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A Newspaper Devoted
|'o the Community Interest
Kill) Local Coverage
i, XXXIX-NO. 43
I Points<* for
r h o o 1 s: i , I I IT-. \ ( ( O I I M l .
p.iir- can**1 ol
, I ui IliUc
CARTERET, N. J , FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1961
G r o
i I !'M A b l l t l - J C t
;i i l i ' i l l .- - l i nn l l a x
i II ' I > I i . • n u n i i i r i i n
:n • ' .i -i i n ' I n l a x
' ; !)• ,111'M n l i rt i n I h r
1 : i . • ii'i.ii
I ' l i r ' . i . i .v 14 T l i l o t i i l
- i. • , • . ' .,: $ 1 I l i f l .
i , ' • ) ! i 111 , n t t i n
i ,i I I ' 1(1 I n "1 ,1
.. r , n : . .• i M i I l i i m m . 1 -
'I r i l l I I i ' . i i m i l s
' ! i< D i a l t 1 ' ' t i
I ('., < ; i l l ( t : : . r J
r .- il >• n Ihe, ! , . • • . . - i - t . i . L . ! ) < • -
>.i|in v .idi I lllli'hl.--i 'iitil icnrhf i -- I{rpail>
• I i h . i ' S;'.> OIMI of t h e
ip rn i i r l . i t lun fm i i m i n -' ( I l l l l l 1)1 , |M- ( | f i l l I 'X-
'• • : n \ , , \ ; i i ) : . i f I l i i s l a d l -1 il t in i> |)r t i i i i ( ip w o u l d
iimif iner M wu-j.vrar•ifl thr board aiitlcl-
••riiiia major con-liificleni'ios this >Tar.
Kn>.ilr\ Hnuredthat
to repine*1
•:...;Num floor ;ii the'•Mi School Tin1 re-
Presented Fairly, Clearly
And Impartially Each Week
Complete News Pictures
u 2nd Clan** P O, Cr tem, N PRICE TEN CENTS
By Parishlli'iir Yearly Reports
At Hungarian Church
(.on<rrc^ational Meet
CARTKRKT - 7)M Annual
(•(HUMi';:ational Meeting of the
Hungarian Reformed Church,
lust .Sunday morning, re-
rl Ifliiis J. Szabo chief
fin- 1961, and William
I,a/,ii vicc-nhlcf-elder. The new
up]1 of the church is An-
Pross. Elders elected for
i'".v H-yct»r term are Joseph
Skiba Demand as '61Budget is Drafted
Donovan Renamed Union Schools ,
President for 10th Year County to
Ask MoreCARTERET —The Interna-
tional Chemical Workers UnionjA.F.L.-C.I.O., Local No. 144, lo-
. R. .1.
Legion Group toAttend Confab onRehabilitation
CARTBUCT - A delegationfrom Carteret Pout No 263.
h | " 1 V mpi
( hrislpiiM'ii, li-man^P r ;
' " < - * - < with B«,nUKl,r rmnon i r s . l,oft to r l jht . l larrv
who i.s In nvtin1 weekly collections. Oth-
ers on thr Board of Elders areJoseph Adam. Roy Jensen,Stephen Kovacs, Bela Kantor,' other of-William Napy, Geza Mefrycsi,|jj_ Kramer,
ijollll Npmish Alov-.J... " '
Icated at Mineral Division of"-"•"Jthc Food Machinery and Chem-a n ^ ical Corp., In Carteret held an
election of officers in Decem-ber, Richard Donovan was re-elected president for the 10thconsecutive year.
DlBrlla and Harold i^1"1 f i n i sh , Alexander Comba'l•"Jim ;iemisn, Alexander Comhni " ' " " • " • "«-<--»« camem,, J U -1 Alexander Peter Bert Pokoi l s e p h P e r r a l ' ° . financial secre-and Louis Szabo ']tar-y; Jack Smith, recording
The onnam, \- [secretary; Joe Duff, chief shopme congregation voted its • M i k e
and elders:Oeza Megyesi, treasurer for sev-icral years. Stephen Kovacs!
e l d e r s ;
I guide: and trustee -for three'years, Pete Harbuchuk.
A former member of the Bo-iCouncil and Boiird of1
Fire Chief Cbuis Turner Church CouncilTo be Honored at Banquet^wted at Zion
CARTERET-Final piepara-William %Oraw, traffic £>• I . l l t l i P r a n P a r i CUo*to have been completed by <>rdinator of the Mew Jer»ey **" ' *** 1 3
Crteret Fire Co 1 for the ban- W | l t f Authority, and Julian CARTERET-At the annual Amol,R other actions, the an-!is"'aqurt In honor of nUrlne fire A t M U . ! 0 * 6 1 1 ^ of «* Zion Evangel- " ' ^ ^ ^ Approved thejof Hibernians, St. Josephschtef Loui* Turm-r to be he Id dom and C h a r t o O D o i u S \** Lutheran Pariah the fol- I n *' 8 t H t P m e n t w l t h ! H o l y N a m e S ° d e t y ' &M Cari>y
•in 8, Ella* Auditorium, Ro- wlll * . J L ^ J S K i W , , w ,v ,(,cted J L%£ £$$£'$ ™^ T ^ ^ ^ ^
Other Activities
!
|bppn associated with Volunteer;PUT
i' ed. 'Hie fire
Rehabilitation -the W«r Memo-
RICHARD DONOVAN
the guesu will be Rev.Konopka, pastor of
Church, the
Edward
The banquet arrangement*f «<*«Oerard
of rn-
each voting
.showed
u,i iir ' ' l)H
':.' •" ,u:(l t h
and Prank
~ ^••The budget for
Form Theatre [Bank and TrustArts Group Here; Co. Elects; Cites
S Simon Chairman Year's Progress
r \n\h»sicKucsak
ins national •fiii'ntair law7* al-(ecting thr health and eco-nomlc we If arc of the veteran.It wilt ako include a completereview of the new I960 veter-
CARTERET „
CARTERET — As prepara-tions of the 1961 municipalbudget began this week, MayorStephen Skiba save notice that
we must hold the line" In or-der to avoid a large increasa
the tax rate.
In accord with Mayor Skibais Councilman Thomas Millie,chairman of the finance com-mittee, under whose directionthe budget is being prepared.He said a series of "continuous.sessions" are being planned tohear department heads as wellus heads of boards as to theirrequirements.
To Sift DemandsMr. Milik pointed out that in
drafting the budget, BoroughCouncil must consider the factthat there will be increased ap-
jpropriations for public schoolsiand the county requirements.j "Our tax rate now is $17.05,"jCouncilman Milik said. "Forthat reason we will have to gothrough the demands with afine comb."
Meanwhile Mayor Skiba in-dicated that efforts will bemack' to slice things as, far ascapital improvements are cyn-jsidered. The road dspartirtnt
isjis likely to be the only one, to"-1 get "an ear" because of the
COMBA, IIOROSKIKOVAL. LITl'S
DEVLIN, COUtillLIN,TELKPOSKY. SUROWKA oi;i
Services Listed
Sunday, January 29 will bejsllfTf!tories;iMTved ai> SeptiiiiKi\sinm ami '
Chflbena vice-president. An-i" e uTa th^ S 1 Z > a ao ? ' w e e k s i l l l ' l u a ! «tor*hx,lder and'shape early in March, wr** a
[drew PI'OHS and Loul.s J. S z a b o ' S J*tti<? T £ Z H™, n re0™I1Jrzatl0n m w t i n " 'pi-e-budget hearing is slated in
P r a n k versegi ch11 L i n 1 , 1 h f J, I ^ ? P n y o n w h o w m t ' l«^s:advance of its. official pi-rsfcn,.thaunwn is held by Mark the 36th year with the bank uition as a 1961 tax Ordinance.:::"=.™, z-« ??•=r^^r^ »ss at(je. Mich; are $11,439,035
at the end of 1959. The capital
>itr,fi
" nr i 'd• r . f I
1 he( 'i)ii '
play tl;i. Blue 1the KUltar.
r of I U i u I!an A«encle», and William ™cKlnle tone of the L
H.
••>•' «' t in- K u c -1 -I^MH the ac-
Miclwlle Kuc-•"•"'»n In hljti
..MSI I'IKIU yean
" : !:- ' ballet b*«.
-Department of Ne»
hefrom Seal
m- Mavr reaa with interput reached In a recent statement tli'e da^^wiuui ie ' t in^ '^- 'HelDand ami , , mem our oppoi\en(8' by candidates sponsored by the Wanted " S u. «l"v S ' ,i,i » frwem HiHtemenis with reward;Better Schools AMU.. seekli)g!Sioii.s " "to our candidacy. Our uoodelection to the Board of E
1 the fantastic and in-UnR under tjolaim that -the last-jwilliam Slebei
,v favorite trick of,mlnute announcement of state'»• fact that they approval of the buildinu pro-1
ie armed forces ofsram will be an election eve' The Luther Lean tic will meetBecauw we ex-itrick' on our part. on Sunday
hiuh iwlitical con-j 'By this statement, whcther|29 in thed their control by .they realize it or not. they areiThr members of the Altar So-
'S, they wave the'implying that the State De-|eiety will meet on Monday
ln Oroup Activities
„ n'cloc. Hi,,w,rian "Crai,, -*&•:"• •Ztt£T*i IL ™S S ^ t h S " £;Slate and others. ,sult tli.it additional niuht hours
Uie traditional in-i One of these scripts will he are planned, plus additionalH production in:help.
The bank reelected AndrewBethlen Hall honoring the newofficers and elders. The JunioiWomen's Guild
I the dinner.will
Junior A11 m e " and women ivlio Hreichrlstensen, president; Mrprepare interested in taking part in this|Kenyon, executive vice' presi-
our(Continued on Pase 2 (Continued on Page 2)
Victory DinnerDraws 300; Dolan,Brown Speakers
CARTERET — Despite thebitter void, some 300 personiattended the victory dinnerSaturday night .in BethlenHull honoring Mayor Stephen
P R r t > 'Ainu ican. A u ) ( y u , a l l fla|, a n d ^ u g 0[ p a r t m e n t o f Edy^yo , , l s piay-j7:45 P. M. at the home of Mrs
tramphnu on .heir rights. ing politics with our building Alma Esktsen. Plans will " '
IS'Ust they forgwt, let us re- program. Such irresponsibility
mind fhem that we al.so served'shows that these candidates,b i l with mll-fhaven't got the faintest idea as
"-JSto
In Plant Mishapourlions
alongfellow y
ans will bemade for placing potted Easterplants in the Church. Cub Pack83 will hoi* its monthly meet
^Fingerprint Method is Only Positive
ltdentificqtion System, Sheridan SavscV • * •
»"•"> titled to the
y. anuay 31 at
_u _ i i i v t u . | -Detective Clar- When a person is arrested, he immbei
complettonjinu on Tuesday. January 31 atj1'1101' Sheji-idiin, who has been is fingerprinted and "iniiKKed" arches,f
'Skibn, C'ouncilmen John E.D'Zurilla and Adam Szymbor-ski and Assessor-elect ThomasiMilik.
Prosecutor Edward J, Dolan,fornier tnayoit, lauded Mr.Skiba for seeking thr mayor-
lalty afjain.; Mr. Dolan said, "The mayor
orihas thr roughest job in Car-td
•"idvini the ,b u d y burned Wednesday mom- We wonder what service In the on everything that the B o T r d l c o B f i r m Z ass at r a nn « I,, a freak accident and fire 1(,,ned forces has to do with aof Education does in the w a y i w " j u n t o r c t a t n I ,
f««»>c.-; MM " ' 8 n e w u n l t u n d < l r ™iMnic-a^hool Board Election, A)l oflof ft school building program ta'"ao P M
of whorls, loops ori"«'i " " iwuo"..-™ .."" ••• — •, „ . _ ... the technician ls a b l e i t p r e t i Problems are exaggerated
_ .. . .„ 1 „> ,,.^uB1n,»i™. ne 14 't,hen- tnn lUKh a formula to determine'fo>' s o m e r e a s o n a n d it- seemsouild will meet on Wedaesday;of identification, balls' it the asked to Rive a spt-cimcii of his " " ' naKi c l a s s fo1" M c n * * Pf!^ l t Pi'oblems are never the
nvmt* • fault of anyone except thes are en-State Department of Education !eveiilriK at 730 p M ' Thuw ! "Jenuricatipn,'calls it the asked to Rive a specimen ofhisprivilege*..by innuendoejs, who must pass[day's schedule includes- Senior!Ultp l I l s t 'm '1 ' S P c t i o n o f t h e prf- hnJidvyritiiie. He is also <iues-
lice department. tioned about his family, date
"tliei day l ' ° " " ' thf> 1*"'b'(! p l a n l " f " " ' u"our r hil.'American Atdicultural Chrmi- Hie
fun 'cal Companvi
The man. i d e n t i f i e d ..Thomas atullek suffered burnabout tli* Hands land anklesand IIIM) Injured his h*|ir
. f St^ilick tmi>loyi;d by i| ™n-l | | l ;Mrm- t lon company wa.s 1 doltu^ l l U s o m e work on a plmfk som* 8
„ ttfH from the ground. When the
^ s * ' o n a l th | rown to the floor, the plank, , l ™' tt hit a quarter inch pip.- line
!.„,, , J ' D , ! V l l d «*"«<•• winch in turn set" " r l«-PwUj'ablaa heatln,, oil nearby
HI 1100! n wu , s r Ppo r ted that Btulli-klanded in the "mws of flames."
I but other workers rescued him
foilKllt till' fightworld fii'tv saf
Tor our1 childivn.
to make -sheer demogoguery and we are Scout Troop 83 atHieellii^ 01 work
Continued on Pane 2
Boy I "our iin-esiigHtive
. . , - . . . - ••- -..- '^viuu IIUOIJ as ai 700 P M'••'*' ' '"Possible." complicated.- Shwidan said, ^ is chV-ckW withtatherTlnTh'^offiand better dismayed at such tactic to be;Alld senior Choir r 1 "1^1 et' Thf> bureau also dues invest!- "but it is surprising to see how n a L S o ? , to s K t h e
W,-ConteBdittedbyanycandld«tentotryi7:30 P. M. The Jujuor Con-'^ve Held work. Photos are quickly be8U,ninK Clinicians X S S b l , ; " ^ MrCIUSK will meet oniLa'ct'" of (''''mo scenes, acci- catch(Continued on PageU')
After the prisoner has dipped ! n l , a y o r" H e f e l t M l ' s k i b a
»f birth job and service record h i s * i n ^ ' t ips into rubber base:cou!ri do the best job of anyone1 , . . 1 ( L O i a 'pr inters ' ink and lms left, ani'» Carteret as mayor because
c a r d he devoted so much time to the
11 the''°"~'l'(; " H i s c1ooJ' i s a '*aysMr. DolaiJ said.
"Without it." Sheridan said.would "The filial ui-int process is impression on the
nil
' M i I I I
Scouts Draft Programs forBoy Scout Week Feb. 7CARTERET Caiu-rti Boy troops and Explorer units will
ScputJi have made arraw<«-iselect its top boy member asm * '" ' s f o r • w i d l ' v a r l e t y o f i i t s ln anniveraarjproKiHins in observance of Boy]events Involving the commu
Week from Februaryamong me nation's topIJ. nuui Biuoug me nations
Under tlw l,henH'of Stivnyth-kouU and explorers 12A i C h t e C t E a l k ill b l
, j ' - - - . . - . -^« . , H0VU1.U HUM iniur i UK- 1111111 ui o u n i ^ u i - M.UUM aim cxpioi^rs 1Z Ol™|-jby dragging him out and rolliiiK vn Aiiieiict)-Chnracter Coui)ts, Eagle rank will be selected to
In the snow.B o 1 1 ' f t l t l i o m l ) a " l t ' ' '
'an hour and, , 'direction df fAl.lnlhrii>M(i Th"
bey spent about1 ha^f under the't e Chief Wlllia.111Injured man was!
thr Cub Scouts,»'<«'e Explon-r«
r t t . Jhe Injuredtaken to the hospitalspital In th ibe the reunion of Boy ScoutI ambulance of the First Aid Troop 82 at the First Presby-
Boy Scouts, I make a Report to the Nation„ _4ult leadersjat Washington. D. p., Februaryobserve their movement's j 8. ^ call at the White House Is
lsl anniversary dining the'ulsfl planned.,-ei'k. Boy Scout ^ ^ . ^ » j , , E U > » , ,The liighllKht of activity wilUR will be observed in churches
the reunion of Boy Scout of all faiths. Members of the. ^ i « 1.11.. . i-k 1... 1 K..JIA *_ltl_ ...jii , . . j
Bquad.
j . embers of theJewish faith will observe thfe
iterlun Church Wednesday, Feb-Boy Scout Sabbath on Friday
NationalHigh
secondbaalcet-at 7:J0°l srym-
Faxeka* SugifeHtu
"Mm of theCARTERET—A
that Cai'teifct pick a "Man ofthe Year" annually has beenndvanoed by Alexander Fa-
'ruury 8, at, 1:31) P. M. (February W, and Saturday,
U41V4 IMU#iV*4>^u u u u t * > - « - V — — — — — •
50 years. Both individual boysMr. 'Pagtskas t«eU that all and units who accomplished
fgaiuzatlont could combine |sp«oinc- projects will receivein picking , the m r t i ' who achievement awards in public
uume wi«! would be honored at an af- ceremonies.fair, with proceeds to go to Most of the nations 12K.000charity Cub Scout packs, Boy Ucout
February a, the actual annl-iPebruary 11. Cub Scouts, BoyScouts, Explorers and theiradult leaders will attend andtake part ln many services lnuniform. Many sermons willdeal with American youth.
While not a religious-Usach-the Boy Scoutseve that no boy
can grow to successful man-hood without a Arm belief lnOod. Many religious awardsearned through- and presented
vt-rsary date, will feature" re-by all scou(s and
to the/ ScoutiOath arid Law.
The anniversary brings todost; the celebration of theBoy Scout Golden Jubilee Year [Ing movement, the Boyand launches scouting's second of America believe that
by a boy's own religious insti-tution will be presentee)
Friday evening at 6:30 P. M1
Principals ToMeet with Board
CARTEHET _ A specia.meeting will be held by theBoard of Education Monda'night at 8 o'clock to winch th lprincipals of Columbus andNathan Hale schools have beeiinvited to express their viewion rotating split session classes
School Superintendent Ed-win S. Quin deeded iiuainM therotation, which broughttests from som« parents.
Quin explained at the board'sbudget h«arins that in tin- pastthe morning split sessions havebeen rotated to the afternoon
|for the second term. The after-noon classes had been movedto the morning, but thU year,Quin decided to continue theyear as it began in Heutiinber.
The superintendent told1 theboard and. parents last niyhtthat he hud checked with of-ficials in Woodbridge, Edisonand Madison Townships, whichhad more children on spin ses-sions than any other communi-;ies in the county, and lie wassdvised to keep the situation asII is. Quin said the other .school
lire quickly_ on
dents, victims of crime, and There lire three basic typus basis for identification'." De-!at01 'unknown dead persons. Latent of fingerprint.1 classifications, tective Sheridan said "We rely!"tn
[fingerprints at crime scenes are under which " " ' • •
-on has been arresied'before." ; M r Doltfn' nlflV! s P e t t k e r i n
"The name is disregarded as'1 '1 ' ' a l ) s e n c B o{ uepridden Sen*-John A. Lynch, recalled
•lassiucauons, lecuve Sheridan said. "We relyl" ln t ' reDinii of the Democratic-...«-.Hwtll,o « t u » , , c »m™ a.c UHUL-I- wuiL-u nii-i-e are numer-,completely on the prints to de- |P a i l v m Carteret when Waltertaken «nd often provide police-.Kb vanatiuns.lThe three types:termine the prisoner's identity 'Sullivan and John Hutnickwith their only clue :to the are whorls, loops and arches. That way we can't be fooled'*we>i: « l e c t t 'd ,councilmeii iniripntit.v'nf tim ci<iniin«i< 1 n,, i ,,... K,,I t :..,. . I . - . L . 1955, The record1 shows Demo-identity,of the criminals the j by an alias."
pro-
urvlcci.nt!systems found It detrtniental
I to rotate at mid-year.
The recordshows ecrats have done the better Jobin miidins! Carttji-et." he de-
JllM'
HOW THE THING WORKS: OHctive Clareiife Nheriilan explains II,* ri-at,,ra, of thrIdentification system t» I'ollce C'uiiiiiiir,Muin 1 John Iliitni.h ami ( liui < h a r k s I,. Mak-
looks on.
fe Elmer B. ( Brownrepeated Piesidfiij, Kennedy'sviews when he tola the fsather-lns "il's not what the Dolitl-tlehiun can <Ut for you —butwhat you can do for llu1 ciim-
(1" prais-'d tile No-ticket from tlii' ua-
itiiin I MTIII Ui tile l(>;'ill slut*..\!r .Siilliwin, luinu'il pivsi-
,'dt'iu, niiHJiatuluied the lion-iorcit fiiui1 and prain'd Milik for'hi.'- rduraar In at'C't'iil the re-iMnuiMiiiiliiv nf lux ussi'SMir." vHi- MIKI " W I wlll mi.s him on
n'uiiiuiiicd on Paw 'i>
I Hit n cr TomorrowTo Honor (Mrien
CAKTKKKT Kurytliitit; is:iu 11 •.luini's.s for ttu' U'stimuniul[(liniiri ID IJI1 L.'i\i'ii in honor ofFrank OHiien tit the GypsyCHIHI1 Kt'htainant at ti;30 to-lliunu'A niahl. '
j Mi uBrien, recently retiredpu.-.ial clerk, served at the Car-tel tl fust Ottke for b$ years.Aiiiiiniiy Sarzillo is xhaii'mun
!ut the dinner cummittoe, as-Uiated by Adam Pluta, Walter[Pajlufskl and Matthew Sloan.
PAGE TWOFRIDAY, JAJTUARY 27, 1961
o B r r i u u E s C o f C L a l l d s A d o I e s c e n t10BITlAR1ES Five fcdmitesWoes Argued
vtt Car. A, F i^nr . '*i qifclfflnr r- the i n rt B-'r't -'
a' Cx-.- ^> i£'
if AYEKEL — Tt* Seniorvj Westerns** PWtoniiiip of tt*i : Aver*] PrMbytcri&L Church
EUaDW^ son* i* rnwrt by l£
CMD-
mod-
C t : tf TTW PMS ?f?.f St*t*tf acroup ha*
Burnt?Moore: »•"'.•>•.
raw :r.bf tic)n*ri or. y» Wtrjdbndie Ttxmiii:? it iorer
V ^..iiT.r lift lias tiai.of <*mpar»Kt cam-per;' =.«*::# •:•: tot SUTUUM a tb?Mr;
of Carter*>: trjd M-tof
orMtrar? of N?*vc
Ai». :r»c!
ol Carters asdEisabetti
of Ui*Lane »»id. "Th? p a a t r t t w
i Wesl-of »ora? 100
**» aw;»rh veex %• toe Av-riel
Kf* Torr
ALBEBTCARTERTT - Alter.
«7. of »€day la New YorkT U warfctaj tivlth the J«ew York
*B£T?»- TO* C,5 * SrwS.CiGetter resided there net; sov. * ^ * " * ™ 1tag to t i l t borough thr« Teanago.
tamer Hit* B&e FIT..??.*htr:one dangfcv?, Mn HtrneSanchez, and a son.both of Cittern: enMri: Florence Vinar.Angeles, Call!: a broth*? Mir-n y Getter of tangt*o «raadcbiidren.
Funeral serrioetWednesday mornng
Girl Scout ISewsBT -HE* IlITA » C K »
4!«'• »l Good Jwi lo M»:
«•»» and her newjy lo-:
ncd by « mwiifT o' m«lUt« troop at c:
.'». D.' waii» of Co- Hiv» fanl»«hion tfw*
f w - court «f *« B r t .U> Uw bemuucti ^
..-. thethe
Mrs KayJ»ar.ne
*nd Mrs. RSU
TTMP HI*03f to Barbara P
at Mrisponsored
^ *-* v i*" T - # ^^w • • a?v f •,»4
' ' ' • i s sponsored by the IUiary of Post 2«3 T
ccuor,
Vn the u w p .
Dot pr of the po»t.
^ Pv'Uimb Khool b-.,:sionfr. R«fr«»ha)»:* n « L Trooo 13» r
in- rtt*t ail leader* to ,
• v -
£tr. C:r>r- T-JM.O*T January 21. a; I P. M•intent of -s v.e Ci-ocae Sjzutt'jfx
Wire* w * ** Tufr? tr* DD mein;>eT&r-iP o*
CIEL ^COIT CEEEMONT: A Rrt-in^ rh«rrl. ImWJtwf tw*16 IUT Mel CortWMi O.SJI., pwtcr »»• Uw •»*«•««. Sitlrr M. AniU O>.MI.U, ,^ tb, Brovnie pbudnt. Purnw »nd l e u b m * U.f rhiidrai » m nnivrfin tb* tburth btwmeiit tern* b7 tbf ririt. Ciwti in xtxn*i*r i»rtaW Mn.f.n«iinj Browni** «f Tr*w 1U u 4 !3 v m pinatJ: June A>na. J«a« Bryex.C«mtN», l*rm Hxttk, Detanh Bn»*»rUi, Claire S w * . Mtry Lrw KrMi
Xamic* Miske. Sataa Tadkri E»ii? WdtMr «a i Diuw
t»
TO
FunUuri
TbeT EileenXuroa.
( \KD OF THANKS;O3EPH J. OXEAR
ti".t.v, io rxpretf our•hanki to our r»lat;T«,
d' and x>f^hbon for their leaders who havftrxpTtsaoci o* sympathy, ple<«d the Otrl S cmany »ct* of WndneM. courte Ancie Cor.:
pTitaal bonouet* £ad thelM. 8L Joseph;iful floral tributes extend- cyzk and Caro! s-
crar bereavement tn Uie 205. St: of our dewrjr beloved Metro. 8t Ellaj.
husband. fiUier. grandfatherand devoted brother and uncleJoseph J- OTjear.
The Candidate-Tinued fros
COMBA HOEOSRIKOVAC. U 7 T S
DEVUN. COCGHUNTtLEPOSKT. SUROWKA
oped
We had LuaseroiiB with h i - as he derel-
ict. irvd changesbr the entire Board
S^ SI PEEK'S NEWS >^ew
Are ChosenThe
'oraiii. and answer i-, t ietver wc::iO'JT chiitfr*' We tad thi?
E*e held '^r 5s S3t c~ti; w» snp, light th*t-. ;^» araln—t2£t :^LS agans poli- '.h»:*
Funeral Host. M uciaw. . - + • • • : • •Carwrrt Avenae, 'wxt. B*bt: "We *.-? DOR arxiwa x df- v,x :Morton E Ba-jm official-1)- Mt* jnb'*,'Jr iht te»i o! teis s or.*tennent irts in BeU U.-«: cacpaim niti our adversariet. Z.teiOme'-err, W'xxibridg*. W e wleome iils opporrun::r. as;a
The isxpayerj ar* enuiled to F:as:>• :-, dtDt: :
tie for tbeir
M U . MABTCARTERST—Mrs Mary TW
Sharkej l*Var. 41 CFSVZAArenue died Wednesday. J&nu-arr 25, at the Ptrth AmboyGeneral Hospita! loUoir^j akmg iitoew.
A natite of Eliza'oeUi siw re-sided In Carteret '.m t « pan
»c»ujd
school
'ri* C£iid_i&* 'i conur; CTUi]T "W^ E."* now a^'aitinj £nal' CETPJ* Ccm>r . 12B&* Kolc^tscf ihe prt-sfr.* major.tT or. approral from tr.e Stave De- oi Colux'sus, Till bo' tBoi.'s o! Educa:;OL- li ptrnneat of Ed>ra'.joa. and asanmici: breailaK cr.
e a rich a t h n j as a na- w»n as tJzs apTroval is forth- monUr.g Jc^oT^-.r ir* t Av c>s i i» Board ol Educa- eoaaist eornracu v.l". be award- 'Mass .r. S; El^s C^urrhr. .5 zj>&.t v:ih taea1 »orfli ed and. conftrjct'on should • • •
<•. u, \:.h er.;^BosTd o! siart Jiist at wr. w wmstroc- A s;ri"« -s 'or.if: T S J •; t::*;ITC ts a whole or. a^ tioa of the addf.orj to Clere- gar_w a C»r.«ret L:>d£**rs o! *«he bu-idir^j pro- land School and W&thinftoo EiCi. Z: i; ijexg i^»rjcrea :
'*TZL&i<i? cr, Schoo'. hare seer, started." 'the P e n i ArzarT F T . \yjcs,•-er.if ertry phas* ol:'. There;ore. t ie ""We behere ir.ii we have, . . .
the ^.:i-e Board o{ Edua«iO2 U a««! wise:? aad prudently fc' A d_-jier siiact ^ i i r i xt'j "f.ow t^ rwsioriKtrf for ti* b^iuing t t a prosTanu as *e are »e!3 S?r_a::: Wai*.?: H Jrat;
F1 v;;Ft. Wt p.-orrar: ar.d not ;UK a so- aware of the respor.Coioe* at Ber^:. w^l 3» riilc ^ th* 7L
k * •
Co.". r.teli. Cif Ctu.D;
AVEKIL — A".
;v» : - - - ? : Hisl-. Pel- Re^ Andre* A. Okal. pattor:"-** C^anc*: Choir. i.n* »!'>*-* Iwyi: the nuns of the•"'cre-cTKi of Car! Doi-nican Order; the church
-" — i-/- c' muse nil)choir, the Altar and Rosary,S - t"v - :o the LortJ" Society, the Holy Name So-
^" v y.-., )W rieiy and the Parect-Tficher»o-A&sotatKm of the Sacred Heart
BerP i !, h
erer by A T. E*C-^- ' — - ^ - - ^ *
Ihe ':uowir^ v::; pr> ^ . " , """"'"-'.A' •'
deal-
P.JI.
rc «.-::. t-Gr;---t=. A.:
J S > sttv;'.T-E; '- '•'• '&: tr.y ; jae s. y aeE'aer ol dnr. u weli? prorraa: '-'i \:A BOS:S sf Edjcaf.on had a-'-ia M U a iaxp»jer» Tho mustir,d 4 Khc»:-: s'jju^-.r. -^ sp«-ij up the b-i2d-'J<»: " w b& 1 * '.ins buadin?
bnrPifl.-i.-i i crs H i r - ^ ^ j
c; ihe First Slovak Catho*ac S-xiety Branch 324; the Slo-
Catho'.ic School Soc^tyMj 118; the Slovak La-Cstholic Sokol Wreath 56:\l. A. Chodoah: CaneretAid SQuadi United States
0 1 MetaJ Refining Co.; C&rteret. Sxfi;t.- and Reflnerr Wprkerf
r ; t'rion Local 837; employees 0!": Foster Wheeler Corp; the netg'r.-
of West Carteret: thawccmted their ears; pall
B i y oearers: Carteret *nd RahwayE-:r.ber- Rr.d pj ,^, , escorts, and the Bizub
\*i '.o ri?E.: r.a: pyj-^iai Home for satislacioryrti : _s: c:.r ••?? sen i C e i rendered.p?-TT? 3r':: - p ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ • ^ ^ • ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ • ^ • ^ ^ ^ ^or. '?T Chr.s'. a
D:.
— I
JOINOur New!
ClubC«U RI
TOTHlPhoto Shof
*S«rrtt>cCarteret Shwr v-v:\
(A Cooke \ \ t i
CVRTEKII
43 years. A eommuiucani ol the f & ,r
S t Joseph RC. Church and s „"
»r."i poiir.f-;To Inrce tr. ucpi.:
.nr prorrts: :; raj. LU re«potj- prarrtin. Taere.member of its A3' r ind P.osir?' b',. a j l 'Society and '.he Cvrt Fidelw v',.yra'#€3< CattcUc Daughters '
C v i c
1 ar. o'.d axxra Daug.".;-fTt T i l i,::i & Ybj?r.- 'sni Eii'iry v. TJT} innh and f:-vt tha; hast* ZAk« wane, and t^j? psr-. F»D.-utn .l w. - t Mr;..-? « : ihis K:;i:::-.i-'ard not :uft «:: -ist whU* we did r.y. proceed Andrew P^^ssr.ar. ks • - • t - n i i -crei .£»• I'V at » 'sna2'i ptce.' we ac".*-d with . . .
I'Tr. I', th* BO-caIie<J ica^crity "tr»-~ cor.SideraUor. d »Z ihf xh* •_.J* t a t t-.i; ^^r.er : !•
ir.- b'.ii^:; bujc^rig program at. f x Ft-orjLTT ' . { & * . " ? M ^
and Mrs Hins
Viclorv Dinner
ofBank and Trust„! i e F--K
) 0 : , eher are berband Mcrton ET , iwo daugh-cUln i flo
ters, Mri G^ne-.ieTe Cbomlek:. ,r.a , , „Sewaren; Mrs. Berrjadette Stei-
on one of, t'r.t-5? tr* r.w.3 :h» Boardthat
o-n Ca.--t.-f,
.,, -„„ -^ m? eMor- opportunity
er. Onwet; three ™ . « ; t t o wou.dton Jr., Perth Amboy; John o. •r-cmfJt-i'Sewarer.; s.r.d Gerard of Wood- "bridge; o.ie orother, Johr.
rtbiit. Efccn c&"thus £>«£): c:
'\hf par. hrre d o * no'-hinj 01
ier.t tp« Aifi-
;.ecU. This wouldto Bp^Bharkey, Avtr.t!; two sisters• caVdida'ta.
Mrs. Mar?ar?t Greasheimcr. ^ . ^ a , d WO.JMFords; and Mrs Nora Rice. Ar.- c , ^ ' Vy,- {z'rJ-nadale; ar.d 10 grandchildren jol" j ^ ' r i ^ r , j " '
^Funeral senices will take ''There are vs.'place from the Lymaa Burcpl s i c t0' ' ^
who hat i*er. w:-.h ihe biDOUt 2" ytirs wtt raia:
'Ed'Ic* •!•-.: r.It w '^«4 w-'-Teurj. proair^iS :ramcstsr.t treasurer vo tree.?:
an * A
thj b'—oUri? prorrhs: bu; htTe»T. vie«s SA: : i y br w:u> the..-.tK sus- r.iv.«ju:re si: fc-.ior. thei' S._:
Wiis- ir.d
- CURRENT PRICES-TOf CAST *tn BBTTfR*
MT OR STOVl • • • • • PEA ' "U
J2Q45IMUTT
r u n •>HtTE [muni
CHODQSH Bros , and WEXLERE drand Avenue,
OIL BURNER SALESfV
SERVICE
t*,i to and c.!>.t:»h?L r-'i.r rj
=7 the a*^£ far :5
Memorial Home. 21 Unut m l o l d w b r i I l g t r A : a c „Street upon completion ofrangemenu
records,OXEAB FCXEEAL .SRJF-S and the::CARTERET — Funeral serv- Vl st^y away '.;
ban for Joseph OXear, tnis- u c t s and smear;band of Suzanne Brechka 0 - we recogrua :hl* ca^r;Lear of 70 Wheeler Aver/at ;Or what it a. We belie-.':took place from the Bizub F-J- \tt public knowi thai o.?neral Home, 54 ^Vheeler Ave- pontr.ts are supp-j.-ted tyupe Monday Morning at 8:30 regulsr political •Lachin':A. M. followed by a requiem operates in Nivtr.-^r Cohigh mass at the Sacred Heart 0: our public &thor.u is atR. C. Church at 9 A. M. with ar.d the politic^r.s do nothe Rev. fAndrew A, Okal is tend gWr.g ;t 'J? Tr.ecelebrant. Interment in Si. political E:?IIS trj»". were
ol tht B'Jird of Eda-i£r:e; oa- •«;.'>- rimtly ii . it Sharkey ^^l w*i n^nwa &ssa;&r.; K-:-
r,d wt Mn. Hik. Mn. Bterjdan. Mr reury ar.i M S ^ A = I trear-rere U=;3 £-d Mr. K-jIiba*. who.*1^ R*r-*rd Maadriat, tt-
i'.< w_j r.e:p -rtre slso pan 0' t&* bafldiig s ^ a t : trttEa-er.ir oppcr.er.ii prciEraa, 0.' unneoessarr dtiay1 B«>cvor* reeitcied were W^-
be forwd to stick v. the -j> :r.t height of irrespoosaCitr l i i a s B* i ) i C i- E l 2 i e r E- B r c i l r -•d by people who shewed no inter-10"2^* Chaara, Andrew a i i:• er. s. this prop-aa: untl Uier H*-T° i a Cnrjienten, Ker.}:-
oettjae caadalaa* for electionr. to ih% Board of Education.
iz~ pubbc. Thii cPerhapt then
A waste paper dr.ve ;.usrt *IT U» Car^ret LJ:C.>for Perana.ry ' i^>i Peir
;ve:
ei by
Stremlaa.
ucr. 0! the ISti»«&J5 ^ the1 probiem 0: theer.ure Board of ECaea-tiori and
. i t t the
Heap BigBuiit by Youngstersz^
CABTERZT — As l x ^ ts ; - "Aere is no Kajcny of ETJOW."-1^
S a l e . V o n A n ' hree youngr-trs tercyvti i':~T i • J n 1 • r J co'-iflie of dayi u> b:::V1ing "To 4«« roliO Fund,sstmaD 13 ;«, ior^and
CARTERTI — Mrs. Rober. -'«M. high r. t o e ; of : Her-and Mrs. Joseph Dap- aiaan Avenne. Tuej ctmed n
v u
_).• 7 M . - - 1 ,Ma;.:
j .vrved o:
3 Sober. Ai:^ m Dt-
»• - . l i t
^10,000 mile!at less than
1.7^ a mile!preparstion of tne 1M1 p
Lr.- ;. ^ ; tht Board of Education11^ co-chiirssan of a cake Alt- e •,-.-:.sit«i w:ti i u fiKal igent : t» « **ld Monday, January 30 tt « •
- * d a is wht-Jier any appropn*- »* ^ Co:umb'i* School froc Karmaxm.
Benninz.. a-^ L.. *^L a d
A?.-: *t-r..r.? tc fr.d
1 Hermann Are-Oertrude Cemeter}', Colonia. during the jeneral tie::;'jr.4-./.in T & s 'required' for "tije in- 1 * A-1*- 2 PM, for the ber.»- sue; Mktoael l*ttr, 10. 7 H«-
Pall bearers wer,e John Br&tr have been repam'^d with CAT de3t«tneH of the new tchooljIrt ° ' l^* March of Dimes ar.- aiaan Avenae and Joseph Wn-ka, John Capik, Sr., Anton opponent*' nzmti. We are c r- and - 4 n e r e &doed that aone noonoed that donations of e*xe t o * * i . 11,. 5 Hennam Ave-
t-oa t^eHa?:,
C^trta E*r-
t>yBrechka, 'An tor: Gaydos, u^n the, pubUc know* thai T U ntcewary and that ft.01 CJ9 eak.es can be madeGeorge Maiola and George Ma- 'hft&e signs have been ready would ristoegln to pay op this contacting Uaem „ » « » _ -mr: •• for a long time. Anj iatwened iadebt*dnfe» until 1>62. We d i AssisUng tiiem on tte M I - t .«DIDATE NIGHT
Tne Sacred Heart Holy Nam* citaen only has to Vook :r.Vj provide !or 15 additjonal t*ach- auttet will be tbe W t i ar.cSociety and the Jhrat Slovak the paint shop on Lower Roost- *rt for our Khool tynm for Birth grade wachen.qatbolie Bociety Branch 324 ve!t Avenue and he can ** for the coming year. We point out —recited the Irosafy Saturday himself. Our opponents and ail IJJ.; u,« tentative budget ww Antk*a*tioiievening at g l P i l i led by Rev. their supporters wiU dse a^ adopted by unanimous vote of »pwAndre* A. Okal. The.Stovakj'*eir November techniques 111 the enure Board of Education'
WOODBBIDGE—TMrji W«n«) Voters w^Ib Berttof of ihe Board of MoC a U 0 D c * a d l d * M : i a t S c h o o !
_ February » at 8:30 P. M, ATJ a * l " i a * i * e t o tomorrow caiieoa tod civk group*
* T e
day aftemrjon at 3 P. M.
Catholic Sokol Society Assem- tn*"1 frantic attempt \o w n and not by a majoriij. Tni$ ,bly 118 held ritual s m i c * pun, We do not intend to sn by and a?am shows the utter lack o f ~ " l t a a u a > ^ (t»»-'
lose merely because they are knoi ledge of'these candidates,-experienced political campaign- in the workJiee of the Board:J;ers, backed bi a rich poiitical;of Education] i' orgaruiation. We intend to figl^t -Tne entire Board of Educa-" the:p at every ton. W« remiad|tlon has devoted many hours to
ihup thtft the people of Car-sthu school - building program,!' ler<tt wilj decide t i l* el*c:ian,jworking in (lose harmony withand not, posters and poUUcal;our architect. Murray Leocrwiu.
j chicanery. When the pubUcjWe have consulted the teach-J1 studies the issues and each ing «uff ia reference to the; candidate's qualificatiotu. we educational features of this
are confident pf the outcome ."'program. Our architect has
pWdky jiytted to atwud thii iaaponan:
HONOR AMONG TIIEVU
Tfaert may or may not bebonor among tbitvti, buttbtr* ii nothing honorabletbout their criminal icti.Bi lure you aavt full pro-tection , againtt fiiuncijlIon from theft. Set 111ibout a Broad Form Per-IOIUI Theft Policy.
Vincent J. Fame J Co.Ke*l
71 Smith St., Perth Amb»j
HI MtM
m UP WITH YOURiHOME TOWN NEWS
CUP AND MAIL THIS COUPON TODAI
WOODBRIDQE PUBLISHING CO,18 GREEN STREETWqODBRIDGE. N. J.
• Enclosed please find $4.00 tor ontvyeaisubscription to:
• INDEPENDENT-LEADERD CARTERET PRESSD EDISON TOWNSHIP-FORDS B1ACON
To be sent to:
NAME
ADDRESS
TOWN
• Hartoan• faartDomonr MErcury4-0125
itt stakway AT
Quality Ke«pj f 1 in BiuineuM i b « kUUrtaJb
POLAROIDJrv* <"
10 SECOND FILM
491KO1.1.
WATCH MARTColonia Shopping
Rout* 27COLOMA, N. j .
ReporleU by POPILARimpartial T«st T«amafter 30-day trial of
OLDSMOBILE
Iniiett At final!Wtuld 7M k* latttestei fatkow a Mte pniricior can protect a"•iw-Jtuui" buknest Uuouch 1U< in-faranctT
. . wriU . .
Joseph G. Fennelly5(8 Amboy AvenueWoodbridgr N. J.
HE 4-1 111 — Fl' 1 > M )
NEWI Jit
YORK UFE INIUsUNCE COMTANVMU-ance - Group Itttaraacorbcw • Acddcnl ani 8tduw«
LAST CALL!"Thank You Sale"
EMS MTIIUY,
25%2ttk
OFFon aU GIFT ITEMS
• Religiauaf Artkte* • SUtues (All Siief)• Musak • Figurines • Rosaries
• Fenton Gltssware • Planlen • Pottery
•Ov«r-all
"In lO.OlOO-plu*
drtvinfl, MA on*
pair had to be i»
OP? ;
Walt & Genes FlowerFata* Wlw Care'
325 PeTshing Avenue, Carteret
. . . y«M don't
woy you do
and taportv"
Make your own^ w root
TeL KI
/umtouss wmwit**
Q AutO475 Aven.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1961
St. Joseph's JottingsBy REV. PHILIP M. BRENNAN, OBM.
( i i iy n raden .for the terns of the area. There, Sunday thr Riadc whooij was a Very good showing at the
" "" '-1" '1 ^ " P e r t h w last Monday. !„lull teami mind i'f t t l c
Mvlc; nine
finishedsennon In
1:1 Hi'Mill
"T t h e weAs compared to theof lost week this
one with St. Mary's,,'.' siuict. end of a 49-31With this KBtno the team
,„„ nil Its names in theml Next Sunday we
St Mary's asaln to i i c i
second round of play, of the special Holy Hour fnwill betfln at 3:00|Youth to bo held at St. Marys
\l I1" uP f l l h Amboy on Sundny
\pprrriating Appet l tn_^ |February_ IB. We are looklii
• taut the dance to be acheduled for February 11. and thdetails of this affair will brworked nut by the committeePlans for another skating partjwere Klventhe once over andwe will have more on that later
p r e s e n t Informe
A ;M'i:,:• Iiir• Th r
We
evening there willdelation dinner and
ihr members of thedinner will be heldAcres" beginning at
hope that they will,,ri time after all their
for the fullest cooperation ,„all the youth of the parish lr.fUils project. Watch this columnfor further details of the prosram of that day. . . . In thicourse of the meeting Pathe.Brennan explained the purpose
^s to the choir dutlesjof the recent meeting of C.Y.Oof the parish. ;prlests with the Bishop. It ha
TrrnsWTlltlMT Blight
>r somebe dull
PAGE THREK
FOR lUC EVKNT: TnucliitiR <lii- crown of the Queen"f Hearts. I!)««, Uulso IVUinhcn. urc thin- of 1%1's ran-dldntps. Left to rlijht. Diane Serin, Frances Halahan andKnthleen Harrow. Also romprtiiiK are Alliorta Burns andSharon Koval (not shown). Thr coronation of the newQueen or Hearts will be held at the Heart Fund Bnll
Saturday, February \, In Hethlm Hall.
been suRgeiited that we joinalong with the National Or-ganization of C.Y.O. «o as toprofit by the services and direc-tion of these people who are soexperienced In these matters.So between now and'May youwill be hearing n lot more about
a I vary Church. . / i • !*"" of "earing a lot more about
Lists services;;!" ™°™ntau°y <* CY-O- «the diocesan and parish level.
WitnessesLeave for Conclave
L Cut)Daughter born to Mr. and
Mrs. Qeoige Jackson, 80 Haf<&-man Street, at Perth AmboyGeneral Hospital, January 20.
Daughter born to Mr. andMrs. Slxto Rodriguez, 50 EssexStreet, at Elizabeth GeneralHospital, January 22.
niDiving Meet
•\HTEKET - The Calvary,<M Church. 84,i will hold its
.;(,... us follow* Sunday:i,0 School «l 9:45 A.M.
,. clutsis ioi all ages; mor-! CARTERET A-delegallon of•..•nice uf worship at 10:*5;over 100 Jehovah's Witnesses!
,: with the Rev. Winston from the Perth Amboy Congre:UT'< as ihe Kiiest speaker. Ration will leave today to at-, l,s piatt will read theltend the organization's three-1 A 1 A » M L . ~ . _ r
,,,;,ire. At 3 P.M. the newly'day Bible convention to be h e l d ' / \ I f Y H I D O V, I,,1 deacons and deaconess-1this wwkend at the Paramount J
i.II meet for training at thelTheatcr in Asbury Park. The PERTH AMBOY—On Pe. x \ \ At 6:30 P.M. the eve- announcement was made by]ary 3, the New Jersey AA.U.,. a.votiotml service will be; John Trosko. local presidingjWL11 hold another one of Its\\ mth pastor Homer Trl-jJJi'nkt«\ who will head the'igeo-61 indoor diving cham-
the message.
Church SocietyAt Installation
CARTERET — Mrs. RuthPolkvard was installed ns pres-ident, of the Woman's Associa-tion of the First PresbyterianChurch at, a meeting held Inthe sanctuary "of the chinch
Other officers Installed wemMrs. Jean Lutton, smTtniy.Mrs. Vinlette Hall, t.reasnrciMrs. Ellen Crooks, fellowshipchairman: Mrs. Eleanorc Hnn-napple and Mrs. Pat DeWitt,co-chairmen of mission sew-itiR. Re-dedicated officers In-cludp Mrs. Virginia Droter, vicepresident; Mrs. Ingebnig f)\-scn, world service: and MisDolores Tjiss, program chair-man. The installing office 1 was IMrs. Jessie Woodhull.
A sermonette entitled "Unityand Harmony" was given byMrs. Elsie Umstadter.
The newly installed presidentappointed Mrs. Marie Wilsonas key woman for the Presby-terian Home in Belvidere; Mrs.Gertrude Borchard as organistuiul Mrs. Jessie Woodhull, sun-shine chairman.
Mrs. Eleanor Hannapple pre-sented a farewell gift to Mrs.Malcolm Brown on behalf ofthe association.
delegation.
•[!..• Advisory Council will Many from the Carteret areaPiomhlp contests at the localY.M.C.A. The meet will be'
..lenders The
die chinch at 8 o'clockjwill be among representatives sponsored by the New JerseyState A.A.U. Diving Committeeand directed by Al Rogerson ofAvenel.
The featured event is theWomen's Junior N.J.A.A.U.one-meter State championship,which call* for eleven dives,five required and six optional
The additional events are:Girls, 12 years old and under(one meter 1; 5 dives (2
the year's ten-1 from 21 central New Jerseyand coordinate,congregations of Jehovah's Wit-heads of all nesses who will convene Friday
!i organizations comprise|at 7 P, M. to hear Bruce E.,,;i.. il and will be present.jGtfJIn, district supervisor, give..il.til will also nominate the address of welcome. He hag«i.,t.-s for the nominating been appointed by the con-..•in- for 1961 vention's sponsor, the Watch-i-AM-ii services we held tower Bible and Tract Society,i.u i;ich nutk un Wed-.to serve as chairman and fea-. i.iiiht at 7 P.M. The '"""d speaker,ci 'H; rehearses linmedi- ".IMT this service. New „ . _ . „ , . .: un always welcome Central County Jn Vi .ilvury Teens, under
(hi -jisiiip of William Miz-11 I Mrs. Magdalene Trt-j
MARK A, RADER '
MARKS MILESTONE: The
Here Tuesday
quired and 3 optional*). Boys,,12 years old and under (onejmeter); 5 dives <2 required and3 optlonals).
Entries close February 1 andCARTERET — Carteret Me-:competitors must be registered
planning to conduct mortal Post 745, Jewish War with the A.A.U. or YJH.C.A.•uiK service on youth,Veterans, will be host to theother plans for this Central County Committee of c_/»n#« „ •hide a tup to a "Word the J.W.V. on Tuejday evening.!*1"11*11
.:• rally in TaSji'r:^cte|January 31, t t 0:30 P. M. ati1 a . 111 -di of South River the ••HH «holl on
si.Mday l.nveing- Curteret.Avenoe. \ij "i-.iu. Tlie Junior High- The local POM will put• Hie .-loup will attend sumner Wetner tor post
Church Plan Dinner
Bar-Mitzvah of Mark A. Ra-der will take place this Sat-urday morning at the Con-gregation Loving Justice onRoosevelt Avenue. Mark willrecite the scriptural readingfrom the book of Judges andwill be presented with a Bibleby the Hebrew Sisterhood.Rabbi Morton 8. Baum willwelcome Mark Into the Jew-
re.{ Ish Community and presenthim with a certificate of BarMitivah.
Mark is the son of Irvingand Anne Rader. Yesterdaymornlnr, a special Tails andTflllln service was held at theSynagogue, at which timeMark was honored at thereading of the Torah Scroll.Mark will be honored at the
Falcon Hall CaseWon by Sam Kaplan
CARTERET—Represented bySamuel Kaplan and Seymour!Pclngold, Falcon Hall, 106 Pu-laskl Avenue, owned by Augustand Helen Kronenberg, wonout in the case to retain the|leasehold on the premises.
Port Reading Builders, own-ers of the property, sought todispossess the Kronenbergswho had pleaded non vult topermitting gambling in an ac-tion instituted by the AlcoholicBeverage Commission. I t wason this basis that the landlordsought the eviction..
The Appelate Division of theSuperior Court at Newark heldthat a violation of a rule orregulation of the ABC by a ten-ant of a tavern does not violateABC control chapter with theeffect that it does n6t give alandlord the right to terminatea tenant's lease.
CARTERET The annuald dinner of Cub83 .sponsored by'
Friday evenlnc services to beheld on February 1, at theLoving Justice Synagogue.
HUM BipiiMYouth county Junior Vice Command- | t a k e , M e K e b 2 8 a l
l(invention In P e b - « At present Mr, Weener ta,PM ,., „,„ n o i .U h h . , , „„„„„,
! . i :
present^mining party will judw advocate of the post and
the group and is m the legal department o(1. iiiid Fi-bruary. An ice.the Carteret Board of Educn-
.i:t> luis been tenta-.tlon and th* local housing au-l..;nif(i. ;thorlty. '
z!0".Lut^a.n..^1Tnch^i11 Two Affairs Slated
-i By St. Eliasing to plans outlined by cub-inaiter Joseph Kuipa, chair-man George Brown, den moth-!eis and the pack committee.
CARTERETslated bySt. Ellas1
-Two affairs areof
Lisicki StationedAt German Base
AUOSBERG, GERMANY -Army Specialist Four EdwardR. Lisicki, 21, son of Mrs. HelenSmith, 1 Pitch Street, Carteret,is a member of the 24th Infan-try Division in Germany,
Specialist Lisicki. a flre direc-tion control computer in Com-bat Support Company of thedivision's 34th Infantry InAugsburg, entered the Army InApril, 1959, completed basictraining at Port Knox, Ky.# andarrived overseas the followingNovember.
He is a 1958 graduate of Carteret High School.
GLORIA ANN KOMLF.WSKI
ENGAGED TO WED: Mr,and Mrs. Peter Komlewskl,6 East Oak Street, have an-nounced the engagement oftheir daughter, Gloria Ann,to Ronald Ozut, son of Mr.and Mrs. Peter Ozut, 299Eagle Avenue, Perth Amboy.
Miss Komlewski was grad-uated from Carteret HighSchool and Wilfred Academyof Beauty Culture, Newark.She Is qnployed by Marga-ret's Beauty Salon, Carteret.Mr. O*ut was graduated fromPerth Amboy High Schooand la employed by the V. S.Post Office, Perth Amboy,
Carey AssemblyTo Honor Bednar,
CARTERET — Carey Assembly No, 1280 — 4th DegreeKnights of Columbus will honor its immediate past FatthINavigator, MIche|l Bednarz, .their annual dinner dance 8a1
urday, February 4, at the Ctlumbian Club. William D. Stllwell, Master of 2nd New Je.sey District 4th Degree Knlghiof Columbus will be present 1•ake part in the social event,
Mr. Bednarz is an act!ember of the 3rd and 4th De ,ee Knights of Columbus and)
the past president of the[oly Name Society of Holy
?amily Church. Michael Pre-mtnick. present Faithful Nav-;ator is the general chairman,
assisted by Benjamin Grasso as' Icket chairman. Joseph Kreld-
r, a 'past Faithful Navigator,; chairman of entertainment,
assisted by Nicholas Spano.
A cake sale
"DOLLAR DOUBLE11'DOLLAR DOUBLE"
AEROSOLTOOTHPASTE
IBUFFEREDASPIRIN
Marc lor y«ur"•"•y. taii« )•mm, ••((•thing•in) flavor
l*f *l< tlik
H i l l PHARMACY"* I'lu* Home of Service"
•"' Prompt Urlivery Service Phone Kl 1-J325
The pack will hold their]*1" ^ held February 4,monthly nut-ting thi, coming R ' L ^ ? °f ra ' * n d **.
i-ii »( 7 P M iR o b e r t Za l e s l c l in charge. A , 'Tuesduy. Januaryat the parish hall.
future hiiiliwill be held
Worn Hids ParentsPdy I isit tp
C'AKTEKET - A meeting ofthe emhth urade parents of the
school studentsin the Carteret
Hixh School auditorium Wed-nesday evening, February 1, a7:30 P. M.
Herman Horn, principal, MisiE C Monahan, Tom Oiwsteiand Frank Bareford will explain thi- curriculum offered aCarttivt Huh School to alentering'freshmen.
demonstration has been set forFebruary 22.
The next meeting of the
INFANT BAPTIZEDCARTERET—The infant son
:of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Kubica of 101 Hictory Street wasbaptized Mark John, Sunday althe St. Joseph R. C. Churchwith Rev. Victor GrabrianO.S.M., officiating.guild will be held February 14 „..
at thehome^of Mrs. Michael j Sponsors were" Mrs. ^laga-D 1 ,_ ..,__.„ , J . . .. , ^ e Karkos of Fairlawn and
jJohn Kubica of Jersey City,uncle of the infant. A dinner
in Westfleld. At thelast session, the birthdays ofMrs. Michael Toth, Mrs. John
"jty Line UnitElects Officers
CARTERET—Election of of--<TS featured the last meeting
HIP City Line Civic andI'lfiire ARfioclatlon, Inc. Thefirms are: Patsy Sliaul, presi-
John Morton, vice presi-treasurer;
Carey Council, K. of C.
Lists Varied Activities
ent; Hurry Alleri,dinond Urbanskl,•cretnry; Chief Charles L.lakwinski, financial secretary,nd George Stroln, sergeant-t
Grand Knight Johnpresided. It was an-
Thp Rssoclation will honorluee members at a testimonial
In BethlenCouncilmen
hiner April 22iall. They are
C A R T I R E T — The regular]meeting of Carey Council, 1280.Knights of Columbus, was helaJanuary 23 in the ColumbianClub.Bosw
recordlngjnounced that Chaptpr 4 of theKnights of Columbus will holdits animal ball in the local Co-lumbian Club April 22. All pro-ceeds from Chapter 4 activitiesarc used to purchase hospitalbeds and wheelchairs for needycases.
A donation by the Knights
fcymborskl and Patrolman1
harleg Makwinski, Jr.Chief Makwinski and Ste-
- d Adamof CoTumbuTw^ made t the
ihen Alach are co-chairmen of;he dinner committee which in-iludes Detective Charles Russo,Jgts. Stanley Sssyba and Ed-
ward Czajowskl, Mr. Shaul andMr. Alleri.
Session on Sunday
Heart Fund Drive.
Catholic Activities ChairmanJay BJorsen requested all mem-bers to receive CommunionjFebruary' 12. These commun-ions are to be offered asSpiritual Bouquet to BishopGeorge Ahr.
Chairman Michael Preput-nick reported that the quar-terly Communion Breakfast ofthe K. of C. wlU be held Sun-r, rt. i i i , 1""" * - " ' " • " l u x l i c l u c
FOr Slovak L/nionday, January 29. MembersCARTERET — The annual
meeting of the First CatholicSlovak Union, Msgr. John E.Rura District, will be held urnJanuary 29 in the Slovak Com-munity Hall in Trenton.
Ernest Muska, district presi-dent, will preside. Officers and
areto receive Communion at StEllas Church at the 8:00 A. M,Mass. He requested membersreturn their reply cards byWednesday so final plans canbe made.
Council Activities ChairmanWilliam Knldzerski notified
delegates will attend Mass at members of the National Bowl10:30 A. M, in the Sts, Peterand Paul Slovak Church, Din- . _.ner will be served at 12:30 andjland Lanes, Newark. Memberthe meeting will follow.
All standing committees will contact Mr. Knldzerski.make final reports for the year1960. Officers will be electedand installed for the ensuingyear. Supreme Vice PresidentStephen Onuska will report onthe memberhlp drive and prizeswill be awarded.
ing Tournament to be held|meeting.March 11 to May 7 at Dream
who desire applications are tc
Music Honors WonBy 3 H.S. Pupils
CARTERET—Philip Waron . .director of instrumental music Membership Committee ha:at Carteret High School, has adopted "Everyone sign a ne1
The Ninth Annual State K.of C. Bowling Tourney will beheld In Atlantic City, JohnAhlering Is in charge of reservations. He announced that thilocal Knights will participatein the tournament on April 29
John Yurin, membershl.Chairman, made a request thamembers contact applicantsthe Knights and have themreturn applications so that the;may be processed. The Stab
arm census.
announced three high schoolpupils recently won honors.
Alice Zawadski, a Junior, wasselected as a violinist In theorchestra for the State HighSchool Festival. Alan Porter, asenior, will play the trumpet inthe Central Regional All StateiBand. /Walter Bonjiorno, an-other senior, will representCarteret High School in the
Egypt Js undertaking a vast Central Jersey Band and the
one in sixty-one" as its sloganTrustee Joseph Cassaleg
made a report on the audlFather Martin Komosinslchose "What will I do In the
ming year spiritually" as thepic of his address to theouncll.It was announced by Qrand
inlght John Bosze that theixt meeting of Chapter 4 .willi held Friday, January 27.Faithful Navigator Michael
»reputnick extended an lnvita-1 to all 3rd Degree Knlghte
attend the dlnner-danc«iponsored by the Fourth De-ree Assembly. The affair is toe held in the Columbian ClubFebruary 4, music to be fur-lshed by the Falcons. Mitchell
Jednarz is to be honored athis. time and will be pfMentedIth a Past Falthfur Navi-
:ator's Pin. Preputnick also re-torted that the 4th pegree As-embly will hold a Communionireakfast February 26, with
M y Family Church as thelost parish.
Grand Commander Leon Cur-an of the Alhambras an-lounced the Ceremonial Run111 be held at the Robert Treat
Hotel in Newark on April 23.Ul 3rd Degree members arewelcome to make applicationto the Alhambras.
The next regular meetingif the Knights of Columbus
will be held Monday, February3. There will also be a meeting
MI that date of the ColumbianClub following the regular
Hebrew School toMake Poetry AwardsCARTERET — On Sunday
morning, February 5, awardswill be presented for the out-standing poetry contributed bythe students of the United Car-teret Hebrew School.
The tneme of the contest is'Only God Can Make a Tree,"
celebrating the festival of TuBshvat, the Israeli New Year ofthe Trees.
This is an ancient Arbor Dayfestival In which trees areplanted by school childrenthroughout Israel.
The presentation will bemade at a party to be held atthe school.
All State Orchestra.
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You pay no more at
Mittuch Pharmacy. Established 1920
61 Roosevelt Avenue, CarteretOPEN EVENINGS TILL 10
Kunak, Mrs; Michael Hila and followed at the home of theZaleski were celebrated. i parents.
T o t of Patriotism"What would you civil a per
feet citizen?""A mun who feels like sinu
mu the ^Htionul Anthem tvhermaking out IIIK income tax return." i
l ieY
resour Kef!
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Randolph Si - Pernhinf Av*CARTERET N J
with
ORTG^UE LOAN at Convenientou pay off your loan much likesingle monthly payment usually
'•""""'•K principal, intend and property taxes." "|n>rviiiT i* that hVthe end, you have free
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HRST NATIONAL BANKCARTERET
*'' Avenue — Kl 1-6300•'•'"' '''OVral Dtposil I iuuninir
Carteret
Fluent !uncr»|CYeated With Can
Alwuyi we drive tomake each funeralopruy. wreath, blanket
piece we de-sign worthy to terve u
loving tribute.
t
WALSHKCK'SFlower Shop
1*5 .Amboj Ave. ME 1-1631
NOW! The finest, fastestFUEL OIL SERVICE i i Mobil
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cm Kl 1-5450j|p iA
GEQ. CHAMRA & SONST)
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COAL-FUEL OIL- BURNER SALES & SERVICE
^4 Lefferts Street, Carteret, N. J.
ROY J . MUNDYFor Better Schools
In WoodbrldgeVote Feb. 14th
PLATFORM FORBETTER SCHOOLS1. (Eliminate double session*
at an early date.
2. Obtain and hold the bestteachers possible.
3. Place strpAg emphasis onbwic fundamental • sub-ject*.
4. Separate policy and ad-ministrative funetlom.
fi. Anpjy procedures forevaluation of the edu-
- national system
6. Eliminate further In-crease* In total cost perstudent.
7. Pursue a more economi-cal building program.
8., Keep the public well in-formed on the activities
* of the school system.
What areyour goals?Keeping your plans "on ice"because you lack the moneyfor seeing them through?Our services can help you!Start piling up cashand nothing can stop you.
BANKING HOURS: Monday - Thursday, 9 A. M, - 3 P. M. — Friday » l M . - « ?, H,
J\iid for by Friends of Roy J. Mundy
Middlesex County's largest bank
The PERTH AMBOYSavings Institution
N I I H Muor. NSW jcistrMfMtll r U f l M PffOJIT INSUIANCE COVCUTWM
LATESTDIVIDEND RATE
Per Annum
PAGE FOUHFRIDAY, JANUARY 27. 1961
Miss Mary EllenHeads Order of Rainbow
o! tf* ArchbUbop.
ttfefet*
HBJX -'at tt» Drtt D*«rwt tf the
GOtT mOTOS BJLVdD. PALM BEACH. Fit. - No
Mothers to AidBuilding Fund
Thrmeeting of fte few Mtoru* Clvie
taJi JU firs
•inr. of Mrsvir, Ch»rl» Bengitam
Mothers GrelpShown Two Fil
COLOrHA -
.V'y.'DBRIDGE -.i-r. Vtrt-jr
ik/ -.DJT r . Or*™
dub
r fc^c t-
in '
'snMdr nl£nc. preti t»ereLl-W f*
•t t rooeot weUnt Jiwmflr itth.t
?r.;.< M iu# wfKJC; tf4 hfr
gponior t tM*et»*J! r*a* in Mn H*rold Buter."J n l»t« Uutlv. JMB«W<I to go in- drnt. greeted l6Z7u> U* building fmd oi U*i»l*i »W» M*. „« cotor.;« Mwnorai l i h w r « r«t. r*«*
tht
M r s
II Dw«
C".-scr
StWAREN NOTES ,th«
•t tof Mn. WWu-
r;u*r<lt. J BrooUkJe Co-:
• form*: P l a n l fOT « etrd par;.nade when Uw ctub m'<,Mr& George Ulrlch, gcrAvenue. R*h*ay. Ffb: .
(jjT<'.ior Mrmbm are urged toran i.ii1 ' "r A .MA urge* sineA-Stri-i '',x drunkennea*.
Utt Dot u reporven.
• \»*
MM* Ct\t]f Dei-TCi P«tenser, tai rju.Jj : . - M.a BLTMJ-IpWJI i u _*i.-.r.iMjd M;M Fa:i:' 1/r.iswttilmg icuHc:&r
O".:><-r <?fiK*r- r.'UVirfiftii Oa&iviv. *g x a w atfriKff K»r :ehanty: itary Anr. Ki;Jili Simon, !»:".:fo**13. junior P * ALoliMtAroy. P.WA
n»thT. roc»I«R. f m r tlSTES Mn Harold P WiUpn.
tn Wf* AT«MM Aw»ir.UD«T.U to (btSr»»THi — ME 4-I7W »un| c«EflUtt« were m
M/t. Wilhwt HftTiin.
Jot.:, i C&iucb is urged vo *t-••<:; "..-i* a&nu»l p*r»h a»eet-
'' . : « v , ae held *t I OCKKI U>-
Mrt. Fmlenck Hrde, eh»u-nun, MM. Tbomu H:i ind
aiiiir- Mn J»-T U r>UMd al-
fc
Baraui
Bunt' <W!1 letAr">rr. j * ' P''."- -« - •* * " * W » r J
rtr. io*e Lisdi ?ejr:r. - , -^- ' Dc^r«. Ww; AATOhnon: Anne CorrxUus r.*;y.-t returns Jrooj a VIKI
„ r , home of Mr. aul Mn tjnex•; »Tj»'*'y" Loaibtnli. Phfl»4eJpr-»itr.-.'ifir.; —>**» E>»nor J . i ' . e a ^ . ^^ " r j ^ B r o o t l r c HtighU. N V spent " " ^
observer; the *e*tw,d «ott: iif: ptrenU. .jJ)Ca.Pstncit Crbar,. ou>r obwr.fv M : »«1 Mi P*1^" E A'^^- Wom•aacr Me«i»£;. tnusicur. aru! >« Aver.ue ^ ^ .Card SilMT- ci»i" dL'«v.; -Fted Brt-i&a». sx. rf Mr „ „
Choir D e t a c c i art K J IAJIWU, MancT & r » . NonuuMBurgiuer. Barter* ZC:::OZJOI
Mn Kan«rel« Ctooner -- .ctub at ihe fearrenWomani Oub letleration dayIcviuuont w t received frointhe Rabvt; Womar.s Crab toanend its i^ver U-i. from the
Al«$\K»acj R*Sality. P«trxu Me!Betty Ann HuejLinda Hierba? er. y
iu 6Stt tzzi:r*run celrtratwtiD*T and from the Clio Oub of Ro-
•lie Ptrt to iU prtcidRit'i day
Ooonej
ar.c Mrt A A Br«i»». O^crff8'.re*t. r«f:y*d r j dacbarfefr-a the A-' F»r« OL T"jes-
Mn. Laurence
Enjoy them no* . . . f c bfealtfasi, in lolads, oi d«* t f i ! .
J-.-j' the thing for odd;-"g o bright touch to any meal—Of for
a betwttrvmfolt-treot.-Coct ond (jet your favoritw!
Piolette Grego:. O k u Ek:r.Dlaae Hubbard. CarcOyr. ."efc-m , Barb«ra Kxtui. l^r.caKrecap, ThereLa McCtl M.-ehek MurraT, Saunlm P^«Smdra Pwrel!. Lend* R:•?: ?*
spec;
EA5 AJTTOMO. T e m — A•±zt: rtu±mtr. zxi his Lideibg«r '-: cipiar* • Touid-Utart*:
Jw-i Oorjaia. a 60-:e&:-ui iT-eJtarr4 plant
.- tpcrtrd as intruder
00 FREE? p behind the r.-;tidt>ed a finger in hi
tad tc-id hai to freei»Tr>» mtr. fnae until poli:*
Carol Stabo, Edr.a Mi* T": - ~
OrangesGrapefruit
Florida Rich flavor
36 for $1.00.. . .
Gold Bond Stamps TangerinesUIUL » • m i _ * #•» M _„ ma 1 #
Pink or Whrte
Indian River, Florida
'Zipper' Ptel
Florida Fruit
WHh M M PwdwKS if $3.00 »r MoreFrt« Stamp OH«r void crfttr Sotufdoy,
10294251019
TOD AT THRU IITXEDATtnt-n ( frcUn « »M Kr* ttnrj P w l Birtr
XlMlcun fiJtwij ftorn.we rant the rut: u tatt
K »id lor l
Navel OrangesFancy Lemons c«Temple Oranges
6-39'6-29c
Bag OrangesBag GrapefruitJumbo Grapefruit
FWidn
5 *• 49'5 » 49<
- 23'
Save at- 1
GAGGED!r.r.gi Cfcio
•nt »*. HieHosp::a; 3roni
ttrwt L 19crej>r,n«l lo be getting
in Si. Joseph's Hos-
f Lumc in a tiod utiew.frtt"or-:nio? if tagged, your or**-paper nlted »Ar. b«. irjth »ndfreedoir almot: gone from jourmeoion: Thaij jaa IXJ» it is for70 mfliion ptopic behind ihe IronCurtain in Eauem Europe
You m«u hc!r with )our dolianor freedom mil be c«npl«t:> dt-s(n>)«d is these couninev Vouidoliin keep Radio Free Europe ooh i i 2 hat wort, o*erpo»«nng Red '-jun-mmg." itaihjn' through Red lin.renewing hope thai freedom wiUtotnc day mum behind the IfociCuru».
Why must IOJ | t « 7 BecauseRadio Free Europe u i piivau or-
( a n ptafik. Vour UoBan pay for iuizaflMBittcr tubes, Iu eouipnicol* ao-Douocen, new) analvus. Keep vourdoilan coming or freedom »TL begagged behind the Iron Cuna>a!lead your truth dollar* today toChmde for Frmlom, cart of yourlocal Potfmaser.
CRUSADEfir
FREEDOM
gMABT TEEN AGESDENVER—A quicX-Uiiniing
leena?»r »8* siandlng in ac-.zr.ort rher. btr,d:ts ar-
Tne '.so gunftier. denvir.or.ey from Mrs. War.r.etaBullock ar.d she har.ded ir.tmSlo3 Irc/in tiit caeh it?isler
Cliilord Dale. '6. ran !:am;r.t iUire — bcrro*«l a djue.':cir. a passer-by ar,d called the.is
policeTLe bandits » ere a: rested DJ
two patrolmen, v .o got Ihe•*ord Irwn the police radio that•.r.ere was a robber j a: a nea:--jy drug store.
fora
BEAUTYSHOP(or any store)
find it Fast in the
YELLOWPAGES
Sweet Rye BreadCoffee Ring t T S 'Citrus Salad tJSZ+.'ff.S*Lucerne Lac-Mix DT-» 7~* 59C
Light Tuna £?» !££ 3 ^Ravioli - W ^ T 1 ^ 2 1 -Mallomars ^ . . ,TMargarine JtTUL, i.^37'Camay Soap 3 Z.59«2S29«
Toilet Tissue
1000 Sheet Rod
WOODBRIDGE PUBtlSHIKG CO.
18 GREEN STREFT
WOODBRIDGE. ». J
^ Enclosed please find 54.00 for one-year
suosenption to:
• INDEPENDENT-LEADER'
G CARTERET PRESS
G EDISON TOWNSHIP-FORDS BEACON
To be sent to
PreservesProtein Bread ^ ^White Magic Bleach
2 ' ^ 69c
White ScottissueGrapefruit JuiceTide DetergentGreen Giant PeasFresh Butter 3H 65
Town Hous" . . ^6 oj .
Sweetened or sweetened can
Special Pack
Save at Safeway
Great Bg Tender
Sweet Peas
10 1.0025
253569'
19-Oz..
Pkg
2 17 o tcans
Luccrrw, 92 Scofw
U S D A Grade AA
pouod solid
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j TOWN
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•60 CADILLACn SKDAS
4-<it»r H*i4\b?. A.eu;:«r. rayA:r condtTiocjiDz Some oi tivtT.tny «trt« lnciudt P"T«• lodoiri. po*«r fey powtr«i«nr:i;. po»er brtitt Tb*fint lnt*r;or ii finUhrd l»Gray Cortino Cor<l Low mil?»je. n u n l i y .
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'59 CADILLACSEDAN DE V1LLB
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CONVEBTTBL1
Here U i mugmflceuL IIUIO-mobUe buUt,,lox duly t MlDclfew. U u »cuiiluf J»w«l u>Mlop teals le»ti]irr tetu no* »ttuulce V/codec top tb*t )uttlutt »ufl u*i*. Aciutl); *cUiHim-bul.l «aloniobil«
MORTON MOTORSCADILLAC SALES & SERVICE
i'4& New Brunswick Avenue III 20100 Perth Amboy
OPEN EVENINGS
R««4r-T»-Eat; Leon ond Tender
Smoked Hams4555
Shank Portion ., ^ J | ^ E4V3 to 5V^ lbs f l P 1
., Full Shank Half* j No c»nltft femoved
Whole Hams h 49c
45Bjlt Ponion
4 l : lo 51-j lbs l k
Full Butt Half
No ceverj -smt
Town House
Sauerkraut3 47<Team up with Sptrt t ibi
tor good «Mingi
7-oi COM 37I
1 pt«i. U(
ClANttUT SAUCC OCM> IpnHUDSON UlNwOW NAK1N}HUDSON KAKiNS wti.HANOI FLU OUST MOT IMHUDSON NAH1N4 * • • ! ) / pMk tOO, p1( JJ,SUNSHINE KIISIK CUCHU I h pka »•»UiT TOItH IA I 2 rtf. ban }*i I baft Un 4kPILUWir lUnEIMIU IIKUITt t-ai p.». 10(CHICKfN Of TM£ SiA « U tuM 7-» I H »».NINE UVU CAT FOOD 1 t«. . , ftEXCEISIOI HrtO SANDWICH •)<,, pk,. « •IA IO CUANSil I U^i cou JJ<
Meaty SpareribsCornish HensSwift's SausageCube Steaks
ib
Ham Steaks
IUr.g«
• *89 ;
3 to 5 39
Check These Value*'.
Stripe ToothpasteKitchen CraftVeg-All STBlackberries t T 5Candied YamsOrange JuicePeanut ButterClaridge HashInstant Coffee
« >'
3 ci
I w i
lit.
69'49'
10029<41'39<25<69'
USOA Grid* A fc
CHoice ol All Sizes
Skirjl«H Linn 1 Ib
Swirij Primium oka
Seel cr Vtt!
Frozen-Pan ptg
59c69c
Sara1 Lee Chicken
HEINZ
CATSUP14 oz. little
HELLMANN'S
MAYONNAISE
Ronzoni
2U"55cLux Liquid
"K i t 3SLiquid
">.t« 6 2 c
"A l l " Controlled SudsZ 2.25
Lux SoapWKit* k i ^ S12.
2 *'
Joy Li12
Lux Soap
3 ' -29 .Morton'
';; 59.
Red Hea-i
3^40 J
To Hold Dinnerfi lm's
WOODBHIDGE ~- EdwardiMcMlcklr, 149 I'lrnsant. Avp-
— The Guild of n u c ' l a c 1 1" lla-s opened BariinlnChurch met at the
in M House. with Mrs. LeRoypresiding
I! W ilS to put a Mmmcs of the Guildwho will have charge
D1««ount Store at 101Main Street, Woodbrldge. Mr.McMickle was associated withthe WoodbridRR Farmer's Mark-et on Route 9 for seven years,and had a store at the KeyportAuction and the Richmond,P111I» T S • • • • - . - f • - . n u v H u i i a n a m e K i c n m o n a ,
"'nr n l d t 8 U t e l 1 IMaild Auctl°"' alsoon tiir bulletin board In o p e r a t e a
•stibulf of the church. , n Newark,"for,stlbulp of the church. | n N e w a r
, w l s l , t n « to have flowers ^ M a l n
".(| on the altar may do soT-..tirviiitr the member In
i*' was madeM J.
nal bans of shelled pevoilablc for sale.Joseph KRI na.1 dlscuwfinal anannements fo
i n n to Ix' held tonlgni :iO to 7:30 and to behy the members of themid Junior Guild.
School PaperISELJN — plans were made
for the publication of a " h o o l w ^ ^ 8 a t e ' r j a y 9
bulletin to be distributed eachiapnir, t w . m***-™*
Broad
, - . store is anoutlet for Job-lots and bank-nipt merchandise of all '..types.Elsewhere in today's paper Is
, - »n advertisement listing typicalj . S/.oimM, that there values available every day at
Eddie's
Auxiliary Makes
\Merchants RepeatSale Days Values
WOODBRIDQE - Becauseof the heavy snowstorm lastweek-end, Woodbrldge mer-chants are repeating their
,again this week-end. Manymonth before PTO meetings at| merchants received phone callsa meeting of tht executive;'™"^ area residents who wereboard of PTO 18. The bulletinwill contain information aboutthe school, teachers and pupilsand will advise members of thePTO meetings and plans forthe season.
The "ad Journal" Is in fullswing and all parents are urg-ed to-obtain advertisements asproceeds will go towards the
unable to get downtown be-cause of the weather.
In response to the numerousrequests, most merchants feltthat the sale day bargainsshould be repeated again thisweek-end and s o m e haveslashed prices even lower thanoriginal sale day prices, Park-ing lota have been plowed andshoppers will find ample spaceall over town. All stores will be
"Partolen™ Holiday." t h . , ° w n W d a y n l , h t tU B o-ctecksecond annual show sponsoredjWIG SAVES LIFEby the teachers and parents1, LONDON — A thlok mop of
'" very well. Theshow will be presented March24 and 25. Tickets are available
, A t pred hair saved the life of EdgarBall when he was hit on thehead with an ax handle during
PQRT READINO — T h e at the school or through MrsJa robbery.Ladles' Auxiliary of the Port'Redler, ME 4-3360. Ball, a dairy manager, wasReading Fire Department met' taking a bag containing $1,142
• I . i i tn f, . Friday In Port Reading Fire Brainy Gal to the bank.nemauy-III I O M | H O U M with Mrs, PaUiy LaRusso1 "IS m y * l r l f r | e"d deverli After treatment at a hospita'
IN Ft, - The Sub-Junior | presiding. j She's got brains enaugh for for a lump on the. skull, Balm i s Club of Avenel met, p ^ f o r l h e W H e o u t . t w o " j u s t e d off his auburn toupeetheir advisors, Mrs. JohrY l l n e d B n d M r g u R u s g ( J fiD_j " T ^ " she's Just the girl you and put It back on his bare
vh-Juniors Aiding
and Mrs. Bruce M o K e e , ^ ^ t h e c o m m l t t e e c h a i r - i 0 U g h t * m a r r ? " iHCal«>'r,kH*nni't >i/im*i f\*e\ra* . . . • • • • — . _
dformers home, O e o r g e [ m e n M , o l l o W 8 .
I f i » >fur-Iashlon show and
pit:iv u> be held tomorrow!in Far Hills Inn. The af-!
by all
Mri. Joseph Neves, a<tonthospitality; Mrs. John Jordano,!special projects; Mrs. MichaelSoleckl, good chew, Mrs. An-
will• ::i t h e si
:, : I l ie
; :.»: Mentally 111 Children,
t" attend the par ly .- I'iiih will extend Us fruit-air for an indefinite per-
l1'TSOII.S Interested can callV;i!r: ic Qreco, president,
K 4-iliL'l.
S!
SAVE BIO
on
Shawl CollarSWEATERS
K. SD.98
c early for bestselection!
SHOPMain Si , Woodbridfe
assist-will;civiliimcone, social; Mrs.
Michael Oalamb, sergeant-at-armt; Rev. Stanislaus Milos,chaplain; Mrs. Peter Doswna,assistant chaplain.
A gltt was presented to theoutgoing good cheer chatrman,Mrs. Joseph Covlno.
A card party will be heldWednesday, February 8, at 8o'clock In the Fire House. Mri.Oalamb will be chairman, as-sisted by Mrs. Martino, Mri.John Katina. Mrs. Soleckl, andMrs. Steve Wuilek.
Tcr.UliYC plans were madeto attend the firemen's annualcommunion breakfast at St.Anthony's Church on PalmSunday and to hold a luncheonin the Fire House on Saturday.May 13. Mrs. La Russo will bethe chairman in charge of ar-rangement* for both plans.
There will be a cakr sale inthe Fire House at 2 o'clockSaturday afternoon, M.iy 13Mrs. U Russo will be. thechairman with Mrs AnthonyCorlno and Mrs. Gabriel Den-gelegt as co-chairmen.
Mri. Jordano,1 chairman ofthe ways and means committeela still accepting new clubmembers.
The dark horse prize waswon by Mrs. Zullo and the social prize by Mrs. Ciardiello.The next meeting will be onFebruary 17. Those In chargeof hoapitality are Mrs. Qalamb.
!Mrs. Kallna, Mrs. Jordano,Mri. La Russo and Mrs. SteveLazar,
C L E A R A N C E ^
Jackson & Perkins Company.The name, Americana, is par-
Icularly appropriate since theed rose has always been theFavorite flower of the American)eople. Further, Congress isionsldering legislation'to makethe red rose the official flowerof the United States because ofIts overwhelming popularity.
Americana Is the newest de-'elopment In a distinguished
line of red hybrid teas. Oneparent Is the famous New York-
which is rated among thetop roses of all time. BothAmericana and New Yorkerwere hybridized by E. S. Boer-ner, plant rewarch directorind secretary of the Jackson
& Perkins Company.
Americana'* rich color in-tensifies as the flowers unfoldand its petals take on a velvetsheen which gives them a rich,textured appearance In the ones?
Lowest PricesEver . . . All FunAre from OurRegular Stock ofQutlltjr Fun!
Tremendous Savings on Every • , .
JACKET • STOLE • COATCAPE • NECKPIECE
WOODBRIDGEFUR SHOP
ME 4-0770
522 Amliuy Avenue Woodbridge
HERE THEY ARE!BEST BUYS for a BUCK!
tor the LADIES:• M.OUSES• KANLON KNTTS
l'«r the GIRLS:* SLACKS su« 1 to 61
• KKOUSESSHIRTS
the BOY^:FLANNEL SHIRTS I
SHIRTSto $3.98
l;<>r the MEN:* ' *ol of Sport Shirts• {1'AIR OF SOCKS
Kxi'eptional Values!!
CHOPEIfSl{7 Main Street, Woodhridge
FINAL CLEARANCE!dtuWU
tthe shoe with the beautiful fit
7 ' 9 0 TOFormerly to $14.99
I
gIM young point efvum fajfcwl
.90 T 0
Formerly to $13.99
SPECIAL GROUP !|!$300 to
(Neat to Woolwurth'»)
105 MAIN STREET WOODBRIDGKIKIOAV TUX 9 P. M.
1961 ROSE OF THE YEAR: In a landslide Victory, Americanaa brilliant red hybrid tea, ha.s been elected the 1961 Rose of theYear by the 10,000-membrr home rose testing panel of the
j sunlight.A red rose always makes dra-
Mr siGoldman, andJoseph BchlcsMiiHcr.
Tlio .study group sponsored'Sisterhood and HadasRah
will meet Wednesday night at8:30 at the home of Mrs. Wlno-frad, South Park Drive. Mrs.George Oettle and Mrs. Out-man are leaders of this group.
Mrs. Jules Melstiich re-
()ne«; ShabbotSet Saturday by
WOODBRIDGE — The Sis- "'";crhood and Hadassah of theCongregation Adath Israel willsponsor an Oneg Shiabbot Sat-urday afternoon at 2:00 at thehome of Mrs. Herman Stern,! • - - - " "•<=">,""" "--South Park Drive, according to P ^ d a successful weekend atan announcement at a meeting FaUsvlew _ sponsored by theof the executive board of the " Sisterhood held Monday nightat the community center. , . . , - , • « « . ~ .
Topic of discusalon will be]M™- ^ ' " S M a z u r -"Judlasm on Broadway" withMrs. Milton Bedrlck, Mrs. SolKlein, Mrs. Henry Belafsky,and Mrs. Walter Shimanskyparticipating. Co-chairman areMrs. Abraham Cooper and Mrs.Irving Goodstein.
Mrs. Ernest Llchtman, presl
M?™"'?:|tfo*«T. Mnrch HeadNamed by Chairman
The next meeting will beFebruary 13 when Rabbi Reu-ben E. Levine from TempleBeth Ahm, Springfield, willdiscuss, "Jewish Art In theiSynagogiie and Home".
matic arrangements for the'dent, announced anyone in-home and Americana will be ajterested I i f attending a branchparticular favorite for table 'settings and other floral pieces.Its rich color and texture makeIt a striking focal point of colorboth Indoors and out.
Reports from members of thehome rose testing panel indi-cate that Americana Is a stand-out performer in every sectionof the country, and that it willbe a great favorite among ex-hibitors.
Of Course"I tell you, old friends are
best.""That's right! Just try ' to
think of a new friend that has
of the Jersey BranchWomen's League February 9 InMetuchen, may contact MrsWflliam Samson,
Members were urged to usethe center's library, and Mrs.
iDavld Gutman, library chair-man, suggested good readingbooks for members and teen-age children.
A reading from the book"Across the Threshold", waigiven by Mrs. Herbert Wlnograd.
Mrs. Bedrick, vice presiden,ways and means, advised lnitia
I plans were made for a CabareNite March 11 at the cente
stood by you as long as the oldiwlth the following as chairOnes?" mpiv Mr nnrf M n p , , , , .'men: Mr. and Mrs. Eugem
llsterhood and Congregation.Hostesses were Mrs. Abraham
hooper, Mrs. Milton Platt, and
Miss Carolyn Si7eo'«Betrothal AnnouncedISELIN — The engagement
of Miss Carolyn Sileo to Ed-ward F. Bird, Jr., son of Mr.and Mrs. Edward Bird, Wee-ihawken, has bee.n announcedb h
WOODBRIDGE — Mrs. Wil-liam Grausam, 175 RowlandPlace, has been appointed
[chairman for the MothersMarch of Dimes. She Is the pastigrand regent of Court MercedesCatholic Daughters of America,past president, past countypresident, and past state trea-surer of tne Ladles' Auxiliaryof the Ancient Order of Hi-bernians.
Mrs,. Orausam has selectedwomen throughout the Town-ship to make the drive on Jan-uary 31. Captains assisting Mrs,Grausam include: Mrs. DonaldRoder, Mrs, Ptter Krulikowskl,Mrs. Robert Fltzpatrlck, Mrs.William Algaire, Jr., Mrs, JohnLogan, Mrs. John Schimp, Mrs.Robert Jacka, Mrs. Ernest An-dreasctk, Mrs. David Gutman,Mrs. Peter McCann, Mrs. Irv-ing Mazur, Mrs, Herman Stern,Mri. Herbert Reutsch, Jr., Mrs.John Almagl, Jr., Mri. ClaireBlxel.
Also Mrs. Thomas Smith,
by her parents. Mr. and Mrs,E u g e n e Sileo, 12U GreenStreet.
Miss Sileo graduated fromWoodbrldge High School andIs employed by Sears, Roebuckand Company, Perth Amboy.
Her fiance attended Emer-son High School and served,three years In the U. S. Marine MOOSE MEET TONIGHTCorps. He Is a member of theInternational Brotherhood ofElectrical Workers, New YorkCity.
Mrs. Thomas Bellanca, Mrs. R.Andrechlck, Mrs. Patrick Gold-en, Mrs. Stewart Hutt, Mrs.Steven Barancko, Mrs. MichaelDoroB, a n d . M r s . Leon Gwity.Anyone Interested In wi l t ingIn this endeavor may contactMrs. Qrausam.
PERTH AMBOY-Th« LoyalOrder of Moose, Lodge 1360,will meet tonight at 8:00 in theclub rooms.
Due to the SNOWSTORM Last W e e k . . ." • ; n •• , • .
Woodbridge Merchants RepeatWoodbridge Sale Days!
SAVE BIG ALL OVER TOWN THIS WEEK-END!!
BAGSWhite Orion
CARDIGANSRe»ular
$9.98
FRAMTELl100 Main Street
SAVE
Free Paint Rollerand Tray
With Any Purchase of
Unpainted Furniture
FOR-UUNPAINTED FURNITURE
120 Main, Street
S/LVE BtXCi
NOW
78'• Silk Prints• Woven Arnel
Fancies• Oxford Prints• Striped
Corduroy* YABD• Cotton Satins
(Values to $198 Yard)
BORDEN'S ' = '84 Main Street
SAVE HK;
WILD BIRDF E E D
R I T E - D I E TDOG FOOD
1 95I 1} 1 US.
1 .79I IS 1 BS.
KLEIN'S ,34 Main Street
u 1 BS.
Kami nod
Center
New Swedish Modern
TABLE LAMPDistinctive Lamp, • J\ Qhas assorted shades | u^%/and brass base)
Limited Supply! 1R & S AUTO STORES
116 Main Street
SAVE BIG
6x9 and 9x12
RUGS5.OO
WASHING WELL
Washed andFluff Dried
Up to 23 Wi ,at th«
117-119 Main Street
SAVE BIG
ALL COSTUMEJEWELRY
y2 PRICE!SAILS' Jewelers
93 Main Street}Ma
SAVE BIO
Men's
FLANNEL SHIRTS
1 .99$3.00 I
Wonderful Selection
Christensen's97 Main Street
SAVE BIG
Discontinued Styles
Famous Name
BRAS & GIRDLESi PRICE!
Christensen's97 Main Street
SAVE BIG
Famous blCKIESBlack CORDUROY
SLACKSContinentalorlvyStjle
R « . 16.95
516.95 Reversible Jackets
Army & Navy Store114 Main Street
SAVE BIG
Ballpoint Special!1 Sbeaffcr Ball Pen Etc M «1 SheallM ReOtt Htg. .11
lWritlnt Booklet (Free) . . . . . ViL 13.28
All 3 ForSupply l imited
Platt Stationery100 Majn Street
Regular $4.05
STUDIOP1CTUKK
I'liune fur Appointment
MK 4-3651
99<tMUR Hull
547 Amboy Avenue
SAVE QIG
Regular $1.00
Dorothy Gray
LIPSTICK
2 'orP i i x Pharmacy• 91 Main Street
For SALE DAYS ! !Dresses - Skirts • Blouses
Boys' SlacksShirts • Socks • CoatsCoat Sets - Pram SetsSnowsuits and Many,Many Other Items!!
KIDDIESHOP
99 Main Street
! (BUSTER BROWN
SHOESSelection.
Value*A.99
to I8.S0
Christensen's97 Main Street
SAVE BIO
JUST FOUR l-EFl1!!
1957 PLYMOUTH!!ully Kiiuipped
875w f W i Each
Kully
$
Mauro Motors, Inc.Gil Ai»rt>oy A v e n u e
PAGE SIX
Dressing I nil I
Ha* Excellent RecordOXONIA - ilrf- BK-: r.
5 £oc oat Uw
20 &«-."1 do
rr
S Of LITE thinr if "toe
cleariy that'O«T> » •'w* TTO
•t \bt Van? and . b •.:<
a<r. tt»
;ry v, K«.T? or. Mi BBt/i tSUto OOLOSI^ - ••Jtwrt r rfci - tnr.J-* »Hfe thf PMWA* ladn
the• T h a * «re tantml! isund It °J maklnt rtwnpj. one
r J T % -, s : 1 1 : f tf :.:• » f . r l . b> < : • • • • '
Fe v Prt--- ' "'V A
J i u pity fc thf an-•-•«
t;. vnc
And * h * f i that-You :e rtiJTHt 8*iT thf other.
rejoinw] t:
)*i tit..- tlA*P's THOUSANDS OF DEPENDABLE ITEMS HELP PUT WONDERFUL
saw, «r.-tr.-
gin nt Jail yoz titxtf?.<'
I i t : r% ?£ on!
Fruits & Vegetables!
APPLESm" 1L IQc
ORANGES10-49TEMPLE
OUR BESTWAY-OF-UFEINSURANCE
TV «*• rf ti» A m ; *ui Air Nfe^tj} Ga»r« r u n u
*aj- «f Ufe. M«rt uua 472.-W-linr% ^-r **&c' i' oar inc t a•f orftaat. Os a aiisu's sxirt
Nik*-A.ax
Cauliflower-' 'J-29Tomatoes . T ^ 19Iceberg Lettuce : L 1 9New Cabbage :Z > 7Yellow Turnips ^ 5Potatoes .,?L. 3 - 29
; iirieii.4! prtptrt Iw aobi-
ti.t. Ii j«»wt.rjf,:: u just u reaor
T, the cru-(rf the K^tueal Guard
tr« betur trsi&ad than er«r briore
FROZEN© FOODS!!\
TbfT an, ia rrtry t a u t our t ; - iMl, . Tirttr
Mtd t» aerre
WE OTBEa SOLOBB Of THE
vunt tootm toolVN W
AdvertiseYour
Business
Banquet Dinners 2 89C
Green Beans i w £ 2 37'French Fries ^ - ^ c n ^ c r O ^ i?Downyflake Waffles 2 : : : 31C
Buttered Beef SteaksDorann Pizza FoursDinner Redy Turkey Slices'Fish Portions J ' ^ " 2 2^ 59s
Breaded Shrimp ^ ^ ^
t;
in the
BusinessDAIRY ?; BUYS!
and
ServiceDirectory
Kt !.«»
Start
00V Uontb
a month
NILS
Ched-O-Bit, " " 2 : 7 9 'ihed-O-Bit i c « w i w VbSham Cheddar B a r s j ^ '^47 e
Cheddar Cheese H ^ r ^ IL59t'1&e«btor« Temp-Te« I oc. QTc
Gold'n'RichCheeseGorgonzola Cheese
Sharp AmericanS2£tir£:Wi
1 r-ntmMiaiiiuillli
Spifhetti S^iceWrt* l»( 32 3;
Crim
Ilk'
"Siper-Rigir Qulity 6rain-Fed Beef!
BONELESS -TOP or BOTTOM
ROUND ROAST" *
\NO FAT AWED
79 cIb.
( F»OM LONG ISLAND FAIMS!
DUCKS TOP GRADEREADY-TO-COOK 39 c
Ib.
CAMPBELL " W 1 1
GREEN BEANSSARDINESLIBBY'S PEASNIBLETS CORN
Irm (hit
32^35
NORWAY
SitcL
tnn SnitIWttUfMi 2-35
MARGARINE"*"^" 24COLGATE'S FAB 2:55Wtrt StnaMrry tr
Applberry Sauce 2 :: 35C Krispy Crackers 27C
Minute Rice ZZL V 3 V Mallomar's "££ 1:%WStar-Kist Tuna ""^ ^ 3 1 * Gravymaster * » * * * ™ \^]]<Twinkle Copper Cleaner V 4 3 1 Baby Ruth Bars H ^ 2 ^ 4 5 l
Noxon Metal Polish ' £ W Pels Liouid DetergentWoodbirySoapGt 'Xi .2 (Sl 2 t Sage Air Refresher BombColgate Soap « T S " S 3 1 C ^15? Strongheart Dog Food 3 35
ScoH
(THE MEAT AIlANflC A fAQBC TtA COMMNY, HC
uper MarketsAJttKA $ MPfNSltU (00D MUCMUT SWCi ',!»
rHcctr«t
frnk Him II. Ot tkiik Nttf lit*
Fresh Hams 45 ! 55Pork Chops SM0«EI 79Top Round .-.'.'„ 89Top Sirloin : i 79Rib Lamb Chops 79Lamb Chops °< 98r ronKS *** <*m * » ^ c u ^ J *
Fresh SttHerkrant 'VT 2 /
cl!ced EctonHO Oats - ' - ^Wheatena Cereal | ; ; 2 ? "Kello^o's Rice KrispiesPost Tories „ c-P'llsburv Pancake Mix
; . : 6 " c
- L
2 2 •••
p -
SendsdAnn I
C*nt t
Imperia1 Mafloarine K:l V: Enolish Muffin ^^ ^°M'- 15t
***»*Orjanoe MarmaladeTangerine Juice *>*HeartsDeliqhtJuicidrinkInstant CoffeeAssorted Cereals "; w
THE STORY OFAMERICAN NEEDLEWORK
by Rose Wilder Lane
riVC GREAT FOOD FEATURESCasserole Cook Book • Cherry Desserts
Corned Beet • Money Saving M«nusRectpes for Onion Lovers
Rock SaltlanliOil
Ill
PAGE SEVEN
NOW OPENStore Hours: Thurs. 9 A.M to 9 P.M.
Friday 9 A. M. - 1 0 P. M. - Sat. 8 A. M. - 9 P. M.
New Large Modern A & P Supermarket833 Roosevelt Avenue, Carteret-Just East of Turnpikb
f FREE Parking Area
Sarah Ami's Cooking
COMESEE. . .YOU'LLSAVE!
A>P EXCLUSIVE BRANDS OFFER BIG VALUES EVERY DAY, PLACING.. .
ATYOUR HNGERIIPS
Just take a look at the hundreds of Items ondisplay — and you'll know why «o many people] i re ft r to shop at AfcP! Low prices — all throughihe store! Fine foods—all you like and more!1 or top values — any time *— pick quality-f.imous'AfcP Exclusive*: Jane Parker Baked
rls, Ann Page Fine Foodi,and AfcP premium-Coffee.
A*P InttantCHOCOLATE
FLAVORED DRINK
ny.OUNCIno.
YOU PAY ONLY
27'Quick hot drink with the milk right in it!J ust add hot w*ter. Dclicieui tnd nuthtioui INow thriftier than evert Enjoy it!
IT'S HOT CHOCOLATE TIME! /
A&P Brand-Ow Fintit Quality
Pineapple-Grapefruit Drink 44j;27Fruit Cocktail cOur Own TeaEvaporated Milk ™1"Z 6-
flOc
Oatmeal Cookies
White Houis—ln»tanr 250/5 OL / QC
Matai | qh. liquid milk pkg. 0 0Jan* Parka* 22 OT.
. Twin Pack pif.
J a i i c u L a S n e W S vacuumPicbd tin 4?
SCALLOP DINNER'/'I' MU.-.lity Scallops, golden . Q Z
;,;;»'; ;«« an<i „ « « pc«. in • _ "llllrrl Juit hett V w t l F K 0 49
JUST-BAKED GOODNESSFOR EVERY MEAL...
Jane ParkerBAKED FOODS!
LEMON PIE SAVE 10* 49Luscious femon filling that's just tartenough . . . crust that's just flakyenough. The result it flavor-famousJane Parker Lemon P i c . . . a treatyour whole family will want to enjoyagain and again. Try it now and SAVE !
PUM Kit SHAD23<16-OZ,
LOAF
DANISH PECAN RING 45RAISIN POUND CAKE t » 53GIANT JELLY ROLL
Bananas are the star in in-gredients in each of these re-cipes. As everybody knows, ful-ly ripe bananas are deep yel-low with flecks of brown, andshould be kept at room tem-perature.
Banana Cake2Vi cups Bitted cake flourly« cups sugar2V* teaspoons baking powder1 teaspoon baking sodaYi cup butter or margarine1\4 cups mashed ripe
bananasa eggs1 teaspoon vanillaSift ths (lour, sugar, baking
powder, salt, and baking sodatogether in a bowl. Be sure-but-ter is softened. Add butter, Vicup banana and unbeaten eggsto flour mixture. Beat hard for2 minutes. Add remaining ba-nana and vanilla. Beat for 1minute. Pour Into a greaMd 9inch square pan and bake Inan oven (375 degrees) for 25minutes. Cool on cake rack.
Strawberries an« BananasStrawberries cut In halvwBananas cut In small pteceaSugarSour creamPowdered augurIt using fresh strawberries,
sprinkle wtth sugar and letstand tO mUwtes. Mix efl.ualquantities of strawberries andDananw. Serve v\ih sour creamand powdered i
Baked Banana*Bananas peeled, wttole or cut
In halves or quartersBrown sugurOrated lemon peelButterArrange bananas on baking
dish. Sprinkle with gratedlemon p « l and brown sugar.Dot with butter. Bake in anoven (350 degrees) for 1& to 30minutes. Serve with chicken orham,
M -
STOCK UP ON GOOD TASTEAND SAVINGS WITH.. .
Ann PageRNE FOODS!
REALLY FRESH
MAYONNAISE 49
PLAIN GELATIN97<32 lidtvlfeal
Emlipnt-OZ.PKC.
A gracious fresh-tasting complimentto yourssalads, the perfect »pread forhearty luncheon sandwiches. Keepsits delicate, just-made JIavor rightdown to the last. Stock p with thisthrifty quart jarl
TOMATO SOUPWonderful buy on their hearty, cold-weather favorite. Stocjc up now at AaJPl
PURE GRAPE JELLY * 43Made from luscious Concord grapes. Superb on to^st or crackers with cream cheese]
Here's CoffeeThe Way M J
like It!AfcP pnmum-quai'h Cof-fee offers you three superbb l e n d e . . . mild, medium,strong ...no* just one take-it-or-leave-jt blend! What'smore, your choice is cuscom-
iround before your eyes exaotly right foryour coffeemakpr, Result? Coffee the wayyo'ii like i t . . . with big, froth, wonderfulflavor every time. Don't miss it!
• MILD AND MELLOW RICH AND FUfct-BODIED VIGOUOU* AND W1NBY
EIGHT O'CLOCK * RED CIRCLE • BOKARi
VLB. BAG•IB. BAG MB. BAG
57' 653Lb.Bo9 »|.65 3Lb.Bog «l.77 3-lb.Eag «|.$9
Zest Soap•*«' »uil«t or b l l h
Zest Soapr thi *4t
IvoryDeterment
JoyLiquid Dettrfent
Mr. GISIR Oonnt Olumr
e t , • • cin.Mi m
Spit I Spu OrliamHog Food2 'nils
Is Your Child
Material?
That depends. By today'sstandards, he probably is. Bystandards teri years from itbw,perhaps not How can thatbe?IJ his I.Q. likely to chinge!No. But conditions are.
Many college classrooms arecrowded today. By 1067, ap-plicatioRS. 'arc expected todouble, Low salaries are driy-ing too many qualified teacb-•ri into othqr fields.
By the time your childreaches eighteen, there may :not be any room in hint inany college,
this is a frightening situa-tion. Now if the time to put aatop to it, Help the college oruniversity of your choice now.The rewards w)}l be greattr :than you think.
•If you w««t t« kn«w mtt* obxrt *»«!Ibf colltat «lil| Mtqxi •« r>i> Vtl'*for a frt* bwll«l •«. HIQHU IPU-CATION, U* U. Tl ui Sowar* Sl»lion, Ntw York M, Nm» T«L
Advertisers'
Dictionary
Mr trc* 0I« *«i!| hOircoUnsnt iliiu «sr
Jutt ai * bank «irain«r tn-tptctt the book* md ao*K ofyour bank, Kjthf AJ.C. sudl-tor «M|nln«s|aU records andreports neccjUry (or | Com*fki* ud «0»uni« ivdit el <WtlrculatiM.
And when the ludller U ftn-lsh*i the AB.C pubUahe* •repoft of th« iudltor'i f^dlnf*—knpwn fact* on which »dv«r-Uieri can plac* a value
Ask uf (w • copy of outUteri A & C report
The
(HDEPENDENT-LEADER
M OrM» «t,Tel MI-4.1111
PAGE EIGHT
k9*¥.?%.i
Nn "f 'oolUh" Questions
voii '.:rr. you h f i ' i"> f' CP~-panv
Not «:-.»..v- ••.,(• Of • .v,;:-fbut :: if o! :<: f:vv .;ch T : T T'r.;<niv At •':".,!! rippTn ir 't'.f >'•;.do • ! f t b ^ ] 3 w c . ^ d 1 t i : r r . : : . v ? •
FP A., a ca:d'-ner ;r Bcrfrtja.skcd th:<• q;if-:::ir av.c! sa:.1 ^th-^uc'".! ;• vt.':;r.rtf-d a !;"'.'(O'i'.'i: No' to mr " (Mr. '•iy-a':v- M: A a; d 1 w.'fad::(:. ;n thr v s > bos*
>o I •urr.pd to D: i>?n'ScaiVvk. rur •:*•.• !>:?:'. * « d 'co:-':ol specialist arid :.< was.more than happy to 'up?:? :h«;
ehanw to make a point aboutlawn care that tears repeating
Tait? it from men who havewatched craijfiraM zro*. itssefds (terminfit* ruht or. thesur!are or majbf with just a.«pnnklma of soii over lhem.:
Crabgrais ^wdf need sunlight:to sprout '
Bri t Crabcnn jAnd that's why rou can be!
irell on your way toward tea'-!tog crabrrass when yo-j kwpthe surface of th{ soJ shaded jAnd rou dont r.en have to,stand out there with an 'um-jbrella to make shade
All you have to do is iet yourgrass grow high 50 that sun-light can't reach crabgras*weds lying th«re or. !'ne surface [ol the ground, ready to-s^ring;into action. High mean* 21?jinches.
If you think that a IBVTI cut[at 2>2 inches looks stats?. ;ust|ask yourself il you'd ratherihave crabgra&s or lawngrass. 1
Getting enough fertilizer onjthe lavrn early in spring sives'the lawngrasses the will to live.
You can do two things nowjto help you look forward to'a crabgrasele.tf summer il>|When you overhaul your mower.or have It done, set the blade;so it r i l l cut at 24 Inches, andj(I) Get a free copy of "Lawn'Care" from your county afri-jcultural agent. Or send a card!to Garden Reporter. College of:
, Agriculture. Rutgers TJniTersity,1
New Bransw ick. jL Can't Trust Volunteer j
Mr A. J .C. , Jersey City, asksabout moving a tree, which shesuspects of being a peach tree,from its present unfavored lo-i
' cat:or. near a shed to a better j• spot in the yard. The tree evi- j' denth 'decided to grow from a;* pit discarded by a youngster, i
If you want a peach treethai'll bear peaches you canenjoy eating, better go to a
, mirwryman and buy one^ then> plant It where it'll have a
chance to grow. That's the ad-,vice of E G. Christ, Rutgers
fruit specialistTake it from the peach
breeders, a tree, that grows!from a pit can be pretty dis-appointing, and you won/t know,until ii\s old enough to bearfruit
Health HintsGOOD HEALTH TO YOUGood health is not a natural
right: neither is it merely ahappy accident. Those who en-;joy good health do so because;they are dowered with sound jminds and bodies that function!harmoniously with that nicety!of maintained balance that be-speaks intelligently disciplined;living. Good health is a proper,and desirable goal that requires;the enlightened cooperation ofphysician and patient.
The physician's part isthrough preventive medicine togive you all possible protection!against disease, and through;curative medicine to restore'you to good health when dls-.ease attacks. ' ',
Your role — apart from con-,suiting your physician regular-:ly and following his advice — iis to live in such fashion aa to'avail yourself of every means'W good health. Chiefly this re- ;
quires that 11 > you eat anddrink moderately, giving your-self regularly qnough, but nottoo much, of the staples of dietwhich you need; (2) you sleepregularly ajid ! adequately, toprotect yourself from the dam-aging effects of unrelieved ten-sions and fatigue; and that (3)you give proper time and em-phasis to both work and recre-ation to achieve that salutarybalance that makes 'or nervousand emotional stability.
Health is yours not for theasking or the buying, but forthe winning. In the pursuit ofit. your physician U your nat-ural .ally. Work with him andenjoy yourself.
Michael S. Newjohn, MH.
COUNTRY WISEA girl from a big English
city, helping with a harvestcomplained that a bull K^ptlooking at her in a somewljatmenacing manner.
"I expect," said the farmer,"that it's on account of that,red frock you are wearing."
"Oh," said the girl. "I knowit's terribly out of fashion, butjust fancy that—a country bullnoticing it!"
Sympathetic"I can't quite djagnuse your
case, said the doctor ' I thinkit iiiyst be di ink J
"That's O.K., doctor IkUQWJust huw you ft-t'l," Mtld theuutli'iit. "I'll t in i i f tj.ick w h e nyou ' i c Mil»-i "
• NEW JERSEY'S MONEY-SAVING SUPER MARKETSAT MUTUAL QUALITY COMES FIRST! THAT'S WHY AT MUTUAL.
SATISFACTION'S GUARANTEED!ALL-WAYS SIMPLY DELICIOUS MEATS!
READY TO EAT
SMOKED HAMSSHANK
END
Ib.
16 poundsand upButterball Turkeys
Fresh Spare RibsReady-to eat Ham Steaks»89All Meat Franks icHicH4us
Roasting ChickensItalian SausagesSmoked Pork ChopsChicken Parts"«1 AH pricti iffKlin ftw» J*tvrtl«r night,
Wi rwnt * • right to KnitII, 1H1.
YOU A1WAYS SAVE MORE AT MUTUAL! • ^ f O U WWAY$ "VE PM FIMKI ""* AMD VKIfABlls
SO WHY PAY M O R E . . .HAM), RIPE, SLICING
Tomatoes large ctn.Ib. or over
HUNT'S PEACHESHUNT'S CATSUPWHITE MEAT TUNA
SLICEDOR HALVES
29-ot.can
ADDS ZESTTO ANY MEAL
DEEPBLUE can
A P . LARGE SIZE
L j Green Peppers1929
PARD DOG FOOD 7,.,,slHECKER'SFLOUR5::t49cRoyal GELATINS 2PV,,29c
MIX 'EM or MATCH 'EMPIUSMIRY'S
COFFEE CAKE MIXor DATE BREAD MIX
FLORIDA'S FINEST-FULL OF JUICE
Oranges 5C MACINTOSH - RED, CRISP, JUICY
Apples j
Ib. cellobag
ANY
Ib. cellobag
FLORIDA-LARGE SIZEFLORIDA-LARGE SIZE
Seedless Grapefruit 5 ' b "
FREE! ONECAN
TOMATO SAUCEWHEN YOU BUY
McCORMICKSPAGHETTI
SAUCE MIX
Del Monte sliced Pineapple 3 " J 1Campbell's Franks & Beans 3 ',6:: '1Brillo Red Soap Pads 2 4 9Rurru'c DAAI/IAC HI-VALUE TRAY PAC A . OAcDUrrTS UOOKICS OXFORD ACE OATMUL COONUT l l i * 9 » 7 T
TOP QUALITY CONVENIENT FROZEN POODS
BIRDSEYE POT PIES v^,B| . „ * 19cSCOOP ICE CREAM n£L ^ ^ 59c0 » H Keody PiMoppli^rop«lniit % ,
Mortons Biscuits u£ 25c Doles Juice 3 £ 49c
PREPARED FOODS and
APPETIZING DEPARTMENT
I
Gourmet's Bakery Trears
UMON
PJtSTRAMCOLESLAWSMOKEY
Mf WHITING
YOUR EXTRA DOLLARSNOW CAN EARN
ANNUAL DIVIDENDS
ON MUTUAl'S k
PREFERRED STQCK
PAID KM» IIMfS A VbU
Offtnd Only lo
••«» hit Ntw Itnty luidtaH
Minimum Purchase-5 Shares at $10 per Share
Ask Any of Oui Manager^ for Details
nt.Brtakfitl Bus 25c
MUTUALSUPER MARKETS, Inc.14M SOUTH AVENUE-HAJNHBD, H. J.
Gentlemtn. « A *I am • bona fid« N«w Jt^*- •••^••> ' » •Check ent
H I am inttftittd in furth*r
P I h«reby tubKrib* for .___ than* W i i m i M 5 tturw) of8% cumulative preferred sfedL«(aM«1 dieck or moneyorder)
-NAME _ _ _ ^ _ ^
ADDRESS OTY
Mutual Super Markets
Dole's Juice ) 3 ^ 49c Birds Eye Spinach 4 69c
Bird: Eye Peas , 37c Fish Sticks ' £ 5 5 c
French Fries ^ 10c Miniature Crabs & 4 5 cDAIIT « DUI j (AVIIWS . . . 10 WHY PAT MfHT
SPICED LUNCHEON MEM : 13SWISS CHEESE r i 63PROVOLOGNE CHEESEPineapple & GARDEN SALAD t r 29PARKAY MARGARINE» 2 ; i 43TAYLOR'S PORK ROLL - a - 3 r $1MIDGET BOLOGNA or SALAMI 4 ?COnAGE CHEESE - . 19
pkg.
Ib.
DAIRY
Rohwoy Ave,at Main St,
Ib.cup
Opposite
OBITUARIESt s ii. r RATTEROLOCo',|-r READING - Funeraltf for Mrs. Raphacia
1,10, 79. 42 Third Street,„, iiird Saturday morning at
•rtli
t.. i «
iim1.
n::bl"1'
/ PAGE NINE
liv, II
lina
General Hospital;attack at her
no held Tuesday raor-m l-lic Orelncr Funeral4 Green Street, Wood-iilh a Solemn Requiem
l' si. Anthony's Church., in St. James' Cemc-
MRS. FEMCITA MAGEWOODBRIDQE -
ir Mrs.
York and Rahway before mov-ing to Avetiel In 1HB. He^w&sawnor and operator of theShady Brook Inn until his re-tirement In 1039. He and Mrs.Salvln celebrated their S8thfreckling anniversary last Feb-
Funeral m a ry 18.
Church ListsFull Calendar
'WOODBRIDQE-TonlRht at,8:00 the Men's Association ofithc Woodbridge Gospel Church
Rt her home1
Woodbridge.ir (ii'ceased was a resident(nr the past 35 years and
iiiimnicant of St. Anthony's
i iutvl i . , ,Surviving are her husband,,t,,i; ii daughter. Mrs. 8am-Cirrare, Trumbull, Conn.;
,,,' sons. Carl, Pasquale and,,,h, nil of Port Reading;
grandchildren and two
k s MARGARET MAGYARWOODBRIDGE — Funeral, . i.TS for Miss Margaret Mag.i 54, 22 C'rampton Avenue,
fiw died last Thursday at> St=I,IS Hospital. New Bruns-Irk, were held Monday mor-u- from the Grelner Funeral](inn. 44 Ureen Street. Burial»., in Cloverleaf Park Cemfe-•i
'i in- deceased was the daugh-i n! Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mag.i: she was born In Perth[irimy and moved here 42
. URO, nnd wns employed\ic Elizabeth Arden Dress-,ni; ueimrtment, New Yorkid veins. She was a raetn-tlic Concurdla Society ol
I mboy.ilng ure twa sisters,
Jensen, N|etuchenKirs. Johanna Kurtz,
•l/ni.'ton, D.C.; three, broth-1'i'ter, Perth Amboy;
Van Nuys, Calif.; and1
Joseph, Avcnol; Rocco and Mi-chael, Woodbrldge; and a staterMrs. Daniel George, Yonkers.
After a short Illness, were held3utitrday morning from t,heThomas P. Hlgglns Sons Fun-eral Home!, 1116 Bryant Street,Rahway. Burial was In PuertoRico.
The deceased was a retiredschool teacher after teaching35 yearn In Puerto Rico. Shehad resided here five yearswith her daughter, Mrs, Wil-liam Brennan, She was thewidow of the late Jose.
Surviving besides Mrs. Bren-nan are two sons, Joseph CruzMage, St. Just, and EdgardoCruz Mage. Bayamon, both
of Puerto Rico; another daugh-. - • -i™ 'ne~ter, Mrs. Blsmark Wlcliy. Bart »t 2:00 at the Hunsrarlan.Re-nimouUi. Mass.; a niece, Mta* 0 ™" 1 , Church, with Rev.Daisy Mage, whom Mrs. Magefeared; eight grandchildren,
" •
MRS. ELIZABETH PETROCZYSEWAREN - Funeral serv-
ice* Mrs. Elizabeth Pe-troray. 87. 120 Old Road,d lddled TiitRday nt her home will
The battalionketball team will play EmersonSaturday at 12:30 P. M. in theFort Lee gymnasium.
The Btockaders have changedtheir meeting time from (1:30to 7:00 P. M. on Monday. Theywill meet weekly at this time
meetings will last until
Heart CampaignBegins Feb. Istj
WOODBRIDGE
Middlesex County
!"imi>al!>n, seeking
*sn.ono, w i l l b r officially
-.perative nursing care for car- B o o s t i n g of /.If fillline patients. j " '
Tiie Middlesex county ASM-1 Shopping Area UrgedJlatlon also maintains a Work, WOODBRIDGE - V OeorRcClassification Unit at St. Pct-;P ( .n .y president Of the Inellii
The lflei'l"1''" H o s p l t R l f o r u s e b y ftreft Chamber or Commerce, has rc-I industry in evaluating the work q U M t e d the Town Commlttpc
lean nmniiiotpntiai of cardiac employes, to appoint a Citizens' Advisory11 Roal ° f ' —• — [Committee on Business for
liiunrhed February 1 nt thean-
W'HO. MK? SKUVOUS? 'Isolln. tilmllHr to thai appointedUcutenant Bally, youthful f o r t n r M ( , i n s t r e P t s o c t l o n o f
nual Kirkoff Dinner to be held J r fo'"cf fp l Io t l 1,1Rd ^ l « » * d . W o « l b r l d « ;
in <*>bVs Uo.siaiu-ant Route »l \^ f l l ! l l t P r H f l o r B m"Sl0>1' ^ P « r p « of the Wood-South Amboy ' ^ , . , ° L J
t l l . { ' . . T ! l i r t . y - e l R h l h ,br idge Committee Is to make anReservaiiims for the dinner^
must be made by today in the
at 1:30the Greiner Funeral Homr'r
44 Green Street, with services.
from 6:30 untilthe Pioneer Girls,and Colonists will
Avenue. EdisonPrincipal speaker at the din-1
inn- will be Dr. Jerome G. Kauf-BRlfcll IT ON YOI T R 1><H;'S HKAI.TII: (f you've just finished m a n ' ft N c w R l k cardiologistwreptllnu with your (In- through bis bath-time—you'll be iUKl " a s l Pl'PsWent of the Es-Klad to hear there's nn unsler way to keep him clenn! Brush ( * C o i m t y Medical Society.
merchants to rent vacant Mainf ii , , U J , • were you nervous during iqtrw,t Mores
of U,o Middlesex Count, 1 ^ a l t B c k r l w ] l l l r e d t h e c o . 8 t r M t S tOrtS
"••ait Association, 263 Loringj . .W h O i m P ? - a 8 k e d B a l l y
'No, sir; 1 was cool as a cueum-T through the whole show.""Swell." replied the CO. "I
ust thought you might haveseen a little Jittery when you!
him!This word of advice comes •
from Clarence. C. Fawrett, yourself the cost of a visith
R. Egry officiating.Burial will be in Cloverleaf!i,le
c ureh0SrMr:oeS-th-ll\ofH
Uie *T? D°" ™'™y™»u\m | " K charge |p/rLCnrf- H° T ^ ' i S " T"' ms Fawcett ' "ls n o t '
Bi-grandchtldren, e n Clveleaf l b l e s t U { ] y w m b
and a sister, Mlsa OertrudUPark Cemetery, Woodbrldge. |3a> t U : 3 0 P . ?Magc Juana Diaz Puerto Ri The deceased was - member
OertrudUMagc. Juana Diaz, Puerto Rico.
MRS. HAZEL HARVEY S d by erFORDS — Funeral services husband, William; a daughter,
for Mrs. Hazel Harvey, ?"n r ••tltwne and two sons, Sanyl and
y, g |3a> tU:30 P.? rtthttX-The deceased was - member t n r I n c l ) R r s ( l A K Tate y o u t h
Of the Himitarlan Reformed prayer meetlnii In also held ntChurch She Is survived by her1 5 K IS a ° e fl B lChurch. She Is survived by herhb
Avenue, formerly ofwho died last Fiid;Tuesday afternooi.Bedell Funeral Honii, -, Am-boy Road. TottenviUe, Burialw&a In Bethel Cemetery. Tot-tenvllle.
Surviving are her husband.;Clarence; two daughters, MrsOrace Yenchiclc and.Mrs. Vir-ginia Kerwln; two sona, Ken-neth and Elwood; a brother,Roy Cole; 11 grandchildrenand three great-grandchildren.
UERMAN n, ROEMER ,FORDS — Private funeral j
services for Herman H. RoemeriFlorida Drove Road, who diedlast Friday, were held Monday
lela, all of Rakos, Hungary;even grandchildren; and a,rothor, Samuel Doktar, Iselln.
SANY1WOODBRIDOE — Funeral
this time. The senior choir willrehearse at 8:45 P. M. withRunyon Ernst In charge.
New church officers were
.will discuss strokes and the ef-Ifect of the diet on heart disease.| Chairmen of Heart Fund
in all 36 Middlesex Coun-wlll be Intro-
were comliiR at emht feet."
lar brushlngs are more health- solution It is Ukelv thnt!d u c e d bj> J a m e s VanDerveer ..than fre- you know more about caring'801"11 A m b o y ' c 0 l m t y c h a l r
jfor your own health—than you'm a n 'ful for your petquent baths.
Here's another point to con-,do about dog care."slder. When you and your dog A balanced program of healthare lathered up with soap suds treatments will include a regu-
Dr. Arthur L. Roth of Me-tuohen, county Heart Associa-tion president, will review the
gatlon meeting. They are Run-yon Ernst, board of elders:
. . . you can hardly get a good lar check-up at the vet's. xhel R c t l v l t l e s °' t h e country grouplook at the oemditlon of hta,number one pet killer 1« dls-ld u r i n g t h e y e a r ' A f i l m ' "Those
Good Old Days," will be shownoutlining the wurk of the HeartAssociation and the need for
skin. And that's a factor worthy.temper . . . an Infectious'virus1
elected at last week's Comae-!0' y o u r c o n s '*n ' ' attention. |disease of young dogs. Has yourSigns of 111 health often show,dog been Inoculated?
up first In the pet's skin and! The vet can lmmunipe your,H e 8 r t ^nA volunteers.
Forth Amboy; also scv-|niorninfr from the Flynn and!iiui nephews. Son Funeral Home, 23 Ford
Avenue. Burial was in Clover-jleaf Memorial Park, Wood-
services for Stephen Sanyl, 70,|833 Bamford Avenue, who diedat his home Tuesday night, willbe ileld Saturday morning at1:30 from his late residenceand at 11:00 at First Presby-terian Church with Rev. AlexNemeth officiating. Burial will]be In Cloverleaf Park Cemetery.
The deceased was employedas a warehouseman at Kohlerand Company, Newark for 18years retiring In 1658. He wasa resident of Woodbridge for 12years, formerly living In Car-teret.
He was the husband of the1
late Julia Ann (Balogh). Sur-viving are three daughters, Mrs
Thomas Burns board of trus- c o a t A s ^m b r u s h n l m ' lce(1Pl(lo8 aKa^t hepatltli, an In- „ T h e H e a r t ^n<* campaign InS n . 8 C w o n S t o board ^ wateWul eye ready to detect;flammatlon of the liver, if"1" "" 1™1- J""of trustees
Mr*.
s C1.AK.A I . STOCKMAN•i•'[.IN • I-'uneral servlcesjbrldgp.Mi- Clam F. Stockman,! Surviving are his nirina^Ray E«khart, Woodbridge; Mm.[•M.iln Hiiihwiiy. who died Juliu; mut «'""«•,....- »™ i.«».ir n . h - . . -T!i!ii>duy tught at her.Carolyn Nil
x ntii'1' a brief illness, werei Miiiicliiy tiftcrnmn from OREOORY (i l l LIASii.-••iner Fuiuial Hume. 44 FOHD8 — fiuieral scivlcesjchildien; and a brother. Frank
••ism-el, Woodbrldiie. Bur-'to' Gregory Olullas, 34, 101'Hungary.v;i, in E-ist Ridgeltuvn Cem iKoycn Street, who died
a daughter.
lastlaw.mna. Friday at the Veterans Admln-
Wisconsin find a ies-,lstratlon Hospital, East Orange,a f t r t Ill
Julia Ann Janvlk, Rahway;and Mrs. Fred Brockup. Car-teret: two ions, James J. andFrank, Woodbridge; 10 grand
. Ifdanger signals . . . ticks, para-1necessary, dc-wormlng can be
b k m h d U j h ? l i t *f trustees g g 1 g c, Report* of various organlza-fslt,e8' b,rOken *m' r a s h e s ' d U " j h a "? l e i . a t , * e _ v e r s to?-Ions were made for the year colorations.
1960. Kenneth Barber, boardof elders, presented the churchmissionary budget which wasapproved. He also explained,he jiew envelope system whichwill provide for weekly missiongiving.
Ernest Barabas, chairman ofthe board of trustees, con-ducted the meeting and intro-duced Mrs. Thomas •Burns,treasurer, who reviewed the1960 budget and advised a 16per cent increase was shownover the previous year, Bhepresented the church budgetfor the new year which was!adopted.
The congregation voted- tosend Rev. Burgess to theMoody Pastors' Conference In
At the first S0ln ef »nything|care of your dog's teeth? Thesuspicious, visit your veterl-^et will Instruct you In thenarian, Give your pet this k/id; safest and quickest way to cleanof health Insuranceyou prolong Ma Ufc by manyyears!
Do you know how to take
and tartar accumulations from be-tween the teeth and you
Fight the temptation to save!self after that.can probably do the Job your-
this community will begin dur-ing the first week of Februaryclimaxing on Heart SundayFebruary 11.
The year-round program o:the Heart Association include!educational programs for clubs,schools, and civic groups, aidto research Into methods offighting heart disease and post-
COUNTRTi WITThe city sllclrer halted his]
IMPORTANT
The young student was beingcar at a desolate crossroads1 taken to task for having ex-and yelled to a farmer driving ceeded his ieave by two days.a load of hay: | Professor: '"Well, what have
"Hay, Cornsitt, ta this the you to say for yourjeif?"
Mayor Frederick M. Adamssaid yesterday he will appointjsuch a committee.
Cheerfully Volunteered"Did you volunteer or were
adloed that 15.000 enemy Jets you drafted?""Well, It was like thl*: My
number came up, 1 had nojAirlines assess 17-day excur-,dependents, and I passed the
slon rates. 'physical, so I volunteered.1'
PARAMOUNTS' GREATEST
THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAYJanuary 261 h
9:30 A.M. to S 1\M.January 21th
0:30 A.M. to 9 P.M,January 21th
S:l» A.M. to t PJ». ,
[way to Chicago?"The farmer looked up
feigned a s t o n i s h m e n t . ^ l u m . i ; «t h ' d | n o m
j s tuden t . ,T min r r e f t U y c o u i ^ t t b ;get
was detained by moststranger, how'd n ,«now m y j l m p o r t a n t b u s l n e
name was Cornslllrt1' !
Shop
ThursdayJan.26
For— on
Friday - Saturday |Jan.27 Jan.28
Chicago from January 30 untlliflUcker.
| Profegjo"I guessed it." answered the t w o m o r e
you
BLOWS TOP IN SEWEE, .. Philadelphia - A temporary
18 years, the di'ceas- a' t''r R "h°rt Illness, were heldipostman found the Christmasi .i iiimibtr of j'irht pri'.s-;yMl*rday from the Flynn andlmaln rush too much for him,
II chmch. 'Son Funeral Home, 424 East He continued to receive com-i.i,: me her • lui.-i)and, Avenue. Perth Amboy, wlth ;pia |nts from people that he
• •!•.; two daiiithttr.s, Mrs. ^'>wces at St. Demctrlos Greek w a s delivering mall to th; JMtipaw, I.sfllu, ;,ud O r t h°dnx Church with Rev.iWrong addresses and he wa<
-'••..'•!! Black, Meiuchen; DemetrloiM Constantelous of- u p s c t . He later told a Unlte<. idiluunhter; two sistcrs,!flcllll'll't' Burial was In Clover-:State8 commissioner at a hear
February 5 during FoundersWeek. Internationally knownJBlb te
ly k o w nJBlble teachers and Theologlans|ChlCBgol"
ill k dg
will speak during this confer-ence.
"Then by hecfc'TOiroed tto,farmer, "suess -**-— -^
wanteddid
you?", Student: "No, sir—of Gladys.'
CHILDREN'S
RUBBERSHeavy Stretch - Sizes 9-12
Keg. $2.49
t Blouses• Sweaters• Skirts• Slacks• Robes v
• WinterGowns
0 WinterPajamas
O Winter
Confuted YouncttcriThe Lord's Prayer has had!
jto withstand a great deal ofThey JTell'Em ! Detective—And to you know rpumbUng and confusion, es-
Amerlcan Sailor—Battleships what we policemen"ifiean by apedally from children trying
j n that he threw 66 plecei 0!m»U"&9Qm. a sewer. -
Th? m*l was recovered an
It ii i s <;vi Kit s
ii.;; Bartholomew, Muk [eaf P a r k Cemetery, Wood-Wts,, und .Mrs. Alfrrd'bridKO.-
:. North Mjjimi, Fk.; 'rll(' deceased wa.n bom in, _..' Killer, F1|('''llol(1 a l l d formerly lived In aftVr being dried out was de
'(Perth Amboy before moving'|]iVpre(|ihere 14 yenrs ago. A vctrrani The confused mailman wa
'of World War II, he was a^eld on $500 ball.- Funeral member of Pords Post Veterans! _ _ _ — _ —
1 <i James Gyurlcs. 337 of Foreign Wars and Local 651 Only senior on Harvardstn.-t. who died last of the Carpenters Union. He basketball team Is Robert Bow
nt 1'.mi Amboy <3en »'6S also a member of St. De-ditch. Jr., of Worcester. Masj'•I wi'iv held Mon- metrlos Greek Orthodox Church' -
• •'•••"•; from the Leon j , Per th Amboy. j•:.!•] ai Home, 411 Am- Surviving arc his widow,
••"'. with a High R e q - M t t r y 'Toro'i; three daughters.: ' nt Our, Lady of Carlene, Cynthia and Pamela;t'a::iicl Chuich. Burial ! l l s m o " ' " . Mrs. Bertha GiuhaK' Jam.-s Cometery. •fMmn: two ulsters. Mrs, Louis
Army service In Be i t (' l t'1P. Fords and Mrs. Stan-' .in y service In^ '-v..r II, iiH. di'ceasfd was l l'y M>'"slin*kl, Edison: a brother
of Mt. C a r - | P e t e r ' EdlJ!0"-!
I'1AS .;)77, a n d past C 0 m - ! C A R M I S E
""I AVENEL _ Funeral servicesWE WILL BURY YOU!
ccliuii,• • • • - > ' i o n s .
C'oulily
K:..;iil.s ,thrc
o ( f o r Carmine Salvia, 81, 1170 Will you allow the Free World toChapter. R a n w a y Avenue, who died Sat- die? Khrmhchev tayi "Yes!"VcU'ran'sur(jay a t hLs n o m e a f t e r a RADIO FREE EUROPEiayi"No!'i also a brief illness, were held jester- Here's your chance to Hop the, Council day from the Grelntr Funeral spread of Communist lies. Keep
Columbus and Home, 44 Green Street, Wood- RFE on the air! It's the American,LU- j bridge, with a Solemn Requiem people's counter-voice to Comrnu-
' | 1LS/'dow, VlTJMass at at. Andrew's Church.<•«•, Mrs, Jamesi Burial was In St. Gertrude
sisters. Mrg.lcemetery.M. Mrs. Julius Tel-Mrs. Thomas 8ne-
":1 "f Woodbridge-Joseph, NU
The deceased was born InItaly and came to the United
aStates when he was 14. HciI operated grocery stores In New
fUJRI.
Mall yevr contribution !••
RADIO FREE EUROPE FUND».O. ton IH1,MtunlVormnlO.NYPublUhtd a> • publicftrvlct In cooptradon wljh Th« dv»rtlnng gounci'
BRAND NEW SIX •• PASSENGER
'61 BUICK4 DOOR I SPECIAL SEDAN - ONLY
PER MONTHFOR S6 MONTHS
BASED ON
1/3 DOWN
PAYMENT
YOUR PRESENT CAR IN TRADE
. MAY EASILY COVER THE
DOWN PAYMENT! COME IN T O D A Y ! !
-OLKOWITZ MOTORS-U New Brunswick Avenup 111 2-0100 Perth Amboy
Centra,! Jersey's Largest Volume Buick DealerServing the Public for Over 40 Years
—why the flagship of our navTiPerfect crime?.1 so big that the captain goes;round the deck in his car.British Sailor—You ought to
lee our flagship. Have a lookit th« kitchen. It's so large the:00k has to go through therish stew in a, submarine* to
^e jf the potatoes are cooked.1
Pretty—Sure! If you stole akiss, that would be perfect.
Which?Shopper — J wish to buy ft
fashionable dress.Clerk — Yes, madam; will
you have it too tight or tooshort, or both?
--„ —„to learn it from poor enunci-ators, or, from mutteringcrowds.
One little boy was heard topray. "Harold be Thy name.",Another begged, "Give us thisday our Jelly bread." A NewYork child petitioned, "Leadus not into Perm Station."
SHOE CO.182 SMITH STREET
PERTH AMBOY, N. J.Open Fridty Evenins Till 9"Cwefollj Flttlnf QUUKJFootwear . Since 1918"
• Handbags GlovesMany Other Bargains Not Listed!SHOP PARAMOUNT and SAVE!
Perth Amboy Days' GreatestBargain Center!
AIUMOUNT182 SMITH ST. PERTH AMBOY
Join jn themarch of
savings during
THURSDAY,JANUARY 26th
FRIDAY,JANUARY 27th
and
SATURDAY,JANUARY 28th
Join the many smart shopperswtio will be taking advantageof the putstanijing values be-ing (Offered in everything fromwearing apparel and furniture,to hardware and sportinggoods. ! . ,
You'll Enjoy Extra
Saviugs'by Shopping
During Perth Amboy
1 !The Bank icilh ALL the Services
1L
I3 BIG DAYSThursday - Friday & Saturday, Jan. 26-27-28FOR CERTIFIED VALUES
SHOP ONLY WHERE YOU SEE THIS SIGN DISPLAYED
It's yourchance to
SAVEMORE
MONEY!
IANK ANDTRUSTjCOMPANY
Perth Araboy, N. J,Federal Depotlt Iniuruice Corporation
SHOP in DOWNTOWN
PERTH AMBOYAMPLE PARKING SPACE
ALL OVER TOWN!Sponsored by The Retail Division Perth Amboy Chamber of Commerce
PAGF TEN ,*ue (rows Nest IWIOL'S AMERICAN TWKKNS
Thf Blofkhomr Inn. Whldlwy M»nd. Wa-h. <
••[•: a : . d
^ : F-;V:-,
In thr Wniltntp'Fd-»ard H. MafV. Jr OT
Mr and Mrv Edward .Mar.r.L innesMn Avrnue. A: d ?.'•>e n .' Hcm^-1. .-or, ••Mr< Robert T H-r
rra iu .ved f:>m ivfru:1 -\i.:--.: -re.-cr.tly at Nava! Tra;:".::'.*' C;;UT. Great Lakes, III Fr-."V.8 v f : ! a , Brookfali A-.f:.'.i' C -loiiui attended a : ^ : , - i . rc o u w in turUr,i^ a1 F . ; ' - - : -UniverMiy's CoIW'" "' A«' ":'•-ture la.< *e?k . . M:« Bar-bara I.ock.f. a j-.in:;: a'. B-.-iW:ColU~Ef. daiu'rue: of N!r. *:'.<!Mrs J»mes Lo:>(,«. B\;vis:'.f'.iAvert]*1. Woodbridtf hn? bf-ennamed a member of tht coiles?touring Glee C^b. She •*;'.! , , , . . 11 1
«ns at the wtwnuco presby- A (I itndenne Inshmun Kneir (i >nuf[ harbortfrian Church. Salisbury. Md Bfvv.is*5 a aand'T.:,- ;*• ?->ggc-d I:;>r.ri.ar, kr,"» a ':.jg har-Saturday: First Prfsb>i*r'.ar. ^ , h P n ^ sai on*, '.he Biockhouf^ Inr. nr. Wa>r:'.stor.f.Church, Annapolis, Md:. Sun- whidbe? Island, north of Seattle. 1? ct-U-bratm; it* i.uiidrcdthday afternoon: ind Takonia anniversary.
John Alexander trekJt-o in 1852 with his family bj coveredPark Presbyterian Church. TVJ o n n Alexa
- koma Park, Md.. Sunday nigr.r , . a g o n a c r o s s ,h(,and at the Baltimore Fneds n B U o t u 'S h l d i Sh
Stales, tfien b> Doat to WU:dbey. the_ _ lanre« coastal —
School. Monday morning. She ,,. lard l n a ^^^ 0 { t h e A f w r Alexander di*d in 1860.la a graduate ot Woodor.dge 1 5 i a n ( j f | o n g g r m Alexander his widow turned the house intoHigh School . . c a m e t o B natural de*p-*ater »n inn. which it bas been everAt Random • harbor, fringed by tall ftr trees, since. It was a restful place for
' lace-like ferns and lush srassthe early sea captains »herrUnderstand that after an a n ( ] populated by browsing they could sip ale. dine on veni-
ttem here last week steps are d w w n s t ^ k a n d w a l c n theirbeing Uken to clean up the Indian too. ships riding safely at anchorcell block at police headquar- ,. ' ^ f d ;v .; ( h e A1] t h a t , . a s needed w toters. Understand thai orders ^ • ; n i a r w a s n t t^ir^ B n y five the harbor a name. Ahave gone out that it is to be c l ) a r c e 6 H e ^ ^ a sturdy,group of captains therefore one
Mernt of the Swift & Compaq ^ ft s l o o d a U a y s read}. ^ a n a t O n e Vii ^ ^ om t n a t
ftoodbndge. A ! e x s m l e r b u s ) e d himself with of Captain Thomas Coupe, and«.w f K oi , l° ^ 8 ,^' cu"m« timbers for California's thereafter the place was knownsuit of hit suggestion to im- ^ ^ ^ w aiMS_ u-er a» Coupenlleprove plant operations. This h e ^ g ^ ^ ^ ^ T < .n .b e d . T o d i y s a i i m i m e n s t ln dock
t * * " ^ r o o m frame house, with four at Coupeville to dine at thebrick fireplaces. The house friendly inn beside the old
: overlooked the port, where blockhouse. And many touristsfour-masted schooners tied up travel to the aland haven by
. — ———^
Federated Woman «Celebrates 1st Birthdlx
S«f!
••4
] '
r i U R I F < T O \ R f V l V F D : T h e w f l l - k n n « n d a n r f r o u t i n e of the i'<!<k « n v r e \ i i e r i in i -kit pr f^nt . -r i TuF e d e r a t e d W n m . u i s C l u b of C o l o n i a , Left to r i t h t . M r v R o b e r t B r u v i w . M r v l o ^ p h Vital.-. Mr- Kol l in l l u h h a r d M r v
l . d w a r d H n e s t o n a n d Mrs . J o s e p h H r e h u * .
engineer in the power depart-ment and h\s suggestion involved a method of installingStainless stee! packets on flavortanks . . .
At the Typewriter:A great big thank you to
Max Weiner of Lomax. MamStreet. Woodbndge. He sentover a color TV set so that weat Tht Independent-Leaderwere able to watch the inaug-uration parade m color, whichmade it just lhat much moreinteresting. . . . Hungarian-American Citizens Club had aline turn out for its 3oth an-n.. sary dinner Saturdaynight , . . And, of course, theWjoabridjif Fire Company din-ne?. as ilsual. had the usualoi__ Citiwd. Mayor Fred Adamsand former Mayor Augie'
n?r did an outstanding jobin filling the gap left vacantftnen Mayor Carlm. Newark,un<»d to make an appearance.
Lust But A of Least;Bom at Penh Amboy Hospi-
tal; From Port Reading, a sonto Mr. and Mrs Michael Sulli-van. 30 Daniel Street; . . . fromWoodbridge. a daughttr to Mr.and Mrs. William Grover, 75.Russell Street; a daughter toMr. and Mrs. Edwin Casey, Jr..733 Bar'ron Avenue; a son toMr. and Mrs, Nicholas Davella,310 Mawbey Street; . . . fromFords, a eon to Mr. and Mrs.Kenneth Keenan, 4 RowanCourt; a son to Mr. and Mrs.Gordon Dorsch, 33 AlbanyStreet; a daughter to Mr, andMrs. Michael Houssick, 58 Cor-ey Street; a daughter to Mrand Mrs. Julius Gedeon, 21 EWilliams Street; . . fromHopelawn. a son to Mr. and\lts. Andrew Vayda, 11 LouisStreet: . . . from Avenel. adaughter to Mr and Mrs. AvoKubar, 1032 St. George ('Ave-nue; . . . from Iselin, a son toMr. and Mrs. Arthur Finks,48 Block Avenue
to load Alexander's timbers, ferry.
OUR BEST WAY-OF-LIFE INSURANCETHE CITIZEN SOLDIERS OF THE
NATIONAL GUARD
)'•'• • " V - ' . ' i r a t V d ' i t ' . f i rs ' b i r t h - M r s . A l l c b a c l i . p i , * , , ,-;i .' t [|1(. AvenM n o d i i r f d iiU«»ld frnni •
" r " ^•"^Ifc'-.mrli hHli district chit*,n • , . , ' , ' ; , , • Bf- HKinmond. pro- A buffet m * sfn.-fl ,
' , n « ' i 'i irilroducitr,' tobert Ma»CH»ik HIICI Mr , : < , 'w. .men Arn <lrp* Konuvf* ,'"' " V- • staifd It «'«'• •hairmen. BWi>itcd i,r ! ' . ' . , , ! •",V. in^i directed oy Oomlntc ValvBiio. M,- .' • •,.,iducf-d by worn. n. Wood. Mrs. John t.u. u ,1"'"'' ' ' '. ((ii . r r | t-rtsi " vdwni'd Ye.lle. and \i' " V, 2* a -atn. . .il Ui.- liam PoUwskl. Mi> i,,.
.,V. ,«t.-d Woman's Club Mrs. B r h r t r t CIUMVS-.",,inch took pine- I" ' " Mf'rtt i iy. W-Tvcri t. .
•ronr,!iiK twnU>-> A tl)|-(*-tierfd c1(^.•.... dmirr routwi' •> ,.kpcl by Gerald Finn,;:,,{i\ yildler drill, mid .is and cor.^ireti wert u..".'.• :tled "The Birilirta> j 1 P Oardt'n »'>d t \ i i i -
md tile Art dftimntiii: •,, ,-;,.st wfi-i Mrs Sum- Tlif club will me •
,..,)!; Hrrliiis. M's J.ri-.ipnionstralion "-IH i). ,H ,i\-ini).. Miii. JOM|II-JMi,- Saiii'ifl Kuslmi.'i- S'ot So Bed
r,]!,..- Ar.rleriiOH. M:.' A n 0 | ^ farmer «„-K AllPtwh. Mrs Paul i eKarduw thf r a u i f
Mrs Robert Biu. -« l . fin,^.u H 8 l ! -Hiram.' your p i > .
M - Rollm Hubbard a g s i n d down thr < ,I , . iK Burki. soloists , w W h b o r told him syiv.,.,
mo o Wirt7. and M ^ c a | i y .puinra. Mage d i n e - - H o * about Mann-;
. , j h HK-has, piaiiM: Hni;ed th< farmer1 •iDhiii'd pr^Kram.-: *^d -They're (one Ux> 'Viialc, Mi'1* cards 'And larsen's?"
; : l - j '*»>rr Kivpn bV Mi-11- "Yes.¥ WVmlK'inifT. J r . "th "Humph." ?jacui»-. r.
uce president, ai.d farmer, cliwrlng up*:Vy L. Dangremoiid. bad as I thought!"
v;.;-.-A'-:". ' '
\
A VICTORIAN C U B MEETING: The year 1894. thr time of the first meeting of a Federated Honun'* Hub. was re-called at the first birthday nf the federated Woman's Club of (.olonia. Kir*t row. Mrv. dforte Mtninnnd. Mr> JamesAnderson: second row, Mrs. Samuel Kushman. Mrs, L*o E. Burke, Mr>. Jacob J. Wirt7, Mrv Rotx-rt Mclnt>rt and
Mrs. Paul Ablonciy,
iltit YOUR COUNTRY C C M V U M T i 1 IN T H E t i A T I C N A t THE m RECORDSWHERE MID-WEEK ISWONDERFULEn(oy the only artificial ice rink in the Poconos
. our sunm«f-bright indoor summing poolAith solariurn, and other winter sports activities.
Or-relax in our lounges, library and TV rooms. or th« Terrace Cocktail Lounge.
NICE ICE . .A WARM P0OL...AVIDST A RELAXING ATMOSPHERE.Special <nnt«rt,nn rite Discounts onm d * « k stays and sty! over 5 days A
I
<*- :nni of Mirt2Fcorv h
HSt«it
RECORD 1959 TAXES IThe Internal Revenue Serv-
ice reports that more taxpayersyaid more income taxes onmore 1959 earnings than everbefore.
Tjlie report stated that the|nuinber of returns went up to1
60.300.000 from 59.1OO.O00 in'1959. Income increased tOi|305.800.000,000 from $281,200,-1900,000. I
The increased amount ofitaxes paid was S24,6OO,OO0.0Q0.'
MAJESTICA WALTER RcADE THEATRE
POCONOMANOR INN
In N. V.: JU t-liM
VA 6-5529MADISON AVEPERTH AMBOY
By Felii iThe Call Brown ]Coral has come up with one
that connect musk; and thestars Rod MeKuen. the com-poser of Written in the Stare,says that he long has wantedto do just this Stereo.
1 He besan the work in New-York a;-.d finished t in Europelast summer, which sounds likea good way to go about it touv Aiivhow, her* it is—ar-ranged and conducted by DickJacobs. Try it. especially if yougo for astrology.
Deeca':- latest stereo IsBrazen Brass Goes Hollywood.,It's done by the orchestra of
STATETHEATRE
t\ oodbridge. N J.
TODAY THRU WED.JAN. 26 THRl FEB. 1
Eliubeth Taylor,••aureoce Harvey In
"BUTTERFIELD 8"Shuwn Cityiluts u ?.oe and
SPECI
p. M.
IAL KIDDIE S1JOW^ATIRHAV, JAN. |»8
At 1:45 P. M. I\ Child's Delight
"SMILEY"- PIU!, -
CARtfOONS:
SPtCIAL MATINEESl'N'DAV
"SMILEY"— Plu» —
THl ABOMlN.iBLESNOWMAN"
tbuu.-iii<rld « Hill Be11urn i . w f. M.)
$1.19 fDINNERS
daily at Uw
Round-UpRESTAURANTZK MADISOX AVEXtE
PERTH AMBOY
SKATINGSPECIAL RATES TO
GROUPS
ETCTJ Ni
Except Monday7:3* t o l l P. M- 75'
i * i
SOUTH AMBOY ARENASUvt-m 4 <ith, Soolb Aaboj
Urnr- Jerome. It is interestingto us mainly because of the se-lection o( numbers which are,done wiih the brass treatment.
There are such motion pic-ture themes as Around thtWorld in Eighty Days. HighNoon. Gigi, The Third ManTheme, etc. The three sectionsof the Jerome orchestra ar-rar.Eed far this recording werean open brass section, a mutedbra.vs section and a« rhythmaction.
Ail in all. it's an Album oftop -elections done in a defl-I.::-:T different style, which isaor.h a listen.
A:.d speaking of Decoe. we'lllemind yoi| of that recent al-bum release, named Rhythm,Blues and Boogie Woogie. Itr.a> the original hits of manyy. the great band* and vocal-lits—for the real cats if. isjone but only for the cats,maybe.
The trend seems to be todar.cing music among the long-
plays There L- a nr\\ one outfrom Mercury entitled PeterPalmer and, loei.ally enou;h,it's the mus:c of P ter Palmerand his orcheitxa
This Ls a follow-up of a firstalbum by Palmer that wa* suc-cessful. He uses a fine dancebeat and two drummers in thisalbum and you will want tolisten, at least.
Then, there's another danc-ing album, done by Floian Za-bach—also a Mercury—featur-ing eight medleys, which 'havelong been popular for danci:1. .This is delightful mu>ic. espe-cially to all those who like 2a-bachs violin <as we d c
There's a slo*-ar.d-ea.sy al-bum from Mercury called T»i-lilht Timt, by Eddie Barclay
'and h:>
in Parks, and j.nc-
and yet it ;> sm.>i!ab!e too
For a Span^hvocals m SpanL«.h.by Ftoiuesi Reoo:worth mentioningHottest Mariachi.native mu-kal \t:of thf nat'.or.a'Mexico
Th:- i; alsov> is cportedBar. 'ay i? a^ ia.' - in 'hu
,i". anc iLstcr.-
flavo: withA new •stereo•ds wh.'h ^
It ;.- Theand ':- theion of many
SOllf • Oj
MRS. ROSEPHRENOLOGIST
HEADER and ADVISORAdiic* on All Problem*
of LifeDKEAM BOOKS77 Main Strett
WoodbfUce, N. J.Mt 6:1117
3 (H A. M. to *:M F. M.Mund»> ToroBth Pritey
Saturday and SandajOmjj
RTTZ Theatret jntret, N. i. E]
THBU SUNDAYPr«lcj in
"G. I. BLUES"Ptu
"H'.Ui LOX A DRAGON"MUlnn S*lu(Un J f. H.
SI NDAY Thr« SATURDAY!A>i. 19 THRU FEB. 1
7 BIG DAYS!
Jerrj
XINDERFELLA"Ttchokabtt
PtuiCUE BOY WHO STOLE
• A MILUO.VUddu
i r. M.
E M U tl. iWoodbrtoti
HELD OVf.Kll ru «»iurili)UtAAtn
"THE WORLD tIFS l i E WONG"
Color
1TARTI Sl'XDAYABB lrmti>
-GIRL OF THE NIGHT"•COLLEGE CONFIDENTIAL
EC-CAB HEATER*
M A J E S T I C1/ A 6 - 5 5 2 9
•3AAKRL4GE GQ ROUND"
WKI.R1
TOIiU IHKL TrE-
\ll t mmu^-opr-Colnr .Slt"»
Thr M.^i OfMnblf t lnnun m
TUMII iud tht t'.itini to lii'.i
Jin! CiH HI TTKKHK11) '•
' in John O'Hirt'v
"BUTTERFIELD 8"- Plui -
jLllr lll>»uii - ||u»u ^ullln'
"THE OPPOSITE SEX"
ISELIN"GOLIATH ANITHE NASON"
THLKSDAY AND FRIDAY
AIM'THE NEAILESS
GHOST"SATURDAY AND 81WPAY EVENINGS
ALSO MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, JAN. M THRU FEB. I
Tht Dnuutlc Trtanpfa <A (he Yeu!!WUlluii H«Ucn K«»n in
"VS. WORLD Of SUZIE WONG"
FORDSPLAYHOUSE
HI :-«Ui
TODAY THRl Tl'tSDAY'JAN. 26-31i
"WORLD OFSLZ1K WONG"
With Willum Huldrn.Nancy K«an
Ou|,JOINS rut
SATtBDAY MATINEE
"FRANCIS JOINSTHE WACS"
"OUR GANG" ui^TMREE ST006ES"
WEDNESDAY. KElTT
"Hiigariai Skiw>f
W(X)DBRIDOE PUBLISHING CO18 GREEN STREETWOODBRIDGE, N J.
n Enclosed please find $4.00 for one-yearsubscription to:
••-] INDEPENDENT-LEADER- CARTERET PRESS
n EDISON TOWNSHIP-FX3RDS BEACON
To be sent to'
NA&fE
ADDRESS
TOWN
Enjoy an EveningAt
SwallickTavern, Inc.
Corner WUU*m A New StrwU
WOODBRIDGE
• Beer• Wine• Liquor• Sandwich rv
"Betty and Joe" — Phone ME 4-M3I
Route 1 at thf Oretn St. Lircle — Iselin, N. J
YOU'RE PLANNING A• PARTY• BANQUET• SOCIAL FUNCTION
THEN PLAN IT IN OUR NEW ROOM
ir
IOR INFORMATION CALL ME 4-M»l
Milage InnBar & Restauranl
2 Green Street(Ciner Rafcway
WOODBRIDGE
Breaktasi - Lunch - pinnerrrom 9:00 A, M. to 12:45 A. M.
Specializing in
Authentic NeapolitanServed DaUy Fnnn 11:30 A. M.
Sunday From t P. M. \
• Home Made Spaghetti.• Lasagna - Ravioli
• Pizza Pies' HOT OR C*»i"
' . , • Sandw'f
T o E*t on Premiiet or to Take Out
Phone ME 4-2244
NEWS
From AD
the Community
Exclusive
and
Exclusively
Independent-Leader Carteret PressEdison Township and Fords Beacon
A Newspaper Dedicated to the BestInterests of the Residents of the
Communities We Serve.
•s. Brownads Girl
bout Unit— The an-
i s Dinner for theT o w n s h i p Girl
Council wns held Mon-i The Pines, Edison, with.
Merman Steinbeck, a:
tr president of the localjinstalling the following!
,v officers:Jiii-k Broun, president;!
.lames Rofjers, first viceml: Mrs. Donald Dibble,
hri vice president; Mrs.Butler, third vice presi-
\!:s. Valdo Martelli, re-i secretary: Mrs. Williamm. corresponding secre-\irs. Jules Flcmmlng,
lurer..lark Brown In^oduced
members of the
Frank Lamallno, Mrs.DK'kMin. Mrs. Frank
Mr.- ,) W Farrell. Mrs.Petty, Mrs. EmanuelMrs. Steven Mohary,
:•« Busch, Mrs. Clyde A.or tl Jr., Mrs Anthony
i h;a Mrs, I! A. Peterwn.|M-- Riirney Dlxon.r'.tirnte.s of appreciation
• •••lilted to Mrs. GrantMrs. John Poll, Mrs.
•.IIIM'II, Mrs Fred Oas->::<1 Mrs. Norman Kilby.
,'ioi;ram featured Mm.'Willis, soloist, accom-•)v Morton Newbi'rxer.
; jin show put on bv 'heil''l)iciin(! the fnMii1 us
!!>• 1920s to the present.ISII included the chunue
if the Girl Scout Ui>i-: 'lie past 40 years, con-
(I Contract
Hungarian Church
Marks Youth SundayWOODBRIDGE—Y6uth Sun-
day will be observed Sundayduring the 10:00 church serviceat the Evangelical and Re-formed Church. School Street.Nan K. Egry will deliver thesermon, "A Challenge for Every-day".
Others participating will be:Richard Hacker. Phillip Oyencs,Donna Szoke, Patricia Bslog,Carol Nagy, Robert Dorko, Vir-ginia Kodllla, Alex Pocheck andWilliam Pastor.
The Youth Choir will offer,'Count Your MHny Blessings"and "Into My Heart".
Charter TalkSet Monday
WOODBRIDGE - All inter-ested in learning more about
] a proposed Charter Study for[WoodbrldRe Township are In-Ivlted to attend a meeting Mon-day at School 11. Ross Street,
{called by the newly-formed•|Woodbrtdge Township CitizensCommittee for Charter Study.
The committee is non-par-itUan and it only Interested Insecuring a Charter Study forWoodbrldge Township. It innot backing any particularform of municipal government.
Proposed by-laws have beendrawn up by a special commit-tee and will be presented.1
There it a possibility that anominating committee will al-so be named.
The League of Women Votersland the Woodbrtdge TownshipB u s i n e s s and ProfessionalWomen's Club backed the ord-inal idea of a Charter Study,which the Town Committee haspromised will be on the Novem-
Tx-r ballot. The WoodbridgeTownship Citteerw Committeefor Charter Study Is an out-
growth of mertltiKS held by the(wo women's units. Tempoutry
are servlnij.
VIRIKO
Top DancerOn Program
WOODBRIDOE -
'Clean Walks'aw Urged
WOODBRIDGE - A recom-mendation of the WoodbridgeTraffic Safety Council, that/asidewalk-clearing ordinance beadopted, will be considered by!the Town Committee at its next'•aliens session, Mayor Adamssnid today.
David R. Rudnlck, chairmanof the Safety Council, advo-cated "immediate enactment ofordinance requiring all citizens!to remove snow and Ice from!sidewalks within a reasonable!time."
"The need for such an;ordinance", the report con-tinues, "was overwhelminglydemonstrated In the past monthwhen heavy snowfalls madeuncleared Sidewalks completelyunusable. Thousands of school;children, along with additional;thousands of adults were1
forced to walk on busy Countyroads. These roads, narrowed
^ T T J T l etHtlves from over y> Business destrians from cars that hud,and Professional Women's at best, minimum control, The
throughout the state, Council recognizesh
Clubs e state, ognizes that somemembers of Township theatri- hardship will be placed oncal groups, Woodbridge Hlghjsenior citizens in clearing side-,School students and represent walks in front of their homes.!tatlves of various Township1 It must, however, consider theorganizations have stgniflednreatest need of the greatest!their intentions of attending number. Woodbrldge is one ofithe second annual panel dis-ithe few communities which at!cusslon sponsored by the Wood-!present, does not have this vi-brtdge Township Business and tally needed ordinance"
7Z^\J ° t h e r ^ " n d a t i o n sp , . ! ! - . t h e council urged the erection
PAGE ELEVEN
( luh Saturday at Our ^ W a " f d ^Udj- of Mt. Carmrl parish hall. Magistral.-
of thr !!.«,*„.
Joseph Pusztai, diaries t r u s t e p s ;iill charter members; back row, William Almasi, secretary;
Tilth, presidrnt; James Kusko and Zigmund Tobak.
subject of theOpportunities
and TelevisionOne of the ncaker
B C o r e t a i m l -
Special Youth Final Hearing on Peak
School Budget Tonight
Steps TakenTo OrganizePTA at WHS
WOODBRIDGE - A me«tln?of the steering committee forthe proposed Pamits-TrachersA.SSIKiut.ion was held TuesdayHI. IlicWoodhridue High School.Mrs. Krhvarri McMnlimi, presl-<lnii. of the Middlesex Countycimiicil of PTA's conducted thei i n r r l i n i ! .
Di J o h n P. Lo7;O, pr incipal ,•.Hid Miss Connolly, vice p r i n -cipal or W o o r i b r i d g e H i g h
,'•'•>! iiixil mid Mrs. Henry W e i -Iiiiiin, procedure and by- lawsjrliiiinnnn, and Mrs. Fred H a n -
r. b u d K c t and f inanceiniiin for the Middlesex
|Coiinly Council were all in a t -tendance.
The temporary officers ap-pointed were: Mrs. HaroldBoner, president; Mrs. MichaelTct.eseo, secretary: Mrs. HBT-olri Ii'Hotta. nominating com«mittre chairman; Mrs. ChrisChrLstensen, by-laws commit-
chairman; Mrs. WillardApplegate, membership chair-man; and Mrs. Sam Glngold,publicity.
The next meeting of thesteering committee will be heldMarch 2.
Service SundaWOODBRIDGE — "Into All
(The World" will be the message
ih TV, i p r e f * r a b l y a t t n e c o r n e r of!*'ven by Walter Kilby and- WOODBRIDGE - The finalito $138,861 or an increase of The question to be placed on'the Theater Main Street and Amboy Ave-]Heyna Rothweiler at the First h p a n n g s O n t h c i961-l9ti2 *7,-;S93,967 and debt service, $673,-,the ballot authorizes the Board
— AM old
hi .V!
Confab HeldP-v of Engineers is j
' :; t hS;0n Valuation• ->l,d today.• f- ' the miiyor said. WOODBRIDOE—The Board: -afivi- of the Corpa"? Assessors and Township Ai-nu It Intends to lorney Stewart M. Hutt con-i-iianncl at Sewaren ferrrd Vlftl "Ttflp MtddHWt
v. fiom Public Sen1- County Board of Taxation yes->itih to Shell Oil and terdajr'in an effort to come to' know where it can an agreement on assessed vaJ-Mlf ' ,ue of re« property »nd agKie-•"'•' Mud hi- was sur- KHte true value.
1)1 mi; informed the. Tlie County listed the a.vwss-iii"st find a dumping ed value of real property at1 i waich revealed!**2.161,000 which wu« an eMi-
' ' ' mated figure. The ratio of a;;-•"• '»•• able to dump '»* wnient was KIVPII as 11.72•• dii't on the island;*""1" 'he Township has indl-
iu,(t there u a po*-jcat*d it is assessing at 15<;^mc tlie swamp!0? ' n e true value.
••'•'it of Walter Mer-i Realty Appraiaal Cflfftpany1 ("i Port Reading l la« stated that the true value•' '••• Shell Oil prop-1**? the Towiuhip Is $352.OOOiOOOiii»Mir slated. I while the County says the
|Towiuhlp aggregate true value,{subject to study, in $445,059,727.If the former figure i* used,
t , Mr. Hult said the Township•"iSDUry will save half <* million on
[County taxes. However, the at-•jtorney stated fit expecu pro-•|t««ta from the other copunun-
, ' ."" Am-ilUe& in the county wnlch would1 ' w to-ihave to absorb that
•nue; thc erection of slgns'presbytt'rian Church during 433 736.75 school budget-high-'840 75 or awill be "Speeders Lo.se Licenses" orjYouth Sunday this week. Call t,s t e v e r i n io c a l history—wUT051 10
Yuriko, dancer and choreogra- "Radar Control.- on Routes l.-to worship and .scriptumlesson b p h e l d t m i ( , n l a t 8'o'clock b yi Total salary increases. in-.forphrt. In 1951 Yuriko first ap- 35, 27, 9, Oak Tree Road, Rah- will be uiwn by William EllLsthf, B o a r d o f E d u c a t i o n uvduding the departments of at-'pearrd on Broadway in the role way Avenue, Inman Avenue.jand responsive reading by Rob- woodbrldgc Junior High School tendance, health services, pupiliof Eliza in the Uncle Tom's West Avenue and Woodbndge-jert Johnson. Bi)1.,.on A w n u c _ itransportation, plant operation,1
Bullii of -King mid I, She Carteret Road: the u.se of bill-; Virginia Schein will lead therrppated this role in the film boards to display safety meas-lLord's Prayer and Robert John-,version. In between, she toured ures; and a Safety Poster Con- son prayer of dedication Ush-Kurope as H modern dancer, test in the .school system. Sers will be members'"of theperformed on TV and Oil; s t r e e t B n d highway recom-iJunior High UPY.Broadway. 'mendatlons are as follows: | Sunday evening at 8:00 new
of $1,516,- to raise by special district taxJan additional sum of $1,475,000
be raised by Plant maintenance, food serv-taxation will be S6.086.524.75 ices, student body activities,
services, amouror 73.8% of the
In 1S58-1960 she appeared as!principal dimcer In
'S,
$123,861;will jtart in «n'ice, $431,855.75.At 7:00 tluv The proposed increase
1000;
1. To replace School l.Woodbuilt in 1876 and to ex-
$600,000;
To replace School 9, Pornd to
Salaries of some of the toppositions have increased as
3. To construct four addi-
State Likes'Woodbridge'
WOODBRIDOE - The his-toric name of Woodbridge willbe Riven to a new state institu-tion for mentally retardedchildren to be built next to theState Prison Farm in Avenel,It will be called the Wood-bridge State School. The De-partment of Institutions andAgencies chose the name.
The $13,154,458 school is tobe built mostly with funds from
tional chissrooms at School 16,Colonia 1 and to provide the
Us due in part to regular incre-automobiles cutting over from;Born in San Jose. Calif., Yu- fthe Inside bgk cmfwy shr ss
nko beKan to study dance at an the ouifcide fast laue toe n l a c e , Sh* wen* to Japan t u m . j W t h side ofHS a child to study under thetutelage of the famous dancer,Konaml ishii. she traveled allover the Orient in a companyheuded by Konaml. Returnl
The superintendents of the'ments of $153,055: adjustments j Supei-in tendentSchool win meet Tues-Sof $34,580; additional adjust- 10(). ^
Fellowship merits of $29,800 due to in - !t e n d e n t »
$15,Wolo'$\T,8M:'oneiaTsiZnt'|shower rooms ' to i le t facilities,facilities, fire
hearing- controls,. to $13,- *>««*superln-r1"
fay.
ass. sign Indicatingfor Garden State Park-|S y n u c l olike w i i r *« speaker, j total increase of $217,435.
•hoir rehearsal wiFriday at 8 P. M,
f r • . » » . ,$7,700 to $8,000;Senior choir rehearsal will bei.. Salaries of the present teach-'
will
frnh's ttitnestes
Other Recommendations
to thi-s country to study mod-' R o u t e ^"—Lightlnu;.•in danciin:. she toured with " I l d entrance sl^ns to be in-] AHie Doiothy iyndal! Dance,s t« l led a t T*0 Gl lJ' s f r o m H^'-'heldCiruiip at the aite of 17. After r l s o n Parking lot. Conslderable;until 6:30 P. M. in(he outbrenk of (he wiir she confusion caused by cars en-Hall under the sponsorship of Jcame to New York City to win t e r l n f ! a n d le«vi"8 lot without the White Church Guild,a scholarship at the Martha directional signs. Sign. "No _ • _Graham School. She became a u n T u n l " °n R o u t « 4 4 0 BO- .inembii of the Graham Modern inK E a s t a t Florida Grove Road. Storm limit's SomeDunce Company in 1945 and Le't turns are backing up traf-for tin' past ten seasons she f'« causing rear-end collisions.has appeared as a soloist with 'Standardize speed limit onihe group when not e r a s e d R °u t € M0- At present 35 MPHin Bioadway activities. She K°'"K ?ast; 45 MPH goingstill makes freojent guest ap- West.
IWBruiiCfs with thus company, Rout* 2~at Correja Avenue, d P p a i . t m o l l t h r i . r l a t l d o v e r
More recently she gave her No parking on either side of: t h e m mc.SStt,,,nist dauet eonceit. "Yuriko Correja Avenue from Bird
y l o u u lnSClUCtlOll COSt, m uu" S s t a f f o f 617 i " amount toduding salaries and expenses, b r i d se Junior High uses the
a recent increase in the statecigarette tax,
Lloyd B. Wescott, presidentof the institutions' board saidit decided on the new name tokeep the school from being as-sociated with the neighboringprison farm which is common-ly called the Rahway Reform-atory although it is located inWoodbridge Township.
Such names as Rahway StateWoodbridge Junior High at a|School and Middlesex State
School were discussed and dis-Total instruction cost, in-'cost ' o f $175,000. iNote: Wood-carded,
679
teach- amounts to $4,899,697.50 as fo™ei' Woodbrldge High Schooli John W. Tramburg, state in-compared to last year's budget;Bu''<*'llf; o n Barron Avenue,Istitutions commissioner, said
P u p "
Uptransportation
I Woodbridge, the major portion;of which was built in the early
cos tsJ 1900s. All the other Junior Highr __ _ c o s t s g
The total current expense ln; i , a v er increased"" $73 383 froraj
Scnools—Colonia, Iselin andthe proposed budget is $6.008,-|$35o 859 to $424 242 This in-!Pords—are in brand new build-i199.15 or an increase of $662,-,dud)-s n o t o n l y b u s ContractsiinBs)-835.85; capital outlay amounts;but cost of station wagons,! Proponents of the immedi-
('Mod-Town Praises1
WOODBRIDGE - MayorFrederick M. Adaiih andCommitteeman Charli.-, Mol-nar, head of the publir works
' i " i -
received,eh lh> y have
cominendifr
PRR RationConditionsHit
-jmaintenance, gasoline, tires andiate closing of School 1 urgetubes, repairs and garage rent.
Plant maintenance has de-creased from $219,331.96 last
I year to $163,585 in the proposedbudget.
' t 't h a t m m ^
, „• R ht r t laUl i f l P u r t h e r w u t o n » •"• expected•' P .B l W '™nven-win, the County Board befoiv
»'irlt this Weeklfin*! rteclslnn I. rparhnrt
WOODBRIDGE—Paul Ham-t h e |'M'h °f " l e Pennsylvania Rail-
estate department,!will meet with Bernard M.
throughout the muninpality. [Hartnett. Business Administra-"It's just the opposite of jtor, tomorrow to discuss the
Township on the eificient ! r o a c i l v a l
it removed snow
J f V Hosts atHospital Party
WOODBRIDGE — Mitchell
P ' , •|v.-.»:.
P f •• .(«•
M:
^ • ' J , ' M
weekifii^j decision la reached
'• '<»cal presiding PlfMF ON FIRE'"'«d the follow-1 AV1NEL - A gaso|lne pump''•«.ition: Danielat the Kraft Oa.s Station,"'id Mrs James Route 1 was knocked over by a
kl Urab. Jr., Mr.'tractor-trailer that was back-'l Tywoniw, atid'Hig up to the pump, Monday,d 'and caused the flump to catch
^Ire. The driver of the truckwus Jerouit I. Beiker, the
'Bronx.
Presents." at (he Phoenix The- Street to Route 27. Parked cars:Hire. New Yovk. Her current create blind spot for cars ep-\ man'ne"pluns Include another ^nodenvtering Correja Avenue fromdiince concert mid a possible Route 27. Correja Avenue from'Broadway revue. When not Bird Avenue to Oak Tree Road,!>u\v with her many dance and parkiiw on Both sides. Ouktheater activities, Yuriko man- Tree Road to LaGuardia Ave-nues a house on the East Sideline, parking on Iselln Theatreof Manhattan for her husband side only, and from Hardwareand two children. store driveway to LaGuardia
Other speakers will include Avenue, parking permitted.'the Broadway mid television I'Mian Avenu*- C o l o n i aKt«r. Pat Oarroll; Chris car-Shopping C e n t e r , Cm-binsroll, fiistini? director for Good-;P'aced at roadway with exit.soii.Todman Television Pro-and entrance designated. Cars / > „ „ „ „ „ , / fi,^lt' Corps plUvses and on staircases and Mis, Ruth Wheeler manager!duction.-.. and Edwin W. Casey, baoklim mto Inman Avenue, ' Mis, num wiu.uu, nmiid^i
Jr.. a native of Woodbridw.jcreatinB ™^f* traHte Seek* New Member*.^ ^ ^ ^ ^ f reql le l |uy;el l ter tamed t h e
who is supervisor of employ-jhazaid. Ample parking in ieai, , , , f ^ n D a T I i r . r , „ „ . „ „ „ . !i,us been critical of some,! ofidemonstration ol- haii-diming
last December," the mayor jconditiun of railroad stations rjeKube, publicity jbhairman, forsaid, -when all we received jt»»d srounds in the Township, woodbrldge Memorial Post 715were complaints. This time j Mr Hai;tnett said lie will Jewish War Veterans aa-the public works depiirtment jUike Mr. Harnisch on a tour of nOunced the hospital party heldwas workhw under a ww jstations. along with represent- ]ast
to takepency."
care of ihe
at the Menlo Park.system and they were reared latives of the Board of Hcarjlli'piagnostic Center wat a sue-
and the Police Department. ,. cess. The 1960 World SeriesThere have been .many cor|- baseball films and ihe 1959
plaints of the unsightly condi-Giant's f o o t b a l l film werein the stations, under- shown to the boys.
staircases and Miss Ruth Wheeler manage,!lack of light-of thc Chantrey Beailty Saloi,
that the children be absorbedin other schools in Septembereven if it means increaseddouble sessions until a newschool is constructed. Parentsof students in School 11, whereSchool 1 pupils would logicallybe transferred. arc opposed toit because it would mean theirchildren will go on double ses-ision at least for another year'However, parenLs of School 1pupils call the. building a firehazard and considering the factthat the building is 85 yearsold they appear to have a le-gitimate complaint. The Boardof Education plans to useSchool 1 for an administrativebuilding.
Voters of the Township will]have an opportunity to castjtheir ballots for or against the
«irldl with
DESCRIPTIONS
fSTtf
What[Do Best
' •
IIU. 10
only ONEThere is
only oneWELCOME
WAGON
90 y««r» of tipenencefott«rin| good will inbuuiwM and communitylift.
For Information on
Welcome Wagon In
» COLONIA
• AVENEL
• ISEUJN
CAU
ME4-8355
is supervisor of mplyinent at National Broadcasting!0' shopping area available.Company. , '
Miss Carroll appeared lastweek in the new Jackie Gleasonshow. "Iii the t'icture." Sheluib appeared with such head-liners as Jimmy Durantie. Jack!Paar, George Gobel. |DennlsiDay, Maurice Chevalier. Perry1
Robot Aids TotsTo Read Well
WOODBRIDGE — The Bar-rotiaiies Drum and Bugle,Corps, directed by Thomas J.Meehnn, and sponsored byVFW-Post 4410 are M>w prac-ticing for the coming ye.nr with
these conditions.A letter was received last
and liairstyling.
nlexpifctations ofin many contests
participatingami parades.
Mr. Meehan announced tht're
ttmio, Buddy Hacket, Jeanle|,nechaniCal "teaching" maCarson. Paulette Goddurd and chines, schools daily find there
y Olsen. At present she ls,ls n 0 subtitute for the resource-United, fU) teacher.
At least that Is the opinionof Mrs. Frieda Barhash, School]
two
COliONIA — In this age of me openings ut the present
for the(States Steel Hour.
Mr." Carroll lias worked
Oabor, Hermlone Gingold. Heluts (Inline of "Play YourHunch," seen over NBC at10:30 A. M. Monday throughFriday.
Mr. Casey's responsibility,employment-wise, includes re-nuitment and placement at all!levels at NBCand creative.
-administrative
the program as It Is an annualfree service U) the community'on the part of BPW.
NEW MEETING DATE
Buchanan, president of SchoolP2 PTA, announced the mpet-
chiefly for Jack Paw, booking 22, who used two discardedsuch attractions an Alexander cardboard cartons, a tin can,KIUK. ELsa Maxwell.. Zsa Zsa some* old reels, a battery, bulb,
and a length of hose to make asplendid robot.
Children who make dailyreading gains become therobot of the day" and are
privileged to don-the aluminumblinking contrivance.
They "warm-up" (or their'motorized" role as robotsthrough flash card drills by
time for boys and girls tp playbugles or drums. Anyone inter-ested in joining may report tothe VPW Hall, Pearl Streetany Tuesday,,from 7 until 9'.M. or on Thursday from 6:30ntil 7:30 PJM.
mere will be no charge for|whlch they phonetically learnto sound words isolated from
their reading texts. Those ableto read a full set of 30 wordsselected from the firSt gradetext vocabulary join the groupof readers entitled to read
COLONIA - Mr». James within the bulto flashing'mechanical man."
Robot champions to date areing postponed last week'due to Donna Weiss, Oeorgere Novak,the snow storm, will be held Vincent Mitchell, Thomas Me-J'ebruary lAThe 8chool Board Donald, Nancy Lambert, Bar-}budget will Be discussed. bar» 6omlo, and Maro Oeitter
?ARD PARTY 8LATKDWOODBRIDGE-The Wood-
iridge Township Education As-ioclation Will hold a card partyn School 11 auditorium, Feb-uary 3, at 8 P. M. Mrs. Mar-uerite Haborak is generalhairmwi.
PETE'SDINER
Now Open24 Hours a Day1239 Roosevelt Avtnue
WKST CAKTKKK'I
wuek from Mi's Mildred Slier-wood, complaining of condi-tions at Avenel. She paid thestair treads are broken, and
Members attending were Mar-tin $taum, Jack Pank, MurrayFreidnian, Mr. Dezube,mour Mermelstein. H a r o l dBerkowitz, Ed Bollens and Mr.
he hoped ground can be brokenbefore the end of 1961. TheState has a waiting list of some750 children for instiutionshelping mentally retarded.
Girl Scout Leaders
Elect New Officers
FORDS — Neighborhood 1Girl Scout Leaders held its reg-ular meeting at the Wood-bridge Council and the follow*ing officers were elected:
Mrs. Walter Holub, neighbor-hood chairman; Mrs. CliffordDunham, corresponding secre-ary; Mrs. Helen Amaczl, sec-
retary; Mrs. Lorraine Smink,treasurer; Mrs. Dunham, coun-cil chairman, and Mrs. WorthLauritam, council chairman.
Plans were 'discussed for abazaar sometime in Marchwith all troops represented anda Mother-Daugfiter dinner inJune.
Refreshments were served.Hostesses were Mrs. DorothyYuhasz and Mrs. Amaczi. Mrs.
furnish the darkhorse prize for the next meet-ing and the hostesses then will
and
broken fllass and debris is scat-;and Mils. Benjamin Efuhshine.tered. She also wrote there was The p r o g r a m 'originallyno lighting when she alighted planned for the January meet-from H train at night, and hadjing which was postponed will"to feel her way down the.steps."
be given at the February.social meeting.
March of Dimes WorkersCommended by Fennelly
COLONIA — At a recentmeeting of the March of Dimes,Joseph Feijtielly, director, ax-
T h e Saturday aiternoonmovies for chiUren pfoved tpbe a successful venture,
pressed his appreciation lor!ting •64.08. Special praise wasthe cooperation .given'him in.,the fund campaign.
Mrs. Thomas Doherty andMrs. Frank Filippone werethanked in particular for their'marvelous organisational abilt.v" in betting up the Mother^
March tor January 31. between,7 unit « P.M.
(it equal importance, he said,rt! the efforts put forth by
ihe youngsters in the teenageprogram, under the leadership
by Diane Gambo, Car-ol Mallas, Cathy and MaryManser, Edith Yorke, Cathybediak, and Uiida Kugel, 1
given Mr. ftnd Mrs. John Pavukfor their assistance, andRaymond Freeman for operating the equipment .
Mr. Fennelly lauded the un-selfish behavior of a little boyAndrew Flelsher, 196 JeffreyRoad, who went out on his ownand solicited funds" door todoor.
SMOKERS
COLONIA — Seventy cartons
of Education election February14 from 2 to 9 P. M, at all the
th»lbe Mrs. Irene AndersenMrs. M. M. Maloney.
Woody Woodbridge
of Miss Andrea Pavuk. She was of cigarets and two inexpensivewrist watches were stolen fromthe Post Store sometime overthe week-end. Owners valuedthe merchandise at $210.
Sure, I'm gonna vote "YES" for more school
buildings. I'm voting "YES" for the whole
school budget!
3n&rjjetti>mi
Cljr £ bison (Eafansiup-
(Tin (Dtrtrrct
Charlw tEditor »nd
11-3* (,r.-n-n Vrwt Ml 4-1111JefftJ
Tit tintnt f-e« rjs.iiV* »«*»JMl Jti»«T» : V'-nijt BJ l-5«*t
1V00DBKIDGE Pt BUSHING C0MPAN1Charlej E Grr<»t7, President
Uwrtnct F. Campton,Vic* Prwldrnt »n« Treasurer <
By cirrtT l r m t i p« »W
one tai. HM. ui tMmth., CH; tbrc* Btitki.IIJJ, tin|l« te^iti Uj nul 1} ccali. Ill ftnkkta tdrutt.
Before election time, we will hawmuch more to say about the Board of jEducation budget. It is a most inter-;esting document, and we hope it willbe widely read — that an informedjudgment will be passed upon it, inview of all the circumstances, before ftvote is decided.
INAUCHJRATION BALL
Things to Remember
The Board of Education budget for
1961-1962, which rr.un stand the test
of public approval next month, is a
•" breath-taking document both from
- the .standpoint of size and from the
realization it brings of the enormity
of the public's responsibility for edu-
cation. In addition, it is superb from
the standpoint of the care with which
it has been prepared, and from its re-
fusal to obscure any of the facts with
which we must cope as a community.
Gone - forever, we hope —are the
budgets which were misleading and
••. unrealistic as to the needs of our local
educational system. In this budget, all
' pertinent details are specified frankly
and completely—with no apparent ef-
fort being made to be adroit or decep-
tive in order to entice voter sanction.
• • Here are the plain, unvarnished facts
of life which —in our opinion —we
either must face candidly or surrender
to in total forfeiture of the obligations
which rest upon us. We are opposed—
. _. as- always—to even the slightest ges-
ture toward surrender.
The residents of Woodbridge Town-ship—at least those who were not alert—approved by their silence, the un-restricted growth of the community.They refused to see—even though ournewspaper tried its level best to warnthem regularly of the consequences—what the problems of too much growthtoo fast, might be. A majority of them,obviously, wanted size more than itwanted controlled order ar.d it wantedmore to loojc at the television than itwanted" to consider the future.
Well, the future Is here—and so is a$7,500,000 Board of Education budget.We have new schools—and we havethe debt service to meet far construct-ing them. We have teachers and jani-tors and light, heat and power—andwe must pay for them. We have books
' and landscaping and appurtenances topurchase—but, we didn't give'taughtto these needs when we refrained homelooking at the Westerns while childrenwere getting ready to become pupilsand represented a significant expensewhich was ahead.
. For Woodbridge Township's indif-ference fo uncontrolled growth, then,
11 It now must foot) the bill. It is an over-
i; whelming one but we cannot imagineretreating from it. We have just com-pleted spendingi $8,000,000 for newclassrooms, but what would these beworth to our children without com-petent and enthusiastic teachers? TheBoard of Education has sought toanswer this question, in our judgment,with discretion and a complete senseof responsibility. It hag kept Its. word
I on an increment schedule and |>n its[ pleage to correct inequities, in trie In-
treased teacher wages it proposes. Itsproposal should be affirmed, if ourschool system really is to reach theultimate in its return from the invest-ment jre na»c made in it.
E"!ckc pnd mortar do not provide an,:c*''"•; Instruction does. We have
-<*'--' 1 the need for schools, but.• i: -v the emphasis should be
»!aced upon those who vril] teach inthese schools, and to place our reliancein them for making the highest useif the facilities we already have pro-, ided.
Challenge to the Mayor
We hope very much that MajorAdams will call immediately a meetingof representatives of all those Inter-ested, in the plight of a small localindustry beset with many difficuIUeinot of its own making, at once. Mr.Adams' leadership can be asserted—and should,be—to fairly protect thewelfare of all.
The reference, of course, is to theTyson Company's zoning problems.Apparently the major interest, at themoment, is whether CommltUemanHughes or Committeeman Jacks canget the most political mileage out ofa situation which the Township had,officially, a major share, in creating.It is most unbecoming to both.
A bi-partisan agreement on settle-ment should be reached immediately,and Mr. Adams as the community'sMayor, has an opportunity to assureequitable disposition of a disturbancewhich has been exaggerated by politi-cal interests, rather than on its merits.There have been so many indiscrimi-nate statements, so much official con-fusion and such close proximity to abreach of good faith in this matter,that only Mr. Adams' initiative can re-trieve -A-from a community disgrace.
We can only wish he will assert thisinitiative.
alttleri to tht
January 22. 1961:*j Augusta Sirect'•Yjodbndje. N. J-
\!: •C1-.1'.** G.tjory, Editor::.>•;••- ±?r.;-Leadex
= C-:«r. street
^ - * . * J
LVi.- M: oresory;:-:.*:*: iun are berc de-
- A -& on aJ level* «1 iove::i-T*- &ii w saj. our own mu-
. - 4 U : T Oi WoodbrdKe which;iV« a? - t*« or our school icd• -T- sudfeti is no exception to
- ?r<vtUin« ruleol nstm Ui W*
JerseyIndependents Points up
likelihood of CloseGubernatorial Race
V S on\tst money in rennins
••i ?uuiic fastead o!
Itx: a what John Q Guun^ s » d« when it cosU him^.T» to run his busiiie&i than
,r.e tales in. but here It hasore.-, a case of raising tiie-ceil-Xi whue tr.e Soo: hai not been• y:c.'.ti Our present Township
iyor and n:s Committee todjoa so they keep
jew* at '.he taxpayers';i?er.se So far a.? WoodbndjeLS cor.cerred this is the oppor-".ur.s :;xe w apply the « o -ncxic braies.
Towards that end the source:o whom vr.e taxpayer can ar.d
loot to Ljr-ien the ux._xease ;t. are ihe car.di-etecwd to t.s.e Towrahip
based on the as-sumpuon they are sacerei* ::;-iere$*»ed in the taxpayer pleafor efficiency ar.d economy ;n
ppiNCFrON-Renilu ot the At the same u.r,r.u J r t New Jemy PolT state- per cent; oMhe ««•wid, jurrey show that amom tered clKtfftte *lv,rank and file rttWmd Inde- lean ***** Ml.^ d - n u a c n * . the state, tho*e<rouihly 8J.000 of*ho lean toward* the OOP out- mated tmo million .'lumber by a martin of five per out next Novemberre-,l those who lean toward* late of the Mate1,™» Democratic Party. gubernatorial candid,"' of importance, too. U that ever they may be.today's «urrey finding show, The fofetoini fli.d•ha: nearly one out of every j,ive every indicaito:jive registered Independent* jtrft .fubernator ,•i;ked to »ay that at the pfes- likely to prove to (*•tr.'. "Hie they lean toward* squeaker In the sair.c *neither major political party. \U1 November's P
Earn registered adult citizen r»c« in the itate w»«. vwho clarified hlmaelf a« an n e d y took New in*-.Independent in the statewide ^ j ^ j votei from Mr •,study I U personally asked by $# narrow margina N'e* Jersey Poll trained staff tentha of one per c>•;reporter this follow-up ques-g m^-gin Of rou.-:
votei out of *n,--three-quarter mlllio:;
An interesting .-;:today's findings :<April, the state* j»:.'up ( u u followsApril 7. 1»M, Politic,line-wp tf Efttaterrd
Consider themelm n>lean Democratic
• At of today. 4» yoo leanmore to Uie Deinaeratlc w
I I
Under the CapitolBy J. Jiseph Grikbiis
Dome
* industries coounginto Lie are* cave gor.e to out-ly-ig nur.:c:?il;t:es. Tr.e trer.dJTJ; conim-e and *iU hitWood'andfe hard IT. yearsahead unless tie tow:.;...? for-
es aroad and weLi 'devised^ to proT.de exT.en>:ve areasuitable land v:\ivs. '.he
iov modern industrial
leao RetoblieanLean Uwarda neithrr
partyA companion of i.
' of last April With t:.
Brakes are Required onSpending Machine
TRENTON — Governor Rob- dizo,<rt B. Meyner wUl call the roll liarn£f DernocraUo GoTemorship and 1
„ ., , , candidates op yonder i t theOver the years, as power and sp«ed;tcuUve
of motor cars increased, the
Waddir.r.-:::.He belie-;s \zt
i f^ct? -. t.-.s
tive industry devised power brakes and to narrow the'iield.
other devices to control today's
mobiles.
I' Uw lax p*-:ure •&. O-JT toirei s permitted '.o worsen the road
"4T.-Xj G OP. > * l=ad to c;-.x d.sasw: .NoJ cczls.i :.-.eL- =ia:^: how c - ^ ^ : ^ we r.jyi»Tj i h s i i cr: pursue urun :*•£-.•• elo;rrr:.t
propaaa c: uy to eniM ia-d'lsur. which ** car.:.':: -.tr. a
.hijl": ra"-« oi uir- . :;; :he tr.ilfurther de'^r.oratijn
Deaccrv -
J sir. it \z*
s
Govemor to come to "Morren". TOM t i t; which hai wiaiessed many a'general *
CongTeS5 has not been as quick to 3at;ie once Lord Comwi^is 7. Her.«. -^e GCTC:?-:: r-ijand hii Redcoau aet the piace ca-ed Si:+rtV! =rr.-.sj »:
provide means of controlluig the Fed- ^ ^ ttam: .j^ -^^^ 0> year ln'Mcrwc M eip-i_- t * i-jd:ceral Governments wiidlv whirlingti"''• « bu a^o Titrated <* pew* * tie 3*=^c»-.x
many a tkipur't xzct that jnaarv txensz..spending machinery which, in contrast time.with budgets of less than $10 billion!. ^
in 1940, now turns out appropriations as foilowi: A>xacder. Bon-. . . , . . ,, . ;ampo, Conoery, COTJUL Car-
at an S30 bili:on-a-year rate. :Iia- r>marer., Eniithari p«.' Punnan, Grogan, GrOaii. Gal- wbo are ti."jj;i sjji vt'.-.i'ri
Uncle Sam's spending machine went iajher, Kerrick, Kefly, Ual< aiay get t*:-_r^ -jie w_—»: =into motion with submission Of the Metier, McMabor Patten. Ro- use ix the S - e = » : t.x^-President's annual budget message toCongress this week (January 16). Thiswill be followed by preparation andpassage of a dozen or more separate; -propriation bills by Congress and:.:eir eventual translation into law
^ S ^ ^ ^ S o« : w: a.o:d^ey ;.iv; *cn -t* G- ;T»~: : - -"?-<:-- •• •* CT.-^_". ..-.a: xar.y~P :.' Ne» Jersey «c^t --. 7 ^ ^ --•* ^-'- -• =ir.dHi -.:--„ • - ^ G - ^ — - - U i e c l ^ r ^ C L . ^ study
- i t«.-= ir.d w.c :-•• .- = -^ - .- - . . - ^ 4-.- s
V f ~ »'-> ^ - « .JSJCJ ' - - ^ u ^ a j i - D > 1 : L ? A J A K
to the Kepnblkan rart*?"T:.' sutewide remits:
Rfristered IndefeodrnlVoter* Only
I>an Uiwardi RepablkinParty <
Lean toward* DemocmtltParty
' I n n toward* neitherparty
•T» n u v : ifr of U>efa: fo-.«—muchly BT« p«r ••..r ••••JL\ tutt*ld« turnouX~<Kr.**T »1)o ID ailr-::. ttt.it ti« f»u of tii'.i y*s.btm-.ar.i: r»c« tn New Jttm
Last week's New Jersey Poll d*y ahowi that Demosi-.owed that 40 r« of the regU- a 3 per cent edge in <tered voters in the itate con- >n d • J-* P « cent •stdpr themselves Democrats; 'Statistically, dif>r-36"c, Republicans, and 241. tween a 2.8 per «:.•Independents. (These figures » 3 P « cent edge .,:are ba*ed on what people con- cally nefliflble.'sider themselves polltkally, not Worthy of particnecessarily on the way they are tion. howerer, Is :registered, i April, the number <?!
And when all those Inde- independents acrojpender.is who say they lean who say they lean t.towards one or the other of the ther political party h;*o ma;or parties are put In a substantial «8 ;•ttt poliUcal camp to which l i t leaned towarr;thev say they lean today, this party last April; o:.is the New Jersey Political cent lean towards n-;:Lir.e-up as of the present time, at the present V.nv
Statewide Political Iine-np . This is one of a s<-:(Rertetertd Voters Only) Jersey Poll measu:
Consider themseWea «rlean Democrat *9.1
Consider themselves orlean Republican 16.3
l-rta towards neitherparty 4.6Thus
ypolitical sentiment Vthem In this newsp:.;-
BXM,IT
^ *,;,.-« JUST PARAGRAPHS
MIDLAND. TEX-walked Into the j>r»
Ua than ten months of a restaurant her-e T Jersey's all-lmpor- manded three worn*:-
t a n t rJ'oematorial elettion— their purses and ]«•"
•— - : — • — '•--,.y*•""-- s;:r^.z> '.:•: all •.-.» as edges:•«*'.•: -_ A,:- . . . li>:4. •:• ::. ^ i . - . t . - j c l i : T.-.j rough-
'.ran Democraticthose who consider themselves dropped
with the President's signature. This inturn'will lead to the inevitable taxbills.
While the Washington scene may'seem remote from the New Jersey tax-payer, effects of its operation are verydirectly related to his pocketbook. This'cause and effect relationship is tracedin computations by the New JerseyTaxpayers Association showing that adollar of Federal igrants-in-aid coststaxpayers in New Jersey; that the cur-rent $80 billion-a-year Federal spend-ing' rate means S570 for every man.
Dinan and child in this state; thatFederal debt now stands at $285
billion and interest1 alone costs tewJersey taxpayers an estimated $400million per year. '
I
Alarmed over the upward course inthe nation's spending, advocates offiscal responsibility and economy ijiCongress naive now introduced pla4sfor making Federal spending ma-chinery more responsible to control.Introduced in the opening days oiCongress were measures to provide:
—that Federal expenditures andprospective revenues be Mept in bal-ance; -i i -1
—a constitutional amendment rela-tive to balancing the budget;
—systematic reduction of Federildebt;
—a. wide variety of debt reductionand retirement methods;
—a consolidated appropriation bill;
—a presidential power to veto singleitems in appropriation bills; 4
—a special congressional committeeto study the fiscal organisation andprocedures of Congress and a similargroup to investigate "subsidiM paidby the Federal Government."
:j~.»r 'fiZ.XL, — j
Know Your Representatives
Cttce
The Sest citizen is an acuv* ctlier.. ;ne ^ ^ _s 1^.-.and gc<s to the source to secure the best y.tsz'jt in-formation- The best represer.-.iUve is o-= ft: -:ccperit«with his constituents and a ready and M ^ ? ? ZC Z-KKMtheu1 views.
Herswi'Ji are the name* c: your reprei€Lu:.VM. KeepJI Mu:i with them.
0. S. CoigressSENATE
Senator Harriaon A. WU^A^IS. Jr., <D\Building, Washington. D. C. Honve—Wesiieid. "*
Senator CJIord P. Case P. . Senate O S « BwWashinjton 25, D. C. Hotne—345 E m Avenue. P^iwiy.
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Repreaentauve Peter Prelinghuysen. Jr.. >R •,iresaionaf District, Bouse Office Buildington 15,1 D. C. Home—Morriswwn.
I State Legislitiit' ST^TE SENATOR
John A. Lynch, New
7±. V- 3-- V-
.y^ i: 14. - .,-«i 1.: ~L Pt>; It On The Baiao
cc J1TJ,::;.- Hoi d«s ::.r. :£r.t Star:.j£, \ii21i :tat* -.:r.g j>—Th? Ides ori'.i: :iiZti Tai»< Are t'por. Yot:1'1
U4 Siit«. —r>".ro:: News
.-r-.c JOLT. :
l i c j . Ai 0i I*%c .i\:r 21
"*»; Thaf» That! 'c:"**" S.n: _-: i ' .«.; «at£ repar-
1>>tI 'So z:'::* torit lak s '-r.t;.'•**>'- i j i^r. -J '•:.': 1 coir.'-—J Oilint the OwBfrt***i- ••"iTrji: do y-jj fir.d :..e nr.os;
Wii..^-.j-
Tiejf ^ l . d
OF ASSEMBLYNorman Tanzman, Wpodbridge
J. Edward Crabiel, MilltovnJoatph Dor«r.,
Complete Brokerage Service
• Stocks «Commodities <MonthlT BuUetin Sent On Written
T. L. Watson & Co.MONROB A. WE1ANT, Resident Partner
Founded 1832 - TeL HI 1-2650Member Nrw fork and American Stack E"'1'
PERTH AMBOY NATIONAL BANK BUILAt th« S Corneni P O T H AMBOT. > <
Ne« !if Closei
Kari B. aletafeT, President Rut«enBnmSTlck.
titan* L. Burton, Jr, 19 A^ate Road. Lairrenc« Broo*VUlate, New Bninswkt.
Bdythe 8. McAndrews, Kev Bnuuwiek.Joaeph R. Costa, 133 Hillcrest Avenue. Edison."Thomas H. Lee, 140 From Street, South Plaaifield.Qtont OUawakl 541 Kennedy Sticet, Perth Amboy.William J. Warren. 875 Main Street, Fords.
WMftrMgi TmsUp CiMriltei! MAYOR-Frederkk M. Adams, Colonia
FIRST WABD—Charles Uolnar, WoodbridieUaynard Winston. Woodbridge
SECOND WARD-^oseph Neffiyo, Fords 'I^on BJaadmrd, Foxd»
THIRD WARJ>—Bob£n Jfjka, AraqclJohn BnOfe,
FOURTH WARD-ThomaaJ. Cottello.Dartd Moota. laeBn
FIFTH WABD-John Kvaito. Ookmlai J Darid T. llfflcr, Colonla.
fiuunt
squads, t(5. o'.'iiii reicu=j sttuadt. 24. 1
|| Tie ccimnpior. 'J, oppotec|l to a proposal that ^:-xt*d* o.1
•ueh lamis.and ."a!f^« oe uxecthe State. I! -jer. a tai 'j,
x/tnt a'. 'Jrjt ir^rth-jser.ioes fjiar.ced throuii.
ajtngo and raiffc^ ctxUd no.;ora« $e ?
DOLLARS THAT COUNT!
eubaPmtdent of Boftjugh ComMfi—Walter Sullivan
COUMC&JOMThoraaa Milk . Walter SulliTanJohn Hntulck John muril laAknadcr Bueh Adam Bymbonki
TmtUp if l*maUYOR-^Apthooy U. Ttkncatci
Frciidint of CooneU-Ndl A. UeDooald
Frack J. TataaDr. WflUtm TothWalter H. Wood
W1H1»» P. AahtonB n u r d J. DwynWOtut N. UaneUi
TIIMilfffl I IBGOVHLNOlLSHIP - A =named SmiUi ejcployied a: tr.eState House vouid be pleased4 1 the approachtnt Oo.verr.or-ihij) eVction features a Smtir.Ti. Jatas cont*i-_
Smith has no siroci polnxaibackinx. chile J.un»» has thesupport oi many county chair-men and the thousands 0! vote*they control. But during theput ttven jears, Smiih, a co'.rleg* iraduaie, h u JOCWMIILI)qualified tn a number of com-petitive eml atryiee eiamma-tiocs for well psymg potmoostn the State Oovenunent. In(act, tckne of his friends bjeUcvehe can easily pas* any eiami-naUoj| on any subject.
Therefore, Smith rat a guu-mkk vhieh he U Rue wouitf© a l e him the next Oorernotof New Jersey, H« would abol-ish tubernatorial eiectlohs andaubftltuU a sutevlde ctvllterrice examination for Gov-ernor every four years to tut(everybody a chance to beGore/nor
CWME:— Aimed at g»n*»Wr»aotl rftctetwrs vho persistent-ly hkk behind the shield of theSUtc't fifth amendment lavi.a bill li before the UcUlatureto permit evidence to be ob-tained (ran a wttnest. by court
iContinued on P»«< !»•
INTEREST! Pal* On1 SAVINGSUCOUNIS
passboobanli-
^<^O.»__
WoodbridgeNational Bank)
uur Ne*.r Ne*. Buiiduy. Corner Muore AV f n u ,an<J Berry street. Opp To»n HallOPP To»n Hall
Inaaravat
livic Clubakes Plansor Season• l i m i t
Plans to piny ftnrole In communityis yiir 'Ti'f nn-
,d by
lv
tlir ColiinlH ClvlvClub when It met
for instnlliitlon of of-
,i, w officers nnv Josephpiesident; Donald Hulbs-
president;, i , ireii.surn-: Nicholas J.
l|l;,,v;,, recording secretary:1'iirdls. corresponding
,ri;iiv. mid Bernard Mc-v lio.ud of directors chnir-
I['Ivor lifts appointed the;
as follows: |Sfcrnizza and Cal Don-
|lr publicity: George Esposi-uuviciice Oliver, and
liiid Hanlon. membership;HalbsKiit, civic Improve-
|I,I chairman: and Te»sleuood cheer
[information regarding civicwill br included in the1
oimiinlltc", to be sent to alllirrs., ml event of the year will
i!n> 25th anniversary dinner1
I,,,.' .lime 24. with Mr. Sfer-,:i us chairman.
Valentin*1 Donee Isfor February 11.
4—
Little FellowsDance Success
PAGE THIRTEEN
CHAPLAINDONAU) 1\ KF1.I.Y
Navy ChaplainTo Speak Sunday
COLONIA - The highlightof the new year of the St. JohnVlanney Holy Name Society willbe it« annual Communionbreakfast Sunday In Plalnfleld.
Andrew McClellan, chairman,reports 400 men are expected
- Success of the: uniual dance of the Littlei i•.'.>; iriKUe was announcedriiiuna.s Donoghue, presl'
More than 35d people.. rl in the tuiiPR Of Whitey
k s orchestra at the St. De-L us Community Center,V : • . • • • ( • ! .
|I.,-\iriice Friedland. Maaterj'•monies, who welcomed
presented new league.•' for the coming .senson.
IN! A lv elected officers areikinnKhue.'president; Law-
h'nedland. recording sec-
,o attend the function at whichthe featured speaker will beRev. Donald P. Kelly, CaptainU. S. NRvy.
Rev. Kelly Is a priest fromthe Archdiocese of Chicago,and has served with distinctionfor 20 years In the Navy Chap-lain Corps. While aboard the
ClubwomenTo SponsorJr. Student
r.SKLIN - ' A holiday party,di-lnyed ttue, to weather was,liiltl by the Woman's Club ofIselin in the Ieelln Library;nuildiiiK. Gifts were exchangednnd refreshments were pro-vided by the Cancer Dressing(iroup.
After the business mettlng,colored 35 mm. slides oftrip to St. ThomBH, Puerto'Rico, Haiti and Nassau wereshown by Mrs. Herbert B. Wll-lianis.
Mrs. Cecil Bliss, youth con-servation chairman, will con-tact Woodbridge High Schoolfor a Junior student to attendthe Citizenship Institute for,Girls June 19-23 at DOUR lass1
College. The club has sponsoreda girl for many years.
Mrs. Williams represented.he club at Federated meetingsin Carteret, Plalnfleld andRahway and has accepted in-vitations to Colonla, Csanfordand Roselle clubs.
Members will attend Club-woman's Day in Newark onMarch 9 and the Sixth DistrictMusic Festival in Woodbridge,April
helin First Aid SquadInstalls New Officers
— The annual in-filiation dinner dance of theI s e l l n F 1 «t Aid Squad was heldIn the Auth Avenue FirehnusW l t h P o l l M C h l p f J o h n R- E g ( i
!a8 m n s t ef of ceremonies. 8an* „ , ,„ , v\torA Edwards, chaplain,
— Francis Wukovetsithe invocationof Woodbrid B d | J l
apt Vntiniv
Francis W k t i
a meeting
Bnziinr.hanked
TO DISCUSS CHARTER STUDY: Mayor Uo P. Carlln,Newark, will be runt speaker at a meeting of the Iselin
Democratic Club tomorrow at V.F W, Hall
Iselin Democratic ClubTo Present Mayor Carlin
28. The "Ha-ha" fund'Un,is won by Mn. Clancy.Qlfts from the club werei
ISELIN—Mayor Leo P. Car-Newark, will address the
Democratic Club tomor-row night at the VPW Hall,
Route 27 at 8 P.M., on "Char-
carrier, U8S Independence . ini s e c r e t a l 'y ' ftn<1 M r s-World War II, he participated!0™*"11- t r e f t s u r e r-
presented to Mrs. Williams,president: Mrs. John Cwtekalo,recording secretary; M r s M Study." _Ralph Ambrose, corresponding; In 1953, Mayor Carlln Jed a
Colonia PackPresents Awards
in engagements at MarcusIsland. Wake Island, Bougain-ville, Tarawa and Saipan-Tlnl-aii. Other tours of duty havebeen with the Marines, CoastGuard and varied staff as-signments. His present duty IsDistrict Chaplain. Fourth NavalDistrict, Philadelphia.
The toastmaster will be Jame«|Brunswlck_Sullivan. New officers of the;society will be Installed by Rev.jCONTEST BEGUNWalter A. Radzlwon, pastor and' COLONIA—John Abbamonte
Spencer:succegSfu) fight, for a change
In Newark's form of govern-
the Perth Amboy General Hos-
ment and In the following year,was elected by an overwhelm-ing majority as Newark's first1
with Mrs. Michael AssmanVspoke onthe proposedreplace"Den 7 openin* the ceremonies,
Mrs. Williams reported the[jcancer dressing group meetseach Wednesday afternoon at 1In the library and Is In needof white material. She recently _delivered 1,022 square pads to Council form of government.'Roger White, Frank Cook, Ste-
Rnsettl, four of thein the Board of.vere guest speakers.
Mrs. James Teufel, ways andmeans chairman, reported the
"cretar,; R o b e r tGreene, treasurer; Edward Bar-rett, captain; Paul Kvalkaus^
was successfulall who helped
andher.
PartenopeAgain HeadsHeart Drive
COU)NIA A veteran HeartFund rampnign leader who hasdone research In heart diseasebends the fund drive ngaln inthis community.
For tlir fifth consecutiveyear. Dr. Edward E. Partenopp,;>:(3 Middlesex Avenue. Is lead-inn the campaign. At presenthe is treasurer of the. Middle-sex and Union County Heartnnd is a member of the boardof trustees of both the Middle-sex and Unlo nCounty HeartAssociations. He is being Assist-ed In the organization of the
kas,' assistant oaptatrij"Charles1 ASSUMES OFFICE: Oscar E. I™1""1"!! " d d Kr0UP b y h l s
She announced that tomorrow,a puppet show will be held for)he school children. To be pre-?ented are "Brave Little Tailor"and "Noah's Ark." The sixthgrade children will participatein the show.
Mrs. Daniel O'Brien member-ship chairman announced thatthe PTA now has 449 members,
The first of a series of Par-ent-Education meetings washeld -yesterday. The subject fordiscussion was "Alms, Objec-tives, and Curriculum for Grade1." Donald Whitaker, principal,led the discussion. Mrs. AlexKettler, chairman of parenteducation was in charge.
Mrs. Carl Luna, library chair-COLONIA — Awante were[m&n. reported that the book
fair was successful.Mr. Whitaker gave a brief re-
jport on the school budget and
Raymond West, second lleuten- _ , ,ant; Charles Carew. Lawrence! C o l l l n l a 'Pearson, John Schneider, trus-tees; Sanford Edwards, Chap-!lain and Robert McSweeney,sergeant-at-arms. Francis Na-gel, president of the 14th Dis-trict of the New Jersey FirstAid Council gave the oath of
[office and presented the badges.Captain Barrett Installed ca-
det officers as follows: WayneRegenye, captain; Robert Selp,assistant captain; Victor Allan,first lieutenant and Gary Craft,second lieutenant.
A dinner wa« served and
presented to members of CubPack 46 this week at School 17,
Hearts."Ronald Nler, Arthur Oross-
kopf and John Schneider werethe hospitality committee,
Receiving the Bob Cat a-ment of Schools 1 and 9. Heurged all to vote at the Boardof Education election and asked— _ . — — . _ i j • o i lul "WUWKWH enxHun ana usicea
mayor under the new Mayor- * a r d 8 were ™»»»M_ °a l m e r- |that all "think about the value
pital. The next lot will go to !a second term.In 1958, he was re-elected for van Levlnleki, Gary Mayle,
:harles Slanocek, Thomas Witt,the cancer society in ^New! Mayor" Cailln showed leader-and Richard Morrison; Wolf
ahip at an early age and wa» badge, Robert Cuzzolino; Bear
spiritual director
elected president of TeamstersLocal 478 at the age of 25. Hehas been a member of the State
;and Herbert Bergman, ownersjLeK'*tlatulc a n d n a s «erved theEdward Kfhler. cone- The new officers are Thomasjof the Liggett Drug Store in thelB o* r d o f Education of Newark
hn- secretary; Al U'hmnn. c. McCann. Jr., president; Eu-jColorta Shopping Plaw, havelDOttl M president and vice pies-• iii'i: C a l v i n Donnelly, g e n e w. Hel.w. first vice presi- opened their annual Rexall' ldent- I n 1957. he was named
manager; and George|dent; Andrew S. Horvath. sec-'Boys' and OlrU' Contest at th*!"New J e r s e v Business States-(icorgc Oi'tz, and Karl;Ond vice president; George T.kore. Any boy or girl 16 or un- n u m o f °^ Year-"
, 3 Warwick Place,was elected vice
president of the Ceramic As-sociation of New Jersey, rep-resenting the executive andtechnical personnel of .thevarious ceramic induitrieg InNew J e r s e y and near-bystates, Friday at PrincetonInn,
Mr. Mathiaaen Is presidentof Federal Seabord TerraCotta Corporation, Perth Am-boy, He Is a member of theAmerican Ceramic. Society
enjoyed with music by "Thei arid American ManagementAssociation and also thePerth Amboy Rotary Cluband Scandinavian American
Society.
Julie D. Kollak BrideOf Richard J. Mensel
education andthen vote for the budget." Hediscussed the bus problems andrequested parents Instruct chil-dren on bus discipline, Anychild who misbehaves on buswill have to walk, he said. He|Kallok and Richard J. Mensel
ill, trustees.> between the;md fifteen may reKisU'rjand James Breiinan, marshall' bicycle and a girl's "bicycle",',• M-s'-ion at the Colonla jImprovement Club, In-j
Evans, corresponding secretary: der is eligible to enter and the W l t n t h e election of Mayorol Charles P. Riuclano. trensurer; Grand Prize* will be a boy's Carlln In 1954, Newark em-
\ barked on a new era. Both bus-iness and labor leaders ralliedaround the mayor and, through
badge. Jack Berman; lionbadges to Jeffrey Durlk, JohnPlva, James Boyle, Wllllamlstated the lunchroom is over-Stulz; 50th anniversary awards J crowded and announced onlyto John Pazuk, Kenneth Me- children being transported byDonough, and Richard Chak-bus may use its privileges. Herin; Weblo badge to Edward said he was sorry that the gleeSuliga; year pins to Michael,club could not present a pro-Blacker, Robert aadusk, Jef-|gram in December, but would
ISELIN — At a double ringceremony in the UkrainianCatholic Church of the As-sumption, Perth Amboy, Sat-urday afternoon'Miss Julie D.i.
Meeting SlatedBy Sisterhood
ISELIN — Due to the unfav-were united in marriage by arable weather conditions, Sis-Rev. Pedor Fedasiuk. jterhood of Congregation Beth
Escorted to the altar by her | 8 h o l o m o f I s e l i n •h a s P°stP°n-father, the bride wore a g o J ^ I ^ S busine5s meetlng
I S E U N - At a dinner meet-
. roistering for the firstHUM bring1 a birth cer-
itf. The eight to twelve!"U i comprises the major
hri mu;.)r leagues, and the 13 - . . , „ . ,
a... group operates as the mt ol t n e I l l e l l n U o n 8 c l u b a l ,: ciivLSKin. , Howard Johnum RcasUurant,
.. league's next meeting Route 1, Woodbridge, sight
| l ,. Kfbniary 6. conservation wa» the subject of
dUcusslon.
Frahk Pardun and son, of
Hold DiscussionOrt 'Sight Conservation'
Iselin LeagueInducts Slate
frey Gruttz, David Jones, Rob-ert Damskl, Timothy Deuer-llng and Vinuent SIhmldt; Goldand sliver arrows to Ken Otte,William Stulz, and Ronald Eig.
his initiative and drive, for aj Skite wer« presented by Mrs,•New Newark," he became the|E. Zabarowskl's Den 6 and Mrs.l
John Wohltman's Den i, fea-turing South America.
Brad Monell, counsellor, in-spected the boys who were In1
leader in the rebirth of a city.The confidence business has Inthe mayor Is evidenced by theirwillingness to invest huge 'sumsof money in building ofNewark," .
The subject of charter study Tentative plaHa were madeThe subject of charter studyis one of great importance to,[°j;
jibrary PlaasBenefit Movie,IN
Woodbridge Townshipquestion is expected
I8ELIN — The annual in-' t n e November ballot,
Middlesex Coujity Blind Asso- s l a l l a t i on dinner for the Iselin'
elation were truest Speakers. B o y s ^ " K W was held in 8tan-;
Dr. Roland H. Ahaul. South > y j 8 Restaurant. Route 1, Sat-'
dlwrribtd camps
the' t a k e
Vthe
Blue-Gold dinnerin February.
try to have a program ready inthe Spring.
A executive board meeting isset for February 16 at 8 P. M. Inthe school. The next monthlymeeting will be held February'20 at 8'P. M. A Founders Daydinner is scheduled for Feb-ruary 16- at Coby's Route 9.
The attendance award waswon by Mrs. Miller's second1
qf Clmntllly lace with a 8a-i~"xhe"*"paTd-upbrina neckline with seed pearls party at which
lfe, Rose.James Vanderveer, South
Imboy, Middlesex campaignhalrman, cited Dr. Partenope'soutstanding record in all four>revlous campaigns" as evl-lence that the area will againontribute heavily to the fightgainst heart disease. Coloniaesidents gave $2,641.12 to theund In 1960 and.placed sec-ind highest in Middlesex coun-.y after Perth Amboy.
A member of the researchsommittee of the New Jersey
Heart Association, Dr. Parten-also serves as chairman of
the speakers' bureau of theUnion County organization. HeIs a lecturer at the post- grad-uate School of Medicine at Se-ton Hall.
He Is an Associate Attendingon the heart staff and Assist'ing Attending on the medicalstaff at St. Michael's Hospital,|JNewark, an Attending on thestaff at Rahway Memorial Hos-pital and one of the foundersof 'the New Jersey Chapter ofthe American Federation forClinical Research.
Dr. Partenope collaboratedwith Dr. Edward Fries ana Dr.| Lawrence Llllienfleld in re-search on the treatment ofhigh blood pressure and chron-ic kidney disease at St, Mich-ael's.
A graduate of Rahway HighSchool, Dr. Partenope took hispre-medical training at George-town College and was graduat-
membership'ed Magna cum Laude fromMrs. David!Georgetown University's School
and sequins. Her skirt was em^Guttman of the Woman's Lea-kbellished with lace panels and'Bue
jguest speaker, wasp
ended in a chapel train. A j very successful. A leather fash-crown of sequins and pearlsiion show was presented, nar-held her four-tier fingertipkated by Ralph Amaiosa.
of Medicine.He served his internship at
Boston City Hospital and didpost-graduate work in cardio-vascular research at George-gp
veil, and she carried a cascade! N e w members welcomed were;town University under a grantof stephanotls with a center,1*'5- Gerald Blacker, Mrs.jof the American Heart Associ-orchld. iThackery Goldman, Mrs. Her- atlon. He received a master's
Maid of honor was Miss Jo-jbert Stoehler, Mrs. Morris Fier-(degree in Internal Medicineanne Moyer, Iselin, Brides-
grade. Clsss mother's of flrst|malds were Miss Joyce MoyerJand second grade pupils werein charge of hospitality.
tag, Mrs. Fred Enden,Robert Freeman, Mrs.
,i stall meeimg " — -«~."«.u —.»K» —«. officers installed were WU-i.s Free Catholic the blind. The children's camp*iianl Buwltz, president, OscarItoocrt E. Mayer,lie » ld la In Marcll, the wom-iEberie. first vice piesident;nit und library{en's canip i» itt Diamond Carl Murkussen, second vice
plans for Spring, D<-nvllle, and the men's president; Vincent Mlele, re-i
Dinner Planned
to.
To Meet Feb. 3rdI8ELIN—The Women's Aux-
iliary of the Iselin Boys Leaguewill meet February 3, 8 P. M.,at the First PresbyterianChurch of Iselin.
A contest will be held to de-
Cub Pack 30 to HoldBlue and Gold Dinner
COLONIA — Cub Packwill hold its Blue-GoldFebruary 1, 7 P. M. at'
Iselin; Miss Carmella De Luca,Irvington; and Miss Pat Lem-chuk, Iselin.
Serving his brother as oestman was Clarence Mensel, Ise-
Mrs.[and Cardiology while there.Max A resident of Colonia for the
Mrs, Bernard Schlossman, past ten years, Dr. Partenope isMrs. Meyer 'Traskowsky, Mrs,:a member of the St. Cecelia'sIrwin Cohn, Mrs. David Lem-f Council, Knights of Columbusberg and Mrs. E. S. Forman. (in which he holds a fourth de-
Sisterhood will celebrate!gi'ee, a n c i i s a trustee of St.lln, and-ushers included RobertjOeorge Washington'sKallok, Roselle Park; Stephen'day by holding a
irvington; and Ron-Jongg and card party, Pebru2() t 830 PM t th C
birth-tcecelia's Church, Iselin.Mah-|
«!icftt uf the new ll-|Leoiuirdo.* l C a n i P Happiness. cordliiR secretary;
theijjensel, Moscow, Pa.
Cranwood, South Avenue, Gar-wood, with Edgar Kremp as|5ld7~ o n
Mountains, the couple will re-
chairman for the affair, It wasannounced at a recent meeting.
Edward Peterson reported a
»««hlto«i realdento of lary; Salvaton Morarw, Lea-Ducted by Den 6 under Mrs.b t d b di litjl»enn have been transported by «ue coordinator; Philip 'RicdiTait
. . / 1*,L.."*', d« r |members to the meetings for and Walter Huryk, sergeants-; Cubmaster
, .- , ISEUN - Cub Pack 38 met!1*"1111"1 t n e m o s t comical, the!tour" was" conducted this weekMod-lMonday at School 18 wherei™^1 .or,ifi"f.1'. a n d t h e pret"iglving the boys an opportunity
to observe the operations of theWoodbridge Police and Fire
, tuiuniK atviciBij, nviuf .wou-:»viuiiuay ai otnuoi IO wiierer-— —:- •liszewski, corresponding secre-'the opening ceremony was con-|U e s t v a l e n t l n e '
i*..rd Snyder U in i S i " in PerthTmboy and Tit-armsHoward Smith
Mrs. Oscar Eberle, president,will .show a film strip. "Open-Ing Day Little League Parade."
New Brunswick.Sspoke on the Blue and Gold!*!! parents and friends are in-
hu',alto announced;bttn transferred other
six shut-ins at Christmas
Sixty members attended theJDlnner to be held next monthreported plants and affair. Jqhn Stead was present-!at the Coral Lounge, Park Ave-
W8tch''
' ' •a
ar Enrollment classthe Legion and Pel-
mrmbers willid;iy night at 7 : 3 0 ^ "hall. All members; T n e
fur his past contributions to; beef dinner will be served for1
The next dinner meeting will1 the league, Salvatore Morano,1
nue, South Plainfield. A roast
cubs and their fathers.held at Howard Johnsonipusl president, was presented! A skit on South America
• 6. at 6:30|wlth a gold plaque in recognl-^as presented by Den 1 undertion of hlfi|services. the direction of Mrs. Eileen
Lions Club minatrelj Mr. BowlU stated the league!sulllvan, Deii Mother. Dens 3,
vited.
Departments.The pack meets at School 20
under the leadership of Alfred;
, s ,^fter a trip to the Poconoter Cooper Avenue. Prizes
Avenue. Fortraveling the bride wore a-beige1
knit suit with brown accessor-;ies and a white orchid.
Mrs. Mensel attended Wood-bridge High School. Her hus-
be given and.served.
MOTHERS MARCH
Vlscontl, cubmaster. ' report on South.
20 at 8:30 P.M. at the Cen-POSTPONE MEETINGS
ISELItJ — The M o t h e r s 'March of Dimes will be heldJanuary 31, Mrs, William Dan-
ISELIN — Due to a last min-refreshmentsute cancellation, meetings of
Group 1 and Group 2 of St.Cecelia's Parochial PTA werenot held. Rev. John M. Wilus,
pastor and moderator, an-Group 1 will meet
band graduated from the same gell, chairman of Iselin au-jFebwary 8 and Group 2 Febru-Hlgh School and is employed nounced. She stated she needs|ary 9. I >th meettings will beby Ameriean Stores, Rahway. many more volunteer workers.iheld in the school hall prompt-
—• If willing to help, please call ly at 8:30 P.M. All membersShortage of doctors noted in her at Liberty 8-2260 or writejare asked to make special ef-
to 70 Pershing Avenue. I fort to attend.
My 3 and 4 aft Barron Avenuefebru-ju endeavprTngtoobtalnthe:
member of thef
cooperati(jii of the Iselin LionsClub to support a drive to reii-
4, 5, and 8, received attendancebanners.
The holiday party which wasfThe monthly paper drivt.iovate the three playing fields'postponed because of weathej-
t b |weather permitting,held Sunday starting at 1 P.M.•"•'•r ^tuff;
Michael Lyons has been''." Hi? book selection1 ''•(1" "'I M»s Carl A n - | N A M E D T 0 P 0 S T
!" tin- cauiogulngl C b L O N U - Arlene
be now in use. | [
next executive boardwill be February 2, 8
M. at Oliver's Tavern.
•t .Quigley
has been appointed cosmeticianand beauty advisor at Liggett
1 offers solutions to;Drug Store in the ColonlabU Shopping Plaza.
TV'1
SERVICE
9 8 PIMS Parts(NO HIDDEN EXTRAS)
WY 8-1242CALL COLLECT
ELECTRONIC PARTS OF KEARNYl« Extending its Service to '
Middlesex (iouiity
IF THE MONTH
TV Overhaul «nil
I'icture Tube Replacement17" to 24" Aluminized
$39.50 to $48.00NONE HIGHER
IT ' I '
All Work Fully Guaranteed24-Hour Service on All Repairs
PICTURE TUIET
conditions, was held after the!meeting. The boys received agift and refreshments were1
*rved.
UNITED ROOSEVELTSAVINGS I LOAN
ASSOCIATIOI
THOMAS JOSEPH
COSTELLOFuneral Homeg
Green 8t. & Cooper A»e. State & Center SU.Iaelln, N. J. Perth Araboy, N. J.
TeL LI 8-4641 HI 2-0075
There are excellent reasons why the 1961 Cadillac socompletely dominates the highways of America. Thefinest Cadillac in a long and distinguished history, it isa motor car which reflects an authority unchallenged byany rival. Stately... majestic... masttrful... these are
easiirewords which convey some small measirre of the mannerin which it takes command of the road and wins theunstinting acclaim of those who drive or ride in it. YourCadillac dealer cordially invites you to enjoy a mem-orable djemonstration drive at your earliest convenience.
I VISIT YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED ^7?Odi&/ DEALER
MILLER PONTIAC - CADILLAC Corp.477 West Milton Avenue, FU 1 -0300 Rahway, N. J.
PAOE FOURTEEN
expected to hiT?ertafiu to »:-
the usx;? •* J Ml. A Ml ewe* ran 1 i t l KM. it U»
rtf to K M Open Bout' *U bt h«M F«b-
j ;
T»L ti i i c trvi X-i 'A'..-ir. —M: u d Mn
-"f %'A *.~ ?SJ&-> \TS.-. <*T. «nd chSldrfn. Thotr-n .*'•• jr-y,,;,. . . •:w#.
Mr t r^ Mn tjtti.i '}.'M B:.-d Amur. *W«:z »nd M: =• •' V.rt l t s *nd V n
St Prter'l ffc*^* N*~ Br-.'J-* P-V
—Cut Pv.i «
On are am Mn. hmtit
_ oirt Seoul' or3 met recent'.) »»
bell,
i n f prw:«tnd MrsMn. Ca
of ibe in Cownj. R*hw»y.t?« S**Jntf>ip of Mrs
V> tfUi'Un?Mdorf.TV, « h
Sunday. Prtnurr i:U6r of Lourdts Hr,c»ll« t Chureh.
Pick fcmden of Trr>-
FIGURES SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES!!AN INCREASE OF OVER 1 9 0 %
A
Resources —December 3 1 , 1955. $ 4,604,166.00
Resources — December 31 ,1960. . . . . . . $13,478,743.97
:,r.? -'. :?«>. ir.fl h»i» ton* an p M Vh* VTW P«^« t:'>r.v;r of
o: ~« i t ! / M*rf Tr>?;r occiip»U*r-
be t t hr: Nww, 111kmm. Frtrutrr U. I M P M
pUn •Po»-Wow it it.
' Vow..Scho
' bridge. January 29. :,« ?M
Alnandrrintroduerd and
d c-F-r^ u« to » oJ-I old
s»L*s»fr, lor *T4:rrf*ri
Trj« 8/kf Kxki' o(
rj?' . For Fnthion, „ LSEUN - The
um Btaek wtnnrw Uwiarer.
l meeting will be hcrir.t » 7 P. M. . t fchool 15.
M:r Ster-.-
Mrs. S:d-r Shm. eha:rair.s a i d 'Jro ha» beenptenned !cr 5a«h 15 »: J K »".School ?i T>re will bt t door
of Mn.
IS
«..
i t e thrf annual docor dm-for April 1! •:
JBWCAL COA Oownunent tui •..
U i , of -h.t i ^ Ml. ^rf ; , , , ; J 0 w>y, iill w«r ru*>m »« over 1.5 tone. ::
,„ . , l l o r e d t p o r M W f # r AH o!*r than for r ^ r ,i r e o»d« to ind.vjdiu! familm.
m , i , u W n m « • The wnrey ^o*« » TOBM« IS » ser.jor *t Th»T x..i *-«>P^0™ »• • ,.„ ... ^ 0 P , i n d m^Hrawlv mwlical f*U for f»:::
Woodbnd«« H^h Bdwol. Hfr PTA ro^:;r.? ;n Schoc! 1.. Co- <••; ^ E,TrvOn^ ii *fl-:oi» in *hlc^ farm op*'-i. •fane*. » fiadia:* 0.' Ti.',x*s ;orja. F«3rj»rr I nV'-M-menU «U1 be «r-.>d 55 yean of ate or el-A. Educe H^h Sch*:. E » - Gues r..*M *jL U « p*;e «_•• ••_ _ . . . g?M , tt2 » r ^ p,&«fa. -• «ay)a7«! a:. Hsri^*u Jaruary 31 »t tji* >fw M».. ... of t h J , Or-»verar ' o r
Blu«»)C2
STATEMENT OF CONDITIONDECEMBER 31*1, 1960
OFFICERSof '.he Boi.-S
ROBERT L CLAREP:*!:iJfn*.
JOHN J. QUIN'N
SOL R. KELSEYJAMES P. HANEY
JOHN J. REAGER
IRVING GOLDSTEINEDWARD P. TARLOSKIELLEN M. McCARDLE
JOHN F CERULOAsjLstar.t Secreiary
LOTTIE M. PETERSONRzirs'r. M?r. Woodtrid??
Francifl J. Mulligan
DIRECTORSROBERT L CLAREPreside.'.'. Larfdff Cor?JOHN F. CERULOExecutive Secretary
IRVING GOLDSTEINTheater & Real, Estate
Management
JAMES P. HANEYAttorney
A. Clayton HollenderDairy ProducU
SOL, R. KELSEYRealtor. Irjuror <k Apprai.*:
EUGENE KRESSIron Worker
JOHN J. QtflKNRealWr and Appraiser
JOHN J. REAGERSupt. Water Departmer.t
EDWARD P. TARLOSKIPharmacist
JOHNE. TOOLAN'Attorney
MICHAEL J. TRAILERCollector o.' Taxei
Woodbridge
COL'NSELJOHNE. TOOLAN I
Firm of TooLar,, Haneyand Romond -
ASSETSFir«t Mortgage
Loan* '. $11,898,790.36
Other Loan* 145,209.91
Federal HomeLoan BankStock , .
I . S. Covt.Obligation
OtherInvestment*
(ashOffice Building &
Equipment
Other
176.100.00
472.570.00
100.312.58
527.532.93
136,020.67
/ 22.207.52
TOTAI 813,478.743.97
• CAPITAL,LIABILITIES
and RESERVES
Savin}£8 Account*
Atlvance-F.H.LB.
Ixianfi in Procej>«
Other Uabilitie*
RESERVES ami
UNDIVIDED
PROFITS
S 12,292,428.89200.000.00
129.100.87
34.441.13it
I82^.t773.08
TOTAL $13,4)78,743.97
SERVICES• SAVINGS
Accour.ts
• SchoolSavingsAccounts
t CorporationSavingsAccounts
• TrustSavingsAccounts
• Christm&jClubs
• VacationClubs
• •MonevOrder?
• .Mortgage •Loaris
• HomeConstraction
• HomeRepairLoani
• F.H.A. 1Repair
'Loans
• G.I.HomeLoans
• SavingsAccountLoans
• Traveler'sChecks
Lancaster Brand Overt-Ready
Ib.2933<
2-ozcan
13-oz
12-oiun
#
Pan-Ready Fresh Whole
ersCut Up
Chuck RoastUncasier Brand fanciest
Cross Cut Roast-89.arxaUef Brand
California Roastb 69
Lancaster Rrsnd Bone In
49<
3$ laiKartir lra«d
I Arm Pot Roast fc 69« Short Ribs
| Ground Beef * 49« Beef Liver
* FranksLancaster
Dog FOOD 10 99
*,fc55« Beef Tonguertsrval—HarW m C H M
:; 29c Salami
49'
49'
CURRENTDIVIDEND
RATE
PER
ANNUM
Tonvato
Ctmpbet's Ve^etabW
CampUCs Chkkefi Noodle
Liverwurst
Bacon 2 i 99« Sauerkraut
.AIU/J C^ Veqelaoiti
I Ur9€ Juicy
8 $1.00Tangerines
#f
MAIN OFFICE
338 STATE STR0BT
PERTH AMBOV, N. J
HI 2-2]70 avinasBRANCH OFFICE':
515 AMBOV AVENUE
WOODBRIDGE, N. J.
' ME 4-1900
Anjou Pears . . 2•» 29-' •"»' >*" * K ( " M . * . n
Cauliflower £ 2 9 * Tossed Sabd '. l9 'V#9«4«bla Codn«l
VegamatolO $1°°Imperil
Margarine 2 69<
Colossalrozen
ShrimpF.IU.
Uoodi
51b box$4.89
I
Ib
Flounder
Steaks
* 49« Green Beans 2 P.;
! : i l 4 f Grape Juice T
and Loan Aaiociation
Open Daily 9 A. M. to 4 P. M. - Snturd*y 9 A. M. Till Noon
FREE PARKING AT BOTH OFFICES
STAMPSwith purckaM of J»0 w a w * M ^ Coupon «t rtflht
reen Stamps
25
Mir
Irhool
, i'1'
An "off-Broad-produftlon of "South
i^itir" Is now in rehearsal ac-
lir(lln!> to an announcement
v An::clo Lombardi, ways and
K,uis committee chairman ofkluiol 25 PTA.
show will be presented3 and 4 at 9 P. M. at14 nuditorlum at Fordand Main Street for the
frimrit of the aehool library.s. Justine Butler, third
l|(T pirsidcnt of the Wood-BP Township Girl ScouU, at•cent meeting of the PTA,•nted a few facts depleting
_,,,y, important It Is for th«•rfiiwl to sponsor several QlrlK-rl,it Troops In the area. Mtm-|r:s decided to sponsor these
•nn|>S.
Mrs. Abe Qrcen Introduced,,'• speakers Harold 8. MulHn,r Isclln: Alexander Roasettl,
jiiiir Roy J. Mundy, Colonla;L l John Csabai, Fords, allW d of Education candidate!.\/ir Csabal explained the pro-Kisnl budget which will beoifd on February 14.Hostesses for the evening
,m mothers of the/1 third gradeunder the direction
. M. to dls-jproposed Hopelawn New
Ambulance Fund.A U-n bag sale Is being con-
e auxiliarys cornm u n l t y service work with Mrs.B e t t y S l l a s y i as chairman.
At a recent meeting Mrs.Marge Pastor presented- eight
P.M.
In order to raise funds forthe chapter's many projects,"round robin" card parties havebeen held during the last twoweeks, under the chairmanshipof Mrs. Donald LufUg, at thehomes of Mrs. Narode, Mr«.Jack Klutsky, Mrs. ArnoldOoldfarb, and Mrs. Frank Zl-novoy.
Two parties were scheduledfor this week; one WBS heldTuesday night at the home ofMrs. Eugene Kalet, 14 Witten-berg Drive, and the second willtake place tonight a t 8:30 atthB home of Mrs. Henry Kargcr,3 Taras Drive. Mrs. EdwardWelslow will be co-hostess.
kitchen on behalf of Olrl ScoutTroop 61 arid Mrs. Helen Ful-lerton presented a waste basketon behalf of all the HopelawnOlrl Scouta.
The special welfare projectwhich will terminate a t thdFebruary 7 meeting Is In chargeof Mrs. Bet ty Fedor.
Mrs. Helen Hornyak, presi-dent, announced a number ofcoming events: "Buck Night",January 28; Valentine Dance,February 11; Penny Sale, Feb-ruary 13: and the department
!Sl. John's SquadGives Month's Report
FORDS -- Captain RobertNeary of St. John's First Aid8quad, Inc., reports the squadanswered 57 calls in December,broken down as follows: 25transportation; 23 emergencies;2 motor vehicle accidents; 5fires; 1 fire drill; 1 house call,
A total of 132 man hourswere used, 512 miles traveled,and 9.500 pourtds of oxygenused.
Captain Neary also advised769 calls were m8de during theyear 1960.
. . . . . « , 1 > ^ 1 | nypuimea a . ~ •-».». .«-» ..«,Cuui mwH. apecmi award winnerinmnt at me H Y U Teenagenominating committee who will?,' t h e Hopelawn Fire Houselwas Mrs. Claire Toth. JDance for the waltz cham-present the new slate of offl FV'bnmry l s ' l l t u ' • • I U ! . . . _ . . ..!»">^rs.
Mrs. Fred Streit Is chairmanassisted by Mrs. Leonard Na- " —• •—* •»» '= UC'"K «"'-rode, Mrs. CJeorge Hoberman d u c t e d f o r t l l e auxiliary's corn-Mrs, 81dney Hoffman, Mrs:""""""" 'Leon Goldberg, Mrs. Leon F e |n .son, and Mrs. Abraham Wefts.
rhf committee will meet atthe home of Mrs. Streit, 37Taras Drive Tuesday at 8:30
krad<*.
tolkkf A New Ambulance DriwJYop Dancersf m A *
HOPELAWN - The UdlesFORDS — Mrs. Martin Lip- , " - - — — *"•= ">UH;»eirt, president of B'nal B'rlth A u x l l l ( l ry of the VFW Post will
Ramot Chapter, appointed ' ~ " 1 " " "send a delegation to a meeting
Dolores Hart will be coof starred with Laurence Harvey
rs. Ruth Welslow and Mrs. and Qeraldlne Page in Hal Wll-ii tillber. Attendance award Us'i "Summer and Bmoke," thetvon by Mrs. Moyle'a third film version of Tennessee Wil
Ikms1 lplay.
KEEP UP WITH YOURHOME TOWN NEWS
CUP AND MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY
WOODBRIDGB PUBLISHING CO.IS GREEN STREETWOODBRTOQE, N. J.
• Enclosed please find |4.00 for one-year•ubscriptlon to:
O INDEPENDENT-LEADERQ CARTERET PRESS• EDISON TOWNSHIP-FORDS BEACON
To be sent to:
NAMB
ADDRESS
TOWN
were Mrs. Silagyl, Mrs. Fcdor,: HOPELAWN — The semi-Mrs. Pastor, and Mrs. Thercsn!finalists will compete tomorrow
Special award wlnnerlnlRht at the HYO Teenage
Good AdviceMechanic: "My advice Is to
keep that car of yours moving.Owner: "Why?"Mechanic: "Well, If you ever
plonshlp. The dance will beI held at the Hopelawn Schoolbeginning at 7:30.
Joseph DeAngelo, supervisorof the HYO, announced regis-trations will begin next weekfor the King and Queen Con-test. Girls will vote for theirKing and the boys Will vote fortheir Queen. Winners will beannounced at the annual Val-entine Sweetheart Dance.
Mr. DeAngelo expressed ap-preciation to Charles (Chuck)Clark lor joining the HYOJunior Basketball team as as-sistant coach. The team Is com-peting In the Woodbrldge Rec-reation Babe Ruth LeagueMembers Include, John TlmkoGary Morgan, John Bacz, Rob-|ert Kovacs, Dennis Sak, Stew-art Szycheur, Martin Thome
i Joseph Angyl and George Pawluch.
They have obtained five vietories and one loss so far inthe league standing.
Beyer-ZonkowskiEngagement Told
FORDS—The engagement ofMiss Barbara Ann Zonkowsklto Allan C. Beyer, son of Mr.and Mrs. Adam Beyer, 56 Cedar.Street, Fords, has been an-nounced by her mother, Mrs,John Zonkowskl, 48 SmullenStreet, Sayrevllle.
Miss Zonkowskl was gradu-ated from Sayrevllle HighSchool and Is a senior at Tren-ton State College where she Isa member of Kappa Delta Pi,honor society, and Thetn Phisorority,
Her fiance was graduated,from Perth Amboy High Schooland, Rutgers University College.He Is a member of Delta SigmaPI professional fraternity. Heis a veteran of the U. S. Navyand Is employed In the ac-counting section of CaliforniaOU Company, Perth Amboy
Westbury Park NewsG1JIDTS E. 8CANK
4S7 Lincoln Hlrhwaj, IscllnTel. LI 8-1679
—A3/c Edwin Bender, Jr.Isdn of Mr. and Mrs. EdwinBender, 116 Bond Street is •--spending two weeks leave with p r e a c h o n " G o d a n d
his parents. He Is stationed""""1""" " ' "with Communications Squad-ron at Kessler Air Foree Base,,Kessler, Miss. He graduated|7,:30, v^\ service
Church MeetingListed SaturdayPERTH AMBOY - The an-,
nual congregational meeting ofthe First Baptist Church willbe held Saturday preceded by asupper served by the PhllatheaSociety beginning at 6:30 P.M.Reports from the church offi-cers and organizations will begiven for the year I960. RevPeter Kowalchuk, pastor, willpreside. Featured will be theofficial recognition of new members.
S u n d a y the pastor will
PAGE FIFTEEN
from Woodbrldge High Schoolclass of 1960.
Dinner guests of Mr. andMrs. Frank Tagllarenl, Worth
p r ° -gram" at the 11 A.M. WorshipService. Sunday Church Schoolwill be held at 9:*5 AM. The
I Street,Samuel
were Mr.Testa and
and Mrs.
the installation service for newjmemberg of the King's Daughters organization. Miss EileenLambert is president of the organizatlon.
daughters,iRuth, Doreen and Judith, south Lillian Rose KramerPlainfleld; Mr. and Mrs. Ed-ward Eheslak and daughter,
| Janet, Sewaren and MrsKromes, Iselln.
ughter,. Lloyd
I - -- incut iias ueen maae oi me en-,'JET CARGO PLANE SOUGHT sagement of Miss Lillian Rose
Engaged to BencskoHOPELAWN — Announce-
ment has been made of the en-
CERAMIC ACCENT ON MODERN; For the all nut modernroom or fitting in plrimntly with traditional furnishing!!,this small sideboard is Indicative of (he merging of classicand modern forms. Part of a large group for dining andbedrooms, called C pram a, it is made of mahogany, accent-
ed with brass ftnd ceramic pulls.
Woodbridge OaksGLADYS E. SCANK
497 Lincoln Highway. IsclinTel. LI 8-1679
—Susan Blhler, daughter ofMr. and Mrs. William Bihler,West Warren Street, has re-turned hdme after having beena patient at Rahway Hospital,She was a dinner guest of herparents at the "Brass Horn,Eli
home-coming.—Jerry Cohen, son of Mr.
and Mrs, Martin Cohen, Brad-ford Place, was a weekend.guest of his grandparents. Mr.and Mrs. William Llnkov, New-ark.
—Dinner guests of Mr. andMrs. Walter Huryk, Wood Avenue were Mr. and Mrs. PeterHuryk and children, Peter, Jr.Robert, Michele and JosephSouth Amboy.
—Mr. and Mrs, AlexandejCuthbertson, Oak Tree Roadwere guests of Mr. and Mrs
Cana GroupIs Set ForFebruary 19
FORMS- Our Liidy of Peace'church announced today, thatit. lins scheduled another CanaConference I for m a r r i e d|coiiplrs of the parish to bt heldin the church auditorium Feb-rnnvy 10, beginning at 1:00
M.
Rev. Thomas Dentlcl, Mllat-ant, St. Anthony's church,HiKiitstown, is conducting theconference series which Is de-signed to help couples find
re happiness In marriage.•It's the little things, not the
things tlmt can make orreak a marriage," Rev, Den-icl says, emphasizing that "th»ttlc consideration c o u p l e *
show one another during court-hip, if continued In the mar-iage state, will strengthenheir bond of love."Rev. Dentlcl points out that
me. of the primary causes ofallure In marriage today U thealse assumption that marriagex a strictly "fifty-fifty" propo-iltlon.
"This concept ia band oniustice rather than love—andit Is virtually Impossible to
p at the Brass Horn,, „—„*» *,* «n. onElizabeth in celebration of her Louis Schmitt, Rahway.
GLAMOR GIRLS
I
CROSS COUNTRY SKIING POPULAR: Deep snow nowcover* tbe gentle slope* and hllU In the Laurentian Moun-tain winter iports playground north of Montreal, wherecroM-fountrj trail skiing It equally as popular u down-
hill running — and a lot more picturesque.
The Governmentdevelop a gigantic,that could carrylong distances eltary or civilian u
As envisioned,would have the ea:ten tons of cargPacific or 25 tonsAtlantic.
The project couw^under the
Your grandchildrenwill grow up underCommunism!" NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV
^ill the Soviet threat come true? Will jour grandchildren live under Comuiunlwu? Forget God? Salute the Soviet flag?
•Vver!" you a y . But we jo* sure? How cm you oppow Communism? One sure way fa to help Radio Free Europe.
• H«ce it Him of Nikila Khrushchev.; audience it American.
r children live to teeWorld die?
G
youdoto(,pp* r c " on. tun way,
behind the Iron Curtain, it broadcastsnews of the outside world.It htlpt keep these people* from turningto Comnnini*n. The Polea, Czechs,Bulgarians, Rumanians and Hungarians.It keeps alive their friendship forAmerica. It reaches over 90% of thesepeople, detpite Communist jamming.Thousand! of letters echo the plea:"God Bleu You I Please kttpRadio Free Europe on Ihe air!"
Tht« people are the buffersRussia and the Free World.
They pose a major obstacle to theRussians itarting any war. AndRadio Fret Europe Is their t^ongestlink with the Fri* World.But Radio fret Europe depends onindividual Americans Jbr its existence,How about it?
Win you he lp? . . . Givi • dollar?. . . Give live dol lars?. . . or more?Surely your heart tells you togive something to that our children—and all children—shall Uvt
' in freedom thfdughout t|u world.
a..NWT,...RADK) FREE EUROPEThe American People's Counter-Voice to Communlm
WOODBRID(;E PUBLISHING CO.20 (iRKKN STKKFT, WOOUBKIIMJK, N. J.
plans toplane
of cargo!mill
planeto fly
acrossacross
thethe
Airto modernize the,.,Transport Service^
Olenn FordvJwjs signed tostar In "Chauiauqu*" when hefinishes bis nof Miracles."
iKramer to Andrew J. Bencsko,1
son of Mr, and Mrs. AndrewBencsko, 992 Main Street,Fords, by her parents, Mr. andMrs. Andrew J. Kramer, 451Florida Grove Road. A Junewedding Is planned. ;
Miss Kramer was graduated'from Woodbrldge High School)| and is employed as a secretary |in the firm of d. Dellapletro,;
The project conw^flnder the Inc. Her fiance, a graduate"of:
Government's general program Woodbrldge High School, is' employed by the same com-
pany.
Bob Horton is wanted for the]role of Ravenal In Jean Dal-rymple's City Center produc-tion of "Show Boat."
To Better ServeOur Community...
The FORDS NATIONAL M lFords, N. J.
ANNOUNCES(EFFECTIVE FEBRUARY 1st)
Q tut, Bnt Ftetum Sjm dial* lac, V<fU rUMi * • « • * .
"Hey, Mom! They're actin! like they're onagain!"
live by justice alone," he say&,adding: "Happiness In mar-riage demands that partner!;ive of themselves completely."
According to Rev, Dentlcl,communication between mar-ried couples li absolutely es-sential to compatabUlty.
"It Is more important," hesays, "that husband am) wife[sit-together In the evening »nddiscuss their Joys, sorrows,problems and every-day ex-periences than to spend hourstogether—in absolute s i lence-entertaining themselves withtelevision,'1
He points out that onlythrough constant communica-tion can married couples fostefand maintain the companion-ship they sought through mar-riage.
Registration for the confer-ence ends February 5. Couplet
i may enroll by calling tyrs.Hugh Gallagher, LI 8-3900;Mrs. Qeprge Lukoskle, LI 9-3770 or Our Lady of PeaceRectory, VA 8-2276.
Miss Doris MillerEngaged to Vagrin
FORDS—The engagement ofMiss Doris Miller to Anton J.Vagrin, son of Mr. and Mrs.Anton Vagrin, 90 Hornsby Ave-|nue, has been announced byher parents, Mr. and Mrs, Ed-mund Miller, 186 ArlingtonDrive.
Miss Miller graduated fromWoodbrldge High School andis employed as a secretary forthe Minerals and Chemical| Corp,, Menlo Park.
Her fiance, a graduate of St.| Mary's High School, Perth Am-boy, Is a senior at the Univer-sity of Dayton, Dayton, Ohio.
Venezuelan troops sei e Com-munist paper.
l|irfXTENSiQN:;PHO^^;:|^;more done. Makes j^^^^_;.j^y^;*m'^^;^efficieht..'i^^cic^t-^.'Wlrnarkably low-ot | ly9dl41 nionth f0(^§ithera table mod^fepr!!!§}{• ^hOfie. And | | | J I ; f i n l | i e extra costtomake it a :delijxe;,9|l(3|;;^| |0he oraJoyel/n^"Pn^i^:phbn^;^'uriprl'singly reasona^|^,^^i^j[ f i t getal! the/facts fronfihe telephone Business Office?gjgf ask your telephone saryiceman. NEW JERSEY BELL
DRIVE-IN WINDOWwill be
Kept Open Daily Til 5 P.M.
\ Friday Til 7 P.M.For Receiving
Commercial and,ConvenienceChecking Deposits
and ("ashing Checks
COMPLKTK BANKING SERVICE
OVER 40 YEARS OF SKRVICK TO BAYERS
The FORDS NATIONAL BANKThe Friendly Rank of Vordst New Jersey
MUM-BKH jrEDERAL RE8KRVK SYSTEM
MJSMBEK OP FKDJSRAL DEPO8IT IN80RANCJE COHl1.
m
I
IP
2•
ii
It
PAGE SIXTEEN
Capitol Domefctitortii Pw*
order, without xcrim:n»tT.ihim
A companion bill ni*o it-»ljn<»<J to keep ahead o: tJi?criminal firmer.:, would re-quire all Iocs! and -our.*.-. y>-\ic* authorities % mat' iquarterly report to trV 5:a«A:toTn'7 General or. t.V. di'po-*(tion of rr\nm :n their re«.pw-t!Tf- areas T;> ArorTWt Or. --ml would on'.late sucr. in'or-m»tk>n and includ"- ;• :n anannual r»por* w th? G->->r*w
Senator Thomw F Cor.r. ryJr.. GWuc*st*r. who mirodycdboth bill*, claims toe? art »•-*rntial and necessary :.' law --ri-forwment u tc be Wf-T-Hj mNeir Jersey The w:ine«e un-munltT bill, he say- is -TJP-pott*d by county prosed tor*and chiefs of poll-'
The uniform cnme reportingBMMur*, he chime, would ?rvfthe 8t*t«'« top law 'enforce-ment agency and the AttorneyO«neral • continuing picture o'.criminal activity throujhou'.the State. He expressed nop»both will be adopted by the1M1 Utfiriatur- althourh tr,--were burled in the Senate la siJtK.INTEKSTATE COMPACTS: -Creation of a Delaware BayBridge Authority throu?r. agreenent wtth the Stst* of Dela-ware, will be ne of the **?Objective* of the 196: Legis-lature.
Legislation will also be in-troduced approvinz an ir.ier-•Ute compact with Penwyi-ranla and New York calling forthe eonMroctkrn of a hu?e newdun on the upper Delaware
River TW« maid »ctiT»te *IWMfataft-, D. C. . PUni we St*U P t r k w rejUariu>U. , ,Propos&l o u t h«f MM' _ ^ t o o l * t e 4 by SUte TVewim The 8t*t* DrvU-km of Emptoy-ttuiir for i-TTeral d«*__er
Th- proposed Delaware Riter
John A. K&rtdi to hold itttc-Intent Security reportiwide ortenUtion « l u m to perwn* working lit Salem
iU meani keep oor letten to thkt
lJMpifttMnt. a i k l n i
8 U * Of State Banking
thai puttie m » thatfroa • • to the profewtonali arid getOood a o m r i If* )utt a« well to
funlliartiie tool tax asaesiori County daily commutewith the prori-foiu of the new the SUt* of Delaware . . _ - - - , — _ — —
health u a proper and de-JraWe dtar up your question* now:goal that rVruirec the en- wWle rarden* are more oc le«H
alighwned cooper-tion_of p h y - m the icy grip,, rather th inpublic hearing at hi» offx* on sidan and patient. clRim* thejwttt until crociwe* begin to popJanuary 31 at 10:30 A. M. OD Medical Society of New Jersey.|up\the proposed rate increase by —
AUomeT Oenertf Dtvld D Pur1 I U L K <j.-\l\lifc;>
-;- at tfiNetr Jf-rwT Turnpike at*»•»• Salem Count?.
Oo'1 ''•-nc-r Robert B .hu b»*n invohwd in & ron-trover,'}1 with Senatorf/Cr.ar'ftfW 8*ndman. Jr Cap* May, ^ d e t e n n l n 8 t J o n p r 0 .aEd F-tnJt S. F.rlev Ati-r,;;c. ,--a m_ f_.g t 0 , ta _L-d i n - ^over the member- of th- C-MB- M t i T O _ p r 0 B r e B e d well duringmis-:'.-. The two Repub.ican j u ^ j . , m o n U l M ^ ^
I. . . New LUbdn Colony, with
O« i » » f wrole in toaay that he can get tome taw-j
t l | a n
THIS WEEK
t t T T 9 New LUWn Colony wiih M0"by South Jersey • • * " "» O D n """»»• """ Judainj? from thet h n w h K«rict im tb* 1.250 patient* below,par men- 0 , you ^rA(mjf ar ,
f h d t ril b b
many
y
Investigated by a in atfnding Ruiffrt gardencommittee headed schoolAnthony J. Grossi,: Bui »hat of you other* "ho
. Gorernor Meyner have n real yen v> sharpen:in Washington on your earden know-how, but
e convempntly attend a
alor,rof the i»dy to reri-[tally, i*
dent* of that area O ^ ^ ^ i jMeyr.-r wants nat*widf rep-,by
r-^r.-.ation on the comrowMonJERSEY JIGSAW:— T h e r e ,nu meet
wer* 21.172 cisef pendi'!? oe-the morrurw of February ^ cant Afore the BtiU Super.r and with New Jersey ccneres&onal cluw'' jfor«u: "•• couru wi January 1. deleeatwn and present Pedera! Are you sure you re not ant- ^and of thtf number 6.3rt were,problems confronting t.he State lookit;? a rKh source of garden w
ovt-r a year old Smetwn of New Jersey, . Go\ernor knowledge in your towns pub-pervirus ha\e bwr. killed :r. New ueyner has not been able to;Uc library? joaot*J»rs«y by cars sir.ee Jar.:ary Imake any chanee ln*he menj- I mention thif because 1 have
dtttt (ram a MWttiiU to mulch•ome yew wrdHngi h? iscrowing But taking a clot*leak U the sawdust, he foundit contained notne traces of
Should he usefor muleb erenthe JwduH
oraamentalour Ray Borbobo,horticulture spe-
^0^0** wouldmTl. t 0 k i l l t n p
j nCTe*R a »Ord of caution>ou do-it-yourselfer* who^ making window boxe*
o ^ , ,rttn your nnrtools. Don't uw cre-
to prewrve the wood or
-: CLASSIFIED :.KATES - INFORMATION
| - W . M l 5 . . r * ^ ' r . 1 " . ' * 8Deadline tm Mb: T-if^.,word I H M for the mm* , f f k
publication. •
s» «m adiuit be ieni In.
Tettparoc MErwn 4 » U
. . . , put the kti* of death on. Oround breai'.r.B wrpmon- bersiiip of th* Delaware River a fefline thai many people still anything you try to erTow m
iff on the new Stav DfTwrt- Port Authority ovt-r the past don't take full advantage of the,the boarsmerit of Education Building ad- seven years. . . Stgt* House opportunities (hat a library of- j-r?. FR OJ North Beitenjac*nt to the Siat* Houw in rumors have it tha: T J. Me- fer- You may find youraelf ^^ ^^^ the right time toTrenton will be h M next June Mahon. of Tenafly. a tax ex*.well r(ward*-<J by stopping at pi^pt flower seeds indoor? so
New Jersey residents will be pert, is planning to enter the the library to browse through that &hf can get an early .•tart,called upon to contribute *3.- Governorship contwt this year the ooofo that fit th- needs of u t e February or earlv March581000.000 as their Khar*- of the- • Traffic deaths on the Gar- beKinnprs as well as th* more will be time enourh becauseF?d>ral budget for 19€2 accord- den Slate Partwaj dropped 50 advanced ereer, thumberB. you don t want to brinf youring to the N"w Jersey Taipay- per .cent last year when only Then, after you have stored plant* alon? M fast that they'll ,. . —-T- \ssociBtion Mrs %-chi- 13 per.wnE were killed sorr.' facu behind your' eye- be ready Ion* before the danger , .bald Bu-h. of M-oV-flown. is CAPITOL CAPERS:- Eighty brm> .•• r -«-n«aI sort of way. of frost if over in mid-May. . Karyn Kupcinet. daughter of Andy *M*™- -"j^™ "thf New Jcrw conference per cent of lost articles turned you may nave some pointed You're lucky if you have a a Chicago newspape: ccumist won w he l a n d r t o t a . wivxiChairman lot the 9th Annual over to the New j«r«y Hi.h-qufst«'*n_ to ask your county sunny place that can be kept ha* bwn si.ned for . role ;n Bob Hop- rorn Hope* Oiwa.
Confer- way Authority in the past two anent or the specialists at Rut- rather cool so your plant* wont Jerry Irww- The Ljidie? s*)in. that BOD »at me grraj
"DOST PISH TH\T ROCK. M1STIR". M'« not »ll «nHl-ji«fin" irou'nd rnncrption Bar in Newfoundland. 'Teeter-inc Rork". *fldom fiven > *tani lonk bT fi«hennrn. ta anever-falling at(ra<-tion to non-fishing rWlor*. The rwkki )>al»nrH wi the side of a hill overlooking ConceptionBay. How toni it hat been there nobody in Newfoundlandknnw». How long will it rtay there? A» loni a» thrrri
in Coofeption Bay." the old-timera »a».
• H U P WANTED •MAI-F. OR FEMAM
RE AI FRTATE SALESMAN WSALESWOMAN for w « of-
f\;r rmi.rr Inman and ClnverA V M . I " Olrtnin. Cull ADAMREA! Vi. EL 4-1570
1 26 - 2 9
TELEPHONE SOLICITOR Ex-^i.cr.ce no! necew«n''--^>ll>'
, ::; ; .i:irsf 10 »'ork. Call frnmyf)'.i: n-*n honif. Commissionbo.-i." Contact Mrs. Curley.aS'nf'T.r 1-3690 1-26"
t FEMALE HELPWANTEn ••
AVONCALUNOWo:K 4-5 hours per day Wait-ins .-uvnmer* pxpectins yourcall in your community C»"TO:)AY L.e»ni hn« YOU c»nrarr. «•':h AVON Phone Mr?Coif MI 2-5146 for horn* ftp-po:n'.tr.»i:t 1*2*
• MOETOAOFs
PRIVATE PARTY hn,gafe money avallahf
Box 101. C 0 thl* neu.
: '.5-3J
MISC. FOR SAI.F
COOKWARJt. former ^ ^h u leversl new ,
«twl waterleat l e u or. ii,n(ioriginal carton* ReKn;,,- ; j i$14960: aacrlfice IM.ifi3028 or CH 7-O4W
RUO8. NEVER U8ED p:,Jhome 9x 13. $3orn- 6 ,
$35 00 Other sizet c, Fuum $2000. Orienih ) u
$55 00 Alao IOIM woe,;and braided rugi FT' «.CH 7-0498.
SER\1CF.S
Republicsn Women'*ence to be held March 5 to " in years were found in the Garden tiers. grow spindly. M»n.' est man he'd ever met.
TELEPHONE SOUC1TOR BABY SITTER. Wi!: r , t
Ar.y t ree or four hours daily children day OT •-(,-«From yti;ir home Contact Mrs crowd home. Large ; i,v ,O ! 00 P M W 5:00 P M M E 4-3617PArkway 1-0972 1-26* ; •..
INCOME TAX R E T l i N - -,[pared by qualified AirProper preparationincome tax doenn t •PAYS Phone FU g-i;
BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORY
Jyst lor teningand cofTee, $1600 retail
iweater or 10"< of Mies isyour- for having a FashionParty in your home. Famousbrands at half price! Call Co-
,Eds by Eve., repre.wntative Mar-telk Davli, LI 8-5823.
1 5-1 26
• PROPERTY WANTED •
Machines Finiitvre Ucksmrth Misical listnctiM - - Plnbitg & Neatlig -- Service Statiiit
WANTED — Ground in thrAvenel area to lease or buy
to build clubhouse for aroup ofresponsible young auto en-ihuslajts Slow Pokes, Inc.. Box66. Aver.el, N. J,
1 19-2 9'
Adding Machines$ 3 9 - 5 0
op
Typewriters* I9.50
«pWOODBRIDGE
BUSINESS MACHINECO., LTD.
2K Amboj Ave., WoodbridgeSALES _ SERVICE
Avenel Pharmacy914 RAHWAT AVENUE
MErcurj 4-1914
PRESCRIPTIONSWHITMAN'S CANDIES
Coametict — Film
Greetim Cardj
WINTER BROS.Wayside- F i n . Shop
Half Yearly ClearanceSale Now In Pro-Tress!
• Bi-gtr Viluri • Top Bun Hi• Better S-rrlcf • ".owft PTICMSt. Geortc Avenue at I . 8.
Highway 1, Avenel(At tiit Wowibn's.ClOTerlM.f Clttl-)
Open ) A. BL to J t M.tad. S-.L
Phon< HErcury 4-6666
Electrician Glass and Mirrors
Coal & Oil
LET US1 Solve Your
HEATING PROBLEMSfrom
Service to CompleteHeating Installation*
KEROSENE
Can
MErcury
4-1400
AVENELCOAL « OIL CO.
828 B*hway Avenue, Avenel
Coitracter
L. l USTOGeneral Contractor• Masonry
• Carpentry•j Painting
• Jobbing, • ilterations' Rot- Frff eitlioate
CALL KI 1-J1822If Harrifon Ave. Carter*!
Delicatessei
A. J. ELECTRICSERVICE
Master Electrician
Residential — Industrial
and Commercial
• Free Estimates• Prompt Service
• Reasonable Fee
FU 1-2253
ClassifiedsBring Results
Fuel Oil
TREAT SHOPPEI U Railway Avenue
Woodbridfe(Opp. WtalU Church)
• SALADS at Their Beit
• SODA FOUNTAIN• FRESH BAK£B¥ GOODS
Op«n 7 A, M. to >0:30 t MINCLUDING SUNDAYS
Closed Wednesday Ail Da*
Drugs
RAYMOND
JACKStilS
andSOlS
DruggistsM (Wain Street
Woodbridge, N. J.
r-de*taon« MXrrurr 4-0554
JOHN j . BITTING
[MofaHj
MobilheatFUEL OILOVer ti Vean ofIrlendl- Service
ME 4-0012100 Fulton Street
Woodbridge
- Funeral Directors
Residential & IndustrialPLATE GLASS andSTORE FRONTS
ALUMINUMCombination
STOEMWLNDOWS
andJALOUSIES
Free Estimate*
• Mirrors • Shower Door*• Desk ft Furniture Topi
MILTON GLASS CO.79 E. Milton Avc, Eahw.jl\i Block from Perm SHOoni
Tel. FU 8-7373
WOODBRIDGE KEY& LOCKSMITH SHOP
AUTO, HOME,OFFICE KMDUPLICATED.SATES SOLD. 0
let- Skit«s - SIKI uid L«WDMoorrs Shirpfr.nl on
Paint Specials: !Interior Fltl White (In oil)ptr jillon _ Sl.ltInterior Flit WhlM (Lxln)prr fallen I3.MInterior Flit Colon (L*tcxjpfr JIUOD ... - ... KMSrrni-Glmi i. Gloss Enamel(In oil • White Onlj)ftt gillon J3J1
j;« AMBOT AVESXBWOODBRIUGETrt. ME «-ies«
O-)tn Dldlj « A. M. !/, 1 F. 31.CLOSED Sl'VDAT UJ. DAT
Moving & Trackiig
Move "IDEAL WAY"Phone Ft-8-3914
"AGENT" NATIONAL VANLINES _ ^
\ZU St. Georte ATC, Anne)l-i Room- - t?«, $!5, %U5-S Booms - $35, $4«. t i l
LEARN TO P U T THEACCORDION THE
MODERN. EAST WAT:NO ACCORDION TO BUT
Print* Lrfcsom:
• International• Mc-dfra• CUwicsl
erimvtrs t t i
StnifBU
We CUTT • fill hnt of Muiltillirtmwnm ind kttmoritt
accdrdloni »• EtCELIIOB. II-TON*. IOBICJ. hCHt. ACCO»-DIAXO. EXCELSIOLA. lOHME,SOXOLA, u ' Clbni
Perth A-nk«7'i OMntietttttm Ccarn
n Ian at Ow- IUH L*uti-a
EDDIE'SMUSIC CENTER
For DependableService Call
I. LEFFLERlicensed
Plumbing L HeatingCONTRACTOR
U 8-8187SI ttnat4j Street, Uclia
ltM
Charles FarrPiwbiig & HeaUig
Dectric hhitt S*rri«
TeVpbcme:
MERH17 t-t&»4
« 1 UNDEN A\tNTE
e, S. J.
14 Benkoiki,317 tUt t I t , F. A. f A i-I*M ' &TV Service
TOWNE GARAGEJ F Gardner 4 Strn
485 AMBOY AVENUE
Woodbridge
MErcnrj 4-3540
We're SptcUlbU In• BEAR WHEEL ALIGN
MEM and BALANCE
• BRAKi 6ERV1CE
Mixed Incentives"Hear about the free fight
bet ween a lot of Irishmen andScotchmen?"
"No, what was it about?"'The Irishmen were in it be-
cause it was a fight, and thf-Scotchmen because it »as free."
CARTERET. Painting . •-,tor. irwlde and on!,-;-,,
ceilin. blocki. V. J 7.-KJ 1-4825. Job8 miRia:'
IF YOUR DRINrtmo r.icome a problem. Aico:,?;
Anonymcu* can nelp vr.,BI 2-1515 or write P >253. Woodbridge
• ; j
HA VINO TROUBLE f.xf. tjsewerage? Electric .vn
er removes roots f.l'J,and stoppage from c.?jpipes, drains and sevndtgsing. no damage- - •>;and efficient. Call To:-PlumBing and Heatirs Mfi|8007
-Sewitg Machiu Service-
Ordettra fir Hire
j
Directory AdsBring Results
Liquor Stores
SynowieckiFuneral Home
56 Carteret Avenue
Carteret. N, J.
Telephone KI 1-57IS
FLYNN & SONHOMES
(sUtUuei) 1M*
4v«nueA»bo,
It Ford Av
VA 6-01M
AVENELLIQUOR STORE
featuriniLarie Selection of Choice
• WINES• BEERS• CORDIALS
Cold Beer by the CawAlso Imported Beer
Prompt FREE DeliveryTel. ME 4-2074
145 Avenel StreetAVENEL, N. J.
Music listmctioi
Telephone MErcurj 4-1889
WOODBRIDGELiquor Store
MARi ANDKASCIK, Prop.
Complete Stock of Domesticand Imported Wine-
Been and Llquom
S74 AMBOY AVENUEWOODBRIDGE, N, I
In Woodbridge It'i The
FRANK KREISELMl'SIC STUPIO
• Aecurdloa• FUJI*
CLASSIFIED
ADS
BRING
RESULTS
Call ME 4-0750
Private Ussoi
• Utordion ''
• Trumpel>nd otherInitruments
• .lutfentRtDtalfU-
• MuiWilAcceuonrt
ill MUci oltaitj-wtnu ud Aoi-Uen
Call Now tor InfonnatlooHJ 2-8948
SAMMY RAY'SHuut anil Kepair -hop
»V» LA<)IAI»KA. ei9f.'* tfwi Eipctleaci 11 loitnicKi487 New Bruiuivlrk Avenue
FORDS. N. J.
IUIBY FREEDMAItO» &%ek*j Ortbettn
ENTER-
TAINMXNT
CALL
ME 4-»4M MI 4-JM7
ONEPAY
mvictk k White
k Pitotinr
Expert Developingk Printing Service
On AllColor
• CAMERA BKrAIK
• PASBfQKT PHOTOS• PHOTOSTATS
f LAMINATION
• ACCIDENT PHOTO*
INVENTORY SALE!
and fhoto Supplki No*!
GALLANTS PHOTO547 Amboy AvenueWoodbridge, N. j .Hon., Wet II t* I
tte . , Thin., Sat II U tFrUar l i l t l
PhoneME 4-3651
Set NeedREPAIR?
C-J]WE 4-43M
ARTS RADIO& TELEVISIONSALES u d SERVICElit ATfBd Strm, Afcwl
aatoautvkM l a w . Tn* M Ou nm.Cm ta^M Utrttt4
Sipplies
ML Kovacs326 Penhine Avenue
CARTERET
• Roofing Supplies
- • Gutter*
f Leaders, Etc
Phone
KI 1-6818 - KI 1-6792
H O V A N E CSe witg M acbi»e Service
rm•O>tC DEMONSTRATION
1M1 "Whttf- Zi|-Za(
Vnirricin A ForH-n Sfwin-Miehln» R'pilrfd . Pirtitat N»dlti
KI 1-9187FRANK HOVANEC
657 Roosevelt AvenueCARTERET. S. J.
WHY SELL SMALL STIFFWHEN YOU CAN SELL BIG.'
When we say 'big'—we mean big sales On a priv!.
that's larsie in size. and second in important* T
to a home We mean ears Buictc cars.
When you sell Buick, you sell one of the most ;> ;
ular line of cars in the coumrv. A car Uiarf <••>?
sistently tnjis m owner loyalty, A car with a -i'-.>
clientele n! repeat customer*. . . and many -•
customers auracted to the Buick Special
Were lookni? for men who want a steady jor, v.-
a firmly publ i shed outfit. Men who want to r: -.:.
a substanti.i": income. Interested? See Mr. Mn-.'.
POLKOWITZ MOTOR>229 New Brunswick Avenue Perth
$••* Tire Wheels •W either Foretut:
HEAVY SNOW!Prepare NOW by
buying
SNOW TIRE'WHEELSFw Tow
Sim Tires!ft All M*ke Can
Barch's Aiti WreckersBeretlj StM End of Lelfert
CARTERET"U Mil l H K] 1-4411
T. R. STEVENSMfltif tat thttt Mtui Mtrk
OS ST. GEORGE AVE.WOODRR{I>GE
Repair«of allT y-K.
Water Stftwera •
SALESSERVICE
RENTALS
Mou>i Guardiroa net u mKB • 11*1 »r M> «-Ut»
leiry Jasei & SNTUuilQC md
Sheet MfUJ Wort
aj»4 rvrci*c« Wort
5ftft Alden Street, N. J.
tUbmn illit
IWate. SofUner Salt1 Soft Water Hoap
Swlnunini Pool gnppUet
SERVISOFTOF WOODBRIDGEMl 8t. Geortc Atenue
Woodbridfe
ME 4-1815
Die NEW RECORDSBy Kelii Thr ( a l l BrownThe must :i:'v...-!:nK ne» al-
bum to corru v.: .\;,v in .yjmetime, u -wmr:..':,. done o y aOerman ron,,.•,-, i-coiwUictoi-arrangtr ru»:ii.<! H--it
He h*s a si. ,,t.d ^days when »,; /.i.^.s are sup-,posed w be K.,i-, * ; L r i the wind- a n d he do^r.' rely on thesexy, mute or •., ».iir,\nt nolt-s oJ'the voca|lM H.- plays muwclike thcoron.-,!:,!.-. formerly did'aiiii it come.'- „•.• HU riRht
i Trie nanir „; ,,lt> a | b u m b
Woodertand H» M f h t , und'some 0/ tln-li.;:,,.. a r f , | w M,Hof the mm. :.,,.„,. j j v ^ | - n
Happinfv. Never Lome.Too U t f , On Tli, Alamo, A« IL«"f JUII, eb
Th, and .„„
v*i wlw. by c U l K Tajbcir. hav-"•" b e e » r,v,:'d.-d In Europe
This album recom.'i.iA ue* Mercurj .
An ETftilni With M^-and ElalDe May. Trected by Arthur P<•;'.:four comedy *lc:'.'current play.
They run raih-thow in a hurry n:: 'w h o l i k e t h e N i d i • •'•'•line, the album '*•.iiji Comedy on a: <Mill wmethlni! i)i<put over. Try this.whether
One Way To I 'A young cuupii -
of their» ian Ausin-an living in this <liUypen upon i>>'her fourth child 'Iyou'1 :not« left thru
sU-reo feet Kodseild. .si*sit!in It every ufi'read — and the d-gel nea)' m e
Advertise
BusinessIn ThisSpace
for Only
a Month
FOR BUSINESS IS'OUR BUSINESSWhether It's a form w
(expedite your ORIL;-1 ^
eratiqns or a bookid 'fl
stimulate your ><lleS
we'll desl-jn and print itto your best a dvani f
Our deliveries *'" °*-tght on the dot il")ur prices will >"aKe
>ense. too!
MIDDLESEX PRESS,Mtunate. l | QRCKN
o n »nytfting ,an>iiine Jui- Cau rHONI M E * " "
PAGE SEVENTEEN
<1AY VENICE: Vrnftinn dMlfnrn wtre -mon» themost tiilrnttd and flamboyant of the Hth Centurj. Noyi,,i(l structural rffrcU for thfm, the drslfni were far andrm uro, This dlnlnf or llflnf room cabinet even In itt warmLroHii tnnr-i of butternut and hackberry wood erotM the,,,,if frrllne. Palntrd white and decorated with bloc orCDIII *tr!ppfnf on door panels and cornice edge* It It a
conversation piece.
BOUI YOUR HOME HEALTH -/ BEAUTY' O n e thing no one wanU li
,n(l silver Is regarded by( f a ] M t M l h . however, It Isv people as a luxury, a g o o ( j ^ t h a t w e w U 1 t l l
in.: ui beauty to be used for ^ t h u p o l n t M0MT o r , a U r
),,;.il occasions only. How- T o l r i s u r e t h B t l t w l l l b e a | l a t <
unlike rnnst luxuries, l t M possible, take the time toa family beautifullyjtaite perfect c»Te of your teeth
and Indeed Ufe-,tnat nature gave you.t l - admire y o u , flm ^
National Purportnation Is moral, virtuous,
while It Is engaKPCl Inil-H Kiiuid objects. But
this linvlng been attalnrd, theActivity displayed by the spirit
Hie ixiople In question Is nolon«cr nn-ded. In order that atruly universal Interest may
the spirit of a peoplemust advance to the adoptionof some new purpose.
O. W. F. HeRel 11770-1831 >Ormon philosopher
Althounh a high standard ofmorality gives but a Might orno advantage to each Indtvldual man and hin childrenover the other men of the sametribe—yet an Increase in thenumber of well-endowed menand an advancement In thestandard of morality will cer-talnly give an Immense ad-vantage to one tribe over another.
Charles Darwin (1809-82)English naturalist
Methlnks I see In my mind anoble and puissant nationrousing herself like a strongman after sleep, and shakingher invincible locks: methlnksI see her as an eagle . . , kindling her undanled eyes at thfull midday beam.
John Milton (1M8-74English poet
Today's Film Reviewe;i;-round,i.mull. Most silver "we admire!museums today was
,1 iwd by early Americans. ; t r l p g ^ ^Silver bowls have many uses.;months apart from there on.r b o l s h a e y months apart from there on.
ones can b« u»ed forlooes this seem like too oftent! nuts, candy, chees* for'to yOu? I can asiure you It \tiK, whipped cream orinot. Troubles with the teeth
ewers. Place your silver where »nd gums begin u little trou-pick up tight and tdd bles that. In almost all cues.
VICTORIA WOULD Bf AMliSKI): From the architecturaldetalli of the Crystal Palace, built In London for the firstInternational F.ipMition, 1851, come the motifs for this,collection of dining, living and bedroom furniture. Fromthis era of mid 19th century comes a hint of the Victorianmood. Dignified and handiome. the good Queen wouldhave been shocked to know this cabinet is eompartmentedfor glawet and bottles. She might mtsi the carved orna-mentations, typical of her time. The dignity of the roundarched panels and the elegance of the over scaled branlock platei and keys with gold tassels would have eharmed
her, as it will today's honvmaker.
TV Today — can will replace June Blair inTwo Paces West.
RIP TORN WILL CO-8TAR
BARBARA NICHOLS WILL " M " * * In«?<| ^ L ' 0 1 ™ ta»»*March specialSTAR In a forthcoming Twi-
light Zone episode, "22," writ-ten especially foi her by execu-tive producer Rod Serllng.
the world of vaudeville in an
EXODUS"EXODUS"
for late January UUed "Two-A-Day." Star Dorothy Provlnewill Impersonate several vaude-
deals with vitalville headUnen «( that e n . Her enough, gold and may be rushed
and beauty to your,you are complete^ unaware of.'Leon Urla.
events leading up to and con-cerning the founding «f thestate of Israel shortly afterWorld War II.
The film recounti moment.In history and human sufferingwhich cry out to be reported. ItU baaed on the bestseller by
Little problem* can be treat-1 The film Is divided Into twoluUid silver must be bought ed- with little dUcomfort andibaalc paru. The first tells howi care to get good resulU. less actual eiperue to you ifimore than 800 Jewish refugeesquality of plated silver de- caught In the beginning, H al- many of them children, from
jeiuts on the thickness of theilowed to drag on ami on theDon't trust your eye to discomfort and the cost will
choosing—pickmaker,
I .Mai.y young girls
a de- rUe and rise—and worst of all.you may lose a tooth or several
today i teeth In the process.a sterling pattern while! The problem of badly-spaced
e still in high school.! teeth can be turned over to anfamily and friends buildjorthodentitt If you are In yourat birthdays and Christ-!teens or In your thirties. Won-
Europe's concentration camps,try to run the British blockadeof Palestine (then a Mandate)aboard a crowded ship calledtthe Eioduu. They threaten a
March special, 'Twenty-fourHours In a Woman'* Life.* Hereplaces Maximilian Bebell.Mickey Shaughnewy andQabor will co-star In a
Eva Inew!
ABC's Roaring 20's will salute half-hour series, Mickey and Ithe Contessa, produced by Desi-1
episode tentatively scheduled lu. . . Wendy Barrie will make'her Hollywood TV film bow in |a episode of The Islanders.NBC's Klondike has not mined j
number, are being staged bychoreographer Lee Scott, onceRita Hayworth's dancing teach-er. . . CBS li interested In anew daytime game show, Shop-per's Keepers, The emcee willprobably be Frank Olfford,star halfback of the New YorkGiants Comedian DickShawn does hit first seriousrole in a O, E, Theater episode.Don't Let It Throw You."
HUGH O-BR1AN has bought
off the air InRichard Boone, forming hisown company, wl)l produce andstar In a feature plctOre. "PointBlank," to be filmed early thisyear. . . Art Carney's Januaryspecial on NBC will be titled"Playing the OarWi" describedas a satiric musical review.
TV rights to "Destry Ridee'theAgain" from Broadway pro-;* long time,ducer David Merrlck. He hopes The Navy
ALL-PURPOSE WEAPONThe creation ol .an all -pur- II
pose weapon system has beendream of mllSUry men for
•ch section,
hunger strlktmake lt toLand.'
andthe
eventually"Promised
to produce) and star in it as aTV special. 0Brian playedthree weeks In the Broadwayshow last year. . . David (Rich-ard Diamond) Janssen plays a stalled in
The second concerns the in-!"™" * « e n t •" h l» n e w
when choosing your ill- derful work li being done to temal Israeli strife betweenpattern, look carefully atiImprove the appearance of Hagannah, the lawful Jewish
puce and remember you teeth by means of Jacket military force, and Irgun. aterrorist force violently antl-Biitlah and anU-everythlftg
ill probably be living with Itlcrowns.n-st of your life.
[ There is a very nood repUkt-At one get* older, the tetth
often become darker and moresolution on the market transparent from wear, staln-
|l.:t-Ji actually holds tiny bttsjUx. and possibly from over usesilver. It U not too suootas- of abrasive dentifrices. Whatuhen used on table silver, happens Is that the precious
ut (iocs very well for trays and enamel wears thin and thenull ornamental pieces. darker dentine beneath shows
| .Silver can be replated com-through.' Dtl
other than Israel.Eva Marie Saint plays an
American widow and non-Jewand Sal Mlneo Is aPollsh-Jewlih terrorjat.
Other parts arc ably jjor-trayed by Ralph Richardson.
The Insider*, with Folly Bergenguesting In the Initial episode.It will have a New York locale
, Next on the Warner Broth-ers agenda: a series based onthe Royal Canadian Mounted!
knownbeen worksince 1958,
When the system is fully in-
73, has«.system
ex-pected to analyze any type of)enemy attack and select andlaunch a specific missile re-quired to' defeat it,
tfamlng to BabesBefore the next stock market;
Police, . . Pot Boone's Cooga- flurry all American, babies willMooga Productions Is preparing do well to bide th&Jt little: red
young!the Pilot scriptBaroum series .
for a P. TJ banks.—Th* Clncloqatl Times-Pamela Dun-IStar,
| L M J. Cobb, David OpaU&hu.(rcihliy. The finished prod-j DentLits would rather you Peter Lawford and others.
*1H gleam like new. Tm ^ n O t Mnok#, u ' th l i Is a ma-1it. rr^on, don't replate old >or C k U H ° ' dUcoloration. - rCINDEBFELLA'>-'•" it you value the antique! Hemembw that the decay
Krmrmber Him?member the driver whoaccustomed to "weave In
M ."ut through the traffic""•:!lfully He was a good
•'-(I » fine neighbor and"' much mls*ed. T h e n w u••'• attendance.
Minneapolis Journal
bcrn
PUa VvoiStramhlp TiHtlThli Un «||>7
|Wt i n ir inl tiptrtt,,1 raut-OcMD or VlCf»V-ua CrulM, w« MltV"» pl»n.—a«l routtiokau - No Mtr»rhuv lot oui mn-
your children's taste buds—so A m u Marie AlberghetU isthey will not develop a cravingor such foods. It will be hard,
but your reward willwhen your childrenstrong, cavity-free teeth.
CcP-VIS C S | P ° Wfcat?Wife — I went to cooking
school before I got marriedChef — What did you do
there, play bridge?
Worti
'n-1667
GOLDBLATTS»•• Cherry 8tre«(
RAHWAY
GOVERNMENTSALES
"' - i r,,,| C 1 . . , M , ...
mm foi joufOimiru. bin
h
It would not be hard to guessprocess starts during the firstthirty minute* after eating.The particles left in the mouthbreak down to adds, which inturn de-caklfr the enamel.
Use a toothbrush with a rub-oer Up on the base of the han-dle. Give your gums an activemassage at least one* a daywith i t Tour teeth can only be
i healtrfy u your gums.It Is the duty of every moth-
er to keep ttat amount ofweats, candy, chewing gum.
soft' drinks, loe cream, cakes,and pies very limited for herchildren, These are, by far thewont offender*. Try to train
by the title that this is atwitch on the Cinderella story,casting Jerry Lewis as a poormistreated stepson and JudithAnderson as his wicked step-mother.
Lewis, as star and producer,has the camera focused on htmlong and lovingly In a varietyof scenes, some of them morehumorous than others.
For CinderFella has twoinasty stepbrothers, who aremsan and greedy, played byRbbert Hutten and HenrySliva.
Ed Wynn makes with thewhimsy a* a fairy godfather.
come
softness and kisses but berturn of the limelight u limited.
This film Is teimed as aglowing masterpleia of humorand heart shown in magnifi-cent color. Watch 'for the slip-per Jerry ^ i at the ball. Itmight Just turn out to be al0«ier.
Count Basle and his bandsupply Jaffl rhythms.
GREINERFUNERAL HOME
DIVIDEND-PAYINGSTOCKS TO FIGHTUVING COSTS
Need more income to balance your personalbudget? Why* not get that income by buyingreiiabie common stocky? As a first step, we'lltend you i free 19-page booklet listing.375stocks which have paid regular quarterly divi-dends over periods ranging from 20 years toalmost a century. Dividends have grown muchfaster than living coats in the last two decades.Buying stocks is simple to do -the booklet tellsjust how to start and we'll be glad to annwerany questions you have. For your free copy,just null the cdupon.
Spear, I-eecls & KelloggMow »wk «*» Awncw Stock kUdui*..
315 State Street, Perth Amboy: HULcrait 2-B787
MAMB.
ADDMJB
A HELPING HAND..WE HAVE NOT REACHED OUR GOAL!
Frankly, the 13 member agencies that depend upon theUNITED RED FEATHER CAMPAIGN for their supportand services in 1961, are in deep financial crisis. Aserious fuud shortage for health and welfare organiza*tions can mean a tragedy for your neighbors and ourpeople in all of Raritan Bay. It can mean a denial ofmeals to an undernourished child or help to a feebleolder person, a visit by a nurse to a person in pain, guid>
> ance to a youngster in trouble. Do we want this to hup*pen? How would we explain such a denial to a personin trouble ? •
THE GOAL WAS A LOW MINIMUMOur low goal for this campaign is $168,195. This figuredoes not begin to meet the true needs of our agencies butour Budget Committee insisted on keeping it at thisfigure when the services showed needs of $204,616.The Drive is far short of this very small goal.
THANKS TO THOSE WHO GAVE AT WORKThousands have given at work, many have given throughpayroll deduction plans and we extend our very sincerethanks to these good neighbors and fair share givers.But this year's need is greater because we have had a63% population increase in our Raritan Bay Section andmore and more services are needed and are being de-manded. Much more money must be raised if the
1 agencies are to survive diiring 1961. We have no
national bodies to appeal to - all funds are kept andspent locally. Each Dollar is a gift from neighbor toneighbor.
WHAT CAN YOU DO?
I You can give now if you haven't givenatwork.
2. You can make an additional gift to help.M • • i i
3. You can volunteer two or three pours ofyour time to help finish the campaign.
MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY!
I WANT TO HELP
((Unit - ru«M frtot oi
• I WISH TO PLEDGE DOLLARS.D PAID IN FILL D BILL ME.D I WILL HELP THE UNITED RED FEATHER CAMPAIGN BY
VOLUNTEERING 3 HOURS OF MY.TIME.
Pl4*i«cl»asJjd return to; IUWTAN BAY WJTED RED FEATHER CAMPAIGNMi SMITH STOUT. rVKTIf AMBO?. N. J.
Published as a public service by THE W00DBRID6E PUBLISHING COMPANY
PAGE EIGHTEENFRIDAY, JANUARY 27. 1961
Resko Rolls 691Set; Sawczak 680
tu.CARTTKKT-Tnr
wins by Sarr.rr.v R.Shop have brouc:.: :top in the Car.e:-; CIndustrial Bowl::-.;thf Hill Bowl.
On SundayBi makeup game.^•Hashed Perry's
Jn three game? ;:ttesko broke tr.e
hieh sf691 <*'. ::-.
• 1«6. 244 and 251 Tr.:-• Iretkinz of the teax
••-. ;"'• :a :.- : ':*•' »".r.r.:nc a two-vaxr
M:;y '..:•.-:r>- •-•'•(• '.he Ideal Lujuo:--.;, :r.( A:*:r. E'.rr.sr R « i o « t the p&c;
" ^
Les.
a*-?:~>::Sam.T.yNe?
r. sh:
and a big 1004 J_-..for second :r. :r.<
..TPbr the loser; M:k<» was tops wiW-. 597„, . On Monday :::z:.:. -Ray's continued the::
•;:.'. ;n5-2o:-2o;.&:wlir.i agairir. the A
M.iier Mason* on Monday, y-• '« Siwchak almost topped E'.:
?- a v ? Re.sko'5 f&l set by ola.qrcrcSsr-::* a 6*0 ser:?s on games o! :• £ ' " ' ' : 248-253 t? bring hii 8Tfraj»• - : r ; - w 190 Perry's copped ;*:> !::.-:n; a tv--e Ma?:ns on
:: Barret", of Mattel's Sunoco yv,en he rapped out 201-220- w a s c
i for a b:i «21 set And a (he pan sweep over the Carteret tivai
noun; f-d
By A i -
3950-1961 basketball jabout half ovrr and1
!^ 1 for ripxi year's Fe»-:.ampn; have b**n an-i
Tr.p sarrws will bei|
G r i
Falcons Ipset
for"Anotr.-: -. -x&i
Dartmouth Beat
played on December 22. 2« and;28 Carvrpt will meet South!Ambov Saint? at Mfrtuchen
tfea-.he; conditions forced1 I - 40'al l ,hii-.-. school eames to be,DV 4 l "'Mcana-lied ".ait Friday and the.
Cane:?: - Sayrev;tle has beenCARTERET - Tlic- Falcons resfhedu'.ed for this *e»S. This
ups«t a favorite Darab team in is the second time tins seasonthe Senior bas-setball league at that Barnes had to be cancelledthe h . ih school tym this week The Carteret -Me'.uchen same!to iirr: ir. 'the:: first victory of will be played February 28 atthf currer.T season. Metuchen.
S Th- Darab= ltd ail th* way We hear through th* grape-and :t looked liMe an easy vie- Vine system- that a top team intorr but the Falcons fought the county i.s having internal
«ror.g in the final period troubles and a key player left, . ! »_ i »Vin t o o
HPenn Wins 2nd toL Remain in Tie>;CARTERE: T-P-:.-. t<.,:
by a 40 to \'t K~~~remained :n a '-• 'o: :'•:.<:ln the Frosh-Soph basii•:-leamje with Yalt Rojc
scored 16 pom'.* or. ':'>and six fouls and V«\
helped with nine po:r.o *.othe winners
Peon took an easy 11-6 lead$>.ji*4d was never headedS !*?• The box score
'_!.._ CARTERET —frUy.f1. Harvard :r. the
io thei
! gyro this week It »*first \rir. for Da r.rr.'.;',!rfce second ioss fa: Ha:
rr.o scored 13 points iohonors ar.d Jo* Cc:r.b
opponents by Uie tearr.. with some unresta 47-43 tn-among others, Before the sea-
son er.d? the coach will getmany more headaches, S;*ak-
and Gerry Medveu e>ven for in* o f Cl)-n!y c o a c h P V w* **:lieve that the rcwt underated
iumph., Jimmy Giles scored 16 points '
i.-.--
a:.d-. i:c
PO!h:ghJ r . l-.r.<- los-rs.
The box scoieDARTMOUTH
the Falcons Riciiey Terebetiky2 1 »:ih 18 of
coach is Leo Klein of Perth!' ^ T : ; r . 10. "'Amoov Leo n Athletic Direc-;
* « n b*in« scored - the first ^ a n d t m k c o a c h o f p e r l h |m l
:\ :he net for 12 poir.; lor Cie end of the f~s". hal!.
Amboy Higlj-. havin? developedThe Darab.- i fi by 31—21 at w m e [ : n e t r a C ) ; Ftar? and had
RulerPorzio3top:r.skl - 0Grjdcn 1
The bos sco:eFALCONS
S. Kondrfc2 0 6 G. Medveu1 1 3 J. Giles0 6 6 j . Lenan0 0 OR. Williams5 3 :3 GretskT
ROMfl/M-
CCACliFOR T/iB
lotPOPGERS.
Zip f/JfB />£<* HAPA FORMER
W.T. Grant Co.Pulls Upset inLeague Games
Raiden I'ICARTERET - The sfcond-
" ln on tn*
and C Finnfin per
n m two out of t h » HBie« CARTERET - The C ,-„week at the Carteret L»r*s fuel Oil won two garni, „
In another match the trt<- Torok Electric In bumper v1 CARTERFT - W. T. Grant U o n s h o p w(Tn t.hre* fames mrr.action in the Carteret K „,pu!lod the upsot of the season , h f 0 U n t s w tie the Bomben Bowling LeagM! to build •when thvy furprioed 8av-On- f o r 5 e c o nd position iMd up to iour lull gameDnisJ by out bowling them and T h f p,iot Plant upset the in anotner match th. M
scoring ' a t»'o-(tame victory M a l n off.ee In two ?ame.« In place Babici Pumiturr •last Monday other matches thf Rockets beat , w 0 ?»mes from the <.. ••
macy
Shop moved into second placejthrw and a half games bfhmdthe pace setting Fox Mens
jstiop »ho continued to dominate
Circuit Leadi To Lafayette fiigro PiniK
Lose inT*»m StandingW
3
. 2
10
nate the leasup by trounclnethe Holiday Barbcis in a hecticmatch. Lafayf.te
Don Znvler starred for An- waltr Forestgelo Michael by blasting a 612 juryvillt-
• in a losing caufe on games of pfesbytcrian1213. 224 and 175. - . ,CommunitT Uapif Standing A VENEL^ Lafayette -enjoyed f
thr dbf.nctlon of belnn the. T h , o n d ptac« Kiu.L only unbeaten team tn the Ave- t h e m ! l f 1VM iM f o r Sr(,n,9 nel Piesbywrian 8enl<"--Hi bT D n l m m o n d g M th( iy
1 2 : , Basket ball League Ihb » • « « „ ; „ , „ u, j »dwb wl., , ! , after taXin* a forfeit « » m ' D r u m m o n ( j p U r m sv,-:
Lr CARTERET — Thr1 leading Nigro pinners '..2 irdme)! to the lowly Mn ';3 In an upset ln the Si-
L w n u e Saturdn-
''•QnardSifltegory
ttr..m t
lit . .
; M ; l l k ......4 Cor.s ' .antmor,
0
45031
16
3 HARVARD, Lindermann -....
6 16 J. Comba
i : i1 2 <Kosty
Lucas12 16 40 Zazworsky
Kertes1 0 2 xerebtsiy5 2 U Sharkey
most' of his boys :e :ship* K Colleges His ambition.;is to f.p.d a runr.er like Pettus
3 9 and develop a worlds champion3 11 hurdler6 11 Thert have been too many.0 0 rhubarbs this season and we-0 6 believe the state should takel3 5'drastic action before real trou-!
ble develops. The responsibility; CARTERET-As the Carteret CARTERET - The Carteret •";a 47 lies with the coach and ath-iRecreatiom Midget League com-freshmen won their fourth s k :
letic director. Some sanctionPleted its fourth week of ac- eame of the season by beating2 4 by the state against the county|tion. St. Josephs No. 1 still lead the Iselin Junior High school2 4 seat coach who took his team:*e r a c e with a clean 4-0 rec- by a score of 53 to 24 at the
St Joe's • Price's Freshmen Defeat STJMeet Tomorrow Iselin bv
< ARTF.RET LANESW
Pox Men.' Shop 39Sabo Sport Shop 35 '_•AURelo Michael 34'..Kepich's Esso 29Mutual Hom« 29Holiday Barons 28G i M Liquors 28Agnco 23Sav-On-DnKs 23Woodbridep J .HST 21Pazur & Co 20 .•Ragucri Electric 19W. J Patten CoHungarian R.C.M.C
.io Ele-trioGrant Co
19192020252b
29
from Lynch's.
17 ;: 30'.
16 ,3215 336 42
Honor RollD ZiPgle^r 213-224-- 612 •. W.
Dyciewski 200-200 L. Kuhn 'or_ 8 p o m l s
from Wake ForestMaiyviJlc won its Initial
clash of the current campaiKiiby si.nk.n-iK Prefibyterlan 43-37. •in a close pa me ^
Thr first half between the ^ " l s
two4eams was a thriller nil the Drummondway, with Maryville reaching J-rill!*the halfway point out front by Lyll< h
a slight 21-20 mam in. In thethird and fourth periods, Mary-ville foived slowly ahead asLarry Gohnski, a former Bnr-ron Kiid star, set a torridfor his team by parting the net?
M a t l d l n , ; ,
DeVlto
Tl-.e same's individual vitr-,;. inii honors went io Gohnski,
Warriors Lead
PRINCETON
_ McKenna11 ig 40 Baldwin
Lafferty .2 PSrr.ularo3 Doloszycki
0 00 20 1
0
tjfi<ae«ney*f»«anski
FalconsDaraos
DAKABS letic director. Some s a n c u o n ; » - « ^ ' - ' ^ " ' . . " ' • ? * . ^ . - ; r " ; " . " • - - " " ; , 1 " r " " . " i ^ , , r 211. J. Masouhn 211 D200
... . w - . ^ . ^ ..„,.. „„» „ .. Hansen 200. S. Kovacs 221two teams clash tomorrow half-time lead of 31 to 10 and h K a- s h a 206- R K u h n 2 0 2
Not too morning at 9 at the high school J..-..-. . « i c d alor.g to an tajy, J Game Winnersm g n y c l l a n n . s i r l h e s ."andmgs ' -gym. The Saint* tooK the first victory. E«l Mamie scored 18 ^x o v e r Holiday. MutuX
19 5 43 of league Vadersh-p "Koli-'E*111* between the two clubs point* on nine fieia goals ar.d n v e r Ar.gelo Michael Sabo o-.i:8 13 12 14-47 bas Tavern won 'six straight three weeks ago. Artie McMahon tallied 14 P ^ u r Co . G A M over Wood-
5—43 games and has taken a same I r ! action this. week. SL JO- poinu on sever, baskets to leadlead over :he Foresters. , seph's won easily over Holy the Carteret scoring.
1
6 I 13 off "the"fioor"recently iTeaking <*&• w i t h P r : c e s >n second po- local high school gym. -0 0 0 of relationship between schools sition with a 3-1 mark. The The Carteret team took a b;g
10 1 21 will result.0 2 Recreation domes:
Romanetz picked up nine.
Locals Defeat
17 14• o-. •
W. J
6(i Dartmouth0 Harvard
1013 12 10 »-405 10 3 7-25
0
!lSt. Elias f iFourth in Row
M
8 *)0 193 14 13—402 3 10—19
Kolibas TossersStill Unbeaten
The. snoM'td-outplayed or. February 8.teams w:lvar.ct.
Junior league has a surprisekadtr. as the St. Elias B o y s D i P a u l 0
CARTERET - The St. Ehas have a game lead on the favor- HeighchewtoSM-rs won t h e i r fourth ite Holy Family team. The Hefferanstraisht game in the Junior Frtshmen-Saph League r u n - M u s c o
Lta-'ue by scoring an easy win ning smooth and Yale andovt-r the Ramblers. 53 to 30. Penn winning two games and
»'hile Prices CARTERETnd all M e n ' s S h o p ! r i m m e d Columbus McMahon
notified in ad- School. 33-SSt. Joseph's No. 1
G F1066
"ForestersCARTERET — The Kolibas in the Junior League this week leading the paci:
Tavern deleaved the Ail Stars at the high school gym. St. Joseph's No. 1 t«|m onto remain undefeated in tlief Melick scored 16-points and top in the C.us "A" Division
4m . „ » Senior basketball league. TheiDau- Rudnick helped Uie vie-.and Brown's Department Store" ) 4 " i l l S C 0 l e w a s 6 0 t c 46 i T h e Fo!e5t"'vor>- with 15 points as, the leading the Class "B" D;rision.Thomas
' tis are one full game behind saints rolled up a big '16-9 lead both teams havms won their :™^*" CARTERET - The Foresters "he league leaders. m the first half. The winners first four games without a loss*on their fifth game in the £d Carmichael took hig:i continued the aUacic in the and each a full game in front.
The Gills leagues have start-ed playing - the "A" league R"1"*11
31Hob Kaoiily
AB. 0
00
'"Senior League by defeating the scoring honors with a total of second halfl*Petrach team by a 54 to 30 !8 points. For the losers Boo The box score:
score. The uame' *as close for Brown had 15 points. ST. ELIASthree periods, but m the final The winners pulled ahead :n skiba
--•period the Foresters broke u the second period with a 19-10 Kilyk{.-•-wide with a big 1.5-6 rally. rally to stay out in from until Melick
, Bobby Bialowarczuk scored t h ? e n d Koby 'ten baskets and one foul for The bo* score: Czubati .21 points to lead the winners. KOLIBAS RudnickCharles Woodhull and Joe Lit- Lehotsky .. 5 111 McMahon ,
ki contributed e l e v e n W. Kindjierski (i 3 3pints each to help the .cause. Paiva ' 0 0 0
i. Coanshock .....
plays every Monday and the4 "B" j-'irls play then games on Hrere
1 The box score:*7' FORESTERSiitwinski 3Bordelon _ 1Woodhull ..! 5Bialowarczuk 10Kordick 4
•I 23PETRACH
Schieck 3Bodnar 1D. Medvetz 5Zuccaro 0Helley ,.../. 4
Carmichael S 2 18 RAMBLERS
0 o Thursdays. The Cub League• 2 16 has played three games at5 li present, the Warriors on top1 l with a 3-;ames won. no-losses
, 1 15 record. The games are played f1C0
2 2 6 every Saturday afternoon atthe Nathan Hale School.
31 1! 53 Th*1 fosters for the Senior.Junior and the Freshmen-Sqph
Prices
Stragepede 1 0 2 Pascal5 11 Rozzelle , 4 1 9 Chodosh
, 0 2 Poloncsak 0 2 2 Masculin1 UKaskiw ,.... 0 0 OKulick1 21 P. Kindjierski 7 1 15 Sullivan1 9
0 e Leagues0 i season.C 01 1•1 1 41 5
are closed for this Haas
R00
, 041000
ChervenakChodosh
T Mantie21 Leniryel'3 Stuart12 SeamanH Dotegowsk:2 Sivon- Powers
J H S T . . Kep:.'Rasuc'c:, Apico overPatten
14 2 Gamr Winners5 Vernachio over H'^^aria:2 R.CMC . W T. Grant Co. ove
i» Sav-On-Dru;'.«
3
64
ISELIN JR. HIGH^ Donovan0 Lewis ....0 Ducsak ." Buglovsky? Qumn ...
1 Markow" Denton
CARTERET - With a fineIi.-itlay o.' iiustlc and ball hawk-]].! the local Holy Family.-airrrs won a clnsply contestedga.ii»' over the Sacred Heartsof Pou'h Amboy. The victoryM.ajipi'd an ei^'ht-came uin-!,.i..' streak of the SacredHi-.m» as they lost by a 53-49score
Holy Family'.* two fine frontco'.iit performers, Ron Dackoar.d Stan Wiegolinski, repeal
53 CARTERET-Anvone would e d ' y > t o l t t h e b a I 1 f r o m t h e l r
think that w-.th scores such as t a ! k : ^v.-rsanes to set up3 Hichie Zvsk and Jim Barns2 rolled fcst week fttr the same5 team, that team would win
Leiderman PinTeam in Sweep
CARTERET-Th- 'A»on their third stunt.,-in th" Cub Recreatiiir. 1ij.ili '.riijue to lead th-orn- full name OVI-I :'•Family and Royals t,«l:om are tied for w .with J-l. The WanKH-cl-:m 3-0 slate.
Joe Kindjierski sen;, i:piniiU for the Warrlo: -diff-atcd the Knicks !:-••
The Holy Family - •the ajnless Celtics by ;
In the final sianv tli-copped their secondthree starts by tak.:.PisKnis for a ride, 10-t'i <-scored six points for tb-
2 three games. But such was not2 the case of Jim D innes En-4 terpnse club. In far. they lost,
0 4 all three sames ro J. Leider-0 2 m a n Contractors, who nibbed
_ _ it in by having Wo ,-ubstitute9 6 24 Players, lead them t > a tri-
talle: adversaries to setbaskets for the locals
The winners employed a fastbreaking offense led by Mitch
21 points alon^; *itlis ten points. '
locals
; K a c s u r F u e lS t i l l in Lem
l r " U '
Cartere1
11n
38
25 10 60 Barnaba8 54 ALL STARS
Webber , 1 1 3 •"0 6S. Semenza 3 0 6 St, Elias0 2 D. SemenEa 5 0 10 Ramblers1 12Onder i 5 0 100 OSena 1 0 22 ld'Brou'n 6 3 15
10
1 0 2
13 4 306 18 19-537 6 15—30 '
Holy Family FiveWins Easily
CARTERET - Holy Family
13 4 30 21 4 46Poresters ft 15 15 15—54 Kolibas . 13 19 14 14-60Petrach ' 3 II 10 6—30 AH Stars 10 10 12 14-46
Darabs RegainFirst Position
CARTERET jem defeated the Academy Al-leys this week to regain firstplace by one-half game margin ^over the Carterel Burners, asMatty Sloan led the winnerswith a sensational 634 series.Matt rolled scores of 232, 200
s u n s in the Junior Recreationbasketball league by routing theMagnificent Seven by 68 to 31.The victory enabled the HolyFamly tc remain one game be-hind the lea?ue-leadinE St.Elias Combine.
Palinkas hadMmoka 11 and Jim
iff to lead Holyn easy win. Raccio
An'or.ello ._Rosenblura ..
Columbus SchoolG F
0001011
17 14 8 14—53 u m P h - M l k e K a l n o k r o ! l e d iWOO!5 5 7 7—24 -*arn«'-s of 246 and 234 1. r a 636
set and Tom Lawlor :.;t 224and 210 for a Dig 5?5 setRichey Zytk had games of 245and 224 and Jim Barm. 223-224-200.
Meanwhile the league lead-ing Industrial X-Ray p
CARTERET-The unbeaten a d d . e d mon s r o u n d l 0
Fourth Straight
StarsTrounce Timers
CARTERET __ T,,. :.^ m rfmalne(J ,„ ,, .in the Carteret Lanr, i
U Mixed LeaKu,. 1D ^ Shop won thr.* -from ninth to fift:i VThe Cartt-ret Unes al.v>a S W e p to mow up 1.I1.. Kaines of first po.-:':
Hiith tames for I.1;-w e r e r o l l e d b y A1 Mai!>1
Eddie Uszenski 604 .:RUSMJ 600
tnmm.-d the
Brown's Department Store won t e a d t 0 so three up asT iu fourth straight game in the Uszenski hit 232 a:;d 203 l-->r a m* h 0 !
. Carteret Recreation ' Midget 6 0 7 ^ t 0 l e a d th* im to a f101111-
, 1 0 w •
Gallo 0Bodr.ar _ 0JGamaehe — 0Caldwell _ 0Prokopiak 3Burton _.... 0
3
^ Mdget! League. Class B Division, by two-game triumph over lastJ t a k i n g t h e C o l u m b u s S c h o o l 1 ' 8 1 1 " 8 t U m p ^ t h C r e
i n t o c a m p b y 3 1 9 h L a ' l e sSchool
into camp b,y a 31-9 score this La' l e s
MeanwhileIn a
the Careret
the E c o n o m y /
'• •'-• s StarsJS to 8 in Wrong Nickiunn-
::, the Car- When Wllllaiti »'a>.- S League, ready for college lie
.'..ilh scor- family, "I wi»h you it::-.••'al of 20 stop culling me "Bis B..
•t; iami' trie "Why?" they gikt-d••••d Milik's College names ^i•"• :-i Sullivau stklt. and you know I -J~1 •• »mnerl. to be a doctor."
second game, the St Aluminum Corp bombed I d e a ! / *J Joseph's No, 2 warn defeated ^QUors for two games and f
_ Kondrk's Aces by a 22 to 9 shoved them back three vame-'j score to remain one full game ^hind the leaders,
behind the league - leading
J> LllU
Browns
in
tujFrosh-Soph LoopCARTERET — Yale won its
game in , the Pro&h-
Miller .CapikFlonntino ..NelsonHarringtonBufano
St. Joseph* No.G1
r.... 30
I
From the start, mak? ypor wedding an occa-sion oi long-remembered good taste and dis-tinction. Invitations set the tone of formal perfeet ion. Choose your own paper and stylingfrom our complete selections. Consult up onany problems.
i"Quality... Worthy of the Occasion"
MIDDLESEX PRESS(Independent-Leader Building)
20 Green Street, Woodbridge
' Telephone
MErcury 4 - 1 1 1 1
a n d 3 0 2 Goetz ;..Lord Maxwell scored over;Mitroica '
Joe's Bar anjd the City Line LUkachAuto Body Heat MuUer's In- RU e i a
surance. Ber{ and Al's upset g ^ othe Carteret Burner Service to;wielgolinskitumble them from first place. Makkai . . . "
The team standing follows: ,City Bowling League I
W LDarab's Tavern 3 5 ^ 184Carteret Burner Ser. 35 19 PiacaCity Line Auto Body 3* 20 MaciorkowskiLord MaxwellSlovak ClubBert & Al'sTavBrady's TavernJoe's BarAcademy AlleysMuller's Insurance
:cheslakKozar
33 2132 2221 273 3 ' , 30'2 Raccio, 617 37 ' ' -
Go
6.. 3
30;ntsAB33
. 020
1716
3738
15
R100000
1
with a—-33-2T win over Columbia. Ed. Mantie scored 16 points for the
.^winners, Kelledy tallied tin. points for Columbia. ',turih
.? The Tale team had a 13-jlOlft lead in the first 4alf,
Three Carte f i n sFeature
Roodrki AtttG
, end of the third period.
2 ° F
„ Davidson J I *_ Mantie ._ | j 6...Seaman
iSwlnglerH
11
Siddons 0iCoughUn .._ 0\. Comba 0llazar - 3
Brown'i Department Slort
y-jBartos
.JlKondrk .ID'340
JlBanik- - - IKeunber
G5l
_ __ 1
12CohunbU
O3
9 33
OPEN BOWLINGON ALL ALLEYSMonday from 9:09 P. M.
Tues. 0:00 P.M. to 9; 00 F.M
Saturday from 9:00 A.M.
Sunday 12 Noon to 9:00 P.M
REDUCED BATES FOBCHILDREN SATURDAYS
(mm »M AM. to t;«l P.M.
BOWL-MOR45J iMBOY AVENUE
WOOOBRIDGEPhone ME 4-9681 .
Score by periods: iDemetfr. 19 14 n 1B-68 P o w e r ! - — - 2Holy Family
Magnificent 2 8 13
Bobbetts LeadGirls 6A' Loop
Q
Kelledy 5Thortoj 0
F3030000
iBodnar ....- 2Thatcher 1Tldroaki 0
> 5
15Coliunbu School
a F:....- 1
Swiiwler 2
CARTERET — Tdefeated the Telts,, 9-7, to re-main undefeated In the Car-
yilr Columbia 5
11 . J 27
9 10 10-445 7 10—27
! JacksonVerdnrl ...Chlera . ..Pernaodo
T4'6•>
2 CARTERET - Three ^tr..g'victories were m order m tin-Q U B M . R Bowling League !.".,•
_ w«ek18 With Charley Urbanski bowl-
ing like a well oiledX hlHiif! games of 200. 227Q.193 fir a terrific 620 series, tn<-2 Mechanics No. 3 won all three4 games |rom the Yard.3 Again led by Prank' Don:v-lij-0 for thq second straight 'weekOilhe Mechanict No. 1 took all0 three from ihe Tank House at
- - frank shot a1 big $04 set on1 a fUWt of 198, 186 and 220
Bill Heaton shot well to le&dthe Electrons to a three eame '
10 victory u he rolled 596 to help2 beat the Mechanics No. 2. |3 Those Main Office boys i4 league leaders, with Walter '2 Stoplnski in the drivers seat '0 with a suzling 586 set, look all I
10 three games easily from theii— Lead Burneti. j '31 The Sheeiers trounced t h e ' * '
'Lead Burners in three garnet L""T251 rAam .11 _ I ami I0020
P001000
1
Bill Mwrotki of UieTitUrteret Recreation Girls Clau A burgh Pirate* ww the only Nt- !
league. Pat Bartz acored sixItionai Lewue second baseman1points for the winners ln the
second week of competition. In ~the second game the Princes a °outplayed the CaldweU Starej*"by 6 to 6 to take their first winof the season. Swingler had1 Meter measure* flow of liquid
Matt B* A BranderUn. BofkliKun - I
• Cream • 0 • LandLeads by 111
~; CARTERET - Cream-O-»;Und Dairy won three game- .
over the last, place Richardk IBeauty School to stretch iu
W l l 1^ garnet over tht
Mn. Newcombe. Whoever theit the has certainly nevermoved In good society.
Mi. Hosltinson—How do ypu
infound out one thing about that ucond place Leschek't Dairv.< M—.^» .K^ I K V u , , . .Urn. 4U- T14 f , . , ~ " « « J ill
in* Hi-Lo Wpmen« BowlingLea«ue. v 6
R « i Watychowks of Orelnerb Ih*d g big 5Z7 aei on game* of i
four points, by "Ustening1
know that?Mrs
ihanda M if the meant tt.She shake* of Crei»in-O-Und Dairy h't a
>K 210 game this week. ,v
ILL S 6 M N . A U .KAMP OR BUtJKER
Israeli Lecturer Bookedfor Talk Sunday NightwooDBRIDOE-Dr.Menach.
will lecture Sundayn l i n R the Woodbridge
nmmunlty Center, In the sec-!i f th peak
nilvniiMR at
of a series of three speak-rescnted by the Metuchen-Ibvidge Joint Jewish Edu-
C;iiion Soiies.I), BcRln will lecture on
• •Kxndus - Fact o'r Fiction."
niif l
We
4f, VIMU-S
After the establishment ofhe State of Israel, Dr. Begin!ounded "Heruth," a nationalliberal party, heading Its dele-gation to the Knesseth, wherehe Is, as the leader of the sec->nd largest party In the coun-,ry, the chief spokesman forthe opposition to the MapaRegime,
Dr."The
Begin IsRevolt,"
the author of"The under-
Begin was bornago In the city of
, polnnd. He was educated ground," both of which dea..-wish and Polish school! with the rebellion against thc
British and "White Nights',,d Rrnduatcd from the Lawehonl of the Warsaw Unlvera- describing hisv He Is an accomplished lin- Russia.
Hist spodklnit five languages1,,,,,,'ily, including English.,
D, Begin became active Intin- Zionist Movement In his, ulv youth'. While n student In,',..], school he Joined Brlthrr'umiH'ldor. Betar, the Zion-,,i Hpvlslonlst para-mllltary
' v.mt Ii omaiilzftttons, roundediind led by Zc'ev Jabotinaky
>. nratorlcnl gift and organ-,m ubility brought him quietin the forefront of the move-,,t and he became,- in 1938,
l inld of the Polish Betar, thel,ii«cst Zionist youth group In
country, numbering overfor
exile in Soviet
PRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1961PAGE NINETEEN
quad President History Unit\Hr. Moss JoinsNames Chairmen Donates $25
To LibraryAVENEL ••- The captain's re
mrt for December was niven byVrip Bumback at. a meetingif the Avenel-Colonia First, Aid•i(|und at squad headquarters.He slnt.P(] R2 culls Wrre »mjc
iiR that month and tliMtwonmhnlanres traveled 9fiO milesind wnmd members donated 94man hniir.q of service. The calls'included 14 accidents; 46 trans-ports: 5 Inhalator; 5 miscel-laneous and 12 fire alarms.
Captnln Bumback gave hisyearly report, announclnn atotnl of 682 calls during 1Q60
SEWAREN — At a meeting,JL the Sewaren History Club at'cm home of Mrs. H. B. Rankin,Cliff Road, last week, Mrs. H.,~. Clark who toured through1
e countries of western Eu-<pe last summer, gave a brief
BBl{1 t h c a m b u l a n c e s
;n.riOO members trainediinneirliig In Israel and the• :it fnr a Jewish State.on the German Invasion Into
I'ulntid in September, 1939, Dr,li'-tim li'ft for Wllno. Lithuania,
en ulrendy occupied by thiiv;eis. lie was taken Into cus<lv by the Communist* and: irnced to hard labor in 81-i :a He was freed in 1941
niter the outbreak of the Nazl-lusMnn war and the concili-um of a Pollsh-Rasslan treaty
ieellll! Polish political prlSOH-iv Dr Bi'Kln Joined as an of-
[;i>i the Polish Army underserai Anders and was evac-
i;.ivd to Imn and from there'd Palestine In 1942, where he
Miss WitkowskiEngaged to Wed
WOODBRIDQE — Mr. andMrs. Casimlr Wltkowskl, 40 Jo-seph Street, Clark, have an-nounced the engagement oftheir daughter, Reglna Ann, toRobert J. Benzeleskl, son of Mr.and Mrs. Louis Benzeleskl, 811Knopf Street, Linden, formerlyof Woodbridge.
Miss Witkowskl graduatedfrom Arthur L. Johnson Region-al High School, Clark and Isemployed as a staff assistantin the patent division of theEsso Rcseardi and Engineer-ing Company, Elizabeth.
Her fiance graduated fromSchool andPolytechnic
WALLS THAT "TICK": What's ticking In the world of home!"'fashions? It's ticking The familiar striped cotton fabric w i traveled 8,560 miles nnd 1.784used to sec only on mattresses and pillows has gone glamorous. m a n n o u r « o f Service were pro-
XT" ••• — ' - - ded by the members. DuringIns
s pllowsNow we'll set ticking used as draperies, as upholstery, even
wall covering. Take this —_sleek room—perfect for city orcountry, as an extra guest roomjor a Uve-ln-one-room apart-'merit. The matching ticking onwalls, couches and bolsters im-parts unity, serenity and a cus-tom-made neatness.
The fabric Is In a muted olivegreen tone by Burlington In-
Woodbridge Highattended Virginia
setter of home fashions. Wallsthat "tick" were one of manydramatic features at a musicalreview presented by Bur-lington at the National HomeFashions Show In Chicago onJanuary 10, 1961. Manufactur-ers and retailers attendedand the next step: Mrs. Amerl-
dustrles, the nation's largest can Housewife will be adaptingtextile organization and a trend these ideas to her own home.
Girl, 11, Writes LetterTo Editor of Magazine
e year there were 151 accl-nt calls; 321 transports; 51halators; 75 fire alarms and!
miscellaneous calls.Chairman of standing com-ittees were appointed byeorge Evans, newly-elected
resident.Named were James Atkinson
nthony Fabrlo, William Selbynd Vernon Johnson, lnvesti
gating committee; W i l l i a mukacs, good and welfare; en
«rtalnment; Henry Karmazln,nd Edward Mann; RobertInowfleld, grounds; Lawrenci
May, sports; Stanley Chapman
Institute, Blacksburg, Va., and:is studying at Bcton Hall Col-lege of Dentistry, Jersey City,
SEWAREN - Arm MarieLacko, ll-year-old Sewarengirl, has written a "letter tothe editors" which It featuredIn thc February issue of Jack
where he Is praWfflV'of'hte!*1"1 Jill magazine. It waschosenclass and a member of theAmerican Dental Association.
Scouts ExhibitAt Scout • O • RamaELHt — Troop 44, Boy
•."is (il'mobili/i'd. Soon after his'8*01'1*, sponsored by the Newval he was appointed Com-.di'i-in-Chief of the Irgun
7.,:ii I mini .
Dover Methodist Church ex-
from many hundreds of letterssent In by children from allover the world.
Ann Marie, who lives at 237Old Road, will receive a copyof the "Jack and Jill Roundthe Year Book," a children'santhology containing some ofthe best stories and verse thatl
hlbited Indian relics and cos-• have appeared In Jack andtumet at a 8cout-0-R*ma heMIJUl Round the Year Book," •by Rarltan Council, Northeast children's anthology contain-
Perth Amboy (>irlto \ enema'^
UoODBRIDGK A The en-1'
District.A new 50-star American flag
Richard Bklllman, vice
of Mlfs Dlanne M.to
(President or the Mothers Circle.I Plying Engl* Patrol was de-
Ernest R. V e n m i i l l c t a w d w l n n w 0 , t h e p a t r o l' UI ld M ^ _ Call8to | C O m p e t l t l o n h e l d , r o m 8 e p t em-
Ing some of the best stories andverse that have appeared InJack and Jill during the lasltwenty years. Each month theeditors will award a copy o:this book to the children whose »P°nsors of the Onei Shabbo
:'N.IK
i of Mr.
N.-1-U,, 195 Grove Street, haa^i i i i^hl iMOTberr-.1 ann..u«cr* by l*r pare^U.j B g y ^ g ^ , k n l v e s ^ e r e
and Mrs, John Oorsak, 744|!ii!ii;inn Avenue, Perth Am-
warded R i c h a r d Sklllman,James Kucll, James Polon,
work appears on the NorthSouth, East, West page.
Ann Marie writes to Jackand JU1 about the mailcUnwho gave a performance at heischool.
'David and Eugene Faugulen.1- . Oorwk. a graduate o f ; J o w p h a n d j ^ ^ T o r n a l k o
Mary s High School, U a | a n d W a l u > r U W c h _.. i] at Trenton State Collwei
IIK in English. Her CHURCH ROBBED: i a graduate oi the umt FQRDS — Thieves broke in:.».;, is a junior at the Unl-jU> St. Nicholas Oreek Cathollcl
;>y of Notre Dame,, 8outh Church, King George Road•iii iiul, majoring In me-Sunday and stole themii-.ii engineering. ifrom a votive candle box.
BARGAIN EDDIECOMES TO 101 MAIN STREET!!Many of you remember BARGAIN EDDIE fromthe Woodbridge Farraef|s Market on Route 9,•VVmidbridjjr Come set us. Hundreds of BAR-'-AINS KVERY DAY!
(UKCK THESE TYPICAL
Low Auction Prices!!IU/OKHIADKS 5c
fcox
HOBBY - - ,
HlU\y Wood
17
" rt I '.» (ilimour
I U < ;
lt('K -Vic Kol)
it9
W\X PAPER7 5 PI. Roll Boie,
3 boxes 5 O 6
"'•*• $ 1 , 1 9
''"• ksaw or - - u „s"l<lcring hXC
SHOE
Griffin
SHOE I V I CPOLISH 19
R«f. 25c
TOYS 9 C
| . 15c
Pol
Colored I h C
NAPKINS fc w
fXOTHESPtNS
SOAP PADS
Ret, $1.S»
Melmao Salt kPepper withBuliwDlih
50Ref. %t.n ^
LMFt. Pkwtbi . 2 5Clothesline
50"x 96"
Wet Slmuth1'aper
Table Cloth15^ i ' Buy Job Lots and Bankrupt StocksEVERY DAY IS SALE DAY IIERK!!
BARGAIN EDDIE•<»i Main Street, Woodbridge
H" "a"> 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. - Friday » A. M. t« » P. M.
Children's BoxLunch, Sunday
AVENEL — The children1!x>x lunch, originally scheduled>y the Sliterhood CongregationB'nai Jacob for last Sunday,was postponed because of the>ad weather to Sunday at noon" movie Till be featured.
Tickets may be purchaieirom Mrs. Albert Rubin, li
charge of the Colonla propeland Avenel section; Mrs. H;Flrkser, Lynn Oaks section amMn. Iz Drescher, Shore Cresl
Congregation will hold regular services tomorrow at 8:3'P. M. with Rabbi Philip Brantdelivering the sermon. The
are Mr. and Mrs, Bernard Ras-kin In honor of their daughterHeather and their son, Stuartwho will mark their birthdayi
Revlon OfferTurned Do^n
EDISON - Members of Dl*trlct 65, Retail, Wholesale amTuesday night are reportednave flatly spurned an offer b:the Revlon Co. Managemenwhich had called for a $2week raise for' 18 months amanother $2 for the remainder o:a Ujree-year contract.
Mrs. Merle Kellenun. ricepresident of the local, said It•"r.'i;|nted to less than "a nickelan hour." The union had asked
iin iirross the board raise,she said neKotlationj were con-
•i>" but that there had beenno agreement on any of the
i . ! Hi' difference.A uTek ago, the union carriedmotion to effect a strike at
mld-nlght, January 31, thetermination of the existing con-tract, unless a satisfactoryagreement was reached withmanagement.
in honor of the birthdays _their daughters, Erica and Jod;and son, Barry.
Junior Congregation is scrieduled for 10 A. M. Saturday.
Includlnr The EditorFarmers are talking ' abot
the weather, and so Is everyonelse.—From the Martha's Vineyard (Mass.) Gazette.
iouselouse
use; Robertmaintenance;
Gilliam,Martii
Jutowskl and Robert Donatolubllclty; Steve Mezaros, chap
lain and Robert Gardner anfrank Cenegy, annual fun;rive.
A committee was formed toinvestigate the purchasing oi'laques with the first aid shlel'or graves of deceased memberi
Lou Rossi, chairman of th<squad's 1960 fund drive re»rted a total of $9389.82 wasrealized. Persons may still contribute by sending their donatlons to the squad headquarter:Avenel Street.
andthe
Ik on her experienceslowed color slides ofaces she visited."The architectural grandeur
these historic sites; the art!nd rich beauty of the tapes*rles and furnishings of famousulldlngs; the carvings andorks of great artists, still Inmarkably good condition ait-
r several hundred years In the
College Faculty!WOODBRIDGE — Dr. Her-
bert L. Moss, 115 Main Street,has been appointed to thefaculty of the PennsylvaniaState College of Optometry in,the capacity of gukst lecturer,and member of the collegevisiting clinic staff accordingto an announcement by Dr.Lawrence Fitch, president ofthe college.
The new position will not In-terfere with Dr. Moss' privatepractice In optometry. He willbe scheduled to be at the col-lege on days when he would no'normally be In his optometrl*office. He will lecture to seniorclass students on advancedprocedures used in' the practiceof optometry-and demonstrate
United Church WomenPlan Annual SeisionW O O D B R I D Q B — The
nlted Church Women willId their annual meeting Fri-
day at l p. M. at the FirstPresbyterian Church. Mrs. Ar-!
ur R. Bryer, president, adised all women of the church
of the council are Invited to
avel slides will be .shown byrs, Joseph Dobos, Refresh-
ments will be served by the tea'omen and the women of the"lrstr Presbyterian Church.
Manaker to MarryMary E. McDonald\
AVENEL—Mrs. Edward Mc-iDon&ld, 202 Camden street,Newark, has announced the en-gagement of her daughter,Mary Elizabeth, to Carl L.Manaker, Jr., son of Mr. andMrs. Manaker, ldfl Minna Ave-nue.
Miss McDonald, an alumnaof West Side High School,
and Mr. and Mrs. Milton Pascal Newark, is employed in thetraffic department of the NewJersey Bell Telephone Com-pany Newark.
Her fiance graduated fromWoodbridge High School and|FIRE UNIT SESSION
atliedrals and public buildings',11 have a unique quality of,yle and color that Is spirltual-' Inspiring in this age of cold,
unctional design In art," Mrs.:iark said.
During the business meetingwith Mrs. Simon Larson, pre-siding, invitations were read•"rom the Cranford Valley Im-irovement Association and the
Federated Women's Club of Co-"onla. Mrs. Ralph H. Qamowhose name was presented byMrs. Larson, became a member.
The drama department chair-man, Mrs. Clark, announcedhat a one act comedy will be
presented at the March meet-ng at the home of Mrs. R. G.
Crane,
Mrs. M. Q. Ebner, welfarecommittee chairman, gave areport on the various aspectsof this work throughout this'area and mentioned severalprojects, one being the collec-tion of old nylon stockings,which are turned over to theQreystone State Hospital forresale. These, coming fromseveral clubs and sources, havenetted the hospital more than$15,000 to date.
Mrs. Joan Oadek, who Is incharge of making up the Ameri-can Home Scrapbook, urged allmembers to help In making thismore interesting by contrlbu-;lng pictures «t sewing and
handiwork for the home. Theclub also voted to contribute$25 to the Sewaren Free PublicLibrary.
Mrs, William Watson, pro-gram chairman, announced that1
there will be a musical programat the February 15th meeting,'at the home of Mrs. ClarenceZischkau, 428 East Avenue. Co-hostesses will be Mrs. Alex Ur-ban, Mrs. John Ryan and MrsWatson,
these procedures to internes inthe college's public' clinics.
Dr. Moss U a Fellow of thiAmerican Academy of Optometry. He Is president of the NewJersey Optometrlc Assoclatloiand Is active In numerous com'munity organizations lncludlmthe Lions Club and Red CrossHe was a delegate to the 1961White House Conference onChildren.
HOSPITAL GUILD MEET INW O O D B R I D G E — Tto
Woodbridge Branch of thPerth Amboy General HospitaWoman's Guild will meet tcnight at 8 P.M. at the Hunga:ian Reformed Church Ha!School Street.
•tend.After the business meeting,
onnptnkll
wedish King SendtThank-You for Key]WOOfiBRIDOE — Mayor
Frederick M. Adami has re-ceived a'thank-you note fromthe King of Sweden, for akey to the Township sent tohim through Captain KurtCarlsen. Alwat Street, skip-per of the Plying EnterpriseII.
E. Wetter, First Marshallof the Court to the King ofSweden, wrote to the mayorfrom Stockholm:
"His Majesty the King hascommanded me to convey tillsincere thanks for your kind-ness in presenting htm withthe Golden key of Wood-bridge Township. Hla Majestyvery much appreciate* yourfriendly gift.
"Wishing you and yourtown a prosperous and happyNew Year."
-—OFF AND RUNNING by John 1. Day
Tin1 Irl of Handicapping
Rutgers Univefstty where hereceived a degree of Bachelorof Science of civil engineering'.He Is an engineer with WallaceJ. Wilck, contractors and en-gineers, Perth Aniboy.
A real racing fan docs notmerely try to pick a winner,but instead makes hia ownhandicap of the race; hedoesn't ask who you like butasks to see your "figures".Such a man was the fate JohnL. O'Connor, better remem-bered as "The Sage of Schuy-l«rville", Mr. O'Connor wa3perhaps more widely knownfor his library of racingbooks, now owned by Mon-inouth Park, than he was forhit handicapping, but on one
WOODBRIDGE — A regulameeting of the Ladies Auxlllar:of Fire Company 1, formed;scheduled for last week, will biheld tomorrow night at 8:30 athe School Street Firehouse.
"Your Grandchildrenwill grow up underV Communism!"
op HUM nuaon
Will lh« Sovltt thrtot <omi truafWill your grandchildren llv* un-dtr Communlim? Forgat OodTSolut* th« Sovlit flag?
"Never!" you uy. But mt yo*tut*? Wh»c can you do to oppoMConunuiium? Then ii ooi nutw»y. Help RiJlo tn* Stropt!What doti it do? h brotdcua th*newt of freedom to 79 million ctp.tive people behind the Iron Cut.u i o . It belpi keep them fromturning to Comffluoliffl. It helpspot* » major obiiacb to tht Ru*.l i u i ittnlng a war. But Kadio Fr««Europe needi help. It dtptndi ooindividual Americuii for in txlit-eace. Will you help? Givt« dollar?Give 5 dollars... or mote? Surelyyour heart iclli you co give nme>ihiug-to that out children-and•11 children—thall Urt la freedomthroughout the world.
Give N o w T o . . .
KADIO FREE EUROPEHi* American People'!
Counter Voice to Connnunlim
Mail itui (snfr'CHifJvn f t :Kadi* Free lurep* hni
r O I w 11*1. Ml. VHnea 10, Ht* Y«kPiLbtitkti as a puM" unici incovptration wM Tkt AdvtrlitinpOunciJ arid t/i« Utwpnytr Ad-arliiing Kmctivii AwwfotW
secret weaponj1
(or anyon* sellingcarscough drops
calicoor cans of corn
J . ,. • . •
The Mcrel weapon is F A & l . . . backing up your advertising
In our newspspr with down )<: r-rth, (mvn CK u''on
tfam.
in the Aildit Bureau of Circuktions* pro-vide* you with the safeguard oit knowledge . . . full knowledgeof when and In how many people your advertising message(MI.
No aattar what you sell or the size of your budget, every
adwrtisement should be planned to reap the greatest benefits
at tiw tail} register. Knowledfs... facts about the circulation
audience you are trying to se l l . . . gives you an extra dimension
OlCOUttDCC. ' "
Alk to tee i copy of our not-so-secret ABC report. Fact-by-.
fact, ft contains the story of out audited circulation to help
yaiUannu«eflectiv«adv«rtliing.
1 8 - 2 0 Green Street, WoodbridgePhone ME 4-1111
' llui nowiptpcr it a member of Ibe Audit Bumau of Circuliuoni, anuucittion of nearly 4,000 publiihin, »dv*na««, and «dveniiiin«»Miciei. Our circulation it aodittd naultrly by «p»ri«nc*l ABCcirculation auditor* Our ABC report ibowi how much elrcultlion wehtve, whm ft |oei, how obtained, and tOm faett thai toll you wb»tyou get for your adv«rlitin| mooey whw you DM tbli wwipepv.
occasion at Saratoga his fig-ures "stood up", as they tay,and, had he been on hand ear-lier this year at DelawarePark when Hal Price Head-ley'i filly Rash Statement wontha Oaks at 45 to 1, he wouldhave been something of acelebrity. The Saratoga inci-dent occurred in 1942 and isvouched for by George B."Brownie" Leach who, in addi-tion to publicizing ChurchillDowns and the KentuckyDerby, is, according to thelate Joe II. Palmer, a man whohas a great respect for ^hetruth and use3 it sparingly.Mr. O'Connor bet on anotherHal Price Headley filly namedAskmenow, and later proudlydisplayed his winning ticketana his "figures" on the race.Asked why Askmenow did notappear on the list and why,therefore, he had backed her,O'Connor replied: "Oh, ehefigured last, but I alwnys beton Headley."
LEGAL NOTICES
NOTICE OT PUBLIC AlXTO WHOM IT MAT CONC«RW:
At • rerultr mMtlni? oftheOoun,II of the Borough of Curtsnt hild
|J»nu»ry 19, IMI 1 m directed widmtlw the ftrt ttrnt. on THiirwisy
n. February 2. itoi. the Mayorl»nd Counrll win mttl at 8:(K) P. M.
n the nnunrll Chnmtwrs, MunldptlBullrtlntT, Cooit# Avtnnn. c»rter»t,Nrw Jerwy find upon* »nd aell ttpublic j»le «nd to th* hlRtitst blddrt
iinu to ttrroi of i«l« on flicwith the Borough Clerk, nptn to
tlon, mill to h*prior to ul«:
LOT 16BLOCK «5 C
DANIEL STREFT1,OTS J3 to n
BLOCK «S CWILLOW STREET
LOTS 18 to 30BLOCK US D
MARION STRBBTAll of Mid lot* being Irregular in
•Ize and only purts or portion* ofcomplete lots.Borough of CarteretM
T»ke further nolle* that tbtC»rteret Borough Council bu. byraiolutlan snrt p\inu«iit to l»w,flitd a minimum price »t »H!chMid lota tn mld blorks will be ipld,together with til other ptrtlMnt
. Hid minimum price beingW0,00. plus costs of prtpulnf tttAand advertising thtt MIc. S4ld lateIn uld Works will require 10% flty-ment i t tlmt of bid. th( btlinci tobr paid within 30 tiurs from OUm UMl«.
The Ml' of the abore mentlonid jproperty subject to tollowlns con-dltlona:TERMS AND CONDITIONS Of RAU
1. The tucceuful bidder ih»ll b»required to deposit 10% of the vetolpurcbaw price at the time of ail*and the balance ahall be p»y«t)lewithin 30 daya from the date otsale.
2. Tlu purchaser, hla, her, theiror Its aaafgna shalkaot erect or per-mit to be erected upon any part ofthe premises my dwelling coatingleu than #,000 00.
3. It La specifically underttoodthat the purchaser, hla, her, theiror It* asalgni, ahall construct at hla,her. their or lta own proper <*st»and expense, complete) aantury andstorm sewers to aeeommodau, theproperty sold, wld aewera abdll belaid within i l l (6) months from thedate of sale and shall be Uld Inaccordance with plane end speci-fications therefore prepared or tobe prepared by the Borough In -glneer ot the Borough of Carteretand approved by the Major andBorough Council of the Borough otCarteret, and all sewers so con-structed shall become the propertyot the Bcroush of CarMret, M bartot the Municipal Sewer System. Thecost of the preparation of the pyoiaand specif lest Ions ihs.ll bt borne bythe purchaser.
4. The purchaser ahall be requiredto provide at hit. her, their oMMown proper costa and eipenu »the Inch penetration maowUmrosd on the street or street* onwhich the aforesaid lota face; andsaid street shall be Improved w theconstruction of the dwelling pro-gresses; uld street thall be Im-proved In accordance with the. gradeof said, street or streets as estab-lished by the Borough Council.
J. Purchaser will conatruct »lde-Tilki. curbs and gutters to atcom-*modate the said property, above de-scribed. The sidewalks and curbsshall be In accordance to grade*established by the Borough Council.Said curb and gutter to be no lestthan 3 leet wide.
Take further notice that at saidsale or any date to which It may beadjourned, the Mayor and Councilreserve the right In their discretionto reject any or all bids and to Milsaid .lots In said blocks to suchbidder as they may select.
Upon acceptance of the minimumbid, or bid above minimum, by theMayor and Council nnd the paymentthereof by the purchaser accordingto the manner ot purchase In ac-cordance with terms of sale on file,the Borough of Garteret will delivera Bargain- and Sale Deed (or saidpremises.
PATRICK POTOCNIChBorough Clerk
To be advertised January 20, 1M1and January 27, 1961 In the CarteretPress.C. P. 1/20, 27/61
Frank Sinatra's contract withCapitol Records ends soon andhe plans to form his own rec-ord company.
BUY ANautomat icELECTRICBLANKETot your favorite store! A-M-M
PAGE fWENTY
ind the sttBDfor your life...
WORSHIPTOGETHERTHIS WEEK
Testimony the lord
Thursday. 12 to 3:00 P.Wednesday « to 7:S0 P. M,
SundayWednesday 8:15 P. M.
M. earth.
' M
AVENEL PERSOINALSGUTOWSKJ with Mrs. William Orahum
Boulevard.
M:W HOVERMETHODIST CHURCH
tW Nrw DoTfr Ro»d. fdi«onRet. UIWTI R 5*f?(. Cider
8:30 A M Ea:!v C:v;"r Jr.;E«rJy Sunday iy-bci;
10 A. M Church Scho>: ar.i11:30 A. M.. Sunday 3-crx.7 P. M. Yomr. Gr/;r
WOODBRIDGEMETHODIST CHVRCHTb«*n» S. »«m»ju, Mimner
WOODBRIDGr GOSPELCHIRCH
Corner Prospect A»rnue »n
•ev Peter Borrfs P»««• 8:45 A. M.. Sur.da>" Schoo!for all ages. Ern*'1- Baraois,Superintendent. A d u l t BibleClam at same hour, teacher.Kunyon Ernst.
11:00 A. M . Morning worship•ervke. Nursery it prov:ded.
6:00 P. M.. S e n i o r youth(ttnips.
7:00 P. M., Evenin; GospelService.
ST. JAMES' R.C. CHCRCHAmboy Avenue, Woodbridf*
M. Rcr. Hm. Ctarlei o.MeCorriftln. Pasta?
•CT. Gnrtare Napolwn.Hrriftjiit Putor
E*T. WlUtam B«M.AtdlUnt P»itof
Sunday Masses: 6 45 7 45.1:45,10:00 and 11:00 A M
Novena services every Tues-day. 7:30 P. M
Weekday Masses 7:00 andf:30 A. M.
EVANGELICAL AND
51
w i e - Ro**J.Or[iniB tad Ckotr Ointtm
Juan Sb*rr»rt III,"tajwnnteneVnl Ol Cbvn* SfboW
«ondar S « T k «9 45 A. M.. Crrureh Sc.iool
sr.d Bcle Class.!!-0C A- M, Morning Wor-
^ • • • ?j:3C P M., Junior Intermedi-
a'-* Fellowship.7-.W! P M.. M.YJ.
CONGREGATION BETHSHOLOM
94 C««per ATenoe. IselintaftW Bcnurd rrukel
ut Nortert *JStwt, Canler ^ ^SacSath Services. Priday eve- Deacons.
ling 8:00.
HRST PRESBYTERIANCHCHCH
Rihwmj Arume and CirterftnO&v, »% OGQ Driu|[e
Ret. A\n *. Vnneth, PatterJ U D H Mint. Stadrnt Atftiunt
TT*4 k, Brieft. Jr., Orjinht ,
Sunday9:30 A. M., Church School.11:00 A. M., Morning Wor-
3:00 P. M., Junior ChristianEndeavor.
6.00 P. M.. Junior Hi*hUnited Prttbyterian Youth.
7;00 P. M.. Senior HighUnited Presbyterian Youth.
Holy Communion T u e * ^ Deacons, flnt
ST. •INTHOSVS R C.CIIIRCH
Port ReadinnR»i Hiinl Inn Mllon. Pittof
Sunday Masses, 7:00. 8:009:00. i :00 and 12:00 noon
Weekday Masses at 8:00A, MNOvena In honor of St. An-
each Tuesday atM
^ t ^ iA white wool suit '
biisht Mlk blouw U »not* in winwr durinz drab traydays—and the color i* as rightfor the north as it It for the
-AdiWhterwwborntflMr.
. and Mr?. Jw"ps S U o ' 3 0 c l a r , Church.* Place at the R«».w»y Memorial
10. Tlic b«by,
P. M.
Thursday: T ruitees.Thursday, 7:30 P M.Scouts, (very ThursdayP. M. *
Friday Boy Scouts,:15,'P. M.
1 0U1K*Perry. 8
*ZXJgecondO l r l !
7:30
Continuous are a-
5 ho» n in aM of the smart shops, son ofThere are tho^ with white Fletcher Commercial Avenue,
medical
* ' 5
Session, first Tuesday. 8 P M.Trustees session, Tuesday, 8;
P. M.third Tuesday,
P M.Junior Choir. Fridays,
PI).Senior Choir. Fridays,
p \£
Superintendent*, last Tues- l o w s h l Pday.
Church 8chool. 2nd Wednes-
Morning Prayer and Sermon, day.II A y White Church Gn;ld. second
Church School. 9:45 A. M.
JOffiTS EPISCOPALCHCRCH
and Hamilton AvenuesForts
Her, W U U U B H. P»me, Vicar
Holy Communion 8:00 A. M.
HOT
FIRST PRESBYTF.R1ANCHURCH OF ISELIN
O»k Tree RoadHer. Rn(fr D. Sldener, Pajtor
Sunday: »Mom:nsi Worship: 8:45 A. M.
and 11:15 A. M.Church S c h o o l : Nursery
through third grade, 8:46 A. M.Nursery through sixth grade10:00 A. M. Junior High church
and Westminster Fei-4:30 P. M.-6:30 P. M.
Senior High Westminster Fel-lowship. 7:00 P. M.-9;30 P. M.
in of God iica »'ill be enlarged upon
_ at Christian Science service*o „ ?Sft*o w b > M C *Sundav in the Lesson-ShimonSaturday. 8:00 P. M. ientitled Love •
from the Bible will
lovely8 Au-
At A vend Hi,
V :OIR REDEEMER
LLTHERAN CHCBCH2( Fourth Strwt, Fords
Ret Jldcn R. lloBi
Organisu: E d d i e Jacobson o n )y
Th:< h «
Miss Barbara FrttscheMatin Service 8.15 A. MMain Service 10:45.Holy Communion
First Sunday 10:45.Third Sunday 8:15.
Sunday School andClasses. 9:30 A M.
include this selection (rorft I|John 49 In this was man:f e s W the love of God towardus. becauie that God sent hi» = r ]emlh An { a v o r f d
begotten Son into, trw M •world, that **= m»::it iiv<through h:m '
The closi:;; cttaiior. to be
School.L a c k l a n d Air B.iw. AVENEV - Tho B,,He Is home on leave un- tmsU'ts of the AVPD, \
frocks til January 3ft at which time lie Library heard Mrs. Fm:sweaters will leave for Gunther, Ala. for z l l r librarian, report
tha- ha? stayed further studies as medical children's books In ni.o! it* popular- technician as well as two no* KI>,
and resort war . . - .uenel School 23. PTA utjoks on Stamp ,„c- those of three- »|)l .sponsor » public card party*hich have been pl« (,,:
at the school tonwht Bl 8 P.M. .sh^lvcv Mrs. MaMjir inEntertainment vnll tt« Prondw* "J (he Decfmber rm
T.e .skirt,-! air shon short, by the .students of the Madelyn hud dropped offshort—rather too short to suit Andre Studio. Door prizes will dement weather.
••) . • (
Days and Hoi;Holy Communion 10:00 A M.
CONGREGATIONB"NAI JACOB
Lord Street, Arenelbfekt Philip Bno<8:30 P M. Friday
Adult Bible Study, 10:00 A.M.;
Monday: Ses&iun, third Mon-,and fourth1 Mondays. da-v- 8 ; 0 0 p M- Ladies Aid, sec-|
Udies' Aid Society, second,«nd a l l d f o u r t h Mondays, 8:00' and fourth Wednesdays, P M. Brownies, every Monday
Women's Association, first at 6:45 P. M,Thursdayi Cancer Dressings, first andithird Wednesday*.] Boy Scouts. Fridays. 7:30
CHRISTIAN SCIENCERah way: Masonic Temple
1548 Irvine Street
Sunday at 11:00 A.M.Sunday School 9:30 A. M.
read from Scienw and Healthwith Key to the Scriptures' byMary Bakfr Eddv states -6:17-
Blble 18-; 'Goc! :> Lovp More thanthis we cannot ask. higr.e: wecannot !ook. farther wf can-not go.
The GoldenJeremiah 9:24'gloneth e'..ir\- iur.dfrstar.deth
many figuresplump TomanTear h-:> s an
so the f.iort be awarded.to
lone?:—T;,;rd Ward Republic
Insofar as this u ti,,nml of the Clvll,Vv
Onr
Cluo o! Avenel meets at the t,rnr ywill stress ailAveLil-Jc'iloma F'irst Aid 8qu»d o n l n P « 8 r. both of •*
r . . buildx,; tonight at 8:15- and ft non-flcllonal n;Oil' [e<f!s :ne m>.«te . u* mpcts effort is to be madr \
East must ever remain mv>ten- —Oirl SHOUI iroop a mn\* r l
n ..- A :ie-» Chinese typewriter tomorrow at 4 P. M. wltn Mr>.Text L* ;:orc-*itl: 4 500 churacur.'- ;.< de- Stanley
' U t him that -or:bed a.<- t'r.e '•simplified" Stre*i! It's that ;••• rr.-xle; - Ti'n
-Detroit NV»i> P M Gi
Florky. 274tlir action on Amcnr
Avfnel i"i>>1rs. Daniel lv \ > ;i
w from 4 to 3.15 stated thf next meetScout Troop 57 nn't-U o Tui sday. rYbruar, :
RATWwdbridce ME 4-11
B«r. Leslie S<rj>, MinliurOrder of Sunday Services:
1 10:00 A,. M. Sunday Schoo)', 10:00 A. M.. English Senice' 11:00 A\ M. H u n g a r i a nBervice. ^
7:00 P M. Youth Fellowship. First Sunday of the m o n t h — , , t
J:30 P. M. Ladles Aids Society ; "Monday: Religious Training1
2:30.Tuesday: ' F i r s t ) Lorantffy
Guild, 7;30.Tuesday: (Second* Officers
and Elders, 7:30.Tuesday: 'Fourth > Brother-
hood. 7:30.Wednesday: J u n i o r Choir.
. 3:15.Wednesday: A d u l t Choir.
7:30.
Avende,WuHun B. Scbmaus,llwn Brindes, Ortanitt
Snndar Services8:00 A. M. Holy Communion.9:30 A. M. Church School
'Holj Comirunion, 1st Sun-day of the month i
11:00 A. M. Holy Communion3rd Sundays' and
Morning Prayer and'2nd and 4th Sundays>
ISELIN ASSEMBLY OF GODCHVRCH
48 Berkeley BoulevardIs*lin, New Jersey
lUt. WUUMH Klrtij, PutorSunday Sen-ices:9:45 A M. Sunday school for',
all ages.
ADATH ISRAELSTNAGOGCE
Amboy Avtnae. WoodbridteB«T. Samuel Newbereer, RabklFriday. 7:30 P. M.. regular
Sabbath services.
THE CHTRCH OFJESUS CHRIST |
Florida Grove Road '••Hopelawn ' j
Jouph BenjoU, MinisterRirhird BfnyoU, Or|anlst ,
Sunday Morning Worship.:10:30 A M . |
Sunday School, 9:15 A. M. !
lowsthodkST. JOHN VIANNEY CHLBCH;
Colonia Junior High School •Rev, Walter Badxlwon, Pastor !
Rev. WUllun i. Kokosikt, AssistantPastor
Sunday Masses 7, 8, 9, 10, Hiand 12 noon. .«
Class. 10:007:45 P. M.
Service. £venmg Rectory, 47 Glendale RoadJColonia,
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL . _ ,CHIRCH OF WOODBRIDGE „ 8 : 0 0 V l l l e M a > W T O I E OUR LADY OF PEACE 'Mtan Schueder, Minister of Muilc Player Meetings. CHURCH
MM. Kennrtb McCain, 7:45 P M. Wednesday. Bible n r a n « l 7 , b » „ „ „ - ,.-„„..Superintendent ol Church School o,,,ri.. >"» Bruiuwick Avenue, ionls
Robert Wahiiren, Ortanist oiuas. Rev. Joseph Bnoiowski, PastorSunday • i 8 : 0 0 p- M- F u s t M o n d a S o l Sunday Masses, 8:00, 9:00,
9:30 A. M., Church Schoo l m o n t h : Teachers and Workers|1C:oo and 11:00 A. M. and 12Worship. 'Child care sen-ice Conference. jnoon. •through age 2). ; 8 ; 0 0 p M- S e c o n ( i Monday:: Weekday Masses. 6:45 and'11:00 A. M., Church School,age 3 through second grade.
Board Meeting.6:30 P. M. 2nd and 4th
days: Mlssionettes under dlrec-
8 A, M.; Priday. 6:45, 8:00 andA. M. ;
12:05 P M Coffee H o u r Q a y s : Mi&5lonenes unaer uueu- Monday iFfellowship t i o n o f M r s - J- W a l d n e i m a t Novena, 7:30 P. M. •
7:30 P. M.. Pilgrim Fellow-!her n o m e ' 1 8 4 C o o p e r A v e n u e v Male Choir Rehearsal, 8:00ship. ' I 1 * 1 ' " - jP. M,
Meetings i 8 : 0 0 p- M- Tatl F r l d a y ol> Altar - Rosary Society, firstOfficial Board 8-00 P M M o n t l l : Women's MissionaryjMonday after first Sunday at
Council under direction of Mrs.^oo p.-M. ithird Thursday.Church School Staff, first
Monday 8:00 P. M.Surgical dressings second and
fourth Wednesday. 1:30 P. MG.E.T. •Cltlb, third Monday.
8:00 P. M.Sigma Alpha Phi, second and
fourth Tuesday, 8:00 P. M.Congrfgators, first S u n d a y
7:00 P. M.Men's Club, fourth Thursday
6:30 P. M.Choir Rehearsal*
Chancel, Wednesday 7:45P.M.
, Junior, Wednesday 6:45 P. M.
BT. ANDREW'S CHURCH, Avtnel•ev. Jobn Ea|an, Paitor
R. Workman. Holy Name Society' secondMonday after second Sunday
COLONIA GOSPEL CHAPEL i a t g : 0 ( ) p M486 Inman Avenue at We*t : Tuesday
Street, Colonia • P T A meeting third Tuesday |Sunday 8chool and Bible of each month at 8:00 P. M.
Classes 9:30 A. M.Gospel Service Sunday 7:30;
Christian Women's HomeBible Class Thursday. 1:30 P. M.
Young People's Meeting Fri-day 7:46 P. M.
Weekday Masses 7:30 A. M.Sunday Masses 7:00, 9:00.
10:00, 11:00, and 12 noon.Confessions Saturday,
7:30-8:30 P M.4-5.
JEWISH COMARTslTYCENTER OF COLONIA
. 518 Inman AvenueBibbi David Schelnfeld
Services Friday night at 8:30.Sunday School 10:30 to 12.
ThursdayC h o i r Rehearsals,
8:00 P. MConfessions
Every Saturday 11 A. M. un-til noon, 4 to 6 P. M. and 7to 9 P. M., and sometimeson days before ' Holy Days ofObligation.
ST. CECELIA'S CHURCHIseUn
Kev. John H'tlus, HIIIMSunday Masses, 6:30. 8:00,
Junior Services Saturdays 8 : J 5 | 9 : j 5 _ 9 ; 3 0 1 0 : 0 0 1 0 ; l a ;from 10:30 to 12. ! 10:45. 11:00 11:30 and 12 noon.
Hebrew School Tuesday and} Weekday Masses, 7:00 andThursdays 3:30 to 5, and 5 to 8 : 0 0 A M
6:30 P. M.
There s an art to good dry-cleaning . . . and our trainedtechnicians prove it! Mar-velous results achieved everytime.
When time counts, yop can count on usfor speedy service. Yout clothes are alwaysreturned to you promptly, sparkling cleanand fresh. And you'll find that our pricesare reasonable.
354 Amboy Avenue
WOODBRIDGE"ConvutUit -ap Mrrie*"
UNITED CHURCH of CHRISTof CLARK - COLONIA
Bethlehem Union Church, ClarkRet. tieorge A. Shultj, filter
9:45 A. M., Church School.11:00 A.. M., Morning Wor-
ship.
TEMPLE BAPTIST CHURCH"A Friendly Church
an the Triangle"Pfeiffer Blvd.
and Krochmally Avt.Perth Amboy, New JerseyRev. Joieph R. Baikin, Paititr10:00 A.M. Sunday Sch|)l11:00 A.M. Worship !]and
Communion.- All Welcope -
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHMarket and High Street
Perth AmboyIUV. Peter Kow^lchuk, ftitor
11:00 A.M., Mominj Worship9:45 A. M., Sunday School6:15 P. M,.; Baptist Youth!
Fellowship. '7:30 P. M.. Evening Gospel 1
Service.11:00 A.M., Communion Sun
day, first Sunday of eai:tvmonth. I
Wednesday, 8 P M., Prayer jMeeting.
ST. JOHN THE BAPTISTORTHODOX GREEKCATHOLIC CHURCH
Broad and Dlvltlop Street*Perth Ambo;
Ret. Stephen Sedor, ftftorSunday Matins, 7:00 A M
tar ly Bnglish Mass, 8:00 A. MChurch School, 9:00 A.M.
Veupers, Saturday niuht.1- andbefore holidays at 7:00 P M '(
OPEN DAILY 'til 10OPEN SUNDAYS 'til 7
— Route 9, ZUCm? TMNNGSTW*
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