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I«iud ««lly. Monlay through .Friday, tooond Oui Postij. VOL. 85, NO. 195 Pali tt 1U1 BUk Ud •* AMttlOUl MliUnj Olllcil. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 1963 7c PER COPY PAGE ONE Rt. 36 Plans Jeered at Hearing HIGHLANDS - Nearly 200 persons, including municipal, Bowen Is Fired county and state officials, yesterday Jammed Borough Hall and overflowed the corridors to voice objections to the state's plans to widen Rt. 36 from First Plan Appeal of Council Action Ave., Atlantic Highlands, to the Highlands Bridge. LONG BRANCH—City Council 90 seconds. The six majority statements on why they had voted Ronca, Walton Fisher and Julius During the 3%-hour hearing, fired City Manager Richard councilmen sat in silence, ouster. Councilman Walter A. Tomaini. Against them were speakers and members of the Bowen last night, The vote was None of the six spoke, except George, sponsor of the ouster Mayor Thomas L. McClintock, audience seemed in accord with 6 to 3, the same as that by which to record their votes. But later, resolution, and Samuel A. Marks and Councilmen Milton F. Unter- Atlantic Highlands Councilman he was temporarily suspends when council held its regularly- were silent. meyer and Lucy Wilson. Ths Jack McGalliard, who charged Feb. 9. scheduled meeting in City Hall, Others of the majority were three pro-Bowen officials stated that "the state holds hearings as The action before a standing- four of them made or released Edgar N. Dinkelspiel, Vincent G. (See BOWEN, Page 3) a matter of form, listens to ob- room-only crowd of more than jections, expresses answers, and 800 predominantly pro - Bowen then ends up doing the job the fans at the Morris Avenue Junior way it wants to." High School surprised no one in the auditorium—if anywhere else. Hearing Taped Steven G. Link, state engineer That the 36-year-old managei said every statement nude at the would lose the $13,000-a-year jol hearing would be studied, and ob- he assumed Sept. 1, 1961 was ap- jection or alternate proposal con parent at the outset. Three votes cidered feasible would be in- on last minute issues raised oi corporated into the highway.'* Mr. Bowen's behalf all wen plans. down by identical 6-3 counts. The entire hearing was taped. The crowd cheered Mr. Bowen At the end of the meeting at every, opportunity. It hissed however Mr. Link, when pressed and booed the six councilmei by Mrs. James E. Smith, Huddy aligned' against him. But whei Ave., admitted hat "It will be HIGHWAY HEARING—Steven G. Link, left, state Highway Department district the fatal vote was taken, the hall a pretty good bet that we. (tha engineer, and Col. Herbert C. Hartman, project engineer, pointing, explain plans for was absolutely silent, during and highway department) will wind dualizing Rt. 36 and installing concrete barrier from First Ave., Atlantic Highlands, to afterwards. up with exactly what we have Highlands bridge, to Atlantic Highlands Mayor Rjsiell W. Morgan and Highlands Tension was released a few • tere." minutes later when Mr. Bowen's The state plans to widen and Mayor Cornelius J. Guiney, Jr., right, at public hearing yesterday. Standing room lawyer, Charles Frankel, said hi resurface the existing dualized only crowd of about 200 persons strongly protested state's proposal. will challenge the proceedings ii concrete roadway to provide two Superior Court and take deposi 12-foot wide traffic lanes, east tions' from council members and west bound, constructed of under, oatli before the May I bituminous concrte and separated election. „ by a 32-inch high concrete bar- School's Bus Service Gut Crowd Approves rier, that would be 24 inches The people applauded, shouted, at the base, and taper to six In Order to Raise Teacher Salary Guide whistled, stamped' feet, an inches at the top. Shoulders will yelled approval for more than be 10 feet wide. RUMSON—Arthur L. Adamson, "We have to get $9,000 out o in a position where it has t Jughandles president of the Rumson-Fair buses in order to keen good make the choice. Haven Regional High School Jughandles are proposed at teachers," Mr.. Adamson said, The curtailment will affecl Grand Ave. Atlantic Highlands; Board, announced last night that Rumson students almost exdu there will be no school bus serv- explaining that financial cuts im- sively. Only a few from this boi Only Few THE RT. 36 PROJECT —FINALLY — After nearly two year. In planning stage, work at an intermediate point between posed following two budget de- Valley Dr. and Navesink Ave., ice for students living within a ough, in the Oakes Rd. area, Iivi got under way yestarday on dualization of Rt. 36. Here, Mario Dlproipero, Scotch 2^-mile radius in 1963-64. feats at the polls place the board more than 2% miles from tni Plains, bulldoier operator for Michael J. Stavola, Inc., Middletown contractor, clears Middletown Township; Water school. Witch Ave. and Miller St., High- Sorry shrubbery from sida of highway at Rt. 36 and Middle Rd., near Airport Plaza, Ran- lands, and Ocean Ave., Sea Differ With Mayor Bright. Mayor Charles Callman, In an tan Towmhip. Stage one of project, Keyport to Kaansburg, which will cost $2,631,- Among those who stood up to Playmate Shoots nouncing the $556,482 figure set It's Over 138, is expected to be completed early next year. do battle with representatives of by the borough council for the the state Highway department school's 1963-64 budget, stated at LONG BRANCH - ProbabI were: the March 11 council meetfa, the only ones saddened by th< Protest FAA Assemblyman Alfred N. Bea- Boy, 5, in Accident that the governiaff body is "un- end of the Bowen dismissal hear- dleston, Freeholder Marcus Daly, alterably opposed to any change ings are Sen and Jim Callano, MIDDLETOWN — State police tha Smith child as the two boys ^ bus procedure." operator* of the Ocean Bakery Atlantic Highlands Mayor Russell will start an investigation today were playing in a group of about OK Bond Issue Halt of Study W. Morgan, Highlands Mayor In a statement later mailed t across the itreet from the Mor- to determine whether a trooper six children yesterday at 12:50 rii Avenue Junior High School. Cornelius J. Guiney, Jr., Middle- p.m. in a neighbor's yard on Lone all residents, the mayor citec town Township Mayor Earl has violated state police regula- safety factors, saying "wt op- Their delicatessen, sandwich For New Schools in Raritan tions in connection with'an acci Oak Rd. On Jetport Moody, Atlantic Highlands Coun- pose our children walking where shop, and bakery has done a land- RARltAN TOWNSHIP — Construction of $1,950,000 in dental shooting yesterday. Hall said the Harms child Xne office business, often into the wee oilmen John A, Joslin, Elbert A. did the shooting with a loaded there are no sidewalks. new- «c*o61 facilities should get under way sometime this TRENTON (AP) - Ths Fed- (Sea RT. 36, Page 2) The police reported that Robert (See morning hours, not only from mimmfr, . . , , -,>.. .•„••-' eral Aviation Agency's decision service revolver he took from fpectttors attending #• bearings Smith, Jr., 5, son of Mr. and the unlocked glove compartment to cancel the second section of but pMsersby who dropped hi t "•'. By a vote of 685 to 331, the public "yesterday approved a survey on a proposed jet air- Mrs. Robert Smith, Sr., 3 Pauls of his father's patrol car. 1 th« Board of Education's proposal to float a bond issue for PI., Is in fairly good condition in be brought up to date on "late port eite In Burlington County Bidault Goes Mr. Smith is principal of Fair- Draw Code developments. that amount for a building program. Riverview Hospital after having view School. has spurred protests from New been shot through the foot. Board Secretary Charles S. Hopla said last night bids Jersey officials. Trooper Harms is attached to will be received within four months. To Police The case was investigated by the Trenton State Police -bar- To Register Former City Policeman An- , He said the board will give priority to the two new 12- Goy. Richard j. Hughes said State Police U. William , racks. thony J. Anastasia. one of two room elementary schools and hopes to complete them by yesterday he would "pursue the In Portugal Princeton barracks. Pojice said normal procedure, Apartments men evicted from a hearing for September of next year. matter as quickly as possible to State Police Sgt. Joseph Hall When a car is left by a trooper, alleged hecklingg , demanded an Also to be constructed under the program is a 27-room get it reversed." And Sen. Clif- LISBON, Portugal (AP)-Anti- reported that Armand Harms, 4, is to' -have any weapon in the ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS - In explanation, of Mayor Thomas L. addition to the high school. ford P. Case asked the FAA how Gaullist leader Georges Bidault son of State Trooper John Harms, vehicle locked in the car, or the near future, landlords may McClintock last night. Voters also approved the transfer of $115,000 from the It could reconcile the cancellation appeared voluntarily at police Lone Oak Rd., accidentally shot locked in the glove compartment. have to register their apartment The mayor said he regretted current expense account to capital outlay for the elementary with its previous announcements headquarters yesterday to have units and obtain licenses for the incident as much as Mr. school site purchases. concerning the surveys. his papers checked. them. astasia, the father of a presen The sites are a 19-acre tract on Union Ave., off Rt. 36, and The FAA completed on Feb. Theformer French premier was Borough Council last night in city detective. But, the mayor a seven-acre tract bounded by Sycamore Dr. and Hazlet 21 the first section of the survey, accompanied by his secretary, New York May Get structed Ms attorney, Henry J. said, things happened too quick- Ave., off Rt. 35. a study of air traffic patterns, Guy Ribeauld, who arrived here Saling, to prepare an ordinance ly and the excitement of the au- in Burlington County and New with, him Monday on a flight setting up such a regulation. dience indicated more troubli York's Suffolk and Orange Coun- from West Germany. At the same time, to strengthen might be brewing. In Raritan Township ties, three sites proposed for a The pair had traveled under Papers Tomorrow the borough's, hand in getting "I had ordered one man (Steve new jetport. assumed names, and police said NEW YORK (AP) - Eight ma The photoengravers were tha "dilapidated" structures con Mazza, part time columnist for a demned and demolished, counei The second phase of the sur- earlier they did not know where ]or New York City newspapers, last of four striking unions to local weekly newspaper) re- vey was to evaluate the sites for they were. reach New York work agree- acceded to Mr. Saling's sugges moved," said the mayor. "Then blacked out for 110 days, are ex- tion that it modernize its sub- New GOP Club accessibility to metropolitan Bidault left West Germany af- pected to be back on the streets ments in the longest and costlies you stood up and made-an un areas and terrain and weather. ter the Bavarian state govern- newspaper shutdown in the city's standard housing code in line fortunate remark and I believed, EARITAN TOWNSHIP — A in becoming part of the loca with tomorrow's editions if strik- with recent state legislation This is the phase that was can- ment denied him asylum unless ing photoengravers quickly rati- history. under the circumstances, I had IOW township-wide Republican Republican "cause." celled out. which, the attorney said, "makes to include you. You would no he gave up his fight to overthrow fy a peace part today. Estimates of the loss run in :iub has been formed for the Other Aims President Charles de Gaulle. demolition easier." have, been thrown out otherwise.' purpose of establishing a central- Sen. Case had written to FAA Negotiators for the photoen- excess of $200 million. OWier club aims will be to de- administrator Najceb E. Halaby Bidault vowed to keep up his Condemn Four Mr. Anastasia said he only ized party organization, Charles velop good citizenship, extend in fight against the French presi- gravers union accepted early to- Frank McGowan, president made his "remark" after being Lube, GOP municipal chair- Monday asking for a report on day contract terms proposed by the photoengravers local, said Councilman Vincent H. Fox terest in local, state and national the status of tha Burlington Coun- dent, but Portuguese officials ordered out and that he had no man, reported yesterday. • affairs and to build party leader Mayor Robert F. Wagner and. ap-he expects the rank-and-file to said the building committee rec- The club is named "The Young ty survey. have said they also would not ommends immediate condemna- regrets for what he said. ship within the election districts let him continue his anti-Gaullist proved by publishers of the eight ratify an amended contract pro- epubllcans of the Township o Then Joseph Mott, acting chief posal put forth by the mayor and tion proceedings against four Mr. Lube said. activities in Portugal. dailies. The first fist fight of the hear aritan" and will build lines o of the airports division of the accepted by the union's negoti structures: the Gesaldi apart- :ommunication between the dis- Club officers are George L. FAA's eastern regional office, atirig committee, 8-2. ment, First Ave., between Bay ings almost developed at the fi- Bberle, president; Mrs. Mary nal moment. ;rkt Republican clubs, Republi said yesterday that the accessi- and Center Aves.; the Manganelli :ans and all citizens interested Agresta, vice president; Mrs bility phase "will not be under- The photoengravers vote on th« house, 5 South Ave.; the Cloud Two men invited each other out- Jean HaJe, secretary; Anthony J. pact at A p.m. side to settle differences of opin- taken." He said the agency de- They're Breaking house, Bay Ave., between Ave- DeMaio, treasurer, and Joseph cided to cancel that section of tha Walter N. Thayer, president ol nue C and D, and a house on ion on the hearing outcome. Penrose, sergeant-at-arms. study last January, and added the Herald Tribune arid a spokes- Leonard Ave., adjacent to Fire- Sgt. George Moran said one of To Discuss A general meeting will be held the FAA had made no commit- man for the publishers, said that men's Memorial Field. the two went into the street and at the Odd-Fellows Hall, 75 Main ment to do a complete, two-phase State Law—But... if ratification comes quickly, In other action, council ap- that the other asked the sergeant St., Keyport, April 20 at 8:30 tudy. we will publish Thursday pa- proved an amendment to the 1963for advice. NJ Boxing p.m. Music, dancing ' and re- ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS-Bor- He said "it has to be burned or pers." municipal budget, reducing the "Stay here or you'll get your freshments will be served follow- The second stage was dropped, we'd have no place to put it. TRENTON (AP) - Gov. Rich- ough Council is breaking state Amplifying, he said that if rat- total to $396,204, with $135,752 to rains knocked out," the officer ing the meeting. he said, after the plan was re- law. That was, the report last But we're breaking the law." rd J. Hughes hopes to meet ification came by 6 p.m., he ex- be raised by taxes, a decrease »unselled. The man took the with Joseph Walker, the Form Committees evaluated on a cost-versus-bene- night from council itself. Council discussed locations for ;oon fits basis, pected that all morning papers of $5,834. idvice and there was no fight. itate athletic commissioner, to Committees will be formed and Borough Superintendent Fred landfill garbage dump sites, bu club aims discussed. The most Hughes said the state was In- was unable to think of any in the would publish tomorrow. The over-all tax rate was es- liscuss New Jersey's boxing pro- Weiler and Councilman Elberlj A. He did not indicate when he timated at $3.19 per $100 assessed Council got to work Immediate- ;ram, Hughes says. important club objective, Mr. formed by telephone earlier this Frimpter reported that rubbish municipality. Lube said, will be to unseat the month of FAA's intention to drop Councilmen also discussed thought the four morning dailies valuation, a drop of 41 cents. ly after the hearing to seek ap- Hughes, who says he "deplores leaves, and other debris is being would get their first editions on Zone Amendment plications for a new professional irofessional boxing," expressed present Democratic administra- the accessibility study, but tha burned at the local dump, next "clamping down" on homeowners tion and Install two-party govern- deicision was never confirmed in who continually put rubbish on the streets. First editions of tha Council introduced an amend- manager. oncern over the death of Davey to the borough garage, West morning papers normally coma ment to the zoning ordinance A resolution offered by Coun- ifoore in , Calif., aft- ment. writing. Lincoln Ave. the curbs (by having police hand out summones), but dropped out the night before they are prohibiting rooming houses in cilman Edgar N. Dinkelspiel per- ir a featherweight championship There was a town-wide Republi The governor termed the study How often? that idea after several of them dated. esidential zones and increasing mits spending $400 for advertise- ight last Thursday. can Club in the municipality up cancellation a setback to hopes until two years ago, when it was "Practically every day," said admitted that they do it too. Wagner announced tentative set- esidential lot frontage in the ments in the Wall Street Jour- The governor told newsmen he that the Burlington County slta lower Bayside Dr. area from 50 nal and the International City rdered experimental changes in disbanded and individual district would be selected, "but I don't Mr. Weiler. It was at this point that the tlement of the photoengravers' clubs formed. Mr. Frimpter advised council governing body went on to other strike at a lo 75 feet. Managers Association news let- state's boxing regulations think it's something that can't, ba news conference at ;er. overcome," he added. that "once the state (Department issues. 2:17 a.m. At auction, the governing body ast year, after the death of Ben- sold the following property: The »d will state five years ex- Paret in a championship fight of Health) finds out about it The announcement came al- He said he would keep in touch Two lots on Bowne Ave., at perience in managing a city of New York City. with Halaby's office to try and they'll put an end to it." most exaotly 109 days after the South Ave., to John Grodeska, Domparable size to Long Branch The changes required that Fire Routs newspaper shutdown was precipi- get the agency to reconsider tha Get A Whiff Index Bowne Ave.,for $1,525; three lots ill be required. Though the for- hysician examine fighters aft- decision. Added Councilman Vincent H. tated at 2 a.m. last Dec. 8 by a n Bowne Ave., a( Center Ave., mer manager received $13,000 a each ronud of a pro- Family In Fox: "One of these days a resi- i Page strike of the printers union to Arthur Murray, 8 Harbor year, plus fringe benefits, the issional fight, that 10-ounce dent will get a whiff, and there'll Allen-Scott „ 5 against four of the city's nine ma- View Dr., for $1,600, and one lot new ad will say, about remuner- iloves be used instead ol 8- Down to 20 be a complaint to the state." Amusements _ ...16 jor dailies. The otner five pa- n Memorial Pkwy., to Fred ation, only: Salary open." >unce gloves, and that the rest Little Silver The borough's garbage con- Births „ 2 pers closed down voluntarily but Moeller, Memorial Pkwy., for jcriod between rounds be ex- LITTLE SILVER-Fire of un- MIDDLETOWN — Police re- tractor, it was explained, dumps Jim Bishop '. ; 6 one, the Post, resumed publica- $500. Even ex-Manager Richard J. ended from 60 to 90 seconds. determined did between ported 20 brush fires yesterday. ion March 4. origin his garbage out of town, Bridge 19 Clean Up Week lowen's closest associates were He said the 10-ounce glove re- $4,000 and $5,000 damage last This brings to 157 tho total The trouble is, Mr. Weiler Classified M Wagner said his photoengraver April 29 to May 4 was sched- lot expecting any chance of his luirements are still in effect, but night at the home of Edward in a five-day period. pointed out, borough street de- Comics 25 settlement formula contained iled as Clean Up Week. ecovering his job even before hat doctors are now required to Martin, 609 Harding Rd., Police On Tuesday, there were 83 partment trucks have to pick up Crossword Puzzle :. 10 "certain amendments" to the pro- Councilman Richard C. Stryker he final hearing started. ixamine contestants after every Chief James A. Fix said this reported. what's left over: "leaves, limbs, Editorials 6 posal he made Monday night. iroposed that the borough install One man close to the ousted hree rounds and the rest period morjiinp. rubbish,- sofas, refrigerators, Publishers accepted that propos- Over the weekend, there wera Herblock 6 a new 8-inch water main from executive said he was advised stween rounds has reverted to The fire began in a bedroom 54. itoves and everything else." Movie Timetable : 16 al yesterday morning. They also the water plant to" Bay Ave., not-Monday, by an acquaintance in seconds. of the ranch-style dwelling, the "I've been fighting about this Obituaries 2 accepted the amendments, the ing that the existing main dates local tavern, betting odds had Sen. Nelson F. Stamler, R- chief said. The family, awak- Shrewsbury Residents for years," the superintendent Sylvia Porter 6 mayor said. back to 1894. He estimated the shifted to 8 to 5 in favor of Bowen nion, has proposed a study of ened by an automatic fire alarm Clean-up Week is April 1 told a reporter. "The problem Is Television 16 The amendments, he added, cost at $15,000. making a comeback. le advisability of abolishing system shortly after 11 o'clock, through April 6. Unlimited trash the borough has allowed the Sports 22-2J are within the framework of the The governing body authorized "Get as much of that action rize fighting in New Jersey. fled the house. pickup everyday. people to get in bad habits — Stock Market _.._.:: -..: 3 12.63 which has been the wage Mr.' Stryker to investigate the s you can," this pessimistic but Hughes said he would discuss The Little Silver Fire Company Mrs. Paul S. Fabry throw anything in the curb, and Successful Investing 3 package of all the unions in- possibility of obtaining federal or well - advised sporting - minded ll aspects of the boxing issue was on the scene until 2 a.m., Borough Clerk get It picked up." Women's New* - 29-21. olved." state aid for the project. BoSvenite retorted. ith Walker, the chief said. -Adv. ; 2-Wei, March 27, 1963 RED BANK REGISTER Weather Rt. 36 By Colleges, Universities Dr. Ayr£s, New Jersey—Variibl* cLoudi- tfi today with scattered answ- ers mostly in the morning. After- Frfmpter, Mr. MoGtfllud, t»J Psychiatrist, National, World noon temperatures mostly In the Richard C. Stryker; Highland* Seniors Accepted 50s. Fair and cooler tonight, low Councilman John A. Bahri tod ANQREW GARLAND NUNERY in the 30s. Herman J. Black: Rev. Donald M1DDLETOWN - More than Perm Sate-nPitricla Gor« and Dead at 45 MacLeod, rector of the local 100 Koion have been accepted Judith KrllL ASBURY PARK-Andrew Gar- Thursday fair land Nunery, 35, died yesterday and mild high Episcopal Chiircji; Mrs. Elbert by colleges and universities for Monmputh Collage—Joel News in Brief Mason, representing the Atlantic the fall term, according to Frank Bendar and Jean Butler. at Memorial Hospital, New York 55 to 60.. City, after a long illness. He re- From the Wires of The Associated Preu MARINE Highlands Garden Club; Henry Grimes, director of guidance at Wooster Colleger-Donna Burg- J, Saling, spokesman for the At- the local high school, er and Eric Richardson. sided; at Building 6, Apartment Cape May to 11, Asbury Park Village, and had YUKON SURVIVOR TO GO HOME NEXT WEEK Block Island- lantic Highlands' Lions Cub; They are: Tuscuhm College, Rider Collegfr-Nlinfa Apanel :: WHITEHORSE, Yukon Territory—Helen Klaben, informed by Mrs. James Egidlo, representing Tennessee—Jane Allaire, Donna and Edward Blomquist. lived in this city M years. _ Small craft A construction worker, Mr. "her doctor she will lose her five right toes, had at least one bit warnings r e - the Gold Star Mothers of Sandy Carley, Richard'Dorrls, William Rosary Hill, Buffalo, N. Y.- •" of good news for her mother in Brooklyn—she should be home in main displayed Hook Bay Post, American Le- Evans, Kenneth Foulks, Cheryl Irene Allen. Nunery was' a communicant of about eight days. for southwest gion; Luke Penta, Highlands Galtowiy, William Gerecke, A3- Wesley College, Delaware— St Peter Claver \r Dr. Nesta James said the Yukon's 21-year-old heroine will be winds IS to 20 beach club owner speaking in exandra Gray, tod Barbara Maureen Andrews. here. He was born in Nutley. able to leave the Whitehorse Hospital next Wednesday. knots .with behalf of Rev. James A. Thomp- Smith. Gettysburg—Daniel Nalepa. Surviving are his wife, Gloria Dr. James is treating Miss Klaben and Ralph Flores, the pilot some higher gusts, becoming son, pastor of Our Lady of Rutgers University—Kenneth Centenary—Eileen Ottinger. D. Nunery; a son, Craig Nunery, of the plane that crashed Feb. 4 on a mountainside in the frozen westerly later today and diminish- Perpetual Help Catholic Church. Casterllne, Ronald Clark, John Albright-Cynthia Nixon. and two daughters, Lois and wilderness 75 miles south of the Yukon-British Columbia border, ing to 15 knots by evening. West On Priority list Clint, Donald Massell, Richard University of Tampa, Fla.— Karen Nunery, all at home; his i The doctor gave this report: 15 knots tonight and early Thurs- When municipal officials Rabourdin, Henry Wallace. Jere- William Plununer. father,- Garland Nunery of As- Miss Klaben suffered a broken left arm, which apparently has day shifting to northwest ISJcnots blamed the state's proposal on my Wells, Spencer Wichham; Moravian, Penna.—Michael bury Park, and two sisters, Mrs. "healed in good condition." She also suffered frostbite on the toes later Thursday. Variable cloudi- the new Sandy Hook State Park, Douglass College-Marsha Lo- Posten. Lois Booker and Mrs. Gloria ,of her right foot and on both heels. The toes will have to be re- ness with scattered showers to- Mr. Link claimed that the widen- pez, Susan Main, Elizabeth Bowaoin—William Barnard. Johnson, both of Asbury Park. moved but the heels seem to be improving nicely. day, clearing tonight. Fair Thurs- ing of Rt. 36 has been on the Median, Elaine Ostock, Margaret Virginia Polytechnic—Barbara A Requiem Mass will be .of- Flores suffered a broken nose, a broken jaw and frostbite on day. Visibility 5 miles or more priority list for a number of Patrick. BrUler. fered Saturday at 10 a.m. in St. two toes. Ha appears to be recovering from all his injuries. except less than 1 mile extreme years, but because of the lack Bucknell University. William Michigan School of Mining and Peter Claver. Church. Interment east portion early this morning. of funds, nothing could be done McKtonon. Steven Smith, and Engineering-Philip Bishop. will be in Mt. Calvary Cemetery, PRO-CASTRO FERVOR COOLED until now. Brace Compton. Seton Hall-Leonard Watson. Neptune. The F. Leon Harris Fu- NITEROI, Brazil — A subdued "Cuban solidarity conference" TIDES Councilman Joslin expressed University of Debware-An- Boston University—Robert neral Home is in charge of ar- offered muted support to Fidel Castro today, cooled off by militant (Sandy Hook) concera with the fact that the *ea Atkinson, Elaine Matthewi, Daity. Jota R. Ayers, Jr., MD rangements. anti-communist pressure and a five-mile ferryboat ride. TODAY — High 9:30 p.m. and and Lynda Rathburn. Kings College-Richard Conte. barrier would hamper fire and LITTLE SILVER — Dr. Ray- Gov, Carlos Lacerda of Guanabara state, a fiery foe of com- low 3:27 p.m. first aid service since all the Wi&es College, Penn».-Judith University of New Hampshire MRS. THOMAS REGAN munism, blocked the pro-Castro Brazilians from meetings in Rio TOMORROW - High 10:01 a.m. —Catherine Weioheimer. mond Ayers, Jr., 45, of 394 CLIFFWOOD — Mrs. Anna Re- fire companies and hydrant serv- Adams and Ann* Howard. Branch Ave. died .Monday In de Janeiro and chased them across Rio's Guanabara Bay last night and 10:21 p.m. and low 3:59 a.m. ice are on the north side of At- Falrieigh Dickinson — Rob- Bowling Green University gan, 85, of Cliffwood Ave., died Lacerda denounced the conference as subversive. Rio police and 4:13 p.m. ert Cuskaden and Phyllis Munch. -Marcla Wolff. Johns Hopkins Hospital, Balti- yesterday at her home. She was lantic Highlands. more, Md. arrested 53 delegates before they could make it out of Guanabara For Red Bank and Rumson He presented a petition signed Lehigh University, — James Utt* State - Raymond Den- the widow of Thomas Regan. • state which includes Rio, and take the five-mile ride to Niteroi. bridge, add two hours; Sea Jarvis, David Skinner and Wayne nison. Bora In Boston, he was the son Mrs. Regan was born in Coun- by several hundred residents of of. Jghh Raymond and Caroline ' Although Niteroi is outside his jurisdiction. Lacerda posted his Bright, deduct ID minutes; Long Atlantic Highlands "staunchly Wi Eastern Nazarene College ty Cork, Ireland, and had lived " police on the ferry docks in Rio and had them arrest delegates. Branch, deduct 15 minutes; High- opposed to removal of the ex- Newark State — Donna Bell, -Paid Eby. Holman, Van Blarcom Ayers of here 55 years. She was a com- Gov. Badger Silveira of Rio de Janeiro state said he would lands bridge, add 40 minutes. isting grass island on Memorial and Babette Moore. Urslnus College—Barbara Nahant, Mass. v municant of St Joseph's Cath- ! permit the congress to meet in Niterol, the state capital, because Pkwy. and erection of a bar- Trenton State-Joy Socokhik, Evans and Victor Fox. Dr. Ayers was educated in pub-olic Church, Keyport. the "Brazilian constitution guarantees freedom of assembly and By The Associated Preu rier." MarcU Sheridan, and Mary Im- St Bonaventure Umvenity- lic schools at Maiden and Lynn, Surviving are a son, William thinking." Less than 400 Castroite diehards finally opened the Showers, drizzle, snow flurries Highlands residents claimed nutt. Edwsid Fox. Man., Tofts College And Johns J. Regan of this place; a brother, conference here, 90 minutes behind schedule, in a sparkling new and "fog covered areas in the Glissboro-Mfcbele Simon, Pa- Hopkins University. naval workers union hall. that barriers would cause too Dread Institute-Daniel bea- Rev. Dennis O'Hea of San Fran- nartheast quarter of the nation much time to be lost getting to tricia Dietrich and Geraldlne ring. •: -. , . He served his internship in cisco,1 Calif., another brother today and rain fell in the Far Boston City Hospital in 1942 and U. S. POSTPONES BOX FOR BATAAN SURVIVOR fires. Morehouse. Concord College—Louis Moate- and three sisters in Ireland, four West but generally dry weather Mr. Link replied that emer- Newark College of Engineering naro. 1M3 after which he was a medi- grandchildren, and one great- ONARGA, 111. — A Bataan death march survivor and his prevailed in other sections. cal and psychiatric officer in the family expressed happiness today after the State Department said gency openings would be provided—John Hopler and John Shaef- Villanova College-Barry Hen- grandchild. A wet and foggy belt extended for fire and first aid vehicles. fer. fey. Army Air Force until 1946. He The funeral will be Saturday it has temporarily suspended attempts to collect payments of achieved the rank of major. World War II emergency relief. from lower Michigan and Ohio Officials and residents of both Western Illinois University- at 8:30 a.m. from the Day Fu- eastward to the Atlantic coast communities said they feared for Lee Hemfaauser. Following the war. Dr. Ayers neral Home, Keyport, to St. Jc- The State Department maintains that the family of Noble Frank and extended northward Into asked how much land they would was a veteran fellow in the Uni- Smith owes $1,421 for relief provided to Mrs. Viola Smith and her the safety of pedestrians and lose. Mr. Link indicated that only Central Connecticut College — speh's Church where a High Re- southern Maine. Light rain spread school children crossing the high- Claire Herold. versity Hospital, Ann Arbor, quiem Mass will be offered at 9 son, Carl, while they were Interned fn the Far East by the Japanese southward into Kentucky and east- those who live where Jughandles Mich., and later served in the during World War 11. way. are proposed would be affected. Illinois Institute of Technology o'clock. Burial will be in St Jo- ern Tennessee. Councilman Frimpter argued —Frank Huhn. Michigan State Hospital at Ypsil- seph's Cemetery. Smith, 47, and ex-marine, told the Associated Press last night: Jughandles require acquisition anti. He later worked in a state "I'm real happy about it I'm not only happy for myself, but for In the West, intermittent light that the proposed barrier might Kansas State University-Suz- rain sprinkled coastal areas from protect auto traffic but not of one-third to three-quarters of hospital at Faranhurst. Del., aft- others in similar circumstances." an acre, he explained He esti- anne Sigiey. WILBUR E. WILLIAMS northern northward in- pedestrian. He said a residential Wagner—Nancy Kopasz. er which he moved to New Jer- LONG BRANCH - Wilbur E. His wife added: "This is the best news I've had in a long time." to Washington. mated that it would be at least a sey to take a post in the state Smith said that the State Department has told him there are zone with a 45-mile per hour Western Maryland-David MII- Williams, 72, of 18 Grant Ct. died It was fairly cool again this speed limit would become a 60 toyear before the state would begin hospital at Marlboro. some 2,000 person* In the nation who owe it money for various negotiating with property owner*. Br. Saturday in Monmouth Medical morning in northern border sec- 65 mile per hour zone. Massachusetts Instituteof Dr. Ayers maintained a private Center. reasons. Including war relief. In Washington, Sen. Paul H. Douglas, Mr. Link noted that final plans practice in Red Bank and here D-Ill., has intrpduced • bill which would cancel the debt tions in the eastern half of the Mr. Link said that speed limits Born in Vineland and a resident nation. Temperatures were most- would be regulated according to Washington College, M&- for the past two years. of Long Branch 35 years, he was ly in the 30s in the Great Lakes local conditions, giving top con- highway, and erecting the bar- He was a member of Phi Beta TO CONTINUE BERLIN TAtKS rier, will be drawn after state of- Chrirtine Monsees. a retired gateman of the New region, eastern parts of the North- sideration to schools and Business colleges selected are Kappa and Phi Bete Pi Frater- WASHINGTON — Secretary of State and Soviet ern Plains, northern sections of ficials evaluate reactions of the York and Long Branch Railroad. Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin are expected to meet again hi churches. KatherineGibbsSchool, nities, the Monmouth County His wife was the late Irnu C. the upper Mississippi Valley, people at the hearing. Medical Association, the Ameri- about * week to continue their exploratory talks on Berlin, Grass Mound No Funds Maureen Holland; Berkely Williams. authoritive sources reported today. eastern areas of the middle Mis- When Mayor Moody, Council- School, Mary Lupshevicz; and can Psychiatric Association and sissippi Valley and in the Ohio He indicated that funds have Surviving are a niece, Mrs. John Rusk and DobQmin conferred tor an hour yesterday at the man Bahrs, and. several other Stuart School of Business, Ber- the Little Silver Civil Defense Ramsey, and a great-niece, Miss Valley. speakers suggested a grass not yet been appropriated for the Council. State Department. The session produced nothing new, the two project. nice Whalen. Carol Ramsey, both of Berkeley, being satisfied to restate their governments' well-known positions The 40s and 50s predominated mound be erected, similar to the Accepted by nursing schools Surviving, besides his parents, Calif. . on the Communist-encircled city, the sources said. across the couivtry, with the 50s one on the Garden State Park- After (he engineer-explained are his wife, Frances Louise da- mat the federal government will were the following. St. Francis A Requiem Mass will be of- The State Department, in accordance with long-standing prac- along the Pacific Coast and the way, instead of a "monstrosity" School of Nursing, Judith Behr Costa' Ayers; four sons, Marc 60s in Florida, along the Gulf share in the cost of toe project, fered at 10 a.m. Friday at Star tice, immediately arranged a briefing session for the three Allies (concrete barrier,) Mr. Link re- and Jeanne Perrle; Rhode Island William, Eric Ray, Jeff Lennard of the Sea Catholic Church. In- Interested in the fate of the city. The British, French, and West Coast area into southern Texas plied: Benjamin Gruber, local attorney, and Gregg Elliot Ayers, all at remarked to the audience: Hospital, Brenda Fowler; Orange terment will be in Mt, Carmel ; German ambassadors are scheduled to meet with Llewellyn and along the coast northward "It would necessitate taking home, and a sister, Mrs. Dorothy from Florida to the Middle Atlan- "Since funds haven't been ap- Orange Memorial Hospital Pa- Cemetery, West Long Branch. Thompson, Rusk's principal adviser on Soviet affairs. Thompson more property on either side of tricia Howell; Beth Israel Hospi- Nichols of Nahant, Mass. The F. Leon Harris Funeral [ attended yesterday's conference, as did Martin J, Hillenbrand, tic Coast states. The 60s and 70s the highway, and cost too much." propriated, the smartest thing to Services will be Friday at II prevailed in the Southwest desert do would be to write to your con- tal, Carolyn Stoll; Ann May Home is in charge of arrange- " head of the State Department's Berlin task force. Several speakers took issue School of- Nursing, Judith Behr a.m. in the William S. Anderson ments. region and extreme southern with Mr. Link on the claims gressmen to keep this project Funeral Home, Red Bank, with Florida. from getting off the ground." son, and Monmouth Medical Cen- TO PRESS PIPE ISSUE IN LONDON that barriers hava been proven ter, Carol Halliday. Rev. Charles H. Best of Trinity HARRY SCHWARZWAELDER WASHINGTON — Undersecretary of State George W. Ball goes Some early morning tempera- safer than Islands. When asked if the state agency Episcopal Church officiating. would conduct another hearing, One senior, William Pratt, has BRADENTON, Fla. - Harry "' to London today to try to convince the British that large-diameter tures and conditions: New York The state official pointed out been accepted by the Merchant Burial will be in Fair View 50 cloudy, Chicago 37 clear, Bos- at night, when plans are com- Schwarzwaelder, 68, president of ' steel pipes are strategically important commodities which should that "there are statistics that Marine Academy, Kings Point, Cemetery, Middletown. Schwarzwaelder - Kern, Inc., ' • not be shipped to Russia. The British presumably will disagree. ton 54 rain, Washington 51 cloudy, show a reduction of over 73 pleted, Mr. link said he knew ol *' This will hardly surprise Ball. He was told the same thing last Philadelphia 48 cloudy, Atlanta no other community which Had Long Island. Newark, N. J., plumbing con- per cent in accidents and fatali- tractors, died here of a stroke •' Monday when he summoned Sir David Ormsby Gore, the British 47 clear, Miami 66 clear,. Louis- ties in areas where barriers were more than out hearing. ambassador, to discuss the controversial pipe issue, ville 42 cloudy, Detroit 38 rain, The audience jeered. ,' Monday. He had lived nine years Installed." at Sea Girt, N. J., before moving Ball's mission likely will arouse the ire of Soviet Premier St. Louis 45 clear, Minneapolis He cited Rt. 1, Rt. 1, and Rt He pointed out that all of the New Jersey Births 40 clear, Kansas City 53 partly highway's contact from now on to Florida. He is survived by • Khrushchev. The Russian leader already has accused the United 22, as examples. his second wife, Mrs. Mae C. • States of having "exercised crude pressure" upon its allies per- cloudy, Denver 42 clear, Dallas Mayor Guiney complained that would be with municipal officials. 52 clear, Phoenix 61 partly cloudy, A resident of Highland* ex- RIVERVIEW Walters Schwarzwaelder, two - suading them to refuse Soviet pipe orders. By doing so, Khrush- the proposed widening of Rt 36 News Briefs Red Bank daughters, a sister and nine •• chev said in a Moscow elections speech last month, the United Seattle 47 rain, 55 here from Water Witch Ave. to pressed the only optimistic note By The Associated Preu ^ States was interfering in Soviet relations with third countries and cloudy, Los Angeles 55 partly of the session. Mr. and Mrs. Robert ScMos- grandchildren. Services will be Miller St. would cause a hardship HOPEWELL - State Police ser, 10 Thorne PI, Port Mon- held in Irvington, N. J., FrkUy. this, he said, was "a manifestation of the senseless-policy of cold cloudy, Anchorage 12 clear, Hono- to 10 or 12 homes and some Said Mrs. Alexander F. Bahrs: yesterday captured a 2ft-year-oki jwar." lulu 74 rain. "I'm sure the itate will aban- rnouth, son, yesterday. businesses in the area. escapee from the Mercer. Coun- Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Fraser, Devalue Property don this whole plan after today's ty workhouse. Robert J. Barry, hearing. They'll tee it's folly to Highland Ave., Atlantic High- He noted that the borough 26, of Trenton, was arrested by lands, son, yesterday.' Fight 3 Fires disrupt this highway and Its State Trooper Thomas Wolfe In Apartments stands to lose $80,000 in ratables. beauty." Mr. and Mrs. William Porter, Statements He said he was concerned with a field along Pleasant Valley Rd. Richdale Rd., Lincroft, daugh- In Red Bank the devaluation of property and Wolfe had been petroling the area ter, yesterday. businesses along the highway. in the belief Barry could not. have RED BANK — Last nlght'l Plan Gets Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dobkow- soaking rain was good news to The audience whistled, stamped School gotten'far from the workhouse ski, 8 Leola Ave., Keansburg, after bis escape Sunday.' Barry firemen, but it didn't save them In Marlboro its feet,' end applauded when (Continued) daughter, yesterday. a trip at 4:50 this morning when Fly Cr Tentative OK Mayor Guiney remarked: said he found a hacksaw Made Mr. and Mrs. John Harris, 73 fire broke out in the home of FREEHOLD — The Planning "I hate to agree with anything council cannot impose Its recom- n a mop close* at the work- ' MARLBORO — The chairman be appointed by the mayor mendation upon the board. Princeton Rd., Fair Haven, Robert Tederman, 238 Spring St. Board last night recommended Mr. Daly has to say, but I go house and used it to cut the bars daughter, yesterday. of the Citizens' Committee has acting mayor, but points out that John Dixon of Rumson Rd. pro-of hit cell. It took him several According to police, the origin branded the flyer distributed that a two-acre tract between along with one of his statements. Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Hendricks, of' the blaze was in a utility "one of your elected council- Spring and Henry Sts. be rezoned That is, I hope there is a delay posed that the school board con- days. throughout the township this week men could not be appointed." eider paying for public transpor- 933 West Front St., River Plaza, room, near an ironing board, to permit construction ol a gar- in this project for many years, daughter, yesterday. * as "irresponsible and full of half- 'No Problems' tation for Fair Haven students JERSEY CITY — Jersey City at the rear of the Tederman den apartment If the site plans possibly forever." Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rickner, home. •f truths." Mr. Bauman retorts that' 'this are approved by the planning Mr. Daly incumbent Republ- who live within a mile of bus police and firemen were voted is not unusual and would create lines which traverse River Rd. 16 Gary Dr., Middletown, son, Fire damage was kept to a Gerald A. Bauman, Jr., said the consultant, E. Eugene Oris, New lean,, is seeking election to the a $750,000 pay raise last night this morning. flyer had been mailed to resi- no problems." Brunswick. post of freeholder this year. Mr. Only about a third of these pu- as the City Council passed an minimum but smoke filled the "The all-powerful mayor," the pils, he said, live farther than a Mr. and Mrs. James Kirk, 211 house. Back taps were sounded dents by the Marlboro Township The board acted upon the rec- Guiney, Democrat, is too. amended $42,096,144 municipal East Bergen PI., Red Bank, son, Voters' Association. statement says, "could be con- ommendation of the planner, who Freeholder Daly, earlier in the mile from an existing bus line. budget The council also con- at 5:15 a.m. trolled by a minority of 25 per An explanation of the school Sunday, Before the rain, firemen fought The one-page paper asked, "Do said "Adequately designed apart- hearing, said the state's proposal curred in the Board of Educa- Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Phillips, you want a dictatorship controlled cent of the voters who could ments would not be detrimental to widen the highway and con- board's thinking concerning foa.B $14,142,000 school expendi- two brusbh h firefi s yesterdayd . continually threaten him with re- 49 East Lincoln Ave., Atlantic At 12:47 p.m. the Relief En- by the so-called 'Citizens' Com- to the surrounding neighborhood." struct a barrier from Atlantic'buse .s an.. d teacher. .„s, is forthcom, ,__ - tares, -n^ amended budget would Highlands, daughter, Monday. , mittee?"' call if he refused to bow to their The consultant recommended Highlands to the Highlands 5* in ths next edition of 'Tower provide increases ranging from to 194 wishes." Mr. and Mrs. Robert Boles, 2 Eas|™t Bergen PI. Three minutes The flyer continues that under rezoning on the condition that the Bridg- • e "lacks vision." Chimes," a leaflet published pe- over $350 a year for patrolmen Essie Dr., Matawan, son, Mon- the proposal, "The mayor would "Here," Mr. Bauman said, "is developers, Lanza and Scott, Mr. Penta and Thomas Knittel, riodically to promote better un- and firemen to dose to $500 for later, when it appeared that the another example of a half-truth derstanding between taxpayers day. grass blaze might endanger a be. all-powerful with the right to Freehold, reduce the units-per- owner of the Cedar Inn in High- department chiefs. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Weeden, hire and fire most department A majority vote would be re- acre from 32 to 28. lands, contended that one-way and school authorities. garage, Fire Chief Charles Knoll quired at the polls." The board will, by truncating 71 Amelia Cir., Little Silver, called a general alarm. heads." It questions "Why In his letter to the board, Mr. traffic would ruin business. GLASSBORO-Charles Hand, daughter, yesterday. The flyer concludes that "there its school bus system, be able IS, of Glasaboro Lawni, was The fire was quickly doused by they are trying to conceal the Oris said reduction of the total Mr. Penta pointed out that the MONMOUTH MEDICAL creation of a dictator.' are many more which we wil units would relieve "what project is designed to alleviate to maintain its three-year plan IdUed last night when he was the combined companies. call to your attention in the very to raise the teacher salary guide struck by a car as be was Long Branch At 3:35 pp.m., firemen extln- Mr. Bauman remarked, "Call- amounts to the overcrowding of summer traffic but that people in bv Ing the mayor under the Faulkner near future." the property." the area would be "stuck with it installments. The final hike crossing Buck Rd. In nearby Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Koshon, quished a grass fire at Drum- Act Plan E a dictator is ridicu- Mr. Bauman asked, "Does this Attorney for the developer, Har- all-year 'round." was ratified last night, making Elk Township. He was dead on 112 Center Ave., Atlantic High- mond Ave. near Willow St. lous. The act provides for checks group really believe that the ry Sagotsky, Freehold, said 60 Mr. Knittel, noting that hefte SWdt Provid« ,for « startlnS arrival at Underwood Hospital. lands, daughter, today. and balances. His appointments Faulkner Act created by the property owners in the area rep- stands to lose 20 feet of his res- salary of $5,200 for a teacher with State Police Identified the car Mr. and Mrs. Albert DiCiro Woman Evicted must be approved by the council, state Legislature is evil?" resenting 80 per cent of the resi- taurant termed the state's plan no experience and a bachelor's driver as Robert Harmer, 22, lamo, 355 Lowden Ct, Long he takes no direct part in the He added, "It is apparent dents, approved the project. He a "seizure of private property." degree, to $9,200 for one with 18 of Monroevllle. Branch, son, today. By Magistrate legislation and he is subject to 'ram the hasty and inaccurate said 21 of the residents in the John E. Gill, relocation super- years' experience and at the Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Postell, recall by the people," Mr. Bau- conclusions of this group that immediate area approved of the visor of the Highway Department, sixth year educational level. An VINELAND — Stuart Park, 21, Ticetown Rd., Old Bridge, son, RED BANK-Magistrate Wil. man said. our original question has been project and only "four or five told The Register that the state nual Increments are $200. of Millville, died last night of in- today. Ham I. Klatsky yesterday gave answered. This group was not Moral Obligation Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Dang- Mrs. Alice Powell Peay until noon Charter Study objected." provides up to $200 for relocation juries suffered Monday night in formed to make an unbiased of families, whether they are Throughout the fight to win a two-car collision at Main Rd. ler, 45 Grant Ct., Long Branch; to get out of town. The flyer continued, "Why study." owners or tenants, if the state public acceptance for its budget and Sherman Ave. Mrs. Elsa son, today. At the morning session of Mu- didn't this so-called 'Citizens' Summon Drivers purchases their property. proposals, tie school board held Arson, 68, of East Sherman Ave., Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Frederick, nicipal Court, Judge Klatsky im- Committee' use the more demo- that it had a moral obligation to was killed in the crash. Park's posed a six-month jail sentence cratic portions of the Faulkner Businesses are awarded up to 956 Wobdgate Ave., Elberon, son, $3,(100 for relocation, within 50 its teachers, many of whom two brothers and two women today. on a drunk and disorderly charge, Act and submit the question to He'll look In Traffic Crash Mr. and Mrs. James Gibson, and suspended it with the con- the voters through charter com- miles, he said. joined the system relying upon were critically injured and a FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP - He noted that if a businessman the proposed guide. third woman wa« seriously in- 229 Seaview Ave., Long Branch, dition that the violator not be mission? The answer is obvious— son, yesterday. seen in the borough again. that would be too democratic For Detour Summonses were issued to the wants to place his belongings in No board, according to state jured. They are patients at New- driven ol a milk truck and an storage, instead of relocating, the school laws, can bind a subse- comb Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hallen- Mrs. Powell was arrested Mon- and wouldn't give flicm the op- MIDDLETOWN - Carl S. dorff, 378 West End Ave., Long portunity to manipulate for their automobile involved in a collis- state will pay for that, but onh/quent board to approve In day on West Bergen PI. by Capt Swaggerty had his problems Branch, daughter, yesterday. William Patterson. She gavbrno own interests." last night at the intersection of ion this morning on Rt. 522 at business property, not personal creases. Yearly ratification of PHILUPSBURG -A (1-year- the jughandle approach to Rt. 9. belongings. such changes must be made. old New Vlfla?e nun burned to Mr. and Mrs. William C. permanent address. •>$}'; Mr. Bauman retorted that "Go Rt. 35 and Kings Hwy. death yesterday when he ap- Thorpe, 21 Leonard Ave., Atlan- A court official said'. • ing through the charter study Police report that Swaggerty, Tenneht State Police identified When Mr. Link said the state As a result of its budget de- the driver of the automobile as believes barriers attract business, feats, the board hopes to Im- parently dozed off In a chair tic Highlands, son, yesterday. Powell had previously ^ commission would have delayed who is stationed at Fort Mon- and dropped a cigarette onto Mr. and Mrs. David Sommers, evicted from a change in form of government, mouth, was driving south on 35 Samuel Maldonado, 26, of La Sat-the audience hooted. prove public understanding of its other Monmouth ta Ave., Englishtown. The dlrver problems. A committee headed his clothing, setting It afire. 29 Pemberton Ave., Oceanport, County towns. which is needed now by at least shortly before 7 p.m. when his To Lose Memorial daughter, yesterday. of the truck, owned by Krauszer Some residents of Atlantic by Gardner Fox was appointed State police laid the victim, two years." car struck the rear of one Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Hoilman, driven by Carl J. Buehler, Jr., Dairy, New Brunswick, was iden- Highlands were concerned about last night to formulate a program Holloway Cllne, lived alone in Chestnut Ave., Atlantic High- The flyer asks: "What are the tified as Russell Dey, 28, of Nix- a house on Rt. 24. The result- I Main St., Matawan, daughter, lands, daughter,. Saturday. - real motives of this 'Citizens' 30, of 30 Handyboy Ct. Buehler losing the present character of incorporating thoughts of board said he had stopped for a traf- n. memorial Pkwy., dedicated 30 members and observers made ing fire did light damage to the yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. William Andrews, Committee?'" house. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Cre- 421 Garfield Ct., Long Branch, The chairman said, "The real fic light at the intersection. Maldonado was making a left years ago as a memoria' l" t•o known last night. At the same intersection two turn from Rt. 522 onto the jug- World War I veterans. Paul White, James Greene and land, 146 Sampson PI., Long daughter, Friday. motives of the Citizens' Com- COLONIA — Carol Scheurman, FITKIN mittee are expressed In our mot- hours later, Swaggerty, again handle, state police said. Both They made a plea to save the Dr. George Hoffmann will also Branch, daughter, Monday. to, 'Better government and better header south on Rt. 35, struck vehicles were traveling east on grass Island, trees, flagpoles, and serve on the committee. 3, struck by a car Tuesday night Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cuje, 52 Neptune planning through citizen partici- the rear of a car driven by the highway. the memorial plaque. Mrs. William Blair, .presiden- near her home at 35 Highfleld Woodrow Wilson Homes, Long Mr. and Mrs. Duane Pierson, pation.' " Miss Florence Kwiatkowski, 20, Maldonado was issued a sum- Mrs. Egldio said: "We took the tial nominee of the Home and Rd., died yesterday In Perth Am Branch, son, Monday. Addison La., Farmlngdale, son, of 276 East Rd., Belford. Miss mons for an improper left turn sons of the Gold Star Mothers, School Association, offered the boy General Hospital. Police said Mr. and Mrs. John Schwarz, yesterday. The flyer states that the group 13 Greenway St., Hazlet, daugh- "deliberately failed to tell" that Kwiatkowski told police she'had and Dey was charged with care- please don't take the memorial co-operation of that group In Im- the child was hit by a car driven the business administrator, a de- stopped at the intersection to less driving. A hearing is sched- dedicated to them.'' plementlng the board's efforts to by Carolyn Pawowitz, 19, of 171 ter, Monday. '' It pays to advertise In the Red partment head, or clerk could' make a left turn. uled here April IS. Residents living along the atrip communlcate with taxpayer!. East Cliff Rd. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnson, Bank Reglster.Advertlsqment. Wed., March 27, 1963—3 BED BA&K REGISTER Successful Investing Nason on Education !"* Earnings, Dividends, Growth Set Stock's Selling Price Causes for Test Failures By LESLIE J. NASON their test papers anil havi students to improve their over- By ROGER E. SPEAR Professor of Education watched them get higher gradei all educational procedures. Here Q.—"Recently I inherited sev. And, if you will allow me, Some students make low grades without learning any more sub- are two case studies that illus- eral hundred shares of Contin suggest that you check the re on tests time after time — and ject matter. trate the point: ental Copper & Steel. I was tok atively low cost of a safe depos: they wonder why. Students often fail tests be Jean, a high school tenior, that their divisions are doinj box at your local bank. They study the material until cause of the way they go abou scored poorly in true-false tests. very well. If this is so, shouldn' (Mr. Spear cannot answer al they know it as well or better taking them. Once they adopt Her wrong answers came in the stock sel mail personally but wilj answei than anyone in correct approach to test-takin, groups—three at a time, four in higher t h a all questions possible in hi the class and they make Higher scores. a row, or three out ol four. 41/2? Perhaps column.) still they fail. Teachers and counselors hav She had fallen into the habit you can e) The fault lies failed to show students how of worrying about one question plain this, in their knowl- eliminate test-taking errors. Thej while attempting lo answer the would like < edge of the have considered the scores o next one. Complete attention is increase m A Vigorous subject but in testi as measures of the student' necessary in dealing with the holdings If de- the fact that knowledge, while they ma; trickly wording found on true- sirable." H.G they just do not simply be measures of his tesl false tests. A. - Please Day Marked know how to taking skill. Jean's remedy was simple. •forgive in take a test. Improving Test Scores She learned to focus all her at- seeming ti In the past Helping to locate procedural er tention on one question, answer Roger E. Spear By Market preach t0 you Dr. Nason 20 years. I rors in test-taking and showin, it and then dismiss it from li°r NEW YORK (AP) - The stock but I have to point out thai have helped students analyze the remedy can also stimulate mind. Then she turned all her market showed renewed signs < stocks sell on their fundamen- attention to the next question. vigor yesterday as it enjoyed il With this simple approach, tals: earning power, dividends, first four million share session 1: quite so competent . . . honest Bowens, "because the way I reai and growth outlook. a type of broom that would the writing on the wall—you an Jean's scores on true-false tests nearly two weeks, with prices ad- went up. On all three of these counts not sweep into the dark corners going to need it." vancing on balance. CASH DRAWER7-Monmouth County Bank, continuing to expand its services, hat Learns to Civc ' your Continental Copper slack The savings-and-ktan holdinj ... or which would sweep dirt . The audience cheered. up very poorly, through no fauli opened a drive-in office at iti branch at Bayihore Plaza, Rt. 36 and First Av*., At- under the rug ... Do you want Held to Rules Dick, a college student, brought companies, big three motors am me test papers in economics, of its own. The company hai a city manager or a pussy- Meanwhile, back at City Hal selected issues among oils, tobac- lantic Highlands. James B. Van Mater, senior vica president, left, stands by AS May- sociology and marketing. All been doing a good volume footer?" Mr. Dinkelspiel said he had re cos and chemicals did well. or Russell W. Morgan makes the first deposit. J. Joseph McVey, third from left, is through these papers the instruc- business, but higher competition Mr. Frankel told the council he mained silent during the lengthy Losses among aerospace issues tor's comments were: "What and rising costs resulted in and unconvincing action by rails, another of the bank's vice pertidents. In the booth is John Murphy, teller. found it interesting that only hearings for the reasons: He wai deficit for the fiscal year which keeping faith with ground rule; else?" "Illustrate," and question utilities, drugs, electrical equip- twice during the hearing did any marks that seemed to ask: "Just ended June 30, 1961, with onl; ness of the HA'S Shrewsbury adopted by a majority of council ments and others kept the damp- Bowen barbs produce reactions. what do you mean?" $0.22 a share earnings in fiscal er on the market. Name Poster Bowen riverfront project. Ono was when the ousted man- and ha was locked in the libel 1962, and profits for the first ha Mr. Frankel contended it was ager told of frustrations in de- litigation with the mayor and th No one ever pointed out to him After an Irregular start, the (Continued) hat in test after test he failed erf fiscal 1963 sharply lower,thai timed, a day before the Bowen termining whether reports of gambling issue which came up market made strides, hitting its to give precise answers; he neg- In the previous year. Dividends Contest Winners their positions to the auditorium hearing was to end, to prejudice widespread gambling in the city was an issue in this personal mat peak in mid afternoon, then soft lected illustrations and ex- have been omitted and .the and won the big crowd's ap- the manager's chances. Tha at- were true, and the other when ter. ening as traders took profits. MIDDLETOWN — Children amples. growth outlook is poor. Iproval. torney had sent notices — de- he assailed the Housing Author- (Earlier, Mr. Dinkelspiel ha The Dow Jones industrial av from kindergarten through grade When this was brought to I advise you to sell a substan- erage, which had been up 3.93 al five at Fairview School recently That the decision will be the livered by city police through ar- ity. told a reporter he wasn't answer- major issue in the May M elec- rangements with the city lega Dick's attention, he corrected his tial proportion Of your holding! 2 p.m. dosed with a net gain 0: participated in a "Keep Your Declines to Answer ing questions put to him becaus tion for all six wards counci department — to HA members test-taking procedure and, with and put the proceeds into 2.21 at 680.38. School Clean" poster contest. At one of the early hearings, his lawyer had advised him t< Coastal States Gas. seats was underlined. asking them to be present at the "button your lip-") less study time, his grades raised The economics background tc Teachers from each grade Mr. Frankel had questioned Mr. trom D to B. Q.—"I have accidentally de- .Campaign Bias hearing so that they might be the market remained quite cheei level screened the posters which Dinkelspiel about published state- The ground rules provided thai stroyed some Series E saving! At the school auditorium, Mrs. questioned about the statement. council need not produce any Given proper instruction in test- ful. It included the eighth were finally judged by Mrs. ments last year—now the basis bonds. Will you please let mi Wilson said she had "no hesita- Attorney Heard witnesses or evidence in support taking procedures, many a dis- straight weekly rise in steel pro Maureen Deakin, art teacher. of counter libel suits between him know if they are traceable? Alsc tion In basing my campaign for The HA attorney, Anthony of the reasons for which it wa couraged student can be given duction and a government fore- The winners were: kindergar- and Mayor MoClintock — about new hope and put back on the please let me know whom re-election on the fact I helped Woolley, was in the audience and dismissing the manager, and tha cast of rising retail sales thl ten, Diane Harwood, first grade, open gambling in the city, and path to success, should contact in order to re- bring a qualified city manager to identified himself. He said "like Mr. Bowen could not question month, Natalena Porcelli, second grade, about the councilman's state- place them." J.M. Long Branch to make the new Ivory soap, Mr. Mailer's state- councilmen as to why they were The brisk trading pushed vol James West, third grade, David ments at public meetings on the A.—This is a disturbing thini form of government work ... I ment was 98 and 44/100 per cenl firing him. (You may obtain a'copy of Dr. ume up to 4.11 million share: Fromm, fourth grade, Cheryl issue. Mr. Dinkelspiel declined to to have happen, but fortunately am confident the people I repre- proof." (Bowen later asked The two reasons cited were tha Nason's "You Can Get Better from Monday's 3.7 million. II Bloodgood and Nina Braunwarth answer. I believe your bonds can be re- sent will be satisfied I resisted council to determine if the usi he had engaged in controversie: rades" booklet by sending $1 was the largest turnover since and fifth grade, Dennis Sullivan. every effort to undermine him of the word "proof" instead ol But, when the hearings were to "Better Grades," Box 2160, placed without too much diffi March 13 when 4.12 millioi over and Mr. Frankel had gone which brought on bad city public culty. >.i Each winner will receive a and destroy the government by "pure" as the nationally adver- ity and that he. was not in har- General Post Office, New York.) shares changed hands. tised trademark would require home and council was back in The first thing to da Is to go book on his grade level as a others who would ruin this city mony with the full council. Of the 1.289 issues traded, for the soap product, was de- its chamber at City Hall, Mr. Into your bank or into any Fed- reward. The winning posters will and destroy anyone they cannot Legal Basis gainers outnumbered > losers b; rule." liberate.) Dinkelspiel took up the gambling eral Reserve Bank and ask foi be displayed throughout the City Attorney Aikens has de- 585 to 405, a respectable margi Mr. Woolley said he had not issue again: a lost bond form, known as PD building until the end of March. At City Hall, after Mr. Dinkel- fended the hearing procedure on To Define but not a very wide one. New attended any of the four prior It is common knowledge that 1048 Treasury Department. You spiel had rapped Bowen and grounds that the law provide; highs for the year totaled 82 and hearings but that he thought they I came out publicly and asked must fill out this form in the full Frankel for "brutally, malicious for it on the theory that it will new lows 42. had gone too long. He said he Mr. Bowen what he was going CD Role est detail. When completed, youi ly, and willfully" attacking him, give a suspended manager a The Associated Press averagi reviewed the article issued by to do about the disgraceful gam- signature must be certified by Mr.' Untermeyer challenged Dink- chance to plead his own case fo; of 60 stocks ended the day with Stock Market Mr. Maher and a reply made bling conditions ... His answer postal official or a bask officer. elspiel to test his confidence with reinstatement and allow the coun a moderate gain of .8 at 258.' Yesterday's dosing stocks: the people of the First AVard, I Tuesday by Mr. Frankel and was: 'Hogwash.' . . . Yet seven Of Nurses After this has been accom- cil time to reconsider its action, with industrials up 1.5, rails up ACF Ind S!i, I-T-B Ckt Brk 14% where both reside, In the coming thought things were fair because months later he states gambling plished, forward your signed Adams Ex SS',4 Johns Man was Long Branch's most serious Here are highlights of the Cily RED BANK—The public health ,2, and utilities up il. Air Pro! 60 ij lelection. • . both were of almost equal length, form to the Bureau of the Pufolii Jonea A L Hall statements by some of the nurses of Monmouth County will Strings of sizable blocks wen Reduc 58 <4 Mr. Dinkelspiel told reporters The attorney said the Housing problem . . ." Alleg e» 10U Joy.-Mtf.' attempt to define their role in Dept., Division of Loans & Cur- iraded, particularly in the sav- Before the ouster vote", Mayor councilmen who dismissed Mr. AlleJ Luil 3114 Kaisej- Al • later he had "no comment," He Authority members would be will civil defense and to draw up rency, 536 South Clark St., Chi- ings and loans but also in a va- '.lleg Pw •19 MoClintock defended Bowen par- Bowen: Allied Ch H'i Kennecott had previously said he was con ing to give testimony if council limitations as well as extensions cago, 111. riety of other groups. Studebakei All Is Chil Koppera ticularly on grounds that he had Mr. Fisher: "1 regret having 18% sidering giving up his council wanted it. Mr. Frankel asked for if nursing functions in today's was off V* at 6J4 on a single block AIcoi 58% Kresge,' ES cracked down on crime. to have had to take this action .m Atrlln mdn-at-large seat, which has two an adjournment so that such tes- tad education session here at of 32,400 shares, ending the day Un Brk Sh 54* Kroger years to run, and make the race timony could be arranged. Coun- Teeth In Code .but I had to keep paramount Un Can 45 V, Lehlgh CAN the Monmouth County Organiza- with a net loss of '/a- .m Cyan cil voted him down, 6-3, "He was instrumental in put- in my mind my own responsibili- Scouts Busy r>3'i Leh Port C against Mr. Untermeyer, in Ward tion for Social Service, Bodman Im MFdy 2014 Points Up Vote ting teeth in a criminal registra- ty ... I expected Mr. Bowen, at Plans were announced on the Lin Hot Q0% Leh Val Ind One, for a four-year term. "1. Un Smelt 67« LOF Qlau Lone Hearing tion ordinance. He reorganized the hearing, would show why he ticker to float a monster 180,500 Un Std "What was the vote," Mr. Lib IKBMi should be reinstated . . . Instead Mrs. Doris Mann, assistant Planning For share secondary offering of Her- Un Tel Tel 121 Yi Gambling and the City Housing Frankel asked. the police department and pro- Am Too 31« Una * My there was just a hodge-podge ol executive director of MCOSS, and cules Power, and the stock sank Am . Authority shaped up as the bogey- "Six to three," City Clerk vided it with modern equipment 60« Litton Ind old arguments with council and Miss Rose Iannota, district chief more than a point on the sews. AMP Inc 27% LUkeru Stl men in the finale of the-public Sanita J. Camassa reported. ... He has sought the help New Season Anaxxmdi attacks on individual councilmen of public health nursing, state So the secondary offering was Armco 8U Mack Trk hearing on Bowen's ouster which "I see," Mr. Frankel rejoined. of professional investigators and OAKHURST—Leaders of Mon- Armour MaraUl Oil .. . The spirit . . . doomed . . department of health, will act as withdrawn and Hercules cut it: 4 Martin M consumed about 22 hours of de- The crowd responded with laugh- has gone to county and state law Armst CIc any chance of reconciliation." consultants at the workshop mouth Council of Boy Scoots are loss to % by the close. Alhl Oil if Merck bate, testimony, and intermis ter. enforcement agencies asking their busy with plans for a full season Atchlson MGM Mr. Tomaini: "It has been my which will follow the panel dis- Ten of the 15 most active stocks Atl Retin Minn MAM [sions at five sessions which City Attorney Louis Aikens ap- assistance. cussion. of activities in the months ahead. advanced, four declined, and Pan Avco Corp Mo Pac A "As a result we have had ef- observation during the five months Babcock W Mont Ward jstarted March 16. parently settled a question for Mrs. Claire Parrish, MCOSS The council will be host to the American World Airways was un- Bald Lima •155 Nat Blsc Top billing in the last-mile de- one of the "six," Councilman 'ective law enforcement In our I have been a councilman the Bait ft Oh N Cash Rej niblic health nurse, Middletown, statewide district operations con changed. 51 fense effort also was given to Marks, though he didn't answer city. Productive raids have been city manager has failed to work B&yuk Clg Nat Dairy with council as a whole and has Is chairman of the staff educa- ference in Myer Hall, Fort Mon- For the eighth straight session Bell * How Nat Distill Acting City Manager John O. directly the question put to him. made ... for crimes ranging Sendlx Nat Oyps entered into conflict on issues of ion committee, which includes mouth, all day Saturday. The Sunray DX Oil was the most ac- Beth Steel Nat Steel Jones. Mr. Marks asked if statements from gambling, to arson and dope Boeing policy, causing disharmony and diss Virginia Chamberlain, Free- conference, which will bring to tive stock. Is rose 1% to 30% on 35 H NY Central These are the highlights: by the Housing Authority would peddling . . . Borden 60« Nla M Pw unrest among council, city em- told Health Center; Mrs. Lea gether more than 6S0 scout of- 13,600 shares. Despite recent de 3org Warn No Am Av 1. Councilwoman Wilson, gain have any bearing on the pending "Any city, particularly a re- 'omlinson, Manasquan Health ficials, will be conducted by Re- Srunswk 16H Nor Pac ployees, and the general public' nials by the company that any Buckeye PI 60% Nwst Airlln ing the floor as the hearing matter. This was immediately sort community such as ours, is renter; Mrs. Mary Withey, Bel- gion 2 {New Jersey, New York such deal was in the making, Bucy ErJs 15% Norwich Ph ! opened, quoted Mr. Jones as after Mr. Woolley had stated (he potentially vulnerable to the per- Mr. Ronca: "I am convinced Buiova 11H mar Health Center, and Mrs. Su- and Puerto Rico), of which Peter 3url Ind Outb Mar beyond a reasonable doubt the Wall Street persists in believing 80% Owens II! Gl having stated, during an argu HA members would be available. nicious incursion of syndicated ian Wltek, Bodman Health Cen- Case, JI 8% two reasons stated in the (firing) Paulson is scout executive. that an assets sale or merger is ?ater Trie Pan A W Air ment at a council conference Mr. Aikens centered his reply underworld activities. The his- cr, New Shrewsbury. Iclanese 33% Param Plct resolution are true ... 1 cannot Largely, it will be a study meet- upcoming. 3SM Penney, JO Monday, that he had "enough In- only on the published statement tory of gangsterism in other cities Cties & Ob give Mr. Bowen a vote of confi- ing. The volume pacemaker among jliryaler Pa PwAU formation to blow the lid off this by Mr. Maher last Monday and indicates clearly that when we 3itiea 8v i Pa BR dence ... He has outlived his ' In preparation is the Show of the savings and loans was San :oca Cola Pepsi Cola. town." said such a statement in-a news- have organized gambling you 92% usefulness as city manager." Shows, the 1963 Boy Scout Show, Diego Imperial, second most ac- 3oie Pal 49 PHzer She said she had been unable paper would have no more weight have with it even more vile 212,700 Jobless Gi» Phil El to be held in Convention Hall, As- ive stock for the second straigM :4 Shell Oil Mrs. Wilson's assertion. The schools and public services, he finery in Linden. New Jersey Bell Telephone Co. pressed in price, have been rec- last Kexi 115 Sinclair lost the first battle — but I should ation was good with seasonal Smith. AO councilwoman also disclosed at will show a model of the Telsta immended as "buys" by street !nd John 19 said. Mr. Brown had been serving as lows in trade and construction irle LacK 3% Socony he hearing Mr. Jones had not call it a battle; it was an am- or Project Echo equipment and sources. Firestone 34 sou Pao assistant manager of that depart- Sou Ry Long Reply bush . . . And while we were be work. other displays are planned. General Motors, touching an- Fla Pw 42S threatened to resign during the ment which has responsibility for Fla P&L 70H Sparry Rd heat of Monday's closed door Mr. Bowen put in the record a ng ambushed snipers were shoi Gov. Richard J. Hughes told Next week, the council will be- tther historic high, rose % 'ood Fair 23 Std Brand laboratory and purchasing func- 'HC Ci 39!4 Btcl oil Cal argument. He declined to com- 'ive-minute reply, point-by-point, t by snipers on the sidelines . . newsmen the cabinet was gen- Chrysler gained \% and Ameri- 45 Std Oil NJ tions, gin to accept reservations for Mot :o the published attack on him "No power on earth can stop erally satisfied with lha report, can Motors eased >4 larrett 42 Btudebaker ment on this. the sixth National Boy Scou len Cigar 30« Texaco by Mr. Maher. us bringing this matter to coun A graduate of Rutgers Univer- but he noted that Camdcn, At- Jamboree which will be held al Actively-traded Reynolds To- len Dynam 27* Tex G Prod "That's why my lawyer was sity, he started at Bayway in lantic City, Cape May County, len Elec T3»i Tex G Eul Mr. Frankel made it appear the and that we intend to do ... iacco gained a point while Loril- Textron out there in the audience to- Valley Forge, Pa., in July, 1964, Jen Fda TO',i editorial comment of (lie local "Before it is over, you will 1951. After a year in economic and the shore areas faced a Scout executive J. Fred Billett ard, American Tobacco, and Lig- 3en Motors 64'/, TMewat Oil night," he told newsmen. But, planning work he moved to the critical labor surplus. len Pub Ut 3351 Tpanaamcr asked who was his lawyer, Mr. lewspaper, the Daily Record, was know you have been in one •aid the Monmouth contingent gett and Myers rose fractionally/ I Ttl&El 25 Un Carbide company's New York hcadquar- He said the job shortage in len Tire 22V, Un Pac Jones said, "Ha ... no com- weighty in the council's deci- lelluva fight" would number 160 scouts and American Tobacco eased Vi '" Unit Alrc .ers and in 1954 returned to Bay- Illlette ment on that either." iion. He took exception to the Mr. Frankel reminded the six Camdcn should be alleviated by leaders plus a visiting patrol ol leavy trading. 3len Aid United Co way as a supervisor of financial Ihc award of a nuclear subma- 3oodrlch US LlneB 2. As indicated in a statement last of a series of editorials ward councilmen — two of them scouts from a foreign country. Superior Oil added 34 at 1,354. joodyear US Plywd accounting. rine contract to the New York Iroce Co US Rub lo newspapers last night, Bowen which appeared Monday and sug-are pro-Bowen and four arc Monmouth troop units will be United Financial of California US Smelt In December, 1962, he became Ship Building yards In Cam- It A4P 46'4 and Frankel pressed an objec- gested the need of a "new broom igainst the ex-manager—that prc- limited to 40 boys each and par- ose 1, California Financial Ireyhound 361,4 US Steel assistant manager of Refinery dcn. 3ulf oil 42VJ Van Al 511 :ion to a statement Monday by . . one with a little less bristle sisely seven weeks from the mo- ticipant scouts must obtain first Du Pont 2, U. S. Smelting V/i. iamin Pap 32i Walworth services. Both he and his wife, The economic report said the [ere Pdr 4UH Wn.rn B Pic City Housing Authority Chairman would round off the corners a ment they voted Bowen's ouster class rank before Jamboree time. Radio Corp. 1, CBS 1%, IBM Wn Un Tel tlarfha, were borri here. II Cent -(S Daniel J. Maher, in the name of ttle better." 'oting machine tabulations would trcngth of the annual spring Taylor Gregory, Manasquan, %, and Western Union % Int Bus Hch HS'i Westg El iplurn in employment would int Harv 54rs White Mot the authority, assailing Bowen Mr. Frankel asked: je mndo on their re-election bids, who will head the expedition said Boeing closed oJf % at / int Nick 59il Woolwortli It pays to advertise in the Red not be known until lato this Yngst ShlT 'or comments he has made dur- "What kind of a city manager "I wish you good luck," ho Uter the close came news It had nt Paper 23(4 month or in April. there still are five places lefl it Tel 1 Tol U Zenith R ing hearings about fiscal sound- re you looking for? One not aid, particularly to the four anti- Bank Register.—Advertisement. for scouts wanting to go to the seen awarded a $358 million con- National Scout Ranch at Phil- ract for manufacture of the mont, N. Mex., July 5-27. Scouts Dyna-Soar manned space glider. enrolled for the 4,600-mile bus Prices were mixed on the trip and others seeking to go wil American Stock Exchange, Vol- SEA BRIGHT meet In scout headquarters at 8 ime was 910,000 shares com- p.m. Friday to go over plans. The pared with 980,000 Monday. Ac- activity is limited to first class ively traded Reinsurance Invest- scouts aged 14 or over. Forty ment was down 14. Syntex rose BATHING PAVILION scouts and leaders will go on Gulton Industries sank 1% Brazilian Traction and Dome the expedition. Petroleum were among fraction- il gainers. Corporate bonds were mixed. ANNOUNCES Egg Market I S. Government bonds declined. NEW YORK (AP) - USDA - Wholesale egg offerings ample. that contrary lo Demand improved slightly yes- 'Ian Band Auditions terday. 'or Fireihens' Fair Whites: HAZLET — The local fire com all rumors ... Extras 47 lbs. min. 36'/5-38; ex- iany will hold auditions April 7 tras medium 40 lbs. average 34- 'or bands interested in partici- 35; top quality 47 lbs. min. 37- pating in the unit's annual fair, 39!4; mediums 41 lbs. average 34- we will be The fair is scheduled for July 36; smalls 36 lbs. average, 25- 26; peewees 20-21. 16-31 and Aug. 1-3. The auditions Browns: ill be held in the fire house on KEYPORT GARDENS — Construction of 108 colonial-ifyle apartment units, ihown in drawing above, on 6.3-acre operating as usual tolmdel Rd. from 2 to 4 p.m. Extras 47 lbs. min. site on eatt sida of Atlantic St. north of Monroe St., Key port, it slated to start about April I, Builders Servanti top quality 47 lbs. min. ^^ and Daniali, Cranford, estimate project to cost approximately $1,2 million. Plans call for 36 two-badroom units, mediums 41 lbs. average 37-39; Buying or selling? Use the for the '63 season! smalls 36 lbs. average 25-26; pee- ;egister Classified for quick re- 12 efficiency apartment units, and 60 on»-b«droom uniti to be housed in six two-story buildings of briclc veneer wees 20-21. mits.—Advertisement, 1 comtruction. Harold Kant, Newark is the architect. v 4—SW., Ihtth 27, 1963 it U» '4i*t»&tat*d ptrton, bad the Ltgitlatoe—tnd told it at(Sat. The court agreed. Mr. bury, attorney for the Peteflto, Fails in Effort«»»t*iKJt» h» ?ut up U.0W as adww WtoWm Court Appeikte DivUlon. But it jag of fix months ago remains payment oa « $t,M0 dtU to buy In im, Mr. Frtund ins Midagreed, too, with Judge Mariano the controlling issutf. Tbt.'A&or- ney Central's Office, on Wrpatt Monmouth To Collect Onoeetotront property tt Lottg in court papers, he recalled his —and Long Branch was let out of the State, of New Jersey, argued Th» third Nrtbday of John Branch in 1M8. $1,000 advance Of IMS and real- as a defendant. along Hie same lines. Zwicki, son o( Mr. and Mrs. John Investment Whan tin purchase deal for a ized what had happened to tht Hie suit against the state and Cwiekt, Lone Oak Rd., was cele. vacant lot at 1163 Ocean Ave. land he had hoped to own. Sothe Pedevills carried and was Judge Ascher agreed on both brated Thursday with Lauri, Mi- FREEHOLD - The last ray ofwasn't completed on time, the he went to court. ' , slated for trial Monday. But M.sides. So that was the end of a chael and Judy Ditchtaw, Stephen former Board of Commiisionarl Raymond McGowan, of Shrews* balloon that burst. hope of a Newark man who He sued, Long Branch for re- and Robert Rycyk, Daniel and sought to parlay a $1,000 bad in-banked the deposit is forfeit. Rip Vaniero. Susan Le Strange turn of his $1,000 deposit. He sued and Andrew Megna. Present Sun- vestment IS years ago into a Later, the state Conservation the State of New Jersey on Its day were Mr. and Mrs. Richard $7,750 profit went (limm«rin| Department bought the lot tor $5,- $7,750 profit on resale Of land ac- YOUU ENJOY THE SIGHT Haherman, Mr. and Mrs. John Monday. 000 for aoceii to a beach where quired after condemnation. And It planned extension of a jetty he sued Dr. Pedevill, because Petty and family, Kathy and Car- His cast was thrown out of ol, Haibrouck Heights. experinienUl project. the latter is the current land own- court by Monmouth County Judge er. Edward J. Ascher. He gets noth- But, in 1954, long after the Long Branch City Attorney Lou. ' ALUMINUM ing. Miss Patricia Gxtaneyer, anned experiment hid bwn side- is Aikens argued before Superior daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ed- Robert Freund, of Newark, who lined, the state put the tot up forCourt Judge Gene R. Mariano ward Gockmeyer, Walker T«r.. sale—by virtue of a spatial act last year the claim was long over Lindhaven, who is a student at Urainus College, Collegevllle, £>.* Estate Council COMONAnOH WIKDOWS AKB DOItS is spending nlnt days of her Slates Meeting Hira's thi MWitt thine la CM- * spring vacation with her parents. bloitliiu! Ton lit ill tti W BORROW '2200 tatUM if ihimlmn iht tti - > SHREWSBURY-"The Profes- Boy Scout Troop 146 of the sional Service Corporation Act" Beauty ef painted wood. Tkiy Dr. Martin N. Malachowsky Pr. Jerald R. Cureton an vinyl coifed and will sot Baptist Church has completed a will be the discussion topic when the Estate Plannitg Council of REPAY 18" A MONTH crick, chip or PHI. Call today paper drive. They will go camp- for a no oblfgatlon dimonstn- ing at Camp Housman this week- Monmouth County meets Thurs- UMMH AMOUNTS AT FKOrOltTIONATI MTU tlm. You'll to anand it tki Two Shore Doctors end with Arthur Coughlin and day in the Shsdowbrook, here. Horn* Owners with or without existing mortgages tow, lot pries. Frank Sisto, co-leaders. There Speakers will be Edward P. CQNSOLHMTE TOUR MIS INTO ONE LOW MONTHLY PAYMENT will be 16 scouts in attendance. Ward, a University of Connecti- cut Law School graduate asso- REPAYMENT SCHEDULE Get DOORS 44-50- Are Elected Fellows ciated with the Connecticut Gen- AMOUNT 15 YEARS The Sky Pifots'of the Baptist eral Life Insurance Co., and Ed- $2,200 $18.57 • BUDGET TERMS 0> FREE DELIVERY LONG BRANCH - Two mem- University of New York Down- Church are collecting newspapers additional ward Pesin, a Newark attorney 3,000 Daily & Saturday I A.M.-5:S0 P.M. bers of Monmouth Medical Cen- state Medical Center. He served once a month. 25.32 who is chairman of the federal Wed. and Fit 'til I P.M. ter's department of obstetrics his internship and general prac- 5,000 45.20 cash tax committee of the state Bar "Between Yanko's * Renssilles" have been elected fellows of the tice residency at Mountainside 10,000 84.39 Harold Copeland, Sr., Cherry Association and a former attor- American College of Obstetricians Hospital, Montclair. His residen- • D Tree Farm Rd., will return home ney on the staff of the Internal cies in obstetrics and gynecology and Gynecologists, it has been an- April 6 from a month's vacation Revenue Service. International Mortgage Assoc. nounced by, George J. Bartel, were served at Geisinger Memo- in Treasure Island, St. Peters- hospital administrator. rial Hospital and Foss Clinic, 22 Haddon Ave., Camden, N. J. burg, Fla. He also visited his Arizona, our sixth state in site, 32 Brood St. SHodytld* 1-7500 fttdBmk Dr. Jerald R. Cureton, Shrews- Danville, Pa., and at Monmouth sister-in-law, Mrs. John Bannan experienced a population Increase In Red Bank Call SH 7-2662 bury, and Dr. Martin N. Mala- Medical Center. He served in the of West Palm Beach, Fla. of 111 per cent from 1946 to I960, chowsky, Long Branch, are theU.S. Air Force as assistant chief only Monmouth County physicians of obstetrics and gynecology it Loring Air Force Base Hospital Philip Schunneinan, son of Mr. who will be inducted into mem' and Mrs. Robert Schunneman, bership at the annual meeting of in Maine. Dr. Malachowsky ij a Blanche Ct., celebrated his ninth the college-April 21 to 24—in member of the American Medical birthday Saturday at a family New York. Association, The New Jersey and party. The American College of Ob- Monmouth County Medical Socie- stetricians and Gynecologists is ties, and the New Jersey Acade- an educational and scientific or- my of Medicine. He resides with The eighth birthday of Madeline ganization for physicians who his wife and two children in Oak-Durino, daughter of Mr. and Mr*. specialize completely in the par-hurst. Danel Durino, Louise PI, was TOP QUALITY-HBESH KIUID POULTRY ticular problems and functions celebrated Saturday at the home of women's reproductive sys- of Mr. and Mrs. James B. Kins- tems. To be named a fellow of ler, Montclair, with others in the the group, a physician must have Thompson family. completed an approved rigorous program of medical training, School Has Mrs. Robert Holland, Gary Dr., limited his practice completely entertained members of the Lone to obstetrics and gynecology for Oak Women's Club last week. An at least five yean, and have the Science Fair auction was held. Mrs. James unqualified approval of his col- MIDDLETOWN — Computers Keating, Craig PI., will entertain leagues in the profession. and telegraphs, the planets and at the next meeting. jTERS Dr. Cureton, an associate at- chick embryology were some of tending on Monmouth staff, is a the features of a scienoe fair at Mr. and Mrs. James Ronald- graduate of Centenary College, the Thompson School. son, Park Ave., recently returned from a visit with their son-in-law Shreveport, La., and the Tulane Blue, red and yellow ribbons and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Dean bratian tf Twtivt Y*«w *f Mwwy School of Medicine' in New Or-were awarded on the basis of & Whole Waters and family of Oak Ridge, SSVIIM Growth! •ntS'luw' md «MVV! leans. He served his internship at workmanship, planning, original- FaMout CooMm Ma* CMUMICI, Tenn. 1 —--Fitzslmmcn— s Army Hospita"--"-•l i'n ity and practical application to CTM« fn» CMM, ant rt-tina th» Denver and his residency at 39 students for their displays and «Mk. WoitUkil Currlv k bo bnn- «•*! Grand Sab mw frina m. Why Tripler Army Hospital in Hawaii. demonstrations. Robert Blom, son of Mr. and Ib. Mrs. Herbert L. Blom, Lawrence hy Marat From 1955 to 1957, he was chief Judging the exhibits were Cat (tart Cir., celebrated his eighth birth- of the department of obstetrics Frank Mercuri, Richard Cole, SHONHTESTUHSACAHI! 69< tOHCm. PARTS, ROAlflNGCHKKENf .37c day Friday with his grandpar- MBHCAKS and gynecology at Patterson Gen- John Dowling and Alva Meyer. Gnferfcrm ents, Mr. and Mrs. Algot Blom, tral Hospital, Fort Monmouth. Winners in the "excellent" (SHKWflnAKf i,37c Dr. Cureton, who resides with Point Pleasant. Also present were CLASBAKE class were Dianna Beck, Willjam Mr. and Mrs. Richard Marhan his wife and three children in McConnack, Susan Macintosh, OVEHWARE NIWPOffTtOAIT lidsui. aw 79c New Shrewsbury, is certified by and Jerry Marhan, Linden; Ste- •AKNC - SKIVING • STOMNO Donald Baumann, Pat Lane, Dick phen Buser and William McQueen the American Board of Obstetrics Meyer, Allen Greenwood, John »l I WM19T-H FIO i •UYOWMKI GQM Top Quality Young Str and Gynecology and is a member and Linda and Thomas Blom. He Mm [ill HMtn 1 u IVHYWHK Ovc-n Rtady and Beth Turner. also celebrated with classmates •H «t Wl h • nak. of the American Medical Associa- m* tUt MkhMn imnm FOR ONLY Red ribbons, for "very good" in the Middletown Village school. 1.i>«»lliilt.,l>t1<*H tion and the Monmouth County work, were awarded to Susan Medical Society. r*mm H m uk "*••* H Snyder, Ken Burdick, Paul tay- Dr. Malachowsky is a graduate A double party for the sixth RIB ROAST 59 lor, Arthur Limann, Gary Solo- mil •«tut of Columbia College and the State . cliff Ault, Barbara Walters, birthday of Patrick Melosh, son moa of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Melosh, I Bruce Lowry, Richard Harburn, FRESH FROM SHOP-RITE! Michael Dr., and the confirma- SECOND IN WBK! nr ruin:IM' Gail Schubel and Christine Ja- tion of Richard Melosh, River lorgt Hcobsen. Edge, were celebrated Sunday at COOKING MAGIC BROCCOLI bunch The yellow ribbon winners the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur | were Charles Hayden, Barbara Melosh of River Edge. MAGmncmr txtro Hird, Susan Tooke, Richard M COOK BOOK! fancy Holmes, Kathleen Cuerdon, Kay UN MH * tt mrtfi mm inM* itdfin. TOMATOES VM.,PE A simulated Hawaiian cruise Brodie, Jean Meyer, Nancy Gill- hrf at lk, BANANAS 2 a. 25' PEPPERS Farrell, Beverly AkerWoom, the Christian Couples Club. Mem- 1«1 MJ • Hhril Nrn-i • HMM «i OIWT CALIFORNIA Warren Stryker, Gary Brown, Jo- Um... WiKari* Ofi, mMy IMM mi bers came dressed in sports at- WWN k • ifcp kf mt nM ** frnmtm FRESH seph Zagorski, Susan Kempson, tire. Kenneth Buchsbaum led de- LEMONS 5.19' CELERY Betty Marsen, Christine Shedd votions. Hostesses were Mr. and WHY PAY MORE FOR GROCERIES? and Richard Steatton. Mrs. Richard Jorgensen and Mr. HMIHUtltHMMI A new feature of the fair was and Mrs. Raymond Williamson. a demonstration by the seventh M.#l if grade science students using the mmmuamn* 19' The first birthday of Julia Meg- MIUIlTtU PEPPIR MILL SXT school's newly purchased Ph nrnurn __ Sunsweet na, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ITMMIIf V*. . 1fl( Prune Juice acidity testing equipment. Farft«6i>Mt!nflavor...H«ind Philip Megna, Line.Oak.Rd., was Sea water, distilled water, car- it fr«M IV. h*\A**ne OMe celebrated Sunday at a family "^llCOMDBKiWIlK! " bonated beverages, vinegar and ThcaMon set fc available fci party. ANNIVERSARY CONnST Personal bload or'datfc vood flnlsli. soil were tested for the chemical 4c OH Perfect for ysamu a sift. reaction. Ivory Soap Mrs. George Scott, Maplewood Taking part in the demonstra- CRANomni Charge Accounts Available Dr., entertained members of (he tion were Lorraine Bryant, Made- Nibble and Quibble Club March EKE I THIPFMTWO FREE DELIVERY line Pabst, Nancy Osborne, Caro- 19. Present were Mrs. Raymond Thrilol«IMkn*-A» at poiiiblt Broadway, Long Branch, was Limit On. P.r Family fined $15 for careless driving, INTIKS:Anyen« can «nt«r frit with on vntry Wesson Oil RBR • hnkuOlllmtliti WATER COMPANY and $5 for failure to notify the blank clipped from our ntwtpaptr or circular cd (or «vtn jutt a UtUrl tog«thtr with a Shoe-tH* state Division of Motor Vehicles Stoktly or Van Camp lab*I or a r«atonebla hereby serves notice of a change of address." l Contest ii optn to «v«ryorw «xc«pt Dale E. Smith of Mitchell Dr., «mployt«t and th»ir fomitlti of Shop-Rit«, Waffles that the annual spring Eatontown, and Anne Wormley, Wokiftrn, Stokaly, Van Comp or Ihttr ogtnlL 6 Central Ave., Red Bank, also Butler -63' flushing of water hydrants were fined $15 for careless driv- Kraft Mm* Utt ing. will take place during Charles L. Nielsen of Elizabeth Cheese =^^ was fined $20 for a stop street wrMvcon mum «utn tt.. Morton or tanqurt Froiwi the period of violation, and $10 for failure to I HCMH exhibit his driver's license. Rich- PotPJes ^7. ard C. Hannon of Asbury Park Shop-UK. • • lipni Sot. Nit., Apri MARCH 18 THRU 31, 1963 was fined $10 for a delinquent f UmitOn.P.rFm inspection and $35 for not hav- Sliced Bacon <*f *>*H»ti Oil. On PWIIWM 01 llm UitW inclusive from ing a driver's license. SMdFrankd s ALL MEAT 10:30 P. M. to 3:30 A. M. A $29 fine for driving an un- registered vehicle was imposed Mwi tffHlhrt Ihnuih iMurfcy W|M March IP, 1 »• J. N«t ratpmtlUt for lypogiaphitiil trrori. Wt rmrv. tha> right to limit quantlu.1. on Herman Williams of 170 Lud- l a good day where?" said Becker. April 5 at Holmdel Elementary million in military aid he is seeking from the U.S. beand Australia . . . Patnaik was at the fire house Monday at 8. to «ec1c fawn. Rejpond, Jike- "I hope so," replied McNama- School. The Holmdel Youth Ac- granted on bis own highly suspicious terms. licked for the crucial U.S. mili- tivities Association is sponsoring p.m. ' ey-if* ftvor a requested of ;ary aid mission by Defense •a, "but I can't say." jrott. . - - . • These exceptional conditions, as expounded to Minister Y. B. Chavani. 47. who State and Defense Department authorities by Biju Pat- lucceeded Krishna Menon. Cha P«t« e. Of the major airlines, Future. .. Outlook for new haik, personal emissary of Nehru, are: rani is playing an increasingly the-fint to te' etfablished «*• private towing j> not to opti- important role in Indian affairs, Permission for the U.S. to send some military ad-and Is a strong possibility as the Air . Is 1919, Frew* misticfor 1963. "Ilierewerenear- visers to accompany the next Prime Minister. affairs, favors bowing to the In pilota made the fint idieduM jy JJ* nfflioa new iiniii iiarted hew weapons to India, but dian leader on the ground his internatwoal pajstager fli^it iri in . A slight decline from 1962 they will be barred from still-gravely-threatened army is PLUGGING UP THE HOLES- hftory tarn die Englisn Chan- HJ, mo^ fc ejected to 1963. "operational areas"; that is, sorely in need of modern weap- Defense Secretary McNamara net • '«*,.•"• the disputed Chinese border ons. admittedly is having his troubles regions (or The Joint Chiefs of Staff don't trying to "manage the news." The Day Under Your Sign which the arms dispute the urgent necessity for His bombastic press chief, As presumably are these arms. But they contend the iistant Secretary Arthur Sylves- U.S. should get absolute guaran- ;er, might like to do that—despite intended. Cwfwvli •bnuub, tut war (Me (I tees regarding their use. Thespecious disavowals by White SCHIAPARELLI tnlad wu nmr clearer Una tmr. Flat refusal Joint Chiefs see no reason why House Secretary Pierre Salinger I* to sign an Nehru is opposed to U.S. officers agreement that But McNamara and his lieu un i»» w mudi jut (hesaniv o*n going into "operational areas' ANNUAL SALE SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Deft 21) U.S. military tenants have their hands ful YoaTi lure diHicnllr to ouj'lor «P for that purpose. getting away with such a restric- GEMINI [May 21 fo Am M| fSr mnft n drier import** decHaaa. aid will not be lite rVfau&lrre in ltaffl% *}•» This contention is particularly tive policy. March 27 to April 8 CAPRICORN (Dee. M«o Jan. M) employed CANCER (Jam 22 to J«V 21) Tike Uw
.— for these weapons to be made un- Committee. nrrebt nri> » • nese elements. The Joint Chiefs til after settlement of the Chinese Rep. Francis Becker, R-NY, vureo MM!» toS» t Ml WSCES (W.. M I, M.rd, 20) til after settlement of the Chinese point out that trained observers Rtg. Sal* y sharply -challenged McNamara on must accompany such units to his plans to drastically revise $f,l. Me. MM then, the question of payment is ensure their effectiveness. 4.95 Navy districts In the country. Exquisitely theer, with «e«mt .;...... U: 2.00 1.65 thus in effect, 4.9S putting this Pentagon authorities are frank- Becker particularly resented the Runlesi, sneer seamless stretch 2.00 I.eS ly critical of India's continued changes being made without firs Long wearing sheer, seamless heel, toe 1.65 1.3S 4.05 $200 million in 4.05 military aid Inmassive mobilization of military informing members of Congress. Runlesi, extra shner seamless 1.65 1.35 strength on its Pakistan borders Elegantly sheer, seamless heel, toe 1.50 1.25 3.75 a "lend-lease" "Why was this information giv Sheer seamless, micro mesh, heel, toe 1.50 1.25 3.75 category. Notwithstanding the seriou en out publicly before our com- Particularly situation on the Chinese border, mittee was notified?" demanded Available in the loveliest new fashion shades. Sizes 8-10 small, desired by In where new attacks are threatened, Becker. "I have received hun- 8 '/t -11 average, ?'/2-ll tall. dia are large India still has more than 70 per dreds of letters asking why thi STEINBACH'S HOSIERY, Street Floor and Asbury Pork numbers of cent of its army and air force Navy is going to disband the nav- tanks, rifles, stationed on the Pakistan bor- al district in my area. If that Is anti-tank weap- ders. That country has been ons, ground-to- strong U.S. ally, and the Joinl Scott air and air-to- Chiefs hold full precautions' musl ground missiles, and radar and be taken to ensure that the mas- LUNCH AND other communications equipment. sive military aid Nehru wants These, arms would be In addi Is not used against Pakistan. DINNER SPECIALS tion to the $40 million rushed to The Joint Chiefs argue there THURSDAY: India last year after the Chinese can be no valid reason for Neh PRIED FILET OF FLOUNDER, Communists' aggression. Much of ru's opposing that. Tartar Sauce, Lettuce and Toma- this "hardware" was taken from Patnaik has told Assistant De- to, Coffee depots in West Germany, which BAKED VIKOINIA HAM fense Secretary Paul Nitze that complete dinner l.SS have not yet been replenished. Peiping is preparing new aggres- FRIDAY: U.S. commanders in Europe are sions in the disputed border re- RAVIOLA with cheese; tomato much concerned: about this delay. gions. According to Patnaik, the sauce, vegetable Patpaik, 47, a wealthy business Communists are pushing a vast FILET OF HADDOCK man, is a (riend of leftist former complete dinner 1.29 military build-up in Tibet with n Defense Minister Krishna Menon, SATURDAY: much road and airfield construc- STEAKETTE on toast, lettuce and who was forced out after the In-tion. Chinese forces also are tomato, french fries dian army's rout. Patnaik makes massing on India's northern am KOAST CHICKEN no secret that he financed a so-eastern borders for obvious a( complete dinner I.M Serve* 11 ».m. to 1 p.m. cialist magazine strongly favora- tack purposes. Try oar home made pies and apple cobbler with lemon lance DRAMATIC CARPET ble to Menon., "There can be little doubt Rec OLD STORY - As is frequent- China is getting ready to strike ly the case. Secretary of State again," said Patnaik. "The onlj CARAMEL SWEET SHOPPE Rusk and the Joint Chiefs of question is when. We have noth Staff .differed squarely on what to ing definite on that." 29 BROAD St. RED BANK do about Nehru's terms. The issue of Nehru's terms un- Rusk, supported by McGeorge questionably will be put up ti Bundy, powerful special assist- President Kennedy. His decisloi It Pays to Advertise in The Register ant to the President on foreign is conjectural. But it's being close- CLEARANCE!

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HOURS: Mon./Wtd., Fri. 11:30 a.m. to 9:30p.m., 7ues.,iburs., Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Twin-Boro Rambler, Inc. ™T«i»7 • Keprt Rambler, Inc. Other Stores: Route 22, Springfield; Route A, Paramue. •• Se&cti Used Cars, Too. Buy Now During Your Rambler Dealer's Used Car VALVE PARADE KdMaHk fogisfa Pardon Ug,Miw,WeHaveAjiIdeaToPeplfpOur Act MBISHOP: «MI *n* MM* tod •«*, N. J. State W&m U, MUDctmra EtfaKBdNd W7I by Join a Coak ud Heaiy day Just Meat, No Potatoes Pnhtehed by HM Red Bink Register Iaeorponted There is something disgusting about being'over- W. HARRY PENNINGTON, President JAMES 3. HOGAN. Editor weight. I know what it is. It's fat I have it I look like M. HAROLD KELLY, General Manager an old upright piano. How can anybody be 5 feet 7^5 Thomat J. BIy William F. Sandford and Arthur Z. Kamla Frank W. Harbour inches tall and weigh 184 pounds? Easy. It wastia awoutln tittoi usoesit* Ballon Vl&dlttowa Burein Mir. problem for me. Member ol the Associated Press No beach Apollo, me. On the sand n>» AaaellUd Prui II •nlltl»d •iclull»«* to IM »•• tor npuDnuthn ot local Btwt printed tn thli u mil u all ATun du I look more like Buddha contemplating Member of American Newspaper Publishers Association his navel. Old friends greet me with* Member Audit Bureau of Circulation hearty handshake and: "You're looking Tfct Ksd Bank Rlgllttr uiumn no financial reipontlblllUM loi typographical arrors 1B advertisements, but good, my boy. Picked up a little weight, mv& rtprtnt wlmout chars*,' that part ol an adverijatzoem it. which the typographical arror oocuri. Advertlseri will Blaaii notllj tin mananmtat bnnudlauir of anj trrot wtuca mar occur. hey?" Translation: "You nut. You buck- Thli uwiwpar uumu no ruponilDHltlei for •tutnunti ol opinion! In Uttara tram lti r«ad montbt—» 4.50 BISHOP it I went to Cye Martin's snob center WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 1963 and bought some dark clothes. The tailor tried size 40 and then admitted that the back of the trousers could not be let out that much. So he got some size 42 stuff Questions and Answers and cut two feet off the legs. The back had to be let out a little. He made chalk marks to show where. This The government, be it federal, man with such a problem. As a spe- roan is a little too personal for a stranger. state or local, urgently ought to fig- cial service to customers, he and his Like a Weather Balloon ure out better methods to obtain wife have been dispensing milk. This The clothes arrived and I tried them on. I tried on a couple of wild sports shirts and the kids said I looked simpler ways to gather information resulted in his getting a string of communications from the state De- like a weather balloon. Someone is going to have to talk it thinks it needs from the governed. partment of Agriculture, including a to those youngsters. Our housekeeper, Katie, just looked and held herself down to a broad smile. She cooks This now is the season where form to fill out and get back in five adult Americans must get together German style. Get the plot? days. Questions asked involve the So I did something about it. Ten days ago I decided with themselves, add up and pay milk, prices paid and received for it, to give up eating three items: potatoes, bread and can- their federal income tax. That's a and how the milk deliverer is paid. dy. Somehow, dinner isn't dinner to me without a complication far beyond the accurate Also asked for are facts about the potato. A nice big baked one with sour cream and reckoning of great numbers of those store employees, the numbers of chives. Or a couple of pounds of lyonnaise with lots taxed because of intricately-worded hours they work; data on gross sales of onions. The potatoes had to go. I dreaded to watch formulas applying to complex uses them pass under my nose without stopping. Like old for everything sold and much more. friends who walk by without saying hello. of money. So there develops a great The baker says he believes govern- Bread is another of my vices. Sour rye is a favor, scurrying among many persons of ment agencies systematically have These Pays; ite. With carroway seeds, please. Three slices are suf- more than modest means for the been strangling his freedoms, and he LETTERS ficient Well, bread had to go too. The trouble with any services of experts who, they hope, does not like it. diet—even a homemade one like this—is that the miss- will keep them out of trouble. NEW IDEAS IN EDUCATION ing amounts of food must be replaced with something "Things like this," he said, Riding Herd on Herd Riders 14S Wallace St., Red Bask, N. J. else. But the government's quest for "added one on top of the other, are By JOHN CHAMBERLAIN To the Editor: Food Fit for Rabbits information does not stop there. a cancer to a businessman." Forms The newspaper plays a key role There is a report current in Washington that Presi- in educating people and should Fat people are fat because they like to eat fattening Businessmen, industrialists, farmers from the federal government keep dent Kennedy is about to ask Congress to set up an serve as a springboard for new foods. They hate thinning foods. So I ate thinning stuff, and professional people are fed up popping up, too, he said. administrative agency to ride herd on the administrative ideas in education. like a couple of pounds of broccoli with no dressing; By state law in New Jersey, with a constant stream of long and With government costing as agencies. But the question is whether the regulators parents must send their children a salad with two drops of oil and four of vinegar; two complex forms to fill out in answer much as it does to operate, it would need regulating, or whether they might better be abol to school until the age of 16. In portions of boiled carrots with no butter. Food fit for ished in favor of automatic regulation our highly developed American rabbits. to a variety of questions that makes seem more effort could be made to society schooling until this age by the forces of free market competition many of them sit back and gasp. is probably the minimum educa- The third substance was candy. This is an inexcus- avoid asking individuals to give up An administrative agency to watch tion requirement a person must able weakness on my part The hunger for candy hits Filling out these forms takes time, time needlessly to answer questions over the administrative agencies would, have to adequately survive, me at about 10:30 every night. From that point on, it cannot definitely say, but I be- effort and no small amount of that contribute little to the prog- in the nature of things, be a body con lieve that this law creates school mounts. My wife likes candy too. Sometimes, when my imagination. ress of society. Selectivity is a sistjng of detectives and judges. The su- disciplinary problems. These father visits us and watches us go off to the bedroom per-administrators would have to be en- problems arise from keeping chil- ladai with bags and tins he snakes his head sadly. Avon Baker Carl Hutchins is a requirement. dren in high school who do not dowed with the power to snoop. Since grasp the meaning and great 'Reminds me of two hunters going off into the only a mediocre man will take a super- privilege of education, who do jungle on safari," he says. This is sheer jealousy on his Edwin R. Conover Chamberlain visory job if he knows that he is to be not desire an education, and who wish to leave school. Some are part because John Bishop was the best free-handed spied upon and second-guessed, the existence of a su obviously just passing the time candy eater I ever met He used to knock off a couple Monmouth County lost one of its association. He was also a president per-administrative agency with quasi-police and quasi- until they are 16. This type of of boxes of cough drops when he didn't have a cough. of the former Broad Street National judicial powers would, over a stretch of time, auto- student ,is prone to be a dis- most respected citizens Saturday ciplinary problem.! Shaping Up for. a Box when Edwin R. Conover, 74, of 50 Bank, Red Bank. matically lower the calibre of such bodies as the Fed- So the candy went My wife had to hide it from eral Communications Commission, the Interstate Com- For a solution to this problem Grange Ave., Fair Haven, died. In addition, Mr. Conover was a two-forked approach is neces- me while making it available for the children. That active in civic and church activities. merce Commission and the Securities and Exchange sary, with both tongs requiring takes will power—on her part Also nerve. The results Commission. change from the present method Mr. Conover was long associated Mr. Conover, a lifelong county of practice. One half concerns were amazing. I gave up three of the great loves of my with the business and economic life resident, was prominent among the There is, of course, soft talk at present.about lint the approach to the meaning of life for food a starving ox would spurn, and I began to education and the other naif con- lose a pound a day. In ten days, I weighed 174. of the area. He was the first secre- ting a super-agency to something less than "czar-like" cerns the approach to discipline leaders who helped to shape the Everybody said: "You're going too fast." I think tary of the Red Bank Savings and powers. But if it lacked the ability to make its recom- in school. Monmouth County of today. His con- mendations stick, it would merely create another ha* First of all, I believe, the law they Were right because I felt as though I was really Loan Association and, at the time tributions were many to his com- ard to be surmounted in the long process of settling should make clear that educa- going. I began to see myself in a box. The weight went tion is a privilege, provided to of his death, was a director of the munity and county. disputes between the regulators and the regulated. And all who desire it, and not an fast but my disposition went faster. I woke up growling soon the cry would arise, "Who will regulate the regu obligation to be fulfilled for the and went to bed growling. My wife said that if I didn't lators of the regulated?" Somehow it makes one think society. This necessitates the stop it, she'd hide my teddy bear. Your Money's Worth; changing of the present law of of that old song, "Who Takes Care of the Caretaker's compulsory schooling to a new Some authorities say that a person should weigh Daughter While the Caretaker's Busy Taking Care?' law granting education to those what he weighed when he was 21 years of age. My The cry for an agency to watch over the agencies who desire it up until the age of Women Head More Than 18 of Every 100 Homes independency, 21 years old. This weight was 145. I'll never live to see it My goal is 160. is a perfect example of the operation of Parkinson's would mean that the public would Dr. Bernard A. Krull used to say: "How many fat peo- By SYLVIA PORTER Law of Bureaucratic Cell Division. Once the agency is assume the economic responsibili- ple do you know over 60 years of age?" set up, it would inevitably develop its own sub-em- ties of college education to those Hie number ot U.S. households rate of separation and divorce in ly independent in recent years. who would take full advantage o No Applause, Please headed by a woman now has the U.S. In another 1.5 million Only a few decades ago, women pires, devoted to this and that bit of specialization. As the privilege. The life span o Well, there was my late mother-in-law. Maggy climbed past the 10 million mile- households (he woman is sepa- who were widowed, separated, Professor Parkinson says, "Work expands to fill the man in America is longer and stone, and in this spring of 1963, rated from her husband. In 1.2 etc., would have been compelled Dunning was exactly five feet tall and weighed a cool time available for it." The super-agency would multiply more time can be distributed to an astounding total of more than million she is divorced. to live with relatives because formal education. This educa 190. When she heaved a sigh, it often rolled up the rugs. 18 out of every A third obvious reason is the •they couldn't earn the paychecks time for work, and it would have income to spend. The tion privilege can be assumed by She lived to age 77, and she talked diet from the.age of to finance living alone. Now, 55 100 American large number of women who taxpayer would, of course, pay the bill, either directly the public in our affluent society. 49 onward. She figured that if she kept talking about households is never marry. In almost 1.5 mil per cent of tha separated wom- We spend $60 billions on defense, headed by a lion households the woman is en, 37 per cent of the widowed or or through inflation of the currency to cover an addi certainly we can devote as much it, no one else could Introduce the subject, and she was woman. single. divorced women and 44 per cent tion to the federal deficit. to education. Perhaps a better right She'loved hot food and ice cold beer. Not in our Financially Independent of the single women are work- educated people will solve the country's his A fourth obvious reason is the ing. These percentages dwarf the The direct way of regulating such laggard and senseless arms race problem in- Who's to say she was wrong? The more weight I tory ha ve so extent to which women have be- total proportion of women in our malfunctioning administrative agencies as the Inter- telligently. . lose, the more I envy Maggy. My father once weighed many women come wage-earners and financial- work force and the proportion state Commerce Commission would be to prune their 254. I'm telling you that this is a family of eaters. There been the sole living with their husbands who The second half of the solution or primary in- are working. functions severely. President Kennedy has himself sug lies in a new approach to dis- is a lady in our family whose north to south measure- come - produc- CARMICHAEL gested this. Some of the more moribund commissions cipline in school. With the re- ments run 36, 44 and 52. Like a blonde pyramid. Finally, an obvious reason is moval of the law of compulsory Porter ers, buyers and the tremendous development of might easily be abolished, at no loss to anybody save When one is fat, the first 10 pounds drop off eas- financial managers of so many education and the replacement our social security and private with a new law of privileged households. Just since 1955, the the regulators themselves. ily. From here on, it is going to be more and more diffi- pension systems in this genera- education, the problem of dis number of households headed by tion. Agajn, women who a few When the Interstate Commerce Commission was cipline control can be approached cult to lose, because the amount of fat left aboard is. women has more than doubled, decades ago could not possibly set up, in the fateful year of 1887, there was a shadow in a much more satisfactory man- smaller. However, I'm 10 pounds lighter. Mostly in the As recently as 1950, the propor have headed their own households of an excuse for it. Prior to the post-Civil War spate ner. Discipline directors would head. Don't applaud, friends. Just send Care Packages. tion of households headed by a after losing their hasbands can no longer be afraid to remove woman was 14 per cent; it's now now swing it because they do of railroad building across the western plains, the rail- students from school for bad up to 18.5 per cent. In contrast have pension checks and they oads of America had been effectively kept from rate- discipline. The issue would be RIGHT IN STEP to the total of households headed have or can earn extra income as ;ouging by the existence of alternative river or canal clear and simple: "If you desire by women, those headed by men well. to continue school, behave bet- are only around 4 million. (The What does this imply to busl routes. Since grain from Chicago could be shipped east ter or leave." With this new balance of our 54,692,000 house- nessmen? To me it surely im- to Buffalo by the competing Great Lakes water route, approach to discipline, I would holds are headed, of course, by plies a great and growing need husbands and wives.) old Commodore Vanderbilt's New York Central couldn't also suggest that the order for for "smaller" products and pack- dismissal no longer be in the In social welfare-minded gov- ages in hundreds of areas—rang- say very well, "The grain shipper be damned." Once hands of one man, but In the ernment circles, the reasons and ing from food to refrigerators. Of the wheat grower had moved to the high plains of the hands of a committee. This implications of this trend are the 10,131,000 woman-headed West, however, where the rivers are too uncertain and would take removals above the coming in for mounting attention. households, more than 5,540,000 petty complaints of prejudice But even among businessmen who are headed by a woman who is an oc shallow to provide an alternative carrying service, which might arise when a parent are aware of the significance of ndividual, and chances are six the railroads could raise their rates with impunity. saw his child removed, Re- our changing population "mix," out of seven this woman is com- So the I. C. C. may have been a valid response to movals would be graduated: the there are few who recognize the pletely alone. To huge numbers first removal would be for one challenges and opportunities in- of these, the family-size package a need of the late Nineteenth Century, but today, with day without public notice; there herent in the fact that women is irritating and wasteful. Surely our modern gird of automobile roads and our prolifera- after the removals would be for now dominate so many millions ol it implies a great and growing tion of airlines and long-distance pipelines, there is longer times and the name of households. What are some rea- need for compact apartments, de- hose students removed would b sons, implications? signed for one person and cen- plenty of natural competition to hold railroad rate- publicly displayed. At the end Outlive Men rally located. Surely it implies makers in check. So why not prune the powers of the of the period of removal, the A first obvious reason Is the a great and growing need for student would not automatically taet that women in the U.S. on C. C. or even get rid of the danged thing entirely? recreation and community activi- There are, currently, four big railroad mergers start classes again; the student average outlive men, and so in ies aimed at pleasing the older would file an application for re- their older years they become woman who is widowed, divorced, pending at the I. C. C. The rail mergers might best be admittance, pledging better be- household heads simply because single. While tourism leaders in speeded, not by the creation of a super-agency to tell havior. they are widows. In almost 6 mil- i ui our country may deny this, they the I. C. C. to hurry up, but by riding the I. C. C. itself Student dissatisfaction at hav- lion households the woman is a I COJLP are flagrantly neglecting this ing to attend school Is only part- widow and the average age of woman's needs—and there are out of town on a rail. If a railroad merger threatens ly linked to the compulsory edir women heading households is 58. & A. JE many among these women who monopoly of any kind, there is always the restraining cation law. I believe that the tn the 35-44 age group.the total have plenty of time and money to influence of Bobby Kennedy's Department of Justice, education system is pushing of woman-headed households OFFICE— spend on leisure activities. most students too far along the •tarts to rise steeply, hits a peak What does this imply to officials which.happens to have an anti-trust enforcement divi- ame general course. This course In the 55-64 age category. sion. Why multiply the cops? A second obvious reason is the 6—Wed., March 27, 1963 (See PORTER, Page 8) (Sea LETTERS, Page 8) A 1 FRESH PAN RIADT WHOLI FREE 100 IT. || GREEN c S STAMPS In Addition to Your Regular Stamp* With Coupon Below and #2.75 Vdw for $1,79! Save 96c! 3 lbs. Ground Beef *1.29 FRYERS2Serve with Ocean Sproy Cranberry Souct HALVID, QUARTERED, CUT-UP-lb5. 29c Regularly 59c Ib. LANCASTER BRAND Meat Purchase BROILE-WELL—reg. 98c ' $ 2-pc. Broiling Pcm 50c RIB ROAST 49 of 5 or More Special combination offer $|79 1st Cuts Slightly Higher OVEN-READY Ib, 59c LANCASTER BRAND , far* 4>f m Modi Sow 48c an Pont ToM Savingi 9«c FREE! 100 S&H In addition t« ywtr rasulap itimN< with M«at Purchase of $5 er More o Nome - So Addrtu_ LEGO'LAMB 4OVEN-READ9Y Ib. 59c Untlt 1 coupon par •hopping family. LANCASTER BRAND , O bplrao 79c I Gruyere .5 39c IAMB «•*"• 4L LANCASTER BRAND HORMEL .Ik FREE! 100 S&H In atdltlon to your rwultr oUmga, with CAMMED HAM - FRANKS •— _£ t PURCHASE OP $10 - <=> Including froth Milk * ClganttM -^ FROSTED FOOD FEATURES Name MAXWELl A/IIALTIME MAID CUBE STEAK '*• 79c BACON _£ 2 £ Addrwi Umltti •hopping family, ARCTIC SEAL COD FILLET J* 39c •xplraa latH March JO INSTANT HOT SAUSACI "'•'- »• 59 : COFFEE RED-L FRENCH FRIED SHRIMP j~» 79c RED-L SHRIMP DINNER I(^" 79c SEAFOOD FEATURES RANGE TOPCHICKEN * N0ODU DINN" ***• 99e FREE! 50 S&H tZ> Wifh Purchase HALIBUT STEAKS In addition to your rosul-r ibmpii with purchato or Ib. or ct S5 or moto BEARDSLEY'S CODFISH CAKES ""• *f _Qe *VO PKB* SMELTS «__L 2 "-39c EXTRA SHARP CHEESE LANCASTER DINNERS • ***? 2 'p'^ 89c Jo Name - FROZEN FOODS Address Limit 1 coupon p«r nUI! 100 S&H Gr«en Stamps BIRDS EYE Orange •hopping family. 10-os. •xplna latt March 10 IDEAL INSTANT COPKE ior 99 JUICE 4 85 wc C PRIDE OF MAINE MAXWELL HOUSE " 99 FRENCH FRIES 6 Z 49c FREE! 50 S&H In addition to your rtaular itimpb with ROMAN with pur-hut of 10-o-Jar of MAXWELL HOUSE 59 PARTY PIZZA ^53c IDEAL INSTANT COFFEE StrawberriesIDEAl 2 °^ 39c Limit 1 coupon per IDEALCOFFEE S "59 Sorvo gtrawb«rrl« with R«ddl-Wlp, shipping family. C get 25c rotund mail-in " ' lit, March 30 DEL MONTE - 2 33 FREE! 30 S&H 0KiN "MK ^S^SST^S^ 'MCHm "10 tt$-

PET EVAPORATED MILK O »"' 81 Golden In addition to your regular ttampt. with C Rip* Ib. purchtta of »vln 18>oz. cant BANANAS 12 IDEAL APPLE SAUCE IMPERIAL— 2 63 AVOCADO FANCY MclNTOSH C Limit 1 coupon ptr •hopplno family. CAMPBELLS 4 65 CORN 5 29 APPLES 3 £, 39 ,, March 30 C MULUR Touod • MULUR Colo OVALTINE 55 PEARS 2«. 29SALAD';: 19c I SLAW 7, ACME IS HEADQUARTERS FOR GARDEN NEEDS FREE! 50 S&H ££ In addition to your regular itimpii with "*91- 00 c purchm of Vi gal. KNORR SOUPS Muihroom 3 87 Garden Lima S'S^M Din «*»°«« ao-ib. *i.«s Virginia Lot. ld«l or Farmdalo ^i^r mm ICE CREAM Pa. Dutoh Farfillzer r Nome «. TISSUES ?0L°d of 400 Address 2 BAKERY Limit 1 coupon par ahopplna Umtty. Ixplni MkU M-rcfi 10 ( VIRGINIA DEL MONTE p-s 2 37 LEE CSUPREME Pullman Bread FREE! 30 S&H ... CADILLAC^ 6 :85 In addition to your ragular il.mpi, with 6 purchan of 10-lb. Hag Odd f ' C TOILETRIES LUDEN POTATOES HELLM ANN'S 59 Choeolotg-Covortl Nome Yitalis Address C HAIR TONIC Mint Patties Limit X coupon por BRILLO SOAP PADS 4 :89 (hopping f«mlly. Ixpln. hi, March 10 Ml IMM Prlc M. hotlto c Rigulirl/ »»0 plus t>< LESSER QUANTITIES AT REGULAR PRICES •torn Hlllna tollitrlu. '• i I pkgi. _db flnt AD DETERGENT IS"e M 62c Rl IITV Secret Excedrin [Johnson's Stripe L/UI I y Short Brtod •c VEt PINK LIQUID off 55c Deodorant HARD GLOSS GLO COAT Toothpaste Dowitr K4Sc i: TellM .r,.' 69c Ivory Liquid i? € 35« c CASHMERE BOUQUET Soop "«» Ca«ad« «». of 100 •]" Wax a** *» 79c tub* OJL r-43e Scooter Pies^39 l-o«. O7C ti Cheer SOAKY BUBBLE BATH 69c •tt. 32c Vi ik^nINSTANT 9.91.$129 PALMOLIVC SOAP Pepsodent CHASE & SAN BORN Crisco Marcal Paper Products Toothpaste Martil Towels Kllchen (barmp 2Bu,39c VEL POWDER - "S Coffee ib.cn While Mepkliu 2 Slfe 23c Marcal Hanklet OI.$129 fc 28c • 53c INSTANT 8- Pastel Maoklu Garkaga Bags 2 A 43c lb.ion 3.1b. nn 85C n< »~ 69c FmnrWrip . 49c Toilet TliiHt 3 " 29c

RED BANK—170 Broad St. FAIR HAVEN—576 River Rd. UNCROFT^Newman Springs Rd. at Hurley Lane WEST LONG BRANCH—Rt. 36 and Broadway ,80) BANK HEGISTER tffy Commute* to fast a nwlsf 3 Suit. Y«iiM»c« smtud for 4 " Apartment Builder 27, fa - i.-V; ... -f- Also named defendants wen planned apartment buildings for In Freehold Boljdlng Inspector WilUan Gay, fills borough would have to be Licensing Agent Philip Hendricki, changed in order to comply. FREEHOLD-A Sea Girt worn - Mrs. Loin Asks Law Change an who fell while-leaving a cock and the laundromat applicant!, Paige, 34, pleaded Innocent Mon- He noted that passage of a tail lounge at the Monmouth Anna O'Hageu and June Apple- measure requiring only one ex- day In Upper Freehold Town- Shopping Center last Sept. 12, gate. KEYPORT — An amended of 38 two*edroom units, 12 effi- terior wall exposure would pro- ship Municipal Court to killing filed a negligence suit Monday The suit sayi the variance to apartment construction ordi ciency apartments, and 60 onevid- e more green area and elimi- her husband, George, 37, at their against the management. permit the coin business at the nance, referred to Borough Coun- bedroom units on a two-story nate a "row city" springing up home on Old York Rd., Friday. Rt. 35 address, In a commercial cil Monday night by thelocal four-building setup. in the borough. Mrs. Ella Crine, 32D Beacon At her request, Superior Court Blvd., Sea Girt, named the Colon- service zone, is Illegal. Planning Board, was sent back Proposes Two Exposures The firm's spokesman also Judge J. Edward Knight ap- nade Restaurant and Lounge de- to. that body for further revision.The proposed ordinance, drawn asked that the code's driveway Anthony Laugelli. 31 North pointed Robert T. Witt, of Asbury fendant, contending she fell be- The action came after a repre- by the Planning and Zoning and parking lot requirements be Sixth Ave., Long Branch, brought Park, defense counsel. A prelim- cause of Improper accommoda- sentative of Serventi and Boards, council, and the borreviewed- , claiming that the bor- suit in behalf of his son, Gregory, inary hearing of evidence against tions. She is represented by D. Daniles, Cranford realty firm, ough's master plan consultant, ough would be "hit with variance 12, against the General Baking Mrs. Paige will be conducted to- Joseph DeVita of AUenhurst. requested the governing body to calls for a minimum of two ex-requests by the dozen." Co., New York City, morrow night in municipal court The Jo-Ida Corporation, Nep by Magistrate Kenneth Smith if change the measure's require- terior exposures per apartment The proposed measure stipu- The action filed by Leon M. ments for exterior exposures for unit. tune, represented by Thomas L. Rosen, Jersey City, say» the boyMrs. Paige wants It. lates that no driveway or parking Yaccarino, Asbury Park, filed a apartment units. The firm's spokesman indi- fell from a Bond bread truck, State Police say She plunged lot shall be closer than 25 feet to suit against the Neptune Town? The firm plans to build 108 cated that most builders: today the front of any building or 10 owned by the New York com- a kitchen • knife into her hus- apartment units, on a 6.3-acre are providing back-to-back units feet to the side or rear of the pany, on Sixth Ave., Long Branch, band's neck and back during an tract on the east side of Atlantic with one-wall exposures. He building. the apartment proposal would al- April 26, 1960, and contends the argument.: She. assertedly spent several hours fa a tavern, re- St. north of Monroe St. claimed that if the proposed Three Stories Permitted low buildings to be two and three company and its driver, whose turned to the house and phoned Permits call for the erection measure is adopted, all of the As amended by the planners, stories high, instead of just two, identity was not given, were re- as originally proposed., sponsible. an undertaker to report her hus- At the suggestion of Mayor band dead. Police then came into Carlton H. Poling, the builder the case. was Invited to a special meeting Lincroft of the planners and the mister OPEN 3 DAYS plan consultant to discuss, revi- Harry Mauser, Phalanx Rd., sion of the apartment measure, has returned from St. Petersburg, Porter Ers&tte. be, IMS. World tighte nml THURSDAY and FRIDAY 10 A.M. 'TIL 9 P.M., SAT. 'TIL 6 Fla., where he spent a month's A request by Donald M. Legow (Continued) vacation. Arthur Johnson, who of Elru Corp., Green Grove Aye. in Washington? In the words of accompanied him, visited friends to vacate a portion of Manchester Dr. Paul C. Glick of the U.S. Cen- in Duneden. He is now staying Ave. between Eighth and Wil- sus. Bureau, "A responsibility to in Palm Beach. Ham Sts., and also Chancellor help the needy among these wom- St., .was referred to the Plan- en keep' eating and sheltered." Miss Margaret Murray, New ning Board. , : Moreover, Glick repeatedly em- Councilman Henri J. Hanten York City, spent the weekend phasized in our talk that, "these "ORGANIC" 1 with Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Mul- women are at'ages when doctor i suggested that the builders and GARDENING SUPPLIES t the borough engineer meet with lin, Oak St. bills become heavy and they have the planners "since the engineer only their Social Security checks FERTRELL, COTTONSEED MEAL, GREEN Mrs. Lewis S. Thompson spent has indicated he is not in accord to rely on." SAND, ROCK PHOSPHATE-ETC. with the plans." several days last week with her - The .trend toward more woman- COMPLETE STORE BUYERS daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Bab- headed households will continue The builders plan to construct : Phone CO 4-2211 163 apartment units on a nine- cock, Woodbury, L. I. to reach new peaks,'for pur whole 22-A MAIN STREET LI 2-9747 EATONTOWN acre plot off Green Grove Ave. population is living longer and between Williamson and Eighth William Horvath, son of Mr.women still are outliving men. Sts. The architect is Harold J, and Mrs. Louis Horvath, Swim- It's more than time for us to SWARTZEL'S Seldin, Red Bank. ming River Bd., is home on va-wake up to this phenomenon in our society, to give.It the search- FARM SUPPLIES In other business, council ap- cation from Johns Hopkins Uni- Ing analysis it demands, to find SELLING OUT -, "^ proved a resolution again re- versity. En out what it means to all of us. HohMM Read-by R.R., Hcnlet questing the state to take over LEONARD WHITMAN'S SHOP of MARYLAND Clark St. from the Garden State Boy Scout Troop 110 will hold Parkway exit.to Broadway. its paper drive Saturday at 9 p.m. William Wordsworth had walked Council also directed a letter to Resident! of Lincroft and Ever- 180,000 miles by the time he' A VERY FINE STOCK OF MEN'S CLOTHES, FEATURING THE LATEST Raritan Township officials ask- ett Rd, residents have been re- was 65. ; ing them to adopt, a similar res- quested to place their bundled IVY, TRADITIONAL AND CLASSIC STYLES .. . CHOOSE FROM OVER olution.' The two municipalities papers at the curb. share ownership of the roadway, 300 Men's Sweaters By , The Lincroft Women's Associa- v tion of the First Aid Squad en- D f Values tertained the Lincroft Fire Com- "Puritan." "McGregor." "Dnimmond," To LETTERS pany Auxiliary Monday night at the new first aid building. The "Alps," "Himalaya" 22.50 (Continued) regular meeting of the Women'! • Italian Mohairs • English Wools tends to mold all student! for Association will be held Wednes- lurron Downs, Pullovers • All Sites • As Low As college education. The system day, April 3. "ONE OF AHERiCA'S GREATEST NEAT MARKETS" fails miserably. All students can- ROUTE 33 (Cori.es Ave.) ROUTE 36 not attain college degrees; all Member - Guest Night was held students, should not be forced Wednesday at the dinner - meet- NEPTUNE CITY EAST KEANSBURG Men's Dress & Sport Shirts along the some general educa- ing of. (he Lincroft - Holmdel MEN'S SLAX "Van Heusen" "Arrow" tion course. I believe more inte- Kiwanis Club at Lincroft Inn. Al- Mon. & Tuts. 9 am. to 7 p.m. grated (pre-college-trade school) bert Flemer, of the F. and F. (ONLY A FEW) "Exeello" "McGregor" high schools are needed. The Nurseries, Holmdel, was guest Wed. to Fri. 9 am. to » p student who will never go to col-speaker. He discussed the opera- OPEN 7 DAYS: Sat 9 to 7; San. 9 to A BUTTON DOWNS lege needs more attention. tion of the nursery business. Also our civilization is nowCharter night will be held Satur- TAB COLLAR 50 highly mechanized to need a newday at Lincroft Inn with the giant field of technicians in vast wifes as guests. Next Wednes- Sizes 14 to 17 numbers. Two-year colleges, I day, a roundtable will be held 2 think, can best fill this job. These it Lincroft Inn and several mem- COMPARE! WHY PAY MORE? Values to 19.95 Many Extra Sixes • Lang Sleeves two-year colleges could "be runbers will join an interclub meet- Swift's Extra Lean, Meaty, Rib on the county scale, giving much ing with the Middletown Kiwanis needed new vitality to that gov- CI*. On April 5, Chris Pellegrin- UP TO ernmental level. Also under this elli and Joseph Mendres will at- MEN 5... MEN 5... MEN 5... new privileged educational sys- tend the annual spring conference tem, states could pursue a more meeting of the New Jersey Dis- active role in the four-year col- trict at Laurel-ln-the-Pines, Lake- •SUITS • SPORT JACKETS lege level. wood. Albert Hardier. Greentree In summary, I believe the Ter,, general manager of the thinking approach to American Bendix Holmdel Division, is a •COATS • OUTERWEAR education needs radical changes. new member. Education for all.,'. who want it. There's no Trick to Having Ex-j SIZES 35 TO 46 SHORTS. REGULARS, LONGS Thank you. ra Cash. You Get it Fast When I

CHOPSwW« S

CUBED •ONELiSS V0f CHUCK STEAKS I SIRLOIN ROAST O 7 » I BEEF STEW PLYMOUTH'S SWIFT'S PREMIUM *n* CHOICE CHARCOAL

•• ••>•••'••(*• HIT IT

IG! BOLOGNA OR 00 PORK LIVERWURST 3 lbs1. I CHOPS 2% I«CHOP*S 59'* Snowhlre Loin or Rib VEAL CHOPS

SWIFT'S PREMIUM RIB or SHOULDER

Lean Center Slices Homemade, Hot or Sweet BOILED ITALIAN HAM SAUSAGE

BIG IN SALESI BIG IN BEAUTVI BIG IN QUALITY I

Orders for the new Plymouth 63 are running •Your Authorized Plymouth-Valiant Dealer's Warranty (gainst deftcts In msterlal and workmenarilp on 1963 con has been far ahead of last year at this time. Part of expanded to Include parts replacement or repair, without charge the reason, of course, is Plymouth's beauty. for required parts or labor, for 5 years or 50,000 miles, which- 5 YEAR ever comes first, on the engine block, head and Internal parts; Clean, crisp, and contemporary. Another: 0» 59,010 Milt transmission case and Internal parts (excluding manual clutch); America's first 5-year/50,000-mile warranty!* WARRANTY* torque converter, drive shaft, universal joint* (excluding dust covers), rear axle and differential, and rear wheel bearings, Here's proof aplenty that Plymouth's put to- provided the vehicle has been serviced at reasonable Intervals gether to stay together for a long, long time! according to the Plymouth-Valiant Certified Car Cara schedules.

A FINE SELECTION OF USED CARS IS ALSO AVAILABLE AT: I WITH THIS COUPON | WITH THIS COUPON 25* OFF toward 1-lb. or mom toward I -Ib. or more Danish Extra Lean Italian or Cubed Imported Sliced YOUR LOCAL PLYMOUTH-VALIANT DEALER VEAL CUTLETS BOILED HAM rr«»™™t at Dell Depl. RID MNK, N. J. RED BANK, N. J. ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS, N. J. PORK Oiler Uood thru Bat.. Mar 3t UBfilOLA MOTORS INC. MAURICE SCHWARTZ & SONS, Inc. BAYSHORE CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH CUTLETS Men ZfhellTe tare Kalurflay. March 30. We, Itenervr, the Blrtt to Limit Quantities. 120 Eat Newman Springs Road Ml W. Front St. 153 First Avenw Net Responsible for Typographical Errors. •I JUST A FEW « OJPTNE REDUCED 800 PRICES AT M AYFAIR! EXTRA FREE Maxwell Hem* Mb. eanl.lt Coffee lb. Can 63c KING KORN STAMPS Vibtm SUPER %J MARKETS Coffee Ib. can 67c with the great Bonus Coupons below Maxwtll Horn* Instant 2-oz.jar4Qc -Size ANNIVERSARY SALE Maxwell H«n* Instant 10- 33< KING KORN STAMPS lordent 6 for 69c Evap. Milk tad can 3 for 40c Loin Half 43< WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF Carnation Evap. Milk tall can 3 for 40c «10.00 OR MORE Pet Evap. Milk tall can 3 for 40c Excluding Fresh Milk and Cigarettes Starlac Limit 1 coupon par adult family Dry Milk eqv. 6 qt. 53c Effective thru Tuesday, April 2,1963 tollman quart |cr Me Mayonnaise pint jar 39c Kraft quart jar 5?e m pint far 39c RIB ROAST Mayonnaise Miracle Whip pint jar 35c KING-SIZE DAIRY & DELI VALUES! Helm 'Simply Wond«riu¥ Ketdiiip 20-Oz. bot. 32c Top Choice French1! King of th» Mustard 9-oc jpr 2 for 29c Oven Roasts GUIOMII Yellow Mustard 6-ox. jor 2 for 19c Helm Cider quart bet. 33e FRANKS "Simply Wonderful" Freih Mad* — Pur« Pork — Hot or Sweet Vinegar pint bot. 21c TULIP FAIR Helm White quart hot. He lb Vinegar pint bot. 16c 'Italian Sausage 59<= ALL MEAT lb. Maine "Simply Wonderful' — Hickory Smoked — Sugar Cured Sardines 1/4 can 10c CenterCuts lb REALLY pkg. liinble »e Chunk : Smoked Haiti Steaks 89«= LOW PRICED! 39 Light Tuna VJ can 3 for 89c Iambi* Bee Chunk "Simply Wonderful"-Top Choice-Young Western Steer-Extra Valu Trim White Tuna Vt can 3 for$l Chicken of Ike Sea Chunk WWW MAYFAIR'S OWN, FRESHLY SLICED Tuna Vt can 3 for $1 "SIMPLY WONDERFUl" Chuck Roast ••« 39c Rolled or Hat FRESH FISH FOB YOUR IENTEN MEALS Anchovies 2-ox 2 for 23c ib Imported Boiled Ham 99< Star Kilt Chunk Light Halibut Steak ^ «•• 49* Ground Chuck -59c Tuna ' V> can 3 for 85c U.S. No. 1 Smells * 25c lb Dial Soap Bath bar 2 for 37c Daisy Hams -59<: Sliced Bacon JSSL 49o v Keg. tar I«or27e THICK or THIN Paneu Clear $ Antmonla qt. bot. 25c ^Simply Wonderful" - Freshly Ground, Top Choice TAYIOR PORK ROIL SLICES **-* 3 * I.OOi Parsons Sudsy Vi gal. 47c MAYFAIR'S OWN Clorox qt. bot. 2 for 43c >/i gal. bat. 34c gal. bat. 55a SLICED SWISS CHEESE -69' Nu Soft pint bot. 43c quart bat. 79c» lb. 39* CH Disinfectant 4-oz. bot. 27c MAYfAIR'S \ KING-SIZE PRODUCE BUYS! Drano 12-oz. can31c Vanish 20-oz. can 25c Golden Ripe, Luscious SOS 10's 2 for 45c CHOCK FULL 0' NUTS Soap Pads C Arautrong 1 Floor Care qt* can 98c Bananas LB 1O Beacon Wax / qt. can 79c ALL GRINDS COFFEE MAINE Jubilee Wax 14-ox.con59c All Purpose - U.S. No. 1 Johnson's Pride 8-oz. 67c SiHSATIONAlLY PRICED! Potatoes 10 -49' Alrwlck Aerosol 5VJ-OZ. size 4 for $1 A fANUSTIC VALUE! Washed and Trimmed Spinach '" 19* AlpDogo BeeFoof d •- "- " 15-oz.2for53c Colo Sweet Juicy Anjou Pears I6.01. 3 for 41c Dog Food FOR EVERYTHING YOU BAKE or FRY 7c OFF LABEL Ken L Ration 16-ox. 6 for 89c b Red Rome Beauty Apples laddie Bey WESSON OIL 59c SURF DETERGENT ^ -19c Beef Chunk 16-oz. 2 for 53c COCK OF THE WALK MAHATMA Pard Dog Food 1-lb. can6for89c BARRETT PEARS No2V4.n3f.89c LONG GRAIN RICE '^^ WHITE MEAT, SOUD PACK — UNDEN HOUSE or GOU>, MARBLE or RAISIN Red Heart FREE-SO-EXTRA FREE-50-EXTRA Dog Food Mb. can 6 for 85c WHITE ROSE TUNA FISH * ^3° 89<= GOURMET POUND CAKE i-^'^<59c KING KORN STAMPS STAMPS Rival FORK & BEANS, BUTTER BEANS, RED KIDNEY BEANS GOURMET With (Mi COUDOP and purchait of id purchai Dog Food 26-oz. 4 for B'c ANGEL FOOD RING ^,.4* 2 POUND BAG any two 6 oz. pkgs. TULIP FAIR Gravy Train 2-lb. pkg FURMAN'S BEANS < 1 Milk Bone 22-oi. pkg. 37c Alt VARIETIES — FRESH FROZEN FREE-50-EXTRA Large & Med. 26-ox. pkg. 39c FREE-SO-EXTRA Purina KING KORN STAMPS KING KOFN STAMPS Fruit Punches «""•"•• •»•»» 10c With Ihli coupon and purchan With (hit coupon and ourchat* of Dog Chow. 5-lb. pkg. 71c CHOPPED or LEAF — FRESH FROZEN A 3 IB. BAG OF 1 lb. or more CHUNK Cat Chow 22-oz. dry 37c 9 Lives Tuna River Valley Spinach f APPLES Cat Food 6-ox. can 6 for 83c BIRDS EYE — FRESH FROZEN Puss N Boots 15-oz. 6 for 85c Fish Bites 8o,.Pk,.4f B&M Baked Beans 13-oz.6for$l Campbell FREE-50-EXTRA FREE-50-EXTRA Pork & Beans 16-oz. 2 for 25c For Really low Prices KING KORN STAMPS Campbell KING KORN STAMPS SHOP MAYFAIR FOR With thii counon and purchase of With imi coupon and purchase of Pork & Beans 21-oz. 2 for 37c A BAG OF 10 1 lb. or aver CHUNK Campbell Pork & Beans 28-oz. 2 for 47c PASSOVER FOODS LIVERWURST Helm Pork & Beans 16-oz. 8 for$l GOODMANS, STREIVS, MANISCHEWU Helm Vegetarian MATZOS 5'^••'.1.79 Beans 16-oz. can 8 for $1 MANISCHEWITZ OR MOTHtR'S-Plain or J.-ilicd Del Monte Corn 303 can 6 for $1 GEFILTE FISH --47' "'89' FREE-50-EXTRA FREE-50-EXTRA Del Mont* KING KORN STAMPS KING KORN STAMPS Corn 303 can 6 for $1 BEEFBURGER With ihli coupon and ourchaie of With Ihli coupon and purr, ho is of B&B Chopped 3 LB. or 5 IB. BAG OF lib. or over CHUNK MUENSTER Mushrooms 3-oz. can 31c GRASS SEED Del Monte 56 Newman Springs Rd. Peas 16-oz. can 5 for $1 Green Giant Red Bank, N. J. OPEN SUM.-9 a. m. to 6 p. Ill, Peas 16;oz. can 5 for $1 Priest etfecHv. thru Saturday, March 30. Right to limit. Please Cut All Coupons Apart For Speedier Handling! Contadlna Tomato Paste 6-oz. 4 for 49c Hunt Tomato Paste 6-oz. 4 for 49c Mtrth 27, 1963 RED BANK REGISTER grutef, in CUMM to m &WB Mm. Edna JMJy Abo pp ntaric school front Jwt U /am bu been la operation No problem foOag July 1 through "Au£. 9, Ttxt& toe meuure, statins •&* through Aug. 2. event years, fund was nothiB« Allocated wtyrMvtrtlMtamt. would be from 15 to 20 students that a fee should be charged the Mr. Katz opposed this meuure, lew. IVR HAfKN TO YOU? By Blak* in each class, he said, and students. saying he couldn't justify the For Summer three teachers will be needed at The board also approved a sum a salary of $75 a week. of $400 to be paid Robert An- expense to the taxpayers. Remedial Class Board member Nathan KaU drews to conduct the summer Mr. Dale said that this pro- GR A MAN'S said, "I can't justify the cost of VACUUM AND APPLIANCE PARTS CO. FREEHOLD - The Board of a school program for 30 to 40 Education Monday night allocated children who don't take advan- 54 MONMOUTH STREET, RID BANK. N. J. $1,500 for tine, operation of a tage of the school during the PHONE SH 7-5623 summer school for remedial regular school year and have to classes in reading, language arts attend summer school." BANKING and arithmetic. Mr. Dale said, "If we can help AUTHORIZED Board president Andrew E. any of these children, I feel it HOOVER—SALES AND SERVICE Dale, in describing the proposal, will be well worth it." Laf 111 be your invlngi, checking, borrowing and safe deposit said, "Our school system has He pointed out to Mr. Katz headquarters. Beit of all, bank in jwt en* itoe el your car, NEW AND REBUILT CLEANERS been described as a good one at our drive-in windowi, new at all 8 office*. that this money was in the • REPAIRS ON • \ . and the addition of this program budget, which he as president, would make it even better." presented to the board. (Mr. Artnrj P»rk a led GE - HOOVER - ELECTROLUX, etc. Superintendent of Schools Jo- Katz was board president until Bank • Hlnaiwui seph V. Summers said he will plan February.) • Norlb Aibnrj IRONS VACUUMS TOASTERS Fark a Fair Baren the program now and present it Neil Munch said, "I know • Holmad PERCOLATORS MIXERS, etc. to the board at a later date for from experience that a school eBrl.Il. PAttTS FOR its approval. Mr. Summers said such as this can be Sjfery benefi- Meuaeolh Count j1. Beriesal Ba* the school would handle a max- cial and it might be the differ- GO Tean of Cantlsaeae Senlea VACUUMS WASHERS DRYERS IRONS imum of 60 children from the ence between whether a pupil Member federal Dapoait Insurance Corp. RANGES TOASTERS MIXERS LAMPS, etc sixth, seventh, and possibly fifth stays back or not."

C Kim Kailawa Syndkatt, Ine, 1963. World rifhU rewryed. LOW DISCOUNT PRICES Township Won't Up Lake Appropriation PLUS FAMOUShiSTAMPS! FREEHOLD — Township off I The lake, which is owned by Watch for this striking Mff ' dais informed officials of this the borough but located in the RNAST (First NA*ior#SIom) township, is operated by the bor- BROILING or FRYING community at a joint meeting sign... smart as the stem * here last night that they couldn't ough. The township pays the give more than $1,000 toward tfie fee so that its residents may use first identifies and soon tob e operation of Lake Topanemus. the facility. seen throughout the ana. Township Mayor Carl B Freehold Councilman Anthony National Schanck said, "We only put that B. Smith said it costs $8,000 to Stores turn in our budget for this pur- operate the lake, and half of the pose." people that use it are from the township. Freehold Mayor Frank E. Gib- Belford son asked whether the township would reconsider the fee for next Dr. Charles Wolbaoh of Mon- CHICKENS year. mouth College showed slides tak «n on his trip to Canada and the Township Committeeman Al- World's Fair, Seattle, Wash., at bert V. McCormick said they the meeting of the Christian would reconsider raising the fee Couples Club of the Methodist next year, but could not this PRICES EFFECTIVE TODAY THRU SATURDAY MARCH 30th at ad Church March 18. A covered dish year because that was all they in Ntw Jinay, Pearl River, New City and Mlddletowa. We rwerva MM right to limit quontititi.. Non« »|d for molt. luncheon was served. Visitors al- had allocated. •o were present. The social com- Township officials took under mittee served refreshments. They advisement a request to permit 1 were Mrs. Milton Bennett, Mrs. the borough to annex its sewer- Harry Lange and Mrs. Harold age treatment plant. Mayor Foulks. Gibson said the plant, which is located on Center St. just out of Mrs. Ralph Panessa was wel- the borough limits, is of no ad- comed back to the Mrs. 8 Club vantage, financial or otherwise, Thursday at the home of Mrs. to the township. Robert Mark, Hollie Dr. Mrs. " 59c The township also took under CHICKEN LEGS wSX. »39c FRANKFURTERS ».„ Panessa has been on vacation in lb Indiana. Plans for a theater trip advisement an offer by the bor- CHICKEN BREASTS •Jit*,, 49c SLICED BACON *«>°* JfH In May to New York City were ough to pay $805 toward a drain- discussed. The club will join the age project in the township SMOKED BEEF TONGUE lb GREEN Twin Mothers Club of Raritanwhi<* would cost $3>™' *** 49c HEALTH or TOSSED SALAD «= Up 29e Bay area which meets in Sayre- project would relieve a drain- BEEF LIVER ondD.iwou. 39c STAMPS situation at the dead ends ..59c ville. Present were Mrs. William "Be s" FRESH FILLET OF FLOUNDER with the purchase of Lasky, Mrs. William Morrisey of Helen, Euretta, and Moreau HAYDU COLD CUTS pk 25c Aves. *59c and Mrs. Mark. (lelogns, OIIYKJ, Spktd luncWn or PleUa & Pimento) " FANCY SWORDFISH STEAKS $7.50 or more Mayor Gibson said that 60 per LIWIT A family party was held for cent of the problem is caused by ONE Kl ADUIT—CIGMETUS, TOBACCO, IEEI .UOUOK AND «ESH MILK EXEMPT WOM STAMP OWI« the fifth birthday of Michael property in the township. Cappello, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Cappello, Macintosh La., rWk J-ow Discount Prices last Thursday. Harlan Gets FRANCO-AMERICAN 1C1/ 1 Compare and Save! WITH CHEESE AND TOMATO SAUCE «%«••" | Leslie Miller, daughter of Mr. SPAGHEni snd Mrs. Bruce Miller, Hopping Relief From Bd., celebrated her second birth- ICE CREAM day Sunday at a family gather Perth Amboy ing. Attending were Mr. and Mrs. CLOVERDALE Arthur Connolly and Mr. and Mrs. HARLAN, Ky. (AP)—The waters *)TTS George Ainslee, East Keansburg; APPLE SAUCE 2 29 have gone down but a new flood Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Miller, is coming into Harlan County—a Mrs. Sarah White, and Keri Mil' ler, Belford; Edward Vay, flood of relief aid. gallon 59 Orange, and Mrs. Mary Quinn, One of two trucks from Perth Montclalr. 3 DEL MONTE CATSUP 2:31 Amboy, N. J., arrived Monday ULAtTS 5THAINSD-4 /, 0Z. m jfc M Jfc bearing goods collected in a drive Mr. and Mrs. John Makely en- BIG 200 SHEET ROLL tertained Sunday for Mr. and organized by a former Kentuckian. BABY FOOD 10 79 Dk Mrs. Anthony Pilone of Union and Other materials came from CLAPP'S JUNIOR-7% oz. m m ** p||iK'YEU0W tr WHITE Mrs. Clara Bernosky of New Hamilton, Ohio, donated by the Providence. Old Tucks, a group of former BABY FOOD 6 69 Kentucky residents now living in Frozen Food Specials Finast Bakery Specialst Mrs. Norman Samuelson Ohio. Food from the Lagrange KEN-L-RATION m• . ,. «* j* ROMAN Brookside Dr., entertained mem Reformatory farm and a truck "YOR" GARDEN-REGULAR or CRINKLE CUT bers of the Six Pense Club last load of produce from the Louis- DOG FOOD 6! 89 ville market, contributed by va- APPLE "« Thursday. Mrs. Donald Boyce. HELLMANN'S m jfc Clinton Ave., will be the next rious firms, came in. FRENCH FRIES hostess. Distribution of relief aid is being CAKE * handled through a Harlan County MAYONNAISE <«.r.j»69 A family party was held for relief committee, organized prima- CREST, GLEEM or COLGATE-reg. 83c -• m HOT CROSS DUNS the ninth birthday of Gary Bran- rily by the Harlan County Minis- 8 1.00 •on, son of Mr. and Mrs. Chester terial Association. The Rev. Har- Branson, Clinton Ave., last Thurs- old Hunter, chairman, is working TOOTHPASTE 00 12 39= day. through county officials to channel FINAST WAFFLES he goods to all parts of the Fresh Fruits & Vegetables— 2 CRUST LEMON PIE ";;;45= Mrs. Elmer Maxson, Mrs. Al- county. bert White and Mrs. Daniel Ahern SWEDISH RYE BREAD 2"°"'|SOV.> ' attended a luncheon of the Mon- Money continued to come In mouth County Federation of Re- rom the Red Cross, including HONEYDEWS EXTRA ,4V/ GREEN STAMPS $55,000 for emergency relief. The publican Women and an installa With tht Purchait of a 6° habilitation work but expects to Old Fashioned Donuts Heights, recently. each spend about $250,000, a spokesman DIRECT FROM CHILE! SARA LEE COFFEE CAKE w said. EXTRA frH. GREEN STAMPS Anne Marie Gabree, daughter SARA LEE POUND CAKE "«»< 79c With Purctatt of Mb. loot of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Gabree, Two floods on the Cumberland Sliced Italian Bread Hopping Rd., celebrated her sev- River this month affected about enth birthday Sunday. Present 1,500 families'in this economically- MUSHROOMS Special This Week Brookiid* were Fabbie Bennings, Susan and depressed coal mining county. CHEDDAR CHEESE Mild •75= Skipper Buchwald, Barbara Di- Officials have estimated the IBUFFERINa36Tsblell-Reg.63c 49 11'A 01. • | Capua, Suzanne Haas, William county's flood damage at $21 mil- Sunthln* Marshall, John and James Pisan- lion. AND NUTRITIOUS lb' •» J^* HYDROX COOKIES 3 eck, Deborah Gomes, Keri Miller INSTANT SANKA COFFEE —1.25 Cliani and and Elizabeth Gabree. SCOTKINS LUNCHEON NAPKINS 2 US 33c FINAST BLEACH Dtodoriiei Seven Enlist Buy i The second birthday of Patty LIBBY'S TOMATO JUICE ' * — 33c WOODBURY SOAP G>t2Fr>a Aim Diffendale, daughter of Mr. PASCAL CELERY «°^° Chacolota and Mrs. Joseph Diffendale was In Reserves BURRY SHORTBREAD '"»•""«< "^ FUDGE SANDWICH K.ibltr celebrated Friday with her grand FORT MONMOUTH — Seven Strawberry or Chocolatt parents, Mr. and Mrs. William MAXWELL HOUSE men enlisted in the 1st Battalion, NESTLE'S QUIK 4c Oil label 1ib.pkt.37e Bond In Staten Island. Also pres- 309th Regiment, 78th Division YELLOW ONIONS 3^ 33c INSTANT COFFEE 10 ex. jar 1.2 $ Mowa 3 "'• ent were William Bond and (Training), U. S. Army Reserve, CANNED COFFEE 11b. cm 63c FANCY SARDINES can Charles and Mark Diffendale, Portugueie as a result of a recent open Extra large house conducted by the unit, Maj. FINAST PRUNES £2lb.pVg.63»c ^ 33« Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith, Charles Brauer, commanding of- DOWNYFLAKE PANCAKES "»- 2X41c Church St., accompanied Mr. and ficer, has announced. SCHULER'S POTATO CHIPS B ICY POINT BLUEBACK SALMON — 67c Mrs. Edwin Hill of Raritan to DOWNYFLAKE MUFFINS 'Ftr '» ^39c They are Clifford Baum, Buffalo, N. Y., three days last ALWAYS FRESH 10 ounce STAR-KIST TUNA ch^-w.*. «*«.«, 37c KEN-L-RATION DOG FOOD TT' 53c week where they attended a bowl- Myrlyn Baum and James Silves- tri, Keansburg; William G. AMERICA'S FAVORITE twin pack 59 ing tournament. Schanck, Little Silver; Wayne M. ICY POINT PINK SALMON >'»«-75c UPTON'S TEA BAGS «»*,-65c The eighth birthday of Law- Conover, Englishtown; Stephen rence McHugh, son of Mr. and Migllara, West Long Branch, and Mrs. Lawrence McHugh, was cel- Edward Lebedz, Union Beach. MUELLER'S JELL-0 GELATINS ELBOW MACARONI ebrated Friday. Present were Maj. Brauer said 27 prospective RONZONI SPAGHETTI Peter and Jack Manning, Gary reservists participated in the open CHOICE OF NUMBERS 8 and 9 Mitchell, Glenn Colbrick, Kevin house which highlighted the initi- o 2 C McGrory, William, Mark, Susan ation of a recruiting program to ALL fLAVORS BREAD CRUMBS A P k g. 27 PERFECT ONE DISH MEAL COLONNA GRATED CHEESE 2 oz. 27c — i or. 43c — 8 ox. °9c 2^45 and James McHugh and James ill openings now vacant In the and Robert Sdiultze. unit. T . Bag •* 07 From Vincent Cantillon both said Monday for the kindergarten and first OTHER EACH 99 10 night they had not been informed grades. Once a month a group VARIETIES 14.W of the Health Department's re- of mothers conducts a half-hour 1 Reg. W J 4 port. of story-telling. Health inspectors from Had- Reorganized Last Year FILL OUT COUPON donfield visited tne cafeteria The Lincroft Library was reor- 5 MINUTE CLEARANCE Friday and found refrigeration New! Tweedy look In jumbo ganized by their PTA library SELECTION OF INSTANT CREDIT deficiency, the spokesman said, knits—smart with slacks, skirts, committee last year. In the JUST BRING IN OR MAIL THIS APPLICATION . . . Your Grant "Choro.flt" but found no fault with the other dresses. Quick to do! process of changing their li- SHRUBS * EVERGREENS oetount will b» r«ady and waiting for you wMn you'rt ready to riiop. kitchen facilities or with the Jumbo-knit vest, and cardigai braries over to the Dewey deci- food handlers. easy-to-do stitch. Combine woi mal system aro Belford, Leon- W. T. GRANT CO. Cantillon said the school board sted, mohair for tweed look. Pat ardo and East Keansburg schools, SHADE, FRUIT. FLOWERING TREES had considered enlarging the tern 766: knitting directions size: where Mrs. Beckman has been refrigeration facilities. 32-34; 36-38 tad. working with PTA mothers. NAME .... Thirty-five cents in coins fo ADDRESS ON HONOR ROLL this, pattern—add 15 cents fo MILES REASSIGNED ..STATE SEA BRIGHT - The honor each pattern for first-class mail GUNTER AFB, Ala. -Airman FREE! FREE! CITY ...... roll at the public school was an- ing and special handling. Send t Third Class Stephen J. Miles of PHONE WANT A nounced Friday. Achieving the Laura Wheeler, The Red Ban! Freehold, N. J., Is being reas- 50 LB. | • GRANTS BUDGET ACCOUNT distinction from the third grade Register, Needlecraft Dept., P.O signed to Webb AFB, Tex., fol- were Michael Zicus and Wendy BOK 161, Old Chelsea Station, Nei lowing his graduation from the 2 BAGS OF LIME 1 HAVE ACCOUNTS AT EMPLOYMtNl " Schadt; fourth grade, Marsha York 11, N. Y. Print plainly pa Air Force technical Slot. Optn Cloud Firm How Long Wi 1 b anks, Edwina Bearuim, tern number, name, address am training course for medical sup- REG. 89c VALUE! lames Cousins and James Fore- zone. (I ply specialists here. Airman With each new Charge Account or Purchase of $10 or man; fifth grade, Bonnie Cran- NEWEST RAGE-SMOCKED Miles, son o! Mr. and Mrs. Nor- tner, Jacky Kucazola, Derek accessories plus 208 exciting man A. Miles of 69 Parker St., More in our Garden Shop. ' T/ynes ana Preston Hansen; sixth needlecraft designs in our new Freehold, was trained to main- ?rade, Micliele Schadt, Peggy 1963 Needlecraft Catalog—jusl tain, issue and distribute medical LITTLE SILVER STORE ONLY Gatto and Richard Lee; seventh outl Fashions, furnishings tc supplies and equipment. The air- grade, Sharon Tosel, and eighth crochet, knit, sew, weave, em man is a former student at Free- W.T.GRAIVT CO. LittU Silver Shopping C.nl.r grade, Judy Hansen and Pauline broider, quilt. Plus free pattern hold Regional High School, He en- 131 PraqMcr Aw. Welch. Send 25c now. tered the Air Force in'June, 1962. i 12-ted., March 27, 1963 RED BANK REGISTER Safety Group Hurt in_ Vain Another Hearing legislature Items Names Ite Effort To By It* Awodated Pr«c nile cases would be heard in On Kennel Slated TRENTON — "It's about time Juvenile or Domestic Relation Chairmen Avoid Dog that some of these young gorillas Courts, and that juveniles 16 and KEYPORT — Borough Coun- chael J. Barnacle, borough at- MIDDLETOWN — The loca: have respect for law and order," 17 years old accused of a second OCEAN TOWNSHIP - A Long torney/the governing body di- Safety Council recently selected cil Monday night requested the declared Assemblyman Frederick high misdemeanor must be prose- Branch woman was injured in rected the health board to hear a safety subcommittee. Board of Health to conduct an- H. Hauser, D-Hudson. cuted as adults. her effort to avoid killing a dog witnesses who Mr. Friedrich Named were: traffic, Joseph Monday night. other./hearing on complaints that claims are not opposed to the It is "unfair, unreasonable and The definition of juvenile de linquency would be expanded to Cahill, Police Lt. Kenneth Luker, Police said Mrs. Dorothy Al- William Friedrich, West Front kenhel, and "were not permitted unjust to classify teen-agers as Frederick Koenig and August to be heard," at a hearing held juvenile delinquents just because include acts ranging from ha- berti of Brighton Ave,, West End, St. kennel owner, is in violation Miner; fire, James Coggins, Ste- was traveling north on Rt. 35 March 7. they happen to meet in groups" bitual vagrancy to loitering in of the local nuisance ordinance. phen Gross, William Kane and when the victim of the accident No license countered Assemblyman Benja- gangs on street corners. Arthur Rechten; water, Robert jumped in front of her car. When Councilman Dyson Woodhouse Monday night, the health board man R. Rimm, R-Atlantic. Tabit, Richard Walsh and Ray- she swerved to avoid it, the dog was the lone dissenter. recommended that council not - And thus the Assembly cham- Eight minutes of tardiness by mond Eckhert; home, Mrs. Bruce was hit and killed and Mrs. Al- On the recommendation of, Mi- reissue a kennel license to Mr. ber rang with debate Monday Democratic senators led to 10 T. McCoun, Thomas Matthews berti's car hit a utility pole. Friedrich. The resolution, ap- on Hibill, sponsored by Assembly- minutes of argument in the state and Peter Frentz; and publicity She was treated at Fitkin proved by" the board March 12, woman Mildred Barry Hughes, Senate Monday. Raymond Neary. Hospital, Neptune, for knee and Kindergarten: also recommends removal of D-Union, that would tighten the Senate President William E Discussed were 'the feasibility ankle injuries. the dogs within 30 days. - stare's juvenile delinquent laws. Ozzard, R-Somerse.t, who ha a! licensing bicycles, legislative The measure was passed, 33-23, made a point of promptness in action on blinking front and rear No Change J. Leon Schanck, Jr., health and sent to the Senate. starting a sitting, clashed heated- lights on automobiles, and dis- board president, told the govern- Opponents argued that the ly with Democratic Minority tribution of auto safety belts to To Study ing body that complaints against measure would subject some teen- Leader Anthony J. Grossi, D-Pas- local residents. On Policy the kennel have been corning in saic, when he found that no Dem- for the last two years, and the agers to the arbitrary whims of In England MIDDLETOWN — The Board police officers, while proponents ocrats were in the chamber a board thought it was about time of Education has decided not to act "in the best interest of claimed the get-tough provision 2:08 p.m. To Return to revamp its kindergarten en- the permanent residents in the would reduce delinquency. Ozzard sent for the Democrats On Grant trance policy. area who have had to put up with The bill provides that all juve- who were in caucus, with thi Bernard M. Mitzner, 23 Arlene this mess for so long." message: "You tell them I warn To England Dr., one of the advocates of a them in here now. The Senat He claimed Mr. Friedridi new policy, told The- Register session begins at 2 and we ar wouldn't let board members see yesterday he has received a let- Hesse Gets going to start voting on soirn names on a petition, which "h« bills." ter informing him of this. claimed were not opposed to the He said the board will continue Contract For Grossi appeared and told Oz- BLOOD BANKERS —The 52nd Artillery Brigade of High- kennel." to hold to Oct. 15 as the date by zard he objected "to the high Mr. Barnacle indicated that the lands Air Force station recently turned out "en masse" which a child must reach the age handed manner in which yoi board was justified in its decision Landscaping to donate blood to Red Cross blood bank. Shown regis- of five to be eligible for kinder- to suggest revoking the kennel gave us (the Democratic minori- garten. FAIR HAVEN — Charles J. ty) some 28 bills to study only ai tering are, seated left to right, PFC Ecoch Sturgill and license on the basis of evidence Hesse, Inc., Belford, was awarded hour be-Fore the session begins." M. Sgt. Howard Duff. Other members wait in line. The board, he said, reached presented. a contract for the landscaping There followed a heated ex its decision in executive session. However, he pointed out that and curbing of the borough hall- change; then an amicable settle Mr, Mitzner termed this "un- hearing the other petitions library by Borough Council Mon- ment. fair." "would probably strengthen the day night. His bid of $3,243 was Ozzard and Grossi agreed in fu- The resident said that under board's case." competed by Joseph F, Piancen- Shore Regional Lists ture to give notice If either party state law a parent may send a tino, 74 Poplar Ave., at $3,910. wished to delay the opening of child who does not meet the "cut- Counoilman Robert Matthews, session. off" deadline to a private school chairman of the building commit- until Jan. 1, then have him trans- 108 Enter tee, reported that construction is Honor Roll Students Assemblyman J. Arnold Bress- ferred to the public school (kin- progressing on schedule and WEST LONG BRANCH - Sophomores: Elaine Hansen ler, D-Hudson, introduced a bill in dergarten). should be completed by April 1. Twnety-nine students have been Deborah LiptDn, Bruce Richards Firemen's the Legislature Monday requiring "We don't plan to move in im- Juniors: Jeanette Bertone, Jil He said this is discriminatory, the Port of New York Authority named to the high honor roll and mediately," he added. Wilfred Buttrick Craig, Betty Christopher, Diane in that only those who can afford to extend the Hudson Tubes from 60 students have been namjed to John Joseph Cogan such a procedure benefit. Essay Test Arthur W. Davison, 31 Gilles- Fromm, Nancy Jeffries, Made- Jersey City to Bayonne. RED BANK — Wilfred Butt- the honor roll for the third mark- line Johnson, Kathleen Johnson, RED BANK — The Fire De- pie Ave., borough custodian, an- MIDDLETOWN - John Joseph Mr. Mitzner suggested a sys- The bill requires the Port Au- ing period at Shore Regional High Dbreen Palsias, Joanne Rippke, partment has extended Its thanks nounced in a letter to council rick, merchandising manager ol Cogan of East Keansburg, an tem whereby a psychologist, at thority to extend the tubes from Mary Ann Pascucci, Lynn Spaf- to the borough schools for their than he plans to retire April 15 Ebsco Industries, Inc., 78 West School. English teacher in Middletown the parents' expense, would test either the Exchange PL or Grow ford, Wanita Thorne. response to an invitation to par- after 13 years of service to the St., will retire May 31! Township High School, has been children for early entrance into St. station in Jersey City to the Students must gain at least ticipate in a fire prevention es- borough. W. Alex MoClendon, vice presi- Named to the honor roll were: awarded a $500 scholarship by the kindergarten—and make recom- Jersey Central Railroad in Ba- three A's in major subjects with say contest. Authorization of advertisement dent and general manager of the Freshmen: Shirley Baker, Pa- Monmouth County Branch of The' mendation's to the school superin- yonne. firm's eastern region, announced no less than B's in other subjects tendent, whD would decide the The essays are in, and the win- for bids for the purchase and in- to attain the high honor roll tricia Barbour, William Biese English-speaking Union, Ran- stallation of a five-foot Cyclone Mr. Buttrick's plans to retire and Carl Benante, Cynthia Craig dolph H. Beardsley, branch presl matter. ners will be announced by April The third and last of Gov. return with his wife to their na- Honor roll pupils must gain al 15. fence around the new playing B's in all major subjects, not Mary Christopher, Linda Clayton, dent, has announced. He said this system is being Richard J. Hughes' bills propos- tive England, where he will con- Anthony DeMarco, John Doxey, St. James School showed the fields behind the Youth Center more than one C in other sub- Mr. Cogan has been selected to used in several school districts in ing a $750 million bond issue was tinue to serve as advisor to Me- Helene Grasso, Roger Eichel, greatest interest, the department was made. jects, and nothing lower than a study the history, literature and New Jersey. I introduced in the Legislatun Clendon and the eastern region Allyson Emley, Virginia Gentile said, with 108 essays. A total of Councilman Hadley S. King, C in all their marks. the arts of Seventeenth-Century Monday. on merchandising and marketing Judy Hansen, Janet Kretlow, 45 were submitted by River Street Jr.'s recommendation that Frank England at Oxford University. The measure, sponsored by As- in Europe. Glenn Jacobs, Carol Pisano, In New Post and Oakland Street Schools, Red Reevey be appointed as a per- Named to the high honor roll The course includes a series of sembly Majority Leader J. Ed- were: Kathleen Rippke, Phyllis Rovick, manent junior sanitation em- A resident of 36 Riverside Ave. lectures by professors and lec- Bank Catholic High School turned ward Crabiel, D-Middiesex, gives Mary Ann Smorra, Nancy Zurat, ployee, effective April 1, was Red Bank, Mr. Buttrick started Freshmen: Judy Bradley, turers of the university, and by in 43 essays, and Red Bank High the governor veto power ove: Bonnie Turner. School six. adopted. any new borrowing or changes in his sales career there in England Peter Devreotes, Angela Gentile, literary critics, authors and mu- Although the fire department Tax overpayments refunds to- tolls by the New Jersey Turnpike as a clerk in a grocery shop. Guy Knleriem, Linda Lapoirite, Sophomores: James Biese sicians, and tutorial groups con- essay committee reported it was taling $196.10 were authorized for Authority. Hughes has proposed In 1924 he joined Harris Lebus Linda Mayro, Tobe Levin, Lynn Laurette Brenn, Robert Cala ducted by university tutors. II Samuel Schaffler, 15 Gillespie that future tolls of the turnpike England's largest furniture man- Macpherson, Leonard Schneider brese, Evenlyn Edwards, Janna begins July 1 and concludes Aug impressed with the papers, it Ave., Cyril Sidun, 57 Hance Rd., be used to pay off the bond is- ufacturer, as a junior salesman Peter Seitzman, Robert Slocum Franks, Carole Frew, Jacqueline 9. ' said plans are being formed for Harry Sugar, Stephen Thomas. Gikow, 3arbara Koncewicz, the dissemination of information and Dominic Figaro, Hance Rd. ue. and progressed to area sales This is the first year that the Karen Lucia, Lorraine LaVergne to fill the gaps indicated in the Council voted to cancel over- Crabiel introduced two other manager covering all of North English-Speaking Union has William Kiely, Cynthia Manna public's knowledge of fire preven- payments of taxes totaling $11.34 bills last week providing for ref- England and was a member of granted two scholarships. Last and, Robert Martin, Hindia Mel tion. for 18 property owners. They in- erendum questions at the Nov. 5 the British Sales Managers As- month, Joseph J. Dignan, an Eng- Honor Cadet nik, Phyllis North, Bonnie Pol- cluded a one-cent overpayment by election on spending the bond is- sociation. lish teacher at Rumson-Fair Ha- Iok, Ronald Reisner, Karl Rippke Councilman John C. Damico. sue funds for construction of high- ven Regional High School, re- In 1946 he purchased and oper- Shirley Ryan, Mark Stein ways, colleges, institutions and ceived a scholarship to study al ated a hotel on the southern berg, Andrea Stella, Helen Strol Unit OKd schools. Stralford-upon-Avon in England shores of England until he joined lo, Debrah While, Thomas Wol This marks the fourth year that 30 Students Military Service Company, a di- stencroft. At School vision of Ebsco Industries as a the English-Speaking Union has Man Fined representative in England in Junior: Kenneth Adams, Lor- awarded a scholarship to an area Have Quit 1952. raine Breglia, Richard Hankins, man for study in England. For Deaf Trudy Hansen, Cheryl Gifford, Mr. Cogan teaches advanced He moved to Red Bank in 1957 Constance Gavalas, Bruce Kron- TRENTON (AP) - The state For English as a member of the team Going Steady to assume the duties of assistant heim, Mary Jo Juliano, Connie has awardel $858,853 in contracts teaching program at the Middle- JERSEY CITY (AP) - Thirty to Mr. McOlendon in charge of Odiotti, Diane Mayer, Patsy for construction of a new upper town Township High School, and students at St. Michael's High sales co-ordination and merchan- Toole, Angela Torchia, Roy grade unit at the State Sthoo] for Killing Dog also teaches Latin. He received School, warned that they would dising manager. Walls, Patricia Woolley. the Deaf in Trenton. DENVILLE, (AP) - Paul R his BA degree in 1958 from Seton Isaac L. Abramovitz be expelled if they didn't stop Robinson, 26, pleaded guilty Mon The Buttricks' son-in-law rep- The new building will provide Hall University, South Orange, specialized training I 200 deaf going steady, have complied with day night to a charge of need resents Ebsco Industries, Inc. in LONG BRANCH — Isaac L. where he is studying for his mas- students in the seventh through Rev. James A. Carey's order, the lessly killing a dog and was fined England. Abramovitz, 317 Bath Ave., has school said Monday. New Members ters' degree. 12th grades. It will have 14 $50 and $10 costs by Magistrate Mr. Buttrick is a member of been named the renting agent for classrooms, three laboratories, Father Carey, school director, the Red Bank Rotary^Club, a Ma- The scholarship winners were the Greens Ave. Apartment at Fremont Donley. a library, an audio-visual made his announcement at a Donley said he believed Robin- son and past master"$£..his lodge. For Jaycees ;elected by a committee headed 28 Greens Ave. The apartments school assembly last Thursday. by J. Howard Burnett, Highlands, will be available April 15. laboratory, administrative and son was remorseful and "has al- He attends Red Bank Methodist RED BANK - Eight new mem- The ban against steady dating senior master and head of the faculty work rooms, a gym- ready received punishment from Church. bers were initiated at a recent Mr. Abramovitz, a Long Branch went into effect March I. Father language department at Rumson nasium, recreation rooms, and the publicity." meeting of the Greater Red Bank resident since 1948, is active in Carey warned students they Country Day School. dining facilities for resident stu- Robinson, of 10 Whaleback Jaycees. raternal and civic groups here. would be expelled if they contin- dents. Waddy, had surrendered to po- ued to "date one person to the FBI Arrests Initiated were David W. Barr, Charles F. Sullivan, state pur- lice Friday and admitted shoot- ABOARD LEXINGTON exclusion of all others." Richard Werner who is employed by the William chase and property director, said ing an eight-month old German S. Anderson Funeral Home; Don- Begin Work GREAT LAKES, 111. — Daniel Two boys and two girls were LITTLE SILVER - Richard the contract for general con- shepherd owned by a neighbor,- Bank Robbing ald G. Marshall, an attorney with J. Walling, boilerman third class, expelled at that time and two Werner, son of Mr. and Mrs. struction will go to Van Lieu & Walter Luzenko of 32 Whaleback Lowenstein and Speicer, Newark U. S. Navy, son of Mr: and Mrs. Van Horn, Inc., Flemington, other students quit in prote Albert F. Werner, 89 Queens Dr., Waddy. and Octavius Pitzalis, Jr., an elec- In Fashion Daniel C. Walling, 10 Mohawk which submitted a bid of $485,- Honeymooner has been designated an Honor against the ruling. "I had to tell you because I trical engineer at Fort Mon- Two area residents this week Ave., Middletown, is serving 000. WASHINGTON (AP)-The FBI Cadet at the U. S. Merchant Juvenile Conference couldn't sleep nights," Robinson mouth, all residents of Fair Ha- began spring work projects as aboard the support aircraft car- reported Monday the capture Marine Academy, Kings Point, The other contracts are: Committee Appointee told the officers, "it was a ter- :n. part of their training for execu- rier USS Lexington which visited of Jerry C. Rush, 27-year-old N. Y., where he is a second class- Franklin Steel, Inc., Phillipsburg, FAIR HAVEN — Jesse S. Jet- ible, terrible accident." And, James Y. Duncan, an en tive careers in fashion at 'the who financed a honeymoon with man. New Orleans, La., last month as $61,31.9; plumbing, Robert B. ter, 28 Fdske St. was appointed Luzenko's dog, Cindy, was gineer with the New York Port Laboratory Institute of Merchan- iis strip teaser bride by robbing Mardi Gras guests. New Orleans Berwick & Co., Trenton, $47,- to She Juvenile Conference Com- struck in the hind quarters by a This honor was awarded for in- Authority; William J. Judge, a dising, 677 Fifth Ave., New York. . bank. He was one of the FBI's Mardi Gras officials invited the 795; electrical work, Easton mittee Monday night by Mayor 22-caliber bullet. Luzenko found itiative, leadership, performance sales representative with Johnson Miss Anne Toop, daughter of 10 most wanted fugitives. Lexington crewmen to attend the Electro Construction Co,, Wind Peter deK. Dusinberre. The ap- the animal and took it to a veter- of duties and other personal qual- and Johnson, Inc., and Robert R. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Toop, Gap, Pa., $79,980; heating and Although Rush had two guns annual celebration. The Lexing- pointment needs approval by the inarian but the dog died. The ities. Cadet Werner graduated Urbanski, a teacher at Monmouth Phalanx Rd., Lincroft, starts her ventilating, Richardson* Engineer- and ammunition, he was arrested ton, now celebrating its 20th an- County Court to become final. shooting occurred March 17. from Red Bank High School. He Regional High School, all Red department store training at ing Co., New Brunswick, $148,585; without a fight by, FBI agents in niversary of Navy service, was Mr. Jetter, one of the organiz- Robinson said he was annoyed was active in scouting here. Bank residents. Hahne & Co., Newark. She is kitchen equipment, Devin Prod- Bay Harbor Islands, Fla., direc recently redesignated from attack ers and early directors of Dads, by Luzenko's dog barking at his And, George D. Herr of Ocean- a 1962 graduate of Middletown ucts Co., Trenton, $36,174. tor J. Edgar Hoover said. carrier to support carrier. She Inc., is a member of River Rats, pet cocker spaniel and that he Alexander Graham Bell called port, a field engineer with Square Township High School. Hoover said Rush also has been is homeported in Pensacola, Fla., The architects on the bidding served on the Youth Center Com- tried several times to frighten the metric system "a labor sav- and Co., and Anthony T. Swain Miss Mary Patricia Policasfro, jharged with armed robbery and where she serves as a training are Merchant, Seidel & Hickey, mittee and the Recreation Com- Cindy away before getting a rifle ing device of the greatest im- of Sea Bright, who heads the A. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Victor assault with intent to murder. New Brunswick. mission, and, as the mayor and firing it. portance and value." ' T. Swain Advertising Co. A. Policastro, 135 Cloverdale Cir., Rush and two other men are New Shrewsbury, begins her stated, "has given of himself "I didn't mean to hit him; I cheerfully and co-operatively for was just trying to scare him jharged with robbing th*> Con- training at Burdine's, Miami a better Fair Haven." away," Robinson told police. very branch of the Perth Amboy, Beach. She is a 1962 graduate of N.J., National Bank of $102,176 Red Bank High School. last Nov. 16. After firing a shot- Both students expect to grad- gun blast through the floor of uate from L.I.M. in June, 1964. the bank and wounding a teller on the door below. Hoover said, Rush also slugged a bank patron Article Written on the back of the head with his shotgun. By Anderson Hoover said Rush, who has the MIDDLETOWN-An article on words "Born to Lose" tattooed on 'Maintenance and Care For Old his arm, then went on a honey- Parish Cemeteries" by Michael moon with the loot. J. Anderson, superintendent of His two accomplices were cap- Movnt Olivet Cemetery, here, ap- jred less than two weeks later pears in the February edition of in Las Vegas, Ncv. The Catholic Cemetery, the mag- At the time of Ihe New Jersey azine of the National Catholic bank robbery, Rush was a fugi- Cemetery Conference. tive from the Maryland State Mr. Anderson discusses the Penitentiary, He had been serv- need for an annual or perpetual ing a 17-'/2 >'ear term for assault care fund for parish cemeteries with intern t» murder after firing and also suggests a program for sawed-off shotgun at a Balti- restoring neglected cemeteries to more police officer who at- their former beauty. tempted to arrest him in a stolen :ar. ARMY AWARD — Samuel J. Schulman, right, contract PRESENT CITATION — Herman J. Carter, left, Long Hoover said Rush also is Attend Jaycee wanted in connection with the administrator for the U.S. Army Materiel Agency, re- Branch, public information officer, Sandy Hook Division, &i7,O0O armed robbery July 13, ceives a Department of the Army Commendation for Event in Tulsa Coast Guard Auxiliary, accepts his 14th citation, for 1962, of a Philadelphia food chain "outstanding performance" during 1962. He represents RED BANK — Board members outstanding services to Flotilla 27, from Phil Dolinsky, .ffice. of the New Jersey Jaycees at- When he was arrested, Hoover the Fort Monmouth procurement office in legal and tended the annual meeting of the Oceanport, past commander. Looking on is Frederick B. said, Rush had $5,554 in his pos- contractual matters, and is in residence at the Electronic U. S. Jaycees in Tulsa, Okla. Loiier, Portaupock, captain, Sandy Hook Division, who session. The FBI said he' was Defense Laboratories of Sylvania Electronic Systems at last week. recently presented Carter with a citation for being the using the name George Hackett. Attending from this area were nation's outstanding public information officer,' having BADGE OF HONOR — Red Bank's Mayor Benedict R, Rush was held under federal Mountain View, Calif. Making the presentation is U. Martin Green, Neptune, and Wil Nicosia, • left, presents Fire Department ex-captain's warrants for the Perth Amboy Col. Frederick J. Johnston, formerly of Red Bank, Jiam C. North, this place, nation- been responsible for 1,800 pictures and news releases for bank robbery and for unlawful al directors, and Evelyn G. Tay- badge to Vincent Soviero, who served as captain last who is commanding officer of the U.J. Army Electronic the Coast Guard and auxiliary being published. Presenta- flight to avoid confinement in lor, this place, executive secre- Research Unit. tion was made Saturday night at Fort Monmouth. year in Independent Engine Compay. Maryland. tary. , May Add - REP BANK REGISTER Wed^ M«cJ»2T, The orljlntl bill would postpone, toe Ua reform l»w If # «v« we» Middletown the property Ux reform law for enacted. Still Making 'Amends' the third consecutive year. The The senate amendment Monday reform law wu approved in I960 limited the tax form* to farmer* Rail Stop after two years of study and wasand businessmen whose total in- WIDDLETTOWN — Township Tax Postponer Shuttles Back to Assembly to go into effect in 1961. ventories and equipment has a Conuniteeman Ernest G. Kaval- However, protests by business- book value of more than $25,000 By CHRISTOPHER MDfltXIER landed it back to the assembly bill next Monday. What the sen- ek disclosed yesterday that the men and farmers, who said the and placed other guarantees to TRENTON (AP)-The New Jer-which gets its second chance next ate would do in that case is un prospects of getting an additional tax forms were too complicated, protect the property owner from sey Legislature, struggling like a week. certain. railroad stop {or Middletowii and feared the reform would bring having the forms used against man enmeshed In five pounds of looks encouraging. On March 11 the senate passed Both bouses of the legislature them higher taxes, forced the him. fresh flypaper, comes back next He said this outlook is based the measure postponing the tax plan to adjourn the evening of postponements. Monday for another "final at- The assembly acted Monday on on the reception he received at reform law. The assembly amend- April 1 and not return until April The original assembly amend- two other senate bills stemming the recent pobKc hearing of the ie measure last week and the pone a sweeping property tax re- 21, only 9 days from the date the ment requires farmers and busi- from the court case on property State. Rail Transportation Com- senate amended the assembly forms ,or me new property re. nesanen to file detailed tax forms taxes. form law. mission in Newark. amendment Monday. by July 1 listing their inventories, The senate passed the postponer form law are supposed to be in. The lower house approved two Mr. Kavalefc cited the fact that Assembly Speaker Elmer M. The forms haven't been print- equipment and machinery. resolutions which would amend there is no Pennsylvania Rail- for the second time Monday and Matthews, D-Essex, said it is ed yet and no one will know to The forms, which would be kept the state constitution to give vet- road stop scheduled for Middle- likely the assembly will amend whom the forms are supposed to confidential and destroyed after erans and elderly homeowner* town after the 6:57 p.m. arrival the senate amendment to the as- be sent, until the legislature fin- one year, would be used by the cash deductions from their prop- of the 5:50 p.m. train from Penn Celli Seeks sembly amendment to the senate ishes its exchange of amendments. erty tax bills. Station. He asked for an addi- state to determine the effect of tional stop of the PER train leaving Penn Station at 7:50 p.m. Council Post This train, presently stopping at Red Bank, could reach Middle- Get the inside story and you'll get a town by about 9 p.m., it was noted. The" official pointed out that Middletown has co-operated with the railroads, in, the interest of DELIVERS RANSOM — Harvey Van Brunt, left, chair- its commuters, by enlarging and man of Van Brunt and Son, Inc., Matawan trucking firm, Flameless Electric Water Heater repaying existing parking facili- is pictured with Andrew Nicora, one of company's driv- ties. en who delivered drugs to Red Cross ship for shipment Officials of the commission stated that the request would be to Cuba, in exchange for release of prisoners lest month. given consideration, noting that Stays Cool on the Outside Middletown's contribution toward resolving the commuter problem was a model which other com- Doing Their Part munities in the state could well follow, Mr. Kavalek reported. Deliver Drugs for Cuban Prisoners Installs Anywhere WITH ID MARINE WING MATAWAN — Van Brunt an Harvey Van Brunt, chairman ENGLISHTOWN - Marine Cpl. Son, Inc., local trucking com- of the board for the trucking John Meyers, son of Mr. and pany, has taken part in a phase company, said his firm made 20 Mrs. John Meyers of 2 Gordon's of the Cuban prisoner exchangi per cent of its tntcfcs available Corners, is serving with the for delivery of a shipment of program by contributing the usi Third Marine Air Wing which re- valuable drugs from Bloomfield of its trucks and personnel fo cently participated in an amphibi- to the Philadelphia piers. . Michael G. Ceul the transportation of drugs am ous exercise near the coast of The Van Brunt company hauled medicine destined for Cuba. Southern California. more than 5,000 cartons of drugs LONG BRANCH — Michael G. and medicine totaling 38,000 Celli, 382 Morris Ave., a city let- pounds. The shipment represents ter carrier, has announced he has part of the ransom paid to Cuba thrown his hat in the local polit- in exchange for the release of ical arena again. prisoners last month. The ship- Mr. Celli ran fifth last Novem- ment was delivered from the ber in a seven-way field for elec- Bloomfield manufacturing plant tion as councilman-aUarge. Now, of Lehn & Fink Products Corp. he said, he will try for a council The program is being super seat from the Third Ward, the vised by the Red Cross. spot now held by Julius To- maini. The election is May R County Dentists Hold A graduate of Long Branch There's one In every crowd who has to beat the High School, Mr. Celli has attend- ladies to Easter with a new sui.t from J. Kridel. All-Day Seminar ed the Newark Conservatory of WEST DEAL — Dr. Jacob Abel- Music and currently is doing work son of New York City was guest at Rutgers University in psychol- clinician at the fifth all-day semi ogy, contract negotiations, anc nar sponsored by the post-gradu- labor management arbitration. ate committee of the Monmouth An electric water heater can be installed in any avail- County Dental Society in the He has been employed by th Georgian House, Rt. 35, last local Post Office for 14 years anc able space - in the laundry, bathroom, kitchen or even week. Is a member of the National As sociation of Letter Carriers, AFL- Dr. Alvin Melser, Red Bank, in a closet or under the stairs. That's because it's flame- CIO. committee chairman, said the New or Newberry's CUSTOM MADE less without fumes, smoke or soot There is no unsightly 1963-64 schedule will be increased The candidate and several SLIPCOVERS and DRAPERIES to six seminars because of the his nine brothers are associated flue or costly pipe runs. And, of course, there's no pilot response to this year's program. in Celli Brothers Antiques and light to go out You simply install it and forgetit Custom made slipcovers, cut and nlnfitted on your furni- Guest clinicians from the Univer- Art Warehouse. He is presidem ture. Expertly tailored to fit perfectly with zippers. Big sity of Pennsylvania, Fairleigh of the company. choice of better quality decorator fabrics in solids and Dickinson, and (he Columbia Uni- Then, too, it's completely insulated top, bottom and all prints and florals. Also custom made draw drapes In any versity Schools of Dentistry will' width and length. It pays to advertise in the Ret varticiDate. he said. Bank Register.—Advertisement around like a giant thermos bottle so the heat stays inside and the outside stays cool. All these advantages make the flamelesselectri c water heater the most effi- cient, most economical and easiest to install. 36 days that proved Call your nearest utility sales office today forcomplete information on the right size and model flamelesselec - Fords total performance! tric water heater for your family. 5 Reasons Why the Flameless Electric Water RIVERSIDE, GAL. MONTE CARLO PURE OIL TRIALS DAYTONA, FLA. January 20 January 23 January 27 February 24 Heater is Superior to Flame-type Heaters

ll • tolil performing list of bnkes, The '63H Falcon Y-8 Sprints nude their ln-» competition designed to test all- Diytona "500" history was nude when nsptnslori ind stinini on Hie twist- debut with a fantastic slowinj in Iht around performance. Fords wan ever- '63H Fordt bland into th* lint Sw 1*1 Riverside sports car course, Dm 2,500-mile Monte Carlo Rallye. Through ill winners in Class I and Class II In Die placet! Slim taytau is th* toughest I Automatic — thermostats maintain dependable supply of hot water Gorney drove I Ford hardtop to victory Europe's worst winter weather they Pore Oil Performance Trials at Daytwia. track In Die world, this was *yewro»n over 43 other stock cars, Th> 500-mlla placed 1st and 2nd In class. Besides this Tholrfota/perrc-rmance design added up proof that Ford's fob/ performance ' at constant temperature. grind demonstrated Ford'i superior one Sprint defeated every entrant in to most total points in gas economy, design can endure the maximum In stamina and road-hoidlnf. the Rallyes six special stages. acceleration and braking events. automotive punishment I Safe—each flameless electric heatiiig unit is controlled automat- ically — relief valve serves as double protection. • Clean - no fumes, soot or greasy smudge - does not detract from surroundings. I Easy to Install - no need for flue or fuel pipes — can be put in any Buy with insurance) available space, from your total Rtddy I Economical - insulation keeps water hot for days - heat trap keeps Kilowatt DoaUr who displays this tmbltm hot water from circulating into pipe lines - baffle or diffuser keeps incoming cold water from mixing with hot JCP*L JERSEY CENTRAL POWER !• LIGHT

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D On every slippery surface you need the kind bs a great road car—and.Ford is the big winner I en «n Nvlnn HaHeM 6 1i" Far* FORD Dtol Direct with mlr& Counlerlnn ivlth 11" Uadtiplftih of readability that placed five Fords out front in t SIMPOl or mrCHDAILI PRODUCTS NOTOI COMfANY riw Manufacturer Producing with Pride Mid Slainlrm Hteel Iloldlnf—Cbolca AND Kitchens of Superior ol Colon. MOUNT ENGUSH SALES COMPANY SAVE Quality and Design. VISIT OUR SHOWROOM AND PLANT AT . . , 90 Monmouth Street SHadyside 1-6000 Red Bank 1121 HWY. 35 (Ont milt north of Aibury Tark Clrcl.) KE 1-3800 WANAMASSA tt-Wtl, Mwsb 27, 1963. BED BAM REGISTER )kItndi havenjuMpiltf 10 times new programs assigned formed," Adaira«$d, "This it area, and when seMess dejlica- taA •Ccommodtte 30 tbnea u to his department, Adams Mid, done through a total expenditure tfon to toe public welfare U all efends nfeny viaitorj, witfa 20 per cent Uidude itt^Htrtiian of power of less than IU.000 aanuaUy and too rtre, it wouid «0*ar kgte*l DENNIS THE MENACE Hy Hank Keuhum (ewer permanent employee] in boats, an enlarged water supply includes the .printing of a num- that the citizens of the state do the parks and forests. wogram, accelerated Ju>Ii fiber of teohnkaJ publications appreciate the • exceptional ,ae- works programs, newly opened whichare self-sustaining." The Veterans Services Division complistanents of the hard-work- public beaches, added policing of GonservationDept took over the void left by clos- "In a period when state gov- ing and effective staff of the De- ing of five Veterans Administra- polluted waters, and revival of the ernment acknowledges iU salary TRENTON (AP) - Gov. Rich "Knowing from my reading of tion offices in the state and did oyster industry. partment of Conservation and ard J. Hughes Monday leaped the report and from the depart- it with three fewer employees ... The department has felt »««l»-aw below those of com-Economic Development," Adams to the defense of the State De- mental comments that there had than in the past, Adams said. obligated to keep the public in- parable industrial scales in the concluded. partment of Conservation and been no singling out of the De- Economic Development against partment of Conservation and charges that it has a top-heavy Economic Development for criti- administrative staff. cism, I was, of course, concerned Hughes issued a statement w«r the newspaper reports," praising Conservation Commis- Hughes said. sioner H. Mat Adams and deny He said Adams' department, ing that Adams' department had which has 35 separate agencies, I MONMOUTH MEATS been singled out for criticism has a tremendous scope of re- 110 MONMOUTH ST. 13 MAIN ST. BRANCH AVENUE by a governor's committee on sponsibility. RED BANK EATONTOWN UTTLE SILVER efficiency and economy in gov- "It was this factor of scope ernment. that drew some considerations by SH 1-5292 U 2-0743 741-5350 Adams issued a statement ar- the Committee on Efficiency and guing that his sprawling depart- Economy," Hughes said. ment has handled broad new as- Hughes noted that his proposed BEEF SALE—SWIFT'S PREMIUM—AGED AND SEASONED signments In the past 18 months new Department of Community FULLY TRIMMED with a smaller staff than before. Affairs would take some of the CUT TO ORDER He said his department "is prob- agencies now in Adams' depart- ably the most overworked In ment. Adams has played a lead- state government." ing role in developing plans for Hughes disclosed that he has the new department, Hughes •SIRLOIN c persuaded Adams to stay on an- said, and the results are to be other month beyond his scheduled made public soon. Ib April 1 resignation to train his In his statement, Adams out- successor and finish up some lined his department's operations*. •T-BONE projects. Hughes said he will an- Several of the specifics he cited nounce the name of the new com- appeared to be answers to gen- missioner shortly. Adams has eral findings made by the econ- • PORTERHOUSSTEAK7E STEAK - FULLY TRIMMED 9 85c Ib. fflsaa «: been delaying his return to pri- omy comimttee. vate business for months. For instance, "the committee The controversy over effici- . . tojvheavy administrative • SWIFT'S PREMIUM—BONELESS ency In the Conservation Depart- staffs are working in fragmented Await Commitmentsment stems from a report by the fashion upon identical or similar governor's committee in Janu- functions such as budgeting, ac- ary. The committee said expan- counting, revenue collection, pur- Of State an Sea Wallsion and addition of state serv- chasing, personnel and legal serv- :EYE ROUND ROAST ices have resulted in "adminis- es." FREEHOLD — The heads of last Friday with the two commis- trative spread" in many depart- Adams said his department has LEAN-TENDER Lean-Rib Side Leanjresh Ground two' state departments have sioners and obtained the promises ments. There are also criticism . centralized fiscal control of- Y Aged & Seasoned agreed to pledge future mainten- which they have insisted upon that some departments "issue fice and none of the departments ance of the Ocean Ave. sea wall Commissioner Palmer said he many publications and reports or divisions take part in this func- and roadway in Sea Bright and could not pledge acceptance of that appear to be aimed In great tion. Eight other state depart- RIBS of CHUCK LOIN of CHUCK Monmouth Beach after a 51,600,- the road into the highway net- part at promoting their own Im- ments studied his operation, 000 seawall project is completed work until 'the sea wall was com- portance without regard to edu- Adams said, and four of them At least they have done so pleted but could give assurance, cational or informational merit." adopted similar procedures. One BEEF ROAST PORK CHOP verbally, the Monmouth County now, that he would do it then if State Treasurer John A. Ker- of those adopting the procedure, Board of Freeholders said Mon- the sea wall job went as planned. vick, a member of the commit- he said, was Kervick's Treasury) day. Fund Deadline tee, was called to testify at a Department. c c C G The board, which has conditi- 2. The freeholders are required meeting of the legislature's Ap- _ Adams noted the Conservation || tioned a $400,000 contribution to to sign and return to the federal propriations Committee last week Department's role In repairingll Ib Ib Ib Ib the job on receipt of these guar- government forms committing its and asked to cite some specific the shore damage caused by tjhe|| 69 49 39 69 examples. He said he would not antees In writing, is now waiting $400,000 by April 3 in order to March, 1962, coastal storm: do so publicly, but would in- for such correspondence. insure $800,090 U. S. money un "Without one dime extra forll form Sen. George B. Harper, R- CHOICE—BONELESS "V A< Freeholders indicated time is der the 1962 Accelerated Public personnel and accounting work, I now of the essence. Any delay Sussex, chairman of the commit- the department... accomplishedj| Works Law. tee. in receipt of promised letters of 3. Freeholder Marcus Daly, de- a $34 million restoration com- assurance from state Highway clared some new problems have Committee sources. said later pared with $2 million spent in a|| Commissioner Dwiglit R. G. become apparent as to the total that the Conservation Department normal year." CROSS RIB ROAST 79 Palmer aid Conservation Com protection of the Sea Bright was one of three mentioned by He said his administrative of-II missioner H. Mat Adams will Kervick. fice has taken over the job of oceanfront. He said proposed JOQC|CHOPPED Q LJ00 1 LAMB for/I if QQ Short- Ribs have their pitfalls. plans may require some added Hughes said he conferred with running the $60 million Green I Here are three key points. study in completing the bid for Kervick and Adams and is re- Acres bond issue program with iW BACON JO9|BEEF Osl I STEW 111 OF BEEF 1. Freeholders met in Trenton iewing the findings of the econ- smaller staff than in the past. Jn 2 federal assistance. Pending receipt of letters from omy committee. 10 years, he said, the state's pub-l| Mr. Palmer and Mr. Adams, the Minister Has board directed Assistant County Counsel Clifton T. Barkalow to determine whether a delay may Suit Against be obtained on the April 3 filing date, or whether the county would Conference have the right, within the next two weeks, to cancel its applica- CAMDEN (AP) — Superior tion. Court Judge John B. Wick began If taken in the state highway hearing testimony Monday in network, the roadway would be- Everything a car owner could need... a suit by Rev. Carl Mclntire come part of Rt. 36. With i asking that Harvey Cedars terruptions in Sea Bright, Mon- Bible Conference, Inc., be re- mouth Beach, and a part of Long •trained from disposing of con- Branch — the highway extends ference assets and that the court rom Six Comers at Keyport, set aside certification of the con- along (he Bayshore, to Highlands ference name. bridge, and from a part of Joline Rev. Mr. Mclntire is pastor of Ave., Long Branch, over the Mon- Bible Presbyterian Church, Col- mouth Parkway in Oceanport, lingswood. He alleges that in West Long Branch, and Eaton- May, 1961, truste.es of the confer- town, to the Rt. 35 traffic circle. ence changed the name of the Sea Wall Plan corporation from Harvey Cedars Bible Presbyterian Conference, Plans for the sea wall project Inc. His petition states that since include new construction • on the conference was founded in North Beach, reconstruction and May, 1941, about $34,000 in gifts replacements of wall sections on were given it by his church and South Beach. 10 that, since the change In the cor- It also provides for some new porate name, attempts have been construction and rebuilding in made to divert the assets and the center of town, near the pub- purpose of the corporation. lic beach and old beachfront prop- Dr. James Oliver Buswell, iden erties. But the coverage here is 27 tified as a Presbyterian leader not complete. and former president of Wheaton Mr. Daly said he is concerned College, testified that he was about the sections not slated for one of the founders of the Bible safeguards though he declined to Presbyterian Church of. the U.S. pinpoint the areas. He said he , in the 1930s. He told the court s hopeful his doubts may be set- Rev. Mr. Mclntire "found he tled through discussion before the could no longer control the de board has to file its application nomination, so he formed his and and that there will be no used the same name." ultimate basis for objection. He said Rev. Mr. Mclntire Assistant County Treasurer separated from the Bible Presby- Theodore Narozanick said the terian Church of the U. S. in 1956. U. S. is insisting its procedures The conference has a hotel at be followed on time In bidding for Harvey Cedars maintained by federal aid. the .denomination and used for He said the procedure does per- recreational and religious train- mit a county to withdraw, with- ing purposes as a non-profit oper- out obligation, within 15 days aft- ation. . er obtaining a federal grant. Mclntire asks that the original However, he said the only oth- name of the conference be re- er variation permitted is a single stored and the trustees removed. delay in the start of the job after an award. AT BUSINESS SESSION Freeholders indicated that if RED BANK — Rolf. Christian- Mr. Barkalow's opinion bears out sen, agency manager of the John Mr. Narozanick's interpretation, Hancock Mutual Life Insurance hat an application can be can- Co. unit office here, attended a celled within 15 days of filing, it four-day business meeting of top will complete the necessary forms general agency representatives of and adopt appropriate resolutions the company in the Hollywood n time to meet the April 3 dead- Beach Hotel, Fla., last week. line. GINGER By Gettertnann

37 LISTINGS l.Automobils Body Repairing & Painting 2. Automobile Customizing 3. Automobile Dealers 4. Automobile Electrical Equipment 5. Automobile Electrical Service 6. Auto- mobile Parts & Supplies 7. Automobile Racing & Sports Car Equipment 8. Automobile Repairing & Service 9. Automobile Seat Belts 10. Automobile Seat Covers, Tops & Upholstery 11. Automobile Undercoating 12. Automobile Upholstery Cleaning 13. Automobile Washing & Polishing 14. Battery Sales & Service 15. Brake Service 16. Carburetors 17. Clutches 18. Filters—Oil 19. Gaskets 20. Generators 21. Glass—Auto, Plate, Window, Etc. 22. Heaters 23. Insurance 24. Mufflers 25. Radiators 26. Road Service 27. Service Stations 28. Shock Absorbers 29. Spark Plugs 30. Speedometers 31. Springs 32. Tire Dealers 33. Towlng-Automotlvs 34. Transmissions 35. Wheel, Frame A Axle Servicing 36. Wheels 37. Windshield Wipers.

.world's handiest book for people who have cars and even if you don't own a car, you can find where to rent one. "I'm going out to play now ... I'd better grab the chance while I'm still young!" For Quick Results p#r Use Our Want Ads BED BANK Home Delivery Dial SH I-0010 DAY SH I-IIIO NIGHT SECTION TWO WEDNESDAY, MARCH. 27, 1963 7c PER COPY Railroad Crossing Briton to Put 14-Point Improvement Set Program Before U.S. Britain toward a middle position NEWARK - The state Board Railroad of New Jersey to com- By ARTHUR GAVSHON sharp departures from Allied pol- in the cold war. „ of Public Utility Commissioners plete the installation by Aug. 15. LONDON (AP) - Another Wil- icy. They are: has ruled that the accident rec- son's 14 points will be laid be- —Limited recognition of Com- If Wilson's Laborites win and The PUC action brings to a ord at the Maxwell Rd. railroad fore President Kennedy tills munist East Germany and recog- then press their foreign policy total of 17 the number of gradi crossing in Eatontown justifies weekend. nition of Poland's title to Ger- program, it could begin a process crossings, which are to be pro- the installation of automatic man territory occupied after of radically transforming inter- tected by lights in the curren Wcodrow Wilson's 14 points (lashing lights and bell signals. World War II. Allied loyalties and East-West program which allows the state helped set the pattern for Europe The board ordered the Centra —Soviet and U.S. withdrawal rivalries. to pay for 85 per cent of the after,World War I. Harold Wil- from a neutralized central Euro- The 14 points of policy have installations, and requires th son's 14 points would ' set the pattern for British policy if his pean zone of controlled arma- emerged from a study of Wil- railroads to pick up the remain Labor Party wins the next gen- ments made up of West and East son's private and public state- Official's Jab der of the tab. eral election, as many British Germany, Poland, Hungary and ments immediately before and To Cost $16,000 political observers expect. The Czechoslovakia. Nuclear weapons after his election as successor Draws Sharp The Maxwell Rd. project is es election must be held before Oc- would be barred from the area. to the late Hugh Gaitskell as La- timated to cost about $16,000. II tober 1964. —Communist China's admission bor's leader. preliminary plans are ustd, it Wilson flies to the United States to the United Nations in place Retaliation will include four standards—three tomorrow for his first meeting of Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists. LONG BRANCH - Council- with the conventional pair of with Kennedy since Wilson was Some of Wdlson's 14 points Who Suggested woman Lucy Wilson said last lights and one with two pairs, READY FOR PROTECTION — Keeping up with the times, the Rumson. Fire Depart- elected head of the Labor Party would swing Britain into closer Suggestion Box? night Councilman Milton F. Un- The additional standards an ment yesterday brought- in its new $42,000 American-La France aerial truck, with its last month. The program he will alignment with She Kennedy ad- termeyer has problems because needed to provide "protection fo outline includes at least three ministration. Others would take LONG BRANCH - City em- the wreckage of his burned out modern 75-foot ladder. The truck, paid for by the borough, will replace the 1938 ployees may get a "Suggestion traffic approaching the tracks Ocean Ave. home is being de- Rumson Fire Department's quad hook and ladder apparatus. It is the most modern Box" but — it might be sug- from Lewis St. and nearby sid< posited on a private dump in her of Rumson's five-truck equipment. Receiving the truck as it arrived by train at Red gested — It will take quite • Fifth Ward, streets. while to learn who really «ug- Bank are, left to right,, Alfred R. West, former chief; Chief Robert H. Marass, and Panel Tomorrow gested the suggestion idea In Her complaint was that a score The crossing is presently pn of truckers had discovered the tected with a cross-buck sign Herbert E. Bush, assistant chief. Officials last night were pleased after taking the the first place. Sixth Avenue disposal area and That arrangement is inadequat truck out on a trial run. Sal Grasso, president of the were using it, much to the con- according to the testimony of Po- On Discrimination Municipal Employees Associa- cern of residents of her ward, for lice Chief William Zadorozny at tion, told City Council last private purposes. a PUC hearing here Feb. 5. ASBURY PARK—A panel dis There will be a public question Reformatories Problem cussion on the question: "Is there and answer period following the night it was still waiting to set But Mrs. Wilson probably nev- The chief stated that the bor- discrimination in the professional presentations of the panel mem- the "box" he said Mayor Thorn- er realized her gentle poke'at ough plans to widen and repavi world today, and if so what ca bers. as L. McClintock had proposed Mr. Untermeyer would bring the approaches, to the crossing, more than a year ago. be done about it?" will be held The Shore Citizens for Better return punch for herself. and that traffic is expected to Hughes on Trail of Solution tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. at the Human Relations is a group of Mr. Grasso said the plan was Benjamin D'Orsi, ef West Long increase after the improvements. that, those offering worthy sug- First Presbyterian Church here, people interested in bettering Branch, who has the demolition gestions would win cash contract for the Untermeyer prop- Deciding Factor TRENTON (AP) — Gov. Rich- Hughes, a former judge, told] ices is the building of a $16 mil- under the sponsorship of the community attitudes in regard to 1 bonuses. erty, demanded to be heard. Testimony^ at the hearing in ard J, Hughes, who says he is newsmen yesterday, "I used to lion reformatory and reception Shore Citizens for Better Human housing and employment for all The mayor allowed that the dicated that highway traffic at practically stand on my head to center at Yardville, according to Relations. without prejudice, through action He • said he had a permit to "on the trail of a solution" to Idea was one he would support, the crossing is about 1,600 ve- keep from sending boys to Bor- acting Institutions Commissioner and education. dump on the lot, that city tracks overcrowding of New Jersey's Chester Apy, attorney; Bernarc but denied he was the author. also were dumping there and hicles per day, including military dentown or Annandale ... I had Lloyd W. McCorkle and institu- male reformatories, planned to Kellenyi, architect; Mrs. Marie Curtis Murphy of Red Bank is "This is the first I've beard that he was using his own equip- and school buses. some idea of what they were like. tions board president Lloyd B. Berrien, educator; Floyd Scott, president of the group. Rev^ John or it, but I think It's a good ment to spread and cover all ma- meet today with the Institutions Now I have a better idea." Train traffic, during a test- pe- Wescott. Both told Hughes this Sr., real estate man, and Thomas Slater of Asbury Park Is vice idea and that we should con- terial thrown on the property. Board. riod, included eight drills and The solution to the overcrowd- last Sunday during his tour of Daniels, engineer, will be mem' president. sider it," he said. Some of the stuff put on the two freight trains in a day. They Hughes canceled several sched- ing and lack of rehabilitation serv- Annandale and Bordentown. bers of the panel. 500-foot long low-lying tract also are allowed a speed of 30 miles uled appointments in the last has come from Mrs. Wilson's per hour. three days to visit all thrqe o property, Mr. D'Orsi said. The accident rate—13 in the the state's reformatories for Girl Remembered Mrs. Wilson said slie had had last 35 years—was the deciding males and to talk with judges League Speaker Raps Hughes conversations with Acting City factor in the PUC decision. Six and institutions officials. His in Manager John 0. Jones about the fatalities and seven injuries have terest was. prompted by a res Concert Honors Yolanda Benson problem and that he had not in- been the toll of the crossing. olution from the Annandale Re- FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP-The singer Shlomo Carlebach and dicated the city was efther using formatory earlier this month tell $750 Million Bond Issue Plan memory of a young Freehold other guest artists. the property or that Mr. D'Orsi's jig him they couldn't go on under Yolanda's early years were dif- usage was approved. NEW SHREWSBURY - Gov her opinion, the show is a "tur programs the governor is propo: woman who died in 1959 will be present conditions. ficult ones. She was bom in , "If you would find out about key." ing?" she asked. honored in a concert Sunday in Zone Board Richard J. Hughes' proposed 5750 Europe. Her parents were im- things before you talk," Mr. Hughes said yesterday the sit- Mrs. Vreeland, a member of million bond issue for highways State Can't Profit New York City. prison,ed in a Nari concentration D'Orsi said to Mrs. Wilson, "you uation has reached crisis pro- the state league's committee on "The governor is fond ol institutions and school construc- camp in World War II. She lived wouldn't be such a trouble- Vacancies portions and something has to be taxes, addressed a general mem- pointing out that businesses bor- Yolanda Benson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Benson of with non-Jewish foster parents In maker." done quickly. He told newsmen tion is another scene in the New bership meeting in the home o, row money. But business borrows Robertsville Rd., was killed In a Poland and later in Italy. he would have an announcement Jersey melodrama entitled "How Mrs. Lloyd Peskoe, 27 Fairfield to make a profit. New Jersey "You are asking about whal bus-truck crash when she was 20 Are Filled Thursday. The only way to over- Dr. cannot make a profit. It is wron After the war, she was reunited security the city has on this prop- to Raise Money Without Really years old. She was a student at with her parents, and the family MONMOUTH BEACH - The come the overcrowding is to Damsels in Distress to pay for state aid on anythin erty. I'll- tell you what security Taxing," Mrs. Milton A. Vree- Trenton State College then. She came to the United States to spend more money, Hughes said. except a pay-as-you-go basis,' they have. If, after tonight, they board of commissioners last The state's schools and institu- was also active in youth work at make a fresh start. Mr. Benson land, Fair Haven, told the Mrs. Vreeland declared. put five ounces on that land I'll night filled the vacancies on the The whole reformatory picture tions are' the damsels in distress, Congregation Agudath" Achim, became a poultry farmer here. sue the city. That's your secur- League of Women Voters, Red and the voters who think "a lit- Zoning Board of Adjustment by s a vicious circle Hughes said: Because the state cannot pro- and in the Teenage Torah Lead Yolanda attended Freehold Re- ity." Bank Region, last night. tle economy" will cure New Jer- Judges don't want to commit vide the matching funds, a great ership Seminars of Yeshlva Uni- gional High School, where she reappointing Domenic Gaetano to sey's financial ills are the vil- boy* s-'"•••- becaus- •e- i"t will do them And she left no doubt that, in deal of available federal funds versity, New York. was a member of the National another term and appointing Ed- lains of the piece, she said. Says Regional is High more harm than good; by the for highway construction, mental Honor Society. Friends formed the Yolanda In College Acceptances win R. Feste to fill the unex- time they are sent to reforma- Mrs. Vreeland declared her re- health and rehabilitation goes un- Benson Honor, Society, and the She was one of eight Trenton RUMSON — College accept pired terril of Raymond M. Tier- tories they are "hardened pros" spect for the governor's "com- claimed here, she said. Woman Hurt mitment to correct the deplorable Yolanda Benson, Memorial Fund State College students killed Oct. ancSs from Rumson-Fair Haven according to officials; and boys A personal income tax gradu- ney. conditions" she said were after her death. 9, 1959, when a chartered bus In Regional High School are "the are released early to make room ated from 1 to 6 per cent with Mr. Tierney resigned from the for new ones. The early releases brought about by the state's "nig- which they were riding was best ever for this time of year," In C^r Crash scalation stopping at an income That fund, in co-operation board last month to become a endanger the community, Hughes ;ardly policy justified by the old rammed by a trailer truck near according to Dr. John F. Kinney, of $9,000 would have provided with the youth bureau of Yeshiva commissioner. said. M1DDLET0WN - Mrs. Mar- cry of 'no new taxes' ." New Brunswick. superintendent, who reported last tha Welsh, 50, of Holland Rd., $182 million in 1961, Mrs. Vree- University's Community Service The group was returning from Mayor Sidney S. Johnson, But, she declared, "he's doing night that 75 students have won "I'm ashamed New Jersey has was reported in good condition land told the group. A 3 pe Division, will present "An After- New York where it had seen the along with. Commissioners Tier- it the wrong — and the most ex- acceptance at 110 schools. not been able to cope with this in Riverview Hospital this morn- cent sales tax would have pro noon of Jewish Music" Sunday play, "J.B." This is a modern ney and Harold Peterson, ratjfied pensive — way." Because the higher ranking problem," Hughes said, adding ing after an accident on Rt. 35 vided $172 million, she said. at 2 p.m. in the High School of version of the Biblical story of the two appointments. "Ivy-League type" colleges do that boys,sent to the reformato- at 6:59 p.m. yesterday. Favor Income Tax Cites Advantages Commerce Auditorium, 155 West Job, which asks why men suffer ries are "sexually abused, beaten The league has endorsed 65th St., Manhattan. not announce admissions until In an effort to keep dogs under Police said her car collided Mrs. Vreeland stated that, un and die in apparently senseless control in the borough, Mayor up and hurt." Reformatory offi- graduated personal income tax. after April 15, Dr. Kinney said, with an auto driven by Harry like a sales tax, a graduated In- The program will feature folk- tragedies. the list represents the result of Johnson announced that Corn- cials told him Sunday they are The bond issue proposed by the Keifer, Kearny, as the Keifer come tax does not press heavily unable to protect the weaker governor would provide $150 mil strong efforts to place average munity Dog Control at a cost of car was making a left turn into on those already oppressed with boys from the stronger ones. lion a year for five years to build Planned for Matawan and below-average students in $25 per month, will pick up un- Mark's Diner. property taxes; doesn't work fine colleges. leashed and unlicensed dogs. highways, institutions, and com- Police said the woman, trans- munity colleges.. Future tolls of hardships on the ill, the unem- Today in ported to the hospital by Fair- the New Jersey Turnpike would ployed, and the aged; is eas; iew First Aid Squad, has a pos- be used to pay off the bonds. to administer; almost impossible New Water Tower to evade, and, when the tax is Washington sible pelvic fracture and possible The $420 million the bond issue MATAWAN - Borough Council has not met with favorable re- Word's Awaited withheld, is easy for the tax- last night authorized its attorney concussion. No summonses were would provide for new construc- action from council's Democratic By The Associated Press ssued pending further investiga- t/ion actually would cost taxpay- payer. to prepare an application for majority. By Planners from Washington President Kennedy greets King ers $1,259 million by the timd it "Acceptance for an Income tax state aproval to exceed the debt Nix Rezonlng Hassan II of Morocco on his ar- was paid for in the year 2004, here is growing," she said. limit for construction of a new Council referred to the Plan- OCEANPORT — The Planning permission for a minor subdivi- rival in Washington; confers -with Mrs. Vreeland said. New Jersey's tax structure, water tower on Middlesex Rd, ning Board a petition, signed by Board, as of last night's meet- sion. TREES J?OR REGIONAL lim. And, she noted, the bond issue suitable for a stable agricultura Although no cost estimate was 31 residents, against reaming Rt. ing, was still anxiously awaiting The subdivision will be ap- Labor Department announces RUMSON—Twenty-seven trees provides no funds after the five- economy but not for a modern given, officials previously have 34 (across from Strathmore) from word from Washington on a fed proved if Mrs. McGregor offers onsumer price index for Feb- have been accepted by the Rum- rear period for the maintenance industrial one, has been aban predicted a tower, needed to serv- residential to commercial use. eral grant pledged to pay for 75 the board evidence that she. had ruary. son-Fair Haven Regional High of the new institutions or for doned by every state except this ice new apartment and residen- Two men were hired as proba- per cent of the cost of a master deeded a 20-foot strip of her SENATE School Board from the Rumson the increased demands which the >ne and Nebraska, Mrs. Vreeland tial projects, might cost from tionary police patrolmen, at sal- plan. property to an adjacent property Shade Tree Commission, which $80,000 to more than $100,000. Not in session. anticipated population increase declared. aries of $4,800. Meanwhile, the board's file of owner, and that she has removed will plant them along Bingham Investigations subcommittee re- will make on them. "A broad base tax is the only A recent proposal by Council- They are: Peter Hallock, 356 items to be held in abeyance un a nonconforoiing building from Ave. and Blackpoint Rd. In ac- man, Edward E. Hyrne, Republi mmes closed hearings on TFX "The normal increase in state answer. I hope you will let your Main St., and Reginald Koval, 10 til the adoption of a master plan the property. cepting the trees, the budget-con- can, that apartment builders be varplane contract award. revenue doesn't provide for the feelings be known to your neigh- Church St. Both men are slated continued to grow. Besides the conveyance of the scious board emphasized that it increase in the normal programs. x>rs—and your legislators," she required to donate $400 per apart- to graduate from the Monmouth HOUSE Two more requests for the va- 20-foot strip, the subdivision pro- was incurring no cost iow will it pay for the increased old league members. ment unit, to pay for the tower County Police Academy Friday. cation of paper streets were vides for the creation of two lots Not an session. Barking Committee holds Council awarded a contract, on added to the list last night. —both larger than minimum. ( low bid, to Dave Gibbs Chevrolet, Borough Appropriation One, however, will contain a ga- :losed session to consider mass ransit subsidy bill. No Additions Main St., for a new police car at Last fall, Borough Council ap- rage which, after the split, will $2,091. propriated its share of the no longer be aji accessory build- Ways and Means Committee Deny Application i master plan cost, $3,125, and de- ing and is below the minimum lears state governors and others For Keyport The governing body denied an cided to hire the consulting firm size building allowed in the zone. m depletion allowances. application by Robert D. Emery, of Candeub, Fleissig and Asso Apartments Rumson, for borough water and elates, Newark, when the federal sewer service for a nursing home government came through with KEYPORT — Applications by Mr. Emery proposes to construct its share. Anniversary Month ;wo apartment developers for on Rt. 34, in Madison Township. Since then, requests for Hie 'ariances were denied last night Council voted to create a new abandonment of paper or unim- by the Zoning Board of Adjust clerical post — assistant to the proved streets have been held For Red Bank's Chief of Police ment. tax collector, treasurer and bor- for the opinion of the planning RED BANK—March is a month On March I, he started his 36th By 3-2 vote, with board mem- ough clerk. It will pay $3,209 consultant. of anniversaries for Police Chief year as a member of the depart- bers Anthony Granata and George :o $3,800. Last night, Roderick Kerr George H. Clayton, who today ob- ment. He has been chie' since Creed dissenting, the board re- Approval was given for the asked the planners if the borough serves his 61st birthday. Jan. 5, 1959, holding an office in jected a request by Csik construction of a police pistol would give up its rights to the which his father, Harry H Brothers, local contractors, to range at the site of the new unused portion of Werah PI. from Clayton, served 28 years until expand an apartment building on sewer plant. No cost estimata Smith St. to Branchport Creek. his death in 1!)38. Rt. 35 at Clark St., from the was made. 3 Residents Appear Chief Clayton has served • in :ode limit of 60 units, to 76. Council again was deluged with Also, three property owners of each rank in the department. He Under the zoning ordinance, complaints about muddy road the Blackberiy Bay area ap- was promoted to sergeant Feb. he number of unils is deter- conditions on streets where sewer peared with a petition signed by 28, 1935; lieutenant, Feb. 16, mined on a property square mains have been installed. their neighbors asking for the 1937; captain of detectives, April footage basis. Most of the complaints camo vacation of Blackberry Bay Ave. 1, 1947, and deputy chief, in By unanimous vote, the board from residents of Cedar St., Oak Two of the three, Harry charge of the detective bureau, urned down the application of St., Union Ave., Fredwood PI., A. Morford and Alvan J. Witek, Oct. 15, 1951. .nthony LaConte, 66 West Middlesex Rd., Matawan Ave.. said they would like to build He was among the first police Front St., to expand from seven Harding Blvd., McArthur Dr. and homes in the area as soon as the officers in this area to be grad- o 10 the number of units Eisenhower Ct. paper thoroughfare is removed uated from the National Police ilanned for an apartment to be Borough Attorney Edward W. from the map—preferably this Academy of the Federal Bureau juilt on West Front St., near the Currie said the contractor, Cruz spring. of Investigation, receiving his di- Sears Roebuck store. Construction Co., Union, is in John DeSieno also appeared. ploma April 20, 1941 Another apartment developer, default of contract in 28 in- The petitioners were told by One of his eight children, A VOTE GETTER — Mrs. Kenneth Mitchell, New Shrewsbury, center, newly elected Scrventi and Daniels, Cranford, stances, according to the bor- Councilman Franklin Ingram, a George H. Clayton, Jr., is a de- president of the League of Women Voters, Red Bank Region, goes over political liter- withdrew application to build ough's sewer engineer, James Boyd, Pennsauken. board member, that the borough tective lieutenant on the focal ature with associates, Mrs. Wan Kamjnow, New Shrewsbury, left, jacondi vice presi- 133 units, rather than the 108 plans to take ile case to Washing- force. >ermitted under the ordinance, He suggested that before the ton to expedite the matter. The chief and his wife, the for- dent, and Mrs. Carl Jensen, Shrewsbury, treasurer. Th»y were elected last night at >endlng possible revision of the borough starts suit against Cruz, McGregor Subdivision mer Florence Sagurton cf a meeting in the home of Mrs. Lloyd Peskoe, New Shrewsbury. Mrs. Mitchell suc- code. This project 'is the company be furnished a list In other business, Mrs. Wal- Shrewsbury, live at 198 River Rd. ceeds Mrs. Joseph Bryan, Oceanport. Named as directors were Mrs. Richard Stone planned for a 6.3-acre tract on of the 28 items (for road repairs) lace McGregor of Horseneck His mother, Mrs. Harry H. Clay- 15 east side of Atlantic St., and given a reasonable time to • Point was. granted conditional Police Chief George H. Clayton ton, lives at 95 East Front St. and Mn. Gordon Litwin, Little. Silver, and Mrs. Reuben Rodriguez, Rumspn. north of Monroe St. complete repair work. l« 16—Wti., Much 27, 1963 RED BANK REGISTER Channel 1 »:« 13—Science Corner—Education U—Parlons Francais H Ouuntl 1 llsJO i TV Key TELEVISION 4-News 4-Price IS Right 5—Bourbon Street BeM 1:01 WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 7-Jane Wyman—Drama j 7-Rebel-We*tern 4-News 2—Calendar—Reasoner . Previews 12: H 13—Sclencelaad—Education j 8—Merrytoon Circus - 7_FUm-Torpedo Boat. (1942) 4—Say When—Art James J-Love Of Life-Serial 11:20 ' 11—News—K. Kennedy Richard Arlen. 90 min. 5—Film—Seven Days to Noon. Tonight's top television shows 4—Your First Impression l}-^5potllght on Art 13-Rujslan For Beginners 9—Almanac Newsreel 7-Susie ••;"'• as previewed and selected by TV 7—Ernie Ford-Variety 11:25 1:05 9—Film—That Certain Woman.' Key's staff of experts who attend 9—Fireside Theater—Dram* 7:10 5-News 2—Film—The County Chairman. See Wed. 2:30 p.m. rehearsals, watch screenings and 11—Merry Mailman 2—Weather 11:30 analyze scripts in New York and 13—Russian for Beginners U—Local News (1935) Will Rogers. 1 hr., 3511—Film—A Scandal in Paris. min. 2—Pete and Gladys—Comedy Hollywood: 12:2S 7:15 (1946) George Sanders. 4—Concentration—H. Downs 4—Headline I—News—H. Reasoner 2—News—W. Cronkite 90 min. 5—Romper Room 9—News and Weather PORTRAIT." Winthrop Rock- 7:25 10:05 7—Yours For A Song 12:31 1:15 efeller is a man of many- and 11—Weather 13—Speaking of Speech 9—Playhouse 30 2—Search For Tomorrow 5-News varied facets, and most of them 7:30 11—Superman •-'Truth Or Consequences 1:25 10:20 seem to make an appearance on 5—Cartoons 2—Portrait—Special 7—News 11:40 this "portrait" tonight. From his 5-Film-Big Town Girl. (1937) 7—Father Knows Best Documentary 10:25 13- -Speaking of Speech Arkansas homestead in a win- 4—Virginian—Western Clair Trevor. 90 min. 9—Memory Lane—Joe Franklin 4-News 11:55 ning interview with Harry Rea- 7—Wagon Train 1:35 11-Rocky And His Friends 13—New York Metropolis 7—Fashion Review soner, he talks about his grind 9—Film—Four Desperate Men. 4—I3th Hour 13-EasTern Wisdom And Modern 10:30 father's favorite phrase, "What Life (1960) Aldo Ray. 2 hrs. 2:03 There's no Trick to Having Ex- about the figures?"; his reputa- 11—Honeymooners—Comedy 4—Scrmonelte 2—1 Love' Lucy—Comedy tra Cash. You Get it Fast When tion as the "Playboy Rockefel- 12:45 2-Guiding Light-Serial 13—Earth And Mankind 2:40 4—Play Your Hunch You Use The Register Classified. ler."; how he happened to come 8:00 2—Film—The Case of the 7—Girl Talk—Virginia Graham —Advertisement. to live and work in Arkansas; 11—Merry Mailman—Children 2—Fighting 186th-Specia! Curious Bride. (1935) Warren what it's like to be a member of a 12:55 LOLA ALBRIGHT transforms herself from a severe, effi- 5—Danger Man—Adventure William. 80 min. minority (millionaire); his role 4-News cient secretary (left) to a glamorous gold-digger (rightl 11—-Bold Jouraey—Travel "• 4:00 in Republican politics in Arkan- 1 13—Heifetz Master Class 2—Film—Earthworn Tractors. WALTER READE en "The Beverly Hillbillies" tonight [9:00-9:30 p.m., EST) sas; and the role his parents 2—Burns and Allen i (1936) Joe E. Brown. 70 min on ths CBS Television Network. played in his and his brothers 4—Afternoon Drama 8:30 development. Interesting. 7:30 5-Cartoons 2—Dobie Gillis—Comedy THURSDAY MORNING, p.m. CBS 7—Answering Service—Panel S—Call Mr. D—Mystery 5:45 OflRLTOll 11—Ramar Of The Jungle ' 7—Going My Way—Drama 2—Previews 13—Fun at One—Children 11—Silents Please V~/ RED BANK BEVERLY HILLBILLIES. The 5:50 Actor Hits a Winner 1:2$ 13—Court Of Reason—Debate 2—Give Us This Day—Religion show belongs to Buddy Bbsen 5-News 9:00 . 5:55 STARTS TODAY — SHOWS at 2-7-? and Lola Albright as Jed Clam- 2-Beverly Hillbillies pett and a sexy secretary, re- 2—News With McHale Series 2—As The World Turns 4—Perry Como 4—Sermonette spectively, and fans should be c jacKtemmoit 5-rFilm—The Gang's All Here. 5—Film—Pride of the Marines. 6:00 amused by them both. After Jed By CHARLES WITBECK people in San Francisco are in a (1?43) Alice Faye. 85 min. (1945) John Garfield. 2 hrs. 2—College Of The Air—Amer- HOLLYWOOD - Joe Flynn, state of ectasy. This is one way to takes a swig of spring tonic, JJL, 9—Star And Story-Drama 25 min. ican Economy Lola soon has him doing the twist known as Captain Wallace Blng- finally get rid of those nuts down 11—Global Zobel II—M Squad—Police 4—Continental Classroom — Award and eyeing the lady with a gone- hamton.on ABC's "McHale's Na- south in dark glasses and san- ft-Spotlight on Art 9:50 Physics Nominations vy," a man who "roars on the gone expression. 9 p.m. CBS dals. The nuts in Los Angeles 1:50 2—Dick Van Dyke—Comedy 6:30 outside while trembling inside," are for it, since most of the 13—Issues and the Challenge ,7—Our Man Higgins 2—Sunrise Semester as one wit put it, opened his PERRY COMO. A singing and Sat. Mariiwe votes and tax money come from 1:55 9—Surfslde $—Mystery 4—Continental Classroom — mouth recently and suggested the dancing show, and even mor Only 2 P.M. this area. 4—News U—Wanted: Dead Or Alive American Gov't. glorious state o( California be di- singing than dancing, with bam Trlpletetn "This is non-partisan, but 1 2:09 13—Art and Artists 7:00 vided in two. music and ballads getting thei Horror-a- have requests from both partjes J—Password—A. Ludden 10:00 2—News and Weather All hell broke loose. Mail poured oars in too. It's a nice, lively Rama to speak before their groups'," 4-Merv Griffin-Variety 2—Armstrong Circle Theatetr 4—Today—Hugh Downs in, business executives formed a hour as Perry gives all his, guest "Th« Bat" said Joe. "It attracts all types. 7—Day In Court—Drama 4—Eleventh Hour 7:05 Committee for the 51st State, —Carol Lawrence, Tex Beneke, "Horn* en The idea was first proposed in 9—Stdry Of Italy 7—Naked City 5—Call To Prayer raised a kitty of $100,000 and Ray Eberle, the Modernaires and Haunted 1926 in the state Senate so it's II—Divorce Court—Drama U-You Asked For It 7:15 Hill" made mild Joe Flynn, the chair- Wynne Miller a chance. Carol's hardly a new idea." I3-World at Thirteen 5—News "Revenge of man. "Hernando's Hideaway" is 2:10 Flynn it realistic about this 16:30 7:30 th. No one knocks the Idea. The highlight: a medley of the 30s 13—Science Corner—Education anoROses' 1 9—Electronics Report—Special venture. He really doesn't expect andibs "with the Glenn Miller 2:25 5—Columbia Lectures Creature" U-Steve Allen California to be split in two, butsound" . Is another; and, a seg- 7-New« 7—Early Bird Cartoons COFFEE 8KKVEt> WITH 13—Jazz Casual he feels the talk and effort will ment at the end to "Something 7:45 OlIK COMl'LJMENTS 11:00 COLOR TV result in much needed re-appor- Old - New - Borrowed - Blue' I^House Party—Art Linkletter 7—King And Odie TV Key 2—News—D. Edwards tionment for southern California. from Como-Beneke-Eberle-Mod 7—Seven Keys 8:00 4-News-J. K. M. McCaffery 'It's like a raise," Joe adds. ernaires et al, is a charmer. 9—Film—That Certain Woman. 2—Captain Kangaroo 7—Local News "You ask for $25 and settle for (Color) 9 p.m. NBC (1937) Bette Davis. 90 min. 5—Sandy Becker—Children Mailbag 13—Where Doej It Come Krom? 9—Film—See 7:30 p.m. 7—Tommy Seven—Cartoons EATONTOWN 11—News Just why Joe Flynn became in- DICK VAN DYKE. The high 2:50 8:30 By STEVEN H. SCHEUER 13—Professionally Speaking DRIVE-IN THEATRE volved may puzzle fans. Joe toned literary world takes a lam-13—Music Interlude 7-Q. T. Hush likes politics. In 1950, during 11:10 • STARTS FRIDAY Question — What is the differ- pooning as the Petries mix with 2:55 8:55 lull in his acting career, Flynn 4—Weather—Tex Antoine ence between the TV Guide pets and writers, avant garde. 4-News 13-Dateline N. J. ran for legislature in his native 7—News jacKiemmon _ALS0_ Awards and the Emmy Awards? This theme is usually done so S-^-News ' 9:00 Ohio. He lost out by a few votes, 11—Steve Allen—Variety Why are there so many awards broadly it isn't funny, but enough 3:09 2—Life of Riley—Comedy M "Playgirls and says he was saved by the 11: IS In the TV industry and only the verbal shafts get through in the 2-^To Tell The Truth 4-TroubIe With Father bell. script this time. Producer Carl 2—Weather 7—Funny Manns Oscar for the film industry?— 4—Loretta Young—Drama 4—News Mrs. W. P., Fort Wayne, Ind. "I alwayj wanted to be an ac- Reiner plays a talking intellectu- 5—Doorway to Destiny 11—Operation Alphabet tor," says Joe. "Of course our 7—Film—The First Texan. (1956) 13—Profile: New Jersey Answer — The Oscar is the al, and he really jabbers on. 9:307-Queerj For A Day ami noses" cycles are different. In the leg Joel McCrea'i1- bjii'yiSmin. most publicized award connected p,m. CBS Il-How To Marry A Millionaire 9:10 islature your, cycle runs two 11:20 ' with the movies, but there are 3:25 9—Farm News years, and out here in television CIRCLE THEATRE. "The 2—Film—Candlelight in Algeria. at least a dozen or so other du- 2—News (1944) James Matibn. i Ihr., 9:15 land an actor's cycle is 13 Health Fraud." Everyone's heard bious honors bestowed upon the 3:30 45 min. 9—News and Weather weeks." of the quacks and the frauds, motion picture industry's annual 2—Millionaire—Drama 11:25 9:25 For once Flynn doesn't have to the diets and the pills, that prom- cinematic efforts ... TV is fast 4—Young Dr. Malone—Serial 5—News 5—News—Sandy Becker worry about striking out with Mc- ise a cure for all your ills. But Gregory Peck Rock Hudson-Hi Taylor following this trend. The Emmy 5—Texan 11:30 9—Almanac Newsreel Hale after helping George Gobel ever since the medicine man held •To Kill A Mockingbird" 'Giant" also "Showdown' Is the first cousin (so to speak) T-Who Do You Trust? 4—Johnny Carson 9:30 and Bob Newhart go down the up his first bottle of colored wa- to the Oscar and Is awarded for II—Best Of Grouchc—Quiz 13—Reflections drain on their respective series. ter, people have been known to 2—Our Miss Brooks—Comedy achievement in TV by the mem- 13—Television for Teachen 11:35, "McHale's NaVy" will be one ofbuy. Tune in here for an un- 4—Dr. Joyce Brothers bers of the TV Academy of Arts 4:00 5~Film-Slave Ship. (1937) Wal- DIAMOND HEAD" and the few ABC shows to be renewed usually deft dramatization of a 5—Topper—Comedy Shelley. Win ters-Perer Folk and Sciences. The TV Guide 2—Secret Storm—Serial lace Beery, Mickey Rooney. THE BALCONY" "GOLDEN ILADES" next season. tireless writer of science fiction 7—Gale Storm—Comedy Award Is really a popularity poll 4—Match Game 1 hr., 40 min. 9—Jack LaLanne—Exercise and his infinite schemes to make 5-Felix and the Wizard chosen by the public. But acting comes first In Joe's 12:10 11—Ed Allen—Exercise ife and politics second or third. e buck at the expense of an end-7—American Bandstand lessly gullible public. Tune in and H-News 13—Parlons Francais II Question — I watch "Stoney Joe has the firm belief an actor 9—Buccaneers take heed. 10 p.m. CBS Burke" each week primarily for shouldn't get into the political 11—Bozo The Clown Jack Lord, who is my idea of ring. "The thing I like about the 13—Television for Teachers what a TV hero should look and Committee for the 51st State is THE ELEVENTH HOUR. "Hang 4:25 sound like. My husband gets the that it's non-partisan. It also by One Hand." James Francis- 4-News biggest kick out of the guy whokeeps my name in the paper." cus, who's set to star as a teach- 4:30 er on » new series next season, plays "Ves" on the show. Please Joe thinks actors' careers can 2-Edge Of Night-Serial give us one of your biographical is this week's neurotic. Jim plays 4—Make Room For Daddy be hurt by stating their party an architect on the verge of a summaries about his career.— affiliations and stumping for 7—Discovery '63—Children breakdown, but psychologist Jack 9—Chubby Jackson—Cartoons VICTORY Mrs. S. C, Indian Springs, Nev. them. "The vote is almost fifty- Ging proves that his recurring Answer — Warren Oates ("Ves 13—American Economy fifty, so why alienate 50 per nightmare indicates his awarness Painter") was born in Depoy, 4:55 MARKET RED BANK cent of the population." that his wife wants to destroy Kentucky and had no acting as 7—American Newsstand Capt. Binghamton has another him. By the finale, we all know pirations until he was serving in &-News OPEN FRIDAY TILL 9 P. M. DELIVERY title in addition to being Chair- that wife Anne Francis is the one the Marines. It was during his 5:00 man of the Committee for the who needs help. Not recommend- hitch in the Marine Corps that 2—Love That Bob—Comedy 51st State; he's a member of the ed for young marrieds who are 31 W. FRONT ST.. RED BANK • TEL SH 7-0508 SH 7-1339 he was introduced to Eugene 4—Film—To Be Announced Los Angeles Mayor's Advisory having trouble adjusting to mari- O'Neill's works and became in- 7—1 Married Joan Committee. It seems Joe went to tal bliss. 19 p.m. NBC terested in the theatre. Uoon his 9—Zoorama the University of Southern Cali- II—Dick Tracy discharge, Warren enrolled in fornia with Mayor Yorty's pres-' University of Louisiana and be- STEVE ALLEN. Mel Torme ,3—Once Upon A Day—Children ARM ent executive assistant and and Jennie Smith give Steve a 5:05 came active in their little theatre worked on his behalf during the proup. This led to his first pro- lift as he sets about the task of 7—1 Married Joan—Comedy RESH campaign. Some time after the saluting the talents of songwriter 5:25 Ib fessional affiliation with the Lou-election Flynn received a letter isville Amphitheatre. A fellow ac- Sammy Fain, when the latter 11-Rocky And His Friends asking him to serve on the coun- plays a call. 10:30 p.m. WPIX. 5:30 RYING tor encouraged Oates to try his cil. luck in New York and so he did. 2-Film—Idiot's Delight. (1939) Joe accepted and heard noth- Norma Shearer, Clark Gable. CHICKENS 25 After some TV experience, Oates ing further until he met the May- headed for California and steady 75 min. or at a Toys for Tots program. MOVIE TIMETABLE embloyment in the many western 5—Sandy's Hour—Children Choice Seasoned, All Cuts, One Price - 7 in. Cut Joe got his nerve up and told series. Producer Leslie Stevens RED BANK 7-Highway Patrol—Police the Mayor he was happy to be ("Stoney Burke" producer) gave CARLTON- 9—Film—Mam'zelle Pigalle. on the committee. Mayor Yorty D»y> O! Wine * KOJCI 2:00; 7:00: O»tes one of the leads in his film, 8:20. (1957) Brigitte Bardot. 90 min. blinked and suggested a meeting "Private Property" and his cur- U—Popeye—Cartoon* Ib be held some time. Joe replied LONG BRANCH rent assignment as "Ves" in the BARONET- WEDNESDAY EVENINO that it wasn't necessary, the item TV rodeo series. Dlamond Head 3:20: 7:00; 10:10; Ths 1:00 had been printed in Variety and Golden Blade 2:O0: 8:50. RIBS of BEEF 7—News that was all he was interested in. ASBURY PARK I3-What'j New-Chlldrea Question — I recently saw a Mayor Yorty smiled and said, LYRIC- 6:15 movie on TV called "It's A Big "Oh, good, let's forget it." The Balcony 7:30; »:«. Country." In the story which MAYFAIR- 4—Local News Choice Cornfed - Fresh Rib End j^k f starred Gene Kelly as a Greek Flynn hasn't been to the un- Tu Kill A Mocklni Blid J:M; 1:15;7-Weather candy store owner, who played employment office in three years, 9:50. 6:20 ST. JAMES- the 'Dart of the excitable father which is a very good track rec- 7—Sports—Howard Cosell ord for, an actor in Hollywood Glant 2:05; 8:35; Showdown 7:09. of the six girls?—M. M. Whit- NEPTUNE CITY 6:25 Ib !nir. Ind. these days, but he really needed 7—Capsule Comment Answer — The excitable man a winner this season after going NEPTUNE CITY- 6:30 Flvl Mllel To Midnight 7:25: 1:39. w«s clayed by the late S. Z. down to defeat with Gobel, New- 5—Mickey Mouse Club LOIN of PORK 35 "Cuddles" Sakall. The Hungarian hart, and Joey Bishop. He be- North of Red Bank 7-New« gan to think he was a jinx. The il—Brave Stallion—Adventure actor appeared in scores of films ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS before his death. Most of them success of McHale is probably J—Profile: New Jersey Maplecrest - Govt. Grade A Choice Young 10-14 Ib. M #^ the best thing to happen to him.ATLANTIC- 6:40 can be seen on TV. Walt Dliney'a Bon 01 Flubber 7:0O; "There's no way to telling be- 0:00. 4-Weather (For an answer to your ques- forehand whether a show will be HAZLET 6:45 2—News—R. Trout tion about any TV program or a hit," he says. "I've lied to my-LOEWS DRIVE-1N- ib actor, write to Steven H. Scheuer. self so many times I don't trust C«rloon 7:00; The Lion 7:07; 10-.15; 4—News—Huntley, Brinkley TV Key Mailbag, c/o this paper.) myself any more." Loves Of Satammbo S:O0. 7—Focus On The News PERTH AMBOY 7:00 Hen TURKEYS 4iJ MAJESTIC— 4-Death Valley Days To Kill A Uocklnn Bird 2:19; 6:00; GENUINE 1 F/» SAVARIN AMERICAN EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS 9:10; Showdown 4:30: 8:13. EDISON SPRING fcEw LAMB 69;f All Grind. COFFEE 59;, UNEMPLOYMENT—WELFARE—PAYROLL MENLO PARK CINEMA- To Kill a Mocklnl Bird 3:00; 4:45; lbs. $1 LEAN $ 7:18; 9:25. CLAIRIDGE— IHL II. HWNM Oi SMrr>H Com ^ X PORK CHOPS 3for • FRESH CHOP BEEF 3£ 1 Wonderful World Or Tli» BroUmu PREMIERE CHECKS CASHED Grimm 2:00; 8:00. OSHOWCASE FRESH INDIAN RIVER ALL GREEN INDIAN RIVER PASCAL IMMEDIATELY SOfrMJUffflW Nominal Fees mm PERKINS SPINACH ORANGES ASPARAGUS Grapefruit CELERY GATIS OMN 61JO-MDVIIS AT 7iOO MONMOUTH SM, t* WR-MSI wo* i v r s i o IN o f will participate are: f^ M MACY A co., \NC:. Linda Mulford, Christine Petti- grew, Martha Robinson, Sandy Robinson, Dzjntra Lemanis, Car- ol Glaser, Patty^ Crosier and Ma- ria Gardella. Marks 40 Years With Company -J BRAKES RELINED ON ALL 4 WHEELS Save now, drive with peace WITH 15,000-MILE GUARANTEE* of mind on these rugged 12.95 Installed For most American cars

* Only new, bonded brake linings are used 100% nylon tires * We bleed and adjust for fall contact * Check lines and master cylinders SALI-VANDERB.LT SALI-VANDE8MLT Ned H. Allen for leaks SAFETY-NYLON TIKIS MAJOR 110 NYLONS •Pro rellnini If Inkn fail within U.000 mflM NEW SHREWSBURY - Ned H. of Job. Allen of Hance Ave. was honored 24-MONTH OUARANTtr 18-MONTH OUARANra* recently by the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company of New- ark at a luncheon celebrating his 40th anniversary with the com- pany. 2 for 14; 2 for 16K Mr. Allen is manager of Mu- tual Benefit's largest department, the renewal department, and is assistant company secretary. He is an associate of the Life Office Management Institute, a 4 for 27J 4 for 3L member of the Pelican Club, a 640x15 tubt-typa blackwall, plus tax company employee organization, 640*15 tube-type bloekwoll, plus tax and of the Veterans Club, an as- and any Hret in trade and any tires In trade Tubt-typa blackball sociation of employees with more COMPLETE WHEEL Sin SlM Tubt-typt blockwoll than 20 years' service with Mu- 670x15 . for I7.8B_ . 4 for 33.18 670x15 2 for 21.88 4 for 41.(8 tual Benefit. ALIGNMENT AND 710x15 for 21.88- _4 for 41.88 71OxlS 2 for 25.88 4 for 4».B8 760x15 for 25.88- -4 for 49,88 76OilS 2 for 29.88 4 for 57.18 BRAKE ADJUSTMENT Six. Tubiku bleckwall Sin Tahlou blackwall 670x15 . for 20.88- -4 for 39.88 670x15 1 for 24.88 4 for 47.88 Fined $205 710x15 for 24.88- _4 for 47.8B -2 for 28.88 _4 for 55.88 hr 28.88- noxis SHREWSBURY -Samuel Yorg 760x15 -4 for SS.88 760x15 _2 for 32.88 _4 for 63.88 750x14 for 20.88- -4 for 39.88 750x14 _ -3 for 24.88 _4 for 47.88 of 58 White St. .was sentenced 800x14 -2 for : for 47.88 _3 for 28.88 _4 for 55.88 yesterday to a $205 fine and a 80OxM 850x14 . -2 for 28.88- -4 for S5.88 850x14 JX for 32.88 _4 for 63.88 ^o-year license revocation — the 6.95 600il3 .2 for 20.B8- -4 for 39.88 60Ox» -2 for 24.88. _4 for 47.88 minimum penalty for driving 650x13 _2 for 24.88- for 47.88 650x11 -2 far 28.B8 for 55.88 while under the influence of alco- • Correct camber and caster All prices plot lax and • like number of old tini s in All price* plot Ux andi like nnrober of old tint in hol. trade. Whitewalls (lightly higher. trade. WhllewiIIi •UrhtlT higher. • Inspect toe-in and toe-out Magistrate Whitney Crowell *Guoranr*>d far lima ip«ciH«d againit all haiardi IUCK ai curb bruit*!, (Itn curt. Impact br**ki, «n»ynl*Mct und«r nomol driving imposed the penalty after having condition! and trovdlnj an oyirej* of 1,000 mil** a month. Tim will b* Mplaced or npairtd at Ih* discnrleti of Samkarftr's. R«- • Inspect and adjust steering placcminti pro-rated en th*M felling prien far amount of firm v**d. reserved bis decision at an earlier hearing pending the fil- • Adjust brakes NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR THESE BAMBERGER EXTRAS: ing of a brief by Mr. Yorg's * Flat repair * Tin mounting • Tire rotation attorney, Charles Frankel of As- • Inspect hydraulic lines bury•• Park. • Inspect wheel cylinders Paul Williams of Willow St. Red. Bank, was fined $35 (or This service available from speeding. He was charged with 10 A.M. to 5:45 P.M. only driving 55 miles per hotir in a 25 zone on Sycamore Ave. Donald P. Cassidy of Park View Ter., Lincroft, charged With driving against the flow of traf- fic on Shrewsbury Ave., re- ALL THISE ACCESSORIES-AND MORE-ON SALE TOMORROW ceived a $10 fine, while Charles Norton, Jr., 65 Rumson PI. Little Silver, was fined $15 for careless driving. Richard Coope.- of Uion, N.Y. 16 years old, paid a $15 fine UPPSS YOUR CHOICE for driving without a license valid in this state. RUST-RESISTANT Ruth Nash of John St., West Keansburg, was fined $15 for MUFFLERS speeding, and Dorothy Schreiner c of Colonla was penalized the Fully guaranteed for the life Wolf's Head Automatic Sealed beam same amount for changing lanes Spring type head lamps without caution. of your cart motor oil transmission fluid replacement 3 quarts 88C 3 quarts 88C EACH 88c antenna Car Year Model Sole lOw, 20w, 30w 6 or 12 volts 88« Lenape Club nimrrokl 'SD.'S.I A 4 09 rimvrniiH '.«.'«« «and B H19 In Federation Pnnlini. 'SO-'M A «0O MIDDLETOWN — The recent- Old« "57-'6O 8 8.99 ly - formed Lenape Business and Caddy (front) _'57-'6O 8 8.99 Professional Women's Club was Caddy (rear) _'52-'55 6 7.99 RI3LOHE accepted into the New Jersey Ford '54-'6O 8 7.99 Federation of Women's Clubs, Ford *49-'S3 6 and 8 4.99

Inc., at a state board meeting IW1E« '5(i.'5Q S,nJI ft OO Saturday in the Elizabeth-Carter ' Plymouth "iO.'SO « .nJ 1 * OO et Hotel, Elizabeth. rhrv.lfr 'SJ.'SQ t. .nj II 9 99 Heavy-duty car The state federation is com- Ray-O-Vac D cell Polishing cloth, Siiiioniz chrome Vista 1-step Shaler Rislone Extension car prised of 56 clubs throughout the tFullr guaranteed maliut manufacturer'! defect! batteries 10 >q. yds. cleaner, chamois mat—colors cleaner wax oil alloy wash brush tor the liletlme of your car—free replacement. state. Duali and eonyertlolei sllitlitljr higher. Tall pipe Both for for rrtoat otri also available at low Drfcei. 5 for 88c 88c 88c 88c Quart 88C 88c Officers of the local chapter Initillatlon available at nominal charie. ' 88c include Mrs. Geraldine Y. Rose, president, Highvlew Cir., here; Miss Helen K. Browne, vice pres- ident, Ocean Ave., Sea Bright; Call KEIIogg 1-2400, OSborne 1-2500 or write on tires. Free delivery within our delivery area. (Except C.O.D.'s, add 50c). Bamberger's Drive-in Auto Center (Dept. 141,144), Mrs. Ann Washco, correspond- Adjacent to Bamberger's at the Eatonlown Traffic Circle, Monmouih. And at Paramus, Menlo Park, Newark, Plalnfleld and Route 22 In Springfield. ing secretary, Carrie Dr., Haz- Bamberger's Drive-In Auto Centers at Monmouth, Paramus, Menlo Park, Newark, Plalnfleld open at 8:30 A. M.; Springfield open at 10 A. M. let; Mrs. Etta Lockhart, record- ing secretary, Garfield Ave., Bel- Buy With No Down Payment, Take Up To 18 Months To Pay With A Bamberger Homemaker's Credit Account ford, anil Mrs. Ave Marie Poth, treasurer, East Rd,, here. Bamberger's Monmouih open Monday through Friday till 9:30 P.M., Saturday till 6 . • • ./////i/i/i,

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PEACHES JANE PARKER A&P's Famous "Super-Right" Quality FREESTONE HOT CROSS «&P Grade A Meed or Halves 2=55 BUNS 39C DELIVERED FRESH DAILY ALL THROUGH LENT! PORK KHNS JELL-0 Danish Ring l 49e - 7-RIB LOIN GELATIN DESSERT Pumpernickel END PIECE END PIECE All Flavors 4 s 37' (Slloid 29o Ik.) Ib. (tlleti Me II.) Frozen Food Buys! 25 35: RIB HALF-Full Cut LOIN HALF-MI Cut MeilliM—Finlfy Size Strawberry Preserves .65° C No Chop* Removed lb. No Chops Removed e Tree Tavern Pizza 55 37S 47J Del Monte Peas *Jh 3«c.M55 C Potato Morsels AIP^, 2 i 47«c "Super-Right" Qiality JLA Del Monte Corn 22 3 49 Chopped Collard Greens ££* 3 'p°£ W LOIN PORK CHOPS Thick or Tila || XIb. l c M e Tomato Juice —2 ^43 Macaroni & Cheese Casserole Bran^M'!id ! 3S C Roman Manicotti L.n).nw CutRiteWaxedPaper2 49 H f d s ANY SIZE PACKAGE Red L Shrimp Dinner » - -« GROUND BEEF Pore Beef—Freshly Ground 39: Pineapple t! Howard Johnson Fried Clams c Nabisco c 10 01. ROCK CORNISH HENS X 45 SMOKED PORK BUTTS 59,Ib. Oreo Cookies Sandwich Cremes Haddock Dinner * 2 pV,«. 89' 4 IOOL Bonalau Lady Joan IOoi. fiQo Breaded Fish Portions * plgt. Top Round Steak 89 J Top Sirloin Roast 89 Ib. Sunshine Cookies Auorrmenr —Dairy Confer Values J — Es>> C Luncheon Meat D.r,i»nR0,.ia.mp cm * Flank Steaks Sr Soup Beef . 47 Bon«l«» Mild M«l-0-Bi«—Paitenrlud Prawn • Armour's Corned Beef Hash can ' D PSH M*(tium Sh« AO Green Pact lib. ^ Fancy Scallops " 69' Fancy Shrimp 'Ib. Flelschmann't Margarine Unsaltad pig. Sliced American Cheese 49 J llb.J Maxwell House Coffee *•*<•* tin Cream Cheese T*£S 2 X 21° X27« MSH VEAL SALE! e b 2 b Cottage Cheese "s£S ;: p25° J ;45« Sanka Instant Coffee rv,c^,. .;-1,29 Selected Milk-Fed Veal Pure Egg Noodles ;£29« Muenster Cheese Fine for Roasting Switzerland Swiss Slices IEG »r RUMP Gontadina l5 M c ( 2 12 27° i 23" Frigo Mozzarella »x37 Boneless Spaghetti Sauce SHOULDER ROAST 69lb. and Ir57« ill* Borden's Fresh Milk Rod Salmon Bonalm . COe RIB VEAL CHOPS 79f STEWING VEAl Ib. Norway Sardines tint "• We carry a wide selection of foods for iooi.jgc c Bachman's Extra Thin Pretzels be> Passover Holidays. Here are lust a few! VEAL CUBED STEAKS 95 BREAST OF VEAL 29f Q.T. Instant Frosting %*£ 2 61? 37° MflfTAfi Round or Square '^oz-AlC 0 ^590 C Cocoa Marsh a.,**^. 1J;35 Goodman's Matzo Meal ^;43 A&P's Garden Fresh Fruits and Vegetables! 4 ».«. 390 q Marcal Toilet Tissue Planter's Peanut Oil :r79° JAVA Pure Vtgetabla ' "*' 9QC 10c off label CQ( Goff Cat Food choPP.dM i*., % w «• 29c "•*" Shortening can ** 3 Ib. can '"* SWEET CORN — • 4-29 s d 7 4 mm ni Cr itj| b 6 3 Little Kittens 'T;.:; 2 'i°; 19° 2 e ;; 29° Kosher Salt ' » tl (23 Laddie Boy Dog Food ^d«./ %'^450 Diamond Brand Walnuts <°M '!49° Tender - Large Stalk* L ASPARAGUS — A&Fs*^ Coffees I— Sunsweet Dried Prunes <->- L« 37° Mild and Mallow Eight O'Clock 31b. bag 1.59 Rokeach Borscht Young, Tender Red Circle Rich and Full-Bodied BROCCOLI 3 Eb. bag 1,71 Gefilte Fish Indian River Vigorous and Winey c d SnowWhil. 49c Bokar Coffee Seedleii—Medium Size 3 Ib.bag 1.77 Vita x; Herring w jar " Grapefruit Mushrooms 8o, J Regularly 1,00—7'/] 01. Bottl* Cream Cheese Kraft'i Paiteuriitd ;3 C RdRpt c Philadelphia Tomatoes 2 ThiiWaat Pascal Celery nb. HALO SHAMPOO Vita Horseradish R«<"WM,. Goldsn, Swaet Carrots cilloi New Green Cabbage

Spray 14 01. t My-T-Fine Reynold's Wrap lato CUantr can ' Comet Cleanser Wyler's Flakes Tide Ivory Snow Joy Aluminum Foil Spray O,59B 4 With Chlorinol ONION PARSLEY For th» family wash and dishes Puddings - Starch 'C ; Liquid Detergent Ragulac H«aw Duty Glis For th» family wash and diihai i Ib. s>/, 01. «48 18" width M | l Bathroom % oi. fAc 12 fluid 01.«» I pt. 6 fluid M I2"widlh44o a A can ** J5 ft. roll** Claanar can pig. M pkg. •* pl«tlc •* oiplarficOi THE GREAT ATtANTIC ft PACIFIC TEA COMPANY, INC. Blue Ribbon Price! effective through Scottissue Scotkins Sat., Mar. 30th in Super Facial Tissues Whita or Colored Luncheon Napkini Markets and Self-Servica IOOOih»t «Q0 Whita or• CColored A pkgi. u per {yjorkets boiei 4Cfl 4 roll* 2 ply f BO stores only. 2 oMOO *> AMERICA'S DEPENDABLE FOOD MERCHANT SINCE 1859 All Tobacco Products, Fresh Milk and Alcoholic Beverages exempt from Plaid Stamp offer. UTO Within Yow Income RED BANK REGISTER Wed., March 27, 1963—19 Bridge Column DAILY CROSSWORD AOBO33 23. Un- murr tuvnuia AND LO*N AS- When you're playing ordinary Managing Money is BigHurdleI. To detect: Tower" opened N OF BAST PATBBSON, THE HANDS colloq. site flower - Corporation of the state ol robber bridge the "right" play West dealer 8. Clever 3. Spoken 21 Ob- New Jersey, Plaintiff »a: CARL HEN. sometimes loses when the By MARY FEELEY extravagant oook); clothing, J30; your combined salaries ought to HT IAW8ON, et M tt al. Defendants North-South vulnerable stratagem 4. Captures atacle By virtu* of a writ of execution in "wrong" play would have worked. household operating costs, $20; serve as starter. But you'll find tile above stated action to me dl< NORTH Consultant in Money Management 0. Man's name 6. Appetizers 25. Cun-., reeled. I •hill expose for sale at pub- In the annual Intercollegiate A K 10 3 One of the most valuable wed- car, $20; insurance, $10 (no life yourselves making changes. For 11. Pine Tree 6. Sources of slug lic vendue. at the 'Court House In Bridge Championships the correct V 8 3 2 the Borougii of Freehold, County of ding presents a young couple can insurance); medical costs, $15; Instance, your husband should atate greaay 27. Huge O 8 7 5 4 2 12. Honshu Btalns ca- Mosxnoutfc, New Jemy, on Monday play always works. give each other is a promise to recreation, $25; transportation, certainly carry life insurance. the lit day of April, 1993, at 2 o'clock, • A3 city: Jap. 7. One pacity P. M. Prevailing; Time. If you were playing this hand $48; savings, $100. Your car operating allowance WEST EAST manage money as well as spend IS. Not Ignited 8. Favorite for ALL that tract or parcel or land, in a normal bridge game you seems low — but perhaps the lltuate, lying and being In the Town- • 975 A 2- it. From, the bride, it's better than The balance of $70 takes care 14. Wanner animals eating: 10 7 4 transportation costs you estimate ship of Raritan, ID tta« County of Mon- might try the diamond finesse ous 35.Flouiiahed K 8 76 «> J 10 9 42 protection and security. And If cellaneous. 11. Lounging shown on map entitled: "Revised Map be the wrong play, but it just onto that $100 savings, as you •ably high. slipper 28. Per- 38. Volcanic of Lots 37 to 48. Showinwing Easements, SOUTH any of those things have ever But the real problem lies in purchase necessities for your 17. Water god: turbed rack Gun Fernando Park" Karlta--n• Town- - might happen to work. 4AQIS64 blighted romance, I have yet to how we can manage if I'm not 18. Woods- fhlp, Monmouth Counountyt , New Jersey, In this case, the diamond fi- Pass 4 sis days—asking for advice in set any help you can give us. bound to be tight squeeze on $368 restrictions and easements of record. Declarer should win the first All Pass 29. Equalled, as 1 4 V S ' 7 • If any. ting up a sound spending plan N. S., Dolton, IU. a month. Your husband's week- Being commonly known and desig- trick with the ace of hearts and Opening lead — opponent's 4 nated u No. 38 Craig Street, Karl- A young husband of "six months ly bonuses may well have to be score » IS n tan Township, Mew Jersey. should draw one round of trumps Dear N. S.: once remarked, "I knew about used for necessities, as you make The approximate amount of the Judg- with the ace to make sure that That budget you've set up on . 30. Indefinite YA ment to be satisfied i by said sale Is the big expenses, but I didn' the adjustment from a monthly article a the sum of JH.COO.OO together with the the trumps are not all in one thus setting up dummy's last dia- Costa of this sale. know there were so many little income of $648 to $368, Here's 31. Arid ^A hand. When both defenders fol- mond. A Dated February 14. 1983 ones!" It's those little ones that Hilton Park Man how it might work: 32. Furnished 14- J08KPH A. SHAFTO. Sheriff. low suit to the first trump, South This line of play works if the Samuel Sleber, Atty, rock the boat unless they, too, with ^/A should lead out the ace of dia- six missing diamonds break 3-3 Rent, $100; food, $82; clothing, ^ —weapons 17 March 6, 13, 20, 27 H6.92 are planned for. monds and then the queen of dia or 4-2. The odds are 5 to I in Pleads Guilty $30; household operating costs, 35.Icid ^A% VA^A 11-423 38. Tapestry It 19 10 21 n a a*- » ' SHERIFF'S SALE monds. favor of such a break, but the Two Incomes lo One $20; savings, including life insur- FREEHOLD-Allen M. Buck, for wall % SVFEBI0B COURT OF NEW JERSEY Sets Up Suit odds are only even on the dia- Often a young couple starting ance, $20; personal allowance, in- LAW DIVISION 51, First Ave., Hilton Park, Mid- 42. Swift 1b n MONMOUTH COUNTY The idea is to set up one of mond finesse. If you try the dia- cluding transportation, $40; med- Docket No. L m«l-60 43. Become % dummy's diamonds as the tenth mond finesse first, the opponents ical costs, $15; car operation 10 II CHARLE8 WBISSMAN, Plaintiff vs: soaking 39 can knock out dummy's ace of costs, including insurance, $25. % FRANK J. ROB3 and JOAN P. ROSS, trick. The defenders can take two duct. wet Defendants hearts and the king of diamonds, clubs to prevent you from bring- income will go by the board when The balance of $36 would be al- 44. Efta: dial. 31 33 3+ By virtus ot a. writ ot execution In Buck had been indicted for in- the above stated action to me di- but then South goes through with ing in a good diamond. they start a family. This advance located towards recreation, 45. Sing, as a % '^AfA ^A % rected, I shall expose for sale at pub- decent exposure in Highlands last JS J7 31 4» 41 his plan. DAILY QUESTION planning makes sense. Here, for church, gifts, books and miscel- Swiss lic vendue, at the Court House in June 29. Monmouth County Judge the Borough of Freehold, County o( Declarer gets to dummy three Partner opens with one heart, example, is a letter from a bride- laneous items. moun- v Monmouth, New Jersey, on Monday Elvin R. Simmill permitted him tatneer 4a 43 the 8th day of Asm, 1963, at ' times—with the ace of clubs, the and the next player passes. You to-be who wants to go into mar- o'clock, P, M. Prevailing Time. to plead to the lesser offense and You sound like a smart person 43. Cautious ten of spades, and finally with hold: Spades—9 7 5, Hearts—Q riage equipped with spending •4 49 All Uie defendant!' right, title and iet Friday tor sentencing. He had who will take full advantage of 47. Sound, as interest. If any. In and to ton follow- the king ol spades. He uses two 10 7 4. Diamonds—K 10. Clubs— plans both for their combined in bells ing: been scheduled for trial on the the income from two salaries, of these entries to ruff diamonds, K 8 7 6. What do you say? comes and his income alone: DOWN- 4b 47 AH that tract or parcel of land and indictment yesterday. knowing the challenge awaiting premises, hereinafter particularly de- Answer: Bid two hearts. You Dear Miss Feeley: LA store Y/< , scribed, situate, lying and being In you on a single income. However, the Township ot Raritan, In the Coun- -LEGAL N0T|CE have maximum value for this I am planning to be married Edward W. Wise, Jr., Red by the time you need Budget ty of IdonmouUi, and State of New raise, and you'will gladly accept in a few months and we are Bank, represented Buck and As- Jersey, and designated'as Lot 128 in Number two your husband's in- company after 31 years, and Wil- Block G, as shown and laid down on t-m any invitation to game if your trying to work put a budget. If sistant Prosecutor John W. Apple- SHERIFF'S SALE come may have increased just Two JCP&L liam Cavanaugh, Sr., of Pulaskl map entitled: "Map of Section Two, partner can make another move. I return to work when we get gate appeared for the state. Garden Parkway Homes, Inc., Raxl- SUPERIOR COURT OP NEW JEBSKV enough to make the going easier. Ave., Sayreviile, after 32 years. tan Towmhlp, Honmouth County, New CHAMCKRY DIVISION For Sheinwold's 36-page book- married, our take home pay Jersey. Scale 1" = 60', December 15 MONMOUTH COUNTY Richard Winslow, 24, Red Bank, If not, you may have to decide Workers Retire 1954.'"" tiled In the Monmouth County Docket No. F l!03-e! let, "A Pocket Guide to Bridge," would be $648 a month, plus some one of four young men involved Mr. Drake is general foreman UNDERWOOD MORTGAGE between lower rent—not so easy Clerk's Office August U, IMS In Case TITLE CO. corporation of New send 50c to Bridge Book, Red weekly bonuses he receives. And an attempted armed robbery ASBURY PARK - The Jersey of the JCP&L transportation de- 42-21. Jersey, Pleintltt vs: MERCER PARK to find—or giving up the car. Being also known and designated as OF MIDDLETOWN, INC. et sis, De-Bank Register, Box 3318, Grand we figured out how. much we of the C. and S. Grocery, Asbury Central Power and Light Com- partment at Allenhurst. He joined 21 Sycamore Drive, Rarltan Township fendants Central Sta., New York 17, N. Y. thought it would cost us to live Park, Jan. 11, pleaded guilty to the utility in 1932 as a garage (Hazlet), New Jersey. By virtue of a writ of execution In iany has announced the retire- The approximate amount of the Judg> the above suted action to me direct- each month, at the minimum— robbery. He will be sentenced (For a boudget suggestion leaf- mechanic. ment to be satisfied by said sale Is ed, I shall expose for sale at public $528 a month. Do you think it ment of two 30-year men. the sum of J200.00 togehler with the vendue. at the Court House In the Friday. He was represented by let, write Mary Feeley in care Mr, Cavanaugh is construction costs of this sale. Borough of Freehold, County of Mon- Awarded $1,442 will work? Francis J. Lawley, Middietown of this paper, sending stamped, Edwin C. Drake of 19 Fourth Dated November I, 11)62 mouth, New Jersey on Monday Uia and maintenance foreman at the JO8EPH A. SHAFTO, Sheriff. 15th day of April, 1883 at 2 P.M. Pre- Rent, $100; food, $90 (I'm an Township. self-addressed long envelope.) Ave., Neptune City, will leave the Sayreviile generating station. Philip J. Blanda, Jr., Atty. vailing Time. In Commission March 13. 20, 37. April 3 H1.40 All the following tracts or parcels of land and the premises hereinafter FREEHOLD —Lincroft stable- MU particularly described, situate, lying SHERIFF'S SALE and being in the Township of Middle- nan H. Hugh Dufford won BVFEB1OJI COURT OF NEW JERSEY town, County of Moiunouth and State $1,442 default judgment yester- CHANCERY DIVISION of New Jersey: MONMOUTH COUNT! KNOWN and designated as Lot day against a former horse owner Docket No. F 4310-S1 as shown on map entitled "Harmony from New Shrewsbury. CABTERET SAVINGS AND LOAN Estates" owned by the Joalmur Con- ASSOCIATION, a corporation of Newstruction Co. Mlddletown Township, Superior Court Judge J. Ed- Monmouth County New Jersey J. Jersey. Plaintiff vs: JAMES A LACY, ward Knight approved the order «t all., Defendants W, Seaman. C. B. & Land Surveyor, By virtue of a writ of execution In dated April 1956 and filed July is, against Mrs. Rosalind -M. Sha- the above stated action to me directed, 1956 in the Monmouth County Clerk's X shall .expose for sale at public ven- Olllcn as Map. 52-22. piro, 712 Sycamore Ave., New due, at the Court House In the Borough Being commonly known - and deslg- Shrewsbury. Included was of Freehold. County of 'Monmouth, Newnated as No. 174 Marsha Drive, Mld- Jersey, on Monday the 1st day of dletown, New Jersey. claim for $1,000 commission on April, 1963, at 1 o'clock, P. M. Pre- The approximatpp e amounmuntt of tthe jjudgu - New for Ambassador... arrangement of a sale of horses, vailing Time. menent to be satisfied by saiaidd salalee Is ALL thit tract or parcel of land, the sum of J13.7C0.00 together with the valued at $10,000, and stable situate, lying and being In the Town- costs of this sale. fees. ship of &iddlebmn, In the County of Dated March 5, 1963 Monmouth and in the state of New JOSEPH A. SHAFTO. Sheriff Jersey: Herman L. Jatree. Atty. Known and designated ai Hot (95) MarcH 20, 37, April 3, 10 IU.4 ninety-five, on map entitled I'Map of NOriCK TO CONTRACTORS Court Approves Country Club Estates, Red Bank, New Sealed proposals will bs received by Jersey, proptropertn "y of Shrewsbury River the Borough Council of the Borough Holding Comp. _isnyi .., Red Bank, New Jer- of Fair Haven, N. J., at the meet- $3,500 Settlement sey, drawn by George D. Cooper, civil Ing place, in the Plre House, River engineer dated January 19, 1928," and Battln Eds., Fair Haven, at 8:00 FREEHOLD—A $3,500 settle- which map Is duly filed In the Mon- p.m., A^rll 8, 1983. for the furnish- mouth County Clerk's Office as Case ing and installation of 630 lineal reet ment growing out of an auto ac- No. 70. or 5' high No.9 gauge 2" mesh chaincident March 12, 1961, was ap- BEING lot No. 05 on the map ollink fence at the -Fair Haven Youth Country Club Estates In the tax mapCenter and specifications therefor on proved yesterday by Monmouth of Mlddletown Township. file In the office of the Borough Clerk BEING known and designated as _ County Judge Edward I. Ascher West Wllspn Circle. Mlddletown, Mon- Bidders shall submit their estimates in favor of Roger Jones, and his mouth County, New Jersey. on proposal forms which will be fur- nished to all bidders by uie Borough mother, Mrs. Eva Thorne, "Ryan Subject to restrictions and ease- Clerk. Flans and specifications may ments of record, <1( any, zoning and y Rd., Marlboro. municipal ordinances, and such facts be obtained at the office of the BorBo- ough Clerk. Municipal Building, PPair as an accurate survey and examina- Haven, N. J. Mr. Jones, now 21, was a pas- tion ot the premises would disclose. All bids must be submitted In sealed senger in a car driven by Don- Together with all fixtures now at-envelope bearing on the outside the tached to or used In connection with name of the bidder and his address ald Munyak, Siloam Rd., Free- the aforementioned premises and any(Iff fforwarded d b y mallll , the sealel d en- hold Township, when it went out household appliances. velope containing the proposal and The approximate amount ot the judg- of control and struck a pole in ment to be satlsired by said sale Is marked as directed above, must be enclosed In another envelope addressed Freehold Township. the sum of HI.150 00 together with the as specified In the Proposal form, costs of this sale. and must be sent by registered mall.) The young man was awarded Dated February 14, 1963 Each bid must be accompanied by JOSEPH A. SHAFTO, Sheriff. cash, by the certified check of the $1,915 and his mother, $1,575. Levy, McCloslcey, Schleslnger bidder, or by a bid bond, duly exe- Harry Ssgotsky, of Freehold, A Ttschler, Attys. cuted by Uie bidder as principal and March 6. 13, 20, 27 javlng as surety a Company approved represented them. The defense by the Borough of Fair Haven, In an lawyer was Richard L>. Porter, Reserve District Xo. S amount not less than ten per cent (10%) of the amount of the base bid. Asbury Park. CHARTER NO. JM1 and made payable to the Borough of Fair Haven, N. J. Such cash, cheeks, REPORT OF CONDITION or bid bonds will be returned to all of tie Monmouth County National Bank except the three lowest formal bidders Easy-See Diagram Of Red Bank, New Jersey In the state within three days after the formal of New Jersey, at the close of business opening of bids, and the remaining on March IS, 1S63. Published in re- cash, checks or bid bonds will be re- sponse to oa.ll made by comptroller ol turned to the three lowest bidders Uie currency, under section 0211, U.S. within eight hours after the Borough Printed Pattern revised statutes. and accepted bidder have'executed the contract, or l*r no contract has been SIZES 12&-221/* ASSETS so executed, within 45 days alter the ]L> Cash, balances with date ol the opening of bids, upon de- other banks, and cash mand of the bidder at any time there- items In process of col- after so long as he has not been no- lection 8,877,577.30 lifted or the acceptance of Ms bid. % United States Govern- The Borouuh Council reserves the ment obligations, direct -Ight to reject any and all bids, waive and guaranteed (Net of any Inlormalltles and award contracts any reserves) : 50,742,997.18 as may be deemed best for the In- i. Obligations of States terest of the Borough of Fair Haven. and political subdivi- By order ot the Borough Council sions (Net of any re- HOY W. NELSON serves) _ 11,860,659,02 __ Borough Clerk. 5. Corporate stocks (In- March 27 S1B.4I cluding $M,W> itocK of Federal Reserve NOTICE OF IN HEM bank> (Net of any re- KKFORECLOSUItK OF TAX serves) _ 17S,OS125 LIEN TITLES «. Loans and discounts SUPK1HOR COURT OP AEff JERSEY lln&utflng *3,-ra.1« CHANCERY DIVISION overdrafts) (Net of any MON Ml) DTI I COUNTY reserves 60.73t,731.!H C&se No. F S0S943 7. Bank premises By BOROUGH OF UNION BEACH, a owned ...... 41.086,079.14, Municipal Corporation In the Coun- furniture and ty ot Monmouth and State of New futures C96,872.K - 1,382,951,52 Jersey. %. Real estate owned oth- TAKE NOTICE that an action, in than bank prem* rem, has been commenced In the Su- Ises 22,474.80 perior Court of New Jersey to refore- 11. Other assets cloae pursuant to R. a. 64:5-104 73 (Section 2 of Chapter 2T8, Pub-llc Laws 12. rOTAi ASSETS 10t,47WtU9 1B55, approved and ettectlve March l, 1968, a supplement to the "In Rom Tax Foreclosure Act (1948)", approved May 28, 1948 (P. L. 1948 c.96) for LIABILITIES the purpose of correcting and overcom- IS. Demand deposits of In- ing any Irregularities In the prior lore- dividuals, partnerships, closure proceeding and to bar any out- and corporations 30,795,617.31 standing right of redemption of the H. Time and savings de- lands from the tax sale which resulted posits of individuals, In the said tax sale certificates, and partnerships, and cor- the judgment to be obtained will specif- porations - M,-Ufl,217.!l3 ically contain a provision giving full 15. Deposits of United effect to the provisio of Section 3 of States Government (in- Chapter 278, Public-Laws 1955 as afore- cluding postal sav- said that this judgment shall not af- ings) _... fect the right, title and interest in said 16. Deposits of States and lands of the aaJd purchaser or pur- political subdivisions .... chasers from the municipality or of FLIP-TOP IS. Certified and officersers' any person deriving an interest there- checks, etc 615,332.47 in from, through or by any action of 1». TOTAL DEPOSITITS said purchaser. This re fore closure is t96,072,477.83 being conducted by the Boough of (a)1 Total demand de- union Beach at the request of and on posits . J38.29UT5.55 behalf of the present owner Joseph (b) Total time and sav. KolodzleJ. Ings deposits The action Is brought against the J67,77S,0M.S8 land only, and no personal judgment 7f>. Other liabilities 1,017,742.00 may be entered therein. Any peraon desiring. to protect a 2i, TOTAL LIABILITIES .. 07,720.229.83 right, title or interest in the [k-acrlbed land or any parcel thereof, by re- demption, or to contest plaintiffs right to foreclose, must do so by paying CAPITAL ACCOUNTS the amount required to redeem as set 55. Capital Stock: • forth below, plus interest to the date (a) Common stock, of redemption, and such costs as total par ..._. 2,300,000.00 he court may allow, prior to the en ry ol Judgment therein, or b fllll 26. Surplus 3,200,000.00 Look leaner, taller in a swift- 27. Undivided profits 1,257,011.66 Answene r t o tthh e complainlit setting forth defendant's defence within 45 days aft- o-sew sheath with no waist seams 39. TOTAL CAPITAL er date of the publication or this no- ACCOUNTS 6,757,011.66! 'ce. o interrupt the smoothly gliding In tho event or (allure to redeem or answer by any peraon having the right line. Choose pastel cotton, Dae- (0. TOTM, LIABILITIES to redeem or answer, BUCII person AND CAPITAL shall be forever barred and foreclosed ACCOUNTS ..- of all his rlftM, title and Interest and Printed Pattern 9331: Half Sizes equity of redemption in and to the parcels of land described In the fol- lowing tax torecloBure lint: Size 16'//2 require ^s 1% yard^s ,45- ^, / MEMORANDUM The following Is a copy of the tax 2 2 inch fabric. 31. Assets pledged or as- foreclosure list showing Uie landa signed to secure liabil- against which this action in brought. Fifty cents In coins for this ities and for other pur- nEUSSILLE. CORNWEI.L, FLIP PULL pose n _... 3,238,487,[lfl MAUSNEH A CAROTENUTO pattern—add 15 cents for each POUR Attorneys for Plaintiff pattern for first-class mailing I, George L. Blelltz, President, of the 34 Broad Street, above-named bank do hereby declare Red Hank, New Jersey and special handling. Send to that this report of condition Is true ami TAX FORECLOSURE UBT correct to the beat at my knowledge Sch. No,—2'; Cert. No,—85: Numr of Marian Martin, The Red Bank and belief. Owner as It Appears on Last Tax Register, Pattern Dept., 232 West Here's the handiest, easiest way ever devised to pour yourself a glass of Old World flavor: get •" ~ G-KORQE L. BLEJUTZ Duplicate at lime ot original fore- closure—John D. Walsh;; NamNmee of Own- 18th St., Now York 11, N. Y. Print '-f We, Uir underfilled directors at teat in the present tax the correctness of this report ol condi- er as It appears on the prese plainly name, address with zone, Ambassador Beer in the new Flip-Top Can. Just lift the aluminum tab, pull it back, snap it ofU .^ dupllcate-^Joseph KolodzleJ• • • ' ; "leocrpe . on tion and declare Uiat It has been ex* Tax Duplicate Block 80, Lot 3. DeauDene. size and style number. •mined by us and to the best of ouron Tax Ceil.—Block 0. Lots 10 A 11: knowledge and better la true and cor-Union Subdivision; Date ol Sale—0/3' FREE OFFER! Coupon In and pour. (Ambassador Beer is on tap, too, of gouree.) For your pleasure. net. 30; Amt. of Snle—M2.62; Amt. of all Spring Pattern Catalog for one H. HAHOLD KELLY Tax Liens accruing suit, to Bale—fl,- ALSTON BffiHICMAH, JR. 245.31; Amount to Redeem—$1,287.D3; pattern free—any one you choose WILLIAM B. L.YMAN Book A Pg. of Cert. In County- Clerk's from 300 design ideas. Send 50c Directors HNce 2346-63. March 27 fTQM March 27 $33.» now for Catalog. . Ambassador pear, afln* NarracaneottProduct,Crtntton.R.I. 20h-Wr4, 27, 1963 RED BANK REGISTER Monmouth Jane Devereux Married to Pilot Around Monmouth: POINT PLEASANT BEACH- Democratic Candidates Counselor St. Mary's Episcopal Cfaurd) was the setting here Sunday for the To Speak marriage of Miss Jane Elizabeth Party at Morven Address County Club Devereux, daughter of Mr. and SHREWSBURY - Albert Ball, Mrs. Stanton Kruse Devereux of By MILLI HRUSKA WALL TOWNSHIP-Monmouth Haven, secretary of the Mondirecto- r of,testing and student Point Pleasant, to Lt. Walter Spring is here, and what may be its happiest party Samuel Vrablic, U.S. Air Force. County Democratic candidates mouth County Board of Elections, aid at Monmouth College, will He is the son of Mr. and Mrs is the one Governor and Mrs. Richard J. Hughes are were guest speakers at a meet- announced a series of classes speak on "Contemporary Amer ing of the Women's Democratic for newly-appointed District Elec- Samuel Vrablic of South Amboy giving Saturday at Morven in Princeton for Mrs. Club of Monmouth County Satur- tion Board members. The School ican Values" tomorrow at I Rev. Hugh McCl. Famsworth Hughes' mother, Mrs. Joseph Sullivan of Interlaken. day here in Mechanics Hall. of Instruction will begin at 7:45meeting of the Women's Associa- officated at the double ring cere- It will be her birthday and the guest list is limited to mony. Mrs. Gladys Wilson was Introduced by Mrs. Katharine p.m. in the following locations: tion of the Shrewsbury Presbyte- organist. the family and a few of Mrs. Sullivan's old friends. Elkus White, state committee- April 2, Convention Hall, Asbury rian Church. The talk will be pre- Mr. Devereux, who is associ- woman and chairman of the Park; April 3, Freeholders' Among the nearly 100 guests will be Mrs. Sullivan's sented at 1 p.m. in the church ated with Steinbach Company, New Jersey Highway Authority, Meeting Room, Hall of Records, brother-in-law and sister, house. Red Bank, gave his daughter in and the speakers were Mayor Earl Freehold, and April 4, Middle- Mrs. Robert Stiilwagon. Pro- marriage. She wore a. gown of the Frederick Reicheys, In- Moody oj Middietown, candidate town Township High School, Tind- Refreshments will be served by ceeds will benefit the projects of for the state Senate; Leon Wein all Rd. members of the executive board. tissue taffeta fashioned with terlaken; the Frederick the Fred G. Steelman Home and fitted bodice of Alencon lace stein, Donald J. Cunningham and Mrs. John Keilt of Atlantic A theater party is planned for Reicheys, Asbury Park, and School Club. trimmed with seed pearls and a Paul Klernan, Jr., candidates Highlands and Mrs. Paul Kie May 1 In New York City. Mem- the James Reicheys, Spring full skirt ending in a chapel for the Assembly, and Mayor nan, Jr., of Long Branch, wen bers of the group will attend a Fred and Marie Giersoh, for- 1 train. Her waist-length bouffant Lake. Cornelius J. Gulney, Jr., of High' appointed chairmen of a spring performance of "Tovarich • star- merly of Red Bank, have taken veil was held in place by a lands and Hugh Meehan, for theluncheon and fashion show to bering Vivien Leigh and Jean up residence in "Riverfields," double crown of crystal and seed More proof that spring is here: Board of Freeholders. held May 25 in The Cobblestones, Pierre Aumont. their estate on Rumson Rd. pearls and she carried white The Jimmy Theises of Sea Bright Middletown. Mrs. Gustave J. Freret of Fair The annual Strawberry Festi- roses and stephanotis. are back in town. They have New members are Mrs. Josept val will be held on June 8 in been following the sun all win- Allen Leatherman of Red Bank Miss Nancy Elaine Devereux, surpassed himself in "Romanoff Eschelbach, Red Bank, and Mrs, the church house, Chairmen are at home, was maid of honor for ter in South America. Franklin Hildebrand, Mrs. Olivei Mrs. William Crome and Mrs, and Juliet" at the Wagon Wheel Beadleslon her sister, The bride's two other The Jack Giordanos are back Playhouse last weekend. Jack Smith, Mrs. Vincent Agrest Glenn Appleyard. attendants were Mrs. Theodore in town, too. They have been Mrs. George Lerner, Mrs. Ed de Genito of Leonardo was great Dreyer of Paterson and Miss basking in the hot.sun of Mexico as "Freddie Vanderstuyt." Ken Addresses ward Kasky and Mrs. John J. Gladys Patricia Gillespie of Sus- and the Caribbean Islands most Reilly, Ocean Township. Hairdressers Woodcock's ellin quality lit up the sex. They were identically of the winter. stage in his portrayal of "The DAR Unit County club members were Mold Session gowned in magenta silk brocade Spring is the season for fashion General." guests of the Wall Townshi, designed with bell skirts and car- shows, too. At tomorrow's lunch- RED BANK—Assemblyman Al- Paul Savonen of Middletown Democratic Club. Mrs. Roberi ALLENHURST - The Mon-ried pink roses and stephanotis. eon and fashion show at Deal fred N. Beadleston was guest played "Romanoff." He is the Benedick, vice president, was i mouth and Ocean County Hair- Capt. Lindsey Parsons, U.S. Golf and Country Club, it will be speaker at a reception given by dressers Association met recently Burt Lancaster of the Wagon charge. Air Force, of Trenton was best difficult to decide who are more Wheel Players. Monmouth Chapter, Daughters of in the Central Jersey Bank and man. Ushers were Theodore fashionable, ttie guests who will Bob Clarke of Hazlet, Mike the American Revolution, recent- Assisting were Mrs. Ina VonTrust Company, where new Dreyer of Paterson and Robert be members of the Navarumsunk Goldman, Dr. Barry Grabelle and ly for its student Good Citizens de Flue, Mrs. Stephen Blauvel spring styles featuring the "new Chonacki, Freehold. Mrs. Thomas J. Rockhill, Mrs. Auxiliary of die Family and Chil- Bob Faust of Middletown and and their parents. belle-coif were presented by Mr. The bride, an alumna of Point Stanley Murphy, Mrs. Eugene dren's Service ol Monmouth Jim Gwynn of Riverside Heights Mr. Beadleston's topic was Battina, Camden, a member of Pleasant High School aiid Tren- Mrs. Walter S, Vrablic County and their friends and sup- Conners, Mrs. James Kelly, Mrs are veteran players at Wagon "The Young Citizen's Concern the hair fashion committee for ton State College, is a kindergar- porters, or the professional William Geginheimer, Mrs. Petei Wheel and make any show they ^vith Law Making in New New Jersey Master Hairdressers ten teacher at the North Dover models who will be exhibiting new J. Bergenn, Mrs. Alfred McPhee, are in worthwhile. Jersey." He urged that citizens Association. Elementary School in Toms "ashbns from Bamberger's Mir- Among those seen at the mid- study our government, join a Mrs. John Vogel, Mrs. James Frank DeGrasso, Trenton state River. Anne Nelson Is Bride ror Room. If you have not yet night buffet and cocktail party political party and work for it. Bailey, Mrs. William Devereaux, vice president of the NJMHA, Lt. Vrablic, is an alumnus of bought a ticket for this, call Mrs. at Bob Harney's Dutch Oven at He stated that the meaning of Mrs. Elwood Smith, Jr., Mrstalke. d on membership, its im- Perth Amboy High School and Alfred Beck, Jr., of Rumson. the bridge in Highlands were good citizenship is to take an Kenneth Miller, Mrs. George portance and its effect on every attended Newark College of En- Of Michael D. Caffyn Mrs. William Ryan of Fair William F. Corio Of Red Bank, interest in what is going on in Hughes and Mrs. Robert Brunet. hairdresser. Legislation was pre-gineering. A graduate of the U.S. Haven heads the committee, president of Wagon Wheel; Doro- government at all levels — local, The club will meet next o sented which will be discussed Air Force Pilot Training, School, RED BANK - Miss Anne V. Ave., Eatontown, and the late which includes Mrs. Gordon thy (Mrs. Frederick) Wagner, county, state and national. April 27 at 1: .30 p.m. in the at the state convention May 4,he is assigned to the 12th Tactical Nelson, daughter of Mrs. Arthur Clyde Caffyn. Montgomery, New Shrewsbury; Lincroft; Mrs. Helen Frederick- 5 and 6 in Atlantic City in theFighter Wing at MaoDill Air H. Ross, West End Ave., Shrews- Mrs. Brace Campbell presided. Albion Hotel, Asbury Park. The ceremony took place is Mrs. John G. Stewart and Mrs.son, Little Silver, (she directed Claridge Hotel. Force Base, Tampa, Fla., where bury, and the late Dewey V. Nel- Good Citizens attending were the chapel of the Red Bank Pres- Beck, Rumson, and Mrs. Mark the play); Billy John Fansler, the couple plan to reside fol- son, was married here Saturday Audrey Karlen Barber, Keyport The county meetings, held the byterian Church. Rev. Dr. Allison and Mrs. Ernest Thomp- Fairview, president of Monmouth lowing a motor trip through to Michael D. Qaffyn, son of High School; Carol Dominic, Church Captains second Wedesday of each month, Charles S. Webster officiated at son, Fair Haven. Players; the Frank Baldwins, Canada. Mrs. Henry Snyoer of Lafetra Matawan Regional High School; are open to all hairdressers. the candlelight service. A recep- Monmouth Hills; the Don McClin- Lynn Wheeler Dusinberre, Rum- Plan Hat Sale tion followed in. Molly Pitcher Mrs. Thomas Laugerson and tocks, Lincroft; Joan Dillon, Port- son-Fair Haveo Regional High RED BANK - A hat sale am Inn, Red Bank. Mrs. George Brucker of Eaton- aupeck; Don Gordon, New Mon- School; Mary Lee Hemhauser, fashion show will be sponsored The bride was given in mar- town are chairmen of a card moutih; Verne and Lois Edwards, Middletown Township High |V the church rally captains of Engagements Announced riage by her uncle, George H. Fair Haven; Kay Gladding, El- party, hair style, wig and hat School; Rose Ann Infante, Rari- the Pilgrim Baptist Church Sat- Mayers of Harrisburg, Pa. She show at Crystal Brook Inn, Eaton- beron; John and Emi Hemleb, tan Township High School, and urday at 4 p.m. In the church, wore a waltz-length gown of white town, Friday at g p.m. Bam- Rumson, and Lee (Mrs. Jack) de Marianne Kwiatkowski, Sayre- Shrewsbury Ave. Hats will be by taffeta and lace, a veiled head- berger's Chantrey Beauty Salon Genito, Leonardo. ville War Memorial High School. the Mad Hatter, Red Bank. Cof- piece, and carried a nosegay of pink roses. will present the fashions, to be Hostesses were Mrs. Jehu P. fee will be served. modeled by Mrs. Albert Carelli, Miss Carolyn A. Friton, New Miss Edith Dooley of Little Sil- Cooper and Mrs. Fred Burlew. Chairmen of the event are Mrs. Mrs. Vincent Urgo, Mrs. Robert York City, was the bride's only ver entertained at cocktails and Mrs. Campbell and Mrs. T. N. James Hawkins, Miss Bernica Quinn and Mrs. Thomas Young. attendant. She wore a gown of dinner at Shadowbrook. Her Parmly presided at the tea Williams and Mrs. William Web- The committee includes Mrs. guests were Ed Brennan of table. ' • ster. Alice blue taffeta,, a matching pillbox and carried pink roses. Quinn, Mrs. Young, Mrs. Jack Oceanport and the Tom Geolys Milton Caffyn, Eatontown, was Daynard, Mrs. Jack Lang and of Tagg Farm, Colts Neck. best man for his brother. Ushers IN 22 SECONDS were Arthur H. M. Ross, Shrews- bury, brother of the bride, and after entering bloodstream Paul Muellert, New Brunswick. PTA to Hold Carnival The bride was graduated from MIDDLETOWN — A Village assisted by Mrs. William Boehm Anacin* is speeding relief to Long Branch High School and at-Carnival, complete with general and Mrs. Paul Giloth. tended Wagner College, Staten Is- store, boutique shoppe, midway Listed as "ringmasters" are land, where she was a member mall, toyville, village green and Mrs. Robert Yard, Mrs. Joseph of Delta Zeta sorority. book carousel is being planned Martin, Mrs. Lewis Welter, Mrs. The bridegroom also was grad- by the Middletown Village School William Pfefferle, Mrs. Ray YOUR NERVOUS uated from Long Branch High Parent-Teacher Association.- Towniey, Mrs. Leonard Bergman School. He attended Rutgers Uni- The eveat, scheduled for May 4 and Mrs. Charles f indall. versity, New Brunswick, where from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. in die TENSION HEAMCHE he was a member of Tau Kappa school, will feature a carnival Chimp to Appear Epsilon fraternity. setting and background created Mbs Joan M. Gray MUs Susan M. Krawcbuk Miss Jeanne Taylor NotonlyrelieYeapainbntALSOltotCMionanddeprearion. On their return from a wedding by Mrs. Nicholas D'Anthony. EATONTOWN - "Zippy, the Contains the pain reliever doctors recommend most RED BANK - Mrs. James J. SHARK MVER HILLS - An- PHOENIXVTU.E, Pa. - An- trip to Washington, D. C, the "Head barker" for the carni- World's Greatest Chimp" will be Tension headaches are by far reliever most rmvinimenned vy Gray, 102 West Front St., hasnouncement is made by Mr. andnouncement of the engagement couple will reside hi Eatontown. val will be Mrs. Guerin Olivola, in Monmouth Shopping Center's the most common kind. And of doctors, plui an extra ingredient announced the engagement of herMrs. Michael Krawchuk, 117 Dur of Miss Jeanne Ellen Taylor to "Lollipop Theater" in the Civic all the leading pain relieve™, and Rd., of the engagement o: Auditorium on Cherry Mall on, not found in leading aspirins or daughter, Miss Joan M. Gray, to Robert James Scott is made by Receives Two Honors only Anacin tii this special buffered aspirins. And Anacin their daughter, Miss Susan Marii her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Friday and Saturday. The pro- Frank J. Murphy, son of Mrs. combination of ingredients. has such a smooth, gentle action. Krawchuk, to Andrew P. Morri Charles L. Kates, Jr., of this city gram is part of the center's third Anacin relieve* pain fast, also Next time when a headache John Hepp, 17 Ward Lai, Rnrfi- Its emotional taniion and makes yon tense, irritable, de- Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrei and Pocono (Pa.) Pines. Mr. birthday celebration. depression. > pressed — take strong jet safe son, and the late Francis J. Mur- Mofris, Sr., 224 Second Ave. Scott is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Vassair Senior Wins "Zippy" who has appeared as Anacin world fattt In 22 sec- Anacin. The big difference in phy. Long Branch. Lyle J. Scott of Woodland Dr., "guest star" on many TV pro- onds after entering your blood- Anada makes the big difference Miss Gray, also the daughter The bride-elect was graduatec Colts Neck, N. J., and Pocono grams, including the Garry stream, Anacin ii speeding relief in the way you feeL. jf the late Mr. Gray, was grad- from Neptune High School and Pines. Moore Show and Captain Kan- to your pain—bringing remark* Fulbright Scholarship uated from Red Bank Catholic employed by Bell Telephone Lab Miss Taylor is a graduate of garoo, can do just about every- able •alfover" relist High School. She is employed at •- ' " ' • • oratories in Holmdel. Phoenixville Area High School POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y.-Miss thing from roller skating to play- Anacin Tabled are so effective the Monmouth County National Mr. Morris is a graduate o and is employed by Philadelphia Sarah Norcross Allen, daughter ing a horn. He will demonstrate because they contain ths pain Bank, Little Silver. Long Branch High School. He ii Electric Co. in Norristown. of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. his talents oa the "Lollipop Largest Selling Mr. Murphy served three years associated with the Speedriti Allen, 424 Navesink River Rd., Theater" stage Friday at 1:30 i the U. S. Air Force and is Painting Co., Long Branch. Mr. Scott, a 1955 graduate of p.m. when his program will be Summit High School, Summit, Middletown, a senior at Vassar PAIN RBLIBVBR employed at Lily Tulip Cup Corp., The wedding is planned fo: College, has been awarded a Ful- especially for pre-schoolers and N. J., received B. S. and M. S. Holmdel. Sept. 7. bright Scholarship and an Eloise the kindergarten set, and again degrees from the University of Ellery Fellowship for the study at 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. On Satur- Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. He Cards and Wigs Tickets may be purchased of mathematics. day, he will perform at 10 a.m. is a member of Phi Kappa Tau, MATAWAN TOWNSHIP — A from Mrs. Andrew Zanlewski, 11.40 a.m., 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. Tau Beta Pi engineering honor The Fulbright Scholarship is card party and wig demonstra- Mrs. Norman Wood, Mrs. Sam fraternity, and Quarterdeck. He for one academic year of study tion will be held tonight at 8 uel Dilks, Mrs. Hugh Boyle, Mrs is a naval architect with Gibbs in mathematics at Girton Col- 'dock in the Matawan Township Albert Pizri, Mrs. William Davi and Co., Inc., New York. lege of Cambridge University in ACCESSORIES First Aid Building. and Mrs. Frank Swan. England. The wedding is planned for from the SEEKERS OF June 8. The Ellery Fellowship was MADLYN SHOP granted by Vassar College for little Silver Shopping Center graduate study for 196344 as an-

SEASHORE DAY CAMP FINE HOME FURNISHINGS and BROADLOOM RUR CLEANING and STORAGE OCEAN AVE., WEST END CA 2-6164 John Clttadlno, Phys. Dlr., 15 years at Asbury Park H.S. 613 PROSPECT AVE. ASBURY PARK (Summer Day Ckmo Auounctment to Rt. 35 Circle, Eatontown—Liberty 2-1010 RED BANK REGISTEB W, X963-ZI Auxiliary American Home Achievement Day • - Easter Fashions Lincroft Club Takes Room Award Naveslnk Hook and lad- ficers will take place at a later ASBURY PARK — Lincroft .pell beauty, but brew disaster ern — Woman's Community Club for several years; Mrs. Sylvia der auxiliary will hold a card date. Officiating will be Mrs. Woman's Club scored another 'or jaywalkers. of Eatontown, second; Rumson VTeehan, Freehold, county home party and fasHon Show Friday al Frances Maubus andMrs. Winkel- win in the fifth district Americar American home scrapbooks al-i Woman's Club, third; Oriental — agent, and Robert A. Gedrys, in- 8 p.m. in the Navesink Library. man. Department commander Home Achievement Day competi- ;o were judged in yesterday's! Little Silver Woman's Club Eve- terior decorator and co-ordinator, Fashions will be by Montgom- Mrs. Mary Ann Beagle and her tion held yesterday in the Wom- jvent. Raritan. Township Worn-1 ning Department, second. Sterling Furniture, Red Bank. ery Ward, Monmouth Shopping staff will be entertained tomor- an's Club of Asbury Park, Wick- w's Club placed first; Middle- Judges were Mrs. Clarence W. 1 Federation guests were Mrs Center, Eatontown. row by the auxiliary at the Mid- apecko Dr. town Woman ! Club, second, and Huff, Fort Monmouth, who was Lincroft Woman's Club, third. Daniel Follweiler, district vice Auxiliary members who will dietown First Aid building, Park It took first prize for a minia- born in the Orient; Mrs. How- president; Mrs. Joseph E. Walsh model are Mrs. Milton Wright, Ave., East Keansburg. A dona- ture room layout in tlw authentic Runners-up in the miniature ard E. Porter, also of Fort Mon- room contest were authentic mod- state community improvemen Mrs. Rdohard Heidel, Mrs. Thom- tion was sent to the East Orange modern living room category. mouth, who lived in the Orient chairman, and Mrs. George R as Cooper, Mrs., John Cooper, Veteran Hospital for a coffee hour Last week the club won first Schneider, state American home Mrs. Arthur Groves, Mrs. Albert for residents. award at the fifth district drama chairman. Builwinkle, Mrs. Robert Jdhnson, festival srt the Monmouth Shop- Mrs. Harry Burdge, Mrs. Thelma NEW MEMBER — Mrs. Dolor- ping Center. Hundreds of articles made by Cooper and Mrs. William Slocum. es Rawlings was welcomed as a First prize for an authentic members of American home de- Mrs. John Dashkavich is chair- new member of the Keyport Vet- oriental living room, in the sec- partments of various clubs were man. Mrs. Burdge is in charge erans of Foreign Wars Auxiliary ond of three categories of com- exhibited. Represented were of refreshments. at a recent meeting in the post petition, went to the Asbury Park woman's clubs of River Plaza, Farmingdale, Middletown, Asbury THREE-QUARTER CENTURY Fund development program It was announced that an East- home. Woman's Club Evening Depart- ment. Breton Woods Woman's Park, (Evening membership and for Drexel Institute of Technology gets a boost at 1he er egg hunt will be conducted A $10 donation will be sent to senior division), Breton Woods, April 13, starting at 10 a.m. at the New Jersey cottage at the Club won first place for an au- alumni dinner attended by 300 at the Waldorf-Astoria thentic miniature bedroom. Avon, Little Silver, Long Branch, the fire house. Local children VFW National Home in Eaton Raritan, Rumson, Belmar, Red in New York Recently. Mr. and Mrs. Jamss F. McSet- between the ages of four and 10 Rapids, Mich, A total of 233 women attended Bank (senior club), and Lincroft. will be permitted to participate. the district event staged by Mrs. tigan, 268 Prospect Ave., Little Silver, are shown at thai DEPARTMENT GUEST -Mrs. Charles S. Toop of Lincroft, fifth Mrs. James T. Buckley, chair- event calling alumni to support the Pennsylvania college AN EASTER HAT SALE will Rosalind Schreiber, department district American Home chair- man of the American home de- n its drive for $18 million by I966, tha year Drexel man who is a member of the Ipartment of the host club served be sponsored by the Lincroft secretary-treasurer of the VFW celebrates its 75th anniversary. Fire Auxiliary April 6 from 10 auxiliary, was a guest at a recent Red Bank Woman's Club. Pro- 's hostess chairman, assisted by a.m. to 5 p.m. in the fire house. meeting of the Sixth District La- ceeds will go toward New Jer- the chairman of its evening divi- Hats will be by the Mad Hatter, dies Auxiliary in the Middletown sey State Federation of Women's sion American home depart- Volunteers Aid Bloodmobile Unit Red Bank. Township Post Home. Repre- Clubs home economics scholar- ment, Mrs. Benjamin Dube. Also, sentative of 10 auxiliaries at ships awarded students at Doug- Mrs. Robert Kent, vice chairman SHREWSBURY— On two con- the professional staff of a blood- ass College. "f the American home depart- CHAPTER ELECTS - Miss tended. jcutive days the Monmouth mobile unit from the New York A bevy of spring hats were ment (senior group), Mrs. Arvid tointy Chapter, American Red Red Cross Regional Center at Lorraine Maubus has been elected The district will hold a dance commander of the Disabledfor patients at Marlboro State shown in a style show presented Latham, Mrs. Francis Guito, :ross, supplied volunteer work- Fort Hancock last week. Mrs. by Steinbach Company. Commen- Mrs. Florence McCool, Miss Mar- irs to aid donors at bloodmobiles Harry S. Craver, Middletown, American Veterans Auxiliary, Hospital April IS. ion Gibbs, Mrs. John Beekman Bayshore Chapter. The auxiliary approved pur- tator Helen Lee Jackson of Stein- m military installations in the was captain of the day. The bach's, Asbury Park, spotlighted and Mrs. Fred Holman, senior »unty. yolunteers gave a combined total Others elected at a recent meet- chase of a $25 trophy for the best Uub, and Mrs. Alex Nobile, Mrs, junior drum and bugle corps par- the high fashion look which will Sixteen volunteers worked with of 74 hours of service. Ing in Hie home of Mrs. William include patent leather touches — Kendall Lee and Mrs. William Hanson, Ocean Ave., were Miss ticipating in the Loyalty Day Pa- 1\ Walton, evening department. rade in Asbury Park on May 5. ;ood in all colors this season and Edna Korish, senior commander; BARE FLOORS CRY FOR Mrs. Rose Thornton, junior com- They will also co-operate in fur- print turbans from the "Far mander; Mrs. Frances Maubus, nishing a room in the Allenwood East — Brooklyn," she said. BEAUTIFUL FLOOR COVERINGS Sanitarium in the name of the Pretty-pretty pink, black and AUTHENTIC MODERN miniature room staged under the treasurer; Mrs. Frieda Winkel- white straws fashioned with cart- Music Fete BY STERLING man, adjutant; Miss Irene Cruse, district. The auxiliaries were direction of Mrs. Donald F. Sickles, right, miniature room Stop in for a free consultation. You'll conductress; Mrs. Georgia Dool- asked to'enter candidates for the wheel brims, modified sombreros and bowlers are leading style chairman, and Mrs. William Leist, American home de- find It will make a wonderful world ot ey, assistant conductress; Mrs. title of 1963 Loyalty Day Queen. Next Week difference in your decorating! Caroline. Oisen, patriotic instruc- notes. Flowers of all colors partment chairman for the Lincroft Woman's Club, wins smothered hairstyles in tiie new POINT PLEASANT - "Inter- tor; Mrs. Mary Hanson, chaplain; OCEANPORT Hock and Lad- a top award at yesterday's American Home Achieve- Mrs. Sylvia Davis, sergeant-at- fashionable heavy brims and national Holiday" will be the der Auxiliary observed its nth crowns — daisies and star flow- ment Day for the fifth district of the Now Jersey State *rms and Mrs. Agnes Elliffen, anniversary at a recent meeting ers were favorites. Many of the theme of the annual fifth dis- color guard. in Cypress Inn, Wanamassa. A originals shown had the almost Federation of Women's Club at the Asbury Park club- trict Music Festival of the New FOKNITtlRC Installation of the slate of of- special tribute was paid to the infco-the-eye high fashion-look that house. Jersey State Federation of Wom- 140 Broad St., Red Bank, N. J. SH 7-MM Orxm It A.M. to » P.M. Moo. tbra Tit. group's two honorary members t AM. tt f TJL Martwt. Mrs. George Hurley and Mrs. en's Clubs. The festival will take Christian Club Katherine Morris. place Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. here in the clubhouse of the Woman's Installs Officers ^Messiah' Continues Sunday Club of Point Pleasant Members ~™™«™,,,,, «. BJ ™«- ISABELLE JOHNSTON, of the Woman's Club of Long BanSHREWSBURk chapter affiliateY - d Thwite h Rethde ^h district. president, was a RED BANK — The Ministry of;mond F. Johnson, Jr. is a mem- story is told that at the first Lon- YOU MUST SEE guest at a meeting of the Ladies Branch will be co-hostesses. National' Christian Women's Club Auxiliary of the Veterans_of For- Music and Fine Arts of the Red ber of the Red Bank Methodist don performance of "Messiah," Church and from time to time the King was so moved by this SHERMAN'S NEW SHOP held its first annual installation edgn Wars, Schaufler-Franze----- n Bank Methodist Church will pre- Proceeds from the annual event dinner Saturday in The Shadow- Post, held in the Post Home; has appeared with the choir in chorus that .he stood during the will • benefit the Meta Thome THE TALK OF THE TOWN sent the second part of George musical presentations. Mr. Wise- entire singing of it, a tradition Waters Scholarship Fund which brook, Nineteen officers were West Keansburg. SIMPLY BEAUTIFUL Installed for one-year terms. Other guests included Mrs. Frederick Handel's masterpiece man was formerly of the Denver which persists to this day. assists deserving music students Colo., Philharmonic, and now re- They are Mrs. Peter MacLearie, Rosemary Sommer, past depart- Messiah" on Sunday evening. Part 2 of "Messiah" is the part at Douglass College. Specializing in Sr.; Belmar, chairman; Mrs. The performance will take place sides in New Brunswick. Mr. ment president; Mrs. Frances T. which is most often omitted in Music departments of clubs in • Linens • Bath Robert Hazel, Spring Lake; Mrs. Nebus, senior vice president of at 8 p.m. in the sanctuary of Clouser is a music instructor in the Toms River school system cut versions and many of the the district will participate. Mrs. • Closet • Bedroom Robert Bruggenworth, Rumson the sixth district; Mrs. Florence tha church. The work will again choruses and solos in this sec- A. C. Dodge, fifth district music 20 BROAD ST. and Mrs. William Colvin, Bel- Lambertson, patriotic instructor; be conducted by Herbert Burtis, and was most recently heard in • Distinctive GUIs the church here as percussionist tion are not as well known as chairman, member of the Wom- RED BANK _„mar. , advisers.J.J,... . j^ Frances MebuSi district minister of music and fine arts some in Parts 1 and 3. Part 3 an's Club of Raritan Township, • Monogrammlng William Bakie, Bemardsville, of the church, who will be as- for the performance of Honeg- • Custom Table Pads Phone 741-2646 chief of staff, and Mrs. Josephine ger's "King David." of the "Messiah" will be sung is in charge of the program. vice president of Muir's Depart- Norman, district color bearer. sisted in the Instrumental accom- on April 7 at 8 p.m. in the church, Rear Entrance paniment by Lee Johnson, harp- The oratorio will be sung by An added highlight will be a from Parking Lot ment Store was the featured A spaghetti dinner was served bringing to an end this series of display of foreign costumed dolls speaker. His subject with table decorations in green sichordist; Al Wiseman and Ray- the Chancel Choir and the fol- concerts. The public is invited Witnessing" mond F. Johnson, Jr., trumpet- lowing soloists: Mrs. Solbjorg made by members of various "Christian and and white In honor ot St. Pa- and no tickets are required. clubs. explained that the Christian trick's Day. Members and guests ers, and Joseph Clouser, per- Lieng, Robert Spencer, Mrs. Ma- Women's Dub is an inter-church received corsages made by" Mrs. cussionist. rie Maddaus, John Schoening, association which was established Donald Ross, who also made the Lee Johnson is the accompa- Mrs. Elizabeth Tuomenoksa and In Hartford, Conn., in 1949. There table decorations and was in nist for the Shrewsbury Chorale Alden Hammond. are now more than 200 clubs charge of refreshments. and has been heard in concert The famous "Hallelujah," ends (cross the nation. Mrs. Edward Stadelmarm was with them often in this area. Ray- Part 2 on a triumphant note. The Henry Coords of Westfield was Initiated into the auxiliary as a the soloist. new member. Legal Secretaries Elect BRIEiAiE-Mrs. Ruth H. Bux- completed, 30 students passed the baum of Belmar was recently test given. Twenty certificates elected president of the Mon- of completion were issued by CHOICE SPRING SUITS AND COATS mouth Legal Secretaries Associa- the National Association of Legal tion here at a meeting in Teddy Secretaries. Schuler's Restaurant. Mrs. Bux- The Monmouth Association is 36.00 baum is employed by the law planning a May theater party. firm of Gross and Garfield in Red comparative value 45.00 Bank, she has been with the The final board meeting of the firm for 10 years and has been retiring officers and committee a legal secretary for more than chairmen is slated for April 2 Marvelous shapes, marvelous fabrics, 25 years. in the home of Mrs. Hani Hauls, 35 Marcellus Ave., Manasquan. marvelous collection. Select your favorite Others elected were Miss Regina Bromberg, Matawan, vice styles for the Easter parade. president; Miss Carolee Kamm, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Stork Shower Sorry, no mall or phone orders. Rosemarie Strong, recording sec- MIDDLETOWN - Mrs. John retary; Miss Floyce Gibson, Johnson, Matawan, was guest of treasurer, all of Long Branch, and Mrs. Dorothy E. Krause, honor at a stork shower Friday FRANKLIN Leonardo, governor. in the home of Mrs. Michael Reo, Miss Greta D. Watkins of As- Church St. SIMON bury Park, chairman of the legal Mrs. C. A. Weisleder, Atlantic education program, reported that in the 10-iveek course in basic Highlands, and Mrs. Charles legal secretarial duties recently Weisman, Hazlet, were co-hos- tesses. Alumni Plan (Slests included Mrs. Edward LeBedz, Mrs. Marion Booth, Mrs. inner-Dance Louis Van Rikxoort, Sr., Mrs. tONG BRANCH - The New Louis Rikxoort, Jr., Union Jersey Alumni Association of Beach; Mrs. Leonard Nelson and Lebanon Valley College, Annville Mrs. J. Ward Johnson, Belford; Pa., will hold a dinner-dance Mrs. Linda Palmer, West Long April 27 at 7:30 p.m. in the Branch; Mrs. Neil Britton, New Springfield Steak House, Rt. 22, Monmouth; Mrs. Howard Ray- BENEFIT FOR DOUGLASS College Dean's Fund is planned Springfield. A 15-plece orchestra hone, Leonardo; Mrs, Jay Reid, by, left to right, Mrs. Joseph Barnarr, Wett Long Branch, will provide music for dancing. South River; Mrs. Dorothy Hale, N.A.D. Earl, and Miss Terry Le- secretary of Douglass of Monmouth; Mrs. Mary Lou Van Robert Tarantolo, 16 Myrtle Bedz. Iderstine, Rumson, vice president, and Mrs. Laurence1 Ave., is chairman of the Mon- mouth County district for the Henderson, Hazlet, publicity chairman. event. PARENTS OF DAUGHTER Guests from the college will SUMMIT—Mr. and Mrs. Wil- Include Dr. Carl Y. Erhart, dean liam E. Baker, 185 Her Dr., Mid- of the college, who will be the dletown, are the parents of a TAKE ME! principal after-dinner speaker. daughter, Megan Christine, their Warren Sechrist is president of fourth child, born March 11 here On Your Vacation the alumni association. in Overlook Hospital. EASTER COAT SALE RENTAL SYSTEM tmfft rAtmr BCTW MI miu. rmui 14.99 AND 17.99 842-0300 CLEAN RUGS regularly 17.98 to 25.98 SINCLAIR STATION ONLY $5.99 Spring coals galore, bountiful 120M«imouthSt. Red Bank per 2-Mir. period LAST LONGER 4- pennies per mile FREE! Pick-up, Gas, Oil, Maintenance, Insurance array of best selling styles, quality fabrics, and look lovelier too! excellent colors, for 'the little Miss'. CALL TODAY Sizes 4-6x, reg. 17.98 and 19.98,14.99. DELICIOUS FRENCH Sizes 744, reg. 19.98 and 25.98,17.99. BUTTER COOKIES Sorry, no mail or phone orders. 40 Varieties. Reg. 1.39 99 Full Pound Full Po FRANKLIN SIMON V SlnctlMl Birnn Candy la Taar Home—Ot b Oir Ftal Dry Cleaning - Laundry 91 BROAD STREET, RED BANK WHITIST. SH7-UD0UDIANK MONMOUTH SHOPPING CENTER, EATONTOWN-OPEN DAILY TIL 9:30, SATURDAY TIL 6 ALSO IN OUR NEW YORK STORE, 33 WEST 34TH STREET M«ch 27, 1963 BED BAM REGISTER Titans to Get New Coach/ Name in 'House Cleaning'

NEW YORK (AP) - The new "The new owners are men of lso has another year to go cm owners of the New York Titans affluence-and cash, with a deep is contract, calling for $20,000 a ear. plan such a thorough house-clean- interest in sports," the spokes- man said. "They are eager to The Titan spokesman said one ing that they not only will replace By Hy Cunningham make the many chances neces- tan in the Titan organization Bulldog Turner as coach but even sary to put the team on a winning lay be retained. He is Geroge JUST ONE BIG CYCLE — Bertram Powers, Elmer will change the name of the team, basis," lauer, former Navy, Baylor and spokesman said yesterday. Brown and even the photoengravers certainly are not Besides Werblin, the new own- ansas coach, who served as gen- "The syndicate is eager to wipe ers include Donald C. Lillis of :ral manager. working for the operation of this corner. It appears jut the old image — that of a Pelham, N. Y.; Townsend B. Mar- 'Sauer is talking to the new as if these gentlemen are going to bury the long term dironic, perpetually squabbling tin of Locust, N. J.; Leon Hess of owners," the' spokesman said. •hatchet with the publishers and finally send our buddy loser and replace it with one of New York, and Philip Iselin of He seems to be one man in their dignity and success," the spokes- Oceanport, N. J. good graces." Harry Carlin back to the racing circuit The Big A Publicity directors of the var- man, who declined use of. his Turner, former Chicago Bears ous American League clubs met and the Tribune's gain will be our loss. Carlin's get ame, added. center, was named coach at the ting ready to return means one thing: Cunningham is end of the 1961 season to succeed New York to discuss ways of "Mr. Werblin is expected to promoting the young professional iammy Baugh, whose contract going to have to leave the walls of 22 Oak La., Rum- make some important announce- league through the various news had another year to run. Turner son, and get back to punching the keys. ments next week about the gen media, After almost eight weeks backed away from GETTING THE BALL ROLLING — Arthur R. Morin, left. Mount Holly, state com- iral manager and tte coach." One of the points made was (hat .David A. "Sonny" Werblin of he AFL teams might do better the "machine with the keys," where does one mander, and John &. Mclaughlin, Oaklyn, state junior vice commander, open up) New York, a director of the Mon- 'rom a publicity standpoint if the start? Certainly activity has been plentiful from all Sunday's final day action in the VFW state doubles bowling tournament at Middle- mouth Park race track in New players kept their shirts tucked town Lsnes. More than 200 teams competed in the tournament which was hold March Jersey, is one of five men who 10 into their pants and wouldn't let angles, including wrestling tournaments to the days ago bought the bankrupt heir socks fall down. popular annual local, county and state basketball 16-17 and* 23-24. American Football League club A representative for a major tournaments. for $1 million. ick magazine said his editor Today this column is going to be like flying with A bankruptcy petition by the >ften chose National Football Midgets Open debt-ridden club had been filed league pictures over those of the a hedge-hopping pilot. Those who have flown with Don Trotter Quits by Harry Wismer; president and because of the sloppy dress this type of pilot will know what we are talking about. Old Bridge principal stockholder who listed )f the AFL players. We'll hop all over, from one subject to another without liabilities at 51,341,000 and asset "The NFL has a rale that shirts at $271,999. must be secured so they don't fly any plan of preparation whatsoever. Fasten your safe As Basketball Coach Slate Sunday loose," one of the league's publici- ty belts, and get ready to take off. y men said. "I think we are sup- We were informed by our sidekick, Jim Sulli- RUMSON — The resignation of George Giffin was appointed to OLD BRIDGE - Two New x>sed to have the same rule, but Rutgers Meets e haven't been as strict about van, that the New Jersey State Interscholastic Donald Trotter from his duties succeed him. York State auto-midget sensations as varsity basketball coach was The board offered its congratu- from White Plains, will spear- enforcing it. Athletic Assosciation basketball finals at the At- accepted with "deep regret and lations to the varsity team for Its head the quarter-million dolla Navy Saturday "Maybe the AFL will do better lantic City Convention Hall were almost as suc- appreciation" by the Rumson- successful season, with 18 wins value of ARDC racing machin our shirts don't fly loose so Fair Haven Regional High School and three defeats. ery in this Sunday afternoon' much." cessful as the Miss America contest. We under- inaugural races on the lightning In Lacrosse Davey Moons Board of Education last night. Appointments and salaries for r stand this was one of the most successful basket- Mr. Trotter has coached the coaching positions for spring ast Old Bridge speedway. NEW BRUNSWICK — Gettin ball tournaments in the 45 years of marking history school's basketball teams for 12 sports were approved by the Bobby Albert voted the most the jump On its sister teams, th Iovine Moves into the books of NJSIAA. Attendance expecta- years. board last night. They are: improved driver in the 1962 Rutgers lacrosse team will open Baseball: Coach, Clifford Ap- ARDC circuit, will drive the Art its season Saturday against de- tions was off somewhat, but still more than 13,000 plegate, $400; assistant coach, Eichman Offenhauser and Ray fending national champion NVy 18 Horses To fans watched the two-day finals. This was the Harold Lorme, $200, and Thomas Brown, feature race winner here in Annapolis, Md. first shot at the A. C. Convention Hall, and it was Collins to Head Botti, $275. in 1961, will be seated in the Ed Bob Naso, the youthful Rutgen Freehold Oval Track: Coach, Thomas Bain, Darrell Offy, making their pres- coach, is hoping for better thing! one that officials of the association were moving $400; assistant, Alan Lyster, $275. ence felt in the mammoth open- this year than last season's 4-1 FREEHOLD— Horseman Pat Bowl Down Iovine has moved IB head to along with like an experiment in chemistry. The Tennis: Coach, Frank Curry, ing day 2 o'clock motor speed- mark, but at this point he'll set- r Freehold Raceway to complete $200. est. tle for a "good show" at Navy. only real complaint schools can offer might be the the job of geting the stock in Cancer Tourney Pre-race favorite Bert Brook "They have most of their per- Intramurals, Mr. Giffin, $150. shape for this year's campaign. distance some teams were forced to travel. How- of New Britain, Conn., I960 fea- sonnel back from last year' A contract to transport spring He has eight otter at Yonkers ever, when one thinks of this location as the. finest MIDDLETOWN — Raymond E. ture race monarch, will handli team," Naso remarked. "I be- teams to and from appointments Raceway waiting to race. Collins, 85 Cherry Tree Farm was awarded to the VanNortwick the chores of the 1962 champion- lieve they'll be favored to wi in the state, distance should be secondary. Just "It's the latest start this stable Rd., has accepted the chairman- Co., which bid $952 against R. ship Hennessy maintained Often- the national title again." keep in mind the facilities of 1961. It was re- has ever had," assistant train- ship of the Bowl Down Cancer Helfrich & Sons Co., $1,065. hauser. New Englanders Kinj Naso expects Rutgers to scori Tournament for the April Cru- er Bernie Cohen was saying ported that the venture to A.C. was a financial jThe board agreed, as a matter Carpenter, Bill Randall, Ronni well, but isn't quite as certai sade of the American Cancer So- while drying off a horse that success. We also were informed that Red Bank's of'budget-trimming, to a policy Evans and Johnny Coy pace the about his defense. Roma.. Horos- ciety, Monmouth County Chapter. out-of-state challengers, zewski, a senior, Rooked good i just finished six spins of the Frank J. Pingitore, president of the association, which would require athletes to Freehold strip. purchase their own shoes, except A 1 o'clock warm-up session the goal the last three gamei turned in tremendous job as top association offi- for football. Mass purchasing, last year and has impressed "We took our stock to Roxan- is listed for the early arrivals at Jimmy Doyla cial, and it could be classed with the performance through the school, will effect re- workouts to date. If he can do i, Del. in the off season and the Rt. 18 racing grounds, fol- didn't have much luck in get- of Bob Verga, who kept Shore basktball in some duced prices. At present, some lowed by three 10-lap heats, 12-lap an adequate job and Naso Jfc shoes are bought by the school. come up with help for Bob Flow- ting the horses ready because of consolation action, a special five- rough winter there," ex- light. lap helmet clash of the early er, the only experienced defense- man, Rutgers could show grea claimed Bernie shrugging his SPEAKING OF RED BANK — Just what is in the victors and the featured 25-lap shoulders. main event attraction. improvement. frying pan with a football coach for the 1963 season? Monmouth Ups "Nobody has to tell us that the NASCAR stock car racing de- Naso expects the attack trio o According to our grapevine information, Bab Glisson John Valestra, Roger Matthews training at Freehold has been iuls here on Sunday afternoon. excellent. The Yonkers Raceway and an applicant from Glisson's home state of Pennsy Mark over .500 April 21, with the hard-top speed and Ron Yurcak is expected to ive any opponent trouble. results prove it. Each day a duels opening at 2:00 o'clock. number of Freehold-trained were the applicants going down to the wire. News Prior to meeting Navy, the horses show up in the pay-off also leaked out that two of Glisson's top backers are In Pin League Scarlet will take advantage o positions," Cohen said. superintendent Gregg Hibbs and principal Royal Hintze. Boat Number the spring recess to hold practice WEST LONG BRANCH- The games against Cornell, Wiiliams, Iovine, a Brooklynite who does As we get the pieces of the puzzle, and as they Monmouth College varsity bowl- Amherst and the University of his own driving, is one of the ing team went over the .500 Regulations Massachusetts. top horseman in the sport. He drop Into their proper position, we get the picture mark, 40-38, last Sunday by de- has won driving championships Meanwhile, the baseball team of an unforgetting group of Board of Education feating Stevens Tech, two games it several tracks and has had Are Announced which does not open until April to one, in a Eastern Intercol- lis share of victories at Yonkers members who disfavor Bob Glisson because of a 4, will hold double workouts all legiate Bowling Conference match TRENTON— Regulations per- md Roosevelt. money situation in which the board made it more week and will have practice held at the Bowl-o-mat Lanes in taining to the New Jersey Boat Iovine, who has been driving unpleasant lor the school system than Glisson and Newark. The scores were: Mon- Numbering Law were announced games against Hofstra, Princeton and Newark Rutgers. !or 12 years, is noted for his mouth, 799, 796, 934 ; Stevens, 816, today by H. Mat Adams, Com- ability to thread a needle in a his staff of coaches. They were asking a small Crew coach Bill Leavitt ha 752, 821. missioner of the New Jersey De- ace. That's an old cliche around amount (raise) as extra compensation for their Raymond E. Collins ordered double workouts on the Benny Faret The Hawks were led to victory partment of Conservation and Raritan in preparation for the harness track for a driver who work. At the time, the board just couldn't see it. Matthew J. Gil], Red Hill Rd., by team captain John Gauvreau Economic Development. opening of the rowing season can squeeze through the smallest is prize chairman. who bowled a 566 for the three The regulations were recom- DIE IN TITLE BOUTS — Four IH fact, the whole package was presented the way April 13. opening. Tentative plans, with single games. Rich Lesko was high for mended by the State Boat Regu deaths have been recorded Cohen kept chattering away. it should have been, and certainly the coaches did easy to follow rules have been Stevens with a 601 series. There lation Commission, and are con in ring title bouts now with "Pat is kind of miffed at his not get the backing from its athletic sources, from formulated which will govern a are four matches to go on the cerned with both tidal and ron late start, but he has enough the chairman of the athletic committee on down. Head Pin Tournament opening season which shows Fairleigh tidal waters. They also include Final CYO Cage the death of Davey Moore good stock this year to top his April 20 at Harmony Bowl. The Dickinson of Rutherford in first provisions for boat numbering, featherweight champ, follow- earnings of last year which ran So a new coach was signed, and already he has tournament runs for the week- place. The Hawk keglers, who reporting of accidents, safety pre- ng his recent bout in Los better than $80,000," moved along to a new location. And the board's ends of April 20-21 and 27-28. are in their first year of or- cautions, boat races and regattas, Loop Standings Angeles. Moore succumbed "We expect big things from coaching problem is at hand. We think it is about Prizes will awarded for high ganized play, are only half game warning lights and related mai .w Mojo," Bernie said. The seven- score in four groups; senior men out of the first division. ters. St. Mary's ...'. 14 of injuries when he was Icay- year-old pacer has a 2:02 clock- time Red Bank's Board of Education members ac- and women, junior teenagers and The Conference is still buzzing A copy of the regulations may St. Agnes 10 oed by Sugar Ramos of Cuba ing. quired an acquaintance with their coaches. bantam children. be obtained by addressing a re- over the fine achievment turned Holy Family 8 Others who died in title I'm a Gander (2:01 1-5), Mi- We were told more than eight weeks ago that a in by Monmouth's George Schil- quest to the Bureau of Naviga- St. Ann's :.... 8 chael E. Diamond (2:»3 1-5), Pat tion, New Jersey Department of St. James 7 fights were Benny Parst, wel- coach, would be engaged from the outside. That means linger last week. The Totowa boy Hogan (2:30 2-5), and Wealthy MC Sailors had a 274 which represents the Conservation and Economic De- St. Catherine's « ter champ, a year ago; Jim- Widower (2:03) are other top- outside of the system. We are of the opinion that this single high game of the year in velopment, Trenton 25, New Jer- Holy Cross 5 my Doyle, welterweight who flight pacers that Iovine says is not a wise move on the board's part, if this is really the E. I. B. C. For accomplish- sey. St. Joseph's 0 1 vill win their share of races this To Compete succumbed after being the play. Certainly the entire board, including its ing this feat, Schillinger will re- Results rear. ceived the "century award" for A total of 19,563 pacers ani St. Mary's 69, St. Ann's 61 knocked out by Sugar Ray athletic chairman, realize Glisson is a man of football. Cohen closed the day's chit- In 12 Regattas bowling 100 pins over his aver- trotters started at least once i St. Mary's 63, St. James 39 Robinson in 1947 and Walter :hat with, "We'll be here for the He has a knowledge of the game. He eats and sleeps age, a patch for rolling 19 strikes 44,626 harness races durinj Holy Cross 53, St. Joseph's 42 freehold meeting in August and Croot, batam, kayoed by the sport. We admired his coaching ability when he WEST LONG BRANCH- The in a row, an award for having 1962. St. Ann's 88, St. Joseph's 50 'revisions to train the stock here crack Monmouth College sailing the high game in the Conference Jimmy Barry in London in was at the helm. We watched him at work both at next winter will be made im- team has announced a 12-meet this year, and a trophy from 1897. mediately after the end of the practice sessions and at Saturday afternoon games. His spring schedule starting with a the Bowl-o-mat Lanes for join- season." personal touch with the players was terrific. Many a octagonal on March 30 at King's the 250 club. Point. time he went out of his way to assist a gridder in ob- This Sunday, Monmouth wil The Hawk team, one of the take on Stevens Tech once again Studio Couch taining a scholarship for future education, and foot- finest in the east, will host two • Brawn ball. For those little items, and many others, the board meets on April 14 and 21. On • Toast April 14, Monmouth will host the • Green might be lightly informed. Little extra items of that First Annual Steve Holland Me- Patriots Widen category certainly were well worth the amount of morial Regalta which will be money the coaches requested back in those "football held in honor of the late Mon- Bowling Lead mouth College student who dismissal" days a couple of years back. passed away upon completion of TOTOWA - The Philadelphia The schedule of Soliinar Peri- WHAT HAPPENS NOW? Middletown Town- a summer sailing vacation in the Patriots widened its lead to four ods, as printed below, has been Carribbean. Competing against games in the Eastern Profession taken from John Alden Knight's] ship High School is also varsity football coach the- Hawks will be Columbia al Bowling League at Gladiators Solunar Tables to help plan your seeking. This everyone, knows. However, do they Princeton, Rutgers, Villanova Arena this week, as Horace Walk days so that you will be fishing know that Red Bank High just might be without and Stevens. i er's253 enablmed them to trounce in good territory or hunting in On April 21 Monmouth wil Baltimore for three points. good cover. The major periods '49.95 Glisson? He is a football man, as mentioned be- are shown in bold face type. host the Middle Atlantic Inter In one of the highlights of the These begin at the times shown fore, and we know that Middletown is quite inter- Sailing Association meet, facing afternoon from the Rt. 46 arena and last for an hour and a half THE Rutgers, Stevens, and Princeton John Germann of Albany strung ested in obtaining his services as head coach. or two hours thereafter. The Returning for the Monmouth seven strikes for a 276 opener, Probably those same Red Bank board members who minor periods, shown in regular team will be veteran sailors Jim then added a 255 for a two-game RAILROAD type, are of somewhat shorter were up in arms at Glisson, would say — "Good." Wiencke, Chuck Mulford, Roger total of 531. This was two pins duration. But is it? When there is something in a system, Smith, Mary McMurray, Chuck short of Vince Lucci's league high WAREHOUSE no matter if it is a car motor or a faculty, why not Gunderson, Bob Chuy, Jay Wall of 533. TODAY Bob Dawson, Cathy tsakson, Joan keep it there as long as it is operating properly? Germann was engaged in one A.M. P.M. Spaeth, Corley Me Evoy, Erin of the most thrilling matches of Minor Major Minor Major OUTLET Now we can just sit on the bench and watch to see Keaveney, Ed Moro, Dwigh the entire season, when he start- 6:40 12:30 7:15 1:00 Fudge, and Margaret Burke. 241 Highway 35, Eatontown what school board is the best quarterback in call- ed with six in a row, as Buffalo's TOMORROW Joat south of KAtontown Circle Sam Borrasca steamrollered the OPEN DAILV 9:M lo 9:30 ing the Glisson play. A.M. P.M. 1.INCHOFT ItKrtlKATION pins for seven consecutive. The SAT. 9:30 to 6:30 WOMKN'S BOWI.IMi Minor Major Minor Major March surprise! Philip H. Iselin and Townsend B. Mlddlftmvn I-nnps pin total, Borrasca, 259 and Ger- Call 542-2020 W 7:40 1:30 8:15 2:00 Holmrte] EIBO ',) mann, 255. Martin,' Monmouth Park bigwigs, are now bigger wigs BrlRadoon U Frank's Bnrber Shop - Ml Gene Vetrone, of the New Jer- in football. As many times as the Titans were men- Uncroft Inn 10' KnsbB-Mlil. Nat'l Hank 4(1 sey Giants, began with two tioned being up for sale, how many county residents Brinlt'B l-'inr Meata „. :!S spares, then strung nine consecu- Wasanrtrtnn n !R SAVE AND EARN would have solved the issue by saying, "Martin and Lfncrnft Gulf Ti tive strikes, catching eight pins Uncroft E^fm _ M1 on his last ball, for a fine 277, Iselin will be Titans' owners." Just how football will Llncroft Phiunnrj in GOO Club — Dot Penny H!l pacing the home slate squad to a mix in with racing interests with these gents is some- 177— 502; 1 r, 1. Wl, lfcl -r>27- '^)G 185—SIS; I'M, 100, 110— 500: 1128 total in its opening game. TOPS WORLD OUTDOOR POLE VAULT RECORD—John thing to watch. And then we can't forget the third Btlrllong IRS, 151. 17fi—.M7 Results of the day were: Phila- 4 Pennel of Northeast Louisiana University flips over the member and familiar figure around Monmouth Park, delphia Patriots, 3; Baltimore 185 Club — Allen Aszman 1H5, 1R7. bar at Memphis, Tenn., to better tha world's outdoor Davis "Sonny" Werblin. Sonny is a real nice guy, but 197, 1D1. Dot Penny 1M, 102, 1B9, Tigers, 0; Buffalo Bisons 2, Al- 30S, 115. 20(1; Peg Buiilonu 200, 1M, bany Eagles 1: New_Jersey. po[e yault.-recordr His vault of I6"feef,'3 'inches, was 1S«; Eleanor Mcnzionano 187,' 193, 1S7, we'd rather just sit back and listen to his most gra- 185; Carolyn Benson 186; Bobble Giants 2, Washington Colonials 1, one-half inch higher than tha record held by Pentti Lawrence 211, 18!); Marcella Cassldy cious wife soothe us over to "The Sunny Side of the 1117; Virginia Wolf IBS; Suo Dlaa 185, and in the featured match, tele- Nilcula of Finland. It was the first time Pennel had bet- Long Branch • Keyport • Holmdel 188: Mary Hopklrn 100, Wilrr Allen cast, Boston Indians 2, New York 181; Marge VanPell 1S5: Oakhursl • Mlddletown (See HY-SPOTTING SPORTS on Next Page) lluemlg 110. Hawks 1. tered 16 feet in competition. Baseball "BED BAMC.REGKTER ' " Wet, Jfcdf 27, Split? and KalineV HR Giv^ l^ Misses 2-1 Triumph over Yankees Hawk Nine Has By ASSOCIATED PRESS collarbone he suffered in a game PAUL A. ALBRECHT Eight Lettermen Al Kaline, enjoying his best against the Yankees last season. spring training season, hit a It also was his 20th hit in 53 at bats for a .373 average. WEST LONG BRANCH - Th« coach is rebuilding hi* team homer in the sixth inning yester- 1963 Monmouth College varsity around the experience tad skill '- The Sycamore Lanes presents each lady a hand Don Mossi backed up Kaline's day to give the Detroit Tigers a baseball team has completed two of his eight veterans; Pitcher* some trophy for rolling a 200 or better game in ieagu< homer with some fine pitching. 2-1 victory over the New York weeks of extensive practice pre- Don Rooney, Frank Brogna, Dave The Yanks got their lon» run in play. Those who roll more than one such game ovei Yankees at Fort Lauderdale. paratory to its season opener Jones, and Don Pitcher, first the seventh on singles Roger It was the fifth homer of the against Montclair State College basemen George Alinauer, left the season receive a nice looking car bumper sticke: Maris, Hector Lopez ;and Phil exhibition season for the veteran Saturday at Montclair. fielder Joel Bolton and right for each one after the first. This season alone, th< Linr. It broke a string at 16 outfielder who apparently has fielder Ed Henderson. scoreless innings for Mossi. The Hawks, coached by former Bruno boys have given away more than 100 trophie: fully, recovered from the broken University of Buffalo football Rooney, the sophomore sensa- and a like number of car bumper stickers. For th Kansas City replaced Baltimore star, Godfrey "Buzz'1 Buzzelli, tion from Freehold, < won eight men, a trophy is given for each 250 or better score. at the top of the American retain eight lettermen from the and lost one last year. In ad- Norcross Named League exhibition standings by 1962 squad, which boasted a dition he had 79 strikeouts in These games have not been as numerous as the 200s defeating Washington, 7-6, at season record, the best in Mon- 69 innings. Dave Jones, from have been for the ladies. Daytona Beach. It was the A's mouth College baseball history. Long Branch, is beginning his Pro-Manager Of fourth straight victory and gave The Sycamore Friday Teenagers league has a few Coach Buzzelli is faced with fourth seasor as a Hawk mounds- them an 11-4 record. the serious problem of overcom- man. Frank Brogna, Monmouth bowlers who will be heard from in the not too distant Rutgers' links Rookie Dick Green doubled ing the loss of three key players junior from Neptune, while being future. Bobby Walker is the average leader with 164, home the winning run as the A's from last year's winning team. an experienced pitcher can also four pins better than Tom Barry. Rudy Esposito owns NEW BRUNSWICK- The ap- pulled the game out with a four- Catcher Bill Dolan, NAIA Little play the outfield position with pointment of Monte Norcross, run uprising in the ninth. Green Ail-American, who batted .500 effectiveness. the highest individual game, a 235. Mike Hull just golf professional at the Metuchen had three hits, including a triple TRIES NEW GADGET — Ryns Duran, newcomer to th* shortsthop George GUI, who bat- Joe Bolton, the returning left missed topping this with a 233. Walker is also the only Golf and Country Club, to be and two doubles. Philadelphia Phillies, uses wheel designed to strengthen ted a handsome .450 and the fielder, from North Haledon, bat- fleet-footed center fielder, Barry man to roll a triple double century totalj 605. pro-manager of the Rutgers Unl Four-run rallies in the ninth the throwing arm at their camp in Clearwater, Fla. ted a lusty .345 last season and versity Golf Course was an also brought the Los Angeles An- Ayers, were lost to the Hawks led the Hawks in horn* runi With The Friday Night Women's league is a bit tight nounced yesterday by John L. gels a 4-2 victory over San Fran- Duren, a fireball reliever, waj obtained from the Lot through graduation. Therefore the 5. Ed Henderson, right fielder the top with the American International Bowling Cor Swink, vies president and treas- cisco at Phoenix end the Houston Angeles Angels. from Freehold, posted a .339 bat- urer of the State University. poration holding a slim half-game bulge over the First Colts a 6-4 triumph over the Chi- ting average last spring. Round- Norcross was recommended for cago Cubs at Mesa. Cage Trophy ing out the nucleus of this year's squad will be first baseman, Merchants National Bank. The Little Silver Cleaners the appointment by the Universi In other games Cleveland de- Fullmer, Tiger May Meet George Alznauer, who bitted .392 are two games out Baynton's Linoleum is that fourth ty Golf Committee. feated Boston, 5-3, at Tucson, the in the limited action he saw list Los Angeles Dodgers walloped Awarded To place team, and also the team holding high game and One of the leading professionals year, and third baseman Chip Pittsburgh, IM, at Fort Myers, in the state, Norcross officially O'Connor who batted .389 for the series with a 696 and a 1,912. Philadelphia trounced St. Louis, In Nigeria in Third Bout will take over operations at the NIT Champs Hawk varsity last year. - Globe Petroleum is next in line and followed University course May 20, al< 16-8, at Clearwater, Milwaukee NEW YORK (AP)-The mana- moter Jack Solomons and then Coach Buzzelii, who is assisted though he will serve in an ad- edged Cincinnati, 7-5, at West NEW YORK (AP) - The East- by Al's Mobile Service, Sycamore Lanes, Mike's gers of middleweight champion go on to Lagos, Nigeria. by the Monmouth wrestling and visory capacity starting immedi- Palm Beach, Minnesota blanked ern College Athletic Conference Dick Tiger and ex- champion cross country coach, Art Obetg, Toy Center, Shrewsbury Pharmacy and Majestic ately. The course, which is open Baltimore, 2-0, at Orlando and The Nigerian government, awarded its major college basket- the Chicago White Sox nipped the Gene Fullmer and promoter backed by the press and a public ball trophy Monday to Provi- has never suffered a losing tea- Amusements. The Majestic sponsors do not find to the public, recently was eje- Norm Rothschild will leave today New York Mets, 2-1, at St. Peters- campaign, has expressed deter- dence, winner of the National In- son at Monmouth. In fact his it amusing way down at the bottom, but as Fred panded from nine to 18 holes and for Nigeria.to explore the pos- burg on Ron Hansen's single with mination to land the title fight— vitation Tournament, The small team* have compiled a plus .600 ia expected to open June 1. sibilities of holding the third Bruno pointed out, someone must wind up in last the bases loaded in tihe fourth. the first ever for Nigeria. Tiger college award for the season went percentage over the past live Norcross, who has been at Tiger-Fullmer fight there. years. Last year's squad finished place. Who knows, maybe next year this team will A fumble by third baseman is the idol of his Nigerian home- to Northeastern, Mass. Metuchen seven years, is a They will stop in London to- third in batting for NAIA schools, Steve Boros opened the gates for land. They were named by a confer- reverse the standings. native of Hightstown, a graduate morrow to pick up British pro- wih a .140 average, and had a Houston's winning rally in the Solomons and Rothschild, ex- ence committee. Lil Regan is the big reason why that leading team of Peddie School, and lives in perienced promoters, probably fielding percentage ol .MS for an Edison. ninth as the Colts tied the Mets Providence finished with a 24-4 eight place finish in tha NAIA, Is up there. Lil has the only average ia the 160s, 162, for first place in the National will co-promote the fight if it is record, and in the NIT defeated Prior to his appointment at which Includes SOD member col- League standings at 10-7. Milwau- Candy Spots made. two of the teams, Canlsius and and the high individual set of 576. Jay Bruno is the Metuchen, he served as assist- leges. kee made only five hits to 16 for "The chances are extreme y y^^ Hft> ^j n8(1 It second high average gal with 155 and is in the same ant pro at the Trenton Country The hawks will play • total of the Reds, but capitalized on Ken good Chat the fight will be held In during the regular season. The place for high series honors with 536. Flo Tyler Club, the Peddie Golf Course and Hunt's eight bases on balls and To be in Shape Nigeria," said Jersey Jones, Tl 17 games for the 1961 season. Friars also hold a decision over The schedule: the one to beat for high individual single game, with the North Jersey Country Club. two wild pitches. ger's American manager. "The St. Joseph's, Pa. the eastern team In addition to being responsible Nigerians apparently are mote im VABSITY BASEBALL SCHEDULE A grand slam homer by Bob For Fk Derby that went farthest in the NCAA. March a 220. for the management of the golf than ready to beat any financial Sadowsfci gave the Angels their MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Candy Northeastern finished with • 21- 30 Hontclilr (Utt A JJ:OO Noon course, Norcross may conduct offer for the fight. They have a Collti* Averagewise, the Monday Coffee and Donut loop victory over the Giants. Another Spots, the favorite for the $100,- 6 record, including the NCAA In golf clinics at the University's stadium seating 60,000 in Ibandan _' St. Ptter'a Oollwi H 1:00 P.M. is a tight race. Shirley Sincius is the current leader homer, this one by rookie pitcher 000 Florida Derby at Gulfstream which it lost to Wittenberg In the 10 NlclMli Oolltii of state-wide branches during the and are out to raise nearly $500,- But, Admin. H );MF.M. Gordie Seyjried with one on, ac- Park Saturday, has served notice quarter-final round. That was the with 154. This may stand as Laverne Hill is rolling months the course will be closed 000 to back the fight. U- Jonnton Kit* CO11<|« counted for the Indians' triumph on prospective rivals that he will only small college defeat for the (Vwmoat) H 13:00 Noon along in second place at a 151 clip, one pin per game (approjdatemly early November 1« Olutbaio St4t» over the Red Sox, Vic Power's not be lacking on condition. "Jenson wants to see the setup Huskies all year. CoH«»«, A »:00 PM. to March). first 1963 homer, coupled with in Nigeria and get a better pic- O) "BtnomlWd CfeUtft better than Ethyl McGuire. But then, a three-pin-per- Rex Ellsworth's undefeated colt The committee said other can- •"(r'aunwr "* A u:oo A.M. Golt units may be Inserted In Jack Kralick's six-Wt pitching, ture of the financial situation. I game lead can vanish in a couple of weeks. was asked Sunday to go seven didates considered in the major 3? the physical education cur- was all the Twins needed to told him that this is all for real >BU«!n(M4 Callw H 1:00 P.M. furlongs and responded by work- college division were Canlsius, riculums at Rutgers College of whitewash the Orioles. and that the money is there for (1 DUN) H 11:00 All. Betty Menne has come the closest to a 600 set ing that distance in one minute, Connecticut, Fordham, NY, St. South Jersey, Newark Rutgers, the fight." a NMWJC suu cants* B 1:00 P.M. with a 568 total, seven pins better than Shirley has Tommy Davis belted a triple 24 2-5 seconds, which is seconds Francis, Penn State, Pittsburgh, Douglass College and the Men's 4 Rutnn lMv«nlty and two doubles and drove in faster than numerous races at the Fullmer already has expressed St. Joseph's, Seton Hall and VII- (Nmitt) 101*0 A.M. done to date. Jane Knoll is the proud owner of the Colleges here. interest and said he will go there T J H 1:00 P.M. almost made it the day she rolled a 219. Mabel picked pky to New Jersey, although In Dodgers fanned nine to boost his sive with his first six furlongs in Tiger became the second Ni were Buffalo, Moravian, Philadel- 16 Trenton gut* Callts* A 3:00 P.M. _ 19S7, 1958 and 1959 he qualified spring strike out total to 27 in 22 1:11, extremely fast over the race geria ever to win a world title IS *Ttw Klnt'l Collet" A 8:00 P.M. the correct time for her game. She was entered ia the phia T e x 111 e, Potsdaine State, 18 nevuk COUtf • or for the National P.G.A. tourna- innings. track this year and again faster when he trounced Fullmer at Springfield, Susquehanna and KnctiHtrlnc A 1:00 P.M. Heart Fund tournament at the time. ment. Last year, he and partner San Francisco last Oct. 23. He DenotM Cmtrai AUutto Coll«t« Cm- The Phillies trailed the Car- than the time of many races at Wesleyan. tareno* Oftmt Jay Bruno comes in for a little first place hon- Lou Barbara lost 2 and 1-in the dinals, 8-5, before tying the score this distance. was named "fighter of the year" final of the New Jersey Pro-Pro by the Boxing Writers' Associa- ors in die Monday Social loop. Jay is the average on Johnny CaUison's three-run Candy Spots went the first best ball championship to Wes homer in the seventh. A seven quarter i.n 22 2-5 seconds, the half tion. In a return title fight, the Hy Spotting Sports leader with a 157 and the high individual single Ellis and Stan Mosel. run outburst in the eighth clinched mile in :45 3-5, then six furlongs two battled to a draw at Las game leader as well as a 218. Evelyn Schweitzer Norcross is married to the it for the Phils. in 1:11 and the seven-eights in Vegas Feb. 23. Rothschild pro- moted the two fights. — Continued — has an outside chance for the average lead, should former Irene Odell of James- 1:24 2-5. The work was listed by the dockers as "handily." Hogan "Kid" Bassey was Ni- Street." Mrs. Werblin was a former vocalist with a burg. The couple has three chil- Don Perkins of the Dallas she get real hot, with a current 151. Bernice Lock- dren — Carol, a sophomore at Bill Shoemaker, America's No. geria's first champion. He held Cowboys has gained exactly one famous band. Each year at the Iselin Roundup, it is wood holds the highest threesome among these la- Adelphi College; Karen, a stu- I jockey, who will ride Candy the banfamweight crown. He nowthis Werblin gal wh shakes the Joint like any of the top dles, 561. Bernice also has a 215 to her credit, just dent at Edison High School; and mile (1,760 yards) in his two Spots in the Derby, was in the coaches boxers for the Nigerian Kevin, 6. seasons of pro football. saddle for the Sunday trial. government. 10 popular sjngers, no matter what year it was. Mrs. one pin better than Hilda Peck's best. Werblin shook the house on many occasions at the Ise- The gals are back Tuesday morning for more cof- 9 lin roundup. "''"'' "* fee and doughnuts as they roll in this Tuesday league, 'New Look Cleveland Indians Club What happens next, Phil? How Is your back- by the same name. El Stewart is the average winnei field looking these days? Say Townsend, how is here, barring a complete collapse. Elly has a 152 go the line shaping up? Say "Sonny," do you have ing for her, six pins per game better than her neares Has Hopes of First Division Finish any contract troubles with these Titans? When rival. Her "nearest rival" is actually in the plural as are these New Yorkers going to train comes July? Irma McGovney, Bonnie Seley and Reggie Kiechlin ali EDITOR'S NOTE: This Is an- "I can see four or five spots BIRDIE likes to talk about th guy who hit .346 for Jackson How about Monmouth Park's infield? Now that have 148s. Bonnie Seley moves out in front in thi other in a series on the major where we need an improved sea- newcomers: ville last year and is being Wismer is out, just what are we doing with these single game picture with a 223 while Mary Jane Watersleague teams. Others will follow on. "Martinez (.287 at Jackson ticketed for center field. "He's a better ball player Titans? You must know that with Iselin, Martin is next with a 217. Reggie Kiechlin also makes Ellie on this page daily. "Pitching is a major problem ville last year) looks like he'i By WALTER JOHNS ,.. even when you got good going to make it. He has gooc right now," says Birdie, "than and Werblin connected with the Titans, Mon- take a back seat in the threesome battle with a 576 to Central Press Sports Editor ones. I think the concept of pitch- range and a good arm and Vada Pinson was when he first mouth County fans are going to be interested In came up. He throws well and Ellie's 563. TUCSON, Ariz.-Although he's ing has changed... they try to think he will hit as much ii runs well. If he makes mistakes the Titans more than before. In fact, Coach Vince been away from the American find rotation and take the bull- the major as he did in thi The nurses at Riverview Hospital, Red Bank, have in the outfield he's fast enough Lombard! and his Green Bay Packers might lose a League for 10 years, Birdie Ten- pen from there. I'd like to find a minors. their own little league in the afternoons and aredoing betts, the Indians' new manager, bullpen combo and then pick my to recover. I haven't seen a bet- little in the football ratings, on the local front, that "Alvis is a surprise to me. already is chirping happily about starters." ter ball player this spring in rather well. The old-time bowlers are, that is. Bar didn't think he was as good is. the club which finished sixth last In his early plan to play Arizona." hitter as he appears to be." bara Lawrence, the night supervisor, is so used to lead year, 16 games behind, after Martinez and Alvis, if it works The Indians acquired JOT Ad- Monmouth Park closes early in August. Conver- ing the gals that she has carried it over to the alleys leading the league as late as out, Birdie has to find a spot Alvis, who hit 25 homers anc cock over the winter and the sation could be recorded this way this year: "Say Phil, and is showing the way1 with a 151 average. Lucy Tri June 30. for Woody Held, who has that batted .319 at Salt Lake Citj needed power. Gone is Chuck last year and then had a brie! Essegian. Pitcher Jerry Walker how is attendance going?" Phil — "Here at Monmouth chine is second in line with a 149, but then climbs to Birdie, who plans to go with potent bat. And he will, for two new infielders. Max Alvis listen to Birdie: trial with the Indians at the eni was acquired in the deal. or at the new stadium?" "Say Townsend, how are mat- the top with a 539 series to Barbara's 529. Karen Kiley at third and Tony Martinez at "Held is going to play and of the season, says he has beei The catching is solid, accord- ters with you?" Townsend — "Who are you talking bothered by tenseness. He madi ing to Birdie, so the pitching heads the high game nurses with 223, also relegating short (at least at this stage) he can play the infield or out- says that "I know we're going three errors in one game thi gets top attention. about, Sunrise County or the Titans?" " 'Sonny,' who field. All I'm going to say is the boss to second place for a 212 game. to be a better club than last other day but still believes hi Sam McDowell, the boy won- do you like today?" 'Sonny' —"What race, here or The Women's Community Church League may be year.,. Maybe not at the start that if I can't find a place for is ready for the big show. der who hasn't quite made it the American Football League?" of the season but you play 162 we must have a terrific yet, pitched well in the Winter a two-team race from here to the wire. • At the last Birdie likes especially to talk You know this football situation with these Mon- games. about Vic Davalillo, the little League in Puerto Rico and he session, Shrewsbury Presbyterian and Red Bank could be ready. mouth County residents could really confuse the track "TOj Methodist 2 wound up tied for the lead. Four lengths Birdie and Mel Harder, the situation as far as sport writers are concerned. No behind is the third place Trinity Episcopal. Trinity was pitching coach. •-•> high on Floyd Weaver was 10-10 matter how used it could get with the two the best team of the season for one night so far. This with Salt La' y, and Wil- sports and the mree sportsmen, it sure is a tribute to was the night it rolled the highest team threesome of fred Siebert, i won 15 for the county to know that we have these men right in 1,890. Charleston. From what J hear about our backyard. From this corner, we say the best of The Little Silver Embury Methodist contingent them," said Birdie, "they must luck to Iselin, Martin and Werblin and the Titans. All is next in line, just ahead of St. Anthony's and be close." we can say to the Titan gridders is: Don't worry about Congregation Beth Shalom. The Beth Shalom gals Other young pitchers who may break in are Tommy John, a your pay check this coming season. You can't miss have the distinction of having rolled the only team lefthander who was with Charles- with this trio! Go, go, Titans. game over 700 — a 713, and also, of being the bot- ton and Jacksonville last year We're not completely back In the saddle at tom team in the first division. The bottom six and Enrique Gazmuri, the young Cuban refuges who came to the this date, but sure would like to extend our thanks teams are Red Bank Methodist 1, Fair Haven Nativ- U.S. via rowboat. to Harry, Jackson, Toby, Jim, Harold, Harry, Tom, ity, St James 2 and 1, and Red Bank Presbyterian Dick Donovan, the 20-game Bill, Art, Joe and all the other members of the 2 and 1, in this order. winner last year, was belted pretty good the other day but Register crew who kept the sports rolling. Special The average race is an interesting one with Fran figures to be a solid type. Gary thanks has to go to Jim Hogan, editor; Harold Nichols and Helen Braney tied for the lead with 154s. Bell, Jim Perry, Barry Latman Kelly, general manager, and Harry Pennington, Eliie Stewart appears again with a third place 152. nd Mudcat Grant form the mechanical boss, for their co-operation and gener- nucleus unless the young pitch- Lois Juliano and Thelma Johnson round out the 150 ers can break in. osity while we were on the sidelines. gals with 151 each. The odd thing here is that not one In the outfield Willie Kirkland Hedge-hopping is over for today. Maybe of these gals is in the high game and series picture. as been working hard but his arm still is not in shape. Gene we'll do a little more hopping tomorrow. Ethel Lansdowne is the high individual game gal with Green figures to be a utility a 230. Peg Brophy is on the top rung of the individual Jayer and can hit the ball. before you buy or build, see . . . series ladder with a 539, just two pins better than Jane Walter Bond came along last year and Tito Francona is solid. Kroll's best effort. These gals will go right down to A new outfield star could be MARINE VIEW the wire before deciding who will take home the top M Luplow, who had such a fine prizes. season last year. Birdie says SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION that "if Luplow continues to im The ninth annual New Jersey Natural Gas Com- irove he should be a very valu. "TWO OFFICES TO SERVE YOV" ible player for us." pany Handicap Tournament, doubles and singles events, MAIN OFFICE Branch Office Being looked at in the spring was begun at the Sycamore Lanes last Sunday. This 874 Highway 35 games is infielder Billy Consolo, Atlantic Highlands was .the. largest Jn- the nine-year-history-of the- event, signed-aa a free-agent. He was (Five Corners) JJ First Avenue 105 individuals having their fling at the pins, all em- 1th the Jacksonville club after MIDDLETOWN ployees of the company. The team event will be held service in the big leagues, lirst OS 1-2400 291-0100 1th the Ked Sox. at the same place April 21. 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Johnion. hetvy lalary to Personnel furnished, private entrance, utilltlei in- duty trailer. quire addition of two laboratory OP ASBURV PARK rRAi)D IN your old ruranur* mm no cluded, across from Ft. Monmouth Hos- Call 842-3061. LKVTITT & SONS, Ir c, Rt. 130. L.vit- technician!. High ichool science bacK- PHILIP J. BOWERS & CO. down payment and let * DCW parlor 26' open skiff with 115 h.p. Chrysler town, N\J, USED OBSANS or dining room let ai'ialt pricei. Wit- plUl, 138 Main St., Oceapport. 1B60 METRO twn-rioor hardtop. S350. Crown. W50. »round uid/or experlenci in an or- JR» Tone. Cabinet -J528. Doctor1! of- ganic chemical research or dtvtlop- Ham Utf fnmllura Inc.. Hwy 35, THREE-BEDROOM APARTMENT — Radio, heater. 30 miles per gallon, good 24* Clayton Hardtop, 135 h.p. gray OFFICE ASSISTANT — OUR 69TH VEAR Hlllel * Davis Spinet Fiano 48s. Mlddletown, BH 1-3213, optD BTtslDgt Furni dependable, economical. LI 2.1M9. marine V-8. flee, Hazlet area. Writ* "A.H.". Bo: ment. laboratory pr»ferre<1. Hammoad £xtravolce Organ (new) i9& Ished. »S5 per month. UUlltlu In- 811, Rpd Bank. till I p,'E ' eluded' * •. 10-"8 CCatherini e SL.. Eed Bank. 1858 FORD TRUCK — F-700. 12' lt>' Lyman, 100 h.p. gray marine. of/in complete well rounded' Hammond Chord Orfan S-6 &d&. 787-2273 or 787-1666. Real Estate service, Conn Spinet Organ _... 656, WE BUY AND SELL anytiunj and THREE-ROOM unfurnlsnea aputmeou. lulated box, excellent condition. pOCTOIt'S OFFICE Secretary-re- LABORATORY TRAINEES everything. O.ve tb« ttlghut pricei. 787-4037 1956 — US' cnbin Bklff, 132 h.p. Chrya- ceptLonlst. SeSenn d resumresumee off llfi aelllni. leulm, homes, apartments, Lowrey Spinet Organ 750, Eicellent locauun. Atlantic Highlands, tlonl s to BoB x 661661 , Red BBank. Expaniion also creates opportunity for land and commercial properties. Baldwin Spinet Organ 750. Call William Lett Furniture. Inc., Hwy. J84 to »8S, all utilltlei. 29I-14M. 1KS4 OLDSMOBILE — 98. Slarfiie con- ler Crown motor, manual electric bilge trainees. High school (tienee back- Red Bank and Uonmouth County areas. Hammond U-3 Spinet Organ 799 35, HicMletown 8H 1-3311 Open an pump, Monel ahafl and gas tanks, freoh THREE ROOMS FURNISHED — Utlll- vertlble. "i'TUton Rd., Chapel Hill NEED MONBy FOR Easter expensei ground with chemistry and mtAti pre- SALES AND SERVICE nlngft till 9 p.m. Farms. SH 1-6122. water cooling system, Periersen hull, Btart earning an Incomf immediately, ferred. ties, parking, adults,' no pels, Phone two small berths. CA 9-2021. Avon Cosmetics has vacancies foi PHILIP J. BOWERS & CO. RENTAL AKD INSTRUCTION UAS3AGE EQUIf&UOOT — For reel 741.2688 after & or weekends. or tale. Fre* delivery. SOUTH JKRSBT 1956 TWO-DOOR FORD — Six cylin- _. SBABEAVER — Cabin Cruller. cnpable women. Call SH M343 or write WALTER S. OVERTON Open Dallr Till 0 — Saturday TU1 6:30 der, itanJard shift. Please call after Mrs, MB-rgaret Qulotta, P. O, Box 190, SURGICAL. SH 7-2611 FOUR ROOMS AND BATH — Opposite 6 p.m. 787-5103; 1S5 h.p. interceptor. J2.0O0. Complete company paid benefit pro- DIAL 741-7200 COOKMAN AVI. AND MAIN ST. railroad station near bus stop. Inquire SH 11685 Red Bank. 1ST. J. gram Inoludinj pront iharing. Good Real Estate since 1894 Foam Rubber at 188 Monmouth St., after 10 a.m. 1960 CORVA1K 709 - d_--. . rtirtlng aftlary. Apply tn person. PR 6-S3W MATTRESSES — Twln-Full-Queen-Kln Automatic transmission, radio ana PARAGON MARINE transmission «nd CLERK-TYPIST INTERNATIONAL FLAVORS M White SL . Red Bin; sizes. Foamart. Hwy. 39, Ealontown, SIX ROOMS with heat and hot water. 25 tip VE4'Wisconsin air cooled en- MODERN — Solid oak disk, good con- Available April 1. heater. 22,000 miles. One owner. A-l Experience with office machines pre- AND PHAQRANOES, INC. dition, lacrlflce. LI 2-WT7. condition. J11O0. Call OS 1-1719. gine, never used, like new. $185. Eve- 500 Roie bane Union Btacli SH 7-H5S 787-K8« nings after *lx. SH 7-8220. farred. Will pay top salary for quali- ItUMSON — Owner Uquldatlni. Three) BUILDER MOVING FROM AREA — OIL TRUCK - 1S52 Dodfe, 1M1 motor, fifiedd per Cll CA 2-140214993 afteft r Surplus building materials. Two 15 ton IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCT — J!4- 21' ZOBEL — Inboard. Navy top, head, PAINT MANAGER desirable bulldinss in commercial COMBINATION WABHBH-DRYER — room air-conditioned garden apartment, 1,600 gal. lank. Call p.m. ares'. For more Information call Good condition. *T5. U 2-05(0 alter 6 package air conditioners, modern good shape, with extraj. See at ZU- Eiperlenced and reaponaible .to take cauier folding door, 10' high, IS' wide. extra large rooms, Lake Takanasse* LO 6-5647 BACK'S YARD, Morgan, N. J. Phone WE WILL TRAIN YOU - Nur«M adaidei, , OLAZE8ROOK AGENCY, realtors. Many other ltemi, no reuon&bl* off* area. Long Branch. 239-0087. 1S56 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE — SH 7-2151. evenings. all hlfls. Applly • in pers , BROOBRK charge of paint, lighting fixturei, and Avenue of Two Rivers. Rumson, M2 Radio heater, whltewalls, automatic. DALE NURSING HOME, 3325 Hwy 35, caltpaper department. Good salary, 17M. WE HELP YOU -efused. SH 1-2233. THREE ROOMS, bath, unfurnished, Need! nothlnj but rend. 3H T-1410. 17' THOMPSON RUNABOUT -- 50 h.p. ilce workin)g concondition!d . sdv«nc«ment. first floor, Red Bsnk. near statlonn, all Johnson motor. Goo4 condition. With Write expe:rlence, persona! hiitory to KEYPORT — Store for rert or builff Select the correct curtain rods. All utilities. SH 1-2373. 1858 OLDSMOBILE — Hardtop con- extras Included. Call CA 2-7570 after ONE WAITRESS—Experienced. 5 "A.E." Bo« 5U, Red Bank. sale. Esttblinhed tailor ihop. Owner kindi. Kinch rodi in •. larger variety. SALE vertible. Radio and heater. Power 6 p.m., CA 2-« p. m. Apply In person. A A retiring. Call CO 4-9789. Call 8H 1-7500 now. Get fast delivery. Alcoa Aluminum Gutters THREE ROOMS and bath, first floor, •teerlnK and power brakes. EH 1-7277. RESTAURANT, 113 Brighton Ave,, Weal IUPERVISOR'6 Job ooen. Bhould have 'wo pcopls only. 26' CABIN HULL •— Two bunks, head. iice personality, handle men. Median!- taued by experts. Fre« estimates. LINCOLN — 1957, hardtop, power Must sell. Call after 5 p.m. End. ally Inclined. Butch1« Car W«ih, Call MORTGAGES FROWN'S SH 7-43«5 brakes. Dealer serviced, no dentt. 1350. SH 1-9184 WAITRESS — Part time. Hix days IH 1-0103 for appointment 33 Broad; St. Red Bank PROWN'S LONG BRANCH — Unfurnished. Beau- Call BH 1-5260. week, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. dally. F. W. tiful, modem, three rooms. Heat, hot 20"TROJAN CRUISER — 75 h.p. Evin- Waolworth Co., Red Bank. HANDY MAN — Five-day week. Mid- DESKS, — Fllea, Conference tables, 31 Broad SL SH 1-7500 Red Bank water. J110 month. MARINA GAR- 19M VOLKSWAGEN — Excellent con- rude. bunks, galley, head, many ex- dle-aged preferred, some painting. Must CA 2-8700 chairs, adding mtchines, typewriteri 75. RAnIO AND TV ELECTRONIC DENS. 220 Ocean Ave. 222 MM, CA »- dition. Radio, heater onrt cood tires, tras. S1.575. OS 1-1711. ^^_^^_ COUNTER GIRL — Pleasant working have transportation. Red Bank area. anual «nd electric, office equipment, BOOKS — Worth about |200. Will sell $550. CaJl 291-1600 after 5 p.m. conditions, Only those seeking steady Only willing worker reply. Btste quali- c. barsiln prices. New or uied. tor W0. SJI 1-7651. 12' BARBOUR, RUNABOUT — Wltll 10 employment need apply. TOP HAT fications, lie: Write "AD", Box. 511, PR 4-1220 KAC Desk Outlet Co. Rt 35. Otk* 1VL VtfU. Ofi. A- tDVl. TWO FURNISHED APARTMENTS- MERCEDES-BENZ - 220, 1960, Six h.p. Evinruiie. Bolh items in excellent CLEANERS. Hwy, 35. Mlddletown. A; *A Bank. mrst. KB. 1-3990. HIDE-ABED — Good condition, rea- Two-room and three-room. With «11 cylinder standard ihlft, white walls. condition. J25O. Call CA 2-5666 after 5 ply In person. DEBT FREE .. . NOW sonable, Call SH T-4(i69 before 8 a.m. utilitiej. (00 and J78 per montlt Good low mileage. Original owner. $2200. Call 'CRNITURK — Sicrlfict'pricei. Liv- or between 7>8 p.m. location. For Information call 291-1465. 632-1B36, aftw 6 P.m. 1 EXPERIENCED GENERAL housework- ing room itxltei. bedroom, dining room, 17V. SHELLCRAFT — Head, 60 h.p, er, good cook, for two adults, Bleep in, HOMEOWNERS ONLY t&blts, lamps. See every day 1-5 p.m. RELAXA-C1Z0R machine, used once, UNFURNISHED FOUR-ROOM APART- DODGE — 1056 Coronet. Slx-cyiMnde. outboard, and trailer, $675. Good con- own room, hath, TV. Must have ex- CLERK except Thunday, Middle town Greem, barjain. MENT-In Asbury Park. iM per month Two-tone, radio, heater, power tram dition- Call CO 4-0872. llent references. 842-0561. $1,000 - $10,000 Middletown, N.J. i MIddl«town-Lincrolt 842-0108 Includes all utilities and hcaL Yearly mission. Good Urea, excellent condition handle routint office duties including \d., near 'Dwlght Rd. School) lease. CROWELL AGENCY, 41 East throughout. S525. Bee It. SH 1-13M. 7*5 H.P. EVINRUDE OUTBOARD PART-TIME office assistant, typing es nventory control. Aptitude for figure* UP TO 7 YRS. TO PAY DELUXE sleeDer-stroller carrlace, like And tank. Perfect condition. $95. SH 1- BONDED REPRESENTATIVE) new, $12. ( E. Highland Ave., Atlantic Front St., Red Bank. SH 1-4030. 1M1 FOUR DOOR HARDTOP Chevrolet sentlal. Little Silver area. Reply siting nd detail. Must be high school gradu- WALLPAPER SALE 8272. complete information to "A.A.," Box Good Bt«rting lalary, benefits, op- EMPIRE JERSEY Highlands. UNFURNISHED _ Three-room apsrt- Imnala — Standard ahltt. Six cylinder. 16'BOAT with 45 h.p. Mercury motor. 611, Red Bfinlc. portunity lor right perion. New Wall Covering Collection. ment. Heat and hot water supplied Rndlo nnii neuter. Rent belti. 22,000 MORTGAGE CORP. USED OVERHEAD DOORS located in the center of Red Bank. miles. *1550. SH 7-9250. All utilities included, two years old. HOUSEKEEPER — Wonderful home 89c per lingle roll Accessible to all transportation and $400. CO 4-474!>. Apply dUJiy 10 ».ra. — 3 p.m. Stat* Licensed Brokers Over U5O paUerru available. All other One 18'i"ilO'l>4" 1952 FORD V-8 — $50. See aL 631 for right womnn. Take care of couple Hom« orlics... 203 Washington BL book* on tale ai up to 50% oil list hopping. Adult« only. Call BH 7-0100 or 16' OUTBOARD BOAT — Need* little only. Good salary. Call BH 7-1300 or Newark price*. CHAD) HOIOT LI 2-3523. Hopping Hd., after 6 p.m. work. Johnson 2S h.D. motor 1956 mod' One 13'10"H0'4!i" Bel ford COCO COLA BOTTLING FIVE SECTIONS, excellent condition THREE ROOMS and bath, furnlahed. el, beat offer takes all. 291-1024. EXPERIENCED shirt operator* needed, KLARIN'S 1960 PLYMOUTH SPORT SUBUR1 CO. OF NEW YORK CA 2-8700 WOOD AND GLASS PANELS ^ne or two 'adults, no pets. W Herbert 19H _ 26' BARTHELME shelter aJUff. full time work. Apply DONALD'n X Ifonmouth St. SH 7-3838 Red Bmk D. J. MAHER It., Red Bank. Call 30 h.p. ChrijI Crart, selling due to LAUNDRY, it Marlon St., Red Bank. ibiiry Circle Rt. 36 842-3538 teart attack. 842-3189. PR 4-1220 PURNITUHE - Including TV, wasner. RECREATION PIER THREE ROOMS UNFURNISHED — WAITRESS — Friday and Saturday No phemt callJ pleuc. Heat snd refrigerator supplied. Nava- 1955 PONTtAC — Star Chief, cle OAU, PAY OR NIQHT Iryer, crib, toys. Itcagomble. Call 8H LONQ BRANCH, N. J. Inside and out, automatic, pow JERSEY SPEED SKIFF — New Sea- only, 10 a.m.-_:30 p.m. daily. F. W. •5839 anytime. Mnk. AdulU. 291-2943. man type cedar planked, plywood hot- WOOLWORTH CO., Red Bank. AldCS — Once In a tvhll* *n oppor* HOMEOWNERS NEED MONEY 7 fcra-keB. Two-tone, $175. CO 4-1442. . Ready for motor. $1,300. BH 1-5130. Tour credit is coed. First and second SEA BRIGHT — Unfurnished fire-room BABY" SITTER — In Rumson area. nity for a lifetime career it made RIDER LAWNMOWZR — »12S. ONE BANTAN MODEL — Eastman 1959 VOLKSWAGEN SEDAN — Owner mortocis. BH 1-[ provlnclst dealt. Call after 4 p.m. IAME3E SEAL POINT KITTENS (two STUDIO APARTMENT - Beautifully T7 Broad St.. Red Bank 747-3355 SH 1-0825. slesi six weeks old. Call located. Nicely furnished. Private en- dential and commercial. Custom In- les Specialiits Ilghtn, Willlamsburg: style. Never used. J75, USED CARS lell KO. Call 787-2141 after 5 p.m CLASSIFIED BUSINESS DIRECTORY and EXTERIOR PAINT SALE A HANDY GUIDE OF BUSINESS SERVICES TO SUIT YOUR MANY NEEDS! Valspar Sno-wite house paint $3.95 ti\, LOWEST PRICES Turpentine 7»c gal. I'1 nylon bruit fi&c. 2T aluminum extension lidde TRUCKS ANYWHERE! 133,75. Adding Machines — Typewriters Cesspool Cleaning Painting and Decorating ONE YEAR WARRANTY* KLARIN'S TOM SLATE - Painting and Decor ADDING MACHINES — Typewriters SEPTIC TANKS, dry wells serviced. atlng. General Contracting, fully In- •'62 Chevy *-dr.' Monmouth Bt. SH 7-3S.T* R«1 sold, rented, repaired. Serplco'a 101 Leeching field added. Backhoe work, The Best Time •'62 Monza, like new a H. Wilson. EH t-1848. sured. Twenty yeara experience. Free •02 Nova *-dr. fled. NO MONEY DOWN • BUDGET TERMS = VENDING MACHINES Monmouth St, Red Bank. SB 7-0485. estimates. SH 1-S4J1 after • p.m. 'G2 Four-whpel dr. rick-up PAINTINO AND PAPER HANOINO- To Save Is •'61 Jmpnla Convprtlblo 1) ROWE CONSOLE CANDY MA Electrical Contracting '61 FORD $1295 '61 Falcon $1295 OH1NE with money changer. Tw Antique! Wanted For a good clean job, reasonable. •'(SO OuH-y Bel Air 4-door years old. 5C00. Call SB 7-3191. Ed Zlnser. •'60 Chevy D-pasa. Wagon Fairlane 500 4-dr. sedan COMMERCIAL and residential wir- Right Now! ••fU\ JrapalB, Cunvertlbla Two-door sedan, fully Old Dolls, guns, Jewelry, cut glass, ing. New construction, remodeling, "*fi*l Corvair 700 Coupe Fully equipped. Luxury equipped, black finish. 2) ROWE CIGARETTE MACKTNI furniture. Civil War books. Anpralasls alterauons; adequate service lnstalla- Piano—Organ Tuning •"(•><) Dodge Dan 4-dr, Manual type. $100. and value are combined An automobile that you made. Oilman. SH 7-1141. tiom and heating. Oaydlck Electric. P1AN0B-OROAN8 See our Beautiful •'60 Chevy impalaHiiip, 787-0603. "'5n Chevy 'j-ion panel in this gleaming white will be proud to drive 3) U-SEt^ECT-rr OA.NDY MACHINE Tuned — Repaired . — Regulated Selection Today! •'159 Old* &8 Hardtop beauty. and own. Wall model. 10c bar. |1M>. Appliance Repalri Raymond Bosworth 8H 1-7853 •'59 riievy Impain. Convertible Home Improvement! i) CANNED SODA VENDER. 240 can •'5!t Chovy Impala 4-dr. APPLIANCE REPAIR and Installs, Plumbing and Heating •'5fl I-'ord Falrlane, S-cyl. machine. Two yean old. Alone; FINISHED BASEMENTS, remodel- •'.".ft Plymouth Wagon '62 Chev. II $2195 "61 CHEVY $1995 ^S changer. H50, tioa' Residential and commercial wir- lnt,. plumbing, electric wiring, ma- KEEOAN'fi SPECIAL SPRING "li& Korrt Squire, 9-pans, ing. Allen Electnc SH 7-0612. sonry and painting. For free estimate 21 Hour Service. All heating units •Ti!» Ford Qalazle 2-dr, Impala convertible, au- Call 8*3-1964 After 6 P.M. call SH 7-1672. •ervlced. SH 7-1627. SH 1-7879. •'M Chevy 2-dr. Auto Body Repair DEALS ••bH Corvvtif, rpd A wtntr sharp A beautiful beige Nova tomatic trans., fully BABY GRAND PIANO — Mod«rn five WORKING MAN'S contractor—Alter- Roofing, Siding and Insulation •'5R Chevy Vvagon, two-tons convertible with dark equipped, blue interior piece blond mahogany bedroom suite. atlons additions, painting, masonry, T>6 Korrt Coiivertililp cherry gate lee dining table and four EXPERT PAINTING and body re. and all those Uttle lobs. Brenlnga LO Aluminum sldlng-ELIMDfATE-eipen- '5h Ford Victoria Hiltp interior features auto- finish with 2-tone blue Ituliler b&clc chairs. Single bed and pair. Moderate prices. McCarthy 6-1714. •lve painting, unsightly exterior f5ft Cadillac 62 Coups matic, radio and heater. exterior and blue top, dresser set, French provincial cofree Chevrolet. Atlantic Highlands. 291-0305 walls snd gable ends. 14 beautiful Follow Your Friends To 54 Olda 9S Sedan table and chair. Zenith cabinet TV, ', colors, horizontal lap or vertical This beauty is priced to Yes, this is the ultimate Hollywood bed. dresser, 12-place serv Lawn Mower Repairs panels. For the lio-il-yourself horns QUICK SALE in good taste. Ice Rogers plate. "741-3133- Auto and Truck Rental owner or Installed by experts. Low,. sell quickly. ALL KINDS OF LAWN MOWERS— '5!) Step-in Van $A9& OREEN COUCH — Unusual walnut low prices. FREE ESTIMATES. •5R Ford .WfiRon „ KLld AVIS^Rent a new car or truck. Low Hand and circular saws, sharpened. PROWN'S, 32 Brosd St., Rid Sink. Many Other Top Quality Cars to Choose From frame. Beat offer. 36" gas stove, good rates. Maple Ave., Red Bank. SH I- repaired. Free pick up, 291-2437. SH 1-760O, CIRCLE '5S Chevy WaKon. needs worlt..S395 condition. S30. OS 1-2035. 0308. PR 4-8214. Dally 7 a.m.-10 p.m. •57P]ymnu!h 2-dr |2M Open Daily 9 'til 9 P. M., Saturday 'til 6 P. M. Insulation * Biding Corp. certified '50 Chevy '-'.-ton panel J39S TV, RADIO. HI Fl SALE Painting and Decorating Johne-Uanrlllt contractor. Pa M407 'SS Kord Wagon 8-cyl,, aulo. ...J395 Building Contractor or Adam Llnzmayer 291-0302. 'M Plymouth _.. $1D« Big trfldMm. No money down. Recon- LOUIS OASBAN — Pamur. decorator, Chevrolet Co. 'M Chevy ..._ .._ „ 4185 ditioned TV'i $39 up. 30-day guaran- BUILDER — New homes, room ad- paperhanger, Zfi years experience, 43 OLSON CO. INC—Roofing. tee. BH 1-7008. Chapln Ave. BH 1-1701 after « p.m. Insulation. Imtalltd and ~ ditions, basement and attio rooms, lor 10 yarn. PR 25 Maple Ave., Red Bank 158 1st Avt\, All. Hlfihlnnds "Rainbow" TV & Hardware kitchens, garage, repairs, and alter- L H. HILL — Painter .Interior and ations Herbert Elgenrtuch. SH 1-5201. eiterlor. No Job too large or too (One Mo.* Ni.rlh ul III. ;!i:i (across Acme lot) Brosd Ren Sank Tel. Answering Servlca A, J. PICONE — Ceramlo tll> con- •mall. Very reasonable. Call 7(7-8631 2SH101 • Open 'ill 9 p.m. E363 MAPL£ AYE. * RED BANk 1-5255= OIRL'B 26" BICYCLE — BOJ'I 2«" tractor for quality, price, and prompt OARL a. JONES — Painting and LBT US BB your secretary. No need SH 1-3130 bicycle, 20-ga). automatic [aa wst«r service. Frs. .stlmat., Call lill.JlJo decorating. Full Insurance coveragt. to miss calls. M hour answering heater, lingleshol iholgun, tmmpst/ or Ml-MTT. rpr Iree estimate call 747-3041. service. SH H700, Venetian bllajls. BH T-ZItT. jOOMMERCUt RENTALS 1 HOUSES FOB SALE HOUSES FO* SALE, RED BANK REGISTER STIVE ROPER By SAVNDERS and OVERGARD fun Owen ~ TwMt«r «*»»n W«Lt March 27, 1963—25 Vint 'floor. Uyiat foots* P9*4er rt> BE LETTING OOfT WORRY A80UTPW HCW, VS. UOCiR! mm, Hindi* mm, lunar &m•*» COUNTRY ESTATE , RENT! flrepltXf, imxHrn Mitcium, four bed- VOUOO WOT KH0W-WHAT IHFOt A LITE Of HAPPINESS MI5TAKK, WWtlHS/ THE/ -SUPPOSE YOU REAL ESTATE WANTED VOU V*XiLO BE UTTIMG WITH THE HAM 1 LOVE, ROW Attractive Southern Colonial. New room., two b»thi on KeouL Full taie- t*rg* brick and frame ranch, rive WED WITH THAT BEPULSVE PERMIT HE TO HAVE meat, MUdied two-car E*ri(«. Con- YOURSELF IN MR. MAXA/ -\ df A fEW MINUTES *ONE bi-level business building 2000 venisnt to traiuportatipa aad ichotHs. bedrooms, den, game room, baaement, YOUR HOME WANTED - Why li feet, Highway 36, Atlantic High- Nke Ireei. Fencing Pick your own two-oar garage, woriuhop, electric with Ui? \y» advertlst extensively •If YOU MARRIED ME WITH MY FIAI dMonJInc Kh WtOO kitchen, two yeara old, top condition, th» newspapers, radio and publish lands-Leonardo. Suitable for of- wooded landscaped grounds, Middle- catalog for home seekers. W* art roei town-Locuit area, Alking £40,000. bers ol the TWR, a national real estat fices, retail outlet, salesroom. referral service. We art "Horn* Tra. en" — two omcere, 11 full time sale 30-CAR PARKING PHILIP J. BOWERS & CO. people. Call WALKER A WALKED POWSTRA AGENCY WALTER a. OVERTON Realtors. Members Red Bank Are $250 monthly Includes all utilities REALTORS Multiple Listing Service, Shrewsbury. 01 E. Front St., Red Banif DIAL 741-7200 SH 1-6213 and Middletown, OS 1-2126. BOWTELL PHONE FOB CATALOG Rell E»tat« Elnci 1894 60 Whlta 8t Red Bank Real Estate SH I -8700 -LEGAL NOTIC

State Hwy 36 Leonardc AN ACRE PLUS — On a high knoll 291-2100 BIS, BIG COLONIAL overlooking beautiful valley. Tall trees, 30 years in the Bayshore laurel, rhododendron). Brick ranch. SHERIFF'S HALE with seven .wg« roomi, three bed- Large living room, fireplace, wains- SUI'KHIOR COURT OF NEW JEBSE rooms, VA baths, basement, plenty of coated dining room, kitchen, dishwash- space tor additional rooms, garage, er, range refrigerator, washer, dryer. CHANCEHY DIVISION OFFICE SPACE In Tuller Bulldlni large shade trees, quiet convenient lo- Playhouse. Barbecue. Three-car ga MONMODTH COUNTY available, fhons during buBlneBs houri, cation In Red Bank, 62 years old. food rage. Hot water baseboard heat. Ask' Dockrt No. 12131 8H 7-2(10. condition. $17,000. Ing (31,600. Louis Y&ccarlno t/a Guaranteed A MICKEY MOUSE By WALT DISNEY STORE FOR RENT — Next to Mayfali to Sales, Plaintiff vs: G. B. Glove; Super Market, Newnun Bprlngi Ed., PHILIP J. BOWERS & CO. et al. Defendants. Red Bank. Call days SH 1-95&9, eve- WALTER 8. OVERTON By virtue of a writ of execution 1 ning! SH 1-S013. DOWSTRA AGENCY the above staled action to me direct '..AFTER HE DIAL 741-7200 ed, I shall expose for sale at publ REALTORS vendue, at the Court House In th( FINISHES OFFICE SPACE REAL ESTATE SINCE 189* 91 E, Front St., Red Bank Borough of Freehold, County of Mon FEEPINS THE Heat furnished, will redecorate to aui 60 Wbltt 8t. Red Bank mouth, New J ereey on Monday th PSNSA your requlrraenta. Beit location, will PHONE FOR CATALOG 16th day of April, 1S63, at 2 o'clock, aub-dlv.de It necessary. Be« uid com' P. M. Prevailing Time. pare. SH 7-110O. SH 1-8700 All the defendants' right, title interest, It any, In and to the fol 1#ODGE ROOM for rent. Center ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS — EXCEP- lowing; town. Could be uied also for office CUFFWOOD-BERG. Four &>lg TIONAL VALITC — In a Ihree-bedroom ALL that certain tract, etc.. In tin •pace. Approximately 2,400 sq.. ft. Write bedrooms, Urge living room, home complete with expansion attic, Borough of New Shrewsbury former!; 'LODGE' BOX 611, Red Bank, dining room, elegant kitchen,' b&gement, two-car g&rage, hot w&ter Township of Shrewsbury, County o und bath, ^liree car garage, heat, Hi bath!, corner lot. 113,500. Monmouth and State of New Jersey STORES . attic, lull basement, storm win- known ss Lots Nos, 6 and 8 In Blocl dows and. screireense , range. Im- T, on Map of Hance Park, In Shrews Whfte St. — Best location, redecor* mediate poasesslon at closing. FINLAY bury Township, N. J. properly tlon completed, small or large spue* tc Veti no, non-vets low down pay- George H&nce Patterson, whfch aal< luit your requirement. BH 7-UOQ. ment to qualified buyers. $13,- REAL ESTATE AGENCY map is riled in the Clerk's Office SPACE — Suitable for storage or Ughl 100. Call The Berg Agency, 270 Bay Ave. Hlghlsndl the County of Monmouth, N. J. manufacturing available for rent Loca- Realtors. OS MOW. Rt. 35, Being commonly known and rieslg tion just outside Red Bank. Call BH ?• Middletown. 172-0100 nated as No. 75 Springdale Avc 2440 during business hours. RANCH HOME — Plus hall acre land- New Shrewsbury, New Jersey. RANCH scaped plot, 14x30 living and dining The approximate amount of the judg •STORE FOR RENT — Will remodel room combination, 12x18 kitchen, three ment to be satisfied by said sale It to auit. 149 Brighton Ave., Long Branch. Brand new. three bedroomi, living the sum of $4,700.00 together with tht room-dining room combination, gas bedroom*, two baths. Near Llncroft Ideal location lor any business. CA 2- schools. $32,900. costs of this sale. 3334. dryer. 513,900. Dated Fobruary 20, 1963 THE PHANTOM By LEE FALK SffxTO' STORE in five atore unit on CASEY'S AGENCY INC. JOSEPH A. 8HAFTO, Sheriff. Hwy 35, Middle town, ono mile north Schanck Agency a Thomas I* Yaccarlno, Atty. of Red Bank. Suitable tor professional Independent Broker Realtor March 20. 2T, April 3. 10 S38. SW--HE'S HAO THIS BCK FDR or commercial use. 8H 7-3730. Hwy. J5 Hazlel S Linden ft. Red Bank CO 49412 BH 7-03P7 YEARS-- BUT I'VE NEVER SEEM STRATEGIC LOCATION — With Off- Uember Multiple Listing HIM. WHO IS Ml?. WALKER? atreet parking; on main highway ad- jacent Red Bank; one to seven rooms JUST REDUCED PROPOSAL available; suitable professional man, Owner transferred to California. Hill- No41ce ii hereby given that seale* doctor's clinic, Company Insurance Of- top acie section, full acre lot. Three- MATAWAN-BERQ — Pour bed- bids will be received In the Receptlor 'liccs. etc. Write P. O, Box 81, Red bedroom ranch, 1H batha, lull base- room Home with spacious living Room ot the Office of trie Director Bank. N. J. meat, recreation room, extras avail- I Division or Purchase and Property room, separate dining room, 2nd floor, Room 232-2. State House LIGHTS,' HBAT. AND AIR CONDI- .Die. tXi.lKW. Owner, Phone HH 7-3963. science kitchen, and tile bath. Garage, attic, basement, refrig- Trenlon 25, New Jersey, on Apri TIONED — Furnlahed. V. Arnom RED BANK HO ME-J 1st oH Broad '->. 1963 at 2:00 P.M. and will be opener Build in*: One room $50. fill 7-3620 and erator, and aluminum storm and read Immediately thereafter, foj calY during bmlness houra. It. Seven rooms, two bath a, fireplace, aaih. Immediate possession at junporch. In excellent condition. Quiet closing. Vets no, non-vets low the following: street. Walking dlstartc« to shopping, down payment to qualified buy- BROKEN STONE "NORTH1 HOUSES FOR RENT schools and trains. $17,850. Call us to- ers, Stl.OOO. Call THE BERG, ENVELOPES day. ROLfiTON WATERBTJRY, Real- Agency, Realtors, 08 1-1000, Rt. 11KB HOSE ton, 15 W. Front St., Red Bank. 38, Middletown. FLOUR MANY FURNISHED and unfurnished SH 7-3800. rentals In all Blzea and prices. Ella NEW SHREWSBURY — Four-bedroom GENERAL DRUGS Wiltshire Agency Realtors, 1480 Ocean FIVE MINUTES TO RED BANK SV\ Cap* Cod, kitchen with snack bar, din- LIBRARY FURNITURE Ave., Stm Bright, N. J. 842-00G4. Open TZON — >5,000 SACRIFICE. Luxurious ing room, living room, and full cellar. NURSE BY 8TOCK •even days. 100' brtrkfront ranch. One acre, cor- J13.90Q. 747-0471. OLE0MARGER1NE ner court, pro feaa tonally landscaped. PRINTING $8.1 to $125 Per Month 10x15' ilagatone center . foyer, brick HAZLET — Three-bedroom ranch, rec- HAMBLER-AMBUI-ANCE THE/BERQ AGENCY planter, 28' living room. Separate large reation,room, porch, center hail, many KNOW I'LOW PARTS Rt." 35 Itiddletown dining room, four bedrooms plus of extras, owner transferred, $15,200. CO KTEEL PILING OS 1-1000 '' Itce. Two baths. 4-OOOfl. Specifications and the form or bid, contract and bond tor the proposed MARK TRAIL By ED DODD WIDE SELECTION OP RENTALS — RIVER PLAZA COLONIAL —. Living work aro on file in the Office of the Furnished and unfurnished. Immedi- DOWNSTAIRS — Huge paneled recrea- room, dining, kitchen, paneled den, Director and may be secured by pros ate occupancy. Samuel Telcher Agency tlon room plus paneled fifth-bedroomL and \k bath, down. • Four bedrooms, pectlve bidder* during office hours Oceanport Ave., Oceanport. Call or dial finished cellar, two-car garage, patio. two baths up. All rooms larger than Bids niust be (1) made on a standard LI 2-3500 or. LI 2-3501. Carpeting, storm sash, dryer, refrigera- usual, and closets like you have never proposal form, i.2i enclosed! in tli KUMSON — Three-room, bath cottage, tor. Private. IJ 2-3028. seen. Carpeted. Being sold by owner. cial addressed envelope, (.1) accompa Hot water oil-heat. Adult couple only. $25,500. Four years old. Priced in low 30's. nied by a certified check drawn to th .. Leane. $75 a month. JOHN L. MINUOH PAIR HAVEN COLONIAL — Three SH 7-5226. ., order of the Treasurer of the Stati AG3KCY. Phone B42-35OO. bedrooms, one bath, living room, din- COLTS NECK - HOLMDEL or New Jersey, or a bid bond, an WAUAMASSA — Three-hedroom split. ing room, kitchen, breakfast room, J. D. Roche Agency of which shall not be lesi than Id' NEPTUNE — Three-bed room ranch. laundry, full basement. Interracial. Long Bridge Kd., Colts Neck of the amount of the bid, ami (4> d Asking S16,5O0. SH 7-3690. 946-4955 livered at the above place on or be KE 1-4843, U 2-1B26. fore the hour named aa no bid w UNFURNISHED nix room house, oni ON QUIET STREET of expenilv APPLEBROOK—Two-bedroom ranch,In be accepted after the hour specific 'block from railroad station. Excellent homes Jn eatata area ot Uncrolt, near excellent condition. Half acre well Bids cot so submitted will be con con/iitton. SH 7-20G8 alter 4 p.m. Christian Brothers Academy in St. landscaped. Large kitchen. ' Fireplace. sidered Informal and will be rejected Leo's parish. Large white brick and $18,900. 748-4210. The Director reserves the right to re BELFORD — Half duplex, completely shingled Colonial. Charming living and ject any and all bids and to award remodeled, three bedrooms, gas heat. dining rooms, four big bedrooms, fifth FOR. BALE BY. OWNER — Split level, contract In part or whole if deemed SlOfl a month, no utilities. Call 747- unfinished. Two colored tiled baths, four bedrooms, two batha, den, family the best interests or the State to $025 or 671-9831. recreation room, basement, screened room, garage. Schools nearby. 4^ per so. The successful bidder will be re porch. On one acre. Buy direct from cent VA mortgage. Call PR 4-73U. quired -to. furnish surety .bond In th< WEST KEANSBURG—Five-room C; . owner and save commission. Price Cod. unfurnished, lease, references. $115 ST. JAMES PARISH LOCATION-For full amount- of, the contract of plus utilities. CHATEAU REALTY ;;J2,!K)O, SH 1-3154. business or residence, atx rooms, bath, company authorized, to do business I Real Estate, 215 Carr Ave.. Keana- RUMSON RIVER VIEW — 4\$' year oil heat. 114,750.,CONSTANCE SMITH," the State of New Jersey. A Maple Ave., Fair Haven. SH 1-2308. DEPARTJJENT-OP>rBJ? TREASURE bill's. 787.5884. _____^_____ d ranch, immaculate condition. Three' Division of Purchase' mid Proper!' KUMSON —. Unfurnished three-room bedrooms, tils bath,, wide board,. FAIR HAVEN — Three-bedrotn ranch, tlHARLEB'T. SULLIVAN, Director.' .tmnxaloV. . . pegged floors. Wlki dit t knotty pine kitchen, tUe bath, living ocean, schools, Walkinc g distancd e :p to room, tots of closets.. Full, dry base- NUBBIN "• 842-1321 March 20, 27 J27.6I By JIM BURNETT and GEORGE CRENSHAW Only $16,000. Calchurchel (ors appointmenand shopst, ment with recreation area ,aqd laundry. FAIH HAVEN — Three bedrooms, Vi ROLSTON-WATERBURY,ll ( . Realtorspit; Ift Garage. All In -Immaculate .condition. baths. Call SH 7-4079 between 9 *-m. West Front St., Red Bank. BH 7-3500. S17.900. McALLSTER AGENCY. Real 1-131 tnd 5 p. m. $125 month. Estate, 109 East River Rd., Rumaon. SHERIFF'S SALE 842-1894. SUPEMOK COURT South 20 WAVERLY PL. i first house from fireplace in living room, - thrte-bed- rooms, famfly room, modern kltchxn, 52 degrees 51 minutes Ea.st 22fl.37-frpr Broad', room next to bath for busi rooms, two 'baths, play-room, two-car dining area, spacious living room. Ex- a point; running llienco i3i Sout UPSS man. SH 1-2677. garage, river rl slits. New listing. Only cellent farming. SH 1-2S11. degrees 02 minutes 10 seconds Wea CLEAN KOOM — Gentleman preferred. 51.88 feel to a point; running thence 15,900. REDDEN AGENCY, Realtors. 4> North 65 degrees 2(3 minutes 3C Call SH 1-9608 during day, after 8 p.m. 301 Maple Ave., corner Bergen PI., Red seconds West 209.71 feet to a potn Call SH 1-0185. Rank, m 1-BlOft. Member Multiple List- MATAWAN-BERG—Three beau- the Southeasterly sideline of Har- •LARGE FURNISHED BEDROOM — Ing. ttlful bedrooms, large living mony Road (formerly Atlantic A\ Reasonable. One short blocU from busi- ASTER SPECIAL — Four-bedroom, room, great kitchen, l',£ batha. ) and lo the point and place ness district. On all bus lines. 57 Peten two-bath split that Is a dream. Largi? Attic, full basement, utility BEGINNING. PI.. 'Red Bank. SH 7-9329, King and dining rooms with luscious room, aluminum sash, and a BEING known and designated SINGLE ROOMS - Clean and com :arpeting. good size game room over- pair of ranges. Immediate pos- Lot No. fifi in Block "G" on a mi fart able. Retisonablo rate3. Gentlemen ooklng a flagstone patio, eat-in kitch- session at closing. Veta no, ntltlerf "Map of Harmony Harden: preferred. 92 Wallace Si. SH 1-5392. m, full basement, attached one-car non-vets low down payment to Middle town Township, Montnoutli arage. Come see aJ! the extras. Ask- qualified buyers. SP.900. Call 'oiiiity, New Jersey, dated Mai* U LARGE COMFORTABLE ROOM — On nK $24 900. LAWLEY AGENCY. Real- THE BERG AGENCY. Realtors, !»55 made by Craig Finnegnn, Engl quiet dead end street in Fair Haven. ora, 100 Hwy. 35, Red Bank. SH 1-6282. OS 1-1000. Rt. 35. Middletown. neer and Surveyor ant! filer! in th Call SH. 1-9204. vEANSBURG — Lovely custom built 5ATONTOWN — Three-bedroom ranch office or the Clerk of the County of LARGE NICELY FURNISHED ROOM three-bed room ranch, modern kitchen.' down. Principal* only. LI 2- Monmouth on July 8, 1955 as Sheet —• Contrally located. Parking place. 64 Large living room, tile bath, base- No. 22 In Case No. 39. Harding. lid.. Red Bank. 311 7-O5:t5. board heat. Only ?16,O00. CHATEAU sing commonly known nnd A°*\% REALTY, ttpal Extale, 215 Carr Ave., RUMSON — Hi acres, estate area. nated as No. 713 Harmony Road, Mid FURNISHED ROOM — Kitchen prlvi £eansburg. 787-5884. Fabulous ranch home, like new. Cen- dletnwn Township, Ucw Jersey, logea. Near transportation, shopping, er hall. Gracious living room 30x16' The approximate amount of the Judg- MARY WORTH By ALLEN SAVNDERS and KEN ERNST ,Rett Bank. SH 7 0015 after 5 p.m. 1UMSON — Waterfront home, beautl- with fireplace. Paneled den. Tiled pow- ment to lie sal Is! fed hv an Id sale la ul six-bedroom completely modern iler room. Formal dining room 17x14". the sum of ?3,TO0.(K) together with the "olonlal on Navealnk River, deep water *Ura GE kitchen, dishwasher, two wall eels of this Bnle. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE channel, l'.i acrej and riparian rights. ,v'en3. Breakfast room. Four twin bed- Dated February 20. 1963 I'LL NEVER, CARL FOS. ANVOME Exquisite trees, lawns. Modern kitchen, rooms, two tiled baths. Maid's room JOSEPH A. 8HAFTO. Slierlff. ELSt —7Ht WAV I CARE.0 fOK YOU, LYNN^ HOUSES FOR SALE laundry. i*A baths, maid's room. Pic- and tiled l>ath.' Large pntio terrace. Two Henser. Heuser & Da Ifalo, YOU CAN T PRETEND ure window breakfast room. Paneled car garage. Many extras. Wall to wall BUT IT WOULON'T 1 AUy«. YOU DON'T KNOW I'W lving room, dining room, library, TV broad loom. Wnsher nnd dryer. Con- March 20, 27. April 3, 10 5G0.72 YOU'D BETTER oom, bar, three fireplaces., playroom, ?nient to golf club and beach. In- 60IN6 TO HARRY creened flagstone terrace, two-car ga- omparable nt $53,000. Stanley K. GET BACK 70 7HE 5ARA-K.AY 5EUER5, CHARMING rage. Walk finest schools. Low taxes. Downs, Realtor, Shrewsbury. SH 1-1017. MBS RECEPTION DESK- Large transferable mortgage. Price Member Multiple Hating Service. SHERIFF'S K.U.K LYN " ENGLISH TUDOR . $65,000. Telephone N.Y. Wl 7-2090. N.J. SUPKRIOR <'OUKT Ol' NKW .1 142-1111. ^TEAR PARKWAY — LotH ot elbow- •oom. Split on elevated plot. Almost CIIANCKICY UIVISION '• Four large bedrooms, two bathn, den, APE COD — Four bedrooms, full eel- icre rustlq treed rear yard overlook: MONMOriil rOUM'V dry basement, garage, patio, secluded, ir, hot water baseboa M heat, at- nf? water. Center hall. "L" shaped Oockel No. F-»408-fil but convenient location with river ached tarage, cedar siding, aewerase. living room, 12x12 dining area. Kitchen MARINE VIEW SAVINGS AND rights, low maintenance, low Red Bank one mile to Red Bank. Near Fairview with dining aren. Den. Foiir-heilrooma. LOAN ASSOCIATION, a body corpo taxes, Asking JCS.OOO. School, Bod man Park. Middletown 2\'i baths. Hobby room or flftli bed- rnte of the. State of New Jersey, Plain Shops. $15,500. Call SH 1-8518. room. Basement. Two-car garage. C:ir- tiff vs: MARTIN FAALAND, cl al.. pettng. patio, extras. Owner going PHILIP J. BOWERS & CO. ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS — Three-bed- abroad. Aaktng 5?7,flOO. LAWRENCE By virtue of a writ of execution in WALTER S. OVERTON room ranch, 2»i batha, beautiful view, J. SCHILLING, REALTOR. IS Spring the nbove stntfd action m me dl tydrofoil boat to New York. Extras, St.. Red Hank. RH 7-4121. MEMBER reeled, I shall expo.^p for anle n DIAL 741-7200 toll for details. Owner. 291-1165. MULTIPLE LISTING. public vt-nrtue, at the Court House li the Borough, of Freehold. County, of Real Xatata Bines ISM IVKRFRONT — Spacious .Colonlni ilh picturesque view. Five bedrooms, noon VALUE Monmouth. Now Jersey on Mominy the •0 Whit* at. Red Bank 1 Four I5th rlay of April, 1M3. at 2 o'clock i • tiled haths. Fireplace in the living Parish. bedrooLargem lotranc, hoht wateIn Str .oi lJame honts, P. M, Prevailing Time. •oom. Paneled family room, plc- finished bnnement recreation room, ALL that tract or pnrcel of* Innri ure windows. Many extras. Broad loom ye. RflrftRp. Only £19.500. WALK- nnd premises hnrplnnftpr imrtlrnlnrlv SPLIT-LEVEL IN SHREWSBURY — it, rlraperlps, etc. Over an acre, ER A WALKER, Realtors, Hwy. .15, crlbffl. situate In the Township ft. on the river: Shrewsbury. SH 1-5212. 21-Hour Service Mldiili-town i'i the County of Mon tached, ..pirnK. C near schools, shopping Exceptional value, 549,500. Stanley K. mouth and State of Now Jersey: arena, Ft. Monmouth, and parkway. Down*, Realtor, Shrewsbury. SH 1-1017 SPRING — Into action today on this BSIN'P. known nnd ties ign.it PI! a? Reasonable. Cn\\ SH 1-7332. No broker*. 'Member Multiple LiBtlng Service. rondprfnl buy. Only 1(26,600 will put I/>ts 127 and 128. In Bloclc 5. nnd the your family in this Immaculate three- lands lying within the boumkirle HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE lieilrnom ranch on a country ai7.ert.lot, Kenmore Avenue nnd the Jersey Cen- 175x250. There is a bright and modern tral Traction Company riRhl-nf-wjiv. kitchen, family sized dining room, and which lie in from or said lota bi>- spacious Ui23 Hvlnc room with fire- Iwcen thp nntithtrlv lino o( <*n.ld Int." place and built in bopk cases. There ftnd the northerly line of Vnlley Drive FAIR HAVEN Is nlso a rUn nnd a nne-rar attached us Shawn on "Mup RIIOWIIIR aii(»(||- enrage. Taxes under «0O. Pick up your v la ion of First Additional Section, Mnr- phone and make an appointment tr lenn, flwned by the Mnrdean Him ipe todpv. RUSSELL, M. RORUS Renl pany, situated In Miildletnwn Towi tors, 000 fllver Rd., Fair Haven. ship, Jinn mouth County. N, J., A|>rll 1H 7-*ft32. Uember Multiple Liming If»10, Snnle i«r —I". Frnnk Oslxirn. Service. H. H.. MifMletuwn, N. J.", said mnp YOU BE THE LANDLORD! Imnftl was filed In the Monmouth County •ollertins; ?220 a month on a $V».5(M> niprk'a Orfirc on March ID, 1!>1J. it investment. This three-apartment hou. Caae 53, Section 2. •toes need redecorating, so lirlng your REOINNIN'G ;»t a point In Ihe nnrtlv checkbook and paint an Income foi niil vournHf.'CaU now. WALKF.R & WALK eiiiK the noinl of Intersection of Hi.' ER Realtora, Hwy. 35. 1000" south of westerly line of lot 128 extended from Uly.Tulln Co.. Middletown. PHONK r«t>rtlnti M'lth Hie north- 3311. Multiple Listings and trade-Ins. erly HUP of Kcnnmre AVPIHIO na net •n 7 Hnyji. forth In the nrorejuilii mnp. whirli pui'it Is 720.43 feet easterly from tiie winterly line oT Appii-lon AvtMiiu1. uloitf; ili'c LOTS AND ACREAGE northerly line of lu'iimore AVIMHIC; [licntp ill cnstiTly, alotig the north- HUMSON — RMtltKllI WOCM!P'I; I lining. RED BANK AREA REAL ESTATE WANTED Hnlnu commonly linnwn and IIP.IIB- nnteil an Kn. 77 Li'iiimnivllln liuait. "lidiilBtmvn, NHW Jprnpy. LIST YOUR HOME The niiproxltnnte amount of the judg- *lth ui for prompt service. Memnpr ment to lie untlflfltul by unid title la the1 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Multiple, LI .it I rig aervlce. ROI.1TON sum of 913,40(104) together wllh IIH WATERDUnY, Realtor! Jlnce i«29, lfl costs of tlila nalc. W. Fronl St., Red Bank. BH 7-3900. Dattd March 1, )M13 'Listed on page 168 of the Yellow Pago Directory JOSEPH A. SHAFTO, Sheriff. WE NEED UOOO HOMES for lerlnn Huberts, PUUbury A Carton, buyen.-Thuyen.Thee DowBtra Aijency,, nBalloriinli, ,„„„Altyn,. 81 E . FFront t BBLL , RRedd BankBk. BH 1-6700.1 Mircti 20, 37. April 3, 10 S77.2A 'depraved,' ill la March 27, 1963 RED BANK REGISTER Hollywood: "And- how span will connect Borough of Brooklyn with Staten Island, background, In New York harbor. your friendly neighborhood collec- 'wildly poignant,' 'willful,'—Adertisement. collecting your laundry or deliver- tor for the Amalgamated League against Bursitis. How much will Opens Barber Shop you give to rid the world of this evil?" "Put m£ down for a buck," you BfldHBERGEKS STOREWIDE answer weakly, fishing through your pockets for tomorrow's lunch money. Life has unwillingly made me a "buck against" man. Whoever crosses my moat iwith a message that he is against something finds MX .Uili» dMAUir in me a man who will give him 3 a dollar to be against it too. I have spent so many dollars MONMOUTH NEWARK being against things that I some- PLAINFIELD MORRISTOWN times wonder what I am for. I found out the other day. PRINCETON MENU) PARK A knock summoned me to the PARAMUS CHERRY HILL door. Opening it, I automatically reached into my pocket There stood a young girl and a young boy. "What are you against?" I ON'T MISS THE SALE THAT GETS MORE EXCITING EVERY DAY-ALL THROUGH BAMBERGERS 8 STORE! asked suspiciously. "Nothing, sir," the girl-ssaid. "Are you lost?" "No sir." Salvatore Izzo, Jr. "Well, what can I do for you?' "What is your favorite flavor?" MIDDLETOWN - Salvatore asked the girl. Izzo, Jr., of 37 Barker Ave., "Mint." Shrewsbury Township, after cut- "Shall I put you down for a ting hair in his father's Red Bank box, sir?" barber shop for 12 years, will "A box of what?" open his own business here Mon- "A box of Girl Scout cookies, day. sir.' Like his father's shop on "I suppose they're a dollar.' Shrewsbury Ave., the new es- "No, sir. They are 45 cents." tablishment will be called Sal's Well, I put out my buck and Barber Shop. It will be located ;ot back 55 cents, signed my at 335 Rt. 35 across from the name, saluted the kids and closed Middletown fire house and next my door. to the Art Floral Shoppe. Now I am no longer merely a Salvatore Izzo, Jr., has been a 'dollar againster,' I'm for some- resident of the Red Bank area all thing. I'm a firm 45-cent support- his life and is a graduate of Reder of the Girl Scouls. Bank High School. He is active It is pleasant in life to stand with the Red Bank Moose or for something, and not to be ganization. eternally opposing things. He is married to (he former Joanne Donato of this place. They have one son. Fairview Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord Barto, Cooper Rd., was their daughter Mrs. Charles Stir- rup and family of Watchung.

Barclay Henderson, Sr., Rt. 35, celebrated his birthday March 23 with a family gathering in his home. (Send your problems to George, c/o this newspaper.) Lynda L. Klotzen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Klotzen, Dear George: Havard St., celebrated her 11th Sometime ago I wrote you ask-birthday March 19 at a family ing what the name of the group gathering in her home. was which is devoted to keep lex to a minimum In the movies. Thomas Stanley of Georgia is You replied: "Ushers." visiting his parents Mr. and Mrs. Annual sale of That answer makes no sense Harry Stanley, Rt. 35. whatsoever, to me! R. T. Jennie Lynn Ralph, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ralph, Or- Dear R. T.: chard St., marked her seventh Next time sit in the balcony. lirthday last week with a family gathering in her home. Schiaparelli nylons Dear George: When finger bowls are used at Robert 0. Thatcher, Chapel a formal banquet is it proper to Hill Rd., has returned from a dry your fingertips on a napkin? business trip to Greece, If not, how should the hands be IN SPRING'S 13 NEWEST AND MOST dried? Mr. and Mrs. Henry Runyon, B. H. Vavesink River Rd., entertained EXCITING FASHION COLORS Dear B. H.: at cocktails last Saturday in hon- Finger bowls???!I or of (heir son Chapman, and his I thought that was a mighty ride Lillian Manahan Runyon, LOVE TO weak martini. who were married March 2 in Tuxedo, N. Y. LOOK FEMININE T BOX OF 3 Seamless heel and toe micro-mesh sheer- .Regularly 1.50 pn. 3.75 FINED $7» Miss Mimi Beardsley, daughter SLIP INTO THIS Seamless sheer, reinforced heel and to Regularly 1.50. pn. 3.75 ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS—Mag of Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Seamless demi-toe sheer -Jfegularly 1.65 Istrate Irving Zeichner last nighl Beardsley, Sleepy Hollow Rd., FLORAL BATISTE DUSTER 3 pn. 4.05 imposed fines totalling $70 o was named to the dean's list at Seamless sheer stretch, reinforced heel .-Regularly 1.65. pn. 4.05 Richard Schade of 126 Monmout Wheaton College, Norton, Mass. AND SAVE Vb Seamless long-wearing, heel and loe -Regularly 1.65. pn. 4.05 Ave., Port Monmouth. Schade, according to police Mrs. Clayton A. Friss and three was charged with speeding an children of Harrison, N. Y., re- What color does the most for your legs? Your costume? Your morale? reckless driving. He was fine cently were the guests of Mr. • Calypso, a harmonious golden brown • Dark Horizon, chic off-black $35 in each charge and Judgi and Mrs. Maltby Jelliffe, Kings • Coffee Bean, a brewed coffee tone* • Definitely Neutral, to go with everything Zeichner suspended his drive, Hwy. Sale • Cosmetiquc, an all-purpose pastel* • Envy, a subtle green off-black* license for 30 days. • Cotton Candy, a delightful "pastel pink* • Fire and Smoke, an iridescent gray James M. Vosk, son of Mr. REGULARLY 5.99 • Touch of Suntan, a hint of summer tan* and Mrs. F. Vosk, 10 Apple • Ginger Peachy, brown tinged with ginger • Will-o-the-Wisp, bone touched with ivory* HEALTH CAPSULES Farm Rd., celebrated his 11th • Soft Petal, a friendly flattering beige- by Michael A. Petti, M.D. birthday March 19 at a family You'll he the picture of femininity in • Smart Gray, a compatible stylish gray* Smajl, 8 to 10; Average, 8^ to 11; Tall 9y2-ll HOW CAN VOU REPUCE gathering in his home. this lovely duster with its pretty lace-edged •In settnlefti long-wearing heel »nd toe Do8y PENTAL PECAY ? collar and cuffs, dropped shoulders and David Hansen, son of Mr. and pouffy sleeves. It's the kind of thing you'll Mrs. Hjalmar Hansen, 51 East love to slip into the minute you get up PLUS SCHIAPARELLI'S Wilson Cir.. marked his seventh each morning because it's so easy to f!ake birthday last week with a fam- care of—it's machine-washable and needs MOST EXQUISITE SHEER WITH SEAMS ily gathering in his home. little or no ironing. Choose it in yellow, pink or blue flowers or the same colors in In Dark Horizon, Fire and Smoke, Ginger Sale 1.65 GOP Club To Hear solid, if you prefer. Sizes 10 to 18. Peachy and Soft Petal. Primary Candidates Regularly $2 BELFORD-The three Repub- 3 pr». 4.95 ican candidates for the Town- Call OSbornc 1-2500, KEIlogg 1-2400 or write. hip Committee in the coming Free delivery within our delivery area (Except primary election will be guest C.O.D.'s, add 50c). Budget Robes, (Dept. 64), Call OSborne 1-25011, KEIIogg 1-2400 or write on 3.01 or more. Free delivery within our peakers at a meeting of the Mall Level, Bambergcr's Monmouth. And at delivery area (Except C.O.D.'s add 50c), Hosiery (Dept. S), Mall Level, Bamberger's ocal Women's Republican Club Pnramus, Menlo Park, Newark, Morristown, Monmoulh. And at Paramuj, Menlo Park. Newark, Morristown, Plalnfleld, Princeton ipril 4 at the Methodise Church Plalnfleld, Princeton. Cherry Hill. and Cherry Hill. all here. WHENEVER VDU. EAT SWEETS, The candidates are Joseph Az- YOU 5MOULP BRUSH YOUR TEETH. OTHERWISE 5UGAR :olina, Ernest G. Kavalek and STICKS TO YOUR TEETH ANP Iarold Foulks. The program al- SATURDAY HELPS TO CAUSE CAVITIES, will include a "crazy hat" con- TOMORROW: COLP SORES. est with prizes being awarded Bamberger's Monmouth open Mondays through Fridajs till 9:30 p.m. TILL«L>\ML. . H..llk (JBUJUI-S;... h-lpM jnlom^tion.. Jhe—funnieslj—pretlicst—and , Itii not iiitmdfld to b« of • aikgnMtfc nalur*. most original hat.