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Published JSrary Thursday VOL. XVIII—NO. 9 FORDS, N. J., THURSDAY; APRIL 12, 1956 at XB Green Street, WoodDriage, H. 3. PRICE EIGHT CENTS Mroz Hits Back at B, of E» Local Rate Election Set Sweetness For Jibe at Planning Board :: : : . • - and '••_"• WOODS RIDGE — After C. Nicklas told the Board: "We $11.30;Fire To, RelieYe months of negotiations, the Board can't have the Menlo Park of Education is finally in posses- School built by February I and kom'of deeds to proposed school there is no use kidding yourself. Cost Added light sites in the Menlo Park Terrace It may not be the Board's fault Board Ja By CHARLES E. GREGORY and Oak Ridge Heights develop- but you have to assume respon- ; ments. The latter site faces In- sibility." :, . . Hopelawn to Pay Highest Iselin School Furniture man Avenue, Colonia. Harold Van Ness said the de- Charge with Total of Deficit to be Met by A hope which once glirfi- The Oak Ridge Heights site lay is not only "holding up fu- "was given to the Board of-Edu- ture needs, but immediate needs $13.44, Trainer Says Use" of 1955 Surplus .Tiered now burns bright. I cation without charge by Rob- as well." .William O'Neill stated think our case is won; bins Company of which Max it should "be made clear to the . WOODBRIDGE — The general WOODBRIDGE — May 22 has tax rate for the Township for 1956 * * S= . Plotkin is representative. Mr. public'''that it is not; the Board's been set as the date for a special 'Plotkin told the Board the. deed fault but that of the Town Com-- will be $11.30 instead of $11.72 per referendum by the Board of Edu- For nine long and mon- covers, a six acre tract arid that mittee and the Planning Board $100 assessed valuation as original- cation to seek approval of .the otonously frustrating' years, sanitary and storm sewers will who made the original agree- ly estimated, due to the $562,000 voters for the transfer of $110,000 be installed without charge to ment."- •'• , cut in the Board of Education from free balances in current ex- I have been saying fervent ,• the. Board. Originally, the de- Harry Burke commented he budget.- Tax Collector Michael J. penses as of June 30, 1955 to the words in a cause for Mas velopers of Oak Ridge Heights felt "Sommer Brothers is obli- rate also includes the $186,043,358 Building and Equipment appro- promised a 12-acre site to the gated to the Board of Education added for equalization by the priation in the present year's ac- which I deemed good. On Board, arid the acreage was ac- considering ttie thousands of County Board of Taxation." count. this long road f,or most of cepted. For some reason, not homes they built in the commu- In order to determine the total This step was advocated last the way I had for my com- * explained, the original site has nity. The Township Committee rate, the taxpayer must add his week by The Independent-Leader. been exchanged for a six acre is in a position to demand the fire rate to the $11.30. The rates in The transfer is necessary to per- panions indifference, skepti- site and 38 homes will be built the land as a civic duty." the various districts are as follows: mit a purchase of furniture for cism and the kind of social on the 12 acre piece. At Tuesday's meeting of the Wdodbridge and Sewaren, .85; Port new Iselin School 18, for drainage Prior to receiving the deed to I Town Committee,-'. Committee- Reading, .63; Keasbey, .84; Avenel, and grading in the Inman Avenue encouragement generally re- '-. the Menlo Park site from Som- man George Mroz took the Board .45; Fords, $1.20; Hopelawn, $1.44; School, for repairs to the Avenel served for a leper. All of; a mers Brothers, Andrew D. Des- of Education to task, for blam- East Iselin, .79; West Iselin, .89; portable buildings and for mis- mond, Board attorney, reported ing the delay in receiving deeds Inman Avenue section of Colonia, cellaneous furniture in various sudden; almost, the torch I he had been promised the deed on the Town Committee and $1.16. other schools. tried to hold high flamed very soon. Because of the delay, Planning Board. The valuations on which the Voters of the Township voted for with a brilliance which only Superintendent of Schools Victor general tax rate is. based are as CANCER CRUSADE CHAIRMEN: The Cancer Crusade in the Township is now underway and. the furniture in School 13 and follows: Land, $7,136,470; im- above are some of the area chairmen who will direct the campaign. Front row, Mrs. Herbert P. drainage and grading in Inman the naive can see. Its beams provements, $31,754,712; personal Neilson, Mayor Hug* B. Qaigrley, Mrs. Frank J. Russell. Back row, Mrs. John Domejka, Mrs. Ralph Avenue School when they approved found their way into many (household goods, tangible, etc.) •T: Ambrose and Mrs. John R. Reilly. the referenda for construction of Army Will Allow Township $7,560,286; second class railroad those schools. However, the money , visions — but what is more property; $2,033,371; total $48,- was expended by the Board for important, into many hearts. 484,839; less exemptions of veter- other things and the overexpendi- . * * * Use of Arsenal Buildings ans, household goods, $4,776,273; Aides for Cancer Crusade Primary Vote Here tures were placed in capital out- EDISON—The Board of Educa- action was necessary because of net valuation taxable, $43,708,566; lay. However, when the budget It is a realization of this tion at its Monday night meeting the inability of the Metuchen less deductions (prior appeals) was defeated twice, the maneuver in the Bonhamtown School an- $187,706, total $43,520,860. Added Likely to be Light metamorphosis which ex- school system to absorb an a'ddi- Named; 'SolicitationPlanned was discovered. The new referen- nounced that it had received word to the latter sum is $186,043,358, dum will set the matter right legal- plains why this is the second that the Army had approved the tional 200 township 10th graders the amount added, for equalization WOODBRIDGE — The Cancer Crusade in Woodbridge Town- ship, for the Middlesex County Chapter of the American Cancer WOODBRIDGE — A compara- ly, even though the taxpayers will time today I have filled this rental of units at the Raritan that year. • , • . • by the County Board of taxation, tively light vote is expected in have been assessed twice for furni- Arsenal for the public school edu- making the iiet valuation upon Society,, will get underway immediately, according to Joseph C. the Township for the primary ture and grading. space. I had written a piece The result of this has been the which county taxes are appor- DeCoster, county campaign chairman. cation of the 'mentally retarded acceleration of the conversion of election next Tuesday. Polls will The $110,000 will be taken from in which I tried to proye and physically handicapped chil- tioned, $229,564,218. - "We are proud to welcome back several Crusade leaders who be open from 7 A. M. to 8 P. M. the $17.4,000 surplus in current ex- dren. the junior high school to a senior The amount to be raised by tax- are spearheading the campaign in their areas for a second suc- again that I am right and high school by one year, As it Delagates - at -large, alternate penses as of June 30, 1955 and will The institution of such a pro- ation is as follows: County tax, cessive year," he declared. "This] delegates-at-large, district dela- be divided as follows according to that the Board of Educa- gram of public school education seems to be at present, the eleventh $1,095,300.87; school tax, $2,923,- sort of loyalty to the cause is gates and alternate district dela- Joseph J, Seaman, Board of Edu- for children of school age in these grade will be'added in 1958 and 760.26; general Township tax, especially valued by the Ameri- tion is wrong. I tossed it into $918,100. The tax dollar is divided Sunday Selling Ban gates to both national conven- cation auditor: categories is now mandatory under I the twelfth grade will be added in can Cancer Society, for it builds tions are to be elected. Iselin School 18, furniture, $28,- the hellbox after I got back State law. The local board hopes as follows: County, .222; school an'understanding of the work of 363:50; site work, $25,000; Inman to have its program underway as of 1959." When the, tenth grade pro- .592; Township; .186. the organization which is impor- On the Democratic side, candi- last night from a visit to gram begins in 1.957, the 97 town- Gets Court Respite dates for delgates-at-large of the Avenue School, drainage and grad- the opening of the new school term tant to the individual and to the ing, $15,000; Avenel School porta- Iselin where I attended open in September. ship pupils originally scheduled to area she serves. regular Democratic Organization go to Metuchen High School will WOODBRIDGE — Stores in the are Robert B. Meyner, Joseph J. bles, . $16,000; furniture, various, house held in the new li- Two arsenal buildings will be "Cancer is a . vicious disease," schools, $23,087; reserved for er- used. The fee charged to the Board go instead to the local high school, Prosecutor Awaits Township will be permitted to re- Hishon, Grover C. Richman, brary building there. It is my making that class' an estimiated j Mr. DeCoster declared, "and the main open and sell merchandise George E. Brunner, Thelma P. rors, $2,549.50, total, $110,000. of Education will be $1,360 annual- life-saving message which the Meanwhile, at an adjourned way of complimenting the ly and the lease will include a 297 at its outset. on Sunday pending a decision by Sharp, Charles 'R. Howell.John A. Eeport of Auditor Crusaders will carry into the Superior Court Judge Howard Kervick, James D. Winans, Ber- meeting of the Board Monday earnest folks who fashioned clause providing for termination The resignation of Mrs. Marlene homes of the Township is of great night, a change order for site 'im- on 10-day notice by either party. M. Corallo. and Mrs. Dorothy Ewart who last week in New Bruns- nard J. Berry, Edward J. Hart, this perfectly lovely facility WOODBRIDGE — "I do not importance to everyone. The Sev- wick reserved .decision on an ap- David T. Winentz, Katherine E. provement work at the new high The report on the availability Hamilton as teachers were accept- en Danger Signals should' be school was ordered, eliminating- with their-own-itands when. of the arsenal buildings.:=was,,Jnad^ti PJ JfeSSSIA •*!&:£.••$?$ follDw expect to have anything further .p^eal.b^.TJie jrwo.Gyys from Har- White, Robert S. Conahay, III, to report "on the Board of Edu- noted "ana -iradBrstood-r*artd- rison^ ""THi." firm "Had" been fined Edward J. O'Burhe, Chaa-Ies W: $30,49-7;50 from -a~$l71,778.75 con- I try now to recognize the in- •by John J. Anderson, board secre- as "hew ^feaclierir'Miss "Eunice cards which lists them should be tract with Middlesex Concrete tary, and Joseph M. Ruggieri, Chavis, Miss Andoneia Christman, cation investigation until the au- $100 fbr selling merchandise on Englehard, James J. Kineally. nate goodness of people. I Mr£ Roberta "Ponder, Frederick ditors have completed their re- retained for reference, when the Sunday in violation of a recently- Candidates pledged to Estes Ke- Products Company. It is under- superintendent of schools'. It was : Crusaders leave them at Wood- stood that the $30,497.50 will be pointed out that conversion to Whitman, Mrs. Esther Colosky, port," Prosecutor Alex Eber said passed ordinance which bans all fauver are Martin J. Rafferty, trust my Iselin friends will .Miss Jeannette Gaydosh, Miss -yesterday. - ., - • bridge Township homes." but a few • Sunday sales toy retail James M. Davis, Jr., James J. used toward the purchase of furni- automatic heating will * be needed ture for the new high school, indi- understand what a low bow I and also provision will be made Elda Maffei, Miss Doris Ritter, Arnold S. Graham, Railway Accepting the leadership in stores in the Township. Hogan, J. Bernard Johnson, Miss Margaret Sorenson and Mrs. Avenue, a certified municipal ac- their .areas for a second successive Henry L. Jankowski, James Elli- cating that the appropriation fpr for a separate entrance from Mill The ordinance, passed on the re- the High School will also be over- make to them. Road. The two buildings to be used Tlieresa Racht. Hired as substitute t countant, appointed by Mr. Eber! year are Mrs. John Domejka, of quest of the Woodbridge Business- son Parker, Thomas E. Quinn, teachers were Mrs. Eleanor Wash- | to make an audit of the Board's 408 New Brunswick Avenue, Fords Fred N. Sucher, Charles H. Mul- expended. # * * for this purpose will be fenced men's Association, was evidently Iins, Roger W. Tucker, Harvey N. Somehow, I have the as- off from the rest of the arsenal ington, Mrs. Mildred Charles and books, said that due to pressure and Mrs. Frank Russell, of 89 aimed at the highway stores. property. It was also noted that the Mrs. Charlotte Laycock. of business caused toy income tax Wedgewood Avenue, Woodbridge. Magistrate Andrew D. Desmond Trimmer, Jr., Frederick L. R,af- surance tonight that our af- area involved includes playground returns, he has not been able Joining the ranks for the first said yesterday he had received a refty, William C. McNally, Harry to devote as much time as he Mopsick, M. Joseph Gallagher, Spiritual Retreat fairs in the Board of Educa- space. Revue to he Offered time this year ai-e Mrs. R. T. call from the upper court suggest- David Abramowitz. tion will be treated different- The agreement with the arsenal would like to the Board assign- Ambrose, campaign leader for ing he adjourn four other cases has not yet been concluded by By Perth Ainboy Nurses ment, but Wall "really get to Iselin, where last year she was pending until such time as a de- Candidates for alternates on the Set for August 3 ly now. I feel that the formal contract. work on it Monday," He said a /worker; Mrs. John' J. Reilly, (Continued on Page Six) (Continued on Page Six) mistakes of the past have The obtaining of the arsenal PERTH AMBOY — The annual he hopes to have the audit com- who will head the solicitation in FORDS—Members of the Holy buildings for the local retarded-[.variety show by the student nurses pleted before the end of the Woodbridge, and M!rs. Herbert Name/Society of Our Lady of been seen, have been recog- handicapped----- educational - program of the Perth Amboj General Hos- month. Nilsen, who will serve as vice- Peace R. C. Church will partici- nized and have been accept- concludes a long effort by the lo- pital School of Srursing will be Meanwhile Mr. Eber said the chairman for Mrs. Russell. EdisonBoardExp lains De lay pate in a spiritual retreat to be cal board to obtain' facilities for held May 2 and Ssin the Wood- entire matter will be turned over held August 3-5 at St. Alphonse ed as signals to warn us this*purpose. At the outset of the bridge High Schobl auditorium, to the May term of the Grand Retreat House, West End. Jury- ASSOCIATION TO MEET In Issuing McCro'sky Report from danger on the road effort, the board discussed the pos- Barron Avenue, Woodbridge, at EDISON—Meeting in the Bon- struction and retirement program" Reservations for the annual af- sibility of entering into a regional 8:30 P.M. COLONIA — The Woodbridge fair already exceed expectations, ahead. I believe this is so be- AUXILIARY TO MEET Knolls Civic Association will meet hamtown School Monday night the prepared for the board by the con- agreement with outlying school "Southland, U.S.A.," sponsored Board of Education "clarified.'the sulting firm of Theodore T. Mc- according to John Bryxchy, chair- cause I feel a certainty that listricts to set up a jointly-shared by the student nurse organization WOODBRIDGE — The Parents' Monday night at 8 o'clock at the man of the retreat committee. classroom system. Auxiliary of the Woodbridge Little Inman Avenue School to discuss reason for the long delay in the is- Crosky, New York. the people will so assert will present Rerennial favorites in suance to the public of the results Describing a retreat as "the When this seemed to be un- the history of music and dance in League will hold a meeting tonight road conditions in the area. All Board members said the long de- most rewarding weekend of a life- themselves, in the event.we residents of the area are invited of the "recommended school con- lay was caused by disagreement workable the board then made an the South. at 8 o'clock in St. James' -School. time," he said that it consists of veer toward, the danger effort to lease buildings at Camp between the board and the firm such exercises as daily Mass, con- Kilmer after that army installa- over "one particular thing" in the ferences with a spiritual adviser, areas, that we can avoid tion was inactivated and the Army report. private meditations, open forums, them by shouts of warning announced lihat it would consider The school survey report was Stations of the Cross and recita- from those Who do not want leasing some of its facilities for delivered to the Board of Educa- tion of the Rosary- civilian use. This effort, involving tion last September. It was not "Through a retreat man has to see bur educational sys- months of red tape, also proved made public until last month. In ample opportunity to meditate on tem fail. I have always be- fruitless. The board then turned the meantime,! the board had been the basic business of life and the lieved that it isn't govern-to Raritan Arsenal, where a similar under repeated questioning by great truths of eternity, thereby Mrs. Earl Main of Old Post Homes establishing a lasting partnership ment that fails, but that it amounwere encounteredt of administrativ. e delays as to when the report would be between himself and God," iia is the apathy of the govern- However, the' efforts to obtain made public. said. arsenal buildings ultimately proved Monday night Mrs. Main asked ed which is responsible for successful. Mr. Ruggieri said that Samuel D. White, who presided at failure. there were sufficient numbers of the meeting in the absence of John children in the township in the re- P. Stevens, Jr., whether anything Fords Man Wins % * * tarded or handicapped categories in the McCrosky report had been It has not been my inten- "to keep both buildings at the changed between the time the re- Key Membership sion to judge the personali- arsenal busy.": port was received by the school -He added that sortie y of the board and the time it was released FORDS—Warren B. Schimmel, ties of the Board of Educa- pupils who will be in the arsenal to the public. son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Schim- tion because not only am I classes , are currently receiving White replied that ths McCros- mel, of 59 Third Street, is among training at special classes in New. ky report was changed in-that in- the 28 Rutgers University sopho- incompetent for such a task, Brunswick or by board-financed terval. mores recently tapped for member- but personalities are unim- instruction at their homes. Mr.. Mrs. Main then asked. Mr. White ship in the Scarlet Key, junior ftuggierialso pointed out that the to tell what had been changed. host and service organization at portant to me. I am interest- township no,w faces a considerable ' Mr. White refused to give this the men's colleges of the State ed only in the Board chang- obstacle in its effort to obtain per- I information. The information was University. sonnel to administrate the teach- 'also not forthcoming from any The hew members, who repre- ing its methods, and I think ing of these classes. He said such other board member, although sent the fraternities, dormitory it now itself has agreed to | personnel, with, the requisite high they were not directly asked for it. living groups and the Crown Club, degree of specialized training, is Mr. White then told' Mrs. Main a commuter's organization, will change them. Time, of exceedingly difficult to obtain., that "we were not in agreement begin their duties as the welcom- course, alone will tell—but if The board announced the retire- with a particular thing 'in the re- ing body of the university for ment of Mrs. Anne Lewis as at- port) and until we had a chance visiting athletic teams, alumni and it proves my supposition to tendance officer and William Witt- to sec the man who made the re- other guests next fall. be correct, then ' I have nebert and Herbert Wildgoose as port and to get an agreement on schQpl* custodians. Their long rec-. the facts and an agreement on the achieved what I set out to ords of service to the school' sys- conclusions, we did not release the Citizens' Group to Hear achieve. I believe, without tem were cited. Both Wittnebert (report to the public. Leihowitz and Nicklas the and Wildgoose are former "There was a statement (in the truth in an effort to conceal bers of the local Board of Educa- report) based on an erroneous as- WOODBRIDGE — M u r r a y tion. sumption," Mr. White continued, Leibowitz, Board of Education ^acts from the people, that' The board also awarded a con- "and the conclusions he drew had architect and superintendent op' we can by dint of industry tract to the Viking Equipment to be changed." Schools Victor C. Nicklas will and sincerity reach the goal Company in the amount of $28,240 The board also heard and re- be guest speakers at a meeting for kitchen and cafeteria eqiiip- fused a request made by Donald of the Citizens Council tonight we all can see in its pristine ment in the new junior high Campbell of Stephenville for the at 8 o'clock at the Municipal school. institution of school bus service Building, splendor. • 1 * • * * It was announced that • the for pupils of the Stephenville de- The speakers will discuss the junior high school will include READY PLANS FOR CATANO DINNER: Above is the committee for the testimonial dinner for James Catano, Sewaren, to be velopment who attend St. Francis proposed Mealo Park Terra cs This goal, to me, is the the 10th grade as of September, S^hJsdt?\S 26, at The Fines. Scale* left to ri^ht are: Mrs. Lawrence Ryan, Mrs. David Balfour, Mrs. Albert Rowley, Fred Parochial School in Metuchen. and Hoffman B o u le v a r d provision of a full-day school 1947, one year in advanc.,..,.e of .the M: Ato™ chairmliv Sirs John McDonnell, Mrs. Herman York and Miss Ruth Wolk. Standing, « the same order, Michael J. Mr. Campbell said that munici- Schools, according to Kevin Satoer j mSTehr ri>avia Balfour, Hair,- Burke, Chief John R. Egau, Deputy Chief Benjamin F. Parsons, lormer Mayor palities were permitted to institute Healy, president. The meeting •^ „ ^-u scheduled date for the institution a c such service. He acknowledged that will be open to the public. ' .( August F. Greincr. sessio(ConifaueOn for ever. ony ?£gchiled Sixamon) g of 10tJ^Continuel grade dc]asse oa Pags Jlere Sixe Tllj s 7 PAGE TWO 'THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1956 EDISON TOWKSHEP AND FORDS BEACON
•n i I ulj^-**^ + Colonia J^TO Closes Season Plans Projected' ^ Lodge Makes Plans For Variety Show For 2 Receptiotis' With Gay Nineties Program i COLONIA— The final meeting Mrs. Walter Zirpolo, Howard Sne- AVENEL —•The Senior High AVENEL — After the opening of the school year was held Tues- decker, C. Clark Stover, Miss Fellowship of the First Presby- ceremonies conducted by Mrs. fid* day by the Colonia Parerit-Teach- Diane Enoch; ''The First Bor," terian Church of Avenel had as its ward Palmer, councillor of the ers Organization of Schools 2 andNancy Smith; "Football Outing," guest at last Sunday's meeting Dr. Pride of New Jersey Council 243, 16 in School 16 auditorium, with Mrs. Robert Flannery, Mrs. Wii-Charles S. MacKenzie, pastor. Dr. Sons and Daughters of Liberty, a Mrs. Walter Zirpolo: presiding. liam Titian, Mrs. Fred Miles, Mrs. MacKenzie showed colored slides business session was held Friday Once again, Mrs.: Zirpolo re- Michael Petyo, Mrs. Howard of his recent trip to the Mediter- in the Avenel Sehool auditorium. minded members of, the need of a Smith; "Bathing Beauties," Mr. ranean countries. A donation to the American fted: Colonia "Walking Blood Bank" and Mrs. Robert Rippen and A variety show is being planned Cross was approved- and urged those whoi-have not Daniel Picaro; "A Game of Cro-for May. The exact.date has not , An invitation was received from mailed in their cards to do so im-quet," Miss Mary Mullen, Robert been set. Evelyn Womelsdorf. is th*> Hightstown Council to attend mediately. It is necessary to have Plannery, William Sparks. taking names of those interested in a dinner-dance April 14. Several 200 persons signed up before any "Naughty Model," Mrs. William participating. invitations were also received to arrangements may be made. Titian and Mrs. Daniel Picaro; Saturday the YMCA in Rahway attend state receptions. Mrs. Creighton Pfeifer, ways and "The Motor Girls," Mrs. A. J. Fox will be open to the Seniors from A report on the official visit of means chairman, announced that and Mrs. John Lockie; "Girl on a 3:00 to 5:00 P.M. for bowling and the state Councillor, Mrs. Victor a cake sale will be held Tuesday, Bicycle,".Mrs. Roger Jones; "And use of the gymnasium. Swimmers Carthage and her staff, to thfe Primary Election Day, starting at So.to Bed," Raymond Smith, Mrs. will be welcome to join the Ter- Freehold Council was given by 1 P. M. The committee includes Robert Harnill and Mrs. Creighton mite Fellowship from the Avenel Mrs. Raymond Waterhouse, Mrs. Howard Smith^Mrs. Sidney Pfeiffer; "Final Group," Mrs. John Church. Plans were completed for, thf Freund, Mrs. Eugene Rockwell, Feldman, Mrs. Gene Zirpolo and Miss Dorothy Weferling-, in re- official visit of state councillor, Mrs. Charles Ronge-;-a^iji -Mrs. H. Mrs. C. Clark Stover and cast. porting the Fellowship's activities, Mrs. Carthagre and her staff to the Buehs. The '"Vocalaires," a popular calls attention to the prayer meet- local council on April 20, at the An excellent program entitled, singing group, sang many old-time ing held each Saturday evening at Avenel school. "Family Album, Gay Nineties songs. 7:00 o'clock, and again on Wednes- Mrs. Waterhouse selected her Era," was presented jiby/Mrs, Wil- Speaking in behalf of her of-day evening at the same hour. committee for the reception iot liam Sparks and Mrs. Robert ficers and executive board, Mrs. Donald Kaiser is enrolling both state associate councillor, Stanley Flannery. Mrs. EdVard Nadler Zirpolo thanked the organization boys and girls interested in the Brookfield, June 1. Mrs. Adolf was the narrator. 'All-'costumes for their cooperation during the Vollely Ball League. Mr. and Mrs. Elster, co-chairman will be as- were authentic. year. She also presented a report Walter Meyer, Colonia Boulevard, sisted by Mrs. Palmer, Mrs. Chris Scenes presented: • were as fol-summarizing the past year's ac- Colonia have been added to the Nelson and Charles Siessel. lows: "Bad Boy,*'.Mrs. Howard tivities. Mothers of first, grade staff of advisors to the Senior The postponed class Initiation Snedecker, Mrs. William Seaman, arid kindergarten pupils, under the High Fellowship. will be held June 7 by Star Coun- Mrs. A. J. Pox, Mrs. paniel Picaro, direction of Mrs. Robert Frank, cil 56 of -Milltown, as announced Warren Reeb and ^iVfr:; and Mrs.hospitality chairman, were host- by state deputy, -Mrs. Ennis Paul Ablonczy; "Our Wedding," SNEAKS HOME esses for the evening. Galesburg, 111. Taken to a HOLDING FINAL REHEARSALS: Above is a seene from the "Fifth Season" to be presented April 14, 15 and 21, by the Adath Israel Bromely. hospital for X-rays, Robert Hiatt, Players at the Woodbridgre Jewish Community Center. Left to right are Mrs. Rubin Greenberg, Mrs. David Stahl, Mrs. Leonard Gold- Mr. Brookfield, reported several Hopelawn Auxiliary. TO HEAR POLICE HEAD- 14, overcome by homesickness, man, Mrs. Chester E. Wills, Walter Schonwald, Mrs. Henry A. Belafsky_ and Dr. Albert Richman. members of the local council at- COLONIA — The next meeting tended the reception given for Mrs, Plans for Installation sneaked out of St. Mary's Hospital Bromely, Franklin Keed, national of the Colonia Club will be held and walked home through show Vesper Service Listed • in the Sanctuary, a Sacred Vesper | of Baptism Sunday, May 13 areCHANGE PARTY DATE representative and Mrs. Margurtte Monday at the Colonia Lebraray at and freezing temperatures, clad j urged to meet with Dr. MacKenzie. HOPELAWN—The Ladies' Aux- BY Church in Avenel Service on the Life of Christ will COLONIA — A card party, Messerol state pianist at the Mill- 8 P.M. Police Chief John R. Egan only in his pajamas. be presented.- Participating in this | on Wednesday evening, May 2 at iliary of the Hopelawn Memorial will be the guest speaker. He will sponsored by the Ladies' Auxil- town Council. Post," 1352, V. F. W., met in post AVENEL — Dr. Charles S. Mac-service will be Mrs. Eleanor Smith, 8:00 o'clock in the Church Study. iary of the Colonia First Aid The special prize of a hand stole" be introduced to the club before FOR SALE was awarded to Mrs. Frank Ben- headquarters and voted to donate the regular meeting begins. Mem- Kenzie, pastor of the First Presby- soprano, Mr. Frederick Beckley, The next reception of; members Squad, will be held April "21 in- two flags to the Brownie troops, terian Church of Avenel, will will take place May 27. All wish- son. Hospitality was under the bers are urged to be prompt. 1948 STUJDEBAKER narrator, and Mr. Don G. Mason, stead of the 27 as was stated direction of Mrs. Nelson. sponsored by the auxiliary. Two Doors, Radio Heater. $75.00 preach on "Overcoming Failure" organist. . ' ing to unite with the Avenel church 1'ast week. The party is scheduled Plans were made -for the joint in- Call WO-8-9095 at the 8:45. 9:45 and 11:00 A,M. are also requested to meet at the WOODBRIDGE OAKS— All parents of youngsters to be to be held in the Civic Club Japan holds leads in cotton, tex- stallation with the post, April 28, 4-12* services on Sunday. At 5:20 P.M.baptized at the next Sacrament above-mentioned time and place. tile exports. at 7 P. M. ,,, •-• —Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dixon building beginning 8 P, M. Mrs. Lee Lund .and. Mrs. Betty and children, of Pennsylvania, Szilagy were appointed as dele- former residents of the Oaks, were gates to the department encamp- recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. ment and Mrs. Mary Thomas and Raymond Smith, Adams Street. Mrs. Beverly Poyssiek were named Little Gail Dixon spent a week as alternates. . :. with the Smiths. Champs of evesy weight class I ew '56 Chevrolet TaskrForce Trucks I
This lovely raneii home at 152 Bedford Avenue, Westbury Park, Iselin, was sold, last week to Mr. and Nits, Richard C. Jackson for $14,100 by the — • JOH;N-,f. .„ 530 Kahway Avenue, Woodbridge Tel. WO-8-3550 New 3000 Series truck, Model 3104, a New %-ton Forward Control chassis, New 1-ton Task-Force truck, Model New 1-lon panel, Model 3805, features ^-ton pickup with roomy body. Model 3442, shown with special body. 3803, illustrated with refrigerator body. plenty of space lor long-loads.
FRIDAY, APRIL 13, SATURDAY APRIL 14
New 6000 Series truck pictured, with van New 5000 Series L.C.F. with platform New 6000 Series school bus chassis ac- New 4000 Series Task-Force stake truck, with a purchase of either a netv spring topcoat body, rated up to 19,500 lbs. G.V.W. body has new 155-h.p, Taskmaster VS. commodates 54-passeriger body. rated up to 14,000 lbs. G.V.W. or suit at $50.00 or more. And you can be sure NEW;MIIIDIiEWElGkT> CffilMPi I that what's right for Spring will be found right here . . . fresh and satisfying as the new season itself.
Pick from sojtie of the finest clothes makers in America.
The fashions are correct, of course.
The fabrics are among the finest available. But equally important are the values. So come in soon. Get in the fashfon picture for Spring . . . you'll be proud of tl|e,^ay you look . . . and happy with values you'll gjet.
"Timely Oothe^' - "Botany 500" Tailored by Daroff - "p^aisliade Clothes" - "Barron- New 10000 Series truck with Triple-Torque New 9000 Series L.C.F. rated up to New 10000 Series truck illustrated with mixer. New 8000 Series model. It's rated up to Anderson" Topcoats - "H. Freeman" - "The tandem, rated up to 32,000 lbs. G.V.W. 25,000 lbs. G.V.W., 48,000 lbs. G.C.W. It's powered by the new Loadmaster V8! 21,000 lbs. G.V.W., 35,000 lbs. G.C.W. Alligator Co.""— and our own "Briegs Built,"
USE YOUR HANDI-CHARGE This is just part of the new Task-Force fleet! They're, rated as high as 32,000 lbs. G.V,W., 50,000 lbs. G.C.W. An automatic
1880 ' transmission is optional in every series at extra cost. Come on In and look "era ovet. Anything less is an old-fashioned truck! } SMITH AT KINO ST3. — PERTH AMBOV. M, J. FREE PARKING IN REAR OF STORE Open Fridjay Evening Till 9 O'clock JUNE CHEVROLET, Inc. New Brunswick Ave., Fords Tel. ¥A 6-6722 950 Wflddlesex Ave., Metuchen, N. J, EDISON roWNSHIP AND FORDS BEACON THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1956 PAGE THREE Home-School Unit Mrs. Clark, Named Gyorkos* Nochta Ceremony Miss Agan Na : Plans Card Party By History Club Held in Lutheran Church 'Regent of D. SEWAREN —' Officers of the . AVENEL—Miss Joan Marie Robert Smithson, South Plain- SEWAKEN — An evening card Nochta, daughter of Mrs. Paul J. field, was best man and ushers WOODBRIDGE — Miss Edna party sponsored t>y the Sewaren Sewaren -History Club elected for Agan was elected regent of the next year at a'meeting of the club Nochta,.27 Chase Avenue, and the were Charles J. Ctiapiar, wew IOIK, Home and School Circle will *<« late Mr. Nochta, became the bride ; and Charles L. Chaplar, Metuchen. Janet Gage: Chapter, Daughters of held next Wednesday, April 18, last Wednesday are as' follows: ( the American Revolution, at a President, Mrs, H- D. Clark; vice- of Richard R. Gyorkos, son of Mr. I Mrs. Gyorkos is a graduate of in the school auditorium. Ttus arid Mrs. Peter Gyorkos, Wilming- l Woodbridge High School and the meeting held' at the home of Miss •will -be the main fund-raising president, Mrs. John i Cassidy; Louise Brewster, Grove Avenue. treasurer, Mrs. Clarence Zisch- ton, Del., Saturday afternoon at 'Berkeley School of Secretarial fcvent of the year, and it is hoped the Grace Evangelical Lutheran ' Training. Mr. Gyorkos is also a Others elected were: Mrs. Wil- that a large number of people kau;'recording secretary, Mrs. El- liam Seaman, vice regent; Mrs. wood Wickberg; program chair- Church, Perth Amboy. Rev. Her- I graduate of Woodbridge High Will attend. bert Hecht, pastor, performed the School and trie Brooklyn School of William Loughran, corresponding mac, Mrs.. Joseph H. Thomson. secretary; Mrs. John Kreger, re- Mrs. Robert' Mathiasen, chair- Mrs. Herbert Rankin, chairman double-ring ceremony. j Optics. Both are employed by Dr. man, has annbunced the follow- I Herbert L. Moss, Main Street. , cording secretary; Mrs. Hampton of the, nominating committee, The bride, who was given in Cutter, chaplain; Mrs. Gordon ing committees; Prizes, Mrs. Rus- submitted the slate. marriage by her brother, wore, a I The newlyweds are on a motor gell Hapstack, Mrs. P. H. Pfleid- trip to Miami Beach, Fla. For MacCauley, .registrar; Mrs. W. Meeting at the home of Mrs. gown of Chantilly lace over yarn- Leon HameS; treasurer; Mrs. Kon- £rer, Mrs. Michael Karnas, Mrs. dyed taffeta. The bodice was made traveling the bride selected a yel- 3". H. Kosmyna, Mrs. Frank Pe- W. Ebner, Holton Street, the club 1 low cotton print dress . with a rad Stern, historian; Mrs. Edward members heard a talk on "The with a scalloped lace mandarin P. Keating, HSrarian. lirtkas, co-chairmen, assisted toy collar and long-fitted sleeves and matching linen duster and acces- the room mothers; chairs, Mrs. History • of Diamonds" toy Mrs. ^ sories' and a white orchid corsage. Plans weligBmade fox a luncheon I. J. Sails, Woodbridge. In addi-j the' floor-length skirt of nylon tulle to bs held next month. Harry Howell; tickets, Mrs. John FLANS FALL WEDDING: Mr, tion to many pictures and des- wSfS fashioned with a lace-scal- Cassidy; cards and tallies, Mrs. loped peplum. Her veil of French Fred Simonsen; publicity, Mrs. and Mrs. Steve Kristoff, 108 criptions of famous diamonds, the Second Street, Woodbridgre, an- speaker showed magnificant repli- illusion was attached to a seal- Mathiasen and Mrs. Simonsen. cas of many of the gems. loped crown, studded with sequins Member Writes , s Movie Children must make a return nounce the* engagement of their and seed pearls.- She carried a cas- on their tickets to the school on daughter, Regina, to Quintin Discussing specific stones, Mrs. cade bouquet of white roses and Irizarry HI, son of Sir. and Mrs. Sails mentioned the Kbninoor feathered carnations. - Skit for Chapter Slated" Saturday itlonday, according to. Mrs. Math- Quintin Irizarry, 801 Manor which has the oldest known his- iasen. There will be a meeting of tory of any diamond.' Its record Mrs. Eleanor Smithson, 'South all committees for the card party Road, Castelton Corners, Stat- WpODBRIDGiJ — An ' original AVENEL—-The Board of Trus- en Island. Miss Kristoff is a dates from 1304 when it was Plalnfield, was, matron of honor, musical skit entitled "Love the tees of the Aevnel Library Associ- tomorrow at her home at 1:30 owned toy the Shah of Persia. She and Miss Margaret Margoczy and 1 ; P: M. graduate of Woodbridge High Leaf,' written by Mvp. Geoi/ge ation will sponsor a children's School and the Burroughs' Of- then i traced its .travels to India, Miss Gwynne Romig, Fords, were Oettle which won the first prize matinee movie Saturday at 1:30 thence to Queen Victoria, and bridesmaids. Marie Nochta served fice Machine School. She is as her sister's flower girl. • in a contest sponsored by the P. M., in Aveiiel school auditori- Former School 11 employed in the accounting said that ever since it has been Woodbridge Chapter of Hadassah, um. SeveraLcomedies suitable for department of the Syncro Ma- owned by a woman..... I will be presented at the April 16 children will be shown and re- chine Co., Perth AmJ>oy. Mr, Mrs. Sails said that the Hope ; meeting, according to the an- freshments Vwill; be en sale. Ad- , Teacher Engaged Irizarry is a graduate of the diamond is currently in New York j nouncement made at a meeting of mission w*iil be one price foi Benjamin Franklin High School at, a large jewelers and that she Westbuiy Park 'the chapter's executive board adults and'Children alike. which met in the Woodbridge WOODBRIDGE — Mr. and Mrs. of New York, and New York had seen-it. It is famous for its Members of the board and th^ State University. He is also em- blueness. Jewish Community Center last Woodbridge Police Deparment William H. McKenzie, Roselle Thursday night with Mrs. Law- Park, have announced the engage- ployed by the Syitcro Machine All diamonds are judged by will be on hand to see the chi' Company as a machine opera- the four C's, according to the rence Weiss presiding. , dren safely, across Avenel Street ment of their daughter, Kathryn, Mrs. Alfred Kaplan, program formerly.of Woodbridge, to Donald tor. He is veteran and served speaker. These are carats, clarity, Members of the Avenel Fire Com- three years with the United color and cutting. Carats is a By chairman, announced that the pany will also attend to giva K. Brandt, son of Mr. and Mrs. April 16 meeting will also include Frank C. Brandt, Barbertoh, O. States Marine Corps. The weight designation and there are adequate safety protection. couple plan a fall wedding. 140 carats to an ounce. In the GLADYS E. a "Husbands' Night" program. Joseph Manzionne, chairmav , -Miss McKenzie is a graduate of trade it is more common to refer Rabbi Max Davidson of Temple MKS. RICHARD R. GYORKOS Roselle Park High School and SCANK. ' made the selection of films; Can to a carat as 100 points. 497 Lincoln Beth Mordecai, Perth Amboy, will Bredow and Charles Cloidt, ad- Baldwin-Wallace College, Con- The clarity of a diamond is con- be the Principal speaker. He will servatory of Music, Beiea, O, 1 mission at tfoor; Mrs. Andrew sidered perfect if no flaw can Highway review the book, "Peace of Mind" Galisin,, distribution of tickets' where she majored in instrumental be detected with a 10-power by Rabbi Joshua L. Leibman. hvusic. She holds a B.M.E. (Bach- Tel. LI-8-1679 Mrs. John Kerekes, candy; Har- lense. Israel's Independence Day will old Kaisen, delivery of film.* elor of Music Education) degree. With regard to color, there are also be observed with Rabbi Sam- "While.in college she was active in uel Newberger, Mrs. Ernest Licht- new granddaughter, Lisa Anne. Frank . Wukovets, school janitor, , very. few blue white . diamonds —A new canasta club was tickets, soda and school; Alleiv * the band, orchestra a capella choir an the true sense, Mrs. Sails said, man and Jack Gottdenker partici- —Joseph Brannegan, Jr., East and Bach, choir. formed by a few residents of West- pating. Bs Avenue, celebrated his 11th birth- Phifer, . projector; Mr. Manzi*. i Only about, one out of 500 are so bury Park Homes. The members- onhe, police protection for road Miss McKenzie taught vocal ! rated. MKS. DAVID day Saturday with a party at his at present are Mrs. Ralph Bisonic, A paper on. Jewish-American home. Guests were his brother, crossing, and Mrs. Daniel Levy, musjc in School 11 in Woodbridge, Cutting can be round, oblong, history prepared by Mrs. Ernest BALFOUR firemen's protection. but at present is teaching instru- Mrs. Rudolph Ingram, Mrs. Sam- Dicky Brannegan, Ronald .Robin- or marquise, and the depth is~j uel Freedman- and Mrs. Herbert Lichtman, education chairman, 597 West Ave., son, Neil Casey, Billy Murphy, Proceeds will go toward the % mental music in the Clark schools. very important. Mi's. Sails also was read by Mrs. Milton Bedrick. new library .building- fund. She is .also the assistant organist Kiviat. They met Tuesday evening Sewaren T.ommy Toy, Bobby Ryan, Dicky ' discussed the mining and distri- at the home of Mrs. Herbert Kiv- Mrs. David Bilowifread a report Delance, Dicky Peck, Jack Dalton, and choirmaster at St. Lukes' , toution of diamonds and gave a submitted by Mrs. .Samuel Kahn, W.O-8-0247 Episcopal Church in Roselle. Dur- very comprehensive talk about the iat, 14 Concord Road. The women Zionist public relations chairman, j Timothy and Dennis Leahy. PTA Plans for Bazaar ing the summer Miss McKenzie is jewels. are anxious to have more members —Mr. and Mrs. William J. in their group. "Please contact anyj on Arab-Israel problems. Baran, West Avenue, have returned And Fathers' Night an instructor at the'Railway Band Mrs. A. W. Scheldt, club presi- The next study group session —Betty Lloyd, daughter of Mr. aiid Orchestra Summer School. • dent, opened the meeting, and member if you wish to join. They from an Easter vacation in Miami WOODBRIDGE — Final plans call themselves "The Westbury will be held tonight at 8:30 oclock and Mrs. Earl Lloyd, Cliff Road, is \ ieachTFlaT"Mrs'. ~Bar*anYbrother- She is a member of M.E.N.C., Mrs. K. B. Butler read the cor- in the home of Mrs. Bilbwit, 216 home for her spring vacation from for School 1 PTA bazaar to be N.J.E.A., St..Lukes' Senior Choir, respondence. Mrs. Simon Larson Four." Julius Street, Iselin. in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. held next Thursday from 9 A.M. Crirl Scouts, Young Adult Fellow- Glassboro College, Glassborol John Dutko, Perth Amboy, went to 9 P.M. in School 11 auditorium reported a profit from the recent •—Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Aiello, Mrs. Weiss announced that the ship of Community Methodist food sale of $39.50 and $14 from Jersey City, were week-end guests —Mrs. Hugh Basehart, West with them. The Barans called on were made at a meeting of the Church, Roselle Park; Abraham chapter received 100 per cent re- Avenue, was hostess Thursday at Mr. and Mrs. Jo Turk, former committee at the home of Mrs. the White Elephant sale which of Mr. and Mrs. George Beveridge, enrollment with 29 new members Clark Chapter of D.A.R., and the was in charge of Mrs. Clarence Worth Street. The George Bever- a meeting of ,the Tired Mothers Sewaren residents, in their Miami Joseph Cohen, 226 North Park B-W Alumni Association. MISS PATRICIA BAGDI and 245 members to date. Club. Present were Mrs. w. Burn- home. On the homeward trip, the Drive. The public is invited to Zischkau, , '• •• •' -f* idges and children, .George and ham Gardner, Mrs. William Henry, Mr. Brandt is a graduate of TO APPEAR ON TV: Miss Pa- -Mrs. Thomson gave details on Roseann, and Mr. and ": Mrs! Mrs. Leonard Cutler, donor Barans met bad sandstorms in the participate in -the games and ac- chairman, reported that 142 mem- Mrs. Raymond Moran, Mrs. Law- Carolinas. tivities. On the committee are Barberton High School and Akron tricia Bagdi, 18, 50 May Street, the trip which the.club."is mak- Aiello were Sunday dinner guests rence Gray, Mrs. Harry Howell, University where he majored in Hopelawn, will appear as a con- ing May 16, to Winterthur, the of Mr. and Mrs. William Has- bers attended the annual donor —Mrs. William Frelish and son, Austin.Dooley, Mr. and Mrs. Leon- : ; luncheon ---held' in the-Waldorf- Mrs. Albert. Bowers, Mrs. Harper Billy, Woodbridge Avenue," and ard Lloyd,/Mrs. Daniel S. Ogden, chemistry and received" a' B.S. de- testant on Ted Mack's Ama- Du Pont estate in Wilmington, sett, Westbury Road. '' Sloan and Mrs. David Balf our. gree. At present he is completing teur Hour, Sunday, on WABC- Del. Mrs. Irene Wiswall, a former Astoria, New York City. Mrs. Cut- Mrs. George Murray and daughter, Mrs. Leslie Obeiiies, Mrs. Joseph —Sunday guests of Mr. and ler also presented a report on fund —Mrs. John Wilverding and Christopher, Charles Peins, Mrs. work for his M.S. in inorganic TV, Channel 1 from 9 to 10 Sewaren resident, has invited the Mrs. Joseph Forzano, Worth Michele, Woodbridge, spent the chemistry. He is a member of P. M. A talented singer who club members making this trip raising projects. children, Erin and Peggy Jayne, day in New York last Wednesday. Al Patnoi, Mrs. Harlan Brady, Mrs. Street, were Mrs. Theresa Shilli- spent the Easter vacation week in George Binder, Mrs. Vincent D. Alpha Chi Sigma, professional has appeared on many pro- for luncheon at her Wilmington tani, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Fi- The annual spring regional con- —Miss Blanche Van Syckle, chemistry fraternity, and the grams for charitable causes home. ference will be held April 22, 23 Luzerne, Pa., with Mrs. Wilverd- Cliff Road, was hostess to the Shay, Miss Eileen Birke, Miss Con- gueras and Mrs. Louis Sweet, all ing's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas stance Lindsey. American Chemical Society. While throughout the area, Miss Mrs. Robert Mathiasen was ac- of Brooklyn. and 24 at the Breakers Hotel in Triple Foursome Bridge club on in service he was stationed with Bagdi Will sing the "Bell Song" cepted as a new member of the Atlantic City, it was announced by McCreary. Thursday. Prize winners were Mrs. Fathers' Night will be held by the AMEDS at Camp Carson, Col. from "Lakme" on the TV pro- History Club. Mrs. Larson remind- —Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore San- Mrs. Weiss,' who may be contacted —Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Bran- S. J. Henry, Mrs. Russell Solt, Mrs. the PTA at School 11 auditorium telli and children, Stephan and He is employed at Columbia- gram. The Hopelawfti girl, a ed the members again of the by those wishing to attend. Dele- negan, East Avenue and children Floyd Howell, and Mrs. W. S. next Tuesday at 8:3- P.M. Partici- member of last June's gradu- Fords WW Band concert on. April Doreen, Worth Street, were week- gates include Mrs. Weiss, Mrs. spent the Easter weekend as the Wooten. Next meeting will be April pating will be George Oettle, Dr. Southern Co., in Barberton, where end guests of Mrs. Santelli's par- he is a research chemist. ating class at Woodbridge High 19. Herbert Winograd, Mrs. Fred guests of Mr. Brannegan's mother, j 19 at the home of Mrs, Wooten. George Benko, John Egan, Julius School, is a student at the ents, Mr. and Mrs. Gustave Kaufman, Mrs. Irving Hutt and Mrs. Daniel E. Brannegan, in Allen. The/^iiest speaker will be A September 8 wedding is Russo, Jersey City. —Mrs. A. W. Scheidt, Holton j Dr.'- CharleS: *SV/MaeKenzie, pastor planned at St. Lukes' Church, Ro- New York College of Music, Mrs. Joseph Cohen. A brief Hebrew Mystic, Conn. Street, and Mrs. Olive Van Ider- New York City. —Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tagliar- lesson was- conducted by Mrs. —Dr. •William Baron, Jr., Fords, of the Avenel Presbyterian Church. .selle. Poppy Sale Plans Henry Winter. stine, West Avenue, spent the day eni and children, Frank and Ken- former West Avenue resident, took in New York recently and lunched TESTS ALARM neth, Worth Street, and Mrs. an Easter vacation skiing in Man- with Mrs. Fred Turner, former COLONIA ,^- Fire Chief Wil- Made by Auxiliary George Beveridge attended a re- chester, Vt. Sewaren resident, at her home in liam Price df the Colonia Volun- caption in honor of Donald Man- GJEX to Present —Mrs. Olive Van Iderstine, West I Tudor City. teer Chemical Hook and Ladder I AVENEL — Tentative plans were zella, a nephew of Mrs. Tagliar- Avenue, is visiting her son and! —Mr.' and Mrs, W. Bumham Company ordered a test of the first sale of made for a poppy sale under the eni, who was confirmed Sunday daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Gardner, Old Road, had dinner in alarm system Sunday morning, at chairmanship of Mrs. Robert at the Church of the Assumption Two Color Films David Van Iderstine, in Rumson, New York recently and attended 8:30, due to the storm over the Schneider at •:• a meeting of the Bayonne. Donald is the son of and is getting, acquainted with her ' a performance of "Pajama Game.'1 week-end...... Ladies Auxiliary to Avenel Me- Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ma3izella,_ and! WOODBRIBGE — Two color morial V.P.W-. Post 7164 Monday the reception, a buffet luncheon films, "Strange Gods of India." at Club Avenel. •and open house, was held at the and "All Around Arkansas," will be .Mrs. Joseph Sullo, Mrs. George Manzella home. '• shown at a meeting of the G.E.T. Gassaway and Mrs. John F. Osth- —Mrs. Helen /Major, 2 Fal- Club of the First Congregational i off were named representatives to mouth Road, was badly burned Church Tuesday at 8:15 P. M., in attend the official visit of Mrs. Sunday afternoon when her dress the Church Sunday School room; Sherman Olson, national president caught fire while she was smok- through the courtesy of the Esso of the Ladies Auxiliaries, on Satur- ing a cigarette. She was taken Standard Oil Company. day at the Robert'Treat Hotel, to Perth Amboy General .Hospital The club will sponsor its spring Newark. _ by the Iselin First Aid Squad. It card party, April 26, 8:15 P. M., in Plans were made for the joint was reported that she was suf- the church recreation room under installation of officers of the post fering from second degree burns' the cltairmanship of Lloyd Smith and the auxiliary, on Saturday, of the abdomen and both legs. | and John Elek. Tickets may be ob- Your Last. Chance to.. Get In on.-.These April 21, at the Maple Tree Farm, Her condition was reported as tained from any member of the with Mrs. Schneider and Mrs. G. fair. I club. Refreshments will be served. from april 12 to 21 Gassaway ast co-chairman for the auxiliary- No ordinary stretch sheers, these! They're made by Delegates elected to attend the Everything going way. below wholesale cost. If you were State department encampment in Larkwood, originators of stretch. They skin-fit your June at Asbury Park are Mrs. G. here earlier this week, be sure to come back.; •••;• legs, never bag or wrikle. Made of "Chadolion" Gassaway and Mrs. Osthoff. For $8.50 yarn. Mail in your order for boxes-full today! The auxiliary made plans to participate in the V.F.W. Loyalty A PERiAHEMT Lpls of New Merchandise Has Arrived!! (Day parade," April 29 at Jersey VALUED TO $15.00 Larkwood Larkwood City. . . Super Stocking X Fabulous Stocking X The attendance award .was won True—we make you this offer First Quality Dupont Cotton and Plisse Two-Thread, long-wearing ul- Original One-Thread by Mrs. George Dunham and host- with a money-back guarantee: tra-sheers—if one thread pops, esses for the social hour were: Mrs. the other holds. ultra-sheers. John jKozak, Mrs. Ella Linn and That for $8.50 .we will give you a permanent that you will Beg. $1.65 pair, Reg. §1.35 pair, Mrs. Thomas Meehan. now ?1 .08 like as well as any you might now § 1 .32 have paid up to $15.00 for. — That will look as Well, be as 3 pairs $«>.85 3 pairs §O.15 phone Soft, Glossy, and as Natural as you desire. . Sold in Boxes of S's COLORS: Chiffon (muled beige); Paris Glow (golden beige); rates ar& l At Fredric's you may be sure that only the finest supply is Velveteen (brown beige). used, that you will receive the^ utmost of attention. SIZES: 3 sizes to fit all—Petite (8-9%); Average ( i_ow If you are having trouble getting a permanent in your Grey Cotton and Crepe COTTON TaH (10-lV/j). Boston .,. ,7.. ,@o
CLOSED WEDNESDAY ALL DAY NEW BRUNSWICK SECRETARIAL, ACCOUNTING AND PREP SCHOOL NEW! IBM, Ablation Secretarial and FREDRIC Free Customer Parking at Rear of Store Machine Stenography Courses. Hundreds of Other Terrific Bargains!! 110 Albany Street, New Brunswick Call Kilmer 5-3910 your hairdresser In Rahway In Clark HEAR RA-7-9883 CR,. 6-9817 HOW CHRISTIAN SCIENCE 150 Elm Avenue Karitan Avenue £ Fredrie himself is at his salon in Railway 5 days and 2 evenings a week. rj He is. at his Clark shop on Wednesdays only by appointment.—Both HEALS II shops.open 6 days and 2 evenings every week. Open Friday 'Til 9 P. M. WOR 710 KC. 7:45 P, M. Sunday
1 -~*t" PAGE 'THURSDAY, APRIL 12, IS56 'IOWNSHIF AND jt'QRDS BiiACOH , you'll save
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Cudahy Roast Beef Hash CTI ASP Shaip Cheddar ^Sir* Mox. y ^ s oz- Broadcast Redl-Meat '. can Rlndiest cwjj pkg. .46 01. •16 OL chunk Dole's Pineapple Juice can Chilled Fruit Salad .-. jar 33' Star-list Tuna Fish can Sliced American ISoz. c quart 8 oz. ib Henri Spaghetti Sauce .'.2 » •Muefister Cheese ^-p^ - Moff's Applesauce . 2'^-29jars ChiliedOrangeJuice . cont. Cling Peaches ^ 29 oz. C Chilled Grapefruit Juice Burr/s Cookies ^01^^ arm#»«n l»H0vSe r ». iar w3 29 cont. F ch H/2oz. bottle Lord Mott String Beans s:; can Salted Peanuts _ bag • Burnett's Vanilla Extract I2oz. 24 oz. (*$(* CilH^I' ©inger Ale, Root Beer, ^ r If HHTa^Hl Macaroni or Spaghetti / , cans Welch's; Grape Juice bottle L«L ijUpCr Coola — no deposit V 29° 20, 12 01. ko r Rsyular ,T|c DeI Monte rL!bb ij 18 oz. *M(; C is^k?f Oats ^ - pkg. Tomato Sauce ° v 6 L* Blended Juice 2 cans £•$ 1-C Orange Drink v./.-3 cans 28 fo1 Wfe#*AfottA ' breikfast cereal pkg.W.. C !8oz. Jell-0 Gelatin Desserts,,flavor™s 3 Marcil^pirNapkins ^ e 2 of 80 28oz.$"|c 23 Plain or 26 oz. WQ Fafina • . l^b-eakf^cerea! pkg. Diamond Crystal Salt Iodized box W Del Monte Prune Juice . , ££, Spring. Cleoning Aids A&pbran d l6 oz- c Kefiogg's Rice Irssples , pkg. Brio Soap Pads , . 2 of 12 'AhrikcaHrA 7 ?^ 6 OZ. •§§"£ MppiCjOULC Our finest quality & cans ^"^ Sail Rugose Detergent 14ct 21 oz Post's Sugar Crisps . . o pkg. 13 C Scottissue, . . . 5 cans tall Fruit Cocktail *•»*-. 2 'lz 47 Ajax Cleanser 3cans 2 White House Bright Sail *1 quart Evaporated Mf cans C Keebler Club Crackers pkg. Clear or Cloudy bottles V/hi+e Hou&e 9.6 oz. I6oz. Del Monte Peaches ^Sl "." 31 For cleaning windows 20 oz. pkg. Sunsh!ne II-Ho Crackers, Doles Pineapple Tidbits 2 without water bottle S3 pkg. Borden's Hii ch olate H cakes iershey's Syrup - 3 parfleff rears :.oOuUpr finesfinest t qualit aUaiHyv «•2• cancansS 4J Fels-Maptha Soap ^tS" cans Tuna Fish 7 oz. ^f CC '*% 16 oz. Cigoreffes Priced Low.' Arm and Hammer Facial Tissues 10 Breast-O-Chicken meat, solid pack can 37 Sal Soda Concentrated L pkgs. Caweli, CW»i)erf:«'J, Kool, Old Sold, Philip Morris, Lucky Stole of 200 IPRETTES i ^1 Clorox 29c ^ has fl complete line of King liis *nd FiHer Tip cignrettes, all priced tow! Jane Parker faked G®@ds For MM CO¥¥EE Enjoyment~ 4oi. CH Distofectant . , bottle AMERICAS' rOKtn.OSt FOOD RETAILER . . . SINCE J85» CHERRY PIE CHANGl TO THE COFFEE THAT'S Plastic Scrub Brushes Urge Galvanized Palls > Supermarkets each Size 39 - -WITH WE GREAT ATUNTIC & PACIFIC TEA COMPANY Sfwdy Brooms '. 1 FLAVOR 1 • ,• Price* effecrire thru Sat, April 14fh, in Jane Parker-—•Brpwn ^ Serve .Mild & Meilo* Super Markets and Self-Service Stores only. Spk & Span Oikfti Cinnamon Rolls 3-LI. Bag $2.61 t-LB. BAG For washing painted surfacss For cleaning woodwork, Just bake in a moder- , Vigpfoui S -Winey 79 walls and tiia C ate pre-beated oven for "K*- large giant S0BCiI 3-LB. Bag $2.31 pkg. pkg. Tide '- *» •-» *»" 2 'Z 57 r! 69 12 ininutes and serve I •' 3-LB. Bag $2.73 pig.
Hsfsii , NiSsIits Kraffs Kraft's, Oil, Oath .Detergent Trend T@mafci him Osrsieif Beef Whole Kerne! Sold*n Corn iirasfe Whip For baking, salads, frying For automatic washors For dishes and fin* fabriee Frown C?n«»ntra+ed 7oi f2oI pint OCft large Twin pack ^ large ®Mp 5l/2 or. 12 oz. i1e 2 -ii« w e** pkg. Banded together • pkgi. "**' cans can il* «an • ! * cant " Laddie Niagara Snow Flakes Liquid Oit@rg@§it LIiilf Laundry SIargfi Draft Bint Ghttr Fwt Jifhei end fin* fubrici For dishes and fine fabrics leg Laundff Starch For the family wash and dishes New washday suds large I 2*17*' bottle *^ largo ^Qg giant j EDISOK IOWNSHIP AND FORDS BEAC&fr THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1S56 PAGE FIVE
niversary. Among the guests -were Dun-Bar Club Meets Mr. and Mrs. Edward McGettigan, ! Colonial; Mr. and Mrs. A. Asch- With Mrs. Alex Molnar. Tnman Ave. Section Colonia Lafayette Estates 1 mont, and Mr. and Mrs. William FORDS—A social was held by McGettigan, Winfield. the Dun-Bar Club at the home " 'Attention (Including Dukes' Estates* Canterbury Village. i —Mr. and Mrs. Robert McKee, samo, DeGrasse Street, were Mr. of Mrs. Alex Molnar, 445 Baker 'Arlington Drive, celebrated nine Place. Mrs. John Bueholz won the Woodb ridge Knoils, Oak Ridge Heights) ' and Mrs. Anthony Balsamo and 1 children; Mr. and Mrs. Michael years of wedded bliss at the home * special prize. By THELMA of Mrs. McKee's parents, Mr. and Guests were Mrs. Paul Sabine, Residents of Menlo Park Terrace and I Oreany, Walter Greany, Union Amodio and children. Mr. and Mrs. BA^TDSON Mario Fernandez and Mr. and Mrs. (Mrs. Darwin Peoton. New York Mrs. Stev-en Kantra, Mrs. Louis By MRS,.) Cityi ROnaid Johnson, Brokdale, Stosh Stankewicz. I City, Kosztur, Mrs. Arthur Solt, Mrs. Lafayette Estates, Fords. CHAKLESJ nd his friend from Newark, Miss I —Den 2 of Scout Pack 15'4 will a 33 Jonquil Cir. —Several women from Lafayette Peter Molnar, Mrs. John Bueholz, O1.1PHANT, Edith Baabe and Foster-Raabe, present a skit on Birds in com- Mrs. George Sabine, Miss Anne ( Liberty 8-3307 Estates will attend the paid-up 1 Jr. both ef East Rutherford were the -membership meeting of the Menlo pliance with "Bird Month" at i!s| O'Buck, Miss Patricia Sabine, Miss , West Street, guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Park chapter, American Jewish . next Den meeting. At the regular Alice Lochli and Miss Kathy Bus Ride to Woodbridge Colonia, N. J.William. Guellich, MeKinley Ave- Congress which will be in the form j meeting of the Pack which is held Lochli. nue. , of a Fashion Show and "Bagel and' every • fourth Thursday of i:ie Phone —The Spring Dance to be spon- month, a valuable '-Surprise Pack- tiiiu uohn, jr., Long Island City.- Fulton S-1966 —Mr. and Mrs. H. Liebenow Lox Party" tonight at the Metu- LUCKY FRIDAY APRIL 13th and children, Richard, Janet, Su- sored by the Lafayette Estates chen Jewish Center. age'' will be raffled. You may be ""—Sorry, due to a severe case of- san, and John, Livingston, were Civic Association Saturday, May the lucky person, so be sure to at- laryingitis, it-was impassible for —Mr. and Mrs. Paskal Merritt, the Sunday guests of Mr. and12,. at" the VPW Hall, New Bruns- —Brownie Troop 59 spent the tend. me to contact more people for more BUS SCHEDULE: Amherst Avenue, were the guests Mrs. Henry Damen, Lancaster wick Avenue, Fords, promises to* be last meeting preparing 'for th'e —Birthday greetings to Michael news. Birthday greetings to Mi-| Saturday of Mr. and Mrs. Ar- Road. the highlight of the social season. Woodbridge Council Gir] Scout i Katzara, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs: chael Stehlick, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lv.: Menlo Park Terrace, Isabelle Street bard Marusinsky, Port Lee. —Miss Carol Scott, Union City, This is the time and place where Field Day which will take place Michael Katzara, Inverness Ter- Edward -Stehlick, Arlington Drive- —Mrs. Philip Singalewifceh, Jr., was the week-end guest of Mr.you will get acquainted with your Saturady April 21, at Rooseveltrace, who marked his eighth birth- to Patricia Tallecson, daughter of School Bus Stop between Hfords and Menlo Linda Avenue, attended the bridal and Mrs. Albert Foote, Inman neighbors and friends. You may Park between 10 A.M. and 3 P.M. day this week. Air. and Mrs. -Hobert Tallecson, shower for her niece. Miss Kath- There will be many intra tvoop Hearthstone Avenue; to Ted Gar- Avrnue. invite your-friends to come along. —Susan Kim Ballingbull, Jon- Avenue -10:15 -11 :OO -12&45 - 2 :OO • 3:00 leen Harney, Little Silver, Satur- Tickets can be purchased from contests, activities and a general vin, Brandywine Road. Anniver- —Mr. and Mrs. Edmund good time for all participants. quil Circle, was christened April day. members of the committee who will 8, at the Palisade Avenue United sary greetings to Mr: and Mrs. Hughes, Savoy Place, attended the Victor Giickman, Marie Road. Lvs-: Lafayette Estates, Fords | Model Home at —M'ss Palric'a Caroy and christening of Patricia Quinn, visit each household, or call George —Mr. and Mrs. Ike Shulman,Presbyterian Church, Union City. fr'end. Cliflon. vp-e rhe dinnerdaughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Crisofulli, LI 9-0042 or Mrs. David- Bellerose, L. I., were the Saturday The ceremony was followed by;,, a Ford Avenue- 10:30 - 11V1S -• 1:00 - 2:15 • P'«\;fcs Si!P'"f" "f Mrs. Quinn, Iselin, Sunday. son, LI 8*-3207. evening guests of Mr. and Mrs.party, given by Mr. and Mrs. Ro- George Gross, Concannon Drive. Cxiarlei Lang, Pli:a'D2 C —Mr. -and Mrs. John Garra- —Henry Korzeb, Jr., son of Mr bert Ballingall at their home. At- I easfsse !ffii@ 3:15. ; \'.i^ —Mr. and Mrs. F. Langendorf, -^e Avenue, were the guests The Gross children, Beth and Bar- tending were: Paternal grand- folt>i and Mrs. Henry Korzeb, Arlington ry spent part of their Easter vaca- 0 f© phone Wendy Road, attended the christ- Saturday evening of Mr. and Mrs. Drive, celebrated'his third birthday T3»rents. Mr.-and Mrs. F. Ballingall, Return Home from Woodbiddge: Main and ening of Richard Henry Ptas- tion visiting their grandmother in North Bergen; Mr. and Mrs. R. Jack Potts, West Lake Avenue. at a quiet family gathering which 'Brooklyh.; ~ chinsky, son of • Mr. and Mrs.—Robert Hubert and son, Den- consisted of his twin sisters, Lynn Kassabian, Maternal Grandpar- School Streets, also Rahway Avenue and Green Henry-Ptaschinsky,- Newark, Sun- nis, West Orange, were the guests and Gail, and' brothers, Billy and •:>—At-a triple'surprise party, Mrs. ents, Union City; Frank Ballingall, J anywhere day. Mr. Langendorf was one of jLillian -'McGetti-gan, Cbncannon Daniel Ballingall, Miss Joan Kirty, Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Keith. ..-•..'• . :'••: " • Kttsburgh. ... .SO© Street, Amboy Avenue and Green Street the sponsors. Bedore, '.Edgewood Avenue. - Dfiye,:,was felicitated on her birth- Miss Joan Higgens, Mi\ and Mrs. : —Sherry.' Gottlieb, .daughter' of day. The party which was held at Joseph Boorujy and son, Petsr; HI Baltimore...... 65e J"'^^ - 4:45 —Mr. and Mrs. Philip Singale- •—Sunday guests of Mr. anMrd . and Mrs. Sandy Gottliebv witch, Jr., and children, Linda, Mi-s. James Black Sr., Patricia •the home of her sister-in-law and Mrs. Sarah-Boorujy, Chatham; Mr,- Brandywine Road, is recuperating, .brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Bob and Mrs. Robert Boorujy, Morris- A . from Biagemxti after 6 PM and Philip, and Philis, Linda Ave- Avenue, were Mr. and Mrs. Aug- from a recent tonsillectomy.. all day Sunday. 3 mis. station Cisaletto, Winfield, also celebrated .town; .Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Terjir- ^m rfttes, 10 % Fed. tax not included. COURTESY OF: WOgPBRIDGE nue, were the week-end guests of ust De Vico and children, Sharon, —Sunday dinner guests at thethe birthday of Mr. McGettigan's ian and daughtei, Lorraine, North Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Harney, Wayne, and August. Jr., Edison. home of Mr. and Mrs Joseph Bal- father as well as his parents an- Bergen; Mr. and Mrs. John Baron BUSINESSMEN'S ASSOCIATION Little Silver. —Mrs. Walter Brostow and v —Mr. and Mrs. George Lees, daughter, Linda; Normandy Road, Linda Avenue, are expected to re- Accompanied by Mrs. 'P. Buszko, turn from their vacation in Flori- and Mrs. Moore and children, da tomorrow. Mary Ann -and Billie, all of Ba- —Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fran- yonne, attended the "matinee per- ' WOODBRIDGE^ chak, Philadelphia, Pa., and Mr. formance of the Ringling Bros, SHOPTHE and Mrs. Theodore Piohalski and and Barnum and Bailey Circus, daughter, Debbie, Bunns Lane, at Madison Square Garden, and MERCHANTS ' Woodbri-dge, ware the dinner! had dinner in New York City, WOODBRIDGE STORES guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Sunday. OFFER V Ferd Sutter. Midwood Way. —Mrs.- James Cherego, Inman SENSATIONAL Displaying thei Avenue, Mrs; "George Latzko, Pa- Mrs. David Q tricia Avenue and Mrs. C. Ober- dick and soils, Michael and Thorn- | VALUESr .:•;• as, Rahway, visited Mrs. Stephen Heads Sisterhood "LUCKY." 13" in fheir windows Karisz, Perth Amboy, last Mon- DGE day. '-.:.--•"• ' '' '' WOODBRIDGE—Election of of- Men's Sport Socks Regular 60c Luncheon McCloskey's VARNISH LADIES' SWEATERS MEN'S DJtESS SLACKS. Special Group of Reg. 89c ficers for the 1956-57 season was From 11 A. M. to 2:30 P. M. Reg. $5.30 Gal. POP RECORDS, 3 for $1.13 —Dinner guests last Sunday of held Monday at a Sisterhood Meet- Jies- 65e 13c OFF •Reg-. $3.98 Reg. $5.95 Mr. and Mrs. Paskal Merritt, Am- ing of the Congregation Adath Is- $3.13 Gal. $3.13 •-herst. Avenue, were Mr. and Mrs. 5 Pairs for $1 13 13% Off All Toys $4.13 WOODBRIDGE rael. Mrs. David- Guttman was SHORE'S Milton Dunham, Sr Roseile Park, elected pi:esideat- o&er officers Christensen's Dept. Store MODERN LIVING FRANTELL SPORT SHOP ARMY & NAVY STORE .. MUSIC SHOP : •••'. ."LUNCHEONETTE and Mr. .and Mrs. Donald Nelson,' are: Firs— t• vice-president,- - - - ' •Mrs ••-•••. So• l 97 Main Street 118 Main Street 100 Main Street 114 Main Street i2» Main Street Greer, South .Carolina. - Klein, w'ays arid means chairman; ^___'-1*1 Main Street •—Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rob- second vice-president, Mrs. Leo-. SAVINGS BOOK BANKS BEDSPREADS - RUGS™ Steam Irons - Toasters bias, Shurburne, N. Y., were, the Goldman, program j chair- SLIPCOVERS 13% OFF ON EVERY ITEM Printed KITCHEN CURTAINS SUB-TEENS BONNETS guests for a few days of Mr and i man; thir
FORMAL OPENIN! Wii§ Be Held What more appropri- ate way to show: how- SATURDAY, APRIL much they mean to you than with flowers? WATCH THIS PAPER FOR COMPLETE DETAILS Send a token of your "One-Fifty" 2-Door Sedan *'R CONDITION'S -TEMPERA- 123 GLAMOROUS PRIZES IN THE "SEE THE America's Favorite—by a Margin of love this wonderful TURES MADE.TO ORDER—AT NEW U.S.A. IN- YOUR CHEVROLET" CONTEST. 2 Million Cars! way. She'll appreciate tOW OOST. LET US DEMONSTRATE! ENTER NOW-AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER'S. it so much. The EDISON We Bcliver and Plenty of Parking WALSHECK'S JEFFERSON MOTORS, Inc. Eoutc Zt and Willow Avenue Edison, N. J. MEMBER F. D. I. C. FLOWER SHOP 180-186 New Brunswfek Aye,, Perth ftmbsy V.AS=001i = 4=8018 305 AMBOY AVE. WO 8-J636 crossroads and will either go one way or the SILVER LINING -Edison Township - Fords Beacon other. Some Pertinent Data France is an example of a democracy in the Published Every.Thursday by which finally split into so many diverse fac- 'l'f.:- The Woodbridge, Publishing Co. tions that sustained, consistent govern- Post Office Address: Fords, N. J. ments have been impossible in recent years. History of Woodbridge ::• •••••• ... Woodbridge 8-1710 The United States is not as homogeneous as is England, where a. two-party system By RUTH WOLK m the Township 1 weie John G -*' Charles E. Gregory (the Liberal Party is now practically non- CHAPTER III Wall, Joseph Ban on, Ralph •';"'. Editor and Publisher Marsh, Christopher Maish, John existent) has become the mood of the times, In the yellowed, crumbly min- Heard, James Patton, Benjamin without doubt. ute books of the Township m A Brown, William Heaid, James Subscription rates by mail, including post- the late 1600's an dearly 1700's Efigai, Philip Blown. John Con- age, one year, $3.00; six months, $1.50; three there are many references in le- In England, also, there is a Conservative gard to piovidmg educat'on foi way Ichabod Pottei, Thomas months, 85 cents; single couies by mail, 10 and a Labor Party, and these lines of politi- Jackson James V Blown, Rob- eents. All payable in advance. the children and partiaulaily foi eifc Edgai, Jonathan Freeman, cal division are a* more realistic grouping the children of the poor James Fireman, Ellis Baxron, _,: .By carrier delivery, 8 cents per copyl In January of 1694 the town I'-mel Thomal Campyon Cutter, than is the case in the United States today. sent Nathaniel Fitz Randolph ••*' Entered as second class matter April 17, John Manning;, James E Paiker, A crucial test for the United States,may and John Bloomfleld "to Dis- Samuel Cutter John Marsh, 1936, at Fords, N. J., post office, under the couise with John Biawne of -Act of March 1, 1879. come in the immediate future, when the Petei Noe, Timothy Brewstei, Amboy or any person that May Daniel Bellove, D Freeman, F S. two major parties, are either reorganized Be Sutable" the possibility cf Cunyngham, Abraai Tappen, into a Conservative and Liberal party, or a securing him as a teacher The Ebenez-ei Foid, Jonathan Bloom- Tardy but Welcome Conservative and Labor party, or the two following month "it was passed field, Ji , Ppfrn Menck Henry by Vote that John Bi own of Am- Oibome, Randolph Cxowell, Jer- The rennaissanee of administrative de- parties split, with the creation of one or boy Should have twenty-fouie emiah Claikson, Robeit Mooies, more additional parties. pounds a yeaie alowed him foi Jaivais Bloomfleld corum in the Board of Education has keeping a fiee School m this towne this next yeai e" Pi e- Latei ve lead of the Elm started tardily, to be sure, but there is some If a split takes place, and there is a third viously a John Beaehei had been party, or even a fourth party, the United Tiee Institute oi Moms Acad- small evidence that at least it has appeared. hired on tual with the piovi- emy which was located at what States could be on the road to a multiple- sions that "he Shall be constant is now 531 Rahway Avenue and The Board has decided to present at least & faithfull in. that employ as was own d as a pi.^ate school party system of government. If that trend School Mastei aught to Bs, and by Piofe'-soi James Stiykei a part of its folly to the people for correc- were to be continued for" very long, and that he shall be engaged to at- But to get back to the public tion. From the records, It is shy some $53,- further splits occurred, the stability of our tend the School this umtei time schools In the 1340's theie were 000 needed for furnishing the new Iselin untill Nine o'clock at Night" two disk lets m the Township— form of government might be threatened. On January 29, 1701 it was the Stiawbeny Hill Dishictr No School and for completing site work there. Because a defeat on an Administration decided that no division of com- 7 and the Woo Jbi idgd Academy Instead of hiding this deficit in the current mon land should *be made until i Dmnct No 6 The Academy bill does not turn out Congress and force the "Free School Land" was laid j School stood on the site between budget, which the Board attempted to do new elections, the U. S. system of govern- out. This is the same "100 acres \ the Ensign anil Randolph homes of upland" that is administered | on Rah way Avenue. The Straw- without success, the shortage is now to be ment would probably never become as un- ! 1 even today by the Trustees of berry Hill Schooi stood some- included in a proposed referendum' to tai- stable as the French system today. How- Free School Lands, dubbed "The where in vicini,y of the present ling $100,000 to be submitted to the elec- ever, if Congress were split into so many Seven V.Sisters," for nowadays intersection Bunns Lane and torate next month. parties that a workable majority would be only women run for the post. Amboy Avenue. The land is in the Iselin section In 1849 the Academy trustees This referendum should be adopted be- difficult to obtain, the result could bring of the Township, formerly decided a new building should be much confusion and even chaos on Capitol known as Uniontown. The house erected "on the site of the present cause there is no other method by which on the property was later used building." After preliminary sur- the Board can meet its deficit at the Iselin Hill. as a poor house. veys, the old schoolhouse was school, and also complete the Inman Ave- The real danger might occur during A survey of the. free school purchased by Isaac Inslee for $70. emergencies, when a majority in Congress lands was made and reported in Mr. Inslee moved it to the lots op- nue school drainage, and grading problem. the minute books and "signed by posite the Woodbridge Hotel, Its. approval also; will permit expenditure did not possess the unity to act in the best Under the Capitol Dome Samuel Dennis, John Bishop, (now' a gas station at the corner of $16,000 for work at the Avenel portable interest of the nation with all possible Samuel Hale, John Bloamfield, of Green Street and Rahway •••By. if. Joseph Oribblos Jonathan Dunham and Thomas Avenue) next to the creek on schools ans provide: a fund with which to haste. This is a long-term danger, but it is Pike. one worth considering, and if we are to Rahway Avenue. The building -at purchase sundry furnishing necessities in . TRENTON — Battle lines are have one-half vote. Republicans porarily. residing -'.'.in- another School Opens one time housed the old "Inde- reach a multiple-party system the election :: It was not until 1793-, however, pendent Hour" forerunner of the drawn for next Tuesday's pri- •State. ' : ;"• •••.,-• .'••• - : " - 13 Township schools. The reasons submis- will send 38 delegates to the that any real attempt was made of Presidents might also become highly mary election with New Jersey Republican National Convention The program .was worked up : Independent Leader. Later it was sion of this referendum is necessary are be- Democrats facing a choice of at the Cow Palace, San Francis* by the Council of State Govern- ' for a public school education occupied by Owen Dunigah as a complicated, and most confusing. for the young. On June 15, 1793, plumbing shop and in 1924 it side the point now. voting for national convention co, starting August 20. Each dele- ments at ,a recent twJb-day. meet- we read of a meeting of "the The question of a Third Party, or a re- delegates pledged» to Senator gate will have a full vote. ing, at Burlington, Vermont. was torn down to make way for a subscribers to the Woodbridge modem business block. We hope that; before the final draft and Estes Kefauver, or a group of Academy." The first schoolhouse alignment of the political parties, is oneunpledged convention delegates AIR RAID ALERT: — Some- EMPLOYMENT:, — For the The trustees of the Strawberry amount of the referendum are decided that was built .by Jonathan Freeman Hill schoolhouse decided to ex- of the greatest questions of the era in the headed by Governor Robert B. time between 7 and 8 P.M. on first time in its-history,-the State foi* 336 pounds and 15 shillings— the/Board will consider at least two ques- Meyner. , . Tuesday evening, May 1, every of New, Jersey -is- invading col- pand and bought in 1860 from United States. Every citizen should do some : approximately $1,650. Rev. Azel William Harned three building tions. One pertains to the overexpenditure The Democratic State Com- resident of New Jersey will be lege, campuses in -an. ^effort to Roe, John Heard, John G. Wall! sound and serious thinking on this ques- required to take cover for ap- recruit [ needed .personnel .to. fill lots "situated on the south side of the authorized sum for the Inman Ave- mittee has entered a slate of un- John ..Condway, Christopher' of Main Street between the house tion. The time ma.y not be too' far away pledged delegates who favor the proximately 10 minutes begin- vacant positions., in.' the. State Marsh, James Patton and Ebe- nue school, and the subsequent covering of ning with the sounding of the Government. -. :'. '---;V _•; • . occupied by Joseph Gilman and when one's opinions may have to be acted presidential nomination of Adlai nezer Ford were the trustees. the property of William Bedman, this shortage in a current budget. We be- "Red Alert." The signal will be ' Because of "wholesale retire- upon. Stevenson but are keeping quiet three minutes of siren blasts or The subscribers (some of the Jr." The schoolhouse was erected lieve, this evasion to be morally and legally about it. Not content with enter- ments of- 1,'500..'.Older, employees family names are still prominent (Continued on Page Eleven) ing their man in the State's . short blasts of factory whistles. on April! and more.due on July unsound and that it should be corrected by presidential preferential primary, On city streets, people will be 1, there is great need foi: pro-; referendum. In the second place, we believe « Colder Winters Ahead Kefauver's supporters have come directed to designated shelter fessionai employees, .especially up with a ful slate of delegates,as areas by wardens and police. Car social 'case workers, -engineers, Competence Creates Confidence the Board should disclose now whether it Another weather expert has predicted a challenge to the State Demo- drivers will bring their vehicles nurses, psychologists, physicians, can totally complete the new high school that the next half century will bring the cratic organization. Because of to a full stop in cities and towns foresters and accountants.; for the $3,100,000 provided, or whether it other primary commitments, and occupants will leave the vehi- During the past Easter vacation United States colder weather, more mois- Stevenson's name was not en- cles and seek shelter. They are period when many college".stu- anticipates a shortage in this account. If ture and what he terms "old-fashioned" tered in the New Jersey prefer- warned, however, not to enter dents were home,, civil service of- there is any likelihood of a shortage, its winters. ential primary. private, homes. fices in Camden,. Trenton and Newark, were open and many a amount should also be included in the It might be remembered that only a few As a result, voter participation For the purpose of the May Day in next Tuesday's primary elec- test only, passengers in vehicles college lad and lassie were inter- referendum. • years ago the prevailing belief of most tion on the Democratic side will on the main highways of the viewed and given a sales talk on If these two matters are resolved, then weather experts was that we were enjoying decide the actual convention State may remain in vehicles. the advantages , of working for strength in New Jersey for Drivers of buses will tell passen- the State of New Jersey. \ : we will have taken a long step toward un- a period of warmer weather and a trend Kefauver. Four years ago the gers what to do. To attract needed employees, scrambling the chaos which has been the toward farmer winters. However, in the'last Tennessean entered his name Aircraft on the departure will in State Government service, the unopposed in the preferential State stressed job security, ade- consequence of Board policy. We trust this year, many weather experts have predicted remain grounded for the duration There was a time—many years ago—before our fine distri- primary which is merely a pop- of the alert. Rail transportation quate pensions and steady sala- bution system of today came into being—when it was will be done. just the opposite—that we are now enter- ularity contest. The result did will be permitted to . continue ries; twelve holidays off: -each ! advantageous for people to buy certain things "by mail year;, sick leaye,.,yearly vacation ! order." Today, our LOCAL «merehants carry a complete ing a period of colder winters. not prove anything. This year, if during the operation. Vessels in stock of various items to supply your requirements. Tour Kefauver delegates are elected port will remain at the dock until periods, prompt promotions and insurance needs were ALWAYS taken care of by your The latest prediction we take note of is over the Democratic organization the fact that employees; will riot LOCAL insurance agency—so let's keep it that way! In the sounding of the all clear fact, EVERYTHING that can be purchased from business- . The II. S. Future : ' based on a study of sunspots and goes back delegates, the story will be much signal. be shifted to. points outside New men in your own community is a part of YOUR contribu- different. 'Jersey. . ?• • • ; ;. ;. ./ tion towards making it a. better place in which to live. One of the long-term questions1 of the several hundred years for substantiation of May WE take care of YOUR insurance need^? Voters will also settle three MENTAL ILLNESS:—The New BLACKBJRDS: ^"The lowly age is whether the United States Govern- the forecast that between 1960 and 2000, Congressional disputes at the Jersey Legislature is considering, blackbird..,which pauses-r great ment, as a democratic system, is going to winters will be colder and more snow and polls in the Democratic primaries adoption of a bill sponsored by "Friendly Service—-As Near As Your Phone s Assemblyman Arthur W. Vervaet, damage : to . South Jei-sey. corn drift into the abyss which now holds rain experienced. next Tuesday and two fights fields may* be. called,• to :the, atten- in the Republican primary. The Bergen County, to permit the tion ; of President . Dwight D. France, or whether it is to continue as a If this long-term forecast is true, it will Democratic contests will be held State to enter into a compact Eisenhower soon..* V..V:-,;^ in the fifth, eleventh and twelfth with other state's to help increas-' two-party system. ' mean fewer hurricanes for northern coasts, districts, while Republicans are ing numbers of citizens who are Assernblynian >John"3V.: Davis, This question, which is a profound one, fewer droughts, a rise in the water table, righting over the congressional mentally ill to secure proper re- Salem farmer,' has. introduced a medical treatment. resolution in the .-Legislation to affecting every citizen of this country, is a in many lakes, such as the Great Salt Lake, nomination in the sixth and .tenth memoralize, the .President to di- districts in Union and Ess"ex. The proposed Interstate Com- ; timely topic. It may not be too long before and a reversal of the recent trend toward rect Secretary :of State iDull.es to Counties. pact on' Mental Health would Continued on Page ^ft our system of goyernrriferit finds itself at the less ice in both glaciers and Arctic ice fields. . Polls will be open next Tues- give greater recognition to the day at 7 A.M. and remain open welfare, treatment and recovery until 3 P.M. County boards of of the patient rather than to his election will meet on that day legal residence. to open and canvass military If the: proposed compact is Opinions of Others' service and other absentee voter adopted by the eastern states, a ballots which will be added to mental patient would not be the regular vote at the polls. shipped to his legal home for THE GOVERNOR StFCCtWlBS however, forget to blame the Re- opponents. All of these men, in New Jersey has 36 votes at treatment but would be permitted Governor Harriman has.signed publicans. their own lifetime, reached the the Democratic National Con- -to take advantage of facilities the Republican $40,000,000 in- So, in spite of the implausi- terminal point of absolute power. vention to be held in Chicago and services in this State. The come tax reduction bill. He thus bility and indeed the recklessness Not 'so Josef Stalin. He died in starting August 13. Each of the same would apply to mental contradicts all portents, the logic of tax reduction when the State full possession of the authority he 72 delegates to be elected next patients who are legal residents of his own previous remarks on is about to embark on a borrow- had so ruthlessly gathered to his Tuesday to the convention will of New Jersey but who are tem- the subject, and compounds the ing program running high into person over more than three dec- fiscal irresponsibility of the Re- the hundreds of milions of dol- ades of violence and intrigue. publicans whom he so scathingly lars, the Governor believes the And he died to the public lamen- GLAMOR GIRLS condemned. His lengthy memo- taxpayers are "entitled" to re- tations of his heirs. It was a rare randum of explanation for sign- lief. end for a dictator, but not an un- ing gives every explanation but But by signing this bill the precedented one. the one that undoubtedly was- Governor does taxpayers no Perhaps we can find some point controlling: to veto tax reduction service. He merely makes State' of similarity in the government would be bad politics; especially government more expensive for of Rome after the death of in an election year. them. For to the extent, no mat- Caesar. He, top, was succeeded by It seems fairly obvious that ter how little, that the State could his political "friends," although somewhere along the. line Mr. avoid borrowing, it would avoid it was they who murdered him. BANKING HOURS: Harriman changed, his .mind, interest charges. Everything we They accepted the forms of the The safe sure road to whatever you most possibly in that last day of agon- dictatorship which they de- Monday thru Friday borrow for — whether $500,000,- nounced. desire is a steadily growing Savings Ac- izing travail before he acted. 000 in highways, $250,000,000 for 9 A. M, to 2 P.:•M.- Torn between the arguments of State university expansion or It cannot be reasonably in- Friday Evenings count in this bank. And the satisfaction fiscal advisers and political. ad- $350,000,000 for mental hospital ferred that Khrushchev and Bul- 4 P. M. to 6 P, M. you get on reaching your goal is an extra visers, he succumbed, ingloriously construction — costs more than ganin and the rest actually en- dividend. For people on the way Jo a to the county chairmen singing a if we paid cash. Was this Mr. gineered .Stalin's death, but from siren song of... something for Harriman's way of doing "the the revelation of the past week- better tomorrow, there's no sub&llf ate everybody. . right thing whether it is popular end, it is quite apparent that they for saving. Forgotten were, the arguments or not"? — The New York Times. hoped for it. for long-range financial sound- A French historian, Leon ness and the arguments against DICTATORS' FATE Homo, has written that "with his 2% Paid on Savings living off past savings, advanced The world of 1956 must watch own hands Caesar made.the con- by Mr. Harriman himself in his• fascinated ars it witnesses the de- spiracy that killed him." How first budget message, denouncing consecration of Josef Stalin. For true it is that Josef Stalin, with W on Savings Certificates the Dewey regime for leaving him this is the first time in modern his own. hands, fashioned the in a fiscal hole. Ignored was the history that a tyrant has been di- conspiracy that now sets about Republican refusal to pass new vested of his halo by those who posthumously to destroy him. It taxes to amortize toond-issuebor - climbed to power in the light of is a proof — a heartening proof, rowing for higlrway construction. its glow. to our mind — of the irremedi- Forgotten was his own,share in Hitler died as a direct result of able flaw in the principle of ab- solute rule. If the ' dictator sur- increasing the State's spending military action against his re- Our New Building, Corner Moore Avenue program after this year's budget gime. Mussolini inet a similar vives, his enemies, as few do, he NATIONAL BANK message, for whicn he did not. fate. Peron was deposed by his (Continued on Page Nine) and Berry Street (Opp. Town Hall) "Now, Miss Jensen, isn't this better than ten or twelve Membert Federal Reserve System and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation .PAGE EIGHT EDISON TOWNSHIP AND FORDS BEACOA coffee breaks per week?" EDISON .TOWNSHIP AMD FORDS BEACON THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1956 "PAGE NINE Hospital Group . Auxiliary to Induct New Slate at Dinner Makes Tour Plans • COLONIA — The Ladies' Au- To-Sponsor Bazaar xiliary of the Golonia Volun- COLONIA — A meeting of the teer Chemical Hook and Lad- COLONIA —-Boy Scout Troop ISELiSf— Plans for a teacher's Colonia Unit of the Perth Amboy der Company will hold its 45 hiked to Roosevelt Park las't luncheon-to-be1 held June 14* 7 P.M. Hospital Guild was held in the installation of new officers at week for the troop's first hike' were made: at an executive ttoafd an anniversary dinner Satur- Colonia, Library with Mrs. W. Sv. of the season. meetingof School 15 PTA Mondays Wilck, 'vice-president, presiding1! day at the firehouse, Inman The Scouts had a-a opportun- Thirty-eight invitations were is- The unit was told about the Avenue. All memibers of the ity to pass many itests which sued for the teachers, their guests volunteer "walking blood Bank" Fire Company, their wives, the could, not be accomplished in- arid other 'sViool personnel, that was accepting members in Exempt Firemen and their doors. The patrol Jsaders set up Announcement was made of the Colonia. Mrs. Walter Zirpolo ex- wives, and Auxiliary Firemen three courses: tracking, by com- County OoBricil meeting May 2 at plained the Junctions of the blood and their. wives have all been pass, tracking by scout trail signs. Lynwood School, North Brunswick. bank and the great need. invited to attend. ar>d measuring /distances across | from 10 A.M. to 3 P.M. Mrs. Walter Reilly of the Perth The next card party spon- streams and tree heights. The ! Today an extension homewqrker Aillboy Hospital Guild spoke on sored b$ the Ladies' Auxiliary scouts cooked their own lunch and j course session will be held at Rut- the history of the hospital dat- will be held Thursday, April during the/ afternoon played ] gers Common. . . ing .back to 1880. Mrs. R. P. I*ar- 19, at the Inmah Avenue Fire- games. There was the usual num- j A report on the plans for "the. kas, membership chairman, an- house. All residents are invited. ber of blisters and cuts for the • second Bazaar May 5 from 11 AM.. nounced that the membership scoutmasta: to attend to. to 4 P.M. at-the school was given.. drive is now in process. Mrs. Peter Scduts participating were: Hu- : Mrs. Henry Weiman, chairman of the ways and means committee, Sideris, volunteers chairman, an- bert Martes, Raymond Zirpolo, MISS BEVERLY* A. PRICE riounoed. that several groups have Twins Celebrate Barry Rcllish, Billy Sheehan, Gary will be in charge of the booths. ENGAGED TO WED: Mr. and . Mrs.- Robert Argalas arid Mrs. started making surgical dressings Mohr, Billy Loekie, Ronald Schae- Mrs. William B. Price, Lan- for the hospital. She is accept- fer, Allan Netcel, Charles Smith, Fred Reight are in charge of the Birthday at Party caster Road, announce the en- •games. - •'-' • ing names of people" interested in David Remine, Harry Sorenson, gagement of their daughter, doing volunteer work at the hos- Tony Salarno, Jimmy Freund, Mrs. -Anthony Krul will direct COLONIA — Mrs. Charles Beverly Ann, to John R. Cahill, the sale of home made craft arti- pital. Howard Newmark, Allan Hornyak, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Ca- A group is being formed to visit Nestrojil,. Broadway Avenue, and Bob Brown, John Toma, Russell cles; Mrs." Michael Cwiekalo and her twin sister, Mrs. Arthur hill, Plainfield. Miss Price is a Mrs. Charles Bachman, home made the hospital soon on tour with MOTHERS AID BOY SCOUTS: Scoutmaster Sidney Freund of Boy; Scout Troop 45 is shown re- Morgan and Ralph Kiracofe. Ac- graduate of Wdodbridgre High Mrs. D. Pecaro in charge. Any- Stehlik, Jackson Heights, L. I., companying the scouts w a s pies and'caWes. A Punch and Judy celebrated their birthdays Satur- ceiving a check from the Mother's Club of the Troop. Left to rfeht are Bruce Connolly, Mr. School, and the Lower Fifth show will•-. be -presented under the one, interested please call Mrs. Freund, Mrs. Catherine Toma, treasurer of the Mothers' Club; Mis. Virginia Smith, president, Scoutmaster Sid Freund. Avenue. Hospitals, School of Pecaro at TTJ 8-2869. day, at the home of their par- the supervision of Mrs. John Po- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Ko- and Robert Brown. ' ] Nursing, New, York City, and is deszwa- TlieSnack Shop' will-be marek, Flushing, L. I. Miss Frances J. Mess a registered rairse at Muhlen- in charge, .of Mrs. Willard Ray-, Guests present were: Mr. and berg Hospital, Plainfield. Her mond and;^plants;, Mrs. Carl Liina. Cubs to Assist Mrs. Charles Nestrojil Si1., Miss Wed to Donald Philpot fiance served with , the Army .MembefsUot:Cub Pack; 148"'^ill Evelyn Nestrojil, all of Astoria, First Meeting of Village Religious Art Air Force, and is now a patrol- assist with tlie den mothers heljs- L. I., and Findley Corsar, North ISELIN — The marriage of Miss man in. the Plainfield Police ing with'the'.games. A committee PTA' af Bazaar 1 Arlington. Husbands of the cele- ibit Planned Frances Josephine. Mess, daughter Department. A June wedding composed-of" the fathers of Cubs ISELIN—A committee meeting brants, Charles and Arthur, also Civic Group, April 27th of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick J. Mess, is planned. includes.-R.qger Kenny, Henry Wei- 112 Warwick Street to Donald of Cub Scout Pack 148, sponsored joined the party. COLONIA—The Planning Com- uals and groups of residents of the 1 ISELIN — Continuing plans and man arid Carl Luna. Vince.Grdgan, by Iselin School 15 PTA was held mittee for the new civic unit being Colonia Village Area have been dis- James Philpot, son of Mr. and Mrs. school custddian'will also assist. great activity mark the approach Emerson L. Philpot, 176 Elm at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Al- formed by residents of the Colonia cussing the apparent need to de- otf the Madonna Art Exhibit May Slate Installed The committee in charge of "the, bert Kull, 1064 Woodruff Street. Village area met at the home of , velop one large formal group to Street, Newark, was solemnized project will appreciate any assist- Trip to Museum - ll2 and 13 at St. Cecelia's Recrea- recently at St. Cecelia's Church, Preparations were made to assist Mr. Charles Knudsen, 32 Sandal- ' provide for solidarity of action in tion Hall. ance from mothers and fathers.•', the PTA at its May 5 bazaar. wood Lane, Friday night. Present the" promotion of badly needed Iselin. Rev. Paul Mess, uncle of By, Fire Auxiliary | The Junior Sodality of St. Ce- the bride, performed the ceremony. Mrs. Robert Argalas an<± Mrs. Set by Cub Packwere: George Read, Village civic improvements. We have re- celia's, under the direction of Rev. Henry Weiman, representatives of Greene; Mrs. -.Anthony Seybuck, cently enlisted the services of many A reception was held after the Thomas H. Raywood, has named ceremony at Polish National Home, ISELIN—A new slate of officers the PTA, informed the pack com- COLONIA — The Pack Com- Dogwood Lane; Mr. and Mrs. Jour- volunteer workers to contact area the exhibit: "Mary, Mother of of the Ladies' Auxiliary-of Iselin mittee that the bazaar will be mittee of Cub Pack 146 furthered dan Richmond, Village Greene; Harrison. Chemical Hook and Ladder Com- residents to determine whether the Mankind." The exhibit will be a held at School 15 from 11 A. M. to plans for a trip to the Museum Mr. and Mrs. Hunter, Columbia collection of more than 1,000 re- Miss Bonnie O'Neill was maid of pany, District 11, was installed at 4 P. M. The den mothers will be in of Natural History in New York Avenue; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wig- | interests of the organizing corn- productions of paintings of the honor and bridesmaids included ceremonies Saturday at V. F. W. charge of games with the cubs as- Gity, at a- meeting held in the gins, Sandalwood Lane; Mr. and i mittee are representative of those Mrs. Joseph Sanguiliano, sister of Hall, Lincoln Highway. Blessed Virgin Mary representing COLONIA" — Jackie and . Billifc sisting. home Of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mrs. Fred. Brause, Jr., Colonia ! of the majority. The response to l^Iorth. America, South America, the bride and Miss Joyce De Belle. Mrs. R. C. Corcoran was the in- It was announced that the pack Ritchie, Inman' Avenue. Boulevard; Joseph Carusone,' date affirms this overwhelmingly. Africa, Asia and Europe. There Joseph Solomon served as best man stalling officer. The slate in- Denk, sons' -ef -'Mr. and Mrs. Ja«k meeting will be held tonight at Cub Master H. Fred Hansson, Montrose Avenue; Robert Hamil- | "We have as our general objec- \pill be one section devoted to con- while Ralph Danter and Kenneth cluded Mrs. Frank Kovacs, presi- Denk, Jr.-, McKinley Avenue, cele- 0 School 15. All dens will display announced the bus will leave Co- ton, Shadowlawn Drive; Willard tives a desire to further the wel- temporary works of art and a num- Philpot, a brother of the bride- dent; Mrs. Robert Ackerman, vice brated their fifth and first birth- skits and exhibits in keeping with lonia .School 17 at 9 A. M. Satur- MacArgel, Sandalwood Lane, Mr. fare of the residents of our com- ber - of originals will be shown, groom ushered. president; Harriet Gorman, secre- days jointly at a party.- '••; the theme for April, "Bird Watch4' day, and should ;return about 4:30 and Mrs. Sidney Freund, Sandal- munity by our own actions and among them, a unique. mosaic tary; Mrs. Robert Painter^ treas- Among ;ttie.guests were; Mrs.aJ. Plans were discussed for the May P. M. Cubs are-asked . .to. bring wood. Lane, Kevin Healy, Longfel- through insistence upon proper panel. This unusual work of art PAPER DRIVE POSTPONED urer; Mrs., John Barby was the re- Denk, S;r., • Union; •;Mrs.-_L. theme. sf box lunch. Other refreshments low Drive, Mrs. Herschel Tarver action by the several governing Jhas been loaned by Catholic Uni- >• ISELIN — Due to the inclement tiring president. Scheurer, jki'ss M. Scheurer, both g The pack will present its annual may-bp purchased at the Museum. and Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Maclsaae, bodies relative to schools, roads, versity of Washington, D. C. and weather Sunday, the Iselin Lion's Members of the fire company of Elizabeth, Mrs. James GilleeCe, " "Circus" at the school May 26 andA program for the April.24 Pack Pinetree Drive. sewers, fire protection, police pro- is one of three experimental Mo- Club was compelled to postpone its and their wives were guests at a Sr., Mr. and.-Mrs. James Gilleece, will participate in the annual Me- meeting. was:. outlined from, the tection, facilities for development saics done by Mother Basil Kutsky, scheduled monthly paper drive. dinner-dance held after the cere- Jr., Mr: antf'Mrs. JormyGilleecfe :: The business address of the or- and daughter;' Linda Jean, Miss morial Day parade in Iselin May Meme;."3Sird Watchers" and the ganization will be c/o Willard Mac- of youth programs, and other mat- OUS. Such materials as gravel, If weather permits, the papers will monies. Mrs. Jack Brown and Mrs. 30. May., theme "Hobo Month" was Argel, 24 Sandalwood Lane, agent ters of similiar type. Throughout, glass, gold and stone were used. be picked up, Sunday, April 15. Jack King were in charge of hospi- Sally Ann--Gilleece, Misses Rose Ten pack committee members announced. "' : we propose, however, that this or- Residents are requested to have tality. Music was furnished by theand Eileen'Gilleece, Miss. Stisaa upon whom service can be made. There will be no admmission Murray, ;Peier Gilleece,. Thomas attended- the meeting at which •' 'The annual • family picnic was Temporary chairmen of commit- ganization shall at all times re- charge. • bundles of paper at the curb Flat Tops. Mr, and Mrs. Jull were in charge discussed . and , a:' tentative • date tees are as follows: Mrs. Anthony main free from any political, reli- promptly at 1 P.M. and to have Gilleece,. all • of Irvington; John of hositality. and place was set for July 4th Seybuck, hospitality and Mr. W. gious'or8 fraternal affiliations. them securely tied. ASSOCIATION TO MEET , Tamaro, . Michael La Mofgese,: in Johnson Park, New Brunswick. J. Hunter, planning. The Planning . "Our initial and immediate prin- Colonia Hills Group COLONIA — A meeting of the both of Newark. It was also announced that a We- committee headed by Mr. Hunter cipal objectives, as visualized by Pakistan has reacted with lively Wood-bridge Knolls Civic Associa- First AM Squad belos MPen is being formed with will outline a program for the sec-the organizing committee, are re- Outlines Road Repairs interest to Moscow's offer of sub- tion will be held Monday at Co- A car with a turbine engine can stantial industrial assistance. lonia School 17, Inman Avenue. : Assistant Scoutmaster Ben Cir- ohd meeting of the organization to lated to the needs of our youth. COLONIA — The Board of Di- use kerossne.. '.•:.-' - -. Drive Continues lin as leader, and: that Pack and be announced at the first meeting The lack of recreational facilities rectors of the Colonia Hills Tax- Leri ags have been purchased. to be held on April 27 at 8:30 P.M.is obvious to any parent. There payers Association met Monday Cubmaster Hansson stressed at the Colonia .library. is no public playground. There are night at the Colonia Library. Com- : ISELIN — A meeting of, the Ise- no-adequate facilities provided for the need for additional den mo- : A flyer will be .distributed', to all mitteeman Peter Schmidt had ac- Jta First Aid Squad was held Sun- thers as well as the importance families" m""the ikSonia" Visage such activities as Cub'Scouts; Boy day at Squad Headquarters on Lin- cepted an invitation to be at the of parents accompanying the boys Area vby volunteers who will be Scouts, Girl Scouts or Youth Can- meeting but did not attend. coln Highway. ._ . ' to P.ack meetings. under the chairmanship of Mrs.. teens. There is no properly consti- A report of activities for the tuted organization available to Plans were made for the annual month of March was given as fol- Willard MacArgel, Mrs. Charles meeting to be held May 14 at the Knudsen and Mrs. John Wiggins. undertake sponsorship of any such Library at 8:30 PJVt. A road pro- lows: eight accidents; eighteen Cake Sale Planned The following is the information activities despite the fact that we emergencies, one hundred seventy- have' insufficient membership ca- gram was outlined for spring re- nine man hours were consumed: which will _ be distributed by the pairs and re-surfacing. Recent volunteers: pacity available in these groups to correspondance relating to the and six hundred thirty-seven miles ,-For Election Day "The first organizational' meet- ' absorb all interested youth now. were covered.. proposed division of Ward 2 was ing of the prospective general j "The organizing committtee. discussed. The association is now The envelopes which were dis- 'COLONIA — Mothers' Club ef membership'of what is tentatively needs and earnestly solicits the as- tributed on March 25 were sup- affiliated with the New Jersey Tax-, the Boy Scouts and: Explorers of kriown as the Colonia Village Civic sistance of as many families as payer Association. posed to be ready for collection, Troop 46", held a meeting at the Association will be-held on Friday l possible. If you can be of any Sunday, April 8. All members re- home --of Mrs. Bernard Krajew- evening April 27 at 8:30 P.M. at'help please call any of the follow- SEMI-ANNUAL MEETING ported for the house to house can-1 ski, Gay wood Avenue, with Mrs. the Cojonia Library. ing numbers, FU 1-1340, FU 8- COLONIA — The semi-annual vass. \ The donations used ,- for 7638 or FU 8-6534." James Mackey, presiding.. •: "This meeting -has been called meeting and tea of the Women's* so worthy a- cause are gratefully jPlans were outlined for a home for the purpose of establishing' a Auxiliary of Rahway Hospital will received by the Squad. The large made cake sale to be held outside formal organization. You will be Frank Sinatra has sold "One be held at the Girl Scout House, thermometer situated at Oak Tree Rahway, April 17 at 2 P.M. Dr. Road and Lincoln Highway keeps the Inman "Avenue firehouse dur- given the opportunity to discuss Way Out," which-he acquired for ing •election hours April 17. and to reach agreement as to the filming by his own independent Dale Harris, bacteriologist at residents posted as to the progress^ company, to Universal. The central Merck & Co., will speak on oi the drive.:. ... . v , •••" • It was decided to ask all-par- form of the organization and its ents \.of^tobys ' in .the "troop to do- charter. We prospose, also, that character in the story is a former "Microbe Killers," an illustrated ,.. All who. ;donate will receive a nate/ baked . goods for the sale. officers of at leasjt temporary sta- prize-fighter, who falls in with a lecture on the discovery and de- sticker for stating that a contribu- Others ;-wishing to donate should tus shall be disignated. band of criminals and subsequent- velopment of antibiotics. Members tion has" been: made.; .contact Mrs. Krajewski. ' ly frustrates a planned holdup. may bring guests. A favorable report has been "For some time various individ- made to- date, but the drive is still going -on* v • •- : ••/"••;~: ':•-': '•':••-
Tax time sum again? April 15fh is Uncle Sam's deadline* for filing Federal Tax returns. Taxes are automatically withheld for most of us, but this is a time Pay a§ Little as when we're all more conscious of money. You can rent a Hammond Organ for as little When you have a growing savings as $20 per month at Griffiths, where all five heavy or unexpected expenses models of the Hammond Organ are on display. won't upset you or your budget. You're ready with reserve cash. You can keep this Hammond Organ for as long Con Be. as six months. If you decide to purchase Ft all If you're not saving regularly with us4 To Purefjofe Price start your account next payday. the rentals you have paid may be applied to GETS the purchase price. The balance can be paid FREE LESSON-IN YOUR over a period of several years. HOME OR OUR STUDIO Everyone who has seen and heard the Hammond AROUND Organ confirms the fact that it is one of the sensations of the muskai world. AH 1 Hammond Organ models now have the amazing "touch-response" Percussion Conrrol* More mothers making available a host of new sparkling tonal effects. If you can't come in soon, use the coupon. give their children' CHOOSE FROM ALL FIVE MODELS Fordens Milk than FILL OUT-TEAR OFF AND MAIL other brand I Please send me full details on your Hammond Organ Rental Plan,
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The Commuist party here and Its fry the Kremlin to have been a American prestige international- Washington should have been •AUTO SALES mouthpiece, "The Daily Worker," monster and a miscreant. Now, consulted before such dramatic Automobiles sales during March Opinions of Others ly. Q -: CLASSIFIED :- (Continued from .Editorial Page) have recently been in one of the using an issue that is specious Autonomy in tax matters is no action was taken. — New York were expected to reach 610;0b0 cannot survive his "friends." most uncomfortable predicaments in law but plausible to people doubt conducive to greater" effi- Herald Tribuute. cars — the highest total in six DATES'—INFORMATION . .in their history. They have been abroad unfamiliar with American ciency hi handling the great bulk j months. The estimate compared The Kremlin cabal has realized forced to explain to each other \ legal practices,.they are claiming 75c for 15 words .'.'/'i I Deadline for ads: Wednesday 10 "this, else it would never have 'of internal revenue problems. But Reported liy E. N. L. , ".with 513.000 sales in February this 3c each additional word J A. M. for the same week's and the the outside world the "persecution." It is, for them, a in a question involving the Wife (in back seat, as moon ris- year and 699,000 in March, 1955. adopted this extreme method of dizzying turn in the party line welcome distraction from the Payable in advanc'G•-*>'*' publication. promoting the view that the foreign relations of the United es over hill they are ascending)— whereby Stalin, their hero for task of' explaining their own States at a critical period in Careful, John, jiere comes a one- Nedeles'scores in $145,000 Flori- Telephone WO-8-1710 post-Stalin regime in Russia is a thirty years, is suddenly revealed shortcomings and may damage collective rather than a personal world affairs, it does seem that eyed car. da Derby. rule. What the heirs of' Stalin do FOB SALE not realize, of course, is that the /FEMALE HELP fatal seed lies, not in the individ- ONE USED Tuna Outfit; 12/0 ual exercise of peremptory power, •'••;:; AN' '••.:, ; • Perm Reel, Tuna Rod and har- but in the power itself. Such RECTORY ness. Trolling Rod; 9/0 Perm Reel, power, or at least the veneration ••'- OPPORTUNITY..,/. double built Bamboo Trolling Rod of such power, has never in all and harness. 1 5% horsepower history long survived its maker, Accounting ® Fyrniturs Missle Siistruetion Plumbing and Heating® Sporting goods gtwaits capable aM-" con- outboard motor. Rudy's Sporting whatever-the dissemblance of the scientious female clerical Goods, 256 Monroe Street, Rail- inhei'itors. — The Oregronian. Get That REKT, FIXED way 7-3894. 4/5 - 4/26 workers, with some knowl- COMMUNISTS AND TAX LAWS BUY ON THE HIGHWAY MUSIC MEANS - WOODBRIDGE NOW! edge of typing, who are 25' JERSEY Type Shelter. Skiff. It has now become clear, after No Problem AND SAVE A LIFE TIME OF JOY , Fully equipped; 100 h.p. Flag- some days of confusion, that the «Ru Mer" Interested in a Mpking For Your Girl and Boy Plumbing & Heating w ship marine engine; $2,150.00. action which was taken by the Too Great! Featuring • "Penn, c^peer. Generous salary Owner transferred to Midwest. Internal Revenue Service against LEARN TO PLAY THE © Inquire About Yearly ® Remodeling "Airex" ana during training ;; period, D. T. Gilman, 815 McKinley Ave- the Communist party and its or- Nationally Advertised ACCORDION THE MODERN, "Centaure" nue, . Gilford 'Park, Toms River, gan, "The Daily Worker," did Bookkeeping Service. Brands of Furniture ' - " EASY WAY- ® New Installations periodic increases ' there- N. J. Tel. Island Heights 4-1725-M originate in the office of Donald Service after and many other' at- or Railway 7-0048. 4-12* R. Moysey, New York District @ Personalized Service NO ACCORDION TO BUY. . . © Gas and Oil Burners Station Director of the service, without tractive benefits. BOTLTRITE COACH CARRIAGE prior consultation with Washing- by Trained Personnel. CaU WO-8-3046, HI-2-7312 REEL REPAIRS A SPECIALTY Reel Checked, Cleaned, /•:;•' APPLICATION by Good Condition ton. It was done within the broad c Call Fulton 8-7787 autonomy granted regional direc- h. PCGLIESE - A. LIPO Polished, Greased and |-| .50 : LETTER ONLY! 4-12* tors to handle contested tax issues Adjusted, for Only. * without referring them to head- FURNITURE SHOP stating age, experience, REAL ESTATE FOR SALE ® {Plus Parts, If Needed) „ quarters, and it followed a pat- U. S. Highway No. 1 — Avenel "Home of Reel Parts" references. For thos^e who HOUSE FOR SAljE-^Woodbridge. tern —.the seizure of property qualify, personal'! inter- Four bedrooms, living room, 'fire under tax liens' — which is not We Have, In Stock place, dining room, kitchen, tile infrequently used when it appears A. B. L. L. B, Clwrles Farr « TROUT WORMS views will be given. ' bath, large front porch and large that the assets may be dispersed. TAX and BUSINESS OPENDAIW 9A.M.-9P, ML. 9 MAINE-MADE MOCCASINS LOAFERS and SLIPPERS enclosed rear porch. Price $15,500. As a simple matter of tax law, the CONSULTANT Phone WOodbridge 8-1577 Plumbing - Heating First Call Fulton 8-6400. Hayes and practice of the Communist party • WILDLIFE PICTURES Carragher Corp. . 4-12 withholding records of the 34 Green St., Woodbridge, N. J. Electric Sewer Service (framed) \.. Trust PRIVAXfc ljjiipBo^s: liiieinational, sources of income and the ob- Modern and Classical — Beginners Telephone: ® HUNTING AND FISHING J, COLONIA—Ranch style, two bed- jects of disbursements is one that Fyiseral.. Directors and Advanced. LICENSES ISSUED .Perth rooms, large living room, large Appointments Day or Night Woodbridge 8-0594 no citizen, no organization, can Since we carry the largest selection Ask How Yon Can Win kitchen, tile bath, laundry room, engage in with impunity. . . . Woodbridge 8-1401 One of Our Trophies JE-ITOU NEED MONEY but can-oak floors, oil-hot water heat, ga- of famous-mafee accordions in the* 621 LINDEN AVENUE %not -Work full time, We Have the What is in question is whether Reasonable Rates - Confidential Raritan Bay area, you are assured c rage. Corner lot 75 x 125. Price the timing of the action was wise. of the best in quality, at the lowest Woodbridge, N. J. PIInV?^FISHING TACKLE (opportunity you iieed'. 'Pleasant, $13,800.00. Gall IPulton 8-6400. "Guardian of Small Business" possible prices. profitable. Avon Cosmetics. Write RUU I «AND REPAIR Hayes & Carragher Corp. SYNOWIECKI . SPORTING GOODS HisCBolling, P.O." Box "705," Plain- 4-12 ® , MISCELLANEOUS We carry a full line of Musical field; ' ..*, % .,,.-4-12 Coal Funeral Home Instruments and Accessories ftadio & TV Service # 256 Monroe Street, Rahway SERVICES EXPERT ALTERATIONS done on . MALE HELP clothing. Work picked up and Choose from such famous make ac- Telephone RA-7-3894 HAVING TROUBLE with your delivered. Phone evenings, FU-8- cordions as: EXCELSIOR, TITANG, YOEFNG MAN wanted,, full time. 46 Atlantic Street IORIO LANCE, ACME, HOHNER, • sewerage? Electric Sewerooter 7996. 4-12, 19* Carteret, N. J. ACCORDIANA, EXCELSIOLA and AL'S RADIO Taxi Cafes m ••' Delivery and dru'if .clerfe. "Neat removes roots, filth, sand and DALLAPPE. Appearance. Hours 9:0G-!5:OO P.M. stoppage from clogged pipes, PAPAS FURS — Fur capes and COAL - FUEL OIL & TELEVISION $1.25 .per hour: Apply"'Colonia drains and sewers. No digging, no stoles made from your coat, : $25.00. Price includes new lining, Telephone Carteret 1-5715 Perth Amboy's Oldest Established Prompt Expert Repairs DAYS- Drugs, Inman Aveijfte, Colonia. damages—rapid and efficient. Call ' Accordion Center : cleaning and glazing, pick-up and '•• :':•• •'-"• •' • • '• . ;;''•* -. 4/12 Tony's. Plumbing and Heating, 18 Years At the Same Location RCA Tubes and Farts WO-8-8007. 4/5-4/26 delivery. 33 Coolidge Avenue, Car- y MAN under M. asBuild- teret 1-8789. Fur storage $2.25 EDDIE'S MUSIC SENTEB Batteries , "ing 'attendant. Eight-hour day, HUNGARIAN Recipe Book, Eng- per $100.00 valuation. 4-12* 34 PERSHING AVENUE fiye-iSasr week. Start $49-88, even- SOLYE YOUR HEATING • ft Eddie Eonkoski, Prop. lish print. Price $1. Mrs. P. So-FOR YOUR plumbing and heat- CARTERET, N. J. tually .$71.52. Good chance for regi, 1767 Prairie Avenue, South 557 State St., P. A. VA-6-1290 JUST PHONE advancement. Public Service Elec- ing problem, call Tony's Plumb- PKOBLEM A. Kish, Jr., Prop. tric: & Gas Co., 1530 Irving Street, Bend 14, Ind. 3/15 - 5/3 ing and Heating Service. WO-8- WO 8-0200 JRahiya-y, N. J.See Mr. Thomas. ® FOOD SUPPLEMENT 8007. . 4/5 - 4/26 Moving and Tracking Telephone CA-1-5089 Fast and Courteous Service •!, :•-:. .• •; 4-i2 • FROM SERVICE. # FLYHN & SON YO-ZYME, THE NEW MIRACLE DARAGO'S FUNERAL HOMES M AGED MASf' |or clean- AUTO DRIVING SCHOOL TO COMPLETE HEAT- Established 51 Years » Complete Moving Job WOBBBRfDiiE TAXI FOOD Largest and Oldest in County 420 East Avenue • ing, part time. .Apply State brings you the essential qualities Perth Amboy 3 Rooms $25 5 Booms $35 443 PEARL ST. WOODBRtDGE •Theatre, Woodbridge:, after 7:00 Hydramatic, Fluid and Standard ING INSTALLATIONS 4 Rooms $30 6 Booms $10 —J&G — ; found in Yogart, Lactose,, and 23 Ford Ave., Fords P.M. Ask for Mr. Ryanv • - 4-12 280 McClellan St.; Perth Amboy Brewer's Yeasts' which aid in regu- Call Hlllcrest 2-7365 VA 6-0358 All Loads Insured — 10 Years Exp. TELEVISION and FOR lation of intestinal nutrition and 4/5 - 4/26 WDGE. 8-1400 ECONOMY MOVERS staying youthful longer. Write for NATION-WIDE MOVEBS YELLOW CAB WAREHOTTSS for sale—40' x 30'details and free samples: Box 10, PAINTER AND DECORATOR RADIO SERVICE i "on/-lot 150' x 55';: has 10' x 10Independent-Leader' . 4-12* Free Estimates : Rahway 7-3914 24-Hour : : 86 Washington Avenue Office, Located at 685 St. George MISCELLANEOUS • •" •;. :• Call CA-1-4825 - ' •• Heating and 48-State ^veriue, Woodbridge. Gall WO8- V. J. TEDESCO Carteret '' - Taxi Service E. & G. MULLER Moving §847; . .4/5-4/26 6 Fillmore Avenue, Carteret ' COAL & OIL CO. Mr 0ond:ti@iiB!ig Service Call CA-1-4978 Plumbing and Heating ; 4/5 - 4/2 & Jot this number down. SUMMER HOME, 4 bedrooms, AGENT Hous-5 Calls Made : ; Kensington Avenue 826 RAHWAY AVE., AVENEL S i>ath, living room, kitchen, din- Colonia, N. J. BONGART SCHOOL OF Home Owners, Business, 8 A. ML — 8 P. M. Ing area, screened 1'porch, tool FU-1-0834 FU-8-5683 DRIVING National Van" Lines Joe and George Magella W8 8-3466 |iouse. Plot 50'x 1007 Shaded, sev- 4/12-5/3" LICENSED IN NEW JERSEY. 81 Industial |ral. hollys. $11,000.00. 200' to Bay Homes Park Avenue, Iselin. Lib-- ALL TYPES Real Estate - Insurance @ Radio Dispatched Cabs JShore Clubhouse. 200' to beach. IF YOUR DRINKING has become Oefsoatessen m erty 8-0070. ' . 4/5-4/26- SHEET METAL WORK Distance No Object |>wner transferred to Midwest. .'••a problem, Alcoholics Anony- A. W. Hall and Son |>. T. Gilman, 815 McKmley Ave- mous can help you. Call Market PIANOS TUNED and Repaired; Gutters and' Leaders nue,: Gilford Park, Torris River, 3-7528 or write P. O. Box 253, free estimates. Also will buy Local and Long Distance Expansion Attics Moving and Storage Upholstering IT. J: Tel. Island Heights 4-1725-M Woodbridge. used pianos. Call VA-6-6816, J. TREAT SHOPPE NATION-WIDE SHIPPERS of 5r; Rahway 7-0048. 4-12 \.' . . 4/5-4/26 Slater. 4/5 - 4/26 Duct Work Household and Office Furniture SGHOEMAKER 613 Rahway Ave.s Woodbridge Authorized Agent (Opp. White Church) FREE ESTIMATES Howard Van Lines to the local Lions Club. Could I qualify to "freeze" your record . Separate Rooms for Storage . SALE! ijiake arrangements to have some- if you are;totally disabled and ' @ SALADS at their BEST . Call WO-8-0647-W* CRATING ® PACKING AGENCY one talk .to our PTA and explain unable to work in any sub- or WO-8-0090-R SHIPPING . Reweb Chair Bottom — $9.00 YOUR N file social security law? Will there stantial gainful employment. @ SODA FOUNTAIN >^. ='. Unclaimed Furniture of Every Reweb Sofa Bottom — $18.00 $$ a charge? The time you cannot work will Description Realtor and Insurer Work done in your-home or at not be used in figuring your © FRESH BAKERY GOODS Office and Warehouse our shop SOCIAL SECURITY Is A. We will, be glad to furnish Jewelry Service Refill CasMons with new j& speaker for any group to ex- benefits. This may mean higher 34 Atlantic Street, Carteret benefits when you file your pay- Open 7 A. M. to 10:30 P. M. TEL. CA-1-5540 "We Sell the Earth and springs and filling — $4.50 f Q. I've been getting social se- yjWain social security. You did iilot furnish your address so you ments at age 65, or for your INCLUDING SUNDAYS Fashion Oredit Jewelers Call WO.-8-I317 curity for the past two years..Now survivors. Insure What's On It." if have been offered a temporary should contact your local dis- 589 ROOSEVELT AVENUE SERMAYAN irict social security offict fo CARTERET Pet Shops |ob. I've heard under the new law UPHOLSTERY SHOP iff you don't earn over $1,200 a '•jnake the necessary arrange- SMART BURGLAR--- ...... Drags CA-1-6308 EDISON, N. J. :year you won't lose any benefits. ments? There is no charge. Helena, Mont. — The burglar, 5 FIFTH AVENUE, AVENEL iWhat if I work for four months Q. I am 63 years old, have not who recently stole a sack of cow m DIAMONDS BABY TURTLES and LI-8-8400 iand make $300 each month. Will worked the past year because of feed from, farmer Gwan Kirby, TROPICAL FISH -I lose any of my benefit checks? lingered long enough to milk Kir- • WATCHES Baby Chicks and Ducks on Sale Yaras 1 a disability, and will not be able A. No, if your total earnings to work any 'more. I have been by's cow. Avenel Pharmacy © JEWELRY Buy Them by the 100 or Vz Doz. Lots i during the year ar£; not over told I will lose my social security Baby Parakeets or Singing Canaries i:-' §1,200. It does not matter how unless I sign some kind of form. HONEST SIGN • . :. 994 RAHWAY AVENUE Rsefing and Siding Anything and Everything m GIFTS Gift Plowers - Flower Potter : many months it takes you to Is.this true? Houston, Texas. — The sign a WOODBRIDGE 8-1914 For—KNITTING- j! earn the §1,200. Expert Wateh and Azaleas - Gardenias A. You should contact your Houston real estate firm recently All in bud and bloom. CROCHETING \ Q. Someone from the social se- local social security office to put up. was really honest. It read: Jewelry Repair curity office recently gave a talk discuss your case. You might "Lots from $1,595 up, mostly up." PRESCRIPTIONS ; GUTH PET SHOP Henry Jansen & Son NEEDLE PGINT WHITMAN'S CANDIES Upor Stores Carteret's Little Zoo HOOKED R«JCJS 80 Roosevelt Avenue, Carteret Tinning and Sheet Metal Work Cosmetics - Film EMBROIDEEY ' CA-1-4070 Roofing Metal Ceilings and it's Greeting Cards Telephone Woodbridge 8-1889 Furnace Work Photography Woodhridge m 588 Alden Street The SEWING KIT 73 E. Cherry St. . Liquor Store Woodbridge, N. 3. JOS. ANXJRASCIK, Prop. JUST 5c A POUND RAHWAY "M673 ' Telephone 8-1246 RAYMOND JACKSON ¥ Complete Stock of Domestic 3aby s weight de- LAWS MOWERS • AND SON and Imported Wines, Beers cides the price. Even if he weighs and Liquors 10 pounds, -you Service Stations Druggists 574 AMBOY AVENUE pay only $1.00 for ALBRECHT/S KEY SHOP i5i! portrait— 124 WASHINGTON AVENUE 88 Main Street WOODBRIDGE, N. J. egularly $4,00. CARTERET TOWNE GARAGE Phone CArteret 1-7163 Woodbridge, N. J. HAND and POWER LAWN S^usieai Instruction @ AVENEL STUBIOS J. F. Gardner & Son MOWERS SHARPENED and Telephone 8-0554 WQ-8-1349-Jt 493 KAHWAY AVENUE REPAIRED Woodbridge •MERCURY OUTBOARD Private 169 Avenel Street, Avenel MOTORS Lessons WO-8-354& on SALE and Service ESeotrlca! Contractors TKUMPE'E We're Specialists In SCHWINN BICYCLES- GUITAR. * BEAR WHEEL ALIGNMENT SALE "and Service ACCORDION AND BALANCE SAWS SHARPENED — KEYS GIBSON •* SAXOPHONE MADE ijrlB&UiN ® PIANO K ® BRAKE SERVICE Veran A. Jensen GUITARS ^ TROMBONE Too Professional and Amplifiers @ DRUMS "Doctor Fellett is certainly th Electrical Contractor STUDENT RENTAL PLAN Sewing most absent - minded man I eve -For Information Call HI-3-6948 saw." Industrial SAMMY RAY'S Select Your BUTTONS , "What's his latest?" ,, •MUSIC ana REPAIR SHOP . "He was married yesterday and ^Commercial 467 New Brunswick Avenue, Fords We'll Make Your luring the caremony, when the 3 Buttonholes •dme came to place the ring- on l~^T^' Residential CANDID OR the brides finger, he actually felt STUDIO Everything for Your tier pulse and asked her to put out WO-8-2582-J SEWING NEEDS her tongue." GALLARD'S PHOTO Inevitable Rule 'What did Jack say, when you 547 AMBOY AVENUE asked him if he could support CLASSIFIED Woodbridge 8-3651 The SEWING KIT you in the style to which"you were Open 10 to 6 accustomed?".,,'. r, ; BRING RESULTS 73 E. Cherry St. • "He said 'norfwt that'l ought Mon. and Fri. Nights, to 8:30 BAH1VAY 7-16,73 _.,, to remember thatjhe styles, are A-125-56 4iwas-s- changing-"-™- •—- '— EDISON TOWNSHIP AND FORDS BEACON THURSDAY, APRIL 12,. 1956 PAGE ELEVEN-
convention named representative ^Jeremiah Manning, Capt. —Marc Rosen, son of Mr. and nthony Fiorello and children, grandmothers, Mrs. F. J. Has- .•Wpodforidge to meet with delegates from other Zebulon Pike, Capt. Robert Ross, Mrs. Norman Rosen, Isabelle Philip, Rose Ann and Nicholas, brouck, Albany, N. Y., and Mrs. (Continued irons Editorial Page.J; colonies in Philadelphia on Sep- Capt.. Thomas Steele, Capt. Ri- i Street, was two years old Tuesday Meiilo Park. Emma Nagengast, Troy, N. Y. j on the site where the intersection tember 5 and the Continental chard Skinner, .Capt, Ellis Bar- Menlo Park Terrace Notesi j when his guests were Mitchell and —Mrs. William Kroner and chil- —Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Morri| of Golombus Avenue i and Upper Congress was born; ron,. Capt.. Samuel Crow, Capt; Jeffrey Williamson, Jo Ann and Street, entertained Mrs. Kenneth son,"Ethel Street, attended a per^ Main Street is now located. Yeaijs Mary Ann Comarada, Larry and formance of "Hat Full of Rain" ia Shot Stir Feelings Abraham Tappen, Capt. Johnj week go to Mr. and Mrs. William Morrison, Mrs. Bamet Weisman later, when the.school outlived Wendy Fishier, JPred Bearison, New York Saturday. •• When the "shot heard round Heard, Capt. Abraham Tappen, Bookless, Jefferson Street; Mr. and and Mrs. Saul, Kritzman, Thurs- its usefulness it was moved down- Philip Kutzenco, Gary and Susan the world" Was fired in Lexington, Capt. John Heard,.Capt. Matthew .,drs. Sdward Haluska, Ethel day. , —Saturday guests of Mr., ^ town to what- is. now known'as Mass., feeling ran high in Wood- Sayres, Capt. James Heard, 1st. By MRS. Lynott, Mindy Barlow, Wendy Kip- Mrs. James Dingwall, Atlantic the corner of Main and Pearl Strjet; Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Fran- —Birthday congratulations to bridge. Tories "were shunned as Lieut. Ralph. Marsh, Lt. James GEORGE ire], Echel Street; Mr. and Mrs. nas.. ". '• Alex Reevie, Ethel Street and to Street, were Mr. and Mrs. George Streets and still later was moved Paton, Surgeon Melanchton Free- if they had the plague. The men FORSTER Peter Telika, Federal Street; Mr. —Mrs. John Apoka, Mason Joseph Decasse, Hudson Street. Forster. :i/ to the site across from the Mun|r •gathered in publft places and vil- man, Surgeon Moses Bloomfield, Street, was hostess to her canasta cipal Building .and still stands!' and Mrs. William Foster, Jefferson —Dean Powell, son of Mr. and —Speedy, .recovery wish to lage taverns to discuss the grave Sergeant Abraham L. Luffberry, 65 Ethel Street Street, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schir- group Tuesday. Present were Mrs. Mrs. Richard Powell, Swarthmore Mickey. Boerer, son of Mr. and '. Miaiiy Owned Slaves v-''.\ news from Boston. Sergeant Morris DdCanip, Kilsey Henry Filippelii, Mrs. Robert Re- Liberty 8-8449 ripa, Ethel Street. Terrace, was two years.old Sunday Mrs., Harold Boerer, Swarthmof-e But to get. back to the real did' Nathaniel Heard, one of the Gutter, Samuel Cutter, Sbeohen , —Sunday dinner guests cl Mr. 3an. Mrs. Robert Murphy and Mrs. when his guests at dinner were Terrace, who underwent a tonsil- days, in the 1700's and 1800*8 town's, first citizens was named Cutter, Ford Cutter. and -Mrs. Edgar Udine, Atlantic Ralph. Barone. Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Powell, lectomy Monday. Woodbridgei ;had its share at colonel of a group known as Also Joseph Dunham, James Street, were Mr. and Mrs. Irving —Robert Foti, , son of Mr. and Newark; Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. —The. Terrace Club met at the slaves.;. ReGords of sales of ne- ••.: Heard's Militia. They". occupied Edgar, William Edgar, William —A daughter, Marilyn Isabelle,. Kaufman and son, Arnold, Irving- Mrs. Vincent Foti, Swarthmore Roselle and children, Bonnie and home of Mrs. Stanley " Gutowski, groes are found in the old recorgls the Amboy barracks and appre- Edgar, Ambrose Elston, Crowell was born, Saturday to Mr. and Mrs. [ton; Mr. and Mrs. Philip Abrani- Terrace, marked his 11th birthday Lee and Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Swarthmore Terrace Tuesday. Pre- atid on June 3> 1T17 we fi hended tories from Amboy and Evans, ^Jonathan Freeman, Jay Tenen, Atlantic Street, at son "and .son, Michael, Plainfield;. at a family' dinner. His guests were Walsh and son, Kevin. sent were: Mrs. Vincent Foti-, Mrs-. Campyon Cutter, Jeremiah Mrs. Beatrice Foti and children, "Know all men by these prese: Staien Island. Being on the main Arnold Kaufman has just com- —The Boydmans, Wall Street, George Muller, Mrs. Angelo Di : Clarkson, Jeremiah Dally Brown, Perth Amboy General Hospital. Carmencita and Peter, Jersey City. . that %: Shobali: Smith, of highway, even in those days, pleted two years .service in Japan. are the proud owners of. a new car. Lorenzo,- Mrs. Michael LarazaTO', Smith Blooiiifleld, Samuel Dally, Mrs. Tenen's mother, Mrs. Lyman, bridge to ye County of Mddx Woodbridge was the center of is visiting her from Edmonton, —Albert Tanko, son of Mr. and --Mrs.. Barnet Weisman, Ethel —-Birthday congratulations to Mrs. Richard.Powell. .. I•:•-'• Joseph Oilman, Jonathan Ja- j . Xe pfovence New East .Jersey, activity ^during the Revolutionary Mrs. Albert Tanko, McGuire Street, Street, attended a shower Wednes- Mrs. Jay Tenen, Atlantic Street —Michael Spingler, son of Mr. and in Consideration of ye smnlff War period. Soldiers were con- duish, Jedediah Freeman, Lewis ' ^ ' - day in honor of Miss Iris Levi at A celebrated his sixth biz thday at a and to Mr. and Mrs. Milton Ber- and Mrs. George Spingler, Federal fifty: pound Currant: Silver, mom stantly marching through the vil- Dunham Robert Coddington, -« surprise birthday party was the Avon Caterers, Newark. b family celebration. Present werej: lin, IsaBelle Street. . Street, will be two years old today. of ye sd proveiice/tQ me in hand lage. Henry Freeman, Lewis Dunham, | eld in honor of Mary Ann Di- —Carol Boerer, daughter of Mr. —Barbara Weinberg, daughter —Birthday greetings to' Mrs. Robert Coddingron, Henry Free- j Geronimo's- 13th birthday. She is Mrs. Grace Julian, Woodbridge and paid by Samuel Smith of ye Same It is believed that Timothy Mrs. Julia Tanko, Perth Amboy. i and Mrs. Harold Boerer, Swarth- of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Weinberg, Harold Kutzenco, Jefferson Street place, yeoman of ye town and man Peter Latourette, Timothy | the. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jo- more Terrace, spent her vacation Jefferson Street, celebrated her and to Mrs.-Nathan Boydman, Wall Bloomiield's House (near Fords. Blocmfield. Timothy Bloomfield,! seph Di Geronimo, Menlo Avenue. —Sirthday congratulations to : provence aforesaid-do bargain, l with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and fifth birthday Tuesday when: her Street. • .Corner) was the center of activity, 2nd, Smith Blopmfield, 2nd, Ro- Guests were Mary Ann Robbins, Mrs: Sam Strieker, Wai] Street, sell, alHneat and Deliver one Ne- Mrs. Robert Morrison, Newark. guests were: Sandra and Joyce of the Jersey Blues, Other famous bert Coddington, 2nd, James Larry Kochie, ; Billy Tomalines, and Fred Jinks, Ethel /Street. gro woman / named Phebe to sd Woodbridge soldiers of the revo- —Our sympathy, to Jack Lieber- Harrison, Edith and 'Pauline BUY AVENEL HOME Bloomfield, John-. Inslee, Jona- Lynn Howeth, Leona Robbins, Paul j —Menlo Park residents who saw. man, Atlantic Street, upon the loss Tenen, Niei and Fern Loebel, Marc Smuel'Smitti, for him, his heirs lution-were: Lt. James Paton • WOC-DBRXbGE—Mr. and Mr.i than Inslee, William Jones, Ar- Pepson, Rochelle Rocker, Ernie the "King and I" at the Paper Mill of his mother. . . Forster, Beatrice Weinberg and and assigns? ..."., : Jeremiah Clarkson, Jeremiah SalVatore Granata have purchased chibald ;Eager, Shotw-ell Bishop, Muller, Ronald Kochie, Susanne Playhouse Tuesday were: Mr. and Peggy Derechin. • •. We now come tp the. Revolu- Dally,: Captain David Edgar, —I am happy to report the Red from Mr. and Mrs. Richard C Ezekial Blopmfield, Robert *Bur- Butch Romone.. Mrs." Edgar Udine, Mrs. William; Cross drive in our area netted $210. tionary War and the part that Smith Bloomfield, Timothy : —Mr. and Mrs.. Wallace.Mitchel Kauffmah^-5222 Marshall Street, Woodbridge played. According to well,. Jonathan Bloomfield, Tjo- —rRobert Pulton, Jr., son of Mr. Kroner, Mrs. Wallace Mitchel, Mis. —Menlo Park residents who at- and children, Mercer Street, were i th, a-4%-room frame Cape Blpomfield, Dr. Moses Bloomfield, mas • Bloomfield, ; J3r., ; Thomas and Mrs. Robert Fult'on, Ethel | and Mrs. Harold Kutzenco, Mr. and E izabe Dally, the Sons of Liberty of John Inslee and of course, the tended .a meeting of the Rosary. Sunday dinner guests of Mr. :and Cod house with expansion attic at Blooihfieid, Jr., B-snjamih Brown, Street, was one", year, old Sunday. Mrs. Norman Gardner, Mr. and Society of St. Cecelia's Church, Woodbridge and Piscataway were . most famous, Captain Nathaniel Mrs. Bennett Bluementhal, Brook- 140 Inman -Avenue, Avenel. Fred- 2nd, David Campbell, Joseph Cro- Guests were Mr. and Mrs. George Mrs. Jiiles Strauss, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Carl Andersen, Mrs.. James lyn. very active in 1765-6 in their fe- FitzRandolph. Mrs. Leland F. erick M. Adams was attorney for ; James:-Kinsey, Sr., James I- Zimmerman, New Brunswick, Mr.: Robert Goren, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- Dingwall, Mrs. . Nicholas . Space, vption.to:.the cause of duty: Ac- ^Reynolds, Linden Avenue, thr —Mrs. Willai, Kroner and chil- both purchasers and sellers and Kins-sy, Jr.V JobJi Kinsey, Shad- and Mrs. Robert H. Fulton, Har- j liam Iceland, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mrs. William. O Donaghue Mis cording to information on hand former Mittie FitzRaridoiph, is dien Bonnie and Buit Atlantic the bi okei w as the John F. Man- rach Kinsey, Abraham Laing, Oli- ;rison, Mr. and Mrs. George Zim-; Softer, Mrs. Nathan Schneider,, William Northgraye, Mrs. A. they sent -word, by a delegation -a.direct descendant. The Town- Stieet and Mis Wallace Mitchel ton Agency ; merman and children,Menlo Park;'Mrs. Seymour Liss, Mrs. Irving Walsh. . . to. William Coxe, Philadelphia, ship Committee thought so much vsr Martin. and childien Jeffiey and Bonnie Mrs. Carplan P. Zimmerman, Miss Sumka, Mrs. Sidney Bartell, Mrs. —Johanna Fiorello, daughter of that unless: his office of Stamp ;Of:^ his deeds that in 17.78 it Others Wfeo Served Meicei Stieet and Kaien Kritz- TJmveiial - International has Barbara Pritting and Miss Louise Alex Gold, Mrs. Murray Goldberg, Mr. . and Mrs. Joseph Fiorello, Distributor for • New Jersey" were ordered that a sword should be. Also, Peter Noe, James Noe, man visited the Staten Island Zoo, bought Fnght Fiom Fear," a vacated-within a. weekv there John Ross, David Freeman, Pritting, New Brunswick. Mrs. Nathan Boydman, Mrs. Ernst Rielly Court, was one yeai old and Fi iday Ketti Fung stoiv which was pub- •: purchased for him as a "fitting, -Mr. arid. Mrs. Anthon Cava,' Gansel, Mrs. Bert Levison, Mrs. E. a family celebiation was held would be "unpleasant conse- •tribute to his patriotism, vigilance Samuel Force, Hiram Frazee, —Elizabeth Nagengast daugh- lished as a senal in Collier's mag- Atlantic Street, are parents of a A. Webber. The party was^.spon- Guests were: Mrs. James Recchia quences,"Mi*.. Coxeresigned:in ' and bravery during the war." Morris Frazee, Isich Fitz Ran- teiofMi and Mis William Nagen- azine about nme ysars ago. The son. :„ •". ' , - | sored by the Menlo Park Chapter and children James Caiol and September 1765.; It.is understood : Capt. FitzRandolph partici- dp:ph. Malachi Fitz Randolph, , gast Rielly Couit marked her scieen play will be written by —AnniversaiT greetings this of the American Jewish Congress. Richard, Kemlwoith Mi and Mis that ships carrying cargoes of tea "pated in attacks on Staten Island Barzilla Fitz Randolph, Daniel ' seventh buthday while visiting hei Mis Flings in :i77,3jwere sent back to Eng- /and captured a number of British. Fitz Randolph, James Randolph, land without, being permitted to However, he was finally, captured Joseph Fitz Randolph, Stelle Fitz discharge their cargoes r in. New •by the British and imprisoned in Randolph, Phineas Fitz Ran- Jersey Ports. . ', New York for almost a year and dolph, Samuel . Fitz Randolph, .Daly has an" interesting item ••a-half: History records .that he Thomas Fitz Randolph, Zedekiah on how tea was introduced in .'•' was cruelly treated and was ftnal- Fitz Randolph, John Oilman, ?ly exchanged for a Captain Jones Joseph Oilman, Charles Gilman,-: Woodbridge and I am repeating; Samuel Jaquish, Isaac Sears,: it'hefe. -' • .. ' ' • -•,... .' who was captured by FitzRan- ; dolph's own men for the specific David . Stewart, Eliphat Moore,; •.The book, written in. 1873, Merrick Martin, Benjamin Thorp,: states:': "Spfi.aking of tea reminds • purpose. .After Captain FitzRan- ,.' dolph was released: he entered Israel Thornall, Benjamin Thor-;; me,of the first;cup of this famous nail, Samuel Willis. There most-,:1 active service again. He died of beverage eyer •enjoyed in Wood- ly: likely were others who served; wounds received in. battle in bridge or in: the; Sta be was drank but yryfew records have been' \ Springfield, N. J. He was buried by. a .company of ladies, in .the preserved. . -. J year.; 1730, in, the building :now : in the First Presbyterian Church octtupied as a drugstore by Dr. :;Cemetery in Woodbridge. Continued Next Week ; Samuel°E.Freeman. The tea was Served with Colonials : brought from New York and was ; Years ago j I was given a list CLUB TO MEET ,:! regarded as a choice article. Mi's. .of. Woodbridge soldiei's who AVENEL — The Mr. and Mrs.; Ca^npyoh f&•• widow, who owned Vserved in the Revolution.-. I have Club of the First Presbyterian: the'hpuse), her daughter, after- every reason to believe it is cor- Church of Avenel will meet at- warditfrs. Cutter, Mrs. Van Cort- - rect, and the names are. as fol- 8:00 o'clock tomorrow in the au~ landt," and: others were present. ; lows: Gen. Nathaniel Heard, Col. ditorium. After the business meet- A discussion arose among the '-. Benjamin Nrown,. Major Clark- ing, a.hat social will be conducted ladies as to tne vessel in which it- :•: son Edgar. Lt Col. Thomas Had- with prizes awarded. Prospective should be prepared. •,den, Major Reuben Potter. Gapt. members are invited to attend "A. tankard was produced and i Nathaniel FitsRandolph, Capt. Richard Kerr will preside. pronounced.: serviceable. Should : Asher FitzRandolph, Capt. David the tea. toe boiled, brewed Pi- ;£ldgar/ Capt. = David Coddington, Barbara Stanwjsck. and. Josl Mc- steeped? "Various opinions were • Capt. John Storey, Capt. Matthew Crea will co-star in "Troop21! advanced; but the steeping party •' Freeman, Capt. Nathaniel Leo- Hook." Filming is scheduled foi was in the ascendancy, so the tea '••, nard, .Capt. Christopher March, next September. was steeped. When it was ready to be served, it was poured into diminutive cups, and the flavor Lasting Tribute of Love and Respect" of the draicnt was the subject of-1 many comments. Cake was eateit betw'C-sn the sips, and this zeal SELECT YOUR MEMORIAL perhaps, contributed toward the j favorable verdict rendered with , regard to this tea.. (Mr. Dally re- NOW FOR MOTHER'S DAY ceived his information from Mrs.: Mark Every Grave! DavM Paton, Mrs. Campyon's I Compare Our Prices granddaughter) Now this nectar > Work Done in All N. J. was to be bar.ished from the table Cemeteries GRAVE of', the .patriot. The, tax oh tea Call Day or Night MARKERS :...... from 1 made the unoffending '•'• beverage EL. 5-9772 or HU. 3-6466 SINGLE GKAVE. $ itself obnosl-us." • ': -.--; -{. OPEN DAILY Including MONUMENTS from G)h'July 21, 17/74 a convention DOUBLE GRAVE $ ' .'-•"•' • • SUNDAYS met .at New Brunswick at which ! MONUMENTS from there were delegates from all j Free Tran^. to and from Our Office counties ' of the province. The MTV OLIVET /.MONUMENTS 139 McClellan St* Newark Anthony O. Rullis, Prop. Newark-Elizabeth Line, Opposite Mt. Olivet Cemetery
's taxes
If all the tax dollars paid by The California Oil Gompany to Perth Amboy in a single year were used for public schooling, they would send each student to school one-half year., THE DEALER ©yfsf an dmg YOU'RE travel eoittforf If those same dollars all went for police pro- tection, they would pay the salaries and wages FOR on the B&O to of all police, plus all other department expenses ;.. is easy to spot in the for one year and seven months. Applied to the Yellow Pages. (And the WASHINGTON Fire Department, they would cover all costs for trademarks he features two years and eight morithi. help you find the brand of and product you want fast.) CALOIL pays one dollar to the city for SEEs CHICAGO each six dollars collected from all othejr Automobile Dealers taxpayers combined. Clearly, these taxes Beverages lv. Elirabelh . . . . ,1.01 PM provide a surprising quantity of .civic serv- Electric Appliances Lv, Plainfield ..... 1.15 PM ices in Perth Amboy. And our taxes paid Fences Berths, secKon;, private' rooms (includ- to neighboring communities do an equally Florists ing lowircost Duplex Roomettes!. Din- important job. . Paint Dealers. ing-car • Strata-Dome with Flood- lights* * Club car* • Observation- Tires lounge** Train secretary*. We all realize the necessary services taxes provide, and these taxes To find "where-to-buy" *fo service w^lt of Washington. are a part of our contribution to the welfare of the community, anything... LOOK In paying these... as well as State and Federal taxes... we take a citizen's pride in doing so. YELLOW For information and reVcrvaJions phono Ticket Office Elizabeth 2-9O8I of Plainfleld 6-6700. W. T. Ruddy, DUfrict Passen- TH I CALIFORNIA ©SL COMPANY ger Represenf afivs* Phone 6-6600.
NEW JERSEY Bai T&EPHONE COMPANY TSAOE«A»K 'CAtSO SEG U. * PAT. OfF PIRTH AISi@¥, N. J* :jsrr PAGE TWELVE TH-L7RSDAY, EDISON TOWNSHIP AND FORDS BEACON
LEGAL NOTICES UEGAL NOTICES between WasSingion and Lincoln. Ave- ment to be satisfied By said sale Is tne dower, curtesy, mortgage, deed or con- nues, in the Township of Edison, Coun- sum of One Thousand Four Hundred veyanee, entry of judgment, or other ty of Middlesex, 'N. J. and Ninety-nine ($1,496.00) Dollars, to- lawful or legal right. The nature of For the purpose of hearing objections gether with the costs oi this SJ. e. I whicH aria the reason that yaxi and to or protests against the granting of Together with all and singular the each of you are joined as defendants is said appeal, the Edison Township Zon- rights, privileges, hereditaments and set forth with particularity in the ing Board of Adjustment will hold a appurtenances thereunto belonging or complaint, a copy of which will be public nearmg on April 17, 1956, in the in anywise appertaining. i furnished vou on request addressed Council Chambers, Municipal Building, ROBERT H. JAMTf«-*l» to the attorney t)f the piaintllf at at 8 o'clock P. M. Sheriff, the above mentioned address. By order of the Zoning Board of GERALD W. KOLBA, Dated: March 19,j
By Clorence M. Lindsay :b.uyiiig-:-aJow-price car-anci youH switch to Plymouth!
HE town of Brookfield was not clock, now didn't roll in till alter Indispensable for (There's a 118% increase in the number of people who are switching to Plymouth from other makes!) Tso very large, but politically ten. And lickings didn't make any speaking it was livelier than a impression on them. Women nest of hornets just knocked off Joel, who published and edited a sweetgum. Jeremiah Abbott had the Brookfield Courier, made it served two terms as Mayor, and his business to call on the heads •• he was resolved on keeping his of • various families and inquire ! well paid job for ancither term, as to just what they thought of the at least. And election day was curfew law. ; very near. Letters began to pour in, and j Walking down Main Street one Joel saw to it that one and all i fine morning he met up with Joel were published—and underneath ; EimbalL one of the town's most each one was the printed line •' popular citizens and who, it was 1 'VOTE FOE JOEL KIMBALL. rumored, had hopes of displacing FOR MAYOR." i Jeremiah as the Great Mogul of These letters were all more or [Brookfield. In fact, it was more less alike, and by the end of the ,' than rumor, for he had already week Joel printed an announce- j tossed his hat into the ring, so ment on the front page of the to speak. Courier in large type, arid which How does performance compare? Which low-price ear is biggest? "Mornin", Joel!" was the May- read as follows: Which is easiest to drive? or's greeting. "Got many voters The curfew ordinance which Plymouth holds official NASCAR rec- Plymouth wins again, inside and out- Plymouth's the only low-price car with lined up yet behind your banner?" Mayor Abbott had jammed through ords for speed in its class (124 mph); side. Roomier, longer, heavier. More positive, mechanical Push-Button Driv- Jeremiah laughed and poked his the town Council has proved a rival ia the short ribs with his boomerang! It is working in reverse! 1 acceleration, all stock cars (82 mph). 2 trunk space. More everything. 3 ing. ToUch a button. .Off you go. cane. Reports front forty-five families "Nopel Not many - yet. But y' make it plain that not only does it Mever can tell!" not keep the youngsters oft the streets at night, but the infernal "Well, I'll tell you something, clang of the nine-o'clock bell wakes my friend! You haven't got a half of the babies in town and all ehance! And today I'm going to of the dogs, and sets them bofb to have the Town Council put _io u± n'Oi-as iioys Club, "which won the Keereation TEAM STANDINGS Senior Basketball championship after defeating Jig-gr's Tavern in the annual playoffs between the Alex Ziesmer will be on the start- games. The Reo. Diner combine ing line for the Barrons while the swept the first two tilts, 801-685 Kasar Builders 50% 33 V2 American and National Divisions at the Woodbriuge High School gymnasium. In the group, jfrom and 827-772. before dropping the Coeper's Dairy—.. 48 36 left to right, are John Yuhas, Bob Voss, Larry Swanick, Leopold Seyglinski and Jo Ferik. Tillman quarter-mile representatives will third, 756-G61. Ideal Beauty Salon 46 38 Laubach, Hood Sharick and Gene Molnar are team members missing- from the picture. be the veteran Bruce Legay, Bob Mary's Dress Shop 44 40 O'Keefe, Steve Pokal, Joe Fritsche One of the reasons for Reo and Joe Novak1. Diner's win was the bowling of Miele's Excavating ...... -43 41 Marie Patrick who put together Iselin Lumber 42 V2 41 Vz Gabriel's " half-milcrs include K* of'C.Rowling Tournament Carl Gross, 'Bob Benzeleski, games of 159, 221 and 136 for a Jag's Sporting Goods .. 41 Va 42 V2 516 set, while her sister Terry Sko- Al's Sunoco 20x/2 Sports Quiz Charles Finch, -and Donald Stue- 631/2 ber. The milers are Bob Fair, a, *iknik, came through with a 474 1 Draws Field of ISO Teams three-game mark. Stella Pastrick .ISELIN — jyiiele's Excavating consistent winner in 1955; .Henry and Ann Leitner paced : Amboy Johiwy t)owle J came up with a surprise victory in How to seore.yourself: mark your ' WOODBKIDGB The fourth Jensen and Henry Both-well. with totals of 475 and 472. Z? the St. Cecelia Women's Bowling- choice 1-2-3-4. You get ten points annual New Jersey Knights of In Field Events Viel's Accordion School and the League by trimming the circuit- for a correct first pick, five for" Columbus Bowling Tournament, In the field events the Red Dixie Belle quintet split when the leading Kasar Builders in two out second, three for a third and one which is being sponsored this year Blazer mentor will call upon Lou sfihird game wound up in a 797-797 of three games. The Excavators point for a correct fourth choice, by^the Middlesex Council No. 857, Hagler, Bill Sabo, Joe Martino, tie. Before the final clash, Viel's HEARD AROUND TOWN swept the. fir,st two tilts by scores Twenty is average, thirty good,, will be held at the local Bowl-Mor Cliff Friis and Pete Smith in the took the first game, 856-845, and of 679-580 and 739-620 before forty very good and fifty is perfect. Lanes on Amboy Avenue starting shot put with' the same group the Dixie Belles the second, 791- Coach Lou Gabriel expects big things of his Wood- dropping the finale, 696-630. • 1. James T. McQuire was a April 14 with 180 teams expected with the addition of Phil Shore 708. bridge track squad which opens its season against The big gun for Miele's was Mary catcher for many clubs during his to compete in the eliminations. entered in the discus throw. Betty Ugi, Viel's star, was at her Perth Amboy tomorrow afternoon at the Stadium. He Murgacz, who was, at her peak j record stay of twenty-six years in The tournament director, John The Woodbridge javelin throw- best with games of 200, 169 and with marks of 166, 178 and 127 for the major leagues during the Papp, Jr., stated that the competi- ers include Ronald Hutteman, Bob , 140 for a 509 set, while Betty Tiska also feels his half-mile and mile relay teams have a 471,- while Lillian Abate copped period of 1884 through 1912. But tion will start April 14 and con- Benzeleski, Lou Hagler, Cliff Friis trailed with a 471 mark. Dixie good chance of winning in the Penn Relays at Phila-; I second place honors by hitting a can you name the. catcher who tinue five consecutive weekends and Tommy Hartman. The trio of Belles' top bowler was Sally Car- 457 three-game mark. The Con- holds the record for catching the until-May 6. Eighteen teams from Bob Farkas, Victor Quatrocchl penter who came up with a 536 delphia the latter part of this month. . . . It's no longer struetioneers' best were Estelle most games in the major leagues? "the far comers of New Jersey are and Pete Sych form the group set after chalking up games of 184, a rumor that a certain Mr. Green is attempting to Eosso and Lillian Kaluskel with i ) Wilbert. Robinson ( ) Hank expected to compete each day which will carry the Barrons' hopes 179 and 173. Her teammate, Jay seUs of 434 and 433, respectively. Severied • ') Rick Farrell ( ) Al throughout the tournament. in the all-important pole vault Biri, also scored with a 213 game gain permission from the township committee to con- Mary's Dress Shop was deprived L°Pez- I William Haug, Jr., the tourna- event. and 502 total. struct a stock car race track in the Keasbey section. of a. clean sweep when they lost 2. When you go through a sea- ment secretary, disclosed that the Gabriel is loaded with talent in ... A certain Green Street angler was embarrassed the; third, game of their match son without an error at any posi- rules require that all entries must 7 after taking the first two by marks the broad jump competition with when he fell head first into a trout stream with Soapy of 697-601 and 654-518. The Lum- ttpn4£ is, an accomp.lishm.ent —. be . ,b_.bnafide_ members, of the the veterans Ljerpy Alexander, Pat., Mayer looking on. Later, Soapy summed up the inci- berjacks won the third clash, 310- but when you.can do it.behind the Knights of Columbus in New Jer- Cunningham, Bob Benzeleski and 565. plate — you're good. Can you sey and will bowl under the A.B.C. Ronald Hutteman available. The dent, "He may not have hauled in a lot of fish, but he name the backstop wno played 117 rules. An entrance fee of four dol- high jumpers on the 80 man squad* Steffie Saley.one of the veteran games in one season and didn't laris. will be assessed each per- are Pete Zych, Andy Lescinski, With Grantord 9 at least had a good swim." . . . The Woodbridge Little bowlers and one of the stars on the commit an error, ( . > Frank Hayes former to cover expenses. All team Dressmakers' quintet, rolled a Buddy Kovacks and a newcomer, League has made plans to register fuutre baseball ( ) Gabby Hartnett ( ) Wes Wes- applications with remittances Carl DeFederico. WOODBRIDGE — Coach Nick sfezling 506 set after posting Priscoe's Barrons, with their stars from eight to 12 years old at the St. James games of 217, 168 and 121. Tlje trum ( > Warren Rosar. I must be mailed to Haug at his On April 28 and 29, the Wood- schedule already reshuffled three auditorium and St. Anthony's recreation room in Port Lumberjacks best was Jessie 3. Hank Severied holds the home address, 223 Martool Drive, bridge half mile and mile relay teams will travel to Philadelphia times due to inclement weather, Reading Saturday morning at 10 o'clock. The organi- Oberdick, who recorded a 421 to- major league record for the most Woodbridge, before the start of are slated to face Cranford High tal pin score. chances accepted in a doublehead- the tournament. to participate in the Penn Relays School this afternoon at 3:30 zation extended the date because of the bad weather Jag's Sporting Goods after los- er (.27) and at the same time is | Assisting Papp with insuring the in quest of the national titile. o'clock at Cranford. last week . . . , ing the first game of its match tied for the American League success of the tournament are The Woodbridge track schedule Eddie Seyler, a lefthander from with Al's Sunoco, 676-664, came mark for the fewest chances of- committee chairman William De- for the spring season is listed be-' low: Fords, will no doubt get the nod BOWLING VIBRATIONS back strong to win the next two, fered in a doubleheader '(2).'-Now Joy, scoring; Patrick L. Ryan, from Priscoe to take the mound 647-634 and 671-704. can you name the catcher who ac- grill; William Roberts, hospitality; DUAL MEETS: April 13, Perth ' Sfor Woodbridge. The starting as- Congratulations are in order for Horace Deter, the Irene Brauer and Sally Stevens cepted 19 chances'in a riine-inning Bill Grausam, program; George Amboy, home; April 19, St. Mary's signment will be his first since P.B.A. kegler who posted games of 200, 238 and.248 were Jag's mainstays during the game — a modern major league Gerity, cloakroom; Carl Herzog, P. A., home; May 2, Asbury Park, moving up to the varsity last meeting with sets of 438 and 424. record. ( ) Bill Bergen ( ) Frank entertainment; and -John. Fofrich, home; May 9, New Brunswick, spring. His battery mate for the for a 686 set, which is the highest recorded at the jThe Gas Pumpers' stars, were Pyt^ak ( ) Ed Sweeney ( ) Matt Larry Campion,'Dick Mack and away; May 15, Plainfield, home; game will be Richie Kuzniak. Craftsmen's Club alleys this season. . . .Trudy Mon- 'Marie .Waterson 449 and Evelyn Batts. ' ILebn Slovik, publicity. SETS SEASON MARK: Horace May 22, South River, away; May The Woodbridge infield appears tazzolli is currently setting the pace in the Rahway I Walker, 407. ' • . 4. A little while ago we noted I Trophies to be Given Deter, the P.B.A.'s team captain, 28, Perth Amboy, away; June 1, tijset with Harold Ford at first base, -. Cooper's Dairy missed an oppor- that one catcher went through a I Trophies to be av/arded at the established a season's^ record at Carteret, home. Johnnie Howell at second, Eddie Women's Major League with a 171 average, . .-. It was tunity to gain a full game on the season without an error. In mod-' conclusion of the tournament in- the Craftsmen's Chib alleys this SATURDAY RELAYS: April 28T- Urbanski at shortstop, and a soph- nice to see the" veteran Hack Chomieki come through Kasar Builders when the best they ern day ball there have been four : elude: the State Deputy Trophy,! week "when he rolled a 686 set 29, Penn Relays; May 5, County could do was take two out of catchers who made four errors in which will be presented to the with games of 200, S38 and 248. Relays; May 13, County Meet; - omore, Jerry Gonyo, at third. The with a 639 three-game mark after chalking up totals A sticky eight pin in the tenth outfield, which, has. been the Red three-from the Ideal Beauty Salon. one game —one of them being, team recording the highest • gross May 19, Long- Branch; May 26, of-213, 180 and 246. . . .Joe Airway made the headlines The Dairymaids won the first two Gabby Street. We're listing the score; the Tournament Trophy, frame prevented Deter from Central'Jersey;, June 2, New Jer- Blazers' glaring weakness thus far, chalking- up a 70© set. is still unsettled. when he rolled a 682 set, with a 90-pin handicap, to 659-634 and 760-654, before losing other three — you pick out the which will be presented to the sey State. In the season's opener, Wood- the- windup clash, 628-626. one catcher who didn't bobble four Knights of Columbus unit accum- bridge dropped a 6-3 decision to lead the Eastern Division, of the annual Knights ;of :.Mary Leiss rolled one of the times in a.game. (, ) John Peters ulating' the top net total; while The director of the Hall of Washington is doing very well Perth Amboy. Columbus Tournament in Newark. . . .The Saturday high sets of the season when she ) Bill Moore c ) Bill Styles ( ) individual trophies will be pre- Fame at Cooperstown, Sid Keener, with, its promotion campaign. The Niters and the Plaza Barbers are neck-and-neck in the paced Cooper's Dairy with a 529 Hank Severied. sented to gross and net team mem- reports-that heavy snow during-the Senators already have more than NAVAL ACADEMY total pin score after chalking up 5. One of , the catchers below '. bers. 200,000 tickets sold. They played Rear Admiral William R. Smed- winter cut down attendance at the Woodbridge Service League. . . . Is it true that the games of 165, 172 and 192; while caught three men stealing in one baseball shrine. About 126,000 per- to only 425,000 customers all of berg 3d, son of a West Point gen- last season. ' . ' Majestic Lanes have been requested^by the A.B.C. to her teammate, Mabel Kaluskel, j inning. That's- right — and he is sons from every State in the eral and father of a midshipman; came through with a 429 mark. the only modern day catcher to was recently sworn in as the thir- make some adjustments in their alleys?: . . . The Mid- Erma Hebler and Fia Vaillencourt turn the trick. Now the job is — igning Date Set union passed through the Hall of Rubber price is off 40 per cent ty-ninth superintendent of the dlesex Television quintet should make it in the Bowl- shared top honors for the Beauti- can you name him, ( ) Ray Shalk Fame in 1955. in three months. United States Naval Academy, re- cians with identical sets of 416. ( ) Mike Gonzales ( ) Les Nuna- For Iselin League placing Rear Admiral Walter F. Mor House League with a three-game lead. . . . Marie maker ( ) Branch Rickey. Boone, who will soon be promoted Leiss coralled a 529 set in St. Cecelia circuit. . . . (Answers on Page 14) to admiral and assume the four- ISELIN—Charles Bahr, director FOB 'ROUND THE CLOCK BOWLING star assignment of Commander in DUFFY CLAIMS . Local.Kegler is | of: the Iselin Little League,' an- Chief, Naval Forces Eastern At- National League umpires, ac- nounced that registrations for the IT'S "MIDDLESEX'S FINEST" lantic and Mediterranean, with Julius Kollar was amazed When Joel Bala, one of cording to the league, get no sal- 19.56 season will be accepted Sat- headquarters in London. Adm. the country's foremost weightlifters, visited the White High in Tourney ary for working exhibition games m.d at io . o'clock at Kennedy Smedberg was graduated from the in. the spring. But they don't Naval Academy in 1925 and is one Birch Inn with Harry Nussbaum, his former room- starve. They are paid their travel- MAJESTIC LANES NEWARK—Joe Arway of Wood- ing- expenses and $20 a day for All boys from 8-to. 12 years old of* the Navy's youngest flag offi- mate at Syracuse University. Bala's picture is cur- bridge and Al Sawicki were the desiring to try out for the various cers at 53. rently appearing on the cover of "Strength and top New Jersey bowlers in the meals, room and incidentals. teams in the league are requested SUMMER LEAGUES NOW FORMING Health" magazine. . . . Tony Cacciola hit one of the Eastern Division of the annual Pitcher Bob Buhl of the Mil- 't0 Produce their birth certificates BOWL IN AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT ;< Manager Birdie Tebbetts of the Knights of Columbus Bowling waukee Braves has one no-hit: during the. process of registering, Redlegs levies an automatic fine longest home runs on record at the old Parish House Tournament which completed the game to his credit, but he got i Veterans from last summer are 24—AUTOMATIC PIN SPOTTERS—24 of $25 against a pitcher who fails field. . . . Steve Yuhas is anxious to schedule games first of seven weekends at the nothing for it but -defeat. Buhl Ialso requested to re-register, to field a ground ball Tebbetts be- Newark Recreation Center. hurled the no-hitter while in the' Tryouts are expected to start lieves he should have fielded. Last for his New Alamo softball team. . . . Kurt Booth, who Arway, a one-night a week I Army pitching for the 11th Air«f immediately,, weather .permitting, season Tebbetts fines totaled $200. resigned as manager of Jiggs basketball team two bowler in the Woodbridge Council borne team at Fort Campbell, Ky. lto Prepare ;ior the season's faiang- uml Majestic Cocktail Lounge i^Xoward the end of the season he weeks ago,'will be back with another court aggrega- League, gained the gross singles He lost- the game, 1-0, on a walk i which is scheduled for May 1. threw a party for his players which lead on the final squad with a 682 and two errors. Bahr also disclosed that the cost that much. The same fines will tion next winter. . * . The fourth annual Knights of total. Arway, who averages 159, Iselin Little League stadium is go this year. Columbus Bowling Tournament at the Bowl-Mor alleys banged out games of 212, 182 and Could Interest Him Anywhere nearing ^completion and will- be j ^ CONTINUOUS^ 198.for a 592 set and moved into Pretty Shop Girl — Could I in- ' ready, for opening day. However, j Oiling the Owner will be one of the best yet due to the efforts of the local the lead with a 90 pin handicap. t"'-°st you in a bathing costume, 'assistance -is;, still required and j "What do you find the most dif- Knights, who are going all out to insure the success Sawicki was the star of the No. sir? i anyone desiring -to help will be | ficult thing about a motor car?" U Linden team, which gained a! Mr- Gay — You certainly could welcomed Saturday morning when V "Paying the monthly install- of the eliminations. . . . The Barrons,; with a good de- third place tie in the team event j^by. but my wife's over there at. a work detail is scheduled to erect i # FRIOAY and SATURDAY N!GHTS% ments." fence, could improve on their 1955 record,,;. It's about with a 2,988 total, made possible Ithe Slove counter. i a fence and two dugouts. time the Board of Education and Woodbridge Little by a 396 pin handicap. In fact, Al Featuring Dancing To MINIMUM League named their respective stadiums. . . . Leo Sey- was practically the whole team SERVICE with a 663 total on games of 213, WALTER BOWNE and his VAGABOND TRIO .95 glinski, a talented football and basketball player, is 233 and 217. His chief support 'Let's Go Rowling! CALL came from John Klunder,«.who had — Join Our -*—.-.'" Plus Danny Flmiani At the Baby Grand Piano seeking an athletic scholarship. Richmond University a series. . V ' might be interested. . . . There isn't a more helpful Dave Davenport, also of Wood- SUMMER. LEAGUES ••.-•: Featuring "FATS MARCO" person than Harry Burke. . . . Steve Stanko, a great bridge; is foul'th in the • singles RADIO &. TELEVISION. competition with a 660 total pin Five-Man Teams and --Mixed Teams Formerly;, of Milton Berle's TV Show 463 NEW BRUNSWICK AVE football star at Woodbridge in 1936 and a champion- score. singing all your old-time favorites ship weightlifter from Keasbey, is currently writing a AIR-CONDITIONED — AUTOMATIC PIN SPOTTERS Everything Under One Roof—Come Early? Stay Late ? Not So Dry FORDS monthly column for « the popular "Strength and 'So your friend, the statistician, Call WO-8-9249 or Stop In At PHONE Health" magazine. Johon Grimek, another famous is spending his vacation at the 9 arid Pennsylvania Ave., Hopslamr, N. J. beach." BOWL - MOR -UAUES -'"•'.., One Mile from Edison Bridge •HI-2-1067 lifter from Perth Amboy, is also pounding a typewriter ."Yes, he thought he'd like to •-.?.>., . 453 AMBOY AVENUE.- WOODBRIDGE VA-6-3481 or VA-6-9760 Continued on 9Page Fourteen •, * study a new set of figures." PAGE FOURTI THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1956 EDISON TOWNSHIP AND FORDS "BEACON ard and James, Trenton, were candidate for the Fifth Congres- S. DeLisle, New Dover Road, Mrs. Yeai-book, USDA, Supt. of Docu- guests of Mr. and Mrs. John R. sional District, was guest speaker. Anton Till, St. George's Avenue. ments, Washington 25, D. C; The Jewkes, .Jr., Elizabeth Avenue. Present were thirty-five key lead- Mrs. Strubel won the table prize, Book of Shrubs; A. C. Hottes, Park Reports Mrs. Jewkes with Anthony, Judy ers, from that area and they Colonia Personals a white begonia. Hostesses for the evening were and Randie returned with the pledged themselves to Mr. Foley. —Billy Hyland, Colonia Boule- Mrs. Daniel Den Bleyker, Mrs. Capeliis to Cape May Courthouse/ His speech covered Federal Aid (Including Colonia Proper and Colonia Village) vard, spent his vacation with his Winfield De Lisle. Attendance Ayenue; also, her mother, Mrs. grandmother, Mrs. ^Ceefe in Jer- Cora Nolan, Lake Hopatcong, and where they were joined! by Mr. jto Schools, Working-Labor-Man- award went to Mrs. "Norman Jewkes over the weekend. While;! •agement Program and a Federal sey City. Bresee. By Walter Koenig. of the Park, start- which was held at the Port of —Warren Thurlow, assistant there they also visited..with Mrs.' ;Road Program. A question and —Mrs. Theodore Chosney and SIRS. %9 stc. PRODUCTS OR- THi 'CALIFORNIA OIL-COMPANY! / I _, : „„ . „. . -— .— - • • —< XTRA SPECIAL Blstrifayted by RARiTAN'OIL COiPAMY, taC.f P.O. Box 3,0, NIXON, N.J, DEALERS: LUCKY BUYS!! RARITAN OIL CALSO STA. EDDIE'S CALSO STATION PARKWAY CALSO Route #1 New Brunswick Avenue Commercial-Burnet Street Nixon, N. J. Near Amboy-Avenue jNew Brunswick, N. J. iPOULSEN CALSO STA. Perth Amboy,; N. J. OLD BRIDGE CALSO .13th and SAT. 14th La4ve Avenue LINCOLN CALSO SERVICE" Metuclien, N. 3. Highway No. IS I Kitchen Towels Keg. 39c 4 for $1.13 Buddy Foulsen, Prop. Cor. Prospect and Thomas Sts. Old Bridge. N._J. ED STERN'S CALSO STATION South River CALIFORNIA CALSO STA. COLONIA CALSO STA. | All Plastic Ford Avenue Amboy Avenue—Maurer Road St. George Avenue Perth Amboy, N. J. Fords, N. J. Colonia, N. J. ^ Drapes and Curtains Reg. $1.98 pr. $1.13 Mickey MarkuUn, Prop, Al Witek, Manager LIVINGSTON AVENUE ^ Batli Slieets CALSO STA, KAPOLKA CALSO STATION HILLSIDE CALSO STATION Reg. $1.98 $1,13 Livingston Avenue Route #1 Rahway Avenue New Brunswick, N. J. Woodbridge, N. J. Ewin Bischoff, Prop. Nixon, N. J. ! 60" Woolens Reg. $2.49 vd. $2il3 PINES CALSO STATION Fritz Van Dalen, Prop. FEDAK'S CALSO STATION Route 27 MILLTOWN CALSO ^ Percales and Ryder's Lame Bet. Mctuchen and Stelton REMEMBER: You pay only 10c per check used. New Brunswick, N. J. Kuhlthau and Main Simply deduct this small charge from your balance Broadclotn Reg. 69c 2 yds. for $1.13 RENDER'S CALSO STA. Milltown, N. J. CONVERT CAIJSO STA. South Pine Avenue ANDY'S CALSO STA. each time you write a check. Lost blank checks or Smith Street—Canvery Blvd. South Amboy, N. J. 25 FLAT CHECKS, podded S Drapes Reg. $3.98 $3.13 & Perth Ainbojr, N. J. Aub. Render, Prop. Route #1 end tmprintsd with your checks you spoil cost you nothing. . Reg.'$4.98 $4.13 John Lotskoi, Prop. Avenel, N. J. s. No LINK'S CALSO Andy Kovalinsky, Prop. RUSSO'S CALSO SERVICE Riva Avenue New Brunswick Avenue Milltown, N. J GRAY BROS. CALSO Fords, N. J. Woodbridge Avenue "The Bank with All the Services" WOODBRIDGE CALSO WILLYS CALSO Nixon, N. J. 330 Amboy Avenue Raritan-Sth Avenue TONY OLIVERIE'S CALSO EN'S Woodbridge, N. J. _ Highland Park, N. J. SERVICE iftsi BANK AND TRUST COMPANY HOPELAWN CAXSO STATION BIGELOW'S CALSO U. S, 130 127 -W—Bond Road * Englishtown Road SURPRISE CENTER Hopelayn, N. J. Spotswood, N. J. North Brunswick, N. J. PERTH AMBOY, N.J. OAK HILL CALSO Corner of Main and School Streets ECONOMY CALSO EDDIE & CARL'S CALSO STA- Plainfield Road Victory Bridge Plaza Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation WOODBRIDGE t Madison & Fayette St. Edison Township, W. J. J l_ Perth Amboy, N. J. Perth Amboy, N. J. Gerald Rumery, Mgr.