*.. - ,,: y .• - Distribution Weather Occasional rain today, dearlng late tonight. Ugh in low to mid- 26,325 40s loir tonight In upper SH. Colder tomorrow fair with tem- Red Bank Area j peratures In upper JOi. Satur- day's outlook, cloudy and cold. Copyright—The Red Bank Register, Inc. 1966. DIAL 741-0010 MONMOUTH COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER FOR 88 YEARS [••tied dill: Itontur throuA Second Claji Po»tig« VOL. 89, NO. 154' Pall U I ti Bank ml tt mil Milling Otficet. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1967 7C PER COPY PAGE ONE To Break Assembly Aligning Deadlock Weintraub Set to Act TRENTON (AP) — New Jer- confronted with the task of pick- Negotiations collapsed five He said he would try to choose Weintraub said he intends to sey Chief Justice Joseph Wein- ing a tie-breaking member for hours before the deadline and an I lth commissioner as soon as confine his choice to someone traub stepped in today to help the stalemated bipartisan appor- both sides agreed to rest their possible. within the state familiar with break a deadlock between Re- tionment commission. cases with an appointee of Wein- The chief justice was asked if the redistricting issue and im- publicans and Democrats over The commission, comprised of traub. he had any qualms about being partial. ' the alignment of state Assembly five Democrats and five Repub- In a telephone interview, Wein- forced into a role of far-reaching Once the chief justice makes districts. licans, had until last midnight to traub said a number of names political significance. the appointment the commission "I don't like this chore at- produce a districting-plan to had been "running through my "Of course, I don't like it at will have one month to produce tached to my office one bit," satisfy the U.S. Supreme Court head but I still have a lot of all," he replied, "but that's the a plan. Eighty new Assembly the chief justice said after being one-man one-vote doctrine. thinking and canvassing to' do." way it is." seats' must be apportioned in time for this November's elec- tions. However, some plan must be on the books before the. filing deadline for primary candidates. RECEIVES POLICE PLAQUE — Raritan Township Patrolman Carl E. Price, second A bill awaiting the governor's signature would fix the filing from left, reeeivei N, J. Police Academy plaque from Col. D. B. Kelly, State Police Johnson May Reply deadline at April 26. superintendent. Patrolman Price achieved the award for ranking first in the 62-mem- William Hyland, Democratic ber 96th Municipal Police Training Class at Sea Girt. At left isC.Raritan Police Chief co-chairman of the commission, William J. Smith, and at right, Lt. Martin Potash, Municipal Police Academy com- said his party would be satisfied with whomever Weintraub selects. mandant. How Does He 'Smell' But John Dimon, the Repub- lican co-chairman, commented, To N. Viet Peace InHin the midst of these tspecula- "We want to take a good look WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi Vietnam and took the line that commitment to talk but' U. S. dent Johnson may reply today the major objective of Hanoi's officials, it is understood, are tions, the White House said late at this 11th guy. We want to see to North Vietnam's latest hint of if he smells right." No Incidents Sparked diplomatic campaign now is to trying to find out through dip- yesterday that Johnson is unlike- peace talks—one reportedly sent get the bombing stopped. lomatic channels whether this is The' commission was an out- to the United States this week . See Talks Possible an' indication of possible North ly to send Congress a message— growth of' last spring's constitu- through neutral countries. Vietnamese readiness for peace at least in the immediate fu- tional convention at Rutgers Some U.S. officials however, ; Johnson is expected to deal saw some possibility that peace discussion;. ture—on Southeast Asia. (See DISTRICT, Pg. 3, Col. 4) with the issue at a midafternoon talks might result. By Teacher Sanctions news conference. Any move in this direction MATAWAN TOWNSHIP - The duty. I believe they should be —Participating in class trips, The Hanoi government report- would confront Johnson with a Yank Toll Edges Up first day of teacher sanctions— because that is part of their reg- dances and the like. edly sent word to the United policy decision on whether a yesterday—produced no Incidents ular work schedule." —After-school tutoring. States this week that two policy promise of direct discussions on or major problems, Assistant He said no problems were re- -^Coming to school early ami statements made in Hanoi last peace between the United States School Superintendent Anthony ported at the elementary schools leaving late. weekend on the possibility of and North Vietnam would be a Nucclo reported last night. peace talks should get serious sufficient reason for ending the Marines Kill 68 Reds either, but again emphasized that —Collecting money for studenl consideration in Washington. The official noted, however, "it is too early to tell." insurance. bombing.. SAIGON (AP) - U.S. Marines nounced that 131 Americans were Enemy forces also increased that it is too early to assess the The List —School (student) photographs, The maneuver was carried out The United States has said any today reported killing 68 Com killed and 822 were wounded in last week,, U.S. headquarters said, full Impact of the sanctions, and Under the sanctions, here are —Holding parent conferences through neutral governments halt to the bombing, must also munist troops iri the initia action last week, . a small. to an estimated 284,000. This was added: some of the things teachers will before or after school or -during which urged the State Depart- bring some Communist de-esca- phases of two new drives in the crease over the previous week's 3,000 more than the estimate' the "The teachers' committee and not be doing: lunch periods. ment to look carefully at the lation of the military effort. northern part of South Vietnam toll of. 123 killed and 716 week before, but there was no board are meeting again tonight —Distributing PTA and PTO — Marking papers, plan books statements. The neutrals report- Both statements published in In action elsewhere, American, wounded. South Vietnamese head- explanation of the increase. and we all hope there will be bulletins and other such materi- registers, orders and inventories, edly said they acted at the sug- Hanoi said if the United States Korean and .South Vietnamese quarters listed 157 government , .In |he .Itpii, Triangle northwest progress." als. report cards, IQ tests, achieve- gestion of North Vietnam. would stop bombing there" could units claimed nearly 150 enemy troops killed last week, a sharp -pt Saigon, where a force of some He said there were no disor- —Counting milk money (teach- ment tests, curriculum guides, Secretary of State Dean Rusk be talks between it and North dead in a series of clashes up drop from the 340 of a Week 30,000 U.S. and South Vietnamese ders in the high school cafeteria ers will collect it but not conference reportsi-except dur- said yesterday the long-sustained Vietnam. and down the country, earlier. A total of 979 .enemy troops last Week =ended a 19-day yesterday. One sanction, accord- eouatlt)i •.,-:., ing regular school .hours., aerial assault is hurting North This stoppedshort of .a Hanoi U.S. military headquarters an- kjiieii was reported by the Ame'r- «corcbed- "You're taking no chances when you save at RED BANK SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION when* your money is insured up to $15,000 by a permanent agency of the Federal Government." ANTICIPATED MEMBER MEMBER DIVIDEND TRAVEL AGENCY,Nc Serving Monnonrh Couary for 18 Years 144 BROAD ST.. RED BANK Telephone 741-5080 Mercury Cougar, Car of thelfear. BETTER SERVE YOU WE WILL BE OPEN • —— Now on display at: — "*** • AND LOAN-ASSOCIATION .. (EFFECTIVE NOVEMBER 1) 10 IROAD ST. • RID 1ANK, N. J. SATURDAYS 9 A.M. TO 4 P.M. 741-3700 WEEKDAYS 9 A.M. TO 5 P.M. ENGLISH MOTORS 'Where You Save Does Make a Dijjerence!" COSTS NO MORE TO BOOK THROUGH YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT 34 Maple Avenue Thurtday, Feb. 2, 1967—3 Stay on an Elevator Deadline THE DAILY REGISTER Record Crowd Expected Set to File At State Chamber Fete Rmeved by Cigarette Auto Death WASHINGTON — Leaders of Other prominent New Jemey- RED SANK - "The worst part Urn and a gre»t foud J»e)/ ttirUA Appeal Data Hew Jersey ijjusiness, industry, unt attending the dinner iaetadi Associate Justice WillUra /. TO that I left my cigarettes in ringing. No one came, so I stayed TRENTON - The state Board Case Sent To agriculture, government «tnd 1 news media are out in record Brennan Jr., formerly of Rum- the car," Mrs. Marjorie M. on the button and the bell went of Education has given Mrs. Eth: Bramley of Fair Haven said yes- on ringing." number for the 30th Annual Con- son; Sam Zagoria, a member of el M. Massey, Coral Gables, for- the National Labor Relttions terday when she was released Presently a voice, muffled by mer Little Silver resident, until Grand Jury gressional Reception «nd Dinner of the New Jersey State Chamber Board and former administrative after spending 15 minutes the closed doors, asked, "What's March 1 to file papers in her KEYPORT—Charles H. Yuill, of Commerce tonight in the Hotel assistant to Senator Case and trapped in an elevator the matter in there?" appeal of a decision denying her Broad St. store. 9 Lafayette Dr., Hazlet, ap- Statler Hilton. Archibald S. Alexander of Ber- "We hollered back to them that reimbursement for home instruc- "But I found one in the bottom peared before Magistrate Sey- nardsviUe, assistant director, the elevator was stuck and the tion for her son Lance. Close to 1,100 are expected to of my bag and we smoked that,' U.S. Arms Control and Disarma- doors wouldn't open," Mrs. Bram- The state board in setting the mour Kleinberg in Municipa attend the event in honor of New she went on. ment Agency. ley went on. Mrs. Thompson, deadline declined to go along with Court last night on a charge o: Jersey's two U. S, Senators and The incident happened when she said, remarked that she a request made by attorney Ed- death by auto. 5 members of the House of Rep- Also attending are former Gov. Mrs. Bramley, wife of Register thought she was going to have a ward C. Stokes on behalf of the resentatives. More than 800 are Robert B. Meyner; several for- staff reporter Bob Bramley, went The charge stems from an ac- heart attack. That was when they Little Silver Board of Education, traveling to Washington together mer New Jersey members of the with her mother, Mrs. Walter R. cident Jan. 1 on Rt. 35 at Mapl found the lone cigarette in Mrs. that the appeal be dismissed. aboard the state chamber's spe- House of Representatives, and Thompson of Fair Haven, to PI. which resulted in the death Bramley's pocketbook. The case began in the 1960-61 cial Pennsylvania Railroad train the commanding officer of the buy a birthday present. With of James Duffy, Middlesex Ave., 1 U.S. Army Electronics Com- Nerves calmed after their school year when Lance was ab- which has been "sold out ' for the the baby in a carriage, the two Matawan. mand at Fort Monmouth, Ma]. smoke, and the two women wait- sent from school. past several days. women took the self-service ele- The case was referred to the '"William B. Latta. vator from the second floor down ed while efforts were made to In 1983, Frederick M. Raubing- Gov. Richard J. Hughes will open the doors with a key. WELCOME — Owners of new Holmdel Motor Inn Grand Jury.. to the first — but they didn't er, commissioner of education, up- Arthur Kondrup, 251 Atlanti attend along with several mem- reach their destination. "They finally took the door held the school board's refusal to Restaurant, Rt. 35, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Yurecko, welcome St., was found innocent on a bers of his cabinet and officers 3 Women Injured "When the doors didn't open, off," Mrs. Bramley reported. reimburse Mrs. Massey on the Holmdel Mayor Edwin Liebenow, left, to yesterday's charge of careless driving. Fred- and members of the state Legis- I pressed the button that's sup- "They were really very nice; they ground that she never made prop- rick Arnold, 14 Miller Ave., Haz- lature and other administrative In Keel Bank Crash carried the baby down and asked er application. preview luncheon. New facility, featuring dining room officials. posed to open them," Mrs. Bram- let, was found guilty of careles RED BANK — Three women us if we wanted a chair to climb Mrs. Massey is appealing from seating 116, banquet hall for 250, and cocktail lounge, driving and fined $15 and $5 court New Jersey Sens. Clifford P. ley said. "Nothing happened, so were treated for injuries at Riv- I pressed the emergency but- down on, since the elevator was the commissioner's decision. opens today. (Register Staff Photo) costs. ~ase and Harrison A. Wil- stuck a little way above the first erview Hospital yesterday after Others fined for careless driv- liams Jr., will each address the floor. I said, No, all I want dinner audience. Rep. Peter W. a two-car accident at West Front to do is go home!" ing were William E. Keegan Jr., Quints Two Youths District Ryer's La., Matawan, and Rob- Rodino Jr., dean of New Jersey's St. and Rector PI. A crowd of about a dozen ert Mullaney, 17 Hestor Ave., 5-member delegation to the (Continued) persons watchqd as the two wom- The driver of one car, Dora (Continued) South Amboy, $20, and $5 costs House of Representatives, will in- L. Jones and her passengers, pounds, 10 ounces) but it looks to en were helped down unharmed. Nabbed In University which approved sion member, defended the Dem- Tom W. Green Jr. wis con troduce his fellow New Jerseyans Dorothea Jones and Dora Jones, be in good shape." "You know, little Duff never plan for increasing the Legisla 1 ocrats from Gross' criticism. victed for speeding ant Jned $1 of the House. Mark Anton, presi- all of 29 Etra Rd., Hightstown, The mother, Mrs. Lionel Har- whimpered all the time we were ture's size from 29 to 40 mem "When we started to work over and $5 costs. dent of the chamber and chair- were slightly injured. The Jones ris, 31, a registered nurse, said in there," Mrs. Bramley recalled. Stolen Car bers in the Senate and 60 to each county, we fell back to the man of the board of Suburban car was in a funeral procession from her hospital bed, "I am so "He thought it was a big joke." MIDDLETOWN — Two Red members in the Assembly. whole state. The question, after Propane Gas Corp., Whippany, Bank youths were apprehended when it was in collision with a excited and happy. I am really Senate boundaries were a Is each county was considered, was will preside and also highlight the driving a stolen car on Rt. 35 at car driven by Georgiana Bethel thrilled and look forward to rais- ratified, but the bipartisan coi how does it affect the rest of the Coppolino chamber's views on several is- ing one big happy family." Oakhill Rd. yesterday. of Church St., Matawan. 26 Pupils vention left the drawing of As state," he explained. sues slated for congressional con- Sgt. Jesse V. Cook investi- Dr. James Seley, the Negro Police said the driver, a 15- sembly boundaries to the com "That's exactly why we failed." sideration year-old, presented a false li- gated. family's private physician, said[\/-Jc-Jf- mission with the stipulation th interrupted Dimon. The Republi Plea Study Mrs. Harris had taken fertili ' loll' cense to the investigating officer. the chief justice would name can chairman said his party had pills for about four months bi OCEAN TOWNSHIP - Twenty- The boy stated that he had tie-breaker in the event of tried to approach the districting Set Today fore becoming pregnant. six members of the seventh found the document on the street deadlock. problem without considering the "She failed to respond aft grade class of Miss Sandra in Red Bank. Detectives learned impact of alignments in one coun- SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) — Re- PUBLIC g that it had been stolen from a At a news conference follow two or three attempts,p, " he sai I f ty on the rest of the state. quest for a change in the loca- Isaacs from the Dow Ave. School locker in Middietown.High School. ing the commission's eighth u "She finally ovulated with a com Fernicola told newsmen the tion of the second murder trial watched the proceedings in Mu- Police said that the youth am productive bargaining session AUCTION SALE bination of these pills and oth nicipal Court yesterday evening both sides blamed each othe: GOP claim was "a little hard of Dr. Carl Coppolino to Miami hormones. We were prepared fi his 17-year-o!d companion usei to swallow." goes before circuit court at Sar- as part of their social studies a piece of copper wire to jum for the failure to reach agre The Providtnt National Bank (Philadelphia), Executor of a lot of babies." ourse. ment. Although the commission was asota today. the last will and testament of Marjoria C. Henderson, deceased, the ignition of a car owned b; unable to come to terms on the Seley explained he had counte When questioned after their vis- Judge Lynn Silvertooth wil will dispose of all personal property belonging to the decedent three heads on X-ray examina- John Rommel. Rommel's autt Nelson Gross, Bergen Coun state's heavily populated coun- it, the children showed general ty's GOP chairman, accused th hear motions by Coppolino's coun- tion. was parked in his driveway ai ties, it did report breakthroughs AT agreement with the verdicts 8 West Front St., Red Bank. Democrats of trading off on sel that the former New Jersey ' The quintuple birth, which ha they heard handed down by Mag- in two counties < previously con anesthesiologist can't get a Detectives William J. Hallida. county against another. He sa pens approximately once in ; istrate Vincent Agresti. sidered sore points. They were fair trial here. The defense ha COATS GALLERIES, INC. and Walter Monahon conducted the Republicans proposed that a million deliveries, is still a ra Mr. Agresti fined James T. Monmouth and Burlington. offered to finance a public opin lty despite a recent increase i: the investigation. future commission meetings t 288 NORWOOD AVENUE DEAL, N. J. Branch of Newark $30 for con- conducted in public. But all previous agreements ion poll to support its claim. multiple births because of ne tempt of court and {5 for mak- appeared to have been set aside (First door tenth of th« A&P Supermarket) fertility hormone treatments. State Sen. William V. Must Coppolino is scheduled to go on ing an improper turn. A bench by the suspension of talks. trial Feb. 13 in the August 1965 warrant, from the Township of Elders' Units D-Hudson, another commissioi Last week, the Democrats put 10:30 A.M. SATURDAY, FEB. 4th 10:30 A.M. member said the Democrat! death of his first wife, Csrmela. Ocean, had been out for Mr. forth a statewide plan drafted The doctor was acquitted in De Branch since 1965. were happy to go to public ses by Dr. Ernest Reock, director of Alio from varloui consignors additional offerings. Study Group sions, but accused Gross cember at Freehold, N. J., o. Penelope Schaefer of First the bureau of government re- murdering retired Army Col Ave., Asbury Park, was fined $10 "kidding us" by ruling out an; search at Rutgers University. closed talks. William Farber in 1963 in Mid- Three crystal chandeliers, colored TV (Zenith), baby grand for improper passing and Wil- Makes Trip The Republicans advanced a dletown, N. J. piano (DeKalb) 5-ft., grandfather's clock (circa 1790), upright liam S. Johnson of Washington 'He'Jl meet in caucus, he'll counter proposal for the entire HAZLET — A three-man com freezer (GE), corner cabinet (1840), oil paintings, sectional Ave., Asbury Park, was fined $10 talk with us on the telephone, state, with the State AFL-CIO Attorney James Russ of Or- mittee appointed by St. John' x bookcases, Encyclopedia Britannica, 1966 edition with three- "or disregarding a traffic signal. he'll do things you'll never know submitting a third plan. ando told Judge Silvertooth ear- Methodist Church to evaluate fed- lier that "extensive, pervasive volume Webster dictionary, world Atlas and cabinet, crystal about," Musto told newsmen ii The Republican commissioners HURT IN ACCIDENT erally assisted senior citizen and recurrent publicity" has Authorized response to Gross' stand. termed the Reock and AFL-CIO hurricane lamps, seven-piece silver tea set with tray. RED BANK — Ralph D. Ridle projects visited Baltimore yes- generated unfavorable sentiment offerings inconsistent and unfair. of 910 Sunset Ave., Asbury Park, terday. State Sen. Nicholas T. Ferni toward his client. Russ also re- Ships' lanterns, three-piece mantel clock set (French), fine INSURANCE Democrats responded with simi- was treated for contusion of the cola, D-Essex, another commis- quested that if the change of china (Minton, Limoges, Coalport, Haviland, Doulton, Wedg- The committee is investigating lar accusations. Replacements head yesterday at Riverview Hos- the federal government's 202 Pro- venue is granted, Silvertooth wood), crystal vases, stemware (Venetian), bisque figures, wall pital after a two-car accident on gram. This plan enables churches Hyland, in response to ques- remain as trial judge. tioning, said the Democrats still clocks, four-piece tea set (Sterling), bronies, three-piece de- Broad St., here. and other qualified sponsors to Four Men Coppolino was held in a Sar- canter set (Bohemian), bric-a-brac, porcelains, mantel clocks Auto Glass Police said that his car was borrow nearly all of the money stood behind the Reock propos- al but were not ruling out the asota jail for about two month (French), brass and crystal wall sconces* breekfront, chests of INSTALLED WHILE stopped when it was struck in the necessary to construct senioi before a preliminary hearing drawers, single and double (mapl* and mahogany); rush bot- Charged As ;ntroduction of some other pro YOU WAIT rear by a vehicle driven by Ruth citizen housing. was held by Silverfooth on the M. Cook of. 507 Washington St. Baltimore has more completed posals ""'when the commission tom chairs (Hitchcock), dressers, lounging chairs, occasional meets with 11 members. charge involving' Carmela- Cop- tables and chairs, washing machine (Kenmorel, breakfast set, Patrolman Robert A. Kuhn in- 202 programs than any city in polino. The hearing resulted in ATLANTIC vestigated. the nation. Shoplifters Neither side was prepared to refrigerator (Frigidaire), television (RCA-Zinfth). speculate on the possibility of New Jersey being granted the While in Baltimore the commit- MIDDLETOWN - Four Ne right to prosecute the doctor Nine-piece dining room let (Sheraton), dropleaf fables, BATTERY STOLEN tee met with government repre- an 11th member disagreeing with GLASS CO. SEA BRIGHT — Police report- York City men were arrested am the Democrats and Republicans first. vanities, three-piece sectional, Early American pine washstand sentatives. The members also charged with shoplifting at Sear. RED BANK ed this morning that a battery talked with Thomas Mangin, an and a further deadlock. Six votes with splash back (circa 1785), crystal cabinets, chest type 21 Maplt Ave.—747-2020 was stolen from a oar owned by architect who has specialized in Roebuck and Co., Rt. 35, yes are needed to approve any dis- freezer (Kelvinator), electric range (GE), room divider, four MATAWAN W. D. Relyea of 1201 Ocean high rise senior citizen housing terday afternoon. tricting plan. Court Fines shelves (Danish); end tables; floor and table lamps, sewing 138 Lower Main St.—566-2838 Ave. between 10 p.m. Tuesday projects. Dimon suggested that the State fable (circa 1845), dining room tables, pin* Dutch cupboard and 7:30 a.m. yesterday. Three of them were also chargei BELMAR The group has previously visit- with using and being under thi Supreme Court might then step (circa 1800), rocking chairs, five-piece dinette set round fa-" Patrolman Kenneth Johnson is 1113 Hwy. 71—681-1200 ed several such projects in New influence of narcotics. in on its own. 3 Motorists ble (Danish), sewing table dropleaf (circa .1845), seven-piece investigating. Jersey. New Jersey's Legislature has Acting Police Chief Joseph M been under orders to reappor- MATAWAN TOWNSHIP—Mag- silver tea let with tray. Queen Anne pattern (Sheffield). McCarthy gave this account: tion itself since 1964 when the istrate Lloyd D. Elgart Tuesday Two double bedroom sets (mahogany), silver table pieces V At approximately 4:15 p.m. po- state Supreme Court ruled the fined David Beeghly, Metuch- en, $30 for speeding and revoked (Sterling and plated), two desks with chairs, five wrought iron Will Appeal ice received a call from Ear] existing makeup violated the U.S. floor piano lamps (circa 1855), television fable model (Philco), REEDS JEWELERS Eckart, security manager his driver's license for 30 days. Supreme Court's one-man, one- marbletop coffee table, pair swirl top tables with locks, Early "32 YEARS OF DIAMOND LEADERSHIP" Sears. He stated that he had ap vote doctrine of balanced popu- Assessed $10 each were Willie American pine dropleaf table (circa 1780), what-not (ma- Ruling On >rehended Norman Woods, 35, i lations between districts. imith, Lower Main St., Mata- he act of stealing a radio froir After failing to reach agree- wan, for careless driving, and hogany), new hospital bed, new wheelchair (American),, ean- Frat House :he store. The man's three com ment in the Legislature, the law- Mrs. Maureen McAuley, Bronx, delabras and numerous items. . : ^Direct Import panions had fled, he said. makers adopted a temporary ap- N. Y., for failing to keep right. LONG BRANCH — The city Packing and cartons supplied by th* Galleries. has authorized assistant city at- Police surrounded the store ant portionment plan and assigned Mrs. McAuley was fined an addi- torney Robert Mauro to appeal he trio was found in the parking the final task to the constitutional tional $25 for delinquent return No consignments accepted for this sal*. Diamond Sale! a ruling by Judge Thomas J. ot. convention. of summons. Smith, who had overturned a de- A preliminary search of thei 1/4 Carat cision by Magistrate Stanley Co- ar revealed records and a cam- hen that the Kappa Beta Sigma ra which had been taken from ~ Diamond fraternity house, Cedar Ave., had iears as well as a tape recorde been in violation of the city's ind other merchandise taken Solitaire zoning ordinance. rom J. M. Fields, Rt. 35, Hazlet. The city had prosecuted the The three are: Cornelius King, fraternity in Municipal Court and 34; Richard Small, 30, and Gary $ won. Robinson, 30. HIGHEST BATES ALLOWED Judge Smith said the matter Mr. Woods, Mr. King, and Mr, was before the courts because of Imall were booked on the nar- T25 complaints about noise, traffic :otics charge, the chief reported. SAVE 20%—-Buy Now or Lay-Away congestion and littering. He said Sail was set at $1,500 each. Rob- the alleged offenses should have nson's bail was $500." been dealt with by the enforce- ment of other local ordinances. The four will be arraigned to- iorrow morning in Municipa They're Unique! Ads in the tourt. Daily Register Classified work Detectives William J. Halliday, PAID /alter Monahon, Robert Olsen, for you around the clock. Place nd Patrolman Robert Schnoor yours now. ade the arrests. 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ON EACH PANEL With vests assuming STARTING AT 3.69 JVOOR ASSURANCE OF "THE; PRE-FINISHED MOULDING COLOR •BEST M QUALITY & VALUE; ever greater importance MATCHED TO PANELS IN STOCK! in men's spits, WALLPAPER CEILING TILE CERAMICS WALL ARMSTRONG featuring . . . we've, added one to COVERINGS • FLINTKOTE 4V4" WALL C COMPLETE TILES 12 ea take you into milder SELECTION • TIFFANY DISCOUNTS Whira—First Quality l"xl" Floor & Wall weather. It's our 10% to G TILES c mid-weight Dacron «q. ft. 50% 12x12" 11ea from polyester and worsted oxford weave, a great PAINT SPECIALS! Covers Beautifully Moore5» Reg. 4.35 Gal. traveler and our ALL SAVE $1.47 candidate as the COLORS 88? suit for all seasons. 269? 2 Gray or whiskey, 79.50. . Monmouth's Newest Decorating Cener • SPINDLE BEADS Early American Hand Hewn Malta. Your Own Daslgni • CEILING BEAMS • REAL DECORATIVE • REAL WALNUT SHELVING Stona and Brick • MOSAIC TILES It's Beautiful • WALLPAPER • FILIGREE PLYWOOD All 1967 Colon and Patterns Many Different Dmlgiu • SUPPLIES FOR PAINTING "Plug In" • CEILING TILES • INSTANT FIREPLACES . • INDOOR WINDOW Idaal for rtc, room, provldtt hMf. toe. and DOOR SHUTTERS Folding Room • WINDOW SHADES • SCRUNS «nd DIVIDIRS. All Wldtltf and Una.Hu Decorator Colon*}. iKHft POMOIS Oiniiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiinuiiiiiiiwimiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiui h *Tve Got To Go Slow On That — The Register's Opinion Speed Would Be Dangerous!" [CA. Johnston; Courthouse Squmtj Bailey's Gathble F. Lee Bailey is taking « calculated risk in hit demand to Reflection on the Senate shift Dr. Carl A. Coppolino's second murder trial away from ; Few U.S. senators of either party Baker allegedly used his connections Sarasota^Fla. The young Boston barrister has set his sights on Miami, • should feel comfortable about the fed- to sway senatorial votes and to build scene of great publicity, as witness the 1966 Candy Moiler eral court conviction on charges of campaign war chests. The Republican trial, and a metropolis from which Mr. income tax evasion, theft and conspir- minority was obviously eager to pur- • Bailey thinks he may better obtain disinter- acy, of Robert G, Baker, former secre- sue all leads that might further env ested jurors. But Judge Lynn Silvertooth, if he Is in- tary of the Senate Democratic major- barrass the Democrats but not much clined to remove the trial from Sarasota en ity. Though it was Baker as an indi- inclined to take any action that might the ground that local Interest there hai vidual who was found guilty, his 14- in future prevent them from dispens- already prejudiced Coppolino's right to a day trial exposed to view some of the ing favors to fat cat contributors. fair hearing, has an alternative. He could change the venue to some other Florida jur- workings of the unsavory system of Now that Baker has been con- isdiction. influence peddling and campaign fund- victed, among other things, of steal- Newspapermen in Sarasota say that un- raising in the Senate — a system ing $99,000 intended for senatorial JOHNSTON iike Miami, which Includes a great number that neither Republicans nor Demo- campaign purposes, the Senate can of immigrants from other state* among its crats have shown much interest in hardly afford to sit back and do population, many areas of the state are not so cosmopolitan. For instance, virtually all of the inland territories, are al- correcting. nothing about the conditions that most exclusively populated by native-born Floridlans who, by After Baker was accused more gave the majority secretary his op- historic identification, are said to be quite unsophisticated by than three years ago of using his of- portunity. Even the Democratic ma- Perry Mason romancing of which Mr. Bailey U so capable. ficial Senate position to amass a jority on the Rules Committee ad- These Sunshine State natives are the "show me" type, fay tht writers, and probably are as well read and subject to as many personal fortune, the Senate Rules mitted that he was guilty of "many prejudices as the more transient flock in Sarasota. Committee conducted an inquiry that gross improprieties." Such improprie- Judge Silvertooth, who enjoys a fine reputation in Florida was characterized more by inter-party ties, which inevitably involve senators just as Judge Elvin R. Simmill did in Monmouth County whan political maneuvering than by any themselves, are likely to continue un-, Coppolino had his first murder trial, would do well to emulaU Judge Simmill's attitude on venue and jury picking. • ' serious attempt to find out what was til Congress tightens up the notorious- Judge Simmill took the position that it had to be demon- wrong with the legislative apparatus. ly lax laws on campaign fund-raising, strated ficst that it was impossible to get a fair-minded -panel The Democratic majority was obvious- on lobbying and on ethical standards in the county where Coppolino's cases had been given maximum ly reluctant to have the investigating for law-makers, including disclosure of publicity. It became evident very quickly that jurors were well informed about the situations but were willing and able to give committee pursue all leads as to how their sources of outside income. an accused person an open mind. * • ' * • THE RESPONSE to comments here Jast week on prob- Ban on Teen Drinkers lems of teacher tenure and salary schedules reflect sympathy That perennial battle—to get New bombard New York with an adver- with the view that tenure should be abolished and ulary schedules should be dealt with realistically by teachers as well York to raise the legal liquor age from tising campaign that hopefully will as boards of education. 18 to 21—has started again. finally persuade the Empire State's For instance, a retired Army officer who lives In Llttli And we're told fhat "this may legislature to raise the age. Silver writes an impression which typifies the predicament of foe our last chance to get the New The commission outlined this pro- many taxpayers who live on fixed incomes and follow strict York drinking age in line with the annual budgets. gram before the New York legislature "The teachers have gone hog wild," he says. "They play on neighboring states." adjourns in April: Sylvia Porter: Your Money's Worth one community against another, People are beginning to resent , The fight has been a long one— New Jersey's major educational, it." without any success. But it is reas- service, civic, religious and philan- Obviously he is concerned by the fact that virtually all ol suring to know that it has started thropic organizations will meet Feb. the revenue municipalities have received from the 1968 itatt 1 How to Save on Taxes sales tax law has been used to give teachers greater salary again. And perhaps, with enough push 27 in an attempt to chart a course of increases instead of to ease the taxpayers' burden. And, in behind the,drive,'this is the year in persuasion on the New York lawmak- . A primary purpose of this series is to deductible. If you sold a residence last year the bargain, taxpayers have been intimidated • by teacher which there can be some action in- K ers; major liquor distillers and insur- give you • income tax savings guides which and paid a transfer tax, cut your sales price threats to "sanction," "strike," and shut off customary par- you cod'ld not easily find elsewhere. Another by that amount in calculating your net profit, stead of the usual talk. ance firms will be asked to enlist in ticipation in school programs. objective is to help you avoid mistakes which if any. If you bought a residence and paid From Matawan, a school executive indicates the frustra- Statistics show that there is a high an advertising campaign, and a peti- could bring your tax return to the attention a transfer tax, add this amount to your cost. tion so many elected Board of Education members feel in accident and fatality rate among teen- tion to be signed by mayors of all of an examining agent, a In deducting any stock transfer taxes on there traumatic experiences with teacher negotiations. municipalities adjacent to the New development that obviously your return, note that there still is no sep- "Based on experience," he says, "I am certain that many >, ! agers who drive across state lines to could be costly in terms of arate line for that deduction in the "Taxes" buy liquor. And this has caused great York border will be forwarded to the board members have misgivings with respect to their views time and money. block under "Part IV. Itemized Deductions" being representative of public thinking. Your views (The Square , concern among New Jersey officials. New York legislature. For instance, did you, on page 2 of Form 1040. You must write in of last week), representative of a portion of the public, are New Jersey's Commission for a This new approach may be the one during 1966,'s period of his- the line under the last printed item which is heartening during these trying times." for "Personal Property" taxes. torically high interest rates, School elections next Tuesday, for regional districts, and Uniform Drinking Age of 21 is lead- that is needed to bring the desired buy bank "savings bonds," * * * i ing the new effort — and plans to action. It is worth a try. Feb. 14, for local districts, offer John Q. his opportunity to "growth certificates" or ARE YOU AN investor who sold real express himself. If he votes "no" just out of reaction to the other instruments which are estate at a profit in 1966? If so, you may pattern, he will be demonstrating in the only manner open similar to U.S. Series E have a potential problem. The Treasury often to him, and he will be doing a service. Savings bonds in that they The Monmouth Museum PORTER claims that an investor held his property This does not mean teachers should not be permitted to increase in value up to ma- "primarily for sale to customers in the negotiate for the best bargain they can obtain, or that their The Monmouth Museum Board of Harry A. Gasteyer. Dr. Whitehead re- turity instead of paying interest currently? Trustees has re-elected Charles B. ordinary course of his trade or business" services should not be genuinely appreciated. But the school mains as a consultant •— although a If; £o, you must know that there is a key and if this proves to be so, the investor must boards, as representatives of the public, should be entitled to Harding as its president. It is fitting search is on for a new director. tax difference between your Series E bond report his profit as ordinary income instead get out from under the tenure law which guarantees incompe- that this honor was again given to Mr. But the museum' conducted an- and your. ba«k-savings bond. You, a cash of preferentially r taxed' capital gain. tents a lifetime security in a field where they are not suited; basis taxpayer, pay no tax on the annual In 1966, the Supreme Court handed down and they should be able to negotiate on individual merits and Harding, who has made such outstand- other fine' exhibition in Asbury Park's increase in the value of your Series E bond ing contributions to the museum. a decision which makes it much tougher for reliance that a salary schedule worked out on a long range boardwalk rotunda and a great deal as long as you hold it. (You can pay if you the Treasury to claim ordinary income (Malat projection would be binding except for cost of living changes. The museum has been established of public interest was shown in the choose, but few do.) You do, however, have v. Riddell). Unfortunately, though, the lower as a center for the study of art, museum's nature program in Holmdel. to report the year's increase in the value court decisions after the Supreme Court case of your bank bond, if you could have re- science and nature. And in the short Programs are continuing which are of have not been as liberal as they might have WITH THE ARRIVAL this week and next of mid-winter deemed this bond during the year. been in applying the High Court's new rule. political dinners, 1967 election enthusiasm starts to build.. period of its existence, it has made interest to school children in the area. * * * Before reporting your real estate sales profit Democrats will celebrate their only Monmouth County suc- significant contributions to the cultur- One of the biggest assets' of the THIS IS SO even if the interest has not as capital gain on Schedule D, it would be cess at the polls last November when, on Saturday night at al life of the community, especially museum at this stage in its growth, been paid to you and you still hold the wise to check these 1966 developments with Sea Girt Inn, they toast Rep. James J. Howard. This will be among our young people. is the able group of people it has in bank bond. your professional adviser. an interesting event to observe. Did you pay any state transfer taxes on A hint for farmers. A farmer who sells Speaker after speaker, undoubtedly, will recall the, sur- Last year was one in which there leadership positions. They are de- sale of stock or other securities or of a house i his upland cotton acreage to another farmer prising margin by which he carried Monmouth in sweeping to were some temporary setbacks for the termined to make the museum a suc- during 1966? State transfer taxes are not should report his profit (or loss) as capital his second-term election in the Third District, which also in- museum. Dr. James Whitehead left as cessful enterprise—and we know they deductible unless incurred in business or for gain or loss (unless he is a dealer in allot- cludes Some safe Democratic areas in Middlesex and Ocean . director and so did his assistant, Mrs. will. •the production of income. Thus, the New ments) on Schedule D. If he only leases his Counties. York State transfer tax on any sales of stocks allotment, the rent is ordinary income and But what many listeners will be hopeful of hearing is some or other securities you made last year is not entitled to the special tax break for assurance from the county's party leadership that they rec- deductible separately as a tax on page 2 of capital gain. ' ognize Mr. Howard's political charm and want his counsel your Form 1040 and not deducted merely A cotton producer who buys someone in future party policy matters. Robert S. Allen, Paul Scott: Inside Washington from the sales price of the securities. But else's allotment cannot deduct the price he These matters would include a preferred voice in selection a transfer tax on the sale of a residence by pays, either as an immediate deduction or of candidates for county offices this year, the distribution of one homeowner to another is not separately by way of depreciation. whatever patronage may be available, and direcMin of the upcoming campaign. ^k- Hassan Wants U.S. Arms So far, party leader Paul Kiernan and Chairman P. Paul WASHINGTON—One of the main objec- mark as a lawmaker, but he has already John Chamberlain: These Days Campi have limited their relations with the congressman — and tive* of Morocco's King Hassan II when he done so in one field. Percy and his staff are for that matter, with the only Democratic freeholder, Eugene comes to Washington next week is to try to conducting one of the most high-powered J. Bedell — to applause. Advice or even concurrence on leader- induce the U.S. to replace France as his publicity operations on Capitol Hill. They ship dictates are things not considered of sufficient merit to country's principal arms supplier. pass up no opportunity to get his name in Coal Industry in Fight for Life take up with the congressman. Morocco has a tough the papers, or to get him on radio and tele- Republicans will swell the now seldom seen Crystal Ter- and well-trained military vision. In the three weeks he has been in Not so long ago the Atomic Energy Com- Worthingtpn of Wheeling, W. Va., talk about race of the Berkeley Carteret Hotel in Asbury Park taext establishment, but lacks the Senate, Percy has garnered more pub- mission's Director of Reactor Development reviving George Washington's old dream of Wednesday for their annual Lincoln Day fete. I modern artillery, tanks and licity than any other Republican except GOP and Technology, Milton Shaw, urged a slow- a canal connecting the Ohio River with the While the scheduled speaker, Gov. John H. Chafeelot jet aircraft. Leader Everett Dirksen, III. At the rate down in the building of new atomic energy James River in Virginia. What Mr. Worth- Rhode Island, is a drawing card of sorts, more consideration Previously a French Percy is going he should get somewhere with plants. Presumably he wanted to have time ington had to say sounded romantic, not to probably will be given by a majority of the GOP-ers to open- colony, Morocco has been his presidential ambitions—unless he stubs to build better reactors. say improbable. The canal George Washington ings in the 1967 slate of election candidates. buying its weapons from •his tbe . . . Dale Miller, Texas lobbyist and Nevertheless, more and had proposed back in 1784,would have been •While it is a foregone conclusion that Sen. Richard R. Stout France. But with the De close friend of President Johnson who headed more electric power com- a series of small ditches ahd tunnels linking and Assemblyman Alfred N. Beadleston will be candidates for Gaulle regime increasingly ,the 1965 Inaugural Committee, is sitting on panies are turning to the up creeks and rivers, with mules drawing two new Senate offices, and that Assemblyman James M. Cole- favoring Algeria on one the financial accounting of its activities. atom. The number of nu- small barges. man Jr. and Joseph Azzolina will be Assembly nominees, the hand, and Russia doing the Miller has announced that the committee clear generation stations .In * * * party will have to choose also two other Assemby potentials same on the other, Hassan wound up in the black, with $50,000 deposited the U.S. will soon top the IF THE GEORGE Washington project and a candidate for freeholder. b seeking another source of military sup- for the 1969 inauguration, and $25,000 be- 50 mark, turning over to were revived it would have to be on a 'plies, particularly as relations between stowed on Mrs. Johnson's beautification pro- 'ne atom ^e i°^ °' P';oa'uc" larger scale; a waterway would have to be •Morocco and Algeria are sharply strained. gram. But a detailed committee report is ing some 28 million kilo- constructed capable of accommodating giant President Johnson has been informed by still to be published. Committee insiders say watts. By "burning" fission- river barges. In level territory, giant barges Cynic's Corner By Interlandi Defense and other authorities that in the such a report was completed several months CHAMBERLAIN able materials the power can deliver coal for less than half of what past year Algeria has re- ago, but they are in the dark as to why industry will forego buying the railroads must charge even with their ceived a large amount of Miller hasn't released it ... The two largest 80 million tons of coal annually. 100-unit trains. A big barge line across the Russian hardware. Included stevedoring concerns in Saigon are controlled If this represents an inevitable trend, Alleghenies, knocking three dollars a ton are some 6,000 artillery by French interests and South Vietnamese the coal states of Appalachia have a right out of the carrying costs, could bring coal pieces and 300 late-model Chinese. Of the two, the French-owned com- to be concerned. They have surmounted one from the Kanawha River in West Virginia tanks. pany is the biggest. great crisis by combining mine automation to the port of Richmond on the James River Morocco has less than with a revolution in coal transportation. In in full competition with the atom. one-fourth this number, thus 20 years of fighting oil for the home-heating Romantic or not, Mr. Worthington thinks giving Algeria a tremendous market, coal production dropped by some that when West Virginia realizes that its preponderance in fire pow- 25 per cent. But new wrinkles in mining, • southern counties may "revert to wilder- er and mobility. 6- THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1967 such as automated shovels, which take al- ness" unless the canal is built, it will find SCOTT The Soviet also has most 200 tons at a bite in strip-mining opera- ways of financing it. The new earth-moving equipped Algeria with 80 40-42 Brond St., Red It fink, N. J. 876 IU. 35, MIddlrtown, N. J. tions, cut the cost of production at the mine, machines—great shovels and mechanical fighter planes, including a score of MIG-21s. 30 East Mnin St.. Freehold, N. J. and the 100-unit "integral" train knocked. "moles"—are capable of doing the digging, Morocco has only a few old-type fighters and 179 Broadway, Long Brunch, N. J. 20 per cent out of the costs of taking the which Mr. Worthington says would cost some- *ome transport planes. Eilah. 1ft7fl br John II. Cook oml llrnry Clay coal to market. The electric power com- where between two and three billion dollars. Later this month, Emperor Haile Selassie Published bj Th» fled Bank Iteilnter Incorporated panies, making use of the cheaper coal With money as tight as it is, it is diffi- ' M. IIAItOLI) KELLY, Publisher Is coming to Washington on an identical offered in 100-unit train bulk deliveries, kept cult to visualize a market for the bonds mission. Arthur Z. Kamlit, Editor building steam plants and more than doubled necessary to finance a Midland Canal Ad- Already, Ethiopian sources have let it TliOman j. niy William I\ Snndford their coal consumption in the 20 years after Kxccullve Editor Associate Editor ministration. But the coal industry has never be known that Selassie will ask for $30 mil- Frank \\, Ha r hour Charges A. Johnston World War II. taken nnything lying down. With 800 billion / lion in additional military aid to match the MlddJetown iinrcau Msr. Freehold Bureau Mgr, * * , * tons of unused bituminous coal still waiting modern equipment Russia is providing near- Mrmljer ol the Associated PIPII BUT NOW, with the development,of the . to be mined in America, nobody connected by Somalia. The Associated Press In entitled exclusively lo thi line For rrpublication of all tlie local news printed In this nuclear energy plants hitting new peaks, coal with the Industry is going to give up'without The aging Ethiopian ruler will urge this newspaper as well as ill AP newg dlapatcli$ surcharge meons THEY will • • * any error which may occur. when the mine cost is added in, coal can't in the Forties and Fifties, I would not be too greatly surprised to see Mr. Worthing- have to pay 6 cents more for each do 11Of fiubacrlDtlon Prices In Advance compete with the atom. AMBITIOUS ROOKIE—Illinois' freshman Single CODV AAoNTGOMERY To Be Boards' COMP. VAL 7.95 EA. £ for WARD Parley Speaker TRENTON — John H. Metzler' GIRLS of Red Bank, associate chairman o£. the Department of Industrial SAVE UP TO Relations at Newark College of SAVE Engineering, will be one of the CLEARANCE COMP. VALUE speakers Saturday at the annual Water Heaters legislative conference of the state 12.95 .,;;: Federation of District Boards of SALE 50% OFF Call - far Immedlat* Delivery Education. R«g* 54.95—6'lau Un«d Mr. Metier is a labor relations COMP. VALUES ON 30-g.l. Natural G.i ...... 47.95 consultant for the federation, and JUMPERS Reg. 84.95—Gla«« Linad has served in the same capacity OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF 40-gal. Natural Gas 72.88 with the Red Bank Board of Ed- Reg. 89.95—Glasi Lined ucation. His topic will be "pro- 50-gal. Natural Gas 79.95 cedures." INFANT A TODDLERS The main address of the con- SKIRTS —Installation Extra— ference will be made by Coiv PHONE 542-2150 gressman Frank W, Thompson PRAMS * COAT SETS Jr. (4th-NJ) who is a member MONTGOMERY WARD of the House Education and La- •DRESSES ' MONMOUTH bor Committee and will speak SNOWSUITS on "federal involvement In edu- SHOPPING CENTER cation." MEN'S COMP. VAL. 6.88 TO 18.83 EATONTOWN, N. J. About 300 local school board • SLACKS members are expected to attend. REVERSIBLE SKI JACKETS When We Run a Sale . . Diamond quilted all nylon, zipper front, 2 pockets, roll under collar hood. WE RUN A SALE Ideal for work or play. Blue, black, burgundy. Sizes S, M, L, XL. REGULAR SUITS-VALUES TO $85.00 SALE $20.00 AND UP OPEN DAILY 9:30 a.m. 'til 10 p.m. CO MM li Nil . SUNDAY* 9:30 a.m. 'HI & p.m. C C P MIDDLETOWN ROUTE 35 *For Salts Allowed By Law , Feb. 2, 1967 SHE DAILY HEGISTER School for Home JBuyers Begins March 6 at C&flfege WEST LONG BRANCH-Pros- lege, beginningb gg March «tad cnn- "We Jwm« bwbtez* we The tchorA 20 Real Estate Sales Negotiated by Agency pective home buyers in the (hare tinningtii on consecutivti e MoodtyMd yg teferetted In getting saJXsftcd daase* of 309 , ..„..,_. •res chouid be the b**t informed through April 3. Classes, limited home ownen," be continued. session last year p. Matattuti3a MIDDLETQWN — WfJilmn J. estate transfers in the Northern fnrm*ri« *.» T««~, m. u.., „„!„» «„,< utr n*\mmi i*.- -- Ail 3 Cl liid formerly of Jersey City, hav quist and Mr. Gcjgei, The salt In our history, according to plans to 300, (tart «t 7:30 p.m., pause "The home buyer who makes his' College. Kinnear, manager of Monmouth County area. purchased a home from Mr. andwas negotiated by Mr. Lindquist disclosed by Joseph Fabiano of tor coffee, and continue until 10 purchase wisely, on the basis of Co-chairmen of the. project «re Middletown offices of Mrs. James Stromenger, 211 Ar- Mr. and Mrs. James Offill havi Agency, has announced Mr. and Mrs. William Symoi New Shrewsbury, president of p.m. . sound facts, is a satisfied cus- John L. Fitzgerald^ Rumson; Eu- formerly of Union, have pui lington Ave., Union Beach. Mr, purchased the home at 16 Karyn the N.J. Shore Builders Associa- : "There Is plenty of authorita- tomer. The disappointed home gene Carroll, Little Silver; Roy Lindquist and Joseph Lowenstei Ter., Middletown. The sale wag •MB*"** Ml Cmlral imtfWmn chased a new house from Mr. an tion. tive information available," said buyer will often mistakenly take Fleidner, Long Branch, and Al- Mrs. Robert Horn, 541 Shermai listed the property and the sail handled by both Mr.'Pepsin and Mr. Fabiano said his organiza- Mr. Fabiano, "and a vast num- it out on the home bui'der, when bert Th6mpson, N.J. Natural' Gas • FUI ESTIMATE 'i I was handled by Mr. Lindquist. James Connelly. • wyavr II Ave., Belford. The property wa tion will conduct its seventh an- ber of prospective home buyers his displeasure may really re- Company. listed by Pat Feldman and Wal- Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Bulger, I ROOFINO oad SIDINtt I Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gieblei nual School for Home Buyers, would like to get it. The School sult from overbuying, under- The producer of the annual pub- • Ovtten, Uodtn and Rtpolrj • ter Wilson and the sale was formerly of Jersey City, have have purchased the home of Mr, designed to acquaint home seek- for Home Buyers will- provide the estimating his future family re- • Aluminum Storm Windows, ['oorj | handled by Boyd Mason and Jack purchased property at 434 Au- and Mrs. Joseph Burulcich at 1 ers with basic knowledge of how channel through which this infor- quirements, or. expecting more lic service project is Jack Little, Lindquist. mack Ave., Union Beach. The Ideal Ave., East Keansburg. Both to buy or build and finance a mation can get to the people who from the home than it can pos-executive vice president of the M2-MN listing was handled by Mr. Ma- | ALL WORK GUARANTEED I Mr. and Mrs. George Stantoi the listing and sale were handled home. need it. sibly give, him." ' NJSBA. son and Mr. Feldman. Mr. Maso by Mr. Lindquist and Mr. Wal- The school, which will again also handled the sale. ton. be conducted by the NJSBA as a Mr. and Mrs. Michael Furlong, public service, will have the N.J. formerly of Rockaway Beach, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Rafferty, formerly of Iselin, have purchased Natural Gas Company as a co- Be Prepared... L.I., have purchased the proper- sponsor. ty at 92 Bethany Rd., Hazlet, from Keansburg. Mr. Lowenstein anc Mainstay Federal Sairings Mrs. Nikita Andreiev at 20 Lam- Classes will again be held in Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dean. Mr. Science Hall at Monmouth Col- Feldman, Joseph Walton and Har- mers St., Hazlet. The listing wa, handled by Mr. Walton and thi old Cromwell co-operated in both SISTERHOOD TO MEET and Loan Association the sale an* listing. sale was made in co-operation with Mr. Mason and Mr. • Wil- MATA^AN TOWNSHIP — Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Levendus- son. The Sisterhood of Temple Sha- ky of North Arlington recently lom will meet Feb. 21 when a 4? BOY SCOUT WEEK Mn and Mrs. Andrew Sorber, DIVIDEND INCREASED TO purchased a home from Mr. and lecture and film will be given "JJJf FEBRUARY 7 th-13th Mrs. Fiore Benigne, 200 Broad formerly of West Keansburg, on home decorating. The meet- way, Union Beach. Mr. "Mason have purchased the home at 16 ing will be held at the Strath- and Walter Wilson listed the prop- Middlesex Ave., Cliffwood Beach more Elementary School at 8:30 To look your best, your erty and Mr. Feldman and Mr. xom Mr. apd Mrs. Edward De- p.m. Walton co-operated in the, sale, mers. Mr. Pepsin negotiated the Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mikal- sale in co-operation with The uniform and equipment ouskas,- formerly of Long Island Berg Agency Office in Sayre- the rate of... have purchased a home at 1( woods as the listing office. OUR should foe at its best. Brooklawn Dr., Hazlet from Mr Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hesterha and Mrs. Alan Rochlin. The list- gen have purchased the home of ing was handled by Mr. Feld- Mr. Edward Stadleman, 12 New- ANNUAL per annum man, and the sale by Mr. Ma man St., West Keansburg. The Boy Scouts • Cub Scouts son and Mr. Lowenstein. listing was handled by James Mr. and Mrs. James Marzano Connelly and the sale by Mr. Paid For Jr. of North Arlington have pur- Walton. Explorers chased the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Alphonse Ven- The Current Semi-Amraal Period Robert Endlich at 557 Cambridge tura, formerly of Maplewood, Ave., Union Beach. Bud Geigel have purchased the property at We are yo« Best OFFICIAL listed the home and Edward Pep- 7' Plymouth Ave., Port Mon- July 1st to December 31, 1966 sin handled the sale. mouth, from Mr. and Mrs. James Boy SCOUT Supplier — Mr. and Mrs. Oronzo Ludovico Offill. The listing and sale were Your Savings Are Now Insured Up To have purchased the home at 11 handled by both Mr. Pepsin and Over 30 Years as a Scout Supplier Coach Dr. East, Hazlet, from Mr. Mr. Connelly. and Mrs. Robert Cloward. The Central Marine Supply Inc. has $15,000 listing and the sale was handled purchased the property at 1228 IS NOW by Mr. Mason. Rt. 36, Raritan Township, from \ by the Mr. and Mrs. Clement Wozniak, Max N. Koven. The listing was IN PROGRESS formerly of Brooklyn, recently handled by Mr. Mason. The sale Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation • • purchased the property at 9 First was handled by Harold Crom- Ave., Port Monmouth, from Jo- well. seph Curchy. The listing was Mr. and Mrs. Paul Swencak, for- wndled by Mr. Pepsin and Char- merly of Iselin, have purchased les Schmidt and the sale was the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thom- negotiated by Mr. Pepsin. as Loughney at 4 Rosemary Dr., Leonard F. Hotzman of Gar- Hazlet. Mr. Feldman and Mr. wood has purchased a home at Walton handled the listing. Mr. MEN'S and BOYS' OUTFITTERS SINCE 1846 Fleetwood Dr., Hazlet. The Cromwell made the sale. HIGHWAY 35 :ale was made by Mr. Feldman Mr. and Mrs. Robert Button MIDDLETOWN ind Mr. Geigel. lave purchased the home of Mrs. 36 MONMOUTH STREET Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gibson \nn Norman at 8 Willis Ave., 19 BROAD ST. RED BANK lave purchased the home of Mr. (eansburg. Mr. Lowenstein and RED BANK nd Mrs. Lawrence Thygesen at Mr. Cromwell handled the list- OPEN WED. and FRI. 'TIL 9 P.M. Franciscan Way, Hazlet. The ing, and Mr. Pepsin and Mr. 741-0663 isting was handled by Mr. Lind- Lowenstein negotiated the sale. FEBRUARY SALE! # BE OUR GUEST. IF YOU You'll be amazed when you sit down to discover comfort you thought possible only In sofas costing many dollars more. That's because Kroehler "comfort engineers" seats and backs to achieve just the right pitch for Comfortable sitting ... and each piece is tested to insure that comfort lasting through years of wear. Yet, style is never tiacrificed. Superb design features, high quality materials and excellent fabric selections offer you tht finest styling available today... you just don't pay as much for it if it's made by Kroehler. FOUR-PIECE AVANT GROUPING BY FAMOUS KROEHLER Shown above; Sofa and chaira with exposed wpod trim on front arms and backs, luxurious Polyurethane foam seat cushioni. W-tach.sf. $198.00 Mr. Chair $109.00 Mrs. Ch.lr $98.00 Ottoman $29.50 FURNITURE ' ' V WEST COMPANY 79-Inch wf% / 1869 -1967 $169.50 KEYPORT, N. J.-FREE PACING OPPOSITE STORE--2640181 Open Monday and Friday evenings *til 9 — -^ — - -j— - rt THE DAItY EBSISTER Tbinfoy, Ftb. % WI-4 Successful 10 Penalized In Holmdel . By JACK LEFLER IpfecUd tJ ttey onslde>rejd t&e enge dropped J3 t/j JIS.0 witb la- of tti« qurXed vaJue HOLMDEL - A Ufifett Fined for,careUM driving ma omw, diirgtA with %uuam, Bellevilk, t»; HEW YORK (AP>-The stack i ' due lor t rest liter fie dustriil* rjtl i.o, rtOi off .7 tad listed on tiie New York Stock I] market yesterday opened Feb- big January advance. Exchange, slipped .18 to M.43. ment of t |10S car cental bill,* re- William Mtyet, Ukewoed, utilities off U. ceived a suspended $50 fine from llruary trailing with a small FAMILY BARGAIN WORLD' Rt. 3S ot Potttnon Ave.. Shrewsbury 100 ft. North of Shop-Rite ' 00611 4 DdVS OlllV 747-5019 Wed., Thurs,, Fri. 10-9, Saf. 10-6 FRIDAY 10 A.M Just 600 to choose from Just 500 to choose from Ladies'—Panty & Regular Ladies' Better ~\-> SPECIAL GROUP OF GIRDLE RIOT!! BLOUSES Gay Gibson dresses are swingy 50 new blooms ! None Higher None Higher Gtiy Gibson shifts break into bleem Nat Adv. up to 5.95 each for the resort season — end on! SPECIAL GROUP Subtle magnolia color accented with Up to 3.98 Values lac* over pal* blu* makes them th* Just 250 to choose from Just 250 to choose from pick of the season. Sizes 5 to 15. Ladies' Belter left: Sleeveless shift daintily banded Ladies' SPECIAL GROUP with white lace on blue. SPECIAL GROUP 15.00 DRESSES & right: Full sleeves and cool square neek yoke trimmed with lac* over SWEATERS PANTS SUITS blu*. 23.00 top: Long sleev* shift with whit* lac* covering blu* yoke front, back $450 and cuffs. 20.00 STEINBACH'S JR. DRESSES, Uceni Floor . olio Albury Park, Brick Town None Higher None Higher SHOP Wtdneid.y, Friday 'til «i30 P.M. Nat. Adv. up to 7.95 Nat. Adv. up to 29.95 Irick Town Monday thru Prldky 'til 9:30 P.M Feb. 2, 19&7 THE DATLY REGISTER 3 p.m., bedlam broke oat Jswt.outplde our , , *P*&9$., H&9& ptj** tint sounded jtffl • windows. A flock of bouse cparrows, clustered bit nily. n In om thmb, *eetn«f to be trying to drown The vvhol* tstembty had beta fUbetrt out * half-dozen starlings who were giving at our feeder* just before that, crowding the fflmrview Laboratories fortfi i*!th that combiftaiMn rA wbietfes, e*x- suaflmitr tr»y and darkening ihq fpxoA By WILLIAM F. SANDFORD gles and cackles which only aether «t»rTing where me millet is tprmd. TTJIB, anptreoMy, Department Head Named could- kfve. Red-winged blackbirds, outnum- •was the ilttt-ilmmt vmtfttX. H it wtmft . Marmoumonax, fuzzy prognosticator of out o* their bud scales (n Colts Neck. bered, added a more pleasant, warbling back- exactly melodious, it :*t least was hearten- • RED SANK — Announcement the clinical laboratories will be tilings 'ffleteprologiicaJ, sticks his neck out The robins that spend the winter in our ground, and in the near distance a song •ingly enthusiastic. ••, 4. ' . was made today at Rfverview doubled in size and are sched- today. Moire acfc'urk}e!y, it's being stuck out dime favor holly; and oedar groves and such Hospital of the appointment of uled for completion in mid-sum- for him by the authors of bucolic legend, places which afford a ready berry crop. Ear- mer, 1967, Dr. Aldo Gaetano Baldi as di- who are classically preoccupied with weather. ly in the period bf the recent spring pre- rector of the Department of Lab- A fellow of the American Col- ~~ Marmota, if he's smart, view, however, I found a large flock of them lege of Pathologists, Dr. Baldi will remain lethargically congregating in open places along the beach- oratories. was, just previous to his appoint- front where spacious lawns apparently offered Add To The BIG oblivious of tlte whole Dr. Baldi succeeds Dr. George ment at Riverview Hospital, as- gambit, deep in his cozy promise of an early worm or two, looking T. Hoffmann who has been di- sociate pathologist at Monmouth tunnel hard by the lower to be caught. rector since 1956 and who will Medical Center, Long Branch. forty. There's no good rea- It took a reminder of winter reality, continue at Riverview as asso- He is a graduate of the Medical son why any smart ground- however, to bring the birds into voice, it Savings on '67 Cars! ciate pathologist. School of the University of hog—unless he went to bed seems. Although there were a few signs of Dr. Baidi, of West Long Rome, Italy, completed his in half hungry—should inter- vocal awakening during the warm spell, the Branch, assumed the director- ternship at St. Elizabeth's Hos- nipt his big nap this early. full chorus didn't break forth in our yard ship yesterday. His responsibili- pital, Elizabeth, and his residen- However, should the re- until Monday afternoon. We'd come through ties include the administration of cy at Flower Fifth Avenue Hos- puted pundit of the pasture- a rather bleak weekend of snow and cold Finance Dirert-Save ™ $150 the clinical laboratories and the pital, New York City. He was Sandford lands emerge from his pad winds. Then the sun came out in force and staff of 24 persons. Dr. Hoffmann from 1955 to 1959 instructor in today and find the sun in evidence, he might the ground Ice melted, and suddenly, about will now devote his time to the clinical .pathology at New York notice a few things of interest to the winter- You R»e»lv» 12 Mei. 18 Mo». 24 Met. 30 M«. 36 Moi. clinical activities of the depart- Medical College, and took a post weary. He would see that the heat-giving $1,000. % 87.08 $ 59.30 $ 45.41 $ 37.08 $ 31.52 ment of laboratories. graduate course in isotopes at orb rides higher in the heavens now, giving 1.500. 130.42 88.95 68.12 35.62 47.29 Mount Sinai Hospital, New York. The addition of Dr. Baldi to the new evidence daily of its waxing strength. 2,000. 174.16 . 118.61 90.83 74.16 63.05 professional staff at Riverview is The day grows longer as the night grows necessary becausevrf the expan- shorter. Marmota, if he were up in time, 2,500. 117.70 148.26 113.54 92.70 78.81 sion program in progress there, would see the sun rise this morning at about 3,000. 261.25 177.91 136.25 111.25 94.58 hospital spokesmen said. A vital 7:06, and it won't set tonight until 5:17. 3,500. 304.7* , 207.56 158.95 129.79 110.34 part of the Phase JI expansion, That makes 10 hours and 11 minutes of daylight, and we're gaining more at the rate COMPARE OUR MONTHLY of better than two minutes, each day. Four TRUE days from now the sun will be above the PAYMENTS WITH THAT OF horizon 10 hours and 20 minutes, a full hour INTEREST OTHER LENDING INSTITUTIONS. CUTS FUEL BILLS! more than it shone six weeks ago on the New Genera/ 990 first day of winter. Three weeks from today RATE* we'll hit 11 full hours of sunlight, and win- PHONE 542-4600 ter will be on the way out. So, whether the sun shines or hides, and *B«ed en Monmouth County's first "Truth In Lending" Policy whether the woodchuck sleeps or ventures IUMIDIFIER forth, there Is promise, on this second day of the second month, of better things to come Hwy. 35 & Wyckoff Rd., Eatontow* fOk FOKCID AIR FUINACU^ for the frost-bitten and the fuel bill- GULL CAPER —' Many sea birds like to [ElATONTOWN impoverished. frolic and 'wash up' In coastal fresh water Monmouth Shopping Center A WEEK AGO today, there was little ponds. Camera caught immature herring INIATIONAL reason to look for pegs on which to hang gull as it repeatedly bounded into air Main Office Open Saturday! hopes for balmier days. The prolonged spell i of June-in-Jamiary conditions, then about to and plunged back into water at opening end, seemed to be fooling Mom Nature a in ice on Lake Takanassee,- Long Branch. \v, 9:30 A.M. to 1 P.M. little. Mrs. Robert de la Reussille of Red CULTHE HUHIDITTYOU Dr. Aldo G. Baldi Photo data: Miranda SLR, 400mm. lens, WANT FOII PERSONAL COMFORT Bank found flowers of, myrtle blooming in Holmdel, and I saw pussy willows peeking Tri-X, 1/22 @ |/| 000. MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP. Dry air is starved air. It makes Certified by the American you feel cold in normal tempera- Board of Pathology in anatomi- TWENTY CLUB MEETS tures, causes dry skin, keeps fur- cal and clinical pathology, Dr. nace running longer and results in higher fuel bills. The General Baldi is a member of the New HIGHLANDS - Mrs. Lillian 190 adds up to 1 gallon water Jersey Pathological Society, \. Maxson, 54 Seadrift Ave., en- per hour. No pump, no fan, no Monmouth County and New Jer- tertained members of the Twen- float to wear out. Most economical sey Medical Societies, American power humidifier made. ,• Society of Clinical Pathologists, ty Club at the first meeting of the College of American Pathol- the New Year. The birthday of ogists and the American Medi- tfrs. Charles Quast, 50 Center FRANK cal Association. it., was celebrated. The next meeting will be held It takes the World's Largest Furniture Maker VERANGE HAT SALE Tuesday at the home of Mrs. HAZLET — The Rosary Altar Rose Andrews, 121 Waterwitch Society of St. Benedict's Catholic Ave., who will entertain the Church will sponsor a hat sale group. Mrs. Frances Gannon, 67 741-7217 Monday at 8:30 p.m. in the Washington Ave., will celebrate church cafeteria. her birthday. BASSETT and the World's Largest Bedding Company WEEKEND ;I\ SIMMQNS ... Thurs. fhrii SALE Sun. Feb. 5th to bring you the Mart .Furniture Galleries GREATEST Large Grade BEDROOM SET VALUE! \,\ i v'*^r - ' ' Swift's Worthmore And it takes the Mart Furniture Galleries to put the world's smallest price tags on this superb selection of furniture and bedding! The Bassett suite includes a lavish 9-drawer dressser with generous landscape adjustable mirror; a broad- shouldered man's chest . . . and a magnificent paneled BREAD headboard that takes either full or queen-size bedding. Rushed to direct from Florida ALL FOR ONLY HAW GAL jT USE OUR CONVENIENT tortentf ^ CHARGE PLANS . ,. . Open Every Night 'til 9:30—Sat. 'til 6:00 •X OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK - for your shopping conv.ni.nce Companion Safe: Simmons Bedding Queen Size Simmons Full Size Simmons Box Box Spring an,d Spring and Mattreis Mattress 60" x 80" 54"x75" Monoemtnlnstnmlbt right to limit quontity.. Sol* alltclin Thun. thru Sun, M* 5th FURNI GALE !** RED BANK FAIR HAVEN LONG BRANCH FOR FOR BOTH BOTH RT. 35, MIDMHOWN, N. J. 671-0400 64 E. NEWMAN 604 380 m 69 RT. 22, UNION, N. J. MU 8-5500 ROAD RIVER ROAD BROADWAY TBE DAILY REGISTER Thuniij, Feb. 2, 1967—11 Palette Talk L STARTS FEBRUARY 3rd Allaire Primes for Spring OPEN 10 A.M. TO 5 PJt By ELEANOR MARKO was your choice CANE PANEL BED1 800KCASE BED..'. CORNER DESK. _ „ " ~~~~""KI BACHELOR CHEST ' «ta CANE DOOR STORAGE CHEST ""~'""~'""^59 h\.rv J your choice Why risk when you can rent? SELECT A PIECE, A GROUPING, OR A ROOMFUL TO Rent a conveniently-available Safe Deposit DOUBLE DRESSER «79 box here-where for only a few cents a week SUIT YOUR SPACE, YOUR MOOD, YOUR POCKETBOOK PAIR OF TWIN OR FULL SIZE CHAIRBACK BEDSZL $79 KING SIZE CANE PANEL HEAOiOARIJ ~~ *75 "you can, so easily and sensibly safeguard . . . AND SAVE BIG DOLLARS. your jewelry, important papers and other valuables against fire, theft, flood, tornadoes There's the ipecial thrill that comes from being up-to-date and in the ruiaht of faihiori . . . that pride you feel In a hem* furnlintd in •«. your choice and careless misplacement. . 2-PlACE BUNK BED e«ll«nt tatlt, yot with valu* In mind. Now Th« 400 leav.i th* ehelc. up to you I Pick a pieco or an antlro room from thii fantaitie collie, Rent a Safe Deposit box NOW! •ion of axquiiita Nori» Walnut pitcoi, each one a .combinatiun of the bold and the sophisticated. What'i mor«, each pieco hai a itain-resiitant, $99 marproof plaitic topi Whatever your needs, whatever your wishes, the skilled decorating staff at The 400 can amwer all your decorating prob- TRIPLE DRESSER „ too 2PUCE BUNK BED „_ __ "s99 PUITYHI 2-PUCETmJNDU IED lems, and the/suggest you loolc into this tensational value on Ml* new) 2-PLACE TRUNDLE BED „.. «oo KNEEHOLE DESK -TZT'lM CORNER DESK, BACHELOR CHEST. OR IKY . . * Convenient Budget Terms M S S^ ^ °^^!!:^ $M rim Shop Daily 'til 9 P.M., Saturday 'til 6 P.M. STATE... Also Available at Our "NORf H teilNSWICK StOhE Cenvtnltnt Offlcts Throughout McmmwHi cikvnty ROUTE 35 AT SUNSET AVENUE. WANAMASSA, N. J. LOCATID IN THI MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION BRUNSWICK SHOPhNtt CINTIR, U. S. Hlfhwiy 1 ••« MlllMwi R«teJ 12—Tbur* MB BACKS ARE tOilHST 1HE WAU! CREDITORS DEHAHD HOMEY... HOT JUST PROMISES! CUSTOMERS DEMAND GIVEAWAYS... HOT JUST BARGAIHS! HISTORY—Oceanport Mayor Edward C. Wilson places an I860 "Union Forge Cap" on the head of James HAD FIRE Patrick Considine, 4, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Considine of Oceanport. The lad holds a flintlock pis- tol dated about 1750. The event marked the formal opening of the Oceanport Historical Society's display of Revolutionary and Civil War relics in the lobby of borough hall there. (Register Staff Photo) WE NEED Rutgers Science Fair Committee Is Named FRANKLY, WE HAVEN'T SLEPT A WINK SINCE FIRE RAVAGED NEW BRUNSWICK — Fifteen in central New Jersey. The two OUR KEYPORT STORE! IT'S AN UPHILL BATTLE TO PAY OFF CRED- men and one woman have been top winners will be awarded a ITORS AND EARN A WEEK'S PAY TO SUPPORT OUR FAMILIES! BUT, appointed to the committee which trip to San Francisco to take part will administer the 1967 Central in the National Science Fair-In- WE'RE DETERMINED TO DO IT! EVERY L A S T DOLLAR OF INVEN- New Jersey Science Fair, to be ternational, May 10-13. held March 21-22 at Rutgers Uni- Amoung high school represen- TORY WILL BE TURNED INTO CASH REGARDLESS OF COST OR LOSS versity. tatives on the committee is Nor- & YOU SAVE BECAUSE 90% OF STOCK IS PERFECT! The fair is open to students in man Worthington, Monmouth Re- grades seven through 12 in pub- gional High School, New Shrews- lic, private and parochial schools bury. TRANSPORTATION THEME Just 36 Pieces! Classes Acqufre LINCROFT — Cub Scout Pack 110 held its January meeting at Trees for Israel the Lincroft School with trans- Adjustable Metal FAMOUS MAKER RUMSOtt - Trees to be iplant portation the theme. Each den ed in Israel have been purchased presented a display on the topic by the Hebrew and Sunday school and Den 1 presented a skit, "The BED FRAMES classes ol Congregation Bnai Is- Iron Horse Grows Up.'1 INNERSPRING rael through the Jewish National Awards were given by the Fund. Mrs. Max Katz, tittle Sil- awards chairman, Jerry Halweg, ver, has supervised the project REG. 14.95 to the following boys: William MATTRESSES ; Members of class 2-C excelled McDaniel, John Halweg, Larry TWIN with the purchase of 34 trees, Holzman, James Daly, Denner y it was announced. They are: Stripes; Mark Daly, gold arrow & Shelley Ackenman, Carolyn Bra- and 4 silver arrows; Joseph Clark $ FULL VALUES TO $350 |] gar, Neal Elseman, Richard Na- assistant denner stripe. Receiving telson, Jan Pressman, Little Sil- two year pins were James Daly, SIZES ver; Karen Chafkin, Ann Jack- Allan Keller, Steven Lorenz, Mi- HIDE-AWAY ler, Jill Kagan, Robin Lieber- 12 chael Walsh, Andrew Lennert. • You'll Recognise the Label inan, Richard Okrent, Nancy Joseph Clark received his one- SOFAS SLASHED • Cash and Carry Small, Beth Zuckerman, Middle- year pin. • Limit 1 Per Customer town; Judith Silverstein, Lin- With Separate The troop welcomed four new Innertpring croft; Valerie Cohen, Holmdel; members: Douglas Goslin, Thom- Ronald Cooper, Rumson; Amy as Quinn Jr., Jerry Halweg Jr. MoHrtn Eagle, Kenneth Feinswog, Leon- and Richard Goslin as a transfer All Remaining 3 Room Rtduetd . . StortiRQ of $169 ard Kaminow, Peter Krass, Jam- from Minneapolis, Minn. ie Silver, Hlndell Straus, Richard Field, New Shrewsbury; Daniel The, word "gauze" evolved Feuer, Hazlet; Daniel Goroff, VALUES TO $129r from Gaza, the great trade cen- BUY AT SALVAGE PRICES! PARTIAL UST! Rhea Siers, James Warshauer, ter in Biblical Palestine and a Fair Haven. JUMBO city famous for its light textiles. Chairs Danish Lounge RECLINING CHAIRS $ 39—Boudoir 1 . $19 $140—Steeps Two S 95 • Advertisement • Contemporary King Size IN ASSORTED S 80 Sofa Bed $17 $49—Headboard 6'6" $ 19 FABRICS Set of 3 Formica 3-Pc. Cherry Cordovan SPEAKING OF MONEY j FROM ... $ 60—Mica Top Tables 1 $27 $240—Bedroom Set $ 97 Quality Oversized Rugs 4-Pe. Triple Dresser By GEORGE L. BTET.ITZ $150—9x15, 12x12 and 12x15 $57 $260—Modern Bedroom $128 President, Monmouth Count; National Bank • Odd Living 4-Pc. Contemporary $ 79—Room Chairs $ 8 $330—Sectional $150 What Happens When You Get a 9x12 BROADLOOM Maple 2-Pc. Pillow Back $ 99—Credenza $47 $350—Modern Living Room ... $ 97 Letter From the Tax Department? RUGS 2-Pe. Convertible 7-Pc. Modern $160—Living Room $300—Dining Rooms What happens when you get a letter from the $95 $178 tax department? If this hasn't happened to you al- ready, do you wonder about it? Do you more-or- less anticipate it? Do you fear it? mi SAW. 1938 mi Skill 1938 NfCEST Well, there's no need to lose any sleep about TERMS OF SALE It, for the secret police won't come in the middle of All Remaining 3,4 & 5 Pc. All Remaining^ 3,4& 5 Pc. All talM final, no txchangt, everything told a the night and drag you away just because your de- Top Quality Oversized 15. NO maun, moll or phono onion. Small do- SECTIONALS b fosit mini accompany oach ordor. Everything ductions are questioned! told >ub|Kt to prior wit. Small dollvory diane. Let's say an official-looking envelope, has just NYLON RUGS BEDROOMS LIVING ROOMS arrived in the mail. You expect the worst and a 9'x15', 12'xl2', U'xl5' FIRE SALE! 1938 PRICES! little letter pops out saying that your return has DUMPED been "selected at random" for examination. REG. SLASHED ALL REMAINING 6, 7, 8 & 9-PC; DANISH MODERN, PROVINCIAL, You knew it was coming, didn't you? $150 & a \ Choose Front 43 Styles! DINING ROOMS After all, this is July! Your friends COLONIAL! ALL FINISHES Every Fabric & Color with the twenty-five dollar refunds re- ceived them in May. You wonder, de- FULL DUMPED fensively, "Why me?" But you already FULL know why — you were expecting a large PRICE PRICE Danish Modem, refund check. TABLE Provincial, The scene changes now to the offices Formerly to Formerly to Colonial! $ of a District Director of the Internal Rev- $900 and to $700 and All Finishes enue Service. We ask what qualifies a tax LAMPS More TO $400 57 return to be questioned. In his reply, we More FORMERLY 178 learn some interesting facts. One is that Certified TO $330 TO $1195 TO $595 one hundred percent of those recalled for George L. BlellB examination are ones that entitle the tax- $15 to $25 Value payer to a generous refund. This does not necessarily mean that all of the returns claiming any refund are checked. But by devoting all their return checking attention to people claiming more than twen- ty-five dollars refund, IRS found they could command more revenues. ft MAPLE RANCH So the letter you received names the deductions in question and encloses instructions on tlie documentation "you are to submit. ; DESKS What you do at this point is gather any proof you have of these expenses and mail them in. Then after two or three ,'l With Formica months you receive a letter that suggests what are termed i'A Tops "alterations." Normally these disallow all questionable de- \$ Reg. 59.50 Mm M ductions you claimed. If you agree to those, you are in- '"its';n(fpwws<"('1' '' structed to sign their revisions and the matter is closed. But If you disagree, you may choose either to submit frintod in cliar, JmlASwIsh self-pronouncing and IP. Clwp additional evidence or arrange an appointment with a tax «t*ly-lit typt. examiner. rood Slides Right Offl In St«omM • This man ... or, more often, it is a lady ... is neither an ogre nor a bully. She will discuss the tax laws in question in a quiet and reasonable manner. If vou still (eel vou're right, the next step up the ladder it a request for a hearing before the Appellate Division of the Resunal Commissioner's office, which you and 1 have dis- cussed before. FIRE SALE BARGAINS AT FIELD FURNITURE If your claim for a deduction was sincere In the first plice, you might as well appeal again. It's an interesting 7-11 E. Front St., Keyport • Open Mon., Thurs. & Fri.'Til 9 P.M. Tues. & Wed'Til 6 P.M. • Sot. 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. • CO 4-3020 experience anyway . . and reassuring about th8 continued fairness oi Uncle Sam. Feb. 2, 1967—13 THE DAILY REGISTER [Caseworker ... select from the |£xamg Set * Largest collection I TRENTON — Examination for 1 caseworkers in all 21 counties of of famous Brand Names SNew Jersey were announced to- Sday by the state Department of 8 Civil Service. in America! | Robert C. Wel!s, acting direc- t tor of the Monmouth County Wei- \: fare Department, said the depart- Atlantic Appliance p jnent has openings for 24 ad- Sditlonal professional positions to 2 be filled during 1967. brings you the best for Less | Requirements for admission to a the examination are U.S. citizen- t ship, 12-month residency in New Z Jersey, and possession of a bach- 8 elor's degree from an accredited i college. ' .£ Applicghts may file for open- 5 Jngs in any one or more counties I in the state. Two lists will Be ri promulgated. One list will con- * tain the names of the successful 8 candidates from their home coun- S ty and the other, a list contain- • Ing the names of the successful \ non-resident candidates. The res- gident list will take precedence, Famous 3 Though an applicant may indl- « cate a desire to work In more a than one county, only one ap- PORTABLE | plication is necessary. 172 | Applications must be filed by £ Feb. 28. The case worker infor- Square § mational brochure and applica- K tlon for examination may be ob- Inches | talned from any county Welfare I Board, any state Employment Of- Including jf tice, of from the New Jersey | Department of Civil Service at Stand t the State House, Trenton, or any t of the department's three branch >• offices, at 80 Mulberry St., New- | ark; City Hall, Camden, or 316 Magic Chef 5 State St., Trenton. Famous Name V. It is important that applicants ij file early, the Civil Service De- ll partment emphasizes, because in 6-Speaker — Console i the event of a tie the applicant £ who filed earlier is placed higher Solid State STEREO 'I on the list.. Gas Ranges With AM-FM I Program Set and | On Collection I FM Stereo v MATAWAN - Walter Zabin- RADIO fe ski, Staten Island, N. Y., an au- Grained Natural Walnut Finish .«t thority on Micromounis, will pre- '•; sent a program tomorrow at 188. >,; 7:30 p.m. In Matawan Regional | High School, Atlantic Ave., Mat- S awan, during the meeting of Famous Name 5 The Matawan Mineralogical So- S clety. Mr. Zabinskl will show | slides and specimens from his Ijj worldwide collection. 27Z H In. COLOR TV '3 Visitors are welcome. '; During the Junior Pebble-Pup- ! pies meeting the same evening i final plans will be made for a Solid Walnut Consoles i show and program they will pre- i sent fof the. Adult group in A namti ! March. Mark Kidzus, (president : of the Juniors, announces that you'll recognize plans . are being prepared for immediately. i field trip's in the near -future, I Michael Kidzus, chairman of j the society's annual rock and Includes one baekguord light • No-drip top • Clock with £ gem show, states that exhibitors year home timer • Appllone* outlet • High perfeimoiK* burntn • Hl|k> j have signed up from all parts Slmmw-Warm color-coded tontroli • SMM even window end | of the United States, Mexico and service. light • Roll-out unokeleu broiler • Two-pleee broiler pan • Nlir £ Canada. , Itg-levelen • HW wide banquet oven. £ This year's show, "Treasures » pt the Earth" is scheduled for £ Saturday and Sunday, May 6 Deluxe 2-Speed | and 7, in Matawan Regional High Automatic $ i School. Several scholarships are 3-Cycle E to be awarded to High Schools S participating in an "Earth Sci- j ence" contest. All secondary WASHER GAS DRYER 3 schools in Middlesex, Monmouth I and Ocean counties have been * Invited to enter. 5 Tickets' are now available for i the show; from the members. $ 129. | Red Bank S&L S Elects Directors Teflon Coated S RED BANK — The Red Bank 148. | Savings and Loan Association t held its annual meeting and GRIDDLE i elected directors Tuesday. <• Frank F. Blalsdell, Theodore M). Parsons, A. Alvin Whiting and Big W'W a John H. Worth were re-elected as Aluminum griddle j» directors. Other directors are WE GIVE I James H. Anderson, Louis S. " Conover, Edward H. Conway, with the purchase :: William A. Fluhr, William H. ;: Hintelmann Jr., Noel J. La'rtaud of any of our £ and Harold B. Millward. ~. • Officers appointed for the en- Magic Chef specials! ,'S suing year were Harold B. Mill- YOU MORE Si ward, president; Noel J. Lar- 3 taud, vice president; William E. * Holloman, secretary and control- 5 ler; Anna W. Van Brunt, trea- 17 Cubic Ft. ? .surer; Richard P. Springsteen, 13 172 2-Speed 14 10 | assistant secretary, and Wilda I Van Wagenen, assistant trea- Cubic S; surer. Sq. Inch Automatic Cubic Cubic !i Counsel for the association is REFRIGERATOR SI Parsons, Canzdna, Blair, and £ Warren," with Frederick E. Lom- Ft. Portable WASHER '• 'bard representing the firm as With Ice Maker Ft. Ft. '", closing attorney in charge of Its ^ branch office in the association's 2-Door TV One of j); building at 10 Broad St, 2-Door • Instant Cold j; The savings and loan associ- Deluxe America's FREEZER FREEZER •'• atlon has assets of over $14.5 REFRIG. Twin Speaker Greater Brand i million and has paid dividends Copper Cabinet and Copper £ without interruption since 1887, Names 7! In early summer the association Stand Famous Brand Famous Brand is expects; to move into its new :; building, now under construction, S at the northeast corner of Broad St. and Bergen PI. ; t Veterans' Auxiliary I To Hold Sale 119. 158. 138. 118. S ; KEANSBURG — A white ele- • 'phant sale will be held at the S general membership meeting of NO MONEY DOWN! UP TO 3TEARS TO PAY! ALL STORES OPEN EVENINGS! •; the Auxiliary to the Molly Pitch- S--§r Barracks, Veterans of World ASBURY PARK NEW SHREWSBURY NEPTUNE "i^War I, on Tuesday, Feb. 21, in TOMS RIVER BRICK TOWN NEPTUNE MIDDLETOWN the Moose Hall, with Mrs. Da- 715 MAIN ST. ROUTE 35 1006 11th AVE. ROUTE 37 ROUTE 70 7115 H'WAY 35 Beaman and Mrs. Martin ROUTE 35 okas in charge. THo Short.; Leading.Chain pr/,ppiioncc Storf-5 Since V A membership drive is being TV. Appliani.'- (.nti Onducted. All wives, daughter 67 1-0836 aiid sisters of Veterans of Work' War I are eligible. Anyone in rested may contact Mrs. Ber Other Atlantic Store* In: BortMntowi, ClimantinKM and PeRMauken, N. J. UpptT Darby, N. E. PhlkNMphla «ml Hwiham, Pa. oodhead, president. | 14—Thursday, Feb. 2, 1967, THE DAILY REGISTER SAVE TODAY AND WRY DAY! We Tp Address * ACRES OF FREE PARKING * „ Seminar On in: i a HEAVEN literature SCENT BOUQUETS Fresh floral fragraact. You Miniature plairen-roMs. Jo Judge For SHOP HUNDREDS OF UNADVERTISED BARGAINS MARKED SUPERAMA CROWN REGAL DOWN FOR QUICK CLEARANCE AND SAVE RESERVE 86 PROOF Rabbi Edward A. Ellenbogen 40% BLENDED RUMSON — Rabbi Edward A. Ellenbogen, spiritual leader of Monmouth Reform Temple, WHISKEY Shrewsbury, will be guest speak- er at the fourth seminar on con- 1 Fifth 3.10 temporary literature sponsored by the Jewish Women's Adult Ed- LADIES DRESS SALE OF Quart 3.85 ucation Committee of Greater LADIES' 1/2 Gal 7.58 Red Sank. 3-PIECE PANT RIOT! The rabbi will lecture Monday FABULOUS GROUP OF at Congregation Brothers of Is- SETS and CROWN REGAL rael, here, at 10:30 a.m. He will DAYTIME DRESSES discuss "The Fixer," by Ber- SKIRT SETS SPECIAL nard Malamud. The story 80 PROOF is based on the Mendel BeilLs trial of 1911. BLENDED The education committee rep- resents sisterhoods of Congrega- Bonded knits In stripes WHISKEY tion Beth Shalom, Red Bank; solids and cheeks. Materials — rayons, jerseys, Monmouth Reform Temple, and Slies8 to 18. cuplonis, cotton and other Fifth .2.83' Congregation Bnai Israel; the fabrics. One and two-piece ,'| Some fun eollan. Red Bank Chapter of Bnai Brith Quart 3.52 styles. Flares, sheaths Pile and quilt lined. Women; Hadassah, and the Na- Sixes petit* 5-13 1/2 Gal. tional Council of Jewish Wom- lines. Sizes 8 to 20 en. to 24 A.M. to 10 P.M. 19.571,000 people live within IGHWAY 35 & SHREWSBURY AVE. / NEW SHREWSBURY SUNDAY 'TIL « P.M. 200 miles of the United States j| New Shrewsbury brnter. Use Our Waal Ads HOME DELIVERY Besults MEDAILT 7414)010 BAirr OR SHINE Dial 741-WOO DAY U10, NIGHT Copyright—The SM Bwak R*#st*r, Jan., 19M, 40c PER WEEK SECOND NEWS SECTION THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1967 __. ,__ 7c PER COPY Senator Proposes $100fidO Study . - . • V • Case Would Conserve Lowlands BY JACQUELINE ALBAN In a letter to Sen. Carl Hayden, of maintaining an abundance of tuarine conservation research, Stressing • that 45,000 acres of The senator recommended the WASHINGTON - Sen. Clifford D-Ariz., chairman of the Senate coastal fish and wildlife,' expan- the senator made these points in marshland had been obliterated Sandy Hook laboratory for han- P. Case, R-NJ., today called'for interior and related agencies ap- sion of cities and industrial de- the letter: in the last 10 years, Sen. Case dling the study "because pres- a' dynamic research program to propriations subcommittee, Sen. velopment must take in account —Fish and wildlife resources said much of the damage is un- sures of population and industri- develop / methods of conserving Case pointed out that the estuar- ecological principles." are of great value to the country necessary and a result of poor al development make the situa- estuarine water areas which ine (lowlands affected by tidal The one-year marine lab study for recreation and a source of planning. tion along the northern coast es- serve as the nursery, sanctuary, action) is the key to productivity would include among other protein food, particularly along The senator's letter stated the pecially urgent." and feeding grounds of the sea. of fish and Wildlife. things, an inventory of the whole the Atlantic coast where nearly Sandy Hook Marine Laboratory If Sen. Case's proposal receives The senator proposed a one- "Much of man's activity along estuarine zone of the Atlantic 50 per cent of the nation's total study would provide basic infor- final approval of the House and sea fish catch is taken. year $100,000 planning and feasi- the seacoast js harmful to fish coastline, investigation of water mation on fish and wildlife needs Senate and is signed - into law, bility study of estaurine conser- and wildlife resources, particu- quality and hydrographic charac- —In 1965, the value of Atlantic required for orderly planning of funds for the marine lab study vation to be conducted by the larly along the shores of th teristics at sites suitable for es- coast commercial fishery was land use. would become available in July. highly industrial , northeast,' tuarine experimental stations, $160 million, some 4.2 million an- iandy Hook (N.J.) Marine Lab- Based on the data compiled, Dr. Walford, for the past sever- oratory, under the direction of he wrote. and a review of the present state glers engaged in salt water fish- he noted, a method could be de- al years, as director of the Dr. Lionel A. Walford, director. of estuarine aqua culture and ex- ing, and spent $331 million. In ad- 'If there is to be any hop Vised for restoring estuarine perimental ecology. dition, 60,000 persons hunted in marine lab, a member of the En- areas already badly damaged by vironmental Pollution Panel of The Atlantic estuarine zone ex- the coastal marshes and spent $3 million. shore projects, and for increas- the President's 1965 Science Ad- tends along the coast for 2,000 ing the productivity of remaining visory Committee and member of miles, with the tidal marshes in "The estuarine zone is being HAWAII VISIT — Gov. John J. Burns, center, receives Raps Library Board areas to compensate for past ir- the Atlantic Estuarine Society, New Jersey comprising some poisoned by industrial and do- two Monmouth County freeholder delegates to the Rec- reversible losses. has stressed the urgency of un- 185,000 acres. mestic pollutants. Wetlands and dertaking an estuarine study, em- reation & Natural Beauty Congress of the National As- According to the senator, four shallow waters are being "According to the Department phasizing that man for too long sociation of Coiin ,ty Officials in The Hawaiian Village; Stand on Site Issue biologists, with the assistance drained and cut up by canals, of the Interior," he stated," the and support of other laboratory ditches and highways or filled estuarine zone is deteriorating in has looked upon the salt marshes Freeholders Benjamin H. Danskin, left, of Wall Township MIDDLETOWN — Andrew J. Praskai, president of the and wetlands as vast wastelands East Keansburg Betterment Association, last night charged personnel, would handle the fea- over to create garbage dumps, an even faster rate, so much so, and Director Joseph C. Irwin of Red Bank. Mr. Danskin rather than as a vital link in that the Library Board "has not laid the proper groundwork sibility study. building i lots and industrial sites, that a good deal of- damage can was one of seven New Jersey counfy officials to address for resolving the township library site issue." To emphasize the need for es- Sen. Case wrote. never he repaired." marine and wildlife cycles. the 600 delegates. His topic was "What Can We Do , Highly critical of the body for not inviting the Board of Education and the entire Township Committee to a meet- With Junk Cars?" He and Mr. Irwin and their wivesj ing called to discuss the site question, Mr; Praskai remarked. *long with Freeholder Eugene Bedell and Freeholder and "That attitude is not going to settle the problem, but just Mrs. Harry Larrison Jr., were guests of Gov. and Mrs. create more disharmony in the township." In setting the meeting for next Thursday night (Feb, 9), Metzler Eyes State Unit 'Jurnt at a reception in Washington House* the execu- the Library Board invited Mayor Ernest G. Kavalek and Wy«, reiidance in the 50th State. Committeeman Douglas R. Burke. "This hassle over the library site, has been going on for two years," declared Mr. Praskai. /'We've gotten nowhere. Now is the time for everybody to get together in one room, ( hash out things, let their hair down, and maybe that way For School, Other Disputes arrive at a solution." RED BANK — Proposed legis- State Federation of District trial relations, Newark College of can settle their disputes without He expressed the hope that the Library Board would lation for a new state department Boards of Education. Engineering, was a consultant for recourse to a third party. When reconsider and invite all school board and governing body to handle disputes between school The proposal will be unveiled the Red Bank Board of Ed- the need for outside help does members to the library site conference. boards and teachers, as well as Saturday when the federation ucation last summer during its arise, Mr. Metzled favors turning The president reiterated his support for a library on or those involving other governmen- holds its annual legislation meet- dispute with the teachers. to a new governmental arm. Two Schools near the high -school property on Tindall Rd. tal employees, reflects the think- ing in Trenton. It is Mr. Metzler's view that The federation's legislative pro- posal will proyide for establish- KEANSBURG -* In discussing Whereas some construction and ing and planning of John Metz- Mr. Metzler, associate chair- both boards of education and ment of a new branch of govern- the planned $1,995,000 junior-se- other bids have come in high ler, here, a consultant to the man of the department of indus- teachers are better off if they ment which would handle the dis- nior high school here, several here, and there is a money short- putes of all public employ- Board of Education members age, they were low for Hudson ees, Mr. Metzler said. have said that Keansburg could and as a result that district was and should have built five years able to add some "extras," such This recommendation will dif- Board Splits on Proposed fer sharply from the proposal of ago, when the Henry Hudson Re- as ceramic tile flooring in lock- gional Junior-Senior High School er rooms, quarry tile in the kitch- the New Jersey Education Asso- was erected. en, cavity wall insulation, alu- ciation which provides for re- minated finish on aluminum solving impasses through ma- The architect is the same in Airports Rules Wording chinery to be set up in the State both cases—Micklewright and work, and folding partitions in the cafeteria. NEW SHREWSBURY - It was After an hour's discussion, the school children, separated by a Department of Education. The Mountford, Toms River — and NJEA will also be holding a leg- Whereas the Hudson board had a question of semantics at last board granted site plan approval grass strip from the curb line; there are some other compari- islative conference in Trenton sons. few major problems over the con- night's special meeting of the to Walter R. Laudenslager of Lin- that the applicant be asked to Planning Board. croft, president of Airview Flying dedicate to the borough any pri- Saturday. ' What "hurts" the local board struction issue, factions and offi- Service, Inc., Red Bank Airport, vate land under the sidewalk! Trie NJEA in turn Is vigorous- the most: the delay in building cials here have been at odds, .. Board members seemed agreed for a 16,000-square-foot office that a landscape plan be present- ly .opposed to. the-view of the here has meant a big jump in off and on, and the J*war of tjiat further• airport construction buHding on residential land at ed far approval at the board's New Jersey Federation of Teach- costs. ^ „_ words" is still in progress. in. the Borough is-undesirable, Hudson board members have but- disagreed?'on what is-said-in thfe-corner of Hance Ave. and March meeting; that trie b'uiMJ eiSj AJJL-CIO that disputei should The per-square-foot cost; for cited one factor, among others— zoning ordinance amendment Apple St. ing must have masonry exterior be handled by the Mediation Henry Hudson was $14.50, for walls; and that no topsoil be Board which is part of the De- the assistance the board got from proposed by Borough Council and The approval was granted on constuction only. The cost h,ere removed from the site without partment of Labor and Industry a citizens' study committee, made referred to the board for recom- condition that the applicant sub- Is estimated at $18. And, the up of engineers and other profes- mendations. prior board approval. and handles labor-management $18 figure is considered a good mit indication of gradients for sional men, which surveyed, stud- The board voted to recommend Permission to erect a tempo- conflicts in industry. one in today's market. disposition of water and septic ied, made recommendations and adoption of the measure by coun- rary sign on the building site was Mr. Metzler also believes that materials; that curbing be shown The Henry Hudson school size assisted in every phase of plan A.A. Anastasia John D. Taylor cil, but only by a vote of 5-4. also given. the present functions of the state 20 feet from the center lines of Is 67,800 square feet. The build- ning, even down to chalkboards, The- proposed amendment bans The building, a l'/S-story struc- civil service department and of ing size here is to be 89,600. drainage and window sashes. 'hereafter" use of any lands in both streets; that a four-foot- ture to be completed by April the salary adjustment com- Pupil capacity at Hudson is 664, Henry Hudson was built for$l,- the borough for construction of wide sidewalk be constructed 15, will house offices of an elec- mission should be turned over to functional, and 830, maximum. 295,000. Anastasia's Post airports or facilities for landing, along both streets for the use of tronics firm. the new governmental unit. The school here • is to have a The local board will meet to- taking off, or servicing aircraft, functional capacity of 914, and night to discuss its building and and lighter-than-air craft. maximum of about 1,100. cost problems. Pickering Applauded In 7 Monmouth School Districts Filled by Taylor Moving approval of the amend- ment, board member Benjamin LONG BRANCH - A. A. An- Building and Grounds — Mr. R. Pickering drew applause from New Bank Will Open istasia stepped down from the Anastasia, chairman, Mr. Taylor about 30 residents when he said Cite Be Facto Segregation loard of Education presidency and Mr. Greenspan. all airports should be moved out ifter 10 years last night and was Appointments of the borough. By ELINOR MULTER The seven districts have a total initiate no formal action to cope eplaced by John D. Taylor. TRENTON — The racial com- of 38 elementary schools. No high The firm or Giordano, Giordano Voting against the recommen- with de facto segregation, the Monday in Middletown position of New Jersey schools is schools are involved. Mr. Anastasia, a 21-ye'ar yet- and Helleran...was named attor- dation were A. John Er- commissioner said. He said that no secret to the State Depart- MIDDLETOWN — The Middle- end of each interest period show- iran of board service, said that ney; Sidney Binder, named audi- lacher, board chairman, Herbert The data was submitted by lo- there are no plans to issue ment of Education. town Banking Company on Rt. ing deposits, withdrawals and in- 'in view of the pressure of my tor. L. Willett 3d, Mayor John E. cal school superintendents. '•„ guidelines to local districts on the 35 just north of New Monmouth terest earned that period. business, I feel that a younger Miss Catherine M. Howland, Lemon Jr. and Justin Henshell. During the past year the de- When the department asked for subject of racial composition. Rd. will open for business Mon- member of the board should have custodian of school monies; Don- partment has quietly gathered the information it promised not to A signature identification sys- All objected to the wording of In the past, civil rights groups day. an opportunity to serve as presi- ald J. Van Brunt comptroller of statistics on the racial makeup of release it in any way which tem will be introduced to give the measure. have urged the state to take the dent." federal funds and assistant board -pupil populations in all of the would reveal the situation in spe- The new brick and glass bank- added protection to depositors. Wording Feared initiative in correcting segrega- Ing house is of modern design and secretary, and Richard J. Lyon, state's public schools. cific districts, acting Commission- Regular personal checking ac- In a prepared statement, Mr. Mayor Lemon said he fears tion rather than waiting for. pro- features many innovations. Vnastasia said: "During my 10 secretary. Data on Monmouth County er Joseph E. Clayton said. counts will be offered during the the wording may prohibit mov- tests to be brought to the de- •According to Joseph M. Fett- rears as president, I have had The Central Jersey Bank & ing the Red Bank Airport run- shows patterns of de facto Dr. Clayton said that the de- opening weeks, requiring only partment. ner, president, some of the ser- he most complete co-operation Trust Co. and the New Jersey way . to another location in the segregation in seven school dis- partment has no legal power to $3.00 ibalance to eliminate service Questions on racial composi- vices that will be featured are ind confidence in every mem- National Bank were named of- borough to eliminate possible haz- tricts. compel districts to submit racial counts will also be featured. tion were included by the Depart- savings accounts that pay 4 per jer of the Board of Education ficial depositories. ard to Swimming River School, In each of these districts the data. The bank has two drive-in win- ment of Education in a question- cent interest from day of de- vho served with me. For this I now "right under the end of the proportion of non-white, pupils The information was gathered dows and an abundance of park- naire sent to all local districts. posit to day of withdrawal, com- im deeply appreciative. I am al- runway." Such a move may be varies from 15 per cent to nearly at the request of the U.S. Office ing space. The bank pays post- Data was reported as of Oct. 1, pounded and credited quarterly. IO appreciative of the efforts of considered, he added. 100 per cent, between schools in of Education, Dr. Clayton said. age both ways on savings and Board Leaves A summary of the statewide sta- 1965, and reports on other find- Statement!! will be issued at the he community to support the Mr. Erlacher said he objects the same district. In seven dis- checking account deposits, for tistics will be sent to Washington ings were issued yesterday. Items joard and myself in our en- to the ordinance "as presently tricts, the proportion of non-white those.who can't always get to but this will not identify individ- covered included: enrollment, leavors." Protection Up worded." He added that it does pupils in one or more schools is the bank. at least 15 per cent greater than ual districts, he said. numbers of teachers and class- Mr. Anastasia was re-appointed not adhere to the wording of Sphool Board Mr. Fettner said the bank will in another school in the same No Formal Action rooms, use of substandard class- ;o a five year term on the board resolutions adopted by the board be open daily from 9 a.'m. to To Police district. The state department plans to rooms and half day sessions. ast year by then mayor Vincent and by council which oppose "ad- 2:30 p.m. and will be open Fri- RAR1TAN TOWNSHIP - The Raps Permit Mazza. ditional" airports. days from 6:30 to 8 p.m. The Board of Education took action Mr. Henshell termed the word- drive-In windows will be open Mr. Taylor's term expires next designed to lessen the chance of ing of the proposed amendment For Project daily 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. and will fear and already there is talk a recurrence of last week's ju- "insane." He declared it would be open Friday 8:30 to 8 p.m. hat he won't be reappointed. venile problems on school prop- City School Budget Rises, | LONG BRANCH - The Board A special installment loan de- prohibit Red Bank Airport con- W Education went on record last Mr. Taylor lauded Mr. Anas- erty. partment will remain open daily tinuing its present operations and night as opposing a variance ;asia and said he hoped he can School Superintendent R, 9 a.nrt. to 6 p.m. and Fridays ierve equally as well. would, for instance, even bar re- for the Construction Co. for the Thomas Jannarone stated that pair of a collapsed airport build- to 8 p.m. A 24-hour, seven:day- David Means was elected vice construction of 16 one-family the board will ask the Township ing. He disagreed with Milton A. Full Rate Under $4 Seen a-week night depository service houses on' Albert PI. behind the iresident of the board. The pre- Committee to adopt an ordinance is available. Mausner, board attorney, who LONG BRANCH — The Board I Board of School Estimate will board secretary, the amount to Elbcron School. vious vice president was Sidney empowering police to patrol said no ordinance can "put any- cut the school budget to the point be raised by taxation under the The board, which fought the The bank will hold an open Finger, whose term on the board school access roads and parking of Education last night introduced one out of "business." that taxes will be less than $4 forthcoming municipal budget is variance when it was originally house starting Saturday, through expired Tuesday. Mayor Paul lotsr! a school budget of $3,998,550, up Feb. 11, with gifts for the first Mr. Mausner admitted, how- per $100 assessed valuation. The $2,940,463. sought in December, 1965, said its Mastasio Jr. replaced him with Under the present law, techni- $569,227 from the last budget. 1,000 visitors. u ever, that the ordinance would municipal rate remains constant attorney would be at the Board of Seymour Greenspan, who was cally police require a complaint The budget, coupled with the The board said 82 per cent of seated last night. indeed bar moving the runway at 93 cents. the budget is designated for teach- Adjustment meeting next week from the board or some private to another borough location and municipal budget, will result in a The board sdt regular meet The school budget in this city ers' salaries. to lodge objections. citizen before they can enter the prohibit even minor improve- tax rate of about $4.06 per $100 ings for the third Wednesday runs from July 1, 1967 to June The board claims that to al- school property—because schop ments without suitable variances. assessed valuation. However, low construction of the houses of each month at 8 p.m. in the sources at City Hall said the 30, 1968. board ownership classes the land When the meeting was opened would bo1 contrary to the mas- ligh school library. The date is as private. to the public, a letter from the The Board of School Estimate ter plan, would inhibit the board . change from the fourth Wednes- Hit and Run Mr. Jannarone said the board New Shrewsbury Civic League in will hold a public hearing on the from ^expanding the Elberon lay. The next regular meeting, had been weighing such action support of the ordinance amend- Vanore Gets budget on Feb. 15 at ,8 p.m. in School in the future and would however, was re-scheduled for for "quite a while." In the up- ment was read into the record. the high school auditorium. Investigated place an , untoward burden on Tuesday, Feb.- 28, because the heaval Jan. 23, one student was The league is composed of resi- The current expense section of school facilities in the area by third Wednesday is the date for LONG BRANCH — Police here cut with a beer can opener and dents of the south end of the bor- Club's Honors the budget is $3,910,500. With state the number of children who are a public hearing on the school four others were suspended from ough. LONG BRANCH — The Ex- and federal funds and the use of are investigating a hit and run expected to live in the houses. budget. $160,473 in surplus funds, the total school for fighting. Included in the board's recom- change Club yesterday present- accident that occurred last night These are the committee ros- amount to be raised by taxation The proposed construction sites The fight occurred after schoo mendation to council was approv- ed Frank Vanore, the city's new between 11:30 and 11:45 p.m. ers: <. is $2,901,566. are adjacent to school board prop- hours. al of other sections of the amend business administrator, with a Finance H. Stanley Joline, According to police, a car erty, which is presently being "Police patrolling will act as a ment defining terms and provid- certificate of appreciation. The capital outlay section totals :hairman, Seymour Greenspan driven by Miss Ellen Davis, 36 used as a ball field. deterrent to loiterers and others ing two alternate members for $88,000 and with federal funds ind David H. Means. Mr. Vanore was the club's guest Third Ave., was struck by a who might make improper use the Zoning Board of Adjustment. at a luncheon meeting. He prom- the amount to be raised by taxa- WOODWARD HOSPITALIZED Education — Mr. Greenspan, hit and run vehicle after Miss of die grounds after school," the To Consider Tonight ised that when he begins work tion totals $85,350. RED BANK — Adrian Wood- chairman, John D. Taylor and Davis had parked her car In superintendent said. The amendment will be con- on Feb. 10 he will "do what's The total amount to be raised ward, 23 j'Westside Ave., is in Mr. Joline. front of the Ink Well on Second sidered at tonight's meeting of best for Long Branch." by taxation is $2,986,916. Insurance — Mr. Means, chair- Two Weeks Special Ave. intensive «are as a heart patient Borough Council. at-Riveryjew Hospital. He is a man, Mr. Joline and Mr. Anas- On regular permanents. $10 wave Mr. Vanore now Is the admin- The present city budget will pay Police said the left side ot istrator in Atlantic Highlands. He the last half of the 1966-67 budget member of the Union Hose Com- tasia. ' , for $8.50. $15 wave for $12.50. Need Extra Money? the Davis vehicle was damaged pany and the Red Bank First Athletic — Mr. Means, chhlr- Sheer Beauty Salon, 57 Pjospec Spring consignment now ex- was selected from a list of some and the first half of the 1967-68 when it was struck by the un- Aid Squad. He was reported man, Mr. Anastasia and Mr. Tay- Ave., Red Bank; 747-1307. ccptcd. Thrift Shop, 70' Monmouth 25 applicants by Mayor Paul Nas- budget. Thus, according to Don- seriously ill this morning; , Joseph At Fettner lor., (Adv.) St., Red Bank. (Adv.) taslo Jr. ald J. Van Brunt, assistant school known car. 16—Thumb?,' Ft*. 2, 1967 THE DAILY REGISTER To Speak on Lawn Care MATAWAN — Rtehtrd Kunge her. The Mad Hatter of Red Bank will discuss lawn care at a meet- will present spring hat styles. ing of fee Woman's Club at 1:30 A trip to fiie International Flow- p.m. in the clubhouse, Jackson er Show in New York City is St. planned for Wednesday, March Mr. Runge, is co-proprietor 8. Mrs. John Eggleston, garden of Pleasant Valley Nursery, Colts department chairman, may be Neck. contacted for further information. Plans will be discussed for a Oleg Cassini bus trip to Radio City Music Hall to see the Easter show scheduled Bridge Winners for Tuesday, March 14, under RIVER PLAZA - Winners of the direction of Mrs. William a recent Red Bank Duplicate Burmester, ways and means Bridge Club game were: Mrs. Boudoir Chic at Budget Prices chairman. Burt Fralick with Mrs. John 1 Card party and hat show sched- Tischendorf, both of Colts Neck, The boudoir — or bedroom if images of men's tartan bath have flowers, paisleys, prints, gest you buy some of your fa- uled for Thursday, March 9, has1st; Mrs. Edgar Gunter, Atlantic you will — is usually a fairly in- robes, forget it. This viyella is dots, plaids, and all manner of vorites and enjoy them fully, been changed to Wednesday Highlands, with Stanley Ivins, teresting room per se, as most so lightweight that it is nearly wild, vivid patterns. And best now that they've come of age. March 1, at 8 p.m. in the club- Rumson, tied for second place everyone knows. But there is sheer, is in the gentlest of pastel of all, you can be completely And think of what they'll do house. Mrs. Burmester also with Mrs. Shirley Schreiber, Red nothing that can't stand a little hues, and is ruffled, gathered co-ordinated, down to the last for all your winter white be in charge of this affair and Bank, and Stanley Strauss, Mid- improvement, and foolish is theand otherwise made Into truly snitch of fabric you wear — clothes. tickets may be purchased from dletown; Bert Pickover, Asbury woman who leaves it all to feminine (yet warm) concoctions. you don't have to have a flo- Park, with John Weber, Middle- ure —especially when art inFor those who are traditional ral top and plaid bottom, un- Masquerade Ball town, third; Mrs. Melvin Ford, conjunction with nature will al- in their concepts of boudoir chic, less that is your liking. Surprise Party Shrewsbury, with Rex Thomas, ways win the day (or is it theblack lace Is always around, but So, now that there is no rea- HAZLET — Fifth annual mas- Middletown, fourth; Mrs. Roland night?). the current turned-on version isson left for drab,,uninteresting Honors Couple : querade bait of St. Benedict's Dozois, with Mrs. Joseph Perez, What am I speaking of? Nofashionet d into a stretch jump under-garments, open your FREEHOLD - A surprise Catholic Church will lake place both of Matawan, fifth, and Rich- what you do but merely some- suit — now how's that for updat- eyes and let go a little. It party was held here honoring Saturday at 9 pjm. in Diamond ard De Sante, West Long Branch, hing so simple as what youing an old and previously suc- will change your whole out- Mrs. Lois Murphy and Charles Jim's, Rt. 34, Cheesequake. A with Paul Kacen, Fair Haven, wear. This is hardly the daycessful concept? look on lingerie, if not on life, Holston, who will be married Cay Nineties theme is planned. sixth. or any woman to be less than So, my lovelies, whether March 10. The event was held Games are played every Evening's activities wall Include beautifully attired in her most you're a siren or a simple type, FASHION TIP In the home of Mr. and Mrs- dancing, a buffet supper and en-Wednesday evening from 8 to private room — not when the whether you lean to crepe cu- Lawrence Marquardt, ' Colts Winter white requires just as tertainment by Mr. Banjo. Prizes 11 at the River Plaze Fire House, selection available to her is solottes or ruffled voile, you'd bet- Neck, and co-hosted by Mr. and much accessorizing as basic will be. offered for costumes. West Front St. overwhelming and dazzling. ter lean toward something chic Mrs. Charles Gibson and Mr. and black — a fact many women There is no excuse today for and newer than boredom. Stay- Mrs. Howard Heulitt, Freehold. seem to forget. But whits is ny woman looking dowdy or un-at-homes have never had it so even easier to deal with, and Attending were Mr. and Mrs. interesting. And there is no ex-good, and men are finding more can take nearly anything but Roy Daniels, Mr. and Mrs. Rob- cuse for any woman to be under- and more reason to stay there unadorned pearls (if they are ert McCoy, Mrs. Evelyn McCor- FUR FASHIONS — Modeling the newest in fashions dressed if her heart yearns for with you. SUPERAMA in a pin with some gold show- rnick, Freehold; Joseph Holston, from the Remington Fur Company yesterday at th»dramatic or sumptuous or swing- and Miss Lee Holston, Farming- ing outfits for intimate evenings ing, then they look fine). If Fort Monmouth Officers Wives Club luncheon in Gibbs FASHION MIRROR you have a large, flittery fake dale; Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hol- it home. ston, Brooklyn; Mr. and Mrs. SEWING MACHINE If dresses are transparent pin with multi-colored stones, Hall are Mrs. Charles W. Levy, right, program chair- Arnold Conover, Miss Barbara The reason Is that the old price vinyl and skirts are up to here, a white dress is perfect for man, and Mrs. L. I. Baugh, vica chairman. Winifred Conover, Mrs. Marlon Bennett REPAIR SPECIAL ines for these clothes have been what better time for fashion to it. Whereas black will drab and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bag- Heidt, former stage and TV star, was commentator broken, as the at-home market finally shed its benign light on red and green and blue stones git, Colts Neck, and. Miss Mar- as exploded into all-time popu- your\ barest essentials. And of in a pin, white makes them • Safer • WMfogbout • White, and Japaaew Makci for the fashions. jorie Conover, Long Island, arity. No longer can you hide course the Inevitable did hap- nearly light up. And since I AAlf * A*!""" MadilM EAR behind the dodge of I-can't-af- pen. Not only did new design you're not apt to find a better LUUIV • CMck MuleMuleMM, rjj" ord-to-look-elegant-at-home. You concepts suddenly mushroom year for hoarding away terrific PARENTS OF SON can afford virtually any kind of up In the underworld, but so looking costume jewelry, I sug- MATAWAN TOWNSHIP — "*w""lrt 45 WHAT County Fare garment that your eye could Adam Marcus Wall, infant son fancy. You may not set silk of Mr. and Mrs. Morton Wall, PRICE By White and Mr. and Mrs. F. J MARGUERITE HENDERSON Rowse, Rumson. with mink trim, but there is 43 Cambridge Dr., was born Jan. YOU GET crepe and marabou. 2 Another swish party was that Mrs. Harold E. Williams was 26 in the Flower Fifth Avertie • FRBB VM ct • madiM* white wi stmci your* Hospital, New York. held Saturday by the Woman's chairman of the affair, assisted Then there is the woman who at ATLANTIC SUPERAMA, New Shrewsbury Club of Little Silver in the Oldby Mrs, John G. Rice and Mrs,is always cold. She Is less com- Mr. and Mrs. Wall are con- Orchard Country Club, Eaton R. tone, both Redmon in apartments, but seems gregants of Temple Beth Ahm town. Pre-party parties abound- G. A. Combs,o proliferate in.drafty houses, where Mrs. Wall is the youth NECCHI SEWING MACHINE CO. ed. Among those who enter- both luxurious and modest. Her adviser for the Alizim group. Mr. Opo Smtby 'HI * ».N. U 2-1483 tained at cocktails were Mr. and story has always been that she Wall is past financial secretary Mrs. Harvey B. Sharer, Fair Ha- xs dining and danc- agreed that crepe, silk, tricot, of the congregation. They have ven, and Mr. and Mrs. Jacob (to Vito Marascio's music) lace and sexy nightgowns were a daughter Stacy, 5% were: Mr. and Mrs. Fred Firges, ood things, and that she in fact The bris will be held on Thurs- Hazlet; Mr. and Mrs. Peyton owned a fair sampling — but day at 9 a.m. at the home of Wheeler, Mr. and Mrs. Edward hey were no solace for goose the parents. Canzona, Mrs. H. B. Van Namen bumps and cold feet. Just give arid Mrs. Gertrude Davis, all Redher a granny gown or some nice Bank, and Mr. and Mrs. Harrywarm flannel pajamas and her MR. DINO... Koch and Mr. and' Mrs. Calvin drafty old castle finally seems Blaney, Oceanport. like a home. Emi and John Hemleb, Rum- Now even this woman, long a son, relaxed from rehearsals now mainstay o! the species, Is about under way for the Monmouth o become extinct. She simply is in town! Players production of "A View hasn't got any excuse left. Fash- From the Bridge." John is di-on has finally attended even to recting (Nell Festa is staging) her, and she can now be both and together they have worked warm and winning. For in- out a unique concept in thrust stance: flannel is around, but stage technique. Emi (who hasit has givfeh way to brushed ny- among her souvenirs a "Best on or other synthetics, and the Actress" award given by the NJnap is not enough. These fuzzy Federation of Woman's Clubs) fabrics are fashioned into all will portray Beatrice, the part of kinds of delectables, with cowl the mother in this presentation. collars and deep cuffs made of It will be at the Navesink Li- don pile, or trimmed with eye- brary on Feb. 10, 11, 17 and 18.iet and lace and fancy frog clos- ngs. And if that isn't warm or Blossoming out at Old Orchard expensive enough, you can get (Country Club next Tuesday are eally beautiful nightgowns.of vi- TROPHIES FOR SHEDDING POUNDS — TOPS, an enthusiasts of the Navesink Gar- irella. Should that conjure up den Club. The occasion is the organization whose purpose is to help woman lose annual luncheon-fashion show — weight sensibly.' held its annual awards night in Long which this year marks the 20th ;Iegant from Wllhelmina Dob- )ins) is Mrs. Ward Denison, also Branch this week with trophies going to, left to right, birthday of the organization. 1 Over the years many more )f Rumson. , Miss Betty McElmon, Eatontown, TOPS 1967 Que«n, questions than "How does your Models will include: Mrs. who lost 51 pounds; Mrs. Clifford Smith, Middletown, ROUTE Mat garden grow?" have been raised. Charles M. Cubbage and Mrs. fifth division winner, who loit 18 pounds, and Mrs. Saul Cornelius Cpbb Shopping VUIl|« Of current concern are problems "arl Ray, Middletown; Mrs. of air pollution and conservation; George W. Howland Jr. and Mrs. Tessler, Oalchurjt, fourth division winner,' 2S.5 pounds. Opening. projects of scholarships and land J. T. Robinson, Rumson; Mrs. Not pictured is Mrs. William Sanders, Neptune, second scaping. Edwin Ludeman, Riverside division winner, who shed a total of 39 pounds. The Mrs. Dexter Bowker, Rumson, Heights, and Mrs. G. R. Miller, SATURDAY general chairman, is accepting Monmouth Hills. The commen- group meets every Monday at 8 p.m. in the Monmouth FEBRUAKV lltfi reservations. In charge of thtatoe r will be Mrs. Hector C. Medical Center, Long Branch. fashion show segment (always Ivans, Rumson. February is FIREPLACE MONTH M0(I SHOPPING CENTER at KINGS HEARTH ^^Hr (/ HWY. 35, MIDDLETOWN ^^^ Houri: MOB.. Thuri., Fri. 10-9: Tuei., Wed.. Sat. 10-6 ocean electric COUPON SPECIALS! INSTANT THURSDAY • FRIDAY • SATURDAY Fireplace Kit , With mil coupon only—IN OUR DRESS DEPARTMENT • with the purchase of •WINTER CA07 ' $20.00 or more of ! DRESSES OU /C OFF | fireplace equipment. j....M...... M...... M...M...ri...j You can really perk up the ship with Mr. Dino's hand- ; Witt) this coupon only-IN OUR SPORTS DBPARTMBNT I printed matching panls and top in luscious Arnel double • PLUS * v • Value to 5.95 f\ f\f\ \ knit. He shows just how feminine pants can be and adds •LADIES' SHIRTS £,\J\)\ !...... i a scallopcd-collar blouse lo top them off. They're drip SAVE UP TO 25 % on stock items j ' With thli coupon only—IN OUR CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT • dry and need just « touch of the iron to look ready for • Value to 14.95 pj A A ' the next tournament. "everything your hearth desires" • PRE-TEEN PRESSES O.UU j ...... a...... a...... a...! KINGS HEARTH at ! With thll coupon only—IN OUR CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT I • Children's—^Reg. 2.95 -| fk A • ocean electric ; BLOUSES AND POLOS ±«UU • HWY. 35, OAKHURST—531-3425 '.a.*...... ¥ Open Daily 'til 5:30, Thurs. & Fri. 'til 9 ! With ttlll coupon only—IN OUR UNDBKWBAR DBPARTMINT • ROUTE 9, HOWELL TWP.-364-3552( Reg. 2.95 & 3.95—FLANNEL *) f\f\ ! Open Daily 'til 5:30 Fri. Eve. 'til 9 • GOWNS AND PAJAMAS £»\JV • 141 BROAD STREET RED BANK J Wltti mil coupon only—IN' OUR HOSE DBPARTMINT J • Famous Brand (limit 3 pair) *| /tf\* 747-8357 FREE PARKING It Pays To Advertise In The Register •SUPPORT HOSE '•*?! Thursday, Feb. 2, 1967—17 Practical Nurse Class Ann Landers THE DAILY REGISTER Graduates Tomorrow l Freehold Club LONG BRANCH - The Mon- •DeUsa, Long Branch; mu Rose Not So Brilliant Lists Winners FREEHOLD — Winners «t the mouth County Vocational School Desmond, Long Branch; Miss Dear Ann Landers: Some- and just enjoyed each other's Freehold Bridge Club's National will hold graduation ceremonies Sue Enibler, Port' Monmouth thing has been bothering me and company. He passed away at 72 Charity Bridge Game were: . for its • 13th class of practical Miss Shirley Ford, Neptune, and I don't know who to ask, so I and I can truthfully say the last North-South, Mr/- and Mrs. nurses tomorrow in the Depart- Mrs.. Maxine Frease, Oakhurst. am turning to you. six years of his life were our ment of Vocational Education Also, Miss Florence Ganley, Leonard Booth, Madison, first; This friend I am writing about happiest. —ONE WHO KNOWS. Building, West End Ave., at 2 West Long Branch; Miss Elyse Harry Siegal, Nutley, and Dr. H. is a nice person, but when I Dear One: A low bow to you p.m. Gardineer, Spring Lake; Mrs. H. Maroon, Kingston, N.Y.; sec- say she is of average intelligence and to other wives of retired The commencement address June Guda, Asbury Park; Mrs ond; Murray Rosenthal, East I am giving her a break. Gracemen who have made those re- will be delivered by Marvin A. Elva Gordon, Neptune; Mrs. Ei Brunswick, and Mrs. Virginia graduated from high school and tirement years "the happiest" Clark, president of the Vocation- leen Hayes, West Long Branch Dohm, Sayerville, third, and Mr. I'll bet she hasn't read a book Your husband could not have al Board of Education. Mrs. Alma Johnson, Atlanti and Mrs. Ralph VanDerWerker, since. She can barely carry on adone it alone, dear. The Practical Nurses Alumni Highlands; Mrs. Cheryl Kinsley, Edison, fourth. decent conversation, yet I have Association will present its an-Red Bank; Mrs. Ruth Leaycraft seen her sit down and work out Is alcoholism a disease? How East-West, Jack and Richard nual achievement award to theNeptune; Mrs. Joan Machette, a crossword puzzle in record can the alcoholic be treated? Is Davrovsky, Farmingdale, first; outstanding graduate. Oceanport; Miss Laura Mitchell, time, filling in words like zi there a cure? Read the booklet Harry Herring, Old Bridge, and The graduating class includes Neptune; Miss Emma , Miles beline, Yahwist and lytta. How"Alcoholism — Hope and Help," Stanley Cobb, South River, sec- Mrs. Florence Bailey, Long Colts Neck; Mrs. Martha New- come the big dumb-bell knows by Ann Landers. Enclose 35c in ond; Mrs. Charles Amm and Branch; Mrs. Charlotte Boyar, man, Neptune; Mrs. Emjlj Miss Janet P. Barlow Miss Margaret A. Patrick Miss Dorothy L. Watson that xylan is a yellow gummy coin with your request and a long, Mrs. Vivian Baird, Freehold, Neptune; Mrs. Agnes Brown, Wran, Asbury Park, and Mrs. pentosan found in woody tissues stamped, self-addressed enve- third, and Mrs. Walter Foley and Colts Neck; Mrs. Patricia Daly, Margie Washington, Long and yields eylose upon hydrol- lope. Mrs. Robert Herman, Freehold, Monmouth Beach; Miss Mary Branch. D. H. Clarke fourth. Announce Engagements ysys? Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Please explain how a person They're Unique! Ads in the BELFORD — Mr. and Mrs. •RED BANK - Mr. and Mrs. Send them to her in care, of this To Marry of mediocre intelligence, sudden Daily Register Classified work Bride-Elect Is Honored Martin C. Patrick, 151 Summit Thomas E. Watson Sr., 57 East ly turns brilliant when she works newspaper, enclosing a stamped, LOGAN, Utah — Mrs. Ralph for you around the clock. Place HIGHLANDS - A surprise Loretta McMahon, Mrs. Roberi Ave., have announced the engage- Bergen PI., announce the engage out crossword puzzles? — self-addressed envelope. N. Barlow of this place, an- bridal shower honoring Miss McMahon, Mrs. C' Mel Johnson, ment of their daughter, Miss ment of their daughter, Miss BEMUSED nounces the engagement of heryours now. . Carole Dale Fehlhaber, was Mrs. Walter Mewes, Mrs. Arthur Margaret Ann Patrick, to Henry Dorothy Lynn Watson of Arling- daughter, Miss Janet Patricia Dear Be : Crossword buffs Barlow, to David Howard Clarke. given here in the Alpine Manor Cummins Jr., Mrs. Edward A Arthur Moran Jr., U.S. Army. ton, Va., to Herbert DeGrange Iearri off-beat and little known Announce by her aunt, Mrs. William E. Finlay, Mrs. John J. McConnell He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.Wolff, 3d. He is the son of Dr. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. words because they sit with a Lawrence I. Clarke, Locust Point All Fehlhaber, Atlantic Highlands. Mrs. William R; Beatty, Mrs Henry Arthur Moran Sr., 115and Mrs. Herbert D."Wolff Jr., dictionary in their laps and check The .bride-elect is the daughter Luke J. Penta, Miss Betty Kehoe Fellswood Dr., Livingston. of (Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Marriage Rd., Locust, and Amagansett, the completed puzzle when it ap N. Y. A March wedding is Mr. and Mrs. Martin D. Fehl- and Miss Terry Mooney, High An, early fall wedding is pears the following day. HAZLET — Announcement is •In- haiber, 114 Navesink Ave. She will lands. Miss Patrick, an alumna of planned. made of the marriage of Miss planned. Middletown Township High To be able to knock out a cross become the bride of Alfred T. Also, Mrs. Lawrence Brooks, Miss Watson was graduated in, Mary Elizabeth Archer, daugh- The bride-elect, daughter also School, is a senior in the College word in record time is no proof Heiman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Donald A. Kornek, Mrs. Bar- 1960 from Red Bank High School ter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Arch- of the late. Dr. Barlow, attended of Liberal Arts at Syracuse of intelligence or general knowl- Ones Theodore Heiman, 33 Prospect bara Leonard, and Miss Libby and from the University of Penn- er, 69 Brookside Mobile Court, to Utah State University. She is the (N.Y.) University, where she is edge. If a • person plays any Ave., Atlantic Highlands, March Scott, Navesink; Mrs. Sam Bian sylvania School of Oral Hygiene Richard B. McKeen Jr., son ofgranddaughter of the late Dr. with or without a member of Alpha Sigma Alpha game long enough he's bound to 10 in St. Andrews Episcopal chi, Mrs. Nick Bianchi and Mrs in 1962. She is a dental hygienist Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Mcan- d Mrs. H.R. McGee of Logan, hones or zippers sorority, and Lambda Sigma Sig- learn the gimmicks. (P.S. I know Church, Highlands. Mary Critchfield, Long Branch; in the offices of, Dr. Zach T. Keen Sr., 178 Middle Rd. and Dr. and Mrs. J.M. Barlow ma and Eta Pi Upsilon honor- a three letter word for rodent always Attending besides the bride- Mrs. Lee Harvey, Audubon; Mrs. Gray and Dr. Edward D. Risdon of North Little Rock, Ark. aries. and beyond that I'm stuck.) The double ring ceremony elect's mother, were her paternal Karen Hellriegel, Had don of Alexandria. took place Dec. 26 in the First Mr. Clarke attended Berkshire COMFORTABLE grandmother, Mrs. Virginia Fehl- Heights; Mrs. Robert G. Kor- Mr. Moran was graduated from Mr. Wolff is a senior at Hamp- School and was graduated from Dear Ann Landers: You're Baptist Church, Keyport, with and haber, and maternal grandmoth- nek, Neptune; Mrs. Bert Pavick, Livingston High School and St.den-Sydney College, Farmville, Hobart College, Geneva, N.Y. He probably fed up on letters from Rev. Eugene Gregory officiating. er Mrs. Helen Kornek, High- Mrs. Richard Merker, Middle- Francis College, Loretto, Pa., where he is a member of Chi Phi is with the Atlantic Processing FLATTERING Wall Street Warriors and I don't Mrs. Everett Poling was church lands; her godmother, Mrs. Fred town; Mrs. Raymond Bossingei where he was a member of Tau fraternity. A 1958 graduate of Company, Amagansett, and Sea Eliminates Mid-riff Buldge mean to belabor the issue, but organist and soloist was Mrs. J. Rast, and her future mother- and Mrs. Jackie Merrick, Bel Kappa Epsilon fraternity. He isChrist Church School, Saluda, Life Fisheries Ltd. of Nova Sco- I'd like to add one more com- Dominic Trolian. Immediately in-law, Atlantic Highlands. ford; Mrs. Thomas H. Wood and enrolled in the U.S. Army Officer Va., he completed four years tia, Canada. ment. after the ceremony a reception Other guests were Mrs. Wil-Mrs. John T. Kuranka, Mrs Candidate School and stationed military service in the U. S. Air was held in The Cobblestones, liam E. Kornek, Mrs. Stephen H. John Giovenco; Red Bank, and at Fort Benning, Ga. Force. I refer to the statement that Middletown. Wholewheat and rye flours Faller, Mrs. Andrew J. Kor- Mrs. Robert Martin, Atlantic hard-working professional and Mr. Archer gave his daughter may be stoneground. or roller nek, Mrs. Anton J. Kornek, Mrs.. Highlands. business men who spend them- ground. The stoneground flours selves elsewhere and are 400in marriage. She wore an Em- pire-styled gown of peau de soie are rougher in texture than the tired for romance got that way roller-ground flours. If you .wan because they chose to. Please appliqued with French rose point lace and fashioned with a sheath to make yeast bread from 16 Wei* Front Street add, Ann Landers, that the same wholewheat or rye flour, and skirt with chapel-length train RED BANK can be said of wives who spend have a smooth even texture in themselves on the garden club, edged in matching hand-clipped lace. Her bouffant veil was held the finished product, use the roll 747-4849 the Ladies Aid, the children, the erground f)our. laundry, and the housework. in place by a coronet of lace, crystals and pearls. Years ago a clergyman's wife complained that her hijsband be; Miss Sue Anne Archer of Eliz- came romantic every Sunday abeth was maid of honor for her HUFFMAN & BOYLE'S night after his sermon had been sister. Best man was Charles A. delivered and the pressure was Brown, Hazlet, brother-in-law of l off. The wife said Sunday night the bridegroom. John Bumber, Special Bedding Section . . . didn't suit her at all because Hazlet, was usher. Monday niorning was her hard- The couple, who are at home at est day. She had to get up early 518 West 15th St., Wahoo, Neb., Great savings on one-of-a-kind quality mat- and do an enormous washing. are graduates of Keyport High tresses and boxsprings from famous makers , Your advice was perfect. You School. Mrs. McKeen was em- told her to do her washing on ployed by Dr. Anthony R. Gar- Route 35 Circle • Eatontown • 542-1010 Tuesdays. ruto, Hazlet, and Miss Betty's Dance Studio, Middletown. Mr. Same Day Delivery Service Please publish my letter. It McKeen, who served two years Miss Lynn W. Woglom Miss Janis £. Purvis contains a moral worth repeat- in the U.S. Navy, is attending FAIR HAVEN — Mr. and Mrs. ing. — CHUCK WHO LOVES John F. Kennedy College in Wa- FREEHOLD — Announcement YOU. H. Vreeland, 19 Timber Ct.,.and is made by Mr. and Mrs. Jack hoo. New Canaan, Conn., • have an- C. 'Purvis, Green Acres Mobile Dear Chuck: Here's your letter CORNELIUS nounced the engagement of Mrs. Manor, of the engagement of and I love you, too. Any reader Vreeland's daughter, Miss Lynn their daughter, Miss Jam's E. who can come up with a line I Hadassah Completes Willis Woglom, to Jason Floyd Purvis, to David C. Reya, son wrote six years ago wins my un COBB, Ltd. dying devotion. Dinner Plans Harvey, son of Mr. and Mrsof.Edwar. d Reya, East Freehold FREEHOLD — The Freehold Custom Collected Early Louis Harvey, 44 Bellevue Ave., Rd., Freehold, and the late Mrs. American Furniture Dear Ann Landers: I'm getting Chapter of Hadassah at its re- Rumson. Martha Reya. cent meeting completed plans for »***»**•»*»***************»*********>*******< The bride-elect, daughter also tired of reading letters from Miss Purvis, an alumna of wives who are dreading the daya "Swing Into Spring" progres- of the late Frank Chapman Wog- sive dinner to be held March CLOCKS JUST MADE lom, is a graduate of Rumson- Southern Freehold Regional High when their husbands retire. The School, is employed in the Pro-last woman who wrote said she 18. The evening will commence Fair Haven Regional High School. with cocktails and hors d'oeuvres FOR WATCHING ... She is a sophomore at Lesley Col- curement and Production Direc- would go out of her mind if her from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. in the Charming Early American reproduc- lege, Cambridge, Mass. torate, Electronics Command, husband sat around the house all day like the retired husbands of Jewish Community Center. tions as interpreted by the New Eng- Mr. Harvey, also a graduate Fort Monmouth. her friends. Mrs. Harold Kaufman and Mrs. land Clock Company are sure to add of Rumson-Fair Haven Regional an appealing effect to any >oom. Mr. Reya, a welder with South Helen Rockower are co-chairmen. High School, attended Monmouth How come she didn't go out Choose from many models with or Shore Company, Manasquan, is Mrs. Corrine Brodnick will be College, West Long Branch. He of her mind all those years when without chimes, AC electric or battery an alumnus of Freehold Regional in charge of dessert and Mrs. is vice president of the Servisoft she was playing bridge and her movement. ' ' Tobais Mayer, reservations. Division of Spencer-Ryan, Wana- High School and served four husband was breaking his back Exciting New Group of Framed Pic- massa. years in the U.S. Marine Corps. to pay her bills? Now that he Mrs. Leon Shtier announced tures on Display. has earned his day of rest he isthat a donor luncheon will be not welcome in his own home. held March 28. ROUTE 34 COLTS NECK When my husband retired we Mrs. Tony Hyman and Mrs. CALL 46M78S (just south of Freehold Rd.) Jane Nugent Engaged really began to live. We went Oscar Bramson were panelists Open Mon.-Thurs. 10 to S; Fri. 10 to 9; Sat. 10 to 6 fishing together, took motor trips, in a discussion on "Is Family TERMS WE DELIVER COLTS NECK — Mr. and Mrs. we gardened, built birdhouses ,ife Disintegrating?" George S. Nugent, Maple Dr., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Jane Kathryn Nugent, to William. Law- rence Hazard, son of Prof, and Mrs. John N. Hazard of New FOOTCRAFT SHOE SALE! York City. A July wedding is planned. Miss Nugent is a graduate of Red Bank- High School and at- BOYS' LEATHER CAMPERS tended Stanford University where she was a dean's list stu- dent. A Wellesley (Mass.) Col- lege Scholar, she received a and WORK SHOES __ Timeless elegance in a costume of bachelor of arts degree with hon- HIGH AND LOW ors in biology and was a mem- textured Italian silk, in Misses or Petite. ber of Phi Sigma Society. She is lor Women of dljcrimlnating taatei ... student, of medicine at the Co- 8'/2 TO 3 _ lumbia College of Physicians and urgeons, New York City. 95 I Wilhelmina Dobbins Ltd. Her grandparents are the late Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Burkhard 3'/2 TO 6 ROUTE 33 RED BANK jj of Ocean Grove and Union, an* Miss Jane K. Nugent the late Mr. and Mrs. George H ::::5 Just over the Bridge — Our Only Location Nugent of Calvary Presbyteriar Columbia College of Physicians ;nd Surgeons, is an alumnus of t.a3^^ Church, Newark. Mr. Hazard, also a student a '.he Hill School, Pottstown, Pa., ?nd studied at the Cranleigh School in England under the aus- WOMEN'S and GIRLS' pices of the English Speaking Union. He received a bachelor of arts degree from Yale University VINER LOAFERS where he was a dean's list stu- dent and a member of the Wolf's * Discontinued numbers only * Not all sires In Decorating Little Touches Count Head Society. His father is a 5 specialist, in Soviet law at Co- Like the ashtrays lumbia University. • ALL SALES FINAL And the centerpiece ' Mr. Hazard is the grandson of Rt. Rev. and Mrs. William Ap- And the pictures over the sofa pleton Lawrence of Boston and And the lamps on the night ttandi Mt. Desert, Maine. And the guest soaps in the bathroom Card Parly Slated And the cannisters in the kitchen For Tomorrow And the right color wastebaskets. HIGHLANDS — The Rosary Footcraft Shoes Altar Society of Our Lady of For the professional touch that will mean so Perpetual Help Catholic Church much, come to JAM IAN. is sponsoring a winter card Phone .. . SH 7-2873 ^m^ party tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the (Note our new store hours below.) school hall. Mrs. Harry E. Bey- er is general chairman with Mrs. SSSeJ 86 BROAD STREET RED BANK Mmk John L. Dedrick assisting. 5 gifts 264 Norwood Ave. Other committee chairmen in- y Open Wednesday and Friday Nights 'til 9 P. M. v clude Mrs. John J. McConnell, furniture daily 10 to 5:30 tickets; Mrs. Michael J. Mona- han and Mrs. Beyer, table Interior designers DEAL wed. eve. 7 to 9 prizes; Mrs. Joseph Kanarkow- SPECIALISTS IN ORTHOPEDIC FOOTWEAR ski, postera, and Mrs. Richard Perez, refreshments. f, Feb. 2, 1967 -J*'*- By ALFRED SHEINWOLD You will probably hold back no matter how earnestly you are as- The Hand sured that it is quite safe to put 'our head into the lion's mouth North dealer NUBBIN By JIM BURNETT and GEORGE CRENSHAW This speaks well for your good Both sides vulnerable sense, but you need courage to NORTH A AQ9- defeat certain contracts. V 7 West opened the deuce of O AK7632 :pades, and South won with the ;ing. Declarer led a diamond to WEST EAST lummy's king, discarded a heart A 832 *J 1065 MINK-TRIMMED AND m the ace of diamonds and gave V 954 AND I UNDEgSJAND YOUR MALE -1.-HAR0 TO .MAGINE PEOPLE WHO LOVE EACH gave up another diamond. upon being given his first dia- OTHER CANT HAVE THO5E PILE, WOOL, OTHER Declarer was now sure of four ASE5 RAfTj-MY MIND WAS BUT THERE IS A mond trick. This took courage THE BRIEF YEAR* y— VEAR5 TO6ETHERI SOLUTION! WILL YOU liamond tricks, three spades and since South had bid hearts, but LISTEN TO JTf EXTRA-WARM CARCOATS, ne heart. If the defenders re- faint heart never won man: used to lead hearts South would rubbers. REG. 21.95 TO 39.95 South would win with the ace Recreation Committee of hearts but would be unable t cash the king since that wouli Re-elects Rusnak give the defenders two hearts, 56 96 SHREWSBURY — Elected to two diamonds and two clubs. If lis second* term as chairman of the defenders never again led he Recreation Committee was hearts. South would have I 17 31 loseph Rusnak of 29 Colonial Dr. tackle the clubs by himself in te Abram Van Hall of 66 Traf- the attempt to develop a ninth Froeted acrylic pile, pure wools, warm blends. ' ford St. was re-elected vice chair- trick—and that would give the Bashing styles and colors. 8 to 18. man, and Thomas Fuorry con* opponents three clubs in addi- THE PHANTOM By LEE FALK tinues as secretary. Continuing tion to their two diamonds. JUNIORS'AND MISSES'SIZES iheir committee-memberships-are DAILY QUESTION Victor Scotese, Pat D'Aloia, WELCOME, SIRE. fun lob«l«d to ihsw country of origin of Imported fun Partner opens with one dia- BORDER, SIRE. WE PLANS HAVE. BEEN oseph Lutz, John A. Trepl, mond, and the next player pass- LAND IN SO MINUTES. MAPE/ Thomas Rogers, John Morris, es. You hold: Spades—J 10 6 5 "I'LL STAY ONLY N (IONS ENOUGH Robert Flanagan and Paul Vinty. Hearts—Q J 10 6. Diamonds—9 ' TO SET THAT SO , The committee meets the fourth 4. Clubs-K 9 6. What do you MILLION — Thursday of each month. say? .THEN GO.' Answer: Bid one heart. With JAILED IN SHOPLIFTING 7 points in high cards you have LONG BRANCH — Magistrate enough strength to respond to Stanley Cohen Tuesday sen- partner's opening bid. Show a enced Joseph Lee Stokes, 180 major suit at the level of one. Wonmouth Ave., to 50 days in To order A Pocket Guide to i STRETCH he county jail for shoplifting Bridge send 50 cents to Red rom Bauer's Thriftway Market, r Bank Register, Box 3318, Grand 0 Broadway. Twenty days of theCentral Station, New York 10017 ;entence were imposed in lieu N. Y. It covers bidding con if payment of a.$100 fine. SLACKS ventions, point count, etc. POGO By WALT KELLY "ASTRO-GUIDE" By Ceean NO, A OOG> IT'« NOT. 99 Ther/re Unique! Ads in the Daily Register Classified work South of the Krupp for you around the clock. Place DEPOSITS MADE IN YOUR SAVINGS ACCOUNT... 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