find tax structure shot $25,000 award for inequities ... · 1 . * . 1::;m s s s s * s.-m t / i...

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. 1 . * . 1 ::;M S ssS* S . - m t / I heard the M is on Christmas Day T IM 49tAIM* # JUM Ulfe JHm rt imhi a In neir Tunfiiiicir cci» ois pici y§ ISfs vT.S And wild and sweet the words repeat Of peace on earth, good win to men. I thought how, as the day had come, The belfries of all Christendom Had rolled along the unbroken song Of peace on earth, good will to men. m :------------ i kyndimrst Public Libr&rv VaU«, brook Ava torary* $ . ___ * * - L: And in despair I bowed my head; There is no peace on earth," I said, "For hate is strong and mocks the song Of Peace on earth, good wiH to men." Henry Wadsworth Longfellow !•! J :;5 M inut-ed Metropolitan National Open Company, which Is to pre- test special performances at Symphony Hall, Newark, lor schoolchildren reported today that the response Is so good few instead oi three performances base been scheduled. Mtale educators, who do such outstanding Jobs in the schools, are apparently busy buying op the discount priced tickets for their students. For the lucky students there wilt be rewarding performances which will ceretainly whet their appetites for more. Vol. 46-Nb.-*-*! Find Tax Structure Shot Inequities, LYNDHURST, N. J. NOTICE DECEMBEK 1965 ••c>n« t.l»u H i* at fcuttwfsre, N. _ A Lyndhurst one-famdly house recently went on the real estate market for *24,500. Five year* ago the house was evaluated by a Passate firm of experts at *14,- 500 This startling gap between ap- praisal and asking price is not unique in Lyndhurst. Ms typical al the entir* state. The incident is merely one m ore reason why New Jersey's tax structure is under tremendous attack today. >■ " -t Inequities in the tax structure are noted almost every day- The fact that assessments are in the o« the New gear's »*y activities next week the Commer- cial Leader will be published on Wednesday, Dec ember *», in- Thursday. Advertisers j tax to *.u'*mit lieu* articles are requested to | submit ropy by Monday noon or' next HtfMd of and ell those lawyers with good relations with one taxpayer assessed at $2,000 the tax office to get certain kind:- of clients, the commission found The commission said: "In some instances assessors apparently disregarded person- al property tax returns and en- tered arbitrary assessments. Examples include $80,000 at taxable value of inventory for Another example indicates $25,000 Award For Injury: Township Is Not CoverJK Woman Beaten, mow a*j Youth Accused Annual Christmas Concert Tonight This evening, December 22, at teJta^ e ” w''uuu “"‘I TOUth Accused =J*:I3 the Lyndhurst High S d W s c r ; iessed at 15.3,000. I 'Music Department wUi present . . ***"' tax: ' A *»*« Lyndhurst «wn«».'iu annual Christmas concert en kbie value of *118,500 was entered.mother at four children, was tiaH -J(>yous Noe, '. t v perfw- in the tax roles as severely beaten Friday nigt* mimceto given at the High another taxable value of *96,390 police Said, by a 19-year-okl iSchoal HU(jjtorium, is open to the was assessed .at *9,839.' Plead innocent On Gambling part-time appointees who their Jobs to politics rather than K> qualifications has made the sit uatmn more ink But a new shocker appeared this week when a special Tax Commission reported to Gover- nor Richard J. Hughes last week that innumerable mistakes in ev- en such commonplace require- ments as copying figures Into the tax records are apparent in stud- The new discoveries because the „ committee has been studying the w ay Chapter 51, the controversial measure which pla- ces < tax upon business personal property, has worked out, The measure has worked out very poorly. But tho commission, besides (fecoveriqg that the measure was practically unen- forceable because of its com* plications found that the abund- ance of clerical errors throws the entire tax structure Into sus- picion. - "it >is probable that Similar errors and inadequacies prevail in each annual assessment of general property taxes in some of the local taxing districts," re ported the commission, . ■■ The statement merely justi- fies criticism that has been hurl- ed against the New Jersey taw structure for many years. Brunt of the criticism is tha there are some 900 tax assessors in the state. The great majortt; of them are untrained. The great majority are part tim e. Some it has been found, are dishonest Yet those assessors are re sponsible for producing aboul T p#r cent of the money that make New Jersey's governments on the m local and county level tick' The need for a new tax struc- ture and an overwhelming chang< in the method of taxing and col- lecting in New Jersey has been demonstrated by the latest The inequities have long been noticed. The fact that a tax hav- en like Teterboro permits of the biggept corporations in the county to be taxed on a ratio that is far smaller than that paid by the poorest of taxpayers in ad- Jolning communities has long been not ad. ■ South Bergen figures rounded Up In simultaneous , bookmaktng raids last October pleaded guitty when arrsJgbed in Bergen Ooun- y Court last w»»k. Judge Ken- fflP Included James Di Giorgio. 53, 183 Pas- saic St, Garfield; Raymond H Graber, 42, of 209 14th St., Wood-Ridge; Mildred A. Kahn 39, of 198 Boulevard, Hasbrouck Heights; Joseph R. Bruno. 42,joQD' of depnsclafie-pwpe^HiWW of TO TKjmmer St., Pass*lc; Wil- liam Nadler, 56, of 298" Hoboken Road, East Rutherford: Joseph Kr«iiak, 41, of 22 Shepard Ter-| raee. East Rutherford. John T. Cebbia, 49, of 135 Westminster Place, Lodi: Wil- liam Frikett, 51, of 827 Teaneck Road, Teaneck; Patrick Cuttita. 52, o f 205 Boulevard, Hasbrouck Hejgbts; Joseph Aokerson, 31, of 126. Lake. Ave.,- ’Lyndhurst; Robert J. Scflilter, 27, of 134 Central Ave., Lodi; Anna Sot: tosanti, 51, of 403 Tenakill Ave., .VortbVale, and Anthony N»r- tozza, 48, of 15 Colonial Court, liver Edge. % H >Beck, Mayor H Bccaiae^Teterboro doesn't have[Obmml»iOner J. Garde schools or a police department, tfre borough has a tax rate under *1 per *100 of valuations. But Lyndhurst. North Arlington, But Rutherford and Carlstadt taxpay- ers must pay almost 300 per een* more, in ratio, than <to the lucky industries of Teterboro. The Chapter 51 survey showef’ that aU Qf the faults inherent the tax structure have been fow*1 in spades in the way Chapter 51 has been enforced 1>ie commission found that some local assessors were not consistent tn applying percert*g- es of common level In some In- stances no common level was ap- plied. All the way through the mission region indicated that _ the taxpayer had a friend in the fax office he could gif a better break than one who did not have a friend.»yh* i fH * This Biaka it V . Galanti continued all youth. He was to be arra today before Magistrate Wi L. Bivona on' charges of atroci- ous assault and battery. Police said that Fiephen Tu- rek, 19, Of 432 Rutherford Ave., Major These were major mistakes, for the local tax ra!e is app’ic.i th? assessed valuation. r v ^ ^ x i^ ^ W c tr X t^ ^ 1' at approximately 7 ***“* , (/clock Friday night was arrest«i w h(>re the tax for bo«Un8 w’« ” r>«n a ‘ a ^ tt was a dts net wivw tne tax booth at the Kingshpni r station on Ridge R,»d. naid ^ tax Pwroln'pn wil!iain S m lt+1 and ^ ^ S i L I 21M0 Raymo™* Francis^ said they sear- qf *8/100. Instead, the *2,000. valuation would grant him a .tax of only *200. - Errors in decimal points are taxable value of *195,000 was en- in the tax list as *19,500 “ Transpositions, Too Numbers were frequently transposed. - •In one taxing district. *712,: ched the listed as *72,000,- the Commis- sion said. In another, *1,776,000 vas entered in the tax roll as *1,17 000. Before Chapter ,71 became ful- ly effective test January, it was seen that its application in gen- eral would increase the tax bur- den to owners of real property t homes, business buildings, land, etc!"). S6 a law was passed guaranteeing that for 1965 and 1966 business and industry should bear the same propor- tions of the total tax burden as they dfd in '1963. This1 equalizer involved a gen- (Contmued on page 5t area and found Tunsk hiding in the aron of the land Avenue aailroad ov*«*p TV victim, jylto signed the atrocious assault complauit, suf- fered bruises on the ; of her face. irame 'jvas with- held by poltcttf' '* World War I Widows Have Christmas Party Widows of World War I. Chap- ter 17, Rutherford, held a Christ- mas party at the home of Mrs. Ann Rowell, December 8th. , Officers elected for 1966 are: President. Mrs. Grace Villa; Vice president, Mrs. Winifred Davis; Treasurer, Winifred Quinn: .Sec- retary. Mrs. Phyllis Flynn, Chap- iin Mrs. Bertha Geary; Sergeant- at-Arm# Mrs. Lulu Quinaei'. i^ned and aji are cordially . in- 4Uam to attend as guests at thi. music department. Openiro* the prograi®.. will be a candle light proceasion by the Girls’ Chorus with Don Covert candwting and accompanyit^ at the organ. They will sing “Iiark 1 The Herald Angels Sing ■'Silerft Nikhir' and "Ofi CoHte. All Ve Faithful". Tableaus by Linda Resetti, directed by Roto- er. Eliringham, Girls’ Ch. TIki 1 Chorus will then per- 'Grwnwillow Christmas", Loea Holly and the U y ", Eng- lish carols tradttiohai "SHvw Bells,” Livingston Evans arranged Naylor; "Birthday of a King', Neidlonger. Mr. Covert will conduct, piano accompaniment by Stanley Le- wandowski. The "13", a special V06al ensemble directed by Mr. Covert will perform "A Snow Legent" by Ookey; "He, Watching Over Is- rael", Mendeisaotjn; "Winter Wonderland", Arr. Arnaud. A saxaphone quartet com- poses at James Mtleaki, James Fonseca, IjjuU Talsrteo and Ken- neth Tinkham will perform "0, Li Hie Town of Bethlehem", "It Came Upon a MWnlght Clear' The Mixed Chorus under t h < dilution of Covert will perfonn , Break Forth 0 Beauteou: tight” , Bach; "Now Rejoyce" Praetorius: "O Bambino", Cap is; “A Christmas Wish ", Kei Keeae. The Concert Band under thi direction -of Stanley Lewandowsk will perform "Christmas Season' Tlie Chriatmas Song", Thre. Senga for Christ m as" and "Whiti CaHstmas", ^ The pnjgr.irr) finale will com hist the talents of the Mixed Cho- rus and the Band under thi enmbtoed direction of Mr. Covert and Mr. Lewandowski performing Search of the Three! Kings" B<ma arrangement by Stanley Le- Mayor Horace R. Bogle, Jr., told a citizen at Monday’s Com- mission meeting that Lyndhurst vlll examine its insurance ordi- 1 lances to determine who U tt* ponslbie for injury in falls caused y tree roots pushing up ride- alks, A twenty-five thousand dollar tward last Friday to a local oou- >le who sued the twvnship over a all on raised walks two years ign, brought queries from anxious Monday’s Com- Lyndale Beverage Company of disapproval of ftjgfc tramfei' an 650 Valley Brook been gra License Won By Lyndale Beverage hurst, has been granted permis- -rkui to move its bevcrase distrb butor s license from 15-17 Hark- ’nsack Avenue, Ridgefield Park, :o Lyndhur,»t under a ruling an- nounced last week by ABC Com- niss;loner Jam es Lordi, Lordl’s opinion said: On August 24, 1965, the fccert-^- «e* filed an application for >laee-to-piace transfer of their tate beverage, disiributor's li- cense from premises 15-17 Hack- cnsack Avenue, Ridgefield - Park, to premises ffiO V’alley Brook Ave- previous occasions by resolutions adopted. *4» Denial of-a simiiar. applica - tion in 1958 is res adjudiiiata of the issues herein. *-U At the heariag herein, testimo- ny was offered on behalf of the applicants to the following effect: Applicants are thi* owners qf the Chris* donatio#s^|nade to HvotnU(Si Lymu^rst. patients »t the Vineland Veteran*, Objectsois to the grant of the Hospital, also the American U- i^ j a p p jiCB{i0„ were filed on be- :ion Po-'t 139, Lyndhursf. Viet Nam Fund. for the -V .. i Baseball Champs Will Be Honored Four Eagle Scouts In Troop 88 Troop 88 celebrated one of the] tew hours of its 18 years afj existence on Wednesday, Decem- J bear 15.-1965, when at its’ Christ } n&s CoUrt of Honor it conducted in Eagle sward ceremony- for four of it?scouts. The tour hoys! who earned _the * rank of ‘ Eagle j Scout, the highest possible rank In scouting, were Michael Dono- van, Victor De Marco, Richard Galik and Erik Tobiasmi. The singing of "God Blear America" opened the program Committee Chairman W. Tobia- welcomed everyone and then turned the program over to R. Dr Ceeco, who presented many mer- it badges and rank achievement awards earned by the boys oth-, er than the Eagle Scouts. Follow- ing- these presentations, the spe- cial guests at the evening were Introduced by Assistant District Commission T. Mottola, acting 'is Master of Ceremonies. In at- tendance were Rt. Rev. Monsig- presentative erf all merit badge Tamarack Council Chief Scout Executive L Eber- and Commander of the American Legion Post F. Hel- mlch. in addition, other guests who had influenced the four wouts on their way up to Eagle rank were introduced. They were past den mothers, Mrs. A. Schrec- Vamstein, Mr*. S. Galik, and Mrs S. Me Fadden, past Cubmaster 11. list, past W<%lo* tVn-Dad-Cub- master S. Me Fadden , past Web- loe-Den-Dsd-SouctTOWftW^ W. To- haif of the Hudson-Bergen County Retail Liquor Stores and a hearing was held thereon. The objections may be summa- rized as follows: (1) The said transfer .would' be to premises located In a "li" re- sidential zoo? and the proposed use Of the property would be in ship* violation of the local zoning ordi-' nance til There is no public need and BarriAger-Wfilker Am erican Le- gion Post 139 will ’ honor its charopionrhip basebajl team with a dinner-dance Wednesday, Dee, 29th, at San Carle’s Reftaurani. DaVe Goodwin, state chairman of tlwir basiness Association(for tl«> Legion baseball program, will be the featured speaker at the event. Ojfich Bob Muhleiscn's BaiTinger-Walker team will be the honored guests. Barringet-Walkcr copped coun- ty, state and regional cliampion- last season, tin its way to a place in the national finals at Alierdeen, S. D. There are a' ftnv ticketsi pric- fince the area I* adequately ser- viced by otheo licensees. 13) The - L^itdhurKt Board of Conruniwkmers had expressed ne-cessity for thc< said tran fer erl at *6.50 per person, still avail- able for the event and can be cured from John Hartigan, the team’s manager. The banquet be- it 41gins at 7.36 p.m. tomeowners at nission meeting. Asked if the township Is insured o cover such cases, Bogle replied that it it now fully covered but via oof bi the award caSe. - ' ’However, I assure you that 4fl*e is not claMd<” said Bogle. In anothet instance coneern- ng damaged sidewalk!,, Public AffShar Ottmmlsatoner Peter Russo told Waller Keenan 418 m ' premises in Lyndhurst where they manufacture and distribute benated non-alcoholic .beverages under the name of lyndale Bev rrnge Comptwy Tlwy also tribute malt beverages from pre- mises in RidgWield Park under their state beverage diirtributor t. lie«»se. They desire to transfer this license from Ridgefield Park to. lyndhurst in order to afford an efficiency of operation and a de- ciyase in operating exptmw-s. Peter Musiardo testified tiial tlw applicants do not intend to al- ter the building at the projKiswl licensed premises, do not Mend to increase the number of trucks used in the operation of their bus* iness, or to Increase the volume He felt that it is uneconomical and impractical to operate tinder the license iff Mdjwsficld Park hectmsp if is lo- cated about fifteen miles from the lyndhurst premises and re- quires a total iif an hour and for- ty minutes in travel time The 1 (us iness in Lyndhurst has tieen wrances from Alfred A. farro, Jr. that he would have CheveUe Bro- thers CorwtnK’tion Co., which da- maged the walk while erecting Porro’a new office building at 10 Stuyvesant Avenue, repair It. Keenan told the Board the walk would get worse with winter wea- ther, then remarked, "0 1 tried to ip bark my taxes you wouldn't let me get away with it.” Harrijsaed, Bogle said, "I don’t know how the township got in- volved in this. We checked the resolution and nothing in it shows the township is Involved." The esthetic value of a pro- posed ordinance prohibiting over- night parking of trucks on residen- tial streets was discussed when a woman in the audience queried, "What is the monetary and psy- chological gain from this?" Bogle said “If you own a home in a nice residential street, and someone oorhes from out of town and park* a truck In ttortt Of tt. the appearance <rf the street is spoiled." Several citizens entered t he discussion, some suggested a mu- nicipal tot for truck parking, oth- ers a driveway or garage on the property, others did not mind operated at these pfemtses since r .„,— ,, .— 1947, having originally been fourtd-'street parking ed by the father of the applicants. George Woertz, Sr., plumbqr, Its area of operation includes Ber- pointed Out that many business- aen, Hudson and Essex countiewmnn who own small trucks use The witneas further indicated that-, them'for emergency work, for se- deltveries of malt products arejcond family oars and for getting (Continued on Page 5) South Bergen Police Officer Stands Accused Of Possessing Smut Matter as Holland wi le and then Mm whVjncident ptdke wrtnmwi t and past Scoutmaster Stefanfle. | Brief inspirational talks were made ( by Rt. Rev. Monsignor Beck, Mayor Bogle and Com- rtisskmer Garde. Throughout their talks, in addition to person- ally congratulating th*- boy,, they reflected on the foil of scout- beneficial influence toso a Americaand to Lynd- th hiirst in particular. lU-peatediv ment oCtheirboys. P a r e n ts \Vc*rr ref^refKed, was, the manner in inform ed, that it was most es-; wbicK the scouting program stressed reverence to Gad, leader- ship, recognition of responsibi-, Jity as a citizen, love at neighbor, restiect Tor all lawful authority, and other fimdamentals so essen- tial for the youth of today to use a* their guide as they progress to be citizens of tomorrow. . These religious and civic leaders al- i-eferred to the importance W the parents," role in tlie dovelop- Duty or dweJlction? This question , was buzzing throughout South Bergen today as charges against a 10-year vet - eran of the East Ruthcrfotd pol- ice department were, sifted by the Bergen Countv Grand Jury. When arrested- at hia h o m e last Thursday L» Frank Terribile said the pornography seized in the arrest was being collected as part of a police exhibit But a . postal inspector who said he had been Investigating the case for six months charged that Terribile was part of a na'ional iand, possible, an international srriut ring. , In any ev£nt Terribile was pended from the police force last Thursday night, in polk* court Borough tor -them to actively par$- cipate in the scouting program If they were to help mold their boy and reap the benefits so vital to, him, themselves, and the nation. Just prior to the Eagle Presen- tation ceremony F. Stefanlle gave an Eagle theme speech to the troop. He reflected on the de- termination that was needed to sus*e«*fully satisfy & lContinued on page 51 gist rale Eugene Dinallo released him to hia own custody. 'He’ll be around when he* needed," the magistrate deciw-d. At the same time Alfred Por- ro, borough counnei, was quoted in the Bergvn Record as saying It was Holland who arrested Terribile and then suspended him; The wh<H*^Jnciden« stirred the whole police rommwilty of the county. Terribile was appointed a police lieutenant in 1961 by the then Mayor Henry BeUtoskl. Ter riMle was displaced when Civil Service regulation* were installs ed. But in a court fight he won the right tirhis'-j&b and has-been d.ing desk work most dt the time, Terribile has art extensive photography laboratory irt h Is home fn fact? he has done .much of the police photogfaphy A short time ago TorriWle took pictures of a billboard urging support of the G.I. s fighting in Viet Nam and siiprilied prlats to friends and relMtvev of id le r s they could send fiiertt proof of our support of the w ar action. H<^ Vr- * „ far there were ture of Terribile was offered by carried on. Lewis declared he was track- ing down an extensive ring and that Terribile, as far as he was concerned, was just one pari of Ht ... ■ ’• . Terribile was working up a dis4iix play of obscene materials people reteive in die mail. But Pont) said that TVrribilo never had Informed Police Chief of the study he was mak- bpA, Upwfa said. E w est f>ewls ol ftw«»ile P?irfc, th? postal U. S, postal injector, who said he has.been working cm the case The Post Office Department Is one of the leader's in the $50- bUlion annual smut business that infect* this etsintry and a good part trf the world. However, no federal charge has been made against the police- man Lewis declared he has in- formation indicating some of the pictures peddled In the ring were taken by Terribile. Lewis his Information to Prosecutor Guy Calissi. Calisrf mtlhZ ‘"formed Holland, How much material was *et*«d to the Tenrl-' bile home has been "the sub- ject of much talk. Some said ear loads." But if the P a w version of the incident is comet there would hardly have been such quantities. Acowdtog Hceman Nfflrth an to Lewis toe po- s special box to the post office From business to smut, materfcl Terribile was to F a ir J Uwn Hospital most of last week a respiratory inflammation. He notified the department 11:30 a.m. Thursday he was returning 1 *> h i? home and would -eei*v<ale*ce wAS there, % to toe firehouse If the owner is a volunteer fireman. Bogle concluded, “The matter is not yet resolved. We invit? l utions from our citizens.*' Commissioners Russo and ter F. Cure in interjected some heat info the holiday greetings be- ing extended hy the Board mem- bers, when Ruaso, referring to a previous discussion on the Viola dumping grounds, said to CttroiO, Let's lie frank and open aboqt this. I never received-any help from Mr. Viola. Can you saty the same, Mr. Curcio? He helped yoa, now you criticisse him." Curclo began to reply, but Bogle reminded him that he had re- marked that he would not refer to tlie Viol* matter. - ---.w ;^ The Board voted to name "Poli- to Ayerrue", the street Rt. 3 and Valley Brook Av which Assistant Prosecutor Polito when Public Affairs Dirae- tor, was instrumental in having' Viola build, so garbage true to would be kept off the streets Of I^ndbiirst Russo reminded Oircio that tlie latter had voted against the road. A letter from Carmine Savlno, attorney for Viola, stated that since garbage disposal was a fitlve business, he felt It . iry to make figures pub- lic and offered to meet in caucus with the Board. '. ’ i; The letter was a reply to die from the Board after Curclo at a previous meeting asked why Lynd hurst should not from the dumps to help I (Continued KAoniuA 11 n ■ > m icc«ve uwtJtnc help finance a » Page S) ^

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I heard the M is on Christmas DayT IM 49t A IM* # JU M U lfe JHm rt im hi a I n■ neir Tunfiiiicir cci» ois pici y §

ISfsvT.S

And wild and sweet the words repeat Of peace on earth, good win to men.

I thought how, as the day had come, The belfries of all Christendom Had rolled along the unbroken song Of peace on earth, good will to men.

m ’:------------ i

kyndimrst P u b lic L ib r& rv V aU «, brook Ava to ra ry *

$ . — ___* *

-

■L :

And in despair I bowed my head;There is no peace on earth," I said,

"For hate is strong and mocks the song Of Peace on earth, good wiH to men."

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

!•!

J:;5

M i n u t - e dMetropolitan National Open Company, which Is to pre­

test special performances at Symphony Hall, Newark, lor schoolchildren reported today that the response Is so good few instead oi three performances base been scheduled. Mtale educators, who do such outstanding Jobs in the schools, are apparently busy buying op the discount priced tickets for their students. For the lucky students there wilt be rewarding performances which will ceretainly whet their appetites for more. Vol. 4 6-N b .-* -* !

Find Tax Structure ShotInequities,

L Y N D H U R S T , N . J.

NOTICE

D EC EM B EK 1 9 6 5 ••c>n« t.l»u H i* at fcu ttw fsre , N . _

A Lyndhurst one-famdly house recently went on the real estate m arket for *24,500. F iv e year* a g o the house w a s evaluated by a Passate fir m o f experts at *14,- 500

This startling g a p between ap­p raisal and a sk in g price is not unique in Lyn d h urst. M s typical al the entir* s ta te .

The incident is m erely one m o re reason w h y New J e rsey 's ta x structure is under tremendous a ttack today. >■"

-t Inequities in the tax structure a r e noted a lm o st every day- The fa c t that assessm en ts are in the

o« the N ew g e a r ' s » * y activities next week the C o m m er­cia l L e a d e r will b e published on W ednesday, Dec e m b er *», in-

Thursday. A d vertisers j tax to *.u'*mit

lieu* a r tic le s are req u ested to | submit r o p y by M onday noon or' next

HtfMd of and e ll those

lawyers with good relations with one taxp ayer assessed at $2,000the ta x office to g e t certa in kind:- of clien ts, the com m ission found

T h e com m ission s a id :" In som e instances assessors

ap p aren tly d isregard ed person­al p ro p e rty tax retu rn s and en­tered arb itrary assessm ents.

E x a m p le s include $80,000 at tax a b le valu e o f inventory for

Another exam p le indicates

$25 ,000 Award ForInjury: Township Is Not CoverJK

Woman Beaten, mow a*j Youth Accused

Annual C h ristm a s C o n c e rt T o n ig h tThis evening, D ecem ber 22, a t

teJta^ e ” w''uuu “ " ‘ I T O U t h A c c u s e d = J * : I 3 the Lyndhurst High S d W s c r ;iessed at 15.3,000. I 'M usic D epartm ent wUi present. . * * * " ' tax: ' A * » * « Lyndhurst « w n « » . 'iu annual C h ristm as concert en

k b ie value of *118,500 w as en tered .m other at four ch ild ren , w as t ia H - J(>yous N oe, '. t v p e rfw - in the tax roles as severely beaten F r id a y n igt* m imceto given at the H ighanother taxable value of *96,390 police Said, by a 19-year-okl iSchoal HU(jjtorium , is open to thew as assessed .at *9,839.'

Plead innocent On Gambling

part-time appointees w ho th eir Jobs to politics rather than K> qualifications has m ade th e sit uatmn m ore in k

B u t a n ew shocker appeared this week w h en a special T a x Com m ission reported to G over­nor Richard J. Hughes la st week th at innum erable m istakes in ev­en such com m on p lace require­m ents as c o p y in g figures Into the ta x records a r e apparent in stud-

The new discoveries because the „ com m ittee h a s been studying the w a y Chapter 51, the controversial m easure w h ich pla­ce s < tax upon business personal property, h a s w orked out,

Th e m ea su re has w orked out v e r y poorly. B ut tho commission, besides ( fe co v er iq g th a t the m easure w a s p ractica lly unen­forceable b e c a u se of i t s com* plications found that the abund­ance of c le r ic a l errors throws the entire ta x structure Into sus­picion.

• - " i t >is probable that Sim ilar errors and inadequacies prevail in each annual assessm ent of general p ro p e rty taxes in some of the local tax in g d istricts," re ported the com m ission, . ■ ■

The statem ent m erely justi­fies criticism that has been hurl­ed against the New J e rs ey taw structure fo r m an y years.

Brunt of th e criticism is tha there are so m e 900 tax assessors in the state. The great m ajortt; of them a r e untrained. T h e great m ajority a r e part tim e . Some it has been found, are dishonest

Yet those assessors are re sponsible fo r producing aboul T p#r cent o f the money that m ak e New J e rs e y 's governm ents on the

m local and cou n ty level t i c k 'The need fo r a new ta x struc­

ture and a n overw helm ing chang< in the m ethod of taxing and col­lecting in N ew Jersey h as been dem onstrated b y the latest

The inequities have long been noticed. T h e fa c t that a ta x hav­en like T eterb o ro perm its of the b iggep t corporations in the county to b e taxed on a ratio that is fa r sm aller than that paid by the poorest of taxp ayers in ad- Jolning com m unities h a s long been not ad. ■

South B ergen fig u res rounded Up In sim ultaneous , bookm aktng raids last October pleaded guitty when arrsJgbed in B ergen Ooun- y C o u rt last w»»k. Judge Ken-fflP

IncludedJ a m e s Di G iorgio. 53, 183 P as­

sa ic S t , G arfield ; R aym ond H G rab e r, 42, of 209 14th St.,W ood-Ridge; M ildred A . Kahn 39, o f 198 B oulevard, Hasbrouck H eights; Joseph R . Bruno. 42,joQD' of d ep n sclafie-p w p e^ H iW Wof TO TKjmmer St., P a s s * lc ; W il­liam Nadler, 56, o f 298" Hoboken Road, E ast R utherford: JosephK r« iia k , 41, of 22 Shepard Ter-| raee. E a s t Rutherford.

John T. Cebbia, 49, of 135 W estm inster P lace, Lo di: Wil­liam F rik ett, 51, of 827 Teaneck R oad, Teaneck; P a tr ic k Cuttita. 52, of 205 B oulevard , H asbrouck H ejgbts; Joseph A okerson, 31, of 126. Lake. A v e .,- ’Lyndhurst; R o b ert J. Scflilter, 27, of 134 C en tra l A ve., Lodi; Anna Sot: tosanti, 51, of 403 T en akill A ve., .VortbVale, and Anthony N»r- tozza, 48, of 15 Colonial Court, l i v e r Edge. %

H > Beck, M ay o r H Bccaiae^Teterboro d oesn 't ha ve[O bm m l»iO ner J. G ard e

schools o r a police departm ent, tfre borough has a ta x r a te under *1 per *100 o f valuations. B u t Lyndhurst. N orth Arlington, B u t Rutherford and C arlstadt taxpay­ers must p a y almost 300 per een* more, in ra tio , than <to the lucky industries o f Teterboro.

The C h a p te r 51 su rv e y showef’ that aU Qf th e faults inherent the tax s tru ctu re have been fo w *1 in spades in the w ay Chapter 51has been enforced

1>ie com m ission found that som e lo c a l assessors w ere not consistent tn applying percert*g- es of com m on le v e l In som e In- stances no com mon lev el w as ap­plied.

All the w a y through the mission region indicated that _ the ta x p a y e r had a friend in the fax o ff ic e h e could g i f a better break th an one who did not have a fr ie n d .» y h * i f H *

This B i a k a it V .

G alanti continued all

youth. H e w as to b e a rra today b e fo re M agistrate Wi L. B ivon a o n ' ch arg es of atroci­ous a ssa u lt and b a tte ry .

Police said that Fiephen Tu- rek, 19, Of 432 R u th erfo rd A ve.,

M ajorT h ese w ere m ajo r m istakes,

fo r the local ta x ra !e is a p p ’ ic.i th? assessed valuation.

r v ^ ^ x i ^ ^ W c t r X t ^ ^ 1' at a p p ro x im a te ly 7 ***“ * , (/clock F r id a y night w a s a rrest« i

„ w h(>re the ta x for bo«Un8 w’«”r>«n a ‘ a ^tt w a s a dts n e t w iv w tne ta x booth at th e Kingshpni

r station on R id g e R ,»d.

na id ^ tax P w roln ' pn w il!ia in S m lt+1 and ^ ^ S i L I 21M0 Raymo™ * Francis^ s a id they sear-qf *8/100. Instead, the *2,000. valuation w o u ld grant him a .tax of only *200. -

E rro rs in decim al points are taxable valu e o f *195,000 w a s en-

in the ta x list as *19,500 “ Transpositions, Too

N um bers w e re freq u en tly transposed. -

•In one tax in g district. *712,:

ched the

listed as *72,000,- the C o m m is­sion said. In another, *1,776,000 v a s entered in the tax roll as *1,17 000.

B efore C h ap ter ,71 b ecam e fu l­ly effective test January, it w as seen that its application in gen ­

era l would increase the ta x b u r­den to ow ners o f real p ro p erty t homes, business buildings, land, etc!"). S6 a law w as passed guaranteeing that for 1965 and 1966 business and in d ustry should bear the sam e propor­tions of the to ta l tax burden as they dfd in '1963.

This1 equalizer involved a gen- (Contmued on page 5t

area and found Tunsk hiding in the aron o f theland A ven u e aailroad ov*«*p

T V v ictim , j y l t o signed the atrocious assault com plauit, suf­fered b ru ises on the ; ofher fa c e . iram e 'jvas with­held b y p o ltcttf' '*

World War I Widows Have Christmas PartyW idow s of World W a r I. Chap­

ter 17, Rutherford, held a Christ­m as p a r ty at the hom e of Mrs. Ann R o w e ll, D ecem ber 8th. ,

O ffic e rs elected fo r 1966 are: President. Mrs. G r a c e V illa ; V ice president, Mrs. W inifred Davis; T re asu re r, Winifred Quinn: .Sec­retary. M rs. Ph yllis Flynn, Chap- iin M rs. Bertha G e a r y ; Sergeant- at-Arm# M rs. Lulu Quinaei'.

i^ n ed and aji a re cordially . in-4Uam to attend a s guests at thi.

m usic departm ent.Openiro* the prograi®.. w ill be

a candle light proceasion b y the G ir ls ’ Chorus w ith Don C o vert can d w tin g and accom p an yit^ at the organ. T h ey w ill sin g “ Iiark 1 The H e ra ld Angels Sing ■'Silerft Nikhir' and " O fi CoHte. All V e F a ith fu l" . Tableaus b y Linda Resetti, d irected by Roto- er. E liringham ,

G ir ls ’ Ch.TIk i 1 C h oru s w ill then per-

'G rw n w illo w C h ris tm a s", L o ea H olly and the U y ", Eng­

lish carols tradttiohai "SH vw B ells ,” Livingston E van s arran g ed N aylor; " B irth d a y o f a K in g', Neidlonger.

Mr. C o vert w ill conduct, piano accom panim ent by Stan ley Le- wandowski.

The " 1 3 " , a specia l V06al ensem ble d irected b y M r. C o vert w ill perform " A Snow L eg en t" by O o k e y ; "H e , W atching O ver Is­ra e l" , Mendeisaotjn; "W inter W onderland", A r r . Arnaud.

A saxaphone quartet com­poses at J a m e s M tleaki, Jam es Fonseca, Ijju U T a lsrte o and Ken­neth T inkham w ill perform "0 , Li Hie Town of B eth leh em ", "It Cam e Upon a MWnlght C lear'

Th e M ixed C h oru s under t h < d i lu t io n of C o v e rt w ill p e rfo n n ,

B re a k F o rth 0 Beauteou: t ig h t” , B ach; "N o w R ejo y ce" P raeto riu s: " O B am bin o", C ap i s ; “ A C h ris tm a s Wish ", Kei K eeae.

T h e Concert Band under thi d irection -of S tan ley Lew andow sk w ill perform "C h ristm a s Season'

Tlie Chriatm as Son g", Thre. Senga fo r Christ m a s " and "W hiti C aH stm as", ^

T h e pnjgr.irr) finale w ill com hist the talents o f the M ixed Cho­rus and the Band under thi enmbtoed d irection of M r. Covert and M r. Lew andow ski perform ing

S earch of the Three! K in g s " B<ma arrangem en t b y Stanley Le-

M ayor H orace R . B ogle, J r ., told a citizen at M onday’s Com ­mission m eeting that Lyndhurst vlll exam ine its insurance ordi- 1 lances to determ in e w ho U tt* ponslbie for in ju ry in fa lls caused y tree roots pushing up ride- ■ alks,A twenty-five thousand dollar

tw ard last F r id a y to a local oou- >le who sued the twvnship over a a ll on raised w a lk s tw o y e a r s ign, brought q u eries from anxious

M onday’s Com -

L yn d ale B e v e ra g e Com pany of d isapproval o f ftjgfc tram fei' an 650 V a lle y B rook

been g ra

Lic e n s e Won B y Ly n d a le B e ve ra g ehurst, has been granted perm is- -rkui to m ove its b e v c ra se d is tr b butor s license fro m 15-17 H ark- ’ n sack Avenue, R idgefield P a rk , :o Lyndhur,»t under a ruling a n ­nounced last w e e k b y A B C Com -

niss;loner J a m es Lordi,L o rd l’s opinion sa id :On August 24, 1965, the fccert-^-

« e * filed an application f o r >laee-to-piace transfer of th eir tate beverage, d isiribu tor's li­

cense from prem ises 15-17 H ack- cn sa ck Avenue, R idgefield - P a rk , to prem ises ffiO V’ alley B rook A ve-

previous occasion s b y resolutionsadopted.

*4» D en ial o f-a sim iiar. applica­tion in 1958 is res ad ju diiia ta o f the issues herein. * - U

A t the h e aria g herein, testim o­ny w as o ffe r e d on b ehalf of the applicants to the follow in g e ffe c t: Applicants a re thi* ow n ers qf the

C h r is * donatio#s^|nade to HvotnU(Si L ym u ^ rst. patients »t the V ineland Veteran*, O bjectso is to the grant of the H ospital, also the A m erican U - i^ j a p p jiCB{i0„ w ere filed on be-:ion Po-'t 139, Lyndhursf.

Viet N am Fund.for the

-V.. i

Baseball Champs Will Be Honored

F o u r Ea g le Sco uts In T ro o p 8 8T ro o p 88 celeb rated one of the] te w hours of its 18 years afj

existen ce on W ednesday, Decem- J b e ar 15.-1965, w hen at its’ C h rist } n&s CoUrt of Honor it conducted in E a g le sw ard cerem ony- for four o f it?sco u ts . T h e tour hoys! who earned _the * ran k of ‘ E agle j S cou t, the highest possible rank In scouting, w ere M ichael Dono­van, V ictor D e M arco , R ichard G a lik and E rik Tobiasm i.

T h e singing of "G o d Blear A m e ric a " opened the program Com m ittee C h a irm a n W. Tobia-

welcom ed e ve ry o n e and then turned the program o v er to R . D r C eeco, who presented m any m er­it b ad ges and ran k achievem ent aw a rd s earned b y th e boys oth-, er than the E a g le Scouts. F ollow ­ing- these presentations, the spe­c ia l guests at the evening were Introduced by A ssistan t District Com m ission T . M ottola, acting 'is M aster of C erem on ies. In at­tendance w ere R t. R ev. Monsig-

presentative erf a ll m erit badge T a m a r a c k Council

C h ie f Scout E x e c u tiv e L Eber- and Co m m an d er of the

A m erican Legion P ost F . Hel- m lch . in addition, other guests w h o had influenced the four w outs on their w a y up to E ag le

ra n k w ere introduced. Th ey w ere past den m others, M rs. A . Schrec- Vamstein, Mr*. S. G a lik , and M rs S. M e Fadden, p ast Cubm aster 11. l i s t , past W<%lo* tVn-Dad-Cub- m aster S. Me F a d d e n , past Web- loe-Den-Dsd-SouctTOWftW^ W . To-

h aif o f the Hudson-Bergen C o u n ty R etail Liquor Stores and a hearing w a s held thereon.Th e objections m a y b e su m m a­rized as follow s:

(1 ) The said transfer .would' be to prem ises located In a "li" re­sidential zoo? and the proposed use Of the prop erty would b e in ship* violation o f the lo ca l zoning ord i-' nance

t i l There is no public need and

BarriAger-W filker A m e ric a n Le­gion Post 139 w ill ’ honor its charopionrhip basebajl team with a dinner-dance W ednesday, Dee,29th, at San C a rle ’s R eftauran i.

DaVe Goodwin, sta te chairm an of tlw ir basiness A sso ciatio n (for tl«> Legion baseball program ,

w ill be the featured sp eaker at the event. O jfich B o b M uhleiscn's BaiTinger-W alker team w ill be the honored guests.

B arrin get-W alkcr copped coun­ty, state and regional cliampion-

la st sea so n , tin its way to a p la c e in the n ation al finals at Alierdeen, S. D.

There a re a' ftnv ticketsi pric-

fin ce th e area I* adequately se r­viced by o th eo licensees.

13) The - L^itdhurKt B o a rd of Conruniwkm ers h ad expressed

ne-cessity for thc< said tran f e r erl at *6.50 p er person, still avail­able for the event and can be cured from John H artigan, th e team ’s m anager. T h e banquet be-

it41 gins at 7.36 p.m.

tomeowners at nission meeting.

A sked if the township Is insured o co v er such cases, B o gle replied that it it now fu lly covered but v ia o o f bi the a w a rd caSe. - '

’H ow ever, I assu re you that 4fl*e is not claMd<” said Bogle.

In anothet instance coneern- ng dam aged sidewalk!,, Public A ffShar Ottmmlsatoner Peter R usso told W aller Keenan 418

m '

prem ises in Lyn dhurst w h ere they m anufacture and distribute benated non-alcoholic .b e v e ra g e s under the n am e of ly n d a le Bev r r n g e C o m p tw y Tlwy a ls o trib u te m alt b everages from pre­m ises in R idgW ield P a rk under their state b e v e ra g e diirtributor t. lie«»se. Th ey desire to transfer this license fro m Ridgefield P ark to. ly n d h u rst in ord er to affo rd an effic ien cy o f operation and a de- c iy a s e in operatin g exptmw-s.

P eter M usiardo testified tiial tlw applicants d o not intend to al­ter the building at the projKiswl licensed prem ises, do not M en d

to increase the number of trucks used in the operation of their bus* iness, or to Increase the volum e

He felt that itis uneconom ical and im practical to operate tinder the licen se iff Mdjwsficld P a rk hectmsp if is lo­cated about fifteen m iles from th e lyn d h u rst prem ises and re­qu ires a total iif an hour and for­ty minutes in travel tim e The 1 (us iness in Lyndhurst h as tieen

w ra n c e s from A lfred A . farro, Jr. that he would h av e CheveU e B r o ­thers CorwtnK’tion Co., which da­m aged the w alk w hile erecting P orro ’a new o ffice building a t 10 Stuyvesant A venue, repair It.

K eenan told the Board the w alk would get w orse w ith winter w ea ­ther, then rem arked, " 0 1 tried to

ip b ark m y ta x e s you w ou ld n 't let m e get aw a y w ith it.”

Harrijsaed, B ogle said, "I d on ’t know how the township got in ­volved in this. We checked the resolution and nothing in it show s the township is Involved."

The esthetic v a lu e of a p ro ­posed ordinance prohibiting o v e r­night parking of tru cks on residen­tial streets w as discussed w hen a wom an in the audience queried, "What is the m onetary and p sy ­

chological gain from this?"B ogle said “ If you own a hom e

in a nice residential street, and someone oorhes from out of town and park* a tru ck In ttortt Of tt. the appearan ce <rf the street is spoiled."

Several citizens entered t he discussion, som e suggested a m u ­nicipal tot for tru ck parking, oth ­ers a d rivew ay o r garag e on the property, others did not m indoperated at these pfem tses since r .„ ,— , , .—

1947, having orig in ally been fourtd-'street parking ed b y the fa th er o f the applicants. G eo rg e W oertz, Sr., plum bqr, Its area of operation includes Ber- pointed Out th at m any business- aen, Hudson and Essex co u n tiew m n n who ow n sm all trucks use T h e witneas fu rth er indicated that-, th em 'fo r em erg en cy work, fo r se- deltveries of m alt products are jco n d fam ily o ars and fo r getting

(C o n tin u e d on P a g e 5)

S o u th Bergen Police O ffic e r S tand s A c c u se d O f Po sse ssin g Sm u t M a tte r

as Holland wi le and then Mm w h V j n c i d e n t p td k e wrtnm wi

t

and past Scoutm aster Stefanfle. |

B rie f inspirational talks w ere m ad e ( by Rt. R ev . Monsignor B e ck , M ayor B ogle and Com- rtisskm er G ard e . Throughout th eir talks, in addition to person­a lly congratulating th*- b o y ,, they reflected on the foil of scout-

beneficial influence t o s oa Americaand to Lynd- thS »

hiirst in particu lar. lU -peatediv m ent oC their boys. Parents \Vc*rrref^refKed, w a s , the m anner in inform ed, that it w as most es-;wbicK the scouting p rogram stressed reveren ce to Gad, leader­ship, recognition o f responsibi-,Jity as a citizen, love at neighbor, restiect Tor a ll law ful authority, and other fim dam entals so essen­tial for the youth of tod ay to use a* their gu id e as they p ro gress to be citizens o f tom orrow. . These religious and civ ic le a d e rs al-

i-eferred to the im portance W the parents," role in tlie dovelop-

D u ty o r dweJlction?T h is question , w as buzzing

throughout South Bergen today as ch arges ag a in st a 10-year vet­eran of the E a s t R uthcrfotd pol­ice departm ent w ere, sifted b y the B ergen Countv G rand Ju ry.

W hen arrested- at hia h o m e la st Thursday L» Frank T e rrib ile said the pornography seized in the a rre st w as being collected a s p a rt of a police exhibit

B u t a . postal inspector w h o sa id he had been Investigating the c a s e for six m onths ch arged that T e rrib ile w a s p art of a na'ional

iand, possible, an international srriut ring. ,

In any ev£nt Terribile w as pended from th e police fo rce last T h u rsd ay night,

in p o lk * co u rt Borough

tor -them to actively par$- cipate in the scouting program If they w e re to help m old their boy and re a p the benefits so vital to, him , them selves, and the nation.

Ju st prior to th e E ag le Presen­tation cerem ony F . Stefanlle g a v e an E agle them e speech to the troop. He re fle c te d on the de­term ination that w a s needed to sus*e«*fully sa tis fy &

lContinued on page 51

gist ra le E ugene Dinallo released him to hia ow n custody.

'H e ’ ll be around when h e * needed," the m agistrate d e c iw -d .

A t the s a m e time A lfred Por- ro, borough counnei, w as quoted in the B ergvn R ecord as sayin g

It w as Holland who arrested Terrib ile and then suspended him;

The wh<H*^Jnciden« stirred the whole p o lice ro m m w ilty o f the county. Terrib ile w as appointed a police lieutenant in 1961 by the then M a y o r Henry B eU to sk l. Ter riMle w a s d isp laced when Civil S ervice regulation* w e re installs ed. B ut in a court fight he won the rig h t tirhis'-j&b and has-been d .in g desk work m ost d t the time,

T errib ile has art extensive photography laboratory irt h Is home fn fact? he has done .much of the police photogfaphy A short time a go TorriW le took pictures of a billboard urgin g support of the G .I. s fighting in Viet Nam and siiprilied prlats to friends and relM tvev of i d l e r s they could send fiiertt proof of our support of the w a r action.

H< Vr - * „ far there w ereture of Terribile w as offered b y

c a rrie d on.

L ew is d ec lared he w as tra ck ­ing down an extensive ring and that T erribile, as far as he w as concerned, w a s just one pari ofHt ... ■ ’• .

T errib ile w a s working up a d is4 iixp la y of ob scen e m aterials people r e te iv e in d ie m ail.

But P o n t) sa id that TVrribilo n ever had Inform ed Police Chief

of th e study he w a s m ak- bpA, Upwfa said.

E w e s t f>ewls o l ftw«»ile P?irfc, th? postalU. S , postal in je c t o r , who said

h e h as.b een w orking cm the case

The Post O ffice D epartm ent Is one of the leader's in the $50- bUlion annual smut business that infect* this etsintry and a good p a rt trf the w orld .

H ow ever, no federal charge h as been m ad e against the police­m an Lewis declared he has in­form ation indicating som e of the p ictures peddled In the r in g w e re taken b y Terribile.

Lew is his Information toProsecutor G u y Calissi. Calisrf

m tlhZ ‘"form ed H olland, H ow much m aterial w a s *et*«d to the Tenrl-' b ile hom e has been "the sub­je c t of m uch talk. Som e said

e a r loads." But if the P a w version of the incident is comet th ere would h ardly h av e been su c h quantities.

A co w d to g Hceman Nfflrth an

to L e w is toe po-s sp ecia l box to the

post office F rom

business to sm ut, m aterfc l

T errib ile w a s to F a ir J U w n Hospital m ost of last w eek a resp iratory inflam m ation. He notified the departm ent 11:30 a.m . T h u rsd ay h e w as returning 1*> hi? hom e and would -eei*v<ale*ce

wAS there, %

to toe firehouse If the owner i s a volunteer firem an.

Bogle concluded, “ The m atter is not yet resolved. We invit? l utions from o u r citizens.*'

Com m issioners Russo and ter F. C ure in interjected s o m e heat info the holiday greetings b e­ing extended h y the Board m em ­bers, when R uaso, referring to a previous discussion on the V io la dum ping grounds, said to CttroiO,

L et's lie fr a n k and open aboqt this. I never re ce iv ed -an y h elp from Mr. V io la . Can you saty the sam e, M r. C u rcio? He helped y o a , now you criticisse h im ."

C urclo began to reply, but B o g le rem inded him that he had r e ­m arked that h e would not r e fe r to tlie Viol* m atter. - - - - . w ; ^

The B oard voted to nam e "P o li- to Ayerrue", th e street Rt. 3 and V a lle y Brook A v w hich A ssistant Prosecutor Polito w hen P u b lic A ffairs D irae- tor, w as instrum ental in having' V iola build, so ga rb ag e true to would be kept o ff the streets Of I^ n d b iirs t

Russo rem inded O irc io that tlie latter had voted against the road.

A letter fro m Carm ine S avln o, attorney fo r Viola, stated that since g a rb ag e disposal w a s a

fitlve business, he fe lt It . iry to m ake figures p u b­

lic and offered to m eet in c a u cu s w ith the B oard. '. ’ i ;

The letter w as a reply to d ie from the B o ard a fte r C urclo a t a previous m eeting asked w hy L y n d hurst should not from the dum ps to help I

(Continued

KAoniuA 1 1 n ■> mic c « v e uwtJtnchelp fin ance a

» P a g e S) ^

J&GE TWO - 8 1 8 .------------ — -»TTHE COMMERCIAL, LEADER AND SOUTH BERGEN REVIEW

TWTDNESDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1965

Keep Your Faith, Co To Church Every Sunday And Holy DaysMember Of A^adingFamHy

lot Bnx-m all, P a . ; <>ighl p-andch'd- Thf r<> w ill Idrun, 21 grout-grand children a n l m oots, and

J - R IT H K R F O R I)•V/ B A V T IS T CHI RGH f^Mrtor John D e if r r G reenleaf — T H E L O R D 'S D A Y —

>’ 8:45 A.M . B ib le School C laeses tor *11 a g es

4 | : « A .M . M orning W orship' i | N P .M . Youth F ellow sh ip

7 :*> P .M , E van gelistic ServiceW E D N E S D A Y

l i M P.M . Hour of B lessingV Phone O t: * 6795 \ “ I h e Church of the

R o y a l W elcom e”

I S A C K t il) H E A R T K. CHURCH

w l g e Rd. t N ew Jersey f . R « v . M sgr. Henry O .J.

fsc .

A ve.B e ck

«:S0, 7:S0, 9:08, 10:90 11:00, 12:80 |n church

4:00 in school M O U N T C A R M E L C H A P E L Copeland A venue, Lyndhurst

D a ily : 7:13 a.m ,$ in d a y M asses: 8:00, 9:00, 10:30

A T , w i c h a e L-s r . c .C H U R C H »~

I Id g e R oad And P a g e A v e a u e l e v . L a d isla u s J. W ile re w slu

P asto ra s s e s are a t 1 , 8, 9, 1# and 11:3 0 a.m .

R E E D M E M O R IA L U N IT E D P R E S B Y T E R IA N

C H U R C H SSI S tu y v e s a n t Avenne

clep h o n es: ( h ireo O E 8-76*7 h iS A .M . B ib le School

for a ll a g es U :90 A .M . Morning W orship

r.tcrjn P a ste r ; th # R ev , D a v id Poling.SUNDAY, D E C . 26 - 9:45 a.m . - B ible School c lasses

lo r a ll ages 11:00 a .m . - Morning W orship

Topic: M usic at Midnight S crtp R ire : Acifs 18

nOO p.m . - yewth F ellow sh ip Thursday, Dec, 23 —1:00 p.m . - Choir reh earsal Friday. D ec. 24 — '11:00 p .m . - Annual C h ristm as ifive

Candlelight Service. E veryon e d* w elco m e t .

Tuesday, D e ;. 28 —!:00 p.m-.- Ruth Nichol M ission­

ary Soeioty.

C larence J . Bogie, 23 G o v e r County B o S rd o f R e a lto rs . Ruther- eur A v e ., Rutherford, died, al lard. •t. B arn ab as M edical O n tW r S u r v iv a ls are a son , Albert

iLivingsten, on .-Sunday,., a fte r a 1*., « RuifKrtord'; t# .i brothers, short illness, lit; w as 70, w a s borii Jam es Bogle, m R utherford, cam e to L>nd-hitts Lyndhuirst, an< as a child and lived here until 35 M aine; apd a kistc'r, Mr:

be gam es. refresh- gift. W e sang Christm as sonss y 0 ||( H e l p s F o u n doren , n groui-gtanucm iaren a n t m om s, ana u gr«b b ag . L eader - ihrcughout 'm eat of the* ev„ _ . . Z. ,w grrat-greai-grandchiU l tJMEiss K . Lindsay. R e p o r te r , D p n > p | , L e a d e r - Mr*.-IT C r r a i . R t ! L o lle ^ rrateflltty

T h e luneryj w a s on Saturday! ha SHlirnn. porter - D e lia Ann M ackin. ' Irn in V olk, Jr., son c" Mit v N szarc M em orial H om e, "

In '.., 4(0 ttidgc1 R 0 O P Ll — Wc com pleted our

R oad, t j S k jr l.lje a n d ie holders for o u r m oth erj ftc.'ir! li. C C h u rch , \vhcra a; 10; ic r C h ristm as. Thank you loiters

a High m b * o f fU’quirrrtUvere vvrf ten* to O ffice rin llo- j eastern. W e sang a Christi■ p X ' l n Waa vficretl. Interm ent w a .

r- Sehrepfc- C hristm as

years a g o , when he mo.-tal t a a ; to R utherford, He w as a brodici' J the la te form er M a y o r H o race .X. B cg le o f Lyndhurst.

He w a s a Veteran of W orld WarT I, U, S. A rm y , M achine G un C m

. M abel'0 :is o f Lo;, Amieiea, C a m . Hisi wife, * r a . E lbd eeth P i.c ltw t 11.3- gie, d ie d In 1859.

A , M asonic S erv ice w ill be D e c e m b e r JS, at 8 o ’ c lock . The I Rev. F r e d M. H o lin v jy . Kd. D-. af the F ir s t P resbyterian Church

A i i j^ ’-UsinjT and * h n p p y B irth d a y " to th e .girls that were in vested fromI If 't>nr> fVirvwnn WiTV>n lkinnva i .. ___ __

C hristm as p r e s e n h rfo r « r , « N o- 236 F _ ^.M , T h u rs d a y , at the ^SteoVcr Funora w e talked aJie.ut our C

Ito w as ram l-O'Uc L yn d h yrs;: m em ber of the J u ;e>

ipkofpers .Association o f Leo- and w a s treaiM rer for 15

years; m em b er of Sbuth B e r 'c n

of R u th crfo id , w 'ii.,conduct a fun

Girl Scout News

TR OO P 23 — W e finbhed o>:

IfC arw Dofiovan. K aren 1>0novan 1 -nd G a il Souza ca m e to h el p.U a 3 t» s - f.lr.i. R. M itqjjRl, M rs.1. Donovan, and M r s . * Souza,

H e a v ie r • P h yllis FritzlO.TR O O P 19 — We m ade angels

. Ter our m others. Then w e m ad ei jard les , W e talked about o u r; C h ris tm a s' p a rly find g ifts for the

•’ i^ r n c ip a l'a n d ^tpitor. ' M ary Annrno:n-,K:i^, cam*' to h(*lp. Leadei - M rs;

Home 253 S tu w ea an t Aw*nue ' m *c!i Wo talked mhcut our Crtrist-^ v’,J. LindcH s. R eporter - SU zam ^ y v e t ia f l i A w n u c ;.m .ls ^ vvw c h vVc-are h a v in g ,i> novfW

- * s“ '-‘ - ^ s z s n

T R O O P 24 - We h id r j r iitve: titure c» rcm cn y . h lo;ig w it h Troops XI, 23 and 25 a V ttw ! o V ltc k m n«s at S.iffrcd Hear,Church an Saturday, D.x'c:»-»cr 4

M r. are!Mrs. Irv in C. Volk o f 612 Third S tis one of the founding m em b ers o ’ S igm a N u Chi. one ,«T -fJie. J n f t fo ar y e a r tm te m iite z rco o g n i^ el by M M v'vstem CollagR ^

M idw estern is u . n w ISur-yeuVi lib era l arts insmutiori whU>h ‘p t f coed O ctober 6 w k h 593 fr e ^ y m en students. It stands atop tns wooded bluffs ovcrloolung D eni­son, a c ity of 5,250, locate.i a w est-central Iowa.I Irv in 'li <»ne o f sranr 20 fe H » f students founding the fr a trrn ’y . H e i* a W62 cra d u a te t f L>n1r hurst H igh School and, a from TarkH) C^k-^e » T ark io , M ixsoui i. - ■ «4

North Bergen.

Mrs. Margaret HulmeMrs. M ain aro t G reenhtdgh Hul-

James Darco, 94la m e s Darco, fo rm erly

me, 220 Forest A ve.. w id o w ci L jra lh u rst, late of P ro sp e ct P lace, I er.; - Mrs. R . Saindel H ulm e, died on W edttes-jN ew ark died aD -W edn w iday a t,U i. Tune.' R c p a t c r H y at C la ra M aass M em oria l;N ew ark C ity H osp ita l-after a lo n g!H u gh

brought home ou r pretty invHa-. douehnuts, cup cakes, candy,;t'crt* that M rs. R usso m a le fo r l~ tn(1y cam ,Si iX>t, to ch ip , a n d : '-t*. We are to bring in a 25 ccn!| w .;h. D elia Ann M ackin m f \ftrah ka?. W e w ill be servin g K«1hy liyn n M aiu r w ere the San-

o f ‘ ham burgers and franks Lend-j ja c la u se s w ho g a v e c o t th*' g ra b M itchell and M rs jbatfs; O u r leader g a v e us each a

GoUeen M r

odr troap w ere S c re e n M aifci*M arg aret Me Keovev, F r a n c a p c MuHin, Jacquetm e MaStfff, and E lizab e th Iosco. A fte r our in vestitu re ceremony w e had a com m union breakfast w K h o u r fam ilies and friends. F a th e r " D fa s q u a le w a s the guest speaker.W e entertained with •# :.shO!*t p-i1 g ram vWiich consisted o f ou r troo;* s ’e j in g "A n g e ls We H av e Hear,On H iKft-" Bernadette Almqu]>:"'W ouldn't I t B e L o v e r ly " . Am - Teshim h recited the p o em "Defi- N O T ICi;nition o f C h arity." Lo ad ers - Th r - Will be no reg u la r gar- M rs. W. C iro n ean d M x«. J . Mar* bag e eollectlofi tm Christman D a y tins. R e p o rter - M aureen Smllh. U r New V ro r S D ay.

Hospital, a fte r a short fllnejs. She whs 69, w as born sin .Vf in

L Y N D H U R S T M E T H O D IS T C H U R C H

H tu y v e s a it and T o n tin e A v a *I E V . ItO B E R T O L f N B R Y A N T

t>astOf ,. 367 T o n tin e A vrrtu e ' G E n e v a 8-6S28

S T . T H O M A S E P I S C O P A L C H U R C H

fc S *« y v^ sa n t & F o re st A v e . sne w a s e», w as w r n in MC h u rch O H ke: C h u rc h S ch o o l tester, England, c a m e to the 'Sailding, F orest A v e . * -United S tates in 1922, liv in g fit

P h o n e: 43f-5«6« - - - ] » -JMBa»vi}le^ West V a .; fo r 10T h e R e v . H arry W .H an sen >iar», then 13 y * i* s in, N cw aik

f t e . in , land the past 21 years in Lynd- V-* vn co n stiw tlo n b u s in o iP h on e: 939-6154 hurst. H er hu^bawl, Santuel. died J r r s e j Ctty ani In L yre ih w st

in 1956.felje it a v e - n jofl, Ja m es iHninte,

:d Lyiitiliurst; and tw o lis te rs \ li,s .s^rah GreeohBteh t fc h e s in . K naiand, and M.-s, Ar- , Ht' '\* Y » » » Andrew ^

! - . u . .... . . .____... v»_____ tS in rt Ufut a r t A!b«wt

D aily Moi P r a y e r P.M .

arnhig a l 7:90

anda.m .

f r i d a j ’ , Dei, 24 4LdXLp.in. - Christm as E v e Can-

E v e n in g a n d 7:00

H;9« A.M ,

i'ir.i-ss.He w a s 94, w as b o rn in Italy,

cam e to the United S la te s in 1900, Ilvins fir s t in Jersey C ity , and 45 y e a rs u . Lym ihur,', B e fo re retire- ir cnt so m e years a g o he operated

l ie ’ 'ws« mfrrtl-.er o f i ic t C h u n * . !li,r w ife.

Uarteo, ph>

JUigh: Service S fln d a j, D ec. 26 - f :0Q a.m . - K a rly service 9:45 a m - Church School w ith

c la sse s fr’r all ages 11:00 a.m . - Student R ecognition - S u n d a y w ith serm on on ‘ 'A uth­

e n tic ity '1 M'onday, Dec. 27 — .8:00 p.m. - Methodist M en w ili

Sunday S e n ices:Holy Com m union:'* »:»0 A.M . F am ily C^ nm im ion mll(l ' U i y i liatchm an of I t <13 A .m . M ornlag JPhiyer and c ‘t;Holy Cominnnlon, 1st and 3rd Tier. R e':ert JSu n days - Morning P ra y e r, 2nd and 4th Sundays.

S T . M A T T H E W 3 E V A N G E L I C A L L U T H E R A N

C H U R C H C o rn er V a lle y B ro o k A v e . and

T r a v e r s P la ce , L y n d h u r s t R e v . G e o rg e M u ller, P a sto r

895 T r a v e r s P la ce , L y n d h u r s t

the W esiwiinster Church, conducted a fu n eral ser­vice ai the Steever F u n era l H om e, 253 SiuyvtBunt A ve., at 10:30 u.m. en Satu rd ay, JrU-rnient w a s in Ar- lin"toh C em etery, K earn y.

A r’ <iJerai.j, h m J . <hr, c j|rs . a h

' . :4rew tT h ftr^ ii M a w a r a o; P i im ! iti'aeh , (Ch., M rs. H erm an <Ga?*>

vi -vc, H a s f'f (tf 'V hippany, and litrs, PresSon t'Gsfheriito 9wnr.

TR OOP 9 W e worked on o u r g B t for the S co o t House. Napkin- \yere decorated in the shape of r tireplace on w h ich w e p laced gjockings and a chimney. Then w e discussed o u r Christm as p a r­ty for next w eek/ E veryone -Ja bringing som rthinf; different ta j •at er play. L eader - M iss J.; f iin & ri. - R e p o r t e r '- B a rb a ra ] P««cH»:rg.

TROOP 5 — W e finished o u r| ‘S h r w if ia l! p re sen's- arid tl;' c a m e out v e r y w ell. Our C h rist­m as pat ty w ill be Dc'.:em >cr . 16.

LOOK SMOOTH! Now I m Can Have UNWANTED

HAIR REMOVED.

M ic h a e l P artkow ski

114 J l3 -

T h f i f jthe "Vip y N.

FIRST

a w elcom e to a ll at c a th# corn er of y ‘uy-

Xontinp A venu es. -Hass' to a l l !

C H U R CH O I“ S C IE N T IS ’

C H R IS T

E. Pierripont Ss Ltttcol.

•ranch e» th« Moth«r Church. #!r '

Sc L in co ln A v e s

T i,.4

Botton, Mass•unday S e rv ic e »t .......

11 A.M.. Suite!av School

n QT ene iviosnor vnunift, ,Church of -Chritl scientist, «f

■unda;£ i t i M H .Wednesday Evtning Meeting at

1:1$ o'clock at which teitimoniea ot Chrletun Sehnct htallnfl are givan,

Heading Bw m at s Station Square oaan Monday tnr^igh Saturday, 11

*i& Y rfeSSto totiKpo'crock? a l led legal holidays.

Nuriery e.-.re erovided duringptyjMmr ■

W E S T M I N S T E R --------. P R E S B Y T E R I A N C H U R C H R id g e R o a d and P a g e A v e n u e

L y n d h u r s t , Ne*v J e rs e y Th e R e v e r e n d i.'ob ert J . E n g e tk t

P a sto r T e le p h o n e N o, 939-7920

S U N D A Y S E R V IC E S W o rs h ip S e rv ic e — 8:39 A .M .

C h u rc h S ch o o l and A d u lt H i s s A .W .

W o rsh ip S e rv ic e — 1 1 J u M . Ju n io r T a lk ', C h ild C a re ' and N u rse ry se rv ic e p r o v id e d each h o u r .

Tlie srrv i tian Scicno d a y w ill « n b

liicfi I

to 1 * re a d in C aK s- "*h u rch cs this Stm-

asi/e the rich blnss- m gs whfipi k r undcraUmdins t . C h rjii .J e s» i' Mission b rir.js to m anl^M , 'T h e Lcsso.-HSe^mjrt begins w ith tjhe prejihecy ~i r o n |

(TNXTARIAM S O C IE T Y — 70 H om e and A m es A venn e su n d a y S e rv ic e , 1 1 a.m,School and N ursery 10:80 a.m.]

fh o n e : 9SS2739

L A T T E R D A Y S A I N T S O F J E S U S C H R IS T A. E . S ta r k s ; 'P a s to r

S e r v ic e s E ve ry S u n d a y a t the A d o n ira m M asonft- Temple 321 S econ d A v e ., L y n d h u r s t

C h u r c h S ch o o l, 19 a .m . P re a c h in g S e rv ic e , 1 1 a .m . -

M ich a el B artkcw ski, e fi S t , F a s tTh u rsd ay at M ountauiside Hospi­tal, G len R idge, aftet- severs; day:, illness.

He w as 46. w aa born in Lytxl-hurst and had lived in E ast Ruth-

| ts & r d fo r the past 4(j y e a r* , i He w a s a veteran of W orld War n . a eoi-poral in the A ir Force,

i on a trot-p carrier, served in the -tAuoM*-. t»«uali», t^Mun and ’ th e | Philippines

He vtas a window Irim m er ivijh a, I the C a lv e rt b is i l l ,n g C am pany

who.are he had been employed i for the past five year.

M r. BarHtowski’ w a i a mem- ber of Itutherforf) .Po'st No. 109,

nolds-Ev-eretl-Sshneider Post, No, W , Veterans o f Forrigti W ars, Ruth-

‘c r ir .d ; L o cal 19, D istillery , Rec­tifying W ine and A llied W orkers IntemationRl Union of am erioa, A F L , a o , Newark,

H e leaves his w ife, M rs. He- k n L ittle Bartkcw.:ki, a son anl la u g h ter. Charles E . and M ary C at h em e; two brothers, Stanleyj

9 98 -788 1 9 98 -172 0

Sii.?

Pixie Nursery School

A progressive

Nursery School N . J . State Certified

' 889 Schuyler Ave. 4 Kearny, N. J.

CH RISTM A S EV E fA X D L E IK H T

« ARO L M H V H E W ESTM I.VSTEH IM 'liS IIV T IiH H V

t I I I HC IIRidge Road and Page Avenue

8 P. M.

Read how George J. Trawinski helps local people

Inatantty . SatMy . Permanently By the aeneatlonal

Radlowatlc Electrelj*b by Gina of

%«ta Baanty (Mw»Come in T ca *y tor

r*»e« conaut-TATioa G i n a ’t K l» :r tr o ly » i»

WymtiB J-13W B

horn, unto u.4 a s in is g iven : andi P r e a c h in g S e rv ic e , 1 1 ajn>.« :i y e**°* A lexan d er o f Ruth-th e governm ent s ta ll 1* upon his — .— ! c t.c rd ; a ad a sister, M rs. Josshoulder ;• anfa hi< nam e - . a ' lv I Y N D H U R 5 T j h ( Lottie I..MudqexVicz of Northca lled W owkiriul, Cdunsellor, "Dio H E B R E W C E N T E R .m igh ty God,j T h ,1 evi>rlas r> F a- 3S3 V a lle y B ro o k A * e n o e V d c ia n r M em orial Servicether, T h * J*mner t>f Peace.'-' B e tw e e n R id g e - R e a d -a a d S l l jV?‘d .o n Sunday at 8 ,{).m, aj

Am ong the! correlative readings S tu y v a s s n t A v e ., L y n d h u r s t ' j * S o ever Fun«r«l T Icm e 253 w ill be tlte>fi«it tenet of the Chris- R ev, D a v id S. B a r b a la tt , R a b b i ’ ttiyvesant A ve. Die funeral wa tian Science C h u rch : " A s adher- S tu d y : G E 8-9582 .rcm S teever s at 10 :.,0 ^ m. Mon-cuts of Truth, w e take (ho in- H om e: 939-3124 ^ y vv,,f> a n -£h M ass of Requiemt.plred W etd <*f-the E.il'.e as .-out *--------r—~ I*1 ^ :30 a^n. at SI. Joseirfi s R. Csufficient guide to eternal Life'* l ' T h e W ashington P T A g a v e a ; Chut cK, E S st R U fheiford. Inter tScien cc and Health with K e y ti p a rty on W ednesday afternoon. m!:n‘ w a3 111 S • <«>*eph a Cein.a- the S crip tu res liy M ary B a k e r F,d- for pupils in the K in dergarten *0-' i-ynrtbuiiit. d j , p. -I97<. Jthri.ugh second grade. S an ta Claus:

Th e Lerton-Serm im sVihject is ,w as thero with gifts for a il. Mi*s.

Familiar Scripture Paaaagea

Favorite Christmas Carols

40 Voice Choir and Soloist*

iPSi«!w

MiaUittf AM Arlln fton H.4.

M E R R Y

C h k is t mF L O W E R S B Y

SPINA

• nu*m M»v»aTW»m *■»;

save on insuraneeI f yo u h av e a g o o d d riv in g r e c o r d , A m e r ic a n M u tu a l’s

G e o r g e J. T r a w tn s to c a n s a v o y o u H P -to 2 5 % o v » r

r a t e s c h a r g e d b y m an y o t h e r c o m p a n ie s o n A u to

L ia b ility a n d C o llis io n I n s u r a n c e . Y ou a ls o h a v e t h e

o p p o rtu n ity t o s a v e on H o m e o w n e rs P r o te c t io n

th ro u g h d iv id e n d s w h ic h h a v e n e v e r b a a n le s s

1 5 % . S u b s t a n t ia l s a v in g s a r e a ls o o o s s ib le o n

n e s s in s u r a n c e .

Y o u w ill fin d G e o r g e T r a w in s k i ts a g o o d m a n to

k n o w if y o u ’ r e lo o k in g fo r s o u n d in s u r a n c e p r o te c ­

t i o n , a t lo w c o s t . G ive h im a c a ll to d a y a n d a s k

a b o u t A m e r ic a n M u tu al’s h o m e , a u to a n d b u s in e s sI w iiy j irtfffl _ . ’ .... __ ;— ---— -a— — .tftavntn tv y r .

c i i o n \ t

t h 4

ar t .

Ris office is a t 570 North Broad S t r e e t Elizabeth.

Call: EL 4 2600.

221 S tu y v e s a n t A ven u e

Lyn d h urat, ’N. J.

GE 8-1234 s - We Deliver )

"C hristian Science." , lA n eelo Checki. j r . . w as eh airm an

Burk Funeral HomeJ o b n L . B u rk

Directors • P a u l

%Konareki

Promjat, Efficient, Dependable .Service

5 2 R idge R oud, L y n d h u rs t W E b ster 9 - 0 4 9 0

(c o r n e r 5 th A y e .)

* fir conditioned year round

J e rs e ^ C ity Office • 4 6 9 P alisad e. A ve.

SINCERITY DIGNITY REVERENCERendered In A Homelike' Atmosphere

WALDO J . IPPOLITOFUNERAL HOME

425 RIDGE ROAD LYNDHURST, N. 'J.A P n a v a R J M 4« V 7 t n c » a 0 “ ” U U t

Parking Facilities On PremisesAIR CONDITIONED TEAS ROUND

HAPPY HOLIDAYS’ FROM THE STAFF AT THE COOPER LUMBER CO.

Our aincere wishes for a wonderful Christmas that you and your family will retnember for many year*to come. V . . * . .

A hearty ‘thank you’, too, to all our valued customers for making oyr ytar such a good one. We hope you’ll

visit ua often Lt 1968,

C O O P E R

M a y the Joy and p eace

o f th e C h ris tm a s s p ir it

e v e r be y o u rs, a n d

m a y you h a v e a v e r y

h a p p y and b lessed

C h ris tm a s.

"Steever Funeral HomeSU C C E SSO R T O C O L L IN S M E M O R IA L

Air Conditioned For Your Comfort

939 - 3000

Dependable Service Sin?e 1 9 2 9

/ : C H R I S T M A S ! ' ^ ..

W e u p p r w r h C h r i s t i n a * V i t h r e v e r e n c e

a n d j o y f o r t l ie m e a n i n g o f this, d a y —

artd W » h t o all: - »--•

T liK M ERRIEST POSSIBLE t I1HISTM VS!

N A Z A R EM E M O R I A L H O M E ]

“A MINISTRY OF SCRIPTURE EXPOSITION”

The Carlstadt Baptist ChurchBroad and Madison Streets ^ CarlstadtAnderson Fraser, Pastor • 472-1911

• SUNDAY SERVICES9.-43 A. M. Sunday School Classes for all ages.

11:90 A. M. Worship Service and Junior Church.6:60 P . M . B ap tist Y o u th F e llo w sh ip .

MIDWEEK SERVICEWEDNESDAY 8:09 P. M, Praise, prayer and Bible study,

American Baptist Convention

E ln e .JOSEPH A. C A G G IA N O , M g r.

4 0 3 RIDG E R O A D - LYNDHU RST., H J .

GEneva 8-7272

A ir 4 o iiiIitio iK ’d f o r V o n r C o m io r l

INDUSTRIAL HAULAGE CORP.. . . - i -

Industrial Waste Removal■-5! < - j '

218 W ASHINGTON.AVENUE -

NUTLEY. N . J .

N O r t h 7 - 8 0 8 0

IHSURASCE CiMPtKY OF BOSTONExecutive Off;c«rs: wjNei^ki, Massachusetts

# US. Mfrttwtd T%em*fk to AMilCO

Cold Beer Wine & Liquors Free DeliveryC o m p lete C a te rin g Se rvice

W E D D I N G S - B A N Q U E T S P A R T I E S - E T C .

- A•

H O M E M A D E Cole.Slaw v Bahd Beans

Potato Salad wi Macarohi Salad Clam Chowder

■ • „ m '

NABISCO RITZ CRACKERS SUNSHINE KRISPY CRACKERS

Home Made

KISZKA an KIELBASYHours Daily: 8 A.M. to 11 P.M.

S U N D A Ye A. M. to i P. M.

G A R D E NDelicatessen

418 PAGE AVE. (Car, Chase) LYNDHURST, R. J.

WE 9 . 2 9 5 0

T H E COMMERCIAL LEADER AND SOOTH BERGEN REVIEW

Leatha Sturges Becomes Bride Janet Negfia IsMarriedOf John Lawton Collins Sunday To Anthony DeMarco Sunday

May your Christmas

bring you all the \oy

your loyal friendship

has brought to us..

W a r m e s t w is h e s !

Carrolls Liquors*

214 STUYVESANT AVE. LYNDHURST

PROMPT FREE DELIVERY

W e l c o m e f r i e n d s w i t h

' b r i n g y o u h a p p i n e s s a n d j o y

A n d m a y t h e y e a r o f 1 9 6 6

b r i n g b e t t e r u n d e r s t a n d i n g

T o a ll m e ne v e r l a s t i n g p e a c e

j r l o v e d o n e s

M u s i c T i m e , In c .

T h e Hopes and F e a rs o f all th e Y e a rs

A re M e t InT h e B a b e o f Bethlehem j o a ||5 ■ ■ v * • • . I i *

T h e Ly n d h u rs t

M in is te ria l A s s o c ia tio n j I r

Keep A Case On Head

And Enjoy The Holidays

PRIDE OF THE GARDEN STATE

. ino tm srm • whuhctw

YOUR HOME DAY SEASON

I k A . f c M B E K 2 2 ,.L K W fc iV K t V l t . Wv U > iJ M J t i - l Ut i t . iM M M U iL k A l ,r A y f o t 'U W i i <. ■

Patricia Jackson's Engagement Reported

CHRISTMAS GIFT • -

SUGGESTIONS!ROCKERSPLAQUESPICTURES CLOCKS LAMPS EAGLES

CHAIR PADS PLACE MATS

RADIOS SPICE RACKS

SMOKE STANDS FOOT STOOLS

MAGAZINE RACKS HOSTESS CARTS LAZY SUSANS

PLANTERS i DESKS

" LAVABOES GLASSWARE

SCONCES BOOKCASES

GIFT B0X1D FREE

1ST. 193# 9 9 1 - 6 1 8 *

COUNTRY BELLE AIR

R A D I O

T a x S tru c tu reStatewide

T. V. SERVICEColor

Black & WhiteP h o n o g ra p h

R a d io

m - F i

CARRY BACK CHAIRA decorators delight. Mode by New England chairmakors who hove learned their skill from gen­erations of eraftsmon, attached cushion filled with solid poly- foam, Ht.42h"Sea« 13V4‘V13i4"

lt» solid heidwood coMnot, tubfcod to e imH«w (Mali, bin*d with tho nW bro«* tH coatufM ovocy dtloil of fh« f

EST. 1 9 3 49 9 1 - 6 1 8 5

DC C O R A T O RFor Prom pt, Dependable Service

C.B , „

5 7 5 R I D G E R D . N O R T H A R L I N G T O N

'0 mil wwl wnii uij i o ft ia i

y t A R0 A P 9 Y ,from all of us at the Equity

fhursdays

naM te iao y i iw

GULF SHRIMPm swft w m

E*T»* Jl'MO , , , , pttl»»#£»IWtOWhite Shrimp » S1 SHRIMP

W e d n e s d a y , D e c e m b e r 2 2 . i % s £

Michele Santulli Weds Michael 1 srane In Nutley Ceremony

T H E C O M M E R C IA L L E A D E R A N D S O U T li ’U E R liE N R E V IE W

Premium Fresh Mined CoalNONE BETTER AT A N Y PRICE

N u t o r S f o v e $ 2 3 . 0 0 P e a C o a l $ 2 l . 0 f r

B u c k w h e a t $ 1 9 , 0 0 S t o k a r Ricfe $ 1 9 . 0 0

GUARANTEED SATISFACTION ■■

MORRIS DEMELIS*. 191S

' | v '

6 1 5 E SSE X 6 T - H U . 3 -2 1 3 2 . I I A R R | S O N

when only th« best will 4«...

tETTER iO Y Christmas W eek r

ITOM HOURSOWN m 9 PMWW (. THURS

FRIDAY TIL 6 WA ' CloiedL Chrittmat Oaf

j f a ™ »»>»■. C0RN ISH H EN3 » 4 S *

t u r k e ? ROAST . 8 9 ' d u c SSuS g s . 4 9 s

^ FRESH FOWL * 3 5 c DRUMSTICKS * 4 5 c

‘ »■— — I ...

.-i-

a S r a n u i T . 7 9 ' r a n k s t e a k » # >

t o m m C m * . 6 9 ' c i o m s R o u n d . 9 9 '

SnWING8EEF,79' STEAKS KBS J 1 ”f u n k e n r b s . 5 9 ' m n u t m . 6 9 '

BRISKET — . 9 9 ' TENDERLOIN . 7 9 '& S .

l i f e ;YOU EARN THE TOP SAVINGS RATE

atK E A R N Y F E D E R A L S A V I N G S

Starting Jan. 1st.FKOM WOUND THE WORLD

CAMEMBERT SPREAD

CHEDDARLEIDERKRANZ

BABY GOUDAM ® E R

PER ANNUM

A N T IC IP A T E D

F O R r E R I O O

B E G IN N IN G

J A N . 1 , 1966

ON YOUR SAVINGS* Accounts opened by tbe 10th earn from the 1st

*■ Accounts insured up to £10,000

Tbe Oldest Tmtncid ItislituHon In Town — Since H t4

AND LOAN ASSOCIATIONPIENTY Of FREE PARKIN© Af SOTMC* FICIS

MAIN OFFICf 6)4 KEARKT AVI .MARNX ti. I.

NORTH A RUNG TOU OFF ICE 80 BIKE RO.

P A C E S IX

The new Touch-Tone push-button phone has been described as the biggest advance in telephone call­ing since the dial. It applies the Speed of ^ c t ro n ic s to the placing of a call. •. -

You can tap the buttons twice as fast as you now dlav. And When you do, musical notes trigger electronic impulses‘to speed the connection.

The result? A more convenient, easier-to-use, and

quicker-to-use phone.

•To make th* Touch-Tone push-button phone to everyone In New Jersey, complex cerrtrel office equipmentwfli be installed gradually throughout the state. Completing this statewide installation wiU require a tew ye sis.,

• •’ / O h - • * •*:

The cost? It's surprisingly low. Add just $1.50 per month to the regular telephone charges, plus a one-time connection charge, and you're enjoying Touch-Tone service on your residency line-including Touch-Tone service on all extensions.

Right now you can order this amazing push-button phone in a wide choice o f colors and styles, including a newly designed, streamlined wall phone. Just call your Telephone Business Office.

New Jersey Bell

______________________

T r y T o u c h - T o n e # s e r v i c e n o w .

Visit y o u r T e le p h o n e B u s in e s s O ffic*

a t 1 1 4 M idland Ave. in K earn y o r an y of th e follow ing lo ca tio n s;

N ational C om m unity B an k

2 3 R idge R o a d , N orth A rlington „ :

M o n arch F e d e ra l S a v in g s & Loan (, 2 5 5 .K earny A v en u e, K e a rn y

F irst N atio n al B ank a n d T ru st Ca* ; *.? ? o f K earny . . ►

5 8 2 K earny A v en u e, K e a rn y ^ .

, .*/#? ' *

— —

: t j

$0*

m 3

T H E COMMERCIAL LEADER AND SOUTH BERGEN REVIEWWEDNESDAY, DI

c o n t e n t m e n t , n e i g h b o r l i n e s s , f r i e n d s h i p 1 g e n t l e n e s s a n d p e a c e

T h e B e s t o f H o l i d a y G r e e t i n■ . « - " '

— From

Anthony Scardino Joseph Negro,

lyndhurst485 Valley Brook Ave.,

$ 3 3 - 7 5 8 4

VIEW

Impressive Decor Marks Holiday At S. B. Savings

'Um Qj coal'We Repair Cecil Furnaces

CANNEL COAL

K oppers Coke - F uel OilT h e S t u y v e s a n t C o .

Tel: 9 3 9 - 7 9 0 0:

Call (or a FRW rhetk-up of your heating equipment . . . no obligation

tfS

FREE $100 ORGAN COURSE!W IT H TH E PURCHASE O F A N EW

L O W R E Y O R G A N H NWe Will issue a gift certificate entitling the bearer to our own complete organ course worth $100!

MQNEY-BACK GUARANTEE! We will teach you to play

to your own satisfaction or the organ may be returned and

the purchase price refunded in full.

I ■' ' ~ " 1

j Christmas Specials3 PC. DRUM SET

Peerl Sparkle - All Colors

Double Tension Beta And

Big 18 Inch Cymbal

ELECTRIC GUITARThin Neck • Easy T o May

Our Own Brand Solid-Body

High Gloss Finish ' _w

E S S OTIGER m

MUGS ™ are here

B e a u tifu l se lectio n of JA N SSEN

PIA N O S, th e o nly p ia n o w ith a

L ifetim e W a rra n ty !

price* s ta r t a t ^ 4 4 9 ^end hundreds of other fine musical gift item*

I P e r D riv er

- 1 P e r V isit

R i d g e h u r s t E s s o.1 9 0 R idge Rd. L y n d h u rst

9 3 3 - 6T 6T Watch and Listen To Our Organ Students Perform

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THE CHURCH FOR AJLL^. A l l FOR THE CHURCH

Th* Chureh to A * «t*<HMt factor on * * t i i kwihe building of c h ^ c l . r a n d ffood d ttw w h ip . H i* a *tor*l*m»» ol .p in iu aJ-ro lu .* . W Jhout a ttto n a Church. n«i<h«r d tm o a a c r n « eiviUm 'ior can su rr i/* . T h w . ar* tour lound m a m why

cak« oi h i t communilT an d ntrticn (4) For th» , a t > of th* Chureh itsolt. which netda h i.and t ta i t r i a l tupport Plan to go to church la d y an d roodI your BibU daily

( M t Ck»i>t«lMi»l> *»D»ot«M»«!7 ‘■ H i

»«y j ; ,.

. . . . . . _____Jtti-::;:::l:::::£SS . isuwritr

L J p i W « b r * . w I ........... ...This educational endeavor ia made possible by the coope ration of the following public-spirited citizens who are

PR JE T8 rBaatdicvMUlor, ta t.

^ £ V " 5 2 S t 2 U

"•rSj S m r i 3 r »

K, C R A W fO R O . P r tiid * * . S u adard T * * l * M ff. Co.

VINCEWTP, CANDIO, MJ3V <. ^

PW A R B (XAUBERC, Fmidem Mm UWtery S $ • •

always jf the fore striving to make ourfL W, GROTE, M i n t

U O P C h em ical G om p*ny

lowing p u b lic-sp irU e d c itiz e n s

f e t te r p la c e i n w h ich to Hve.

AN, Pre.idenl t * U AwoeiM laa

ALFRED A. PO RRO , )r. Attorney tt Law

I C P h .' •.M J

RALPH W. SHAW, Ir , PiwMaki A. R. PuHy C a , laa. ,

HORACE W K J U IR.AlUnwy Al Law

£STHt E. RRION, JR, M t o i Peiar A. Frwaa t C t* b e .

H M M A.Ait*nny l*»

^ ’W E l l T }RU D O LPH M ELONE, Praafdcni

T b e S*n C arlo f Rcrt*ur«nl. laa.

JOSEPH R. POUTO,Josefh R. P*m* Afaaay, Inc.

THEOIXIRE RICHMOND, Pr«ti4*M , loteiChy TranworUtion C*„ la*.

« m a. tu r n , iTkt C*w*r H*»d Btmnrni, ls»

P A U L B O R CB I, O irw U r T h * !»tero«u»a«l

P A T CARUCX3, Preiideat JOHEPH C A R O C C l I R , 9 *tf. i T « w

| . Camtai * 8«m. b e .

A. CAGGIANO.

■ t s r ^ a x t s

Amessagi

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F r e e d o m d o e s n ’ t j u s t h a p p e n . I f y o u d o n ’ t

h a v e i t , y o u h a v e t o s t r u g g l e m i g h t y h a r d

t o g e t i t — a s t h e e a r l y P i l g r i m s w e l l k n e w .

P r e s e r v i n g t h e f r e e d o m o u r f o r e f a t h e r s

w o n f o r u s i s a c o n t i n u i n g c h a l l e n g e f o r

e v e r y n e w g e n e r a t i o n o f A m e r i c a n s .

n i a b l e e v i d e n c e o f t h e a d v a n t a g e s o f l i v i n g

i n a f r e e e c o n o m y .

H e l p p e r p e t u a t e t h e f r e e d o m t h o s e e a r l y

i m m i g r a n t s f o u n d i n A m e r i c a . B u y U . S .

S a v i n g s B o n d s f r o m y o u r b a n k , o r o n t h *

P a y r o l l S a v i n g ! P l a n w h e r e y o u w o r k .

Y o u c a n h e l p i n t h e j o b t o d a y b y b u y ­

i n g U . S . S a v i n g s B o n d s . E a c h B o n d y o u

b u y h e l p s o u r g o v e r n m e n t b o o s t t h e c a u s e

o f f r e e d o m e v e r y w h e r e .

I n t e r e s t - e a r n i n g U . S . S a v i n g s B o n d s

b u i l d y o u r p e r s o n a l n e t w o r t h t o o — u n d e ­

K e e p freedom in y o u r future w ith

WEDNESDAY, IJftMMi.lilM

| ■ 4ClAL LEADER AND SOUTH

H i i " H U

Movies Are Greater Than Ever — ie e One l his weeken1 ‘Where To Go — What To Do — W7iaf To See In South Bergen

111

s p o r T C I l ?Mk3Mhit * mark of the time* to realise that no Board of Education

would permit the u*e of school property

South Carolina’* racing basketbtdl team defeated Duke. Which defeated the country’. No. 1 team, UCLA. Then Duke lost to New York University.

This fact It underlined because it also underlines the fact that New York University is one of the opponents of Fair* leigh Dickinson which plays on the university’* Rutherford gymnasium.

When NYU defeated South CaroHna it was on the Madi son Square Garden court where upward* of 15,000 can be

The Rutherford gymnasium hardly holds more than 1,000 It it difficult to entertain in such a court teams that are in competition with the best in the country.

FDU will r«medy the situation to a degree when it gets a new gymnasium in Teaneck. There are some, however, who beleive FDU should be playing its big games in theTeaneck gym right now. ----- - ----- -

FDU is now putting forth basketball teams that can hold their own with the best. The team needs a court With plenty o f space fo r spectators and parking if it is to realise its potcnttunly However.

IF FOOTBALL COMES?At the Rutherford campus of the college Red McGarry

editor of tha FDU Bulletin, has

d probably which are

of North Arlington, sports been advocating dub football Thi. would throw FDU into competition with »uch colllege a* NYU, Fordham, Geo town and a few other, which are playing a strictly emphasised brand of the game.

The'* are interesting aspect, to die practice. It would provide a healthy outlet for,athlete* and fans without in curring the tremendous risks and cost* of intercollegiate football.

However, the question of die field would have to be “hel­ved.

Montclair State, which has one of the better small in the state, play* it* big games at night in Clifton Stadium. If FDU ever gets interested in football it could bargain for the use of one of the many fields not occupied many week-ends. Lyndhurst, . _ _ _ Heights, East Rutherford and Wood-Ridge have fields which are played on only alternate Saturdays.

THE GOLDEN DAYS?All too often men with short memories moan about the

golnen days of sports. Boxing, for instance. They don’t have fighters the way they once did, is an old cry.

And the arguments for killing the sport are numerous today. Boxing is nothing but a cheap fraud today, th It isn’t -the way it once Was.

When, one can ask, was boxing ever a respectableAt hand is a faded and Uttered copy of The Evenini

World of Friday, April 20, 1917. And despite the fact a rea war was on over in Europe the big question among sport* men on thi* side of the ocean was whether boxing should be continued.

Half the .ports page of die newspaper 48 years ago

n its rightaides* it was safeguarded up and down.

Are lads more destructive today?We hardly think so. But they don’t have the tame

responsibility, perhaps. More likely, there are so many nore of them and the problems of modern living are so nuch more complex that the semi police state becomes almost a necessity for all concerned. / '

g i t g o t h a m t u r n s t h e

s p o t U t e o n t h e s t a i r sgette Bardot h av e turned to sil l ver, the voice and acting ability] of a girt named Julie1* Christie will b e noted w orn coast to] coast and land to land.

T h e publicity bom bardm ent I that accompanied Mis* Bardot!s| visit to this cou n try a ll but < soured the fa c t that the lit B ritish Girt. Ju lie Christie, a lso! has been aboard.

Julie Christie is in “ © Z h iv ag o " and it) it she is sim p ly I great. She h as a long ca reer ahead of her. based not on the p h y sica l endow m ents of the m o ­m ent but upon solid and inspired! acting.

Ju lie Christie is in the tradi-l tion of Helen H ay e s and Julie) H arris. They last and last.

■ Courtesy, oommon sense anfll learning about modem creative [extra care are-the marks of the art education and some of it* responsible driver. He Is the one materials and tools. They will

I most likely to get though win- -learn by doing'* - the theme of tar's worst weather without anjthe Woricshop. Roiling up theiraocident — o r a Tam m concluded.

traffic they will

Art Workshop Is Scheduled

of the newspaper 48the great age'when Jack Dempsey and Benny - - * i w „ was - de_ ,boxing was covered with a carton hailing the fact a biH ^ rooonjs gejjbanning boxing has been defeated. '

And this,

Special to the NEW P O R K - w e c a n think of

no better way of wishing you (he m erriest of Christmases than

putting in your lit t le stocking the w t lc e that on F r id a y , D ec. 24,

8.05 PM. Channel 13 , the fa v ­orite of qur TV dial, will present

"C h ild 's C h r is t a as in Wales'' with Dylan Thomas.

This is a modest little film inspired by the Genius o f D ylan Thomas. Thomas was a Welsh poet who died very young a fte r a tempestuous career

A couple of y e a rs ago a stage called ‘ 'D y la n " featured

Guirmes and w a s a Broad­w a y success. Th ere a re m ore

an Thom as b ein g written and published e ve ry y e ar.

D y la n Thom as w a s so g re a t that a young singer-com poser nam ed Bob Dylan, w h o w as horn Zim m erm an, took the W eish po­e t’s nam e. Bob D ylan , who turn* out som e of th at terrib le j u n k w h ich fUU the a irw a y s today, now m ak es SI m illion a year.

D ylan Thom as d ied leaving a quantity of debts, a sm all

try out by. Mrs.!

These techniques wiH include m e at the use* of crayon*,

witter colors, poster paints, fin­ger paints, colored chalks, rqodeling clay. Simple craft techniques will also be shown, giv-

teachers an opportunity to work with paper, paste and ether material* to gain dimension effects. All of the Art Workshop activities will be experiences which the teachers

I can relate to their own classroom teersHfng. |

1 School officials the Workshop arrangement*, in addition to Superintendent Kane include Mias Charlotte Savino, Principal of Lincoln School.

Legion Women Have SupperT h e Lad ies’ A u x ilia ry of B ar-

ringer-W alker Post of the A m e ­rican Region held their C h rist

a r ty at the Legion Hom e evening with M rs

L u ddecke as chairm an, w as a buff** su p p er

and tofts w ere exchanged M Jo h n ! H artigan reported on thi County m eeting held on the p vious night.

Th is evening th e wom en w ill the Legionnaires in enter- 38 v eteran s from the Vet-

eran*~Ho*pital a t E ast O range, at a Ch ristm as dinner party.

from there, ti, cousin

V isit.r

HaveThe

M iss Alessandro But- D r. Berutti.

Nurse* (mai Party

*afcie tor Tsrons Visit

Bob O'Hara rolled the M ore at the Light Brigade-bow*

ling on Monday evening, 107; Do*. I tie Edmeyer, 89, and Vermle Fed-

I j Hin, 82.

M r. and M r*. Arm ando Toron ol Tontine A venue h av e at their h om e to r an Indefinite stay their non-in-law and daughter, D r. V e­rio B erutti and M rs. (Louise) B e.

and ch ildren . Lucicne and o f CSmoa, Ita ly , with a friend

unit of t h e ty Visiting N urse s e r­

vice, held their Chriatma* p a rty at Lyle'* I in Kearny on Tu esd ay evening. | M m es. George A iber- ding and |Heibert Freeman w e re

r. charge! of arrangements. Oth- were Mmes V icto r

M a tu re / M artin Moran, Dbml- hick Pinto, Frederick Blum, O tto Verba rg and H arry Albrecht.

_ C G E N E R A L C I N E M A

4 b T H E A T R E S

F R E E i n c a r H E A T E R S

R O U T E 3DRIVE-IN Rt.3<HRf 17

Traffic Toll Still Rising

M A R G R E T JOHNSON

o f T h o m a s's favorites „ " C h ild s C h ris tm a s in

W ales ." It is the s to ry of h i * gro w in g up in the sm a ll v ill­a g e in W ales w h ere h e w as bora, f t te lls of the re la tiv e s : th e uncle*

aunts. O f the people w ho liv- jh o it him, O f hi* friends

Sixty-eight teachers fro m Lynd-j mirst public schools w ill attend an Art W orkshop on Jan uary 4,

W ith tra ffic accidents an|5 and 6, 1966. at the Lincolndeaths reaching new h igh s al- School, it w as announced re- m ost e ve ry month, and w ith m ore cently b y E li Kane. Superinten- m otarists on the streets and high- dent of Schools. ,„ .w ays, the individual m otorist A free educational se rv ic e p r o

m o re 'm u st accep t g rea ter personal re-|vided b y Binney & Sm ith Inc., and m em o-! sponsibility fo r his own s a fe ty , I m anufacturers of Crayola cray-

j ■ ' ■* other school a rtWorkshop will be con-

w ritin g that b ecom es i « « i pop ular every y e a r , and m em o-. _He* |s.Tys Quinn T a m m , E xecu tive Di-| ons

O ne o f T h o m as’s favorites rector, International Association

ed about a id the sm all b its o f m ischief to w h ich they applied them selves w ith fervor.

I t is an entrancing s to ry . T h om as m ade it m ore so b y recording #.

D ylan Thom as h a d an

o f Chiefs of P o lice . I ducted b y M rs. M arg aret Johnson"T h e police of our nation a re who has taught extensively a n d

doing a splendid job of enforcing holds a M aster's degree from Ooi tra ffic law s, but unfortunately um bia U h iversity ■' there are not enough of them in i The teach ers w ill Atend nf-

M&m and la«ai c» tm iu n j-|teen h o u rs- o f tiialF n w a tim e the police executive Said

therefore, must

LINCOLNArlington — WT MX4

Now th ra Sun Mat * Eve also Mon ft Tues Mat.

2 Big Reatle Hits * -A HARD PAY'S NIGHT'

**H | L f

Mon f t T m s Evening Dec.*7 8* Paul Newman "THE OUTRAGE”

Robt Goulet "Honeymoon Hotel”

Matinees Daily at 140 TJ» I during School Christmas Vacation

TOURS. EVE ■ PHI.MATINEE ^

SAT. • SUN. , MON. CONTINUOUS

T H E B E A T L E SIN THEIR * SMASH HITS

IN COLOR

HELP ■* * * 0K * * * V- ■

A H a rd D a y ,t M ig h tCLOSED CHRISTMAS E V E

most as well as his books. O ne bright and inspired

to Wales of still

. was the golden axe.Benny Leonard had juat knocked out Ritchie Mitchell

Milwaukee, Sam Langford was boxing a man D e v e r e at d ie Harlem Sporting Club, and,World, Carl Morria, a leading heavyweight, was swing into action.

These were the so-called golden day*. And boxing even then was under attack!

Prophetically Bob Edgren, who drew tk* big apart* car­toon which covered half the page, had one of h u characters My: "There’ll be boxing in N. Y. State whan we all wear long white whiskers.” 8:05 P.M.

How true. And how cynical sports writer* and carttfotuata have been Mki l i t! 4 "...

GONE; AMATEUR BASKETBALLThe death of Jackie Kleman recently underscores the

" O v e r ythe ch allen ge to 'lm p iw e ]

his <Wn driving sk ills and set an exam p le to others by obeying a il tra ffic te n s and supporting th e

In their huge task Of keep- ing fh e tra ffic law violators from killin g them selves and ether*;” 4 1

H e pointed out that esp ecia lly during the w in ter months, it is

c m v 'w ta l ly im portant for m otorist* to

N o w Playing

SEAN CONNERY'THUNDERBALC

m m f' r .m m mTECHNIC010R

R o ryC a lh o u n

VirginiaMayo

V O U N G r U R V

ln !

I

1i

ELECTRIC

difficu lt to believe that so much action can be p acked Into 25 m in­utes with only still p ictures and t h evo ice of Dyland Thom as,

But this ■little p a ck a g e of pure sentim ent will m o v e you and stir

and picked out | accep t the added responsibility o fpictu res. It is4driving sa fe ly under adverse

I ButI flantii

• l r

The death of Jackie Kleman recently uMerscore* aw passage of amateur basketball a* a .port. Now the high tchooU and the proa hereabout do it aU. J

In the daya when Kleman was growing up a baaketbaO team sprouted on every corner. In what plumbing fixture shop on Ridge Road was W e.tm m .ter ChurchT%be church had a tiny hall which, nevertheless, had basket hoops. And nearly every night teams got to*

**At*what w*»ow an apartment house was EH’s HaU, in Ridge Road, Lyndhurst, a big, roomy place in v*fch soma of the big fellowa played their baaketbaB garner In Kearny, East Rutherford and Caristadt were hall, m wfcach the

F r id a y night,

m e r ry Christ-A nd a m erry, in e s to you a ll!

And In T h is Corner S ince the sexp o t w ar is

in full regalia, it is only fa ir to sa y that o n e little g ir l who se e m s k * t in the whole b u r te p ro bab ly will b e the longest re­m em bered.

Long after th e cu rves o f Bri-

l i e r H P H n B m i H In addition to the norm al dan­

g e rs of d riv in g that w e encounter every day in the year, w inter tan-

two additional hazards inadequate traction and reduced visibility. T h ese can spell d isas­ter to the unw ary d river who

a t firils to reoogniH* them for w h at they a re .” T am m pointed c u t

"M ost d riv ers w interize th eir ca r* , but to o few ‘w inter-w ise' th eir driving habits. When p a v e ­m ents are slip per/ and visib ility is poor, the w ise m otorist h is speed accordingly, keeps longer d istan ce between his ca r and other tra ffic , a w roaches in­tersections w ith extra care , srteers sm ooth!y and brakes

LIVING GUIDcars

: < every garag e.

IF YOU ARE PLANNING TO BUILD, BUY OR REMODEL, CALL ANY ONE OF THE CON­TRACTORS LISTED BELOW. HE’LL G IY J YOU ALL THE FACTS ON TOTAL ELECTRIC HOME HEATING, I

“ T w o

is one builder1* n w im atton of the trend to weE-buili vacation

” “ * - ” = ' TH S i s E L VE5to arrange things.

East

te*m ' - ^ DID ITThor* was no recreation department _

Tha pUyera accomplished it by tham sJva^ Thay had a manager who telephoned around and arranged games. There were dosen. of teams. The players got together at various meeting place, and went off to play.

Officiating was atrocious. But it was part of the game. In Garfield School No. 3 was a long, n w r w barn. It w.

the baU had to be played off the wafls.

W e hove a ll th e know n brands o f Liquors, W ines and b een . W e serve hot lunches. Ladies Invited.

Double Barrel’s Tavern■at Seam and all kinds e l OeM Cnts, SanAwtefces pin* all kinds of Beverages, Coffee sad Cake.

JOE DOBROWOLSKI, Prop. m LEW ANDO WBKI STREET, LTND HURST, N .I.

w tk a t^ r M « ei

w o rk w eeks and vacations have cre a t­

ed the dem and tor a vacation, hom e - a w a y fro m hom e for thousand* of fam ilies.'

"F u rth erm o re, the dem and is to r year-around' type con­struction. The fa m ily w ith a p la c e at the beach m ay w en t to go there in m id-winter just .as m u ch a* a fa m ily of rid-nuts g o es to their chalet.

"C o m p lete e lectrica l house he&ting m akes it *H. • ntolte

We don t remember now but wa are aura that nobody had beaten the Garfield team m a couple of years on i t . home

Theee were not powder puff gwnea. There was violent lysical contact. Now Mid than pUyera would a«mre off. Rut we don’t recall a really v.ciou. »e.

rncd mutters out -__

The pUyera also had to 'contribute to the of paying for tha court. Tha jaHtora had to be paid and it w a. up to

r « D OF U N R E A L m .

J . J . O r m i j i u . . 1 It . p a » .

manager.. And, of course, the hard working official, wanperformed their stint far tip Wva of rt.

How did this all come about? , , , .Nobody want to the communfty o ffic es and *sk^d for

help. Each ifid what h adto bjidona. S o m e ^ - s ^ - . c m g chap would be the so-called manager. Ha would the player*. -

It was up to the manager to inform the tha next game waa to be played ami »* up to die manager to arrange for the court, if he was man aging the horn* team. And it w a. up to the manager to get the money together to pay the oo.U-

There would be the.e eag*r, Urd-pUy.ug fellow.Jack Kleman. They would be on hand for die

W e R e p a ir A ll M ak es Ofe TAPE RECORDERS • TRANSISTOR RADIOSe PHONOGRAPHS • AUTO , RADIOS

e PORTABLE TV • STEREO HI FI • AMPLIFIERS

A U . W O R K G U A R A N TE E D

Je rs e y T elevision479 FRANKLIN AVE.

PHONE

player, w at time. It

t* ^ e * * « m r ^ g l w « t7 w b a s ^ a B . And for football The guys did everything for th e m te W T h e i m m u n i t y asked to help. And the community didn’t offer.

m L .IIC H THE BETTER?1 . it better for the kid* t o p U y under e n r o lle d

f W t thi. having everything done for tha boys destroy thaw

Who knows? Thna will te ll The population h a . flooded rifUy. There are more good fy m . around today. But it {

"It’s ready to go to wort the instant k's aw itrin d .on . “ Not only is it the perfect fuel

... but w ith e le ctr ic ity ., t h e equipm ent Itself is going to Stay in fin e shap e fro m ® e visit to the n ext.” ■ I

E le c tr ic a l heating system s need no seasonal cleanings. |

T h e re a re few o r no movMw {wits to get out of outer. | Two-Home Ocm Justifiable A stu dy b earing out the two

hom e trend s a y s that increased tim e and earlier retire-

are two influencing fac-

thc pudding," though com es from an e leotrica l contractor in N ew J ersey who s a y s that "co n versio n " found out how m u ch m ore e asy and com fort­a b le living can be in a n e lectric­a lly -h e a te d house ... new w ant the sam e high standards fortheir '"mala" homes.""E Q U A L IZ E D '' E L E C T R H 3 T

P A Y M E N T P L A N E X P L A IN E D Y o u m ay turn on y o u r e lectric­

al heating system to r a couple of hour* throughout the sum ­m er, When It 's ooM sn d rainy

you use it when you need it .„*«! you’re apt to need It most, in the Nortlwast part of the United States in Jai>

In fa ct you use approxim ately 21 p er cent of your total annu­al consumption of M ectricity in J a n u a ry . This is the o f.- a m ajo r utility ea stu dy of etoatrioaUy heated hom e*. , ■ ■ ■ VTh e figure. Incidentally, in-

tor all otheras lighting, app

fam ily o f , fou r w ith the to travel long distances

m ight find the travel cost to far p la ces prohibitive The ssane m oney going into « house "is invested, not juat expended."

I f , a ls o noted that couple* w ith young children are find­ing that the m oney that used to g o to eam p tuition goes w a y toward the cost of ' t h e se-. ..-th, I lM lX * ' "cfHiu nomp,

T h e most outright "p roof o l

M p a y m e n t — the hdme-

to have tothe 21 pet cent wck all atright a lter Christm as.

A m a zin g ly close esttn of usage can be figured in advance by the utility company w hich then divides the total by 19 and spreads the cost over 10 mamba, September to June.

a the aosrt should be more you would be billed. But not until July.I f the actual uaage proves

tower than the estimate, it’s

question box

trtcally htatid A. Acewdino to

ttenal Minw*

W M is ran»ld«P«rf flood insutstto" for tu t b«nm«nt of an Sloe.

htstad Ho u m ! a to the N»-

WoolAosocUion. th* roeom- msndstloni depend o* the region.The three d«»ln»»tlon« are; ■.............< mild win-i «i Atlanta -Usually normal w in­ters, »uch a* Maw Vork, New Jareey, St Louie ,Ususlly aevar* win- t i r s sueh as Suffsto • Mlnneapoltsm-T . i s . .a * . .ceptable In th* '*«»- uaually mild" ranae; H-S is recommended for "uaualty 'formal- and the «#ur* lu m n t o a-11 for the "ua­ually aevere" belt.A s any e.,*erl«need electrical contractor wtit tell you, irtveat in

IS: *’forever aft

. . . *KS after.i«*»

. There is no waste with

- ■ a s r u . w F w !ayetema, '*0 alt of it can be utilised are.vMUflS th* conatructlon

■ . o f flte

aurposes more . cs«n-

te dwellina I*

men In homea than th f larger structures? , '

v. The u**a« «f *ls*trl*t- ty a* tha »«le fuel to heat home, has mush­roomed so in the last three snd a half dr ao years that It eaptureaM e InUMlnatlen. r « r the recjrd , how­ever sehoots, office bulldlnge, factories * efcy-aersoer apart, menta fn some Israe oitiea are also totally heated by electricity . Snd, ;<s with Homes, thie *omm*rlcal trend i* also increasing.

m.

I

LARSON'S ELECTRIC SERVICEResidential Commercial

Industrial Wiring Electric Heating insured - Bonded

24 Hr. Service Lie. #599 Belleville PL %-Wtt.

MYLES ELECTRIC■

t t Hoar Sm e.teRcy Servle*

L I* #710-711

Kearny WY 1-167*

EARLE ELECTRIC

Sloetrlost Contractor

L I* . #1*

No. Arlington

GROSSO ELECTRIC

Slectrlesl Contractor

WESTERN CONSTRUCTION CO., INC

is pleased to announce

A COMPLETE LINE OF HOME BUILDINGHOME BUILDERS HOME MODERNIZING

one family two family

ftW information No. Arlington office

J O N E S ELECTRIC

C O M P A N Y

u*. mmf f l lt t l Sl f U if . IGE

CH ASAR & SON

GE 8r4S0S

D E V O N ELEC TR IC

I N C .

U * . #KM

IPW w VH H I giPR»"Wl Pm

D O N W IL G U S

Kloettical Contractor

'* * L i* . * ia a t

991-5551 - W 8 -4 4 S 7

No. Arlington HU 2-6760

BELLO EL E C T R IC

\ SERVICE. ' t : AL I* . « « l

Nutley NO 7 - 0 » I t

: - rS. ‘ & ’ " " ' i , . . ; ‘ , _

S . J . P A L U M B O

K l« trte « l Centridtor‘

BAUER ELECTRIC■, s., i - ■

t t * Veit InataHed.

. Banded

A T O M E L E C T R IC

Electrica l Contractor „ , Henry Saokua A Pete Plttpaoao

L ie . #t*WE . R utherfordLie . M S

I I

1

!

liF.T m t

KSTDIATK ON \ VKtV2?0 vo!t — 3

SERVICE TO0A V

A.ChasarssorU lL r iC ltiA N Sivvcvant Av., I >ndhurv4 ■., UOUOJWKk a •■•jot#* -=>'»

R E N T A C A R

$ 5 . 9 3 p e r d a y

G E . 8 - 6 6 6 5

2 4 hours per day

J O H N S

L a A frD SfH JEU flERC&N KfrA l£ fr >rt5SDA¥I V k k L V f c

B0Tewtflt> bogining ’ w ith ji’nm r. M rs, F ra n k C ilifan > n ch arg r o f » n«i« .ni»-nis.

G ifts , w e re e*rf>a*ij;ed. G a m : ivere ttusic ’ wa* tWHfish-sd fry the G o ld Tonet. Mr-.. P r i­or Carella is presidrnt.

A reg u la r meeting o f thiPaintingALTERATIONS

A. TtJRIELLO & SdKCttmptd* Hot** imprdv#m« T. T H O M P S O N

Interior — Exterior

Business, Commercial A R e s id e n t ia l

tH JTClt b o y P A ir r r

Avg. 1-family house - # 2 0 0

Avg. 2-family bou*e - $ 1 0 0

Free Estimate* . .Fully Insured

Dial 997-1411

For Estimate* Ob *Guaranteed Hot Asphalt Driveway*. FarUnK Areas,

Playgrounds, etc. Call

NO T.170»J.M ph L. lM r * m

Nutley Contractor (S in e . 1***)

Oft, t mire htfl i ; l-’BHS. 114.40

K itch e n . N Aluminum S'dii Aluminum OMi

414 Fw e .t A v .GEneva

Electricians

Save BIG Money During (Kir

RECORD BREAKING SALECreditera of Em m .w ufl M m

K u rt* , deceased. ar* by order ot a n . t c . JOa, «i. a«r..*en Ceunty. d .t .d November is . ’ MS upon application ot th# tub •eriber notified to brmo in their aeots, demand* and a-«am *t Ma .K a te und.r oath,• '♦v i« «K month* from above data.

Brtocca 8. Kurta

J trH y -

■ M a w * ™

i renxon, piea t t o r n e yDated: Nov«

TRUCKS BUILT, SOLt) AND

SERVICED BY TRUCK PEOPLE

As Low As

Creditors o* Milton 0 i ;k .y , aka May Milton D ickey du.AW d, a ra by o rd .r of G IL L C. JOB. S u r . roBate or B«rq*n county, dated Nov. 17, 1»W upon application of th . .u b tc r ib .r notified to brmo in their debt., demand, and claim * a«ain*t. h i* e t u i , under o .tt i, within * ix m4ltth» from •ibov. date.

National Community Itonk at Rutherford »« Park A ve ..Rutherford. N. J, ' E X E C U TO R

W illiam C, B ivona. Eta.*** A v * . ., , .. .

*1779°°Featuring e x t r a s not atwaya included la other tracks . . . Dual fe*j»4 lamps . . . 8:15 % 15 Tirea . . . Double wall ta b con- atruction GMC* exclusive suspension . . . CM’a 24/24

Dated: November 2S. December i, * , 1*. 23, 1M5

FRANK’ SGARAGE

247 - 2 6 9 Hidse Road

FRIDAYN O T I C E tO PERSONS D E S IR IN G A B S E N T E E B A L L O T S

(C IV IL IA N S )I f you a r e a q u alified and re g is te r e d v o te r o f th e

s t a te w h o e x p a c ts to b e ab sen t outeide th e s ta te on F e b r u a ry 8, 1068, o r a q u a lif ie d and re g is te red v o t e r w h o w i l l b e W ith in the S t a t e o n F e b ru a ry 8, 1966 b u t b e c a u se o f illn e ss o r p h y sica l d ia a h ility , o t b ecau se o f th e o b se rv a n c e o f a r e lig io u s h o lid a y p u rsu a n t to th e te n e ts o f y o u r re lig io n , o r b ecau se o f re sid e n t a tte n d an ce a t a sch o o l, c o lle g e o r u n iv e r s i ty w i l l b e U nable to ca st y o u r b a llo t a t th e polling p la c e in y o u r d is tr ic t on sa id d ate, and y o u d es ire to v o te in th e T o w n s h ip o f L y n d h u r st, N ew J e r s e y A n n u a l S ch o o l E le c tio n to b e h e ld F e b r u a r y 8, 1966 k in d ly w r ite o r a p p ly in person to th e u n d ersign ed a t once, re q u e s tin g th at a c iv i l ia n a b se n te e b a llo t be fo rw a rd e d to y o u . S u ch re q u es t m u s t sta te y o u r h o m e a d d ress and th e a d d re ss to w h ic h s a id b allot s h o u ld b e sent, a n d m u st b e s ig n e d w ith y o u r s ig n a tu r e ( th e s a m e s ig n a tu re th a t is o n y o u r re g is tr a tio n s h e e t) 'an d S tate th e reason w h y y o u w il l n o t be a b le to v o t e a t y o u r u su a l p o llin g p lace. N o c iv i lia n ab sen tee b a llo t w i l l be fu rn is h e d o r fo r w a rd e d to a n y a p p lic a n t u n less re q u e s t th e r e fo r e is re ce iv ed N O T L E S S T H A N E IG H T (8 ) D A Y S P R I O R to th e e lectio n , and c o n ta in s th e fo r e ­g o in g in fo rm a tio n f . . .

p l i c a t i o n o t e r M U S T 3 IG N H IS O R H B R o w n A p -

F o i * » o f a p p lic a tio n can b e o b ta in ed front th e u n d e r­s i g n s .

iiiC .4 P A T S Y F. R E S T A IN O , S e c re ta r y•. ,*- B o a rd o f E d u ca tio n

• M u n icip al B u ild in g 'L y n d h u rst, -New J e r s e y ;

DECEMBER

BANKING HOLIDA Y

NOTICE TO PERSONS IN MILITARY SERVICE Oft PATIENTS IN VETERANS’ HOSPITALS AND TO

THEIR RELATIVES AND FRIENDSIf you a re in the m ilitai-y se rv ic e o r a re a p a tie n t in

• vettfrsfis' h o sp ita l and d ea ire to v o te , air if y o u a r e a r e la t iv e or fr ie n d o f a person w h o is in th e m ilita r y s e rv ic e o r is • p a tie n t in a v*t« ran s' h o sp ita l w h o , y o u b e lie v e Will desire- to v o te in th e T o w n sh ip o f L y n d h u r s t , N. J. A n n u a l S c h o o l E le ctio n to be held o n F eb rtW ry 6, »WG, fttw Jly w r ite

t u n d ers ig n ed a t on ce m ak in g a p p lic a t ion fo r a m ilita r y 8 b M lot to b e voted in s a ia e le c tio n to b e fo r w a rd e d i rf yo u a re in the m ilita ry s e rv ic e o r a re a pattern W ren*' h o sp ita l sta tin g y o u r n am e, age , seria l n u m b er. -SBdress and th e add ress a t w h ich y o u a re sta tio n e d

o r c a f c * e fo u n d o r i f yo u d e s ire th e m ilita r y a w v ice feaUot t o r a r e la t iv e o r fr ien d th en m a k e a h a p p lica tio n un4< r oath fo r a m i * a r y s e r v ic e A t i l o t 16 b e fo r w a rd e d lib nfm,’ s ta tin g in y o u r a p p lica tio n th a t h e is o v e r the age o f twferity-one (2 1) y e a rs and sta tin g h is n am e, s e r ia l Birin b«x. hom e a d d re s s and the addrea* a t w h ic h h e is sta tio n e d o r can be f t u n A '

F orm s o f a p p lica tio n c a n be o b ta in e d fro m th e u n d e r, s ig n e tf

P A T S Y F R E S T A IN O , S e c re ta r y B o a rd o f E d u ca tio n M u n icip a l B u iM ln g L y n d h u rst, N ew J e rs ey

D a te d : D e c e m b e r 22, 1985 F E E S ' S19 3#

VICTORFRANGIPANE

Composer and Arranger for Ctun I Contury - Heritage and Schuberth Music Co. of

New York City. ADULTS may also apply for

occasional tenons at yo«r Hone.CALL m - « m

^ ^ i T K irn e r s ^ ^PImw** WYman 1-5627

Welti Fuel OMi O IL BUHNERS F U t t OIL

■ "S S S iS S S S L 0” VELTRE T-V REPAIRS

...i,..........

JMMERCIAL LEADER AND SOliTH BERCv r ^ n tm n jffW W 0 m f

I

S E A S O N ’ S

G R E E T I N G S

M» to, your pocketbook! (loll t o detail# DI i i m or dial Operator tor Kfoa Cali WX ISS*. ■ - -

typ I railsfUee, knowledge ol

part time. Write C tiu n m leader, Box m . stating ex

perienoo. T f

E V E R Y O N E

R M AUTO SALESU Keamj Ave., Kearay, M. J.

V T m u t-W l

ELDERLY handy man asRoom optikoiial.

' » u i o * k » 9 s j m v i r a i '

toSSJSOWERS

t,*nahur*DELMt aut«§ MMUi .* 5I» 5w « » -t in

BSS 5*34**• n»w»rv«

KMpay

yourHMUl

HELD WANTED - MAUI

A

The rules of Rummage Sale a r . > w h . T im. tf you sell W* depend an your Honor. W rit# put

I r s r X i S t e a H t e j f - rcement twice — without cost if you d o o t jell. If J

fc ** " “Vo f i l ! M r i i a » S hmr-

N o w P l a y i n g Hew" Rivoli John V. DeFlUippoJohn V . D e F B lip p o cl 175 Ri-

w rv te w avenue, p ast president offH arrison and Hudson boards oi dducWlon, d M D ecem ber 16 a l hom e. H e w a s 59. . ^

B o m In I fc n is o o , Mr. D e F fl- HkgK) lived Uwr* until m ovta« te North Arl'-ftjton 13 y ear! a so. F rom 19 J to 1930, he w as an cut

‘ -West

BARTF.NI1EK aad all around ser- V^_n»aa. H im* be lia b le . £01

tzS TRAIN TABLE of HO train* aad access. 8 «*t» of race ears, Aurora and HO with acoeas. Call 43.W J8 . , lt-S

Y O U N G m an Ior 4 stsn t to production textile and paper bag factoryW rite C o m m ercial L ea d er, Bo*

m ~~ “ •• a a

M A C H I N I S T ^

dinette set, $78; also bedroom set, *75

I C q n w i a «

J Offer Gri igs*A w ish** to r i

healthy in-w year

Mr. De FlWppo was coowner of tbe hilHp* af H arrison, He tha North Arlington

Testimonial Dinner For John Wylie

m & M IBest offer

DAY f>*> SW ifr* SHIPT ,,, KX— V o v p *»t i m E

TOP RATS*Many RXUt.i.l.fc w upfnlftt’ tn

with advancements fo r

tall

I <valve, nine wide, * * > rover. ***•

■ i IM S

O n e hundred ia d fifty f r ie s * and co-w orkcrs attended a testi-

l t - is n on ial dinner a t M ahero’s on R t W Sn Param us, honoring J o ton W ylie , who w ill retire at the etu St th is jftar a fte r 8* y e a rs ri--*er v ice with Ijeslie Co.. m an u fastu r t r o f regulators and controller:

P H Y S IC A L fittteM .exerciser. new pogo stick, $8.50. Ideal fo r Christ- t in s g ift. C a ll 898 K##8. n n

avi B O O M S , tad fir. trance. A v a il . Jan. It 1461.

rsr a

GREEN leal her lounging e h a i r with ottoman. Like new, $68. Al so mahogany telephone ta b le aad chair, *18. Call 8388137. l*-»I . , .y mmb| -ii -T A B L E and four c l ia jp painted

- “ T f o a o r

for pressures, tem p eratu res, <uw, Siquid lOvela u s e ! in induatriaand m arine p ip in g system s. ....

W y lie was b o m in P assa ic, and rece ived his e a r ly education ln th< Paterson school system . A fter hifTi-aduatfd h igh school, be jo in ? the Nfevy duriiti? W orid W ar I nrt se rv e d on the battleship U SSi p m ■

S f w ; a J l 5 g g £ » « § » s * i ■playing at the new Rlvolf Theatre. The group come up with fev k new sohj W» ih the way wrt w m H ki- :

North Arlington High Wins From Hasbroueh Heights 74-51

open-(vantage » j Hie m j t '

s R O O M S, heat aadi ^ S o t alter • p.m.,

r w d e m

* w *i?-S0

rJANlJKA('TORm<3a S d 'a I I D A ^ I i JT C R D A f

R.P.I.u i , ri AVB NO. ARIJNOTO-S fciual" Opportunity Employer

^ four fired, >10, wiitable lot ! recreation room. Alao Johnson’s floor waxer and polisher, (&. Like Mtw. C M t'fw ntt; »*■*>

Immed. o ccu p * » REWARDcy. Bent $M. Call <H W - » *»,«»

, v w n w i t k a T s r^ T b ^ T ^ d *** " • * * * ■ * • to* “1.VNDH1RAT, t rowns. beat ana (q ^ havf po^tto-s f“V,. Real Estate saleswoman or sal

— [m en^ll yo« am looking for

fOLDINQ eoach carriage and playpen in very good condition, both hardly used, 148. Also 21 Emerson «-on»ole ti4evl*»lon, new picture tube, **5. d t f 939 *488.

1J-2J

now. CaMNORTH T b u I o t S I »heal and h o t w « * r , m « * a * kH

only.

""" .. .. M odem,l y k S T

M-rtul fo u r room ap t. ** w »W t tadR tw o fam ily B W * * * » t .

« w aftw . two new a ir condition

U4»l«MMfy MM*. Tray • r - — Uad good tood. u»««l«d h*m ford. Call OE M*M- TF

( iA B A G E — Located a i

small compact ear Call »»»«« aay time or MM»« *«erp.m.

free estwaaweo.'

18 C U B IC ft. upright A iftaw * Iree Hke a e w . *288. A l# e « 8 « S

„_ o d beds with m a ltr e a t box spring and h ead h o a r d * *#***5'u * T c a l l M l t m or m m '

■■ . 12 23

A L M O ST a e w 1*»" green quilted ■

4S8IS62.C a ll

./yarning. He w a s a te a r d the O M 1N G when the G erm an fleet surrendefed, N ovem ber 21, 191S.A fte r the w a r , W ylie w orked for

fe E rie R ailroad as boilerm aker rom there, h e Joined the A m e ri­can Locom otive Com pany, P ater- --------

iTW O i l * * * * M F o rd w!tecl», -Cn, l» e r- m o vir^ to M ilw au k ee p w e i^ d oYceiirot conditon, »lse 8UOH4, is a designer d ralttm an <pr the “ — S « r . p . . « 9 P a g - M ilw aukee R ailro ad, M r . W ylie

, vBdbnrst. 12*3 attended St. L o u is Technical In-A venue, L y m m o rs ..-------------------- 8U tute and the R ailw ay E d u ca-

tk jn a ' ftireau .In 1929, M r. W ylie w as em ploy-

,’d hy l^ s lie Com pany a s a ’ design draftsm an. He rose to E n ­

gineering Su pervisor, P la n t M anager, and O ftice Sales M ana g e r . He served several y ears as a m em ber of the firm 's O ffice M a­nagem en t B o ard , and » « c h arte r m em b er o f Leslie C o .'s S ilver Roifflffl CSuto.

W ylie is a m em b er of the Indus­tr ia l M anagem ent Club o f B ergen County and served osn its B eard o f rtre cto rs fo r six years a m eiftber <*t the lnsinnner.- L. c ie tv <i A m erica and the P a c k s -(c e le b ra te d

ic k Woods Association.W ylie lived in Rutherford for 35

and recen tly m o ved to W ayne w here he resides with has w ife . M arguerite, and daughter,M arjorie. He h a s^ our^oth er cha-

R A o un d in g from » * - j . —ing gam e defeat, l i o r lh AHUigton a t t B W •High S ch ool's fire h o rs e basket- liv e pulled u w ty tteadH y baJl team evened its record fo r last rhee periods c f play.

night d t fe il- 1 »•he

s tn ^ iii* socc e r p la y e r In the

po w as co-owi

.rlington Plannlnt. liotu-d and a director d the Savoybu ild in g & L o a n AssOelat icn iia r r to n .

M r. De F‘JliPP° w®3 * * ber of O ur L a d y of 6 r a « Counsii c f the Knights o f Colum bus, t£l<H a n to i Measure Clab, and the R-Own Oi*> ot HarriSH}.

H e le a ve s h is w ife , Ilanmnh Gal- lagh tJ JJe F lU i f - » l J !* .L < * * '

•T r a n k c f N u tley and John « U u U c f K e a rn y , his partn ar I# the p lu m hir.l bu»tae*s; on:; s i ter M rs. Jennie M essina in Californ ia and b' jc grandchildren.

H ie funeral w as M ?nd*y ^ the C k M H M McTliorlai H om e. 377 {Oraiuy aven ue, K earny, w ith

Mayor Bogle commended Jo­seph Caruoci- fathPr 11 Cjmmis- lioner Carurci, oa the many wars of se ttee on the Zoning loard erf Adjwtnient, from which ic ja retiring Carucci thanked

:he many vrfuttteera who serve

ii

mendr j tile •ienrr* nnd the tiea " f c r <fcMg

■ ■■ • f i<*■—II.

Robert Wiahsrt. student at Qlaa^orc Stats CJollege. m the holiday r e c e ss w ith hisparents. Mr. JJrs. Jam e^ W irim rt <* C hase Avenue.

j Christm as p a r t f gtW B,-Io'‘ em ­ployees <4 the Continental Cun

Com pany, P aterson , day eveniag T h e y . r e e # ‘td a

‘ ttUig a

in

Friday .,i*i Ha*rouck He;ghts 74-51.

V ikin gs who w ill not p lay during the CStristmas holidays, wiH retu rn to action on Jan uary! 7th in a North 'je r s e y Confer- [

' ence co o lest with MewSntain L akes, j North A rlington's attack w as I

b y Pat J u r r n k a d * 29 points and EWb Heinzingrar with 17. Ken Eigienrauch w aa

fo r the A v iato rs with 12 1 while G eorge S p a e trailed w 11.

The home team led from tlw rpcning tap and held a IM ad-

jel's K earn y aven ue, K m W , w tn_ » lt(er rad!o farthe f e t o n Mai* of Requtetn at Our CCm M .

Lady Queen of Peace Church, 'PcBta dance com™

“ A Nam e W o rth Rem em bering”

JO S E P H COCCIA *Raal Estate - Insurance - AppraW

Builder* - Developers

A nd Sale* S ta ll E*leud»

s t W i s h e :fo r

expeditionary a irfie ld s and a i r ­craft ca rriers.

B efore entering tho service in July 1965, Hall attended N ew ber­ry C o lle g e . N eV o erry, S C. H a p p y a ml

DANISH « w eh and fru it wood coHeo tabje. C a l. ^ y »'™e »»1 *114, or a fte r « l - » .

m i. i....ni. 1 j ■■■! ‘.‘k.' "...." W * ' "L IO N E L electric w iper “ O " trains with a ll ac<«ssories iaclu d ed with

M r. and Mrs. | — - -728 K in gslan d A ve., enfertsuned I Sunday M r. and Mnt. Rchert G e r mann o f RoseHe. T h e birthday* of

H e >is I Mrs, Brant and th eir children,

w m m m r * r m

w m ^ ' m PN e w Y e a r t o

wltfa a ll a c c e s s o r* * (;all dren, M rs, Joh n Saracen a ai O aka new *75 w an traaafo rm er. W L . John ^ R utherford, Robert

M *-***- x_______ _ L J o f Wayne-, and R ichard of P assa ic .- • g vacuum H e has s ix grandchildren and one

G ood condl" g rea tg ra n d ch ild ,b * • «nf ] ------------

w. Oarr, HU.;

OFFICE SPACE |t»R K' 00* ft. S room office emte Ave.AirAvailable Feb. 1st.

^ a n www

e l e c t r i ccleaner, w ith parts, tion. *10. Also sm all enei draw er* a ad night t a b * . n a il bet. 5 * « p « . 43t-»8Si.

T # 0 boy* sport ja c k e ts , rise 18and 1*, I* each. Tw o g ir ls winter

I f w i —

M iM O * beanttea, A R C . M l » <« *»«N. i . COB MMt.

PUPPXIhIjf/1 JfdMMB,

Wery's Oltt Shop,

F O t 'B ^fem ale, ab o rt one month old, fraa. C a ll SSS-0J84. “ W

| * * » WithCntors, royal blue and $10 each. Call 9M-SMA

Marine P i iv a tc Ronald J. Hall. s r ^ p f M r . and M r s R ic h a r d A A ndrew artha, o f 51 Shields P lace, North Arlington, is serving fo r du­ty with H eadquarters and M ain­tenance Squadron-26, a unit d M arine A ir c r a f t G roup 26 at fte M arine C o rp s A ir F acility , New riv e r, N. C .

His iq u ad ro n ’s p rim a ry m is­sion includes providing admini-

i' s

D B M JX E Kenm ore g a s dryer, has five heat setting*, p lus three.

S PC. bedroom set, *7»; Kelvlna | fare and offensive a ir support re fr lg e ra lo r , . *25: tetevW oaj operations t a support of F leet _Ma-

set, *75; M d torm lca d la e th , $J5. C a ll between I* .tt * P-m -

i advaecw l bases,

IM SLOSE WEIGHT safely with Dex- •***. Saturday all day A DM Tablets. Only M eeata at people* Pharmacy

ric.DU N N J

Advicelif te d r J t e

oe oa all prob

y A N T C Pp.,. ■ mi **■#' *A»a-— ' ‘

M B fO « » „ -Papers SO cints per M* delivered

L A ^ O S C A P O 'C

Md, batteries, and lro«KEARNY 8CBAP METAL

Schuyler Ave., Kearay, N Jm - o m

B T * a p c o u j c t p w

I ^ * 5 * r * t ,

GARDEN

0 - 1 “ ^ U S S S w i t

Assemblers... j- ■ ■ ■ •

E q u i p m e n f W i r e r s

M a c h i n e O p e r a i o r s

1st and 2nd Shift*

J B tS S R S & S tper, Rags. O w t im * . DeBvered.

E s r / M S -

---------

Rent a NEW

COCCIA1.FAM1LY - f*l,W* (No Mainta—aen)

Travers Place — 5 roeI H

A - J r s r .

this maV a i tHK o^PoaTUNiTV vou hav« h i n thi* mat had itoM hiohWAITING IfOA ir vou Hava »T ..1school ANO W IS H . o t * « . T o u a u f i c a t , o ^ MAV OON9IO«H«D ron on* or th » » « opM-

in o *.

J11if

Applyat the employment office.

Ask for Mr. G. W-

Plant win a* ******

ua n *4»|1 W *rt»!>ltr

a— — • f r -

h ik in ir al iUDMiR* mExcellent tion.

2-FAMILY

J s r f t X 3 T 7 J .modern kitchen) on l i t I floor, and collect a*«llant income from 3-room A bath ' apt. on 2nd} Oil hdat, ex­cellent residential location. Low down pavment to | qualified buyer.

^ Occupy ro o n # A b a* in 2nd apt. and re e ^ra f»- ceUent income from *-room A tile bath in 1st apt. ©>1

occupancy. Only *25.

N»W X FA M ILIESUltra modern, ex

i

finished basement, ia u n d r v r o o f B , cei conditioning, S car garage. C .B tp se * t« ,ao » r!

H ARRISON t

a . . f x - i ~

PIfMTV V n i t «»«N O M »0<H OTOCH _

COCCIAW Y 8-W06

131 Kearny Aw.

*8

Old Guard €n|oy Party

E gA TTPTOffBr U U R i f i c J H TH E COMMERCIAL LEADER AND SOUTH BERGEN REVIEW ,

r AND THS SOUTH BERGEN REVIEWEstablished 1921

The Commercial Leader is the official newspaper

L Y 1 S H U R S T H O M E O F 6 H A M P I 0 I SPublished every T h u rs d a y b y T h e C o m m e rc ia l L eader P rin tin g C o m p an y

at 2 5 1 R id g e R o a d , L y n d h u rs t, N. J . T e le p h o n e G E n e v a 8 - 8 7 0 0 - 8 7 0 1

T.r .M W I W L ,

< 2 2 , 1 9 6 5 .

m m m

Editor

p tio n 1 3 .0 0 P e r Year

J O H N S A V W O

Second-Class postage p aid at R utherford, N. J.T en C e n ts P e r C opy

L y n d h u rs t, N. J . , D e c e m b e r 2 2 , 1 9 6 5

J o n e s : M o n u m e n t O f G allWhen Walter H. Jones called his press

conference last Thursday nobody expected that the repudiation he suffered in two Consecutive elections would have persuad­ed him th a t his brand of Republicanism is Ws»a cup of hemlock to the average voter.

Were Jones able to comprehend there vwuld have been no need for the press conferenc e : he would not have led the fMffty iv w a the disastrous trail of defeat.

What Jones said a t the conference was pure Jones and deserves a commentary not became of its importance but because it is instructive to consider the monumental gall

domin- But did

not con- itic Coun

into nomin-

The course of the Jones strategy was, ted weeks before. Fred

Iter, the undersheriff, who has been rabidly opposed to Sen. Clifford P. Case aud who was gifted with a lucrative

job by Jones fo r such out* Republican!sm, suddenly announ­

ced that the way to Republican victory was through Case. .

Tbe gambit was idiotically transparent. But if w hat was going on had to be written

himself finally provided the

being made last year Case was ant figure in the Republican Jones ask his advice? Did spire with Senator Farley of ty to throw the selection of the party a turmoil in a vain effort to get ithe no ation himself?

It was never any secret to Jones that Case wanted Congressman William Cahill o f Camden for the party’s candidate for governor—and that Jones bent every effort in the book to thwart Case!

And so at the press conference th e n is the pious declaration: “Since my election as county chairman 1 have tried desperately to warn my fellow Republicans, at both the

'—Every year about this time I get calls from wtves, husbands, sisters, brothers, and friends of bird watchers. The big question Is what to give the blister lor the holidays. Peterson's “A Field Guide to the Birds- heads the list followed by a pair of bino culars or a membership in the National or New Jersey Audubon Society. The address of the former ts 1130 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. ¥., 10028; the cost of a regular membership la *8.50. The state society may be reached at 790 Ewing Avenue, Frank­lin Lakes, N. I. and the annual dues are |S.M.

If the birder has sit these, then the next suggestion is a re­cently published book. A number have come out In the last few months. I've listed them In order of my owh preference with the most valued first. My favorite this year is “W ater, Prey and Gaipe Blr-te of North America” available from the National Geographic Society, Dept. 279, Washington, D. C., 2W86, for $11.85. It is crammed with pictures, action and sound, with the portraits of,J29 species In the National Geographic’s incomparable color. A record album containing the recorded ca lb and cries of 97 birds is included

For the tale oLa 20.008 mile trip through whiter In the United States, try '‘Wandering Through Winter" by Edwin Way Teale Dodd, Mead . $6.50) With this book. Teale completes hji.odyssey of the seasons begun 20 years ago. It begins on the first day of winter where California joins Mexico and finishes north of Caribou, Maine. Subjects range from gray whales in Baja, Call fomla to road runners In New Mexico, from praire dogs la Lub­bock, Texas, to snowflake mlcTophotographs and harvesting

A splendid pcngrswn talnment and a delicious eon was enjoyed by about ninety members and guests of the Old Guard of Rutherford, Inc., at their Christmas Party, held on Wednesday morning, December 15, at the Fellowship Hail of St. John’s Lutheran Church. Alfred Zendler, Director, greeted those present and introduced tee Rev­erend William H. Niebanck, who gave the invocation. Alonzo Put­nam, Vice Director, was the pro­gram chairman.

naple sugar Im Vermont “Portrait of a Desert” by Guy Mountfort illustrated by Eric

Hosking (Houghton Mifflin Company - $10.00) conies next It Is the story of an expedition to Joivtan by a team of naturalists that included several noted ornithologists. Hosklng s picturesare always tops and the account of the feathered folk's struggl for existence in this arid land is fascinating.

to Mike Supko in the Herald News of Passaic Jones said Case is the “symbol of die Republican party and it is for him to rebuild or remold th e party.”

Thus it can be seen that even in depths of u tter defeat Jones is willing to try a subtle form of political blackmail.

Case has been a senator fo r a dozen

dissension that characterised ‘business as usual* policies th at had cruelly weakened our party.”

Here is the man who broke with the country’s outstanding Republican senator, Clifford Case, having the nerve to talk about dissension.

Here is the man who broke with the county's outstanding senator, tadking about dissension.

Here is the m an who walked Out of the state organization on the eve of the state’s most important election talking about dis­sension .- i * ■ ' ---- b r1;

Jones thinks, of course, he has an ace

Si his sleeve. W,e come upon 1966 when ifford Case wiH seek reelection.The Jones maneuver was a bald effort

Rep. H enry Hcfertoski (D., 9th) a rrived in this c ity y esterd ay a l­ter spending a month behind the

ypars. H e has been one of th e country’s Republicans. Case is revered

it, independents and liberaltv c iy w h e re .

to warn Case th at , he must take Jones and

Why has it taken Jones 12 years to sud­denly find this out.

Why, f

the Jones slate ofter., The threat is as

pocket. He could nomination—which

Iron Curtain studying tra d e rela; p o ssib ility of b u ild in g a m onorail

tea or face disas-

y as Jones’s political more-Mock Cases’*

is the real stake next

for instance, when Case could have bean an important figure in the national coriVention last year did Jones and bis' crowd refuse to make him the favorite son?

When the gubernatorial selection was

year—than he could stop February follow' ing January. And what Jones says or does could not help o r dsEMg’e Case’s chances.

It looks as tliougn the man from Nor­wood has at. last beeii cut down to size—a pipsqueak voice from Norwood (population: 2 4 5 0 ).

N ew Big C ity In W eehaw kenL. Muscarelle, a director of N a­

tional Community Bank whose building company is located in Maywood, has been making interesting news the last few years But nothing quite tops his idea to build a city of .40,000 in Weehawken on the banks of the Hudson River.

Presently die area selected by the Mus­carelle firm it barren, abandoned railroad sidings deteriorating on the banks of the Hudson. Muscarelle would acquire this land from the Erie-Lackawanna Railroad and convert it into a “city of the future.’'

There is nothing new in th e proposal. Nearby is similar acreage owned by New York Central System. A few years ago New York Central proposed for its land the very type of development Muscarelle envisions for Erie- Lackawanna’s property

The difference k : New York Central went looking for a developer and couldn’t find one. In this case the developer is look-

WED DAY,

HughMelssner Dwight

M ey e rMUler,

D w ight O’Connor,Harry

E verett

M rs. P a u l E, H ag ar w a s intro­duced by her father-in-law, Paul Hagar, and opened the program by singing ''Jolly Old S t Nicho­las.” “O Holy Night” ”0 Christmas Tree” and closed with the solo "We W ish You A Mer­ry C h ris tm a s’ . ’M rs. Hagar ac ■ompanied h erse lf on the accor­

dion. She a lso accom panied those present w hile singing m a n y of the old fa vo rite Ch ristm as Carols.

■A group of 54 g irls from the

G lee C lub of S t. M a ry ’s G ram ­m ar School, d irected b y Sister Inez R aym ond, g a v e a splendid .perform ance._ singing a ca p e lla

ert Huff,Sindaire,Zendler and Har^y R,

Winners of the drawings for door prizes were Archie White,Henry Perrin, Scptt Stapi SS, Al­fred Zendler, Ernest D imme- leers and Perry A. Griffiti i.

Others pr?^eltf....yy'ere! Carl Abend. John Baba, Jacob lauch, Cliff ftpetae, Walter Burges i, Lou­is Bright, Walter Burrgra , Har­ry-Butler, Glade Button, Morris Crook, Melvin Cumtngs OttoDunker and William Dunla J.

Mao Victor Emanuel, Ralph Fister, Curtis Fox, Wm. Class­man, Harold Greenleaf, 1 erman Grimm, Albert Hall, Robe * Har­wood, Marfin Hauensteln, Jeorge KelUen, Thomas KtscarWi Fred Kleefi, Joseph Kny«f, Chad. Lsb* mam*? J, Louis Lemoert, Andrew Lewis, Hugo Loetfter, AivtaLugg, Stanley Mac Dow* 1 andA lfred Zendler, Alonzo P itnam

In a more serious vein is Sir Julian Huxley’s “Essays of Humanist" (Harper and Row S4-95). One essay, “Birds and Science,1’ traces Darwinism in some detail as Illustrated in the bird kingdom. “The Cote Donatia ” relates some of the experience Sir Julian had on an expedition to the Marismas of Spain. Here

____he saw most of the birds that live In Europe. In other id*s ta te and County level, th a t w i could „o <™™ned pages are discussed

. ,1,1 j j j i . challenge to Toynbee’s tlme-scale thesi as,n analysis of Teilhardde Chardin's contributions and an examination of the population explosion. It is very readable.

For the traveler, a good choice would be “The Bird Wather’s America” edited by Olln Sewall Pettingill, Jr (McGraw-Hill - *7.50). Sutton, Peterson, Krause, Cru ckshank, Bodsworth, Sprunt Gabrielson and 37 other distinguished naturalists write about the best areas for birds in the United Stages and Canada They take you with them from the nearby metropolitan New York area to the far-off Aleutians. /

In the fiction field, try “The Golden Eagle’’ by Robert Murphy (E. P, Dutton and Co. - $3.95). It’s an absorbing book about a wonderful bird.

Congressman Helstoski Visited In Amsterdam

o b se rv e the use o f m onorail there. H elstosk i has introduced a b ill ask in g fo r a fe d e ra l study on the

a b o v e the E rie -L a c kawanna R ail­road right-of-way-' from S u ffem , f t . Y . . to Hoboken and then into

m ain tain s his p ro jected schedule, he w il l return to Bergen County on F r id a y .

Leaves For ServiceA nthony

For instance, what about the garbage generated by 40,000? W here would it go? What about the water? Nobody has said a word about the Weehawken w ater and whether there is a tufficient tupply to ac­comodate a new city of 40,000. What about the sewerage? What facilities are there for this giant undertaking? i . s ’„

In other words, there is is lot of basic planning necessary before a, brick is laid.

It was .to be hoped th at in this kind of development the advice of a i*an like Ken­neth Roe of Ridgewood would be sought. It was Roe who went to lualifomia and talked interestingly of using garbage to pro­duce heat and water. H e said there is no reason why garbage should not, under pre­sent know-how, be used to

M s m s m *

mg fo r the railroad. W t'ii-hope the Muscarelle plan succeds.But so far some of the publicity handed

out by the company is disappointing. W ee­hawken is one of the smallest communities in Hudson. In 1960 it had a population of less than 14,000.

The architect disclosed no startling new "»g that would m ake for betterprogram m ing

th eheat, water and power that some of oar self-contained developments should have.

In the recent black-out a i little Long Island plant near Hempstead churned mer­rily on, fully alight, because it was burning garbage. The garbage in turn was distilling salt water so that a pure, potable fluid resulted.

Perhaps before the Muscarelle firm be­gins finalized plans for the new city it will undertake a study of the possibility that a major share of its power and water problem can be solved by solving the major problem of getting rid of its garbage.

tions w ith Com m unist nations for the G overnm ent O perations Com ­m ittee. a

Hete*esWt w ou ld h a v e spettMNew Y o rk City, three" additional d a y s h r th e! ~ f f -the freshm a n Com m unist b lo c but his v is it v(ras cut short when R um ania refused to i&sue him a v isa. O ffic ia ls there .were aroused b y a s p e e c h j f c t - stostoi m ade in M a x m ark in g Ru-

Independence D a y , in he deplored the re lo catio n

U freed om in th at c o w ^ ry by the communisfts. i-

H elstoski h as a busy period ahead o f him , even though his o ffic ia l study h as ended. He scheduled to tra ve l to T h e H ague today to confer w ith engineers r e ­presenting N E D ECO , a D utch en­gineering firm

NET) ECO engineers in 1958 w e re brought to B ergen County b y the M eadow lands R egional Plan­ning Board to study the feaafefc lity o f recla im in g the meadow­lands lyin g north pf N ew ark Bay.Th ey iU ggested this could be done b j ’ constructing a dam and tidal gates above the mouth of the H acken sack R iver.

HH^toski, considering possible fed eral legislation m helping re­claim the m eadowlands, w ill con­su lt further w ith the com pany’s engineers and w ill inspect sim ilar projects used to reclaim land to the N etherlands.

Tom orrow he is expected to tra v e l to Dusaeldort G erm an y, to

T h ey sang “ Joy to the W orld' ■Winter W onderland", “ O jC o m e

AU Y e F a ith fu l" , Jesus O u r B ro ­ther ”, “ H ark the H erald A ngels Sing” , "SUent N ig h t ”, “ T h e F irst N oel', \'©n the M ountain ’ and " W e W ish Y o u . a \ M erry C h ristm as” .

In appreciation of th eir ser­vices, the g ir ls w ere perm itted to rem ain to en joy the presentation by P rin ce Jasp er, (J a sp er Wells of E a s t R utherford) a m agician and com edian. A ll present were am used and m ystified b y his various sleight of hand tricks fire eating, etc: J I

G eo rg e Sorensen presented the R everend W illiam H. N iebanck P asto r o f St. John’s Lutheran Church, w ho g a ve a Christ­m as M essage, based upon the first verse of the second ch tp ter of St. M atthew .

T h e o rch e stra of the Old G u ard rtf Rutherford entertained by playin g C h ristm as m usk: at various in tervals during the pro­gram . T h e m em bers o f the or­ch estra consisted of F r e d Stoec- kle and J a m e s H am m q n & wo- tins: M a u rice R esnick and John

E m il G s tm u v soxaphone, arid A lfre d Herr­m ann, piano.

La P la c a , son of M r,

Abo William Rehfeldt, Alvin Schmidt, Martin Scholl, Quirin Schwartz, J. K. Sinclair, Wil­liam Sinclaire, Daniel Robbins, Chas. N. Smith, WlUiam Staheli, Carl SteUber. Chas. SuSpMa, Ha­rold TerwHliger, WiHiam Tiede- mann, Chas. Van Roden, Fred Verny, Knight Vernon, Charles Williams. .. \' |

T he Cantetbury Inter-Faith Group will sponsor a teenage dance on December 29 from t p. m. to 11 p.m. in the pariah hall of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, North Arlington. Casual d m a will be the order of the evening. 4 Music will be by Tlte Odd Ones, formerly known as. The Castles, Bol De Steno is general chair- m aa, - . , h:

Tickets will be sold at the door the night of the affair.

Shop At 'R idge W ine & Liq u o r W I N E S B E E R S

L I Q U O RFree Off Street Parking

For Your Convenience

Those seated at th e d a i s ere th e R ev . C. V an LeeUwen.

P asto rChurchSecretai

and M rs. Philip L a P laca , 268 Y oung M S tu yvesant A ve., left last Mnn- tion, invl d ay fo r service in the U. S . A rm y . R ev W; P res en tly he is a t F t. D ix i ra ry

o f the Congregational and F rank Schw eigardt,

the South Bergen Christian Associa guests; a lso the

H. N iebanck, hono- r, C . O ak ley Austin,

and ] irjt o f

M ens

0 - PICK -UPBrookdate Soda Large Bottle* 1.39 *

Phis Deposit

FREE DELIVERY

case

R idge W ine & Liq u o rPh o ne 9 3 9 - 5 5 9 0

James DeLellis Prop.

4 1 9 R id g e R o a d Ly n d h u rs t

Hows n s m M t*

to be a P o p u la r S A N T A . . . GIVE THEMCOME TO PAUL'S

for E Q U I P M E N T

Hart & Northland SKISBOOTS - POLES - IN FO RM A TIO N

A D V E R tlZ M E N T

A C ra ftsm a n R e tir e s : L o u is Mion

Beck’s Column

In hia own way Louis Mion was an artist. He w m a tile designer and a tile te tter. A native of Italy where craf tamanthip is an iart, be came to this country, settled in Lyndhurst and soon became known in

~|HNMhP Bergen, aa a builder.But it was tile that intrigued him. For

years he built up a display of tijes that was aa breath-taking at tom e of the art

m the museums hereabouts.techniques have cuWtleeply into

Hie tile business, however. T he old system of handsetting tile has been abandoned mere and more because it is now possible to boy synthetics by the slab. It is cheaper. If it doesn’t last a t long a s the antic tile wfaat difference?

Or some thought. Not Louis Mion. Over

the years lie maintained the integrity of his art. There are not many tdesetters left. There are not many plasterers left. Lathers are a dying breed.

The wood-working masters who produc­ed those sweeping ttoircases are disappear­ing. Why pick a master when it is easy to select a pre-fabricated article?

Louis Mion retires now. His integrity is intact. A philosophical man, he understands that times have changed. Whether they have changed for the better is for the younger generation to determine. Louis Mion is tranaferring his sest for tiling to tho ^olf course.

May every score b ^ par for this enor­mously popular man.

' ■ v '

• Toys for hoys ft girlse Bicycles, tricycles, wagons• Faint-by-number sets, pussies e Model trains, planes, boats• H-0 ft Standard accessories• Model motoring racers ft sets• “Matchbox” models• Gilbert Educational toys• "Perfect" model accessories

e Hunters needs • gloves - thermal underwear - boots - jackets • guns

ICE SKATES Men's — Womens

Children’s Figure ft Hockey

“Canadian Flyer” Ice Skates

EVERYTHING FOR SPORTSMEN a Golf — Bowling — Tennis• Fishing — Hunting• Basketball • Football

L o s t O p p o rtu n ityMow that the election it over Gov. Hugh-

ts h a t vetoed a bill that would have pre- New Jersey’s reputation for honest

_ The bill in question would have**■“ ----- weight of proving title to the

upon the state. Instead, has veoted the measure so 4hat

owners of 150,000 acres of individually prove their

which they purchased in good

integrity of a state is at stake m this question. Eventually Hughes is going" ' ‘ t> * .

wrong.an issue

had

to he provedBut where it should

was in the campaign, innumerable _*pot with- the fully aind up the tituation and supported the contention that the atate should honor contract* entered Into honeatly.' Inatead, Dumont bated his | uoon the Genovese issue and was

of state integrityood for cheap

f r i t y !h e a p

b y M A X BEO K

A

MERRY

C H R IS T M A S

A N D

H A P P Y N E W -

YEAR ’

TO

ALL O U R

C U S T O M E R S

READERS O F

THE C O L U M N

A N D FRIENDS

F R O M ALL O F

U S AT

B EC K ’S T. V.' '

A M M OW e Issue Licenses

e C’hem C r a f t L ab se ts

• Lsb Apparatus ft chemicals• Microscopes ft accessories

PA U L 'S H A S BOATS!And Everything For Boatsmen s Commanlcstlon Equipment • Compasses — Log Books s Speedometers — Tachometers

M O D EL C EN TER O F N . J .

Paul*i Hebtjy and Sport Shop Is Recognized As This Entire Area's Most Fully-Stocked Model Train Cenier

Often 9 A.M. to » P.M., Mon thru F ri-Saturdays ’t i f P.M:= I jag . .. - . | M.Christmas Eve

Tali

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LOADS OF FREE PARKING SPACES

4 0 - 5 4 6 P a te rs o n A ve nue 4 E a s t R u th e r fo rd

M arket)

Cor. W illow SL ------------

f Tali

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