• r, .< To «Kt*. 25,6^0 [Red Bank Arm f tow to mid Mi. Tqmemnr fair, ioHowed by incrtwina cloudiness, • . 'y '.'•'.- ., Copyrighfr-ihe Red Bank Renter, Inc.,,1988. Wfh to low «•». ^^ ""^"7? DIAL 7414)010 MONMOUTH COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER FOR 87 YEARS
tfcravfc rrtdj». SK«4>CIU> ptaug* . VOL 88, NQ. 152 %# OCBfc FRIDAY/JANUARY 21, 1966 7c PER COPY PAGE ONE Truce, Attacks Korean Marines SAIGON (AP) - South Korean tended to include South Viet Tuy Hoa, a spokesman said. ;renade attacks and other ha- Marines battled 4G0 Viet Cong Nam's allies In the truce: Armed helicopters came to the rassments in the first day of the early today In a two-hour close Human Shields Used aid of the paratroopers, who nice, U.S. spokesmen reported. See Quick quarter fight that Jolted the lu- An American spokesman said claimed they killed three Viet None apparently was serious. nar new year cease-fire. A Ko- the Viet Cong pushed some old (Jong. No U.S. casualties were A South Vietnamese spokes- rean spokesman said 46 Commu- men, women and children In Imported. man repotted that a Viet Cong Action On nists were killed. front of them as shields is they The clash involving the Ko- propaganda unit fired on a gov- By nightfall, the U.S. military attacked the Korean Marine pla- feans was by far the most se- ernment Ranger company after command reported 48 other vio- toon 10 miles southwest of Tuy tere since the start of the holi- t ignored loudspeaker appeals War Cash la'ions by the Communists of Hoa, a coastal town 230 miles day truce yesterday. to defect during the Tet holiday. their own truce, but almost ail northeast of Saigon. He was un- The Marines, who were in the The Rangers suffered minor cas- WASHINGTON (AP) ^ Sen. wi-re regarded as minor brushes able to say whether any civilians area to protect the rice harvest, ualties, the spokesman said. Richard B. Russell predicted to- In Saigon, an accidental outburst were killed. lit first held their fire but opened Both sides have mounted pro- day Out congress will, approve uf shooting, also involving Ko- Two U.S. Air Force fighter- lip when the Viet Cong came iganda campaigns during the "practically all" of the $12.76 reans, was set off by the sound bombers • buzzed the area but 'jvjthin 30 yards, a Korean celebration, a sentimental occa- billion in supplemental -funds re- of firecrackers as the' capital were unable to unload their ex- fpokesman said. sion when many Vietnamese re- quested by President Johnson to | greeted the Year of the Horse. plosives, apparently because of Moderate Casualties turn to their homes. help pay for the Viet Nam war. rhirty-four of the Communist the close nature of the fighting. Both sides lobbed hand gre- From Hanoi came warnings The • Georgia Democrat' com- I attacks were reported against The Koreans and Viet Cong at nades at each other and ex- of harder Communist attacks af- isented as Secretary of Defense '„J „S. , •„;__,_•...•_.__•„_Korean, Australia_n an-id times grappled hand to hand, a Changed small arms fire. Rein- ter, the Tet celebration ends Sun- Robert S.: Mctymara prepared New Zealand troops. The other spokesman said. forcements were called In by day. Hanoi radio broadcast « tp ."resume testimony on the.re- 15, ail characterized as minor, A guerrilla band niso attacked the Koreans. They said their new year's message frdm the quest to annb'ined sessions of were against government forces a reconnaissance patrol of the casualties were moderate. Viet Cong saying: the Senate's Armed Services this aroused speculation whether U.S. 101st Airborne Brigade last American patrols came under "Let our people march for- Committee and defense appro- the Communists really had in- night three miles northwest ol a variety of small arms fire, (See VIETNAM, Page 3) priations subcommittee. Russell is chairman of both! •In testimony yesterday, Me N«m«r» disclosed plans for "(fnassive application of firepow- er in Viet Nam" and laid "we Would Back Income Tax, must be prepared to deploy even ' • ' * • ' tfibre forces" If the Reds ex- pand their'operations.- , -Secretary of State Dean Rusk, meanwhile,' plans' a news Con But Not Retroactive Cla use ference today is the.administre tion weighs which way to turn FOR ADVANCEMENT OF PEACE — Former President Harry S. Truman, left, and By WILLIAM HENDERSON the federal government. This big income can be tapped, he zolina and James M. Coleman, are sales tax advocates. next in it* drive-for settlement President Lyndon B>-Johnson poie together in Truman'* office at the Truman Library TRENTON - A large, Influen- could open the door to all sorts will turn to the sales tax prop- of the w«r.. • • » • tial group of Democratic legls- of trouble/' Mr. Kingsley said. osition, The Register was told. Stepping into the tax picture President , Johnson was re- at Indepcndsnc*, Mo. President Johnson spoke at the inauguration of the Truman islators will pledge Gov. Richard The, governor, backed by the About 20 Democrats and nearly today will bs former ^Senate Pres- ported assessing the results of Center for Advancement of Peace. (AP Wirephoto) J. Hughes enough votes to pass mandate of the people who gave a majority of the . Republican ident Charles W. Sandman, Jr. hU ,month-Qld peace campaign his proposed income tax bill — if him a walloping 350,000 margin lawmakers will then vote for a (R-Cape May) who embarks on a to decide, among other-things, he eliminates its retroactive ictory in hij re-election cam- 3 per cent sales tax. speaking tour of 21 counties in a whether to resume the bombing clause. The Democrats now con- paign last fall, will lay It on the Sen. William T; Hiering (R- battle to block- any income or of targets in Communist North trol the Legislature. line when he meets with the Ocean, 5th) will introduce a bill sales tax. . • VletNatn. Party lawmakers representing state's strongest Democratic lead- in the Legislature Monday which Sandman, who last y,ear lost a Hire Federal ers in two weeks. ,Th^President is. expected.to the northern, central and southern calls for the sales tax. close gubernatorial primary race, continue U.S. diplomatic efforts. areas of the state are united — Or Salei Tax Monmouth County's legislative campaigned on s "no:tax" plat- But ho spoke, somberly yester- in their stand against the gover- If Hughes refuses to yield on delegation, including Sen. Rich- form, ' and opposed the governor's day, after hearing; from Rusk and nor's tax program as now draft- the Democratic legislators' retro-, ard R. Stout and Assemblymen $750 million, bond proposal in Roving Ambassador W,. Averell Agent for County ed The Register has learned. active deal and no other source of Alfred N. Beadlestbn, Joseph Az- 1963. Harrlman,. just returned from The. Democrats have' informed extensive foreign travels in be- FREEHOLD—Monmouth Coun- for the Great Society detailed for "If we don't get funds to Gov. Hughes they would join him half of Johnson's offer of un- County; may hire Its own federal Hie National Association of Coun- which we are entitled, we are at in his fight to enact the. state- conditional discussions to end negotiator to help assure that the ty ' Officials in Washington fault. We have to pay the taxes ; wide income tax if the Jan. 1 State Buys Manalapiutl thewar. ' • • : '••• county and its 53 municipalities Wednesday. • anyway, so we have a duty to withholding date were dropped. ' Johnson declared, that Hanoi apply, for, and get, a full measure After hearing Mr. Irwin's sug- get back those which are intended has blocked peace hopes so far. of federal,funds, available.. gestion, during a long day of for areas such as ours." It is the governor's. wish to Speaking at. Independence, Mo., Freeholder Director Joseph C. meetings' in preparation of its While a one-man staff might have the Legislature pass his tax •he, added: Irwin: yesterday recommended 1966 budget, the1 board took it not be able to process all of the measure by mid-March with the Farm for Battlefield Park "What is- holding back the th«~the freehpldewt coniWer- ap- under consideration. applications which municipal gov- revenue collectible starting the peace Is the mistaken view on pointing, a full-time stiff "There Is a lot of money which erning bodies and local agencies first dajt of this year. FREEHOLD —; The next , ing a condemnation action which bursed by the federal 'govern- $&,:&'%*• Inreisor. fai uito'ta'MiiWtu has been collected from all of might have occasion to file, fee Legislators have critized this ast major tract needed by th| Was pending. ment through, jt»'."o^«n -~^~M we jktt going to g ve up TheMaea grew out of •«'rising the taxpayers' and it lias been added, the information, could to phase of the tax program.' U ConservtttonCh Altogether the; state plans' to program; ; Mr.'Taylor was represented In principle*,, thtt we may yielil d to tide of federal aid program* appropriated'for use in the coun- made available. ' Bie- arguiment New Jersey resi- the proposed Monmouth develop about 900 acres of the tlefield State Park was pur- Revolutionary War Monmouth the transaction by Robert V. pressure or abandon our illfes, which.Vice President Hubert H. ties and mutiicipalitiee," Mr. Hearing the vice president dents would be taxed on salaries or finally 4*t tired oi get out." Humphrey and other spokesmen Irwin said. and other income they already chased yesterday for. $220,000. f Battlefield scene a« a state park Cartoa, Asbuiy park. The state for the first time in person, Mr That was the price agreed upon through Its "(foeta Acres" funds. was represented by Deputy At- Irwin said he greatly impressed. had received and spent on rent and daily necessities, by the state and the seller, Jc- Half of the cost will be reim- torney Gen. Henry Sevrin. "I was satisfied that he and jteph W. Taylor, for a 120-acrb Gov. Hughes has ' repeatedly the -men he presented were the north side of the t - - stated that the tax wouldp erDommican Guajrd thoroughly sincere in the effort Snglishtown Rd., Mll- $180 million annually. they are making," he said. Township, directly op- The session was held at the $232 Million posite from Molly Pitcher's well. MerchantsFavor Washington—Hilton Hotel. About The tax bite would be on in- Still in' dispute is a price for W Threat by Castro 350 representatives of counties comes starting Jan. .1, 1966, and Wemrock Orchards, Rt. .33, a 172- with more than 200,000 population because the state's fiscal year acre landmark in Manalapan and 'SANtp DOMINGO,' Domin- The: minister also revealed had been invited. won't end' until June 30, 1J67. conference, Castro declared the Freehold Townships. C.. Richard ican' Republic (AI») -r: Fidel that the Dominican navy recent- the first year take would total Dominican people "should not Heartland Applegate, president of the Or- Castro's threat to. intervene in ly acquired-"several" new high- confront Yankee Imperialism $232 million. "The future of our nation,' chard Corp., has rejected $145;- FREEHOLD — Even While Al- Mr. Lamhutt said the LPA the- Dominican Republic has New Jersey's acting tax col- speed, heavily armed • patrol alone" and threatened open in- the vice president said, "lies not 493, according to the most recent lowing protest signa to be placed should' explain how the project caused- the Dominican armed 1 lector, William Kingsley, is dead craft from the United States. It tervention by international com with the federal government. If report filed in the county clerk's In their store windows, business- will affect the community by forces to intensify security pre- set against dropping the retro- was learned,'however, that the munism in the Dominican Repub- lies in our heartland — in in- office. men in the midtown area sched- supplying more specific informa- active portion of the planned tax cautions along the northwest small boats arrived some time lic. dividual American counties and uled for revitalizetion say they tion on moving, rentals and bill. The Taylor farm includes a coast.' . . , before, the new threat from Ha Earlier in the conference, one communities. favor the idea. taxes. The armed forces; minister, He feels there would be comp- large residence, a sizeable farm ana. •-•••••.-• of the eight Dominican dele- "The Great Society will be an house, barns, storage buildings, But like Harry N. Frank, Jr. He said he knows of two busi- Commodore Francisco. J. Rivera Castro Words gates, Cayetano Rodriguez del America made up of thousands lications if the tax became ef- and other structures. and his father, printers at 17 nesses that would not reopen if Caminero, declined Thursday The commodore said the rea- Pfado of the Dominican Popular of great communities;" iective only on incomes earned The, sale price- was disclose)! Mecha'nlc, St.; wh| have started they were required to move. He night to go into details of the son for the increased vigilance Movement, said his country in He cited the many social prob- after April 1 or May 1. in an order approving the a campaign against' the Local would not disclose their names. coastal watch. But he said naval could be found in the words of the future would become the lems which confront the nation's "The •: salaried man would be patrols were concentrating on local governments and declared: making out two sets of .tax forms cjiase, signed by Superior Court Public Agency (LPA), they con- "I am uncertain about the sur- Castro and the Dominican dele- "Viet Nam of the Caribbean." vival of my, business at this nearly 100 miles of coastline (See U.S. FUNDS, Page 2) - one for the state and one for Judge Elvin R. Simmill, terminal- tend that a lack of information gates at the Havana conference Provisional President Hector timei" hestid. .' - • between': Monte Cristi and Puer- has fed' fears which they say : of revolutionaries from Latin Sarcia-Godoy barred the' re-en- now stand in block for gener- to Plata- Cuba's eastern tip is America, Asia and Africa, (See MERCHANTS, Page 3) try of the eight Havana dele- al, approval, ' ' ' ' miles northeast of Monte which ended Sunday. gates, who also included Eii- . Hane Bassoff, LPA executive Cristi. In his dosing remark's to the Matawan Township Utilities Unit clides Gutierrez Felix,, vice min- director, said that information ister of-the interior In the rebel needed to answer all inquiries is Convention ;overnmenf Col. Francisco Caa- Elects Zuckermanas Chairman available at his 14 South' St. of- mano Deno set up In downtown fice and daily is being given ianto Domingo after the: April MATAWAN TOWNSHIP - The rently constituted, and the capa- The authority will review five out. DelegatesGet evolution. Utilities Authority last ' night city of the present holder of that proposals by contractors to do The opposition' became evi- Would Defy Ban elected Karl D. Zuckertnan chair- office to discharge its responsi- the hook-up work. Mr. Traphagen dent Monday when the Franks IVoOppositioil man, with Eric K. Hellstrom bilities." said all five are^in the $1,700 Ib Another Dominican delegate, handed out about 500 copies of FREEHOLD - The six-mem- named vice chairman. the $1,800 range. Upheld by Court iuido Gil, said the group would There has been considerable an IB-page booklet, warning er slate °' Republican and He explained there are 84 usej's defy the president's ban and Mrs. Mary Lou Smith, was speculation that Strathmore Dem- .^ Democratic candidates for const!- "enter Santo Domingo and replaced as secretary-treasurer ocrats would seek to oust Henry Involved. All, were receiving gram for which the borough TRENTON (AP) - The Ap- find out who the other votes utionai l conventipn delegates fight." by Mrs.: Edythe Kaufman. She is E. Traphagen from the position. water from Matawan Borough could become obligated up to pellate: Division of Superior Court were^ for, the court implied. from Monmouth County will have Criticism of the presidential the wife of Strathmore Demo- He holds a five-year contract. through township mains. , 25 per cent. Estimates have put upheld Thursday a 1964 election "Some of the challenged bal- no opposition in'the March I ban has come from two political cratic Club president Edward Mr. Zuckerman continued: "We The authority took under ail- the need here at $1.6 million. A in which a candidate to the lets were cast by persons who special, election. figures. Ramon Gonzalez Hardy Kaufman. intend to carry out that pledge visement a request from John 'I. planning survey Is now in prog- Howeli Township Committee in are now dead or have left the County Elections Clerk Stanley of the Conservative National Civ- Allen B. Pearl, Strathmore ac- within a reasonable period." Ballofti of 251 Broadway, Ewep, ess. , Monmouth County won by 11 state or even are but of the A. Davis said the joint petition ic Union and Hector Aristy, pres- countant with Wall Township of- The examination, he said. Is N.Y. for permission to dig wells Besides the booklet, called the votes. country/'.the. court said. approved,, by the Republican idential minister in the reb- fices, was appointed auditor. Pat- part of a general evaluation of to supply -one million gallons i|>f "Eye Opener," the Franks have Lawrence E. Michnevich of Mr. Michnevich, a Republican, and Democratic County Executive 1 regime. Both said the, order rick J. McGann, Jr., Lincroft, the authority. water a day for a paper plant.j printed'signs reading "LPA, Go Squaflium-YeUow Brook Rd., defeated Marvin R. Clayton of Committees was the only one 'Mated a principle set forth m was named authority attorney. The new members plan to Mr. Baliotti proposes to build Away," and have had a dozen Farmfngdale, won the election, 56 Fbrtf 'Rd,,- a- Democrat. Mr. received before yesterday's fil- lie charter that created Hie' pro- Charles J. Kupper will continue "acquaint ourselves with all phases the plant on the 15-acre Cuspy of them placed in stores and but the results were challenged Mlchnevich..received2;37T votes ing deadline at 4 p.m. isional government -^ the right as engineer. of the authority's present opera- tract on Lloyd Rd. adjacent |o homes of co-operating business- by his closest competitor who and ;Mr;: Clayton got 3,366, Mr. Carrying th,e 'slogan, "Republi- f every Dominican'to live in Taking their seats last night tions, then make any changes the railroad. • men and residents. . •aid regulations were violated Michnevich, who took office in can-Democrat, Bipartisan," the his country regardless of politi- were five Strathmore Democrats, we feel are necessary to increase The operation would require All of the businessmen inter in the handling of 74 absentee 1965, elected for three list includes'State Sen. Richard cal bMie;f: '.,'•. ' , ' ' Councilman Henry C.F. Arnold, efficiency." one million gallons of watjr viewed yesterday said they were vdtes. There was no charge of years, R. Stout, Assemblyman Alfred N. Aristy, regarded as one' of the John J. Schorsch, Alvin A. Mar- Mr. Zuckerman did not say It daily. not opposed to revitalizing the fraud. ' • : Beadleston, and the former state closest advisers -W Cbl: Caa- gulies, Mr. Zukerman, and Mr. the examination would include a He is seeking approval by die borough but were concerned The Appellate Division said: highway commissioner E. Donald mano Deno, declared that per- Hellstrom. legal opinion of Mr. Traphagen's authority so he can bring Ills with what would happen to them "The trial court declared nine Judge Appoints Sterner, Republicans; and former sons at the Havana conference Mr. Zuckerman delivered a contract by Mr. McGann. proposal before the state Depart- when they move. of the challenged ballots to be •ssemblyman Patrick J. McGann, identifying themselves as mem- statement on behalf of authority Mr. Traphagen was directed by ment of Conservation and Eco- "As I printer, how would I defective but held that even if Violations Clerk r., Ocean Township Mayor John bers of the rebel constitu- members. the authority to comply with the nomic Development. | fit into this plan?" asked Manny they had all cast for the LONG BRANCH - Mrs,,Ahgeia '. Reilly, and Dr. Mason W.. tionalist movement had gone on In it, he pledged an examina- court order handed down by The authority will meet nekt Lamhutt, owner of the Paul- winning candidate, it would not Shanaphy Has been,' "appointed iross, president of Rutgers Unl- their own and not as representa- tion of "the need for the position Superior Court to extend water Thursday at 8 p.m. to approve Mark Printing Shop at 47 South change the result of' the elec- violations clerk "6jr Magistrate ersity, Democrats. tives of the movement. of executive director as it is cur- service to Storyland residents. its budget for the current year.! St. tion." . .•••(. Stanley Cohen. The convention, held to reap- Furthermore, the Appellate Mra^-Shanaphy has been serv- Mrtion the state Legislature, will Division said, only one of the ing "as.tssiitant'violations clerk start March 21 and is to, compi»ta Absentee ballots showed for and assistant court clerk. ts business by June 15. Its rec- whom the vote was cast. . F«nk Paiaia, court derk. has immendatlons will be subject to been acting ivlblitioni' clerk. Cut Ocean School Budget by $210,000 i public referendum at the gett- Arid it would be difficult to ral election in November. OCEAN TOWNSHIP, — After an exhaustive the gain will be nine cents. The new rate Is placed of 150 persons ai the public hearing in the Ocean at $2.38. , Township Ele; ary School. Steak Lunch-He study, members of the Board of Education early Sizzling broiled steak, salad, Saying today that "I now believe the voters will Mr. Fox anm meed the first change. He said today succeeded in paring $210,000 from its record baked potato, Texas toast Bonan- approve our budget," Mr. Fox stated "It must be the tentatively pi ed budget of $2.5 million to proposed J2.98 million achoor budget. za Sirloin Pit, Rt. 35, Middle- realized we will have 300 additional children In be raised by li il taxes would be lowered by Herblock lli:j__ ; town, N.J.—Adv. Final approval wa« given to a budget calling ' : school and dnly a $5 million Increase in ratables." $30,000 In the lint AmuMmenU Hume aad Garden budget due to anticipated federal MM* Timetable _ for j'2.JO3,U?.«« to be raised by taxation, which is He-said that In readjusting, the figures, board aid. j Miss Clalrol Touch Up $278; 473.51 more than was asked last year. members were able to trim $70,000 in the amount The budget w; s formally adopted for placement $5.95. Leon's Beauty Salon. 74l< OMtuarfca ....: ,.. ! Jim Btohep . low .S«jrvlce* Ocean Township taxpayers pay 98 per cent of asked for capital outlay, $110,000 from that for cur- on the ballot In tl Feb. 8 school elections. 8150. Next to Carlton Theater. Bridge „....: k™ the (mount for taxes and Loch Arbour 3 per cent. rent expenses and set.aside $30,000 from the bond Murray BIu: a board member, said: "Some- -Adv. , . , John Chamberlain The reduction will save Ocean, Township $203,700 • issue surplus fund from the surplus for'high school how every Item i there (the budget) can be used Chicken In Basket $LU Ctaulfled •'-'- .and U>ch Arbour $6,300. it was explained by Edwin purposes, this, he laid, "gave us a total budget In- very well." The tentative budget means spending Potatos -and vegetable, Colo* Cvrtfci ..•...,./. ~ J, Fox, the president. , , .,-•'-. •••• ' .' •' crease of $122,644. $550 (or each eler entary student and $1,000 for each olal COKM Shoppa * RwtauraBt, Cmtword Ptuzle Before the paring was done, the board was call- Before going into * late private session to dig high school itudt it, he estimated. Holmdel Rd., Holmtol Village. fttfff for a tax rate Increase of 31 cento per $100. Now Jto ltt arithmetic, the board faced a critic*! capwd (Se OCEAN, Page 3) ; 9«9M8Ad Six Top E€OM Positions tograplier 0n Social Filled by neassignmeiits Anti-Poverty Pay FORT MONMOUTH — Six top Col. Paul A. TroupX for- maintenance of the Materiel NEW YORK,;(AP)>- The city fire department when he needed Disclosure of her, appointment Army Electronics Command mer chief off the radar-combad l Readiness Directorate. \ has drawn its'official city hall one. came less than 24 hours after positions have been filled by re- surveillance commodity manage- Lt. Col. Ralph N. Cone, for- photographer from the ranks of Miss Thomas said her work Lindsay announced a luat on assignment of personnel here, it ment office, wa* named director merly deputy chief and execu- the social register and is charg- with the poverty program would the hiring of new city employees waa announced by Brig. Gen.; of ECOM personnel and training. tive officer of the radar-combat ing off most of her salary to the include taking pictures for bro- and .said he. may cut back all antipoverty program. chures, leaflets and other mater- department budgets by 10 per .William B. Latta, commanding William D. Roberts, former di surveillance commodity office, She is Katrlna Thomas, a Bryn ial.' • cent. ,• , general of ECOM. rector d ECOM personnel and has been named acting chief. Mawr graduate,' who will.receive In the past she has specialized Co). George A. Kurkjian, for- training, was named chief of the Col. Kurkjian has been here merly deputy director of person- a salary of $9,100 a year. in photographs .of children, but directorate's civilian personnel l'/j years. His previous assign- nel and training, was appointed ment was as executive officer Miss Thomas is listed as says Lindsay Is "my favorite division. Jury Awards . deputy and acting chief at staff. in the Signal Office, Headquar- consultant to the Economic Op- subject over IS," Lt. Col. Michael A. Caponegro, Lt. Col. John M. Reilly, for. ters, U.S. Army Pacific, Hawaii. portunity committee, which She took the photographs far who was program manager at merly executive officer of the He attended Aquinas College, draws most of its funds from the the book "My Skyscraper City Couple $22,200 federal antipoverty program. the radar-combat surveillance Army Combat Development Com- Grand Rapids, Mich., the Signal A child's View of, New York." commodity management office, Officers Advanced Course, and "The bulk of mywork will be Miss Thomas, a 1949 graduate was appointed secretary of the! mand, Communications-Electron. the Associate Command and Gen- as a poverty photographer," she of Bryn Mawr, has been a friend For Property general staff. ics Agency here, is deputy for eral Staff College. said last night, "though I'll be at of the mayor'a wife since their FREEHOLD - A jury before Col. Caponegro came here in City Hall whenever they ask me. college days. Superior Court, Judge Elvin R. Some people are coming down July. He previously was chief Siramill awarded 122,200-yester- with a gavel tomorrow and I'll of the Operations Division, G-3, day to a Port Monmouth couple Cold Wave Cripples In the Alaska Command. He. re- be there fo.r that." Weather for land taken by the state High- ceived a BS in education and did Mayor John V. Lindsay is the New Jersey: Mostly cloudy graduate work at the University first mayor in the memory of this morning, becoming partly way Department for a new Rt. Industry in Britain of Tennessee. He was graduated City Hall observers to have an cloudy in afternoon. Little tem- 36 jughandle. LONDON (AP)-Europe's col of them broken wrists. Brighton, from the Infantry School and the official photographer. Former perature change, high in upper The verdict, however, was only wave crippled British Industr on the south coast, had 160. Command General Staff College. Mayor Robert F. Wagner bor- 30a northwest, low arid mid 40s $700 more than a condemnation today, packed the hospitals an In Norway, the intense cold He holds the Purple Heart, rowed a photographer from the south and along coast. Fair, lit- commission had agreed upon threatened major embarrassraei seemed to be lifting slightly and Bronze Star Medal, and Army tle colder tonight, low in 20a to last Sept. 20. tor Prime Minister Harold W the temperature reached 14 de- Commendation Medal with two iround 30. Tomorrow, fair fol- Raymond T, and Sarah C. N. ton's government. grees Fahrenheit. The weather Oak Leaf Clusters. Fort Opens lowed by increasing cloudiness. Neary, Main St., Port Mori- Cuts in gas supplies disrupted bureau said the last three months Col. Troup was deputy chief, Uttle temperature change, high mouth, who had appealed the the English midlands, the hub have been the coldest Oslo has Silk Purse Control Group, Opera- DANCE PREPARATIONS — John Cottingham, left, in,mid to upper 30s northwest, commission's judgment; gave up British industry. Thousands known since official records tions Division, J3, U.S. Arniy president of the Tinton Falls Fire Company, meats with College Unit low 40s south. a .3-acre portion of their Main started 132 years ago. FORT MONMOUTH - Brig. St. property. The Highway De- workers were laid off for the rest Europe, before assignment here. his decoration! chairman Jamas Tector, right, and com- MARINE of the week, and assembly lines Sweden, enduring its coldest He has a BS in mechanical en- Gen. William B. Latta, command- partment took it In connection mittee member Ed Braidenbaeh in preparation for the Cape May to Block Island: baited in automobile and engi- winter since 1881, reported 43 gineering from Syracuse Univer- ing officer of the Army Elec- with the highway widening pro), 1 North to northeast winds 10 to neering plants. ships icebound in the northern sity and a graduate degree in fire company ! buffet dance stated for tomorrow at 9 tronics Command, at a recent ect between Rarltan Township ribbon-cutting1 ceremony, official 15 knots today and tonight. and Atlantic Highlands. Hospitals reported hundreds Baltic. Inland temperatures industrial engineering from the p.m. in the fire house. This is the fint dance since the ranged from 4 to 38 Fahrenheit. ly opened. the Newark State Easterly winds 10 to 20 knots fracture cases brought in from University of Alabama, where Members of the condemnation By these standards Britain, with redecorating of the fire hous/e was completed, The Doug College extension department tomorrow. Cloudy this morning, the icy streets. Some set up spe- he was assistant professor of commission had\ been Samuel temperatures only few degrees here. ; becoming partly cloudy in after- cial wards for old people wi military science and tactics from Barton Five from Newark will furnish the music. Allen Carotenuto and Abraham, Zager, below -freezing, was enjoying a noon. Fair tonight and Satur- hypothermia, a dangerous drop 195S-60. He is a graduate Of the Crawford, Jr., is chairman of the event. More than 400 students reg- Red Bank attorney;, and W. heat wave but the consequences day, followed by increasing In body temperature. One Lon- Command and General Staff Col- istered during the evening for Raymond Van Horn, Fair Haven were considerable. cloudiness. Visibility 5 .miles or don hospital, reported 2U casual- lege and the Airborne School, and courses to be given in the spring real estate broker. J. Frank ties from falls last night, most Cute by the government gas holds a Silver Star and Bronze semester at the facility, the firs" t mow Weigand, Keyport, and Ralph S, futy undergraduate program es- TIDES and electrical industries gave the Star Medal with two Oak Lea* Brown Appointed Chief Heuser, Matawan, were attar- tablished at Fort Monmouth. Sandy Hook Conservative opposition a spring- Clusters. neys for the Nearys, Deputy At- board for attack on Wilson's Among special guests attending TODAY - High 7:54 p.m. and torney Gen. Vincent Jennings, Labor government, which has a Mr. Roberts, a Wayside resi In Division of ECOM yesterday'6 ceremonies were Dr. low 2 p.m. dent, has been in the federal for the state. Births majority of only two votes in the FORT MONMOUTH - The ap- Eugene G. Wilkins, Newark TOMORROW - High 8 p.m. House of Commons. civil service for more than 22 pointment of Roland M, Brown State College president, and and 8:30 p.m. and low 2:06 a.m.' years, and has headed ECOM's as chief of the maintenance sup- Charles J. I-ongacre, Jr., in and 2:42 p.m. MONMOUTH MEDICAL personnel and training direc- port division of the National charge of field services. SUNDAY - High 8:48 a.m. and Eatontown Long Branch torate since October, 1S64. He Maintenance Point was an- Present for the event, also was 9:12 p.m. and low 2:42 a.m. and Mr, ad Mrs. Norma In. Board OKs attended San Bernardino Valley nounced by Lt. Col. John M. Lt. Col. Darden, Electronics 3:18 p.m. (nee Mary. Marsh) el 316J4 15th College, the University of Cali Reilly, Army Electronics Com- Command's deputy director of For Red Bank and Rumson School Rate . Ave., Belmar, • daughte Budget At fornia, Stockton (Calif.) College, mand's deputy for maintenance. personnel and training. bridge, add two hours;. Sea ' Wednesday. and Anchorage (Alaska) Metho- Mr, Brown has filled this post Kenneth K. Huhn, chief, educa- Bright, deduct 10 minutes; Long To Go Down Mr. and Mra. Juan Medina dist University. in an acting capacity since No- tion development and training, is Branch, deduct 15 minutes; High- , (nee Edith Fishrr) of 414 Atla Marlboro Col. Reilly has a BS degree vember. in direct charge. lands bridge, add 40 minutes. EATONTOWN - The Board from Fordhatn University and tic Ave., Matawan, a son, yes- MARLBORO - Less than a At the same time, Col. Reilly The new college extension is SATELLITES of Education's tentative school terday, i a graduate of the Command announced Mr. Brown's promo- headquartered in the Electronics ECHO II at 3:46 a.m. tomor- budget for 1966-67, up $34,134 handful turned out last night to General Staff College and numer- FITKIN discus* the school budget and tion to Civil Service grade GS- Command's modern education row, north of New York City, 7 over the current spending plan ous other service schools in his MtpfciM watch die Board of Education 15. center located in Armstrong Hall degrees above horizon, moving for a total of $1,217,964, will re- specialities. „ , Mr. and Mra. Ralph Stout (nee adopt the 1966-67 total of $624,248. As held of the division, with on the main post. sult In a decrease of 3.59 cent* Col. Cone came here in 1963 Ada WoollejO. Ardmore Rd Adoption, originally scheduled an authorized strength of 67 per- Classes will be held Tuesday, PEGASUS II Sunday at ,4:37 per $100 of assessed valuation in Freehold, daughter* yesterday. to take place after the Monday from Viet Nam, where he was sonnel, Mr. Brown has primary Wednesday and Thursday eve- a.m. 29.71 degrees above horizon, the tax rate, the board 'presi- " Mr. and Mra. Michael Madden night hearing, had been post- Army Programs Officer for the responsibility for those portions nings, starting Feb. 8. Each moving SV to SE. dent, James K. Van Dover, said (nee Shirley Dettrleh), 72 Ca poned to permit the board to Military Assistance Group. He of the National Maintenance course will meet for one weekly yesterday. non Rd., Freehold, son, yettei meet Wednesday night with the attended Southern Law Univer- Point's mission relating to tools session, Herbert A. Carusoe, the mayor and council and represen- sity, graduated from the Com- and facilities and automatic test It is planned that the cur- board's accountant, reports that tative* of local builders. mand and General Staff College equipment. NMP is a major riculum at the extension depart- Fine Woman while the current budget ac- associate course, and attended element of the Electronics Com- The board explained Monday ment will be expanded in the counts for 80 cents per $100 of mand's Materiel Readiness 1 night that it was postponing numerous service schools in his ,, Roland J/L'toOrm future to include- undergraduate In Contempt the tax rate, the proposed bud- Miss Harris specialized field. rectorate. , work at all levels. get will take up only 76.41.cents adoption on the pouibility (hat FTA.tnd the boosters Cli*,' sec. MIODLETOWN - Anita John- Mr. Brown, who has more than Courses are open to military per $100 of the 1966 tax rate, information gained Wednesday retary and treasurer •of.Natlonal ion of New York City, who failed 15 years' experience as an elec- and civilian personnel Jn the Mr. Van Dover said. The, ac- Is Hired To night would prompt •• modifica- Guardsmen, and-a. fheipber of tt appear to answer charges of tronics^ engineer here, started his area and up to 16 iibtirs' of work couiiMt's fibres are Based up- tions of the budget. •-"'• ~ Young GOP Alpha'' PW Alpha. ihoplifting last February, re- civil service career in 1949. His 1 p, . before matriculation at Newark ofi thi latest assessments. ' .Tftey decided no change was Wl i lei ved a" contempt charge fine 1 positions have been in the areas is a iwmbef of the State College may be credited Main reason for the slight In- indicated, howeve'r and last >f $200 from Magistrate Seymour Elects At of quality control, meteorological Jersey Society of Professional towards the bachelor's degree. crease in the (otal budget was night's brief meeting ended wltft i Steinberg yesterday. ! WEST LONG BRANCH - and maintenance engineering. Engineers and is licensed as a Further information may be ob- that "we were'able to hold the adoption of proposed budget. In additlon, Mrs. Johnson was ; The Shore Regional Board of Ed- Before coming \o his present professional engineer in New tained from Mr. Huhn at Arm- # line on teachers' salaries; we ordered to make restitution to < ucation last night hired Miss Middletown division In 1962 as chief of auto- Jersey. He serves on the Fort strong Hall, Fort Monmouth. have a t'we-year contract," the • Elaine Harris of 6 Cottage Ave., MIDDLETOWN - The Middle- matic equipment, he had headed Monmouth Board of U.S. Civil Two Guys Store here, which had board president commented. brought the charges, of $42.85 ;; Lc*j Branch, to teach English, 5 Speeders town Township Young Republi- up the metrology branch of the Service Examiners. The' tentative budget, intro- and was given a suspended 60- : Miss iHarrjs' contract calls (01 cans elected their new slate of former Army Electronics Mater- His wife, the former Miss duced at the Jan. 3 board meet- day jail sentence, I a $9,590 annuaj salary. officers last night without fan- iel Support Agency, ECOM. Mary Lilly Davis of Summit, is $75,000 Bid ing, will be heard publicly Mon- j The board awarded a pair Lose Licenses fare or intra-party opposition. A native of Morrlstown, Mr. a registered nurse and holds a Arthur Keller, 50 Crest Rd., day at 8 p.m. in Margaret L. I contract* to WoondWoa footbal EATONTOWN .— Magistrate Elected to succeed president Brown completed two years of BS in nursing education from For Marina vas fined $10, and George Brush, Vetter School, At the same time, : equipment, A $339 contract wenl William S. Throckrnorton sus- Robert Tabit was Henry Ernst undergraduate study when he en- Rutgers University.' She teaches 10 Conover Ave., was fined $5 public hearing of the proposed • to Circle System, Easton, Pa. pended the licenses of five speed- and the following other mem- tered active military duty at the at the Marlboro Hospital nursing 'or violating the township dog $1,372,000' bond Issue for school • Another contract went to Ivory ers yesterday, bers were named: start of World War II. As a school. In Keansburg jrdlnancc, construction, to be re-submltted commissioned officer in the Air The couple reside at 48 Garden Systeai, Ssdem, Ma*s., for $4H Thirty-day suspensions were or- Vice president, William Boye; KEANSBURG — Can you top In an assault case brought by to voters ' unchanged, wiU be Force, he served as a bombar- PI., New Shrewsbury. They have dered for Kathejine L. Delmont, secretary, Lois Sullivan, and an eighth of a million dollars? August Kaufman, 56 Park Ave., held. ' ; • dier navigator. He holds the a son, Roland M. Brown, Jr., a 86, of West Park Ave., New treasurer George Hespe, recent That's the starting price for ort Monmouth, against James Voters will express their prtf> rank of captain in the Air Force freshman at Howard University, Shrewsbury, who also paid a $10 president of the County YRC. bidding on this community's O'Donnell, 185 Port Monmouth erence on both issues at the Raise Salary reserves, as a member of the and a daughter, Gloria Jeanne, fine; Jimmy I. Anderson, 26, a The club's nominating commit- marina and its 15-acre tract. Rd., Part Monmouth, postponed polls Tuesday, Feb. 8, from 2 9250th AF Squadron, Fort Mon- a senior at Monmouth Regional from last week in order for Mr. Fort Monmouth soldier, fined $15; tee had originally planned to Bids will be received by Bor- until 9 p.m. mouth. High School. Kaufman to obtain legal coun- Of Substitute Tomasa Aponte, 27, of 45 Fifth name Charles Comito as presi- ough Council Wednesday, Feb. 2. Ave.,, Long Branch, fined $15; dent but he declined, saying he After the war, Mr. Brown en- sel, another postponement was Peter Bonafede, president of granted so that additional wit- John R, Davis, 30, of IS Larsen had other commitments. tered Lafayette College from Colts Neck GOP Bonafede Enterprises, Man- Jury Acquits HS Teacher Rd., Somerset, i fined $20, and The Register learned last night which he received his BS in elec- nesses could be brought into hassest, N.Y.; has offered $75,- :ourt. WEST LONG BRANCH — TheBessie L. Thomas, 96, of Rt. 1, that Mr. Tabit Intends to run in trical engineering in 1949. In Installs Officers 000 for the facility and pledges Accused Man •alary of Mrs. Maria Woodward, MorganvJlle, fined $10. the June primary for the nomi- 1951 he recedved an MS from to spend an additional $50,000 im- Richard E. Burke represented FREEHOLD - Herbert Howard College of Engineering. COLTS NECK — New officers i lubititute French teacher, was In- Three other convicted speeders nation for township committee- proving it. Mr. Kaufman. Wilder, Church St., Manalepan man. He Is enrolled in the doctoral of the Colts Neck Republican ; creased from $25 to $27.50 per pai^ d $1„ 0 fines,bu„„„„t kept thei„.„.r .11 ..-. The marina now • is being Township, was acquitted by a Tabit said he will wage a long program at Newark. College of Club were installed JTuesdayjn Monmouth County Court jury day by the Shore Regional High cenees. They are Louis Bevacqui, the Cedar Drive School with operated by the municipal Port and vigorous primary campaign. Engineering. 300 Area Men yesterday of having possession School Board of Education last 34 of 509 Tabor St., Long George Fessler presiding. Authority. It will not be sold to [ night. Branch; Herbert O. Lamin, 701 At Lafayette, he was elected the highest bidder necessarily. of two stolen checks worth K- PHYSICIAN LICENSED to Tau Beta Pi, national engi- Robert L. Simms is the new Take Physicals 000. j Mrs. Woodward Is substituting Ocean Ave,, West End, and Lest- president of the organization and Council also will evaluate pros- TRENTON (AP) - The State neering fraternity and the RED BANK — Approximately Mr. Wilder had been Indicted r for Mrs. Linda Mills. er E. Taylor, Jr., 18, of 15 Grant his colleagues are vice president pective purchasers' plans for de- Board of Medical Examiner* has Knights of the Round Table. He velopment of the area. 300 young men left from Red In connection with checks of the I In other board action it re- Ct., Long Branch. licensed 28 physicians, 13 from won the Lehlgh Valley student William H. Deedmeyer; treasurer : lieved Mrs. Masle Connelly from Bank this morning for the New- J. and M. Flooring Co., Free- New Jersey, the attorney gener- award for the American Insti- Howard T. Shlppen, and secre- ark induction station where they hold, stolen Noy. 6, 1965. ,' her business arithmetic class tary Vincent Costigan. al's office announced today. tute of electrical engineering. will undergo physical examina- The jury returned its verdict -' hier request. Her $5,300 annuai A reception followed the cere- Margaret Denny ; U.S. Funds The New Jersey physicians in- Mr, Brown is a past member tions to determine their fitnesj after a trial before Judge Ed- salary will be reduced one-sixtr mony and it was announced that (Continued) clude Dr. William Vaun, of Mor- of the New Shrewsbury Board of In Spelling Bee for service in the armed forces. ward J. Ascher. Samuel Caro- as a result of the action. mouth Medical Center, Long Health, a member of the Mon- the next regular meeting will be "Nobody in this age of change The group left in eight buses tenuto, Red Bank, was' defense Branch. mouth Regional High School held Feb. 15 in the game place. NEW SHREWSBURY - Mar- The board approved Albert can .meet these demands alone from in front of Local Board attorney. Assistant Prosecutor, : Fure u Mn. Connelly's replace- garet Denny, an eighth grader at and without help. : Tinton Falls School, will repre- 44 of the Selective Service Sys- John W. Applegate represented ment. His salary will be in tem, 54 Broad St., about 7:15. the state. creased $S per day. "That is why we passed break- sent Monmouth County in the an- through legislation last year to nual state spelling bee. The con- better help you meet your needs test, sponsored by the state Man Fined $100 — legislation for education, for granges, will be held Tuesday in EXPRESS YOUR JDEAS health, for housing, for opportun- Trenton. Robert I. Price, princi- |n Long Branch ity, for prosperity. pal, and Mr. and Mrs. Richard "That is why the President has LONG BRANCH - Magistrate Denny, 600 Riverdale Ave., will In llr.il mill |H<|>|>!| committed this administration to Stanley Cohen yesterday fined accompany Margaret. even further efforts in the year Dama Mitchell of 449 Hendrick- Margaret spelled down four, ahead." ton St. $100 for driving without teen other contestants to win the a license. With what Mr. Irwin conceded county crown for Pomona Grange was a direct reference to counties DALE CARNEGIE COURSE James Borden of Thomas Ave. and Tinton Falls School. This is like Monmouth, Mr. Humphrey the fifth year Tinton' Falls has In Effadive Speaking, Human Halations, Red Bank, was fined $30 and hai asserted: provided a county winner. Memory Training Ms license revoked for 30 day 'Spillover' for speeding. Steven Kohn also represented "Most of you in this room are Tinton Falls at the county level. 10 Ways Tais leirsi Will BsMflt MIR ni Wsmsni ' James Fornino of 671 Mart directly in the path of spillover Bonny Kodadefc and Scott Miller ConlMmct t. TNKK pnd SPMK wi Ywr Put St. was fined $10 for driving with from urban centers, People have 7. Central Mir and Wwry fictitious license plates. were second place winners and J. Ml Yourmf anif Your Idui not only filled the suburbs, but Beverly Miller and Michael 4. •• Ywr a«l wim Any Omit i. Santa* Y.ur HlwJn Mil tin are moving Into county lands as I. mmt-'-r f—i It. lirnTlllf B«lt.r Jo», Fined for careless driving wen Burke, third place winners in the well — and they are bringing tfr-j.lrr— James Scarsl of 36 spring Hi! school contest. " Dr., Ukewood, $20; William Will with them the problems that beta, Jr., of ttC McClellen St. plague bur cities. FREE DEMONSTRATION flfl, and Clarence Cook of 17: "Yours iaVe the only effective Pavilion Ave., $5. or potentially, effective govern' Egg Market ment organizations to cope with NEW YORK (AP) - USDA - RID SANK CARLEEN FEIT BAPTIZED these ipjobltms. . Wholesale egg offerings adequate. Matlv. Nicker laa , ASIURY PARK MATAWAN - Carleen Elle i "'You know local conditions, Demand good on large; fair on ko«t* 31 ItriwUy! Carttntt H°ttl F4t, infant daughter of Mr, ami local problems; you kn&w your balance yesterday. Tues., Feb. 1,8 p.m. Mrs, Robert F«U.
y ' •• A •••; "• •.'••• .1 :••••- !.-.-/ . * Petition Sees Effort to 'De-taloafee Eagle' Raps 'Internationalists9
State tottery trol U vital to keep the Viet Nam EATONTOWN — Disarmament No one can answer that ques- as a tool for the ultimate achieve- tion, either, the speaker con- war from escalating. \'?$ii&rimf N.I, CAP) -nie The Jaycees want a lottery on ment of world dictatorship was tinued. A sensible alternative, the Neiy Jersey Junior Chamber of three thoroughbred horse races discussed last night by Duane Using the emotional appeal of speaker said, would be,to get Cpirojnerce laid •Hwriday it each year, Kistner said, one at Thorin, guest speaker at a meet- a call to end the arms race, Mr. Congress to assert its power and *M preserK Gov. Richard J. Garden State Race Track in ing of the Monmouth Forum of Thorin went on, internationalists declare war in North Viet Nam, Hughes next .we* with a peti- April, another at Monmouth in American Opinion, John Birch have maintained "civilian con- thus placing upon politicians the tion signed by "thousands and June and the last at Atlantic Society affiliate, in Monmouth rol" rather than "civil authori- responsibility of ending the war 1 thwsMds * of New Jerseyans City In September. Shopping Center civic auditorium. ty" over the military, with the as soon as possible and at the who want, a state lottery. An audience of about 50 heard result that though American least possible cost in lives. Franklin .Kistner, chairman of Mr. Thorin, veteran of 22 years military forces have expanded "Let's bring the war to a quick the Jaycees lottery committee; Viet Nam enlisted and commissioned ser- greatly, development of new snd," Mr. Thorin urged. "It •aid he will give the governor vice in the U. S. Navy, which in- strategic — and indeed, conven- (Continued) isn't even necessary to bomb the petition at a meeting in the cluded 19 months as a prisoner tional — weapons has been sup- Hanoi; it's just necessary to SUte House Jan. 27. A,spokes- ward to continually strike dead of the Chinese Communists, score pressed. ly blows at the U.S. aggressors convince Ho Chi Minh that it will man for Hughes said the gov- 'internationalists." They, he con- "Since 1961," the speaker said, and disintegrate inany puppet be bombed if he doesn't with- ernor had agreed to meet with tended, now seek political power 'no new strategic weapons sys- troop's and win greater victo- draw his aggressive forces from Kistner. by "de-talonizing" the America tem, nor any improvement of ries." South Viet Nam." . Kistner refused to disclose eagle and delivering the national any consequence, has been de- Americans Assailed He urged his audience to push* how many signatures he had on security over to the care of a veloped." He named a list of The president of North Viet tor a declaration of war by Con- the petition but said that he world armed force for peace to strategic weapons canceled off Nam's Fatherland Front, Ton ;ress so the legislative branch would make the information be controlled ultimately by defense plans for, he said, politi-. Due 'Thang, called for "more will "re-assert its check against public next week. IT'S DUCKY AT HU — Stanley 'Ducky' Moore hat been installed at president of the world government. c«l reasons. .and still greater successes to the executive." "But I can say," he added, bring the national salvation war Hook and Ladder Company in Red Bank* Shown at ceremony, seated, left to right, are How to Control It? Civilian control of the military "that we have.names from every Scoffing at is not a constitutional principle, Mr. Thorin scoffed at the Idea against U.S. imperialist aggres- .Albert Nolan, secretary; William-Bloom, outgoing 'president; Mr. Moore, and Philip the "Utopian county in the state from more of negotiations in Viet Nam. sion to early victory." nonsense that we're going to Mr. Thorin stressed. Civil auth- than 300 communities." Martinez,' vice president. Standing ar» the new line officers. From left art Charles abolish arms or military force," ority is, he added. Civil author- "We lost more men in Korea The custom of exploding fire- — and so did our enemy — after Kistner said the Jaycees will crackers to chase away demons Gunnell, captain; Kevin Lang, first lieutenant; Robert Laveratt, lecond lieutenant; and which he called essential to ity as conceived by those who ask Hughes to propose an amend- modern civilization, Mr. Thorin drafted the Constitution means the negotiations started than be- on the new year unnerved a Joseph Layton, assistant engineer. < . ment to the state constitution to said the internationalists aims legislative, control of the mil- fore," he stated. "What's so hot truckload of South Koreans com about negotiating in Viet Nam?" permitMtablishment of a lottery ing into Saigon from the battle are at least better than that. But itary, he stated. he asked, how will the interna- The present war in Viet Nam, He urged citizens tri use the in- zones. As their truck entered < creasing casualty reports from the capital, a dozen Korean tional peace force be controlled? undeclared by Congress, is being No Answer fought under civilian control, the Viet Nam to regain control of Ocean soldiers assumed they were be- Air 48 ?o School Budget their government. "No one can answer this ques- ex-Navy officer explained "and ing fired on and shot back into "Whenever a casualty occurs in (Continued) tion," he declared. our forces are fighting with their the trees and upper stories of the community, say, "That boy ,' "We now pay |«M per pupil What kind of government wouli hands tied behind their backs." buildings along the street. could be yours or mine,'" ths .'attending Asbury Park High we live under if the international Internationalists claim, Mr Another truckload of U.S. sol. speaker suggested. School," he added, "So why Hike With Pictures, Music aims prevail? Thorin went on, that civilian con- ihouM it cost us $1,000? I don't diers heard the shooting. Wit- Ever-growing Viet Nam casual- know and I'm sure the rest of nesses said the GIs jumped from MANALAPAN — House lights The story of the board's $1,261,- be known until Feb. 8, at the ty lists are the greatest op- ' Hie board doesn't. their vehicle, deployed along the dimmed, mood music drifted ov- 604 spending schedule, calling for annual school election. The bud- portunity available to unite the curb and also fired into the er the auditorium, colored slides an over-all increase of 48 per get will be up for judgment be- Set Celling? Joins the Peace Corps American people, he concluded. trees. flicked across the screen. cent, was dramatically portrayed fore the district voters then. "V "W« could tell the administra- SHREWSBURY - "It's good As the suspension of air at- But it was neither a Disney- to a disappoint, ngly small and Pupil's Day tion to set a ceiling on each pu- land production nor a first grad- subdued audience. Several ques- experience, and it's something I tacks on North Viet Nam entered As the slides flicked across thi pil, jf we were economy- er's "Show and Tell" hour last tions indicated that while the can do for my country." Man Killed mmded; But the people in our the 29th day, the United States night at the Gordons Corner show was good, the budget was large screen, pre-recorded voices James E. Markham, 26, ol 26 township are not economy came under more pressure to continue the moratorium. School. It was the Manalapan- high. ot pupils and teachers narrated Alameda Ct., was talking yester- By Truck mjnded, except on three occa- Englishtown Regional Board of Canadian Prime Minister Les- Whether the silence and small the pupils' daily activities at the day about his acceptance as a •ipna: the school budget hear- Education doing a soft sell on ter B. Pearson told the House turnout portends good or bad school as soft music drifted Peace Corps trainee. The young ing, and the two times they its 1966-7 budget. Vdte down flw. budget." of Commons in Ottawa yesterday news for the school board won't throughout the room. man, a recent Monmouth College On Rt. 9 sociology graduate, leaves Feb. SAYREVILLE, N. J. (AP) — Wr. Blum said that when he he hoped the bombing pause The spectators saw the chil- 21 for three months' training at Mitchell G. Trott. 57, of Jersey dttl find wayt to save money would continue "as long as pos- dren arriving at school, going sible." He said the suspension Los Angeles State College in Cal- City, was fatally injured Thurs- ihwi^h the years, by-buying a Furniture Repair and Refinishing through their class assignments and President Johnson's diplo- ifornia. day night,when he was struck ' lower price material that would and finally boarding the buses matic moves had brought "no by a tractor truck while cross- •erve as well as a higher priced for the trips home. "I'm only accepted as a on>, "not one of you in the response that you could detect Course Offered by Adult School trainee, not yet as a volunteer," ing Rt. 9. from Hanoi," but he added he township responded except to MATAWAN — The Matawan Board President Charles Wlk- he emphasized. He added that Police said the truck collided ;«y "that'i terrible.' " still hoped for peace talks. pjf, Jr., said, when the house about 29 per cent of trainees are with a passing car while trying Community Adult School, Inc., - A few residents criticized ad- lights were turned on again, that to avoid Trott. ministrative and teachers' sala has announced the appointment budget meetings began shortly The victim was taken to Perth rie«. However, the loudest criti- Merchants of Mark O. Whitney, 224 Main St., after Thanksgiving and that $110.- Amboy General Hospital where ckm came from board member as instructor for the furniture 000 was trimmed off before the Brielle he was pronounced dead at 7:30 John-Moore, "who voted against (Continued) board approved the final figure. p.m. Another merchant, William Mc- repair and refinishing course in raising the salary guide this He explained that no educa- Also injured was Arthur Tous- Grory, owner of Two Vets Bil- the spring semester which starts year by $31,000. tional program was sacrificed but Woman saint, 27, of 19 Pacific Blvd.i "I don't believe in raises upon liards at 15 South St., said he Monday, Jan. 31, in The Matawan Cliffwood Beach, driver of the was undecided about the project that board members decided to raises," Mr. Moore said, noting Regional High School, Atlantic James E. Markham car that collided with the truck. but allowed the sign to be placed teachers also would receive $33,' Ave. retain some of the present buses He was treated for a neck in- 000 in increments. in his window anyway. for another year before trading Killed dropped; from the program after jury and released, ; Mr. Whitney, who is semi' "I think we should have a bet- He expressed concern about them in. BRICK TOWNSHIP (AP) - their threfrrrionth schooling. Police identified the truck driv- the availability of houses and retired, has a wealth of training If accepted as a volunteer, Mr, er as Samuel L. Sawyer, 41, of ter than average salary guide, Charles D. Swalm, school su- Mrs. Fostina Arbuckle, 75, was business locations for the relo- and experience that covers the Markham will spend the next tw< 1259 Randall Ave., Bronx. but we already have one," he perintendent, said he spoke to said. cated residents and merchants. repair and refinishing of any wood fatally injured Thursday when years in Thailand as a membe Trott lived at 151 Sip Ave., product to the design and con- home developers, waiting to start 'Below Norm' Some Like U her car was struck broadside of a rural health education team, Jersey City. . , j struction of 48-foot yachts. construction, and learned that 900 , Mr, Fox replied that the town- But not all mercnarits oppose by another auto while trying to The young man may seek a the project, Mr. Frank said, add- houses could be expected in the inip'a salary '.guide is "below During this course, Mr, Whit- make a U-turn in this Ocean career in social work or In Jour- ing that he has found some who coming year so that the board the norm in Monmouth.Qounty." ney iwill gear his 10 lessons to nalism after his two-year Peace believe it would benefit the bor- could estimate that 650 children County community. 'Edward German, superinten- the techniques involved in the Corp? tour,,he.said. He worked ough. would be added to the enroll- Mrs. Arbuckle of 609 Rankin dent, - added, . "no school any- specific , repair, refinishing and in the composing room of The He said that he, too, was not ment. Dr., Brielle died three . hours where, has a better faculty than rehabilitation of an antique or Daily Register while attending against revitalization but is wor- Uses Charts later at Point Pleasant Hospital we have. '.Tftis year many a small piece of furniture that college at night four years ago. ried about the fate of the af- can be transported by the student of internal injuries. schools will have guides com- Illustrating with charts, he said At Monmouth College, he wai fected small. businessmen and to each class. Materials can be Mark O. Whitney parable to ours. We must go 59.8 per cent of the school dol- State police at the Laurelton associate editor of the college forward, just as they go for- low income families. obtained i.i the class. barracks said Mrs. Arbuckle Whitney learned cabinet work lar goes to instructional services, newspaper. :,.„.. ward." ' . ; • "I have no political motiva- had stopped her car on the A minimum of 10 students must and drafting while studying psy- listed in the proposal as $754,048, Robert E. Harris, a candidate tions," he said, "I just want southbound shoulder of Brick register to justify a class. Twenty- chology at The Theological Semi- for the board, noted that 70 per what is best for the town." hours of instruction will be held an increase of $247,723 over last Bvld. 1 nary. After teaching woodwork Romait Assigned «ent of the budget is for teach- His booklet information took from 8 to 10 p.m. Mondays or year's figure. They said she started to pul more than a month to research and physical education at Hart- ers' salaries ($1,751,220). . "If Thursdays. When he explained that a cross- out onto the road again, appar- To KWea Post we're going to have excellence he said. He added that he has ford City Mission for Boys and A native of Darien, Conn'., Mr. ing guard would be hired for ently to turn around, when her 2D, INFANTRY DIVISION, we'have to pay for it." joined the Citizens Advisory Com- serving as scoutmaster and main- $1,000, one spectator quipped: car was struck on the driver's Korea—Army Pvt. William E. . Richard Sheehan asked, why mittee on Urban Renewal so that taining boys' camps for seven years, he continued his studies in "How much would it cost to side by an auto driven by Mrs Roman, Jr.," whose parents live tt additional teachers are he could learn more about what Charlotte Abrahamsen, 36, of 103 BWMed.1 • "Why doesn't the will take place here. Mack Wins cabinet and furniture construe- built a bridge over the Gordons at S21 Newman Springs Rd., Lin- Corner Rd?" Larch Dr., Toms River. board increase the number of Explaining that every affected tion at Columbia University. croft, N. J., is assigned to the itudehfs In classes?" he said. businessman and resident would New Post He taught woodwork at Junior Without pausing, Mr. Swalm re- Mrs. Abrahamsen was treated 2d Infantry Dryislon here. •IT. have a responsibility to the receive detailed information High School, New Britain, and at plied that It was a county road at the hospital and released. Pvt. Roman is a military po- board and myself to keep these when the plan is formulated, Mr the Evening School in Hartford and that a bridge would cost liceman in the division's 2d Mil- lebobb excellent," Mr. German Bassoff said the project is High School. more than a guard. itary Police Company. He en- tered the Army last July and replied. He noted that, more geared to the small businessman When he opened his own cabi- The board estimated that Man- GOP Club completed basic training at Fort teachers are needed because en so that' he may gain the ad- net shop and antique furniture alapan taxpayers will be paying Dix, N. J. rollment is going to up 300 next vantages of a new area. repair and reproduction in East $2,285 for each $100 ratable, com- fall and the first 12th grade will He said films and slides from Hartford, its proximity to The pared with $1.85 last year. En- Slates Fete The 21-year-old soldier was Some of our have to be taught. the federal government were be- Hartford Yacht Club brought glishtown residents will carry the gradua ted from Middletown ing ordered to acquaint the peo- many calls for yacht repair and larger shars o< $3.23, or 90 cents Township, N, J. High School in Robert Levy, aUo.a board can- For Candidates 1962. WEEKLY didate, asked, how much the ple with results of similar proj- remodeling, Introducing a over last year's $2.33. NEW SHREWSBURY - Tinton board has. m surplus and what ects in other municipalities. field for his talents. He then The figures have not been ap- Fails and Monmouth Regional Income it draws. Marshall Mr. Bassoff stressed that, only studied boat design and opened Shore Regional Adds FEATURES proved by the state y,et and min- Board of Education candidates Conklln, board secretary, said with the acceptability of the a shop called The Whitney Wood- or changes may be made before regardless of political affiliation 6 Substitute Teachers (190,000 Is banked as surplus and residents could a plan work. craft, later changed to Whitney Tuesdays ... they are finalized, board mem- are invited to appear at a can WEST LONG BRANCH — The earns $3,000 annually. He explained that there would Yachts, which was maintained bers said. didates night sponsored by the Shore Regional High School He explained this money could be no pressuring of a plan on for 12 years with exhibitions of SHANTY BUFFET his own 23-foot to 48-foot boats New Shrewsbury Republican Board of Education last night not be used to lower the bud- the people. He said he would A nptib array of delicious sea be talking to various groups to in the National Boat Shows in Club, Mrs. Betty Diano, club added six persons to its substi- get because 7 per cent of the president-elect, has announced. food dlshti . . . practically budget; must be retained as sur- find out what they want and his New York as a member of the Three Plane tute teacher list. everything on ear menu, plus plus for working capital. office would try to devise a plan National Association of Engine The gathering of candidates They are MM." Susan Joseph, more besides, oil temptingly which would be the best for them and Boat Manufacturers. Occupants will be at 9:30 p.m. Monday in Mrs. Barbara Snyder and Mrs. served tn buffer! C? 7C and for the borough. The depression caused the clos the First Aid Squad headquarters Dianne Sheeran, all of Eaton- Adults . . . ^3*19 building, immediately following town, Mrs. Peggy Ann Appleby of Ladiu and gentleman undtr ing of his own luxury business, Iwclvt ytan £4 4E Pogler Contest Planned but he was immediately engaged Found Dead the installation of club officers Long Branch, and Mrs. Carmella for 1966. Sethmann and John Pozeryckl of af 09. . . . ^U«*» as night superintendent of con- SCRANTON, Pa. (AP) - The By We Must Care, Inc. The public is invited. Asbury Park, BftKf*gL struction and material control in bodies of three New Jerseyans Wednesdays ... RIDGEFIELD - We Must John E. Mack the Elco plant, Bayonne, where — a music publishing company Care, Inc., is sponsoring a poster tip to 80-foot boats were being executive, his wife and a sales TWIN SPECIAL contest for children to point out COLUMDUS, Ohio - John E. built in World War II. man — were found Thursday the dangers of talking to strang- Mack of 1SJ Kingfisher Dr., Mid- For three years, Mr. Whitney after their single-engine plane Our ewit eruitaeean Giminl— TWO ont-pound ehalc* lobitan ers. • dletown, N. J., has been pro- had charge of the plant of C. C. crashed into'hilly woodland near The organization seeks to quell moted to director of the Toll and Galbraitii and Son in Keyport, wrvxi with a cup of clam an amusement park. ehowdtr, potarott, cholct of child molestation and hopes for Tandem Switching Laboratory at building and repairing steel life- Bell Telephone Laboratories, The wreckage of the plane, •aladi and 6 A EA a Monmouth-Ocean County chap- boats and equipment for ocean tavtrag* . . , «P^*9V ter to be organized in that area. here. In his new post, he Is re liners. He was a member of The which crashed during the night, was strewn for two miles over Winners of the child safety sponsible for development of Keyport Businessmen's Associa- the area. The bodies were found poster contest will be received switching systems in the Bell tion and ICiwanis Club, assuming Thursdays . . . at 1:30 p.m., nearly six hours by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoo- System long distance network. charge of Division after the downed plane was dis- ver in his Washington offices, Dr. Mack Joined Bell Labora- Work for the New Jersey Ki- SHANTY FISH FRY covered. where he will acknowledge their tories in 1954 and was primarily wanls. Special flih lov.n night . . . efforts. •' engaged in development of elec- He was asked to help with the A load of musical instruments ALL Hit flih you can tot, fried We Must Care, Inc., seeks the tronic switching systems. He has reconstruction of the First Church als0 Was in the wreckage. OR broiled! Also cup af chow say interest of civic and service been Head of the Automatic dtr, potatoes, tot rolli aid of Christ Scientist, Broad St., The victims were identified as butter, choice 6*) CiY 11737 groups and Parent-Teacher As- Number Identification System and Keyport, from the^ former Pres- Fred Kolster, 43, of Woodcliff of uladl . . . 94e3U sociation units to sponsor the Special Switching Projects De- byterian Church. As general Lake, N.J., a sales manager of of your contest locally and to donate partment at the company's Holm- superintendent of that remodel- G. Schlrmer Music Publishing prizes for the winners. The or del, N.J., location,, and has been ing project, he assigned contracts Co. of New York City; his wife, , . and EVERY day, neighbor*ganizatlon will lend the film, concerned with continued exten- and personally designed, built and Ann, 34, and a Schirmer sales- the best sea food on "Say No to Strangers," to groups sion of the direct distance dialing hand-carved the chancel rail, and man, Milton Riger, 41, of Glen wishing to stimulate children's telephone service. reader's desk. Rock. the coast, carefully Interest In the contest. It asks No Minimum A native of Montana, Dr. Mack Mr. Whitney has also taught at The Kolsters had six children. prepared to your taste merchants to allow posters to be received the B. S. degree In the Freehold Regional Adult displayed in store windows. A company spokesman said engineering physics from Mon- School. they were en route to a music Information! is available at We tana State College in 1948 and He Is a member of The Mata- dealers' convention in' Elkhart, Required the Ph.D. degree in physics from Must Care, Inc., Ridgefleid, or wan Borough Businessmen's As- Ind. by calling 893-5389. Lehigh University in lj>54. He is sociation, and is kept busy with The plane, a blue and white a member of the American odd jobs, including the repair of pour-seater Navion, was regis- TAMED WILDLIFE — Shown displaying stuffed venlons MAN FINED $18 Physical Society, the American furniture and antiques It his tered In the name of Kotster, >'**- FAIR HAVEN - Robert L. Institute of Physics, and the basement workshop. of the typ«i of wildlife found at the Sandy Hook Stats iOO? honor societies Kappa Phi Tau, who apparently was the pilot. A SHASfV Mrost, 95 Matilda Ter., Long Mail registrations will be ac- business associate said Kolster .Park it Richard Cole, left, trie park'i chief naturalist. Branch, was fined $38 in Munici- Beta Pi Phi and Sigma Xi. cepted and should Include regis- had been flying for more than Looking on arc, left to right, J. Leiter Rigby, J. C. » CHANNIL DRIVI pal Court yesterday. He pleaded tration and tuition fees to be sent 20 years. . guilty to speeding 89 miles per MEETING POSTPONED to James G. Long, director, Davenport and Clifford Adams, who wars among th» POINT PLIASANT IIACH hour in a 25-mile zone. LITTLE SILVER-Last night's Matawan Regional High School. TW »4700 , House Hunting! It's open lea- many husbands who attended the Garden Club of New meeting of the Zoning Board of 1 Registration will be held in the Shrewsbury's annual Huibandi Nigrjt at Sycamore Adjustment wa» postponed to high school Monday, Tuesday and son In the Dally Register CIIMI- Open 7 Day$ a Week lext Thursday, Jan. 27. Wednesday from 7 Vto 8 p.m, fied now. School, N»w Shrewsbury. 4-Frifey, JIBIMIT 21, 1906 TOI DAILY RECB1ES tbt commission, l» pteiyunc to namncx i. present a jUy pmt> ttma JUs MA3WWAM — Frederick East Africa Holmdel Recreation Unit year. Anyone inUntttd In aerv- rtun, M, of Water St., died ing as director la asked to con-questions regarding yesterday in Perth Araboy Gen Talk Slated Elects Morse Chairman tact Mrs. Russ Lsgattuta. Obituaries eral Hospital, Perth, Amboy, Mrs. David Carlson and Mrs. Mr. Barham was .bom in Jer HOLMDEL-Charles E. Morse children in kindergarten through the commission is also offer- Richard Greenman, co-chairmen sey City, son of the late James On Tuesday was elected chairman of the Rec-third grades at the Village School ing a program for men. and wom-of the commission's senior citi- MM. MARY A. LuBRANT JOHNCOST1GAN reation Commission at a recent starting at 11 a.m. On Saturday, en interested in basketball. The zens program, have planned an and Rosanna Hagan Barham SHREWSBURY - "East Afi LONG BRANCH — Mrs. Mar> COLTS NECK TOWNSHIP - and had lived here for the past reorganization meeting. Jan. 29 at 11 a.m., a feature Indian Hill School gymnasium is active agenda for the year. The A. LuBrant. 77, of M North Fifth John Costigan, 72, of Malboro ca Today" will be the topic Also elected were William film will be presented for theavailable Thursday evenings group meets' at the Fellowship 74 years. a talk Tuesday at Shadowbrook, Ave. died in her home yester Vanderburg Rd, died yesterday He was a retired bricklayei Dehm, vice chairman and Arthur children of. the township in thefrom 8 to 9:33 for all women, Hall, Holmdel Village, and eith- at the Ivy House Nursing Home, Broad St., by Patrick Lewin £. Judd, secretary-treasurer. fourth through eighth grades at er of these women may be con- and plasterer. high school teacher in Kikuy with Mrs. Ruth Ormsbee to be Born in Poland, she was th Middletown Township, after a Mr. Barham was a member ol Jay Demarect will again be di-the Indian Hill School. contacted for further information, tacted for information on meet- lengthy illness. Kenya. rector. ing dates and transportation. 'daughter of the late Paul and St. Joseph's Catholic Church, Mr. Lewin will address a din The Teen Clufr, organized by and for the men. the Indian Hill {Mary OryU. She had lived in this Mr. Cottigan. was born here, Keyport. Plans include programs for •on of die late Daniel and Mary ner-meeting of the Monmoutli «rea 47 years. He is survived by a sister, Mrs. County Branch of the English residents of ail groups. Tomor- . She was a communicant of Out Costigan. Ella Otte of this place. row morning a cartoon show will lady Star of the Sea Catholic A retired farmer, he was Speaking Union at 8:30 pan. A Requiem Mass will be of Hie guest speaker was born be held for pre-schoolers and -Church, here, and a member member of St. Mary's Catholic (ered Monday. at 9 a.m. in Si Going to New York?... the Rosary-Altar Society of St.Church, Colts Neck, and its Holy and lives in the highlands Joseph's Church. Burial will be Kenya. Educated at Eton a : Jerome's Catholic Church, West Name Society. in Holy Name Cemetery, Jer- "Long Branch. She was the widow He is survived by a brothtr, Oxford, he graduated with ho Belford sey City, under direction of th on in history and a diploma i jof Martin LuBrant. William Costigan, at home; two Bedle Funeral Home, Matawan Mrs. Robert Walling, who had ; Surviving are two sons, Ben- nephews^ Raymond L. Coitigan education. After teaching in pi vate schools in England, he too been residing with her husband, jamin H. LuBrant, here, and of Middletown Township and Vin- Staff Sgt. Robert Walling, in Al- WE TAKE up his present post in the All • Frank M. LuBrant of Ocean- cent Costigan, at home. Historical amogordo, N. Mex., is visiting port; three daughters, Mrs. Wi Services will be held Monday ance High School in Kikuyu, ne Nairobi, Kenya's capital. Mr. and Mrs, Luther Walling, •Ham G. Manning, here, Mrs. at S;M a.m., at the Freeman Fu- Jr., and family fpr several ; Andrew Brown of West Lon neral Home, Freehold, followed Society Gets Living on the slopes of 17,00 YOU OUI OF foot Mount Kenya, Mr. Lewi weeks. Sgt. Walling is on anoth- Branch, and Mrs. Frederick 1 by a Requiem Mass at 9:30 in er assignment. McCormtck of Red Bank; St. Mary's Catholic Church, Colts experienced the dangerous da; Documents of the Mau Mau emergency. I brother, Watson Oryll of Re Neck. Rev. Stephen A. Bielen The Independent fire auxiliary Bank; three sisters, Mrs. Joh will officiate, quriat will be in OCEANPORT The Historical has driven in the East Africa Society has received document! Safari, one of the world's fasl will hold a Beeline fashion show THE DRIVERS Boman of Lincroft, Mrs. Dennis the St. Rose of Lima Cemetery, at the Feb. 8 meeting in the fire- Msadeof Red Bank, and MrsFreehol. d Township. said to "greatly enrich" its his-est and toughest motprcar ral torical files. lies. He has traveled to th house, Rt. 36. Guests are wel- John Griffiths of Eatontown; come. A rummage sale is seven grandchildren, and three Mrs. Raymond Sculthorpe, uni source of the Nile and spoki MRS. ULUAN RHODES chairman, said the papers wil with pygmies beyond the legei planned for March 25 and a SEAT! . greatgrandchildren. OLD BRIDGE - Mrs. Lillian dary Mountains of the Moon. tricky tray party in May,. Birth- Rhodes, 70, of 148 Englishtown lill several gaps in the society'.! A Requiem Mass will offered documentation. The information From has Irish grandfather, day gifts and wedding anniver- Rd. died-yesterday, after being is contained in a copy of the 1896British army general who retiree sary gifts were received by Mrs. in Star of the Sea Church at taken to St. Peter's Hospital, New Richard Milko, Mrs. Martin ;8 a.m. Monday, with Rev. Joh Oceanport directoryt furnished by to live in Kenya, Mr. Lewin has Brunswick. 1 Knudsen, Mrs. Elwood Seeley * Koran, pastor, officiating. Burial, James F, Durnell of New Yori accumulated tales of Kenya ; Mrs. Rhodes was born in Mon-City and a 1923 circular donated history and the often hilarion and Mrs. Lois Sorentino. Host- Ift us do your driv- * under the direction of the Flock esses were Mrs. Melvin Leek, 'Funeral Home, here, will be i roe Township, daughter of theby Mrs. Douglas Dear of Portau- deeds of its pioneers. ing! You do the re- Carmel late Charles and Maggie Wanzen- peck. Mr. Lewin is a settler and Mrs. Joseph Miiko, Sr. and Mrs. ;Mt. Cemetery, West ried, and lived here three year*. Joseph Milko, Jr. laxing. Read a paper, Branch. The old borough directory ad- missionary whose school has ei or take a snooze, before Before that she lived 24 years in vertised local businesses at thai ucated many, of Kenya's Africa Lincroft. leaders. Mrs. Hans Larsen, Leonard- you know irf you'ie de- Surviving time, when the local populatio * MRS. RICHARD LA MURA are her husband, was 400. Mr. Durnell, formerly ville Rd., celebrated her birth- barking at the Port Au- Duryee Rhodes; • daughter, Mrs. day with her husband and fam- J MATAWAN — Mr.i. Doroth; of Pemberton Ave. here, alsc thority Terminal in the heart •LaMura of 3S Freneau Ave. died Virginia Morgan of Madison; five supplied a documented "Schoo Wells Retire ily, Mr. and Mrs. David Finlay- • Wednesday In Mountainside Hos- sons, William E. Wilson of Tren- Days" history, when the publi son and children. of New York dry. • pKal, Montclsir. - ton, Austin A. Wilson. Jr., ofschool was in what is now North 25 Round Trips daily. Colonia, Kenneth A. Wilson of The eighth bathday of David ' Mrs. LaMura, owner of Mount Long Branch. It includes the 1368 At Monmouth Phoenix, Ariz., Robert D. Wilroste- r of students. Isaksen, son of Mr. and Mrs. pleasant Manor Nursing Homi FORT MONMOUTH — Russe Richard Isaksen, Main St., was son ot Rumson and Walter D. Wil- Mr. Durnell's grandfather wai AVERAGE RUNNING TIME Jhere, was born in Freehold andson erf Fair Haven; two step- V. Wells, Sr., 69, who just retirei celebrated recently. Guests were presided In this place the past a former principal of the Nortli here after 25 years of federal ser Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kadmus, RED BANK — 75 MINUTES daughters, Mrs, Gertrude Lever- Long Branch school. His aunt, 111 yean.. berg of Jamesburg and Mrs. vice, has had long experience Mrs. Leonard Koch and children, HIDDLETOWN .— 65 MINUTES * Sh« was a registered nar.it. Miss lizzie Durnell, later became wide variety of communi Janice, Kenn&h and Dorene, Louise Perdoni of Concord Oceanport's first teacher in its KEYPORT — 5T MINUTES Calif.; two stepsons, Charles activities. Mrs. Kaspera Isaksen and Miss §'. Mrs. LaMura w*s a member of first school. Extensive background RED BANK 741-0285 ;.St. Clement's Catholic Church. Rhodes and Robert Rhodes, both Mr. Wells has served In vari Kathy Isaksen, Ruth Ann, Ed- of the Durnell family was also ous areas of the state as an edu ward, Robert and Richard Isak- MIDDLETOWN 671.2100 | Surviving are her husband, of this place; 20 grandchildren, received by the society. and two great-grandchildren. cator, in municipal offices, sei sen. KEYPORT 264-2222 ; Richard LaMura; a son, Richard The circular donated by Mrsvic. e clubs, church and civic am [fLaMura, at home; her mother, The funeral will be Monday at Dear publicized the Portaupeck other groups. The annual blue and gold din- •Mrs. EUa Sherlock of this place, 1 p.m. in the Eckman Funeral section of the community and Born in Camden, Mr. Wells •nd one • brother, Joseph Sher- Home, Spotswood, with Rev. Wal- contains a map ot lands for sale, ner of Cab Scout Pack 141 will a veteran of both World Wars ba held Feb. 9 in Buck Smith's lock of Hampton Square. - ter Gandek of Simpson Methodist according to Mrs. Richard H, an Army sergeant in 1918-19, anc ASBURY PARK-NEW YORK TRANSIT CO. C A Requiem High Mass will be Church, here, officiating. Burial Considine, society publicity di- restaurant, East Keansburg. LAKE Mt., ASBURY WkMC a storekeeper in the Navy dur- Games were played at a recent /-offered tomorrow at 9 a.m., m will be in Old Tennent Cemetery. rector. ing World War 2 with duty ir ;St. Jdseph's Catholic Church, the South Pacific. .Keyport, by Rev. Joseph Rucin- HOWARD K. MEYER Mr. Wells'worked at Fort Mon- 2lki, pastor of St. Clement's ELIZABETH - Howard K. Laferrera mouth the past 20 years, fin {Church. Burial, under direction Meyer, 29, of 712 McKinley St., as chief dispatcher, later as edi- *W Day Funeral Home, Keyport, brother of Mrs. Muriel Meyer of tor and technical writer, followec 'will be in St. Joseph's Cemetery, Boy Baptized Red Bank, was killed in a truck by maintenance and 6tandardiza 'Beyport. accident In Pennsylvania. MATAWAN — Joseph Later- tion duties. He also worked Mr. Meyer was a driver for rera, 3d, first ohild of Mr. andyear at Camp Kilmer as a dis the Coastal Tank Lines of Wood- Mrs. Joseph Laferrera, Jr., Fred- patcher and yardmaster befort MRS. KA1HRYN MEfNEX bridge. The truck In which he wood PI., was born Nov. 25 atenlisting In the Navy. In 191' MSOLETOWN - Mrs. was riding plunged down an emRivervie- w Hospital, Red Bank. He lie served briefly at the Leagui ryn Meinel. 81, a former Red bankment at Clark's Ferry WM baptized at St. Joseph's Cath- Island Navy Yard in Phlladel C8ah!c resident for many years, Bridge over the Susquehanna RIv- olic Church, Maple PL, by Rev.phia as an electrician's helper. : died Wednesday In Bayview Nur- in Duncannon. Sebastian Carmel. During an active span in com t sing Home, here. Mr. Meyer was born In Long Mrj. Russell Litchult.Waldwick munity affairs, Mr. Wells was ai ] Born in PittsfiaM, Mass.. she Branch and had lived here 19 maternal sister, was the godelementar- y teacher and supe • *as the daughter of the late Mr. years. He had been .employed by mother. Peter Malloy, Chatham vising principal more titan 22 •and Mrs. John McAvany. She Coastal Tank Line* two weeks, paternal brother-in-law, was god- years, including 13 years In Union WM a retired domMtic worker. formerly working for the Hess father. Beach. .She was a cominunlcant of St.Ml Co. A reception was held at the He is a charter member an ; James CathoKe Church, Red Also surviving are his wife, Oak Shades fire house. Lower first president of the Union Bead] Bank. Vfr,i. Elizabeth l*rry Meyer; Main St., for 50 guests. Those Lions Club. Also in the same bor- :: Surviving are two cousins, hrse sons. Howard, Gordon and attending included Mr. and Mrs.ough, where he planned construc- fohn, at home; two daughters, Michael A. Ladika, Waidwick, tion of the community's first ; Mri. James. Toaie of Flushing, church, Mr. Wells served as coun- L. I., and Mrs. Jule Engle of lonna and Sharl, at home; hit maternal grandparents; Mr. and 'after, Howard K. Meyer, Sr., Mrs, Joseph Laferrera, Sr., Irv-cilman, registrar, and secretary ^New York City. if the Board of Health. ' A Requiem Mass was offered of East Orange; a brother, ington. paternal grandparents; . ta St. James Church this morn- Charles Meyer of Scnntm, Pa. Mi« Marilyn Ladika, Waldwick, In Gloucester County he was • |B|. Burial, unocr the direction and another sister, Miss Madeline aunt; Mrs. Peter Malloy and chil- YMCA group leader. In Bloom " of the- John E. Day Funeral Meyer of East Orange. dren Peter and Nina; Mr. andfield he was president of its Civic Services were scheduled for to- Mrs. Pat Filippone, Millington, Chorus and treasurer of thi Home, Red Bank, WM in Mt. ly at 2 p.m. in the McCradcen paternal brother-in-law and sisown'- s Hone and School Counci Olivet Cemetery, here. 'uneral Home, Union. ter, and their children Patricia Mr. Wells also was active ii and Joseph; and Mr. and Mrs.Honmouth County scouting. win nones - DEATH JfOTICE Russell Litchult, Waldwick, ma- : RHODES — UUUI. <* ltl IwiUtt- JBERNIK, Hrtin. *». of SM Clinton :: t»wn IM.. oia snase,
SUMMMT fe Mount Mamaritl Horn* John E. Day FUNERAL HOME See your friendly Giant-Killer...your American Motors/Rambler Dealer. 85 River»id» Ave. Red Bank
CXSIDUN.Mgr. 747-0332 TWIN-BORO RAMBLER, Inc., 131L Newman Sprigs Rd., Red Bank Opposlt* M«lly Ntahsr !»» KEYPORT RAMBLER, Inc.. Highway 35, 4 The United Jufah Coimdl «( DAILY CROSSWORD Holmdel Youth Awaits Jury Acti
GOLDEN BIOSSOM TRUCKLOAD SALE! n-s HONEYGIVES %w! Lovely WOOD PANELING for an average room for Less than $50.
Sea how economical Little Silver Lumber malcei it for (quick action energy) you to beautify any room in the house! Thii special sale enables you to improve a room for much lets than you And he certainly carv always use an extra charge-of get-up-and-go* might imagine. Come on in and see this handsome pan- So can yoii. Get your Beezaz by using«tasty,.nourishinglGolden Joseph E. Galano eling and dozens of others. •KEANSBURG — Joseph E. Ga- Blossom Honey in tea or on cereals, biscuits, toast.,, .anyplace you lano, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eman- I WOOD, PRE-HNISHED use a sweetener. And feel Golden Blossom's Beezaz pick you up- uel Galano of 21 Shore Blvd., has been appointed Caribbean district director of Catholic Re- LUAN PANELING lief Services. The announcement Come %— tfili dondwmo pan- was made by Bishop Edward E. •ling that hai b«m pre-flnishcd Swanstrom, CRS executive di- and pollshid te a soft warm rector. glow. Each pantl Is a big 4'xB" Mr. Galano will supervise aid and b a Map to iintall. Na 49 programs In tha Dominican Re- tpoelal tool* nwdtd. Sal* «ndi public, Dominica, Guadeloupe, Jan. 29 IO erdtr now while you EA. Jamaica, Haiti, Martinique, and can Hvel in several Island groups In the 4 Use our stapling gun without area. He has served as program di- charge to install your new cell- rector In Guatemala since Join- ing tile. Free use with purchase ing the agency in 1959. Prior to of specially priced tile! that, he was employed with the Catholio Home Pureau for Chil- dren. COMPLETE STOCK OF MOLDING TO A U.S. Army veteran of World War II, Mr. Galano received his COMPLETE YOUR PANELING JOB. bachelor's and master's degrees IN STOCK—COMPLETE LINE OF PLYGEMS from Fordham University. AND U. S. PLYWOOD PANELING , Police Push Probe in Theft At Matawan SAVE ON WASHABLE MATAWAN — Police here are CELOTEX OR U.S.G. WHITE continuing Investigation of the Wednesday night theft of $568 CEILING TILE from Matawan Lumber, 1 Sut- i! phin Ave. 12"x24" EASY TO INSTALL SIZE! SO. FT. Police Chief John Melna re- ported that Patrolmen Carmen Messina and Irving Nussbaum WARM —SAVE ON FUEL! have been assigned to the case. Entry was gained sometime between 5 p.m. Wednesday and 7:15 a.m. yesterday. Daniel Ri- INSULATION near, Valley Dr., discovered the 2" THICK BATTS $J.O5 3" THICK BATTS O.60 break when he reported for work. ' 90 FT ROLLS *t bu. 60 FT. ROLLS 4 bu. Chief Melna said that a lock hasp on a rear sliding door was broken and the firm's safe was pried open. FURRING STRIPS Matching Luan V'x2" 2c Lin. Ft. FLUSH DQORS Re-Elect President 1 I"x3" 3c Lin. ft. 2 6"x6'8"~6.95 Of Woman'* Club KEYPORT — At the annual meeting of the Bayshore Wom- en's Club In the home of Mrs. William Frledrlch, Wist Front LITTLE SILVER LUMBER & SUPPLY St., Mrs. Frledrlch was re- elected president; Mrs. William DAILY 'TIL 5:00 SYCAMORE AVE.. LITTLE SILVER Rosieter, vice president; Mn. SATURDAY 'TIL 3:00 i J Edward Rlnkowich, secretary, At Hi* RailnxKl-FfM Parking and Mra. Trolian, treuurer. 74L7800 New secret pali were selected. 'Avon Calling'And What Information The Registers Opinion Jim Bishop; Reporter Carelekw^at Too many ships are being sank. Lloyd's Registry counU \ Criticism in Matawan Township 249 in 19M. The total is not yet in for 1965. Four ships dis- . There is a great deal of criticism tionalism in making appointments. Se- appeared at sea. No wreckage, no bodies. In an age of radio, i TtdtT, Loran and shirMo-shore telephones, it seems incredible being thrown around in Matawan lections, he said, were made on the to lose 558,000 tons of ships without a word from the Mari- township over the appointments basis of ability and a desire to assist time Commission about causes and corrections. . <« made by the new Township Council. the township. ,Juno sailed from Formosa with cement and reported her position for two days. Th«. The harsh words are unwarranted at And then the mayor made this silence. Yarmouth Castle sailed on a g«y too long. His measure is a humani- mit the mighty U.S. treas- * * * I did. Before we fiver got to sea, I knew where my llfejacket 1 it It is unfortunate that the vjctim tarian approach to the problem, / ury to offer Is 4% per THE SIZE OF THE PUBLIC debt hasn't was and I knew my boat station. I even knew the petty offi- cent. It could be a "magic been zooming. While the debt is on the way cer in charge of it. ! : ' 5 per cent" coupon. Both to an all-time record $325 billion, this still the law setting the maxi- Gen. Courtney H. Hodges represents a rise of only about 19 per cent SOME JUNES — mostly American-do this as a matter pt mum rate the Treasury can, in 10 years. As a percentage of our Gross PORTER pay on bonds and the mar- routine. Commodore Anderson of the liner United States made •\ Many were the Monmouth County to lead his troops in a victorious National Product—the only proper way' to everybody turn out in orange jackets, including senators and „ ket's condition at thds time dictate that the r measure the-burden—the debt actually has soldiers who snapped to in World War ;drive through France and Germany, Treasury borrow via short-term notes. The Supreme Court judges, before he cleared the harbor. Even" shriveled to well under 50 per cent of GNP small lines do-it. Eastern Steamship Lines, whose Bahama II when Gen. Courtney H. Hodges went General Hodges had a great warmth duration of the entire Joan will have to be now. In contrast, at the end of World War II, within five years. Star was only affew miles behind the flames of Yarmouth for the American soldier. "I dori't our public debt was 33 per cent bigger than Castle, has shipboard lectures on abandon ship drill and makes Their salutes were signs of respect think he has any equal," the general Right now the market for U.S. Treasury o^r nation's entire output of goods and ser- all hands'go through themotions of getting to the proper life- securities is "deciding" what;tlje bbriwving ,, •'';Vices, arid'in 1955 it still was 73 per cent boat. :- •.-"•'. and affection for the gallant Com- once said. And he favored' a demo- terms must be. Whatever the precise' details of "GNP.'" ' mander of the U.S. First Army in * cratic army for a democracy — "That fixed at deadline, the heart of the matter What has been zooming Is the cost of Eastern, which is a small cruise line, even requests the Europe. is, one of our great strong points," he is this: the Treasury of the greatest financial carrying this debt—of refinancing maturing Coast Guard to run through a complete inspection of Bahama power in the world must now pay around loans, of borrowing new cash when neces- Star and Ariadne every 90 days. So does American Export in He did not have the flamboyance said many times. 5 per cent to borrow even comparatively sary. Since 1956 the interest cost has jumped New York. Ditto some of the, oil tanker groups. of General Patton. And he was neither The general, who had lived quiet- short-term money in the open market and from $6.8 billion to way over $12 billion in Congressman William Milliard of California is sponsoring 4 must soon announce a new rate, of more a bill which would empower the Secretary of Commerce to a back-slapper nor a seeker of public- ly in retirementan Texas, died*Sunday. %-fhl* fiscal, year, 3^d, t)ow. it's,.'on.,the way '" than 4 per cent pn non-inarketable U;S. sav- to $13 billion. This represents an 85-90 per "license" foreign cruise ships. The Congress cannot control ity. His military de^R&Bg-^lktefrftWm- rlngs bondsi''- ' :'' '•'••••''•.' .".••; •'•• ;• cent rise' in"- Iff' years;1 This is < the lafgest foreign ships, any more.than an alien nation can control ours,
\ But he was a top-flight general bered. But so .will, the humane;qual- .••••\, * * -*. ,,„ ,. , ,.n s)m|e item qut^ide of national defense w.the In fact, such legislation invites reprisals. .:. , ... and soldier, who rose from the ranks ' ttjes that made him the GFs general. INTEREST RATES have been In an lex!- jederal'budget. ' A simpler way would' be to have, the Coast Guard •!«•: . traordinary upsurge since the Federal Re^ '. There is no Way the Treasury can< duck lease to the press names of ships in port.which have-not • serve.Board on Dec. 6 raised our pivotal this, increasing, cost. Every week billions of passed inspection under American standards. Such information : interest rate (the discount rate) to 4'/4 per1 dollars of the' treasury's marketable IOUs can also be passed on to travel agents. The only way to stop Robert S. Allen, Paul ScjM: Inside Washington cent and boosted the top rate commercial mature and they must be rolled over at rates the loss of ships is to make carelessness more expensive banks can pay on time deposits having a determined in the marketplace. The return than safety, ' • . '. ' . ,. maturity of 30 days or more to 514 per cent. on U.S. Savings Bonds—which has become We are back to—and, in some areas, through painfully obsolete at 3% per cent if the bond —the steep rate levels existing during the is held to maturity in seven years, nine Democrats' Mmancial Woes severe money squeeze of late 1959-early months—is ,now to be'hiked to more than From Our Readers .1960. Credit isn't aa hard to get as it was 4 per cent. The legal limit the Treasury can Acting Democratic Treasurer Clifton Car- S National Chairman John Bailey will stay St that time of brutal pinch, but It's g«n- pay on these bonds is 4% per cent. ter Is glumly pondering * most disconcerting •on until after this year's elections., He ,is •' eTdlly as expensive. The Register welcomes letters from Its readers, provided' financial problem. • ^little more than a figurehead, and has been ' It's a big story within a big story. It they contain signature, address and telephone number. Letters The objectives of the pull-up In rates for a long time. Carter and Watson ate also helps explain why President • Johnson is should be limited to 300 words. They should be typewritten. , The Democratic National Committee Is and tightening of credit) are simply stated .running the committee. '•'•,•' making it clear in his messages this month All letters are subject to condensation and editing. Endorse- more than $2.5 million in the red. and in accordance with orthodox money man- 1 that he is determined to rely much more ments of political candidates or commercial products are not That's what the long- * * * agement in a period when inflation is a on income tax adjustments than on further acceptable. time political lieutenant of ; HE'S WAITING-Bobby Baker, recently threat. Specifically: to cut down fringe bor- credit tightening • (and even higher Interest President Johnson is telling indicted by a Washington grand jury on • rowing by businessmen, Individuals and oth- rates, an even higher debt burden) to com- Democratic congressional charges of Income tax evasion, grand lar- ers, and thereby .to relieve- price-wage pres- bat inflation forces. ' - leaders seeking funds for ceny and fraud, is uneasily waiting for the Jim Bishop Criticized colleagues facing tough Vother shoe to drop." . ,...... election battles thli year. . r A Baltimore grand Jury has been investi- 82 Conover l&. ' According to Carter, the' gating the'fonder Senate Democratic secre-j John Chamberlain: These Days Middletown, N. J. ' National Committee not ; toVy for more than a year. His much-publi-i To the Editor: only Is broke but deeply : clzed motel is in Maryland. ' Jim Bishop writes In his column of Jan. 12: "Anyone who in debt. says that, in a general sense, the Negro Is ready for respofl- i!' " There is no indication.if and when this' While not disputing this, lible citizenship is ignorant or lying." . grand jury will act. But It'is.known several; Give Voltaire His Due Who is ready for "responsible citizenship," Mr. Bishop? ; tht legislators are frankly •. score witnesses have been Interrogated, some : Are the John Birchers ready? ' '• p,- >»ffied. • . •.;;. .•„' ' • •• , of them prominent officials. Yale University ls getting a lot of pub-. .'liis native land. He dlstrusu the peace over- \ They araWble. to understand why an Iklty because Staughtpn Lynd, one of: ita tures. What bothers him it to see the adjec- It the American Nazi Party ready? ' : ••#.• .• i.*> > ::*••. •.• •, • ••• administration ?that scored a landslide vic- assistant professors of history, took off to tive "non-Communist" cropping up as a Is the Ku Klux Klan ready? , , ON THE , FENCE — Attorney General, tory and- blg^ majorities in both branches of North Viet Nam on a peace mission despite • descriptive tenh fojr some South Vietnamese Is the White Citizens Council ready? ( < Katzenbach is-trying to persuade President Congress only a little more than a year ago the State Pepartraent ban on travel to that functionaries who have recently come on the Are you ready? . Johnson to publicly come out against capital' should be in such dire (I- country. Some • of Yale's •If the ignorant Negro masses of the North and South are - punishment. '. .. . • • , ' scene. Where "non-Communists" have re- riancial plight. Usually un- Old Blues are howling with placed "anti-Communists" in the past, it not ready, what about the ignorant white masses of the North' der such circumstances, by The President hasn't fiatly rejected tak- pain because their, uni- ' has. invariably been a harbinger of a sell- and South? Are they ready for responsible citizenship, in a this time the election deficit ing such a stand. But neither is he ready versity president, Kingman out to pro-Communists. Thus Tong is wpr- "general sense"? i , , has' been paid off and the to make such a declaration—ardently advo- Brewster, has defended the TieS that Vu Van|Thai, a "non-Communist," Really, Mr. Bishop! Why not stick to your trivia and leave till again well filled. cated by Katzenbach. It's one of the attor- right of any "sincere" pro- has "replaced! Tran Thien Khiem, a stern the big issues to the big men? -•• But that's Carter'i sad ney general's pet beliefs. • fessor to engage in extra-' anti-Communist; as South Viet.Nam's repre- Very sincerely, tale, strongly supported by. He vigorously' urged including such a curricular political .activity sentative In Washington. He sees a second Regina B. Scott Marvin Watson. The two statement In the President's State • of the as long as it doesn't inter- Dominican Republic fiasco threatening. Texans are the President's Union message.' fere with the integrity of. chief political trouWe-Bhoot-' his classroom work. . •..',:* * * But after consulting FBI Director J. Ed- ANOTHER THING THAT bothers Tong Cynic's Corner By Interlandi ers. ... - -•.' '""•. .. President Brewstfir'a gar Hoover and congressional leaders, the .is Washington^ propensity to think in terms CHAMBERLAIN stand follows the well- "Various accounts are President decided against it. They pointed of'an "indispensable" man In: the effort to known Voltairean prescription of letting, ^ on the reason for this exceptional . out the proposal would conflict with a num- build a consciously democratic society in the anyone talk even though what Is said may situation. ber of federal laws, notably the Lindbergh South Viet Nam countryside. He would like only add to the sum total of human non- , * * * kidnapping act, which have the death penalty. to know .for sure that General Edward G. sense.' The Old Blues will riot be pacified SOME'PARTY LEADERS are attributing In the hope of eventually winning over Lansdale,, oui* , "indispensable" exponent of with this, for they make the point that democratic rule at the South Vietnamese It largely to the President. They cite his the President, Katzenbach did succeed in Staughton Lynd has refused to abide by cold-shouldering Invitations to address fund- adding a line to the short paragraph dealing grassroots, ,1a proof against the blandish- the lawa of his nation. Whether" Professor ments of peace-makers who advocate a raising dinners and other gatherings, and with crime In the streets. As expanded the Lynd is guilty or not, however, win proba- •hl« keeping Vice President Humphrey From paragraph reads: coalition with the Viet Cong in a post-war bly never be officially determined so long , government. Tong wants to know how and doing so. Humphrey was set to make a "I recommend that you meet the grow- as the federal authorities refrain from ac- •wing around the country for this purpose ing menace of crime In the streets by build- why Premier Nguyen Cao Ky, a firm anti- cusing him of Infringing passport regulations Communist, was offered a million dollar last fail, but it was abruptly canceled at ing up law enforcement, and by revitalizing or violating the Logan Act by acting As an' White House Insistence—according to back- the entire federal system from prevention bribe to leave his own country. (Ky himself amateur diplomat In dealing with a foreign is the authority for. reporting the bribe offer.) •tags word. to probation." . , , . nation. ,:•> Carter and Watson, Inferentlally, are pointing the finger at former Treasurer Rich- * * * According tb Tong, the liberal "line" is being pushed iii the United States tot Pre- ard Magulre, the Kennedy holdover who re- AS A VOLTAIREAN, President Brewster mier Ky and two of his entourage, Nguyen signed last month to join a big law firm E^BEGISTER might be accorded some praise for his neu- with offices in Boston and Washington. They tral practice of harboring at least a few , Huu Co. and, Nguyen Van Thieu, are ihili- .are indicating he spent too much and col- '•V FRIDAY, JANUARY 21, 1966 teachers who think Staughton Lynd is an tary men who have "no roots" in their own 'feeted too little. unqualified disaster. The problem,' from the land. But as the late Marguerite Higgina U Brawl 81., Bml n*ak. N. J, .made plain in her on-the-spot reporting, the * * * mi lit, it. Midiiittvwa, N. J. . antl-Lynd. point of..view, is getting the op- 0 E M overthrow of the Diem government robbed ' BUDGET BALANCOMG-The first thing 17301 EuBrwmwwl Mils, Ht., flrrholj, N. I. position to Lynd Into the headlines/I fcnritv 171 Brwmww l«i Hf«M». N1 *. South Viet Nam of what, in U.S. terms, they'd)d after taking over wai to slash the Cilik.. 1871 in John II. Vcak »»a litnr1 y C1»r at least two liberal, teacher*.! at Yale who Vk a i . would be the equivalent of the president, the National Committee's staff more than half. by Th» Hit EMU Buliltr defend..Lynd's. right to,go to Mississippi on vice president, the cabinet, the Senate and ' Around 'BO we're lopped from the payroll. M. UAUOLU KKI.I.V. FyMlrittl Mil Urgent laud : a civil rights issue but ttiink he was dcli- House leaders, the principal governors and ; This wholesale economy axing was fol- Arthur /. Ktniln, Kdltor • nltely-out of- bounds Itt going to Hanoi In mayors, and all the chief politicians of both lowed by the elimination of a number of Oimu ». •!» William ». •*s"«r< defiance of the law. And I know of at least Kxecilllv* IWIIor major political parties. After the assassina- Expensive activities, foremost among them AMOClBt* IMitOr one knowledgeable Individual at Yale Who trtali W. lltrbuur Qtarlei A. Johnilva tion of Diem and the exile of hU party, there the voter'r«gXtr»tlon bureau. This w»i justl- MlilillttowD Uania Un. Tbtd Burttu Mir, can'tear Lynd to' shreds on the subject ot was nobody left in South Vietnamese politics Ijd on tip ground civil rights organizations tttmixr (X iha AUMIMM Preit Southeast Asian realities. This person hap- flfct AMMtftttd Preii Ih •ntUi«4 moliulvcljr Co Uxt UM with "roots." Torlg thinks the present South '1'labor unions are adequately taking care pens to be a native of South Viet Nam, (or rmubllouon ol ill tin looil o«wi orlutid In Ihli Vietnamese government has as much chance this (unction. mwipip.r u wall •• Ml AP n»w» dlipntclm. Huyuh Sgnh Tong,. who, teachea the Viet-' • Mamlwr ot Amfrknn Nami»pCT rnkUil»n »n100. namese language to students who are of growing roots ai my other. Carter Is #aying a full financial report Mtmlwr A»4H Bareu *l CtronUUM -.1 enrolled In the Southeast Asian studies 1 "Id.tot atudenti. They'll find out the nude to th» National Committee when Mtiimo no rininoftl This view 1* what one teacher at Yale ttnn In tdvartl»*ment«, program. •'-•.• rlqht to dltiant cdn'i b» in March. tntt Mil of in artvtr. . of fen to counter what tht Staughton Lynd plahJ, ,ht will then •rmvscuri. Advartl»n Tong, al'this moment In history, li tXr , cUdue till'to aay. It Is a voice that should horn, •Ith«pi" ' mtT«w»
• The Couple's Club of the Lin ;croft ' United Presbyterian Police? Make Church will host an ice skating party •« The Ocean. Ice Palace Friday, Jan. 28, Plans, are to 5 Arrests leave from the church at 7:15 MIDDLETOWN - Police Chief p.m. and return for refreshments Raymond T. Walling reported later. Anyone Interested may the arrest of .three persons yes- call Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Ne- terday. . well for reservations. Robert J. Campbell, U. S. Ar- my, Highlands, was released In Mr, and Mrs. Charles Conover, $100 tell after being charged as Sunnyslde Rd., visited Mr. and a disorderly person by Special Mrs. Lazlo Gyetvai In Scotch Officer Donald Spivey, the chief Extrc Night Tmble, Plains Tuesday and were enter- reported. ' ."'.,' tained at dinner Sunday at the Charles K.. Boyce,' 41, of 282 ••-••:•: \ $54 home of Mr. and Mrs. John Por- twilight Ave.; East Keansburg, tin of MoCampbell Rd. was arrested by Detective" Wai King-Size Dud Bed, !cr Monahan on a disorderly Add $60 ;• Mr. and Mrs. Edward Stiffler, Ipersort warrant from Clinton Carnegie Ct., are parents of a Township. He was released in daughter, Perri Anne, born at $50 bail for a court appearance Overlook: Hospital In. Summit in Annandals' Municipal: Court Saturday,. Tuesday. , . ' , Patrick G.SIattery, 35, of 436 > Among the guests at Morty Mutswamp Rd. was arrested by Budget your purchase if you wish! Take up to Wallen's in Spring Lake Heights Detective Monahan on a non- 18 monthi to pay on our Extended Ptyotent Saturday night were Madeline supporf charge, Chief Walling and Ed Foran. said. He was held in J5M bail, Flan, fully insured for your protection. -No but *as released on authority of down payment required. * ;'. Mr. and Mrs.,Charles Kienzle Magistrate,. Seymour R. Klein- 1 of Jumping Brook Rd. and fam-berg!1'- '•"'" ' : "••'; ily have returned from Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Newton- Beron, JOIN CRUSADE Manor Pkwy., and daughter, Jill, MAtAWAN-The Junior Wom- COUtTISY IIRVICI are home ,fiorn Georgia. Mr. an's Club recently adopted « »nd Mrs. Inn $tes» and ion, D« resol|it)on to join. |1xt Oeneral1 •vld,ir« readiring lit a PMJadel- rWeratfcn of JV
JEHOVAH'S WTTNESSJSI FIRST BAPTIST ST. AGNES CATHOUC MOUNT DON HOUSE OLD FIRST CHURCH FIRST BAPTIST FIRST METHODIST Red Bank Long Branch Atlantic Highlands OF PRAYER American Baptist Convention Copy Deadline Oakhurst ' Red Bank Sunday massei are scheduled United Church of Christ AO religious news for Inclu- A talk on "Why Jehovah's Wit- Pastor Homer: Tricules will United Holy Church Rev. Dr. John D. Blair will Rev. Stanley E. Mugridge wi nesses Are Different" will be de- for ft30, 7:43, 9, 10, and 11 a.m. Middletown sion b the Friday Schedule of servii preach at the II a.m. service Red Bank preach at the 9:30 and 11 s.m. preach at the 11 a.m. livered by E. Duck, Jr., Neptune, and noon. Sunday school will be held at Religions Services must be In Sunday on "Now the Spirit Speak- Sunday school' will be held services Sunday on "The Chang- Sunday. He will be assisted b visiting speaker, at 4 p.m, Sun- 9:30 a.m. Rev. R. Webb Leonard The Register office by noon of eth Expressly" and at the 7:45 The sacrament of baptism ll 10 a.m. Rev. Virginia Wright will ing and the Changeless." Rev. Rev. Lee A. Morris, associat day "Wfttchtower" Bible study r will preach at the 11 a.m. ser- toe preceding Tuesday. pastor. There will be a mortgage p.m. »ervice on "Which 'H'?' administered every Sunday at 1 preach at the 11:30 a.m. service. August Kiebsattel and Rev. W. on Luke 4:16, "According to His vice on "Christian Unity." burning ceremony at the morn- Sunday school meets at 9:30 s.m p.m. Arrangements are to be Senior missionary service will be GRACE LUTHERAN Joel Wright, assistant ministers, Custom on the sabbath day, he Thursday, 6:30 p.m., covered will assls't at both services. ing service. School of Missions Calendar for die week: made at the rectory at least two held at 3:30 p.m Rev. Abraham Freehold entered into the synagogue, and dish supper will be held, followed Church school meets at 9:30 and begins at 6 p.m. Lay, leaders meel Sunday: 2:30 p.m., finance days previous by one of the par- Dixon will preach at the 7:30 he stood up to read," will be by the annual business meeting, Sunday: 9:15 a.m., Sunday II a.m. Adult Bible class meets for prayer at 9:30 a.m., follow eonunirtee metis; 8:30 p.m., eve- eats. p.% service. school; 11 a.m., the service. held at 5:15. ' .' ' nlng fellowship meet. Dally masses are scheduled (or Wednesday, 8 p.m., Bible1 stud n 9:30 a.m. by church school at 9:45. Wednesday: 6 p.m., Sunday Tuesday at 8 p.m. the'neigh- Monday: 7 p.m., visitation team 7 and S a.m. On Saturdays the and prayer service.- CALVARY BAPTIST 1 Sunday: 7 p.m., Junior, and The Women's Fellowship wil school staff meeting. borhood Bible study groups will 4 meets. early mass U said at tha convent Red Bank Senior High Methodist Youth meet Monday at 8 p.m. Tuea Friday, 8 p.m., prayer service Thursday: 4:30 p.m., 7th grade meet at Kingdom Hall. 58 For- Tuesday: S p.m., deacon meet. for t&e puWic. Rev. Robert P. Ball will preach Fellowships meet. day eveniiig, the Sr. Hi's mee will be held. catecblcal class; 7 p.m., confir- man St., Fair Haven; 144 Sev- Wednesday: 8 p.m., Evening The sacrament of penance Is Sunday at (be 11 a.m. Missionary mation class. Monday; 8 p.m., WSC5 execu- for Bible study and the men oi Mvssionaty Circle meets. administered on Saturdays bom service. Sunday school will be tive meeting in the home of the church will have a wort enth Ave., Atlantic Highlands; PILGRIM BAPTIST V Delaware Avt., Riversidfl Prayer meeting* tri held 4 to S:SO p.m. aai 7:30 to 9-p.m. held at KM a.tn. B.T.U. and CENTRAL BAPTIST Mrs. Howard Wynne, 13 Branch night. Red Bank B.Y.F. will meet at 6 p.m. Rd., Oakhurst. Heights, Middletown; 10 St, Wednesday at 9:30 a-m., Thurs- and on Mondays at )fc30 p.m. Atlantic Highlands .Mid-weekservice Is Wednesda; Rev. H.L. Morgan will preach Wednesday: 7:30 p.m., mid- Mary's PI., 1 Cedar St., and 37 day at 7:45 ftcu and Friday at Tha Miraculous Medal novew Calendar for the week: at 7:30 p.m. 6:45 a.m. at the 11:30 a.m. service Sunday. Monday: 8 p.m., Flower Club Sunday School Is at 9:45 a.m. week prayer service; 8:15 pjn., Drummond Ave., Red Bank. BTU will meet at« p.m. Installa- wHI meet Worship service at 11 a.m. Nur- commission on education meets. Thursday at 7:25 p.m. the ST. ANDREWS EPISCOPAL sery provided. Rev. Harry W. . REFORMED BAY SHORE COMMUNITY tion of officers will be at 7:30 Wednesday: 7 p.m., Bible class; Ministry School instruction will Highlands Kraft will preach at 11 a.m. on p.m. 8 p.m., prayer service. ' AJM.E. ZION Colts Neck be given by Edward S. Thomjv East K«ansburg "The Personal Gospel and the Sunday services at 8 and 10 Monday, 9 p:m., Bible class i Thursday: 8 p.m., Pastor's Aid Red Bank services will be held Sundr son. There will also be student At the ll a.m. service Sunday, Social Gospel." Pilgrims, Pio- a.m. 'ire morning prayer and held. Club will meet. Sunday school is at 9:30 a.m. at 8 and II a.m. Rev. Samue talks on the weekly Bible read- Bev. Richard R. Schwartz will sermon except on me third Sun- neers, Ambassadors and Baptist Wednesday, 7:30 pin., Prayer Friday: 7 p.m., new members' Rev. Thomas H. Coursey will La Penta will preach on "Tt ing assignment, Matthew 22-28. "Do Unto Others." Of- day of each month when both Youth Fellowship meet at 6:39 p meeting is hel-1 ' olass; 8 p.m, teachers' meet- preach at the 11 «.m. service on Fellowship of Faith." The sacra Service meeting follows theme: services are Holy Communion. p.m. Evening service is at 7:30 ficers of church ing. "The Christian's Consolation in ment of holy baptism will be "We Ought to Be Teachers in Church school meets during the Sunday school teachers meel p.m. newly elected trustees, and Friday, 7:30 p.m. Trouble." A reunion program administered a* the 11 o'clock View of the Time," Hebrews 'viserj of youth groups will be 10 o'clock service when children CHRIST METHODIST Tuesday at S p.m., meeting of will be held at 4:30 p.m. service. Church school will be 5:12. Ralph H. Mitchell is chair- remain with their parents for the Sunday School Teachers and •tailed. At 9:30 a.m., Sund METHODIST Fair Haven held at 9:30 a.m. man. / • •• school will meet. At 6:30 p.m the Eucharist; The office, of eve- Rev. Charlw Hankins will Officers In the home of Mr. and Navesink ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL Youth Fellowship will mee the Christian Teeners and junio ning prayer is read at 6 o'clock. preach at the 11 a.m. service Mrs. Frank Crawford. 22 Holly- CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Rev. Gilbert Fell will preach . Red Bank Sunday at 7:30 p.m. will meet. At 7:45 p.m., Daily services will be held as Sunday on "Come and See." wood Ave., Leonardo. Red Bank announced. Sunday at the 9:30 a.m. service Wednesday at 7:45 p.m. mid- Sunday is Theological Educa- Communicants class will me Soldiers of Christ will meet. Church school will be held at tion Sunday. Donald Harris, a tomorrow at 9:30 a.m. The nature of God as "Truth" Today:. 8 p.m. Women's GuiM on "Le Jongleur de Oieu.' 9:30 a.m. Senior MYF will be week Prayer meeting will be Church school will meet at 10:45 held. student at the Philadelphia Divin- Covenant of*Lii« Class will meet will be the subject of the ser- meet. PRESBYTERIAN held at 9:30 a.m. vice In all Christian Science a.m. Thursday, 1 p.m., Ladies' Aid ity School of The Episcopal Monday at 8 p.m. Wednesday: 1 p.m., the Worn Eatontown Tuesday,, 8 p.m!, commission churches this week. Scriptural Society luncheon meeting will be Church, will be guest preacher. Women's Guild will meetThuri en's Guild will sponsor a car Sunday services will be at 11 on stewardship and finance readings will include the Psalm- ST. ANN'S CATHOUC held. Holy Eucharist will be cele- day at 8 p.m. • Pi--.'.' a.m. Church school meets at 9:45 meets. Adult fellowship will be ist's prayer: "Withhold not thou Keansburf brated at 8 a.rrt. Matins with Friday: 8:30 p.m., the Men a.m. held at 11 a.tn. • thy tender mercies from me, O Sunday Masses will be at 7, CHURCH OF CHRIST Sung Eucharist will be at 9:30. Club will meet., Tomorrow: ID a.m., the com- Thursday, 4 p.nv, Young peo- Sunday school is at 9:30 a.m. REFORMATION LUTHERAN Lord: let thy lovlngkindhess and municants' class.will meet. 8, 9, 10, 11 and noon. Red Bank West Long Branch ple's membership class is held. Holy Eucharist will be cele- thy truth continually preserve Dally Masses will De celebrated At the H a.m. service, Charles ST. ANTHONY'S CATHOUC Sunday: 6 p.m., the United Friday, 5 p.m., Junior High brated at 10 a.m, Tuesday, Feast "The Glory of Christ, Our King me." at 7 and 8 a.m. except on first Brown, former minister in Red Red Bank Presbyterian Youth will meet; MYF is held. of the Conversion of St. Paul, will be the sermon title of Rev Paralleling the Bible passages 7:30 p.m., the Men's Chapter will Fridays when hours will be at Bank and now minister of and at 10 a.m. Wednesday. W. Robert. Oswald at the 9: will be references from the de-, Sunday Masses are celebrated meet. 6:30 and 8 a.m. FIRST METHODIST Toms River Church of Chrisi Confirmation Instructions a.m. and 11 a.m. services Su nomination's textbook, "Science at: 7, 8, 9, 10 and H a.m. and Keansburg will speak. Bible study is at will Wednesday: 8 p.m., Bible On Holy Days, Msssos will be be held Wednesday, at 7:30, be- day. Installation of church coun- and Health with Key to the Scrip- noon. offend at 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11 Rev': Newton W. Greiner will a.m. study. ginning with Evening Prayer. cilmen and officers will take pla« tures" by Mary Baker Eddy, in- Daily Masses are celebrated a.m. and at 7.30 p.m. No chil- preach at the 9:30 and 11 a.m. Robert Riggs. local minister, at the 11 a.m. service. Sunda: at: 7 and 8 a.m. ervices. Church school will be cluding — " 'let there be light,* METHODIST dren are permitted at evening will speak at the 6:30 p.m. ser- PRESBYTERIAN ichool meets at 9:15 a.m. is the perpetual demand of Truth Sacrament of baptism is Eatontown Mass. held at 9:45 a.m. Adult member- vice. Hu subject will be "Cal ministered on Sundays at 12:4! hip class will be held at 6 p.m. Bed Bank Luther League meets at 7 p.m and Love, changing ctatos Into Sunday services will be con- Confessions, will be heard Sat- to Discipleshlp." p.m. . Tomorrow at' 11 a.m, & Rev. Albert T. Woodward will Sunday. order and discord into the music ducted at 10:45 a.m. Rev. El- urdays, first Thursdays, and on Mid-week services are Thurs of the spheres." Sacrament of penance Is ad- driohC. Campbell will preach on ship class will be held, day at 7:30 p.m. preach at the 9: IS and 11 a.m. The church school staff meet ministered on Saturdays from the eves of Holy Days, from services Sunday assisted by Tuesday at 8 p.m. The Priicilla Sunday school and church ser- "the light of the Gospel." 3:30 to S p.m. and from 7:30 to Wednesday, 2 p.m., senior citi- A group of ladies from thi 4:30. to 6, and 7:30 to 9 p.m. Joan Webster, Brian Bundy and Circle meets in the home of Mrs. vices are at 11 a.m. Church school meets at 9:30 a.m. 8:30 p.m. zens' group will meet. congregation will visit patient: Novena devotion in honor School of -Missions will meet at Martboro on Tuesday aftei Richard Burger. Church school Gerber, Community Dr., at 8: IS Wednesday testimony meetings Baptisms'wlU be administered FIRST METHODIST the Miraculous Medal is held from i to 7 p.m. noon. will be held at 9:15 and U a.m. p.m. are at 8:15 p.m. '. every Monday night at 7:30. every Sunday at 1 p.m. Arrange- Atlantic Highlands Wednesday at 8 p.m., the com- Young adult group meets at Friday at 6:30 p.m. the senio: Perpetual novena in honor ol ments should be made a week Rev. Robert H. Heulitt will HOLY COMMUNION mission on missions will meet. ST. LUKE'S METHODIST 12:30 p.m. Junior and Senior catechetical class meets. St. Anthony is held every, Tues- in advance of the baptism. ireach at the 11 a.m. service Long Branch High Fellowship meets at 7 p.m. Saturday at 9:30 a.m. the ju- EPISCOPAL ' day night at 7:30. Rev. Edward A. Corrigan Is Sunday on "The Privilege of Senior High classes meet at 7:45 Fair Haven < ST. JAMES EPISCOPAL Rev. J. Couitney Haywart nior catechetical class meets. Higji school o.' religion class i pastor and Rev. Eugene M. Re- Prayer," Church school will be p rn. . Eatontown' will preach at the 11 a.m. serv- Holy Communion will be eele>; held every Monday night at 7:30 beck and Rev. Frederick A. Val- held at 9:30 a.m. , Tonight: 7:15 o'clock, Hathomar Holy Eucharist will. be cele- ice Sunday on "Great Essen- TRINITY EPISCOPAL orated at the 8 a.m. and th« : entino are assistants. Club meets. brated Sunday at 8 a.m. Family HOLY TRINITY LUTHERAN tials" The Methodist Youth Fel- Red Bank 9:30 a.m. family-service. Church FIRST METHODIST Monday: 9:20 a.m., prayer 1 service and termon will be at Red Bank lowship will meet at 6:45 p.m. Holy Eucharist will be cele- school is at 9:39.,The 11 o'clock group will meet. . • ' -" .-'Malawi*'. 7 . 10 a.m. Church ichool meets at CHRIST EPISCOPAL Sunday school and Family ser- There will be a "pot luck" sup- brated at 8 a.m. Sunday. Church service will be morning prayer Tuesday: 8 p.m., session meet- Services Sunday art at 8:45 10 sum. ' . Shrewsbury vices will, be held at 9:15 a.m. per for all Sunday school teach- school and family service wit; and,sermon by Rev. Charles R. ing, Lois Circle will meet In the and U a.m. The pastor will Wednesday at 9 a.m.. Holy'Eu- Schedule for Sunday: 8 a.m., Rev. Harold Hornbenger will ers at 6:30 ip.m. Wednesday. Morning Prayer and address wil Lawrence. The EYC will meet home of Mrs. Robert Nixon, 7 preach on '"The Church' — the charist celebration will be fol- Koly Communion;; 9 a.m., Fam- preach at the 11 a.m. service. be at 9:15 a.m. Morning Praye 17^.10. Bride Of Christ," Sunday school Ward La,, Rumson. lowed by heating' service of un- ily Eucharist service with Rev. A square dance will be held ALL SAINTS EPISCOPAL and sermon by Rev. Canoi Monday afternoon at 3:30 will m*et,f at 9:45 and 11 a.m. Wednesday: 8 p.m., annual ction : ^ . Ronald -G. Attwry preaching on at 8:30 p.m. Navesink Charles H. Best will be at 1 be the children's confirmation, Sunday: 7 p.m.,' Sn-Hi. M.Y'.F. "Aristinpus or Christ?"; 11:13 congregational and corporate Tomorrow, 10 a.m., confinna- Services Sunday are: 8:30 a.m a.m. class. Adult discussion group will a.m., morning, prayer with ser- meetings; meet at 8:15 p.m. TRINITY EPISCOPAL tion instruction will be held.: . Holy Eucharist; 9:30 K.-m., Hoi Monday: "8;p.«., Commission mon ty Rev. Amury. • The Acolytes Guild will mee: •, .. 'Matawan ., ;. , Monday, 8 p.m., council will Eucharist with church school; 11 Tuesday, at' 9:30 a.m. Holy on membership and evangelism MONMOUTH BAPTIST at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. ; Communion will be celebrated. -: ! Schedule for Sunday:. 7:45 a.m., Holy Eucharist will be cele- meet. a.m. Morning Prayer with ser- meeting!, .••' . '.' "--" ,' ' (Southern Baptist Convention) Holy Eucharist will be cele- Wednesday, at 9:30 a.m. will, be matins and Holy " Commu- brated Tuesday,, 8 a.m. Vestry Thursday, 12:30 p.m., Golden mon by Rav. H.R. Sof ehsen. brated at 8 and 10 a.m. Wednes- Wednesday:' 8 p.m. commw nion;"-9:15 a.m., Holy Eucharist Age club meets. Eatontown • the rnidweelc service of Holy • will meet at 8: IS p.m. Holy Communion will also be day. The service of healing wl: ; tlon on missions meeting. and church school;, U a.m., Sunday school Is'at 9:45 a.m. Communion and healing. '•* .- Friday, 9 a.m., Holy Eucharist Matins will.be held dally at celebrated Wednesday, at 8:3C be at 8:30 and 10:30 a.m, The Morning Prayer jj|nd sermon. 10 a.m. except Thursday. Rev. M. R. Hajre will preach at will be celebrated. a.m. Sewing Group will meet at 1 EMMANUEL BAPTIST Holy Communion will be cele- the 11 a.m. service on "Men God Atlantic Highlands . : METHODIST Can Use," A film, "Forgotten a.m. brated tom'orrow..|t 8 a.m., foj- FIRST PRESBYTERIAN ST. GEORGE'S-BY-THE-RIVER Sea Bright Fields," will be shown at the There will be a business peo- Rev., Dr., Howard M. -, Ervin, lowed by a.meeting of church Rumson will preach at the 11 a.m. and EPISCOPAL Sunday school meets at 10 a.m. 7:30 p.m. service. Men of the ple's luncheon in the parish hal school teacfiefs' ~ Sunday services will be helc . . . ; Rumson Rev. George W. Starsmeare will church will be in charge of the from 11:30 a.m. until 2 p.m. T:30 fin: services Sunday. A ,Holy Communion will be cele- at 9:30 and 11 a.m., and Rev. prayer meeting is at 7 p.m. Sun- >rated Monday and Tuesday at Sunday: 8 sjn. Holy Commu- preach at the 11:15 service. services' in observance of Lay- the Thursday. nion: 9:30 a.m., Morning Prayer, Harvey C. Douie, Jr., will preach men's Day. day school is at 9:45 s.m. ' a.m., Wednesday at 9 Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Bible a.m., church school; 11 a.m., Morning study: is held. on "Our Sacred Trust." Church The young people meet Sunday ind Friday at 6:30 a.m. school will meet at 9:30 and H Sunday: 6:15 p.m., Training CONGREGATION B'NAI Prayer and sermon by the rector; Union meets. it 6 p.m. . Monday, 8:30 p.m. planning OLD BRICK REFORMED a.m. Adult Class will meet al ISRAEL 5. p.m. Carillon recital fay Robert Wednesday: 7 p.m., family , The annual business meeting committee meets. Marlboro 8:30 ajm. Senior High Class will Rumson D. McKee. night. of the church will be tonight at Wednesday, 9:45 a.m., altar ftev. John H. Hart will preach meet at 10:30 a.m. Sabbath eve services will be Home Fellowships meet.Fri- o'clock.' : , . . ' ftiiiM iiwing will be held at the Tuesday: 9:30 a.m,, Holy Com- at the 11 a.Jn. service Sunday Senior High Junior, High Fel gin at 8:30 p.m. Rabbi Jack M, day evening. ..''.- ' Midweek prayer service rectory. Wardens and vestrymen munion. on "How Can Religion Curb Ju- lowship wil! meet at 7:15 p.m ; Rosotf will conduct the services. W'lnejday at S p.m.. meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday. 9:30 a.m.. Holy venile Delinquency?" Church Tuesday 9:45 a.m., Monmouth Cantor Sidney Scharff will chant .The.Pioneer Girls meet each Friday, 8:30 p.m., Episcopal Communion. school will be held at 9:30 a.m. Presbytery will meet in the Pres- SAINT ANDREWS EPISCOPAL the liturgy. week as follows: Explorers] Tues- Young Churchmen will attend the Youth Fellowship meets at 6:30 byterian Church of Belmar. At Highlands Sabbath morning services are day at 6:45 p.m., Pilgrims, Thurs- Bishop's Ball a; Trinity Cathe- BIBLE PROTESTANT p.m. 10 a.m., Prayer Fellowship wil Services Sunday will be Morn at 9:15 a.m. for the junior con- day at 3:30 p.m., and Colonists, dral, Trenton: ';-,.- •.';. • ' " Robertsville Tuesday, 8 p.m., Miriam Circle meet, and at 8 p.m. the Session ing Prayer at 8 and Holy Euchar- gregation and at 10 a.m. for the Friday at 7 p.m. Sunday school meets at 10 a.m. meets in the home of Mrs. John will meet. ist with sermon at 10 a.m. adult services. David Greenstein, CHRB* BPISCOPAI. Rev. Edwin P. Spencer will O. Bennett, Jr., Main St. Thursday at 4 pjn. , the Com Church school classes will meet son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard CALVARY BAPTIST Middletown preach at the 11 a,m. service or Saturday, 8:30 a.m., confirma- municants Class will meet. at 10 a.m. Greensteih, will be Bar Mitzvah. -- Occsnport- Schedule for, Sunday: 8 i.m., "Daniel in. the Lion's Den." The tion class meets. Rabbi Rosotf will charge David. Rew. PaulN. SmMi will preach oly .Cpmmuniiin; ,9:30 a.m., 8 p.m. service Is temporarily dis- BIBLE BAPTIST CHURCH MONMOUTH REFORM Cantor Scharff will chant the at the 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Holy Communion with fifth and continued. . GETHSEMANE LUTHERAN Hazlet TEMPLE lltuiigy. services Sunday. Bible, school 1« sixth, grades attending church; The young people') group will Keyport Robert Plowman will preach at ' Shrewsbury Sunday morning services are at $49> a.m. 930 am,, -church school; 10:29 meet Tuesday. * . • , Sunday school will be held at the service Sunday at 11 a.m Sabbath Eve services will be at 9 'a.m. followed by the Talmud 1 Youth Fellowship groop* meet jn., church school for fifth and The bowling group will meet 9.-4S a.m. Services are held at Bible school meets at 9:45 a.m held tonight at 8:30. Rabbi Rich- cjlass. Sunday and Hebrew Sunday at «: 30 p.m. sixth grades, office of Morning Wednesday at 6:45 pjn. at Hill 6:30, 9:45 and 11 a.m. Senior Evening Service will be -at 7 ard F. Steinbrlnk will preach on school 'will meet at 9:30 and, 1 The Hoar o! Faith meets Thurs- Prayer for' ail other children; Lanes. • • Luther League meets at 7 p.m. o'clock. Pastor Plowman wil "The Humane Slaughter Contro- a.m. High school will meet al day at 7:30 p.m. :15 aan'.; office of Morning Monday, LOW worknlght will preach. versy and its Significance for Re- 11 a.m. ; The Women's. Missionary Fel- fo'/ ' '' ' ' REFORMED tie held at t p.m. Mid-week Prayer Service Is form Jews." Thursday, 9:30 a.m.. Holy Com- B'nsi Israel Tweeners and * lowship meets tonight at 8 o'dock New Shrewsbury" Wednesday, 8 p.m., Lutheran Wednesday at 8 p.m. The religious school will meet mnlon will be celebrated. ECW Pre USY will meet at 7 p.m. In the home of Mrs. Zadorozny, Rev. Isaac C. Rottenberg will school of religion will be held. tomorrow at 9 a.m. Sabbath ser 59 Rase Ct., Eatontown. tudy group meets at 10 a.m. Saturday, junior confirmation UNITED PRESBYTERIAN vices will be held at' 11 a.m. Monday.' The Board of Educa- conduct the 9:30 morning devo- tion will meet at 8 p.m. tions and 10:30 a.m. service Sun- class meets at 9 a.m,, senior ' Llncroft During the Torah service, Miss Thursday at 8:30 p.m. the ST. DOROTHEA'S CATHOUC TEMPLE SHALOM day. The sermon topic will be meets at 10 a.m. Sunday school will be held al Martha Emily Brandwene, daugh- aboohmy third in a series of lectures on . Eatontown " 'Matawan ' "A Sense of Belonging." Church 9:30 a.m. at 11 a.m. Rev. Wil ter of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard World Jewry in the Mid-Twen- Sunday Masses will be cele- Sabbath eve services will be school meets at 10:30 a.m. Th WESTMINSTER lmm Mills, will preach on "The i. Bradwene of Red Bank will % tieth Century will be held. Rabbi he read brated in the family center at leld tonight *t 8:30 in the Strath- Senior Hi -Fellowship meets al PRESBYTERIAN Idolatrous Church." At 7 p.m. become at Bat Mitzvah. Seymour Siegel will speak on 7:30, 9 and 10:30 a.m. and noon nore School. Rabbi Sheldon Gor- 5:30 p.m. ' Middletown senior high youth fellowship will The Sisterhood and Men's Club tm will speak on "The Rabbi," Rev. Harlan C. Durfee will meet. 'South American. Jewry." Daily Masses are held in the The confirmation class meets will hold a Joint meeting Mon< thai can ry Noah Gordon. preach at the 9:15 and 10:45 a.m. Rev. Mr. Mills will attend the day at 8:30 p.m. Daily evening services are a chapel at 6:30 arid 7!30 a.m.; Monday at 0:49 p.m. The Junior services Sunday on "Pride and meeting of the Monmouth Pres- Hebrew classes will meet Tues- 7:30 p.m. Saturdays at 8 and 1:30 a.m. Hi Fellowship meets at 7:45 p.m. METHODIST the Grace of God." Church schopl bytery at the Presfbyterian lay at '4 p.m. The ninth grade free you Confessions are heard Satur- The Bible Study 'Fellowship Ml Is at 9:15 and 10:45 a.m. Junior Church In Belmar. la*s will meet at 7 p.m. FIRST UNITARIAN days aftii'the eves of Holy Days meets Wednesday at 8 p.m. from 4-30 to 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 Sunday school will be held at High UPY meets at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Circles of the Unit- The Hebrew class will meet Llncroft from fear to 8:30 p.m. a.m, Rev. Wayne Conrad will Senior High group meets at 7 ed Presbyterian Women's As- Thursday at 4 p.m. The rabbi 'Rev. Harold R, Dean will CONGREGATION ; ireach at the 10 a.m. service on p.m. sociation will meet. The mornhw will meet as scheduled with the preach at the 10:30 a.m. service The sacrament of baptism BETH SHALOM 'Beware of Spoilage." MYF Monday, 8 p.m., Men's Bible circle will meer in the home of confirmation class. Sunday on "Moses and Jesus" quiet place many times—but administered Sundays at 1 p.m, Red Bank There will be a meeting of the neets in the h»me of Mr. and study group meets. Mrs. John Herndon, LeedsvlHe Church school is held at 10:30 hnenever.enUredit.Yet here Sabbath services tomorrow are CYO following the Sunday 9 a.ih rs. D. F. Babcock, 1 Hillside Wednesday, 8 p.m., board of Dr., at 9:*5 a.m. Evening Circle CONGREGATION BROTHERS a.m. m Oat peaceful room, ready tve. at 0:30 a.m. for Junior and se- Mass.' • '.:'• • • •• deacons will meet. will meet In the home of Mrs OF ISRAEL for you to read, is a book Ihtt nior congregation. The Liberal Religious Youth Novens in honor of the Mirac- Herbert Bryant, Mlddletown-Lln- Long Branch Group will meet at the church at his freed many thousands ST. JOHN'S EPISCOPAL Sunday school Is at 9:30 and ulous Medal will be held Tues LUTHER MEMORIAL croft Rd., at 8 p.m. Services will be held today at 7:30 p.m. Sunday. from fear and wony-h»i Little Silver 11 a.m. LUTHERAN day after the 7:30 a.m. Mass; i:45 p.m. The "Introduction to Unltarlan- given them renewed Murage Schedule for Sunday: 8 a.m., Congregation board meeting is Missouri Synod FIRST METHODIST at 3:30 p.m., catechism for cttll- Sabbath morning service tomor- Ism" discussion group will meet and strength to go forward. toly Comanurilon; 9:30 a.m.. Tuesday at S p.m. Community New Shrewsbury dren in the Shrewsbury Town Red Bank row are at 8:30. Rabbi Rafael in the home of Mrs. Patty Me- It can do this for you. (hip-New Shrewsbury section wil 'amlly Service with Holy Com- supper win be held from S to 7 Rev. Daniel Reinheimer will •Rev. W. Gordort Lowdcn will (i. Grossman will preach, on "In iunlon and eermbn by, Rev. preach at the 10:30 a.m. service 1 Gulgan; IB Hubbard Park, Red The place ig tie Christian beheld. p.m. . ' nreach at trm E: 30 and 11 a.m Fighting Oppression. ' Junior con- tuart F. Gaet; 11 a.m., Morn- Sunday. Church school will be Bank, Monday, at 8:30 p.m. Science Reading It Mm; th« Wednesday st 8 p.m, CYO re Sisterhood board meeting Is a services Sunday on "The Com- regation meets at 10 a.m. The ig Prayer and sermon by held at 9 a.m. Couples Club The social concerns committee book. Science and Health Hgion Classes will be held. 7:30 p.«i. Thursday. mon Christian's Calling." Holy 'almud coarse will be at 4 p.m., will meet at 8:30 p.m. with Key to the Scripture*. 'ather Gast. meets at 7 p.m. Communion will be celebrated at ollowed by services. Dally Ser. Thursday, • 3:30 p.m., catech- Monday, S: IS ft.m., byMnrj Baker Eddy. parish CROSS OF GLORY LUTHERAN Monday, at noon, Luther Me- 8:30 a.m, Ohurch school meets /ices are: Mornings: Sunday, The Monmouth Unitarian Ser- ism classes for "Eatontowa chil leeting will be held. vice League will meet Tuesday •Hop at a Christian Science dren will be held. Matawan morial Women'j Society meets. at 9:30 and 11 a.m. Youth' divi- 1:30 Weekdays, 1:45 Evenings: Thursday,, 8 p.m., adults Infor- at 9:36 a.m. The first film of «?«%R°odJ Rev. Richard A. Weeden wili sion workers meet at 5 p.m. In- ?«%R°om5Mn;readtJw ST. CLEMENTS EPISCOPAL mation class will be held, /~ termediate and Methodist Youth the International Film Series, RELIGIOUS SOCIETY preach at the 10:30 a.m. service The Institute of Adult Jewish Ju>]«and Science and Health Belford Fellowships meet at 7 p.m. Wes- "Nobody Waved Goodbye," will OF FRIENDS Sunday on ' "A-Go-Go." Church itudies will meet Monday night. Ji the quiet, nndtoturbed at- Holy Eucharist will be cele- FAITH REFORMED be shown at the Community school will be held at 9 a.m ley Fellowship and membership Hie Sisterhood will meet OU. Shrewsbury rated tajiorrwv at 9 tk.tn. From Hazlet class meet at 8 p.m. Theater, Eatontown, at 8:30 p.m. Both services, will be held in the Wednesday evening. Borrow this book, free of Sunday meeting Is -held at 11 to 4:30 p.m., the sacrament of Sunday school will be held at i Monday: 8 p.m., executive The book discussion group will Strathmore 'School. Adult Infor- Dally services are held at 6:45 fW*buyitforylfc a.m. First Day school Is held at penance will be administered. 8:30, 9:30 and 11 a.m. Rev. board of Women's Society and meet In the home of Mr. and mation class will be held at 7:30 m. and 4:45 p.m. Edition It. l|:30 a.m. Sunday services are: 7:40 a.m. Theodpre Muiler will preach at commission on worship meet Mrs. Robert Smith, 25 Brlarwood p.m. In the parsonage. Sunday morning services are ti atlns; < a.m,. Holy, Eucharist the 9:30 and II a.m. services on Tuesday: 10 s.m., intenfenom it 8:30. Rd., Fair Haven, Wednesday at Thursday, 9:30 a.m., eighth • CHRISTIAN acme* ind sermon; 9:30 a.tn. Sung Ku- "The Making of a Christian," Inatlonal prayer and studv group 8:30 pjn. hsrist and sermon, Installation grade confirmation class will be fOCIKIY Pilgrim Youth Fellowship meets will meet; 1:30 p.m., adnlt class PHRSBYTERIAN An adult discussion group wHI Ckristian Science newlyrdected church officers, held (n' the' parsonage. Sunday ! Atlantic Hfthjtndf y oe at 9:30 p.m. meets: 7:30 praver group meirts. Shrewsbury r&eet In the home of Mr. and h h l k mvlw Jtt4 church school classes follow. school teachers training class will Monday, 2:30 p.m.' weekday Wednesday: 9:30 a.m., Bible Services will be conducted Sun- Mr*. Lee Rossbach, 10 Elfceron BEADING /n at U Si hi held at 8 p.m. in Matawan Christian school Is held. Board study class; 1:30 p.m, Forty lay at 9:30 and 11 a.m. Rev, Sq., EJberon, Thursday at 8:30 ROOM Ins and Holy Eucharist at ( aim. of elders meet at I p.m. Plus group will meet; 4 p.m., George ,M. Watson will preach p.m. T a.m., seventh Wednesday, 8 p.m., board of confirmation, class. on "TtM Christian and Tha En- Thi social concerns, committee i confirmatiojonnmaton class will be Christian education will meet. Thursdayh :: 44 p.m.,p.m., , conflffliaconflflr|t>* tertalniMnt World." , will sponsor a aod*l *vmlnc al .ta* tlwi Sat U4M /ninth grade class will b« Thursday, 7 p.m., Confirmation Con clas 7 p.m., Maitlad Coil* j tha «huj««,, ftiday, Jan. 3, «t Alas Pridav' Eva 7:30-9:3* atW:l6s.m. i olaai II will meet. ftfftl h»MW „-. rip t THE DAILY BJEGISIEE Fridty, Jumrf 3h Eleven Closings Reported EXfERilMCED REAL ESTATE SALESMAN By RedlBank Area $ WANTED FOR FULLTIME EMPLOYMENT IN OUR RED BANK - Members of the Judge and Mrs. Theodore J. who have moved W Chicago. BUSY. ORGANIZATION Red Bank Area Multifile Listing Labrecque hav« purchased Judge Labrecque presides in the KINDLY CALL Service reported U closings this home at 410 Rumson Rd., Little Appellate Division
ALLAIRE - Bob Housen fired first ace in hi* (our yean of Ihe 44-yard ninth hole. Don Houproae- h shots, Housen with' a aev- one-under-par 66 over the playing golf. sen and Jo* Thefcault, Lake-^^ ^ {„„, j« feet «t, «nd Victorious In Three eagles were scored on wood, both holed out their ap- Spring Meadow Golf Club Theibauk {ram SO feet away with course yesterday to take his wedge shot. eighth consecutive tourney low Joe Montepano, Asbury Park, NBA Contests amateur gross victory in the Jer- Geiberger Shoots 68 hit a drive and • two-iron that BAMTMORE (AP) - Scoring While the Bullets had to fight sey Shore Winter Golf League put him 10 feet from the pin six points in the final IS secthei- r way back, the St. Louis Tournament. and he sank the putt. onds, the Baltimore Bullets de- Hawks got off the ground early Roy Farber and Joe Lanzetta, For Crosby Golf Lead Iaelvlleal rrMeaaleaali feated the Los Angeles Lakers end were never headed as the PEBBLE BEACH .Calif. (AP) Paul Bondeson of Palm Springs, Roy Fatei. Ooloalal Terrace H-fl-il I2J-12I in a National Basketball Jr., shared the top spot among Hawks downed the Detroit Pis- — Slim AI Geiberger dropped a and Lee Raymond of Redwood Joe lantetsa. Jr- Celealal Association game last night. Hie. pros, each shooting 71s. Terrace M-SS-il tons at Dallas,' 14342. 25-foot putt and two more from City, along with Oklahoma City's Johnny Kerr's one-hander The Hawks grabbed their Eighteen professionals and SO Mike, Buke. Deal JS-M-W 15 feet yesterday while fashioning Ernie Vossler. Walter Oarthwall*. Falrmeunt »*-2*-JII with one second left snapped a lead in the first period with 7:52 amateurs competed. a three-under-par 8 and the firstAl oelbttltr .-..34.31—«l Chaa. Tali. Ask Break Baltimore losing streak that had K«n ToTownw t ....»63te»63te» remaining as P1 a y e r-coach On the front nine, Housen round lead in Bing Crosby's $104,- PPtu l BondejoBd n 34-35—«9 J— Lelsi, WeeebrMfe I m. J»J»—M jn /oka Bellanre>. Plaes reached four games. The victory Richie Guerin scored eight points carded five birdies. He birdied 500 golf tournament. LM RaymonRd d ' .pulled (he Bullets to within four to pace St. Louis at the outset. firnie Vo»l«. r ...- . ..._ ..33-W—..33W« « Dan Oeldlnr. Asbeu-y Park 1T-31—M the second, third, fourth, sixth Geiberger, eighth among the Tony Lema — :..—56.3a—756 0 Reedy Newmaau.. HemeeteaeMi M-J«—7» points of the Lakers, who lead St. LouU boosted its lead to : Don MuaenisU 36.31—70 Amstevr Oreai: and ninth holes. He holed a IS-pro money winners in 1965, played Lftkcwtod th- Western Division. with two minutes left in the Rex Baxter „ .35-2ft-^?0 1 HALL SAVES — Chicago Black Hawks' goalie Glen Hal! toot putt for his birdie on thethe Monterey Peninsula Country Arnold Palmer - 37-33—70 boa Hasten.' Lakeneoek * M-J1—I* , Baltimore trailed 131-117 when quarter. , ClltU Blocktr - .31-36—70 Ress Wallace. Bamm HeUew Jt-W-TJ kick* puck out from net after Dean Prentice of Boston third hole. Club, one of three in use in this Olenn Stuart ^ 35-n—71 Joe Hmtepare. JampUf Brook s-3>—
> Stock Market 9 out of 10 LEADING yesterday's closing stocks: ACF Ind mt Tel & Tel TO Adams Xx T-T-E Ckt Brk 87'. Air prod Johns Han ' B3H Air Redue Jones * L — - Cp Joy Mir Alle* Lud Kalier At TELEVISION DEALERS Alter Pw Kennecott Allied Ch Koppera ^ AI1U Chll Kreste 88 Alcoa Kxofer Am Alrlln Leh Port C Admiral TY-Slma ikMtai AM Brk Sh 6811 Leh V>1 Ind Am Can SSVi I.OF Glass The ultimate (it home Am. Cyan Lib McMkL Am.M Fdy m (4 List * My biterlakimcnt , Model SMHSUI Atn Mot Litton Ind Atn smelt B'.i Lukene Stl Am 8ld HacK Trk Am Tel Tel ..5* Macnavox Am Tob Marath 011 SSK, Amp Joe Martin M 2414 Anaconda Merck 7114 Armco Ell MOM. 4614 Armour Minn M41I Arms! cic Mo Pae A So amazingly reliable we give Ash) OU . Mont Ward Atchlion Nat Blec All' Bella 3S?i ' The next lime you discover 7114 N Cash Reg Aveo Corp 2614 Nat Dairy Bibcock W Nat Distill ' i. BUt * Oh Nat Oyps Bayuk Clf Nat Bleel • Jhat perfect little restaurant • Bell * How NT Centra! Bendli Nla M Pw Betfr atetl No Am Av Boelnx Nor Pae Borden that you want to'keep all to 4 Nwit Alrlln ONE YEAR Bora- Warn 48'i Norwich Ph Brunswk Outb Har Buey Srlt . iS" ': yourself, look around for Bulovl Burl iBd : SERVICE Case' JI Cattr Trae 37*4 «7 : this symbol. Chei & Oh Chrysler ADMIRAL COIOR Cities'SV Pll*r Coca Cola Pbtl II PW1I Pet Con ioles/Uw Boys :; Much of Pit Steel Colum Gaa Coral Colv Pub Sf H 4t O 33011 1 (2y««n>ctia<»»I.W<|.l>*>M>atlia>a>) UoeUUDM* ! Pilllman «5 Con Can RCA ' the good Corn Pd Reading Co 2614 Corning'o Repun Stl .4314 "V...:. cm zeii 51H Revlon Oruo Bll Reyn Met CUrUsa Wr Rey Tob :-• restaurant food around Rob Controli ONE YEARCARRY- 8t Joi Lead StRer Pap Sears Roeb ;; town is prepared by Shell oil Slnclnlr - SERVICE ON ALL Smith AO Socony 8oii Pan " flameless electric cooking. Sou Ry 1214 Sperry ltd ADMIRAL TV PORTABLES Stl Brand SM oil Cat ' This is ihe sign of flameless electric cooking: the Std Oil US 8tudebaker Texaco / Iteddy Kilowatt symbol. The owner of a restaurant Tex o 8ul 116!4 Textron *l Mt, II 10 *tbn mnrrt It Uw Mlrtpellla «M ninumM Ainlral Am ill Him. .-.••• or diner displaying it has invested in electric TIde»«t OU Transamer . Un Carbld* ,; cooking because he feels it's the best.way to pre- Un Pae 3214 Un Tank rr pare food. We, along with all the housewives BHT4 Unit Aim Buy with 39 >i United Co |; who wouldn't part with their electric ranges, 12H US Lines ( ^7» US Plywd US Rub •a % S'"«gree with him. UB Bmell MS US Steel em confidence i Vaseo Met Waloorth 44 Wmlrol TV rcrtoiltt xtodti pn»i7O Warn B Plo : Wn ,U» T«l »•••»• is* inr«* wests El •.. buy , frlttd from $7?.M ; Enjoy the pleasures White Mot Woolwlh i - al'nmlllti>|a there is some question as to when the present building was constructed. Its present owner, Geia da Vegh, who took posses- lion in 1943, has not changed its original appearance. The Old Mill now is a cultural center dedicated as a studio workshop for artists and craftsmen. A picture gallery is currently the -focal point. The Old Mill is open daily, including Sundays, from II to 6 P. M.; the public is invited to tour the premises without charge. Events Tuesday—February 1 Tuesday—February 8 Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- Rumson—12 p.m.—Combined Campaign Lun- Fair Haven—12:301 .m.—Luncheon and Fashion ative Art 620 Broad St. ative Art, 620 Broad St. cheon. Sisterhood Congregation B'nai Israel. Show of Church of the Holy Com- Red Bankr-3 p.m. Book Tea sponsored by Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of munion. Lincroft—2 p.m^-Children's Movie—Lincroft Court St. James Catholic Daughters of America. Public School. Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- Red Bank—9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.—Book" Fair- Parish Room, St. James Catholic Church. ative Art, 620 Broad St Travel and Tourism through Books. St James Sunday—February 20 • Red Bank—7:30 p.m.—5th and 6th grade girls Grammar School (First floor corridors). Monday—February 14 Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of gymnastic class. River] Street School. Rumson—1 p.m.—Regular monthly meeting of Red Bank—8:15 p.m.-^th and. 8th grade girls Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- Jr. Service League of Monmouth, Inc. Club ative Art, 620 Broad St , gymnastic class. Rivet Street School. Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- House, Center Street.' ' ative Art, 620 Broad St Monday—February 21 Wednesday—February ;2 ;.,/.',,. ' Red Bank—7:30 p.m.—5th and 6th grade girls Red Bank—7 p.m.—High School boys recrea- gymnastic class. River Street School ; tion basketball league. Red Bank High School Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent "works of Red Bank—6:15 p.m.—7th and 8th grade girls Gymnasium. Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- Helen Bachner and Cell Grayer. Guild of Cre- gymnastic chuis. River Street School.. Red Bank—7:00 p.m.—Adult volleyball league. ative Art, 620 Broad St. ative Art; 620 Broad St :" ' Red Bank—7 p.m.—High School boys recrea- Red Bank—6:30 p.m.—5th and 6th grade boys Shrewsbury — Dub-Show of recent Works of River Street school. Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- Red Bank—3:30 p.m.—3rd thru 6th grade girls tion basketball league. Red Bank High School recreation basketball league; Red Bank High Gymnasium. School Gymnasium." ; ative Art, 620 Broad St. f : \ beginner dance class. Mechanic Street School. Eatontown—12:30 p.m.—Monthly luncheon of Shrewsbury—Board Meeting of the Sisterhood Red Bank—7;00 p.m.—Adult volleyball league. Thursday—February 3 The Welcome 'Wagon Newcomers' Club of of Monmouth Reform Temple. River Street school. Rumson, Fair Haven, Little Silver and Shrews- Shrewsbury --> Duo-Showof recent works of bury. Mrs. Einar Purstrom will demonstrate the Tuesday—February IS Red Bank—3:30 p.m.—3rd thru 6th grade girls Helen Bachner .'and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- art of creative hat making. Crystal. Brook Inn. beginner dance class. Mechanic Street School. ative Art, 620 Broad St , Fair Haven—S p.m.—Willow St School PTA— Middletown—Penny Auction sponsored by the Red Bank—3:30 p.m.—3rd thru 6th grade girls Wednesday—February 9 Follow-up Modern Math for Parents. Middletown Auxiliary to Riverview Hospital. advanced dance class. Mechanic Street School. Baptist Hall, Kings Highway. Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of ' Shrewsbury—Spjn.—Card Party sponsored ox Episcopal Church Women of Christ Church Friday—February 4W • , T. Helen Bachner. and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cxen 1 Tuesday—February 22 , ^;ative Art, 620 Broad St; • -' ";' -'••"• -l: '••'•};•* : 'Shrewsbury. Christ Church Parish Hell, Syca-' Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of :,. mor» Aveauev--H-S'-' '^ \ ; , . ;•; • Shrewsbury"— Duo-Show of i*c«rt works of Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- Red Bank—6:30 p.m.—5th and 6th grade boys Red Bank—7:30 p.m.—5th and 6th grade girls Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- recreation .basketball league. Red Bank High ative Art, 620 Broad St. ative Art, 620 Broad St. School Gymnasium. . ' , gymnastic class. River Street School. Red Bank—6:00 p.m.—Red Bank Junior Rifle Red Bank—8:15 p.m.—7th and 8th grade girls Fair "Haven—5:30 p.m.—Shrove Tuesday Fam- Club. Meets at Fort Monmouth Range. Red Bank—9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.—Book Fair- gymnastic class, River Street School. ily Pancake Supper of Episcopal Church of the Travel and Tourism through Books. St. James Holy Communion. Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of Saturday—February 5 Grammar School (First floor corridors). Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- Wednesday-—February 23 Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of Thursday—February 10 ative Art, 620 Broad St Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of Helen Bachner land Cell Grayer. Guild of Cre- Red Bank—9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.—Book Fair- Wednesday—February 16 Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- ative Art, 620 Broad St. Travel and Tourism through Books. St James ative Art, 620 Broad St, ;,' Red Bank-r-9 a.m.—Junior bowling for boys in Grammar School (First floor corridors). Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of Red Bank—6:30 p.m.—5th and 6th grade boys grades 5-8. Red Bank Recreation Lanes, i^ed Bank—3:30 p.m.—3rd thru 6th grade girls Helen Bachner and Oil Grayer. Guild of Cre- ative Art, 620 Broad St. recreation basketball league. Red Bank High, Red Baiik—10:30 a.m.—Junior bowling for girls advanced dance class. Mechanic Street School. School Gymnasium. • •:, in grades 5-8. Red Bank Recreation Lanes. Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of Red Bank—6:30 p.m.—5th and 6th grade boys • ' ' • Ar'. Red Bank—9 a.m.—3rd and '4th grade boys bas- Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- recreation basketball league. Red Bank High Thursday—February 24 'x -j ketball clinic. River Street School. School Gymnasium. , ative, Art, 620 Broad St Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of Red Bank—10:30 a.m.—7th and 8th grade boys Thursday—February 17 , Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guijd of Cre- recreation center program. River Street School. Friday—February 11— ative Art; 620,|road St.' V Red Bank—9 a.m. 5th and 6th grade boys rec- Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent wbras of Red Bank — 6 p.m. — Red Bank Junior Rifle reation center. Red Bank High School Gym- Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- Red Bank—3:30 p.m.—3rd thru 6th grade girls advanced dance class. Mechanic Street School. nasium. • •;'.. ; ; Club. Meets at Fort Monmouth Range. ative Art, 620 Broad St. Red Bank—10:30 a,m.—7tb and 8th grade boys Red Bank—9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.—Book Fair- Red Bank—3:30 p.m.—3rd thru 6th grade girls, Shrewsbury—12:30 p.m.—Regular Meeting of recreation center.. Red Bank High School Gym- Travel and Tourism through Books. St James advanced dance class; Mechanic Street School. ' Sisterhood of Monmouth Reform Temple. Pro- Grammar School (First floor corridors). gram—Florence Karasik, N.SXD.-Interior De- nasium. '' '•'••",' ' sign. •••••:•••••••• Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of Friday—February 18 Sunday—February $'': . • Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of Friday—February 25 Shrewsbury —. Duo-Show of recent works of ative Art, 620 Broad St Helen Bachner arid ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- ative Art, 620 Broad St. Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- Saturday—February 12 Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- ative Art, 620 Bripad St. Red Bank — 6 p.m. — Red Bank Junior Rifle ative Art, 620 Broad St. Little Silver—7 p.m.—PTA Valentine Dance. Club. Meets at Fort Monmouth Range. Monday-^-February- 7, Cobblestones, Middletown. Lincroft—Lincroft Lecture Series "Why Cath- Red Bank — 6 p.m. — Red Bank Junior Rifle Red Bank—7 p.m.—High School boys recrea- Shrewsbury — Duo-Show of recent works of olic Colleges." Sponsored by the Pius XII In-, Club. Meets at Fort Monmouth Range. tion basketball league. Red Bank High School Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- stitute. Christian Brothers Academy. Adm. $1. Gymnasium. ative Art, 620 Broad St, Saturday—February 26 Shrewsbury—Open Discussion following ser- Red Bank—7:00 p.m.—Adult volleyball league. Red Bank—9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.—Book Fair- vices. Topic "What can be done to strengthen Red Bank—9 a.m.—Junior bowling for boys in River Street school. Travel and Tourism through Books. St Junes Sabbath observance among Reform Jews?" grades 5-8. Red Bank Recreation Lanes. Red Bank—3:30 p.m.—3rd thru 6th grade girls Grammar School (First floor corridors). Monmouth Reform Temple. Red Bank—10:30 aim.—Junior bowling for girls beginner dance class. Mechanic Street School. Red Bank—9 a.m.—Junior bowling for boys in in grades 5-8. Red Bank Recreation Lanes. .Little Silver—8:15 p.m. — Pre-School Study grades 5-8. Red. Bank Recreation Lanes. Saturday—February 19 Red Bank—9 a.m—3rd and 4th grade, boy? bas- Group of Little Silver PTA. Markham Place Red Bank—>10:30a.m.—Junior bowling for girls Fair Haven—11 to 12 a.m.—Puppet Show of ketball clinic. River Street School. School. in grades 5-8. Red Bank Recreation Lanes. . the Episcopal Church of the Holy Communion. Red Bank—10:30 a.m.—7th and 8tri grade boys Shrewsbury—8:15 p.m.—Northern Monmouth recreation center pragram. River Street School. Red Bank—9 a.m.—3rd and 4th grade boys bas- Red Bank—9 a.m.—Junior bowling for boys in Branch AAUW presents a forum, "Perplexing grades 5-8. Red Bank Recreation Lanes. Choices in Contemporary Life." Presbyterian ketbsjl clinic. River Street School. Monday—February 28 Red Bank—10:30 a.m.—Junior bowling for girls Church House, Sycamore Ave. Public invited—' Red Bank—10:30 a.m.—7th and 8th grade boys Red Bank—7 p.m.—High School boVs recrea- no admission. ;' / in grades 5-8. Red Bank Recreation Lanes. recreation,center jJragram. River Street School. tion basketball league. Red Bank Higij School Red Bank—9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m;—Book Fair- Red Bank—9 a.m.—3rd and 4th grade boys bas- Sunday—-February 13 Gymnasium. Travel and Tourism through Books. St James ketball clinic. River Street School. Red Bank—7:00 p.m.—Adult volleyball league. Grammar School (First floor corridors). Red Bank—After all masses—Book Fair—Trav- Red Bank—10:30 a.m.—7th and 8th grade boys Shrewsbury — Duo«Show of recent works of River Street school. Helen Bachner and Ceil Grayer. Guild of Cre- el and Tourism through Books. St James Gram- recreation center program. River Street and Red Bank—3:30 p.m.—3rd thru 6th grade girls ative Art, 620 Broad St mar School'Auditorium. High School. beginner dance class. Mechanic Street School. Whis community service is sponsored by ike following firms who offer you friendly, courteous service always! Let any of the 40 MEMBERS of the RED BANK AREA New Jersey Nine Convenient Community Of jicei . MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE • Wfcny PW* • RM'MMI « MHHHUW IMA AiMry Natural Gas Co. HELP YOU PICK THE RIGHT HOME • Mr HtvM • Htfmlfl • SrWtof/ • C*tt> Nt* • CHy COMPANY HM« oHwti HI iuniwH AVI -Atkimv MM* MtR • BIB SANK • I1KI TOWM ASBURY PARK, N. J. EVERY MEMBER A REALTOR MY** t*mmm* ummt mm *i M owwit Listed on page 216 of the Yellow Pa.fl.es. Mmtar Html RiMrv* smn* • Htmt tmm Imamm \y i Th* THE DAItY REGISTER w »iut SAM aMTnab 16—Fri4*y, Jwwry 21, \< $s own** tiu Vtud«fMtr aUht dob \AntvMaMer Plar^ ^fganimticl^ tff. Rt. 19 In ?««%*» Town*W(>, trial «u la it* mumi day w*rt mfornlftf from a rinsluc tote Monti Cflnaly J*J» House HunlitigY Iff open set ?ng«jert*nt in ftennaylvanta at wand P. Broderii* and a ion in the Wily Register Class foORWSrtWN, N. J. (AP) -]th* time. According to testimony, tied now. It was a rainy night and their ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS — As:private property, destroy it and years to complete a renewal The jurjy y trial of *n auto gfcg gence iuiit In whichih iinternational car skidded several hundred feet its argument against urban re- negotiate its sale to another who jproject.. down a slight decline into the newal here, the Anti-Master Plan profits. . . industrialist Charles W. Engel- "What his private enterprise hard, Jr., was a defendant ended vehicle driven by Sinclair. EQUIPMENT Committee yesterday submitted "Doesn't urban renewal provide done to better housing con excerpts from a 1963-64 study by better housing for low income abruptly Wednesday after an out AAoNTGOMERY ditions? Between 1950 and I960, of court settlement. DEVELOPMENT Dr. Martin Anderson, assistant groups? Betweea 1950 and I960, some 18 million new homes ware Ackerman Gets professor of. finance at Columbia it demolished 126,000 low renlVjvately built without taxpayerY The case involved the death of WARD University Graduate • School • olhomes, built only about 28,000 money. In 1M0, 49 per cent of a night dub singer June Smith, 37. Germany Post COMPANY Business. new ones during that period, The »ult was brought by her U.S. housing was substandard, ,8TH INFAKTRV t>lV., Ger. with the vast majority in higher husband, Nathan Smith of As- V •(McnltSm Dr. Anderson's study, first pub and in 1960, the figure was 19 many — Army Spec. 4 Thomas lished in a 1964 report, "The: rent brackets than those re- per cent. By 1970, 5 per cent bury Park, in connection with TIRE the two-car collision in Chester Ackerman, son of Mrs. Mary I. •tew* Hw Federal Bulldozer," appeared in placed: of all housing will be substamf Township March IS, 1963, in Carr, 9$ Gulfstream Dr., Mid- condensed form in an April, 1965, "What happens to people farced ard. •tiatnJiUmf ROTATION which Mrs, Smith was.killed. dletown, N.J., has been assigned Reader's Digest article, "Explod to move from, a renewa} area? to the 8th Infantry' Division in "What can be done to. put ur- In the accident, the Smiths' car Get the most wear and ing the Myths of Urban Renew- More than 60 per cent are Ne- Germany. ban renewal on a sounder foot collided with a station Wagon mileage out of all your al." groes or Puerto Ricans who often ing? Protect the people—no cm driven by Lyman Sinclair, 54, Spec* Ackerman, a helicopter tir« by having them prop- A reprint of the article was are faced with discrimination, should be forced to relocate tut' and relocated into neighborhoods chauffeur for „ Engelhard. Al- crew chief lit Company B of the erly rotated. Tires checked also sent this week to local resi- less into good housing, in a good though Engelhard was not a pas- diviiion's 8th Aviation Battalion for cuts, bruises. dents by the Taxpayers Associa- as bad as, or worse, than those neighborhood he can afford. they left, at higher rents . . . senger* in the station wagon he near B»d Kreuinach entered the tion. —"Place it on a cash-for-cask 'How does the Urban Renewa was named as a defendant in Army in April, 1964, completed ONLY basis, with the government (the suit along with Sinclair. basic combat training at Fort These are some of Dr. Ander- Agency determine whether i matching funds put up by th' Dix, N.J., and was, last stationed son's findings—in question and house is 'standard?' The deter The Smiths, who were known answer form: cities. in Vj«t Nam ruination is left to local officials, in entertainment circles as "The 00 "What was the original intent who sometimes apply strict hous —"Introduce legislation to pre- of the urban renewal program? ng standards to justify condem vent loan of tax dollars to pri- To provide quickly a decent home nation and relocation, and later, vate developers to finance profit- for every American by eliminat-| ax standards to place people .In able construction of hlgh-inconv housing. ALL WHEELS ing slums, preventing blight, and housing inferior to what they 1° revitalizing cities..in the belief "Develop project areas little once occupied. Memnoiitk Shopping Center hat private enterprise, operating "What happens to business in by little, stopping the destruction tqlonlown Circle without substantial help from the renewal areas?, .Records show of homes for use as parking, lots government, could not 'achieve many stores, in .addition to losing while trying to induce private enough quality housing! , . property and other assets,, have developers to build something..." "Is the program working? The had to pay for relocation costs... "But these changes will not record shows it has been costly "Can't business move back into correct the basic faults of urban and has not met the goals set renewal areas when the project renewal, "Dr. Anderson's article by Congress. . .alters the tra-, !s completed? They seldom do. concludes. "We would still have ditional concept of eminent pub- Rents in renewed areas are fre seizure of private property for lic domain. Officials can seize quently higher. Most do relocate someone else's usA, the forcible linear the former location, but paydisplacement of people, the sense- twice toe rent as before,.. less destruction of low-rent hous HIGHLANDS "Do many businesses close be- ing. FAMOUS cause of urban renewal? The "In my considered judgment, 'death-rate' is high. Of 21 renewal the only rational moral course LOBSTER POUND projects studied in 14 cities, one )f action is outright repeal of NAMES out of every four displaced firms :he entire program." goes out of business. Adds the Anti-Master Plan ''Does urban renewal generatej Committee': «•' '• • a large increase in tax revenues? "This is one study we feel •«]• Facts show it has actually caused ows us good reason to fear ur-j a decrease in revenues of most jan'renewal for Atlantic High- cities largely because it takes lands."' . '•.'•'.•' LIVE LOBSTERS Views of McCallum Yei, they make quite « CHOWDER At\*, ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS — pair. Ye», they stan«j for CLAMS *IUC dox. George B. MoCallum, 53 Hooper quality. Ye» — Pay IBSJ Ft. of Atlantic 5r. off Bay Ave. Ave., a candidate for election to for Brand Names with HIGHLANDS-872-9861 the Henry Hudson Regional ; Next to Hlqhlandi Marina Board of Education, yesterday • \ "BlS.W" ' issued this statement: ' Discount Prices I Open 7 Days 1 o.m. to 7 p.m. The Board or Education must be a team effort. Its members are entrusted by the community FURNITURE CO. to achieve community objectives KEYPO'RT. N. J. Unlike athletics, the winning board team does not get cheers 264-0181 from the crowd. It gets silence, ; which bespeaks public confidence. 'V..!.V. >" To win this silence, the board must be composed of hardwork- ing, mature, practical citUens of varying backgrounds, prefer- ably possessing skills which re- late to the diverse problems of "education."—including the man- »>.;/vbV« i •:- Open Mon. and Fri. evenings 'til 9 agement r of money, organizations and people. , , Ki-'it i,,; •,'• ... i»: *"»:.••••••-• ».' ,••"'"' Our educational team at Hen- ••-• ,;: •••.•; W'i'frx** i '.- • ry Hudson Regional — the build- Gporge B. McCallum ing, the staff and the board — •••••••-' ••••''•••v\1:v»i;'.iv-.''i;f4t*t is but four years old. It isagood advantages of jouth. They are team — a new, growing team. striving to improve. They are New teams are seldom league adaptable. They sense destiny. champions, but they have' the "I.want to join our team by becoming a member of the Re- gional Board of, Education. If •elected, I will do my best to maintain and improve our educa- Dine informally in our tional team effort. . , Monmouth Roam! "My~background,.whicH should AWARD-WINNING OESIGN help me meet this responsibility, follows:. Graduated Nutley High New Bath X Shower Valve School 1937; B.A. from Dartmouth College 1941'— majoring in eco- nomics; entered Navy in 1941, released from active duty in 1948, after serving as line officer on three ships in bpth the Atlantic and Pacific; investment admin- istrator at Bankers Trust Co., - !:•••»•'••.••* '. *•*• » • v New York from 19& to 1951; since 1952 have bought supplies Banquet facilities and services for the U.S. Army •IV 542-0800 at Fort Monmquth. . ," HWY.35 EATONTOWN James H. Kaufmann & Son ! Plumbing and Htgting The missionary mass meeting opposite Fort Monntoutfi 1104 Mapl* Avt.. Eatoitown, H. J,of the Camden District of the FhoM LI 2-0363 [A.M.E. 2k>n- Church will be held Thursday • in A.M.E. Z i o n Church, Red Bank. There will be a Holy Communion service at 11 a.m. A special program will 'Wagoneer be presented at 2 p.m. The youth rally planning com- mittee of the Greater Red Bank Area Council of Churches will meet in the- First Presbyterian wHh4'tvheel driveChurch,.Red Bank, Sunday at 4 has twice the grip p.m. in snow Let your fingers do the walking. Shop the Yellow Pages way. (SUPER-RIGHT) QUALITY Action people do. 'Jeep' 4-whoel drive lets you plow right through when other wagons stick; hold fast when other wagons slip. And, with 250 hp'Vigilante'V-8 -( or Hi-Torque 6, It's got all the power you'll ever need on or off road.Tiioto'a Turbo Hydra-Matic* automatic transmission, too, power W brakeiyail Iho option* you expect ".Mmttemoiuiux 0H ;:, T**1!*??* ** *$*» " SECTTON TWO FRIDAY, JANUARY 21, 1966 7c PER COW McGrath Comments on Saigon Visit Sees Viet War's End This Year ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. (AP) er Ho Chi Minn "seems to feu ing against South Vietnamese and strong feelings of national unity, re Vietnamese family to move —V. S. Rep. Thomas; C. Mo ' Red Chinese as potential Allied troops is intensified. and are weary of more than 20 a unit from one section of Grath; D-N.J., predicted Thurs- rulers of North Viet Nam, as On the debit side, McGrath years of warfare, McGrath said. ieir country . to another. They day the war in Viet Nam would they became rulers of North Kor- ilid the U. S. military and dip- "Their entire lives are woven re a deeply religious people, end this year because North Viet ea, if they help the North win lomatic mission was facing con- around their families and they do /hether their religion is Budd- Nam's rulers fear a Red Chi- the war." siderable difficulties in winning not feel any loyalty to a district, lism or Catholicism, but that is nese takeover of their country if the support of the South Viet- a province or even a national he very thing that makes them Can Only Lose 1 fighting is escalated, And, he added, North Viet Nam namese people. government. ,o adaptable to life in any part MoGratti, • recently returned can only lose the war it fight- The South Vietnamese lack "It is not unusual for an en- >f their country," he said. from a visit to Southeast Asia, Notes Gains said he was told by American McGrath said. some gains Embassy officials in Saigon that ere being made through the the Viet Cong are defecting at J. S. and South Vietnamese gov- the rate of 500 a week. Keansburg BoardTrims srnments' civil action programs, "What's more, our air strikes in which inhabitants of small vil- have proven so effective that the lages and hamlets are trained to VCs are unable to light fires to administer their own affairs. boil water or cook food, and the At present, some 3,000 local ad- promise of decent meals and $10,000 From Budget ministrators are graduated from medicines . , . seems to entice training programs every 10 many of them to the govern- KEANSBURG — The Board of The vote on the $782,767 figure at the board, countered a sug- weeks, but McGrath said that ment side," he said, Education last night adopted a wai the third such ballot, ac- gestion that funds should have number was too small. Tlie New Jersey Democrat revised tentative budget, jug- cording to freshman member »een reserved in recent years "Our forces can sweep through SMILING SIGNERS — Keansburg officials and representatives of Bonafede Enter- made his remarks In an address gling teacher salaries and tui- Mrs. Elizabeth Connelly. for construction. He said it was VC areas almost at will, but if before the Buena Vista Jayceei. tion to produce a $10,000 reduc- She disclosed that a special he who opposed this principle Jiere are no Vietnamese to •prises ore all smiles as they sign contract yesterday for sale of urban renewal arta He said North Vietnamese nil-1 tion. meeting was conducted Friday, when it was attempted severa leave in charge in the cleared land. Pact is for $117,821. Seated,, from left, are Richard Norris, director of opera- Jan. 7, for the initial adoption. years ago. areas, the Cong come right back tions for Bonafede; Mayor Leonard L. Bellena, and Peter Bonafede, corporation preii- Tuesday, Jan. 11, after a con- He declared: the moment we leave," lie ference with Borough Council, "You'd bankrupt this town col. added. dent. Looking on are Judge David Ravieh, attorney'for developer and Borough the spending schedule was voted letting $50,000 each year." Manager C. Bernard Blum. Groundbreaking for 100-unit motel is expected iky March Keansburg School upon again with changed fig- According to the board, voters I. Swimming pool, restaurant and-apartment houses will follow* . ' ures. defeated a budget because such Raritan Plan The latest proposal slashes a provision was included In it. (24,100 from teacher salaries but They said the sinking fund drew Projects Delayed Increases by $14,100 the amount sharp criticism at a public hear- Unit Re-elects to be paid to Middletown for lo- ing before the referendum, lead- Conservatives Rap Mom KEANSBURG - Construction will re-evaluate the sendlng-re- cal high school students, ing members to believe it caused of. a junior-senior high school ceiving relationship between this This borough's tuition account the budget defeat.1 G. W. Bennett and'additional elementary class- community and the Middletown now reads a total of $262,500 Mr. McLoone charged that al rooms moved further into the school district. despite the fact that Middletown though the board had acted tc For Case EndorsenwMl future, last night. Extend Agreement estimates Its receivable tuition meet emergencies by providin ; Tjie 'Board of Education an- Mr. Ryan commented that at only $220,000. off-premise classrooms, pool RED BANK - The Conserva- support throughout the state. the New Jersey^GOV'partyto'a nounced that target date for a state officials could decide to planning had caused the emer- tive Club of Monmouth County The club president remarked all time low," Mazzone asserted. The board speik much of a referendum is now "February or extend the agreement At pres- four-hour session defending it! gencies. yesterday rapped the move by "It would be naive to expect the Assemblyman Azzolina sough March" with final state approv- ent, a - ruling stands . barring Mr. Ryan agreed that pooi Assemblyman Joseph Azzolina, Republican steering committee the endorsement for.Case at a actions but Mrs. Connelly sue al not yet obtained. ninth grade students from here cessfuUy moved that press and planning might be to blame Bui R-Monmouth, to endorse Sen. to withhold its endorsement from meeting of county party leaders being sent to Middletown in pointed an accusing finger al Clifford P. Case for re-election. Seri.Case. last Saturday in the Old Orchard The board will meet Monday public be notified of all regular night with its attorney Benjamin September, 1967. and special meetings. "those swivel chair artists I Salvatore N. Mazzone, club "We must say, however, that Golf and Country Club. Thomas C. Garrison, school nas Gruber to evaluate a land ap- Mrs. Margaret Boyle, board Trenton who offer nothing bul president, contends that the GOPthe. endorsement of one who County GOP Chairman J. Rus- praisal received Dec. 28. superintendent, asserted that ii promises, promises, promises." U. S. senator "ha,s consistently demonstrated he would be much sell Woolley at the same will take 16 months to complete president, insisted that the press The meeting was to have been and public have always been Mr, Ryan also defended th voted with the Democrats more at home, on ,th$ Democratic time requested the proposal be the proposed . school once con- right of a board member to call put off until the steering commit- held "immediately after the ap- welcome at meetings but Mrs. against the Republican minority side of the Senate -would- bfe polit- praisal was received" but what struction begins. for an executive session at an; ical hypocrisy that would lead tee meets again in three weeks. Connelly pointed out that they on partisan issues." appears to have been t break- A letter was directed to Bor- can't attend if they are not time, asserting that action ii He added; down in communications be- ough Council asking that a spe- aware a meeting is being held. never taken during such ses- tween the board and Mr. Gruber cial meeting be called for the The change in policy carried sions. Members agreed that dls- "We deplore the fact the Re- adoption of a resolution by the publican leaders in this state arc delayed the parley. unanimously. cussion Involving disciplinary Convention May Pick John J. Ryan, board finance governing body approving the matters and land purchases apparently so concerned* with board's plans. The resolution In the wake of published criti- running a winner that tjjey committee chairman, left the cism of limited space in the should be in caucus. meeting last night to call Mr. must be presented to state offi- Under questioning by Mr. willing to disregard 'What that cials Thursday but council does board< room, the meeting last Gross as Chairmah Gruber and Monday** date wu night wai held in the school Scales, Mr. Wilson agreed thai person's political philosophy U not. meet again until February. "for a while" the board had or even whether he will vote J cafeteria. — TREOTOJl — The state consti- tion the state Senate and Assem- The attorney reportedly told : : The board agreed to meet "string" of such caucus session! with them or against them af- tutional "convention on reappor bly. The question will then be ""• bound!'*-Citizens Advisory In what: was admittedly "nee- in the midst of public meeting! Gilbert W. Bennett ter being elected." the board't secretary, Mrs; dling" a newsman, a handwrit tionment is'likely to name Dr. presented to the voter? in the Mary Lou Ackerman, that he Monday, Feb.-* to but said there have been nom . Mr. Mazzone stated the major- Mason W. Gross, of Rumson, November election, ten press sign was tacked along- lately. RARITAN TOWNSHIP - In would be out of the state ui plBuW. side one table by Mrs. Mary Lou ity of his Conservative Club president of Rutgers University, Gov. Hughes will preside ai Harold C. Lovett, building Voters will decide on the bud the first official meeting of the members are Republicans and Wednesday, Jan. 26. Ackerman, board secretary. year the Township Planning as its chairman, The Register the opening of the convention al • -Wilson Angry plans committee chairman, es- get Tuesday,* FeK 8., They wll that 'they would very much like learned. Rutgers University, New Bruns- timated that, (he $2 million proj- Revenue figures for the re- Board re-elected Gilbert W. Ben- Discussion of the snarled com- vised budget were read by John also decide the board futures c to see a prominent Republican Dr. Gross was among three wick, March 23. Then a voti ect will raise taxes 46 cents per MM. Boyle, Douglas Foulks am nett to his fourth year as chair- oppose Sen. Case in the primary munications and delays being J. Ryan, finance committee man. - •- • ! selected as candidates for conven will be taken among the 126 encountered prompted an out- $100 assessed valuation. Wallace E. Schaab, who seek r election. He feels that such a tion delegate seats by the Mon Democratic and GOP delegates to chairman. Jeremiah T. Wilson election.. -. > ...-'i, '•&. Chairman Bennett, after thank- burst from board member Jere- then voiced the opinion that it ; person would command wide mouth County Democratic Com elect a chairman. miah T. Wilson. They are opposed by--Mr. Mc- ing the board for its confidence conservative and moderate GOP inittee. The others running with would not be necessary to have in nlm, made the following ap- Only in case of a tie vote wil! "If you feel.the attorney is in- expenditures . read since these Loone, Mr. Scales, George L. Gross in the March 1 election are the governor be called upon t< competent, if you want someone Hurt Woman DeLage, Richard M, Hopkin pointments: Ocean Township Mayor John J. figures would be available at Vice chairman, James J. Me- cast a deciding ballot. new then get him." next Friday's public hearing. John E. Milmore and Patsy . Reilly and former Assemblyman Dr. Gross is no stranger to con- He said the construction pro- Acconzo. - Gprty; secretary, Joseph F. Bon- Vocational Patrick J. McGann, Jr., Lin- Gets $22,500 The new total is $782,767, up figlio; master plan chairman, stitutional conventions. He at- gram may need, l coordinator, $49,552 oyer the present budget. croft. tended one in 1947 when Re- John F. Gilligan, Jr.; sub-divi- The board will seek an exten- The proposed spending calls Budget Rises If the chairmanship goes to publican Gov, Alfred E. Driscoll sion of credit Thursday from the Settlement sion, Harry N. Greene; zoning, Gross it will be with the added presided. for a tax levy of $533,738, up Adopt Pay John A. Ivliele, Jr.; capital Im- state Division of Business and FREEHOLD — A Belford wom- $57,532. urging of Gov. Richard J. Hughes. The Rutgers president has a Finance. an who fell on a metal clothes provement, Mrs. Jeanne Mx- By $176,905 The convention will draft a Current expenses are now pro- Donough, and public relations, home on Monmouth Ave.,'Rum- During th« following week the hanger at the Two Guy* store, posed at $737,479, up $47,380, Hike Codes FREEHOLD -^Monmouth permanent proposal to reappor- son, and votes .from there.' state Department of Education Rt. 35, Middletown Township, ac- Steven Falardi. with teacher salaries — $303,850 KEANSBURG - Borough While expressing gratitude to County's proposed 1966-67 voca- cepted $22,900 yesterday in settle- — aid tuition accounting for Council adopted salary codes tional school budget was accept- ment of a Superior Court suit for the board for his re-election, nearly 80 per cent, of the total. Wednesday night that provide Mr. Bennett said, "We hope that ed by the Board of School Es- her injuries. Candidates for board election, pay raises for police and most timate and was recommended to Mrs. Gehevieve Marks, Holly this is the start for getting our Anti-Poverty Funds Use Daniel L. McLoone and 'Robert other borough employees. due of ratables in Raritan." the Board of. Freeholders yester- Rd., who had tripped while shop- E. Scales, put present members The new police guide provide! day. ping in the store's infant's wear on the defensive with numerous An application for subdivision a range of $6,300 for patrolmen of a lot at Middle Rd. and Poole The Midget, drawn by the Vq- section June 19, 1964, had filed: questions on progress of pro- to $8,500 for Chief Robert Kron- catior Board ot Education, to- suit against the store owner,1 posed school construction, its old Ave. made by the Cannon Realty Plans Told at Keansburg enberger. Officers joining the Co. was referred to the sub- tals $536,9051, an increase of Vornado, Inc. policy of closed meetings and department will start at $5,300, $176,£?5 over the current year. KEANSBURG - Thomas C. ter, a decision on where to lo- Portable The settlement came during the the need for executive sessions. however; ' division committee. The appli- 1 cation is for the.division of the The rise has been attributed Garrison, local school superin- cate the facility has not been The structure will be movable fifth day of a trial before Judge Responding to Mr. McLoone, Increases ranging betweei principally to costs of operating made. but of a semi-permanent type. Andrew A. Salvest and a jury. the board contended that much 200 x 345 x 266 x 282 foot lot tendent, released details last $100 and $500 will go to othei into two lots of 125 x 150 feet now schools to be opened in Mid-night on the proposed expendi- The superintendent reported It will consist of four offices for Mrs. Marks suffered a fractured of the delay in getting elemen- employees, although there an that original plans to have the child guidance, social services, each. Construction proposed for dletown and 'Wall Townships in ture of $49,500 in federal anti- right arm and was left with tary and high school classrooms some whose pay remains the September. building placed alongside the and psychological testing for permanent injuries. She was rep-constructed was due to previous same. There are no Increases the site Is two stores. poverty funds. elementary school were rejected emotionally disturbed children. resented in the auit by Louis boards. included for councilmen. They A county school budget goes Although the Board of Educa- by state officials. through three steps for adoption, A remedial reading room and Drazin' Red Bank. Mr. Ryan, a 17-year member draw $600 annually. tion and Mr. Garrison have been Being considered are proper- a larger, 24 by 30-foot, room for Howard Says but is subject to only one public assured of the money, and plans ties owned by Veterans of For- hearing. a library and storage room. are available for construction of eign Wars, American Legion and Mr. Garrison said the services The first action came last a multipurpose educational cen- St. Ann's Catholic Church. are for educationally underpriv He'll Join In week by the school board; the ileged and economically de- Colts Neck School Budget Calls second yesterday by the Boaid prived children of the public of School Estimate, which is school and of St. Ann's School. Truth Rally made up of three freeholders and Lance Asks Protective For 71-Cent Tax Rale Increase WASHINGTON - Rep. James two school board members; and, He gave the breakdown as 136 from the public school and 62 J. Howard (D.-3d, N.J.) an- the third, by the freeholders tor COLTS NECK - The Board of The discussion of tax rates the shortage of teachers, whicl nounced today that he will parti- relation to the entire county bud- from St. Ann's. Education unanimously adopted was only part of a two-hour hear- resulted from the underestlmat. lists Alms cipate in a Truth-In-Packaging get. . ., • System its budget of $644,525 last night, ing conducted by the Board of of pupil growth. rally in Matawan Township, EATONTOWN - Former Sen. Objectives of the project, as estimating that it will require a Education for some 80 township The remaining 10.5 per cenl The only public hearing comes gobble up the surburban sections listed by Mr. Garrison, are im- N. J., Monday night. when the full county budget is Wesley Lance, R-Hunterdon, sajd as far as representation Is con- local school district tax of $1.77 residents who turned out to ask increase breaks down into in- yesterday the state should have provement of reading, child per $100 assessed valuation. questions. creases in several areas; ,2.5 pei The congressman, who has in- aired at a special meeting at cerned, , ' > ''•"'.' •' guidance, social services, speech troduced a bill calling for con- the end of February. The bud- a permanent plan for reappor- "Whether the reapportiotiment This would mean an increase of The questions and answers were cent is for an attempt to reduc< tioning • the Legislature which correction and aid to the hard 77 cents over the current rate of preceded by a display of trans- class size to 25 pupil average; 2. trols on food packaging and la- get will be introduced next plan is by counties or districts it of hearing. beling, will address the Mata- Wednesday but the hearing date should protect every'voter in- should be a most'fair one;"'he $1. parencies each charting some per cent for Increases In salarie, cluding all minority groups. . declared. • Also, educational aid to emo- However, explained board aspect of the budget explanation. about half for additional teachers wan branch of the National Coun- hasn't been fixed as yet. tionally disturbed, individual psy- cil of Jewish Women and its Mr. Lance, considered! an Special Election president Lee S. Tuomenoksa, The total 196647 school budget and half for normal increments chological evaluations, addition- in order to estimate the Impact of $644,525 is up 40.5 per cent plus a contemplated increase guests. authority on reapportionment, A special election will be held al library facilities with visual Middletown Man I§ spoke to "the Monmouth County March 1 td select U6 .'state^vtde of the increase on their 1966 taxover the previous year's total of the salary guide of about $10( Principal speaker at the rally aids', recreational supervision in bills, residents should realize that $458,615. The board offered (his will be Dr. James Mcndenhall, JHeld for Extradition Federation of Republican Wom- delegates who will 'represent 112 ihe evenings, Saturdays, and per s.te.p; .9 per pent Is for im en at a membership meeting in votes with those;representing one the $1 rate does not allow for explanation for the increase: provement of curriculum (a part education director for Consum- during'the summer and to pro- er Reports magazine. COLTS NECK - State Police, the Old Orchard golf and coun- county having' half •«' vote: ' ' Vide cultural opportunities for the $75 thousand shown on the — An Increase of 20 per cent time art teacher will be added) with local police assisting, ar- try, club. Whatever - plan is Resided.o. n art, music, crafts and apprecia- 1965-6$ school budget as miscel- reflects the expected Increase of 2.7 per cent for administrate A similar bill is being con- laneous revenue. sidered In'the Senate. It was in- rested Frank Istvanditsch, 33, of "I believe that the '1 man-1 by the convention will; bev'sub- tlofts- assumed to b« In the 20 per cent In the; average daily changes which will provide a fu 127 Hubert Ave., Middletown, mitted to the voters'in the ,gen This sum, which was trans- enrollment. time board secretary-business troduced last year by Sen. Phil- vote' ruling must be adhered to. : of most families of mod- lip A. Hart. Tuesday as a fugitive from Penn- Regardless of the areas candi- eral Nov. 8 election for a "ye«" erate means. ferred to the school board by Estimated enrollment for this manager, a superintendent and sylvania where he is wanted for dates represent, people should or "no" ballot. The board last night hired the Township Committee, also year Is 800 and for next year, 960 two building principals. This year The legislation has administra- • 1964 burglary- have the right to vote for at least Jn the order of business, the seven part-time teachers and a was raited from local tax sourc- students. there are only the two principals, tion support but is opposed by State police said he was ar- one senator and one assembly- federation's nominating slate clerical worker who will partici- es, Mr. Tuomenoksa said. — An Increase of 10 per cent one of whom serves as' the chief leading manufacturers and the raigned before Magistrate Sey- man," he said. ' named as first vice president, pate In the program. Mr. Gar- Allowing for this money, the results from the fact that the administrator; the final one half United States Chamber of Com- mour Kleinberg, Wednesday night amount ot locally raised taxes 1965-66 budget Is based on an of one per cent of the Increase merce. In discussing the state consti- Mrs. Harry Seamen, Holmdel; rison, school principal William In Keyport and was committed third vice president, Mrs, Mar- DIMaio and board secretary being used to support the current underestimate of the average en- is for miscellaneous expenses. The rally, being arranged by tutional convention which opens school budget Is equivalent to a rollment.1 "--.' Mrs. Arlene Rothman, chair- to the county jail for 30 days In March 21 in Rutgers < Universitygaret Crowther, Wall Township; Mrs. Mary/Lou Ackenman will An analysis of current expense default of $10,000 ball. He is held treasurer, Mrs. William Cole- contribute time without compen- tax rate of $1.27. The current budget was based per pupil for next year was of- man of the council's public af- to select a plan to permanently fairs committee, will be held In for extradition to Pennsylvania, reapportion the Senate and As- man, Interlaken; assistant, re- sation. The Township Committee, has on an estimate of 740 students fered. .The projected Colts Neck police said. sembly, Mr. Lance stated: cording secretary, Mrs. George The instructors will teach two given no indication that it will rather than the 800 now expected figure of $574 was compared with Strathmore Elementary School, Jewell, Oceanport, arid assistant hours in the morning and two be ablt to make a contribution for the current year.' ' • an average for Marlboro and Matawan Township, at 8 p.m. To Watch Democrat* corresponding secretary, towards the 196647 budget. Uniform Sile In the afternoon at the local and The board has handled the cur-Freehold Borough of $554. The Male Slogera Wanted Now in progress at The Shirley "WY will have to keep • dost Mrs. Joseph Robertson, private schools. They/ will pro- Mr. Tuomenokia referred some rent underestimate by a shortage average for these two districts Spring Uke Heights. questions on the tax rate to the of services and also by utilizing Shrewsbury Chorale audltio Shop, Red Bank.—Adv. wateh to Me what the Denw vide Individual attention for be- plus Fair Haven, Holmdel add For ipjjointiMnt tail Mrs. crats try to do; Remember, They will b« elected and take k»V-grade-l«v«l readers. Township Committee, Indicating surplus to ipend • total which Rumson will be $578 the board ward Swlkart, 843-1208. Open To The Public therf (nay hot be an important office in March. Speech correction will be pro- that ha was only quoting the will b« greater, by June 1966, Indicated. The new Old Orchard Restau- change in the state' constitution Other officers remain for vided by an expert, figures that had been given him than the budget provided. All five of the districts shown Hall Ton Pickup rant, Monjnouth Rd. in Eaten- for another 100 year*." toother year, Including the fed' The project Is to be ev«lu»ted ind that he did not have enough Teacher ShorUgt for comparison have estimated Steal it today. Truck on down town. Luncheons and ^ Dinners, The ex-1 tor remarked tratton's president, Ml*. Harry In June to determine the ex- information to go Into detailed Some classes hive' is many enrollments within 90 per cent of to McCARthy Chevrolet. JJl-UM. Tuesday thrash Sunday,—Adv. that the large cities should Dot Clayton of Rumwn. tent of achievement of discussion, u 14 children, thus reflecting that for Colts Neck. -Adv. •' --, - a •-•••••. •.... I A.UT0M9T9rl • • •)' AUTOB FOR SAME (Mm uw OMBViwHJIT -'•«al Mr. wl»4oar _i t^*. NOW AUTOS FOR SAUE AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOB SALE AUTOS TOR SALE Is the time to buy a good used car! ANNUAL WHITE SALE 1964 SUICK 1963 BUICK 1963 PONTIAC 1962 PONTIAC SPECIAL PRICES ON NEW AND USED CARS! ilactra 225, t-window HT. Rtyi»ri—Buick's firait. . Grand Prix. • lonnavilla cent. Full powar and air. Fully aquippad. Utc« n»w, Auto, tram., P.St, P.Br. 1964 BUICK NATION WAGONS FORDS COMPACTS 1963 IMPALA 1962 BUICK 1961 FORD LaSabro 4-dr. sadan. Skylarlc 2-dr. hardtop. Aulo. tram., f.Sf., P.Br. S. S. eonv., auto. tram, Country Squira, auto. tram. •62 COMET 850. on floor, bucfcat laatt. Powtr St., power window!. •60 RAMBLER 495. "62 GALAXIE 1050. Powar itaaring, 9-pauangar. Custom four-door, FerdemaHc I9&4 BUICK Elaetra eruiia control. 1962 BUICK "Ctaiilc""rW-door, auto,, P.St. Convartibla, Fordomarlc, powar itoaring. LaSabra 4-dr. hardtop. •65 COMET 1995. Spatial da!u«a »nv., auto, 1961 RAMBLER Auto, tram., P.St., P.Br. 1963 FORD '61 FORD 4W. Caliantt, Moreomatle, powir ttaarino,. , trant., buckat taati, P.St. Claitic daluxa, 4-dr. itdan. "63 GALAXIE 500 1295. 1964 BUICK Falcon. 4-dr. tadan. SiK-cyf., 4-dr, ranch wagon, FOM. Two-door hardtop, FOM, powar itaaring. Straight itielc. 1962 BUICK Straight iticlc. •64 COMET 1195. LaSabra 2-dr. hardtop. "202" (sur-door ladan, Mareomatic. Auto. tram.. P.St., P.Br. 1963 BUICK Elaetra 4-dr. iodan. 1961 PONTIAC '60 COUNTRY SQUIRE 595. '64 GALAXIE 500 1695. Full powar and air. Fordomatic, powar itaaring. '64 CORVAIR 1295. 1964 BUICK LaSabra 4-dr. hardtop. Tampait station wiaon. Two-door hardtop, FOM, P.St. Menu 2-door todan, Powargllda. Wildcat 4Jr. hardtop. Ante, .tram., P.St., P.Br. 1962 VOLKSWAGEN Automatic tranimlnion. Fully aquippad and air. Two-door ladan. •62 FORD 1195. '64 XL 1795. •64 COMET 1495. 1963 IMPALA I960 PONTIAC Two-door nardtop, FOM, P.St. 6000 ml. 1964 BUICK 1962 FORD ••pm. Country Squirt, FOM, P.St. Calionto ConvartlbW, Mareomatic S. S. 2-dr. hardtop. Bonnavilla eonvariibla. Skylark 2-dr. hardtop. Country Squlra, auto. tram. Four on {leer. Fully aquippad. '65 GALAXIE 500 2395. •65 MUSTANG =1795. Fully .quippad. Powar itaaring, ?-pasiangar. *62 MERCURY _1195. Fordomatle, power (tatrlng. 1964 OPEL 1963 BUICK 1962 CHEVROLET I960 BUICK Colony Park, MOM, powor itaoring. THUNDERBIRDS Station wagon. Skylark 2-dr. sport coupa. Imptla 2-dr. hardtop. LaSabro 2-dr. hardtop. LINCOLN-CONTINENTALS . Radio and haatar. luckot (oats, vinyl lop. Auto, tram., powar itaarlnj. Auto, tram., P.St, P.Br. '63 FAIRLANE 1295". MERCURYS 1-pan., custom wagon, Fordematle, P.St. '61' METEOR 650. •60 CONTINENTAL 795. GOOD DEALS Four-door hardtop, air conditioned. '64 FORD 1695.' '63 THUNDERBIRD 1995. Six-pati, Country Sadair, FOM, P.St. '63 MONTEREY 1450. Landau, full powar, fi wW> GREAT SAVINGS Two-door hardtop, MOM. P.St. black vinyl top. '64 CHEVROLET U95. '63 S-55 1550. "62 CONTINENTAL 2150. lal Air, Powarglldt. powar »t»arino. F«ur-doorf *ir eenditiontd. REAL VALUES Four-door hardtop, MOM, P.St. '64 THUNDERBIRD 2495. '64 FORD 1950. •64 MONTEREY 1750. Landau. "The dealership where the customer is important" Nino-pan. Country Squlra, FOM, P.St. Four-door tadan, MOM, P.St. •64 CONTINENTAL 3595. •61 GALAXIE 495. •64MONTCLAIR 1895. Four-door, full powor. Two-door hardtop, Fordomatic, F.St. Two-door hardtop, MOM. P.St. •64 CONTINENTAL 3795. Four-door, air conditioned. MOTORS •62 GALAXIE 695. •64 PARK LANE 2095. •65 CONTINENTAL 4195. Two-door Jtdarf. ifasdard tranimiiiton. 2-door hardtop, MOM, P.St., air eend. Four-door, lull powor. INC. BUY OR LEASE FROM MONMOUTH COUNTY'S LARGEST FORD DEALER NO RIDICULOUS CLAIMS TO GET YOU IN, NO "LOW-BALL" PRICES TO GET YOU BACK BUICK OPEL Home of the -Finest double checked used cars MOUNT ENGLISH HWY. 35 ('/. Mil. South P.rU.y Exit 117) 264-4000 SINCE 1904 MONMOUTH ST. and MAPLE AVE, RED BANK 741-6000 NOW EVERYONES PICKING UP NEVER BEFORE SAVINCS O LOS ON ALL OUR OVER 100 CARS \ WILL AT RUSSELL T0 % NEVER BE CHOOSE FROM *- . OCTTCD A tK Step ahead in a Toronado-inspired ALL MODELS > «1 J IMMEDIATE I T[ME JETSTAR 88 DELIVERY HIGHEST TRADE-INS LOWEST PRICES Now's the time to get a swingin1 deal YOU MUST STOP IN THIS WEEKEND on an Olds 88 at... LOOKING FOR A SECOND CAR ? WE HAVE SOME CLEAN "OK USED CARS" THAT HAVE JUST BEEN THE SHORE'S LARGEST TRADED IN ON THE FABULOUS "1966 CHEVROLET^." THEY'RE ALL OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC DEALER ... WINTERIZED AND READY TO GO. BUY FROM THE BIGGEST AND SAVE. RUSSELL Monmouth County's Largest Chevrolet Dealer! FOLLOW YOUR FRIENDS TO OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC CO. 100 NEWMAN SPRINGS RD. RED BANK CIRCLE CHEVROLET CO. 741-0910 325 MAPLE AVE. 741-3130 RED BANK AUTOIFORMUS THE ttwy masrm — rout-Sow. a*t rOKB*VJTKX - KM. HcCAJR. itwvrm yajutn — ti4*?,Juwxrr il, 1966—19 IMS CBBVROLZT—rajimcnr tiudtop. Pane atttfin^ radto h«st*r. auto- 1M1 ALJA ROHTCO — MOO U6> CHIVILIJ: — 1ST Co. Inc.m UM VOLVO - ir.OOO miles. Two-doe AUTO* TOR SALE matic truimlaalm, whll«w«Jl ttni, ex- EMS. UcCAXlllir ChertoleL tuil Injection. Etceliei* condition. Cell •Ku. Model P-I100. Verjr dun. «« cellent condition. (1,375. Z2S-15M alter 5. H1-US4 btfore ( p.m. Alter, 141-MM. Qotot winm. Wtm IMPALA KPOBT COOPI. •<*• y* IMS VOLKSWAGEN — Sutr root. IMS. UN VOLKSWAGEN BUS ISM PLYMOUTH — IIS. Good nmnlnc powor atwrlst. pow»r HWe. ttist. Me- RENAULT PEUOEO1 MtCAKUiy Chivrolet. Cili before t p.m. condition. Radio, heiter. «1412» CARthy Chtviefa. CM-1101. AUSTIN HEALB? SPRtTII S81-11M SAVINGS... UONMOUTH MOTORS tW-7878. tween 4 v/i 8 p.m. - S6j BI3CAYNE - »ux4ald Iklft. MX- Hwy. 35 M2-24I4 EUmtom 19M CORVAIR COUPE - (etutUontJ 1985 CORVAIR , MUST 8BEE ^yllndor S1.M0. McCARlUir CUtvrol.l. it 11.295. McCAKUiy Chevrolet. 291- KMlo ud Heater - SI385 1963 Crtevrolet convertible. !SJ-11M. 1101. Cill 7*73282. speBd. 300 h.p. SHOO. 717-0878. I960 1MPAUA — Harltoc, AUTOS FOR SALE 1960 TOAVELALL INTERNATIONAL 1059_ CADILLAC — Two-doow r hardtopd , 1S6! CORVAUt — Four-door odan. JicOARthy Chevrolet. — BUUon wt«t>n. six cylinder. Ex- clem, flfulll cower. 19501950. CalClll altel r 6:30 J765. UcOARthy Chevrolet. SJ1-U01 SERVICE... cellent condition. 1150. Oil HMU9. p.m. or all day Saturday 787-66400. 281-1101 IVU UOHZA COUPt - uued. H.O8 fOUtth Cb«rrol«t. 291.1101 , AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE IMi IMPALA CONVERTIBLE — Like new. *l.»i McCARlhy Chevrolet Ml- 101. ... CADILLAC SPECIAL - Slurp. SATISFACTION. il,285. McOARthy Chevrolet. S91-1101. I9«5 VOLVO — IMS, B»dlo, h«»tl» YOU GET MORE OF ALL THREE ind detrDiter. Price, $2,200, or belt AT SHREWSBURY MOTORS TWIN-BORO RAMBLER lfr. Cell 671-1828. (More Classified Adi LOOKING FOR LUXURY IN OB The Not Page) 1964 KARMANN GHIA 1EQE 1959 FORD Coup. IUUJ. 4-door seden 395. THE MEDIUM PRICE FIELD? AUTOS FOR SALE 1963 KARMANN 6H1A -j 395 1962 KARMANN GHIA COME IN AND Coup* Coup* 1295. SEE THIS EXCITING FRIENDLIEST 1961 PONTIAC 1961 FORD DEALS Bonnevilie convertible 950. Gelaxie 2-door hardtop 795. 1966 RAMBLER CLASSIC~2-DR. HARDTOP The new BRAND NEW 1965 LEFTOVERS! 1961 PONTIAC 196! CHEVROLET OF Catellna 4-door hardtop Corvett* conv*rtibf* 1595. Brand New 1965 SALE PRICE MONEY DOWN MONTHLY PAYMENT hot 1 THE tike the feel of 90 horses AMERICANS $1745 NONE Low 1961 OLDSMOBILE I960 KARMANN GHIA rarln* to go? Swing Into the F-IS four-door. 795. Coup* 1095. saddle of the 1960 Toyota CLASSICS $1865 NONE LOW WEEK Corona. Move out to 90 mph In a Hash. Here's a 90 hp AMBASSADORS $2160 NONE LOW 1961 VOLVO 1962 RAMBLER 4-door sports sedan that's Four-door I22S 1195. American convirtibla 750. the No. 1 performer it Its field. $2595 NONE LOW Drive it Check out its 47 fea- MARLINS . tures Including optional auto* 1962 CHEVROLET 1961 AUSTIN HEALEY matic transmission—and— Monmouth County's Oldest Rambler Dealer 1964 VALIANT M«nu 4-door, perfect. mazing price. V-200 station wagen. 1150. Sprit* convertible Factory warranty, Original 13,000 mil... 1964 RAMBLER 1962 CADILLAC $1714 Clinic wtgon, full powtr. 2-door fiardlop. ' $1995 Automatic, radio, ht«Ur. $1795 $1499 1962 STUDEBAKER 1964 PONTIAC Wsgon, radio, haatar, V-B. •EXTRA SPECIAL- T«mpn( 4-door. Automatic, pewar staaring, $ 895 Automatic, radio, haatar. $1575 1962 RAMBLER 1964 OPEL KADETT ConvartibU, «uto. 1964 FORD Radio and h«»t«r. $795 Two-door itation wajon 330. $1050 1964 CHRYSLER Falcon Four-door 1962 OLDS 88 Newport, nint-passanjar 1963 FORD 4-dr, ita. wgn,, auto., RtH. station wagon. $1095.:j TOYOTA PS, PB, powar raar window, $1695 Factory warranty. This Week Only Fairlana "500", agtomatic. $1150 Radio and h««jar, lit* naw. 1961 CHEVROLET $2499 CORONA 1963 RAMBLER Impala 4-dr. hardtop, auto. $975 RiH, PS, whitawalli. Clanic V-8 4-dr. nJan. Air con., auto., R4H, PS, P8. $1495 1961 RAMBLER Trie touch ones comi from TOYOTA Ambaiiador 4-door, auto.. ALSO AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ' will's 3rd Urtest manufacturer $795 1963 RAMBLER Radio and haatar, full powar. 1959 THRU 1965 VOLKSWAGENS of commercial vehicles. ' Four-door wafon, auto. $1375 1961 DODGE Radio, haatar. Dart V-8 four-door hardtop* $ 675 1963 PLYMOUTH 1963 RAMBLER Automatic, radio, lieartr. PRICES RANGING FROM *695 up TO * | 595 Belvedere station wagon. Two-door sadam $795 1961 CHEVROLET . Factory warranty, Impala 4-dr., aufo. $ 895 1963 FIAT RiH, power storing. $1499 MONMOUTH COUNTY'S OLDEST AND LARGEST 1100 medal, vary clian. $750 1961 VOLKSWAGEN AUTHORIZED VOLKSWAGEN DEALER Sun viior, haatar $895 RED BANK 1963 BUICK I960 T-BIRD ConvtrtibU, *utomtffc. Automafic, radio, htater R*dio and h«ittr. $1395 Two-door hardtop. $1075 AUTO IMPORTS 1963 PONTIAC I960 CHEVROLET 1963 PLYMOUTH Belvedere twO'door hardtop. SHREWSBURY MOTORS, INC. Authorized TOYOTA De«ler|| Hardtop, automatic,' radio, 4-door hardtop. Faetery warranty. haatar, powar itterinj, $1695 Auto., R»H, P.$t. V3'. $ 795 SHREWSBURY AVE. 741-8500 SHREWSBURY 119 E. Newman Springs Rd. .• JEEP SALES AND SERVICE $1199 741-5886 Red Bank|| NEWMAN SPRINGS RD. 747-0040 ) 1962 LINCOLN Continental, sharp. SPEEDY'S $2150 ARE YOU Tl FINEST! 1962 CHRYSLER THESE USED CARS ARE 300 convertible. ^1399 OF SITTING ON THE FLOOR PRICED TO SELL! 1963 CHEVY II 1965 BUICK AND LOOKING OVER THE Nova four-door station wagon. Riviera sport coupe. ' SiK-cyl., auto, tram., P.St., blu*. Full power, gold. 1960 PLYMOUTH 1965 FORD 1964 PONTIAC Four-door sedan, Fairltna 500, two-doer hardtop. Grand Prix, full power. $499 STEERING WHEEL?? Elght-eyl.. auto, tram., P.St. Air conditioned, maroon. Turquoiia and black. 1964 FALCON 1963 PONTIAC Future sport coupe, eight-cylinder. LtMans jport coupt, 4-ip««d Innj. Auto, transmission, power steering. Radio and haatar, maroon. Air conditioned, turquoise. 1962 RAMBLER TRY.. STUDEBAKER .Classic four-door sedan. 1962 RAMBLER 1964 VOLKSW'N Reel cleen. Deluxe bus, four-speed transmission. Clauic custom station wagon. $799 Radio and heater, green and white. Six-cylindar, auto, tranimiiiion. Radio and haatar, graan and whita. 1964 MERCURY 1961 CHEVROLET Comet, tour-door station wagon. Six-cylinder, standard tranimiision. Impala two.door hardtop. Radio and haatar, white. Six-cyl., auto, tranimiiiion, black. 1959 FORD Galaxla, two-door, 1963 CHEVROLET 1965 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury, eight-cylinder. $350 Impala Supar Sport, aight-cyl. Four-spaed tranimiision, blue. Automatic frammiiiion, maroon. 1963 BUICK 1963 RAMBLER LeSabre two-door hardtop, eight-eyt. Clank 770 four-door sadsn. Auto, transmission, power steering. I Six-cy!,, auto, trantminion, whit*. Power brakes, black, 1958 CHRYSLER New Yorker, 9-peiienger station wagon. FULL 100% $399 NEW JERSEY'S MECHANICAL GUARANTEE FRIENDLIEST DEALER BAILLY BROS. Ihc I 91 MONMOUfH ST. RED BANK i AUTO SALES 747-0596 MAIN STMETiH'WAY Nai8- . Jtawtiy 21, 19M DAILY REGISTER Atmxnn uii JHITM W* MIX AUTOS rOK MIX AUTOS MM IAUE radiridlo Od .beaS»eal»rr. .Powerawe. r atotrliii •»> IM)PONTIAC CONVBRTTBLl — ttttM.•rtter WMU-wilU" . J BUICIt SPUCIAL _ PBUOSOT — 4O3-1MO-S7.O0O mjlaa, «l J»hl blue. Sicellant ctmdlUon. Fmnr n.119n115. tu-juo. nlnf oond«tlott oall If owriw. Clsan and mechanically aol&d UK DODOB BKMN — IUAU> — p^STto take over mm* brtkea pow»r ifMrlni. whlttwtJU. 1M! CHRYSLJEn IARATOOA — Ex- ••_ 1140. MO9. Call T«-l«13. tliuar. Motor onlj two yean old. Alio •all tntr 7 p.m. HMIIi. 1MJ BulcX aeon. ItevoTa •»! wllnt condltloo. »25C or bolt otfor. RAMSUCAAMSUCR AMBR1OAM — Man- 1668 OOHTBrajKTAL - Air emit- • (or »18O. i FINANCE YOU! UKAC1DES — BBNZ 1W BJCDAN CllI Mi-UM. trmJMmlulon' ' , radioradio,, hheatere . Oood Uoned., Good lirti. UeoKanleeai/ eomid. r-00e7. Alter I p.m. IK1 — Gr.phlti fitj-rti UiUlt In- .™ CADIIXAO COMVERTIBU! -- tconeray c»r. W7«. Wt-T«M. eaeritiee. |3(n. call Wi-Msl. NO MATTER HOW MANY LOANS YOU HAVE! terior. Ptrfcet tQ tvtry wky. S1I00. flood condlUtm, (ood rubber. »1CO Oil IBM CHJVRM-ET IMPALA SUPER cm wts)3 to io pn. niittm SPORT - Hardtop M», 3(0 h.p. Four AUTOS FOX SALE apted tran»miaei 1965 CORVETTE String Ray, four-ipaid, radio and h««t«f, whita- previously owned Walli.' • •' . . ' , and proudly cared for ' .LINCOLN MOTORS MERCURY' Besides being little more thin nicely broken In, the major difference you'll consciously note between one of our late- -. - 1963 CHEVROLET 19c. I BUICK • 3446 Maple Ave. 747-4545 Red Bank model Continentals and a new one is the remarkable Javinjs a previously owned Continental affords its second Spaeial V/gn., ?-pasi. MORE B.f Air 2-dr. i.dan. owner. The ride, the look, the performance, the quality are Y-8. Aufttitjatiif. powar - classic, timeless, unmistakably Continental. Come in tnd Automatic, radio, BRAND NEW 1946 MODELS inspect our fine selection—this week. itaaring, r;adi-o, tiaatar, AT fiaatar, axeailanr cond. FACTORY FRESH Down Payment PAY PER MONTH whita-wall tirei. VALIANTS -.»• . $41.91 PLYMOUTHS 4lf\fir S44.24 CHRYSLERS 1111™ •* $m ENGLISH 1963 BUICK 1963 BUICK KITSON LINCOLN MOTORS MERCURY * . S53.55 PUE-SNOW CLEARANCE LaSabra 2-dr. hardtop, LaSabra,:4-door hard-, 34-36 Maple Ave. 747-4545 Red Bank THESE CARS MUST GOI WE CAN'T AFFORD TO BE PLOWED UNDER. 2-tona, fully aquippad, top, fully aquippad, OUR TREMENDOUS VOLUME 48 INTERNATIONAL 60 MERCURY Pick-Up J Door vary good condition. vary good condition. 63 FALCON • il.RAMBLER OF SALES GUARANTEES y/agdn ' Wagon 45 PLYMOUTH 65 BELVEDERE Fury II 4 Door 4 Door YOU SAVINGS A4 PLYMOUTH 61 CHEVROLET Fury * Door Hordlop Wagon WHOLESALE 1963 BUICK 1964 CHEVROLET S7 PLYMOUTH 60 DODGE 44 FORD 4 Door Falcon Waoan. S» CHEVROLET Riviara.fullyaquippad, Impala. Sadan. 4 Door Sedan 43 THUNDERBIRD 65 PLYMOUTH LOWEST PRICES 62 VOLKSWAGEN custom laathar intarior. Fully aquippad, Belvedere I Wagon 62 RAMBLER 6? OLDSMO8ILE Wagon - ' PRICES... 4 Door Air conditioning. axeallant condition. S» PLYMOUTH 62 OLDSWOBILE IN THE AREA Wogon Cutlols 58 LINCOLN : 51 PONTIAC CMeflaln 2 Door Sedan ON ALL USED CARS 4 Door 62 STUDEBAKER 63 VALIANT QT i Door Hardtop 2 Door Hardtop 58 CHRYSLER 59 FORD . Windsor 2 Door Hardtop FOREIGN CARS Galaxie - 63 CHEVROLET NO KIDDING!!! 65 .IMPERIAL 8. 4 Door 4 D&or , - . 63 MERCURY COME IN 63 PLYMOUTH. 4 Door Hardtop •65 DATSUN conv $1600 1962 Austin H»aUy I960 MSA Fury 4 Door 60 CHRYSLER 61 FORD Windsor 4 Door '65 VOLKSWAGEN conv $1650 Convertible ' 64 FORD Radio, haatar, wira 63 CHRYSLER MORGAN + 4 $1900 Roadster 3m 1 Door Hardtop Station wogsn '65 61 VOLVO 5» PONTIAC Cotallna Sport '57 PORCHE Cabriolet $ 975 whaali, ovardriva, . Radio, haatar, PET US 4 Door 64 FALCON , ,57 FORD SUNBEAM plus Hdtp $ 850 vary good condition. 4 Door Fblrlone 500 Hardtop "61 vary good condition. i .61 CHEVROLET 64 PLYMOUTH impata Cnvertlbls TR-3 _ $ 800; Fury Convertible '61 60 CHRYSLER 58 CHEVROLET 1 Door Delroy > Door "60 TR-3 $ 700 PROVE IT! 60 FORD . 53 PLYMOUTH Squire 9 Passenger 4 Door Sedan •55 M.G. T.F $ 800 . 64 PLYMOUTH 5? FORD 1964 Volkswagen .Fury Convertl< •60 SPRITE plus Hdtp....» $ 575 I960 Volkswagen EASY T6RMS—36 MONTHS TO PAY Wagon 59 PLYMOUTH ' 62 MERCURY '64 DAUPHINE -..„ $ 800 2-door sadan. R«d- Fury 4 Door 65 PLYMOUTH Ont ownar, Bllvedert II 54 IUICK "63 RENAULT R-8 $ 750 special* 2 Door Sedan with vinyl infarior, LARGEST DISPLAY OF NEW 61 FORD Galax't 60 PLYMOUTH '63 TRIUMPH Herald $ 575 •xcallant condition. vary good condition. Vollont 30t 4 Door Sedan CHEVROLET! IN THE AREA 64 FORD 62 CHRYSLER "61 RENAULT $ 395 Squire Newport convertible 63 CHEVROLET 62.CHEVROLET '63 PEUGEOT 404 $1095 Monia ConvirNbli Monia Wngon 4 Door FOR 60 MERCURY 57 PLYMOUTH '60 PEUGEOT wagon $ 295 MANY GOOD TRANSPORTATION CARS 9 Pfitlenner Wagon Belvedere 2 Door 61' DODGE 60 PLYMOUTH '61 VOLVO 544 ..$ 595 Wooon Wagon 5? CADILLAC 60 RAMBLER "64 OLDS conv., 4-ipeed $1550 . . 4 Door Claulc 4 Door Sedan Wagon FROM $IOG IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 63 CHRYSLER 65 RAMBLER •61 FORD conv ...:..„ _....$ 550 4 Door < Door Sedan 64 PLYMOUTH '65 CHRYSLER '59 LINCOLN Continental ..$ 295 SoorU Fury New Yorker 65 PLYMOUTH 45 MERCURY Monrhouth County's largest ConvtrtlbH 2 Door 63 CHRYSLER . 42 OPEL , NEW LEFT QVERS , > 300 convtrliMe Wagon : 60 MERCURY 61 IMPERIAL Crown 2 Door '65 M.G. MOO, ...... :„...„„..„._..:$ 1595 BUICK DEALER 2 Door 61 CHRYSLER 64 IMPERIAL • Wlndior 4 Door Sedan KITSON 1 Dow •65 GRIFFITH „..'. $4350 60 FORD 86 CHRYSLER Falcon J7I H.P. 60 FALCON 63 FORD , 4 Door ' flalcon ConverNole BOB WHITE CHEVROLET NO MONEY DOWN UP TO 5 YEARS TO PAY HIGHWAY 36 EATONTOWN MONMOUTH MOTORS Naxt to Motar Vahlela Inipactlon Station / BAYSHORE CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH "KINS OF THE IMPORTS" ""'• Av#. 741-4100 N.w Shrawibury HWY. 35 542-2414 EATONTOWN ADS PRODUCE QUICK RESULTS Place Your Ad Today! Call . •, ... AND THEY ARE INEXPENSIVE TOOl 741-6900 AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE HELP WANTED-FEMALE HELP WANTED-FEMALE THE DAILY, REGlSf-R Friday, January 21, j?66—21 ATTENTION" CAR" BUYERS—— MUST HBU, MOVING -• lMl Valiant 1W VOUg»WAOBH KABMAMN am Til—3 U» — RID, EXCELLENT Trouble ending the car you w«nt? 200. Excellent running condition. Coupe. ReS. 12,000 mile*. Call «7l-0oi CONDITION CALL HELP WAWTED-MALE HELP WANTEX»-MAIJ_ We stock 40 to 50 cars at all »lmM Loa4td, Asking ISTJ. T41-1WI. ti after g:30 p.m. U2-UM Saturday Interviews CHI OASIS MOTORS p" WOO m! i960 FORD — V-B ranch wagon. Four 1863 BLUB V0U-!WA__N —Sutt rool OOSVAIR — Bolder 'USS. Hick ehlfl. ». SayrevJIIe. EASY CREDIT TBBMS. door. white-wall Urn. Very good cori- radio. New tnow tires, .Good condition Loaded. Immaculate condition. Sacrt- ALL DAY enson D0WN- FAST «* owilltiun. Call 342-4878. HBO. Call BU-2282 a»er Sunday. rtce. call 842-1466. DESIGN IBS! CHEVROLET IMPALA SUPER 1963 BIBOATNE CHEVROL-T — Pour 1885 PLYMOUTH STATION WAGOt 'reduction Operator! Soldanrt 1TOBT — Low mllMM, four->pee UNT Tally alr.eondUlaatd. n'ar f u lorlr HHitt Ca; WANTED TO RENT IS THE MOST! all tranwoMatlM. » Leror IMaJa, Rad , eantalnlaa about Bank. Call T4I-1DR or T4T4SI*. 1117 BELSHAW AVE.«'.•..,, .aUTONNWH Isar. HMUD. SWW3 TtmsS 0!l fO'JR ttOOU -mrurrJ-KH - Call M3-WS1 aMrtmctit. Rid BaiUt ta Rarltan Town- EXCEPT FOR THE RENT... THRI8 ROOUS AND BATK — Newly YOU AMD decorated. KUdletowil area. By af- KD0 BUNK — Thrti r»»mi. Hail DUl* are*. t*or Afrll 1 ottujlaacj by poatmtnt only. 747-4JS5. T • "iM •water. sH. Adulu, No PIU. Oil ling business ewipit. Write full, ii- THAT'S THE LEAST! «.-*) and aftar g.-». 3*1.7*7?. "XJXF »«t »», Rtd Btnlt RED BANK - Brueh aM MaaiKm ARTlUtNT T#» liiW dttlB Avu.. spacious er»»• an'l * twc-bedfOomlUNFlnmajaiD uuee room* and balii Writ or four room apartment. Red 239 SPRING ST.. RED BANK 4-Room It 5-Room Suitei atarUns at auo. Av- In Red Bank, ats par month, Ineiudea ROAD ST., SHRaTtTSaUitr — Bant UnfurnlaHid. Within walltlnsr &. S Api'BiHolly' ntthentchtrT VlUateCaurt _al.l iit.lltiM. ;Day, T414S7I. Bvetlmg' roen ofNci. Call 747-MM or unet Cilhollo ehnreh. Call 3»4a». call Mr. Sam LomaUO. T41-HU. 741-57M. ind family aestre M ke<- Uj«a kltshtn, WrWIv r»oin»oin.-6atSH. 5 room house. IS Minute drlvl from and marry trtraj. connoltBnoltBt u M. STUDIO U2BEDR00M APARTMENTS WVT! OSTIOE - In troMsalonal 1 t«Jj,, 8.11 us,, raett «« FROM $115 ulldlnt. storttulal aptea opUonal. HolmatI Bill LOW. WIU take toM t «,«<» ur5?r APARTMENTS APARTMENTS c&ra of met home. tM-wos.' nik aprirslsal for flat aala. 6UI in- Ueerrlc He*Ma« wlrii TO INCLUDE AIR CONDITIONEK WMM. Reem ikan»oiter» .' Cm TUB IDEAL INDOTTRIAL SITE FURNISHED QUIET ROOM SELL LAM ARIA - atx nan rwek. Including Heat and Cookinj 6tt With modern offleti, two-car is rat' writer. Not Illtp In. Write "B. • Madam f iKrrlt Llvln. room- with flrlBlaet Duuf Huge rooms. Formol dining roorm and Incomt po-optrty. Centrally located S30, Red Bank. ... ram, kitche.,, two bedroom, twa in Red SMlTaita. SW.O0*. WEART- • Flemiiest ItetMe Water Ht«tls» lit every oportmtn'. Eiwrirnus. walk- WE HAVE an sriromr oc t«o» fldl »tht: fayroomfamily'room. Tw^MTw^Mrwuitr T eUXTH AOBN07. RttBM. 1DJ Wprotpect. i loounc for two or four bed- Kfiutdd porchoch. OOn m utt e Alr-candirleniag In closets. Each tulle hot private MTONTOWN rout St.. Red Bank. T«-g40. rooms. Call ua far fast action ta. i'~" iwalf. 3.6: ROOHE. TrlaStarT front and reor tntrancca. A/cater IODIIHK orncii *MI MOT — toraur homt rantad. THX' Bl Brian . ltd., cam $* tts^ • Lert* Clesel* AOENOT. IU, tt. Mlddletown. SI1-1 TV- anttnrra. BullMfl wall ovtfl and Jnoen PI., Red Bank. Call BEAUTIFUL .THRBB - BB •12 Cn. Ft. Refrioereter -Ita 7tr-K2O. RANCH — With ittukM SsasraM Deer Freezsr counltrrop rangt, MtrtulM from Heatorably nrlctd. 1W TmSitSwS MmrMuth Shopping Canttr . , . FURNISHED ROOMS aria. On 4u!K strut Mutt ba lean • Ctramie Tile lathi ROOMS- HOUSES FOR RENT to bl appreciated. Owner had ta ra- Convenient to Parkway, trains and • M»dtm twatitv Ftcllltltt CUBAN, MODERN ROOMS - Private lMUe. Call IIT-tSM, afttr S ».». DUttt, ' / ( data, Jret fvf . (3 auiyauy. . H » wMjcljcjj NO rtalty ptoBlt . pltut. • • Meaty ef OfMtreat Parkin j RENTALS gar jaojatrtonn , double aeeupaacyaeeupaay. SOU,* Eltgaitt Swim Cluh and Tennll * A. OiaXHAUIMJlAL BSTATB HILL HOTEL, ftt. M. wT Kunsburs. OUTOROWN tut eultW- MODEL PHONf BEDROOM ROOM FOR RJlNT — Couple only. STATEWIDE MST, CORP. 741-3953 Ceurtt an mi Prafnftaa. BwT. 1* LtOnardo Komi trlvlltftt. RtaMruHt. Call TtT- 1*661(1 #,U| ol7-.700 (Ntxt to llua * WMta But Tarmlgal) DIAL RD. at Rout* 91, QMlurtt ' nn. pimCTIOMI: Brood tl., FROM — Cloaa to town. MM tonal (,,„ Mn it). 71M«JJ afttr « p.tn. andJUST REDUC1BD: _, ._ RaM ta lariat CRYSTAL &OKUN all dty Sunday. ixctiitnl eonjiusn. Cory . It,. rilM M Cannm Ftnl RED BANK — For buitntej wtmati, liuil Wllift. : Realtor! RTJKSOK — small five-room house, nice rMm In pleutnt turroundlnt. its, WalUnt dixant to church, ttortt, etc sari, ft**"^ Call m'lUf. h S^v'-^b&i*Ove^r 776-7714 ITLANTIO MlOHbANOS — Beautiful ONB . EFFICISKCr ROOM - Ont ss..Wnm%wnoft watlr view. Tnne bedrooms, llvlns bldraom. A r.asonable rau. call Ml- room, ttrtdayt, sartat. All convenl- MM. Atlantle HUManil. encei. LOUtTwIlh opusn. S14a,. Call «f LTOTlp - Sla-roem taut sat lat •ftw ». an-itfo. ,. .* ATTRACTIVX tflcely furnished room. Tti/M beorsoms, Idtefim, dlnlnr «a*«T Private. Llsht eooldnt. relrlllraUOn. Uylnt room and vantry. Raatar wan*: INCLUDED! UNOAU3W. — For couple. >•» rooms, Sentltmtn. Convenient. Ttt-iaR. urnlahed. 175 ptr montn. Call Aluminum oomblnatlen windam. wtli- per monl FURNISHBO ROOM — Ntar tranj- la-wall earptUna, two wMlukat* aM portatloil. Business lentlemen prtftrrtd. many extras, Walklnx aistanclTJ ta£ CENTRAL HEATING HIR CONDITIONING [OHLArfM — >">ut c-tdrooml,; bath. rnone after 9, 741-6935. at tna trains. m,7M. Call T«t-t% KING JAMES APARTMENTS Ils room, dining- roam, kltchan, 7V , basement. Beautiful vtUN JIM. OE CLEAN, NICELY fUJt- WBST SBC/RO — Lovtly' i IN EACH APARTMENT TnSRKD doae In. Oentltman pnftr- room aaiit iiveii. MItodirM a MUhtn. l Vh AND 41/2 ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE FINUY AGENCY red. 74I-«C». rtertatlorJ room nice 101. Nesr The /King, Jtmti Aptitm«nt» ara tuckad awsy In ant of Atlantit Hijhltndi quiattit raiidtntitl GAS FOB HEAT AND COOKING Raaaal EttAte HINQLE ROOMS — Clesn, comlort- SIMM* akw rtuonabla. aantitmsn pnuml trtai. A madarn ihopplng centar ii within willing dlitanct*. Bum to New Yark tnd Ntwtrk M Wallacs St.. fil-SSi Ouut. •top rtatr the tit. daily. Rail lervict It avtlliblt from tha center af town. Ktna Jtmei A»art- OOMFORTAWJC ROOM — Ne« M mtntl provida tha kind af raUxttlan that will anurt you til tha luxuriai af a truly comfertablt letcisui claiati ' ' - - ite occupancy. SA1 Mt*. Rtult BriviUias, all UtllltJU. 9 Truly itptraltd dining raami QENCT. OclUpOTt Avt.. RMianttlt. Off ttrttt natWm. ffi- • Individual frent and raar antranen i • Windowi in tvtry roam H1UCI-BEDROOM RANCH - Im- ^ CHECK OUR COMFORTS OF HOME! kedlate oceupaney. I1SS a month. • Oraam Ititchani with KELVINATOR ralrlgarttar.fratitr. GARAGES FOR RENT STERLING THOMPSON - By owner, imrieji- PRIVATE BALCONY OR PATIO • YOUR own PRIVATE ENTRANCE • Two alementtry icriaoli next door— jmt itapi KU, BRICK CAPE COD IN LITTLE ata auuMney. Foui«.M«t»»m»v «S, AND AlMCUTEt, MSAL.T0RS ir«l nmlly Idtelttn. dlaHtrtaSar trMl with an all-*vaather Thermopana and PARKING SPACE. from Eatentawit Shappinf Center loaletown , i 7 y ; - i-"-'i\:\:-;-'- • :'• ;. ' t. . •-••-•: . • Fer additional information call '"•IMM, full-betemtijti la- HAROLD E. HARRISON WALKER luilder. Dfv«lop«r . 1S«:^^» Ut'HU I3I-I20T galM offle* open Monday ftrough Saturday, • a.m. w I pjn. WALKER, ir, S : REALTOR end INS , Jimmy "Hi 19(56 THE DAILY.REGISTER WWJ5ES SAJJE 3At STATE or vtw HOUSES rot BOUSES V. ILLMENSIE mom* Scouts • ell w> K•*«• U ScouU, wu ft two-y«r troop proj- REALTOR ix &p>peui to my utl* HOUV0»EL - Janet Ktakwte The McGOWAN AGENCY fectton, by duly authentlcitai rword MTATjtf Of WILLUM T* ect. " " '"••-.,' of 6i* precMduigi lor the voluntary ECSAaKD and Judy Christiansen, Girl Scout HOLMDEL Oldest Real EiUU Firm In Colts Neck iisBoIuttou thereof by the unanimous PurauaiJt to the order of DON Troop 555, recently presented a Also visiting the nursing home :oiuent of all the stockholders, de- , CUNNINOHAM. .Surrogate of the VETS NO $ DOWN wool afghan to Mrs. Katharine were Merri. Leder, Christina Rt. 34 462-3172 Colti N«ck posited In my office, that MADISON County ot Monmouth thli day made, NON VETS $900 DOWN CHEMICAL CORPORATION * corpo- on the appHcatioo of the undersigned, Braun and Felicia Spencar. The ration, ot this State, whose principal Westley, a patient at the Holm- Like new three-bedroom, 1% bath- George Morgan and Jennie Skiff the girls were accompanied by Mri. Whan buying or Selling in Colts Neck — For quick results office is situated at No. 18 Wallace Executors of the estate of the said del Nursing Home. home. Living room, science kitch- Street, la the Borough of Red Bank, William F, Wilson, deceued, notice is bounty of Monmouth, Stat* ot New The afghan, hand-made by the Joan Braun, troop leader, and, en complete with counter-top call tht Realtor who knows the area. hereby given to the creditors of *ald lersey (Miss Vera F. Kaney beln* deceased to present to the said Ex- Mrs. Ruth Rimkuat aisistant range, wall-oven, dishwasher. he agent therein mud In charge thert- ecutors their claims under oata within COLTS NECK - FIVE ACRES WITH BROOK of, upoa, whom process may be ... —LEGAL NOTICE' leader. Family room and den, laundry served), ha* compiled with the re- i month* from thli data. Three-bedroom, two-story older home in excellent condition, 2!/$ .Dated: January tth, 196$ room, attached garage, enclosed quirements of Title 14, Corporations, NOTICE baths. Large living room with fireplace and French doors opening ieneral, of Revised Statutes of New GEORGE MORGAN TAKE NOTICE that application has lersey preliminary to the Issuing of 232-18 Conduit Avenue lu PLAN FOR BANQUET yard Assume GI mortgage. $110 onto 14' x 22' screened porch. Also includes 32' swimming pool. Rosedalt. Lor/g Island. New York jeen made to the Towm/hip Con"" « his Certificate of Dissolution. if the Townslilp of Colta Neck to FREEHOLD — Vat committee including taxes and insurance. Acreage mostly wooded with brook as back property line. Nice AND ransfer to William Munox trading as Call now (or appointment. 519,200. NOW THEREFORE, 1, the Beere- JENNIE SKIFF The Colts Neck General Store, O°u"'y meeting of St. Rose of Lima Cub location. Low taxes. $42,500. :ary ot State of the Slate of New 251 South Harrison Street Highway West, Colts Neck, N. J. the Jersey Do Hereby Certify that the East Orange. New Jeriey Plenary Retail Distribution License Scout Pack 18 was held recently TREE COVERED LOT COLTS NECK - HILLSIDE LOCATION iaid corporation did, on tht 31st day Executon heretofore Issued to William Manoz )f December, 1965. file In ray office In the Knights of Columbus. Home targe trees, not little ones. Bet- Lovely wooded, secluded Colonial with extra grounds. Cozy fire- AI«ton Beekman, Jr,, ESQ. , and Myrna Gordon trading is The i duly executed and attested consent 10 Broad Street Colls Necic General Store, County when final plans were made' for ter than new condition four-bed- place in living room and study. Four bedrooms, 2'/$ baths. Two- ,n writing to the dissolution of said Highway West, Colts Neck, N. J. corporation, executed by all the stock- Red Bank, New Jersey the annual Blue and Gold Banquet room, V/f bath home. Living car garage. Non-development. Priced well below market at Attorney iclder* thereof, which said consent Tan. 7, 14, 21. 28 S32.20 Objections, It any, should be made to be held Sunday, Fef>. 13, at room, dining room, kitchen, {41,000. ind .he record ol the proceedings Immediately In writing to Harry Crtne, aforesaid sxe now on file in my said Clerk of Uw Township of Colta NecH, the Trotters and Pacer?. Diner, 21x14' paneled family room, base- office as provided by law. NOTICE N. J. ment, attached two-car garage. COLTS NECK - SHADE TREES MONMOUTH COUNTY (Signed) Rt. 9. Charming three-bedroom ranch situated on side of hill with many IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, NURKOGATK'H COURT WILLIAM MUNOZ Transferred owner a offers im- I have hereto set my hand aiti Notice to Creditors to Present ran. H, 59.'JO Cub scouts have been invited shade trees. Rustic beamed ceiling in living room with fireplace. SKAIJ affixed my official seal, at mediate occupancy. Extras in- Claims Againut Estate to attend the annual Fattier and Good neighborhood. Non-development. Low taxes. Asking $29,900. Trenton, this 31et day of.De- ESTATE OP ALBERT W^ HAUFF- NOTICK clude dishwasher, aluminum com- cember A. D. one thousand nine MONMOUTH COUNTY Son Scout Communion Breakfast hundred and sixty-five. M.AN, DffiOKASED binations and refrigerator. Paro- Pursuant to the order of DONALD NURKOOATB'S C«UftT Feb. 6 to be hosted by St Vej- COLTS NECK — GOOD VALUE ROBERT J. BURKHAJtDT J. CUNNINGrfAM, Surrogate of the Itfollcp to Creditors to Tr«ent chial school parish. Call now, Four-bedroom two-story older home in good condition. New oil- » Secretary of State County of Monmouth, th-ls day made, <:ialim Agalnnt EnUt* ronica's Parish, Howell Township. $28,900. fired baseboard hot water heating plant. One acre lot. Prim* fan. 7, 14, 21 S3 3.81 on the application* of the undersigned, ESTATE OF MARGARET WIE- John A. Hauffm&n. Administrator o! WALL, DECElAflED. Tlie committee was apfjointed location. J27.90O. NOTICK ths estate of the said Albert W. Hauff- PumuMit to Uie order of DONALD to set up the window display at REALTORS MONMOCTH COUNT* tnan, deceased, notice U hereby given J. CUNNINGHAM, Surrogate of UII SURROGATE'S COURT to Uie credltora of s«4d deceased to Jounty of Monmoutn, this day made, Britt's store during Scout-fWeek, present lo Ui« aaid Adminittrator their on thft application of the undersigned, Feb. 6-13. William A. Taylor is 258 Newman Springs Rd. HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE Notfcft to Creditors to Preient claims under oath within six months Robert Gerard Fullam, Acting Execu- Claims Against Estate from this date. ' tor of the estate ol the said Marga- chairman. .'-••• L1N0RO5T — In the shade of the o!d ESTATE OF WILLIAM t BUCHAN- Dated: January 7, IBM r&t Wlewall, deceased, notice is here- Red Bank 747-3000 CHARMER apiile trips. Buflder's own hoiwe. AN SR. DECEASED JOHN A. HAUFFMAN, by giver/ to the creditors of said de- Woods acreage here. Hubby will like Pursuant to the order of DONAU) 406-13th Avenm, N. E. ceased to present to the said Acting Brand new listing. Eight-year old nearness to Garden State Parkway. J. CUNNINGHAM. Surrogate of the St. Petersburg, Florida, Executor their claims under oath wlth- 24 Hours 7 Days L itx months from this date. SCOUT FILM SHOWN lovely ranch with three bed- Wife/, nearness to church, schools, County of MonraouLh, this day made, Administrator shoppinK. Ranch. Living room, fire on the application of the undersigned, David C. Furman. Esq. Dated; January 14tii, 1066 MATAWAN - "Light on the rooms. Living room and paneled place, dJnlr.'g room, den or third bed- Deborah B. Robertson, one ol the Ex- Box 765, ROBERT GERARD FULLAM Red Bank, N. J, 33 West Avenue Mountain," a Girl Scout.color dining room. Kitchen, bath, room, two baths, full basement. Two- ecutors 1of the estate of. Uie said Wil- HOUSES FOR RENT HOUSES FOR SALE car attached gajage. Look butt for liam I. ' Buchanan, Sr., dec eared, no* Attorney Malvereie/ New York film made during Scout Roundup breezeway, attached garage, full J-a.900. GLAZKBROOK ASSOC., INC. tlce is hereby given to the creditors Jan. 14, 21, 38, Feb. 4 127.60 AcUng Executor Meisrti. Reussllle, CornwcM, at Farragut, Idaho, last July, COLONIAL4ZED CAPE COD - basement. Large plot. Anchor Your Favorite Rumson Realtor. 45 W,ot said deceased to present to the River R:.., Rumson, 842-1700. said one of the Executors their claims NOTICE Mausner carotenuto & McGann Seven rooms, two baths, four fenced-in yard. Country atmo- under oath within »ix montlis from 34 Broad Street was shown by Mrs. William' Win- REDDEN AGENCY sphere. Dead-end street, wonder- CAPE COD ON ONE ACRE LOT - this date. MONMOUTH COUNTY Red Bknk, New Jersey drow, field advisor, during the bedrooms, fireplace. Basement, With wooded area in Tear. IB' living Dated: December 22, 1965 HUMlOtiATK'8 COIIRT Attorneys 741-9100 garage. Nicely shaded. $18,900. ful for children. Hurry, asking room, dining a-rea, laundry ares, two DEBORAH B. ROBERTSON, NoUct* to Creditors to PreieDt Jan. 21, 28. Feb. 4, 11 IM.52 first meeting of the riew= year $19,900. bed-rooms and tiled batli, and room for 94 Pnrlcy Lane, (lairiiH Against YMIt NOTICE of the Neighborhood Association expansion for two more and bath. FHA Bed Bank, N. J, ESTATE OF SYDNEY H. MC- Realtors — Inturort INCOME PROPERTY - Two- . MONMOUl'H COUNTV of Girl Scouts. financing available. Low down pay- One of th« Executors LEAN, DECEASED, KURKOflATE'K COURT family home in excellent condi GRACIOUS LIVING ment. Priced $15,900. McAUBTEK Messrs, ReussIUe Cornhvell, Purauant to the order of DONALD Notice to Creditors to .'resent Member of Red Bank tion. Slate roof. Conveniently lo- is yours in this four-bedroom ' -iTSUGX, REALTORS, 109 E. River MauanW, Carotenulo & McGann, J. CUNNINGHAM, Surrogate of the Cindy Dorl of Senior Troop 146, I., Rumson. 843-lflM. • * 34 Broad Street, County U Monmoulh, thl> day made, Claims Agalnit Estat« Multiple Listing Service cated to transportation, shopping home. Large living room and din- ESTATE OF JAMBS V. HAftESCA. Keyport, who attended the Round- Red Bank, N. J. on the application of the undersigned, I>BCEABED. and churches. $22,500. ing room is carpeted. Modern, RUMSON COLONIAL - Excellent con- Attorneys Dorothy M. McLean, Phyllis M. Bulm Pursuant to tlie order of DONALD up, was present at the meeting FAIR HAVEN BAND BOX - d it Ion. Living; room, full dining room, Sec. 31, Jan. 7, 14, 21 I2fl. e-r and The Monmouth County Nation roomy kitchen. Recreation, room paneled den. Three bedrooms, two al Bank Red Bat% Executors of thi JL CUNNINGHAM, Surrogate of the and related her experiences and Ideal for newlyweds or retired RED BANK — Nine-room Dutch County of Monmouth, this day made, and two full baths. Attached ga- baths. Porch, basement. Lovely plant' NOT1CF. estate of ths said Sydney H. McLean, an the appllca,t!oti of the undtrslprta, exhibited her pot latches and couple. Immaculate two-bedroom Colonial. 5-6 bedrooms. Studio Ins and trees. Near achools, buses. MONMOUTH COUNTY deceased, notice la hereby given tc W Robert Warwick, Administrator ol rage and full basement. All on Low taxes, A real Rumson buy HUBROOATF/B COURT the creditors of said deceased to pre- mementos. It was announced that bungalow. Cheerful living room, ?i/, baths. Patio. Basement, ga- sent to the said Eieculors their tht estate of the said James V. Ma- nicely landscaped half acre. Lo- *33,HW. THE LOW AGENCY, Realtors, Notice U> Creditors to Present reaca, deceased, notice is'h&re&y &iv- Jennifer Nebus, Matawan Senior dinette, modern kitchen, tilec rage. $29,900. cation is convenient to schools 63S River Rd., Fair Haven. 741-4177. Clalm> ArnlDst Estate claims under oath within six months en to the creditors of said deceased ESTATE OF1 HELEN D. BMITH, Irom this date. Troop 312, who also had attended bath, full dry basement, garage and buses. Only $23,000. KAKLY POSSESSION — Owner trans- Dated: December 34th, 1905 to present to the said Administrator OLDER DUTCH COLONIAL - DECEASED. theJr claims under oath within ilx the Roundup, is available certain Low taxes. Asking $18,900. ferred. See this lovely home. 22 It x Purauant to the order of DONALD DOROTHY M. MCLEAN months from this date. In very exclusive area, Four 13 ft. living foom. Dirtlng room. J. CUiNNINGiaAM, Surrogate of the 33 Lenape Trail Screened porch, with {lagstone floor. Dated: December 29th. 1D65 afternoons to attend scout meet, large bedrooms. Large, forma County ot Monmouth, this day on&de, Middletown, New Jenny. ST. LEO'S PARISH — Four bed- LAWLEY AGENCY Electric kitchen with dining- urea, on the' application of the utvdejrHgned, PHYLLIS M. BULMSJR , W. ROBERT WARWICK ings and report on her-experi- rooms, !•/£ baths, paneled den dining room. Living room with dlshwaaher. Pine paneled ftimll? room 3.3 Cedar Avenue Geanffianna 8. C. Foster, Sole Eiecu- 17 KthgtiBhe-r Drive Long Branch. New Jersey ences. fenced yard with woods in rear, Fireplace. Four-car garage. $35,- Established 1932 23 ft x 15 ft. Four large bed-rooms, tris oT the estate of the Sflid Helen Middletown. New Jersey and three tiled baths. Basement, Two-car D. Smith deceased, ttotice 1* hereby THE MONMOUTH COUNTY Administrator Excellent condition. $21,500. 000. garage, over half an acre. OUT- given to the creditors of said deceased NATIONAL BANK, Red Sink Meson. Warwick & Warwick Mrs. Richard Getshali, Neigh- Realtors - Insurors STANDING VALUE! ONLY $24,900. 434 Broadway to present to the aald Sole Executlrx 63 Broad street Long Branch, N»w J*ney borhood chairman, announced CHARMING HOME IN RED STANLEY K. DOWNfl, REALTOR, their claims under oath within Biz Red Bank, Ntw Jersey ROLAND PIERSON Shrewsbury, 741-1017. months from this date. Executors Attorneys that the Neighborhood Tias- re- .BANK — Within walking distance Multiple Listings Dated: January 11th, 1066 Burton T, Doremus Esq. J*n. 7, 14, 21, 28 «7.60 ATmACTIVlB CUSTOM BUILT mod*, JT Mechanic Street served a medium sized booth to everything. Living room, din ern ranch, Suitable for family starting OEORGIANNA S. C. FOSTER, NOTICE ' \ AGENCY 741 - 6262 W) Campbell Avenue Rea Bank. New Jeney MONHOUTH (OIINTV for the HAODown which wiH be tog room, modern kitchen, lovely or retiring. Living room, kiicher/, two Belford, New Jersey Attorney breakfast room overlooking gar- bedrooms. Tiled bath. Garage, play- Deo. 31. Jan. 7, 14, 21 X3S.6S SURROGATE'S COURT available for displaying various REALTOR room In basement Frontage on two Sole Executrix Notice to Crfdltors to Present den. Upstairs sitting room, three Francis W. Liwley Claimi Ajalnst Estate projects' from the troops of the "MODERN THINKING" etreets, $18,000. JOHN I- MINUGH, 100 Hiyhwy No. 35 ESTATE DE- bedrooms, 1J4 baths, possible 840 Newman Springs Rd. Realtor, 35 Rumson Hd., Rumaon. Dial NOTICE MARY CLANCT, Matawan Neighborhood Associa- Very unuiual houae with plenty ol 842-3500. Ked Bank, New Jersey MONMOUTH COUNTY CEA8ED. fourth hedroom on third floor. Thormopane windows across the front. Attorney Purauant to the order of DONALD tion. "';'•• Lincroft Center Huge fireplace. Lovely garden with Jan. 21, 28, Feb. 4, 11 127.60 BunnoGATE'8 count J. CUNNINGHAM, Surrogate of the Perfect condition. $28,500. Ivy covered wall. Thre* doors from SPACE-43PACE-6PAOE — A lot O NMIc« lo Creditors to Present County of Monmouth, this/day made, 741-7575 tha river. Just reduced to S28.500. room far the growing family In thli NOTICE Claims Against Eitatu Mrs. Leon Christinat, HAO- apactous Red Bank home situated on on the application of the underiifned, BOATSHOW SPECIAL! Custom MONMOUTH COUNTY ESTATE OF KATHERINB C. Ol- Theodore D, PariorS, Sole Executor Down Neighborhood chairman the bus line and within walk-Ing dli HURIUlGATE'S COURT LOIY. DECEASED of the estate of the ,sald Mary Clancy, built ranch on beautiful Shrews- MEMBER "GOOD THINKING" tance of town, Fdv« or six bedrooms, Notlca to CredJtorn to Treunl Pursuant to the order of DONALD will schedule the manning of the 2H baths and modern kitchen. Early deceased, notice 1B hereby given to tht bury River. 26' living room over- OF RED BANK This brand new .luting is highly recom- Claims Agmlnti Estate • J. CUNNINGHAM, Surrogate of the creditors of said deceased to preaenl booth. It was noted that aU girl mended! Split level. Six spacious room I occupancy. $29,000, THE DOWSTRA to' OF MAX BLUMEiNSCHEIT, County ,06 jvlonmoitth, this, day made, to the said Bole Executor their claims looking the water, fireplace, din- MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE and bath — gameroom and half bath AOSNCY, 91 E. Front St., Red Bank. DECEASED. on the appllcaUori of the undersigned, und er oath wlthd n si x months from scouts in uniform will foe admit- ing room, three bedrooms, den on lower level, garage. A dream 741-8700. Pursuant to the order of __,.,. Phyllis Manzo and Elizabeth Ann Gl-this date. of a yard! Moat convenient location loly, Exeoutrlces^ ot ths estate of th ted free to HAODown.. •,- •• or fourth' bedroom, two tiled J. CUNNINGHAM, Burroffate ol tin Dated: January, 7, 1968 GRAND BAHAMA ISLAND to schools and buses. $22,000. County of Monmoulh, this day made, said Ratherina C. Glloly deceased, no- baths, screened porch, two-car LOTS AND ACREAGE tice Is hereby given to the creditors THEODORE D. PARSONS, Mrs, Getshali announced that ELLA WILTSHIRE on the application of the Undersigned, 19 FozMIl Drive, garage Bulk-heading. Over three FREEPORT-LUCAYA Ruth A. Pru&kiewlce, Bole Executrix of said deceased to present to the Little Sliver, N. J. the annual Council meeting is Realtor ONE bOT TO LAItr.E TRACTS — of tht estate ot the said Mafc Blumen- said Executrices their claims undei Sole Executor acres Many extras. Absentee Tax-free community. No real 1480 Ocean Ave. Sea Bright Middletown, Colts Neck, Marlboro, •chelt, deceased) rJbtlc* is hereby given oath within .six months from this dati scheduled in April and a'nom- MULLANEY REJALTY, INC., 6714151. Dated: December 30th, 1&63 , . Messrs. Parsons, Cantona, owner has priced to sell below estate taxes. No income taxes. 812-0004 to the creditors of said deceased' to Blair k Warren, inating committee has been ap- Open 7 Days BUILDING LOT — In Hazlet, lOOxUO, present to .th«, sail Sole Executrix PHYLLIB" MANZO IS Wallace Street, appraisal value at $45,500. No personal property tax and no their claims under oath within six Laird Road pointed to select the nominee for city water. 13.000. Call rColta Neck. K • J. Red Bank, N. J. MINIATURE ESTATE months from this date. inheritance taxes until 1990. Rec 284-2925. Dated: January ISHh,- 1966 EUZABETH ANN Attorneys Neighborhood chairman for next Rt. 35, 301 Maple Ave. reation, residential, commercial Excellent three-bedroom home with liv- NEW MONMOUTH — 120x200 — Eatab. Ely Road ' Jan, 14, 21, 28, Feb. < 528.53 ing room, dining room and kitchen. RUTH A. PRU8KIEWICZ year as well as to narrje. the and industrial. Homes. Lots and lixhed -neighborhood. All utilities avail- 22 Main Street Holmdel. N. J. NOTICE Corner Bergen PI. Nestled among the trees. Complete able. Near all facilities. Call 671-062B, . Port Monmoulh, New Jersey Executrlces eight delegates and two •-alter- Acreage. Retirement and Invest- privacy, yet within walking distance after 6. Alexander Levchuk,, Esqq. MONMOUTH COUNTS RED BANK I to all schools and transportation. Under Bole Executrix 57 West Main Street SURROGATE'S COURT nates to the Annual Council meet- ment property. Kissed by the Howard A. Roberta, Esq. Notice to Creditors to Present 120,000. Don't heitllate. Call SNYDEIl ONLY PLOT IN OCBANPORT ON 8 TJndall Road Freehold. N. J. ing to represent the 545 registered Call or write for a beautiful blue waters of the Gulf REALTORS, 671.2590. CITY SEWER AND ALL UTILITIES — Attorney Claims Asatnst Estate % acre wooded. Adjacent Fort Mon* Mlddietown, New Jersey Jan. 7, Ji, 21, 3S 531,2S ESTATE OF MARGARET-W. BAU- scouts of the Neighborhood. Mrs. complete brochure Stream. Phone or write for 28 mouth. Asking $7.000. Phone 542-2827. Attorney ER, DECEASED, $14,990-$ 124 MONTH Jon. 31, 28, Feb. 4, 11 $27.90 Pursuant to the order of DONALD Richard Polity will chair this page color brochure. ONE ACRE C-F LAND — loc NOTICE Exclusive Agents Loyely six-room ranch type home. Hot J CUNNINGHAM, Surrogate of th» committee with Mrs,].Mui8w Evenings and Sundays water heat, Permastone and aluminum half-mile from Bell Labs. M kid I down NOTICB Notice Is hereby given to the legal County of Monmouth, this day made, For Monmouth ana ocean count! Twp. Asking $5,000. Oail 747-3S54. voters of Ihe School District of the ELWOOD A. ATlMSTKONa AOENCY •tdlng, fully insulated. 100x135' lot with An ordinance entitled "AN ORDI- Monmouth Regional High School Boar on the application of the undereUned, Quinn, Mrs. James Bffnft^-Mrs. Realtor Itangf. FHA approved. Call 787-6600, NANCE AUTHORIZING THE A.CQUJ Frederick W. Sauer, Jr.. Sole Execii' 741.9204 THE KIRWAN CO., REALTORS. 16( SnUON BY PURCHASE OR CON of Education, In the County of Mon-tor of the estate of the said Mar- William Groft and Mr^rjohn JJ» Prospect Ave. Little Sllvei COMMERCIAL PROPERTY mouth, New Jersey, that the annual 7illV>l Hwy. 36, W. Keansburg-, (AH prlcea DEMNATION IN THE MAMNEK PRO- garet W. Sauer deceased, notice is Conlon assisting. wbject to Government approval). VIDED BY LAW OF CERTAIN LANDS meeting of the. legal voters of said hereby given to th« creditors of said HOLMDEL FOR ASSISTANCE IN SELLING — IN THE BOROUGH OF BHUiEWSBUR' District for the eleotlor/ of 3 membej deceaseti to present to the iald Sou IT WON'T LAST Your commercial property call MUL? of the Board of Education and foi 0M.Y EIGHT TEARS OLT>. THREE RUMSON COLONIAL IN CONNECTION' WITH THE RBLO other nurpo!ies will be held at 4:00p.m Executor their claims under oath with' BEDROOM TRAMS RESIDENCE Holmdel TWP. Three bedroomi, H LANEY REALTY, INC.. 671-5151, CATION OF THE ENTRANCE FROM TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 1, 1866. In six months from this date. Mrs. Richard Polity, township FAMILY SIZED KITCHEN, RECRE- baths, 21' living room, deluxe eaMn Handsome letllni, tall tree). Walk to NEW JERSEY STAT1E HIGHWAY NO. Dated: December 23rd. 1965 school, shopping, buses, Park, beach, IDEAL (or elngle or group profes- 35 TO OBItE PLACE AND AP The polls will remain open until 9 troop organizer, announced the ATION ROOM. GARAGE PLOT kitchen, delightful family fun center, at- sionals. Large, older Colonial building p.tn. and as much longer as may bi FREDERICK W. SAUER, JR. lOO'llSO'. FENCING. ASKINd I1C8O0. tached larageV Note: excellent financ- and dock tor residents only, one of a PROPRIATENG THE SUM OF'*4,200.(X 832 Poo If Avenue, formation of two new Brownie kind at 433,900. Don't wait. Call todiy. recently moderniT.efi, In prominent lo IN PAYMENT THEREOF" was pre necessary to permit all legal vote-n ing available to qualified buyer*. Lei's cation with private parking. As kins then present to cast their ballots. Hazlet, N." J, HEW,SEVEN-ROOM RANCHER. TWO move now for only 119,200. S39.000. Immediate occupancy. CRO sented for Introduction and first read Messrs. Arnone A Zager troops, one headed by Mrs. Char- A. FRED MAFFEO AGENCY Ing- on Tuesday, January 4, I960 by the The meeting; will be held ami n 343 Broad Street BATHS. BASEMENT. TWO-CAR OA- STERLING THOMPSON WELL AGENCY, 83 Riverside Ave., the legal voters of the School District lotte !>mith with Mrs. Carol Far- KAOE. ONE AORE PLOT. DECORATE 569 River Rd. Fair Haven 741-9333 Red Bank. 711-4030. Mayor ajifl Council of the Borough of Red Bank, N. J., AND ASSOCIATES, REALTORS Shrewsbury «nd on January 18, 1966will vote at the respective pollln( Attorneys ley as co-leader and another un- TO SUIT.. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCV. Hwy. 34, Matawan 566-0400 MIDDL2T0WN — Bt, Mary's Paiiah. was finally adopted and approved. places stated below. IKICB COUNTRYSIDE ATMOSPHERE. Four-bedroom Colonial Split on dead- Dec. 31, Jan. 7, 14, 21 329.6- der the leadership of Mrtj, Ellie ONLY 131,900. end atreet, *£ acre with apple trees FREDERIC MESSINA. K From the BDrough of Eatontown: COLTS NECK and awimmlnjt pool, 24' living room REAL ESTATE WANTED Shrewibury Borough 1 member will be elected for thre, NOTICE Marotti and Mrs. Ceil Noga, co- ATTEST; yea,!-*;. MONMOUTH COUNTY NJW/J JWR-BEDRO01I CENTER Two-story modified Cape Cod. with wall-to-wall carpeting, separate HELP — ACTION! Prom the Borough of New Shrews- RUBItOGATE'S COURT leader. .' l dining room, fully equipped kitchen, Jean W. Fabry, Clerk Four years old. \ /i acres, four par/Bled recreation room with protes- HELP us; nur 12 salespeople need Jan. 31 jc.76 bury: Notice lo Cif dltori to Preient listing on your home. 1 member will be elected for Mirei Clalim Against Estate The Parent-Teachers New Shrewsbury GOP Dines, Dances Feb. 5 Um for Yoursttf Wliy iv«ryonf'< Going «• 1 NEW SHREWSBURY — Sena- Feb. 5, at 8 p.m. in the Cobble- BONANZA BURGER tor and Mrs. Richard R. Stout stones, Rt. 35, Middletown. will be guests of honor at New Stan Fox, a member of the Shrewsbury Republican Club's club's board of directors, is CHARLEY CLUNA'S |^Jr- COMPlETESIZZUlr SIRLOIN annual dinner-dance Saturday, dinner chairman, ' Home of the Bring the family to enjoy a full Hickory Charcoal Steak evening of unhurried dining I ... at the Highlands Thcr* Is a different* .. . th« proof Is In th« tatingl RECREATION CENTER in pleasant surroundings. 103-07 BAY AVE. HIGHLANDS We also cater to Entertainment—'Tues. thru Sat. 872-1149 • SALES MEETINGS * BEA SCOTT at th« Piano •SPEOAL-tUT FLAVORFUL ^ • BUSINESS LUNCHEONS naxjiKGTBAK LOOK FOR THE BOWLING PIN and Friday and Saturday •IDAHO BAKED POTATO 4 • COMPANY DINNERS • ELEANOR SHERRY TRIO •CfllSPBONANZAMlM) < For Reservations Call 542-2744 •TEXASTOACT J* . Beginning Wed., Jan. 26 BUSINESSMAN'S LUNCHEON DAILY 11:30 to 2:30 BONANZ^SIRLOIN PIT #251 IS ENTERTAINMENT 7 DAYS A WEEK 3 NIGHTS A WEEK Dinners wrvtd 8 p.m. to 11 p.m^-Kitckm tteud Sim. Optn 7 Days 11:30 A.M. to 8:30 P.M.' .,'* Nut W.MJ.—The "VICK-TERS" SHREWSBURY AVENUE South bd «f H I. Alrpwt . Cd) 741 • 9774 MUSIC SATURDAY and SUNDAY By WALT KELLY POGO ANDY CAPP By REG SMYTHE I DONT'OLOOUT MUCH t*»E FOR EAST AN1 WEST/ MICKEY MOUSE By WALT. DISNEY BUriW^toBwn^—InioU. ^ '''•???'.*.-* '.&&%&. h STEVE ROPER By, SAVNDERS and OVERGARD STEVE ROPER By SAVNDERS and OVERGARD YES, YES/ I WILL MEET WU-IN FRONT RIGHT/-BUTREMEMBER/ >m ROPEUf'-TMSWWfic. IS OUT ON HIS', /lUSEE WU A5AIM IN ABOUT MOW FOLLOW ME CAREFULLY, *1 "INSAVIWGS. OF THE BANK--AND TAKE .TELL NOBODY ABOUT THK/ iS M/KSS MMIA/A19SXX, MRS; NOWW ' yam CITY TRUSTS US. ROBERTS'/ THE BltlS TOOUH OFFICE IF THE CROOK POUNP OUT •'1MUSTSPBAK ^L. CAM I HELP BRAMCH OPENS AT 9AJH./ **- r- ID BE MARKED/ VOU ARE HELPING TO PUT BE THERE W¥TIH6/-rAN[> HIM BEHIND BARS-HOT DRAW OUT 45090/ ONLY ymi, BUT YOlttWIFE AND SOM,WILL BE IM6REAT DAM6ER/ THEN THE F0R6ER COMES TO CASH THE BAD CHECK OKI ME-AHD YOU ARREST HIM-AN& v I GET #25.000 REWARD ? NUBBIN By /Wf NUBBIN By JIM BURNETT and GEORGE CRENSHAW. A , JUST PIPN^T MAKE: |T veKV PWJN / (500P , ' F/ MORNlNSf HOWARBVCHJ- TOPAY? MARY WORTH SAUNDEftS and KEN ERNST MARY WORTH By ALLEN SAVNDERS and KEN ERNST COULD I ill WHAT MY SEVEK-OW SENTENCE WEa~ THERE ARE HUIO!-MI5$ YE5-I60TH0ME., 15 ONLY HALF ttKVEP, LORI.' WRITTEN 50 FAR? 50ME QUESTIONS-" VAN DOREN SPEAKING- ABOUT I5AUNUTK AGO.'- SOMEHOW, I BOftJEX W WMWp OH- FRANWY, I'M A5 EXCITED -•ANbJUNOtASKWR ABOUT VOUR. FIRST M/FHOHE 15 RINGING, !THAT MUSIC! ABOUT THB5ERIE5 AS TIME OFF FOR 6000 K1LUN6INTHE. DUK.E!~TAKE OFF VDUR WHERE. ON EARTH ARE YOU 1 WAS ABOUT THE FIRST BEHAV10R!.-5COUrt MARKEt- WRAPS! -THE. MANUSCRIPT Y> CAU.INS FROM? WTERSfltW I tYER. iit0UH scoar, OH THW TABLE—BY MY A WHILE BEFORE 160 rm us THE PHANTOM By LEE F4LK THE PHANTOM By LEE WALK 5OWUAAADEIT; ESCAPED \ PIRATE TCWN-OFF- , '-TO THE SU/MS OF \\- By CEORGE RIVETS By GEORGE SIXTA VOUJUST CAN'T ASKING SCRATCH. VOURSELF TOO , WITH SHOES ON. MUCrV/ MARK TRAIL By £D DODD MARK TRAIL By ED DODD FLAGLER'S PLANE YOU AND CAROL GO GST (WC. IS IN TROUBLE... HURRy...HE MIGHT PANIC/ AMP THE WHOLE BURRO HERP IS . STAMPEPINS/ , FLACLER RAILS TO PULL UP IN •TIME, ANP THE EXPLOBION SENDS ROCKS RIPPING THROUGH HIS PLANE , were represented by Ed- At «*«« war i» ami mm ciO tor as aMMqnti Cluster Awarded n»mt4 M * defendant Mi (keen Is <*W «« W. Wise, it. B*4 Rank, In 1* «&tean awlyds other boy with Whom f fupervidofi «*« tkt fiitng of the tidt, tar soring natim, la Rough Play Verange allegedly' wt's gr»p-i resUtrattOD win take plate Taen „ AbriPte for - inteiraediaMf -to al»e 1 pling, Ronald La Montagite, Adu}t School day anrf-Wednesday from 1 (of pg Results In and his father, Adrian La Mon- planned,. The oil painting clasi FORT lflONMOUTH - Cap*. p.m. it the high ichool. ' < will be enlarged to an art work- tague; 2 Chestnut Ridge, Hatlet. William V. Bogart of 31-B Lake- Mr. Lewis was said to have Will Open Th* advisory board met recent- shop and furniture refinithing in- view Ter., Eatontown, has been Court Case ly arid {drew up a list of sug- to antiquing. A course in. British decorated with a first oak-leal FREEHOLD — A rough-house gested courses. These include old and American novels i,s also con- cluster to the Air Medal for dis- Wonian Admits on the grounds of the Indian Hill On March 1 favorites which were ottered in templated. tinguished service as an aviator School at Holmdel, which caused Possessing Drugs NEW SHREWSBURY — lilt the fall term: Bridge for begin- Back on the schedule for the in more than 25 missions over injuries to one pupil, resulted in dtte for the opening of the spring ners, sodal dancing for beginners FREEHOLD — Mrs. Evelyn spring term are golf, star gaiing hostile territory in Viet Nam last a Superior Court law suit yester- km of Monraouth Regional Adult and intermediates, dressmaking, spring and summer. Mansfield, Church St., Belford, and ABC steno script. day. pleaded guilty yesterday to pos- School has been set for Tuesday, dram* workshop, fencing for be- Capt. Bogart is now attending ginners, gourmet cooking, tennis,' There are two new entries be- The injured boy, Joseph Ver- session of marihuana in Middle- Mart* l, according to Misj Char- the Signal School's advanced lotte Hohenstein, director. bade typing and upholstering. ing considered for the spring ange, and his father, Anthony town Township last Oct. 26. term. They are guitar playing course for officers. His first oak- Verange, sued the Board of Edu- Monmouth County Judge Ed T»» term wjll run 10 weels A-popular *oune last ttrm was and a current events discussion leaf cluster signifies he has won cation and a teacher, Robert ward Jf. Ascher will sentence her ttirouih May 10, except for April punched-card data processing. group center on South Asia. Lgwis, for negligence. Also the Air Medal twice. Friday, Feb. 18. Top Quality Martex "Luxor" Towels and Rugs Siije Rag. SALE COMPANY 27x50" Bath Towel 4.00 3.00 XllU»Y UU • a» «*H« 'KICK TOWN .16Jc32" Guoit Towel ,.2.00. 1,80 :i3kl3" Face Cloth .._ 80 ,70 ' 20x34" T»rry Bath Mat 3.50 2.50 A truly luxurious towel — extra thick, 10ft and absorbentl Rosebud, Lemon, Bitter Olive, Black Pearl, Lavender, Antique Gold, Platinum, Shad- ow Green, Butterscotch, Fawn, Blue Mist, plus other new, exciting shades. . • • • Matching "Luxor" Bath Rugs, Lids Six* Reg. SALE SALE 21x36" ..5.50 450' 17x24" „.. 3.50 3.OO Lids ...... 2.25 2.00 sign peautiful "Plantation Rose" Site . Reg. SALE 24x46" B«th Towel 2.30 1.80 16x28" 6u«t Towel . 1.40 1.20 12x12" hcttfofh - ..65 .55 11x18" Fln«.rflp 70 .60 You ara certain to f«el elegant when uilng these toft, plushy Martex tarry towels. Light paittl rossi on piquant pastali ar« Axfremaly attractive. Jasmins, Winfergraen, Robin Blue, Petal Pink and solid colors id match. MUES NOW IN PROGRESS! -American Sampler" $4-$5 MEN'S DRESS Friilged Towels by Fieldcrest. SHIRTS Size Bath Towel ...„._... Gua*t Towel...._._. 3.50 each Face Cloth.. ... Fingertip towel „.;. :._.._.„. 70 .60 Tub Mat _.:...... _ 4.00 3,50 nw'tf fameut jn«nuf«c<«r«rs -*•• md it f«bulo*uy'tiyhigt -tool This quaint sampler pattern will be the envy of . Irthd mw shirts. M y«ur hyorjt* eollit ityl*. MoWJy whites, everyone , . . brilliant colors in delightful Colonial but »om» ihiptd fab *nrf buHon-down collir*..ih-th* .group. designs, frash whita backgroundt, thickly fringed Triiy'll 9» fait,» hurry for b«» «»l«ction. ' . edges! Long-lasting, fast-drying terry by Fieldcrast. 5.95-,$7 IVfatcliing "American Sampler" Sheets, Cases Add Charm to Bedrooms . i . Old-fashioned letters and numbers join styliiad mo- - ' SPORT SHIR|i v fift from Colonial themes. Claar multi-colors, gltam- ' ing white backgrounds. Colors stay bright even af- ! : ter countless Washings. " Nbf 3.75..;••';:] •\":£-' i SALE Save 2iJ0 to 3.25 per rfiirt i 72x108" long twin . 3.99 8 lil08" double „ 4.99 $»v* doll«rs en your ftvorite sport shirtt . . . fint 100% Pima 42x38" cases „ pr. 2.88 <«H«ni, warm and soft brushed r«yon«, dacron* «nd cotton blends In the group! You'll aven find many of the new no-iron, p«rinan»nt pr»w ihirtil Soma fxtet slaave langtJiil, Solids, plaids, ehaekt to ehooia froml $25 Early American Gold Eagle STEINlACH'S WEN'S FURNISHINGS, 5tr.,t Snack Tables With Carrier all* Aibury Park, Irtclc Town regularly 2S.00 14x16" tables set Red Bank, Aibury Park SHOP It's the striking "Americana" set; four lap-high tables, plus con- 10 a.m. to 5 i3O p.m., -: venient carrier. Wipe-clean, stain-resistant Marlite topi in & FRIDAY black or teak color. Mail, phone orders filled while they lastl 32.50 Set with 16x19" tables -- Sole $20 set iV ' ;''''•; •''''" STEINBACH'S GIFTS, Second Floor,.R.d Bank Only] • t • ,-.-*.:-.'••.• THEDAILY 7 FRIDAY, 21, 1966 Regional School By MARGOt SMITH RUMSON — The sixth annual Community Night at Rum- son-Fair'Haven Regional High School Tuesday night crowded the halls and classrooms with curious parents and proud stu- ' dents. • . 'All, departments offered demonstrations of what they do during the school year, the object being to give Mon'and Dad - a first-hand glimpse of secondary education, Regional style. The range of things to see was as broad as the educa- • tional program itself, with audience participation a major goal.. , • , Wandering visitors played "Bingo" in French and Latin, tasted freLsh-out-ofohe-oven pizza,. brought books, solved . problems-and viewed skits, musical rehearsals, language lab A JPOZHEMENTT — S. C. Farmer of Fair Haven tries to follow the path of an overhead demonstrations and a fashion show. projection without looking at the transparency. Eilen Kinney, center, and Ann Karinja, They took a citizenship test, a blood test, a co-ordination sophomores at Rumson-Fair Haven Regional, explain how it works in biology lab demon- test and a color-blindness test. The tour was guided by students and by a two-color pro- stration at Community Night. gram printed in the school's graphic arts shop on a new offset press. Seek Home For Student Pizza Recipe MIDDLETOWN — For want An easy-quick favorite for young cooks was served at of a home, Middletown Town- Rumson-Fair Haven Regional's Community Night. -Here's how ship may not have a foreign you make their:' . . exchange student in September Quick Pizza 1 for the first time in five years. 1 6 oz. can tomato paste " ;,, , ' 1 tsp. garlic salt " . Guerin Olivola* chairman of % tsp. oregano ; ' the homes committee of the % 1b. American or Mozzarella cheese, cubed local American Field Service y cup chopped green peppers , chapter which is currently 4 Heat oven to 400 (moderate). Combine tomato paste, seeking a volunteer host family, says response has.been dis- garlic salt, oregano, and spoon small amount on refrigerator , couraging and time is running rolls which have been flattened and stretched until very thin. out. Sprinkle with green peppers and cubes of cheese. Bake iinV. til brown or cheese has been melted. Serve hot; r Parents whose sons or daugh- ters will be high school juniors or seniors in September are urged to open their home to a student from a foreign land for one school year. Details may be had from Mr, Olivola, 116 Kings Hwy.. Students at Middletown Town* "YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE ITALIAN TO MAKE PIZZA ship High School continue, their 1 enthusiastic support of the ex- say the girls in-R-FH Regional * cooking class. Community change program. At last week's night demonstration is taken from the oven by Betsy chapter meeting, David Me* Moody and Pam Boyd, Fair Haven freshmen. Aneny, representing the school AFS Club, turned over a check for $138 raised from a Tag Day which will go toward me ex- penses of bringing a foreign stu- dent here. Complete Plans For Class Trip KEWORT — Frank Zampel- lo, principal, and Charles Mar- tin, senior adviser, conferred re- cently on plans for the class trip to Washington, D, €., and senior class dues at Keyport High School. The trip will cost $42 and dues have been set at $ which will include graduation fees and yearbook expenses. The Washington trip will take place Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, Mar. 16, 17 and 18. The bus will leave from Keyport High School Wednesday at 7 a.m. and return Friday between 10 and 11 p.m. THEIR OWN CREATIONS at R-FH Regional's The students will visit such community night fashion show were, left to right, Sherry places o£ interest as the Smith- WAXING CRAFTSMANSHIP --Bob Hall'i *alad bowl is sonian Institute, Washington Clifton, Joanne Brennan and Chrie Ntelson. Sherry's suit made from four, piece* of wood] carefully lamtnated and Monument, Arlington Cemetery is a heather-wine wool. Joanne's oxford grey flannel and the Capita* buHdlng. A dance dress is trimmed with yarn braid. and Chrle's sky-blue polished to flawlessneisi He's a ninfh grader in Rumson- «riU be held each evening & Ftir Haven RejionalV wood VJi .1 .MI- ing thefr itty in Washington, wit is double^raasted in a^bby texture. ^ Freshmen Report "3 On College Life bo By PAT HA1X Bruce ' Green, Netf Mexico and State, agreed that "English is the hardest subject, because the rest J SANDEE CARMAN is review." Concerning social MATAWAN - Forty-two grad- life, Bruce discovered that there uates of Matawan, Regional High are "parties al! the time, but School returned Tuesday to par- you can't go because you have ticipate in the annual College to get your work done." It is Day program at the high school. hard to study in the dormitories, Each of die visiting graduates is Bruce complained, because a freshman this year at a col- "everyone barges in, on you and lege or professional school. The you barge in on everyone else. students represented schools as They come and rip your bed distant as New Mexico State apart, set your garbage can on and Tulane and as near as Mon- fire." . . ' :-.,-Cv/.-r •0 mouth Cotiege and Seton Hall. Barbara Shafto, University of The Matawan Regional High Georgia, also complained of the School Chapter of the National 1 ftmor Society invited the stu- dorms, where ''P^pJe pop in all 2 dents and sponsored the. pro- the time., It's impossible to gram, which was planned to fa- Study." . .; \ 1;'•*•:;.[:;Aii:. • miliarize high school students Many students found indepen- with college and professional dence to be a problem, Barbara school life. STATE COUNCIL OFFICERS CONFER before meeting last week of the New Jersey As- Best, Tusculum College, Green- The students were greeted at villek Tenn., and Kathy Beam. sociation of High School Student Councils in Monrhoufh College. Prom left to right are assembly by John Caracciolo, Trenton State T^ch^s, both Dan Barber, treasurer, a student at Christian Brothers Academy, Lincrbft; Meredith New- principal; Gunther Heyse, chair- said that at coHegie "you're com- bon, secretary, Red Bank High School; Robert Withay, executive secretary, and Tom Ben-" man of the guidance department, pletely on your Own." Barbara and Michael Dolan, president of ner South Plainfield, president. commented, "After; class time, t the Honor Society. Afterwards, students visit at w profwsor's the visitors held panel discus- homes," but during d|$j "the sions in the high school class- relationship is very foi Automation Cuts Work Day rooms, attended a luncheon at Pat Wttkes cowcwi^ftai, at noon and a tea in the afternoon Montclair State,"My;j|piggest in the home economics rooms. problem is living•;•on iijjy own. Highlight of the program was You don't have your parents to the classroom discussion continu- rely on." Ronnie Trenwer, on Problem of Too Much Leisure ing throughout the day. Here the other hand, found the new high school students had an op- freedom enjoyable, Joking that WASHINGTON, D.C. - In the with us for a long time, the ernment subsidies for higher portunity to ask the freshmen "at Drew we- have a very strict next 15 too 20 years, today's author writes. Doing the job, education will be more general.. questions concerning such topics curfew for boys. You have to be youngsters may face the unusual Michael continues, means more Community colleges, voca- as homework, social life, home- back in tkne for your .morning problem of what to jjo with all education. tional schools, centers for in- sickness and money. class.**. •> -<:t .- -'vi ••-• -v,:-"- . their spare time as automation With the increasing growth struction in recreation activi- Most frequently, answers given shortens their work day and cuts of automation, many unskilled ties, and institutes attached to by the freshmen concerned the ON PROM COMMITTEE into the total number of years workers will lose out to the ma- industry, business, and govern- difficulties of college work and NEW HAVEN, Conn. - Mise of employment. chines, but some unskilled jobs ment will cater to aH individ- the noise in the dormitories. Bob This, social psychologist Don- will remain and some new ones uals, regardless of age. Testino, Monmouth College, Catherine Steeger, daughter of ald N. Michael writes, will mean will be created. said, "The hardest class is Eng- Mr. and Mrs. "Frank W., Steeger, "boredom, anxiety, and restless- Many skilled workers also lish. If you think it's hard now, 37 Dehvood La., New Shrews- will be forced to retrain, if EDITOR'S NOTE: The booklet ness" for many who aren't pre- wait tili you get to college. The bury, N.J., is a. member of the pared to use their leisure time they are to maintain well- inserted into*the "NEA Journal" biggest problem is that you're on well. paid, quality jobs. There will for January was developed from your own. If you get behind, you favors committee for the Junior Michael emphasizes, the im- be education for all — almqst a book, "The Next Generation: fail. Professors aren't babysit- Prom Weekend, Feb. 11-13, here portance of helping to educate on a cradle-to-grave basis. The Prospects Ahead for the ters/* * at Albertufi Macnus College. youngsters to understand the More children of al! economic Youth of Today and Tomorrow," problems that automation will groups will attend nursery also written by Donald N. Mi- bring in "Your Child and the school and kindergarten. Post- chael. He is presently associated World of Tomorrow," a booklet high school education will be with the Institute for Policy Stud- included in the January issue of more widely available, and gov- ies, Washington, D.C. the "NBA Journal," official magazine of the National Educa- tion Association. Reports A Shortage In stressing the need for edu- cation,' Michael says: Parents in many classes must ' Of Nursing Teadiers help children to plan their By KATHIE DIBELL When people think of nurses, lives, .decide on jobs they may AP Newsfeatores Writer they think of the* woman making be able to get, recognize the NEW YORK (AP)-The public a patients bed or taking his need for continuing lifelong edu- may feel more bedside nurses temperature, Miss Arnstein said. cation, and cope with the new are needed, but Margaret "They see only the person leisure. "At home a child can Arnstein, of the U.S. Public who is visible. They don't learn that there are often sev- Health Service, says the most realize the judgment she is ex- eral right ways to do some- acute shortage fe in capable ad- ercising before they see her." thing, not just one, and that ministrators and teachers of Miss Arnstein acknowledged it's exciting to learn different nursing. that low salaries also contribut- ways." ; "You can't enlarge the ed tothe shortage. The youngster will heed help number of bedside nurses unless "Salaries are low, but they if he is to win a good place in you have more teachers and a are going up," she said. "They the new technological society, good one can get more mileage are beginning to be respect- and there will be more teachers out of her staff," said Miss able." than ever educating people for Arnstein, senior nursing adviser "However, there are still LIVE IT UP!: . .„.. both work and leisure. fc for tile office of International some areas of the country where SPBOAL-PURPOSK Students will confront new A savings program is tfie surest way Health. the salary is (3,600 a year. to make, that trip to Europe, or any other special . challenges. During the next two Miss Arnstein, who1 recently That's what I call bed. The decades, more people wM| be was the first woman to receive* median is $5,200. That means dream, come true* Our high-profit earnings added to working in such fields as ge- Rockefeller . Public Service half are getting less. That's not your savings regularly make f ast accomplishment ot netics, brain processes, growth, Award for work in the Federal beautiful." tig goals possible. Embark on your special saving! and aging. government says the. nursing Miss Arnstein has been with program' this payday! ; Oceanography may offer, to- profession must attract bright the Public Health service since -'morrow's engineers anil scien- young students who are heading 1049 and feels that nursing for tists exciting work, equal to for college. the federal government is CURRENT PER that of our spacemen. "We are getting an increased especially rewarding-, because RATE 4V4% YEAR Many of tomorrow's jobs will number of college-bound people, one can do a variety of jobs "and . offer opportunities to those who but not in proportion to the num- not get tiie reputation as a roll- nave the ability to work well ber going to college," she said. ing stone." with other people. There will The decline" in the proportion- be need for. more doctors, ate number of college students MYSTERY BUS RIDE Red Bank nurses, clergymen, and social entering nursing ig due "partly KEYPORT — Rev. Edward workers. to a lack of understanding of the Strano, coordinator of the Cath- There will be new opporiuni- challenge of nursing. olic Youth Organization of St. \ ties for careers in "the help- "We must make it clear to the Joseph's Catholic Church, has AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ing occupations" as the popu- college-bound young woman, or announced the g*oup will sponsor 747-0330 10 Broad Street lation increases. The helpers- young man even, that nursing is a mystery bujj ride on Feb. 22 wiH be needed in the anfe a career that will tax their which Is open to all youths in .». poverty program, which will be capacity,?1 she said. ., the community.. ,r. >v 9 NEW BRUNSWICK.— An an- semester will be able to select t nual jncrease of $100 in room and an option which allows 'them to board charges at the State Uni- eat weekday dinners at the fra- Jerry M. Wjgdortz, 18-year-old Albert J. Xofantck, son of Dr. Barry Maclean, son of Mr. and versity has been approved by ternity house. ;•'•;• > son of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Wig- and Mrs. Albert J. Kolareick, Mrs. Kenneth MacLean, 16 the Rutgers Board of Oovernors. The ^teieal plan consists of ; Room and board at Rutgers has dortz, 174 Pinckney Rd., little Sycamore Ave,, Shrewsbury, was Healtholiff Ra\t Ruinson* has tliree daily m^als six days a Silver, will perform Jan. 31 in awarded a bachelor of arts de- pledged to Phi Gamma .Delta at been $800 a year since USS. The week and a tnorning brunch plus Town Hall, New York, in Wini- gree in history from Regis Col- Davidson (N.C.) College. . \ increase to take effect in Septem- dinner on Sunday. ber will bring the charges to $900, fred Cecil's "The Joy of Singing, lege, Denver, Col., a Jesuit liber- The current $106 college fee at $500 for board and $400 for room 1906." His performance will con- al art college. the men's colleges of Rutgers will Hedged to Phi Kappa Phi at rent. Tiiitton of $400 a year for sist of "Comfort Ye" ami the aria rise $20 to $126 per year, large- Davidson College also is Camer- New Jersey residents and $636 for "Every Valley" from Handel's William Mfthwtey, Jr., son of ly as a result of planned changes Messiah. on Ferguses, son;of Mf. and Mrs, out-of-state residents will remain Mr. and Mrs. William H. Ma- y in the Umversity Commons (din- Georfee Ferguson, !#$ Queens Dr. the same. honey, 73 Pinckney Rd., Red S., Llttie Stiver; ; :.'.-; ing hall). Architectural and dec- Bank, was pledged to Omega The board's decision to in- orative changes are planned Chapter of Sigma Alpha EpsMon crease fees steins both from in- to make the building's dining fraternity following Rush Week creasing food and labor costs and areas more homelike. at Allegheny College, MeadviMe, from the planned implementa- The board based its decision In Pa., where he Is a freshman. The tion^ a program of improve- large part upon the recommenda- fraternity, on campus since 1987, ments in the residence and din- tions of twor committees which is one of seven national fraterni- ing tialla. reported at its December facet- ties to establish chapters at The governors also approved ing. A committee to study the Allegheny. a flexible plan of board arrange* mehts for both Rutgers and Doug board system had been in opera* tion since last May and a resi- Miss Julia Etteabetft Davis, lass Colleges. All students ex- cept freshmen will be able to dence hall study committee had daughter of Mrs. Barbara been at work since October, 1963. CHern Davis, East Twin Rd,, choose between a seven-day, 20* Monmouth HUts, a graduate of meal, basic board plan at $500 Included in the improvements Middtetown Township Htgh a year or a Hive-day 14-meal plan planned in the residence halls School, presently enrolled in ' at $425 a year. are increased use of graduate Monmoutft College, willbe among Non-freshman students at the students as preceptors, additional a group of 20 women who will men's colleges of Rutgers will' counselors in residence, better take up their studies at Mount have additional options. They lounge facilities and a research Holyoke College, South Hadley, will be permitted to room in col- program on the effects of such Haas., at the beginning of the lege residences as space permits changes. Changes in the dining second semester. This Is the without taking any board plan; to hall program would aim at in- second of the February fresh- sign up for weekend meals if creasing the variety and quantity men entrance programs at the they eat at their fraternity on of the food and at making the college. Classes for Miss Davis Miss Leona M. Murray weekdays, or to sign up for lunch dining facilities more pleasant. Mr. Wlgdorte, « -freshman at begin Feb. 3 with an orientation Miss Leona M. Murray, daugh< .five days a week if they com- Stevens Institute of Technology, program beginning Feb. L tier'ol Arthur R. Murray, 8 mute. SENIORS PLAN DANCE Hoboken, where be is majoring Harbor View Dr., Atlantic High- All resident freshmen will be KEYPORT — The senior class in physios, will be appearing with TO VISIT TRENTON lands, has been accepted for ad- required to take the basic 20- of Keyport High School w\U spon- professional talent in the series KEYPORT - The Future mission in March to the State meal plan during the first sem- sor a dance on Saturday, Jan. which is considered by managers, Teachers of America dub of University Agricultural and Tech- ester. Rutgers College freshmen 29 from 8 to 11:30 p.m. in the conductors and talent scouts as Keyport High School held their nical College at Defci, N.Y., who join fraternities second gymnasium of the Central School. an important showcase where second meeting last Wednesday. where she will study hotel man-* (hey can appraise promising Plans are being made to take agement technology. She is a talent Mr. Wlgdortz* interest is a trip to Trenton State College ; graduate of Atlantic Highlands in opera. '"•' : '"• during the month of February. High School, class of 1960. TH£ SHADOWS, who played for a Gig he Id recently for the benefit,of the Muscular Dystrophy Association, include, left to rig ht, Richie Rotondelh, Bob McEvtHy, Loring Norrji and Buddy Norm. The group will play again tomorrow night at a teen dance sponsored by the Middletown Lancers Dru m and Bugle Corps to be held in the The wool melton CPO shirf is Middletown Community Center from 7 to 11. p.m. back in the Young Men's Shop* Give Dance As Benefit For Fund New shipment includes navy, SHREWSBURY - A Gig wasMiddletown Hifih School. They Morris, Joe Martin, Jerry Cure- fcetd recently at me Presbyterian are Buddy Norrt^, Loring Norris, ton and Jackie Spahn, all of New burgundy, bottle green. Extra Orach House for the benefit of Richie Rotondella and Bob Mo Shrewsbury, and Ed Soles and muscular dystrophy. Dave Evilly. Mark Edwardsea from Eaton* Marshall Jr., 6*1 Prospect Ave.. The fubs are Chris Janis, town, small to large, 10.00. ft sophomore at Red Bank High Colta Neck; Rick Geynor, Fair •fahooL wai executive chairman Haven; Rob Maurer, Red Bank: DC the alfair, which wa# attended Bruce Benson, Iincroft; Dave Regiiter Welcomet by J« people. A total of $133* Savage, Fair Havta, and Jim Reader? teiier$ was eoHected, and, after e* B Rumson. gooses, $41.69 was turned over to The Beau Mondea Include Ed The Regbter*f Y«MI AWt jho Muecular Dystrophy Assad* O'Reilly. Rndy Mufler, Charlie SeetiM wekemes letten frem Bon fund. LWberg tad John Kroli, a*l - MI readers, prerMea nej cas* Groups pttyfof for tte event from Stemabutf, mi Ran*/ JMd d The Shadows ffrom New Homing, Little SJJver. Letters theTMtiUtfatttts laoMe Don S W*W ^^" H| n^W^piPW ™ffl!W Wi" Hortaiauth, a* of ^faorn attawl '•<•# How to Get Into College —— and Succeed ».-'•:.' By LESLIE J. NASON, Ed. D. Don't be one of those college school. Give learning Hs proper brarian will help you select an.. and moved into a dormitory, GnJj University of Southern California freshmen who, startled to find place M get, off to a good equivalent text. In each text read then was he able \to briny Wa . Beware of the first six weeks . that their work during the first start! • '»•'••• the introduction and first chap- grades up to TtoeV tfcey be- I : x: in college! weeks was not up to college stan- Student often • • complaSn that ter. Learn the new words. Say longed. ; . • - ' • " - •*''•• '--p>i Suddenly.you are on yoafomi, t dards; give op and drop out of "nothing happeas during the first them aloud over and over, Wpg- . I have watdied n^ny studeiiiii surrounded by tempting dlstrac- classes.'? Actually, plenty hap- ing up a mental picture of~ the under the influence of a s^rbilK tions-football games, sorority or pens. CpHefee instructors start meaning of each ftord aS you scholastic fraternity Wt i fraternity rusti parties, new '•••[ Nason Booklet j lecturing tile -first day. Outlines hear it. This will prepare you to grades and prepare seriott^ friends and new entertainment Dr. Nasm's booklet, ".How to and: .previews they present of begin listening and understanding careers—with the extra bbnyir ot l opportunities. . .•••*" Get Into College- and Sue- their cwiTHifl are Just what you the- first class period. .' ; - fraternity' friendahips. di Your college instructors give b available try writing need to help you- organize the If any text appears too difficult, fraternities keep- i carefully prepared lectures. materials; In your own mind. The find other mor^ elementary ma- the same s<**>lastil c standing yeir to: 1 These are easy to follow and College Booklet student who oomfrtainsi that noth- terials which wHl give you a after year. In son*?, the scholta- everything tends, to hill you in- Red Bank Register ing happens is only revealing the background. If necessary, go all tic standing Ahrtys b Mgh; m to a false sense of security. Then Box 17 fact that nothing happened Jo his the way back to books fox chil- Where, it atwtyg; is " come mid-term ' examinations. Brooklyn, N.Y. 11212 mind.'.- j- .,'.'/ ,?v:;. \ V- dren. • ." •..-"*•• Characteristics^ ~ mtcem- Your old high school-system of Enclose $1 for each booklet SonMthne before the opening of ' The students I have known who ful Iraternitiet quick reviews and cramming ses- Please make check or money college get textbooks in the made this kind of preparation High sions is not adequate for college order payable to "Colkge Book- course you will take. If possible, for each of their courses \nave Their Pledges < work/Even if it were how can let" <( ., ••• •; • get the books you will be using. succeeded well in their first se- scholastic goals; ; you- train the same night for He sare to Include your name These may be available in your mester of college, V Active members set' 1 J two or three examinations? and address. local library; otherwise, the ll< Arrive at -the campus early pie of good scholarsh%r V enough to get settled in your pledges. . " ,,; room, find-out where you will Senior members take j*mc;%) eat and sleep and buy your text- help pledges develop study .sktlls A Thing of the Past? books; in fact, learn your-way and malnUin high: grades. Se- around. ,. . crets of good schojnriiip are passed from class ito ^ais,' Locate your classrooms so that Atmosphere Is one'&ftifcfrg and you can attend the first sessions respect for each 4rthef a^jd \ht. —notebook and pencil In hand— ready to begin learning. You are in a pew situation Rewards^ and punishni<^ with many new activities and in- based on Hhe behavjor EDITOR'S NOTE: Dr, But- pendent, relatively autonomous Therefore, H seems to its that pPkxtg«.»t> t f „ lex; a clinical psychologist and terests available to you. The way. self. 'Togetherness" facilitates our young lady would do well sons adniinistenng them.^f .A Fair Haven resident, in addition the gratification of social needs to question the wisdom of her you spend your time in the firSt to his weekly discussion of sub- but often interferes with the de- boy friend's devotion to "togeth- days and weeks of college has a New; students > may obQdfa tin scholastic sending' of each fra- jects of interest to teenagers velopment of one's self. erness". In the process of fry- tendency to persist. So don't be a tkneAraster. Keep a schedule. ternity fronvthe deto df sfju|ents. and: parents, will answer ques- "Togetherness" calls for de- ing to please him she may dam- Learn to make good use of spare Choose a friteiWty; with'seniow tions in this column addressed to votion to another person or per- age her own identity that in the moments} ' - of the type y^ would like ito he Shn in care of The Daily Regis- sons in the case of a family. It end she will be miserable and ter,'40 Broad St., Red Bank, possibly destroy their relation* when you affe ti seatk>r> * * V means sell-sacrifice, self denial, CHOOSE FRIENDS WISELY Next: MainSU' Names win be withheld on re- concession, and compromise. All ship- You will have many opportuni- cess. c quest • • •-.*.....,.• of these things are necessary One must also wonder if his By EDWARD C. BUTLER, ph. D ties to make friends. Because you and essential to any society or singleminded devotion to her is will want to keep your studies in We have been asked to com- civilization. Carried to an ex- based upon love or if it is based ment on the following situation. first place, you will be wise to ON HONORS treme, however, they result in upon necessity^ Perhaps he can- associate mainly with other stu- *'I have been going with a boy frustration, boredom, resentment, not tolerate a relationship with MORRiSTOWN — Prank Ar- for several months. I like him dents who feel the same way linghaus, "son of Mrs. Prank It and rebellion because they deny another person who is autono> about this., a lot. In fact, he's the nicest boy a vital human necessity—the de- mous and independent -« person ArKnghaus, Windmill La., Ruro- Are fraternities good or bad? I've ever known. Lately, though, velopment and enhancement of in her own right. If such is the son, and the late Mrs. Ariing- It depends on your choice. Don't "•'" he always wants the self and all its potentialities. case she might do well to look haus; was named to the mid-term expect to maintain high scholar- us to be togeth- for a more mature boyfriend. headmaster's honors list at Dei- er. I enjoy being Personal Identity ship if you join a low scholar- barton School, He is one of four with him but .1 The failure to develop the self ship fraternity. You probably students at the boys' prepara- also enjoy be- may result in a loss of personal The Episcopal Young Chunch- won't make it even though you tory school named semi-finallsta lng with other identity. The loss of identity men of the Monmouth Convoca- make a heroic effort. One of the in the 1966 National Merit Schol- friends. usually results in anxiety. The tion will meet Sunday at 4:30 finest students I have known arship Qualifying Competition, attempt to rid oneself of anxiety struggled with this situation for winners of which will receive For example, p.m. in St. Peter's Episcopal can result in a variety of things, a long time before he gave up four year scholarships. I like folk danc- Church, Freehold. The Junior from hostility to withdrawal to |ing very much Episcopal Churchmen of the land I belong to rebellion—all of which tend to Monmouth Convocation will meet la folk dancing damage, disrupt, or destroy the in St. Thomas' Episcopal Church, Dr. Butler group that meets original relationship or family. Red Bank, next Friday at 7 p.m. twke a month. He says he MARINE • doesn't like dancing and that I should give it up so we can spend the time together. It .seems he wants me to only do things with him and this bothers me. Am I being selfish or is my boy- CAN BE A friend demanding too much?" Not very long ago "together- GREAT FRIEND new" was a word that we heard quite frequently. Young people getting married would talk about how they did and were going to do. everything together. Possibly because the world seems such • dangerous and chaotic place yam PAWS •xid because of disillusionment With the pursuit of material FOR COLLEGE tilings, young people become more "family oriented". They Withdrew to 60me extent from the outside world over which they felt they had no control and focused primarily upon their own tittle tworld — the family. JToday, howevef, we hear rela- Wely little about "togetherness" Your lavingi account Ti b most important tool for planning or what we do hear is mostly college expenm. At our institution you rectfv* • high divi- negative or derisive. This turn of dend and courteous service. Viiit us today. Deposits nude by events may have been prompted, tht I Oth or the month earn from the lit.. '••',''• in part, by the impossibility of Ignoring external events. Prob- v ' ably more important though is fte- fact that "togetherness" 4'A% ANNUAL DIVIDEND didn't work because it fails to COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY provide for individual needs. Possibly the two rrtost impor- tant needs in human beings, aside from purely biological PHYS ED PROGRAM moves on to the ic« at Shore Region* MARINE VIEW ASSOCIATION needs, are the needs for. inte- al High School, West Long Branch. -Stuart ZywotoWi left, grated human relationships and Hlgk*avJ5. Mlddtetow. • Hw». 36. Atfgfttk the need for indivlduation, that and Marshall Brown, bbfh seniors, Skate during ichbol hours 471-2400 291-0100 r '•.,•'<. is the. need for a unique, inde- in a school-sanctioned program at Franklin Lake. - By NANCY PH1UPP1 Thin year's; Christmas" dinner* x>f the work experience program, 3 : FREEHOLD -*, The table w*s consisted of staffed turkey, vege- .with boys taking witside Jobs in set with the best china, candles tables, breads and pies, the first kitchens during their second year 3 were lighted and the Christmas bemester began ' with yeast U the subject. • feast e< turkey and irimmings .doughs. VThey're fabulous at piz- TTje classes include field 'trips w»s; ready- • .:'• - ;/ • ;• *a". according to. their tpacher, to the kitchens of large New York ., The .hour was 10 a.m.; the The rest of tha year they will restaurants, to» bakeries, and to cooktf were high scKboJ boys and concentrate on shortorder c«ok- the meat departments of super the -quests were f '. • teachers. injg at thfir jieW commercial grill, markets. 'Local restaurateurs It was.: the^ Chefs paration and then on iqeets. „•' have volunteered to give demon- pass .at Freehold Regional High • Eating' the end result is half strations at the school—pl«a- . School, in the week before va- maklng• was featured earlier In cation,: serving a complete din- of tine fun for many of the'boys, hit'their teacher points out that the year and a short order dem- ner as a demonstration of their there's a lot of work to the course onstration is scheduled for the first semesters work too. She devotes one session a future. '•Boys love to,cook," says Mrs. week to theory, and instructs Special occasions during the Dorothy Stutanan who teaches iflj setting tables and serving, in I the art to approximately 46 soph- year, in addition to the Christ- .sajtffatibn and cleaning up, and mas dinner, will Include a dinner omores, Juniors and seniors, "but in. kitchen management. they never have the: chance." for the Board of Education in •*.:,'R»jreiitsVheve Aevei> objected . "Some are taking, it because the spring,. and a shish kebab 3 ./jMratta her fitudenta. brought reci- they Just p|aln like to_cook," says picnic to finish ott the year. pes home to try d»t in their Mrs* Stutzman, but at least a Mrs. Stutzman finds it's a live- .owja kitchens. Last year when the third are preparing for future ly course to teach. 'They're not course was first offered only nine jobs i in restaurant work, •:• easy to handle in the kitchen," boys tried it. T;e fact that some "There's a tremendous need she row. but the mother of two were seniors and footbeJJ play- for chefs, arid short-order cook- sons and Cub Scout leader for ers, Mrs. Stutxman points but, ing Is very important,", say* the six years knofcs and enjoys work- LINING tojngredfenh for the project of the day it Henry helped to erase the stigma at- teacher, emphasizing "There's ing with boys. "We have a very Banks, 16, o^ Freehold. •••.' tacbed to boys being in the kitch- a great future (or these boys." good tfene,*' shfe says, "and we're en/ Her course will eventually be part always laudblqg at something." Pick Cast Members For Middletown Flay By DAVID ML PHILLIPS worth . Hill, Barbara Finnich; MIDDLETOWN — "It was the Clara Eynsworth Hill, Bonnie stiffest competition Tve ever fiad .Husband, end Parlor maid, Pam to choose from. It shows the num- Sipith', ; ber of talented people at'Mid- Extras for the play include Is* dletown." chide Ken Israel, Phil Murray, These were the words of tyrs. Dave Crawford, Greg Jones, Carol White, director of the Jerry Sapienza, April Simon, forthcoming production of "Pyg- Linda Johnson, Linda and Kathy malion," commenting on the try- Healy. Student director for the outs. A total of 85 students came play is Gay Ingramx out to compete for only 10 parts and more came out for backstage USHERS AT CEREMONIES work, makeup and other odd NEW BRUNSWICK — Steve jobs. Carwdle of Middletown was one The major problems of the of three Scarlet Key members in- play are the English accent vited to usher at opening cere- which must be mastered by all monies of Ruteers University's the actors, and the costumes of Bicentennial Year at which Gov. that period, stated Mrs. White. Richard J. Hughes was the prin- "The success of the play de- cipal speaker. Scarlet Key is a pends a great deal upon the per- campus organisation whose pur- formances of the two lead parts, pose is to welcome visitors to the Eliza Doolittle and Professor university. Higgins," the director explained. Mr. Carwile, a junior geogra- The play will be given Feb. phy major, is secretary of the 16 and 19 in the school auditor- Sigma Pi fraternity. He is the ium beginning at 8 p.m. son of Mr. and Mrs. William MEASURING BUTTER for Robert Kraick, center, 15-year-old tophomore, Englishtown, is The cast is as follows: Eliza Carwiie, 74 SwartzeL Dr.; Middle- Mrs. Dorothy Stutzman, instructor in the chefs' preparation course at Freehold Regional Doolittle, Suzie Crawford; Pro- town. > Hfjgh $chool. looking on is Donald Powell, 15, of Freehold. lessor Higgins, David McAneny; Col. Pickering, J. Keith Lucken- There will be a J'day) apart" bach; Alfred DooliUte, Russell, for members of Womeifs Society Entertain Howard; Mrs. Pierce, Fran of Christian Service organiza- Melacd; Mrs. Higgins, Jane tions in St. Paul's Methodist Kennedy; Freddy Eynsworth Church, Ocean Grove, on Fri- Exchange Hill, Larry Fuller; Mrs. Eyns- day. Students By NANCY HORR RUMSON - On Dec 28 Hie American Field Service Club of Rumson-Faif Haven Regional the "CLAP" High School held a party at the home of Tracy Walen. The event ALWAYS IN; STYLE was given for Claire Wood«> a student from Australia, and Mil- • IN BLACK and BROWN ton earlier, a student from Ecua- dor. Both Claire and Milton at- • SIZES 4-10 tend the high schooJi^ ;^ • AAAtoC Jane Nagle Jie.aoyd tte refresh- ment committee, and Kitty Kelly, thexkib secretary, handled the invitations. As chairman of the entertainment committee, 'Leslie Turek engaged The Ber- ries to supply **tf Here the 7thPdirtiFr&' ;-1Y.iT.'1.' 10 MONMOUTH ST. Um *ff RED basketball same'' § New Jersey Forensic Cfamipiom Set Goals in Theater and Therapy •a By JOAN TURNER Linda won over nine contes- helping people in clinics and hos- no MiDDLETOWN — Two JitUe tants for her dramatic interpre- pitals and perhaps in schools," 9 maids from school are the Misses tation of a passage from Eugene says Laurie, " Laurie Jane Fox and Linda Anne O'Neill's, "Desire Under the "I am definitely going to be Johnson. Elms," this past December in an actress." says Linda, just ag They are both 17 yearet of age- Trenton. determinedly, "and not a tele- both are state speech champions Laurie's championship became vision o r movie actress, b ut a — have been friends 'and class- a .reality last October at St. stage actress." mates since kindergarten — and Mary's High School, Perth Am-, The girls are life-long residents both are going to make speech a boy. She was selected for her of Middletown and are four-year predominant factor in their fu- humorous interpretation of selec- members of the school's Thes- tures. tions from, "Why It Is Important pian Society. Linda intends . to become an To Be an Athlete," by Richard After graduation in June, each actress and Laurie will tbecome Armour. girl will go her own way. They a speech therapist. Both have been in "summer wHI undoubtedly be heard from FORENSIC CHAMPIONS — Displaying trophies earned They are seniors at Middle- stock" here at the Wagon Wheel again. s town High School and through Playhouse. s as winners in New Jersey Forensic league competition are, the guidance of their speech coach, Mark J. Rothstein, eco- They have had the glamour of left, Linda Anne Johnson, 434 Red Hill Rd., Mi'ddfetowri, playing bit parts aM ingenues Youth Groups and Laurie Jane Fox, 20 West Lincoln Cir., Middletown. nomies and history, teacher, they won New Jersey Forensic League and the hard work and fun of Meet Jointly Linda won state championship in dramatic interpreta- building and painting scenery. contests. MATAWAN TOWNSHIP- — Forensics include public speak- 'Linda, who lives at 4M Red tion category and Laurte in humorous interpretation cate- Hill Rd. with her parents, .Mr. Members of the Temple Shalom gory. ing, debating, original speeches Youth Group recently held t r and poetry. and Mrs. Grandin Johnson, and two brothers Peter and Jeffrey, joint meeting vilHi the You* will go to Albuquerque, N.M., Group of Temple Beth Miriam in Teen Nutrition on June 23 to compete in the Elberon. national championship contest of Attending from Temple Sha- the Forensic League, lom were Betty Jatfrey, Rebec- She intends to study acting at ca Lorberfeld, Robin Weirtberg, Sonia Moore's Acting School, Arnold DeMonte, Michael Bot- C Is Skimpy In Teen Diets New York City, tari, Steven Cheirnet, Deanne EI- Laurie will not compete, since senberg, Harvey Rosenstock and Steven Schour. They were ac- Vitamin C doesn't have much humorous interpretations are not Knowing the reason why C rich foods rather than pour included on a national levelr companied by Rabbi Sheldon get-up-and'go when it comes to doesn't solve the problem how- them down the drain. She resides at 20 West Lincoln Gordoji and Mrs. Efliot Jaffrey, stamina. Heat and exposure to .ever; you have to make a special Why is vitamin C important? It Ct, Middletown, with her mother group adviser. 1 helps heal outs more quickly and air easily destroy It, Any vitamin effort to acquire what you re- and father, Mr. and Mrs. Law- Organization officers will meet C rich food that is limp and tired helps the body resist Infection. quire. rence Fox, end brothers, Dennis with members of the Jersey Fed- has less vitamin than if it were In addition, this vitamin pre- and Michael, Michael is her twin. eration of Temple Youth Sunday fresh and crisp. An easy way is to start the vents scurvy. You've probably She has submitted her applica- in Mrs. Jeffrey's home, 48 Bea- morning by drinking or eating never known anyone with that tion to toe University of, Con- con La. Another interesting fact is that disease — as soon as doctors a citrus fruit. Among the com" necticut, to major in speech The next regular youth group your body can't store vitamin C learned.scurvy was caused by monly available sources are therapy. meeting will be held Monday in a* .ft can other vitamins. You a lack of vitamin C and man took grapefruit, lemons, limes, or- "I'm not Interested in becom- the Strathmore Elementary can't go on a "C binge" and get sufficient vitamins to prevent anges, tangerines. ing an actress. My future ties in School. • sveek's supply in a day. You the disease, it became almost need a rich source of vitamin Other foods providing vitamin non-existent. C ewryday in your life. C are raw cabbage, peppers, po- Foods and nutrition specialists These qualities, peculiar to tatoes, strawberries, tomatoes at Rutgers University offer this 15 Exchange Students vitamin C, probably explain why (either fresh or canned). somber advice: If you get your many teenagers have diets low Vitamin C is water soluble, so vitamin C each day you'll stay in this particular nutrient. drink cooking liquids of vitamin on the list of scurvy non-victims. To Attend WEST LONG BRANCH -j?if- Mrs. Mary Ann Baxter of Ocean- teen foreign students will be port, local APS publicity direc- tor. hosted here tomorrow at an Save Money While Dieting (Requirements are that the American Field'Servke workshop sponsoring family must have By VIVIAN BROWN errands. In good weather choose (expensive) creamy drinks. in Shore Regional High School. more than one child, one of A good resolution any year is lawn sweeping and mowing. Fruit juice and tea are good and The students, all high school whom is a high school junior, that one about losing weight. Snack happy? Sample some of a good wholesome glass of seniors, are studying in Mon- and that the guest student have the low-calorie drinks, lots less milk is far far less fattening than mouth and Ocean County schools private sleeping! facilities, al- Another is the one about saving expensive than lose big thick other choices you might make. under sponsorship of the AFS. though he may share a room. An money. Free exercise i$ pennies in New York officials of the or- atmosphere of close family har- But some day when we are the bank. Ice-skating, "swim- ganization will lecture on phases mony is required Bnd non-work- faced with a luscious sundae, ming, bicycle riding are good of the AFS program and its af- ing mothers are preferred. A re- Waters filiated Americans Abroad pro- ligious affiliation also is required. Creamy pudding, nesselrode pie, ways to bum up calories. Skiing can really take it off and golf gram, which sponsors American Mrs. Edward Urion of Ocean- ye forget. We, break two resolu- Wins Title courses are good places to go students on foreign study tours. port is Shore's APIS president. tions right there with the htgh- for that kind of exercise When A question and answer period The Urion family hosted Bettina By SUE PERKINS cost of treats. ' there is snow. Find a hill,- pack will follow the talks, which are Guttges of Kassel, Germany, MATAWAN - Pete Waters, se- slated to b&gin at 10 a.m. One way to beat the game is it down by herring boning it, and while she studied here last year. nior at Matawan, was vot- you'll be minus ounces .at the The local AFS 'chapter is now This year, ines de Fonesca e go for broke. Never but never ed "Most Original" by his class- end of the day. If you're at a taking applications from families Silva, a Shore Regional student carry money in your jeans. mates. Pete is a guitat-playing spot where there's a ski tow, who would sponsor foreign stu- of Rio de Janiero, Brazil, is the member of The Jesters, a rock Each time you get your allow- pass it up. You'll not only pock- dents as a house guest for the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Bo? 'n roll group, but his interests et the money, but do yourself 19&K7 school year. According to" va, also Oceanport. ance deposit it in your little are not confined to that type of piggy bank. The idea is that a favor as you climb the slope, music alone. He is a folk music instead. piggy grows fat instead of you. "bug" as well, and also enjoys The fatter piggy gets, the slim- the classical strains of "Schehera- Just about everyone who gains mer you get. He's going to be zade." weight easily confesses to 'a . your barot'ieter. When piggy is food nibbling • ^extravagance One of Pete's greatest ambi- plump, and you are real skinny, whether: k is fried potatoes, remove the cash, deposit it in a tions was realized last summer candy bars, or nuts. Try a new 1 SALE j savings account and watch it at the Newport Folk Festival kind, of nibble tray at home- grow. You can start fattening where he met Joan Baez, the work time — raw carrots, CLEANSING Itefalar 2.4S—l«H«oN O piggy again right away. queen of folk music. Miss Baez's celery, cucumber, small squares warm, sunny personality endear* CREAM MOISTURE You can open a savings of cheese. A hot drink that is ed her to Pete, who said later, delicious with.it is tomato soup. ••oak* 2.7S Prtony account for as little as a. dollar "She's tough, that's all I can LOTION : In commercial banks, Ten Mix canned soup with water, say, There's no other way to drink it out of a cup. A beef dollars a month Wai give you describe her." $|*5 fnore than $3 interest at the end bouUion cube may be added to of the year. And'seeing the Bob Dylan is another idol of give it special flavor. fc • • ii 1 iitf ^ ftai flnrmiii Aa^m Imount grow will give you in- his, and Pete's room is littered Just think how much you can centive to. keep the program with albums of the great folk save by avoiding the local pizza' SPRAY SKIN jpoin*. and rock singer, in addition to parlor. those of Joan Baez. Dylan's in- COLOGNE LOTION • Choose Ways to slim your One thing to keep in mind fluence on Pete can be seen though is that you must occa- $|OO figure as your bank account is clearly whenever Pete performs. $2°° fattened. sionally digress from a spartan Pete's room is a masterpiece program to enable you tocon - WaHc to school? Why not? It's of pop art, reflecting the ab> tinue. That may sound paradox- MANY OTHEt UNADVEMISED SKOALS I one way to lose weight and save stract, off-beat style which is ical, but K you carry the thing that car fare. A regular walk at characteristic of him. Its Mack too far, you'll Just get fed to a good brisk clip is one of the wail, hung with, paintings and the teeth with It, and go whole beat all-around forms of ex- marked with telephone numbers, hog with your appetite. Far bet- ercise, i Family Pharmacy j fa a topic of conversation in its ter to deliberately go off a diet .After-achool Job? Choose one own right. Many of the paintings once in ft while, and go back to CORNER of CHURCH ST. «nd PROSPECT AYE 1 that gives you some exercise. are Pete's own creation*, which piggy on schedule than to get M*k« i deal with dad for that bored with the whole idea and 'LITTLE SILVER 741-1121 1 ,'f. %&fas gfcmfcup. ' "' ' for a career In r 1 137 Make Honor Roll at I KEYPORT -Frank Zaropel- Petry Sutphin, Kenneth Thome, Peter Burke, Patricia Bosco, plo, principal of Keyport High Ester Walling, Emma Wright, Sharon Creed, Peter FtSchler,, School, has announced that the Edwin Gregory and Nancy John- Genearin ; DiGi^uribattista, * Mary following 137 students have been ' son- . •/••*• Diroer, Georgiha Eastmond, To- c entered dn. the honor roll for the Teneth grade: High Honor Roll by Geller, Ronald Hanimel, Ken- second marking period; -Kathleen CoughUn, Steven Di- neth Kruegel, Nancy f Gardner, 5 .By DOM LORDI Ninth grade: High Honor RoH GiamtottisU, Terry Ellis, Bar- Barbara Hyer; Eileen Katcher, —Margaret Bulger, Gustave Dir- bara Knierim, Louise Neff, Bet- Barbara Ludwig, Elayne Martin, The Register WiB pay $2 to any reader between the ages of ner, Eileen Kennedy, Elaine ty Jean Newman, Jill MacKeon, Jeannette Miller, John Olsen, 14 and 21 who submits a question chosen by the editors for use Lowe, Edward Makkwskl, and Holly Prager, Patricia Scow-1 Patricia Page, Patricia Rosato, fe ibis column. Send questions to "The Students Speak Up," Jill Walfenfeld; Honor Roll- croft and Kathleen Wysocki;' Charlene Saurman, Roseann Tur- Young Adult Section, The Daily Register, 40 Broad St., Red Cheryl Beverly, Sandra Apple- Honor Roll—<5usan Barber, Pa- so and Richard Witzlg. Bank. gate, Robert fielmonte, Peter Cu- tricia.- Calvert, Karen Gundell,- Twelfth grade: High Honor sumano, Paula Dawy, Wendy Marsha Horner, James Kelly,. Roll--Nancj5 Batters, Mary Anne PLACE: Monmouth College, Davis, Margaret Ehlert, Linda Beth Langan, Janice Lawlor, Fina, Louis Kaluzienski, Lois I QUESTION: Do you think It is advisable for wives of college Fftardo, Andrew Fischler, Robert Ellsse Mackason, John O'Rourke,; Haggerty, Judith Miller and San- men to belp them financially while they are still in school? Frantz, Angela Jack,. Judy Jack- Edward Ostervich, Elizabeth dra Psrciak; Honor Roll—Karo- son, Dianne Kochy, Eugene Ma- Panagakos, Patricia Panzera, lihe Aasvick, Richard Applegate, KENNETH MORRIS, IK Atian. MARGIT WOHLGEMUTH, II trejek, Margaret McKeown, Bar- Patricia - Patterson, Brunilda; tic Ave. Matawan, *enJer. line Aasvick, Richard Applega*e, I t Marine Pi., Deal, junior. bara Minor and Eileen MuHer. Ruie, Mary J. Schaming, Patri- Gorrine Arnold, Johanna Breisch, Yes. However, To some de- Also, Barbara Newman, Mar- cia Schaden, Lee Wenzel, Patrice Lois Brunner, Michael DiGirolr [the wife must i perhaps she gie Norcross, Dennis Oakes, Pat- Strange, Pamela Tommer and &mo, Sharon Collins, Nan- realize the real* in help her hus- ricia Orlando, Frederick Parris, Ruth Wood/ cy F-iynn, Sharon Gregory, Bar- ities of financial Iband, but she Patricia Paulln, Edna Radmond, Eleventh grade: High Honor bara HostrupY Kathleen Kennedy, ; difficulties and •should not let Kathleen Rooney. Derek Rowe, RoH -t Shirley Headden; Hon- Robert Kipp, Richard Pieper, [pressure in going Ihitn completely Linda Scott, Thomas Sison, Car- or Roll—Judith Adamecs, Geor- Kenneth Robinson, William ]to school. Sec- (depend on her, I ol Storms, Laura Symciyk, Ann gina Aumack, Susan BaJdassi, Ralph, Marilyn Mackason, Kath- [ond, they both ! believe it would Marie Tobia, Dennis SjoWom, Kariene Barber, Frank Bar one, erine Martin, MaryLou Russo, '> must realize that (probably cause William Selah, Frank Stein, Nan- this is a tem- 1 friction and re- cy Silcox, Robert Shuman, Mi- porary situation fsentment. I think chael Sjoblom, Barbara Taven- and will reap fu- I they should wait Process Applications er, Rose Wood, Donna Wotton ture benefits. to get married and Jean Young. Last, Inferiority of the male is till they can start off on the not implied. right foot. For Vocational School MICHAEL GOLDMAN, !tt LAURA E. D1LER, 13* River Ave., Point Pleasant, senior. ..aDDLETOWN - Frank 42 credits at the beginning of To Begin Qeeaa Ave., Apt. 15, Long Grimes, Middietown Township their junior year. Sraoclt, senior. Since a college [education is ft High School guidance director, Mr. Grimes stated that students I feel that a has announced tha| applications Practice f man shouldn't be necessity for a who intend to enter technical for the new vocational school are schools or colleges after gradua- (married unless man, a wife, should aid hex now being processed for students tion should not enroll in the pro- [he can afford to Teaching [husband in any who will be juniors and seniors gram. The training is only de- I support his wife I way possible. If next September. signed to give students a mastery [and Wmsetf. In [the husband is The school, slated for occupan- of basic skills required in the [die ca.se of a I unable to com* cy in September, will be adjacent occupational areas related to | few law and Iplete hia educa* to the high school. them. , * I medical students jtjon due 'to a jl make an ex- Vocational training wiM consist Courses to be offered are auto- (lack of funds, of a two-year course for juniors motive mechanics, beauty cul- |oeption because 'the working wale | the added years and seniors. However, students ture, carpentary, electricity, should contribute the necessary who wiH be seniors next year will electronics and technical draft- of required edu- financial aid. cation are very burdensome. be allowed to register for one ing. Students will receive high ROCHELLE ROSAY, 1M Third year of training for the 1966-07 school diplomas upon graduation. PEARL ROTH, 1144 Elbmo St., Lakewood, Junior. school year. Ave., Etberon, sophomore. I feel that Seniors must have 63 credits I see no rea- wives of college toward graduation and good at- son for the wife students should tendance and deportment records Keansburg ^ of a college stu- I definitely a i d to enroll in the program. dent not to help [their husbands Present sophomores must have Girl Wins her husband fi- (financially. Aside nancially for ed- 1 from benefiting ucation is one both mates in DAR Title of the most es- the future, it Freshman M1DDLETOWN—Barbara Cro- sential factors will help to cre- for betterment. ate a feeling ken, local high school senior, was It might be. bet- (of closeness in Wins Letter recently selected by her class ter, though, if striving to attain and the high school faculty as the the couple wait- a specific goal. A wife should township's "Good Citizen." Miss Margaret Qulvey ed until the education was tin- help her husband in every way Sponsored by the Daughters of before they married. possible. — Miss Mar- the American Revolution, the garet Quivey, daughter of Mr. contest is open to senior girls and Mrs. John Quivey, 25 Far- who possess outstanding qualities rell Dr., will begin practice teaching in the Spanish depart- CBA Announces 41 of dependability,.service, leader- ment of Rumson-Fair Haven Re- ship and patriotism. gional High School on Monday. A member of the National Hon- Miss Quivey attends Montclair Accepted by Colleges or. Society, Miss Croken is also State College where she is a can- vice president of the Student didate for a bachelor's degree in LWCROFT — Brother Bene- ski, King's CoMege, James Jor- Council and a member of the June, She is a member of the dict, guidance counselor at Chits' dan and George Telcpun, St. Pe- national Spanish Honor Society ter's, Charles Kitson, Catholic Future Teachers of America tian Brothers Academy, has an- Club, Math Honor Society, Pep Sigma Delta Pi, and a member University of America and St. of Lamda Omega Tau sorority. nounced that a record 41 seniors Francis College; Richard link, Club and yearbook staff. have been accepted at the col- Robert Dreyfuss, and Bernard The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. lege of their choice on an early Pfelfer, Manhattan College. Robert Ctoken of 190 Forest Ave., Need Money? Sell those things you really don't need with • a decision basis to date. Others are George Madden, Keansburg, Barbara plans to at- University of Missouri; William tend Douglass College In the Daily Register Classified Ad. The students are Alfred Bel* fall. Marfili 2fi,. when : R,umsoh-Fair ,, Ifatyen Regiona.1 Hjgti.rSchool pro- •^•dweeai "The Musicr Man"*/in the school • auditorium. Paul 0. -.. Granimer, head of ^ the vocal music department, and' Lloyd ' Grpflse, an English teacher and , fa'cujrty adviser for the Tower Players, irvlll direct. A PAIR OF carriage boots come In smooth fake, calfskin. They have a gently scalloped' top and are fleece-lined.. -ir- Auditions for the musical took pJace in December, and the re^ to •j suits were announced at the Variety Of Heights And Styles ••Christmas assembly On Dec. 23. Marion, the librarian, will be For An Active Social Season played by Cathy Baily, and un- derstand by Libbi Manley. Both. ly StKAN UIDEN > girls are- juniors. The quick BOOTS are bigger news costume.'They ftppear lined, ,. Witted and charming Harold HM than ever-on the fashion unilned, fur -topped, mid -calf - Will be portrayed by senior scene thlB season. They appear •'* length, ankle-height arid knee Thorn White. for every occasion. • . deep. - Other : prominent citizens of There are styles for country, The ones pictured are from River Cityv Iowa, are as foHoWs: ski lodge, daytime and after- an American house that pridea • Mayor Shin, Brian Narelle; noon. And for formal dress Itself t>n elegant styling com- • Amaryllis, • Lee Henderson; jeweled or lamS boots add a blned with practicality. All of , Charlie Cowell, Rod Taylor; fanciful footnote to a ahort their boots are waterproof, ..Tommy, Mark Gajither; Marcel- evening gown. . , ptain-and-scuff-resistant, and For Every Stylo -r deiightfully corafortableV ' t Jus, John Wichman; Mrs. Paroo : • Sue Paraley; Eulalie, Jan Whatever ;the hour or ^he Many are made of a vinyl. Bradley; Zaneeta, Dede Clark, outfit, there's a boot 'jto trot that looks like the finest and Gracie Shinn, Mindi Gorlin. along and, complement the leather or the softest suede. The cast will be augmented by a singing chorus and a dancing . chorus. Professional musicians 'iwill accompany the student •ofbhestra, X Jtie technical end of the pro- -: dqctfon will, be handled by com- mittees. Chairmen are: props, :Daqiel Auchen; costumes, Jfoanne -Brehnan; ntalte-up, Mary Di Fazio; set construction, Tom ' ; Conally; art, JoAnne GheZzi, and program ana publicity, Karen Famulary, The production staff also is aided by faculty advisers. Assistants to the directors are Gail Grammer and Candy Chin- nock. Prompting will be handled by Beverly Braun, Nancy, Kpeh- ter, Chrie Nielson, Msry: Lib Stout, Susan Van Brunt and Sue 4-H Course Announced * Young people between 18 and \ 25 will have an opportunity to United State* Rubber Co. take part in a "Citizenship Short PAWN-COLORED pretend-suede Is used for a handsome SHORTIES FOR "apres ski" are casual and comfortable. ""•Course for Out of School South'* knee-high pull-on boot with sUtching detail at the top. Made of suede cloth they sport shaggy white pile cufft. ; from Feb. 27 to March 4 at the National 4-H Center in Washing- * ton, D.C. The course will provide train- Graduates ". ing to aid young men and women to, be more effective leaders of Return For their existing organizations. ' Individual groups or represen- tatives of any youth organization Program are invited to enroll In this week- HIGHLANDS - A college guid- long session. Applications should ance program was recently pre- be: made through the state 4-H sented for the senior class at office by TtSb. 15. New Jersey's Henry Hudson Regional High state 4-H office is located at the School. ) College of Agriculture and En- •• vfronmental Science, Rutgers Several college students, all ; University, in New Brunswick. IMS graduates of Henry Hudson People interested in enrolling in discussed various problems of the course can obtain assistance campus life. The group closed with' applications from the coun- the session by recommending ty 4-H agent, George W. Siver, frequent reading and.essay writ- Jr., 20 Court St., Freehold. ing as tne best preparation for entering college. , Citizenship Short Course Participating were Robert Sun- jOut, of School Youth will be din, Rutgers University; Joy. conducted by the National 4-H Brown, Duke University; Donald Club foundation In behalf of the Stengeman, William and Mary Co-operative Extension Service of College; Michael Whitfield, Uni- the State Land-Grant Universities versity of Maryland; Tanya Ash- and Colleges and the U.S. De- uck, Glassboro State College; partment of Agriculture. Kathy Kearney, Rider College; In addition to lectures and dis- Linda Giovenco, Ursuline Col- cussions on the citizens role in lege; Linda Pannaecione, Union government, the American eco- Junior College; Jean Bolger, Car- : . ' - nomic system and other related dinal Strltch College; Matthew TWO LOCAL COMBOS, The Mags, above, and The Shadows, will be feafure^ topics, the program includes a of field trips to places of night af a teen dance sponsored by the Middletown Lancers Drum and Bugle Corps. Th» In Washington. dance will take place in the Middletown Cdfmmunity Center from 7 to J