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VOL. 85, NO. 32 1UM< tun. Manlu uuoum TtltiT. Sicoad CIUI PMUI>Pall U fUl Buk ml u AddlUonal MllUoi OHICM.
RED BANK, N. J,, THURSDAY, AUGUSTS, 1962 7c PER COPY PAGE ONE
Mayor vs. CouncilKeansburg Battle Brews Over Sewer Repair Bill
KEANSBURG - A king-sizedbattle between Mayor Louis T.Collichio and the remainder ofthe Borough Council is startingto brew here.
1 And the rift-may well resultin the mayor being charged withfailure to carry out his dutiesby the remainder of the govern-ing body.
Triggering the ruckus is themayor's announcement that or-ders not withstanding, he is notgoing to sign checks coveringbills submitted by the M. M.Nero Construction Co., Hazlet,for repair of the borough's sew-er outfall system.
Mayor Collichio was orderedry the council to pay the bills,totaling $1,300 and $5,034, Tues-day night after the mayor lostout in a bid to get the govern'Ing body to rescind a prior mo-tion authorizing the payments.
. The mayor claims the bills areInaccurate.
Councilman Martin C. Lohsenwhen apprized of the mayor'sannouncement said, "I and Ed-die, (Councilman T. Edward Kin-lin) will have to prefer charges."
Will Discuss ItHe said he would have to talk
to Mr. Kinlin and the boroughattorney to see exactly what theprocedure would be.
Louis.T. CeflicUo
. . . Won't Sign Check
He said he and Mr. Kinlinwould probably have to call aspecial meeting or get the may-or to call a meeting to discusshe situation.
In making the announcementthat he was not signing thebills, the mayor expressed thehope that the state Attorney Gen-eral's Office would be broughtinto the case.
"This I welcome," said themayor.
The following items on the J5,-034 outfall line bill were ques-tioned by the mayor:
1. $1,440 labor charge for 96hours of diving time to preparethe line and installation of threesleeves to cover three breaks inthe line.
2. $742 to cover cost or' havingdiyers stand by in case they wereneeded.
3. $400 tar a foreman at therate of $40 per day for 10 days.
A. $1,050 for hire of a boat andtools for 10 days at a cost of$105 a day.
5. Fifteen per cent figure of$597.42 .for supervision.
The mayor contends that two
borough employees, James Da-vis, water plant operator, andPatrolman*William Kryczinski,
(See KEANSBURG, Page 3)
Says Red Hill AreaRoads OK for Now
Find StillOn FarmInHowell
HOWELL TOWNSHIP - Abootleg alcohol operation whichused huge plastic swimmingpools to ferment the 180-proofmixture was smashed here yes-terday in daylight by more thantwo dozen state and federal po-lice agents.'
Four men were arrested on thespot. They Included the owner ofthe farm a half-mile off CasinoDr. in the West Farms section,where the still was found In alow-level ramshackle chickencoop.
The four are Martin Kalh, 28,of 29 Lynp Dr., fjakhurst, theproperty owner; Seymour Weeks-ler, 29, of 1191 Monmouth Ave.,tikewood; Anthony J. De Ste-phano, 49, «* 25 Clifton Ave.,Newark,.tod Btn Rosenblatt, 48,of CasinoDr.,'.'."
JUl' w«fe..Tield in the Mon-mouth County Jail overnight andwill be arraigned this morningbefore U.S., Commissioner DavidGoldstein at Astrary Park. Theyare charged with,illegal opera-tion oF an alcohol still and de-frauding the U.S. government ofrevenue.
1,1M Gallon*Police estimated the still had
• capacity of 1,100 gallons a day,enough to cheat the governmenlout of $11,500 a day in tax paymeats.
Though only 88, gallons of al-cohol were found on the scene,agents seized 18,000 gallons omash ready for use and 13,000in use. Police said the still hadbeen in operation several weeksbut declined a specific estimate.
"This investigation is continuing and there may be more arrests," a spokesman said.
Among the equipment foundwas a wooden mixing tub, aboutsix feet deep and' 12 feet wide,and three plastic swimmingpools where the mixed mash, su-gar, water and other ingredients•were left to ferment. Two ofthese were 20 feet across andtour feet deep, the other, 18 by3 feet.
All three had stuff in themand the immediate area of thechicken coop reeked, police said.
Big Column. T h e cooking apparatus wasbuilt -around a 22-inch widemetal column 10 feet long and•link about five feet into the
(See STILL, Page 2)
I INDEXPage
Adam & Eve 10Allen-Scott 6Amusements _ H
-Births*1 2Hal Boyle _ - 4Bridge 16Classified ...-.20-21Comics ..,...- 18Crossword Puzzle ...16Editorials - 6Herblock , _ 6Movie Timetable 14Obituaries 2Sylvia Porter «Television 14Social 10-11George Sokclsky 6Sports 18-19Stock Market »Successful Investing 3W. S. White _ - •
DealSelling at public auction at the
Coats Galleries, 288 NorwoodAvenue, Deal, New Jersey, Sat-urday, August II, personal prop- preme Court, there has been a re-erty from the estate of BaronessVon Hlller, Deceased. Exhibitiondally 9 to 3. Phone KE 1-3461.-Adv.
BUSINESS MAGNET — LiHl« Silvtr y«tttrday~«r*ct«c1four signs directing motorist* to it* feuines* district.The one shown, at Rumiojt Rd. and Ch-urcji St., it beingplaced' by Mayer Charles W. Stephen!,' right, Council-man Charles T. Bruno, center, and Dr. Victor Marajcio,president of the Businessmen's Association. The' planwas prompted by a request of the association and wasimplemented by Mr. Bruno, road committee chairman.
2dDoctors9 BuildingGets OK of ZonersRED BANK — The Stoning
Board of Adjustment last nightgave its approval for the con-struction of a second, doctors' of-fice building to be located onBroad St, . . . '
The applicants, Broadmoor Co.,plan to erect a six-suite buildingat 252-258 Broad St. adjacent toanother medical - building forwhich they received variance ap-proval from the board last month.Both structures were designed:byBernard Kellenyi, Red Bank ar-chitect. . :
The board last night agreed torecommend that Borough Councilgrant the second variance re-quest, provided a minimum of 25parking spaces are made avail-able.
Between both buildings, a com-bined total of 53 parking spaceswill be provided, Mr. Kellenyitold the board last.night.
Both variances are needed to
relieve a . zone restriction that H e . Viprofessional men.. reside . in thesame building where their officesare located.
Martin C. Lohsen
. . . Plans Formal Charge
TownshipZoneCodeAmended
MIDDLETOWN—The TownshipCommittee, after a public hear-ing last night, adopted an amend-ment providing for a host ofchanges to the zoning ordinance.
The major changes provide fortwo business-professional zones-one at the Tindall Rd. and Rt.516 intersection; the other on Rt35 from Navesink River Rd. toCooper's Bridge./The amendment also paves the
way for the construction of aprivate golf course on the 135-acre Lyons Estate on Cooper Rd.
The change also will permit theconstruction of a hospital'in theB-4 business zone. RlvervlewHospital is now planning a 110-bed unit on Rt. 35 near PalmerAve., in a.B-4 zone.
A portion of Chapel Hill, pre-viously zoned for 2i£ acres, wasdowngraded to one acre underthe change. A majority of ChapelHill residents favored the change.•Tbeihospital is awaiting state
approval to build a $2,280,000buiWiog, here. Exact location ofthe site, has not been announced.Tire'hospital hopes to have theunit ready in 1964.
Clifton T. Barkalow, Freehold,representing the. builder of theprivate golf course, asked thatthe, committee consider makinganother changa in the code.
the amendment re-buildings connected
Landscaped Area,
quires allwith the course be" at' least 500feet "from a road. The attorney
,drawings "club house, is less
f
_ m m c f j | — t h e future club house, is les• u f f e e t t h 8 n 50P f e e t f r o m "Property lin• 11S I e e t and .might be affected by the dis
tance requirement.The committee agreed to con
sider the change,
Theshow that the secondbuilding, will be. set back-US feetfrom' the street. Separating a 12-car lot from the street is a land-scaped area. Other parking is tobe available, in the rear of thetwo buildings.
The first proposed office struc-ture is to be 62 feedback from _ . . . . . ._.„..„the street. The effect of the site tion of Ltl Col. Paul Kronheim,plan, Mr. Kellenyi told the board,is to develop a "court" betweenthe earlier proposed building andanother building,adjacent to thesouthern boundary of the land.All three structures are redbrick. Mr. Kellenyi pointed out.
For II PhysiciansA total of II physicians will oc-
(See DOCTORS, Page 2)
Kronheim ResignsEATONTQWN - The resigns
(USAR-Ret.,) from the ZoningBoard of Adjustment was ac-cepted with regret last night byMayor arid Council.
Cbh Kronheim, a teacher InLong Branch schools, has servedon the zoning board since February, 1961. He resigned becausehe plans to move to West LongBranch at the end of this month
BLUE RIBBON LAMBS — The kniff.n brothers, Donald, I I , left, and Danny, 10, ofMarlboro, display their champion fat lambs. Looking on it August Daetarier, ownerof th» American Hotel, Freehold, who bought the Hampshire ewe lambs at public auc-tion. The lambs, along with several others ware grown and carefully, fad by 4-Hboys and girl* {or the first 4-H fat lamb sale held at the recent Monmouth County 4-HFair. Danny was owner of tha grand champion fat lamb and Donald, the reservechampion fat lamb. -
Tax Appeal Hearings SetFREEHOLD — In announcing
hearing dates for county resi-dents on tax assessments, theMonmouth Couaty Board of Tax-ation stated that no appeals will
Borough Hall, Atlantic High-lands, Keansburg and Highlands.
Monday, Aug. 27, 9 a.m., Bor-ough Hall, Keyport, tor the bor-oughs of Keyport, Mitawan and
be heard -unless iney >re Wed Union Beach, and the townshipson or, betore.nejtf Wcdqatday, • f R i M t d H l
Forms for such appeals maybe obtained from local assessorsor by writing the board atffi i th H l l f R
of Raritan, Matawan and Holm-del.
here.The following dates have been
set for hearings in the variouscommunities of the county:
Friday, Aug. 31,9 a.m., Munic-ipal Building, Red Bank, for theboroughs of Red Bank, SeaBright, Fair Haven, Rumson,Shrewsbury, New Shrewsbury,,Little SilverTownship.
Wednesday,'
and Shrewsbury
Friday, Aug. 24, 9 a.m.. Ocean.._„ ... . .^Township Hall, Deal Rd., Oak-
office in the Hall of Record* farst,' for the boroughs of Deal' Mlenhurst and Interlaken, Ocean
Township and Loch Arbour VII-lage.
Wednesday, Aug. 29, Hall ofRecords, Freehold, for the borr
oughs of Freehold, Farmingdale,Englishtown, A11 e n t o w n andRoosevelt, and the townships ofHowell, Freehold, Millstone, At-lantic, Manalapan, Marlboro andUpper Freehold.
Sept. 5, 9 a.m., Monday, Sept. 10, 9 a.m., at
Make DevelopmentSewers Mandatory
FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP — An ordinance wasadopted by the Township Committee, last nightwhich will require all subdivisions in'trie township
. having mor,e than 49 houses ;to ha ve a centralsewer system rather than septic tanks.
The proposed ordinance, also carries a stipula-tion that previously established subdivisions whichhave not yet had houses built on them must alsocomply with the regulation for central sewerage.
Committeeman Norman Wagner said, Therewill be no more septic tanks in large developmentsin this township after this ordinance has beenadopted... and' the problems arising from septictanks in low areas will be solved."
Long Branch City Hall, Ibr thecity of Long Branch and the bor-oughs of West Long Branch,Eatontown, Ocesn'port and Moo-mouth Beach," :. ,:,'" ' '• '••'.'
(See TAX APPEALS, Page 2)
Delay ActionOn PeddlerCode Defense
MIDDLETOWN—The TownshipCommittee decided,last night togo along with a restraining orderbarring enforcement of a portionof Its peddler code which pre-vents ice cream vendors fromcanvassing the township after 6p.m.
The Good Humor Corp. ob-tained, the court order last week.A hearing on the ord'er is scheduled for today.
Lawrence A. Carton, Jr., township attorney, noted that the icecream firm is currently attack-ing a similar ordinance in Ho-boken and that a hearing is expected iwxt month. He suggestedthat the committee wait unti'the outcome of that hearing be-fore taking any action.
A Good Humor salesman wasissued a summons.two weeks agofor selling ice cream at 10, p.min violation of the ordinance. Thefirm promptly sought the re-straining order and announcedthat it - would bring suit chal-lenging constitutionality of theordinance.
A court hearing on the sum-mons has been ctelayed at leastuntil after tomorrow's hearing.
The firm holds that the ordi-nance is arbitrary and unfair.
MIDDLETOWN — Theconstruction of an inter-change at Red Hill Rd. onthe Garden State Parkway"will not immediately re-quire any right-of-way orp a v e m e n t widening ofroads within the township."
This Is the opinion of Robert. Strong, the township's plan-
ning consultant.In a report on the Impact of
the proposed interchange on theroad system of the township, Mr.Strong stated that once the sec-ond half of the giant Bell Labsresearch center is built In Holm-del, there will be a need forroad Improvements to maintainthe capacity of the portion ofRed Hill Rd. between the park-way and Everett Rd.
The report goes on to state:liat other access roads leadingto the proposed Interchange will"not be taxed beyond their ca-pacity prior to 1970."
More ClearanceThe report suggests that tits
only significant, improvement?needed during this time periodare the widening of shouldersand lateral clearances — especi-ally on Red Hill and EverettRds.
According to Mr, Strong, suchprojects can be carried out with-n the existing right of way {40feet). He'said such rights ofway could accommodate a 24-foot paved surface with- six-footshoulders on each side.
Mr. Strong goes on to statehat further widening ct these
roads would not be required uri-1 residential development oc-
curs in lands adjacent to theroads.'
He suggests that rights of waythen, could be obtained throughPlanning Board review of thesubdivisions.
In connection with tha otheraccess roads, the planning eon*'sulUnt listed ss "desirable" thefollowing projects:
(See RED HILL, Page 2)
Brennan Seen Making a Strong Mark in Judicial HistoryBy JOHN KOLESAR
TRENTON (AP)—Justice.Wil-liam J. Brennan Jr. of Rumson,who has finished his sixth sessionon the United States SupremeCourt, is already assured of a topspot in New Jersey's historja.
In fact, Brennan gives promiseof making a strong mark on thenation's judicial history. Andmuch of that accomplishmentstems from the fact Brennan has
after Brennan's surprise nomina-tion to the court six years ago.Up jumped Sen. Joseph R. Mc-Carthy, R-Wis., with the chargethat Brennan was unfit to serveon the court- This was within theNew Jersey tradition of the day,which saw the state produce manytargets for the late senator.
McCarthy was mostly angryabout a couple of speeches Bren-nan had made on the Fifth
exported to Washington some of Amendment, but he was alone inthe things he learned in New Jer-sey.
New Jersey is generally rateda "literal" state in such thingsas racial integration, Individualliberty and court procedure. Inall of these fields, Brennan standswith the Supreme Court's "liber-al" wing.
Some students of the high courtcredit Brennan with turning thetide of court decisions toward theliberal side starting in 1956, whenhe took his seat on the U.S. Su-preme Court.For a gentle, courteous man such
as Brennan. serving on a remote,cloistered body such as the Su-
markable amount of controversyIn his high court career
Surprise. NominationThe controversy started soon
his opposition to the appointmentwhen the Senate voted for con-firmation.
While Brennan frequently linesup with three other liberal jus-tices on the court—Chief JusticeEarl Warren and Justices HugoBlack and William O. Douglas-he generally does it without theirsweeping pronouncements. Theothers are more willing to rulelaws unconstitutional. Brennanwill often get> the name . resultmerely by holding that faulty pro-cedure was used.
A. Key RoteThough Brennan plays a key role
on the court, most students ofFelix Frankfurter believes courtsshould seldom overrule legisla-tures, Brennan seems to take each
on Its. own.
the court say he has not laid downany general theory to outline his
late as 1948, when Brennan wasa partner in one of the state's
position. While Black wishes to leading law firms, handling lucra-apply to the Bill of Rights in itsentirety to the states and Justice
"Massive common sense" is theway one student of the court describes Brennan's method.
Most of this deep involvement due to Republican chief execu-in the nation's legal tides wouldhave been impossible to predict as
tive but quiet corporation affairscompletely out of the public eye.
But the following eight yearssaw Brennan stage a meteoricrise in judicial circles, all of It
Justice WiiiUm J. Si
the Bill of Rights.He is now the court spokes-
Jr.1 man on obscenity cases, having
written the landmark decisions ofrecent years. On cases involvingreligion there has been no evi-dence of any pro-Catholic bias— side in a trial had up its sleeve.he joined the majority in knock-ing out a New York school pray-er and dissented when the courtruled Sunday Blue Laws do notviolate the rights of OrthodoxJews.
The importance of Brennan'sappointment to the court becameapparent as early as June 3, 1957.Qn that day he delivered two important majority opinions thatstirred up a lot of grumblingabound the nation and even gavethe stock market a bad time fora day or two.
In one decision, he ruled E.I.du Pont de Nemours and Co.would have to rid itself of itsownership of General MotorsCorp. stock.
.FBI DocumentsIn the second, he ruled that de-
fense attorneys must be shown
tives—an Ironic fact consideringhe is the son of an Irish immi-grant who became a labor unionleader and Democratic city com-missioner in Newark. Brennanhimself never held any public of-fice until 1948 and was inactivepolitically.
Contemporary CriticismThere was some other con-
temporary criticism of Brennan'sappointment. Some anti-Catholicsdid not like the fact he was aCatholic. And some Catholics didnot like it when Brennan told asenate committee that no obliga-tion of his faith was superior tohis oath of office.
Since joining the court, Bren-nan has become one of thestaunchest judicial defenders ofthe Fifth Amendment and the p(her jencks Case-stirred up strongnine 'amendments that make up criticism from anti-Communist
any FBI documents used in ques- serVative reasoning,tloning witnesses in a trial. While •this decision—now famous as the
in view of Brennan's* backgroundin the New Jersey court system.
He was one of the state's strong-est advocates of "discovery"—thepre-trial disclosure of what each
He became a judge that year,when former Republican Gov. Al-fred E. Driscoll named him to thenewly created Superior Court. Inless than two years, Brennan wasserving on the Appellate Division,the stale's second highest court.And two years later he was onthe State Supreme Court, againthrough appointment by Driscoll.
Then President Eisenhowermade the surprise appointment ofBrennan to the U.S. SupremeCourt in 1956. Since Brennan wasthe junior member of the statecourt and a Democrat to boot,many Republicans were disap-pointed, to say the least.
Now 56, Brennan has a prospectof long service ahead of him onthe Supreme Court. The writersin legal journals expect him tocontinue arriving at liberal con-clusions through the use of con-
Old Wagon FarmPEACHES are ready now for
freezing and canning. We willleaders, It wai hardly surprising have eating and cooking apples
MlddleUwn.—Adv.
To Request$395,000 ForNew School
RUMSON - The BoaM of Edu-cation last night authorized appli-cation to the State Board of LocalGovernment for a 20-year bondissue of $395,000 lor the proposed11-room primary school to bebuilt adjacent to ForrestdaleSchool. ' •
The school board's borrowingcapacity will be exceeded to theextent of $88,232. For thatamount, it proposes (0 use bor-ough borrowing ability.
The board also authorizeda contract with Bernard Kellenyi,Red Bank architect, subject to arevision, by its attorney concern-ing the elimination of a referenceto a clerk of the works for theproject.
Mr. Kellenyi will receive acommission based upon 6 percent of the estimated cost of thenew school.
Resolutions setting Oct. 16 asthe date for public referendum onthe bond issue also were adoptedlast night.
Board WantsControls OnNew Bridge
OCEANPORT - The Board ofEducation last night resolved topetition the state Highway De-partment and the county Boardof Freeholders for safety meas-ures in the vicinity of the newGooseneck Bridge.
Board member Albert Weigelexpressed concern about the in-tersection of Gooseneck Point Rd.and the bridge approach, which isa school bus crossing.
He said he would like to seespeed limits posted on the bridge,school bus crossing signs erected,and flashing lights installed atboth sides of the intersection.
His recommendations will beforwarded to the state and countybodies.
Mr. Weigel pointed out that au-tomobiles are now crossing thebridge at 50 miles per hour asopposed to the speed limit of ISmiles per hour on the old bridge.
The crest of the new bridgeis 500 to 600 feet lrom the inter-section, he said.
A Clean Car Rides BetterButch's Automatic Car Wash.
this week-end, Route 35 North of Across from AJkP, NewmanSprings Rd., Red Bask.—Adv.'
J-Thurwky, August ?. 1962 RED BANK REGISTER
BriefsTOKYO (AP)—Typhoon Opel Blasted across the
Japanese Island of Southern Hokkaido today, kill-ing two persons and Injuring nine. Another wasreported missing. Opel swirled through South Ko-rea yesterday leaving 718 homeless, but oo casual-ties were reported. More than 20 fishing boatswere reported sunk or wrecked. About 2,500 milesto the southwest, typhoon Patsy, packing 86-milecenter winds', moved across the South China Seatoward the Red Chinese island of Hainan afterplowing through the central Philippines.
LONDON (AP)—American Nazi leader GeorgeLincoln Rockwell gave a defiant Hitler salute to-day as Britain deported him to the United States.Bareheaded and wearing a brown suede jacket andsun glasses, the 44-year-old fuehrer of the Ameri-can Nazi party was escorted by Scotland Yarddetectives to the steps of a Pan American jetlinerbound for Boston. Rockwell traveled tourist class,and Scotland Yard paid the bill—$270.06.
Frazee Gosing in on ElliottAt Wall; Feature to Stives
WALL TOWNSHIP - It Tomtnie Elliott Is to become the firslthree-time Wall Stadium modi-fied champion, he'd better gelmoving.
The popular Toms River driv-er, champ in 1954 and again in1960, is being strongly pressedby another former titieholder.Pete Frazee of Rahway.
Frazee moved within strikingdistance with a pair of fine races eluded in the smashup wereover the past two weeks. He now Tony Battle of Normandy Beach,
Dave Hulse of Point Pleasant,Dick Massing of East Brunswickand J i m Hoffman of English-town. None were injured.
AI Kemp of Saddle Brook, for-mer three-quarter midget out-door champion, looked liketitle-holder as he outclassed afine field of T.Q.'s in the co-feature 30-lapper. Second was
. i Don Stumpf of Ridgefield Park.seem* to have the sportsmen dt jftird was Sonny Saunders ofvisionhand.
. trails the slumping leader byonly 52 points — with 50 up forgrabs this Saturday night.
With several 50-polnterstwo double-point races still onthe schedule, Elton Hildreth ofBridgeton, Wally Dallenbach ofEast Brunswick and Bill MeCarthy of Freehold are also stilin the running.
Chubby Hower of Middletown
championship well in. „ _ . He holds a better thanSCO-point lead over th» nearest«tJve competitor — Jerry Brit-ton of Toms River.
The novice division has alsoturned Into • horse race, withdefending champion Stan VanBrunt of West Long Branchmere 10 points ahead of the fastcharging Bob Voorhees. A winer two by Voorhees in the up-
' coming weeks could completelychange the novicehire.
racing p i c
BUI BlrgeCharlie MuscatelDave Hulse ...
Saturday's program at the seashore oval headlines a 30-lap
and sportsmen division
contest for- the novices. A pairof 12-Iap heat races and a 10-lap consolation will be run' bythe modified sportsmen alongwith two 10-lap heat races forthe novices.
Starter Pete LaVanca dropsthe green flag at 8:30 p.m.
Don Stives, the sensational
Don StumpfSPORTSMEN
Chubby Hower ,lack Hart __:Parker BohnJoe Severage .E d . J /terry Britton.
Artnew racing star from Hights-town, really came into his own Vaarhrr.latt Saturday night as he drove Bob Vaorfceeshis sportsmen No. 81 to victory Tom.Greenla the 30-lap stock car portion ofthe combination racing show.
Stives, who had b e e n * sur-prise runner-up to Fraiee here aweek ago. battled his way to thefront early *nd held on. Secondplace went to Wally Dallenbachof East Brunswick in his fastNo. 14 modified. Dallenbach was
BASEBALLBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York _..Los AngelesMinnesotaBaltimoreClevelandChicagoDetroitKansas CityBostonWashington
d
American LeagueW. L. P e t G.B.
67 43 .60964 49 .56663 50 .55858 56 .509 1155 5655 5854 5752 6250 6142 69
m131717*$
.495
.491
.486
.456
.450
.378Wednesday's Results
New York 34, Baltimore 2-4Los Angeles 5-7, Chicago 1-5Detroit 6-10, Washington 5-3Boston 6, Cleveland 0Kansas City 4, Minnesota 3
Today's GamesBaltimore at New York (N)Los Angeles at ChicagoMinnesota at Kansas CityDetroit at Washington (N)Cleveland at Boston
Friday's GamesBaltimore at Boston (N)Detroit at New York (N)Cleveland at Washington (N)Chicago at Kansas City (N)Minnesota at Los Angeles (N)
National LeagueW. L. Pet. G.B.
Los Angeles 78San Francisco . 72Cincinnati — . 67Pittsburgh 63Bt. Louis 64Milwaukee 60Philadelphia _ 51Chicago 42
37424649505464727182
5J410
27
36
.678.632.593.563.561.526.443.368
Houston 40 71 .360New York 30 82 .268 46
Wednesday's ResultsLos Angeles 3, Philadelphia 1New York 5, San FranciscoSt. Louis 2, Pittsburgh 0Cincinnati 4, Houston 0Chicago 12, Milwaukee 4
Today's GamesPhiladelphia at Los Angeles (N)New York at San FranciscoChicago at MilwaukeeCincinnati at Houston (N)Only games scheduled
Friday's GamesPittsburgh at ChicagoNew-York at Cincinnati (N)Philadelphia at St. Louis (N)Milwaukee at Houston (N)
'Lot Angela i t San Francisco
gaining at the end, but had nochance to catch the front run-ner.
Third was Elton Hildreth ofBridgeton, who came on late tochallenge Dallenbach, w h i l efourth spot went to Augia Mos-chera of New Egypt.
The race was stopped once inthe second lap when four carsspun out on the third turn. In-
miles today except less than onemile in fog near Block Islandthis morning. One to three milesin drizzle tonight and Fridaymorning, improving to about fivemiles Friday afternoon.
TIDES(Sandy Hook)
Today — High 2:56 p.m. andlow 9:37 p.m.
Friday — High 3:05 a.m. and3:56 p.m. and low 9:40 a.m. and10:35 p.m.
(For Red Bank and Rumsonbridge, add two hours; SeaBright, deduct 10 minutes; LongBranch, deduct 15 minutes; High-
New York City.The 29-Iap novice feature was
taken by George McCurdy whileVan Brunt was second and Voor-hees third.
Wall StadiumPoint Standings
MODIFIED
FlUbnmn .. l 288NOVICE
Stan Vaa Brunt 5.11
George McCurdyJohn LuhrsDick FisherMike SamnPat Keeley .... —Bernle RezekowsU
County WillsFREEHOLD -r The following
wills were probated here recent-ly by Surrogate Edward C.Broege:
THERESA D.L. N A Y L O R4]4 Marlboro, who died July 22, left
her estate to Judge John C. Gior-dano and Superior Court JudgeJ. Edward Knight "for the kind-ness and consideration they hawshown me and my deceased husband, Walter C. Naylor."
DAISY HANCE, Red Bank,who died June 20, left her es-tate to h e r brother, LesterHance.
LOUISE A. BRUECK, R e dBank, who died July 22, left herestate to her daughter, LouiseSharpless.
JOSEPH L. PRATE, R e dl hiBank, who died July 16, left his
estate to his sister, DelenaPrate.
AUGUST T. MINER, SR., Mid-dletown, who died July 27, lefthis estate to his children,gust, Jr., Louise E., and GraceM Miner.
ETHEL R E I D , West LongBranch, who died July 17, lefther estate to her brother, HarryC. Reid.
KENNETH R. SMITH, RedBank, who died July 9; HARRYA. PETTERSON, Middletownwho died July 23; GEORGE J.FERNETT, Matawan Townshipwho died July 11 and ROBERTE. GARDENER, who died July19, and PETER L. McCANN,who died July 11, both of Key-port, left their estates to theirrespective wives.
MYRA C. OLSEN, L o n gBranch, who died July 26,her estate to her husband.
left
NO TAKERSBIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -
In the interest of safety theBirmingham Junior Chamber ofCommerce gave a member $5and told him to jaywalk acrossdowntown streets.
The first publlc-mlnded citizenwho called him down would getthe $5.
No one but Jaycee officialsand city police knew the Jay-walker.
He walked for a full monthand still had the $5.
WeatherMew J«ney—Cooler Miry
scattered shower*, fctfb 470s. Cloudy tooitft with somedrizzle In coastal a n t s , low fromthe 50s in the northwest to near
the 60s in the
wifetat
southeast.
KiverytowRed Bank
Dr. and Mrs. William Copper-Be- thwaite, 105 East Bergen PL,
pleasant Fri-day, highthe 70s.
MarineBlock Island
to Cape May— Northeastwinds throughF r i d a y withspeeds 10 to
15 knots except 15 to 20 knotsnear Block Island. ConsiderableJoudlness with showers. Cloudy
with some drizzle tonight andriday, clearing Friday after-
coming fair and Red Bank, daughter, this morn-ing.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul K. Hill, 611Holmdel Rd., Hazlet, daughter,this morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene McBride,10 Walker Ter.. Middletown,daughter, yesterday.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank BriscoFranklin, 62 West WashingtonAve., Atlantic Highlands, son,yesterday.
Monmouth Medical CenterLong Branch
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Jameson,noon. Visibility three to five Tennent Rd., Morganville, a
lands bridge, add 40 minutes.)
daughter, yesterday.Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Van
Dyke, 55 Slocum PI., LongBranch, daughter, yesterday.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Rudner,468 Middletown-Lincroft Rd., Mid-dletown, son, yesterday.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mulllns, 173Branch Ave., Red Bank, son, yes-terday.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Costello, 3 Clarissa Dr., Middletown,daughter, yesterday.
FltMnNeptune
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith,Rd. 4, Howell Trailer Ct., Free-
CHICAGO (AP) - Coolspread across wide areas fromthe Northeast into the North Cen-tral region today in the wake ofsevere thunderstorms in somesections.
The chilly air from the Hud-son Bay region of Canada spreadslowly southward over the north-east and Great Lakes region, set-ting off thunderstorms from low-er M i c h i g a n southeastwardthrough the central Appalachiansinto Maryland and Virginia.
Severe storms, with heavyrain, hail and strong winds, hitPittsburgh and areas in Ohio, in-cluding Toledo, causing someproperty damage. Wind gusts upto 80 m.p.h. lashed the Toledoarea, felling trees and disruptingtelephone and electric service.Damage to three school buildingsin Maumee, west of Toledo, wasestimated at $100,000. A severewind and rain storm also hitSterling, in northwestern Illinois.
Temperatures dropped Into the*f?40s in some northern border
areas of the cool belt and intohe 508 and 60s in most of the
North Central region and NewEngland. Generally temperaturesoutside the hot spots in the South-land were in the 60s and 70s.
Showers fell in the warm andhumid sections of the south At-lantic states, but brought onlytemporary relief. Heaviest rain-Tall yesterday was three InchesIn Tallahassee, Fla.
Early morning temperaturesranged from 93 In Needles, Calif.,and Yuma, Ariz., to 44 in Hough-ton, Mich. Some other readingsand conditions: New York 73partly cloudy; Chicago 66, clear;Boston 62, rain; Washington 71cloudy; Atlanta 70. clear; Miam77, clear; Louisville 73, clear;Detroit 62, cloudy; St. Louis 72,clear; Minneapolis 55, clear;Kansas City 72, clear; Denver 67,clear; Dallas 83, clear; Phoenix88, clear; Seattle 58, clear; SanFrancisco 65, cloudy; Los An-jeles 70, clear; Anchorage 56,cloudy, and Honolulu 76, cloudy,
hold, daughter, yesterday.Mr, and Mrs. Robert Fitzger-
airald, Brickyard Rd., Freehold,son, yesterday.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Revere,100 First St., Laurelton TrailerPdrk, Brick Township, daughter,yesterday.
Mr. and Mrs. William LeMine,School St., Marlboro, daughter,yesterday.
Rotary QubChanges SiteOf Meetings
EATONTOWN - Alex Her, newpresident of the Rotary Club, an-
Doctors(Continued)
cupy the buildings. The buildingproposed last night will house sixprofessional suites, Mr. Kelienyisaid. Dr. William L. Wood, an of-ficer of Boardmoor, said thefirm hopes to rent the space toan orthopedic surgeon, a generalsurgeon, an obstetrician and abrain surgeon and two other spe-cialists.
Dr. Wood and Drs. Alfred J.Kolarsick, Robert B. Robertson,William A. Jamison and CharlesPaterno will occupy the other fa-ility.Mrs. Laura Rudolph, Planning
Board secretary, told the boardshe knew of no objectors to theplans. She said she resided in thearea of the doctors' project.
Boradmoor Co. was represent-ed by Emest Fasano of the RedBank law firm of Doremus, Rus-sell, Fasano and Nicosia,
VISIT BROTHERHAZLET — Rev. Vincent J.
Plscltelli of Hyde Park, Mass.,.nd Mrs. Albert DiBlaslo and morningHiss Margaret DiBlasio of Mel-ford, Mass., visited their brotherand sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Gravel RoadTo SchoolIs Planned
HIGHLANDS^-The Henry Hud-son Regional Board of Educationwill settle dor a gravel road tothe new junior-senior high sehool-for this year at least.
The borough agreed severalmonths ago to provide waterand sewer facilities fir the newhilltop school, and also to pro-vide a paved street approximate-ly 1,100 feet into school groundsfrom the intersection of TraveledWay and Grand Tour.
At a Borough Council meetingMonday night, Mayor CorneliusJ. Gulney, Jr., said the borough
Couple, 80, 75,Three Others,Hurt in Crash
LONG BRANCH — Four persons were hospitalized and anoth-er suffered lesser injuries in anaccident yesterday on Fifth Ave.,near Halberton St.
Police said a car driven byBenjamin Winfleld, 80, of 11Beach Rd., Monmouth Beach, ap-peared to have been on the wrongside of the street and caused ahead-on collision with a vehicledriven by Mrs. Julia Ruscii, 47,of 304 Chelsea Ave., this place.
Mr. Winfleld and his wife, Mar-jjaret, 75, were admitted toMonmouth Medical Center withmultiple cuts and fractures.
Mrs. Ruscii and her son, An-drew, 12, were also admitted tothe hospital. Mrs. Ruscii had mul-tiple Injuries and a possible frac-ture, and her aon suffered headand knee injuries.
Robert Ruscii, 11, was releasedafter treatment for head in-uries.
Patrolman James Jones inves-tigated and Issued a summons forcareless driving to Mr. Winfield.
that council's solution to the roadproblem was satisfactory "forthis year."
Selection of a teaching - staffwas completed With the hiring ofMiss Elizabeth M. White ofBrielle.
Miss White will teach Englishand Spanish. Her salary was setat $5,700. She is a graduate of handed the reportSt. Elizabeth's College, Convent \Station, and has studied at St.John's University, Newark State
my of Dramatic Arts.Roy Querns, on-the-job repre-
sentative of Micklewright and to Improve all access roads toMountford, architects for thenew building, reported that fin-shing touches to the school were
being completed on schedule andcited mid-August completiondates for Installation of lockers
Weekly-Food
ReviewBy The Associated Press
A candidate for mealtimevariety this weekend is scallops,featured at many groceries overthe country during scallop fes-tival promotions.
One national chain is featur-ing these succulent morsels at59 cents a pound in its NewYork area outlets.
Considering that scallops arenounced today that all future pure eating-no bones, shell, fatluncheon meetings of the organl-or gristle—this makes a veryzation would be held at The Col- • - •onnade Restaurant in the Mon-mouth Shopping Center.
Mr. Her stated that the centrallocation, accommodations andample parking facilities suit theclub's immediate plans for anaccelerated program of activitiesand expanded membership.
The first luncheon meeting atthe new location will be held atnoon Tuesday. The meeting ofAug. 21 will feature the instaila-ion of new members.
economical main course. Forthose who Insist on red meat,however, there is si wide selectionof beef and pork cuts.
Ribs of beef (offered at 59cents a pound by one chain) andround steaks are popular in thenortheast. Southeastern storeshighlight rib and cube straks andground beef.
Midwestern markets are fea-turing chuck roasts and groundbeef.
Pork features Include smokedhsrru, picnics and smoked butts.
The poultry category continuesto feature turkeys and fryers,with some shops highlightingreck cornish hens.
Garden production continues to;enerate a wide spectrum of sea-
sonally priced, fresh vegetables,nd canned and frozen versions
are on sale many places againstthe competition of the new crop.
Salad eating Is at its crispybest with lettuces, kale, escarole,endive, romaine, chard and okraregional attractions. Carrots andradishes add crunchy color andcelery, cucumbers, and cabbageare also featured.
Other vegetable specials in-clude artichokes, onions, tomatoes, sweet potatoes and peas.
Fruits highlighted this weekendregionally include peaches, earlypears, seedless grapes, water-melons, cantaloupes, summer ap-ples, figs, plums and nectarines.
Fatally StrickenSEA BRIGHT—Ernest deck.
5, of 104 East 81 St., New York'Ity, who has spent summers inlea Bright for the past several'ears, died of a heart attack this
in his residence, 624icean Ave.He was pronuonced dead ata.m. by Dr. C. J, Scapellino
Joseph Piseitelli and family, Ityol Red Bank, Police Chief GilbertJethany R d , last weekend. Boyer said.
L
RedffiH [da CantorDies, WifeOf Comedian
HOLLYWOOD (AP) • — IdaCantor, wife of comedian Eddie
these are desirable projects they Cantor and the one for whom hedo not "warrant the expenditure sang his song "Ida" for many
1. Hu&tBTtU* V*B SchoickRd.
J. Hardwfec* the Dwifht Rd.extension.
could not afford the expense of Nutswamp Rd. areas.
Sthoick Rd. would siphon off a e r i i y ea rS i w u placed underlarger portion of traffic now an- gelation in their Beverly Hillsticlpated for Red Hill Rd.
He also contends that the extension of Dwlght Rd. to RedHill Rd. would split traffic des-tined tor Bamm Hollow Rd., andwould provide easier access torresidents of the Fairview and
paving the road during the cur-rent budget year. Council, how-ever, approved an emergency ap-propriation of $32,000 to providewater and sewer facilities.
Base RoadAt last night's school board
meeting, Councilman Robert Die-bold told members the boroughwill cover the road with "state-approved" gravel and have itpacked, rolled and oiled In timefor the Sept. 10 school opening.
'You'll have a good baseroad," he told the board.
Referring to the municipality'scommitment to pave the road,Mr. Diebold said, "The boroughis not going1 to renege on this.It's just a question of time."
The councilman said the costof a water pump and tank toserve the school would be ap-proximately 513,000 In additionto legal fees. Council awarded acontract to Ace Manzo, Inc.,Matawan, oh Monday for Instal-lation of water arid sewer lines St., Everett Rd. and RedHiilRd.for $14,913. The school board will Red Hill Rd. and Van Schoick
Rd., Red Hill Rd. and BammHollow Rd., Holland Rd. and
pay $3,346 of this.'Satisfactory'
George Lahey, vice president of Van Schoick Rd. — Laurel Ave,the board, told Mr. Diebold andCouncilman William McGowan- parkway at first would generate.
College and the American Acade- Highway Authority's Interchangeproject feel that upwards of $1million would have to be spent Brooklyn "womw "to"in"critical
and chalk boards and completion f a d s .of the gymnasium floor and otheritems. Library shelving, however,is not expectedAug. 30.
to arrive until
Tax Appeals(Continued)
Wednesday, Aug. 22, 9 a.m.,Municipal Building, Eighth Ave.and River Rd., Belmar, for theboroughs of Spring Lake, Brielle,Manasquan, Sea Girt, Belmar,South Belmar and Spring LakeHeights and Wall Township.
Friday, Sept. 7, 9 a.m., Bor-ough Hall, Bradley Beach, forOcean Grove, the boroughs ofBradley Beach, Neptune City andAvon and Neptune Township.
Friday, Sept. 14,9 a.m., DistrictCourt Rooms, Asbury Park, Cityof Asbury Park.
The board also states that allindividuals who wish to appealmust appear in person or be rep- •£&£resented by an attorney and that ibiresented by an attorney, and thatall appealing corporations mustbe represented by an attorney.
Still(Continued)
ground. Agents said it was one township clerk. Instead ofof the thickest columns seizedin recent years.
Hundreds of plastic gallon con- b r o u g h t b a c k t o t o w n halItainers, ready to be Tilled, werealso confiscated.
It was so far removed fromthe road and other buildings,odor gave no notice to residentsor passersby. But up close, asone trooper put It: "It wouldknock you over. It takes a stronghead and stomach to stand upagainst it."
The raid was directed byState Police, ttie state Alcohol andTobacco Tax Division, the stateAlcoholic Beverage Control Division, and the U.S. Alcohol TaxUnit.
Lt. William Kennedy headedthe state police contingent whichncluded Detectives G e o r g eSmith and Robert Dorian andTroopers Edward Wilkie, LouisTeranto, Erlck Tappert and Jo-seph Nasti.
Former State Police MaJ. HugoStockburger, now with the stateABC, and Paul Hankins, of theU.S. ATU office at Newark,headed the undercover agents Inplalnclothes.
12-Story ApartmentDecision Postponed
RED BANK—The Zoning Boardof Adjustment has postponed untilSept. 12 action on an applicationto erect a 12-story apartmentbuilding at 28 Riverside Ave.
Maxwell Klarln, board chair-man, said last night the zoningunit plans to study legal briefssubmitted by Interested attor-neys.
Gramercy Associates, Ltd.,New York, mft the applicants.
The zoning code restricts theheight of buildings in the areato six stories.
h
Mr.Only
Strongdi
said that whileh
>f funds which would be requiredFor right of way acquisition."
By surfacing these roads theconsultant f e e l s that V a n
years, died of a heart attack inher sleep yesterday. She was 70.
Cantor, also 70, suffering fromheart ailment himself for sev-
On the question of rights ofway for these roads, Mr. Strongalso feels that they could be ob-tained when subdivisions are pre-sented to the local planners whenadjacent lands start to be de-veloped.'
Asked StudyThe Township Committee had
requested its planning consultantto make a study on the impact of Tobias. Her father tried to getthe proposed interchange on too Cantor to quit show business and
JOHN E. THOMASLITTLE SILVER — Jotal E.
Thomas, 86, of 7 Manson PI. diedyesterday at the Ivy House Nurs-
Home, Middletown.'r. Thomas was bora to Form-
by, England, the ton of the lateJohn and Isabel McKeon Thom-as.
He was e retired bricklayer.-,— , . . Surviving isi a daughter, Mrs.
change, and future traffic vol- a comedian, she said, was Just Charles Milts, with whom ha
al roads.The 12-page report deals with
such Items as existing road ca-pacities, existing traffic prob- widowed grandmother, Estherlems, traffic Impact of the inter- Caator, put her foot down. Being
T h e study Involved sevenroads — Red Hill, Everett, VanSchoick, Holland and Bamm Hoilow Rds., West Front St. and cures a lot of ills."Laurel Ave.
According to the report, traf-fic volume counts were takenat: Everett Rd. and West Front
Mr. Strong estimated that the philosophizing about life. He al-
at the peak hour, 190 carsthrough the Interchange travel-ing from the east
S7S-Car PeakAt the peak hour, he estimated
that 575 vehicles would passthrough the Interchange fromthe west.
The committee. which wasJust before
its meeting last night, decided togive the report further study.
Critics of the New Jersey
the interchange.The committee has taken
that ifwill
the
, towards the cost of acquiring rights of way on access
Two passengers and the driver™P to also were injured In the mishap.
The committee however, in-sists that the county take overmaintenance of an feeder roads.
The county, on the other hand,says it will not take over RedHill Rd. maintenance. The roadis narrow and winding and hasbeen described as inadequate forheavy traffic loads anticipatedby some officials when the In-terchange opens.
Asks OppositionMartin V. Lawlor, Democratic
candidate for the Township Com-mittee, continued last nfght, topress the committee to take whathe termed "a firmer stand op-posing the Interchange."
Members of the committee ex-pressed the view that their po-sition was clear and that the au-
interchange at Red Hill Rd. re-gardless of the committee's feel-ings on the matter.
Mrs. Irving T. Bartlett, KingsHwy., charged that because
available to her, a group of citi-zens were thwarted in an at-tempt to t a k e legal actionagainst construction of the inter-change.
she could get to see them.
Louis SeeksMoore Fight
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Joe UN bond purchase bill.Louis, new president of UnitedWorld Enterprises, yesterdaytelegraphed an offer to ArchieMoore and Cassius Clay to fighthere on an unspecified date.
The ex-world heavyweight state of the economy.champion offered Moore of SanDiego, the tlghUieavywelghtking, $50,000 against 35 per centof the gate, and $5,000 training"fepenses. TheNo. 3 ranked
deal for Clay,heavyweight, of
Louisville, would be $25,000 or 25per cent of the gate, whicheverIs greater, plus $2,000 for train-ing costs.
MANASQUAN VISITORSMORGANVILLE — Mr. a n d
Mrs. Alfred LaMura and chil-dren Alfred, Ruthann and Eu-;fne, Tennent Rd., were Sunday
guests of Mrs. Wilbur Erricksonof Manasquan.
RECORD HOPHOLMDEL - The Holmdel
Recreation Commission willsponsor a record hop Saturday at
p.m. in Holmdel ElementarySchool. Local high school studentsand their guests are Invite^ toattend.
AT GAME FARMHAZLET - Mr. and Mrs. Ed-
ward H. Johnson and daughterGayle, Main St., and Miss Jan-Ice Layton, Beers St., visited theCatikiH Game- Farm In Catskllf,N. Y., last week. f
The couple, childhood sweet-hearts on the streets of NewYork, married 48 years agowhile Cantor was a strugglingvaudeville comedian.
They had five daughters whowith Mrs. Cantor figured promi-nently in much of the banjo-eyed comedian's humor. The eld-est daughter, Marjorie, died ofcancer in 1W9.
Mrs. Cantor died in the familyhome where she had been suffer-ing for some time with a heartailment.
Her maiden name was Ida
MRS. MARY KOSMABELFORD — Mrc Mary Kos-
tna, 87, of 566 Green Ave. diedyesterday in the home of herdaughter, Mrs. Barth Hpckia of255 Sunrise PI.
She was the widow of JohnKosma. Born in Hungary, Mrs.Kosma resided here 40 years.She was a member of St. Mary'sCatholic Church, New Monmouth,and a member of the NationalSlavonic Society.
Surviving, besides Mrs. Hockln,are four other daughter*, Mrs.John Bullard of Salem, N, Y.,Mrs. Robert Crocker of Summit,Mrs. John Naylor of this place,and Mrs. Irving Klrshbaum ofDeal; a son, Andrew Kosma ofLeonardo; eight grandchildren,and 18 great-fgrandchlldren.
The Scott Funeral Home Is incharge of arrangements.
go into the clothing businesswith him.
But the orphaned Cantor's
as Important as selling fuits"Anybody who can make you daughter.
laugh," Eddie quoted her assaying, is like a doctor. Laughter
Cantor remained in show busi-ness, became t millionaire and at 9 a.m. in Nativity Catholiclost it In the stock market crash Church, Fair Haven. Burial winof 1929 and then rebuilt his fi-nancial fortunes.
He has been largely retired Inrecent years, spending his timewriting books and articles remi-niscing on his long career and
so has been active in numerouscharities.
Survivors in addition to Cantorinclude the four daughters, Nata-lia, Edna, Marilyn, Janet andfive grandchildren.
3 in HospitalAfter CrashIn Matawan
MATAWAN TOWNSHIP - A
condition in Rlverview Hospital
automobile accident on R t 35,
Police said the car, driven byiames F. Martin, 39, of 18 KarynTer., Middletown Townihip, went
bridge abutment.The woman in critical condition
is Jane Posner, 33, of 7 East 17thSt. She suffered cuts of the headand a possible fracture of thespine and pelvis, police reported.
Mr. Martin, who has beencharged with careless drivingand failure to have a driver's li-cense and car registration in hispossession, is in fair conditionwith cuts of the right eye.
Patricia O'Shaughnesy, 24, ofBrooklyn, is in fair condition,with ankle cuts and a dislocatedhip. Dorothy Gercki, 21, also ofBrooklyn, was treated in River-
thority was going to build the v i e w tor f a c e ^ a n d released.Mr. Martin will be arraigned in
Municipal Court Aug. 21, policereported.
Today InWashington
By The Associated PressSENATE
Considers minor bills.Investigations subcommittee
She charged that the minutes continues hearings on Billie Solwere in the Atlantic Highlands Estes case,office of Howard W. Roberts, Armed Services Committee
i holds hearing on nomination oftownship' hall and that she had Gen. Taylor to be chairman ofto wait until the minutes were the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Foreign Relations Committee home,continues hearings on communi-cations satellite bill.
HOUSEConsiders minor bills.Foreign Affairs Committee
holds closed session to consider
Judiciary subcommittee re-sumes hearings on wiretappingbills.
Senate-House Economic Committee continues hearings on the
OBITUARIES
made his home, and a (rand-
Services will be held at 8:15a.m. tomorrow from the John E.Day Funeral Home, Red Bank.A requiem mass will bs offered
be in Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Mid-dletown.
LEWIS a BOYCEHAZLET — Lewij H. Boyce,
91, of 2830 Rt. 35, died Wednes-day in his home.
Mr. Boyce was bom in SouthAraboy and had lived most of hislite In the Matawan area. He wasa retired conductor with the Jer-sey Central Railroad.
He was member of the Mid-way Fire Company, Matawan,and of the MaUwtn Presbyte-rian Church,
His wife, Mrs. Ida M. Boyce,died In 1959. He is survived byseveral nieces and nephews, in-cluding Charles E . Boyce, Jr.,with whom he lived.
Services will be held Friday at2 p.m. in the John W. Mehlen-beck Funeral Home here, withRev. Chester A. Galloway, pas-
this morning as a result of an tor of the Mattwan Presbyte-rian Church, officiating. Burial
passengers and the driver will be In Rosebili Cemetery,i j d I th i h M tMatawan.
HARRY T.KOLLOCKMIAMI, Fla. - Harry T. Kol-
out of control about 3 a.m. and lock, 75, of 200 Northwest 58 Ct,crashed into the Matawan Creek died Monday in Jackson Memo-
rial Hospital here.Born la Shrewsbury, he was the
son of the late Shepherd and E n -ma McGinty Kollocfc. Mr. Kol-lock resided in Red Bank formany years and had lived here10 years.
He was a retired trainman forthe Central Railroad of New Jer-sey. .
Surviving are his wife, LouiseTarnow Kollock; a son, Harry T.Kollock, Jr., of Little Silver, twosisters living in Lakewood,Fla.; three grandchildren, twogreat-grandchildren.
Services will be Saturday at12:30 p.m. in the Worden Fu-neral Home, Red Bank, with Rev.W. Gordon Lowden of the RedBank Methodist Church officiat-ing. Burial will be in Fair ViewCemetery, Middletown.
MRS. MARIE GRMALDIKEYPORT — Mrs. Marie Gri-
maldi, 85, of 2116 Florence Ave.,died Wednesday In her borne aft-er a short illness.
Mrs, Grimaldi was bora in It-aly. She had lived here six years.Her husband was the late An-thony Grimaldi. •'
Surviving are four sons, Junes,Mario and Anthony Grimaldi, at
and Philip Grimaldi ofSouth Amboy; two daughters,Mrs. James Purcell of this placeand Mrs. Leonard Eastmond ofMiami, Fla.; a grandchild, andtwo great-grandchildren.
Day's Funeral Home, Keyport,is in charge of arrangements.
BROOKLYN VISITORHAZLET — Mr. and Mr». Wal-
ter D. Brown, Jr., of 2889 Rt. 35,had as their weekend guest Mri.Stanley Gordon of Brooklyn.
EVER HAPPEN TO YOU? ByBlaU
ANPIA/WEPING1HIS
POISON IVY neve?
InvestingTobacco Shares Affected ,By British Smoke Report
By ROGER E. SPEARQ.—''I am concerned about our
Reynolds Tobacco stock whichteems to bav» declined more•evenly than the other tobaccos.Can yon Wl me why this should
be?" J.C.A.—Yes in-
deed, and very
it* price-to-«arnlngs ratio became![30, unprecedented (or » tobaccostock.
The subsequent decline hasbeen a correction of that over-valuation. It has been sharpenedby the British health scare oncigarette* which has affected all
simply. Rey- makers. Reynolds still sells at anolds has de- tower yield than any other in itsdined m o r ethan other cig-arette makersbecause it wentup much faster
group and at a higher earningsmultiple. I would certainly holdmy shares.
Q.—"I am 18 yean old with asmall savings account, 10 shares
and higher. Of of American Telephone and 40t h e e n t i r e shares of Transition. I know the
SPEAR ' group, y o u r latter Is speculative, but I won'tcompany has for several years need the money for many years.been considered the leader in Do you think Tiansltron has goodmarketing and in growth. Reflect-ing these factors, Reynolds gotup to a level in 1961 where itsyield was only 1% per cent and
long-term growth prospects?"S.B.
A. It is very comforting oc-casionally to encounter a youngman like yourself who is capableof taking the long view. I amsorry to say that I am not "im-pressed with tire outlook for Tran-sitron and I see little attractionin holding these shares. The com-pany is a big and efficient makerof semiconductors, a businesswhich has been hurt badly by in-
NEW. YORK (AP) - Heavy ' « * competition.
Heavy SalesCive BoostTo Marketbuying in the final hour of trad-Ing produced" the'kock" market's have brought suit against thefirst advance of the week yester- directors of Tiansitron for sub-j stantlal damages, alleging that
Volume totaled 3.08 million registration statement! filed withshares compared with 2.97 mil-the SEC in 195$ and 1960, con-
yVolume totaled 3.08 million
lion Tuesday. talned false and misleading state-The Dow Jones industrial av-ments. The people who run
wage closed 2.59 higher at 590.94 Transltron are very able, butafter having lagged more than
3 Ex-SchoolBoard MenFined $3,000
JERSEY CITY (AP) - Threeformer city school officials and
4 points at 1 p.m.Of 1.212 Issues traded, 533 ad-|eamings and public Image,
vanced, 423 declined, 24 set 1962lows and two, Caterpillar Trac-tor preferred and Curtis-Wright,were at new highs.
Of the 15 most active issues 10advanced, three declined and twowere unchanged.
Certain-Teed Products led the:way, on 72,000 shares, closingunchanged at 19M- Companymanagement expects third quar-ter profit to exceed the secondquarter.
Martin-Marietta, No. 1 the lasttwo. days, was second most ac-tive on 55,300 shares. ItH lower at 20. Aluminum Ltd.was next on 42,300 shares, gain-ing % at 21%. The company re-)ported sharply higher first 'earnings.
Among the volatile growth Is-sues IBM gained fc%. PolaroidT-as up 2, Xerox was ahead """and Texas Instruments, up 2%.
Yesterday's closing stocks:
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We Tho^Mhsiie'sDeath Knell Sounds
Complete* Coune
James G. ParkerJCP&L VETERAN—Jamas G.Parker, 22 Brown PI., Oak-hurst, will celebrate his 30thanniversary Friday as, an em-ploye* of Jtrsey CentralPower & Light Company, Mr.Parker Is a lineman, tintdais, with headquartersthe electric utility's Red BankDistrict. Ha is married tothe former Sara Cottrell ofOakhurtt,
In addition, four mutual funds
they've got a big Job ahead ofthem to rebuild the company's
the president of acontracting concern
New Yorkhave been
competitive bidding law.Hudson County Judge Sol
Schulman imposed the penaltieson John P. Sheeh
York St; Louis Panga-ro, 52, 55 Storms Ave., and JohnRoraanowski, 47, 730 Broad Ave.,Ridgeiield, and Barnett Levine,53, president of the firm that hadbeen awarded a contract
A jury returned a guilty ver-
A $100 fine was Imposed onfirm, General Restoration
YkCo., 2360 Park Ave., New York.The defendants were accused
evading the bidding law ina supplemental contract Issuedlto General Restoration Co. Injship construction capacity, Wil-1960 for replacing steel lintels forwindows at Public School 34.
Sheehan is a former president„ of the Board of Education. Pan-KK garo was supervising architect of4»3 the school board and Romanow-
ski had been business manager.
Employers ToldOf Tax Duties
CAMDEN — William F. Culll-ney, district director of .the U.S.Internal Revenue Service, hasadvised employers liable for In-come tax withheld and SocialSecurity taxes in- excess of $100for the month of July that theymust deposit this tax money
3K with a depository by Aug. 15."*' The deposits, he said, may be
made in local authorized banksor In Federal Reserve banks.
If any employers are confusedabout employment tax proce-dures, Mr. Culllney said they canreceive a copy of Circular E."Employers Tax Guide," fromany local ofice of the InternalRevenue Service. In it, he said,are full instructions, tables andpercentage methods for comput-ing the necessary taxes.
Deposits, he said, should be re-corded on Form 450, a blank pre-pared for this use.
^Council GrantsThree Variances
EATONTOWN - The Mayorand Council last night approvedthree variances recommended bythe Zoning Board of Adjustment.
They were; a minor subdivi-sion to permit Carnival Bar icecream company, Rt. 36, to buyadjoining land for an addition to[Its building; permission for FrankLamella to add two bedroomsand a bath to his residence ina business zone on Rt.'35, andpermission for Mr. and Mrs. Har-ry Luftman to build 15 moreapartments at Sunnycrest Apart-ments, in an MB zone on WykbffRd.
Egg MarketNEW YORK (AP)-(USDA)-
Wholetale egg offerings abort tobarely adequate. Demand fair butsufficient to maintain close clear-ance yesterday.
Whites: Extras (47 lbs. mui.)3S-38V&; extras medium (40 lbs.average) 3 0 & 3 % top quality (47lbs. mln.) 40-41; mediums (41. lbs.average 3]y&-3% smalls (36 lbs.average lJ-20'/$; peewees 15-18.
Browns; Extras (47 lbs. min.)37-39; top quality (47 lbs. min.)41-43; mediums (41 lbs. average)3%34&; smalls (36 lbs. average)
peewees 15-16.
U.S.S. JerseyOff to Philly
BAYONNE (AP) — The bat-tleship VSS New Jersey wasen route to Philadelphia todayin tow of a Navy tug.
The battleship left h e r eyesterday and b expected toarrive In Philadelphia late to-morrow.
The Navy said the transferfrom toe New York NavalShipyard here Is part ef aprogram of relocating the At-lantic Group Reserve fleet'
The Navy Is considering arequest by Sen. Harrison A.Williams, it., D-N.J., that thebattleship be turned over toNew Jersey for use as ashrine.
The Navy has told Williamsthat It wants the New Jerseyin Its Reserve fleet but wouldconsider giving her to the statewhen she is no longer needed*
Asks an EndTo Shipyards'Differentials
WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen.Harrison A., Wpams, Jr., D-N.J.. has asked for eliminationof the 6 per cent differential en-joyed by West Coast shipyardsin bidding on federally subsidizedmerchant Ships.
There was justification for theprovision when it was enactedin 1936 to build up the nation's
By RALPH DIGHTON
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Thedeath knell of an historic missileand the birth pangs of a newconcept in . space age warfarewere recorded on the same dayon- opposite sides of the Atlantic.
On that day, Aug. 1. BritishDefense Minister Peter Throney'croft announced hi London: "AT'rangements under which Thormissiles are stationed in thiscountry should be brought to anend during the course of the nextyear."
On the same day the U. S. AirForce announced in Washingtonthe award of contracts for de-velopment of a Mobile-Mid-RangeBallistic Missile (MMRBM).
The days of the 1,500-mile Thor,the Western world's first weaponcapable of hurling atomic retali-ation across the Iron Curtain,thus have been numbered. By theclose of 1963 Its usefulness as aballistic missile will be ended.
Skybott, Then MMRBM
Never intended to span the At-.[antic or Pacific from continentalU. S. bases, the intermediaterange Thor was designed forlaunching from European sites.Some 60 were set up at four1
bases In England. Stored aboveground, they were vulnerable butwere the best the United Stateshad until the intercontinentalAtlas and Titan, with four timesthe range of the Thor, wererushed to operational status.
Great Britain plans ro replacethe Thor as soon as possible withthe less vulnerable Skybolt, a 1,-000 mile missile launched fromjet bombers. Later the Skyboltsmay be supplemented by theRange will be cheaper to build,
A New ConceptThe midrange missile Is more
than a follow-on version of theintermediate range Thor—it is anew concept that extends the mo-bility of the submarine-launchedPolaris missile to land launch-ing!!.
When perfected the Mid-Rangemissile will have many advan-tages, most of them based on thefact that is propelled by solidfuels rather than the liquid fuelsof the Thor.
Solid fuels, molded into therocket at the factory, mean thatthe Mid-Range. like ita silo-storedbig brother Minuteman, • can befired on an instant's notice. ThereIs no need for fueling at file sitebefore launching.
More MobilitySolid fuels mean that the Mid-
Range Missile, like its older sis-ter Polaris, has mobility. No slt-j
Hams said yesterday, but it isnow outmoded and unfair.
Williams said in a statementthe differential recently workedto the disadvantage of the NewYork Shipbuilding Corp., Cam-den, N. J.
A San Diego, Calif., firm wona contract fpr two ships althoughits bid was $1,703,174 above thelowest bid submitted by NewYork Ship, Williams sa i l
"Thus, almost $2 million waspaid out unnecessarily by theU.S. government," he added.
Variance ApplicantsTo Pay Ad Costs
FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP - f i l e 1
Township Committee last nightintroduced an ordinance whichwould require all applicants fora variance before the Board ofAdjustment to pay all costs ofadvertising. At present, suchcosts are paid by the board.
A request was forwarded to theBoard of Freeholders for widen-ing of the bridge on Hall MillsRd. The township is wideningthe road itself, and Mayor AlbertV. McCormlck explained thatthe widening of the road was un-dertaken as a safety measure.
Township Attorney Arnold Tan-ner was authorized to prepare anordinance vacating certain un-used portions of ShibanoH La.Mr. Tanner said the townshipwould take over other portions ofthe road off Rt, 9 which are used,but have not been a. part of thetownship road system up until
Auditor Says School'sCondition Is Good
OCEANPORT - Armor S. Hul-sart, auditor for this borough'sschool system, last night sub-mitted his 1981-62 audit to thejBoard of Education with the com-ment that everything is In orderand "legal."
Mr. H u I s a r t reported theschool's credit Is good. Allowedby, the state a borrowing powerof 6 pw cent of borough assets,the board has borrowed only 2.78per cent, he said.
The school's current surplus is$86,200.
Bough StartFor Bettors
ATLANTIC CITY (AP) -Twelve persons suffered minorInjuries yesterday when a spe-cial train arriving at AtlanticCity Race Track came to asodden stop,
The Pennsylvania - ReadingSeashore lines train was aspecial being operated betweenPhiladelphia a a d the racetack.
tug duck chained to a penra-'nent launch site, it can be fiiedfrom trucks or surface ships.
Solid fuels mean that the MidMid-Range Ballistic Missile.cheaper to launch. Some ex-perts figure the cost per poundof payload delivered on target athalf that for liquid rockets.
The Mid-Range Missile couldbe given the same range asThor—1,500 mlles-but strategistsfigure 1,000 miles will reach I hetargets it Is designed to hit—thosearound the perimeter of the So-viet bloc. Interior targets fall Inthe range of the intercontinentalgiants.
Even though replaced militarilyby the Mid-Range, the historicThor will be around a few yearsas a satellite launcher. It canhurl payioads up to 4,000 poundsinto 100-mlle-hlgh orbits endsmaller payloads into higher or-bits. It has been the booster forthe Tiros weather satellite, theTelstar communications satelliteand the military Discoverer sat-ellites.
Shop on Broad StRED BANK — Percy Sherman,
who has been In the interior dec-orating business In Red Bank 25years, has announced his retire-ment from that field and plansto open a specialty shop on BroadSt hi the near future.
Pair FailsTo ScaleLong's Peak
ESTES PARK, Colo..(AP) -Two climbers gave up their at-tempt to scale the 1,010-footsheer east face of 14,255-fooLong's Peak yesterday after omof them apparently became ill.
John Wharton, 22, of Prince-ton, NJ., and Dale Johnson, 31,of Boulder, Colo., gave up abouthalf-way up the rock wail knownas The Diamond during the sec-ond day of their climb.
The pair spent Tuesday nighton a narrow ledge and, whenWharton became ill, Johnson at-tempted to continue on by him-self. Park officials said John-son climbed about 104 feet be-fore he returned to bis compan-ion.
Johnson, contacted later atShelter Cabin at the base of thepeak, did not disclose the natureof Wharton's illness.
The Diamond has been scaledonly once before, by two Call-fornlans in 1960. They got about150 feet higher the first day thanWharton and Johnson.
To
Percy Sherman
Ralph V. Alvino
FAIR HAVEN - Ralph V. Al-vino, son of Mr. and Mrs. RalphAlvino, Harvard Rd., has com-pleted a six-week course traininghim as an auto body technician.
The course, at General MotorsTraining Center, Union, was spon-sored by his employer, McCarthyMotors of Atlantic Highlands.
Mr. AlvinoRumson-FairHigh Schoolpated in football, baseball, andwrestling.
is a graduate ofHaven Regional
where he partid-l
Percy Sherman
Mr. Sherman has sold his In-terest in Sherman Workrooms,4tB Broad St, Shrewsbury, to his1
associate, Earie M. Kaplan, who'will continue the business underthe trade name Shrewsbury Dec-orators.
For many years, Mr. Shermanconducted Sherman Decoratorsat 45 Broad St. as a full interiordecorating service with ShermanWorkrooms as an adjunct. Sincethe Shermanwas destroyed by fire two yearsago, Mr. Sherman has devotedfull time to Sherman Workrooms,
Mr. Sherman said
(Continued)were used by the Nero firm asdivers for the job.
He claims that Anthony Vaca-relli, another borough employee,was paid $50 for use of his boa1
for three to four hours on threeseparate occasions during the Jobwhile the firm actually chargedthe borough $1,050 for the boat
The mayor also contends thata foreman was never at the Job.
An Informal hearing was heldwith Michael Nero, head of thefirm, July 25. At that time hedenied that his bill was inac-curate.
Contract BastsMr. Nero said he was given the
job on tht contract basis for re-pairing a break in the outfallline at a cost of $2,500 to $2,700.At the time the work was au-thorized by C. Bernard Blum,borough manager, it was believedthat there was only one breakin the line.
Mr. Nero said he itemized thebill because It was requested byMr. Blum.
Three BreaksMr. Nero also claimed that he
hired Mr. Davis to do the divingand secure boats for the Job.
The breaks were reportedlyabout 1,100 feet out In the bay.The line extends into the bayat the toot of Main St
Mr. Nero said he would »tandby his bill and the fact that he1
was hired at a lump sum price."1 don't care about the itemizedbill," he said.
The borough appropriated $20,000 to cover the cost of all Marci6 damage repair work on munlcipal facilities.
, The borough will pay for thbsn°P work and be reimbursed by the
At a Democratic freeholder!candidate living in MMdletown,
am aware of the present andbrowing need for an additionalparkway interchange In the Mld-dletown-Holmde! area. Eversince the Monmouth CountyBoard of Freeholder! requestedconstruction of an interchange atKed Hill Rd. last April, .com-plexities surrounding the Inter-change question seemed to grow,Many of us have read withamazement The Red Bank Reg-ister of Aug. I which includedthe astounding statement of theincumbent Republican freeholdercandidate that the board refusesto accept responsibility for "thelocation of any Interchange.Let us look further Into the roleof the freeholders In this mat
In a prepared statement April11, 1962, the director of theBoard of Freeholders requested"the Highway Authority to con-struct an interchange... at RedHill Rd. In Middletown Town-ship." (Red Bank Register, p. 2,April 12, 1962)
Around 9:45 a.m. on June 32,1962, the director of the Boardof Freeholders announced anagreement between thi county,municipalities and authority pro1
viding for the purchase of rights
dalty shop will feature fine lin-ens and bathroom fashions. Hewill be assorted by his wife, Mrs.Rose Sherman, who has servedas a decorating consultant withhim for many years.
"In recent years there has beena growing importance attached toelegance In linens and bathroomaccessories. We feel that with ouryears of experience in tills fieldwe can offer a valuable serviceto the discriminating home own-er," Mr. Sherman said.
A former president of the Red D-JH. These reports were deniedBank Community Chamber of at first by both men.Commerce, Mr. Sherman said he
Street because he has "Implicilfaith in the continued growth o(Downtown Red Bank as theprime shopping center in Mon-mouth County."
Today's Bashm Mirror:
Will Tax Rates StayAt Present Level?
Dawson
By SAM DAWSONAP Business News Analyst
NEW YORK (AP)-lf tax ratesstay at present levels—as Wash-ington dispatches say Is likely forthe rest of this year at least-howelse can the economy get the de-sired added umph?
A faster pace is held needed IfJobs for all are to be found, or if a'eared but still highly speculativerecession is to be averted.
Tax cut advocates say their pre-scription would do the trick. Oth-ers see this doing as much harmas good because of the greaterTreasury deficit a tax cut mightbring.
Labor leaders urge higher con-sumer spending power as the an-swer—Increased take home pay,either through less tax withhold-ing, or higher wage scales, orboth.
The battle over the need for taxcuts now or next year Is Just partof the basic conflict between la<bar and management over whatwould really make the economyspurt. The goal Is to soak up pres-ent unemployment and findenough new Jobs to take care of ahoard of newcomers to the laboiforce in the next few years, andalso to Improve the Ullted States'
position In International trade andfinancial markets.
Labor leaders stress the needfor more purchasing power In thelower-income brackets whereany Increase in take home payusually finds its way quickly intomarket place. Union leaders holdthat management Is primarily in-tent on increasing profits. They
by addbg to spending powerwould increase retail sales, andthus industrial output, and hencejobs, union spokesmen say.
Business would welcome a taxcut, too, as improving Its net in-come. But tax rates are applied togross earnings—and these are de-pendent upon sales, prices and op-erating costs. And many business-men charge that this mix Is grow-ing much too thin.
High tax rates cut into net prof-its. But so do rising operatingcosts when they mean that evenincreasing sales volume results inno more, and perhaps even less,profits for those who take the risk—so says the NAM.
That's why' some hold that taxcuts by themselves won't do thetrick of getting the economy roll-ing as fast as the planners wouldlike.
am
state.Fear Suit
Both Councilmen Lohsento rescind
authorization for payment of thibills because they feared thathe borough would be subject tolitigation.
George E. Ostrov, borough attorney, feels that if there is tcourt fight the borough standsa good chance to win.
The rift also heralds a clear-cut break between the mayorand Mr. Kinlln—his running matein the last municipal election.
Previously there had been re-ports that a break was in the
The mayor became angered re-will open the shop on _ Broad|cenUy. however, with Mr. KlnliB
over a difference in opinion re-garding appointment of a heartsuperintendent.
First BreakThat was the first time Mr,
Kinlin combined forces with Mr.Lohsen against the mayor.
Tuesday nights action over thibill broke the partnership widiopen
Mayor Collichlo also ralsecquestions about the $1,300 billwhich covered repairs to seveibreaks In sewer lines !n various'parts of the borough.
He said Mr. Nero gave thimanager a price per break amtlien charged a larger amount tirepair an eighth break on Pine-view Ave.
Board of Ed. ContractWith Cab Company
OCEANPORT - The Board o!Education last night renewed Itscontract with Public Cab Convpany, Long Branch, for the trans-portation of special students, anddesignated the Continental Baking
are skeptical that this will pro- Company as Ota school's supplierduce many, if any, jobs. A tax cu' " "of bread and rolls.
Teachers' salaries were approved In accordance with a pre-viously adopted salary guide, and$480 was appropriated for the re-placement of three "1911 typetoilets and associated plumbing."
TAKES AD POSTCINCINNATI, Ohio - Robert
F Goodell, a former resident olFair Haven, has accepted a positlon in the advertising department of the Proctor and GamblCompany here. A graduate oDartmouth College, he will asslst in planning advertising campalgns for cake mixes.
AT SHIP BOTTOMHAZLET - Mrs. James Neld-
Ingcr, Rt. 35,. and Mrs. JosephR. L. Jackson, Holmdel Rd., vis-ited friends In Ship Bottom Tues-
LETTERSON SRBUHAIfBE
M Stepbtavffie Blvd.MMdletown, N, J.
BED BANK REGISTERTaandiy, August 9,
Aug. 7, 1962,the Editor:
PermanentMilk RefundBan Mulled
By CT FOXNEWARK (AP)-Superior Court
udge Nelson K. Mints was con-sidering today a motion for apermanent Injunction against theissuance of milk refund certifi-cates by three New Jersey dair-
s. iAt a 4% hour hearing Wednes-
day, Mlntz continued In effect etemporary Injunction against thedairies pending a decision in thematter which is expected next
State Asst Atty. Gen, Theo-dore I. Botter told the court thatdenial of the state's motion woulddeprive the Office of Milk Indus-try of Its means for enforcingprice controls on milk in the state.
The dairies involved in the hear-ing were Garden State Farms,Inc. of Midland Park, LampertDairy Farms Inc. of Linden andMeadle Dairy Farms of Belle-ville.
Mintz also ruled that Floyd R.Hoffman, director of the OMI,should be available for examina-tion by attorneys for the dairiesat the time a decision on the in-junction Is handed down.
Nicholas Martini, attorney forGarden State, said an applica-tion for a contempt citationagainst Hoffman would be
of-way, construction, and rnaln-|dropped if he answered ques-tenance of roads. There is somequestion as to whether suchagreement was actually made.
An editorial in The Register,April 17,1962, commenting on the;delay in construction of the inter-change, stated: "Returning froma Mexico vacation,., (the free-holder director)., entered thepicture with a poHcy of blunder porary or permanent, wouU cur-
bl I d f h l i I tail the dairy's right to Informand bluster. Instead of helpingto solve the question, he helpedto confuse i t , . . (his) suggestionof a Jury-rigged interchange alRed Hill Rd., with a tie-in roadto the east, would help contrib-ute to traffic bottlenecks. We sajbe has come up with a politicalanswer to what ii really an eco-nomic and engineering problem."
On July 19. 1982, The Registerpublished certain "Behind-the-scenes-Facts."
On July 28, 1962, the freeholderdirector stated, "I have no com-ments on any developments orpersonal holdings/' (Red BankRegister, July 26, 1982, p. 1).
On Aug. 1, 1962, The Registeron page one reports that "Fnholders Won't Take Responsility" for plan to put a new interchange at Red Hill Rd. This re-port was made despite tha factthe freeholders initially requ«st*a|the interchange and the directorefused comment after facts re-leased by Register on July 18,1962.
When it appeared evident thaiour own elected public officials,the Board of Freeholders, wouldcommit themselves to a policyof inaction in this matter, thifollowing telegram was sentshortly before 8 a.m. on Aug. 1,1962:
"Honorable Richard J. HughesState HoustTrenton, New JerseyRequest you delay proceedings
for parkway Interchange at RedHill Road. Disagreement among1
officials on allocation of costs orcrash program to Middletown,Holmdel, and Monmouth County,Strong public opposition to approval of project warrants further study before final decision.
Victor Gerdes, Democratlifreeholder candidate—MonmouthCounty
Martin V. Lawler — Democratic candidate - MiddletownTwp. Committee.
Earl Moody—Middletown Twp,Committee
Archie R. Price, Jr, Democrat-ic candidate—Holmdel Twp. Com'mtttee
Edward J. Roth—Democrat!candidate — Middletown Twp.Committee."
On Aug. 3, 1962, the headline:in The Red Bank Register read,'Red Hill Contract Award Is De-
layed." Thus, those requestingdelay had been successful.
Is lt not true that when "Free-holders Won't Take Responsibllity," the taxpayers and votersmust act for themselves? Whoelse is there to protect their in-terests?
Victor Gerdes
FreedomlandTrip Slated
ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS-TheRecreation Commission will sponsor a trip to Freedomland Monday for parents and children.
Buses will leave Firemen's Me-morial Field at 8:45 a.m.
Wednesday, the recreationbody will award tickets to thiMets-Phlllies doubleheader at thiNew York Polo Grounds to local boys, 10 through 16, onfirst-come, first-serve basis.
Buses will leave the field at Ka.m.
OFF FOR THE DAYHAZLET — The Senior Citizen
Group of St. John's MethodlslChurch left this morning foPoint Pleasant. They will takeboat trip around Manhattan nextThursday. On Thursday of lastweek they met at the pool InMrs. Walter Smale's yard onHolmdel Rd., with 22 memberiand two guests present. Guestswere Mrs. Mary Dillon of BritishColumbia, Canada, a slster-ln-law of Mrs. Jane Heath, andMrs.|A. J. Brerston.
tuns" "satisfactorily."Hoffman did not appear at a
deposition bearing in Patersonlast Monday.
The dairies sought to end thetemporary Injunction on groundsthe refund certificates did not vi-v
date OMI regulations.Martini said an injunction, tem-
the public of "what ha termed the"excessively high m i n i m u m[price'1 set for milk by the OMI.
Botter countered that lifting ofthe injunction would, lead to"wholesale violations (of the pricecontrols) throughout the dairy in-dustry."
He insisted, and the dairy rep-resentatives denied, that the firmshad committed "habitual viola-tions" of the price control regula-tion. Botter said the law pro-vided for permanent Injunctionsas a measure against suchbreaches.
He claimed the dairies, in is-suing the certificates, had triedto "take the law into their ownhands, to establish the rule of the
Ma Duncan,Hired KillersAre Executed
SAN QUENTIN, Calif. (AP)-Atriple execution In San QuentinPrison's gas chamber Wednesdaywrote the final chapter in a gro-tesque story of obsessive motherlove. .
Elizabeth (Ma) Duncan, 38, wasexecuted for plotting and payingfor the murder of her pregnantdaughter-in-law four years ago soshe could keep her youngest sonto herself..
It was a futile killing. ForFrank Duncan, now 33, marriedagain.
Yet her love was reciprocated.Frank, with his present wife andlaw partner, Elinor Chandler Dun-can, fought through the courts,trying to save her life, until twominutes before the execution.
But no tears were shed In SanQuentin's little green-walled roomwhen Ma Duncan died, shortlyafter 10 a.m., tight lipped andstaring straight ahead into noth-ingness.
The tears came three hourslater for one of the two small-time criminals who said Ma Dun-can promised $6,000 and paid $360for the November 1958 Wiling ofOlga Duncan, 30, near SantaBarbara.
A half-brother wept when cya-nide gas choked off the inaudiblelaughter of Augustine Baldonado,28. Strapped beside Baldonado andtalking with him was his fellowkiller, Luis Moya, 23.
"It's all right," Baldonado hadassured Daniel Ledesma, 35, ofPort Hueneme, Calif., only mo-ments before. But It didn't stopthe tears. v~
Frank Duncan had met OlgaKupczyk, a Canadian-born nurse,when he took his mother to a San-ta Barbara hospital suffering froman overdose of sedatives. Theymarried June 24, 1958, against hismother's wishes.
SHORT-LIVED PROTESTEATONTOWN - George A.
Morgan, former Planning Boardmember, last night asked the[Mayor and Council If signs hadbeen authorized on Broad St.near Eaton PI. saying "OfficesBeing Built for Dr. H. L. Har-wood by Precision Builders." HBwithdrew his protest against thesigns, however, after being as-sured by Robert Hayes, buildingInspector, that the signs wouldbe removed today.
ABOARD MONROVIA)RUMSON - Lt. (j.g.) Alfred
E. LaBrecque, Jr., U.S/NavyReserve, son of Alfred/E. La-Brecque. 34 Ridge "Rd.. hasjoined the crew of the USS Mon-rovia for two weeks of summertraining. Lt. LaBrecque, a com-munications officer, served twoyears on the Carrier Wasp. HeIs a 1958 graduate of DartmouthCollege and is in his last yearat Rutgers University L a wSchool where he is executive edi-tor of the Rutgers Law Review.
Pakistan FarmJflea on Visit
Ing a MoBmoeth Canary fttraerl 4—Thorwiay, August .9, 1962to riwrvi ft*' 8tod modem ' • ' * " •••,
RED BANK REGISTER
g i t i * suggestion! tothefr «#* fcaetry,
Mobinuned Owilj of lUngpur
CarderYEAR-ROUND
»WEATHER-MAKERSYSTEMS
Htals and Cools Your Homtto K«*pYou Comfortable Hie Y«tf.Round
NOEL R. NILSONAir Conditioning and Refrtaeriiion
40 MUCH AW. SH 1-3454 Q11U SILVER
a&d WaWJ Afasftd Talukda/ ofRtagurUB tr« viiittM Mr. todMrs. iloeepa W. Ticysor, ownersof tne MoBy Pitcber Farm onR t SO.
Both men expressed special in-terest in modern farm machineryas well as methods of crop irri-gation. They have been visitingother farms in this area as wellas the experimental farms con-ducted by Rutgers University.
The two men are part of agroup of fanners from Pakistantouring agricultural areas of theUnited States. They arrived inthis country July JO and will re-main until Sept. 21.
I It pays to plan ahead. Here's why I "*•'H buys a rugged 19.95 boy1* jacket to lay away for cold weather. No cash3 outlay. Not charged till October. Jacket is heavy cotton^twill, fullssherpa lined, Vith zip-off hood, 2-length turn downH cuff for growth, big 2-way zipper, and the wholeH thing washable. Get it now on the second floor=5 while sizes are complete; 6-20. While you're here,3 plan what else you'll need. Look things over andf | see what's new. It pays to plan ahead.
iMWI f f l l lWB I f l l ^ ^
Temple to OpenReligions School
SHREWSBURY - Rabbi Rich-ard F. SteLnbrlnk and Robert A.Newman, chairman of the Re-ligious Education Committee,have announced plans for the Re-ligious School session of Mon-mouth Reform Temple.
The first session will take placSunday, Sept. 9, at 11:15 a.m,Registration for new students willbe held at 11 a.m. The schoolwill have classes for student!from kindergarten through thininth grade. Special features foithis year include an enlargedand specially catalogued libraryand a program for audiovisualsupplementation to the regularclassroom teaching procedures.
The faculty for this year in;eludes Miss Margaret Sarason,Mrs. Max Singer, Miss JoanTemko, Mrs. Joseph Slaughter,Miss Margery Yanko, Mrs. Mil-ton Yesler. Carl Miller. Mrs. Milton Klein, Mrs. Milton Mannheimer, Max Klein, Stanley Leuox, Irving Cohen, Yair Lamdanski, Miss Vickilynn Gruber, JeflRuda and David Cohen.,The members of. the temple'sReligious Education Committeefor the year are Aaron Hoffman,exoffido; Mrs. Irving Cohen, Al-bert Goldstein, Harold Greene,Julian Herz, Mrs. Aaron Hoff-man, Mrs. Jules Huber, Mrs.Jack Kohn, Mrs. Bernard Levy,Mrs. Donald Littman and FrankSinger. Robert A, Newmanchairman. Rabbi Steinbrinkprincipal.
The committee has announced,too, that it will be host to teach-ers from other Reform congrega-tions in this area Sunday, Sept.9, for an area conference for re-ligious school teachers."Luncheon will be served by the
members of the sisterhood at 1p.m. During the afternoon therewill be a main speaker and threeworkshops on educational andpedagogical problems and pro-cedures conducted by experts IDtheir fields.
This conference Is betnjplanned in cooperation With thiNew Jersey Council of the Unionof American Hebrew Congrega-tions of which Monmouth ReformTemple is a member.
- j ^ - ^ •*• ir ir ir
J.tiitkl
DAVID SCUDDER HOMEMORGANVILLE - D a v i
Scudder, son of Mr. and MrsRichard Scudder, Station Rdbas returned from a three-weevacation at the home of hisgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ken-n e t h Stevens, Old OrchardBeach, Maine. A house guest olMr. and Mrs. Scudder for thepest week .has been Miss Bev-erly Scudder of BinghamtonN.Y. :'
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by HANK
POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
Here's How to EarnA Place in History
BoyleNEW YORK (AP) - D o you
yearn to win lasting fame and theratltude of future generations?Well, you can hardly do it by
piling up wealth.You could do it by writing
perfect poem or song, but that Isfar harder than making $100 mil-lion, the luminous gift ol imaginetive creation is denied to all buthose of genius.
But there is a simple availableway for you to earn a place Inhistory! That is—to keep an hon-est, detailed diary throughout yourlife, and leave it in your will tosome university library.
A hundred years from nowsome historian seeking to find ouwhat life was really like in themid-20th century, will stumble onthat diary in some dusty stackOpening and reading it, he willcall your name blessed.
This has been called the "Ageof Anxiety" and the "Age of Cri-sis." But it may finally go downin history as the "Age of the By-stander," a period when peoplewere so busy watching the excit-ing spectacle of life—or were sonumbed by what they saw-thatfew bothered to put down now theyelt about it all.
Later historians will find no lackof material to study about thisgeneration. There will be tons andtons of official papers to peerthrough.
The chronology of wars and dip-lomatic conferences makes uponly the dry bones of human his-tory. It is like learning about ex-tinct animals by studying theirfossils.
The only way to make humanhistory really human is to find outhow the individual person reactedto existence. What stirred him todream, what caused him to de-spair? What did he really thinkabout himself and others while helived?
In the past men were more elo-quent about themselves. Our an-cestors were more frank abouttheir reaction, to life. They keptdiaries; they wrote long lettersand did not hesitate to speak free-ly what they thought and felt
Such outspoken documents asthe diary of Samuel Pepys, or theletters between John Adams andThomas Jefferson, illuminate
Tree-TopHouse Status
Up in AirTEANECK (AP) - Teen-
agers were up in the air todayover the status of a tree-tophouse they built to "get awayfrom it all."
The township had ruled thedwelling unsound, saying itwas a fire hazard and thetownship would not be respon-sible if occupants tumbled tothe ground and injured them-selves.
Some 30 boys built the 14-foot frame dwelling on town-ship property. Several haveused it as overnight sleepingquarters.
The township ordered theDepartment of Public Works toraze the structure Monday,but a reprieve w a s grantedpending consultation with theyoungsters.
Mayor Mario La Barberastepped forth with a proposalthat would have permitted theyouths, most of them fromNew Milford, to "reconstructthe tree-house on land near theNew Milford Borough Hall. Hisproposal stipulated that thestructure would fall under thesupervision of the Parks De-partment and could not beused by the youngsters afterdark or during the school year.
The teenagers rejected theproposal as too restrictive,leaving the question of whetheror when the house will comedown up In the air.
No problem finding tenantswhen you advertise The Registerway—Advertisement.
By HAL BOYLE
their times in a way no treaties 0;Today we seem to be losing thi
proclamations can.Today we seem to be losing the
ability to write as well u to walk.We celebrate our anniversaries bsending each other cheap comgreeting cards bearing a rentedwisecrack.
Few of us bother to recordany permanent way problemsour hearts and mlnds-as if wwere ashamed to show our privatefeelings. We run the risk of havingfuture generations decide we ^tually had no feelings, and stalkeddumbly through our time on earthlike stumbling zombies.
•So, why not keep a diary? H'help you find out yourself whalkind of person you are while aliv—and it could make you famousafter you're gone. It might makeyou more Important later than youfeel you are now, and isn't thatworth, a gamble?
1410 A.M. — 105.5 F.M.
Monmouth County News Summaries7 A.M. • 12 Noon • 5 P.M.
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Parents' NightSlated TonightAt Playground
HOLMDEL - P»rents' Nightwill be held tonight at the Holm-del Elementary School play-ground, sponsored by the Recrea-tion Commission. •
The commission estimatesthere has been a daily attendanceof between 150 and 175 children.The program is under the direc-tion of Mrs. Kenneth Willey, as-sisted by senior counselors Nor-man Miller and Marilyn Youngand junior counselors MichaelSullivan and Gary Homberger.
Fun, fellowship and physicalfitness has been stressed through-out the season. The program hasbeen open to all Holmdel chil-dren from kindergarten througheighth grade.
It pays to advertise in TheI Register.—Advertisement.
to keep your homebeautiful longer withBPS HOUSE PAINTS
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, (AP Wirephote)
Parkway's ParkingLot an Experiment
Shortage of Orphans*HONG KONG (AP) - Hong
Kong (t experiencing t short-age of orphans for export.
Hundreds of people around theworld are on waiting lists for or-phans from this British colony onthe China coast.
Some 2,500 Chinese children arehoused and fed by 10 orphanageshere, but most are not eligiblefor adoption. Despite an increas-ing flood of refugees from Com'munist China the number of orphans abandoned In the colonyhas been dropping.
A total of 120 was abandonedlast year compared with 154 theprevious year and 205 the yearbefore that.
A government spokesman at-tributed the drop to improvedeconomic conditions and in-creased aid from social welfareagencies for needy families.
Not Really OrphansMost of the children In orphan-
ages are not available for adop-tion because they are not reallyorphans.
'Most of them have one orboth parents living." explainsMother Helena Da Silva of theCanossian Institute. "The parents•re unable to look after them atpresent."
She cited a family of six. Thefather, employed by a factory,died a year ago. The widow hadto take a full-time Job.
She did not earn enough to hirehelp to look after the children.The only solution was to sendthem to an orphange.
"We take care of the childrenuntil the family becomes self-sup-porting," Mother Helena said.
Only genuine orphans or aban-doned children are legally elig-ible for adoption in Hong Kong.
Sound Health, MindTo qualify for adoption, a child
WOODBRIDGE - The 33-carcommuter parking lot at the RedBank interchange of the GardenState Parkway is not a "profitmaking" undertaking, accordingto D. Louis Tonti, executiverector of the New Jersey High-way Authority.
The lot, which opened officiallyAug. 1., is an "experimental"project, Mr. Tonti said yesterday.A monthly charge of }5 for eachparking space will go toward pay-ing cost of construction and main-tenance, he said.
Since the completion of tl$7,000 facility, a number ofpotential users have declared trfee'is unfair and excessive.
Mr. Tonti said yesterday a rduction in the fee could easily r
Nnrf S-F« THIM WALL INSulATIOKit twic* t t iffieieirt at ortfiiunr in-sulatiM, w requires Mly hiH tbtUticlum. Tha-plus !<!• la i«vttrtor eapadlr—plus other 6-E Im-prawninb-rtNltt ta 88% nw»itoraft spaa la <an< sin cablrnt
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BETTER HOUSEKEEPING SHOP46 MONMOUTH ST. RED BANK
Telephone SH 1-4310—Open Wed. and Fri. Nights
FREE PARKING IN REAR OF STORE ENTRANCE
ON WHITE STREET PARKING LOT^li'iti
; "
suit, if the "unique" service metwith a sufficiently favorable re-ception from the public to justifyits expansion. He added, how-ever, that he was projecting Intothe "far off future."
An expanded lot would resu]in a drop in maintenance costsfor the over-all service, he said.This saving would be "passed onto the lot users," he said.
Parkway officials have pointedout that the lot is a service de-signed to serve area commuter,who travel to their jobs in caipools. There is no similar facilityavailable on any major toll roadin the U.S., they say.
The authority will not be ablito determine public response tothe "pilot" project until the Mid-dletown Township Committeeadopts ordinances regulatingparking on streets in the area othe lot.
The committee Is expected toact soon to acquire from the au-thority Woodland Dr., Lincroftwhich gives access to the lotTownship and parkway officialare hopeful that the new lot willrelieve a nuisance parking prob-lem in the area.
RegistrationDate ToldAt College
WEST LONG BRANCH-Mon-mouth College starts registrationAug. 17, for a late summer studysession—the first of its kind atthe college—that will run throughSeptember until a weekend be-fore" .the regular rail classes be-gin.
The new "post-summer studysession" begins Aug. 20 and endsSept. 14. Fall classes beginSept. 17.
As part of an enlarged summerstudy schedule, tte post-summersession will make it possible forstudents to earn a four-year col-lege degree in three years.
Some 19 courses are being of-fered during the day and at nightranging from art to science. Sev-eral education courses are in-cluded plus chemistry, econom-ics, English, history, psychologyand physical education.
A non-credit high school coursen intermediate algebra is being
offered through the college'sCommunity Institute program.
Nearly 800 students—a recordenrollment—are currently regis>tered for the second summerstudy session which ends nextweek.
No problem finding tenantswhen you advertise The Registerway—Advertisement.
=- Daily - == Appraisals =:
= Reports
FUTURESMARKETS
THOMSON &MFKINNON
Brokers In Sucuritlej & Commodities
9 Memorial Parkway,Loot Branch • Phone: CA 24310
301 Main St, AUenhurrtPhone: KE1-3500
MURTHA RE-ENLISTS
RED BANK — M/Sgt. John F.Murtha, whose wife, Mary, livesat 294 Spring St., recently re-en-Iisted for three years in theArmy. He is serving with U.S.forces in the Ryukyu IslandsSgt. Murtha, a supply sergeant,joined the Army in 1939. He ar-rived on Okinawa in 1960 to be-gin his current tour of duty.
must be of found health and The Catholic service, one of themind. Some abandoned childrenu e mentally retarded or physi-cally handicapped.
Finally, local foster parentshave a priority.
The majority of Hong Kong or-
BED BANK REGISTER TharnUy, Aagurt 9, 1961V-5
phaai go to tte UnitedTh C h l i ibiggest international charitableagencies here, bu handled more
tions in the past few years.Hong Kong orphans generally
lead a more comfortable and
betltiry life ffeas children of thecotoB/t under-prtvilegid ten-Me*. Their meal* u * nutritiotuby Ailtn ctandards tad they re-
than a hundred overseas adop- celve constant medical attention,One infanta* bone maintain*, astaff of 34 to attend to about SOchildren.
All wrapped
and waiting for fall,
the wool flannel
wrap-around,
everybody's joy.
Comes in camel or
forest green.
Also in spongy wool
plaid worked in
black and loden against
camel. 12.98 each.
And look what's back!
the oxford button-down
placket shirt. Have it
in white, navy, pebble
and stone and be
happy all your school
days. 5.00.
If you're a college man on a budget
you know the importance of advance planning.
J. Kridel's August program of
special back-to-college values was planned
months ago to meet your needs.
All new-for-fall wanted items
as seen on college and graduate school
campuses around the nation.
First of the series:
Classic herringbone and heathertone worsted suits with vests,tailored in Philadelphia by our regular 65.00 ivy suit maker.
advance planning price, 49.75
Traditional grays, olive and newly interesting char-blue tones, all cutin our natural shoulder, plain front model with tapered trousers. Thesefine worsted suits cannot be replaced to sell for anywhere'near thisprice, once current supplies are gone. Plan ahead by visiting the thirdfloor at J. Kridel now. You may charge. We'll go ahead with altera-tions. You pay '/j September, '/j October, '/j November. No servicecharge.
I*OAD AND FRONT STRUTSRID IANK, N.J. • SH MIOO
i f &
Ked' tiank KegistetErtaMitm Vm by **• a CMk ud Itowy Ctojr
State Hl^wty U,
THOMAS avows BROWK. int-iinJAMES J. HOOAN. EdttM
W. HARRY PENMNGTON, Production ManagerM. HAROLD KELLY. General Maiugw
Member ol tht Auoclated PrcstTM AMOOUad J"aa la wtiutd •xeiuawlr '• uu HH »t rapusneuios « ui uu WII awn »nniw
u uli Dtnpuv u nil u ill AP ntm dlipatoaaa.
Member ol American Newspaper Publishers AssociationMember Audit Bureau el Circulation
Tb» JM Bank Rajtaur aaaumta no fluaaa^ai raaponaibnuiM tnt typognptiicai «rrora to advtrttMmaiiti.aul «ui raptlnt wllBout cuarga. thai part ol u utnrttaamint Is WHICH lU typographical «rr« oseura. lidm t u t i will piaau neub u» masaauntnt w a M t t K l r or anj arror wbiea w ooeui.
Tlua aawapapar aiitunai no rvapooaibiutlaa tot ituamania «f optoioat la [attari from lia twdara.
aubaorituas Pneaa to M<aneaUnfit « O T at eorataf. 1 eama
Oaa raai IM.0O 111 monlBi. MOOaingia cow by maU. 9 eanti
THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1962
tell Me How to Dress?The answer is yes.And the interesting part of it is
that the students of Raritan Town-ship High School themselves set upthe rigid code of dress which willbe enforced when the new $1,500,000building opens next month.
We don't purport to know whathigh schools in other parts of thecountry do about this, but author-columnist Jim Bishop says suchcodes are rare throughout theUnited States.
Mr. Bishop, a Register columnist,noted the story about Raritan onthis paper's front page some weeksago — telephoned the high schoolprincipal, William E. Madden, andwrote a column on the subject.
He called Mr. Madden a man ofcourage—telling teenage girls thesedays they cannot wear skirts abovethe knee takes a strong backbone.The columnist believes Raritan maybe "showing high schools in the restof the country the way."
Principal Madden deserves credit.He started the idea.
But the accolade goes to the stu-dents. A select group of them metwith a committee of adult advisorsearlier this year to "swap ideas" onthe subject.
Strangely enough, it was theadults who suggested a "lenient"code to give pupils wide latitude inmode of dress.
The Student Council didn't buy
it. They insisted that high schoolers
—who are people while at the same
time being teenagers, an added di-
mension—need "firm and specific'
direction.
They devised the code—and it isstrict. It says, for example, no shortskirts, no full skirts, no tight skirts(which may lead mothers who sewto distraction), no tight sweaters, noexcessive cosmetics (such as eyeliner, eye shadow or "unnatural"lipstick colors), and no excessivewidth or height of coiffure in hairstyles.
For the boys—trousers must bejust right—not tight, not loose andnot more than six inches from thefloor.
Boys who are able to shave mustdo so as often as the whiskersappear. Beards are out of thequestion.
If a fellow is caught with side-burns below the middle of the earhe will be called to the principal'soffice for a lecture—and not on thehistory of Cromwell or King George.
Possible suspension from schoolfaces those who do not comply withthe dress code.
Who said the younger generationis going to pot? It has standards thelikes of which one never saw in'the old days."
Allen-Scott Report
Senate Probers Study AffidavitWASHINGTON — Senate elec
tioa investigators are scrutinizing White House staff and other gov-an explosive affidavit in the tor-rid primary battle between "Ted"Kennedy. 30*-yea«)ld brother of
the President,and Massachu-setts AttorneyGeneral Ed-ward McCor-mack.
According tot h i s s w o r nstatement by Convention from Ward IV North
Adams. James King of Ludlowcame to visit me at least four wanted the second man on the
Armand Serre,an innkeeper
_ , _ _ _ and delegate to times. On June 3, I was visitedAllen the Democratic by King and Edward Boland,
«taM convention, the postmaster-•hip of North Adams, Mass., was
mated; and members of the had the experience over Kennedy."Further, 1 thought there were
ernment agencies actively cam- enough Kennedys in politics, evenpaigned for young Kennedy. (though I think Jack Kennedy is
Attorney General McCormack the best President we ever had,and his brother Bob is doing aindicated he had affidavits affirm
ing various charges, but did notmake them public.
SPELLING IT OUT-The fulltext of Serre'j intriguing affi-davit is as follows:
"Statement of Armand Serredelegate to the Democratic State
congressman from Springfield,and requested to vote for Ken-
tsed to line up support for young nedy. I was asked why I wasKennedy. He was overwhelming-ly endorsed for the senatorialnomination, but McCormack re-fused to accept that and is vig-orously challenging "Ted" in abitter primary campaign.
Serre also alleges that he was,in effect, threatened with re-taliation when he refused to•witch from McCormack to Ken-nedy.
Rep. Edward Boland, D-Mass.,Is directly involved in both af-fairs'in Serre's affidavit. Boland,long politically close to the Pres-ident's family, was in (he fore-front in masterminding "Ted's"'successful convention drive
Boland is al-so charged byS e r r e w i t hpassing himselfoff is a net-w o r k repre-sentative.
In his affi-davit, S e r r estates he wasagainst "Ted"because thereare "enough *" ScoKKennedys in politics, even though!I think Jack Kennedy is the best IPresident we ever had, and hisjbrother Bob is doing a great job;as attorney general."
While this dynamite-loaded doc-ument is in the hands of Senate(lection Investigators, no formalrequest for a probe has yet beenmacfe. Committeemen under-itand that is in the offing. Theyhave also been told that otherequally explosive affidavits areforthcoming.
During the heated conventionfieht. numerous charges of"While House pressure" in behalfof "Ted" were made. Foremostamong them were:
That more than 50 postmaster-ihfps were left unfilled so theycould be dangled as prizes fardelegate votes; leading delegateswere threatened with income taxInvestigation; deportation pro-
not with Kennedy."When Boland first walked in,
he said he was from the ABCand he wanted to sit and talk tome. I run a liquor establishmentin Florida, Mass., known asPeter's Hideway, and this iswhere Boland came to see me. Itold him I had never met McCor-]mack, and I also hadn't met Ken-nedy, but I thought McCormack
great job as attorney general. Idiscussed with Ed Boland thepostmastership that was open inNorth Adams and that the CityCommittee had approved a can-didate who was not a veteran.
"Boland said it was too late todo anything now because he wasnot a veteran and Senator Smith
OF THE
list. The North Adams City Com-mittee however would not endorsethe second man on the list. Ithen told Boland to either tellLawrence J. Belisle that he can-not get it and don't keep him onthe fence because this was theNorth Adams City Committeechoice.
"Ed Boland left and at the con-vention, Boland saw me andasked if Kennedy had my voteI again said he didn't. Thensomeone from North Adams,namely Louis Sinclicito, came tome and told m'e that Boland hasthe name of Belisle, endorsedby the North Adams City Com-mittee, placed on the President's
• ^ desk for approval as postmasterfor North Adams.
"At the convention floor, EdBoland told Armand (me) thathe (Boland) would remember thisbecause they don't forget theones that didn't go along withKennedy. When Louis Sinclicitotold me about the postmastsrshipat the convention floor, he alsotold me that he had a couple of
iTheae
"Mams mlal America t tin . . . PARADISO , . . ! "
Your Money's Worth*
PORTER
Disappointing US Bond SaleBy SYLVIA PORTER
With mounting urgency, the U.S. Treasury is be-ing warned by the central bankers of the entire freeworld that as it must borrow money to cover the swellng deficit in our federal budget, it must tap the "sav-ings of the people" by selling long-term U.S. bonds to
you and me and to the savings institu-tions which hold our nesteggs.
Only if the Treasury meets thedeficit in this way, say the bankers—including the chairman of our own Fed-eral Reserve System, William McChesney Martin—will the world have confidence that we're not going to "turn theprinting presses" to get the necessarycash and that our dollar's value wilbe protected.
Well, the Treasury made a stab at doing just thislast week. It offered to sell up to $750 million of newU.S. Treasury bonds due 30 years from now in 1992and carrying a coupon of 4 yt per cent at a price of101 per bond—meaning the buyer of the bond earns4.19 per cent a year on his money. That's quite a highcoupon on a U.S. bond; the familiar savings bond returns only 3% per cent if held to maturity. And thebuyer of the new 4% knows he'll get the coupon fo;many years to come.
What happened? *It was a flop. Altogether, the Treasury raised only
$316 million from investors and even though officialssaid when they put the bond on sale that they didn'expect buyers to take anywhere near the $750 millionbeing offered, the whole operation was a disap-pointment.
Why?Was the sale a flop, particularly among individual
investors, because you haven't been educated to buying long-term marketable bonds from the U.S. Treasury in this era? Yes.
You, know about E bonds, for you've been toldover and over that they're for sale and you know howto buy them. If you were an adult in World War IIyou knew about the great war bond drives—in whichthe Treasury sold tens of billions of dollars of longterm marketable bonds paying a minimum 2y2 percent a year; those war bond campaigns were miraclesin public education. But you haven't been educated onways to buy marketable bonds fromjlie U.S. Treasurynow, There has been no attempt to educate you.
Lack of Publicity?
Was the sale a flop because of lack of publicityand because of its timing? Definitely, yes.
The Treasury announced the offering of the newbonds—and it was a surprise even to market profes-sionals—late Thursday afternoon, July 26, and thestory was reported in the financial sections of big citynewspapers Friday, July 27. That was the only business day between announcement of the sale and theactual sale on Monday, July 30. Moreover, the sale ofthe bonds was restricted to that one day—at midnightMonday, the sale ended. This timing hardly, gave youtime tD find out that a bond was on sale, to decide tobuy it and to learn how to go about it. It scarcely gave
clambakes lined up for him. t h w h o m a n a g e t h e investments of our country'ssavings banks, savings associations, insurance companies, pension funds, etc., time to make up their mindseither.
"t still insisted I would vore lor|McCormack and did.
"I have read this statement,written on two pages, and it isall true."
/a / Armand Serre,124 Barth St.,North Adams, Mass.
(Ward 4)Then personally appeared be-
fore me, Armand Serre, andswore the above statement to bethe truth to the best of his knowl-edge.Richard T. Dolan,Notary Public.My Comm. expires Feb. 1, 1369.George BregianesWitness.
POLITICALS - President Ken-nedy has set Oct. 19 as the dayhe will spend in Illinois cam-paigning for Rep. Sidney Yateswho is running against SenateRepublican L'eader Everett Dirk-sen! In a whirlwind sweepthrough the state, the Presidentwill make a number of appear-ances and two speeches for.
«edfn*s were allegedly intl- 6—Ihursday, August 9, 19G2 (Se« ALLEN-SCOTT, Page 9)
Was the sale a flop because of the interest rate—a 4'4 per cent coupon and a yield of 4.19 per cent?Yes and no.
A 4*4 per cent coupon does compare favorablywith savings bonds but many institutional investorswho hold our savings are looking for the highest an-
, , ., . ,' . . ster Macmillan's own party.nual return they can get — and top-grade corporate ^ ^ Ifvarli,ri arm ;nrtr*ri
bonds give them substantially more than 4'/J per cent.Many also shy from putting savings into a bond notdue until 1992, for they fear interest rates may riseabove today's levels in coming years. As an individual,you might have liked that 4V4 per cent coupon but
WILLIAMS. WHITE
WASHINGTON — Our govern-ment is earnestly accentuatingthe positive arid the British gov-ernment is patiently spreadingthe balm of calm all over theplace.
Nevertheless, an unhappy factwill not down. The abrupt sus-pension for two months of alnegotiations to let Britain into theEuropean Common Market onlivable terms his hit a danger-ous blow to this whote great en-terprise to strengthen the West-ern world.
Nor has It left the United Statesuntouched. We do not intendactually to go into the CommonMarket. But we do intend to as-sociate closely with it, if onlybecause we must, considering thevast new community of trade ithas raised. We would not neces-sarily be out of it even if theBritish were frozen out. But weshould find such a situation awk-ward, to say the least.
Moreover, the exclusion olBritain might complicate, or evenrequire some rewriting, of cur-rent American legislation togrant President Kennedy widetariff-reducing powers in orderto deal with the Common Mar-ket. One responsible legislator inthe field, Rep. Henry Reuss,Democrat of Wisconsin, alreadyhad suggested that the KennedyAdministration should move forstand-by revisions to cover thepossibility of an excluded Britain.
The postponement of all realdiscussions between the Frenchand German-led Common Mar-ket and Britain, on how Britaincould enter and still give indis-pensable protection to the fowlimports from her oldest Common-wealth associates, by no means
Herbert Hoover at 88By GEORGE E. SOKOtSKY
It is now 48 years that Herbert Hofcvef has it-voted all the hours of his life to public service. It |«the record of a man whose acceptance of publicresponsibility has almost been priestly in character. Hehas asked for no return, for no thanks, for no recogni-
tion for services done.Not all of Herbert Hoover's efforts
have been, successful; but they have allbeen^ motivated by selfless recognitionthat each man is his brother's servant
It is not surprising that todayreaching the great age of 88, HerbertHoover should be an honored and be-loved man. Even those who bore him
SOKOLSKY enmity for the Depression of 1929 havelong come to recognize that in Herbert Hoover, asPresident, we had not a politician who twisted andturned with the tides of popularity, but one who wasguided by the foundation principles of our civilization,by the Natural Law and by the Constitution of theUnited States.
Herbert Hoover has never been a radical or a re-actionary. In the 19th Century, he would have beenregarded as a moderate liberal, of the order of JohnStuart Mill; in the 20th Century, he would be calleda conservative.
The 19th Century Liberal believed in the expan-sion of individual human rights and benefits. He putan end to child labor; he gained the vote for an in-creasing number of persons; he attacked the conceptthat women were chattel; he fought against slaveryand abolished it in most places. His slogan was equal-ity of opportunity for all of mankind.
But the 19th Century Liberal differed from the20th Century Liberal in one basic essential; the 19thCentury Liberal believed that by the expansion of theliberties of the individual, by increased access to edu-cation, by equality of economic opportunity, the indi-vidual would contribute his share to the perfection ofsociety.
The 20th Century Liberal has found this processtoo slow. He has turned to government as the vehicleof achieving all good. He has expanded the powers andactivities of government. He has reduced the possi-bility for equality of opportunity by burdening the in-dividual with taxes which, in America, are bringing theeconomy to a standstill. He has made the governmentthe benefactor of a large part of the population; thus,destroying ambition and initiative and lessening theimpulse toward achievement. He has substituted a hu-manistic philosophy of life for the loving, God-fearingmorality of the Judaic-Christian civilization.
In his anxiety to solve all human problems speed-ily, the 20th Century Liberal has lost the meaning ofthe family system. He has substituted for parental so-licitudes, a pseudo-scientific sociological interventionin the family and a psychiatric supervision of morals.The evil results of this are statistical in increased di-vorces, broken homes and juvenile criminality.
In 1962, dissatisfaction with the product »f 2bthCentury Liberalism is widespread. Young people donot like the world in which they find themselves. Manybecome Communists; others declare themselves to bevarious types of conservatives (some without defini-tion); still others have joined various extremist right-ist radical movements. Others, like the Beatniks, turnto sexual escapism as a way of life.
These are manifestations of youthful reaction toan unsatisfactory way of life.
In this changing and confusing world, HerbertHoover stands as a monumental moral force, the solidrepresentative in our land of the basic principles of19th Century Liberalism. He has brought into the 20th
implies a final collapse of ne-|Cen tu ry the Quaker ideal of the goodness of man ingotiations. Within its own reali-ties it is a setback—but nothingmore. No one seriously supposedthat this meeting alone could re-solve all the complications owhat from the very start hasbeen the one true British prob-lem. This is how to go into theCommon Market on such term:as not to break the old tradeties-Mind the deeper political ties—with Canada, Australia and NewZealand.
The true harm that has beendone here is not so much to thesubstance of the negotiations asto their appearance. The harmin a word, is more political thaneconomic.
Tte French have been allow-ing, if not actually promotinginterpretations of the current ne-gotiations so extreme as to feedthe conclusion that somethingapproaching disaster has befallenthe British attempt to enter with-out nations! humiliation and with-out breaking up the Common-wealth.
Any such view, on the plainfacts of the case, is nonsense.This was only one inning in along ball game, even though ad-mittedly a bad inning for Britain.Wholly reliabre British information to this columnist in no waysupports any notion of any irreparable reverse. All the same,British leaders fear—and soundlyfear—that in England itself thesescare accounts may enlarge andembolden the already bitter op-position to the Common Marketfrom among the more tradition-minded members of Prime Min-
leaders are concernedthat the British public itself maybe led to believe that "the Frogsand the Huns" - — The vulgarterms in pub and street for theFrench and Germans—are deter-mined to do Britain in. Givenany such emotional national cll-
„ , , . » . . . ! . . . , , « - . , mnt(! ' * e British people will*BayThe plain fact is tha t the U.S. Treasury never has to hell with the Common Market,
ots of institutions simply did not.
financed a big part of a year's budget deficit throughtapping our savings. It has obtained most of the moneyfrom the nation's banks. If it tries to tap our savingsnow, a major campaign of education will be essential—and" so also may be higher interest rates to attract s"mlnR lhe FrM,c1i.uh?uld b e c T e
nvestors.
economics or no economics.And it l s extremely doubtful
that in such a state of publicfeeling Macmillan could ever putthrough British entry, even
more generous In theirher joining the club.
for
g an inthe love of God. This concept is not Humanistic; It isDeistic, for man cannot stand alone in a changingworld. He requires the strength of faith in a force out-side himself, as Matthew Arnold put it, that makes forrighteousness, and having that strength within himself,he does not need the power of government to con-trol him.
Herbert Hoover's life is a Horatio Alger story.The orphaned son of a blacksmith and a seamstress,he became a great engineer, the feeder of the humanrace, Secretary of Commerce and President of theUnited States. He heads the Boys Club of America,perhaps to help give other boys what he missed as aboy. He is the author of many important historical vol-umes and is now engaged in a great work on interna-tional relations.
He is America's great man.
"As Yon Were Saying, Neighbor, Youth Will B«Youth"
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lilting*
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RCA 5-tube Table Model SQ88Radio 7
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Once a year the store managers get their opportunity to run asale and this is it. Choose from the most famous makes inAmerica! Frigidaire, Westinghouse, Kelvinator, RCA-Whirlpool*Caloric, Tappan, Hotpoint, Easy, Admiral, Norge, Kitchen-Aid,Fedders, Zenith, RCA Victor, Magic-Chef, Youngstown, Welbilt.Act Now! Buy Today and SAVE!!'
3 BIG DAYS — AUG. 9, 10, 11
Portable & Console TELEVISIONWe Carry all Famous Brands
Famous make, 19" portable, I year freeservice, with handle, built-in $1 ! • _ ,antenna • I™
Admiral portable TV, free I year partsand labor, built-in antenna, $190thinman I_O
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RCA 19" portable TV,built-in antenna :..
Westinghouse, giant 23",all wood console :.
$140I "7
148
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Famous Name, 23" console "400" spacecommand, not in all stores, $991power transformer, hand-wired _ « ^
Famous Name 23" TV console, $OAlpower transformer, hand-wired ..; •™
RCA 23" upright wood $O9(console TV .;. _ _
Westinghouse 23" TV, genuine $09mahogany veneer, lowboy design .... _ _
Westinghouse 23" remote control console,turns set on-off, changes channels, $ 1 0volume, traditional veneers I 7
These arejust partial
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REFRIGERATORS & FREEZERSThese are
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Famous make, large familysize capacity
Norge, 2-door Refrigerator-Freeier,automatic defrost, 13.1 cu. ft
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Westinghouse, 13.8 cu. ft.Refrigerator, automatic defrost ,
Kelvinator, 13.6 cu. ft., 2-doorsupreme custom, not in all colors
Famous make, Upright Freer) «holds over 300 lbs. frozen foods, $ 1 O . Qextra storage in door 1 « # O
Norga 11.2 Upright Freezer, modernslim design, giant 392-lb. capacity, $ l * 4 Onot in all stores I T r O
Famous make, I I eu. ft., holds over S ' l X ' T390 lbs. frozen food, upright .. lO/
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Wettinghouse Upright 13 cu. ft. $ 1 Q QFreezer, large capacity ^ I ©7
PLUS MANY OTHERS
FINAL CLEARANCE
1962 AIR CONDITIONERSFamous make, I HP, 7,200 BTU's $ •Vli Amp—115 V, 2-speed deluxe
Famous make, I HP, 12 Amp., J •£ • • •"•9,000 BTU, b position comfort control | § /
S188
Fedders, 8,500 BTU's cooling pow- C •• • • Mer, 115 V, 12 Amps. W-Auto Timer | / " |
Whirlpool, 2 HP, 230 V, deluxe 5 m A Qfeatures r4,500 BTU's | QQ
These arejnst partial
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Admiral, I'/j HP, 230 V, giant12,000 BTU, super deluxe
Whirlpool, I HP, 115 V, Vh 'Amps., all deluxe features 137s
Fedders, Vh Amp. , 115 V, $1/|7can be installed in 77 seconds | "fX
Westinghouse, I HP, 115 V, 8.5 J •• • • « %
Fedders 10 Amp. instantmount 8000 BTU's 159
Amps., easy to install, 8,400 BTU's
Westinghouse, 2 HP., 15,000 BTU's j230 V, 10.6 Amps, all deluxe features
Automatic WASHERS & DRYERS$169$158
Frigidaire, 2 speed, 2 cycle, fully automaticwasher, auto, detergent and C 1bleach dispenser
Weitinghouse, deluxe automatictumble action washer
These arejust partial
listings
Norge, 2 speed, 3 cycle, fullyautomatic, miracle fabrics
Hotpoint, fully automatic, 10-lb.capacity, all porcelain
Westinghouse, 2 cyclecompletely automatic washer ........
Whirlpool, 2 speed, fully automatic C Iwasher, miracle fabrics
Hamilton clothes dryer,full size capacity
Norga, all fabric automatic"electric dryer,
miracle fabrics
Whirlpool electric dryer,fully automatic
Hotpoint, fully automatic,large capacity Electric Dryer
715MAIN
ST.,ASBURYPARK
PR 59516
ROUTE
AT SHARKRIVER
BRIDGE,NEPTUNE
• PR 5-9813
'Shrewsbury'Ave. at
Route 35,New
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ROUTE' 9 and 37
TOMSRIVER
SHOPPINGCENTER,TOMS PIVfP
81Broad
Si[Key port
CO,4-3012
Westinghouse13.8 cu. ft.Automatic
DefrostRefrigerator-
Freeier
'208WhirlpoolAutomatic2-Speed
Multi-Cycle
WASHER$178Famous Make23" Low Boy
TELEVISIONFOUR SPEAKERS
23,000 VOLT CHASSIS
KelvinatorUndercounter
DISHWASHER12 PLACE SETTING
ALL DELUXE FEATURES
$164WestinghouseDehumidifier
688 8• HUGE 52 PT.CAPACITY
• HUMIDISTAT
8~Tb»ndiy, tag* 9,1962 RED BANK REGISTER
WINES and LIQUORSBUY YOUR WHISKIES IN QUARTS
.39DAVIDSON'S OWN
FINE WHISKIESDavidson's• Blended
WHISKEY • QTCOLONEL ROYKENTUCKY STR.BOURBON—8 Yn.
44 .99
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Health HintsThrougterut the country ioctl
•attoritcs are busy miking surethat by lummer'i end the scholiwill be ready for the children:Similarly, parents should be do-ing what they can to insure thatthe children will be ready for theschools.
IMPORTEDWyeliffeS C O T C H W Q T
C Z E C H W H I R L — F»t stopping by girl dancercreate* mushroom-like effect with her swjrllng ikirtt dur-ing a folk dinee festival In Straxnlce, Cieehoslovakla.
Davidson'sVODKA 3.95
QT.
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DAVIDSON'S N. Y. STATECHAMPAGNE and SPARKLINGPINK CHAMPAGNE 26 oz.Naturally femmrtd In th» bottle BOTTLE 2.99
39 BROAD ST., RED BANK Te l .SH 7 - 3 3 3 4FREE PARKING AND DELIVERY
(Knotty problems untied, oneflight up. Ask about the George!E-Z Pay Plan. Agonize now, paylater.)
Dear George:I spent several years in the
service and picked up the habitof using profanity quite a bit.About 18 months ago I met avery nice woman and we begandating. For almost a year shechided me about my languageand finally it began to take ef-fect. I don't cuss at all now but,unfortunately, during that periodmy lady friend picked up thehabit and now she cusses like asailor, most of the time withouteven realizing it. What can bedone about this offensive habit?
H. H.Dear H. H.:
Raise hell.
924 in State to GetEquivalency Certificates
TRElfTON (AP) - i A total ol924 adults will take examinationsthis month to qualify for the N. J.High School Equivalency Certifi-cate, the equal of a high schooldiploma.
State education commissioncFrederick M. Raubinger madethe announcement today. He saidthe examinations will be given,at the six state colleges and atthe campuses of Rutgers Univer-sity. • . !
Dear George:You seem to give advice that is
no more or less accurate thanthat in the business tMiblications
the sefeol year. All these thing! should be takesif yw *«•*
d t a g e
A good, relaxing vacationpart of that preparation,should stress vigorous outdorlife, with lots of exercise, sun,and fresh air. Balanced diet andadequate rest play an Importantpart also in building up the gen'era) health of the potential pu-pil. One thing more remains—toward the end of summer it isadvisable to have the family phy-sician give your child a thoroughcheck-up, so as to head off anydeveloping condition which mightthreaten his health or efficiency
SCANT PlansDemonstrationTRENTON (AP) - The State
Committee Against New Taxes(SCANT) plans a protest demon-stration here Nov. 19, when thestate legislature reconvenes.
SCANT officials yesterdaycalled on all New Jersey resi-dents opposed to the adoption ofa sales or personal income taxto participate in the demonstra-tion.
A MERE 12,913 PIPESATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) —
The pipe organ in ConventionHall here Is reputed to be thargest in the world.
It contains 32,913 pipes, witheven manuals in the main con-sole and five in a movable
NURSERY SUPERVISORTRENTON (AP) - State Ag-
riculture secretary Phillip Alam-pi today named Frank H. Pagli-aro of Bordentown to the post ofsupervisor of nursery inspection.He fills a vacancy created by thedeath of Lawrence Felton ofTrenton.
these shaky days in the market.So, George, tell me? What's afoolproof stock to buy?
SpeculatorDear Speculator:
Holsteins, At least you can milkthem.
YOUR DEALER'S GOT AUGUST BUYS
ON NEW CHEVROLETS
' V , \ * : ""•
' f Y.
TO PLEASE EVERYBODY
(WELL...ALMOST EVERYBODY)EfWl the most persnickety luxury-lwer couldn't ask for very much morethan a Jet-smooth Chevrolet (like, forinstance, that Impala Sport Coupe atthe top). Yet all of it-Body-by-Fisherroom and elegance, roatl-Kentling Jet-imooth ride with Full Coil suspension,your choice of V8 or 6 engine, the•works-comes for a Chevrolet price.(You know how low that is.)
JET-SMOOTH CHEVROLET
Here's about the best thin? that'shappened to make money go farthersince budgets-the lively low-costChevy II. It's got all kinds of room(Body by Fisher, what else?),' a 6that thrives on regular gasoline,plus things like bolt-on front-endcomponents .for rock-bottom upkeep.Eleven-model selection includes theNova 2-Door Sedan (second from top),
CHEVY n NOVA
The Corvair Monza h kind of like twocars for one low price-a roomy familycar and a sporty driver'* car. Andwith the engine at the rear for bettertraction and easy handling-, it playsboth roles to the hilt. The Monza comesin three flavors—Club Coupe (thirdfrom top), Sedan or Convertible. Careto join the club—and get all the funof a once-a-year buy, to boot?
CORVAIR MONZA
gee the Jet-smooth Chevrolet, Chevy II and Corvair at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's
CIRCLE CHEVROLET COMPANYS25 MAPLE AVENUE RED BANK SHADYSIDE 1-3130
care of. twwwtr.your child to have die advantage
l d i vipra vigorous jnlad in »enjoyment ofvaca-OD by keeping the time of re-nt to school always before him
We'll give you top dollars whenyou trade in your oil), tired ma-chine for a new Airequipt Superba77a-The most versatile slideprojector on the market. Features4-way remote c- i t ro l , automatictimer, single slide operation andediting. New preheat blower sys-tem warms slides to prevent poo-
Uses the famous Airequipt metalmagazine that protects yourcardboard mounted slides fromdust and wear, or the economicalAirequipt Vari-Wount plastic mag-azine.
15 WALLACE STREET RED IANK
Ttl. SH 7-2273 or SH 7-2274
Fallfashionfavorsthe mattejersey
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A .beautiful, fluid line, very soft, veryeasy and very, very fashionable^See our fresh new collection inacetate-and-nylon matte jersey thatfolds like a handkerchief, packsperfectly and simply refuses to wrinkle! ,All with their own Sash ties; 10 to 18.
NO ONI It IN Dil iTO ROIERT.HALfc• W« MI I for n t h onlyl• Thar* art no credit chargol• Wi hov« no trtdll I M M I I
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ROUTE 36 ON MAIN STREETalso in ASBURY PARK, Rt. 35 at Asbury Park Traffie Circle
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING AT BOTH LOCATIONS^
Jenkins, third;broad jump for
Day AwardsBfcACH - Forty nve
boys and jgirl* were winner* ofmedals at the Youth Day cele-bration Saturday and Sunday,sponsored by the RecreationCommission. ' ;
Receiving awards at the sportevents' Saturday morning onFlorence Ave. school groundswere girls, 25-yard dash for 8years old or less, June Deer,first, Gail Mecges, second, Deb-ra Catlow, third, boys '25-yarddash for 8-year-olds and underJoseph Netols, first, Steven Phil-ips, second, Alex Gregus, third;girls, 25-yard dash for 9 and 10-year-olds, Chris Jenkins, first,
.Patty Ann Donnelly, second, Gerri Ann Cannon, third.
Boys, 25-yard dash for 9 and10-year-olds, Leonard Cologna,first, Thomas O'Brien, second,Dennis Mclnerney, third; boys.35-yard dash for 9 and 10-yearolds, Thomas Mackey, first,Bruce Huleg, second, WilliamSchaap, third; girls, 35-yard dashfor 11 and 12-year-olds, JeanHahn, first, Mali Men, second,Carol Ann Deer, third; boys 50-yard dash for 11 and 12-year-olds,John Roche, first, Michael Phil'
yeawfldi, "Robert Htr% first,William Wamtea. Mcmd, andSteven SealUoa third. ,(
Winner* la toe watermelon eat-ing contest wire Valerie FayMark Takagl. Carol Ann Nor-mile,' Dennis Mclnerney, PatriciaChristie and William Warden.
To end Saturday's activities, ablock dance was held at the
ips, second,third.
Bernard O'Brien,
Girls, 50-yard dash for 13, 14and 15-year-olds- Betty Jenkins,first, Ellen Farrell, second, EllenHicks, third; boys, 50-yard dashfor 13,14 and 15-year-olds RobertHullg, first. William Worden, sec-ond, Steven Scullion, third; girlsstanding broad jump, 11 and 12year-olds, Mall Meri, first, JeanHahn second, Barbara Petrickthird; boys running broad jump,11 and 12 year olds, John Roche
.first. Michael Philips, second,Bernard O'Brien, third; girlsstanding broad jump for • 13, 14and 15-year-olds, Ellen Farrell,
boys13, M *od IV
ThewenWright tad WUHia Durldn.
Other downs were Pamela andChetySe BoyJe.
Included in the Una of marchwere commtokm meraben, May-or and Council memberi. Boardof Education members, a floatwith Miss Union Beach and othercontestants. Fire Departmentmembers. Fire Company One La-
beach front. Music was furnished dies1 Auxiliary, Harris Gardensby the Jades.
Master of ceremonies Benjamln Young introduced Mrs. Martin Mclnerney, commission chairman, who welcomed the guestsand introduced Miss Union Beach1962 (Miss Claude Witte) and thesecond place runnerup, Miss Jo-aim Gerrits, and third place run-nerup, Miss Joann Farrell.
"/inners in the parade Sundayafternoon to climax the two-dayevents were best marching,Union Beach Fire Department;best appearance. Union BeachFire Company One Ladies' Aux-iliary; best float, Girl Scouts andBrownies, and best marching andappearing, Union Beach FireCompany One Ladies' Auxiliary.
Fire Chief James Haggerty ac-cepted the trophy for the fire de-partment and Mrs. Herbert F.Klein accepted the trophy for theLadies' Auxiliary. The trophy forthe float named "Honor the Pastand Serve the Future," thetheme for the Girl Scout 50th an-niversary, was accepted by troopleader Mrs. John Borne. Mrs.Mclnerney presented the awards.
A float entered by the Recrea-tion Commission featured Mr:.Edward Donnelly as Miss UnionBeach 1925, and escorts AlfredWilson.and Eugene Bender. Allare members of the commission.
Clowns entered by the Demo-cratic Club of Union Beach wereMrs. William Novick, Mrs. Wil-liam Rodgers, Mrs. BernardCrane, Mrs. Roger La France,Mrs. Albert Boyle and Mrs
first, Ellen Hicks, second, Betty Thomas Perno.
father and baby downsportrayed by WUUm
Fire Company Ladles' Auxiliary,Police Athletic League cheer-leaders and twirlers, AmericanLegion Firing Squad, RepublicanClub, First Aid Squad and Aux-iliary, Girl Scouts, Brownies, Littie League Queen and LittleLeague players,
The Drum and Bugle Corpsparticipating were Guadalcanal ofCliffwood, Union Beach Fire De-partment Firesiders, Point Pleas'ant Pointers, Melrose Baysidersof South Amboy, Thunderblrds olStaten Island and Twin Lights ofBelford.
The Candleirs Drill TeamNewark, performed along the pa-rade's line of march.
Master of ceremonies duringthe parade at the reviewing standwas Mr. Young.
Frank Cozens served as master of ceremonies during thesports competitions.
Judges for the parade ccmpetitions were Mr. and Mrs. Thornas Meehan of Woodbrldge.
Awards presented at the parade were for residents enteredonly. The drum and bugle corpswere not in competition.
"FLUSH"SLIGHT DAMAGE
DOORS9
Cash "n CarryMAKE
• TABLES• WORK BENCHES• BOOK SHELVES• BOOK CASES• SHELVES• SLIDING DOORS
FURNITURE LEGS IN STOCK
RED BANK LUMBER" " •" "where everybody buys"7 Wo* St. SH 1-5500 R«l fta*
Motor VehicleQuestion BoxQ. I was prepared tft sell
my automobile but I cannotfind my certificate of owner-•hip. What can be done Inthis Instance?
A. If a certificate of own-ership, or title papers, arelost, the Dlrecor of the Divi-sion of Motor Vehicles may,upon proof by certification orotherwise In the manner re-quired by Urn, and if satisfiedof the bonafldes of the appllcation, prepare • certificateof ownership, certify II andauthorize Its use In place ofthe original. A fe« of one dol-lar Is assessed for this dupli-cate certificate.
FINED AS SHOPLIFTEREATONTOWN - Police Chlel
I! William Zadorozny yesterdayconfirmed that Mrs. Juae Denny,500 Rlverdale Ave., New Shrews-bury, was convicted last month
I on a shoplifting charge. Thechief said Mrs. Denny was ar-rested in June in Bamberger'iDepartment Store and her hear-ing was postponed to July. She
[was fined $200 by Magistrate Pe-f ter J. Edwardsen.
BACK FROM MAINEHAZLET - Mr. and Mrs
I! George R. Emmons, Beers St.and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Tintlt
I of Pompton Plains have returneiI home from a vacation trip to Bai
•Harbor, Maine.
sale ends Saturday, Aug. 11th
J.YANKO30 BROAD STREET RED BANK
Eventa few of the many specials:
2.00 & 3.00 Fall Jewelry .. 9 9 C *
2.98 Women's Pigskin Palm Gloves 1.99
1.98 Pure Silk Head Squares, 36 inch .1.19.
.1.00 Boxes of Stationery 2 for 1.00
5.98 Linen Mat Sets, 8 pieces,.-.:..„ ........3.39
37.50 Pre-teen Tweed Fall Coats 29.99
19.95 Women's Wool Kookie Coats 14.99
22.95 Zip-Out Poplin Raincoats 18.99
49.95 Women's Chesterfield Plaid Coats 38.00
7.98 Women's Shetland Blend Cardigan 5.99
1.50 Set of 4 Quilted Hangers J'OO
'. 45 piece Set Melmac Dinnerware 20.95
8.98 Boudoir Lamps, white shade .4.99
3.98 "Luxor" Martex Bath Towels 2.98
'plus tax
SHOP YANKO'S FRIDAYS & WEDNESDAYS 'TIL 9 P.M.
Councilifl Be Named;
Liter Cardinal(Continued) •MATAWAN >- The newly-or-
inized M a l a w i n Council,nights of Columbus, will bearaed Cardinal Newman Coun-Chicago and another downstate"
The . name was selected byLev. William Bausch of St. Jo-eph'jj Catholic Church, Keyport,tio Will be. the council chap*'lin. Members of the new coun.-11 voted to honor Father Bauscby' allowing him to select theame'of the council.Cardinal Newman was known
ir his dedication to Catholic Ac-ion. The new council will pub-ish a short biography of Card!-ial Newman in the near future.The election or officers will be
eld Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. inJoseph's School Cafeteria.
teven Sviatko will serve ashairman of the nominating comlittee. He will be assisted by•onald DuBois, Herbert Carbone,lharles Vena and District Dep.ty Joseph Lang.Clifford Brower relinquished
chairmanship of the Colum-us Day ball, set for Saturday,let. 13. Frank Matuch will fillie vacancy, Mr. Brower will as-1st Charles O'Hare on other de-ills.The institutional degree and
ie first degree, sponsored byie new council, will be con*rred Wednesday, Sept. 5, in St.oseph'a School Cafeteria. Plansnit oe announced.
SOTTYates; one in the evening in what happens on Capitol Hill .
at'a still unselected placew the basis of the latest poll,
If a a neclc-and-neck race in SouthDakota between Sen. Jut Botturn, R.. recently appointed fol-lowing the death of veteran SenFrancis Case, and former Food-fpr-Peace Administrator GeorgeMcGovern. The • statewide pollby a group of newspapers, givesBottum 48 per cent, McGovern46.
As far as Sen. Clinton Ander-son, D-N. Mex., chairman of the
Anyone Interested in joiningthe council may contact Hugh V.McGuire, Ravine pr., or CharlesA. O'Hare, Schenck Ave.,of Matawan.
both
Interior Committee and vie*cfaainnan qf the 'Joist AtomicCommittee, it cooctrned, (Us coittrfbutors are styiag they are;
bausted y g jpuoiis legislative labors, «ad fol-lowing a cardiac examination.
dally la buying ticket* far $100-s-pUte fuod-raiibig dinaeri . . ,Sen. Vance Hartke, tod., chair.
Anderson has gone tome„and In- man of the Senate Democratie sitibn as Secretory D e a ntends to stay there—regardless o f r i r i n ;n • i i i i r : •tends to stay there—regardless o f
The Democratic National Commit-tee has picked Aug. 23, 24 and25 for a Midwest conference atFrench Lick, Ind. Democraticcandidates and leaders from 14states will attend. Among thetop speakers will be TheodoreSorensen, whip-smart and razor-
l htongued specialPresident. The
counsel to the34-year-old Ne-
iy
braskan is becoming a stellarfeature at Democratic meetings.Sorensen is not a rhetorical"stemwinder," but he is provinghighly effective in expounding Ad-ministration viewpoint and answering critical questions.
The stock market slump is af.fecting Democratic contributionsparticularly from New York andother large cities. Big-money
HUFFMAN JJ BOYLEFINE HOME FURNISHINGS end BROADLOOM
Rt. 35 Circle, Eatontown—Liberty 2-1010
RED BAAK REGISTER Thursday, Augm 9, 196Z-&
??*• »**numeroui request* for p ^ tspeeches, but is turning them aildown. He Is taking the same po-
Campaign Committee, will short-ly publish a book titled "Insidethe New Frontier." It will betimed for the fall campaign, andis one of a series of s t a l l e d"inside" books on national and
foreign affairs. , , , UN Arpba*
that foreign affairs is non-par-tisan and officials dealing Withit must keep out of partisan pol-itics. This will be the tint cam-paign in years in which the II-1
linoisan will not be active.
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Adam and Eve
Teenager's QueryDEAE ADAM AND EVE:
I »m a girt 15 and will soon beIf. I would like to obtain mydriver'* license, but my fatherdisagree*. He says I'm tooyoung, and every time I try tomention it again he refuses tolisten. I feel that I am capableof handling a car, and can behelpful with driving chores. AmI asking too much? Do you thinkI am too young? The State High-way Department doesn't!
Too Young?Dear Too Young:
Your Dad knows you betterthan the State Highway Depart-ment. At 15 you may indeed
AnnounceBetrothalAt Party
HIGHLANDS — The engage-ment of Miss Janeta MarionRasmussea to Pvt. William BruceDwyer was announced'here re-cently by the bride-elects par-ents, Mr. and Mrs. George W.Rasmussen. The announcementwas made at a party In theirhome, 9 Locust St.
Pvt. Dwyer Is the son of Mr.and Mrs. William Dwyer, whccelebrated their 27th wedding an-niversary the same evening itheir Lake Worth, Fla., home.
Guests at the Highlands' gath-ering were Mrs. M. J. Ander-son, Brow, N. Y., Miss Rasmus-sen's paternal grandmother; An-dy Reyers, Jersey City, her ma-ternal grandfather; Mrs. MarionWolfe, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ras-mussen, Gerald Rasmussen andMiss Doris McNeil, also of Jer-sey City, and Mr. and Mrs. Nor-man Rasmussen, Hicksville, L. I.
Among others attending wereMr. and Mrs. D. E. Van Ever-dinger and their sons Red andJohn; Mr. and Mrs. Curt En-gelsman, Mr. and Mrs. RaymondKriessler and Mr. and Mrs. CarlMinute, Hoboien; Mr. and Mrs.Thomas Gordon, Mr. and Mrs.George Schmidt, Mr. and Mrs.James E. Smith, Jr., and AlPoUnowskt.
Ibe capable of learning to drive,but right BOW your Pop feelscap**!* of h d l i d
EUROPEAN TRIPMIDDLETOWN-Mr. and Mrs.
Karl F. Wihtol, Red Hill Rd., aretouring England and the conti-nent They will return home nextweek.
W your Pop feelsp of handling you-and
he'i stUl in the driver's seat.Adam
I don't agree, she ahould begiven a chance to prove thatshe can learn, right now, to bea careful driver, If the laws ofher state permit It. If she failsto learn properly, she won't begiven • license.
Eve
DEAR ADAM AND EVE:Do you think a boy 14 yean
old is too young to be engaged ta 15-year-oM girl? Fve been go-Ing with her for about a year.She thinks it would be okay toget engaged and stay engagedthree or (our years, then thinkabout marriage.
Worried 14Dear Worried H.-
It would be better to think forthree or four years about get-ting engaged.
Adam and Eve
DEAR ADAM AND EVE:Am I wrong to want two oi
three days rest away from mythree children (aged 10, S and 4)
years,husband,
who travels, takes me out in thevening about four times a year,and our relatives can't bebothered with our children. I lovmy children dearly and maybeI'm weak, but I can't stand muchmore without a short rest. Amwrong to want this so much? Myhusband says I am just feelingsorry for myself. Suppose I am?
Getting WeakerDear Getting Weaker :
You have a right to feel abit sorry for yourself. Find agood babysitter for the childrenand make your husband takeyou on a two-week vacation.And when you come back, ar-range for a regular "day off"each week (one afternoon, any-way).
AdamEven a housemaid gets a day
off every week—and Sundays.Eve
I've been married 11never hire help. My
9x12 Domestic
ONLY 9 7 2
RUft CLEANERS
col new CA 2-5042
DEAR ADAM AND EVE:Please give me both your opin-
ions on my problem. I am a girl17, a neat, quiet sort of a girl,and I am stout. Why aren't boysinterested in me? Is it because 1am stout, quiet, or what? A lotof boys laugh at me because I amstout. Is this the real reason? Bythe way, I just love your column.
Unhappy GirlDear Unhappy Girl:
Try dieting and exercise tolose weight, and when you areno longer "stout" tee if boysare interested in you. If they
still are not, then that wasn'tthe reason.
AdamRemember, you have nothing
to lose but some unwantedweight
Eve
Send your personal questionsproblems to Adam or EveLowell or both, as you prefer.For a personal, unpublished re-ply, enclose a stamped, ad-dressed envelope. Man toADAM I EVE, in care oi TheRed Bank Register,
Mrs. Brian R. Hulse
Katherine Morgan WedTo Brian Robert HulseEATONTOWN - Miss Kather-
ine Morgan, daughter of Mr. andMrs. Harold Morgan. 08 TintosAve., became the bride of Air-man 2C Brian Robert Hulse, US-AF, Saturday in the EatontownPresbyterian Church. The bride-groom is the son of
Clifford Hulse,Mrs.Mr. andMilford,
Conn., formerly of Fort Mon-mouth.
Rev. Robert W. Reed officiatedthe ceremony which was fol-
lowed by a reception for 200guests in the home of the bride'sparents.
Mr. Morgan gave his daughtermarriage. She wore a full-
length sleeveless silk taffeta»own, tie bodice covered byox-cut overblouse of imported:hantilly lace designed with el-
:iubizza
GivesParty
SEA BRIGHT — EdgewaterJeach Club held a small frylizza party with swimming andeach games recently at the clubjr members and guests.Dance contest winners at the•cnage dance party Wednesday
jght were Vanda Paladino andames Beeson, both of New Mon-nouth, twist; Ruth Johnson, Bel-ord, and Charles Cutaia, Rum-ion, mashed potato and cha-cha,md Linda Sharraba, Shrewsbury,id Louis Mannini, Fair Haven,tterbug.Music was by the Fidells.Chaperones were Mrs. Johntavola, Mrs. Raymond Stubbs,Irs. Henry Canonlco, Mrs. Jack.oversidge, Mrs. Ralph Iannar-me, Mrs. Ralph Powell, Mrs.lobert Yorg, Mrs. Frank Stavola
bow-length sleeves. Her veil oiFrench illusion was fingertip-length, attached to a pillbox ofChantilly lace, and she carriedcascade bouquet of chrysanthe-mums and carnations.
Attended by SistersMatron of honor was Mrs. John
Philip Morgan, Eatontown, sister-in-law of the bride. Miss SuzanneMorgan, the bride's sister, wasbridesmaid and another sister,Yvonne Morgan, served as flow-er girl.
The honor attendant andbridesmaid wore gowns of aqua-marine embroidered silk organzaand pillbox hats covered with thesame material. The flower girl'sfrock was'of white silk organzatrimmed with aquamarine appliques. All three carried cascade dler,bouquets of pink carnations andyellow chrysanthemums.
Lamar Kelly, Milford, Conn.,was best man and ushers wereDonald O. Freeman, Freehold,and Fred Tomalni, Long Branch.
Long Branch GraduateA graduate of Long Branch
High School, the bride is em-
nd Mrs. Ugo Viggiano.The events were planned by
1rs. Nicholas Giaccone, socialrector, assisted Andrew
Fair's Profits<5o to Squad'lMATAWAN - The turnI t t l hat been tubed overTheodore Phelan, drive chairmanof the .Matawan First Aid iRescue Squad, by a groupchildren from the Lochste*Heights Section.
David Baulier, 8; RonaldBauUer, 6; David Drake, 6; andDouglas Drake, 4. held a fairSunday for the benefit of thesquad.
Donations may be sent in careof The Squad 190 Drive Fund,P.O. Box 28, Matawan.
List BridgeClub Results
Local duplicate bridge club:tallied the following results altheir games last week.
Winners at the Thursday sightgames played by members of theGarden State Duplicate BridgeClub to the Willowbrook, FairHaven, were Miss Margaret Mi-chel, Atlantic Highlands, and Mrs.Joseph Farrell, Lincroft, first;Gary Deckelnick, Oakhurst, andHenry Fleming, Long Branch,second, and Mrs. Ruth Patockand Jay Patock, Little Silver,third.
Games are held every Thurs-day night at 8:15 in the Willow-brook under the co-direction olHenry H. Fleming and E. T. Waters. Monthly master point gameis held the fourth Thursday o;every month.
Members of the Jersey ShoreBridge Club played Friday eve-ning In the Oaks, Mlddletown.
a Winners North and South werft:Mrs. Samuel Neuwirth, Elberorand Mrs. Helen Levy, AsburjPark, first; Mrs. Willard Dill,Neptune, and Mrs. KennethChandler, Asbury Park, second,and Vladimir Trvetcoff and Nich-olas Uyss, both of Red Bank.
Winners East and West wereMrs. Albert Schwartz and Mrs,Rosalind Fain, both of Rumson,first; Mrs. Arthur Gross, Jr.. Lit-tle Silver, and E. Grant Scheck,AUenhurst, second, and ArthurHarris, New Shrewsbury, andRobert Young, Hazlet, third.
The games are held each weekunder the direction of Mrs. A.Judson Dunlap and Mrs, Chan-
ployed at Bamberger's Mon-mouth, Eatontown.
The bridegroom, a graduate ofRed Bank High School, is servingat Pease Air Force Base, 'Ports-mouth, N. H.
Following the reception, , thecouple left on a wedding trip toCanada by car. They will resideat 96 Tinton Ave., Eatontown.
Name For Back-To-School Clothes
RUN!WALK!OR RIDE A BICYCLEBut com* sea Donna's
Wonderful Pall Collection ,
of Sub-teen and junior apparel
for High School or College
RegistrationDates Listed
COLTS NECK - The AtlanticTownship School will hold itssummer registration on Aug. 16,in the school auditorium from 9a.m. to noon.
Children registering for kinder-il garten must be five years of age
on or before Sept. 18. Parentsmust present a birth certificateand records of immunizationagainst smallpox, diphtheria,tetanus, whooping cough, andpoliomyelitis. Pupils transferringfrom other districts must bring atransfer card and health records.
Before school opens In Sep-tember, parents of kindergartenchildren will receive an an-nouncement of the session whichtheir child will attend.
Donna*s fdr yourJunior clothes***^
-41M: ("titor loo|c_»O
93 Broad St. Red Bank
County NursesWin Diplomas
NEW BRUNSWICK — ThreeMonmouth County girls receivedtheir diplomas from St. Peter'sHospital School of Nursing atexercises Sunday in St. Peter'sCatholic Church here. BishopGeorge W. Ahr of Trenton con-ferred the diplomas.
Graduates from MonmouthCounty were Miss Carolina Erl-wein, Buena Vista Ave., Rumson;Miss Patricia McMahon, 90 SouthAve., Atlantic Highlands, andMiss Diane Metier, LaurenceHarbor.
Surprise PartyHonors Bride
LITTLE SILVER — Mrs. Ste-phen M. Popper, the former MisCarole Worden of Middletown,
as honored Tuesday night at asurprise miscellaneous shower inhe home of Mrs. William H. Wioff, Jr., 318 Prospect Ave.Mrs. Popper, the daughter ol
iflr. and Mrs'. Harry C. F. Wor-len, was married or June 2 in
merson to Pfc. Stephen Michaetopper, son of the late Mr. and
rs. Harry J. Popper. He is withthe Seventh Infantry of the U. S.Army and will leave Sept. 3 forluty in Korea.Attending the shower were Mrs.'. Kenneth Breece, New Hope,
Pa.; Mrs. Albert Hindi, Maple-wood: Mrs. Clara Gorelich,- Mrs,Caiman Heir and Mrs. Haroldussman, Emerson, Mrs. Charles
H. C. Clark, Jr., Mrs. CharlesT. MacLain, Mrs. Harry McLain,Mrs. Frank J. Maps and Mrs.Arthur Ramsdell, Lpng BranchMrs. Harry C. F. Wordeii, Mid-dietown; Mrs. Frank Hadley, Chi-
ago; Mrs. Robert F. WordenAiss Barbara R. Worden amATS. William H. Wikoff, Jr., Lit-le Silver; Mrs. Thomas M
Grath, Mrs. James A. Wordannd Miss Betty Ann Worden,air Haven; Mrs. William H. Wi-
koff, Sr., Mrs. Florence R. Kenedy, Mrs. Albert W. Worden and
* » . William E. Foster, Redank.
arty, DinnerHonor Couple
LITTLE SILVER - Mr. andAra. Seymour Corwin, Fox Hillr., were honored at a dinner
md cocktail party recently- 'nelebration of their 20th weddinginniversury.Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Tuffiash
Jewman Springs Rd., Lincroftntertained at a cocktail partyn their home before the dinnerarty given by friends of thexmple in Ilventos Restaurantxrnq Branch.
Guests were Dr. and Mrs. Na-han Block, Mr. and Mrs. Dan-iel Freedman, Dr. and Mrs. Sld-ley Hodas, Mr. and Mrs. Willam Klatsky, Mr. and Mrs. Rob-rt Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Pol-ick and Dr. and Mrs. Tuffiash.
KHSSffiW
New TEACHERS, new BOOKS — and
SMARTNEWCLOTHES..:
I«j 45 Broad St. PHONE: 747-S898 RED BANK, N. J,
•ssmtmsmm
Mrs. Frederick F. Nasser
Joyce Zaorski BrideOf Ft. Monmouth SoldierEATONTOWN — Miss Joyce
Ann A. Zaorski, daughter of Mas-ter Sgt (Ret.) and Mrs. StanleyJ. Zaorski, 34, Campbell Dr., be- Hanover, was usher, and Rich-came the bride of Sp. 5c Fred- ard Mitchell, Oceanport, juniorerick F. Nasser In St Dorothea's usher.Catholic Church here July 28.The bridegroom is the son of Mr.and Mrs. Frank Nasser, TerreHaute, Ind.
Rev. James J. McConnell of-ficiated. A reception followed Inthe non-commissioned officershall, Fort Monmouth.
The bride was escorted by herfather. She wore a gown of silkorganza over tulle designed witha scoop neck, long pointedsleeves, and a.fitted bodice withraised appliques. The full skirtended in a chapel train. Herfour-tier fingertip veiling ofFrench illusion was held in placeby a crown of seed pearls andcrystals. The bride carried a cas-cade of carnations and roses.
Three Attendants
Miss Sylvia Feiss, River Plaia,was maid of honor. Bridesmaidwas Mrs. Stanley M. Zaorski,Eatontown, sister-in-law of thebride. Miss Patti Jo Zaorski, athome, was flower girl for hersister.
The attendants all wore street-
EngagementAnnounced
HAWTHORNE - Dr. and Mrs.Chester E. WiDielm of this place,former residents of Mlddletown,announce the engagement of
length gowns of aquamarine silk their daughter, Miss Donna Jeanneorganza over lace bodices and Wilhelm, to Kenneth Josephbouffant taffeta skirts. Thegowns were styled with scoopnecks and short sleeves. Attend-ants wore matching headpiecesof single roses and carried cas-cades of apricot carnations. Themaid of honor's bouquet was ac-cented with yellow carnations.
Area StudentsTo Enter Gibbs
NEW YORK — Three RedBank area girls will begin coursesat Katharine Gibbs School hereSept. 28.
Miss Penny Lynn Graham, 48Conover La., Middletown, is en-rolled in, the special course forcollege women. She is an alumnaof Kent Place School, Summit,and the University of Washington,Seattle. She is the daughter ofMr. and Mrs. T. K. Graham.
Miss Deane Marie BlaisdeU.670 West Front St., River Plaza,is registered for the one-yearsecretarial course. A graduate ofthe Madeira School and BennettCollege, she is the daughter offormer Middletown Mayor andMrs. Frank F. Blaisdell.
Miss Maxiire McLean, 39Wavrrly PI., Red Bank, is en-rolled as a resident student inthe liberal arts-secretarial courseit the school. The daughter oftfrs. Alice M. McLean, she is
graduate of Red Bank HighSchool.
Fund Campaign^o End Sunday
REEVEYTOWN - The mort-gage fund drive for the Reevey-town Church will end Sunday at1:30 p.m. with services- In the:hurch. Rev. O. G. Goodwin ofSt. Stephen's AME Zion Church,Asbury Park, will preach the ser-mon. St. Stephen's Churchchoir will sing.
Mrs. Norman Reevey is chair-man of the drive.
Services are open to the public.
William J. Zaorski, at home,brother of the bride, was bestman. Sp. 5c ' Judson D. Edel,
Lerner EmployeeThe bride is a graduate of Long
Branch High School and is em-ployed by Leraer's, Red Bank.
The bridegroom was graduatedfrom Valparaiso Technical Insti-tute, Chicago, and the radar re-pair course at Fort Monmouth.A member of Theta Chi fra-ternity, he is an instructor withthe United States Army SignalCorps School, Fort Monmouth.
After a wedding trip to NiagaraFalls and Terre Haute, Ind., thecouple will reside at Fort Mon-mouth until the bridegroom's re-tirement from the Army In Oc-tober and afterwards will residein Terre Haute.
Mrs. WhiteTo AddressSecretaries
WEST LONG BRACH — Mrs.Katharine Elkus White, chairmanof the New Jersey HighwayAuthority, will present the key-note address at a secretarialinstitute at Monmouth Collegehere on Oct. 27.
The day-long conference, whichwill be open to everyone inter-ested in the secretarial professionis being co-sponsored by theMonmouth-Ocean Chapter of theNational Secretaries Associationand Monmouth College. The insti-tute program will emphasize thenational motto of NSA — BetterLearning, Better Letters, BetterLiving. The first institute waspresented two years ago by theMonmouth-Ocean Chaper.
In addition to Mrs. White'saddress, two other talks will beoffered at the institute. Luncheonwill be served in the collegedining room and a fashion showwill be presented by the BelmarFashion Corner of Belmar.
In charge of registrations areMrs. Edith Dressier, chairman,Box 77, Marlboro, and MissAmelia GUIy, co-chairman, 311Cedar Ave.,1 West End.
13.047 VisitUSO Beach
LONG BRANCH - A total of13,047 visits were made to theUSO Beach during July, accord-ng to a report issued today by
William Kennedy, USO director.This brings the total to 22,749since the beginning of the season.
The USO Beach is open to illmilitary personnel on active du-ty and their authorized depend-ents. To gain admission, servicepersonnel must show theirArmed Forces ID cards and de-pendents must have a USO fam-ily beach pass. These passes areavailable at the beach club dur-
IR normal hours of operation.The USO Beach Is open from
1C a.m. to 8 p.m. dally. Bustransportation from Fort Mon-mouth leaves the post every hourstarting at 1 p.m. The bus re-turns to the post every hourstarting at 1:30 p.m. The bath-ing facility features dressingrooms, showers, beach suppliesand snack bar.
"Buzzy" and his combo fur-nish the music for the regularThursday evening dances at theAsbury Park USO. Junior host-esses are on hand and refresh-ments are served. Dormitory ac-commodations are available atthe Asbury club on weekends.Sunday mornings an "AfterChurch Coffee Call" Is featuredfrom 11 to 12 noon.
BERMUDA VACATIONKEANSBURG — Mr. and M "
Al Wood and son Richard, CollinsSt., left last week by ]et for »
Murphy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jo- vacation in Bermuda,seph Murphy, Pompton Lakes.
Miss Wilhelm is a graduate ofHawthorne High School and at-tended the Sherwood School ofBusiness. She Is presently em-ployed by the Faber Construc-tion Company, Paterson.
Mr. Murphy was graduatedfrom Pompton Lakes High Schooland served in the United StatesMarine Corps. He is" employedby the Paterson Branch of theHousehold Finance Corporation.
The couple plan to be wedSept. 29.
Dr Wilhelm is a former viceprincipal of Red Bank HighSchool and resided with his fam-ily on Poricy La., MiddletownTownship.
OUTDOOR PARTYHIGHLANDS — Debra Lee
Sanborn, daughter of Mr. andMrs. Edgar Sanborn, 3 RogersSt., celebrated her first birthdaylast week at an outdoor party ather home.
Attending were Margaret Ro-senberg, Charles and Lisa Mc-Call, Robert Rosenberg, Jr., Ron-ald Face, 3d, Michael Hegarty,Candace Barker and Lena Ma-rino.
Also present were her grand-mothers, Mrs. Charles Eckert]and Mrs-. Vivan Sanborn andMrs. Margaret Rothman, great-grandmother, all of Highlands.Also, Mrs. Otto Rothman, greataunt, of Irvington; Mrs. RaymondHegarty, Jersey City; Mrs. Fred-erick Limberg, Mrs. Thomas Ro-senberg, Mrs. Charles McCall,Jr., Mrs. Ronald Face, Jr., Mrs.Robert Rosenberg, Mrs. DorothyMarino and Mrs. Raymond Bar-
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OURONLY
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SHIP AHOY DANCESEA BRIGHT — Ship Ahoy
Beach Club was the scene of arecent dance for members andguests. Al Fazzone and his or-chestra, Red Bank, provided themusic. More than 200 attendedthe party.
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"Dinner by candlelight is ro-mantic," sighs Sassy, "especial-ly if it's with an old flame.*
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Katherine's46 Monmouth St. SH 7*347$ Red Bank
AMPLE PARKING IN REAR OF SALON
Mmmouih Names. In the earliest years of ifee Mbbmootii settlementliving in clow conujjiunities- w u favored and orderedby some governments, with farms and pastures in out-lying lots, as protection against Indian raids. In spiteof this danger the immigrants scattered over the coun-tryside in search of tfome sites near streams that wouldsupply water power! Because the chief occupation at'
first was farming, sites for] These mills were usuallynamed after the builders orowners. Grist mills and sawmills began operating wherever
• water was available, Ingable much farther inland than streams even beaver dams pro-they are today, so many grist vided power. In fact the Indiansmills could ship flour by sailing *"** *
grist mills were much indemand. Many of thestreams of yore were navi-
vessels as well as by wagon fore the coming of the whiteload. ' „ ; man. Most today are gone, but
may often be found by the re-mains of old stone work. Someremain like the lovely one atBuck's Mills near Colts Neck,The mill pond is still lovely atHurley's mill site which wasonce the center of a communityserving a large surrounding area.There is a beautiful mill pondin Englishtown, and a restored
„ „ _ m "l house. The Bennett mill atCrtuld. 8 Paris Ave!, and'the tate]™1*0" £»«» W M , f o b ? b I y J * «
A full list of the mills of Mon<mouth Is not available, butnames on the early maps arerevealing and may help those!tracing their families. Almost ev-
Miss GouldIs Wed toH. B. Hubbs
KEANSBURG - Miss1 Joan K.Gould, daughter of Mrs. Marge
David Gould, was married July28 to Harold B. Hubbs, GarfieldAve., Belford, son of the late Mr.and Mrs. Harold Hubbs.
Mayor Louis CoUlchlo offld-]ated at the ceremony: in Mshome. A lawn receptto followed 2 7 h a m l e t h a d a t A""*, one'at the home of the bride's grand- t h e r e w e r e m B n y " • t h e M a n «mother, Mrs. Charles Ellefsen,East Keansburg, for the immedl-ate family and friends.
Attendants were MM. FrankBenning, Belford, sister of thebridegroom, and David P. Gould,Keansburg, brother of the bride,
The bride is a graduate ofMiddletown Township H i g hSchool.
The couple have returned froma wedding trip to Atlantic Cityand are BOW residing in AtlanticHighlands.
End SummerBook Program
LTTLE S L RLITTLE SILVER* — The con-lwas this a grist mill and waslcousins of the bride to be.elusion of the summer readingprogram of the little Silver Li-brary was celebrated by a partythen Monday.
The program, sponsored bythe Little Sflver Friends of theLibrary, was organized and con-ducted by Mrs: Nell Smith with]the aid of Girl Scout volunteers,who heard the book reports. Atotal of 609 books went read byj30 children during the month ofJuly.
Winners in the younjer groupwerec
Alan Scheming, gift certificate;Carol Whelan, red ribbon: Cas-sandra Alexander, blub ribbon,and Nancy LJnd, yellow ribbon.In the older group, winners were:Gall Walnwrlght, gift certificate;Dick Corson, red ribbon; EileenjWichnuum, Uue ribbon,' and Bar-bara Bender, yellow ribbon.
Shower FetesAugust Bride
MATAWAN - Miss SarahLouise Keeler Pearson. 44 ValleyDr., was the guest of honor at• surprise miscellaneous showergiven by Mrs, George Burrows,Matawan,Chapman
and Miss Patriciaat Miss Chapman's
borne, Oneida Ave., Portaupeck.Miss Pearson will become the
bride of Jamie T. Clark, Brown-town, Aug. 18 in the MatawanPresbyterian Church.
Also attending were Mrs. Sam-uel Clark, Browntown, Mrs.Worsdell R. Pearson, Miss An-noinette Delia Pietro, Miss Fran-ces Kaler, Miss Sandra Penroeand Mrs. Raymond Duiand, Mat-awan: Miss Lorin Pulvennuller,Madison Park; Mrs. CliffordChapman, Portaupeck; Mrs. Rob-jert Mount, Long Braiicb; MissMiriam Sample, Leone Park,Madison Township; Miss GloriaSchlnket. Mrs. Henry A. Schln-kel, Miss Judith Davis. SayreWoods South and Mrs; Hugh V.Kelley, East Orange.:
Back-to-SchoolWITH . . ; .
had some mills of their own be-
quan, of course one at Allaire,and there may have been tidemills like the famous one onLong Island, which Is still in[operation. With flour the true"staff of life" home mills werethe centers of most villages.
ANSWER
to say that Mrs. Jacob B. Rue,Jr., Telegraph Hill Rd., Holradelj
tion No. 56.Question No. SI: Information
owner of the mill on Mr. Amory
names of the successive owners,
it later a powder mill?E.E.B.3rd, Middletown
Miss GerardIs HonoredGerard, 161 Sycamore Ave., was
neth Scher, 55 Elm La. The
[Wasserman and Mrs. Elias Long"Red Bank; Mrs. William Zlm-
setie Harris, New Shrewsbury;Mrs. Harold Melstricb, Little Sil-ver; Mrs. Abraham Zager,Shrewsbury; Mrs. Joseph Brow-er and Miss Judith Brower, Deal;and Mrs. David Sklar, Rumson
Also, Mrs. Jerry Poling, Cleve-Icnd, Ohio; Mrs. Jerald Hlrsch-berg and Miss Phyllis Hirschberg, Newark; Mrs. ThomasMoore, Mrs. Sol Meyers andMrs. Rebecca Gershater, LongIsland; Mrs. Phillip Singer, NewYork, and Mrs. Leonard Silver-man and Miss Lois Silverman,New Brunswick.
AIR CADET — Jay Kappmei.r, son of Mr. and Mrs.John H. Kappm.ier, 95 Cloverdale Cir., New Shrews.bury, N. J., is attending the Air Force ROTC summertraining unif at Lockbourn* Air Force Base, Columbus,Ohio. Cadet Kappemeier, who completed his junioryear in advanced Air Force ROTC, is attending a four-week summer training period ai part of his ReserveOfficer Training at college. Following graduation atGettysburg College, he will be eligible for appointmentas a second lieutenant in the Air Force.
Bride-to-BeIs Honored
CLIFFWOOD — Miss JudithAnn Spoor, 44 Edgeview Rd.Cllffwood, was guest of honor ata surprise miscellaneous andpersona! shower given by her
An unidentified lady has called bridal attendants in the CUffwoodInn.
A buffet supper was served.can provide an answer to <jues- Hostesses ~ were Miss Patriciati N 56 Benner, Matawan; Miss Barba-, ;
ra Konar, Miss Patricia Burgey,M H l d B h d Mi K
Q g y ,is wanted on the first name or Mrs. Harold Behr and Miss Kar-
en Spoor, Cllffwood; Miss Pa-Hasklll's property, and the trice Remier, Colonla, and Miss
Linda Vankat, East Patenon,
Miss Spoor will become thebride of Carlos Concepcion, Cliff-| wood, Sept. IS in St. Joseph'sCatholic Church, Keyport.
Guests were Mrs. MarjorieConcepcion and Mrs. George A.Spoor, CUffwood, mothers of theEngaged couple; Mrs. Edward
SHREWSBURY — Miss Susan|Vankat, East Paterson; Mrs.George Penner,. Colonia; Miss
honored at a bridal shower Sun-JMargaret Flynn, Keyport; Mrs.day in the hon»e_of Mrs. Ken-|Edward Walsh, Miss Dorothea
Wedemeyer, Mrs. Frederickdaughter of Mr. snd Mrs. Mil- Domlnlcic," Mrs. George Konar,to» Gerard, she will become the Mrs. George Burgey, Miss Rosebride of David A. Undzy of Hanson, Mrs. Jospeh Bienkowski,Mishawaka, I n l , Sept. J. Mrs. Edward Malcolm, all of
Attending were Mrs. Irving CUffwood: Mrs. F. L. Van Ro-d e * Miss Elizabeth Havens,Mrs. Vivian Nappl and Mrs
merman, Middletown; Miss AorlCharles Connors, Union Beach;Mrs. Eileen Kelly, Mrs. JosephSmith and Miss Dorothy Smith,Matawan, and Mrs. Robert Ogg,Parlin.-
Farewell PartyFor Burches
SHREWSBURY — The pooland patio of Mr. and Mrs.Charles Kroll, Corn La., werethe setting Saturday for a fare-well party given by members ofthe First Unitarian Church ofMonmouth County for Mr. andMrs. Blair Burch, Fair Haven.
Mr. Burch, a research chemist|and executive with the HerculesPowder Co., Parlin, Is belngjxansferred to the company'sWilmington, Del., location. Mr,
Miss HyerTo Marry
KEYPORT — Mr. and Mrs.Stanley L. Hyer, 27 Monroe St.,announce the engagement oftheir daughter. Miss Carol Ma-rie Hyer, to John Robert Bam-bricfc son of Mr. and Mrs.James Bambrlck, 209 Washing-ton St.
Miss Hyer was graduated fromKeyport High School and is em-ployed as a secretary by theArmstrong Cork Co., Frances PI.
Mr. Bambrlck, a graduate ofRed Bank Catholic High School,is employed by the Jersey Cen-ttal Power and Light Co., Allen-]hurst.
Bridal ShowerHIGHLANDS — Miss Dorotlv,
Lynch of Wilk«s Barre, Pa., wasguest of honor at a bridal showeiigiven Saturday, by Mrs. Ear)Morse and Mrs. John McDermotlin Mrs. Morse's home, 151 Nave-sink Ave.
Miss Lynch, daughter of Mrs!Peter F. Lynch of Wilkes Bam
Holy Name Unit|To Hold Dance
RED BANK — St. James[Catholic Church Junior Hoi
and the late Mr. Lynch, will be-Name Society will sponsorcome the- bride of William JSh f M H
f William JShea, son of Mra.Helen J. Shea,61 Navesink Ave. on Aug. 18 inOur Lady f P lOur Lady of Perpetual Help Music will be by The Fidels.
Richard McCabe and WilliamKane are co-chairmen. Refresh-ments will be served.
Church.Guests included Mrs. Shea,
Mrs. Harry Dilger, Mrs. CharlesQuast, Mrs. Henry Quast, Mrs.Emiel Aufieri, Mrs. William V.Rauscher, Mrs. Peter Blewett,, « A J 'Mrs. Robert Reed, Mrs. William W i n S 3 A w a r d sLoihle, Mrs. Daniel Ferenai,Mrs. Hubbard Stiles, Mrs. Eliza.beth Heliker, Mrs. Howard Brey,Sr., and Miss Edith Schmedes,all of Highlands.
Abo, Mrs. Joseph A. Shea,Sensfield, Germany, who is vaca-tioning with Mrs. Helen Shea,iMrs. Arthur C. Railce, Jr., Leo-nardo; Mrs. Daniel Collopy, Na-vesmk; Mrs. John Kelleher,Keansburg; Mrs. Robtrt Grover,West Keansburg; Mrs. Alfred W..-.—, . -.Wright, Hilton Park; Mrs. John|Majorette." The corps
Reception ForSilver Wedding
UNION BEACH - The 25thBurch fs also a past president oflwedding anniversary of Mr. andthe Unitarian Fellowship.
Co-hostesses assisting Mrs.
ROUTE nMIDDLETOWN
Kroll were Mrs. J. Walter Marvin and Mrs. Richard Perry,Middletown; Mrs. Lester Scheler,New Shrewsbury, and Mrs. War-en Sawyer, Little Silver.
CONTEST WINNERPORT MONMOUTH - Chris-
tine Olsen, daughter of Mr. andMrs. Alfred Olsen, 6 Gordon Ct.,has been notified by the Kaiser-Aluminum Corporation that sheIs one of the winners in theirnationwide coloring contest spon-sored earlier this year.
Christine returned recentlyfrom a three-week vacation InLake Shore Park, Laconia, N. H,She traveled with her grandmoth-er, Mrs. Ernest Walling, Hatlet,and Mrs. Augusta Holmes, Key-
Iport. Later she was Joined by her,' parents.
"Beat the heat" dine on the waterAT THE ' ;
LOBS/TER
Good Food \f£„ _ . Sensible Prices I •>
belting View L '•JERSEY LOBSTERS — SEA FOOD
Wt will cater your dambaktf.ON MAPlASQUAN RIVER'S SCENIC83 CHANNEL DRIVE
Point Pleaiqnt Beach TW 9-6700Closed Tues., optn from II Noon 'Ul II P. M. dally
Mrs. Clifford Evans, Ml Morn-ingslde Ave., was marked' at areception recently in-the HarrisGardens fire house.
Mr. and Mrs. Evans were mar-ried July 18, 1937 in St. Ann'3Catholic Church, Keansburg, byBev. John Lucitt.
Mrs. Raymond Barels, Adams-ton, the former Miss Mary Taka,sister of Mrs. Evans, was maidof honor. Mr. Barels was bestman.
Mrs. Evans, the former MissJulia Taka,'• Is the daughter ofMrs. Helen Taka, Columbia Ave.,and the late Michael Taka. SheIs a graduate of the Union Beachschools and Keyport High School.
Mr. Evans Is the son of Mr.and Mrs. Claude Evans, SouthAmboy. He is a graduate of theKeyport schools and is employedby the Cohen Liquor Store, Keyport_
7/ They'reBUSTERBROWN
They Wear!
Attends SeminarNORTHAMPTON, Mass. -
Miss Ruth I. Onken, a member]of the professional staff of Chil-dren's Psychiatric Center, Eatonto™, N. J., has completed a10-day graduate seminar for ex-]perienced social workers at theSchool for Social Work of SmithCollege.
Miss Onken, who resides at 122North Riverside Ave., Red Bank,N. J.ter'sgram.
is co-ordinator for the cen-school consultation
FAMILY RETURNSMIDDLETOWN - Mr. and
Mrs. Paul J. O'Rourke, 61 Con-over \ A . , and children Paul, Ste-phen, Kathleen, Anne and Teresareturned home Saturday from atwo-week vacation in South Well-fleet on Cape Cod, Mass.
Scout TroopsReturn Home
MATAVAN - 1m MatawanOftJ Scoot troop* have- returae:p ttolrbomes after a four-da;stay at Camp Nomoco, Smitli
I t u r * • • • . • ; ' . •
Mrs. Clinton Heyer, leaderTroop 230, and Mrs. Vernon El-lison, leader of Troop 593, acompanied Wendy Born, TotTomasello, Linda Kost,- ClaudiiRlegert, Ann Doumas, PatriciAllen, Gwen Harris, PatriciHeyer, Elaine Charlsen, LoiSmith, Susan Marvel, Nancy Racliffe, and Alice Ellison. Jacquiline Kordulak, Belmar, and Beinice Heyer, Matawan, were|guests.
The girls lived In tents amcooked their own meals oveicharcoal and wood fires.
Miss Mary Lou Williams, RedBank, was camp director amMrs. William Till, Raritanship, served as nurse.
The group were transportedMrs. William Ratcliffe, Mr. andMrs. William Smith, Mr. aniMrs. H. A. Charlsen and Mrs,William Bom.
Tuttles ReturnFrom Midwest
MATAWAN - Mr. and Mrs,David L. Tuttle have returned t<[their home on Aberdeen Rd. afteia two-weeks visit with their sonin-law and daughter, Lt. amMrs. James N. Farrell, MineAir Force Base, Minot, N. D.
Lt. and Mrs. Farrell are lhparents of a son, James Newton,Jr., who was born July 5, anddaughter, Kathleen.
Idence Aug. 23 from 8 p.m. t(11:30 p.m. in the Red BankCatholic High School cafeteria
b
Coastalier Corps
MATAWAN TOWNSHIP — ThiGuadalcanal Coastaliers Junio:Drum and Bugle Corps receivedthree awards in the Stand-StilCompetition presented recentl;by the Union Beach Fire DeIpartment in co-operation with theJersey Shore Area Drum CorpsCouncil.
The contest was held at thiKeyport High School Stadium.
Miss Mary Harrison wiawarded a trophy for "The Besl
a trophy for fourth place ani[the color guard placed third.
Brown AlumniTo Hold Party
RUMSON — The MonmouthBrown Club will hold its seconannual summer cocktail partyAug. 18 from 5 to 7 prn. in thi
Loftus, Mrs. John Sheehan, Mrs.Paul F. Muir, and Mrs. KennethGrover, Atlantic Highlands, andMiss Jean Dolhal, Perth Amboy
Past OfficersHold Session
HIGHLANDS — Mrs. Stephen, - t J _ , m u-^-,H. Faller and Mrs. John L. De-|home of Arnold Tulp, Blackpolnidrlck entertained members of thePast Presidents Club or the Ladies Auxiliary of the TwmlightPost, American Legion, recentlyin Mrs. Faller's home, 85 Wash-ington Ave.
Following the meeting thebirthdays of Mrs. Robert P. Capslinger and Mrs. Ethel Kollmarwere celebrated. Mrs. Myrtle]Lawrence, a past president of theauxiliary and a former residentof Second St., Highlands, nowresiding at Military Park, Fla.,attended as a guest.
Mrs. Claudia France and Mrs.Frank Wright will entertain the]group Aug. 28. Mrs. Ethel Koll-mar and Mrs. George Selah willbe hostesses Sept. 24.
Rd., president.Peter Harvey, Fair Haven, 1
chairman. Co-chairman of re:ervations Is William A. WescotNew Shrewsbury, secretary.
VISIT ENDSMATAWAN TOWNSHIP — Mrs
Frank Rigglo and son, Joseph,have returned to their home iiNewark after spending a wee!with Mr, Riggio's parents, Mr.and Mrs. Joseph Riggio, LloyiRd., Matawan.
Mr. Rigglo Joined his familySaturday evening and returnee'with then on Sunday.
DINING OUTMIDDLKTOWN — Linda Am
Tatum, daughter of Mr. and Mrs,Leonard Tatum, 2 Louis Cir.celebrated her second birthdaySaturday while vacationing inWildwood with dinner in theLobster House, Cape May.
Attending beside her parentwere her grandparents, Mr. andMrs. Laurence Tatum, Toms Riv-er, and an aunt and uncle, Mr,and Mrs, Ronald Tatum, Plain'ield.
RADIO CLUB PICNICHIGHLANDS — The Bayshore
pro-| Radio Club will hold its annualjfenic Sunday at Connors Hotellere.
GUESTS FROM TRENTONH A Z L E T — Rev. George
Deutsch of Trenton and his parnts, Mr. a n d Mrs. Joseph
Deutsch of Morrestown, recentlyisited Mr. and Mrs. Benedict
Jione, Holmdel Rd.
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An American Brings LifeTo Tiny Mexican Village
By RICHARD DAWESCOND1DA, Mexico (AP) -
For the first time, the 45 chil-dren in the Adobe school houseof this tiny Mexican village are;sitting at desks instead of onhe floor.They're writing with long,
Hrm sticks of chalk on a shinyblackboard that wasn't there be-fore, and at recess they playwith the first basketballs manyof them ever saw.
Richard Streb, a sandy-haired
Name HardingFund Chairman
RUMSON — Charles B. Harding, Rumson Rd., will serve as1
general chairman of the 1962-63campaign of the New York Ar-thritis and Rheumatism Founda-tion, it was announced today.
Charles B. Harding
Mr. Harding is the senior part-ner of Smith, Barney & Co., NewYork investment bankers. Ascampaign chairman he will leadsame 30,0(10 volunteers in raisingfunds for the foundation's pro-grams of care and informationservices for arthritics, researchand professional education. Thecampaign begins in October. Thegoal is $1 million.
To VacatePaper Street
EATONTOWN-The Mayor andCouncil last night introduced anrdinance to vacate a paper por-
tion of Grant Ave., as originallylaid out.
The unused portion, which Is to'be vacated, goes, on paper, fromthe parkway spur to a dead endat the parkway, crossing only theStella property en route.
The owners of the property re-quested the vacation and will payfor the costs of the ordinance.Public hearing will be Aug. 22jat 8 p.m. in the Borough Hall.
American, brought them a tasteof the 20th century after hestumbled1 on to Escondida lastyear while searching for archae-ological ruins,
The village was similar tomany which still exist through-out Mexico despite governmentefforts and gradual progress.- Escondida had no electricity.
Its streets were rutty andpaved. Basic sanitary facilitieswere unknown. Its two-storyadobe schoolhouse was virtuallybare. v
It was only, 250 miles west ofbustling Mfexi'co City, but Its lifewas of another century.
Even its name, which in Eng.llsh means "hidden," echoed itsisolation.
As the village teacher talkedwith Streb she raked her fingersthrough her hair In a futile cffort to arrange it. She had nocomb.
Streb talked with other vlllagers, learned that 19 of the 45:choolchi!dren were orphans, and
that the highest ambition ofmany of Escondida's 200 resi-lents was to leave their villageorever.
Streb promised the villagerslie would return with help.
Back in teylttown, N.Y., he:old the students and teachers atonas E. Salk Junior HighSchool about Escondida, organ-ized a Mexican fiesta to raisemoney, and got help from busilessmen.With $1,644 in his pockets andMexican flag made by his wife
'or the villagers, Streb camelack to Escondida to keep hisiromlse.Taking the village leaden with
iim, Streb set out for Guadala-jara, the nearest large city, andspent the money he had raised.
Back to Escondida he broughtthousand pencils, dozens of
books, boxes of thumbtacks andhalk, maps and desks to outfithe school.
: Clothes, TooHe brought a complete outfit
if clothes for every man and boyn the village, and bolts of cloth0 make dresses for the womenind girls. .He brought a sewing machine,
ocls, basketballs, baseballs, and'actory-made candy to give thechildren a rare treat. ,
With an eye toward improvinghe villagers' standard diet ofrijoles and tortillas, he brought1 chickens and 20 rabbits andlaterial to build pens for them.Said school teacher Refugio
Rodriguez as she watched thedesks for her school being un-loaded:
'No words can tell the peopleoi Levlttown how grateful thepeople of Escondida are for thisgenerous gift."
Streb hopes to talk other U.S.schools into raising money to help! other needy Mexican village*.
Name Rumson ManTo Editor's Post
NEWARK — Alfred E. La-Brecque, Jr., 34 Ridge Rd., Rum-son has been named administra-t e editor of the 1962-63 Rutgers
Law Review;1 .Mr. LaBrecque, who received
his A.B. degree from DartmouthCollege, will be a senior this fallat the law school.
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SECTION TWOj " V . i
THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1962 7c PER COPY
OFF TO CAROLINA — Lt. Robert L. Armour, left/new commander of the SandyHook Group, U. S. Coast Guard, shakes hands with Cmdr. Lawrence O. Hamilton,retiring group commander, at farewell dinner last night in Crystal Brook Inn, Eaton-town, sponsored by the Sandy Hook Division, USCG Auxiliary. In center is OlafT. Nordrum, past captain of the auxiliary. Cmdr. Hamilton has been assigned to theCoast Guard cutter John Quil in North Carolina.
Plan State Police IncreaseTRENTON (AP)-The Hughes
administration is considering a 20,per cent manpower increase inthe state police, calling for 120 ad-ditional state troopers to copewith rising traffic volume andhighway deaths.
An informed source told TheAssociated Press Wednesday thatCov. Richard J. Hughes will beasked to include the request formore state troopers in his pro-posed state budget for next year.
The additional troopers wouldraise the force from approximate-ly 600 men to more than 700.
Last month, the highway deathtoll was higher than in any Julysince 1937, state statistics showed.
, State police are presently oncall 90 hours a week, includingtime spent sleeping in barracksbut away from home. In order ""to reduce this to 70 hours a week,Atty. Gen. Arthur Jj Sills wantsauthorization for 1201 more statetroopers, the source said.
Sills declined to "comment oathe planned request T.
say he has asked the civil serv-ice department to fill 24 vacanties in the Motor Vehicle inspec-tor force. He said 14 of thesewould fill existing vacancies and10 are new posts.
.Hughes requested 10 addition'al state troopers in his last budgelmessage, but Sills said Hughe:would get the Motor Vehicle In-spectors instead, (his year.
$12^,000 Bond IssueGels Council Approval
EATONTOWN - Mayor andCouncil last night adopted an or-dinance authorizing a bond issuiof $128,000 with which to built!a new fire house on Broad St.,and a second municipal garage
5t-
But the attorney general did the measure.
The sole speaker at the publhearing preceding, passage wasCol. George A. Morgan, formerchairman of the Sewerage Au-thority and former member olthe Planning Board, who praised
Late News BriefsASSOCIATED PRESS
SOMERVTLLE — SomerseiCounty Physician Dr. DominickT. Russo was arrested last nighiand charged with advising anddirecting a 23-year-old woman tohave an illegal abortion per-formed. Dr. Russo, In his 50swas arrested at his office inRaritan on a complaint of Som-erset County Prosecutor ArthurMeredith. He was arraigned be-fore Magistrate Robert Brokawhere. No plea was entered tothe charge. Brokaw released himIn $1,000 bail pending a preliminary hearing Tuesday, Aug. 14, atRaritan. The prosecutor accusedDr. Russo of advising and direct-Ing a North Plainfield woman tohave an illegal abortion per-f o r m e d at M i a m i , Fla.Meredith said Dr. Russo was paid$1,400 for the referral by thewoman's boy friend. The womandid have an operation and camethrough without any ill effects,according to Meredith. Dr. Rus-so has been county physicianmore than eight years. He alsohas been the county jail physicianfor a year.
HILLSIDE — Fire took thelives of scores of animalsvalued at 110,000 by the own-er of the Hollywood Pet Shophere. The animals lost jester-day Included a dozen chinchil-las, a rare $1,000 magpie, sev-eral pedigreed dogs, tropicalfish and 60 canaries and para-keets, Anthony Katawlck, Jr.,owner of the shop, said. Twomakes, believed harmless,were missing. Firemen rescued•bout nine puppies and a whiteangora cat from the flames.
MORRISTOWN — James HVance, Jr., 18. accused of theslaying of two teenage girls, isscheduled to enter a plea tomor-row to two indictments charginghim with murder. Charles MEgan, Jr., court-appointed defense attorney, said Vance wouldplead innocent to the deaths ofMargaret Ann Kennedy andNoreen Buckley of MorrisPlains, The girls' bodies werefound In a lonely lane in MorrisTownship June 20. Morris CountyProsecutor Frank C. .Scerbo saidVance would be tried first irt con-nection with the slaying of Miss
boy was struck when he rodeoff the curb in front of hishome and into the street. Thedriver of the car was Mr».Barbara Clement, J5, of JO Nas-sau PI., Princeton Junction.
CAMDEN — Attorney HarrisY. Cotton of Woodbury has beennamed a receiver for the Cam-den A Burlington County Bus Co,Cotton was appointed yesterdajby Camden County Judge RCooper Brown, sitting "in SuperioiCourt. He also ordered the buscompany to show cause by Oct.24 why it should not be adjudgedInsolvent The line operates be-tween Camden and Medford andbetween Camden and Lumberton
Kennedy. Exact date for the trialwill be set at a court calendarcall Sept. 14, the prosecutor said.
PRINCETON -r Robert Nal-alat, 4, son of Mr. and Mrs.Samuel Naiilat of IS Canoe•rook Dr., died yesterday frombjorles suffered when ha wa»Mt by • car white riding Mstricycle. State police said the
ATLANTIC CITY - The bodyof Joseph Owens, 28, of AtlanticCity, who reportedly jumped In-to the ocean Friday with hisclothes oa, was found beside abuoy in Absecond Inlet yesler-day. Police said that Owens,only two weeks married, hadbeen fishing with bis bride froma jetty when be told her he wasgoing for a swim. He Jumpedin fully clothed except forshoes and socks, police said.
NEW YORK— A New Jersey-an has filed an action to directtrustees of the Texas Pacific.and Trust to open their books
to his inspection, it was disclosedyesterday; The action was filedby John S. Kroese, Sr., an elec-trical supply dealer in New York.Krose lives at Teaneck, N. J.The action will come before thestate Supreme Court Aug. 20Kroese owns more than 60,000shares in the unincorporated busi-ness trust. His attorney, IrvingSpieler, said the stock was worthupwards of $1 million at currentmarket prices.
LINDEN — A Ducknapingcase was solved here yesterdaywith no foul play involved.Lucky, a duck, was back withthe Joseph Gordon family at16M Summit PI. Lucky disap-peared Tuesday from the Gor-dons' yard. Neighbors said theysaw a boy pick the animal upand run away. Yesterday thetelephone rang and the callersaid the duck had been broughtto a farm here by (he motherof a little boy who foundLucky on the street..
NEW YORK-Willlam Murphy.57, Gibbstown, N. J., an iron-worker, was killed yesterdaywhen he fell from the ninth tothe seventh floor of a buildingunder construction at Third Ave.and 47th St. Police said Murphyslipped while walking across anopen steel girder. •
MotorcycleKills Horse
ATLANTIC TOWNSHIP — Amotorcyclist and a horsetangled but night.
The motorcycle operator hasa broken arm.
The hone is dead.State police, Shrewsbury bar-
racks, said the animal, ownedby Brace Crieghton, a local res-ident, darted across Rt. 34just south of Rt. 520 and wasstruck by the two-wheeler,driven by Peter Ernst, 21, ofBailey Ave., Elizabeth.
Another cycle, operated byJohn Mastenoa, 19, also ofElizabeth, rammed Into therear of the one driven by Ernst,whose right arm was broken.
Both men were taken to Rlv-enriew Hospital, The Master-son youth was treated for mi-nor Injuries and released.
Police said they do not knowhow the horse got loose.
Vandal CurbAt SchoolIs Sought
OCEANPORT — Faced withseveral enterings, or breakingand enterings, into Wolf Hill Ave-nue School this summer, theBoard of Education last night de-termined to recheck its doorlocks and look into the possibilitjof reinforcing them.
Charles M. Guiilaudeu, chair-man of the building and groundscommittee, told the board thatvandals recently had removedthree fire extinguishers from theschool. One was found, dis-charged, in nearby woods, hesaid.
Board member Albert Weigelremarked that it was so easyto enter the school that culpritscaught could not be charged withbreaking and , entering.
It was pointed out that locksthat might slow the evacuationof children in an emergencycould not be installed. Panic barsare presently in use at all exits.
Mr. Guiilaudeu received the au-thorization of the board to replacewooden doors at the east end ofthe building with metal and glassdoors at a cost not to exceed$615. The new doors might im-prove the situation there, he said.
Delay HearingOn Subdivision
MATAWAN TOWNSHIP - The'lanning Board last night post-
poned its hearing on the Levitsubdivision map for a section ofIvy Hill Park until Aug. 22 at 7
p.m., because not all propertyowners in the adjacent area hadreceived hearing notices.
The board approved the pre-liminar^ subdivision map cover-ing nine\]otj in the Levitt Cam-bridge Part section.
Chairmani Joseph P. Stengerreported "that there was no meet-Ing last night with Levitt of-ficials regarding the builder'silan to add 500 houses to the de-•lopment.
Wrong Land PricesSHREWSBURY TOWNSHIP -
In a story in yesterday's Register:oncernlng the signing of conracts for the purchase of prop-erty slated for Urban Renewal,he price to the Industrial UrbanRenewal Corporation of Shrews-iury Township was erroneously;iven as $35,000. The Industrialite will be purchased for $3,500.
cost of $2,400 for the 1959 pur-:hase of grounds from the gov-
ernment was mistakenly listed as24,000.
To Accept PupilsIn New Boundary
HOLMDEL TOWNSHIP - AI-:though the boundary line ques-tion between this municipalityand Raritan Township has notbeert fully resolved, local schoolofficials are ready to accept anynew pupils that will result fromthe boundary change.
The Board of Education an-nounced last night that studentsliving in the area that is nowRaritan, but will become Holm-del, may register in the Holmdelschool system.
A requirement set by the boardwas that the affected studentsmust obtain certification fromthe Raritan Township tax asses-sor. The certification was re-ported necessary because of themany inquiries being received atthe Elementary School.
It was also reported that ameeting will be held betweenJohn H. Mount and William R.Greene, Holmdel and Raritantax assessors, respectively, to de-termine the status of residentswhose property is split by theboundary line, A report is ex-pected before Aug. 15.
Architect PactBernard Kellenyi of Red Bank,
architect for the 20-room ele-mentary school on the 24-acretract in Holmdel Village, wasgiven a contract which providesfor 6 per cent of actual construc-tion costs.
The architect's compensation Isconditioned upon favorable actionof the voters at a referendumplanned -for < September.
Board members will meet withthe State Department of Educa-tion in Trenton Aug., 29 for ahearing on the proposed construc-tion of the elementary school.
In other,business the board:Senior Teachers
Approved as senior teacherswith a supplemental salary of$100 a year: Mrs. Mary W. Col-
lins, Holmdel Village; Mrs,Averil Wilson, Hillcrest School;Neil Bry, CenterviUe; and RalphRobinson, Elementary School.
Adopted a new ruling restrict-ing smoking in the ElementarySchool except in the auditorium,teachers' room and office, ancrequested all organizations usinfthe multipurpose room to use asitrayj.
Purchased a piano from Grif-fith Piano Co., Newark, for $525for use in the new kindergartenroom, and a Burroughs addingmachine from Bayshore Station-ers, Keyport, for $159.
Set. Aug. 29 for a special meeting to resolve transportatioiproblems.
Approved $250 for Ralph Robin-son for audio-visual aids.
Drain JobIs PromisedBy King
SHREWSBURY — CouncilmaiHadley S. King Tuesday nighpledged action on a SilverbroolRd. drainage problem—next yeaiif not this year.
The matter was brought to thattention of Borough Council b;Leo F. Sadkowski, 30 SilverbroolRd., an Independent candidatefor council.
Mr. Sadkowski said five house!are affected by large pools o:water which1 collect in the street
Mr. King, road committechairman, said the cost of thiproject has been estimatednear $5,000, including the installation of two catch basins.
If that figure can be trimmed,he said, the problem will be rem-edied with funds from this year'sbudget.
OK Quarter-MillionInTownshipProject
MIDDLETOWN -* The Town-ihip Committee last night ap-proved three ordinances and in-troduced another, plus an emer-gency resolution, authorizing ex-penditure of more than a quarter-million dollars for rc^», drain-age and other projecls.
The biggest single item was anordinance authorizing expendi-ture of $180,000 for the first stageof a massive drainage programor the township.The committee approved ordi-
nance authorising $60,000 to bespent for the improvement ofMurphy Rd.; $5,600 for improve-ment of Old Woman's Hill Rd.,and $5,900 for realignment of theMiddletown-Lincroft Rd.-DwightRd. intersection at the site of theThompson Intermediate School.
The emergency resolution pro-ides $6,000 for emergency tax
map work to get the documentready for use by the start of the1963 tax year. There are insuf-ficient funds to cover cost of thiswork in the existing budget, of-ficials reported.
, ProjectsThe drainage program involve
the following projects:Farrell Dr. and Normandy Ct.
Reilly St. and Kelly St.; TayloiMe. and Sunset Ave.; Irving St,
Bellvue Ave. and Teinch St.1
Greene Ave. and LeonardvilleRd.; Poplar St. and Chestnut St.Warren Ave. and Harmony Ave/Oakland Ave. and Bayview Ave.Millbrook Dr. and Lone Oak Rd.;Maplewood, section I,; Broadwayat the Navy Depot.; KitmaryAve., June PI., Sylvia Ter., Ward
ve. Collinson Dr., Wilson Avend Thorne PI.; Acker Dr. and
Niles Ave.; Rt. 36, Main St., andBray Ave.; Bayslde Dr., Swart-zel Dr., Swimming River Rd.,Barbara Ter., and Morris Ave.
In other business: .... ,' Inspect DevelopmentThe committee ordered thi
Miss JayceeContest SetFor Aug. 26
ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS-The.tlantic Highlands Jaycees an-lounce the participation of the•Leonardo Rifles,", MlddtetownAmerican Legion, in the forth:oming Miss Jaycee of GreaterUlantic Highlands contest.The contest will be held at
p.m., Aug. 26 at the municipal,radit harbor, in conjunction withhe Lions Club Regatta.All single girls, ages 16 through
are invited to enter the con-•st. Among the judges will be!ric Hedlund of the New Yorkunday Mirror.In addition to a modeling jobIth Sftinbach Co., Red Bankid Asbury Park, the winner will
eceive gifts contributed by localnerchants. Conn Organ Studios,Isbury Park, will provide musicor the affair.,
Entries are still being acceptedid application forms may be oh-
lined by contacting Donald J,aruso, 25 Harbor View Dr., or
building inspector, engineer, san-itation and plumbing inspectoto inspect the Lakeland Park de-velopment and report back to thegoverning body at the next meet-ing. The committee has receivernumerous complaints aboutdrainage, roads and water services In the area.
The governing body also de-cided to ask the state HighwayDepartment to review the speeilimits again on Rt. 516. The statehas set a 45-mile-per-hour limiton the major portions of the ar-tery which the committee feelsIs too high.
The committee heard a reportthat 319 traffic summonses wereissued last month In a drive bypolice to crack down on speedersand .reduce the accident ratehere.
The township attorney was in-structed to draft an ordinancebanning swimming at the damand dike end of Shadow Lakein River Plaza.
Comrttitteeman Paul Pandolfiagreed to meet with residentsof the Hillside area to discuss se-curing water service from thMonmouthCo.
Consolidated Watei
BreunissensAre DeniedA Variance
FAIR HAVEN — A varianceapplication of Mr. and Mrs. JohnW. Bfeunissen, 44 Hillside PI.has been denied by the ZoningBoard of Adjustment.
The Breunissens sought a sideyard variance after they wgranted a subdivision of theirproperty by the Planning Boardand .Borough Council.
The garage on the property is6.79 feet from the new subdividedlot line. The requirement is 10fast.
The denial was announced yes-terday by John W. Martin, sec-retary of the zoning unit. Theboard had withheld its decision atits last meeting last week.
Firemen's FairStarts Tonight
NAVESINK - The 73d annualIrenien's fair here gets under
way tonight at the fire housegrounds in Naveslnk.
Sponsored by the Navesink FireCo.. the fair is the oldest In the:ounty.
The program will run throughSaturday night. It will involvelie usual food and fancy tablesind white elephant sale.
There also will be rides forchildren.
Proceeds go for the operationrom any member of the Jaycees. of the volunteer fire company.
GOP Hits ModifiedTest Ban Proposal
By JACK BELLWASHINGTON (AP)-Republi-
cans have closed ranks for apolitically significant attack onPresident Kennedy's modifiedproposals for a nuclear test ban.
In language so similar as to in-dicate a prior meeting of the
minds, Senate Republican LeadeiEverett M. Dirksen of Illinois,House Republican Leader CharlesA. Halleck of Indiana and Gov.Nelson A. Rockefeller of NewYork contended Wednesday thatKennedy Is retreating toward theSoviet position.
END OF RUN — Red Bank Patrolman Vernon Patterioninvestigates an accident at River Rd. and Harrison Ave.last night. The driver, Robert A. Rote of ShrewsburyTownship, has been charged with reckless driving. Localpolica said ha also was involved in another accidentearlier in Fair Haven. In Red Bank he struck a cardriven by Mary J. Seely of Rumion.
New Drug ControlRules To Be Issued
By BARRY SCHWEIDWASHINGTON (AP)-Secretary
of Welfare Anthony J. Celebrezzeis expected to announce today newregulations covering distributionof new drugs to physicians for in-vestigational purposes.
Celebrezze promised last weekthat the new regulations would beissued soon. . ,
Speaking against a backdrop ofmounting concern ever the seda-tive thalidomide Celebrezze thensaid: "It seems clear that sometightening up needs to. be done,although care must be taken notto interfere with the' professionalwork of competent physicians."
Thalidomide, blamed for thou-sands of birth malformations inEurope, was never marketedhere. But. under U.S. drug laws,it was distributed to 1,231 Ameri-can doctors for possible expertmental use.
CrackdownOn GoofballSellers Set
TRENTON (AP)-The state haslaunched a crackdown on drug-gists who fill illegal "goofbali"prescriptions.
Atty. Gen. Arthur J. Sills an-nounced Wednesday that fines to-taling $1,250 have been levied Township, was
President Kennedy has said "weought to be tougher" hi regulat-ing distribution of drugs to doc-tors for experimental use. He andt! - Food and Drug Administrationtake the position this could bedone without further legislation.
However, Kennedy also has sailfull protection of consumers willrequire action by the Congress.
This week Kennedy made sever-al recommendations to the SenateJudiciary Committee for strength-ening the drug industry controlbill now in its hands.
Wednesday the committee decid-ed to require that official or gen-eric name of a drug be printedprominently on the label and intype at least half as large as thebrand name.
The administration bill in thiHouse goes further, meeting theKennedy recommendation that theofficial name be printed In typeas large as that used for thebrand name and that it be givenprecedence in position.
Existing law requires only thaofficial names of drugs appearwith prominence and conspicuous-ness on the label.
against two Essex County drug-ists.
"Goofballs" usually refer tohabit-forming synthetic drugs tak-en by teen-agers as "pep pills."
The state has banned illegalprescriptions for years, but it re-cently enacted a law making ita crime to possess habit-formingdrugs such as "goofballs" without a valid prescription.
A fint of $750 was imposed on'rank F. Lewis of Orange, pro-
prietor of a pharmacy in Mont-clalr. Frank Nicholas of Newark,was fined $500.. He works for Jef-ferson Industries Inc., also ofllontclair.
The fines were ordered by theitate Board of Pharmacy.
Reckless DrivingSummons Issued
RED BANK — Robert A. Rose1 Barker Ave., Shrewsbury
reckless drivingcharged withby Patrolman
Vernon Patterson after an acci-dent at River Rd. and HarrisonAve.
According to police, witnessesreported that Rose was travel-ing at a high rate of speed fromthe direction of Fair Haven whenhe struck a car driven by Mary
Seely, 25, of 7 Lafayette St.,Rumson. Only minor injurieswere reported. *
Patrolman P a t t e r s o n saidRose, after striking the car, hita utility pole, blowing out a fusebox and breaking the power feed!o street lights. The officer re-sorted skid marks of 62 feet be-
rc>re impact and 108 feet afterimpact.
Drop 'Navesink9 on Truck,But Company Name Stays
RED BANK - In "popularrms," the sign on the side ofie new hook and ladder truck Allen said. "It will be most cor-
lere "means what is says," ac-rdlng to Councilman John Al-
an, fire committee chairman,it reads: "Hook and Ladder
Company of the,Rod Bank Firo)epartment.""Actually, though," he ex-
Jains, "'it changes nothing." The!ompany, proud of a charterhat dates back to 1888 retains,
official terms, its old name,'The Navesink Hook and LadderCompany," which was painted onie old truck which recently wasraded in for the new one. '
"There is no intention tqchange this official name," Mr.
rect to use the new, though un-official, name in the future," headded. "The decision for the newreference was made to avoidpublic confusion between the fireapartments of Red Bank andNavesink. It should be remem-bered that the Navesink Hookand Ladder Company first wasnamed after the Navesink.Riverwhich flows past here and notthe municipal section of. Nave-sink. Red Bank had its fire de-partment many' years beforeNavesink had one."
Dirksen and Halleck charged ina news conference that Kennedyhad sent U.S. negotiators to Gene-va "hat In hand" with concessionsto the Soviets that w e n promptlyrejected. They added that the na-tion now was witnessing /'anotherexample by the Kennedy adminis-tration of how not to deal withthe Russians."
A few hours later Rockefellersaid in a statement the Kennedyadministration had "moved stead-ily toward the Soviet position" inefforts to get a treaty on nuclearweapons testing and controls.
He said that what he calledweakening of the U.S.. proposals"made in March 1961 by the Ken-nedy administration even furtherseems to me to run a high riskof endangering our national se-curity."
Rockefeller, who might becomeKennedy's Republican opponent in1964 if he wins re-election as gov-ernor this year, went on to saythe Democratic President ap-peared to be making decisionswithout the public's knowing whatproposals were being made.
There was no White House com-ment on the Republicans' re-marks.. At Geneva Wednesday, U.S.Delegate Arthur H. Pean was re-ported to have told the lT-nationdisarmament panel that his coun-try is willing to reduce controlsposts to 80, less than half thenumber previously proposed.
ShuffleboardState TitleTourney Set
RED BANK - The Red BankShuffleboard Club will host theSecond Annual New Jersey StateShuffleboard Championship Tour-nament here at Ivlarine ParkTuesday.
The announcement was madeyesterday by Ralph S. Cryder,director of recreation and parkswho said about 100 competitorsare expected to participate In theevent. The tournament Is opento members of shuffleboard ebbsaffiliated with the New JerseyState Shuffleboard Association, hesaid.
Tha local club is hopeful thatthe 1964 National championshipswill be held here, Mr. Crydersaid, as well as tha 1863 atatechampionships.
The program will be headedby Carl F. Clark, tournament di-rector of the Red Bank club andMorrell Moore, state tournamentdirector and third vice presidentof the association. Mr. Moore al-so is a member of the local club. <
Mr. Cryder said awards win In-clude a perpetual trophy formen's and women's singles, andawards for second to sixth placesin each division. All the eventsare singles he pointed out.
The program will get underway at 9 a.m. Tuesday when en-trants- must register at 9:30a.m. opening ceremonies, Mr,Cryder will give an official we],come to the entrants. An Invo-cation will be offered by Rev,Kerry Robb, assistant pastor ofthe First Methodist Church here.Lewis Hendricks, president of theRed Bank club, and AndrewWatts, president of the state as-sociation also will give brief open-ing talks.
Other officers of the local clubare Howard Shlnn, first Wee pres-ident; Amos Emmons, secondvice president: Melvin Cree,treasurer, and Robert Butler, sec-retary.
Two VehiclesIn Collision
FAIR HAVEN-The front porchof the home of E. D. Evans, Jr.,86 Church St., here, lost a pillarin an automobile accident earlythis morning.
Two cars collided at the cor-rffir of Third and Church Sts., andone stopped on the Evans porch.One driver, Lester J. Brett of 12Henderson PL in this borough,was taken to Riverview Hospitalby the Fair Haven First AidSquad, where he wns treated forminor injuries and released.
The driver of the other car,Sherman Williams, 110 SeventhAve., Atlantic Highlands, wastot injured.
No summons has been issued>y the investigatnig officer, Pa-rolman Robert O'Neill, pending'urther investigation.
In another accident here, a hitmd run driver struck a caririven by Charles C. Cuddeback.159 Morningslde Ave., Eastfeansburg. Mr. Cuddaback waslot injured.
Capt. William B. Robbins is In-estigating.
NO BUSINESSWEST LONG BRANCH - The
Planning Board met Tuesdaynight, and quickly adjourned. Thereason: No matters of businessfor lt to dlscusa.
CBS is OptimisticAbout Its Ne\v Shows
B , HAKVEY PACK
CBS came up with the one bis•ward winning new «how last yearwhen they had the courage to fi-nance and stand behind the ex-cellent Herb Brodkin-ReginaldRose one hour weekly drama"The Defenders." But the over-all season was almost as disas-trous (or them as for their tworivals, so 1962-63 seej a largegroup of new shows armed withoptimistic advance notices pre-pared to debut.
The big news at CBS is thatLucy's back and they've got her.Miss Ball, whose "I Love Lucy"kept CBS at the top of the Niel-sen charts for many seasons, hasdecided to tackle the TV grind•gain in a new series producedby her ex-husband, Desi Arnaz,lor their Desilu organization.Called "The Lucy Show," theshow bows in on Oct. 1 with Lucyplaying the part of a widow witha ion and daughter living inWestchester County, New York.
14—Euindty, Align* 9. 1962
BANK REGISTER TELEVISION
The series, based on the novel"Lile Without George," finds ourheroine sharing a two-story housewith a divorcee who has one son.The divorcee will be played by
that's rightold sidekick Vivian Vance,be good to see Lucy on
Lucy'It'llthe
screen again in something otherthan a fifth time around rerun.
Another CBS perennial hasagreed to give it a whirl thisyear for the web and on Sept. 29—away we go! Gleason is backin a weekly one hour varietyshow which will be seen Satur-days from 7:30-8:30. Since he lastfronted a Saturday night review,Jackie has gone on to conquerBroadway and Hollywood. He hasproven himself a fine actor aswell as a gifted comedian. Withso much talent deserting TV, CBSdeserves a vote of thanks forbringing back Lucy and Jackie.
Hitchcock, Too
Alfred Hitchcock, who has beenintroducing half hour vignettes on
CBS tad then later a* NBC, re-turns to tht CBS fold this set-son with an extra half hoar un-der his ample belt The one-timefirst rate suspense director willhost • one hour dramatic seriesentitled "The Alfred HitchcockHour." Name guest stars willbe used on each episode and theprogram," which premieres Sept20, will have the same staff asthe half hour version so Hitch-cock fans can look forward todouble doses of the same.
TV fans, who are fed up withhalf hour situation comedy shows,can now try their hand on a one-hour one. Eddie Foy, Jr., is thestar of "Fair Exchange" whichmoves into a one hour Friday sloton Sept. 21. The Idea of the pro-gram is to give a comic accountof the home life of two familiei.—the Walkers of New York andthe Finches of England—eachwhich has "adopted" the others'teenage daughter for one year.The program is the brain child oiCy Howard, creator of 'Friend Irma1' and "That'sBoy." .
Not content to welcome thecorny and successful "Real Me
THE GREAT GLEASON EXPRESS — CBS Television Nat.
work star Jack!* Gltaton and an entourage of some 40panoni head th* call of "Away-y-y we go!" Thursday,Aug. 9, when The Great Gleason Express begins a rollick-ing 4,337-mile, 10-day, 10-city train tour starting in LosAngelas and ending on Aug. 18 in New York. The cross-country trip includes itops in Phoenix, Colorado Springs,Denver, Kansas City, St. Louis, Chicago, Pittsburgh andBaltimore. Gleason's grass-roots whistle-stop campaignheralds his forthcoming new weekly television series,"Jackie Gleason's American Scene Magazine," a lavish,colorful comady-variety-muiic production, which pre-mieres Saturday, Sept. 29 on the CBS Television Network(7:30-8:30 PM, EDT).
RELAX! ENJOY
YOUR
LUNCHA MAGNIFICENT VIEW OF THE OCEAN FROMOUR BEAUTIFUL DINING ROOM PERCHED HIGHABOVE THE SURF.
A Reputation for Good Food /!<£ • 1 . ^ « T• SPECIAL LUNCHEONS p/l/1fI/§M>fiA <•»• LATE SNACKS
BOARDWALK •Rntumrt • C«tkt.ll Uunf«
LONG BRANCH
TONIGHT THRU SUNDAYItalian • American Recording Star
LOU MONTE!PLUS The Exciting JERRY GRECO TRIO
Two Shews Nltely — Extra Dinner Show Frl. and Sat• Deljcioiis Home Cooking• Never a Cover Charge Reservation]:
CA 9-1000
Coys" Into Its fold, CBS intro-duces another folksy corned;,show in "The Beverly Hillbillies"beginning Sept 28. Buddy Ebsenis the star of this Paul Hennlng("Bob Cummings Show") brainchild and the storyline is aboutan Orarit family that moves toplush Beverly" Hills when oil ontheir property turns them intomillionaires. Most of the comedywill evolve from their conflictswith their sophisticated neigh-bors.
Lloyd Bridges, tired of beingthe butt of all skin diver jokesstars in "The Lloyd BridgesShow" premiering Sept. 11.Bridges plays a roving Journalistwho uses his Imagination toproject himself Into the role ofthe protagonist of the story he Iscovering. This basic idea givesthe writers plenty of latitude asfar as writing episodes for theshow, and actually sets the pro-gram up as an anthology serieswith a Tunning character.
"The Defenders" has madiproducer Herb Brodkin a bit ofa hero at CBS and they are let-
I ting him try his hand at the cu[Krent medicine fad. His "Thi
Nurses" debuts Sept. 27 and thinetwork hopes the one-hour dra-mas will do for the ladieswhite what Casey did for the doc-tors. Shirl Conway and Zina Be-thune are the stars and it's asafe bet off past performancethat the productions will beamong the season's best. Ofcourse, Brodkin is handling thlione without the services of Re-ginald Rose, but most of TV'stop writers are on good termswith Brodkin and CBS has hlglhopes for this hour.
'New* Loretta Young"The Loretta Young Show" rar
for eight years on NBC so CBSlassoed Loretta and named hershow "The New Loretta YoungShow." It premieres on Sept.and Loretta will play a maga-zine writer who also happens tobe a widow with seven children.Between the kids and her JobLoretta should have no troublfilling "the weekly half hour.
The perennial "GE Theatre1
moves off on Sept. 38 to makway for the "General ElectricTrue." Jack Webb will be hosias well as producer of this hallhour series of factual dramas based on stories from thfiles of ja national adventure magazine.
Another TV perennial, "MikStokey's Pantomime Quiz"back in a new package commencing Sept. 17. Now called"Stump the Stars," it willhosted by comic Pat Harringtonwith Stokey serving as producer.
That winds up our August looat the three networks' schedulof new shows for the fall. Thiall may seem like winners ipaper, but the final answer is ito you, and psychiatrists' coucles in New York and Hollywoiare already crowded with 1execs anxiously awaiting yoiverdict.
THURSDAYW - ( 2 ) Lore of Ufa
H) Your First Imprtsiloa(7) Jane Wyman
(11) Merry Mailman12: M— (1) Search For Tomorrow
(4) Truth or Consequences(I) Cartoons(7) Camouflage
12:41- 0 ) Guiding Light(11) Rocky and His
Friends12:W- (I) News And Weather
: B _ (4) News(7) News(I) Almanac Newsreel
: M - (2) Bums and Allen(4) Trouble with Father(5) Cartoons(7) Dr. Hudson's Journa()) Understanding Our
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mam ® ^
GATES OHM 7:00 f.M-MOVIES AT DUSK
STARTS TOMORROWThe Most Important Motion Picture
in 20 years—N. Y. Times
uam >«IID minim mnitm , _"SUWHROS th i GRUT SHIPS" C H O I
"One of themost significant
pictures (Ms year"N.Y. Herald Tribune
"You had beltersee It!"
N.Y. News
Now In its 6th
Month in New York
Smoking Section NO EXTRA
Paramount1! biggest spec-tacular of the year, HowardHawk's "Hatari," starringJohn Wayne, Hardy Kruger,Elsa Marrinelli, Gerard Blainand Red Buttons, comes toLoew's Route 35 Drive-lnTheatre for the week startingWednesday, August 8th.
Filmed i n Technicolor,"Hatari" is a top-notch combination of romance, adventure, comedy and everygradient that makes a greamotion picture. FilmedAfrica, some of the most exciting wild animal scenes evercaught by a motion picturecamera are brought to thescreen, The picture is released by Paramount.
Also featured on this showis 'Seaward the Great Ships,filmed in color.
Advisory VoteIs Asked OnCamden College
CAMDEN (AP) — CamdenCounty voters in the Nov. 6 elec-tion will be asked to vote on anadvisory referendum calling forconstruction of a $2 million community college.
State Sen. Joseph Cowgill,Camden, minority leader of theUpper House, said yesterday theBoard of Freeholders has author-ized preparation of the referen-dum to be submitted for theirapproval next Tuesday.
The Freeholders will not bebound by any decision the vot-ers make election day. The ref-erendum is merely to test publicopinion on the project before of-ficial action is taken.
The college would cost $300,000
VISITED SARANAC LAKE
MORGANVILLE — Mr. andMrs. Joseph L. Bruce and chil-dren, Jeffrey, Peggy and Cheryl,
79, and their' guests, Mrs.Howard Jeffrey, Middletown, andMrs. Russell Tetley, R i v ePlaza, have returned from a two-week vaaction in Saranac Lake,N.Y.
Because of the unexpected demand,we have increased our supply of
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MOVIE TIMETABLERED BANK
CARLTON-Mr. Hobbi Tikel » V«c*Uon 3:00;7:00; »:ia ^
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question and the, Freeholdersmove ahead with the proposal,Camden County would be thefirst New Jersey county to starta community college under anew state law providing exten-sive state aid for such undertak-ings.
C M NOW!RTS. 33-34 COLLINGWOOD CIRCLE
WALT DISNEY
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annually to operate ani woiildto start ofliove an enrollment
SOD students. It would provide atwo-year curriculum.
If the electorate approves the
Daniels AddsNew YouthDepartment
RED BANK - John DanielsMen's Wear h a s expanded itsstore at 23 Monmouth St to in-clude a boys' and students' de-partment called The Ivy Corner.
This Is the third time the store,which has been In business herefor 14 years, has been enlarged.
A selection of nationally adver-tised brands of quality clothing-suits, coats, sweaters, shirts andaccessories — has been stockedfor the back-to-school trade. In-cluded are sport coats and blaz-ers, lined raincoats and a widevariety of ties. All have beenplaced on display.
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ASBURK PARK-N.Y. TRANSITUnder Rollo Management
Kennedy at Mid-TermThose 'X' Factors in Foreign Affairs
RED BANK REGISTER Thursday, August 9, 1962—15
EDITOR'S NOTE — PresideJohn F. Kennedy la approachingthe half-way point in his termthe White House. What's his scorIn foreign affairs? In this fourt!article in a five-part series. Asso-ciated Press reporter RelmanMorin notes the plusses and mi-nuses—and the abundant "X" fa<tors.
By RELMAN MORINWASHINGTON (AP) - Durinf
the conference between PresidenKennedy and Nikita S. Khrushchev in Vienna last year, the Soviet premier suddenly grated out:
"If you want war over Berlinyou'll get war."
History does not record a moreblunt, bull-dozing threat thrown alone head of state by another.
Khrushchev's design may hawbeen to shock Kennedy off-balance. The President replied:
"It looks like a cold winter."The two men, having measured
each other, went their separateways.
Kennedy held firm on Berlin.Khrushchev set no new deadlines
TO CORRECT A RUMORDorn's Photo Shop has not been sold and we
have no plans to sell it.
It is being run biy the same motley group that
has always run it and we do not contemplate any
change.
However we are continually trying to better
our service to YOU our customers.
If you do not get the same poor service you
are accustomed to at Oorn's, please call me person-
ally — SH 7-2273.
I am always pleased to talk to my customers if
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DORN'S PHOTO SHOP15 WALLACE ST. REP BANK
DANIEL DORNOWNER
Tel. SH 7-2273
for signing a treaty' with EastGermany. He told a delegation ofAmerican newspaper editors lastJuly 18 he still intends to signsuch a treaty, but he said:
"When shall we do it? I will no)set any time limit."
Some observers consider this aplus on the administration's cred-it-and-debit ledger for foreign af-fairs. For the moment, it may be.
But Kennedy, who says "Berlinis our big Interest," does not ex-pect Khrushchev to remain quietindefinitely about this problem.No new formula for solving it isin sight. So Berlin is an X-factor,an uncertain quantity, in the for-eign equation.
What are the plusses andminuses? Few developments inforeign affairs fit completely intothis clear-cut definition.
Cuba, to be sure, was a disasterfor the administration.
The Berlin Wall was a shocker.At home and abroad, people askedwhy the Western Allies were notprepared for such a contingency.Some Americans criticize Kenne-dy for not having ordered Ameri-can tanks to knock down the wallat the moment the Communistsbegan erecting it. Whether theother Allied governments wouldhave supported such a move, is,of course, still another question.
The Congo is still snarled. TheUnited States, with money and
other support, backs the UnitedNations effort to force KatangaProvince into the Leopoldville gov-ernment. Some Americans bitter-ly criticize this policy. Only lastweek, the U.N. secretary-generaitermed the situation "particularljcritical."
The problem with France,hold-over from 1959, remains unsolved. The French are determined to develop their own nu-clear weapons. The Kennedy ad-ministration refuses to providetechnical assistance. Time alonewill tell whether the policy wa:the right one.
No formulas have been foundfor an agreement to disarm or tostop nuclear tests. When Kennedjdecided the United States musiresume nuclear testing, picketlines formed in front of the WhiteHouse in protest.
On the other hand, develop-ments In Southeast Asia appear towarrant at least some cautiousoptimism.
An agreement was hammeredout for a tripod coalition govern-ment in Laos. The questionwhether It will hold.
Before this agreement, Kennedjordered American forces, includ-ing nearly 3,009 Marines, to Thaland to forestall a Communisguerrilla move out of Laos. TheMarines were withdrawn as thitension lessened.
GINGER By Cetternwnn
The World Today:
Cautious ManBy JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press Newt AnalystWASHINGTON ( A P ) - Anthony
J. Celebrezze sounds even morecautious than Abraham Rtbicoff,the man he succeeded as secre-tary of health, education and wel-fare.
Riblcoff, a politician and nowrunning for the Senate in Connec-ticut, never built any fires herethat would make people mad athim.
He was a very mild member ofPresident Kennedy's Cabinet.
And he was quite a man forcompromise. For example, theway be was willing to compro-mise with the conservatives inCongress on Kennedy's plan ofmedical care for the aged.
So far the most distinguishingmark of Celebrezze, five-timemayor of Cleveland, has been a
his new assignment to .stick hisneck out even a little bit on any-thing.
It Pays to Advertise in the Register
him, but before the Senate ap-proved his nomination, Celebrezzedeclined to say where he stood onthe big national issues.
This was understandable sincehe still didn't have the job anathe Senate could be unpredictable
But he's here now, with the job,and Tuesday at his first Washing-ton news conference he had hisfirst dance to say where hestood on the two biggest issuesinvolving his department.
These were federal aid to pub-lic elementary schools (but nolparochial schools) and medicacare for the aged.
When the conference was oveiCelebrezze still hadn't said anything to make anybody mad alhim or really to indicate exactlywhere he stood on those twotouchy problems.
One of Kennedy's earliest actsas president was to propose fed-eral aid to education, leaving outparochial schools. This got Catho-lic leaders angry.
It would seem that betweenthen and now Celebrezze, particu-larly since he was mayor ofCleveland and had school prob-
great unwillingness since getting l e m S ( w o u i d have had time tostudy the aid-to-education planbackward and forward.
But he told his news conferenceAfter the President had picked he hasn't completed, a study ol
Come 1o
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the problem.He praised, the Kennedy medi-
cal care plan on the grounds thatits cast would be financed throughSocial Security taxes on workerscovered by Social Security rathethan at the expense of the generaltaxpayer,
This was a little hard to followsince the Social Security systemnow covers nine out of 10 work-ing Americans, most of whom payincome taxes and Social Securitytaxes.
Celebrezze said he thinks therewill always be a need for theKerr-Mills program of medicalaid through the public assistanceprogram. But. he said its full ef-fectiveness is being delayed bylack of action by the legislaturesto bring their states into it. •
The Kennedy administration ex-planation for proposing its pro-gram was that the Kerr-Mills ar-rangement was much too inade-quate to meet the needs of peopleover 65.
But the Kennedy program gosmothered in Congress, along withRlblcoff's proposed compromise.
Nevertheless, Celebrezze said."Something must be done" and"I am sure the next session ofCongress will come out with someprogram."
At this point it seems fair toconclude;
Celebrezze would like to avoidthe savage jungle of Washingtonpolitics, if he can, and try tooperate as a manager of the de-partment, which Ribicofl com-plained was too big and shouldbe split up.
Meeting SetAt Shore For
fOlder PeopleOCEAN GROVE — David Jef-
freys, director of field operationsat the national American Asso-ciation of Retired Persons, atWashington, will speak at a pub-
,hc meeting to be held at Taber-nacle Auditorium Park Saturdayat 2 p.m.
The meeting is being arrangedby the association's Ocean GroveChapter and arrangements forthe park use were made with the
| Camp Meeting Association ofOcean Grove.
Mr. Jeffreys will speak on theI subject: "Older People PlanTheir Own Future."I The association is a non-profit,i non-partisan group which aimsto provide activities and services
'to help older persons help them-selves and maintain their Inde-pendence and dignity.
HAZARDOUSWEATHER BUREAU
WINSLOW, Ariz. (AP) — Me-teorologists at the U. S. WeatherBureau office in Winslow carryrevolvers. when they report to.work. The weathermen have spot-ted three rattlesnakes In the bu-reau office during the past year.
"Don't drink it all, please, lady! Tho only piece oflemon we've got ij in that glass!"
School OpeningDate Announced
RUMSON - Dr. John F. Kln-ney, Jr., superintendent of theRumson-Fair Haven RegionaHigh School, has announced thatichool will open Wednesday, Sept.
New pupils not already enrolledat the school must register at theguidance office next Mondaythrough Friday. To obtain an, ap-pointment for scheduling, :dents have been asked to call theregional guidance office.
Students who had made sched-ules prior to this time should notreport again because their enroll-ment has been completed, Dr.Kinney said.
Tenth, 11th and 12th grade stu-dents who attended Regional lastyear, and who live- in Fair Ha-ven, have been requested to pickup their bus tickets in the mainoffice of the school on Thurs-day, Aug. 30, between 9 a.m. and
p.m.; those living in Rumsonmust obtain their tickets Friday,Aug. 31.
It adds upl More and more[>eople use The Register ads eachBr.—Advertisement.
It pays to advertise in TheRegister.—Advertisement.
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1869 W E S T 1962FURNITURE COMPANY
KEYPORT, NEW JERSEY 2£&£53S. TEL CO 4-0181Optn Monday & Friday Evenings Until 9 P.M.
BridgeH » b n t w»y to htadle a tx%-
eyrjun I» to pull the coven upover your head and hope he goes« w y . If you're pawing on thisadvice to your children, tell themthat1 it won't work at the bridgetable.
East won the first trick withthe king of diamonds and cast afearful glance at the dummy.What a horrible hand to lead upto!
Hoping that
THE HANDSNorth deiierBoth lido vulnerable
NORTH* A j 4 3<? A I0 5 2• A Q 10 5 2
EAST• 6 5 „ * 8 7V K105 4 2 <? Q 7 3O J 7 3 O A K 10 S 4
something good!* 9 8 4 * K 7 3would happen if he just waited]a bit longer, East cashed the aceof diamonds. The boeyman didn'tgo away; East still had to finda suit to lead.
Actually, liast had thrownaway the defense by waiting.South could discard dummy'sJack of hearts on the queen of jdiamonds to make sure of los-'Ing no heart trick. Declarerjcould draw trumps and give upone club trick, making the gameand rubber.
Need Four Tricks
SOUTH* K Q 10 9 2<? 9 8 60 Q 8 6• J 6
North Eat* Sooth WotI * 1 0 1 * Past3 • Pas» 4 4 All Put
Opening lead — 0 3
DAILY QUESTIONPartner opens wilh one club,
and the next player passes. Youhold: Spades—6 5. Hearts—K 105 4 2. Diamonds-^ 7 3. Clubs—
Put yourself in Easts piace)g g 4 m a t do y o u s a y ?at the first trick You win vvithj ^ ^ B j d M e ^ ^ ^
der whfre° fou'rTfensive tricks depending on your partner's na-can be found. You can take w odiamonds and one club, but youstill need one other trick.
You shouldn't expect to get atrump trick in view of the bid-ding and of dummy's trumpstrength. Therefore you must tryto get a heart trick if you hopeto defeat the contract.
You can get a heart trickif your partner, West, has
ture. With a conservative part-ner you can afford to bid; withaflighty partner you should pass
For Sheinwold's 36-page book-let, "A Pocket Guide to Bridge,"send 50c to Bridge Book, RedBank Register, Box 3318. GrandCentral Sta.. N. Y. 17, N. Y.
y p pking of hearts and only if you'TT ff „ . . „ .lead a heart immediately. You||* Qf l_j(>lll(>Y
h il tcannot postpone the evil momentby first cashing the ace of dia-monds.
If you lead a heart at the sec-ond trick you will force out dum-my's ace. Then you will eventu
win
RARITAN TOWNSHIP — Thefirst fund-raising activity to besponsored by the Saritan Town-ship Community Center will bea moonlight splash party Aug.
from 8 p.m. to midnight at the36, Mid-
ally win your other diamond ;trick, a heart and a club to de- \c « " « * e r p ° ° ! . R t-feat the contract. dletown
When you have to !ead up to! Highlight of the affair will bestrength, don't put off the evil the crowning of a Miss or Mrs.moment as long as you can.Prompt action beats bridge bog-eymen.
Merritt GetsCollege Post
NEW BRUNSWICK — Dr.Richard H. Merritt, Bridge-water, has been appointed as-sociate dean in the College oFAgriculture of i Rutgers Univer-sity.
Raritan Township CommunityCenter, who will be selected fromthose attending the party byboard of judges.
Cabanas will be available forswimmers, and musical enter-tainment will be provided by An
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Hollywood:
She Was a StarBy BOB THOMAS
AP Movle-Televijion Writer
(Last of three articles onMarilyn Monroe)
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Memo-ies of Marilyn . . .
manufactured in the talent fac-tories of that era, except per-
chairman of the party. Serving onthe committee are Mrs. WilliamCross and Mrs. Clifford S. Wal-ters, tickets, and Mrs. Vi HanveyMrs. James Barr, Mrs. EdwardMichalski and Mrs. Earnest FredFoster, prizes.
Donations have been made byHarry's Liquor Store, Tiara Beau-ty Salon, Bayshore Stationers andKeyport Greenhouses. Ticketscan be obtained from Mrs. Gross27 Appleton Dr., and Mrs. Waiters, 10 Barrier Dr., Hazlet.
' Princess-Pretty .
Printed Pattern
Dr. Richard H. Merritt
Dr. Merritt, who has been onthe Rutgers' faculty since 1956—with two years out for serviceas a first lieutenant with theAir Force—has been promotedfrom instructor to assistant pro-fessor of ornamental horticulture, following completion of hisstudies toward the doctor ofphilosophy degree...
CHURCH AT PHIUPPIDISCOVERED
NEW YORK (AP) - A 1,500-year-old Christian church hasbeen discovered by archeologistson the site of Philippi, ancientcity near Kavala, Greece. Thev 'preserved church is of thebasilica style.
HEALTH CAPSULESby Michael A. PelU, M.D.
HOW WARM SHOULP THEWATER 0£ FOR HOT
COMPRESSES ?
dy Allison.Mrs. James R. Overton is
(DO PEGREES F. IS USUALLYWARM ENOUGH TO BE EFFEC-TIVE WITHOUT BURNING YOURSKIM. OLPER PEOPLE SHOULP
NEVER USE IT WARMERTHAN 100 PEGREES F.
rmonnow: OWMAH MZASLSS.' H M M I CWIUI.J givat UlpU inlomutlon.,nuiMtint«Hl«l ID baofidiignoitic nature
K's fun to look forward to par-ies or school with a new dress
pretty as this princess. Has abolero-effect bodice—choice ofpanel or inverted pleat skirts.
Printed Pattern 9038: Girls'iizes 6, 8, 10, n, 14. Size 10 takes% yards 35-inch.Fifty cents in coins for this
j pattern—add 10 cents for each(pattern for first-class mail. Send(to Marian Martin, The Red Bankj Register, Pattern Dept., 232 West18th St., New York 11, N. Y.Print plainly name, address withzone, size and style number.
FIRST TIME EVER! Glamor-ous movie star's wardrobe plus110 exciting styles to sew in ournew Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog.Send 35 cents.
DR. LOUIS L. PERLMANSurgeon Chiropodist
announces the opening of his branch officefor the general practice of Chiropody
154 Memorial ParkwayAtlantic Highlands, New Jersey
291-2525TUES —WED.—SAT. BY APPOINTMENT
When I saw Marilyn Monroe little different from the thronjor the last time, she had t h e o i starlets that were still beim
figure of a starlet, but themistakable aura of a star.
It was two months ago on the haps that she gave a betler inset of "Something's Got to terview.Give," and she gave one of herlast interviews. Actually It wasmore like a conversation with anold friend, for she w a s warmand witty. She was still glow-ing from her tumultuous recep-tion a t President Kennedy'sbirthday celebration in MadisonSquare Garden.
She looked great. Gone wasthe pot that she had displayed inrecent movies. She had dropped15 pounds and I asked her how P | n8 metallic gown and emceishe did it.
"It helps to have a bad gallbladder," said Marilyn, who hadhers removed a year ago. "Therest is l o w cholesterol: avoidanimal fats. Who need them?Eskimos, maybe. Not us."
She talked gaily of her forth-coming 36th birthday and said:"I like celebrating birthdays. Ienjoy knowing that I'm alive."
Concern TouchingShe was doing a scene with
two child actors who were play-ing her children In the film.Her concern for them wasstrangely touching. The boywas shivering after a swimmingscene, and she wouldn't continueuntil an electric heater was in'stalled to warm him.
Between scenes her conversa-tion was punctuated with highlaughter and she insisted puck-ishly she wanted to write an in-terview about me. Despite herexhilaration, there was an un-dertone of the trouble that layahead.
I mentioned that the studio wasunhappy with her absence at thePresident's birthday party, especlally since she had been outor the picture many days withillness.
"I told the studio six weeksago that I was going," shesnapped. "I consider it an honorto appear before the Presidentof the United States." Shedoubted the studio's claim therewere na more scenes to shootwithout her.
It was shortly afterward thatrelations with the studio eruptedwith her firing and the hurling of
threats and filing of lawsuits.Marilyn dropped into seclusion.
Everyone has his own memo-ries of Marilyn Monroe. My owrgc back to her early days on thsame lot, when she was a youngand eager starlet. She seemec
Metallc GownAnd when you saw her on the
screen for the first time —slithering on a couch as Louis^alhern's mistress in "Asphali
Jungle" — you knew that sh<had that quality that separate:stars from starlets.
There were other times . . .when she appeared at an award:banquet in a clinging, eye-pop
Jerry Lewis expressed everythought: "Is She foi
Real? . . . When she slinked into another dinner, late and luci-ous, and evoked a tirade fromJoan Crawford for "poor taste'. . . How she nursed the hurt foia long time.wondering how MisiCrawford, mother of adopteichildren, could have so criticizeh e r . . .
There was the time, a tearfu'Marilyn appeared on the arm olJerry Gieseler before the Beverly Hills home she shared mmore with Joe DiMagglo . . .happier time one Halloween alher New York apartment wheshe was married to Arthur Miler. Kids came by to play "trie1
or treat," and she didn't under-stand — she had never playedsuch things as a c h i l d . . .
There were other places, othertimes, but there won"' be anymore. The Marilyn Monroe storjs over.It will long be debated whethei
she was an actress. No one wi'ever doubt that she was a star,
COMPLETES SEMINARLINCROFT — Thomas D,
Sheehan, 60 Circle PI., has returned from a two-week careeiseminar held at the home officof The Mutual Benefit Life In-surance Company of Newark.
Mr. Sheehan, a member of thcompany's Theodore A. GodfreyAgency in New York City, waone of 27 life underwriters se-lected from the company's na-tionwide field organization to at-tend the conference.
"ASTRO-GUIDE" By CeeanFor Friday, August 10
"resent—For You andYours . . . Brighter prospectsare ahead for tomorrow, al-though today is under somewhatrestrictive influences, Tfae daymay bring the closing of a chap-ter in your personal life, but takecomfort in the fact that therewill be smoother sailing in thefuture. Home is % restful placetoday. Stay there if. possible
P a s t . . . Good fortune is oftencalled a windfall. The w o r ditems from medieval England,when'commoners had troublefinding wood for fuel. Royal de-cree prohibited them from chop-ping down trees, so when windknocked <lown branches it wasa stroke of luck..
Future • • • Treasure divers willsearch for a German submarinesunk in 1944 near Sprally Islandia the South China Sea. Th-U-boat was headed for Japanfrom Indonesia with a $6 millioncargo of gold and platinum.
The Day Under Your SignARIES (Born March 21 to April l»)He a listener in a friendly rifKuiiicn.You maj team amnctbing iiirptiiinf 1
TAURUS (April 20 lo May 20)Speculation and anything; that approaches;amhling jhould DC avoided lil<e the
GEMINI ( M a y j ' l to Jtint 2 1 )•ek effective wiy i to tiiinioilir <Jju|tii t « d of j u « fretting about them.
CANCER fJim* 22 fo July 21)Cansider (lie toun* and don't. tifttMIUuptet over tlie I*ck of ne t of another,
LEO (Ju ly 22 fo A u g . 21)iVlaiieTcr happeni i « m j Intended t« t
i to direct your future life.
IR&O (Aug. 22 U S«pt. 22)Ifirmonite finjilr rclttionihlpi by ouk<inf ooocejstoni wnrn ntcemry.
LIBRA (S.ph 23 4oOcK 22)Orerindutienee in oerciie, food cf otfitrCXCMSCS i i wiraed ir i init torjijr.
SCORPIO ( O c l . J J I o N . y . J l )Beit up for in active period ahetrl. Re-lixttion will |ive you new tntrgy.
S A G i n A R I U S (Nov. 22 t o O . c . 7\)I.tt your achievement! apeak for thrm-•rlvri initcid of blowinf your own born.
CAPRICORN (Die. 22 4oJ»n. 20)Although th'mgt mty look Aim, don't girtiti to a mood of dtprmion,
AQUARIUS (Jm. 21 fo Fab. 19)You invite trouble wlirn you tonfiJo injuit tnybody. Be more lelective.
PISCES (F»b. 20 fo March 20)L*t your emiragt Avrrcofne • Iryipf »jhtAtjati, Don't be Indetiiirc roirl
STEVE ROPER By SAVNDERS and OVERGARD
__ ^ 1 SUPPOSE 1VE MVT'? ) \ :i'sTO MUST; WVE PUltED ^ ' AWmiES SW.557. ?- "* i w m . G O O P » e w w s <, T f t n n s T H S T M W • • ' . - - •*,>;3/i«;awfcJ»
U THE MIWt£ Or THE J** , „ —• _t « - ^ i a» - . 'SCMfrHINfi WHUCUEMHC0R0/ » WVT0/J,
MICKEY MOUSE By WALT DISNEYX WONCEK WHACT
MINNIE WANTS ONEBUJ6 R-OWERFOK
NOW.TWS IS THEHXACT BLUR 1 WANT
TOKTHE WALLS!/VMCklBV.COULPVOO
BUIN3 0V8SZ OMB OPTUB SUiK R-OWBRS
•V0UHAVBINNOURVARP?
THE PHANTOM By LEE FALK
WHERe ARE Y t iH -LET ME )•""•--RI&HTyTHINK-ONE
HERE-ME. THREEENGINE ROOM-TWO
NIGHT SHIFT-ASLEEPIN BUNKS--ME IN
BOSS'S CAB.I'
YOU'RE HERE. J I M HO FARTSTAY HERE. / O F THIS MOB!
I'M ONLY THECOOK.'
WHOA, COOK! HOWMAN? MEN OM
THIS SHIP?
TOMORROW: 3 AHO 2.'
MARK TRAIL By ED DODD
I CANT DOTHAT, ALBC
CAN VDU GIVE MEA LITTLE SOMETHING?
I'M HUBTINS AWFULBAD..
YOU HAVE A BADBUEN, CHABUE...I
THINK VNE'P BETTERTAKE X X I BACK V/OOLDWCK
we cur FOReooo IF tLEFT NOW
SUDE, CHARLIE-IM GOING TO TAKECAEEOF-YOURIGHT NOW.'
NUBBIN By JIM BURNETT and GEORGE CRANDALL
FW5 THE SQUSKB EDOTOPMV COMAtON 6£NSg PlVJPgPEW TUB EQUILATERAL.P T A 6 0 f 6 e NTWO.' OLWIOU6P/,1HISP8OVB5,J!A TWICE AS
SAAARTAS
JAM/
POGO By WALT KELLY
NOW TXlv KNOW W JW»fA SttAUrtMS HAM'" NOTAtmyiHTIRMATIOHAU
IWrfW. 41.0W \ifAN'SWCOPHASUS
MARY WORTH By ALLEN SAVNDERS and KEN ERNST
NOT THERE.DFAR-TON IGHT.'- I M A BIT WEARY OF FRESH,
VOUNG FACES--ANP fiUTHflT/
T.KN0U) ITS LATE,BOT,PlEn5E.'-VJONT y o u TAKE ME SOMEWHERE
GftV «ND EVCITING T O N I C H T ? / THERE'SA NEW
RESTAURANT-THEATER- WHERE
-THE ACTORS IMPROVISEI HERR ITS WORTHSEEING I— FRESH
yOONO FACES ANDALL THAT'
RIVETS By GEORGE S1XTA
WELLrGET'IMour OF1
HBRB!HE BOWERS
ME--//
WHO CARES':ABOUT BITING?
MISTER.HEWOtfTBITE-
THE RYATTS By CAL ALLEY
HAVE \OU LOOKEDUNPER VDUR
B£PS
F O R M I L A D Y— Sprays of clipped vulture feith-• n ara i«t around a tiny box beret of black velvet trimmedwith bout. The design for fall wear la by Lilly Diche.
The World Today:
How to SpyBy JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News AnalystWASHINGTON (AP)-Spy in
the sky but not on the ground.That sums up the Russian atti-
tude, as of now, toward the latestAmerican effort to reach agree-
nation disarmament conference atGeneva.
Nevertheless, President Ken-nedy made plain at his news con-ference last week that this coun-try would still insist upon the
i principle of some inspection.ment with the Soviets on a treaty j Dean, back in Geneva, dis-banning nuclear tests. j cussed the latest American offer
It dampens hope, built up over|Sunday and Monday with Sovietthe past few weeks, that through j Delegate Valerian Zorin.a refinement in the American j And Monday Zorin brushed ittechnique of detecting under-j off. He said lhat Dean returnedground tests the two sides afterito Geneva with what appeared to17 years of trying rriight agree onjbe based on the "same old Amer-a test ban. jican proposals" which Russia had
On Monday the Russians once turned down before,more belittled the proposal the1 Dean said he wanted to talk toUnited States had in mind. j Zorin some more before present-
In the old days the nations kept j ing the proposals to the full con-tabs on one another's big weapon * ference. All this made prospectsdevelopment by man-spying. jfor a test ban look as dim as
Now, through sensitive instru-; always, although the need for it:ments, the nations can spy on one grows more urgent:another by what happens in the' The United States, not to be out-iky: A nuclear blast above ground I done in developing new nuclearcan be detected thousands of! techniques, felt it had to resumemiles away. testing after the Russians re-
The United States was less sure! sumed last fall. This country isUs instruments were keen enough!still testing. >to tell (he difference, in an under-j Now the Russians have begunground disturbance between an a new test series. This may causeearthquake and a secret Russian!the United States, not to be out-tot- 'done, to feel it has to have a new
Over the years the United | series, too. This, in turn, willStates has argued the only w a y j m e a n m o r e Russian1 tests if theyto prevent cheating—if there is a think they're being outdone.test ban treaty—is to have inspec-tors inside the territory of the nu-clear nations.
Future generations, if there areany, may look back on all thisas the most blazing example of
The Russians, calling this a spy i n l e r n a t i o n a , i n s a n i j n ^ W s
system, have almost consistently | , o f m a n W n d ^ a s o f n o w
said no. Which boils down to this: j ^ , , sWes s e e m t 0 t h i n k ^ , „If you re going to spy it will have j p e r f e c t I y n o r m a l jf u n e a
to be in the sky, not mside Russia.Recently this country has de-
veloped its detection instrumentsto a point where it is believed theUnited States feels fewer inspec-tors would be needed in Russia,and fewer here.
Therefore, this country wasready to make new proposals andsent U.S. Ambassador Arthur H.Dean back wilh them to the 17-
There's still time . . . Saveby the 10th—earn from Aug.1st . . . Hurry!
RED BANK SAVINGSand LOAN ASSOCIATION
"Where You SaveDoes Make aDifference!"
The entire United States, Alas-ka and Hawaii—a fine decorationto frame or line.
Flowers of the 50 states—alarge map in colorful embroidery.
attern 953: directions, transfermainland 16x26 inches, two newstates.
Thirty-five cents In coins forthis pattern—add 10 cents foreach pattern for first-class mail,lend to Laura Wheeler, care of
The Red Barik Register, Needle-raft Dept., P.O. Box 161, Old
Chelsea Station, New York 11,N. Y. Print plainly pattern num-»er, name, address and zone,
NEWESET RAGE-SMOCKEDiccessories plus 208 excitingleedlecraft designs in our new963 Needlecraft Catalog—justmt! Fashions, furnishings torochet, knit, sew, weave, em-iroider, quilt. Plus free pattern,iend 25 cents now!
YOUR BEST BUY...
SHERWIN-WILLIAMSi PAINTS
^THE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS ColPAINTERS - INDUSTRIAL - INSTITUTIONAL
Highway 35 1S7 Broad St.Mlddletown Shopping Center
OS 1-257S SH 1-7183
BEST IN PAINTS • BEST IN COLORS • BEST IN SERVICE
The day-to-day costs or oper-iting county government will top1200 million in New Jersey this'ear. The figure is exclusive of
expenditures for capital Improve-ments and debt service.
The 21 counties this year au-thorized spending ol nearly $204million ($203,879,628) for the"household costs" of government,lesignated officially as "currentiperating expenditures." This in-:ludes more than $104 million$104,091,792) or "personal serv-ces" (salaries, wages andfringe benefits") and nearly100 million ($99,787,836) for "oth-r expenses" (materials, sup-ilies, repairs, maintenance, con-racted services, etc.).The near $204 million appropri-:ions total reflects an increase
KNOW YOURGOVERNMENT
Prepared by N. J. Taxpayer*Association, 143 E. State St.,
Trenton 8 N. J.
T* almost * per cent over ictus1S62 operating appropriation'omptrti with last year1
jpertttog expenditure! of Jmillion ($189^95,912) In IKl.
AH counties reported increasec1962 operating appropriation'compared with last year's oper-ating expenditures. The percentages of increase scaled upwarfroni 1.1 per cent in AtlantiCounty is 14.9 per cent in Gloucester County. Among the largercounties, Hudson County reporteia 2.7 per cent increase; Bergen10.4 per cent; Essex 12.3 per cen
Monmouth County, which spen$8,754,569 on operating costs ii1961, this year appropriated $9,331,353 for the same purpose, aincrease of 6.6 per cent.
The figures, Dased upon officiabudgets filed with the State Ovision of Local Government, aramong data being compiled bthe New Jersey Taxpayers Association for inclusion in its annual publication, "Financial Statistics of New Jersey Local Government."
F, P. RlSTINE & CO,Established 1902
Members New York and Phila.-Baltimore StockExchanges and American Slock Exchange
STOCKS - BONDS - MUTUAL FUNDS> Lester R. Ross, Mgr.
» EAST FRONT ST. RED BANK, NEW JERSEYTelephone SHadyslde 7-1414 - WX-12W
lecepf 583For TransferTo CollegesTRENTON (AP) - A total of
>83 New Jersey students havejeen accepted for transfer toNeW Jersey's six state collegeshis fall, education commissioner?rederick M. Raubinger an-lounced today.
He said 1,179 students had ap-plied for transfer.
Many of the students are trans-
ferring from other New Jersey |iducational institutions,, but otb-j-;rs will come from stale univer-sities «nd private collegesthroughout the nation •']
Raubinger said most of the stu-dents request transfers in order:o be able to live at home andreduce college expenses or to get;he necessary education coursesto teach in New Jersey. Others,he said, were married womenwho want to complete their edu-cation.
RED BANK REGISTER Thursday, August 9, 1962—17.
Ijohn Hay Fellowships
{Available Next Month
TRENTON-(AP) - Applies-
ions for 1963-64 John Hay Fel-
owships for New Jersey high
ichool teachers will be available
September, state education
It pays to advertise in Ther.egister.—Advertisement.
NOW!©UTSIDE
LuMINALLWith Dow Latex
and Alkyd-Retln
GOES FARTHERCOSTS LESSTO APP1YI
A BETTER MASONRY PAINTI
Amoxing latti-alkyd poim btxmliflis 4 pro-Ucti moienry lurfactil Gallon thinntrf lorui* mak«i 5 quarts «f paint—cov*n up to40O tquort ftut. U»« brush or iproy, Ontcoot covtri with hard, long-laiting film. Nowttting down ii/rfoct b»fwt cr olitr pointing.No odd waihti nttdadl 15 sunfast eolouend doniinj Whit* mod* wilh pur* titaniumpigmtnli. total lor bottmtflh, loci
$C.55 .** up gal.
Deep Colors Slightly Higher
Atk tor trot Color Chart
KIMMERLEPAINT & WALLPAPER CO.
20 WHITE ST. (on Pariiing Lot) RED BANKTEL SH 7-1129—WE DELIVER B.
smwtiuimti Froknck M, Rau-nger announced today.Each fellowship carries « sti-
pend equal to a teacher's ta l t ryfor the fellowship year, plus trav-el expenses and tuition and fee*at one of these universities: Cali-fornia, Chicago, Columbia, Har-vard, Northwestern and Yale.
PUBLICAUCTION SALE
Personal property belonging to the Estate ol Baronets
Von Hlller, Deceased and others, at the
COATS GALLERIES, INC.288 Norwood Avc, DMI, N. J.
1st door south ol A&P Super Market.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 11th10:30 A.M.
Objects of Art, Antiques, Early Jersey Glass, Fine Lin-ens (Bed and Table), Marble Top Commodes and Cheats,Silver (Sterling and Plated), Early American Butler's Desk(Pine), Bric-a-brac, China (Spode, Copeland, Limoges), Cutglass, Oriental and Domestic Rugs (Room and Scatter Sizes),Twin Bedroom Set (Maple), Five-Piece Double BedroomSet (Cherry Mahogany), Tilt-top Table (Chippendale), EarlyAmerican Hanging Wall Cabinet (Pine), Eight-Piece DiningRoom Set (Drexel), Pair Love Seats designed by EdwardWormley, Four-Piece Rattan Set in black and white Nauga-hyde, Early American Blanket Chest, Pair Fireside Chairs,Brass Fireplace Equipment, Grandfathers Clock, BanjoClock, Hand Painted three panel leather screens, Secretary,Slant-top Desk, Four Poster Canopy Bed, Six Dining'RoomChairs (Mahogany), Chests of. Drawers (Maple, Mahogany,Lime Oak), Dining Room Tabie (Mahogany), Floor and Ta-ble Lamps, Drapes, French Curio Cabinets, Hunt Table (Ma-hogany), Hunt Board (Pine), Deep Sea Fishing Rod andReel, Pair Bronze Indoor Gates (Spanish), Occasional Ta-bles and Chairs, Spinet Piano (Winter), 3-Piece Rattan Set,Sterling Table Silver, Oil Paintings, Prints and numerous
items.
EXHIBITIONDaily 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.
GETA READY FOR
SCHOOLIn just • law short wtaki ichool belli will be ringing again,colleges will be getting read/ to accept students and par-•f i t i will be wondering what to do with all their iparotime now that the kids are back in ichool. It'i back toichool time!
It' i time too, for the Register's annual Back to School Edi-tion. Thit special tection will be filled with timely tips
: about children and school and many of the area's leading;—merchants will advertise back to school itemi. Look forit Tuesday, August I4fh.
RED BANK REGISTER'S ANNUALBACK TO SCHOOL EDITION TUES, AUG. 14th
MR. MERCHANT: RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISING SPACE TODAY
Union House inPlaLocal Team Can Gain NationalPlay with Win Over N.Y. Nine
By Hy Cunningham 'MONMOUTH PARK CLOSED LAST SATURDAY
AND THE BETTORS of this area transferred their
luck to Freehold Raceway. Monmouth had a record
breaking wagering crowd on its last day and Freehold
absorbed this group and came up with a record break-
ing opening day figure at the mutuel windows.
Amory Ld Haskell's plant rebounded like
Carry Back and staged a whirlwind finish in its
final week to reduce a predicted decrease in busi-
ness to a minimum. After an unpredictably slow
start during the early June weeks of the regular
50-day meeting, Monmouth staged a recovery
which gained momentum throughout July and
reached its peak closing day. When the final fig-
ures were in, the track was down just 3.5 per cent
In attendance and 3.1 In wagering.
Numerous items accounted for this remarkable
"comeback," but the chief one was the quality of rac-
ing, particularly through the final half of the meet.
We've watched many of the thoroughbred stars on
TV during the winter campaign in Florida. Then we
had the opportunity of seeing most of them in the
flesh. Such great performers as Carry Back, Kelso,
Jaipur, Primonetta, Batter Up, Green Ticket, Affection-
ately, Ahoy, Delta Judge and others which had proven
themselves in the toughest company, made Monmouth
appearances and wrote new pages in the history of the
sport at the Oceanport plant.
On the final day of the meeting, Monmouth
Park set new attendance and betting records. The
attendance of 43,591 topped the 43,258 of 1960
and the betting of $4,100,930 eclipsed the $3,934,-
840, also of 1960. The day's betting not only was
a new mark here, but established a state record,
beating the $4,008,799 set at Garden State Park in
1960.
When Delta Judge accounted for the Sapling on
By JACKSON CUNNINGHAMRED BANK - The Old Union
House baseball nine of Red Bank,the baseball power on the Shorethe past two years, will be shoot-ing (or the National Baseball Con-gress finals at Wichita, Kans.,and a possible $10,000 first prizewhen it entertains the Amster-dam Textiles, New York statechampions, in a two-out-of-threeaeries this weekend at Red Bank
(Recreation) Memorial Field.The U n i o n House team,
coached by George Spillane,gained the Bi-State playoff bydumping Morristown for the NewJersey state championship. TheBi-State playoff is played becauseonly 32 of the 48 state NationalBaseball Congress champs parti-cipate for the national title inaction at Wichita.
The Union House, which was
Don Rooney
tabbed to win the New Jerseystate title in the first of its fourstate tourney games by someobservers, will play a single
e with the New York cham-pions Saturday starting at 3 p.m.and then tangle with the Amster-dam club in a double-header Sun-day, first game starting at 1:30p.m.
One Game If Rain
dosing day, the $64,833 earned was sufficient to put
If it rains Saturday there willbe only one game Sunday withthe winner earning the Bi-Statetitle. Should it rain Sunday aftereither club has' posted a victory
d i d
series would be impossible. Tak-ng a look at the record. UnionHouse is very tough with a 24-3season. But then the visitors areeading a twilight league in New
York with a 31-4 record. TheNew York club is loaded with for-mer professional players, having,in fact, one for almost everyposition.
Catcher Brian Mee leads thepack. A former player in the Cubsystem, Mee was voted the most
j
p ythe victor on Saturday
valuable player in the New Yorkifjcial results of the combined & Y.C., had a corrected timingtourney and it is only his first] races were not released until East! of 13.42:20. His craft was the firstseason with the Textiles. Mee hasj night due to final checking of theiboat to finish in both races.
g rL^]au^3Ada L. Rice at the top of the list of owners of thej s h o u ] d i t rain both days, it hasn'tmeeting with $104,798. This also was a new recordSt Monmouth as it topped the $101,142 earned by theW.G. Helis, Jr., stable in 1959.
Local trainer makes good. W.J. Sacco, aLong Branch resident, added his name to the listof leading trainers when he saddled 13 winners,to be two ahead of a trio of rivals in the finalstandings . . Walter Blum, with a total of 60 vic-tories, was the leading rider of the meeting bymany lengths. It was his second riding champion-ship at Monmouth Park. He won it In 1960 with61 winners.
In addition to the regular 50 days for the Mon-mouth meeting, the track ran six days prior to thatas part of New Jersey's coastal storm relief program.In those first six days of the meet, 80,149 customersattended and wagered $6,923,248.
SHORE RACING FANS are now wagering atthe Raceway. Monday, a turnout of 8,347, shy oflast year's opening day, kept the machines in tuneto come up with a new betting mark of $532,907.This gave Freehold Raceway its first better thanhalf million dollar weekday.
Freehold should have another excellent year. Ad-ditional records will go down the drain by the time thelongest meet of its history is over. New management•t Freehold has the plant in tip top condition and theystill continue to modernize.
NATIONAL SWEEPSTAKES R E G A T T AHERE IN JULY went over tremendously with boatowners, drivers and guests who came to Red Bankfor the two-day affair. Arthur B. Hafner, inboardchairman of Region Three of the American PowerBoat Association, was here for a meeting Tuesdaynight and was asked what the reaction of the par-ticipants were. Hafner replied, "In talking withthe drivers, they all said, 'Let's do It again.' '' Hesaid there were no complaints, but drivers wereannoyed with the Coast Guard Auxiliary."
Jack Teel, also an APBA representative, reported'that he surveyed the women folks of the drivers. Jacksaid the women weren't watching the races Saturday.They were all shopping, (merchants note) and all hada ball in Red Bank.
Hafner reported that the Sweepstakes herehad more boats competing (95) than the nationalchampionships held in California. And that meansgoing across the starting line. When encouragingremarks are received, it sure gives encouragementto the hard-working committee members.
.BE CAREFUL, COACHES — A rumor of a ruleschange by the NJSIAA allowing high school footballteams to start conditioning Aug. 15, 'TAINT so. The
been decided if one or the three-game series will be played thefollowing week.
This weekend's victor will bein for a rough time if it elects tomake the trip to Wichita. (Teamsplaying at Wichita must pay theirown expenses). New Jersey's rep-resentative has never won thenational title since the initiaplayoff in 1935. The best a Jerseynine has placed was fourth. TheNew Jersey State Prison Guardsplaced fourth in the 1939 editionof the tourney. The second club togain Jersey's top finish was theGlen Ridge Tytodls in 1948.
The quality of players particiDating in the tourney is shown Inthe person of Satchel Page, thefarried Negro pitcher who wasnamed the initial tournament'smost valuable player.
Major Leaguers PlayedSome of the major league play
ers who saw action in past tour-naments—there were many—areHarvey Haddix, Johnny KucksDick Brudowski, Irv Palica andArnold Portocarreo. The nationaknown O'Brien twins from SouthAmboy, athletic stars at Washington University, got their"start" in the National BaseballCongress tourney, according toArt Lance, regional director oN.B.C.
The national tourney at Wichitais a double elimination affair, soan exceptional club will not beeliminated for having a "badday." To win the national cham
SEEING DOUBLE? — II not, check with tha nearest eye specialist. The gait in the
photo am sats of twim tailing at the Shrewsbury Sailing and Yacht Club, Portau-
peck. At the left are Alec and Ray Corley of Rumson. At right, Jessie and Girmy
Drew of Little Silver. The girls compete in the Sailfith clan.
Dr. Charles Shoemaker's SloopWins Big Bay Day HandicapATLANTIC HIGHLANDS-Dr.
Charles Shoemaker's 28-foot fiber-glass Triton type sloop "Ven-ture" added the Big Bay DayHandicap title to his recently wonTexas Tower Memorial racechampionship with a victory inlast weekend's series on SandyHook Bay.
The two-day series was jointly-sponsored by the Atlantic High-lands Yacht Club and the Shrews-bury Sailing and Yacht Club andconducted under the rules of theJersey Ocean Racing Club. Of-!a member of the Shrewsbury S.
boy, was first in the over-allstandings with a corrected timingof 12.55.27. He also took the ClassB honors, for boats under 30 feetin length, with a timing of13.32.36.
The Franklin (N.J.) residentwas the winner of the rugged 140nautical mile Texas Tower oceanrace on the July 27-29 weekend.
The winner in Class A boatsover 30 feet was Dr. George Whittie of Long Branch in his 38-footRanger sloop "Sylph." Whittle,
nine home runs and 56 runsbatted in and also bats for anaverage well over .400. The handyman of the club, Gerry Hisert,who plays almost any position inaddition to being a good spotpitcher, Is batting over .500. Oth-er players with big league ex-perience are outfielder Jack Pi-leckas, in the Detroit chain, fourhome runs and a .400 plus aver-age, shortstop Zeke Zilka, for-merly with the Dodgers; ancJohn Krochina, who was in theYankee farm string as an out-f i l over .300 average.
RuggSkPitching
off-sounding ratings of the com-peting craft.
Shoemaker, a member of theRaritan Yacht Club, Perth Am-i races here.
Whittle was the defendingchampion, having won Class Aand over-all honors in last year's
Van Duyne WinsSears Cup Area 'C9
Runner-up in Class A was Hen-r Mihm's "Tamara," a bigdouble-ended sloop, out of Mon-mouth Beach. Mihm was timed'in 13.47:26.
Jerry Bourne, Rumson, wasthird in Class A with hij "Aqua-lure," in the timing of 14.41:21.
Dick West, Rumson, was fourthin "West Wind." His ttme forb.th days was 14.55:20. The "Isa-bel" was fifth in 14.55:30.
Alegra Class B Runner-upAnson Peckham, Tinton Falls,
the winner of JORC's Texas Tow-er tune-up race, was runner-up in
Ship Ahoy PostsFifth StraightDual Meet Win
SEA BRIGHT — The ShipAhoy Beach Club recorded itsfifth straight dual swimmingmeet victory with a 158-100 de-cision over Trade Winds BeacbClub here Monday.
Four other Ship Ahoy swim-mers also have qualified for theJunior Olympics meet. They are,Bill Beegle, 10 and under 50-meter butterfly and 10 and un-der 50-meter freestyle; ChrisKrukovsky, 13-14 girls' 100-meterbackstroke; Jack Wright, 15-16200 meter freestyle; and KarenKarinja, 15-16 girls' 200-meterfreestyle (alternate).
The results of Monday's meet:39 lest freestyle, boys 8 — Won by
Larry Levy (TWi: 2. rUllh O'Connor(TWj; 3. Tim Colemart (SA).
25 meter freestyle, boys. 7 — won .by Mark Karinja. i.SA): 2. Wtym D«at(TWi; 3. Bob Hogan. <.8A>.
25 meler freestyle. Ilrla, 7 — woqby SuafSjaclmU] <SA); 2. Katie Mul.[men n w i ; 3- Mary Ann Ru«elo (TW>
25 meter freestyle, boyi. 8 — Wonbv Jim Placopo (TW): 2. Bob M6MM(BA); 3. Mickey Colemen (SA>.
25 meler ireeatyle, jtrla, 8 — won >w DenUe Diljer <TW>: 2. ArdenKremer <SA;; 3. Cheryl Pomphrey
25 meter freealyl*. boyi, 9 — Wonby Norman Dear ITWI; 2. Brad iaarKent ISA). Rick Karinja (8A).
25 meler. freestyle, Blrla, » — Wonby Nancy Reejle ISA): 2. Pattyllulheren (TW); 3. Kathii WsUtaknITW). 1
25 metfr, fresstjle, boya, 10 — Wonby Bill fceegle |8A>; 2. Skip inablttTWj; 3. Allan D'Zurllla (SA).
25 meter, freestyle, girls, 10 — Wonby* Marilyn Edmunds (TW); PallyStf wart " TW); 3. Debbie I*Noruo(BA>.
25 meler, freestyle, boya, 11 — Wonby Jim HoEan ISA): 2. G«or|-a Howar(BA>: 3. Crli Bell (TW).
25 meter, rreeityie, glrla, 11 — Wonby Carol Piicono (TW); 2. BlleenHogan (TW): 3. Jean D«Ferro (tA>.
51) meler freestyle, boya. l i — Wonby Gary Seargent tSAt; 2. Bob Dels-plane (TW): 3. Bob Walter (SAI.by Wendy Slaughter (8A>; 2. CatiiyHess (SAi; 3. Colleen Mulbaren (TWi.
50 meter, freestyle. bny», 13 — Wonby Jeff Handley (SA); 2. Rick Farley(SA); 3. Jim Farrell (TW).
50 meter, freestyle, giria. 13 — Wonby .Ysncy Berlelsen *SA>; 2. LindaKramer (SA); 3. Qraca Reynolds
50 meter, freestyle51) meter, freestyli
jirls, U — Wonboya, 14 — Won
by Robin Lovett (3A>; 2. Tom Law(TW>: 3. Jim D«Vlne ISA).
50 meter, freestyle, glrla. 14 — Wonby Lois Conlen (SA): 2. Crll Krulura-
Ilky I SAI; 3. Peggy Beatly (TW).50 meter, freestyle, boya, 15 — Won
by Jack Wright ISA); 2. Jim Kanzo|TW); 3. Jim Marlnelll (TW).
50 meter, freestyle, glrla, IS — Wonby Polly Corbly |8A); 2. Karen Kar*Inja (SA); 3. Debbie Ounnell (TWi.
50 meter, freestyle, boya. H — Wonby Larry Cross (BA): 2. Loll PUeono(TW); 3. Dick Wetzel (BA).
50 meter, freestyle, glrla, IS — Wonby Arleene Conlon <8A); 2. Pal De-Kerro (SA»; 3. Rose Uhorchik (TW*.
100 meter, freestyle relay, boys inand under — Won by Ship Ahoy rela>of Tim Scnoor. John aiagnotta, AllanD'Zurllla. Bill Secgle.
Class B with his" A l e g r a . " His14.26:30.
JU-1OOI SlOOp!B
timing
P a lly {nil wind. «'•'
Patit MulhereBarbara DDffer. Marilyn Edmunds.
WES 10O meter, freestyla relay. (IllsiRntl uuiier - IVon by Shop Ahoy rei:.of Polly Cobly, Lota Conlon. ArleCoilon. Crla Krukowsky.
ICO nipter, freestyle relay, baysand under — Won by Shop Ahoy reiaof I.arry Cross, Robin Lovett, *Handler. Jack Wright.
J0O meter medley relay boysand under ~- Won by Ship Ahoy re'.,ot Dick Wetzel, Lirry Cross. Ja-WrlRht, i'ed Handley.
100 meler medley relay glrla loand under — Yvon by Ship Aliuy re .of Polly Corbly. Crls Krukowsky. A;-
The visitors areTclsrrTOugh onthe mound with Bob Marottaleading the way with a 130 rec-ord and 1.82 earned run average.Tom Foster, formerly with Hous-ton o! the Class AA League, hasa wicked curve ball. A new addi-tion to the New York club couldbe the best of the lot. Don Blahaposted a 7-0 record for New YorkUniversity last spring as a sopho-more. Roger Bowman, formerlywith the New York Giants and Pi-rates, is also ready to take thehill for the Amsterdam nine.
Taking a jump over the fenceto the Union House side, thereare more impressive records.John Bland, third baseman, hasa .436 average and won the bat-ting title in the New Jersey statetourney. Catcher Bruce Phillipscan belt the long ball any timeas shown by his four home runs.He has driven home 30 runs andscored another 30 himself. JoeHaider and George Gill also sup-ply hits for the Shore nine. Gill,
RUMSON - The Barnegat Bay,Yacht Racing Association cham-pion, Carl Van Duyne of theMantoloking Yacht Club, won theSears Cup Area "C" semi-finalseries on the Shrewsbury River
changed his knickers for a majorleague uniform. Now, 19 yearsand some gray hairs later, the
pionship, a team must win at.not the power hitter as some ofhis teammates, leads the teamin hits with 37 for his .366 aver-
least seven games. Ten teamswill share in the prize money.Following the winner's purse, therunner-up takes home at least$3,000, maybe more if the gateis good. Each team that winsthree games automatically movesjon the New Jersey Tourney's All-into a tie for seventh place I s t
Henderson are also high average
Reds AdvanceAngels in 2nd
yesterday to gain a berth in theSears Cup North American Ju-nior individual sailing champion-ships starting Aug. 27 at Marble-bead, Mass.
Van Duyne, with his crew JanChance and Henry Tomlinson,dominated the four-race serieswith two firsts and two secondsfoi 14)4 points.
The round-robin
AtASSOCIATED PRESSage 15, Joe Nuxhall
series wassailed in Arrows, a 23-foot keeltype sloop loaned by the hostRumson Country Club. Light to
Third in Class B was Jim Yonkof the Atlantic Highlands Y.C.,in "Bonnie Nancy 2d" with atiming of 14.31:49.
Bill Robinson, Rumson, wasfourth in "Mar-Claro," 14.35:59;fifth was Bill Wye, Rumson, in"Wye Farrer," 14.42:26; sixthwas "Bill's Due," 16.22:25, andi venth was Phil Andrews,Shrewsbury, in "Philanderer,"
1? ' „ ; M ' « ' b°>< 5 y - — Won by HikeRay Carey, Rumson, in Whis-jiiuihere^ ITW>: 2. JMI, Karinj« UK>:
per," had a timing of 13.47:43 andthe "Bambi" had a timing of
lene Conlon. Lois Conlon.:»r. — Won byPer Barnacle
30 feet girls i ;
3. Jlaiy D'Zurllla <BA).30 feet girls 6 yr. — Won by Tarry
Bchulti iTWr. 2. Palty Daley (TW,;3. Kly»e Kremer (SA).
feet boys 5 yr. — Won by Mikeeren tTW>: 2. Jeff Ki
3. Tommy Varlan tTWj,
14.24:05. Both of these boats werenot scorer] because their crafthave not been officially rated byJORC.
Joe Scott's "Marguerite 2d,"out of Middletown, only competedin one race and compiled a cor-rected timing of 6.24:06.
Saturday's race was a 23-nauti-cal mile grind, while Sunday'saffair was a short 16-mile race,
moderate northwesterly breezes;The winds were light for the fi-
FROM STILL TO SCHOOLPANAMA CITY, Fla. (AP). -An elementary school scienceteacher has found an ample freesupply of glass containers (orclass experiments.
The sheriff's office givei Mrs.H. B. Swilley an assortment ofjugs and jars which it confiscatesin raids on moonshine whiskeyoperations.
prevailed for the four races,sailed over four-mile windward-
knuckle-balling left-hander has i leeward courses.turned into somewhat of a Tied for second place were thephenom again for the Cincinnati!North Jersey Yacht Racing As-Reds.
Th'e 34-year-old veteran,claimed from the minors recent-
nal half Saturday's event. Atotal of 20 cruising auxiliariescompeted in each race.
jsociation crew, skippered byre- Chris Bello of the Raritan Yacht
ly, hurled V/3 innings of shut-outball before giving way to relief Racing Association entry, skip-ace Jim Brosnan as the third-place Reds made it three con-wcutive whitewash jobs againstHouston with a 4-0 triumph.
Meanwhile, the National Leagueleading Los Angeles Dodgersmoved 5J£ games in front bymaking the most of four hits fora 3-1 triumph over Philadelphiawhile the New York Mets used
age. Bruce Fischbein and Ed the home run weapon to subduesecond-place San Francisco 5-2.
hitters. Phillips, Bland, Haiderl Elsewhere in the NI,, Bob Gib-and_ Fischbein were all namedj s o n- s fourth shutout, a three-
Club, Perth Amboy and theChesapeake Bay, Md., Yacht
Wilson's LeadsR. B. Adult Loop
RED BANK — Wilson's Pal-ace Diner is leading the RedBank Adult Softball League witha 12-3 record after 12 weeks of
Joe Hare crewing.' had a 4-1-4-2 play. Trailing by one-half gameseries. Chesapeake had the :~ r"u-1-' " * -" • ' •other first in the series.
pered by Marge Myers. Eachsailor had 9V4 points.
Bello, with Wally Cramp and
The South Jersey Yacht Rac-ing Association crew, skippered * "V6 t i e fn
d . w i l s o n ' s blanked
ginto a tie for seventh place.
T° f i « u r e a f a v 0 I ? t e forI Star team.
The fifth player named to the« , D . c ? ! The fifth player named tweekend's Bi-State championship,a l l . s t a r ^ a n d a ] s 0 [ h e
Prenknesa Victor NotRunning in Travcrs
(AP) — Buddy Raines, trainerof the Preakness winner GreekMoney, said yesterday theBrandvwine Farm colt wouldnot start in the $75,000 TraversAug. 18 at Saratoga.
ney's most valuable player is theclub's top pitcher, Don Rooney.Rooney pitched all four victoriesfor the Union House in the tourney. He has
"TKeRaines,
colt's fine." reportedbut I'm afraid he
far enough advanced inisn't
his
"Red" Pierson backs up Rooneyon the mound and has an Im-pressive 11-0 record. Hendersonposted the other mound win.
Bleachers will be put up atMemorial Field to seal approxi-
training lo go the mile,and a
m a t e , y m f a n s m s w e e k e n ( J . s
| t u r n o u t o f f a n s m a y
W h e t n e r n e x t y e g r . s s t a t e
d
d e c i d e
, | W h e t n e r n e x t y e g r s s t a t e
quarter distance of the Travcrs. j s p | a y e d jn R c d B a n kT'IFA ^Alsfnrt If mine IHIIH IVrTt* II've talked it over with Mr,
Jerome." The $50,000 Jerome'Handicap will be run Sept 1 atAqueduct.
night at Long Branch HighSchool's diamond, the UnionHouse club will be taken on amotorcade through local towns.
president of NJSIAA says there has been no such aJDonald Ross, his owner, and we; Fnllowing a practice session to-rule change and schools will not be permitted to start have decided to wait for line' • • - - . " - . -
drills until Sept. 2. Conditioning exercises are not
even permitted with the coaches on hand, that is, un-
til Sept. 1.
We understand the main reason that no drills
or excessive football activity Is allowed is because
of the heat of August. Even in September football
players pass out and the association doesn't want
this to happen in practice sessions.
Our advice to coaches is to check with James G.
Growney, executive secretary-treasurer of NJSIAA.
The ruling was discussed but it has never been ap-
proved.
CRONYNS IN MINNEAPOLISMINNEAPOLIS (AP) Jcssira
Tandy and Hume Cronyn,husband and wife in private life,have signed as members of therepertory company that willlaunch the new Tyrone Guthriethealer here in May 1563.
The first season, runningthrough September, is to com-prise revival of four period plays,yet to be chosen by Sir Tyrone. •
The visiting nine will stay atthe Peninsula House, Sea Bright,over the weekend,
Owner Ray Smith of the UnionHouse will treat both teams lo aclam bake Saturday nighl.
Tickets for the weekend gamesmay be purchased at the OldUnion House or the Red BankChamber of Commerce.
hitter, gave S(. Louis a 2-0 tri-umph orer Pittsburgh, and theChicago Cubs belted Milwaukee12-4.
by Bob Bray of the BrigantineYacht Club, was last with fivepoints.
The race committee consistedof Commodore William T. Hae-bler of the host Rumson club,Eowin Stewart. 3d. also of thehost club, Commodore John Cat-tus. Bay Head Yacht Club, andRear Commodore Morris P.
Club. Commodore Cattus wasthe Area ','C" representative forthe Sears Cun committp?.
KEAIW CUP SUMMARIESIftt Ttarf
Van T)i.ynt\ 2. Minn Wyers.-, i. nrllo.
2f R
Those Los Angeles Angels ,ust s h e r w o o d o f t h e M o n m ou th Boatwont co-operate at all. Theyrefuse to follow the script, justkeen doing things tteir own way.
"They'll never last," soberlypronounced the experts as Bit! i
Ripney somehow placed his oddly i Bra;assorted crew of herces hot onj ,the heels of the American Leagueleading Yankees. But they clungthere, week after week. i
"See," chortled the pundits inan l-told-you-so sort of way latelast month when the Angels wentj _'•
Myers, i, Fra>Van Diiyne, 3. Mian
I. Ml-•my, 4.
3d lUcei Myt»r«. '-'. V»nBello.
4th Rarr1, Van Duvtiiv 2 Bplio, Mian My era
and pray (Bntli DUq.iFinal Point*
Barnpgat Bay Y.R.A. 'Van
into a mild slump, the Yankees! Y.n.A.' fBcii'di." »>i. and' cgot hot and Los Angeles qui'etlylS,, Yj?T,% VMB"A. Va'Ay':.slipped back to third. ' ^ t -—
But now, all of a sudden, theAngels arc back in second place,trial New York by 4</2 games andonce again have to be considereda major factor in thre race.
The" regained second bysweeping a doubleheader at Chi-rngo 5-1 and 7-5 while last nijjhtKansas City chalked up its sixthstraight victory, a 4-3 triumphover Minnesota. The Yanks splita pair with Baltimore, winningthe first 3-2 and losing t te night-cap 4-3. Boston downed Cleve-land 6-0 behind Gene Conley'sfour-hitter while Detroit took apair from Washington, 6-5 and10-3.
Baylor ReturnsFrom Service
LOS ANGELES (AP) - ElginBaylor, star forward of the LosAngeles Lakers, will come homeMonday after seven months'service in the Army.
Baylor, all-National BasketballAssociationyears, wasTuesday at Ft. Lewis, Wash. Hehas served as medical orderlysince January!
Baylor said, his weight is 227pounds, Just about what he
is Chris' 11-3 mark.Real Estate dumped Kirby,
9-6, Luigi's and Sal's battled to
Mainstay, 6-0, in recent contests.Sunday's games saw Mainstay
bounce back with a 7-5 win overCnris' and Luigi's nipped Kirby,8-7.
The standings:W L
Wilson's U SChris's 11 3Luigi's 9 4Sal's 6 7Mainstay 6 9Kirby 4 11Real Estate Assoc 2 13
Pet..800.786.692.500.400.267.125
Registration DeadlineTuesday for Tourney
HOLMDEL — Tuesday is tiredeadline for registration for golf-ers entering the tournament spon-sored by the recreation com-mission here Oct. 8 at KorsgateCountry Club, Janresburg, at 1p.m. A roast beef dinner willfollow the tourney.
Chairmen for the event areWilliam Friedlaender and PeterGenovese.
Thrilling
Stock CarRACES
30-Lap Feature
20-Lap Novices
8 Big Events
Special Added Attraction
See spectacular baton twirling
exhibition by the fabulous
Dottie DunstonU!
SEF Tele Frawff, TnmmlrElllnll. Rill McCarthy.
Wallr I>allrnlmrh, Bllon Hlldrrth,Don Stlvr* and olhrr (op modifiedand sportsmen driven.
star for severalreleased from duty
p jweighed during the NBA season.
RENTA NEW FORD OR OTHER
FINE CARS AND TRUCKS
PHIL WALDMAN'SGULF
SERVICE STATION
Mopla Ave. & W. Front St.Open DaUy and Sun. 7 A.M.-10 P.M.
CALL SH 7-0308
68th MC Horse Show August 17-19Rumson Earns 5/>o*Best Riders to Be On Hand IninCarletonPlayoffsM C l a s s e s ; Arabians Added
SHREWSBURY - RumsonFair Haven reached the playoff championship finals of the EdCarleton Memorial baseballleague by trouncing Shrewsbury12-3, last evening on the Patterson Ave. diamond here.
Coach Vern Paulson's nine willnow face the winner of tonight'sRams-Neptune clash next weekin a two-out-of-three series forth; play-off title. <
The Rams are the defendingchampions. Last Monday theywhipped Shrewsbury, 11-8, in aspecial play-off for the regularseason title after the two clubshad tied for first with 22 pointsapiece in seasonal play.
Rumson-Fair Haven, fourthplace finishers In the Carletonloop, exploded with three runsIn the first, added a big sevenin the fifth when Shrewsbury'spitching fell apart and finishedwith two more in the sixth.
Witt Buckalew pitched a bril-liant game for the winners, allowing three scattered hits andfanning 16 batters.
Rumson's Vern Paulson pro-vided the big first inning sparkwith aaboard.
home run.Buckalew
with oneadded a
double to send Fred Dicksonhome with the third run of theInning.
Shrewsbury tallied two runs inthe fifth to tighten up the con-test, but the rout was on in thebottom half of the frame.
Herb Johnson and Irky FalksingledPaulson
to open the inningwalked to load the
sacks. BuAalew also strolled toforce Johnson home.
Jack Damico picked this spotto unload a bases-clearing doubleto deep center. Then the "walk"parade continued.
Jim Robinson walked, but waspicked off. However Bob Lat-timer, Jay Benedict and John-son walked to force Damico over.
Falk was hit by a pitch andPaulson received a free pass tosend the sixth and seventh runsicross.Bob Coyle, who relieved starter
Paul Kocen, was the victim ofthe fifth inning assault. PeteStirnweiss finally relieved thetired Coyle (he pitched fivenings against the Rams Mondaynight) and finally put out thefire.
Coyle was on first when Kocenslammed a triple in the fifth.Kocen continued home when theball was interferred with by theRumson batboy.
Coyle belted a home run in theseventh for the final Shrewsburytally.Shrrniburr (3) numion (II)
A I R H AB It H
OCEANPORT - One of theoldest and most popular horseshows of the East is scheduledhere Aug. 17, 18 and 19 when the68th annual Monmouth CountyHorse Show will be held at Mon-mouth Park's Wolf Hill Farm,adjacent to the track.
The show is expected to drawleading hunters a n d huntingponies from most of the leading pion, and Mrs. Julian Trenholm'sEastern stables. Several of last
Lall!,If 3 0 OUohnson.isschlssler.lb 5 0 0 Fam.rf
3 0 OlPaulion.c3 0 HDIckson.lbS 0 0 PerrUb1 2 I ~ - .2 0 0 Dam!co,3b
0 0 Roblnaon.cF
1 22 2
Coyle.cf.p
Weira-CurleyKocen,p
0 0
8l!rnw's3,p 1 0 0
Lattlm*r,2b
21
_ _ 14 1 10 0 0
2 11 11 0
0 0 Bunch.2b
31 13 1
Benedtct.lt 30 01
23 3 3a-Struck out for Slmpaon In 7th.Shrewsbury .. OOO 020Rumson-Falr Haven 300 0T2 _ . .
HFi—Paulaon, Coyle. 3B—Kocm. 2B—Buckalew, Damco. Hits off—Kocen 6In 3*4: Coyle 1 In 1; Stlrnwelsi 2 Inl!ii 80—Buckalew lfl; Kocen 4; Coylt • Dai __.«_i_.» * H I _ «• —- ». • —
working hunter champion, GoodN" Safe, is returning along withHigh Field Farm's Tac, grandpony hunter champion, SusanBlaisdell's (Middletown) SingingStorm, large pony hunter cham-
Quick Card Wins FeatjFour Straight Longs]
Grid PracticeSlated Sept. 1 *
RED BANK — A rumor circu-lated this week regarding highschool football squads being al-lowed to start getting into con-dition Aug. 15, is false. Coachesof local high schools are to becautious in this undertaking,authorities said. —
Frank J. Pingitore, p i i d e n tof the New Jersey StatMInter-scholastic Athletic AsAation,last night said there Mk beenno change in the a v i a t i o n ' sSept. 1 practice s t a j K date.
Mr. Pingitore s a i j p e Aug. ISstarting date wasjWcussed but
pthe sanctionAugust being
IUOUS football"'association 1
; to keep the Sept.as a health pre-
"""Why some gridderss out during game in
itember," stated Mr. Pingi
o had never receivjof UJSIAA. Du|
hot12 s tooi_ 3 workouts,1—12
Airwell, green working hunterchampion, and Duffy Stable'sMcLain Street, open jumperchampion.
The show Itself has becomeone of the most important in theEast, with a tremendous repre-sentation of New Jersey exhibi-tors. It is the oldest in the state(founded in 1894) and last yearit was designated an "honor"show by the American HorseShows Association.
Arabians To Be ShownFor the first time, there will
be a division for Arabian:. Therest of the show is for huntersof all kinds, and jumpers. TheArabian classes will be heldSunday, Aug. 19, at which timea colorful class in costume willbe featured.
One of the Interesting Items ofthe show is the huge representstion of local exhibitors. Includedare Misses Bambi Ellis, Jill
made i
tore.
FREEHOLD-After long shotswon four straight races, favoredQuick Card romped home first totake the feature dash yesterdayat Freehold Raceway.
Quick Card, piloted by HowardCamden of Freehold, rushed 'othe top at the three quarters poleand came home a winner by onelenght over Dukewyn, who wasone-half length ahead of Grate-ful Racy.
The 3-year-old bay colt pacedbeautifully in third place untihe was urged to the front by
nally Doublejfijll Paid IIB.I10—P«r»! C-3; Gfad.: l m . i T.VtMO.iojf !:53
Machlponjo (Dennis Sr.)..1.4O 2.80 2.80
Baby Billy— Happy Duke,
— 3.00 3.00. — — 5.40WMmlngtld
Camden. Owned by theStable, Quick Card
Coltspaid
t~ 10 win and negotiated the milein 2:06 3-5.
Bie Bie Chcerful's $13.60 vietory in the fourth started thelong-enders ride to the winner'scircle. Handled by Vernon Cow-ger, Bie Bie assumed the leada' the halfway mark and wonthe mile race by one length. MissTitanette was second and Maple-leaf third. Time for the mile was2:08 4-5.
After Miss Wiggins, RandaStafford, Jr., piloting, scoredanother upset in the fifth ($12.40)Gypsy Lybrook stirred the crowdto a terrific round of applauseas the 10-year-old bay geldingromped home a winner at thehefty price of $38.80.
Driven by owner Howard Scott,Gypsy Lybrook beat to thewire Viscount Pick, Anthony Ab-batiello steering, and Miss BootIn the order named. Miss JuliaCobb next won a photo for a $12
. return for $2 to end the upseWring.
Abbatiello, star of the inaugu-ral card with three victories anda third in as many starts, wonthe second behind Chipman'sHeart. He started only twiceyesterday.
A: turnout of 7,526 brought thetotal attendance for the meetingto 23,328.
RESULTS1—Trot: C-3: 1 m.: T.S:1D.! «»f 1:0*.Nip Sonr; (Qulnnl 4.20 3,00 2.4CLucky Hour fjaeften — 4.00 2,fifBran Brummel 'Dennis SiO — 3.6C
Alao — Lithograph, Rio Girl. Home-stretch Hnrvey, Amosson'a Bill, Noss-del Herman,S-P IM-C (on.; 1 m.: T. 1:10.1 oil t.ifli l r Charlei Pick (Abb'llo)4.60 3.40 2<iSherry 1 -... — 4.80 3.21Willie Winkle (Cowftr).. — — 2.60
Also — R. G. Direct, Vonnle Han-Over, Chipman'fl Heart, Meadow Zea-land. Beverly Mine.
THE WORLD'S
BEST
SHOWER HEAD
the SPEAKMAN
ANYSTREAM
J. G. Rachel, Homeitretch Pearl BlusMonday.«—Trot, r -5 ; ] m.; T-1:WM off 3:10R!e Bie CheerfuhCoweor) 13.60 7,60 5 60Mtsa Titanette (Wardt^ — 5,20 4 iOMapteleaf (Taulon TV— — 8 40
Also—Roialina Nlmlu. VT14|J£ DeiCoordinator, Pay Shlppei -^^-- -Klnney.
•Par*. C-3, Cond.: Iff 3:50
MiM WiBginstSttrfordJr.) 12.40 5.80 3.Chockoyotte Lee (BrlttlnLDave Herman (DennlsSM — — 7 40
Alio — Neighborly. Hunter, MissOoldle Patch, Mountain Volo, ChalldaleRon.
~Tri»t, C-li 1 m. T-t:08.I off 4:1»Gypsy Lybrook (Scotti.-38.8O 9.40 6 00Viscount Pick f Abb'llo)-. — 4.80 4 00
Rumsoii Pop WarnerTo Add Floodlights
RUMSON — The Board of Ed-ucation <last night granted per-mission to the Rumson Pop War-ner football league to erect sixpoles with three floodlightsapiece, and tackling and blockingdummies for use in practice.The equipment will be placed onthe field adjacent to the Forrest-
MUs-Beol malnbone) .... — - 5.80Also — Sharontown! Scotch SlthriaT
B 15. Lokl Ben, Chulldnle PeterJ—F»oe. e-t: I m.; T-Z:07.1 oil 4:<(Miss Julia Cobb I Oakley) 12.00 7.00 4.00May a. iDawklnm „ —480 4.00Patsy Nlralu iWagnen.... — — 3.60
Also: Jean Woollen. Euallzer. FormalEacort, Jim Dean. Wee Willie Winkle.8 - P » « , C ! ; 1 mi T-S:o«.3 off SMSQuick Card (Camden) ...SM 3.80 3.20Dukewyn «Jalt) — ».<o 5 00Oratelul Ray (EUerroan) — — 4 40
Al»o — Lady Knljnt. C. n. Vie, Mo-hawk Thurway, Leonid, Aunt Debbie.9-P«cr. C-3,
off 5:38. Cant.; 1 m.i T-t:08.I
Busy Chuck (Evans) 6.20 4 20 3 00Jerry Kirk (Farrlngton)- —4.80 3 00Creek Star (Dill) _ —3 80
Also — June Elklnjtton. Jealous Ab-be. Debbie Walnut, Bobby star Mar-tha Direct.10— r»cc, C-3;
off 6:01m.; T-IM.1
Bewitching Beauty(W'er)18.6O «.O0 5.00Vlctoranda (Wlmbrow) .. — 22 20 6 60Oneteta Adlos (Dennl.iSr.l — — 2 60
Also — Electric, Sudden Surprise,Keenl« Dlrectta. Key Stona Girl,Doras Joy.AtlrndaJH-r: 7,5!« — Handle 1195,WJ
Billy Keay Signs PactWith Buffalo Bisons
BUFFALO, N. Y., (AP) - TheBuffalo Bisons of the AmericanHockey League signed coachBilly Reay to a two-year con-tract yesterday.
beholdSelections
Chip HalEmily WllGeneral DeanDavey DeanHI WorthyDarn TrustySussex SenoritaAflon CastleThird Rail
Red BreezeJet GemMiss KentGrandma KeyCharm BoyLucky ChrisAvenue HalDale KnightHenrietta W.
Royal LairdDanny T.Amos Diamond
8 Jimmy GeneMr. Qulnton ScottMabel Rosecroft
Ann FairSonny CincoNet* Walnut
10 Willa QuintonLord TitanRoyal Hi he
'ear's champions in their re-ipective divisions have filed en-ries and will be seeking repeatictories.Susan Dickson's 1961 junior
Also the Shoestring Trophy,was won by Jill Chamberlain ofRumson in 1961.
All of last year's winners areentered for this year's classesana are hoping to win anotherleg on these trophies next week.
There are also several NewJersey high score award class-es, including the Gregory B.Saunders trophy for large andsmall
Chamberlain, Gail Asay, SusanThomas, Susan Blaisdell, Sallyand Muffin Lord, Andrea King,Andrea Savarese, Peggy JaneLynch, Whitney Andrews, Eliza-beth Jane Crowhurst, Lucy Gans,Dana Brennan, Ellen Holsey,Barbara Ulrichsen, Carrie BethBlair and Karen Leftwlch.
A l s o Virginia Shiman, R.Crofton Held, Robert Evans, Jr.,Stephen Badenhop, C.C. Combs,A.R. Gilman, George S. Howell,Joseph F. Lord, Allison Stern,Mrs. James Weil, Steven Woodand others. All these exhibitorsare local area participants.
Several TrophiesThere are several challenge
trophies and last year it wasSusan Dickson of Gynnedd, Pa.,who took home five of them. In-cluded were the W.B. Ruthruff,for working hunters; Louis S.Gimbel, champion hunter; Tam-burlaine, for junior hunters;Ross Trophy, for champion ju-nior hunters, and the ArmandSavarese, champion rider.
Others were the Rumbough(ladies hunters) w o n by Mrs.George Scheets, Whitemarsh,Pa., last year; The Lord Trophy (green champion hunter]v/on in 1961 by E. TrenholmCerulean Farm, Armonk, N.Y.
The Punkin Tart Trophy (fieldhunter) was won last year byMrs. Armand Savarese, Middletown. The Tourelay Farm Trophy (drive, ride and jump class)was won by Miss Susan Thomasof Middletown. T h e Davis(champion pony) was won byMiss Barbara Ulrichsen, Key-port.
COLTS CUT ROOKIESBALTIMORE (AP) - The
Baltimore Colts cut three morerookies yesterday to reduce theirNational Football League squadto 56.
Put on waivers were NapoleonBarbosa, halfback from VirginiaUnion;xRon McGurk, defensiveend from Huron, S. D., College,and Joe Chefalo, defensive half-back from Citadel.
Freehold EntriesFIRST RACE: 2:00 p.m. PURSE: VOO
C-J P a c e ; 1 Mile3. Safe Deposit - e a s i e r 3-11. Chip Hal Hubbard, Jr. 4-15. Kernel Don Hubbard 4-12. General Dean Zendt (-16. Johnny Maplecroft White 6-li8. Tony Elkington, Dennis 6-14. Emily Wll Marks 8-17. Hemell Rhythm HobbsSECOND RACE: 2:25 p.m. PURSE: $700
C-3 Trot; 1 Mile6. Titanlte Robinson4. Davey Dean Dawkins8. Chockoyotte Dream Dill3. Go Lucky McKee2. Lady Frost Ellerman7. Darn Trusty Offutt5. Harlan Rose Zendt1. Hi Worthy JamesTHIRD RACE: 2:50 p .m. PURSE:
C-3 Pace; 1 Mile; 3 and 1 y .o .7. Third Rail8. Clever Zip3. Wayne Direct5. Shadydale Dream6. Afton Castle4. Sussex Senorita1. Homestretch Vamp2. Avalon Aurora
DillMaceRobinsonCarterBotschJamesWarrlngtonLong
FOURTH RACE: 3:15 p.m. PURSE:C-3 Pace; 1 Mile; 3 and 4 y.d.
7. Red Breeze Zendt6. Honor's Kit 'Mace1. Nlckawampus Carter5. Miss Fay Botsch8. Jet Gem Goodwyn3. Adlo Elkington Floyd4. Miss Kent Warrlngton2. Taurida Debbie HobbsFIFTH RACE: 3:40 p.m. PURSE:
C-2 Trot; 1 Mile3. Sword's Point Rpblnson7. Vandy Hanover4. Charm Boy2. Queen Way5. Grandma Key1. Gay Wanda5. Lucky Chris6. Midget
DillFarrlngtonTaylorNealyWellerMyerHiteman
3-14-14-16-16-18-18-1
10-1$700
3-14-14-16-16-18-18-1
10-1(700
3-14-14-16-16-18-18-1
101$900
3-14-14-16-16-18-18-1
10-1
SIXTH RACE: 4:05 p.m. PURSE: $700C-J Pace; 1 Mile; 5 y.o. and up
2. Dale Knight Abbatiello 3-17. Avenue Hal Farrlngton 4-15. Even Guy Dennis, Sr. 4-11. Colleen Royal Dawkln 6-1J. Miss Majesty's Lady Tobeann'cd 6-16. Cedar Crest Hope McCandless 8-18. Henrietta W. Crane 8-14. Reggie's Jean James 10-1SEVENTH RACE: 4:30 p.m. PURSE: $900
C-2 Pace; 1 Mile2. Danny T. Farrlngton 3-14. Stevie Boy White 4-11, Edith K. Abbe Young 4-13. Amos Diamond Dennis, S r . . (-18. Chief Hour Roslno ' 6-17. Great Titanic Wirrington 8-15. Royal Laird Cowger 8-16. Stormy Mountain Robinson 10-1EIGHTH RACE: 4:55 p.m. • PURSE: $1,100
C-l Pace; 1 Mil*Dennis, Sr. 3-1Camden 4-1Thomas 4-1Ellerman 6-1Long 6-1Robinson 8-1Mihar 8-1Santero 10-1
$700
3. Vernon Boy2. Mable Rosecroft5. Frederick Direct1. Jimmy Gene4. Brown Mink7. Mr. Quinton Scott8. Pine Hill Till6. Widower GoldNINTH RACE: 5:20 p.m. PURSE:
C-3 Pace; 1 Mile; 5 y.o. and up2. New Walnut Robinson4. Atlas Hanover King8. Ernie Joe Cowger6. Ann Fair Evans5. Mountain Jane Huebsch1. Wee Yankee Murphy7. Prime Time Scott3. Sonny Clnco MyerTENTH RACE: 5; 45 p.m. PURSE:
C-J Pace; 1 Mile; 5 y.o. and up6. Lord Titan7. Blue Dan4. Willa Quinton2. Honey's Peter Patch1. Cindy's Up5. Royal Hi Le8. Grade S.I. Meadow Noel
KobashMiiltoxRobinsonMarksHubbardMyerDennis, Sr.White
3-14-14-1
, 6-16-18-18-1
10-1$700
3-14-14-16-16-18-18-1
10-1
RED BANK REGISTER Thursday, August 9, 1962—19
pomes.Haskell President
A m o r y L. Haskell, Middle-town, is honorary president ofMonmouth County Horse Show.Michael Torpey, Little Silver, isshow chairman. Philip H. Ise-lin Is honorary director.
Other officers include Mrs. Jo-seph F. Lord, Little Silver, first;vice president and correspondingsecretary; Mrs. John C. Ellis,Middlelown, s h o w secretary;
Andrew Ulrichsen, Key-Mrs,port,
A.R. Gilman, Llncroft, treasur-er, and Mrs. George S. Howell,Scobeyvilie, delegate tc t h eAHSA.
Directors are Mrs. Frank F.Blaisdell, Middletown; AshtonEurke. Lincroft, Miss BarbaraBurrand, New York City; Mrs.CC. Combs, Tinton Falls; Mrs.Joseph H. Gans, Everett; Mrs,Gilman; Louis S. Gimbel, 3d,Wayside; Frederick F. Grau,Little Silver; Stinor S. GimbelWayside; W. Trubee HaeblerLocust, and Oskar E. HeldRumson.
A l s o Paul W. KenworlhyMontrose, Mrs . Estes King,Rumson; Joseph F. Lord, LittleSilver; Mark D. McClain, Mid-dlelown; Mrs. Richard G. Met-calf, Middbtown; Mrs. William
recording secretary: Dr. C. Ricker, Rumson; Melvin A.
Ryan, Red Bank; Mr. and Mr».G. Barker Seeley, Holmdel; Ed-win Stewart, Jr., Rumson, mdMrs. Mark Thonun, Middletown.
Top JudgesJudges include Mrs. Charles
H Coffin, Sr., Middletown, whowill also judge the Arabians;Stephen O. Hawkins, Englewood;Norman W. H a l l , Norwaik,Mass., and Mr, and Mrs. HarryG Huberth, Bedford, N.Y.
Thomas J. Hamilton, Phila-delphia, and Mrs. Lawrence Yet-ter, Newton, are stewards. KarlWandell, Edison, Pa., is ringmas-ter. Gerald Goldman, Philadel-phia, is the announcer.
The Monmouth Historical So-ciety, Monmouth Council of BoyScouts and the U.S. Equestrianteam will be beneficiaries of thisshow.
OPEN TILL 9 P.M. — M 0 N . - F R 1 . ; SAT.TILL 6 P.M
firistont SUMMERSELLOUT
50-ft. Vinyl Plastic
GARDEN HOSE• Full 5-year "no charge" replacement f |
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Replacementa prorated on tread |I wear and baaed on liat pricesI current at time ol adjustment.
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YOU K N O W W H A T Y O U A R E G E T T I N G W H E N Y 0 U 3 U Y F I R E S T O N E !
f. Align* 9,1962 JBJES BAM REGISTER
_ S J J >> -» IT DD«OST. BIOS «•» MU>.:O m « Ifsck r«i«t Ales. Reward. Call
as c*muc - Bunto*. low mi*W«. VHi. S» Bast Bttfti VI, Vt
— PMrtw* Na B 191M. Finderfsturo to Morunouth county
Buk. R«4 Bank.
i»s» PLYMOUTH SAVOY — Good rubber, transportation, aatomatlo. Can-bsseen anytime at fil Naveatnk Ave., EastKeanBburg.
LOBT—VIclnlty' Fort Monmouth, crownand wWt*; terrier, Htsblands license.ttnalngt, nsOOSB
TRAVEL • TRANSPORTATION
WANTED — Girl In New Monmomharea, would like to ride with someoneto Red Bank at 8 a.m. and borne at &p.m. Call OS 1-3204 after 5 p.m.
AUTOS AND TRUCKS
SPECIAL SAVINGS*60 Chevy Monz& Coupe'6» Btudebaker Convertible'60 Dodge Stilton Wagon•59 Cliryiler 2-dr. Hardtop•89 Ford 2-dr. Hardtop•5» Plymouth (dr. Sedan'58 Chevy Station Wagon'57 Ford 4-dr. Sedan'57 Chevy 2-dr. Sedan'M Chevy 4-dt, Sedan'M Bulck 2-dr. Hardtop,'56 Plymouth Convertible'MFoM 2-dr. Hardtop'66 Plymouth l-dr. Sedan15 Chevy Station WagonMany other* ta choose from.
13S M Aw., Atl. Highlands
AUTOS AND TOUCKS
1958 DOJOOE CORONET — Completequipment Including snow Urea, f893.Can be eeen at Comrnuter'a Esso, 47Shrewsbury Ave., Red Bank.1959 STATION WAGON — Ford Coun-try 6<]ulre. Excellent condition.
. os i-rrmMUST SELL THIS WEEK!
1060 Cadillac. Silver blue eonvertlblMust see to appreciate. Make olfe;Call CA 2-1235. Auk for Edgar.i960 RENAULT DAUPHINE —condition, new tires, aun roof, peraoilick. J7S0. 787-3892.19M PLYMOUTH TUDOR SAVOY —Call
EH 7-56181853 VAUXHAlX (Pontiac). Leavlntown, must sell, J295. gee at Al's MobStation, Maple Ave. and Broad. Ke<Bank.
$4501953 PLYMOUTH station wagon,condition, all extra a, LI 2-Q347.
PLYMOUTH — 1959, two-door Puihanliop. Good condition. $M5. Call 26*B*J57. _ _1952 PONTIAC CLUB COUPE — Gootcondition. Reasonable. Phone
TS7-M58PODGE PANEL. TRUCK
S100OS 1-1375
CORVAIP. — 1961 ItaiQpaifle Pick-up.Radio, heater. Standard tranamlsstaaE e l l e n t condition. HO 2-6331 evenings.CADILLAC — 1959, excellent condition,
after 6 p . m . ^
1358 RENAULT BAUPIttNE — Ktires, new battery, motor recently over-hauled, radio, heater, and Bun roof.Gets 39 mile* per pallon. Excellentcondition. Call 787-395© alter 6 p.m.
AUTOS AND TRUCKS
A QUIET WORD TOBARGAIN HUNTERS..NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
105 NEW• FAIRLANE
FALCON• GALAXIE
Thunderbird• COMET• METEOR• MONTEREY
FORDMERCURY
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
ENGLISHSH 1.6000 AGENCIES SH 7.4545
Since 1904 — MONMOUTH & MAPLE, RED BANK
SjTfSiurns AND TKOCB
__ cmtmefmMu i w « » iwr
inr Bit.. Fair Hun,MM KEKCUttY ~ Kew m H w , (MO.
1967 FORX> — Klne-pueenKer stationwagon. Fordomatlc. radio, neater, onsowner, fWO. Cali after 6 p.m. OS 1-1456.1962 MGA — Convertible, like new,J1995. For appointment caU OS l-r—ai(»r 4 p.m OS 1-0975.
1953 PONTIAC — .Ifour-doiHydramatlc. 5225, Call
SH 7-1536I860 THUNDERBIRD convertible, bur-gundy with white top, power steering,power windows, radio, heater, 93,495.SH 7-1H8.WILLYS JEEP? No. SCOUT. Yeifour-wheel drive branri new. Startat R223 delivered. S<*e MAURICESCHWARTZ & SONS, Plymouth, Vll-lant. Imperial, Chrysler. Internationaltrucks. 111 West Front St., lied Bank.
1953 PLYMOUTH sedan, automatic, €Xcellenl condition, $175. Applejate's.Garage, corner Ave. T> and LeonardvlUeJld.. Leonardo. 291-1906,
STATION WAGONS\m> FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE1959 FORD RANCH WAGON«56 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE1953 FORD RANCH WAGONMAURICE SCHWARTZ 4 SONS. Flymouth. Valiant. Imperial. Chrysler, In.ternational trucks. 141 West Front St.,Red Bank.
S53 8TUDEBAKER Champion, goodstation car. tlOO. May be seen evenings,811 1-HG17.
1061 OPEL — Excellent condition. ItRhtblue, lull sun roof, m&ny extras. Call8(2-2«54.1951 MO — TD. Best reasonable offer.Call after 6 p.m.
SH 19191MORRIS MINOR «t«!ion
:cellent condition. CaliM2-36G8
1356 MERCURY — Nlne-paalenger. PullPower. J495. KSssas Bros.. Pontlac. 395Broad St.. Red Bank. SH 1-51S0.
1959 THUNDERBIRD — Have you beendreaming ot a Thunderbird? This allwnite convertible ts fully powered In-cluding electric wlntlowa. power ateer-InB. and i» a local one-owner car. StopIn and see It t o d a y . MAURICESCHWARTZ A SONS. Plymouth. Val-lant. Imperial, Chrysler. Internationalirucks. HI West Front St. Red Bank.1957 PONTIAC convertible, full power.Immaculate condition. Asking S950. 1951CHEVROLET, power glide, radio, heat-T. J1!5L 787-5077.
RELAX—HAVE FUN! Sailing, out-boarding and skiing. See our completelines. BOAT. SKI * SCOOTER CEN-TER, 75 White St.. Red Bank. SH 1-1124
MM PONTIAC — BonnevilU con-vertible, excellent condition, power•teerlng. power brakes, radio, healer,luctet teats. Am forced to fell, willucxine* at (1,099, for quick aale. CallMr. Wy»r, BH 1-OOlft extension 35.
w RUNABOUT — 40 h.p. MercuryHolsdaw trailer, excellent conditionSH 1-6292.
COMMUTER CARSLook at thai* to HI all DOCketDoolO1955 VOLKSWAGEN1959 S1J1CA1960 SIMCA1960 IULLHAN WAGON1959 RAMBLEK WAGON1960 VALIANT SEDANMAURICE SCHWARTZ * SONS, Ply-month. Valiant, Imperial, Chrysler, In-ernatlonal trucks, 141 west From SL,
Hed Bank.
1867 EVMRUDE MOTOR — 18 h.p.Used vtry little. Best Offer. Call eve-nings. SH 74299.
1956 FORD — Four-door Town Sedan.f-8 automatic. Call evenings or Batur-ay. SH 7-M99.
IAS SAVING 1959 RAMBLER AMERICAS — Tv/lHloor, automatic, clean, onewrcier. Call CO 4-5»77.
1955 OLDSMOBILB 88 — Hardtop,power steering and power brakes. Goodcondition. OS 1-2904.959 THUNDERBIRD — Convertlhle,14.000 miles. J2.200. Excellent condl-Ion. Call after 6 p.m. SH 7-5965.
MG-TD — 1951, excellent condition, newtop. two new tires.
SH 1-86131959 CHEVROLET — H-ton pickup.Priced to sell. Rassas Bros., Pontlac,395 Broad SL, Red Bank. SH 1-6180..951 FORD SEDAN — J55. Kuns well.Brakes, elutci, e t c rood, bo3y poor.291-H54.
1052 PLYMOUTHPwo-door, radio, heater. Good Ure»,iow mileage. Call SH 1-0641).
1956 LINCOLN — Two^ioor hardtop.Full power. As traded *395. RassasBros., Pontlac. 395 Broad St., Rediank. SH 1-5180.
AUTOS AND TRUCKS
Oldsmobile-Cadillac Co.
IS AT IT AGAIN!
PRICES SLASHEDON FACTORY FRESH '62 OLDSMOBILES
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AUTOS AND TSDCKS
MU-.j wKaul BW.
<)UXMOK\Vt — Dyualc-H, W»,lLU f r rU*Ht »»4 brw*luuLUx. t ,black and wtilte t»M«y. Ok« new,Dwyer'a Crown Service Station, Hl«n-way S8, Mlddletown.PONTIAC — WSt, hardtop, bWe andwhite. Automatic transmission, powersteering, c l e a n car, mechanicallysound. Dwyer*s Crown Service Station,Highway 35,1955 PLYMOUTH BAVOY — Good rub-ber, transportation, automatic. Can beaeen anytime at 51 Kaveslnk Ave., E u tK b c /1957 FORD CONVERTIBLE — Auto-matlc, power steering, radio, heater,Aa traded S3S0. R&is&s Bros.. Pontiac,395 Bro»d St., Bed Bank. SH 1-5180.2953 STUDEBAKER — Four-iloor, :nlng condition, 5100.
SH 1-71471969 OPEL station wagon, Ideal tostation car or school transportation.5525. SH 1-B9S1,IBM FOKD — TwoKloor, stamlard shift.Going in service. Oood condition. 842-0365.1957 OLDSMOBILE — Two-door. Auto-malic, power Hteerin*. As traded $350.Hassas Bros.. Pontlac, 393 Broad St.,Red Bank. SH 1-5160.1961 BUICK CONVERTIBLE — Invicta.Tinted glass windshield, radio, heater,power brakes, steering. CM50, Call 291-2M3.
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Used . 10% downHew - 7-year financing
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lnce. l!Cl 16 W. 'Front St.. BH 7-3500
BAKQAIN — Any boat you want toi^rn. Lew bank rates. £isanclnK arrangements completed la ons call atany of oar offices. THE MONMOUTHCOUNT! NATIONAL BANK. SB 1lOOOt
1961, 17' LATOTRAKE, FENN YAN—10 fLP. 1962 Er inmde electric start.1200 IP. trailer. Ashing SUOO. 787-1274.
WANTED CANOE — Ujesbl . conilitloaCall
BH 7-1927
REVEL CRAFT Hardtop hoat, 1960GO h.p. Scott-McCuIlough motor withbailftmatfc, completely equipped withelectric s tar ter and generator, ta-chometer, compass, side ladder, boatcover and extra large tank. Used verylittle, cost $2,400, bargain at |1,500Call after S:30 p.m.. 787-5749.
RUMSON YACHT BASINFirst Stretet 842-2300
Sales & Service32' Cabin Cruiser $2,20028' Olsen Sea Skiff, 165 h.p. $3,50027' Eico, 95 fap Chris-Craft $1,80025' Chris-Craft, 185 hp, 1961 $4,50025' Richardson Skiff $3,25023' Cabin, 60 h.p.,
Chris-Craft $2,09017' Thompson Outboard,
1962 _.., $1,700QLASPAR G3 SKI boat, 1950, withJohnson windshield, steering apparatus,gear shift. White with red trim. PhoneMike Kirk, 842-2260, or «ee at Irwln'Yacht Works, Kfd Bank.15' BOAT — Floerglased, In water,S125. Iff Cape Cod, as is, » 5 firm.03 1-1567 alter 5.4' RUNABOUT - 25 h.p. Evlnrudeengine, controls juid trailer. $330, Phone142-2984..900 — 18' Penn Van, I960 75 b.p.lohnson outboard motor.
SH 1-9K18SPEED SKIFF —.IB1, B5 h.p. Inboard.J750.
•42.2137WANTED — Small outboard motor,good condition only. Call
291-1565
MARINE SUPPLIESEverything For The Boatman. New' e y ^ largest marine supply houne.
Evlnrude Sales and ServiceTHE BOATMAN'S SHOP
!i Wharf Ave. Red BankSH 1-5T8O
Open Sundays and Holidays9 a.m.-l p.m.
PLYWOOD OARVY — t75. 1800Evinrude, IS h.p., $150.
291-184214' RUNABOUT — 40 h.p. outboanmotor, eectnc starter, steering wheel,controls windshield, excellent conditionSH 1-9599.
17' FLEETCRAFT — 35 h.p., electricjtartlng motor, Master Craft trailer,tuny equipped. Two full tnnfcs of.gHB,water skis. Ready to go. Terrific buy,;*)(). Will finance, 4? OCPan Boulevard,
Atlantic Highlands. 29M653.20' TROJAN CABIN CRUISERl.p. Gray, beet offer.
SH 1-7187TURNABOUT SAILBOAT — Good con-dition, dacron sail and other accesso-ries. Call S42122S.3 H.P. OUTBOARD MOTOR — Roodrunning condition, $25.
842-35901G* COMET sailboat. 16' Old Town «kboat, 30 h.p. Johnson electric stnrt,fully equipped. Priced for quick sale.SH 7.1652,
RUMSON YACHT BASINFirst Street 842-2309
Ready to serve you with
' TEXACOFIRE CHIEF
SKY CHIEF MARINEDIESEL CHIEF
TEXACO OUTBOARDMOTOR OIL
HAVOLINEMOTOR OIL
TEXACOCREDIT CARDS HONORED
FREE: Crusing Chart andTide Tables
1961 OLDSMOBILE 1961 CADILLAC 1959 CADILLACfi 98 Holiday Coupe. Antique S c d a n DeVille. Ebony black Coupe. Powder blue wilhH white with matchinc interior ?"th m a t c h i n S interior. Ful- matching interior. P o w e rj .j wjjiic WJUI jjitiLuitii^ niici iui, jy power eQUiPped including .I Fully power equipped, only factory air conditioning. All ea.u'PPed- Y o u ' n be P r o u d t o
fi 9,500 miles. This is PERFEC- (he makings of LUXURY o w n t h l s smooth driving>•*. T I O N PLUS' DRIVING! LUXURY CAR!
1 1961 CADILLAC'< Coupe DeVille. Alaskan white* with matching interior. Fullyi power equipped, factory airj conditioned. You can ride in1 COOL COMFORT THIS SUM-I MER!
1959 OLDSMOBILE,
Ltynamic 88 four-door HolidaySedan. Completely powerequipped lor your drivingpleasure. Here's your chance . — _to get a real SHARP CAR AT | 0 0 N e w m a n Spring. M . SH 1-0910 RerJ BankA REAL SHARP PRICE! r
VISIT OUR AIR CONDITIONED SHOWROOM
The Price Is Right At . . .
LLJussellA'/JJ!'1 f'<tr.
IS' SEA BRIGHT skiff, cabin, twobunks, 35 h.p. Ejvlnnjde, complete,trailer, tarpaulin, »850. SH 1-2256.
SUPER SAILF1SH — 75 tq. ft. dacronnail sacrifice. J125.
OS 1-1713
22 SKIFF and tandem wheel trailer.Itt ll.p. Chrla Craft, new navy top. cock-pit cover. Excellent condition. Call SH7 37M.
MERCURY MOTOR — bVi h.p.. excellent condition, $55. Thomas Gordon, 21Locust gt., Highlands. 872-1607.
J7 PAWN SKIFF, K902V CHFtlS CRAFT CRUISER, B5 h.p.,
$1,2(1(121 • UIHRB SKIFF, Crown motor, J1.MI017' TKltRY SKIFF, 25 Evlnrude, J8IK)IT PENN YAN, 35 Evlnruile, $801)17' PEARSON, FlberglBji, <0 Johnson.
JTO0.FAlIt HAVEN YACItT WORKS, INC.Fair Hiivcn. BH 7-3010
1902 cnuisEns uic- is' SKIFF — 70h.p. Mercury, navy top, slile curtains.Full mooring cover, extras. $1,800 firm.CA!,L KINCTBOAT WOnKS, 872-10CS.1954 JISK8EY SHELTER 8KIHK — 130h.p. Chris Craft, good flshlnff boat, willnccent car on trftdc. B42-3183.
BUSINESS NOTICESFOR THEE IVOIilt. C*O tr«» lorvlccTopping, trimming, removal. Call LJ2-4220 for tres estimates. Full Insurancecoverage.HANDY MAN WITH TnUCK — YariU,cellure. attic, etc., cleaned. Reasonable.Coil 811 1-20.15 anjtlme.CHARLGA HOWER — Mason Con-tractor. No fob too umau. en 7-1479 orBH 1-0172.
S£«ESMifflSBK^^ »-* v«/> * -
WEEK-END PA1NTEM8 — We painthouses lnslrtn and out. Fencef, garages,etc. Our free estimate will really stirprise you. Call BH' 1-2585 anytime.JOB MOMTANO r- Maann ContractorStuccoing plflsterlnf,' cDnerete work,114 BptlagiUt Mi., Red Bank. BH 7-M47.
tUSWBS HOTtCT
EMPLOYMENTH E I * WANTED-FEMALE
QffiNEKAL HOUSEKEEPER — To liraIn or out Experienced wlta children.Recent references required. Call 843 ™
GIRLS WANTED — For counter andchecking. Apply In person. Horsy La-Rue, Hwy. 36, Batontown.PRACTICAL NURSE — Or nurses sld—Apply In person 10 a.rn. to 2 p-ra.,RIVBRC1U5ST NUR6INO HOME, 31chapln Avenue, Red Bank.TEACHER — Desires young or maturewoman tor child caxe. Four days aweek, 11 &.!*.•* p.m., Fair Haven area.Relerences desired. SH 1-5374.
RELIABLE CLEANING WOMAN—Onor two days weekly. Tranlportaron andreferences necessary. LI 2-1782.
WAITRESSES — Experienced, full orlart-tlme. Apply la person, Shor« Pointnn. Highway 35, Ilazlct.
SLEEVE-SETTERS and stitchers on la-dles coats. Union shop, 3tV.hDur week.Vacation with pay and all paid holi-days. Apply Adams Bros., 25 S.Bridge Ave., Red Bank.BOOKKEEPER — For moving andstorage business, double entry system,general ledger, 'Burroughs posting ma-chine for payroll; state and federalpayroll returns. Handwiite resume tP. O. Box 947, Red Bank.SECRETARY — Must be competenind ' • - • - - - - .SECRETARY — Must be coand experienced typist. ApplyRubber Company, Long BrancLong Branch.
pey Mach A
WOMAN — To take care of smallchild, light housekeeping. References.STAKTIHO September. SH 1-5442.
MATHEMATICSASSISTANT
To waist engineers In mathe-matical calculations. Requiresgood underatanaing at advancedmathematlci for computer pro-gramming or work involving-probability and statistics. E3 orBA degree fn math the mini-mum requirement. Gome I rain-ing in physics or economics de-•.rattle. Good scholastic achieve-ment preferred.
COME IN TO SEE VBMONDAY-FRIDAY, 9 A.M.-J P.M.
OR PHONB
IN HOLMDICb(NEAR BSD BANK)ON ROBERTS RD.
949-2301
BELLTELEPHONE
LABORATORIESAn Equal Opportunity Employer
INTERESTING TELEPHONE WORK—At home calling la your own localarea. Steady positions open In RedBank, Mlddletown, and Long Brancharea. For details call between 1:30and 4:20 at PR S-059? and aak forMrs. Turner.SECRETARY — Red Bank, part-tlmt to 5, Monday througtt Friday. AC'curate typing, some steno preferred,CttJl BH 7-35W.SHREWSBURY — Teacher nteds wom-an to care lor four-year-old and lighthouseKeeplng. Call BH 7*1321 after 5 p.m.WOMAN*— 3IH5 yeare of age, to worfull time lit card *hop. Call in pertoa,65 Broad St., Red BanlL
WAITRESSExperienced Only
Busy House-Good Hour*
MAHER'SBoardwalk, Long Branch. New Jerse;HOLD COSMETIC PARTIES—Earn $25ror three hours' work. Everything fur-nished. Beautiful Kift line. STUDIOGIRL COSMETICS. For full detailcall 7B7-538G.COUNTER GIRL — 18 or over, eve-ning hours. Holly Hill Drive-In, Rt 36,West Keansburg.AVON SELLS ITSELF—Full or parttime. Several terrltorfei open forwomen Interested in having a goodsteady Income, Experience unneces-sary. SH 1-4343 or write: Mrs. Marga-ret Oulotta, P. O. Box 190, Red Bank.
GIRL — Luncheonettepertence, OVIT 21 years, 40 hour week.CHI SH 1-00M.SECRETARY — Girj Friday, salaryopen.
PR 5-G900ASSISTANT PAYROLL CLERK—Some
Kece rate experience desired in cloth-g manufacturing line. Also familial
with quarterly reports, Write "A.F.,"Box 611, Red Bank.8ALESI*ADY — Far Kl/t shop, stposition. Write "A.X., Box 511, RedBank, for interview.SALESWOMAN — Full-time. Apply inperson to manager. Sun Ray Drugs, 46Broad St.. Red Bunk.
EXPERIENCED FLOOR LADYKev/ dress plant opening In LongBranch • Red Bank area.
Excellent opportunity. Replies confi-dential. Write to "A.O.," Box 511, RedBank.
WAITRESS — Age 25 to 40, experl'enced. 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Apply iniprnori. Mystic Restaurant, 747 Hwy. "". 3C,
Port Monmoulh between 1:30 and 4 p.nuHOUSEWIVES — Terrific party planwork. Three eveningB a week, No de-livering, no collecting, no investment.SH 7-0319.
WANTEDTen nigh school girls. To make lightdeliveries. SH 1-2506.BOOKKEEPER AND CLERK - Ma-ture, for distributor, good worJUng cdIIIons. P. O. Box 408. Red Bank.WANTED ~ WomBn, experienced towork In delicatessen store. Apply 91Broadway, Keyport.WAITRESS — For part-time day workIn coffee shop. Call
CO 4-1063
ROOKKEBPER — Billing, typing, gen-eral office work. Call
LO 6-390OSLEEP IN — Reliable woman seekingpermanent position caring for child andhouse. SH 7-9255, call 0 to 5.MUTHEU'S HELPER WANTED Llv-In, care of children, light housekeepingilutles, no cooking. 8H 7-1917,WAITRESS — Experienced for restau-rant dining room. Dally from II :3D to2:30 p.m. and Fridays and Saturdaysfrom 5 to 11 p.m. Call CA 2-9778 be-tween 6 and JO p.m. Ask for Mrs NIch-tern
EXPERIENCED WAITRBBSE8 - Mustapply In person and be over 21. HowardJohnson Restaurant, Hwy 35, Middle-town.
HELP WANTED-MA1EHOOFERS AND SIDING MECHANICS— Apply 9 a.m., 1N8ULATION & BID-ING CORP., 005 Main St., Ashury Park.ACCOUNTANT — Benlor, permanentposition with CPA firm, excellent *al-iry, exceptional opportunity for ad-vancement. Our employees know of this(id, Send resume to "A.B.," Box 511Red Bank. '
PAINTERS WANTEDCall between 6 ana T p.m. PhoneHO 2-0681.
WANTED — Manager or commercialiutiea. Young, growing electronic Instru-ment company desires aggressive manwilh some technical and sales back-ground to handle all phases of promo-ion, advertising, contacts *and sales olnewly developed proprlolory Items. Ex-cellent opportunities for advancementand growth, depending only upon abilityto produce. Send confidential resume toAerologlcal Research, Inc., 420 Divi-sion Rt., Long Branch, or call CA 9-3700 for appointment.
MAHTNE MECHANIC — ExperiencedIn gasoline and dleael marine engines,electrical marine equipment. Year-round employment, catering to yachtingtrails eiduslvely. Only qualified ap-plicants considered. EAU QALL1EYACHT UAfllN, INO, Box 1349, KailOalllc, Florida.
MAN TO WOitK — In retail hardwareplore. Over Ji vcari of age. Permanentposition. Mii'it nave knowledge of hard-ware and Kins selling experience. Callm 7-2222.MKW — trt or over. Full-time or part-time, dayi, evening*, weekends. OS 1-0025 f>r fn person, MCDONALD'B HAM-aURQBRB 11*7. 31. Mlddletown. I
HELP WANIED-MALE
er • Plrm
BRIAO BiXXR — InmtKMM, ButUr
Red BJttik.
PAItrrERS — Flrn i luionly. Call alter t.
8K 1-2005
CHXC — Writ a w , m nuns , wiuconsider taldiMC coccesaioa.
767-6501
Jmt, ..._Hours 32 "noon until 0 p.m. Custodiantor large, new office building. Musthive good work record, he neat anddependable. Also have birth certificate.We offer good pay, paid holidays and ~--vacation. Apply In person, Thursday iJt^PJevening, 5 to 8:30 p.m. No other time." Bowl, Rt. 35, JtlddUtown.
RETIRED VAN — A j . 83, put-timeemployment as guard, watchman orlight janitorial employment. Knowledgeand experience tn bulldlnc security,small arms and Janitorial duties. Em-ployed 39 years until retired. PrankTalerlco. 2&1 Bridge Av«.. Red Bank.SH 1-7690.
Dear Sir: *
The man In business for himself likesIt that way. He will tell you so. Ifyou ask him. Hit only limitation Ishis own ambition.
We have just completed constructionof a BRAND NEW, modern servicestation on LeonardviUe Rd. In Belford,N. J, The facilities couldn't tie FINER!We are lookm*: for a capable lessee , . .a person -who will grow with the com-munity.
Experience In the petroleum In-dustry Is NOT necessary. We will of-fer thej right Individual a comprehen-sive tramine; program, at the com-pletion of which he will have prenaredhimself tor all phases of UP-TO-DATEservice station operation.
The Individual selected, with a mod-erate Investment in equipment endmerchandise has the opportunity tobuild a lucrative business for atm-selt.
Perhaps you, or a friend, are c _slderlnx such an opportunity? You arecordially Invited to come lor an in-terview and inspection of our stationon Monday or Tuesday, August 13and 14, between the hours ot 7 p.m.aad 9:30 p.m.
Sincerely,
The Shell oil Company
DINER — EstatUshtd S3 years. Beats43. Priced tor Immediate late, *l«.0O0.FIN1.AY REAL ESTATE Agency, 770Bay Ave., Highlands. 872-0100.
AUTO MECHANICS — Two, steady,reliable men tor shift work. Attendingproduction machinery. Factory experi-ence not necessary. Permanent Jobs,good pay. Phone CO (-6000 for InterviewBARTENDER — Night club, full orpart-time, 8-ood personality, neat ap-pearance, age 21-40. Apply at ShamrockBar, Keansburg.
MENHllcleto—-Red Bank area. I seed tenmen who can start work thli week.Full-time, steady, year-round J&nitortalwork. Bight hours a night, [We nightsa week. Mint be dependable, have birthcertificate u d own transportation toand from work. Fald holidays and va-cation. Apply in person Thursday eve-ning, < to 8:30 p.m. No other time.Harmony Bowl, ftt 35. MUdietown.BUTCHER — Friday and Baturdsr.
281-OtnYOUNG MAN — Wilh car, Irom Middle,town and Hed Bank area, S96 per week.Steady employment, no layoff. Repre-sentative ot nationally known companywill Interview. N, J. STATE EMPLOY-MENT SERVICE, 48 East Front St..Red Bank. Monday, Aug. 13; 1-3 p.m.
TOOLMAKERS and
MACHINISTS—LO 6-2430
.CAREER OPPORTUNITYPosition available with Insurance com-pany. Salary and commission. Manyfringe benefits. Paid while In training.Wrte to "B.B.." Box Ml, Red Bank,N. J. Stating age, education, and salesexperience. Replies will be beld In«tiict confidence.
GRINDER — External or Internal, ex-perlenced, Rood salary. ACE EMPLOY.""" "' \ 12 Broad SL SH 7-3494MENT AOENcr.BARBERS — Barber or experiencedapprentice, full or part-time. Call 872-1040.
$425 PER MONTH
FULL TIME JOBSNow available In our recently openedfactory branch. Want alert and am-bitious men. age 31 to 35, who areready and willing to work. We haveopenings In three department a, andthese are permanent Jobs with theopportunity for rapid promotion. Noexperience necessary.
Call SH 1-4326 for Interview
EXPERIENCED LAUNDRY PRODUC-TION MANAGER - Man laminar withlinen supply, must be capable or han-dling people. Address replies statingexperience, qualifications to WASHCITY, INC., !11 Edwards Avenue, LonjBranch, or call CA 2-0372 tor appointment.
MAN — Hardware and paint store.FuM-tlme Ex^r ieTp rref*rred. Write•A.B." Boi 511. Red Bunk.
REAL ESTATE SALESMAN — Ex-perienced, full-time, Ideal working con-ditions. Casey's Agency, Hldhwnv 35.Hazlet. Phone :6t-B(«. Night Phone,506-18M.EXPERIENCED TRUCK DRIVER —Over 25, New York deliveries. Steady.Starts $100 weekly. References. Write"A.O.." Boi 511. Red Bank. N. J.
HELP WANTED-Male • FemaleEDWARDS EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
Executlve-Saies-O (lice-DomesticSincerity and ability wltb high ethics
IN PLACEMENTSBroaa St. Red Bank
D 05BABB EMPLOYMENT AGENCV
qualified Personnel For Quality Orders210 Broad Long Branch CA 24147
ACE EMPLOYMENT AGENCYEvery order ft applicant our specialty.a Broad Bi.. Red Bank SH T-34S4
STEADY JOBSWe want reliable men and women torfactory work. The pay la good and theworking conditions are good too. Re-member! These are permanent Jobs.Phone CO 4-8000 for Interview or ap-ply In person. ATCO CERAMICSCORP., Hwy 35, Keyporl, N. J.
SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS wanted. ApplyBennett Bros. Corp., 218 East Road,Belford. N. J.EXPERIENCED WEEK-END LABORA-TORY TECHNICIANS. Rlvervlew Hos-pital. Call SH 7-9157.EXPERIENCED SALES PEOPLE —Good opportunity with established mul-tiple listing realtor. P. O. Box 2DS,Mlddletown, N. J.
SITUATIONS WANTED, FemaleDENTAL HYaBJNIST — Experienced,available full or part-time.
CO 4-6509HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE — Wlsheityping In her own home.
501-2697
, _ *
SB '•
Mivn, tmuiMui tor, enrtrt, work weekdays, atttuoay at*m-iw mA SH 7-wnj,
»PUT RAO. C J2tnts Cin>(e» ft "& "® "net, dam-ally netted «i_«t ttrcOln. 12 MC-
iX'jra, one-jeu-old. Q Me* MCBofc « •pott two run. m uaa
FINANCIALBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
$39.95kLVUatlM COHBOfATION DOOR
With the purchau ot 10 welded comerAlcoa Aluminum combination windowsat J12.M eaca. Total pnct tor J3S.M1door and IB windows 1.129.50. LIMITEDOFFER No money down, first pay-ment Eectmber,
PROWN'S32 Broad St. Red Bank I B 1-7609
DRIVZ-IN RESTAURANT — On motelgrounds for leaae or sale, Excellentmoney maker. I I 2-1700.ESTABLISHED vending business; otherInterest, for aale, 1780 complete. Callafter t, SH 1-0878.
AMBITIOUS?Be Your Own Boss!Unlimited Potential
Run a Gulf Service Station located atLeonudvllle Road, Beltord.
Borne financial help for Qualified man.HE H-66M 9 to 5 weekdaysCO 4-3181 Nlghta, weekends
COIN-OPERATED LAUNDROMAT —Must Bell, sacrifice. Call
SH 1-5635
WHOLESALE MILK ROUTE — TOOquarts dally. Write "A.K.," Box Ml,Red Bank.
..UNCHEONETTE AND CTATIONERYSTORE — Long Branch business sec-tion. Good lease, fully equipped, rea-sonable rent. CA 9-1111. o r write Steinand Btamelman, l Third Ave., LongBranch. N. J.
GROCERY BUSINESS — Low InitialInvestment. Call
SH 1-8577
NEW SHELL service station for leasiLeonardvllle Rd., Belford, Excellentbusiness opportunity. For Informationcall EXport 6-5537, 8:30 to 8 p.m.BEAUTY SHOP—Small Owner Pin. A-lstylist Red Bank Center. Retiring.Three-day operation grosses $12,000 ayear. Reasonably priced for quick sale.Excellent clientele. For details write
A.Q.," Box 511, Red Bank.
MORTGAGESHOMEOWNERS NEED MONEY?
Your credit is good. P int and secondmortgages. SH 1-4344 or SY3 3-2601.
MERCHANDISEFOR SALE
REASONABLE — Showcased aluminumetorrn windows, wooden atorm doo»,glass shelves, mirrors, wooden screens,small gas stove, aluminum egg crate,formica counter top. twtjlng frames,ice cream refrigerator, iron mangier.291-1502.WE8TINGHODBE WASHING MACHINE— Excellent condition. Reasonable. SH7-1726.FOLEY SAW FILER — Automaticsaw retoother, teeth setter, circularsaw setter, handsaw setter. 787-5039.
PILOT'S BANK
CLIPS HIS WINGS
He flew the coop anyway!
Three-Room Outfit returned
to be sold for unpaid balance
of $192. $2.50 per week.
Household consists of three-
piece living room with two
end tables and decorator
lamp; three-piece cordovan
mahogany bedroom with ac-
cessories; five-piece deluxe
dinette with extras. Hurry
THRIFT WAREHOUSE OFFIELD FURNITURE
7-11 E. Front St., Keyport, N. J.
STORE H0UKS:
9-6 Monday thru Saturday
9-9 Thursday and Friday
HOTPOINT RANGE — In good condi-tion. RS. Call
seirraTRADB IN your old rurnnure with nodown payment and get a nevi parloror dining roam set at sate prices. Wil-liam Lett Furniture Inc.. Hwy 85.Mlddletown. SH 1-3213. open tvenlngstill 8 p. m.
ALTENBURG PIANO HOUSERent A Piano $12 per MonthKNABB. MASON-RAMLIN. SOHMERCABLE-NELSON. EVKRXTT. 8TBCKOookmaa Ave. a Main SL, Aftburr Pk.
Open dally till t Sat, tiu 5:30PR 4-9301
TWO — 4(x0' wooden storm windows.Suitable for cold frame. First S10 takesall. Call PR 6-7639.ELECTRIC FENDER BASS, BLOND —And plush bardshell cue , $150. PA 1-3439.OLD SHUTTERS — Odd li l ts .
CallSH I 6119
KITCHEN CHAIRS RECOVERED —Dinette sets at rowelt prices.
BH 1-S833TYPEWRITERS. ADD1NQ machines.All mates new or used. Guaranteed.Low as 125. Serplco's. 101 MonmouthSi Veil to theater SH 7-0431.
JALOUSIEDDOORS AND WINDOWS
We are specialists on quality workwith low prices. Free estimates.
PRDWN'S32 Broad St. SB 1-7500 Red Bank
WB BUY AND SJ5LL ANYTHING —Contents of homes, (tores, estates,cellars attics. Ctilna, glassware, an.tlques, art objects and all bric-a-bracKuicin. 23 East front BL SB 1 let).
FOKSALE
ttic tnuaM, flMvf*,•a, vuurtxi bmatuM Bern*.
FREE
ANNOUNCING THE ARRIVALOF THE LOWEST COST
DOUBLE-MANUALALL TRANSISTORIZED OROAH
M99COMB Df, HEAR THEM. TRY THEM
MUSIC TOWN«00 Hwy 35 Mlddletown
671-1180COMPLETE works of Charles IMckens.20 volumes. Never used. $25. Pressurecooker and caaner. large, used once,115. OS 1-2(00.
ALUMINUMVENETIAN BLINDS
Never nuti. Custom type. Bizet to36" wide. Plastic tapes, nylon oords.
$4.99 ea.PROWN'S
31 Broad St. Red Bank BH 1-7500MONITOR WASHER — Monitor dryer.No hookup necessary. $125 for both,used three months. SI! 1-2177.OE PUSH-BUTTON EANGB — Fullsize, (20.
SH 1-5789WOOD GUTTER SM.B — t"l«"Ji.ran-dom length. Regularly 50 cents perrunning foot, now 27 cents per runningfoot. Cash and carry (slightly weath-ered). Will deliver lotr or more. REDBANK LUMBER. SH 1-5500.
HAMMONDORGAN STUDIO
OF ASBURY PARKElectrovlce Organ .Estey Chord OrganHammond ExtravolceHammond Chord OrganWurlltzer spinet Organ ..Conn Spinet Organ
_*22».325.515.IDS.ttt.«95.786.Hammond H-3 Spinet (blond) .
SALES AND SERVICERENTAL AND INBTRUOIIOll
Open Daily TIU 9 — Saturday Till »:30COOKMAN AVE. AND MAW IT.
PR S-9300
KELVINATOR KEFRIdEKATOR — 10cu. ft., good condition, £25.
LI 24182WB BUY AND BELL anything «ndeverything. Olv* the highest prices.Call William Lett Furniture, Inc., Hwy.35, Middlttown. SB 1-3113. Open eve-ning* UU t e.m.
SLEEP LATERWINDOW SHADES
Why get up with the birds? Oet roomdarkening ihadei, Imxnftd.mtt » m c » .
PROWN'S32 Broad Hi. Red Bank SB 1-T60OKODAK MEDALIST H CAMERA _Flashgun, and case, perfect cofldlUon,190. Call CO 4.-89O9 or write P.O. Box181. Holmdel.
REEL MOWER — 21" Vi h-B. Blcel-lent condition. 350.
747-54M
KIRSCH CURTAIN RODSTraverse or any other kind
Large SelectioniDfltsji&tian made at your nom*
CaJ!
PROWN'S31 Broad St.. Red B u k 8 3 1-I900DESKS - *15 up, files m Up, cbsurs.adding michUei, typewrliers manualand electric, office equipment, etcbargain prices. New or used. AAO DeskCo. m &. oakbum. K E i-39sa
KENMORK WASHING MACHINE —Phllco refrigerator, like new. Firstcome-first served. Call SK 1-9092.ACCORDION — 120 bass, Ilk* new.
VENETIAN BUNDSAll SUes 17" to M" wide. 61" long
2 for $5PROWN'S
32 BroU St. Red Bank. SH 1-7500SWEET CORN — Picked fresh dallyright from our own fields. Jersey to-matoes, all fruits and vegetables. Open7 days a week 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.GAHLER BROS. Farm and Nursery.South St., Holmde), opposite Bendtx.
3 H.P. DILLE-MAGUIRE rotary ridermower, excellent condition, glfiO.
SH 1-8273HOHOE AUTOMATIC WASHER—Goodcondition. »50 firm. Dining room set.nine pieces, *23 firm. 264-3529 slier 5p.m. .
SALEALUJILVUH COMBINATION DOOM
Two gtass Inserts, ens screen, math-erstrlpped, complete, ready to a w l .Nothing eltra to buy. CaU today.
$23.88Installation Optional
PROWN'Sa Broad SI Red Bank BH 1.7800ELECTRIC ADDING MACHINE—AllenWales, full keyboard. S125.
842-37888 CUBIC FOOT FREEZER — W Iron-er, good condition.
CA 2-5191
CHILD'S GO-KART — With motorCall
SH 7-HJM
DOUGHBOY SWIMMING POOL—NowIn use. 3x18', filter and ladder, (70SH 1-3322.
ALUMINUM GUTTERSGenuine Alcoa Lifetime. We Install onshott notice. Low prices. Call today.PROWN'S 32 Broad SL SB 1-1500REDUCING EQUIPMENT—*W rent oraale. Free delivery. 8oum Jersey Surgi-cal. SHadyalda 7-2014.8ERVEL ONE-TON air conditioner,round, out-door meta} table, with fourchairs. Reasonable. 842-1977.1981 CRAFTSMAN POWER EDOER —17" Emerson Console TV. Civil w,arcarbines and books. OS 1-3733.POOL — 3'xl8', complete with filter,vacuum, ladder. Cost 9325 will sell for$100. Call OS 1-213J*
SHOP BY PHONETree quick dally delivery In Red Bankarea, outlying districts Wednesdaysand Saturdays. Discount prices.PROWN'S. 32 Broa4 Bt SH 1-710*
RCA — 21" console TV, be*UU!ul cabi-net. Call after 5 p.m.
BH 7-M78 .
CLASSIFIED BUSINESS DIRECTORYA HANDY GUIDE OF BUSINESS SERVICES TO SUIT VOUR MANY NEEOSl
Adding Machlnei —Typewriters
ADDINQ MACHINES — Typewriterssold, rented, repaired. Serplco's 101Uonmomh St . Red Bank. SH 7-0IS5.
Antiques Wanted
Oil Dolls, guns, Iswelry, cut glsss,furniture. Civil War books. Appraisal;made. Oilman. BH 7-1141.
Appliance Repairt
APPLIANCE REPAIR and Installa-tion. Residential and commercial wtr-Ing. Allen Electric. 811: 7-0611
AuctioneerB. O. COATS — An essential AuctionAppraisal Service "anywhere." 288Norwood Ave.. Dtti. Ptione KEuogg
Auto and Truck RentalAVIS—Rent • new car or truck. Lowrates Maple Ave., Red Bank. SH 7-0308. Pit 44211 Dally 7 a.m.—10 p.m.
Building Contractor
A. J. PICONS — Baths, kitchens re-modeled. Cerajnlo tile. Sales. Instal-lation. 82 Leontrdvlll* Rd., Leonardo.2DI-J477 ot 291-2124
BUILDKR — Mew homes, room ad-ditions, basement and attic rooms,kitchens, garage, repatra and. alter-•lions. ierCerl Elisnnucti. 011 14101
Building ContractorRED BANK ALUMINUM PRODUCTSStor,. windows, siding, awnings.8H 7-2853 i~ SH 1-4821
Cesapool CleaningHEPTia TANKS, dry wells serviced.Leeching; field added, fiaekhoa wotk,C a Wilson. BH 1-1819.
Fuel 0)1 —HeatingFUEL OIL & IIEATING-Call SH 1-0610. OU Delivers, Inc., Service aBalcj., 3 Herbert St., Red Bank.
Home ImprovemenljWORKING MAN'S contractor—Alter-ations, adrlltlons, painting, masonry,and ail thoaa llltle jobs. Evenings LO8-1714.
InsuranceABILITY • SERVICE . Dependabilitywhen you Insure your HOME, AUTO,yacht, outboard. Insurance throuphARMSTRONG AGENCY. BH 14B0O.
DISSATISFIED with present Insur.ancet Want a better deal? Call DunnInsurancsi Agency SH 1.5533.
PaintingODD JOBS - Painting at Its flntit.Residential u l commarcUU. Lowestrams. Evana, BH 1-ISIT,
Painting and DecoratingLOUIS OASSAN - Painter, decorator,papsrhangar. M years sxperlsnc*. i lChapln Ava, IB 1-1TM alter I n,m.
Painting and DecoratingCARL B. JONES — Painting and decorating. General contracting, FullyInsured. Free Estimates. 13 MonroeAve., Shrewsbury, ,N. J. 747-3011,
TOM SLATE — Painting and Decor-ating. General Contracting, fully In-sured, Twenty years experience. Freeestimates. BH 1-iHSl after 6 p.m.
Plumbing and .HeatingRONNIE KEEOAN - Plumbing u lboating. Oil burner service. 2i-no>urservice. BH 7-1627.
Radio and TV RepairA-Z Radio-Television Repair -Serv,Ice, Prompt. Reasonable. 50 Mon-mouth SL, Red Bank. 8111-7853,
Rooting, Siding and InsulationInsulation 4 Sldln) Corp. CertifiedJohnS'Manvllle contractor. PR B.84Q7or Adam Llnzmayer 291.0302,
OLSON CO., INC.—Roofing, Siding *Insulation. Installed and. guarantsadfor 10 yearn PB t-O705-291-0oia
TeL Answering ServiceLET. US DE your secretary. No needto miss culs , 24 hour answerlniservice. BH 1-1790.
Vacuum Cleaner RepairCLECTROLOTi
Bales . Service BuppiusSOI Prospect Ave., Lima Bllvsr, rotprompt Boms isrvlc* or free chsckunon your Blectrolui. «sil PR sVMil w
FOR SALE
BsVBT CABBIA8EI —
**«*,a i.
WHOM(2*.
weetm DREMM gum u4 «**tslls. hardly worn, am is onlj. PtiotitaB« MOB. U M i d
SALELUCITE WALL PAINT
By DopantAt idTirtlltd on television. Ri(ul| U & Sals prlc. K.T8. Frss" 4«llvtr;
FROWN'SJl Brest »!• Rea B u t BH 1-150IS" STUVBNS svsaiir In cabinet, 12Kollnt unpltfltr, Oranco FM tonerESS chas(er, $SS takes all. Will
ftolr M H WUNUSUAL solid mahogany 44" roundtain, rope (do , claw led, but otter.S42KM.
KEYS MADEWHAT WOULD you do U you lotI M r IWIT B» lat l , r i t safes, I a nmm. OompleU MCKSIIITH sarrtcs.
PROWN'Sat Broad at. H«l Bank IB l-noo
VOK aALB — WMttnthouM s lectayellow kltciua Ut>M ana ' 'ram. yellow kii
baby carriage, orlb, cribMeklnf hone, annaraable oBar.p.m.
alb, orib u n , playaU food eondiuon.•. Call MMW5 aft
chain,lay pen,
oppoRTUNrrr SHOP ANTIQUEI.tr. t , and foreign stamps, pair of 40"p l u bmchaa from old church, imai]martls top taDto, maplt riddle-badyouth chair, old blot gtaHordihltiChina, •pinning wheel, cut, colored and'patterned glass; bric-a-brac, fine crrina,fin and wood Itsms. Call u s when•atling, The ,Matth«wi, l i t BroadwayXeyport CO 4-MIS.
MERCHANDISE WANTED
WANTED> ORIENTAL RUOS
AND PERSIAN
PIANOS WANTED-]PAID, CAU, K. TXST., LAKIWOOD. I
NTBDHIOHEST PRICESa CAU, K. TINZKR, 3M MAIN
LAKIWOOD. FO MIBO.
rkva H.P. A d COMFBE8S0R — 80gallon tank, three-phase. Call
BH MWO
UTS AND UVESTOCKOBIOUN UDEPBKID PUPS — AXCr w l i u n d , brad for beauty and tem<uramtat, Tery reasonable. OB l-HOO.P0MIRAN1AN8 — AKC registered,nuonabla. Call
OIRMAH SKBPHKRD pussies, AKCT e g l . t a r e d , inoculated, WaUMllymazked, goad temperament, reasonable.
WHTTB PERSIAN — OTA leg-•hot*. Can
7BT-4M*QKKHAN SHEPHERD PUPS — BomJune 7, AKC, excellent, healthy, flashyspecimens, ISO. H U H I .
BOXER PUP — AKC regislerea.Cull
132-3619GERMAN SHEPHERD AT STUD — To.apprmed (emalei only. Champion elniBed Oate Farm'! BUtt. Pnusenbli i tand Osnabruckerlarrd blood llnee, CaUSB 1-00W aner 4:30 p.m.
ONE arALpomr KFTTEN/ CAIIJ
BASSET PUPS — Irreslstabls, llvldotla, top condition, champion atock.a ibam {-MO.
HORSES BOARDEDSEVEK-BOX STALLS AVAILABLE —One mile from Red Bank. $65 permonth. SB 1-3322.ANOOIIA KITTENS — And Chihuahuapuppies. 120 Wilson Av«., Port Moo-mouth, m- l t ta .
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
APARTMENTS
OCEAN DROVE — Furnished or untunlahel , 2-H-room apartment!. Benlocation. Detain PR 5-47S0.
SEA BRIOHT — New three-room apartmenta, beautifully furnished, year!]H u e . t o t per roonui from Sept. 1. 812O36. After 8 n a . 8C-1888. *
XEANSBtma — Four roomi. bath,patio.
T17.J74J or 78T-3OM
THKSS-KOOlf garage apartment, fur-Blabed or unfttrnlihed, Holmdel area.S4i-sm.
maHLANDB — Tone room! furnlahed,fearly, i l l utUIUee aupplled, tSO month.
tin rrumzEAST KEANBBURO — Three room•Ad bath, hot water supplied. SH Phon
vtt-on.TWO-BOOH — Furolahtd apartmentBuatnaaa couple. ^
SH 7-3992
roar FLOOR APARTMENT — PV»Iroona and bath, unfurnlehed, raodertmproremeDti. centrally located In ReiBank. Phone SH 1-9035i before 13 noon.
LIVE MODERN
RENT FREE
Tlvoll Garden Apartments, one o
the states newest and most mod-
- era colonial communities offers
you three months of rent free
living.
Move In now! Pay your first rent
la November.
Rent at Tivoli Is quite reasonable
too. It's only $135 per month for
three rooms. This includes . .
yes includes gas, electric, heat
hot water, etc., plus a swimming
pool. Other apts., V/i and five
rooms.
Corat at once! See for yourself!
TIVOLIGARDEN APARTMENTS
Westwood & Bath Ave.
Long Branch CApital 2-2030
RU1UON — Unturrikhed, five roomi,second floor, near bui. uutttlee sup-piled. BOO month. 8I2-3JH.
RED BANK — Two or three-room lur.nlihed apartment. Call SH 1-887B or•H MB30.
RED BANK — Umuuat five-room gar-den apartment, for September. Electrickitchen, two bedrooma, large roomeand etofela. Private etalrway to ga-rage. Quiet, fine atmoiphere. Rent Slo&
MADISON GARDENSU l South 6L 8H 1-7633
APARTMENT — 9 Brotd BU. threerooma and bath. Heat mppUed year-round. Immediate occupancy. BH 7-0209.
ITVE ROOM APARTMENT — Avail-able immediately, alio one (or Septem-ber. Call 8H 1 0115.
TWO-BEDROOM — Garden apartment.Hatawan, on^ the like.
LO (-10S1
APARTMENT -~ Furnlahed, four roomaand bath. Private beach. North LonsBranch. CA 0-1863.
UNFURNISHED—Available September1. Three 'roome and bath. Rent re&aon.able. 787-0239 or OS 1-38M.
FOtM-FtOOM unfurnlahed apartment,near bua and rail llnea Inlulre Sunday,between 11 and 3, at 14ft Bamua Dr.,Shrewabury.
COMMEHCIAL RENTALS
LODdB ROOM tar rent. Ceatwtown, Could be out t u t lot etaee
omncES FOB KBUT — castntows. HaU tmKhM. Call
•H 7.1100
HOUSES FOR RENT
HALF DOUBLE HOUSE — Red Ban!unfurnlahed six rooma. oil beat, walklzdlatance to tchooj,- available Septem-ber 1. Seal «100.' Call SH 1-7K0 altei
3
THREE-BEDROOM CAPE CODNewlyutontb.
painted, large yard, »U5 pel' » y»i .Call 232-1082.
WIDI tlLECTIOK O* RENTALS —rurnlaaed and unlurniahed. Immed-at* occupasc>. Samuel Telcher AgenciOceanport Ave., Oceaoport Call or dialU i£m or U 2-gJOl.
UNFURNISHED — Cuatom-buUt, thrbedroom, 1^-bath epllt level. Recre^tlon room and garage. Two-year leajiavailable. Shown by appointment onl-Convenient Uttle Illrer location. TBiraiSTRICH AQKNCY. SH 1-688S.
at MTHE
OB MOM
RID BANK — Beven-room UDiumJib..hottit, B> M*> comer lot. AvkJlablScpttmtxr 1, yearly leue . Call BH30OS for InformaUoa
NBPTUNE—Three-bedroom ranch, 1btthi, cellar, cirport, |135 nnluralihed.
[USt 10. LI 21631 Kffi 1-4843.AUUBON — Xjovely three-bedroom wi-terfront home, furnlihed. September tcJuly. 8U442B.
8p!R level ._Shnwebury Boro oa U acre. Beauti-fully landscaped. Enclosed porch, ra-n g e . C4M per month,
Itouraoom cottage In Shrewsbury Boro,wlttUa walking distance of shopplrijarea. Large living room, kitchen, twibedrooms, 1128 per month.
CaU after 4 p.m., SH MUM.
NEW SDC-ItOOM Cape Cod. Four bed-raoma, l\i bathi, buemenL One 'blockto biu andand •hoppliur. tl40 a
required. K1AVOOD A.month.
8TR0NO AOBNOy. Realtor, »S Pro.-poet Ave., Little Silver. BH WS00.
BONOALOW — Furnlahed, three roomaand hath. Adulta, no peta. ISO a month.SH 1-1271. 278 Ilechamo St.
BOUSE — Unfumlahed. Six rooma, ex-cellent location. Small family deilred.Available Oct. 1. (128 monthy. Fordetain call SB J « J t '
HALF DOIIBLI! HOUSE — Red Bank,unfumlaoed alx roomi, on hiai, walklnolatance) to idiool, arailahle Septem.ber 1. Rent BOO. Call BH 1-U30 aftei
I'M p.m.
WIST l*NO BRANCH — Tliree bed.rooma, one jeaTa l.aae USO pamonth. Call altar » m CAJWBB.
DEAL — Lovelr corner houae, aeyenrooms (tnree bedroomi, 2H baibanear achool. bna, ami ahopplnr. AvaU-abla after Labor Day. 1125 per monthplus utllltlea. Call any mommx exceptMonday or Thursday, KB 1-0517.
UATAWAN — Three-bedroom homewith garage, dean, near schools andtransportation. LO *UtS.
T H R E B . B S J D R O O U ranch, convenientlylocated In Mlddlerown. Available Sep-tember 1. Tear's lease, J12S month.DOWSTRA AGENCY, SI Eait FrontSt. 8H 1-8700.
RANCH HOME — Lane living room,(our bedrooma, two bathe. Neaiechoole. tl!5 per month. SCHANCKAGENCY. Realtor, S Linden PI., RedBank. SH 74397.
BATONTOWN — Modern five-roomranch houae, fun basement, tile bath,near Bendli. 74T-1IH1.
8PRINO L>AKE — Slx-room houae, ne'gas heat. Inquire 316 Morris Avenue,Spring Lake.
PAIR HAVEN — Cape Cod home oneblock from schools, centrally 'locatedt9 ahopplng center, 1125 per month.LI 2-2<00, between t a.m. and 5 p.m.
WANTED TO RENT
APARTMENT - Refined widow wlahetwo or three-room apartment. No pete.SH 1-eiHRESPONSIBLE COUPLE — With threchildren, desire three-four bedroomhome, UQO to H7&. Referencea. KE l-3603.
WANTED — Houae, Red Bank or aurrounding area, two or three bedrooma,larnlahed or unfurnished. As soon aapossible. Plaaae call LI 2-3200, Ext. 28.
RUHSON — Three-four bedroom house.References. Leaie. September or Octo-
Call SH 1-44S1.
FURNISHED ROOMS
FURNISHED ROOMS — Newly decor-ated. Private entrance, fitting room. In-quire 43 Peters PL, Red Bank between
and 7:30 p.m.
EOOU -~ Nice home, all modern, caraccommodation. Reasonable. 57 Shrewa-bury Ave.. Red Bank. SH 1-91H.
FURNISHED ROOM — Very cool, con-venient location. 157 Maple Avenue,Red Bank. Call EH 7-2600.
TWO BEDROOMS — With kitchen priv-ileges located near Bendlx and FortUonmouth. LI 2-2539 or SH 1-8374.
W, ROOMS FOR ONE — Or two teach- —irs, kitchen privileges. Weekdays call RJifter 7. all day weekends. SH 1-BtM. J-a
ATTRACTIVE — Single, double rooma.Kitchen privileges. Hot and cold run-ning water. Free TV Hudson Bouse.31 Hudlon Ave.. SH 1-B862.
REFINED BUSINESS GIRL—To aharenice home and own room. Write "A.U.1
511, Red Bank.NICE ROOM — Shower, garage, kitch-en privileges. Reasonable. Gentlemenpreferred. 8H 7-OfflJ.
WILL BHARS MY HOME — Free, withman pait 60 for companlonahlp.
7BT-14SBROOK NEAR BATH — For businessman. Carafe. 20 Waverly PI., (firsthouse from Broad). SH 1-2677.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
HOUSES FOR SALE
SACRIFICE—Owner transferred, threebedroom Cape Cod on quiet dead-end•treet, In finest neighborhood. Juitminutes to Red Bank station. Deal
lrect and save. $15,100. Call BH 7473d.
TINTON FALLS AREA - Large three-bedroom ranch, two batha, Californiaatyle kitchen with dinette, extra largepaneled den with bar, wall-to-wall car-
ting full dry cellar. Excellent neigh-jrhood. Must nee to Appreciate, call
owner LI 2-0735 or 8H 1-4119 for ap-pointment.
SHREWSBURY — Owner trani-Fflrred. Immediate occupancy. Spilllevel four bedroom, 2V, baths, recre*tlon room, extra room, laundrv bate-aent, patio, beautifully landscaped.ear schools, transportation. Mint beten to be appreciated. 4H per centlortfage can be aisuraed. BH 1-B897.
WHY PAY RENT?Ponryear-olJ, practically new rancherwith three bedrooma and bath, on aot 100x125. Full basement, convenient
everything. A down1,990 takea thli home
aymeithe
It ot
ket, approximately 1137 a month coversall carrying coils, steal thla one at
IAVBSINK ASSOCIATES, REALTORS
MOUSES FOB SALE
BED BAMB-UTiBg room, dining i«a , C00 cyaa: - To qualified buyiIdlchec » o bedrooms, ule be i , Ul Urrely lanes txnu at 7 East Jack 1bajement hot w»Ur h t l l t - - - - - - - - • ~ * "
chec » o bedrooms, ule be i , Ulbajement, hot w»Ur heat, excellentlocatfcn UtUK OaoKKKOEHHEUXB ICembe? HuJOl
am ttectenio na.tolUlays, BH 142M.
WAC10U8 EUVsirl-IlOOM wlonWUte-Uned street. I^rge living rootwith girtcJt fireplace, family dlnlnaroom, deluxe kitchen, breakfast room,three twln-slie bedrooms, tile balbaaement, two-car garaie. oil heiValue packed at J19.S00. ELWOODARM8TR0NO AaENCY. Kealtor, l-Prospect Ave., Little Silver. SB 1-46(X
Kxcrrmo DIBCOUNT! — coo offthli house la aold by September L Fiv«bedrooms, three bathe, TV room, twttcar attached garage ^ ith
drooms, three bathecar attached garage,many many shad t
room, twacre wi
Hg ^
many, many shade treee. Hear riverand school, five minutes to town. 324,500Be sure and aee this. ROLBTON WATERBURT, Realtor, IS w. Front StRed Bank. SH T-3500.
SHREWBBURr—Three-bearoom randlden, fireplace. Many extras, No agemAaklng (21.000. BH 7.1458.
FOR SALE OR LEASE — Three-bedroom ranch house. Oarage, breezewayfull cellar. ALLEN built home. Man1
extras. 368 Meadowbrook Ave., Salon.town. Available Immediately, gu.800call ZJ 3-2082.
MONKOIJTH BEACHBEAUTIFUL RTVKR RANCH
Bxcellent six-year cuatom brick. Tb:bedrooma. DOCK, two tiled bathe. UlTRA kitchen, utllltlea, DEN. gaa healAttached garages. CA 2-4460.
STANLEY K. DOWNSREALTOR
"Homes of Charm and Value'
SHadyside 1-1017
Multiple Listing Service
Sycamore Ave. Shrewsbury
QUAINT AND CHARMING! Colonial home, beautifully decorated. Center hall. Gracious liing room with fireplace. TV deiWilliamsburg dining room witlfireplace. Bar-pantry. Fabuloukitchen, fireplace, electric rangedishwasher. Two artistic powdeirooms. Family room overlookingbrick patio and secluded gardenSecond floor — three large bad-rooms, two baths. Wall to walbroadloom all thru the house.Two car garage and tool house.Magnificent shade trees. Excep-tional value! Very outstanding!Asking $39,500.
THE UTMOST IN VALUE! Ex-clusive neighborhood. Impressive
with fireplace. Formal diningroom, 22' pine den. Kitchen witfbreakfast area. Electric rangeand dishwasher. Four large bed-rooms, 2>/4 baths. Full basement,hobby shop, two pine playroomsSwimming pool 18'x3G" — lightedand filtered. Dressing room, pa-tio. Beautiful evergreens andshrubbery. Shade trees. A rarecombination of privacy and con-venience. Asking $36,000. Offer:considered.
RIVERFRONT. Magnificent ma-rine view. Exceptional home foigracious living. Paneled Florldiroom, Picture windows. 24' liv-ing room with fireplace. Formaldining room. Deluxe kitchen,breakfast alcove. Sunroom, subedrooms, 3J4 tiled baths. In-cludes wall-to-wall broadloom,draperies, two-oven range, dish-washer, refrigerator, air con-ditioner. Immaculate condition,Beautiful landscaping. Outstand-ing in every detail! Amazlnjvalue! $49,500.
"OVER 300 CHOICE HOMESFOR YOUR SELECTION"
SHadyside 1-1017
STANLEY K. DOWNS
r o o m room, dining room, kitchen, two beeining'- " - " - - - " -
FAIR HAVEN — Cape Cod, Immaculatithroughout. Four bedrooma. bath, rusticliving room with fireplace, spaciouskltchea, garage. Ill health forcea ownerto sell at 115,450. Low taxes. ELWOODA. ARMSTRONO AOENCY. Realtor,653 Prospect Ave., Little Enter. SH 14500.
RUMHON RIVERFRONT — Ten yeaiyoung. Delightful, three bedroom ranchPrivate dock, bulkhead, living roonoverlooking water with, sliding door ti-icludsd 20" screened porch. Reduce!
> «28,4M. Taxes *237. HALL BROS.Realtors. Uember Multiple Listing, 81:River Road, Fair Haven. BH 1-76861% ROOM stilt level, 2V, batha, wall,to-walt carpeilna; throughout, full bastment, V, acre, top neighborhood. SH 15871, after 6 p-m..
READ CAREFULLY — Note Ule advan-c e s of this house. Cape Cod dealgn.
Three, large bedrooma (also a fourth,unfinished). Fireplace, An encloseiporch 28 i 12. Oarage with spaca fowo cars. One block to flneat achoo]
In Monmoutlt County. All for 04,(00.MJ88ELL M. B0RUB, Realtors. 600
River Hi., Fair Haven. SH 7-4532.Member Multiple Hating Hervlce.
CAN YOU TOP THISfPour bedrooma, two baths. Ranche
five yeari old with l a n e living anddining rooms. Spacious modem kitchenand porch. Oversize garage. Basementwith game room. Florida boundowner says sell at this low figure,$23,100. WALKER * WALKER, Real'tori, Hwv 31, Barewlbury. 8H 1-5212.24-Hour Service.
Ohlien Paul MeFarlandHarry Kearney
14 Hwy. 35 MIddletawn OS 1-0600MEMBER MULTIPLE LISTING
LITTLE SILVER — Ranch type twobeatoomi, dining and living roomcreened porch, extemlon attic, at-iched garage. Near river and trans.•ortatlotl. Call X2-1B0J 8 to 8 p.m. orlaytlme weekends.
.tTTLB 8tL\rER - stone and frameolonlal ranch In tree-ah&ded area. Sev-n lovely rooma, three apaclous bed-
rmm«. two balha, atparate diningroom, den, fireplace, screened porch,finished recrentfon basement, two-rnr
arate. Extras. Now 129,700. ELWOODARMSTRONO AOKNCY, Realtor,
i55 Proipect Ave,, Little Silver. SH 1-soo.
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
BUILDER'S CLOSEOUTMODEL HOME
Nina rooms including four bedrooma, paneled den, family room, livingroom, dining rouui. modern kllulieu with dliliwalher, 2ft bathi, over-riled two-car' glra'ge. Landscaped corner lot. Wall-to-wall carpeting,drapes, curtains and other appointments.
$ 2 2 , 5 0 0Ope.i HOUBI Batuiday and; Bund*/, i t to S p.ni.
Dirtctlana! ,Twd mutt north ot Red Bank on Rt. 39, turn rlfhl OaililUJliuram, prociel 100 yardi to Model Homt on left
BERGQUALIFIED BUYERS
Short of Cash? Use Our Lay-away Plan. All Down and Monthly
Payments Are Approximate.
VETERANS
No Down Payment
SELL HOUSE MUST TRAVEL"he ownera of thla four-bedroom Cape
Cod are moving to Arizona but cannotmill they sell their home. It has tileisth, beautifully equipped daylightdtohen, ipacious living room with
7900* beautifully landacaped lot Inreal nice location. Extras Include d m .shtdei, range, and combination stormsash and doors. Immediate posseailon
" dosing.
$13,990 Full Price
Non-Vet $425 Down
Monmouth Comity Office
THE BERG AGENCY"Personalized Service"
OSborne 1-1000
Route #35 ' Middletown, N. J
Daily 9-9 Saturday-Sunday 10-7
LINCROPT-HOLMDELCOLTS NECK —Choice selection, old and new seven-room homes. Priced {30,000 upward.Also custom-built to your Diana. Acrewooded lota. MARTIN AaENCY, EealEetate. Newman Springs Rd., LlncroltBH 7-2229. '
BMALL BOAT OWNER'S DREAM —Three-year-old custom ranch with It'sown bulkhead located on high ground.Two bedrooms, H4 bathe, beautiful,large kitchen, living room with fire-place, full, dry baaement, garage. Un-usual combination for only 116,000.WALKER ft WALKER, Realtors. Eastside of Rt. 39, Middletown (approxi-mately 1000 rent north of MiddletownShopping Center). Open aeven daya.Phone OS 1-2126. OS 1.3311. CO 4-5J12.FAIR HAVEN — New eight-room ILOCU8T — Six-room ranch.
2B1-O003
»M0 CASH I — To qualified buyer.Spaclpun ranch home located at 57 Pop-lar rfve., W. Long Branch, Two blocksfrom shopping center, tine schools, andlovely, community center. Six largerooms (three bedrooms) [lreplace. Tilebath FLUB tiled lavatory, attached ga-rage. Owner will paint the outside,FHA apnralied at »17,600, monthlyPayment of 1147.80 paya all (better thanrent). Call owner at SH 7-4(32.
NEW SHREWSBURY — Pour-bedroomranch, two batha, garage, fireplace,basement, largo fenced lot. Many ex-tras. Owntr, LI 2-1601,
HOLMDBL — Three-bedroom split lev-el, HOxlfio lot. Large paneled recrea-tion room, H , hatha, garage. Convenelent location, owner moving, pricedlow |20a. Principals only. Call CO l-5101, after 8 p.m.
VAIL KOMBS'— Four-room unit. Newblinds. Aaklng (300. Homines M2-2M2or SH 1-M2T evenings, .
HOUSES FOB SALE
Hsrfet, N.lovely >.™,Only
Jack 1~slx-yesxs-oH m*.
bedroom),-J«q
Co,,w
»HAat IH
FIVE-ROOM —Co-optrulve aputmauttfor sale, utilities Included, call LJ :1S»7 t * appointment. ^
SEVEN ROOMS — Kitchen, dining, liv-Ing room, four bedrooma, two batha, ga-rage. All improvements. EH 1-8028.
OWNER — Wlahea to at], small iraer home. T4 Tenth Street
Belford
HAZLET — Try thla for llze. Hereis a roomy, modern split. Bright,sunny kitchen, full dining room, spa-cious living room, three giant sitebedrooms, full baaement, finished rec-reation room, Nicely landacaped lotNo down, vets. S45O down, non-vetsFull price only S14.GO0. FIRESID:REALTY. OS 1-2631.
RANCH HOME — Charming settlntreea, beautiful lawn. Living room12x20, full dining room, three berooms, IVi bathe. All appliances 1eluded. 124,900.
Schanclc AgencyRealtor
3 Linden PI. Red Ban]BH 7-0397
Member Multiple ListingSEA BRIGHT - Well-built home, pluincome. Private beach. Will take badmortgage. 842-3380.
UTTLE SILVER — Reduced to sellleaving area. Small Colonial, dormeiacross back, four bedrooms plus oniunfinished, two baths, separate dining,fireplace, screened porch, dry baaement, attached garage. J17,fi(Kl. SH2309.
UTTLE SILVER — Lovely leven-scomcolonial on large tree-shaded lot. Livingroom with fireplace, full dining roomkitchen, sun porch and large ecreene<In aide porch. Three bedrooms anbath upstairs. Full basement and oncar detached garage. Aluminum atormiand screens throughout. Located in finest Little Silver residential area twbrocks from school. 121,500. Call SH
SIX BEDROOMS — Living room, din.Ing room, kitchen, TV room, garage,full basement. (300 down, FHA forqualified buyers. (12,000. CABEY'IAOENCY, Walker Building, Hwy 35,Hazlet. 204-8442. Night phone KM-1B54Open evenings and Sundays.
NEW SIX ROOM RANCH — Full base-ment, garage, convenient location, At-lantic Highlands area. tie.DOO.
Dial 741-7200PinLIP I. BOWIBfl ft CO
Real Estate Since 1894WALTER S. OVERTON
Affiliate60 White St. Red Bank
Opposite Municipal Parking Lot
rooms, tile bath, full basement, alayears old, ideal for retired couple, com-bination screens and storm sash. (15,900ultosalNOEK AND H E L L E R , Realtors,Member Multiple Listing. Broad amMechanic BU. SH 1-2100. Nights, holtdaye, BH 1-0256.
RUSTIC TREE-SHADED New EnglandCape Cod. Spacloua, deluxe kitchen,separate dining room, 26' living room,wo bedrooms down and bath. Charm-Ing second floor with studio bedroom.Open porch, patio. Won't last at $19,000.ELWOOD A. ARMSTRONO AQENCT,Realtor, 555 Prospect Ave., Little Silver.SH 1-4500.
NEW HOUSE — Portaupeck. Nice loca.tlon, near water. Low taxes. Four bed-rooms, split level. f22,000. CaU CA ~
MIDDLETOWNImmediate) Posieision
Transferred owner offers Immaculatefour-year-old colonial on one-acre, 'woodland setting with brook. Lawn .showpiece. Four oversized bedrooms,2% batha. living room, early Amerlcstyle dining room-kitchen comblnauu.with brick wall and fireplace, laundryroom, playroom with outside door,patio, two-car attached garage, manyextras. School bua stop one-block awa:
to public and S t Leo's parish. Stationand free parking three minutes away.'efore you buy, aee thie home. Direct30,800.
OS 1-3717.
ST. JAMES PARISH.Mtle SUver. High area off PlncVneyId. Ideal for children, three bedrooms,
two baths, fireplace In living room, fulldining room, TV den, cellar, garage,brick and shingle Cape Cod. Reduceito El,COO. SH 14341.
OAK HILL RANCH — Five bedrooms,three baths, central air conditioningstereo bum-In, all epptlancea. Wall-to-wall carpet, many extras. Custom-built,two-years-old. Asking 142,SOO. Call Ol1-0166. mornings or after 7 p.m.
DEAL — Gracious, beautifully landleaped, four-five bedrooms, den, sacri-lice, 138,500. Nash, 4T Poplar. KB 1-O700
BEACH AGENCYLOOK WHAT WE FOUND!
In these days of high prices we havtruly found a/bargaln in this conveni-ently located three-bedroom home•potted on a lovely landscaped 100x100lot. Features Include gas heat, alumi-num alarm and screens, jalousie porch,and a full basement
PULL PRICB ONLY(12,200
Qualified Ol Ne Money DownFHA 1400 DownAPPROXIMATELY S89 PER MONTH
PAY ALLSubject to Mortgage Approval
BEACH AGENCY1400 Hwy 35 Middletown
OS 1-2727
Daily to 8 p.m. Sat. Sun. to 6Licensed Real Estate Broker
APPLEBROOK — Brick and clapboardranch, three bedrooms, living roomwith, fireplace, combination kitchen-din-Ing room, large acreened porch. On:ree shaded half acre. House freshlypalmed. OS 1-0027.
HIS MAN CAN'T AFFORD TWOiOMES — Immediate occupancy, own-:r transferred, leaving behind four-bed-•oom split on a quiet street In Newdonmouth. Walking dlatance to publictnd parochial schools plus shopping.taking S18.5O0. Call, see It today,'HOMPSON A BARTBLL, RealtorsIH 7-8000.
iflDDLETOWN — Three-bedroomlomft In convenient location. Excellentlelghborhood. Immaculate. ffial-in;ltclten, formal dining room, large lot*lth good aharte.REALTORS. Flva:own. OS 1-2500.
J18.99O. SNYDBRCorners, Middle-
LITTLE SILVER — Attractive Colonlal In pleasant surroundings, twolarge bedrooms and bath, den firePlace, screened porch. Range and car>etlng Included. $19,400.
Dial 741-7200PHILIP J, BOWKRS t CO -
Real Estate Since 1894WALTER S. OVERTON
Afllllate10 White St. Red Bank
Opposite Municipal Parking Lot
PPLEBROOK — Lovely .two-bedroomanch. Beautifully landacaped. Sacrifice18,200. 75 Brook Rd. OS 1-3572.
LEONARDO — Three-bedroom ranch,five yeara. Science kitchen, wall-tn-wail.Extras. Attached garaischool, bus. 114,900. 201.•mie.CUSTOM-BUILT HOUBB _ Leedsvlllo
, LlncrofL For InformaUon callCA M217
MODERN RANCHry I d a l for a f
NetCl
ARQB MODERN RANCH Net.Ihrewsbury. Ideal for a family. Closeo Port Monmouth and Bell Labs. Threerge bedrooms, dining room, living
room, kitchen and pantry with modernappllancea, acreened porch, radianticat, large Jandscaped lot. Suitable low
rrns, fd? qualified, buyer. gJO.OCO, own-
RED BANK COLONIALleally a good and very liveable con.'enlent home, 21' living room andlreplace; a new birch cabinet, 10'ftchen: dining room, heated, .com->rtihle eun room; three big bed-i»ms, 1U Baths; dry, full basement,ewers, all copper plumbing. Taxes
l y ' ' MAKE O P F U MI2LM0
CROWBLL AOKNCYEast Front St. R e i Bank
811 1.(030Member Multiple Lining
EANSBURQ — Inspect) Make offer,li •uliimar bungalows. Corner lotood spot «way.from beach. Aaklng5.00fl. Chateau Realty Real Batate.7-5881. Kvcrtlnfs HI 2-3082,
TOER TRANSFERRED — House Isimpty, Centered In deep forest of fcen-ury.old oak trees. A charming 3H-ye«r-Id Colonial ahowplcce. Center hall, for-lal dining room, four master-alied bed.
, 2i^ baths, pine-paneled den,oailloom In every room, sacrificing134,000. Will consider offer, Call to-
day. Don't miss out again. THOMP-SON * BARTELL, Realtors, I H 7*600.
HOUSES FOR SALE
WOW1 FOITR-BZD8OOM Dew customtalU C«J« Cod In Ke*asbt7i, lA*tbuilt Cave Cod U> Keaastotitcbea with mes eabifiets,lares lirt om IV b t
L*g4ry«t n
titcbea with mes eabifiets, j t u 4ry«rlares lirtDi room, IV, baths, hot nhut Snrtri oar Wum CUXTZKbin ,RJCAJ
irs, oar Mfcaw.- • fcsuu. -•
KDUrtxJwM KHZKWOQIt KOREIJT7ottr*b«jlroom split, two full baths,
recrtallon room, patio, full basemeat,ettaefeed garage, on full acre. Xxtras,prlnafplea only. Call OS 1-2374.
LOCUST — Attractive f U year . .five-room ranch, large living room,dining area, three bedrooma, 1 Vi batha,custom built. In nice location. $19,700
Dill 7(1-7200PHILIP J. BOWERS * CO
Real Estate Since ISMWALTER S. OVERTON
AffiliateW Whlta St. Red Ban
Oppoaite Municipal Parking Lot
ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS — Bacrlllce,handyman special, two bedrooms, nur-serv, new kitchen, dining room wit:built-in china closet, bookshelves, giheat, storm windows, fire alarm Bytern. H0.500. Call 2U-27S9 I a.m. to :mon.
ASSUME MORTGAGE with 13,500 <large split level. Three bedrooms. 1batha, unflnlahed attic, garage, man1
extras, and near schools. S1B,75O. Ci787-5411.
MARIE COX AGENCYREALTORS * INBURORS
Member BhoreMultiple Listing Service
Portaupeck98 Comanche Drive CA J-I60
PAUL R. STRYKER, Realtor.
Farms a n ! farm estatea State
Highway St. HolmJeL Phone WH
4MU4,
LUXURY RANCH HOUSE!LlncroIL quality-built home. Livingroom, formal dining room, four be<rooms and two batha, maid's room,and bath. Many other cuatom features.Seen by appointment only. Executivetype home. Principals only. BH 1-5948,Price In MO'a.
LOTS AND ACREAGE
RIVERFRONT —ik Ri H h
acres on NaveRIVERFRONT m acres on Navsink River, Hartahorne wood area. Hiand d y with b t i f l i B
Highdry ith beautiful view. Bulk,
headed slip, suitable for large boats.Call after 7:30 p m 872.1840
sink River, Harahorne wood areaand dry with beautiful view.
ed slip, suitable for largCall after 7:30 p.m., 872.1840.
MIDDLETOWN — Cleared, 100x200 lotEstablished neighborhood, excellent location, (2,9S>, OS 1-2072.
MOICE BUILDING! LOT for sale InMiddletown Township. Principals only,SH 1-7875.
UNCROFT — Finest realdentlal build.Ing lot remaining In Iincroft CornelNewman Springs Road and JumpingBrook Road, Slightly more than hi acre,several apple trees, presUge area.17,200 firm. Call SK 7-<U«.
CHOICE SELECTION ot two-tc-tlireiacre wooded plots. Oak, beech andlogwood, some with view and brook,others high and rolling, deed restric-tion to protect purchaser, I9.B0O andup. "Holmwood/1 Atlantic Township.>aul R. Striker. Realtor. Holmdel,
HIDEAWAY ESTATE — For sports-man. Five acres secluded; valley; landonly. Near Bell, Bendlx, Restricted to
plua barn or_ - over 130,000
modern style construction. Referencesrequired to be considered. Write "A.Y/Bex 511, Red Bank.
one-family residence,stable and kennels. In
BUSINESS PROPERTYRed Bank ttl.OOOCHOICE BUMNIM CORNER-INCOMEPROPERTY. Store 1300 sq. f t plusmodem four-room apartment. Immedi-ate occupancy. Call i l l LA 7-1101. In.spect l to Mtmmoath at.
REAL ESTATE WANTED
NOT A MEMBER OF ANYMULTIPLE LISTING SYSTEM
SELL YOUR HOME THROUGHThe McOowan Agency
Red Bank SHadyside 7-3000
BUYERS WATTINO — Homes In alprice ranges needed In Matawan-to-Mlddetown area. List your home with
8ee some real action.HOMETOWN AOENCY
Hwy 54 MetawanLO e>3«00
are mireal est
lOUlt 110MB WANTED - Why ULwith us? We advertise extensively inthe newspapers, radio and publish acatalog for home seekers. We arrbers of the TWR. a national realreferral service. Wt are "Home Trad,era" - two offices, 11 tun time salespeople. Call WALKER A WALKER,tealtora. Members Red Bank Area
Multiple Listing ftervlci*. ShrewsburySB 1-9211 and Middletown, OS 1-2121.
TV KeyMail bagBy STEVEN H. SCHEUER
Question — Is it true that Dur-
wood Kirby and Carol Burnett
are both leaving the "Garry
Moore Show" next season to star
band and wife comedy team?—
Mrs. D. H., Fulton, N. Y.
Answer — Carol is limiting her
ippearances on next season's
"Garry Moore Show" to approxi-
mately half a dozen guest shots
but Durwood Kirby will remain
regular on the show,
Question — I recently saw Van
Johnson on "Talent Scouts" and
in a summer stock production of
"Music Man" and enjoyed him
'ery much. Are more TV appear-
mces included in his future
plans? — Mrs. M. M., Milford,
Conn.
Answer — The "bobby soxers'
movie idol of the forties" is
scheduled to do a Broadway play
his fall and will no doubt be
ivailable for a few TV guest ap-
pearances.
Question — What are the names
}f the two actors who starred in
series called "Along the Klon-
dike" (I believe that was the
title) and what are they doing
hese days? — F. F., Hickory
fcidge. Ark.
Answer — The stars of the un-
successful series called "Klon-
dike" were James Coburn and
lalph Taeger. Coburn is a fre-
niently guest star on most of the
making a movie with James Gar-
ner and Steve McQueen, two for-
mer TV western heroes. Taeger
has been shopping around for a
new TV series while doing an oc-
casional guest stint on other
shows.
Question — Is Peter Lawford
he son of a duke and duchess of
Great Britain? Also, what other
TV series did he star in besides
"The Thin Man?"—F. S., Bruns-
wick, Ga.
Answer — Peter's parents are
Sir Sidney and Lady Lawford.
(He is also related to a prom-
inent American family, who re-
side in Washington, D. C) . Law.
'Dear Phoebe" in which he
)layed the part of an "advlce-to-
[he-lovelorn" columnist.
Question — When was the lat-
est version of "Little Women"
nade, I mean the one with June
TV KeyPreviews• Tonight'! top shows as pre-
viewed and selected by TV Key's '
staff of experts who attend ~
screenings, watch rehearsals and
analyze script, in New York &
Hollywood.
RED BANK REGISTER Thursday, August 9, 1962—21
ACCENT. "The G a m b l i n g
Americans." A visit to Reno, Ne-
vada's largest gambling house
. . the seven story Harold's
Club. Night manager Darl Voss
conducts a tour of the dice ta-
bles, slot machines, and blackjack
games and not only explains the
games of chance but even tells
how the casino can spot a cheat-
er. The deale'rs at Harold's are
all girls and Voss discusses their
training. A slot machine re-
pairman strips down one of the
monsters for us and shows how
it works. Also a look at the club'
show and an interview with It1
owner, Harold Smith. 7:30 p.m
CBS.
Hollywood:
DR. KILDARE. "Witch Doc
tor" (Repeat) Pat Hingle's Uv
creasingly strong performance as
a faith healer gives this ahow
mest of its best moments. Joan
Hackett gives an intense portray-
al of a patient who becomes a
pawn in the battle between sci-
ence and fraud. 8:30 p.m. NBC,
THE REAL McCOYS. "Th
Law and Mr. McCoy" (Repeat
This one's similar to the oli
vaudeville skit, "Pay the Two
Dollars." Gramps is arrested for to a"some5riTM*chee^/«MneI
burning trash, refuses to pay f - . - . — • »
bail, and is put in jail, ft soon
turns into a big newspaper story
and a political football. Walter
Brennan's son, Andy, appears In don of Charles Dickens, which •* enough to pay off tin Invest
a non-speaking role as the un- appears already destined for fi- ment> t n d t H » method might be
Informed c o t bailiff h l d l l I hi "^ solution for the theater's stag-
ei tpg appears
Informed court bailiff who leads nanclalncal success In this country
gramps away at the end. 8.30 Whether it will be a Broadway Bering costs.
p m ABC hit i t b Chi T lp
p.m. ABC,
MY THREE SONS. "Bub Gets
a Job" (Repeat) Delightful epi-
sode. The episode Is all William
Frawley and he's a Joy. Bub
is overwhelmed with his family
housekeeping chores and wants •
job as a change of pace. The
scenes at home with the endless
demands of the clan and the
scenes in the employment office
are fine, but stay tuned for the
sight of salesman Bub in the de- right enthusiasm.
partment store. The long under-
wear sequence is a winner. 9 p.m
ABC.
THE LIVELY ONES. A jump-
ing session led off by trumpeter
Shorty Rogers playing against a
Nike base background. Then pi-
anist Peter Nero and a lively
beach party where the Christy
Minstrels do "Saints Train." To
round It out and change the pace,
Stan Kenton does "Malaguena" In
an ingenious set-up where band
instruments appear to be hanging
n air. (Color) 9:30 p.m. NBC.
CBS REPORTS. "Birth Contro
and the Law" (Repeat) A sen-
sitive presentation of a contro-
versy that's all-embracing in its
coverage. Not only does it pro-
vide a forum for the adherents
ot varying religious (Catholic and
medical
(Public
Albert Goldberg of the Los An- don. and they recruited th» xest
geles Times cites these differ-of the c u t In New York. The per-
ences: "The English take their formers are excellent, especially
tea with milk; Americans usually Georgia Brown as the tragic Nan-
prefer lemon and sugar. Approx-
imately, this Is the difference be-
tween the English type of musical Fagln turned lovable. As in Lon
show, as exemplified In 'Oliver,1
and the familiar American brand.
TV & Radio
non-Catholic), moral,
and governmental
Health) points of view, but It
clarifies their areas of agree-
ment and discord and offers some
hope for a future meeting of the
minds. Also, through Its study of
a Chicago public hospital and a
review of a controversy on Con-
their~own fv'serieTa's "a hu"s- nectienfs anU-Wrth control law,
it illustrates the cleavage be-
tween the private and public
practice of medicine, and the
economic and social political as-
pects of this essentially "person-
al" problem. 10 p.m. CBS.
Best PhotoContest Set
TRENTON — The search is on
lor the best pictures of New Jer
>ey people and scenes... ,,
Entry blanks for the New Jer-
sey Tercentenary Photographic
Competition started going out
this week; contestants must sub-
mit entries from Sept. 15 through
Dec. 14.
All amateur and professional
photographers living in New Jer>
sey were Invited to enter the
contest by Clifford C. Anthes,
general chairman of the compe.
tition and first vice president of
the New Jersey Federation of
Camera Clubs. Entry blanks can
be obtained by writing tc Photo-
graphic Competition, New Jer-
sey Tercentenary Commission,
State House, Trenton.
Tercentenary medallions and
ibbons will be awarded to 36
winners. Winning photographsmajor TV series and is currently will be eligible In the final se-
ection of pictures fjor a 1964 New
rersey Tercentenary Calendar
md for the exhibit at the New
rersey Tercentenary Pavilion at
the New York 1964-65 World's
Fair.
The Tercentenary p h o t o -
graphic Competition is being
sponsored by the New Jersey7ederation of Camera Clubs as
>art of the state's 300th birthday
:elebratlon.
Lake, Ind.
Answer — The technicolored
version was made in 1948 and is
jften shown on TV. In addition
to June Allyson, the cast included
Elizabeth Taylor as "Amy," Jan-
ford's other TV series was called et Lehigh as "Meg" Margaret
O'Brien as "Beth," and Sir Sid-
ney and Lady Lawford's son ts
Jamie."
(For an answer' to your qiies-
:ion about any TV program or ac-
or, write to Steven H, Scheuer,
Mlyson as "Jo"?—B. A,, Cedar TV Key Mailbag, c/o this paper.)
O Khf r<atar»s gradate, Iitt.l««I.Wcrtl
Broadway Hit?By BOb THOMAS "There h plenty of evidence,
AP Movto-Televtaloa Writer however, that the English custom
HOLLYWOOD ( A P ) - London's i $ j f <Us,<«teful *> «" American
smash musical, "Oliver," had its a u a l e n c e -
American premiere Monday night American importer David Mer-
times perplexed audience.
Oliver Twist, Fagln, the Artful •»* S a a Francisco and three each
Dodger, Bill Sikes and Nancy
come alive in this tuned-up ver-
y
success In this country
it ill b B d
Broadway stagecraft — the huge,
revolving set is a marvel, and the
timing is split-second.
American curiosity, If not rJown-
p
rick has booked "Oliver" for sev-
en weeks apiece in Los Angeles
In Detroit and Toronto before the
New York opening. He says that
hlt remains to be seen-et Christ- The long road tour worries one
mas, when It opens in New York, individual — Lionel Bart, who
"Oliver" has been hailed as the wrote book, lyrics and music
best musical that the English mu- Bart's worries are small ones,
steal stage has had to offer since however. A darkly handsome 32.
the war. It borrows much from be is the hottest talent in London
musclals, being also responsible
for b e hits "Flogs Aint Wot They
Used T'Be" and "Blitz!" His sue-
But It is still Dickens, and that cess is remarkable, considering'
means heavily-plotted, thlckly-ac-be started la the music world
ceated material that may evoke only sis yean ago.
Bart and director Peter Coe
brought six principals from Lon-
cy, Bruce Prochnik as the wistful
Oliver and Clive Revill as the
don, Fagin Is the hit of the show,
supplying the only comedy.
New Comedy SeriesBy CYNTHA LOWRY
HOLLYWOOD (AP) — A new psychosomatic. That way It be-
comedy series about a pair of ac-
cident-prone carpenters will make reflection on an Industry or trade.
its debut next month on ABC be-
cause a student of laughter be- some practical observing. He has
lieves slapstick is due for a re- teamed up In the starring roles
a stand-up comic named Martyival.
Producer Leonard Stern, who has
served under such generals as
"ackie Gleason, Steve Allen andPhil Silvers, finds that comedy wtkei out very well last season
._ . L — ^ — . _ ^ t h "Car 54," which matched up
comic Joe E. Ross and actor Fred
Gwynne. It wasn't too bad, either,
when Jackie Gleason and Art
Carney did "The Honeymooners."
moves in a broad cycle.
"And big comedy—broad com-
edy —• abdicated about three or
four years ago," he remarked,
landly ignoring last season's
slapstick disaster called "Oh,
Those Bells."
His forthcoming "I'm Dickens
He's Fenster" will frankly go aft-
er those big, unrestrained guf-
faws after a period of concentrat-
ing on more sophisticated humor,
which Stern calls pallid because
it elicits at best an amused
chuckle.
"But with all the television they
see, audiences won't accept a
comic who comes out and trips
for no reason or slides on a ban-
ana peel," said Stern. "We're go-
ing after the big laugh, but we're
jolng to motivate It logically."
His main characters are skilled
craftsmen. After all, there's no
sense In outraging the nation's
building tradesmen. Those boffo
situations emerge in each weekly
episode because one character is
a worrier, and his mishaps are
comes a personality defect and no
Stern apparently has been doing
Ingels with an all-around actor
with a flair for comedy roles
named John Astin. That formula
Blaze and BeesBUDD LAKE (AP) - Fire-
men dashed Into a boning
farmhouse Tuesday night —
and dashed back out again.
A swarm of bees, angered by
smoke and flames, routed the
firefighters.
"They were going down our
necks, through our coats and
Into our trousers," said Fire
Chief George D. Smith. About
2t firemen were stung.
The chief said the bees ap-
parently had built a hive in
the unoccupied building on
Flanders-Drakestown Rd. The
fire burned out the interior of
the house, which Is owned by
Leonard D. Sylvester ol Bndd
Lake.
10
WHERE JFK WILL VISIT — Map locate* areas in Main*to ba visited by President Kennedy in August, Kannadyit schtdulad to attend a charity affair Aug. 10 at th*'Naval Air Station n<iar 'Brunswick. H* th*ri will spendth* following two days at th* home of Gen* Tunnay enJohn's Island, off th* Main* Coast. (AP Wiraphoto Map)
COMPANY»AtK no
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I
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It's BacktO'Sckool round-up timeand we've corralled
Loads of Steady SportswearPardners by Majestic
. . at home or on the (campus) rangeWashable cotton suede nutmeg poncho „.... 7.98Bulky Turtle neck chamois sweater .'. -. 11.98Slim skirt of glen plaid wool 11.98Gold oxford western shirt ..,..„. 8.98Waist-skimming suede pants ...„...„.. 14.98
. . . shod in 5 oz. Caressa pumpsCaressing your foot with just 5 ozs. of comfort
shown: "Dateline" and "Robbin" in black calf 15.98
s STEINBACtrS STREET FLOOR OF ACCESSORIES & SPORTSWEAR,Red Bank and Atbury Park - -
Special! $14 to 25.95 Casual HandbagsCasual handbags in cowhide, cowhide and C\ C%C\Seton, woven leather, carpets and more!
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