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MX toraorr tttttd •». Wetbetdty, ttlr tad «m, fet tntthet, page 2. 21,675 DIAL SH 1-0010 VOL 85 NO 242 Um " » * mow km u ui. Bank u m u MHUSoul JUUInl OIUtM. RED BANK, N, J., MONDAY. JUNE 3, 1963 7C PER COPY PAGE ONE Pope Survives Two Crises; Death Near VATICAN CITY (AP) - Pope John XXIII sank into a state of increasing stupor today, but his •tout heart continued to keep ap- proaching death at bay. , A medical bulletin at noon (6 a.m. EST) said that the Pope no longer felt the agonizing pain which had been wracking him and sedatives and pain killers no longer were necessary. The bulletin said the pontiffs temperature had gone up again, but "the cardio-circulatory con- dition remains, nevertheless, rath- er valid." VATICAN CITY, (AP) - Pope John XXIII clung stubbornly to life today, defying all medical predictions. But his doctors an- nounced his condition was slowly, steadily worsening. The 81-year-old pontiff survived another' crisis last night and yet another early today. Since Fri- day his doctors have said each day would probably be his last. t h e first medical bulletin of the day reported that the Pope's pulse beat had eased from a high of 140 beats early this morning to a steady 130: His hold on life was attributed to the, "perfect integ- rity", of his heart and circulatory systern and his "exceptional robustness.'" The bulletin, issued at 9 a.m. (3 ».m. EST), said:.. .. "The,perfect integrity of the cardio-circulatory system and the exceptional robustness of the holy father maintain his physique in a condition of elevated resistance In which the worsening, although steady, is slow. "In the past 12 hours there have frequently been periods of loss of consciousness and failure to react to stimulants. "His body' temperature con- tinues, to remain high. Admin- istration of oxygen and the pres- ence of adequate breathing has permitted'the conservation of a sufficient ostygenation. His arte- rial pressure af 8 a.m. was 115 and his pulse had a beat of 130 with it steady rhythm." One -Vatican source said ter- rible convulsions almost shook the Pope off his bed at one point this morning. Doctors were using sedatives to ease his pain, but the source said the pontiff during his periods of consciousness re- fused them. At 8:30 a.m. the Vatican said he was fully conscious and able to follow the recitation of prayers by those at his bedside. Fully Conscious Death almost came at sunset yesterday — Pentecost Sunday — When he suffered an alarming crisis. It brought a Vatican Ra dio plea to the world for prayer. Again his heart pulled him through. '' ' Through the early hours of to- Gen. Hoff to Quit Army FORT MONMOUTH — MaJ. date has been set for his arrival Gen. Stuart S, Hoff, reportedly unhappy with the Army Elec- tronics Command's mounting organizational problems, has speeded his plans to retire from here. Sources said Gen. Hoff, in re- cent ' months, has become in- creasingly concerned at organi rational procedures which have the service, it was learned to- people working under him at Fort submitted his resignation h day. High-level sources here and in Washington said Gen. Hoff, who' assumed command of the Electronics Command.in August, will leave the Army at the end of July. He has more than 32 years of service and is eligible to retire. Official Fort Momnouth would neither confirm nor deny the report. New Commander It was learned also that the Army wiH bring in Maj. Gen. Trank Moorman to replace Gen. Monmouth and reporting direct- ly to the Army Materiel Com- mand in Washington. The Ma- teriel Command is the Electron- ics Command's parent organiza- tion. Hoff. Gen. Moorman is chief signal officer at NATO head- Maj. Gen. Stuart S. Hoff quarters in Europe. No definite maud function as it should. "Bui Washington, was fouling up the whole works," he said. "Officers of Gen. Hoff's caliber are not easy to replace." Sources said after Gen. Hofl brought about by the Army's re- cent sweeping reorganization, have made Gen. Hoff ask for re- tirement much earlier than ex- pected, sources said. Brilliant Officer One official explained that Gen. Hoff, regarded as a brilliant gen- eral officer, was doing "an out- standing job" in trying to make tihe far-flung Electronics Com called in his staff and Informed them of his action. There was no indication whal Gen. Hoff will do as a civilian, He has had a varied Army anc Signal Corps background anc day the Vatican issued a series statements saying that the igony was continuing slowly, the "ope's We was ebbing, there was otbing to dp but wait. Pulls Through Crisis The Vatican said that the Pope's resistance to death had defied every medical expecta-. tion. At 6:40 a.m. (12:40 a.m. EST) he Vatican Press office an nunced that he had suffered still mother crisis i— but again had mUed through. The radio said he crisis seemed for a moment have ended his life but he rai- led once more, and the stow XHirse of his suffering continued, The statement said his fever reached ( 104 degrees Fahrenheit and his pulse had increased to 140 beats a minute. At 7:07 a.m. (1:07 a.m. EST) he Vatican Radio announced hit the Pope was suffering "atrocious pain"' and had been holding a cross to his chest for more than four hours, Consciousness came and went is the Pope lived through the night, but most of the time he was jn a coma. (See POPE, Page 3) This, and other difficulties has held such Important assign- ments as deputy signal officei for the Eighth Army,- oomman dant of the Army Signal School and chief of the Combat Develop ment and Operations Division the Office of the Chief Signal Officer. ' Over-all Mission Under the Army's reorganiza- tion, the Electronics Command (See HOFF, Page 3) Begin SecondPhase ofTrafficPlan RED BANK — The Police Department over the weekend Implemented the second phase of a seven-point traffic im- provement plan with apparently successful results. The plan was recommended and is being promoted by the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association. Point two consists of the creation of a storage lane or turn slot for traffic left- turning from West Front St. to English Plaza. Raymond Sergeant, Jr., president of the PBA, said yester- day that the first phase of the program—a ban against left' turns from West Front St. into Wharf, Ave., has met with acceptance from persons involved. The Chamber of Commerce, which has endorsed the entire program,, likes the first step, Patrolman Sergeant said, and «' peh»nal ; letter from Bernard Natelson of the J. Kridel •tore, expresses hearty approval of the Wharf Ave. change. The storage lane near English Plaza was established during the early morning Saturday. It necessitated a ban on parking on the north side of West Front St. between the Old Village Inn and the Pep 'Boys store. Only six parking spaces were sacrificed. Because of two '' garage entrances and a driveway next to the Elks Hall, park- ing already had been banned on a part of the block. A spokesman at the Old Village Inn said the parking ban might hurt his business slightly, but he felt the step necessary to improve the flow of traffic on Front St. ' Parking along the south side of West Front St. was not affected. The changes in the traffic pattern are being made on a temporary basis. If they are found to be beneficial, Borough Council has the prerogative of making them law. Patrolman Sergeant said the. next step will be taken at Linden PI. For that'street, the PBA recommends another parking ban to provide separate lanes for cars turning either way into Broad St. Raritan Housing Project Gets Court's OK to Start Building FREEHOLD - The right of builders to RO forward with Rari- tan Valley, USA, housing project in Raritan Township has an okay today from a Superior Court Judge who once upheld a zoning law which would have blocked them. jujge J. Edward Knight, whose earlier opinion dealing with the first of five sections of a 569- Pleasant Day For Dad Is Contest Prize RED BANK - The Red Bank Retail Trade Board has thought of some of the most pleasant ways a man could spend a day of leisure — and the board will see to it that a group of men from this area will have the chance to follow the suggestions. The lucky men will be the winners of a Father's Day pro motional event sponsored by the board. Among the prizes will be a barbecue accessory set, complete with two tempting steaks; a pair of tickets to a Mets baseball game on June 23; a free round of golf at a nearby country club; tickets for the June 22 produc- tion of "The King And I" at the Paper Mill Playhouse, Mlllburn; and a day at the track, including free admissions for two, with $10 "spending money" to make the time go faster. To win a prize, fathers will dip coupons from The Register Thursday, deposit them at the designated st6res, and then sit back and wait for tihe results ol n drawing at the Chamber of Commerce office. Winners will be announced June 14. house project had 'been over- turned by the Supreme Court, ruled Friday the entire plan is legally justified. In its decision, the high court returned the case to Judge Knight for rehearing. It spelled out its view, however, that the first section merited approval and that more testimony was needed before a decision could be handed up on the other four sec- tions. Upsets Amendment Judge Knight's decision, which upsets a Raritan Township zon- ing amendment, falls in line with the theory of the 1962 Supreme Court decision. His earlier decision was based on a finding township officials acted in accord with discretion- ary powers under the law, The proposed project on a 157- acre tract at Line and Bethany Rds. by the Paterson firm was irst discussed in 1956. Official Tim Killed VENAFRO, Italy (AP)-4j,bu carrying 70 persons home from o religious pilgrimage plunged 20 feet to the ground from a bridge Sunday night. Police said two per wns were killed and 40 Injured Free Pot o' Steamem June 4 to B—at Captain's Cabin celebrating first anniversary, 400 Broadway, Point Pleasant Beach -Adv. Pilot Rewarded TOKYO (AP) - A Nationalist Chinese pilot has been rewarded with 2,500 ounces of gold for de- fection to Red China with an Amer- ican-made F86F fighter, the New China News Agency said Sunday. A Peking broadcast monitored here said the pilot would be given the rank of major In the Red Chi' neso air force. He was identified as Capt. Hsu Ting-tee. approval was given preliminary plans, improvements were made, even model homes were erected, over a continuing period of time. But in 1959, the Township Committee, threw the lands of the entire project into an indus- trial zone and barred a belated- ly-feared population boom. Cites 'Vested Rights' The builders, Raritan Asso- ciates, Judge Knight said dis- posing of the matter, "have ac- quired vested rights" to com- plete their project without re- gard to the 1959 amendment. The court took notice that the builders, relying upon actions prior to 1959, had spent or as- sumed obligations of about $500,- 000. He referred in his decision to this Supreme Court statement: " it is significant that when there were interruptions (in prog- ress of the now-seven-year old proposal) the municipality did nothing whatever toward expedi tion of the development, nor did it do anything to suggest to the developer that his interests would be in jeopardy if he did not proceed in faster fashion." Formal Approval On the contrary, the high court had said, "the municipality granted formal approvals and ex- tensions which on their face avoided defaults and justified the developer's reliance." William R. Blair, of Red Bank was attorney for Raritan Associ- ates. Lawrence A. Carton of At- lantic Highlands represented the township. Mayors Back Bond Issue HACKENSACK (AP) - Gov Richard J. Hughes' proposed $75' million bond issue has been e dorsed by Bergen County's . Democratic mayors. The mayors, in a joint state ment issued Sunday, urged Nev Jersey voters to approve the bom issue referendum in the genera election this November. They said Hughes "has discoi ered the only means by which Ne 1 Jersey can avoid the immediat adoption of either a state incomi or sales tax while at the same tim meeting the state's obligations its citizens." The joint'statement was issuec by Mayors Fred C. Galda of Pa ramus, Hugh Gillison of Bergei field, Peter R. Tonner of Norl Arlington, Joseph F. Regan Edgewater, John J. Tucci Moonachie, Henry Helstoski < East Rutherford, James McGui of North Vale, Edward Ihnen Montvale, John J. Costello of Em erson and Frank Belli of Lodi. 3 Jerseyans Win Forensic Contes PITTSBURGH, Pa. (AP)-Three New Jerseyans were among win- ners in the 12th Annual Grand Ni tional Tournament of the Nation; Catholic Forensic League tha ended three days of competitio: Saturday! Paul Bucovec of St. Joseph': Newark, N.J., placed first in ori| inal oratory and Timothy Verdi of St. Peter's, Newark, was thlrc Anthony Ciaglia of Seton Ha Newark, won the boy's division e> temporaneous speech. CROWD AWAITS NEWS OF POPE— People start gathering door at main entrance to the Apostolic Palace in Vatican critically-ill Pope John XXIII. The door, customarily open, is a pontiff. in front of the bronzo City for news of the closed at the death of {AP Wirephoto) Wallace Case Set For Court Today BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) - The case of the Federal Govern- ment vs. Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace comes up today in U. S. District Court. There were indications that, come what may, Wallace will go through with his Jan to try to keep Negroes out t the white University of Ala- bama. No one expected the fiery seg- regationist governor to be pres- ent for the legal proceedings. He said on a national television pro- gram yesterday mat he would send counsel to present his de- fense of his stand-ln-the-door pol- icy against integration. The Justice Department asked U.S. District Judge Seybourn H. Lynne for an injunction barring Wallace from interfering with an earlier court order directing the university sytem to enroll two Negroes, Repeating his vow to stand in the university doors to keep Ne- groes out, Wallace told interview ers on NBC televisions "Meet the Press" that his defiance would 'test in the courts the validity of this order involving our school system." Law Will Prevail The issue, he said, is whether Alabama may run its schools as it has or must submit to federal government operation of the schools. He said repeatedly that vio lence would not be tolerated al the university, but said it re- mains to be seen whether federal troops will be needed to get two Negroes into the university sys- tem next week. The governor said he has ap- pealed to the citizens of Alabama to stay away from the campus. "Absolute law will prevail," he said. "We will not tolerate mob action." While Wallace talked, hundreds of white and Negro pickets marched outside. Many chanted "Wallace Mast Go" and "Down with Wallace." The pickets, how- ever, were outnumbered by po licemen, who threw up massive security measures. There were these major de- velopments elsewhere: —In Jackson, Miss., scene of mass arrests of pro-integration demonstrators last week, the Sab- bath was quiet. Negro leaders held a night strategy session be- hind closed doors. Earlier a ral- ly heard James H. Meredith pledge to "use every resource at my command to liberate my peo- ple." Meredith Is the first Negro knowingly admitted to the Uni- versity of Mississippi. Picketing Continues —Picketing continued at Talla- hassee, Fla., where Negroes (See WALLACE, Page 2) PROPOSED COLTS NECK SCHOOL — This is architect's scale modal of the 14-room $745,000 elementary school to b* built on a i»ven-acr« tract on Cedar Dr., Colts Nock, Vot«ri on May 21 approved a referendum appropri- ating th» funds for tha building. Architect for Board of Education is Norman W. Coates, Somirville. CAMPOREE C H O W — Frank Steckhahn, New Shrewsbury, assistant commissioner of District 2, Monmouth Council of Boy Scouts, samples a stew whipped up by three members of New Shrewsbury Troop 100 at council camporee staged during weekend at the new county park in Holmdel. The "chefs" are, left to right, Ralph Overman, 13, and Senior Scouts James Teeter, 15, and Jay Mannix, 14. Some 2,000 Scouts from mora than 100 troops in the county, took part in the "Invitation to, Adventure" camp- out, which marked tha first public use of the new park site on Longstreet Rd, LongBmnch,Race TrackCrish Ends on a Note of Hospitality LONG BRANCH — Councilmen and other city officials partook Saturday of traditional Monmouth Park Race Track hos- pitality on "Long Branch Day" with hardly a mention of reverse city hospitality to the track a day earlier. Just as ths track was to open its 1963 season for a 56-day meet big columns of black smoke rose from the city incinerator, just east of the oval, which liad been shut down since January as a health and safety hazard. The track tried unsuccessfully last year to buy, and level, the burn- er. Almost simultaneously, police squads took up stations at two main intersections feeding traflic into roads leading to race track gates. The ensuing two-hour oheck of drivers' credentials backed up traffic for periods up to a half hour. Takes Responsibility Acting City Manner J, O. Jones took the responsibility. He called the traffic checks "rou- tine." Ho said ho assumed pub- lic works employees, oE whom lie is also director, were burning off soot to make ready to use the plant for city purposes. The acting city mnnngcr denied he had been prompted to act becauso the track had been less generous this year with passes than in other years. Barker Secley, the track's pub- licity director, gave mistuken strength to tiiat theory when asked about the number of passes issued to Long Branch officials. He said only Mayor Thomas L, McClintock had received one. But later checks—after the situation already had received wide pub- licity—disclosed that all council- men received their usual allot- ment of two passes each. , Critical of Actions Mayor McClintock said he was certain he was not the only one to receive passes. He sharply criticized the twin administrative actions, noting a bad public relations effect and comparing the moves to some controversial steps taken by for- mer City Manager Richard J. Bowen. "I can think of no Incident at- tributed to Mr. Bowen that caused more people to get more angry in a shorter period of time." the mayor said. Mr. Bowen was ousted in a 6 to 3 vote of Council for allegedly not Jjottinji along with the full council and for becoming in- volved in controversies. All councilmen, except Julius Tomaini, who is a medical pa- tient at Monmouth'Medical Cen« ter, attended the usual Long Branch Day luncheon and gath- ered in box seats for the race card Saturday, Mr. Jones and other top admin- istrative officers also were, there. One councilman, who arrived late, said he was appearing only so that his opponent in the June 18 runoff elections couldn't claim the incumbent was opposed to an improvement of the breed, The acting manager said traf- fic checks at Broadway and Myr- tle Aves., and at Branchport and a mile from the track, were in- tended to implement the city's criminal registration law. Tho checks, however, were made of cars leaving the city, not enter- ing, Police Chief Robert C. Gurley said police Issued no summonses during the check which lasted from about 1 to 3 p.m. Todafs Index Page Adam ami Eve 7 Allen-Scott - 20 Amusements 8 Mrllis 2 Jim Bishop „ ,.„__ $ Bridge It John Chamberlain 8 Classified 18 Comics _. .«.. .«..1B Crossword Puala II Editorials Hcrblock Movie Timetable Obituaries _ Sylvia Porter Sports Successful Inventing Television Wonwn'i N«ws Page ...... 6 6 — 8 ..11-17 J ZJMI

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Page 1: DigiFind-It · 2015. 4. 9. · MX toraorr tttttd •». Wetbetdty, ttlr tad «m, fet tntthet, page 2. 21,675 DIAL SH 1-0010 VOL 85 NO 242 Um»" * • mow km u ui. Bank um u MHUSoul

MX toraorrtttttd •». Wetbetdty, ttlr tad«m, fet tntthet, page 2.

21,675

DIAL SH 1-0010

VOL 85 NO 242 Um" • » * mow k m u ui.Bank um u MHUSoul JUUInl OIUtM.

RED BANK, N, J., MONDAY. JUNE 3, 1963 7C PER COPY PAGE ONE

Pope Survives Two Crises; Death NearVATICAN CITY (AP) - Pope

John XXIII sank into a state ofincreasing stupor today, but his•tout heart continued to keep ap-proaching death at bay. ,

A medical bulletin at noon(6 a.m. EST) said that the Popeno longer felt the agonizing painwhich had been wracking himand sedatives and pain killers nolonger were necessary.

The bulletin said the pontiffstemperature had gone up again,but "the cardio-circulatory con-dition remains, nevertheless, rath-er valid."

VATICAN CITY, (AP) - PopeJohn XXIII clung stubbornly tolife today, defying all medical

predictions. But his doctors an-nounced his condition was slowly,steadily worsening.

The 81-year-old pontiff survivedanother' crisis last night and yetanother early today. Since Fri-day his doctors have said eachday would probably be his last.

the first medical bulletin of theday reported that the Pope's pulsebeat had eased from a high of 140beats early this morning to asteady 130: His hold on life wasattributed to the, "perfect integ-rity", of his heart and circulatorysystern and his "exceptionalrobustness.'"

The bulletin, issued at 9 a.m.(3 ».m. EST), said:.. ..

"The,perfect integrity of the

cardio-circulatory system and theexceptional robustness of the holyfather maintain his physique ina condition of elevated resistanceIn which the worsening, althoughsteady, is slow.

"In the past 12 hours therehave frequently been periods ofloss of consciousness and failureto react to stimulants.

"His body' temperature con-tinues, to remain high. Admin-istration of oxygen and the pres-ence of adequate breathing haspermitted'the conservation of asufficient ostygenation. His arte-rial pressure af 8 a.m. was 115 andhis pulse had a beat of 130 withit steady rhythm."

One -Vatican source said ter-

rible convulsions almost shookthe Pope off his bed at one pointthis morning. Doctors were usingsedatives to ease his pain, butthe source said the pontiff duringhis periods of consciousness re-fused them.

At 8:30 a.m. the Vatican saidhe was fully conscious and ableto follow the recitation of prayersby those at his bedside.

Fully ConsciousDeath almost came at sunset

yesterday — Pentecost Sunday —When he suffered an alarmingcrisis. It brought a Vatican Radio plea to the world for prayer.Again his heart pulled himthrough. '' '

Through the early hours of to-

Gen. Hoff to Quit ArmyFORT MONMOUTH — MaJ. date has been set for his arrival

Gen. Stuart S, Hoff, reportedlyunhappy with the Army Elec-tronics Command's mountingorganizational problems, hasspeeded his plans to retire from

here.Sources said Gen. Hoff, in re-

cent ' months, has become in-creasingly concerned at organirational procedures which have

the service, it was learned to- people working under him at Fort submitted his resignation hday.

High-level sources here andin Washington said Gen. Hoff,who' assumed command of theElectronics Command.in August,will leave the Army at the endof July. He has more than 32years of service and is eligibleto retire. Official Fort Momnouthwould neither confirm nor denythe report.

New CommanderIt was learned also that the

Army wiH bring in Maj. Gen.Trank Moorman to replace Gen.

Monmouth and reporting direct-ly to the Army Materiel Com-mand in Washington. The Ma-teriel Command is the Electron-ics Command's parent organiza-tion.

Hoff. Gen. Moorman is chiefsignal officer at NATO head-

Maj. Gen. Stuart S. Hoff quarters in Europe. No definite

maud function as it should. "BuiWashington, was fouling up thewhole works," he said. "Officersof Gen. Hoff's caliber are noteasy to replace."

Sources said after Gen. Hofl

brought about by the Army's re-cent sweeping reorganization,have made Gen. Hoff ask for re-tirement much earlier than ex-pected, sources said.

Brilliant OfficerOne official explained that Gen.

Hoff, regarded as a brilliant gen-eral officer, was doing "an out-standing job" in trying to maketihe far-flung Electronics Com

called in his staff and Informedthem of his action.

There was no indication whalGen. Hoff will do as a civilian,He has had a varied Army ancSignal Corps background anc

day the Vatican issued a seriesstatements saying that the

igony was continuing slowly, the"ope's We was ebbing, there wasotbing to dp but wait.

Pulls Through CrisisThe Vatican said that the

Pope's resistance to death haddefied every medical expecta-.tion.

At 6:40 a.m. (12:40 a.m. EST)he Vatican Press office annunced that he had suffered stillmother crisis i— but again hadmUed through. The radio saidhe crisis seemed for a moment

have ended his life but he rai-led once more, and the stowXHirse of his suffering continued,The statement said his fever

reached (104 degrees Fahrenheitand his pulse had increased to140 beats a minute.

At 7:07 a.m. (1:07 a.m. EST)he Vatican Radio announcedhit the Pope was suffering"atrocious pain"' and had beenholding a cross to his chest formore than four hours,

Consciousness came and wentis the Pope lived through thenight, but most of the time hewas jn a coma.

(See POPE, Page 3)

This, and other difficulties has held such Important assign-ments as deputy signal officeifor the Eighth Army,- oommandant of the Army Signal Schooland chief of the Combat Development and Operations Divisionthe Office of the Chief SignalOfficer. '

Over-all MissionUnder the Army's reorganiza-

tion, the Electronics Command(See HOFF, Page 3)

Begin Second Phase ofTrafficPlanRED BANK — The Police Department over the weekend

Implemented the second phase of a seven-point traffic im-provement plan with apparently successful results.

The plan was recommended and is being promoted by thePatrolmen's Benevolent Association. Point two consists ofthe creation of a storage lane or turn slot for traffic left-turning from West Front St. to English Plaza.

Raymond Sergeant, Jr., president of the PBA, said yester-day that the first phase of the program—a ban against left'turns from West Front St. into Wharf, Ave., has met withacceptance from persons involved.

The Chamber of Commerce, which has endorsed the entireprogram,, likes the first step, Patrolman Sergeant said, and«' peh»nal; letter from Bernard Natelson of the J. Kridel•tore, expresses hearty approval of the Wharf Ave. change.

The storage lane near English Plaza was establishedduring the early morning Saturday. It necessitated a ban on

parking on the north side of West Front St. between the OldVillage Inn and the Pep 'Boys store.

Only six parking spaces were sacrificed. Because of two'' garage entrances and a driveway next to the Elks Hall, park-ing already had been banned on a part of the block.

A spokesman at the Old Village Inn said the parking banmight hurt his business slightly, but he felt the step necessaryto improve the flow of traffic on Front St.' Parking along the south side of West Front St. was notaffected.

The changes in the traffic pattern are being made on atemporary basis. If they are found to be beneficial, BoroughCouncil has the prerogative of making them law.

Patrolman Sergeant said the. next step will be taken atLinden PI. For that'street, the PBA recommends anotherparking ban to provide separate lanes for cars turning eitherway into Broad St.

Raritan Housing Project GetsCourt's OK to Start BuildingFREEHOLD - The right of

builders to RO forward with Rari-tan Valley, USA, housing projectin Raritan Township has an okaytoday from a Superior CourtJudge who once upheld a zoninglaw which would have blockedthem.

jujge J. Edward Knight, whoseearlier opinion dealing with thefirst of five sections of a 569-

Pleasant DayFor Dad IsContest Prize

RED BANK - The Red BankRetail Trade Board has thoughtof some of the most pleasantways a man could spend a dayof leisure — and the board willsee to it that a group of menfrom this area will have thechance to follow the suggestions.

The lucky men will be thewinners of a Father's Day promotional event sponsored by theboard.

Among the prizes will be abarbecue accessory set, completewith two tempting steaks; a pairof tickets to a Mets baseballgame on June 23; a free roundof golf at a nearby country club;tickets for the June 22 produc-tion of "The King And I" at thePaper Mill Playhouse, Mlllburn;and a day at the track, includingfree admissions for two, with$10 "spending money" to makethe time go faster.

To win a prize, fathers willdip coupons from The RegisterThursday, deposit them at thedesignated st6res, and then sitback and wait for tihe results oln drawing at the Chamber ofCommerce office. Winners willbe announced June 14.

house project had 'been over-turned by the Supreme Court,ruled Friday the entire plan islegally justified.

In its decision, the high courtreturned the case to JudgeKnight for rehearing. It spelledout its view, however, that thefirst section merited approvaland that more testimony wasneeded before a decision could behanded up on the other four sec-tions.

Upsets Amendment

Judge Knight's decision, whichupsets a Raritan Township zon-ing amendment, falls in line withthe theory of the 1962 SupremeCourt decision.

His earlier decision was basedon a finding township officialsacted in accord with discretion-ary powers under the law,

The proposed project on a 157-acre tract at Line and BethanyRds. by the Paterson firm wasirst discussed in 1956. Official

Tim KilledVENAFRO, Italy (AP)-4j,bu

carrying 70 persons home from oreligious pilgrimage plunged 20feet to the ground from a bridgeSunday night. Police said two perwns were killed and 40 Injured

Free Pot o' SteamemJune 4 to B—at Captain's Cabin

celebrating first anniversary, 400Broadway, Point Pleasant Beach-Adv.

Pilot Rewarded

TOKYO (AP) - A NationalistChinese pilot has been rewardedwith 2,500 ounces of gold for de-fection to Red China with an Amer-ican-made F86F fighter, the NewChina News Agency said Sunday.

A Peking broadcast monitoredhere said the pilot would be giventhe rank of major In the Red Chi'neso air force. He was identifiedas Capt. Hsu Ting-tee.

approval was given preliminaryplans, improvements were made,even model homes were erected,over a continuing period of time.

But in 1959, the TownshipCommittee, threw the lands ofthe entire project into an indus-trial zone and barred a belated-ly-feared population boom.

Cites 'Vested Rights'The builders, Raritan Asso-

ciates, Judge Knight said dis-posing of the matter, "have ac-quired vested rights" to com-plete their project without re-gard to the 1959 amendment.

The court took notice that thebuilders, relying upon actionsprior to 1959, had spent or as-sumed obligations of about $500,-000.

He referred in his decision tothis Supreme Court statement:

" it is significant that whenthere were interruptions (in prog-ress of the now-seven-year oldproposal) the municipality didnothing whatever toward expedition of the development, nor didit do anything to suggest to thedeveloper that his interestswould be in jeopardy if he didnot proceed in faster fashion."

Formal ApprovalOn the contrary, the high court

had said, "the municipalitygranted formal approvals and ex-tensions which on their faceavoided defaults and justified thedeveloper's reliance."

William R. Blair, of Red Bankwas attorney for Raritan Associ-ates. Lawrence A. Carton of At-lantic Highlands represented thetownship.

Mayors BackBond Issue

HACKENSACK (AP) - GovRichard J. Hughes' proposed $75'million bond issue has been edorsed by Bergen County's .Democratic mayors.

The mayors, in a joint statement issued Sunday, urged NevJersey voters to approve the bomissue referendum in the generaelection this November.

They said Hughes "has discoiered the only means by which Ne1

Jersey can avoid the immediatadoption of either a state incomior sales tax while at the same timmeeting the state's obligationsits citizens."

The joint'statement was issuecby Mayors Fred C. Galda of Paramus, Hugh Gillison of Bergeifield, Peter R. Tonner of NorlArlington, Joseph F. ReganEdgewater, John J. TucciMoonachie, Henry Helstoski <East Rutherford, James McGuiof North Vale, Edward IhnenMontvale, John J. Costello of Emerson and Frank Belli of Lodi.

3 Jerseyans WinForensic Contes

PITTSBURGH, Pa. (AP)-ThreeNew Jerseyans were among win-ners in the 12th Annual Grand Nitional Tournament of the Nation;Catholic Forensic League thaended three days of competitio:Saturday!

Paul Bucovec of St. Joseph':Newark, N.J., placed first in ori|inal oratory and Timothy Verdiof St. Peter's, Newark, was thlrc

Anthony Ciaglia of Seton HaNewark, won the boy's division e>temporaneous speech.

CROWD AWAITS NEWS OF POPE— People start gathering

door at main entrance to the Apostolic Palace in Vatican

critically-ill Pope John XXIII. The door, customarily open, is

a pontiff.

in front of the bronzo

City for news of the

closed at the death of

{AP Wirephoto)

Wallace Case SetFor Court Today

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -The case of the Federal Govern-ment vs. Alabama Gov. GeorgeC. Wallace comes up today inU. S. District Court. There wereindications that, come what may,Wallace will go through with hisJan to try to keep Negroes outt the white University of Ala-

bama.No one expected the fiery seg-

regationist governor to be pres-ent for the legal proceedings. Hesaid on a national television pro-gram yesterday mat he wouldsend counsel to present his de-fense of his stand-ln-the-door pol-icy against integration.

The Justice Department askedU.S. District Judge Seybourn H.Lynne for an injunction barringWallace from interfering with anearlier court order directing theuniversity sytem to enroll twoNegroes,

Repeating his vow to stand inthe university doors to keep Ne-groes out, Wallace told interviewers on NBC televisions "Meet thePress" that his defiance would'test in the courts the validity

of this order involving our schoolsystem."

Law Will PrevailThe issue, he said, is whether

Alabama may run its schools asit has or must submit to federalgovernment operation of theschools.

He said repeatedly that violence would not be tolerated althe university, but said it re-mains to be seen whether federaltroops will be needed to get twoNegroes into the university sys-tem next week.

The governor said he has ap-pealed to the citizens of Alabamato stay away from the campus.

"Absolute law will prevail," hesaid. "We will not tolerate mobaction."

While Wallace talked, hundredsof white and Negro picketsmarched outside. Many chanted"Wallace Mast Go" and "Downwith Wallace." The pickets, how-ever, were outnumbered by policemen, who threw up massivesecurity measures.

There were these major de-velopments elsewhere:

—In Jackson, Miss., scene ofmass arrests of pro-integrationdemonstrators last week, the Sab-bath was quiet. Negro leadersheld a night strategy session be-hind closed doors. Earlier a ral-ly heard James H. Meredithpledge to "use every resource atmy command to liberate my peo-ple." Meredith Is the first Negroknowingly admitted to the Uni-versity of Mississippi.

Picketing Continues—Picketing continued at Talla-

hassee, Fla., where Negroes(See WALLACE, Page 2)

PROPOSED COLTS NECK SCHOOL — This is architect's scale modal of the 14-room $745,000 elementary schoolto b* built on a i»ven-acr« tract on Cedar Dr., Colts Nock, Vot«ri on May 21 approved a referendum appropri-ating th» funds for tha building. Architect for Board of Education is Norman W. Coates, Somirville.

CAMPOREE CHOW— Frank Steckhahn, New Shrewsbury, assistant commissioner ofDistrict 2, Monmouth Council of Boy Scouts, samples a stew whipped up by threemembers of New Shrewsbury Troop 100 at council camporee staged during weekendat the new county park in Holmdel. The "chefs" are, left to right, Ralph Overman, 13,and Senior Scouts James Teeter, 15, and Jay Mannix, 14. Some 2,000 Scouts frommora than 100 troops in the county, took part in the "Invitation to, Adventure" camp-out, which marked tha first public use of the new park site on Longstreet Rd,

LongBmnch,Race TrackCrishEnds on a Note of Hospitality

LONG BRANCH — Councilmenand other city officials partookSaturday of t r a d i t i o n a lMonmouth Park Race Track hos-pitality on "Long Branch Day"with hardly a mention of reversecity hospitality to the track aday earlier.

Just as ths track was to openits 1963 season for a 56-day meetbig columns of black smoke rosefrom the city incinerator, justeast of the oval, which liad beenshut down since January as ahealth and safety hazard. Thetrack tried unsuccessfully lastyear to buy, and level, the burn-er.

Almost simultaneously, policesquads took up stations at twomain intersections feeding traflicinto roads leading to race trackgates. The ensuing two-houroheck of drivers' credentialsbacked up traffic for periods upto a half hour.

Takes ResponsibilityActing City Manner J, O.

Jones took the responsibility. Hecalled the traffic checks "rou-tine." Ho said ho assumed pub-lic works employees, oE whomlie is also director, were burningoff soot to make ready to usethe plant for city purposes.

The acting city mnnngcr deniedhe had been prompted to actbecauso the track had been lessgenerous this year with passesthan in other years.

Barker Secley, the track's pub-licity director, gave mistukenstrength to tiiat theory whenasked about the number of passes

issued to Long Branch officials.He said only Mayor Thomas L,

McClintock had received one. Butlater checks—after the situationalready had received wide pub-licity—disclosed that all council-men received their usual allot-ment of two passes each.

, Critical of ActionsMayor McClintock said he was

certain he was not the only oneto receive passes.

He sharply criticized the twinadministrative actions, noting abad public relations effect andcomparing the moves to somecontroversial steps taken by for-mer City Manager Richard J.Bowen.

"I can think of no Incident at-tributed to Mr. Bowen thatcaused more people to get moreangry in a shorter period oftime." the mayor said.

Mr. Bowen was ousted in a 6 to3 vote of Council for allegedlynot Jjottinji along with the fullcouncil and for becoming in-volved in controversies.

All councilmen, except JuliusTomaini, who is a medical pa-tient at Monmouth'Medical Cen«ter, attended the usual LongBranch Day luncheon and gath-ered in box seats for the racecard Saturday,

Mr. Jones and other top admin-istrative officers also were, there.One councilman, who arrivedlate, said he was appearing onlyso that his opponent in the June18 runoff elections couldn't claimthe incumbent was opposed to animprovement of the breed,

The acting manager said traf-fic checks at Broadway and Myr-tle Aves., and at Branchport anda mile from the track, were in-tended to implement the city'scriminal registration law. Thochecks, however, were made ofcars leaving the city, not enter-ing,

Police Chief Robert C. Gurleysaid police Issued no summonsesduring the check which lastedfrom about 1 to 3 p.m.

Todafs IndexPage

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EditorialsHcrblockMovie TimetableObituaries _Sylvia PorterSportsSuccessful InventingTelevisionWonwn'i N«ws

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3, 1963 RED HA.VK

County WiikFREEHOLD - The following

wUU have beso probated here bySurrogate Edward C. Broege:

S A M A, TULLER, Middle-town, Who died May IS, left$29,000 etch to son-in-law, JohnH. Dill, and grandsons, John C.Dill and James T. Dill; £0,000to the First Church of Christ,Scientist, Red Bank; $5,000 eachto niece, Helen B. Caran, nephew,Ned A. Bower, and each grand-child; $1,000 each to sister, Mar-garet A..Bower, and the Woman'sClub of Red Bank; $499 to Doro-thy Szepula; $250 each to AnnTUller and Robert Tuller; realand peronal property and bal-ance of estate to daughter, Mar-garet T. Dill.

MARY A. O'NEILL, Red Bank,who died May 9, left {2,000 toAdelaide Emerson; $1,000 eachto Thomas P. O'Neill, the So-ciety of the Propagation of theFaith of the Archdiosese of NewYork, the Convent of Mercy inIreland, the Jesuit Missions, Inc.,New York, St. Joseph's Churchof New York, and Catholic Chartties of the Archdiocese of NewYork; $500 each to Phyllis Bums,Gail Taylor, Jack G. Emerson,Jeanette Vaughn, the WorkingBoys' Home, Boston, and for re-lief of the poor fund of St. JamesChurch, Red Bank. The balanceof her estate is to be divided

among Adelaidethe Archbishopric of New Yorkor the welfare of the poor of the

city of Mew York.

ELEANOR L. MELLEN, Rum-son, who died April 12, left build-

Wallace(Continued)

are seeking desegregation of twowhite movie theaters.. And atGainesville, site of fte Univer-sity of Florida,. several hundredNegroes and white persons glaredat each other across a roped offstreet following an attempt byNegroes to enter a white theater.Authorities said there were noincidents at either place.

—After an eight-day truce, ra-cial demonstrations resumed lastnight in Greensboro, N. C. about200 Negroes marched silentlythrough the downtown .streets. ANegro spokesman said themarches were resumed becausethe city had been slow in re-sponding to pleas for an end tosegregation in business establish-ments.

—In Washington, 20 Republicancongressmen accused the Kenne-dy administration of "footdrag-ging" on civil rights and said theywould take the floor of the houseone by one today to urge sup-port of GOP civil right* legisla-tion.

—In Philadelphia, racial un-rest, which last week broughNegroes into conflict with laborunions, threatens today to pit Ne-gro against Negro.

The National Association forthe Advancement of ColoredPeople (NAACP) and the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)had followed parallel policies indemonstrating against racial biasin hiring on city constructionjobs.

But their paths diverged lastweek when the NAACP reachedan agreement with the local building Trades Council and the Boardof Education, over the picketingof a school construction site. Thepickets were removed and fourNegroes were hired. The NAACPagreed to resist any further in-terference with the work by oth-er Negro organizations and alsowon union recognition of the NA-ACP as official voice of die Negrocommunity.

NAACP Local President CevilB. Moore met with labor leaderslast night to reaffirm that agree-ment. '

CORE, however, rejects theagreement and disputes the NA-ACP's right to make it.

In a statement last night, CORElaid it. is sending qualified Ne-groes to construction sites thisweek, to test the good faith of

ing and property at comerWashington .and Hunt Sts., Rum-son, including furnishings, to son,Samuel H. Crooks; $3,000 eachto Ruth Milford and Charles Al-ias; $5,000 to brother-in-law, Wil-liam E, Mellen; $2,000 each torandchildren, Janet M. Shearer

and Arthur W. Mellen, 3d, and toRay MoGirr; $1,000 to Jane Hun-er. The balance of her estate iseft in trust as follows: 50 per

cent to Samuel Crooks, 30 percent to brother, Harry A. Mac-

liffin, IS per cent to niece, HildaMacGiffin, and S per cent tonephew, Harry A. MacGiffin,Jr.

FRANK PERNO, R a r i t a nTownship, who died May II, leftproperty on the north and southsides of Rt. 35 in Raritan Town-ship to son, Thomas Perno. Thebalance of his estate is left todaughters, Meluccia Muccio, Jul-ia Eovino, Philomina Ambrosinoand Frances Miller.

GEORGE FROST, Red Bank,who died May II, left propertyat 199 West Bergen PI., RedBank, to his wife, Florence I.Frost, and the balance of his es-tate to his children, John D.Frost, lone B. Dudley, and Elea-nor Mae Vincent.

N. DWYER, L o n g

the contractors.A U.S. marshall succeeded

only yesterday in serving Ala-bama's governor with a courtsummons concerning today'shearing. Wallace had eluded serv-ice for a week but was caughas he boarded a plane for NewYork for the television appear-ance.

Asked if he would comply withan order against interference,Wallace told interviewers:

"I am going to take the ac-tion I told you I was going totake.

He added: "I am not hopingto have myself arrested. This Isa dramatic way to express to theAmerican people the omnipotenmarchment."

of centralized govern

Wallace confirmed earlier re-ports from aides that he wouldbe represented by counsel at thehearing.

If he was not represented aall, he would be subject to adefault judgment and a probableImmediate injunction order in theabsence of any defense.

In civil cases the defendanhimself is not required to bepresent for the proceedings, 8high legal source said.

In the complaint filed May 24the federal government asserted,its sovereignty and said no gov-ernor has '.he right under anycloak "to obstruct or prevent theexecution of the lawful orders ofa court of the United States.'

Wallace had invoked state snv•reignty In vowing to block theNegroes,

Scheduled for enrollment forthe summer session which opensJune 10 are Vivian J. Malone,20, of Mobile, and David M. MeGlittery of Huntsvllle. Miss Ma-Ion* will seek to enroll at themain campus In Tutcaloosa, Mc-Otatberybranch.

i t the HuaUville

LiTTLE SILVER - Mrs.Peterson, 34, o f ' l M Slvcrbrook

died Saturday in River-Overview Hospital, Red Bank.Mn. Smit was born io Indo-

ardSmit, Sr.,

several yean. He is a retireddiamond merchant,

Mr. aid Mrs. Sralt war* known

Bora in BtrawiUe, Minn., Mr.Peterson was the son of Elmerand Susan Morgan Peterson, nowof Kelly Lake, Minn.

Surviving, besides his parent*,i -e his wife, Mn. Stella Klines.

Branch, who died April 5, left$1,000 each to nephews, Edmund,Vaietine, and Riohard Anderson,and nieces, Mrs. Donald Seymourand Katherine Berry, and nieceby marriage, Marie Kennedy; adiamond ring and pin to Kath-erine Berry; and the balance ofher estate to niece, May Keeshen.

MICHAEL T. MICHEL, WestLong Branch, who died March10, left furniture and personaleffects to daughter, Joan Michel.The balance of his estate is tobe divided one- th ird eachto daughter, Joan Michel, andson, John Michel. The remain-ing one-third to grandchildrenDoris A, Michel and CatherineMichel.

JOHN STANKLE, Freehold,who died April 28, left his estateto his sister, Lucy Stankle.

FRANCES PREK, Oceanport,who died May 9, left her estateto husband, Raymond Prek intrust for her daughter, Joan P.Williams.

GRACE E. ALLAIRE, Middle-town, who died May 11, left herestate to her husband, CharlesAllaire.

PAULINE G. SUITER, Mata-wan, who died May 6, left herestate to her sister, JosephineT. Sutter.

CATHERINE McCORMACK,Middtetown, who died May 1, lefther estate to her son, GeorgeMcCormack.

ANNIE CARHART, Middle-town, who died May 9, left herestate to her son, Lesley D. Car-hart.

WILLARD V. CARTER, Key-port, who died May 13; JOHN J.ROCHFORD, Fair Haven, whodied May 12; ARTHUR M.MEEKER, Long Branch, whodied May 9; MAX B. MORRIS,Rumson, who died May 10, andROBERT E. L. MORGAN, Marlboro, who died April 22, all lefttheir estates to their wives.

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSAccidents took eight lives in

New Jersey over the weekend.Five persons were killed in trafficand a man and two childrendrowned in Manabawkm' Bay.

The victims: °*ALLENOALE-Robert Eichler,

44, of AUendale, was killed earlySunday when he lost control' ofhis car on the Franklin Turnpikeand smashed into a tree.

TUCKERTON - A 27-year-oldman and two children drownedSaturday in Manahawkin Bay

YOUR GARDENTHIS WEEK

By Garden ReporterCollege ol Agriculture

Rutgers—The State Uni-versity, New Brunswick

FIRST DEPOSITORS at grand opening of Atlantic Highland* branch of Marint ViawSavings and Loan Association, Bayihore Shopping Plaza, Saturday were left, AtlanticHighlandt Mayor Ruiiall W. Morgan, and right, Henry J . Sailing, president of localLions Club. Teller is Mrs. J. Edmund Vaubel.

Eight Die in Accidents Woman DrownsIn Bathtub

BirthsMONMOUTH MEDICAL

CENTERLong Branch

Mr. and Mrs. Anthony" Fon-tana, 20 Shark River Rd., NewShrewsbury, son, today.

Mr. and Mrs. Ignatio Ranca-tore, 25S Bath Ave., Long Branch,son, Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Mc-Ginnis, 716 Fourth St., UnionBeach, daughter, Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Fried-man, 376 West End Ave., LongBranch, son, Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert W. Engel,2 Johanna Ct., West Deal, daugh-ter, Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. William M. Codncr, Jr., 540 Michigan Ave.,Brick Township, son, Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Rick,Hope Rd., Wayside, daughter,Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Vennis,155 Cherry St., Long Branch,son, Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. John Russ, 51Rockwell Ave., Long Branch,daughter, Friday.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lawrence,162 Hamilton Rd., New Shrews-bury, son, Friday.

Mr. and Mrs. Philip J. Eager,Jr., 6 Ticonderoga Ave., Ocean-Port, son, Friday.

Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Otta-viano, 130 Dunbar Ave., LongBranch, son, Friday.

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Friend,1093 Eastern Ave., Elberon, son,Friday.

Mr. and Mrs. William Franko-vic, 14 Lori Rd., MonmouthBeach, son, Wednesday.

about 150 yards off shore. Thethree victims and another child,who was rescued, had gone outin a 12-foot motorized rowboat.State police identified the dead asJo Ann, 9, of Camden, and Eu-gene McDonald, 6, of Mantua.Kuda's son, Charles Jr., 4, wasrescued by a boatman.

Police said they did not knowhow the victims fell into the wa-ter. The boat remained upright.They quoted witnesses as sayingKuda treaded in about six feet ofwater, holding on to his daughterand the McDonald boy while hisson held onto the boat's .edge.Then the three dipped below thesurface,

TRENTON-Janet Griffith, 17,of Ewing Township, died Saturdaynight in a two-car collision inwhich six others were injured, onecritically. Miss Griffith was in acar with three other teen-agersreturning from a dance at EwingHigh School. One of the passengersin the second car, Judy Vitella,14, Ewing Township, was report-ed in critical condition today atMercer Hospital, Trenton. Theother teen-agers and Judy's fath-er, James Vitella, 47, and hertwin sister, Jean, were taken toMercer and Helene Fuld Hospitalsin fair condition.

MATAWAN TOWNSHIP-RobertJohnson, 45, of Cliffwood, wasstruck by a car and killed as hewalked across Route 35 Saturdaynight. The driver was identifiedas Eugene T. Baldwin, 36, of Haz-let.

Confidentially, men,' here's away' to get out of some yarcwork.

Just mow your lawn more of-ten.

Sure, this saves work. Whenyou mow often you rarely haveto rake clippings. And raking iswork.

You'll be doing your lawn afavor, too. According to a Rut-gers lawn specialist, Dr. HenryIndyk, removing clippings is of-ten wasted effort if you mowyour lawn properly.

Besides, when you rake clip-pings you rob your lawn of thebenefits the clippings provide.

Clippings Help LawnClippings form a mulch on the

surface, Dr. Indyk explains, tohelp keep the soil cool in hotweather and warm in cold weath-Ver. When clippings decay theyadd organic matter and plantfood to the soil.

Clippings are especially help-ful to lawns on poor soils.

An easy way to rake less or doaway with the job entirely is tomow before the grass grows tootall. Clippings usually don't ac-cumulate under these conditions.

The lawn specialist suggeststiming your mowing schedule sothe grass never doubles its mow-ing height.

For example, if you usually cutyour grass at a height of twoinches, be sure to mow it be-fore It's up four inches.

With such frequent mowing,you rarely have to rake clippings.

But sometimes you do—after arainy spell or a vacation. If clippings settle down through thegrass, there's no need to rake.But any that accumulate on thesurface have to be removed toavoid trouble.

Heavy accumulations of clip-pings form a mat,, resulting inyellowing of the grass under-neath. Severe matting can kill thelawn grasses underneath andcreate conditions favorable to

. the development of lawn disease.

TOP MAN—Danial K. Hanntuyol Summit, will gradual* at -thathead of hii Naval Academyclan Wadnaiday. Hi i i tht topraliaf pitcher on Navy's ban-ball turn and has compiled ascholastic average of 93.? percant for his four years.

FAIR HAVEN-Mrs. Marion K.Hahn, 48. of 50. Fair Haven Rd.died Friday afternoon after an ac-cident; in her home. AssistantCounty Physician Harry L. Har-wood said Mrs. Hahn presumablyfell into a bathtub and drowned.She was incidentally burned bythe hot water.

Mrs. Harm's body was foundby her 11-year-old son, Robert,at about 4 p.m., Police Chief

NEWARK-John Council, 39, ofNewark, died Saturday when hewas thrown from the car in whichhe was riding on Route 1. Fourother men suffered minor injurieswhen the car, driven by JosephJohnson, 36, struck a pole.

SALEM -Danniel Mercado, 17months, was killed by his father'scar Saturday In the driveway oftheir farm home in nearby Man-nington Township. Police said thefather; Miguel, 44,- had shooedseveral of his eight children awaybefore he started the car but Dan-niel, the youngest, crawled behindthe auto when it began moving.

WeatherNew Jersey — Rain heavy at

times today and tonight, taperingoff to showers Tuesday. Becom-ing windy today and tonight-andtides to run two to three feetabove normal in coastal areaswith flooding in low-lying areasat high tide times. Cooler today,high in the 60s. Low tonightabout 60. High Tuesday in the60s to near 70.

MarineCape May to Block Island —

Small craft warnings displayed at4 a.m. east to northeast windsthis morning, increasing to 20 to30 knots, becoming southeasterly25 to 35 knots with highest guststhis afternoon and tonight withrough seas developing. South tosoutheast winds Tuesday 15 to 25knots. Visibility lowering to onemile or less in rain and fog to-day through tonight and partTuesday. Tides to run two tothree feet above normal todayand tonight with flooding in lowlying areas at high tide times.

High during the past 24 hours,Low, 60. Ocean temperature

57.TIDES

Sandy HookTODAY - High 6:26 p.m. and

low 12:06 p.m.TOMORROW - High 6:37 a.m.

and 7 p.m. and low 12:40 a.m.and 12:48 p.m.

For Red Bank and Rumsonbridge, add two hours; SeaBright, deduct 10 minutes; LongBranch, deduct 15 minutes; High

(AP Wirephoto) lands bridge, add 40 minutes.

Stuart and Jess* Peterson,at home; two daughters, MissesDawn Marie and Teresa Pater-son, both at home; and, two lis-ters, Mrs. Robert Mulford ofHebbing, Minn., and Mrs. GeorgeLucart of San Jose, Calif.

Services will be tomorrow at8:30 a.m. from the John E. DayFuneral Home, Red Bank, fol-lowed by a Requiem Mass to beoffered at 9:15 ain. in St. Leothe Great Church. Burial will bein Mount Olivet Cemetery, Mid-dletown.

Earl J. Jakubecy said. The First Smith, MTJ. Boeckel was bornAid Squad attempted unsuccess-fully to revive her. Dr. Harwoodestimated she had been deadabout an hour when found.

Mrs. Hahn was born in Lau-rens, S. C, and had lived here10 years. She formerly Hved in Thelma FieWirg of Atlantic HighLittle Stiver.

She was a member of the of Shrewsbury and George WilChurch of the Holy Communionhere.

Surviving are her husband,Robert W. Hahn; a daughter.Miss Sara Hahn at home; twoother sons, Timothy Hadsell ofRed Bank, and Peter K. Hahn,a U.S. Navy ensign stationed atNorfolk, Va.j her mother, Mrs.L. R. Kerr of Swansea, Mass.; asister, Mrs. Elizabeth K. Weaveof Darien, Conn., and a brother,Rodman Kerr of New Bedford,Mass.

Services will be this afternoonat 2 o'clock In the Church of theHoly Communion with Rev.Charles R. Lawrence officiating.Burial, under the direction of thiWorden Funeral Home, Red Bank,will be in Fair View Cemetery,Middletown.

Skinnay Ennig, 56,

Bandleader, DiesBEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)

—Band leader Skinnay Ennis, 56,who rose to fame as a singer withcomedian Bob Hope, died late Sun-day night after suffering an at-tack in a restaurant.

Doctors et the Beverly Hillsfirst aid station pronounced himdead on arrival at 11:18 p.m.

Ennis, whose almost forgottenreal name was Edgar C. Ennis,was stricken while dining in arestaurant.

Officer T. M. McCarthy, flaggeddown by a parking lot attendant,found Ennis lying on the floor.He applied external heart mas-sage until an ambulance arrived,found Ennis lying on the floor.He applied external heart mas-sage until an ambulance arrived.

Ennis and is orchestra hadbeen playing at the Statler Hiltonin downtown Los Angeles the pastfive years.

Ennis, whose nickname originaily. was "Skinny," changed itto "Skinnay" after it was mis-spelled that way on the label ofa record early in his career.

Rank AmateurDOVER TOWNSHIP (AP)-«A

rank amateur,'1 was the commentof a state trooper as he checkeda soda machine at a Route 37service station that had beenforced open Saturday.

The thief stole a box of oilbottle caps.

Put Out Grass FireLITTLE SILVER - This bor-

ough's two fire trucks werecalled out to extinguish a grassfire on the west side of the NewYork and Long Branoh Raiiroaitracks near Birch Ave. Saturda;afternoon.

Former catcher Al (Rube)Walker manages the AugustaYankees in the Sally League.

PROMOTED — WAC Capt. Elizabeth A. Berry of Oceanport hat fhe gold oakleaves of a major pinned on by Col. Franklin G. Rothwall, commanding officer ofII U.S. Army Corpi, and Maj. Margaret J. Coona, senior WAC officer, during a pro-motion ceremony in Col. Rothwell'i office.

lor their collection of paintings,carvings, -antlnques- and prehis-

Surviving, besides her husband,are two sons, Johan J, Smit, Jr.,of Gerrards Cross, England, andPieter Smit of Glenvllle, Conn.;and two daughters, Mrs. KarelPhaff of Iver Bucks, England,and Mrs. Pieter Binghorst inHollind.

Services were Saturday in theAdam* Memorial Home, RedBank, with Rev. Ralph L. Barrettof Embury Methodist Churchofficiating. Burial will be in Coal-font, Buckinghamshire, England,

MRS. BERTHA BOECKELLEONARDO - Mrs. Bertha

Boeckel, 77, of 67 LeonardvilleRd., died Friday in the home ofher daughter, Mn. Doris Mani-grssso, H Wesley Ave,, AtlanticHighlands, after a long illness.

The daughter of the late Ed-ward and Katherine Stryke

here. She was the widow of LeonBoeckel.

Also surviving are three otheidaughters, Mrs. Beatrice Mur-phy of Red Bank, Mrs, ElsieThoresen, of this place, and Mrs.

lands; two sons, Leon A. Boeckel

Ham Boeckel, of this place; asister, Mrs. Serena Havens ofRiverside Heights; 21 grand-children, and 21 great-grand-children.

The funeral will be today2 p.m. in the Posten FuneralHome, Atlantic Highlands, withRev. William Csrr, pastor olLeonardo Baptist Church, offi-ciating. Burial will be in FaiView Cemetery, Middletown.

MRS. LILLIE BOTTGERST. PETERSBURG, Fla.-Mrs.

Lillie Bottger, 72, died Fridayin Mound Park Hospital here.

Born in New York City, shehad lived here 10 years. She waformerly of Kearny, N. J. Mrs.Bottger was the widow of Har-old E. Bottger.

Surviving are two sons, Rob-ert Bottger of Hazlet, N. J., andHarold Bottger of MiddletowiTownship, N.J.; a daughter, Mrs,Viola Chapman of Glen RockN.J.; four sisters, Miss Mae anMiss Ethel Pedersen, anil Mrs.Alberta McNulty, all of West-wood, N. J., and Mrs. Florenc*Lagerberg of Dumont, N. J.;brother, Charles Pedersen ofBrooklyn; nine grandchildren,and one great-grandchild. .

The funeral will be today at2 p.m. in Restland MemorialChapels, Hanover, N. J., witRev. Maurice Phillips, pastor ofthe First Baptist Church, Key-port, N. J., officiating. Burial wibe in Restland Memorial Par)Cemetery, under the direction olthe John W. Mehlenbeck Funra!Home, Hazlet, N. J.

MISS ELIZABETH C. BAZLEYLONG BRANCH - Miss Eliz-

abeth C. Bazley, 86, of 145 Gar-field Ave. died Sunday in Mon-mouth Medical Center afterlengthy illness.

Miss Bazley was born here,daughter of the late Thomas Dix-on and Mary Eliza Herbert Baz-ley, and had lived here all heilife. She was a charter membeiof the First Presbyterian Church,and a member of its United Pres-byterian Woman's organization.She also was a rhember olthe Long Branch Woman's Club

Surviving are a sister, Mrs,Helen B. Graves, this place, antwo brothers, Forest S. Bazleyhere, and T. Raymond BazleySan Francisco, Calif.

Funeral services willWednesday at 11 a.m. in HieDamiano Funeral Home with Rev.Robert Bonham, pastor of theFirst Presbyterian Church, officating. Burial will be in West Lon;Branch Cemetery.

MRS. LUCILLE HOLLIEFREEHOLD - Mrs. Lucille

Hollie, 63, of 28 Avenue A diedSaturday in the John L. Mongomery Medical Home,

Mrs. Hollie was born in CrispCounty, Ga.

Surviving are a daughter, Mrs,Florine Hurt, with whom shelived; a son, W. C. HoMie of Flor-ida, and one grandchild.

Services will be held Thursdajat 1 p.m. in the Church of Godhere, with Elder Alex McNeal of-ficiating. Burial will be in Maple-wood Cemetery under the direc-tion of the W..H. Freeman andSon Funeral Home.

Car BurnsRED BANK - A general darm

was sounded at 2:47 p.m. Satur-day when flames broke out ina car In the parking lot atthe Mayfalr Market, NewmanSprings Rd,

The car belongs to EdwardNixon of 37 George St., RiverPlaza, an employee in th« mar-ket. Fire Chief Charles R. Knollsaid it was badly damaged. Thechief added that It hid apparent-ly been smoldering for some timebut that the origin of the flamescould not be fixed.

RED B A N K - J o h n M, White,75, of 1A Linden P)., 4 M 'Tturs-

w to'Wvenriw Ho#JW.»A native of tWi toroqgfc he

w£s the son of -the laUr Lewuand Kathryn Howland WMI». Mr.White was retired and had. form-erly been stage manager at theCarlton Theater. :

Surviving U hto *ister, Mrs.Blanche Antonide*. Mr, Whiteand Mr». Antonide* were evacuated from their Linden PI.partment May 11 when fire and

an exptossion damaged nearbystores. They were not injured d wing th« incident.

Service* will be tomorrow at11 a.m. in the Wfltom S. Ander-son Funeral Home with Rev. W.Gordon Lowden officiating. Buri-al wbll be in Mount Olivet Ceme-tery, Middletown.

MRS. JOSEPH W. HARVEYOCEAN TOWNSHIP *- Mrs.[eWe Ward Harvey, 83, of 122

Monmouth Rd., died Thursday Inher home.

Mrs. Harvey waa the widowof Joseph W. Harvey. She wasborn in GaHway, Ireland, andhad lived here 70 years.

Surviving are four sons, Les-ter W. Harvey, former mayor ofthis township, Joseph Harvey ofWest AUeahurst, Harry R. Harv-ey, township poUce chief, andJohn J. Harvey, deputy policechief; ttiree daughters, MissesMargaret and Adelaide Harvey,both of Otis place, and MissWiUielmina Harvey,. Oakhurstpostmistress; seven grandchil-dren; one great-grandchild, andtwo sisters, Mrs. Beatrice MeLaughlin of New York City andMrs. Winifred MoLaugNin ofTapoan, N.Y.

Services were this morningfrom the Buckley Funeral Home,Asbury Park, followed by a HighRequiem Mass at St. Michael'sCatholic Church, West End.

MRS. MADELINE SLOCUMLONG BRANCH — Mrs. Made-'

line Stocuin of 108 GaiCeld Ct.,widow of Frank R. Slocum, diedyesterday in Monmouth Medical-Center.

Bom in Woodside, L. I., Mrs.Slocum had lived here 35 years.She was the daughter of the lateJohn and Mary Sheridan Lud-

wlg.Mrs. Slocum was a communi-

cant of Star of the Sea CatholicChurch.

Surviving are two sons, FrankD. Slocum of Arcadia, Fla., andThomas Slocum of this place; adaughter, Mrs. AJian Noble ofSan Antonio, Fla.; a brother,John T. Ludwig of MonmouthBeach, and three grandchildren.

Services will be tomorrow at9 a.m. in Star of the Sea Churchwhere » Requiem Mass will beoffered. Burial will bo in MountCarmel Cemetery, West LongBranch, under direction of theDamiano Funeral Home.

GEORGE S. MASCIOLIMIDDLETOWN — George S.

Mascioii, 31 Lincoln St., Fair-view, died yesterday in the Vet-erans Hospital at East Orange,

Mr. MasdotH was a SignalCorps veteran of World War IIand was a member of the Veierang of Foreign Wars. He wasan automobile mechanic at theBob White Bufck Company, RedBank.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs.Dorothy Thompson Mascioii;stepson, Robert H. Emmons olRemington: his mother, Mrs.Vincenzo Masciola of Hull,Mass.; five brothers, Albert C.Nicholas,' James, Andrew amAnttony Mascioii, all of Hull;two sisters; Mrs. Joseph Bennejof Hfngham, Mass., and Mrs.Walter Christie of Weymouth,Mass.

Funeral arrangements are un-der the direction of the Adam!Memorial Home, Red Bank.

HUGO FLEMMTOMS RIVER—Hugo Flemm.

72, of Tenth Ave., formerly ofNewark and East Orange, diedFriday in his home.

Born in Germany, Mr. Flemmcame to country 65 years ago. Heretired last year after workin;21 years as a jobber for tinHostess Ice Cream Company.

Surviving are his wife, MrsRose Bollbach Flemm; a sonHarry Flemm of Newark; a stepson, John H. Miller of WhitiMeadow Lake; a stepdaughteiMrs, Frank Oliveri of this place,a sister, Mrs. Helen McCue olNewark; a brother, RichanFlemm of Union Beach, and seven grandchildren.

Services will be tomorrow at 1a.m. in the Haeberle and Bart]Home for Funerals, Irvington.

JOSEPH A. SCULLYBELMAR - Joseph A. Sciallj

67, of 208 Eleventh Ave., dietSaturday in Fltkin HospitalNeptune.

Mr. Scially was retired. Hiwas a meat department manage:in A&P stores, 10 years in Jersey City and 15 years in thiarea.

Surviving are his wife, MrsFrances Garrigana Scially; tw<sons, John J. Scially of Bloomfield and Joseph F. Scially oMiddletown; two daughters, Mis:Carolyn Scially at home amMrs. Lee Tomlinson of this place;a brother, John Scially of Jerse;City; a sister, Mrs. Mae Ferraraof Jersey City, and five grand-children.

Services will be Wednesday i9 a.m. in St. Rose CatholChurch. Burial, under the direction ofFuneral

the DanielHome, will

Reilin Si

Catharine's Cemetery, Sea Girt

MRS. MAUDE STILLWAGGOTMATAWAN—Mrs. Maude Still

wagon, 86, of 2 Union St., diedSaturday in the Seabrook Nursing Home, Keyport.

Born in South Amboy, she hailived here most of her life, Shwas the widow of Harvey Stillwaggon.

She was a member of the FirstBaptist Church, Order of EasternStar, Keyport, and the Sons aniDaughters of Liberty.

Surviving are a daughter, MnCatherine Morrel of this placea son, Watson L. StillwiggonEatontown, and two randchildren.

The funeral will be tomorrowat 1:30 p.m. in the Bedle FuneralHome, here, with Rev. RoberW. Addlss, pastor of the FirslBaptist Church, officiating. Bu-riil will be in R o n Hill Ceme-tery, here.

MRS. PAUL H. HAMMONDEAST ORANGE - Mrs. Belle

Hewson Hammond, 79, wife ofPaul H. Hammond, of 21 SouthGrove St., died Friday in EssexCounty Overtax* Hospital.

Mrs. Hammond was born inSomerviHe, Mass., and lived inMontelair many years beforemoving here a year ago.

Surviving, besides her husband,are a son, Donald B. Hammondof Middletown; a sister, Mrs.Ella H. Wadleigh of Turner,Maine, and six grandchildren.

Services were this morning atMeayer and Lundquist, Inc.,Montdair. Burial was private.

FRANK W. ADDEOASBURY PARK - Frank W.

Addeo, 55, of 1517- Bangs Ave.,died Saturday in Newark.

Mr. Addeo a native of Brook-lyn, resided in Newark before-moving here 10 years ago. Heoperated the A&B Trading andSarvager Company, Newark.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs.Ann Villapiano Addeo; four sons,Nicholas Addeo of this place, Jo-seph Addeo in California, andSamuel and Frank Addeo, Jr.,both of Bloomfield; a daughter,Mrs. Anthony DeGano ol LongBranch; five brothers, Harry Ad-deo of Kearney, William Addeoof Hackensack, and Samuel, Johnand Carmen Addeo, all of LongBranch; two sisters, Mrs. FrankDel Espositl of Long Branch andMrs. Raymond Moss of Keyport,and two grandchildren.

Services will be Thursday inMount Carmel Catholic Church,here, at 9 a.m. Burial will be un-der the direction of the BodineFuneral Home, here.

FRANK JONASKENILWORTH — Frank Jonas,

47, of Eighth St., died Wednes-day night at Elizabeth GeneralHospital, Elizabeth, after a shortillness.

Mr. Jonas was born in Gar-wood, and lived here many years.He was an electrician employedby Bennenati Electrical Contrac-tors of this place. He was aWorld War II veteran.

Surviving are three brothers,George Jonas of Leonardo,Stephen Jonas of Elizabeth, andLeslie Jonas of Kenilworth; fivesisters, Mrs. John Babin, Mrs.Wally Wamander, Mrs. JosephDalesandris, Mrs. Edward De-tridk, and Miss Irene Jonas, allof Elizabeth.

Services were this morning atthe Hlggins Funeral Home, Eliza-beth. Burial will be in RosedaleMemorial Park, Linden.

VALENTINE BERNHARDT, SR.HIGHLANDS—Valentine Bern-

hardt, Sr., 71, of 3 Seadrlft Ave.,died Saturday in his home aftera brief illness.

Born in Bayonne, he later livedat Linden and came here 20 yearsago

Mr, Bernhardt was a retiredcarpenter for the Esso StandardOil Company, Linden. He was amember of Our Lady of Per-petual Help Catholic Church,here, a member of the Esso Em-ployees Quarter Century Club,and a commodore of the High-lands Yacht Club.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs.Mary Mettler Bernhardt; a son,Valentine Bernhardt of thisplace; a daughter, Mrs. GeorgeSt. Andrassy of Linden; a broth-er, John P. Bernhardt of thisplace; two sister, Mrs. WilliamStalling of Rumson and Mrs.Charles Schmidt of Bayonne; sixgrandchildren, and one great-grandchild.

Services will be Wednesday at8:45 a.m. from the Condon Fu-neral Home, Atlantic Highlands,and at 9:15 a.m. in Our Lady olPerpetual Help Church where aHigh Mass of Requiem will beoffered. Burial will be In MountOlivet Cemetery, Middletown.

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InvestingRoger E .Sp«r

Q-—"In the very near future, IWlrix to buy about $250 worth ofitock as i confirmation gift to mygranddaughter. I am consideringthe following: New England Elec-tric, Burroughs, Sperry-Rand,General Telephone, Grand Union,or Brooklyn Union Gas. Whichdo you prefer? I.K.

By ROGER E. SPEAR I

Cites Pope'sEncyclical

JERSEY OTY (AP) - Gov.Richard J. Hughes, citing a recentencyclical by Pope John XXIII,told a graduating class Sundaythat academic competence andmoral principles go hand in hand.

"The tools of knowledge," thegovernor said, "must be uised notonly for an Individual's well-beingand development, but in the' serv-ice of truth, freedom and justice."

In a speech at commencementexercises at St. Peter's College,Hughes cautioned against becom-ing "unduly fascinated by thetools and techniques fashioned byman in his struggle to master na-ture without an equivalent con-cern with moral and spiritualramifications."

"This fact," he said, "was im-pressed upon the world in dra-matic fashion recently when PopeJohn addressed to all men of goodwill his compassionate encyclical,'Pacem In Terris' (Peace onEarth). The universal response tothis message from men of allfaiths must have been gratifying tothis great ecumenical pope. Andthe personal response of PresidentKennedy—'as a Catholic I amproud of it, and as an AmericanI have learned from it'—indeed re-flected the views of many Ameri-cans of the Catholic faith; and Iam happy to declare my sharingm that opinion."

A.—It is very commendable of/ou to plan to do something spesial for your granddaughter- onher approaching confirmation,and I appreciate your asking meto help you.

You should give her a stockwith reasonably assured futuregrowth and a good past record ofearnings and dividend increase*.Although New England Electricis a good solid stock and GeneralTelephone appears to have re-tored its lipward trend in profits,

am inclined to believe thatBrooklyn Union Gas is the stockbest suited for your purpose.

future expansion of BrooklynUnion Gas, particularly on StatenIsland, seems assured. Earningsilnce 1953 have risen in everyyear but one, and dividend pay-ments have been increased an-nually from 1953 through the pres-ent year.

Q.—"My husband, aged 56, re-tired from business with an in<come of $500 a month from realestate: Because we have an «,•000 mortgage on our home, ourincome is not quite enough tolive on. In the savings bank wehave $10,000 paying' 4V4 per cent.Could we invest this in stockswhich would bring us in a suf-ficiently higher income so thatwe could make ends meet?" C.P.

A!—I'm extremely sorry to say

Says RacialBarriers MustCome Down

TRENTON (AP)-<3ov. RichardJ. Hughes says the nation's con-science cannot be clear until alracial barriers are broken down

He said the government has eduty to intervene when personsare denied full rights as citizensbecause they are Negroes.

In a speech at eommencemenexercises at Rider College Sun-day, the governor described denialof civil rights as the most grievousdomestic problem of our society..• "Unless we as a people are de-termined to remove the barriersof racism," Hughes said, "ourconscience cannot be clear andtile image of American freedomwill be discounted to the extentthat this group of fellow citizen:Is being denied the opportunity toexercise its personal freedom andinitiative." .

Hughes said that consideringthe problem of equal opportuni-ty affords an insight into the ap-peal of a society bfcsed on theprinciple of individual freedom,

that you cannot.

Stocks have moved up in pricein recent,months, and yields havegone down materially. Underpresent conditions, it would beimpossible for you to obtain withsafety a yield from stocks ma-terially higher than your presentincome from savings.

I suggest that you take $8,000from your bank account, extin-guish your mortgage and, I hope,make ends meet.

('Mr. Spear cannot answer allmail personally, but will answerill questions possible in his

column.)

Await Word OnJetport Sites

WASHINGTON (AP)-The Fed-eral Aviation Agency says it wouldbe a week or longer before re-lease of a report on the feasibilityof three possible sites for a newJet airport to serve the New YorkCity area.

A spokesman for the FAA saidSunday the report originally wa.expected to be ready by May 31,but it was held up when FAA Ad-ministrator Najeeb E. Halab;asked for additional informationon the effect of air traffic on thethree proposed sites.

The three sites are in Burling-ton County, N.J., and in Suffoland Orange Counties, N.Y.

The spokesman said Halaby hac•greed to seek the additional dataat the request of Gov. Richard J,Hughes of New Jersey.

The report now Is in tentativiform, subject to revision.

NJ. Federal AidCost Takes a Drop

TRENTON (AP)-The pricea dollar of federal aid has droppedfrom $2.07 to $1.80 for the NewJersey taxpayer, the State Tax-payers Association says.

The association said SundnNew Jersey's state and local gov-ernments got $170 million In fed-eral aid in the 1962 fiscal yeatand contributed $305 milliontaxes for federal aid programs,This worked out to $1.80 in taxesfor each $1 in aid, the associatioilaid.

It said that the decline in thecost of a dollar of federal aid re-sulted largely from an Increase Ifederal highway aid.

-LEGAL NOTICE-

NOTIC'K"Bepnralo nenlcil bliti for School Fu

nltlir« and Equipment will bn recelveiby the Mhldlttown Teiwruhlp llonm cKrilicfttlon et the Administration Built'(nj, 80 Tlnilall Iloail, Ml<l(ll«tflwn, N. Ju|> to 8:00 P.M. prevailing time -TiJMday, June 11, 1WJ3.

SnMiriMlloiu anil formi tor blditln,may In >«cured »t the Board or Education Office, 60 Tlnilall Hoad, Middletown, N. J.

The Iloinl ol Education ronorveirlilil to reject Miy or all lildi and t.walvt Immaterial InlormilltlM.

JAMK8 W. IMViDltBISlDR.BeorMaJV"

Jum a I)

j ScheduledENGLEWOOD (AP)-A prayer

vigil combined with a continuingsit-in demonstration are plannedtoday at Cleveland ElementarySchool by groups of protesting ra-cjal i m b a 1 a n c e in Eaglewoodschools.

The sit-in by some 30 Negrochildren at -the predominantlywhite school enters its fourth weektoday. •

A spokesman for the integrationgroups said participants in theprayer vigil would meet at LincolnElementary School and thenmarch about a mile to ClevelandSchool, where they were to gatheron the school steps for the prayermeeting.

The Negro children taking partin the Cleveland School sit-in areenrolled at Lincoln School, whichis 98 per cent Negro and the cen-ter of the dispute. School authori-ties have been permitting the chil-dren to enter the school as un-registered visitors.

The prayer vigil was anothermaneuver in the two-year-old con-troversy here that has beenmarked by boycotts, court suitsand picketing.

Gov. Richard J. Hughes saidlast week that he expected a decision by the State Department ofEducation on the Englewood mat-ter within three weeks—about thetime that the current academicyear ends.

The ruling is to come from thestate education commissioner, Dr.Frederick M. Raubinger.

In a recent decision on a similarcase , involving Orange publicschools, Raubinger declared thatextreme racial imbalance did ex-ist in one school, and he orderedthe Orange school board to offera plan by July 1 to 'correct thesituation.

Hughes said he didn't know ifRaubinger's ruling for Englewoodwould be comparable to his deci-sion for Orange, "but if it carriesthe tenor of Orange it will be sig-nificant and will lead to a solutionof the Englewood dispute."

JfflJJ BANK REGISTER Monday, June 3,

The ArtOfLearning

By LESLIE J. NASONDr. Nason Professor of Education

ProvenzanoDefense OpensCase Today

NEWARK (AP) - The defenseopens its case today in the extor-tion trial of Anthony (tony Pro)Provenzano.

The federal government com-pleted its presentation Saturday.It accuses Provenzano, presidentof Teamsters Local 560 of Union"City and an international vicepresident of the Teamsters, ofextorting $17,100 from DornTransportation Inc. of Rensse-laer, N. Y.

The government has attemptedto prove that the money was ex-torted through the trucking firm'sFormer terminal m Secaucus toinsure labor peace between 1952and 1959.

Michael G. Comunale of JerseyCity was the final government wit-ness. Comunale, a former assist-ant Hudson County prosecutortestified that he received $15,600of the disputed $17,100 from thefirm as a legal fee and did notgive the money to Provenzano.

Government attorneys claimedthe money was paid to Comunalethrough an arrangement Proven-zano had with Walter A. Dorn,president of the transportationcompany.

Dorr had been on the witnessstand for three days as the majorprosecution witness. He testifiedthat the payments were made toComunale after Comunale's namehad been given to him by Proven-zano on a slip of paper. He addedhe thought the payments werenecessary for the operation of hisbusiness.

Under cross-examination, Com-unale said the only time he metProvenzano "to really talk to'was in 1959 when a U.S. SenateSubcommittee opened an Investi-jation of the relationship betweenthe Dorn firm and Comunale andProvenzano.

Pope(Continued)

Only loss of consciousnesseased Pope John's pain, the ra-dio said.

"When he can," said the an-nouncement, "he concentrates onprayer."

Mass was celebrated againearly this morning in the roomnext to the Pope's bedroom. I'was dedicated to his expressedwish that his life be a sacrificefor his church, his EcumenicalCouncil and mankind.

Prayerful Vigil

"We are waiting," said theVatican, as thousands of devoutkept a prayerful vigil through thenight in rain-drenched St. Peter'sSquare below the windows of thePone's apartment.

Withswelled

the dawna^ain as

thethe

crowddevou

streamed through the city to thegreat circular courtyard. Manyprayed that death would comesoon to end their beloved Pope'sagony.

"I would have wished thi.great man a hundred more year,of life," said a younf> Italian withtears in his eyes. "But now wehave to prav that he be relievedfrom his suffering."

The pontiff marshaled his wan-ing strength late vesterdsv toRive blesninirs to fie world, butVaticanslowlv

Radio saidlosing its

"his life ilight and

warmth.""The holy father is still alive

in his slow agonv," the radiosaid at 5 a.m. (11 p.m. SundayEST). "For the fourth time thidawn of a new dav of sufferinghas come for the Pope . . . weare waiting."

A high prelate sorrowfully tollnewsmen the pontiff "is passingaway most slowly, going out like

candle."Doctors said there was noth

itic; more thev cou'd do to trealthe Pope's ailment, a stotrmcrtumor complicated bv oeritonitis,They said tfiey could only tr\to ease the pain that haswracked him since he neared thibrink of death last Friday.

I wonder how many mothersand fathers across the land arelooking apprehensively toward theday when school gets out. They'rethinking "What in the world willthe youngsters do all day long?"

While this is a problem, sum-mer actually can be your goldenopportunity to re-establish con-tact with your children and ac-tively guide their development.

Often, during the school year,hildren seem to be directed

mostly by their teachers. Parentshesitate to step in for fear ofworking at cross purposes withthe teacher. But in summer, youdo have the chance to becomereacquainted with the children asindividuals.

In addition,

QUEEN OF THE RACES — Miss Joanne Feniello was named queen of the NationalSweapstalc«s Regatta in competition at the Molly Pitcher Inn Saturday. She is 18.Presenting a plaque and crown respectively are James N. Kenny, manager of the inn,and state Sen. Richard R. Stout, while Theodore J. Labrecque, Jr., commodore of the re-gatta, watches approvingly. Misses Judi Wing and Irene Durlcin were named princessand crown princess of the July 6 and 7 Navesink River event. All the winners arefrom Long Branch.

County PeopleHelp in RescueIn Smoky Mts.

BRYSON CITY, N. C. - AGastonia, N. C , man and hisfour small sons were rescued inthe rugged Great Smoky Mount-tains Saturday night after Mr.and Mrs. Wolfgang Fischer ofFort Monmouth, N. J., reportedseeing them on a mountain trail.

Rescued were Wallace F. Brad-ley, 34, and his sons, Nathan, 1,Jonathan, A, Scott, 6, and Les-lie, 8, All are reported in fiarcondition in a hospital- here.

The Bradleys were rescued by•angers of the Great Smoky

Mountains National Park afterMr. and Mrs. Fischer met themon the Indian Creek Trail andreported the group couldn't findtheir way out, chief ranger TomEla said. He said that the Brad-leys, who existed for two weekson a few berries, roots, grass,mushrooms and water, were"nearly starved to death." Theytold the Fischers they hadn't eat-en in four days, Ela said.

Ranger Norman Roy quotedBradley as saying, "I jiist wantedto get away from people." Brad-ley's car with the keys in it wasfound May 19 parked near theDeep Creek campground but nosearch was pressed because noone was reported missing, Elasaid.

To Study Whether Motorists WithHeart Ailments Should Drive

TRENTON (AP) - A panel of |heart .specialists will help deter-mine whether New Jersey motor-ists with heart ailments should beallowed to drive.

Essay PrizesAre Presented

KEYPORT—Mrs. John Sommerand Mrs. Warren Van Clief, pastpresidents of the Ladies' Auxiliary of the Veterans of ForeignWars, presented awards for anessay contest sponsored by theVFW at the annual award as-sembly afternoon in the highschool.

First prize was won by RoseAnn Grasso, a senior; secondLinda Whaley, sophomore, andthird, by Sherry Wolfe, junior

High school winners in the an-nual spelling contest sponsoredby the School of Business of Wilmington, Delaware, were announced at a special assembly.Certificates for proficiency inspelling were presented to Donnn Thieme, Spafford Lewis,Cheryl Patterson and WayneSmith, seniors. Juniors receivingthem were Theresa Hubbard, KaThomenius, EillenMichael Fanning.

Maclear and

SOCIETY CITES — Th* Garibaldi Society honortd one of i t i senior membort at »testimonial dinner in St. Anthony's Catholic Church, Red Bank, Saturday. Rocoivinga plaque for distinguished service it Salvador* Cuinmano. The presentation was madeby, from left, Joseph Folvo, president, R«d Bank Councilman Peter Falvo, and, atright, Joseph Eipoiito, chairman of th» dinner committee.

can be put to their great advan-tage by engaging in activitiesthat help them to grow—in manydirections,

For instance, if they undertakespecific projects, they will learnresponsibility toward the familyand the community. And they'llfind it is fun, too.

Also, whether the child is pre-kindergarten, in grammar school,entering high school or college,summer is the ideal time to up-grade studies to assure greatersuccess in the coming schoolyear.

Lead, But Don't Do WorkKeep in mind the object is that

Heads Firm'sTraining Unit

n

William L. Spltler

SHREWSBURY-The Stephen-son Corp., White Rd., has an-nounced the appointment of Wil-liam L. Spitler as director oftraining.

•Mr. Spitler will be in chargeof training, co-ordination and dis-tribution of current informationon Stephenson products for policeuse. These include the Breatha-lyzer, the Radar Speedalyzervarious types of resuscitators,and other scientific equipment.For the past two years, Mr. Spit-ler has been a research assistantto Prof. Robert F. Borkenstein,chairman of the department ofpolice administration at IndianaUniversity, where he worked withthe U. S. Public Health Serviceon its alcohol and road trafficresearch program.

Prior to his association withthe university, Mr, Spitler spent12 years in law enforcementwork, in West Terre Haute, Ind.and Broward County, Fla.

The Stephenson Corp. said thatthe appointment will enable it tooffer a more complete trainingprogram to police and others interested in chemical breath test-ing and .the police sciences.

Ned J. Parsekian, director of:he Division of Motor Vehicles, an-nounced today that the State Med-ical Society has joined in a pro-gram to promote highway safety.

Parsekian said when the motorvehicle division gets a report thatapplicants for drivers' licenses orpersons already driving have seri-es heart ailments a complete

medical report will be required.The report must include state-

ments of case history, and a state-"ment from the motorist's persona!ihysician spelling out diagnosis,

treatment and prognosis.

Parsekian said the informationwill be reviewed by the medicaadvisory panel, which "in mostcases, will require that the motor-ist submit to an examination byone of the three members of thepanel."

The evaluation by the medicalboard will be used as a guide indetermining whether a licenseshould be granted or suspended.

"The problem is basically medi-cal, rather than legal in nature,and the new approach, initiatedin co-operation with the StateMedical Society, is both fair tothe motorists and the commun-ity," Parsekian said.

He said motorists affectedthe regulation would be given ev-ery opportunity to present medica;evidence to stave off suspension.And if suspension is imposed, hesaid, the motorist could renew hiapplication for a license after ispecified recovery period.

Hold SoldierFor TheftOf Auto

LONG BRANCH - A FortMonmouth soldier, apprehendedby Little Silver police after thecar he was driving almost crashedinto a patrcl car last night, isbeing held in the city jail fora hearing here tomorrow on scharge o! unlawful possession oan aulo.

The man, who was turned overto local authorities by Little Sil-ver police, was identified as PvtJohn M. Verovich, 20, of Head-quarters Co., USASA ProcessingCenter, Forl Monmouth.

Verovich was apprehended byLittle Silver Patrolmen AllnnWright and James Fugan onKumson Rd. al !):45 p.m. PoliceChief James W. Fix said the carwas owned by Donald Johnson o152 Branchpurt Avc., this place,

Lonj; Iirnnch Detective CaplJames D. Purcell, Jr., quoted'ohnscn us siiyin;; lie had ptirkci'the car on Irving PI. here at1 o'clock End did not know it wit:Hissing until ' Little Sliver po-ice notified him,

Buying or selling? Use tinRegister Classified for qucik resuits.—Advertisement,

this leisure time

a matter of teaching. It will beyour support, even insistence thathe make the effort to learn thatwill count.

Facing such responsibility, par-:nts always can use added sug-;estions. So, among other topics

in this summer series, I plan todiscuss:

Summer reading — ideas onhow to get your child interestedin reading and what he can doto upgrade his reading compre-hension.

College-bound students — howthey can prepare for this bigstep.

The non-college bound — whatparents can do with an aimlessteenager; how to help them lookfor jobs.

Timid children —how to findactivities that will help themgain confidence.

Changing schools—how to easethe1 transition for children whowilli enter a-, new environment andhow to maie new friends.

I hope ttiese suggestions willhelp make this summer the mostbeneficialjet for our children.

of interesting theown development.

child in hisYou Can pro-

vide the activities and encour-agement, but the child is the onewho must learn to learn.

In this series of summer ar-ticles, I will discuss in greaterdetail exactly what projects youcan plan for your children, andhow you can assist them in fur-thering their studies.

But for now, let me suggestthat you plan to set aside a def-inite period each day for suchactivities. You can start withjust 15 minutes a day and, if thechild finds the project enjoyable,lengthen the period to an hour orlonger.

Parents' Advantage

(Continued)

became one of the five "middlemanagement" commands underthe Materiel Command. Its mis-sion is the execution of the re-searoh and development, procure-ment and production of electron-ics material required by theArmy.

Major elements of the Elec-tronics Command are herein Arizona, New Mexico,

andand

Philadelphia. There are otheragencies throughout the country.

There was general feelingwhen first word of the new Elec-tronics Command came out inThe Register in MayGen. Hoff was an

There are several reasons whyparents can be especially effec-tive in aiding their children toreach higher levels of accom-plishment.

First, you are working with in-dividual children you know andin whom you have a keen inter-est. Each child needs the per-sonal attention and encourage-ment only a parent can give.

Second, a child's ability tolearn and develop is closely asso-ciated with how well he thinkshe can perform. He accepts whathe thinks, is. his parents' judgmentof his ability. While he is in-fluenced by his teachers and others, his parents' attitude is themost important.

You need have no fear of fail-ure because you think you're un-able to teach. The process is not'sults.—Advertisement.

1962 thatexcellent

choice to head it. He is known:n the Army for his super ad-ministrative, technical, and mil-itary ability. Officials here atthat time said if any generalcould make the Electronics Com-mand work it was Gen. Hoff.

One cource said Gen. Hcff andhis staff have made repeated ef-forts to help straiehten out theorganizational problems, manyof them dealing with personnel,but have not met with the suc-cess they had hoped for;

ROBERTS BACK HOMEM1DDLETOWN - Howard W.

Roberts was released yesterdayfrom Monmouth Medical Centerwhere he underwent a physicalcheckup. Mr. Robert?, seniormember of the Roberts, Pillsburyand Carton law firm, is townshipclerk.

Buying or selling? Use theRegister Classified for quick re-

WeU-Dressed | FAMILY R O O MBoys HeldBy Police

RED BANK-Police have ar-rested two youths and are looking Ifor a third in connection with acharge of obtaining merchandiseunder false pretenses on Satur-||day.

Released in $200 bail pending a IIhearing today in Municipal Courtwere Raymond J. Bonanno, 18, of213 South Jefferson St., Orange,and Patrick W. Cameron, 19, of ||199 Linden Ave., Highlands.

According to police, the pair,along with a Gary Greeley, 18,of 124 North Fifth Ave., Newark,found a Steinbach's DepartmentStore charge plate on the board-walk in Long Branch Friday.

Police said the charge plate be-longed to a Mrs. Ronald Samet,Bloomfield Ave., West Deal.

Police said the youths bought$5 worth of shirts at the RedBank store Saturday and thenwent to Asbury Park and bought$95.75 in other merchandise.

According to police, the triowent back to Red, Bonk and at-tempted to buy more merchan-dise, using the charge plate.

A clerk at the Red Bank storecontacted the Asbury Park storeon a routine credit check andfound that Mrs. Samet had closedher account in April.

When store officials confrontedthe youths about the chargeplate, Greeley ran off, police said.

Police said the Asbury Parkstore will press a similar com-plaint against the trio in thatcommunity.

Your basement can become the altracive extra room thatyou need foi family activities. The cost can be modest andour free estimate will convince you that you can have the|ob done immediately. Our own skilled workmen guaranteecomplete satisfaction. Call now for our representative tocall on you. No obligation.

Bankers to HearAlex Webster

LF.ONA.UDO — The MonmouthCounty Hunkers and ClearingHouse Association will hold itsQuarterly Dinner McctinR at theDeacon Hill Country Club, Tues-day evening.

A gnll tournament will be heldin tht afternoon, followed by din•tor at 7 p.m.

The mayors of each municipal-ty In Monmouth County havesen invited lc the dinner. Gir."

:penker will bo Alex Webster,ullhnck of the New York Giant!

football team.

A new remodeled kitchenwill make your chores somuch more pleasant andeasier. Let us help you withthe planning. Free estimates.

If your family is handi-capped with an outdatedbathroom, we con solve theproblem. OR, maybe youneed an extra bathroom.Lowest prices.

FIRST PAYMENT SEPT.UP TO 20 YEARS TO PAYNOMO NEYOOWN

• DORMERS

• ROOM ADDITIONS• ROOFING • SIDING *

• PORCH ENCLOSURES

- GARAGE

• MODERN KITCHEN

• MODERN BATHROOM

• PLUMBING - HEATING

• MASONRY

• BREEZKWAY

MONMOUTH CONSTRUCTION CO.W G H W A Y f l S AT HEDDONS CORNER-MIDDIETOWN

SHSdyiidt- 1-5060 PRospcci 5-1333

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i -Uon&y, J*u» 3, 1963 BED BAKK REGISTER

(Rush your problems to Ceorpfcr prompt procrastination.)

Dear George:

Exactly how do you go aboul

CASH REFUNDFROM FEDDERSr i n A COOL

MfeUwMnOf

BETTERHousekeeping ShopMMMmmrthSt.Rtdlank

c Uta 10 as iadwtry?ham a gnat idea: why not putlittle tip*, like filter*, on theof cigirette* to help removmuch of the harmful tan andon? Could your* research ttaf:prepare sample documents forme to fill out to sell this fineidea? .

Iaventlv

Dear Inventive:Sorry, my researcher is

tied up these days—he's trymL

to sell an idea to the phone com-pany which sounds great to m<They can put all the numbers 0!subscribers together in a bibook, and maybe even sell adsin the back.

Confidential to BirminghamChamber of Commerce: Weiyes, planting, some nice do,woods around town would Inice, but I don't think that's youbasic problem, public-relation:wise.

NINTH BIRTHDAYBELFDRD—Kevin Calvin, so:

of Mr. and Mrs. A. Joseph GalviPark Ave., was given a familparty May 22 for his ninth birthday. A. Joseph Galvin left lasweek on a business trip to Frank-furt, Germany.

A FAMILY MAN

NEEDS A SAVINGS ACCOUNTThe future makes many demands onparents, and smart parents are saving'today for the growing years ahead.Are you saving for the future?

Mainstay Federal Savingsand Loan Association

36 Monmourh Street Red Bank

Insured Savings - Mortgage Loans

REAL VETERANS — Four faculty members now retiring from service in LirHe Silver's

schools who, together, have had teaching experience that adds up to 157 years, were

honored at a testimonial dinner in Molly Pitcher Inn, Red Bank, Wednesday night.

Shown, left to right, are, Earl B. Garrison, Monmouth County superintendent of

schools; and C. David Vanderhoof, superintendent of Little Silver's'schools; Miss

Agnes Hackett, who served 50 years in Little Silver schools; Mrs. 'Mary Nolan, a

teacher 23 years, five at Little Silver; Mrs. Rae Turkington, a teacher 41 years, 13

at Little Silver, and Mrs. Adele Conover, a teacher 43 years, 33 at Little Silver.

All received engraved silver trays.

Live Within Your Income

Curb Those Impulsive BuysDear Miss Feeley: '

I find it almost impossible tolive within my income! Themain problem is trying to set alittle aside after paying board, in-surance, and charge accounts. Itry to keep the charge accountsto a minimum, but when I seesomething I need, I don't alwayshave the cash oniiand and maymiss a chance for a real.bargain

I try to save something foremergencies, vacations and such,but it's difficult. I end up put-ting most of my salary out incharge account payments. Whaito do? My income is about $5,350a year.

Mary T., New York City,

Dear Mary:There are two things you can

do. The first is to deposit a fewdollars in a savings account thevery day you draw your salaryStart with as little as $5 if that'sthe most you can begin withThen declare yourself on a cashbasis for at least 30 days. Don'tcharge a single item during thatperiod.

You'll be surprised how differ-ent some "bargains" look, whenyou have to open your purse andtake out your money right onthe spot. Some women who thinkthey'rereally

"bargain-minded" arejust impulse-shoppers.

Nothing is a bargain when youcan't afford it.

To determine whether an itemis a bargain, put it to this test:Will buying it prevent you frommaking a deposit in your savingsaccount? Will you still be able:o make the proper payment onyour charge accounts? Do youplan to use the item for a specificpurpose in the near future? Willrou :>et alone iust as well without

CLEANEDRUGS

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NOW SAVE 10% AND MOREPresent this coupon to our driver when In delivers your •park-ling clean r u n *ad ha will deduct 10% from our already lowprice on rug cleaning, If you have a 8HEHADI Charge Account,deduct i0% from your rug cleaning only and be iure to lendtiili coupon wlUi your remittance.SAVE EVEN MORE, nrlnjt your nice to BHEHADI (Sea GirtBlore only) and aava 20% with CASH and CARRY - THENpreienl thli coupon and receive an ADDITIONAL lC"""-.

Thli Coupon Non-Transferable—Limit One To A FamilyOffer valid for all rugs nicked up or received

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No C*«h A Curry an Stornga OrdersCash A Carry mint be nicked up within 30 day*

RBR

Member of

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WED. AND FRI. EVES, 'TIL 9

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(NEXT TO FOBT OFFICE • OPEN 1:30 TO 9:30)

Gl 9-5900OPEN » TO t:30)

ROUTE 35 • S E A GIRT(IDIT WORTH O# 1UNA1QUAN CIKCLJB

it? Had you planned to buy suchan item anyway?

A real bargain is an asset. Butunless it eventually' leaves youwith more money in the till,rather than' less, it's often wiserto pass it by. Putting yourself ona cash basis until you get yourfnances headed in the right direc-tion may prove very revealing.

Dear Miss Feeley:My husband says a home is not

an investment and should not bathought of as such. As an apartment dweller, I'd like your com-ment on the subject.

We have felt that by living inapartments we are able to saveand invest more than if we had ahouse. Are we right? Peoplewith homes always seen pressedfor money, plus the upkeep theyhave to do themselves.

M. G , La Mesa, Calif.Dear Mrs. C :

Owning versus renting is oneof the most,satisfying topics todebate — because everybody canmake his point.

Actually, the real answer as towhich is best depends on the at-titude of the individual. Ofcourse, home-owners groan aboutthe upkeep, and brag about theircallouses. But just try to takethat lawn mower away fromthem. Or try calling that quarter-acre estate a little plot o(ground! When pride of owner-ship is involved, even taxes canbe accepted philosophically. Tomany people, working around ahome is recreation of the finestkind. But if the whole thingsounds like a headache to you,stick to your apartment.

There's not much point in try-ing to prove anything with fig-ures. For example, let's say theSmiths and the Browns eachhave an income of $580.50 amonth, take-home pay. TheSmiths rent an apartment for $135

month, and pay $15 a month[or utilities. Total, $150 a month.

The Browns own a home, pay$68 a month on the mortgage$12,000 at Wi per cent) and pay

$35 a montTi for taxes, insurance,water, and utilities. Total, $153 amonth.

GUESTS OF CONNELLYSNEW SHREWSBURY - Hosts

to the Thieves bowling team pre-ceding the dinner-dance were Mr.and Mrs. Frank Connelly, 85Reeds Rd. Guests included Mr.and Mrs. Joseph Bechtle, Mr.and Mrs. Harvey Miller, Mr. andMrs. Elmef Butterwei and DonCole, New Shrewsbury and Mr.and Mrs. George Steel, Little;ilver.

HOME FROM ARGENTINAPORT MONMOUTH - Miss

Joan Gajanec, Main St., who isemployed by the American Em-bassy in Buenos Aires, visitedher parents, Mr. and Mrs. GeorgeGajanec. She made the trip toattend the wedding of her sister.Miss Gajanec also visited in Al-lentown, Pa,, and attended a wed-ding of a friend in Boston.

HEALTH CAPSULESby Michael A. rclli,M.D:

IF YOU HAVE GLAUCOMA,POES THIS MEAN , W WILL,

EVENTUAL!.1/ GO BLINP ?

NO, TREATMENT WILL NOTRESTORE SIGHT ALREAPY

LOST, BUT IT CAN PRESERVEWHAT SIGHT REMAINS.

TOMORROW: BRITTLE FINGERNAILS.

Hullh CiptuUi glvn htlpful Infatiutlm.Itltildritelfedilk

Who comes out best in the longrun? It's sort of like asking"how long is a piece of string?"A lot depends on how well theSmiths invest their money, howmuch rents fluctuate; whetherthe Browns' property Increasesor decreases in value, whetherthe mortgage is paid off on sched-ule.

It seems to me the answer liesnot in who ends up with the mostmoney, but which is the most sat-isfying kind of life.

(You can obtain Mary Feeley'sbudget suggestion leaflet by writ-ing her in care of this news-paper, enclosing a self-addressed,

d 1p g

itamned Innw

ftwife on Seiwisy, May U.

Ou«u pfeewtJs^ew Mr. andMn. B e n i n Ontnotrg, Mr. andt in . ' Maxwell Karrael, Mr. andMn. Simon AllweU. Mr. andMn. Morton Reak tod Or. and| M n Gtorga Wexler.

Mr. and MM. Ira \n« i wer«the rtoett dinners giiesu of Mr.and Mrs. Spencc^Laae, Aidiley,N.Y. in tenor of; Mr. and Mn.Benjamin S. AnfcL, Who wffl heteaviag aoon on i f iktended tripto France, Holland, Denmark andIsrael. , . ; / t - . ;>

Mr. tad Mrs. Harold B.er, Jr. and sen, B % of Sllvir

MM *M«4

Mrs. Geone MoGrtw, » Drtxel1

J. Kridel knows fathers bast.

Planning toREMODEL?

Before you 90 too f i r with your horn*improvement plant, let a qualifiedrepresentative from Chariot B. Ham-bling and Son diuuis your ideas withyou. We will bt more thin hippyto htlp you with your detlgn and to

1 give you a reillitie estimate keeping

within your budget. So why not bt

turo before you go ahead and eill

ui to tee how we can bo of service

to you. For any type home improve*

ment or remodeling, call ui for a

frao ettimitt. Prompt service at.

sured.

NO MONEY DOWN • YEARS TO PAY

No question about If—for home ImprovementsCALL

CHARLES B. HEMBUNG & SON13 Cafliwiiw Strait Estab. 1918 l t d Bosk

Day Phone SH 7-MW

Reading Time-3 Minutes.... . . But Mr. Merchant—3 Minutes That Can Help You Get More Business. . . Push Your Sales Figures Over The Top,..:. Make ThiiSeason Your Most~Successful Ever. The Asbury Park Press 1963 Invitation Edition PublishedThursday, June 13th, Will Go To Over 60,000 Homes. 20,000 Extra Circu-lation to Specially Selected Prospective Vacationists AndHome Buyers From Northern New Jersey, New York, Phila-delphia, And All Parts Of The Country . . . Families, ThatHave Asked For Vacation Information About The ShoreArea.

looking Time—A lotlonger!Readers Will Be Read-

ing A Lot Longer Be-

cause The Invitation

Edition Will Be Brim-

ming With Pictures And

Stories On Facilities,

Attractions And Amuse-

ments In Mon-

m o u t h A n d

Ocean Counties

. . . A n d W i l l

Show The Dy-

namic Industrial,

Municipal A n d

R e s i d e n t i a l

Growth.

Acting Time-RIGHT NOW-JustCall 7717000 For Your Spaa

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'ASTRO-GUIDE"

>rmt»t—For Yen «mj

uWymtbe majority of chtrteMay. The boss wllll* easy toPC aJoqg wift, to this b a-goodtime to approach tim for ad-vice, advancement, or t rate. 'Lilies to Ms point of view, too.Penonal items may be bi t orstolen, so tie cautious.

P a s t . . . Honing experienced Future. . . A developer of newiuuiui! surges of activity in products will make a fortune1950,1955 and 195*>**rtal ^ 4 4 ^ , k n e e

P ^ t n i M i n g construction fcas nK*on imJ Jbeen at record levols for the p u t ' f r o m '"i1"?* *n>e kfiee h P*rt»>f ularry vulnerable td injury.

The Day Under Your SignAWES (&.mM.reh:ih. April 19)*"•« awr not d a a « UK c m , tf &,

r, but yooTl p t utoniihinf rtnUu.

|AURUS !

UMA(Sapt.«»oOeh21)Cnltinu time who can an* nm" lie at-•tit yon need lit tie preunt tineSCORPIO (Oct. 13 to .Nbv. I I )l t i « jmJ HIM u attrt > M'imi nn>Svm -'to protect future atcuiity

IKIComic iEfiu«p«UDr in

UIo

lore.

&ta and tear It m tiwigB. fee remtricof • cfrVtrtar ttpKb yon tmfomily.VIRGO 1A»«..moW. 22) • .-..Don't I* tlnli cf u i l W • (fiffioflt

SA6ITTAJW1S (tjov.»faltec. 21)Trird h famed,dUw & pnfit orpltuore. Trtt j fa i l /of BODcr (kg*CAPRICORN (D«c 22 to Jin. 20)You' Kt another canu now, a» ooo t• W f ' Oil one. jhrt »our M h « for-

- n t i . ~ . . . . . . 1 -.' , ••• •

AQUARIUS (Jan. 31fo Fat. I?)Your btuincM reputation li cabinctd ao*aai ncctu !• «t jrtter finicr tlpfc

PISCES {hh. 20 to Match 201Iitoid koinkilitr to wonla^MtSil Wref«t the iicji* ,timi. Sbow them anund..

QlW.KeMEoterpfiKa,,Int.

EXPLORERDAY CAMP

McGuire's GroveENROLL NOW

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J U H 24 • A19. I t•oyi and Oirlt—4 to 14For lufonnariaa 774.2241 .

741-9007 . LI 2-1183

PACK HAS SPELLING BEENEW MONMOUTH-Finals in

the spelling bee of Back 144 ofSt. Marty's Catholic Church wereheld recently. Richard D'Addariowas winner of first prize andRobert Pologano, second prize.The Cubs displayed hand workdone this year. A picnic will beheld in Bodman Park June 22

There's no Trick to Having Ex-tra. Cash. You Get it Fast WhenYou Use The Register Classified.

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Michael D. Morris

LITTLE SILVER-Michael D.Morris, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mel-

M. Morris, M5 Prospect Ave.,as been awarded a teaching fel-

ow prize by. the department ofchemistry, Harvard University,Cambridge, Mass., where he is

teaching fellow and & graduateitudent.

Morris also was awarded acaching fellow prize by the de-

— Cbngregafion Brothtrt of liaal of Cong Branch marked its65th anniversary at a dinner last night in the West End Casino. Reading a resolutionof congratulation adopted by the state Legislature and forwarded to the congrega-tion are, left to right, Milton A. Stein, anniversary chairman; Rabbi Rafael G. Gross-man; Dr. Theodore H. -Adams, who addressed the members, and Irving Kaye, presi-dent of the congregation. '

Gets Teachingellow Award

,

Mrs. ConnellyHeads League

NEW SHREWSBURY - Mrs.Prank Connelly was elected pres-ident of the bowling league of theWoman's Club at a luncheonmeeting at Bamm Hollow Coun-try Club, Middletown.

Mrs. Joseph C. Beohtle wa«re-elected secretary and Mrs.Eldon Seley, treasurer.

For the second straight year!fcs. Philip H. Meyer receivedtop awards in the league. Shewon high game, 197; high series,508, and was a member of thewinning team along with Mrs.Malcoim Markendorf,; outgoingpresident, and Mrs. GeorgeBercowy.

Mrs. Bercowy received anaward for most improved bowl-er, 13 points.

Mrs. Seley won the trophy foriigh average, 144.Awards were also presented to

second place team, Mrs. RobertWilson, Mrs. John Doughty andMrs. Seley.

Fred Bruno of Sycamore Laneswas guest of Uhe league.

jartment. year. He expectsto receive his doctorate fromHarvard in June, 1964.

A 1956 graduate of Red BankHigh School, where he was anHonor Society member and afinalist in the National MeritScholarship contest, Morris re-ceived his B. A. from Reed CoLlege, Portland, Ore., in I960, andlis M. A. from Harvard last year.' Morris resides in Cambridgewith his wife, the former LeslieTuttle, and 13-month-old daugh-ter, Susannah Jean.

EastKeansburg

Mr. and Mrs. William Spraguehave returned from a weddingtrip to Niagara Falls, N.Y. Mrs.Sprague is the former Miss Ros-alee Gajanec of Pdrt Monmoutfv

Thomas Todd, son of Mr. an<Mrs. Thomas Todd, MomingsidAve., celebrated his fifth birthday May 26 with members ofhis family.

A family party was held foithe 10* birthday of MichaelHemhauser, son of Mr. and Mrs,John Hemhauser, Vineyard AveMay 27. Present also were Mr,and'Mrs. Jacob Hemhauser.

CELEBRATE BIRTHDAYBELFORD-The 13th birthda

of Bruce Gumbert, son of Mr.and Mrs. Harold Gumbert, wascelebrated at a family party Ma;26. Present were Mrs. HenriettaSnezek of Little Ferry, and Mr.and. Mrs. Robert Ziegenhorn cRed Bank. Bruce also particpated in a music recital in Mid-dletowri High School, Sunday.

Represents Firm

3 ArrestedAfter BeerParty Raid

MKOLETCWN - Three youthswere arrested here Saturday nightafter police broke up a beer partyat the eiflof Woods End Rd.

Released' under ;$», bail pendinghealing;'in Municipal Court

Thursday were Frank R. Wider-stioa, 19, cl 53 Waterman Ave.,Rumson; George K. Lindstrom18, ofTCedar Ave., Rumson; andKenneth J. Kragh, 18, of 61 SpruceDr., Fair Haven.

The youths' have been chargedwith Illegal possession of alcohol.

Two juvenile girls were alsoarrested at the party and turnedover to their parents pendingaction' by juvenile authorities.

George Stevens, 49, o f 13Rustic Dr., Lakewood, was ar-rested Saturday night on a chargeof creating a disturbance at homeat 94 Monmouth Pkwy., EastKeansburg. He Was released un-der $50 bail pending a hearingThursday on a disorderly con-duct charge.

Robert Trigg, 27, of 184 PortMonmouth Rd., Port Monmouthwill receive a hearing Thursdayon a charge of assaulting hiswife Saturday night. He has beenreleased under ISO bail. The com-plaint was signed by Mrs. Carolyn Trigg.

Walter Fisler, 27, of 91 Camp-bell Ave., Belford, was arrestedSaturday night on a disorder!}

charge filed by hit'wUe, Mri. dbturbaace at McDoaaltfi Driv*.Elaine FUler. He alw wai .ra-b, Rt-. */!f>oli« « * . » » atf«

ted under $ »caring Thursday. qJoseph Streat, 83, of. 68 Tinda(l »*»» $»0 bail pending- hearing;

Id., this place, was arrested forwing drunk on a public street.ie is under $50 bail pending afhursday hearing.

John L. Beasich, Jr., 19,. of 284andy Hook Ave., Belford, wasrrested Saturday night after

BAtfK REGISTER * tf»***y, June 3, 1963—«

bail pending created a disturbance In policeheadquarters. He wai reteeied

$ b l di h i

Useful aid in p»lnting-a dustpan with a rubber edge. It is par-ticularly good for protectingwalls while painting adjoiningwoodwork.

Sodality ElectsEATONTOWN - Miss Maureen

O'Donnell was elected prefect ofthe Sodality at St. Dorthea'sCatholic Church last week. Shesucceeds Miss Judy Resch whowas elected vice prefect for thisyear.

Miss Peggy Michalowski andMiss Barbara Sauerwein wereelected secretary and treasurer,respectively.

Misses O'Donnell and Reschwill attend the Sodality School ofCatholic Action in the Sheraton-Atlantic Hotel, New York, Aug.12-17.

NewShrewsbury

Mr. and Mrs. Bernard W.Schwartz, 83 Willow Rd., enter-tained officers and trustees ofthe New Shrewsbury Public Li-brary last Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Haivor-sen of Delaware, Ohio, are spend-ing the weekend with Mrs. Hal-vorsen's parents, Mr. and Mrs.Charles Stosik, 12 Cariton Dr.Mr. and Mrs. Halvorsen recentlywere transferred to Ohio fromFreehold. Mr. Halvorsen is as-sociated with the Nestle Com'pany.

William Balbach

RED BANK - William Bal-bach, S Daniel Dr., Middletown,has been appointed to the staff ofregistered representatives at theFirst Eastern Investment Corp.,148 Broad St.

The appointment was an-nounced by the firm's president,Jack Stephen Skakandy.

Mr. Balbach has completed aseminar in mutual funds and willbegin classes for senior repre-sentative in the fall.

An amateur boxer in his youth,Mr. Balbaoh held the New JerseyState and Golden Gloves cham-pionships. He promoted boxingand wrestling in Keansburg dur-ing the World War II years, andpromoted a m a t e u r boxingmatches for the benefit of theRiverview Hospital building fund.

Balbach was chief of theKeansburg Fire Department in1955. He is a member of the NewPoint Comfort Fire Co., Keans-

PLEASE.LET USJBURNER

HUM-oBEFORE

THE «WINTERSArE

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So choose your mattress as r you would your male.

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i a r o « f i l l yean to m . : . , ,

Mr. and Mrs. Philip Nelson,Manhasset, L.I., former residentsof New Shrewsbury, were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clif-ford Heaslip, 91 Cloverdale Cir.

KAREN SPEARS IS 2BELFORD — Karen Spears

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. GeorgeSpears, Park Ave., celebratedher second birthday May 22.Present were Mr. and Mrs.Ronald Hyers, Mr. and Mrs. Fred-Borger, Jack Spears, Mr. andMrs. Ralph Parker, Ralph Doll,Richard Colson, Hollie Hyers,Ricky and Gebrge Spears.

It pays to advertise in the RedBank Register.—Advertisement.

DENNIS THE MENACE By Hank Ketchum

ea/1/w

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31 MOAD ST. MDIANK T1L74MM»

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MONDAY, JUNE 3. 1963

Culture and SafetyThe New Jersey Highway Au-

thority, which likes to pride itself onrunning an efficient superhighway,may be going in for a bit of culture.

The authority, which operates theGarden State Parkway, has an-nounced plans for construction of a$650,000 center for the performingarts at Telegraph Hill Park in Holm-del.

Authority officials are pushing forthe idea — and they say that Gov.Richard J. Hughes is enthusiasticabout the project.

But first, of course, the authorityplans to conduct its usual feasibilitystudy — to determine if the projectwould be self-sustaining financially.We, of course, all know what feasi-bility studies are — and parkway of-ficials love to use them. A feasibilitystudy is when you tell a paid con-sultant you want to do a certainthing — and to find ways to makeit feasibile even if it isn't.

We woti't comment on this ven-ture as yet — even though we doraise an eyebrow at the HighwayAuthority going into the culture busi-ness ats an initial cost of more thana half-million dollars.

But before any money is spentfor the opera and ballet and open

air theater, we would like to gentlyremind D. Louis Tonti, authority ex-ecutive director, about a project thathas been waiting in the wings forsome time now.

More than a year ago, when therewas original discussion about raisingthe toll to 15 cents at the parkway'sRed Bank exit, Mr. Tonti announcedplans to redesign the southbound exitof the interchange.• Plans included, he said, the con-struction of a longer decelerationlane, the installation of more flood-lights, and larger identification signs

Authority officials have admittedthe exit was unsafe — and the re-design project would probably beginwithin a reasonably short period oftime.

That was a long time ago — andunless there have been some reportsfrom the feasibility experts sayingthe project is not feasible, it shouldhave been done.

Perhaps before any money ispoured into making Telegraph Hillanother Hollywood Bowl and extrafunds are needed to pay for thespiraling cost of the Red Hill Rd. interchange, something could be doneabout making good a promise for theRed Bank southbound exit.

Your Money's Worth:

Stockholders Enjoy Top Rise in homeBy SYLVIA PORTER

Porter

W I were to ask 3ml whatgroup In America is now,enjoy-ing the fastest rate of rise in per-sonal income, I'll wager most ofyou would say promptly "thewage-earner or salaried worker."

I Some of youfwho recentlyj have been hitI by heavy medileal bills might•answer " t h ej doctor or denItist" OthersI of you who areI paying moreI rent than youI can comfort-ably c a r r y

might choose "the landlord."All of your answers woud be

reasonable and all, wrong.The group whose rate of in

come rise is now dwarfing thoseyou might reasonably mentionIs: the U. S. stockholder.

._» Cash dividend payments on cor-poration stocks are climbing toall-time peaks. In the first fivemonths dividend payments havebeen way above $5 billion. OnJune 10, when General Motorswill pay an extra 50 cents "spe-cial dividend" on top of its regu-lar quarterly dividend of 50 cents,$286 million will go to GM stock-holders alone. In 1963 dividendpayments are likely to approach$17 billion against 1962's recordhigh of $15 9 billion which inturn was 6 per cent above 1961.

Contrast to 1950sIn 1963 America's stockholders

are getting a much larger shareof this nation's personal incomethan the $12.7 billion going to allour farmers or the $13.1 billiongoing to all our landlords. The1963 payout will represent an av-erage of $1,000 for each of ourcountry's 17 million share ownersand while not all corporationspay dividends and not all share-owners receive dividends, this av-erage does underline the import-ance of dividends in the compo-sition of personal income today.

Most startling, though, is thecentral fact that dividends are10 rapidly rising a source of per-sonal Income, for this is in directcontrast to the trend of the 1950s.In 1957-58, dividend Income aclually declined, Now consider thesecomparisons.

From January through De-cember, 1962, total personal In-come rose 5\per cent and thlaalso was the percentage rise inwage* and salaries. Rental Incoma Increased • minor 2 percent Proprietors' income (re-ceived by business and profes-sional persons and fanners) roseI per cent.

fa ttw MOM ptriod dividend In-1 a per coil, almost

Why the • spectacular improve-ment?

A first obvious reason is the up-surge in corporation profits. Atlast official reporting date in late1962, corporate profits were run-ning at an all-time record of$53.2 billion a year and the levelis sharply higher now. The influ-ence of profits on dividend pay-ments is illustrated by the waypayments vary from industry toindustry. In 1962 the flush autoindustry hiked its dividend pay-ments 19 per cent above 1961 andthis year the Chrysler-GeneralMotors moves guarantee a fur-ther hike. At the same time, theprofit-squeezed steel industryslashed its dividend payments 5per cent under 1961 and this yearsteel is just beginning to pullout of its prolonged slump.

A second obvious reason is cor-poration confidence in the econo-my's future. Even when compan-ies are loaded with cash, theydon't pay extra dividends unlessthey anticipate a continued highlevel of profits. In the first four

twice the rise In total personal months of 1963, 487 companiesincome or in wages and salaries boosted their dividends, 83 more

CARMICHAEL

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6—Monday, June 3, 1963

than in the comparable period of1962.

Treasury LiberalizationA third vitally significant fac<

tor was the Treasury's liberaliza-tion in 1962 of the rules govern'ing corporation depreciationwhich permits companies to de-duct larger sums from their pre-tax income to write down in-vestments in plants and equip-ment. As a result, companiesneed not depend so much on theirafter-tax income to finance plantexpansion and modernization andthey have a bigger portion ofafter-tax income left to distributeto their stockholders,

To emphasize how significantthis is, in late 1962 almost two-thirds of after-tax profits werepaid to stockholders in compari-son with an average of only 54per cent in 195041.

Many companies don't pay dividends, attract stockholders bypromises of long-term growth.But more than 1,000 companieshave paid regular dividends ontheir common stocks for 25 yearsor longer. Of corporations listedon the New York Stock Ex-change, 514 have paid cash divi-dends in each year for 25 yearsor more.

(P.S. Another group enjoyinga steep rate of rise in personalncome is the receiver of Inter-est. "Capitalism" is certainly stllvibrantly alive In these UnitedStates.!)

YOUR GARDENTHIS WEEK

By Garden ReporterCollege of Agrlcultur*

Rutgers—The State Uni-versity, New Brunswick

Scale Iniect Problem

J. C. S. of Saddle River askedfor help with his "Ruby tree,"which has small pink flowers inthe spring, then dark reddishleaves. He noticed some kind ofscale on the branches.

A scale insect, sure enough, ac-cording to Louis M. Vaavary, ex-tension entomologist. Next April,before the buds open—the dor-mant season—use an oil spray,followed by a ipray of MalathlonIn early May.

To add extra flavor to broths,or any other form of non-creamedsoups, sprinkle grated Italianparmesan cheese over the soupsfor tastier and more nutritiousdishes.

JIM BISHOP;

These Bays:

College Education AlarmistsBy JOHN CHAMBERLAIN

Soon the crest of the big post-war baby crop willhave flooded through our high schools and on intocollege. It wasn't so many years ago that the moregloomy prophets were claiming that the states andcities of the nation would never be able to pay for the

extra grammar school and high schoolclassrooms necessary to take care ofthe huge load. But the states and citiesmet the challenge, and then some. Theybuilt -so speedily that between 1955 and1962 the number of pupils per classroom in the nation dropped from 29.4to 27.

Now the prophets are saying thatChamberlain the colleges won't be able to provide

classroom space and dormitories for the swelling registiations of the next few years. President Kennedy, inhis January message on education, put the increase of1962 over 1950 at "more than 50 per cent" And, join-ing the gloomy prognosticators, he went on to say that"by 1970 college enrollment will nearly double."

The President's figures do not tally with projec-tions made by the Bureau of the Census and the Officeof Education, which indicate that the 1970 figure forcollege enrollment will stand at some 50 per cent ofthe 1962 figure, not at 1O0 per cent. But, waiving thediscrepancies between the President's calculations andthose of the statisticians who work in his Administra-tion, it is obvious that college enrollments are goingto increase by a good deal. The question is: must thefederal government finance whatever space is neededfor the flood of extra students, or can the states, citiesand private agencies be counted on to meet the coming emergencies, as happened before in the case ofprimary and secondary school facilities?

According to Roger A. Freeman of the Hoover In-stitution at Stanford University, who made a numberof exceedingly well-informed and prophetically accuratestudies of primary and secondary educational needsin the Nineteen Fifties for the White House Conferenceon Education, the present cry for massive federal aidto the colleges is just as mistaken as the call for fed-erally supported grammar and high school programswas a few years ago. Mr. Freeman points out that thediminishing birth rate will soon enable the cities andstates to channel a bigger proportion of their educa-tional funds to technical schools and to colleges. Butbeyond that, he points to the great possibilities of theso-called tri-semester system that enables the Uni-versity of Pittsburgh, for example, to use its plant alyear round. The tri-semester plan, according to Pitt'sChancellor Edward Litchfield, "could reduce the $10billion needed in the next decade for new facilities toabout $6 billion."

Realizing, perhaps, that there is something fishyabout the propaganda for massive federal support ofcollege building programs, many members of Congresshave come up more or less simultaneously with theidea that it is the taxpayer who should get the breakwhen it comes to providing aid to education. There aresome 120 separate bills now pending in the Senate andthe House which would give some sort of tax conces-sions to families that have sons and daughters in pri-vate schools and colleges. These bills ring the changeon Senator Abe Ribicoff's proposal to let parents de-duct up to $1,500 for college expenses.

The drawback in the tax deduction or concessionidea is that the colleges themselves would get no mone-tary benefit from it. Indeed, they might very well incura loss, for individual income tax deductions for educa-tional purposes would probably increase the enrollments and add to the pressure on college facilities. Toget around this objection, Mr. Freeman suggests thattax credits be given to individual families to supportan across-the-board general increase in college tuitioncharges. The deal on the tax credit would be betweenthe individual taxpayer and the Internal Revenue Serv-ce, which would keep the federal government out of

higher education. But the colleges would get moremoney for the service they provide.

This would be a non-bureaucratic way to help outboth the parents and the educators. But when did thefederal government ever do things the short and easyway? - .

WILLIAM SWHITE

WASHTNGTON-The most articulate American antagonist 0:excessive concessions to the Soviet Union of the nuclear test baiissue has freed himself—and alsothis vital policy position itself—from the "warmonger" epithetwhich had so long been flung arational criticism in this fatefu1

field.This is the central and practice

meaning of the success of Senate)Thomas J. Dodd of Connecticut imarshaling 33 fellow senators aco-sponsors of a Senate declara-tion favoring an,immediate offerto the Russians of a joint agree-ment to ban all atmospheric anunderwater testing.

Left out of it all would be underground testing—the heart 0the matter, since this form o:testing requires precisely Iliaform of on-the-spot inspectiorwhich the Russians have so consistently rejected. It is in thione field, moreover, in whichAmerican negotiators have,re-peatedly given way to the Rus-sians in their understandablehopes to bring off some nudeaiarmistice.

Won't Accept FormulaThe Russians, of course, wi

not accept the Dodd formula. Allthe same, more than a third ofthe United States Senate — andnotably the old "tough liner"-Dodd himself—will have madethis generous offer. The worloutside, including the endlesslpreaching neutrals, will know i

But others—and especially althose who have felt that becausiatomic fallout is undeniably badwe should simply end our ownfallout and trust the Russians todo the same—will know it, top.For Dodd, the archtype "right-winger" on this issue, is nowjoined in the Senate by nearly aUof those liberals who hive beenin the forefront in urging effortand yet more effort to come tosome understanding with theSoviet Union.

Senator Hubert H. Humphreyof Minnesota is a co-signer. Soare such highly liberal Senatorsas Case of New Jersey, Clark ofPennsyhania, Douglas of Illinois,Morse of Oregon. Nobody, noteven in the frantic rhetoric of ourtime on this issue, could possiblycall these men warmongers—oreven "war hawks."

Patient ExplanationThus the Dodd resolution ac-

complishes what no amount ofpatient explanation has hereto-fore been able to accomplish. Itestablishes to all reasonableminds that those who hold outfor real guarantees against Sovietduplicity are not really happywith atomic fallout and full ofevil designs for atomic holo-caust. As Dodd has surely nowdemonstrated, they don't'opposea genuine test ban; they onlyoppose a test ban resting only onSoviet pledges already brokenagain and again.

The national debate thus surelycan go forward now free of muchof the feverish nonsense whichfor years has so bedeviled it.Nothing else, it is true, can ra-tionally be expected.

The Russians will never acceptthe Dodd proposal, for the verygood reason that this would bea true beginning to true disarm-ament and a true end to fallout,assuming that they lived up tothe agreement. And if they didnot, the world would know Itwithin mlnutei. For our monitor-ing devices, though operatinghalfway around the world, areentirely competent to detect anyiheating In the air or under

water.Setiilble Discussion

Where the cheating can't bedetected, without on-iite Inspec-tion, it underground. And thereIg exactly where the Russianswill permit no agreement for In-spection. Maybe in time It willsink to the gladly optimistic whythe Ruiiians are 10 adamant onthli jingle point,

Jb» (agney-A MM Act*MADRID, Spain.—It was late and the shopi In the

old section were shuttered and the only people on A tstreet were small knots of working men drinking restwine and talking about sports. It was cool after mid.night and, here and there in the blue gloom, a weak

light tossed yellow haze from a bed'room window. . . . .

Cagney got in the back seat withKelly. I was up front with the dhauf-feur. The long good dinner was overand we had split the party to go to theRitz in separate cars for coffee. Jim'sbrothers—Dr. Edward Cagney and Dr»Harry Cagney of Los Angeles—wefy In

BISHOP a taxi with Howard Newman, whospeaks Spanish with a Brooklyn accent Samuel andthe beautiful Dorothea Bronston were with DtvidBrown, who comes from Mississippi and speaks Span«ish with a you-all drawl.

I speak Spanish in pantomime. Cagney was tell-ing a story about Wilson Mizner going to elaboratepains to open a safe in the Klondike and, when he gotto it with his Pete man and the crowbars, hs sfaidmournfully: "I found I could have kicked it open witha moccasin." I told him the one about the man who,when he visited Paris always hurried to the Eiffel tower"because it's the only place from which one can MeParis without looking at the Eiffel tower."

Energy and Love of LifeThe cars moved out of Madrid Antigua and up

across the cobbled Plaza Major, deserted except forlovers holding hands under the arcades, and out ontothe Plaza del Sol, where the lights appear to be bright-er when the people are gone. James Cagney was on aslow tour around the Mediterranean by ship. Hebrought his brothers along, and bis painting teacher, aRussian named Sergei.

The ship was near Alexandria, Egypt, when Sergeileaned over the rail and watched the bow wave sparklein sunshine. "It is so vunderful," he said softly, "to betouring instead of escaping." He and Jim had madesketches up and down the Nile, and had moved slowlyaround the'sea until now they were in Spain,

Cagney is a little overweight, but he has moreenergy and love-of-life than anyone except Bronston,who fingers each dawn as though someone had handedhim a rare pearl. Jim has quit making motion pictures.Kelly told him she had heard other actors say it, butthey always came back for one more picture. "Notme," said Jim, pointing to his chest "Not this-man.I'm through. The last picture I was in, I had to pumpmyself up every morning just to face the cameras.No more."

Story About an Irish Widow

He sketches. He paints. He visits. He tells stories.Cagney and his wife have a home in Hollywood, asteer-breeding farm on the Hudson, and a summer homein Martha's Vineyard. Deep inside, he is a shy andserious man, the antithesis of the tough guy on thescreen. He dreads big parties and public appearances.

The car was in the Plaza de Neptuno, the fountainsparkling in cascades beneath the heroic feet of KingNeptune, standing in a marble chariot with the bigtrident aloft Jim was telling a story about an Irishwidow in California whose husband was dead eightmonths. She had fallen in love with a man named Pad-dy, who wanted to marry her at once.

The priest said no. "As a matter of respect for yourlamented husband," he said, "you should wait a yearbefore remarrying." She argued with him, to no avail.He sent her away and she went out in the garden andstood before a statue of the Blessed Mother. The wom-an beseeched the Mother of God for a sign that iheshould marry Paddy at once.

The priest heard her and tiptoed behind-the statue."No," he roared. The woman heard the voice and said:"Just give me a little sign, a wink of an eye if* youplease, to show that I should marry Paddy right off."The hidden priest yelled: "No." The woman compressedher lips in anger. "Be quiet for a minute," she replied,"and let your poor Mother speak!"

An Artist and a Poet

Cagney talked ecology for a minute as the carmade the final turn to the Ritz. Ecology is theknowledge of man's natural resources and Cagney'sworry about how man dissipates his oil reserves andcopper and coal land tin and forests and streams issomething we have in common.

"My brothers and I drove down from Barcelona,"he said. "All along the road, rings had been cut aroundbig old trees, beautiful old trees." He shook his head

(See BISHOP, Page 7)

"Why Invodi Cubot That's ilmplt •• btcaui*' lt'*th«rtJ" r

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and Eve

Suspicious Wi(Do you law a perroni t t a bta?or problem? Send it

. Jo Aden or Eve Lowell orM b , s i you prefer. For s per-sonal, unpuWiabed reply, ea-dose * stamped, self-addressedenvelope. Mail to Adam andEve, in care of this newspa-per.) _ _

DEAJt ADAM AND EVE:. My husband has been a com-mercial BirUne pilot for 12 years.He is here today and gone toPart* or Rome or London "to-morrow." We have two children.

' A few montiis ago his e M m em-ployed one of tte prettiest host-esses I have ever seen. Then Isaw all those pictures in thepapers about hostesses sitting Inpilots' Japs and I've been worry-

Jnf ever since. Never in all oureta years ot marriage have 1been Jealous before, but now Iworry every time be leaves forMe airport. Would it be all righttor me to ask him to get an-

' other Job here at home — andstay here?

. . ; : . - Not flightyp g y

No, because you have noevidence to support your nis>piotons..' Even when a wife has

: an errant husband, the can't•oh* things by trying to pinUrn down like a captured but-twfty.

Adam and Eve

DEAR ADAM AND EVE:As, the principal of a hitf

Mhool I would like briefly toMl your waders why corpora)

tah is essential. I knowOat some schools have abolishedIt, hut I think that's a seriousmistake. Severe physical punish-ment, usually a strapping in frontof daaamates, is the only thingfeat many wayward, showoflboys understand. Tfeey fear the

nent even more than

he it UNQUALIFIED, except per-haps for beating rugs.

Indignant Mother

DEAR ADAM AND EVE)My husband has been a fisher-

man for a long tim* but for thefirst time he found a real peartin an oyster. It is large and per-fect. He showed it to me butmade me swear never to tell asoul about i t He is very happyabout finding this gem but he isafraid that If the governmentfinds out he would have to paya high Ux on it. So he's hiddenthe pearl away. I say to Mm,what good is K.tf you never sellit, just keep it In a secret placeuntil we die? We are poor andmajbe the pearl could make usrich. But he is scared. What canI do with him? Can the govern-ment take away the peart?

WorriedDear Worried:

No, because it was a fair"find," and did not belong toanyone else, Except the oyster.

AdamIt Is not "income," and there-

fore becomes an asset. If soldfor a million dollars or a thou-sand, we still doubt that itcould be taxed, but you'd bet-

a tax lawyer to

EveTell your fisherman the worid

will never be his oyster untilhe present* his pearl to theworld. And let us know wherehe "fishes."

Adam

Having trouble telling youchildren the tacts of life? WriteAdam & Eve for a fine booklet,'How to Tell Your Child About

Sex," enclosing 25 cents andself-addressed, double - stampedLONG envelope.

the pain! These boys can't all "besuspended or kicked out of school— there are too many of them,and besides too many also WANTto be thrown out To all thoseparents who have the naive no-tion that a good "talking to or"understanding methods" will doMe trick, I have only three wordsof advice: You are wrong.

Principal

DEAR EVE:Any school principal who has building and were received. Inb

to: resort to ugly physical vie- Mrs. Thomas Todd's Girl Scouience In order to "control" dis-orderly pupils (which NEVER

ter consultmake sure.

EIGHTH BIRTHDAYNEW MONMOUTH-The eighth

birthday of James Black, son oMr. and Mrs.Kevin PI., was

George Blackcelebrated Ma;

23, at the home of Mrs. AdaWalters. Also present were MissDoris Rudrauss, Keansburg, Mrs.James Black of Newark, andStephen Black, this place.

BROWNIE FLY-yPEAST KEANSBURG-Browni

Troop 130 had a fly-up atbridge ceremony in the first aid

troop. Mrs. Stanley Zdichodd a «Miss Shirley Zdichocki are cc~

works) should find another job - m of &t Brownies.

The PUce To So For Th« Brands You Know"Clothes of Distinction"

JOHN DANIELS' MEN'S WEAR23 MONMOUTH ST., RED BANK

Charge If — 30 - 60 or 90 Day*

Science Shrinks PilesNew Way Without Surgery'Stops Itch-Relieves Pain

AllowanceHike AskedFor Jurors

FREEHOLD ~ The outgoingMonmouth County Grand Jurymade an appeal, Wednesday foran increase in pay and mileageallowance for members of bothgrand and petit juries.

A presentment, handed toSuperior Court Judge J. EdwardKnight, and pasted on to Gov.Richard J. Hughes and Mon-mouth County legislative repre-sentatives, said:

"We ...approach the conclu-sion of our service with one mis-giving to an otherwise satisfyingand rewarding experience in per-forming a civic responsibility.

'But we respectfully submitthere is a limit to everything.

"The county and the state, webelieve, has been embarrassingboth petit and grand jurori formore than a quarter of a centuryby paying them $5 per diem andtwo cents a mile for transporta-tion from residence to the countyseat and return while most othercosts have ''skyrocketed.

"We bring this view to theattention of the court and askthat it be made public. Let allof the people know it actually isa matter of personal expense tomost persons who perform juryservice."

The jury said it recognized pro-posals are before the legislatureto increase both the daily com-pensation and mileage allowancefor jurors. It added:

It is our hope appropriateaction will not be long delayed,not to benefit this body but sub-sequent panels of citizens whosacrifice time and transportationcosts to serve their county and.state."

Equitable lifeAppoints Mills

MIDDLETOWN — LawrenceF. Mills, 16 Cherry Tree La.,haibeen appointed a life underwriterwith the Equitable Life Assur-ance Society, New York City.

He has been assigned to theWilliam Gonska district office,Broad St., Red Bank.

Mr. Mills is a graduate oFreehold Regional High Schooland Seton Hall University. Healso did graduate work at RutgersUniversity.

He is a member ot the RedBank Elks, St. Mary's CathojicChurch, New Monmouth, and itsHoly Name Society. , /

A veteran of World War II,Mr. Mills istwo children.

married and has

i Tafe. H. T. ( S T M U ) - F o r thttott tiaa setae* h u found a newfclte with th» uUm-

c itr to shrink h«mor-th.ldt, stop lUhiar, and rtlirr.f i n - witkoat tnrtarr.. la MM liter cut, »hil« tiAtljrtditrinf pain, ictnal redaction( f c l U ) took pLw.

l f n

•o thorough that inffmri mad*utonUhing lUtemenu like "Pilesiiv» eeiMd to b< a problem I"

The secret U a new healing §nb-•Un« (Bio-D7ne*)-dlKOTerr ofa world-famom research imtitut*.

Thii mtitanc* li now araUablaIn tuppotittry or ointmiHt / » munder the name Pnptntin B*At all dnut counter*

County Legislators'

Bilk Are SignedTRENTON -Gov. Richard J

Hughes last week signed a bilproviding liability-immunity tomembers of volunteer fire companies. The bill had been intro-duced by Assemblymen IrvingE. Keith. (R. Monmouth) andFrank Melon! (D. Camden)

Two other bills introduced byMonmouth County assemblymenwere among the. 10 measure)signed by the governor.

A measure introduced by Mr,Keith, requires at least two mem-bers of a three-member munici-pal governing body to declare anemergency for the passage of anexpediture resolution.

A measure introduced by Mon-mouth Assemblyman' Alfred N,Beadleston and Mr. Keith amendsthe unemployment compensationlaw to clarify the exemption ofbrokers or dealers in the sale ofmutual funds or other securitieswho are compensated entirely ona commission basis.

Dmitry FairEntrants T0Get Beanies

N E W SHREWSBURY -eanies will be worn in New

Shrewsbury in September-byevery child who enters a compe-

tion in the Country Fair.The competitive shows com

mittee of the fair, at a recentmeeting'at the home of Mrs.Robert J. Singleton, chairman,decided to award a beanie in theborough colors of black, red andwhite, to each young entrant inthe various competition). Therewill be an identifying button foreach show in which the child en-ters a project.

TAKES GOLD MEDAL — Steven Jacobs, 15, son of Mrs.Berths. Jacobs, 3 Van Court Ave., Elberon, and a freih-man at Long Branch High School; receives from I. A.Zarik, chairman of hit school's science department, agold medal signifying his victory in the 1963, FordFuture) Scientists of America program. In addition, bytying for first place in state competition, he will receivea $500 scholarship yearly to Fairleigh-Dickinson Uni-versity. Students competing sent-in detailed reports onprojects in science, engineering or mathematics.

Bishop(Continued)

and slumped in the seat "They'll all be cut down because man wants to widen a highway."

He was silent a moment. Then he murmured:"Man comes and the trees go,The waters soon follow apace.They make their way toward the mother seaIn broad fingers of liquid laceCarrying along the willing landFor which they have much affinity;Making up as they do with sweet clean airGod's very own blessed trinity."

"Where did you hear that?" I said as the caistopped. He shook his head from side to side. "Nowhere," he said. "I just made it up." . . .

Bus Line HoldsSafety Program

KEANSBURG - The NewYork - Keansburg • Long BranchBus Line, Inc., 75 Beachway,sponsored a safety meeting re-cently in Bachstadt's TavernEast Keansburg.

A safety film, "Signal 30," washown by State Trooper Henry

Woolley.Charles B. Phillips, chairman

of the company's safety commit-ee, addressed the group on safe-ty measures to take in operat-ing buses.

Joseph Savitsky, of the Trav-elers Insurance Co., stressedraffic safety from the stand

point of liability.Patrolman Thomas Sutton, ol

he Highlands police departmentand Sergeant Nelson Morrisey, ofthe Atlantic Highlands force, al-so attended. About 40 companydrivers and other personnel par-ticipated in the safety session.

All-Number CallingWill Start June 22RED BANK—Come June 22, fear not. The changeover is noi

there will/be no more SHady-side-1, Liberty.! or COIfax-4 inthe Monmouth County areaserved by New Jersey Bell Telephone Co. All-Number Calling(ANC) will be the standard prac-tice.

But, telephone executives say,

Rodgers WinsHonor Medal

Airman James F. RogersSHEPPARD AFB, Tex.-Airman

3/Class James F. Rogers, Deal,N. J., has been awarded theAmericanhere.

Airman

Spirit Honor Meda

Rogers was selectedfor the award as the airmanwho best demonstrated the qual-ities of leadership which expressthe American spirit — honor, in-itiative, loyally, and high ex-ample to comrades-in-arms.

The airman is attending theAir Training Command technicaltraining course for air passengerspecialists here.

He is the son of Mr. and MrsFrank F. Rogers, 120 PhillipsAve., Deal. He is a graduate oRed Bank, N. J., High Schooland received his B.S. degree fromMonmouth College at West LongBranch, N.J.

OF THE NEWLY EXPANDED . . .

LONGO'SPIZZERIA—RESTAURANT

and NEW DINER1072 OCEAN AVE. SEA BRIGHT

TUESDAY . JUNE 4 2 P.M.W l A M PROUD TO ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF OUR NEW DINERADJACENT TO OUR RESTAURANT, FEATURING QUALITY FOODS FORWHICH WE ARE FAMOUS.

DINER SERVING BREAKFAST & LUNCH5:30 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. DAILY

BOOTH & COUNTER SERVICEAIR CONDITIONED FOR YOVR COMFORT

DINNERS SERVED - 4 P.M. ONIN RESTAURANT AND BOOTH AREA

PIZZA & ITALIAN MENUTAKE OUT SERVICE-CALL 842-9857

Election SetBy Engineers

EATONTOWN-The MonmouthSociety7 of Professional Engineersand Land Surveyors, Inc., willelect and Install officers at adinner meeting in the OldOrchard Country Club, MonmouthRd., Wednesday at> 7 p.m.

The slate presented bythe nominating committeeincludes; David Berdan, presi-dent; Harry Christie, Jr., firstvice president; .Leon Avakian,second vice president, Charles C.Widdia, secretary, Morton H.Burke, treasurer; William Ayres,state trustee; Ted Frank, alter-nate trustee; George Jorgensonand Thomas Birdsall, directors.

Donate $1,000For Research

ALLENHURST - Ivy CancerLeague No. 117 will send a $1000contribution to the Ivy CancerResearch Foundation, Mrs. Ju-lia Hodnett, president, announcedat the league's final meeting ofthe seatson Monday night here.The Foundation supports researchwith the drug, Kr«>blo2«n, In thetreatment of cancer.

TO TELL OF TRIPRED BANK - Mrs. Kenneth

Baiehore, 19 A Spring Ter., willbe the guest' on the Mary Pro-duction "News, Views and Inter-views" program with Mary-Eu-nice and Joseph Spagnola, ofBelford, Sunday, June 16.

Mrs, Basehore, now workingfor the Allen Petersen TravelService in Red Bank, will tellof hertrip.

recent South American

as serious as it appears.Take the Red Bank situation

Here, one reaches The Registerby dialing SH-1-0010. The newnumber will be 741-0010, dialed inexactly the same way that SH-1-0010 was; there is no difference.

Through the county area,the new listings that will appealin the next issue of the telephombook, this "name to1 number"designation is being followed, aiexecutive explained. COIfax-4 wibecome 264, CApital-2 and CApital-9 will be 222 and 229 (sameas now).

Looking over the rest of the lislin the immediate area —HOp-kins-2 becomes 462; LIberty-2 be-comes 542; LOwell-6 becomes566; OSborn-1 becomes 671; PRos-pect-4, PRospect-5 and PRospect-6 becomes 774 775 and 776 and,of course, SHadyside 7 becomes747. A glance at the dial wilshow that in this list nothing wilbe different.

In its inarch toward ANC, thitelephone company has not always been able to do this: Winess the way RUmson-1 and SBBright-2 were blended to becomian 842 prefix. And one reacheiFort Monmouth by first dialinf532, 535, 596 or And whenew exchanges go in, they wiget their own new number pre-fix without thought to any namedesignation.

Added to the telephone nuirvbers game are the code designa-tions. Starting July 21, caller!in North Jersey wanting to readSouth Jersey first will dial thcode 609. Those in the south caling north will begin with thecode 201. Right now,.private tele,phone users here can reach IntoManhattan with the code 212, o:down to Miami, Fla., with cod(305, or out to Sacramento, Califwith code 915. There are man;other combinations being madias numbers pull the nation close:together.

New Jersey Bell says some 31per cent of its telephones howhave been converted to ANC iwhat is "a nationwide programto provide enough numbers tomeet the accelerating growth 1the demand for telephones."

But, when in doubt, dial "O1

for Operator. She'll still be there

TWO BOYS MISSINGKBANSBURG-Police here are

still looking for two boys missingfromdays.

their homes for' severalPolice said Robert Feeiien,

15, of 28 Center Ave has bee:missing from home since latThursday afternoon. The secondyouth, Paul Hyland, 14, of 128Main St. has been missing sinceFriday morning.

DONATE TO DUNDRED BANK - The Republic*

Women of Red Bank have do-nated $25 to the Stanley Moor.Fund. The fund was begun bjFire Chief Charles R. Knoll t<assist the family of the jnjurecfireman while he is iticapa:ltated. Mr. Moore was injurein the Broad St. fire of May II

Buying or selling? Use theRegister Classified for quick re-luiu.—Advertisement.

The committeethat -young .honors start their projects now.The same word to the wise ap-pHet to adults, committee mem-bers pointed out. The fair will

t held Sept. 3-7.Mrs. Frank Connelly is in

charge of homecraft; Mrs. W. C.Locke, flowers; Mrs. D.! C Cas-teilini, hobbies, and Mrs, R. M.Overstrud, art and photography.

Further information about thecompetitive exhibitions and also

RED BANK HEGB1TR Mfflviay, June 3, 1«S~T

•boot s pott eomtwtitk* lor to*

schools of tht Tinton ftJla «»•trfct

CLUB PLANS PICNICNEW MONMOUTH-Kani tor

a Fourth of July picnic to beheld at the home of Mr. andMrs. Robert Holland by the LoneOak Club tor the members andtheir husbands, were made re-cently at the home ot Mrs. JohnP. Chamberlain.

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

x ^ ^ 2 s N Time Is here for 1Tim* It htrt forPrawn's FcBiwui

Sleep LaterWindow Shades

Bring In your rolltrt.

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RE-SCREENAny Typ«

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WINDOW

Aluminum Comb.Storm .and Screen Door

Full 1" ThickComplete - Nothing extra

to buy.t 2 Glass,

1 ScreenInsert

• Inst. Optional 23

1• BUDGET TERMS • FREE DELIVERY

Dally & Saturday 8 A.M.-5:J0 P.M.Wed. and Frl. 'til 1 P.M.

"Between Yanko's ft Routines"

32 Broad St. SHadyside 1-7500 Red Bank

MONDAY & TWSPAfSPECIALS!

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MUCK EHECTIVf at «• NCW XKStt, K A H WO.MEW CITY and MIWXETOWR W. rntrn tM light to~ U ' '

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Peaches 2 29Low Discount Prices!

Niblets Corn«™ 5 "-•95Campbell's F—«•'""":; 33Swift's Corned Beef 53Sunsweet Prunes ™*63Jell-0 GelatinHeinz KetchupMiracle Whip A ?53<Pet Milk *— 7:1.00

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Bonus Stamp Offers... Ifo Coupons NeededExtra d&t Gr—n Stamp*

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Page 8: DigiFind-It · 2015. 4. 9. · MX toraorr tttttd •». Wetbetdty, ttlr tad «m, fet tntthet, page 2. 21,675 DIAL SH 1-0010 VOL 85 NO 242 Um»" * • mow km u ui. Bank um u MHUSoul

4-Yoor Flat tapnuta7H5rale Ford-Variety•-Fireside ThetUi

U-£uperman

3-News-Reasoner

• 11:11J-Search For Tomorrow

.4—Truth Or Consequences—Quit5-Cartooos—Fred ScottT—Father Knows Best—SeriesJ-Memory Lane-Joe Franklia

U-Rocky And His Friends11:41

J-Guiding Light-SerialU-Cartoon Party: v 11:84-NewS-Ray Scherer

HELPING HAND — Members of seven Brownie, six Intermediate and two Senior

Girl Scout troops and one Mariner Ship^have joined in the support of the Fair Haven

Public Library Fund, each by contributing a week's dues. M. Floyd Smith, treasurer

of the fund, is shown receiving a check from the girls. Left to right are Susan Brandt

of Troop 335; Joanne Brennan of Senior Troop 224, and Nancy Jose of Intermediate

Troop 277. Fund drive starts today and will continue for a week. *

Scouts' Round-Up

Popular RequestUnit resident camping for girls

mil be launched in MonmouthCounty this year for the firsttime in more than a decade.

Charles Nelson of Freehold,chairman of the Camp Commit-tee of the Monmvuth Council o/Girl Scouts, who made the an-nouncement, reported "an over-whelming demand for campingopportunities which permit In-termediate Girl Scouts to live inunits,"do their own cooking, andshare in a varied program."

The .council plans four one-week Johnson, Robert Perfetto, Pedeisessions in July at Camp No- Gisteson, Jay Cotenoff and Palmoco, Freehold. Mrs. James Destito.Heidelberg, Fair Haven, will becamp director.' The swimmingprogram will be under the directkm of Mrs. Lloyd Sohuknecht were graduated into Webelos.of Port Monmouth.

In addition to swimming, the

hikes, crafts, outdoor cooking andspecial programs including art nition of their work during thiand drama.

The camp will accomodate 100girls in each session. Mr. Nel-son has urged interested girls tosend tfieir applications to coun- camporee over the weekend atd l headquarters in the Monmouth the Bob-Bet and Lone Pine Units,Shopping Center, Eatoniown, as Camp Nomoco. Activities includ-

ed campcraft instruction, a sur-vival hike, and square dancing

CUB PACK IX, Little Silver, under the direction, of Mr. and

held its final pack meeting of theseason recently at a picnic inAllaire State Park. The programincluded games and contests anda circus performance presentedby Den 11.

Awards were earned by Wil-liam Lloyd, Robert Grammer,Brent Thatcher, Barry Thatcher,Ronald Tomaino, David Brown-lie, Douglas Brownlie, ThomaPalone, Michael Stout, WilliamJohnson, Bruce West, DuncanMonson, James Voss, Timmy

Wilfred West was accepted aa Bobcat and Robert Grammer,Howard Ostran and Pat Destito

Den mother certificates werepresented to Mrs. Frank Destito,

girls wiH participate in nature Mrs. W. L. Forsyth, Jr., andMrs. George Brownlde in recog-

past year.

BAYSHORE NEIGHBORHOODof Girl Scouts held a leaders'

PRESIDENTIAL CAR — Miss Helen C. Phillips, chief of

the museum and historical division of the U.S. Army Signal

Center and School, Fort Monmouth, shows Christopher

Lee, son of a Fort Monmouth Army captain, a model of

the President's railway communications car which was re-

cently donated to the museum by the White House Army

Signal Agency. The car, the "Albert J . Myer," is

•quipped for all types of communications with the ex-

ception of microwave and television.

Mrs. Fred Corbitt.Thirty-two girls and their,lead-

ers conducted fly-up ceremoniesrecently in Keyport. They willbecome the first Junior GiScouts in Keyport on Sept. 9Leaders of the new units will beMrs. Victor Caik, Mrs. AndrewHulsart, Mrs. Dorman Walling,Mrs. George Gratz and Mrs.Jack Jeandron.

MEMBERS of Brownie Troof125 became members of GiScout Troop 155 at a candlelightfly-up ceremony held recently irthe parish hall of St. CatherineCatholic Church, East Keans>burg. Troop 155 will becomejunior troop in September whenthe new scouting program be-comes effective.

Participating were Martha An-derson, Elizabeth Gallagher,Kathleen Hern, Maureen HughesDenise Low, Kathleen McCarth;Ruth Ann Mize, Theresa Thornson, Cecila Truex, Deborah Dil-lon, Colleen Knight and DonnaBartholomew.

Also, Mrs. William A. FearonJr., and Mrs. Charles Simpsonco-leaders of Troop 125, and MrsJohn Pollinger, Jr., and MrsPaul Pettijohn, co-leadersTroop 155.

Guests included Mayor Ear]Moody of Middletown Township,Rev. Thaddeus Wojcaehowskj ofSt. Catherine's Church; Mrs. Jo-seph Howard, chairman of tinEast Keansburg NeighboorhoodAssociation of Girl Scouts, andMrs. William Kreuger, troop con-sultant.

BARBARA BENNETT of Lincroft Girl Scout Troop 365 wasawarded the Curved Bar, highest achievement in IntermediateGirl Scouting, at a recent ban-quet and court of awards of Lin-croft intermediate troops.

First class badges were pnsented to Jeanne Limann, Deborah Braun, Carolyn Thatcheiand Pamela Seyforth, all of Trooi365.

Troop activity reports wer<given by Linda Messina, Troo)617; Peggy Skrabits, Troop 9!and Betty Marsen, Troop 365.

In the color guard were MarcJackson, Sandy Bauer, KathleerSheridan and Susan ApplebaumMary Beth Wagner led recitatiorof the Girl Scout promise anlaws.

BROWNIES of Troop 355 pa:ticipated in a roller skating parrecently in the Belvedere ArenaKeansburg. In the group were:Mary Anthony, Marguerite Batzle, Judy Bedford, Patty BlaclCathy Carone, Noreen DempseyIrene Gilson, Linda Green, Sandy Green, Kathy Guiney, Barbara Hartgrove, Jane Horan,Debbie Layton, Margaret MGough, Catherine O'Neil, LuaniSciortino, Lorraine Senz, SueSiverson and Mary Ann SoykaMrs. John Cameron is leader andMrs. Charles O'Neil, assistantleader.

FinestSeafood

at the Shore

MAHER'Son the Boardwalk in

LONG BRANCH, N. J.SINCE 1929-

• Bouillabaisse t Broiled Lob-ster • Lobster Thermidor• Cold Boiled Lobster • SoftShell Crabs t Shrimp • Clams• Clam Chowder • Steamerswith broth • Homemade rolls,pies, u d » really good cup ofcoffee.

Opens for the 34th season

WEDNESDAY, MAY 29Those who have favored our superb seafood cookery

await the prasonnl opening of this fnmoils restaurant

with keen anticipation. Our pcwly refurnished dining

room, jutting out over the breakers affords a wide

panoramic view of the ever-changing sea; adding extra

enjoyment to the fine fare we serve.

2—Burns & Allen4—Afternoon Drama5-Cartoonj -7—General Hospital

11—Bold Journey1:11

2-As The World Turns5—Film—Steamboat Round The

Bend-1935-85 Min. .7-GirlTalk

U-Captain Scarface-19S3-90Min.

1:459—Faraway Places ,

4-News. 2 : 0 0

2—Password—Allen Ludden4—Ben Jerrod7—Day In Court—Drama9-Understanding Our World

2:354-News7-News

2:3ft2—House Party—Art Linkletter4—Doctors •7—Jane Wyman.9-FiIm-Obliging Young Lady

1941-96 Min.1:55

5-News3:00

2-To Tell The Truth-Panel4—Loretta Young—Drama5—Doorway To Destiny7—Ojieen For A Day '

11-How To Marrv A Millionaire1:25

2—News—Douglas EdwardsJ:M

2—Millionaire—Drama4-Y6u Don't Sayl5—Texan7-Who Do You Trust?

11-Best Of. Groucho-Quiz13-Muslc Interlude

4:002-Secret Storm—Serial4—Match Game—Gene Rayburn5-Felix And The Wizard7—American Bandstand9—Buccaneers • •

11—Big Bozo Circus13—Profile: New Jersey

4:254-News

4:J»2-Edge Or Night-Serial4—Make Room For Daddy7—Discovery '63—Children9—Chubby Jackson—Cartoons

13—American Economy4:55

7—American Newsstand9—News

5:002—Love That Bob—Comedy4—Film—The Night My

Number Came Up—1956—75Min.

7—1 Married Joan9—Zoorama

11—Dick Tracy13—Once Upon A Day

5:2511—Rocky And His Friends

5:302-Film-Reap The Wild Wind

1942—75 Min.5—Sandy's Hour7—Highway Patrol9-Film-Rocketship X-M-1950

- 9 0 Min.11—Three Stooges-Popeye

MONDAY EVENING

0:007-News

13-What's New-Childrea0:15

4—Local News7-Weather

0:Mfr-Micfay Mouse dub7—'Focus On The News '

U-Yofi Bear-CartoonsW-Profllt: New Jersey

1:404-Weather1

M l2-News-Robert Trout4-Nm-fluntJey • Brlnkley7—Focus On Th« Ntwi

7:014-Blogrsphy-Oocum«Ury5-Outlaws-Western7-Ann SotberiH-Comedy»—Menytoon Circus

U-News-Kevin Kennedy13—Russian For Beginners

7>»J-Weather

H-LocalNew«

l-News

U-Weather7:8

2-To Tell The Truth4—Film—The Bravados—1958—

2Hrs. . . ;7—Dakotas—Western9—Film—The King & Four

Queens-1954-90 Min11—Adventures In Paradise13—Books For Our Time

8:002—I've Got a Secret5—Tightrope—Police. , ,. " ; . • "8:30'

2—Lucille Ball5-Peter. Giinn-rMyatery7—Rifleman—Western

11—One Step Beyond13—Invitation To Art

1:002—Danny Thomas5—Cain's Hundred—Drama7—Stoney Burke9-Surfside 6

11—I Search For Adventure13—Perspectives '

2-Andy Griffith-Comedy4-Art Linkletter

11—Law And Mr. Jones10:00

2—Password4—David Brinkley's Journal5-Depiity-Western7—Ben Casey9—Championship Bowling

11—Best Of Groucho13-World at Thirteen

10:302—Stump The Stars4-New York Illustrated5-Dragnet—Police

11—Steve A l l e n . . .13-Professionally Speaking

11:002—News—Doug Edwards4^-News—Frank McGee •

.5-News . . \7-News9r-Film-See 7:30 p.m.U—News-J. K. M. McCaffrey13—Religion In the Newi

mil4-Weather . .5-Film-Walk A Crooked Mile7—Local News "

11-^Steve Allen .11:15

2—Weather . '4—Local News...

11:202—Film—Crossroads—1942—1

Hr. 40 Min.7-Film-Shining Victory-1941

—1 Hr. 35 Min.

4—Tonight—Arthur Godfrey12:55

11—Jungle Drums Of Africa12:30

9—Almanac NewsreelH-News

12:359-News & Weather

12:505-News . •7-Film-Cairo Road-1950

1:002-News . . . .4—News5—Film-Dixie Dugan—1943

1:052—Film-She Made Her Bed—

1934-85 Min.4-Headline

1:3541—13th Hour—Drama

2:054—Sermonette—Religion

2:302—Film-Down The Stretch—

1936-80 Min.

PROM QUEEN — Suian Hobby, 17, Highlands itnior,

was crowned queen of th# Henry Hudson Regional High

School junior-isnior prom Saturday night in th« Rhap-

iody-in-Blua, Long Branch. Doing th« honors i i Patricia

Kaagan, IB, la it year's quaen.

- 7 0 Min.TUESDAY1 MtMIMNQ

0:15t-Pwritws

CMJ-Glva Us This

by. TVKey's stiff of experts who at-temj rehearsals, watch screen-Ings, and analyze scripts In NewYork and Hollywood.

4—Sermonette•:tt ,

2-5ummer Semester4-Educatloa Exchange

7:112-Naws and Weather4-Todsy—Hugh Down*

7:015-CaU T6 Prayer-Rellrton

7 l l

7:H5-News• V • • : •

7-News . . .. , .. . im ..

5-Columbla Lectures7—Early Bird Cartoons

7:417-King And Od'8 ,

S:00 .. v ' .2—Captain Kangaroo{-Sandy Beckery-Chlldreii7—Tommy Sevea-CartoOBi

• ". . 8 : »7—Little Rascals

* * • ! * '

2—Life Of Riley-Comedy4-Birthday House7-Susle

0:255-Newi

' ' ,fcM . ' ' ' •2-Our Miss Brooks4—Dr. Joyce BrothersJ-Tppper-Comedy7-Gale Storm—Comedy

0:4513-Wonder Of Words

• •• ' • • 0 : 5 5 • - • • , •

9-Almanac Newsreel10:M

2—Calendar—Reawner4—Say When—Art James .5-F!m—Bermuda- Mystery—

1944-«5 Min.7—Answering Service9-Film-Obliging Yonng Lady

-1941-90 Min.10:15

4-News10:10

2—1 Love Lucy—Comedy -4-Play Your Hunch

11:002—McCoys-Comedy .4-Price Is Right

11—Jack La Lanne

MOVIE TIMETABLEBED BANK

CARLTON-Dan"ANTMT Into Wlht 2:00;

EATONTOWNDRIVE-IN-

LMt Truln From QunMII «:«; 13:30;" Iffct At OK Corral 10:30.

LONG BRANCHBARONET-

Ttat Lut Tnia Pram OuiihUI 3:06:T:O0; 10:30; aunfllW At OK Corral1:30; 1:30. .

. ASBURY PARKl Y R I C -

Cartowi * Trilton 7:00; 9:07; Bud

MAYFAIR-Mvtd * U » «:00; 1:38; >:M

ST. JAMESU w n n c t <X Arabia 8:00.

COLLINGWOOD CIRCLESHORE DRIVE-IN-

Thf tlava IJM; 12:00: U HappemdAt Tbt World'! Ftlr 10:l».

NEPTUNE CITYNEPTUNE CITY- ,

LW Ol Adriu MMatntu 1:40: 7:10;

North of Red BankATLANTIC HIGHLANDS

AtLANTIC-Shoitt S:OC; 7:30; Wwt Sldi Stoty1:30; S:N

HAZLETLOEWS DRIVE-IN-

Oartoon 8:«; Black Zoo 1:53: 11:06;" — • • • " • • ft IJu Crou 10:30.

5-Newi • • •-.U:M

2-Pete And Gladys-Comedy4-Concentrstion—H. Downs5—Romper Room' '7—Seven Keys9-Playhouse 3.0-Drama

It-Operation Alphabet

Goes to KrajiiHRED BANK -senior at. Red. Bank Catholic

High School, has-been selectedto receive an Exellence in Writ-ing' award from the Monitor, officiat newspaper of the CatholicDiocese of Trenton.

Ranking sixth in his classhe is the son of Mr. and Mrs,William KraybiU, 24 High PointRd,, Uncroft.

During his senior year, heserved as editor-in-chief of theschool- paper, having been sportseditor of the same publicationduring his sophomore and junioryears. He is a member of the N»tional Honor Society.

He plans to enroll in the pre-veterinary medicine course atCornell University.

He will receive the award atgraduation exercises June.9.

Assault ChargedHIGHLANDS - William De

Lade, 37, of Ralph St., was pickedup by police Saturday night inthe Vacation Bar, Bay Ave.,and chargedbattery.

ywith assault and

RIGHT GUYPORTERVILLE, Calif. ( A P ) -

When J. J. Minjares, a truckdriver, was honored at a ban-quet of the Porterville SafetyCouncil, everyone agreed that hedeserved the homage.

Police Chief Francis Torigian,presenting the award, describedas "fantastic" Minjares' recordof driving 1.8 million miles since1927 without a traffic accidentor citation.

PERTH AMBOYMAJESTIC-

Hud 1:35: (:4ft: 10:06; Tin Onat VanBODtory 3:05; SOS; I'M.

EDISONMENU) PARK CINEMA-

Bud 2:00; 4:W; • : « ; 8:IS.

WOODBRIDGEDRIVE-IN-

Tlw Day 01 Tbi TrltSdi l;35; 11:»;Bis Wavt 10:90.

MONTCLAIRCLAIRIDGE-

Tb» Bwt O( Cloerara* 8:00.

Gets MasterDegree in Music

THE LUCT-Notfso * l n y . . . _ ,but there's oat grand scene lawhich Lucy, imitates ChtrUeChaplin that's certainly worthwaiting (or. Lucy and Vivian in-terrupt a youngster's New Year*iEve party arid decide to show thekids how they did their entertain-ing in the old days. 8:30 p.m.CBS.

DANNY THOMAS. (Repeat)The slapstick bit continues asEnglish Keystone Kop BernardFox makes his debut'in the roleof a bumbling waiter who can'tdo anything right. He gets a'Jobat the Copa Club and shortlyhas the place In a shambles. Thewhole thing's absurd, but whocares. Mr. Fox, with his grandface and smile is a very ninnyman. 9 p.m. CBS.

STONEY BURKE. "Point ofHonor." (Repeat) Good episode.The same basic plot has beenused on the series before, but thistime the show is .more exictlng.A rich boy who's trying to provesomething, turns his misdirectedhatred on Stoney and company.Scott Marlowe plays the villain-ous son of an influential judgein a southern town where the ro-deo Ik playing. Some of the indi-vidual scenes are so well donethey overshadow the storyline.9 p.m. ABC. •'' •

DAVID BRINKLEY'S JOURN-AL. Brinkley casts a jaundicedeye to a sign of crass commer-cialism devouring a national shrineThe shrine Is the battlefield ofGettysburg, and the sign is theevidence of hot dog stands, ga-rages, a motel in the middle ofthe battlefield, and more. Itseems that former President Ei-senhower and a non-profit asso-ciation are not only voicing theirobjections, but doing a construc-tive planning job to save the bat-tlefield. On a very different level,Brinkley discusses' a "talkingtypewriter" designed to teachyoungsters to read and write!(Color) 10 p.m. NBC.

BEN CASEY "The Sweet Kissof Madness." (Repeat) You'llstay With this one just to watchArthur Hill's stunning portrait ofa doctor, so plagued by his pushywife's demands on his careerthat he's virtually driven to in-sanity. Vince Edwards and Wil-liam Windom gave him good sup-port. 10 p.m. ABC.

TONIGHT. Arthur Godfreytakes over this week while John-ny Carson gets a vacation. God-frey's guest list is Impressivewith Meredith Willson, Liza Min-nelll, Walter Slezak, comedianNipsey Russell, and singersFrank D'Rone, Richard Hayes,and the Buffalo Bills. (Color)11:15 p.m. NBC.

MUs Clara G. Tilton

NEW YORK CITY - The de-gree of master of sacred musicwas conferred on Miss ClaraGroyer Tilton, daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Minor B. Tilton, 318Newman Springs Rd., Lincraft,N. J., at the 127th commence-ment of Union Theological Senvinary last week in RiversideChurch.

Miss Tilton was valedictorianof the class of 1956 at Red BankHigh School. In April, I960, shewas named the outstanding stu-ldent in the School ol Music ofSyracuse University and was jgraduated summa cum laude with |the degree of bachelor of musicin May, 1960.

The following year she studied Iorgan and piano under a Ful-Ibright scholarship in Vienna,Austria. Her organ instructors |have been John Ferris, nowHarvard; Dr. Arthur Poister,

VET RECORDS ON FILM

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Rec-ords of the state's veterans olall wars' since the AmericanRevolution have been micro-filmed, and copies cart be madein 10 seconds, the Ohio Divisionof SoWiers . Claims says.

Muoh of the filming was donethrough arrangements with theChurch of Jesus Christ of Lat-terday Saints (Mormon), whichuses such records In helping itsmembers trace family history forreligious reasons.

Division officials believe Ohio'smi-Wary claims office is the first,and apparently the only, one inthe nation to completely micro-film its records.

WALTER READE

STERLING THEATRES

CARLTONRED BANK m\-N.Y. Tl«t.

Joseph Hock, 68, who lives in Syracuse, Anton Heilier, Vienna,the same building on .Hah* St., M d vernon de Tar of Uniontold police that De Lade had Theological Seminary School ofpunched and threatened him. sacred Music.

De Lad« was released on $100bail. Hearing will be tonight be-fore Magistrate Irving B. Zeich-

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HER HANDIWORKCOATESV1LLE, Pa. (AP)

One guest at the 50th anniversarydinner of the Coatesville YWCAfelt a special glow at the cele-bration.

Miss Anna E. Harlan, a found-er of the local group and itsfirst president, has been an ac-tive participant in. the organiza-tion throughout lt« half centuryof existence.

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presidential Monttl:

O w *the<U» paiW Jtaujht t countam "«JitefM method." atCoUuHijr Vntfwilty School oftairuUtan in New York City. I'mafraid 1 wun' ta very good teach-er, for- la «oovtriatloa I like tohave people tell me, not vicevena. But • number of student*Who. patted through the oourwwent on to become first-rate Jour-aaliiti. There was MargueriteJflggtni, who covers Internationalaffair*, for the New York HeraldTribune; Fred Grain, Time Mag.utne't able UN correspondent;and Al Rosenfeld, who writesfrom Israel, among others. Theyare still teaching me.

Now comes another good pieceof work by one of those Columbiastudents who vised to tell me offWritten by Edith Efran for theTV Guide magazine, it is the firstreally documented analysis thatI have seen of the taboos thatparalyze the big U.S. televisionnetworks and the reasons forthem. The report Is particularlypertinent now that NewtonMinow, the thunderer, is quittingas Federal Communications Com-missions Chairman, leaving hisJob to the 34-year-old E. William

"Henry. .Brave At Distance

Miss Efron proves, by statis-tical analysis of three years ofIn-depth public affairs TV pro-grams, that the bravery of thenetworks has a direct relation-ship to the distance of a problemfronrfhe United States. Our TVprogrammers are courageous aslions when they cover Pakistanor Europe. But when it comesto domestic matters, there areobvious lapses. Aelection gets good coverage; sodoes the explpration of outerspace. But Miss Efron finds that,over, a span of three years, theTV systems devoted exactly twoshows per year to Congress, andonly one show in three years tothe Supreme Court. The Departrnent of Agriculture and the De-partment of Health, Educationand Welfare also got one showeach. As for such perennialboneg of contention as the Interstate Commerce Commission andthe Federal Trade Commission,they got no recognition whatso-ever. And five of the 10 showsthat touched on Big Businesswere devoted to crises in steel.

Miss Efron concedes the im-portance of the office of the pres-idency! But at a time when Su-preme CbWt decisions are havingsuch' an effect on Mississippi,Alabama and other southernstates, to say nothing of our"image" abroad, the dispropor-tion between 236 shows Involvingthe President and only one showinvolving the work of Chief Jus-tice Earl Warren's tribunal is atrfl* startling, to.say the least.Again,' with our railroad networkin a shambles, the total by-pass-ing »of the obstructive workingsof the Interstate Commerce Com-mission seems like the mostreprehensible sore of news judg-ment.

Scared ThemThe Important thing about Miss

Efron's study is that it does notput all the blame for timidity onthe networks. Mr. Minow mayhave been correct when he de-scribed TV as a "vast waste-land," but when he threatenedthe broadcasting companies withthe possible loss of their wavelength licenses he scared everynetwork owner almost half todeath.- The Federal Communica-tions Commission is both dictatorand policeman, with the powerto give or withhold the one in-dispensable bit of property thatIs necessary to the television busi-ness. Says Miss Efron, the pow-er of the FCC inflicts "floatingpolitical anxiety'1 on every broad-casting company- Naturally theycringe at-the, very suggestion thatthey might offend an all-powerfuladministration in Washington.

y u r t of Wuttagtoo reportingand commmtary, Arthur Krock,hai taid that "Congress dmildget rid of the POC and tat up apublicly owned commercial cor-poration like the latellite corporation. Thlt t , the only thins 1can think of that would get politlcal fear out of network cov-erage." But thli it not enough.A satellite corporation would .stillbe subject to tough pressuresWhat Is also needed la uninhibitedconsumer control of TV program-ming. This means that thehypocriiy of "authorising" pay-TV development programs thouUbe exposed for what it is, a drag-the-feet meani of forcing the TVstations to depend on advertisingsponsors, not on TV-viewers, forthe content of TV shows. Thegovernment should get out of thebusiness of telling TV stationshow they are to finance them-selves.

Miss Efron has done a publiservice in exposing the skeletonin the closets of an FCC-moni-tored IV business. Let E. Wil-liam Henry take note as he picksup the reins that Newton Minowis dropping.

Daly SubsMonday ForConsidine

WEST LONG BRANCH - JohnDaly, television star and newscommentator, will speak in placeof newspaperman Bob Considineat the annual meeting of the

IOUUI College Library As-sociation today at 11 a.m.

The college received word thaiMr. Considine, a resident of Al'lenhurst, is being rushed to theVatican to cover the seriousness of Pope John XXIII. Mr.Considine sought out Mr. Dalyfor the library association talk.

Mr. Daly has been the modera-tor of "What's My Line" andother television shows. Until I960he was vice president of ABCin charge of news, special eventsand public affairs.

A native of Johannesburg,South Africa, his broadcastingcareer goes back before WoriWar II when he was a WhiteHouse radio correspondent. Dur-ing the: .war he reported fromLondon and the Middle East.

He made news headlines 2years ago when he divorced hiswife to marry Virginia Warren,daughter of Chief Justice -Ear!Warren.

A contributor of article to na-tional magazines, Mr. Daly ispast president of th« OverseasPress .Club. ' . J •"

Mrs., (jammer'sTestimonial Set

KEYPORT - Mr*. Adelaide>. (Raymond) Crammer, Broad

St., who has been borough clerkhere for 3?. years iM-be honoredat » testimonial dinner In YeCottage Inn Monday night,June 17.

MomnoWhCounty Clerk J, Rus-sell Woolley will be the toast-master and others on the wel-coming committee will includeHoward W. Robertvcounty coun-sel and former borough attorneyFreeholder Director, Joseph C.Irwin and State Sea, Richard R.toUt

Hurt lii GrasKMATAWAN - Ronald John-

son, Main St., and Charles Lipera,Johnson Ave., are reported ingood condition in Riverview Hos-pital after an accident Fridajnight.

Police said the two youths weninjured when their pickup truckhit a utility pole on Mill Rd.they were pinned against theseat. According to police, it tookthe local First Aid Squad almostan hour to free the men.

Mr. Johnson, driver of thetruck, apparently lost controlwhile rounding a curve, policireported. Police said the pollsplit and pushed the two meiagainst the seat.

TROOP AT CAMPNEW MONMOUTH-Girl Seoul

Troop 168 spent the weekend alCamp Nomoco, Smithburg, ac-companied by Mrs. James Gil-lespie, Mrs. Richard Gage amiNancy Bond, Nancy Kilduff amJacqueline Frisco, aides.

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On the arrangements commit-tee are CouncUmen'Henri J, Han-sen and Robert Strang; EverettS Poling, borough'collector andJohn J. Haley, Broad St., alocal businessman.'

Mrs. Crammer, moved to Key-port shortly after her marriageto the late Raymond Crammer,

blacksmith who was in businessand had his shop on DivisionSt. with his father. She waschosen as a temporary fill-inclerk because of Her experiencein legal matters for the balanceof the year on Feb7;25,1924. Shewas reappointed at a council's

rganisation meeting in 1925 andafter five years gained tenure ofo f f i c e . • • • " • • '

Prior to her marriage Mrs.Crammer had been secretary tothe Sussex County prosecutor. Shewas graduated from the New-ton public school system. Beforemoving, to Newton she residedat Washington.

Mrs. Crammer will retire frompublic service June 30.

Agency EnrollsThose Aged 65

ATLANTIC HIGWLANDS -E. R. Snyder and Co. InsuranceAgency, First Ave., is conductingits second annual enrollmentperiod for health Insurance cov-erage for people 65 years of ageand over, now. through June 27.

ISie insurance program isknown as Golden 65.

Developed last year by the Con-tinental Casualty Company ofChicago, Golden 85 is a trio of in-surance plans wWch «»prds. peo-ple 15 and over complete cover-age regardless of age or presenthealth. No physic*) examinationIs required tor enrollment in theprogram.

T»e first portion of toe Golden5 Programs, 85 Plus, is a basic

IwapM-sujgioal pig,, j ^ y , kctects its owner from the financial ofstrain caused by normal hospitalstays. It is augmented by 10,000Reserve which otters protectionfrom the Ugh cost of illness oraccident entailing a prolongedhospital confinement. As itsname implies, the plan pays upto $10,000 of the hospital-surgicalexoense.T h e (bird segment of the Gold-

en 65 Program known as 5,000Medical, pays out-oMiospital ex-penses when not serious enoughfor hospital confinement, such asprescription drugs, doctor bills,etc.

According to Mr. Snyder, theGolden 65 Program may be pur-chased in its entirety, or BS Plus,10,000 Reserve or 5,000 Medicalmay be purchased independently.

CLUB HEARS CANDIDATEEATONTOWN - Donald Cun-

ningham, borough attorneyAvon and a Democratic candidatefor the statt Assembly, addressedthe Eatontown Democratic Clubrecently.

He urged passage of the pro-posed $750) million bond issue andits amortization by use of revenue

Center SetsSales, FreeTrout Fishing

EATONTOWN - The stores inMonmouth Shopping Center willhold a series of "June on Pa-rade" sales Wednesday throughSaturday. The four-day salesevent will be followed by the cen-ter's annual "Salute to Fathers,"when there will be free troutfishing outdoors at the intersec-tions of Pine and Spruce La,and Oak Mall.

Here, in a special pool, onemay fish at no cost or obliga-tion. Those wising to participatemay get their "free license"from any store in the center. Ifa fisherman is lucky, he maykeep the fish he catches. Someof the trout will be tagged andthe fisherman catching a taggedtrout will receive a bonus of onesilver dollar.

FETED BY AUXILIARYLEONARDO - The birthday of

Mrs. Peter Arata was celebratedat the meeting of the BreventPark and Leonardo Fire Com-pany auxiliary May 27. A cake

of sale was held at Dodge's storeyesterday, with Mrs. HaroldRaynor as chairman. A cardparty will be held in the firehouse June 26, and Mrs. Raynorwill be in charge. Meeting host-esses were Mrs. Charles Mc-Burnie and Mrs. Thomas Mur-

be available for fithejmw psi-tldjMtiag, end i/ thty wish to«hop after their fishing spree,their fish wi|l be put in a specialiced container until they.returnto take it c home.

There will be free cartoon mov-ies for the children in the "LittleLollipop Theajer" on Cherry Malloh the following Saturdays, June15, 22 and 29. Movies will becontinuous; starting at 10 a.m.with a lunch break from 11:30a.m. to 1 p.m.

Also for .the children this sum-mer, therfr will be free cartoonmovies in the "Little LollipopTheater" every day it rains whenthe beach is too wet, the backyard too damp.

Other attractions for the sum-mer will be the' "Outdoor LivingShow" for the vacation minded,on the Malls, June 27—July 6,and the third annual Outdoor ArtFestival, Saturday, July 13. Ama-teur and professional artists mayobtain registration blanks for theshow, which offers $300 in cashprizes, by calling the center's

Tree fishing poles and bait will public relation office.

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Its June Again-Traditional Month foOcean Qrove ResidentMarried in St. Paul's

OCEAN GROVE - The mar-riage of Miss Nancy ElizabethGergasko, daughter of Mr. andMrs. Martin A. Gergasko, Wood-bridge, to John Richard Shep-pard, son of Mr. and Mrs. JohnSheppard, 30 Abbott Ave., tookplace here Saturday at soon inSt Paul's Methodist Church.

Rev. Albert S. Layton officiated• t the double ring ceremony. Areception was held in the Shad-owbrook, Shrewsbury.

The couple will reside in RedBank on their return from a Ber-muda wedding trip.

The bride was given in mar-riage by her father. She wore anivory-faced peau de soie princess-

, stye gown fashioned with adraped yoke edged in pearl andcrystal bead fringe. The Watteautrain extended from the yokelineIn the back and her tiered veilwas attached to a matching coro-net. She carried a bouquet of calalillies. • , .

Miss Linda Burkett, Martins-

ville, was maid of honor. Herfloor-length gown of ice blue silkshantung had a matching empirejacket. Her headpiece was a coro-net of blue carnations, bachelorbuttons and babies'-breath andshe carried a fan of the sameflowers.

William Jelley, Long Branch,was best man. Ushers wereJames Boyd, Middletown, andRobert Brown, Ocean Grove.

The bride, a graduate of Wood-bridge High School and the Lab-oratory Institute of Merchan-dising, New York City, is em-ployed as assistant fashion direc-tor for Simplicity Pattern Com-pany, New York City.

The bridegroom, a MontclairHigh School graduate, attendedRutgers University and receiveda bachelor of arts degree fromFairleigh Dickinson University,

| Rutherford. He is associated withDeering Milliken, Inc., New York

I City.

Miss Schuber Is WedTo Joseph Jiosne, Jr.KEYPORT—Rev. Alfred Smith

officiated at the marriage of MissPatricia Ann Schuber and JosephJiosne, Jr., Saturday here in St.Joseph's Catholic Church.

The bride is the daughter ofMr. and Mrs. Edward F. Schu-ber, 300 Broad St., Matawan. Thebridegroom's parents, Mr. andMrs. Joseph F. Jioshe, Sr., re-fide on Biondi St., Cliffwood.

The bride was given in mar-riage by her father. She wore afloor-length gown of chiffon-taf-feta styled with a straplessbodice over which she worematching jacket embroideredwith sequins and pearls, withtiree-quarter-length sleeves. Thebell-shaped skirt featured a Wat-teau back and chapel-length train.A crown of flowers studded with

Miss FaganIs MarriedIn Key port

KEYPORT—Miss Eileen CarolFagan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.Bernard Fagan, 100 ArbordaleDr., Cliffwood Beach, and AlbertL. Bothams, Jr., son of Mrs. Albert Bothams of Lyndhurst, andthe late Mr. Bothams, were mar-ried here Saturday.

Rev. William Bausch performedthe double ring ceremony in St.Joseph's Catholic Church.

The bride was given in mar-riage by her father. She wore afloor-length gown designed witha fitted Chantilly lace bodice,studded with pearls and sequins,scalloped sabrina neckline andlong tapered sleeves. Matchinglace panels were draped over thefront of the bouffant silk organzatkirt and cascaded into a chapel-length train. Her bouffant veil!of illusion was attached toqueen's crown of crystals andpearls, and she carried a cascadebouquet of white pompons andbibies'-breath with a white orchidcenter.

Miss Emma Levine, Keyport,was maid of honor. Mrs. Um-berto DILauro, Cliffwood, andMiss Barbara Ellison, Matawan,were the bridal attendants. Theywore street-length gowns of peachorganza with matching overskirts.They wore matching crowns andcarried cascade bouquets of peachpompons and babies'-breath.

Thomas Lynch, Keansburg, wa:the best man. Ushering wereBernard C. Fagan, at homebrother of the bride and Thomas1

Koubek, Perth Amboy.

A reception followed in O'Hara'sRestaurant, Rt. 9, South Am-boy.

When they return from a motortrip to Florida, they will residein Lyndhurst.

The bride was graduated fromMatawan High School and is em-ployed by the Prudential Insur-ance Co., Newark,

The bridegroom was graduatedfrom Lyndhurst High School and

[pearls held her fingertip-lengthveil and she carried a crescentbouquet of white miniature car-nations and stephanotis with aglamellia center.

Mrs. Steven Alikas, Matawan,was maid of honor. Serving asbridal attendants were Miss Shir-ley Teufel, Union; Mrs. JohnTedesco, Englishtown, cousin ofthe bride; Mrs. Neil Scully, Mat-awan; and Mrs. Kenneth Wil-liams, Carteret.

They wore white silk organzastreet-length sheath gowns withturquoise-bordered white organzaoverskirts, embroidered with tur-quoise flowers. The fitted bodiceswere styled with sabrina neck-lines and cap sleeves. They woreturquoise flower headpieces withpearl centers and circular veilsand carried cascade bouquets ofminiature white carnations andturquoise carnations with ivy.

Don Hauser, Cliffwood, niece ofthe bridegroom, was the flowergirl. She wore a floor-lengthwhite organza gown with shortpuff sleeves and turquoise cum-merbund ending in a back bow.She wore a turquoise flower head-piece and carried a-small cas-cade bouquet of miniature whitecarnations and turquoise carna-tions With ivy.

John Tomasello, Matawan, wasbest man. Ushers were EdwardSchuber, brother of the bride, athome; Neil Scully and RonaldJohnson, Matawan, and GeorgeWoolf, Cliffwood.

After a reception in O'Hara's,South Amboy, the couple left forFlorida. When they return, theywill reside on Rt. 79, Morganville.

The couple were graduatedrom Matawan High School. The

bride is employed by Weyer-haeuser Co., Port Newark. Thebridegroom is studying IBM ma-chines at the New BrunswickSecretarial School and is em-ployed by Marlboro State Hos-pital.

Rutgers University,He served in the Army

attendedNewark.and is also employed by the Prudential Insurance Co., Newark,

JUNE CARD PARTYRED BANK-JMrs, William

Scalzo, Rumson, and Mrs. Brogen Randleman, Lincroft,chairmen of a card party whichwill be held at the Ladles Auxillary of the Mystic Craftsman'sClub of Red Bank Friday atp.m. In" the home of Mrs. HarrHaviland, 200 Maple Ave.

MRS. JOHN RICHARD SHEPPARD, left, is the former

Miss Nancy Elizabeth Gerguiko of Woodbridge, whose

marriage look place Saturdiy m .St. Paul's Methodiit

Church, Ocean Grove. The bridegroom is the son of Mr.

and Mrs. John Sheppard nf Ocean Grove.

MRS. CHRISTOPHER F. WEINHEIMER is the formerMiss Lucille D'Anthony of Middletown. St. Anthony'tCatliolic Church; Red Bank, was the setting of her mar-riage to the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank L . Weinheimerof Middletown.

Lucille Anne D'Anthiony,C F. Weinheimer Wed

MRS. JOSU'II A. VWl.in, JR. l^m.rl, 1/ >s MariaPin iVolleiti nf Mamnroncil. A. I , n H ipiirw I .\stur-day in Vo't Holy T'ii.it\ itthiiu (lunli. 1/nw fii.v • k.The bridegroom i« tlv ?>n •>! Mr. and 1/rs. Jvfph \ idcltiof i\cw Monmiuth.

Wedding in Mamaroneck ChurchMAMARONECK, N. Y. - Miss

Maria Pia NoIIetti, daughter ofMr. and Mrs, Filippo Nolletti,935 Lester Ave., became the brideof Joseph Anthony Videtti, Jr.,son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A.Videtti, Sr., 2 Roberta Dr., NewMonmouth, N. J., May 25, herein the Most Holy Trinity CatholicChurch.

Rev. James Boyd officiated atthe double ring ceremony. A re-ception followed in the DavenportInn, New Rochelle.

The bride was given in mar-riage by her father. She wore aprincess style gown of pure silkfashioned with a beaded train.Her headpiece was a two tiertiara of rhinestones and she car-ried a cascade of small white or-chids.

Mrs. Leonard Lucia, Mamaro-neck, was matron of honor. Thebride's other attendants wereMiss Marie Videtti, New Mon-

mouth, sister of the bridegroom;Mrs. Leonard Nolletti, and MissMarilyn Germani, both cousinsof the bride, also of Mamaroneck.

The gowns of the bridal attend-

Nuptial Mass Follows

Nuptial Rites In Freehold

MONMOUTH BEACH — Themarriage of Miss Patricia AnneHubbard, New York City, daugh-ter of Mr, and Mrs. James S.Hubbard of Decatur, Ga., toGeorge Glennwood Osgoodby, sonof Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Os-goodby, 1500 Ocean Ave., SeaBright, took place Saturday herein Precious Blood CatholicChurch. The double ring cere-mony was solemnized at a NuptialMass celebrated by Rev. Maurice" Griffin.

A luncheon reception followedGeorgian House, West

FREEHOLD-Miss Rose MarieOwenburg, daughter of Mr. andMrs. George R. Owenburg, 72Water Works Rd., Freehold, be-came the bride of Frank Reich-enberger, son of Mr. and Mrs.Joseph Reichenberger, TennentRd., Morganville, yesterday.

Rev. Walter Pearce performedthe ceremony here in the Assem-bly of God Church.

The bride was given in mar-riage by her father. She wore awhite gown designed with a lacebodice and pleated satin skirt thatflowed into a chapel-length train.The fitted bodice had a scoopneckline and cap sleeves. Herfingertip-length veil of illusion

AAUW TeaLITTLE SILVER - An after-

noon tea will be held today at1:30 p.m. in the home of MrsGeorge C. Bray, 62 Rivers Edge,Dr., for members of the Ameri-can Association of UniversityWomen, Northern MonmouthCounty Branch.

The event will be the closingactivity of the season. AssistingMrs. Bray as hostesses will beMrs. Christopher A. Probasco,Mrs. Robert J. Keevers and Mrs,Richard W. Child.

New officers and new mem-bers of the board of directors wilbe introduced and next year'sprogram will be presented at abrief business meeting. AAUWprograms will resume in Octo-ber.

BEAUTIFUL MONOGRAMMING

•as held by a crown of pearlsnd she carried a cascade bou-uet of white roses and babies'-reath.

Mrs. Clifford Reichenberger,dorganville, sister-in-law of theddegroom, was matron of honor.he wore a lavender organzareet-length gown with matchingeadpiece and circular veil. Shearried a cascade bouquet of pinkarnations and babies'-breath.

Clifford Reichenberger, Mor-anville, was best man for hisrother.

A reception followed In thelome of the bride's parents,

graduate ofSchool. The

The bride is atiarlboro Central>ridegroom attended FreeholdRegional High School and is em-•loyed by McDowell's Trucking

Co., Neptune.

4rt Shotv WinnersHIGHLANDS-Members of the

ocal Girl Scouts and Brownie!>couts held an art show recentlyn the grounds of the St. Andrews

Episcopal Church. The exhibits•ere judged by Frank White ol

Highlands.

Winners were Mlchele Nichols,'roop 5, first prize; Janice Jones,'roop 37, ' second prize; Liane^ase, also, of Troop 5, third prize,nd Linda Maxson of Troop 5,wnorable mention.

Brownie Scout winners wuc Siverson, Troop 355, first;

Jetty Ann Horn, Troop 355,econd, Susan Kadenbach, Troop03, third, and Judy Bedford,roop 355, honorable mention.

ants were of blue chiffon, andthey carried cascades of Carib-bean blue glamelias.

Francis Heffernan, Bayonne,N. J., was best man for his ne-

George Osgoodby WedsWest Long Branch, where he Ismajoring in English.

The couple will make theirhome in Sea Bright on their re-turn from1 a wedding trip to thePocono Mountains, Pa.

Newark Ceremony

phew. Ushers were Redo Nolleti,brother of the bride; AlbertoNolletti, cousin of the bride, andAl Dalgreen, all of Mamaroneck.

The bride, a graduate of a sec-retarial school in Italy, had beenemployed there as a legal secretary.

The bridegroom, a graduate ofBayonne High School, is attending Monmouth College, West LongBranch, and is employed by EssoStandard Oil Company, Bayway,N- J.

The couple wilt reside in NewMonmouth on their, return from awedding to Nassau and the Ba-hamas.

Miss Pugliese Married

in theDeal.

Mr. Hubbard gave his daugh-;er in marriage. She wore acotton ottoman gown fashionedwith a fitted bodice, elbow-length sleeves and bell skirt. Herveil was secured by a matchingottoman pillbox and she carrieda prayerbook bouquet of lily-of-;he-valley and feathered carna-ions centered with an orchid.

Mrs. Lawrence Robert Osgood-by, Sea Bright, sister-in-law ofthe bridegroom, was matron ofhonor. Mr. Osgoodby was bestman for his brother.

Also attending the bride wereMrs. Robert Willis, Spring Val-ley, N. Y.j and the Misses WendyWolfenden, New York City; SusanJohnson, Natick, Mass., and Bar-bara Joan Powell, Richmond, Va.,cousin of the bride.

All five attendants wore street-length gowns of yellow cottonbatiste fashioned with white em-broidery on the bodice, squarenecklines and bell skirts. Theywore daisy headpieces. The honorattendant carried white daisiesand orange carnations. The oth-ers carried yellow daisies andwhite carnations.

Ushers were Jnmes S. Hubbard,Jr.y- Decatur, Ga., brother of thebride; Robert Hintelman, Rum-son; Christopher T. Coll, 3d, Al-lenhurst, and John Carras, OldBridge.

The bride is a gradute of NatickHigh School and Barbizon Model-ing School, New York. She wasemployed by Reuben H. Donnel-ley Corp., New York City.

The bridegroom, an alumnus ofDeerfield (Mass.) Academy, isattending Monmouth College,

NEWARK - Miss JosephineAnne Pugliese of Middletown andJack Klee, Jr. of this place weremarried here yesterday in BlessedSacrament Catholic Church.

The bride is the daughter ofMr. and Mrs. Frederick Pugliese,73 Hialeah Ave., Middletown. Mr.Klee is the son of Mr. and Mrs.Jack Klee of Newark.

Rev. J . A. McGrath, pastor,officiated at the late afternoonceremony.

The bride was given in mar-riage by her father. She worea floor-length gown designed witha fitted lace bodice, studded withsequins and pearls, scallopedneckline and long tapered sleeves.The bell-shaped skirt ended in achapel-length train. Her finger-tip-length veil of illusion was at-tached to a pearl leaf headpieceand she carried a cascade bou-

Dance StudentsGive Program

RED BANK — First year students of Mrs. Edna LanelHaviland performed in a dancerecital recently in her studio a75 McLaren St.

Participating in the programwere Camille and Victoria Fern-andez, Kristine Peterson, BlairPinsley, Joyce Rusin, KarenSchindler, Ann Stratz, Debbieand Peggy Schweers, YvonnejTenenbaum, Gay Webster, JudyWheeler and Karen Withey.

Mrs. Haviland formerly taughtin the Jack Blue Stage Schoolsin New York City and in Fred|Miss Mary Kane, Middletown.Astaire Studios in Baltimore,Chicago and Monmouth County,

She will resume her classes inballet, tap dancing and associ-ated dance arts in September,

RED BANK - St. Anthony'sCatholic Church was the settinghere yesterday for the marriageof Miss Lucille Anne D'Anthony,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. LucianW. D'Anthony, 3 The Vista, Mid-dletown, to Christopher F . Wein-heirner, son of Mr. and Mrs.Frank L. Weinheimer, LaurelAve., Middletown.

Rt. Rev. Msgr. Salvatore Di-:

Lorenzo, pastor, officiated at thedouble ring ceremony. Mrs. JohnFamulary was organist and MissRose Pignataro, soloist. A recep-tion was held in Joseph's Res-taurant, West Long Branch.

Mr. D'Anthony gave his daugh-ter in marriage. She wore a courtgown of spring silk taffeta designed with a portrait necklineappliqued with Alencon lace, anobi sash at the back and a chap-el train. A pearl and crystalcrown secured her bouffant veiland she carried a prayerbookwith cymbidiums.

Sisters Are Attendants

Mrs. Louis DeChicchio, Middle-town, was matron of honor for

Bride-Elect

quet of white orchids and lily-of-the-valley.

Miss Caroline Nieuzytek, 'New-ark, was maid of honor. Brides-maids were Miss Barbara Ritch-ngs, Kenilworth; i Miss GloriaCapriotti, Newark, cousin of thebride, and Miss Diane Pugliese,sister of the bride, at home.

They wore shocking pink Ital-ian taffeta street-length gownswith fitted sleeveless bodices andmatching flower headpieces. Theycarried closed parasols filled withwhite carnations.

Matthew Barbosa, Newark, wasbest man. Ushers were ThomasPugliese, brother of the bride, athome; Fred Bhend, Newark,codsin-pf the bride, and TheodoreNarbonne, Newark.

A reception followed in theSan Carlo Restaurant, Lyndhurst.

The bride was graduated fromWest Side High School, Newark,and is employed by the PublicService Co-ordinated Transport,Newark.

A graduate of Irvington Tech-nical High School, Irvington, thebridegroom served four years inthe Navy and is employed byMicro Laboratories, Livingston.

They will reside in Bloomficldon their return from a weddingtrip to Florida.

Baby ShowerMATAWAN - One-month-old

Paul Charles Koons was honoredrecently at a baby shower in thehome of hisMrs. EdgarBrunswick Ave., The hostess was

parents, Mr. andKoons, 316 New

Attending were Mrs. JeromeCrone, MissMrs, James

Marie Crone, andFitzsimmons, Cliff

Miss Sandra Huserik

LITTLE SILVER — Announce-ment is made by Mr. and Mrs.Robert Huserik, 52 Kings Rd., ofthe engagement of their daugh-ter, Miss Sandra Huserik, to Lt.Charles J. Sollohub, son of Col.and Mrs. Julian V. Sollohub ofSpringfield Center, N. Y.

The bride-elect is a graduateof Rod Bank High School and isa junior at Orange MemorialSchool of Nursing of the Hospi-tal Center at Orange.

Lt. Sollohub is a graduate ofthe U.S. Military Academy atWest Point and will be attendingthe University of California atLos Angeles to study for hismaster's degree.

her sister. Another of the bride'ssisters, Mrs. Robert S. Haines,Levittown, served as bridal at-tendant with Miss' Kathy Mund,Middletown, and Miss CatherineWeinheimer, at home, sister ofthe bridegroom.

The attendant's gowns, Jacketsand petal headpieces were ofBermuda blue silk chiffon withsoft Dior bows at the back. Thehonor attendant carried a coloni-al bouquet of talisman roses andwhite carnations! The bouquetsof the other attendants were ofyellow roses and white carna-tions.

Seven year-old Diane Haines,Levittown, niece of the bride,was flower girl. Her bouffantfloor-length frock was white overBermuda blue silk organza witha bow sash. She carried a bas-ket of daisies and roses and worea matching flower headpiece.

Best Man

Best man was Lt. Rene Af-fourtit, U.S. Army, Fort Devens,Mass. Ushers were Louis. De-Chicchio, Middletown, brother-in-law of the bride; Robert S.Haines, Levittown, also a broth-er-in-law of the bride; Kurt Wein-heimer, at home, brother of thebridegroom, and Paul Buzzi,Dayton, Ohio.

The bride is a graduate of RedBank Catholic High School, classof I960, and of Wood SecretarialSchool, New York. She was em-ployed as a legal secretary forthe law firm of Roberts, Pills-bury and Carton, Atlantic High-ands.

The bridegroom, a graduate ofMiddletown Township HighSchool, attended the Universityof Dayton and is majoring in pub-lic accounting at New York Uni-versity. He served as command-ing officer of the Pershing Rifles,honor military fraternity at Day-ton, and is now employed in thecomptroller's division at NewYork University. His father issuperintendent of Monmouth Re-gional High School.

The couple will live a t 507Ocean Pkwy., Brooklyn, on theirreturn from a wedding trip to thePocono Mountains, Pa.

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Dinner PartyMarks 25thAnniversary

MTODLETOWN-Mr. and MM,Alfred C, Ralph, 8 The Trail,were honored at a niipriae din-ner party, marking their 25th wed-ding annlveftary recently in theMagnolia Iim, MaUwtn.

• t h e party was given bji theoouple's soc-in-law and daughterMr; and Mri. William D. Leigh-ton, Port.Monmouth and Mr. andMa. AHen Halsey, Mr. and Mrs.Paul, Ralph, Red Bank; Mr. andMrs. Arnold Bennett, Shrewsbury;Mr. ',-ud Mrs. Elmer Ralph,

, : River Plaza; Mr. and Mrs. WarneL. Snedeker, Colts Neck and Mr.and Mrs. W. Bernard Snedeker,Freehold.

The couple were married May22, 1938 t* the Reformed Church

•jn Teaneck by Rev. Carmen W.Tremoath. Honor attendantsWere Mrs. William Ogden, BInn-

•jngham, Ala., the former Bernice, i Van Corn, and Mr. Halsey.

. Mrs. Ralph is the former Fran-ces R. Snedeker of Colts Neck.The couple" have four children,Ronnie A. Ralph and LynnMarie Ralph, at home, KennethRalph, Onbisonia, Pa., and Mrs.Leighton, and four grandchildren,Douglas and Donna Ralph andSheri and Wendi Leighton.

ParenthoodUnit Meets

LITTLE SILVER - Execu-tive .Board of the MonmouthCounty Planned Parenthood As-sociation will meet June 21 inthe home of Mrs. Walter E, In- was married here to Eugenegram, Jr., Little Silver Point Rd.

At a recent meeting here inthe home of Mrs. Bernard M.Goldsmith, board members votedto purchase copies of "The TimeHas Come," a book by Dr. JohnRock, professor emeritus of gyn-ecology at the Harvard Univer-sity School of Medicine. The vol-umes will be presented to locallibraries requesting copies.

Mrs. Douglas W. Payneported on the annual conventionof the Planned Parenthood Fed-eration of America and World

l « t * " * • •-•• •"•"•Mrs. Kenneth Chianese

Mrs. Eugene J . Hill

Miss Janet FreemanWed to Eugene J. Hill

RED BANK-Miss Janet Mary-ann Freeman, daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Albert E. Freeman, 20Willow Rd., New Shrewsbury,

Joseph Hill, son of Mr. and Mrs.Otto Hill, 32 Idlewild La., Mat-awan. Rt. Rev. Msgr. SalvatoreDiLorenzo officiated at the cere-mony May 18 In St. Anthony'sCatholic Church.

Mrs. John Famulary was or-ganist. A reception followed inthe Colonial Room of the RiverPlaza fire house.

Mr. Freeman gave his daughterre- in marriage. She wore a high

neckline gown of Alencon laceand silk with a full skirt termi-nating in a chapel train. Herbouf-

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a colonial bouquet of daisies andorchids.

Miss Kathleen Freeman, athome, was maid of honor forher sister. She wore a street-length gown of mint green chif-fon over taffeta and a flowerheadpiece. The bridesmaids, MissJanet Litwite, and Beverly Kukanboth of Roselle Park, and MissKathleen OMally, Union Beach,were gowned in yellow. All car-ried baskets of yellow and whitedaisies. Also in an identical en-semble was Miss Jean Freeman,junior bridesmaid for her sister.Flower girl was Terry Jean Lou-don, Irvungton, cousin ofbride, wearing a frock identicalto those of the other attendants.

Michael Hill, Nixon, nephew ofthe bridegroom was ringbearer.

Best man was Albert Freeman,at home, brother of the bride.Ushers were William and CharlesNeithardt, Secaucus, cousins ofthe bride, and Robert Hill, Nixonnephew of the bridegroom.

The bride was graduated fromRoselle Park High School and isemployed at the MonmouthCounty National Bank, LittleSilver,

The bridegroom also wasgraduated from Roselle Park HighSchool and is with Cosmair, Inc.,Clark,

The couple now live in Roselle.

EAST KEANSBURG - .. . .marriage ol Miss Mary H. MeGuire, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.Michael McGuire, 81 Ocean Ave.,to Kenneth Ctoanese of Mt. Ver-non, N. Y., was solemnized at aNuptial Mass Saturday here inSt. Catherine's Catholic Church.

The bridegroom is the son ofDominick Chianese of Mt, Ver-non and the late Media Chianese.

R«v. Thaddeus Wojciehowskiofficiated at the double ringceremony and was celebrant ofthe Mass. A reception followedin Buck Smith's Restaurant.

Mr. McGuire gave his daugh-ter in marriage. She wore a longsleeved gown of Alencon lace ancsilk organza designed with ca-thedral train. Her bouffant vei.was held in place by a crown oforange blossoms and she carriedwhite orchids.

Miss Isabella McGuire, athome, was maid of honor for hersister. Her gown was of yellowchiffon and she carried white

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The carnations. The bridesmaids,Miss Ceceiia Walsh, Mt. Vernon,N. Y., arid Miss Ellen McGuire,Huntington Station, L. I , bothcousins of the bride, wore lilacchiffon gowns and carried redcarnations.

Anthony Chianese, Mt. Vemon,was best man for his brother.Ushers were the two brothers ofthe bride, Michael and AndrewMcGuire, at home.

The bride is a graduate of St.Mary's High School, Greenock,Scotland. She Is employed atElectronic Assistance Corp., RedBank.

The bridegroom, a graduate ofand Case High Sohool, Swansea,

Mass., is employed in the com-veil posing room of the Herald States-

man, Ypnkers, N. Y. He servedtwo years in the U.S. MarineCorps, with the rank of corporal.

The couple left for a weddingtrip to Canada. They will maketheir home at 23 North ColumbusAve., Mt. Vernon.

Janice Pauline Erker, daughterof Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Erker,Jr., Whippoorwill Valley Rd.,

hapel Hill, Middletown, wasmarried here Saturday in theFirst Methodist Church, in a dou-ble ring ceremony to Spec. 5/CWilliam Don Latimer, U.S. Army,son of Mr. and Mrs, J.E. Hick-man, Ardmore, Okla. Rev.Robert H Heulitt officiated. Ahome reception followed.

The bride was given in mar-riage by her father. She worea gown of imported silk organzaand Alencon lace.. The fittedbasque bodice was designed witha portrait neckline and longsleeves. The bell skirt revealedappliques of matching lace. A

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Miss Yaun BecomesBride of Army Officer

OAKHURST-The First Method-ist Church was the setting hereSaturday for the marriage ofMiss Dorothea H. Yaun, daugh-ter of Mr. and Mrs. James S.Yaun, 709 Talmadge Ave., to Lt.Peter K. Ferris, U.S. Army, withDr. John D. Blair officiating atthe double ring ceremony.

The bridegroom is the son olMr. and Mrs. Warren Ferris ofNewport, Ore.

Miss Evelyn Allen was organ-ist and Miss Sylvia Tannaz, solo-ist. A reception followed in theOfficers Club at Fort Monmouth.

Mr. Yaun escorted his daugh-ter. She wore a gown of silk or-ganza fashioned with a sabrinaneckline of Alencon lace andseeded pearls. The bell skirt, ap-pliqued with matching lace, term-inated in a chapel train from abow back. She carried a cascadeof lily-of-the-valley centered witha white orchid.

Miss Virginia Bach, AsburyPark, was maid of honor. Brides-maids were the Misses SandraHartley, Lincroft, and Patricia

Strigus, Neptune City. Miss Mi-chele Williams, Lincroft, wasjunior bridesmaid. All weregowned in pale yellow silk or-ganza and wore daisy headpieces.They carried bouquets of match-ing daisies.

Lt. Eugene A. Groves, Eaton-town, was best man. Ushers wereJohn Yaun, at home, brother ofthe bride, and Thomas De Mille,Long Branch.

The bride, a graduate of As-bury Park High School, attendedMonmouth College, West LongBranch, and is employed by Pep-si Cola Bottling Company, AsburyPark.

The bridegroom is an alumnusof Newport High School, Ore.,and Oregon State University, Cor-vallis, where he was a memberof Kappa Sigma fraternity. He isstationed with the Army at FortMonmouth.

The couple will live at 49 Lau-rel PI., Eatontown, after a wed-ding trip to the Pocono Moun-tains, Pa.

Bucknell Gets$50,000 Donation

LEWISBURG, Pa. (AP) - ANew Jersey man donated $500,000worth of securities to his almamater, Bucknell University, Satur-day for construction of a chapein memory of his parents.

The donation was made by Rob-ert L. Rooke, Westfield, N.J., whowas on the university campus inLewisburg for the 50th anniver-sary of his class graduation.

The chapel is to be called theCharles M. and Liva S. RookeChapel.

Among new trustees elected tothe university were Dr. Arthur L.Brandon, Weehawken, N.J., vicepresident of university relations atNew York University, and E. Wal-lace Wilkinson, Summit, N.J., vicepresident and treasurer of Alleg-henry Power Co.

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ented with pearls secured hetalian butterfly veil and she car-ied a crescent bouquet of whitiladiolos and babies'-breath.

Miss Arlene Albaum, Navesink,as the bride's only attendant.ier gown was of aquamarineatin and she carried a bouquef pale pink carnations.

Donald Slagel of Oklahoma waest man. Ushers were Jaclharles Erker, at home, brothef the bride, and Richarrd Seidel'eaneck, cousin of the bride.The bride is a graduate of Tea

eck High School and is em-loyed at Bell Telephone Laboatories, Holmdel.The bridegroom, a graduate o!rdmore High School, Oklahoma,: stationed at Fort Monmouthith the NEA Division.The couple will make thei:

ome in Long Branch.

yimAty, June 3,BED BANK REGISTER A

AuxiliariesPlan Events

LONG-BRANCH-A variety ofsocial and fund-raising activitiesis planned for the next fewmonths by auxiliaries of the

'amily and Children's Service.The Navarufnsunk Auxiliary

will hold a poolside luncheon onJune 13 with Mrs. James L. Ber-nard, 63 West River Rd., Rum-son, as hostess.

On June 28, the Second Aux-iliary will hold its annual bar-becue in place of its monthlymeeting. Miss Yvonne Guirewill be hostess at her home, 679Woodgate Ave., West End.

The Southern Monmouth Aux-iliary will hold a bazar July 18in the Essex and Sussex Hotel,Spring Lake, and the Mid-Mon-mouth Auxiliary will sponsor abooth at the New ShrewsburyFair on Sept. 5, 6, and 7. Mrs.Benjamin R. Pickering, Ne-vShrewsbury, is chairman incharge of arrangements.

T h e Middletown Auxiliary,which held a rummage sals re-cently, presented the service acheck of $600, proceeds from thesale, at a recent meeting in head-quarters here.

Mrs. Alton V. Evans, LongB r a n c h , personnel committeechairman, announced the ad-dition of Mrs. Frank Muser, so-cial worker, to the staff. She willbegin her duties on June 15. Mrs.Muser, who resides in Neptune,holds a master's degree in socialwork from the University of Mich-igan.

Miss Jeanne Rafferty, LittleSilver, and Miss Judith Evans,Long Branch will be employedfor 10 weeks during the summer.

May CrowningRED BANK-A crowning of the

Blessed Virgin Mary was heldrecently by the Blessed VirginMary Sodality of St. Anthony|sCatholic Church. Miss AdelineMazza was the crowner and MissJoanne Caruso was the crownbearer. Members of the court ofhonor were Misses Angela Figaro,Marie Anguili, Barbara Gualtleriand Mary Ann Vecchia.

Rt. Rev. Msgr. Salvatore DiLorenzo officiated at the con-secration of three new members.Misses Anna Rovito, MarianneMarascio and Tina Anguili.

Chairman was Miss Rose Pig-nataro, who was assisted byMisses Mildred Pace and Vin-cina Porcelli. Mrs. John Famu-lary was organist. •

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. hat 3, 1963 RED BANK

MARLBORO CITIZENS' DINNER — The Township Citizens' Committee held its first

annual diinner-danca Saturday night at The Turf, Madison Township. Shown checking

over the guest list at the affair are the general chairman, Gerald A. Bauman, Jr.,

(center), flanked by vice chairman, Bruno Petronio, left, and Philip Inglis, More

than 175 people attended the affair. The group recently spearheaded a successful

drive to change the form of government in the community.

Thousands ISee ParadeIn Freehold

FREEHOII>-Bright skies pre-vailed as thousands turned outto watch this community's an-nual Memorial Day parade. Morethan 50 units marched in theevent which lasted an hour andthree-quarters.

Mrs. Laura Nowack, generalchairman of the parade committee, said it was the largest par-ade, in numbers of both par-ticipants and onlookers, since theparade committee was formedseven years ago.

Assemblyman Clifton T. Barkalow set the tone for the day inhis address honoring thedead and delivered from a re-viewing stand at the Hall of Re-cords.

Members of local veterans or-ganizations and auxiliaries placedwreaths at the Memorial Mon-ument at Elks Point after whicha Fort Monmouth firing squadsaluted the war dead and "taps'was sounded.

After the ceremonies came theparade, led by Dominick Cerrato,parade marshal and Mayor FrankE. Gibson. The march concludedat Freehold Raceway.

Trophies were awarded at theraceway to participating units.

Judged the best appearing firstaid squad was the Englishtown-Manalapan unit. The trophy forthe most members in line went to

re unitw u woo" by the Marlboro FireCompany with its auxiliary win-ning in that category.

The Freehold Regional HighSchool band won the trophy inits classification with the secondprize going to the Freehold FireDepartment Band. The drum andbugle corps award went to theWalter J. Conley lodge, IBPOE,with runner up trophy garneredby the Guadalcanal Coastaliersof Cliffowood.

The Girl Scouts won the mosoriginal float trophy with secondprize going to Cub Scout Pack 18.Monmouth Post 54, AmericanLegion, and its auxiliary took Bank

lodge wwt * d » Walter J. Con-ley Lodge, 1BPOE, and the Set-ting Sun Cornell, Degree of Po-cahontas, was the winner of theauxiliary category.

The Catholic Youth Organiza-tion ot St. Rose of Lima Churchwas the winner of the trophy forthe best appearing youth organ-ization and the 4-H Rough Ridersgarnered the best appearinghorse unit trophy.

Judges for fee event were Mrs.Everett Woolfenden, Joseph Sum-mers, Ralph Ciazzo, and VernonStatesir. 'vv. > . '

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County MD Unit ElectsRED BANK - ' Michael J.i

Gormley, West Keansburg, was;elected president of the Mon-;mouth County Chapter, of theMuscuiar Dystrophy Associa-tions of America at a meetinghere last week. '

He succeeds Mrs. Melvin Yardof New Monmouth, who will be-come treasurer of the chapter.

Mrs. Yard reported on the as-sociation's 1962 campaign. Shesaid $24,957.50 was taken in, ofwhich $2,185.84 was used forcampaign expenses.

Mrs. Yard also announced thatthe chapter has opened a per-manent office at 710 MattisonAve., Asbury Park.

Also elected for 1963 were Mrs.Robert Walker of West LongBranch and George L. Reck, Jr.,of Hazlet, vice presidents; Mrs.Carolyn Shaw of West LongBranch, recording secretary; andMrs. Michael J. GormJey, corres-ponding secretary.

Named to Hhe executive com-mittee were John A. Richardson,Oceanport; Jerome Solari, Keans-

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METHODIST CHURCH EXPANDS — Architect's drawing of St. John's Methodist Church, Hazlet, as it will appearwhen completed. New parsonage, far left, was built this year. Center section of Educational Building was com-pleted several years ago. New church sanctuary, right, is now under construction. Two-story Fellowship Hall, atleft end of Educational Building, and utility building, front right, will be erected in future. Fire destroyed old churchedifice, South Main St., three months ago.

Church Construction Under WayHAZLET — A new construction program, which eventually

will cost an estimated $400,000 or more, is under way by St.John's Methodist Church.

: Fire destroyed the main section of the church March 8.The new sanctuary is being erected on Florence Ave., near

the site of the structure which was burned.Rev. Norman R. Riley, pastor, estimates that this phase

of construction, due to be completed in about six months, willcost $275,000. •

At some point in the future—the date is yet to be deter-mined—a Fellowship Hall wing will be added to the existingEducational Building. Cost estimates on this wing range from$100,000 to $150,000.

The wing will include' an auditorium and additional Sun-

day School facilities.

Charles Schultz Construction Co., Long Branch, is general

contractor for construction of the sanctuary, which will seat

about 600 persons. ;

The history of St. John's Church goes back to the early

lBOO's.

At present, the church has a membership of 1,100. Some

850 children are enrolled in the Sunday School.

Church services are currently being held at Central School,

Keyport.

250 Paintings in Freehold Show

AMATEUR WATERCOLOR WINNER — Mrs. Diane M.Harod of Shark River Hills is shown with four of her en-tries at the fourth annual exhibit of the Freehold ArtSociety. The top left painting entitled "So Still," wonher a blue ribbon in the amateur watercolor class. Thepaintings along with 246 others were on display in frontof the Hall of Records on Friday and Saturday.

FREEHOLD—The fourth annual exhibit of the FreeholdArt Society was held on Friday and Saturday when 250 paint-ings by 40 artists were exhibited in front of the Hall of Rec-ords here.

Co-chairman of the affair, Mrs. Kenneth A. Baird, SwanLake Park, Freehold Township, said the exhibit was thelargest in the history of the' event.

Three prizes were awarded in the professional and ama-teur categories of oil paintings and watercolors. Pen-and-inkdrawings, pastels and woodcuts were included in the water-color category.

A large number of still lifes and many seascapes, rural

paintings, and portraits were exhibited this year.

A few abstract entries used poems and symphonies asthemes and a few reached far out into the universe, inspiredby recent outer space explorations.

Some of the paintings were for sale. The first sale of.three paintings came from a special display, by Max Walters,an elderly patient at the John L. Montgomery Medical Home,whose pictures were not entered in competition. Two of hispaintings were of horses and the other of deer. The three weresold for {8.

Judges of the event were all professional artists. They in-cluded Mrs. Elizabeth Lansdale Hammell, Red Bank; JamesCrank, Asbury Park, and Earl Tyler, Bay Head.

Mrs. Hammell displayed part of her collection.

Students at Freehold Regional High School were among theexhibitors. Several students displayed samples of their sculp-ture. Mrs. Baird said a sculpture category may be includednext year.

Winners in the professional oil category were Ray Maherwith "Medicine Man"; Millicent Freyere, "Skippy andFriends," and Mona Kirt, " Still Life."

Amateur oil winners were John Kirk, "Still Life;" Mrs.Baird, "Swimming Hole," and Boyd Pryor, "Farm Boy."

Professional watercolor winners were Lucile Geiser,"Flowers and Log"; Ceil Grayer, "Mist," and Wini Smart"Winter Day." Amateur winners were Diane M. Harod, "SoStill"; Margaret Baird, "Penn Lake," and Helen Amm,"Winter."

Mrs. Amm was co-chairman with Mrs. Baird.

Wins Third Straight Science Fair AwardNEW SHREWSBURY - For

the third consecutive year JohnCastellini received a first placeaward in the Tinton FallsSchools annual Science Fair.

John, an eighth grader, made

all three grades at Tinton FallsSchool. Both Mr. Camarigg andRobert I. Price, school principal,commented that the quality of

an incubator and hatched five period.

the projectsgreatly over

chicks. In jars of formaldehydehe had embryos in the 12th ative ability, original thought andthrough 21st days of develop-ment.

John's was one of a hundredexhibits set up in the gymnasiumof Tinton Falls School Friday.

The science fair was originatedas a sixth grade class projectby Eugene Camarigg, sixth gradeteacher. The second and thirdyears it was enlarged to include

hasthe

improvedthree-year

Exhibits were judged on ere-

neatness of presentation. Judgeswere Mr, Price, Edward A. Pav-lovsky, principal of SycamoreSchool, and Norman A. Worth-ington, head of the science de-partment of Monmouth RegionalHigh Sohool.

Kirk Miller received secondplace among eighth graders forhis "Effect of Alcohol on Mice".

Jackie Davenport, the only girlto win an award, received thirdin the eighth grade for her blueand gold display of mathematicalformulas and shapes.

Norman Einhorn was first inthe seventh grade for his demon-stration of depth perception. Rob-in Jameson was second with"Psychological Observations of

VeteransBack State LotteryNEWARK (AP) — The Depart-,elected included Harry Muenzen-

ment of New Jersey, Army and

Navy Union, called Saturday for

a statewide lottery to finance a

bonus for veterans of World War

II and Korea.

In other action at the 47th an-nual convention, the 350 delegatesof the 3,000-member organizationadopted resolutions calling for:

—Construction of a new Veter-ans Administration hospital inSouth Jersey,

—Enforcement of the MonroeDoctrine through the Organizationof American States.

—Release of a bill In the SenateSubcommittee on Veterans Affairsthat would give veterans of WorldWnr II and Korea the opportunityto repurchase national service lifeinsurance.

- A $100-a-month pension for all born lo let go, a scuffle occurred,veterans of World War 1 who have police said,reached 05. Sanboru was arrested and then

Fred Kozlowski of Newark was released on $100 bail. Hearingelected commander at the union's will be tonight before Magistrateconcluding session Sunday. Others Irving B. Zeichncr.

berger of Camden, senior vicecommander; John Spencer of At-lantic City, junior vice command-er; Ransom Gaskill of AtlanticCity, paymaster, and ClintonReeves of Woodbury, judge advo-cate.

Charge AssaultOn Policemen

HIGHLANDS - Ralph San-born, 22, Fifth St., was arrestedby Patrolmen Howard Brey andThomas Sutton Friday night andcharged with assault.

According to police, the patrol-men were making a routine checkof the Vacation Bar, Bay Ave.,when Sanborn grabbed Sutton'snrm and tried to detain him.

When Patrolman Drey told San-

Mice in Maze". Jerry Cooper third.

got third award for a one-tubradio made from spare parts.

Graydon Goss placed first ithe sixth grade with an iliumnated chart defining terminolog)and procedures of space travelLawrence Froehlich took a se>ond with the physics of sound,Richard Ovestrud's electromechanical number board placet

Mark Tercentenary DayLITTLE SILVER - Satur-

day was Tercentenary Dayhere. The celebration featuressunny skies, a town crier andfolk singers in period costume,community dancing — and en-thusiastic youngsters.

Among the visitors wasState Sen. Richard R. Stout,West Allenhurst. The celebra-tion is a prelude to the state'sTercentenary observance nextyear.

Mrs. A. E. Grudin, tercen-enary committee chairman,stimated that 150 youngstersi their early 'teens joined inhe afternoon square dancing.Approximately 200 older teen-lgers and adults attended thesvening block dance, she said.

'Most Enthusiastic'

Mrs. Grudin described theyounger residents of the bor-ough as "most enthusiastic"about the celebration. How-ever, she voiced- disappoint-ment that "e adults had notparti cipatec

Among those clad in thedress of 1663 were employeesof the W. T. Grant Co. store.Mrs. Ann Crawford, Oceanport,assistant manager, said thestore distributed 1,000 carna-tions to shoppers in the Pros-pect Ave. shopping center. Thestore also featured an old-fashioned candy sale during theday.

Display DocumentsAn exhibit of old documents,

arranged by Mrs. Neil G.Smith, opened in the boroughlibrary. It will continue allmonth.

News of 1663 was proclaimedby the town crier, John Palum-bo. Members of the Red BankHigh School Folk Singers, whostrolled through the boroughsinging ancient ballads, in-cluded Phyllis Nadeau, Bob Kd-sen, Danny Brown, LawrenceAshin, Patty Barrett, CynthiaCarlton, Carolyn Rush, JaniceKerr, Gigi Blair, Bonnie Young,and Cheryl Wainwright.

Published NewsletterDavid Marsihall, 7 Westwood

Rd., a student in the MarWiamPlace School, announced thecelebration from a sound truckwhich was driven through theborough early in the day.

The Tercentenary Day com-mittee published a newsletter,"Little Silver Times," , compiled by Mrs. Robert Kennedy.Mrs. Grudin expressed hopethat proceeds will be usedtoward establishment of a com-munity center for teenagers.She said the newsletter will re-main on sale all year.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Boykin

Auto KillsPedestrianOn Route 35

CLIFFWOOD - A 45-year-ol<man was killed on Rt. 35 'atiFriday night as he was walkingacross the highway near CountyRd., Matawan Township, policereported.

Police said Robert Johnsonwhose last known address wa:Third Ave. Cliffwood, was struckby a car driven by Eugene T.Baldwin, Frances PI., NorthCenterville, Raritan Township.

Mr. Baldwin was released ii$1,000 bail on a technical chargfof causing death by auto, pending a Municipal Court hearing

Police said the pedestrian waipronounced dead on arrival iPerth Amboy General Hospital.

Police Chief J. Edgar Wilkinson said Mr. Baldwin declined tcgive police a statement as tithe cause of the accident.

No court date has been set.

HATCHES A WINNER — Eugene Camarigg, right, sixth grade teacher at Tinton FallsSchool, admires chick hatched in incubator-egg development exhibit which took topaward in the school's science fair Friday. John Castellini, left, was the exhibitor andtook top award for the third consecutive year in the annual event.

directed the square dancing,and the Tony Manfredi Or-chestra played lor the blockdancing. Both dances were heldin the parking lot of the localbranch of the Monmouth Coun-

ty National Bank. Prizes weredonated by the W. T. Grant Co.

Tercentenary Day cqmmitteemembers included: A. E. Gru-din, Mrs. John Palumbo, Mr.and Mrs. Joseph Howard, Mrs.

Charles Oakerson, Mr, andMrs. Robert Edmunds, Mr. andMrs. Benjamin Ashin, Mrs.William Towers, Mrs. PederGiselson, Mis. Joseph Baclga-lupi, and Mrs. Kennedy.

THEY WERE DANCING IN THE STREETS at Little Silver Saturday. It was part of theborough's Tercentenary celebration which was centered at the parking lot adjacent tothe borough hall.' Picking up some pointers from Mrs. Robert Boykin, right, a danceinstructor of Lincroft, are Phyliss Nadeau of Little Silver and Daniel Brown of Shrews-bury.

To Employ500 on JCPLLacey Plant

EATONTOWN - William H.McElwain, president of JerseyCentral Power & Light Companyand New Jersey Power & LightCompany, has announced thatmore than 500 persons will beemployed in the 'construction ofJCPL's proposed nuclear-fueledgenerating station in LaceyTownship.

Mr. McElwain, speaking at thecompanies' 15th annual Reportto the Press at Crystal BrookInn, Friday night, said most ofthe work force probbaly will comefrom the area. However, he em-phasized selection of employeeswill be left up to the companyactually building the plant.

He said JCPL hopes to re-ceive proposals for building theplant sometime this summer andaward a contract before the endof this year. The company hasinvited proposals from GeneralElectric Company and the Westinghouse Electric Corporation, headded.

In Operation In '68The electric utility announced

May 2 it would begin work some-time in 1965 on the 500,000 kilo-watt nuclear plant. It is expectedto be in preliminary operationin 1968 and full operation in1969.

The plant will be built on acompany-owned, 800-acre tractbounded by the Garden StateParkway, Rt. 9, the South Branchof the Forked River, and OysterCreek.

Mr. McElwain said last nightdetails of the plant won't beknown until a proposal has beenaccepted. But, he said, somegeneral plans are known.

He said JCPL will build sixbridges at a total cost of about$300,000. One bridge will be builtover Oyster Creek and anotherwill span the Forked Riverbranch, both on Rt. 9. They wilreplace existing bridges whichwill become obsolete with thewidening of both streams, Mr.McElwain said.

Rail Span

Two railroad bridges also wilbe constructed. One each wilspan the streams and will replace existing ones carrying linesof the Central Railroad of NewJersey.

A fifth bridge will be built toreplace an existing span oncounty road over the SouthBranch of the Forked River, andthe sixth bridge will be built forJCPL's use for access to theproposed plant.

Plans call for widening anddredging both streams, he saidto provide means for the intakeand discharge of cooling waterfor the condensing unit in theproposed generating station.

Mr. McElwoin said an infor-mation center will be built nearthe station. It and the plant wilbe open to the public, The planwill consist of at least six buildings, all of which will be bullbetween 1,000 and 2,000 feet wesof Rt. 9 between Oyster Creekand the South Branch of theForked River.

"New Jersey's first nuclear-fueled generating station shouldbe of particular interest to ski-deht groups," Mr. McElwain said,"These groups and the public wilbe welcome to visit ur once ourinformation center is in opera-tion."

ELIZABETH — A one-storymaintenance building in the Jer-sey Central Railroad yards inElizabethport was destroyed yes-terday by a three-alarm fire. The50-year-old building was unoocupied and no injuries were re-ported from the fire. Loss esti-mates ran as high as $500,000. Anumber of minor explosions occurred in the early stages of thefire, believed caused by gasolinein the tanks of trucks within thebuilding. Several trucks, signalsand signal repair tools weredestroyed but much of the equip-ment stored in the building, aright-of-way equipment repairshop, was out and in use whenthe fire started. The blaze wasreported at 2:20 p.m. and broughtunder control in about an hour.

New JerseyNews Briefs

By The Associated Press

ANNAPOLIS - The NavalAcademy will honor 25 of Itsgraduates today at the seconddress parade of the lune Weekcelebration. Midshipmen whohave demonstrated outstandingofficer-like qualities will begiven commendatory letters byRear Adm. C. C. Kirkpatrlck,superintendent ol the academy.Among those to be honored isPaul V. Roundy, 3d, brigadeoperations officer, Avon-by-thc-Sea, N. J .

POINT PLEASANT BEACH -An auto driven by Essex CountySheriff Leroy J. D'Aloia was in-volved in a two-car collision onRt. 35 and Forman Ave. Thurs-day night. Police said neitherD'Aloia nor the driver of the sec-ond car, William F. Fuetterer ofHackensack, was injured in theaccident. Officers said the vehides suffered slight damageand no charges were filed. Thesheriff's office in Newark saidD'Aloia was driving his officialcar at the time of the accident,He was spending the holida;weekend here, the office said.

NEWARK — A pair of shoes,size 3, are en route to Cubabecause a Newark shoe dealercouldn't say no to the plea of aCuban girl. In a letter to JohnDeegan, the girl said her onlypair of shoes were badly wornand added, "If you want to doa good action, send me theshoes (by air mall) and Godpay you for me." The letterwas signed "Nury Acin." Deeg-an mailed the 16-year old girlthe shoes. He said the lettermight be a hoax, "but I'll takethat chance. She'd have a jobfinding a size 3 in Cuba. I un-derstand these are not exactlywhat you call good times downthere."

TRENTON — New Jersey statioffices will close a half houearly during the summer. Gov.Richard J. Hughes, in line with ntraditional policy, directed thatquitting time be moved up ihalf hour starting June 17. Thisummer schedule will remain ineffect until Sept. 6. Most statioffices now close at 4:30 p.m. o5 p.m. The 4:30 closings willbe moved up to 4 p.m. and 5o'clock whistles will blow at 4:30under the summer schedule.

ATLANTIC CITY - LloydLlppln ef Linden was Installed

Saturday as president of theNew Jersey State ExchangeClubs, succeeding CharlesWhitehead of New Brunswick,Election and installation of Lip-pin came during the organiza-tion's 38th annual convention.Some 600 persons from 41 clubsIn the state attended the meet-ing. Named vice president wasStephen Cesare of Buena Vista.James Harrison of Trenton andLem Thompson of Morristownwere re-elected to the posts ofsecretary and treasurer, respec-tively. Miss Nancy Parr of At-lantic City was presented witha $50 bond for placing secondin a nationwide crime preven-tion week essay contest spon-sored by the national exchangeclub.

Tax FormsMailed OutBy State Unit

TRENTON (AP)-Businessmenand farmers will get forms fromthe State Treasurer's Office with-in the next few days asking themto list the value'of their machin-ery, equipment and inventories.

The forms, which are beingmailed this week, are for statisticcal purposes only and will not beseen by the local tax assessor,the treasurer's office said.

They must be completed and re-turned by Aug. 1. The law requir-ing the forms provides fines ofup to $25 a day or a maximum of$500 for late filing.

The State Legislature agreed tothe forms earlier this year to givethe treasurer's office some helpin determining the effect of asweeping property tax reform law.

The tax reform was postponedthis year, tor the third consecu-tive year, pending filing and anal-ysis of the forms.

Tax Director William Kingsleysaid the new forms "are in effectan invitation to businessmen to layout the facts."

If an analysis of the forms indi-cates the tax reform law wouldgreatly increase the property taxburden, as feared by some busi-nessmen, then the legislature couldamend the law before it becomeseffective, Kingsley said,

The Informational returns comein a 20-page booklet with an en-velope addressed to the local prop-erty tax bureau in Trenton.

Each booklet contains forms forbusinessmen whose tangible per-sonal property used in businessexceeds $25,000; shorter forms forthose who have a net book valuoof less than $25,000; and formsfor farmers.

Among the Information request-ed on the forms is (he name andaddress of the person, typo of busi-ness, basis for figuring inventoryand price; value of inventoriesand supplies; original cost of tan-gible personal property used hibusiness; and the net value forfederal income tax purposes.

All of the questions are appli-cable to tho 1962 calendar yearand separate forms ore requiredfor each taxing district In whichthe businessman or farmer ownedproperty in 1962.

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»»*• - » * • .

v j i N T B A R R O W A L A S K A

* T.

LEBANON, KAN5.

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A1TU, ALASKA

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WEST OUODDY HEAD, ME

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BUTIE COUNTY, S. DAK.

•- -

Planning a vacation? Well, how's your geography?Here's a pictorial tour of the U.S., showing the extreme geo-

graphical points of both the continental US. end the larger 50state area.

Before you read any further see if you can guess where thenorthernmost, southernmost, westernmost, easternmost and cen-tral points of both areas are.

Now, to check your .knowledge, these are the locations as fur*nished by the U.S. Dept. of Interior.

Geographic Center of the 50 states Is In Butfe County, S. Dak.,about 17 miles west of Castle Rock. For the continental U.S. it is inLebanon, Smith County, Kans,

Northernmost point of the 50 states is Pt. Barrow, Alaska. Forthe continental U.S. it's Lake of the Woods, Minn.

Southernmost point in the 50 state area is Ka Lae Cape, Hawaii.For the continental U.S. ifs Cape Sable, Fla. counting only themainland or Key West, Fla., counting the Florida Keys.

Westernmost point for the 50 states is Attu, Alaska in the Aleu-tian Island chain. For the continental U.S. it's Cape Alava, Wash.

fasfernmosf point for both the 50 states and the continentalU.S. Is West Quoddy Head, Me.

How many did you guess right?

7-.'

KA LAE CAPE, HAWAII

W."" * - . . «

* * .

CAPE SABLE, FLA.

\

\

\ KEY WEST, FLA.

V

Thii W(tk'« PICTURE SHOW-AP Newif««tutM.

' I

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BED BANK REGISTER lam %, 1963—15 AreaMeet Tonight

FREEHOLD—The Shore AreaIks will hold their regular meet-

Post Caja'tAccept BidFor Parcel

LONG BRANCH - BrightonMemorial Post of the Veterans ofForeign Wars has had secondthoughts about a parcel of landit acquired from the city in 1954tor »00.

The VFW has had an offerof $4,000 to sell the small lotit has occupied on Dudley St.But it learned It oan't sell be-cause its deed from the city wasconditioned on an agreement theland would always be used forpurposes of the nationally-char-tered organization.

Anthony Irene, VFW spokes-mat), told City Council Tuesdaythe post wanted to sell the landto raise money to help offset thecost of its recently-built head-quarters on Willow Ave.

City Attorney Louis Aikins,apologizing to the organizationfor the hard background facts,said law doesn't permit councilto give the post an unencum-bered deed. Nor can it do any-thing but take back title if theproperty ceases to be used bytte VFW, he said.,

Hoping that some solution with-ta the law and satisfactory to theVFW can be found, councilagreed to consider the item againat a later date in caucus. VFWmembers will be invited to takepart

WASHINGTON - It begins toappear that the West is, after all,to be spared the formation of apowerful and Soviet-armed "neu-tralist" bloc in the Middle East -but certainly not because of anyvery sensible action by the Westitself.

The founding father ol this en-terprise, Col. Gamal Abdel Nas-ser of Egypt, is current history'spet He is the darling alike of"anti-colonialists," of Commun-ists and proComniunists, andof good but deluded anti-Com-munists who believe the best wayto preserve'peace in the MiddleEast is to make big and power-hungry Arab states out of littleones.

The "anti-colonialists" loveNasser because he long since gotaway with kicking around the

Seek to UpsetHotel Variance

FREEHOLD — Repubican vo-ters in Sea Girt apparently ex-pressed a negative opinion in theApril 19 primary on a zoningvariance the all-Republican gov-erning body granted for a newStockton Hotel on the beachfrontsitef of the present, now-closedlandmark.

The voters denied Mayor Ed-ward T. Doyle, their chief ad-ministrative officer for 20 years,nomination for re-election. Hihad cast the deciding vote tobreak a 3-3 tie of council.

Tuesday a dozen property own-•rs in the beachfront area filedsuit in Superior Court to get ajudgment which would agree withthe voters' verdict, though on aprinciple of law rather than sen-timent.

The suit named the Board olAdjustment, Borough Council, anthe ownership of the StocktonHotel, Inc. as defendants.

In 1962, the present more-than-M-year-old frame and stucco, 175-iopm hotel was closed. The own-ers, last April 9, won a zoningvariance to build a five-story,modern, fireproof, 270-room uniton the same site, in what is oth-erwise an exclusive one-familyresidential zone.

Five days later, the Republicanvoters, in an election where thehotel Issue was the key, madetheir views known. Defeated withthe mayor were two incumbentcouncilmendorsements.

seeking party en-

The law suit, filed by WilliamL. Dill of Newark, contends thevariance should be set aside be-cause there was no proof beforecouncil that the need was sogreat as to justify deterring thpublic interest or ignoring theborough's zone plan and zoninpordinance.

The action also contends "onor more" councilmen had prede-termined the issue and that,therefore, the council vote wa:Improper.

Convict ManOf Forgery

FREEHOLD—A Red Bank manaccused of stealing and forginjan endorsement on a check fromthe office of an Asbury Parklawyer was acquitted of stealingTuesday but found guilty of forg-ing.

Mllfred Water, 45, of Montgom-erv Ter., Red Bank, drew thesplit verdict from a jury beforeMonmouth County Judge EdwardJ. Ascher. He will be sentencedJune 14 for the forgery, whichallegedly netted him proceedsfrom a $623 draft.

Abraham KliUman, an AsburyPark attorney, reported last Feb.28 a stack of checks was missingfrom his secretary's desk.

Stop payment orders blockedthe cashing of all but one.

But Waters, according to As-ilstant Prosecutor John W. Ap-plegate, had one check and forgeithe name of the beneficiary ahe cashed it at a store operatedby Benjamin Cohen, ShrewsburyAvc., Red Bank.

Waters wag defended by HaroldFreund, of Asbury Park.

WILLIAM S. WHITEBritishclaims

Driver Cleared[n Auto Death

FREEHOLD - Extended delib-eration by a Monmouth CountyCourt jury on the legal meaningof the word "wanton" in a death-by-auto case wound up in a ver-dict of innocent for a young Free-hold man.

Martin K«rekes, 27, ol 117 Cen-ter St., had been Indicted in theauto fatality on Rt. 35, Feb. 3,of Pvt. Jose Maldinado, a FortMonmouth soldier, whose bodybody was found In the highway.

Kerekes later was convicted inMunicipal Court of leaving thescene of an accident. He was indieted for causing death by auto,on the contention his action was'wanton."Represented by Theodore J.

Labrecque, Jr., of Red Bank, thedefendant admitted being in-volved >n the fatal collision, ad-mitted fleeing the area, but de-nied any willful intent.

After three hours' deliberationTuesday, the jury was calledback by Judge Edward J. Ascherto give an opinion about how longit would take to reach a verdict.The foreman indicated the situa-tion was hopeless. But anotherjuror asked for a tighter defini-tion of the word "wanton."

Judge Ascher said it meanta "reckless" disregard of thesafety of others. The jury wenback to its cuticle. Within twominntes Its long debate was over.It returned and said "not guilty.'

Divorce DecreesFREEHOLD - Two divorce:

recently approved by SuperiorCourt Judge Leon Leonard werefiled here Tuesday.

Ann W. Kirschner, Old Mill Rd.,Wall Township, won a decree ongrounds of desertion from RobertKirschner, of Point PleasantBeach, whom she married Jan

, 1943.Mrs. Kirschner was awarded

custody of the couple's child$30 a week support, and $450in counsel fees and court costs.She was represented by SeymouCohen of Hackensack; Mr,Kirschner, by Rocco Ravasch-

a "revolution." These types areautomatically enchanted with'revolutionary" movements, par-

ticularly in an old and dustyarea like the Middle East wherethere has been much ancient in-justice. For, to them, revolutionsnecessarily have the cardinalrecommendation of being "for-ward-1 o o k i n g" whereas, olcourse, the maintenance of tra-ditional powers necessarily isbackward-looking.

Good, But Deluded

The good but deluded anti-Com-munists—of whom the AmericanState Department has more thana few—have gone along withNasser in the notion that if he

allowed to " d e v e l o p hisregion" he may become less in-timately "dependent" upon theSoviet Union.

Finally, though Nasser is asworn enemy of Israel—the onlyout-and-out and effectively faith-ful Western ally in all the MiddleEast—there has been in recentyears a sharp turn in the viewof American and British liberalintellectuals toward the Israelis.

Once, to these people, the Is-raelis could do no wrong; nowthey can do little that is right.The reason for the turnaboutseems to be that the toughly real-istic Israelis persist in lookingupon the cold war as a trulytough enterprise, not really to bewon by lofty talky-talk or'even

"under-"newly

iere,John

Bank.Linde, 31 13th St., Wes

Keansburg, received an awardfrom Patricia G. Linde, 153Highland Blvd., Keansburg, foiadultery. They were married Oct.26, 1953. Mr. Linde received cus-tody of their three children.

Benjamin I. Kantor was at-torney for Mr. Linde. Tinaction was not contested.

Only 3 per cent of Norway iiunder cultivation.

andhis

because he pro-movement to be

JUNIOR CD TEAM — High Schoolers at Fair Haven have formed a unique Junior Civil Defense Corps to back

up the regular CD organization there. Membership includes, standing from left, John Vassar in charge.of trans-

portation; Bob Gordon, radiology; Lawrence Farley, director; Borough CD director Melvin P. Stout; Mrs. Roy W .

Nelson, adviser to the group; Louise Wiesen, religion; Linda: Noweck, supplies; Laurel Wolfe, public relafiont, and

Vera A. Nelson, medical and health. Seated, Bill Rich, fire; Robert Knobloch, communications; Patricia Mylott,

.warden; Ann Korzdorfer, warden; Linda Stout, deputy director, and Sharon Acker, first aid.

Fair HavenYouths HelpCD Council

FAIR HAVEN - A group ofhigh school students . here hasdonned helmets and taken cours-es in first aid and mass feedingto become what is believed to bethe first junior Civil Defense Or-ganization in the area.

Borough CD director Melvin P.tout said the unit has enlisted

14 boys and girls between thages of 15 and 17, and hopes toincrease its ranks to 30 or 40.

As the first assignment, members learned the general duties olthe Civil Defense staff. One otheir projects will be to tabulatiand classify data obtained inforthcoming CD census here,course in blood group typing isalso contemplated.

The Junior Civil Defense pro-gram requires two or more hoursof duty per month learning withand assisting the 15 divisions olthe regular staW.

Mrs. Roy W. Nelson is thesponsor and adviser to the groupMisses Vera A. Nelson and LindaL, Stout are school representa-tive and secretary, respectivelyThey ar ein charge of recruiting.

by endless concern withprivileged areas" andemerging states."

Lost "Membership'The Israelis, in a word, have

lost their membership in the clubof the forward-looking for tworeasons. They are not the leastconfused about the true motivesof international communism. Andthey don't at all accept the ideathat the way to win over pro-So-viet "neutralists" is give themmore and more aid—as we havegiven Nasser—and more andmore sympathy in the hope thaiall this will turn them to ourside.

Nevertheless,reasons cited

forhere,

all theNasser's

wave has long been the waveof the future. Hardly a monthago, while an open military ag-gressor in the kingdom of Ye-men—an aggression instantly for-given him by the United Statesbecause, after all, Yemen aspathetic little monarchy is notforward-looking—he set out tocreate a new Pan-Arabian blockto be formed of Egypt, Syriaand Iraq.

Since he is undeniably andheavily armed with Soviet weap-ons introduced by Soviet "tech-nicians" there would hawseemed something rather sinis-ter in this new reach of Nasser-ism into the Middle East. Still,the West encouraged rather thandiscouraged him. And so it hadlooked that nothing could stopthis new instance of forward-look-ing revolution.

Now, however, Nasser haoverplayed his own hand—withSyria and Iraq While they werewilling to enter this new asso-ciation they soon found the in-evitable — that Nasser wantedthem not as honest associatesbut as stooges to himself. Rightaway pro-Nasser plots intendedto take away their sovereigntywere discovered in both Syriaand Iraq. Now, Syria and Iraqare reported busily preparingtwo-nation unity aimed not tospread the glories of the newPan-Arab movement but ratherto defend themselves againstNasserism.

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2 ChildrenHurt in Crash

FAIR HAVEN — Two childrensuffered minor injuries Thursdayas a result of an automobile collision at Hance and Ridge Rds

Police Chief Carl Jakubecy nported that a car operated bjRose Maimone, 27 Carlile Ter.,Little Silver, was going northon Hance Rd. at 11:45 a.m. andfailed to stop at the intersection,

A second vehicle, going east orRidge Rd., the chief said, opeated by Joan Maxwell, 31, <16 Spear St., Sommerville, waistruck by the Maimone car.

Slightly injured and treated b;their family doctor, were MarjMaxwell, 12, and Donald Max-well, 7.

Patrolman Louis A. DeVito issued careless driving summonse:to both drivers.

Nursing CareClaim Settled

FREEHOLD—A Keyport praitical nurse accepted $7,500settlement of a lawsuit again!the estate of a man for whoshe claimed she had renderecare for six years without pa;ment.

The agreement between MrMadeline E. Ryer, of 28 MyrtlAve., Keyport, the nurse, wilMrs. Lily J. Simpson of Washinton, Ga., for the estate of heihusband, Frank, was approved b;Monmouth County Judge Elvin RSimmill.

Mrs. Ryer had claimed $10,9'as fair compensation for hservices and supervision at hhome and in Florida for varioilengthy periods in the six-ye,term. She claimed Mr. Simpsodied without a will and that untithe court decision her demamwent unanswered.

Norman Currie of Keyport, w,counsel to Mrs. Ryer. Sidney LSawyer of Keyport, representecthe estate.

24 Towns AdoptMeeting Rites

SPRING LAKE — TimothySullivan, originator of the plato have all governmental bodiopen public meetings withprayer and a Pledge of Allegiance, said yesterday his movtalready has won adoption inmunicipalities as well as amonthe Monmouth County BoardFreeholders.

A Wall Township school teacler, Mr. Sullivan said the 24 towgoverning bodies subscribinghis suggestion are in addition t<the five which already had similar practices when he beganeffort six weeks ago. He said tliresult is that at least a majoriof Monmouth County towns havadopted the practice.

FROST DAMAGETRENTON - The F a r m e r

Home Administration says thtNew Jersey fruit and vegetmbligrowers whoso crops were damij>ed in a severe frost lust Friday may apply for emergenc;"ivms. The frost, which caiiphnany ifarmers by surpris*uused heavy damage to bluterry crops in Burlington amcean Counties. Cranberry, beanotato and tomato crops als;re damaged when tempera

ires skidded to 18 degrees;>me areas.

U t h e fcetl VAi/fi t>t\t*iA far the n e w n a i l , M r , UdaA'TL 7*m> .— - m m,.iffAel uiA, but Y/*n vA for tteiFrtd Sebnti*, & of * * *

E d g a r Dinfcelspiel, crippledchildren committee president,said that studies will continue re-garding the establishment ofanother speech clinic. A target

end of the year.

New members inducted intothe organization at the last meet-ing, held at Belmar Lodge 2151,were Bernard J. Sharkey, Ralph

sfeip, tad C MPark.

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Page 16: DigiFind-It · 2015. 4. 9. · MX toraorr tttttd •». Wetbetdty, ttlr tad «m, fet tntthet, page 2. 21,675 DIAL SH 1-0010 VOL 85 NO 242 Um»" * • mow km u ui. Bank um u MHUSoul

Matawan Regains Conference TitleHuskies Defeat Monmouth Reg.,21 ; Falcons9 Southern Champ

Nina Vuyosevich R a r l o 'Nips Frazier InRiver Rat Race

FAIR HAVEN - Nina Vuyo*evfch nipped Quentin Frailer by

KEYPQRT - Mtttwu Re-gtonal H i * School has retainedits Shore Conference B Division oad on the wild throw to first.baseball championship.

Coach George Deiti'» powerfulHuskies, Northern B Division ti- grounded out.

field out tnd scored as Mango

tie-holders, nipped MonmouthRegional High School's SouthernB Division chunpipns, H , (orthe over-all Conference crown onKeyport High School'i diimondSaturday.

Coach Ruts Mtcaluso's Fal-cons won their first Conferencechampionship on Friday, edgingHenry Hudson Regional, 2-1, ineight innings to nail down .theSouthern crown.

George Morrell hurled a two-hit gem to gain a second straight

for Matawan. Morrell not onlypitched a sensational game tobeat Ralph Mango's three-hit ef-fort, but won his own game witha two-run triple in the thirdinning.

Monmouth scored Its lone run

in the first when Rich Cone sin-gled to deep short and took sec- ting save.

He moved on to third on an in- hit off Morrell in the sixth—a

Morrell settled down after thatto blank the Southern championsthrough the final six frames.

The Huskies broke throughMango's spell in the third. JohnSictels drew a walk. EddieFlynn forced Sickels, but prompt-ly stole second. Ken Szyartowalked to set the stage for Mor-rell's booming. triple down theright field line. Freshman thirdsacker Pete Tuck saved furtherdamage with a great stop ofChuck Ganfano's hard shot be-

overUil B Division championship tween third and short. Tuck'ssubsequent throw nipped Garafano at first, saving t run.

Tuck again came to Mango'srescue In the seventh with anoth-er fine play on a Garafanogrounder. The Huskies had aman on when the Monmouth

By Hy Cunningham

MONMOUTH'S SEASON IS ON — MonmouthPark Jockey Club, Oceanport's biggest tax customer,rolled up the curtain Friday afternoon with a biggercrowd than last year's early June opening for the benefit of those Shore towns that took a beating with iwicked March storm. Friday's crowd here was largerby 3,892 persons than last year's opening day.

Speaking of crowds at race tracks, that wasquite a Memorial Day for racing. Race programsat 21 horse plants operating in the country drewa total of 400,898 fans and produced a total pari>mutuel handle of $25,104,548, according to a sur-vey by Associated Press.

Those figures represented an increase of 21,181in attendance and $1,335,633 over Memorial Day 1962when 17 operating tracks drew crowds totaling 379,617and handled $23,768,913.

Aqueduct in New York and Hollywood Parktopped the list this year, with the Big A's crowdof 65,276 and handle of $5,311,375 the fourthlargest in New York history.

Hollywood drew 64,284 who wagered $4,310,862down from last year's crowd of 68,132 but an increasein betting from last year's $4,183,535. Our point withthese figures is the fact the public must like to gamble.At the Monmouth opening the fans sent $1,450,896through the machines.

This was probably the first time in the his-tory of Monmouth Park that it opened its seasonin May. The track's curtain went up Friday, MaySI. Barker Seeley, Monmouth's publicity chief,was no doubt a real "worry wart" early Fridaywhen fans were moving into the parking lots ata snail's pace. Traffic picked up considerably anhour or so later, because a fine Friday crowd wason hand. And even Saturday there were brightskies and smiling officials' faces.

Saturday's attendance of 31,757 was an increaseof 1,288 over last year's second day attendance andgave the track an attendance hike of 5,180 for the firsttwo days of operation. The betting Saturday was $1,-845,459, bringing the take to $3,296,355 for two days,an increase of $609,637 over the figures for the firsttwo days in 1962.

DOLAN AND CAPRION1 — Sounds like anold vaudviile act It Is. This act is made up of theFlorence Nightingales of Monmouth Park, Deneand Caroline. They're doing a song and dance actthis year to publicize the park's new beautifulmedical quarters, and rightly so. Monmouth Park'sfirst aid headquarters went under the redecorat-ing tools and it is certainly "hospital like" now.Curtains now pull around a bed, which is some-thing new here. In fact, it is a tiny, tiny River-view. Along with Dr. Stanley Wllklns, these galsdo a terrific job keeping all healthy.

TRACK NOTES — Ken Lennox is a busy indi-vidual in his first meeting at the racing secretary'spost. Ken received numerous congratulations fromhorsemen who knew Ken was making his secretary'sdebut Louis D. Dolan, Lennox's assistant, also wasin line for Congrats. Last year, Dolan handled stallassignments.

Old favorite jockey Walter Blum is missingfrom the Monmouth scene. He is plying his tradein Illinois this summer where he received offersfor some of the big money. In fact, there are morebig stakes out that way, and Blum, who has beenright up there with the national leaders this year,is after that green cabbage.

One of the happiest persons at Monmouth Fridaywas Adele Kappel, owner of the Ka-Dele Stable andthe 2-year-old filly Research, who won the fourth race.Last winter In Florida, Fred W. Hooper donated thefilly for a raffle at an affair for the Cancer ResearchFoundation. Mrs. Kappel had three tickets, one of themthe winner.

Opening figures a year ago (also on a Friday)showed 12,923 attending and watering $1,126,503.The first six days of last season averaged 15,358and average handle $1,153,874. For the 50 days ofthe regular 1962 meet the average in attendancewas 19,578 and the handle was $1,757,535.

freshman came up with a spark-

Mango collected the only other

single to left.The Falcon junior right-hander

In the first. Larry Gerald! andFred Bertha both singled and ad-vanced on a wild pitch. CatcherMike Porter attempted to pickGerakH off third, but the throwwas wild, permitting Larry to

gave out two other hits besides tally the equalizer.MorreU's triple. Flynn singled inthe fifth and Ron David had asingle in the second.

The Huskies closed out an 18-4campaign, while Monmouth was134 over-all. Matawan finishedwith a 12-1 record in Northern BDivision play. Monmouth was 11-2 to nip Southern Regional (10-3)for the Southern B Divisioncrown.

Falcons Edge AdmiralsIt was a far sweeter story for

the Falcons Friday as theynipped a stubborn Henry HudsonRegional nine on the AtlanticHighlands Firemen's Memorialfield to clinch the Southernchampionship.

Reggie Nauden was the heroof the Monmouth win, coming upwith a clutch triple in the eighthinning to break a 1-1 deadlock.Nauden's hit, followed by Tuck'ssacrifice fly, gave the Falconsthe all-important victory.

Mango relieved starter GaryDriscoll in the sixth to pick upthe victory, his eighth of the sea-son. Each team collected fivehits, with Nauden the only bat-ter to get two safties.

Each club scored a run in thefirst. Cone led off the Monmouthfirst with a walk and came homeon Mango's triple to right. TheAdmirals tied it up with two outs

RED BANK - Coach Toma boat length "to win the fourth Kario's Red Bank High Schoolrace of the Wver Rats springsailing series yesterday.

Dan Byrne hurled a fine gamefor the Admirals. He was re-lieved by Bertha following Nau-den's eighth inning triple. Tuckgreeted Bertha with a fly ball toright that brought Nauden homeafter the catch.

Henry Hudson closed out witha 2-16 record. They were 2-U inConference play.Matawu Bet . ( « Mm. Bcf. (1)

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27 1 5lor Lewli In 7th.

28 1 I

Monmoutli Regional — J 0 0 000 01-Henry Hudson . 100 000 DO—1

OB—Ralph Manse Atifle Nauden,WF-Balph Manga LPUmplrea-~Norton.

.0 Byrne.

nme avenged an earner setbackby blanking rivals Red Bank

Moderate to light breezes pre- Catholic High School, U, behindvailed for the Naveslnk River Bob Coyle's six-hit effort hen

Friday. CoyW scattered d i 8-7-1 mark. Red Bank Catholic St. Peter'r, of New Brunswick,

the season.

action.Drew Brinckerhott won the Casey hits, striking out .11 and edged the BUM, 7-6, earlier in

Indian Scout race, while Don allowing only one walk.Colyer won the Wood-Pussy tune-up race for Navesink Sailing So-ciety entrants.

The Navesink Wood-Pussy fleeis sailing with the River Ratfleet this season, utilizing thesame courses and committees,but keeping separate series re-sults.

Miss Vuvosevich, and crewJohn Post, won a close struggleTruex's Middletown Townshipwith defending champion Frazier High School team closed its sea-in the eight-boat Blue Jay fleet, son on a successful note with aRuth Chinnocfc was third.

Brinckerhoff, and son Billy,

Scout event Cheryl Wainwrightwas second and Bob McCutcfieonJr., third.

Colyer, and daughter Georgie,won the Wood-Pussy test, with

Sedder, third, in a five-boat fleet.The McCutoheon family served

as the committee for yesterday's d a y M ^ I e a g u e

"""" i b k M tiraces.-BCMMABIES-

Btoft JaffaNlnt Vujo«v(ch, 1 quMtin

5. uenrj Ttromu, «. Faui A Division contestWhite, 7. tack Jamlxm. B. I l i m uNOWKfc

1. Drev Brlnckuiwii, I. CberrlWalnmliht, 3. Bob MoCntcfctoa Jr.Ellen DaWUon (DOT).

ffood-PoiiriL Don Colyer. 2. Jim Cr«J». S.

Byron seldv, 4. Don lUoLun. ft.Ned Shaw.

Red Bank Catholic, 2-0The Bucctt tallied single runt

la the fourth and sixth framesRed Bank Catholic h u a 11-5

ow-all record. Tin Caieys faceto close out their 19(3 campaign Notre Dame, of Trenton, toroor-on a successful note. Red Bank row at Wghtstown, i n , « Southwas M-l and finished thin) in Jersey Parochial A state tourna-the Shore Conference race with a ment clash. The winner will face

Lions Close SeasonBeating Freehold

MIDDLETOWN — Coach Arnie gave the winners two runs In the

7-1 victory over Freehold Region-al High School here Friday.. The

teamed up to take the Indian Uons, Shore Conference A Divi-sioa diamond champions, woundup with a 14-2 slate.

The Colonials finished • sixth inthe nine-team loop with a 7-9mark. They were 8-10 over-all,

two-run margins.This wasn't the case here Frt

y gLions broke a M tie with tworuns hi the, fifth and lour moreta fte *& to wrap up the final

f b hbothschools.

Ken Bullivant fired a two-hitterat the Colonials, missing a shut-out when the losers collectedtheir two hits in the fourth. Los-ing pitcher Herman Hill doubled,moved to third on a wild pitchand rode home on Glen Gerkin'ssingle.

Middletown scored in the firstwhen Harry Snyder tripled andtallied on a passed ball.

Singles by Snyder and Bob Capalbo, sandwiched between awalk to Bullivant and two errors

fifth. Three walks, followed bysuccessive single*, by Ray Lacy,Bullivant and Ken Foulks, sentfour more Lion runs home in thesixth.

Bullivant went six frames, be-ing relieved by Ray Denniston inthe seventh. Hill went. five

finished up and was the victimof the four-run sixth.

1M over-all record. The A Divi-sion championship was their fifth

one coming in 1957.rmkoK m . (1)

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for Michigan State teams, wonhis letters as a right end on the1958 Spartan football team.

for the championship.Coyie and Wit BuckaJew locked

horns in a torrid pitchers' bat-tle, but'Coyle was returned thewinner when his mates brokethrough In the fourth. Cliff Grewsingled with two outs. Willie Da-vis followed with another singleand Ed Buanano doubled to rightto score Green.

Wait Deiss led off the sixthwith a walk. Coyie was safe ona fielder's choice. Green forcedDelss at third, but Davis singledto load the bases. Buanano hita grounder to short but the throwto first was wild, permittingCoyie to score the second run ofthe game.

Doug Longo and Sal D'Esposl-to each collected two hits for the

innings, giving up four runs on losers. Davis was three for threefour runs on four hits. Ed Becker for the Buccos.

The Casey jayvees evenedmatters with a 2-0 victory over

Middletown wound up with a the Buoco reserves on an adja-cent diamond. Doug Chiecohurled a two-hitter to give the

in the school's history, the last Casey jayvees a final 104 sea-sonal mark. Mike Ferguson'stwo-run homer in the first set-tled the issue In favor of RedBank Catholic.R. B. Cuttolto (I)

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Pull 16 Left or Right?

IF S O . . . W E L L DO ULL T H I S

BEATING THE FAVORITE — Walnut Hid Farms Sray Hill won the Long Branch Stakes,beating out favorite Ahoy, Saturday in the second day of racing at Monmouth Park.Near Man, ridden by Howard Grant, was second, and Ahoy, with Herbert Hinojoia inthe saddle, was third. In the top photo Gray Pet, Steve Brooks riding, heads for thewire with a length lead. In the lower photo Long Branch Mayor Thomas L. McCfintock,right, makes the presentation to owner Bruno Ferrari, second from left, while trainerJulian Serna, left, and Jockey Brooks, enjoy the festivities in the winning circle. Itwai a $10,757.50 win for owner Ferrari. The Long Branch grossed $16,550.

ifnetdftand torsion bi/Qadjustmentnot Included

Gray Pet is FirstStakes Winner

OCEANPORT - An old rival-ry that was under way here atMonmouth Park last summer,sent the season of! (lying Saturday and this time it was GrayPet, ridden by Steve Brooks,avenging a 1962 defeat with avictory in the Long BranchHakes over Ahoy.

Ahoy and Gray Pet renewedheir Monmouth competitionrrom last year when Ahoy defeated Gray Pet in the TyroStakes.

In winning, Gray Pet, ownediy Bruno Ferrari and trained by

young Julian Serna, upset JaclynStable's Ahoy, a 1-5 favorite onthe board. There were only fivehorses m the field making noshow betting for the 21,757 onhand (or the first 1962 Saturdayof racing in Monmouth County.Gray Pet returned $14.80 on awin ticket and $8.60 for place.Near Man, ridden by HowardGrant, finished second for a $7.80place return and Ahoy, HebertHinojosa in Uw irons, was thethird horse.

Gray Pet was carrying Hpounds less than the 128 pounds

16-Monday, June 3, 1963 RED BANK REGISTERdown the chestnut colt In that

; stretch run to the wire.

Gray Pet was slow getting outof the gate, fourth in only a five-horse field, but once the gray,colt turned on the speed he start-ed flying. Gray Pet was clockedin 1:08.4 which is only two-fifthsslower than the track recordheld by Decathlon and Primonet-ta.

Near Man, Howard Grantup, was the early leader, butcouldn't keep up with the fastpace. Despite dropping back tofourth spot, Near Man found ex-tra energy in the stretch driveand wound up taking secondplace money.

As the horses turned into thestretch, Gray Pet and Near Manbegan to move at Ahoy, who wasleading at this stage.

Brooks started Gray Pet mov-ing after coming around the fi-nal bend and the colt respondedwell. Going to the outside,Brooks went about his businessof keeping the Pet moving andwas under the wire by a length.

the day, Mrs. Henrj Obre'i

assigned to the fast moving Chambers! tied the track recordAhoy, and this may have worn of 59.1 in the five furlong seventh

race on the turf. The former

May and had been standing sinceJune 20, 1952.

The combination of Babestrai the first race and On The

Watch in the second, returned a$195 daily double. Numbers were10-7.

Prior to the feature race therewas excitement in the back-stretch when a driver of a car"hit the broad side of a bam."Handlers at the starting gate andother track personnel were im-mediately on the scene. Startinggate helpers went back to workminutes later and Starter EddieBlind sent the field off with asmooth start.

Saturday's attendance of 21,75711was an increase of 1,188 overlast year's second day at-llendance. ' Wagering Saturday [was $1,845,459. In two days ofbetting Monmouth is up $609,6371|over last year's first two days. |[

Scarlet Runners Elect

Vanderveer Co-captain

NEW BRUNSWICK - WarrenVanderveer, a distance runner,and George Stahanovioh, whocompetes in the field events,have been elected co-captains ofthe 1964 Rutgers track team.

Vanderveer, who lives in Free-hold, competes in the 880, mile

NEW TREADSAPPLIED ON SOUND TIRE BODIES OR ON YOUR OWN TIRES

WHITEWALLS-ANY SIZENarrow or Wld« Design,,Tubeltss or Tute-typ*

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STOREHOURS

In one of the speed races of and two-mile events. He was amember of the two-mile relay

Westorkan, ridden by Wayne team which placed fifth in thei n d o o r IC4A championships.Stahanovich, who lives in thiscity, was the top scorer on this

mark was established by Helen year'i team, which finished VI.

where your dollar buy* MILES more

STORESMaple Ave. af White St.,

Red Bank—SH 7-57001000 Asbwy A»». Atbary Park

n 5.1700

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Red Bank 9 Cops 2Jersey Shore M

MED BANK - Red Bank/Tire erCo. roUed along undefeated lafirst place in the Jeney ShoreBuebtO League by defeating theMuuquni AC, M, on the losers'fleM yesterday after nipping theBetaar Knifbti, M, in a tightatruggle on the recreation field

' Don Roomy, from Freehold Re- ^gkntl High ace, went the routeto record the win over Mana-iquaii yesterday, lite rigfat-hand-

Indians BowTo Long Branch

LONG BRANCH - Coach RedPienon's Long Branch HighSchool team had to settle forfecond place in the 1963 A Division baseball race. The defend-ing champion Green Waveclinched that spot with a 11-1rout of Toms River High Schoolhere Friday.' t i le Green Wave wound up ItsConference slate with a 10-6 rec-ord, while the Indians finished upwith a 6-10 mark. Toms Riverhas a NJSIAA Group 4 statetonrnament assignment today•gainst Edison High School atPlainfield.

Mlddletown Township HighSchool won the A Division crownwith a 14-2 record.

Phil Huhn paced Long Branchto Its easy victory, pitchingthree-hit ball and contributing atwo-run homer in the fourthframe. The Branchers had twobig Innings against three TomsRiver hurlers—coming up with( i s in the third and five morein the fourth.

The losers picked up their lonerun in the seventh.

The Wave jumped on starterLarry Ricketts for six runs inthe third.,Three hits, two walksand two errors opened the gates.

Six hits, topped by Huhn'shome run, sent five more talliesacross in the fourth.

Long Branch wound up with a13-7 over-all mark. Toms RiverIs 10-11 with at least one morecontest to play.

Tmni BJver (1) Umt Breach (11)A B R H A B R H

had a shutout going until theseventh innlng.when Manasquan•cored two runs. The 'Squardub scored once again in thebottom of the eighth.

Beroi* Cooke pitched the RedBank dub over Belmar Saturday,but it took some clutchpitching by another Freeholder,

Henderson, to preserve thewin in toe seven-inning encount-er.

Henderson came in with tworunners on base in the ninth andonly one man out against BelmarSaturday, but worked out oftrouble by fanning one batter andgetting the final out on a ground-er.

George Gill, whose is pacingRed Bank m the batting depart-ment along with John Blind,drove in two runs in yesterday'sgame. Gill had three RBIsagainst Belmar Saturday.

Yesterday's game was theoksest of the season for the RedBai\k club In Jersey ShoreLeague competition. Pete Rlzzohit a two-run homer in the sev-enth for Manasquan to close thegap to 4-2 in the seventh beforeRed Bank came bade with onerun in the eighth to wrap it upBland drove home the winningrun on a single after Rooney hadsingled and advanced to secondon a sacrifice bunt by BarryAyers.

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NEW BRUNSWICK (AP)-BilPaton of Syosset, N.Y., and StanChef we o* Millville have beenMected co-captains of. Rutgers'1964 baseball team.

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Bob Rossellfourth.

of New Egypt,

Monmouth ParkIN-THE-MONEY

SELECTIONSBy DOTTIE GORMAN

TODAY'S PICKSAT OCEANPORT

By SAM

1 State StreetMostarSophia's Boy

Time to LaughFair BlendHidden Valley

SagoliathBabeKDeinesian

4 Namon's SisBully BuffoonRoad Show

Some DevilQuiz MarGold Rhythm

Sort-OutBrandy IsleTomy Pixon

Gathering DuskChic ChiaSaras ton

8 Clear CallStall GetterBrandy Sea

Greg's PalMostarBig Marine

Miami ShoresTime to LaughFair Blend

Martial OwensBabeKSagoliath

Road ShowBully BuffoonNamon's Sis

Some DevilClever DuchessIrish Silver

Lucky BoyTomy DixonBrandy Isle

Ferrous CountSarastonOlylea

Stall GetterRoute Sixty-SixClear Call

Late Scratches1. Boston King, Option Time, Beaul of Fruit, Ways to Save,

Pickerel Point, Helmet2. Classy Doll, Sweet Sugar, Tira Sun, Miss Chan4. Susan's Gent5. Mawee6. Scarlet StudyI. Hasty Pace, Scorned, River Rage• TRACK-Fast WEATHER-Drizzliag

0 W thru AUG. 3WEEKLY HI-LIGHTS| "EGRET H A N D I C A P ^

a a at a aB * S M m A •• • • • IS I" a**TYRO STAKES

Sat,June 8

RESORT OF RACINGOCEANPORT, 1 1 .

I siffw frm « * N H ft fkwy, 6dt 108

unlimited parking

outdoor and indoor dining terraces' cafeteria and dining areaon grandstand lower level,completely air-conditioned

BED BAM BEGISTER , hm 3,

4*5TAR PRODUCTION — Baltimore's Jim Gentile goeson all fours as he iriei for a wild throw from an infielderas Gino Cimoli of the Athletics gets to first safely. Sceneis recent game in Kansas City.

CBA Aims lor CJT League'sTitle in 17th Annual Tourney

PRINCETON - ChristianBrothers Academy's tennis teamhas its sights set on the CentralJersey Tennis League champion-ship today following eliminationin the third round of the 17thannual New Jersey State Inter-scholastic Athletic AssociationTennis Tournament on thePrinceton University courts hereFriday.

The Uncroft Colts (13-1) suf-fered their first defeat of theseason, losing to second-seed-ed Millburn High School, 2-1, ina third round tourney match.CBA had defeated Englewoodand River Dell Regional in open-ing round play on Thursday.

Millburn (16-2) eliminated Nep-tune High School, 3-0, in the firstround. Two other Shore entrants,Asbury Park and Rumson-FairHaven Regional, were also oust'ed Thursday.

The Colts, regular season

champions of the Central Jerseyloop, will take on the AsburyPark-Neptune winner tomorrowin the semi-finals of the leagueplay-offs. The winner will thentackle defending championPrinceton High School later inthe week for the championship ofthe 11-team loop.

The Little Tigers, runner-up toCBA in the regular season, elim-inated third-place finisher RedBank High School in the othersemi-final.

Asbury Park, Rumson-Fair Ha-ven and Neptune tied for fourthplace in the league, necessitat-ing a special play-off to deter-mine- CBA's semi-final opponent.The Blue Bishops ousted Rum-son-Fair Haven, 3-2, last weekand will meet Neptune (whodrew a "bye) today on AsburyPark's SunSet Ave. courts.

Jerry Brown completed an u»beaten season for CBA in scor-

ing the Colts' lone point againstMillburn. Brown, one of theEast's top juniors, disposed ofBill Woods, 6-2, 6-1.

Hank Sieminski bowed to CraigKaufman, 6-2, 7-5 in the othersingles. CBA lost the match asRon Messina and Mike Barrettlost to the Millburn doubles com-bine of Rich Weiner,, and DanRubinfeld, 7-5, 6-0, in the de-ciding engagement.

Lakers Defendpowerful Mountain Lakes

It's Close (Very) But No CigarFor CBA, Pt. Pleasant Teams

NEW BRUNSWICK - "Wait'til next year," and "if only"may be the cries coming fromChristian Brothers Academy andPoint Pleasant Beach High stu-dents and backers today.

The two schools, who rule asthe top track and field teamsin the Shore area this season,mustered up a bundle of pointsn the 45th annual edition of the

N. J. State Interscholastic Ath-letic Association track and fieldchampionships Saturday at Rut-gers University cinder paths,but ended up on the short end inthe team totalsjboth squads los-ing out by a one-point margin.

Christian Brothers, whippedlast Thursday by Bergen Catho-lic in the N. J. Catholic TrackConference championships, lostout to the same squad from Ora-dell Saturday by only 35'/2-34I/2.The win completed a sweep ofall major meets for Coach JimSokoloski's Bergen team.

Point Pleasant Beach's squad,which under Coach Dave Ox-

/ing his crown. Mulvihill wentover 6 feet, 1 inch to erase theold mark while Scrobogna, onlya sophomore, cleared six feet forsecond. Mulvihill added four;more points to Christian Broth-ers' total with an excellent leapof II feet, 9 inches, a schoolrecord, in the pole vault for sec-ond place. Record-breaker AndyMancini, Camden C a t h o l i c ,cleared 12 feet,

Flemke Cops FeatureEvent at Old Bridge

OLD BRIDGE (AP) - Ed stretch, was nipped for the CenFilemke of New Britain, Conn.,won the lOMap NASCAR modi-fied and sportsman championship Park, nipped the Owls, 16-15, inlast night at Old Bridge Stadium.

Bill Slater of Damelson, Conn.,was second; John Gouveia ofWWte Plain*,; N.Y., third and

enford hasn't lost a- dual or tri-angular meet over a three-year

the NJSIAA meet Saturday. Theonly problem came from FortLee, a school that has competedin the. running, Jumping aridthrowing sport for only two sea-sons. Fort Lee, with only twoperformers gaining point-scoringpositions, used the 17 points fromthe standout duo to capture itsfirst state crown.

Mulvihill, DeFazlo StarChristian Brothers's produced

breakers in nearlyparochial division

two recordtaking thecrown from Bergen Catholic. ArtDeFazio, victor in both hurdles,and Eddie Mulvihill in the highjump were the record busters.

DeFazio, favored in the 180-yard low timber event (he wasrunner-up a year ago), surprisedby whipping to a 15.4 clockingto capture the 120-yard high tim-ber event. The senior ace willbe joined in the record book byDePaul's Jeff Hasselberger, whoalso ran 15.4 in a smi-final heatbefore finishing second to De-Fazio in the final. .

Muvihlll, who tied for the highjump title with two other leapersat a record 5 feet, 10 % incheslast year, put on duel with team-mate Bill Scrobogna in defend-

Inches tobreak his old group record by~l/i inches.

Zilincar Adds PointsAugie "Gus" Zilincar was the

final winner for the CBA team,tossing the shot put 56 feet, 1inch to tie Bergen Catholic's BobHiggins for the crown. The big"if" for CBA came after as- meetofficials' said all ties would bebroken by faking second-best ef-forts, fewer misses, etc. It neverworked that way and Zilincar;whose second best throw toppedHiggins, was forced to settle fora tie.

Bergen Catholic had an "I f ofits own. The Bergen Catholic lowhurdler, running only for a plac-ing position to clinch the meetfor the Crusaders, went score-less in the event while DeFazioswept to a 20.5 clocking for fiveCBA points. '

One other mixup hurt the Colts'chances. While Zilincar was tos-sing the shot put, the discusevent was going on and Zilincar,a consistent 140-foot performer,didn't get a chance to competein the platter event. '

port and Matawan Regional eachhad one to complete the Group2 efforts for Shore cindermen.Rumson-Fair Haven had a run-ner-up in Bruce Dunn in the shotput, a third place finisher inbroad jump Frank Parker andRichie Altreuter, fifth in the 120-yard high hurdles.

Rumsonv Parker FailsParker, in finishing third in

the broad jump on a leap of 20feet, 11 inches, failed to defendhis title won in last year's meet.Roxbury High's Clyde Cogellawas the winner at 21 feet, 9%inches.

Matawan's Bill Farrell ran2:02.9 to finish one-tenth of asecond behind Larry Borger ofDemarest in the Group 2 half-mile run.

Ed Scullion, Keyport's star mil-er, ran third in the Group 2 four-lap event, picking up Keyport'sonly points as Moorestown's Bar-ry Middletown won in 4:25,9 andArt Nelson, West Morris, coppedthe runner-up spot.

Red Bank Catholic and St.Rose each scored seven pointsin the parochial division. TomLalli of Red Bank Catholic wasnipped in the broad jump, finish-ing second on a leap of 21 feet,V/t inches, only 1% inches behindthe winner's leap.

Pete Armstrong, a sophomore,added the other three points forthe Caseys in their first effort inthe state meet was tossing thejavelin 168 feet, S inches forthird place.

Sprinter Jack Lennon was thescorer for St. Rose as he ransecond in the 100 and third in the220.

, Hagin Wins ShotFour standouts totaled Point

Pleasant Beach's runner-up totalof 16 points. Dennis Hagin wasthe lone victor for the GarnetGulls with a 52 foot, 4% tosswith the shot put. The huskyjunior added another point to theGulls' total with a fifth in thediscus throw.

P o i n t ' s outstanding Juniorsprinter. Bob Harris, ran thirdin the 100-yard dash and addeda fifth in the 220. Vaulter RichieCobb went over 12 feet andseemed to have clinched the winfor the Gulls, but Metuchen's BobPederson. cleared the bar sixinches higher and Cobb had tosettle for second place.

Jim Pentz was the final scorerfor the Gulls, the sophomore runner finishing third in the 880-yard run.

Rumson-Fair Haven Regionalhad three point scorers and Key- Jim Freeman totaled all the

Asbury Park's Hal Robinsonand Ed Sonnenfeld of Toms Riv-er were the only Shore perform-ers to score in the rugged Group4 competition. Robinson cleared12 feet, 5 inches for first placein the pole vault while Sonneaieldwas third in the 220-yard dash.

Carlone 3d in Jump

Red Bank and Lakewood eachhad .a third place finisher to totalthree points in Group 3 action.The Bucs' Bill Carlone jumped21 feet, 6 inches for third inthe broad jump while Lakewood'ssparkling half-miler, Ulo Kuhi,ran a 2:00.5 half for the thirdspot.

Neptune totaled 12 points topace area schools in Group 3competition. Richie Hopkins and

Monmouth EntriesFirst Race-Purse $3500 2 y.o. C & G Mdn V/i fur Fifth Race-Purse (3000 4 y.o. & up Clg ml & 70 y1. The Big Marine2. Boston KingS. Mostar4. Option Time5. Greg's Pal6. Sophias Boy7. Beau! of Fruit8. Ways To Save9. Colonial Dash

10. Rough Territory11. State Street12. Pickerel PointIS. Smart Prediction14. Big Pete15.<SkeanOckle15. Helmet

118118118118118118in118118118118118118118118118

BrooksMBBoulmetisA. ChambersNBGrimmKarpeNBBalrdKorteGllllganZakoorNBCulmoneNBGrimm

BrooksHarrnatiGueriraNBNBSorrentlnoGrantBrooksGuerra

(a) Mary G. Christmas entry

Second Race—Purse $3000 S y.o. fillies Clg t fur1. Erqullla2. Twin Pearlsi. Hidden Valley4. Time To Laugh5. Cozy Josie6. Just Divine7. Confess Visu8. Titian GraphI. Clynmalira

10. Fair Blend11. Classy Doll12. StaraklavaU. Sweet Sugar14. Tira Sun15. Miami ShoresIt. Miss Chan

109109113108109113113111102109111109108113119115

NBAddessaNBKarpeMonacelllMonacelllNBShawGuerreMonacelllNBNBKarpeBrooksJ. BlockGllllgan

4-1 1. Soma Devil 11215-1 2. Clever Duchess 1122-1 3a. Mawee 1056-1 4. Nooress 110

20-1 5. Quiz Mar 11210-1 6. Gold Rythum 11220-1 7. Shotgun Wedding 1126-1 8. Petal's Star 112

1M 9a. Irish Setter 10515-18-1

15-1 Sixth Race-Purse $400015-1 1. Grandoge Hi W. Chambers20-1 2. Broward 114 NB8-1 3. Brandy Isle 114 Addessa

20-1 4, Remunerate l i t Balrd5. Sort-Out 114 Brooks6. Spartan Life 104 Arlstone7. Tomy Dixon 114 Zakoor8a. Scarlet Study 108 NB9. Pitch Black 114 Grimm

10a, Lucky Boy 110 Grimm

9-23-13-18-14-1

10-110-112-13-1

20-120-120-18-1

20-110-112-120-120-18-18-15-1

15-16-14-15-2

3 y.o. Claiming 6 fur... _. . g_t

10-110-15-2

10-112-14-13-1

1513-1

(a) Laccltiello-Bernadotte stable entry

Seventh Race—Purse1. Fort Queen2. Four Penny3. Ferrous Count4a. Olylea5. Blue Batchelor6. Gathering Dusk7a. Saraston8. Chic Chlat . Pioneer Girl

$4500112110115117110109117112110

Third Race—Purse $3500 3 y.o. Mdn 6 furlongs (B> Calumet Farm entry

3 y.o,NBNBBrooksBrooksNBKarpeBrooksNBZakoor

Allow I fur5-23-19-25-18-12-15-1

10-112-1

1. Happy Jeep2. Sharbed3. Campo Basso4. Martial Owen*5. Babe KI. Royaume7. Deinesian8. Sagoliath

118118118118118118118118

SorensonKorteNBBrooksZnkoorGrantKorteCulmone

6-110-112-12-13-15-15-16-1

Eighth Race—Purse $4000 4 y.o. & up Clg U trf

Fourth Race-Purse $4000 2 y.o. Allow 5% fur1. WellingtonsU. Namon'iSIs1. Destiny Bay4. Sun Like5. Road Showla. Susan's Gent7. Bully Bulfon

115112IIS115115115US

(a) T. AJU GrlsMtn entry

NBBalrdZakoorZakoorA. ChambersBalrdGJllljao

10-19-55-18-12-1M8-1

1. Route Sixty-Six2. Keb3a. Ace Richard4. LePavols5. Sun Valley6. Clear Call7. Hasty Pace8. Whereby9. Carbangcl

10. Rudolph111. Scorned12. Stall Getter13. Mark-One14. Brandy Sea15. River Rage

(«) cor-

115115115113115115115115115106117111113119

BrooksGrantNBNBNBGrantGilliganFrenchNBGonzalezNBW. ChambersNB T

NBMonacelll

Stable-R.R. Peronl entry

2-15-29-2

15-115-17-28-1

12-112-115-19-25-1

20-120-120-1

High School tennis team success-fully defended its state net title

by disposing of first-seededRidgewood High School, 3-0, hereSaturday afternoon. Trie Lakers,seeded eighth by the committeehad eliminated Weatfield 3-0, inthe morning semi-finals.

Ridgewood, pre-touraey fa-vorites, reached (he title roundby stopping Montclair, 2-1, in theother semi-final. Second-seededMillburn was eliminated by theMountain Lakes squad Fridayafternoon. Westfield won the con-solation final by whipping Mont-clair.

Defending Champ MetealfWins Opening Arrow Race

RUMSON - Defending chant- Summ«-pion Manton Metcalf 3rd won theopening race of the Rumson ClubYaoht Squadron's championshipArrow class series Saturday. A

points for the Fliers in the dashevents.

Hopkins ran second in the 100ith Freeman third before Hop-ins was third in the 220 with•Yeeman another pace behind.Henry Hudson Regional and

Shore Regional, which onlyopened their doors back In Sep-tember, totaled five and threepoints, respectively, in theiroup 1. events.Steve Baker and Steve Noonan,

a pair of sophomores, ran four-five in the 100-yard dash andhigh jumper Mike Lane wasfourth in the shot put by JohnIhirk and Art Cotgreave's fifthin the discus throw.

Budd's Record TiedWhile local performers had a

banner day under the excellentweather conditions, so did track-men from the rest of the state.Four all-groups icords weresnapped and 17 group recordswere erased.

Although group records 6et bylocal runners in the past did not'all, Frank Budd's all-groups 100-/ard dash mark of 9.7 was tied>y Orange High giant Bob Arm-

strong, a 6-2, 195-pound junior,who tied the mark in the semi-finals and final. He started offthe day with a 9.9 effort in hisopening heat. Budd, who wenton to set the present century rec-ord of 9.2 while running for Vil-lanova University and also wasa member of the U. S. Olympicteam at Rome in 1960, set thestate record while running forAsbury Park High in 1958. *

Bruce Jackson's all-groups highjump record of 6 feet, 5% inchesset last year as a Keyport Highsenior, was threatened by Un-ion's Frank Costello but did notfall.

Costello, who cleared 6 feet,

fleet of seven Arrows competedin moderate breezes on the Na-vesdnk River.

Jim Davis, skippering "Circe"won the special Arrow trophyrace yesterday.

A Blue Jay class race yester-day was taken by Hank Gilbert-son, wioli Larry McDonald, run-ner-up.

MetcaJfs, "Windward" bestedthe fleet in. the Saturday event"Heron", owned by the WilliamRiker-Tony Huber partnership,was second, with Davis, tod.

-SUMMARIES—Arrows

Bat. B K XManlon Mttciir 3d, 3. William

Rlker-Tony Huber, 3. Jim Davit, 4Dick Mercer, 5. Bill Hauler, 6. Don

<DISQ>.

1. Davli, I, Summa.Blue JftylSun. Kftce

1. Hank Ollberston. 2. !>rryDpr.ild.

Me-

DODGER SKIJUMPERS?

LOS ANGELES (AP) - TheLos Angeles Dodgers' home InChavez Ravine is due to becomehome to a 28-story-high ski jump.

Ski equipment manufacturers,retailers and resort operators an-nounced plans yesterday for ajumping competition by membersof the U. S. Olympic team Oct.25-27. Proceeds will help defrayexpenses of the team at Inns-bruck, Austria, in winter Olympiccompetition. •

The 165-foot-high jump, coatedwith crushed ice, will terminatein the outer reaches of the ballpark.

Major Leag

Associated Presa

National LeagueW. L. Pet. G.B.

San Francisco 31St. Louis 30Los Angeles .... 27Chicago _ 27 23Cincinnati, . 24 23Pittsburgh „_. 24 24Philadelphia _ 23 27Milwaukee 22

6 inches in the Central Jerseymeet two weeks ago, went 6-4'^Saturday to win the Group 4crown and tie former Plainfieldand Olympic ace Milt Campbell'srecord.

Scotch Plains was the Group 4champion as expected. HaddonllHeights and Glen Ridge rompedto the Group 3 and 1 crowns, |[respectively.

Houston 21New York ..... 20

.620

.577

.551

.540

.511

.500.460.449.412.385

New York . 26

12

Sunday's Results

New York 2-4, Pittsburgh 1-3(both 10 innings)

Philadelphia 5-2, Chicago 2-3Houston 3, Milwaukee 1 (17 in

nings)San Francisco 6, St. Louis 4Cincinnati 5, Los Angeles 2

Saturday's ResultsSt. Louis 7, San Francisco 4Cincinnati 1, Los Angeles 0Pittsburgh 10, New York 1Chicago 2, Philadelphia 0Milwaukee 4, Houston 1

Today's Games

"Los Angeles at Houston (N)Only game scheduled

Tuesday's GamesMilwaukee at New York (N)Cincinnati at Pittsburgh (N)San Francisco at ChicagoLos Angeles at Houston (N)Only games scheduled

American LeagueW. L. Pe t G.B.

J05.600.592.543.511.511.471.432.426.327

lA

34%4%M8«JS

14

Baltimore 30 20Chicago 29 20Kansas City .... 25 21Minnesota 24 23Boston 2} 22Los Angeles ... 24 27Cleveland ....... 19 25Detroit 20 27Washington .... 17 35

Sunday's ResultsCleveland 5-7, New York 0-2Detroit 7, Minnesota 6Boston 11-0, Chicago 9-10Washington 6, Kansas City 4 (10

innings)Los Angeles 8, Baltimore 2

Saturday's ResultsLos Angeles 7, Baltimore 1Washington 9, Kansas City 1New York 5, Cleveland 2Chicago 3, Boston 1Minnesota 7, Detroit 1

Today's GamesChicago at Los Angeles (N)Minnesota at Kansas City (N)Only games scheduled

Tuesday's GamesChicago at Los Angeles (N)Minnesota at Kansas City (N)Detroit at Cleveland (N)Boston at Washington (N)New York at Baltimore (N)

DragonsWhipNeptune, 5-2

NEPTUNE — Neptune HighSchool lost an opportunity to takethird place in the Shore Confer-ence A Division baseball race,losing a 5-2 decision to BrickTownship High School in the fi-nal Conference battle for bothschools here Saturday.

The Fliers wound up with an8-8 record .as fed Bank HighSchool topk the third spot withan 8-7-1 mark. Brick tied TomsRiver for seventh, each with 6-10records.

The Green Dragons came upwith five runs in the fourth tosurprise the favored Flier nine.They loaded the bises andscored five times on two hitsand a costly error.

Neptune came back with tworuns in the bottom of the fourth,but Brick's winning hurler JohnConnors checked them the restof the way. Lou DeSarno was thelosing pitcher.

Brick wound up with an 11-11iver-all record, while Neptune

ended its diamond activities witha 13-11 mark.

before you buy or build, tee . . .

MARINE VIEWISAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION

"TWO OFFICES TO SERVE YOU"

I MAIN OFFICE874 Highway 35(Five Corners)

MIDDLETOWNOS 1-2400

Branch Offict

Atlantic Highlands33 First Avenue

291-0100

BOAT SUPPLIESWall Street area head-quarters for all your boat-Ing needs.

Nylon—Manila—DacronInterlux Yacht Paint

Racelite FittingsTuphblox—Roledge

Writ* for free catalog o)

SAILBOAT FITTINGS

A. L. DON CO.37 South Sf. N.Y.C.

WH Irthall 4-82902 Blocki South of W.ll St.

Needvacationmoney?

Get an HFCTraveloanWishing won't takeyou places... but anHFC Traveloan will!So take that vacationnow. Borrow con-f i d e n t l y — r e p a ysensibly.

A»k about Credit lifeInsurance on loant

at group ratet

Special Service to Armed Forces Pertonnel

OUSEHOLD FINANCE

CoikYou 9.1

•200300400500

MONTHLY PAYMINT HANS

14paymlt

$16.7721.9426.77

18/>«•"»»

5 6.9713.9320.9027.4733.69

npdlntli

$9.7519.5029.2538.5947.62

6tmtt

S18.1536.3154.4672.1489.53

i chnv h 2\i<k ft woiH* en

t u* N» w mattAtiimr PARK

710 Cookman Avenue—PRosped 3-25OQOiwnWtdMsfay Minings until 8

UTONTOWNMonmouth Shopping Center

Rt. 35 at Eatontown Traffic Circle—Liberty 2-13400pi« WHutdty (frMsy ivintogt mil |

HWDMIOWMMlddletown Shopping Center

1107 Highway #35-OSborr.e 1-1400

Page 18: DigiFind-It · 2015. 4. 9. · MX toraorr tttttd •». Wetbetdty, ttlr tad «m, fet tntthet, page 2. 21,675 DIAL SH 1-0010 VOL 85 NO 242 Um»" * • mow km u ui. Bank um u MHUSoul

* E 0 BAMC 8 K I S T I R

ANNOUNCEMENTSLOST AND FOUND

AUTOS * TRUCKS

u o U t t^unftttk ttuuutiwiwi.tauter, tJtt tew iStm. l ewO l y 43000 o l f t o l tt « } i

LOST — Sum of money in Red B u t .Reward.

U M735

I/)ST — Brown wallet by LeslieGravel, Larado, W.Va. Keep money,return wallet to 17 Washington 81, orSherwin-Williams Paint Store, BroadSt., Red Bank.LOST — Student's glasses, light brownframes, 1Q black and brown leatherpurse Reward. 291-2835.

. u te , tJtt tew iStm. lewbattery. Only 43,000 orlftosl nt t« , «}niynue. Phont ert-onxNOW THAT ITOD b a n studied toeADS, . . "Hustle to Riuaell" to Inspectand buy a top recoadJtiased CadillacOldsmobtu or other make carl

MOBILE HOMES

PUBLIC NOTICES

BUMMER ON A FARM — At Home-lands. Farm camp on a real operatingdairy and horse farm for small num-ber boys, 7 to 14 yean. All farmanimals and activities. Sports include,riding, swimming, hiking, etc., andcamp acUvltes. Good food and super-vision. Registered nurse on premises.For Information call CA 2-8809. —CA 5-0444.

AUTOMOTIVE

AUTOS & TRUCKS

1951 CHEVROLET — Half-ton pickup.Good condition. Call

846-43451S58 VOLKSWAGEN KOMBI — Extra

l l i l e $950 EH 14333

BARGAIN — Any boat you wan: toown. Low bank rates. Financing ar-rangements completed in one call atany ol our office!. THE MONMOUTHOLKSWA

clean, low mileage,after 6 p.m.

O$950. EH 1-4333

COUNTY1000.

1961 FORD GALAXIE — Standardshift. 390 cu. Inch engine. One owner.Low mileage, almost new tires. Callanytime. OS 1-0467.1959 CHEVROLET — Two-rloar hard-top lmpala, 348 engine, 3-speed floorEhift. WOO. SH 7-9528 atter 6.

16' OWENS — Sport deluxe model.Runabout. Mahogany trim, all con-trols, 35 h.p. Johnson. Heavy duty.Gator tilt trailer. All 1968 model. 1550.787-6474.

M(9 CHEVROLET witll 195S CHevroletV-S 1058 rear, 1957 transmission. Cus-tom interior. S—W gauges. Neverruceci; in service, need money. In-

vested $850, aikinj J525. Call CO 4-5655.1S57 H1LLMAN - Four-door. Extraset tires. Top condition. 5395. PR 6-S2O9 nights of TW 2-3595 days.1958 CHEVROLET — Station wagon.Six-cylinder, standard ahilt, very clean,quick Bile. |S650. Private. 787-6474.1D58 CHEVHOLET IMPALA — Convert-ible. Perfect condition.787-9175.

Call alter 6,

1956 FORD — Transportation. Runs,needB some work. Best offer. SH 1-

GOOD STATION OR BEACH CAR —1953 Chevrolet station wagon. Call SH7-5069 for information,1369 FORD GALAXCE—Hardtop, makeolfer. Call

SH 7-4673MGA — 1600, 1960, blaci convertible,excellent condition, new rubber, oneowner. See at Toraaino's shell Sta-tion, E. Front St., Red Bank.1953 FORD — Four-door, radio, heater,A-l condition.

OS 1-28501858 V-8 PLYMOUTH CONVERTIBLE— Top condition, 35,000 miles, auto-matic transmission and steering. Seeto appreciate. SH 1-4700.

MOBILE HOICKSUsed • 10% downNew • 7-year financing

ROBBINSVUAJBMOBILE HOME SALES, INC.

Rout* 130 - RobtlasrtlU. N. f.10 J-U2O \

BUSINESS NOTICES

§f£

EMKOYMENTHELP WANTED-FEMALE

SECRETARY

1958 WE3TW00D 50x10. Good condi-tion. Located in park. Call

WANTER-AUTOMOTIVE

TOM'S FORD INC.WE PA! CASH FOR USED CARS

10 Main BL LO 6-UOO Matswan(150 yds, from Malagas JtR Station)

BOATS AND ACCESSORIES

Dk*at>bone trsj>scr«t>tag, heary typingw d related ceomtuia] (tittles fo« agroup ol Chemist*. Some technicallamgiage background (chemistry)preferred. Complete company paidbenefit program Apply in person.

INTBRNATJONAI, FLAVORSAND nUOBAJfCSSL

AND nUOBAJfCSS800 Rose Lane Union BeaohNURSES AIDES — Experienced. 40houri per freek, days. -Apply la person.HILLTOP NURSING HOME. B a l iHwy, Mldaietnwn.PLANNING A VACATIONT Be an AvonRepmeotatlvt and ( t u t earning lortint trip Immediately. Call SH 1-43(3or writ* MM. Margaret Gnlotta, P.O.Box 190, Red Bank.GENERAL OFFICE WORK — Hint bea Kood typist good In spelling and ac-curate with figures. Pleasant workingconditions. 37& hour week, two weekspaid vacation plus other company hene-UU. Call SH 1-COltl between 11:30 a.m.and 12:30 p.m. or 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.Ask lor Mr. Blccl.

NATIONAL BATIK. SH 1-

MARINE SUPPLIESEverything tor the Boatman. New Jer-sey's largest marine supply houae.

Evinrude Bales and ServiceTHE BOATMAN'S SHOP

21 Wharf Ave. SH 1-5780 Red Bank.Open Sundays and Holidays P am-1 pm

1963 SCOTT OUTBOARD MOTORS nowIn stock! — Also Polyester Resin only{6.95 per gal. Bottom paint, rope,snaps, anchors, etc. JACOBS HARD-WARE CO., Bergen Place * Shrews-bury Ave.. Red Bank. 147-3654.

MARINE RADIO — Tune up special.Transmitter adjusted for proper out-put, receiver aligned, antenna andground checked. Call DAVE MORSE.Red Bank. SH 7-2454.

BOAT TRAILER — And accessories.(100. Call

787-1605

22' CONVERTED LIFEBOAT — 25 h.p.inboard. In water last season, bestoffer SH 1-8666,16' DUNDEE — Ideal ski boat. Im-maculate, 19G1 hull, mahogany trim,windshield, convertible top, lights, cush-ions, 1962 Evlnrude Lark, electric con-trols, new battery, wlta tacks. 19S0,SH 1-8667.26' CABIN CRUISER - Sleeps tour.Call after 5 or weekends,

291-0503

RESPONSIBLE HIGH-SCHOOL girl liv-ing la Applebrook area; to Dabysltone toddler child during summer. 671-0087.

18 H.P. JOHNSON outboard motor, 1998excellent condition, $175.

SH 1-0130

RESPONSIBLE PERSON—Good typist,to run small office. Call lor appoint-ment. CA 2-8657.

1957 VOLKSWAGEN — $750Call

SH 1-60381962 HARLEY DAVIDSON MOTOR-CYCLE — Duo-glide. Fully equipped,and fully chromed. Call after 6 p.m.264-6131.

18' CRUISERS INC., 50 h.p. outboardmotor. New navy top. Motor over-hauled. Many extras, Excellent condi-tion. Ready to go. 842-1266 after 6.

1857 CHEVROLET two-door six-cylinder,standard shift, $200

671-3O5S1961 CORVAIR COUPE — Standardtransmission. Must sell best offer. Call291-9041.SACRIFICE — S1000, I960 Ford Galallelour-door nardtop, full power, 28,000miles. OS 1-2140.3952 MG-TD — Restored, new darkgreen flnlsli, recent engine—transmis-sion rebuilt, excellent tires, will sellat a sacrifice. SH 1-3097 evenings.Business SH 1-1B88.

14' WOOD PUSSY, fiberglass, withtrailer. Call

741-2069

1959 PORSCHE, convertible. Model D.1600 standard, low mileage, new tires.Excellent condition. 0 3 1-2300.1957 VOLKSWAGEN — Red converti-ble. An economy car in good condi-tion. Call 747-3570.1659 FORD—Four-door, radio, automat-ic, 39,000 miles, excellent condition.Death causes sale. Reasonable offeraccepted.- 747-5014.1952 ENGLISH AUSTIN — Runningcondition. Needs some work. Jfi5. J.Collins, 700 Ocean Ave.. Sea. Bright.1654 CHEVROLET convertible, slickshift, power windows and seat, newvinyl top, runs good. Asking $250. CallSH 1-4)51 after 6.1956 CHEVROLET EEL AIR, V8, auto-matic, asking S400. Call SH 1-2809er 6:30 p.m.

16' CRUISERS SEAFARER — 35 h.p.Svtarude motor, Qatar tilting trailer.Call alter 6, 291-1491 or 291-0805.

18 H.P. JOHNSON — 1861, like new.Only five hours. Loog mart, fK 4-3878 after 6 p.m.16' TERRY SKIFF — 25 h.p. motor,controls, anchor, fire extinguisher, price$300. 291-9248.18 H.P. JOHNSON — «2S, carrier u dt k C l l

Otank. Call

6(2-2036

8' SINGLE STEP HYDROPLANE —Ready for water. Going to summerschool, must sell. (20. 741-7882.9' SKIMMER with ?tt Evlnrude. BothIn excellent condition. $175. Call 8117-5695.SAILBOAT BARGAIN — 22' HumsonClaas sloop. Needs some work. HO 2-1603.24' CABIN — 165 h.p., head, navytop, two bunks. $1950.

SH 1-16S512' RUNABOUT and 10 h.p. Mercuryengine. Motor needs some work. $125,SH 1-1901.

BUSINESS NOTICES

LUSH ESTATE gives way to progress,large quantity of top soil, deliveriesanywhere. All types mason work. LO6-0650. 787-8777.

EXPERIENCED — DENTAL aislatantFull time. Must have own transporta-tion. Write stating qualifications. "B.L."Box 511, Red Bank, N. J.YOUNO LADY - To work part timein cash and carry office,- dry cleaningdepartment Permanent position. ApplyDonald's Oleui-o-matlc Laundry, New-man Springs Rd., and South BridgeAve.. Red Bank.LEGAL SECRETARY — Experiencedonly. Full time, salary commensuratewith experience. Contact CA 2-7700.REGISTERED NURSE — For sightduty. Also mirss'a aides. Information10 a.m. until 1 p.m. RTVERCRESTNURSING HOME, 31 ChaffiQ Ave..Red Bank.

MEN WANTED - For career oppor-tunity in professional real estate coun-selling throughout Middlesex and Mon-mouth counties, Applicants must be atleast 21 years of age, personable anddesirous to obtain, greater financial u dprofessional status. No experience nec-essary. Financial assistance availablewhile we train you. Full hospltallxa-tlon plus fringe benefits. Excellent op-portunity for advancement wlBj rapidly expanding firm. Remember, careermen only. For Interview, call Mr.Cuevas at OS 1-2531.MACHINIST — On sewing machines.Apply Rio Shirt Co., 389 Rector St.,Perth, Amboy, N. J.'

BABYSITTER — Mother wishes res-ponsible girl or woman to assist incaring (or three young chUdren week-days 0-1 p.m. Must bave transpoUttlon.Call BH 1-2554.OPERATORS WANTED— Experienced.Full time and r a n time. Piece work.Cnlldrens skirts and tops. DIJOPSPORTSWEAR, I N Second St., Key-port 284-0815.HOUSEKEEPER—Capable woman, ex-perienced, ranch home, plain cooking,no heavy laundrr. Own room, TV. Ex-cellent salary, 842-1308.GIRL — Counter work and assembly,MUBT BE NEAT. Apply In personMorey IjaEue- Cleaners, Hwy. 35, Eaton-town.

SECRETARY — To advertising execu-tive, typing, shorthand, part time, 9 tonoon, alr-conftltloned office. Call SH 1-5238.HOUSEKEEPER — For couple andone child, live In, weekends off. Call741-470LEXPERIENCED BEAUTICIANSteady,9749.

good salary. 244-3849 or K6-

WOMAN — General cleaning, one daya week, own transportation. Referenc-es. After 6 p.m., 787-9127.SECRETARY — GIRL Fridayclergyman's office,raphy. Mornings.clergyman's office. Typing and stenog-

SECRETARY—Knowledge of Spanishdesirable. Small congenial office at-mosphere. Salary open. Writ* "AJ."Box 511, Red Bank.

DRAFTINGTRAINEES

Immediate openings,tty to Join our drafting u ddultn tmiatng program forGraduates who have- recentlycompleted high school, or withft Maximum ol o n year col-lege! must have IVi yearsAlgebr*, DM year Oeomttxy,naif year Trigonometry.

COMK IN TO S M UBAY-FRmAY, 6 A, M. TO } P.M.

BELLTELEPHONE

LABORATORIESNear Red Bank. Everett Rd., Craw-ford'* Corner Rd.

EQUAL PPPOBUMrrY EMPLOYEREXPERIENCED PAINTERS" WANTED— Outside work and Inside. Phone843-0490 atter 5:00 p.m.

l*t«>*rSt«J. . .

FIELD'SFANTABULOUS

'BUD&ETEER'*X U s e d . . . N o t Du«rtM«J. . .

But A Custom DesignedTHREE ROOM GROUPING

STYLEIX..PRICED.. .

BUDGETED...For Beginners

Thrat Complete Rpomi ofBRAND NEW FURNITURE

/or only$295.

Pay only $3 weekly*• 10-pe. Living Room Group* 9-pc. Bedroom, Modern•k 5-pc. Dinette

plusA Guaranteed Family Size

REFRIGERATOROnly at Field's

Keyport7-11 East Front St.

CO 4-3020Open Dally 9-4

Thursday and Fridays 'til 9P1ANOB - save tun or more off listprice brand new ((not* l i

1ANOB save tunprice, brand new ((.anos. io.yeusave. Rent,Musio Store,

ore off listconsole pi-Come see,

T 'r t e e . . Come see,

n to bur, Tuner'sMain St., Lakewood,

GENERAL MAINTENANCE. MEN

Excellent opportunity with Nationalconcern. Experienced operating main-tenance shop equipment and knowl-edge of snop technlQues and proce-dures. Maintenance and set tip ofproduction equipment

LILY TULIP CORPORATIONHwy. 35 . Httradftl, N. J.FARM AND ESTATE worker wantedIn Holrodel area. Must DB completelytellable. Phone M6-48W after 6.

CAFETERIA SERVICE MANFood concern requires amblUoua manfull tdmo In automatic cafeteria, cpera-tlon. Mechanical experience desired.Salary plus commission, Hospttttization.Phone 671-9342 between 1 to i p,m.for appointment.

DRIVER — Salary plus commission.One Hour Martinlnng Dry Cleaners,Campbells; Junction, Belford. Apply 'perBon. .

MEN-SELL

Recent D.iCTOtionn tore* tW» ad.America's Urge* home Improvementcompany Is expanding again.

Pay plan open, Appl]Wanarnassa, or Call fi

1113 Hwy 36,11-3200.

DRIVERS WANTED—Ice cream vend'Ing trucks. Apacross from 1

ily between 9-12 noon,t Keansburg school.

MARRIED MAN — As all-around clerkIn liquor store; near Eed Bank. Age24-50. Write age, references, experience.

A.H." Box 511, Red Bank.

QIRL i TO MVE IN for summermonths. Assist with children. Lighthousework. 8H 7-5036.

HELP WANTE&-MALE

FOREMENItesponslbla supervisor; positionsavailable In the assembly of con-sumer electronic products. B. S. I. E:or Industrial Management decree pre-ferred. Prior at»f! or supervtjoryposition in industry preferred. Gen-erous ailsry and benefits. Call orWrite Mr. R. p . Eommer.

WestinqhouseXBVZSMWRADIO DIVISIraXBVZMWRADIO DIVISION

McMchen, N. J. LI 6-5000 Ext 262An Equal Opportunity Employer,

CHARLES HOIVER - Hajon Con-tractor. Ma lab too ssull . SH 7-M79 or

1940 FORDBest offer, call after 5 JJ.m.

BH 7-17161862 ALFA GU1LAETA - Eed. L o w j B E K T ^ r j HARRY are really neatmileage. Call but t0 save money little ole Ace can't

LO 6-7332 '• •- —— *— - *" -- — --AUTOS & TRUCKS

be beau ACE TV. 69 Hwy. 35, NeptuneCity.WEEKEND PAINTERS—H years ex-

I perience. Average borne ¥125 plus paint|| Wliy pay morer SH 1-2538 any hour.I GENERAL CONTRACTORS- Remodel-I ling, kitchen, room additions. Commer-

cial and residential. 291-0003 or BH 1-1736.INTERIOR DECORATING—And paperhanging.

741-7814

LOWEST PRIGANYWHERE!

ONE YEAR WARRANTY*•'62 lmpala Convertible"62 Cnevy 4-dr.'62 Four-wheel dr. pick-up

•'61 Chevy Bel Air <-dr.•'61 lmpala Convertible•'60 Falcon Wagon"60 Corvalr 700 Coupe"60 Dodge Dart 4-dr."60 Chevy lmpala Hdtp.'59 BulcH Electra

"59 Oldl 88 Hardtop•'59 Chevy Impila, Convertible"59 Chevy lmpala i'-dr,"59 Plymouth Wagon•'SS Cord Squire, B-pmi"59 Ford ODaide 2-dr."58 Chevy Mr.•'58 Chevy Wagon, two-tone'5fi Ford Convertible•to Ford Vlclorla Jidtp.54 Old> 98 Sedan

qUICK SALE'56 Slutlebakf>r Bed. Jm'55 Plymouth aed, . 4UE•54 Chevy _.„'53 Chovy

CELLAR8 CLEANED — LIGHT HAUL-ING — Odd jobs. Call Ray Lambersonafter 4 p.m. SH 7-9O6V5.THOMAS BOECKEL, BUILDER -Newhomes, addition, dormers, garages, re-modeling, general contracting. Qualityworkmanship. SH 1-1736.

MEN — AMBITIOUS AND NEAT.TIRED OP PRESENT POSITION? Ourprogram guarantees commissions from$117 and up while learning. No previ-ous experience required. Car andphone. For BDpotntment call PA 7-2442.

STORE CLERK — Red Bank firm.Write stating ate, experience and sal-ary expected to F.O. Box 833, RedBank, N. J.

HELP WANTEDTWO MEN WHO WDJL WORK TO KB-FLACE TWO MEN WHO WOULDN'T.DIAL OS 1-0370 WITHIN THE NEXTHOUR.

FORMICA COUNTER TOPS - Con-version from rotted linoleum to beau-fa! tormlca. Our specialty. 842-1257.DUSKS US up. FILES {U.M up, tablet,chairs, adding machines, typewriters,otfics equipment, e t c at bargain prices.New or used. AAC DS8K OUTLET,Rte. 35, OakhursL KB 1-3M0.

ft* UU

MUSIC TOWNONE Y&& MMMBMARY

SALE

186.50 8700,

Alto sax outfitTenor sax outfit,

used , „.._ _ « . «Clarinet outfit, used ._Trumpet oistfi used _Three octave Vfhe* _ .Drum outatDram ovtat

THREE ROOMS and bath, complete-ly turnWhed, with gas heat electricami TV. Call 787-514*. •

MERCHANDISE WANTEDWANTED

JTRIIDliAN GALLERIES

MOVING - Norge gas dryer, like

CO 4-38M

SWIMMING POOLSAND SUPPLIES

DOUOKBOX AND BUSTER CRABBBFOOLS. Easy charge on above groundpools, ChemlcaUi pool service and iup<

" is. • All your pool needs In stock.je delivery, BWIMMINQ RIVER

POOLS BALES. Hwy. 35, Eltontoivn.V> mile south ol laonmouth ShoppUijCenter. 54J-17TJ.

LADDERS, RUa, corner cabinet, set-tee, kitchen set, drapes, sink, (rames,tables, chairs. Brto-a-brac. 842-J540.STICKLEY CHERRY end table, both29ti" high; one sQuare (U% top);other circular 22" in diameter. Reallytine furniture. SH 74082 alter 3 p.m.BABY CARRIAGE — Blue Coach, ex-cellent condition. Reasonable, Call BH7B123.

BUILDER MOVING FROM AREA —Surplus building materials. TVo 15 tonpackage air coodlUonftrs. M o d e r nleather, folding door. 10* high, 19- wide.Paint Many ether Items, no reasonableoffer refused. SH 1-2233.

TELL. MEWhere else can you buy any colorKemtone at %LV» gal. (regular priceVU»)t Cellar combination alamlnumwindows (2.99 (sbse 32xl«r Venetianblinds 1 (or 1ST Turpentine Mo gal.J3> gal. plastic trash can and oov«t3.wt Hundreds super values rightnow. Shop by phone. Quick delivery,

PROWN'S32 Broad BL Bed Bank S 3 1-7500PEONIES — Heavy clumps, pink, red,white, best named varieties, 11.50 each.F'ORSZTHM, large, II; smaller, 35c.You dig and take. Bring i h o v e lA. ILER DAIRY FARM, one-half milesouth Mlddlelown R.R. station on roadto Llncroft

PR 4-8145 Bvenmgs CA 2-74S1ONE UTTLE OIRL MADE HAPPYStill seed one more 26" Hngllsn-type[trfe bicycle. Call DI 6^575 (TomsElver)).OLD FURNITURE - Antiques, china,tlajiware, art objects and brlo-a-brao.Immediate cash lor anything and every,thing RuseU'a, 25 l a s t Front St.,

93

PETS ft LIVESTOCKCOCKER SPANIEL 'PUPPIES — AKCrglstered,. r irenu available (or In-ipecUon. OS 1-25M.

ADORABLE BLACK PUPS thorough-bred mother. Five weeks. Free togood home. MH-42M.tSUOATURE POODLE — AKC. Sixweeks old. Call

BH 1-8881ADOPTION~Labrador retriever, verygood with children, one year, musthave room for exercising. 6S4-7380.GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AKCregistered. Champion blood lines. Sireblue ribbon winner. OS 1-0375.GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES —Heavy boned, grand sire championAtlas Von Haul Jupiter, black andtan, and sanies. 542-4397.COLLIE PUPS — AKC. Champion1 aire.Wormed and inoculated. Raised withchildren. U 2-3563.SKUNKS — One male and one fema4e.De-icented, not tame. Wonderful buyat 120 for both. LI 2-3407.

REAL ESTATE FOR RENTAPARTMENTS

TWIN GABLES APARTMENTS — 39Riverside Ave., Red Bank, on river-front, 3354-5 rooms unfurnished. SH 1'

Y.0UNQ MAN — For factory work.Apply In person Ralph Frledland ftBros., Inc., Locust St., Keyport.

HELP WANTED-Male • FemaleNOTICE TO JOB APPLICANTS'.

The Red Bank Register does notloowlngly accept help wanted adver-tisements from employers covered bythe Federal Wage-! Law If they

EXPERIENCED AUTO BODY painter.Top wages, steady year-round work,many benefits. Apply D I C K MAT-THEWS AUTO BODY, Newman SpringsRd., Red Bank. BH I-5S8S.EXPERIENCED GENERAL FACTORYmaintenance man, steady work withovertime. Apply in person. ESTEYUETAL PRODUCTS, 1 Catherine SI.,Red Bank.OPENING — For bright'and ambitiousyoung man aa pregaroom-sterotype ap<prentice. MUBt be high school graduate.:ajl SH 1-0O10 lor appointment. Ask•ir Mr. Harold Kelly.

BUCK'S FURNITURE SERVICE -Furniture repairing and refmUhlnf.Antiques anrl modern. SH 7-2435.LAWN SERVICE - Lawns cut andcared for at lowest prices, 842-1421, or842-0125.LANDSCAPING - Complete lawn serv-ice, top soil, fill dirt, grading, grats

I cutting, estimate]I SH 1-9082.

given. SH 1-4732.

AUTOS & TRUCKS

RETIRED?If time hangs heavy for you; comeIn to aee us end let us put that timeto good use (or you. Earn extramoney for Uiose extra needs. Sup-pUment your pension and socialsecurity Incomes. Give us your ex-tra time and we'll give you that ex-tra money. Canvass in your ownlocal area. B&Uiry and commission,all company benefits. Apply TUX)COMPANY, Subsidiary ol ReynoldsMetals, 1113 Hwy 35, Wanamassa.

oller less than legal minimum wages.Beginning Sept. 3L 1961 employeesengaged in interstate or foreign com-merce or In the production of goodsfor such commerce must be paid notleu than 11.15 an hour and at leastlime and one-half for hours workedatter 40 in a workweek, unless specif-ically exempt. Employees of certainlarge retail, service, construction, andother enterprises must be paid notless than (1.00 an hour after Sept.3, 1961, but no overtime tor such em-ployment is required until Sept 3,1983. II you are offered lets by cov-ered employers, or if you have ques-tions concerning this law or otheractivities of the U.& Department ofLabor, call or write U.S. Departmentof Labor at Rooms 201, 202, Old PostOffice Building. 202 East State St.,Trenton. N. J.

TWO SttD TABLES and coffee table,modern, good (or playroom. Twolamps, *2S. SH 7-4708.SIT-ON MOWER — 1961 Homelite. 24",impulse start, 1135.

SH 1-8867

HAMMONDORGAN STUDIO

OF ASBtmi PARS.USED ORGANS

Hammond Speaker -..Pianorgaa ».„ _. .. „ . -.^

£ 5 3 &pSffiaJr=

INSTRUCTORS WANTED—CALL FOR APPOINTMENT

BERTOLO MUSIC, 787-6090BARB EMPLOYMENT AOBNCK

qualified Personnel For Quality Orders210 Broad Long Branch CA 2-4747

Wurlltier S In 1 Organ. 450.•- - - - __ 6 8 0 .

m pinec drgan.Zrr~~~. . l ." 6So\Hammond. Extravotce .__ -45«,Open Dally Till » — Saturday Till 6:10

COOKMAN AVB. AND MAD) ST.PR B-B30C

Hammond Chord OrganBaldwin Spinet Organ .Coral Spinet *

BRAND NEW air conditioned apart-ment in the newest and finest projectIn Red Bank. Living room, diningroom, bedroom and lovely Jijtcnen. |14£per month.

SH 1-1900MANOR EAST

THREE ROOMS AND BATH — Heatlied.

RED BANK—FOUR-ROOM unfurnishedapsrtment available June 15. Fullkitchen, private bathroom, spaciousrooms all leading (rom center hall,quiet, residential area; near bus lines,shopping and business centers; privateparking. Yearly lease. Call after B p.m.6H 7-3487.

HOUSES W t BOUSES K » SALE

SROROt.. Realtors. «H

~i*<*l«BERG

to. H

P" Month

0 8 1-1000YOUR BOMB VvTTH.US ^ W J

&THEast Front

T*0-B»DRO0M HOUBB ~ uwur-ntshed. Close to UBO beach. Teariyor summer seann. LI 2-OSBS.KUMSON - Bmall unfurnished three-roont bath, cottage. Hot water, oilhsat Available to adult couple. Tenantprovides utilities and teat. |7S month-ly on lease. JOHN IV MJNTJOa Baal-tor, 842-3500.SHREW8BURY - Unfurj ahed house(or rent, available Immediately. Fourbedrooms, IK baths. SH 1-0333.RED BANK - River Plaja area. Fourbedrooms, two baths. J1B0. Call 8H1-2805.FIVB-ROOM HOUSE - Gas heat, rea-sonable rent Leonardo. Bus at corner.291-0317 after t p.m.

WANTED TO RENT

35. Mlddletown. OS t-3200.

FURNISHED ROOMS

ELDERLY PERSONS BOARDWAYSIDE RESIDENCE, West ParsAve., Wayside. Brand new build-ing. All meals, laundry and cue .Call KB 1-WM.ATTRACTIVE ROOM FOR GENTLE-MEN — Little Sllvtr near bus line.SH 1-5742. •SINGLE ROOMS — Clean and com-fortable. Reasonable rstw. OenUemeopretemd, 92 Wallace St. SH 1-15392.

ROOM FOR RENTMKN ONLY

741-6229LARGE FURNISHED ROOM —Waverly PI., Red Bank.

' SH 1-1382NICE ROOM, shower, kitchen privlleges. Parking. 8H 7-0638 or 47 BantSunset Ave., Bed Bank. ,'ROOM-Next to bath (or business man,20 Waverly PI.. (tl"t house lromBroad 8 t ) SH 1-2377.FURNISHED ROOM-Gentleman pre-ferred. Witt or without cooking. Call787-9192.BLBERON—Private ocean front beachclub has de luxe summer residenceaccommodations, Includes all pool andclub privileges, cell CA 2-1400 or CA2-7T33.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALEHOUSES FOR SALE

THE OCEAN

can be reached within » minuteslrom this) Rumson home, six rooms, k j u I ithree bedrooms, remodeling now going *. ™non. Near some of the finest schoole •'.•'•"•In the area, this value Is hard to

ket. $11,800 #Si3.

PHILIP J. BOWERS & CO.WALTER a OVERTON

DIAL 741-7200Real Estate Bines 1894

60 White St. Reel Bank

'' ShortUse Our Uyaw«y Pita

All Payments Appwodmtt*To Qualified Bafm

VETS - NO DOWNNON-VETS - $650 DOWN"The moving anger mites—and havingwrit, moves on . . . " Toll tour-bef-room will HreJ will move on, too, I ryou don't lee It now. Equipped with1% baths, science kitchen, reoHaUonroom, atttefced garage, alUBteuinstorm sash, on a full! linrtaoaped lot.Immediate pMsesslon at doslnt.

ONLY $16,990 aKBERS

Monmouth County Office

THE BERG AGENCYRealtor

"Personalized Service",OSborae 1-1000

Route #35 Mlddletown, N. J.Dally 8-9 Saturday-Sunday' 10-7

RIVERFRONTHigh on a bluff, five bedrooms, 2V,bath home .wUh family room, 281' onriver, IK acres, many hemlock, fir,dogwood, and hickory trees. Fishingand boating In river. Short walk togrammar school, five minutes to RedBank station. Just reduced to 131,600.Bee It today. ROLSTON WATER-BURY Realtor, 16. W. Front St.,Red Bank. 747-3500.

COLTS NICK • HOLMCELJ. D. Roche Agency

Lone Bridge Rd., Colt* Heck

ALL YEAIt, six rooms, bath, B.900.Easily converted to two family. 8 BurlSt, Bea Bright. Key at service station.

LEONARDO — Two-bedroom house,large llvlni-dinlng room, Urge kitchen,tiled bath, tB,«OO. 291-1427.

LITTLE SILVER—It's the ArmstrongAgency. lor all types of homes andproperty. Our extra large Variety oflomes (residential, riverfront) (rom114,900. SEE A 'REALTOR' IN LITTLESILVER, ELWOOD A. AKMSTRONGAGENCY. Realtor 655 Prospect Ave.,Little Silver. SK 1-4500.

EAST KEANSBURd — Five rooms,two porches, gas heat, convenient lo-cation. Price (6,900. OS 1-2796.

SUBURBAN UVINO—CITT CONVEN-IENCES — City sewers, commuterbuses, shopping and schools, all athand. Three bedrooms and unfinishedfourth, 23' recreation room, comforta-ble living room and pretty dining area.Plus a Gt mortgage .assumption ofS«00 cash and J130 month payments.Live in the country by calling today.WALKER & WALKER, Realtors, Hvry.35, 1000' south of Llly-Tallp Co., Mid-dletown. PHONE 671-3311. MultipleListings and trade-Ins. Send {or cata-log. Open' 7 days. •

VAIL HOMES — Four-room apartmentfor sale, oil heat, down payment,J69.W ,ner month. LI 2-3337. 32 BulshawAve., Eatontown.

WIDOWS SACRIFICE — Bungalows,one or more foe sale or for rent inKeansburg. 787-9406.

EAST KEANEBURO — Six-room house,

7S7-M3S

beat even In this house hunters mar- MIDDLETOWN — Split four-bedroom.Satin kitchen, wall oven, dining room,family room, two full baths, basement,garage, patio, lewen, walk to schooland transportation.747-6481 118,309

i m RIVERFRONT APARTMENT - Twi S ' bedrooms, Ule bath, electrlo kitchenaXf livlni-dlolng room, reasldentlal arei

Walking dlatanca to staUon. J150month. Lease naulred. P.O. Boxmonth. LeaRed Bank.

BIO BARGAIN — Color TV 1993,

SECOND FLOOR APARTMENT—Flirooms and bath. Nice and llghti Sxclsively decorated. All utilities. Preftmiddle aged business couple or retlreiNo pets. A - real quiet place to Hv<Bus In front o( door, with reference]691 Broad St., Bhrewebury.

model *398 complete. Come In lor a THREE ROOMS — Unfurnished, s<free demonstration. ACE TV Hwy. 35,lond door. $85 Includes heat and hiNeptune City. PR MOM. water. SH 1-J814.FIVE-PIECE bedroom set; English car-rlage, like new, must sell.

B42.1793WE8TINOHOTJSB LAUNDROMAT —Like new, fTC. MONMOUTH HOSIERYMILLS, 457 Broad St., Bhrewsbury.

ACS EMPLOXMJSNT AQEMCXttvery .jrder A applicant our specialty.12 Broad St. Red Bank SH 7-3494EDWARDS EMPLOYMENT AQENCI

Executive-Salea-OUlce-DomeitlQSincerity and ability with high etbloW Broad St SB 7-0977 Red Bank

SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEE —National company will train men withleadership quality. This is an outstand-ing opportunity for men with a visionfor a sood future. For appointmentphone PA 7-2442.

158 1st Ave,, Atl, Highlands(One Iliwk XoHh ol. Kt, act

281-1181 • Ojsen 'til 9 p , m .

r62 IMPALA4- dr. Full Power

Executive Car•61 PLYMOUTH

Conv. Clean, Full Power'61 CHEVROLET

Sedan"55 CHEVY

Panel Truck. '/i-Ton

Trenery Chevrolet12 Church St. Keansburg

SALES and SERVICE787-0007

REAL ESTATE SALESMAN for ex-cellent earning opportunity. No experi-ence necessary. If you are aggressiveand ambitious, call THE BERQ AOEN-Ct. Middietown. 08 1-1000.

SITUATIONS WANTED, Female

MAN WANTED — Three hours nightly.11 p.m. until 2 p.m. 8lx nights pe-rweek. 11.25 per hour. Call JACKPOTOOLP, 747-4081.

EXPERIENCED FLORAL DESIGNERseeks steady employment. Call

OS 1-2902

MAN — To work in laundrv full time,six days a week. Experience not re-quired. Apply Donald's Laundry, 44Marlon St., Red Bank.SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT —Must be over 21 years of age. Someexperience needed. Call 741-3393 after6 p.m.YOUNG MAN — 18 years or older.Apply after 7 p.m. Fascination Sport-land, 91 Eeachway, Keansburg.FIK8T-CLA8S experienced machlncst,(toot! starting salary and benefits. Call291-1054 for appointment.

CLASSIFIED BUSINESS DIRECTORYA HANDY GUIDE OF BUSINESS SERVICES TO SUIT YOUR MANY NEEDS!

Adding Machines — Typewriters

ADDING MACU1MB - TypewritersBold rtnted. repaired, Rcrplco's 1(11Monmouth Bt.. keel ftjinlL BH 7-W85.

Antiques Wanted

Old Dolls, guns, ]owclry, cut films,rurnlturo. Civil Wat books. Appraisalsmade. Oilman. UII 7-1141.

Appliance Repair*

APPLIANCE IlKPMlt and Insinua-tion. Itoslrlentltjl mni commenilal wlr-Ing, Allen Electric, SH 7-0012.

Auto Body Repair

EXPKltT I'AINTINO mifair, Modernto prlcrn.ChBvroJot, AtiaoUo JIlKlilnrirtfi

body ro-McOnrlhy

Auto and Truck Rental

AV1B— Rent a new C«T or truck Ixjwrites. Mopli Ave., Red Hank. UU 7.03118. Pit 4-M14. Dully 7 a.m.- lu |,.m.

Building Contractor

UUJLDSll - Now homes, room ad-ditions, basement and attic nmmi,kllclltns, B»rnrr, ropUrs and niter-allmti. Herlii-rt Hlgtiirauch. BH w a n .

J riCONhl - Cetamlc tile con-tractor (or tiuallly, price, and promptsen-Ice. R n estimate. CsJl WI-ZU9Ol ltl-2«77,

Cesspool Cleaning

BEITIC TANKS, dry ivelli serrlced.I.occhlnit field uddcd. ftackhoe work.C. II. Wilson. BH 1-1818.

Home Improvement!

FINISHED BASEMENTS, remodel-In,,, pmmblne, oloctrlo wiring, ma.«onry and pilntlnj. For free estlmakcall SI1 7-1072.

WOUK1NO MAN'B contractor—Alte^ntlolu nddlllonj, painting, masonry,nnd all thoss little lobs. Kvenln|s LO

I.nwn Mower RepairsAM, KINDS OF LAWN M0WHR8—Ilnnd and circular saws, Bltartienelrepaired. Free pick up. 201-2437.

and Dccorallng

LOUIS CAUHAN - ramt.r, decorator,impcrliatiKor, 2R years experience. 43Chapln Av«. BH 1-1708 after « p.m.I- II. II1LI. - Palnttr .Interior andciterlor. No Jobs too large or toosinaii. Very rmsonahlt. Call 747-9030.

OAI1I. U JONBB - I'Unllng anddecorating. 1'ull Insurance coveragt.For lre» estimate coll 747-3041

PAINTING AND PAPEIl IIANOINO-Jor a good clean |ol>. reaavnabls.Coll ail 7-3401. U4 Ulnser.

TOM BLATB - I'slntlatinj. Orncral Contr.L...... ._sored Twenty rears ««p«rTenoe. Free•sUmaUs. i l l t-»4Pi after I p.m.

'alritlngintractlni

and Decor*fully In-ng.

irle

Piano—Orgaa Tuning

PIANOS—OnaANBTuned — Repaired — RegulatedIlaymonfl Boawortli 811 1-7803

PIANO TUNINO — Available eve-nlnjs. James A Ryan. CA 2-75J4. Callafter S p.m.

Dumbing and Heating

KEttOAN'S21 Hour lervlce. All heating units•arvlced. Oil 71827. BH 1-7870*

Roofing, Siding and Insulation

Aluminum siding-BLIMlNATE-eipan-slvo ixlnllnj, unslglilly eiterlorwalls, gnbln ends. 14 btlutlful colorshorliontal or vortical panels. For do-it-yourself lioj»» owner or Inatnlled brexperts. I/>w, low prices, KltKR KR.TIMATU8. PnOWri'B. li Broad BtHod Bank, 8il 1-7500.

Insulation » Billing Corp. CertifiedJonns-Manrlll* contractor. Pit B-BI07or Adam Ummayor 201.KKU

OMON CO. INO.-noollng. Siding *Insulation. Installed nnd suarantaailfor 10 rears. PR IMJI04—201-004%

Tel. Answering Service

LET UB UK <our secretary. No needto miss os-lli. 24 hour answeringservloe, oil M700,

SALESPERSON — Make »JJJ In realestate and Insurance. PAUL P. BOVA,INC., Realtor • Insurer, OS 1-2S44.THE LAWLEY AGENCY la seeking agood real estate salesman or sales-lady. Many fine properties to sell.Visit Lawley Agency between 0 a.m.and 10 a.m. for further information.100 State Hwy. 35, Red Bank.

EXPERIENCED LAUNDRESS -Desires laundry. References. Call

8H 1-B233

CENTRAL OAB HEATING unit, floortype. Good condition $20.

291-0063

SITUATIONS WANTED. Male

WEEKENDS OR NIGHTS-Chauffeur.house boy. Experienced, over 25, noaccident record, sober, clean cut,

broad minded, answers confidential.Write "A.B", Box 511, Red Bank.HIGH SENIOR wishes summer work,preferably on estate. Willing and In-dustrious. BH 7-1199.

FINANCIALBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

FOR LEASE — American Oil Co. hasservice station for lease in Red Bankarea. Financial aaalslance available.

SPECIALS

RANGE HOODS30" _ 36" — 42"

UNFURNISHED - One room. Doulcloset with sliding doors, ceramic tl

STAINLESS STEEL OR COPPBRTONE bath, privately controlled baseboaiA Q . f i i - hot water heat Refrigerator. ComblntS T . 7 3 tion storm windows, light cooking pelT mltted. Utilities furnished. (60 p

month. References required. Locatedbusiness section Red Bank, Call SH0213 for appointment

MANY OTHER ITEMSON SALE ALSO

Crown Kitchen CenferHwy. 38. 8H 7-2852 Mlddletown.

(next to American lumber)POLAROID CAMER — Model 100. Withflash gun and leather case. Excellentcondition. 140. Call CO 4-3670.

LONO BRANCH — Three-room antwo-room apartment, private entrance;convenient to everything. CA 9-395:NEWLY DECORATED — Three-rooifurnished apartment. Complete privacy.Across from Fort Monmouth hospital.138 Main St., Oceanport.ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS—Unfumlsheithree rooms. In Private home, AJutilities Included. Call K'l-1697.

RED BANK — Newly decorated threeroom apartment. Unfurnished. Heat andwater supplied, private entrance. Cofrvelnlent to transportation. 185month. 741-2123.

NYLON TRICOT half slips, nightgowns, Mau Maus in cotton, closeoutlots from J1-J4. 787-1080.

ALTENBURG PIANO HOUSERent A Piano $12 per MonthKNABB. MABON-HAMLTN, SOHI1ER P.CABLE-NELBON. EVERETT. STUCK 'Oookatan Are. * Main St. Artury Pk,

Open daily UU » Sat. till 0:30PR 5-B301

RED BANK — Small furnished firfloor apartment. Private entrance aniprivate bath. Suitable for one buslnessman. 8een by appointment. SH '5393.FURNISHED TWO-ROOM APART-MENT — Cai! between 9 a.m. and

m. 02 Mechanic St., Red Bank.

COOLBRATOR FREEZER18 cu. ft upright. $79. Call

291-2130

THREE ROOMS — Unfurnished ,avaable now. Four rooms unfurnishedavailable July 1. Heat, hot water sup-plltd. Hwy. 35 Call CO 4-4968.

1963 WESTINGHOUSE refrigerator- 6.freezer, 18 cu. ft. In Coppertone. Maple ~bedroom set. 7S7-1443.POOL 16x42, plastic, completely equip-pea.

CO 4-8441

USED T.V.'SrW.tXS. ACl! T.V., ft» Hwy 35. NeptuneCity. PR 0-8082.

Call KI 1-5121 or writs511, fleet Iiank.

'A.C.", Box

PACKAGE LIQUOR STORE — TUBD0W8TRA AGENCY, 01 East FrontSt, Red Bank. 811 1-8700.SERVICE STATION FOn RBNT-Shoreterritory. Oakhurst. Corner location.Two-bay modern stition. Small Invest-ment. Call FA 2-4400 or write Dean OilCo., Fanwood, N. J.

MORTGAGES

HOMEOWNERS NEED MONEY7lour credit 1» good. First and secondmortgages. BH 1-4344 or CO 3-2CO1.

INSTRUCTION

TKAININO IN ELECTRONICSAttend one nlglit per week, fay asyou learn. Apply 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.Monday through Friday.

MONMOUTH RADIOKLKCT/IONICS INSTITUTE

814 Cooliman Ave., Asbury Park Northol Railroad ^ts.tlon. 774-O303.

0x12 AMERICAN ORIENTAL KARASTAN — New pad, US, Custom ridingclothes, Parker lawn sweeper. 842-2686.

3% ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT— Couple only. For further informa,tlon call BH 1-3375.

NEW — Two and three-bedroom apart-trients, unfurnished, available lmmedl'ately. Keansburg. Call 787-7107, aftei

Baturday and Sunday, CA 2-4218AVAILABLE JULY 1 — Newly paintedtwo-bedroom apartment. J125. MollsPitcher Village. 842-2367.ATLANTIC HIOHLANDS—Unfurnished

h\ furnished m-room apartment;tine section. 6 Third Ave. 201-923"TWO-ROOM APARTMENT — Conven-ient riverfront location. Business or re-tired woman. SH 1-4138.

UNIVERSAL GAS RANOE—40". Four-burner divided top. Waist high broiler.Beat offer. 812-3215.

BIG DISCOUNTSFactory clearance sale. Men's socks,bargln prices. MONMOUTH HO8IBRYMILLB, 457 Broad St. Shrewsbury.Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-4;30 p.m.SOYBEAN (CLARK'S) SEEDS TO-MATO PLANTS, MORTON HYBRIDS.

LI 2-3709BURLAP - All decorator colors. (IDcents • 89 conts yard. Foamart. awy.35, Eatontown. LI 2-0477.

THREE ROOMS—Unfurnished, In four-apa.Ttm.ent building. Bedroom, livingroom, kitchen, bath, freshly painted,no pets, adults only. SH 1-8687, aftei9:30 SH 1-5384.ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS — Thnrooms, all utilities Included, $90month. Available July 1. 52 Third Ave.

COMMERCIAL RENTALS

OFFICE SPACEHeat rurnlshBd, will redecorate to sullyour requlrments. Best location, wllsub-divide If necessary, fiee and com-pare. SH 7-1100.

MERCHANDISEFOR SALE

WHERE ELSEuan you buy tha belt quality windownibums "tnipont Tontine?" They lootneat, they wear a lonr time. Shadesmad* while you wait. Shop by phone.

P R O W N ' SS3 Broad at. Red Bank BH 1-7500 fo'iuft7M3-368&

STORE FOR RENT - Next to MayfalrSuper Market, Newman Springs Rd.Red Bank. Call days 811 1-D59D. evenlngl SH 1-5013.

30 ACRES STANDING CLOVER HAY— In Holmdel. For information caiH40-48IM alter 6 p.m.

LUCITE PAINTThe miracle of the ago. Dupont really

a wonderful article. Order some. Sale price Jo.78, rejular |7.45.

P R O W N ' S32 Broad Bt. lied Bank 811 1.7B00

J2-PIBOB WALNUT D1NINQ nOOMBET—nerkley and Gay, in excellentcondition. Chairs have upholsteredtincks and seats. , Excellent china* cab'

tt. Must sell. Beat offer, mi 1-7107.

DINETTE BUT - Otay oak, ovalable, six chairs, breakfront, good con.

illtlon, KB 1-1012.1'Yt'UlWIU'i'iillUi ADUlno machinesAll makes mw or ueed. duaranletd'Low as 12s, fierplco's, 1(71 afarmniift-' Nmt in trmter SH 7-OilS.

CHUM OHINDKIl, with or wllhout re-iliictlon g««r. N'> motor. 30" attlo fan,

It lype, 2001 V mantla 81"w>w«r mower reel tyj>« Bit

attlo fan,root, 81"1-MI7<

COLD SPOT ItEFRiaBRATOIt-314years old. Perfect running condltloaApartment size. Will sacrifice and ac-cept best olfer. 787-6530.TWO MAHOOANY piecrust tables, onemahoiany leatlteriopCall LO 6-0372.

cooktall tabje.

AWNINGSALUMINUM OR FIBERGLASS

Door hoods, patios, eto. Promotionagainst sun, rain, sUst, snow. Free•silmatss. call today. No obligations.

PROWN'Sil Uroad Bl, SH 1-7000 Red Bank

CABINET MAKER WANTED—To renlfully equipped wood working shopaood location. Modest rental. EveningsBH 7-51D5.BHLFOBD — Space suitable (obusiness use, 580 so. ft, will rer

STORESWhite St — Beit location, redecora-tlon completed, amall or large space tosuit your requirement, 8H 7-1100.

OFFICESHIGHWAY 35, NEAR BEND1X

LI 2-061)3COMMERCIAL BUILDING- 30165, willrent all or part. Lltllo silver, nearrailroad station. SH 7-2800.LODGE) ROOM for ront. Center ortown. Could be used also for officespace. Approximately 2,400 sa. ft. Write•LODClEr Box 511, Red Bank.

HOUSES FOR RENT

UUONUURIZINO UQUlraWNT - Foirent or tale; free delivery. South jer*e.y MJJWJCJU, SB I-MM.

WIDE SELECTION OF RENTALS -Furnlshsd and unfurnished. Immedl-ati occupancy. Samuel Telcher AgencyOcsanport Are., Gccmtnort call or dialLI 3-3800 or U J-JHOt

, SUMMBH IUDNTAI*LONO BHANCH - On the ocean front.Private beach. Four rooms and hath.CA 9-ltiX i

COLONIAL SPLIT LEVEL

ThU four Dedroom, 114 bath, beautyhas everything your family will enjoy """including a large nicely landscaped onlot, garage, basement, combinationstorms and soreens, and as a bonusa large family sized swimming cool.

PRICED TO SEH.

$19,750.SNYDER REALTORS

8 Corners MIddJetown OS 1-2590RED BANK HOME-J list ell BroadSt. Seven rooms, two baths, fireplace,sunporch. In excellent condition. Quietstreet. Walking distance to shopping,schools and trains. (17.850. Call us to-day. ROLSTON WATERBURY. Real-tors, IS W. Front St, Bed Bank.SH 7-3SOO.

SHREWSBURY — New Cape Cod ontree-shaded lot Three bedrooms, 1V>

RUMSON RTVKRVIEW — 2H yearold ranch. Immaculate condition. Three-bedrooms, tile bath, wide board,pegged Doors. Walking distance toocean, schools, cnurchea and shops.Only (15,800. Cull lor appointmentItOLSTON-WATKRBL'RY, Realtors, 16West Front 8t , Red Bank. SH 7-3500.RIVER PLAZA - By owner, three-bedroom ranch, dining room, dinetteplayroom, two-car garage. BH 7-5549.

PLACE YOUR BIDThis four-bedroom home In good con-dition Is yours for the asking. Ownermust sell this month and la beggingfor offers. With the many featuresthis home provides, this Is the bar-gain you've been looking for. Livingroom with charming bay window, din-ing, sunny kitchen with, built-in Tap-pan range, I}i baths, game room,.lenty of closets, too. TBRMB-TERMS-'ERMS- pick up the phone now.

WALKER & WALKER, Realtors. Hwy.35. 1000' south of Lily- Tulip Co.,Mlddlttown. PHONE 671-3M1. MultipleListings and trade-ins. Bend for cata-log. Open 7 days.

BUNGALOW — Four and ball rooms.50x100. Reasonable. Will consider rent-al. 08 1-3662.

SHREWSBURY — Well-built home onnicely landscaped %-acre. Privatebackyard. Two bedrooms, modernkitchen, dishwasher, wall-to-wall carpet,recreation room, Full basement withlarge game room, attached garage,many extras lnoluded, $16,950. Ownt,.

LINCROFT — Attractive three-levesplit, on culet street. Eight rooms,l*b baths, attached two-car garag-(22,600, with i'i% mortgage. BH .-9690.

OWNER LEAVINOSeven years new with loads of llvir.tln eight-room ranch home. Twin baths,double garages, huge basement ovei-slzed lot with fine lawn, ahrubi aniltrees. Now *19,800. WALKER «WALKER, Realtors, Hwy. 35, Shrews-bury. SH 1-5212. 24-Hour Service.

RUMSON WATERFRONT-Flrst timeoffered. Need our bedroom homs, ondeep water with new style floatingdock? Borne consists of large paneled'Wing room with beamed celling anil

baths, full cellar, bay window In Uvlng fireplace, dining room, time savingroom, large kitchen, plenty of cabinets kitchen, 33' long porch overlooking riv-(15,900. SH 1-3441. er. We wager you will practically live

on the porch. Excellent bulkhead. Theashing price is <27,000, but the owneris open to reasonable offers. Call thisagency for further, details. GLAZE.BROOK AOENCY, Avenue 01 Two Riv-ers, Rumson. 842-1700.

LOTS AND ACREAGE

LOT 200' 300'. Four-oedroom sparc-ment. 621 Highway 35, Mlddletown,Call OS 1-1685.

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY

FOR SALE OR RENT — Reasonable."t 1% C l lStore,

OR RENTrooms. Call

787-3110

BUSINESS PROPERTY

FOR SALE OR LEASE3omer Lot 100x150 Shrewsbury Ave.

Inquire at 335 Shrewsbury Ave. R.B.

'ARK LIKE SETTINO — Sparklingwhite. Five bedrooms, den, fireplace,two baths, modern kitchen. Riverrights. Three blocks to Red Bankschools, churches, and shopping center.«6,000. See It today. ROLSTON-WA-TERBURY, Realtor. 16 West Front St,Red Bank. BH 7-3500.

RUMBON — Cape Cod, knotty pinethroughout, fireplace, full cellar, excel-lent location, reasonable taxes, |17,500.3 l l 9-12 noon or after 5 owner, 842-0899

RED BANK — Near St. James Parish,HudHon Ave. Price $14,750. Zoned forbusiness or residence, oil heat. Ex-clusive agent CONSTANCE 8MITH, 14Maple Ave., Fair Haven. SH 1-2308.INVESTMENT PROPERTY — Ocean-port Landscaped waterfront, threelouses on three acres, all rented. Onewuse furnished, Includes iheo-cor ga--age, room tor three additional houses;wntefront, deep channel, new dock.35,000, SH 1-2233.JEW BHREWSBURY - Colonial, touriedrooms. all largo rooms. $29,500. £x<client condition. Owner. SH 7-5380.

PAB ULOI/8 OPPORTUNITY, TivTapartment house for sale at the shore.Best location. Fully furnished. $4000Income. Price a7,SO0, Write "A, T."Box 511, Red Bank.,

REAL ESTATE WANTED

LIST YOUR HOMEwith us lor prompt service. M«nh»rMultiple Listing (Service. ROLBTONWATBSRBURX, Realtors since 1925. 19W. Fronl HBd Bank. 8H 7-3500.

WE NEED YOUR HOMBOur 12 salespeople have clients wait-Ing for your listing. They need ranches,split levels, two stories; also Invest-ment property. Call us for a quickBale. Two offices serving you.

WALKER ft WALKERRealtors

Bhrewsbury Office Mlddletown OfficeSH 1-5212 OB 1-3311

:ED BANK — Washington St., duplex.Ix rooms each side, coal furnaces.;easonablo price. Low taxes. Exclu-de agent, CONSTANCE BMITH, 14laple Ave., Fair Haven. SH 1-23OB,

WE NEED - Five or six. 2-3 bedroomhomes, furnished or unfurnished, fromIttO to JH75 P " month for Incomingexecutives. THE BERO AGENCY, Rt3o, Mlddletown. OS 1-1000.

LEGAL NOTICE;

IIVER PLAZA — Elsht year-old Capo;od: Perfect condition. Three-bedrooms,Bpaca for fourth), basement, aBsumoilgli mortgage. 115,000. 741-7686 or 222-

" Mr. Cozens.IIQHLAND3 — Four-room house onII], oil heat, large kitchen, full basa-lent. Ideal for couple. 872-1738.'AIR HAVEN — S18.IKX), Owner sell-lg. Charming Colonial on large (loox00') tree-shaded plot. Roomy screenedorch, living room wltli bRy window,en. Compact sunny hllchen and dln-ng area. Upstairs, two bedrooms and>ath. Exceptional walk-In closets andtorage apace. 136 Harrison Ave. CallII 1-2354.

tlVER PLAZA SPLIT-LEVEL — Threeledrooma, living room, dining room,lichen, recreation room, laundry room,^ baths, full cellar, attached garage.ras*ier, dryer. Practically new wall-t-wfill carpet throughout, drapes, cur-tins. Underground sprlnker, % acre,Bautlfully landscaped. Through owner,10.500. PR 5-0445,

IEVEN ROOMS - Colonial split-level,'atlo, fully landscaped. Assume 01lortiage. CO 4-59.17.O8T DESIRED AREA. Finest schools.00 sq. ft. of modern living space,our bedrooms. Century old shade,ly through owner. |3J,9O0. 81! 7-2(03.

NOT1CKTake notice that Sycamore Lanes,

Inc. T/A Sycamore Lanes has applladto the Mayor and Council of the Bor-ough of Now Shrewsbury, N. J., thBBorough or New Shrewsbury, N. J,,for a Plenary Retail Consumption Li-cense, for premises situated at 800Shrewsbury Ave., In the Borough ofNew Shrewsbury, N. J.

OfficersCharles T, Bruno, President, 71 Seven

Bridge Road, Little Silver, N, J.Fred C. Bruno, Vice Prealdent. 90 Elm

Lane, Shrewsbury, N, J.Charles R. Bruno, Treasurer, 41 Salem

Lane, Little Silver, N. J.Officers holding more tlian 10% of

stock In the Corporation are:Charles T. Bruno. Prcslilcnt, 71 Beven

Bridge Road, Little Silver, N. J.Objections, if any, should be made

Immediately In writing to Jerome 8.Reed, Clerk of the Borough of NewShrewsbury.

BYCAMOflE LANES, INC.Charles T, Brunsn, President71 Seven Bridge Jtoad,Little Silver, N. J.

May V June 3 $15.18

HOUSES FOR SALE

IDDLETOWN - Split level, sevenoms, 1M baths, garage, Ideal loca-on. AsBume 4H% mortgage. Owneransfirred. $18,900. OB 14134.

MORE LISTINGS SHOWN

.KOMAHDO — Flve-roome furnished Iungalow, enclosed porch, garage andiriuhop, near boat harhor, nice lawnI shrubbey, (8,500. M Monmouth

ICOND HOUSE from Ashury-Oceanrove boardwalk, four bedrooms,ery Improvement, grand condition, I

Income, one floor If needed, 112,-

? » 0 W n W *•* « * |

MLSMORE LISTINGS SOLD

Thru Th* R»d Bank AreaMultiple Lilting Strvic*

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BURNETT and GEORGE CRENSHAW

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MARY WORTH By yllLEA' SAUNDERS and KEN ERNST

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IBRIEF CARIHAS BEEN1 MARKED|BV BITTER

WORD5(ABOUT HI51 FATHER-

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EASY PREY FOR A PRETTY J^GIRL'S FLATTERY!

M SORRY, GRANDMOTHER!Yvii V E B y~WHEN YOU WRITE,TELL, unru MOiir,HIM I WISH HIM IUCK

RIVETS By GEORGE SIXTA

THE RYATTS By CAL ALLEY

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DAILY CROSSWORD

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- LEGAL NOltCE-

HonesT«k« nsUet Hut John J. Nl»ra trtd

HI u Thl WbM Birrtl h u «pp]lecto UM M>7or und Council or thlBorouih of Red Bank (or a PUntryRM>I! Dlilrlbutlon Iha licini* torpremUil illuated i t 4 Monmouth at ,Red Bank. N. J.

Objection, It anr, should b« mid«Imnudlatajjr in writirx to John Brjrtn.<Snk of tnt Borough of Red Bank,

( l l d )JOHN J. NIVENHighland Roail,Mlddletown, N. ; .

May V, Jun. I

HOTICETake notlct that TKB COL.UMBUB

CLUB Or RID BANK. NEW JBIUBTnil trolled to the Major and Councilol the Borough of Ealr Hav«n tor aClub Ucen» for ^remliea altuatcd 'itHO Third Strait, r»lr Hares, NewJerair.

The namei and rcjldeneei ot theOltictn ana Truiteii of THE COLUMBUS CLUB OF RED BANK, MCWJ E R S E Y a n ai rollowi:

OffleenEmlllo arllil. tm Branch Arenue. Ut-

lie Mlnr, N. J.. PrealdentJoeeph P. Ambroalno, 363 rro»P«ct

Artnui, Llltle lUver, New Jentr,Vice Preildem

Oeorge Wlimar, lot Manor Drlre, RedBank. New Jereey, fleeretary

Joeeph Keenan, n Creitvlew Drive,Red Bank, N. J.. Treuurer- TruINt

Olflcirs abov*.Robert Dudley. 271 Hanoi Boat reirHaven, New Jereey, rruttceWilliam Tbarer, 10 Third Itnet, Rum

eon, New Jernj . TniiteeJohn TUlelll, n» Erirett Roal, Re*

Bank, New Jersey, TrueteeJamee R. Mlnogue. I NUee Arenue,

MUdletown, N. J., TruituKucene Carroll, 407 Proepect Avenue,

Uttle UlTer, Hew Jeriey. TrutUeQerald McDonald, 1IJ Creitvlew Drive,

Rod Bank, N. J.. TnuteaOWecUonj u any mould be nude

ImmiautelT In writlm to Roy If. MM-eon, Borough Clerk of toe Borough otFair Haven, New Jeriejr.

THB COLUMBUI OLUBOF RED BANK,NEW JURIST, *MO Third ItctetFair Haven, New Jereey

May 17, June I I23.K

NOTICEMOMJOUTH COUNTY COCBT

LAW DIVISIONSOCKET MO. U t i l

IN THE MATTER Or THB APPL*CATION OF P A U U N I SUSANPRICE, Individually and ae NaturalOuardlan of THOMAS PRICI, an In-fant, for Leave To Assume the Namesof PAULINE SUSAN CALLAHANand THOKAS CALLAHAN, respect-ively.

NOTICE OP APPLICATION TORLEAVE TO ASSUME

ANOTHER NAMETO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:

Pursuant to the provisions of theStatute* and. Rulst of Court, noticeIs hereby given that we shall applyto the afo&mouUi Cou&tv Court, LawDivision, at the Court Houle, Freehold,New Jersey on t i e l l l h dar ot July,1K3 at ten o'clock In the forenoon,

as soon thereafter as the nuttercan be heard, for an Order to au-thorize u i to assume another name,to wit: PAULINE SUSAN OALLAHANand THOMAS CALLAHAN.

DATED: l i a r 23. 1M3.(Signed)

P A U U N I SUSAN PRICI, Individuallyand as Natural Guardian ef THOMASPRICE, an Infant.Joseph T. Deegan. •"•• Esa.

Counsellor at LawUS Slati Street

PerUi Amboy, New JerseyIfajr n . June 1, 10, 17 SSt.M

NOTICETake notice lha! Role Huy To-

mtlno, Exetutrli Eitile of Leuli P.Tomalno trading ae Commuten Wine* LUuor Store hai appind to the Miy-or and Council of UIA Borough of RedBenlt for a Plenary Retail DistributionD4 llceme for prtmlsei eltuateri atlit Uonmouth St., Red Bank. N. J.

Objection!, If any, ahould be rnedeImmedletely In writing to John Bryan,Cltrk of the Borojgh of Red Bank.

(Signed)HOSE MART TOMAINOEiecutrlx Eetate ofLouie P. TomalnoX Allen PlaceKed Bank, N. J.

Uay 77. June 1 M M

-LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICETake notice that Harry reuhnun

trading- u H. T. Llduora HAS a nto tha Mayor and Council at theough of Red Bank for a PlenaryRetail Distribution D-T license forpremjiea situated at 90S W BerxeiPlace Red Bank, N. J.

Objections, It any, enould be madeImmediately ki writing to John Bryan,Clerk of the Borough of Red Bank,

(signed)HAIUtT FELfiHMAN2M w . Bergan Place

T . Red BiBk, N. / .June I, 10 11June J, 10, n

"How's your diicovery tech-nique?" Queen Isabella asked.

" M l do for a tew centuries,"Christopher Columbus replied."But when they get around toinventing bridge, the best playerswill develop a very refined tech-nique." ,

Columbus was quite right. Thebest bridge players have greattalent for discovering wherethings are.

For • example, take this handplayed in a team mttch recentlyby Richard Walsh, of BeverlyHills. Walsh wanted to discoverwhich opponent had the king ofdiamonds. He couldn't send asailor up to the top of the mastwith a spyglass to look for aone-eyed king. The opponentsmight object.

Put yourself In his place andsee how you would go about it.West took the king and ace ofhearts, then led a trump. Howshould declarer locate the kingof diamonds?

Indirect Method

Walsh used an indirect methodto locate the king. He first lo-cated, the ace of clubs. The theo-ry was that East needed. eitherthe king of diamonds or the aceof clubs for his raise to twohearts. East couldn't have both,for West needed one of thosecards for his opening bid andstrong rebld.

After winning the third trick inthe dummy with the ace ofspades, Walsh led dummy'sking of dubs. 'East naturallyplayed the ace, and declarerruffed.

This play didn't win any tricks,but it told South that West hadthe king of diamonds. Since therewas no advantage in taking thediamond finesse, Walsh drew onemore round of trumps, cashed Dieace of diamonds and led a lowdiamond.

LEOM. NOTICE

pjtorsamr MLENotice to hereby given that the Bor-

ough ot Sea Bright at lti meeting olMay It. 1M3, hat approved the follow-ing property for public eale, whichproperty te not needed- for public uieand which property u known and del-Ignated on the tax map of the Bor-otijti ot Sea Bright ai foUowe:

Blk.. S: Lot. •: Addnw, Surf StreetApproi. Bin, » ' i » ' .

A meeting of the Borough Councilwill be held on Monday, the 10th dayof June, 1M3, at the Borough Hall, SiaBright, New Jereey, at »:00 P.M., pre-vailing time, when the Borough Coun-cil will receive bide for the eald aele.

Bide for the eune ehall be aub-mJtted verbally, at public auction, atthe eJbove time and place. The euocea-rul bidder ahull pay an amount equalto ten (10) car cent ot the amount of

The ternu of the eale ahall be ecaih eale upon the following terma andumdltkma:

1. Payment by oaeh or certlflldcheck at the time of the tale of anamount equal to ten (19) per cent otthe luocewful Md.

X Payment by caeh or certifiedcheek ot an additional amount equal toten (10) per cent of the eucceeeful bidupon deUvkry of contract ot aale to beexecuted and delivered no later thintire (t) daye from the date that tie•all le DonBxmed. In the event the buy-er etull refute to execute eaid contract,the tin (10) per cent depoelt hereto-fore paid ehall be forfeited to the Bor-ough or Sea Bright.

J. The contract of aale ahall providethat title be eloeed no later thanthirty (JO) day* from thn date thereof,at which time the buyer ehall pay tothe Borough ot Sea Bright by oaeh orcertified check the balance remainingdue on account of the purohaee prlei.

The purchaeer ahall at the time oteloalng pay a aum of money aa an ad-ditional purchue price equal to theamount of tax baied on the lae! ai-eeeeed valuation on the booke of theAueeur, apportioned from the tintday ot January, US), for the yearU6).

The aald land and premleea la to betold iubtt« to all municipal, Kale,and federal ordlnanoee, etatutea, andregulatloni affecting the uae of Uiecald land and premlaee and the build-ings to be or thereon conetructed, andsubject to euch elate of facia a> anaccurate survey ot eald land and prein-laee would dlecjoie, and eublect to allsuch oovenarita, easements, conditions,and reatricuone appearing In prior titledeeda and Instrument! now of rec-ord atfeotlnr; tald land and premises.

Conveyance ehall be by bargain andeale deed. Purchaaer shall pay anyand all legml fees attending the prep-aration and execution oi contract ofeale, deed, and any and all other doc-uments neceeeary, recording fees, anddocumentary etampe to be paid by thepurchater.

Council reeervee the right to rejectany or all bids.

JOAN AXJDLflEN, Clerk,Borough ot Sea Bright

June I JBO.M

NOTICETake notice that Blue Diamond Inn,

Inc., trading* aa Blui Diamond Inn hasapplied to the Mayor and Council ofthe Borough of Red Bank for a Plen-ary Retail Oonaumptlon C-M llcini i forpremlsee situated at 1& Monmouth St.,Rid Bank, N. J.

Oblectlona, If any, should be madeImmediately In writing to John Bryan,cnerk of the Borough of Red Bank.

(algnedlDOMENIOK C. PINGI-TORE,

President end Treaaur*r25 Wall Ot..

Red Bank. If. J.JOSEPH G. McCUI,

Vice Preeldent,Ridge K D U ,

Runuon, rf. J.ADELE PINOI-TORI,

Secretary,29 Riverside Avenue,

Red Bank, N. J.June 1, 10 113.4?

• LEGAL NOTICE • •LEGAL NOTICE-

SDMHAKY OB STNOrSIS OF 1MI AUDIT BErOBT OF THEBOROUGH OF UTTLE SILVER AS MEQDDtBD BY H.IM. MA't-1

COMBINED COMPARATIVE BALANCE SHEETASSETS Dec. 11, IBS! Dec. SI, 1W1

Caeh and Inveetmente 4 M2.KT.U I 43IM08.MTaxei, Asaenmenle and U e m Receivable 62.S31.7S 4H.O96.B3Property Acquired for Taxee—Aeeetied Value T.MO.0O 7,6(0.00Accounts Receivable - 15,«M.M M.WU9Deferred Ohargee to rutuie Taxation—Oeniral Capital •M.ms.Ou 15,6M.«)Diferred Charges to Revenue of Succeeding Tears 31.38S.H

TOTAL ASSETS Mt,M».l i | KO.&M.JJ

UABILOTIJXB, RJDSamVZS AMD SURPLUSBonds and Notes Payable - -t I 1,600.00Improvement Authorlritlona ..._ W.KS8.SS «,6sn.!8Other Uabllltlea and Special Funds J72.762.M 4M.3M.MReserve for Certain Aisete Receivable Tl .KgM (7,111.18Surplue . 101,374.83 93.010.12

TOTAL LJABIUTUK,RXSJGRVXS AND SURPLUS . . * JM.H4.H % 580,018.M

COMPARATIVE STATEMENT Or OPERATION AND 8URPMMCUBKENT FUND

TIKVKNUE ICaeh B u t e !Surplus Balance January IUleccllaneous— From othit tlian

cal Property Tax Levies ....— -Collection ol Delinquent Taxes -Collection of Current Tax Levy

nlerlund Loans Returned -

Tear 1K2 Tear 1IM1«3,oM.02 I S2.O26.K

104,306. tt42,Stl.42

H7.M1.M

11.110.ISKt6.in.ie7»,1I«.M«,72(.tH)

TOTAL. FUNDS JMI>»,U7.|O W.1»,7M.«1

EXPENDITURES (Accrual lae ls lRuriget Exnendltureii:

Municipal PurooseeCounty TaxesLocal School T e n s -Other Expenditures

TOTAL BXPBNDITUrtES

: Expenditures to be Raisedby Future Taxee _

g rt7,X«Hl.... VK.U3M

... mt.mvtIS1M

I 184,637.3417D,»J«.«.1IW,OT».I2

TOTAL, ADJUSTED I X P E N D n T O I *

4 I M.OM.CO

It,007,106 71 tl.Oi2.lM.a9

Surplus Salance December 11 J 1OI.OU II I U.&tS.n

RattOMMENDATIONftt1. That proper action be (akin to dlepose of ptraonal taxee over two years old,'.. That all officials handling fund! deposit them wltMn forty-eight hours.

The above eummery or lynupels was prspared from the report of audit>f the Borough ef LIUIa Silver, County of Monmouth for tha calender year

1M2. This report of audit, submitted by Joseph X, Seaman, Regittered Munici-pal Accountant, la on file at thl Borough Clerk'a elYlof end may he Inspectedby any Interested person.

riup L, Anns,Clerk

May JT. Juns 1 H7. l l

Bridge ColumnBy ALFRED SHEDWQLD

THE HANDSWat oeiler

OT 4 $4 K ( 5 J

WEST EAST

V A K J 1 0 5 U 9 * « 40 X R O J 10 9

• Q W ^U* J «

O A Q C 5 2* None

West NMth EastI V Psss 2 ^ 2 44 9 4 * AH Pass *

Opening lead — «j> X

West had to play the king ot

diamonds, and declarer had tha

rest of the tricks, If South had

taken the "normal" diamond fi-

nesse, he'd have lost the queen

to West's king, and East would

eventually take the setting trick

with the jack of diamonds.

DAILY QUESTION

Partner opens with one heart,the next player bids one spade,and you hold: Spades — 5 I.Hearts — 9 8 6 4. Diamonds -J 10 9. Clubs - A J 7 6. Whatdo you say?

Answer: Bid two hearts. Youhave only 6 points in high cardsand 1 point lor the doubleton,but you must raise at once orforever hold your peace. It paysto raise light when you hav»four-card support for partner'ssuit.

For Sheinwold's 3&page book-let, "A Pocket Guide to Bridge,'.1

send 50c to Bridge Book, RedBank Register, Box 3318, GrandCentral Station, New York IT,N. Y.

POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER

The Big, Fat CostOf Staying Slim

BOYLE

NEW YORK (AP)-Thingscolumnist might never know if hedidn't open his mail:

In the quest for slimness, Amer-icans reduce their bankrolls moreoften than they do their figures.They spend (300 million anow on reducing pills and weightlosing nostrums.

It'll be a long time before UncleSam gets down to his last buck.The U.S. Mint hasn't coined silverdollars for more than acentury but still has 74 millionthem on hand.

Wonder if tennis fans know thatEgyptians were batting ballsacross a net 500 yean before thebirth of Christ?

One of the world's nicest smell-ing streets is the Rue du Fau-bourg-St. Honors in Paris. Once ayear its sidewalks are washedwith perfumed water.

After the American Revolution,the portrait of George Washington•riefly replaced the king of hearts

In decks of playing cards. For ashort time, too, Thomasreplaced the king of clubs, An-drew Jackson the king of spadesand John Quincy Adams the kingof diamonds.

By HAL BOYLEIn Kentucky, a lawmaker once

introduced a bill making it illegalfor tobacco auctioneers to speakindistinctly.

Studies have shown that to bepsychologically ready for a job

year you should see that it is worth do-ing, be reasonably confident youcan do it, and want fe do it now.

'Pilgrim's Progress," the reli-gious classic that became an all-time best-seller, was written by

quarter j o h l l B u n y a n w h i I e ^ ^ . ^

01 Adolf Hitler also was in jail whenhe wrote "Mein Kampf."

Some 77 per cent of U.S. fam-ilies now own at least one motorcar.

Not man but an insect, the ant,has the largest brain in propor-tion to its size.

Nudist camps were started inGermany in 1912, but the largestone now is in France. It draws15,000 jun worshippers each sum-mer.

Our quotable notables: "What Ismy loftiest ambition? I've alwayswanted to throw an egg into anelectric fan"-Oliver Herford.

Experts say American1 papercurrency is the easiest to counter-feit, French banknotes the hard-est.

"Many a man who never lost anJefferson argument never kept a friend"—

Arnold H. Glasow.

One out of every six persons inthe VS. working force is a gov-ernment employee.

It was Benjamin Franklin whoobserved, "There are three faith-ful friends—an old wife, an olddog, and ready money."

•LEGAL NOTICE-

NOTICETaks notice that executrli of the

eitaie of Norman Dlletto and ChristineL Dlletto, T/A Red Roof Tavernh u applied to the Township Clerkof Holmdel Tbn-mhlp for a PlenaryRetail consumption llcerue for prem-ises situated East side Route 31,Holmdel Township.

Objectlone, If any, should be madeImmediately In writing to: DanM S.Ely. Cltnk of Holmdel Township.

(Signed)OKRISmNI! DILOETTO,• Allen Place,Red Bank, N. J.

una 3, June 10 ' ga..T4

NOTICETake notlta that Raffaele O. Tom-

lino trading as Tomalno Uquors hasspiled to tha Mayor and Council of

tlie Borough of Red Benk for a PlenaryRetail Distribution D 4 license for pre-mises situated at HI Shrewsbury Av<..Rsd Bank, N. J.

Oblecllora, if any, should be madeimmediately In writing to John Bryan,Clerk of the Borough of Red Bank.

feigned)1U.FF1ABH: O. TOMAINO,

161 Bhrfrwebury Avenue,Red Bank, N. I .

me 3, 10 11.61

rtoncr.Take notice that Batee Lodge #220,

BPOK of W. Inc. has spoiled to thfMayor end Council of the Borough otRed Bank for a club llceme C.B.I.license for premliee situated at 306Shrewsbury Ave, Red Bank, N. J.

Objections, If any, should be madeImmediately In writing to John Bryan,Olerk of the Borough of Red Benk.

(algned)OWRIil, IIAItms, Eialted Ruler'» nanlen PI.,

New Shrewsbury, N. J.OHN MITCHELL, Financial Secretary•1 Puch « . .

NAW Shrewsbury, N. J.PERCY rtOBKRTtlON, Recording Secrelary

181 Mechanic St..Ited Bank, N. J.

May 27, June 3

NOTICICTake notice that Btlow, Inc., h u ep-

>Ue><l lo the Mevor and Council of thetorougti nf Red Flank for a P l e n t yRetail Consumption C-.13 license forvemlftee eltuaXeil at 61 Monmouth St.,lt«d Bank, N. J.

Objections, If any, should be mademmedlatftly In writing to John Bryan,

Clerk o[ the Borough of Red Bank.imwia c, Bitxiw,Prftfltden*.

60 Awalon Prlve,OolimU, N. J.

EUMNRTH BILOW,Vice President.

60 Avaton Drive,Oolonla. N. J.

iirnwro onnwruN BIUW, «D,HeorMary.Trea*ur*r

(0 Robin Court,MMiUetown, H. J.

una I. 10

Youths FinedAs Disorderly

EATONTOWN - Four RedBank youths were convicted inmunicipal court under the dis-orderly persons statute of failingto give a good account of them-selves, fined $30 each Wednes-day night and each given a 10-day suspended sentence in thacounty Jail.

The four, Roland Morris, UCentral Ave.; Willie J. Yarbor-ough, 218 Bridge Ave.; WalterLewis, 241 Bergen PI., and JohnSummey, 121 Bergen PI., all ofRed Bank, were picked up inthis borough May 24 wfth threecompanions in a car that hadbeen reported stolen by the New-ark police. No charge of cartheft was brought against them.

Magistrate M. Raymond Mc-Gowan found Albert J. Droidow-ski, Dr., Freehold, guilty ofdrunken driving and fined him$225 and revoked his driver's li-cense for two years.

Mrs. Rita Zopper, 18 OrchardCt., Lakewood, was found guiltyof shoplifting May 18 in Bam-berger's Monmouth ShoppingCenter store, and was fined $310.

WILSONS ENTERTAIN

NEW SHREWSBURY-Mr. andRobert Wilson, Jl Thayer

Dr., were hosts to the Ratable*bowling team preceding the Tues-day Nite League's dlnner-danc«Saturday. Guests included Mr.and Mrs. Robert Kiechlln, Mr.and Mrs. Joseph Herrmann, Mr.and Mrs. Gordon Montgomery,Mr. and Mrs. John Crowley, Mr.and Mrs. Richard Maloney andMr. and Mrs. William Marshall,Jr.

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birthday of Richard Kotgel, sonof Mr, and tin. Herbert Koegel,was cdebreted at a family part)May 21 and on Sunday, May 26,at the home of Mr. and Mrs.Charles Brooks, Upper Montclair.Also present were Misses Barban-Brook* and Beth Brooks

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Scott

Oppose Aid to hdiaBy Robert S. Allen and Paul Scott

By ROBERT S. ALLEN and PAUL SCOTTWASHINGTON — President Kennedy's little-no-

ticed proposal to give India more than $1 billion inadditional economic and military aid is encounteringstrenuous bipartisan opposition in the House ForeignAffairs Committee.

All the backstage indications arethat this key committee will vote far-reaching restrictions on this hugh for-eign aid plan.

Foremost under consideration is anexpress requirement that further assist-ance to India be tied directly to thatcountry's coming to an agreement withPakistan on the long-pending Kashmir

Allen issue.In the committee's private deliberations, Repub

licans and Democrats voiced blunt impatience withIndia's persistent refusal to settle this war-threateningdispute. They made no bones they feel the time hascome for the U. S. to demand a peaceful solution ofthis controversy before more aid isdished out to India.

The committee's closed-door hear-ings' brought to light some startling V; +^facts regarding India, as follows:

—In the past several years, Indiahas received1 more U. S. aid than anyother country in the world. PresidentKennedy's intention is to continue thatpolicy in the new foreign aid budgetnow under congressional consideration. It calls forgiving India nearly $1 billion in military aid alone.

—Krishna Menon, the acid-tempered leftist whowas fired as Defense Minister after Red China attackedIndia, still is close to Prime Minister Nehru and exertsmuch influence in his councils.

—While India, under insistent U. S. pressure, didwithdraw some troops from the Kashmir area, thiswas offset by immediately moving in tanks and artillery—with the net result that India had more fire powerthere than before.

LAYING IT ON THELINE — The administra-tion sent two high official:to the House Foreign Alfairs Committee in an e!fort to "justify" the hugiIndian aid plan.

James Grant, deputy assistant secretary of stat<for South Asian affairs, andWilliam Gaud, assistant foreigraid administrator for South Asiadid their best, but they didn1

get very far. They were undiheavy fire from start to finish.

Representative Thomas Morgap, D-Pa., chairman, started thicritical barrage by pointing out

"It is very hard for memberof this committee to understamwhy India insists on the rightflout us and the United Nation:on the question of Kashmir, amto devote a large part of he:budget to building up military afenses against Pakistan. Whjshouldn't the U. S. require thaiIndia make some concessions irreturn for the immense amouniof aid they are getting from us?"

Deputy Secretary Grant ac-knowledged that "There arefair number of things in which wwould like to see them act dif-ferently." But he contended tihalin many other ways India is ad-vancing interests that are verymuch to this country's advantage.

Pointed Question

"Name one," demanded Repre-sentative Wayne Hays, D-Ohio.Representative William Brooms-field, R-Mich., heartily second-ed that with, "Yes, name justone."

After a long pause, Grant replied, "India stands out as arexample of what a country ca:do to help itself under democraic concepts."

'That's a general statement,snorted Hays. "Name somethinispecific."

"The Indian troops helped iithe Congo," said Grant.

"She got paid for them, didnshe?" retorted Hays.

"That was not a mercenar;transaction in any way," argueGrant. "All UN troops got paid.'

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Chairman Morgan renewed hiscontention that India be com-pelled to come to terms on Kash-mir.

Add Some Strings"I think the time has come to

do some arm twisting and to getthis problem cleared up," he foldthe two administration officials."As long as this dispute betweenIndia and Pakistan persists, thosetwo countries are not going tomake real progress despite thetremendous amounts of moneywe are pouring into them. A lotof the money has been wastedthat should have gone into soundand constructive development."

"That's what we have been tell-ing these people in our talks withthem," declared Grant.

Representative Broomsfield ar-gued the time is past for words.

"Obviously talk is doing nogood," he declared, "so we oughtto put some strings on our aid.Instead of giving India a newsteel mill running into hundredsof millions of dollars, we shouldinsist that she abide by what theUnited Nations recommended fora Kashmir settlement. In brief,we should enforce that settle-ment."

CRACKING THE WHIP- Rep-resentative Clement Zaiblocki, D-Wts., heartily seconded that con-tention. He bluntly advocated ex-ertirig pressure on both Indiaand Pakistan to solve the long-standing Kashmir dispute.

"I can't see how we can justi-fy giving India hundreds of mil-lions of dollars in additional mil-itary aid with 12 Indian divisionsstationed on the Pakistan bor-der," declared Zablocki. "I thinkit would be very proper for us tobring pressure on both thesecountries to reach a setlement.In this committee's report, itshould make a very firm anddirect statement about the in-tent of Congress with respect toassistance to either country if

Settle SuitFREEHOLD-A settlement of

$1,750 Tuesday disposed of anauto accident suit by Mrs. Min-nie Mintz, 525 Second Ave.,Long Branch, against Mrs. Car-mita Aponte, 18 Clifton Ave.,Long Branch.

Mrs. Mintz contended she wasinjured Dec. 23, 1961, when a carshe was driving, and which wasowned by her business, StarCleaners, 132 Myrtle Ave., col-lided with Mrs. Aponte's car atSecond and Franklin Aves. Supe-rior Court Judge J. EdwardKnight approved the agreement.

HAS BIRTHDAY PARTY

BELFORD— Michclc Guerrieri,daughter of Mr. and Mrs.Michael Guerrieri, Hopping Rd.,celebrated her ninth birthdayMay. 24. Attending were M^rieLisa and James Guerriero, Bar-bara Isaksen, Joanne Perrillo,Cheryl Parker, Susan Feathers,Jane Prisbie, Donna Dale Krueg-er, Valarie Keddy, Patty, Vaioris,Susan Garrity, Linda Vasqucz,Donna Lee, Lou-Ann and GinaGuerriero.

MARKS BIRTHDAY

NEW MONMOUTII-The sixth:>irthday of Charles Regan, sonof Mr. and Mrs. Richard Regan,Kenneth Tcr., was celebratedMay 23. Present were Timothy,James and Paul Bej!ley, Shielaand Thomas Flood, ThomasCouvity, Preston Skravnno, Ray-mond, David and Kathleen Re-;an, Hank Slcarcnzo and Wandalendrlcks.

There's no Trick (o Having Ex-Ira Cash. You Get It I-'ast WhenYou Use The Register Classified.

they do sotD-P*,,

. frying Winley,the rA'M "Jrusi

youdoe* Wft'tend itself to blunt lan-guage. Isn't it true that KrishnaMenon is stiH almost a dailyconsultant to Nehru?"

".We have• no information onthat," said Grant.

"Well, he hasn't disappearedfrom the scene," retorted ZaWoc-ki.y"You are quite right," admit-ted Grant. "He is still makingspeeches."

Representative Hays put an un-usual question to Assistant AIDAdministrator Gaud.

"In the long conversation ourofficials have had with India,"declared Hays, "did anyone eyer;et to the point of saying, 'Boys,

it you don't settle this, there willbe no more money.' "

"I don't think so," repliedGaud, obviously startled.

"Do you think they would un-derstand that kind of language?"

"Yes.""Then why don't you use it?""Let Mr. Grant answer that."Grant's opinion was that "It

would not be sufficient to ac-complish the desired results."

Playing Both Sides

"Maybe not," snapped Hays,"but it would save U. S. taxpay-ers a billion dollars."

this bill," ht«13 it to be

wills

|7W /nitlios from theCoauasnists and taking every-thing h« can possibly get fromus." Whaley also indicated doubtsabout what will happen in Indiaafter Nehru disappears. ,

"Is India making plans tolaunch an offensive to regain theterritory it lost?" he asked, "oris It going to accept Chinese con-trol over Mist region?"

"BasicaHy, the Indians have re-fused to commit themselves onthis," said Grant.

Representative John Pilcher,D-Ga., strongly advocated defi-nite committee action to requirea solution of the Kashmir issue.

"We should spell out in wroress

Gtud, obykittsiy diK*«wert*d,, "We nwHfa't get tew a

whet* w« -can't #»* ft»y

ing Russii and t*te V, 5. ™ ™he can get. The largest spy ringin the world has been in Bombay,and that is Krishna Menon'shome town. Menon is still verydose to Nehru, That is what in-telligence people tell me."

More Direct SolutionRepresentative H. R. Gross,

R-Iowa, had an even more directsolution for the problem

"Let us cut off this aid," heurged. "Let'B put an end to it.That will bring them to theirsenses. I am strongly for cuttingoff aid' to both India and Paki-stan unless they settle this dis-pute."

Assistant AID Administrator

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