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An Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity 106TH YEAR, No, 50 E, A. Thorne, Freeholder, Dies Suddenly Heart Attack Fatal; Death Brings Fourth Contest for Board Edward A. Thorne, Mercer Coun- ty Freeholder and Princeton phar- macist, died suddenly of a heart at- tack Monday at his home on Elm road, Princeton. He was 56 years Freeholder since 1^8, Thorne served one term as director. He also served as voting member of the As- sociation of Chosen Freeholders of New Jer.sey. Thorne organized the Mercer County Industrial Commis- sion, serving as its director from the start. His death brings a fourth contest fora place on the Freeholder Board. The current Freeholders will appoint a Democrat to serve in the position until January 1. Thorne’s term would iiave expired on December 31, 1956. HIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE, MERCER COUNTY, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955 PRICE—FIVE CENTS ‘Operation Alert 1955' [l4 Die in 4 Listed for Wednesday Days in State Road Mishaps To Get Diploma Edward A. Thorne A native of Camden, he moved to Princeton about 30 years ago and opened a drug store. He served as president of the New Jersey Phar- maceutical Association and the Mer- cer County Pharmaceutical Associ- ation. The funeral will be held at 11 a.m. Friday from Trinity Episcopal Church, Princeton, with the Rev. H. Martin P. Davidson, assistant pas- tor, officiating. Interment will be in Princeton Cemetery under the di- rection of the NIather Funeral Home, Princeton. Survivors include his wife, Cdad- ys; a daugiiter, Mrs. Layton Carter of Princeton; a brother, Horace Thorne of Philadelphia and two grandchildren. Two Recitals Set By Ashton Pupils Recitals will be presented by the pupils of the Ashton Studio of Music on Friday and Saturday evenings in me Eaches Memorial Chapel of tlie Baptist Church. Piano and vocal numbers will be featured. Composi hons of Mrs. R. R. Forman will be rendered in recognition of the lOOth anniversary of her birth. She was ^ resident of here. Taking part are Carole Prudhon, ^lary Mullen, Joida Dey, Joan Brink, Edna Jane Van Hise, Ursula ''ittenbrock, Barbara Wittenbrock, Benny Shaw, Kathleen Appleget, Joseph Liedtke, John Barlow, Myra JJashevsky, Linda Osgood, Carol “Chenck, Edgar Archer, Vaughn wienck. Diane McNamara, Joann .oitman. Clare Howell, Elaine Da- Diane DeWitt, Carol Pala- omo, Deloris Johnson, Patty Yan- nut. Mary Anne Rose, Margaret Key- ev' Schenck, John Dabrow- > . Peter Debrowski, George Da- Browski. Susan Byrne. Barbara SBelley Colin, Carol Hop- Hoffman, Cathy Lan- «‘ng, Carolyn Lanning, Gail Whit- jey, Lenora Radische, Lee Higgin- 1- ^p^^bert Wright, Phillip Bar- * Pprman, Benay Rubinstein, riiff^ ^ ‘^bcock, Michael Starr, Mar?/1 Beverly Everett, pi Schenck, Barbara Cornell, Decker, Robert Rose. Rob- Teddy Terwilliger, Paul ^endall^*^’ Tlobby Hutchinson, Carol For a period of ten minutes next Wednesday afternoon all traffic the State of New Jersey will come to a halt and pedestrians will be in structed to take shelter during this public participation phase of the na- tionwide "Operation Alert 1955.” Acting State Director of Civil De tense and Disaster Control Thomas S. Dignan pointed out that emphasis on the test is placed on the import- ance of taking shelter when the Red Alert is sounded. He has men- tioned several times that plans for evacuation cannot be completed until there is some assurance from the Air Force on the amount of warning time we will receive in the event of an enemy air attack. “Because of this, it is imperative that the idea of taking shelter be planted in the minds of the people so they will instinctively head for the nearest shelter any time the Red Alert signal is soumle<l,” Dignan as- serted. He also urged the residents of the state to learn the various signals and to comply with instructions from air raid wardens, auxiliary and reg- ular policemen who will direct them to shelter areas. In a bulletin to regional, county and local directors, the State CD- DC head explained there will not be any mobilization of CD forces other than wardens, auxiliary police and regular police during this exercise and there will not be any simulated incidents of any type. Dignan emphasized that during the ten minute alert period, people slioiild not u.se llieir telephones ex- cept to call the fire department, po- lice department or doctor if an emergency arises during this lest. Householders are advised not to turn off gas at the meter, not to turn off pilot lights, but to turn off gas range biirncrs and non-automatic gas ap- pliances such as manually operated w'ater heaters or room heaters. Elec- tricity should not be turned off at the meter. Electric appliances which they know how to operate should be turned off except radio and televi sion which should be left on for emergency instructions from CD officials. “In rural and .suburban areas,” he said, “vehicular traffic should pull to the side of the road and remain there for the duration of the test. During a real raid, passengers . private or public vehicles should get out and lie down in a ditch or be- hind a stone wall, or enter a private home w'ith the owner’s permission. In this test, do not attempt to enter private residences.” Persons in public buildings will be expected to go into designated shel- ter areas and all building staffs should be prepared to follow regular operating CD procedures. Hospitals, hotels, theaters and churches will be expected to follow established CD procedures as far as possible. "The cooperation of industry is most important to the success of this test,” the State CD-DC head pointed out. “We urge their partici- pation actively on the local level. Our plan to stop everything during the test, however, does not apply to an industry which is engaged in a manufacturing process which can not be stopped and resumed again in a few minutes. We do not intend that such production should be stopped.” Vote Registration Cards Being Sent Out County residents who have moved must answer post cards be- ing sent out if they wish to pro- tect their voting right, Registra- tions Commissioner Samuel A. Naples has announced. Return post cards are being mailed by the election board to voters whose primary election sample ballots were returned for want of a forwarding address. Peddle Plans 90th Exercises Peddie’s 90ih commencement ex- ercises will be held Sunday at 2:30 p.m. in Ayer Chapel with 82 students candidates for diplomas. Dr. Carrol O. Morong, headmaster, ill give the invocation and bene diction. Leonard J. Matteson, pres- ident of the Board of Corporator, will present the diplomas. Marlin M. Tweedale of Yardville will give the commencement ad- dress. Robert E. Hicks, son of ifr. and Mrs. Evans Hicks of East Ward street has been awarded a cup for participation in activities at The Peddie School. He was awarded the first prize for number of points. The award was given at the Prize Day exercises Sunday. Hicks was also awarded the Evans Hicks soccer tro- phy which is given each year to the most valuable player on the varsity soccer team, and the Winaiit achievement cup whicli is given to that member of the senior or junior class who excels in scholarship and athletic ability. Hicks, a senior, will graduate Sun- day. His activities have included varsity soccer, wrestling, Gold Key society, sports editor of the Peddie News, Elias-Slahor I Miss Elizabeth Slahor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Steve Slahor of 217 Cornwall avenue, Trenton and Jo- seuh Elias, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Elias Sr. of 1857 Chestnut avenue, Trenton, were married m a private ceremony Monday m bt. Caul’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, Broad street, with the Rev. .Ansis Kirsfelds officiating. Mr. and Mrs. lolm Slahor of Trenton were the attendants. The bride is a member of tfie local congregatKin. 1 he bridegroom is the owner of a laun- dry and dry cleaning business m Trenton. The couple will reside at 1857 Chestnut avenue, Trenton. Miss Stubbs Becomes Bride Of J. Barnett Miss Margaret. Stubbs, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Stubbs of 388 Morrison avenue, be- came the bride of James N. Barnett, son of Mr. and Mrs. James F. Bar- nett of Philadelphia Saturday at 10 a.m. at St. Aanthony’s Church with the Rev. Louis F. Cogan officiating. Miss Margaret White was soloist and Miss Frances Borkowski was at {the orgjin. Given in marriage by lier father, the bride chose a g?awn of Swiss em- broidered organdy. Her veil was held by a lace cap embroidered with seed pearls and sequins and mitts matching her gown completed her costume. Her flowers were an ar- rangement of stephanotis and ? wliite orchid on a prayer book. Miss Eileen Stubbs acted as maid of honor for her sister. Bridesmaids were tlie Misses Kathy and Mary Jane Stubbs, sisters of the bride; Elizabeth Barnett, sister of the groom and Joan Frazer, cousin of the groom. They wore light blue embroidered organdy gowns. Nicholas Barnett was his brother’s best man. Ushers were James Mul (loon, George Binck, Philip Mans field and John Finnegan, all of Philadelphia. The bride’s mother chose a dress of light blue nylon lace, matching accessories and a white orchid cor- sage, while Mrs. Barnett selected a blue lace dress, matching accessories and a corsage of baby pink orchids. A reception was held at the Cran- bury Inn. The couple are on a mo- tor trip through the southern states. The bride is a senior at the Moun- tainside Hospital School of Nursing in Montclair and the groom is serv- ing with the U. S. Navy at Little Creek, Va. Borough Relief Costs Total $349 in May Borough relief costs totaled $349.- 50 during May according to a re- port released today by Mrs. Elsie V. Franklin, director of welfare. They were $230.50 lower _than the previous month, but $214.50 higher than the corresponding period a year ago. , vt , , . , Three families and five single persons shared in the dole, Mrs. Franklin said. The breakdown: food, $172; shelter, $8l..50; nursing home, $80; clothing, $2; medical .service, $9; transiwrlation, $5. Toll Heavy Despite Three Deathless Days Attorney General Says Although there were no traffic j deaths on three days of last week, 14 persons were killed in nwtor v e -; hide accidents in New Jersey in the remaining four days up to Sunday; midnight, Attorney General Grover C. Richman Jr. announced today.! The 1955 toll until Sunday midnight | was 288 or three more than the 285 i registered to the same date last year. Tlie fatality slate was clean on Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. The Mercer toll is 15. Richman said last week’s victims included six passengers, five drivers, two pedestrians and a bicycle rider. Hut this toll, heavy as it was, would have been much worse liad not high- way users exerted care to bring the three deathless days, he added. “In most of the accidents there was evidence of lack of control. In some cases the vehicles ran off the roadway and struck a wall, poles, or a parked car or in one instance ran off a bridge. It isn’t a question of whether a driver is traveling in ex- cess of a certain number of miles an hour. The test is whether he can stop in time to prevent an accident regardless of any circumstance that | might make it difficult for him to do I so,” he declared. Richman said the recent rains: should be a warning to drivers and | pedestrians alike on the increased j perils of the roadways. j “Rain at all seasons adds to slop-1 Record Classes Slated For Graduation Here; Exercises Next Week 68 Are Candidates For HHS Diplomas; Commencemept June 16 The 4Ist annual commencement exercises of Hightstown High School will be held in the school auditori- Jum Thursday, June 16 at 8 pjn. and Ithe largest senior class in the {expected to receive certificates at Ischool’s history. 68 students, is; the annual promotion exercises of scheduled to be graduated. j the eighth grade in the high school Theme of the exercises will be "Education Toward Peace." Class Eighth Grade Will Promote 78 Students At Wednesday Event The higher elementary school is scheduled to graduate the largest class in its history next Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. when 78 students arc Mi»s Cora Virginia Heyer Mi.ss Cora Virginia Heyer, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. William S. Heyer of 202 Stockton street, will be grad- uated from Centenary Junior Col- lege, Hackettstown at the Eightieth Commencement exerci.ses to be held Saturday at 11 :15 a.m. cn the South Campus. Miss Heyer will be one of 199 seniors to receive her diploma in the largest graduating class in the history of Centenary. She was a member of the Psychology Clnb. Land Division Ordinance Laid Over to July auditorium. The Rev. J. L. Swann, pastor of Mt. Olivet Baptist Church, will de- liver the invocation and benediction. Henry E. Jablonski, vice president of the Board of Education, will pre- sent the certificates. The class will Ijc presented by Mchrin H. Kreps, superintendent of schools and Paul D. Haring, high school principal, will make the awards. ‘Our Community” is the theme of Prsident Anthony Martin will intro- duce the theme. Other speakers will be Marie C. Enders, “The Role of the School”; Margaret E. White,' "The Community as a Classroom” ; Marjorie L. Girth, "World Under- standing” ; Joel M. Levinson, “The Outlook for the Future.” The Rev. Sanford M. Haney of The First MetlK>dist Church will give the invocation and benediction. program. The speakers and Melvin H. Kreps, superintendent selections will Barbara schools, will present the class; and j Inside View of Our Jerome L. Becker Jr., president of ^mmunity, ^written by Penelope the Board of FMucalion, the diplo- mas. The awards will be made by Paul D. Haring, high school princi- pal. Another feature wrill be the pre sentation of the class gift of 1955. Shaw: John Bilcik, “Business and Farming Opi^rtunities," written by Donald \'etick; Nina Patterson, “Improvement Through Organiza- tions.” written by Mary Mullen. Music will be provided by the high | Allen Juris, “Cultural Opportunities Protests tn ping distances and interferes with govenung the subdivis visibility. Those on foot should alsor'"'* the Borough wen bf. more akrt In llip iiiilavAr.ihlr. a meeting .il llie Louncil to save seconds at the risk of a life person who suffers from a hurry complex can find it fatal!” Degrees for 7 Area Students llie proposed ordin- the subdivision of ere aired morn alert Ici llii- 'n-f^v.^z.Milr !- f ' ^ -’I coiidtiioiis in tralBc. Pedestrians can i ‘ ‘‘7 lotiil real estate lose tlieir lives hv holding umbrellas i ‘"■“r " ." '" "* at an angle in front of them to pro.; 4" I’’*” ®°< tect them from a driving rain while walking. Too often those afoot have! I'olknving the hearing the ordin- thus stepped directly into the path ! "as I;iid over for further con- of an approaching vehicle,” he add- i sidcration at the regular meeting cd. "Everyone behind the \vheel or 5. on fool should refrain from trving| Appearing to object to certain ■* '■■■ sections, i>rincipally the 85x150 reg- ulation. were^ Maurice H. Hageman and Harold Stackhouse and son, lo- cal real estate brokers and Thomas Stubs of Reading, Pa., a former resident. Stults is interested in de- veloping 22 acres off ^ u t h Main street, known as the Polhemus tract. The general opinion among the speakers was that certain restric- tions would stifle housing develop- ment here and render hardship upon prospective Iwuse buyers in the lower income brackets. Tlie liquor license applications of Sieve’s liar, Ruth's Bar, Old Hights Bar. Rex Bar and James Damasco were approved. The application of the Trio Bar was held up for tech- nical reasons and that of Stanley Copeland to await health inspection apimoval. These will be considered at a special meeting slated June 21. Sixty-four vending machine license applications were authorized and tlie ordinance to amend and supple- ment an ordinance regarding the jiarking of motor vehicles in the Borough adopted Sei^tember 7, 1954 was adopted. C. of C. Names Tantum Elwootl C. Tantum, e.xecutive vice president of the Hightstown Trust Company, has been named to fill the unexpired term of Director C. Rob- ert Brown on the Hightstown Area Chamber of Commerce. Browm re- signed when he moved to North Jersey and was succeeded at the bank by Tantum. John Ditcheos Promoted To First Lieutenant Ditcheos of 101 Main street Hevated to the rank of first revealed today by J- F- Seitz, ^^mandmg general of Camp Kil- *rv Nicholas Ditchc- in'igr; ^Icheos entered the Army atirp ..vtt ® assigned as mainten- Corne liV* Quartermaster ^277th Service Unit at Kil- Peddie School, class siiY^u- ^ attended Cornell Unrver- the Janet, also, lives, at ' Mam street address. No Word Yet on Salk Polio Vaccine Project With focal schools set to close on June 17, a little more than a week away, there is still no definite word on when the rechecked Salk anti- polio vaccine will be mass inoculations of some 250 first and second graders here. Milton H. Cunningham, prpident of the local Board of Health, said the vaccine which had been under refrigcralkin here was turned over to state health officials over the weekend for retesting. . . Nw Health Commissioner Daniel Be^^ma has said he is op- posed fo giviilg moclilations during the [lolio season from about July 1 to mid-October. Cunningham added that as soon as he receive.^ definite word on the vac- cine he will call a meeting of local physicians to determine whether to go ahead with the project. School and health officials have been ready for several weeks to go ahead with the program, but several delays have held up things. Origin- ally the mass inoculation was slated to get under way April 26. The vaccine is provided free by the National Foundation of Infantijc Paralysis. The local supply was shipped here May 5. Seven local students have received degrees or are candidates for them at various colleges throughout the East. Miss Sylvia Weiner of 226 Mercer street received a bachelor of arts degree at the 34th annual com- mencement exercises at Douglass College Wednesday. A Latin-educa- tion major, she held a State Univer- sity scholarship during her four years at the school. She served as advertising manager of the Caellian student weekly newspaper and has qualified for secondary school teach- ing in New Jersey. George E. Trought Jr. of York road and Alfred George Mount of 286 Monmouth street were awarded bachelor of science degrees at the commencement exercises of Rutgers University Wednesday. Mount re- ceived gold gars signifying commis- sion as second lieutenant in tlie Army Air Force Reserves. Clifford C. Stults of Cranbury Station road was awarded a doctor of philosophy degree. Richard M. Kotler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Kotler of 601 North Main street, will receive the degree of bachelor of arts at commence- ment exercises at Lafayette College Thursday. He was a pre-dental stu- dent. Kotler was a member of Pi Lambda Phi social fraternity and majored in English. He was on tlie cross country, track and wrestling squads. Frank M. Perrine of Cranbury will get a bachelor of arts degree at Lafayette. He majored in history and literature and was president of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. John L. MacGowan of R. D. Hightstown, is a candidate for the bachelor of arts degree from Mid- dlebury College, Vt., at the com- mencement Monday. A graduate of Peddie School before entering Mid- dlebury’, he majored in English. He was a member of the Moutain and Sailing Clubs, cross country team and was active in dramatics. He plans to attend law’ school. Can Company Purchases Metal Firm Equipment The Continentai Can Company, Inc., New York City, recently pur- chased the patents and equipment of the Vaporized Metal Coatings Co., Inc. of Roosevelt. The plant will continue to operate at Roose- velt. Dr. Paul .Mexandcr, who patented the process, and his .staff will re- main with the CCC. Among these employees are Mrs. R. H. Mintz, secretary to Dr. Alexander; L. Li- bovc, C. Dupries, S. Rindlcr, N. Na- vod and D. Pollack. school band and senior chorus The annual baccalaureate service for the graduating class will be held Sunday at 8 p.m. in the auditorium. The Rev. Barry Keen of the First Presbyterian Church will give the inldrcss. Other area ministers tak- ing part are Rabbi Meyer Korbman in Our Community,” written by V. John Vacca; Joan Brink, “Commu- nity Progress Requires Efficient Government.” ^lusic will be provided by the eighth grade chorus and junior band. Solos will be rendered by Delores Johnson and .-\lbert Magson. Stu- ot Beth El Synagogue, the Rev. J.| dents scheduled for promotion S. Swann of the Mt. Olivet Baptist'Rena .-Mbright, Jean .Mtieri, Vi I .. ... - ........... - irgin- Church. the Rev. Earle A. Bowen of ia Benedetto, Joan Brink. I’atricia Cranbiiir Mgthnffiyf tMiuiTh !!nd<'Odcm.ui. Jnidn n er, -Biirbari Em- Donald Phillips, lay reader of Trin- mons, Harriett Feinstein, .Mta Gro- ity Episcopal Church. j ver, Carol Hansen. Shirlev Hinman, Combined church choirs wdll sing i Barbara Hoffman, Elizabeth Hood, under the direction of .Mfred M.)Delores Johnson, Nancy Johnson, .Masonheimer and Miss Edith E. j Patricia Keenan, Mary Mullen, Mar- Erving will be at the organ. igaret Muse, Shirley Norcross, Nena Kreps announced that reserved seats for the commencement will be held until 7:55 and then they will be open to the public. Class Day exercises will be held Friday at 2:30 p.m. under the direc- tion of Mrs. Floyd Blume. Assist- ing are Joseph Diefenbach, Marie Enders, Joyce Freestone, Barbara Grossman, Clare Howell, Anita Leib- son, Joe! Levinson, Anthony Martin, Marie Meyer, .Arthur Monsen, Les- ley Peat, Linda Thompson and Rob- ert Turton. The class song is w’rit- len by Levinson, class will by Linda Thompson and Barbara Grossman, class history by Turton. Turton will narrate the film of the senior class W’ashington trip. W a&hington Town»hip The annual graduation exercises of the eighth grade of Washington Township schools w’ill be held next Wednesday in the Robbinsville audi- torium. Twenty-three pupils are Engaged William S. Heyer, Funeral Direc- tor. Phone 8-0002, 2tt2 Stockton street.—adv. Mils Barbara J. Prudhon Mr. and Mrs. Rolland .A. Prudlion of 141 South street announce the engagement of their daughter. Bar- bara jane, to George Nicholas Dit- cheos, son of Mrs. .Mexandria Dit- cheos of 101 Main street and the late Nicholas Ditcheos. Miss Prudhon is a graduate of Hightstown High School and is presently employed as a secretary for Fred Smith & Co., Inc., New York City. Mr. Ditcheos is a graduate of the Peddie School and also attended Rider College, Trenton. He oper- ates the Old Hights Hotel. .A September wedding is planned. scheduled to get certificates. .An- other feature will be the presenta- tion of honor, American Legion and I Richard Weisel, Lions Club awards. | George Wood. Veterans to Fete Firemen, Aiders The Veterans of Foreign Wars will hold their fourth annual dinner- dance Saturday at 7 p.m. in Grange Hall. Honored guests will be Hight-stown Engine Company No. 1 and the first aid squad, William Rhoads and Richard Ewan, co- chairmen of the event, announced today. Each year the Vets fete some out- standing citizen or organization for service to the community. The se- lection is based on the interest dis- played and the contribution made toward the betterment of the com- munity. The firemen and first aiders arc strictly volunteers and have turned in excellent work here for years. The Engine company was founded more than 100 years ago and the first aid unit in 1935. Currently they are headed by Chief Thomas B. Malone. Dancing will follow the dinner and will be held at the VFW post home. Hilman Danser is toastmas- ter for the event. Judge Bard Turns In Busiest Month of Year Judge Samuel Bard handled 123 cases in May, his busiest month of, the year, according to a report sub-i milled ttxlay. Traffic cases topped the docket as 103 persons were hailed before the court. Ninety-four paid fines and costs totaling $723, one w'ent to jail,! one not guilty, one dismissed and five suspended sentences were hand- ed down. Twenty-three disorderly cases were judged and saw fines and costs totaling $233 assessed. The borough treasury was enrich- ed by $539, $ ^ went to the Division of Motor Vehicles and $135 to Mcr- County treasury. BAKE SALE will be held Saturday June 11 in the Hights Theatre Lob^ at 10 a.m. for the benefit of the I^irst Methodist Church Camp Fund—adv. 49-2t Patterson. Linda Pullen, Gloria Radische, \'irginia Robbins, Jean Ryan. Pen- elope Shaw, Georgia Sherrod, JoAnn Southard, Helen Teplica, Olga Val- asek, Edgar Archer, Frank .Archer, John Barlow, John Bilcik, Robert Chew, James Clawson, .Albert Cliffe, Joseph Collura, Samuel Coney, Glenn Cooke, Francis Darlca. Carl Dye, John Ellis, Barton Feese, Waldo Floyd, Ira Geller, Larry Gunnell, Johnnie Gordon, Charles Green, Laurence Jones, Thermon Jones, Allen Juris, Joseph Keller, Joseph Kozabo, Albert Mag- son, Stephen Merrill, Theodore Mont, Kenneth Morton, Mainy Li Ng, Raymond Paladino, William Porter. Dennis Ropars, Lesley Scrousc^ Warren Silvers, John Simmons, Rob- ert Sked, Ronald Starr, George Sto- ney, William Stout, Roy Tantum, C^orge Thompson, David Tomberg, \ ito John \ acca, Donald Vetick, Edward Waldron, Lawrence Weisel, WirL^rrt w«;c«i Frank Wirth* Flag Day Rites Planned Tuesday Final plans for the celebration of Flag Day on Tuesday were announ- ced today by Theodore Greezyn Jr. of Hightstown B.P.O. Elks No. 4955. Ceremonies will be conducted by the officers of the Elks at 8 p.m. in the high school auditorium. The high school band and local boy and girl scouts will assist. William Thorne, past exalted ruler of Trenton B.P.O. Elks 105 and president-elect of the N. J. State Elks Association will be the princi- pal speaker. Governing bodies and lodges from file boroughs and townships within the jurisdiction of the local lodge and the public, have been invited to attend. The many flags to be used in the ceremony have been loaned by the high school and V.F.W. Post 5700. Patricia Patton of Freehold will be the soloist. Air Raid Instructions At Home Go to prepared shelter. Turn off all appliances. Leave on radio. At Work Obey wardens. Go to assigned shelter. At School Obey your teacher. Go to assigned shelter quietly. In the Open Obey wardens. Go to nearest OK’d building or shelter. In Vehiclei Get out. Go to nearest OK’d building or shelter. KNOW THESE SIGNALS RED (Danger) 3 minutes of wail- ing siren or short blasts of whistles or horns. WHITE (All Clear) 3 one-minute blasts siren or whistle; 2 minutes silence between. Proci»nMtion The Mayor and Common Conncil pj-oclaim Tuesday, June 14, as Flag Day and encourage all citizens to display their flags.

Record Classes Slated Listed for Wednesday Days in State ...€¦ · An Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity 106TH YEAR, No, 50

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Page 1: Record Classes Slated Listed for Wednesday Days in State ...€¦ · An Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity 106TH YEAR, No, 50

An Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity

106TH YEAR, No, 50

E, A. Thorne, Freeholder, Dies Suddenly

Heart Attack Fatal; Death Brings Fourth Contest for Board

Edward A. Thorne, Mercer Coun­ty Freeholder and Princeton phar­macist, died suddenly of a heart a t­tack Monday at his home on Elm road, Princeton. He was 56 years

Freeholder since 1^8, Thorne served one term as director. He also served as voting member of the As­sociation of Chosen Freeholders of New Jer.sey. Thorne organized the Mercer County Industrial Commis­sion, serving as its director from the start.

His death brings a fourth contest fora place on the Freeholder Board. The current Freeholders will appoint a Democrat to serve in the position until January 1. Thorne’s term would iiave expired on December 31, 1956.

HIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE, MERCER COUNTY, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955 PRICE—FIVE CENTS

‘Operation Alert 1955' [l4 Die in 4 Listed for Wednesday Days in State

Road Mishaps

To Get Diploma

Edward A . T h o rn eA native of Camden, he moved to

Princeton about 30 years ago and opened a drug store. He served as president of the New Jersey Phar­maceutical Association and the Mer­cer County Pharmaceutical Associ­ation.

The funeral will be held at 11 a.m. Friday from Trinity Episcopal Church, Princeton, with the Rev. H. Martin P. Davidson, assistant pas­tor, officiating. Interment will be in Princeton Cemetery under the di­rection of the NIather Funeral Home, Princeton.

Survivors include his wife, Cdad- ys; a daugiiter, Mrs. Layton Carter of Princeton; a brother, Horace Thorne of Philadelphia and two grandchildren.

Two Recitals Set By Ashton Pupils

Recitals will be presented by the pupils of the Ashton Studio of Music on Friday and Saturday evenings in me Eaches Memorial Chapel of tlie Baptist Church. Piano and vocal numbers will be featured. Composi hons of Mrs. R. R. Forman will be rendered in recognition of the lOOth anniversary of her birth. She was resident of here.Taking part are Carole Prudhon, lary Mullen, Joida Dey, Joan

Brink, Edna Jane Van Hise, Ursula ''ittenbrock, Barbara Wittenbrock, Benny Shaw, Kathleen Appleget, Joseph Liedtke, John Barlow, Myra JJashevsky, Linda Osgood, Carol “Chenck, Edgar Archer, Vaughn wienck. Diane McNamara, Joann .oitman. Clare Howell, Elaine Da-

Diane DeWitt, Carol Pala- omo, Deloris Johnson, Patty Yan- nut.

Mary Anne Rose, Margaret Key- ev' Schenck, John Dabrow-

>. Peter Debrowski, George Da- Browski. Susan Byrne. Barbara

SBelley Colin, Carol Hop- Hoffman, Cathy Lan-

«‘ng, Carolyn Lanning, Gail Whit- jey, Lenora Radische, Lee Higgin-

1- ^ p ^ ^ b e r t Wright, Phillip Bar- * Pprman, Benay Rubinstein,

riiff ^ ‘ bcock, Michael Starr, Mar?/1 Beverly Everett,pi Schenck, Barbara Cornell,

Decker, Robert Rose. Rob- Teddy Terwilliger, Paul

^endall^* ’ Tlobby Hutchinson, Carol

For a period of ten minutes next Wednesday afternoon all traffic the State of New Jersey will come to a halt and pedestrians will be in structed to take shelter during this public participation phase of the na­tionwide "Operation Alert 1955.”

Acting State Director of Civil De tense and Disaster Control Thomas S. Dignan pointed out that emphasis on the test is placed on the import­ance of taking shelter when the Red Alert is sounded. He has men­tioned several times that plans for evacuation cannot be completed until there is some assurance from the Air Force on the amount of warning time we will receive in the event of an enemy air attack.

“Because of this, it is imperative that the idea of taking shelter be planted in the minds of the people so they will instinctively head for the nearest shelter any time the Red Alert signal is soumle<l,” Dignan as­serted.

He also urged the residents of the state to learn the various signals and to comply with instructions from air raid wardens, auxiliary and reg­ular policemen who will direct them to shelter areas.

In a bulletin to regional, county and local directors, the State CD- DC head explained there will not be any mobilization of CD forces other than wardens, auxiliary police and regular police during this exercise and there will not be any simulated incidents of any type.

Dignan emphasized that during the ten minute alert period, people slioiild not u.se llieir telephones ex­cept to call the fire department, po­lice department or doctor if an

emergency arises during this lest. Householders are advised not to turn off gas at the meter, not to turn off pilot lights, but to turn off gas range biirncrs and non-automatic gas ap­pliances such as manually operated w'ater heaters or room heaters. Elec­tricity should not be turned off at the meter. Electric appliances which they know how to operate should be turned off except radio and televi sion which should be left on for emergency instructions from CD officials.

“In rural and .suburban areas,” he said, “vehicular traffic should pull to the side of the road and remain there for the duration of the test. During a real raid, passengers . private or public vehicles should get out and lie down in a ditch or be­hind a stone wall, or enter a private home w'ith the owner’s permission. In this test, do not attempt to enter private residences.”

Persons in public buildings will be expected to go into designated shel­ter areas and all building staffs should be prepared to follow regular operating CD procedures. Hospitals, hotels, theaters and churches will be expected to follow established CD procedures as far as possible.

"The cooperation of industry is most important to the success of this test,” the State CD-DC head pointed out. “We urge their partici­pation actively on the local level. Our plan to stop everything during the test, however, does not apply to an industry which is engaged in a manufacturing process which can not be stopped and resumed again in a few minutes. We do not intend that such production should be stopped.”

Vote Registration Cards Being Sent Out

County residents who have moved must answer post cards be­ing sent out if they wish to pro­tect their voting right, Registra­tions Commissioner Samuel A. Naples has announced.

Return post cards are being mailed by the election board to voters whose primary election sample ballots were returned for want of a forwarding address.

Peddle Plans 90th Exercises

Peddie’s 90ih commencement ex­ercises will be held Sunday at 2:30 p.m. in Ayer Chapel with 82 students candidates for diplomas.

Dr. Carrol O. Morong, headmaster,ill give the invocation and bene

diction. Leonard J. Matteson, pres­ident of the Board of Corporator, will present the diplomas.

Marlin M. Tweedale of Yardville will give the commencement ad­dress.

Robert E. Hicks, son of ifr. and Mrs. Evans Hicks of East Ward street has been awarded a cup for participation in activities at The Peddie School. He was awarded the first prize for number of points. The award was given at the Prize Day exercises Sunday. Hicks was also awarded the Evans Hicks soccer tro­phy which is given each year to the most valuable player on the varsity soccer team, and the Winaiit achievement cup whicli is given to that member of the senior or junior class who excels in scholarship and athletic ability.

Hicks, a senior, will graduate Sun­day. His activities have included varsity soccer, wrestling, Gold Key society, sports editor of the Peddie News,

Elias-Slahor IMiss Elizabeth Slahor, daughter

of Mr. and Mrs. Steve Slahor of 217 Cornwall avenue, Trenton and Jo- seuh Elias, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Elias Sr. of 1857 Chestnut avenue, Trenton, were married m a private ceremony Monday m bt. Caul’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, Broad street, with the Rev. .Ansis Kirsfelds officiating. Mr. and Mrs. lolm Slahor of Trenton were the attendants. The bride is a member of tfie local congregatKin. 1 he bridegroom is the owner of a laun­dry and dry cleaning business m Trenton. The couple will reside at 1857 Chestnut avenue, Trenton.

Miss Stubbs Becomes Bride Of J. Barnett

Miss Margaret. Stubbs, daugh­ter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Stubbs of 388 Morrison avenue, be­came the bride of James N. Barnett, son of Mr. and Mrs. James F. Bar­nett of Philadelphia Saturday at 10 a.m. at St. Aanthony’s Church with the Rev. Louis F. Cogan officiating.

Miss Margaret White was soloist and Miss Frances Borkowski was at

{the orgjin.Given in marriage by lier father,

the bride chose a g?awn of Swiss em­broidered organdy. Her veil was held by a lace cap embroidered with seed pearls and sequins and mitts matching her gown completed her costume. Her flowers were an ar­rangement of stephanotis and ? wliite orchid on a prayer book.

Miss Eileen Stubbs acted as maid of honor for her sister. Bridesmaids were tlie Misses Kathy and Mary Jane Stubbs, sisters of the bride; Elizabeth Barnett, sister of the groom and Joan Frazer, cousin of the groom. They wore light blue embroidered organdy gowns.

Nicholas Barnett was his brother’s best man. Ushers were James Mul (loon, George Binck, Philip Mans field and John Finnegan, all of Philadelphia.

The bride’s mother chose a dress of light blue nylon lace, matching accessories and a white orchid cor­sage, while Mrs. Barnett selected a blue lace dress, matching accessories and a corsage of baby pink orchids.

A reception was held at the Cran- bury Inn. The couple are on a mo­tor trip through the southern states.

The bride is a senior at the Moun­tainside Hospital School of Nursing in Montclair and the groom is serv­ing with the U. S. Navy at Little Creek, Va.

Borough Relief Costs Total $349 in May

Borough relief costs totaled $349.- 50 during May according to a re­port released today by Mrs. Elsie V. Franklin, director of welfare. They were $230.50 lower _than the previous month, but $214.50 higher than the corresponding period a year ago. , vt , , . ,

Three families and five single persons shared in the dole, Mrs. Franklin said. The breakdown: food, $172; shelter, $8l..50; nursing home, $80; clothing, $2; medical .service, $9; transiwrlation, $5.

Toll Heavy Despite Three Deathless Days Attorney General Says

Although there were no traffic j deaths on three days of last week, 14 persons were killed in nwtor v e - ; hide accidents in New Jersey in the remaining four days up to Sunday; midnight, Attorney General Grover C. Richman Jr. announced today.! The 1955 toll until Sunday midnight | was 288 or three more than the 285 i registered to the same date last year. Tlie fatality slate was clean on Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. The Mercer toll is 15.

Richman said last week’s victims included six passengers, five drivers, two pedestrians and a bicycle rider. Hut this toll, heavy as it was, would have been much worse liad not high­way users exerted care to bring the three deathless days, he added.

“In most of the accidents there was evidence of lack of control. In some cases the vehicles ran off the roadway and struck a wall, poles, or a parked car or in one instance ran off a bridge. It isn’t a question of whether a driver is traveling in ex­cess of a certain number of miles an hour. The test is whether he can stop in time to prevent an accident regardless of any circumstance that | might make it difficult for him to do I so,” he declared.

Richman said the recent ra in s: should be a warning to drivers and | pedestrians alike on the increased j perils of the roadways. j

“Rain at all seasons adds to slop-1

Record Classes Slated For Graduation Here; Exercises Next Week68 Are Candidates For HHS Diplomas;Commencemept June 16

The 4Ist annual commencement exercises of Hightstown High School will be held in the school auditori-

Jum Thursday, June 16 at 8 pjn. and I the largest senior class in the {expected to receive certificates at I school’s history. 68 students, is; the annual promotion exercises of scheduled to be graduated. j the eighth grade in the high school

Theme of the exercises will be "Education Toward Peace." Class

Eighth Grade Will Promote 78 Students At Wednesday Event

The higher elementary school is scheduled to graduate the largest class in its history next Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. when 78 students arc

Mi»s C o ra Virginia H eyer•

Mi.ss Cora Virginia Heyer, daugh­ter of Mr. and Mrs. William S. Heyer of 202 Stockton street, will be grad­uated from Centenary Junior Col­lege, Hackettstown at the Eightieth Commencement exerci.ses to be held Saturday at 11 :15 a.m. cn the South Campus. Miss Heyer will be one of 199 seniors to receive her diploma in the largest graduating class in the history of Centenary. She was a member of the Psychology Clnb.

Land Division Ordinance Laid Over to July

auditorium.The Rev. J. L. Swann, pastor of

Mt. Olivet Baptist Church, will de­liver the invocation and benediction. Henry E. Jablonski, vice president of the Board of Education, will pre­sent the certificates. The class will Ijc presented by Mchrin H. Kreps, superintendent of schools and Paul D. Haring, high school principal, will make the awards.

‘Our Community” is the theme of

Prsident Anthony Martin will intro­duce the theme. Other speakers will be Marie C. Enders, “The Role of the School” ; Margaret E. White,'"The Community as a Classroom” ;Marjorie L. Girth, "World Under­standing” ; Joel M. Levinson, “The Outlook for the Future.”

The Rev. Sanford M. Haney of The First MetlK>dist Church will give the invocation and benediction. program. The speakers and Melvin H. Kreps, superintendent selections will Barbaraschools, will present the class; and j Inside View of OurJerome L. Becker Jr., president of ^m m unity, ^written by Penelope the Board of FMucalion, the diplo­mas. The awards will be made byPaul D. Haring, high school princi­pal. Another feature wrill be the pre sentation of the class gift of 1955.

Shaw: John Bilcik, “Business and Farming Opi^rtunities," written by Donald \'etick; Nina Patterson, “Improvement Through Organiza­tions.” written by Mary Mullen.

Music will be provided by the high | Allen Juris, “Cultural Opportunities

Protests tnping distances and interferes with govenung the subdivisvisibility. Those on foot should a lso r'" '* the Borough wenbf. more akrt I n llip iiiilavAr.ihlr. a meeting .il llie Louncil

to save seconds at the risk of a life person who suffers from a hurry

complex can find it fatal!”

Degrees for 7 Area Students

llie proposed ordin- the subdivision of

ere airedmorn alert Ici llii- 'n-f^v.^z.Milr !- f '^ -’I

coiidtiioiis in tralBc. Pedestrians can i ‘ ‘‘7 lotiil real estatelose tlieir lives hv holding umbrellas i ‘"■“r " . " ' " "* at an angle in front of them to pro.; 4" I’’*” ® °<tect them from a driving rain whilewalking. Too often those afoot have! I'olknving the hearing the ordin- thus stepped directly into the path ! "as I;iid over for further con- of an approaching vehicle,” he add- i sidcration at the regular meeting cd. "Everyone behind the \vheel or 5.on fool should refrain from trving| Appearing to object to certain

■ * ■ '■■■ sections, i>rincipally the 85x150 reg­ulation. were^ Maurice H. Hageman and Harold Stackhouse and son, lo­cal real estate brokers and Thomas Stubs of Reading, Pa., a former resident. Stults is interested in de­veloping 22 acres off ^ u th Main street, known as the Polhemus tract.

The general opinion among the speakers was that certain restric­tions would stifle housing develop­ment here and render hardship upon prospective Iwuse buyers in the lower income brackets.

Tlie liquor license applications of Sieve’s liar, Ruth's Bar, Old Hights Bar. Rex Bar and James Damasco were approved. The application of the Trio Bar was held up for tech­nical reasons and that of Stanley Copeland to await health inspection apimoval. These will be considered at a special meeting slated June 21.

Sixty-four vending machine license applications were authorized and tlie ordinance to amend and supple­ment an ordinance regarding the jiarking of motor vehicles in the Borough adopted Sei^tember 7, 1954 was adopted.

C. of C. Names TantumElwootl C. Tantum, e.xecutive vice

president of the Hightstown Trust Company, has been named to fill the unexpired term of Director C. Rob­ert Brown on the Hightstown Area Chamber of Commerce. Browm re­signed when he moved to North Jersey and was succeeded at the bank by Tantum.

John Ditcheos Promoted To First Lieutenant

Ditcheos of 101 Main street Hevated to the rank of first

revealed today by J- F- Seitz,

^^mandmg general of Camp Kil-

*rv Nicholas Ditchc-in'igr; ^Icheos entered the Army atirp ..vtt ® assigned as mainten- Corne liV* Quartermaster

^277th Service Unit at Kil-

Peddie School, class siiY^u- attended Cornell Unrver- the Janet, also, lives, a t

' Mam street address.

No W ord Yet on Salk Polio Vaccine Project

With focal schools set to close on June 17, a little more than a week away, there is still no definite word on when the rechecked Salk anti- polio vaccine will be mass inoculations of some 250 first and second graders here.

Milton H. Cunningham, prpident of the local Board of Health, said the vaccine which had been under refrigcralkin here was turned over to state health officials over theweekend for retesting. . .

N w Health CommissionerDaniel Be^^ma has said he is op- posed fo giviilg moclilations during

the [lolio season from about July 1 to mid-October.

Cunningham added that as soon as he receive. definite word on the vac­cine he will call a meeting of local physicians to determine whether to go ahead with the project.

School and health officials have been ready for several weeks to go ahead with the program, but several delays have held up things. Origin­ally the mass inoculation was slated to get under way April 26.

The vaccine is provided free by the National Foundation of Infantijc Paralysis. The local supply was shipped here May 5.

Seven local students have received degrees or are candidates for them at various colleges throughout the East.

Miss Sylvia Weiner of 226 Mercer street received a bachelor of arts degree at the 34th annual com­mencement exercises at Douglass College Wednesday. A Latin-educa- tion major, she held a State Univer­sity scholarship during her four years at the school. She served as advertising manager of the Caellian student weekly newspaper and has qualified for secondary school teach­ing in New Jersey.

George E. Trought Jr. of York road and Alfred George Mount of 286 Monmouth street were awarded bachelor of science degrees at the commencement exercises of Rutgers University Wednesday. Mount re­ceived gold gars signifying commis­sion as second lieutenant in tlie Army Air Force Reserves.

Clifford C. Stults of Cranbury Station road was awarded a doctor of philosophy degree.

Richard M. Kotler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Kotler of 601 North Main street, will receive the degree of bachelor of arts at commence­ment exercises at Lafayette College Thursday. He was a pre-dental stu­dent. Kotler was a member of Pi Lambda Phi social fraternity and majored in English. He was on tlie cross country, track and wrestling squads.

Frank M. Perrine of Cranbury will get a bachelor of arts degree at Lafayette. He majored in history and literature and was president of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity.

John L. MacGowan of R. D. Hightstown, is a candidate for the bachelor of arts degree from Mid- dlebury College, Vt., at the com­mencement Monday. A graduate of Peddie School before entering Mid- dlebury’, he majored in English. He was a member of the Moutain and Sailing Clubs, cross country team and was active in dramatics. He plans to attend law’ school.

Can Company Purchases Metal Firm Equipment

The Continentai Can Company, Inc., New York City, recently pur­chased the patents and equipment of the Vaporized Metal Coatings Co., Inc. of Roosevelt. The plant will continue to operate at Roose­velt.

Dr. Paul .Mexandcr, who patented the process, and his .staff will re­main with the CCC. Among these employees are Mrs. R. H. Mintz, secretary to Dr. Alexander; L. Li- bovc, C. Dupries, S. Rindlcr, N. Na- vod and D. Pollack.

school band and senior chorus The annual baccalaureate service

for the graduating class will be held Sunday at 8 p.m. in the auditorium. The Rev. Barry Keen of the First Presbyterian Church will give the inldrcss. Other area ministers tak­ing part are Rabbi Meyer Korbman

in Our Community,” written by V. John Vacca; Joan Brink, “Commu­nity Progress Requires Efficient Government.”

^lusic will be provided by the eighth grade chorus and junior band. Solos will be rendered by Delores Johnson and .-\lbert Magson. Stu-

ot Beth El Synagogue, the Rev. J.| dents scheduled for promotion S. Swann of the Mt. Olivet Baptist'Rena .-Mbright, Jean .Mtieri, ViI .. ... -........... - irgin-Church. the Rev. Earle A. Bowen of ia Benedetto, Joan Brink. I’atricia Cranbiiir Mgthnffiyf tMiuiTh !!nd<'Odcm.ui. Jnidn n er, -Biirbari Em- Donald Phillips, lay reader of Trin- mons, Harriett Feinstein, .Mta Gro- ity Episcopal Church. j ver, Carol Hansen. Shirlev Hinman,

Combined church choirs wdll sing i Barbara Hoffman, Elizabeth Hood, under the direction of .Mfred M.)Delores Johnson, Nancy Johnson, .Masonheimer and Miss Edith E. j Patricia Keenan, Mary Mullen, Mar- Erving will be at the organ. igaret Muse, Shirley Norcross, Nena

Kreps announced that reserved seats for the commencement will be held until 7:55 and then they will be open to the public.

Class Day exercises will be held Friday at 2 :30 p.m. under the direc­tion of Mrs. Floyd Blume. Assist­ing are Joseph Diefenbach, Marie Enders, Joyce Freestone, Barbara Grossman, Clare Howell, Anita Leib- son, Joe! Levinson, Anthony Martin, Marie Meyer, .Arthur Monsen, Les­ley Peat, Linda Thompson and Rob­ert Turton. The class song is w’rit- len by Levinson, class will by Linda Thompson and Barbara Grossman, class history by Turton. Turton will narrate the film of the senior class W’ashington trip.

W a&hington Town»hip The annual graduation exercises

of the eighth grade of Washington Township schools w’ill be held next Wednesday in the Robbinsville audi­torium. Twenty-three pupils are

Engaged

William S. Heyer, Funeral Direc­tor. Phone 8-0002, 2tt2 Stockton street.—adv.

M ils B a rb a ra J . P rudhon•

Mr. and Mrs. Rolland .A. Prudlion of 141 South street announce the engagement of their daughter. Bar­bara jane, to George Nicholas Dit­cheos, son of Mrs. .Mexandria Dit­cheos of 101 Main street and the late Nicholas Ditcheos.

Miss Prudhon is a graduate of Hightstown High School and is presently employed as a secretary for Fred Smith & Co., Inc., New York City.

Mr. Ditcheos is a graduate of the Peddie School and also attended Rider College, Trenton. He oper­ates the Old Hights Hotel.

.A September wedding is planned.

scheduled to get certificates. .An­other feature will be the presenta­tion of honor, American Legion and I Richard Weisel, Lions Club awards. | George Wood.

Veterans to Fete Firemen, Aiders

The Veterans of Foreign Wars will hold their fourth annual dinner- dance Saturday at 7 p.m. in Grange Hall. Honored guests will be Hight-stown Engine Company No. 1 and the first aid squad, William Rhoads and Richard Ewan, co- chairmen of the event, announced today.

Each year the Vets fete some out­standing citizen or organization for service to the community. The se­lection is based on the interest dis­played and the contribution made toward the betterment of the com­munity.

The firemen and first aiders arc strictly volunteers and have turned in excellent work here for years.The Engine company was founded more than 100 years ago and the first aid unit in 1935. Currently they are headed by Chief Thomas B.Malone.

Dancing will follow the dinner and will be held at the VFW post home. Hilman Danser is toastmas­ter for the event.

Judge Bard Turns In Busiest Month of Year

Judge Samuel Bard handled 123 cases in May, his busiest month of, the year, according to a report sub-i milled ttxlay.

Traffic cases topped the docket as 103 persons were hailed before the court. Ninety-four paid fines and costs totaling $723, one w'ent to jail,! one not guilty, one dismissed and five suspended sentences were hand­ed down.

Twenty-three disorderly cases were judged and saw fines and costs totaling $233 assessed.

The borough treasury was enrich­ed by $539, $ ^ went to the Division of Motor Vehicles and $135 to Mcr- County treasury.

BA K E SA LEwill be held Saturday June 11 in the Hights Theatre L o b ^ at 10 a.m. for the benefit of the I^irst Methodist Church Camp Fund—adv. 49-2t

Patterson.Linda Pullen, Gloria Radische,

\'irginia Robbins, Jean Ryan. Pen­elope Shaw, Georgia Sherrod, JoAnn Southard, Helen Teplica, Olga Val- asek, Edgar Archer, Frank .Archer, John Barlow, John Bilcik, Robert Chew, James Clawson, .Albert Cliffe, Joseph Collura, Samuel Coney, Glenn Cooke, Francis Darlca.

Carl Dye, John Ellis, Barton Feese, Waldo Floyd, Ira Geller, Larry Gunnell, Johnnie Gordon, Charles Green, Laurence Jones, Thermon Jones, Allen Juris, Joseph Keller, Joseph Kozabo, Albert Mag­son, Stephen Merrill, Theodore Mont, Kenneth Morton, Mainy Li Ng, Raymond Paladino, William Porter.

Dennis Ropars, Lesley Scrousc^ Warren Silvers, John Simmons, Rob­ert Sked, Ronald Starr, George Sto- ney, William Stout, Roy Tantum, C^orge Thompson, David Tomberg, \ ito John \ acca, Donald Vetick, Edward Waldron, Lawrence Weisel, WirL rrt w«;c«i Frank Wirth*

Flag Day Rites Planned Tuesday

Final plans for the celebration of Flag Day on Tuesday were announ­ced today by Theodore Greezyn Jr. of Hightstown B.P.O. Elks No. 4955.

Ceremonies will be conducted by the officers of the Elks at 8 p.m. in the high school auditorium. The high school band and local boy and girl scouts will assist.

William Thorne, past exalted ruler of Trenton B.P.O. Elks 105 and president-elect of the N. J. State Elks Association will be the princi­pal speaker.

Governing bodies and lodges from file boroughs and townships within the jurisdiction of the local lodge and the public, have been invited to attend.

The many flags to be used in the ceremony have been loaned by the high school and V.F.W. Post 5700.

Patricia Patton of Freehold will be the soloist.

Air Raid InstructionsA t H om e

Go to prepared shelter. Turn off all appliances. Leave on radio.

A t W orkObey wardens. Go to assigned

shelter.A t School

Obey your teacher. Go to assigned shelter quietly.

In the OpenObey wardens. Go to nearest

OK’d building or shelter.In V ehiclei

Get out. Go to nearest OK’d building or shelter.

K N O W T H E S E SIG N A LSRED (Danger) 3 minutes of wail­

ing siren or short blasts of whistles or horns.

WHITE (All Clear) 3 one-minute blasts siren or whistle; 2 minutes silence between.

Proci»nMtionThe Mayor and Common Conncil

pj-oclaim Tuesday, June 14, as Flag Day and encourage all citizens to display their flags.

Page 2: Record Classes Slated Listed for Wednesday Days in State ...€¦ · An Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity 106TH YEAR, No, 50

tig* T«n HIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE, M:I»RCER COUNTY, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955

Advertisement

University Cleaners and Laundry, Princeton, Using New Methods and Ideas in Preserving Fabrics While Cleaning; Fur Storage Vault

University Cleaners and Laundry, 30 Moore street, Princeton, has en­joyed a recent increase of three to four-fold in their business because of their new methods and new ideas.

Operators of the firm are the third generation in the business, which started in 1902 as University Laun-, dry, and tlie emphasis changed to cleaning about 1948. They are li­censed Sanitone cleaners and em­

ploy 37 persons.A wrinkle resistant is used witli

dry cleaning and the emphasis in the past few years has been on liigh style cottons with fany pleats and gathers. When washed they are too limp and when starched are board- like. A method has been developed for restoring garments which gives the material body and not stiffness and restores the original cripsness

and freshness, which has to be fell to he appreciated. This is called the Sanitone Cotton Clinic, using Sani­tone style set.

The firm lias its own fur storage vault and is agent for Hollanderiz- ing and for Cravenette waterproof- ing.

You’ll not go wrong m patroniz­ing University Cleaners and Laun­dry.

Household Finance Corp., Princeton, Offers Quick and Confidential Service on Loans

Household Finance Corp., Prince­ton Shopping Center, Princeton, of­fers prompt and confidential service on loans ranging from $20 to $500 on your signature, ypur car or furni­ture.

Many persons in an emergency find themselves in need of money without red tape and Household is

in a position to supply it. For e.xtra fast service, phone before you come in, Princeton 1-5440.

Hours are 9 to 5 daily, until 8 p.m. on Friday and 9 to 1 on Saturdays.

Osborn D. Beadle is manager of the Princeton branch, which open­ed on May 20 of this year. He has been with the company for more

than five years. Mrs. Rose Junea is also on the staff.

The firm has been in business for more than 76 years and its head­quarters are in Chicago. It holds license No. 879.

The convenience offered by this loan service is already appreciated by many.

YOUR ‘ i

L A W N CA REThis is the time w’hen a lawn can

be severely damaged by close clip­ping or scalping, says Charles H Connors of Rutgers University.

We are prompted to write this af­ter watching a young man who, we believe, is having his first lawn. There are many in that situation this year.

If the bed knife of the mower is set too low, soil may be picked up as the mower moves, due to un­evenness in the lawn, and with this the mower chops the precious buds from the crowns of the grass plants. No more spears will grow from there.

We are coming into the crabgrass season. Clip the lawn close or scalp it and you open it so crabgrass can floruish, especially if you water the lawn. Desirable lawn grasses are cool weather plants. By mowing too short, you expose the soil and the roots to the .sun’s heat. Tlie heat is increased if you catch or rake the clippings because these may form a protective mulch. Clippings left be­hind decay and become incorporat­ed in the soil to improve its fer­tility.

A particular lawn had always been well cared for— best of seeds, good fertilizer applied at the proper sea son, frequent mowings. But crab­grass always invaded. We advised the owner that too close mowing was the cause.

Being present when a new mower was delivered early one spring, we set the cutting height at 2 inches. A little crabgrass came in that year, but none since. And the gfass was more pleasant to walk on, also.

So one of the important factors in the maintenance of a good lawn is the height of cutting. Place the mower on a smooth paved surface and set the badknife so that it cuts at a height of not less than inches, or better, at 2 inches. Some­times reel type hand mowers cannot be adjusted to a suitable height without the use of fish-plates, but it would pay to have these made. Ro­tary mowers usually have better height adjustments.

CFC'^t'C:: Stic DCISNT POLLY IVANTS A CCACI EC. BUf

New Jersey—Your State and Mine

D O N 'T ,overlook the danger of that old, dis­carded ice box or refrigerator that you m ay have in your back yard.

Every y ea r children die from soffocation because they love to play in these dangerous cabinets. H ere's w hat you should do if you see a discarded box in your neighborhood or in the junk yard;

Remove the door. It's the best w ay to m ake such a cabinet safe.

Remove the latch on the door by taking out the screw s on the door plate.

Drill holes in the door and rem ove the rubber gasket.OR

Tell the policem an in yoUr neighborhood about this dangerous m enace.

The Child You Save M a y Be Your Own

D O U B L E Y O U R M O N E Y B A C K

IF Y O U D O N ’T A G R E E

CARA NOMESUNTAN lO T lO Nis the best you've

ever tried!

Now get golden-tanned, yet keep away more of the sun’s burn rays. Greaseless, non-drying and positively will not stain clothes. Keeps your skin soft and smooth.

ctiTfimSanlan

creifflXbtioii

Large bottle 1.00AT OUR g g i g DRUG STORE

CUNNINOUAM'SC p lu m jH jO L C t -

TUt A ^rOR.B

A tomGovernor Meyner say the atom or

hydogen bomb has no respect for tlie doctrine of state's rights.

Therefore, he claims, the Federal goveernment should consider plans for any future war a natioiial re­sponsibility instead of continuing re­sponsibility for civil defense in the states and smaller political units.

With the dropping of a hostile bomb, the Federal Government must immediately move to take command, the Governor emphasizes. Secondly, as modern bombs have wide orbit of complete destruction, plus a much wider orbit of fallout, transcending state lines, the Governor claims the problem of handling metropolitan areas cannot be solved on a state­wide basis.

“What is lacking is a decisive voice from Washington, acknowl­edging and preparing for what is most definitely a national responsi bility,” says the Governor.

Jersey JigsawThe price of milk to be paid by

dealers to New Jersey farmers will be returned to $5.87 per hundred weight, or 12.6 cents per quart effec­tive August 1 . . . Total enrollments of 24,530 in all divisions of Rutgers University during the academic year ending June 30 have been reported by University Registrar Wherry E. Z'ingg . . . Paul Neumeyer, retired preparator of the New Jersey State Museum, has signed a contract to construct a dinosaur for the Phila­delphia Museum . . . New jersey will join with New York and Penn­sylvania in a simultaneous public participation the afternoon of June 15 during the nationwide "Operation Alert—1955” . . . The State Board of Child Welfare w’as supervising over 20,500 children at an average cost of

a rew -w t jtme ^ . v . AMNew Jersey stale unemployment in­surance claims are now' being proc­essed and paid under a mechanized system . . . Both racing revenue and attendance at Garden State Park have increased during the spring racing season . . . Tlie annual blue­berry Queen will be selected . . . une 18 in Hammonion and a Blue­berry Suecn will be selected . . .

Carl Holderman, state commissioner of labor and industry, reports that since pre-war June, 1939, food prices have advanced 129.3 per cent . . . The Japanese beetle quarantine goes into effect on June 15 and all fresh fruits and vegetables shipped from New Jersey to places outside the regulated area, must be certified to be free of the beetle . . . An aver­age yield of about 26 bushels per acre is forecast for New Jersey’s wheat crop this year . . . More than two score entries have been filed with the Slate Department of Edu­cation in New Jersey’s official state song contest . . . No new cases of vesicular exanthema have been re­ported during tlie past 7 months in New Jersey.

Tlie birth rate in Japan has de­clined from 34.3 per 1,000 population in 1947 to 21.5 today.

NEW YORKER DELUXE NEWPORT

i i Where are you going with my Chrysier?"tie 's like any normal husband with a new Chrysler in the family. He’s learning why more wives “borrow" it than any other carl I t seems that once a wife or husband gets to know the ease and control of Chrysler’s Full-time Power steering, any semi-power steering feels clumsy and heavy-hand^. They both prefer Ohrysler’s smoother- acting Power Brak^ . . . and the alive feeling of unlimited power in Chr-ysler's great new V8 engines! They like the utter smoothness and silence of

PowerFlite Automatic Drive . . . and moei of all they enjoy being seen and admired in America's most smartly different car!Now two Chryslers would really keep a family like this happy. Nevertheless, they’d be the first to tell you that one is a thousand times better than none at all. That’s why we urge you to come in for a personal look^ee, and a drive.I t ’s a truly wonderful experience. And . . . Sir or Madam . . . we suggest you bring your spouse!

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Page 3: Record Classes Slated Listed for Wednesday Days in State ...€¦ · An Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity 106TH YEAR, No, 50

\ .

To Complete pike Newark Bridge in ’56The Vew Jersey Turnpike Author^

. I V560-foot bridge crossing of rk Bay is being rushed to com-

^,'" ^for early 1956. Steel work is P " “ -reeled for the tied arch span^ ''"^ le bay anti 'b« vonnns of

re e decks from Newark cast­s '; has been proceeding rapidly.

ri,i« new bridge, an integral part Xewnrk Uay-Hudson County

nf the New Jersey Turn- Slirwill provide a facility long'rded'to expedite vehicular traffic

” Imeiiis between the Turnpike, r a k Bayonne and Jersey City ' ' h downtown New York City. The “ fmlete extension of 82 miles from i^Kewark Airport interchange of S Turnpike to the entrance of the Holland Tinmel will cut travel time (or motorists amt truckers by more Zr, 50% as compared to existing

At the same time it will X rd ' substantial relief from con- “estkin and overloading on the pub- fe highways in Essex and HudsonCounties. , , i ii

This bridge, when completed, will be die longest of the Turnpike structures, exceeding by about 2a00 eet the bridge crossing of the Pas- Sc Kiver. It will be 82 feet ni oyer-

width and provide six 12-foot alies of travel, three in each direc- lion, separated by a 4-foot mall. It will be Hanked on each side by 2- (Mt safety walks. On the outside“ he safety walks will be steel par- aoels surmounted by steel railings.

A diaiinel span of 400 feet is pro­vided ami a vertical clearance above mean high water of 135 teet to per­mit clearance of all navigation and assure uninterrupted operation of vehicles traveling on the Turj'P'be e.Ueiisioii. Approximately 36,TO tons of steel will be used in the bridge and 97,(KX) cubic yards of concrete.

Besides the connection with the 118-mile Turnpike at Newark -Air­port and the direct access provided to the Holland Tunnel, the Newark Bay-Hudson County extension will have three interchanges in Bayonne and Jersey City for oonvenient en­trance and exit of motorists in those dties. These interchanges will be Avenue E in Bayonne, Caven Point

and Grand-Montgomery interchan­ges in Jersey City.

Included in plans for the extension are two service areas in the Caven Point area of Jersey City where 'V, .food facilities will he avail­able to Turnpike users.

New Jersey—Your State and Mine

Capitol CapersBecause June is Dairy Month, the

State pepartment of Agriculture emphasizes dairy products contain calcium, ribollavin, protein, fat, vi­tamin A value, thiamine, ascorbic acid, iron ami niacin . . , The May dr-- spell has put New Jersey about 7 inches behind in raiiifati needs and its farmers bcliind the eight ball . . . Governor .Meyner insists, “We have reasonably good law eiiforcc- mem ill the State of New Jersey."

Milk Vending Machines Grow in Popularity

Milk vending machines have been growing in popularity in most parts of the country and it is believed by some authorities they will contribute to an increased per capital consump­tion of milk. One of the machines is located at Davison's Market, Main street.

Serving milk in containers rang­ing from half pints to quarts and half gallons, the venders have made milk available at all hours and in some instances where there was none before.

.According to information received by the New Jersey Department of .^iriculture, the venders have proved particularly popular in factories and schools while a number of dispen­sers for larger containers have been placed at outdoor sites.

Studies reported from Chicago showed that the sale of milk in scliools has increased as much as 150%. It was also noted that the sale of milk through venders has not necessarily made any apprecia­ble decrease in sales of milk over the school lunch counters.

The purchase of milk from vend­ing machines lias been credited in large part to tlie round the clock supply of refrigerated milk when it is wanted, the availability of milk in residential areas where there are no stores handy and a ready supply of

you can find whereto rent anything

HIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE, MERCER COUNTY, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955 Page Three

CHAIRS AND T A B L ^(see C h air Rentals)

DRESS SUITS

D

BUSES(see Buses—Charter)

X

O F V O tJBto Phone for

Service

NEW J E R S E Y BELL TE LE P H O N E COMPANY

m

SEE HOW MANY WAYSOur Printing •Helps You To ! n UBuild Sales •

• C o u n te r C a rd t

• S u te m e n ts

• P ro fe e e io n a l S ta tio n e ry

0 P e rso n a l S ta tio n e ry

E v e r y b u s m e s s tn a n c a n c h e ck o ff *^**^V^* o f p r in t i n f n e o d s b e c a n uee . A n m e v e ry u n g la i n i t a n c e w e a r e p re p a re d to ^ aU th is n e e d , q u ick ly , ec o n o m ic e lly end

p ro fe ts io n a D y .

HIGHTSTO W N G AZETTEPRINTERS and PUBUSHERS

IMRo s o tAy.. Pho».«-»3n HigtUloweN.J

milk to tourists and residents in such places as filling sfptions.

School Releases ’55-’56Student Body Officers

CLASS O FFIC ER S Seniors

President ..........— ... Richard StahlVice President...... Ralph GHckmanSecretary ...... Rochelle SjielkomanIre a su re r ...............Carole Prudhon

Jun io rsPresident... .......... Patricia ColluraVice President ........... Bruce LevinSecretary .......... .... Natalie MersonTreasurer ............... Robert Perrine

Sophom oresPresident............... Burt FernandezVice President___Judith LewallenSecretary ..... ................. .Ann SudolTreasurer .......... Charlotte Stafford

•S T U D E N T CO UN CIL O FFICERSPresident ._............. ....Barry PullenVice President Richard StahlRec. Secretary — Patricia ColluraCor. Secretary....... Susan HagertyTreasurer ............... Robert Perrine

West Windsor Lions Give School Audiometer

The West Windsor Township Lions Club presented an audi ometer machine to the West Wind­sor Board of Education at a meeting last week.

Robert Holiday, chairman of the civic improvement and community betterment committee of the Lions made the presentation to Arthur Ev­erett, president of the board. The machine will be used to test the hearing of township scliool children.

Guest speaker was Bernard Mount, member of the board and also of the dub. He discussed the proposed school building program. A resolution endorsing the building program was passed recently by the Lions.

Only one person out of 100 in Finland is illiterate.

Nearly 8 out of 10 motor vehicles in the world are American owned.

The United States had almost 3 2 times as many non-farm dwell­ings in 1950 as in 1900.

A total eclipse of the sun can occur only when the moon is some- w'here near its closest approach to the earth.

M i n u t e m a n . • •

/^5 5 \/e is h nl8 o YEARS AGO this month a small group of men gathered a t Concord Bridge and took a stand for a way of life they believed in.They called themselves Minutemen—ordinary citizens will­ing to protect their freedom and their families with their lives. And in a less dram atic but no less essential way, the spirit of Concord Bridge is evident today. Millions o f citizen sol­diers are now training in our armed forces and in volunteer reserve units. Like the Minutemen who preceded them, they are prepared to protect their homes if they have to.Let the Minuteman in the Savings Bond symbol remind you of the necessity of constant vigilance—and of a way we can all contribute to our nation’s strength and p reparedness- through the systematic purchase o f U. S. Savings Bonds.

Security—for ourselves and our country— is simple with the Payroll Savings Plan

Eight million working people just like yourself are profiting by steady investment in Sav­ings Bonds through the con­venient Payroll Savings Plan. Why don’t you join them? Just tell the people in your com­pany pay office how much you want to save each payday and sign the card they give you. Then that amount is put aside (or you each payday. When

enough accumulates, you get an interest-earning S«nes £ Bond.

For your future—and the future of America—sign up today for the Payroll Savings Plan or buy Bonds regularly at your bank. I j you want your interest as cur­rent income^ ask your banker about J% Series H Bonds that pay interest semiannually by United States Treasury check.

Government doe$ not pay for this advertmng. The PreoMi^ Department thanka, for their patriotic donation, the Adtrertiging Council and

B o d t s a y m w i f f i ^ M n j !

All Chevrolet's competitors and most of the high-priced cars tried it recently in official NASCAR*trials—and took a licking!

Meet the champ! The new Chev­rolet “Turbo-Fire V8” —the

most modem V8 on the road today. Here’s what happened—

Daytona Beach. NASCAR A c­celeration Tests Over Measured Mile From Standing Start. Chevrolet cap­tured the 4 top positions in its class! 8 of the first 111 A nd on a lime basis Chevrolet beat every high-priced car, to o -b u t one! But w ait!-this is just the beginning!

Way, ahead'

D a y t o n a B e a c h . N A S C A R Straightaway Running. Open to cars delivered in Florida for S2,500 or less. Chevrolet captured the first two places, 7 out of the first 11 places!

Daytona Beach. NASCAR 2-W ay Straightaway Running Over M eas­ured Mile. Open to cars from 250 to 299 cu. in. displacement. Chev­rolet captured 3 of the first 5 places!

Cotumbio, S. C. NASCAR 100- Mile Race on half-mile track. Very tight turns. Chevrolet finished first!

Fayetteville, N. C. NASCAR Late Model Event. Chevrolet again fin­ished first. Because of even tighter turns the driver chose to run the en­tire 150 laps in second gear! Yet no overheating or pit stops!

These facts you can’t laugh off. Sales leader. Road leader. A crown­ing achievement of Chevrolet and General Motors. T ry 'a C hevrolet. . . and live in a land of going-away where you win all the arguments! Soon, maybe?*Nofionoi AttocioHon for Sfoeik Cor Auto XociDg

Sales leader for

19 straight years I

GILBERT CHEVROLET COMPANYHightstown, N. J. Route 130, South of Stockton S t, Phones: 9911— 9911

Page 4: Record Classes Slated Listed for Wednesday Days in State ...€¦ · An Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity 106TH YEAR, No, 50

Page Four HIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE, MERCER COUNTY. NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955

Established June 50, 184^Member:

New Jersey Press Association National Editorial AssociationGEORGE P. DENNIS, Editor and Publisher

PFC. GEORGE FOSTER DENNIS, KHled in Action, September 11, 1944 W. PALMER DENNIS, Managing Editor

KATHRYN S. DENNIS, Book Editor Entered as second class matter at Hightstown, New Jersey, post office under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Published every Thursday at The Gazette Building, 114 Rogers avenue. Terms of subscription: one year, $2; siz months, $1.25; single copy, 5 cents.

SHOW YOUR COLORS

THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955

Month of WeddingsJune is traditionally the favorite montli fo r weddings. The

poet said that in spring the young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love. Presumably by June his fancy has become so emotional, that the w ord “lightly” no longer applies to it.

The cynical observer may say that all weddings are more or less alike, except of course that many of them are very ornate and beautiful spectacles. But whether such an event is a highly finished picture or, a very unpretentious affair for a few relatives and friends, ever)’ such event is a dram atic turning point in tlie history o f one man and one woman.

Such an event, even the very simplest little wedding is a climax of human experience, a kind of high mountain top of life, tow ard which the climbing paths have reached fo r many years and where distant views into the more o r less misty future are obtained.

W hat see these young couples, as they look out from that elevated position in their life history? Can they see fair skies ahead, bright sunshine, fruitful labors?

I t is this mystery of the unknown future that throws its veil of romance over every such event. B ut anyway, the world gives its best send-off to these young people about to sta rt out on their pil­grimage.

They are on the mountain top of experience now, but they have to pass through dusty valleys, where the way will not be so clear and plain. But love and labor and sacrifice can find its way through the darkest thicket. .

Hook (lemooA by Kathryn S. Dennis

the Flag

FLAG DAY-Juae 14i

Flag DayAmong all the national emblems in the world, the American

flag is generally conceded to be the most beautiful. It was officially adopted by the Continental Congress on June 14, 1777 in a resolu­tion which provided that the flag be 13 stripes o f alternating red and white and that the “union” be 13 white stars on a blue field.

Originally the 13 stars were arranged in a circle and it was at first intended to add an additional sta r and an additional stripe for each new state adm itted into the Union.

But after increasing the num ber of stars and stripes afte r the admission of V erm ont and Kentucky, it became evident tha t a fu rther number o f stripes would make the design of the flag less beautiful, so it was decided to retu rn to the 13 stripes, representing the 13 original states and add a star for each new state. T hus we have our present flag with 48 stars and 13 stripes.

In commemoration of the adoption of the flag in 1777, June 14 is celebrated throughout the nation as Flag Day w ith appropriate ceremonies intended to impress all citizens with increased respect and reverence for the flag and all fo r which it stands.

T he newly organized Elks group here will m ark the day, next Tuesday, with services at Memorial P ark and at the local schools.

It’s JuneT hat old march of Tempus seems never to be halted o r turned

aside. Sometimes we wish the travel were faster, but usually it is entirely too swift. It seems now, as we write it as if only a few days had elapsed since Father Tim e introduced us to January i.

W e’re rather in favor of June. I t may have its drawbacks, it m ay not be everything that everybody could desire, but, by and large, it’s really the m ost satisfactory month in the year. T here’s no wonder that M r. Tennyson asked, “W hat is so rare as a day in June?”

Brides, roses, vacation, picnics, growing crops, June peas, early cherries and new garden truck, along with perfection in homemade straw berries characterize the month.

I t’s a lazy month, too, w hat w ith mounting tem peratures, cool shades that lure one from one’s la te r , fleecy clouds that inspire dream ing and nights that are as near perfection as anything can be.

But we’re on the last lap of the first half o f 1955. A fte r all, June has but 30 days and how fast they evaporate.

W e’re in favor o f having June made about three times as long as it now is. T hat’s about all the improvement the sixth month of the calendar seems to need.

Commendable RecordNew Jersey’s Secretary o f Agriculture, W illard H. Aellcn of

Princeton, came in fo r some deserving praise recently when he was aw arded the State A griculture Society’s gold medal for distin­guished service.

Fore more than 17 years Allen has served as secretary and turned in a fine job. H e was appointed to the post in January, 1938 and has seen service under six governors, Hoffm an, Moore, Edison, Edge, Driscoll and Meyner. H is period of service as a state secre­tary o f agriculture ranks as one of the longest in the nation.

L ester Collins, president of the Society, presented the medal­lion to Allen “as a loyal friend, trusted counselor, m aster adminis­tra to r and outstanding leader.”

“To hundreds of farm youth you have been an inspiration as they strive to build fo r the future. They cherish as a precious legacy the mem ory of having shared freely in your rich store of wisdom and sincere good will. Y our unusual talent fo r inspiring compro­mise o r agreement among those holding divergent views is widely recognized and attests to the respect and esteem you command throughout our state.”

New Jersey-Your State and Mineby J. JOSEPH GRIBBINS

National Guardsmen Making Camp Plans

Trenton.—More than 13,000 New Jersey National guardsmen, plus 1,621 members of the Air National Guard, will soon pack their duffle- bags and participate in two weeks of field training at Camp Drum,N.Y., Camp Wellllcet, Mass, and at Otis Air Force Base, Mass, and In- diantown Gap, I'a.

The largest number of units will train at Camp Drum, N.Y. from June 25 to July 9. These include the Selective Service Section, Headquar­ters and Headquarters Detachment of Trenton, comprising 2 officers and 30 enlisted men; the 103d Ar­mor Group of New Brunswick, com- . „ , .

Let’s Go Fishin’The rush season fo r fishing in New Jersey will be on afte r June

15 when small-mouth and large-mouth bass, considered the sportiest fish o f the w arm -w ater group will becomes the targets of thousands of licensed fishermen.

T his announcement is joy to the ears of the angler. T here’s ju st something about the fishin’ sport that calls out the men to the brooks. I t appeals to every one.

Prim arily it is a case of competition. M an against nature. W hen he conquers these creatures, he feels a sense o f trium ph over physical forces. O ne m ust be patient, because sometimes these fishes are in no m ood fo r biting.

Sports and pastim es come and go, but there’s always someone ready, willing and able to go a fte r a fish.

ed men, with lank and engineering units from Phillipsburg, New Bruns­wick, Trenton and Woodbridge; the 102(1 Armad Cavalry Regiment of Newark with 118 officers and 1,180 enlisted men.

The 161st Ml** Battalion, Trenton, with 22 officers and 240 enlisted men; the 456th Transportation Bat­talion, Long Branch, with 16 officers and 174 enlisted men; the 30th Ord­nance Battalion of Camden with 3 officers and 84 enlisted men; the 63rd Army Band, Camden, with 1 officer and 21 enlisted men, will also train at the same time.

The 50lh Armored Division, from all parts of New Jersey, with 747 officers and 7,955 enlisted men will also train at Camp Drum, N.Y. from July 23 to August 6, along with the 695th Armored Field Artillery Bat­talion of Morristown with 17 offi­cers and 292 enlisted men.

Governor Robert B. Meyner plans to pay a visit to the troops during the encampment period and Major General James F. Cantw’ell, chief of staff, will make an inspection tour of each group in the field.

The 157th AFA Battalion of At­lantic City, with 22 officers and 302 enlisted men, will train at Camp Drum, N.Y. from September 10 to 24, along with 5 officers and 311 en­listed men of the 286lh AFA Battal­ion of Wildwood.

The 254th Arirrored Artillery Air­craft Group, with 11 officers and 84 enlisted men from Trenton, will train at Camp WelUleet, Mass, from June 25 to July 9, along with the

AAA Battalion of Newark, composed of 14 officers and 138 en­listed men and the 2(Wth RCAT De­tachment of Trenton.

Air units of the l%th fighter- bomber wing, comprising 174 officers and 1,309 enlisted men, will train at Otis Air Force Base, Mass, from August 20 to September 3, while Comjiany B, 876ili Engineering Avi­ation battalion, with 3 officers and 129 enlisted men, will train at In diantown Gap, Fa. from August 13 to 27. These units are located at Newark Airport and McGuire Air Force Base.

Legi»iatureThe 179th New Jersey Legislature

will reconvene in summer session in August to tackle many unsolved problems confronting the state gov­ernment.

They include water shortages which are expected to be critical at the time the Legislature returns; voting machines for each of the 21 counties; a state office building pro­gram based on Federal aid now be­ing considered in Congress and a boost in unemployment and disabili­ty payments from $30 to ^ 5 weekly.

Because of the absence of Senator Walter H. Jones of Hackensack who is on a Federal mission in Eu­rope and not expected back until July, the Senate Committee on La­bor and Industrial Relations is split down the middle, two to two, on the increased unemployment and disabil­ity payments. Senator Jones is ex­pected to break the deadlock.

The Senate has practically agreed upon a $35 weekly payment to un­employed and sick workers, but some legislators want workers to have average weekly earnings of $65.09 before securing the maximum benefits. Others want the $35 paid for average weekly earnings of $52.

The Federal road program would make available $12.25 billion in funds to the states .over -a 5-year period,

.^beginning with' th< fiscal year 1956- w . While fhere fs general agree-

the program have been offered. New Jersey is expected to secure a fair share of the funds.

Highways New Jersey’s highway system is

out of step in a nation living on wheels, according to the Delaware River Joint Toll Bridge Commission which has charge of the bridges crossing the upper Delaware River,

In fact, within the next 20 years, New Jersey must provide highways, tunnels and bridges for nearly twice the number of vehicles on the high- wavs during 1954, the bridge com­mission claims.

In the year 1914, the National Automobile Chamber of Commerce reported that 1,711,339 cars and trucks were registered in the

' . “Xaiyears later, 1924, registration of ve­hicles jumped to 17,595,373. The Public Roads Administration report ed 24,317,020 cars, trucks and buses registered in 1934.

Tlien years later, 1944, 30,499,608 vehicles were reported as register­ed and in 1954 it is estimated that 58,000,(XX) motor vehicles were reg’ istered in this country. It is pre dieted that in 1965 there will be 81,(XX),00 registered vehicles, passen­ger cars, trucks and buses on the highways and in 1974 the estimate is the phenomenal figure of 92,(X)0,- (HX) vehicles.

“It is obvious therefore, that we must look forward to providing in the next two decades liighways, bridges and tunnels for nearly twice the number of vehicles as there were on the higliways of 1954,

F lag DayAn unprecedented flag display on

Flag Day, June 14, throughout New Jersey and the nation, is being pushed this year by the American Legion, Department of New Jersey.

Tile Legion urges display of the National ensign on every home, school, church and public building, in order to foster a new demonstra­tion of love and respect for the flag of the United Slates and the free­doms enjoyed in this country.

“We of the American Legion in New Jersey would like to see our state the most be-flagged state in the nation this year,” states Legion Commander Arthur W. Mazowiecki of Clifton. “We urge that there be iiH American flag flying from every home, from every business estab­lishment and all along Main street on Flag Day, June 14, and on all patriotic holidays. We want the people of our state to be so proud of Old Glory that they will fly it on every holiday and every patriotic occasion.”

CONGRESSIONAL WATCH DOGCongressional control over the Na­

tion's purse strings—strained by the billion dollar spending avalanches of the past several decades—would be restored under plans now underway in Congress.

Congressmen themselves complain that legislative budgetary procedures deemed adequate to control the $61 4 billion spending program of the U.S. Government at the close of World War i fail in the face of post World War II expenditures ten times great­er.

Members of the New Jersey dele­gation are in the forefront of those proposing strengthened fiscal con­trols to restore to Congress it tra­ditional grip on the Nation’s purse strings. When the New Jersey Tax­payers Association sounded view­points of this slate’s congressmen on balancing the federal budget, many voiced the need for improved fiscal procedures.

A former member of the State Legislature, now in Washington, ob­served that the Governor and Legis­lature in New Jer.sey “have a clearer budgetary picture” before them than does Congress. Another Congress­man scored “hit and miss” methods of cutting appropriations. An organ­ization was urged to “do for Con­gress what the Bureau of Budget does for the executive branch.”

A New Jersey Congressman has introduced a hill in the House of

SUNSHINE AND SHADOWBy MARY PICKFORD Foreword by Cecil B. DeMille N.Y., Doubleday, 382 pp., illus. $4.95

This reviewer has been able to understand only vaguely why Mary Pickford has been called “Amer­ica’s Sweetheart” ail of these year.s and this reviewer did not find a definite answer in “Sunshine and Shadow,” Miss Pickford’s candid and at times naive autobiography. What kind of sweetheart was she? Certainly not a siren, something all w’omen long to be at one time or another. Most of the parts she played were either kid roles or such sickenly sweet girls like Pollyanna (which Miss Pickford says she did not like) and Rebecca of Suiinybrook Farm (which role was somewhat better than that of the good Pollyanna) or melodramas like “Tes.s of the Storm Country.” Per­haps if this reviewer had seen the beauteous Mary with her long, blonde curls (two of which are in the Los Angeles Museum, two in the Museum of San Diego and two at Pickfair) in those and other roles for which she has become so famous, this review’er might be able to shed a few tears for the good old days during which Miss Pickford, the former Gladys Smith, received so much fame and praise that she and her second husband, Dougla.s Fairbanks Sr., could not enjoy their honeymoon trip abroad because they were almost torn apart by their fans.

Many thousands of Miss Pickford’s admirers who followed the blonde curls year by year will wipe the tears away as they read “Sunshine and Shadow” and perhaps this reviewer is a little envious that she, too, can not belong to that group even for a few hours. Since this reviewer remembers only the cutting of the famous curls and the marriage to Charles “Buddy" Rogers, this review will neither be a love letter to “.^me^ica’s Sweetheart” nor a nostalgic look back into time. A matter of a generation, more or less, prevents either of those conditions.

One, ho\vever, does not have to be a long-standing and ardent admirer of Mis.s Pickford to enjoy and appreciate "Sunshine and Shadow.” Indeed, one will have a different kind of admiration for “America's Sweetheart” after reading her biography. Miss Pick­ford’s life was far from easy and only a strong deter­mination could have accomplished what she has done. Born Gladys Marie Smith in Toronto, Canada, some 60 years ago, she was earning a living at an age when most youngsters should be playing with dolls or indul­ging in a bit of cops and robbers. Mrs. Smith was only in her twenties when her husband died, leaving her with Gladys, Lottie and Jack and with no means of support, except sewing which brought in small sums of money. Gladys, olde.st of the three children, real­ized her mother was having a difficult time without the father so she set out to take her father’s place. And there began the family devotion that grew stron­ger as the years passed.

Shortly after her husband’s death, Mrs. Smith rentedbedroom to the stage manager of the Cummings

A Smith became glamorous and famous.

Stork Company of Toronto. As a result of the re..ti„„ede’ >pen

a man!” Thus began the fabulous'careW'Tif'thi'''■ , .0 t)i the girl

called 'as

£ ii * i i t ’ • * ” Fcsiiii ot the reiifino' of the room, Gladys and Lottie made tlieir staae ® in a play entitled “The Silver King,” Glah y m w lures were "Don’t speak to her, girls, her father S a man!” Thus began the fabtdous later to be called Marv Pickfonl.

The Cummings Stock Company soon moved on to other cities and Gladys worked in other stock ro™ panics or variety shows. By the time she was n .1 had secured the role of Betty in David Helasco’s ’nm duction Ib e \\a rrens of Virginia.” Belasco call her Mary Pickford and from that time forth she ll known by that name. '

in March of 1909 she became a Riograph girl n..a. the direction of D. W. Griffith. And with t C evem she began one of the most important stages of life, a venture that led to a long and thrilling career ■After she left Biograph, she returned to Broadway for a short time and then returned to films ininin™ Adolph Zukor and Famous Players, where sh'e rtl^vef 554 years, the happiest years of her screen life During these years she made some of her most famous nir* lures and began her battles with the movie magnateV Between her pictures and her partnership in Artists—formed by Griffith, Fairbanks Sr., Chaplin inH fickford m 1920-Miss Pickford became a miliionahe°

"Sunshine and Shadow” is an appropriate title life has brought ifiss Pickford much .sunshine and many shadows Her career brought her fame, fortune and three husbands. The first two husbands—Owen Moore and Douglas Fairbanks Sr.—offered her onlv temporary sunshine and much anguish before the divorces. She has found a more lasting happiness in her marriage to Buddy Rogers, to whom she has been married for the past 18 years and they are living at Pickfair with their two adopted children. '

Death brought a different kind of sadness to Miss Pickford. It took away all the immediate members of the Pickford family, except for Lottie’s daughter at

And of those deaths and relationships Miss Pickford speaks with emotion and loving mem- ory.

There is .something about "Sunshine and Shadow’" that makes one feel old, if one is old enouizh to havp followed Miss Pickford’s career very closely. It mav be because Miss Pickford’s life is in part the storv oV the early days of the movies when there was no pre­pared .script—the script was developed from day to day—and when the studios were on open lots—hence the term “on the lot.” The art of the cinema has advanced (though some may think it has retrogressed) .so rapidly the last 25 years that those early days seem farther away than they really are.

The publishers liave seen fit to include many pic­tures of Miss Pickford, her family and of scenes from her pictures. And wdiile they, too. add to the feeling that many years have passed since Miss Pickford began her career in that field that gives so much enjoyment to so many, the pictures also show Miss Pickford’s fonner beauty and the attractiveness that she still possesse.'^ today.

equipped with its own professional staff and authorized to follow closely the fiscal picture throughout the jea r. A similar measure to establish a “congres.sional watch dog” already has been approved by the D! S. Sei> ate.

A New’ Jersey supporter of the Joint Budget Committee plan point ed out in the “Congressional Rec urd” that it w’ould “give Congress that overall, coordinated view of Federal revenues and expenditures which the existing fiscal machinery of Congress fails to furnish.”

{poja»aC|E.0«SPS.BJCH$01I

differing opin- Representatives providing for a Ions as to the tirethod of financing I Joint Committee on- the Budgetfinancing j j

THE COMMUNIST BLUEPRINTDuring the conflict betw’een Jo­

seph Stalin and Leon Trotsky for control of the Communist machine

Russia in 1924, a blueprint of world conquest was drafted by the Stalinites. Stalin wrested control from Trotsky and later had him murdered. This blueprint of con­quest, according to Dr. Fred Schwarz, the noted .Australian schol­ar on Communism, calls for the con­quering of Asia first, then Africa, then Western Europe, then “to iso­late, degenerate and, if necessary, devastate the United Stales."

International Communism today is following this blueprint, Dr. Schwarz said. He spoke at the 16th Freedom Forum, conducted by The National Education program at Searcy, Arkansas. He said the Com­munists use five steps in their tech­nique of conciuering and that they are concentrating at the present time in Asia. The steps are:

1. Conquest of the minds of the youth by use of Communist-prepared or Communist-infiltrated books.

2. Organization of the intelligent­sia of those youth into the Commun­ist Party.

3. Scientific survey of what that particular country wants; then promise it to them. (For instance, the Chinese coolies and the socialist intellectuals wanted land to be re­distributed; the Communists prom­ised agrarian reform.)

4. Conquest, war and revolution.5. Scientifically imposed control by

the dictatorship of the proletAriat. (This is accomplished by destruction of those who oppose the Party. Our U. S. Government investigators have estimated that 30,(XX),(XX) Chinese have been murdered since the Reds look over China.)

Dr. Schwarz believes that to suc­cessfully combat Communism, which has grown from 17 people in 1903 to iron control of 900,000,(XX) today, the U.S.A, must conduct a positive ed­ucational and propaganda program among the youth of the world, clear­ly showing and dramatizing the ad­vantages of private ownership of property, self-reliance, constitutional government and, above all, faith in God.

The Communists are spending bil­lions on a massive literature barrage which is being concentrated today on Asia, India and Africa. These are the areas toward which the Red masters are aiming their conquest at the moment. It is authentically es­timated that they are spending $300,- 000,000 a year in America on books, pamphlets and projects to infiltrate America’s mass media of communi­cation. Every written or spoken line in this vast thought-shaping cam­paign is shrewdly calculated gender hate against America and-tbe American capitalistic system.

“There is being built up towa|<Js this country—cold-bloodedly, stidif-

tificall)', efficiently—a terrible body of deadly, burning and malignant hatred that at tlie will of its creators may be unleased as an avalanche of the greatest^ r e ^ s l murieriniJL t e e . the that no other huid rj«n rqml TI,p

Id has ever secen, said Dr. facts are superlative. But thev'reworlSchwarz.

“If there is one priority more doR- perately urgent than any other, it is books—clean books, well-printed books, books that tell the truth about your country, about its won­derful record, about its love of free­dom, about its peaceful heart. They .should be made available to the stu­dents of .Asia and the world as well, at as small a cost as those provided by the Communists. No man’s judg­ment is any better than his infor­mation and facts do not speak; it’s only when those facts are known that they speak.

"You have every right to be

proud because >’Ou're citizens of a country with a record of freedom, prosperity, brothcrliness and gener­osity, both internally and c.xtenialV,

facts are superlative. But they're not known. Your story should be spread around the world. Instead, the people of the world are hearing the Communist version which pre­sents the lie as truth and creates a viciow, burning, malignant hatred.”

Yes, we are engaged in a titanic battle for men’s minds. And in the minds of our youth the tide of battle will turn. Not only is it necessary to spread world-wide the truth about America, it is even more urgently necessary to spread world-wide the truth about America, it is even more urgently necessary that our own youth know these facts and thrill to their incomparable advantages un­der the stars and stripes.

QuuU

A ny d ay is a g o o d o n e f o r p ic lu r in i ; c h i ld re n ——b a t m a k e Children i Day o n e o n which y o u m a k e a sp e c ia l e ffo r t.

A Special Day for Children Calls for PicturesIn many states ot the Union,

calendars mark June 12 as Chil­dren’s Day — whic^ reminded us that todAy might be a good time to think about how you can take better snapshots of your favorite youngsters.

First of all, the logical people to take pictures of youngsters are their parenU — that means both Mother and Dad—the two people who have the deepest interest and the best opportunities. And those opportunities are with you every hour of every day—from the first Prani^o the first prom! By keep­ing your camera ready, you will be able to catch the tmposed, un­planned things when they happen.

It 8 smart, too, to plan on get­ting certain pictures. Many par­ents pick one day of the week or month on which they regularly take at least a few pictures. Two weeks is usually ju st about the right interval b^w een snapshot- sessions for babies up to* six months. After that, once a*mcMitlk —^perhaps the first Satv^day af

• each month—is often, enough for . a planned 'T ictu re Day.*"

Particularly with children, goo* pictures are caught by people who are ready with their cameras whenever something “good” hap­pens. You never know just w h^ your youngster is going to do something ^ tra -c u te — so why not keep your camera loaded all the time and keep It where you can grab it on the run?

You’ve heard us often t^lk about “shooting in^sequences.” A^d this is especially important when you’re taking snapshots of chil­dren. Every picture is part of a long biography—the child’s grow- ing-up story. Some chapters can­not be told in a single picture, but require a series of three or four or a dozen shots to record the action or event step by st^- A child’s typical day from break­fast to bedtime, a trip to the zm,a birthday party, preparations forthe first day of sdiool or die firs stay a t camp, a happy welcome jo

pet, learning to ska T^ffiTS^eae are worthy of picture

the family album. W oh n Van GulW«r

Page 5: Record Classes Slated Listed for Wednesday Days in State ...€¦ · An Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity 106TH YEAR, No, 50

M l F A R l f f ‘by Rkkurd UppmcoM. Manwr Coonty A(r>ciiltu»l A ( n t

h ig h t s t o w n g a z e t t e , m e r c e r c o u n t y , NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955 Pat* Fba

COMING E V E N T S 13: Special m eeting , Execu*

M erce r C ounty

the foliage thoroughly with this mixture.

To treat larger or older woody “The Farm- I’ fenmals put the chemicals in 90

gallons o( water and 10 gallons of aNo. i diesel oil.

aMost farmers appreciate the dan . ' , , , drift when the hormone

Woody perennials such as hedge type weed killed are used Use them inrtweed. honeysuckle, poison ivy only in low nressurp pnH

June — , -tive C om m ittee,

of A gncJlur. house, Trenton, 8^ j n

Chemical K ill W eeds

Woody pciciu.iai^ wccu Kiiiea are used. Use thenbindweed, honeysuckle, poison ivy only in low pressure and low gal „d green hnar along fence rows lonap sprayers, spraying when tin nd roads can be killed with cliem- wind ic ku. — ?

fcals now that they have reached ; ,1 .Ipvflnninent. Use 4 to 6icals nowfnl! leaf development. Use 4 to 6 S n d s of a mixture of 2,4-D and 245-T in 150 gallons of water. Wet

■ SORRY, THATm m i

(J U APRESCRIPTION

If we say that to you, please : don’t be offended. The particu- ; lar drug or combination you ■ asked (or Is dangerous unless : properly used and req u ire s ’ your doctor’s advice before ' taking. If he agrees that you ‘ need it, we w ill be glad to com- i pound such a prescription ac- j cording to his specifications. Special care goes into com- , pounding eve ry p re sc r ip t io n presented to us.

your 6!e3 pharmacist

Cunningham’s PharmacyMain & S tock ton StYe«t«

Hightstown, N. J . P h o n e 8-0001

- wiicn thewind is blowing away from crops that might be killed, such as toma-

alfalfa, ornamentalsand others.If there is the slightest danger of

drift to crops or shrubbery on your own or your neighbor’s property across the fence, play it safe and cut tiae weeds now and do the spraymg m fall and early spring

lie sure to rinse out the tank af­ter allowing a mixture of household aniiiioma and water to remain in it overnight if the spraying rig is to be insed for other purposes, as weed killers m only small amounts can do harm.

P oultry H om e F an 'Valuable Forced air ventilation of poultry

houses by means of fans can prove as valuable during summer hot siiells as during damp, muggy winter months.

Forced air circulation keeps the birds more comfortable, helps to maintain egg production and redu-

bosses due to heat prostration, .Although a desirable level of air ex- cliange for summer use far exceeds winter requirements, the usual Stan dard of 3 cubic feel of air per min utc per bird specified for winter op­eration will be of material benefit in Slimmer as well.

Old R efrigera to r D eath T ra p , Not all the discarded ice boxes

and refrigerators arc in the city dump or urban backyard.

Several have been noted on fann- steads, their self-closing catches and clamps still intact, ready to im prison and suffocate some unwary child exploring or using the box as a play tiling. If such items must be stored where children can crawl into them, the least that should be done

/ - ------------ >

' For higher crop yieldsyou need two kinds of

nitrogen

Quick Feeding [ Long FeedingNltrote nitrogen. Immediately ■ Ammonia nitrogen. Leach- available for rapid intake by — resistant, available through- plants. I out growing season.

YOU GET BO TH A T THE SAME TIME IN

AEROPRIUSAmmonium Nitrate Fertilizer

33.5% NITROGENH alf nitrate nitrogen

H alf am m on ia nitrogen

And look a t a ll these other advantages...1 . Prilled Material. Tiny beads that flow easily, dis-

. tribute evenly.2 . Economical to use. No special, expensive single­use equipment required for application. Use your regu­lar fertilizer spreader or distributor.5. Low in cost. One of the cheapest solid nitrogens per unit of N.4 . Convenient. Application fits conveniently into your trork schedule. Excellent for airplane application.5. Versatile. Adaptable for top- or side-dressing all grain, vegetable, forage crops and pastures. Also for mfit trees.6 . Stores w ell. Packaged In moisture-resistant bags.

Readily available supply. Orders can be filled promptly,

llA** yee want aaimenlen nitrote ask for AEROPaitls.

See your fertilizer dealer

or distributor and place

your order (oefoy.

MRefcr leaflet.

A M E R I C A N Gfonamid c o m p a n y

AOKICUiTtMAl CHIMICAL] DIVISION JO Rocksf«ll«r Plazo, N«w York 20, N. Y.

is remove the catches so the doors can swmg open from inward pres­sure. ihis warning may seem un- necespry, but enough children have ost their lives trapped in these air­tight boxes to prove its likelihood.

Air .J^P*^*"®***"? A lfalfaAltaUa has a big appetite. Three

tons of alfalfa hay will take from each acre of land phosphorus and potash equal to a tliousand pounds of 0-5-12 fertilizer.

Alfalfa fields must be adequately iertilized each year for top produc-

fertilized cither in the late fall, early in the spring be­fore growth starts or right after first cutting. If your field was not fertilized heavily last fall or early spring, then directly after the first cutting would be a good time. Ob­servations by this writer indicate that perhaps fertilizer applications on alfalfa after first cutting is prob­ably the best time. The first cutting i IS usually quite coarse anyway and fertilizer applied in the fall or in the spring encourages rank growth and very often the hay is stemmy and hard to cure.

Established stands of alfalfa should get the equivalent of from 600 to 1,000 pounds of 0-10-20 fertilizer to the acre.

Tests in Mercer County prove that alfalfa won't do well if boron IS lacking in the soil. You can be sure your alfalfa is getting enough boron by putting borax at the rate of ^ pounds to the acre in your fertilizer mixture. Most commercial companies making an 0-1-2 ration fertilizer for alfalfa automatically mix borax with the fertilizer. Borax IS very water soluble and at least 20 pounds to the acre should be applied each year. The amount of borax that is applied each year may not be util­ized by the current year's crop but during the winter months practically all of the material is leached out of the soil.

P ulle t G rowth NeedsNormal growth of young poultry

depends on room to grow, fresh air and plenty of feed. With birds rais­ed on range there is little problem of supplying the first two.

Crowding on range is possible when loo many birds are placed in a shelter. Regardless of the size of range shelter, 125 to 150 birds to any one shelter is best.

it is important to remove all bags and other material from the shelter to provide an abundance of fresh air at night as well as during the day.

Many a pullet flock is ruined be­cause it doesn’t have enough feed. Light weeks of age is the usual time to change from starling mash to growing mash or standard laying mash. Scratch grains are fed in the late afternoon, about all the birds will eat in an hour.

Birds raised on range or in con­finement will eat about the same amount of feed to make normal growth. Birds raised on good grass range pick up 10 to 12% of their ra­tion from the range which _,means that they eat a little less mash and grain than birds reared in confine­

ment.How much feed should birds be

fed? Here's the answer, in pounds of feed per 100 birds daily, based on white Leghorns: Eight weeks of age, 7 pounds, 12 weeks, 14 pounds; 16 weeks, 18 pounds; 2S) weeks, 22 pounds; 24 weeks, 24 pounds.

From 8 to 12 weeks the proportion will be about 50-50, grain and mash. Frome 16 to H) weeks it w'ill grad­ually change to 60% grain and 40% mash. And the last 4 weeks it will generally range around 65 to 70% grain and the balance mash.

These figures serve as a guide in

I feeding growing stock. Amounts ■and proportions vary with the I strains and health of the flock and 1 rearing conditions. Give more feed !if birds clean it up.

An unlimited supply of water is a must if pullets are to make normal grow'th and maintain their health.

Timely TipsM ercer Countjr H om e A geot By M A R G A R ET A . M OTT

Be S paring with Trim W hen M aking Clothes

The secert of using trimmings on clothes effectively lies in restraint. Miss Mott likens trimming on clothes to seasoning in food—a dash adds zest but too much spoils the taste.

When your trim is of contrasting color, handle it with particular care. The brighter the color, the smaller is the amount to be used.

Color accent can be achieved in (Continued on page II)

E x t r a F in e ,Fine, Medium, Broad

Point Selection

m SM ORKEE PENShto fhr Snorkef pern from $8.75

F A TH E R 'S D AYS U N D A Y , J U N E N I N E T E E N T H

Remember DAD with a Greeting Card Send One From the Kiddies Too

It’s Such a Simple Way to Say . . . “We in Your Family All Love You”

WOULD YOU LIKE A CIFT FOR FATHER?A Box of Cigars—a Ronson Lighter, or then, a Parker Jotter, perhaps, or another Ball Pen. A Sheaffer Snorkel with ink would be tops, we think. Then there’s “51” Parker & Waterman, too. We’ve got the shebang just waiting for you . . . with Autodexes, Phone and Appoint­ment Books, and Desk Sets to add to the room’s good looks. A Timex Wrist Watch— it’s waterproof, you know, and $12.95 is as high as they go. But Buxton, yea Buxton, the best in the land, grabs the finest of leather to keep money in hand. Wherever there’s smoke there must be fire. A Kaywoodie Pipe will soften the ire. A Camera for movies would set him agio, then the Family could all play star of the show. Then if he gets haughty and lazies in bed, an Electric Alarm Clock will go to his head.

This is our story And we wish to say We are here to serve you For Fathers Day.

Hightstown News ServiceA n d S ta tio n e ry S to re

Theatre Bldg. 20 Years of Service

Remember Dad on June 19 with

CARRIESMORE

T H A N A N Y O T H E R B I L L F O L D

B U X TO N S U P E R F O L D '

See Our Terrific Assortment of Cards for Father's Day in ^The Peg Board Nook/' at the Rear of the Store

It 's still N o t T o o L a te to S e n d T h a t G ra d u a tio n C o n g ra tu la tio n C a rd

O r a G if t so P ra ctica l

JIfffre's where ell thet wonderful performence begins!

Tthey’re all tru e— all th e wonderful things you hear about Pontiac’s great performance.

T he way i t sweeps uphill or down with the same effortless ease. T he tremendous burst of passing power th a t answers the nudge of your toe. 'The thought-quick response in stop- and-go traffic th a t m akes the car seem part of you. The smooth, quiet way it goes about its business however hard or far you drive.

Lift the hood of a Pontiac and you’ll be face to face with the reason. T h a t compact power p lant nested there m ay look much like other V-8’s—b u t th a t’s where your eyes deceive you!

The Strato-Streak V-8 is in a class all by itself—filled with engineering “ firsts” that make i t the mightiest engine ever to appear

in Pontiac’s price field. And it’s one of the m any Pontiac advantages you can’t get any­where else. Pontiac alone gives you the terrific drive of Strato-Streak performance.

This sensational performance, remember, comes in a distinguished, future-fashioned beauty th a t is tagged with a price any new- car buyer can readily afford.

Here’s your wide-open invitation to come in and try the result—t/ie fastest-selling Pontiac of all time. T he car is ready whenever you are! Make it soon.

W Any Car^ v-a

motl odvan«w "'-buX.StonLTd '"»i of Ponlio.-.

Bltwr wav y„, cori.LX

W A L T E R H . K O L L M A R P O N T I A CRoute 130, South of Stockton Straet Phone 8-1567 Hightstown, N. J.

Page 6: Record Classes Slated Listed for Wednesday Days in State ...€¦ · An Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity 106TH YEAR, No, 50

HIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE, MERCER COUNTY. NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955

TH E GAZETTE

Archer Bros. Win 2, Head Juniors by 3

Archer Brothers chalked up a pair of victories over the weekend to run their string of wins to six straight and hold a three game edge over VFW Post 5700 wliicli has split in eight outings in the lunior Division of the YMCA Baseball League.

Bruce Levin hurled a neat one- hitter Tuesday night as the Archer nine blanked the Vets, 5-0 at Peddie Field. The winners sewed the con­test up in the first frame when they tallied a run on a single by Dave Ogden and a triple by Levin. They added four more in the fifth for in­surance. Big blows in this frame were doubles by Ogden and Larr>' Gunnell.

The Vets only hit came in the fifth when Bob Rebh singled.

In another brilliant duel Ogden outpitched Block to give Archer Bros, a 1-0 triumph over Allen & Stults. AB scored the winning run in the fourth inning on two errors and a stolen base. Ogden gave up two hits, one a double by Jeff El dridge, while Block was combed for singles by Tom Shuman and Roland Pnidlion.

Billy Dey served up a non-hitter as the VFW shutout Allen & Stults, 8-0, Friday. A five-run barrage in the second provided the margin for the Vets. Three walks, a pair of er­rors and a double by Dey turned the trick.

Tlie Veterans club got back on the winning track by upsetting Allen & Stults, 6-4, with a five-run outburst in the second inning. John Ellis blasted a home-run with a male aboard to feature the rally. Phil Moody also got one for tiie victors in the fourth.

Field & Son got off to a 1-0 lead in the first inning when Bobbie Chew hit a solo homer. They scored three more in the fourth to come within reaching distance of the Vets, but went down easily in the final frame.

Rug Pounds Decker's, 18-2 Le«l Midgets

The Hightstown Rug Company pounded Decker’s Dairy 18-2 Mon­day night to take over first place in the Midget Division of the YMCA Baseball League.

A 10-run second inning did the trick for the Ruggers who sent 13 men to bat. A pair of doubles by Doug Tinsley featured the attack. Tinsley also added a single and triple for a perfect night at bat. In addition he pitched the victory for the Rug club.

Hitting star for the Dairy was Dick Gunnell with two singles and a triple in three trips to the plate.

The American Legion pushed across three runs in the seventh inning to beat Eufemia’s Sweets- lers, 7-5, and hand them their first defeat of the season. The Legion scored the winning runs without a hit. Five walks and an error were responsible. The winners got only two hits, while the losers picked up four.

Decker’s Dairy got back in the winning column by whipping Hage- man's Insurance, 12-3. The Milkers tallied five in the second and iced the contest with seven more in the fourth. Hageman’s picked up a duo in the second and one in the fourth. D. Gunnell paced the Milkmen with two singles and a double.

Coming from behind the Legion pushed across six runs in the fourth inning to dump Pullen's Fuel, 6-4.

Mercer County Baseball League

Levittown Lambertville J. A. Roebling Trenton Hightstown

Baseball SchedulesM ID G E T LEAG U E

M onday Decker’s vs Eufemia’s Umps—Dennis & Horstman

TuesdayRug Co. vs Pullen’s Fuel Umps—White & Barlow

W ednesday Legion vs Hageman’s Umps—Septak & Shuren

All games on Hunt Field, Park avenue, at 6:30 p.m.

•JU N IO R LEAG U E

FridayField &. Son vs Archer Bros. Umps—Fisher & Sprout

TuesdayAllen & Stults vs VFW Umps—Ball & Mohr

W ednesday Field & Son vs VFW Umps—Ivins & Norcross •

All games on Etra road diamond of Peddie School at 6:30 p.m.

YMCA StandingsM idget League

Hightstown Rug Co. Eufemia’s Sweetsters American Legion Pullen’s Fuel Hageman’s Insurance Decker’s Dairy

Ju n io r LeagueArcher Brothers VFW Post 5700 Allen & Stults C. R. Field & Son

Rams Capture Track Honors

Hightstown High School’s track team captured first place in the Del­aware Valley track meet at FlorenceF rid ay \vit;h a tot^l points, fn th a A m erican Leakgue. G ro th is als<o a fine fie lder and C ourtney isSecond place was taken by Pember­ton 26j4; third, Riverside 26; Flor­ence 15 and Pennington 6.

Joe Diefenbach was the big gun for the locals and outstanding star of the meet by annexing three wins

the quarter mile (56.8), broad jump (19'7^”) and high Jump (5'5”).

Another first place winner was John Weeks who took down the 100- yard dash in 10.7 seconds and the 220 in 24.2. He also tied for third in the high jump and was fourth in the javelin throw.

Half mile honors were won by Phil Moody in 2 minutes and 16 sec­onds. Jim Fawcett placed third in the mile and Barry Pullen second in the broad jump with a leap of 19* 1”.

This was the final meet of the season for the Rams who are coached by Frank Fucarino.

Lambertville Pounds Hightstown 10-1

Hightstown’s losing streak ran to seven Sunday when Lambertville pounded the locals, 10-1, on high school field. A nine-run third inning provided the winners with all they needed to win.

Manager Jimmy Dey‘s club took a 1-0 advantage in the first frame and were done for the afternoon.

Five hits, two walks and five er­rors accounted for Lambertville’s big splurge. Pete Schroeder was the hitting star of the game, garnering a pair of doubles, a triple and single in four trips to the plate for the locals.

About 4.7 per cent of the earth’: crust is iron.

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WE NEED

USED CARSTop Allowancesfor 1949 -1951 Cars

S Mt MERCEK S T , HIGHTSTOWN, N .J . TdU I W W I m i

SilHNIIIIIIUUIIIIIIIIIIIUIIHIIHIIIIIIimillllimiMIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIf

Clint C ourtney BoB C kakalesT h e Chicago W hite Sox T uesday obtained speedy cen ter-fie lder Jim

B usby from the W ash ing ton S en a to rs in exchange fo r outfielder Johnny G ro th , ca tcher C lint C ourtney an d p itcher Bob C hakaies. B usby is the key m an in the deal and is ra te d one of the b es t defensive cen te r fielders

expected to handle the first s tr in g catching chores fo r th e S enators.

BEH IN D T4tt6 B A L L ?

Odds and Ends: The bass season gets under way next Wednesday and will continue until November 30. Those anglers who need licenses can secure them at Clayton’s Sports Shop, Mercer street or from Mrs. Elsie Liedtke, Borough Clark. They are no longer available at The Ga­zette office . . . Men’s Bowling As­sociation Secretary George Lewis Jr. said today that trophy winners of the past season are requested to get their name plates in to Ray Powell by Saturday for engraving. This is the deadline and those who I fail to come up with them will have I to take care of the job themselves,] Lewis said. |

* ♦ * IPhone numbers can prove tricky I

propositions, especially the ones! that do not exist. The other day| this office received a call from ai local operator concerning a peculiar! unlisted number that supposedly ap-^ peared in last week’s issue of The Gazette. She wanted to know what the right number was in a classified ad. It seems a phone user was sure our ever working linotype operator, A. W. Kelley, had printed 4^ -T as the number to call. The party kept demanding from the harrassed op­erator that 482-T job. However, there was no phone number listed in the ad, the 48-2t being our code for saying the ad first appeared in the 48th issue of the current volume of The Gazette and was to be publish­ed two times . . . Speaking of the girls who handle the switchboard at the local office, we should be con­siderate of them at this time of year. This is the beginning of their busy season and if you don’t get your call in nothing flat, keep your shirt on, they will get to you and I'll bet not over 10 or 15 seconds will elapse. For instance, the other day this office made several calls, one right after the other and there wasn't a bit of delay. So let’s keep the girls cheerful with a little pa­tience, they have lots of it.

* ♦ «.It's a bit late to be commenting

on the recent Memorial Day parade here, but we thought it nice despite the fact that it was not as lengthy as in previous years. The highlight as far as this department was con­cerned was the operation of the Hightstown High School band. In the years it has been in existence it has come to be a tremendous item in school life here. Incidentally, those majorettes are real steppers, too. Edgar Thomas guides the band . . . Missing from the ranks of the

lineup of firemen was Chief Thomas B. Malone who was ill. This is the first time he has missed one in years. * * *

New Jersey will have five extra weeks of daylight saving this year. Gov. Meyner has signed a legislative act extending the period until the last Sunday in October. In previous years the time ended the last Sun­day in September . . . Bean shooters or pea shooters or whatever you shoot out of them can be dangerous play toys. As a re.sult the police department has requested the coop­eration of local stores not to sell them to youngsters. Was in an es­tablishment that has a goodly sup­ply on hand the other day and a lady was insisting that the manager sell one to her boy. But the store official said though he had lots of them he was sticking by the wishes of the IKjlice even tliough the prospective purchaser claimed she lived in a rural area.

* * «Paul Theoharis, popular mixolo­

gist at the Old Higlits Bar, hopped over to the Polo Grounds last week and saw his beloved Giants take a licking. He ran into an old TV friend, Frankie Frisch, former Cub manager, seated near his box. Paul asked, “What’s the matter with the Giants.’’ Frisch said it was the same team as last year (the champs), but the boys just can’t get started. Paul is wondering what will happen when Brooklyn really gets going.

* * «One of the surprise visitors at

Monte Norcross’ Golf Range on the Higlitstown-Princeton road Monday evening ws movie actor, producer and director Burt Lancaster from Culver City, Calif. Incidentally, Monte missed the qualifying test for the National Open Golf Tournament by one stroke. He trailed such golf­ing notables as Art Wall, Al Bessel- ink, Dave Douglas, Charles Lepre and Sam Penacle at the Philmont course in Philadelphia. Monte turn­ed in 146, one above qualifying.

Sportsmanship Award To Thomas Shuman

Thomas F. Shuman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice P. Shuman of South Main street has been awarded the Lower School sportsmanship prize of the Peddie School. This prize is given at the lower school graduation exercises to the boy graduating who exhibited outstand­ing sportsmanship both on and off the playing fields. The exercises were held in Ayer Memorial Chapel last Tliursday.

Shluman has' been at Peddie for three years and will enter the fresh­man class in the fail.

Sherman Averages 203Wally Sherman, one of the top

keglers in the Men’s Association here journeyed to Echo Lanes, North Jersey recently and ran off tilts of 219, 193, 194, 225, 192 and 241 for a 210 average in the singles and doubles events. His team games of 202, 158 and 203, the week pre­vious netted him an overall average of ^ for the nine outings.

HIGHTSTOWN ESSO SEHVICENTERU. S. Route 130 - Corner Morrison Ave.

JUNE SPECIALM otor Tune Up

Brakes Adjusted

Clutch Adjusted

Front wheel bearings repackedLubrication

ALL LABOR FOR $8(parts extra)

Brakes relined and clutches installed at reasonable prices

FORD Mechanic on Premises(Serving FORDS since 1917)

Open 7 a. m. tol3 a. m.

p e horizon luas never hn^liter!■T^hb futurb is the province of young ■L people —a place where their greatest

joys and victories are waiting.

This Imonth especially you'll notice a cer­tain eagerness around you— in the young men and women graduating from high schools and colleges all over the country. You can tell who they ate, for their eyes reflect a bright horizon.

Sa what gift could he mart appnpriaU for a young fo rm looking into the future than an tnvcstmnt in tho fu tu r t-a United States Savings Bond?

Bonds pay good intetest-3% compounded semiannually when held to maturity. And Aey teach a valuable lesson about the bene­fits o f a wise investment.

Furthermore, with their interest-earning period now extended to a fu ll 19 years and 8 months. Bonds can return $1.80 for each $1.00 origi­nally invested.

So give your favorite graduate a start towards a more secure future. Invest in a U. S. Savings Bond in his or her name.

Want your interest paid as current income ? Invest in 3% Series H

U. S. Government Series H Bonds, in de­nominations of 1300 to 110,000, ate re­deemable at pat after 6 months and on one month’s written notice. Mature in 9 years, 8 months and pay an average 3% per an­num if held to maturity. Interest paid semi­annually by Treasury check. Available through any bank.

'xtv.nUmg. T h . T rn a w y DepaH-menl thankr. for Iheu wuriolic doootUm. the Aivertuing CouiicU and

Page 7: Record Classes Slated Listed for Wednesday Days in State ...€¦ · An Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity 106TH YEAR, No, 50

HIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE, MERCER COUNTY, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955Page Sena

QwA'" r a t e s —* *•■»»» » M inim um , S« c e n t, in u K u ic .! ; M cen lt,

2* MOU u ih fitio u J (o r U r (0 hood. W h i t , . p . . . , 75 ce n t, p . , | ^ Box n u m W *5 co n t. o it ru . T h . G u e l t . doM no t « .a m « re .pon - ' dkiUtr f " “ "* • in. . . . Crm lit fo r I jp o irx p h ic d |

limitml to o n . inm rtiou . . . . D m d lin ., W «L , 10 x jn . C»U 373

f o r s a l e

n o r t h m a in STREETlust the right property to put

4i,,t extra money to work! 2 apart- S t f 8 rooms and 2 baths. Oil 5 Priced at $10,000.

IMLAYSTOWNC foom bungalow with 2 bedrooms

on improved road 30 acres of land. 2 car garage. Low taxes. Price $11,500.ph o n e HIGHTSTOWN 8-0439

far appointment to inspect our new Ranch Home. 3 bedrooms, spacious living room, dining room, kitchen and tile bath. Plaster walls Full i ih r Attached narage. All on a f„ge lot 100x200 and priced at only $14,700.

LOTSTown and Country Lotsl

Hielitstown Heights, 70x200 $850Dmcti Neck road, K»x200 $ 1 ,^Town Lot, all improvements $1,500

POTATO FARMno tillable acres, 23 acres of

mods. Brook for irrigation. Dwell- ine has 5 rooms on first floor and 5 bedrooms on second. 2 b.aths. Oil heat Large machine building, 3 large barns, 2 car garage. Priced at $40,000.

HOLMESONCorner property. Modern bunga­

low, road stand, 2r/ acres of cleared woodland ideal for picnic site. Heavy summer short traffic. An e.xcellent location and business opportunity. Price $14,500.

FOR RENTFurnished apartment available

June 15. 3 rooms and bath. $95.00 month.

Maurice H. HagemanREALTOR

231 Rogers Ave. "At the Monument”Telephone 8-<W39

BUILDINGSDelivered to your property. Four rooms with improvements. Also barracks, 20x52. Located on High- ^•ay 33, Manalapan.

HARRY N. FORMAN Box 187, Freehold, N. J.

. _ IsL Engliahtown 7-5521 4Uf

p r o pe r t y at 211 Stockton street. This house consists of two aparimenis and 11 single rooms. In­spection invited. Call at 211 Stock- ton street. 50-3t*

NEW Ranch Home with plaster walls ami extra large living room and three large bedrooms on extra large lot, located in new development on Morrison avenue extension, priced at only $15,990; 100 acre farm with all equip­ment, good modern house, near Hightstown, $35,000; new 3 bedroom split level home, near schools; at­tractive 4 room and bath home with garage on Park avenue, immediate occupancy, $7,500; good Iwme in business zone, $12,000; new four bedroom bungalow near schools, $12,500; attractive home on South street, $13,500; six acres wood­land near Dayton, $1,650; 6-room brick house in good location, $6,900; four-room bungalow in good location in Hightstown, $6500; new 3 room and bath bungalow in high­way 130, near Hightstown, $ 6 ^ ; 6 homes in Roosevelt from $7,500; double house for colored folks, $3,000; new 4 -room oil heated bungalow with large lot in Hights­town Heights, ^ 5 0 0 ; improved double house in good location, $11,500; large oil heated income property, near school, $18,000; not long built four room oil heated bun­galow near school, $7,500; very nicely located oil heated home on Stockton street, $13,500; six new bungalows in all sections of Hightstown with two-three-four bedrooms, from $5,800; also business properties and all size farms. Egnor Appraising Service, 219 Rogers ave­nue, tel. 8-0158, Hightstown.

REAL ESTATEWe have available 20, 25 and 30

year Veteran Mortgages.FOR SALE

1 family dwelling, 3 bedrooms, ®odem kitchen and bath, dining foonj, living room and enclosed porch. Near schools.

1 family dwelling near center of town, 6 rooms and bath, 2 car gar- $Hix)0 fJtcellent condition. Price

I family dwelling in nice section , J°wn, has 4 rooms on 1st floor,

and bath on 2d. Price

style dwelling with 3 bed- bath, living room, dining

oom and kitchen. Attached garage, cellar. Price $17,000.

in c o m e PROPERTIESfi ° apartments, 7 rooms and bath

^ rooms and bath on 4 car garage. Price

income property with 2

Harold E . Stackhouseb r o k e r

Harold F . Stackhouse

FO R R EN T

APARTMENT, $65. The Mansion House. 211 Stockton street. 50-3i*

MODERN 4-room and bath apart­ment with heat and hot water Available July 15. Old Hights Apts' Mam street, phone 8-0081.

AVON Products, Phone 8-1413-R, -Mrs James Johnson. R. D. Hights

__________ ^ tOUTBOARD MOTOR

21'2 H. P, ELGIN. Perfect con- lect condition. Ideal for car top

[boat or 12 ft. rowboat.. Price $40.Phone EX 2-0529 evenings

-ASBESTOS cement boards. Ap­proximately 350 (T'.vd'xia"-. orroughly 2.800 sq. ft. AVill consider any reasonable offer. PI one Hights- town 8-<j925. *

FIVE rooms and bath, reasonable rent, .\pply 118 Center street.

TWO furnished rooms, near bath room. Call at 154 Broad street.

WE carry a full pro line »f Burke and Hilrick and Bradsby golf equip­ment, including clubs, bags, balls and shoes. Xorcross Golf Range, Prince­ton read, HightstuA-n. Phone 8- 1575.

FURNISHED room. Call at 242 Monmouth street. »

AP.'VRTMENT, 3 rooms, heat hot water. Inquire at Hights Hardware Co. *

FOUR room bungalow, ceramic tile bath room, Hollywood kitchen, all modern improvements. Phone Hightstown 8-093o. 50-3t

LARGE furnished room, suitable tor one person or couple. Phone Hightstown 8-0315-W. Mrs. Klein, 159 Stockton street.

CRIB,, high chair, bookcase, up­holstered chair, iron bed, ^ size, jelly closet, 3 moth proof closets, 2 play pens and 6 dining rr -»m chairs like new. Apply at 441 Stockton street or call 8-0185-W evenings af­ter At home all dav Saiurdav. June II. ' '*

REFKIGER.\TOR, Frigidaire, $25; gas range. Caloric, $25; studio couch, $20; table and 4 chairs, mat­ched, $15; largr and small dresser. $10. Call Hightstown 8-1357-M. *

Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Wiener ;‘if York road attended the I89th an­niversary V rimmencement exercies of Rutgers University in Rutgers st;. 'hum Wednesday. Their .<>on. Leon, received a bachelt.7r of science degree from the Rutgers College of Phar­macy. He al-' h-.lu5 a bachelor ■•f 'cience degree in education - hh. n he received from Rmger-i in im 1951.

Mrs. Esther Hoyt, librariciK *1 the Memorial Library • , Frai.khn -ireet anr -Mnccd today th it begin­ning Wednesday, June 15. sununer

jurs '.vill be .hwerved. They are p.m. M“!iduy through Suurday.

Mr. and Mrs Peter Edward Esch Jr. -m' 212 Hutchinj m street are re- Cuu. iiij. congratulations uj-o-'n the birth of son. Peter Edward Esch HI, weighing 7 pounds, 9 ounces. May 31 at Princeton Hospital. Mrs. Esch is the former Miss Jean Hutchinson.

Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Rc-zers and family of Center street spent the weekend visiting Dr. and Nfrs. P. P. Silvester of Princeton at Seaside Park.

1 The Friday Club held its final 'meeting f-f tlie reason Friday eve­ning at the home of Mrs Frank Priory. Supi>er wa- served by the

'•e'S. Mri Paul D Haring, dele­gate :: the siatt -'>n\enii<,m at .At­lantic City, presented a repv>rt ‘»- club activities Meetings ..ill be re­sumed in the Fall.

The Barl'4\. family held 'heir an­nual picnic at Hecker’s Grove Sun­day. Seventy-eight members at-, tended. Games : - -i basket lunches.

P O T T E D RO SES, P a te n ted Sc N on -paten ted C*n be P lan ted Safely All Sum m er

N U R S E R Y STO C K : E v e rrlb in g S u itab le fo r ibi* S ection V ILLA G E N U R S E R IE S — Blade A Locke H i^b tstow n. N. J .

A lle n to w n -H ijb l.to w o R oad (R o u te S3*)CO M E . S E L E C T & T A K E H O M E

Mrs. George Trought Dead at 45 Years

Mrs. Lilhar* V ^'a^Hom T*- wife • f (jt -igc Ehvi -i Trough*

divl Fri'l'ty ijpjMer-of York rrcer Ho-pital, Trenton.

In ad.h'i. ;: her husbtnd she issurvived b> a - ti;. W* E. Jr.; her mother. Mrs. Harr. \'inH oni. three : •‘ters, Mrs. W'alier l>^wd, Mrs, Reynold Syuimons and Mis< Naomi V.mHorn and a b r ther, Flarl \'anHorn. all :»f Trenton.

Tlie funeral was held Monday a; 2 pm. at the Heyer Fun.;.il Home,

i2u2 Sl -rkt--n strtct, with the Rev. Leland Hi=-.inbo!h.m of the Fir-‘. Baptist Church officiating. Inter-

jment was in Cedar Hill Ceineterv.

JFirst prrHfaiTlnian ChurrhN O R T H M A IN S T R E E T H IG H T S T O W N . N .J .

R EV . H, BA R R Y K EEN . M in is te r

SU N D AY , JU N E 12 i , m A .M .

THILUk KN'S :-,\Y SEKVii'i--

?('■ -I ir.;,. . ■ - the Ch—:b and J' -i-T C!

A CORDIAL WELCOME FOR ALL

f u r n is h e d room with 2 single Ibeds, for gentlemen. Call at Mercer street. 50tf'

EIGHTEEN inch power mower! Mr. and Mrs. William D. Shuff of and five screens 19".x27’, aluminum, iiere are the proud parents of a, tram p and wire. R. D. Lanning.' daughter, born May 25 at Princeton

! Hospital. i o

Willgus PromotedProm S Sp. Lee R. Will-

-'i lieutcr-antP.been annoumed by Co! J-,'5cp!;

FURNISHED naoms, all improve-j ments. Mansion Tourist Home, un- i der new management, 211 Stockton i street. 50.31* i

FURNISHED apartment, three rooms and bath, large shed, garage, oil heat and hot water. Available July 20. Phone 8-0964. ASt(

USED golf clubs Men's and la-; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Porubski of; dies wools and irons Norcross[second avenue arc receiving congra- p.Goli Range, Princpon r'.id. Hi ;hi3- u‘ri?!'*'« uf>on the birth -c>f a daugh- * • --- --

phone 8-15/5. ‘ter last Fridav. 1- mu 1 j .lasi semce w: 1931 and .-erved atMiss .Ann Elaine Hanc- :k, daugh- Tuckerton,

cnu\ Z I tTT— Villiam R. Bruns-uCKCOHN, -.vheat, -•-c. ans. Highest' Silvers of 424 Stockton street hasmarket prices paid, Silverlec Farms, heen graduated from Penn H a l l “ t * v - - ' 1943 Hr 1:.-.. re-

W A N TED

: Rutter, 'iireriniendent .>{ the N'tv. ersey S u te P-.Iice.Lt. Willguf cnicrc-l :!.c Slate Pc

it: 1931 and .-erved at Higlilsn -vn and Now

Inc., Toms River, N.J 8- 2121.

FURNISHED room with cooking | facilities. On One Mile road. Tel.i Hightstown 8-0447-J-2. 45tf!

H E L P W A N TED

.Junior College, Chambersburg, Pa, ■^®GShc received honorable mention for 1“ '^ *-

(excellence in Spanish.

tk nianu for the

SUITE of business or professional offices. Excellent Hightstown loca­tion. Rare opportunity for right party or business. Available June 1. J. Riordan, 8-0018. 38tf

MALE or female help for office work, e-xperience preferred. -Apply in person. Coleman Buick Co, Route 130, north of Stockton street.

MODERN 4-room apartment, heat and hot water supplied. Immediate occupancy, Phone Hightstown 8- CW28. Ben Katz, Etra.

H E L P W A N TED — M A LE

-M.AX for garden uork and lawni . * j - *i. uz-rv. . ,nmuing. .\pplv at Hiuhts Hardu-are program used lor .

.A pot luck supper at 7 p.m. v.ill feature a meeting «m Hightstown Grange next Tuesday*. Member- are^ requested to bring a covered dish.

I!;k-htst«':W7i itrangc voted t-- con­tribute $129.75 to the 4-H camp fund.,The money' was realized from the;^j^jj^

Egg Pricesto ’ anrtion market reported ■ f 27*0 c.--rs of e: s -‘ver t '.end. Prices arc listed be-

Moiul.ty'* -lie: •• ''iie. A A large, •j; A.\ medium. -WM5kj; A me-

37~My- : B h rs t. 40-43; B

Co, recent minstrel show. jun 57-o4; pul-

AI’.ARTMEXT, 3 rooms, bath, hot • water lieat, oil burner, 2 car garage, i automatic hot water. Inquire at D a-' vison’s Market, 112 Main street. 49-2t*

STORFI in busiest section on Main street, 4 or 6 room furnished heated homes near Hightstown from $ ^ ; four-room heated apartments from $70 to $90; four, five, six, eight or nine room oil heated homes near Hifijnilfiwi} i£Qm $70 l a $125; pro-, fessional or business offices. Phone 8-0158, Egnor Appraising Service, 219 Rogers avenue.

FO R SA LE

H E LP W A N TED —FE M A L E

EGG C.IXDLERSExperienced or Unexperienced

CfOi<i opportunity, sanitary workir.

ilcts, 29i:$-30, peewees. 21-23.I The Rev. F. Robert Steiger of the; ^I Peddie School recently was awarded ' B large. B■ iiis doctor’s degree in religious e d u - * jumb-p. 66-ri7.4.I cation at Columbia University and I, East Thursday s sale: 'vniie. A.A 'U u^n Seminxrv, ! *U-4/i_i; A b r p 4ai4-4/'.:

i .A medium. 3c-'■‘'■j; b large, =

Baccalaureate ServiceHig'ht5to\vn Hitjh School Auditorium

.‘SUNDAY. JUXE l i , 195.' AT 8 P.M.

.‘'peaker—Rev. H. Barr\ Keen.Minister ,i the F irst Fresb;.terivn Church

Go XOt P ar From Me, O' ( r o d "— ZingarelH Music l,y O .c.liinr ! Church Church Choirs

LttiKC Direction :,i A lfred M. Mas-mheimer

Pianist-—^4iss Edith Erxinj;

Services Planned by Clertrvmen of All Faiths in Hightstown and Cranbur\

PUBl.IC LW TTED

ARIENS rotary tillers and lawn mowers, starting at $129.50. See Kelley, 1308 or 0274-R-2.

TV set, Admiral, 12 inch, in good condition; also 12 gauge shotgun, like new. Call Cranbury 5-Oo71-J-U.J

conditions in the largest candling I 23rd annual retreat of the 43‘ i; B medium. 3UJ-36; jumbos.idant in New Jersey. A'™' -I'rsey_Baptist Men will iw '

Call Freehold 8-60cii)G & G Fresh Egg Plant

of X. J.Engiisluown, X. J.

held at the Peddie School, June 17, 15; and 19.

50-4t

LO ST

The Baptist Church Live Wire so­ciety recently presented a new robe to -Alfred AL Masonheimer at the annual choir dinner in appreciation of 29 years of service as organist

BLACK angora jacket in the vi­cinity of Broad, Main and Stockton streets. Finder please contact Han­sen at 8-1107-M. •

M ISCELLA N EO U S

CHAIRS caned. Phone 0144. Ben Eby, 306 Stockton street.

THOROUGHBRED Boxer pup­pies, $35. Phone Pluinsboro 3-2935- K-1. 49-3i

I am now writing the all-new HOME OWNER’S POLICY insur­ing all your property in one policy with substantial savHngs. For infor­mation contact Russell A. Egnor, 219 Rogers avenue or phone 8^158.

WINDOW screens. Twenty-one 28x63, Uvo 40x54^L two 17*^x63 and two doors. Very good condition, any reasonable offer. Call at 251 Stock- ton street.

The Summer Vacation Bible School sponsored by local protestant church will be held Tune 20 to July 1.

Mr. and Mrs. William H. Glackin of Windsor spent several days over the weekend visiting their son. Sgt. William F. Glackin, at Ft. Bragg, N.C. Sgt. Glackin has 12 jumps to his credit, one being a night jump.

Kenneth Bagot of Franklin street has returned home for the summer from the University of Toronto.

n \r,c 7~- 1 T7T i Mrs. loseph Seip Sr. and daugh-CARb msured lor on y So. even , chnHo.te of Ita.xwell avenue en-

though driving ,wer K- miles Ro.semarie Koelie atwork. Russell -A F.jmor. 219 R o g e r s M e m o r i a l Day avenue, phone S-Olw. - •

AXMINSTER rug. 8’6".v9’, $10. i good condition. Call at 533 South [ Main street. •.

BETTER HOMES are built with:dry, used lumber. !

USED JUNE SPHCr.VLS ;3x4x6, each _________________ .2013x4.x6, 100 pieces _____ —-------$15;2x3x8 Special lot, each _______ 15c j

100 p ieces________________ -$10

Wrought Iron Railings Quality Workmanship & Material

BEN FRANKMid-Jersey Sales. Cranbury, N.J,

Phone Cranbury 5-1766 24-Hour Phone Seiwice

Ncarbv Referrals Gladlv Given 39tf

•veekend.Russell A. Egnor, local real est.ite

brviker. announces the sale .'f a rc.^idential property on Freehold ."•'ad. Hightstf*un Heights t" Mr. anil Mrs. \ inceiua DiSalvo fur Leif

54-594<i; pullets. 30fz-32.Brown. A large. 38-44|z: -V medi­

um, 35*i-38; B large, Jtda-W; B me­dium. 34-344'.$; jumbos. 56-60 'i; pul­lets. 30.

Fowl Prices =The local auction market report- :

ed ihe sale of 178 coops ot last : week. Prices are listed below. ■

Leg fowl, 12 2-1-4 4 (2): 20-23U. :(1) ; col. fowl. 14-19*i (2); 244i-29*2': fl); leg broiler, 2\\'x-2.3Va (1); col : broiler, 27-28 U ); leg springer. ISVz!;(2) \ 22*4-24-4 (U ; col. springer, ;2V/X (2); 275^-3144 (1); col. pullet.'! 30^2-36Ji (1); leg rooster. 11*4 (2): : 1^-13 (1); col. rooster, 14-14*;; (1); ; pigeons. 35c a pair. ;

ARMY SURPLUSWindow screens, sizes 3Ifzx62*a and 44*4x54*». Ideal for closing in breezewavs, porches, etc.

H S:’ H FEED CO.Windsor, N.J. Ttl. HI 8-1127.^-4t

F. W. DRESSINTERIOR &• EXTERIOR

FAINTINGI CAKFRNTERI PAFERHANGERI Robbinsviilc, N. J.

Call between 5-6 p.m.

R O B B IN S V ILLEThe Convenient Location For fWHEAT TRANSACTIONS |Large Scale Right at Siding =

New Accurate Testing Equipment nFast Easy Unloading =

Plenty of Space for Govemmoit Loan Wheat H Contact Us Today =

EDWARD DILATUSH & CO. |I Allentown 9-7631—9-8181 Trenton JU 7-9194 I

-75cSingle sash, each from _F.O.B.

Plumbing & Heating Supplies i Used Brick Steel Products ;

HIGHWAY WRECKING & |BUILDING SUPPLY j

Lakewood Road Freehold 8-43001

T H E TO P H O M E IM PR O V E M E N T S E R V IC E

Aluminum storm wimiows, doors,! .Applegate lias completed ajalousies, Venetian blinds, etc. cuur>e in beautv culture at the

For free estimates and demonstra- Beautv'School in Eliza-tions phone Hightstown 8-1143-R-3. i .vorking in Mil-

The Otto Eiker house near Clarks-'bur. has-been rented to Robert W . ' H i ^ h t S t O W n 8 -0936-T -3

50-2i*hins of here. R. .\. Egnor, real ci- , tate broker, handled the deal.

!tf

I, SALESMAN‘ '■one 8-1069 ------443 Stockton Street

H ALL'SOVEN-READY

Quick-Frozen

TU R K E Y S50c per lb.

Delivery Saturday Phone 8-0342-R

PRESCRIPTIONSOUR SPECIALTY

HIGHTS PHARMACYDavid Goldstein, R eg. Pb.

! P H O N E 8-0053 W E D E L IV E R

! Net’s Beauty House on Broad street.i Mr. and Mr?. Charles Ely of !Lakew.H>d spent Sunday with Mr. (and Mrs. EIwxxkI Croshaw of North ! Main street. They dined at the Turkey Farm, Chester. Mrs. Ely is the former Mrs. Della Dey of York

i road.

M ISC E LLA N EO U S

e q u it a b l e Society twenty-year farm loans and country home loans, no stock obligations, no fees; dwell­ing and other property first ™ rt- nage loans and insurance. Egnor Appraising Service, 219 Rogers ave­nue, phone 8-0158. _________

WHALEN'S Lawn Mower Serv­ice. Lawn mowers, hand and pow­ered, sharpened and repaired. Phone 8-0354-W. Whalen's Lawm Mower Service, Hightstown Heights. 39-15t

h a u f b r a u i n n

WESTERN & POPULAR MUSIC

by

T he W enderera

Rt. 130 bet. High Bridge and Mount’s Garage

Hightstown

A ir Conditioned Always Cool and C om fortable

H I G H T SH ightstow n, N .J . T«L 8-0131

MATINEE POUCY regular matinees — SoedaySaturday aad Natk»al HoUdar* at

ZiSI P .MEVENING SHOWS — «:S* P J L aed

9.-«t PJ4.

T burs. & Fri. Ju n e 9 & 10B arbara S tanw yck

R obert Ryan David F a r ra r—in—

"E SC A PE TO B U R M A ” (Color by T echnicolor)

S atu rday M arjorie Main

Ju n e 11 P ercy Kilbride

"M A AND PA K E T T L E A T W A IK IK I”

—also—Johnny W ein m u lle r

—in—"JU N G LE M OON M E N ”

Sun., Mion., Tues. J u n e 12-13-14 Jan ies S tew art Ju n e AUyson

'ST R A T E G IC C O M M A N D ’ (Color by Tecbniclor)

Ju n e 15-10-17 L ana T u rn e r

W ed., Thur., Fri.Jo h n W ayne

—in—"T H E SEA C H A S E ”

W am erC olor in C IN EM A SC O PE

I CARDS O F TH A N K SI wish to sincerely thank my

friends and neighbors for their cards and tkjwers and kind thoughts and many acts of kindness while I was a patient in Mercer Hospital and since my return home.—Mrs. Clar­ence S. Puglin.

•We wish to express our sincere

thanks to relatives, neighbors and friends for the many acts of kind­ness and expressions of sjTnpathy at the time of the passing of our beloved husband and father, Henry G. Wikoff; also to those who sent floral tributes and loaned cars.— Mrs. Emma Wikoff and family.

D A N C E SEvery Week Until .\fter July 4

Hightstown Country ClubEvery Wed. the Famous ' FRIENDSHIP D.\NCE

”F('r Folks 25 & CK'er Only” Meet New People—New F'ricnds

Fun Whether You Come Alone or Couples

Every Fri. the Popular Jerry Bryan Band (12 pieces)

Lvery Sat.—Two Bands .•\din. $l inch tax

50-2t*

SUDOL’SFRESH KILLED CUT UP

POULTRYROASTERS, FRYERS, STEWERS

TURKEYS DUCKS

BARBECUE CHICKENS EGGS

Mercer and Ward Sts., HightstownNext to Bowling: Alleys

Phone Hightstown 8-0561 Free Delivery

SU D O L'S C U T -U P PO U L T R YFresh-cut-up poultry available

daily. Chickens barbecued on the premises. Open Monday through Saturday—Mon., Tues., Wed., 8 to 5; Thurs., Fri.. Sat., 8-9. Sudol's Cut-Up Poultry, 159 Mercer street, next to bowling alleys.—adv. 50-4t

SINCE I A M IN B U SIN E S S ;

AS A

NEW CARFactory Dealer

in H opew ell. N .J .1 w ith to ta k e tb is opportxm ity to | thank all tny friends and n e ig h b o rs ' for the ir past business and p le a sa n t! relations during the past few years.

M IC H A E L M A L EK

MALEK CHEVROLET85 £ . B road S t. Hopew ell, N .J.

Res. P hone H I 8-1393-M But. P hone H opew ell €-0878

HOUSE FOR SALEStockton stree t, H ightstow n, across from A C M E drivew ay. S u it­able fo r business o r residence o r com bination the reo f. T h re e b ed ­room s, bathroom on second floor, pow der room o n first floor. Also living room, study, m odem k n o tty pine k itchen and d ine tte , u tility room , brick stru c tu re , new oil b ea ter. T w o-sto ry , tw o ca r garage, la rge lot.

Inquire at 163 Stockton Street Or CaU 8-1134

You’ll Enjoy Shopping at Yardville And You’ll Save Money and Time Too!

^ Y A R D V IL L E SA LES CENTERROUTE 130 (formerly Rt. 25,4 mL from Trenton)

Carnation, Borden’s Nestles or Pet EVAPORATED MILK, 8 tall can s........... „$1.00FREE! 2-lb. Box NEW DASH DOG MEAL When You By 5-lb box ........................ ............73c

Tenderized, All Center CutsSLICES of HAM, lb............................ :....... ...... 79c

Sugar CuredSLICED BACON, 3 lbs........................................ 79c

EVERY FRI. 4 SAT.AUCTION Bid Yourself the Biggest

Bargains Auiywhere!

Money Back Guarantee On Ml SALES

Page 8: Record Classes Slated Listed for Wednesday Days in State ...€¦ · An Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity 106TH YEAR, No, 50

Pit* Eight HIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE, MERCER COUNTY, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955

EAST WINDSOR TOWNSHIPMERCER COUNTY ............ -

AN ORDINANCE ESTABLISHING A SANITARY CODE FOR THE TOWN­SHIP OF EAST WINDSOR IN THE COUNTY OF MERCER AND PRO­VIDING PENALTIES FOR THE VIOLATION THEREOF AND PRO VIDING FOR LICENSING OF BOARDING AND ROOMING HOUS­ES AND PROVIDING PENALTIES FOR THE VIOLATION THEREOF. BE IT ORDAINED by the Board of

Health of the Township of East Wind­sor in the County of Mercer as fol­lowsSection 1. This ordinance, together with any and all ordinances supple­mentary thereto or amendatory there­of, shall be known as the “Sanitary Code of the Township of East Windsor in the County of Mercer.”

DEFINITIONSSection 2. The terms “Board,” “this

Board,” “said Board” and "Board of Health,” shall mean the Board of Health of the Township of East Wind­sor in the County of Mercer.

Section 3. The word “regulation” as used herein shall Include such spe­cial regulations as the Board mayfiromuJgate from time to time, and he word “permit” as used herein

shall mean the permission in writing of the Board, issued according to this ordinance, amendments or supple­ments thereto, or the rules, regula­tions or resolutions of the Board, and the word “light” or “lighted” as used herein shall mean natural, external light, or adequate artificial lighting.

Section 4. The words "Contagious disease” shall include any disease of an infectious, contagious or pestilen­tial nature with which any person may be sick, affected or attacked, and any and all diseases and ailments that have been, or may hereafter be, des­ignated as such by any law of the State of New Jersey, by the Depart­ment of Health of said State or by said Board of Health.

Section 5. The terms "Township. “The Township.” and “This Town­ship,” shall mean the Township of East Windsor in the County of Mercer.

Section 8. The term “Health Offi­cer” as used herein shall mean the Health Officer of the Township of East Windsor in the County of Mer­cer.Section 7. The term “person” as used herein shall be held to include both singular and plural, and both masculine and feminine, and also in­dividuals, corporations, societies, firms and associations.

Section 8. The term “food” as used herein shall include every article used for food or drink by human beings, every ingredient in every such arti­cle. all confectionery, and all drinks and beverages known as soft drinks.

Section 9. The term “Communicable disease” shall include all diseases that have been, or may hereafter be. desig­nated as such by the Department of Health of the State of New Jersey or by said Board of Health.

Section 10. The term “Isolation” shall mean the separation of a per­son affected with, or suspected of be­ing affected with, or a carrier of the Infectious agent, any communicable disease, from other persons, in such a manner as will prevent the direct or inirect conveyance of the infec­tious agent to other persons,

Section n . The term “Quarantine” shall be held to mean the restriction of movement of any person who has been exposed to a communicable dis­ease, by the confinement of such per­son within a restricted area, and the exclusion of other persons from such area.

Section 12. The term “Contact” or ‘‘Suspect’’ shall mean any person who has been sufficiently near or exposed to an infected person to make prob­able the transmission of the infectious a^ent to the person so near or expos-

Action 13. The term "Carrier” shall mean any person who harbors an in­fectious agent, but who at such time, has no symptoms of the disease.

Section 14. The term “Infectious A- genr* ghaTI mean the virus or organ­ism, capable, under favorable condi­tions, of producing the disease.

Section 15. The term “Professional Attendant” shall mean any person, regularly licensed to practice medi­cine or surgery, any t^rson engaged In the practice of midwifery, or any person who makes a business or vo­cation of rendering aid, treatment or advice to others lor the purpose of alleviating physical or mental Illness.

ORGANIZA^ON AND POWERS Section 18. The Board of Health

shall elect annually at Its January meeting a President and a Vice-Presi­dent from among Its members, and shall also appoint a Secretary to said Board and. at Its January meeting held at the expiration of each suc­cessive period of three years, shall appoint a Registrar of Vital Statistics for the term of three years.

The said Board of Health may ap­point a Health Officer, and such sani­tary inspectors, plumbing inspectors, clerks and other officers and assist­ants as said Board may deem neces­sary.The employees of said Board of Health shall be governed by the rules of said Board, and may be removed for cause by said Board.

The Board of Health shall not con­tract any debt or debts of any kind beyond the amount of the appropri­ation made for the use of said Board by the Township Committee of the said 'Township.

The Secretary shall perform such duties as the Board of Health may direct, and shall transmit an annual report, after approval by the Board, to the Township Committee of said Township.

The Health Officer shall act as the executive officer for the Board; he shall make investigations for. enforce the ordinances and regulations of, andgerform such other duties as he may

e directed by, the Board of Health. He shall have, possess and exercise all the power and authority conferred upon or vested in said Board by law, when he shall be engaged in the per­formance of anv such duties.

Section 17. The Board of Health shall have the power to adopt such rules and regulations as it may deem necessary concerning any matter which involves the protection or pro­motion of health, and all persons con­cerned shall comply with the provi­sions thereof.NUISANCES

Section 18. Whatever Is dangerous or detrimental to the public health, whatever renders the air, water, soil or food a hazard, menace or detriment to human health Including the follow­ing specific acts, sUtes. or conditions are, each and every one. is hereby declared to be and constitute a nuls-*”paragraph 1. The disposition or maintenance of any foul, decaying or offensive matter In or upon any lot, yard, street or in any private or pub- Uc place.

Paragraph 2. The maintenance of any sunken lot, spot or excavation, or any cans, barrels or other recep­tacles where water may stagnate, or mosquito or other Insect larvae breed,

Paragraph 3. The throwing or over­flowing of any water, slops, stable drainage, liquid filth, cesspool or privy contents upon any public or private^'pw^graph 4. Any polluted stream of water, spring, well or source of drink­ing water.Paragraph 5. Shaking any mop. dus­ter, broom or other cleaning utensil or device out of any window, or throw­ing any dust or dirt out of any win­dow. .Paragraph 6. Taking any dog into, or permitting any dog to enter, any store or other place where food is exposed for sale within two feet from the floor thereof. . , , ,Paragraph 7. Doing laundry work as a gainful occupation In any home that is unsanitary, or under conditions that have not been approved by the Board of Health. Every person do­ing laundry work as a gainful pccu- paUon at home shall register his or her name and occupation with the Health Officer.Paragraph 8. Sleeping in. or per­mitting any other person to sleep In. any c ^ a r or other place that is or may be in a condition prejudicial to health.Paragraph 9. Any chimney, smoke­stack. pipe or flue, or any part there­of or any connection therewith, that is so defective or out of repair as to allow coal gas or other noxious fumes to escape into any building; and alao any gas-pipe or other fixture wtUch allows Illuminating gas to es

into any building.nK rag ra i* 10. Any unclean or un- a a i ^ ^ o<mdltion in any cellar, room or building, end any imperfect plumb­

ing, sewer appliance or fixture, from which may Issue any foul or noxious odors or liquids.

Paragraph 11. The housing of hors­es. cattle, swine, goats, sheep, rab­bits, fowl or pigeons or any of the same in any building used as a habit­ation for human beings.

Paragraph 12. The keeping of any cattle, swine, sheep, goats, rabbits, poultry, fowl, pigeons, parakeets, par­rots, canaries or other birds or ani­mals within said Township, except un­der conditions approved by the Health Officer in writing.

Paragraph 13. The escape of any gas. fumes, or smoke which may be a menace or detriment to human health, or which may be. by reason of disagreeable or noxious odors therefrom or therewith, a source of discomfort or distress to persons In the vicinity thereof.

Paragraph 14. More than one per­son sleeping, or being permitted to sleep, in any room containing less than 400 cubic feet of air space for each of the persons sleeping therein.

Paragraph 15. The offering for use by more than one person, without thorough cleaning and sterilization aft­er the use thereof by each person, of any cup, drinking glass or other drink­ing vessel, any saucer, dish, knife, fork, spoon, towel, comb, hair brush, shaving brush or shaving mug.

Paragraph 16. The maintenance for common use of any device usually known as a cigar cutter in any store, restaurant or other public place.

Paragraph 17. The distribution on any street or highway from house to house, of any package or bottle con­taining samples of medicine, except by written permission of the Health Officer. No samples shall be throwm or placed in or upon automobiles or other vehicles, upon doorsteps or porches, or UF>on or in any place where they, or any of them, may be picked up by children.

Paragraph 18. Spitting upon the steps, halls, floors or other parts of any public or private building, or upon any sidewalk, crosswalk or path In any public highw’ay, park or play­ground.

Paragraph 19. Coughing or sneezing without an earnest attempt to cover the mouth and nose with the hand or with a suitable piece of gauze or handkerchief.

Paragraph 20. Maintaining any vehi­cle used for hire, or for the transport­ation of the public, in a dirty or un­sanitary condition.

Paragraph 21. Maintenance of any stable, barn or other shelter for ani­mals in an unclean or unsanitary state or condition: any manure pit. box or other receptacle without a tight fitting cover, or without having the contents thereof completely remov- efi at least once each week, or within thirty feet of any dwelling; or any collection of manure, garbage or other waste in which the larvae of insects may breed, or in such a location as to causd contamination of a stream or %vell.Paragraph 22. Depositing, accumu-

food is contained, and any such vehi­cle or stand, shall be maintained in a clean and sanitary condition and in conformity with the regulations adopt­ed by the Board of Health.

Section 28. The owner, proprietor or person in charge of any place with­in said Township where food for hu­man use Is manufactured, prepared, handled, sold or served shall cause all garbage, offal, scraps and all oth­er refuse to be kept in water-tight containers tightly covered, and shall cause such containers to be emptied, the entire contents thereof to h« re­moved and disposed of, and such con­tainers to be cleaned, every second day, and more frequently if required by the Health Officer.

Section 29. No meats, sea food, vege­tables or other articles to be sold or offered for sale within said Township for food for human use shall be stor­ed or displayed within eighteen inches above the floor, and all such articles shall be suitably protected from con­tamination with dust, dirt or floor refuse.

Section 30. It shall be the duty of the owner, proprietor or person in charge of any restaurant, hotel, tea­room, lunch counter, lunch room, ice cream parlor, soda fountain, inn, tav­ern. bar or other place within said Township where food or drink for hu­man use is sold or served to provide and use adequate facilities for the treatment of all cooking and eating utensils used therein or thereabout with boiling water, steam under pres­sure or other suitable means, and all such utensils Intended for use again. Including cooking pans, pots, vessels, cups, glasses, knives, forks, spoons and dishes, shall be washed in boiling water, or shall be treated after wash­ing by steam under pressure for at least three minutes, or shall be treated bv any other method approved by the Health Officer, in order that each of any such article shall be thoroughly sterilized before further use.

The use of paper cups, plates or other single-service articles shall be required in all cases wherever prac­ticable, and all such articles shall be destroyed after being used once.

Section 31. No person shall sell or expose for sale for human food within the Township any meat, meat prod­ucts. or any part of any cattle, calf, sheep, swine or goat unless such ani­mal has been inspected both before and after slaughtering by a meat in­spector duly appointed by the United States government, or by some other officer who has been approved by the Board of Health, and all such meat shall have been approved as fit for food for human use. and shall have been stamped with a proper identi­fication mark or marks according to the system in use by the United States Bureau of Animal Industry.

Section 32. Ice Cream is hereby de­fined as a frozen product made from cream with the addition of milk, eggs, fruits, nuts and sugars, without arti­ficial coloring or flavoring. It shall contain not less than ten per cent of

lating, or dumping anything that of- milk fats, except when the Ingredientsfers or produces a breeding or hiding place for rodents, vermin or insects.

Paragraph 23. Collecting or convey­ing through, across or along the streets or highways of said Township of any garbage, swill, offal, dead ani­mal or other offensive matter, ex­cept in vehicles or containers, and in such manner, as may be approved by the Health Officer in writing under the rules and regulations of the Board of Health. , .Paragraph 24. Any dug well which does not have a waterproof wall at least six (6) feet below grade nor does not extend at least six (6) Inches above grade, nor which does not have

tight-fitting waterproof top.Paragraph 25. Maintaining, keeping,

feeding or harboring more than two (2) cats and or two (2) dogs in any house or building or on any premises except with the written permission of the Health Officer.Section 19. The Board of Health and any of Its members, agents or em- pinye^s, shall possess the right of en­try into and upon any pilbllC or private building or premises for the purpose of enforcing or determining whether the provisions of the Sanitary Code, the rules and regulations of the Board, the Sanitary Code of the State of New Jersey, or the rules and regu­lations of the Department of Health of the State of New Jersey, are being complied with or obeyed. No person shall oppose, hinder or Interfere with any such entry of the Board of Health, or any of its members, agents or em­ployees, in the performance of their duty,

VITAL STATISTICS Section 20. All reports of births,

deaths and marriages shall comply with the laws and regulations of the New Jersey State Department of Health. _ . „„„COMMUNICABLE DISEASES

Section 21. The reporting, quaran­tining, Isolating and handling of all communicable and reportable diseases shall be done in the manner and un­der the rules and regulations as set forth in Chapter II of the New Jersey Department of Health State Sanitary Code, as revised and enacted by the Public Health Council of the State of New Jersey. June 22. 1953.

FOOD AND DRINK Section 22. No person affected with

any contagious or communicable dis­ease which shall be at an Infectious stage shall be employed, be in at­tendance at or be engaged In any work In any store, shop, stand, mar­ket, restaurant or lunch room in which any article of food for human consumption is exposed for sale, serv­ed. prepared or cooked.

Section 23. No person shall sell or offer for sale within said Township any food or drink for human use which has been exposed to any con­tagious or communicable disease, or mislabeled or adulterated within the provisions of the laws of the State of New Jersey, or which contains or has been exposed to any Injurious con­tamination. ^Section 24. The owner, proprietor or person in charge of every factory, restaurant, store, market, hotel, room or other place within said Township where food or drink for human con­sumption shall be manufactured, pre­pared, handled, stored, sold or served, shall cause such place to be properly lighted, ventilated and drained, pur­suant to the provisions of this ordi­nance, and shall permit no bedroom, water closet or urinal within or di­rectly connected with any room or place in which food or drink for hu­man consumption is manufactured, prepared, handled, stored, served, or sold, and shall provide adequate wash­ing facilities in convenient locations for all workmen and employees.

Section 25. The owner, proprietor or person in charge of every factory, store, market, restaurant, hotel, room or other place within said Township where food or drink for human con­sumption Shan be manufactured, pre­pared. handled, stored, sold or serv­ed. shall cause such place, together with all dishes, utensils, equipment and appurtenances to be kept in a thoroughly clean and sanitary condi­tion at all times, shall conduct all op­erations connected with the manufac­ture, preparation, handling storage, sale or serving of such food and drink In a clean and sanitary manner, and shall protect such food or drink dur­ing all processes and at all times, including the delivery thereof, from flies, dust, dirt, vermin and all for­eign or Injurious contamination; and all workmen shall wear clean cloth­ing at all times while working in any such place.

Live polutry shall not be kept In the same room or compartment in which meats are prepared, stored or exposed for sale, nor shall live poultry be kept in any adjoining room or space except by permission of the Board of Health.

Section 26. No person shall expose for sale within any store or building, or In any other place, within said Township any food for human con­sumption which is ordinarily consum­ed without cooking or without further cooking, with the exception of fruits, vegetables and berries, unless the same be in closed containers.

All bread and other bakery pro­ducts which shall be offered or ex­posed for sale, or handled in process of delivery within said Township shall be suitably wrapped and covered in such a manner as to be completelyKrotected from dust, dirt, or other un-

ealthful contact or contamination. Section 27. No food shall be sold or

exposed for sale from Apj .push cart, wagon or truck or otbw^efaicle or any stand on or along dny' wtiwalk or street of said Township liSUess such food and all receptacles wherein such

contain nuts, fruits or eggs. In which instance it shall contain not less than eight per cent of milk fats. Melted ice cream shall not be frozen nor used in the preparation of ice cream or other similar products.

Section 33. No person shall sell de­liver, or distribute from any wagon, push cart or other vehicle, or from anv stand or counter, in or about the streets or highways, or at fair, carni­val or circus grounds, at game fields or grounds or other similar places on or off the streets or highways, within said Township any ice cream, ice cream cones, ices, sherberts or other frozen confections, unless each por­tion thereof sold, delivered or distri­buted be completely wrapped in a vegetable parchment or other sanitary waterproof wrapper.

Section 34. No person shall sell, or offer or expose for sale, any ice cream, or any water ice or sherbet, within said Township, which contains any Ingredient the sale of which sep- ffr f&Ty pjiaii be unlawful, nor any ice cream, or water Tw or snerbel, has been made from milk or cream which has neither been boiled nor pas­teurized, nor any ice cream, or water ice or sherbert, which shall contain more than five hundred thousand (500,000) bacteria per cubic centimeter thereof. . ^Section 35. The owner, proprietor or person in charge of every factory, store, market, restaurant, delivery wa­gon, truck or other place or vehicle within said Township wherein or where­at any food or drink for human use Is manufactured, prepared, handled, sold, stored, served or transported, shall permit the Board of Health, the Health Officer and its or his author­ized representative to take such sam­ples of any such food or drink there­from as may be necessary for exam­ination, upon tender of proper pay­ment. . ^Section 36. Whenever any substance intended for food or drink for human use shall be found being offered or exposed for sale, or held in possession with intent to sell within said Town­ship, which shall be. in the opinion of the Board of Health, unfit for human use or likely to cause or transmit any disease, the Health Officer shall order the same to be removed and disposed of, and thereupon it shall become the duty of the owner or person in charge of such substance to immediately re­move and dispose of the same at his or her own cost and expense accord­ing to the directions of the Health Officer. In the event that the owner or person in charge of such substance shall fall to Immediately remove and dispose of the same in compliance with such directions, the Health Offi­cer mav cause such substance to be removed and disposed of at the cost and expense of said owner or person In charge thereof. ,

Section 37. The Boara of Health shall have power to close any factory, store, market, bakery, restaurant or other premises within said Township where food or drink Intended for hu­man use shall be manufactured, pre­pared, handled, stored, sold or serv­ed, whenever, after written notice from the Health Officer, the owner or per­son in charge of such establishment or place shall fail, refuse or neglect to keep such establishment or place in a clean and sanitary condition, or whenever such food or drink, or the sale of the same, shall, in the opinion of said Board, be likely to cause or transmit disease. Such notice of such closing shall be served upon the own­er or person In charge of such estab­lishment or place, and shall remain in effect until the objectionable condi­tion shall have been remedied. It shall be the duty of the owner or per­son in charge of such establishment or place to immediately comply with and obey such order and notice, and to conduct no further operation pro­hibited or suspended thereby until per­mission therefore shall be granted by the Board of Health.

HOUSINGSection 38. The owner or person in

charge of any store, factory or other building used for business purposes shall provide an adequate supply of water therein or thereabout, shall pro­vide water closets and wash room fa­cilities as required in this code, and shall cause all plumbing to be kept In good working order and sanitary at all times.Section 39. The owner, leasee or person in charge of any building con­taining six or more apartments shall provide adequate janitor service at all times for the purpose of keeping said premises clean and sanitary and shall cause all garbage, ashes and other household waste from each apartment to be removed dally.

Section 40. It shall be the duty of every person, firm or corporation who or which shall contract, undertake or agree, or shall have contracted, under­taken or agreed, orally or In writing, to heat, or to furnish heat for, any building within the Township occupied as ,a residence by more than two families, to furnish sufficient heat to any occupied part of such building to maintain at all times between the hours of six o’clock in the morning and ten o’clock at night a minimum temperature of sixty-eight degrees Fah­renheit. The supply of heat herein­above required shall be furnished for or to all buildings or parts thereof us­ed for business from the first day of October in each year to the first day of May of the succeeding year, pro­vided that the requirements of this section shall not apply to buildings orEarts thereof used for any trade or

usiness in which high or low tem­peratures are essential. The term "Contracted” as used in this section shall be construed to mean and In­clude any written or Implied contract, lease or letting, and the presence

of any heating outlets, radiators, ris­ers or returns in any hall, room or other part of a building shall be prlma facie evidence of an Implied con­tract. The presence of any central heating plant, furnace or boiler under the control of the owner, lessee or person in charge of said building shall be prima facie evidence of an im­plied contract.

Section 41. The owner, lessee or oc­cupant of any tenement, house or dwelling, or any part thereof, within said Township shall cause all rooms, passages, stairs, floors. windows, walls, ceilings, privies, cesspools and drains of the house, or the part of the house of which he or she shall be the owner, agent, lessee or occupant, to be thoroughly cleansed, to the satis­faction of the Board of’ Health or the Health Officer, as often as may be required by said Board or said Health Officer, and shall cause the walls and ceilings thereof to be cleaned or paint­ed as often as may be required by said Board or said Health Officer.

Section 42. Whenever any building, or part thereof, within said Township shall be found to be in such condition as to be a menace or detriment to the health of persons occupying the same, the Board of Health may order such building vacated, and may require such building to remain vacated until such time as the unhealthful condi­tions are remdied to the satisfaction of said Board. Anyone of the follow­ing specific acts, states and condi­tions shall be deemed sufficient cause to condemn a building or part thereof for human habitation.

(a) Lack of adequate plumbing fa­cilities as required in the plumb­ing or housing section of this or­dinance.(b) Lack of water or lack of a potable supply of water on the premises.(c) A chimney that is a fire haz­ard or the lack of a chimney.(d) A building in the opinion of the Health Officer that contains too many vermin and or too many insects.(e) A building that is not weather-

tight because of a leaking roof or leaking side walls.

(f) A building that is in such a location that because of its sur­roundings, whether it be a high water level In the earth, noxious odors or vapors, or other external causes deemed by the Health Of­ficer to be a hazard to the health of the occupants therein.(g) Any building that does not contain at least 500 cubic feet of interior usable space per occu­pant.(h) Lack of adequate ventilation in the building.(1) An accumulation of filth in the building that the Health Officer may deem prejudicial to the health of the occupants therein.

Section 43. Every owner of land within said Township upon which land shall hereafter be constructed, alter­ed or converted or placed upon or moved in anv new or old building Intended for human habitation, shall cause to be constructed or placed therein a sink and also a water closet or toilet with the facilities for the de­livery thereto and use thereat of run­ning water of a quality safe for human consumption and a quantity neces­sary for the proper use of such fix­tures, which sink and water closet or toilet and the pipe and fittings used in connection with either of the same, shall conform to the provisions of this ordinance; provided, however, that the Board of Health may grant permis­sion for use for human habitataion of a house or building not containing the facilities specified in this section only temporarily and for a period not ex­ceeding six months in any year.

Section 44. No home, building or oth­er premises constructed prior to the enactment of this ordinance shall be rented or the human occupancy there­of otherwise permitted, unless the same has, the following minimal facil­ities or the equivalent thereof installed pursuant to the provisions of this or-

(a) If there Is located a privy on the property, said privy must com­ply with Section 47 of this ordi­nance.(b) If there is a well on the prop­erty. said well must comply with Section 45 of this ordinance.(c) If there are no plumbing fix­tures In the house or building and there is a well and privy on the property, a sink with running wat­er must be installed in said house or building and conneeted with pip­ing to comply with Section 56 of this ordinance.(d) If any house or building has neither well nor privy on the property and does not have Inter­ior plumbing facilities, then said house or building must comply with Section 45-Section 47 and Section 56, of this ordinance.

WELLSSection 45. All wells in East Wind­

sor Township heretofore or hereafter constructed or maintained shall be at least twenty (20) feet deep.

(a) Dug wells heretofore or here­after constructed or maintained shall have a waterproof wall or casing at least six (6) feet below the ground and which shall ex­tend at least six (d) Inches above the ground. Every well shall have a waterproof covering extending at least three (3) inches beyond the well casing. Earth or other approved' material shall be bank­ed against the well casing so that surface water will be diverted a- way from the w'eH.(b) Spear point driven wells of a size pipe from one to two inches shall be Installed and located as the Health Officer may direct.(c) Driven wells of a size two and a half (2 V2) inches to twelve (12) Inches shall be installed and lo­cated as the Health Officer may direct.

HOUSE DRAINAGESection 46. No privy vault or cess­

pool shall be constructed within said Township unless a permit for such construction shall have first been ob­tained from the Health Officer. Cess­pools will be permitted only where there Is no Inside toilet.

No privy vault, cesspool, septic tank or drain field shall be constructed with­in fifty feet of any well or spring, within twenty-five feet of any stream of water, within five feet of any party line or fence, within fifteen feet of any boundary of any street nor within twenty-five feet of anv door or win­dow of any house used as a dwelling.

Any drainage or overflow from any privy vault or cesspool shall not be allowed to flow upon the surface of the ground, nor into any stream of water. But the same shall be disposed of in a sanitary manner.

In the instance of an irregular lot or parcel of land wherein the regu­lations set forth in this section cannot be conveniently complied with, the- said Board may modify said regula­tions or adopt special regulation®.

No privy vault or cesspool shall hereafter be permitted along the line of or adjacent to any sewer in any street in said Towmship unless tlto use of such sewer would be imprac­ticable because of the low graae of the lot on which such privay vault or cesspoll is situated, or under spe­cial circumstances in which Instances the said Board may permit such cwi* structlon.

Upon the completion of. and before covering with earth or using, any such&rivy vault or cesspool lart here In-

efore referred to, the said Board shall be notified in writing that all of the regulations and requirements gov­erning the construction thereof have been complied with: and said Board may order an inspection thereof.

Section 47. All privies heretofore or hereafter constructed, reconstructed, altered or maintained In East Wind­sor Towmship shall have constructed a water-tight, concrete, brick, block or other masonary vault, not less than thirty-six (36) inches deep and ex­tending at least six (6) Inches above the level of the ground. Upon such vault shall be constructed, reconstruct­ed, altered or repaired a privy build­ing. Every privy shall have a tight fitting self-closing door. Every venti­lating opening or window opening shall be tightly screened against flies and other small insects. Every privy shall have a self-closing, tight-fitting lid so constructed that it v«Hl] cover the seat opening when not in use. Ail privies must be cleaned on or be­fore the excrement reaches the height of the ground level. All privies must be flnlsned on the Inside with an im­pervious material or If constructed with wood be painted on the Inside with at least three coats of paint,

the final coat white and with a hardSection 48. No drainage from any

closet, bath tub, laundry tub, kitchen sink or other similar fixture or ap­pliance shall be permitted to flow up­on the ground, nor shall any such drainage be diverted Into any surface or sub-surface drain Intended to carry away the natural flow of rain water, nor upon any public high­way. PLUMBINGDEFINITIONS— _ .PLUMBING SYSTEM—The Plumb­ing and Drainage System” of a btold- ing includes the pipes within the build­ing distributing the water supply, the plumbing fixtures and traps, the soil waste and vent pipes, the house drain and house sewer, with their devises, appurtenances and connections.

SOIL PIPE—A “Soil Pipe” is any pipe which receives the discharge of water closets, with or without the dis­charge from other fixtures, and con­veys the same to the house drain.

WASTE PIPE—The “Waste Pipe Is any pipe which receives the discharge of any fixture, except water closets, and conveys the same to the house drain, soil or waste stacks.

TRAP—A “Trap” is a fitting or de­vice so constructed as to retain a wat­er seal to prevent the passage of air, or gas, through a pipe without ma­terially affecting the free flow of sew­age or waste water,

STACK—“ S tack” is a general term for any v ertica l line of soil, w aste or vent piping.

SOIL OR WASTE VENT—The "Soil or Waste Vent” is that part of the main soil or waste stack extending through the roof and above the highest fixture outlet.

PLUMBING FIXTURES—“ Plum bing F ix tu res” a re receptacles intended to receive and discharge w ater, liquid or w ater c a rried wastes into a drain ­age system with which they a re con­nected.

SIZES AND LENGTHS—The given caliber or size of pipe is for a stan­dard internal diameter, except for brass pipe other than iron pipe size, which may be outside diameter and the length of the pipe is its develop­ed length along Its center line.

Section 49. The respective sizes of trap and waste branches for the fol­lowing respective given fixtures, drain traps or waste traps, and the respec­tive distances from a vent at which any such fixtures mav be Installed without reventing, shall not be less than as follows: Dis­

tance out- in

let of feet Trap-In- drain in- with-

ternal ternal out dlame- diame- re- ter In ter in vent-

FIXTURE inches Inches Ing Wash forWater Closet ...» Slop sink with

trap combined . Pedestal urinal .Laundry tubs Kitchen sinks (resi­

dence) .............Kitchen sinks (ho­

tel or restau­rant) ...............

4 4 02V4 4 52'/a 3 82U 3 82 2 8I!a 1 2 8

1*2 10

.. 2 2 Trapmust

bevented

I*,a 2 8I '2 1*2 8

Pantry or soda fountain sinks ....

Wash Basin(single) ............

Wash Basins (2 or3 combined) ...... Hi

Bath tub .............. IV2Shower bath ......... 2Drinking fountain Hi

Section 50. The respective maximum number of fixtures which shall be permitted to be connected with each of the following respective sizes of pipes shall be as follows:

Internal

2H i2h ;

d iam eter oT pipein inches

22 ' i34

Section 51.

BranchFixture

20

WatorClosets

0 0 0

12 36

168 84420 105

____ _____ All horizontal housedrains within the walls of, or under, any buildings, must be medium weight cast iron pipe, not less than four (4) inches in diameter. GalvanizedWTought Iron, galvanized steel, brass pipe, may be used above the ground only. \^ e re house drain isrun above cellar floor, it must be sup­ported at Intervals of not more than eight (8) feet, by eight (8) inch brick or concrete piers, accepted Iron brac­kets, or be suspended from the floor beams by heavy accepted iron hang­ers. The house drain shall be sup plied with at least two four-inch "Y” cleanouts: the first at or near the IKjint where the house drain leaves the foundation wall and on the inner side thereof; the second at the end of the house drain near its junction with the main soil stack. In no case shall said cleanout be more than thirty (30) feet apart. When under­ground. the cleanout must be extend ed to the surface of the floor. All soil pipe and soil pipe connections shall be caulked with oakum and o- ver which shall be poured hot lead, the lead caulked after it has become cold. Twelve (12) ounces of leadshall be used per inch of pipe.

Section 52. Waste pipes shall be gal vanized steel, galvanized wrought iron cast iron or lead. "When using lead the connection shall be made with a wiped Joint. All pipes shall bethoroughly reamed and pipe dope put on the male thread only. All fittings used on waste lines shall be of the galvanized drainage type. Suitable cleanouts shall be used at every change of direction.

Section 53. The smalle.st main soil vent extending throogh the roof shall be four (4) inches. All roof flanges shall be of either lead or copper, and shall be made water tight. Every dwelling constructed after this date, which Is to be used for human habit­ation. must have an outlet left In the plumbing system for an automatic washer, a comreirtial washer, or a wash tub. A four (4) Inch vent must be Installed over the baffleplate on the inlet side of a septic tank if used, or connected Into a tee on the inlet side of a cesspool. If used, and ex­tended eight (8) Inches above the grade level and protected by the use of vent cap,

Section 54, No water closet, lava­tory, and bath tub shall be Installed In an inclosure where there is less than thirty-five (35) square feet of floor area. A single water closet shall not be Installed In any area less than thirty (30) inches by forty-two (42) inches. No water closet shall be in­stalled closer than fifteen (15) Inches to any wall or other obstruction. The minimum width of a bath room shall be four (4) feet. In any bath room using the minimum area of thirty- five (S3) square feet, the Health Of­ficer shall be consulted as to the lay­out of the fixtures. AH bath rooms and toilet rooms must have an outside window opening or an air duct In the ceiling at least eight (8) Inches In dia­meter or mechanical ventilation as ap­proved by the Health Officer.

Section 55. No sink, lavatory, wash tub, or any other fixture trap may be connected to the waste line by the use of locknuts, or slip nuts, except when the locknuts or slip nuts are on the house side of the fixture trap and are located above the water seal of said trap. In all other cases fix­ture traps must be connected to the waste line by the use of solder bush­ing, solder ring, a screw thread, or a wiped Joint.

Section 56. Sinks and other small fixtures such as bath tubs, lavtor- les. laundry trays, drinking fountains, home washing machines, ^c ; but ex­cluding water closets, slop sinks and other fixtures using a trap size of over two (2) inches; shall have a two (2) inch house drain and a two (2) inch stack through the roof and have connected to such drain not more than four (4) such small fixtures. Where the house drain is laid In earth or concrete the pipe shall be two (2) inch medium weight cast iron pipe. There shall be placed a Wye cleanout on the Inside of the foundation and at every change in direction on the house drain and waste lines to said small fixtures. A fixture shall be connected Into the vertical stack so that the base of the stack shall always be w adiad by the fixture waste. Such fixture or fixtures shall connect to a property constructed cesspool, or septic t a «

and disposal field, as the Health Of­ficer may direct.

Section 57.Paragraph 1. GENERAL WATER CLOSET ACCOMMODATION. The owner or owners, lessee, or agent, of any building, or premises, used in any manner for occupation by human be­ings for business, dwelling, place of employment, amusement, or other pur­poses. shall provide and maintain in good serviceable and sanitary condi­tion. sufficient water closet and urinal accommodation for each sex. with proper washing facilities In proportion to the number of occupants as herein­after specified.

Paragraph 2. TENEMENT OR APARTMENT HOUSES. The term tenement or apartment house shall be taken to mean every building which or a portion of which is oc­cupied, or to be occupied as a resi­dence for three or more families, liv­ing independently of each other and doing their own cooking on the prem­ises. Every tenement house hereaft­er erected and every existing prop­erty that Is altered or remodeled for use as a tenement house shall have within each apartment one water clos­et, one lavatory, one bath tub or show­er, and one sink, Every bathroom shall be separate from any other apartment, and ventilated according to Section 54. The floor of every such compartment hereafter constructed, shall be constructed according to Sec­tion 58. The walls of said compart­ment shall be enclosed on all sides with plaster partitions carried from floor to ceiling. Each sink and lava­tory have both hot and cold water to same.

Paragraph 3. SERVICE OR GAS STATIONS, Every service station or gas station constructed after this date shall have at least a water closet, lavatory, and floor drain in the Ladies Room and a water closet, lavatory, urinal, and floor drain In the Men s Room. A garage catch basin of the proper size and construction, to be approved by the Health Officer, shall be installed in the wash room of each station. Each lavaotory shall have both hot and cold water connected to same.

Paragraph 4. TOILET ROOMS IN VARIOUS BUILDINGS, Water closet compartment in all places used by the public shall be plainly marked- “Men’s Toilet” and for females-“Wom- en's Toilet." Amusement parks, pic­nic groves and all outdoor places of amusement, heretofore or hereafter constructed, reconstructed or maintain­ed, shall be provided with suitable water closet acommodatlons for both

■s. Nni less tliaa one (1) water closet and one (1) lavatory In wom­en's toilet room and one (1) water closet, one (1) urinal and one (I) lavatory in men’s toilet room. The number of persons to be accomodated shall be based upon the actual num­ber of persons accommodated in sta­tionary seats or benches as follows: One water closet for each 400 males, or fraction thereof.One water closet for each 200 females, or fraction thereof.One urinal for each 200 males, or fraction thereof.

One additional lavatory shall be pro­vided In each water closet compart­ment for each additional 400 persons, or fraction thereof, and it shall be assumed that the number of persons attending such places shall be equal­ly divided as to sex.

Paragraph 5. BAKERIES AND ALL BUILDINGS WHERE FOOD PRO­DUCTS ARE MANUFACTURED. Bak­eries, and all buildings where manu­facturing of food products is carried on heretofore or hereafter construct­ed. reconstructed or maintained, shall be provided with suitable toilets and washrooms. Where males and fe­males are employed, separate toilets and washrooms shall be maintained as follows:

When less than five (5) persons are employed of both sexes, one (1) water closet, and one (1) lava­tory with hot and cold water con­nected to same, shall be installed. Wtiaa mora tiuui five paraona are employed there shall be at least one (1) water closet, one (1) lavatory with hot and cold water connected to same, and one (1) urnial for each twenty (20) males employed. There shall be at least one (1) water closet and one (1) lavatory with hot and cold water connected to same, for each fifteen (15) females employed. Each of these toilet rooms shall be separate from each other and marked clearly as to the sex. The toilet room shall have no direct communication to the rooms where food products are produced.

Paragraph 6. CLUB ROOMS, LODGE ROOMS, DANCE AND ASSEMBLY HALLS. All Club rooms, lodge rooms, dance and assembly halls, shall be provided with water closet accommo­dations for both sexes as follows:

At least one (1) water closet, and one (1) lavatory with hot and cold water connected to same, in wom­en’s toilet room for each fifteen hundred (1,500) square feet of floor space, or fraction thereof, and men’s toilet room shall be pro­vided with at least one (1) water closet, one (1) lavaotry with hot and cold water connected to same, and one (1) urinal for each fifteen hundred (1,500) squre feet of floor space, or fraction thereof.

Paragraph 7. PLACES OF WOR­SHIP. In all places of worship hav­ing a seating capacity of fifty (50) persons, or more there shall be pro­vided separate water closet accom- inocatioiis for both sexes as follows:

One (1) water closet and one (1) lavatory In women's toilet room and one (1) water closet, one (1) urinal and one (1) lavatory in men’s room.

Such toilet rooms shall be accessibly located and plainly Indicated. All lav­atories shall be supplied with hot and cold running water.

® RAILROAD. AIRPORT. BUS STATIONS AND TERMINALS. Toilet accommodations for males and females shall be provided and main­tained as follows:

At least one (1) water closet, one (1) urinal and one (1) lavatory for males and one (1) water closet and one (1) lavatory for females and such additional water closets, tovatorles and urinals as the Board of Health may direct

Such toilet rooms shall be kept open during the hours of traffic. All lava­tories shall be supplied with hot and cold running water.

9- RESTAURANTS AND SIMILAR PLACES OF BUSINESS. Restaurants and all places where food Is prepared and offered for sale and eaten on the premises, heretofore or hereafter constructed, reconstructed or maintained, shall provide suitable wat­er closet accommodations for both sexes as follows:

One (1) water closet, one (1) lava­tory and one (1) urinal In toilet room for males where the seating

Im s thanfifty (50), and one additional water closet and urnial for each addi­tional fifty seats. There shall be at least one (1) water closet and one (1) lavatory in toilet room for fernales and one (I) additional water closet provided for each ad­r e n a l twenty-five (25) seats. Where the seating capacity Is

than one hundred (100) an additional water closet and urinal shall be provided for males and one (1) additional water closet and one (I) lavatory provided for fe­males.

The toilet rooms shall have no direct connection with the rooms where food is prep^ared. AH lavatories shall be supplied with hot and cold iimning water.

Paragraph 10. TAVERNS In aU places where beverages with an alcoh­olic content are offered for sale to be consumed on the premises, heretofore or hereafter constructed, reconstruct-

or toaintanled. shall have a t least one (1) water closet, one (1) urinal and one (1) lavatory provided for male patrons. Where fem ales a re se^ed, at least one (1) water cloaet

one (1) lavatory shaU be provlS- Where there is more than one

employed in serving drinka, additional accommodations shall be provided as the Board of Health may

I *>ulldlng wherein atavern is situated where persona live or e re em ployed a p a rt from said et* tabllshmcnC water eloi^ accomaS-

provided, separa ta , and distinct from those In the tav e rn •nf* »o situa ted aa to be accessib le

t h r o i ^ any p a r t of the ioJe ofiwch f ^ o r a g e t . All lavatortea shall

h e tu i^ ijB ed with hot and cold running

Paragraph 11. THEATRES AND att piT O R tpiS . E.ch theatre, auditor'turn and moUon picture theatre shall be provided with separate toilet room, for each sex as follows:-

In toilet rewms lor males, one(1) water closet, two (2) urin.!!hhh one (1) lavatory shaU iS S stalled for each six hundred 16001 seals or less. In toilet rooms™; females, one (1) water closet for each three hundred (300) seats o? less and one (1) lavatory for eart six hundred (600) seali or P"t tlrinldnB fountain shall S installed for each four hundr^ (400) seats or less. In addltta one (1) Water closet and one (?i lavatory shall be Installed for the use of Ihe moving picture operator situated conveniently to the Ixmh of the operator. ‘

All lavatories shall be supplied with hot and cold rxmnlng water Paragraph 12. PLACE OF EMPLOY

MENT feach factory workshop oL flee, store, or other place of employ, ment heretofore or hereafter con structed, reconstructed or maintainpH shall be provided with separate w S closet, urinal and washing facilltiM for each sex employed therein as foi. lows:

There shall not be less than onp (1) water closet and one (1) JJi nal, for each twenty (20) males, or less provided, however, that where less than five (5) males are em ployed, urinals may be omitted. There shall be not less than one (1) water closet for each fifteen (15) females, or less. In factories and workshops, the washing facU- ities shall be provided on a basis of one (1) faucet, with runnlna water, for each ten (10) persons or less, employed. ..These washing facilities may be provided by in- dividual lavatories, or wash sinks placed convenient to the toilet rooms or in the toilet rooms All washing facilities shall have hot and cold running water to same In offices, stores and other places of employment not less than one (1) lavatory, vlth hot and cold running water to same, shall be provided for each water closet in­stalled. Each factory and work­shop. at least one (1) drinking fountain shall be installed on each floor.

Paragraph 13. HOTELS. ROOMING AND BOARDING HOUSES. In each hotel, rooming and boarding house where separate water closet accom­modations are not provided for each room or suite, separate water closet accommodations shall be provided for each sex as follows:-

One (1) water closet, one (1) lava­tory, and one (1) bath tub or shower for each fifteen (15) pers- ons, or fraction thereof, who room or board therein. 'Where accom- modations are for males only, uri­nals shall be provided as the Board of Health may direct All lavatories, bath tubs, and show­ers shall be supplied with hot and cold running water.

Paragraph 14. SCHOOLS-PUBLIC AND P r iv a t e , in all schools, sep­arate water closet accommodations shall be provided for each sex as follows:

Water Closets:Girls—Grades one through eight One to 25 pupils Boys—Grades one through eight One to 40 pupils

Girls—Grades seven through twelve One to 45 pupilsBoys—Grades seven through twelve One to 60 pupils

UrinalsBoys—Grades one through six One to 30 pupils Boys — Grades seven through twelve One to 45 pupils

When flushometer valve-, are used, they shall be provided with approv­ed vacuum breakers.Lavatories

Boys and Girls—AU grades One to 40 pupils

Ratio shall include individual class­room fixtures, except that there strati be at tarat two lavatories in every general toilet room.Drinking fountains shall also be pro- vlded-One (1) for each two hundred (200) pupils or less.Kindergarten rooms shall be equip- p>ed with separate water closet fa­cilities.Section 58. ALL BATHROOMS AND

t o il e t room s in every building ex­cept private homes, shall have the flcHjrs covered its full area with an impervious material. An impervious material shaU also be used on the walls to a height of four (4) feet above the floor. Such Impervious materia! shall be of a composition and finish that can be easily cleaned and as ap­proved by the Health Officer,

Section 39. Whenever it shall ap­pear to the satisfaction of said Board of Health that the water of any well in said Township used for domestic purposes has become poUuted and ren- dred unsafe for potable use. the said Board may cause notice in writing to be served upon the owner of the prem­ises where such well is situated re­quiring such owner to close and fill up said well and to do all w’ork neces­sary for such purpose, and. if said own­er shall fall or neglect to comply wi i such notice, he or she shall become subject to the penalty hereinafte^r pro­vided, and the said Board may pro­ceed to cause such w’ell to be closed and filled up at the cost and expense of such owner. The standards to be used in determining the degree of pol­lution of wells shall be those adopted by the State Department of Health.

Section 60. Whenever said Board of Health shall have satisfactory evidence that any public water supply has be­come poUuted and rendered unsafe for potable use, a notice requiring the discontinuance of such supply of such polluted water shall be served upon or sent by registered mail to the per­son or persons who shall have been supplying said water, and such per­son or persons shall thereupon, upon receipt of such notice. Immediately discontinue such polluted water or pro­ceed under the direction of the said Board of Health to aboUsh the sourceof pollution. __BOARDING AND ROOMING HOUSES.

Section 81. No person, firm or cor­poration shall manage, conduct or erate the business of keeping a boar^ ing house or rooming house as deflnea in this ordinance, without first having obtained a license therefore in the manner herein provided- ,

Section 62. A Boarding house is herein defined to be any building in which three (3) or more persons not related by blood or marriage to the owner or operator of such business are lodged and served meals for a consideration. ,

Section 63. A rooming house Is herein defined to be any building where fur­nished rooms are rented for a con­sideration to three (3) or more ons not related by blood or to the owner or operator of such wisi-

Section 64. An appUcatlon for li­cense to manage, conduct and cairy on the business of a Boarding or room­ing house ShaU be made In writing, under oath, signed by the operator to the ^ a r d of Health on such forrn or forms as may be provided by m® Board of Health and shall set forth the foUowing: .

(a) Full name and address « proprietor or operator or suci boarding house or rooming hou^_(b) Name of the owner of to® premises and hls address. .(c) Location of the boarding house or rooming house. , .(d) The number and locations orbedrooms to be used for boarmns and rooming and the size of eacn room. . rtf(e) Statement as tobaths and toilets and their loca

Such appUcation shall be reterred to the Health Officer for Insi^ctioj and report. If the report of Officer discloses no violation of m Sanitary Code, a license may be 138 ed by the Board of Health, cense shall be for the calendar >« • It the report of the Health OMcer discloses a violation of the Sanitary Code, no license shall bo issued.

AU applications for renewal of cenoe shall be made by Novemwr 15th of the year preceding the Ucense^*Se^on 65. The fees for said license sh a ll be as foUows: ^

(a) For three (3)roomers. Ten DoUars ($10,00) pefbfV or four (4) boarders cr rw®' ers or more boarders or twenty-five DoUars ($25.00) P*

Aif ahaU accompany tbs tP*(Continueii on page 9)

Page 9: Record Classes Slated Listed for Wednesday Days in State ...€¦ · An Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity 106TH YEAR, No, 50

HIGHTSTO'R'X a^ZETTE, MERCER COUNTY, N EW JERSEY, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, I9S5{Continued from page 8 ) hereinabove rc o u ire d ____

’’f i n d e r or revocation ^ U- w rte o u M ^ ^ <2 S S “ i r » ' o ^ w ^^ issued, pnor to l u m b e r 31st of k«P< free and « « Hard labor, for a k v ^ i S e r ^^ y e a r of issue. shaU not eoUtie the c j ^ u id shall d m haibor flies. «*»?» a * cxeeedmc e c K f a r ^ A d i ­dder of an.v Uceose thereof to reim- ^ “ *»- = ««» . -» r c# tfce p e t ^ ^ E a r t ^ y ^ S £ rhSiement for an>* pro ra U portion “ » « « » « rermio. » « rKrfattoc shail be n e r i i S K ! ^

The license, fees hereinabove, T ^ eatottor greoads irf i m t after coemctioa t o e S ^ S £^ for .5> u ^ e s « h license i. roomai* h » deeeed a separate aad 5f t ^ e d for the purposes of regtUa- **„ ^ cieaa and o rd e ^. fecae « « o c i «r SectioB 7» , There shall aoe be keoi. G E X E E U .

^ t io n 66. Each building licensed i ^arberei lar cat- it if Secaon CS Ali ordmaaces asd anas a boarding house or rooming house ® boose or on PctmsMca thereof T m nrtitm l dn,,^ e r the terms of this ordinance may « r o u ^ of aay boartfeag bowe or ->n*aiaace are hereby repealed S T in s ^ te d as often as the Depart- ™ > ^ n g house m the Tinrastop af East SeetwB M i f ^ S v m Jt ^ H e a lth may deem It neces- ' ' ' N r " -

If any of said inspections dis- P»*eo^ ehtoken«vi«tinv m tlwk hinM. I Or tMrd be

P>8 e J f i w

a y ;arakcrt- PCOVTazeo threreof. of ih » o n S caace oefaer fepvi ** ^ applacatxR of any saeh section L cr iiar. » p reem o o to any p e r m ^ t o l S

CrouBds «f any 5 * * ^ sttaatson. shall be declared to♦«- ■” — cv ;ic«>;<lL. eraiai -r sacer-

p a n .

Amer:.-.ir-.* -..i'.e e - . i - r i - cirioa^Jy --e t ’ca*urc> liVing

h*': i-u. read-r>r ibc-'.:* them in *r.e -f- r":r,._ '^j^-ar ref. Henry Van -•>A.e -a-.-te ib= tii ta«n s... -a'cII that TT^r.j a nihenna;' rca>i his stories a*a:a an! again ii.her. the urge t -■ - ashrr.r b^arr.e aLm‘.*s: :- <i' erea: t resist r. njaiter Tihar the la.se •_ r :re I’.eathcr ' r 'he tcrrairi V a -r t'.c* ■: 5>h are raeniKmed in-,:he .iterao^ ami include the Sebaa: SaliDi'n. Land!‘)cked Sairr>::i and '.nianacxhe. The Atlaanc Salmon, and the Rainbcm Trout b'.th belir.c^

c genus Saimo. *

B V S IW C S S G U I D CR E C O N D I T I O N E D H .A N D M O W E R S 5

-An Sizes 12 tc 2D inch — S5.00 op —

CHARLES O’HARA |160 F irst A t t o i k SPhooe 8- U 39-M =

38-l2t* =

unim iM Htiiiiflitum nfaiiiitiiH iiniHHnm M M nnH

Hightsfaiwn Television Co.CARPENTRY - M.\SOKRY ROOFING - EXCAVATING

a* c o itio n exisung m the b u i l d - b e k e p t . ------------- ---- ------------_ ,-«««. «c «, an r - -----fngtending to create a violation of i ™ “ the grow ds of any 5* ® * ^ snaatjon. shall be declared to «n Fel>ruarv i*. jo n e x: is the^ i t l r v « » d e a«J st«^h condition is ‘ b<»r*ng boose or rooenmg ho«e. -Mc-cKicstaitLi:. -r . - - . ytt, •

noT^corrected in ten (10) day s a f te r , Person, tip a or corporaxiHi m whate or in part, by w -A t^n.ic .o nn-^ c e in »Titmg to the oavier or oper- *b*fl have received a w itaec peraiit ™«rt of coopeiem jtm dtotM a. CTaie Bp5tream lo ^ a e ro . T be xcmaieStor of abe said b u ^e ss. the Health, ^ « prurtaions hereof sha!L to her e«*5 ia a nest in a nffie -„ e n . m «- sum m zo S S . « ^ ' i ' f " tfc^r „ c fznsfizrd b y t h e ; T zznching atsd D a ^ Tnsek S « r , i« =°<i«tlon ffl No room in any boarding ' Iric range or stove or any other ap- *d ard cfSectaased. and tm such de- ^0 -pcGiid texsale m av fatyj Locistnxtion - Mamtenance - —home or roomln* house shaU be so j^ a tu s « appijaace ihall be used lor » M i a O o o shall be deemed to m- Irani to eg zs but i 3S-j A lie rau o tu =

™ « = - :.--a r.d_f«na k m a r a ls ? la r as nraur j Eqmpznent aud Kuosr H o w to D o =

NOTICEXotiee H h e re b y g rrea d ial d ie face-g re a te r num ber I h« cooked o r o tb ers iae be prepared - _____u . . . . . . « . . . w -„- . - _____ ,

established or stored m any room m any boartteg gwttg Onfcxanee vas inircdoeed »t»i m onth, ib c r m a r be 5 inches kmg?“amDlt.” B y th e s x a th i

Alt less than th ree h undred (300) cubic shall be in s ta lk d m aay room in any s*ctioo o r p rcm ao c bereof. -myf ^ t of a ir space of each child u n d e r : board ing bouse or rooming {k w k Seetiaa n T b » onkaaoce «fc»x> tak e ^ -Aboct 3 m o n th s a f t e rt^ Jv e >-ears of age nor less ihA n' ®r is noendeiL ar- days a fter pofatxcaooa ‘h e e g ^ s h a rc h fh e T o o n g f ish m a r jfJS hundred fiftj- <*»> cubic feet o l . « d e s gned to be oeex^aed far ^l^ereaf as p r u v ^ by la* . rea c h a eii^rih orah space to each person over the age 'jen-'oe p«rpMe<. spr saail anr mod XOTITF ^ - « m n o t J y 2 U K hes a o d b e }nf tvk^ve vears. No g re a te r num ber i^ occupants th an thus estab lished ------------ ------------------- - vuu*-« - ------------------ — - --------------«haU be perm itted to sleep in any o n e ' bouse o r rooenu^ bewse. * b icb room rcadm g u » m ectisg of a n d be fctHTwn a« “ rrsi-t-* Wi h

»s occuptod o r is tetesded . a rranged ^ Board af Health of E ast V to d o ^ ^ t e o w n a s " p a r r . F ^ fa t h a t fSection 68. Everv’ sleeping room in ** o ecu |w d fa r deep- ^ ^

_j;_— >vMK«> o r room ine bouse i n . purposes. oetSered potiSshed nt aceordance withE a s t W io Jw o r shaU ' ** « i la * fa j fa r »

. height betvreep floor and ^ lessee, p ro p n etc r o r operator o f, a d ered far finai readm g sa d adopeias- rt# Oft* th an seven (71 feet I boardnig famae o r rooming boose ** * m eeting of Vae Beard of Health

s S > i ? - u t ^ i e t . ren t o T v ^ i any ' - ' J * •?- u TM^ ' ^ » r d m g bouse o r roaoiisg boose o r " « « of toe S e r re ta r r oa

iS v e a floOT M t s m J le r ^ ^ purpose af ™ B a « W ladosr Ttmr*.L ? « i ^ ^ 60* S k a r e feet ^ P « * « « J-W' *£ m x r n m ter-tjun sixty <001 sq u a re reel p e r per ^ p n v i ^ oastaittng « « « i » A y appear far o r agaissx toe

89 E v e rv room used for “ » occupied or m- P^saage o < ,sa id _ J)r* n a ae e• room »wt . j _ ia bo an lm * h e w “U * ; * ! ! or desuEBcd *x beS.S 5«z~£TE l y F B r EILEHS.

SiJri"1?*«SrSrtsi3r‘ w“ru 7 i‘uch“ »tol * htertni rih*t s iv t ^f f 3 >nSn!S«I so U ^ t H van bo o o ^ - » raphah« a.ed easily by the occupan t of the room. All um etows in to ilet r c to ^ .

be used for the mu pose of storing o r preparing food.

Sectioo 81. Each boardiBg and room-

E a s t W iadbsr To*tastdp Board of Heahh.

H. Gaamc. T a« - ri=* fee SIT

™ n iS S s6aU a daj' tax* star.- ' Tata svxa 9 a< ( t a w EtSSe Shan have placed on the outoide ^ ^ ^ f Ttve a, U , t s v M ,,frf nich wiudovrs a fall ^ g t h screen, ' ” **f°, #*** a ^ aheymg the room Gaaanrtee « ^ nkwrgti:* To**-2! r S i e ^ S d . to exch.de moepdto. g * -S j h , " ‘and kept in good repair, on the 1st dav ^ T i^ re shall be Postri ns j Cb w ^ cms Ijcxaae w peBttr.c .TroarcirfMav eich y e a r ^ remain thereon m every hoanfcy a H^gtntav t a r o t » aa i B. ta­l a V 5s t’ day ot Octoher 0< «>» , ^ c^ tk nadscr ..ta Idtax-adScmore persons, a cw y or uss •?* - ' ‘ erertwas. ? aar iiooll W ^

ance. whxch cofiy shaQ be furrysbed -n r*n rh - -Section TO. In every boanfing house by the Township of E ast Windosr ^ -------a -. Frrd r Drake.O r t .« Trefiup . W adi.:-.and rooming bouse th e re sh a ll be toil- . ^ \i:L .A-r^ v- rMs and bath as req u ired by the plximb- . Secttoci & All operators of b o a n fe ^ \ j.

S j ^ t l o n s of th is code. All doors • > c g » d ' G ^ E t COMPTC-V.on toilet rooms o r b a th room s shall ^ xz t- ____ t X. J.be equipped with sg if ckwing springs . j ^ G a« ee . ]sae x. r;. Fee 1132or other devices to c Io « the door. p assage and adoftooa of this o n h sasce . ■ ' ......

Section 71. C lean sh ee ts and pillow PEN.LLTIES. NOTICEcases shall be prov ided each week for Section 84. Any perso ra «k o sh a B ; Take j=etse that W shsm < M cM aae each bed occupied, in a il board ing o r violate any o f the proeuaec a of any E -to i*nt Bccei W --roomine bouses. section of th is ordm ance far toe vto- Towashg^F C ; » ^ :* e ot -

Section 7 i At lea s t ten iIO) foot lation of whicb do penalty o ther than T - ^ r r ta ^ iferc^^ Cc w t F - » P W arrcandles of ilh im ination shall be pro- revocation, rccusaoa o r saspenaaoa of le*ad ( » « £ ( » • U o ^ ______vided ov-er the e n tran ce , in the en- any Ik e n se o r ^ r m n . o r oth e r p » sam»ae4 i t E ifi^ere H-.'«Ltrance hall, and in a il in te rio r halls of a lty ocher th an fine o r ^ p rw e io a , S z*-— ^all boarding houses o r room ing bouses ha« b# « i herem hefore onMndMl chaB -— "• '

TELEVISION - RADIO - APPLIANCES iA U T H C * I Z E D S A L E S * S E R V I C E F O R =

RCA - ZENITH Iz

TMevisioD and Radio 5

FRIGIDAIREYoor Job = ‘lefrigermtor* - Freeier* - W u h e n - Dryers f

JOHN D.ARBY = N ot W ater Heaters RCA E sU te Range 1CM I E y ^ X c E « T d 1-S M i 32rf | BENDIX Waabers A Dryer. |

= 146 Mercer Street Pkow S-ltSC 1

has been hereinbefore provided, shall _Section 73. In e v e ry boardm g bouse in additioo to. m exriusioa of aad O bkery te if .?k-, j^^ssr be -

or rooming house a ll wool, cotton, or notw ithstanding any penalty o r r rrp - ^ w n v ^ 'm Le*W B. O s a m ^ -other coarse m g s o r floor coverings catiofi, re c is su n o r sa sp e a so n at any ^ T -«-«*■—shall be cleaned thoroujttUy once a license or penm L o r esher p e n a lty , praaceoje T e m b a . V J ‘seek All expoeed w ooden floors o r o ther th an fine o r im pnsoem eot. to w~n r i a vi jfcif-LXt'Simpeniouj floor covering shaU b e this o rdm ance provided as a penairr r f a ^ i i B * e l Ettafatr* v ' rwashed thoroughly w ith hot w a te r and for any such vioiatioii. w bether sack h . Gaaerte Taw i id. ?*53 Fre 'i? nsoap or detergent ooce a week. perstm d » l i ikx as principal a r as ao ' ■ ' ‘ ^

Section 74. In e v e ry room ing bouse agent, se rv an t o r employee of a n y ' NOTICE 5-'"or boarding house a ll g a rb ag e o r travh n a tu ra l person, C r a c r comeraOM ^ C1EDITOR5 OF Eahen E Dieti. De- that accumulates, sh a ll b e p laced daily shall, ufxm coork thM thereof. Jorfert ’ erased, are. W a f “ H iL .L M Iin a metal con tainer wfth tig h t fitting and p av a P « } ^ of not less toan Scri-wa^ « M e r w f j ^ t r ' • 'Ito. on the outside of the building, tw o do llars 82.00* nor g rea te r tcan iT iw ” obos of ii»Such garbage o r t ra s h sha ll ^ dis- ^ hundred ^ ^ s^-CTher. * r l« 'posifd of at feast once a week in a discretion of the Court, ior each aad c4i;»* ' ’ 'maxmer that shaD not b e offensive t o , ' every vtoUttoti. If any persor. id eoa- or become a nu isan ce to th e com- ■ victed a s aforesaid shall refuse or ac f-

A T IA M T X : S A U A O N© 1954 Ntoioato WSdU* fwdgreiioa

jpen:a: reel

rec:

FIX aanaribi brm ahevr • —

ir~Mr DbaiWiwrooming houses shall furnish sufficient all the costs and charges mcideMt - a - z -.-beat to any occuoied part <d such , thereto, such person may be esmznn-building to maintain at all times be- ted to the common Jail of toe County >• rtween the hours of lia o'clock !n the of Mercer tor a period not esLceding jj^ G^wtaT Mar 3 -vmorning and ten o'clock at night a ninetv' days. In case any person ___ ;___minimum temperature of sDrty-eigh» have been twice coovicted. wrthin the degrees Fahrenheit. Tbe supply of ■ space of szx months, of a vtoiaC' r cf

Fee $6JV

BOROUGH OF HIGHTSTOWNSummary or Synopsis of Audit Report for Publication

Summary or Synopsis of 1954 .\udit Report of the Borough of Hightstown as required by R. S. 40:4-2.

i r e :

COM BINED COM PARATIVE BALANCE SHEETDec. ;

AurtsCask aad State road aid aHocnrsts -----------------------------------Taxes, assessments, lunu and atihty charges rcceTahlc . Prapmr acquired by tax title ben liquidation . .Ucinits reenvabte .

Year 15 4

Fixed capit^ anthorixed and uaconipteted—utibty Fixed carital—atih tyIkkmd charges to intnte tasaDon— fcneral . Dderred charges to soccccdmg year's reresae -

ijc-r 74.*45.» A i j » r:4U .^ ^ r : O '.«;

:5LiaUities, Ri____________

Bonds aad notes payableAppropnaticn reserres »sui vther habthties________ '- —istprorinmu anthorieatioss -- -Jpenal hods acnunnlated ______________________ — -__ —

AaurtuaiM oi debt i'-r axed capital acquired or iTtt'i,-rjad .WWTTC ;rr certain assets receivable ------------------------------------—farpins _____________________________ _____________ ______

Dec L Year 1. .3tL’a -NU:

N .h r.“: !lL_i

r-JLS i.x •4« » .C •

EAST WINDSOR TOWNSHIP N O TK E

N '.xe ;* 'e-TSTT f.-icz ™ it at i aeeqsg ;t the TrsTT-'.-r-.- CrttasKtee s Wsiei-

VS ^ t d k S A S C ^ TO ^'^KCXrE*^BE LX.ASE AN D Z X n X G n S H A N T .AN'D a l l P V B U C U G JiTS IX A X o Ti' STREETS DCSKX.ATED ,A5 BOOCER STREET. UX O O LX A V E-N TE HAM - - - - L E T AN EXVE. SBERM.4N .A\'ESTT .VXD MORiiSOX .V\-EXCE IX TH E TO W X 5H IP OF EAST WTXl*> ». .si ' SHOW N ON A CEBT.UX MAP EX T IT L E D “U B E E T Y P.LkK. F TL E r IX T H E MERCER Cr*UXTy CLERK'S OF FIC E NOX'EMBER li. .\i MA? N X M B O 3T«

«a« wd-yeec.LACRA V F T T F t i

CVrt. -f Ziz. « ' - - -H, GajeTTe. Jaoe ree C M

-:ijr :i'-t

—■ - f .ifLi'ytrate l ix - '’ ; -z.:. i-'c IM i•hi- - rTnke i? rra::u

■.hir "sractjcc'i by ?h-:• V ! >4.411100!,z is tra :cr} clear rtie| i be urei r, the act u-f tak-

A tla r.iK saimofi arc | c" cverrccrriaiiy m Cacadia.*i |• :rc n*'-. rra.T be boe?s’b:|

• : m - -Tt« c .-i 'c m

:-v:hrcri ;< ■-#

AtianticSalmon

*■--« ih.‘ :i,rTic«ware :n-.

-•rre>*?

LOANSFor Abt Farm Purpose

Loog Tena Mortgage Loans Short Term Prodocrioo Loans

CooperativeFanRCreiftASSOCIADONS

212 Mcrccr Street, Hightstenre Pbooe S-0992

Lopatin Electric Co. -Xinibnrized H O O ^ 'E R

Sal-es & Serrice

Free bazb:i<i3Xia.tioe

Mie f k k ISz' & Iie iiTcr

M ain S t Freeh:’';P ' “.e Freei^-Li .V ‘C-74

Sern:: Frcci !; Si Vidniir Over 25 Years

Notary Public GEO. P. DENNIS

Office af Htgktsttfw* Gaxettc

T W Gaaefte BaulcKmg

:k o o e R-R373

AUTO GLASS Installed in .4.11 Cars and

Trucks While-U-\Vait• S A F E T Y G L U S S

• T I N T E D G L> iSS

• B E N T W IK D S H IE L D S

• CiUANN'ELS

Insurance Repiacements

COMA’S BODY SHOPfishcTtiS!! Tel ?-«&»

Kcxx to Whispenmg P acs

J

It is slwRys IxHttftr to iiSTe lasarsDCc

need it than to Fused it just oiMDe aywi not ksTe it I

WILLIAM H. GLACKINi n s u r a n c e

Fta «M . W M 33

d - r r l S « , W a . a » r . N . J .

ear it. - - i y. i t be I - frogn 31

-vc !rre;: sea rc?T n^a-sare 31 ! A ,

• 2:' 4 vt.irs ia4 f - ; - i . w r-.- -

MAC’Sm e a t m a r k e t114 MEKCEE STREET '

H I G H T S T O W N . K r Phone 8-0576

Uphoitterinj, SBp Corers

VeuMian Blind*, Draperies

Truck Seats Recorered

C f f A t C f y u U k f P f

HE USED CXJROR-, TVtoJ A 0 «EI l« SACTPLEASE SERVE

ME EVERV^yEAR/'

X J. VETICK171 Stacktoa St. H ig4ttstawB

P«0?fE R-WB

AiV. mar

avif■’ ’hese lc*t in B u n

•'•ics finatoT S ;'veti aad ooer r y

rccTtanoc

Tct»i i Yittes, reserves and furptes .

COMPARATIVE S TA TE M E N T OF OPERATK>S AND SURPLUS CURRE.ST ACCOCfXT

SttTttB* rcTRioe appnjpriated - _______________— ------- 5 ’’ *'■^wt rrrvr.oe OQ a ''Ca*h Baits" -AutKiQs to laciMM

Incipeaiied balaiKc of apfwvipriatkn reserve* .. Lubit:s»«» caoeefed _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _laierfandi and acsooBt rereivafale orfiected___laeitase is deiemd c c h ^ taxes....................—

Tru! rere

AW’f’Jprutw** _ k ’ .4 tax .

vOWOjr tax _ _ _

•.me re m-... . -rZ'Zt'l f i a i4a:

I f ' ^ractxrs — -.-^ra-o , 4-.:: •

*■' careie-»>nesv and with The -_.-.4 e ; • been nniversally

i T^f: X aTinm J W il»’i:fc : .e ra - ^ i - i *her CT-:-up5 •

:n ■'.< --I'.fare oi fi-h aac T—r. _.;:“ence i-'aimer.

Simheat Fuel OilC'i! E o r r t r S ilts k Serrice

P H O N E SIE E h !5t;-*T: S i:296- D A Y

H i£ h :5;.7- n S :ir> 2— N I G H T Let Us Gnre Yen Free Esthnite

ta :a s :i lh ^ in OIL BUKNEK la :c:r f u r n a c e

WTiiain C. PtiHen, Inc.F l . 'E L S E R M C E KigfctStOWTL N I.

Total expenditure*

nperatioa ____m’ additKJB to i“ *Bove cxfMUiditBrri ____

! iov curreni deferred charges

« l»o « Jauaary l « __________

f w J U ;

E. F. Weingart, Rocky Hill Plumber, Serves Princeton

J Sob total ___________________« « ; Amrmm »f/pro^n»ud in budget .

, -* r « Ei r o i

J z m 3<

cky Hizhe 'wav

*. W i . : - a i r . . i t s everv-

Decentocr Slit , S CJ=^.'J

COMPARATIVE S TA TE M E N T O F OPERATION AND SL’RPIX'S W A TE R A.ND SEWER i m U T Y ACCOUNT

appropriated ________________________

®“ “ " ------------------<* otVroto,ztKo rotaot,

“ '"Itad Kniami receiTaU, effected ______

------------- ---------------- —^I^tonatiQug __________________________

Son

Add- ®**«t*«i'^• ^tuto ry addR»«“* apewfitare,

Arooitet

SeTjuC a

^ XT:'l i ' i r r ^ rv ic e the wt-'-ie F n r c e -

area.He :* cN'-erierrfrt^ :n ' i ' : - ti.1, ga«-fireti e q c :r n ^ L

x it e r -:t Hearn, an-i rn n n k iitf : — mfen ■ i;e :? p< ' ? ri:e; t

t itv:ith«ry , W eiagarr doe> repair '

’aii^i n iinrenaoce as as

-r.- ---.I..''' gnar-

He '4? been us b-irs^ess *":-r htsa- l i t the pas: :■* years, h..-

eer: :r rhe area for :2 year?i ’--i ;:s experience gxes back

K » YOUBECAUSS-—every one of our used t n ic b with the famous O K Tag has been in- ^lerted and racoodi- tioaed by truck experts. CoGopare these values!

CH.ARLES

WOODWORK SHOPFa nritnrc R e p a ir^ ft: Refimsbed

fGteW u Cabinets - S ttre F ix tar es

Charles DiSalvoOpposite Katz's Store. E tia

Skfi9 tcL Res. 8- 1473- J -2 ,

ARCHER BROS. CO.122 M ercer Street

. ^ N T E K N A R E P .A IS S

N E W a n t e n n a s

.A N T € N N .\ S M O \ -E D

I X S U T t O .C E J O B S H O N O R E D

P h t w M 4J3 - I

Greeting Cards, Magazines

Ggars, Ggarettes Stationery, Pipes

CARTER’S106 M .A1X S T R E E T

H I G H T S T O W N

CRAIBl^DN^3 X

O f w ' w 'ta

HlGh’ S’ Clk*'

Damasco^ sUQUOR S T (» E I §7 Stockton street Hightstown, N. X

Imported and Domestic Wrae* and LkfDors

Phone Hightstown S-f3€5

Clayton’s Sport Shops p o r t i n g g o o d s

n S H I N G E y t l P M E N T Electncal AppEaztccs

B io rrk s - Tn e v d e s - R e p m Goes - Hsncm g Ootlscag

A rc h e rr Eipi i im eMt

:34 M ercer Sl PVfete S-IQ8B

N- J-R- G Q avtoe, P ro ^

Fcn& eriv FneaH iy F r e f s

B O D Y — F E N D E R

R E P A I R S

L A W N M O W E R

j S A L E S i S E R V IC E

I SbarpcB Bg ft R e p a irii^ .AH Makes naSaywiitg

A s £0 P x rr- '-£

Ante Glass Installed

^^^dsafiers Q caaeti and Repaired

1949

Year 7«3H e

o rk 'tc c a: ence

cc-es '• n x '. -', wei. as res- i , - .v- 'k i-..-: W ” be idad ' ' a.T esrijuate ‘ c a n j jeh c i a a rj H e , :. •■:•:«> a jswrsceal serr •i those r-b.-:- hare had expe': rrrh ins work call hnE agam.

U51

, ,;«i_ trom nto mtotmt ior enrrest ddrtrtd ci&argcs

Colin T. Lancaster, Princeton 1,52 Builder, Has Tech-Built Homes;

Cohn

. ' ed - ’.Tf *JtA-« J i.iT.'i?? 1 htnlt a

‘ t'ttt? jail steehVI : __r-..', laM v Naiswiita.- t.

B 'JECJl s « ITO3= J . ' H -

c i 2 u '. ’ : R cck r is the frajK*".:?-

the iech-partia^'.y p re -:>br:- pco^ibev a retnark- vnie ai pnees race- : - ST' **

\t^xr a’ Sci M ile R im I

GMC * 2 Ton Pick Up New Tires, Very i Ck«n $595Chevrolet * 2 Too |Pick Up, Unusually \Nice, One Owner 6S5 Qwrrolet *2 Ton “J Are. Pick Up. New Paint,Priced at 7iS'

N E W a U S E O M O W E R S A ciborixed P iacor Dealer

B rig rs -ic ra tro c ft O m to n Eagmes D E X n T R Y S E R M C E

C a l H ifbtatew a g -W lS -W

DaYe’s Specdoseto' Sorice

H ig^nnow n

Ccxiqilete Repairs on A 3 D f Cars and Tnacks

POTTER A HILLMANF O R D S .A L E S t S E R t T C E

Phone* e-OWC and s-flW l

HighJstowri, X , J .

toprot^iaicd m budget .

I*ee«nhex 3l « _____

S ECOMMCNDATfONS

, tbe akstrdH u t:“ ** teaporary Wdyet mrmt agpeai

2. AwwLi?” * iwtotuiL.J*** leap o n u y h a d ^ thrmU wtx be

be T«*r. oer %hoM a»fo$>natM«s m tb* »v aw^ All fe> X w m b e r l*t. t ie to te l i — irTT are fwii t t e d.

^ The r be to;>ciited vnbm W ixm n *» rt«j»red W s t a t i *o( a . & O-JO-l ntotives w i t* pwretwe M

report.r ot mnKnUtrvr ________ _________ ________ ,J Loo.

y r LarKaster came here rr».'dn n rr r* \v>*t2n:r.-

j t rer Cbc-tr Cc4l e « Xz »b<rr= ’ '^xe m?odertai Ttch-Bssslt j 3j*5o corottevL. be was inx^r?-*-Ic-i ;n cboer o Jinij He &&5 the I

-■f'4 bofeidvr^ fpeciiicy j nr^tofas cabuwrv aaii fine '

wT:*:TiTn:irk.:.ui;. xn T ’hscb he m sexperience. H e b.ar b ^ rr -n \

ic r furThree years

For fnrtfcer jr.f.;-— -:a ihej

K-r tbe raoDey. photke jewT, t-3?i*LT-l>

[1953 ClicrrTolet V2 Tewj

MMf aeSv cw be

.Veterans Taxi Serves Princeton

Veterans T a n 5em ce.

Pick Up Radio. Heater

1S39 Ford l» i Ton Chassis & Cab

Terms to Suitat

filbert CbeYTolet Ce.years ago and i* oow o € ^

:.v .^DMfenco .\rc a x »o ^« j r r i r w A i \ Ex>s*a! r.Jerk.

Teiep<e»:^ ca3b IQ Priacetr-L c e h w tf b rm f a prcrrrpt respcoie O p e n D a R y S a m . — 9 p j n .

arcaoe. Fnncefem perates rv o cans trips are t ^ d c anvvbere. ia servittg the PriiscetOQ area ’w itbj Use o i a cab i> TTXvn far

tb* rtpcrt ri saAt af ipeoenpL coMTTeoes and safe t r a m -’ e c o n o w a i tfean d n v t* « yo ar o w -ta tv tW esWtatalae Tgar ! M. Tbi* TTpeet ■ toatL , M -4WW iWc.f-inAVta-,41 w m t i*nr *cvMW-«9>l-r vw »K*aa —>»*»«

e Get yvtR lomi here m I tnp. Etnpkyetl m eo aad leomro. plimtc tata — p e l a leal tim p ie f » n t — .p m .p p tO T .1. com e in to n d t n - - - . So pbooe - - . »T^te . . . or cttanc o* t a d ^ l l amm $3 i tm SSOO mm

*<°2 oiMr fat’iita 'cak^M T « r ^ ’ jo rialjc*: K> atte ie ia ta ri:® seren a r , ra t h « t tfa n wiicn^ " «■ ®* •• •*“ ‘ meek, i r in t 7 am . tm M n a t - j^ f t e r m em bers ot t te la n d y m »y

*■ < ^ 1.,■ J“ » », K, !S55

n -S l t IL U S W ItE .OejJu

im g h t [w ajit the mixhirrie while y<jm are atF « *5t N j serrice was escabiisbcd abont week

Sunday IIRowte 13t

Hightstown, N. J.

p>.nLi

Page 10: Record Classes Slated Listed for Wednesday Days in State ...€¦ · An Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity 106TH YEAR, No, 50

Page le nHIGHTSTOWN GAZETTE, MERCER COUNTY, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955

I t ’s a simple m atte r to get a loan a t Household Finance. You have your choice of loans from $20 to $500. Loans a re m ade on your s igna tm e or on car or furniture. Phone before you come in for extra fast service.

*20 to ’5 0 0lo a n s made w ithout en­dorsers. Up to 20 m onths to repay. G et an H F C loan to consolidate old billB, for medical expense, for taxes or repairs, or for any good purpose. We in ­v ite you to visit us a t any tim e—no obligation.

Cash You 0»1

I$ 50

100 200 300 500

MONT30

paym h

ULY PA 18

paym tt

rMENT t 12

LANS6

pajm ts

$ 6.41 12.83 19.24 30.92

$ 6.97 13.93 20.90 33.69

$ 4.87 9.76

19.50 29.26 47.62

> 9. 08 18.16 86.81 64.46 89.53

HouseMtTs ckargt u 2W ft P*r moutkonbal- encuoj$S00orles»and}^ o f l%ptTmonlkon that part oftlu bcianci itt4xc€sspfSSOOtofSOO.

OUSEHOLD FINANCEPrinceton Shopping Center

P H O N E: PR INCETO N 1-5440Lietnu No. 879

TRENTON2 8 W . S tate S t , 5th FI., Trenton Trust Co. Blda.

PHONE: OWen 5-5401LictnM No. 660

Traffic Conditions, School Aid, Taxes Seen Top State Legislature Issues

By K enneth F ink , D irector, P rince ton R esearch Service

rrinceton.—W hat do rank and file voters in the state regard as the most important issues that should be discussed by this year’s candi­dates for the New Jersey Legisla­ture?

To determine the answer to this all-important question, the New Jer­sey Toll sent its reporters up and down and across the state to ask a representative cross-section of the state’s voters the following question:

“As you probably know, this No­vember New Jersey will elect 11 sen­ators and the entire 60 member as­sembly. What do you personally re­gard as the most important issue or

discussed during the election cam paigning this year?”

Results of the survey show that New Jersey voters would particular­ly like to hear what candidates for the senate and assembly have to say on these three issues:

1. Highway-trafiic conditions: bet­ter highways; question of roads leading to tunnels and bridges; in­adequate highways; how to handle

heavy traffic; how to relieve traffic congestion.

2. State aid to education: distri­bution of school aid; how to get adequate support of schools; prob­lem of school support.

3. Taxes: What are the chances of getting new taxes? How do they propose to raise it if additional money is needed to run the stale government?

More than one out of every two people who mentioned a problem named one of the above three.

Getting considerable mention, too, are the following:

4. W ater: water conservation;what steps are proposed to solve New Jersey's water problem?

5. Housing: big city housing; get­ting places for people to live at

TTiTi a’fffu'dT slum ance in bigger cities.

6. Mental institutions: gettingmore help for mental institutions; status of hospitals for feeble-mind­ed; steps they propose to improve conditions.

7. Getting efficient government: how to get honest, efficient govern­ment; how to take politics out of carrying on the state's business; what can be done about improving

our state government?8. Juvenile delinquency: how to

help with the problem of delinquen­cy: what can the State government do to help?

9. The Slate budget: balancing the budget, handling of state funds to the best advantage; can the budget be balanced for next year ?

10. Crime and corruption: gam­bling, graft; kickbacks; keeping racketeers out.

Also receiving some mentions are uncniplovnient; teacher salaries; help for’hospitals; the need for bet­ter bus transportation; seeing to it that the various authorities do not usurp their power; the gasoline price war; helping the farmer; highway safety; bingo and beach erosion.

Republicans across the state give top mention to taxes, school aid and highway-traffic condition. Then come water, juvenile delinquency, crime and corruption and housing.

Independents give most mention to school aid an<l taxes (both get­ting equal mention from Indepen­dents). Then come highway-traffic g 5 nflltlOT15;~ \vnt e r ; b o piwu g ; institutions; juvenile delinquency and unemployment.

Rank and file Democrats give first mention to housing. Then come school aid, taxes, highway-traffic conditions, mental institutions, the state budget, juvenile delinquency, unemployment and water in that or­der.

For anyone who keeps a budget book, a checking account — used to pay all bills — provides a valuable double check on ac­curacy. First, the checkbook stubs, each filled in at the time the corresponding check was drawn, give a complete and usually precise listing of expenditures, and a running balance. Second, the bank’s statement of the checking depositor’s ac­count, sent to him periodically, gives him an opportunity to test the correctness of his checkbook balance.

Try this sure-fire way to keep a budget book accurate and up-to-date: pay bills w ith c h e c k s-d ra w n on our bank.

Hightstown Trust CompanyMEMBER:

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

FOR JUST A LITTLE MORE

YOU CAN R O C K E T A W A Y !“iR you CAN KEEP WUR MEAD WHEN ALU ABOUT VOU .ARC LOSING THEIR?MA%E VOU POWT FULLY UNDERSTAND THE SITUATION

P E P P LE R ’SSM O K ER F A R M E L E V A T O R S

24 to 38 ft. L e n g th ,, w ith E lec tric o r G a«)line Engine.

B E L T H A R V E S T E L E V A T O R S

16 to 28 ft. L e n g th ,, L ight W eigh t, A lI-P u rp o ,e E levato r,.

JA C O B S E N P O W E R L A W N M O W E R S

R otary o r Reel T y p e ,—18” to 24” ..................... ............$64.95 to $299.95

JA M E S W A Y

D airy B arn Equipm ent, P ou ltry & H og F eed e rs & W atere r,.

S H E R W IN -W IL L IA M S P A IN T S

S. W . P . O ulaide H ouM P a in t, S u p er K ern Tone, Kem d ® .

F A IR B A N K S SC A L E S

F airbanks P recision Ind ica to r, fo r S ca le , fo r u n d e r o r over weights.

JO H N D E E R E

M odel 60 T ra c to r s w ith L IV E P ow er T a k e Off S haft P ow er M o w e rs No. 5, 7 ft. Cut, w ith H o o k U p fo r Any T ractor Side D elivery H ay Rakes, on S tee l o r R ubber T iro ,R o ta ry H o e ,, 2, 3 o r 4 S ection ,P o ta to D iggers, New 30 Series, D ouble L evel Bed G rain & F e rtilixe r D rills, 13, 17 & 18 D isc C om P icke rs, No. 227 Tw o Row M o u n tedM odel B. T ra c to r. New, Fully E quipped ................................... $1,465.00

B oggs P o ta to G raders, Cobey F a rm W agons. M yers Pumps. P lan t J r . G arden T ra c to rs and Tools.

THOMAS PEPPLER, SON & CO.SAMUEL PEPPLER, Proprietor

P H O N E 8-0143 H IG H TSTO W N , N .J.

LOCAL DELIVERED PRICE OF OLDSMORILE "8 8 "

9-D m t t o 4 m U

$ O O O O 6 22388 Stof* and local taxM

•xtra.

Yowr prk* rfopn d t upon cnalca of mod*] and b ^ y 8tyl«, optloriol •quipmont and oc- CMiorlM. M eat may vaiy ilightly In adjoining cofnmwniti** bMav»* of ihlpplng charg*s.

C » o A h ead ! Drive i t yoursetf tA mighty small difference in dollars makes a MIGHTY BIG

difference in driving these days. Because now you can put yourself in command of flashing '^Rocket” Engine power • , . thrill

to brilliant *'flying color” beauty and luxury . ®. and it’s easier than you ever dreamed! Actually a very few d<^lars more a

month rockets you right out of the ordinary into an Olds! Before you buy any car, stop in! Get our generous appraisal! Drive the

^Rocket”. . . price the "Rocket” . • . you’ll own an Olds, todayl

IS / IS EE Y O U R N E A R E S T O L D S M O B I L E D E A L E R

IRELIABLE OLDSMOBILE CO.

177 MERCER STREET Phone 8-1385 HIGHTSTOWNO O A H I A D . i . D R iV I IT YOURSILFI T H I G O I N G ’S GREAT IN A "ROCKET S " l --------

O w e

s o m e o n e

a L e t t e r ?

(you’ll both be happier if you phone instead)

It’s easier...takes only about a minute to phone anywhere these days.

It’s cheaper than you think...especially after 6 P M and all day Sunday... look at these tjtpical rates: A a b u iy P a r k to

P ro v ln o o to w n , M a s * . T re n to n to W i l d w o o d . . . . B O c

P rin c e to n toM o n tlo a llo . N . Y . ."..". • 4 0 a

B min. station cM. Reduced 10% tax nottncludad.

N E W J E R S E Y B E L L T E L E P H O N E

S . T/k nicest ' bread and hutteT* note you can send is a personal "thank you” by phone!

It’s more satisfying...you can say more . . . find out more. And folks get such a kick out of hear­ing from you in persoiu

C O M P A N Y 0

Page 11: Record Classes Slated Listed for Wednesday Days in State ...€¦ · An Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity 106TH YEAR, No, 50

p .y y m s r o w j i g a z e t t e M £acEE c x x - y r r . j h e s e y , t h ^ -^ b:. «vPave Efepca

35TH ANNIVERSARY PICNICHIGHTSTOWN p o s t n o . 14*. AMERICAN LEGJON

D EPARTM ENT OF NEW JERSEY

to be bejci

Sunday, M y 17, 1955AT DECKER’S fjAJRY PICNIC GROUNDSL ocated on R oute* I3« A X]

All yon can c a t OB«i t i r iu E C o in e o o t a n d m e a t a n i m j d y m

friend. A ll kia<U o f e»m «« a n d sp o rt* . A n j r W y a m j r~ni t i m j /

javiteci C o m e <Hst a n d l e t 's E e r e a s o o d G ew

A dm isiioo p e r T i c i e l SZ

t Beauty' And Utility’ Combined In Estate Wagon1

O uM re. M Tears 35e

Cleans and redeans the wash water to give you (leaner dothes

SeettemW

ro « « r r 4X1 m f s z

$ 2 - 7 5WEEK

After Down P ay m en t

G-EAUTOM ATKWASHER

wifin i m - n o ^

W A S H mm n n

c o # im B K 3 F ftjr r m e k• FaC ttA nnirfi immsr aac*-

\-T k P < C 3 =f ^ ir r u a s

U .S . K A v y s ,

^Careers U fd tm M

( t&e n a r aeae at ia tsaaae ■ n ^a m L . T te paurtr m tS n tU tft

M t f m i

Tnieiy Homemaking F ^ s1 3zr r a r -

: - j r r cr.u

*TRBT?; i& rZ ’Vt » . 1 jayrrij- 1—j-=I iffltt. K s o a i f XSrt-t, L-i —tm iiauv 5^75 j;■ m rm rrferrc z ie a s s -j : a rr-ja a ca o . i ,__' ' - 1? 73TV . miT. V -TTitr s—X*iTf" am nanirT j i r Xgx: .C treat —

Tir*7 t7;^7'rSr^ai. T'-ri-'i iceri

Jc aa « 3 .-,i-» j ^ ___~u, i-^u ' . ■ i ^ S e x k i£

ir . ^ 5 . ,e

l-i-asSi

'4ie ’tx e t r .■r/ ‘Z aTiin raw waiLCT

rrT^5*

irrfc-ii-iA cr?Mil'll jciri, ^ ;,- -.

I—tie' %G'AK.'’.n-7if 1, *3Tfunr»3Bt -jut 6?-rc

- ^ sif CT.'ie'T :1'::^ <-:jrFei-Hi.jaicif -rc I rez i Older la e t liiaC

i in :rxx !x a r t

,- PsSWBKr : _ _'.•■-•« L’’.r\rcs: Er T^rxs at ccirr rr-.

raea x ra j ^ Marir O^-wer:- i e r r 2ssir£.ir: 3y".A. 2H-r%_ 36i:t* art!

inet S29e iCrT -m-.-rk A «r^ ' ' ’ - ^ i ■ :-ft-v..k. t i e ib2« a t 3 * 'Jr.ru.'.’;'-2i r 2;-> ';

E«rde< *53 e?i*t a a « ^ j .i ^sd j-afciief <dBc Jirj.

fFr:? ■> 2 fp ■eater> r»r.t:5. -xwtod fr:“ - ji; •re ceatner. T s» cunea j* i

aat K n 3, ctm '#:.. U

NOW AVAILABLE

Cold Beer by the CaseT O P m A M D S I F i C L U D I N G

MFree Ddrm y

t d W m l L l p i r s

Pleaty of Free Parldna

g r ^

:srmer

^ -»»re fierce .. — - r? e t -je, j cm /ae ^ -A 1£ ^ llfti IMH

•5CT -w'l -savtse aocasine c c'.Tj'-rr e& reariT a a i Age ct^per

— •■■ \ j 7-. r j '^ e s '-r i t p s u n c ; l i c a r ^ ’i 'n ,5. } ix c 7 ik '

_ ,, r.---.r ;f :-.--:.'f»:iRr»rc i “?5cre---. .t_ir e r - sA -q veok ^ o e r . ryr< sasj-

*^S0 ET 3s u t ja - - - r - i e r rzsTF. -.— t >-» iciiK. •aiTMifiia. I t es^ccadrr jr.T-w

-..ir '; AiTK-- -.^r

r aa* sssr^.K^in^ caa ie2 'i tf-4^ «r>:EiJsUfc eraLi l- a r a a n - t l sl reasc’m ^ ?'-issr 4r%ri <«f3jc e:£a«s 'jue Bariaoef «s2?:r.cl a-.r Bjo_i.:r3i yeaesraoce stS •c-sjo. ■.*' Jt XBsarrs 5 t a m > «

ro^>':rf$ac$$ isac ira^pf :« r •±e? ITjizz. W-'eCe 3 e s&ifa. « a^^iaei ' 1-. R Y'. rK la. CTnen. T^mrufs ,

t APPllAMCE

Taa saecr » r

• F «

i 'rTrartm; ;x:*r Tstrjr. 5t‘jsan-':ii aCTTieS- TTK.-5Xl:it:.r~Zi i-: A

£-r:rvra; fctgi:'.rn v-r--

-<F srr^ r 'ti;

33*icr-*lre:

« -i.'Sii.i-:;'. ' i. ac--r virTn’e. --

r Tts"'.*: ' . ir t

Tj.ilut:

JOHN C A R D U N E irSLIQUOR STORE

ROLTE m A STOCKTON STREET

PHONE S-«74

CRAIG & SONSRoute 1 3 0 PfMme 8 -0 0 5 7

H ig h ts to w n , N . X

Want to watch the1 ,. L T _ lu-

:—rrtjTP- r laocirut -r aSTaaSTC*-

•• -’: ra. t r i r - ndrv-i'.I. :_-?-crr2c "id: Vinritv

<=Jit ic^a t U ix ia /& ,P ic6; peZa^tf '/W D !!U

A vv sirilsc 'pAoC * t* Jtfi 7 ?= ibat one Sfi t. reasoc ior the jaceitsrs pcasae's trea th

siozased eroiw!!^ raafe riser ?* the 1 ;wKh pro^Rctkr.To Set d ri>e trccad. of eoerse- tiie p5»'Jt Bexdi plenty of acceaeratic®. 5or raLi-c- jsd dzEC. Sg hsa propeStrs mest n rX s certzsi k r aersfist perirjrsaiBcc.Bat soce the ptaae k at er^siaa^ x^tinrie. £reac ■prf»er texxiem xm . k s» k r a ^ aeeoed — W i e&deacy s . S:- dxe psjuC torkebet the piBEk « f h k p r N e e A e r tcRiDes t » lk ^ > < t» e » K s y

—3sd ^ taore Tirieaikr hrccs thelad io ias txcia.T i-ii 'f ’•rby B nidt's ae*r VirLiiv* PhefcIIHnaiaor* k nirh 2 tesssaam eNcsynhere.For she tasrae aivi^ss pr a c y ie

r h k r a r k w r y gng>»ie t a t h e m m ie r s j i m e k E flF ^ K E sad * t h e p r n o e j k r - S s e b i a d e s w i n c i 'k a t S3 ofl iesade th e D r a z i e w ■

e iM e ti im oim ic t/T fs a c I ia a f C i d j i i mmiifcw e m c r e ^ jM c a ta a r jo e aac iizn 4«- a *■<« • ’j m * OBBi 19 . 5 ( 1 » *aC n areimw j O t X 3 8 3 3> III j g 3 r»rT n-aT « -aiM g^ i»3*f T r « e r

p 'x 'j i ^ m u t a gaiTi,.

L o e v f D M h n r e k P r i c e a f

*2195

Jtattl^preMacik the £ » pedd RTzy iinwn.7«Ri Fwied: a e rkrii xrad ket autamts»e*m3 t^st- T»xy Tesp»io*e «aety-*Hrte aeeekrarioB. Jsst % t3sss:4 op «e the pesM. yen change

aers sad besxrr is M rssridrtvin; aad orakaBE,I r's 2 ipwTiimte' and lensfcie :—th k aen ElynaAsoa D r k c —2 dar^ £ad 2 braari-aeNi datifcwm..Aad Tekh £ jioeN the akkfec of re o a rd -i* ^ X" p aces'—jad the artel lE sary of B okic't aS-

rf Bniek's broad iBBeriarf—and ike kaat «f ixker adtnaeed fejenrci daaC add ia Bajkk't

k »«rs .'iltkuCirH' ike o ftle

n k t B nidceak bec-fidler ha^a-

ii.M >«RC m sxmmmms, m iu

COLEIMAN BUICK CO., INC.U . S. Mew Jersqr Route 130

Page 12: Record Classes Slated Listed for Wednesday Days in State ...€¦ · An Independent Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of the People of Hightstown and Vicinity 106TH YEAR, No, 50

Page TwelveHIGHTSTOWN g a z e t t e , m e r c e r c o u n t s , n e w j e r s e y , THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955

O w n a d a n d O para ted b y Am arican S toras C om pany

HIghtstown Market Now

OPEN THURS. & FRI. nu 9 'Saturday Till 6 P. M.

CotttinuingAane’sBigJUNE

^ f O O D lES T IV A L

Acme VoluM Answer Your Food Problems

MORE PEOPIE SHOP AT ACME MARKETS THAN ANTWHERE E I S E . . . .

APRICOT N E G A R S 35cCa m p k u 's P o r k A_B e a n s 2 ^ ^ 2_5'

THIS COUPON IS WORTH jptThursday, Friday and Saturday June 9, 10, 11, 1955, on Purchase of 0 ^ ^

20-01 LOAF NEW

C o u p o o l ' 7 ^Home Style lo^ | #

. ^ j Reg. PriceWe want vou to try u-because it u so good ©, *we are making this special offer«saving you 5c ioai Lix.

Cream Filled Coffee Cake Orange Chiffon Cake Nabisco Waverly Crackers

" ^ 3 5 coely 4 9 (

13-os pkg 9^JUNE IS DAIRY MONTHCooperating with American Dairy Association

C r e M r i f l c Puo«»to- Pineapple, 0 5-<>* 4 5 cB o r d e n s o p r e a d s qu„ pimento

Q fU ai Extra-Sharp Cheese 79e

Speedup Bleach Water H-s*iJ"8 23e^nasHun Liquid Starch ^ iaa 23c^ Seal Macaroni or Spaghetti 19c

W i t h P u r c h a s e

of $10.00 or MoreF R E E !25c Bottle Q d ia i

TRUE FRUIT SYRUP

Your choice ol 6 delicious flavors: Orange, Lemon- Lime, Grape, Raspber^, Strawberry, Cherry. For sum­mer drinks, popsides, ice aeam topping —It’s delidousl

(x fLdas

FRESH FROZEN FOODS

GRAPE JUICE ° »‘3Concentrated Lemonade 3 ‘ °'““ 39c

9dta£ Mixed Vegetables 2 37cSea Pak Peeled Cooked Shrimp 75eArctic Seal Pollock Fillets ' '“ 35e

4 9 «

< u u t ^ e ^ e tc iU e A

Fresh Stringless

GREEN BEANS 2 l yCalifornio Pascal Celery Large Fresh Florida Limes

jumbo fUlk 96 25e

BING CHERRIES LargeCalifornia 39«

Lancaster Brand U. S. Graded Choice BeefSirloin T-Bone

PorterhouseS T E A K S 79* Oven-Ready Rib Roast of Beef 59e

Boneless Rolled Pot Roast 39eFresh Regular Ground Beef 34c : 3 $1.00

.d o M M d ttn . * p td

V E A L *' 3 3 ^Shld. Veal Chops 53cRib Veal Chops “’69cLoin Veal Chops '“Sic

Breast of Veal Neck of Veal Shank of Veal

’ 19f■19e’ 19c

Lancaster Brand

SMOKED BEEF TONGUESFRANKFURTERS Lancaster

Brand

53*. 45*

Bekwl Meet leaf SIked Olivs Leaf Slked Pspper loaf Leef Breenswtlgmr

8-oe pk| 27^«-»8*133(K * 8«< 3 3 c

v*»28c

CUT-UP FRYING CHICKEN PARTSBreast (All White Meat) 89cThighs and Drumsticks 75cWings (Flavorful) ____________ "’ 3 5 c

OCEAN-FRESH

SEA FOOD

Fresti Jersey

Sea BossCod Fish FilletsSliced Red Salm on

O’ 23c "■31c ‘ 4 9 c

A out ter Dmil Complete Set

| H H T < ^ U R M L F IncyclopMlIa t ^ e b m a a \ -i StM A velM rfe#r <

^ S S SIL V E R STE IN D E -5 3 4 "

*^H1S LONG FORGOTTEN VETERAN OF IW O J IM A AND OKINAW A C A M E O U T O F

"MOTHBALLS" IN FEBRUARY I ISI,d e t e r m in e d t o m a k e it sPRESENCE FELT IN T H EFAR EASTERN CAMPAIGN.

COMMUNIST SHORE b a t t e r i e s KEPT UP A CONTINUOUS SNIPING AT THE DARING TIhJ-CAN AS SHE COORDINATED U N A I R s t r i k e s a g a i n s t 50N S JIN .

BY NOVEMBER fFtt S I L V E R S T E I N w a sPA T R O L L IN G K O R E A 'S

C O A S T L IN E , s t r e t c h i n gF R O M W O N S A N NORTH­W A R D T O T H E C IT Y O F S O N G j m . ______________

r e t u r n in g t h eHONORS, SHE BARED FIVE-INCH FAN G S B E FO R E TH E TOWN AND REDUCED ITS r a il c e n t e r t o S H A M B LES ^_________ ,

J O IN IN G T W O o t h e r d e s ­t r o y e r s , THE 51LVER5TEIN BOLDLY DASHED OLOSE i n s h o r e t o la y a SMOKE SCREEN a b o u t TH E BELEAGUERED S A M P ^ -

f AILING SOUTHWARD WONSAN, THE DES­TRO YER SILVERSTEIN

ARRIVED JUST IN TIM E TO PREVENT t h e e s c a p e o f T W O RED PRISON ERS.

A F E W D A Y S L A T E R C O M M U N IS T a r t i l l e r y O R E N E D U P O N R O Kg u e r r i l l a s a s t h e yF E R R I E D R O W ’ Sa c r o s s t h e h a r b o rf o r i n t e r r o g a t i o n .

T H IS PROMPT A C TIO N INd r a w i n g e n e m y f i r eM A D E IT P O S S I B L E F O R T H E F R I E N D L Y c r a f t t o M O V E H E R IM P O R T A N T C A R S O S A F E L Y O U T O F FLANGE.

I cwTiM uepTrri

H a v in g b e e n u n d e rFIRE L O N G E R T H A N A N Y O T H E R U.S. NAVAL S H I P IN K O R E APESTROYER SILVERSTEINR E T IR E D TO P E A R L H A R B O R F O R A R E S T .

S H E r e t u r n e d f o rA S E C O N D T O U R O F d u t y i n e a r l y I R 5 3 TO E S C O R T AM M UNITION S H I P S F R O M S A S E B O TO P O H A N G A N D W O N S A N .

A F T E R T H E T R U C E S H E G U A R D E D S E A W A R D E S C A P E R O U T E S F O R O V E R 1 5 ,0 0 0 P O W 'S INTERNED O N 'T H E S O U T H E R N IS L A N 2 O F C H E JU DO.

TH E SILVERSTEIN d i dN O T R E W R I T E H I S T O R Y IN T W O T O U R S I N K O R E A , B U T H E R C R E W L O O R S W IT H P R I D E O N T H E I R R u i p a n d T A G H E R _

''THE FIGHTINGEST SHIPa f l o a t ." 1 C T 5 1

Plannidg Boards Woodson’s Topic

In the first political speech on his own behalf, l.)r. S. Howard Woodson Jr., Republican candidate for Free­holder from Mercer County, ad­dressed the local Rejmblican Club at a recent meeting at the Grange Hall.

Speaking to a gathering of over 60 people, I)r. Woodson told of some of his experiences wliilc serving as a member of the City Planning Board of Trenton and of ways com­munities in Mercer County could be improved through the establishment and proper functioning of local planning boards.

NOTICETake notice that Michael Stamos and

I,/)ula Stamos, a partnership, t ra d i^ as Robbinsville I<iquor Store, has applied to the Township Committee of Washington Township, Mercer County, New Jersey, for premises situated at Northeast corner Rob- hiiisville and Allentown roads in W ashing­ton Township.

Michael StamosLoula StamosRt. 33, R.D. 1, Robbinsville, N. J.

Objections, if any, should be made imme­diately in writing to Fred U. Drake, Clerk of Washington Township, Windsor, N. J,

Michael Stamos Loula StamosRt. 33, R.D. 1, Robbinsville, N. J.

H. Gazette, June 9, 16, 1955

Dr. Woodson declared that county and community planning boards would be an aid in the improvement of existing streets and the laying out of new ones, besides attracting and selecting new businesses and indus­tries to the area with the subsequent creation of new jobs. He further stated that federal aid was often made available to help defray the cost of setting up a planning board.

Certified Mail System Starts

Certified mail service began here Tuesday, Postmaster Jerome L. Becker Jr. announced today.

The new system is designed to give most of the advantages of reg­istered mail, but at a lower cost and with less trouble. Persons wishing proof of delivery of mail which has no monetary value will get for an extra 15 cents postage a letter stick­er and a receipt form.

If you wish a receipt, present the

form and the letter to the postal clerk for postmarking. If you don’t require a receipt when he delivers the letter and the receipt is filed in the post office for six months as proof of delivery.

Registered mail service won’t be affected except that it will be re­stricted to safeguarding items of value. Previously, it cost 30 cents to send a “no value” piece of regis­tered mail.

widow of Charles A. Knight. She had lived liere for the last 70 years and was a member of the Method­ist Church.

Surviving are three sons. Frank and Eugene Knight of Newburgh, N.Y. and Charles M. Knight of here.

In colonial times, 40 per cent of the people in what became the United States were under 15 years old compared with 27 per cent to­day.

Long Illness Fatal To Mrs. Mary E. Knight

The funeral of Mrs. Mary E. Knight, 74, of 167 Stockton street, who died Thursday in Princeton Hospital after a lengthy illness, was held Saturday at 2 p.m. from the Heyer Funeral Home, 202 Stockton street. The Rev. Sanford M. Haney of the First Methodist Church offi­ciated. Interment was in Cedar Hill Cemetery.

Born in Englishtown, she was the

Pickle or Pimento Loaf 27c Sllcod Boot Bologno 27cBrovMWotgor Midgot •^<*«29c Smtkod Bool Loaf ««>**35c

BOROUGH OF HIGHTSTOWN PROPOSALS

The Mayor and Common Council of the Borough of Hightstown, Mercer County, New Jersey will receive bids on Tuesday, Tune 21, 1955 a t 8 p.m. at the Borough Hall. Stockton street, Hightstown, N. J., for furnishing, delivering and applying

15,859 gallons Tar, Grade 7, 8 or 9 on various streets in said borough.

496 tons Broken Stone on various streets in said borough.

Said materials shall meet the require­ments of the New Jersey State Highway Department.

Pros|>cctive bidders are referred to the Engineer or Borough Clerk for detailed in­formation.

Each proposal must be accompanied by a certified check in an amount «qual to at; least 10% of the Lump Sum Bid, payable i to JVimugh Collector-Treasurer, Miss EtJith!

Erving. 'The right is reserved to reject any or all |

bids and to waive any immaterial defect' nformality in any bid, should it be in

the interest of the Ilorough to do so. SPECIAL NfTTfCE TO CONTRACTORS

Since the financing of the work involved under the sfiecifications is dependent upon the reimbur.sement of the New Jersey State Highway Department to the Borough of Hightstown the award of the contract is contingent ujKip amiroval of said award by the New Jersey State Highway Depart­ment.

ELSIE M, LIEDTKE.Borough Clerk.

H. Gazette, June 9, 1955 Fee $4.92

NOTICECREDITORS OF Sophie R. Dey, De­

ceased, arc, by order of WILLIAM J. CON­NOR, Surrogate of Mercer County, dated June 7, 1955, uixm application of the sub- scrilrer, notified to bring in their debts, de­mands and claims against her estate, un­der oath, within six months from above date.

DAVID B. WATERMULDER,(Executor)

Present Qaims to:Tnrp & Coates, Attorneys 160 Stockton Street Hightstown, N. J.H. Gazette, June 9, 1955—4t Fee $7.14

NOTICETake notice that the Trio Bar (j>rpora

tion has applied to the Mayor and Common Council of the Boniugh of Hightstown for a plenary retail consumption license for mcmises situated at 118 Mercer Street, Hightstown, N. J.

The names and residence of all officers and directors who have no other named office and the names and residences of all stockholders holding one or more per cent of the stock of the said Trio Bar Corpora­tion are as follows:

Harry Sand, president, Hutchinson Street, Hmhtstown, N. J,

Rfise Sand, Secretary-Treasurer, Hutchin­son Street, Hightstown. N. L

Hennan Sand, 440 Baldwin Avenue, Jer­sey City, N. J.

Obje

VM

jjections, if any, should be made im­mediately in writing to Elsie M. Liedtke, Gerk of the Bonough .of.UighUtown, N. J.

TRKDBAR COfPDRATlON, H tn y oiiW, President.

H, Gazette, June 9, Ifi, . ^ 5

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