25 Million Building SEE STORY PAGE 2 Fair, Pleasant Fair and pleasant today, THEMIII tonight and tomorrow. Be- "j Kill Hank, Fwholil T~ coming sunny, warm Satur- FINAL I , Long Branch I day. » EDITION M<»nmouili 4'ouiily's Outstanding llom«» »\vspapor VOL.94 NO.33 RED BANK, NJ. THURSDAY, AUGUST 12,1971 TEN CENTS Democrats Welcome Lindsay _ NEW YORK (AP) - Lead- A welcome was also extend- Humphrey of Minnesota, the Angelo, state Democratic driven out o the party." mayor of the great city of teered that, like those already ing Demcorats have generally ed by Sen. Henry M. Jackson Demcoratic presidential can- chairman said, "The addition Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield of New York has finally seen the hi the race, Lindsay "would welcomed New York Mayor of Washington, one of a num- didate in 1968 and a possible of people like Mayor Lindsay Oregon commented, "I feel light." make an outstanding prcsi John V. Lindsay to their party ber of Democrats already contender nn 1972. In the ranks of the Democrat- the Republican party can ill "Democrats are always dential candidate." but there was little upper ech- eyeing the presidency. Of the He said the switch "un- ic party only substantiates afford to lose anyone at a pleased to welcome lost sheep Former Sen. Eugene J. elon enthusiasm over his po- mayor's presidential possi- doubtedly reflects the views and strengthens this move time when registrations are into the fold," declared Det- McCarthy, who himself made tential as a possible presiden- bilities, Jackson has said: "If of many hundreds of thou- away from the destructive , running so badly against us. roit's Mayor Roman Gribbs. a try for the Demcoratic nom- tial candidate in 1972. you joined the church one sands of voters who supported and unimaginative policies of John Lindsay's switch is a "He will be a great addition to ination in 1968, said: Republican reaction to the Sunday, you cannot expect to the Nixon-Agnew ticket in the Nixon administration." major loss to our party." the party.. .He is an effective - "I know no special reason long-anticipated Lindsay be chairman of the board of 1968 and have now come to re- No Surprise Some of the most enthusias- and articulate spokesman for why he should not seek the switch yesterday ranged from deacons the next Sunday." alize they made a mistake." Republican National Chair- tic responses came from some the needs of the people of presidency as a Democrat if the view that it was overdue McGovern: 'Amen' Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of man, Sen. Robert J. Dole of ' of his fellow mayors. In Chi- America's core cities." he so wishes. In the American to expressions of loss by some Sen. George S. McGovern of Maine, considered the front Kansas, said the shift came as cago, Mayor Richard Daley And WesUhlman of Seattle, tradition there is no pre- liberal members. The White South Dakota, an announced runner for the Democratic no surprise adding, "I assume said, "I'm delighted to see the a liberal Democrat, volun- scribed waiting period." House had no comment. candidate for the Democratic nomination, welcomed Lind- that he will soon be joining John Lindsay In his announcement, Lind- nomination, commented, say and said his shift was a the ranks of Democratic ores- ' say scored the Nixon adminis- "The only thing I can say sign "he can no longer accept idential hopefuls." "M-"^ "• "• ~| A ft 1 tration and said his shift "rep- about the conversion is Republican politics especially "I'm not so certain the I I II I JL /% I resents a renewed decision to 'Amen.' , as they affect our urban switch is bad news for Re- •""^"1 "I ~W* MJT W\ d "I^^B I /% O O €\ "I | O fight for new national lead- "But I did not come to New areas." , publicans because I think for ••III l^k I I £w I III /~~m ^i^^^l I I ?^ ership.. .Whether this means York to convince another can- . Asked if Lindsay might some time John Lindsay has -m—^ m"M- '•M- -"-»-•.-•• %^-K. x>«. *S a. i.Uk/»*J.J.»^ I will run for president I do didate to run for president," make a strong Democratic been backed by the Demo- • not know." he continued, and suggested candidate for the presidency, crats," Dole said. . .. ~mr "I • T| '• ~W "1 welcome John Lindsay that Lindsay might want to Muskie said he had "no firm Rep. Paul N. McCloskey Jr. • I • • I I to the Democratic party," nominate "George McGovern judgment" on the matter. of California, who plans to • ~V\ £^W "I £~b~W ~WW f\ ~W\ T ^ • k'^T I *l "1 "W*\T said Democratic National for president." In Indiana, home state of challenge Nixons's renomina- • I I I I I I ,1 III WJ III ^% 111 || I I W Chairman Lawrence F. Lindsay's criticism of the sen. Birch Bayb, another lion in several primaries, -»--•"•- V-*L-«_ ^_/m/M.M.M. ^^/ -P---"- •> ^-^ -"^ T . QJ ^^/m-•M- J O'Brien in an eight-word Nixon administration was Democrat weighing a bid for said, "I regret that another ^ w statement echoed by Sen. Hubert H. the nomination, Gordon St. good Republican has been NEWARK (AP) _Forme r "i categorically and com- Bridge Unking New Jersey New Jersey Secretary of pletely refute the charges con- and Delaware. State Robert J. Burkhardt has tained in the indictment. I The indictment also ^^^ denounced as "baseless and have never taken a bribe in charged that Burkhardt re- "*&' jSH| vicious" charges that he my life and I was never in quested an additional $10,000 - «^^HHHK jfjSfcS^^, . ^H1. f^|H shook down a New York con- any position to grant con- from Steers to be paid in the '^^^^^E.J '"•"'S.^SHP " ' H[ M^l struction concern on bridge tracts on any construction job forrn of political contributions contracts. or in any other area of gov- m g^iy 1965-when the state Similiar charges were ernment in New Jersey." Democratic Party was rev- *" "* ' ' K
^jB^n-vn^,,, l^MHMfiKk^Bm City and seven other officials. The^ contract, the in- Knowlton, 55, was charged Authority a contract for foun- iflHV vmsm m :<.«H , •BfffflHr^^TMi Denouncing the charges as dictment charges, was for with 34 counts of assisting dation work on the Chester- 'vi^^^^H \ wBEKS*" 'lH "baseless and vicious," Bur- foundation work on the re- Steers in obtaining from the Bridgeport Bridge. The span ^_ .« rri'-'-WBT i^Kti. '*• •» S khardt said in a statement is- cenfly completed second span New Jersey Turnpike Author- links New Jersey and Penn- • j ^H|. .• • ,' f& __J **'•* "?Tfy>K ^Bff'f3i:-''Vll' soedbyliisofrice: of the Delaware Memorial ity a contiact for the Route 46 sylvania.
^, m_, •*!st ., ,f, is||gj Highway Proposal Given —^: ifeA ^ICool Red Bank Reception ^^MV^ b^^M ^^^^^^^^^H ''^SSk^.'^i^fc. \H ^^fD ?ANK. 7 WhUe.ac- and the building of a spur Bank extension and the fort It eventuany will extend' *,. . ^ : ^^•O^^^^H ^^^^^^^^H • iKyra^1-.^ knowledgmg that something along to the Route 35 bypass. spur are still fath e planning from Brielfe connecting with dyk* ,^flHBhu^ ••••• •^•••••••S -• -^M6iWiH» 9 must be done about its traffic This is very similiar to a stages. existing Rt. 18 in New • "' Mrs Ann D. Flynn Hanison A. WlWams Kattarine Enms White William Hlmelman problems, Red Bank officiate plan advanced by the fort sev- Sen. Stout was the prime Brunswick. UU8.AUUU. rtyuu ....,» .;.,....- aren't sure that the answer eral years ago by its then sponsor of the legislation Red Bank's Acting Mayor _^_ lies with a state plan to build commander Maj. Gen. Wil- which authorized construction Edward Minear said he had T • "I * TT^ Til I A, /"^I ; a four-lane highway through Uam B. Latta. . .of Rt. 18. only heard rumors of the high- I t*l./iC!'flIT C • 1-^ n "MX m r %nitf • ^k"i"C? tbe borough's west side. In Ptonntag Stages So far, the Rt. 18 extension, way. I j| IlllnaV n 1 d.1 IV kjlllll, xTtyLS Butthat< s what the state State Sen- Ricnard R- also knpwn as the Rt. 35 by- Study Wanted M^iM.M.M.^M.UW, • kJ M. %+M. ** J KS MM.M.M.I, V/VHJ Department of Transportation Stout, chairman of the Sen- pass, exists from 18th Ave. to "Certainly Rt. 35 needs a v v , is now planning under author- ate's transportation com- Wall Township to Deal Road lot of improvement but I'm Mixe•vmm-9 d-m neactio-r* • "n i• n Count/~*\ y SBSilnyiiation of a bill sponsored by rnitteer, said that both the Red in Ocean Township. See Red Ban'k Page 2 ' J er three assemblymen. I Wl Q TI* I Ull4~kY'4" l mWl Q17'O" rP 1^ I7fliC ByPAULKERN the state, Mrs. Ann D. Flynn, "He's really got to demon- Lindsay fighting an uphill J^SSSS^ ^ ^ ^ If J.CtY Ul JU V C? expressed little regret that strate his interest in our par-. battle for the presidential S^ ,™?SZttfS™! ^ *>
RED BANK - State and lo- Mayor. Lindsay left their par- ty. You can't just take over a nomination. Both men said be- ^K »rt(mta7.LT 1 /^k. . • - 1 • X^ 1 cal leaders of both major par- ty. party the day you join." sides his handicap as a party ^LZirv norfSrt to its I nvirll I ^ Afl^i /^"T» C< 1^1 ^ Y~k V* V+{\X\£± ties had mixed, if generally Democrats, on the other D. Philip Gerand, the coun- switcher, "There are too jgjggrseSwitn^the J^O.11 Q W W ll.il rSflllJ JT I U JJC
cold reactions, to New York hand, while happy to have a ty party leader, said much the many other good candidates." ™J" ™* ™.»" «aLon TT 1XVA U111MX M. v^-^r ^ Mayor John V. Lindsay's deci- known national figure in their same thing and added, "If he Little Chance Seen £3wn v . sion yesterday to become a camp, see the mayor as a had switched five or even Rep. James J. Howard, D- nnntlJenn»ht MARLBORO - Mayor Mor- used as a football site and cost to the taxpayers. iW B0B | Democrat. very Iongshot for president or three years ago, he • would N.J., thinks "Mayor Lindsay T. »« B » ton Salkind today indicated family picnic area. They suggested instead that Most Republicans, with the vice president in 1972. have stood a good chance of has very little chance of gain- . '"e "Vr sfa®B>J**^n*'^ that he wUl ask for a Grand AcUon Opposed a more centrally located site, exception of one of the most Democratic State Chairman receiving local Democratic ing a place on the Democratic {? „ i. t m « Jmy tovestiga11015o fta x ^^ This action was opposed by such as part of a 12-acre site active GOP women leaders in Salvatore Bontempo said, support Party's 1972 national ticket i^ highway from Kt. 36 near transactions involving the site Belle Oaks residents, who on Harbor Road owned by the "It's not a question of not but doesn't see the party ^nr^ to th? nWKw on Schml Road East heha s maintain a»t devotopment of Municipal Utilities Authority, l ra c to l Se wmmmmmmmmmmmmsmmmmmmmmmm trusting a party switcher - switch as hurting the mayor R " * k ^Z^ L?Z recommended for use as a the site would mean more should be used for the field. He's new in our party and like politically in the long run.." ™* rh "!„ c Pop Warner football field traffic on School Road East, The MUA plans to use one TI ¥ «J dm any other good Democrat, Mr. "It has been my ex- Thpn ™nqpri ,li(Thw,v This action came after which W0Uld result in extcn- acre of the site for construc- 0 3 111 0 1 " 1 lie inSlCie htOrV Lindsaynastoearnhisway." perience," Rep. Howard said, woi?d ^eBe«llv fdtow the C "^ " ^" ™ ;" sive road construction at a See Marlboro, Page2 J.i*k7*vtvy KJ i\J* j Althoueh Mr Gerand said "thit voters are much more uld 6eneraIy f°Uow tn^ said yesterday that the field we crn lde f tlle Central w s S£^r,i'^r::::::::::::::::::::::::SBridge lifts cause many traffic Jams rL.PageKj "sfe^rJTSoMtauB indicates d Sindenendent that mosSt peopl e 2S$£K.'JSlf, " A T S»r=fA7," privately owned, andE not Melanie-a Long Branch e 18 Heckl dubbed Pan-Am 'King of Pool' ^8 with the GOP ^'I'm sure he SSttUcSSrtl" i New Shrewsbury to Red mayor. These actions are the ^ .G , O BecomesE t Famom 73sgsttss====si--**-«" Hs,-• a--.^j—. %%srz&z. zl M 6 asi==f3 ussssss Jkr,s^^ S: . SrtSrSss ^sssssis ai Bt» - - - - - • - s=r==s XSL, assftttsss asaar-aga- J£T* y^<^*- 3r3:sLii—s s « s=S=s assi.. ss xss.'vasi -is-rs.. M»«. B-JSSSSSS zstJfJssz ::rlSS" ' "^«* n»I««.«n« Mclrc J"la'lon,DcP|> :iJ1Si7 courage of his convictions to wouldn't vote for Mayor Lind- will be held at the Community s^""**1a f a '5-acre township- ^ , fascinatine one-and it novor reniw h»c 01 raakc thcchang e Now other saybecaus e hc made thc Centcr m West Ber en PI Wn d S te Sch 01 ad H faSCi atlllg ne and never nas SEE " « &?fRLs 44 mt iib a ne u iica ltch u ]l sti Rcd 'Bank on sat Au8 g a 'be p f as'nea Mr Moor°ne Roa!!°d b ebeen told before " ° " "*"* 552Sta:r:zzzi3 « S.c »5! r ' P ? r ™y r - " v ir z °l - - - - ? staff RU» Marie a*«, hOm «Ur LOng Bnndi Bu. Outdoor World 9 Aect's Receivable 74,.OoiO make the switch to the party how many Republicans think tween the hours of 12 noon and I will not be responsible for any reau, interviewed Melanie. Sports 18,19 Mlddictown Bureau 671-2250 wherei they belong and they, like I do." 3 p.m. debts other than contracted by Her special report, with photographs will appear in to- Televlslon 25 Freehold Bureau 40.2121 too, win bo welcomed. She said the mayor is John Bryan, myself. Patrick Binaco Jr., 85 morrow's Daily Register, Northern Monmouth County's larc- Women'sNews 16,17 Long Branch Bureau 22M010 B"t Mr. Himelman, as Mr. 'rushing things too much BorougbClerk Belshaw Ave., Eatontown. est newspaper and Monmoutb County's most interesting news- ^^_^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Gerand and others, see Mayor gee Lindsay, Page 1 (Adv.) (Adv.) paper. In- Daily Krister, Krtl Bank - .Middlelonn, N.J,, Thursday, August 12, 1971 Harassment Charged r By JIM MeCORMICK youth. And the police one time curious audience and the com- entered my house and threat- mittee what had happened. MANALAPAN - While over ened my wife if my kids are . The youth had been playing 100 residents listened to a par- caught again," Mr. Kurtz in the band, "The Ava- ent complain to the Township said. lanche," at a dance being held Committee of alleged police Mr. Kurtz said that "some- at the club. He said that at brutality, his son allegedly thing must be wrong when the one point three youths was one of several youths dis- kids throw bottles at the po- climbed on the stage and be- rupting a dance and dam- lice. If the cops can't gain the gan damaging the group's mu- aging a rest room at the Ho- respect of the kids, then sical instruments. liday Swim Club. something is wrong." Things continued to get out Abe Kurtz, 32 Elliot Road, The resident said that when of hand, he said, and a group last night spent over 20 min- the police arrested his son, of youths went into the men's utes charging the township's Richard, 17, on July 15 on pos- room and began ripping the eight-man police force with: session of marijuana charges, electrical fixtures from the harassment and brutality they subjected him to ridi- ceiling...... THEY RUSHED THE STAGE - Kip Niehaus, Marlboro, gestures stemming from the arrests of cule. Richard Kurtz is 6 feet 5 Yale Emmer, assistant with his hand to explain to trie Manalapan Township Committee and an 17 youths at Holiday Park two inches tall and weighs 300 manager of the club, added audience ot over 100 last night what happened when youths attending a weeks ago. pounds. details of the incident. He said dance at the Holiday Swim Club rushed the stage, damaged his musical The arrests reportedly Mr. Rurtz said that the po- that the problems began at 10 group's' instruments, ond later pulled the lighting fixtures from the ceiling came after police were stoned lice "should not sink to the o'clock when someone in the of the men's room. Sitting listening attentively are, lower left, Detective with rocks and beer cans by level of the kids." audience, estimated at 100 Tom Mion and Detective Lt. John Valentine, Monmouth County Detec- youths ranging in age from 12 George Matthews, Holiday youths mostly between 13 and tives who reportedly were at the meeting to investigate charges of alleged to 19. One youth was treated Park, said that he believes 16 years old, put his hand police brutality. at Jersey Shore Medical Cen- that harassing is going on, through a plate glass window, ter, Neptune, after he alle- "but it is not the cops who are slightly cutting a 13-year-old gedly assaulted a policeman. doing it." girl. The incident at Holiday "Two weeks ago my daugh- $25 Million ECOM Park occurred while residents ter was babysitting at a neigh- Then, approximately 30 of the development were com- bor's when a young couple minutes later, three youths, plaining to the Township Com- banged at the door and said began to damage the musical mittee of the potential volatile that they were being attacked instruments, he said. Police, conditions which exist there. by someone with a gun," he were then called, and while Building Site Pi they were on their way, the Theyt said that youngsters said. who won approval for the from 16 to over 20 con- men's room destruction took By DORIS KULMAN man Building Corp., New "I get disturbed when I place, he added. York City. He said the lease structure in the HousfPubUc gregated in the park to drink walk out of my house in the Works and Armed Service beer, smoke marijuana, and morning and find empty beer "At about 11 o'clock, the WASHINGTON - The Gen- has a five-year renewal op- tion.' Committees, pbinl&J out" yes- drag race. cans on my lawn, as well as thing bordered on a riot,"Mr .eral Services Administration terday that the government tire tracks," he added. Emmer said, reporting that handed New Shrewsbury a The building will house The manner in which the 3,400 ECOM employes now acquires ownership of the arrests were executed moti- Mrs. Julius Moses, Blen- police quieted the situation by plum yesterday when it building at expiration of the vated a group of M parents to heim Road, protested that dispersing the crowd. signed a 20-year, $57 million quartered in 102 "temporary" World War II barracks build- lease. The builder must main- meet at Mr. Kurtz' home to "everyone is'yelling about a The Neihaus youth told the lease for a $25 million, seven- tain it during the lease period. form the Parents Committee fire, but no one is making an audience that two of the three • story office building a New ings. youths were Richard Kurtz, The GSA said the rental According fo New Shrews- of Manalapan and Marlboro attempt at putting it out." York builder will construct on bury officials, Dworman Townships. The aim of the "Ninety per cent of the kids and Robert Balowski, 20, of the 33-acre Magnam tract, on breaks down to $5.33 per us- Rt. 79, Marlboro, who was able square foot per year. Building Corp. has an option group is to ask the mayors of are locked out of commu- Tinton Ave. and Wayside to purchase the j!3-a<;re va- both municipalities to conduct nication in their own homes," charged with being drunk and Road in that borough, for use One of Jhe federal specifica- disorderly, using loud and tions was that rental not ex- cant site, known sis' the Mag- an impartial investigation into she said. by Ft. Monmouth's Army nam tract' after the family the Hobday Park incident. abusive language, disturbing Electronics Command. ceed $5.50 per usable square Committeeman Gerald Son- the peace, eluding a police of- which owns it. ••'"--• All the youths were re- nenblick said that the problem New Shrewsbury Mayor foot, considered a low rental ficer and driving while on the Robert F. Henck, who esti- in$iis area. No official of Dworman leased in their own recogniz- was not new, and was caused revoked list during the Ho- could be reached for comment in large part by the lack of a mated the building will be a A spokesman for Rep. ance or the custody of their liday Park incident July 28. See ECOM, Page 4 v parents pending a Sept. 14 central place for the kids to $25 million tax ratable, last James J. Howard, D-N.J., Municipal Court hearing. The congregate. Young Niehaus said that night happily predicted the charges include drunk and .Seek Facilities he would sign complaints borough's tax rate will go disorderly, using loud and Mayor Thomas Wbalen said against Kurtz, Balowski and down at least $1 when the abusive language; disturbing that the committee is cur- the other youth, whom he 535,000-square foot structure ROSANO'S Register Staff Photos by Larry Perno the peace, assaulting and/or rently advertising for the use identified as "Alex" Alexan- goes up. The tax rate now is "HOMEMADE ITALIAN SPECIALTIES AND DEU" DAMAGED CEILING - Yale Emmer, right, as- interfering with a police offi- of a barn for a coffee house der this morning. Mr. Emmer $4.03 per hundred dollars of sistant manager of the Holiday Swim Club, Ma- cer, and eluding a police offi- where the kids can congre- said that he would not sign a assessed valuation. 217 LOCUST AVE., WEST LONG BRANCH .nalapan, shows Patrolman Charles Lydamore cer. gate. complaint for the damage to He assumes the building damage done to the ceiling of the men's room af- At this point in the meeting, the men's room because he will be ready for occupancy 229-0922 ter youths attending a dance went on a rampage, Sparred Crowd township policemen in attend- did not see the incident take "next year," the mayor said. destroying light fixtures and pieces of ceiling in The developments of the ance left to the sound of si- place. Blow to Eatonlown • RAVIOLI «LASAGNA • CAVATELLI their path. This incident was taking place while last two weeks spurred the The Neihaus youth praised The GSA action is a blow to the father of a youth allegedly taking part in the rens in the background. • GNOCCHI . • MANICOTTI • FETTUCINE over capacity crowd to attend Twenty minutes later, Lt. the Manalapan police depart- Katontown, which three years • HOMEMADE SAUCE EVERYDAY vandalism complained to the Township Com- the committee meeting last Thomas Wallace, commander ment for Its handling of the ago was considered to have mittee of police brutality during arrests at Ho- situation. liday Park two weeks ago. night. of the police force, returned the inside track on getting the MANY VARIOUS Of Mr. Kurtz began a barrage red faced, with perspiration "You want to know about building and rezoned a 32-acre against police by charging beading on his forehead. the Manalapan police. They site on Tinton Ave, add Hope IMPORTED CHEESES & SALAMI that they are "inexperienced Lt. Wallace said tbat he are really good Road for it. Snow White Veal Cutlets-Custom Cut and not doing their job prop- brought six youths to the people... they don't go out of A GSA spokesman con- Homemade Sausage-Italian Party Platters Red Bank Is Cool erly." . » i meeting from the Holiday their way to jnake trouble," firmed it signed ,a contract Threats Alleged Swim Club, Holiday Park. said the long haired youth yesterday to lease the planned COMPUTE (ME OF HOMHMDf ITJUUN GOURMfl JKCUIMJ "I have written proof of a One of the youths, Kip clutching a damaged cymbal, building for 20 years at OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK To Highway Plan false accusation against a Niehaus, Marlboro, told the which he valued at (SO. 12,851,550 a year from Dwor- (Continued) . thing," Mr. Labrecque said, not sure this is the answer," "but personnally I would rath- he said, "I think it will take a er see them accomplish elec- lot of study. I'd like to sit trification of the railroad as down and review the plan to they promised and as they see just how it is going to af- have appropriated money fect us." for." Mr. Minear, president of However, Mr. Labrecque the Brough Council, is acting said this is something which mayor while Mayor Daniel J. would require a lot of study to O'Hern is vacationing in weigh the good with the bad. Maine. Dr. Michael J. Arnone, also Councilman Theodore J. a councilman, said he'd need Labrecque, chairman of the time to study the proposal be- police committee, also said he fore rendering a decision. wasn't aware of the state's plans. "It will take careful consid- "But, he said, "it sounds eration to evaluate the pros like they are planning on cut- and the cons," he said, ting a swath through our west "sometimes what is good tor side. the state isn't good for Red ROOTS "It might not be such a bad Bank and vice versa." red bank • summit Lindsay Gets Mixed Views (Continued) elected President and I think and if he had remained a Re- if he was elected President, publican, "I'm sure he would we would be in much worse have had an opportunity (for shape than we are today." higher office) sooner or later. U.S. Sen. Clifford P. Case, If he stayed with us a while, R-N.J., was out of town on va- NEW ENGLAND SPORTSWEAR AT ADAM'S RIB ._.'j LAMBSKIN SUEDB'.... S7 his time would have come." cation yesTerday but a spokes- Puppy Sales Recalled man for his office said the A prominent Democrat and senator has always taken the former ambassador to Den- position that "The Republican marko Mrs. Katharine Elkus party has room for many White said the move reminded points of view." He would not her of a reporter at the last comment specifically on the ABLAZE f OR FAIL... Republican National Con- Lindsay issue. vention who saw a man sell- U.S. Sen. Harrison A. Wil- ing "real Republican pup- liams, also sees Mayor Lind- pies." say as having a poor chance A week later, the same man for the nomination. "I would sold puppies at the Demo- make it a 100-to-one shot that crats' convention. Lindsay would be the (presi- The reporter asked him, dential) nominee," he comi she said, how they could have mented. AUSTIN HILL AT ADAM'S RIB . . ; COTTON/RAYON BUCKSKIN . . . $54 become Democratic puppies , Paul Sherwin, New Jersey in so short a time and the man Secretary of State and a lead- replied: "Oh, their eyes are ing GOP strategist said, "It open now." was probably a question of al- Mrs, White said of Mayor ternatives to Mayor Lind-, In wool flannel, cotton velveteen, cotton /rayon buckskin, Lindsay, "A very interesting say ... he had no place to go McMULLEN AT move on his part. Perhaps his as a Republican in New York. lambskin suede...in camel, copper, burgundy, navy, eyes are open to the fact that But it's a question of how far taupe . i . blazers for sport. . . blazers for WOOL FLANNEL . . . S65 there's more to offer in the he'll go with the Democrats." Democratic Party. He's an But Daniel Gaby, head of dress... blazers for just about everything in the able young man who might the Democratic Party's state make a good presidential can- policy committee and a fall... you'll love them! didate. spokesman' for the liberal GOP Assemblyman Joseph wing of the party said he Azzolina, a candidate for the didn't think Mayor Lindsay state senate at-largc seat wanted to be President now" from Monmouth County, is Mr. Gaby said he thinks the Priced from $54 to $75 happy to see him go. "It mayor wants to consolidate COTTON VELVETEEN ... $5« proves one thing - Lindsay is his power as a Democrat in blazers at Adam's Rib for Lindsay," he commented. New York and run for gover- Record Assailed nor in 1974. Mr. Azzolina accused the "I think he's got to be re- .... an extraordinary shop for women. mayor of having done "such a garded as a party leader sim- horrible job in New York that ply because he's acting as a I don't know if he could be Democrat," Mr. Gaby said. -105 Broad Street, Red Bank Open Wednesday & Friday 'til 9—401 Springfield Avenue, Summit Open Monday & Thursday -til ?• 3 Top of the News Pirate's Cove Ruling WASHINGTON - A study published today by the Senate Internal Security subcommittee estimates' Chinese Commu- nism h#s cost at least 34 million lives and possibly as many as 63,mpon in the past 50 years. Upheld by Salvest The author of the study, Richard L. Waler, director of the Institute of International Studies at the University of South FREEHOLD - Superior After the association filed "I note from the reading of Carolina, Bald: "A reasonable estimate would be that of the Court Judge Andrew A. Sal- its complaint in court, Pi- the transcript that nowhere do figure approaches 50 million Chinese." vest has upheld the actions of rate's Cove filed a counter- the objectors make a direct ' The study, titled "The Human Cost of Communism in the Monmouth Beach Plan- claim alleging that the associ- attack on any of the subpara- iGWna," was ordered printed by the subcommittee July 27, af- ning Board in granting site ation was not legitimately in- graphs (of the zoning ordi- ter announcement of President Nixon's forthcoming visit plan approval for the con- corporated and for malicious nance) ..." said .Judge Sal- Peking in, what Nixon has called a journey for peace." struction of the Pirate's Cove prosecution. vest. He added that the asso- •' Sea. James 0, Eastland, D-Miss., subcommittee chair- townhouse apartment com- Action Dismissed ciation's attorney did not base >man, said in an introduction to the study, its publication plex. . his arguments on any of the • -''comes at a particularly opportune moment." Judge Salvest, however, In a five-page opinion re- dismissed the initial com- testimony in the record and • leased yesterday, the judge plaint and counterclaim. "I was not supported by any ex- Moonmen to Describe Voyage said: also dismiss the counterclaim pert testimony. "I, therefore, find that the SPACE CENTER, Houston - The Apollo 15 astronauts and the third-party complaint The judge noted that the Planning Board acted in ev- filed herein," said the judge, Planning Board studied the tell about their voyage to the moon today in their first news ery way that complied with conference since their 12-day space expedition. "because no proof had been application and made a physi- due process of law and in the presented to support the cal inspection of the area to Astronauts David R. Scott, James B. Irwin and Alfred M. public interest and was not in Worden will show films they took on and about the moon and same." be developed and its sur- any way arbitrary, capricious- f answer questions for an hour at the Manned Spacecraft Cen- or unreasonable. Pirate s Cove wants to con- roundings. ter. "I find no merit to the alle- struct a 100-unit townhouse "It conducted public hear- The spacemen ended their lunar expedition last Saturday, gation that the matter be re- complex on a 10-acre site on ings not required by ordi- splashing down in the Pacific Ocean after a voyage of more manded to the board for any Racoon Island, off Meadow nance or statute at which it than 1.2 million miles. additional hearing as a MI and Highland Aves. The land gave full opportunity to Scott and Irwin spent 19 hours exploring the surface of the hearing was afforded to all is in a residential zone. present evidence and testi- moon and collecting 175 to 185 pounds of lunar samples, in- objectors, together with rep- when the matter was heard mony by all persons desiring cluding what they believe to be a bit of the moon's original resentation by counsel and to be heard," he said, adding crust. 4 in court July 28, Judge Salvest- Register staff Photo that any further hearings said he found nothing in the that it also conducted its own PETITION SIGNED — Edward Hensler, co-manager of the Sea Bright would serve only to contribute transcripts of the Planning traffic study and considered Bathing Pavilion, Sea Bright, left, watches as Roger McCann of New to unnecessary delay." Board hearings to support the all the testimony and evi- JimkProbe on Wallace Rule Shrewsbury, signs a petition circulated among beach clubs in Sea Bright The Planning Board action association's contention but dence. WASHINGTON - The Justice Department has junked its requesting better regulation of the opening of the Rumson drawbridge. came under legal attack by he delayed a formal decision "I am satisfied that the • investigation into alleged corruption in Gov. George C. Wall- the Monmouth Beach Civic until the attorneys supplied board did not act in any un- ace's state administration in Alabama. • Association which alleged that him with briefs. reasonable, arbitrary or capr- • Sources said a confidential report inside the Justice De- six sections of the borough's In his written opinion, icious manner, but gave due . partmeal decided the investigation failed to find enough evi- Bridge Lifts Spur zoning ordinance were not Judge Salvest noted that the deliberate and reasonable . jdenca to warrant prosecution. complied with and that the Monmouth Beach Planning consideration before making , A iederal grand jury is scheduled to reconvene Sept 7 in Planning Board did not make Board held two public hear* its determination in the light .Montgomery^ Ala., to close out the probe. factual findings before ren- ings on the application, on of the public interest," he <• A source inside the Justice Department said tax in- Traffic Jam Crisis dering its decision June 28. June 3 and June 21. said. ' (jfctments might be returned at this grand jury session or a fu- ture one, even though the major thrust of the investigation has SEA BRIGHT - If you are many more times. ter regulated. It is unfair for iepded. . a motorist, you must have Under Monmouth County motorists to be backed up like been "caught in it," espe- Bridge Department regu- this for miles. It makes it so cially on weekends.' difficult-for people to reach Battlefield Park Site lations between Memorial •Work Standards Study Slated It's a hot day and the Day and Labor Day the us, when we are only acces- ,r. TKKNTON - The New Jersey Labor Department an- beaches beckon. You load the bridge is supposed to open ev- sible over the bridges from nounced Wednesday that it would conduct a study to develop family car with coolers and ery half hour on weekends Rumson and theHighlands., standards for the health and safety of workers involved in in- all the beach paraphernalia, and holidays between 11 a.m. Something should be done to Visit Set by Official terstate commerce. the kids, and the wife. You and 7 p.m. At all other times better regulate the draw State Labor Commissioner Konald M. Heymann said the take off. bridge during the high sum- By WILLIAM J.ZAORSKI MonmoutbT representatives pieces. The park also wonld it opens at random. feature picnicking" areas," study was funded by a $51,000 federal grant and would be com- You may come to Rumson In an effort to have these mer season.!' met with the state officials for pleted within 11 months. Bridge. There's the sea. Anti- Councilman John P. Weir, FREEHOLD - Commis- more than an hour discussing equestrian trails, hiking trails regulations changed, petitions andbikeways. The project is designed to develop a state plan that cipation mounts, but you just have been circulated in Sea Sea Bright^ commissioner of sioner Richard J. Sullivan of the proposed park. matches the standards under the new federal William Steiger don't quite make it. The draw Bright, "requesting that police added, he fully "reite- the state Department of Envi- Proposal Liked The engineering firm that Occupational Safety and Health Act which takes effect Aug. bridge rises just before, you bridge openings be eliminated rates the mayor's statement," ronmental Protection will Mr. Birmingham arid that planned the park recommend- 27. cross. A" boat or two or three entirely during peak traffic and added, "It is very clear come to Monmouth County Commissioner Sullivan'liked ed in 1968 that the state give Labor department officials also disputed claims by the pass, and there you sit, one of periods and that they should that the bridges are not regu- next month to make an on-site the committee's proposal of a the battlefield a high priority New. Jersey Builders Association that the new federal law a long line of cars. then be put on an hourly lated to take the motorists inspection of the proposed five-year development plan so it could be ready for the- could mean much higher building costs. Ever So Slowly basis."' into consideration. It seems to Monmouth Battlefield Park in for the park. 1976 anniversary. Bat to date It seems to take hours for me that the boat owners are Manalapan. If the state goes along no major Improvements have The petitions were drawn been made, not even tempo- the span to open ever so slow- up by Robert Hensler and his the only ones given consid- The purpose of the commis-. with a planned development State Rapped on Road Toll ly, stay open for the boats, eration on this matter, when sioner's visit on Sept. 21 is to of the fields, the park could be rary markers to alert passers- cousin, Edward Hensler, man- operational for the 200th anni- by that they are traveling TRENTON - The New Jersey Citizens Highway Com- and then close, it seems even agers of the Sea Bright Bath- literally thousands of cars are determine what has to be slower than it went up. tied up by the half hourly done to get the now dormant versary of the Declaration of through a historical site. mittee charged yesterday that the state has failed to do ing Pavilion. They were circu- Independence. The state, however, plans enough to reduce highway accidents. Nobody seems to be in a lated, and posted among bridge openings. fields where the last, major hurry, except the kids who "Traffic," Commissioner' revolutionary battle in the Mr. Birmingham added that to spend $100,000 thisyear for The committee said in a special report that New Jersey's Beach clubs in Sea Bright and the restoration of the historic start to fret. You just sit and Monmouth Beach. So far Weir added," is increasing ev- north was fought, developed the commissioner also has highway safety efforts have been stalled by "chaos, confusion agreed to use the Monmouth Craig house, the oldest build- and congestion." ' ' swelter in the heat, while the "hundreds of people have ery year both on the roads as a state park. kids get crankier. In the and on the river. It seems in- Representatives of the Mon- Bicentennial Committee as a ing on the battlefield which The report said, "those public officials and agencies spe- signed them," said Robert dates back to the revolution- meantime traffic piles up. Hensler. congruous to me that a 14 foot mouth Bicentennial Com- local advisory- committee to cifically given the decision making po\Ver relating to highway advise'the state on the devel- ary war. safety needs tend'to place too'Uw a priority on the problem." You can see across the riv- "It seems inequitable for boat with a 20 foot mast mittee and state Sen. Richard er into Sea Bright. There are should be permitted to tie up R. Stout, R-Monmouth, met opment of the park. The engineering firm that Safety programs have been "severely handicapped by the literally thousands of people prepared the master plan esti- lack of efficient centralized management," the study said. lines, often double ones, as far to be caught up like this, for traffic like that. I do not know yesterday with Commissioner He noted thaf the local as you can see in either direc- what can be done about it, but Sullivan and Joseph J. Trun-. committee consists of people mated that the park, when de- The committee said that the state has failed to provide the sake of a relatively small veloped, would attract about a statistics on accident rates and resulting economic losses since tion. On weekends, especially, number of people on the it is certainly up to the Board cer, director of the state Divi- who know the area, know the traffic is piled up as far south of Chosen Freeholders. We sion of Parks, Forestry and park plans and the history of million visitors a year. This 1968. boats, especially at peak peri- would give New Jersey a tour- as Monmouth Beach, as far ods, between 11 a.m. and 1 are hurting here because of Recreation, to discuss the the area. It called for a centralized effort to replace the current ap- status of the proposed state ist attraction that could com- proach which it contended yas "fragmented in several north as the Highlands Bridge p.m. when everyone seems to all this traffic congestion." Mr. Birmingham added that and as far into Rumson as the Another beach club owner, park. the state has been working on pete with the historic sites in agencies." be going to the beaches and other states. Avenue of Two Rivers. between 4 p.m. and 5:30 p.m., and former member of Coun- Prompt Action Sought the park plans, doing re- Or yet, imagine you are in cil, Glen Osgoodby also The county committee and search, identifying various Mr. Sanders agreed that the when they are all returning park would "do wonders for an ambulance on the way to a from them." agreed "it would be a very other historical groups are buildings and determine what hospital, "caught in it," at good idea to limit bridge open- hoping that the state will de- has value on the park lands the economy of the state." Caliill Hit on Jobs Decline Mr. Hensler said that the After Commissioner Sulli- one such peak period, with bridge tenders have con- ings, especially at weekends. velop the battlefield in time and what does not TRENTON - Assembly Minority Leader David J. Fried- Major Plan Set van visits the park, he contin- land, D-Hudson, proposed yesterday that Gov. William T. Cah- traffic jammed up in all direc- firmed that "at most 60 boats Traffic congestion and the for the bicentennial anniver- tions. traffic jams we get here, are sary of the Declaration of In- The state has an elaborate ued, "we will have to con- ill appoint a special committee to recommend ways of reliev- requiring a draw bridge open- vince other senators and rep- ing unemployment in New Jerey. Sometimes you make it ing, pass on any 24-hour peri- certainly a big problem to Sea dependence which will be cel- $4 million master plan for the over the bridge, and you. see Bright, and to our visitors." ebrated in 1976. park. Included are a visitor resentatives that this project "Urban and ghetto areas are the focal point which need od during busy weekends." is good for the entire state." • several large boats waiting The same views were "It was a very successful center where visitors would help today, not tomorrow, next month or next year," Fried- Mayor Cecile F. Norton of" meeting," said Charles J. Bir- learn of the historic battle Mr. Sanders, whq has been land said. for it to open. You then feel a Sea Bright also condemned shared by owners and man- sort of triumph because, you agers of beachclubs through- mingham, president of the through a motion picture film active in the'annual Battle of • Friedland charged that Cahill's Republican adminis- the situation. "I personally Battleground Historical So- and a six-mile tour of the Monmouth parade held here tration has failed to take measures to halt unemployment. made it, this time. But this is feel," Mayor Norton said, out the borough and south in not often. You get caught in it Monmouth Beach. ciety and a member' of the fields where they would sea every June, said that the area "We could help stop this jobless trend if we called a mora- "the openings should be bet- county Bicentennial Com- field pieces,such as powder, residents are ready for this torium on handouts or state subsidies to bankrupt railroads, mittee. wagons, carriages, loading park, "noting the large turnout enacted all-year racing and off track gambling bills and fun- "I was impressed with equipment and artillery every year for the parade. neled the millions in state' revenue.. .into the poor areas to Commissioner Sullivan's sin- provide work for the unemployed," Friedland said. cerity and his desire to do Friedland is seeking reelection to the Assembly in Novem- Marlboro Mayor Eyes something," said Alfred Sand- ber in the legislative elections in which all 80 assembly seats ers, another committee mem* Weather: Sunny and 40 Senate seats are at stake. Republicans currently hold 8- ber. 1 control of both houses. Sunny with more comfort- during the night, while almost "The meeting showed prog- able temperatures today, high an inch soaked Hickory, N. Land 0 wnershipProbe ress," said Dr. C. Malcolm B. in the low 80s. Clear and C, and Atlantic City, N.J. Car IJMakers Oppose New Tests Gilman, another committee pleasant tonight, low in the given back to him. Mr. Her- the state for the proposed Rt. member andpresident of the CHERRY HILL - Clean air advocates have applauded (Continued) mid 60s. Fair and pleasant to- TIDES man said that the tax was 18, he said. Monmouth Battlefield Associ- morrow, high in the low 80s. and automobile makers, condemned New Jersey's proposed in- tion of two water wells, and Sandy Hook paid, and the land went to Mr. Mayor Salkind estimated ation which has been working Saturday fair and seasonably TODAY -High 1:06 p.m. spection system for curbing air pollution from auto exhausts. has previously indicated that Moore. the value of the property to be for the past 22 years to have Spokesmen for General Motors, Ford and foreign car the remainder of the MUA-^ warm. and low 7:30 p.m. "It is odd that a part-time over $50,000, and charged the state develop the lands in Clear skies and pleasant TOMORROW - High 1:30 manufacturers criticized the proposed testing system as being owned site could be used for councilman like myself was township attorney Minogue Manalapan and Freehold everthing from inaccurate to unfair. But a health representa- 'recreational facilities. temperatures favored wide a.m. and 2:06 p.m. and .low able to ascertain this informa- with deciding to "let this Township as a historical park. areas of the midcontinent 7:42 a.m. and 8:42 p.m. tive approved the test, declaring that the automobile was the tion while our full-time mayor property revert back to the single greatest cause of pollution in the state. Politics Stirred today while heavy thunders- For Red Bank and Rumson Councilman Richard Her- and a full-time business ad- former owners without ex- torms were confined to iso- bridge, add two hours; Sea The tests could force owners of more than one million ministrator and his full and hausting all legal remedies cars to make repairs to correct excessive emissions. The com- man said that the mayor was lated sections of the East and Bright, deduct 10 minutes; insisting on the School Road part-time office staff did not •and without any authorizing Shooting Is South. Long Branch, deduct 15 min- ments came in two days of public hearings sponsored by the nave time or perhaps the in- council resolution." State Department of Environmental Protection. East site because the major- More than an inch of rain utes; Highlands bridge, add 40 ity of the area voted against terest to gather these facts," A Council Matter Probed la. drenched Pine Bluff. Ark.. minutes. him in the last election. Mr. Mr. Herman said. "A decision to take this Herman, a GOP appointee "It is a shame that Mayor amount of money away from Nixon Signs Boat Safety Bill Salkind' was so interested in Long Branch WASHINGTON - President Nixon signed yesteroo/ a joat seeking election to the coun- the township must be made by cil, is a Belle Oaks resident. getting back at the residents the council, not the attorney," LONG BRANCH - Police Dig they must... safety act aimed at cutting down the death and injury toll in of Belle Oaks that he did not recreational boating accidents, which is second only to that in Mr. Herman yesterday the mayor said. today continue a probe of the said that the 15-acre School even excerise enough good "I question the judgment reported shooting yesterday highway mishaps.. judgment to check his The new law calls for setting federal safety standards Road East site is owned by of any councilman who is of Vincent Lemongelli, oper- we Leonard Moore, "who resides. facts," the councilman said. aware of the situation as well ator of Vinnie's mobile hot which must be met by manufacturers of boats and boating The mayor, however, stated equipment of a recreational or noncommercial type. The fed- on the subject parcel." The as the legality of preferential dog stand at the oceanf ront councilman said that township that a limited investigation by treatment. I don't see how Although police said the eral government would provide federal cash as an incentive to his office yesterday- indicated ^Improve boating safety programs. attorney James R. Minogue anyone can give up to $50,000 man was taken to Monmouth opined that the township has that as far as the township tax worth of property away," he Medical Center following the not owned the land since Nov. assessor is concerned, the said. shooting at about C a.m., hos- School Road East property 30,1870. „ r. ,. • o ,J1W .../Pital officials said last night THEMIY belongs to the township. Mayor Satod saidI that jio>he was not admitte(L According to Mr. Herman, No Tax Paid ' will, confer today with county Mr. Lemongelli told Sgt. the township attorney report- Mayor Salkind said that tax prosecutor Vincent P. Kquper John Naylor and Detective Main Office: ' ed that Mr. Moore lost title to CheHntit St., Red Dank, N.J. O770I assessor Joseph La Mura ad- if his investigation is com- Herbert Cofer that he dis- Branch Offices: the land in April, 1970, for or* Rf. 31, Mlddletown, N.J. vised him that since the land plete. The mayor said that "a covered a man in his van- 30 East Moln St., Freehold, N J. nonpayment of over $7,000 In Is on his books as township source of great concern is 379 Broadway, Long Branch, N.J. style stand when he opened taxes. He said that a court ac- owned, no taxes are currently how some officials knew of for business. Establlihed In Wt by John H. Cook and Henry Clay tion ensued, which resulted in being paid on it. this transaction and others did He said the man shot at him Publithed by The Red Bonk Register a decision rendered by Superi- The mayor said, however, Member ol (he Associated Presn- Thr Associated Press Is entllled CK- not." and fled. He was unable to P0 WIS6**. Finance your sewer system ClusiVtly to the use (or republican on ol nil HIP locat news printed In Hits, newspaper or Court Judge Francis X. that approximately $7,000 in Mr,. Salkin.„ d. adde. d„ tha t wo give police a description of his « welt o% all AP newi dispatches. , Crahay. back taxes covering many hookup costs through us Mcond doss pojlofic Will nl Ni-d Bonk. N. I 0/7OI nnii ol ixMIt Reportedly, Judge Crahay wondered "why he, the may.-, assailant, but said the man Oftleel. Published dally. Monday IMrnucjti Frlitay. Moil iiibjcripliom |i years were paid on April 23, °tr> t" J,°C ,a lcttor took about *200iTom a ba8 ta on our special low terms 1 Year ruled that if Mr. Moore payed 1971; The property, which to- 1 Month 3 Months 6 Monllii torn Mr. Minogue last De- the van 19.50 US.00 US.W. U.5O the township the back taxes, tals just over 20 acres, has ap-, cernber, which was addressed . ponce said the man's Home Delivery by Carrier -SO Cents a week the title to the land would bo proximately 8 acres sold to Slngl* copy ot counter, 10 Cents. to'mayor and Council'l" wound was minor. The F-. :'y Register, Red Bank - Middletown, XI^ Thursday, Axfgatt 12,1971
ECOM Buildingft Planned for New Shrewsbury (Continued). that as of 4:30 p.m., when ne firm, the Dworrnan corpo- officials will contact Freehol- Mayor Werner apparently said it would cost $22 million 1965, a proposal for an $18 mil- too expensive.. yesterday. Mayor Henck said spoke with members of the ration hadn't been notified by der Harry Larrison Jr., coun- was the first to know. He said were the government to do lion government constructed In announcing the GSA the GSA that it is the success-' ty director of highways, "very lie received a mid-afternoon the building' itself. It said building on the Hexagon site award yesterdayt Congress- ful Udder. Mayor Henck said •shortly." call from GSA administrator rental costs would be more 'was nixed because it would be man Howard said construc- that as of 7:30 last night no "Plans will have to be Robert L. Kurrcfg, who tended than offset by savings in too expensive. The Army tion work on the building "will borough official had been noti- made to widen both Tinton his condolences along with the maintenance costs on the could have completed the go a long way toward improv- fied, either. Ave. and Wayside Road to information. Mayor Werner shambles of old wooden bar- Hexagon building, which has ing the bleak unemployment ;'5The site is oife-quarter mile handle the amount of traffic said he "expressed dismay" racks, and by increased pro- only four of its planned six picture that has plagued Mon- Win a Cool east of ECOM's Hexagon, to Mr. Knnag. duction and efficiency. sides, in 1962 for $7,171,000. mouth County, toe state, and that will be coming in," he building, on Tinton Ave., also {Slid.- The mayor said he believes Three yean: before that in That also was turned down as the country." in New Shrewsbury. Mayor "There will have to be high- the two Eatontown sites for 50 Grand Henck observed it also is "a way improvements in that .which bids were submitted direct run" down Tinton Ave. area," Freeholder Director are the most desirable. He to Ft. Momnouth's main gate Joseph C. Irwin agreed last said they meet all GSA re- on lit. 35 in Eatontown. He night when told of the GSA quirements, specifically that This Summer! said he believes this proxi- award. they are zoned for office use, mity was a major factor in He said the freeholders will have all utilities on-site, and REEDS JEWELERS the GSA decision. await verification of the lease are owned by the bidders. Zoned Residential You can! All it takes is one 50$ weekly contract and then will confer Whan the House Armed Ser- The tract also is zoned for .with "all officials concerned, vices Committee first ap- ' ticket and bingo... you could win one of residential use and on two including Ft. Monmouth offi- proved private construction of those fabulous $50,000, $4,000, $400 or $40 two-lane county roads ill cials." a building for lease to ECOM weekly prizes. Or, imagine yourself being one 'equipped to handle the traffic While exulting in that ?25 three years ago, the GSA was the building will generate, million ratable, Mayor Henck eyeing the 32-acre site at Tin- of the lucky ones who wins in the Millionaire Mayor Henck acknowledged. Lottery? There are thousands of ticket agents was critical of the GSA for its ton Ave. and Hope Road in "Well have to rezone," he failure to officially notify the Eatontown. That borough throughout New Jersey at the seashore, said. The borough's planning •builder or borough. promptly rezoned the tract mountains or right around the corner... aboard "is presenting a new "It seems a poor way to do from residential to com- master plan within the next ready and willing to sell you a ticket. Buy business," he said. mercial That sparked a law- month or so, and this will fit suit by New Shrewsbury, you rs today... next week Although he received no right in with it," he declared.. word from Washington, he did. which also coveted the build- or the week alter; The mayor said that "most receive a telephone call from ing, and which claimed the you may also have of the planning done in the Eatontown Mayor Herbert E. Eatontown action detrimental that "grand" past" recommended that New Werner "who called to con- because the commercial zone abutted New Shrewsbury's feeling. Shrewsbury zone the Magnam gratulate me," the New tract for use as a municipal or Shrewsbury mayor said. residential area. community center. "That was very nice of A Presidential freeze on "It's .a central point in the him," Mayor Henck added, new construction temporarily borough," he said. "But Mayor Werner always is halted the project and ended Mayor Henck noted that a perfect gentleman." the suit. sewers are being installed in Decision Dented Eatontown wasn't the only that area-the borough is a It was five minutes before loser yesterday. A bid report- customer of the Northeast the 5 p.m. closing time yes- edly was submitted for a Monmouth County Regional terday before the GSA here Shrewsbury site also. Sewerage Authority-that wa- would confirm it had awarded In the three years since the ter is available there now Largest selection of the lease. Congressman How- project was authorized the Diamond Engagement "and all utilities will be in by ard's office had managed to •building has grown one story riflg& bridal sets, dinner the time the building is con- pry the information loose a in height and more than 3WAY57OBUY & cocktail rings from $75 structed. CASH* CHARGE short time before that. Mean- doubled in construction cost UY-AWAY • to $2500 all sold with a Benefit! State Education and Institutions But the building "will while top officials in the In 1968, the construction written money-back guar- create a traffic jam unless the GSA's New York regional of- cost was estimated at $12 mil- JEWELERS antee. Check Your Tickets Carefully. See Your Licensed Lottery county does something about fice were firmly denying any lion. And the government said Fine Diamond* Since 1935 Agent for Complete List of Weekly Winning Numbers. the county roads," he said. decision had been made. it wanted a 100-acre tract. 608 CMknan, Asbury Park - 60 Broad St. iiedSank Mayor Henck said borough At that time, Army officials r Obituaries
Odell Died While Driving BED BANK - A former Eatontown councilman died In his car Tuesday afternoon, an PATIO TORCHES CLOSE-OUT SALE apparent heart attack victim, RIG. before Ms vehicle hit another 4.98 pr. AII8"-I4"-20" 5.98 stopped at a traffic light at tr. Broad St. and Maple Ave. ELECTRIC TO According to police, George 101b. BAG V. Odell, 65, of 48 Cllftwood Ave., Eatontown, was trav- CHARCOAL FANS 13.98 eling south on Broad St. when ... and lots in .between he ran into the rear of a car BRIQUETS driven by Gail L. Fekete of 96 PEG. Just a few E. River Road, Rumson. 98' 66' The impact sent the Feiete HOOVER VACUUM CLEANERS car into the rear of a vehicle- driven by John 0. Perry of 147 E/ecfr/cCriorcoo/ Close-outl Priced Leonardvflle Road, Belford, who also had stopped at the HRE STARTER way,way down light Neither of the drivers 60 were injured in the collision, Reg. 4.98...... 3 which occurred at 12:59 p.m. BEG. 249 188 Mr. Odell was pronounced dead on arrival at Riverview Hospital. NOW OPEN CITRONEllA Antonio Marchese Insect Repellent LONG BRANCH - Antonio Marchese, 12, of 51 S. 5th CANDLE Ave., died Tuesday at Mon- mouth Medical Center. RIG. He was born in Milano, 79' 49' Italy, and had lived here five FREE years. He was a student at Long Branch Junior High- SELF PRIMING LATEX School, a communicant of DeMOIST Holy Trinity Catholic Church, This colorful, all-purpose Keeps t/ojsfs and HOUSE and a member of the Little bag has uses all through die basements dry League sponsored by the Ro- year. Ideal as a beach bag or REG. tary Club. 99c PAINT Surviving are his parents, to keep food and liquids fresh U9 • REG. 8.98 Michael and Concettina and cool. It's great for over-" • White 98 Marchese; a brother, Sebas- night trips and as a general COSCO • Colors tian Marchese, and two sis- purpose, tote bag. You'll find 6 ters, the Misses Palma and new uses every day. Superna Marchese, all at STEP STOOL ALSO NOW ON SALE home. REG. 198 THESE FINE COOK & DUNN PAINTS The Damiano Funeral 15.95 • Exterior Primer • Trim Paints • Floor & Deck Home is in charge of arrange- Enamel & Flat • Redwood Sealer Stain ments. In a beautiful, new Georgian-Colonial style, building, WHITE / Mrs. Melvin Ott First Merchants National Bank brings more than 22 ALUMINUM 0 GUTTERS LEAK? LEONARDO - Mrs. Anne customer services to individuals and businesses in the Combination for Campbell Ott, 57, Of 42 Bur- WINDOWS Call for free estimate lington Ave. died yesterday in Marlboro area. Located at Route #9 and Route #520, IHSTAIUD 7O ON the Monmouth Medical Cen- the new First Merchants office offers Drive-In and Seamless .032 (Heavy Gauge) ter, Long Branch, after a long- Walk-Up windows and a night depository, among all illness. It's yours FREE when you Hi-Back - No Unsightly Hangers Used Full 1 Inch Thick Mrs. Ott was born in other services. open a checking or savings Aluminum Comb. Kearny and had lived here.26 account for $25 or .more at years. She was a member of First Merchants National Bank has served the people, #119 businesses and communities of Monmouth County for our new Marlboro office. the Ladies Auxiliary of the Other favors for everyone ate. AIIKudwirDOOaR MM% 99 Leonardo First Aid Squad. 60 years without interruption. Backed by over $190,- & Framing 44' CHAISE LOUNGE Surviving are her husband, waiting for you, including INSTALLED • Reg. 12.98 •Green & White 8 Melvin Ott; a daughter, Mrs. 000,000 in assets, First Merchants is proud to extend Key Rings personalized with Judith Ann Hanson of Little its experience and facilities to the Marlboro area. Silver; a son, George E. Ott, your name. at home and two grand- ALUMINUM DOOR SALE! children. HEAD OFFICE: 601 MAJTISON AVENUE, ASBURY PARK The John P. Condon Funer- Asbwry Park • North Aibury • West Anbury • Avon • Bridle • Colts Neck • Eatontown • Fair Haven • Holmoel al Home, Atlantic Highlands, Manalapan • Manuquan •' Marlboro • MlUstono • Monmouth shopping Center • Neptune • Bed Bipk • Uppet Vtctbold Save $5 and $10 on many is in charge of arrangements. of our better Aluminum Doors Member Federal Jtejereo Sj/item — Federal Deposit IiMuranea Corporation Man Killed NEW YORK - Daniel Cur- CHARGE lU rcn, 41, of 37 Plneview Ave., Keansburg, N.J., was killed yesterday afternoon when he either jumped or fell in front Free Delivery 741 -7500 of a subway train In the Times Square Station here. Police said It could not be 32BROADST.fr i«5, RED BANK determined whether the in- Daily and Saturday 8-5:30 Wed. and Fri.'til 9 p.m cident was accidental or dq- liberate. NJ,Ttanday,Ai*aa1i2,mi - New, CostlierSchool SefforRumson Vote *GOP for Salkind RUMSON - Another refer- The new, referendum calls board. problems" by presenting the Mrs. Eileen Bolf, was report- the cafeteria committee, a endum on school expansion is for 12,585,665. Out of approximately 4,000 issue at this crucial point, to in the offing for Rumson vot- ed to be continuing its in- seven per cent increase in sal- In June the price tag on the registered voters in the which another board member, vestigation of plans to coordi- ary for the cafeteria man- Group Formed ers. proposed school was borough, 1,737 votes were cast John Emery, retorted, "It is nate the curriculum in grades The Board of Education ager, Mrs. Margaret Murphy, $2,540,000. in June. Mr. Zydney hopes far nice to have sewers, but we four through six. continue to support the nation- last night unanimously passed as well as cooks and workers, MARLBORO - John O. Price of Delay a large turnout in September need a school more." al and state Republican orga- a resolution calling for a ref- No Recommendations was approved. Bennett 3rd, a third gener- "It cost every homeowner for the community's own. best Reiterating the necessity of erendum on Sept. 13 to ap- , According to Mr. Davis, no ation resident of the township, nizations. $25 to $30 to say 'no' last interests. a new school building in the prove construction of a new definite recommendations today announced the forma- The executive board of the June," said Herbert Zydney, He said announcement of borough, Mr. Zydney said that school building to accom- have been made by the com- tion of a "Republicans for Sal- group consist? of former GOP chairman of the board's facil- the date five weeks in ad- in September Forrestdale Police Probe modate 400 seventh" and eighth mittee, but the teachers are kind" group to work for the councilmen Lawrence Yotmg- ities committee as he ex- vance of the referendum was .School will have "three and a J grade students. working on ways to provide reelection of Democratic man and Alfred L. Storer, plained the increase of ?4$,0<)0 made "to get the town inter- half times more seventh and more communication and rap- Three Thefts Mayor Morton Salkind. who was an officer of tbe Site of the proposed build- over the figure called for in ested" in the issue'. eighth grade students than it port between teachers in es- township's GOP club, Robert ing is the Lovett tract on Mr. Bennett said the group the June referendum. Timing Questioned was designed for." tablishing subject matter and In Hazlet was created "to create the Niverson, John Gilligan, Mrs. Ridge Road. Last June voters defeated While the referendum has The Forrestdale library, it studies. HAZLET - Detectives are best government possible for Pat Cullens, John Dorsey, The referendum is the same the referendum by 259 votes, the full endorsement of all was reported by Acting Super- Two new teacher appoint- investigating three house Marlboro Township." He said Mrs. Kit Hayes and Mr. Ben- as that presented to voters which Mr. Zydney called the board members, Theodore intendent Stewart Davis, is ments were approved. Hired breakins over the weekend, that the GOP members would nett. last June in all respects ex- "smallest defeat of any refer- Brenner questioned the wis- being "brought up to date," for the 1971-72 school year as including one in which $1,000 cept cost. endum" presented by the dom of timing. ' with 653 new books added to a developmental reading in cash and jewelry were sto- He said that with the sewer the shelves this year. teacher was Guy O. J. Buck of len. - project and its costs, the "It is a creditable collection Deal, while Mrs. Joan L. Bud- Detective John J. Fethers- board might be "looking for of books for an elementary ner of West Long Branch was ton reported the home of Ar- Grow moire money AMERICAN school," said Mr. Davis, not», approved as a mathematics lene Sarmello at 37 Hart St., LEGAL NOTICE ing that the total number of and science teacher for sev- West Keansburg, was forcibly books in the library is over enth an jteighth grades. entered sometime Sunday moire ways SEWER SERVICE Take notice thot application has been mode to the Township Committee ol the 11,000 bpoks. Also ^proved was designa- night. Towmtilp of Mlddlefown to transfer to. 156 HIGHWAY 36 Todo Inc.* trodfm of Country Tovem* tor A curriculum committee, tion of $3,500 from the capital Two rings valued at $550 premises locatedI at oa storstore In shoppinsheppl g composed of three faculty WEST KEANSBURG, N.J. center on State Highwalohway 35, norttwanorthernn* corc - outlay surplus account for the and $500 in change from the ne—r o..f Harmon—„._.,y RoodRoad*, streetttwtt nuntbenumber as members, Mrs. Josephine schools' sewer connection. We have savings yrtmeahnwd, the> Pleonry Retail Con-, family's concession on the sumption License O10 heretofore Issued Stoll, Mrs. Maxine Eoff and This figure covers resident su- Keansburg Boardwalk were plans for everyone Sewer Hookups -Free Estimates to Todo Inc., trailing a Country Tavern tor thenremiswTocated at 1430 Highway pervision of installation.. stolen. —with highest 35, Mlddletown Township. LEGAL NOTICE Board Secretary David The following are the names and ad- Two other burglaries were interest allowed Work Done at Your Convenience dresses ot all officers and directors hav- Jones said the project should ing more than 10% of the stock ot said Setctal School DistricDititt MMeeting Or Ele reportedly minor, police said. lion Ol The Towninlp Ol Hoilet In T be finished by the time school by law. Full Insurance Coverage - licensed Plumber "Somlnicit J. Miillaney Jr., President, 10 County Ot Monmoutn, New Jarsey On An investigation is also OceonBlvcL Atlanti"• c Highland' -'•s Tuesday, August 34,1*71 re-opens in September. • being conducted by Detective Arne T. I; ' ;en, Secretory-Treasurer, NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN to the le- od, Qeiford. al voters of the School District of th Salary adjustments for Warren Briggs into the theft _ .^educations ot building fa fomuhlp of Harlet In the County ol AAon- Why not check our price? ctedmay be examined at the of- mouth,-New Jersey, that a special meet- lunchroom aides to conform of $800 in automobile parts — - TownshlpClerk. Ing or election of the legal voters ol said Obledlo s, If ony, shou District will be held on Tuesday, August with work loads and time from a car owned by Richard ediately In writing to C 24.1971 Ot 2;00 o'clock P.M. ' were approved for Mrs. Do- ll, Clerk of the Township The polls will remain open until 9:00 Eeilly, 605 Holmdel Road, Call 495-0584 0 etoefc P.M. end as much longer as may rothy Bader and Mrs. Patricia .while it was parked in his be necessary to permit oil the regal voters then present to vote and to cast their bal Murphy. driveway Monday night. August W, August 19 lots. . The meeting or election will be held otic On the recommendation of Member F.D.I.C. all legal voters ot the School District wn vote ot the respective polling places stated below. LEGAL NOTICE The Federal Aviation Admin- At the said meeting or election, the fol lowing proposals wlllbe submitted: AN ORDINANCE TO REGULATE THE istration recently awarded one PROPOSAL USE OP FIRE HYDRANTS IN THE company a $49.1 million con- The Board ot Education of the Township BOROUGH OF FAIR HAVEN. MONMOUTH COUNTY NATIONAL RANK 01 Hazlet, In the County of Monmouth, is BE IT ORDAINED by the Mayor and tract for air traffic control au- authorized (a) to undertake os a capita Council of the Borough of Fair Haven, In The bank thai looks out for you project tor lawful school purposes' the the County ot Monmouth and Stale of New tomation equipment. construction ol a new schoo.,...ilhousl , e fo* r use Jersey, that: is an odmlnljnln|strotlomnistratlot n bulbuildinl "' g o Section 1. Use ot Fire hydrants by a» owned th' e .Boor" d of Educatiotiding no no nlon the e thorlzed persons only. northerly"alde'ef'MTdftYRjoali Fn the No person other than Borough person- school district* the improvement of so]< nel, fire company personnel ana water plot of land and the expenditure Iheretor company personnel, unless authorized by ot not exceeding vnsm: end (b) to Issue the duly franchisee1 water company for the bonds of the school district for said pur- area of the borough in which such fire EAST ORANGE MILL END SHOPS pose In the principal amount of S225,ooo, hydrant Is located. Is permitted to operate thus using up S225.000.00 of theor take water Irom any public or private H,699,6S2.B? borrowing margin of thefire hydrant for street sprinkling, flushing Township .of Hazlet previously available sewers, storm-water drains or for build- for other Improvements. ing construction or for any purposes other The polling places for the said meeting than fire protection purposes. or election and their respective polllni Section 2. Unusual use; special pep districts (described by reference to the mission. election districts used at the last Genera Un.iual use of fire hydrants may be per- Election In sold municipality) are estab- mitl 4 for other purposes when special lished and hove been designated as fol- permission Is obtained from the water lows and no person sholfvote at said company In writing. Permits to use hydr- meeting or election elsewhere than at the ants will not be Issued during cold weath- Mlllng place designated for the voters of er, more particularly the period from De- says you can't eat a tie polling district In which tie or she re- cember 1 to April 1, but not limited there- to. The water company will permit such '**' POLLING DISTRICT NO. 1 special use pursuant to Its own regu- Polling place at the West Keansburg lations. School, 12th Street, West Keansburg, New Section 3. Operation regulations; dis- Jersey In the School District for legal vot- play of permit. ers residing within General Election Dis- No wrenches of any sort, other than the Super Shef in less tricts Nos.l and 12. one supplied with the permit, shall be POLLING DISTRICT NO. 2 used tor opening or closing hydrants. The Polling Dlace ot the Middle Rood water companf will supply the Borough School, 30SMIddle Road, Hazlst. New Public Works Department, the Borough Jersey In the School District for legal vot- Police Department and the Borough fire ers residing within General Election Dis- companies with the necessary wrenches tricts Nos. sand t. to be retained permanently for their re- CUSTOM-MADE POLLING DISTRICT NO. 3 spective use. Anyone using a hydrant shall than 10 minutes. Polling place at the Beers Street School, display tils or her permit forthwith If re- quested. No attachment of any sort shal MO Beers Street, Hazlet, New Jersey in be left connected to a hydrant except he School District for legal voters resld- when It Is In actual use. No hydrant shall ng within General Election Districts Nos. be left unattended while attachments ore POLLING DISTRICT NO. 4 connected during the time it Is In use. The Come in to any participating Burger Chef and try to eat Polling place ot the Sycamore Drive hydrant must be shut, attachments re- School, Sycamore Drive, Hazlet, New Jer- moved, caps replaced and the hydrant left sey in the School District tor legal voters In readiness tor Instant use when unot a huge, luscious Super Shef in less than 10 minutes. If you residing within General Election District tended. < No. 4. Section 4. Violations and penalties. POLLING DISTRICT NO. 5 Failure to adhere to any of the provi- can do it, we'll give you a coupon good for 25#off the price Polling place at the Onion Avenue sions of this ordinance shall be deemed to School/ Union Avenue, Hazlet, New Jer-constitute a violation of this ordinance. of your next Super Shef. If you can't do it we'll give you the sey In ttie School District tor legal voters Every person violating this ordinance residing within General Election District shall be subject to a fine of not more than two hundred dollars (S20O.) or Imprison- coupon anyway. Then you can try again. "V- POLLINGDISTRICTNO.5 ment not to exceed ninety (90) days, or Polling place at the Vnlon Avenue both suet} fine and Imprisonment, fn file School, Union Avenue, Hazlet, New Jer- discretion of the Judge of the Municipal sey In the School District far legal voters Court. residing within General Election Districts Section 5. Siveroblllty. PINCH Nos. 10 and 11. In case any provisions of this ordinance ' POLLING DISTRICT NO.6 shall be adludaed unconstitutional, Inoper- Polling place ot the Lillian Drive ative or voi— d fa,_rr onny reoson, ssuch adfudldjdi- PLEATED School, Lillian Drive, Hazlet, New Jersey catloti n shalhll l nott effect any ol the olhtr In the School District for legal voters re- provisions of this ordinance. Idlna-vilthln General Election Districts Section «. Effective date. This ordinance shall' take eflecl Imme- • POLLING DISTRICT NO. 7 diately upon Its passage and publication Polling place al the Cove Road School, according to law. Icf5e| Wealwaystreatyouright ove Rood, Hazlet, New Jersey In the LINED OR • Family Restaurants School District for legal voters residing The foregoing ordinance was Introduced within General Eecllon District No. 8. at a regular meeting of the Mayor and UNLINED ' 'POCCfNciDTSTRICTNO.8 Council of the Borough of Fair Haven, N. Polling place ot the Rorltan Volley J. held August 9,1971 and will come up School, Crescl Blvd., Hazlet, New Jersey for final consideration and passage at a In the School District for legal voters re- regular meetlna of the said governing siding in General Election District No. 13. body to be held Sept. 13,1971 of 8:00 P.M. ROUTE # 35, NORTH Doled: Hazlet, N.J. ot the Municipal Building, 748 River Rood, Draw Draperies August 12,1971 Fair Haven, N.J. at which time and place ^By Order of The Board of Education all persons desiring to be heard thereon GLIFFWOOD BEACH, N.J, "O"•f •"•The- Township ot Hmlet In The vlll be given full opportunity. Included County ol Monmouth ROY W. NELSON ROBERT G. HAVEIAVENS: , Secretary Borough Clerk AUg.il M7.75 August 12 522.251
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2 Broad Street, Red Bank NOTE; No Qthllation with any other storo on Jorsoy Stamford • Elizabeth • New Brunswick • White Plains • Fail-field Shorn with similar name. Bo sum you oro in tho EAST ORANGE VILL END SHOP. THE DAILY j REGISTER Gravel's Future Questionable By ROBERT S.ALLEN ! to the apparent stock of the Wtt the problem areas he se- Established in 1878-I'ublished by The Red Bank Register Senate leadership of both par- lects for his spectacular art- tics. He bas made loud noises ARTHUR Z. KAMIN Sen. Mike Gravel's publi- ties? city grandstanding has pro- INSIDE "The senator's answer to on issues surrounding the President and Editor duced a mixed bag of results all these questions is obvious. Vietnam war, but has not - some headlines in the news- WASHINGTON But whether his judgment as demonstrated much effective- Thomas J. Bly, Executive Editor William F. Sandford, Associate Editor papers and a flock of brick- to his role is the same as that ness on issues closer at home.. bats from home. made by Alaskans is some- It is not his .sobbing voice reading from secret papers In a flood of letters from ir- cused on Sen. Mike Gravel, thing else again. U would ap- that bothers us, but more his ( Thursday, August 12. 1971 ate constituents and in caustic Alaskan voters once more pear that the overwhelming complete about-face on the is- editorials in home state news- have to ponder a basic prob- majority opinion is that he sue of the Indo-China conflict. papers, the first-term Alaskan lem. Did they elect him to the would be a better senator for ALLEN "It may be an old fashioned is being bluntly told to spend U.S. Senate to filibuster Alaska, and perhaps for the notion, but we are still of the pore time on local affairs and against the draft? Did they nation as well, if he devoted troops from Vietnam." 'Can I Be of Any Help?' opinion we are electing public interests and less on os- send him to Washington to be- nimself to the economic and U.S. military expenditures officials to represent the will tentatious exhibitionism. come a leading dove in the an- social problems of Alaska." in Alaska are one of the of the people. We are not aw- Graphically illustrative of tiwar ranks? Did they choose Headlines Captured mainstays of the state's econ- are of any mandate from the these stinging press brickbats him as their senator so he omy. As a consequence, Fairbanks News Miner: Alaskan people to throw ev- are the following from two could stage an emotional and Gravel's crusading against ' < - "Alaska's Sen. Mike Gravel erything else to the wind in leading Alaska dailies: tear-filled reading of classi- has developed quite a flair for the military is definitely mak- 'i order to achieve an Imme- §§ Anchorage Times: "Amid fied documents in a Senate capturing headlines, but it is ing his political future ques- diate withdrawal of American ] r' all the national attention fo- committee room at midnight, hard to become enchanted tionable. New Health Careers for Pros opment of medical in- 1967. Also in New York, a By SYLVIA PORTER struments and prosthetic de- ' newly licensed practical nurse vices - ranging from elec- earns an average of $159 a Let's say you or your YOUR MONEY'S tronic heart pacemakers to week and an RN earns an av- daughter would like, to be- the application of laser tech- erage starting salary of $207. come a nurse. Are you - or is nology in medicine. Typical Nationally, a beginning hospi- she - aware of the new spe- WORTH earnings of today's full- tal pharmacist now earns an cialties now emerging in the fledged biomedical engineer average of $224, according to MM K*£ /ntCLtlttT nursing profession? with a PhD degree are $20,000 a recent, unpublished survey. As just one instance, in two-year course to take over a large share of today's simple, to 125,000. by the American Hospital As- Hi New York City nurses are 17 uncomplicated dentist's It's scarcely news to any of sociation in Chicago. being trained as anesthetists duties, including much of the you that costs of health ser- The key force behind our PORTER or "gas girls" capable of ad- teeth cleaning and filling - at vices of every kind have been soaring medical costs has tasks they perform today ac- ministering anesthetics in un- a fraction of the traditional skyrocketing - but just to been the persistent shortage tually could be properly and ft ^p complicated surgery not re- cost to you, the patient. remind you again of the brut- of professionals in all areas — more than adequately taken quiring the services of a full Or let's say you or your son al burden: physicians, dentists, nurses. over by physicians' assistants, MD anesthesiologist. or daughter are determined to The average cost of spend- Despite relatively huge in- according to a recent study by Or letts say you or your become a physician. If you ing a single day in a semi-pri- fusions of public funds into the Tri-State-Regional Medic- ram child would like to be a den- vate hospital room in the are especially strong on math.; medical and nursing schools, al Program (New Hampshire, tist. If so, perhaps you should and engineering, you might ' United States is up to $80. The the professions have so far Massachusetts, Rhode Is- ffli consider becoming a dental want to consider becoming a minimum wage for hospital shown themselves incapable land), headed by Dr. Leotta. auxiliary. Such auxiliaries are biomedical engineer as an al- employes in New York City is of solving this basic problem. Baumgartnerat Harvard Uni- now being trained at New ternative. Your job would in- now $130, nearly double the Yet, doctors themselves re- versity, and the New Hamp- York State University's Stony volve the design and devei- $76 minimum as recently as port that 20 per cent of the' shire Medical Society. Brook Dental College in a Textbook for Diplomats By JAMES J.KILPATRICK properly executed note, he ob- lations referred to above pre- serves, "neither adds nor det- cluded earlier notice of these New York City prides itself, CONSERVATIVE racts from what is already matters." quite justly we may suppose, known on the subject, nor Nixon, Too ' as the world's "center of com- does it change any position on On the very day that twgE munication." Washington VIEW any given jssue." If a note is marked publication of this claims a different and loftier really well prepared, and says Machiavellian work, Presi- title. Unsurpassed by any con- in 500 words what could be dent Nixon demonstrated his tender, our nation's capital statesman who is asked on said in 50, it will produce a absolute mastery of the game. stands alone as the center of Thursday "to clarify" his re- request for clarification. "The Ordinarily obfuscation is a KILPATRICR non-communication. marks of Wednesday finds issue will then be obscured function of length: the longer, what? The dazzled White This takes a little getting himself in pastures of Elysian still further, and no action will the murkier. This is especially House press sought clari- Using Our Waste used to. An honest young bliss: He can now create six be taken. This is ideal from true of Supreme Court opin- fication from Dr. Henry Kissi- man, fresh from the hills, ar- ambiguities where only two the diplomatic point of view." ions, but the rule applies gen- nger. His Eminence gave Reclamation is a word that is much in that it isn't a simple matter, not if they are rives in Congress, or in the had grown before. By way of example, he cites erally. Showing the stuff of them an hour's worth. I hap- diplomatic service, or in one Bernardo Teixeira, the use these days, and a seminar on the sub- to meet their responsibility to protect the a note from our own State De- champions, Mr. Nixon pro- pened to miss the briefing, but of the executive departments, suave and urbane press coun- partment to the assorted em- duced total confusion in three later in the day I ran into Pe- ject last week at Monmouth College sources of pure water and to eliminate and his first thought is to selor at the Portuguese Em- bassies of Washington having sentences. It was a tour de ter Lisagor of the Chicago proved quite interesting. past pollution practices. communicate. He is bursting bassy, has described this deli- an interest in fishing for had- force. Daily News. His eyes were Starting with a program of collecting Speakers at the college session with ideas, solutions, propos- cate art form in a guenuinely dock in the northwest Atlan- In point of fact, the Presi- glazed and he looked like a "nonreturnable" bottles and cans so that seemed optimistic that reclamation plants als, alternatives; he would funny book, "Diplomatic Im- tic. Obedient to its new policy dent managed something very man in shock. He had dis- like to sell these to his col- munity." His slim little treat- they can be processed for reuse, recycling and machinery now being developed in the of clarity, the department close to a hole in one. In the covered that his notes, when leagues, and he imagines, in ise, published by Luce, is concluded its note in this fash- second sentence of his state- he attempted to transcribe efforts have extended to solid wastes and United States will be able to turn today's his innocence, that plain overpriced at $5.95, but it is a ion: ment on the arms limitation them, were all in Chinese. wastes into tomorrow's resources. Al- even sewage sludge. speech will please his au- deductible business expense "The Secretary of State talks, he said the U.S. and the Dr. Kissinger, of course, One of the principal speakers at the though the programs may be belated, they dience. for any man having dealings regrets that the close juxtapo- Soviet Union "have also had been speaking in German, meeting was Joseph C. Irwin, director of at least offer hope that our nation can But this is not so. Here in with the government. sition of the entry into force of agreed that together with con- which added to the mystery of Washington, speech turns Mr. Tei^eira's admirable the county's Board of Freeholders. He avert a crisis. the Protocols, the conclusion cluding an agreement to limit both the President's position upon itself and takes on minus purpose is to instruct fledgling of the six months' period spec- ABMs, they will agree on cer- said the massive job of collecting and dis- Foreign countries whose geography dic- and Lisagor's notes. Taken all properties; it becomes non- diplomats in such techniques ified in the Protocol Relating tain measures with respect to in all, it was a memorable af- tated wise use of land for years have been posing of trash and garbage can only be speech instead. The object of as notesmanship, which in- to Entry into Force of Propos- the limitation of offensive ternoon, though it is difficult, done efficiently-and at a reasonable ex- forced into reclamation programs that communication is not to in- volves a written exchange als, and the proposed entry strategic weapons." in retrospect, to remember pense-if the county takes the lead in re- may not be as sophisticated as those being form, but to mystify. The with the State Department. A into force date of the regu- What did it mean? Meant it • exactly why. gional recycling instead of depending upon designed in the U.S.*but they've resulted individual municipalities. in the use and reuse of many commodities, Regionalization, of course, is the an- including food. swer to many problems where govern- Before the United States gained its Marlboro Resident's Questions ment services are involved. Many munici- reputation as a wasteful, heavily populated palities which balked at higher and higher nation, many of its citizens put back into 2 Lindsay Drive master plan. I agree that this recreation. I would like to see the bids from garbage contractors found that, the ground the edibles which came from Morganville, N J. 07751 road does need a repaving (b) If it were, it would be at borough of New Shrewsbury even if they furnished the trucks, the costs it. Modern man may, through reclamation, To the Editor: and could be done at approxi- least several years before re- have the tax rate pn the air- I would like to explain why FROM OUR mately $40,000, saving Marl- to taxpayers would still be excessive be- be finding a way to return to an ancient creational facilities' could be port property reduced and I constantly write letters to boro about $450,000. installed. cause there is inadequate land to bury the practice. hope that an interested oper- the editor's column. I am not READERS When questioned about this Can anyone answer my ator »r the borough would re-" garbage. Mr. Irwin's suggestion to create about a governing official of Marl- enormous expense to be in- questions?... open the airport as the New The freeholders have attempted to ob- three sections in the county where recl- boro Township (just a tax- curred, the answers from the Sincerely yours, Shrewsbury Airport. This payer), therefore, am not amation, incineration and landfill can be At first, I could not in- council were as follows: (a) Mrs. Sheila Gross would certainly be a credit to tain landfill areas to serve the dumping allowed the luxury of a formal telligently reason out the real The council did not bother to our community. needs of the county, and they have learned performed deserves support. press conference to express underlying motive for the re- inquire of the county as to my views to the public. But I cent zoning and subdivision when they might redo the Airport Needed Respectfully, do believe that I can contrib- Donald J. Humcke ordinance. Now 1- am con- road at county expense. 26 Partridge Lane ute an informed opinion on vinced that the council must (b) The' council does not New Shrewsbury, N.J. some of the problems that be- be just plain crazy... want to, instead, repave this To the Editor: Long Branch's Mr. Ravo set our town. Their new idea is to spend road because they say it I view the closing of Bed Task Force's Goal The offer to Pat T. Ravo, Long the type of person he is because he for- My subject for today is the $490,000 to widen Lloyd Road, might wash away. What then Bank Airport with much regr- $490,000 Lloyd Road project a road scheduled for reconst- happens to the extensive and Branch's director of Recreation, Parks merly served its Becreation Department et. Each year one or two air- that is scheduled for passage ruction by Monmouth County expensive road program that ports close in New Jersey and Industrial Development Task and Conservation, of a similar position in as deputy director. That is why, in trying by the town council. and is indeed on the county Marlboro has just undergone no new airports open. At this Force , Maryland's Baltimore County should be a to fill a vacancy which will occur in Octo- and just begun to pay for to rate, there will be very few P.O. Box 284 matter of concern for the shore city's offi- ber, they are considering him for a post the tune of $700,000? general aviation airports re- Middletown, N.J. 07748 cial^. that pays $8,000 more than he is earning in (c) The council did not an- maining in New Jersey in 20 To the Editor: Since assuming the Long Branch post Long Branch. swer the question as to what years. You recently wrote an edi- happens when the project is torial along with an appro- earlier this year, Mr. Ravo has enthu- We appreciate that Long Branch has In most cases, airport clos- completed before the pipes to ings arc due to the inability to priate cartoon regarding the, siastically and energetically worked to im- its budget limitations, but it would be a supply water to the northern maintain a profitable oper- endeavors of our Task Force prove recreational activities in the city shame to see the city lose an excellent Morganville area are installed ation in an area where proper- in attempting to encourage In- and his efforts have been enjoyed and ap- employe. Mr. Ravo says he likes to be in under Lloyd Road, The road ty taxes are constantly rising. dustry to build in Middletown will then be torn up again and Township. preciated by young and old. Long Branch and enjoys the job. Perhaps In order to operate an airport, be repaved. Is this a good eco- / On behalf of the Task The Baltimore County people know a way can be found to keep him there. considerable property is re- nomic policy decision? quired for runways. Similarly, Force, I would like to express The second part of their considerable property Is re- our appreciation for your idea is to purchase 13.9 acres quired in order to maintain a comments and opinions. AU of at a price of $3,700 per acre farm operation. Justifiably so, us on the Task Force have put for a recreation site because the farmer is given a low tax u forth honest and sincere ef- Another Brookdale Service they claim that 40 children in rate to compensate-for his forts to help correct what we that area have ho where to land requirements, but the think is a critical situation tax wise in Middletown, particu- Brookdale Community College in Lin- people whose duties make it Impossible play. Council has not found it airport is taxed at the regu- necessary to act in a year and larly Increasing residential or larly for the senior citizens on croft is providing .mother great service to for them to take advantage of other a half on high priority sites to business property rate. How fixed incomes. Monmouth County residents by scheduling Brookdale courses. , accommodate the 2,000 chil- then can one expect general We expected criticism and an educational program this fall for people The first class, scheduled to begin dren in the concentrated area aviation operators to survive we are getting it, but that who cannot avail themselves of its many Sept. 22, will be limited to 200 students. If of Whittier Oaks and Mon- in New Jersey? does not deter us in our ef- other classes and courses. successful, the college promises to extend mouth Heights. But now Several years ago, the gov- forts to achieve the goal that comes the great rush for 40 is right and proper, tax relief The courses to be offered Saturday it to more students and to look Into the ernor of Ohio realized the im- children. If I truly believed and employment. To have mornings and afternoons can lead the en- possibility of providing courses with addi- portance of small general that the children were their aviation airports in attracting your written comments pub- rollces to an associate of arts degree in tional weekend hours. major concern, I would not be new industry and providing lished in favor of our endea- five years or less. The four programs are Although it is a young institution, Brook- angered. But after a detailed services to existing Industry vors is very gratifying and in- discussion at that council in business administration, education, so- dale has in many ways shown that it is an in Ohio. He therefore decreed spiring to all of us. We do ap- meeting, it was stated that preciate this immensely. cial science and humanities. important one to the county. The weekend and had built 60 airports in even If this land were pur- Sincerely yours, The "weekend college" is a wonderful one year. Does Ohio know college plan is another example of its chased: something that New Jersey B.G. Tipton opportunity for working and married great value.. And Then There Were Thieu (a) It might not be used for doesn't? Chairman TbtlJaiiy Re girter, Red Bank -1 *«, JU, Tfortfcy, A
LADIES STRETCH 100% SLACKS Nylon
WASHMU NYLON II COLORS OF NAVY • GREEN • PLUM • $099 MOWN AND IUCX SIZES 10 to 18 3 SIZZLING SUMMER SAVINGS
MONMOJJTH HONORED - Monmouth County received a $peclal New County Achievement ,AWard from the National Association of Counties (NACO) at its, annual conference in Milwaukee, WIs. The awards recognize "progressive devel- LADIES opments In county government." Here, at the 100% ACRYLIC award presentation are Clesson Y. Chikasuye,' left, president of NACO, and Joseph C. Irwln, di- rector, of Monmouth County Board of Freehol- TO SAVE AT "SUPERAMA" DRASTIC REDUCTIONS IN OUR EATERS ders. ' "AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE" TO-DAY thru SAT. 99 Ratarians Hear MEN'S BOYS'PERMA-PRESS 2 • PULL-OVER STYLE About Drug Abuse perma-press • FULL FASHIONED ,.BET?-BANK- The Rotary • SHORT SLEEVES on Discovery House, which CASUAL • RIBBED FINISH CJub meeting at the Molly Gov. Cahill toured for the sec- • WHITE - NAVY Pitcher Motor Inn, heard ond time and gave his approv- WORK PANTS Richard C. Wenner, adminis- BEIGE - GREEN al of the project results thus PLUM trator of the county Narcotics far, SLACKS Council, a new agency estab- SOB iMAIUHEMMMMGt Recent attempts to estab- Reg. *2.98 lished by'the Board of Free- lish a Methadone Mainte- holders under the direcfion.of nance Clinic for Monmouth Jbseph.C,.Irwin., .".:.' County were mentioned* along [pit, Wenner defined the fac- with the necessity for having IDEAL FOR HEAVY DUTY $199 ets of1 the drug problejn facing this program available for JOBSI RUGGED EXTRA society and discussed the pro- patients in the area who have STRONG FABRIC OF COT- 1 THESE RUGGED PO- grams on prevention, educa- to travel long distances to use TON AND NYLON. LYESTER AND COT- tion and rehabilitation which another county's facility. FEATURES INCLUDE TUN- TON SLACKS AL- Mr. Wenner also discussed • NEL LOOPS AND HEAVY WAYS LOOK GREAT ire being coordinated and as- the family's role in preventing DRILL POCKETS. BECAUSE THEY NEV- sisted by the Narcotics Coun- drug abuse by being careful in THE BONUS? NO IRONING ER NEED IRONING. ell, whose chairman is Robert. its use of drugs and alcohol, NEEDEDI OLIVE WOOD, IVY BELT-LOOP MOD- !. Ansell, Deal. - and keeping lines of commu. SPRUCE GREEN, CHARr EL, ASSORTED SOLID He presented information nication open with teen-agers. SIZES COAL AND AIR FORCE COLORS, SIZES 8 to 29 to 38 BLUE 18 Keyport Sewer Plant LADIES FINAL CLEARANCE! FINAL CLEARANCE! Is In Full Operation WOMEN'S and WOMEN'S BABY DOLLS KEYPORT - Residents of • COTTONS OR keeping formality," Philip J. ACETATES the Luppatatong Ave. area of Blanda Jr., borough attorney, TEENS • PASTEL the borough can now hook into explained. "We have 90 per- SUMMER SHADES the borough's sewer system, cent of the cost funded by the • SIZES Councilman Leroy P. Hicks state, but must show it on the SUMMER SMALL- $169 announced. record." MEDIUM "Our Maple Place pumping Council president Henri J. SHOES URGE station Is now operating al 100 Hansen said the appropriated Reg. to 110.99 per cent and can fulfill the money is council's share for SANDALS needs of the area residents roadwork of the state sales who. wish to hook in," Mr. tax. ~ Hicks said during the com- An ordinance creating a $199 mittee report portion of seven-member Harbor Com- Borough Council's regular mission which will include two session. council members was I PAIR Council last fall appro- adopted. priated $63,000 for construc- Under questioning of Theo- tion of sewers which in addi- dore W. Csik, Democratic CHOOSE FROM BONDED ACRYLICS tion to Luppatatong Ave. also candidate for mayor, Mr. MANY STYLES, A TREMENDOUS AR- • NEW FALL COLORS Included Chandler Ave., Hansen explained that each OPEN AND AIRY. RAY OF STYLES. Therese St., and a section of councilman will submit a list SOME WITH FOAM CHOICE OF HEEL • SIZES 3 to 6x Maple Place. of candidates tor the positions PADDED CUSHION HEIGHTS IN A MUL- • SIZES 7 to 14 and appointments will be INNERSOLE. OTH- TITUDE OF COLORS. An ordinance appropriating made from these lists. ERS WITH HARD- NOT EVERY SIZE 126,000 for reconstruction of An ordinance allowing addi- WARE TRIM. MANY AND COLOR IN EV- Atlantic St., was introduced. tional outside electrical con- ONE OF A KIND IN ERY SIZE. The measure will be aired tractors to make electrical in- ALL THE SUMMER SIZES 6 to 10 IN THE $ publicly Aug. 24. spections In the borough was TIME COLORS. GROUP "All this really is a book- adopted without comment. SIZES 5 To 10 IN THE GROUP | Hurry in For Best Selection | 3
Geremony Honors | USE OUR "GILLETTE" "LISTERINE" "JOHNSON'S" "POLAROID" LAYAWAY dry look AT NO E£GM Employes Mouthwash BABY POWDER COLOR FILM EXTRA COST FT. MONMOUTH - In an' Quality salary increases HAIR SPRAY awards ceremony here, the di- went to Sheila Quinn, Inter- rectorate of maintenance, laken, Maintenance Manage- 32 oz. $]09 24 oz. $069 Army Electronics Command, ment Division, and Emil Kra- honored a group of employes. vec. Technical Assistance and John R. Oberlin, Belford, New Equipment Training Di- LIST PRICE 1.49 LIST PRICE 2.29 LIST PRICE 1.98 # 1083-UST PRICE 5.49 and Henry A. Hitz, Fair vision. Haven, received suggestion Mrs. Maryann M. Gwynn, award certificates. Mr. Ober- Eatontown, a secretary in the MAJOR APPLIANCE lin is with the Technical Assis- office of the deputy director ARNELCREPE BONDED WOOLEN tance and New Equipment of maintenance, received a FAMOUS NAME COMPACT Reg. *1.98 By MILUKEN MILLS Training Division, Mr. Hitz Special Act Award for out- Choice of Colors, with the Avionics Mainte- standing performance of duty. New Fall Plaids in £ *fl QO Ideal for Dresses Many Colors 54" * T **© REFRIC,FREEZER nance Engineering Division. Col. Donald J. Hennes, di- and Sportswear, Wide - Reg. 3.98 | y.rd Mrs. Isabel V. Varjabedian, rector of maintenance, 45" Wide 9JF 8^F Yd. COMBINATION Long Branch, received an out- presented the awards. standing performance rating FAMOUSN and a sustained superior per- formance salary increase. Picnic Planned BONDED POLYESTER J13-CUBICFT. Ray G. Scott, Oakhurst, and POLYESTER AND ORLON FANCIES. $O99 Marilyn J. Matey, Long By GOP Club THIS IS A WASHABLE FABRIC NOW/ .UPRIGHT FREEZER Yard Branch, were awarded sus- WEST LONG BRANCH - REG 3.98 60" WIDE 2 )LDS3521B$. 159 tained superior performance The local Republican Club certificates. All are in the will hold its annual picnic at R E FAMOUS KAMI W H .TE DENIM KETTLE CLOTH Technical Assistance and Disbrow's Picnic Grounds^ type prints 12" PORTABLE formerly the. Seely property BLUE New Equipment Training Di- Variety of Patch Polyester/Fortrel BLACK AND WHITE vision. on Whalepond Road, Sunday The Wash and Wear from 3 to 7 p.m. Denims. The Easy Care Fabric Fabric - 45" Wide The rain date is the follow- 45' WkU - Rig. 1.98 Reg. 1.59 Yd. . TELEVISION Women Won't ing Sunday, Aug. 22. 98 Yd. 98 Each year approximately Picket Pageant 500 persons attend. As usual, INAME ther,e will be pony rides for M 8,000 B.T.U. LAKEWOOD - The Miss the children. ATLANTIC America pageant will not be A number of state and BANKAMEHICAHLT.1 picketed this year, as it was county Republican dignitaries AIR CONDITIONER last year, by the National Or- are expected to attend. West till •tin />i IMULTI-ROOM—230 VOLTS 239 ganization for Women, an offi- Long Branch officials will be cial of the group said yes- present. terday. UP TO « Pat Hinfcy, president of t lie DISPLAY MODEL Monmouth County chapter of Trees on golf courses not only 'master charge [ TMC INriR0tH* CtAO J NOW, made the announce- provide food and shelter for SHREWSBURY AVE. at RT. 35 • NEW SHREWSBURY ment on a public affairs pro- birds and small animals but its STORE HOURS MON. thru SAT. ? A.M. to 10 P.M. 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SANDFORD ing backgrounds - like rolling now being reported has been stand one of the ways the fly- But pollution is a com- Bernardsville. With David F. surf - they can'appear to be variously described. A hand- ing saucer stories get started. parative thing. A lot of bird- Moore, executive director of Anyone who hasn't caught OUTDOOR moving faster than they are. held binocular cannot possibly Meadowlands ers know that one of the rich- the North Jersey Con- the current "unidentified fly- When they don't pass out of be held rock-steady, and the We might as well develop est and most interesting bird- servation Foundation, the five Ing object" yet can catch it at sight, we get the impression magnified motion makes its the Hackensack Meadow- ing areas in the state is that made a field trip to the Hack- its best now. Man - and the WORLD they're moving back and own shapes. Telescopes mag- lands, an official was quoted same Hackensack Meadow- ensack wetland. They found bright red planet Is, of course, forth. Because they're moving nify the motion even more, as saying recently, because land. many species of birds, rab- Loizeaux of Baling Bidge, the "UFO" that has caused a around the same sun we are, and even when mounted on they're polluted anyway. If Among those who don't be- bits, fish and insects and a and Randolph White and lot of talk recently - is at its ship, but when opposition oc- the planets don't display the camera tripods, will sway that were the general official lieve the meadow is "dead" rich plant lif e. Emanuel Gaskins of Newark; closest and brightest right curs in midwinter, the planet same, regular pattern of enough to distort the target. attitude we'd have long since and a fitting candidate for de- This is valuable natural The report of their findings now. is 62 million miles away. movement we see in the stars, It's an easy mistake to given up on most of this coun- struction are five students of habitat and should be pre- was written and forwarded to It will fade rather quickly Astronomers Busy and can be even more con- make, and cool-headed ob- try's inland waters, much of the New Jersey School Con- served, report Jocelyn John- us by Kate G. Haggerty of in coming weeks, dropping Although Mars is always fusing. servers who have been fooled its land, and large segments sortium's environmental field son of New Brunswick, Boyd Califon, a 13th grader at the away another 14 million miles closely watched by astrono- The shape of the "object" by Mars are able to under- of the ocean. program at the Gill School, Hudson of Cranford, Christine school by the end of September. And mers, these close approaches, at that time it still will be a happening only at 15 to 17- little brighter than it gets in year intervals, generate lots its normal approaches to of excitement. This year, earth (those at about two-year space probes as well as • SALE TODAY thru SAL intervals). Of course, if you ground observation are being ^ miss it this month, you'll get used, and astronomers expect another chance at a close look to learn a lot about the planet . about 1988. The show will be spectacu- FASHION DISCOUNT CENTER When the earth comes clos- lar enough to attract attention eat to a direct line between a for a few weeks yet, By the planet and the sun, astrono- end of this month Mars will be mers say the planet is "at op- 37% million miles away, then TODDLER position." That term is used will fade quickly. By the end AND because to look at it we face of September it will be just MISSES' CLEARANCE JR. BOYS' directly away from (opposite) under 49 million miles from the sun. This happens with us. - SLACK Mars about every 780 days - a Look for it in the southeast, SHIFTS little more than two years. where it rises now at about SETS But only when it occurs in Au- sunset Its brightness and red Popular sleeveless gust do we get a really close color make it easy to spot It Summer shifts in Knit crew neck or look. sets about sunrise. prints and solids. collar shirts in ' liars was in opposition last How can it be mistaken for Pink/ blue/ maize. stripes or solids .. night at about 9:30. It is now a flying saucer? Nor all sizes in all matched to perma- - only 34,931,000 miles from us. The night sky can fool us. WILL nent press boxer That may sound like quite a colors, but 'a won- When stars are close to the flare slacks, in Jaunt in anybody's rocket horizon, viewed against mov- derful choice in sizes WHAT BUY! sizes 2-4, 4-7.
politicalFlurry •^> Has Brief Life - MIDDLETOWN - A small Mr. Makely said. ,- political flurry whipped up by With their ordinance the » the Democratic candidates two Demcoratic candidates is- BOYS' BOYS' : for Township Committee flou- sued a press release: ". rished briefly and died at the' "Being mindful of the fact 100% COTTON Famous Maker/ • meeting of the governing that for government to be ef- Permanent - body. fective it must enjoy the con- TERRY - William E. Schell, who is fidence of the citizens, we CANNON9 Crease teamed with Wilford L. Wis- have tonight introduced what CASUAL ner in an effort to take two we believe is the first step in BEACH committee seats in Novem- rebuilding such confidence. \ . SLACKS ' ber, presented individual Years of conflict of interest in JACKETS copies of a proposed code of Middletown have dulled the .! fvy and Continental ethics ordinance to the com- ethical senses of the govern- Clearance of four- \. \! 100% cotton Thunder mitteemen, urging its imme- mental establishment. burton cardigans in ' Twill. Sizes 8-18 in . diate study and adoption. "We are making this pro- white, blue or yel- Regular and Slim. -, "I'll be glad to introduce posed ordinance public be- low. Sizes 8-16. 1 islatlon of this kind,"
Thenew,convenient way topay yourgas bilL
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Even though your actual bill may be.; sports cars for precise handling nance yourself Our Equal Payment Plan is offered to you so that you a different amount (higher or lower) your payments will'- • 75-hp engine averaged over 25 mpg In sim- may pay your gas bill in 12, equal monthly payments and always be the same. . -f • Extra rustproofing on critical body areas ulated city/suburban driving avoid having to pay higher bills in Winter when expenses • Wide stance, low profile for better stability • Large door openings*or easy entry and exit are heavy. In July, New Jersey Natural will compare your actual ; even in gusty winds • More legroom, more shoulder room up front costs for the year with your total payments on the Equal£ There is no charge for this service. We offer it only for Payment Plan. If your actual cost is more or less than your| •51919 ii Ford's lujjisted price (or • ntw base 2-door Pinto. However, Ida your convenience and it is available to all our customers, payments, you will receive notification and your monthly $ cir shown Is equipped with white sldtwall llrti $29, led acctnt option J60. with or without heating. Damnation charm dealer preparation diaries (II any), state and local payment amount will be adjusted accordingly. ?| taxes ire extra. ••Comparison based on manufacturers' suunted retail prices lor lowest priced models, comparably equipped. Neither price: Includes accent group IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO PAY YOUR GAS BILL or white sidewall tires pictured above; they ate extra-cut options. . •... ON OUR EQUAL PAYMENT PLAN AND IF YOU HAVE NOT PREVIOUSLY RETURNED YOUR CARD, MAIL THIS COUPON $ New Jersey Natural Gas Company I PINTO 601 BANGS AVENUE, ASBURY PARK, N J. 07712 Tho now 3-Door Pinto" Runabout. Avoiloblo ot &silghlly hifjlior prico. Ford gives you Better kteaa Gentlemen, NAME | Yes, I want to I SERVICE ADDRESS pay my gas bill DOREMUSFORD CITY JST . on the equal I 90 MONMOUTH STREET Ig payment plan. ACCOUNTNO. RED BANK, M,J. ' I 350 Attend The Daily Beguler,B«dBtiik-Miaaktpwn,N.J^TlHinday, August 12,1971 13 R.evitalization Corps Picnic Marlboro Jaycees Resubmit RED BANK - More than 35'0, Newark and Monmouth County youngsters and adults attended the annual picnic of Ethics Code for Consideration the Revitalization Corps held at Cheesequake State Park, MAKLBORO - The town- Maraziti. The Senator's bill, the same political party. The not final, the Jaycees would, Madison Township. ship Jaycees have resub- Mr. Gitten said, deals with board would be appointed by "like to see some action on mitted to Township Council a standards of ethical conduct the mayor with the consent of this measure by the end of .The picnic marked the be- revised proposal for creation in local government. the council. September." ginning of the fourth summer of conflict of interest guide- • The Jaycee member said it'Operation Suburbia, an ex- The original proposal stated lines and a three-member that his organization is mak- that all municipal employes, change .program through board to administer them. ing the proposal in the hope o! which Newark children visit whether elected, appointed or NEED Martin Gitten, chairman of keeping political conflict out hired, would be under the families in the country or sub- the Jaycees' code of ethics of the newspapers. urbs during the summer. The board's jurisdiction. The re- SEWER committee, said that the pro- Under the original proposal, vised plan removes the Board picnic was an opportunity for ' posal is based on a bill in- the .children and parents to the board would be comprised of Education from inclusion in INSTALLATION troduced in the state Senate of three residents, with no the plan in line with township became acquainted. Activities Jan. 18 by state Sen. Joseph J. HELP? included volleyball, softball more than two members of attorney James R. Minogue's and swimming. legal opinion that such in- clusion would be illegal, Mr. The Revitalization Corps is Gitten said. a national private citizens' or- Also deleted from the pro- ganization dedicated to social posal is the granting of sub- action. The Red Bank Chap- Register stall Photo Service Salute BREAKFAST IS SERVED —Participants in the first pre-school play poena and penalty powers to" ter, completely volunteer- Airman George M. Prasc- son of Arthur C. Scott of 5 the board. Mr. Gitten said staffed,'was established in group at the Red Bank Community Center enjoy a breakfast prepared and sak Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.Walker Ter., Middletown, has served by volunteers. The women are, left to right, Mrs. Bea Tillotson, that the board wiould recom- May, 1968. Prascsak of 56 Fairview completed basic training at mend breach of ethics cases Mrs. Sydelle Sipress, Mrs. Virginia Cutler, Mrs. Ellen Fox, Mrs. Dorothy Drive, Middletown, has gradu- Lackland AFB, Tex. He has Suburbia co-chairmen, Mrs. , Jackson, standing, and Mrs. Adele Kahn, program coordinator. The cen- to the township council for ac- John Reuter of Eatontown ated with honors at Sheppard been assigned to Lowry AFB, tion. ter is preparing to begin second year of the program. AFB, Tex., from the technical Colo., for training as an in- mumnonssiOHAi and Mrs. Robert Glaser of Mr. Gilten said that al- [Quimm AI miONAtu um Fair Haven, still have six chil- training course for U.S. Air telligence specialist. Airman Force medical service spe- Scott, a 1970 graduade of Mid- though the revised proposal is • ntfwemu dren to place for one or two cialists. Airman Prascsak, weeks. There are three, boys, dletown Township High • mtamastvtat ,who was trained to assist in School, attended Union Col- .. The Bluestone, Greenbrier • WPEJOIWMUWKNCHW age 6, 8 and 12, and three Center's Play Group and New Rivers are three of • uut mum the care and treatment of lege, Barbourville, Ky.. His girls, two 13'and one 11. Any patients, is being assigned to wife is the former Jeannette West Virginia's unpolluted riv- • OUftK/NGtMRMtNGrOOU family tliat would, like to ers. the USAF hospital at Wright- A. Farrell of Spotswood. MNCHINGHRVICfAIWUKf make arragements to take Patterson AFB, Ohio. The air- one flattiechildren may call Plans Its Second Year man, a 1968 graduate of Mid- Army First I,t. Dennison E. FIX BROKEN Mrs*ifteuter or Mrs* Glaser. A to Z RENTAL BED BANK - Things are ready for another challenging caters to four-year-olds who dletown High School, attended Osborne, son of Mr. and Mrs. DENTURES happening at the Red Bank year. come to the center daily from Ashland (Ohio) College. His Edward I. Osborne, 3 Green- CENTER Community Center. The unique project is truly 9 to 11 a.m. After a hot break- wife, Carol, is the daughter of wood Place, Middletown, re- At home In minute* ItiNIWMAN The very successful pre- community oriented, initiated fast, prepared and served by Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth B. Amazing new Quik-Kix Bits broken ceived the Army Com- plates, fills in the cracks and replaces SHKiWUIWr school play group which was by volunteers and staffed enti- volunteers, they begin their Seeley of Orient, Ohio. teeth like new. Fast! Easy to use! No mendation Medal near As- special tools needed. HHIK-FIY" started last year is getting rely by them. The play group morning of music, art and sto- chaffenburg, Germany, for Wp k i V^liX TIA RENTAL 0p.n7.tayi.WMk DECORATING ry-telling. Airman Charles W. Scott, meritorious service. Works every time or CENTER* fhw. 741-004* In addition to these regular your money back. Dulurl Ripiir Kil PITOBLffVtS? activities, there are trips to Broqkdale Exhibits the post office and sledding parties on the first snowy days. Birthday parties and Mixed Media Art outdoor games round out the MONMOUTH BUILDING CENTER'S LINCROFT- Open to the Ruth Caruso has exhibited program. Everything is aimed public is an exhibition of mix- in juried state shows-Trenton at broadening their ex- ed media work by two local Museum, Montclair Museum, periences and providing op- artists, Ruth Caruso and Nor- Monmouth College, New Jer- portunities for growth and de- man Colson. The art council sey Cultural Center and many velopment. of the public events board of others. She has shown at the The real excitement of the SUMMER SPECIALS Brookdale Community Col- Old Mill Gallery, the Guild of program stems from the way lege is sponsoring the exhib ' Creative Art in Shrewsbury, each volunteer can contribute in the rotunda area of Build- and at all of the local gal- in her own way. No special ing A at the college's Lincroft leries. She has won more than talent is needed-just a liking campus. 30 awards for her work. for children and a wish to LAWN CHAISE The collection, entitled Norman Colson is an artist- help. In-service training is "Nostalgia for Texture," will illustrator at Ft. Monmouth. provided by a trained profes- Telescope Folding USE WARDS CUSTOM SERVICt run until Aug. 14. The hours He has won awards at shows sional throughout the year. 4 Position FBEE ESTIMATES IN YOUR HOME are 8 a.m. to 10 p.m., Mon-held at the Monmouth Shop- Anyone interested in being a While/Green-White/Yellow Call 542-2150 Today days through Thursdays, and ping Center, Monmouth Me- volunteer should contact Mrs. UH all of Wards Custom from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on dical Center, and Greater Adele Kahn at the center, 144 Monmouth Fair, among oth- ' Services Fridays. Its aim is to focus W. Bergen Place. • bedspreads • shades • diaperies recognition on the working ers. He also exhibited at the • slrpcovers • reupholslery artists of the community. Trenton State Museum, Old NURSING HOME -. The exhibit consists of Mill, Gallery, Asbury Park So- • • 24-Hour Cm • RN on duly III times Wards Monmouth paintings, collages- and drift- ciety of .Fine Arts, and Guild • MmCcm Approved' Shopping Canter wood assemblages that com- of Creative Art, where he is NAVESINK HOUSE atwiMwn C|f I6 AM till 9 30 PM bine materials for their tex- an instructor. Mr. Colson also 44 RIVERSIDE AVE. RED IANK tured interest, color and form. has done set design. MZ-3400 FUN - GAMES - PRIZES CAUETALGAEC1DE 12 01. TUMBLERS Powerful algas barrier that ex- FLOODLIGHT 177 nnds chlorins life. Keeps water crystal clear and clean. From B// Coaital. 84' HOLDERS Pak RIG. 2.29 1 of CANNON BEACH 24 97 TOWELS BEVERAGE GRASS SHEARS Disston Cordless Get away to the beach with. SETS our alt-cotton 34" x 62" tow- • 7PC.SMS 67 Electric Upright els by Cannon. Look—bright • 0Mo4oi.r1tdMr summer prints that put you in 1" • 6-12OL Ghosts 82nd Annual Firemen's Fair the 6wim of things! Buy a 1 27.49 bunch! Sponsored by... SOMETHING NEW A MONMOUTH 18" TABLE TOP GRILL BUILDING CENTER Here's a folding barbecue grill from MARSHALLAN that's portablol Set it on THERE'S A AHEAD FOH YOU! your picnic (able. 3-position chrome "HEPLER STEP" grill, brass plated legs. 9 " high. Boxed. N AVESINK 66 FOR YOUR HOME OR MOBILE HOME "HEPLER STEPS" km Ow original ctntam quality am- 2 marital iron riflings, dasigrud and manutaeturact by MASTER CRAFTSMEN. CHARCOAL "HEPLER STEPS" coniiil of iturdy ilt.l tubular wxJar- d ifruchir*, palntad witn rult inhibitor, and a finish eoit of qlesi black •n«tml. Tha trtattd wood traadi art painttd r«d or 9-ay. TKo BRIX 63 complala irrudur* ii aaty to timblff, [tnr at taiy to carry in your car. REDWOOD FOLDING HOOK AND LADDER CO. NO. 1 PATIO TABLES REG. R Q_ TONIGHT, FRI. & SAT 8.19 0.0/ GTRONELLA mm{ MODtt ?Hli<0" GMV CANDLES 44 Protect vounalf «nd otheri by alirninatmo. thot* umaf* | August 12, 13 & 14 mabf-ihirr ittpi of c«m«nr bl«b—iiidi—palfati—pop HELD ON FIRE HOUSE GROUNDS, MONMOUTH AVENUE, NAVESINK Ennar,c» lh> "BEAUTY" ol your bcrrw or mobil. hom» CHARCOAL with "HEPLER STEPS" MOOII IMS' KID DRAWING for 1971 DODGE POLAR A 4-Door SEDAN FREE DELIVERY Free Use of Car Top Carriers • 10 and 20 Pound FIVE ACRES OF FREE SUPERVISED PARKING BAGS . . . MEET YOUR FRIENDS AT THE FAIR! MONMOUTH BUIDING HOURS: OPEN SAT.. MON.. TUES. NEW JERSEY'S OLDEST FIREMEN'S FAIR 7:10 A.M. • I P.M. WED., THUBJ , FRI. 747-5220 • •»» 7.MA.M. ."P.M. "COME SEE THE NA VESINK CANNONBALV 777 SHREWSBURY AVE CENTER SHREWSBURY \\ .ueliail) Kruistrr, KwlBank - Middlrtow u,..Vj.. Thursday, August 12,1V71
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SHORT ROOM LOTS VINYL WALL COVERING GENTLE SECONDS ill-Tex^Sanitas C* SCRUBBABLE CANVAS
MEATY, BEEFY FLAVOR - Stephen S. Chang, professor of food'science VINYL WALL COVERING at the Rutgers College of Agriculture and Environmental Science, watch- NEW 1971 PATTERNS - CHOICE SECONDS es his research assistant, Sherman S. Lin, adjust the connections of an OVER 200.000 ROLLS IN STOCK, AVAILABLE CHAINWIDE elaborate distillation apparatus used In separdting the volatile flavor GEOMETRICS • FLORALS • BOLD PATTERNS AND OTHERS compounds from cooked meat. Dr. Chang hopes to find exactly what com- : All seconds sold in durable rolli only! pounds make a steak taste the way it does. S SCRUBBABLE I PERFECT 4.55 Flock on canvas in hew- Duplication of Steak est colors and patterns. ONE Sold in Double Rolls only. Wall-lex LOW IF PERF. Is Goal of Scientist 7.95 single roll . NEW BRUNSWICK - The protein is not' necessary for "Differences in flavor are flavor of a good steak may good nutrition," Dr. Chang caused by extremely minute VINYL WALL COVERING seem one of life's simpler says. "A less costly mixture amounts of material," Dr. 1971 DECORATOR PATTERNS pleasures, but in reality it's a of plant proteins which nutri- Chang emphasizes, "often Exclusive selection of these choice seconds. Latest colors and patterns. tionally complement each oth- just one or two parts per mil- highly complex puzzle with IF PERF. 4.09 Sold in Double Rolls Only 37»| er can serve just as well - lion. As recently as 15 years more than 100 pieces. *m^r SingLRol I A food scientist at Rutgers whether used in human or pet ago, this work would have is trying to identify the food. been impossible. But a newly pieces, then put them back to- Cost Difference developed technique called gether again. So far he's ''The cost difference, for gas chromatography fraction- found 49 separate compounds example, between the utili- ates the mixture of flavor in the flavor of boiled beef. zable protein of unprocessed compounds into pure com- "I believe, however, that wheat or soy flour and beef is ponents so they can be identi- only a few compounds are striking - beef is roughly 20 fied by infrared and mass largely responsible for the times more expensive. spectrometry. cooked flavor of meat," says "Also, the less saturated A 'Fingerprint' Stephen S. Chang, professor vegetable fats used in synthet- "The infrared spectrum of of food science at the College ic meats may be more health- the component, actually a of Agriculture and. Environ- ful than their animal counter- kind of 'fingerprint,' is just mental Science. parts. Imitation bacon from like the fingerprint of a per- "Fundamentally, my work spun soybean fibers is already son. We have the infrared Vynaloniooo Is basic research into the on the market as cooked bits spectra of over 40,000 com- sass FAMOUS WINSTON mechanisms of the formation and ready-to-fry strips. But pounds in our laboratory. when purchiied VINYL LATEX of flavor compounds so that the flavors of cooked meat, "Mass spectrometry breaks in 2-g.Hon c.n»_ meat with stronger and better such as beef, pork and chick- a chemical compound into BLACKTOP flavor can be produced. This en, or even charcoal broiled pieces. If each of the pieces is could be done through im- steak, are more difficult to recognized, then they can be VYNALON FORMULA provements in the breeding of match, and this is where I put together like a puzzle to ACRYLIC VINYL LATEX OUTSTD DRIVEWAY SEALER meat animals, or new tech- hope to make a contribution." reconstruct the chemical • Cleans up with water niques at the processing Before actually beginning structure of the compounds in FLAT WHITE plant." • Protects against his research, Dr. Chang, to- question." cracking Another possible benefit is gether with food scientists HOUSE PAINT 2 the creation of synthetic - or from Italy, Japan and Czech- Dr. Chang believes there Take $6 off tola) reg. price of 195 • Paint on damp or dry partially synthetic - meat oslovakia, developed a special are over 100 compounds in \ n n 'PER GALLON surfaces GALLONS products. apparatus to. isolate the vol- cooked beef flavor, with still, ^S ^r Reg 8.95 Gallon "The taste of meat has' atile flavor compounds from others added by charcoal been traditionally preferred cooked meat. A. slurry (or broiling. So far he's identified over cereals, thougfi animal "spup") of ground beef is 49, including hydrocarbons, ELECTRIC BARBECUE flash evaporated under a vac- alcohols, esters, ethers, lac- FIRE uum. The compounds are then tones, aldehydes, sulphur collected, in traps cooled with compounds, and various ring LIGHTER liquid nitrogen and dry ice. compounds. He notes that it's starts in his research, Dr. Chang more difficult to identify "the fires 148 is assisted by a postdoctoral real McCoy," components safelyl research fellow, Dr. Sherman that contribute to flavor, than S.Lin. the ones that don't. CHARCOAL LIGHTER ON ALL FLUID F?mer directors HUFFY •s»^=WM POWER MOWERS «s£s •:*<>, Portable Eraiieis and Hibadus w. ^. Y *•* * ^3 FLOOR MODEL Install Juska 50-7 oz. FOAM CUPS CLEARANCE! final LEONARDO - The Mon- mouth and Ocean County Fu- HOTORCOID neral Directors Association, reductions meeting in Beacon Hill Coun- try' Club, installed Mrs. Ann r M. Juska, funeral director at: -' f all the Flock Funeral Home, Long Branch, as president: Others installed by Everett summer Johnessee, second vice presi- IFIRST QUALITY WOOD PANEL SALE!! dent of the New Jersey Funer- al Directors Association, were suits Howard Ely of Neptune, vice president; William P. Walton 32x84 dacron & wool 3rd, Asbury Park, secretary- DAWN-CASCADE treasurer; Glenn DeBow, ONE PRICE! reg. $95 Jackson, and Robert Worden, NEW SELECTION SUNSET 50 Red Bank, trustees. Others participating in the 4x7 Your.. 4x8 PANELS 57 ceremonies were Silvio Failla, PANELS • GLACIERWHITE* DRIFTWOOD executive secretary, and Choicer 4x7 now *## Mildred M. Damiano, pasti • BAHADRIFTWOOD* HERMITAGE president, of the state organi- NEW SELECTION 68 other suits - zation, and Vincent Powell, a Mrs. Ann M. Juska WALNUT* CASCADE AVOCADO member of the State Board of • ALPINE WHITE* WHITE MIST VINTAGE 2 | now 30% to 50% off neral director's license in 1964 SUNTAN-CHATEAU Mortuary Science. and has been active in affairs • MONTEGO Mr. and Mrs. H. Laurence of the Monmouth and Ocean 4x8 PANELS sport coats Scott Jr., owners of the Scott County Association, the N.J. 88 4x8 Funeral Home, Belford, were Funeral Directors Associ- >88| blazers hosts. ation, and the National Funer- > Panel Mrs. Juska, the first woman al Directors Association. She Choice! Choice! CARAMEL reg. $70 to $85 member of the two-county or- served as chairman of the ganization, is a graduate of ladies activities committee at • 00 the class of 1963 of the Ameri- the national convention in At- Crossbuck 12"x36"xy2" now 48 can Academy of Funeral Ser- lantic City and was a New Aluminum Combination LUMBER SPECIALS vice, New York City, where Jersey delegate to the nation- Storm & Screen Door 1"«2"FinRING she received special honors. al conventions in Detroit, IV THICK-EXTRA DARK STRIPS •O Un. Ft. Mich., Portland, Ore., and STRENGTH-TROUBLE FREE She received the Thomas 1 Acrylic Wlnta-Lifotime Coating summer M. Quinn Memorial Award for New Orleans, La. 7 Crinrloi'izcd Screen Wiro CORK 2"x3" nc the graduate who "through Mrs. Juska and her hus- WALL STUDS. U Lin. Fi. slacks her active participation in stu- band, Francis, lifelong resi- >88 5/8"it12" dent activities and her inter- FLAKE BOARD 1 Q< dents of Long Branch, have SHELVING I O Un. Ft. est in her fellow students is just moved to their new home ea 40% off most deserving of such recog- at 219 Comanche Drive, BASEMENT nition" and also the New York Oceanport. They have two WHITE PINE FIRST QUALITY State Funeral Directors Asso- daughters, Mrs. Jerome B. JALOUSIE ECONOMY WHITE ciation award for the gradu- Flora 3rd of Succasunna and ate who "in the judgment nf Mrs. Carl J. Gallina of Ocean- SHUnERS 12x12 T.J. her fellow students and facul- WINDOWS Fabric louver frame. port; and six'grandchildren. 32yj"x13V4- 6x16 »iro ty best typifies the highest Mrs. Juska is the daughter CEILING TILE ideals of the funeral service of the late Mr, and Mrs. Jo- 1.K '88 McMAHON'S profession. She also served as seph J. Kicrnan. She is sister Volu* ea » 12' VALUE' Rt. 34 Colts Nock her class secretary. She is of Sheriff Paul Kicrnan and Oppoaite Delicious Orchard! also a graduate of the Star of the Rev. Benjamin J. Kier- the Sea Academy, Long nan, stationed at St. Andrews 431-1515 Branch. PERGAMENT HAZLET: RT. 35 and POOLE AVE. OptnDoaylO-6;W»d.trri.'til9 Indian Mission, Pcndleton, Mrs. Juska received her fu- Ore. -I, j> in Mobile Homes By JIM McCORHICK lage proves that a Jot more Also included in the month- to plan for the future," Mrs. they had lived 45 years. They, than terminology has ly rent is the municipal tax. Jardot said. said that they sold their home MARLBORO - When the changed: An entirely new Although the streets in the 4 "This is wonderful, it is too because the children bad all kids are all grown and mar- concept has been parlayed community have no names, bad that there are not more married, and the taxes were ried, many middle aged into a tranquil community mail is delivered daily'to mo- parks available for older beginning to get too high. people are faced with paying with well kept lawns and no bile homes, each of which has people... to build or buy a The Donnellys' paid 110,000 constantly increasing taxes on vandalism. a number. small house is almost an im- for their 64-foot long home large empty homes. . This mobile home commu- Mr. Diffendale said that all' possibility," she said. with two bedrooms, and they Looking forward to retire- nity is almost entirely hidden of the mobile homes in the Mrs. Jardot and her hus- have made an effort to make ment, many of these couples from Crine Road, and is ap- park were purchased from the band, who is a foreman at Na- it lived in and similar to their want to sell their homes and proached by riding slowly Holly Hill firm, which trans- tional Lead Industries' Sayre- previous home. Their garden utilize the equity they have in- over a wide, bumpy road. And - ports the home to the park. ville plant, bought the home sports a rose trellis, and a vested some other way. The "•when you enter the park, the Parking spaces for two cars for $12,000 two years ago. The garden in which they grow first thought is usually to first thing seen is a 64-foot come with each plot, and the basic mobile home has two corn, cucumbers, tomatoes move into an apartment, but mobile home set on a very property is seeded the first ' bedrooms, a large modern and other vegetables. for the people who want to well landscaped corner plot. year without charge. bath, large kitchen with a "We know how tp sur- continue "puttering around" That view is characteristic Chandler Sorles, the park's comfortable dining area, and vive ... I spent most of my in their gardens, apartment of all 104 mobile homes. After co-owner, said that most of a living room expanded to 19 life learning how," Mr. Don- life is not the answer. speaking to four residents, it's the homes cost between $7,000 feet wide by the addition of an nelly said. to addition,* elderly people easy to see why. . and $14,000, and added that expanding room. Mr. Donnelly, framed by an paying often exorbitant rents Peter P. Diffendale, a re- many residents choose to add The Jardots also added a unlined face, spoke of life be- often get no return on their tired artist, manages the park rooms. 12-foot wide "ranch room," ' fore coming to the park. monthly investment. Con- for the owners, the same men He said that the park caters and a screened-in porch, "I was serving on a masted ' dominium apartments are who own Holly Hill Mobile to older people, keeping the which runs the length of the sailing ship before I was 17, considered, but the monthly Home Sales, South Amboy, amount of children to the min- home. The entire home is car- and served in the Army dur- maintenance is often more and Holly Hill Mobile Home imum so as not to burden the peted, and sports artificial ing World War I," he said." than the rent on corporation- Terrace in Hazlet. Mr.' and township's school system. wood paneling accenting com- "Before I switched from owned apartments. Mrs. Diffendale live in a 64- Pointing to a continuing de- fortable early American furni- the Army to the Air Force, I There is another alterna- foot long, 12-foot wide trailer mand for mobile homes, Mr. ture. was injured and while recu- with an office attached to the " Register. Staff Photo tive, but it often involves set- Sorles said that "they would The home, which requires perating in a field hospital in FOOD FOR SURVIVIAL —Mr. and Mrs. Hal B. Donnelly examine the ting aside unfavorable pre- side. • sell like hotcakes if there little outside maintenance due England, I met the nurse who products of their garden located next to their 64 foot long mobile home. conceived views: Mobile Mr. Diffendale, sitting on a were places to put them." He to the aluminum siding, is was to become Mrs. Don- Mr. Donnelly, 82 years old, characterised the mobile home park as a home communities, pre- concrete patio overlooking his said that another 35 acres re- centrally heated and air con- nelly," Mr: Donnelly said. "beautiful place. . .we have decided to make our last stand here." viously known as trailer landscaped lawn, explained main to be developed in the ditioned. Mrs. Donnelly chimed in: parks. that the trailer park was tract. "They all said we would be "Of course you could tell I Answer Found bought two years ago by the Not for Travel sorry without a big house, but was a Limey ... we were More than 104 famines, con- present owners. It then was Mr. Sorles said that the mo- it just isn't so.. .we couldn't both in the 'World War,' and sisting predominately of called Hoffman's Trailer bile homes actually are not be happier," Mrs. Jardot said. we will be married 52 years middle aged couples, have Park, and consisted of 18 purchased for travel, but "for Down the blacktopped this year." THEDMLY found the answer by living in small trailers. an economical way to live." street a bit sits the mobile Mr. Donnelly, after he re- Wickatunk Village, an adult Park Grows He said that residents include home of Hal B. Donnelly, and tired from Reaction Motors i f mobile home community lo- The manager said that accountants, teachers, nurses, immediately upon entering as an engineer, worked for cated on 15 acres off Crine there are now 104 mobile s : the lived-in home, the visitor the township of Parsippany- RED BANK, NJ. THURSDAY, AUGUST 12,1971 15 Road. homes in the park, which av-' between the ages of 45 and 60, is put at ease by the affable Troy Hills. He finally retired The word trailer park con* erage.64 feet by 12 feet and as wen as retired couples. couple. • in 1957, but has found hobbies jures up visions of vagabond are situated on 52-by 80-foot Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jardot But there is one thing that to keep him busy, - loafers, who pitch camp one lots. Residents nave to pay $60 live in a 12-by 64-foot mobile separates the Donnellys from, "I am an amateur photo- week and move in the dead of a month in rent, which; in- home on a well landscaped their neighbors: Both are over grapher, and we both enjoy night soon thereafter. But the cludes water and sewer costs. corner. Their reasons for 80 years old, and view their tending the garden," lie said. trailer industry is now trying The park has its own sewer moving here are typical of life in the park as their "last "It's quiet and peaceful to change the image of all plant and lines. Residents - other park residents. stand." here... you meet all kinds of that by calling their trailers must pay for their electricity,' "We had a large bouse, and Mr. and Mrs. Donnelly classes... and it is here we mobile homes. but garbage is collected twice after the kids got married, we moved here two years ago have decided to make our last One visit to Wickatunk Vii- weekly without charge. had no use for it and decided from Rainbow Lakes, where stand," Mr. Donnelly said. Volunteers Aid Helpless By FLORENCE BRUDER "But there arent enough of teer comes into the picture, can't cut grass, shovel snow gaps with volunteers from all Last of a Series the latter," said Mrs. Karl. adopting a grandparent at a or keep up home repairs," over the county," Mrs Karl Mrs. Phyllis Backover and nursing home, or establishing -Mrs. Pearl Brown, adminis- said. "There's much to be NEW SHREWSBURY - Mrs. Rhoda Goldstein, adult rapport with a wheel-chair trative supervisor of family done, but we're not dis- "There's a 90-year-old black services supervisors for the patient at home by being what Services, said. "Then we get couraged. Human life has woman in a nursing home who board, said there's no diver- we call 'a friendly visitor.' " complaints about run-down sucti importance we're proud only finished the eighth gence of confidentiality be- Mrs. Karl pointed out. bouses. It's a vicious circle." to be a part of this effort in grade," Mrs. Marilyn Karl, tween volunteer and patients. "The community must un- "We're trying to fill the behalf of the deserving poor." coordinator of volunteers for "And, for the elderly and derstand who these worthy the Monmouth County Wel- disabled who are able to live clients are before we get con- fare Board, recounted. "The at home," they said, "the centrated help," she contin- volunteer assigned to her got need is outstanding. ued. "They're intelligent hu- her interested in reading, and Phones Go Out man beings, often proud and now we can't keep her sup- "Under the new flat grant, always in real need. If you Register Staff Photo plied with books." which went into effect July 1 come once to help, you'll WEST END QUEEN — Maria Motto, 8, of 122 Hulick Ave., Long Branch, . Working with the elderly and allows $142 a month to the come back." right, was named Little Miss West End at a city Recreation Department and disabled is the third offer- single elderly or disabled per- Men Sought ' contest in West End School last night. Runners-up in the event were Don- ing to area volunteers under son living at home, minus So- "At the Montgomery Home, na Motto, 7, ttie winner's sister, left, and April Keller, 8, of Hampton St. the expanded program at the cial Security, our clients at for example, we're looking for The contest was open to girls aged 4 to 11. welfare board. home are deprived of such men to fill the big brother im- Balance Required simple things as a telephone," age. . .that is, to come nights Mrs. Elizabeth Wright, su. said Mrs. Elizabeth Nelson, ° and weekends to assist the pervisor of nursing homes, R.N., supervisor of the health men in wood working, ceram- Say Group Petitions said "We need a balanced ser- services unit. ics, reading." vice to meet the need. New "We used to have volunteer This summer, there's a Jersey's making it mandatory telephoners," Mrs. Karl ex- young touch at the Montgom- Back Industrial Park for welfare boards to have plained, "who called these ery Home: in addition to oth- volunteer units and the pro- people on the phone to offer er activities aided by young MIDDLETOWN - Several ing of the River Plaza Civic dustrial park. fessional staff's grateful for them encouragement and see people, wheelchair bowling . civic associations are begin- Association in the River Plaza The zoning ordinance for the help." if there was any emergency. has become a popular diver- ning to circulate petitions in firehouse, Applegate and Fos- the area, prepared by the zon- Now the simple pleasure of a sion. support of the proposed indus- ter Sts., said petitions are ing subcommittee of the Plan- Clients are deployed in the two county homes, the Ger- telephone is withdrawn, mak- Impossible, you say? Not at trial park in the Red Hill sec- being placed in various stores ning Board, is to be presented ing more necessary then ever all. tion of the township, accord- and other commercial estab- to the full Planning .Board at aldine L. Thompson Home in Allenwood and the John L. the visit of the volunteer to It's set up systematically ing to the head of the Industri- lishments by several of the as- its Aug. 18 meeting. It is then the client's house." and girls and boys help out al Development Task Force. sociations. to be presented to the Town- Montgomery Home in Free- From a nursing home, they the eager sportsmen. Mrs. The River Plaza Civic Asso- ship Committee, which will in- hold, as well as in private B. G, Tipton, Task Force don't always nave a house to Karl's delighted with the re- ciation, . after hearing a pre- troduce it and hold a public homes. chairman, addressing a meet- return to. sponse. sentation by Mr. Tipton and hearing. "We can't pay their rent or As to the intricacies of the other Task Force members on Party Set ., If it is approved by the utilities or insurance while volunteer world, Mrs. Karl ex- the proposal to rezone the Township Committee after they're away," Mrs. Backover plained that the caseworker For Sterner Beekman-Gulick farms area the public hearing, it is to go said. "Their furniture can't be makes the recommendation for light industry, office build- OAKHURST - William R. back to the Planning Board stored and we're losing liens for one, and no one's assigned ings and research facilities, "Ed" :Kiely Jr., president of for final consideration. on insurance and property. without the full consent of the took the matter of possible en- Monmonth Council of Boy Mr. Tipton stressed that It's a poor system for the tax- client. dorsement under consid- Scouts, has announced that one of the requirements for payer, as confinement to a "And we put the volunteer eration. Register Staff Photos Kendall H. Lee, vice president the zoning recommended by nursing home is, in the end, straight to work, always Several association mem- CONCERNED PROFESSIONALS - Mrs, Phyllis of the council, will serve as the Task Force is that the more expensive than main- . trying to place him or her in a bers who asked for details on Backover, left, and Mrs. Rhoda Goldstein, adult chairman of a committee to Planning Board require site taining their own residences." situation near their own specific types of development service supervisors for AAonmouth County Wel- arrange for a "E. Donald plan approval for every facil- Rationale lilt homes, or spots they choose." that, would be allowed were fare Board, contact volunteers to help elderly and Stemer Appreciation Night" ity considered for the industri- "The rationale, of the sys- "We need the volunteer," told that, no matter what type disabled in private and boarding homes. dinner Oct. 9. al park. tem is wrong," Mrs. Goldstein Mrs. Florence Rothenberg, of business or industry was Mr. Sterner, of Colts Neck During a slide presentation added. "If it weren't for the administrative supervisor of approved for the park, all and Belmar, retired this year showing the types of ratables backbone of the volunteer adult and health services, ex- would have to meet high con- after serving 31 years as pres- contemplated for the pro- corps, our services would be pounded. "This new flat Union Beach Bond struction, design and buffer ident of Monntouth CouncU. posed industrial park, Stanley really severely limited." grant's making several of our standards. Invitations will be limited U. Bauder, Task Force vice Many elderly and disabled clients nearly ready to com- Several Task Force mem- to 600 guests. Presentation to chairman, pointed out that, as clients have no families to mit suicide because of worry. Ordinance Is Due bers stressed that the unit; an Mr. Sterner will be made by it is now zoned, The Beek- help them, or they are too far The volunteer's a life-saver, arm of the Economic Devel- By ED WALSH could talk about the things Irving Feist, national presi- man-Gulick site could be used away to be of any aid. 'literally." opment Commission (EDC), for several hundred homes. the administration has accom- dent of the Boy Scouts, and by Mrs. Elizabeth Nelson "This is where the volun- "Our clients, if living home, UNION BEACH - Perhaps has recommended strict con- Other Task Force members plished, but it's 1971 we are J. Fred Billett, regional scout the greatest step toward prog- trols on construction and of who spoke were Ellis. S. Vie- concerned with because we executive, Region I and for 17 ress will be realized tonight all forms of pollution in the in- ser and Fred Richardson. have been forced to live with years the scout executive of when Borough Council in- this sewer problem for a long Monmouth Council. Holmdel School Bids troduces a $3 million bonding longtime." ordinance for construction of Youth Charged Arrest 4 Youths a sanitary sewerage collection The borough is a part of the system. three-town (Hazlet, Union In Radio Theft Three days into the new Beach and Holmdel) Bay- shore Sewerage Authority, but .HAZLET - Louis Koos, 18, In Assault Case Accepted by Board year last January Mayor Al- will run its internal sewerage of 37 Annapolis Drive was fred T. Hennessy Jr. asked MIDDLETOWN - Four them with eggs. system as a corporate utility HOLMDEL - Following a time that the specifications completion in early 1973, is residents to "say a little pray- charged yesterday with the . youths have been arrested Arrestea were Kenneth in the same manner the water stormy recess lasting one could have been written in er that we see the start of our larceny of an $80 radio from and a fifth is still being sought Janson and his twin brother Michael Riesz & Co., Fords, department is run. hour, the Holmdel Board of such a way as to. save more sewer program this year." Genovese Drugs, Rt. 35, Po- in an assault Tuesday after- Robert, both 18, of 40 Maple- $2,943,700. The school board Education awarded general money. The start will be tonight Up to one-third of the total lice Lt. Roy Hilton reported. noon on two young women, in- wood Drive. Two 16-year-old has ISO days to consider an construction and special ser- -.During the recess, two ab- option to deduct $31,000 for a when the first part of a series cost is anticipated in state The alleged larceny oc- cluding a police department juveniles were also arrested and federal funds to finance vice bids to five New Jersey sent board members arrived road and parking lot giving of schedules is met. After its curred Aug. 4. The youth was employe, on Half Mile Road in and a fifth youth is being the project. firms. and when the meeting began introduction, the ordinance released in $50 bail pending an Lincroft. sought. All were charged with access to the tennis courts. Aug. 18 court hearing. assault and battery. The recess was called only again, the full board was will go to the state Municipal In 1968 Mayor Hennessy, Detective Capt. Robert The two 18-year-olds were minutes into the meeting, tak- present. The members voted 5 There is an additional deduc- Finance Commission and the who has championed the sew- Political Cure Works Letts said the girls, Joyce released in $100 bail each for ing precedence over a motion to 3 to defeat the Kinkadc mo- tion of $9,000 which the board state Department of Health er cause since taking office, by Board Vice President 'tion to hold all bids for further RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) - Cherney, who is a secretary a court hearing Monday. The could avail itself of within the for review and recommenda- said he went to Trenton "beg- George S. Kinkadc Jr. to re- study. There wjas one absten- Juscellno Kubitschck, presi- with the department, and her juveniles were released to 150-day grace period. If the tion. ging for funds that would stop ject all bids and study them tion. The board then moved to dent of Brazil in 1956-fil, has friend, Barbara Collins, both their parents. The four were board chooses to deduct both A public hearing will not be this community from living in further. Mr. Kinkadc said he consider the general construc- told a newspaper he is "total- of Middletown, were bicycling arrested yesterday morning the options, the cost of the scheduled until Sept. 23.. filth." had not seen the construction tion bid. ly cured of the intoxication of along the road at 9:20 p.m. by Sgt. William J. Halllday general construction would be During reorganization day His efforts will become a specifications until Monday The general contractor for politics" and doing well as an when five youths pulled up and Detective Richard Delck- subsequently reduced to activities earlier this year, partial reality tonight when evening and believed at this the high school, scheduled for investment banker. alongside in a cor and pelted mann. $2,903,700. Mayor Hennessy stated, "I the ordinance is introduced, Nudes in Pool House Will Aid Arthritics By Marguerite Henderson where - being addressed and chase* prevailed. After din- Haven, is president of the alphabetically filed, with en- ner, paintings of particular in- foundation's New Jersey The Art for Arthritis com- velopes licked and ready to be terest or esteem are auc- Chapter, founded in 1952. The mittee met yesterday at tea stamped and sent. In essence tioned in the main dining' chapter is especially inter- time at the Rumson estate of they bid one be present on the room. Then there will be ested in the Juvenile Arthritis Mr. and Mrs. William G. date and in the place afore- something to dance about. Treatment Center at the New' Wrightson Jr. There were mentioned for a sale and auc- Another something to dance Jersey College of Medicine about 25 nudes in the pool tion of original paintings, pro- about would be the total an- (where services are available' house! ceeds of which will go to the swer (cause, prevention, to any juvenile arthritic) and It could have been a shock- Arthritis Foundation, New cure) to the scourge of arth- completely supports a Diag- ing situation excent that those Jersey Chapter. It's a black ritis - the nation's number nostic, Evaluation and Treat- nudes were line drawings - tie affair featuring com- one crippler, afflicting 17 mil- ment Center at Children's clever, whimsical, crazy plimentary cocktails at 7:30 lion men, women aad chil- Specialized Hospital in Moun- drawings done by Mrs. p.m. and dinner at 9 p.m. dren. tainside, where services are Wrightson, chairman of the Mrs. Wrightson's key aides available to any state resi- Monmouth County Committee are Mrs. Kurt Hofmann, That is the aim of the Arth- dent, upon referral by his phy- of the Arthritis Foundation's Countess Anatole Buxhoeve- ritis Foundation, founded in^ sician. Fees are nominal and state chapter (and a really den, Mrs. I. Ralph Fox and 1948 as the Arthritis and' no one is refused service if talented artist), by couturier Mrs. Bernard B. White. They Rheumatism Foundation. Be- unable to pay. The state chap- Enrico of Enrico-Crista, Al- were all there looking wildly tween 1938 and '64 the Nation- . ter also supports professional lenhurst (you all know how chic in their pants ensembles. al Foundation (earlier known education in the arthritis creative he is), by a Con- Locally, this is the fourth as the National Foundation field, provides public educa- necticut doctor friend of the annual Art for Arthritis ben- for Infantile Paralysis) also tion aids and forums and Wrightsons (who put his ana- efit. It all started at the worked in the area of arth- maintains an inquiry and re- tomy lessons to good use) and Wrightson estate (14 woodsy ritis. In fact Dr. Arthur Sabin ferral service at 26 Prospect by Mr. and Mrs. William H. acres on the banks of the Na- was working on arthritis when St., Westfield, to provide in- Borden, Rumson (and all vesink River) in October, he discovered the vaccine that formation and guidance for along I thought music was 1968, when a Saturday after- bears his name and helped arthritic people. . , their thing). noon art auction and sale was bring about an end to polio. The Monmouth Committee, Register staff Photo The black ink outlines of held outdoors. Next fall, the When the National Foundation through Art for Arthritis, aids ART FOR ARTHRITIS — Mrs. William G. Wrightson Jr., right, holds one of her original paintings that the form divine - all female, action moved to Mr. and Mrs. withdrew from work on arth- in all these areas. And that's a She Is giving for the Sept. 17 benefit in Rod's Shadowbrook, Shrewsbury, as Mrs. William H. Borden, please note, women's lib John Lenhart's "Squirrel ritis, the new Arthritis Foun- very pleasing picture. •.-' left, and Mrs. 1. Ralph Fox study a Rouault print of the crucifixlorcdonated by Mrs. John Lenhart. The ladies - were done on plain Hill," also in Rumson also on dation was established in 1964. ADVERTISEMENT women are all of Romson. • • white canvas boards (5"x7" a Saturday afternoon. Last The American Rheumatism maybe?) and sparked up with year's party was a Friday Association; a society of phy- dashes of purple and hot pink night formal in the Shadow- sicians and scientists working paint. They will be used as brook. ' • in the arthritis field, is a sec- OVERWEIGHT part of the centerpieces on tion of the Arthritis Founda- Odnncx caivhclp you.rkcome the trim Cleaning for a Decade This year's format will fol- slim person you want W be. Odrlnex is Friday, Sept. 17 when the low 1970's. That means that tion. '--,, By FLORENCE BRUDER sey, the Red Bank store is a service all under one roof. thing is thoroughly cleaned, a tiny tablet and easily swallowed. Con' arthritis benefit settles in a paintings and artwork do- Interestingly, Charles B. tains no dangerous drugs. No flawing. pioneer in many ways. According to Mrs. Bal- as hundreds of satisfied cus- very chic "joint" - Rod's RED BANK - A decade The village is fully attended nated by professionals and Harding; Rumson, is presi- No special exercise. Get rid or excess dridge, pressing is now includ- tomers will testify: Shadowbrook, Shrewsbury. amateurs alike will be dis- dent of the Arthritis Founda- fat and live longer. Odrinex Ijas been ago, Mrs. T. B. Baldridge and by cheerful personnel (Mrs. ed in the dry cleaning depart- Three years ago the corpo- (Arthritis -joint -you DO get used successfully by thousands all over William H. Zillger established Baldridge says she receives played, price tags attached, in tion. ... ':;yv'>?:V:.:: ;.,'. ment and the coin-operated ration won a silver Revere it don't you, Rod)? the room to the left of the Interesting also,' from a the country (or over It years. Odrlntx an entirely new concept in complimentary comments costs $3.25 and the large economy size laundry boasts a wash-dry- bowl for being the "Village The attractive lavender and Shadowbrook entrance. Last Monmouth viewpoint, is that laundry and dry cleaning in about capabilities of her per- J5.25.You must lose ugly fat or your and-fold accommodation. with the most improve- pink invitations were every- year lots of cocktail hour pur- Frederick W. Hose, Fair an innovative business at 117 sonnel wherever she goes) ments." And it has never moneywillbereiundedbyyourifruggiit. Monmouth St. and managed by Mrs. Betty Costs, Mrs. Baldridge says, No questions asked. Accept no -lib- stopped, having been cited stituto. Sold with ihb guarantee- by: It was the Norge Automatic Zillger, wife of one co-owner, are cut by 50 to 75 per cent for several times in the National On Vacation Dry Cleaning and Laundry and sister-in-law of the other. the customer in this simplified tlTTlC SILVER FAMILY PHARMACY • concept of the past mysteries Coin-Op Magazine which Food columnist Margot 10 CHURCH 5T. 4 SHRiWSBURY Village, and today it's a hub Customers don't have to made the award. Smith is on vacation. Her col- PHARMACY • SHREWSBURY SHOPS • of activity for economy and process their own items and of the cleaning processes. All Abused Pair umn will resume when she re- BROAD ST. SHREWSBURY , MAI1 value-minded housewives, ca- they flock to the busy corner fabrics can be handled ex- . Mrs. Baldridge points out turns. ORDERS FttUD reer women, bachelors and in droves. pertly, she goes on, and time that a full-time engineer is al- Dear Ann Landers: Much whose children are hostile, teen-agers. Ten years later, the busi- is an important element. ways in attendance for has been written about bat- angry and given to frequent One of the first Norge Vil- ness has expanded to the Additional services include maintenance purposes. tered children. What about tantrums, I suggest a neurolo- FOR COMPLETE lages in the state of New Jer- point where it's a complete reweaving, repairs and a shirt But largely she credits Mrs. battered parents? gical examination to deter- service. There are even two Zillger, with her talents and My husband just phoned out mine if there is a physical SALES AND SERVICE enormous washing machines efforts, for a large part of the married daughter to tell her a reason for the volatile behav- capable of handling a 9 by 12- enterprise's success. "She is family event would have to be ior. If there is no evidence of foot rug. responsible, to a measurable postponed because I have a a physical problem, by all COME TO Dainty underwear, drapes, -degree, for the Village's popu- miserable cold. She flew into means take the child to a psy- LAST 4 DAYS •cottons, wools, knits, every- larity." a rage and used language you chiatrist for an evaluation. If couldn't print. therapy is indicated, no time This girl has had a hair- should be wasted. The earlier NINTH ANNUAL trigger temper since child- the treatment, the better Mr. Harvey's hood. She has spoiled every chance for recovery. family celebration because To parents whose grown SUZANNE FASHION WIGS someone said the "wrong" children behave as your SUMMER thing to her. daughter does, I say this: stop catering to them, stop trying 558 BROAD ST. SHREWSBURY N.J. to appease them and for heav- (Next to Shrewsbury Po«t Office) . en's sake stop blaming your- Ann selves! No one knows for sure why some kids turn out beau- 741-8256 tifully and others are loused Landers up. The experts have ex- pressed a variety of theories One semester of college but nobody knows for sure. As was all she could tolerate. She I've said before, the same fire left in a huff, mad at everyone that melts butter hardens and was subsequently fired iron. from several jobs because of her temper. She was not Dear Ann Landers: Why did speaking to us when she mar- you advise the young fellow ried so we were not invited to who carried a thermometer in the wedding. Her husband is his pocket and took his own Betty exactly like her - abusive to temperature every hour to his parents, and discourages marry a nurse? Nurses don't ENDS MONDAY any contact with us because want guys who are looking for says - we are "trouble makers." medical care. What's more, being married to a nurse car- You'll probably say that Custom Collected Early ries no guarantee that he'll had we raised our daughter get it. American Furniture properly she wouldn't be this way and you could be right. My best friend, Trudie, But do you have a word of married a jeweler because comfort for us and for other she was nuts about jewelry. Modern cosmetic cfernists haye cottiS up with EsIIi Hack. parents who are completely Her husband bought her many a number of near-miracles in the preparation of ON ROUTE 14 431-1778 3 alienated from their children? lovely pieces but she couldn't skin care products that assure surface smooth- keep anything long enough to Open Friday Night'ill 9:»» We need it. - Walled Off ness besides doing a marvelous job of healing > OTS*-^' enjoy it. Whenever anyone ad- Dear W.O.: Your daugh- and lubricating. These new discoveries aid in s. Register Stall Photo mired a ring on Trudie's fin- ter's hostility, her inability to penetrating the skin with ingredients.that are' TEN-YEAR MARK — Mrs. William H. Zillger get along with other relatives ger, or a watch, or a pin or gives special attention to a 10-year rubber plant and friends, her conflicts in earrings, Sam sold it right off essential for growth and normal health of the she received when Norge Automatic Dry Cleaning school and in the work world, her. Sometimes she'd say, skin. • ...... , . . and Laundry Village opened in Red Bank In 1961. are all symptoms of a severe "But Sam, this was your anni- BORO BUSSES CO. versary present—" He'd If you'd like help for your skin. Stop in and personality disorder. This girl is more than ornery, she's reply, "I can get you another talk to Betty at the Little Silver Family Pharmacy. HOLIDAY TOURS sick - and she's been sick for one within two weeks." Some- It's a free service. • a long time. < thing always happened and It's useless to tell you now she never got the replace- what you should have done 20 ment. years ago, but for the parents Trudie and Sam were di- vorced two years ago. She LITTLE SILVER BOWERY AND CHILDREN'S WEAR GALLERY PROGRAM married a tax lawyer in De- SHREWSBURY - Sculptor cember and now she really FAMILY PHARMACY Herman Holzm'aiv tieal, will does have beautiful jewelry! 10 Church St. LITTLE SILVER present "The Parallels Be- - London Observer 741-1121 Advance Rosorvntions tween Art and Music" Friday Dear London: It is said that required, call at 8:30 p.m. here in the Guild the shoemaker's sons go bare- John Fitlerer 741-0667 of Creative Art, 620 Broad St. foot. Thanks for the evidence. One-Day Tours LAISCASTER COUNTY, Penna...... 815.50 ANNUAL Include* family ityle dinner at Plain and Fancy Farm, ride on LAWN SALE Ihc SlnuburK Steam Railroad, visit to Kitchen Kclll*-. Aug.2l(Sal)Uav«8:00».m. Upholstery, Drapery Some Hot Tips For Cool Serving and Slip Cover Fabrics, HERSIIKY, PENNA 810.20 Furniture, etc... Baby's first toddling steps come easier in shoes that don't restrict natural Make any easy dessert look spectacular—sorvo it in a parfait An opportunity to vinit the Chocolate Factory, so* ibe Roue toot action. It's a moment ot triumph lor baby and a moment of truth for Bod Rooms • Bedding • Dining glass. Prepare in advance and store in refrigerator or freez- er. Gardens, visit the 1'rnn.ylvmiia Folk Festival, and tlw Aniline- his shoes. Because his shoes should Rooms • Decorating • Uphol- stered Furniture • Carpeting • menl I'arl. be designed to be soft and flexible with just enough support to keep him Tnbtos • Oraparies • Slip Covers Serve your salads and relishes in a lucite server with a dome Aug. 25 (Wcl) l/-,,vrs S:.!0 a.m. moving on a straight path. Buntobs. • Restorations • Rnpairs • cover. Put crushed ico in tho bottom and your food will stav cool and deliciously fro3h. The permissive baby shoo. Made To Order Furniture • Weekend Tour Cloaning Sorvico • floclining Chairs Keep your iced drinks frosty in our insulated (jlassos (which NEW ENGLAND IN AUTUMN 854.75 have a great new look this yoarl) INTERIOR DECORATING Oct. 15, 16, 17l«-iivf»7s00a.in. Come to JAMIAN to shop in cool comfort. Havo a cold soda Cuatom-Made Slipcovers, 1 Includes Mntel ocrnmnioilniioiM for two night* (two per room) Drnno» and Upholstery on the house and collect moro hot lips for cool serving. admission* to Mystic Sinporl, I'liwotb Plantation, Slur- Reupholitering and Ipridgt, Tour nf MI>M..II. Repairing of All Kind* LITTLE SILVER Touri Loave: Quality Apparel from Head Io Joe UPHOLSTERY & DRAPERY gifts 264 Norwood Avc. BORO BUSSES COMPANY LITTLE SILVER SHOPPING CENTER c By ELEANOR MARKO the knees and others graze wool gabardine coat perked Oscar de la Renta's three- Wwnea's News Editor the ankles. Never are they military fashion with brass piece outfit called "Some- gaudy. And, they are sublime buttons, and its navy and lav- thing" was a pleated grey - SHREWSBURY - Call it for the chilled boned type. ender print Thai silk bodice flannel skirt, white crepe de classic-feminine- Long-sleeved and paired with navy wool gabardine chine white blouse and double wearable-the fashion look with matching jackets or skirt to match the coat. An- breasted blazer in charcoal, for fall' is a munificent word coats, the dresses shown in- other dress in red wool had a red and white plaid. Blazers gatherer. cluded Harve Benard's navy brief jacket. are in. They are shown with Pronouncing it to per- pants and skirts. , fection, a new collection of El- Mrs Eileen Susser, owner of sie Stone, Red Bank, was the fashion shop, selected all presented yesterday for 100 the clothes shown at yes- enthusiastic women at the terday's show, with the com- summertime Scholarship Ben- mentary presented by Mrs. efit luncheon and fashion Marjorie Preston. As Mrs. show of the Monmouth County Susser sees it, and there was Chapter of the Marymount full agreement yesterday, College Alumnae Association. "The pants dress look is out, Staged at Rod's Shadow- pants are "in" but worn in brook, the show exploited with separates and there is a re- acumen the fabric and color turn to the very feminine, soft consciousness of fashion de- look and very wearable." signers for today's women. Hong Kong knits and velvet Mindful of milady's prefer- - cut, plain or pleated in ence for unpretentiousness brown, plum, and "black and and the furor over hemlines white is never wrong," were abandoned, designers such as prevalent in the collection. Malcolm Starr herald a new Fake furs were in double image that screams prac- breasted styles. ticality. Some demurely cover Gossamer sari silk and old fashioned chain's presented fabric contrasts. Often shot with gold threads, the sheer fabric was seen in evening dresses in subtle colors and the challis was presented in a print top dress with check skirt and demure neck ruffle. final There was no deserting of the hot pants. They were im- pressively cooled down with reductions matching skirts. Slits in skirts for fluidity of line most dra- all siimmer matically was in the climax presentation of Malcolm Starr's ankle-length coach- fashions man's coat of candlelight sat- in collared with mink and now worn with a brown wool crepe deep cut sleeveless gown guaranteed to gather words and wows. But, for an entirely new look, it was the three- piece evening outfit by Kas- per for J.L. Sport, a new divi- Register Staff Photos by Don Lord I sion of Loan Leslie showing, _ PERFECTLY FITTING — For town, Norma Sterner models a three-piece plaid outfit in charcoal and for the first time this season. red, and Gail Shilling, Red Bank, a two-piece navy wool coat and print top dress. For nijjht life Mar- An original sample, the gown gery May, Oakhurst, models a mink-collared candlelight satin coat and brown wool crepe, gown. The sported a velvet blazer with fall fashions from Elsie Stone, Red Bank, were shown at yesterday's summertime luncheon of the plaid lapels and cuffs and Marymount College Alumnae Association, Monmouth County, for the benefit of its scholarship fund. NIGHT LIFE GLAMOUR — Long dresses for af- matching plaid long skirt shot ter five from the new fall collection of Elsie with gold threads for luster. Stone, Red Bank, include black velvet blazer with There's a soft green silk predominantly green plaid and matching skirt blouse to go with it. Call it modeled by Toby Lowenstein, Deal, and glittering versatile. And, call your hus- Layaway Sale! sari cloth dress worn by Norma Sterner, Wall band. Township. a small deposit will hold til needed! OF COLTS NECK *n t * ^ ^ Charge-it Sale! ' use your Youth Center charge "tfrrs.r.r Benefits May Await You' and you can pay in October or November Route 34 # Open Friday Eveningt ASBURY PARK - Young severe injury or illness, may for disability benefits if in the l»W46iW120 mothers, who have become be eligible for monthly social five year period before her unable to work because of a security benefits for them- marriage, she worked steadily It's now or never! After Septem- selves and for their children, under social security. If there ber 1-andi for the remainder of according to James J. Caiv- are children, it's possible that the season—every garment will ano, district manager of the they also might be eligible for be back at the regular prices shown! BARE SPACE ON social security office in As- monthly payments." THE WALL? bury Park. For further information Every sale-priced coat and jacket "It isn't generally known," about the disability require- GIRLS' is a "Peak-of-Fall-Fashion" style in the season's most wanted and MAM A PICTURE FROM said Mr. Caivano, that young ments for young women, con- women who left the labor best wearing fabrics and col- tact your county social secu- ors—made by the best Makers in market several years ago rity office. JACKETS our markets—to our exacting KNITTERS NOOK may still be eligible." standardsl Many people think that the 26 MONMOUTH ST. RED BANK disabled person must have Out Dern Spot! been working at the time the YARN • CREWEL • NEEDLE POINT disability occurred. Actually Ball point pen marks on a the general requirement is white blouse, a shirt or a fa- 18°° that the disabled worker must vorite sweater? Fear not - have at least 5 years of work the spot comes out easily. during the 10 years before the Simply spray the portion 13" SLIPCOVERS • DRAPERIES disability became so severe as that's got the ink marks with to prevent substantial gainful hair spray before laundering. CUSTOM UPHOLSTERY work. Those disabled at age Lo and behold, the dern spot Custom Built Furniture. We have a large selection of vinyl 30 or younger need less work. is gone. (Repeat the process if and upholstery fabric in stock. \ "A good example of eligibi- it hasn't disappeared com- lity," Mr. Caivano said, pletely.) Watercolor el Marko . 208° HEADQUARTERS fOtb.Z£$&. "would be the case of a young spots are no worry at all. The woman who quit working af- ink is water soluble so just a 10-12-14 ter she got married. If she trip through the washer is all 15" DEBRA DECORATORS ££±fr should become disaWe five that's needed to make the 33 Monmouth St»«l 747-4421 Had Bank years later, she might qualify garment clean. Open Friday 'lit 9 p.m.—Tale up fo 24 months to pay BOYS' 2-IN-l PARKA Sizes 4-7 90 : Navy .•'•"'• Reg. '2O. 16 I EYE Fashions ghat get Sizes 8-16 90 Reg. '25.00 a Second look Red • 18 PENER Two distinctive looks—oxford ny- lon quilt reverses to rugged Or- Yellow , lop* acrylic pile. 4 pockets, con- vertibjs collar hood, drawstring MADE IN-U.S.A. bottom. Winter Blue, Brown, Green. Washable tubular nylon-quilt pile lined—28" instructor length—braid trim—hooded—elastic waist. Terrific value! Clearance Sale TRIM WALKING COAT Sizes 4-7 1 Q90 DRASTIC REDUCTIONS NOW! Reg. '25. Sizes 8-16 90 YOUTH You can always charge it! Reg. '30. 4& Hot Pants 842-0088 23 ! W«U EXAMPLE $191 OFF the stickerprice. BRANDNEW And that's just the start of the savings during the Good Guys' big 1971 FORD LTD ALL CARS HAVE AUTOMATIC clearance sale. You get a free automatic transmission when you buy Hardtop, automatic transmission, w|iit«wolls, air conditioned, tinted TRANSMISSION, POWER STEERING glon, vinyl roof, radio, vinyl teats, visibility group, body tide molding, their specially equipped Dart Swinger Automatic. And you get the power steering, 6-way power' seat, power window), 400 cid. engine, AIR CONDITIONING. ETC. powe> door tacks, bumper guard}, door edge guards. ' entire car at the lowest price of the year because the Dodge Boys PRICE DOES NOT INCLUDE N.J STATE want to move it Out. Nobody else gives you a package like this at $ SALES TAX & DEALER PREPARATION. such a low price. So hurry in before these cars are all gone. list (5246 -ninus 20% 4197 "Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price for ToiqucFllte automatic ttammiiiianon V6 modek~S1X.60; 6-cyllndermodels-i1B2.95. THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY ONLY! BOYS NJbAA KROLL FORD LABRIOLA TOWN & COUNTRY HOME OF LOW OVERHEAD MOTORS, INC. DODGE NEWMAN SPRINGS RD. 60 MAIN STREET 671 Broadway-LONG BRANCH RED BANK, N.J. MATAWAN, N.J. 222-3600 At I Oh* OK SALE AITOS FOB SALE AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE The Daily Register, Red Bank - Middlelovn, N.J., IhurwUy, Auguit 12,1971 21 ItM *> RU5_ eondli AMX 1969 — Four speed. Excellent condi- 1961 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE - Good condi- CADILLAC 1967 - Coupe OeVllle. Orlgl- AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE Ijim tion. Many performance ports. " tion. Snow tires. Radio, heater. Niw rear 1970 JAGUAR nal owner. New tires, stereo, olr condi- AUTOS FOR SALE window, Coll Wl-2779. 242 COUPE tioning. Excellent condition, coll 142-1(10 1949 PONTIAC FIDEIIRP — Orange, l»3 OLPSMOWLE CUTLASS , . uum ifler o p.m. white convertible top, 3-spced Hurst. 350, S7S or best offer. ,, CONVERTIBLE A> OS FOR SALE ALTOS FOR SALE 'our new tires, new clutch. Asking 11700. Coll 542-3517 AUTOS FOR SALE 1969 VOLKSWAGEN BUG — Radio, heat- Coll anytime 542-IMO. - SPECIALS For the discriminating buy- •r. Automatic, 10,000 miles. Excellent 1111 RAMBLER CLASSIC - Station er! Glacier white with black condition. 11645 firm. 747-9642. VOLKSWAGEN 1965 — Excellent running wogon. Power steering. Rodlo, heater. condition, looks like new. One owner. Ra- Creom puff. Beoutlful condition. 7*10077. All Prices Reduced buckets. Air conditioning, 4- CADILLAC 1W7 — Coupe de Vllle. Groy, dlo. Low mileage, tnt. 74l-»a. speed, chrome wire wheels, vinyl top. Factory air, AM/FM radio. Ex- JUST WON 1»7I DODGE POLARA - cellent condition. 493-2982. Reasonable. IMt VOLKSWAGEN - Convertible. Ex- INI CATALINA tins whitewalls, tinted glass all Valued at over 13100, sell lor UI00. Four- IHI PLYMOUTKaSjJRY III I12«S cellenl condition. Asking IUS0. door hardtop. 291-2462 evenings. w MUST SELL BY AUG. 10 - 1967 Vol- Call 7471550 Ml CATALINA S1S9S windows. Seat belts, heated kswagen bug. Good condition. Excellent 1947 BONNEVILLE-AIr 51595 tires Best oner. 6710165 alter 4. 1965 VOLKSWAGEN (US - 45,000 miles. 1M2 FALCON - Automailc. 59*00 miles. SPECIAL SALE rear window. AM/FM radio, Good condition. Asking S200. Thrtt MOU, »M0. Coll You Sove Now. power steering and full un- VOLKSWAGEN — 1966, with sunroof, ra- 741 3523 1971 GAIAXI! 500 dercoat. Original list $7114, dio, new engine, front end, all new brakes and drums. Newly painted, practically a 1961 CADILLAC COUPE - De Vllle. A-l 1963 GRAND PRIX — Power brakes, RASSAS PONTIAC our price $4995. brand new car. Losing money at 1925. Call condition. 1375. Must set. 14 Hudson Ave., steering, seal. Air conditioning. Excellent i Brood St. MMIIO "«< B» 4-door sedan, V-8. aulomatic radio, 739-0519 alter 5 p.m. E. Keonsburg. condition. U7S. 671-2207 alter 4 p.m. Eves, until 9. power steering, whitewall lires. Two I960 CHEVROLET — SlJf-cyMnder auto- ltffl TRIUMPH — GTe, Konl shocks, new 1919 MERCEDES BENZ — 2I0S, perfect 1969 MUSTANG — AAoch I, stondord RASSAS PONTIAC matic, A-l. Immaculate condition. Needs rodlals, IIAOO miles. Excellent condition. condition, air conditioning, 4-speea, auto- Ironsmlsslon, 11,950. I9M 8UICK RlWjro. to choose Irom, 1 green, 1 gold. 315 Broad St. T4I-SIS0 Red Bank matic transmission. Full set of new Mlich- Eves, until 9 minor transmission adjustment. S25O "as Best oiler 741-4370. olr conditioned, fully equipped, Is." Call 495-0641 or 787-1204. elln tires. 20,000 miles. 15,200. 671-1232. Coll oner 5 p.m. 244-M53. 1968 FIAT STATION WAGON JEEP — Four wheel drive. New top, tires, point. U00. 1965 CHEVROLET BEL AIR - Four-door BUICK WILDCAT — 1948 converhole. AH 26,000 miles. Family expansion. JW5. 442- DOOCE CHALLENGER 1970 - Power sedan. Air conditioned. Automatic. Power 729S. steering, power brakes, factory air. Many 142-0191 power options, Including factory olr. '2995 others. Call 787-6776 or 229-8412. steering. Excellent condition Inilde and leeds transmission work. 11100. 142-19U, 196» PONTIAC CATALINA - Four-door CHEVROLET BEL AIR - 1W1. SlonOord out. Cad 741-1447. , between 34 p.m. sedan, power steering, brakes. Excellent TWO 1949 STATION WAGONS — Ford shIH. 9130. Call after » p.m. condition. 11195. I23-M99. 8420779 otter 6. Ranch Wogon and Dodge Polora. Radio, 717175. VOLKSWAGEN CAMPER - Sleeps six. OPEL RALLYE 1970 — Encellent condi- heater, factory air. 741-4636. Corvolr engine. Chrome wheels. AM/FM tion. Must sell. Bnt offer. FORO GALAXIE 500 - 1965. Four-door l»44 TRIUMPH -TR4,6loch. wire rodlo. Metal flake brown paint. Many ex- C0IU71-MM . sedan. Power steering, brakes. Ntw tires, 1965 VOLKSWAGEN wheels. Stebro tnhaust. M0. Coll otter 4 tras. 1975 firm, 717-1595. very good condition. 741-5128. Good condition. p.m. 747 un. Call 787-5131 196? TOYOTA - Four-door, stick shift. 1971 PINTO 1MI TR 250 — Good condition. Just over- Radio. Whlfewolls. IU50. TRUCKS FOR SALE FORD GALAXIE — Eight-cylinder, four- Con 671-38(7 door. Power brakes, steering. Factory BUICK LeSABRE — 1969 convertible. hauled. 11900. Call I»M FORD PICKUP TRUCK — Good «n- Olr. 32,000 miles. J1695. 741-7364. Fire engine red with block root. Fully 2913471 alne, needs some body work. New oat- 2-dobr, 2000 cc engine, automatic powerecfand (ulty equipped, with air con- 1965 VOLKSWAGEN — Sun roof. Rodlo. JEE P — 4-wheel drive, 7? odiusloble dltlonlng. S2400.142-3242. 1970 TOYOTA CORONA — Automotlc. New front end. Good transportation. 1550 ery. »M173e after *:» weekdays, oil day transmission, whilewall tires, radio, snow plow with hydraulic lilt, ?0O amp, Approjclmotely 17,000 miles. S173O. Week- or ony*re"osonoble offer. 7B7-159S. Sat., Sun. ' bumper guards, cofor white. aencrolor or welder with power lakcoM. doysofter 5, weekends onyllmt. 741-7el2. I960 MALIBU CHEVROLET - Convert- STATION WACOM - Blue. 1964 Chevelle. USED FIFTH WHEEL - U) W best Of- Motor rebuilt spring 1971. Asking 5SS0.. ible. Asking 1700. Call 229B4J8. 1M9 CHEVY NOVA — SS 39e, four-speed. Radio. Six tires. Runs well. Best offer. er. Also IMT Chevrolet Pickup. Coll 2tl- Call after 5 p.m. 842-2977 Low mlleoge. Tope deck, FM radio. Roily Coll 747-5274 before 9 p.m. wheels. Must sell. Asking »I7M. 214-4019. WANTED AUTOMOTIVE WANTED AUTOMOTIVE KARMANN GHIA I9t5 — Excellent run- FORD PICK-UP TRUCK 1»5» - F-100 '2095 OLDSMO8IL6 - 19«2. Rtbullt Irons ning condition. Htw brokrs, front end. halt-ton. 1»» engine,. Can be seen 1« E. mission. 1250 Moving. 1550.747-0099. Shore St., Keansburo, after % p.m. Coll S42-4795 1964 MGB - Top condition. I9S< CHEVROLET — Poral truck. Good CAMARO 1941 — Four speed. 327. Trans- Phone condition. Bunk In bock. S15a or best •(• mltllon lust rebuilt. Com. 101111), Carter 291-I7U fer. Coll otter 6 p.m. 74I-(S43. • SELL YOUR CAR AFB, two mags. Netdi tune-up and *x- tioust plot. Neeo money, (Irsf JlOOO takes 1M7 FIAT — DOOR. Excellent condition INTERNATIONAL 1956 — Dump truck. II. CollSM-MH. throughout. Stereo top* deck Included. Needs work on engine. Let go rewnoble. by phone and g«t up to Mull sell. 142S. 747-4230. 1957 Ftoo FORD DUMP, rebuilt engine, DODGE DART 19«4 — Deluxe four-door. iildta tter t p.m. . Beige. Four ntw whltt ildawalls plus AUSTIN AMERICA *- Two door, lour 1971 MUSTANG snows.'Automatic. Very clean. 1500, 671 speed. 11.172. POE slightly higher with "500 fflRpR.CE im otter 7 p.m. oulomolic. Also 5pnlev Miogcfs, MOB roadsters - GT. AAG /uoroffs, Asou.-y MOTORCYCLES Grande, V-8, automatic transmission, 19e5 VOLKSWAGEN - Sunroof. Good Pork 77S 3 MOBILE HOMES HOLLY HILL MOBILE HOMES "Jtrwy't Flntlt Selection" Ftsturlna u'wlde Holly Park. Delta, Windsor, Rlti-Crott and Holiday Cottoge. Alto uttd I1 and 10' wtdts. Ideal for voca- tion homes. Optn 9 to 6 weekdays. I^P^HpBBHHHHHHHBHIBIHBHBiHBMHHMBBBaaflaleSallssssHeiMsHsSHBeSsslaHHHai Route 35 So. Amboy Phone ni-SUI- 1971 — Ont bedroom mobile home. won. to-woll carpeting In living room and bed- room. Does not hove to Be moved. S55W, 2M-5I57. 1971 CHRYSLERS & PLYMOUTHS 10' X SO' - Furnished. 12500. Unfurnished. S3O90. Call 931-5141 FACTORY PRODUCTION HAS STOPPED! DON'T MISS OUT! TWO BEDROOMS — Awnlngi and en- OVER 500 CARS AVAILABLEI-HURRY! WHILE THEY LAST! WANTED AUTOMOTIVE ' JUNK CARS A PARTIAL LISTING!! PICKED UP '71 CRICKET '71 PLYMOUTH '71 PLYMOUTH 4S TWINBROOK 4-DOOR SEDAN AUTO WRECKING '71 PLYMOUTH FURY I 2-DOOR RESENT 9-PASS. WAGON We're Cleaning House - Only J9 Left! EATON TOWN 542-2233 i-ieael' lienmiiwii, black trim All stenaale SATELLITE 4-DOORCUST. ^ ii 'Jlr V-l, paoei '71 PLYMOUTH All leaMeahf, aMaaMk, 'Jlr V4, pawn teddy equipment enf ufety feature!, AnNiMlIt, 'ill' V-l, piwH IIMIM, rate, Itaariaf, paMr •)» kralui, >«»., all Hlld FURY III 4-DOOR HARDTOP itMki, amar e)sl W An |ke«y a»ry), «la- WANTED - Choice used cars, with certi. alass, «W|I l«l, BUT NO RECRET5! V'KMOW 60METHING WHERE D'VA GET THAI I-FEEL CHEAP. "CHEAP" STUFF? LJU5T BETTV? I'VE. DEQDED THAT CHBW 15 OFF DERRy!-PARKING 5PENT A WEEK'S FUN-MONEY HIS ROCKER! ANV GUY WHO'D THROW YOU OVER FOR A GAL LIKE TIPP/ TIITON'FACT TO RENT THIS CAR.! I'VE. BEEN THINKING ABOUT SOMETHING • PRIVACy THAN WE HAD • PERMANENT FOR US! . IN THE OLD DRAGON'5 JOKES J0l<£5 M LAIR WHERE WE HAD ' B OUR FIRST MEETING.' The Wizard of Id Your Horoscope, Birthday THUBSDAY, AUGUST 12- scene, and the like. Tempera- the time allows for. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 21) Born today, you are one of mentally, you thrive on LIBRA (Sept. 24-Oct. 23) - - Time your actions expertly those lovers of travel who changes of every sort. Since you must get to Friday and you will have little would be completely happy if Determination, tenacity, duties sooner or later, it trouble persuading others of he could indulge his longing to and the patience to wait your might as well be sooner. Do the Tightness of your deci- see the world at the same turn at the same time that what you must as soon as pos- sions. time that he earned an ex- you are Johnny-on-the spot sible. ARIES (March 22-ApriI:JD) VB6,«R.-«TePRl6WT UP AMP 6TUMP PRI0HTI citing living. And, indeed,, where opportunity is con- SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Make necessary contacts such fulfillment is possible - cerned: these traits make you - Insure yourself of the tune immediately if you would; in- if you are insightful enough to a prime candidate for ex- you need for this evening's en- sure your own success inihe recognize within yourself ceptional success. You have a tertainment. Attend to the near future. Creativity pays early in life the budding cor- special bent for commerce day's chores during morning. off handsomely. respondent, the diplomat, the and could easily take the busi- SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- TAURUS (April 21-May"21) business man of international ness world by storm early in Dec. 22) - Don't decide now - Begin now to concentrate stature and then gain the kind your adulthood. Thought for- to rest on your laurels. An ex- on the next phase of your of training and education' nee* eign to many, the field of fi- cellent day for proving once climb to the top. A matt'eVfcf essary to make the dream a nance is "home" to you. more the value of your com- common sense comes in 'lor reality. Friday, August 13 pany. some scrutiny. Not one to shirk your duty Leo (July 24-Aug. 23) - A CAPRICORN (Dec. 23-Jan. GEMINI (May 22-Zune:,21) in favor of pleasure of any bright sunny day for the Leo 20) - Several offers may - You may have to buck more kind, you are a hard worker who refuses to be overly in- come your way today. Do then your competition today. with a consistently high level fluenced by his own en- your best to remain calm as Take care that you don't over- of accomplishment. But you thusiasm. Where money is you go about making a deci- do and bring a case of fatigue Andy Capp also realize that all work and concerned, curb your im- sion. upon yourself. J no play, though it may make pulses. AQUARIUS (Jan. 21-Feb. CANCER (June 22-JulyJi») -I UOK'TMEAN ) /lWOWTH«r\ss you wealthy, may also make VIRGO (Aug. 24-Sept. 23) - 19) - No more procrastinat- - A bonus day for the Cancer . TAKE A?EAT,< II -f^TAWN* 1 S life dull, and for this reason You should have ample op- ing! Do what you must do with enough foresight to see a HEH.'HEM.'HEH.'E'HEOO \™\ E CARPET/ || you are careful to provide portunity for additional without any further hemming use in some seemingly worth- yourself with periodic rests, achievement before day's and hawing. The future du- less object. Work to make total vacations, changes of end. Don't demand more then pends upon present action. ends meet - completely! Sheinwold's Bridge Advice By ALFRED SHEINWOLD experience; and he knew the dummy's jack, and declarer value of pushing the oppo- spond to an opening bid ofc2- tried another heart, losing the NT. • . • 'j.r When the opponents stop nents a trick or two higher. jack to the queen. bidding at the level of one, Besides, West might have a West led another trump, you can almost always afford rather good hand; and then taking the last trump out of South dealer to reopen the bidding. .Once a East would be able to make the dummy. Now South had to North^&uth ")rulnerab"te'"^ Blondie year, you may discover that two or three clubs. Give West lose four hearts and two dia- NOftTH you have given them the the ace of clubs or the ace of monds. Down one. / NOW, WHO ( SOMEBODY COULP I M 1 HAD >->. chance to get to a game that diamonds, and South would . tf 63 C^-r GET HURT- J ( A FEEUNG ] South should make the con- /DIDN'T PUT THAT they were going to miss. The still open the bidding with one 0 9 7 62 5?®\ LAPDERAWAY £ I LEAVING IT .„ i)/ SOMEBOPV ^ tract by leading a low heart at rest of the time you will get to spade, and West would still the second trick. If a trump is -5 OUT THERE M WAS GOING TO WEST „*. -^ GET HURT a sound contract of your own pass. returned, South can lead an- EAST LIKE THAT • 532:, or push your opponents In the actual hand, South other heart. Declarer wins the * 76 beyond the level of their skill. was pushed to two spades, (? AQ107 V 982 next trump in his own hand <> JI083 0 KQ If East had passed one which he should have made. and ruffs a heart in dummy. * J 10 spade, no rubber bridge play- But South- made one slip, and * KQ9653 This ruffing trick assures the SOUTH i er would have blamed him it was enough to do' him in. contract. 4 AKI084 ' very much. After all, a part Wrong Trick DAILY QUESTION (5KJ54 score of 30 points is not worth South won the first trick Partner opens with 2-NT 0 A54 very much. Why drive the op- with the ace of clubs and de- (22 to 24 points), and the next * A ponents to a higher part cided to try for a natural player passes. You hold S-Q J South West North East: score, which is worth far heart trick. He led a trump to 9H-63D-9762C-8743.What 1 ^ Pass Pass 2 4>! more? dummy's nine and returned a do you say? Double Pass 2 4 All Piss When the hand was actually heart, losing the king to the Answer: Pass. You need at Opening lead - + J played, East had tournament ace. Back came a trump to least one more point to re- Snuffy Smith THAT'S TH' GIVE ME A AM1 THAT'S WHAT WILDEST TOLE INSTANT REPLAY HAPPENT WHEN I EVER HEERED, ON THAT PART WHAR ZONEY JUNE ELVINEY HE BIT HER FIN6ER CAUGHT HER AN' SHE WHACKED ~ .. HUSBAND HIMOUERTH'HAID/ - ll\ \WIPTH1 SKILLET STRF16GLIN" HOME AT SUN-UP The Phantom A6ANGINTHEOLPEM OUR LEADER TEUS US ITIS WE FOLLOW RETREATING TIMES CAUEP "THE VULTURES"? FOLLy TO STEAL FROM THE ARMIES- ROBBlMG THE Beetle Bailey WHAT AN AWFUL NAME. . STRONG-WHEN THERE AI?E WOUMPEP ANP THE. DWNS yeAH,tie's NO T AND HE'S \ I F'GOSH SAKE5/ f so mm WHO WHAT I LIKE UPTIGHT OR BOS61 NOT CPUPE { CERTAINLY WHAT AM 1. ARE WEAK. ABOUT LT. FLAP OK l\ HOT 16, HE'S NOT \ VIOLENT OPINIONATED the MiV Better, Bed Bink - Wdkfmm, -VJ^ Tlmnday, Angmt 12,1971 25 Televisio •••••'-— Board Meeting New York Channels-! Is Postponed 'AYT1ME MOVIES HIGHLANDS - Lacking a 1:30 O "Brida of Vsngunca" ID NET PLAYHOUSE quorum, the Board of Educa- CK» B "Shanghsi Eipriu" "Hrfmstofaglal Or the Btons AnnV (R) Wjtt. IB "Frsnch Wifhou, Tsart11 O THE CBS THURSDAY NIGHT MOVIE (Q tion held no formal meeting 1M "Who's Muffin; the Store?" (1963) starring J«nT [•DO B "I Wai a, Mai. War bids" Lewis, 9111 Bt John. The story of a iumhlfif am- last night O "Dark Wateri" ploye of a store who Is madly in love with tho owner's daughter. (R) . The regular August meeting 4:30 .0 "IJUIS" was postponed until Wednes- O "P.p." (Part I) O MAKE ROOM FOR 6RANDDADDY (O ''Will the Real Oiana Please Stand TJpT" WJmi day, Aug. 18, at 7:30 p.m. O "Wnita Pongo" Damry Is forced to apologize to a popular stager for blowing up ovtr her rudeness, he goes to her •/EN ING apartment where he meets a sweet gin who claims Youth Seized In Disturbance ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS - A Middletown Township youth was apprehended Tuesday night when he allegedly created a disturbance and used loud and abusive lan- guage on First St., here. . . Jack Piano, 19, of East Val- ley Drive, was arrested by Patrolman Louis Papa at 7:30 p.m. Winter Quake Feared TOKYO (AP) - A city agency predicted about 560,000 people would die if an earthquake as strong as the great 1923 tremor struck Tokyo on a windy winter night, most of them from fires started by the city's thou- sands of kerosene stoves. The 1923 quake killed 99,000. CYAC DANCE SET KEANSBURG - The Catho- lic Young Adult Club of North- ' em Monmouth County will > sponsor a "Peanuts Party" ' dance Saturday from 9 p.m. to ' 1 a.m. in Knights of Columbus HUFFMAN - KOOS Hall, Rt. 36. Dress will be cas- HACKENSACK.RT. 4,3434300 . RAHWAY, RT. 27.388-3700 • BERNARDSVILLE. RT. 202.766-3040 • EAST BRUNSWICK, RT. 18.257-480O • EATONTOWN RT 35 6421010 . FREEHOLD RT -I «Mm J,' ual. , PARSIPPANY.RT.48.3344100 • POMPTONPLAINS.RT.23. 836-3400 . SOMERVILIE.RT. 22.6264565... SPRINGFIELD,RT.24.'370-4300 • T0T0WA,"RT,«6,786-0600 ' miWMSmnmt^in^.^l