8
Born in England, she had li' Hightstown 27 year?. She \ member of the Hightstown \\ infield Mi«a M»rc«IU L»*x«ri rollment will be limited, first come, Mr. and Mrs. Levin Lazzeri first served, ot Cranbnry have announced the If yon wish to apply, call C. A. engagement ot their daughter O’Reilly, Borough C D director, at Marcella to William Hummel, Hightstown 8-2378 n o t' latter ttm son of Mr. and Mrs. George! October 7. Hummel of Summit street. Thej prospective bride is a graduate unwRtn rit sun w of Hightstown High School »nd k Sttarday. November 1 8 6 9 employed bv Electronics Associate* L a fia Aid of United M M d Ilie *rincc ton. Mr Hummel also Obarth of Millstone, J | ]■ attended the local high school and is Adlltts, 88, chOdten f l t ^ p i M r V | employed by Midaut Aluminum Servjugs froan 4:30 wo.—idv. |Corp . Dayton. Oct, 6, 27, Nod. 1 PTA is and bak- October j | | © b e ( f i a f e t t r Ad Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity >—'"V H2TH YEAR—No. 14 HIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE, MERCER COUNTY, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1900 PRICE—FIVE CENT* Paladino Gets Light Company Foreman’s Job Lincoln Ave. Resident Nine Years with Firm; Is World War II Vet Vincent E. Paladino, 177 Lincoln avenue, has been appointed a line foreman in Jersey Central Power & Light Company's Hightstown dis- trict. A nine-year veteran with JCP&L, his first position was as a winch truck driver. From there he pro- gressed through the company line- man classifications. For the past Field of Five Girls Vie for ’Miss’ Title One of the following girls will be: Brothers; $5, Marie’s Beauty Shop; honored as “Miss Hightstown En- « Voelbel’s Plumbing & 'Heating; ThursdaIv P f?etnhpr fi ?! o' 15 for each of the five winning con- T-Tiotit Tt ,e, *A at ?|le ? CW testants, Coleman Buick, Trenton; win be S M S f ',f en& St|lts Agency $10 , nnm er^p: Miss Mary Jane A -.-M \ ss J,U/ y J?rhnson,ll¥ ,sV Caro iKeity; 3 free games, Hightstown ^ '"A Nancy Mount and B L $5 Glackin Ftmeral Miss Sharon Szczepamk. , Home ;B$5, Egn0r's R cal Estate ; $5, Jhe winners were chosen from alKennelh Duryee; $5, Lewis’ Mar- field of 35 contestants after a 21-dayjket; gift, Jim's Barber Shop; gift, voting period that saw 45,224 votes Hightstown News Agency; $5, Char- cast in a race that brought shoppers ||e nle B lrber f c t T c k r t t o e s ‘° SUPP°rt Each «irl has been assi«ned 10 a tavonte candidates. member of the Firemen's Auxiliary Miss Austin, Miss Johnson, Mtssiwh0 will help her prepare for both Lannmg and Miss Szczepamk arc 1 Thursday night and the Anniversary students at Hightstown High School.'Day activities. Mrs. Earl Davison Miss Mount is employed at Me- w;n act as chaperone for Miss Graw-Hill. , tin, Mrs. William Rue for Miss As excitement continued to mount Johnson, Mrs. George Lanning for during the final week of voting, so her daughter, Mrs. W arren Wright did the “Treasure Chest” increase in 1 for Miss Mount and Mrs. Edward value. Much attention has been fo- Esch form Miss Szczepanik “Miss cuscd on the chest in the window oT Hightstown Engine Company No. 1” the Town Shop where Miss Bea will be presented with a bouquet of Rogers has displayed it with imagi-1 flowers by her chaperone Thursday nation and color. Mrs. John Archer, night. She will be an honored guest of Archer’s North Main street store in the reviewing stand at the parade has announced that the following, on Saturday. The other four win- gifts were added last week: $10, Con- ners will serve as hostesses during over’s Dairy; hair dryer, Danser the day. ; OUTSTANDING CITIZENS. Vincent E. Paladino year he has taught Lakewood and Freehold line crews in the use of specialized line tools. Paladino is a graduate of Hights- town High School. He is a veteran of World W ar II, having served in ■both the Atlantic and Pacific in the U. S. Navy. He is a manager in the YMCA sponsored Peanut Baseball League. Married to the former Miss Pearl Visintini of Applegarth the couple has two sons, Bruce 10 and Brett Boro Authority Peddie School Accepts House Employs S ix Applications New Teachers D. Socholitsky Mayor Milton H. Cunningham and' Six new members have joined tllc S P | H | -r III3 11ST Jr. William G. Rose, chairman of, teaching staff at Peddie Carrol 0. \ Thousands to See Fire Co. Parade Here 100 Units, 25 Bands To Take Part in Event To Start Sat. at 1 p.m. Thousands of persons from this area and other parts of the state will be on hand Saturday when the local fire company marks its 125th anni- versary. Some 100 fire companies, 2S hands and 4,500 marchers will be in the line of march. It will get undef way at 1 p.m. according to James Eufemia and Earle I‘. Davison, co* hairmen of the affair. - 1 Mrs. Alonzo Dey, descendant cM Benjamin Reed, a pioneer in obtiui ■ ing fire protection for Hightstown will be one of the honored gueBtl* according to Earl F. Davison tn 4 James Eufemia, cho-cnairmen of thfl celebration. Other dignitaries wb# will be present in the reviewing stand at the intersection of Swutil Main and Mercer streets when th* parade gets underway at 1 p.m. wi® be Chris Hasscihuhn, president aI the N. J. State Firemen's Associa- tion; Captain John T. DemjMrtef* Mercer County fire marshal; Cap* VFW Po.t 5700 Commander William J. Pender,,.t pre.ent, out.tandin, citi- IvrepreseJtat^ef’O fc'tf zens awards for 1%0 to George S. Lewis Jr. and Eugene Fulton while Mayor Tunis Conover of East Windsor Monmouth County fire marsl»»l| Township look on. Some 125 persons attended the ninth annual dinner-dance held at Grange Hall and the William J. McGray, emergency SC 1 > post home. David R. Twomey, senior vice commander, vices supervisor for the N. J. TtlTO- pike Authority; Mayor Milton H. Cunningham; Councilman Howard Haring, principal of fing project slated to year of the boys prep school -Hightstown High School, announced, turning down an antlerless season Xc%-k'r*e> ' State. of Qua,it>1 residents to display the Amer will be opened on Joining the English Department today tjiat a niember of this year's this v*ar ; distributors who also pack eggs H;, for the occasion. Police r 18 at 2 p.m. at Bor-1 are George D. Heisey of Newark \ senior class, David N. Socholitsky, '/ |; Hi|. Tnn oul-m-state sources wasjcivif defenPe reserves will be YMCA Goal Set at $5500 Dr. ----------- ... ------ , the Housing Authority of the Bor^Morong, headmaster, announced at ough, today announced jointly that the opening of the 96th academic, p auj bids on the housing project slated to | year of the boys’ prep school, be built here Tuesday October _ __ _ . _____ ____ _____ _______________ ough Hall. |Ohio and John G. Hopkins of jias been named a semi-finalist in The “prefect calls for the construe-, Wellesley, Mass. Heisey received' tjle 1960-61 National Merit Scholar-; tion of 42 units of public housing in: his bachelor of arts degree from' sTilp competUtQTir. the Railroad avenue and Wood Denison University and his master Socholitsky, who is the son of Mr. | street area this fall and winter. (of arts from Western Reserve Uni-1and Mrs Sidney Socholitsky, 2&Tine; Rose said the authority has about versity, while Hopkins is a graduate Roosevelti is among the 10.000' completed title acquisition to the;of Harvard and has completed his j.- . scoring students on the NMS site through its attorney and execu- master’s at the University of Vir-j Qualifying Test of educational de-: tive director, Bruce H. French oflginia. ivelopment given in more than 15,- j Princeton. William E. Davis who taught at qqo |dgfi schools last spring. The Mrs. Marjorie R. Sherman is ac-j Bridgeton Academy, North Bridge-1 senii-finalist group is composed of , * ~~ ,, .... -- -• ring students in each United States terri - No Antlerless Season Irks Farm Bureau The New Jersey Farm Bureau’s state wildlife committee will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. to decide how to counter the latest rebuff of the State Fish and Game Council in Amend Seal EggRegulation Birdsall Jr., fire commissioner. Judging of the parade and selec- tion of the winners will be done by a six-man team from the Mid-Atlan- tic Judges Association who will work northern counties most plagued with crop damage by the overpop- ulated deer herds. Following talks last week be- tween Farm Bureau leaders and the Fish and Game Council, which drew a blank as far as reconsider- Icepting applications for tenant se-|t0Ilj Me., will be ail instructor in| the highest scoring students in each] If® J* ^ Urea?|tlDre,idem>Srleton 1 1 nr.|iAti K.r fomilipc intPrPRfpd in low- Ir.liomietrif T-T P rprpivf*zl 111? R A ...... ... wl In I'nllnrl I- . i ^ 1 E. Heritage declared: “The Council’s continued refusal to take into account the profes- sional advice of the state’s fish and game director, Dr. A. Heaton Un- derhill and their appeasement of the sportsmen’s lobby, is a slap at those groups concerned about the overpopulated deer.” Son Follows Mother in Death lection by families interested in low-1 chemistry. He received his B .A .iSfH^e and rent quarters. This may be done by j from Middlebury College and has toiies. calling Princeton Walnut 1-7459, j done graduate work at Cornell and He wjlj take another examination, which is the office of the authority. Bowdoin. _ 'the three-hour scholastic aptitude I .The units will [nc; ude .^00I? fs. ! Harold S. Jones of Princeton is tesC 0f tj,e College Entrance Exam- j divided into 2 4-bedroom urnts, 1U| teaching biologv. He earned both • inauon Board on December 3 to de- ,The annual campaign ot the 3-bedroom units, 12 2-bedroom units,i hig Bachelor’s and master's degrees' te-mme possible selecffon as a final- Hightstown Area YMCA will ffetjl4 1-bedroom units with 4 n° - becl‘ iat Columbia University and has jP ; jie scholarship competition, under way Monday, October 17, Ar-' J " ' thur Schroeder, fund drive chairman, room units designed for elderly per-1 vvorked on |,is doctorate at Rutgers, sons. . . , , | He was for many years a member of announced today. The goal of this important community organization . . is $5,500. |architects are Holden, Egan, Wilson, Last Year more than 500 boys j and Corser of New York City, ranging'in age from 7 to 19 partici- Other members of the local au- pated fn various Y activities as the | thority are Edward Juns yice chair- result of the donations of money man; Monte Norcross Sr., George and time by residents. £ SgO°d,0 VSS‘ ° n * % £ ''ffl Among the activities were three IPercy Y\- Bryan ter baseball leagues made up of 17 out compensation. ____ teams, basketball and bowling clubs , t - 1 1 vvao iui iiiiinj, j ^ r. ----------------- - ■ The project has been in the Pjan- the faculty at Trenton Central High ning stage since January I School. Harold W. Hurst of Morristown a new instructor in the Social Studies Department. He received his bachelor’s degree from American Youth programs such as these are sponsored by the YMCA throughout the country and are an important factor in the low juvenile delinquen- cy rates in many communities. Mrs. Shuman Elected Director of DVPA HHS 1950 Class Slates Reunion Harvest of Crops Light in CJ Area \ light harvest was the general in direct contact with the competing j companies and bands. A regulation affecting licensed Mayor Cunningham has requested .American and 1 lie meeting at Par Pints inn, ! amended by the State Board Oi Ag-'W.'b to'direct traffic and port' signs Somerville, will bring together ncuiture al St,.’umber meutine U 1 d 1 K fanner members uf ihe counts , 7 e| R ,r meetmg ,n temporary no parking zones, boards of agricultnre fm n t W 1 ; »«.!?„ egg distributors j Som enir booklets ma\ bepurchas- ''ere permit ted m use tbe State Seal*,.,, fr„m Brenl„ mpph « oi Quality only it an egg inspectornimited. Iohn B. Gambling of radio "I tile Mate Department ot A g n c n l - \ v o R will tell of the celebra- ture was employed lull tune at .'tion between 6 and 10 a.m. Sttasday. plani- wlitre eggs were being pack-' , , nf j.,, Iohn Elder, represeniative ot , Mercer County on the executive In, amended regulation s t i p u l a t e s of New Jersey State Fire- Dnat a mate inspector must be pres-' Association, will' annoonce the ent only during the lime that eggs dt activlties. This parade wiB are being candled, packaged and take four hour3 to pass along the I identified with the Mate Seal o i, de rQute that 0rismatei at the Quality. He need not be at the plant | intersection of Monmouth street Iwhen eggs which do not bear the|and iIanlove avenue, proceeds down i w al are being packaged i Monmouth to North Main, south on The Department of Agriculture's Xorth Main to Main street and from State Seal of Quality may be ap- Main street out Mercer to the Tri- phed i ni) to eggs which are pro- Countv Auction Market grounds jduced in New Jersey and meet qual-Lvhere it will disband. Refreshments ity standards established by the D e-jwd] be served there by the firemen Jiariment. In the case of firms which j and members of the Ladies Auxit- also pack out-of-state eggs, the sealsijary. remain in tiie custody oi department; A'total of 26 prizes will be award- . , , , t,l. Thirteen money prize! totaling I be regulation w>t-' amended be- Nvdj presented to winning some egg distributors do not bands ^ 13 winning fire companies wShmgbm D C and ^ <* * ^ Funeral services for Arthur U n e g e t V O-g g - g - £ ^ receive trophies at (Jeorgetown University. ^"rted‘i J o n t o y R a f t e r being ^ p a ^ e T a ^ f i r s f a ^ q S s S The appointment of Sanford Roes- oll|y one day in which the digging en mothei > .side Saturday were held jdered bv liie bl,ard to \K cX. by in case of emergencies. A first er as director of admissions was an ()1 potatoes was possible. Monday. 1 cesduelv c-tlv . aid unit with doct->rs and trained , nounced earlier. From Meadville, \pple "drops" have been fairly Police said Levie, 43, who was as- ' ' ——-------- nurse' in attendance will be in op i Allegheny College and assistant di- xvep . leaned up and when weather v-ciated with Starr Transit Com- R o o s e v e l t Sisterhood ' -bt Pedd |Allegheny Colleg and assistant di- permits growers are picking Red pany, here and in Trenton, collapsed; arv . rector of admissions at Washington Grime- Golden and Jon- at the sight of his mother, Mrs. pjans Party Installation land Jefferson College prior to his at[ian- On mixed vegetables there Elizabeth Levie, 65, Trenton, being; > A dinner-dance for the Rights- j appointment at Allegheny. was a loss of quality and more labor administered oxygen. The Sisterhood i Roosevelt will j nine radio stations al« mi the<parad# town High School class of 19d 0 has, - " will be needed for a given unit due Both were pronounced dead with- h '.d a Simckath Torah party for t--ute. Others are 1 >cated through- Ibeen planned. The event will tak^iHHS Cheerleaders to the necessity for spot picking and jn minutes of eacli other when re-• children and adults October 13 at]out the town for traffic control, 'place on Saturday November 5 at selection. vival efforts failed. 1 7 p.m. at Rossi’s on Route 1 Chosen for Season In South Jersey the sweet potato Arthur Levie is survived by ! . 1 ___ kn/in TH 'IP"'* , '- 5; 'aool infirm- Thc fire compa; has set up a ' 'ter,; with The Delaware Valley Protective j Reservations have been mailed to vest became general this week. Nv jfe and two daughters. his Association at its 27th annual nl^et‘ !ciass members. Anyone else desiring ^[jss Filemina Bonfilio and the The fall broccoli operation has start- ing held at New Hope, Pa. lastjtQ attend should contact Jy rS- varsity cheerleaders selected 13 girls'cd but the season is somewhat later Thursday elected to its board of di- Q iar]es £. Feese. All reservations tQ represent the school as its cheer-; with the peak near the latter part rectors Eleanore Nolan Shuman, l°\ mUst be in no later than October 1U . ]eaders recently. (of the month. rian-author. The program for the evening is Members of the junior varsity ----- New lersev directors elect being planned by ^ F s- ,/ ayl? ^ n squad are Dotty Hutchinson cap- Lillian S. Hiland, le Senator Wesley L. Uncel Russ0f Mrs. Vincent Ely, Mrs. Jonn,tain> Doloi.es Hill, Marilyn bisher,1 Mrs. Winfield cal historian-author. Other ed include ea inciuae oenaror vvcsiuy u. ^ KUSm, am.-. > - u/vb-nflF ' UU1 , , n . 1 . Clinton ; D. H. Moreau, editor of the ! Wilhelm and Mrs. William VVickort. Mary Robinson, Janice Wilson, Jo pormer Local Resident “Hunterdon County Democrat, ’ The reunion committee a so consists 1 rllen z e]t and Karen Dey, substi- Flemington and Vincent Bradlw of Robert D eyjohn^m f.^tate. ........................... , Mrs, Lillian Corrine Stead Hikrnd, Flemington ----- -------- president of the New Jersey Real Estate Commission, Trenton. Salvatore A. Bontempo, commis- sioner of the New Jersey Depart- ment of Conservation and Economic Development, announced his depart- ment had plans for the development of the Delaware and Raritan Canal as a recreational and historical at- traction. Miss Robbins Engaged To Raymond H. Ellis Mr. and Mrs. Warren Robbins of Cranbnry have announced the en- gagement of their daughter, Miss Diane Veronica Robbins, to Raymond H Ellis, son of Mr. and Mrs Ray- mond I. Ellis of Davison road. Miss Robbins is a graduate oi Hightstown High School and is em- ployed by National Quality Intel- views, Cranbury. Her fiance is also a graduate of Hightstown High and is employed by Davison s Market. A May wedding is planned. Do you know your auto radio car be repaired at Hightstown Tclev - ■ion Co., 146 Mercer street? 37ii CADILLAC-OLDSMOBILE S B King & Son Inc, 54 West Main street,8 Freehold The Be,, m Used Cars Give us » c l R folA „ best deal. Phone Freehold 8-0042 a d r . ________ __ Our services available to all re ■ardless of financial circumstances ffeyer Funeral Home, 202 Stockton street. Hightstown, N. J, Phone g-0002 O I IN.UI3C I I J ' T . p ... lull.. -Mia. A.titles*. .................. j e lo b J - old Stillwell,Mrs. TheodoreUrec-. The freshmen squad will include ^ widowof Charles 1. Hiland br Besi(ie her husband, she is sur- zyn, Mrs,Robert Byrne, Mrs. An-, gherry Wright, captain,Diane Eller,uieJ Monday in Mercer Hospital,;vjved fev four sons, Stanley of Rob- drew Ford, Mrs. E. McKmgnt, j Theresa Muse, Linda McNichol, Trenton, following a long illness, jjjnsv-ille Frank of Wrightstown and Feese and Mrs. Edward Kolpack. Mary Genovese, Jackie Carpenter, she resided at 38 Soloff drive, Ham-1 ~ r] d Harry of Robbinsville; i and Bernice Williams, substitute. ,;lton Township and >'3rmer,> ' llve<t three daughters, Mrs Helen Carter The varsity cheerleaders are Rene here 0f Cape May Courthouse, Mrs. Doris! Quattrone, captain, Sheila Sweeney, Born Crosswicks, she was an p . hej. q( f reehold and Miss Mari-'; Judy Pierson, Benay Ruberutein, employce 0f American Steel and ,Jrigg of Robbinsvilleand ten , Cathy Podsaidlo, Linda Eller,Gloria Wire Co T ! randchUdren ot Bryan, Barbara Brandt and Linda( Surviving are one son, Charles L.,<■ The funeral was held Mbnday, the Roosevelt Community Center. On October 26 at 9 p.m. officers of the sisterhood will be installed. A buffet supper will K -erved. . _ , , . Officer- t- be installed are M rs.||l|pC V |U l,;„ Klaiskm. Imnorar) president; JUUUCM IJ Frances Bard, president; Edna Su- raskv, Pauline Krane, vice presi- Mrs. Margaret Briggs, 64, of New dents; Edith Margitov, treasurer; Sharon-Clarksburg road, Robbins- Sad; L. Karshenbaum. membership ville, died Friday morning in Mercer secretary and E-telle Goozner, cor- Hospital. She was the wife of Ern- responding secretary', est Briggs. _ L Engaged Is Dead at 64 Years OES Bazaar Chairman Names Work Committee Mrs Lois Greczyu, matron , ----------- - HiVhtstown Chapter No. 103 Order i,jeberman, substitute. S the Eastern Star and chairman of the annual bazaar scheduled m David V. Erving the Masonic Hall, Mercer street, on Hiland Jr. of Trenton; two daugh-, i>om the Peppler Funera] Home, , Mrs. William Horne 0 r Tllentown Intr-------* — " p <**f and Mrs. James Taylor of Gle - Windaor Cemet ters, ! ton ! dale. Intrement was in East! ery. FridayaSOctobe'r 21, has announced gervices for David V. Erving, 41, j brother, John Stead of Crosswicks her committees. j of Cranbury-Half Acre road, who and a sister, Mrs. Mary Iappencott , J Mrs ill- died Sunday in Princeton Hospital,'0f Trenton. wer held Wednesday at the A. S ' Funeral serv Charles D. Allen ■r comnmivca. . ;ui v iaiiuu, j - - H ' l U a s1 - 1 1 Fancy work and aprons, Mrs. in- did Sunday in Princeton Hospital,'o{ Trenton. prlvat. „rvices were -- Hancock‘ wer held Wednesday at the A .S .j Funeral services were held ; Pn^te semces .wire Cole Funeral Home, Cranbury,_with nesday from Poulson^& V a n ^ ise ,, Ch^l^ ^ ^ s '?ptei'llber 28, Sat lie Vogts, Mra. Evelyn Hjmcock, Mrs Polly Hicks; pantry shelf, Mrs. Anna H o k Ida Greene, Mrs. Ruth Brink; white elephant, Mrs. Ke en Waters, Mrs. Barbara Ben- nett Mrs. Thelma Roach; plants ne a’ flmvers Mrs. Elizabeth Silvers, Mrs Elda 'jones, Mrs. Margaret M ' kitchen committee, Mrs. zyn held for of Mercer the Rev. J. E. Hackling of the Cran- Trenton, with the Rev. i - ';i.,"(^ £t,:i Funeral Home, bury Methodist Church officiating, j West of Memorial Baptist i ,u/. n.,0n„» itifprmpni was Interment was in Fernwood Ceme-1 officiating. Mrs. Harriet Tindall 136 Morrison avenue. Interment was ___________ in Cedar Hill Cemetery. He was.em- i t member of Carpenters; Larcal, M rs. Harriet Tindall 1,1widowerthh H^ th V rT la ^ k RAlien, Croshaw; kitchen c o m m p his wife^Dorothy Winsch Erving;! Funeral services for Mrs n/’ H 'G F h n k 'a ^ R a y m o n ^ k o ia n S" nS’ Minnie Barcmore, Mrs. Lois Grec- „ dai hler, Gladys; a sister, Mrs. M. Tindall, 80, who died baturdayat I Francis andRaymond iroja and Mrs. Betty Swinger. Jeanette Applegate of Jamesburg hcr home, 100 Park avenue, w" e ; ^ “ga' drS'u „ Georee McChes- and a brother Harold oi Spotswnod.. held Wednesday at the Heyer Fn- deer nig Mrs.George McUres PTA Meeting he & h o n tu a ra "d X o „. « In North Atlantic l G n:.D . and L-UI- "i hn ch-M and Herbert -1 North AtIantic(FHTNC).-Edward interment was in Cedar Hill Ceme- 1re n to n . ______________ T Ellis, boilerman fireman, USN, tery. FALL SUPPER son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. El- A member of Hightstown Grange Monroc School No. 2 The second meeting of St. An- thony’s PTA will be held October 11 in the church hall. Officers sched- uled to take part are Mrs. Martin Davis, president; Mrs. Timothy Kel- ty, vice president; Mrs. Frank Dar- lea, treasurer; Mrs. Leon Harker, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Ber- nard Braun, recording secretary. It was announced the annual Hal- loween party will be held October 30 in the Elks home. Mrs. Tony Eufe- mia is chairman. iis"of' 124 Broad street, Hightstown,’96. she was the wife of !h= ^ ! sponsoring a chicken salad a '*■ ' ' .......... c-i.rv.tea uy Thnrcdav is serving aboard the heavy cruiser| Enoch Imdal and is survive ham supper Thursday, USS Macon operating with the Sec-, two sisters, Mrs. Mary De> ot . 13 Scrvings at 6 «: 7 p.m. Adults ond Fleet in the North Atlantic. ; lentown and Mrs hi auk Richard ^ Chddrrn un(jer 12 $1 andtake The Macon is participating in a son of Ocean Uty and three urou - Qut ^,£5 For reservations callMrs. seven-week NATO cruise and is ers, Johnson 1. Applcget of 1 r "" Shulman at HI 8-2594.—adv13-2t scheduled to rctiiru t<* Boston, Mass, ton and Gcor.uf 11 aita btepnen - - ; ~ ~~TTTr Oct 21 ; Applcget. both of Dutch Neck. HIGHTSTOWN QAZTTT%-« • Yt CHICKEN PIE SUPPER November of United of Millstone, f t children from 4 39 Nov. 1 Mrs. Rosetta E. J. \\ infield, 61, t*f 201 Summit streei. died suddenly Friday at Orthopedn Hospital, Tren- ton. -iiu iiad lived in She was a Elks Auxiliary. Surviving are her husband, Ernest ; t\v<- daughters Mrs. Wil- liam \\'incklhofer of Hightstown and Mr-;. Theodore Plait of Cranbury; a sister. Mrs. Gladys Stockstill of Waukegan, III., and six grandchil- dren. The funeral was held Monday from the Heyer Funeral Home, 202 Stockton street, with the Rev. Jud- son D. Hulsey of the First Method- ist Church officiating. Interment was in Cedar Hill Cemetery Radiation Monitor Training Course Open A tuition free course will be given to train radiation detection monitors at the Mercer County Extension Service building, 830 Spruce street, Trenton, on the. following evenings : October 13, 20, 27 and November 3. Each session will last 2 hours. Minimum requirement for admis- sion is a high school education. En- rollment will be limited, first come, fircJ c<»t-arra/t A.

Field of Five Girls Thousands to Vie for ’Miss’ Title See ... · engagement ot their daughter O’Reilly, Borough C D director, at Marcella to William Hummel, Hightstown 8-2378

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Page 1: Field of Five Girls Thousands to Vie for ’Miss’ Title See ... · engagement ot their daughter O’Reilly, Borough C D director, at Marcella to William Hummel, Hightstown 8-2378

Born in England, she had li' Hightstown 27 year?. She \ member of the Hightstown

\\ infield

Mi«a M»rc«IU L»*x«ri rollment will be limited, first come,Mr. and Mrs. Levin Lazzeri first served,

ot Cranbnry have announced the If yon wish to apply, call C. A. engagement ot their daughter O’Reilly, Borough C D director, at Marcella to William Hummel, Hightstown 8-2378 n o t' latter t t m son of Mr. and Mrs. George! October 7.Hummel of Summit street. Thej “prospective bride is a graduate u n w R t n r i t s u n w of Hightstown High School »nd k Sttarday. November 1 8 6 9 employed bv Electronics Associate* L a f ia Aid of United M M d I lie *rincc ton. Mr Hummel also Obarth of Millstone, J | ] ■ attended the local high school and is Adlltts, 88, chOdten f l t ^ p i M r V

| employed by Midaut Aluminum Servjugs froan 4:30 wo.—idv.|Corp . Dayton. Oct, 6, 27, Nod. 1

PTA is and bak-

October

j | | © b e ( f i a f e t t r

Ad Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity>—'"V

H2TH Y EA R —No. 14 HIGHTSTOWN GA ZETTE, MERCER COUNTY, NEW JE R SE Y , THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1900 PRICE—FIV E C E N T *

Paladino Gets Light Company Foreman’s Job

Lincoln Ave. Resident Nine Years with Firm; Is World W ar II Vet

Vincent E. Paladino, 177 Lincoln avenue, has been appointed a line foreman in Jersey Central Power & Light Company's Hightstown dis­trict.

A nine-year veteran with JCP&L, his first position was as a winch truck driver. From there he pro­gressed through the company line­man classifications. For the past

Field of Five Girls Vie for ’Miss’ Title

One of the following girls will be: Brothers; $5, Marie’s Beauty Shop; honored as “Miss Hightstown En- « Voelbel’s Plumbing & 'Heating;ThursdaIv P f?etnhpr fi ? ! o' 15 for each of the five winning con-T-Tiot it T t ,e, * A at ?|le ? CW testants, Coleman Buick, Trenton; win be S M S f ' , f “ en& St|lts Agency $10,n n m e r^ p : Miss Mary Jane A - . - M\ ss J,U/ y J?rhnson,ll¥ ,sV Caro iKeity; 3 free games, Hightstown ^ '"A Nancy Mount and B L $5 Glackin FtmeralMiss Sharon Szczepamk. , Home ;B$5, E gn0r's R cal Estate ; $5,

Jhe winners were chosen from alKennelh Duryee; $5, Lewis’ Mar-field of 35 contestants after a 21-dayjket; gift, Jim's Barber Shop; gift,voting period that saw 45,224 votes Hightstown News Agency; $5, Char- cast in a race that brought shoppers ||e nle B lrber

f c t T c k r t t o e s ‘° SUPP° rt Each « irl has been assi« ned 10 atavonte candidates. member of the Firemen's AuxiliaryMiss Austin, Miss Johnson, Mtssiwh0 will help her prepare for both

Lannmg and Miss Szczepamk arc1 Thursday night and the Anniversary students at Hightstown High School.'Day activities. Mrs. Earl Davison Miss Mount is employed at Me- w;n act as chaperone for Miss Graw-Hill. , tin, Mrs. William Rue for Miss

As excitement continued to mount Johnson, Mrs. George Lanning for during the final week of voting, so her daughter, Mrs. W arren Wright did the “Treasure Chest” increase in1 for Miss Mount and Mrs. Edward value. Much attention has been fo- Esch form Miss Szczepanik “Miss cuscd on the chest in the window oT Hightstown Engine Company No. 1” the Town Shop where Miss Bea will be presented with a bouquet of Rogers has displayed it with imagi- 1 flowers by her chaperone Thursday nation and color. Mrs. John Archer, night. She will be an honored guest of Archer’s North Main street store in the reviewing stand at the parade has announced that the following, on Saturday. The other four win- gifts were added last week: $10, Con- ners will serve as hostesses during over’s Dairy; hair dryer, Danser the day.

; OUTSTANDING CITIZENS.

Vincent E. Paladino

year he has taught Lakewood and Freehold line crews in the use of specialized line tools.

Paladino is a graduate of Hights­town High School. He is a veteran of World W ar II, having served in ■both the Atlantic and Pacific in the U. S. Navy. He is a manager in the YMCA sponsored Peanut Baseball League.

Married to the former Miss Pearl Visintini of Applegarth the couple has two sons, Bruce 10 and Brett

Boro Authority Peddie School Accepts House Employs S ix Applications New Teachers D. Socholitsky

Mayor Milton H. Cunningham and' Six new members have joined tllc S P | H | - r I I I 3 1 1 S T Jr . William G. Rose, chairman of, teaching staff at Peddie Carrol 0 . \

Thousands to See Fire Co. Parade Here

100 Units, 25 Bands To Take Part in Event To Start Sat. at 1 p.m.

Thousands of persons from this area and other parts of the state will be on hand Saturday when the local fire company marks its 125th anni­versary. Some 100 fire companies, 2S hands and 4,500 marchers will be in the line of march. It will get undef way at 1 p.m. according to James Eufemia and Earle I‘ . Davison, co*

hairmen of the affair. - 1Mrs. Alonzo Dey, descendant cM

Benjamin Reed, a pioneer in obtiui ■ ing fire protection for Hightstown will be one of the honored gueBtl* according to Earl F. Davison tn 4 James Eufemia, cho-cnairmen of thfl celebration. Other dignitaries wb# will be present in the reviewing stand at the intersection of Swutil Main and Mercer streets when th * parade gets underway at 1 p.m. wi® be Chris Hasscihuhn, president a I the N. J. State Firemen's Associa­tion; Captain John T. DemjMrtef* Mercer County fire marshal; Cap*

VFW Po.t 5700 Commander William J. P en d er,,.t pre.ent, out.tandin, citi- Iv rep re seJta t^ ef’O fc 'tfzens awards for 1%0 to George S. Lewis Jr. and Eugene Fulton while Mayor Tunis Conover of East Windsor Monmouth County fire marsl»»l| Township look on. Some 125 persons attended the ninth annual dinner-dance held at Grange Hall and the William J. McGray, emergency SC1>post home. David R. Twomey, senior vice commander, vices supervisor for the N. J. TtlTO-

pike Authority; Mayor Milton H. Cunningham; Councilman Howard

Haring, principal offing project slated to year of the boys prep school -Hightstown High School, announced, turning down an antlerless season X c % -k'r*e>' State. of Qua,it>1 residents to display the Amerwill be opened on Joining the English Department today tjiat a niember of this year's this v*ar ; distributors who also pack eggs H;, for the occasion. Policer 18 at 2 p.m. at Bor-1 are George D. Heisey of Newark \ senior class, David N. Socholitsky, '/ • |; Hi|. Tnn oul-m-state sources wasjcivif defenPe reserves will be

YMCA Goal Set at $5500

Dr. ----------- ... ------ ,the Housing Authority of the Bor^Morong, headmaster, announced at ough, today announced jointly that the opening of the 96th academic, p auj bids on the housing project slated to | year of the boys’ prep school, be built hereTuesday October _ __ _ . _____ ____ _____ _______________ough Hall. |Ohio and John G. Hopkins of jias been named a semi-finalist in

The “prefect calls for the construe-, Wellesley, Mass. Heisey received' t jle 1960-61 National Merit Scholar-; tion of 42 units of public housing in: his bachelor of arts degree from' sTilp competUtQTir.the Railroad avenue and Wood Denison University and his master Socholitsky, who is the son of Mr. | street area this fall and winter. (of arts from Western Reserve Uni-1and Mrs Sidney Socholitsky, 2&Tine;

Rose said the authority has about versity, while Hopkins is a graduate Roosevelti is among the 10.000'completed title acquisition to the;of Harvard and has completed his j.- . scoring students on the NMS site through its attorney and execu- master’s at the University of Vir-j Qualifying Test of educational de-: tive director, Bruce H. French oflginia. ivelopment given in more than 15,-

j Princeton. William E. Davis who taught at qqo |dgfi schools last spring. TheMrs. Marjorie R. Sherman is ac-j Bridgeton Academy, North Bridge-1 senii-finalist group is composed of

, * ~~ , , . . . . -- -• ring students in eachUnited States terri -

No Antlerless Season Irks Farm Bureau

The New Jersey Farm Bureau’s state wildlife committee will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. to decide how to counter the latest rebuff of the State Fish and Game Council in

Amend Seal EggRegulation

Birdsall Jr., fire commissioner.Judging of the parade and selec­

tion of the winners will be done by a six-man team from the Mid-Atlan­tic Judges Association who will work

northern counties most plagued with crop damage by the overpop­ulated deer herds.

Following talks last week be­tween Farm Bureau leaders and the Fish and Game Council, which drew a blank as far as reconsider-

Icepting applications for tenant se-|t0Ilj Me., will be ail instructor in| the highest scoring students in each] I f ® J * ^ Urea?|t lDre,idem>S rle to n1 1 nr.|iAti K.r fomilipc intPrPRfpd in low- I r.liomietrif T-T P rprpivf*zl 111? R A ...... ...wl In I'nllnrl I- ‘ . i 1

E. Heritage declared:“The Council’s continued refusal

to take into account the profes­sional advice of the state’s fish and game director, Dr. A. Heaton Un­derhill and their appeasement of the sportsmen’s lobby, is a slap at those groups concerned about the overpopulated deer.”

Son Follows Mother in Death

lection by families interested in low-1 chemistry. He received his B.A .iSfH e and rent quarters. This may be done by j from Middlebury College and has toiies.calling Princeton Walnut 1-7459, j done graduate work at Cornell and He wjlj take another examination, which is the office of the authority. Bowdoin. _ 'the three-hour scholastic aptitude

I .The units will [nc; ude . 00I?fs. ! Harold S. Jones of Princeton is tesC 0 f tj,e College Entrance Exam- j divided into 2 4-bedroom urnts, 1U| teaching biologv. He earned both • inauon Board on December 3 to de-

,The annual campaign ot the 3-bedroom units, 12 2-bedroom units,i hig Bachelor’s and master's degrees' te-mme possible selecffon as a final- Hightstown Area YMCA will ffe tjl4 1-bedroom units with 4 n° -becl‘ iat Columbia University and has jP ; jie scholarship competition, under way Monday, October 17, A r-' ’ ‘ J " 'thur Schroeder, fund drive chairman,

room units designed for elderly per-1 vvorked on |,is doctorate at Rutgers, sons. . . , , | He was for many years a member of

announced today. The goal of thisimportant community organization . .is $5,500. |architects are Holden, Egan, Wilson,

Last Year more than 500 boys j and Corser of New York City, ranging'in age from 7 to 19 partici- Other members of the local au- pated fn various Y activities as the | thority are Edward Juns yice chair- result of the donations of money man; Monte Norcross Sr., George and time by residents. £ SgO° d,0 V SS‘°n * % £ ' ' f f l

Among the activities were three I Percy Y\- Bryan terbaseball leagues made up of 17 out com p en sation .____teams, basketball and bowling clubs

• , t - 1 1 vvao i u i i i i i in j , j ^ r. ----------------- - ■The project has been in the Pjan- the faculty at Trenton Central High

ning stage since January I School.Harold W. Hurst of Morristown

a new instructor in the Social Studies Department. He received his bachelor’s degree from American

Youth programs such as these are sponsored by the YMCA throughout the country and are an important factor in the low juvenile delinquen­cy rates in many communities.

Mrs. Shuman Elected Director of DVPA

HHS 1950 Class Slates Reunion

Harvest of Crops Light in CJ Area

\ light harvest was the general

in direct contact with the competingj companies and bands.

A regulation affecting licensed Mayor Cunningham has requested.American

and

1 lie meeting at Par Pints inn, ! amended by the State Board Oi Ag-'W .'b to'direct traffic and port' signs Somerville, will bring together ncuiture al S t,.’umber meutine U 1 d 1 Kfanner members uf ihe counts , ” 7e| R ,r meetmg ,n temporary no parking zones,boards of agricultnre fm n t W 1 ; »«.!?„ egg distributors j Som enir booklets ma\ bepurchas-

• ''ere permit ted m use tbe State Seal*,.,, fr„m Brenl„ m p p h «oi Quality only it an egg inspectornimited. Iohn B. Gambling of radio "I tile Mate Department ot A g n c n l - \ v o R will tell of the celebra- ture was employed lull tune at .'tion between 6 and 10 a.m. Sttasday. plani- w litre eggs were being pack-' , , nfj.,, Iohn Elder, represeniative ot

, Mercer County on the executiveIn, amended regulation s t i p u l a t e s of New Jersey State Fire-

Dnat a mate inspector must be pres-' Association, will' annoonce theent only during the lime that eggs dt activlties. This parade wiB are being candled, packaged and take four hour3 to pass along the

I identified with the Mate Seal o i , de rQute that 0rismate i at the Quality. He need not be at the plant | intersection of Monmouth street

I when eggs which do not bear the|and iIanlove avenue, proceeds down i w al are being packaged i Monmouth to North Main, south on

The Department of Agriculture's Xorth Main to Main street and from State Seal of Quality may be ap- Main street out Mercer to the Tri- phed i ni) to eggs which are pro- Countv Auction Market grounds

jduced in New Jersey and meet qual-Lvhere it will disband. Refreshments ity standards established by the D e-jwd] be served there by the firemen Jiariment. In the case of firms which j and members of the Ladies Auxit- also pack out-of-state eggs, the sealsijary.remain in tiie custody o i department; A' total of 26 prizes will be award-

. , , , t ,l. Thirteen money prize! totalingI be regulation w>t-' amended be- Nvdj presented to winning

some egg distributors do not bands ^ 13 winning fire companiesw S h m g b m D C and ^ <* * ^ Funeral services for Arthur U n e g e t V O -g g - g - £ ^ receive trophies

at (Jeorgetown University. ^ " r t e d ‘ i J o n t o y R a f t e r being ^ p a ^ e T a ^ f i r s f a ^ q S s SThe appointment of Sanford Roes- oll|y one day in which the digging en mothei > .side Saturday were held jdered bv liie bl,ard to \K cX. by in case of emergencies. A first

er as director of admissions was an ()1 potatoes was possible. Monday. 1 cesduelv c - t lv . aid unit with doct->rs and trained, nounced earlier. From Meadville, \pple "drops" have been fairly Police said Levie, 43, who was as- ' ■' — —-------- nurse' in attendance will be in opi Allegheny College and assistant di- xvep . leaned up and when weather v-ciated with Starr Transit Com- R o o s e v e l t Sisterhood ' -bt Pedd|Allegheny Colleg and assistant di- permits growers are picking Red pany, here and in Trenton, collapsed; arv .rector of admissions at Washington Grime- Golden and Jon- at the sight of his mother, Mrs. p jans Party Installation

land Jefferson College prior to his at[ian- On mixed vegetables there Elizabeth Levie, 65, Trenton, being; >A dinner-dance for the R ights- j appointment at Allegheny. was a loss of quality and more labor administered oxygen. The Sisterhood i Roosevelt w ill j nine radio stations al« mi the< parad#

town High School class of 19d0 has, - " will be needed for a given unit due Both were pronounced dead with- h '.d a Simckath Torah party for t--ute. Others are 1 >cated through-I been planned. The event will tak iHHS Cheerleaders to the necessity for spot picking and jn minutes of eacli other when re -• children and adults October 13 at]out the town for traffic control,'place on Saturday November 5 at selection. vival efforts failed.17 p.m. at Rossi’s on Route 1 Chosen for Season In South Jersey the sweet potato Arthur Levie is survived by! . 1___ kn/in TH'I P"'* , '-

5; 'aool infirm-

Thc fire compa; has set up a ■ ' 'ter,; with

The Delaware Valley Protective j Reservations have been mailed to vest became general this week. Nvjfe and two daughters.his

Association at its 27th annual nl et‘ !ciass members. Anyone else desiring ^[jss Filemina Bonfilio and the The fall broccoli operation has start­ing held at New Hope, Pa. la s tjtQ attend should contact Jy rS- varsity cheerleaders selected 13 g irls 'cd but the season is somewhat later Thursday elected to its board of di- Q iar]es £ . Feese. All reservations tQ represent the school as its cheer-; with the peak near the latter part rectors Eleanore Nolan Shuman, l ° \ mUst be in no later than October 1U. ]eaders recently. (of the month.

rian-author. The program for the evening is Members of the junior varsity -----— —New lersev directors elect being planned by ^ F s- ,/ ayl? ^ n squad are Dotty Hutchinson cap- Lillian S. Hiland,le Senator Wesley L. Uncel Russ0f Mrs. Vincent Ely, Mrs. Jon n ,tain> Doloi.es Hill, Marilyn bisher, 1

Mrs. Winfield

cal historian-author.Other

ed includeea inciuae oenaror vvcsiuy u. ^ KUSm, am.-. > - u/vb-nflF ' UU1 ’ , , n . 1 .Clinton ; D. H. Moreau, editor of the! Wilhelm and Mrs. William VVickort. Mary Robinson, Janice Wilson, Jo pormer Local Resident“Hunterdon County Democrat, ’ The reunion committee a so consists 1rllen z e]t and Karen Dey, substi-Flemington and Vincent Brad lw of Robert D e y j o h n ^ m f . ^ t a t e . ........................... , Mrs, Lillian Corrine Stead Hikrnd,Flemington ----- --------president of the New Jersey Real Estate Commission, Trenton.

Salvatore A. Bontempo, commis­sioner of the New Jersey Depart­ment of Conservation and Economic Development, announced his depart­ment had plans for the development of the Delaware and Raritan Canal as a recreational and historical at­traction.

Miss Robbins Engaged To Raymond H. Ellis

Mr. and Mrs. Warren Robbins of Cranbnry have announced the en­gagement of their daughter, Miss Diane Veronica Robbins, to Raymond H Ellis, son of Mr. and Mrs Ray­mond I. Ellis of Davison road.

Miss Robbins is a graduate oi Hightstown High School and is em­ployed by National Quality Intel- views, Cranbury. Her fiance is alsoa graduate of Hightstown High and is employed by Davison s Market.

A May wedding is planned.

Do you know your auto radio car be repaired at Hightstown Tclev - ■ion Co., 146 Mercer street? 37ii

CADILLAC-OLDSMOBILES B King & Son In c , 54 West

Main street,8 Freehold The B e ,, mUsed Cars Give us » c l Rfol A „ best deal. Phone Freehold 8-0042a d r . ________ __

Our services available to all re ■ardless of financial circumstances ffeyer Funeral Home, 202 Stockton street. Hightstown, N. J, Phoneg-0002

O I IN.UI3C I I J ' T . p . . . l u l l . . - M i a . A. ti tles *. .................. j e l o b J -old Stillwell, Mrs. Theodore Urec-. The freshmen squad will include ^ widow of Charles 1. Hiland br Besi(ie her husband, she is sur-zyn, Mrs, Robert Byrne, Mrs. An-, gherry W right, captain, Diane E lle r ,u ieJ Monday in Mercer Hospital,;vjved fev four sons, Stanley of Rob-drew Ford, Mrs. E . McKmgnt, j Theresa Muse, Linda McNichol, Trenton, following a long illness, jjjnsv-ille Frank of Wrightstown and Feese and Mrs. Edward Kolpack. Mary Genovese, Jackie Carpenter, she resided at 38 Soloff drive, Ham-1 ~ r] d Harry of Robbinsville; i

and Bernice Williams, substitute. , ; lton Township and >'3rmer,>' llve<t three daughters, Mrs Helen Carter The varsity cheerleaders are Rene here 0 f Cape May Courthouse, Mrs. Doris!

Quattrone, captain, Sheila Sweeney, Born Crosswicks, she was an p . hej. q( f reehold and Miss Mari-'; Judy Pierson, Benay Ruberutein, employce 0f American Steel and ,Jrigg of Robbinsville and ten

, Cathy Podsaidlo, Linda Eller,Gloria Wire Co T ! randchUdrenot Bryan, Barbara Brandt and Linda( Surviving are one son, Charles L.,<■ The funeral was held Mbnday,

the Roosevelt Community Center.On October 26 at 9 p.m. officers of

the sisterhood will be installed. Abuffet supper will K -erved. . _ , , .

Officer- t- be installed are M rs.| | l| p C V | Ul,;„ Klaiskm. Imnorar) president; J U U U C M I JFrances Bard, president; Edna Su- raskv, Pauline Krane, vice presi-

Mrs. Margaret Briggs, 64, of New dents; Edith Margitov, treasurer;Sharon-Clarksburg road, Robbins- Sad; L. Karshenbaum. membership ville, died Friday morning in Mercer secretary and E-telle Goozner, cor- Hospital. She was the wife of Ern- responding secretary', est Briggs. _ L

Engaged

Is Dead at 64 Years

O ES Bazaar Chairman Names Work Committee

Mrs Lois Greczyu, matron , ----------- -HiVhtstown Chapter No. 103 Order i ,jeberman, substitute.S the Eastern Star and chairmanof the annual bazaar scheduled m David V. Ervingthe Masonic Hall, Mercer street, on

Hiland Jr. of Trenton; two daugh-, i>om the Peppler Funera] Home,, Mrs. William Horne 0 r Tllentown Intr-------* — " p <**fand Mrs. James Taylor of Gle - Windaor Cemet

ters, ! ton ! dale.

Intrement was in East! ery.

FridayaSOctobe'r 21, has announced gervices for David V . Erving, 41, j brother, John Stead of Crosswicks her committees. j of Cranbury-Half Acre road, who and a sister, Mrs. Mary Iappencott

, J Mrs ill- died Sunday in Princeton Hospital,'0 f Trenton.wer held Wednesday at the A. S ' Funeral serv

Charles D. Allen■r comnmivca. . ;ui v iaiiuu, j - - H ' l U a s1 - 1 1F a n c y work and aprons, Mrs. in - d id Sunday in Princeton Hospital,'o{ Trenton. p rlvat. „rvices were

-- Hancock‘ wer held Wednesday at the A .S . j Funeral services were held ; P n ^ te sem ces .wireCole Funeral Home, Cranbury,_with nesday from Poulson^& V a n ^ is e ,, Ch^l^ ^ ^ s '?ptei'llber 28, Sat

lie Vogts, Mra. Evelyn Hjmcock, Mrs Polly Hicks; pantry shelf, Mrs. Anna H o k Ida Greene, Mrs.R uth Brink; white elephant, Mrs. Ke en Waters, Mrs. Barbara Ben­nett Mrs. Thelma Roach; plants ne a ’ flmvers Mrs. Elizabeth Silvers, Mrs Elda 'jo n es , Mrs. Margaret M ' kitchen committee, Mrs.

zyn

held for of Mercer

the Rev. J. E. Hackling of the Cran- Trenton, with the Rev. i - ' ; i . , " ( ^ £t , : i Funeral Home,bury Methodist Church officiating, j W est of Memorial Baptist i ,u/. n.,0n„» itifprmpni wasInterment was in Fernwood Ceme- 1 officiating.

Mrs. Harriet Tindall

136 Morrison avenue. Interment was ___________ in Cedar Hill Cemetery. He was.em­

i t member of Carpenters; Larcal, M r s . Harriet Tindall 1,1 widowerthh H^ th V rT la ^ k RAlien,

Croshaw; kitchen c o m m p his wife^Dorothy Winsch Erving;! Funeral services for Mrs n/’ H 'G F h n k 'a ^ R a y m o n ^ k o ia n S" nS’Minnie Barcmore, Mrs. Lois Grec- „ dai hler, Gladys; a sister, Mrs. M. Tindall, 80, who died baturdayat I Francis andRaym ond iro ja

and Mrs. Betty Swinger. Jeanette Applegate of Jamesburg hcr home, 100 Park avenue, w" e ; ^ “ga' drS'u „ Georee McChes-and a brother Harold oi Spotswnod.. held Wednesday at the Heyer Fn- deer nig M rs.G eorge McUres

PTA Meeting he & h o n tu a ra "d X o „. «In North Atlantic l Gn:.D. and L-UI- "i hn ch-M and Herbert -1

N o r t h AtIantic(FHTNC).-Edw ard interment was in Cedar Hill Ceme- 1 r e n t o n .______________T Ellis, boilerman fireman, USN, tery. FALL SU PPERson of Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. El- A member of Hightstown Grange Monroc School No. 2

The second meeting of St. An­thony’s PTA will be held October 11 in the church hall. Officers sched­uled to take part are Mrs. Martin Davis, president; Mrs. Timothy Kel- ty, vice president; Mrs. Frank Dar- lea, treasurer; Mrs. Leon Harker, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Ber­nard Braun, recording secretary.

It was announced the annual Hal­loween party will be held October 30 in the Elks home. Mrs. Tony Eufe­mia is chairman.

iis"of' 124 Broad street, Hightstown,’ 96. she was the wife of !h= ^ ! sponsoring a chicken salad a'*■' ' .......... c-i.rv.tea uy Thnrcdavis serving aboard the heavy cruiser| Enoch Imdal and is survive ham supper Thursday,

USS Macon operating with the S e c -, two sisters, Mrs. Mary De> ot . 13 Scrvings at 6 «: 7 p.m. Adultsond Fleet in the North Atlantic. ; lentown and Mrs hi auk Richard ^ Chddrrn un(jer 12 $1 and take

The Macon is participating in a son of Ocean Uty and three urou - Qut ^,£5 For reservations call Mrs.seven-week NATO cruise and is ers, Johnson 1. Applcget of 1 r " " Shulman at HI 8-2594.—adv 13-2tscheduled to rctiiru t<* Boston, Mass, ton and Gcor.uf 11 aita btepnen - - ; ~ ~~TTTrOct 21 ; Applcget. both of Dutch Neck. HIGHTSTOWN QAZTTT%-« • Y t

CHICKEN P IE SU PPERNovember of United

of Millstone, f t children

from 4 39 Nov. 1

Mrs. Rosetta E. J. \\ infield, 61, t*f 201 Summit streei. died suddenly Friday at Orthopedn Hospital, Tren­ton.

-iiu iiad lived in She was a

ElksAuxiliary.

Surviving are her husband, Ernest ; t\v<- daughters Mrs. Wil­

liam \\'incklhofer of Hightstown and Mr-;. Theodore Plait of Cranbury; a sister. Mrs. Gladys Stockstill of Waukegan, III., and six grandchil­dren.

The funeral was held Monday from the Heyer Funeral Home, 202 Stockton street, with the Rev. Jud- son D. Hulsey of the First Method­ist Church officiating. Interment was in Cedar Hill Cemetery

Radiation Monitor Training Course Open

A tuition free course will be given to train radiation detection monitors at the Mercer County Extension Service building, 830 Spruce street, Trenton, on the. following evenings : October 13, 20, 27 and November 3. Each session will last 2 hours.

Minimum requirement for admis­sion is a high school education. En­rollment will be limited, first come,fircJ c<»t-arra/t

A.

Page 2: Field of Five Girls Thousands to Vie for ’Miss’ Title See ... · engagement ot their daughter O’Reilly, Borough C D director, at Marcella to William Hummel, Hightstown 8-2378

P i p I m HIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE, M ERCER COUNTY, NEW JE R S E Y , THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1960

Ullf? ijtgljtBtomn (SiazrtUEstablished June 30, 1849

GEORGE P. DENNIS, Editor u d PoU i.krr 1*12-1*S5 /WC. GEORGE FOSTER DENNIS. Killod m Action, September 11, 1»«

MAY S. DENNIS, P .b li.U r W. PA LM ER DENNIS, Editor

KATHRYN S. DENNIS, B iu iu u and Book EditorMember:

Sew Jersey Press Association National Editorial AssociationEntered at second class matter at Hightstown, New Jersey, post office order the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Published every Thursday •t The Gazette Building. 114 Rogers avenue. Terms of subscription: pear. $2, six months, $125, single copy, 5 cents.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6. 1940

New Jersey—Your State and MineLoop-bole* Are Found In State Constitution

Association reports . . . Employment in New Jersey increased 5,600 from mid-July to mid-August to a total of 1.996,800 . . . The state has secured

Trenton—Many loop-holes have fourth place in the nation with aj been found in New lerseys 13-vear- record high yield ot tomatoes per. old State Constitution although the acre this summer This week has. fundamental law has withstood the been proclaimed Professional Flio- hard test of experience so far. tographers V\ eek by Go\ ernor j

Writers of the Const.tut.on left Me-'ner -• " ater ntanagement.;

Imperial Valley to rent 20 acres ad-, jacent to the community of Pomona, | buy a wagon and'team and a few! hand tools. Living in a grass hut { constructed by a Japanese w ho! couldn’t make the land pay, Walter j worked even* daylight hour plant­

in g . cultivating and harvesting peas jand then he spent half the nights in | his wagon, searching out profitable j markets all over the Los Angeles!

■area. He made enough to get mar- j red. homesteaded a farm in the: Mojave Desert but had to abandon it for lack of water and finally put

s roots down in Buena Park, rent-j g n few acres of berry land and

marketing his produce at a roadside! one shack. He and his wife Cordelia and

their three youngsters lived behind;-----; the shack in rwo rooms.

If you are ever in the Los Angeles '___ j area, go out to Knott's Berry Farm •

and see what freedom and oppor­tunity permitted W alter and Cor-

j delia to build None of you will ever forget it. It is an .American dream

(come true.

R « f ' 0

several tasks to the Legislature to forms the basis of mosquito controlwork out, including a law providing New lersey claims Dr. Roscoe P.for the removal of county and su , health

state commissioner ot October has been pro-

penor court The Constitu- daimed bv Goveraor M eyner ,tion declares the Supreme -< Fnrr»lliru»nf Month j Per capita expenditures within the

COUNTY COSTS $ * .2 5 PER MAN, WOMAN, CHILD

Costs of the 21 county govern-j ments in New Jersey averaged $32.41 for each of more than 6,000,000 resi­dents in this state last year.

mav remov c S T f o r 'iPcrent-Teacher Enrollment .e these judges for such , . hcauses and in such manner as shall j^ew j er5ey Army and Air National i from $55.92 in the resort county of; be provided by 1law, bu <e S1-* Guard’, including* (Governor Meyner Cape May 3nd $51.45 in heavily pop- latere has tailed over the sears to and ^ James p Cant. „Iated Hlldson County to $2239 in'pavs auch a law. we]lf v. ill travel to Honolulu. Hawaii. Somerset and $22.18 in Burlington

The Constitution also directs tne next week to attend the 82nd Gen- Count)*, which had lowest per capitaLegislature to provide for prompt erai Conference of the National costs in the state,

publication of administrative rule.' Guard Association of the United j n Mercer Countv ,the $3625 av-l and regulations, out -,ears f ' e States. j crage expenditure for each man, wo-gone by and no such legislation has Capita] Caper. |man and child last year included

M other h atter of concern in offi- Septic tanks and other individual I f& 3 2 for current county operations dal and judicial cirdes is the failure sewage disposal systems are becom- g - g /°r d e b t'se n Jk f0'™ 1 ^OI the Legislature to reapportion mg as outmoded as the surrey w ith]v°±J tor aeot .em ce.seats in the General Assembly in 5“ £ L ™ ''a n f u a f S S t S ™ ' ‘‘F i Z d ^^ r e “ hNWs ^ V p S n h r , h Se Kandle . ^ f h e ‘stahe D ir im e n t| S ta tis t ic s of X - Jersey Local t o -

r e = r* ieach census from 1850 to 1940. Hav- per cent o f t u tomato crop had been ing failed to reapportion in 1940 and harvested . . . Governor Meyner bc- 3950, the Legislature now awaits the'heves everyone will look at tne sec- official 1960 census figures to tackle pod N x- n - Kennedy television the j 0b broadcast because there will be

Whether the Supreme Court or. nothing else on the air wave*, the Legislature has power to pro-' mulgate rules of evidence has been bouncing around the State House for years. Legislative spokesmen claim that power is a prerogative of the Legislature. Other authorities claim that rules of evidence are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Supreme Court-

Under a law passed this year a' compromise has been reached. It provides that rules of evidence shallbe considered at a judicial confer- W alter Knott, who at age 31 was ence and then proposed by the Su- eking out an existence selling ber- j preme Court. They would become; ries a 50utI;ern rnia road.effective the following July 1 unless sj(j|e ?tand and today is the owner j they are cancelled by action ot the and operator fI the fabulous, inter-!Legislature and Governor bet ore" nationally-lamous Knott’s Berry 'that time Farm and Ghost Town in Los An- :

The Constitution also provides ge]es, j5 gravely concerned for the that on the 4ath day alter adjourn- fmure of Ameri. , He J5 devoting1 ment of the Legislature, the lawmak- his .,ersonal CDergies and the re- ers should convene automatically to sources of his umqile enterprise to

. More than 200 members of the individual counties, however, ranged’

inree complete lines. M any attractive color- 22 ditterent phones in all! Reading in the usual left to right order— the all-new Princess phone (it’s little, it's lovely, it liahts), the handy wall phone (saves valuable counter space in working areas) and the step-saving table phone. Pick the style

you w ant— the color th at 11 go best with your d cco ra li^ scheme—'and you’re ready to enjoy easier phoning, etulor livimr. Today’s colorful extension phones offer so ; m | convenience— yet cost so little. O rder yours today. Cnll l i t Telephone Businas Office or ask jour telephone seniccman.

NEW JE R S E Y BELL

Looking A h ea d/-trSir O

.by Dr. George S. BensonPRESIDENT—NAT! ON A! EDUCATION PROGRAM

S«*rqr( yitr.tli

raPAY I THE GREATESTKN O TTS BE R RY FA RM CHEVROLET

consider bills vetoed by the Gov- awakening Americans to the dangers' ernor. Lut since a Republican Sen- Gf international Communism and ate exists and a Democratic Gov- encroaching Socialism ernor holds sway at the State House. Walter Knott, at 70, has onlv one for the past seven years the Legis- motivation—to aid in the preserva- lature has not adjourned sine die tjon ot- frcedom and opportunity for until the last day of the legislative jds four children, his grandchildren year. This prevents a Democratic and his beloved nation. He has Governor trom making temporary achieved great 5ucceS5 in agriculture, appointments alter Republicans call :n t ]ie development of unique m ar-! in the guards. keting practices, in the restaurant!

Voter* business and a showman rivalingRegistration of voters for the S o - the late Phineas T. Bamum of cir-

vernber 8 presidential election is ex-jeus fame. As the slang saying goes, | pected to reach record proportions "He's g"t it made!'1 He could sit in New jersey this year. down and let the rest of the world

At the primary election on April go by. But Walter Knott, even a t : 19 last, 2,742,088 voters were regis- 70, cannot be idle as he sees the te re j in the state but since that time threats of destruction from without campaigns have been conducted and and within confronting an apathetic thousands of new voters placed in a American public. He is in the fight legal position to cast ballots for to awaken America to her peril i president next month. Aware of B le .„n g ,

To simplify and expedite voting In a„ ,,f h;s ende5v beginning by persons who have moved either with the tlme „.h as . fatherlest into New Jersey or outside the state boy. he made a In. mg growing peas the Legislature on September 12 on vacant , ltv v.t; and lived in a passed a bill permitting a registered shack Inade of weed, he ha bcenvoter who has moved to another keen|y aware of the blessings ofstate or county and is not able to j rec-dom and opportunity He ismeet the residence requirement to afraid that American generalh— nev- vote at the Presidential election, to er having experienced life without vote by absentee bMlot Such a vpt- freedom and opportunity-are un- er, however, would be prohibited aware of their value and thus mav from voting for any municipal or j0Se them“ “ ‘y ° * cer- . , 1" many ways at his fascinating

Although anxious to approve such showplace in Buena Park i-outh- a measure to increase voting, Gov- ea5tern Los Angeles) he reminds ernor Meyner is conducting a study the three million visitors a year ot­to determine whether such a law , ome of , he colorful hist’ory ofwould conflict with the State Con- America It is in sharp contrast tostituuon. ,he wholesale killings and violence

The constitution states that tv - depicted in the present crop of ery citizen of the United States, of Western movies and TV fare. Ghost the age ot 21 years who shall have Town, a5 resurrected out of the pari been a resident of this state six by W alter Knott, is a place o f Iran-1 months and of tne county in which qui, ptace, friendly, authentic old- he dauns his vote « days, next be- times, a place where God-fearing fore the election, shall be entitled pioneering Americans made their t0 vote contributions to progress in freedom.

jersey Jig.ew Loved the SoilGovernor Meyner has appointed But it is in his own personal l i f e -

22 New Jersey educators to the New with it5 meager beginning, its ardu- Jersey Tercentenary Advisory Edu- ous upward clim b-that the millions cation Commission . . The State wh0 visit his enterprise each vear Department of Conservation and find their raost commanding reasons Economic Development announces for strengthening and safeguarding 13J New Jersey nrms recently re- the wonderful mechanism which we

Con,trac,s call the American wav of life. By totaling $94,836,951 . . New Jersey understanding God's laws bv edu-pharmac.sts are dedicating them an- cating him5eff in the scie^c e ' 0 f ag.nua! Observance of National Phar- r,culture, by developing a sa t is fa i macy W eek to an education^ pro- tion out of rigorousP pgv5ical jabor, I gra msalutmg the state s 3^000 nnr- bv keeping steadfastly before him' ses New Jerseys traffic death the bright hope in his American total thus far this year has reached dream, Walter Knott himself has 537 compared with 523 up to the become a dramatic example of the same time last year . . Bids will be goodness of the American wav- received on five seashore improve-; “All my life,” he sav« 'T ve vvant- ment projects by the State Conser- ed to bo a farmer. To me there has vation Department no later than 11 always been a feeling of sccuritv a.m. October 11 . . Governor Mey- and a definiteness of purpose whenner has called for renewed dedica- 1 am working with my hands in the tion to the problem of obtaining soil. I 've always fe lt'that if' a man gainful employment for New Je r - ( has a plot of ground and a willing sey’s handicapped workers . . . The ness to work hard enough he can third annual New Jersey Marketing make himself a living from the Institute will be held at Princeton; earth. And what more fundamental on November 7 . . . Local govern- 1 security than in knowing that one’s ment m New Jersey is having finan- success or failure depend- upon cial troubles, spending more than a one's sell : ' billion dollars a year and in debt From Rag. to R ich .,more than a dollar for each dollar; When he was 18 he earned enough spent, the New Jersey Taxpayers money picking cantaloupes in the

Here’s the car that reads you loud and clear— the new-size, -you-size ’61 Chev­rolet. VI e started out by trimming the outside size a bit (to give you extra inches o f clearance for parking and maneuvering) but inside we left you a full measure of Chevy comfort. Door openings are as much as 6 inches wider to give feet, knees, and elbows the undisputed right of way. And the new easy-chair seats are as mudh as 14% higher—ju st right for seeing, just right for sitting.

Once you’ve settled inside you’ll have high and wide praises for Chevrolet’s spacious new dimensions (in the Sport Coupes, for example, head room has been upped as much as 2 inches, and there’s more leg room, too— front and rear). Chevy s new trunk is something else that will please you hugely— what with its deep-well shape and bumper-level loading it holds things you’ve never been able to get in a trunk before.

l e t , generously endowed as this car is with spaciousness and clean-etched ele­gance. it holds steadfastly to all the thrifty, dependable virtues Chevrolet buyers have come to take for granted. Your dealer's the man to see for all the details.

IMPALA 4-DOOR SP O R T SEDAN— one o f five Inipnhis that bring you a new measure o f elegance from the most elegant Chevies o f all.

NOMAD 9-PASSENGER STATION WAGON. Youhat e a choice o f six Chevrolet wagons, each with a cave-sized cargo opening nearly 5 fe e t across.

There’s never been a trunk like it before! The floor’s recessed more than half a foot and the loading height is as much as 10'A inches lower.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * ★ * * * * *

INTRODUCING THE '61 CHEVY

B I S C A Y N E 6the lowest priced full-sized Chevy with hig-car comfort at small-car prices!

Chevy's new ’61 Biscaynes—6 or V8— give you a full measure o f Chevrolet quality, roominess and proved perform­ance—yet they're priced down with many cars that give you a lot less! Now you can have economy and comfort, too!

BEL AIR 2-DOOR SEDAN, like a ll '61 Chevrolets,brings you Body by Fisher newness— more front seat Irg room.

Biscayne 4 -Door Sedan

t o t e new Chmotet mitheneu, CmetU a, m r local ootMccd CtmroU dealer’.

GILBERT CHEVROLET COMPANYHigtetoin, N.J. Route 130, So. of Stockton St. Phone84910-Mll

Page 3: Field of Five Girls Thousands to Vie for ’Miss’ Title See ... · engagement ot their daughter O’Reilly, Borough C D director, at Marcella to William Hummel, Hightstown 8-2378

mGHTSTOWN GAZETTE, MERCER COUNTY, NEW JE R S E Y , THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6 , I960

* ir iA <( 1NG Ol CARDS * it

''clara! - c la r a ! - look! iVe fin a llyWOW A G-AME OF SOLITAIRE ! "

Tony Lane’sA P P L E G A R T H I NN

"W here Only the Best Will Do"(3 Miles East of Hightstown, Off Route 33)

DINING ROOM OPEN FROM 5 P.M. TO MIDNIGHT

CLOSED MONDAY

Catering to Banquets and Social FunctionsDiners Club — American Express

Phone Hightstown 8-0449

1 4r p T . r\ r". A/N

H i e i

N ew sN«w S p u iili Tw chtr

One of the new faculty members added to the Hightstown High School teaching staff is Mrs, Alberta Sicroff who teaches Spanish. She resides in Nassau Estates, Lawrence Township with her husband and three children.

At Hunter College she received her degree of Bachelor of Arts. She continued her undergraduate work at Middlebury College, did graduate work at Syracuse University and studied for a year in Madrid.

When asked for her hobbies and pastimes Mrs. Sicroff mentioned playing the piano, reading and trav­eling as her main interests. She also said that she liked everything about Hightstown High, especially the at­mosphere and the student body.

Seniors Chooee PUy“Our Town" by Thornton Wilder

has been selected as the Senior Play by the Senior Class, to be presented November 17-18. Under the direc­tions of Miss Elizabeth Keller try­outs for positions on the cast were held Monday.

Magazine Drive Begin*During the fourth period last

Thursday the students had outlined for them the details of the annual magazine drive. Larry Floyd and Nancy Sloan are co-captains. Stan­ley Czenis, faculty adviser for the drive ending October 3 has set the goal at $3500 which means each stu­dent must sell six dollars in sub­scriptions.

AssemblyThe second assembly on Septem­

ber 13 was opened by David Socho litsky, senior class president, who read the Bible and led in the prayer and flag salute. He then introduced 14 seniors who gave short talks on school life. They were Brent Bar- low, Nancy Ogden, Cynthia Mans­field, Judy Pierson, Benay Rubin­stein, Gail Forman, Samuel Turner, Martha Zingg, Larry Floyd, Louis Bellardo, Maud Gavett, Carl Jantz, Susan Mohr and Marcia Pogrebin.

Apples For EverybodyAny time is the time for apples,

but supplies are most abundant in the fall. September and October are the two months when most of the apples are harvested. W e’ve had summer apples for several weeks; now fall varieties are aavilable. From late September right on through the fall and winter there’ll be plenty of the fall varieties of this delicious fruit. Supplies are greatest, prices are lowest and quality is the best at harvest time.

This year’s apple crops is not as large as usual. We won’t be short of

apples but you may have to pay little more than you did last fall.The nation's apple production smaller by about 10 per cent than last year's crop. This forecast does not take into account damage from the recent hurricane which swept through important apple producing areas in New Jersey, the Hudson Valley and New England. The ex­tent of the damage will not be known for some time. Locally esti­mates of fruit loss range from 5 per cent to 30 to 40 per cent.

We ate an average of 29.3 pounds of apples and apple products per person last year, 15 per cent of all the fruit we consumed. This is a lit­tle more than half a bushel or about 88 medium-sized apples. One and two-thirds apples per week, or apple every four days, may not seem like much but that figure includes everybody, young and old. It's not as much as we used to eat, either. Fifty years ago we ate more than four apples per week or more than one every other day. But then wre didn't have all the oranges, bananas and the host of other present day fruits from which to choose year around.

We eat some of our apples fresh and some as canned or frozen apple products. Apples rank second to bananas in per person consumption among fresh fruits; third following peaches and pineapples among can­ned fruits; but fourth among frozen fruits and seventh among canned fruit juices. Out of the total of 29 pounds of apples eaten per person last year 22 pounds or about three- fourths of them were purchased as fresh apples.

Retail stores and roadside markets are displaying baskets of colorful apples. It is thrifty to buy apples in large quantity if you have adequate storage space. Don’t over-buy; ev­ery apple you throw away because it spoiled adds to the cost of thegood ones. One way to take advan- ________tage of quantity purchases is for) Estate of tames you and your friends to go iu to-! Decej**«J: gether.

There are many varieties of apples intermediate ACO&dSr rf the Su I scrSel

ing apples to eat out-of-hand, you will want those which are free from blemishes, firm, juicy and of pleas ing flavor. Apples which are shriv­eled are not fresh. Both small and large apples may be of good quality. You may want a more perfect apple to bake or to display m the fruit bowl than for pie or sauce. For baking, apples should hold their shape well even when they are baked until soft. Apples for sauce and pie should cook tender in a short time and the best sauce apples will cook to a smooth texture. Usually an ap­ple with a slightly tart flavor is good for cooking.

When cooking apples, remember to use a pan with a tight fitting lid. This will help keep in the full-bod­ied apple flavor. Adding sugar at the beginning of the cooking period will help the apples keep their shape. If you want the apples to cook into a sauce, add the sugar just before tak­ing them from the range.

Apples go well with pork. You can include apples in the stuffing for pork chops; serve them in rings on top of the chops, or as applesauce with roast pork,

Conover’* Guernsey Cow Makes High Record

A registered Guernsey cow, C on­over’s Ben Wilna, owned by Mrs. C. L. Conover of York road, has com­pleted an official AR production rec­ord, according to the American Guernsey Cattle Club.

This record was for 14,187 pounds of milk and 812 pounds of fat. Wilna was a junior three-year-old and was milked three times daily for 365 da vs while on test.

This official production record wiw supervised by New Jersey State Col­lege, New Brunswick.

from which to choose. Consider whether you are going to make an apple pie, applesauce, or provide a snack for after school. When choos-

SHOW ON WORTH!CHEVY M I R More space .

more spunk and wagons, too!

The newest car in America: the CORVAIR 700 LAKE- WOOD 4-DOOR STATION WAGON.

Z Z J t k

Here’s the new Chevy Corvair for ’61 with a complete line of complete thrift cars.

To start with, every Corvair ha9 a budget­pleasing price tag. And Corvair goes on from there to save you even more. With extra miles per gallon . . . quicker-than- ever cold-3tart warmup so you start saving sooner . . . a new extra-cost optional heater that warms everyone evenly. Riding along with this extra economy: more room inside for you, more room up front for your luggage (sedans and coupes have almost 12% more usable trunk space).

And our new wagons? You’ll love them— think they’re the greatest thing for families since houses. The Lakewood Station Wagon does a man-sized job with cargo, up to 68 cubic feet of it. The Green­brier Sports Wagon you’re going to have to see— it gives you up to 175.5 cubic feet o f space for you and your things.

Corvair’s whole thrifty lineup gets its pep from a spunkier 145-cu.-in. air-cooled rear engine. Same rear-engine traction, same smooth 4-wheel independent-suspension ride. See the polished and refined 1961 Corvair first chance you get at your Chevrolet dealer's.

CORVAIR 700 CLUB COUPE. Like alt coupes and sedans, it has a longer range fuel tank.

M. VA.NDENBEHGH,

v ■ •)0 'r I f E ,0 F S O T L E M E X T-Notice ■- hr.rrhy given that th jr , h ntermed,ate ACCOUNT of the SU BSC

LKb, trustees under the last Will and Testament ot JA M E S M. V A N D EN BERG HTnhtaSEdV Wl11 bc audited and sta ted by jo in h. Curry, surrogate, and reported for settlement to the Mercer County Court, Probate^ Division, on Friday the 28th day of October next, at two o’clock P M

Dated: September 22, 1960.The First National Bank of Hightstown.Laura i! \andenbergh,

1 urp and Coates. Attorney?,160 Stockton Street,Hightstown, New Jersey.H. Gazette, Oct. 6, 1960—4t Fee $10.20

ST A TEM E N T O F O W N ER SH IP > tat emeu t required by the Act of August

-’ l, 1912, a- amended by the Acts of March L 1933, and Ju ly 2, 1946 (T id e 39, United Mates Code. Section 2J3i showing the own- rship, management and circulation of The

Hightstown Gazette, published weekly at Hightstown. New Jersey , for October l/1960.

The names and addresses of the pub- slier, editor and business manager are: Publisher, Mrs. May S. Dennis, 114 Rog­

ers Ave., Hightstown, N. J .Editor, W. Palmer Dennis, 114 Rogers

Ave., Hightstown, N. J .Busine-- manager. Miss K athryn S. Den-

MS, ITT R ..ger: Ave.. I HgflWWWU, N. ;T. • The owner i> Mrs. May S. Dennis. 114

Rogers Ave., Hightstown, N. J .The known bondholders, mortgagees and

other seucritv holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities a re : (None)

The average numbers of copies of each sue of the publication sold, or distributed,

through the mads or otherwise to paid sub­scrib e during the 12 month preceding the date shown above w as: (Thi> information is required from daily, weekly, semiweekly and triweekly newspapers only ) 1907.

Sworn to and subscribed before me this 1st day of October I960.

JO SE P H S. S T U L T S , Notary Public.

(My commission expires Feb. 13, 1962)H. Gazette, Oct. 6, I960H. Gazette, Sept. 29, 1960 Fee

A h om em ak er completionthese twenty home prepared­ness points can now qualify for this color window seal by sign­ing a similar list and taking it to the local civil defense direc­tor:

____Know the warning signal#and what they mean.

-----Know my community planfor emergency action.

----- Have selected our familyshelter area.

-----Have plans for emergencycooking.

-----Have plans for emergencyheating.

-----Have plans for emergencylighting.

-----Know what to do about ra­dioactive fallout

---- Have a two-week aupfdy ifood^and water.

-----Am prepared to purify un­safe water.

---- Have a radio which docs not.depend upon a commercial source of power.

-----Know the Cooelradand am prepared to for survival inatruettooi.

-----Have a first aid k it-----Have emergency clothing

and blankets.— Hava morale mppltea.-----Do fire - preventive house­

keeping.:— Have emergency fire

plans and equipment---- Have emergency

plans and preparations.-----Have plans for evacuation

accordance with my munity plan.

You rely on him—24 hours a day, 365 days per year. The telephone lineman is a trouble shooter who guarantees your immedi­ate contact with the outside world. You know instinc­tively you can count on him.

Count on us, tooTo provide comfort and re­sponsibility when you need them m ost.The Seal of National Select­ed Morticians means high ideals, ethical practices, busi­ness integrity.

William S.Heyer

Funeral Director 202 Stockton St.

Hightstown, N. J.

CREAM RIDGE PEACHESLUSCIOUS QUALITY—TREE-RIPEN ED —FREESTO N E

At Farm Prices—Wholesale and Retail Open Sundays and Weekdays from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Packing House and Orchard* at Davis Station, N. J. Davis Station, Imlaystown Road, Just off Route 539

E. W. HARVEY ORCHARDSPhone Clearwater 9-7*61 CREAM RIDGE, N. J.

4 -1 0 t

GREEN STAMPSIt ’s thrifty to save

Spare tire is in the rear in coupes and sedans— leaving more luggage space up front.

CORVAIR 700 4-DOOR SEDAN. Provisions fo r heat■ ing ducts are built right into its Body by Fisher.

Even middle-seat passengers sit pretty, thanks to Corvair’s practically fiat floor.

'Vote in production— the G R E E N B R IE R SPO RTS WAGON with up

3 * to twice as much room as“ ordinan' wagons (third seat

“ optional at extra cost).

and lots o f fu n too!

$ See the new Chevrolet cars, Chevy C’orvairs and the new Corvette at your local authorized (Chevrolet dealer’s

GILBERT CHEVROLET COMPANYHighKtnim , R . J . Route 130, Sorth of Stockto* S t Plio6es: * -0910—0911

Saving for the things you want can be lots of fun, when saving doesn't demand any sacrifice or cut-backs in your budget.

That's why the S&H Green Stamp saving plan is so popular today with 25 million families in this and other States.

Saving S&H Green Stamps doesn’t require giving up something else. They’re extras that you get when you shop at stores that give them. Actually , they're discounts on your purchases — the same kind that manufacturers and merchants receive.

With your filled books of S&H G reen Stamps, you can get at no added cost any of 1,500 items of dis­tinguished merchandise — the finest made in America. You’ll find them at your nearest S&H Green Stamp Redemption Center, Or order them by mail from the

beautiful S&H catalog, if there's no center nearer you than 20 miles away.

Page 4: Field of Five Girls Thousands to Vie for ’Miss’ Title See ... · engagement ot their daughter O’Reilly, Borough C D director, at Marcella to William Hummel, Hightstown 8-2378

Four m n i m n i — GAZETTE. » * « r n n o o U W rY NEW JE R SE Y , THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, I960

LOCAL ACTION IN

I p OFITSArco R ex Henzler’s Esso Hightstown Lane- Windsor Manor Stewart's R. B. •Hall’s Bowling

; Craig 8c Son Harry's A & B Amron Homei

1212103 6

44

Bowling Fact* Local Men’* Bowling League Standing*

RED DIVISION107766443

Pullen's Fuel Green Gables Carduner's Shangle & Hunt Hutchinson’s Conover 8c Son Old Hights Inn Trio Bar

W HITE DIVISIONCree-Mee Freez -Jim's Drive-In "Pharma-CraftMcCo!!’s Masons oArcher Bros. ?Decker's Dairy Old Hights Bar 4TEgditstown Rug ■

b l u e d iv is io n

Selected Risks G. A. Bennett Hightstown Trust Decker's Dairy Greenhorns Damasco’s C. R Field & Son F.CA

Women’* Standing*

Garden State Lists 26-Day Fall Meetiug

Major LeagueTrenton Brakes Conover’s Dairv 10Pat Pavers 7Holiday Inn 6Collier Agency 4Tri-County Lumber 4Jim ’s Drive-In 4AAA Answering

Retuln16 r j c r> i ■ v . ! Countv Lumber 2, Pat PaversGarden State Park opens its 2b- T ^ Brakc ^ AAA Answering 1

£ ; day tau meet Saturday with the ™n- • ; im's D. I. ,Collier*' 2, Holiday Inn 1

* number of track and state attend-uuu4ifw f*i run,- Top scores were chucked by W al-ance and wagering records may be !>' Schanck 223, Johnny Forman 217,

4 broken before the final day of racing ’FTal Tiltoni 191, Tri-County, Joe7 at the Delaware Township oral No- Trani 199, Bill W ltdemann 194, 233,4 vember 12 Devaul 3)3, Applegate 222, .AAA6 In addition to a blue ribbon5 ter of stake, races, highlighted b y * 237. 206, Andrews 230, Ktncel 7! the October 22 running of the G a r - '* - K b. Brakes .Mike fttstle 2M8 denia and the October 29 running of 182, J Baldmo 2W, ^ 214 Cyat the Garden State, world's r i c h e s t ,^ ™ ” 519 l } - S.h' rn

>race, rite fall calendar also b r i n g s ! man 191' Jlm ^1, Johnwith it added emphasis on the com- 5

3 deer with a shotgun during the in-1 3 1 terval of December 12-17 if he pos-| 51 sesses a valid firearm license.7 Hunting hours during this firearms 9 1 and bow and arrow season will be

from 7 a.m. to 5 pm.?! | Bowmen participating in the sea­

son are advised by the Division it shall be illegal to use a bow and ar­row for hunting between sunset and one-half hour before sunrise during the bow and arrow deer season or between sunset and sunrise at all other times. All arrows carried in the woods and fields must be fitted with an edged head of the following specifications: Minimum width shall be three-quarters inch, maximum one and one-half inch. Minimum length shall be one and one-half inch on main cutting edge. Cutting edges shall be of well-sharpened metal only.

Under the law, it will be illegal at all times to discharge an arrow from or across a state, county or munici­pal highway or roadway or within 300 feet of any occupied dwelling, except with permission of the owner or lessee. It is also illegal to use a bow and arrow from any vehicle, moving or stationary'.

13

9 33J4

8 46*4 $ 45 7♦ S4 83 9

Shuren 213, Jim ’s D. L ; Joe Iava-S oarlToo ' ron 253, R. B'rachelli 263, P. Maranomumty relations aspects ot park op gpntak 2H7 201.2+4, Holiday ; Jack Septak 207, 201,

c _ George Lain! 228, 198, Tony Ansilocall attention to m m p au, p onlbski a®, Collier’s.

1109.

HightsMwn Trust Co. Mom’s Restaurant Higbtstown Lanes Cree-Mee Freez Jim ’s Drive-In Allen & Stults Tow n Shop Nick’s Hights Hote'. Jim ’s B. S Pullen's Fuel Ted’s Gulf Higbtstown Rug Cranbury Inn Windsor Manor Vetick’s Upholstery' Tony Cal’s

the histop- growth and accomplish- ^ oh d ^ . set ments of 20 neighboring southern New Jersey communities during the meet, with the opening day program calling for a tribute to the Borough of Audubon. Other communities to be saluted during the first seven days of racing are Berlin, Gloucester

•> Township and Clemen ton, j Among the throughbred horses 3] now arriving in the stable area are 2 1the nation’s top equines, entered in.2 ‘one or more of the nine stakes events 7 to be run this meet 5 Among the races are the New Jer- 4 sey Breeders Stakes, the Benjamin

Franklin Handicap, the Quaker City

a new team score,

Bow & Arrow Season Opens On Saturday

Hunters armed with bow and ar­row will trek to the deep woods of

Lady Handlcaper HoldsForth at Freehold Oval

Eoslea chuckled, T W t he foofcj to inch thinking, i xtudious

er could find it lot* more u p Constance.

Mr*. Enslen explained that “park. : ed out" is indicated by a m ail f0\ and this must be scanned carefulk

One voice overshot a gathering in said there ae 12 parts to take into i raring'oo the racing secretary’s office at Free- j consideration m arranging a_racc -V T T r *hold Raceway and it was asking, s h ® outlined them thusly: Che tlrr , . , . „ „ , » , the horse s best record, his actualHovs- do you handicap the horses ? [ t[me in rccent raceSi condition and

Mrs. Constance Enslen, who holds size of , he tnlck and its speed rat- forth as the racing secretary at the jn g . tbc opposition, drivers ability, central Jersey harness oval and is position, age of horse, class ofthe only woman in horse racing t o ' racp_ cll,s in which the horse raced discharge the duties of the impor- j recentiyi was he “parked out" last tant office, had a ready answer. S h e : tbne anj Joes he show several

breaks in stride and finally checklicensed hunters of the state. T h is ' the odds: represented an increase of 122,507 an- j All this information appears in the imals over that taken in 1958. It 15 program and it sounds like a-heap further estimated that in 1959, 106,-1 of work. Many distaff bettors may 103 licensed sportsmen were rabbit: swear that the hat-pin system is just hunters by preference. j as good and much easier. But Mrs.

( L , P I . ——, horse between him and the rail U She outlined them thusly: Check q s he expected that he will dobet-

ter if he has an inside poet in next race. The small (o), incidca tally, will show in the poet perform, ance line just after the part of th* race where the situation occurred.

For example in the horse’s last start, the performance Eae mar m l 4-3-2(o)-2. The cirde after thTS shows he parked at that stage. Keep­ing in mind the greater distance travelled, you could subtract a sec­ond from his time for each "parked out" indication and consider the re­mainder his potential for the up­coming race.

Expect Plenty Of Cottontails

4 Franklin Handicap, the Quaker City x ,„v , on October 8 to officially3 !T nCf ,?.n Hand,3cap. open New Jersey's first big game4 me $:>f},000 \ ineland Handicap and ‘ . ,iw,

Fish

Cottontail rabbits are plentiful in New Jersey this year and are cer­tain to add to the popularity of the' 1960 upland game season, the State Division of Fish and Game announ­ced today.

The rabbit has been New Jersey’s most important small game animal for many years and the popularity of the species is being maintained at a high level by the Division.

The season for cottontail rabbits l will open at 9 a.m. November 12 and extend to December 10. It will re­open on December 19 and close on December 31. Hunting hours on No­vember 12 will be from 9 a.m. to one-half hour after sunset. On al! other days the legal hunting hours will be one-half hour before sunrise

and i to one-half hour after sunset. The

CARDUNER’S LIQUOR STOREl* Now Doing Business in Its New Store

RT. 130 A STOCKTON STREET, HIGHTSTOWN

Plenty of Parking Free Delivery

4 the $75,000 Trenton Handicap as the D * . .\WmK#*r 1? final** The State Division ----- — . „

i ‘ T h T r i e ; attrac-ine tiie greatest Game has announced the bow and, daily bag limit will be a cottontailQiattcntion "across the nation are the arrow deer season, during which U-irabbits andi in addition the hornsed3 Gardenia, $50,000 added for two- censed hunters may take deer oi hunter may have 1 jack rabbit or

vear-old fillies and the running one either set, will conclude on Novem-i hare n possession, week later of the Garden State, for •>er ” • i ‘ie season bag limit is one In 19d9 it is estimated as the re-ma!e tv, -vear-olds deer of either sex. Hunting hours suit of a widlife season production

j,*«> » >nr n First nost durintz the earlv oart be one-half hour before sunrise survey conducted by the Divisionfc .i .ts to ^ R u g ^ .H lg h ts m w n T r . 1, ^ st^ d u rtu g a ie eairly^art ^ one. half hour after sunseL ! that 530,038 rabbits were taken by

u * ; be advanced to 1 p.m with the Later, on December 12, the fiye-return or Eastern Standard time, day annual deer season during which There will be no racing on Mon- hunters may use either firearms or

R exult*Jim - Drive-In 2, C-M -F 1

PHONE 8-0S74

We will soon have the GRAND OPENING of our New Store

To Serve Our Customers Better

THANK YOU

days.

Allen & Stults 2. Nick’s Hights M ,m’s Restaurant 3. Town shop 0 Vetick’s 3, Tony Cal’s 0 Cranbury Inn 2, Ted’s Gulf 1Pwikn's’i HightribTO j-anes 0

- || t 2. Jim’s B Si - , j , __. . ____Top scores were registered by 8 5 0 C lassic Bow ling

Evelyn Walton 156, Betty Frazee » Standing*163, Clara Cornell 200, 176, 171, | l e a g u e 3 t a n a m g S Higbtstown Trust; Arlene C arter. Gre£n Gab!e_ 12172 Hug; Jean Mangold 160, M om s;: -- ------------------------------------- —Kitty Yetick 165, Maureen McGow- ________________________an 311. IE , Jackie Beecher 201. Mu­riel Walters 160, Vetick’s; Doris An­derson 172, Tony Cal's; Terry Gam- barort 181, 161, Regina Lubbers 191,1 179 Ted’s; Peg Smith 183. Selma Wiedemann 201. 171, 1M, Cranbury Inn : Thelma Henzler 177, Evelyn Conme 174, Kitty Applegate 177, 170,Pullen's; Marge Sherman 162, Grace Ball 190, 165. Lanes; Marian Hanna 201. Manor

Women’s ScheduleW ednexday

Cranbury Inn vs Hights town Lanes Decker's Dairy vs Hightstown Rug Pullen’s Fuel vs Ted’s Gulf Hightstown Trust vs Vetick’s J ir .'i R S. v= Town Shop Allen 8c Stults v- Jim’s D. I.Mom’s Restaurant vs Windsor M.

•McGraw-Hill League

Untouchables Scotch & Soda Yankees 3 Rings Rocketeers King Pins Woodchoppers 3 Splits Musketeer^Fishermen Gangbuster- MisSplits Alley Oops

Result*Scotch & Soda 3, Musketeers 0 Yankees 2, 3 Splits 1 Untouchables 2, King Pins 1 Rocketeers 2, Alley Oops 1 3 Rings 3, Gangbusters 0

Top scores were registered by George Cranstoun 198, Musketeers;Bill Malicke 189, 182, J. Munion 192,Scotch & Soda; Charlie Norcross 190, 3 Splits, S. Zuczek 183, Alley Oops, K. Clark 186, Pocketeers; F.Pollack 192, 187, 183

Industrial LeagueBennett-Mount 8 4McLean Engineering 7 5Hightstown C. C. 6 6Cranbury Nat. Bank 6Gottel & Billingham 6 6Walker-Gordon 6 6Treat’s Garage 5 7Hightstown Nat. Bank 4 8

bow and arrow and take antleredonlyi will be Lunched T he sea *

son bag limit is one deer with antler at least three inches in length. A person who has legally taken a deer: during the special bow and arrow'

3 season can legally take an antlered

O P E N S S A T U R D A Y

FOR THE BEST RACING

m m

10 210 29 39 3(?£ 5546 6554 6445 74 84 83 93 93 9

ResultsBennett & Mount 2, Gottel & B. 1 McLean Eng. 3, Country Club 0 Walker-Gordon 2, H. Nat. Bank 1 Trea’s 2, Cran. Nat. Bank 1

High scores were rolled by Dave Reeder 201, Dean Pullen 197, C. C .; George Lewis 190, 189, Joe Hopple 201 224, 183; Stan Briggs 213, Pete Lebkuecher 208, B. & Mount; Milt Shinn 199, Russ Sutphin 189, W alk­er-Gordon ; Jim Fowler 195, E. Faille 202, T reat’s.____________

Fishing RulesTentative regulations for the 1961

fishing seasons have been announced by the New Jersey Division of Fish and Game. A public hearing on the proposed regulations is slated Tues­day, October 18 at 8 p.m. in the W ar Memorial Building, Trenton.

The trout season is scheduled to start January 1, 1961 and extend to Marcn 5. It will reopen at 8 a.m. April 8 and run through February 28, 1962 except in certain waters.

SEE THE NATION’S TOP 3-YEAR-OLD FILLIES

THE JERSEY BELLE STAKESPOST 1 :3 0 PM . NO RACING MONDAYS GRANDSTAND $1 .8 0 . CLUBHOUSE $ 3 .6 0

CHILDREN UNDER 16 NOT ADMITTED TRAINS and BUSES DIRECT TO TRACK

DINING RESERVATIONS—CALL NORMANDY 2-7777

Garden Statu ParkROUTE 7 0 - N E A R CAMDE N

Now! Your Gold Medallion Home Has Extra Value!

Now! Your electric utility offers a further incentive to owners of Gold Medallion Homes.

To help you install sufficient electrical capacity and equipment for full enjoyment of total electric living, we will buy and maintain your main electric service entrance facilities in accordance with the following schedule:

JCPsL-NJP&L will pay:*75 for a service entrance rated 100 amperes

*125 for a service entrance rated 150 amperes

*175 for a service entrance rated 200 amperes

*225 for a service entrance rated 400 amperes

a 100 «n p «es are restricted to residences of 700 aq. ft . of living area or less.

^ Y lri? £ ,nui4, wnform to the provision of the applicable National Electrical Code.

To qualify fo r this Gold Medallion Home Plan, there are some easily m et specifications which we will be glad to send you a t your request.

Please rem em ber th at you must apply to the company before construction or rem odeling is done. W rite or call our Residential Sales D epartm ent for full details on this new Gold M edallion Home Offer.

JCP&LJersey Central Power & Light

Page 5: Field of Five Girls Thousands to Vie for ’Miss’ Title See ... · engagement ot their daughter O’Reilly, Borough C D director, at Marcella to William Hummel, Hightstown 8-2378

HIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE. M ERCER COUNTY. NEW JE R S E Y , THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, I960

j i L < ( K U I i u ) i . Y

RATES—1 — %t - r 2S c m U additional for larga k tM

IV cents ia advance; E coatsWhite space, -45 cents per inch.

The Calotte doee aot eegame responsibility in. Credit far typographical •rror limited to

D E A D L IN E -# turn, W mL Call M 1 7 I

REAL ESTATEFOR

REAL ESTATESALE

Four bedroom home located on dead end street in nice part of town. Tot 95x200 with old shade trees, home has screened porch living room, dining room, modern kitchen, bath, oil hot water heat, two car ga­rage. Price $16,000.

Six room and bath rancher on Y acre lot. Modern kitchen, living room, dining room and 3 bedrooms. Walking distance to schools and shopping district. Price $13,500.

Cape Cod, six rooms and two baths breezeway and attached ga­rage ’ Nicely redecorated through­out. Combination screens and storm windows, gas hot air heat, nice yard. Reasonably priced at $lo,UUU.

Two story frame near schools, modern kitchen with G.E, wall oven, electric stove and dishwasher. Liv­ing room, dining room, family room, four bedrooms, laundry and bath, two car garage. Price $15,5(JU.

Income property, four apartments with a monthly income of $282; ex­cellent location, oil heat, two car ga­rage. Price $22,900.

Very nice two story home with

FOR SALE

FO RTY-EIG H T acres of ground on York road. Call 8-1537.

CHEVROLET 1953 pickup truck. Call after 5 p.m. 8-2290. 14-2t*

CHEVROLET, 1954 2-door, pow- erglide, power brakes, r&h, good condition. Call 8-1882.

BUICK, 1955 hardtop, automatic transmission, r&h. Call 8-1882.

FOR SALENEW MODERN RANCH

bedrooms, 2 baths, large living room with fireplace, dining room, 12x33 out door livin'* room, complete kitchen with built-in oven. Full cellar, par­tial stone front, garage. Springcrest location.

Six room house in excellent con­dition. New roof, new aluminum sid­ing, new heating system, new porch with wrought iron railings, aluminum screens and storm sash, modern kitchen, tile bath, 3 bedrooms, living and dining room. Price $16J)00.

RANCHER — 2 years old, owner transferred, 3 bedrooms, cedar pan- nelled dsn, built in Hi-Fi, modern kitchen with built in oven, dish­washer, excellent ‘ location

Seven room dwelling, close to town, 4 bedrooms, outbuilding, lot 95x200, $16,000,

C A PE COD, 4 bedroom, in good neighborhood, quiet street, 2 baths, enclosed breezeway, garage. $15,000.

INCOME P R O P E R T IE S : 2 apart­ment dwelling, 4 rooms and bath in each, on North Main street month-

i u , -— r „ ly income $170. Price $11,500. 2 fun-aluminum siding, hardwood floors in |y ft rooms each apartmentexcellent condition, oil hot waTC’ baseboard hot water heat monthly heat, fully insulated. First floor has.income Price $14,500.Iwing room, dining room, den, laun-i,lry bath and modern kitchen. Sec- j FARM BARGAIN—60 acres near ond floor has four bedrooms, office | Allentown, 37 acres tillable, 23 acres ind bath The rooms are all nice.good timber, irrigation lake fed by size and sunny for comfortable hv-, spfthgl. 9 room dwtllme in good mg Storm windows and screens,! condition located on good hard road two car garage, full basement and $28,500.cellar. Price $17,000. ; f a r m s 0f various sizes, descrip-

Would you like a nice farm? Give tions and prices among our large us a call. W e have a good variety I number of listings, to choose from. j Building lots available in various

W E H A VE MANY LISTINGS!attractive sections of town.ON SM ALL FARM S, LARGE Ruraj jots desirable locations, FARMS, COM M ERCIAL AND IN- .DUSTRI AI, P R O P E R T IE S , REN T -1 acre at $z,uoo.ALS AND O TH ER RESID EN TIA L High wooded 2y2 acre lot with P R O P E R T IE S IN HIGHTSTOWN over 450‘ road frontage bordering

BEAGLE hounds. Paul Adamek, Edinburg road, Windsor. Call 8- 0041-R-ll. 14-2t*

GOOD used pipeless heater with blower and oil burner. Call at 321 Second «avenue or &-0184-W.

ELECTRIC heater, brand new. La­dies wool coat, size 20p2. Phone 8- 2612.

USED bathroom fixtures. Tub, sink, etc. Call 8-2288 after 5 :30 p.m.

LABORATORY equipment, GE electric stove, Magic Chef gas stove. Call around 5 p.m., Davis 9-6838 4

TOP soil. Rich and black. Deliv­ered in Hightstown area. $14 for 6- yard load. Call Swinburne 9-1575. 13-5t

LAST chance to buy at reduced prices: rugs, 'chairs, ''large tahde, card tables, couch and cot, table cloths, napkins, towels, knives, forks. Ben Eby, 306 Stockton street* Phone 8- 2451.

AND NEIGHBORING AREAS. stream, 12 town, $3,500.

miles from Hights

HOUSE on Princeton-Hightstown road. Two bedrooms, unfinished at­tic, full cellar, oil fired hot water heat, 2-car garage plus enclosed sun porch. Call 8-2776 for appointment, 14-2t

Hightstown Post No. 148 will hon­or its American Legion baseball team at a dinner in the post rooms Saturday evening, October 15.

Saturday at 6:45 p.m. a devotional program conducted by Mrs. Emma

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Matruski of Franklin street are the proud par­ents of a daughter born September 25 in Princeton Hospital

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest S toff el of Sunset avenue are the proud par­ents of a daughter born September 21 at Princeton Hospital.

In flowers and the service that goes with them you want, most of all, absolute dependability. Call

Murphy, Mrs. Katherine GibiUsco Country Flowers in Cranbury E Xand Mrs. Sue DeGeorge, will be broadcast over Zarephath radio sta­tion W AWZ.

Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Ryan of Outcalt street are receiving congrat­ulations upon the birth of a son Sep­tember 21 at Princeton Hospital.

Honestly, wouldn't you like flow­ers a little oftener than you have them? So would your friends. Send them some. Phone Evelyn at Coun­try Flowers in Cranbury. E X 5-1233. —adv.

Almost everyone likes a good bar­gain. One of the best is the cash & carry dollar weekend special at Country Flowers in Cranbury.—adv.

FOR RENT

BUNGALOW on Route 130. In­quire at 133 Monmouth street. •

ROOM, Roosevelt, one room, working woman or man, kitchen privileges. Available November 1. Phone Saturday or Sunday, 8-2477- W.

T H R E E room apartment and bath. Call after 5:30 pm., 8-0138-R-l —married couple preferred. 14tf

TH REE 65,000 Smith .all electric incubators. Will accept best offer. Purchaser must remove from pres­ent location in Trenton. Contact F. Robert Schroeder, P. O. Box 1873, Trenton or phone Trenton Export 2-6095.

FE ED ER calf and commercial beef cattle auction sale. 250 head Hereford, Angus and Shorthorn slaughter and feeder cattle and cows with calves. Saturday, October 8, 1 p.m. sharp, Livestock Auction Mar­ket, Hackettsown, N. J. For details write Donald M. Kniffen, secretary, N. J. Hereford Assn., College of Ag­riculture, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N. J.

HELP WANTED

Insurance & Real EstateM7 N. Main St., Hightstown. N. J

Phone 8-0112—8-1994

Near Hightstown. 10-room, 2-story home, W /i acres, ideal for large family or suitable as a rooming house. 6 bedrooms, diniw* room, liv­ing room. 2 kitchens, 2 baths, 2-car garage An exceptionally good buy at $13,500. Ask for #279.

Near Cranbury. Income property, large 2-story home on 1 acre, con­tains 3 apartments. One apartment has 4 bedrooms, dining room, living room, kitchen, 2 baths, den, other apartments are 2-bedroom and 1- bedroom apartments. $24,000. Ask for #280.

Investment opportunity: 2 apart­ments in this completely renovated home—all new utilities & heating system; a landlord’s dream—avail­able at a low, low $15,500. Ask for #272.

9-room 1 lA story house, 9 plus acres, 60'x70’ brooder with radiant heat and concrete floor, 480 ft. front­age, can be zoned commercial or light industrial, excellent location. $33,500. Ask for #260.

Store and 2 apartments. Down­town Jamesburg, convenient to transportation and parking. Ideal for downtown retail or service bus­iness. Priced to sell at $18,000. Ask for #221.

OSMAN-AMRON

Rt. 130, Cranbury, N. J.EXport 5-1704

FOR RENT TOW N; 5-room apt, heat and

. hot water, $95; 4 rooms and bath, 2d floor, heat and hot water, $90.

COUNTRY: 6 room furnished, $150; 5 room apartment, heat and electric, $100; 5 room house, $65.

Maurice H. HagemanREALTOR

231 Rogers Ave. “at the monument” HI 8-0439 - HI 8-1439

FOR SALE

T H R EE piece sectional sofa, like ney, aqua, $185. Call 8-1911.

BUICK, 1951 Super, R&H, dyna- flo, $125, good condition. 1946 Chev­rolet F.V. \]/2 ton truck with 8 by 14 ft. insulated body, rubber like pew, $575. Call 8-1052-J.

5-1233.—adv.

Leon Penrith Sr. is hospitalized in Bristol, Pa.

Mrs. Stewart Shuster of Center street was honored at a surprise party recently in honor at the home of Miss Grace Ashton. She will move to Portland, Me. in the near future.

Barry Pullen, Lafayette junior has won a fullback spot on the college soccer team.

Miss Elizabeth L. Blyman, daugh­ter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Bly­man of Windsor has resumed her studies at Penn Hall Junior College, Chambersburg, Pa.

Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Ryan of Out­calt street are the parents of a »ont Daniel Franklin, born on September 2l at Princeton Hospital. The couple also have three girls and a boy,

CARDS OF THANKSWe wish to thank our neighbors,

friends and the local fire company for their aid at the time of the fire at our home, 445 Stockton street.— Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wiley and Qscar Hopkins Sr, *

We wish to sincerely thank our relatives, friends and neighbors for their cards, flowers and many acts of kindness at the tiem of the passing of our beloved wife and mother, Mrs. Rosetta J. Winfield.—The Er-» nest Winfield Family.

I wish to sincerely thank my' fLCILdL relatives and neighbors who worked and voted for me during the "Miss Hightstown Engine Company No. 1" contest.—Mrs. Albert (Judy) Peterson.

CHROME Print Swedish o f Dan ish glassware at a sacrifice. Also miscellaneous items: electric living room clock, electric kitchen clock, portable electric heater with blower, exhaust fan, weather zone cooler, fireplace set, first extinguisher, metal hand truck. Call at R. Sherrard’s, IYork road, Hightstown.____________ | Fifty_nine employees of Jersey

Central Power & Light Company

59 JCP&L Employees Take Company Courses

EGNOR PRO PER TY BUYSFour apartment building, not

leated, $213 month income, $13,- 60; attractive modern six-room nsulated bungalow, combination vindows and doors, 2 car garage, orner lot, shade trees, excellent ocation near Hightstown schools, 114,200; new six-room split level, Y, baths, combination windows md doors, near schools, $l/,l«i, Iranbury split-level, attractiv lew 8-room, 2J4 baths, baseboa leat, 2 car garage, basement, $24,- ’50; new 3-bedroom split level in Tamil ton Square, paneled utility oom, garage, $14,500; home will wo 4 -room apartments, t i le b it mrdwood floors, birch kitchen lew oil burner, near Hightstown chools, $15,500; single and duplex muses in Roosevelt; five rooms md bath, oil heated bungalow m eight tenths of a "and .near Pernneville

>*«■ hr n o o m$r5 oo§: $8,000irties, $8,000iroperties, $6,000, fU lai t/s 100121,000; $7,500; f 5,750; $.300 as,000; $10,300; $5,800; $19,990

g S i ® ;; S ' s | S

s « i . * 3132,000; $7,000; trade your home FA RM S FARM S FARMSaT L farms from $10,000 to)

1165,000. ..Lou , A c re .!. , M .re.nl.1 .,

Indailrul SiUa FOR LISTINGS

,f horn**. U rn». Hmd Ml type* °* Pr°P*rtT

Contact Russell AEGNOR

Realtar219 Rogers Ave.. Phone 8-0158

EXPERIEN CED waitress wanted. Mom's Restaurant, Route 33, phone 8-1054. Apply in person. 3tf

RELIA BLE woman who likes chil­dren. House cleaning one day a week. Ott-u transportation^, refer­ences required. Call 8-0102.

FARM home wanted for Labra­dor Retriever. Fine watchdog. Call Walnut 4-4871.

ONE or two unfurnished rooms. Wanted immediately. W rite Box 135, Gazette Office.

FOR RENT

SIX T Y acres for fanning. Inquire at 151 Wyckoff avenue, Hightstown.

ONE room and bath for two gen­tlemen. 126 Academy street, after 5 p.m.

MAN OR WOMAN: Full or spare time. Supply Rawleigh Products in Hightstown and vicinity. Earn $2-$4 per hour. Write Rawleigh's, Dept. NJI-120-1124, Chester, Pa. 9-9t

ATTRACTIVE office in Hights Theatre Building. Low monthly rental. Call Michael Lynn at 8-2425 or 8-9875. 3tf

FURNISHED home, $80; three and six-room oil heated homes from

i; 4-room apartment from $60; country store with 7-room apart­ment, '$115; 4750 sq. ft. industrial building; stores, professional or bus­iness offices; storage building. Eg- nor Appraising Service, 219 Rogers avenue, phone 8-0158.

SECRETARY T Y P IST for gen­eral office work, 35 hrs. per wk., ex­cellent opportunity. Also one typist- file clerk. Apply New Jersey Credit Union League Building, Ward street, East Windsor Township. Phone HI 8-2426. 13-2t

SECRETARYShorthand and typing. Essential

knowledge of medical or scientific terminology desirable. Apply to Personnel Office.

CARTER PRODUCTS, INC. Half Acre road, Cranbury, or call

Export 5-2900 for appointment.

ONE year old in July. 1959 Mer­cury 4-door sedan, Mercomatic drive, heater, radio, foam cushions, back up lights, carpet, clock, power steer- ing, power brakes, undercoated. This 30 week car is in excellent condition, owner1 must sell, returning to Europe. For TA A .V ID appointment call HI 8-2291-W

have enroller for company-sponsor­ed courses in electricity.

Forty-three have signed up for ; course in simplified elec

WANTED

EXPERIEN CED waitress. Apply Old Hights Inn, Route 130 & Stock- ton street.

W. LINCOLN Painting & Paperhanging

Phone 8-2995-W

tricity. Classes will meet every Monday night in the electric utility's Linemen's Training School in Alien- hurst. The instructor is R. A. Gold­en of Fair Haven, JCP& L general cable foreman.

Sixteen employees have enrolled for a course in the transmission and distribution of electricity taught by Elmer H. Adkins, JCP& L area su­pervisor of engineering. The class meets every Monday night in the j linemen's meeting room in the utili ty's Allenhurst operating building.

— --------------------------------------------NOTICE

Take notice that on October 12, 1 9 0 M 9:15 a.ra. at 2W /3 Furm an street, T nN. J . , I shall expose to public a *1959 Ford, Serial No. C 9 0 S I7 7 5 I2 .______and repossessed from Frederick Parks % f virtue of the breach of a cooditiosai MAM contract dated September 24, 1959 lad n r * suant to the Uniform Sale* Act of MV T ersey.

The Commerce Investm ent Company re­serves the right to bid.

The Commerce Investment Cm 145 E* State Street Trenton, N. J .A. Mergins, Collection Mgr.

j H. Gazette, Oct. 6, i960 Fne 0 J V

14tt

MAN as general stock clerk. Ap ply in person. Mach Lumber Co. Etra road. Hightstown.

HANDYMAN - GARDENER in Princeton area. Wife to help occa­sionally in household, cottage sup­plied. References required. W rite Box 115, Gazette office, Hightstown, N j 13-2t

14tf

MISCELLANEOUS

TV SERVICEIf you are ever in TV trouble call

Weber’s T V for dependable service. Davis 9-2110. ‘Htf

5 REAL ESTATEFOR SALE

Large 2 story home in good neighborhood. First floor has 2 liv­ing rooms, dining room and kitchen (modern). Second floor: 3 bed­rooms, bath and laundry. Two car garage, near schools. Price $16,000.

Beautiful Country Home Living room, dining area and kitchen; also office Two bedrooms and bath on second floor. Two car garage. Large lot. Price $27,000.

Ranch home in new area with three bedrooms. Living room dining room and kitchen, two baths, breeze­way and 2-car garage. Price $25,000.

Nice one family dwelling near schools. Two bedrooms, living room, kitchen and bath. . Fu! basement, expansion attic. Price $11,999.

New home on corner lot. Living room, dining room and kitchen. Three bedrooms, bath and recrea- tion room, one car garage. Price $17,000.

Nice country home with two bed­rooms and bath on second floor. Liv- ing room, dining room, kitchen, basement, two car garage,Price $16,000.

Country ranch home with three bedrooms, two baths, living room, dining room and kitchen. Two car garage one acre of land. Price $24,- 000.

FOR RENTFurnished apartment, 4 rooms and

1*/, bath. Good location. Price $115 per month.

H IR 0 LD E .S T A C K H 0 U S EREALTOR

441 Stockton S t , Hightitown, N. J.Phone Hightstown 8-1069 or 8-1353

NOW ON D ISPLAY New Comet and Mercury at our

showrooms. Schanck & Sihler, Inc, 10 Lafayette place, Freehold. 40tf

HAVE M UFFLERS. Will install or do it yourself and save. All cars, American and foreign in stock. In­stalled while you wait. Auto Boys, Hightstown 8-0923. 53tf

WANTED to buy or rent homes, apartments and building _ lots for industrial plant near Hightstown. Contact R. A. Egnor, sales and rent­al agent, 219 Rogers avenue, pnone 8-0158.

% Y n.ik n w a n t e d

For adjusting and testing high quality precision instruments. Age preferably between 22 and 30. High degree of personal initiative essen­tial. Excellent future. These are permament jobs with a rapidly grow­ing company. Excellent working conditions and fringe benefits. Please send complete resume.

Production Manager

P. O. Box 71

Hightstown, N. J .

TRO PH IES, award pins and plaques, tie bars, cuff and lapel but- tons with your favorite sport em­blem. Engraving at moderate prices. Wilsam Jewelers, 106 Main street, Hightstown, phone 8-2206._____ 24tf

GIRL W ANTED

For assembling high quality preci­sion instruments. Age preferably not over 35. We will train qualified candidates in our Hightstown plant. This is a permanent job with a rap­idly growing company. Excellent working conditions and fringe ben­efits. Please send complete resume

Production Manager

P. O. Box 71

Hightstown, N. J.

TRENTON F T

OPEN 7:00 SHOW AT DUSK

Now thru Sat.The story of just how it was*.

—in—

“Hell to Eternity”—plus—

The Suspense Thriller

“The Hypnotic Eye”Extra Added Fri.-Sat

CARTOON CARNIVAL

Sun., Mon., Tue*.Clark Gable Sophia Loren

“It Started in Naples”—plus---

Buster Crabbe“Gunfighters of Abiline'

$1 CAR LOAD EV ERY N1TE $1

Till 8 p.m. F r i, S a t , Sun. After 8 p.m. F r i, S a t, Sun. $1.5®

6tf

WILSAM JE W E L E R S Successor to O. T. Fenton

GUARANTEED FIN E W ATCHES

DIAMONDS JE W E L R Y 106 Main Street

Hightstown, N. J.

, full nice lot.

PRESCRIPTIONSOUR SPEC IA LTY

HIGHTS PHARMACYDavid Goldstein, R e f P k

PHONE 8-P053 W E DELIVER

LOST

CAMERAS. Will person who found camera equipment on Apple garth road near Hightstown phone owner. Reward increased.

The NewHIGHTS THEATRE

Phone HI 8-9875

ThursdaySE E M ISS HIGHSTOWN

CROWNED LIV E FROM THE STAGE AT 9:00

One Show Only at 7 p.m.

“Time Lock”

VALUABLE papers on First ave­nue Saturday morning. Owner call Hightstown 8-0914. ______

MISCELLANEOUS

W ill baby sit in my home for working mother Monday through Friday. Call 8-1045.

T H R E E month old hound dog. Will give away. William Wyhnanez.

Bicycles RepairedGood Used Bicycles

Bought and Sold

GEORGE DIEFEN BACH

315 Grant Avenue

HI 8-1445-W

48-3**

October — The Big Month at the

DANCESFlightstown Country Club

Special Events This Month: Tuesday, October 18 SQUARE DANCE

Wednesday, October 26 GALA HALLOWEEN BALL This Fri., Andy W ells Band

Every Sat., Two Bands, $1.25 inc. tax Every Wed., Friendship Dance For Folks 25 & over Adm. $1.00

Take*Fri., Sat.

You into the Future!( -MOST U SO M H Osawa wcnoH nm um r

■rnc^OLorotjuru

Note

K O . WELLS*

-»n*irMACHIHf

Time Machine” Sat. at 10 No show Sat. afternoon.

Sun., Mon., Tue*.Winner Five Academy Award* 1

Top Picture of the Decade! W ILLIAM HOLDEN

“Bridge of Toko Ri”

Wed., Thur*.Bring the Family!

BO B HOPE SEVEN L IT T L E FO Y S

OUR SERV ICE IS TH REE-FO LD 1. Ta offer tkm M i ace W mm M en ak L Te — ha wary larrice a M ena e f i I T# five you a l a r i — a l Saaaiaa

Wtwity-

O l a c h l l l F u n e r f l l H o m eHIGHTSTOWN t-UM

1M MORRISON AVE.

AMPLE PAKKHK

HIGHTSTOWN. E i

- r IF YOU WANT<*- , w QUICK SERVICE - . 7 TOP DOLLAR

PROMPT PAYMENT ACCURATE GRADING

i For Your r

SOYBEANS AND NEW CROP CORN

: •, Contact

FARMERS’ COOPERATIVE ASS’N.TRENTON

EX 2-6174

HIGHTSTOWN

HI 8-1470

H O PEW ELL

HO 6-98C3

CUSTOM ERSERVICE

R EP R ES EN TA TIV E

wanted in

Telephone Business Office

in Hightstown• excellent opportunity for high school graduate

who enjoys meeting and talking to people, in person and on the phone

• good starting pay with frequent increases

• opportunities for advancement

• pleasant surroundings, friendly co-workers, or­ganized social activities

• liberal sickness, pension, vacation and other benefits

• no experience necessary but applicant should be alert, friendly and neat

Apply to Mr. W. H. Klank, Manager

158 Main Street, HightstownMonday through Friday, 9 am. to 5 p.m.

New Jersey Bell Telephone Company

Oux Tttiqli&t'diaMtl

Z T O R 1 2 F O R 1

“Seven Little Foys”P ru tiil Thit Coupon at Our Boa Ofhca. Two Praaou* Admitted for the price of I.

We want to welcome you, and cordially invite you to make use of our services. Even if you are not quite ready to open an account, come in; get acquainted. See for yourself the many ways we can help with your money matters.

F I R S T N ATIO N ALOF HIGHTSTOWM, ML J .

MEMCEt FINMl H U M tm«a

Page 6: Field of Five Girls Thousands to Vie for ’Miss’ Title See ... · engagement ot their daughter O’Reilly, Borough C D director, at Marcella to William Hummel, Hightstown 8-2378

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CAU &-0373 FOR SERVICE

T H E H IG H T S T O W N G A Z E T T E

3 O T X L O SE , i r c a H c ss m .

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CHAELEES TA X IH r M 3 J 3 Jt

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LOANSFor Any J j r a ? * r y ji

T«eb J t -a r^ s * L-: S&oet T en *

f-x^erx 'A amt. am lenrary negaar-rg; Go. O s P re ^ o e s

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f» r^,.. i n. oaA1 W ack GBa f f n el

Lawrence E. Ward1 B rm ftxi Sc C t o M

P atac Export i - « U

saviaCentral Jersey GLF

Petroleum C o-op Inc.d o u b l e f t l t t b x d f u e l ckl

2*HOU« BUBNE* SERVICE M * m PU.

MACSMEAT MARKET114 MEKCEH STREET

HIGHTSTOWN. V j. Phoac LOOT

HOW OH CM SPLAT AT ALL OOOQC O iA U n

BARTON F. FRANCIS2 2 3 5 N o t t t e i g l u H n W a y M e r c e r v f M « v T r e n t o n P . 0 ^ N . i .

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SewFORD TsLACTOSS AND

EQUIPMENT Part* 2sd Serrict

HOLLAND A McCHESNXY Asthorttfei Dealer*

Route UOrtglttStDWB, N. J.Plsooe HI S-1572

M O BILE HOMESN EW AND USED

Used—10% Down Payme&t New—7-Year Flaaaoa*

Robbins viiieTrailer Sales, Inc.

Rl UO RotRumOe, NX IPbooc Jaaiper 7-LOD

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WE CATE* TO PAJtTIES. E T C

Delicious HomemadeTOMATO PIES

In or to Take Out

•*«**• 13* Hi«hutown PBoue 4 - 9 0 3

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BODY FENDER REPAIRS

.Soto Paianag

Aato Gfaas Iastaficd Radiator* Ckaacd aad Repaired Wheel Rail ana*Complete Re*ain oo AH Make*

Of Can aad Track*

POTTER ft HILLMANFORD SALES * SERVICE

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Page 7: Field of Five Girls Thousands to Vie for ’Miss’ Title See ... · engagement ot their daughter O’Reilly, Borough C D director, at Marcella to William Hummel, Hightstown 8-2378

HIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE, M ERCER COUNTY, NEW JE R SEY , THURSDAY, O CTO BER 6, 1960 P a ce S e r a i

Boon Beoieu*A PAIR OF RED CLOGSBy MASAKO MATSUNO. lllus. by K aiut Mizamura. Near York, N. Y-, World Pub. Co., n.p. $3,

"A Pair of Red Clogs,” written and illustrated for the 5-8 age group, has a charming, should-be-told story behind it. This is it.

Miss Masako Matsuno, a native Japanese attending Columbia University, was riding along one of our highways and was suddenly taken with the desire to walk in wooden clogs on the stone pavement in order to hear the familiar sound, “karo koro, karo koro." Whether Miss Matsuno did so at the time, this re­viewer does not know, but "A Pair of Red Clogs,” a first book, is the result of her wish to capture the sound of wooden clogs in the “beautiful rhythm of the English language." And it would make her happy if "this story gives American children 'something Jap­anese’ in sound as well as in spirit.”

"A Pair of Red Clogs” is the story of a pair of old cracked wooden clogs and a little Japanese girl by the name of Mako. All little girls love new shoes and Mako was no different. The day before school began her mother took her to the shop where wooden clogs were sold. Mako had to pick out just one pair. What a time she had in deciding. There were all co lors- blue, red, yellow, white, black and many others. Finally

by Kathryn S. Dennis

Mako chose the ones painted with clear red laquer and with thongs of red and black.

Mako was a very happy girl. She wore the clogs to school and shopping with her mother. Everyone ad­mired them. One day she played the weather-telling game and cracked one of the clogs. The clogs no long­er sank “koro koro, kara kara” when she ran. They sounded like “gara gara, goro goro.”

Little Mako was sad. What would her mother say ? : now would she get a new pair? She thought hard and l°ng. Ma.yl>e if she got the clogs very dirty her mother would buy her a new pair before the next festival day. bhe walked through a puddle and a dusty field and scuffed along and then went home, heavy of heart that she was making up a lie.

Mako's scheme to deceive her mother failed and in a gentle and kind way her mother let her know that she understood.

Mako’s story is recalled by the grandmother who wore the cracked clogs and was at the time of the re­calling sending a new pair of clogs to her grand­daughter. This story device adds another depth of un­derstanding.

This is a warm, sweet story that has happened many times all over the world with modifications and varia­tions. The illustrations, lovely and graceful in four colors, capture Japanese life and spirit.

Y our/ r -

THIS WEEK

% Tott Rvtftn RfMrtw

SHE’S RIGHT AGAIN

the grass is dry and spread the fer­tilizer evenly to avoid burning and streaking.

Finally, to help your lawn get the most from the fertilizer, apply some lime, too. Most New Jersey lawns need 50 to 75 pounds of ground lime­

stone to 1,000 square feet every two or three years.

HIGHTSTOW N G A Z E T T E -12 • Year

GOP Congressional Candidates Hold Same Slim Lead Over Democrats

By Kenneth Fink, Director, Princeton Research Service

Republican 47.8%Democratic 47.0

Princeton.—Results of the latest1 , y . . V . ,statewide trial heat of voter prefer-! Wlth undecided vote eliminated, ence show the state’s electorate split- the results are: ting almost exactly down the middle ' Republican 50.4%in their choices for Congressmen. | Democratic 49.6

Todays results are of interest! Three weeks ago, New Jersey Poll since they provide a good indication j findings on a similar question show-

—6.15 per cent behind the statewide congressional returns in this state.

Should this trend manifest itself at this time the GOP vote for Con gressional candidates across the na­tion today would be approximately 44.25 per cent, the Democratic vote 55.75 per cent—a result that would

'give the Democrats the same com­fortable hold on the House of Rep­resentatives that they have today. .

of the basic strengths of the two major political parties in the state 33 days before election day.

Come November 8, every one of the state’s 14 seats in the House of Representative’s plus the state’s 16 electoral votes for president, as well as one of the two New Jersey U. S. Senate seats will be up for grabs.

Here's how the vote went in the state when New Jersey Poll staff re­porters put the following question in face to face interviews to a cross- section of 1080 of the state's adult population.

“If the elections for Congress were being held today, which party would you like to see win in your own Congressional District—the Republi­can or the Democratic?

The following table shows the statewide results among those who had an opinion on the above ques­tion, or who, if undecided, stated towards which party they leaned:

ed the^following: Republican candi­dates 50.3%, Democratic candidates 46.6%, undecided 3.1%,

Thus over the past 21 days, senti­ment for GOP Congressional candi­dates has dropped 2.5%; that for Democratic candidates has inched forward 0.4% and the undecided has increased 2.1%.

In the November 1958 Congres­sional elections, GOP candidates for Congress picked up 50.15% of the major party vote to the Democratic candidates 49.85%. In that same election the Republicans picked up nine Congressional seats to the Democrats five.

Worthy of note, too, is that while GOP candidates for Congress in New Jersey picked up 50.15 per cent of the major party vote in the 1958 Congressional elections across the nation, GOP Congressional candi­dates could muster only 44 per cent of the nationwide major party vote

a week or two. Then carefully off the old conns and discard

Examine the basal plate or be tom of any new corm you plaa store. If it is white and hard, l it, but if the exposed basal plate ia dark brown, spongy or soft, discard it. It has early stages of rot.

Gladiolus corms are like applet Ati barifi

Storing Glad Corm*W hat do you with your gladiolus

bulbs’’—more properly called corms -a fter you dig them ?

If you toss them into a box and don’t look at them until next spring it doesn’t matter much what you call them because they may be rot­ted and not worth planting when spring comes around.

Spread the corms out on the ga­rage or cellar floor and keep win­dows open for good ventilation for

one respect. If you store a ___I of them and a few were starting to rot when you stored them, the f t* will spread to other conns.

A fter corms have been clim e d and are ready for storing, phc4 them in a paper bag and add one o f the captan or thiram dusts, aloOff with some 5 per cent DDT dust to control thrips. Shake gently to pre­vent bruising.

Now place cleaned and trented corms in loosely woven or wire ban­kets and store them in a cool pine*where they will not freeze.

LU IG I'S PIZZERIA136 S. Main Street Hightstown

Phone 8-2408

TOMATO PIES - ITALIAN FOOD

Open 4-12 Daily Closed Monday

Sorry to bring this up, men, but if your wife has been after you to rake r 7the leaves off the lawn, she’s right. 1 .

You can’t wait until the last leaf ,.)/is down before you start to clean up. yNot if you want to keep your lawn healthy. Dr. Henry W. Indyk, ex­tension turf specialist at Rutgers University, concedes that it may seem like a futile job to start rak­ing when there are many leaves still! clinging to the trees.

But leaves left on the lawn can smother the grass rather quickly.There is a danger when rains wet the leaves and they form a tight mat that seals off air. W et leaves of course are harder to rake than dry ones. Newly seeded lawns are es­pecially susceptible to damage by falling leaves.

More Than OnceDr. Indyk offers his sympathy to 1

anyone who doesn’t like to rakej leaves, but he says that if you want; to keep your lawn healthy you may have to do to job several times this fall and early winter.

He has one final word on this sub­ject. Resist the temptation to touch a match to the pile of leaves. In­stead, put them into the compost pile where, if you do the job right, you can produce valuable synthetic manure.

Making compost is easy, but nat­urally there are a few rules to fol­low if you want top results. Ask your county agrcultural agent for a copy of the Rutgers Circular 470,“Synthetic Manure,” or write to Garden Reporter, College of Agri­culture, Rutgers University.

Feeding Time, TooAnd now that you’re sold on rak­

ing leaves and putting every one in your compost heap, why not go all the way with Dr. Indyk and follow his suggestion for fertilizing your lawn in earjy October?

Generous use of fertilizer is one of the best cures for a thin, off-color lawn, he says.

Fertilizer applied now will make your lawn greener and better later this fall and next spring. The turf specialist favors 10 pounds of a 10-6-4 or similar fertilizer mixture to 3.000 square feet of lawn. Be sure

Our LegislatorsBOROUGH

Mayor: Milton H. Cunningham.Councilmen: George Dubell, pres­

ident, finance, streets; Daniel Feese, sewer, finance, industrial; Ralph Whitney, water, industrial; Howard Birdsall Jr ., public buildings, fire, parks, finance; Clinton I. Sprout, welfare, sanitation, garbage; Joseph Eufemia, police. Clerk, Mrs. Elsie Liedtke.

T H E 'SI P O N T I A C I S O U T T O D A Y 1

EAST WINDSOR TOWNSHIPMayor: Tunis Conover. Committeemen: Clarence Camp­

bell, T. Spafford Dey.Clerk: Jam es R. Pickering

W EST WINDSOR TOWNSHIP Mayor: F . J. Ward. Committeeman: Malcolm Roszel. WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP

Mayor : Carl J . Klotz Committeemen: William Tantum,

Stanley Shyner.Clerk: Fred U. Drake.

It's All Pontiac!on a new Wide-Track/

MERCER COUNTYCounty Clerk: William Falcey. Surrogate: John Curry. Prosecutor: Stanley Rutkowski. Freeholders: Arthur R. Sypek,

Joseph S. Holland, Frank J. Black, Richard J. Coffee, Joseph R, Gruerio, Charles Kovacs.

STATE CAPITOLGovernor: Robert B. Meyner. Senator: Sido L. Ridolfi. Assemblymen: Edward Sweeney,

Vincent R. Panaro, Charles Far- Representative: Frank Thompson

NATIONAL CAPITOLSenators: Clifford P. Case, Rah­

way; Harrison R. Williams, Plain- field. Address: Senate Office Build­ing, Washington, D. C.

Representative: Frank Thompson Jr., Trenton. Address: House Office Building, Washington, D. C.

forPLUMBERS(or any service)

find Mp Fit In tht

YELLOWPAGES

New track-to-body proportion! The track is the width between the wheels. Pontiac is the only Wide-Track car. Body width is reduced, shaving side overhang, balancing more weight between the wheels. Best relation­ship of body width to wheel width ever tailored. Lean and sway are ancient history.Announcing the new Pontiac Trophy V-8 Engine! We’ve improved the engine the experts said was perfect. New fuel induction system saves gas by using more air in the gasoline mixture. This makes the engine breathe more efficiently, giving you better acceleration. Eleven versions to choose from. Horsepowers range from 215 to 348. For best economy, specify the Trophy Economy V-8. Its lower compression ratio lets you use regular gas.

More headroom, iegroom, footroom for greater comfort! You’ll take greatcomfort in the extra roominess we’ve built into the ’61 Pontiac. Seats are higher, yet there’s more clearance beneath the steering wheel and more hatroom over your head. There is more Iegroom, more footroom. Doors are wider and designed to swing open farther. The more highway you put behind you (Pontiac specializes in this) the more you’ll appreciate the new room that’s all around you in this sleek new ’61.

THE ONLY WIDE-TRACK CAR!Body width trimmed to reduce aide over­hang. More weight bote need between the wheels. No other cer hugs the roed with such sure-footed atebWty and precision.

ISN'T TH IS YO U R BIG Y E A R F O R A W ID E -T R A C K P O N T IA C ? IT'S A L L P O N T IA C JBO NN EVI LL E • S T A R C H I E F • V E NT UR A • CATALINA

O N D IS P L A Y N O W A T Y O U R L O C A L A U T H O R IZ E D P O N TIA C D E A L E R1 i *’ f

W A L TE R H. K O LLM A R P O N TIA CRt. 130, SOUTH OF STOCKTON ST. HIGHTSTOWN, N. J.

T H I VICTOR BOPtOB SHOW TOMtOMT I ABC -TV I ■

Page 8: Field of Five Girls Thousands to Vie for ’Miss’ Title See ... · engagement ot their daughter O’Reilly, Borough C D director, at Marcella to William Hummel, Hightstown 8-2378

7 the Newport Z door Hirdr&p

featuring the new N ew p o rt! . . . a full -size Chrysler in

a new, lower price range!Its new! And it's a beauty! It's Newport . . . the big car that's every inch a Chrysler. Come see what you get for

the Newport's new, lower price | i riibody, a single unit that's 100G stronger than old type body-and-frame construc­

tion. A new' Firebolt V-8 engine that nins on regular gasoline. Five foot-wide seats. , . plus a driver's seat built to

support you from shoulder to knee. A brand new alternator that gives your battery longer life. And unexcelled torsion-

bar handling j fbe Newport! Full-size proof that Chrysler can't be beat for value. Ask your dealer. He's waiting

with a key and the widest smile in town!

CHRYSI1R 6h NEWPORT * WINDSOR * NEW YORKER * 300/G

MAIN LINE GARAGEM ER CER S T R E E T H IG H TS TO W N 8 -0 4 7 9

IT ’S W ORTH E V ER Y PENNY

When You Buy

F.C.A. WONG BARLEY

YOU G ET SEEDTHAT IS PROTECTED AGAINST SMUT

(Grown from hot water treated seed.)

AlsoHIGH GERMINATING AND W EED FREE

* * * * *

And If You Are Planting Wheat You Will Be

Further Ahead If You Use G.L.F. SELECT PENNOLL

Picked to Meet Rigid Purity and Germination Standards

Also Smut Treated for Further P r o t e c t io n

Other Varieties of Wheat and Barley AvaiUbI*

FARMERS’ COOPERATIVE ASS’N550 W. Ingham Avenue, Trenton, New Jersey

TRENTON HIGHTSTOWN HOPEWELL

EX 2-8174 HI 8-1471 HO « -# «

(Lhr Jfirst jprfsbgtrrian CChurrhNORTH MAIN STR EE T

HIGHTSTOWN. NEW JE R SE YR EV . DAVID M U YSKEN S, MINISTER

SUNDAY. October S II M am.

'L E T 'S STOP CH RISTEN IN G RABIES"Sermon by Rev. Muyskens

Chancel Choir:W.-er I Survey the Wondrous Crt»-~ Steckel-Mascn

Anthem : "Sweet is Thy Mercy Lord” Barnbr

SopraBC'S—Ju ae Houck, Winifred Terhune Alto—Gloria Orr

JOIX W ITH US IX WORSHIP

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S e e n r i i « f tr e s .

Mom’s Drive Inn Features All Home Cooked Foods, Specializing In Tempting Italian Dishes, Is Open Daily and Sundays As Well

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R. J. Hicks Does Expert Blacktop and Asphalt Surfacing Throughout 50 Mile Area

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H1GH75TOWM GOSPEL M ISSION

Fri, 7 J 7 BsSTe «f d j assd prayer 'i-itra? atjja/ Xcrth Mair: strceLSooday. 7. SersTcc ia the Swxnost

FIRST METHODIST CHURCH

Chrysler 61( ew .1 N. C -r-ei Aer' ‘ t e-, > De e-e ite e. C e »-• -e i e.» - v r e- -b, . .

Other* in Giryuer's price das* are building

Jr. editiom for 61 N ? O.r.-ier • becY r. ;.-- c.--- - ;-*-en based on full rlze : iD-

▼alne cars Result: your investment in a Chrysler not be compromised by les-er can bearing the Chrysler name.

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH3Lr*. Terry L. Baandu, MiEBfetiatr

■‘l i i i t f i . & c* l .n u u iu trFfir «-15. Study GrDcp, parsonage. >*rued*T, 9:45. CHurch School, i l .

■ ycmz& Worship, senaoo, "The

7 T_ MarwrSe as Casa A Portrait ot Je- " - 7 V " u B Y.F.

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In case zz fire call 7 :al opera*-.

ahr iFirst Saptial (fhurrhOF HIGHTSTOWN INVITES YOU

TO STUDY :

S«md2T. 9:45 sum. Chr.rch School ciasse* h r ail ages. 7 0 WORSHIP:

.'’O -.iiy, i : -1C am .. Message: Rev. Terry L. Barch

"TH E MIRACLE AT CAVA: A PORTRAIT OF JESUS” Nursery for Infants and Ohidren)

"The Church Dcnrntown* Since 5745