deciding on a' gers/ a young ^man with a he had earlier disbanded. school's Homecoming Day in testifying. ENGLISHTOWN — An at- the, West End firehouse. assailant today, Chief Clayton work stoppage. pistol, All aboard except the Addressing a group of high-ranking Newark police of- tempted hold-up at the Ad- said. Detective Lt. George H. His question received no an- young man were expected to ficers yesterday, the 57-year-old police director sharply Mr. Vanore said there are • dison and Arnold Hardware Clayton Jr. is investigating swer. ' . return today to Colombia. criticized his superior officers and promised some "unpopu- more than a dozen witnesses Detective Store, Main St., yesterday lar" personnel transfers and reorganization in the next few to the incident and .that he afternoon resulted in" the ar- weeks; •••',... has interviewed several of rest on a disorderly conduct- Spina was indicted in July by an Essex County Grand them arid has gained their Is Accused charge of Jerome Russell, 33 Jury investigating alleged corruption in Newark city gov- positions on the matter. South St., Freehold, accord- ernment. The indictment charging him with "willfully re- Yesterday's hearing was By Matzner ing to Tehnent State Police;,. LIFE INSURANCE fusing to crack down on illegal gambling stated that on stalled, he said,' when Ber- ..Trooper James Graham, April 15, 1968, Spina disbanded a special police gambling nard F. Boglioli, attorney for PATERSON (AP) -» News- who investigated, reported squad headed by Deputy Chief John Redden. the policeman, objected to paper executive Harold that this is what happened: wown ^Robert-Maurorcity-proseeu— ~about^™20p.m;,amanwalked- Preinaugural Meetings "Set tor and acting city attorney,- Gabriel ^eFranco murder into the store with his hand LOblTaf THESE Rates for Yowr Age NEW YORK — President Nixon wilL hold preinaugural appeared against his,client. trial, repeated his charge yes- in his. pocket as if carry- He said the posts are conflict-,_ terday that' DeFranco told ing a weapon, told owner Gil- Monthly Cost Monthly Coit Monthly Coit meetings with all members of his prospective Cabinet here " him a- Passaic County inves- this week. ing and prejudicial to Mr7 bert Kirkland to lie on the For $25,000 For $50,000 Per $100,000 MAXIMUM Bonforte's interests. tigator was receiving protec- floor, and when Mr. Kirk- Alliance to Expand Jobs Drive Yesterday's hearing contin- tion money from Paterson land refused hit him in the 20 * 6.00 $ 9.00 ' $l'7.O0' INSURANCE ues a probe into the fracas. area gamblers. face and knocked him to the 21 5.00 9.00 17.00 TRENTON — The New Jersey Alliance of Business- Initial hearings on- the mat- ground. ' ~~"? 22 5.00 9.00 17.00 men announced yesterday it will expand its program of Under cross-examination, . 9.00 17.00 ter were held last month by Matzner testified that De- Mr. Kirkland then called 23 5.00 at finding jobs *or disadvantaged youths" and "hard-core un- Mr. Vanore. 24 5.00 9.O0 17.00 employables" Ufls_ year because of its initial success in Franco, a gambler himself, for help to an employe in ' 9.00 - 17.00 had named Joseph Mueeio as another part of the store and 25 5.00 MINIMUM 1968.- . , V • 26 5.25 9.50 ' 18.00 Philip B. Hofmann, chairman of the business group, the investigator receiving the the< man fled on foot. 9.50 18.00. payoffs.' ' He was described as being 27 5.25 said 4,400 job placements were made through his group's 3 Speeders 28 <' 5.25 9.50 18.00 COST I efforts last year. When Matzner made simi- a Negro male, about 22 years 2» 5.50 10.00 19.00 lar comments on the witness old, and wearing a brown I0.S0 20.00 OFFERED BY Are Fined suede jacket and dark hat. 30 " v 5.75 USIS Library Is Damaged stand last week/Superior 11.00 21.00 Court Judge Gordon H. Brown A man answering that 31 Yoo ONE OF THE . FRANKFURT, Germany — Two Mojojov cocktails were 32 6.00 11.00 21.00 Bv Carton characterized the comments description was seen walking 12.00 23.00 OLDEST AND LARGEST thrown into the U.S. Information Service library early today, as the "rankest kind of hear- north on Main St. 10 minutes 33 6.50 causing damage estimated at $1,500. NEW SHREWSBURY - later' and was stopped by 34 6.75 ' I2.S0 24.00 INSURANCE COMPANIES Municipal Court Judge Law- say." Muccio afterwards de- 13,50 26.00 nied the charges. Trooper Graham. The man 35 7.25 ' IN THE WORLD rence A. Carton 3d fined three swung at the trooper, was 36 . 7.75 ' 14.50 "~ 28.00 Bonds Bring Record Rate On the witness stand yes- I5-.50 drivers a total of $60 for - subdued and returned to the 37 8.25 •• ~" 30:00 ' TRENTON — The state sold $75 million in bonds yester- terday, Matzner testified that' 16.50 YOUR RATE speeding. store where Mr. Kirkland 38 ' -8.75 32.00 day for an average net interest cost of 4.4883 per cent, the Fined for speeding 80 miles DeFranco said Muccio once 18.00 > highest rate for a New Jersey-backed issue since 1932. "put the squeeze on me and identified him. 39 , 9-50 ** 3S.00 DOES NOT INCREASE 1 in a 60 mile, zone were Cyn- 40 19.50' While the interest rate for the first portion of the $990 thia A. Pearce, Point Pleas- Danny Palidori because Pali- Russell was taken to State 10.25 38.00 AS YOU GROW OLDER million bonding program approved by the voters last Nov. 5 Police barracks where Mr. 4,1 --;_a.|.Q0_. .-t-MifllL.,, .... 4L9B 1 ant, $15, and Nicholas Pom- dori wouldn't pay off."' In r ONCE YOU OWN was higher than, had been hoped for, State Treasurer John previous testimony, Matzner Kirkland declined to make a 42 11.75 ' 22.60 44.00 A. Kervick called it "good under the circumstances." pilio, Paterson, $25. William positive identification. Rus- THIS PUN H, Michau, 303 Lockwood identified Palidori, now de- 43 12.75 -24.50 48.00 A syndicate headed by the Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. ceased, as a gambling associ- sell was then arrested on the 44 14.00 27.00 53.00 Ave., Long Branch, was fined BUT SEE of New York City made the successful bid with a $26,977 ate of DeFranco. Matzner disorderly conduct charge 45 I5.00.U -^29.00- 57.00 premium offer. In dollars, the interest would amount to $20 for speeding 75 miles in and is in Monmouth County a 60 mile zone. Judge Carton said a friend of DeFranco, 46 16.25 31.50" 62.00 HOW, THE $49.7-million over the life of the 30-year bonds. Frank Shea, tola him Pali- jail, Freehold, pending an ar- 47 . ,J7.76. 34.50 , . 68.00 .. also ordered the licenses of raignment today. - COST GOES UP all three suspended for 30 dori killed DeFranco, a small- 48 —~ 19.26- -37.50-- -74.00 HHH Weighs Party Leaders days. time Paterson gambler. 4» 21.00 ' 41.00 81.00 IF YOU WAIT! WASHINGTON — Congressional sources say the three . Fined for careless driving Matzner, a publishing ex- Two Teachers SO. 22.76 44,50 88.00 . BUY NOW leading contenders being considered by Vice President,Hu- were Solomon Dalberg, 5 ecutive, Vincent Kearney Jr., bert' H. Humphrey to become the new Democratic National a Paterson salesman, and AND Dartmouth Road, Neptune, Are Appointed ontlump lum or a monthly Incomt. Tht'plan'i minimum chairman are Sen. Fred Harrris, Rep. James G. O'Hara . suspended Clifton Police Sgt. KEEP YOUR COST LOWI $15, and Francis H. Sickles, NEW SHREWSBURY — amount it IMUI U ; $25,000*. ' and former North Carolina Gov. Terry Sanford. Avon, $10. ;' John DeGroot are charged Lawrence E. O'Brien's resignation as chairman was an- with slashing DeFranco's The Monmouth Regional High William /H. Woodcock, Ber- School Board of Education Tin abov« insurance It convertible (oxchangaabU) without •vldatica of Insurability for nounced yesterday in a letter to Humphrey, titular head of genfield, was fined .$15 for im- throat on Oct. 6, 1S66. another policy of aqua I or Ian amount of Iniuranca on any CASH VALUE PLAN of KU the party. Both O'Brien's letter and Humphrey's acceptance last night appointed two ' proper passing and $35 for or endowment during the' 20 year term. were dated last Saturday. Spanish teachers. contempt of court for not ap- Mrs. Barrie. G. Klaits, ,6 pearing when originally sum- Scott Raps The Coit of the above Ufa Insurance p*lan ii EVEN LESS juvenile Court Unit Filled Silverton Ave., Little Silver, If you pay Quarterly, Semi-Annually, or Annually. (Female ' moned. will serve part-time at a sal- TRENTON — Membership for the legislature's Juvenile Alice Wright, 927 Munroe ary of $3,600 pro-rated from ratei ilightly LOWER eljo.) '•• . - Court Revision Commission was completed yesterday by the Ave., Asbury Park, was fined U.S. Aides WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Jan. 6. appointment of two state senators and two former Juvenile $20 for operating a motor ve- Mrs. Virginia Koo, who had Court judgets. . • hicle on a permit unaccom- ' Hugh Scott, R-Pa., questioned yesterday whether federal of- been teaching part time, will Senate President Edwin B. Forsythe, R-Burlington, panied by a licensed driver. serve full time, also from Jan. named Sons. Joseph C. Woodcock, R-Bergen, and Richard J. Bruna R.'f Jones, 366 Pros- ficials are guilty of "horse ROBERT M. MORRIS and buggy-aga thinking" 6, at a pro-rated salary of Coffee, D-Merccr, and former judges Robert F. Novlns of pect Ave., Long Branch, was ?7,000. Toms River and Fnvcrio R. Princlpato of Camden to tho fined $10 for driving tho wrong about tho Bradford, Pa., air- 12-member commission. way on tho Garden State port near, which 31 persons • Parkway. Luz D. Yntes, Jack- have died In two separate Baldino Critical AGENCY plane crashes. Biafra Food Ship Loaded son Township, was fined $10 LONG BRANCH — Thom- "Life Insurance Exclusively" »EW YORK — The dock strike goes on, with sKlps tied for not having A motor ve- In a statement released by as Baldino, local attorney up at tholr piers or anchored in the harbor, but-longshore- hicle registration In his pos- his office, Scott said airport and former city magistrate men were discarding their picket signs to. get fine vessel on session. officials have asked thevFed- today remained in critical 221 LOCUST AVENUE the high sons: a food ship bound for wnr-torn Biafra. Judge Carton fined John eral Aviation Administration condition in the coronary care The 315-foot freighter Form, aided by tugs donated by Miller, 255 Shrewsbury Ave., for 10 years for funds to In- unit at Monmouth Mcdlca WEST LONG BRANCH the mran Towing and Transportation Co., docked yesterday Red Bank, $25 for assault and stall a complete new instru- Center. Mr. Baldino was ad- at Br*%n's Bush Terminal to be loaded with a hoped-for battary on his wife, Mrs. Gre- ment landing system aJW con- mitted to thu hospital Mon . jus! off Cedar Avenue K 222-1393 - 8,500 toils of foodstuffs and medicines. < ta Mlllor. trol tower. . T day. DAILY BEcisixR. William Mm. Ivan Pozharwky ' RMSI , r"1 Phone Talk Woman Wednesday, January 8, 1969 " HOWELL TOWNSHIP - NEWfitK - Michael Aossi, row in St. Rose of Lima Cath- Sought Peace Mrs. Elizabeth PoZharsky, 51, 38, of 310 Sixth Ave., died Sun- olic " Church, here. The Sparks Arrest Iii Checks Case day in an auto accident in Charles J. Rotondq and Sons MIDDLETOWN — Florence Mrs. K. Boden MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Wil- of 367 Windeler Road died Jersey City. He was fiie Home for Funerals, here, is MIDDLETOWN ~ A 28- liam Calhoun Baggs, 48, a Monday, at home. She was brother of Paul Rossi of Mid- year-old AUantdc Highlands M. Suydam, 23/of 1 Shore JERUSALEM (AP) '*- Th# RED BANK — Mrs. Kath- newspaper editor nominated in charge of arrangements. born in Russia. dletown. woman was arrested at her Israeli Foreign Ministry says erine A. Boden, M, Of 297for the Nobel Peace Prize . Surviving are her husband, Drive, Highlands, was arrest- France'* arms embargo 1 home Monday night and Spring St., died yesterday in after acting as an intermedi- Ivan Pozharsky; a daughter, Mr. Rossi is also survived ed Monday nighl-and charged .agauist Israel is a "one-sided Rlverview Hospital. She was ary in preliminary peace-talk by his widow: Mrs. Matilda 0Allocca Named charged with using abusive- negotiations between Hanoi Mrs. Elizabeth Curry, at Masucci Rossi; a daughter, TRENTON — Ralph AMoc- with issuing worthless flhecks^ and arbitrary breach" of . the -widow of Joseph L. Bo- home; a son, Sgt. Stephen language over the telephone. den. and Washington, died yester- Mary Anne and a son, Mi- ca of Colts Neck yesterday Detective Captv Robert- French-Israeli agreements Pozharsky with the U.S. Air chael Rossi Jr., both at home; According to Detective and-eliminates France as a Mrs.. Boden was bom JEorce in Vietnam; two sis- was named as one of four, Capt. Robert Letts the sus- Letts said Mrs. Suy

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BROOK' ' JOHr^ M. P)LLSBURY • CLUB STEAKS TOlb President, Cpnovcr Lumber Co, Real Estate and Insurance Attorney PAUL S. WEHLE WILLIAM A. KIELMANN Chairman oj the FREE Va 'OAL. ICE CREAM WITH $15 ORDER ALSTON-BEfiKMAN, JR. C. M. C08BAGE , Chairman oj the Board JOHN T. VALDES Eiecutivi' Committee ... 19 NORWOOD A VS. LONG BRANCH Attorney. President, I. Howard Smith, Ine. Advertising Executive FRBB DELIVERY CALL 222-0*19 «I Never Catch tfpP THE REPORTER ,\ 'Judges Are Human' Established in 1878 — Published by The Refl Bank Register, Incorporated By JEW BISHOP - •> M. HAROLD KELLY, Publisher ' '•. The judge leaned forward in his black robes, a crow in v , , • Arthur Z. Kamin, Editor a lofty cage, and asked the defendant to rise. Dominiek , Ursola 62, laborer, was nudged by his lawyer. He stood Thomas J. Bly, Executive Editor William F. Sandford, Associate Editor slowly a small man with a drooping mustache and shoes. caked with old concrete. Behind the railing, a woman, —6 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1969 obviously Mrs. Ursola, sat weeping into a kerchief. "How do you plead?" Judge Brown said, Dominiek looked to his lawyer. "Guilty" of simple assault," the counsel said quietly. The assistant prosecutor, a small man with harried hands, got to his Monmouth Is Number One feet and said that the charge — with the explained that although the municipal court's permission — had been reduced Among New Jersey counties, from felonious assault to simple assault, Monmouth is Number One, and its boundary will always be with us-, the provided that the defendant would enter problems of municipalities are spilling a plea of "guilty. official family is pledged to keep it across those boundaries at an increas- "I'm not so sure the court acted there. . ing rate, demanding cooperative solu- properly in this case;" the judge said. BISHOP That is the gratifying word that tion. Water' supply, sewerage and "Mr. Ursola is a dangerous man to be at large." Counsel glanced at each other. "In any case," came out of the Board of Freeholders garbage disposal are among items in the judge said, "1 will hear testimony." organization meeting for 1969. sup- which the need for regional approach The prosecutor called three witnesses. He went ported by documentation of achieve- has become amply evident. through the motions of phrasing questions so'that a mini- ments to date and disclosure of plans The Register has long advocated mum of time would be atfused." The first witness was a . for the future.- boy. He was fourteen, big for his age, and, between ques- cooperative effort, under county guid- tions, his jaws worked rhythmically on chewing gum. Yes, Beginning his 31st year as a ance,, in those projects/with which he was Johnny Cadis; he lived at 1509 Merchant Boulevard freeholder (and that's a. record in - individual'Tmtrnicipalities san cope only with his mother and father; yes, that was his mother sitting itself among county officials in New - on an expeditious basis with solutions right there at the prosecutor's table; no he had never been in trouble with the police or at school. Jersey) and his 18th as director, of-the that are too little,- too late or too • i When did he first see Dominiek Ursola? Two days ago, board, Joseph C. Irwin . said the , costly — or all three. We note with a in the empty lot at Merchant and Prospect. What was the coming year will be one of continu- '. great' deal of satisfaction that the time? A little after school—maybe three thirty. What had ation of the consolidation theme - county government has recognized happened to the best of Johnny's recollection? Well, he and closely" followed in 1968. The plans some other kids had seen the old man in, the lots rooting and will continue to recognize its around the garbage for salvageable itemSTT-metal and wile, call for implementation qf many new responsibilities here, and plans to> he guessed, and the court ordered it stricken. projects, he added. continue its leadership along regionai- Freeholder Benjamin H. Danskin, ization lines. ANYWAY, JOHNNY and some kids thought they would also being "sworn in for-a new three- - Also gratifying is the evidence of, tease the old man. They didn't mean any harm. What had A CONSERVATIVE VIEW they done? "Well, we chucked a few stones at him." And year term, expanded_on_the.dire£tQfi_ progress with the problem of welfare. , then what happened? The old man lost his temper any be- remarks. Refinement of projects , There has long been controversy in gan to throw rocks at the children, yelling something In' already begun will mark the future, he this area, and there is general feeling A Stirrup Cup for Lady Bird a foreign language. Had anyone been hit? '' • said, and more regionaiization is in • that changes in the systemsare in Johnny showed the judge the back of his head. He had litical sense, she had perfect pitch; her the making. ~ora"er'rBut the~problem-now is^belng- By JAMES J. KILPATRICK been hit, and the hospital had taken three stitches in it.- -greatest giftwas to hit the right_note. —Next-witness was Mrs. Cadis, Johnny's mother, She said studied in a responsible.and rational These are tunes of hello and good-bye Mr. Irwin cited some of the year's in our town. Up on Capitol. Hill, the new . Last January she was hostess at a her boy had come home screaming, crying. When she gains: the court house addition, light. A .great deal of credit for the Congress has convened and the old-timers White House luncheon set up to launch a saw the blood, she had almost fainted. A man like Ursola regional reference library, county progress made-Here to date must go have vanished. Down (he avenue, (he "women's crusade against crime in the- shouldn't be allowed in a free society. This too was stricken Democratic exodus continues. It is in> stfeets." To speak the truth, it was more from the record. Jail construction progress, gains in to the Welfare Board and its chairman, of a charade than, a crusade; it was a so- Ernest W. Lass, and its welfare direc- possible to voice all the The third witness was the policeman who nabbed Domi- sanitation and pollution 'control farewells a reporter might . clal' affair — white gloves, cream cheese niek and had taken the boy-to the hospital. Mr. Ursola had engineering, preliminaries to the tor, Robert C. Wells. : wish to put in words, but- and rabbit food — and subject to the same been in jail for two days. Seems he didn't know much about , juvenile center construction. There We will subscribe to the statement there's one in particular' rules of good manners that apply to such bail: The defense placed Dominiek Ursola on the stand. He occasions everywhere.. was also expansion in the-county's , made at the organization meeting by that ought to be made — stared almost tearfully at the judge and hung his head. to Mrs. Clauaia Alta Tay- Eartha Kitt, the^Negro singer, was * * • ... i parks and recreation program, marked a former freeholder, now county road lor Johnson.' She's been among the invited guests. Good manners 1 HIS LAWYER asked the simple^ precise questions qf_ •progress—toward—ther*opening of a- —supervisor- —Gharies-i-Smitri,--^The— idehtiflcati6TirTheiffie~'sii"drT'DTd it happen the•waylhVboy county," he said, "is in real good hands liberate, insulting rudeness, she launched county college. Just a few days ago, into an attack on the war in Vietnam. said it did?" Dominiek nodded. The clerk -asked him to As for regionaiization, Mr. Danskin for 1969." Mrs. Johnson wound, up . Then she undertook to educate Mrs. John- speak up. "Yes," he said. "Yes." her 40th trip "to discov- 21 son in the use of narcotics. It was adduced that Mr. Ursola worked as a .laborer. I—-er—America; -—In—96— "U you don't know whai -tor-ji-huilding-contractnr--:Hp-h3rt nn skill and he gamotf The Critical Blood Sfiortage KILPATRICK hours, she covered 6,000 •snarled,at her hostess, "it's marijuana'." $2 an hour. His wife—he pointed to her—had diabetes and miles. It was enought to exhaust the • * • he couldn't afford the medication nor the doctor. So, in his An adequate blood supply is, in under the family plan are entitled to Campfire Girls of the press who hike the spare time he salvaged refuse and garbage. up to 10 pints of blood per person for trails behind her, but Lady Bird came MRS. JOHNSON kept her cool. She this day of advanced medicine, vital had tears in her eyes and a tremble in her . When both sides rested the case, Judge Brown frowned. themselves, and their immediate fami- through, as she always does, with the old "I'm going to make an example of you, Ursola. You might to the life-saving efficiency of our smile going strong. fingers, but she never stood taller as First lies for one year. Under the corporate Lady of the land. In-a dozen well-chosen have killed this child. The fact that he was wrong in throw- hospitals. That supply has been hard- 'plan, industrial, fraternal, church and In the past five years, she's traveled sentences, she voiced her conviction that ing the stones does* not mitigate your guilt in losing your at least 200,000 miles. She's gone down temper. Before I pass sentence, has counsel anything to hit and dangerously depleted in the similar groups may donate and obtain the war ought not to be permitted to keep the Rio Grande in a rubber raft, and gone us from trying to do those things here at say?" current season of widespread illness. coverage for their membership on their up.the Utah mountains by cable car. She The lawyer mumbled. "What?" the judge said. "What has called on slum dwellers, hillbillies, and home that would create "a "happier and a Winter, with its normally higher blood needs for a year. better land." Then she went on with the did you say?" The lawyer turned away and mumbled. "Will Indian tribes. If she has missed a" single you speak up?" the judge saM, getting-aed in the face. "I incidence of illness, of accidents and 2 The cause, Mr. Long points out, is? -hist&ric shrine or national park, the over- luncheon. ....'• lifergivlng, and the investment a mat To be sure, not all her efforts have did," the lawyer said, smiling. "Is it possible that the court's .of seasonal afflictions, always puts a T sight na's been accidental, not delfberate. ., hearing is defective?" The judge almost got to his feet. ter of good family business protection. ~ In cowgirl hat, checkered shirt and muddy " been crowned with laurels. In their anx-. greater drain on the supply. This boots, she's won the West all over again. iety :to' please Mrs. Johnson, highway, "That's enough'out of you!" he roared, "One more remark season's flu outbreak has tripled the It. takes only 10 or .15 minutes, and -beautifiers have" wasted a fortune in plant- like.that and I'll hold you in contempt." burden. . donors from 21 to 60 are eligible. These indefatigable travels have caused Ing dinky little bushes in impossible clumps • * •— • Here is the schedule of times and her to be compared with the late Efeanor along the interstate system. Yet she has- COUNSEL SHOOK HIS HEAD. "Judges are human," he Not only does the increase in ill- Roosevelt. Mrs. R., as everyone recalls, so identified herself with the' beauty of said softly. ."ThSy can go deaf and dumb." The judge rapped ness proportionately increase the places where .the donations may be was forever turning up in the •coal mines of America that a bench-sitter in Williams- his gavel so hardjie almost broke it. "I will see you in demand for*blood, but it also cuts into " made: West Virginia and Ohio," or bounding around burg recently was amused to overhear a chambers..." he shouted at the top of his lungs. < , JBlppd Bank headquarters, Super-_ tiie dust bowls of Oklahoma and the work mother scolding a negligent child: "If you "You see," the lawyer said sweetly, "how easy it is to the source of, supply becauseionly the camps of California.- But Eleanor Roose- throw- any riiore candy-wrappers on the healthy-can donate; ama Building, New Shrewsbury — cause a fine judicial mind to lose ite temper. How hiuch velt was a tough old hen, stringy and chewy walk, I'll tell Mrs. Johnson!" easier for a troubled old man with boys throwing rocks at In announcing-that the shortage Wednesdays and Saturdays, 9 a.m. to arid full of gristle; she numbered her ene- The first new issue of postage stamps him." The judge sat back, his breath heaving. He main- noon. mies by the thousands. ' Lady Bird John- is now critical, Joseph A. Long, execu- son has numbered mostly, friends. in 1969 doubtless will be known to collee-- tained the attitude for some time. "Sentence suspended," tive director of the Monmouth County - Riverview Hospital, Red Bank — * . * * tors as the "Lady Bird" issue. As speci- he said.., **" . . Blood Bank,'"urged action by those Tuesdays, 5 to 8 p.m. mens of the philatelic art, the, stamps are BESS TRUMAN and Mamie Eisenhow- not much; but in their exhortation to plant 7Tipon-whonrthe-supply-now-depend» -Menmouth-MediG4l-£enterr4'Ong^ er surely'were assets, to their husbaiHlsr-Sn- ^nd-streetsrthe-stamps-wHhprovide-trplear-" toms and' not taking cold or diet pills * 5 to 8 p.m. fashion; Yet/we are likely to remember sant farewell to a good and gracious lady. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lady Bird longer and more pleasantly than She has a respectful stirrup cup coming as Today is Wednesday, Jan. 8,'the eighth day of 1969. or tranquilizers. . . Jersey Shore Medical Center, Nep- all the others of recent times. In the po- she rides on back tojthe ranch. there are 357 days left in the year. There are benefits for those who "tune — Mondays and Fridays, 5 to 8 Today's highlight in history: respond, Donors of one pint of blood p,m. YOUR MONEY'S WORTH On this' date in 1815, U.S. forces under Gen. Andrew Jackson defeated the British in the Battle of New Orleans. The battle was the closing engagement in the War of 1812, I INSIDE WASfflNfiTON r On this date— ...... - ,; (. • ; 9 Money Primer for '69—III In 1642, the Italian astronomer, Galileo, died. * T By SYLVIA PORTER wage Increases in. new contracts. In 1679, the French explorer, La Salle, reached Niagara . China and Hhe Bomb You wouldn't, be at all naive if you Q. Then how can this be justified as Falls. ' - . By ROBERT S. ALLEN and DEFEND THE FRANC — In a series asked "how can raising the cost of borrow- fighting inflation? ' - In 1918, President Wondrow Wilson outlined 14 points of nuclear tests. last summer, French ing cut the. cost of living^' Nor would you A. The reasoning is that if banks were for peace after World War I. JOHN A. GOLDSMITH be the least bit cynical if you asked "how lending and borrowers were getting- even In 1923, France began the military occupation of the With its eighth nuclear weapons test, scientists detonated their first thermonu- does shrinking a bank's capacity to lend more to spend on goods and services, the Ruhr Valley in Germany. Communist China has vaulted back ahead clear explosion. The Chinese had done no discourage union leaders inflationary background would be even In 1943, World War II, American bombers struck the of France oii the grim performance chart testing since their reported dud, and,there from demanding wage in- worse than it is. As a result, the forces Tunisian port of Blzerte. of the nuclear club. was much satisfaction, for France in reach- creases?" working toward inflationary wage hikes In 1925, Igor Stravinsky made his first American ap-- A final appraisal of the Chinese'test ing the H-bomb plateau. The Federal Reserve would be even more powerful than they are. pearance, conducting the New York Phllarmonlc Symphony must await detailed System is now pursuing To illustrate: Reserve authorities argue .Subsequently, however, in the weeks Orchestra in a program of his own works; analysis of the debris . an aggressive tight money that because money is so tight and costly, - Ten years ago . . . Premier Charted de Gaulle be- blasted into the atmo- which saw.a speculative attack on the sta- policy to combat the businessmen will not borrow as heavily as bility of the franc, Gen. Charles de Gaulle came president of France. i sphere last month "at the wage-price spiral.' The they otherwise might to stock up on goods Five years ago ... . President• Lyndon B. Johnson, Lop 'NQC testing station. announced that the French testing program / above, questions, are en- and thus inventory accumulation won't be- Certain implications al- • would be halted as a part of an austerity tirely in order. Thus, I'll as unstabilizing a factor as it might be, in a state of the union message, proposed a wide-ranging ready are clear,- however,— BEfigram_designedJo protect the currency. ask them for you and try ::T: They insist that tight, amL expensive program to end poverty and discrimination. 7 One year ago ... Tha Liberal- party in Australia from available informa- So the iFrench are oh'the sidelines for the %to answer Uiem in every- money will prevent some businessmen from tion. present. . . PORTER day language in this following'through on plans to build new chose Sen. John Grey Gorton to succeed the late Harold In disclosing the blast As they ponder the long-range implica- week's Money, Primer. plants in 1969 and this will ease some.of the. Holt as' Australian prime minlsterX on Dec. 27,_ the U.S. tions of the recent Chinese test, U.S. intel- jQ. How can tight money curb wage in- pressures in this area. They declare that Today's birthdays: Business executive' Thomas J. ligence experts'face, a couple fit tough ques- unions are on notice that inflation Is not Watson Jr., is 55, former White House aide Sherman Adams ALLEN Atomic Energy Commis- creases? • sion . estimated it's yield tions. The first, of course, is the makemp A. The honest answer is that directly to be. taken for granted when they negoti- 1? 70. at three megatons. The AEC announce- of the Chinese nuclear explosive. Much it cannot. This is" one great drawback of ate new settlements. Thought for'today: One maVsmile and smile and be ment said the yield, equivalent to three" can be determined; In, that regard, from the ' "the policy "as an anti-ihflatfpii" weapon and" "Tiiey "are"sure' the' moneys sJjortage'will -a-villain-still," -WJlliam Shakespeare, 1584-1610. million tons of TNT, was "about the same debris analysis.' ' • Federal Reserve policymakers admit it, tip some decisions against building houses as the sixth Chinese test which took place .„ A more difficult question, debated be- The. Federal Reserve can help mod- ' now and tfils will ease pressures too. - on June 17, 1967.",. hind-the-scenes by China experts, Is • crate spending for goods and services by In short,, they-answer that cost-push' "No mention was whether the cultural revolution of Mao- . reducing the availability of credit and thus inflation this year would be even worse' made, in the one para- • Tse-tung nas deeply disrupted Peking's forcing'a reduction in borrowing to buy .the if the Federal Reserve were not fighting so graph AEC statement, of- ' drive "for a nuclear striking force. goods and services, This way* it can di- hard against demand-pull inflation. . . •« the seventh Chinese ex- rectly curtail demand-pull inflation,' the " Initially, U.S. experts believed the ac- .-.. •••,••.;• ; * • * plosion in December 196"7. type of' Inflation in-whlch excessive de- Q. IF UNION LEADERS will try to off- That test, which generat- tivities of the Red Guard had. set back ' mands for goods and services pull up ed a TNT equivalent of China's missile program but left its nu- set higher interest rates, don't higher rates clear energy program relatively free, from • prices. v add to living costs? less than 20 * kitotons;' is"~ But the Federal Reserve cannot through widely assumed "to have disruptive delays. Reports last summer *"•'•• A." Of'course they do. The spiraling up been a "dud" — an H- suggested that the testing program had also this clampddwn on credit directly curtail of mortgage rates has played a key part In bomb in which only the been affected. " ' '' cost-push inflation, the type of inflation In the rise in the Consumer Price Index since which rapidly climbing costs (mostly 19R6 and new upsurges In installment and atomic trigger actually Early reports of the recent Chinese test wages") push up prices. GOLDSMITH exploded. , other loan rates across the board will help do not suggest that delays, .if any, have, * ' * * * tilt the index upward In coming months, . With its announced three megaton** seriously interfered with China's progress ' IN FACT, MAJOR unions already have • Kvcry additional dollar you must pay yield, there Is every reason to believe that in atomic development. made it clear that they will fight as hard for Interest is as much an extra dollar out the recent Chinese blast was a thermonu- * • * clear (H-bomb) explosion. That suggests for fat wage hikes in 1009 as they did In of your spending money as any additional a successful test which puts Peking back • PENTAGON IMPLICATIONS - The 1968, and .some big contracts aro coming up dollar you must pay for a coat or a car. on the road lo a hydrogen warhead for the pace of China',s nuclear explosives program in the next few months. Many union lead- Every additional dollar a businessman pays missiles it is developing. and its program for producing missile de- ers will try to get wage boosts that will spe- for Interest on an essential loan adds lo livery systems xre vitally important for cifically offset the squeeze on workers of his operating costs and encourages him to U.S. experts believe the Chinese explo- U.S. defense planners. 'Hie controversial higher borrowing eo8l.s. try to offset the expense. sion look place, after an airdrop, well above Ih/n anli-lKillisdomi.ssilfi system (ABM), Whal'.f more, a record number of work- Tlie paradox in that a policy designed ground. That. Is also, the implication of planned by the Pentagon, is designed to ers under major contracts are due for fat to curb inflation In our price Indexes adds "Come, now — he's not off to a combat , reports from Japan dial the blast has pro- protect against a possible mi.ssilc attack deferred pay dikes tills year and this alone- to the appearance of Inflation In the Index- duced relatively Jit lit radioactive fall-out. from China in the 3070.*?. will automatically net a high floor under es. zorw. Ho's just going bock to col legal" i 4 5 Area Students Given THE DAILY REGISTER, Wednesday, Jan. 8, 1969—7 Montclair State Posts v UPPER MONTCLAIR - mouth County serving on the Five Promoted by Bank Five college students of the committees are, Frank Cripps, Red Bank area have been 1 son of Mr. and Mrs. William Chapter, American Institute named to administrative and RED BANK — The board, •where he is now a' candidate County Katfional, Bank. M. Cripps of 8 East Ave,, At- of directors of the Monmouth for a B.S. degree in business He served for-three years in of Banking. faculty .advisor committees at lantic Highlands, on the cam- Couity JNfational Bank at its Montdair State College here. administration. He has a pre- the Army SignalJ^rps and Walter J, Wellman, a Rum- pus development committee; last' meeting appointed five standard certificate and a is a member of the Ameri- son, had 20 years ;of commis- They are among 150 stu- Susan Bey, daughter of Mr. members of the staff to the standard certificate from the _ can Institute of Banking, sioned service in-the Army, dents appointed in a moVe de- and Mrs. Alexander Bey of positions of administrative as- American Institute of Bank-/ faonmouth Chapter, and is a 57 E. Wilson Circle, Middle- {retiring as a colonel before signed to increase student in- sistants. George L. Bielitz, ing,'where he is a memb;ptf .fife^mernber of the Order .of; volvement in the'operation of town, a member of the in-,. president, announced the pro- of the Monmouth Chapter. DeMolay." He and his wife "he entered civilian life as!a the c&llege, according to Dr. structional media committee; motions. Prior to joining the install- and'two children live in Little registered representative of Allan Morehead, dean of the John McElwain, son of Mr. ment credit department of the stock exchange firm of and Mrs./'Willard McElwain John J. Burns, East Keans- Silver. college and chairman of the the Monmouth County Nation- Charles E. Van Wickle III, Bache & Co., after which lie committee on committees. of Hartshorn Place, Middle- burg, a native of Jersey City, entered the banking business al Bank in 1963, Mr. Kadrey 'Sea Girt, attended Dickinson joined the Monmouth County Students have been serving town, a member of the library VIETNAM PROMOTION — Ronald Miller, son of Mr. was with the Domestic Fi- committee; Robert Cotting- with the Commercial Trust College, Carlisle, Pa.', and the National Bank. He U on committees at the college and Mrs. Evart S. Miller, 41 Leocadia Court, Hazlet, 6o. of that city and rose to nace Co., Long Branch. He American Institute of Bank- for a number of years but ham, son of Mr. and Mrs. was promoted to. Captain in ceremonies at headquar- served nine years with the assigned as assistant mana- never before to this extent, John A. Cottingham of 1182 the position of head teller ing. Before joining the mort- ters of fhe (Otfi.Combat Aviation Battalion, Dong Ba when he moved lo the shore 250th Quartermaster Bn., gage department of Mon- ger of the New Shrewsbury, he said. Sycamore Ave., New Shrew* 1 New Jersey National Gua,rd, office. He is a member of bury, a member of the for- Thin, Vietnam, by Lt. Col. William A. Walker, left. area and joined Monmouth mouth County National Bank -.- Last year a coordinating County National at the Free- and is a former captain of the Retired Officers Associa- eign student exchange com- Capt., Miller is married to the former Margaret A. the Deal Fire Department. in 1965, he was with the Cen- council was created, drawing mittee; and Kathleen Ellison hold office. - tral. Jersey Bank and Trust tion and the Ft. Monmoiitn its members from the admin- Prag, a teacher in Middletown Township schools. A William T. Rager, Little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James M. Kadrey, Deal, a Silver, was in charge" of col- Co. for six years. Mr. Van Officers Club. ;__ istrative council, faculty coun- John R. Ellison, 49 Salem graduate of Keyport High School, Capt. Miller grad- graduate of Asbury Park High Wickle served in the Naval cil and student government lections -for the Goodyear Co., Lane, Little Silver, a mem- uated from Panhandle State College, Soodwell, Olcla. School, attended the Univer- East Liverpool, Ohio, before Reserve and is a member of Warm Gulf Stream waters association; It was the first ber of the student personnel In Vietnam since May, Capt. Miller, an aviator, re- sity of Vermont for three the Wall Township Jaycees,. make Bermuda the world's' student-faculty body institut- joining the installment loan .committee. ceived the Air Medial in October. years and has an A.A. degree department of the Monmouth the Monmouth Chapter A.U.- northernmost coral ed for the purpose of promot- from Monmouth College S.A., and the Monmouth island group. ing communication between various campus groups. Among the committees opened up to students are: 'Academic honors, admissions, . art acquisitions, assembly pro- grams, bookstore, public school relations, examinations and academic standards. Students from northern Mon-

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Joim w. Battofi7Jrr Pick Pupil Coordinator In Madison MADISON TOWNSHIP — John W.. Batton Jr. has been Foodtown Frozen Food Depi. Cash Soeingt Frelh Lean named- to the newly-breated Center Cut position of pupil personnel co- foxlumn fr««e«.ara Chock Full ofF««e» F»M» County Style Ground Beef . ordinator in the new Middle at New Lo»4 Price*: Shop and Compare! Spareribs Fresh Lean . School scheduled to open next Foodtown Frozen Regu Frozt-n ChopDed or Lenf or Crinkle Cut Fresh PORK CHOPS Ground Chuck Sept. The appointment was Veal, Beef & Pork made \by the Madison Town- FOODTOWN Chicken Livers *.59« ship Board of Education. ™ENCH ,00, Hot or Sweat . Meat Loaf • Mr. Batton' will assume his FRIES ^ Italian Sausage «,. 69' or ROAST Fresh Grade A—3'/4-B>. Ayg, duties August 1. He has been SPINACH • Tender . ^^ ^^ Roasting Chickens a guidance counselor in the Taylor Midget Madison Township system for Beef Liver b. 39* two years. <> UbbyFroien Instant Chaesa, Pepperon or Sausagsausage PorrOscakr Maye Rolr Alll Meat Wieners , . A graduate o? Middletown ORANGE JUICE BUITONI QUARTERED CHICKEN PARTS' orAlltW wMl Township High School, Mr. ertine Frozen Sliced Berti Breast Quar- FRANKFURTERS fc 69' Batton received his bachelor STTRAWBERRIER S PIZZA 69 Leg Quarters' ters with Wings and master degrees from But-' iole . with Backs ,. & Backs At- Oscar Mayer Meat Attached lb- gers •University. Be is now £ 39« Meat Loaf, Breaded Veal, Chicken, 39' • ••iliii/l BOLOCNA 6* _enrolled in the specialist in Salisbury or Turkey—Frozen iuHancerand-counseling-pro^ gram at Rutgers: .. SWANSON < Grape, Orange-Pineapple, Orange, Married to the former Anne IMLMNUANS 4^99 ENTREE PVi Fruit Punch, Apple or Cherry •Wilson of: River Plaza, Mr, Batton, his wife and two c daughters reside in Morgan- 6 Off Hl-C DRINKS vine. CREST Raritan High

TOOTHPASTE Fooutown m School Data From Creen Giant 6.75-oz* G TOMATO CATSUP 5 M NIBLET CORN Parley Set tube 59 Assorted Foodtown ' . _/ ' e All Purpose Grind HAZLET - The Raritan C CAKE MIXES 4,v *1 FOODTOWN COFFEE High School guidance depart- 12 Off foodtown • . • Foodtown Orange, Crape or Fruit Punch ment will hold a program in- formation meeting for parents FRUIT COCKTAIL 3*1 FRUIT DRINKS of eighth grade students and SECRET All Grinds Coffee As advertised over W.N.B.C. other interested parents Wednesday, Jan. 15, at 8:15 ROLL-ON DEODORANT MAXWELL HOUSE 69' UPTON TEA BAGS p.m. , . ' Foodtown Bakery • ftFoodtoum Appetizer^ ^»7 Foodfotm Dairy •>. Conducting the meeting will Cash Savings! • Dept. Savings 1 'Dent. Cash Savings! be William P. McDermott, school guidance director, who Gourmet Delicious Dark Meat . wltt outline services rendered COCONUT CUSTARD PIE by the guidance department, TURKEY various areas of specializa- 1 It. 5-01. ^* tion and procedures to be fol- ROLL lowed in scheduling confer- 20= Off P ences with parents and stu- WHTTIBRTAD 5^ CoumttSlmlCut dents. Mr. McDermott also SWEET MARGARINE £i. 39 ITALIANO BREAD •.. 25 CHICKEN ROIL 'A-t.69' ' Center Cut --will-answer questions relative •raatillan* AUdatt TH^i. __ to the high school program. Courmal . *85 HALIBUT STEAK Similar group meetings will TIDE ENGLISH MUFFINS 12 X 39 SWISS CHEESE ^-ib. 49* FARMER CHEESE »•«• 23 Gourmftt DonJih Ft.ih ' ,. be held with eighth graders, COLE SLAW .-L29' , CODFISH STEAK at which time students will PRUNE RINGS u-.. 49 fr..h Smoktd SOFT MARGARINE 3 J&I Pramium SMELTS 2 A 69'! A> Adv.rlii. J Onr W.O.K. •. receive copies of the program WHITING ib.79' VIT* IUNCH „«. of studies brochure and hear SOAP NABISCO SAUINES 16^ 29 Where Available Where Available an explanation of the high HERRING V 62' school curriculum. Foodtoton Farm Fresh Product Cash Savingst- Individual parent and stu- POWDER dent conferences for high school programming will be- Andy Boy California gin the week of Monday, Jan. 27. Both parent and student original will meet with a member of the guidance dopnrtment to BROCCOLI bunch discuss and plan a high school program. ., New Green Florida Juicy Mclntoih ADVICE TO CABBAGE ORANGES APPLES NATUIIE LOVEItS CAPE TOWN, South Africa 10 10 39' (AP) — Sign at a nature re- serve In suburban Somerset .«»< West: "This Is your heritage. Tako nothing but photo- Prla««(ft

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Krauss Again 2 to 31b. FRESH BROILING & FRYING Avfc WHOLE (Split, Cut-up or Quartered 33*) Heads Board (Split, un-up or uuanerea 44lbj ^^. ^^^ In MIDDLETOWN — The tributaries. State funds may Board of Health re-elected be available to help .fund : the project. Charles A. Krauss, president, CHICKENS 29 — Intensification of the rat Edwin J. Ensign vice-presi- LEG QUARTERS eradication program. ' wlhWil 0> dent, and Dr. Marc Krohn, — Appointment of a five- Fresh Parts BREAST QUARTERS ' 'Ib. secretary, at last night's or- member group to advise the ganization meeting, then board in matters of pu^" heard Mr. Krauss. outline an health. The advisory board ambitious 12-point program would include three phy- sicians, a dentist alfd a reg- he hopes will '*set the'course istered nurse. for the year in environment- — Establishment of a chil- tal control and fiublic health. dren's dental clinic. Most likely we bake The board will submit a — Expansion of the town- - .*•'''" >". $ 113,996 budget to the Town- ship's glaucoma clinic. ship Committee, up' ?9,00O — Broadening of the rag- CALIFORNIA CUT from last year. State health weed and poison ivy control Chutk, Bone-In ' aid funds will supply at least program and the township- more types of bread $18,760 of the total figure, conducted pollen counts, leaving $95,236 for the town- . — Establishment and signl FRESH B0HELES8 (Sinlcbl Gut* 1.09 Ib.) ship to absorb. ficant enforcement of an air OVEN-READY, Cut Iran First 4 Rlbi Fees Are Cited pollution program. Board members were quick than anyone! Ribs of Beef « — Revision and updating of Beef r m to point out that board income the present plumbing code, *ir« Own AllgMd Brand FROZEN from dog licenses, plumbing fees, food handling licenses Feasibility Study and the like will total nearly — A feasibility study of the than probablbly any other bate- m Ameriea. Sliced Bacon Swordfish Steak 89: $32,000. V board's assuming dog control, "Sup«r-R!gh»" Quality AlP'i Own Country TreoJ instead of contracting to, an Yom-JaneParkerBakerythatdeSve«toeadfacallteAftPgtoM SPECIALLY MO c Salary Increases made up Beef Liver SELECTED ^*lb. Sausage Meat most of the budget increase.- outside firm. b^es at least 20 tSSerert types. ftif — Investigation Mo the pos- Public hearing on the salary ALL MEAT #A . ALL BEEF sibility of.the board's han- Jane Parker breads Ike these: #A{ { ordinance introduced • last s BRAND Franks l-lb.plg. OT 1-lb.ptg. righf was set for Janr2t —dling sanitary pickup of .solid As public health officer, Dr. wastes within the township. Krohn will receive a $1,500 Committee assignments will 100% WHOLE WHEAT raise to $14,706. remain the same for the com- Fresh Fruits & Vegetables .' Salaries for the township's ing year. Plumbing and sew- PLAIN or SEEDED RYE, two sanitarians were- set at age( including sewage dispos- $9,666; senior clerk-stenogra^ al and pollution of streams GLAMOUR BREAD FLORIDA SEEDLESS FRESH RED, RIP! pher, $5,268; • clerk stenogra- and potable waters, Herbert —s pher, $4,746; Plumbing inspec- F. Coffey, chairman, Mr. En- SEE MIX and MATCH SALE BELOW , tor (full-time) $10,300; plumb- sign and Mr. Krauss; envir- ing inspector, (part - time), onment control, including dog, 84,406. rodent and mosquito control lauar • Eva faymain g breads in a sandwich? . ' • Oujntitl.l Otter salaries specified in and air pollution, Mrs. Hall, •» Rag. the ordinance are senior clerk- chairman, Charles W. Smith, Slices of Rye and Pumpernickel with ham and cheese, Prk. 3 & 1»00 typist, $4,076; superintendent and Mr. Coffey. •r Raism and a sKee «f Cinnamon Loaf with erean cheese anctjefljjt of mosquito control (part- Health and education, Dr. IDEAL FOR I1ICIMB s < HEW CROP-FIRM CRISP—10 oi. mf time), $2,500; assistant super- Sanker, Mr. Walters and Mr. IfstWferent!Irtmteresting!Ifsanewtaste! rt C e intendent of mosquito control. Smith; finance, Mr. Walters, Ripe Tomatoes I9 Brussels Sprouts 29 (part-time). -Mr,^jCpjfey, and Mrs.' Hall; FLORIDA TEMPLE—NEW CROP . WMHINfiTOWASHINflTON $STATE—U.S. FAH0Y employes will Be paidaTan organization and personnel ad dHsete experiment, eome to A*£- E c RED or GOLDEN hourly rate of $2 per hour. ministration, Mr. Ensign wneretheeho^ofbrea' "&?$? Hall to head the study com- 'the borough.; The mayor said 59. l Viva Towels ^35' mittee, which includes Dr. CAfN JOHNS A»P PURE PAST. (In Dairy Ca») Premium Saltine Crackers !,« 29" there is now $16,282,000 in rat- A l-lb. Scott Jumbo Family Napkins K*.. Joseph Sanker and Bertram ables in the borough. Kuiilar'e OLD FASHIONED COOKIB * 14 01. * flfl Walters, and asked for an in- Codfish Fillets pigs. •*» Chilled Orange Juice bot. nCCUICI J Oalmail, Sugar or Lamon 4 pkgi. I.UU Scott Towel Holders •aeh 4JC In the report, the consul- BEEF, CHICKEN, TURKEY BORDEN'S . ;- 9 C itial report of effluent-satur- tants said there were errors Meat Pies SULTANA 1 Phillips Milk of MagnesiaMi*; Fi.r.'d"" 75 Viva Napkins »««««« KIT- ated or low-absorption areas and' ommissions , in the meai ries BRAND •5 SMI ' Buttermilk Biscuits 3 '^ Breath-O-Pine Spray Disinfectant '." 595 ConfldetS FEMININE NAPKINS c by the board's March IS meet- 2«ra89 borough tax map and NON-DAIRY CREAMER A&P BRAND' Feins Feminine Napkins "tSST 2 Sfe 65l tog. suggested that a new one be e AN A&P COUPON Consider Measures drawn. Seneca Coffee Break 4c f 59 Shredded Cheddar •> 89° 100% COIOMBIAH Mr. Krauss indicated that iriann Agency will have A&P DOMESTIC such drastic measures as an charge of the borough work Danish Coffee Cake '^69° TEA BAGS—100'; embargo on all new home men's compensation. Swiss Cheese Slices Wifh Coupon A Ac P '' construction in areas of poor ^P Coffee You Pay Only «•" saturation or a requirement ' Percolator or Drip Valid thru Jan. 11 ih that all builders of three or Variance Plea TIDE DETERGENT 1 coupon p« family. more homes provide package Colombia Mb. sewer treatment plants be Held for Study considered. mi COFFEE can 'EATONTOWN — Th'e Zon- 79 — Continuation of the beach- ing Board of Adjustment has [""ioiroW'Ymv! ta. box VALUABLE COUPON surveillance program origin- held for study the request of 67 This Coupon ; Towardi ated by Environmental Man- ,the Humble Oil and Refinini Worth Parahiit •! agement Inc., Amherst, Mass. Co. for.a special exceptior College Inn Chicken Broth last' summer; Township em- variance to permit expansior MIRACLE WHITE ployes would conduct the con- of the Esso service station or DASH DETERGENT CLEAR tinuing program. Mr. Krauss . Rt. 35 near TTnton Ave."' ' s, SUPER CLEANER said that the research firm According to the varianc I-Qt. "had "served its purpose"-and •fequestr^tne-cdmpany- wil Imperial1 SpSpr.a'ld Margarine would not be used again, add- Valid thru Jan. Ilih purchase the two propertic 1 coupon par family. ing that the' board had got betweeri the existing statioi M/ilb.tub. , llb.QOo its $10,000 worth (the cost of and Tinton Ave., raze the the summer-long contract with buildings and the present sta the Amherst firm) of infor- tion, and construct a largei mation. facility.' Ivory Snow Thrill For Dishes Cascade Duz Detergent Ivory Liquid Ivory — Establishment of a The board denied the re Soap Granules liquid Detergent stream pollution surveillance quests of Goodyear Tire an DISHWASHING DETERGENT. Premium Pack Detergent Soap Flakes program to determine the ex- Rubber Co., Rt. 35, arnd th< 22 «. For Automatic J Ib. 3 oi. "7Ce 2lb. 7«.O|0 22OI.CC0 FwB.by I3OI.Q70 act sources of pollution pour- Chrysler Motor Corp., IU. 36 O!ihwaih*ri pig. 'W ing Into Raritan Bay from its for variances to erect signs pfilftc' Clothai bo< W' GIANT WASH & DRY Save Plaid Stamps...the No. 1 trading stamp in NOW OPEN the metropolitan New York-New Jersey area. (..nil, lU fl.lt l.n.UTl ohfbflxt by «li!t U HWY. 35 (Adler Shopping Canter) MIDDLETOWN MOM •fftcllv* thru Sat., Jan. 11th In A*P >tom In North N.J, Oranfl. « Rcekland CounllM... AU MIAT AND POULTRY SOLD IS U.S. OOVT. INSKCTBD. OKN 7 DAYS A WEEK 8:30 A.M. - 9:00 P.M. TIty DAILY RZCISTEB, WrAnttAsy, Jan. g, And Patrons of Library SHBEWSBUEY- - Persons building," Mr. Livingston re- and a transaction card with using the nejp Eastern Bfanch ported to the library commis- a code number. As books aie of the Monraouth County Li- sion. • returned, the /transaction brary Uer& should have an He further explained, "Our cards are fed Into a easier time finding books in people have had to literally computer along with the film the near future, • take people by the hand and and the computer automat- Also, a new modern system help1 them find the material ically records the 'books re for keeping track, of, books is they're looking for." ? turned and-feeds out the film being tested in the pew East- Mr. Livingstone also com-" with the names and addresses ern Branch building. merited on the success of the of the borrowers who haie Delicious Orchan Jack Livingstone, library dl.' new paperback book section. not brought their books back rector, said the. new: com-' "Many books are available The film is then fed into a ROUTE 34, COLTS NECK, N. J. Just South of Route 537 Light puter programmed cata- in paperback that are not recorder -.printing machine log book for the adult, section available in hard cover these which automatically makes GOLDEN GIFT OF THE SOUTHLAND is complete and will be avail- days and, also, the. library which automatically mate s able a* soon as, the county saves money using them," he> out the overdue notice and computer in Freehold is ready said. the envelope. Citrus Fruits for a readout. • . Paperbacks an Aid According to the library di- Last week, a successful test I In response to questions by ssector, the hew system al- Huge Florida Navel Oranges, Tan- was run on the'first half of commission members he add- ready has freed one person, gerines, Tangelos and large juicy the alphabet in preparation ed, "Paperbacks cost us -only' Who did nothing but type up for publishing the catalog 50 eents^on the average with the overdue notices and en book. the special discount the li- velopes, for other work, and More than 100 copies, will *brary receives,. and if they may free a second person in be ^available at different" are lost or destroyed after on- the. near future. Grapefruit points, in the library, and ;an«- ly two or three circulations Seedless. ; lor other : 100 copies will be cir- we have gotten our money's White or pink culated to other libraries In worth. It costs us over 50 Democrats the. state informing them of cents, considering all costs, what is available here. to circulate a hard cover vol- READY TO1 HEAT and SERVE Less Cumbersome • ume." Schedule HAND AND FOOT — Mrs. William Towers, left, pres- The1 new cataloging system Although the library has on- ident of tho Little Silver Friends of the Library, put" does away with the usual ly a 1,600 volume initial pa- Victory Fete her right foot forward to help with the ground- S.S. Pierce Dinners cumbersome file drawer-type perback section, paperbacks FREEHOLD i- Monmouth " New England Boiled Dinner, Chicken , card, catalog. - •. have accounted for more than breaking for the 2,400 square foot addition to the County Democrats will cele- borough's public library, while Mrs. Rodolfo Correa, Beef Stew, Lamb Stew, Beef Pot_Roast, Meat "Not having any catalog all 10 per cent of the total cir- brate November election suc- Fresh Pies this time has brought our staff culation. The branch building cesses at the county and local president of the library trustees, lends a hand with the Ravioli, Spaghetti and Meat Balls, Macaroni closed to the public and has has 50,000 volumes • levels Saturday, Jan. 25, at shovel.. Happy about the beginning, construction are with Creole Sauce, Stuffed Peppers, Stuffed Hot and fragrant from our own forced the staff to have an Photocharging, a new elec-' Byrne's Sea Girt Inn. Cabbage, .Chicken ala King, Chicken Fricassee, ovens; Cherry, Apple, Cocoamrt intimate knowledge of the new ' tronic system for charging out Mayor Gordon N. Litwin, left, and Councilman books and notifying borrowers County Chairman P. J'aul Anthony T. Bruno, building committee chairman. Con- Corned. Beef Hash, Hash. Look for Custard, .Blueberry, Southern "Pe- Campi announced that the can. of overdue volumes, recently party's fifth annual Victory struction of the $66,000 addition, aided with a $22,- our specially priced Pierce Dinners. was put into operation. Dinner-Dance will mark the 044 federal grant, is stated to get under way before Camera Record reelection of Bep. James 3. week's end, with target date for completion four Open Monday - Saturday ?_to^.Junday 1 to A special camera takes a Howard and Sheriff Paul months away. (.Register Stuff Photo) picture of the borrower's li- Kieman, and the election of brary card, the book card, local officials throughout the county. • • - Congressman Howard rep- resents the . Third District which includes all of Mon- Hear of Plan ~ mouth and Madison Township, EATONTOWN —; The de- in Middlesex, and Lakewood, tails of the Metro. Terminal Jackson, and Plumsted Town- Complex proposal for the ships, in Ocean. e North Bergen-Secaucus area "While they did not win," will be described to members Mr.. Campi said, "our most of the Monmouth County capable candidates for Free- Chapter, New Jersey Society holder, Eugene J. Bedell and of Professional Engineers to- Frank Woolley, who made a night at Crystal Brook Inn at -most-creditable--showing_and , i Ypnr television 7 o'clock, according to Mor- provided a tight race, will Humidifier let may be fine . , . ton H. Burke, Oakhurst, pres^ share in the spotlight at this ident of the county organiza- celebration." It could =be your antenna! tion. Mr. Howard triumphed over COMPLETE INSTALLATION Paul Zar, Red Bank, presi- state Sen. Richard R. Stout Proper Humidity Adds to '• As Low As dent of Metro Terminal As- by more than 30,000 votes and sociates, an engineer consult- Sheriff Kiernan, the party Your Home's Total Comfort ing firm, and Nicholas 3. Ser- leader and state Democratic ,#5.. vidio, Coltf Neck, VfteTiresi-; . Committeeman in Mohmouth, . dint, of %*' cdmp'any, a'.'lT- won over Manasquan Mayor Montgomery Word censed professional engineer Axel B." Carlson, Jr., by up- SERVICE DEPARTMENT and professional planner, will wards of 15,000 votes. , WAREHOUSE — HOPE RD. present the program. John C. Sheriff Kiernan, winning his (ATONTOWN, N. J. Fink, Jr., Leonardo, is pro- second term, polled the high 542-1590 gram chairman. Democratic vote among county aspirants with over 87,- 000. Mr. Howard scored 97,- 000 in Monmouth and 113,000 in the district .in copping his third term. $257 Taken From Market RED BANK -* The Galatro Produce Market at 9 Wharf =--Avenue- was broken-into - and $257 was taken from the safe, according to Police Chief George Clayton. The chief said the market was entered between 11:30 a.m. Sunday and' 7:15 a.m. Monday. He said entry was gained through .a window where a screen had been re- A Super "15" Gives Entire Home Humidification moved and through an inner door. • One easy to get control assures correct humidity Both the dial on the outer 4 Days Only door and the back of the in- • Exclusive Lime Guard retards mineral - build-up ner • door of a safe were knocked off, the chief said, • Rugged cabinet resists rust and. corrosion Regular 79.95 and a cash box containing bills, change and checks was • Easily' installs into any forced air heating system rsmovedy the chief said. De- tective Lt. George Clayton Jr. INSTANT WASHINGTON! -. ^investigating. Indoor humidity can drop belojw J5% during the cold winter months 1 ;••<•• Raritan Squad causing dry throats; droopy houseplants and static electricity. Park(your ear In our tpaciout, free, eitcloied 88 Put the humidity back Into your home's dry air with a Super JIS parking lot . . . ttep into one of our lux- Elects Nemeth Installation Power Humidifier ... completely automatic operation. Available ^iiHour DeHarHlowl Twin Prop-Jer Otter HAZLET — Fred Nemeth has been elected president of airliners and .Tv ZIP! You're In'Wash- the Raritan First- Aid and 64 Rescue Squad. ington, D.C.! We go there* and back non- Also elected were Robert For further information •top six times a day at eonvenlont hours Sulpy, vice president; Ed- Sears Electronic ward Boehm, secretary, and mail coupon below .;, for easy commuting. Juit call our Ticket Theodore Hoffman, treasurer. ••••••....•.....•.....•...... • Line officers Include Walter Air Office or your travel agent and ask for McKinlcy, captain; Les Hor- Sears, Roebuck and Co. • •' >« some "Instant Washington." ner and Frank Havcy, assis- 1500 Highway 35, Middletown, N. J. tant captains; Arthur Meyer and Robert Frye, first lieuten- Gentlemen: * Cleaners ants; William Burke and An- Please send me more information regarding; thony Spaloss, second lieuten- Q Central Air Q Heating Systems Reg. ants, and Robert Delaney, Hal $199 Mark and Frank Kiley, trus- Conditioning Systems \\ Humidifier tees. x 169 Name • . ,..,..... ,..'. .V, ., 'Installation Available

Scout Puprr Drive "• Address Cut down , on housekeeping Scheduled Siiliit'diiy time. Removes dirt, dust and HOLMDEL — Boy Scout Clty- ZIP Code Troop 331 will conduct its pollen quickly and easily. Fits See your travel ngnnt or call monthly pnper drlyo Sat- State • Phone Into forced air furnaces. „ urday. Tho troop requests residents to place bundles of newspn- pars, magazines and old You Can't Do itetter Than Sears phono hooks at curbsldo nfter tho regular garbage collec- 1500 Highway 35 tion, Anyono needing nssls- SHOP AT SEAES AND SAVE timco Is nuked to contact his Mi to- Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back Sears Open Mon. Him l'rl. »:.10 to S..10 Red B*nh 747-9080 - Album Park 531-520O ward tho purennso (if enmp- KF.AIIS. HOI.IUTCK AND CO. Open Sut. Ill 5: JO ing equipment for tho troop. tr 12-THE DAILY BECISTEB, Wednesday, January 8, Service Salute Airman William J. Setrin, son of Mr. and MrsrwSiiani M. Setiia of 142 Monraouth Boad, Oafchurst, has been graduated from a U.S. Air Force technical school at Chanute AFB, III. He was trained as a jet engine' me- chanic and has been assigned to a unit of the Tactical Air. Command at Shaw AFB, S.C. ~ The airman is a graduate of Ocean Township High School. « He is jnar&ed to the fonner Debra I.,- Slocum. Sgt. Russell R. Heller Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell R. Heller, Buckley Road, Marlboro, is on duty at Udorn Royal Thai AFB, Thailand. r Sgt. Heller is an intelli- r,z vr%r* ' gence-specialist with the Pa- \ cific Air Forces. Before his . arrival in Southeast Asia, he 4 , pRICfS - WAXI • was assigned at Mountain USD* an****** **• Home AFB, Idaho". The sergeant, a graduate of Freehold Regional • High School, attended Newark Col- lege of Engineering. ROAST BEEF SALE! —Miss- Darlene Judith BONELESS Knowles.' daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Ryland Knowles of 637 •*-• Brookside Drive, Belford, has " completed ten weeks of basic training at Recruit Training California Command (Women) In Bain- bridge, Md. The> graduate of Middle- 'town Township High School will spend a liday leave with her family before reporting to ROAST U.S. Naval Training Center^ Great Lakes, HI., for Hospital Corps " Staff Sgt. John Sheehan, ALL GRINDS Marine Corps recruiter in Red Bank, announced the en- listment of four Monmouth County men into the U.S. Ma- Maxwell House 1 ib. rine Cqrps. They are now un- dergoing recruit training at the Marine Corps Recruit De- pot, Parris Island, S.C. The five are: —Kavy-Damage-Controlman l.C. James Chadwick, son of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Chadwick, 52 Black Point Road, Rumson, is serving KOUNTY KIST PEAS GREAT AMERICAN SOUPS aboard the guided missile de-' . stroyer USS Cochrane, the HEIN7. 14 secondary recovery ship for TENDER 16 oz. can §^ for ALL VARIETIES 15 oz the Apollo 8 lunar flight. The ship was on station in the mid-Pacific with another MINI MCEI. MAXI VALUESX destroyer, an oiler, a com- RAGU SPAGHETTI SAUCE SLICED PINEAPPLE SNO-WHITE MILK «D VIAL munications relay ship and fc e the primary recovery ship, f r SWEET SHOULDER VEAL CHOPS 85 the aircraft carrier USS York- VARIETIES IS-: OZ. j31 TREAT town. 3 ° $1 3 $1 VEAL CHOPS 95* ••* "*"» 1.09 Richard C. Shannon, Jr., LEG or RUMP ROAST OF VEAL son of Mrs, Violet Shannon, Italian or Thousand Island «•_ Mgk 251 Atlantic St., Keyport. VEAL FOR STEWING >79e Prior to enlistment he was 20* OFF LABEL Kraft Uw Calorie 0m•teg Z j» 4 V« employed by Food Fair Stores, Middletown. He is a to T h graduate of Raritan Town- TIDE DETERGENT Boneless Brisket SSS^S •59c c !:»'79c ship High School. chopped t : fc John R. Dillon, son of Mrs. B inBMushrooms .»« Rock Cornish Game Hens ™** ?'*T» 38« Joan Machette. 268 Dart- King Size mouth Ave., Fair. Haven. Fresh Chicken Parts 59c Tfior to eiiptmenTTie was" 84fz.bex -The)- Ixtra Touch I employed by Fair Haven Es- la. of Beef - so and is a graduate of Shore Accent Seasoning Regional High School, West BeefFlanken Long Branch. He also attend- ed Hofstra University, Hemp- US0ACHOIte stead, L.I. Beef Cubes for Stew

Roger L. linger, son of Mr. TOP aaMirr and Mrs. Herbert W. Unger, Bluw Bonnet ^^ — tUM, rUVOCPUL NO WASH 384 Park Place, Long Snow Whitw Greenland Ground Chuck Round Iranch. He is a graduate of MARGARINE * 24 Long Branch High School. . 11b Be«ff Chopped viOVnQ' - HALIBUT FILLET 69 Axelrod Cottage Cheese cant. Sgt. Theodore W. Parsons REFRESHINGl SWORDFISH STEAKS Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Par- sons of 234 Riveredge Road, Fresh Fruit Salad FRESH CODFISH STEAKS New Shrewsbury, has been Vt gal. graduated from a U.S. Air 99% Fat Free Milk cont. 49c Force technical school at 12 oz. Keesler AFB, Miss. Kraft American Singles pVg. FIRM, RIPE-SUCWKi He was trained as a conr ALDERNEY- V* gal. Imported Polish puter repairman and has been PURITAN cont. assigned to a unit of the Aero- Orange Juice BORDEN'S 10 or. 98 space Defense Command at CHOPPED NAM - Luke AFB, Ariz. Milk Shakes AU FUVORS TOMATOES The sergeant, a graduate of HAYDU MUNICH BOLOGNA 19 MACINTOSH FANCY Conestoga Senior High School FRESH MUENSTER CHEESE «IA«Y ^, FANCY - lb in. Berwyn, Pa., attended 1 Apples CRISP Yellow Onions Pennsylvania State University SALAMI or BOLOGNA "TKZT ^1.09 and the University of South- FLORIDA TEMPLE CALIFORNIA NAVAL ern Mississippi." Swift'* Premium SMOKED WHITING ^^c* *& SWEET 1 A. Oranges EATING each; Oranges 10 49<= Thomas , Ercolano, son of FRESH COLE SUW CREAMY Mr. and Mrs. , Thomas J. FRANKS 59« FRESH W>iSHED DELICIOUS Ercolano, 12 Cedar Ave,, Ha'z- FANCY. • 1 lb. can 3 Ibt. "let: Prtor'to'enUBtnienf he" Danish Sliced Bacon Spinach •- Apples GOLDEN 49c was employed by Atlantic sllCED 6oz. $ Regular or Crlnkl* - Llndan Farm* Tile Co., Matawan. Case Pork Roll 3 pkg%.i. I Army Pvt Robert J. Bald- win Jr., 19, whose mother) Royal Dairy Sauerkraut FRENCH FRIES 10 COLLEGE INN EGG NOODLES AND CHICKEN Mrs, Betty M. Baldwin, lives GREATEA Linden Farms Spinach LEAP no« at 1911 Springwood.Ave., Nep- Hormel Ham ^G' 3 ib. can 2.79 CHKSf PHP 0NI COLLEGE INN TOMATO COCKTAIL tune, has completed ; nine ] lb Buitoni Instant Pizza %uoT" weeks of advanced infantry al Loof, Br.ad«) V.ol, YUBAN INSTANT COFFEE training at Ft, Polk, ip* Morrell Pride Franks **• 59= His father lives at 28 Locust MIDGETS v «. Pv9. Kleentx Dinner Napkins .f£27c Yubon Cofftt ^Taylor Pork Roll ^ 1.19 CHEF'S SPECIAL Aviv,- Red Bank. Beef Steaks Kleenex Toweli *•-« 'pi;1!' Yubon Imtant Coffee * W79e Airman Ronald E. Patch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas fnitant Coffee Keebler Toost ^^1"' Prlee» affectivs Wednmday, January 8 thro Tuesday, January 14, 1968. Never any limit*. »uy all you want. MAXWIU House u Palch of 30 Spruce Road, None sold to daalers. Not responsible for typographical errors. Nabhco Pretzels >*' ^ '•• Karmingdale, has been grad- MAXWELL HOUSE N bl M olt uated from a U.S. Air Force Drtft.finmlt»9.-tt*ttfa f«rk tt7k Pretiel Stick* " v"i rL' '' technical school at Chanute AFB, III. DOLE FANCY SLICED PINEAPPLE 2-39c He wag trained as an air- 56 NEWMAN SPRINGS ROAD RAGU SHELL MACARONI DINNER craft equipment repair- RIGHT OFF man and has been assigned M oi. but £{)C to a unit of the Pacific Air ROUTE 33 RED BANK, NEW JERSEY COLD WATER SURF Forces at Yokotn AB, Japan. The airman is a graduate of Southern Freehold Regional High School in Jtovwli y By ERJ0 M. BHAEP have one major complaint— say its faults are technical half shows little more than Mevision Inc. which Installed make it more effective," he and pan from side to side." aluminum-coated cable to a OLEAjC H.V. (AP) - It-hasn't worked well since it and'* can, be eliminated automobile headlights. A per- it, admitted there are bugs, said. Zoom Lens plastic-coated one. was turned on Sept; 37v' While, shoppers look in win- through better equipment and son walking along a sidewalk but said they will be correct- "Well change the location Arnold demonstrated one of The older policemen on "They've got the cameras at night cannot be.seen, ed soon. of the cameras to cover back Olean's 33-man force believe dows along Union Street, po- experimentation. the new zoom lens cameras. in the wr6ng places," said a "If this does no more than Michael Arnold, creator of /'We've learned a lot in this alleys and blind spots, the system is a waste of time. liceman look at the shoppers He aimed it out the window bartender. "TBiey watch the. control our.traffic problem, the system and general man- early period, and we're going and our new cameras, will be of his office and it focused The younger men are more on clo>ett-,cjr774,949.26 proval to allow Charles Smith of Palmer, and Thompson UiS. Government Bonds ...... ,..»'...... '. 25,109,297.97 ~Aves7 tft/erect an-addltion-to -137^288,335.88- a noneonforming building. Municipai 'Beta for Study Loans and Discounts OFFICESi Held for study-were ttie ap- plications of Woodbrook Acres, Bank Buildings '! tITiars) are 18 Central Jersey Bank andTruatCornpany a proposed major sub- \.:- •};-;':' ' off lc«s throughout the CounV* division of 73 houses; Arthur Furniture and Tzeses,. a subdivision of. 38 5 1 ALLENHURST i-% \ houses at W. Front St. and •Other-Assets-.-, .v;.. .T.-.-i'sy.'S-.*;' .- ?.^ Everett Hoad; Wooflview ALLENTOWN a rii-V',;-^ •-.'-:'s- ?.c4-;5-?_"•!"-"' Acres section 2, a proposed sub-division of IS houses off BRADLEV BEACH •.*• *.•'.'-+< Nut Swamp Road and the lands of Charles Leriiie, a EATONTOWN 97-lot subdivision on Everett LIABILITIES .-, -.^ if.. '. *^% "' '-•-"• •' •:•'•: -• . ' Road near the Garden State FARMINQDALE Parkway. Capital Stock 1,605,693 at $2.50 par - $ 4,014,232.50 FORT MONMOUTH . . The application of Bush Capital., Notes . .-.;..,.»• 2,6oO,OOO.o6. Construction Co., Shrewsbury, . FREEHOLD (2) to convert" an existing com- Surplus „ •.., . 5,200,000.00 FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP mercial building into a pro- fessional building was also Und]Y)decl Profits...... ,u.T .^...... i... • '• 2,478,186.66 LONG BRANCH (2) held for study. The 13,000- TOTAL. CAPITAL ACCOUNTS...... *...,.j..... $ 13,692,419.16 MARLBORO square^foot building would -•house- seven-professional^?, •Reaerye for Loans ..,.;.....,;;..;...... :'...... 1,337,508.74 —' MATAWAN n. • fices. 'Dividend No;37, Payabl t, 1969 h...i;>-.i....7. . 321,133.60 NE>*fjijNE\&Tf -~H~' ^ Bungalow Unearned Discount ; 1,543,653,84 RUMSON bthpr 'Liabiiltles •".".. .' '.,...T./."..7 ' 1,182,198.8,8 SEA BRIGHT Is Damaged Deposits 185,085,378.84 SHREWSBURY " ' " $203,'l62,298.06 Byi)Flames SPRING LAKE HEIGHTS NEW SHREWSBURY - A • Reserved for Joans under a formula approved by'the; Internal Rsvenue Service. MemberFederal Deposit Insurance Corporation bungalow on South Ten, was badly damaged by a fire Mon- day aftferndfcti that brought out three fire companies. The fire broke out in the •, I : kitchen of the one-and-a-half ' ;/• '. ;':'~?f::. f story home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kelly at 8 South TOT., iBiOARD OF DIRECTORS J REGIONAL DIRECTORS according to Fire Marshall Walter Cobb, No one was at home at tire time, he said. . Erv^ln E; Auflensleln, Augensteln Manufacturing Co* .„ John O. Bennett, Sr., Bennett's Qaragg, Inc. Stanley G.Mns,/wester , .n*. . The fire -was reported at Robert B.Barlowi Pres/deW H.R.Brlndle.M.D. Donald E.Lawes,Sr.,fresfcfor>^LaivesCoa7 Co,' . *; 3 p.m. by a neighbor, the fire marshall said. Responding to Harold W. Bryan, Bryan Radio and Television ArsmA.Captanlan,M.D. ' '" , CharletW.Mandevllle.V/cePresWenr- ' the alarm were the Northside, Tlnton Falls and Shrewsbury Ross B. Cameron, Exec. VlcoPros., Charms Co. Albert F. Cassevant, MaJ. Qen. (rait) U. S. Army theodore W. McGlnness, flea/tor , . t ' fire' companies and the New William D. Clayton, Clayton Farms • • Edward 0. Clark, Assistant Vice Presided . . Harry E. Mills,Mills CraneSerWee andCansJ,,lhi^ Shrewsbury First Aid Squad. the residence was badly John C. Conover, Real Estate and Insurance Oliver Brown Conover, Oliver Brown Conover & Assoc, JohnB.Movelle,M.D. , damaged by fire and water on August H. Daesener, American Hotel Company Herbert Cottrell, Jr.iHerbert Cottrell and Son Solomon J. Nelmark, Retired • _^ •• the main floor, Mr. Cobb v said, but the basement and • Ernest Hall, Executive Vice President James C. Day, Day Funeral Horn* J. J. Nolan, Joseph M.Nolan and Son '" - upper floor escaped heavy . Thomas C. DeFelice, President, damage/ He declined to give ~*Alf red J. Holland, Holland and McChesnay > ,. EdgarN.PepplBr.Pepp/erFwnera/Home an estimate of the amount ' Raymond F. Johnson,' Chairman, Executive Committee Douglas Downs, V.P., Joseph Qarlbaldl Organizations Henry Rapp, Jr., Rapp Farms,/no, • —- • ••«~ of damage. Robert 8. Lockwood, Executive Vice President . : Victor W.Emery, Ret Ired : . Jack V. Richards, V.P.,Neyv Jersey Natural Gas Co, , J.Wallace McCue.D.D.S. Ernest A. Qardolla, Jr., Gardella's Market Louis D. Rollo, Jr., Rollo Transit Corporation ' TWQ Face Andrew Mlllloan, Vice President Gsorge C. Giger, President, Glger Ford •H. Sherman Russell, flusse// and Cook ' ' Drug; Counts . Maurice A. Potter, Attorney, Potter arid Gagllano Edward W. Harvey, Harvey Farms Herbert Schor, President, Perfection Plastics, Inc. ' FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP- Walter W. Reid, III, President, Charms Company, Donald C. Hambllng, Pros., Charles B. Hembllng & Son ' FredVehtelnq,Jr.,President,Vahlalng,lno. .' Two men will be arraigned EarleW.Handrlokton.flef/rect " Alex Vinos, V.P., Matthews Chevrolet Agenoy •«.. '»-»• Monday at 9 a.m. In Munic- Peter J. Rollo, Rolld Transit Corporation ipal Court here on charges .( Henry J. Shaheon, Real Estate Developer H.AIvlnrlendrlck8on,flet//-ec/ " George B.Whltlleld, Retired of possession of narcotic drugs, legend drugs and a f. Ralph Shlbla, Retired Harry Van Iderstlne, Jr., President, Johnson Boat Works Stanley O.WIIkins, M.D. , , hypodermic needle. Charles I. Smith, Monmouth County Road Supervladr Tcnnent Stato Police Iden- tified them ns Charles T. Richard R. Stout, Sfafe Senator Dillon* 21 of 1021 Bay Ave., Point Pleasant, and Vincent Richard W. Stout, Attorney, Stout and O'Hagan R. Lopez Jr., 19, Davis Daniel 8. Welcjand, Attorney HONORARY DIRECTORS Drivo, Neptune. Trooper w John HUSBOII W. D. Williams, President, N. J, Natural Gas Co. Julius E. Fllnk, Fllnk,Cezar,*nd Company Abram D. Voorhees, Chairman, Spring Lake Htlghts Board Mopped tho pair on Rt. 0 Tuesday at 3:10 p.m. for a Bruce C. Woolley, Woolley Funeral Homo Carl McDermott, Retired Mix Warner, ftef/rsc? . , motor vehicle check and dis- J. Ruutll Woolley, County Clerk, Monmouth Gqunty PradH. 8tout.net/red J. Idgar Wllion, Senior Vice President covered the drugs nnd needle in tho car, They havolboen roleuscd In 11,500 ball onch ponding tho hearing. TS DAILY REGISTER, Wednesday, January 8, 1969 Nameliross 2 Jftiii Worthingtdii Staff in Book Unit FREEHOLD —Worthlngton bridge will supervise and di- preparation -of enzymes and Worthington Biochemical Buy Plant Site Biochemical Corporation has rect the company's research other Worthington biochemi- Corporation is a producer of Through Agent President announced - two key appoint- activities which speed.the ap- cal products. - high-purity enzymes'foi re- ments "designed to enable plication o! the science of bio- Holder of a.master of sci- search. - MIDDLETOWN — Earie S. NEW YORK — Dr. Mason the company to carry out sub-, chemistry to the improve- ence degree in microbiology, Snyder, owner of the Snyder W. Gross of Rumson, N. J.f stantial expansion programs ment of diagnosis and patient Mr! Begel • had worked .42 Wisconsin,restaurants once Agency, realtors, at 876B Rt. president of Rutgers Univer- care in the nation's hospitals years in microbiological de- were required to serve two- 35, negotiated acquisition of sity, has been elected chair- in the field of research and applied biochemistry." and clinics. At present, Worth- velopment at E.R. Squibb & thirds of an ounce pi Wiscon- acreage off Rt. 35, Eatontown, man of the National Book ington offers a, broad line of Sons. He, his wife and their sin cheese with every meal where the 'new plant of Ste- Committee Inc., succeed- Dr. J. Eliot Woodbridge has been appointed Worthington's enzymatic reagents to the two children reside in Wana- costing more than 25 cents. phenson, a Bangor Punta Co., ing William L Nichols, se- clinical laboratory. The law lapsed in 1937. is scheduled for completion in nior consultant and former director of research for clini- massa. • March. . publisher of This Week mag- cal products. Woodbridge re- Dr. Woodbridge lives with azine. Dr. Gross has, since ceived his Ph.D in physical his wi/e and six children in Mr. Snyder, assisted by Jo- . Wynnewood, Pa. They are seph Phelps and Ben Priolo 1964, served as a vice chair- chemistry from(Princeton Un- of Feist and Feist, Eatontown, man of the committee, a non- iversity ia 1948.' He previous- planning to move to New Jer- arranged sale of the tract for profit group of prominent cit- ly had been director of re- sey in the near future. $71,225 by Huskey Brook Es- zens representing the public search at Sadtler Research Joseph Begel has been ap- tates Corp. to.Smith and Wes- interest in the free flow of Inc. , arid Harlecp in Phila- pointed Worthington's micro- son, a division of Bangor Pun- ideas and access to books, delphia. Atthe latter, he had bial production and process ROOFING Scott R. Beskin ta; of which the Stephenson Milton Kosene responsibility for developing development manager. He Dr. Gross became presi- works in the company's new iirm is- now a wholly-owned new products as well as a dent of Rutgers in 1959,' at complete line of diagnostic fermentation plant, super/is • 15-Y«or gyarantw subsidiary. ing production of microbial 1 which time he had been serv- ' reagent kits for use in hospi- • Made by JohncManvlll* William H. Stephenson, Form Partnership ing as provost and professor tal and clinical laboratories. products sold directly or used as the raw material for the • Avollablt In 10 colon president and chainpan of the , of philosophy. He continues At Worthington, Dr. Wood- safety equipment firm, re- to hold the professorial title, • Avoid Interior wall , cently revealed architect's For Law Practice and regularly teaches a damage drawings of the planned 45,- • 235 Ibt. P«r tqiiara FA*IR HAVEN — Milton--nerstiip, Mr1(i Beskin main- course. 7 home now Exptrt Installation- by our own* maehanlei It another on« el ciated with Mr* Kosene, have entered Jesus College of Cam- with the help of MARINE He is secretary of the Free- the great feature* of thli fin* roofing. Call ai losnl entered into a partnership for' hold Township Zoning Board bridge University which VIEW. We will be most happy the general practice of law. conferred upon him the bach- to discust a home mortgage and attorney for the Freehold loan with you. Stop in at one ' Egg. Market. The new firm will occupy elob of arts and master of the offices which have been Township - Recreation and of our throe convenient offices FREE DELI VERY NEW YORK (AP)-(USDA) Parks Commission. ' arts degrees. He earned his today. — Wholesale._ egg offerings maintained by Mr. Kosene in doctorate in philosophy from Dally and Saturday 8 A.M..B:30 >>.M, adequate. Demand good yes- theFair Haven Shopping Cen-^ -_Mr.-Beskin Js^a. member, of Harvard University in 1938 F.H.A. and Conventional Wednetdoy and Friday 'HI 9 r.rt. terday: ter. Remodeling is now under the Greater Freehold Lodge while teaching there. Later Mortgages Available way of a building on Rt. 9, ,.._ ,T New York spot quotations of B'riai B'rith. ; that year he was appointed Freehold Township. When an instructor hi philosophy at . follow: completed within the next sev- Standards 46W-47& He resides at 109 Overbrook Columbia " University (1938- eral months.the office struc- Drive, Freehold Township, '42). WHITES ture will be entirely occupied . with His wife, Alice, and.two 32 BROAD ST. • 741-7500 • RED BANK Fancy large 47 lbs. min. by the new Jirm, which will children, Robin and Stephanie. 49&51; fancy medium 41 lbs. maintain offices at both loca- Skinks swim through sand 3 CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE Mr. Beskin is president of • BUDGET • EASY CHARGE • FROWN'S CREDIT average -47-48; fancy smalls tions. " V y .the Colt's Glen Homeowners in Saudi Arabia. The tiny liz- MIDDLETOWN ATL. HIGHLANDS | LINCROFT 36 lbs. average 34-35. Association, Inc. , ards use flippers to travel be- BROWNS Mr. Kosene, who was ad- low the desert surface. «7l-2400 291-0100 I (42-4400 Fancy large 47 lbs. min. mitted to the bar in 1945, has 50-51. practiced in Red, Bank and Spedcor Acquires here, and has maintained a suite of offices in the shop— Launcher Assets^ ping center the last three NEW YORK — Spedcor years. Educated in the Perth Electronics, Inc., said today Amboy Public Schools, Mid- it has agreed in principle to dlesex Junior College, the acquire from the Benfus Coiy University of Newark College " poration tooling, data, test RATE PAID of Liberal Arts and the Uni- equipment and inventory used versity of Newark (now Rut- by Benrus in the manufacture IN gers) School of Law, Mr. Ko- of sidewinder-missile airborne sene had served a three-year launchers and power supplies. Why Pay More? NEW JERSEY clerkship with Karkus & Kan- tor of Keyport. He is an The purchase would be for honorably discharged veteran rWfiaTVTl an undisclosed amount of cash and would include a provision" Textbook Author FRESH PRODUCEI VALUES! —More at Lower Prices Mr. Kosene is the author related to sales resulting from of "Evidence Law in New the transfer of the assets to SHOP-RITE'S • BONELESS Jersey," a legal textbook Spedcor.- which was written for the CORNED BEEP bench and bar of this state Spedcor manufactures elec- and is in wide current use. tronic test instruments and As a result of his author- communications equipment PORK LOIN ship of and the wide accept- and systems for government ance of his book Mr. Kosene and . industry. The company is currently listed in Who's has three operating units — Who In The East, a biograph- the Specialty Electronics Di- ical reference work of per- vision, Glendale, N.Y.; Bay sons of outstanding and rep- State Division, Southbridge, utable achievement. . . • Mass., and the Lavoie-Ana- Mr. Kosene is a former lab-Benrus Instrument Divi- ON mayor of the Borough of Fair sion, Morganville, N.J. ONE YEAR Haven and is the only.Demo- crat ever elected to that post- SAVINGS in the borough. He was elects Harney Retires U.S.D.A. CovMnmant Graded ed in Nov. 1980. Cheic* Utt CERTIFICATES For the past .three years At Post Office lombes Chuck Minimum Amount Mr. Kosene has filled the post NEWARK — A former res- COUNTRY STYLE SPARE POT ROAST M of township attorney in Marl- ident of 239 Spring St., Red Cut Short . $5,000 boro Township. He resigned Bank, has recently retired as SMOKED PORK SHOULDER RIB STEAKS M postal operations >Mf far Potting ond troillflf -irfficfi_h^Ee^afiex, U.S.D.A. Govl Grado "A" over 41* years of service. He ROCK CORNISH HENS tegular Grad is Gerald P. Harney. Ml Inattt wMi'Wingf or Ual with Soda OROUNDBEEff Mr. Beskin was graduated Pascal Celery 19c CHICKEN PARTS ChoJot, Frarfi and lean from fiutgers University with ;-Newark ^Postmaster GROUND CHUCK a bachelor of arts degree in j. Benucri commented that political' science in 1959. an "irreplaceable void" was He received his law degree • created by Mr. Harney's de- from the New York Univer- aOe Off. label : ••./.., sity Law School in 1962 at parture. Froxmm Wmmda- TIME LAUNDRY DETERCfMT l\ which time he was awarded He entered the postal ser-' M VOTMIM fcaiquoto f CENTER CUT a juris doctorate. That same vice in Newark on May 1, *1 Off iflM year Mr. Beskin was admitted 1927, and- was* promoted to MAJ.WUT DASH LAUNDRY DUIMINT *£ Wh.U DonM> to the New Jersey Bar and foreman of mails in 1940. Sub- was also admitted to practice sequent promotions led to his wm^m^rff fnopae wvan or KOtpMny Mieptte Al Cebm Brook Trovt before the United States Dis- «W CCom b. RED BANK trict Court for the District of present position. Light Rings "~»» 57c FACIAL TISSUE 6 X M New Jersey. Married to the former Ha- All VOXMM loll W log zel Lees, Mr. Harney resides Mr. Beskin served as an BiCO O.KNO.ANT 3^81 Al Varfetiet, Taylor". SAVINGS officer for two years at the at/380 Mt. Prospect Ave., AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Fort Monmouth Procurement here. His children are Kath- ihop-llt* DUNCAN HrNES MIDGET Mfo Office and recently retired leen Silvers, Caroline Lamb, *• *-"• •ROAD and BERGEN PORK ROLL'^ • from "the U.S. Army Reserves William and Gerald Harney, 10-fdt "Hoot H* torn" All M«rt or All loot OMOT Atayor RED BANK w,ith the rank of captain. Jr. He also has 13 grandchil- K CAKE Prior,to forming the part- dren. Roman Plxxa " »£*99c Franks & 59c Swwl CaniMd Maik . Tompb Shrimp or Chttm MIXES Chow Main 2£ 89 Pork Shldr. '£ 1.99 Shop-Rlt. Vac Pod logular er Thick Bacon £ 69c French Fries 5 From Our Datrf Cmum MONMOUTH MEATS Shop-tlta Cut ShofvJtitt Why hy MoreT shoo-mto >b ) 110 MONMOUTH ST. 13 MAIN ST. BRANCH AVE. Green Beans 3 TOMATO SOUP 'tr 8c ORANvB M-gtA J|(% RED BANK EATONTOWN LITTLE SILVER Shop-UK roar tf Stor. WM» Wo»w»l Horn* or Noictrf* JUKI "ntaln.rHYC Srwborrles "^ (tgular or Porkoy Blu. tomol 741-5292 542-0743 741-5350 INSTANT COIVIE K n.it Margarine 4 ,*?,. »1 Appttlrtrt, thop-Klt. AH Vorl».RIto SPAGHETTI 6 J, *I My ravorllt Mtat/Uv»r/ChhliM rlovor.d SNOW GROUND STEW CAPSULES' '^,T 49c DOC FOOD 12 ,1 *1 A8PIRIlin' JL 25c fr. Hyfo On.ii BMHI/CT. UyU, Wtiol. Ktmol Com er SHOVELS FRANKS CHUCK BEEF f Whtr* Avallablt Vaporizer \t 3.9B DEL MONTI PEAS 5 1. *I WITH N0N4TICK COATIN« ANACIN t£ ChMttn of ttio too $ 59* 69' Chunk Light TUNA 3 ^ 89c 1 79 Net .fc. KfM t, |M ^.AIM. Hh «,»»,!, WurJ ^ THE DAILY BFTASTFX V7yiM*A*y, 3M. 3, 1909-15 Grand Union's Earnings Up EAST PATERSON — 'flew third quarter earnings equaled Bank Rate Rise records in earnings and sales Al cents a share on the aver- Successful Name Ford to AT&T were set by the Grand Union age of 8,128,809 shares out- Company in both the third standing, after adjusting for quarter and the first nine a 5 per cent stock dividend Jolts Market Position in New York months of fiscal 1968, it was distributed'in May, 1968. Investing announced today by Charles Third quarter sales were By ED MORSE NEWARK-Martin J. Ford G. .Hodman, president and By the end, losses outnum- of Holmdel has been appoint- $256,559,825 In 1968, a new NEW YORK (AP) - Jolted bered gains by 6 to 1, and the By ROGER E. SPEAR chief executive officer of the high for any third quarter by still another boost in basic Spear ed share owner relations su- nation's ninth largest' food Dow Jones Industrial average pervisor for the American and 10 per cent above saleiB^ interest, xates, the stock mar- was down 10.99 to 925.72. Q—I am in my late 30s ..and port a sizable increase in chain. of $231,364,587 in the compart ket declined sharply again Telephone and Telegraph Even this represented a buying stocks for growth. I coti sales and earnings for Company in New York Ci\j Grand Union had third quar. able quarter of 1967. • yesterday. Trading was comeback from a "loss of 15.29 hold old lots of AT & T, Em- the 1968 fiscal year ended ter net earnings, after all heavy. an hour before the 2 p.m. hart Corp., IBM, National Oct. 31. .Wentwortft manufac- Mr. Ford had been a cus taxes and depreciation, of close. Can and Redman Corp. Should tomer filiations supervisor for $3,119,735 during the 13-week The market; was resuming tures a line of low-priced cot- New Jersew Bell in Newark You Get -its retreat after -Monday's Volume for the abbreviated I increase my holdings in ton dresses and aprons, a period ended Nov. 30. This these companies or look for highly competitive field. But prior to his new assignment was a new high for any third "steep decline when surprise session was 15.74 million AT&T is New Jersey Bell's quarter in the company's 96- spent came that the big cora- shares — record for a four- other issues?—A. B. a new plant IS Texas should parent company. begin operations early this year history. It represents an .jneicial banks were advanc- hour, day — compared with A—National Can has moved increase of 6.5 per cent earn- ing the prime rate for loans 12.72 million Monday, when up sharply on an improved year, which could improve He joined New Jersey Bell the company's position. Div- in 1955 as a customer sales ings of $2,929,131 in the third vto a new record of 1 percent the Dow industrials skidded outlook stemming from its quarter of 1967. MORE idend payments, omitted in representative in* Elizabeth jjfrom the previous record of 15.23 points. acquisition and modernization WITH FIRST MMCHANTS programs. Your holdings in 1966 and 1967, were resumed and advanced through assign- The 1968 third quarter earn- ,6'4 per cent. It was the third •' The pace of trading actu- ments in the company's com- rtime since Dec. 2 this rate ally was the heaviest in his- this company could be added last January. Because, capi- ings were equal, after pre- DAILY INTEREST to on dips. Current weakness talization is extremely' thin, mercial department. He was PAID FROM DAY OF • had beeit raised. tory. If It had been a full 5V4- named manager of the Toms ferred dividend requirement, hour session at the same rate in IBM shares also presents with about half the shares to 47 cents a share on the DEPOSIT TO DAY OP <•: Stocks speeded their decline an excellent buying opportu- closely held, developments - River business office in 1962, of turnover, 21.64 million commercial staff supervisor in average of 6,570,814 shares of WITHDRAWAL j$s the ticker tape ran late. shafes would have been trad-' nity. Representation in-the oil either good or bad would be provtdJ.9 a S2i balmu h industry is advised at this amplified. Since the com- 1964, and personnel staff su- common stock • outstanding nolnraintd at rt» —4 tl Hw ed, topping the record 21.35 pervisor in 1966. He was qrartcr. made last June iz. time, and Phillips Petroleum pany's outlook is favorable, during the period. *ln 1967, I see no reason to sell at this named customer relations, ^Promoted Despite occasional tape late- is particularly well situated supervisor last February. 4% Par Annum _, ness, there was no apparent for purchase. Its recent suc- time. Martin J. Ford Compounded and /fold A native of Jersey City, Airman Arthur L. Washing- panic. •_..•. cesses in the North Sea should Quarterly ToVPOf begin Uy add to 1969's earn- (For Roger Spear's 48-page Mr. Ford was graduated from Hancock Officers Club. ton Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Of 1,595 Issues traded, 1,235 Guide to Successful Investing Seton Hall University in 1952. He is a charter member Washington Sr., 134 Borden b mmnH ap M S1I.K* fell, and 223 rose. New lows ings. Continue to hold the (recently revised and in its He is a captain in the Quar- of the Holmdel Kiwanis Ave., Asbury Park, has been h»F.D.I.C. Gas Firm for the year totaled 47 and others. Club, secretary of Hazlet graduated from a U.S. Air Q—I would appreciate any 10th printing), send $1 with termaster Corps of the New new highs 4. Jersey National Guard. Fire Company, and a mem- Force technical school at The Associated Press aver- information on World Vision. name and address to Roger - He holds memberships in ber of the Holmdel Republi- Keesler AFB, Miss. He was age of 60 stocks dropped 4.2 —H. D. E. Spear, The Daily Register, the National Guard Associa- can Club. trained as an administrative to 350.4, with industrials off A—I can find no publicly specialist. The airman' is a Box 1618, Qrand Central Sta; tion of the United States, the He and his .wife have two 5.6, rails off 2.9, and utilities held company of that name, New Jersey National Guard graduate of Asbury Park but assume you refer to House tion, New York, N. Y. 10017.) daughters, and live on White Fidtrel DwoMI li off 1.6. It was the worst loss Association, and the Fort Birch Lane in Holmdel. Hieh School. o In tiie AP average since July of Vision, an American Ex-, 25 when It fell 4.3. change Issue. The company Thirteen of the 15 most- owns a chain of 69 dispensing Hiltbrunner active stocks declined, Avnet optician's retail, outlets AUCTION rose 2% to 33%, Eastern Air and also manufactures oph- Gets Plan Post Lines was unchanged. thalmic instruments. Sales NEW SHREWSBURY - and earnings have shown Kenneth Hiltbrunner has been US 7500 FARM MACHINERY steady growth with margins elected chairman of the Plan- maintained at over 7.5 per SAT.. JAN. IT, 1969 10:30 A.M. ning Board, succeeding Louis CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBTS Stock Market cent. First nine months report CASK AMOUNT 6D MO. Route 71 between Earonfown, N.J. A. Steinmuller, who declined YOU 6Ef -OF MOTE PYWT. Yesterday's closing stocks: showed a 7 per cent gain in and West Long Branch.'trJ. sales but earnings remained reelection. $1000 1355.83 22.60 ACF Ind •6094 I-T-B Imp additional $2009 2711.67 1964 International "U00" truck; 1961 Int. "140" Adanu Six Johni M&n ' static on an increase in the Justin Henshell was elected 4520 Air Prod 44 Jonei & u 6779.19 112.99 tractor w/culf.i 1955 Int. "300" tractor w/lead*r Air rteduc' Joy Mil number of shares outstand- vice chairman at the board's .AJISI.Op . Kal«r Al 3774 ing. House of Vision guided caihi J7M0 10.16S.23 169.47 and backhoe; John Deere "40" tractor ana cult.; All« Usi 50 Kenneoott_ organization meeting Mon- 60'/» W. LONG BRANCH TOMS RIVER -Allot Paw Koppen by. capable management" day. ,-—•.. lifa IMTUM JMtatl* «r All loan Allls Chalmers "G" tractor w/culr.; 3 Ford tractors; Allied Ch 3334 Kre»i», S3 38tt Ig. quantity Irrigation pipe; plows; planters; sprayer; Allli Cbal Kroger 33% could work out well on a long- Chester Apy, a Red Bank 542-7300 244-5400 Alcoa 72 Leh Port C 20H term basis. E. BRUNSWICK CLARK spreaders; tillers; greenhouse equip.; air compressor; Am Alrlln 33V Leh V»l Ind 13H attorney and Monmouth Coun- Walter C. Money Am Can M34 IX>F Co welders; shop tools; fertilizers and other materials Am cyan 31% Lib MeN Q—I have shares of Went- ty assemblyman, was reap- 2574000 - 382-7400 Am M FJy 25' M«* * My 3ft wortt Mfg. which have gone CORP* f*»unc SCMO i«~iiioM*utninuTK>H~ used by vegetable growers. ELIZABETH — The promo^ Am Motor! Litton Ind 46 pointed board- attorney. 1214 IMftlTAN RO., CLARK. N.J. ! HUK' Am fimeli 88(4 Liikeru »tl 71% up quite a lot. Should I sell The-board will meet in ' for Est. Stephen Muccto Sr. tion of Walter C. Money, 84 AAm SiSid 43%3% Maffnavox 31S 63% Mmratli OU them?-J. C. ' • special session on Wednes- Central Jersey Bank & Trust Co. Exec. Battln Road, Fair Haven, to Am ToTel4T«b l 63% Martin II l A—Your company should re- day, Jan. 15. AMP Ino &JSOffnr M vice president of corporate Anaconda Merck 8!)',4 Armco Ml 1IGM iVA relations for Elizabethtown Armour Minn M*M 1969 Caprice Coupe Arnut Cfc ' Mo ?u A 7914 Gag Co. was announced by Aihl OH Moblloll NSVi Ateblson 32% M —John—Keanr-president __ .-AUJUchUd-10H4~ .-.1HUNitJIu. BHD. «l)14~ AvcoCorp «- N-• Cas- h- Re- g 11314 BabcocK W 3814 N« Dairy 4154 In his new post, Mr. Money Bayuk Clg IB V, Nat DIMM 42 will, coordinate Elizabeth- Bell & How 68 3 Nat Gyp« 5754. Bendlx 47 Nat Steel 46 town's planned program of Beth Steel 3OS Nla M Pow 2214 Boeing 65V4 No Am RocK 4014 growth through acquisitions. Borden 32% Nor Fac MS and diversification. He was Borg Warn 33% Km Alrlln 79J4 Brunswk. 17% Norwich Ph 42 previously executive vice Bucy Erie 28 Outb Mar 38 Bulova 47 14 O-wemi ill . .7114 president of Klizabethtown's Burl Ind 44 Pan Am Wld J014 subsidiary, Northwest Jersey Ca>e, JI 1014 Penney, JC *45 • Cater Trao 45 P« Pw * Lt NaturalJGas, Inc. ," . Celaneee 6014 Penn Cen Cries tc Oh 7114 Pepal co;';' • GhryaleT 65 »£ PcrMn Him 53 . Mr. Money joined Elizabeth' CHiM 8v 72<4 Pfizer 72%, town in 1959 and was .person- Coca Coll T3% PWI El 30% Coll Palm neglnni«g' The • acquisition by Stop & Shop, Come to a Chevrolet Showroom during our Value Go for a drive. More people do, you know. Plnlay Agency in 1050. He Inc. in 1961. Mr. Solomon will hd Get a free sample of Chevrolet's luxurious full- holds (he position of direc- join the corporate develop- Ask the mante^how you, on paper, how you can coil, cushioned ride. Shut the windows and see how tor of urban renewal in High- ment group, headed by vice order most any 196^ Chevrolet with a big V8 and fresh the interior stays, thanks to Astro Ventila- Putting you first, ketpt us first. . lands. chairman Irving W. Rabb. Mr. Futoran, who is 46, is president of Frederick Atkins, Belford Engine Inc., Now York based, coop- eratively owned, merchandis- Names Miller ing nnd research organiza- BELFOIlD — Frank Miller tion. hag hcen elected president of Slop & Shop, Inc., which,Js the Belford Engine Company expected to report sajes In • No. 1 for (he coming yoar. excess'of ?(100 million for its Other officers for 1081) In- fiscal year ending Feb. 1, has clude: Nicholas Alfano, ,vko retail operations In seven president; John Mnkclcy, Ka.stcrn Ktntos including food secretary; John J. Ilochc, ns- nnd ilnif' units, in addition to sistnnt secretary;, Wlllliim Jt.s Ilriicilccs division. A s\x Mogc, treasurer, and Robert unit operation with talcs of "^-Ilie Chevrolet Baumnnn, financial sec- less than $20 million in 1901, retary. * tho HrndlecH division now op- Lino officers urn Cnpt. Al- erates 52 self-service stores bert While; First I.I, Wil- with Rules nt an nnnuul rato liam Mogc; 2nd U, nichiird In exccsR of $175 million. Colson and 3rd LI. Albert Mr. Kutornn will assumo his Boycr. \ now position alter Feb. 1. Value Showdown is oh 16-TOE DAILY REGKS1ER, "Wednesday, January 8, 1969 Aid Squad's GRADE A wmn Helm Goes To Wardell LARGE IDEAL HOWELL TOWNSHIP — At its 21st; annual installation acme's low dinner dance held in the Cricket Restaurant here, the Farmingdale-Howell Township First Aid Squad installed William t: Wardell as presi- prices.. plus dent of the squad. He was re- elected in December to that office. Also installed were Carlton Gordon, vice president; James Lore, secretary and sergeant; jJW stamps Garrit Dice, treasurer; Ste- phen Boyd, chaplain; Willis Parker and Lou Kolaritsch, trustees; Arthur MegiU, cap- UNBEATABLE "DAIRy" DEPT. UNBUMtlE "fROZW fOOD" OBT. UNBEATABLE VITAMIN SALE! " tain; Christopher Corey, BORDEN'S DANISH (4c Off label) IDEAL FAMILY MULTIPLE first lieutenant; and Robert bOKUtN o UAiNiiti ^4C yir laDei; «% -pi. SAVE 19c — SARA LEE ^.j Smith, second lieutenant. C £ The oath of office was ad- Margarine .. \35 Pound Coke...; iC 5o VITAMINS ministered by Richard Me- SAVE btLoMOO SAVE lrtLal250 Elvey, president of the New C e Jersey First Aid Council. PartyPizza .../S 49 The main speakers were Light N'Lively I 53 51.29 ^y St4» • Mayor Fred Rohn of Farm- KRAFT EXTRA SHARP CHEESE^ PRIDE OF MAINE • Wbt'Oe BTU OF 50-PIUS IRON ingdale and Mayor Paul French Fries...... p^ 9 M Tucker of Howell.- Cracker Barrel. Multiple Vitamins.. *1 PHItADELPHIA BRAND GOLDEN GEM - ^ |^|| BTL OF 50 —PLUS MINERALS " Second Lieutenant Robert S 19 Smith was awarded his 20- Cream Cheese. IZ Adult Vitamins.... 1 year certificate. An ambu- PRINCESS QUARTERS ' . - _ Orange Juice .. O ""* "™ BTU OF 100- , ' **. lance club plaque was shown C 1 to the membership and the Margarine.....\ ^' 15 Children's Vitamins n * guests. Macaroni & Cheese + &*>• I CUP & REDEEM The captain's report for the year 1968 was read. The squad LEG OR BREAST QUARTERS COUPONS FOR answered 737 calls during the UNBEATABLE year of which there were 122 in the Borough of Farming- VALUES! dale, 537 in Howell Township and 68 other calls. Some wmmwmmmmmg 3,08? <. man hours were ex- pended. THIS COUPON WORTH < LEGAL NOTICE Fryer Ports js SO IXTRA S&H STAMPS i o mn purchau of $1,00 or atora Lancaster 1 NOTICE 1tefttf2»ffla8Br ? _._ smmiFFs 8AI.E SUPERIOR COURT eiM.vcEnr DMSIOX MONMOUTH COUNTY ' DOCKET NO. P lM-tg The Sgultable Ufa Assurance B-o BONE-IN etaty of tbe United States. & corpora- ROASTING Rsils«nQbbll»aSe>t.Jan.1l,196?. tion ol the SUte oC New York. Plain- UMirOMCOUPONWBfAMILY. tiff T*: Msdelaiae S. Saceo, »t «U., CROSS RIB Defendants By virtue of SL writ of execution In CHICKENS ARM ROAST the ai>ove stated action to roe dl* reefed. I shall expose for sale at ROAST public Tendne, at the Court Home In tbe Borough of Freehold, County of Uonmoutb. New Jersey, on Monday the 3rd day of February. 1869, at 2 . o'clock, P.H. Eastern Standard Time. THIS COUPON WORTH Premises In the Borough of Shrews- bury. Momnouth County. New Jersey. EMOJKN_ft .DESIGNATED as lots 79* 30 IXTRA S&H STAMPS iJos. l, 2 and part or 89 as-shownon "Amended Map of Sycamore Court, «nth pun-hoi* of ofMi8-ox. far Shrewsbury, New Jersey, property of the InTestxnent and Realty Corporation made by George D. Cooper, C. E., April IS. 1929. SDEAfl. PEANUT BUTTER- BEGtNNlHO at a point In Uie north- erly side ot Sycamore Avenue where the same Interesects the westerly side of West Snd Avenue; thence (1) northerly along the westerly IMBMMBif "FROZEN MEAT" Dm. Bide of West End ATenue north 5 ITALIAN 1st CUTS ._. FIRESIDE t«Jssin*alils d-s-B Sat. Jan. I %, H6». degrees 33 minutes east 207.07 feet c LANCASTER BRAND, FROZEN' UMITOM COUPON raFAMlY. to a point In the southeast corner of lands BOW or formerly of Harold I~ Sausage. ChuckSteak ....ox47 Sliced Bacon ... 68 Bowne; thence Veal Steaks <2> In a westerly direction and along OLD HICKORY J fc CENTER CUT RIB Aftc LEG OR RUMP the southerly side of property now or LANCASTER BRAND. formerly Harold L. Bowne. north M 1 degrees 27 minutes west 150 feet - to Franks .....^ Pork Chops...... &."" a point said point being the southwest Veal Roast corner of Harold L. Bowne; theace SQUARE CUT SHOULDER SHOULDER ' m A. Beef Patties... (3) In •.*. southerly direction and RIB along the easterly line of property C ttNUATABU "DBI" DOT. THIS COUPON WORTH < now* or formerly ot John and Wil- Pork Steaks..... * 69 (at Aon. MMi. where available) liam T. Parker, south. 5 degrees 33 Lamb Roast..... •>>.• Veal Chops.. . minutes west 300 feet to a point In 'BONELESS BUTT ' m *L. 30 EXTRA S&H STAMPS! the northerly aJde of sycamore Ave- QUARTERED PORK LOIN JLQt LANCASTER BRAND COMBINATION nue: thence DOMESTIC <=> withpurchaMoftwo16-ox.pbg. < <4) In an «aaterly direction along the northerly side of Sycamore Ave- Pork Chops...... tW Pork Roast Mr Veal Cutlets..... nue south SI degrees 45 minutes east SHOULDER Boiled Ham FIRESIDE SALIINES! 190.31 feet to the point of'beginning FRESH BONELESS The above description Is In accord- |C DOMESTIC ance with survey made by Harold J. Lamb Chops. — •>. Seldln. P. B. and I* 8., 60 Broad Ground Chuck... it < Cross Rib Roast. 81. Red Bank. N. J. dated Nov. 29, Swiss Cheese IMS. Being • tbe same premises conveyed ;. to MadelaJne Sacco by dead Irom Lj>- B* mak * Co., a partnership, recorded December 1. 1965, In Book 34U of Seeds for Monnxmtb County, Page M7. Said premises are designated as Lot CONTADINA A 14. Block S2 on the Tax Map ot the WALDORF Borough of Shrewsbury, • and are com- monly known as 215 Sycamore Ave- - JMe_Shrewsbury, New Jersey. BREAKFAST TOMATO "The sale will b« made subject to BATHROOM THIS COUPON WORTH tbe fallowing: SAUCES •• -I- Such facts as aa accurate sur- vey and Inspection of the premises TISSUES PASTE would revest Plain, Mushroom, 30 EXTRA S&H STAMPS 2. Lien ot unpaid taxes. (Tax search M with punhaM of any 10 or 20 b. bag S/9/6& shows unpaid 18ST taxes of Marinara, Meat (1,182,34 plus Interest, and unpaid 1968 taxes of (1.400.08 plus Interest.) POTATOES 3. Federal, State, and Municipal acts, laws, ordinances, and regula- NAME . tions affecting the use and occupancy of the premises. 4. Restrictions and easements of ADDftBS * o record. If any. 5. Occupancy of the mortgagors, 1' isn.1«.196»; any. (Judgment contains a Judgment for possession, but a purchaser would bave to obtain his own writ of poi- S' The approximate amount of tba Judgment to be satisfied by said sale Is the sum of 130,270 together with SAVE 20c COLD WATER 15c OFF LABEL VHBUTABU "BAKatf KPT. the costs of .this ssle. SPEED-UP OHBIATAtU "MOKfOODi" DIPT. The Sheriff hereby reserve! the •M-tcu-ur Ji-aaL^ITe ^ - .-* fa^r fAr 5BrnH.*reiT,llIISIB0UfK»*JOItt right to adjourn this sale without fur Uier notice by publication. C C GOLD SWIRL Dated November 26, 1968 Bleach ^ 25 Surf Detergent. .^59 Wheat Bread 2 c THIS COUPON WORTH 40* ^ PAUL. KIERNAN, Sheriff Donald B. Jones, Atty. SACRAMENTO SAVE|6c .. <%^, IDEAL STRAWBERRY t VIRGINI.._._A LE_E ._ €lassware «.10 towardf purdMM of on* '/i-gal Jan. 8, IS, 22, 29 . • 1103.00 t BUMSOK PUBLIC NOTICE Peach Pie •°-49 "*«*•&••« THMTH < Mm AW DIPT. MIRACLE WHITE Take notice that the Planning Tomato Juice... «» J«J Preserves .. Board of Uie Boroucb of Rumson will UNCLE BEN'S • _' c |DEAIDEAL, VIRGINIA LEE _ ^ bold a meeting on January 21, 1M« CLEANER In Memorlsl Borough Hall, River Long wrain Rice... p< day of. January, 10* 2 19 1909, at 2 o'clock. P.M. Prevalllni Tlim. LIQUID WITH FREE DISH TOWEL Bird soapFeeder JV* 10c OFF LABEL ALt'->wfi, N.J. YOU PAY I ESS FABRIC SOFTENER CREAM DEODORANT BARS Tyif sp'-Tojclinate itrnount of the ALL DETERGENT luitgmenl to bu sMllsfi**-] by milil 33-oz. • all' la I In. Mliil of 112,M0 Ui««lli«t 35oz. WIU] U]« tynitm nt Ilils vnle. Liquid Dove...... 'tt 57' final Touch10c OFF LABEL bit. 69' Phase III 2 37' 2 47' J'he Hlii-rlir herrliy rrarim tli» 75" further notlire Iry inii'lltnlloti PAI'I, K1KI1NAN, dlierlff, Piled -N'lvo'iiilM'r VI. imw rill*l>ur*y, Dam«cl#, Jtunspll Jk Car. ion, Ally!, Dee, It, », »l. Jan. I ' KKIOO LINCROFT — Newman Springs Road at Hurley Road WEST LONG BRANCH —Route 36 and Broadway FAIR HAVEN —576 Rim Road t j A- ••'.... \ - Freehold Planners Set t6 OK Zoning Code , FREEHOLD — The Plan- the board last night held a Councilman Alfred E. San- ' zones to the Downtown: Busi- consolidates the highway de- er parking requirements. zoning provisions for high rise ning Board expects to approve 3'/4-hour work session with its ders, a board member, said nessmen's Association. That velopment zone, and manu- More off-street parking will apartments, which might be , a comprehensive new zoning later that the code eliminates will give the association time facturing and wholesale com- : have to.be provided for new included in the ordinance. ordinance Jan. 28 for recom- planning consultant, Charles v K. Agle of Princeton. .< • objections heard to a zoning to look it 6ver before the mercial zones into one zone.. ;?.. buildings. The board will name its mendation to the. Borough ordinance introduce^ 14 council acts on it. Council to implement the first The board reviewed the or- Certain businesses are 're isivi uThe minimum frontage in chairman, vice chairman, months ago. «• The major change in the stricted and others — par-;i&JjUJtt; e new residential zone will secretary, attorney, clerk and major zoning changes here in dinance, approving various .Major objectors then were business zone involves elim- ticularly "nuisance";. busi- minor subdivision committee ! more than 40 years. 'points in a final run-through local businessmen. Mr.. San- "^ "TSl? 70 feet, and the minimum when it meets Jan. 28. , At the lame meeting, the ' Before it adopts the code in ders last night got the board ination of some-setback and nesses which •produce noise depth, 125 feet. Parking and board will organize for 1969. its entirety. Mr. Agle said the to agree to send copies of height requirements which" or air pollution — are pro- Mrs; Eleanor Esteries re- side lot line requirements are cently resigned as chairman, i With the vice chairman, new zoning map will be ready the part of the proposed ordi- V the businessmen considered hibited. changed in all zones. Jan. 28. ..-••••> nance dealing with business but she remains a member i Anthony B. Smith, presiding, too restrictive. The measure The measure contains strict- Mr. Agle also presented of the board. MEMIIY Tentative Haslet School Budget I , /

—17 RED BANK, N.J., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1969 $502,567; Tax Hike Seen HAZLET — Although nego- reasonable salary scale," Mr. instructors for physical edu- elementary schools to accom- noted that the system is tiations with teachers have Hand said. "I won't comment cation and two in the arts modate more bus runs. operating on a minimal sur- not ended in a contract further on what the tentative and music. There are present- He said the schools will agreement on a new salary plus. .. \ budget includes." ly 272 teachers in the system. open at 8:20 a.m. instead of The budget figure break scale, the Board of Education The line item in the bud- The largest decrease in the 8:30 and the high school w'll last night adopted a tentative down is as follows: $4,167,- get for teacher salaries "for budget 'is $54,150 in contract- continue to open at 8 a.m. 559 for current expense, $225,- 1969-70 school budget of $4,- next year is set at $2,575,533, ed transportion services This will allow for schedules 927,616. 145 for capital expenditures up more than $332,000. This, The estimate is $28,850 for to include more parochial and $534, 912 for debt service. The total is up $502,567 over . Mr. Hand says, provides for next year. student pickups. Of the total $2,820,707 must this year's and hfay cost tax- increases as well as'five new Mr. Hand said the decrease Mr. Hand said he was un- be raised by taxes, with the payers as much as 50 cents high school teachers, seven at ' will be accomplished by the ' able to predict what if any remainder covered by additional per $100 assessed . the elementary level and four ' purchase of four new buses surplus would remain at the state, and federal aid and tui- value on their tax rate just specialists comprised of two and staggered openings at the end of this fiscal year and tion. for school purposes. While Board President Rob- ert J. Hand refused to specu- late on the cost.to the tax- payers because of lack of in- MCAP Defends Hiring Policy formation of the revaluation figure of the-township re- cently taken, Mayor Joseph A. .LONG BRANCH — The Monmouth Community Action meet the MCAP trustees and to become more familiar with Morales did some estimating. Program's, board of trustees responded formally yesterday the agency's work and policies. . *. to charges leveled against it by a local clergyman critical Expressing surprise and dis- Mr. Taylor said Mr. Megill will find that MCAP's board of the county antipoverty agency for having hired Paul G. members are individuals "who are committed ... to the may, the mayor saidJhe^ bud- Nastasio,;son of Long Branch Mayor Paul NastasioJx._; get with higher"than/anticipat- __cojicepLof helping people_ to helpthemselvjesJ In a sermon Sunday, the Rev. E. O. Megill, pastor of St. Tiie Rev. Mr. Megill said last nighf he really, doesnt ed and set the 50-cent-ad- Luke's Methodist Church, criticized the hiring of the youth v J ditional figure. want to discuss the matter further^ -•«* ; • ; by MCAP's manpower division. He said he "somehow feels" that MCAP is over-reacting This, he explained, was one . Young Nastasio is free in $2,500 bail as a material wit- to his sermon statements. . v^a ' ; cent per $10,000 cost based on ness in a case involving stolen property.' "If people can't be criticized they should check them- the . revaluation,_jrhich_ JheMCAP board Mondaynight authorized executive di- selves to find the reasons, why they're afraid, to face criti- brought the township's worth "rector r 1 5of~J6seph E. Taylor, Deputy Director Wflbert Russell cTsm7 he said. " " ~~ ~—~r~:^~-^~.,;... .:.. -.. ; PARTNERS— Nine-year-old Jim Barlow of Howell Township and MCOSS public to more than $100,000,000. and manpower director Albert Dalton to draft a reply to Mr. Megill said that in his sermon comments about the health nurse, Miss Meredith Martin, join forces to get Jim back on his feet after This is up from the $92,000,000 the minister's charges." ..*-*«•• MCAP-Nastasio matter "I quoted what Tread in the news-- township valuation last j two months hospttalization for second degree burns on 40 per cent of hris body. OBJECTION TAKEN 28 Electric Co., lit. 9, and driven 150 to $11,550; master's plus the rate of escalation," Mr. White Sale dicted . an • • administrative • Fields said. had one problem In tlio case, James J. Pezzella testified In I lie Central School. by Donnld K. Cnrtcr, 37, of 30 credits from $7,400 to 11,- snarl when lie learned of Ihnt of reconstructing his1 that between 500 to 600 gal- Tho budget was approved Creamery Hotid, Colts Neck. 850; and doctornto from $7,- "Without any increase in tho lons of gasoline wore found laws enacted • in September whereabouts March 15, 1008. vor. (Adv ) by a vote of 7 to 1 with The vehlclo- was traveling 050 to $12,100. turning families with depen- teacher's salary wale, the tun- Martin ltudnlck of lied .scattered about the hotel James Birmingham voting north. Mr. Birmingham Hiild he at- dent children over to tho . tatlvu lOltU-70 budget is $84,- Bank, representing Nicholas March 15. There wero more Uniform Kale •'no." Trooper Mlelmel nisi Is In- tended many of the negotiat- county nourd, assured TIK; Ituiimun Notice I'anacclonc, Jane St., Ixmj; than 21 20-gallon plastic con- Now In '„ progress. Shirley Notice vestigating. No summons has ing sessions and "thoy wero Register the local board will The tax books will be open Branch, told tlio M-memlier tainers and 45 one-to-two gal- Shop, ItroaU St., Itcd Bank. Holmdol dog owners, obtain been Issued. not as nmicnblo as the chair- handle the situation us long for Inspection on Thursday, jury of nine men and five lon ones, he said. (Adv.) 1MB llconneif during month of Tho O.H.T. Clayton ami Son man Indicated." as necessary. January II, from 9 to !i, at tlio women to listen for inconsis- Tho 20-year veteran on tho Karthcnware House Jan. at llolnulul I'ollco llcad- Funeral Home, Adolphlu, Is In Tho budget will go before "No ono will J;O without liorougli Hall. tencies In tin) forthcoming tes- department said Mime of tho Jan. Kale. Savings up to 50%. qunrlors. Mnn. through Sat,, charge, of arrangements for dho public at tho Feb. 11 food In tills township," i ho Jolm W. Carton. Jr. timony of witnesses. The In- plastic containers wcn> In tho 7B5C River ltd., Fair Haven. hours 0 til 3:30. (Adv.) Mrs. Urocklcbank. school election. promised. ' Assessor (Adv.) consistencies will grow and hallway and ulxmt 33 small- (Adv.) 18—THE DAILY BEGJSTER, Wednesday, January 8, 1969 Paris Has Parking Problems after-midnight restaurant ar- PARIS (AP) - A French- maximum of 250,000 cars to that the bulk' of the. parking Board Term space is taken by persons ea. man will drive around and circulate. Adding 250,000 plac- The rates are expected to around the block,. then take es into" which autos are working downtown rather Extended In a chance on parkirig'tllegaUy squeezed illegally, they come than shoppers. They peti- be 50 centimes — 10 cents — rather than pay for' under- up with accommodations tioned for a new system to an hour for the first four Correction ground garages placed at his for 730,000. increase turnover. hours, low enough to attract Approved-in principle, the serious shoppers. For the FREEHOLD — To correct disposal at great expense. But nearly two million cars So the City Council is going are registered in Paris and new plan is to rope off 16 next four hours they would a technical error, the Board large areas, including the fr nc wtlich would of Freeholders yesterday ex- to try somethin new: hire a the suburbs. The in-and-out rise to 1 a > tended the term of Victor E. crew of the toughest men in movements alone sometimes Place de la Concorde, where make the cost per day the Grossinger of Middletown for town to extract hourly rates climb to 800,000 per day. the U.S. Embassy is located, same as in the garages. To one year on the county Board on thousands of legal parking The motorists for years and the Avenue des Champs- government hopes the park- of Recreation Commissioners. spots now used free. screamed for more off-street Elysees. era will spraad out evenly parking, so the city has cre- among all the facilities. Freeholder Benjamin H; That's how bad the French Placed in charge of each capital is suffering from auto- ated 20,000 "new parking plac- area would be a former beef The City Council also thinks Danskin said the expiration es all over town. Many are in a motorists .would be far less date for Mr. Grbssinger's mobilism. While it may not heaver from the Paris central be alone, its experiences may deep underground garages in market — those husky, blood- tempted to try to cheal tprm was incorrect in that it the richest downtown areas. a heavy beef heaver than a expired the same year as be unique. ' spattered men who add folk- •The statistics are suffocat- But jnany motorists think lore to the city's popular parking jneter. another member's, Donald, E. they cost too much, an aver-1 McKelvey of Wall Township? ing al by themselves. Traffic engineers say there are 230,- age of 5-6 francs — ?1 to $1.20 on Dec." 31,' 1970. — for all day. , The term of the chairman, 000 legal parking places in the city, and space for a The underground garages • who retired as a freeholder have at times been only 10 in 1960 after 18 years on the- per cent full. The best so far board, was extended one year has been 55 per cent, and that to Dec. 31, 1971 so that the Bound Over in an area where night life terms of the men will expire FENCED IN — A group of 83 Viet Cong prisoners sit.under guard in a barbad wire crowds tte streets almost as in different years.. enclosure after their capture-In South Vietnam's U Minh forest. Elements of the For Jury much as daytime activity. The freeholders set a light South Vietnamese 21st Infantry Division on a. 10-day operation moved into the agenda for the regular meet- SHREWSBURY-Two cous- Another poll found that 9 ing so they could resume forest, a 200-square-mile swampland uted ai a Viet Cong base, and took the pris- ins Were bound over to the out of 10 suburban, commut- county budget meetings, be- . IAP Wirephotbl Monmouth County Grand ers never use the garages, Sale values and new cruise stuff are cheek by fowl oners. and Oiree-fourths of all driv- at Natelsons J. Kridel, ing held daily. They hope to Jury Monday night on ers in ;the area are categori- introduce the budget during a charge of possessing stolen cally against paid parking of the last week of January . DENNIS THE MENACE By Hank Ketchani property. any kind. . The business meeting lasted . Municipal Court Judge Wil- four minutes and IS seconds. "Tickets cost less," many FURNITURE CO. liam J. Gladding or- drivers told the pollsters. Set Lincoln dered Gregory Register, 21, Perhaps they do under the Keyport 264-0181 * of 401 - Brinly St.',» Long WEST 1 present system, which limits Branch, and Arnold Register, parking to an hour and a half feature* . . • 4* Day Dinner 18, of 111 Washington St., Red during- business hours in PS. Batik, held for the Grand Jury mean's. Plus Service WANAMASSA — The Mon- downtown areas. "Thomasviile" J mouth County Republican or- ' on a complaint signed by The motorist has a "park- between Asbury Park Charles Narnifico, trading as ^anizatlpn_ has. 'set Its sixth _ing.jiteh"_wMclLis aJteavy and Newark r - Bargataland—DO ;—Newman square paper envelope with EST. 1869 * annual Lincoln Day Sinner Springs Road. two openings. He revolves the m130 for Feb. 10 at the Terrace The cousins were arrested disk inside so that his time OpenMon. andFri. Evenings 'til9 4» Asbtirj Park- Restaurant, Wicfcapecko last Dec. 19 by Eatontown po- of arrival appears in one op- _ '. . . _..__.____.__, *m e_> •_••_• .<*••_»•«_• _«_•» .•_•..•__ Drive, here. lice and charged with a gas ening, giving the time he Newark Buses Rep. F. Bradford Horse, R- station burglary allegedly must leave in the other. Serving: Mass., will be guest speaker committed earlier that eve- Enforcement falls to thou UNCROFT—HOtMDH ' ning. They are alleged to have GRAMAN'S at the_affairL sponsored by sands of aged men, mostly re- NEWAKK AIRPORT . the Monmouth County Repub- had two coats, valued ,at $17 tired policemen, who leave VACUUM end APPLIANCE ' an rout* to Newark , lican CojnmiUee, The Mon- each and identified by Mr. self-addressed cards as tick- 156 MONMOUTH ST. BANK, N. J. Fnquent service-, tow faref. fqtt trip mouth County Federation of Narnifico as stolen from his ets. The offender need only . PHONPHONE 747-5623 vfa Parkway and Turnpike) ^Republican Women and the store the previous month, in buy a $2 special stamp at a Ask but operator about lowcottl0.lr!p theiri possession when ar- Men's Affiliated Republican •M tobacco shop, and mail the HOOVER and EUREKA CLEANERS commuter ticket. rested. card. It works fine except FVIUC SUYKZ COOBXNATID TMNSKMT .Clubs. KINGSTON TANKS & CANISTERS Both -defendants were rep- that so -many tickets have ' The honorary chairmen of been written in recent weeks Waxen — Polisher* — Hand Cltemcn the affair are J. Russell Wool- resented by public defender Peter Shaw, and- were re- , that the tobacco shops are out SALES and SERVICE ley and Mrs. Ann D. Flynn. of stamps. Honorary co • chairmen leased to the Eatontown po- "We Service What We Sell" are Theodore J. Narozanick lice for a hearing there on The disk system is so ALL PARTS and SERVICE ON PREMISES and Mrs. Mary Coleman. charees of Detfv larceny. abused, shonowncrs complain. - Honored guests win be •I OOrfT THINK WE LOOK QflOWrW. I THINK State Sen. and Mrs. Richard • R. Stout; and state Sen. wiaxS7V0ror and Mrs. Alfred N.-...:...... ' '•' '6,050,00 If fof r any reason you fall to receive the OFFICERS ieWfortoWlbier DAVID O. EVANS as Permftt*)d by Law 81,829.15 results listed below, Elaine Powers will Chairman at the Board ond PrMtdent CAPITAL ACCOUNTS GIVE YOU 6 ADDITIONAL MONTHS FREE DOUGLAS J. SCHOHE B«ecutlve Vice PreiWenf Common Stock (Total Par Value) ...;..„ '. .;„ $ 577,500.00 LAST CHANCE , 7 Day-6 Night BETTY D. KENNEDY Number of Shares Authorized, TODAY IS JANUARY 8 2 FOR THE PRICE OP 1 CoihUc A »Kritary Package Includes: to the Board and Outstanding „.... (|'|5,000 shares) ARATUITIEl. All Oraem Fell. •' Yeu Mil com* down from 4rtu ibi EUGENE W, LANDY S MI lll -COMPLETE — Luxury mem with prlvele both. Five- Vic* Preildtnt & i i _. i •J'K-'W; •" •-• 300,000.00 court* tvinhto dlnnari dtlun. Oil. Truit Officer. 14 te a ...... 5lw 10 by Feb. 8 together cock loll partial. MoWii, Undtvrd«d Prof Its- ..A 324,465.26 3-Monfhs Plan lotlel Htiltn and Travel Covolceoe ROY U. HICKS 3-Mon by famout Bermudion lecturer. Dane. Aitlitant Vice Prttldent It ta a ...... Slie 12 by ..:... Ptb. 13 Total Capital Accounts ....: ,...M k % 1,201,965.26 Ing, EnKrlolnmen! nightly. Fr«e DAVID SIMPSON Iranioormilon le private Btoch Club, Attltlont Cnhlir 18 to or:. ... 51M 14 by Feb. 13 50 IMO fell el pswdtry pink iiMi. PER fleam ootfii ", CHARLfS MANN total Ll«bllj,l«i and Capital «. ...^$14,724,384,38 20 taa .. ... Siie 14 by....:. Ftb. 28 MONTH Only $244.00 per person Aiilttanl Vice Pretldent 6 10965 O None "• South won the first trick in 47632' dummy with the king of dubs SOUTH andj led dummy's queen of 4 AIS . diamonds for a finesse. This UAKJ "normal" play cost him his O A963 i ' contract. . ? „ + 984 West won with the king of Soath Wc«t North EaK diamonds and returned a club 1 NT Pin 3 NT All Pitt to the'ace. South took (heace* Opening lead-4 Q of diamonds and gave West a GROCERY DEFT. diamond trick. West cashed his good club - and got -.out Latest Food NEWS ... ^witiriiis^last diamond todum - the ace and returns another yj diamond through. West. The DEC MONTE Declarer discarded a spade rest is easy. SWANSON T.V. on the last diamond and then If East has all of the dia- tried tiie heart finesse. On a monds, dummy's jack forces SWEET PEAS Pelicious getting South off the hook, but a club to the ace, and now PROGRESSO ARMOUR'S BREAKFAST West won with the queen of .declarer wins a finesse witli and got out safely with the nine of diamonds. He con TOMATO CORNED * Pancake, Sausage & Potato another heart. tinues with the ace and queen * Scrambled Eggs & Sausage South could win only eight of diamonds, and then with SAUCE tricks, winding up with a mi- dummy's last diamond. BEEF HASI * French Toast & Sausage DAILY QUESTION mdaee 1-lb. Cant nus score and a red face. 8-Oz. Size Sure Play Partner opens with 1-NT (16 Large •Fancy • Vine Ripe South Is sure of four dia- to 18 points), and the next mond tricks if he plays the player passes. You hold: S— Pkgs. suit correctly. He should lead Q 9 2. H-Q 7 2 D—K 10 8 7. a heart to his hand then lead C-Q J 10. What do you say" For a low diamond toward dum- . ANSWER: Bid 3-NT. Sine* ITOMATOES my. you have 10 points in higl 101. If the diamonds break 2-2 cards you know that the com' or 3-1, South can easily win bined count is 26 to 28 points WELCH'S Betty Crocker four diamond tricks. The This should be enough to yield California Sunkist only problem arises when one a reasonable play for game. opponent has all of the miss- (A Pocket Guide to Bridgi GRAPE CAKE DELI. DEPT. ing diamonds. is available. Get your copy b; Navel If West has all of the dia- sending 50 cents to The Dail; BROCCOLI JELLY monds, dummy's Jack will Hegister, Box 3318, Gran MIXES win the first diamond trick. Central Station. New York Delicious 20-O*. Jar GENOA Bolognal Declarer leads a diamond to N, Y. 10017.) ORANGES Italian Genoa "ASTRO-GUIDE" By Ceean Thursday",, January 9 10 FOR Present—For You and Your* .. . Aspects,fa- 31. SALAMI vor the solid attitude work and financial affairs. 3l Good period to discuss possible changes with execu- Hi-C 46-Oz. tives. Speak out honestly and you wilt get honest SLICING opinions in exchange. Even though you think you are doing tine, further progress Is In the cards in By the Bunch JUICE DRINKS many charts at this time. PROVOLONE The Day Under Your Sign • Arln. BornMir. 2lf°Apr. I? Libra. Stpf. 23 fo Ocf. 22 Give precedence lo mMlere. lint Conccntriie on peranhil ad< Snow White SOFT WEAVE rt'jutrt Immtillme •cllnn; poit- vancrmrnt contingent with your VIRGINIA pon* noti-cHenilili. ipfcl»l ibllhien. A d T«urui. April 10 to May 20 Scorpio. Oct. 23 to Nov. 2f The Tmirnll'i mile mlnil ran Von ctn iFpurate I fie rltal l«*uet TISSUE cr 2-Pak. imp tile MR future immtijlntc- from (lie confuiion of idem, Be MUSHROOMS Jy, Ml promptly. att«nlivf. BAKED H AMI Gimlnl. M.y 21 to Junt 21 S*gltt*rlut. Nov.22 (o D«c.21 Temjiwlon coiilrl • rnine, you la You nlioutd 1>« Turin' in RO lodty lo»f mnmenlitm. Keep your niWtd mid tlitre ire plenty of dunce• on liunlneM. In |iron|^r> Ctncir, Jun» 27 fo July 21 Capricorn. D«c. 22 ,o J«n, 20 IllilccUinil tmilil he • Mmnliilnft; Takr i IOMR ItKik kt your tiht> WALL to WALL! SHELF to SHELF! You must SAVE 20% Work lo mlilevemeiil under cur- alinu. AcctimtR •[)|>raiitl, may rent rirllltlonl. ttlidone •iirprUf H, Un. July 21 to Aug. 21 Aqu-rlui. Jnn. 21 lo F«d. 19 Duich Majd Buiry 1-lb. Kocblor 11 ox. Sunihlno 11 ox.,. N.B.C. 16 oi. F.F.V. 11 oi. Twin Pic. Thu» li Imintfl to be *miitl>nr*|>rrlivr. DEPT. OATHEAI GAUCHO AQ0 RAINBOW VANILLA TZt RITZ TJ CHOC.. 2f 1 Virgo. Aug. 32 to Sarit. 12 Piir.i, T«b. 20 io Mirth 70 U ll11 lirt out itul »rel< new cnnliiii l« ttcefflning In* CREAMS ^ Auorimont WAFERS Crackers. n»f»n»IH« let

©Fl*1d KntcrprWfi, Ttw.i 19^9 ; j • . 20-rTOE DAILY lltGISltK, Wednesday. January 8, 1969 COUNTY FARE Leaping Steps Into the Ndw learned from general chairman Mrs. Ira Jacobs, Little Sil- By MAKGUERITE HENDERSON Hostess Marilynr.adrift in.her gold Moroccan caftan Though vice president Robert Loversidge, Little Silver, Sunday afternoon, a "step, step, leap!" in the airy new bound with black braid, greetec} guests — as did club presi- was unable to be there, treasurer Ed Weinstein, Lincroft, ver who lists among the more unusual events — a Greek dance studio of Maureen (Mrs. Thomas A.) Deakin — could dent, Mrs. A. Lee Don,". Ruiiison. Mrs. Don dressed in- and secretary Fred Colmorgen, River Plaza, attended with Sweet Tasting party at the Fair Haven home of George have sent you spread-eagle into the sangria! Sangria, my cyclamen pink — demurely be-ruffled and high-necked their wives. Also toasting were Mr. and Mrs. George, Jaeger (that's Greek?) Tzannetakis (that's Greek!) and his wife friends, is an old Spanish potion concocted of dry red bodice but with a surprise back scoop. and Mr. and Mrs. John Haig, Shrewsbury, Mr. and Mrs. Ivette, whose heritage is Puerto Rican! Also, for those with stout hearts — and strong ankles — there will be some table wine, cinnamon sticks, cloves,' assorted chopped-up Chairman of the popular party (this year's attendance Carl Gerding, Rumson, and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jimminaro family fun on ice (if there is ice- on McCarter's Pond, Jan. fresh and frozen-fruits, lots of ice and a soupcon of club topped 125) was Mrs. Harold E. Williams, Bed Bank. Aid- and Mr. and Mrs. Dan Gallop, Little Silver. 19) at a skating party organized by Mrs. Anthony Close and soda. Its service in that usually more business-like enclave ing and abetting were Mrs. Thilomay Serpico, also Red The Exchange Club of Greater Red Bank is a service Mrs. Robert Schuermann, Fair Haven. Hot stuff al fresco up above Natelsons J. Kridel in Bed Bank, Bank; Mrs. £. Eugene Fisher, Monmouth Beach; Mrs. John organization which will celebrate its first full year of being will be served on the Schuermann property which, as luck was by way of a surprise studio-warming Baumfalk, AHenhurst; Mrs. Laurie Bouwmeester, Shrews- by enthusiastic (but occasionally muscle- this June. At a dinner meeting at the Union House last night, would have it, borders ye old skating spot. bury; Mrs. Harry S. Koch, Ooeanport; Mrs. J: Crawford plans were publicized re the crime prevention week the sore) members of Maureen Deakin's adult Compton, Belford, and Mrs. Joseph F. Kiernan and Mrs. There are scads of other affairs which start today and Interpretive dance class. club is planning for February — to be directed by Capt. Jacob White, both Rumson. Frank J. Mazza of the Red Bank Police force. shall continue through Jan. 23. Among them and their _WeU-wishers, in addition to Maureen's Mrs. Rowse's antique candelabra and Mrs. White's ar- hostesses are: two progressive dinners — one in Little Sil-. attorney-mate, Thomas, included: her par- rangement of yellow mums and white snapdragons (snapped Benefit Art Auction ver with Mrs. Ronald Goff, Mrs. James Simes, Mrs. Robert ents-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Deakin, fresh from her own greenhouse?) decorated the hors d'oeuvre Cea and Mrs. H. P. Tasker participating - and .the other Rahway; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Neary table — and were as lovely to look at as those hors d'oeuvres The Monmouth Affiliate of the Children's Psychiatric in Rumson with Mrs. Martin Lyford^Mrs. Thomas Maher, (her parents) and Mr. and Mrs. Elson were to taste! Center will hold a champagne preview, sale and auction of Mrs. Richard Grimm and Mrs. John Lawson furnishing Guiterman Jr., River Plaza; Mrs. Lester prints by Helen Siegl, Saturday, Jan. 18, 5-7 p.m., at the the fare. Also, Mrs. Schuermann will get off the. icevand Simon and Mr. and Mrs. George Whit- Henderson Travelers Meet ; Old Mill Gallery, Tinton Falls. into her kitchen to prepare for a recipe party (to which more, Little Silver; Mr. and Mrs. Gustav Rhein, Matawan; guests bring their recipes and tasty samples). A recipe Mrs. James Parker Jr., Red Bank; Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Lois and Charles Edelmann, Rumson, holiday-hopped to Smaller prints by Mrs. Siegl will be sold throughout Portugal and Spain to get away from it all; then had din- party will also be given by Mrs. Fred Armstrong, Little Sil- Crocker, New Shrewsbury, and Red Bank artist Evelyn the preview. Later, Schuyler Van Vechten Jr., Monmouth ver, while Mrs. Walter Oakden, also Little Silver, will hold Leavens, whose drawing of a dancer is already on display.. ner in Lisbon (their first port of call) with Joan and Andy Hills (creative genius at Abercrombie & Fitch) shall switch Zakanych, Atlantic Highlands, dined on Christmas Day on a colonial show and sale (of pewter, milk glass, wrought From Fair Haven were Mrs. Bernard Levy and Mr. and from advertising to auctioneering as a collection of Mrs. ironware, etc.) and friends of Mrs. George Conner, Rum- the Algarve Coast with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Muelberger, Siegl's large prints go on the block. Mrs. George Martin; from Lincroft, Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel Rumson, and bumped into across-the-river neighbors Judge son, will convene over coffee cups. Katell and Mr. and Mrs. Martin Rudnick; from Humson, and Mrs. Lawrence A. Carton Jr., Locust, while browsing Benefit chairman is Mrs. Edward B. Shaw, Fair Haven. Among other hostesses are: Mrs. Jacobs, Mrs. Gerald Mr. and Mrs. Martin Lyford; from: Middletown, Mrs. Sid through* a Portuguese museum! Assisting her are: Mrs. Robert Nugent, Mrs. Dudley Sum- Peterson, Mrs. Donald Leahan, Mrs. Paul Berthlaume, Mrs. Sawyer and Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Guadagmino; and from mers and Mrs. George CampbeU, also Fair Haven; Mrs. • Actually, Mrs. Edehnann, Mrs. Zakanych and Mrs. Hayden Evans* Mrs. John Koenig, Mrs. Leslie.Htagle, Mrs. Atlantic Highlands (where the Deakins reside) came Mr. Robert Anderson, Mrs. Bruce Crichton and Mrs. Frederick Muelberger are all teachers in the Knoll wood School, Fair J. E. Van Wagener, Mrs. Thomas Offerdahl and Mrs. Mario and Mrs. Walter Hanson. Westphal, Rumson, - and Mrs. Thomas Shafer Jr., Little Haven. But their trips were individually planned and not Pistacchia, all Little Silver; Mrs. Daniel Hudgings, Mrs. Silver. mutually discovered until four days before school recessed. Lee Phillips and Mrs. Nate Beekley, Rumson, and Mrs. - Cheer Party Tickets, nominally priced, may be reserved by,calling James Leonard and Mrs. Harvey Sharer, Fair Haven. The Rumson residence of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick J. New Year Toast "" Mrs. Joseph L. Davidson, Ward Avenue, Rumson. Party proceeds shall augment the John H. Daniels Jr. Bowse must seem like y Sonie~officers and mefflbm-of-aie--Exehange-Club-of— Scholarship Fund which was established in memory of the bore of the Woman's Club of Little Silver and their mates. Greater Red Bank "exchanged" holiday greetings over Active'Newcomers late administrator of Riverview Hospital. The first scholar- Sunday evening's Holiday Cheer Party was the second such cocktails last week at the Rumson home of club president The Benefit Bridge Week sponsored by the Newcomers ship in Mr. Daniels' name will be awarded this June to a held there: And in seasons past, the- spacious house and and Mrs. Ronald'Jacobs. The party followed a board meet- Club of Rumson, Fair Haven, Little Silver and Shrewsbury graduate ° of. Rumson-Fair Haven Regional or Red Bank grounds served as the setting for the club's steak roasts. ing (lasting all of 15, minutes) in the Jacobs' dining room. — has blossomed into a Fortnight of Fund-raisers; This we High School who plans to major in hospital administration. For Designer Sarmj It's the Ultrafeminine Look By LOUISE COOK ganza you can find," horizon- a'maribou bolero over black of men's tie silk and match- Amdated Press Writer & tally, banded in satin ribbon crepe, satin sashed pants, ing actual men's ties she also NEW YORK (AP) - "I and trimmed and sashed in with the midriff left bare. designs. like women to look like wom- black satin. Pants for Uomewear The pants. Trigere~ showed en and look pretty," Sarmi No Bare Skin Pauline Trigere, who for at home—and they opened said ~as "he—introduced—hls- —Most of Sarml's dresses had,, -showed. earlier-Monday~after-_ her—collection — spring and resort collection long sleeves — sheer, but noon, agreed that pants were triangles, of skin, just above at the American Designer long. "I'm so fed up to see strictly for at home. "I don't the waist, between pants and FABMINGDALE — A rec- ner to receive a gift 'for her- the store manager at will participate in the addi- Showing. bare skin on' the street," he think that women. . . should cutaway tops, fastened only ord 259 Brownie and Junior self and a gift for her troop. Sutphen's. tional bake-off scheduled to said. "Bare skin is good only take the pants away from the by a button or two. Girl Scouts will compete in six Miss Eleanor Vieweg, home Sarmi said that in his de,- During the same week 44 be held at a new'location, the signs, "You don't see navels. for bedrooms." men," she said. There was more skin show- "separate-Girl Scout Bake-offs economist of the Jersey Cen- Scouts from the Bayshore, Better Housekeeping Shop, 129 Despite his disclaimer, Sar- Miss Trigere had no qualms, ing in a black jersey bolero at six different store locations tra* Power and Light Co., You don't see bosoms. You Hazlet, Holmdel and Matawan N. 35, Eatontown. This con- don't see behinds." mi did present a black dress however, about stealing fab- and skirt combination which throughout the area served by is in charge of the program. test will be judged by Miss Neighborhoods will participate He called the ultrafeminine with matching stole, trimmed rics from the men. Several bared a large section of mid- Monmouth Council, it was an- Vieweg and Marie Hoffman, A total of 59 Scouts of the in a bake-off to be held at appearance "the look I love in pom pons, bare backed and dresses were made of plaid riff and which was tied to- nounced today. Colts Neck, Englishtown, Sears, Roebuck and Co., 64 home . economists. Thomas '. plunging to the waist. "For and tweed fabrics she select- gether only by a huge t t Dunlap is the dealer represen- — because it reminds me of Bake-offs have been sched- Farmingdale- North Howell, West Front St.,NKeyport. Mrs. once," he said, "skin. The ex- ed from men's suiting charts tulip running from shoulder tative. Nick Di Guglielmo is my youth." uled for-four weeks; two will Freehold-Freehold Township, Rose Kane, and Miss Marie and she showed ascots made to floor. manager of the Better House- For daytime, Sarmi showed ception proves the rule." . be held this week;, two during Marlboro - Morganville, and Hoffman, home economists, Shirtwaists will act as judges. Ted For- keeping Shop. soft, fluid clothes, belted or. Jan. 13-17, one from Jan. Southern Howell area will par- sashed. There were none of Long evening dresses, many ticipate in the bake-off through tier, dealer representative, 27-31, and another from Feb. At Sears Middletown the floral patterns seen In oth- of them shirtwaist style, Jan. 10 to be held at Sutphen's will assist. Richard Hem is During the same week 33 er collections, but there were swirled and swirled with Cooperative Project Radio Store, 27 E. Main the Keyport Sears store man- Scouts from Atlantic High- lots of stripes/ particularly yards of chiffon — yellow, Girls participating nave al- Street, Freehold. Mrs. Ethel ager. lands, Beacon, Fairview, horizontal ones. pink, blue, white and orange; IflNCROFT — Mrs. Arthur County chairman - of this ready won their individual Clayton and Miss Vieweg, From Jan. 13 through 17, a Harmony, Highlands, Iincroft- There were several varia- Necks were scooped or high, Bent, Mrs. Harold Jani and group is Mrs. John W. Cava- troop Bake-off., home economists, win act as total of 28 Scouts from Eaton- River Plaza, and Middletown, tions of the shirtwaist, includ- softly cut. Mrs. Walter Lobo, acting gar- nagh of Freehold. There will be a Brownie and Judges. Duncan Kelly and Rob- town, Fort Monmouth, New Pajamas — strictly for at den therapy chairman, all will Bake-off at the Sears, ing a signature dress in white Mrs. Cavanagh will be the Junior Girl Scout: winner for ert Morris, dealer representa- Shrewsbury, Oakhurst-Deal, borne wear — usually appear members of the Lakeridge Roebuck and Company store, with themame "Sarmi" in speaker at tomorrow's meet- each Bake-off with each win- tives, will assist. Roy Hyers is Shrewsbury and Wanamassa,. under a long skirt. The ex- Garden Club of Madison 1500 Rt. 35, Middletown, orange, green, blue and pink. ing of the Lakeridge Garden ception was an outfit Sarmi Township, recently .asssisted Judges will be home econo- For evening, there was a dub of Madison Township. mists Mrs. Kane and Mrs. shirtwaist in "the thinnest or- called his "powder puff" — the Garden Club B.F.D., Nay- esirik *and New Shresbury She will speak about Garden Clayton. Frank Lo Presti, Therapy at Marlboro Hospi- dealer representative, will as- Garden Clubs in giving a January 1 tal.^ She also will discuss the sist. Alvin Pollack is the ap- Christmas party for patients • of Marlboro State Hospital. rewarding wor£: available~(T pliance manager of the Mid- local garden dub members in dletown Sears Store. The party was held at the First Unitarian Church of Lin- the occupational therapy de- partment of the hospital's' —.The...BaJce-pft_scfeednJe(Lfer_ croft. greenhouse.^ . Jan. 27 through, 31 at Fielder These clubs are all part of and Warner, 1717 "F" Street, the Area VIII Garden Clubs The meeting will be held at South Belmar, will have 60 Green Thumb corps of hospi- 8:30'p.nr in the Magnolia Scouts participating. tal volunteers. The Monmouth Inn, Rt. 70, Matawan, Final Bake-off to be held is scheduled for Feb. 3-7 at Sears, Roebuck and Co., Third Marie Golden Wedding DRESSES-SLACKS SUITS—TOPS 25% OFF and Union Avenues, Long Branch, with 35 Scouts sched- FREEHOLD - The 50th Hotel, .hosted by their son, All « - uled to participate from Fan- wedding anniversary of Mr. William Jr. Haven, Little Silver, Ixmg and Mrs. William Bresnahan Mrs. Bresnahan, the for- SLACKS and SKIRTS Branch, Red Bank, Rumson, ST., Spring St., was observed Seaside, and West I. t mer Miss Hannah Appiegate, IMPORTED THME-PIECI Sunday at a surprise dinner daughter of the late Mr. and Branch. Judges will be »»..«. party held in the American Mrs. Holmes F. Appiegate, WOOL SUITS Vieweg and Miss Hoffman, Bradley Beach, and Mr. Bres- home economists, assisted by IMPORTED—WOOL nahan were married Jan. 4, Thomas Dunlap, dealer repre- Safety Topic 1919, at 8:30 p.m. in the rec- KNIT DRESSES sentative. Norman Henry is Before Club tory of the Ascension Church, the Sears Long Branch store Bradley Beach, with Rev. •LUE FOX-TRIMMED MATAWAN - Monty Coul- manager. John J. O'Hara officiating. son, Rutgers University safe- SKI JACKETS NINTH CITATION — Mr.. Marguerite E. Johnson, ty officer, was the speak- They resided in Bradley • LAMI-TRIMMED ' Middlefown, receiVat an ouhranding and sustained er at the meeting of The Beach until 1934, when they moved to Freehold, Mr. Bres-^ Elmaros superior performance citation with cash award from Woman's Club of Matawan SKI JACKETS Monday in the clubhouse. nahan was an electrical con- Col. Harold J. Crochet, director, Department of Com- MELTON RESTAURANT His topic was "Safety In tractor, and was the movie HWY. IS SOUTH AMBOY, N, J. mand Communications, Army Signal School. This cita- the Home." picture projectionist In the TOGGLE COATS tion' is the ninth Mrs, Johnson has received in her 20 Mr. Coulson served as Safe- Freehold Theaters. He is HARDWOOD CHARCOAL now associated with his son MELTON years of federal sorvica as a secretary-stenographer. ty' Consultant to Rutgers PORTERHOUSE while working with the Amer- with the Freehold palry Inc., BENCH WARMERS STEAKS (10-oz.) Employed in tho Administration Division, Department ican Insurance Group. In Spring St. .•*•-'••'• SPECIAL LOT Salad, Bafcod Potato 1 flr of Command Communications, Mrs. Johnson it t 1957, he was appointed uni- Mrs. Bresnahan Is active in and GARLIC BREAD • • »3 graduate of Middletown Township High School. She versity'safety officer at Rut- the Freehold Borough and WOOL SKIRTS SMORGASBORD 3.BS and her husband, Clarence, live at 88 Oak Hill Rd. gers. He also served «even- Township Hospital Auxiliary yearg as safety director In WEDNESDAY thru fUNDAY The coupfo has two children, Donna and William,' nnd the Woman's Society for MELTON—FIUUNID the field of Industry. tho Christian Service of 7-14 BENCH WARMERS He is a member of The the United First Methodist American Society of Safety Church, Freehold. 7-14 TOGGLE COATS Auxiliary Engineers, The American In- Tho couple hns three chil- To Slate ' dustrial Hygclno Afi.soclntlon dren; Mrs. Dorothy Potta, PRE-TEEN PEA COATS Rumson Reading Institute and The Veterans of Snfoty Colorado Springs, Col,; Mrs. Card Partiei Engineering Society. Audry (Fred) Fitch, Mana- after-school supplementary classes in Mrs. Bcrnadcun uarr was Bciuan; and William Jr. There 'MANY OTHER VNADVERTISED SPECIALS" MATAWAN - Tho Mata- hospitality chairman. ,wan Borough Auxiliary nre W grandchildren. READING - ENGLISH - MATH to Bayshoro Community Hospital will meet Monday at INVENTORY CLEARANCE FACTORY 8:15 p.m. In tho Trinity Kpls- - First Grade through College copal Church Hall, West OUTLET Court. SUBSTANTIAL LUCY'S Among things to bo dis- 235 Hopo R'd., Now Shrowibury 542-4777 cussed will bo the plans for (ho card parties to no held REDUCTIONS! \ during tho month of Fob- Immrilialo Delivery BRIDGE AVE. and FRONT ST. 747-0108 RED BANK jrimry. OPEN; THURSDAY and SATURDAY 10-6; FRIDAY 10-8 RUSSELL C.RANNEY I Also on tho program for DIRECTOR tho evening will bo a film on Huffman & Boyle * i K the printing nnd editing of Itt. 35 Cln-lc • Eatontown, N. J. 5^2-1010 tho New York Time* Wednesday, itn. 8, 1969—21 Doetsch' JarreU THE UMIY REGISTER Nuptials Announced NEW HONMOUfH — Miss bridesmaids were (he Misses Deborah Lynne, Jarrell, Lori Hill and Susan Reynolds. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. An- Ernest Schaaf, step brother drew J. Jarrell, 2 Canterbury of the bridegroom, was best Prattini-St. Pierre- Court, Middletown,'and Ger- man. Ushers were Paul Dai- METAIRIE, La—The wed- bridegroom, and Mrs..Made-" Louisiana State University, hard" K. Doetsch "were mar- ley and Thomas Cove. ding of Miss Crystal Louise line Troups. Baton Rouge, where she was ried Saturday ,-lfcre- in St. A- reception was held in the St. Pierre, daughter of Mr. The best man was Chris- a member of Alpha Chi Ome- Mary's Catholic Church. Holmdel Motor Inn. The cou- and Mrs. Joseph Roland St. tian P. Callens. Groomsmen- ga sorority, Phi Kappa Phi The Aridegroom is the son ple will reside in West Long Pierre, 4 Farrell Drive, Mid- honorary society, and Sweet- of Mr. and Mrs. John Schaaf, Braiich, ^- -.. -;. dletown, N. J., to Kenneth were Thomas A. Valy, Mich- heart of Tau Kappa Epsilon 34 Waackaack Ave., Keans- The bride and the bride- John Prattini, son of Mr. andV'ael A. Patterson, Robert E. fraternity. She teaches Eng- burg. ; groom are graduates of Mid- Mrs. Frank Prattini of Metai- Anderson and Dan M. Scheu- lish in the BatonRouge school The Rev.: Charles F. Kelly dletown Township High rie, took place Dec. 28 here ermann, the bridegroom's system. celebrated the Nuptial Mass School. They are attending in St. Catherine of Siena cqusin. Ushers were Hugh T. and officiated at the double Monmouth College. Mrs. Church. The bridegroom will gradu- ring ceremony. Doetsch is "majoring in soci- Longacre and Richard Dale ate from Louisiana State Uni- Miss Jane O'Leary, Middle- ology and her husband is ma- Mrs. Kenneth Olexy was Robinson. matron of honor. Also attend- versity in May with a degree town, was maid of honor. The joring in accounting. ing the bride were the Misses A reception was held in the in industrial management. Grande Ballroom of the Fon- Mrs. Kenneth Prattini Denise and Diana St. Pierre, The couple'will reside in (The former sisters of the /bride; Kay tainbleu Hotel, '• '. Mrs. Phillip DeCarlo Quigley 'Matthews Seheuermann, cousin of the The bride is a graduate of Baton Rouge. • Crystal St. Pierre) (The former Lynn Allison) EATONTOWN-Miss Diane chael Nevin, Al Pockovits and Marie Matthews, daughter of Robert "Constantine. .Mrs. Gerhard Doetsch DeCarlo* Allison Mr. and Mrs. Irving Mat- A reception was held in thews, 76 High St., was mar- ''Crystal Brook Inn. (The former Deborah Jarrell) ' SEATTLE, Wash. — Christ chele DeCarlo, sister of the Her husband, a graduate of ried Dec. .28 to Robert Phil- The bride is a graduate of Engagements the King Catholic Church was lip Quigley, son of Mrs.' Ed-- Monmoufh Regional' High bridegroom; Mrs. John AUi-" ' Parsons College, Fairfield, ward Quigley, 137 Main St., the setting here Dec, 21 for son, sister-in-law of the bride, Iowa, attended DePaul Uni- • School and Orange Memorial Keansburg, and the late Mr. Hospital School of Nursing the marriage of Miss Lynn and Miss Mary Guinness. versity Law School, Chicago, Irene Allison, daughter of Mr. Quigley. -;" Before her marriage she was Ray DeCarlo was his bro- HI. He is a member of Kappa and Mrs. John H. Allison Sr., ther's best man. Ushers were The Nuptial Mass was cele- employed at Columbia-Pres- Sigma fraternity, the New- byterian Hospital, New York of. Seattle, to Phillip Rafael John Allison Jr., the bride's • brated by the rRev. William DeCarlo of Inglewood, Calif. brother, and Jerry Zahnle. man Club and the Knights of City, as a registered nurse Columbus. Mr. DeCario is em- Schneider here in St. Doro-" He is the son of Dr. and Mrs. The bride attended Everett Mr. Quigley, a graduate Ray DeCarlo, 90 Maple Ave., School of Nursing, and is a ployed by the Security Pacific thea's Catholic .Church. .engineer from' Gannon Col- Red Bank, N. J. graduate of -Lincoln High National Bank, Los Angeles. Miss Patricia Marcello was lege, Erie. Pa., is attending - A reception was held in the School, Seattle. She is a sec- He is a lieutenant in the 301st maid of honor. Also attending Officer Candidate School at home of the bride's parents. retary for the Woman's Auxil- Civil Affairs*Group of the U.S. the bride were the Misses, Ft. Belvoir, Va. Before his Mrs. James Savidge was iary to the Los Angeles County Army Reserve, Los Angeles. Bonita Batheray and Kath- induction into .the Army he matron of honor. Also attend- Medical Association, Los An- The couple reside at 810 E. leen Carl, and Mrs. John was employed by U.S Gyp ing the bride were Miss Mi- geles, Calif. LaBrea, Inglewood, Calif. Mangelli. sum, Clark. Michael Del Pietro was best The couple will reside in Miss Frltsche man. The ushers were Mi- Alexandria, Va. Miss Jimenez Miss Collins ANN LANDERS Leddy-Jimenez NeW - Jones BOGOTA, Colombia — Mrs. Joseph Jimenez of Bogota, has announced the engagement of her daughter, Miss MIDDLETOWN — Miss er's best nan. Ushers were MartRiTJimenez," 309 Monroe Ave., Asbury-Park.-N.- J.,-to- _^ Jeanne J. Jones, daughter of Gary Evenson, the bride- Stephen Gerard Leddy, son of Mrs. Dolores Manning Leddy j -MMr-*Morton—H^-Jones—Jr— 28 Vine Court, Long Branch, N. J. Miss Jimenez;is the 1511 Rustic Drive, Oakhurst, Humes and Ronald Krajno- - Dear Ann Landers: Please universities — they are great. Ann Landers? '•— JUDGE Mrs. Robert Quigley daughter also of the late Joseph Jimenez. A' May wedding is give me a chance to reply to - and the late Mr. Jones, was vich. - planned. But the loud mouths on those G.L.Q. married here Dec. 21 to Navy The bride, a graduate of (The former Diane Matthews) "Concerned Dad" - the fath- campuses are not representa- Dear Judge: I would have Miss Jimenez is employed by Aerological Research er who'complained that to- Lt. (j.g.) Richard C. Nell. He Middletown Township High tive of the student body. tapped the lady on the shoul- School, is an alumna of Mon- Inc., Asbury Park. day's colleges and universities is the son of Mr. and Mrs. • As far as sex is concerned, der, informed her that her Sydney Nell, 104 Orchard Hill mouth College, West Long Her fiance is a student at Monmouth College and is are nothing taiore than open kids take to college the mor- hairdo was obstructing my brothels" "sup- Drive, Lincroft. Branch, where she was a employed at the U. S. Post Office, Red Bank. als they learned at home. If—-vieWi-and-ask that-she-move- -member of "Delta Zeta soror- ported by tax- n€r nea T^TfiiTRev. Robert ETLeng-~ you don't trust your son alone d about six inches to ity and Alpha Psi Omega hon- payers. I with a girl, send him to a the side. ler officiated at the ceremony could "take a girl, send him to a in. Christ Episcopal Church. orary drama fraternity-. Prior Jiannine-Cpllins ' - • . nursery, not to college. — to her marriage, she taught his arguments Ann Landers' new book, . A reception was held in LINCROFT — Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Collins Jr., 9 : : North Carolina State U. speech and drama at Shore apart sen- t %"- i "Truth Is Stranger ...," tells Scriven Hall, Ft. Monmouth. Majestic So., have announced the engagement of their'daugh- Thanks, Ann, for giving us Regional High School, West tence by sen- her own story of 13 years as The bride was escorted by ter, Miss Barbara Jean Collins, to John'William ' Jiannine, tence, but a chance to be heard- — advisor to millions. $4.95 at Long Branch. son of Police Lt. and Mrs. Philip A. Jiannine, 44 Throck- since space is N.C.S.U. bookstores. ..•,:.'. >• Dr. William J. Zapcic. Her husband, a graduate of morton Ave., Red Bank. limited, I'll Dear N.C.: You're welcome. Ann Landers will be glad to The matron of honor was the same high school, is an Miss Collins is a student at Middletown Township High stick to the And now a ward from a Har- help you with your problems. Mrs.t Gary Evenson, the- bride- - alumnus of Rutgers Univer- School. central vard dean: Send them to her in care of groom's sister. Also attending sity, New Brunswick. He is Mr. Jiannine is employed by Natelsons J. KrideL Bed Issues. Dear Dad: Colleges are not this newspaper enclosing a the bride were Miss Patricia a navigator on the U.S.S-. BanK t^lfcrrfitaiBpedn^sejf^addMssed •ent- Mahoney. Mrs. Ludwig Coco ^Charleston. were correct when you said doesn't know how to stay velope. dMy G Askelandr- —The-couple-will-reside -in- colleges aren't what they used sober, drive a car safely, and James Nell was his broth- Norfolk, Va. Maffeft-Fritsche to be. In some ways, perhaps, respect girls, I suggest you bring him back home. The Krafts • LITTLE SILVER — The engagement of Miss Patricia they are not as good, but in Bender-- Lantry Anne Fritsche to Rodney Lee Maffett has been announced more ways they are better. Colleges are supposed to ed- Have Daughter It's harder to get into a good ucate, not serve as custodial LONGVIEW, Tex. - Mr. by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Fritsche, 460 Prospect institutions for students. More NAVESINK — Miss. Janet Miss Karan Slaterbeck was Ave. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Maffett, Mentor, college than it was in your and Mrs. David W. Kraft, of day, and harder to Stay in. to the' point, if you and your Eileen Lantry, daughter of maid of honor. Ohio. An August wedding is planned. • Longview, became the par- Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Lan- Walter Joyce Jr. was best wife failed to do your job as ents of a daughter born here Miss Fritsche is a junior at Culver-Stockton College, You seem worried that your parents, don't expect us to try, Medford, was married man. Mrs. Kichard Nell Canton, Mo., majoring in physical education. -: .. son will spend all 'his time Jan. 3, in Good Shepherd here Dec. 22 to Anthony Mar- The bride is attending- the salvage him. Sir John Wolfen- Hospital. Mr. Kraft is the son (The former Jeanne Jones) Mr. Maffett is a junior at the same college, majoring 'making but, carrying signs den said, "Schoolmasters and tin Bender, 37 Gooseneck Monmouth Medical Center in business and economics. with dirty words, and setting of the Rev. and Mrs. Harry Point Road, Oceanport. He is School of Nursing. parents exist to be grown out W. Kraft of Central Baptist fire to the main buildings. of." Harvard Pean, Cam- the son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Mr. Bender is a graduate of Why? The percentage of kids Church, Atlantic Highlands! Bender, Westfield. bridge, Mass. - N. J. Mrs. Kraft is the for- the Philadelphia College of FACTORY WAREHOUSE. who do. this, is small, and The Rev. Gilbert Fell offi- Dear Dean: Amen, brother, mer Judith Myers of Leo- Pharmacy, and is a pharma- usually they don't last iong. ciated at the ceremony in cist at Monmouth Medical amen. nardo, N. J. PIANOS The overwhelming majority Navesink Methodist Church. Center, West Long Branch. BOUGHT. SOLD, TUNED of college students study long- Dear Ann: We. waited eight. A reception was held in the The couple will reside at 37 REPAIRED, MOVED - er and harder than you did. weeks for good seats to a STORK SHOWER honie of Walter Joyce Jr., 9 Gooseneck Point Road, Ocean- They must in order to survive. great musical — eighth row, MIDDLETOWN — Mrs. Wil- Ithaca Place, Oceanport. port. 44 SOUTH ST. FREEHOLD There is more to learn and center.- Tyro minutes before liam Stewart, 6 Helen Lane, the competition is deadly. The the curtain went up, a lady Hazlet, was honored at a sur- kid who can't make it is boot- seated herself directly in front prise stork sliower given by ed out to make room for of .me. She had a two-story Mrs. Jess Boyle, Mrs. Albert someone who can. hairdo which stood mysteri- GiHen and Mrs. Ernest Merg- JANUARY CLEARANCE You sound as if all schools, ously erect —10 inches above ner in Mrs. Mergner's home, are like Columbia and Berke- her empty skull. 60 Jefferson -St. Twenty-seven Miss Zambuto Miss Thomas - - Miss Kulbick,, ley.. I'm not, knoehing these What would you have done, guests attended. Krenkel-Zambuto OPEN OLD BRIDGE — Mr. and Mrs. Alfonso Zambuto, 6 Wendy-Drive,-announce the engagement of their daughter, 3 DAYS ALE Miss Frances Theresa Zambuto, to Richard Henry Krenkel, gon of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Krenkel, 66 Lincoln Court, ONLY! Keansburg. A Sept. 8 wedding is planned. i Miss Zambuto is a laboratory technician at the Elizabeth General .Hospital. • , Thursday Her fiance is employed by Waldron and Harding, Somerset, as a laboratory technician. Friday COMPLETE STORE BUYERS 747-9894 10 to 9 187 NEWMAN SPRINGS RD., SHREWSBURY Tagliareni-Thomas Sat. to 6 AT THE A&P SHOPPING CENTER EATONTOWN — The engagement of Miss Janice Marie Thomas, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William F. Thomas, 11 Park Ave., to Donald Richard Tagliareni, son of Mr. and Mrs. Domlnick tagliareni, Bayonne, N.J., was announced SELLING OUT... the entire stock of by her parents-at a Christmas Day_J!n.ner_party in their, home. " one of Philadelphia's most popular shoe salons. See this unusual Miss Thomas is a junior at Jersey City State College, majoring in elementary education. - - Her fiance is majoring in English at the same college. selection of all new 1967 high styles in women's shoe fashions . . .

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\ Shore ffi Piners Whip Wave; wood, as the Piners held Long to create another deadlock. the third period, taking the much for a game Raritan Middletown Township, The victory left Middletown % stands alone on- top of the". undefeated (4-0) against- "A" Branch to just 16 points in DeCausey made the 1,000th lead at the midway mark of club. Shore Conference "A" Divi- opponents and 7-2 against all- the second half. point of his career a big one the stanza. Joe Hoffman Down, 39-28, at halftme, the sion standings today, but it comers. Long Branch dropped With Chico Jones hitting for when he knotted the contest canned 13 points in the quar- Rockets charged in the third took a second half surge by. into a second place tie with 11 points and Tom Williams at- 55-aH with 1:20 to go in ter to spark Middletown's 29- period and closed to within the Lions and a helping hand Lakewood, both at 3-1. The for all 10 of his markers in the game, and Jim Ross put 12 bulge and a 47-38 lead four points, 51-47. Their rally from Lakevvood to put"'Coach_" Branchers are 5-1 overall, the first half, the Green Wave the Piners ahead for good with heading into the final eight fell short, however. Roger Allgor's club there. while the Piners show a 7-1 raced out to a 38-30 first half two foul shots with 55 sec- minutes, of play. Kevin Hamm and Dal Hoo- Middletown rallied to .thwart - composite record. lead. At one point the Branch- onds to go. Freehold never threatened ver, both of whom netted 14 Freehold Regional's bid for an In other "A" games last ers had doubled up the home DeCausey racked up a thereafter, as four of its five points, gave Scott help in the upset, 67-51, while Lakewood night Neptune topped Raritan, team, 32-16. Only, a 16-point game high of 25 points to be- starters foulejJ out , in the scoring department for Nep- knocked Long Branch out "of 70-65, and Brick Township first half by Jose DeCausey come the only Lakewood per- fourth quarter. tune, which evened its "A" the ranks of-the unbeaten, 60- thumped Toms River, 69-48. kept Lakewood close. former to break (he double Baynes paced all scorers record at 2-2. The Scarlet Fli- 55, witha second half splurge with 21 points, and Hoffman ers are also, at .500; (4-4) Defense Pays The Piners drew to within figure barrier. Chico Jones of its own. Defense paid olf'for Lake- led the Green Wave with 14 finished with 16. Mike Ward overall. three points, 45-42, going into and Tom Harrington chipped the final period and they final- points, while Hampton was Raritan, also 2-2 in "A" but right behind with 13. Billie in with 11 and 10, respective- ly drew even at 45-all on-a ly. 2-3 overall, was paced by,? three-point play by DeCausey. Jones and WilliamsAeach had Fred Fread, whose 29 points 10. Chico Jones ana Williams Freehold, winless in four tied Scott for game honors. The teams exchanged buck- "A" starts and 1-7 overall, ets before Art Warner put both fouled out of the game Tom Weeks chipped in with in the crucial final period to had Blount and Don Davis 15 points. •, the Piners out front for the share point laurels, each with first time, 49-47, tallying on add to Long Branch's woes. Brick's victory over Toms Early Shockers 13. Willie Davis contributed a layup 'off a steal by Kosco 10. River left both teams with Richardson. DeCausey made Freehold, with Greg Blount Scott Stars 1-3 reoonis inline "A" Divi- it 51-48, but Byron Hampton hitting for nine of his game Neptune's 21-point second sion. clicked on a three-point play total of 13 points in the open- period and a 29-point perfor- Hlddletown (67> Freehold «1> Lens nnraca lakeirooi ing period, jumped to a shock- mance by Jeff Scott were too O F P F P (60) Ing 20-6 lead during the first Baynes 8 9 21 Blount 6 1 13 O F P . Sarltan (85) .Neptune (TO) Hoffman 5 • 16 Stylet 0 11 C. Jones 6 2 H Warner 2 3 6 eight minutes against Middle- F P Hair'gpn 5 0 10 D. Davla 5 3 13 UNSTOPPABLE — Middletown Township's Wallace Gwathn'y 1 O :2 Rlcharda'n 2 4 8 o r r Scott 12 529 Ward S 1 11 Long . 0 0 0 B. Jone-3 4 2 10 DcOausey 10 5 25 town. Wallace Baynes scored Weeks O 5 U Hoover 7 014 Oarriaui 0 0 0 Buffet 10 2 Baynai (24) goes high above Freehold Regional's Williams 1 4 10 Kou 2 5 9 half of his team's points (six) Reich OOO O4 Huey 3 17 Steward O 1 1 W. Davla 3 4 10 Brown 1-2 4 Brown 4 19 O'Keere 2 0 8 jjamm • 2 14 Bloxom 2 0 4 Bennett 3 0 8 Willie Davis (42) to score two of hli game high' 21 Hampton 6 113 YVlsHnic* 113 in the second stanza, as Mid- Fr'grette 4 0 9 Becker 0 2 2 Dillon 0 0 0 Perry 0 0 0 Covia 0 O 0 Eleenm'Fread n 122 55 29 Calderoc 0 0 0 Brown 1 0 2 Williamson 0 0 0 point* last night. Middletown won, 67-51, to takeover Pcnta 0 0 0 dletown came to life to close Bunt 0 0 0 Rogers 0 4 Martin 0 0 0 Waiko 3 0 6 -Abel 1 O 2 Taylor 0 0 0 Von* _ 1 00_22 . first place in the Shore Conference "A" Division. the gap to 26-18 at halftime. 25 15 65 22 11 M | 21 18 60 Applying a full court press, Lakewood .1* 18 12 18—60 (Register Staff Photo) Lons Branch the Lions came out roaring in

Team Pins -Henry Hudson Regional routed Point Pleasant Boro, points in the second period turn the contest into a rout, heading into the fourth quar- took over undisputed posses- 92-499, and Shore. Regional 'when the Admirals took-the -. Riley_lead all icorers with_ter. _ ___ — Paterson E. sion of first place in the Shore edged "Central Regional, lead permanently, 24-18. The 22 points. Whittey had 14. O'DonneU was the only PATEBSON - "Heavy-~~ FAREWELL TO ARMS — The ball is headed for the Conference "C" Division last 55-53. Garnet Gulls were lim- and Hendricks 13. Sweeney member of the winning team weight Brian Hill scored his night by trouncing 'Point Admirals 8-1 ited to only one field-goal McKennan's 18 were best for to break into double figures, sixth straight pin to pace Bed hoop, projected by Freehold Regional's. Curtiss Ben- Pleasant Beach, 70-44. Henry Hudson, which now during the eight minutes of Point Beach, 1-3 in ''C and but Orr had nine important Bank Catholic to a 54-u blank-' nett (54i, who.out leaps Middletown's Doug Bloxom' The victory-, coupled with, has an impressive overall action. an even 44 overall. markers for the Keys, now ing of Faterson East Side last (33) earl/ in last night's contest on the Colonials' Keyport's 45-44 overtime tri- record of 8-1, started slowly, Hudson sewed up the con- With all five starters hit- 5-2 overall and 3-1 against night in wrestling. The vic- court. (Register Staff Photo) umph over Wall Township, trailing, 14-12, at the end.of test with a 20-15 edge in the ting in double figures, the Ad- division foes. Wall slipped to tory extended the Shore team previously unbeaten in the the first period. The Admi- third quarter, as Carl Wnitley mirals' junior varsity team 4-3 and 3-1. success streak to six after a circuit, left the Admirals rals had trouble hitting as a pumped in nine points. Les scored a* come-from-behind Tight Contest loss in its opening meet. -alone on, top with a 4-0 rec- teamt bnt.^Scott.Raeji- kept; Hendricks garnered eight 77-63 victory, their sixth with- Jim McConville's bas- Hill pinned Barney Eulam _, ord. • " ' ' them close with eight points points in the final period out a defeat. ket put Shore ahead, 54-53/ in 45 seconds. Mike Gill (168) Keansburg Loses In other "C" activity last' in the session. 'when the winners poured in Orr a Hero and John Peterson's free night,- Southern—Regional BHey—aTHea—six—inOre "26 points to the losers'TlTo" -also-had-a-quidt-pln-for-the-— Keith Orr's free throw with throw with two seconds re- _Ca,seys when he scored over one second remaining lnthe^ ~ mainiiig^eeounted^f or—the- overtime session spelled vic- Blue Devils' victory over Bill Wilson in 50 seconds of To Si. tory for Keyport after Wall Centsal. the first period. TOMS RIVER — St. Jo- fense which caused mistakes Township rallied to knot the The contest was tight all Other pin winners were seph's of Toms Biver copped and turnovers to go against contest at the end of regula- the way. Shore led, 16-9, af- Kevin Dempsey (98), Ed Mc- its sixth victory in seven Keansburg. tion play. ter the first period, but Cen- Fittigan (106), Vince Sullivan, Four-Way Tie tral rallied to take a 28-26 starts last night by pulling a St. Joseph's experienced Trailing, 39-31, the Knights Tom Lloyd (136), George tough one out of a red-not" foul trouble in the" first half, roared back in the fourth halftime advantage. The Blue Chaehanske (148), and John fire over Keansburg,, 50-47, committing. 15 personals, quarter, with eight straight Devils went into the wild Flannery (157). Tony King, on the Griffins' court here. which gave Kearisliiirg an op- points. The tying goal was fourth quarter with a 44- the Caseys' 130-pounder, and Keansfr'- ^ad St Joe's portunity at the charity line. tossed in by Dan White. Key- 43 lead. Terry Gillen (141) and Jim playfc" '•' i- P most of the The Titans dunked in 10 of port went ahead on John late in the game the count Walsh (178). registered deci-- contest Miors the home club 13 attempts in the first quar- In 'B' Division Schanck's free throw, but stood at 52-all when John sions, while Mike Sagurton at wemTmto a tight pressing d£ ter. The Shore Conference "B" Doug Kutz had 14. Bruce Bill Ianderosa had 18 for the Dan White hit another bucket Beale gave Central its last 123 had an easy time of it. Once Keansburg started to Division - race became as Farley topped Red Bank with Buccos. to put Wall out front, 41-40, lead with a free throw. He earned the remaining five tight as a drum head last 14, while Phil Dotts contribut- with 39 seconds showing on points by pocketing a lorfeit falter' in the fourth period, pt Sparkle Kevin Dooohde and Mc- St. Joseph's came on and, night when four clubs took a edl3. the clock. Convffle shared scoring hon- victory. Schoolboy share of first place with-3-1 John Queen paced T'ana- Ocean did a job on Asbury .Tom O'DonneU's basket took a 4$41 lead. Once out Park after trailing, 13-10, at ors for Shore with 16 points Boa Bank Calaollo «•> the end of. the ftfstyjnarter. apiece. Tim Barnes, added • W—Kevin Demrxer (A> p. taniom- haul, the Griffins stayed right with a 29-point production. before Jim White dropped in er Hlley, l:3« lit. T Standings Matawan won over Jack- In the secondpoferiod, the 11/ •-..'•' ••:'•-•'• there and protected their a free throw with 10 seconds VX-Bd McOHUian (R) p., Douc SHOBE CONFERENCE son Township, 95-57;yOcean Ocean club starfefcrolling to Beale's 20 points and Don Veal,-1:09 lat. "A" DMilael margin. • : to jo to tie it up. r 115-Vlnce SulUvan (R) p. Tim Township downed Asbury spark a 21-10 session, and Whitemair s 17 comprised Hughes, 1:20 3rd. MladUfanra (1-!) . All nine cagers in the line- Park, 7447, and Manasquan Verga's 22 then barreled out with a 20-8 Jim' White opened the over- most of the losers' attack for 123—Wk* Saiurtoa (H) for/eU. Lone Branch (5-l> time play by sinking a two- 130—Tonr Klni (R) d. Jo* Palanto, „ Lilu-mod O-D up scored for the winners with whipped Red Bank, 65-51, scoring spurt in the third. ' losing Central, winless Neptune (6-3) Kevin Billerman the high man Bed Bank held the lead with pointer, but O'DonneH, Key- 13S—Ton Lloyd (R) p. Roberto IUrilon The fourth.was a 23-16 scor- against "C" foes and 2-5 Rodriguez, 1:10 in. •• Tom» River (1-S) with 16 points. a 3-D record, but its loss Paces Nets ing session with Ocean out" port's leading scorer with 18 against all opposition. Shore 141—Terry Qlllen (R) d. A)e« Betr.ee, Brick 14-4) dropped the Bucs into the points _. (14_below his. season 8^« Fhld 5-Hr cluirin the thickTfthe run Matawan won with ease as Belniar, N.J., AH - Stater, pair of foul shots. Then Orr, Devils are 2-5 overall. 157—John Flannery (Ri p. John Oo-an T«p. (5-SI Bcrkenfeld, 1:50, tlret period. ...3 r with 19 markers. night, sparking. Ocean with a -freshman, stepped to the 1»-M!)ie 0111. (B) * 3m WlUoti. MaJuuquan (4-5) — ..3 l coach Bruce MacCutchen hopped off the bench in the. Ma Kejport (4S) Wall (44) 60 »ccon —. _i ~t O'DonneU a « 19 J. White 4 a 14 . 7.4, A«bar? Park (3-3) ..._ ..\ ! to pace St. Joseph's JVs to a iri the third quarter. to a 113-101 American Basket- clicked for 12, and Jamie The Red Raiders led, 12-11 Olaen 10 2 Turner T 0 14 Mnrnnoulli K'r. CS-5) _.l 3 Schank 113 McCrSe 0 0 0 .Hvt—Brian Hill (R) p. . Barney BoroU (0-7) — 0 4 54-43 win over Keansburg's •The Huskies broke the ball Association victory over Henneberry contributed 11. at the end of the first period, Eularq, 45 lecontU, Ilret "C" IHvUion p 3 17 IX White jayvees. Tim McWaters was game wide open early in the Minnesota last night — tie 25-23 at. the half, and 33-29 Orr 4 19 Hughei 4 0 8 Hrnry nndiwil Nets' first triumph since Dec. Benji Willman kept the Qulnn OOO Thompion 0 0 4 high for the Keansburg club second when Ken Haspel Point Beack Henry Radwn _. 1 _ _ _ tf Andre* 10 4 K'vnort (5-TI .- - pace for the Blue Bishops (44 > Applet !* 0 0 0 Dolan 0 0 0 Wall Twp. (4-31 with 13 markers. sparked a 10-point spree with 19. Bennett 3 0 1 Shore's Track fcmth^m JUg. Xeafiibtinr (-*?) St. Jowj>b'i with his 17 points. O F P 0FP Point Bora (2-41 •n r r T P six points. In the third quar- Bclmcat 13 5 38 0 45 I is "i 44 n Verga scored 11 of his 22 PlUem'n 3 O « s. mier i» 2 23 Keyporl 12 13 Point Braea (Ml Bcatty 0 fi 5 MorclU 2 < ter, Matawan really packed 1 Asbury's. jayvees gained a Mewea .20 4 II S—4» Officials Group Hiorp Rf>c <2-fl> —- Lope* OOO Ramirez 2 1 7 points in the final quarter , in- Pourchl'r 1 0 2 Iledmond 10 2 Wall " ; U 12 t 13 2—44 Cratrat-BraV'"-l» Acccmzo Hjfi 1*> Bl Herman 3 6 1< It away, outscoring Jackson, M'Kcnn'n 8 2 18 Matter 3 1 s. IS cluding two -key jump shots bit of consolation by defeating Whaler 113 Shore (55) Central (53) OTHERS Carfl z**2 8 Burger 3 0 30-19. C. WhKley 1 111 Meets Jan. 15 Haynn 3 0 8 Sullivan that helped thwart a Piper Ocean's reserve staff, 50-46. (prapia 3 17 Hendrlcln 5 3 13 O F P a r P Rfd Rank Cath«lle ~~ 2 1 11 MnMahoMh n 0 1 CollUoa 119 T. Hlley 3 o t BarnM 2 711 Bsals « 8 20 LINCROFT — Brother Ma- Bumwin.p H til In OSC) OOO' 0'IIara 1 0 Mark Bumup led the Husk- rally as New York broke a Baunden 0 0 0 Turner 0 0 0 • Bonohoe 8 O 16 WWteman. & 7 17 2 0 Rich Bfnaco led the winners SanlHll ooo M'C'vllie I ill Morrlney " o a Krsmburg ies with 23 points, Andy 1 Murrnr 0 0 O < lachy, president of the Shore 0 2 six-game losing streak. - with 13. Scott was high for Hanklns 0 0 0 BDarly t 0 « Knlerlem 0 2 2 Hlbbl 2 2 6 rBA .' ~.~ 3 0 Bellamy dumped 21, and Has-.. Peterson '0 2 2 Bmch 0 2 2 Track and Field Officials As- Matrr Del 19 12 M The-»Hpers, trailing 96 . 84 Ocean with 11. Bozard 4 19 Mattox 10 2 sociation, (NJTFO) an- Croyilon Hall 8 14 7—47 pel had 19. Dave Dennis and Marlboro , ...... 18 12 13-50 early in the final quarter, ral- 18 8 44 31 8 70 20 15 95 17 19 83 nounced yesterday a meeiirig Tom Langford were high for Ocean's yearling squad • Henry Hudron .12 12 20 20-70 lied to trim it to 98-93 with Point Bfich 14 4 15 11—44 Shore _..„ .._....18 10 18 11—55 for Wednesday, Jan. 15, at the losers with 14 eadi. turned out a 71^5 over the Ontral 9 10 15 10—53 4:47 left. But then Verga hit Bishop frosh squad. Christian Brothers Academy Matawan won the junior two baskets and Willie Fra- varsity contest, 69-33. Ocean has the best overall at 8 p.m. zier one to guide the Nets JI , —BBeusnaw oaciclnto controTat 104-9J. -record-in--the B" -varsity - Officials of~the-new asso»— Red Bank's first loss de- race with its 5-2 mark. elation are urging interested veloped early, and alter knot- Connie Hawkins, who fouled trackmen to attend the meet- out with 6:53 to go, led the Monmouth Regional broke ting the score at 14-14 in the the deadlock for the cellar ing. There Is a need for middle of the second period, Pipers with 23 points. Watt track officials, and the group Sim6n of New York had 25.' berth by trimming Howell, that was it for the Buccos.- • 65-39. welcomes physical education Manasquan came up with The Golden Falcons won men and track enthusiasts In eight consecutive points for order to enlarge members of nssi—rrarr-iurtnriti -Imi '69 Soccer Set:* their first conferencfi game the group. the way with four points and WitJi 8 Teams for a 1-3 mark and made One of the requirements for was joined by Chip Hirst and their overall recflrd 2-5. How- • ^coming a track official is ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) ell is 0-4 and 0-7. Bill Forrest. Professional soccer will be attending a certain number of The remainder of the game, -represented in~~tH8~ United Howell had the lead once, meetings during the'* season , the Big Blue Warriors..held.i; -States this year with-aneightc;—J.2,. but that was it. Once the •In order to keep officials tight grip ,on their margins ' Falcons took over, the period aware of developments. and added an additional six team league, officials of the Atlanta Chiefs announced yes- was 16-7 in their favor. At the Official's caps and emblems by conclusion time. : • half they led 37-17, and at the will be distributed at the ses- , Red Bank how has a 44 terday. , ,, Dick Cecil, vice president. _. end of three led by 30, 54-24. slon. overall record. Manasquan is Mike I learn paced Mon- 4-5. of the club, and Phil Woos- nam, head coach and general mouth with 18 points. Jim Former Yankee pitching Miller led the winners with McKln[ey had 12, and Bob star Ed Lopnt Is scouting for 19, Hirst chipped in 15, and manager, made • the an- nouncement after a day-long Jackson scored' 10, Dennis the Montreal' IJxpos, new Oc#in Twp. Anbury Turk (47) meeting here with the owners Pokllkuha sparked Howell tenm in the National Leacue U P P . • <* y p for 1000. 12 4 2* h 1, O 2 of seven other teams." with his 11 markers. 2 4 Hrnn lllnlky 2 S I.yona 1 Meanwhile, the executives J«rUnn Twp. MafatviM H''h'rH'n'h'rii y 8 1 » Koohman 1 0 3 of the eight North American <7<«7>> jin.'ili'n o ii (i Niwklrk 3 1 T (1 F P V I" ALLPRO Mll'.-r 4 0 * Aliraniv - 1 Soccer I/jague clubs ap- I.nnxfonl r, 4 14 Johnmin 2 2 V.imt, II 1 1 SHvnrrn •' S 0 4 Archer 3 2 8 3 in Morgan li 7 12 plnkdton O a i pointed Wbosnam to a newly Bho 0 4 4 Burnup II I) 2.'1 iriiiirir'm 1 2 4 Wlllman 4 1 i llt-Sf«lly 4 0 * 1 '21 HlnlHi 0 0 n created post as executive di- Dennlfi 0 2 It Ilollnmy 1(1 TRANSMISSIONS H..'i'rl| 0 0 0 a o 2 4 WibiT 0 0 0 • rector of the league, Kubcirn'k 1 a n Hnnilere 2 I) 4 SPECIALISTS D'Ani'lMOO 0 Carrie 'J U • TO H II i , ' 1H II H Cities which said they will llnyter OOO 1 3 • Ad|iiiMd • Roatgltd o.;f»n Twii ...... Ml 21 2(1 2:t—7* Club 3 0 AMmry l""fk ...... 13 10 I l»- « field soccer teams this year M""i""r ;l • Repaired • Omhaultd ill Clll) I MiinnitMilh are Atlanta, Dallas, Chicago, 21 19 (IT I 3H 111 III) an I Tobln wlio ployed football at 20 11 57) !1 Id «l ovtr, »nar«d the victory on their home court, 6S-39. n n is H'ii Hunk « J7 9 Ill-lit fcuha (31 J. (Regi«(ar Staff Photo) 7 19 7 15—19 Notre Dume 22 years ago, Mtingu.n „ .11 20 13 ailt (Register Staff Photo) ZM-V617 HAIHI Ifl 21 17 ll-Oil THE DAILY REGISTER, , Jan. 8, 1969—23

Somewhere, sometime, someone in sports said: "Nice Phil came out of PortUfaShihgton, Long Island, and guys finish last." ; was forced to forsake his formal education at the age of Now, take the Jets, American Football League, reprfc 15. After young Phil handled several jobs he finally hooked sentatives in the Super Bowl in Miami's Orange Bowl on on to a job as a salesman for a dress company at 21. This Sunday.,At this date there is not a pro football fan in the was the start of the-Iselin climb. country that doesn't know the facts of the Jets, as victors, Catching on to the business at a rapid pace, Phil was and that they'll be playing the rugged boss of his own factory at 25. Under his masterful guidance, Baltimore Colts, heavy favorites to win the his first factory now has grown into a $20-miUion-a-year overall crown. By Hy Cunningham women's apparel business with offices in New York City. But, how many know Phil Iselln? He Following Phil's business career and his success makes is the president of the Jets' organization, it quite easy to determine the success of Monmouth Park and one nice guy who didn't finish last. classroom, he was pressed for statements, and with his and now the New York Jets. ft ce inisn usual ease gave the right answers. Then again," how many i guys f A SPORTS FAMILY first in their first shot at being head of a "Weeb Ewbank is the general manager as well as coach,- Pfefllp H. Iselln football organization?' Phil Iselin did. and he has been a real general manager this year. When I This is a sports family. Mrs. Iselin, known to the sports . Weeb Ewbank Iselin stepped into the rugged job of took over, I told Weeb he was the boss, I would not inter- world as Betty, is the one in racing. Phil doesn't own a being bead of the Jets. But again, that is fere." That might have been one of his best statements of stable, but Betty has an interest in a two-year-old colt. nothing new for Phil Iselin. He has been in the year. Ewbank was relieved of the pressure applied to a When it wins, the winner's circle is clogged with owners. Bulldogs thoroughbred racing for almost a quarter CUNNINGHAM football coach. It worked! The Jets are getting ready for Son Jimmy is in boxing. Jimmy heads Peers Manage- ColtsHit, the big one on Sunday. ment. Top boxer in this stable is Buster Mathis, who has of century. Iselin has a well formed habit of stepping "in" 1 and making something function successfully. When Phil has a job to do, he buckles down, and in the posted quite a record in the heavyweight class. Like dad , Win Out; SUCCEEDS SONNY, LILLIS quiet Iselin way, he goes about getting it done, and with- Jimmy is a credit to the sport. • . out fanfare. He inserts as much energy into the Jets' as he When the Olympic boxing team was preparing for the But Jets 'Phil was named president of the Jets after Sonny does in Monmouth Park. Sportsman Phil also is president competition in Mexico City, it was Jimmy Iselln offering Werblin, also a Monmouth County resident, sold his share of the Oceanport racing plant. Under his direction Mon-' his boxing camp in Hyde Park, N. Y,, for a few days of Dooley:33 of the New York Jets. Don Lillis, another member of the mouth has.developed numerous "firsts" in thoroughbred training for the young boxers. Peerless housed and fed the METUOHBN - Rich Dooley stock holding group, was then named president to succeed racing. This accomplishment alone has been the cause for team and sent them off to Mexico City in fine health. Go Easy Werblin. After the death of Lillis, Iselin was named pres- many track executives to visit Monmouth Park for a "look Remember Olympic gold medal winner George Fore- scored six straight points in ident of the club. FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. the fourth period to lift Rum- see" of the Iselin operation. man? He was there, and for awhile we thought Jimmy might Phil is a modest man. If cornered and asked —."What , When Monmouth Park was on the drawing board,- Phil have another, fine fighter in his stable. Foreman is the lad (AP).— Rival coaches in pro son-Falr Haven Regional to do you know about football?" Iselin would reply, "I'm'not Iselin joined the sportts world. The late Amory L. Haskell who proudly carried a small American flag into the ring football's dream game—Sun- a 63-61 Garden State Confer- a football man." Then he would add, "Thoroughbred racing recruited him into the fold. It was Iselin who headed the after .his victory. day's Super Bowl matching ence basketball victory over is my main sports line." construction committee, was vice president-treasurer, for It certainly is up to the Jets now. If they want to win the veteran Baltimore Colts, Metuchen here yesterday af- When getting into football, Iselin certainly did not years, and was elevated to the presidency when Mr. Haskell for Phil, they have their' hands full. Win or lose, Phil champions of the National ternoon. • jump into the pond to swim past all the football men. He passed away. . Iselln will be a proud president. His Jets are the AL League/ and .the upstart New went slow, delegated authority to the right men at the EXAMPLE FOR DROPOUTS champions, and you can wager he'll be the No. 1 fan cheer- Dooley, who finished with York Jets, best in the Ameri- right time. He is not the type — "I'm the boss, I'm giving „ In the times of today, one hears consistently of drop- ing on Sunday. . a robust game output of !s the orders." outs, and what a tragedy it is. If dropouts read the life Sonny Werbun? Make another bet that he'll be watching, can League—had their troops points, broke a 55-aII tie with HAS BIGHT ANSWERS story of Iselin, they would soon find out it is not entirely One way or the other, stands or TV.' There is no thorough- out for different style work- four minutes remaining in the When Iselin went to the head of the class in the Jets' tragic if an eye is kept on ambition. bred racing on Sunday. cuts yesterday. ntesLanMdded Jwo morfl_ Don Shula of the Colts had baskets to wrap up the Purple -the-NFL-kings-don-pads-for— Bulldogs fourth victory in six THETNNOCENT"BYSTATNDER^ the first of three daily work- outs. .. GSC outings. Metuchen, 2-4 "We will take it easy the overall, has won only one of last two days," said Shula four circuit games. Unreachable Star ¥ia 2 Points after meeting the press and —DooleyjT who^also hauled leadingJils forces to anearny By GEORGE SHEEHAN in a framework of courage, trust, virtue and justice. Not down 17 of the winners' 34 re- schoolboy field at Boca Ra- For the Bowl Games this was the year of the two-point always triumphant, but always identifable. The conflict of ton. "But for the next three bounds (Metuchen snared 31), conversion. After knocking around for 10 years, the two- good and evil is resolved in the inevitable gunfight show- days we'll work on offensive failed to score in the opening point play suddenly added a new and necessary dimension down. -.':-.. and defensive formations." quarter, but John Connor to football. It banished forever the intentional tie as an ac- NEW ART FORM ceptable ending for a college football game. • Football in many ways is replacing the Western as an Jets Go Easy ' canned six points to pace Weeb Ewbank and his Jets Rumson to a. 13-11 lead. Take the Orange Bowl. What started as a routine foot- art form. The violence, the conflicts are all there; The show- ball game ended like a gun duel at the Last Chance down is there, too. The two-point conversion. .And every were already taking it' easy Metuchen rallied to forge Saloon. The game had the standard con- one knows that the hero cannot back down. Better to go in at Yankee Stadium, where ahead, 30-25, during the sec- frontations along the way. Third and long; style before a gunslinger like Billy the Kid or Johnny Ringo the New York American ond period which ended with fourth and inches; goal line stands; but than survive as an outcast in a frontier town. The dare League baseball club does its the home club on top, 30-27. going for two joints With the clock run- must be taken. Win or lose, the try for two is the natural spring conditioning. <-43iwJsltors-closedthe-margln ning out~is the ultimate showdown. TW~air^MhngTg^p M "We—just—want—to-taeak—r to one, 44-43, heading into the them out into a sweat," said -hecl!e~iinal stanza. It's throwing down on the fastest gun Luhan, "the pattern of the game that gives it relevance in the territory. There are no ties. Just to our inner fives and not who is playing nor the outcome Ewbank. "We'll also look at The "Purple Bulldogs went Boot Hill or riding off with the girl into of the game." a-reelof filmon kicking and into the lead, 50-49, when two the sunset. The pass or run for two points has never had many another of one of the Colts' foul shots and a field goal by At Miami, Joe Paterno, a plaid- advocates since its introduction in 1958. Stats from the Na- games. Otherwise, there is Dooley wiped out a three- jacketed dude from the East was called tional Collegiate Sports Service show that the play has been nothing to do except to keep point deficit. Connor's free the players right mentally for out by Kansan Pepper Rodgers. He could used roughly the same percentage of times each year for the game." throw and basket gave Coach have taken the tie and gone undefeated. SHEEHAN the past 10 years (12 percent) with about the same degree Bill Kern's club a 53-49 ad- No mean feat any year. He never hesitated. Just went for of success' (40 percent). The*ick on the other hand has been Injuries were at a minimum vantage, but Metuchen roared all the marbles. successful to a high degree (87 percent). These statistics on both teams. Bubba Smith, back to tie the game and set are compiled for approximately 600 of the major college Giant Baltimore defense end, the stage for Dooley's heroics. NO CHOICE HERE Paterno had no choice. He knew, as we now know, that games each year. The odds then are 3 to 2 against the still was hobbled by an in- Connor wound up with 14 there isno longer any sense in a tie ball game. There were . pass, run and 9 to 1 for the placement. jured right ankle but Shula points, and Walt Kemp added times in an acquisitive society, a credentials society, when said it was improving from THE PLAY'S THE THING ' day to day. 10 for Rumson. Don Steuken- ties could be stored in the trophy case. That time, as Ara Some will say that 59 minutes of football or an unde- broker led the losers with 19 Parseghian found two years ago, has passed. We no longer feated season should not be put on the line for one play, "However, I doubt if he'll points, 13 in the second half. want or accept stalemates. Parseghian ran out the clock but life, history and sport tell us the fate of individuals, be at his best," said Shula. ' Rich Toth. contributed 10. for a tie against Michigan State and lost more friends than nations and the Oakland Raiders has been decided by an " "He hasn't given the ankle Metuchen won the junior the Russians did by marching into Czechoslovakia. Of instantaneous action. a real test." varsity game, 71-25. the'Russian move, DeGaulle said that it was "too late in What about David and Goliath, the Branca pitch to Lyles m Metubea (el) history for such action." He could have sent the same Bobby Thomson, Bob Murphy's safe pitch to the 18th green Shula also reported - that OFF Lenny Lylesl defensive back, Meuk'b-k'r T 111 cable to the Notre Dame coach. in the Westchester Classic? The Cincinnati kid put years and 1 McKewen 13 4 was bothered by a sore throat. Connor 6 4 14 H. Hallu 1 J 4 This change in climate was, also evident in the un- his whole bankroll on one hand. Bob Seagren passed at SCORING THREAT— Jim Turner, th« N»w York Jah' But the 11-year veteran was Vetterl 2 15 M. Hallal 3 2 1 17-8% in the .Olympic pole vault and took the gold medal •parllnr Oil Toth 0 o 10. changing climate (70 degrees temperature, 52 percent humi- kicking specialist, it the team's leading scorer with able to take part on the de- Ch'ehtow 0 0 0 Haley J> 3 7 dity) of Houston's Pleasure Dome on New Year's Eye. . . in a three-way tie at 17-8J4 because of least tries. • ,Kemp 4 110 Klsler 4 19 145 .points. Holding the ball is sub quarterback Babe fensive . plays Monday. Lane 0 0 0 A wildly exciting game became memorable because the Everything points to more and more of these make or The Jets were back at full, Brook* O0O Oklahoma-teanuwent for the two-pointer and failed, giving break showdowns in sports/ The men and teams on the Parilli. Turner could play a big partin th» Jett''hopes i l strengtlras compared to Mon- M 13 83 _•_ the game and the Bluebohnet title to Southern Methodist. field are simply extensions of ourselves. And now often uT* "of victory" aga!nsnhT~Baltn nofe~Csltr"ltriSiniday r- ^aywnen'ace'quarteTBaeR "Joe"" The stylized Western has been the American morality, this technological world do we get the chance to reach for SuperBowl, ' . (AP Wirephoto) Namathand backs Emerson play. It incorporates the violence of the American past with;~ the unreachable star?'••-•- ^ •••-•. •-• —- Booser and Matt Snell didn't^ show up for the1 brief work- out. "Appropriate action has 9 been taken against the three," said Ewbank. But he declined Bulls Rookie Boerwinkle Snaps Knick String to define appropriate action and Namath refused to talk a mark of 19-25 while the point bulge with 12 minutes to and a minute''and 40 seconds the L05 Angeles Lakers.' time to check a furious Bullet about the situation.. By ASSOCIATED PRESS Bulls edge New- York 102-101 Closed Issue Rookie center T0m Boer- and end the Knicks' longest Knicks now have a 26-18 rec- play. remaining, Boerwinkle scored The 6-foot-7 Baylor, back ;af- rally. National Basketball Associa- Cazzie Russell of New York M e a n whi 1 e, Milwau- "It is a closed issue," Ew- winkle, scoring 22 points for ord in the Eastern Division.. a basket on a jump shot and fer missing two games be- bank said emphatically as he the first time in his pro ca< tion winning streak in history. New York's Willis Reed, helped his team regain the anoUjer on a reverse layup. cause of the flu, slammed" kee-stopped -Cincinnati: llfc_ New York had won 10 in a was pressed for an explana- reer, collected two clutch bas- lead in the "fourth" quarter af- Two free throws in the final in six of his 30 points in the 101, Detroit whipped PhUa- tion of his words. "The prob- row. who finished with 28 points, delphia"" 117-114, Phoenix kets In the final 37 seconds ter the , Bulls grabbed the eight seconds by Bob Weiss last IV2 minutes to give the lem has been solved and it ' last night to help the Chicago The victory gave the Bulls 11 in. the final quarter, topped Seattle 116-112 and San edge. The Bulls went ahead assured the Bulls of their vic- Lakers' Western Division will have no effect on the brought the New Yorkers to stay on a 30-foot jump shot Diego defeated San Francis- tory. leaders a 100-83 victory over team. back from a 10-point deficit in by Jimmy Washington. co 113-108 in the night's oth- Turn, on Elgin Baltimore's Eastern Diivision "This will be a top test for the third quarter to a three- With the Bulls leading 96-95 er games. • . Want to know how to turn leaders in the National Bas- the AFL but, regardless of Hull, Howe,Orr The Nets Triumph the outcome, I don't believe off a red-hot rally? Just turn "S^ms^p^amS^to—^er-ta-the.American^as-^ne^nie.^.a.mea^^jfe. Ana, ni5-spreTrcame ^trin—^^ AssoclaUoni New York strength of the two leagues. defeated Minnesota 113 - 101, If we are fortunate enough to On All-Star List win, I would be the.last man Kentucky slipped past Dal- to say that 1 the AFL has • NEW YORK (AP)-Chlcago's Joining the right winger las 101-98 and Indiana rolled passed the NFL." Bobby Hull and Detroit's Gor- Howe and left winger Hull on Pats Ai Holovak, over New Orleans 120-108. die Howe, 1-2 in the National the East's top forward line EASTERN DIVISION Hockey League scoring race, W L. Fet. Be'h is Boston center Phil Espo- Baltimore 30 11 .732 — The $100,000V Florida Derby and super defenseman Bobby Philadelphia „_...... _.8 u ,700 IK for three-year-olds will be slto. Toronto veteran Tim Their CokcL GM Boston 4* IS Orr of Boston were unanimous Y M 18 run at Gulf stream Park on choices • among 24 standouts Horton followed the 20-year- BOSTON (AF)—Mike Holo- available for comment. .« 17 March 20. selected today for the NHL's old Orr In the defensemen. vak, a fixture with the Boston In nearly eight full seasons wi»°auk» mv«H ' flrstEast-West All-Star Game. balloting and New York's Ed Patriots since the Inception of as head coach, Holovak c ^ the American Football League Giacomin nailed the goal-?- piled a 52-46-9 record, leading Atlanta Hockey writers in the 12 in 1960 but the target of in- the Pats to the Eastern NHL cities selected 12 players tender's berth. San Franclu.0 ...... 18 _. creasing fan booing and dis- championship in 1963 and Seattle .14 31 in each division for the 22nd Jacques Plante of St. Louis content as the team slumped gaining AFL coach of the FhoerUx 0 M annual All-Star classic, to be Yeiterday'e Keeulte is the West's No. 1 goalie, in the past two seasons, was year honors in 1966 when a has Angeles 100, Baltimore M played In Montreal Jan. 21. with teammate Al Arbour and Milwaukee 110, Cincinnati 101 fired yesterday from his jobs late season charge fell one- Chicago 10], -New York 101 Stars from the East Division Los Angeles' Bill White on as head coach and general half game short of another Phoenix 116, Beattle 112 will oppose standouts from San Diego 113, San Frandico lot defense and Minnesota right manager. divisional title. Drtrolt 117, Philadelphia Hi the expansion West Division winger Claude Larose and The announcement by the It was all downhill after for the first time. The old Oakland left winger Gary Jar- team said Holovak will be that, however, as the Patriots All-Star format matched tho reti flunking Bercnson, offered another job In tho slumped to last place with Sixth Straight EVERY MINUTE AND defending Stanley Cup cham- Other Enst team selections organization, tho nature of a 3-10-1 record in 1967 and pions against ntars from tho are goalie Gerry Checvers of* which will be determined complied only a 4-10 mark in For Forrestdale other clubs in tho league. A HALF...SOMEONE Boston, defensemen J. C. soon. 1968 amid steadily growing RUMSON — Forrestdale St. Louis Coach Scotty Trcmblny of Montreal and There was no immediate boos, catcalls and "Goodbye, School's basketball team won Bowman, the West pilot, and Pat Stnplcton of Chicago, right word on a successor, and no Mike" chants from the stands. CALLS AAMCO its sixth straight without a Every week AAMCO lollirttt more former Montreal Coach Toe winger Bob Novln of New indication whether the team Vote Ouster loss yesterday, knocking off than 10,000 tranlimlttlon problemi Blako, who will direct tho York, center Jenn Bolivenu of would seek separate individ- You get fr« towing* o free rood- The decision to relieve Tinton Falls, 54-34. check* fait, efficient tervlct — East squad, each will name Montreal and left winger uals as coach nnd guncral Holovnk of his present duties Tho Rumson quintet Jumped most tlmei In |utt one day. Antf with AAMCO* your frammliilort con geven moro players later In Frunk Mahovllch of Detroit. manager or ngnln hire one despito a five-year contract out to a 23-4 first quarter lead be protected by aver HO AA/UCQ tho wook, completing tho 19- Tho second nix in tho West man in the dual capacity. which extends through tho and then coasted home free. Center* cooiMo-coatt. man All-Star squads. voting wore gonlio Glenn Hall Patriots President William 1071 season was reached by SIDE STEP — Minnosota North Stan' gonlio Gary Despite the loss, John Hen- •Of Railroad Am., Albiry Park Hull, Howo nnd Orr topped of St. Louis, ttcfcnHcmen Ed II. Sullivan Jr. flew to Mo- the 10-mnn board of directors Bauman roachoi but to tho side of tha not to glovo dcr.soii of Tinton Falls walked Fr*t Towlnj 774-.WO tho .voting in tho East, draw- Van Impe of Philadelphia and bile, Ala., to Inform Holovak at a Mondny night meeting. off with high scoring honors ing totals In tho secret voto by posting 18 points. 193 I. Newman IprUfli M. . apiece, whllo St. Louis con- right winger Bill Hlcko of In background. Montreal didn't scoro on this fint n club spokesman .said both worn not disclosed, and an- Kevin Cnlllnnn led llumson lUd Bank 142-2100 Oakland, center Ted Hnmpsan tor Red Hcronson honded tho period attempt last night, but it hit tho nets often for men wcro going from there to nouncement of tho outcomo with 16 markers, Jim Finn PICK UP STATION Wont tonm with a total ol of Oakland and left winger Miami for tho Super Howl, was withheld until Sullivan dunked 14, and Pcto Holland AtA IHOP, RT. M ft CMtCINT PL. 84 points. Danny Grant of Minnesota. • 6-3 victory. •, (AP Wlrophotol Neither was immediately could tell him In person. scored 11 points. •U4JM I. M—THE DAFIV IJOST AND FOUND AUTOS FOB 8AU5 AUTOS FOB SAJJJ AUTO HELP WANTED-FEMAJUE Wrdnesd&y, January 3, 1969_W_ED~-'Tot r*turn"»*,~or tnfor- »J6_) VtfMW_JJ f w ta>.e Tuition leading to. the return of old TRY US AND SEE over payment!. -all - TEMPORARY . long barreled - Wlncnegler ahotgun re- NTW DODGES SOLD AT COST F_,t7_ -m 787-6GSS. RENT A CAR moved from car Christmas night NO MONEY DOWN Light Assembly Work ANNOUNCEMENTS CADILLAC »967 — Sedan X»e Vllle. jWO Hwy. 36 -64-1800 ' Keyport Great sentimental value.' Model 1897. Kir* year warranty. Immediate de- Fully equipped, atr.' Take over pay- 12 gauge. Serial No. 39280. Call 2$4- livery. We'll beat anyone's deal. Over Bed 'Bank area. Modern electronic: LOST AN1> FOUND 6625. ments KZ-.7B week. Town A: Country If you have any <5T_be, above _k4II_ pUint.'Exixrleiuse- or will train. Oood south volume sale...save* you hundreds. Dodge, Inc. 60 Main Bt.. luatawan. BOATS AND ACCESSORIES and are lntereated In' permanent or .Bed HOST , — "?den_f SABRE convertible — englnc, automatic trannmisHlon ex- shorthand skills required. Apply transportation. 747-5862. "HOUSEKEEPER - .* _i2? Excellent condition. New tires, muf- cellent condition. All new brakes. J35. Qa[f rig Iceboat. Reconditioned. On Monmouth Legal Services Organlza- Oood pay. Three day« a week. fler, battery. Mtut sell. Call 291-O51P, Phone after 6.'30, 842-2675, ice at ICEBOAT CLUB. Sat. and Sun. lion, 3 E. Front St., Ked Bank. 741. KITCHEN HELPER —- 11:30 a.m. tc0715 between 4 and » o'clock. AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE after 6 p.m. EXCELLENT AX ICEBOAT — Per- 1401. 2:30 p.m. Inquire Village Pantry, - _._... Fully lect condition. Call Llncrolt. Call 741-7616. « 19i? CHEVROLET —.Four-door, stan- equipped. Take over payments $13.87 222-0225 SECRETARY — For busy executive. SALESWOMAN — BiperlencedT" pi, HELP WANTED—MALE dard transmission. In good running week. Town & Country Dodge, Inc. Excellent shorthand and typing re- condition, two extra tires. $200. Call 60 Main St.. Matawan. Call now' 566. quired. Professional orrlce (not legal) Broad St. specialty shop. Our em. 9*fl«130after 5 p.m. offers unique opportunity. Car neces* ployees know of this ad. Write Box PRICE DROPS $10 A DAY H-133. The Dally_Keg1ater,_Bed Bank BRS - ?•» P-•«•. Mon. thru FrL Call IMS SUNBEAM ALPINE —Top con- BUSINESS NOTICES aary lo and from work. Salary com- 19(0 FORD QALAXIE 600 — Excel mensurate with experience. Write 542-6579 Before 5 vjn- , ON THIS CAR UNTIL SOLD dition. New top and Interior. Phone lent condition. V8, automatic, powe TVP'N'COPY HOUSEKEEPER — sleep in or out, »«1015 steering, etc. 542-9228^ Box B-152, The Dally Register. Red Dft days. References required. Own SHOE REPAIRMAN This car Is picked oui oi our reg- j ___( Executive Typing and Mlmeo Bank. transportation. Call 563-03S3 or fi66- 1967 CHEVROLET ular inventory to create Interest. BANK REPOSSESSIONS — Take over r»ODGEi 1967 — Polara. Four-door. Resumes - Letters - Reporta 948-4303 8591 WANTED There is nothing wrong with It. It weekly "low payment- to fit your bud- Fully equipped, air. Take over pay- Bet. Lowest bank rates. Town & SLIP COVERS CLERK-STENO-TYPIST 8ALKSQIRI, — Permanent position. TOR SHOE REPAIR DBPARTMBNT will be sold to tht first qualified ments $12.47 week. Town _ Country For leading Importer of tlre«. Splendid Oood pay. Company be"enl*i,B5jf>iiJ" buyer. Country Dodge, Inc. 60 Main SL, Mat- I>odge. IAc. 60 Main St., Matanan. Sofa, S30, chair $15. with you* own Full time for general selling. Experi' awan. Call now 566-6100. Call now! 566-6100. fabric. Free welting, zlppera, ol over- opportunity to grow In Income and ence preferred but not neceflBary. pair Dept., Nelsner's, Hwy. 35. Middle- responsibility. Liberal profit-sharing Driver's > license needed. Apply Iri town Shopping pepartment . locking. Fabrics also available. Call plan and fringe benefit-. Knowledge 1965 CAr>I_._AC~COUPE~_>eVI__,_CT DART 1965 — Station wagon. Fully anytime 671-23S4. person to Mrs. Plnsley, at KIBLIN'S, PLUMBER — Dxperienced In JoB. Impale V-8 rour-door station wagon. Excellent condition. Air conditioned. equipped. Take over" .payments ?7._3 German helpful, but not vital, starting Front St. Red Bank. Maroon with block vinyl interior. AH-power. $2750. Financing available. week. Town & Country Dod_B, Inc. FOR ALL TYPES OF HOME RE- salary commensurate with present blng work. Excellent working condl. Automatic transmission, power Call 741-9586 alter 5 ,j>.m. 60 Main St.. Matawan. Call now! BM-PAIRS Alterations, painting, at rea- ability. CALL 060-2200. CONTI RUB- CLEANING LAD5T — Experience., Uons. Mu»t be A-l mechanic, F. V. steering. A beautiful car. 6100. ':--- sonable prices. Call 741-3953. Free es- BER PRODUCTS, INC., Carteret, N.X for permanent position. Five days a Verange, 741-7217. VO_V6~196T — P144~2_~0O0" mlleiT timates. Prompt service. 0700S. week. Private school. ^01-1570. ORIGINAL PRICE ' ' Air-conditioning. Beautiful, Best offer. 1940 BUICK-- - Four-door "sedan. 9350. SALES - REAL ESTATE ; 842-4724. Call RUBBER STAMPS — Made to order. WOMEN — Plat work Ironer and NNodysr. 52,400 • . * CadillacOld.mobH« 583-8225 Fast, efficient service. Use at home or ahlrt operators. Free hospltallzatlon and Thurs. ft - 2. General housework. High commission plus bonus. WIU; TODAY'S PRICE BROADWAY AT 4TH * "1967 WILDCAT Bulck convertible? bualneaa. Oall 741-3227 or 787-2400. and paid vacation. Apply Star Laun- Must have transportation. 671-0026. train PAUL RRACrAR AOENCYj 147- {2,300. Call BUICK 1965 — Skylark. Hardtop dry, 132 Myrtle Ave.,' Long Branch. 0221. Call for appointment. $1840 LONG BRANCH 222-1234 •95.0387 coupe. Fully equipped. Take over FURNITURE MOVING — Attics and WOMAN TO CLEAN — One day payments. ¥7.87 week. Town A Coun- cellars cleaned. Free estimates. Call WAITI_3_SES~WANTE_r^Alf shifts" week. Own transportation. Kellable, CAREER OPPORTUNITY.— Join one CREDIT PROBLEMS? Everyona fi- 747-3002. Call after S p.m. 842-3555. ot Monmouth and Ocean Countlei nanced on. a purchase ot a, good used try Dodge, Inc. 60 Main St, Mata- open. Top wages, apply THE DOG fastest growing real estate agencies. ear. Ask for our credit counielor. wan. Call now! 866-6100. LIGHT HAULING—CLEAN CELLARS HOUSE, Hwy. 35, Middletown. 747- WOMAN — Mature. Waekendu, Sat. We will train and prepare for licens- Town St Country Dodge, 'Inc., 80 MUSTANG 1969 — Hardtop, slx-cylln YARDS OARAGES — Free estimate* l. 9:15 to Mon. a.m. 9:15. Live ing, through our special popipany Main SL Matawan. call now 566-6100. der. Very good condition. J11O0. All Call after 3 p.m. 741-2149. WAITREBSES — Experienced, wanted In. Work mostly cooking. Own tram achool, qualified young menraor po- new tires Including spare. 27,0OG for day or night, Rex Diner, Rt. 35, portatlon. Salary open. 671-0087. ' altlons In one of today's more lucra- 19W AUSTIN HEAIjEY Bugeye Sprite. miles. 747-KHA. Fair Haven. SHEET METAL WORK WANTED — Keyport. Apply in person 6 p.m. to tive professions. 1' you are Interested Excellent running. Must sell. 222- Small or large. Red Bank Sheet 8 p.m. CLEANTNGpiVOMAN — One iB.yTi In first year earnings ot 112.000, with 3472 TEMPEST 1966 — Four-door. Fully Metal Co., 1 Leonard St., Red Bank, to 4. (16. Mldriletown area. 741-3454. 671-1205 Unlimited future Income potential! call VOLVO 1962 CORVAIR _Tonza convertible, equipped. Take over payments S7.42 T^t Mr. Btearn. 7S7-6MO. week. Town A Country Dodge, Inc. resfles wanted. Experienced. Must be „. IN SWEDEN 4-npeed. Very clean. Asking $495. 8*2- GEORGE MAJtaH & SONS — Local over 21. Apply In person shore Point SALESWOMAN — For drug store In 4219. 60 Main SL. Matawan. Call now! 566. and long distance moving and stor- Long Branch, 9 to 5, ! Mon. through MALE UNBKILLBD HELP — Bome, 6100. age. Agents for Dngel Bros. Fully Inn, Hwy. 35, Hazlet. Frt. Experience helpful, but not neces- Jobs pay good Incentive ratei after THE 11 YEAR CAR! f* 19fiO RA_tBI__R station wagon, stan- Insured and containerized storage. sary. For interview call 222-1367. short training. Hospltallzatlon, paid dard transmission. - FORD 1966 — Fall-lane convertible. SALESWOMAN — Full time. Experi- holidays and other benefits. Apply Fully equipped including alr-condl- GEORGE MARSH & SONS. 380 W. ence preferred. Monday to Friday;- CHAMBERMAIDS — Must apply in ATCO CERAMICS. Rt 35. Keyport 787-4572 tlortlng. Excellent condition. (U2S. Prospect Ave., Cllffwood. 866-1104. . 10 to 5:30. Apply Four Seasons Gift person. No phone calls. HOWAHD An equal opportunity employer Most '69 Models and Colors In Stock DODGE I960 — Needs work. Cheap. Phone 4G--8529. Shop, Monmouth Shopping Center, LIGHT HAULING — Garages, attics Eatontown JOHNSON'S MOTOR LODGE, Hwy. PLUMBING MECHANIC - Fully ex- Must sell. After 5:30. MERCEDES 1966 —- Four-door dlenel and cellar* cleaned. Call 787-5241. 35. Middletown. 671-2923 Reasonable fees. perienced. Steady year-round work. Only A Few '_>8 Leftovers In Stock Fully equipped. Take over payments WAITRESSES — Morning shifts and MEDICAL SECRETARY — RBCEP Call 531-8085. 1961 T-BERD CONVERTIBLE $ 15.83 week. Town A Country Dodge, KEN BAHRS MOVES MACHINERY day shifts. Must apply In person, no TIONIST — Experienced. 4<_ days. Very clean. Must be seen. 9800.' Inc. 60 Main St., Matawan. Call now Ocean Ave., Sea Bright phone calls. HOWARD JOHNSON'S Middletown. Write particulars to Box TRUCK EQUIPMENT MECHANIC - 747-9766 566-6100. call 842-3190 RESTAURANT, Hwy 35, Middletown. H-136,_The_Dally_Ileglsler, Red Bk^ Experienced. Welding helpful. Call Mr. BIG SAVINGS! Pray, 542-3220. •• 19S8 FORD TORINO—OT faatback. ONE OP THE FEW REMAINING PAINTING — Exterior and .Interior MAID WANTED — For Pan Ameri- PHOTOGRAPHIC LAB "ASSISTANT-^ Standard transmission. Excellent con- OKIOINAX. 1968, 427 FORD FAIR Insured. -Pedal rates on one-family can Motel, Rt. 35, Eatontown. For We will train the risht person. Pleas- PARTS MAN Monmoutb County's Import Leader dition. Leaving country. Call after.5:3.0 LANES T- For Information call Call Jerry for Ires estimate. 787-3243. Information call 542-4322. ' ant working conditions and fringl 264-4559. 747-0159. General Motors experience. Excellent COMPLETE HOME REMODELING MOTHERS ^~B<> i/^Llsa Jewelry benefits. Only careful, consclentlou opportunity for right man. All com- 1987 CHEVROLET —, Impala Super DODOB 1968 — Dart. Hardtop coupe —Additions, and alterations. Walter Advisor. Definitely no Investment workers .need apply. Call 741-1123. pany benefits. Apply fn perion RUS- Sport. Bucket seats, power Bteerlns,- Fully equipped. Take over pay- Bud Boyd. 671-1594. Middletown. High commissions. CaU 787-7351. W"RERB~AND" ASSEMBLERS — ~Ev SELL OLDSMOB1LE-CADILLAC CO., alr conditioning. 12300 or beat oiler. ments 114.8? 'week. Town ,& Country YOUNG LADY — To work In buay perlenced-. Excellent working condl. 100 Newman Springs Rd., Red Bank. JIEBJANK m-4591. - :- - - Dodge, Inc. 60 Main St.,' Matawan ___JHAVIN_& A_ PARTY? dental office. 'Typing and. transporta- tlons and many company benefits. Ask for Ken owe. •C-lr-nowl-M6--6100: 1 J Uon~nece'ssaTy;—mii5-Rfsrence»r-Caii Contact- Mrs.—Laura.—Hamilton.—775-. 1959 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE — Call "' '" f. 6100. HOOFING" CREWS-—Bee-Mfc-«ore- Mechanically excellent,.body fair. $300, FIAT 1967 — Station wagon. Fully MErUTI 11AKJNG8 >O 741-2072. any morning, early. PROWN'S. 32 Call 7(1-8497. equipped. Take over payment- 16.42 741-5933 Mon. thru Fri. 9 a.m. -12 NURSE, REGISTERED — For Depart- STENO TYPIST — Experienced ca- Broad St. Auto Imports 1964 BUICK SPECIAL DELUXE — week. Town A Country Dodge. Inc. 60 Two days advance notice a "MUST" ment of Pathology, Intravenous, Ther- reer-minded gal. Better than average Main St.. Matawan. Call sew! 566- salary. Outstanding benefits. MUST CAR WASHERS — Full time em- Excellent condition. Best Oder. Own- 6100. ' . TREE TRIMMING — No high trees. apy and related duties. 40-hour week. ployment. 17- years age minimum. Newman Springs Rd. 74I-5S8- R.d Bank er transferred. 747-0560. Woods cleared. Retaining walls. Buck- 3 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. For Interview ap- BE LONO BRANCH RESIDENT. Excellent working conditions and pay. TOYOTA. 1968 — Corona. Four-door. Un Landscaping, Llncroft. 741-0990. pointment call 222-5200, Ext- 492. MANPOWER INC Apply COUNTRY 8UDSER CAR TFTUNDERBIRD 1984 >— Oreen converts Fully equipped. Take over payments 4 W. Front St. 842-4343 Red Bank. WASH, Middletown. Itile. (950 firm. Some electrical work S8.S7 week. Town & Country iDodge, COMPLETES TAX SERVICE—Corpora- RESIDENTIAL needed. Must.iell. ReloeaUon. Call 747' -Inc.-60-M-in.St,_MatAwan. Oall now tion, business, personal and payroll. DAY, WORKER — One day. Trans- APPRENTICEI MACHINIST — Open- 3322 between 4-6 li.m. oril: Also- bookkeeping;—auditing. Outstand- portation If possible. Call alter 5. 5OW100. . REPRESENTATIVE • : S71-IS52 ing for young reliable man who real- CHEVROLET 1967 — Impala con- ing record of satisfied clients for 18 Nationwide service organization heeds ly, wants to learn a trade. Must have 1968— MERCEDES — BENZ years In Middletown. Maximum legal BEAUTICIAN high mechanical aptltune. Call Kesf- vertible coupe. Fully equipped. Take 350 autoshatle sedan. 3,000 original deduction assured. Reasonable rates. experienced representative for local ler-Ellls ProducU Co. 291 -500. BAYSHORE nver payment* $10.97 week. Town miles. July 1968 delivery. Burgundy For appointment call 671-1289. Margery areaj. Work by Appointment only. _AI1 462-4430 A Country Dodge, Inc. 60 Main St., with tan Interior, Power steering, Trovato * Associates, trading as Re- leadR furnished, car necessary. High Nights 462-4933 DJUVEH — To make deliveries In Matawan. Oall now! 566-8100. Power disc brakes. Tinted glass, liable Tax service. earnings, company henettta. No eve- SALESWOMAN WANTED FOR drug store. 9 to 5, Mon. through Frt. nlnff/t necenaary. Full time. CaJl Mr. Prefer older man. _ANDFORD'0 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1963 VOLKSWAGEN — Sunroof. AM/JFM and shortwave. Air condi- Hartman, 755-4565. DRESS SHOP — 34 hours _ week, Low mileage. Clean. Owner needs tioning. Must sell this week. (5200. FLOOR WAXING ''.all 229-9226, between 6 and 9 p.m PHARMACY, 566-2376. larger c-r. »50O. Call alter 6, 741-1528. Call arter 6 p.m., 842-7453. Reasonable and reliable. 872-0069. FILE CLERK — For Bed Bank law DAYWORKER — Reliable, expert MACHINIBT/TOOLMAKER WANTED NO MONEY DOWN CORVETTE 1065 — Convertible. Four- of flee.'Experienced. Call" — For young V progressive company. 1964 CHEVROLET — Station wagon. FLOOR WAXINO Home and office. T47-3730 . enced woman,'-for cleaning.' One day speed. Fully equipped. Take over 327 cu. In. Four speed with Hurst, Free estimates. week. Fair Haven. 842-1149. Must be able .to work with minimum , payments »15.92 week. Town * Coun- 411 rear. J100O. TELEPHONE SOLICITOUS —Day or supervision. . Top pay. Blue Cross, UP TO 5 YEARS TO PAY j T4T-246O BITTER WANTED IN MY HOME — Profit Sharing. Call Kenler-EIlls try Dodge,, Inc. 60 Main St., Mata- evening. Needed for. one month for Permanent. CaU • • . wan; CaU now! 566-fllOO. "1963 JAGUAR XKE BLUE EOAIV WE THAW FROZEN PIPES jiealUvjigency. Call 222-474S. Products Co. 291-0500. , - , STKR •— Radio arid beater. Four C. W. GRIMMER * SONS 264-7063 19S7 BUICK -— custom Wildcat Two- speed. New white walls, brakes, ex- 741-2189 REGI8T__!REl5~NU_RSBa "AND"VP~NL haust system and battery. Excellent DEPENDABLE WOMAN for day's PRESSERS door hardtop. Full power Including We have growing pains and need for work. On Fridays. In Rumson. Own Steady work. THree week! paid vac** -" air conditioning, power windows. Or-, condition. Sacrifice. $2195. Til 5 p.m. BEDSPREADS AND DRAPERIES — nurses In all departments and shifts transportation. 842-2811). -68 FORD CORTINA lglnal 17.000 miles. Call Mr. Walker, call 747-2319. After 6 p.m. call 462- Made to order. Keasofiabie. Phone both full time and part time. Oood tJon, seven paid holidays, plm other Munmi 5291. • - . • ' 291-148S. starting : salary arid benefits and SECRETARY — Legaegal exexperiencp e de- union benefits. •chtmee—to grow with un. Actl*g-ma,_- ht * ti) f ~T5B[TWI__:S-1N-BRAND-NEW-CO MUSTANG 1965 — Hardtop coupe. 1638 VOLKSWAGEN BUS SNOW PKJWINO SEBVICE BRIDGE-SP-ORISWEAR . Commercial' ' Residential developments In service training. m atllces. Bend resume to Box-B- Fully equipped. Take over payments Call 787-1212 Write Assistant Director Nurse* Ser- IS4, The Dally Register, Red Bank. 247 Bridge Ave. 747-1373 Red Bank. N.J. $7.87 week. Town * Country Dodge, After 6 p.m. Call, after (p.m. 747-0412 1 vice, Jersey shore Medical' Center, RETIRED MAN^PORTBR—HANDY- Inc. 60 Main St., Hat-wan. CaU now. 1958 JEEP — Meyers full cab. New 1945 Cornea Ave" Neptune. N," J. or SECRETARY-RECEPTIONIST — For If A.N — Full time or part-tfroe morn- SAVE '1000 9644100. xall 775-5500,, Ext. 212, _! real estate office. Must type and englne,-baUery,-Urei,-g_i-t_nkt_«hoc!t_ EMPLOYMENT take dictation. 40-hour week. Call for ings. Steady employment. Pleasant PLYMOUTH 196T — Power steering. absorbers. Warren hubs and snow- Wolhtmsnt'147-0221." — working conditions. Apply manager. Factory air conditioning-. New tires. plow. S983. Call 291-9264. HELP WANTED^-FEMALE PBX " mer Shops, al Broad Bt., H«d Bank Winterized, lake new. *1650. 741-3454. 1967 CHRYSLER 300-Llke new, 24,000 "ATTRACTIV_r*YO UNO" LADY~— 67 mllei, $2700 or best oner. 196S EXPERIENCED COSMETICIAN — young lady with modeling or airline VOLKSWAGEN. 6000 miles, J150O or Full time. Good pay. Red Bank area. SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR stewardess experience, as contest (More Classified Adi AUTO RENTALS best offer. Service bound. 671-5496. Write Box F-100. The Dally Register, manager for local department store Red Bank. EXPERIENCE NECESSARY Experience not necesnary, as we wll '68 CHRYSLER "i960 CHEVROLET — impala.- Very" EXCELLENT COMPANY BENEFITS train. Starting salary up to $433 s On The Next Page) good condition. Asking $250. Phone RN AND LPK month, plus fringes. Work locally. NEW YORKER 787-4735. J lo 11 and 11-7 ihlfui Apply In person 'nil main employment office, 233- NEED AN 281-3400 Electronic Assistance Corp. S32S, to arrange personal Interview. Four-door hardtop, air-condition-d, power windows, 1969 PLYMOUTH ROAD RUNNER— 20 Bridge Ave. Red Bank pov/er »_ati, power bralei and steering. Immaculate! Many extras. Service man will sacri- WORLD'S largest Cosmetic Company APPLICATIONS "NOW BEINO ~~ A~rf HELP WANTED—MALE EXTRA CAR? fice. Phone 787-4218. has openings for qualified - ladlea in An Equal Opportunity Employer CEPTED For full time employment Sold new and sarvicad hart. local .neighborhood. Part-time work WOMAN—To woric ln~d(___tore,~two~ Apply J J Newberry, 79 Broad 8t. 1963 BLACK CADILLAC COUPE De- earning to (50 a week showing Avon daya a week, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Write Red Bank. RENT ONE FROM VILLK — Oood condition. Call alter Products. Call 741-4343, 462-3377, 774- Box H-131, The Daily -Register,- Red JOB OPPORTUNITIES 6 p.m.. 264-6124. 1320 or write J. Blrchall, P. O. Box Bank. at JENSEN MARINE 788.' Port MonmouUi. L ' ' 1964 RAMBLER — classic 660. Three- WbilAN—_fattire, to care for working HELP WANTED—FEMALE Rapidly expanding Eail coait plant NEW STOCK OF seat wagon, sJx-cyllnder automatic, WOMAN WANTED FOR 8HOVV- mother's children. Must have own of largest lallboal producer In U.S. with power steering, radio, . heater, ROOM SALES — Full or part-time. transportation. T41-1953. needs steady, ytar round help. Boat WALL and roof rack. Good family car. S50O; experience nol nectuory. We" will Call 741-6400, Mr. Leonard. 787-1858. WOMAN WANTED — For kick press NURSE, REGISTERED train ASSEMBLERS — CARPENTERS UNCOLN-MERCURY 1962 MERCEDES BENZ CAREER OPPORTUNITIES and machine operation. Light aasembly EMERGENCY ROOM - PAINTERS - FIBERGLASS '69 SIMCAS 190 SL. Black leather Interior. AM/ work. Experienced desirable. Apply MOLDERS - WOODWORKERS. Paid Sh'-Wib-ry Avs., at Sycamort • STATISTICAL Crown Engineering Corp., Lacusl St., Rotating days. Experience desirable, FH radio. 46,000 original miles. Looks • SECRETARIAL jCeyport._264-308ay hospital and medical benellli, poltf JUST ARRIVED! and run* like new. S1950. Original but not necessary. Attractive salary, holidays and vacation, bonuses and title. CaU after 6 p.m.. ,542-7453. • ACCOUNTINS benefits. For Interview appointment 747-5400 3 • CLERICAL WAITRESSES — Oood working condi- overtime. 1862 MERCURY — Radio, beater. • ASSEMBLY tions, fringe benefits. The Buttonwood coil Personnel Deportment, Monmoulh Manor. Hwy. 34. Matawan. MIMESo. Medlcol Center. Long Branch, N. J. JENSEN MARINE. D'V. «f Bonoor FIRST AVENUE ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS ASK FOR MR. EUGENE 1135. Expanding International corporation Punta Corp., p. O. Box 113, Boundry A 747-9142 needs outstanding personnel In these BEAUTICIAN — WluTfollowlna-. »25" JM-520O, Exl. 472. day. Full or part time* Paid vacation Rd., Marlboro, N. J. Wrllt or Phone 291-9200 "1964 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD — categories. Above average^ paf%_cale 431-OI00 betwten • a.m. and 4 p.m. and fringe benetfi«. Apply In person and holidays.' 264-4978.' (An equal opportunity employer.) Must be Keen. Excellent condition. or send resume In confidence to 7tr> AUTOS FOR SALE . Asking f23O0. 767-7360. HOUSEKEEPJSR—Two"dayiTor~eilulv_^ HELP WANTED-MALE sonnel, ' EBSCO Building, Shrewsbury lent.' Hours can be ftiranged Tor right THUNDERBIRD 1867 — Landau. Aye, (opposite airport) person. Own transportation 'preferred, Fully equipped, air. Take over pay- MATURE WOMAN — To workTtn" ifust have recent references. New menu. JJ5.80 week. Town _ Country Rumson home. 741-3967. Dodge, Inc. 60 Mam St., Matawan. doctor'a office, to start January IS. ( Call now! 566-6100. ^ Please send resume to Box H-127. SALE_blR_T^~For ladlea^shopT Part The Dally Bctlater, lied Bank. time, permanent. Experienced. Call BOAT BUILDING 1959 FORD — Running condition. KAIDS — Foil ume~permanenl~ po-~ 741-9608. VISIT THE J itltlpns available with full "fringe bene- If you have experience in boat building or related ft SSNSS^S3Jsi J)_ICT0R_l_AXD5E=Four day* a' week, rw_rrifrr|miJ|6lJdT»t)rKmr to assist doctor Mi office" procedures. 1963 DODOSS STATION WAOOK — condition*. Contact Personnel Office, Willing* to work one evening per week Industrie* or have the desire to. learn the following 440" model. Automatic trannmisston. Wvervlew Hospital. 741-2700, Ext. 225.and three afternoon! until 6. Write FRIENDLY SALESMEN Oood condition.'Call Thurs. and Frl. DENTAL ASSISTANT — Red Bank P. o. Box 387, Holmdel. trade* . < . .. - • , • . • after 7:30 p.m., gat and 8un. alter area. Experience preferred but not 10 a.m. euenllal. Send resume to Box D-129, PANTRY WOMAN WANTED — Day The Dally Register. Red Bank. shift. Experienced. Call (or appoint- 1964 VOLKSWAGEN convertible. 47. ment 872-124S. 000 original miles. One owner. Radio. WOMAN TO MANAGE WOMEN'S WOODWORKING PAINTING WAREHOUSING at WALL! whltewatlM, niw tlrei. 1750 firm. Call SHOP — Experience necessary, call 787-1585. HAIRDRESSER 671-9292 for apj>otntment Apply In pemon. Contesna D'or, 642 ENGINE INSTALLING ' BOAT FABRICATING FORD 1965 WHITE FOUB-DOOIl OALAX1E 500 — Radio and heater. WOMEN — AVON Newman Springs Kd.v Mncrofl. Automatic transmission, power steer- ru_L OR PART TIME. Several terrl- WAITRESS WANTED — _ _ THEY'RE OFFERING Ing and brakes. Snow tlretl. 1995 or -lories open for women who are Inter- Year round .work. XI.60 hour to start best ofler this week. 229-4867. ested ID having a good, steady In- plus uniform*, meal allowance and We Offer come. Experience not necessary. tips. Full company benefits. Apply af- 1961 RAMBLER WAQON Avon sells Itlftf. CalU14t-4343, 462- ter 2 p.m. V. W. Wrwlworth Co.. 52 tin) 3377, 774-12,0. Broad St.. Red Hank. Call 842-5224 Csmpatiftv* W«g«i — Qu*rt*rly Wig. 'Rcvltwi 40 OF THE CLEANEST ASSEMBLY LINE WORKERS — ^JA_ FRIDAY " — one girt office." BUICK 1967 — BporUman. Nine-pas- Women experienced in electro me- * Piles V.cit|oni Call Call between 12 and 4 p.m. 671131,- The Dally Register, Red Bank. Year Round Employmtnt and Much Mori 787-07 59 0672. t DENTAL ASHISTANT ^~ Matawan. DODGE 1967 — Monaco! Hardtop Experience necessary. 2 to .1 days, MONMOUTH COUNTY. SECRETARY no evenings, complete handwritten coupe. Fully equipped, air. Take over TO APPLY you may arrange lor on Interview at th« followlnj N. J, payments $13.68. week. Town .& Coun- resume to Box H-135, The Dally.- Reg- try Dodge, Inc. 60 Main at., Mata- Excellent opportunity for a bright In- ister, Red Hank. Stale Empfoymenl s«rvi« Olllcss: Freehold, Jan. 13, 14, II, Ml A.W.i wan. Call now! 648-6100. dustrious person la work lor no active PRICED FROM $100 TO $6,000 Personnel Director. Should have ex- BALEBPERHONB WANTED ~^~ Full"' Red Bonk, Jan, 13, U, I), 2-4 P.M.! Asbury > Pork, Jan, V, 16, 17, cellent skills (Typing A Btcnoi and time year round only. Five day week. 9:30-11:30 A.M. f F.W. Woolwnrth Co., 52 Broad —_, O« CALL »• PVFFE, 'A CAR FOR EVERY.TASTE IM4 CHEVROLET PICK UP —With company benefits and Hlary com HOUBEWOItKEH — Live In. Hazlet. utility body. V-g. Automatic trans- niensurate with experience. Apply Call between 3 and 7 p.m, 2M- mission. Oond condition. Heater. $7Vfi. Personnel Office, Mon. thru Frl., 97728. • • . __^ THE LUHRS COMPANY AND EVERY POCKETBOOK ... Call 741-1122. a.m. 12 Noon or call 671-30_O, Ext. 214 for appointment. WAITRESS—Experienced. " Tray ser- Boundary Road, Marlboro, U. J. 1962 CORVAN — |300 vice. Nights. For Interview appoint- WITH DEALS TO, MATCH. 1M2 CHEVROLET PICK UP — ISM LILY-TULIP ment oall 842_00O. Rumson Hotel. 10 An squol opportunity tmplpyar Call_7(l-lia - _ L ^_ DIVISION Olf OWBN8I_LINO1B Waterman Ave., Rumson.. NO FEE.CHARGED PIOKITPR - mw Chevrolet and 19M Hvry. 33 Holmdel, N. I. EXPERIENCED office manager and Ford. HU cylinder engines In each, An equal opportunity employer bookkeeper to take complete charge COURTESY • VALUE • SERVICE . . . SECOND TO NONE Catl_S46-4806 m(t«xjl_p.nl. MBD/CAL, SECR_iTAi?y — _aho7a~ ol office and all phases of bookkeep- tory department han a position open ing. For Interview call 29I-2M0. 1981 CMC TILT— CAB — Chassis ror experienced Individual. Excellent only. For JB' body. 'Oood condition vorklng conditions, 40-nour week. .COME IN TODAY and SEE HOW. throughout. 787-3328. Weekends off. Liberal fringe hene- IMf CHEVROLET CARRYALL. — »_7S riln. Apply Employment Office, Jer- EASY IT IS TO DO BUSINESS WITH US Call sey lUtor. Medical Center, 1945 Cor- 747-5O90 • lies Ave., Neptune, N.J. CLASSIFIED BUSINESS DIRECTORY Jm"CHEVROLET . VAN ™ EJcellent RN OR I.PN —H>y~«x_niin_tlnn7T r_on<1llt8rir3llnmy'ir-auir,»BelfordrTalie .to.-lL, p-m.jl_p.m_..lo..T»,mr.Write over payroenW 495-OM19. Box N-I03, Tria. Dally Register, Red A HANDY GUIDE OF BUSINESS SERVICES TO SUIT YOUR MANY NEEDSI ViTbin Bank, MOTORCYCLES ^xpRm_mca_w>iiiii_BBisft VALUE-SERVICE Full time and part time. Apply In +MMOO AfTWJYKD tm IMT 'HONDA CB 1WCC — With perjion; Peterson'*,. 1A3 KJyarsfde Scrambler parts. Hardly used, new Ave., Red Bank. Adding Machines-Typewriters Moving & Storage. Pearl and Bead Reitrlnglng JUST A PARTIAL LISTING condition. Cost »6W1 n«w, nnw only (425 with helmet. .Call 2S4-27M. ADDINO MACHINES - Typewriters flA zpsrtiv on nrafdtd nylon. I..M _ BUSINESS NOTICES sold, rentod, repaired. Berplr.o'n 101 Direct Bervlee 10«I~HONDA~— MIS Hisrsmtilor. Very Monmouth St., nc 1966 MERCURY rood nnnMUon. Musi Mil. |32> firm. t na. • Oalir. Bpeclallita LLEB', U Broad it, Kid Call M1-00U, .- Coupe DiVillt. Full powtr, factory Two to chooie from. Both thorough' Sevtrnl lo choou frsrn. Two-doori, Diamond* Bought or Reatyled ly reconditioned. Jutt tcoded from I lour d»ri ond tlotlon wogont. All olr, 1,000 original milti, original owntri.'Fully tqiupped with i In -lo« condition. Ripdy lor your MOBILE HOMES IM us tiny Hie diamonds you iton't Photography factory olrv. -* i Inipecllon, 'K- hNGEL 1 wear or lot in rentylo themfl , for you LOOK1NO POL. „ J^HOMKn Anderson personally. UeunBlllpa'. 3 Broad Bt. mm MCMM<__*twMM W_DDINO» — Portraits, Thwtrleal 1967 CHRYSLER 1965 MUSTANG • Approximately flx*10. ood condition. Ml-Mll Arlv.rU.ln.. riLU AKT PHODUO- 1968 CADILLAC fUaannanilt. 201-MU0, Draperies TIONB, Fair Haven. T41-4744. Tw» to chant Horn, Oil ton-) Two lo chMH from,- Ow «n- IQkfti AVC -- • two tindrmtnt. living Odd Joba Eldorodo, 2 to chocw from. Both vertible, one lwo_oor hardtop. Bo4h , > vertlble. bnf hardtopTvJuit traded room. Full size kltchetr and hath. llnholstrrlnc, riraperlcs, sllpcovnrs, IrnmoculaH. Balance of ntw car i from original ownen, Priced lo Healed flnnrs. Rxcellent condition. Plumbing and HeMIng loaded with txtrai. Bros. Inc. (1OI.UKN TOI/CII DEOOnATOnn, 1,1(1HT 1IAUI.INO—Cellars, «ira_«a < warranty. \ uli |'l"s II 117 nromt, iixl Hank. Wm:% ojtnnerf IIP. ilitvn Irufk , fr«s Htl- 11X15 10x1)0 MOMI.K HOME — On the mstrs. 741-1411 attor 3 p.m, PMtMniNO - lieatlni and D»lhroora apnt. ' Adults only, Call after 6 p.m. Packing • Moving Electrical Contractor! r«nniit«llni 2644413. C. KI.KCl'I'.IC — N«w wlrlns, Painting and Decorating CORRISAN'S i Klentrln heat. No Job loo 127 Oakland St., Hed Bank T47-.7OI WANTED AUTOMOTIVE Storage l»0<0 7U»JM OAltl. II. JONBn — I'dlnllni and wallpaporlnK Kully Innured. for fret Roofing, Siding & Insulation JUNK CARS Entertainment nsllmaloi, call 220-3S31, I'ICKBIl UP Ticket* avallAlile for Intent nrosd- 1'AIN I-IHO — Inttrlor, •xtarlnr. (Ian- OTBBN corTN_r"Smriinifr«rriini~* fvay flhown nn'l Major Hportn nvrnts, • ral repairs. Kron fottmates. nehson- Insulation Inalallnd and aiiEraji(asd Twinbfoolc Auto Wrecking 176 Monnmull, HI., J(«,| Imnk, able rales. Cnll f,M.i:iM, , for ID rears. 77B.O70.V MI%<0. Eatontown 542-2235 1111 CONTIlAf.'TOIt — Palnllnl, In- "IDINfl — Alum, miponl Tedlar and Gcncrnl Conlrnclnrs tsrlor anil exterior. Kree rfltlmstas. Mcoa. Work giiaranlflftd n«A-onn!)Je rates. Oall 7n7-S'JFi4. ToWKn AWAV vnr.B AOKNT/ALIIID VAN LINK UnFKNTl t Y^Ailil It ii'iiis, pa n pjiriiT PROWN'S i'.hlA, -f|4'7ftO4 atftpi, si'lQwslks, jiiilloii odd jdlii, no s, rAn.wni.fj OUT chtin'von vouit KOIIKION'" nrasitnaliln rales Winm, 7(7.2338. k 33JJT(>»(1 J8t. Itiid Jltnlt 74l<7AO0 SHREWSBURY AVE. and SYCAMORE AVE. AMBItlfiAN - AND BPOItTH OArtil 51-53 Mechanic St. _, VAuf/Mtuu-i *~noN»' --"iiiiniflio" I alntln_ A Decorattnc AT MONMOIJTII MO'IDUB,, INC., ror Vre. Kstlmatss Call M3-3IIW nm.vonn itonriNn _ iiniNn co llwy. S.'i, KSUtntown, MI-K4I4. trim PnilfM, *Hlta 1.11(1* «l!»«r "(2-.7IM nr flIM Hl'MTi InHireti, trim *#!lmAj0* T«;.|vj« lit year miarjintns. I Two liuyt, MM'lltlown, 071 DIH4. 741-0030 THE FAMILY CIRCUS By BO KCOM THK PAILY Veitrndtj. Jw.,B, I969—23 APARTMENTS FTJRNI8HBD ROOMS .; DRAFTSMAN DRAFTSMEN **" PHARMACIST BUB-LIT APARTMENT — Available rURNWHBD. ROOM-In- hom« with Knowladga of mechanical FOR Jan 10th.. Wesjant. Three months. elderllyy men;; wilwil exchangge room and Immediate opening! for me- Prefer Military- Elevator. Call 774- ird forr part cuatodttn. Call dd»y» s on- detail drafting. Minimum chanical draftsmen. Elec- . , LARGE MEDICAL CENTER 4986 or 774-4856. 7t7flV7.flt»Vb«f0rf e 4 t»,rnr. n .two tp four y«ar« experi- RED BANK—Bedrood m an** ocompleU tronic background helpful, RED BANK ----- Three-rooms fur- kitchen. Seralpriva4* Bath with shower. ence.; Top rate., added Staff position. .40 hour week. Starting salary $190 a week. nished, ..for adults. S88 a month, heat One denlrable business person. Linen Many benefits. Excellent op- and utilities extra. 747-1857. ""-"•as sundered, phone. TV. Maid service Coit-of-Living differential, portunity for advancement. Excellent working conditions. Employee benefits include pen- KEAN8BURG — Four rooms .unfur- if desired. Rent Includes utilities. 741- excellent benefits and §rou sion plan; partially paid life, disability and hospitaUzation in- nished. Call after 5. all day Bat, gun.1855. - " Please* send resume, including salary Adults preferred. 787-2282. EFFICIENCY ROOM and bedroom. potential. surance. For interview appointment, call Personnel Depart- THREERO6M~KURNISHED Apart7 Reasonable rates. 2910599. U E. High- requirement*, to •«•«, ment. All year round. AH utilities. land Ave, Atlantic Highlands. Ur ^t1"' Personnel Department ment. Overlooking Bandy Hook Bay. 872-1139 smtllM ROOMS — Clean, comrort- (No phone calls please) MONMOUTH MEDICAL CENTER THREE-ROOM APARTMENT — Neat- able. Reasonable Gentleman pre- AIR CRUISERS CO. ly furnished. Heat, riot water. Gas and fercd. 92 Wallace 8t.. 741-5398. LONG BRANCH, N. J. electric supplied. Private entrance. A Division Of DANELECTRO 222-5200, Ext. 492 Call 787-6783. LABOE"R66M — With prlvate-Jtrt' THE GARRETT CORP. ..Division of MCA Entertainment atorj-. Nicely furnished. Phone X41- 211 W. Sylvanla Ave. Neptune. N., SANTANDER APARTMENTS 2183. • - ~~i- JHHB BBTTOR FLAOB TO WORK" 07753 Elepance without extravagance TOOL MAKER — Experienced, wit! Elevator Incinerator REAL ESTATE FOR SALE •Hwy. "34, Ji4 miles south of OoMngs- good practical shop and math back HELP WANTED—MALE FOR SALE Full Service Building wood Circle, Wall Township. ground, for work on complex 3-D geo Bfautlftil ocean and latlc view Balcony, HOUSES FOR SALE • metric shapes and mold cavities, fireplace, electric kitchen lr. Asbury Park Now Is the HIM to move neeJ or,- 225. '. REPRESENTATIVE apartment In charming home. Near ragc. Asking $40,000. Vacant — Sail Nationwide service organization needs FACTORY WORK shopping center s>nd . transportation. today. - ; OROCERY CLERKS-Full-tlme male experienced representative for local WITH A QUICK ACTION For appointment to view, call 741-3691. , days, full-time male nights, part-time areas. Guaranteed salary. "Work by HALL BROS., Realtors: trials mornings. All steady employ- appointment only. All leads furnished Immediate PERMANENT openings for LOW-COST 'RED BANK — Attractive "ona-hed-' 813 River nd. 7I1-76S8 Fair Have- ment. Experienced preferred. All No evenings necessary. Oompany beni males and females. MUST work ro- room garden apartment. Back and Member Multiple Listing Service- company benefits. Apply in person fits, Call Mr. Hartman, 7M-I585. tating shifts. Starting t3.3SM per hour DAILY REGISTER "Anyhow, 1 kept MYSELF clean, Mommy." front entrances. Heat, hot water'and Open 7 Days yoODTOWN, 129 Main Bt.. Matawan. plus shift differential. OVERTIME. gas supplied. On bus lino. Quiet neigh- EXPERIENCED QROCBR — Appi; Excellent fringe benefits. Drive to borhood. See Manager, 165 "E" FIRST TIME OFFERED-. FtlLMlMIl EXPERIENCED'CADDY' after 4 p.m. Little Silver Market, 47 Exit 120, Garden State Parkway, right Branch Ave. SlAflTVrl—Year-round position. Top Prospect Ave., Little Sliver. turn on Matawan Rd.. left turn on FAMILY AD Llncroft Split. Entrance hall. Living •alary and employee benefit!. Please Cllffwood Ave. to plant. Apply In per- WEST END — Unfurnished Town room, full dining room, fireplace.- In call S42-83M for Interview. son, at Personnel Office. 3 LINES - 5 DAYS FOR SALE MERCHANDISE WANTED House. 3 bedrooms (5H roomst $18fi family room, den. Four bedrooms, W, SALESMEN mo. plus utilities. Oceanfront 2294)300 baths. Large patio. Full basement- BHORT ORDER COOKS — Experi- FULL OB PART-TIME FOR ANTIQUES — Tiffany Items, toys, fur- overslied two-car attached ffarsge. ence* only. Apply in person, Mar- MIDLAND GLASS CO. nltur*. ohtna. palatlnii. Rtatukryt coins. THREE ROOMS AND *BATH~—~Un" Excellent condition. Many extra*. Call tini's Diner, Hwy. 38, Keansburg, CLIFFWOOD AVE. lllhUnc nxtures. Curved-oeJt dining rurnlshed. Including heat and hot today. .Asking $38,000. f : liJRVICHl STATION ATTENDANT LEADS-LEADS-LEADS JUST HAMMOND room pieces. Capper Kettle Antiques, water. Private. Ideal tor adults. f9i,' OL1FPWOOD, N. J. AVfctUbl* for Merohandtia For BiV Oakhunt 631-1609 or 229-08D2. Oarage optional.. 747-2676. Third shift. Profit sharing, paid vaca- World wide computer school needi An Bqual Opportunity Employer only. Article must originate from 747-3500 I ; tion, and hospitaUzation. For Inter- ambitious men for outstanding careei MEN — WOMEN houiefaold and may not exceed a in COLLECTOR — WJtnts old toy trains RED BANK — 3V4 rooms and bath. tU» call Mr. riore. S42-9784. opportunities. Our growth rate Is ere Our firm needs 13 to start Immediate- price of 150.00 per article. any condition, Pay cash or will trade. All utilities included, security re- ly. No experience. We train. Ills- ORGAN H.O., 027, 0, standard cause. 774-3710. quired. Adults. No pels. 741-0642. ROLSTON WATERBURIf • OAB BfATJON ATTENDANT — One atlng 13,000 to 18,000 sales position Price MUST be advertised, flitch an man 3-11 p.m. one man 11-7 p.m Ap-We will train the sales oriented pe {170 to atart Call H! 4015 between diUonal line JLOO. No copy change ACCESSORIES WANTED — for a r!ED BANH — 2ii~bedroom»r~3tesr Realtor - Insuror " ly |n person, Hem service station, son. Commission paid weekly. Car 2:30 and 4 p.m. may b« made and no dUcoiinU 01 Gravely tractor. Call after 6 p.m.rientlal. Close to tnwn, Churches, 16 W. Front SI. Red Bank 0TTO1 :wy. to, Mlddletoa-n. necessary for local travel. MACHINE OPERATORS — Presierg return* will be made If ad la can* 776-7283. schools, can after 6 p.m. 741-2512. E celed before expiration. STUDIO "RED BANK ~ "cozy,~thre« roomsT RED BANK TOWN HOUSE AUTO AND TRUCK- MECHANICS' and floor help (20,). New oompany. OLD FURNITURE - Antiques, china, Call 842-1881 collect (Union). BCHARF CORP., 321 Main To Plae* Your Dally R»glif«r (urnished. Garage. Heat. Couple only. WANTED — Apply In person, M. 1 P.M. to 5 P.M. ONLY St., Belford., 787-7877. OP ASBURY PARK gla&aware, art objects and bric-a-brac. Lease. 1110 month. Collect 212858' Newly decorated Three extra largo SCHWARTZ * SONS, 141 W. Front Mr. Don Trueheart FAMILY AD, CALL ... Open dally 'til B; fiat, 'til B:30 Immediate cash for anything and ev-5962 or 212-987-5777 after 6 p.m. bedrooms, lVj tiled Iiailn, wall-to-wall It., Bel Bank. - REAL ESTATE SALES MANAGER— erything. Ru a oil's 35 But Front St., throughout Excellent condition. £x> CARPENTERS — Experienced, steady To handle supervision of sales staff T41-1603. THREE-ROOM APARTMENT ~ FOR DAIRY AND FJtOZEN FOOD MAN' work. Report on Job, country Woods, and all advertising. Active local BRAND NEW cellent price — »29,50O. AOBR — All company benefits. Ap- off Red Hill Rd., Hotmdel. WANTED — Port-a-crJb, aood to ex- RENT — Vicinity of MarJboro-Holm- ply In person, Foodtown. Matawan, agency. Excellent opportunity for the 741-6900 cellent condition. Phone del. Unfurnished. Adults .only. Imme- right person, our sales personnel SPINET PIANO diate occupancy, call 946-4596. 842-0110 13* Mils St. SALES CAREER know of this ad. Wrlto giving exper- 24-Hour Service • Full keyboard, 3 pedals, keyboard cov- 741*3931. FLOOR SAMPLES, "AS IS''—450* to ATTRACTIVB — Nicely furnished MECHANIC—Experienced on Chrysler FOR the right Individual, we offer lence and qualifications to Box G-180, er, bench, delivery free tuning at your Edward A. Hanlon, Realtor Corporation oars. FREEHOLD DODOffi, marvelous challenge. No celling on The Dally Register, Red Bank. S5% savings. Sola, renllners, rockers, home, IS year guarantee, traditional studio apartment. Private light cook- ~MS«3t "—' chairs. Little Silver Upholstery, 333 or contemporary style. PETS AND LIVESTOCK ing. Convenient 741-8394. '-, 504 Shrewsbury Ave. eventual -Income. -Excellent starling PERSON-FOmmmNQ-ANDCOUN. Bllrarslde Ave.i-'Iilttlej Silver.— BPEOIAL PRICE: Mew Shrewsbury, N, J. 07734 salary, plus commissions while com- TBR WORK — Permanent position. BOUIBRgL IIONHEV _ Hli tnontln KEANSBURG — .Thres rooms nicely ASSISTANT MANAOER — Experience pleting our three-year sales training Apply NORWOOD DISTRIBUTORS FOR THE PERFECT WKDDINO furnished. Heat, utilities extra. VIEW- program. Liberal fringe benefits' ani INC., 16 Third St. KeyporL GOWN — Bridesmaid dresses and all old. New cage. Call Ily high school. 787-1015. MATAWAN TOWNSHIP future management opportunity. 681-7987 in iUjxrvUlrig men •"entlal, Mechani- HAIRDRESSER — Top salary and accessories with Individual personal $525 T 5. AND 3 BED~R0OM APART- GOVERNMENT OWNEP LET 1989 be your year of opportunity. •«nrtce. Oall Virginia Klmball. Free- commission for right stylist Otiry of ALASKAN MALAMUTE8 AKC—Dedi- MENTS ~ Winter or yearly, In Shore Thoroughly recondttloned lovely horns cal aptitude or skill* Important Xx- Call 519-7581, eves 671-2232 today. hold. 462-77TC- cated brASder offers heavy boned, An equal opportunity employer. M/ N. Y. In Keyport Call 2M-«080. 775-9300 beautifully marked, home raised pups. area, call 774-4968 or 774-4856. in choice location. $11,900 with WOO OAS miS BOILBR — 100,000 BTU 300 Main Bt. A*bury Park down. Balance 30 yeari at 9135 par MlKnt salarr, hospital iwntfJts and MEN — To deliver morning and HALE FEMALE Bllihtly used. Call Top champion pedigree. Soundness SEA BIUO11T — Ideal for single. month pays all. - ^ . Sunday newspapers In Red Bank arei B83-903B...... AcnrrusNB CUTTINO OUTFIT — and disposition guaranteed. 542-0718. Furnished efficiency apartment with Insurance program. Call Ceuntry Bud- No collecting. Call 74T-2143.. PRODUCTION WORKER Large gauge torch. 60 It. new double PROFESSIONAL DOd GROOMING— irlvate entrance, 10 minutes to Fort BEACH AGENCY, Realtor hose. ISO. 787-6160. By appointment only. AKC poodlo Sonmouth. N.Y. bus stop on coraer. 194 RtT 35 Middletown, it JfT get Car Wash, Mlddletown, §71-5259, ROUTE SALESMAN — Long Branch, RENT A TV and achnauzer puppies, 671-9621. call 8421100. 843-3836 Open 7 dsy» Asbury Park area, LANCE INC. Ex- 3 shift operation, six days per week. OLYMPIC STEREO, 21" T.V. AND Hves: 831-47W, • • ••:••• cellent opportunity, top benefits. Fu. Steady employment,, excellent bene- Color or black and white. Day, week v for appointment. or month. Low rates. BATBHCRB TV AM/FM RADIO CONSOLB — Asking Payments approximate \L - " fure unlimited, salary plus commis- fits. $230. Call 222-2518. INSTANT CREDIT C0MMERICAL RENTALS QuaHTfed buyers' sion. Young man over 21. Good pasl Interviews Monday through Friday 9 a» Church St., Keanaburg. 787-4100. TAKB A PUPPY HOME ACCOVNTANT SEMI-SENIOR CPA work records. Sales experience noi a.m. ttl 12 noon. BYE'B PLACE SSSTAURANT BAND SAW — Craftsman, with motor WITH YOU NOW MODERN OFFICES — singles or NEWLY LISTED -T firm seeking man with general ex- necessary, we'll train you. For per- Apply at the personnel office 7BA Monmouth BL Red Bank and metal stand, extra blades, ISO. K-9—CLUB suites, own parking. Colonial style sonal interview, call between 7-9 p.m. CHRISTMAS SPECIAL Imtnaculato three-bedroom, two-tHUh perience level of Seml-Senlor. Com* (Bame side ot street as diner, hut 787-6180. building. Heat, full maintenance, air ranch home,' situated on tree shaded petltlve salary offered plus a gener- 727-2336. west BOO ft.) OLD ENGLISH SHEEP DOGS conditioning optional. Reasonable ren- LILY-TULIP ^Poodles, all colors Alasklan Mala- lot. Spacious living room with \v\i,id ous prognm ot fringe benefit!. Call AUTO MECHANIC — Steady work Featuring AH Home Cooking DINETTE , SET — Table, six chain. tals. 10 florins St. Red Bank. Call burning fireplace, formal dining: room, Grossman, Brown * Co. 7744583. DIVISION OF OWENS-ILLINOIS (With this ad) 2 eggs, potatoes, toast, VM. Black.seal stole, |35. mutes, Tiny Toy Boston Terriers, 7«l-9363. ! for reliable man. Must have his ownHwy. 35 Holmdel codes We. 201-0558 Welmaranera, Wire Fox Terriers, Scot- science kitchen, 24' g&moroom, full tools. ANDERSEN, INC. 7«7-4500. Equal opportunity employer Srery day a New Lunch Special ties, West Highland whites. Fuss, WAREHOUSE , STORAGE SPACE) - baaemont, attached garage. St James SALESMEN vl MonmoUth St., Red Bank. HOMEMADE SOUP DAILY DISHWASHER — Moving. Must sell. Daschunds, Bassets, Pomeranians, Approximately.. 1300 sq. it. call Parian. F(nanclnff arranged. Trans- V rou'want money we can maice It WANTED.,^- MALE OR MMALE Sear's Kenmore portable. Two years Mint Bchnauzers, Cocker Spaniels, 747-1100 ferred owner. O&ll now — lltT.BOO.LTh,* for you. Part-time 110,000 per year, MANAGEMENT FOB SALES WORK — In Arts and old. Works perfectly. J50. 842-5033. Irish Betters, Samoyedes, Fabulous McOOWAN AOB3NCY, Realtor. 358 full time 120.000. CaU Mr. Frank, 671- Crafts, atore located In .XBatontown. Sale - Introductory - Sals Great Danes. Magnificent Afghans. OFFICE SUITE — 756 sq. II. in ex- Newman springs Ed., Red Bank. 747- 0678. • Some knowledge of Arts and Crafts Clear Plastic Slipcovers 21" O.K. TELEVISION — Maple con- Siberian Huskies, Cairn Terriers, Chl- cellent location. Desirable fo*r any pro- 3O00. . :; • TRAINING necessary. Full time. M2-5783. 3-pieod set 179.90 pin fitted to your fession can 747-3730 between 9 and 5. —WANTED——Mature.-«ober_man_to sole. Perfect condition. Priced at US huahuaa. Border Collies, Boxers. BRIOKTOWN — Ranch, three yoars -LTIADBTO- REAL ESTATE 'furnlture.-20-yeaTs-experieTiee.—Guaran- for quick Hale to mak« mom rpi- nayr LITTLE SILVER — office or suite assist superintendent. Borne knowl- teed workmanship, can Anytime. 499- EKEE-LIFE-TIME-INSURANCE— young, on a U acre lot. Six roomi. edge of painting, plumbing and gen-EXECUTIVH CAREER color set. 291-9309. POLICIES AND HEALTH of offices "approxlmat&Ty"~BW>—iqr—ttr includes three hedrooms. G-as hent. eral maintenance, for garden apart- IN FINANCE New year, new office, new ideas, new oaos. GUARANTEED ON ALL PUPPIES Will alter to suit. Modern, air condi- Oarage. Taxes only' $tSO. Must sea ment. Salary ISO per week.to start After completing a unique tralnlni oonortunltles. Experienced or will FOUR-PIECE BEIOB SECTIONAL— Lowest Prices, Highest quality tioned, all utilities. 741-6952. to appreciate. Aaklng $19,900 with program, you are appointed Brancl- . SINGER ZIO ZAQ corner table, cocktail table, step ta- For your convenience, open weekdays, call 7(1-9115. train. In confidence call Mr. Dexter, Late model. Reposessed. Makes but- ble, room divider and chaise. Call 35O0 sq. FT. -~ Light manufacturing terms to qualilied buyers. Manager — a respected member of HOWARD DEXTER AS8OC, Broker, » to 9, Bat and.Sun.'to s p.m. ]Dft for lease. . SECURITY GUARD — Full time po- a crack management team with vital T47-2701, 21 B. Front St., Red Bank, tonholes, monograms, hems. Needs no 671-3648 after 5 p.m. sltlon available with good salary and responsibilities for the profit and attachments. Full price IS*, cash or 747-363). Oall 747.1100 full fringe benefits. Must be able to growth of tiie organization. Advance- DISHWASHER — in school cafeteria, 10.60 per month. Trade-Ins accepted. FOUR TIRES — 770-14 whltewalls, t8 HORSES BOARDED DESIRABLE 0FFIOE8 with- vlsw ot BARBEHA AGENCY work rotating shifts. Contact Person- ment, security, liberal salary with In. five days a week, 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 CREDIT DEPT. 2H-S5S3 apiece.'28" bicycle (boy's) glO, as Is. . . .Reasonable the river available. Tuller Bids,, 103 M2-3004 Open til. 9 p.mJ nel Office, Rlvervlew Hotpltal. 7, Shrewsbury. Matched appliances. S42,9oo, CROWBu* fancy, but you'll like Atco's friendly SALESMAN WANTED — For Man'l home. Mlddletown area; Reasonable, fer. Also selling is cu. ft. refrigera- Red Bank AOBNCY, Realtor, 78 W. Front "St., ptapM. Paid holidays, vacation, inaur- Call 291*117, 8-10 a.m7 . .tor-freezer, boy's and girl's bikes, DALMATION 7«-«03O. EVM. 74W(IU. —^ shop. Must have some experience, s~ OF LIST PBICE plcnfo table, several pairs of chil- anoe, other benefits. We were an equal ooldln's Men's Shop', 25 Broad St., Ifale. Fret to a good home. Call HOUSES FOR RENT TOMB RIVER — Nln» room Bl-Ievel. opportunity employer years before It Bed Bank. dren's Ice skates. 741-4531. '- •• ' became fashionable. ATCo CERAM- $85 to 1350 Per Month five years old. Excellent condition, SITUATIONS WANTED-Male ; ALL INVENTORY JUT BLACK KITTENS — With blue convenient to shopping, churches-xod ICS CORP., Hwy. 39, Keyport. 284-8000 WANTED — A SECOND COOK — THE BBRO AGENCY schools. Four bedrooms, Hi baths, Experienced. Reliable and dependable LJCAD SINGER — Wishes to join ex- CARPET •yes. ,Call after 8 p.m. HI. 33 . Mlddlttown BOYS—Between tt and IS to ilellvcr person. Excellent opportunity to. ad' OB3SON — FBNDKR — AMPEd T8T-8815 apaoloua living room, tormal dining circulars In Red Bank on Saturday Ubllshed rock group. Four years ex- ROOERB — YAMAHA — CORAL SAVEMON&Y 871-1000. room, eat-In sanltu kitchen with all vance. Brand new operation- Pleasant perience. Call Jim. 281-6183. ORBTBCH-SHUnE- MIKES -— OBEDIENCE TRAINING — The Bay- WIDE BELECTION OF RENTALS — appliances, wall-to-wall carpeting, - ele- mornlngl. No collections. Call 222-1224 atmosphere at Fort Monmouth's O Choose from leading brands. Dupont shore Companion Pott Club will hold vated sun deck. LAwer level • spacious between » a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday 501 Nylon, 13.99 «4. yd. Acrllan, 16.68 Furnished and unfurnished. Immedl- through Friday. . fleers Club. 542-7332. FREEHOLD MUSIC CENTER beginner classes In Red Bank start- ats occupancy. SAMUEL TEICHER mahogany paneled room with hnga TRUCK DRIVER — For Septic Tan SITUATIONS WANTED — «5 Souto Bt. Freehold ing on Jan. 22nd. Call 741-696S or AGENCY, Ocsanport Ave., Oceanport brick fireplace, laundrjr room, garage. WINDOW CLEANERS truck. Experienced preferred. Call al FREE'DECORATOR HOME SERVICE 222-8749. Many extras! No AGENTS Call lor Male •Female Call colleot, 462-3S21. After 6 p.m. 542-3500. EXPERIENCED ter « p.m., 787-0137. REGISTER NOW FOR MIDDLE- appointment after i p.m. 311-9610 - . CALL 5M-37S0 462-4760. • ••; • TWO AND THRBB-BEDROOM HOMES BALKS CLERK FOR MEN'S AND COUPLE TWO AIR CONDITIONBRS — o-ton TOWN RECREATION DOO OBEDI- — For rent or sale. $125 to S1S0 aTWO-STORY . HOUSB — All iargf PHARMACIST - NEW JERSEY LI- BOYS' CLOTHINO — Fun time em' Excellent cook-housekeeper and ver-and 3-ton. Excellent condition. Call CARPET BY KELDSEN ENCE CLASSES — All dogs from 6 month THB KIRWAN CO., REAL. rooms. Living room, dining room and CIN8E—SMll-tlme position available In ployment Call In person, CLAYTON satile butler-houseman. North Euro- 741-5241 evenings after 8:30 p.m. or weeks to 10 years are eligible. Re- TORS, Belford, 7S7-5JOO. W. Keans- kitchen., Full ceramic tiled bath plus modern growing hospital. Convenient- * MAQEE, 19 Broad St., Reg Bank. pean. Capable complete charge. Avail- Saturday morning from 8 to 13. sults guaranteed by' STAN LERNER, burg. 7S7-S6O0. Hazlet. 264-7100. four bedrooms, all with walk-In clos- ly located on New Jersey Bhore. Ex- able for adult position Jan. loth. Write MACLXHnr electric belt reducing ma< Professional Trainer. Demonstration ets, very nice porch. Excellent loca- cellent salary, full fringe benefits. Box H-132, The Dally Register, Red SIREPLACB WOOD chine. Excellent condition. : and registration to be held Mon., SKI IN VERMONT tion. 5 minute walk to center of town .-I-leajant working conditions. Write or SALES Bank. Call 741-8028. Jan. 20, 10 a.m., at MIDDLETOWN and school, oil-fired steam heat 671-0335 COMMUNITY CENTER, Hwy. 35Ne. w home. Heated. Fireplace. Bath, Well under I20.O00. Call 462-800O. - call for Interview, Personnel office, MANAGEMENT TRAINEE MAPLB L1VINO ROOM BET — Three Come and see ROY. the counting three bedrooms. Close to Kllllngton, Hlmnrlew Hospital, 35 Union Bt., Red It" HORSESHOE ANDIRONS — $50. nieces. Qood condition. SSS. dog* Please do not bring your dog to Pico and others. 46Z-83SS. UNION BEACH — 330 Bro*rt*a» Bank. 741-2700, Ext. 225. Executive type man, college cali- FINANCIAL Pair 49" lamps, W0. New studded & 291-2462. the demonstration. For further Infor- six rooms, three bedrooms. $15;ioo. J.NaiNs5ER.gUtlon«ry — New Jersey ber. Starting salary to (8,400 year; snow tires 8x83x14, S33 ea. Salton REFINISHED ANTIQUE — Wall-type mation, call 741-0844 or 531-8854. ' FOUR BEDROOMS — Three baths. iU.TOO mortgage available. 264-313* Bin* Seal. Permanent position, aood Intensive three year training pro. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Hot Cart, {SB. «" artificial gardenia crank telephone. Phone Dining room, den, two' fireplaces. 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. - „; gram. Career- position with man- tree, J10. 6469669. THOROUGHBRED RACE HORSB — $275. CROWBLL AGENCY, 741-4031. employes benefits program. For Inter- 842-4528 Evenings 741-3636. TRANSFERRED" OWNER — ThteeT view appointment call Personnel De- agement opportunity: excellent re- GULF SERVICE STATIONS FOR COMPLETB KITCHEN EQUIPMENT Reasonable. Make offer. Write to Box partment, Monmouth Medical Center. tirement and group Insurance pro- LEASE — Modern 9-bay, good neigh- AMPLIFIER VOX — Essex bass lor D-132, The Dally Register, Red Bank. bedroom ranch. Finished basement. —Freezer, commercial stove and re» rhythm and organ. Call after S p.m. SMALL BUNGALOW — Three rooms Central air conditioning. Wooded • tot 222-MOO. Bxt. 402. gram: no traveling, >r with or with- borhoods and transit trade. Paid frlgerator. Two pizza ovens, odds and GERMAN BHEPHERD DOO — AKC, Suitable for one or two only. Call out experience, *, training. One In Matawan and one In ends. Quick sale "as la". Best offer, 747-3155. 787-2017. with brooK. -bodrooms, wall-to.wall -Qarpotrnfr. - Personnel Office, Mon. thru Frl. (ram N-104, The Dally Register, Red Bank. TWO RETRIEVERS ~- Yellow Lab- bury, Includes 'river frontago. older Jiving rnnm. dining rnnm, eqiilntird I sun. to 12 Noon. Olant printing presses, stesdy em- WHOLESALE AND RETAIL EEEIl DRAW DRAPES — For windows 10Mi ployment, COMMERCIAL PRESS, 169 x6', 7'x6', plus 38" cafes same width, rador female, good hunting potential. seven-room homo. Brand new kitchen, cltchen, recreation room. Wooded lot. LICBNBK — aood In state of New DRBXKI. dining room table, mahog- Chocolate Chesapeake, very gentle. double oven range. Large entrance Near school. Mid *30's. 741-3258. '..". W. Front St., Red Bank. Jersey, (5,000. Write Box B.US.any, throe leaves and pads. (50, also two panels with valance HO. foyer, living room, dining room, den/ LILY-TULIP The Dally Beglster, Red Bank, Cocoa brown brocade sofa, button Kenmore Deluxe lroner right and left Both beautllul one" year olds. Details NEW MONMOUTH - Two bedroornaT SPOTTER — For quaflly~~dry clean. back, SBO. 741-1103. 243499 or bedroom on first floor. Beamed 1 D1VUION OF OWHN8 ILLINOIS . Ing plant. Steady employment wit controls S20. 291-0388. ceilings In foyer and dining room. living room witn fireplace, dining Hwy. 35 . Holmdel, N.J. benefits. Apply In person, MILLEn SINQER PORTABLE electric sewing NET PLAYPEN — $10. High chair Two bedrooms, bath on second floor. room, kitchen, garage. Resldenca^of- An equal opportunlty_employer CLEANERS, 52 Throckmorton St. INSTRUCTION machine with attachment*, 125. S71- 7. Hoover vacuum $20. Call REAL ESTATE FOR RENT Basement, garage. Being redecorated lice rone t22,m. Call_e71-12M - TWO Urn INSURANCE AOENTB' — Freehold. 3020. 747-4708. for February occupanoy. References RIVBR PLAZA — Threehedrooin" for nut frowing company to- service ART L.E89ONS — Morning Studio APARTMENTS roqulrSd. write mix H-128, TUB Dally lioune. Hot water baseboard heat. established • policy holders. Average MASO'N'D HBI/PBHS WANTED —NI CIa«ses • Beginner*, advanced • ill FRIQIDAIRD — Twtwloor, whlteT ANTIQUE ORANDFATHBR CLOCK Register, Red Bank. L,arge tlvlns room, dining room and oxporlenco necessary. Call after media, by Lonia Etttiyvoulou. "Studio Qood condition. f!M). call call after 6 p.m. kitchen. Call 747-6877 after 6 p.m: earnings first year from 1711,000. Froo p.rn.,_747-S787. 21", 21 Broad St., Red Bank. Call . . 7S74814 8420032 TWO-ROOM efficiency apartments. UNFURNISHED — February 1 oc group Ufa Insurance, hospital and 741-0358 mornings. Tiled kitchen and bath. Winter rates. cupancy. Less than one year old, UNDER CONSTRUCTION — Eight major medical, double pension plan. HANDYMAN — Famtllnr wiih small TWO SNOW TIRSJB — Mounted on 13- BEDROOM PUHNITURB — Twin Leonardo Motel. 74 Hwy. 36, 201-MU. three bedrooms, two baths, powder rooms, two batns, two-car garage, bl Advancement on merit. For appoint- repairs In building. Call at the RIV- Inch wheels. S20. phone 066-8386, Mat- beds; also double bed. Excellent con- room, family room, den, mus!t> room level. ^4 acre. Near flchoola. Better ment call 442*0773 between 8:30 andBHVIEW TOWERS, 28 Mversldo COMPUTER CAREERS awan, N. j. dition. Best oner. After 5 call 671-1652 RED BANK — Furnished throe-room or fourth bedroom, double fireplace lection of Leonardo. (20,000. 872-1345. 4 p.m. Evenings 7-9:30 p.m. call 711- Avo., Red* Bank, In person hntwcsn In bustnnas, Industry And government apartment, bath. All utllltlfi. Included. SMALL RHHflHQIOItATOR _ 130. Five REFRIGERATOR between den and living room, elec- Iho hours ot 10 a.m. and fi p.m. start with ECTI training. Day and Adults. No pets. 747-5320. tric kitchen, separate laundryroom. HOMES - FARMS - ACRHJAaE Jeff," evenings. Call KCP1 at B42-2800 or piece chrome kitchen set, $10. 747-1208 24 cu. ft. Slde-by-sldk between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m, Call 671-0068 LONG BRANCH — Modern four full basement, double garage. Excel- New Hat many rood huya-Cail LAM- visit ECPI, 28.1 Monmouth Park Hwy., rooms and bath with two bedrooms lent Mlddtetown location. IS month SON, INC.. HEA£TORS, FRBKHOLD. MONEY TO LOAN MONEY TO LOAN Welt Long Branch. SNOW TIMES — Studded, Flrestune TOWELS — FACTORY OUTLET, until Juno 30th. Heat and water sup- leaRO required. (32& a month plun 452-0440 ______- TAG, whltewalls for VolKtwagcn, 6.60- ALL KINDB, FAST, HAND, WASH, plied.. No rets. 2:9-1553. utilities, kvenlngn and' weekends. 871- NEW BIinHWBBURY — ThriVbid^" EARN HIGH WAGESI 15, used 200 miles, pair with wheels, KITCHEN, BEACH, 50» nEDUC- 3484. _ room split, in excellent location. Th»# Learn heavy equipment. Barn $10,000 ?05. Call 871-3033. TION, GARDEN STATE PRINTS, GU UED BANK — Unfurnished, Cannon )Rths, living room, dining room, otec* •yr. and more. No need lo leave your INDUSTRIAL WAY WEST, BATON- rolnt Vlllngo Garden Apartments. 23D •SMALL BUNOAIIOW — Two bed- GILBERT ERBCTOR BBT — 120. At. Spring St.. 3 room apartment avail- roomn. Adults only. 173 Morningslde trio kitchen, family room and den. present Job while training on bull- Ian HO Road Racing Bet, piece by TOWN. SATURDAYS ONLY. 8 A.M. LfJiunti ry room. Fim i>a.v*mf>L. dozers, cranes, graders, etc., al our 'TIL NOON. _ llf. All electric. Ses manager. Apt. Ave., Eant Keansburg. ploco 2Bc-;2fl. After f> p.m. 741-2153, K I). Screened In porch. Two-car Knrase.- VA approved and ntate licensed facllll- W1IITH MINK CAPB — Le«n tlinn" EATONTOWN — Unfurnished, three All met on n lovely one acre corfler ty. Train full or part timo. Free Job ANKJn BAifaB 2 months old. Never worn, (300. Cull KATONTOWN — Tlnton Ave., Lake- bedrooms, porch, cellRr,' it aors. Jot. Near schools- shopping ami'park* gulilnnce — budget terms. For Im- llechsleln, $100. Call 842-4256. view (inrdens. Largo 1 bedroom $225 plus utilities. 542-3268. way, Wnll-to-wnll carpfttlnB, rtmpV» mediate Information Rend name, nri- ___^ aiiartmontfl. Separate dining area. and llho new washer, dryer and re* rtTCss and phono no, to: American Color coordinated kitchen. Larfffl Jrlgerator. J3-">.WO. - M2-7833. NO Training Bnrvlcoa, P.O. Box 1D70, Dent. OOOD HLATB pool table, RCA HI Ft. ALUMINUM DOOR SALE AC.BNT8. , * MO, Oamilon, N. J. rndlo combination, bedroom nulte, Sturdy pro-hung iiluinlniim combina- closets. ALr conditioned. $145, nor WANTED TO RENT Hammond organ, oilalrs, furniture, tion nor0en And Btorm donra, reRuinr iT?!!yi_ 51'2-4.'i72. Bee apartment 28A^ BRA OIRT RSTATEB — Model fur- IN 10UO JOIN TIIE 531-242D. $2ft,tX% — now *24.9,",. In atock in 33"xRED BANK — New luxury apartmsniT COUPLB — With on« child wish to ninhcri three-bed room ranch. HnrRaln ftl", and 37"xBl" loft or right, hcniHo on the rlvor. One bedroom or rent house or abartment, 2-3 bed- ). 1308 Boxwood Dr. 53H3OO(J.: L1VINO~ROOM, DININO ROOMTieHr trircn bedrooms. Duplex penthouse rooms, Hazlot. llliiaiotown. Rod Bank ronm /(irnltiire. Floor modoj utarco, nBi4BVH THiB -;.: COMPUTER color TV. Lamps, end tables, drapes. RED BANK LUMBER aviillnhle. Rent or buy co-operative. area. Call 257-6400, Ext. 473, 8 lo 4. 741-Oblu. Older Ihreo-lietlroom houno necrtn ' a Exerclso equipment. Jlossonsbly Pearl and Wall, licit Hunk 711-5S00 S_0"~8ANK" —~Three-1>etiroom home. handy ramlly lo make It beautiful GENERATION priced. Coll U7-O27O. ANTjijUB"0IIAlii~BNbLISll"—Open HKA Ill!lcJJtT~^"~ThreoMroom aparf Option to hity, Box H-134* Tho Dally •gain. Ownnr wlDlnj1 to help pay for arm, solid mahogany, Tudor RDRO munt. Furnished. Ready for occuplrn- Register, Hod Bank. ' mn»lr« and palntlnB—maktnif the IJfs, HIM KEYPUNCH carving. Motif repotted nest snd HIM OOMPDTI0R PIlOOItAMMINO condlllon. 170. Call 5 0O0. price tug a steal. Located on a HIM OFFIOI0 AUTOMATION _^ 741JB20 baok In now rmeilloi>f>lnt. Oil white (julot Htrest )n flhrew»bury, WALKER baoliground. $175, 747-r>O3B, nvenlngn. TTHHOBMIOOM APARTMENT — FURNISHED ROOMS A WALKER, nenltom, Hwy H\ NORTHEAST 10" TATiL5r~foi'~liAW—wiili~iT«nS7 CUKwood Ilaach. Call 8hri!\vubury. 711-521.!. 2\ • Hour tfnrvlca 1 h.f. motor. One Homecraft JIK««W, ~Hijayfa[S~vtdvti —" cionii' apiionr^ _ "M0-6U86 LAROE ROOM — With bath, private Id", with motor. Ono 12" illao mtnrlcr, ance, axcnllont working onlor. Plrk IMMEDiATE, OCCtJ'P'ANCY""— Wn nmnnnN AOKMcrr. Lights, spnro,llltoli, elo, trill, 7IWHIIK) rciiulruil, li, KeniMilniiK. 41150410. 43 Peters PI. Lfiilfors, 3Ot Maple Ave., qurnnr iWc- Dstit tanfldsnlfy *wllfi New JtrMy'l YlitlblT~ilTAINBI> ~ OLAHH WlNDOWIl" K«'ii PI.. Rod llnnh. 7410100. ;„•• HOLLYWOoii noiliiijti'nioif'--imnii- lll(lHI,ANI)H"--~Tlir('o rooms first 'FSUNIBIHOII' HOOM — Femslt only ntoif wfdity advlff/lto* toon company, MERCHANDISE CAffU lifl«(ltf hnlh Inntal titylff. Tw« utory, Like a pjij^ e 41 Mo, Total rlBNi)jl]H -- Pro rnvnrh •mitllilor iMiitm Id IE1I) Mapln Ave., work ilnys OAilbijN Al'AllTMMNT~~~' rooms In prlvato home. KxtraH. Cnll 741 - luru i)»nlrarr), Thrre tedrooni", l^; atn ryi-wmTjEKST^ABBiNo maomnesT from 0-4:30 p.m. iir un.ll 741-2604. , luminhod. »UII. I UP bttltfl, with wood hurnlng ItiA* CALL NOW You osl Payment Payment All makes new or used, amtrnnlsed. nd/or Ilanardau holt. Elxi-dllnnt J4742:I:I ; SMI). I'luee In living room. Formal dlnlntf I i(M I II51 • IIJ.M l^ow as |I«. Sarploo's 101 Monmouth condition. Call alter 4, 74lnir.n. HAY " - " Mlwd*'first "«II«II»',"~'b«lml" __J _ __ KlltriimiKb HOf)M .- Hu»lnn»s s«n- room, pretty eat-In kltrtien. Danffmlnlj l,0Ot JIM 1,I)MO iSwoon FHm"iiAMn"'-irtii TUUNK ilry, (I hnlo, In Ilin lisrn. A. . IMQIt li'llltNTdHJiin --""Threo "rooms, "nind." tloinan only. 747-r^OB bolwflen 10 a.m. l>liiyrm>rn. AU*t:l>*d it o rug*. |i«autl-S 988 2300 1I)M cm, ovnrli.olillit liny. Utilities. Vln- 1,100 ll.tr 1,011.40 DEIK!I |19 up WLBi•ifii"", Ishlss, ohalrs7, LOAD. CALL DAIIIY FAI1M, MlddlMown mt-WVi. ami 4 p,m. liil girimmiH. 1211,000. C. A, AtUf* 1,000 <1,H tral air coiidlllonltig. fleourlty, Avail- KIOANinimd—(fninfortntlld room for BTHONfl AOBNCV, RenlUir. TW8 xriMo adding miohlnes, lypwrltnu, ollloe 7 ;clittem*n, Aliaolutaly private, MftAls ZENITH LOAN CO. 4,047.40 New or used AAO DJDIJK OUTM0T, l)omn top with doublo IIIID, lTrout and an4* AI'AIITMBNT • • llnfilrnlshsd Ilirns 4,MM toll M11M lit w, OaKhurst DM-woo nldn O|i«iilnKH. footunr. flin. 7R7-OIH0. «77I. N«PTUN», N. J. 1,000 lll.fl 4,771» nirilinn" -"iiaby^iTrniiure,""curUlnSr rooms, second floor. IQxcsllont loca- (More Ad. HAY roil OALUI IILUBI BILK VIOTOItlAN-'VslO^A " —' riiftrt, lilothltig. lirtln, tvpnwrllcr, «lc. tloji. Utilities and heat liii'lildml, Sill) C," ni™iv liitn|sh«rl room. /(. ( ,1/iiulniv II, I'l Bin In 4 I'in, rnffllhlv. turn or Iwn imMfinfl, Avjill- Light i-fiuklng. Opiitlomnn. * ,tm!s an,l up. Also straw. ;"""'" °' "'rn'mao. U llumia l'lnce, Kcl Dank. 'II14M4. atile li'elimm-y 1. 741-11234 alter & p.m. On The Next Page) 26—THE DAILY REGISTER, Wednesday, J«maiy %, HOUSES FOB SAM! Sentence Cifyt PRIVACY HOUSES FOR SALE , HOUSES FOR SALE Country ranch on acre plus. Living room 18x27, fireplace, beamed celling. Bid Is Denied Not Acted Upoji RED BANK-RUMSON Dining room with bay. Ken. * Three GENTLEMEN'S ESTATE — Choice bedrooms, m batlis. FiUo. Attached FREEHOLD — Superior FHA HOMES FOR SALE 10 - acre property - professionally garage: Lais privileges. $36,500. Court Judge Elvin R. Simmill lating that boats in storage. la arista, ped; very convenient, beau- HIGHLANDS — Borough After some discussion it owners he asked, "Do you -' tlrul setting. Gracious fleldstone has denied a motion by Wil- Council failed to act on wese was decided to adjourn hear- want to see a whole section must not be within five-feet Housing Counseling and frame Colonial with complete 747-3S00 of a property line, rows of . privacy. Winding circular drlve- liam T. Mitchell of Asbuiy ordinances last night. ing on the legislation until the wiped out by fire?" •way. Features mahogany paneled Park for' a reduction of his boats must not be more Service By living room, formaJ dining room, ROLSTON WATERBURY Measures to accept cession next council meeting Jan. 21. Discussion Set pine paneled den, spacious kitchen Realtor - Inauror prison sentence. Council and the Planning than two boats deep and 10 Appointment with breakfast area, laundry, U H W. Front St Red Bank 07701 of a portion 61 Rt. 36 from The ordinance would create bath, full basement. Second floor Mitchell was convicted by a five-man Shade Tree Com- Board will discuss the ordi- feet must be allowed between; with four bedrooms, two baths. MIDDLETOWN VILLAGE — Four Middletown, to create a Shade Telephone 645-302J Also servants' quartern. Outbuild- bedrooms. One acre. Dead end street Monmouth County juries and Tree Commission and to' es- mission, appointed by the nance in a special meeting at rows to allow fire equipment ings include two barns, garape, 32x16 In-ground pool. Excellent condi- THA Properties me offered for pale "doR kennel, tool house, corn crib, tion. $27,500. Principals only. 671-3238. was sentenced to three-to-five tablish new subdivision rules mayor and having the power, 7 p.m. Jan. 21 before the access. - ; to qualified purchasers without regard chicken house and run. Call for HAZLET — 1958 SPLIT LEVEL years for his part in the 1966 all failed to come up for a with the agreement of the regular council meeting. The mayor announced that to the .prospective, purehaser'8 race, appointment. Price $125,000. Features three bedrooms, dining room ' color, creed or na-tloniU origin. and apaclous game room. All utili- robbery of Hynjan's Jewelry vote. State Department of Agricul- An ordinance authorizing a meeting between council RAY STILLMAN, Realtor ties Including city sewers - Located store, Asbury Park, and w^s ture, to order the removal of and the Army Corps of En- Following .Homes are Re- 'Our 51st Year" two blocks [rom local and express Edward Petfosek of Shore Highlands to accept cession 6+8 Hwy. 35 . Shrewsbury 7U-8600 city transportation. VA% mortgage sentenced to seven - to - ten Drive asked who pays for the diseased trees. of Rt. 36 from > Middletown gineers will be arranged soon paired and Bear 6 months ava.ila.ble with $135 monthly payments. years for his part in the rob- HURRY-HURRY Call' now for appointment - Asking removal of a shade tree if The new sub-division ordi- will also have to wait until to discuss dredging of Sandy FHA Structural Warranty $19,900. WALKER ft WALKER. Real- bery of Liftman's Jewelry the commission and the state nance; proposed by the Plan- the next meeting. Hook Bay and the Shrewsbury New Shrewsbury Ranotu^Tliree bed- tors, Holmdel - Mfddletown. 671-3311. store, Eatontown, in 1966. Long as 3O.Years to Ray rooms, two full baths, living room Multiple Listings and Trade-Ins. Send agree it is a menace to other ning Board, also failed to Francis X.. Moore, an River. •• . with fireplace, formal dining room, for Catalog. convenient laundry room off Kitchen. Mitchell sought the reduc- trees in the area. come to a vote last night. Eatontown attorney rep- "The only reason they're FHA Will Pay Reasonable Full basement with family room. LOTS AND ACREAGE tion based on his good be- . "The ordinance must stipu- Under the ordinance proper- resenting James McGrath, dredging is to sell the sand, and Customary Financing havior at prison. Will co fast at .-..427,900 PROM ONE LOT TO 100 ACRES — late who pays for the removal ty owners wishing to owner of a tavern on Bt. 36, and they won't dredge where and Closing Costs Either commercial or residential. -Call of trees or you'U have build would have to widen the • argued for the measure. He we realiy need it because the 842-0110 MULLANEY REALTY 671-5151. REAL ESTATE WANTED stressed the importance of 300 Atkim Ave.. Neptune. KEYFORT — Kearriey St. 1-2 fam- trouble. The town could end road in front of their proper- bottom there is worthless S800 Down—$18,000 Edward A. Hanlon. Realtor ily 67.6x117. S35O0. City water and LIST WITH CONFIDENCE up in court," Mr. Petrosek using Highlands police to pa- 352-066491 773 Greenwood Ave., l^ui- 504 Shrewsbury Ave.. sewer. 264-1117. ties before 'construction • could silt," the mayor declared. ",' ' • rcnce" Harbor. $400 Down— New Shrewsbury, N. J. 07724 Our 14 professional salespeople ari " warned. trol the area as opposed to M2.900 MARLBORO — One full acre, 200 ft. ready and able to market your prop< start. James Fernandez, S52-O55708 46 West Shore St., Ke-ina- front, clear, high and dry, {6,600; erty successfully. Legal Question Planning Board chairman, Middletown officers. His ma- hurg.'1350 Down—$11,400. or 2 acres for $11,000. 743-0117. Trade-Ins — Exchanges jor point was that the High- •152-057040 12 Michigan. Ave., Port RAMBLING RANCH Member Multiple Listing Service* Mayor James T.. White, contends this stipulation "is Memorial Sing Brick and frame construction. Lovely WALKER A WALKER, Realtors >• Monmodth. S400 -Down—$11.- Shrewsbury Holmdel agreed, saying, "This is a necessary to insure that fire lands force,, working closer to 900- "••• private location In choice Little Sil- COMMERCIAL PROPERTY •852-050957 40 Fourth Ave., Highland* ver. Sight large rooms including four 741-5212 671-3311 legal question of property equipment will be able to home, would be more consci- Aids Hospital ' . M.900 All Cash—An Is bedroom* and a spacious den. TwoMIDDLHroWN TWP. — Commercial CLIENTS WAITING FOR LOTS AND entious. B -190632 1705 West Third Bt , Ptncat- tUe baths. Huge screened porch over- propecXy along Hwy. 35 or 36. From ACREAGE! -^ ' Ocean ' and Monmouth rights." - function in the borough." : away. $9,900 All Cash—As Is looking secluded rear yard and rock 1751 to 10 acre! JtULLANEY REAL- Counties. Call 747-2701, HOWARD RED BANK - — Five Runt- garden. $42,500. Gall us, we have key. TY 671-5151. DEXTER ASSOC., Broker, 21 E. When questioned about the Adopted after public hear- son children, saddened by the .Complete'-'listings may be'"obtained RUSSELL M. BORUS Front Bt.. Red Bank. fairness of the bill to land- ing was an ordinance stipu- from Federal Housing Administration, LISTINGS URGENTLY NEEDBD IN death of a neighbor and - 970 Broad Street, Newark. New Jersey REALTORS REAL ESTATE WANTED Atlantic Highlands, Highlands, Le- Hart Heads friend, Police- Sgt. Walter 07102. Telephone No. 845-3468. 600 River ltd. Fair Haven onardo and Naveslnk. BROOK AGEN- 747-4532 ATTENTION—COLTS NECK CY, Bank Building. Atlantic High' Children's Letters To God Pompiirey, raised $20.53 by POINT PUBASANT — Large Cape We have ready qualified buyers, so land«. 291-1717. caroling and donated, it to CHARMING COLONIAL Cod. Six rooms and. enclosed side for fast efficient service, call J. t>. Plan Board Ffrepla^e In Hring; room and on patio. porch. Includes three bedrooms, JH BOOHE, Realtor, Ttt 34, ColUj Neck. Riverview Hospital. . Pining room. Three'- bedrooms, 1H baths, rear, patio. Wall-to-wall carpet- 462-2741. Member Multiple Listing Ser- LITTLE SILVER — Harold . baths. Full basement. Excellent condi- Ing stays. BOxlOO lot. Well kept home vice. Kathy Bond, 12, and her •tlon inside and out Asking $28,500. in lovely area. Taxes only $460. Asking Hart was, elected chairman $21,000 with terms to qualified buyers. NEED VACANT LAND of the^ Planning Board last brother, Tommy, 11, children .„ STERLING THOMPSON ASSOC. of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bond REALTOR BARBETTA AGENCY Small lot or large tracts. Call MTJL* night. * He succeeds Robert GALLERY OF HOMES LANKY REALTY. 671-5151. of 93 Avenue of Two Bivers, 45 W. River Rd., Rumion, N. J. M2-3094 open til 0 p.m. URGENTLY NEEDED — Two and Bainton. three-bedroom homes Aliddletown. Kaz- were joined in the venture by 7«-W00, IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Iet vicinity. We have buyers waiting. Edward Goldstein was Iilncroft. Three bedrooms, 1H baths, THE KIRWAN CO. 787-6600. Mary Lynn Smith, 11, and country kitchen, den. mud room, elected vice chairman and ACRE PLUS F.H.A. - V.A. - to qualified buyer. PROPER MERCHANDISING — Will Stephen Smith, 9, children of Custom ranch. Living room, formal CROWEL.L AOENCT. 76 W. Front St., sell your home profitably and prompt- Leonard Perry was named Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. iJlnine room, den, three twin size bed- Red Bank. 7M-4030. Kve.nlng» 7U-3656. ly. Call 747-2701, HOWARD DEXTER secretary. -—roomi, m hnitha—Immpdifljte ^ ASSOC, Broker, 21 S. Front St., Bed Smith, 88 Avenue of Two Riv-. •ton. J38.S00$36,500 . "CROWBLCBOWEUL AAOlSNCV. ^R>"ivbgdrpor5j234 bath Bank. Daniel Gallop, a'Little Sil .Realtor, 76 W. Front St. 741-4030. ColonlaL Formal dining room, paneled' : ers and Ellen McSorley, 12, family room with fireplace. PlsS- WE CAN MULTIPLE UST^ ver resident—who--practices_ _jaughter_pf Mr. and Mrs. Ed- RAMBLING RANCH — With three washer. Two-car garage. 946-4081. Y0URH0ME bedrooms, - two tile bathe, kitchen LINCROFT — IMMEDIATE OCCU- law in Shrewsbury, was re- ward McSorley, 6 Center St. with dinfnr area. Spacious 14x28 llv- PANCY •— Three-bedroom, 2^-bath Call today and give details and cash Jng room -overlooKing «4 acre land- Split Level. Large living room, din- price. STERLING THOMPSON & AB- appointed board attorney. William T. Gill, adminis- scaped grounds. Tremendous base* ing room, kitchen, paneled den, laun- 8OC 747-5600. y»ient~Tri(h"~xecrestl"on—roomy—office —or- dryroomi—basement and—garage.—Ex- WEfTEKD— -Fiva-or ate 2-3 bedroom George Drawbaugh, named trator of the hospital, ac- etudj-. Attached double, garage. - 526, cellently located for schools, shopping Incomes, furnished or unfurnlslied, "Where doei everybody get Ihi by-Mayor Gordon N. Litwin 600. E.A. ARMSTRONG AGENCY, and commuting. Ashing $28,500. J.D. from fSS to (350 per month for In- cepted the gift with '!sincere_ Realtor, 555 Prospect Ave.. XAtUt Ell- ROCHE. Realtor, Re. 34, Coin Neck. coming1 permute!. TBB BBRG AOZN idea-Alvin caught that fish he go last week to a six-year term, 1 Yer. 741-4500. 462-27U. CY, Kt. 35. MUdlelawn. 671-1000. in The Daily Register Want Adi? thanks for the thougMful- was seated last night. ness and generosity ot these PEANUTS By CHARLES M. SCHVLZ Mr. Goldstein was named children." „ - . •• subdivision committee chair- •Sgt. Pomphrey died Dec. 28 PE6W-FLEMIN6 ANPI (/SEP TO man. Mr. Bainton and Mr. to Riverview. .. . SKATEIQeETHERqt/fTEOFTEH Drawbaugh were named to that committee. . The board adopted a reso- . Meet Tomorrow lution limiting a chairman to HIGHLANDS — The High- two successive one - year lands Public School PTA will terms. hold its first meejfng of the new year tomorrow at 8 p.m. regular session oh Tuesday, in the school auditorium. T5e Jail. 21. They met in special program will feature a talk on narcotics and a karate session last night to organize © King Features Syndicate, foe- "69. By CHIC YOUNG for the new year. demonstration. ,; By LEE FALK BAGWOOD, WHEM.VOU COME IN BECAUSE I VV**ff~ THE PHANTOM TO see POR MYSELF WAKE VP! THEY CAUGHT ME AT THE / VOtJ THREATENED TO -you PROP youR DIANA, AIRPORT.' OH, DARUNS, / PUT A 8ULLET IN OUR GUN5 OR I'LL HOW IN-? I'M SO SORRV- ( SAS TANK.' NOW IT'S PUT A BULLET M/ TURN - HOOD-/— IN HER/ & THINK.' TANK.'

PARLINS.' YOU WO MUST KNOW EACH OTHER.'

MARY WORTH By ALLEN SAVNDERS and KEN ERNST VOITO BETTER TOKK. I IET'£MA5K! \ I 5URERXED A CERTAIM STUCK-UP/ •-« VEK/ CAREHKIV ABOUT AiHEM'5 MORE I TEACHERS WAGON, GRAGEl By JIM BURNETT and GEORGE CRENSHAW OOULDNT YOU HAVE YOUR 5TORy.TrlE5CHOOlT I COULC) / FOR, WHAT 5HE WO TOME ! SHE WAS SORT OF SOU, MISUNDERSTOOD WHAT MK5 BOARD MW ASK. VOU / \ TELL "EM! / JUST HARPER SAID THAT NISHT? ATMR.GARRETT!— IT SEEMS UNLIKELY 5HE.W0UU> 8ECAU4E.HEWA5NT STABT-UM RAISE HER VOICE,—TO BUYING HER WARPATH A6MN WITH MAKE SUCH A PROPOSAL! IDEA! MM I i

ANDY CAPP By REG SMYTHE HI and LOIS By MORT WALKER and DIK BROWNE THATOUT?-^ER >OUSHO0LDNT OCCUPATION? OfcllNJNVER TOUCH THAT, iwooeHrrr DITTO-IT'S WAS HIS BUP6ET FORTIES.' THAT WAS FULL

NATIOHAl ASSISTANCf

THE WIZARD OF ID . By PARKER and HART BEETLE BAILEY By MORT WALKER I'B r — JUST TfeU- THS &CK

SNUFFY SMITH By FRED LASSWELL BLESS JOGHAIDS HEART' TH WALLER. >, By WALT KELLY HIM AN'THAT TftTER flR6 CROCK VWIF ) IJESTGOTTOSO , .., ., , ISAM-'WfM lc nTCr eiTTIN'CLOSER'N TWO PEAS TH'FLOWERS / ONIT.TATER/ tSI^NAV DOWMTOTH'SENERALl^S POD IU. ovu. off tm* NAMi» IHAAMCO IWUZWONDERIN' / n^il^o A«AJN ID 600 WHICH «HB OH&MVUI? IF-UH-- — ^ W HANHAHtHMftier?.,,, TUF- DAILY REOI5TF.R, Vninndty, Jan. B.1969—Z TV COMMENT ion Ji The V. " ' •••••••*•• 111 I MMMMMM«H*H>

B WCBS-TV e WNEW-TV WOR-TV WNDT-TV * 'First Tuesday/ Quality Show » WNBCTV '•'Movies P WABC-TV WPIX-TV Indicates Color FREEHOLD MALL- By CYNTHIA LOWRY no networl? ever touches—the' now 76, still has a trim muscu- DAYTIME MOVIES 171* lubjact Wai RMII 7:10; J:I0; NEW YORK (AP) — With tearful, sometimes hysterical lar body. CD FOLK GUITAR PLUS Slinrt Subjects T:M: t:00. "First Tuesday" in its pre- backstage reaction of the dis- 8:00 BRICKTOWN The program concluded with O"Half Angol" " .1 6:30 8 MY FAVORITE MARTIAN miere outing, NBC has joined appointed losers. a feaiure on Bita "Hayworth, 10:00 ID "Lydin" BRICK PLAZA- the educational network and O EYEWITNESS NEWS—4:30 REPORT O Thi BMton stringier 7:J5; 8:38. The longest portion of the once a film love-goddess and 12:00 O ;;Tfie SalnUd Sttwi" Chart* ot U>« Light Brl|id» 1:10; CBS in presenting a maga- O I SPY © S""" S:30. show was a pictorial report World War II pinup girl, who 12:30 O ||A Girl with Ideal" . "Turkish Delight" A group of Internationally fa- zine-format show from its on the state of Castro's revolu-" is now frankly 50 and wants 1:30 O "Sally, Irene and Mary" mous agronomists disappear In Mexico City where North of Red Bank news depart- tion, largely interpreted by " to play mature roles in Holly- they are gathered-to attend a conference. 3:00 O "Deadline" ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS ment. dedicated young Pro-Castro wood—but finds no takers. , 3:30 O Repeat of Noon Movie fD VOTAGE ;TQ THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA O NBC has a students—American and Cu- "'Deadly Creautre" Below" Two escaped convicts at- ATLANTIC- Sandur Vanocur, the host O "The Baby and th* Battleship" L»dy in cement T:00; 10:15; Ban- giant, econo ban. Activities of Cuban tempt to-hijack the Flying Sub while a sea monster , dilcro 8:30. of the program, tried to por- 4:30 O "Devotion"' ••-• • menaces the Seaview. * my-size show exiles in the Miami area also HAZLET consisting of were shown. tray Miss Hayworth as lone- O "Love Hat Many Faces" . 0D INGLES PARA TODOS PLAZA— ly, but the pictures of her 7:00 S CBS EVENING NEWS S assorted fea- Th« Subject Wu Rams 1:10: »:10. tures whith Short features included some. charming house and pool and EVENING with Walter Cronkite . . * •• ROUTE M DRIVE-IN- film' showing Charles Atlas, the sight of her teeing off at - 6 HUNTLEY-BRINKLEY REPORT & C&rtoon 7:00; Lovely W»y To t)l* relate to its her golf club gave this whole 4:00 O O NEWS 8 7:07; 11:23; Boston Slranjlcr »:SJ. daily news who made "a profitable career O THE FLINTSTONE'S O 8 I LOVE LUCY 8 KEYPORT out of selling exercises to 97-, thing the tone and quality of B ABC EVENING. NEWS WITH . programs in a movie-fan magazine piece. O GILLIGAN'S ISUND " * l STRAND- pound weaklings, and who, „ "Waiting for Watubi" FRANK REYNOLDS © Shorta T:15: »:30; There«« ft H- about the ID BATMAN 8 IB NEW JERSEY SPEAKS FOR ITSELF ,|*ell» 7:45; 10:05. same way LOWRY EAST BRUNSWICK that a Sunday newspaper 7:30 B DAKTARI 6 , ••• , - x DISCOUNT BOOKS NOW AVAILABLE TURNPIKE- _magazine.~section relates to A Bengal tiger that deserted the compound long OUTDOOR—Boston strmder I.-00; , ago returns to lead Dr. Marsh Tracy Into the bush 11.00; Tony Rom* 0 -.00. its news pages. Tell Winners to minister to her seriously 111 cub. ' , INDOOR—Boston Stranfltr 7:30: $6.00 IN ADMISSIONS FOR ONLY $5*00 11:30; Tony Rom« 9:30. The initial two-hour show HEAR YE! O THE VIRGINIAN & ; r o 3 EXCELLENT FOR GIFTS OR FUND-RAISERS In Decorating "Stopover" Several Medicine Bow Citizens, etch PERTH AMBOY last night opened with a re- AMBOYS DRIVE-IN-' port on Dr. Philip Blaiberg, NOW ON SALE AT ALL HEAR YE! - with a guilty conscience, fear, a gunman who ha* Cartoon T:00: The Boatsn Stranglor KEANSBURG - The Great- arrlved in town is out to kill them. 7:M: U:B»: A Lovely Wiy lo T>\» now celebrating his first an- er Keansburg Jaycees in co- niversary with.a new heart. Q TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES O. 31 MENU) PARK operation with Borough Coun- O HERE COME THE BRIDES O ' The South African dentist was The Log Jam" When Jereray Bolt and Candy CINEMA- most interesting when giving WALTER UEADE j HEATRES cil has announced winners of BuJlitt J;oo: <:oo; «;00; 1:00:10:00. the annual Christmas lighting Pruttt announce they are engaged, the other girll a first-hand report .on the contest. hope that it will start the men proposing. surgical procedures for his O STEVE ALLEN SHOW 8 CALLED TOP STARS heart transplanting that he First place winner and re- ID RAT PATROL 8 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — had ''more discomfort and cipient of a $25 savings bond "The Last Harbor Raid" (Part'II) The Patrol con- pain" in the course of the .re- NO MATINEE TODAY and a recognition plaque is fiscates a ashing fleet in their plot to evacuate Barbra Streisand and Sidney pair of a hernia a year or so 5000 Allied POWs. 1 OR TOMORROW Wes Burger of Morningside Poitier won the Star of the before. ' BETSY BEST BET and Crescent Aves. Second © TO BE ANNOUNCED Year Awards at the conven- The program moved on to and third place winners, who 8:00 © PAY CARDS 9 TONIGHT AT 8:30 P.M. PLATTER SPECIALS will receive f 25 savings bonds, ID RUN FOR YOUR* LIFE © - tion of the National Associa- a grim report on the competi- Serwd with potatoes $129 "Strangers at the Door" Paul Bryan 1» Instrumental tive spirit of the young girls MONMOUTH ARTS FOUNDATION vegetable*, rolls & butter • are James Davis of Park tion of Theater Owners. Brit- Ave. and Anthony Cavigliano In changing the life of an angry young man who entered in a national baton • MON^-Seef Stew hates the world. ish movie actress Carol twirling contest, making it ob- PRESENTS LIVE ON STAGE • TUES.—Mtoi Balls aid f Jh JLr CD INTERNATIONAL MAGAZINE White was named "Most Pro- : vious that most mothers of ORCHESTRA • WID.—lolud Ham New Point Comfort Fire nK3onBTHE~GOOD GUYS®" —mising-New-Female-* • THURS—Meor Loof Co. No. 1, Carr Ave., was To attract truck drivers to Bert's place, Rufua per- the Year," for her role in poured -from the same mold MICHELANGELO Dl FIRENZE judged best decorated non- , suades his wife to pose as Frisco Fritzi, a hip- • FRI.—Fillar Of Solo swinging, gum-chewing, sharptongued waitress. "Poor Cow." as stage mothers and Marine TONIGHT'S PERFORMANCE IS SOLD OUT • SAT—Sollibury Steak : resident building. The jcpnv. drill sergeants. Ud Only We tar compittt Olnnir - —O THE MERV©RIFFIN SHOW 8 Miss Streisand received the — Include! - pany will receive a plaque for ——Reaction- Revealed juict, stvp, same, pit, com* O PEYTON PLACE 8 1 award on the basis of her its effort. Honorable mention Rodney is hospitalized again; Maggie buya new One little girl, who ruptured went to the Keansburg-Mid- 1 MIDDLETOWN I ASIURY PARK r wardrobe; The Miles learn that Lew plan, to marry . film debut in "Funny. Girl." her jugular vein in an acci- dletown National Bank. , Vickie; Steven goes to Boston on Peyton business; Poitier was cited for "Guess dent, and Was close to death, lAYFAIR BETSY ROSS Norman confronts Betty. OWN Overall honorable mention Who's Coining, to Dinner," was so determined to be in 6TM020 77MM1 Broad Street, Shrewsbury went to Ben Leon of • Carr 9:00 D THE BEVERLY HILLBILLIES 8 the contest that she was toss- T Hwy. #13 . Nut to Shop-RItt Ave., Joseph Weber of Rari- Banker Drysdale comes down with the fluan d "To Sir, With Love," "In the iiig her baton 10 days later— 1 • •• "doctor" Granny- tries to treat him With ha'moon- Heat of the Night" and "For and came in; second. The seg- tan Ave., Frederick KaUchof THIS IS A TRUE AND of 360 Main St. and George shine "serum". . Love of Ivy.." . . ment showed something that REMARKABLE OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. MOTION PICTURE. Famous for Char-Broil 'A-lb. Sehreiber of Cottage Place. O KRAFT MUSIC HALL 8 Guest: Nancy Sinatra U.S. Gov'r. Insp. Hamburger* Prizes were donated by O WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE 8 12:35 O NEWS AND -WEATHER — Fra*ck Frits — Fried Onion members of the Jaycees and UlSmdwIehe* "Compulsion" (1959) starring Orson Welle*, Diane 1:00 O LATE NEWS 8 Borough 'Council. "• ~~^ Varsi. Drama of Meyer Ovifi'rKcountTJf Chicago's— «HN«DE-BEDFOR0-STU¥VESANT- \ indents at a midwestern university. O THE BEST OF BROADWAY O WHAT'S MY LINE © "Steamboat 'Round the Bend" (1835) starring Will (D NINE O'CLOCK NEWS 8 Rogers, Anne Shirley. Comedy drama about a Mis-' BECAUSE YOU ASKED FOR IT - - sissippl steam boat captain who invents a powerful 03 CRITIQUE © -•--... new patent medicine! . . 9:30 O GREEN ACRES 8 1:15 ©THE LATE NIGHT NEWS & THE BOSTON DINNER INVITATION OFFER O BASKETBALL 8 O THE GREAT SREATSHOW — By popular demand, we are pleased to resume New York Knicks vg Milwaukee Buck* "Mark of the Gorilla" (1850} starring Johnny STRANGLE!! our- wetkly dinner Invitation specials at the (D PASSWORD 8 Weissmuller. Jungle Jim helps a princess recover MOLLY PITCHER MOTOR INN. This week we gold stolen font her by Nazis and guarded by hench- Guests: Eva Gabor, Hugh O'Brlan ' men dressed as gorillas. present 10:00 B HAWAII FIVE-O 8 Tony Curtis Henry Fonda George Kennedy FOR FIVE DAYS ONLY While on leave in Hawaii, a Marine corporal gets- 1:20 O THE LATE LATE SHOW I . CotortayDetuxs l "No Room tor the Groom" starring Tony Curtis, , {Monday. Jan. 4 THRU Friday, Jan. 10) hit with a bat during a baseball game. Upon regain- ing consciousness in a hospital, he Imagines he's Piper Laurie. Soldier, home from_jjyerseas, dis- " our regular, COMPLETE $4.95*» ^, back in the battle zone in Vietnam. * covers his ranch house Is being over run by his O-THE OUTSIDERS 8 wife's relatives. (1852) ,-.. "The Girl from Missouri" David Boss accompanies BAKED YEAL CUTLET a young girl as she seeks information from under- EATONTOWN world figures as to the whereabout of her missing COMPLETES TRAINING OMMIMITY NOW PARMIGIANA ' brother.. Army Dr. Capt. Anthony P. Atlantic Highlands 291-0148 2 If 542-4201 O 10 O'CLOCK NEWS Dinner $•> ID PERRY MASON •> Pietroplnto, son of Mr. and SHOWING NOW THRU TUESDAY For Just tJ "The pase of the Greek Goddess" «Perry defends a Mr/;. Donate S, Pietropinto, world-famous sculptor, charged with murdering a New York City, ,,-has com- FRANK SINATRA Thli llallan food lovers' feart ol a dinner Include! Greek immigrant woman. : • > RAQUEL WELCH •vvythlnj: a Under prime veal cutlel bakid to per- pleted the medical service of- ACADEMY AWARD fection In a delicately* flavored Marinara Sauce. It It IB NEWSFRONT V / •?.:•, - ficer basic course at Brooke DAN BLOCKER— Color topped with Monarello Cheeu and served wllh Llngulnt "LADY IN CEMENT" »lui tolled JDIOO, drstiln?, choice ol oppitlien, IOUPV 11:00 BOO NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS 0 ArmyV Medical Center, Ft. dessert and beverage. The porlions are the tame). The O THE DONALD O'CONNOR SHOW 8 PLUS— DEAN MARTIN ONLY thing that's different Is the enchanting decor and Sam Houston, Tex.' His wife, Chef Utgene Menteiti whose culinary talents ore trio OJHE FUCK . Joy, lives at 28 Country Club JAMES STEWART BEST DIRECTOR-MIKE NICHOLS talk of me area. Come In TONIGHT and Re-Discover "Sky Dragon" starring Roland Winters, Keye Luke. "BANDOLERO" the loyl of dining at the MOLLY PITCHER MOTOR INN. Murder strikes aboard a crowded airliner, and Road. Eatontown. Charlie Chan must solve the crime in a .Hying JOSEPH LUVINt '•locked room". (1949) ' .. BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:30 Piano Artist TOM FLANAGAN—NIGHTLY •"•••• ID TONIGHT AT THE MOVIES ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS "Catherine the Great" starting Douglas Fairbanks, DTE.35 * Slng-a-long with Tom Sunday afternoons Jr., Elizabeth Bergner. Tim Empress of Russia is fl DRIVE-IN WHY DID 13 WOMEN Dancing and Entertainment to the forced into a marriage against her wishes. (1934) , lmi.S0UlHJCl.RTE.35t3? FRANK PELL TRIO Every Saturday Night 11:30 B THE LATE SHOW I HAZUT 2642200 OPEN THEIR DOORS "Odongo" starring Rhonda Fleming, MacDonald Carey. Trapper and attractive veterinarian search TO THE BOSTON MOIXY PITCHER MOTOR INN . for native boy in Africa after boy was blamed for STRANGLER.. letting animals loose. (1956) On the Shrewsbury River O THE TONIGHT SHOW 8 WILLINGLY? *t«d Bank, New Jewey 201 SH 7-2500 starring Johnny Carson THE Q THE DONALD O'CONNOR SHOW 8 Tony Curtis Win a FREE 6 Day. 6 Night O THE JOEY BISHOP SHOW 8 GRADUATE HONEYMOON IN ACAPULCO, MEXICO 12:20 ©GREAT MUSIC 8— ' Henry Fonda TECHMCdOR* WMVSXIN* «iw»Kuit< at the Sao Paulo Hotel and fly there via AerorwvM Da Mexico, Mexico's Largest Airline — at "the June Bride 12:30 O SCIENCE FICTION THEATRE Cooking School to be held on the Wednesday nights Ot THEBOSTON February 19. 26 and Morch 5 at the Molly Pitcher Motor "Hour of Nightmare" Inn. For tree reserved tickets write Frank J. Monica, fD LATE NEWS FINAL © STRANGLER ROUTE 35 Molly Pitcher Motor Inn, Red Bank. HELi» EPTUNE CITY HEMMINGS TO DIRECT OVER N 7744272 Gal way, Ireland (AP) — D0UGIR3 British actor David Hem- STARTS TODAY AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU! mings says that the film "Al- fred the Great" he is current- ly making in Ireland will probably be his-last-stnr per- "THE FILM BRISTLES WITH THE SHOCK OF THE CRIMES' formance for some time. inda Hole, Daily Ncv A IT ; t-k.E AT RE 5 Hemmlngs, who gained stardom with Antonioni's NUMITEP FREE PARKINGI/FREE SECTIONS "Blow Up" two years ago, has made five films since then. I TTHEPLAZH A I IASBURV PARK ADULT "I think I've really done too ItfcjKiilM -2644434] AMES much since then.'I'm begin- ENTERTAINMENT ning to realize that you can STARTS TONIGHT! at BOTH THEATRES! 775-8883 have too much of a good thing," he said. >' "ROSES" from the Critics for When he completes . "Al- "The Subject Was Roses!" WHY DrD 13 WOMEN WILLINCLV OPF.N THEIR DOORS TO THE BOSTON STRANGLER? fred," Hemmlngs said lie in- good grief tends to become a • director. "Patrlefo Neal'i performance ^its candy! would be worth waiting a dtcade tori" Robert Hogging, P«r«- Zorm and —Timt Magailna Selmur Picturej Corp. prcwnl A Chrijlion AWquond Production THE BOSTON "Moving and Powerful!" Candy —Newiweok Mnqailnt Technicolor* CRC ' ******* 2M>04S2 ******* "Diflnltely One To See!" —N. Y. Dally Ntwl TONY CURTIS NOW PLAYING Uncut - Original Version . "One of the Finest Films of the Year! HENRY FONDA "Go See It, ot Lewt Once!" — L. I. PRESS "You Abiolutely Mutt See This Exceptional Film!" EXCLUSIVE GEORGE KENNEDY -LaitHi Homt Journal Metro-Qoldwyn-Mayer presents ' AREA Patricia Neal SHOWING HAZLET MiDDLETOWN Irt Frank D.QIlroy'8 JOHN CASSAVETES' > Pulitzer Prize winning ROUTE 35 D.I. A Walter Reado Theatre TOWN Dubbed in Engllth PERSONS UNDER FACES Mumty Hamilton Richard Flelwher Robert Fryer EdvvBrdAnhntt Geroid Frank 18 CANNOT Ftonavtelon* Color by DeLuxe Sc»n» rllmtd BE ADMITTED In Niarbv Spring Lkl ••••••••••• Metrocolor t SB-THE DA/LY REGJST3JB, Wednesday, January 3, 1969 HOLLYWOOD 'Pleased, Proud' or Macaroni Grapefruit LA ROSA FINAST AtFUm Nos.8&9 : By BOB THOMAS or No. 35 HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Charlton* Heston in a nude love-making scene? It hap- Advertised prices effective thru Saturday, January 11th. We pens in "Pro," Heston's new reserve the right to limit quantities. Not retpomible for typo- Mm which concerns profes- sional foot: graphical errors. '•••".. ball but in- cludes some bedroom ath- letics as well. The actor was indulging in some of the latter with co-star Jessica Walk- GO WITH SUPER FINAST and SAVE!!! er on the last THOMAS day of film- COLUEGJE INN ing. The set was closed to 13 K. all but necessary film work- ChlCK#BI BVOHl ers. maasrum JK FUSSY WES AT mum 6 . Later, a fully dressed Hes- PRKMUNDINa ton commented: Flnasf Prune Juice "I'm pleased and proud at ROASTING SIRLOIN the way that sex has been handled in. this picture. We've done two or thjee erotic scenes without the baring of CHICKENS STEAKS HEINZ BEANS one breast. Yet I think au- diences will find the scenes With Pork as stimulating as those in ~which~the"actors~are ""shown nude. overage "Nudity on the screen is Tomato Sauce like violence: It can defeat its own ends. Too explicit a Lipman's FINAST sex scene is distracting, just as too much violence de- Chuck Cut • Bone In - USDA Choice Thighs, Livers, D PL tat. stroys illusion. 27* "For instance, if a scene or ft. HNAST COOMB shows a knife being stuck in- Calif. Roast STEAK Chicken Parts to a body, that is shocking Marshwllew Pies 3 ^ *1 and repugnant; it is much Top Quality - Shoulders " Government Grade A ' JB ^Bk more effective to show the knife being drawn, and then show the face of the victim. Fresh Pork Roast * Rock Cornish Hens'43< DEL MONTE PEAS "Likewise, if a picture ^hows-too-much -bareness,- the GROUND CHUCK USDA CHOICE GROUND ROUND USDA CHOICE audience is embarrassed; the SWIFTS PREMIUM onlookers are not swept up in SLICED BEEF LIVER FUU™« *,& BROWN & SERVE SAUSAGE LINKS or PATTIES Early 1 Ib. the passion of the moment" SLICED BACON 5WfPREM"79e ™»» **.*+W BEEF SAUSAGE LINKS Garden 1 oz. can Brinkmanship %tr This may come as news to UVERWURST or BOLOGNA CHUNKS h^c SLICED HAM many of today's film makers C GLORIA • who seem.to be playing sex- ALL MEAT FRANKS -65 ALL BEEF FRANKS ual brinkmanship in exploring new vistas of screen passion. 'DtlV SAVINGS (where available) Sf AFOOD SAVINGS Heston is distressed by this SLICED TO ORDER ffet •• TASTY, NUTRITIOUS Sno-White Greenland m j^ RICHMOND trend. C ECONOMY CORNER Strawberry Preserve* "Yes, I know there are 2t5<* some fOnf makers who be- Boiled Ham >T> Halibut Fillet *49< lieve their only responsibility is to film," he remarked. "I Corned Beef *•*«* «-^95* Beef * 39* Smoked Ced Fillet ^59 don't believe that. I don't e Canadian Smells ^ -37 think that film makers should Cooked Salami »>79 Beef Kidneys *29* CUT GREEN BEANS be as unrestricted" as other Imported Provolone »»> 85e Fish Cakes creative artists. You can't Ox Tails take the standards of a paint- Sable Chunks er or a novelist and apply Ocean Porch them to the movies: • "Film reaches too far and influences too many people. PRICE-MINDING FROZEN FOODS PRICE-MINDING PRODUCE Complete freedom of expres- CMAM imi ar"¥rH0U KftfMl sion is not possible; responsi- bility must go with it." FANCY McMTOSH Del Monte Com K. eiit Heston was recently elected SWHT A CUSP " to another term as president SWANSON DINNERS Crisp tfeicy- V/A" ftlp of the Screen Actors Guild. Best Foods Pkfcles With so many actors and ac- Macaroni & Cheese, 12 oz. tresses being required to ap- Beans & Franks, 10 01. YOUR pear nude nowadays, does the Noodles & Chicken, 10 or. rHniPF guild offer any protection to Spaghetti & Meatballs, 11 ox. 'jnuloc those who don't wish to? CANNED SODA No Pan Intended APPLES "There's nothing in'the con- Finast tract with the producers that covers that,", he said, with no: French Fried Potatoes Regular pun intended. "An actor has the responsibility to protect REGULAR or m •B^fe or Lo Cal himself, and we urge our members to do so, particular- CRINKLE CUT £M 1 h. g %Mm ly in the field of stunts. 'Yor1 Garden •# »k»- M M* FINAST-ALL VARIETIES "If an actor is asked to InstantBreakfast S't fake a saddle fall and he FANCY RED 49 thinks it's dangerous, he HNAST should decline to do it. Like- DOLE JUICES 11 K. wise if a girl is asked to do Creem-Rife Creamer Jar nude scene and she doesn'i want to, she should say no. PINEAPPLE, certainly think the guili PINEAPPLE-ORANGE, YOUR OC TOMATOES would support her." PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT CHOICE cans T£P AOF JutJWQuJdn't^she Jose th 5 CLING PEACHES Job? That happened recentl; to a Broadway actress win TASTE O' SEA \ 3 to accepted a role in a new play 9 K. Richmond \ ib, 13 When the play was rewritten, carton she discovered she was re- Seafood Platter Sliced or Halves oz. cans quired to play one scene total- 55 ly nude. She declined anc 19 iras fired, PRICE-MINDING DAIRY FOODS RICHMOND or lib. r. "Usually that could be MUD FIAVOR ^avoided in films," said Hes- SINGLES, AMERICAN GREEN CABBAGE J2< Finast Pork 9k Beans can ton. "Hit's a shot in bed, 10 she could cover ,up witlf'a 12 n. CHOC. MOP, FUDOI NUT, CARAMEL CHIP .sbeeLor.else.ask for a.clost OVEN-FRESH BAKERY PRODUCTS F.F.V. Cookies 11 oz. shot. If it's a long shot. sh« Kraft Cheese 59 3 Pkgs. could request a double, that's NATURAL FINAST SLICED WHITE What happened in 'War Lord TOP VALUE when Rosemary Forsyt Sliced Swiss Cheese didn't feel like playing a nud C scene in a stream.. Borden's Liederkranz Cheese XAB Sandwich Bread FINAST TOMATOES "And I understand Elizabeth ROWLEVS C t'ROGRESSO Taylor did'the same thing. Axelrod Sour Cream «? ^9 Chocolate Layer Cake CALIFORNIA 1 PL 12 PEELED IN PRICE-MINDING HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS oz. cans Old Village Co JANUARY WHITE SALE HEAVY PUREE 14 oz. bot. Chooses Odell Full or Twin Sin PRICI-MINDING ; MIDDUTTOWN — In a re Listerine Antiseptic qt. cent election, the Old Village 6oz.bot. CANNON BEDSPREADS - 3.99 Salad Dressing RICHMOND Jar Fire Company chose Howard 29 Nyquil Colds Medicine .. Decorator Colo, r & Design ^ PRICI-MINDINO . Odell,.,as president. Other of- • • . .. C Decorator Color & Design 4Vj ficers for this year arc Philip 39 ARTLIN PILLOW CASES ,1.00 VaJese, vice president; Wnyn BUE GREEN mm e Finns? Tomato Soup Weingarth, recording secre Finast Shampoo « ^ 39 ART1IN PIUOW CASES it rmncH STYLI tary; Jacob Hosteller, sccrc tary, and John Ilayden.'trea PLAINflEtDJOINWESTFIEL THED PRICE-MINDERSMENLO PARK ANDCARTERE TSAVE ELIZABETHARDH CASHLON I G BRANCH Greon Beans GREEN GIANT surer. West 7th Street Elm Street Shopping Center Shopping Center Newark Avenue 320 Third Ave. PRICI-MINDINO Richard Garrison w.if PLAINFIE1D WESTFIELD N«xt to WOODBRIDGI HACKINSACK ATLANTIC HGLANDS. circled captain with Joseph 2».3 FoMhaxl, first Heufenant; Sou\\\ Avenue North Avenue Mont0om«ry Ward Rahway Avenue Essex Street Route 36 A 1st Ave. Mott's Apple Sauce oz. cam George Martin, second lieu- tenant, and John Ililliard, Uiird lieutenant. 320 THIRD AVENUE, LONG BRANCH ROUTE 36 and FIRST AVE., ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS